HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-07-08 - Orange Coast Pilot• Lone Bandit Bolds Up NB Bank
• OC Authorities Probe Jail Riot
(Story, A3)
• Vandals Wreak.Dome Destruetion
• Valley Toddler Dies in Pool
DAILY PILOT
) . * * * 10' * * '*
FRIDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 8, 1977
f VOL. 70, NO. 1n, 4 SECTIONS. 41 PAGES ·--------
t Uttle Stolen
1 ~=Vandals Wreck
·Couple's Home
PROSPECT HEIGHTS, Ill.
(AP) -Gerald Schubring and bis family, back from a camping
trip, pushed open their front door
in this comfortable suburb and
felt horror: vandals had kicked
through eight walls, slashed
f.urniture, strewn food about -
Autopsy Set
I For Drowned
f alley Baby ..
l::oroner's deputies are con· d~ing an autopsy on the body of
a lot who apparently drowned in
bii family's swimming pool Thursday evening.
• Scott D. Jacobson, 14 months,
of 17397 Santa Suzanne St., Foun·
tatn Valley, was pronounced
dead on arrival at Huntington In·
te;r~ommunity Hospital, where
hiis .father, David, works as a re·
9lat1red nurse.
!the elder Jacobson pulled the
ipfant out of the pool after his sis·
te.r; ;Lisa, 8, spotted the tiny form
16the water.
hvesUgators said Jacobson
E attempting to revive the
child when Fountain Valley
Department para~ediCf a.ii Newman and I)an Guehetro
ant\> ed. . •uner~ services were pending toe.y at Pierce Brothen-Smith
M..-tuary, llunUngton Beach.
and stolen almost nothing.
Schubring's stunned wife Carol
sized it up:
"They came to destroy, and
boy. they did a beautiful job. Two
tape recorders and a clock radio
are the only things missing.
"There was total destruction
everywhere and all I could do
was scream, ''Oh, My God!" she
said.
·'Steaks, roasts, a gallon or
sourdough starter and other food
was thrown all over the place.
·'Two glass chandeliers were
smashed as if they were swing-
ing on them. They poured liquid
detergent on our bed and poured
oil inside and out or our 1976 auto
parked in the j?arage. They put Kitty Litter on our dining room
table.
"They took all our slides and
dumped them all over the place,
ripped up our projector screen,
knocked in the television picture
tube and .completely dismantled
our elght·track tape player.
"The hedge clippers were
lodged in the ceiling of the family
room and a knife was stuck in the
wall. One hole in a wall upstairs
was big enough to walk through.
•'They covered the family
room wall with eggs and
Vaseline. They smashed mirror
tiles on the wall and punctured
holes in family portraits, includ·
ing a photograph of my 9-year· ·
old .daughter w}\o died three y¢arsago... .
derald Schubring is a 39-y«!ar·
old computer analyst. Hts wlf.e
Carol is 36. Tb&y have foµr
(See VANDALS, Page A.2> .
t O.ily Pl-..""°"' by ltkNnt K-1 ... NEWPORT BEACH FIREMEN RESCUE ERIN BERCH.AM FROM Ame CONFINEME NT
Victim Spent More Than Eight Houra In 100-degrH Heat Thuraday·
NB Mari Wedged
8 Hours in Attic
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
OI ~I{ ll'llOt Stall
A 24-year-old Newport Beach
rqan is recovering from minor in-
juries today after being trapped
for more tban eight hours in a
ceiling crawl space ln tem·
per,tures firemen said reached
more than 100 d~erees.
Erin Bercham was pulled from
the enclosed attic area at about
9:30 p.m. Thursday by firemen
who were called to his home at
7404 W. Ocean Front by friends
who had worked unsuccessfully -
at freeing him fo~ more than an
Police Fde Suit
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ten
policemen have filed a $1 million
damage s ult. a1atnst the
Progressive Labor Party, one of
the largest suits yet filed by
pol~ce in a trend to try to collect '
chill damages from persons aod
groups who fight with police.
hour and a bait.
Fire department spokesman
Art Morton said Bercham
climbed into his attic at about
12:30 p.m. to do some work on a
light fixture that bangs over his
kitchen sink,·
Bercham becan:ie 'Hedged into
the crawl space appatenUy
because he had loaded tools into
bis pockets.
At about . 6 p.m. Bercham's
girlfriend, Penny Arthur, came
over for a visit and spent nearly
an hour trying to find him. "
She told fireme.n abe could bear
his faint cries and his pounding
on the walls, but she couldn't
figure ~t where the noike w~ coming from.
Wbel) Miss Arthur did locate
him. she cat4ed. a friend, Mark
Aqderson, ~" they tri~d to slide
Bercahm out of his trap by cover-
ing blm With dlsbwashing liquld.
Morton said AnderaoJi and
<See TRAPPED, P~1e Az)
Ex-Lax Spoof
By 'Sex-Lax'
Angers Firm
Prices
mp; Jobs
Decline
W ASlUNGTON CAP ) -
Wholesale prices fell six-tenths
of one percent in June, the big·
gesi drop· in nearly four years,
the government reported today. •
But the good news was offset by a
rise in the unempfoyment rate
from 6.9 percf[Pt to 7 .1 percent.
A big drop lt1 tatm prices led
the price decline last month, an
indication of an easin& of inlla-
t ion a ry .pressures at the
wholesale level.
Wholesale prices generally
presage prices consumers pay
and the effects of last month's
decline could first show up at
supermarket counters following
sever~l months of rapidly rising
food prices.
Julius Shiskin, commissioner
of labor statistics, said the in·
crease in unemployment "can't
be considered a very serious ad•
verse sign for the future."
He also ~old the Joint
E conomic Committee that the
drop in wholesale prices is "a
long way from a new pattern."
But he agreed with Sen.
William Proxmire (D-Wis.),that•
recent drops in retail sales and in
the index or leading indicators,
coupled witb increased un-
employment, u may be the begin·
ning of some serious trouble that
will have to be watched closely."
The increase in the jobless rate
was the first in four months, as
the number of Americans
without jobs in June rose by
210,000 to 7 million. Most of the
increase 0ccurr-ed among aduJt
women. whose jobless rate rose
.from 6:&.tott12~ffcebl. ·· · ·· • : · .
The price news was cert~ to
cheer the Carter admlnis'tration,'
which has been d~tiply worried•
over prtce r~f>o'rtS iti· previous
(See ECONOMY, Page AZ>
I ' • *
·Sunny Saturday ex~ept
cloudy at beacbes,mornirtg
hours. Laws tOalgbt 55 to
60. Hllhs Salurday ln up.
per 80s at·be..tcluw to 70s In·
land. • 1 •
...
2 DAIL V PILOT s Friday, July 8, 1977
NBC Defense Due
'Scottsboro' Prosecution Rests•
WINClll:s1'ER, T nn CAP> -
After cmo\lonal but conf1.1114"1
tatJmooy ~ th" chief witn4lal
a1&1nst Lbo ~0U1boro 8oy1, al· torneya reated h r cue today In a
• m1tUon llbcJ 1111t Mt(a1nat NBC
The network planned to c•ll
two main wlt1101'e11 : John
McGreevy. who wrote lbe acripl
for the te.lovt.lon movie "Judie
Horton and lbo Scothboro
801•. ••And Dr. Dan 1'. Carter. a
hl1iory professor from Emory
Unlvc;ralty In Atlanta wbo ad-
vllcd NBC on tho movu:
NBC ii II th Un• the suit filed by
Victoria Price Street, now the
70•)'\liar·Old wife of a Tennessee
tob•cco (armt!r. She contends
that tho network invaded her
prjvacy and libeled her Ul the
movie by &Uigesting that she lied
Riding IDgh
Amin lJ:nkn Tuv Limo1?
STUTTGART, West Germany (AP) -The
Daimler Benz motor company says its dealer in
Uganda has ordered two Mercedes 600 limousines,
one of the world's most expensive cars, and the
newspaper Bild Zeitung said they are for President
ldiAmin.
"We don't know who they are for," said a com·
pany spokesman, "but you'd be surprised to know
how many people apparently can afford a 600."
However, the spokesman denied the newspaper's
report that the cars were to be armor-plated and
equipped with extra-strong air conditioning and
direct communications to Amin 's palace ~uard.
The company said the 600 model is made only to
order and about 50 are sold annually at prices of up to
$52,000, dependjng on the extra equipment. Users
have included Pop~ Paul VI, President Tito of
Yugoslavia and Mao Tse.tung.
1'1inuternan Halted
Rockwell Layoffs
Seen in Anaheim
Rockwell rnternational will lay
off 700 more employes from its
Anaheim plant because of a hall
in production of the Minuteman 3
missile.
The first notices will be sent
out later this month, officials
said Thursday, in the wake of an
order from the Defense depart·
ment to halt production by the
e nd of September.
Meanwhlile, some 3,000 former
Rockwell employes already have
applied for unemployment
benefits from the state, officials
reported.
A spokeswoman for the slate
Employment Development
Department (EDD) said
Rockwell applications were be·
ing processed in groups of about
15 to speed up the process.
A bout 8,000 workers were laid
•off by the company when Presi·
dent Carter decided against pro-
duction of the B·l bomber.
One employe decided this week
lo take advantage of the com·
pany's special job relocation pro-
gram. and by the end of the day,
was on another firm's payroll.
Company officials hope this is
an indication their relocation
program will find jobs for at
least half of those laid off when
the Bl program was canceled.
Jack Hefley, a s pokesman for
the firm's B·l division, said tbat
F,.._P~AJ
TRAPPED. •
Miss Arthur punched some holes
in the ceiling near Bercbam 's
race so be could gel air. They
used ooe for a straw to provide
him with water.
Al8:30p.m., they gave up their
efforts and called firemen.
1,200 of th~ 2,700 B·l workers
already laid off have gone
through briefings about the
salary and benefits due them,
about how to write resumes and
about interviewing for new posi·
lions.
Hefley said that employe pro-
files will be catalogued by next
week, and will be made available
to other Rockwell divisions· and
lo 150 companies that have con·
tacted Rockwell for employe in·
formation
"We're estimating there are
quite a few openings for our
skilled people and we reel we can
relocate up to 50 percent of our
people,·' Hefley said
Meanwtrile, U.S Sen Alan
Cranston <D-Calif.}, plans to ex·
plore what can be done for the
laid ocr workers in a meeting to-
day with government officials
and Rockw~I representatives
from the fitm 's Palmdale as·
sembly plant and El Segwido
headquarters.
Richard Silberman, s tate
Secretary of Business and
Transportation, said "we are
more interested in work than in
aid," but indicated ofricials will
look at city. county and state
sources of funding to supplement
what may be obtained from the
federal government.
Fro.Page Al
SPOOF •••
ture and distribution of Se1'·Lax.
plus a retum of all packages
already distributed. It also seeks
damages amounting to three
times any profit thus far realized
by Sex·Lax.
There was no immediate com·
ment rrom the Ohio company.
in the Scottsboro case.
Back in the 1930s. through
three trials, Mrs. Price tesWled
that she and a companion were
raped by nine blacks as they
hitched a ride aboard a freight
train from Chattanooga, Tenn.,
to Huntsville, Ala. •
·'When they stopped the train, I
was aUll laying down ... she said
Thursday. "One of them was in
there and Ruby was in, there and
they woke me up and helped me
gel my clothes on."
Mrs. Street said she was bleed·
ing (rom the head and other parts
or her body.
"And I've got the scars to
proove it from where those black
bo,ys cut me," she said, pointing
excitedly to her chest, her arm,
her race and her back.
Doctors at the original trial
said they saw no signs of blood on
either women.
Nine blacks were convicted of
rape and spent a total of 130
years in prison before they were
pardoned or paroled. They con-
tended they had been railroaded
in a racially troubled al·
mosphere.
"If they'd been a bunch of while boys, I'd have done the
same thing,•' Mrs. Street
testified Thursday. "It wasn't
because of color that I charged.
Because there's as good colored
folks as there are white folk."
Under cross.examination.
Mrs. Street said some scenes
from the movies were inaccurate
and others were "bold-faced
lies."
She also denied testimony from
transcripts of the original trials
half a dozen times. saying at one
point she may have been con.
fused.
"It all happened so long ago,"
she explained
Mrs. Street said she saw the
film when it was first shown on
television in April 1976.
"Il just tore me up;• she said.
''The worst part of il was that
they said it was all lies, and I
knew that just wasn'lso" .
Her sisLer·in·law, Lois Price,
later testified that the show had
been traumatic for the elderly
woman, who had told the six
jurors earlier she just wanted to
forget the whole thing
"She is afraid to go out," said
Mrs Price. "She has lost con·
fidence in the people she loves.
She was even afraid that her
whole family was going to turn
against her."
Defector Says
Peking 'Weak'
TAIPEI, Taiwan CAP> -A
Chinese Communist squadron
commander who defected to
Taiwan said today be believes
the Peking regime lacks the .
military capability lo mount an
invasion of Taiwan. He also said
followers of the purged "gang of
four" still have limited Influence
in the air rorce.
Fan Yuan.yen. who Oew his
MIG 19 jet fighter lo Taiwan from
Communist China Thursday,
said the mainland Chineae would
be unlikelr to attack the Island
"because their air and sea
strength is weak.
''I have never undergone any
special training to attack Taiwan
militarily," Fan added.
Concorde Mulled
NEW YORK <AP) -The Port
Authority of New York and New
Jersey has again postponed a
fina I decision on whether to grant
landing rights here to the British·
French supersonic Concorde jet.
Morton said seven firemen
from the city hall station tmder
command or Capt. Jerry Strom
worked for more than 45 minutes
before they were able to peel the
wood and plaster off the walls
and ceiling and free the trapped
man.
Run Kills Teen
Pampl,ona Bulu Pik Up
Morton said Bercham ap-
pareoUy suffered onlv a few
minor cuts and bruises io the or-
deal.
DAILY PILOT
900-yard course from the conals
through the streets of lbe arena.
Police estimated that 1,200 run-
ners, an unusually laree number,
took part today.
Hotel and bar workers halted a
strike just before the festival
be1an. A spokesman Cor the
strikers said the walkout, called
to protest the firing ol 10 fellow
workers, might resum~ after the
heavy spenders leave town.
.There were aJao •treet tiahts on open.inC day between 8a1que na·
ltonallats a nd anti-poUtJcal
hoHdayera shouting "Festival -
Yes! PollUcs -No!"
TBIEJl'ES TA.KE
EN'IJRE HOME
. ,.,...,,,...,....
GERALD AND CAROL SCHUBRING SURVEY WRECKAGE OF THEIR HOME IN ILLINOIS
Vandal• 'Came to Destroy, and Boy, They Did a Beautiful Job,' Say• Owner
Tested on Dogs F,.._Pag~Al
Laetrile 'Deadly'
Claims Scientist
VANDALS. ••
DA VIS CAP) -Laetrile, touted
by some as a cancer cure, can be
deadly when taken with some un·
cooked foods, says a scientist
who tested the combination on
dogs.
in some uncooked foods.
children and their home is a
seven-room dwelling in thic;
quiet, affluent suburb northwest
of Chicago.
Police say the neighborhood's
homes arc worth an average or
$90,000to $100,000.
"l don't know who would do
this," said Schubring. "It's clear
.that it was just. malicious van·
dalism."
But police say more may be in·
volved. They want to know if any
one b arbored a grudge against the
Schubrings. Out of 10 dogs fed a combina·
lion of Laetrile and almonds in
an experiment last week. six
died, says Dr. Jerry Lemis of UC
Davis. ·
He spelled out bis conclusions
on the dangers or Laetrile in a
paper published today in the.
California Medical Association's
Western Journal of Medicine.
The CMA has been the leading
opponent of legalization of
Laetrile in California. A bill to
legalize the substance has been
approved by the state Senate.
Similar measures have become
law in ll stat.es in the past year.
"In small doses, oral Laetrile
may not be harmful," the re· searcher wrote. "But when in·
gested with uncooked foods such
as fresh apples, sweet almonds
or bean sprouts which contain the
beta·glucosidase enzyme,
cyanide may be released. with
the patient s uffering the effects
or cyanide poisoning."
Lewis said doses varied in the
experiment with dogs, and
couldn't say which doses would
cause death.
He added in the interview, "My
concern is that there are going to
be an awful lot of people taking
this garbage and some are going
to be innocenUy injured by it."
The community is a quiet sub-
urb of 15,000, which bas seen
some minor vandalism lately -
broken windows, paint smeared
on walls, the kind of thing many
communities experience. But
police say they have rarely seen
anythang like that what happened
to the Schubrings last weekend.
Schubring and his family bave
moved out for now, and are put·
ting up in a motel. But he says he
is determined t.o rebuild.
Lewis, who heads the Davis
medical school's studies of blood
and tumors, disclosed the tests
on dogs in an interview after the
paper was written.
Laetrile, an apricot pit de·
rivative, contains cyanide. Lewis
wrote that the cyanide is
chemically released by a sub-
stance, bela·glucosidase, found
Church Get.
I t.11 St.eeple
DENVER (AP> -The
great steeple chase is over.
Police in the Denver sut,..
urb of Lakewood say the
Rev. Gene Parrett, pastor
of the Alameda Hills Bap· list Church, received a call
early today from an
anonymous male who said
the mi5sing steeple could be· found in a field in
Lakewood.
The metal-and-wood
structure was undamaged
when it was recovered.
"I can't imagine what
someone wowd do with a
church steeple," said Mr.
Parrott.
The man who patented
Laetrile, Dr. Ernest Krebs, said
Lewi&' findings were ••a proper
area for exploration." But he
said Laetrile has been used for 20
years and poisoning has not been a problem.
'Big~'
SpelLI Jail
For Youth
\J
ANN ARBOR. Mich. (AP) -
Ray Higgenbottom said he
''wanted to ride in a big car just
like the president." So he stole a
hearse-twice.
Higgenbottom, 19, tried lo steal
a hearse Thursday, but police re·
leased him after the funeral
home declined to press charges.
From police headquarters he
went back to the Muehlig
Funeral home, grabbed a funeral
rtag, jumped into the same
hearse -by now in a garage -
drove it through a wooden wall
and up the street.
Chased by police again, he was
caught when the hearse ran into
an embankment at -naturally
-Fairview Cemetery after hit-
ting another car and injuring its
driver.
He was held for arraignment
on a variety of charges.
"We've lived here for six . years." he said. "We're not go·
ing to be scared away by kids.••
E'rom Page Al
ECONOMY. •
months that showed inOation in·
creasing al a worrisome 10 per.
cent annual rate during the first quarter.
However. the turnaround in the
unemployment rate could be a
disturbing sign for the long run.
Administration officials have cautioned that unemployment
might increase in some months
but are predicting the jobless
rate wiU decline to about 6.5 per·
cent by the year's end.
Not all the job report was bad.
Employment continued to in·
crease last month, rising by
270,000 to a total of 90.7 mi!Lion.
Employment grew by 2.9 million
over the past eight months as the
economy continued to expand.
However, there was also a
Jarge gain in the size of the labor
force last month, which rose by
480,000 to 97.6 million. The labor
force includes those at work and
those looking for work.
Since more people went look·
ing for jobs than found work last month, the unemployment rate
increased.
It's Y 011r Dollar!
QUITE OFTEN A CUSTOMER IS CONFUSED
WHEN SHOPPING FOR CARPETING. HE ASSUMES
THAT IF A CARPET PILE IS HEAVY ANO THICK
THE CARPET IS NECESSARILY OF GOOD
QUALITY.
NO] TRUEf MORE OFTEN THE OUALJTY OF
THE ABER. AND NOT THE QUANTITY, IS THE
DETERMINING FACTOR WHICH CONTROLS WEAR
ANO PERFORMANCE.
IT'S YOUR MONEY -SO. WHEN BUVlNG
YOUR CARPETING, MAKE SURE YOU ARE
DEALING WITH AN ESTABUSHEO Mill.. ANO
EQUALLY AS IMPORTANT. A REPU:fABLE
DEALER.
c
Orange Coast
EOITJON
. • O.lly Piiot Pllolos by Rlc""rd Koelllor
NEWPORT BEACH FIREMEN RESCUE ERIN BEACHAM FROM Ante CONFINEMENT
Victim Spent More Than Eight Houra In 100-degree Heat Thursday
Trapped M:an Freed
Newport Citizen Caught in Crawl Sptree
l· By JOANNE REYNOLDS
04 IM D•ilY Piiot St~I
A 24-year-old Newport Beach
man is recovering from minor in-
juries today after being trapped
for more than eight hours in a
ceiling crawl space in tem-
peratures firemen said reached
more than 100 degrees.
Erin Bercham was pulled from
the enclosed attic area al about
9:30 p.m. Thursday by firemen
who were called to his home at
7404 W. Oceap F~ by fpends
'who had worked unsuccessfully
at freeiqg bUn for more than an
tuntr and a half.
Fire department spokesman
Art Morton said Bercham
climbed lnto his attic at about
12:30 p.m. to do some work on a
light fixture that bangs over his
kitchen sink.
Bercham became wedged into
the crawl space apparently
because he had loaded tools into his pockets.
At about 6 p.m . Bercham's
girlfriend, Penny Arthur, came
~ over for a visit and spent nearly
'ln hour trying to find him.
S~e told firemen she could hear
bis faint cries and bis pounding
on the walls. but she couldn't
figure out where the noise was
coming from.
When Miss Arthur did locate
him. s he called a friend, Mark
Anderson, and they tried to slide
Bercahm out of his trap by cover·
ing him with disbwasbing liquid.
A JOYOUS REUNION AFTER EIGHT l.O~ELY HOURS
Erin Bercham Hugged by Glrftrlend Pennv Antwr
Morton said Anderson and
Miss Arthur punched some holes
in the ceiling near Bercham's
face so he could get air. They
·used one for a straw to provide
him with waler.
Judge Goldstem Appointe.i
North Orange County ·
Municipal Court Judge Leonard
Goldstein of Newport Beach was
Jppointed to the Superior Court
J>ench today by Governor Ed·
m1JndG. Brown Jr.
Judge Goldstein, "5, replaces
J\adge Samuel Dreizen who re-
Ured last week ~ter 16 years on
Coast
Sonny ~turday except
cloudy at beaches morning
hours. Lowa toniaht 5.5 to
60. Highs Sfiturd.ay -in UP·
per 60s at beaches to 70t In·
land.
the superior bench.
Judge Goldstein was named to
the north county court by Gov·
ernor Brown in 1976.
He served as a hearing ottJcer
for the Suite of California and in
private practice before beirta ap·
pointed to the Fullerton beD.cb.
He is f DeQ\~rai.
At 8:30 p.m., they gave up their
efforts and called firemen.
Morton said se~fj._n firemen
from the city ball ~tation under
command of Capt. Jerry Strom
worked tor more than 45 minutes
before they were able to peel the
wOOd and piaster off the walls
and ceiling and free the-trapped
rpan.
Morton said Bercham ap-
parenUy ~rrered only a few
minor cuts and bruises in the or·
deal.
.. ,_~--... _
I
.. ,
Today's Closing ~
N.Y. S'oeks
FRIDAY, JULY 8, 1977 C
Jobless Rate Up ·~
Prices Take Dip
WASHINGTON (AP ) -
Wholesale prices feU six·tenlhs
of one percent in June, the big·
gest drop in nearly four years,
the government reported today.
But the good news was offset by-a
rise in the unemployment rate
·from 6.9 percent to 7 .1 percent.
A big drop in farm prices led
the price decline last month, an
indication of an easing of infla·
tionary pressures at the
wholesale level.
months that showed inflation in·
creasing at a worrisome 10 per·
cent annual rate during the first
Quarter.
However, the turnaround in the
unemployment rate could be a
disturbing sign for the long run.
Administration officials have
cautioned that unemployment
might increase in some months
but are predicting the jobless
rate will decline to about 6.5 per-
cent by the year's end.
Lieense Cheek
Not all the job report was bad.
Employment continued to in·
crease last month, rising by
270 000 to a total of 90.7 million. E~ployment grew by 2.9 million
over the past eight months as the
economy continued to expand.
However, there was also a
large gain·in the size of the labor
force last month, which rose by
480,000 to 97.6 million. The labor
force includes those at work and
th?~e looking for work. Wholesale prices generally ·
presage prices consumers pay
and the effects of last month's
decline could first show up al
supermarket counters following
several months of rapidly rising
food prices.
Julius Shiskin. commissioner
of labor statistics, said the in·
crease in unemployment "can't
be considered a very serious ad-
verse sign for the future."
H e a lso told the Joint
Economic Committee that the
drop in wholesale prices is ''a
long way from a new pattern."
Dog Nose Count
To Start in Mesa
But he agreed with Sen.
William Proxmire (D-Wis.), that
recent drops in retail sales and in
the in~ex of leading indicators,
coupled with increased un-
employment. "may be the begin-
ning of some serious trouble that
will have to be watched closely."
The increase in the jobless rate
was the first in four months, as
the number of Americans
without jobs in June rose by
210,000 to 7 million. Most of the
increase occurred among adult
women, whose jobless rate rose
from 6.6 to 7.2 percent.
. The price news was certrun to
cheer the Carter administration,
which has been deeply worried
over price reports in previous
A two-month nose count of
canines in Costa Mesa will begin·
Monday, according to city
Finance Director Robert Oman.
The city is sending out four
Comprehensive Employment
and Training Act (CETA)
workers to determine how many
dogs are in the city and if their
owners have current rabies
certificates and licenses for the
pets.
The reason?
"We spend about $99,000 a year
for animal control services."
Oman said, "and we're only get-
ting about $55,000 back in rev-
enues from dog owners."
He said that only covers about
half the expenses with the rest
being picked up by the t ax·
payers.
Tax'Jtate to Drop?
''We feel people who have dogs
should be carrying the full
burden for animal control
services," he said.
Oman is guessing there are
about 11,000 dogs in the city, and
said the $10 annual license fee
would cover the city's cost.
He said the CETA employes
will be asking Costa Mesa resi-
dents if they have a dog, then re-
quest permission to see rabies
certifi cates and current licenses
for the animals.
"If the owners do not have up
to d ate licenses, they can either
purchase them from the CETA
people, mail in a check, or come
down to city hall," Oman said.
Those who do not comply will
be reJ>Orted to Costa Mesa of-j
<See DOGS, Page AZ) j
Mesa Ri,se 'on Button'
Costa Mesa city officials say a
17 .8 percent increase in the city's
assessed valuation unveiled
Thursday is just about what they
had estimated earlier.
And they don't think the in-
crease will affect the city's pro-
posed $22. 7 million spending plan
fo r 1977·78agreatdeal.
"I feel pretty good about our
predictions of a 15 percent in·
crease." said City Manager Fred
* * *
Sorsabal, "although I'm not that
hap~y about it as a taxpayer.''
Working with a 15 percent in-
c r ease estimate, the city
manager predicted the city could
drop the city's current $1.32 per
$100 assessed valuation to $1.21.
But Robert Oman, the city's
finance director, said he cannot
compute what kind of tax cut re-
duction the city can realize until
around Aug. 10 when the assess·
* * *
ments for public utilities are· re-
ported.
••As of now we know we can cut
it (the tax rate) to $1.21," Oman
said . "The budget calls for a re-
duction from $1.32 this year to
$1.21 and we can reduce it that
far."
At $1.21 per $100 assessed
va luation, a Costa Mesa
homeowner with a $60,000 home
(See MESA, Page AZ)
* * *
How Coast Areas Fare
Figures Given for Assessed J7 aluation Hikes
CITIES
Last Yrs;
Dollar Percent Percent City 1976-1977 1977·1978 Increase Increase Increase
Costa Mesa $377,912,180 $445,376,470 67,464,290 17.8 20.9
Fountain Vall~y 204,873,010 249,754,330 44,881,320 21.9 28.1 Huntington Beach 657,799,695 799,952,900 142,153,205 21.6 23.8 Irvine 385,203,630 498, 159,180 112,955,550 29.3 21.2 Laguna Beach 131,597,570 160,836,410 29,238,840 22.2 23.9 N'ewport Beach 678,104,626 808,419,317 130,314,691 19.2 22.6 San Clemente 125,4~.790 154,386,010 28,888,220 '23.0 23.5
San Juan Capistrano 71,244,440 92,897,190 21,652,750 30.3 24.5 Seal Beach 132,866,600 151,118,630 18,252,030 13.7 31.9
Unincorp. Total $1, 149,353,365 1,429,314,620 279,961,255 24.3 20.3
9range County Total $8,182,998,341 9, 796, 732,022 1,613, 733,681 19.7 18.7
\ ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DISTRICTS
Last Yrs.
Dollar Percent Percent
District 1916-1977 1977.1t78 Increase Increase la crease
Fountairt Valley $197,760,405 246,423,600 48,663,195 24.6 30.0 ·Huntington Beach 266,749,190 321,380,670 54,631,480 20:5 20.6
Ocean View 313,736,060 389,450,860 75,714,800 24.1 25.6
Seal Beach 100,527,240 108,588,190 8,060,950 8.0 30.6
Westminster• 233,991,606 272, 720,675 38,729,069, 16.6 20.8
_,J UN1FIED SCHOQL DISTRICTS
Pel'ttftt
1911-1177 1t'l'1·1t78 . Jn create
Capistrano UM.629,320 582,475,310 28.1 trvl.ne 237,.259,640 322.,959,500 36.l
Laauna Beach 1",057,315 2''1.~1,100 26.1 N~w~n·Mesa 908,060,'36 1,187 ,613,321 19.0
Sadd eback Valley 26.7
.....
1\f OA,ILY PILOT c ffrldfy, JW1 f. ttn
35 l11Jured
R11nning B11lls
Trample Teen
l'AMrl,ONA, Sputn <A P)
l)ozeru. of men r htuu .• '(f by flahtinl{
bulli1 1n thl!i city ')> Jnoual fcau val
J&mm('d up at the ent rttnce to u
h\111 r 1n.: lod11y, trampling curh
oth~r 3nd betn& trampled by th~
half ton ammah1. A teenager was
a ushed to death under the p1h:uv
. .md 35 men were injured
Authorities sa1d the dead boy.
Jose Joaquin Esparza. 17, a
promismg amate ur soccer player
from Pamplona. lnggcred the
pileup when he tripped and fell al
the narrow gate to the bull nng.
Une atler another, about 50
men runrung ahead of the six
charging buHs fell atop Esparza.
The bulls then olowed into the mass of humaruty, treading on the
fallen runners for about five
mmuLes before heading into the
rmg.
The screammg men. many
covered with blood, lay writhing
on the ground until ambulances
arrived.
Doctors said Esparza was
cru1hed to death.
It was the second day of the an-
nual rwming of the bulls festival.
Espana was the first fatality
i.n the bull running since 1975,
when a bricklayer was killed and
20 men hurt in another pileup at
the entrance to the arena .
There wtll be six more runs in
the week-long festival. over a
900-yard course from the corrals
through the streets of the arena.
Police estimated that 1,200 run-
ners, an unusually large number.
took part. today.
Hotel and bar workers halted a
strike just before the festival
began . A s pokesman for lhe
strikers said the walkout, called
to protest the firing of 70 fellow
workers, might resume after the
heavy spenders leave town.
There were also street fights on
opening day between Basque na·
tionalists and anti-political
holidayers shouting "Festival -
Yes! Politics -No!"
Riding IDgh
AnUn Orders Tiro Linws?
STUTTGART. West Germany CAP> -The
Daimler Benz motor company says its dealer in
Uganda has ordered two Mercedes 600 limousines.
one of the world's most expensive cars, and the
newspaper Bild Zeitung said they are for President
!di Amin.
"We don't know who they are for," said a com-
pany spokesman, "but you'd be surprised to know
how many people apparently can afford a 600. •'
However, the spokesman denied the newspaper's
report that the cars were to be armor-plated and
equipped with extra-strong air conditioning and
direct communications to Amin 's palace guard.
The company said the 600 model is made only to
order and about 50 arc sold annually at prices of up to
S52.000, depending on the extra equipment. Users
have included Pope P aul VI . President Tito of
Yugoslavia and Mao Tse·tung.
Ceast Community
College Tax Cut
Chances Seen Slim
Coast Community Collei;?e Dis·
trict's chief financial officer
doesn't see significant cuts in the
district's projected 80-cenl tax
rate this year, despite a 19.7 per·
cent increase in the district's as-
sessed valuation.
Corr ellan Thompson . ex·
eculivc vice chancellor for the
three·college district, said he
would like to see some or the 4.7
percent increase over his 15 per·
cent estimations go into what he
said is the dis trict's depleted re-
serve account.
But district trustees might
think otherwise next Wednesday
night when they meet to establish
the college district's lax rate.
Trustees approved a pre·
liminary $68.2 million budget just
last week, and are scheduled lu
establish a tax rate for the dis-
trict next Wednesday.
A $5.5 million state allocation
recently authorized for the dis-
trict by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr ..
is expected to cut the estimated
87.1 cent tax rate to about 80
cents.
But Thompson was not that en-
thusiastic about cutting more
from the tax rate.
"I have not computed what the
additional increase in property
tax funds will mean to the dis·
trict." he said. ''Actually, I won't
receive the official (assessed
valuation) figures from the coun-
ty until Monday.•'
He said it would be up to the
board of trustees to declde what
the final tax rate will be, "but
any increases will have to go into
building the reserve fund.'•
OflANQI! COAST c
DAILY PILOT
~:r~~:~!r.=1==::.: C.0.>ll'Vbl~lllt°""IH'"Y· ...... -lottie(t -ti-Mo11<1ey '"'°"* 1"<141¥ fOf Cotta :=-v:=.1,'!t.~~ s~i::t ... ~::: ""'-tlM<ll/Sowl" 0..11, A t1••t9IONI HI•
llool It -I\-s.i•tHY' _, -,.,.. T~ t!:l~~"t,~~~:.,~.:._ui wt.i llev
"-""·-............ ncll'\ltll-
'll!IM~.~= .. -.-
,...., •• tt ..... ""' .... "':'..~'\~
~Jti!:'M.1~=-.:t111t•
Thompson said the district cur·
rently holds reserves of $1. 7
million. or about five percent of
the district's budget. He added
that he feels comfortable with a
10 percent reserve account.
NB Bridge
Backers Due
At Hearing
Supporters of plans for a seven·
lane bridge on Pacific Coast
Highway over Upper Newport
Bay are expected to turn out in
large numbers Monday for the
coastal commission hear ing on
the bridge permit.
The hearing is scheduled for l
p.m. at the Huntington Beach Ci·
ty Council chambers.
Newport Beach architect Bill
Ficker. who heads tbe citizen Bridge Action Team CBAT>, is
urging interested people to at-
tend ''to indicate to the coastal
commission that governmental.
civic and citizen leadership are
behind this project."
The $6.5 mUUon bridge to be
built by Ca!Trans will be 20 feet
high and will be located sligbUy
to the north or the existing struc-
ture.
It will have six through lanes or
traffic and a seventh lane for
westbound traffic that is turning
north on Dover Drive.
Hlebway officials say they
hope the project is approved in
time to put it out to bid by the end
of 1977. It would be completed by
mid·J.W'/9 if it stays on schedule.
Van Hooten
Said Healthy
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The attoroey for former Charles
.Manson fottower Leslie Van Houten says his client ahould be
convicted of ll'lahslaughter, in-.
st.,ad of mUl"der. because sho is
••remarka,bty mentally healthy" now.
But MuwoU Keith contended
ln hl1 ranal argument Tbu.nday
that Ult atttacUve, ttlender de-
fendant had chansed and "° lon1er believes Charles Manson
it 1 uua Chrl.tl reincarnated.
3Lose
Three former owners or the
Port Me$a Convalescent Hospital
in Costa Mesa have had theh:
licenses revoked by the Sta~~
Department of Health.
Bob Nance, spokesman for the
health department, said the trio
sold the Port Mesa facility to
another party in 1975, adding that
the new owners are operating the
hospital in a satisfactory m~
ner.
"Port Mesa is not affected tn
any manner by this action,"
Nance said.
Licenses to operate nursing
homes were revoked this week
for Uri Mandelbaum of Los'
Angeles, Sholom Levitan of Seat·
tie and Benjamin Levitan of
BrookJyn.
APWI...,.... GE~D AND CAROL SCHUBRING SURVEY WRECKAGE OF THEIR HOME IN IUINOIS
Vandel• 'Came to Destroy, and.Boy, Titey Did a Beautlful Job,' Say• Owner
He said the state investigations
of the facility at 2570 Newport
Blvd. began in early August 1975,
and continued through late Nov-
ember of the same year.
The reason state officials kept
coming back to the facility U:i.·
eluded more than 100 violation~
of health code standards, Nance
said.
Fro111 Page A J
V_4.NDALS. • ,
Vaseline. They smashed mirror
tiles on the wall and punctured
holes in family portraits. includ·
1ng a photograph of my 9-year·
old daughter who died three
years ago.··
Police say the neighborhood's
homes ar~ worth an average of
$90,000to $100.000.
Gerald Schubring is a 39-year·
old computer analyst. His wife
Carol is 36. They have four
children and their home is a
seven-room dwelling in this
quiet, affluent suburb northwest
of Chicago.
· · 1 don 'l know who would do
this," said Schubring. "!l's clear
that il was just malicious van·
dalism."
But police say more may be m·
volved They want to know if any
one harbored a grudge ;,igainst the
Schubrings
The community is a quiet sub·
urb of 15,000. which has seen
some mrnot vandalism lately -
broken windows, paint smeared
on walls. the kind of thing many
communities experience. But
police say they have rarely seen
anything like that what happened
to t he Schubrings last weekend.
Schubring and his fa'rnily have
moved out for now, and are put.'
ting up in a motel. But he says he
is determined to rebuild.
"We 've lived here for six
,1ears." he said. "We're not go-
ing to be srared away by kids."
NWport Employes
Picket City Hall
A handfuJ of Newport Beach ci-
ty employes began picketing city
hall today. They said they plan to
maintain the picket line until
Monday's city council meeting in
the hopes of getting city officials
to reopen stalled salary negotia·
lions.
The pickets, wbo marched with
blue and while signs, are mem-
bers of the Newport Beach
Employes League whic h
represents 127 maintenance
men, mechanics. trashmen.
custodians. gardeners and sign
painters.
League Presid e nt Stan
Peterson. who took a day off
-work to lead the pickets, said his
group is unhappy with the city's
last contract offer which totaled
a 6.7 percent increase in pay and
changes in the retirement
system. His group is seeking a
package totalling seven percent.
"The city isn't offering as
much as they did last year,'' he
claimed.
The picketing marks another
effort by the league to call atten-
tio n to its displeasure over
negotiations. Tuesday, about 50
members of the group s taged a
·sick-out.
Meanwhile. the 85-member Ci·
ty Employes Association which
represents the clerks and
secretaries. voted lo accept a 4.8
percent pay raise whic h will cost
the city an additional one percent
in fringe benefit increases.
The first of the city's six as-
sociations to settle was the
Profession al and Technical
Employes Association which
earlier accepted a five percent
pay raise for its 56 planners and
engineers. That raise will also
cost the city an additional one
oercent for fringe benefits.
Thursday, lifeguards agreed to
a two-year contract which calls
for three percent pay raises the
first year except for three of the
association 's nine m embers.
Marine Safely Capt. Bud Belshe.
will get a 4.5 percent raise and
lhe two rescue boat operators
will.get four percent.
ln the second year, there will
be no pay raises, but at the end of
the second year , the lifeguards
will be taken out of the existing
Public Employes Retirement
System CPERS) and put into the
more expensive California
Highway Patrol CCHP) plan.
Members of the police and fire
employe associations remain at
odds with the city over use of the
CHP plan and both groups have
declared impasses in their
negotiations.
Fire employes have asked for
mediation and the first session
has been setfor Wednesdav.
~olice employes will take their
grievances to the city council Monday.
Drifter Still . :
·Out in Front
In Transpac
The yacht.Drifter report·
ed a position 742 miles
from Honolulu at 9 a.m. to·
day and was 132 miles
a h ead or Windward
Passage's r ecord run in
1971.
Merlin was in second
place on elapsed time and
was 771 miles from the
finish. Both yachts are in
·th e light displacement
division of the race.
Jn the Division I class A
battle, Windward Passage
had moved ahead of Kialoa
and was 829 miles from the
finish. Kialoa was 840
miles out.
The four lead boats were
a ll ahead or WP's position
of 874 miles to go in 1971.
Ragtime's position
placed her 829 miles from
Diamond Head.
Winds were reported
from 18 to 23 knots through
the 66-boat fleet. (See
earlier story Page B6.)
Fro• Page A J
MESA ••• ..
Script Came From Book
·would realize a city tax bill of•
$208, or $27 above last year's city
tax bill.
But those figures are based on
•the city's estimated lS percent in-
crease in assessed valuations.
Oman said the 17.8 perceot in·
crease reported by the county as-
sessor's office Thursday is pretty
close. Chief Scott&~ro Witness Telh TV Rok
WINCHESTER. Tenn. (AP) -
As the chief witness in a 1930s
rape case sat at the plaintiff's ta·
bl e s h a king her head, a
scriptwriter told a federal court
jury today where he got the
material for the NBC-TV movie
'·Judge Horton and the Scotts·
boro Boys."
His testimony came in Victoria
Price Street's $6 million libel suit
against the network. The 70-year-
old white woman contends that
NBC libeled her by suggesting
she lied four decades ago during
the rape case against the young
bl ack men who became known as
the Scottsboro Boys.
Scriptwriter John McGreevy of
North Hollywood said he took
most of the material from the
book "Scottsboro -A Tragedy or
the American South," written by
Dr. Dan P. Carter, a history pro-
fessor at Emory University in
Atlanta.
Carter. scheduled to testify
later, told reporters much of his
book came from court
transcripts but that he in-
t erviewed Judge James E.
Horton just before the judge's
death several years ago.
. Horton sacrificed his career by
dismissing r ape charges· filed
against one of the Scottsboro
Boys in Decatur, Ala., in 1933.
Eventually, aJl rune defendants
were convicted and served a total.
of 130 years in prison.
Only one{ Clarence Norris, is
known to st ll be living.
Mrs. Street, now the wife or a
Tennessee tobacco farmer,
testified throµ~hout three trials
in the 1930s lhat she and a com-
panion, Ruby Bates, were Taped
by nine blacks as they bit~bed a
ride aboard • frei&bt train (rom
Chattanooga, Tenn ., to Huntsville, Ala.
Mrs. street Hid Thursday she
was bleeding trom the h•ad anti •
other parts of her body when the
train stopped, but doctors at the
first trial said they found no signs
of blood on either woman.
Ruby Bates, who died recently,
recanted her testimony after the
first trial and testified that she
was not assaulted and did n"t
know whether Vi ctoria Price was
assauJted.
McGreevy, winnerofanEmmy
Award for another television
show, testified hhad to be selec·
Uve about the material which
went into the show.
"Unquestionably, my biggest
problem was trying to condense
a two-week trial into about 100
minutes, which is the length of a
two-hour television special," he
said.
The scr iptwriter said he
worked nearly eight months and
was paid $25,000 for the show,
which won a Peabody Award, a
broadcast honor, and a Silver
Gavel Award from the American
Bar Association.
"Of course the city council can
cut more than 11 cents from the.
tax rate if it desires,'' he said.
"Maybe it will be 12 cents. I juat
don'tknow."
Brezhnev Meets
MOSCOW (AP) ~ Presiden(
Leonid J. Brezhnev met today
with ambassadors to the Soviet
Union and said threats to in-
ternational peace were growing
but opportunities to strengthen
peace were growing as well.
It's Your Dollar!
QUITE OFTEN A CUSTOMER IS CONFUSED
WHEN SHOPPING FOR CARPETING. HE ASSUMES
THAT IF A CARPET PILE IS HEAVY AND THICK
THE CARPET IS NECESSARILY OF GOOD
QUALITY.
NOT TRUE! MORE OFTEN THE QUALITY OF
THE FIBER. AND NOT THE QUANTITY. IS THE
DETERMINING FACTOR WHICH CONTROLS WEAR
ANO PERFORMANCE.
IT'S YOUR MONEY -SO. WHEN BUV~NG
IQUR CARPETING. MAKE SU~E YOU ARE
DEALING wrrH AN ESTABLISHED MIL.L. ANO
e OUALwY AS lMPORTANT. A REPUTA~H.E
DEALER.
. ·
SJC Leatls
. .. .
Boom
County Valuation Hits $9. 7 Billion
B1 GAaY OaANVILLE
Ol-0.0"1"1 ..... aff
A breakdown of Oraot• Coun tr•a urn.71 ~MNment roll and
its teeotd one-year UI 7 percent
overall lnere•ae •hows that San
Juan Capl1trano and lrvln. led
county clues in percenta1e ot
1a1n.
AcCCJl'dina to nauros reloued
Thursday by A.Qessor Bradley
J acobl. property valuca in San
Juan Caplatrano Jumped 30.3
perctnt ftocn a year aio. Irvine's
valut Clin wu rne .. ured at 29.3
percent.
SkyrocketJni proptrty val11es
In tboae two cltles sett.he pace for
a record $1.6 bllUon count,ywtde
ellmb 1.n aaseaaed value that
fAtanty .Jail lneldent
Female Inmates
Stripped After Riot
By TOM BARLEY
Ol Ult Dalty Pl tee S1<1H
Orange County Jail authorities
CQntinued today to probe a
Fourth of July fracas that caused
nude women prisoners to remain
in view of male guards for about
90 minutes.
Senior officers explained about
the riot involving more than 70
'VOmen prisoners in which the
women were stripped and isolat-
ed in an area that left them in full
view or male personnel.
Jail Capt. Jerry Krans said the
exposure was unavoidable. He
$plained that male personnel
t\ad to be summoned to the
~omen's section because only
f1ve female deputies were on du-
ty at the time.
Krans said the incident erupt-
ed when women prisoners object-
ed to being removed from the jail
roof where they had been
p'.ermilted to watch a nearby
flreworks display in the Santa ~na Bowl.
Jail officers said the prisoners
a,;ked that they be allowed to
wait unW the end of the fireworks
display. They said the prisoners
had to be returned to their cells
becauseorthecurfew hour.
He said a group of about 15 to 20
women sparked the riot which
developed into the burning or
mattresses, linen and reading
materials in a number of cells.
Krans said the fires were
quickly extinguished by jail
personnel but the situation de-
~eloped to the point that male
deputies were rushed to lhe area
from themen'sjail.
At one point, he admitted, a
group or women prisoners were
stripped and searched by women
deputies and then led naked into
the jail's day rooms pending
further investigation.
Throughout that incarceration,
he said, the women prisoners
were in full view of male deputies
who were still patrolling the riot
area.
Krans said the situation was
regrettable but necessary. He
said the women had to be
searched for the matches that
sparked the fires and were issued
nightgowns as soon as the gar
men ts could be obtained
Krans said the male personnel
were kept in the area because of
the J>06Sibility that women in·
mates might try to escape via a
stairwell that bad been opened to
allow the smoke to escape.
He said male personnel were
kept in the women's section for
about 00 minutes. The women prisoners were kept in the day
rooms for about four hours while
their cells were cleaned up.
Jail officers said it is likely
that a number of women involved
in the riot could lose up to 10 days
of privileges. Those privileges in·
elude television viewing, recrea-
tion and visiting time.
OC Housing Boom
Examined Sunday
Are your friends being priced
out of the neighborhood? Or are ( J you outliving them? Sunday's SUNDAY'S BEST
Daily Pilot will explore some or _ .
the side effects of Orange Coun·
ty's housing boom and old
people"s reliance on television.
HOUSING PROBE -How do.
couples manage to buy their first
homes today and what amenities
do they like and dislike? Stal(
Writer Judith Olson leads off the
YOU section that also features a
report of consumer attitudes
made at model home sites.
CRAZE PAYS -Nadine's her
name; T-shirts are her game -
to the lune of a half million
dollars per year. Read about her
glad-rags-to-riches story in the
Business Section.
OLD FRIEND -Elderly peo·
pie find that often their only way
of keeping in touch with the
world is through television. What
they watch -and bow networks
respond -is the subject of an As.
sociated Press feature on the En·
tertainment Pages.
DRUG ADDICTION -More
drugs may be on the way to clear
up your mind when it reels a bit
cloudy or spur your creativity. A
look at the work that's being done
on mind chemicals will be in Sun-day's Daily Pilot.
followed by a year a near~
Sl.2billion1916-77 lncrease.
By the lime tht twd-yea.r value
bin10 ended at Ulla year 'a uaeea·
mcot date, March 1, the asseued
value ol property in Orange
County at.ood at $9. 7 bil11ori, ac· cording to the aueuor'a figures.
Aaaeaed values are the base
on which property tax rates are
-u>Plled by more than 200 county
taxin1 aeenclea.
Tbe flew-es released Thursday
don't include assessed values as·
signed to utllitlea, meaning that
all gains have not yet been
measured and tbat the total
value of taxable property in
Orange County could sWl climb
still higher.
Jacobs made it clear Thursday
that residents in San Juan
Capistrano, Irvine and other
cities where values increased substantially may not like the ef.
feet those gains will have on their
tax bilis th.ls year.
"But even though the roll is up,
tax bills do not have to go up,"
Jacobs said.
By that he meant that if taxing
agencies slash property tax rates
enough, the value gains will be
ofCset by the lower tax rates
Jacobs also pointed out that
some of the value gain is the re-
sult of new cons truction. the
adding of new property to the as-
sessment roll.
He attributted 4.5 percent of
the overall 19. 7 percent gain to
new construction
The remaining 15.2 percent
was charged off to inflation. Or.
as Jacobs said, "the problem of
too many people trying to buy not
enough property · •
Whatever the cause, Orange
Coast cities were among the
hardest hit by the gain in proper-
ty value
Two coast cities, Newport
Beach and Huntington Beach,
skipped by Santa Ana for the first
time lo become the county's
number two and three cities in
terms of assessed wealth
Newport Beach's value gain of
19.2 percent forced the city's as-
sessed value to $808 million,
second only to Anaheim among
Orange County's 26 cities.
Property values in Huntington
Beach jumped by 21.6 percent,
according to the assessment roU.
That placed assessment value in
Huntington Beach at $799
million, nudging it $1 million
above Santa Ana, until now the
constant second to Anaheim in
assessed wealth.
San Clemente ranked sixth in
percentaee t-1n with a value
growth measured by the assessor
at 23 percent.
Next in order among the cities
were Laguna Beach (22.2 per-
cent) and Fountain Valley (21.9
percent).
In Costa Mesa, the gain tagged
by the assessor was 17 .8 percent.
And in lbe county's unin-
corporated reaches that include
tbe Saddleback Valley, Dana
Point and Capistrano Beach, the
. assessed value one·year gain
was set at24.3 percent.
'the only inland cities to com· pe~ with eoastal cities in soaring
propert y values were Brea,
where a buildJnj{ boom has been
under way, Una Villa Park and
fast growing Yorba Linda.
Among the county's school dis·
trlcls, the Irvine Unified showed
the largest gain in tax base, a
whopping 36.1 percent gain hi as·
sessed value. •
Capistrano Unified was second
only to Irvine in gain with a mark
the USeslOf set aU8.1 percent.
Third in line among the county
unified school d istricts was
Laguna Beach with a gain ol 216.1
oerceoL
Tbe 1a1n In the N~rt-Mesa
UnlQed School District s tax base
was 19 percent, according to the
assessor's breakdown.
Among the county•s high
scbool districts, Huntington
Beach had th~ heftiest increase
(20.3 percent> and la now the
wealthiest in terms of tax-base
among the county high school
dlstrlctl.
Fountain Valley elementary
School Dlatrict led the county's
16 elementary districts in tax base gain With a 24.6 increase.
the usessor•s fi,ures show.
Next ln lloe came Huntlngtoo
lJeach'a ~ean View with a 34.1
'Percent tax base gain. Hunt·
lneton Beach was not far behind
with a 20.5 percent aatn while the
Weatmtmter district showed a
11.IPll'eeatblt!re ....
In Seal Beach &.be lncreue in
~alue was aet at 8 percent.
Saddleb ack Community
Oolleee Diatrkt far outdistanced
the COUDL.Y'• tbl'ff other com· mamt) CoJleie CllStrttta with • us bale &alA lbowll t>J the u.
aeaor at rt.5 percet.
Nm m .un. wu the Coast
CommunltJ COlleae Di.strtct wttb a t aln ol lt. T pereent that sent u·
1taaed valu. wkbln Ua Wln.c boUndali• at .. 5 bUUoo. •
APWlrel!IMto
POLICE DIG UP SKELETON IN SUSPECTS' YARD
First In a Serles of Homoaexual Murders?
Another Trash Bag
Victim Unearthed?
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
bones of a person believed to be
another "trash bag" murder VJc-
tim have been unearthed behind
a house once occupied by the two
avowed homosexuals who are
charged in two murders and un-
der investigation in 26 others.
The skeleton was round Thurs·
day at a Culver City house.
One or the defendants, Patrick
Kearney, provided information
GAYS' SILENCE
HINDERS PROBE-AS
that led authorities to the lot, said
sheriff's Lt. Ed Douglas. The
triplex building where the two
men lived from 1968 to 1970 Is on a
quiet residential street behind a
movie studio that once housed
Desilu Product.ions and is now
Culver City Productions.
"This appears to be the first oC
the murders." Douilas said.
"We believe this was the first
residence in which they (Kearney
and bis codefendant. David Hill>.
lived toeetber."
Kearney, 37, and Hill, 34, sur-
rendered in Riverside last week
and were arraigned on charges of
murdering Arturo Marquez, 24,
of Oxnard and John LaMay, 17,
or El Segundo.
Authorities said Kearney iden·
tified the dead man only as
George and said he had been
fatally shot. Sberi,ff's deputies
said the person wfiose remains
were flitund had been shot
through the bead.
With Thursdll)''s discovery, the
two men have been linked with ll
uncovered bodies. Authorities
say the m\U"ders may be related to bomosextaal activity.
Some of the victims· were found
dismembered in trash bags.
DAILY PILOT A:S
Dealer
Agrees .
To Fine
Operators of Dot Dataun, Inc .•
of Huntington Beach have agreed
to pay aS20,700civil penalty inset·
tlemeot ol. a lawsuit filed aJ(ainst
the firm by the Consumer Fraud
Division of the Oranae County
District Attorney'• olfice.
Legal action was taken against
the dealership at 18835 Beach
Blvd. following invesUgatioo or
lbe sale of 69 can that did not
comply with the state's air pollu-
tion control regulations.
Investigators aald smog
·certificates on the cars were is-
sued after inspections by an un-
licen.sedand unauthorized inspec-
tor and were either stolen, coun-
terfeited orforged.
Investigators said at least 19
more auto dealerships ln Orange
County face identical action in·
volvin~ an estimated 500 vehicles.
They ref~ed to identify the
dealerships pending the filing of
legal actions.
Lawyers for Dot Datsun have
made it clear that the firm does
not concede the truth of the allega-
tions filed by the district al-
torney's oCCice.
But the dealership has agreed
lo recall the 69 cars involved, pay
the $20, 700 penalty and refrain
from such alleged conduct in the
future.
Deputy District Attorney Jean
Rheinbeimer said the illegalities
stemmed from the alleged
criminal conduct of a defendant
idenUfied by her as Merlin Cham-
bers, 43, of Huntington Beach,
who faces trial Sept. 26 in superior
court.
Chambers is accused or issuing
stolen, forged or counterfeited in-
spection certificates and operat-
ing without a state inspector's
license.
It is conceded by authorities
that most of the dealerships in·
vestigated had no knowledge of
Chambers' lack: or credentials,
but were, nonetheless, civilly lia-
ble for his activities.
Miss Rheinheimer said Dot
D ataun was •'extremely
cooperative" in the investigation
and moved quickly to take re-_
medial action oa~e the Weial
natul'e' ~the smor certUlcaUons
was brought to the attention of the
firm 'smanqen andownen.
Featuring Charlotte Armstrong, Chrysler Imperial, Montezuma,
Queen Elizabeth, Helen Traubel, Lowell Thomas, Eclipse, Peace,
K.A. Victoria, Sterling Silver and Circus. $%19
2 gallon size Reci. $3. 99
. Sale Price
MEYER LEMON
You can harvest fruit ahnost any titM of year
FUCHSIA .
An encore aale on OW'tf'
•varieties ot bukttor
ul>IUbt varMtt-. Lari• ,,. •lie. -.,.
DISNEYLAND
ICE PLANT save water b)I planUn1
this care-free tpO\lnd
cover with tbe bon11t of
white lloftrs tn sprlnf
&t.rt.W $ 99
W.P'tb
DWARF
EUGEl'ITA
Eiccellent for uae u a k>w bed,ce O(' ose a Utile Imagination and form a
bonaal apeelmen. 1
gallon. $ 19 Reg. S2.•
W.Mce
4 DAILY PILOT
Nix on
Tied to
Koreans?
WASKJNGTON (AP> Rep
Bruce Jo' C•puto <R N V >. Hya
he's eomi to try t<> confirm tu•
behet th.It Rich.rd M. Nixon
knew about •lle1ed South Kore.n
1nnuence-bu)'ln1 while he waa
president
"I P"r'S001tlly believe lh•l both
former Secretary of Stale Henry
A. K1aslngt'r and former Presa
dent Nixon knt.>w 11bout th.-
Korean &obbyiog aattempls but for
a variety of reasons dad not
choose to act o n that
knowledgt'," be saad Thursday.
C•puto, a member of the H<>Ubt'
( I NSHORT J
panel probmg the alleged 1n
fluence-buyang m Congress, 1>a1d
he wall ask the elh1c1> comm1tlet'
to seek access to Nixon's While
!louse tapes "Jn hopes or gammg
1nformat1on about which
part1cuJar congressmen were m
volved, and about who 111 the
Whale House knew of that in·
volvement.
Refk Cirrle Gulf
WASHINGTON CAP) -Four
Soviet ships being tracked in the
Gulf of Mexico by an American
destroyer are heading west again
after returning lo the area
around llavana, the Pentagon
said today
The ships, including a guided
missile cruiser , two destroyers
<ind a support ship, have been an
the Gulf since July 2 following a
stop in Cuba. They are being ob
served by the U S. destroyer
Bigelow. The ships returned to
the Havana area Thursday after
a c ounterclockwise s weep
through the Gulf, the Pentagon
said.
Talb to Continue
GUATEMALA C ITY .
Guatemala (AP> • Britain and
Guatemala have agreed lo con-
tinue negot1at1ons on the ruture
status or 'Belize, dcfui;m~ lht·
latest threat of war ovt>r tht•
Hrilis h co lon y in Cl•ntral
America.
Br itish M1n1s tt'r of Stale
Edward Howland s and
Guatemalun Foreign Minister
Adolfo Molina Orantes an·
nounced Tuesday after two days
or talks an Washington that
Rowlands would visit Guatemala
City as soon as possible "lo dis-
c uss means of reducing tension
and th e next stagei; in the
negotiations."
SM!rif f T rial S e t
MOBILE, Ala 1AP) Sheliff
Tom Purvis and nine of his of-
ficers, charged an an inmate kall-
mg, remain Cree without bond to-
day after pleading innocent rn a
court appearance that al times
had the navor or a campaign
• rally.
There was loud cheering from
his supporters after the plea
Thursday. Friends outside car· r ied placards. A public rela·
lions consultant talked with re-
porters.
B• L eaf& Chase
WILMINGTON, Del. CAP)-A
passenger took over a Greyhound
bus with four other people aboard
Thursday night and led police
through a c hase that was
punctuated by gunfire before he
was forced to stop and ap-
Rrehended at an intersection,
state.police srud.
The man identified as William
Bo rock, 32, of Seminole, Fla.,
kept police from forming a
roadblock by r unning three
patrol cars off the road during
the 10-Dlile chase from New Cas-
tle to Wilmington, police said.
Two young girls, a n elderly
woman and a l!i-year-old boy
were on the bus durmg the chase,
they said.
ltidOtes A wait Bodies
Grieving widows wait for the bodies of four miners
killed in an explosion in a shaft near St. Charles, Va.
Author ities said today that methane gas concentrations
above federal limits caused the explosion. Fourteen
other miners working about 1,500 yards from the ex-plosion escaped unharmed.
Prosecution Nears
End of Hanafi Case
W ASHJNGTON <AP 1 -After a month and a half of sometimes ,
stormy proceedings, the prosecution is winding up its case against 12
Hanan Moslems accused of murder, conspiracy and kidnaping in the
armed takeover of three downtown Washington buildings last March.
The prosecution was expected to call its final witnesses today in the
trial. which resulted from the
siege March 9-11 in which a re
porter was killed and several
other persons wounded.
AT Lt:AST ONE defendant,
llanaf1 leader Abdul llaamas
Khaalis, is expected to take the
stand in his own defense. He al
legedly led the siege to avenge
the murders of !>evt.•n of his
children by a ri val Black Muslim
sect.
The defense ca'sc could begin
Monday if the prosecution con
eludes its presentation as
scheduled.
Juror s heard a r ecordin ~
Thursday of Khaalls calling his
s on-in-law at Hanafi head·
quarters during the> siege "Kiss
the children for me." the voice on
the recording said. "We're gonna
gel the murderers. too, or heads
are gonna come out of here. If the
murderers are more important
than these people, then I don't
care."
HE WAS REFERRING to his
demand that the killers of his
children be brought to him for
justice.
lie also said, "They slupped
the picture," a reference to
··Mohammad: Messenger of
God," which the Moslems want·
ed removed from movie theaters.
Betty Neal, a B'naa B'nth
employe who acted as KhaaJis'
telephone operator, identified his
voice as the one on the recording.
8 'nai B'rith's headquarters was
one of the buildings taken in the siege.
Gay Hospitality
Ad lrwites Honwsexruils ) ·
MIAMI <AP> -Homosexuals in Minnesota are inviting tbeir
comrades in Dade County to move to the Minneapolis-St. Paul area.
"Trade a rotten palm for a thriving pine,'' urged an ad in
today's editions of The Miami Herald. It was placed by the Target
City Coalition, a Minnesota homosexual group.
THE INVITATION FOLWWS DADE Count~'~s repeal of a
homosexual rights ordinance June 7, accordlne to Minneapolis at·.
torney Jack Baker. who heads the group. •
Dade County's gay community campaigned vigorously to pre·
serve the ordinance. But opposing forces, led by singer-orange Juice
promoter Anita Bryant, won repeal of the ordinance in a county-wide referendum.
Baker said his group wants ''to double the percentage or gay men
and lesbians in Minneapolis and St. Paul ln the next year." •
HOMOSEXUALS IN THE TWIN CITIES area will help the
DadeCountyemigrantsgetsetUedandfindjoba,hesaid. · ·
Baker said the ad does not suegest Dade County's homosexua1
community give up the fight. But "some are burned out and leaving
Florida," be said, "and if they want to leave, we want them to think a bout MinneaPolis."
It's Hot Back There
Temperature. Soar t,o Record Higha
Tempert1t•re• ·
Ml• Lew l't,. u .,, .. .,
,, •S w n
jQt •
•• se 12 ., ,, 1S
1t ..
'1 II ,, .
~ 71 ,. 10 ,, ..
" 1J .. • S1
~ .. n .w
'1 IS '4 7' ~ ..
" n .. 10
S.vert thun°'"storms co11tl111HOd "rly 1"'9 mof'llinQ from Ille central
''etnt ec:.-111t Of>lo val .. y·lnlO the
-111ern -mld--"llanllc 1ta1ea •nd OV•r llOlllhtrft Florida. Sh• 1....-, _.. r-1ect Thurs·
dlY-MlnCOlortdo--M<.llln lowt, Jlr•nnsylvtnla, Olllo and
FIOrfN. Tiit Floridt IWISI•• was near
t•IJflr• Hlllt • ~ llulld•no• •I'd '4•* ....,_ ,,..s.
"---
Twins separated:
•
Girls Remain 'Desperately Ill'
risk sbould be taken with healthy lie baby etrls and couldn't d ~· t WASHINGTON (AP> -
Siamese twins joined at the torso
since birth remain desperately ill
today after an operation that
followed a "tough ethical de-
cision" to try to save both in-
fants, rather than sacrifice one.
"We decided the chances of
both surviving were very small,
but the chances of one surviving
were reasonable," said Dr.
J u dson G. Randolph, who
supervised the operation that
separated the two-month·old
girls on June 23.
"IF WE llAD chosen to save
one child, it would have been a
relatively simple operation
because there would have been
plenty of tissue and plenty of
skin," Randolph sald Thursday
after hospital officials released
word of the operation.
"One was not healthier than
the other," he said. "It is our
judgment that separation, even
at a greater risk, was kinder."
Now. even though he is caring
for two very siclc. infants, Ran-
dolph said he "wouldn't gp back"
on "the tough ethical decision"
he made with other physicians,
clergym en, the family and others
at Children's Hospital.
THE GIRLS, FLOWN from
Italy for the IO-hour operation,
"laughed, smiled end cried in·
dependently" when they arrived,
he said.
Before separation, the twins
had two hearts, two sets of lungs,
two stomachs, four arms, two
heads and separate spines, Ran-
dolph said.
Their intestinal tracts were in·
lertwined, their diaphragm and
liver were joined and they had two legs.
"WE DON 'T KNOW whether
they will Ii ve. They 're still
desperately ill," he said.
Randolph said if the twins sur
vave . corrective surgery may be
possible later to a llow each to be
outfitted with an artificial leg.
Randolph said his main con-
cern is the "gaping wounds" in
each child's torso that are cov-
ered with plastic. "They are still
an indefinite way away from be·
ing healed," he said, adding the
risk of infection was large.
SKI N GRAFTS COULD be
made from other parts of the
body and skin a round the wounds
could t>e stretched to cover part
of the exposed areas later, he
said.
The infants huve been in the
hospital's intensive care section
since the operation.
Randolph said the operation
raised several ethical questions
for the doctors a nd clergy, in·
eluding whether a maJor medical
two-month-old babies. that one would survive and t
• wouldn't." . "WE WERE CONCERNED The hospital's cbl I
that leaving them together would p s y c bolo g i s t , Dr • K t
have an enormous psychologicaJ Ravenacron, said before the
impact," be sald. "We felt that it eery the children "were tot
would be cruel and unusual for separate neurologically an
these cblldren to r e m a in terms of their capacity to de·
together." v e 1 o p e m o t i o n a I J y ,
He said the idea of saving only psychologically and socially.
one child was discarded "Givenlhat,what e lsecouldone "because we felt we had two lit-do?"hesaid.
Detente Bart?
MoscoUJ Attacks
U.S. Neutron Bomb.
W ASH1NGTON (AP) -Moscow is stepping up its attack against
U.S. development of the neutron bomb as President Carter considers
whether to move ahead with production of the weapon.
After .disclosure Thurs~ay that the warhead has been tested under-, round m Nevada, a Russian commentator wrote in a dispatch report-
ed by the Soviet news agency -
Tass that instead of seeking a mtact. Pentagon planners s=iy
satisfactory settlement or the the new bomb would be a gr~14ter
U.S.·Soviet strategic arms talks, deterrent than convenhonal
·'the American administration is nucl~ar ~arheads to a Soviet
doing everything possible to bloc mvas1on or Europe.
complicate these negotiations.·'
"TIUS ROUND IN the race for
illusive military superiority is an
ext remely dangerous venture
which jeopardizes the cause of
deepening and strengthening de·
tente," wrote commentator Yuri
Kornilov.
Administration offi:cials re·
fused to respond to the Soviet
commentary.
Secretary of State Cyrus Vance
said last week in Paris that U.S.·
Soviet relations have been
strained by ·•very substantial ..
differences over strategic arms
limitations and human rights.
IN CONFIRMING THE bomb
tests in Nevada, a spokesman for
the Energy Research and
Development Administration
declined to say when the testing
began or how extensive it has
been. He said the tests were con·
ducted underground in ac ·
cordance with existing treaties.
The spokesman said weapons
are tested before production as
"a matter of procedure."
The White House says Carter
will decide whether to recom-
mend production of the warhead
after reviewmg lhe results of
s tud ies expected to reach bis
desk about Aug. 15.
The neutron warhead is de-
s igned to kill people through
radiation while leaving buildings
/loP Wh .. pl>OIO
Prin~e Honored
Britain's Price Charles is
now Red Crow. or Mekaisto,
after being inducted into the
Kainai Indian chieftainship ·
during ceremonies on the
Blood Res ervation i n
Southern Alberta. Canada.
,A Great Place for
Kids on Saturdays
In hundreds of homes along the Orange CoaJlt, a Saturday
morning tradition begins with a turn to Uncle Len's Corner.
This regular feature of the Dally Piiot young people's page, of-
fers a weekly art challenge to young· readers.
. Uncle Len provides intereatlng art •••lgnments and Invites
youngatera to submit their work to the scrutiny of Judges of hi•
I • weekly contest. ' .. r ..
.. ...-·::: ' • t I 7' ·-• I -,
First-hand Look
Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr., left, chats
w1tb Deke Slayton, one of the original
astronauts. during a visit to the NASA
fac ility at Edwards Air Force Base.
Brown viewed the space shutUe, back-
ground, and d esignated Aug. 11 as
"California Space Day." The first free
flight of the space s})uttle is scheduled
Aug. 12. Brown sees a bright future for the
aerospace industry.
State Unit Bans
Gas Additive MMT
LOS ANGELES (AP) -California has decided to ban a con-
troversial gasoline additive that its detractors say could cause brain
dam a2e. ruin automobile smog devices and reduce fuel economy "Thursday's action will save Californians money, imporve·
automobile performance, protect our anti-smog program and most
importantly, remove a major public health hazard," said Tom
Quinn, chairman of the state Air Resources Board.
California is the first ( J state to ban the controversial c:."'r ~TE add1t1ve methylcyclopenta-J.l. l't
d1enyl mangane se
tncarbonyl, known as MMT "------------
The ban becomes effective in 60 days to allow oil companies time to
use up their stocks of MMT, according to Quinn
OAKLAND (AP) -A wildcat strike today shut down the Bay
Area Rapid Transit <BA RT) system, stranding some 80,000 morning
commuters in three San Francisco Bay Area counties
Only two operators s howed yp for work for the regional transit
system which serves San Francisco, Alameda and Contra Costa
counties, said BART spokeswoman Diane Levine
4 liu•r••~ ........ s~d ,,,, LA c...i.,
LOS ANGELES (AP> -The city and county of Los Angeles
have sued four major auto insurance companies and the state
Insurance Services Ofnce to halt the practice of charging higher
rates to persons in heavily populated areas
County Supervisor KeMeth Hahn, an outspoken opponent of
what be terms auto insurance "redlining," filed the suit Thursday on behalf or the county's 4 .s million drl vers
Geweral F .. d S •rplu Set• lleeord
~ideSays
Grouclw
Proposed
SANTA MONICA <AP) -Erin Fleming, ousted 21~ months ago
as Groucho Marx's temporary
conservator, says the 86-year·old
co median proposed to her
"several times," but that she
turned him down.
·'I loved him w1lh all my
heart." Miss Fleming said in a
900 -page deposition filed in Santa
Monica Superior Court Thurs-
day But she said she declined to
marry Marx because he wanted
to adopt children.
"It's my vanity wanting to
have my own children," said
Miss Fleming, who was Marx's
longtime companion
SHE WAS removed as Marx's
temporary conservator April 20
3fter her role was challenged by
the comedian's son, Arthur
Marx. The younger Marx
clai med that Miss Fleming had
verbally and physically abused
the comedian.
Miss Fleming's six-volume
deposition, turned over to
Superior Court Judge Edward
Rafeedie Thursday, was the
latest action in a lengthy court
battle over appointment or a
DAILY PILOT A5
3 Ki~ Ki11ed by Train
Engineer'• Dreaded Nightmare Reality
HUNTINGTON PARK <AP)-
lt's a sight dreaded by every
train engineer -klda on the tracu, beads down.
Larry Van Daele waa pulJ.ini
bis 15-car Creight toward lls home yard after a daily run to
Los Angeles harbor Thursday
when he spotted four children,
band ln hand, idly stepping from
tie to tie. a Union Pacific
apGkesman said.
Slowly, they came toward him.
BE SOUNDED his diesel's
shrill whistle. But they kept com·
ing.
He sounded the whistle again
and threw on the emergency
brake.
The train slowed, but only
gradually.
Brakeman Maurice Dieu
leaped from the train, running
and waving at the kids. The
railroad said the freight was
traveling at less than the 20 miles
per hour train yard speed limit.
.. But the four of them, they
were look:tnl directly down at the
Ues, .. aald Dleu.
He aald be climbed onto the
platform ill front Of the ename.
.. I thought. well. maybe my
voice might carry . . . I have no
ldea wby they didn't bear the
whiaUe."
Three of the children were
killed on the rails as the train
«round to a stop. The fourth was
critically ittjured.
No one knows why they didn't
move.
"The brakeman got out and
waved and hollered and every·
t.blng else," said Union Pacific
sPokesman John Forbes. "Have
you ever beard a diesel whistle?
It turns you blue."
But Van Daele "was pushing a thousand tons • . • He tried, but
trains don't stop like
automobiles," Forbes said.
"Before we identified them, we
thought they might be han-
dicapped,'' Forbes said of the
Slaying Suspect
Gays' Silence
Hinders Probe
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -Police say a suspect
in 14 homosexual murders bas not been charged
because three survivors of bis knife attacks, includ-
ing a "well-known entertainer" and diplomat,
won't "come out of the closet" and testily against him.
childreo. "We thought they
might be deaf."
AMANDA LACK, 7; her 6-
year-old brother Jason; and
Julie Kline, 10, were ktlled.
Julie's 8-year-old sister Holly
was listed lo "extt'emely
critical" condition at St. Francis
Hospital after undergoing
emergencysur1ery.
On their way home from a
morning in the park on a bot
summer day, they bad decided to
s top at the trainyard ln this
largely industrial suburb.
"They use it as a playground,
unfortunately," Forbes said.
"There are kids all over.
"Some of the older children
still like to play •chicken,' jump
out of the way at the last
minute," be added. "The
younger ones like to emulate
them, although we don't think
these kids were."
SF Mayor
No Drip on
Water Ua e
SAN FRANCISCO
CAP) -Mayor George
Moscone is no drip when
it comes to doing his share for water con-
servation.
For the past year, police have been questioning
a young man lbey call "The Doodler" about the 14
slayings and three assaults that occurred in San
Francisco's gay community between January 1974
and September 1975, l.nspector Rot.ea Gilford said Thursday.
Interest in the case surfaced again this week
after two Redondo Beach men were arrested in
Riverside for questioning about as many as 28 slay-
iogs linked to homosexual encounters.
The suspect here, his name not released.
has talked freely with police but bas not admitted
the slayings, Gilford said.
American Indi a n
Movement leader
Dennis Banks will be
called to testify in
the Skyhor se~
Mohawk murde r
trial in Los Angeles.
Skyhorse and
Mohawk are· accused
of murdering a cab
driver.
Water department
meter readings released
Thursday showed that
Moscone, bis wife and
two children used 235
gallons of water daily, 49
percent of their current
water allotment of 478
gallons a day.
Mosoooe has been nrg-
ing San Franciscans to
conserve as much water as possible.
-N? GET QUICK RalEF WITH SUMMER SALE
FDJLLE '\\!/,~, '::::t' ,,,, Drexel -Herita9e -Henredon
NOW.
SACRAMENTO <AP ) -State Controller Ken Cory says the
state's general fund finished the fiscal year with a record Sl 79·
billion cash balance, about $300 million more tha.n expected.
permanent conservator to care ~~:iiiii~~~= for Marx •
DURING OUR DREXEl:-HERITAGE
SUMMER SALE SWEEPSTAKES,
IT'S YOUR CHANCE TO
Cory, in an announcement Thursday, credited the increase to
growing economic activity and the effect or inflation on taxes, both
of which created "a phenomenal now of cash revenues."
Fedft-al A id S ought 111 Beed~ Flg•t
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Alarmed by an invasion of Japanese
crop beetles, county agriculture officials h"1'e .called upon tbe
federal government for help. _
County Agricultural Commissioner Paul B. Engler told ll~newi;
conference Thursday that 47 J apanese Beetles have b~m found
aboard planes landing al Los Angeles lnternaUooal Airport in the
last week.
Suicide Victi1n
Aids Conviction
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -The testimony of a
Noman who committed suicide by leaping from a
all building one month after being raped bas led to
he conviction of her attacker, Michael Hogan, 24.
The jury was told by a judge only that the vic-
im, Linda Bullis, 37, would be "unavailable f9r
estimony" and did not know of her suicide unW
lfter they returned a guilty verdlct Tburadal.
A LONGTIME Marx friend,
Nat Perrin, was named by the
court to fill the post until the dis-
pute is settled.
Both Miss Fleming and Arthur
Mar x are asking the court to
, make them permanent coo-aerv~.
'J, Brin Schulman, an attorney
fQf /.rlhur f,!arx, saUfthat while
· ~i"i questioned by lawyers for tle_d~tlon. Miss F.letnlng re·
fused to answer 39 questions.
PWMl lHG
Hl.UIMG •ra coMO. m.._ .. __ ,
S.l'\'lce In Vou-ArH -Call Mlf>SION VIEJO mn Carnlno Caplstreno (San Diego Frwy . .i Avery P~wy.)
495-0401 COSTA MESA
1S'6 NeWPO<'I BlvCI
642-1753
SI.Uc. •217'57
"It's the only case in my memory like 1t -it's
:ertaloly unusual lf not unique," said San Fran-
!isco Superior Court Judge Claude Perasso.
A female bailiff read testimony submitted by·
diss Bullis at a preliminary bearing held a few
lays before she killed herself May 12.
FOR COLOR
ALL SUMMER
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AU.ITOIDOPIN flOM MON~...4T. t AX.10 MO ,.M.
A8
DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Ai1-port Woes Reniain
Despite completion lour months aao of a four-
year study that cost $300,000, whatever decisions to be
mu.de about Orange County Airport'& future won't be
made until some time in 1978
The delay i5 a reJSult elf apparently no one-except
Airport Du·ector Robert Bresnahan and the Airport
Com mission -001111 sutisricd with the study.
So, the hefty document that was supposed to con·
taln all the answers has been sent back by the county
planning commission to its designers. It isn't
scheduled lo reappear until "~ometime betwtien
Christmas and Easter ..
That s a victory of sorts for those who oppose so
much as lifting a pebble at the airport to accom-
modate what they see ai> undesirable expansion that
would increase noise and air pollution.
1n the meantime, however. county air travelers
will continue to suffer in an airport terminal that is
overcrowded and with parking facilities that don't
meet their needs.
So be it. Someday. though, someone is going to
come up with an answer to the airport dilemma that
will .have more meaning than just more of the same.
Pemion Pay-off
Last month Los Angeles Fire Chief Kenneth R.
Long retired after two years on the job that pays
$.56,150 a year. His pension is $41 ,382.
To many taxpayers that sounded generous.
But it wasn't nearly as startling as the detailed
breakdown of what Atty. Gen. Evelle J . Younger calls
his "good retirement program."
It's so good that six years from now. when
Younger turns 65, he'll be collecting no fewer than
four separate pensions totalling $.53,226 a year -paid
for the most part by the taxpayers.
There's been a lot of grumbling about ''double
dipping" by people who retire on military pensions,
then take government jobs with the prospect of yet
another pension at taxpayer expense.
But Younger is an interesting example of the new
breed of ''multiple dippers" who manage, quite legal-
ly, to take full advantage of the government's lenient
retirement programs.
Right now he's drawing $.530 a month in Los
Angeles County pension benefits for serving as dis-
trict attorney from 1964 to 1970, while earning $42,500
a year in his state job. Next year he'll qualify for a
military service pension of $850 a month.
When he leaves his attorney general job to run for
governor, his eight years of service in that post will
yield a state pension· of $1,416 a month.
After that he'll have to wait until 1983 to begin col-
lecting his fourth government pension -$1,638 a
month for past service as a Municipal and Superior
CourtjudgeinLosAngeles.
President Carter has said he'll undertake a full
survey of federal, state and city retirement plans in an
effort to unsnarl this complex taxpayer rip-off.
Meanwhile retirees on Social Security. 60 percent
of whom have no other pension benefits, scrape along
on their government pittance. And if they're careless
enough to earn more than $3,000 a year in part-time
work. they even lose that.
Clearly the multiple dipping into government
pension funds is getting out of hand. A lifetime of
public service should be adequately rewarded with a
decent retirement program. But reaching into the
taxpayers' pockets three or four times to provide it is
downright indecent.
And how will be the next generation manage lo
s upport the ever-growing army ofretirees '?
The President and Congress would do well to con-
sider the practice, adopted in many countries. of
limiting persons who have served in different areas of
government to one government pension -the largest
to which he is entitled, but only one.
Busy-ness
Can Be
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
The lnapart of Soviet Ci1'il Defense .
A Startling Nuclear .Scenario
A Narcotic
(SYDNEY HARRIS)
There are fa miliar s ayings
that cut both ways, and most peo·
ple wbo use them don't un·
derstand how they cut the other
way. Like the man I heard today,
remarking to a friend at lunch.
"I justloveto keep busy."
He was a stranger, s o 1 don 't
know anything about the implica·
Uons of his re·
mark . But
there are two
opposite ways
we can "love
to ke e p
busy.'' artd
they are total-
ly different, in
motive and
consequence.
The healthy
way to keep busy is to project
yourseU, as a person, into the life
of your work. or your family, or
your community, so that you are
looking forward to tomorrow.
Without this sort of involvement,
we tire easily, age rapidly, and
turn crabby and self-involved.
But there is also an unhealthy
way to keep busy. This is to
engage in activity for its own
sake. to use busy-ness as a device
for warding off reality. Activity
can be a narcotic, just as alcehoJ
can, for deadening the senses to
personal relations. family obliga-
tions. and comm·unity
responsibility. And for keeping
tomorrow at bay.
WORK AND LOVE, said
Freud, are the two elements that
combine for a satisfactory life.
But many people who seem to
"love their work" use it as a sub-
stitute for working at their love.
They let their families go to pot
(emotionally, if not materially),
while focusing all their libido on
a company, a merger, a stock is·
sue, or any commercial en-
terprise.
Well, well , Dr. Spock, who
misguided a generation of
parents on how to bring up
children, only to admit he
was wrong when it was too
late. says Anita Bryant is
wrong. What next?
K.S.W.
Gloomy Gu• co-11 ore •wbmltted by re•d•n """ CIO not -Hutily reflect tlM view• ef Ult ,,.....,.,.,. S.ftCI yowr ,.e
puve to Gl-..y O..s, O•lly Piiot.
Not to be involved in work of
some kind is stultifying to the
human spirit; and, obviously, the
best kind of work is that which
you would be willing to do for
nothing if you could afford it. But
not many are lucky enough, or
talented enough, to find so
creative an outlet for their
energies.
WOMEN, TOO, of course. are
not exempt from this syndrome.
The "busy, busy" woman who is
always attending club meetings,
working for causes, or perform·
ing civic duties may be doing so
because she has an abundance of
vitality and concern -or
because she is escaping from a
genuine relationship with her
husband and her children. Whic,h
takes work, too.
It is the inner dynamics of the
s ituation, not the raw facts
themselves, that determines
whether our busy-ness is a
heightening of our powers or a
lowering of them.
Most of us require a balanced
life in order to reach the op-
timum satisfaction for our
diverse needs; too much industry
can be as crippling as too much
indolence. But people tend to be
proud of their industry. while
secretly ashamed of their in·
dolence. H many of them ex-
amined its emotional roots.
however, they might begin to re-
cognize that, just as all that glit-
ters is not gold, all movement is
not necessarily getting
anywhere.
W ASIDNGTON -A new and
chilling study of the potential
impact of Soviet civil defense
measures on the U.S.·Soviet
strategic nuclear balance raises
fresh doubts about U.S. reliance
on a strategy that assumes each
side is capable of virtually de-
stroying Ute other -a strategy
called "mutual assured destruc-
tion,'' or MAD.
A result of long analys is by a
team of experts unde r the
direction of T.
K. Jones, one
o f t. h e
foremost
Am~rican
students in
s trategic
nuclear
analysis. the
s tudy was
privately
done for
non-government defense and
nuclear students. These include
Paul H. Nitze, former Deputy
Secretary of Defense, and other
acknowledged experts long
worried about glaring
imperfections in the strategy of
MAD and in the concept of
overkill, both of which are
constanUy paraded by doves in
the arms-control community who
'want to slow U.S. strategic
growth.
The Jones study first measures
potential fatalities in the Soviet
Union under an arbitrary
scenario: following a Soviet (irst·
strike nuclear attack. against
U.S. strategic launchers (a
counter-force strike). the U.S.
retaliates with an all-out nuclear
5'1"ike specifically designed as a
population-killer, using every
strategic weapon that survived
the Soviet first strike.
The study (which Pentagon
experts have not yet been able
seriously to flaw) assumes that
full use is made of Soviet ci vii de·
fense planning. Th.us, there is a
maximum exodus or population
from M06cow and other cities via
24. hours or walktng and
maximum use of what the study
calls "expedient shelters" -that
( EVANS-NOVAK )
is, simple but adequate cover for
two weeks· protection from
nuclear fall-out.
SOVIET civil defense. which
has budget priority equal to the
military and is under t he
command of a hig h Soviet
general. has distributed millions
of designs for quick construction
of just such crude -but effective
-shelters. Indeed, school
children are regularly taught
that art. llighly advertised exit
routes for various neighborhoods
whenr evacuation is ordered are
also a routine part of Soviet civil
defense. • ,
The.study claims that under .. a
full evacuation in accortlance
with Soviet civil defense
principles" the number of
fatalities from the American
retaliatory attack would be as
low as 4 million even lower. if
the 24-hour walking time for
evacuation is lengthened.
But the U.S. today has no plan
whatever for ''expedient
shelters." Indeed, civil defense
has been lost under the liturgy of
MAD, the concept of deterrence
and the mythology of "overkill''
(superfluous nuclear power >.
'1984'
WASHINGTON -Much biJS
been written about repression in
South Korea,
so we have
sought to put
the story in
perspective
by investigat-
ing conditions
t n North
Korea. By all
accounts it is
ruled by one of
' the cruelest regimes lntheworld. West.em analysts don't have a
We Trust int~ Father of Our Country
A s we paused last month to
consecrate once again the institu-
tion of fatherhood, we should have
remembered to honor in our
thoughts and prayers The Father
of 9urCauntry, Wal~r Cronkite. ·
As befita his role, Mr. Cronkite
eschews acclaim. asking only to
be left in peace to
perform his
P•t.ornal
tasks -
1ooth1.q our !eau, com-
forUn1 out
burt1. and
1•ntly •uid· i.a• •OUr ~ ror Ull8 past deeade and more.
Mr. croulte bN wi.ely and rill canted Oat tM dlitl• of t.llU. tbe -.twtome.Jaoarla,Jeaviba
........... JxJnors to~. John diucellor, lot example, has W. dedared Tbe Uncle ol Our OMaitl7: Dffld Brtokley tu Kid
JIJOU-i; J~M Willie. ·Bubar a
...... -ttlell -Utmcllt t.o ai...7'111 Jladlli OI ORCOuft. 117 c.c. _.. wamaa can JiOC*
( ARTBOPPE )
for more), she has been forced to
setUe lor Visiting Social Worker.
BUT Mr. Cronkite's hold on the
lifetime app0lntment has been
confirmed again and qain. Pon
after poll bas shown hlm to be tbe
•1most respected," tbe ''mOlt ad-
mlredz.". and! by Inference, tbe
most oet0veci man in Amtrlca.
Time mqadne bas dJfJclaUj
proclaimed him .. tbe most eon-
vlncln& and autbotit.aUvo ftfun''
bnNl'Un& knowledp Ad moral p{danee-niahtJY to 111 ln our llv•
fo.1 rooms.
Aad ltttus not forfet tUt ~.
Pr•ldta.t carter f ~ed ..... ftflt
major crl&t. -i.o,r.ie -..Suet. a
radio talt •bow ftom tbo Whlti
Hou1 -Mr. Croak.llo wu the
ooe 'be asqd to alt bellde him
tllroQsbout t.be two-hour~:
"Oar ~oo." JOdJ' PVft1l
eQlalaed Ill ille tlase, •..a that th•• '4lflU be IMODl• ln \b11 eoun· trtwbO'wOuld lie-~ to
the President. but that no one
would be disrespectful to Mr ..
Cronkite.''
How true. Presidents may
come and go, but there can be but
one FaiberofOurCountry.
Tbere may be some, m:~k foreigners and the like, who .
'tl\e office a ceremonial one. But
to co~ Mr. Cronkite to the
Queen ol En1land 1s to miss tho
point. n jj bis on.el'Olls Job, for ln-
1tanee. to nominate. elect and in·
•tall f'raid$Jta.
blems we face. He hides nothing from us. When be says, "And
that's the way it is,') we ia,o.o
that's ~be way it.is. •
Accordingly. in the· reverse
case -an American first strike
against Soviet launchers, and
Soviet retaliation designed only
to kill people -the study
predicts 72 million dead in the
U.S. What is worse -1f anything
could be -is that even if the
American people had access to
"expedient shelters," the study
predkts there would still be 2Q
million dead.
THESE catastrophic results
both assume that 90 percent of
the urban population has 24 hours
to get out of town; that the
e vacuees take maximum
advantage of residential housing
Wicks
'Sen CongteN could nrfk• for
• PllY /nclwn, but how would ,,_,,,,.know .w~ on nrlk•l'
' for fall-out protection; and thatj
the 10 percent left in the cities1
make "optimum use" of des·,
ignated fallout shelters (such as4 s ubways> -in tragic shorq
supply here. I
' One reason for these ghoulishly.
high estimates is tbe size of
Soviet nuclear weapons, withl
much higher yields in both!
explosive force and in radiation~
than U.S. long-range missiles.!
Thus. effective shelter from thel
deadly blast of a Soviet nuclear
warhead in this country requires,
far more structural strength. •
1 The arithmetic is startling. A •
shelter that wouJd protect a:
Soviet citizen one mile from thei
point of impaCt of an average-1 s ize American warhead (a!
Poseidon submarine-launched
weapon) would give protection 1 only at three miles from the point I
of impact of an average one·
megaton (million· tons of TNT1
equivalent) Soviet warhead. ~
WITHOUT question. studies ;
such as this suffer from abritrary i
assumptions. The authors 1
concede that their scenarios ar~
"overstated" and certainly "not
likely." Yet to begin to perceiv
dangers from the hight~ organized Soviet civil defens
program, and the absence or an
in the U.S., a start must be made
• somewhere. I
North Korea :~ • Ill
(JACK ANDERSON)
full picture of what goes on above
the 38tb parallel, except that it is
ooe of the most isolated societies
on earth.
The border is tightly controlled.
The few details that have leaked
out provide ~ dim outline of a
highly authoriUµian government
and a brutall~ regimented socie-
ty. In the word.a of one American
analyst: "It ts '1984' -in
spades." ·
Every aspect of North Korean
life fs contrQUed. The day is·
literally divided into 4$0·minute
segments: Eight hours are spent
on work; eight hours are spent on
study and mus organization;
eight hours are given to eating,
sleeping and other necessities.
The degtee of party
membership is greater in North
Korea than in an~ other
Communist country. The C~mniunist party ls suJ>plem-
ented by mass 1>rgani%ations tor
ev~y element ~of socletf -
youth, women, lat>or. There is
t remendous p1ycholotJeal
pressure upon everyone t.o ]otn.
to conform, to parUcioale, t.o
'abow a "positive" attnud'c.
home districts, for whatever
reason, they must carry their.
travel permits and ration cards.
The few who travel abroad are
thoroughly screened beforehand .. While in another country, they
are required to remain virtually
to themselves. They avoid all
contact with foreigners, remain
in their hotel rooms, visit no
restaurants, attend no movies-;
stroll in no parks.
or course. North' Koreans ha.ii
no h"eedom of expression. Th.l-
common man is convinced, not
without reason. that someon:!
watching him at all times. Tb
is 110 tree press; religion has bee
outlawed. A formu Christian
mission complex in Pyongyang,
for instance, has beon converted
Into Khn IJ Sung University.
OAAHGE~AIT
DAILY PILOT
,_
'SAM IS THE POPULAAIST GUY,' FAN ATTESTS
And Here's Why: 'They're All My Children'
Kids Love Sam
Ice Cream Man Retunu Favor
By JULES LOH
AP ~-1•1 COtrHpofldent
NEW YORK -Hell hath no
fury like the sidewalks of New
York on a steamy summer day.
East Side, West Side, all
around the town, boys and girls
cavort under fireplug sprinklers,
splash in gutter rivulets, run
barefoot from shade to shade on
soft asphalt.
ON 20TH STREET a block
from the East River, they hne up
at Sam the ice cream man's
white pushcart.
Sam Batchoff, a man or good
humor, has been selling ice
cream at the same cofoer for 30
years.
"What 1s Nathan's famous
for?" Sam calls out.
"Hot dogs!" chorus the kids
gathered around his cart.
"Whal is Sam famous for"
"SAMMY'S WHAMMYS!" cry
the kids. and run away laughing.
A Whammy, for the benefit of
a ll over 12, is a cold confection on
a stick and costs 10 pennies, or
six. or nine. however many a
small fist happens to hold. Sam
rarely counts. ·
( ___ AM_Em_u ___ J
amined the shirts, lit a cigar.
composed himself, thanked the
ladies. Then he passed out the
cake to the kids.
"IF YOU'RE AN ice cream
man and don't Like kids you're m
the wroogjob." Sam said.
''No, 1 never bad children of
my own but they're all my
children if you know what I
mean. I know nearly all or them
by name. I know their mothers
and fathers. I've watched them
grow up and go off to college and
get married.
"They come back and visit me
and bring their kids and say,
'Honey, this is Sam. I used to get
ice cream Crom Sam when r was
a little girl.' Yes, r know them all
and f guess they all know me."
IS THAT SO, kids? rs there
anybody in the neighborhood who
doesn't know Sam? The kids pon-
dered the question a Jong mo·
ment.
"Conroy. Maybe Conroy
doesn't know Sam," said Joey,
polishing off his third almond
bar.
JFK Death
NelVs Review
Set for Filtn
By JAY SHABBU1T
LOS ANGELES CAP> -Docu-dramas on TV
claim to re-create actual events. But they OC·
casionally are accused of distorting history to
heighten drama, of offering surmise as 100-proof
fact.
Worried about this and the growth of docu·
drama as a form of evening entertainment pro·
gramming, CBS-TV chief Robert Wussier h1ts taken
an unusual step with a planned TV movie, "Four Days in Dallas.'•
He says CBS News will review it for accuracy.
.. DALLAS," ABOUT THE 1913 slaying of Presi·
dent Kennedy, traces the last days of accused as-
sassin Lee Harvey Oswald and of club owner Jack
Ruby, who fatally shot Oswald after JFK's death.
Wussier, who during a 15-year stint as a CBS
News producer helped prepare reports on Ken-
nedy's assassination, says CBS News won't be
asked to say if the show should or shouldn't air.
But he says if there's any doubt about the film's
accuracy, its broadcast-scheduled for next ~pn_~g
-will be delayed and corrections made, or it will
be postponed indefinitely.
HE SAID "DALLAS" JS BASED in large part
on the Warren Report, which found that Oswald act-
ed alone in killing Kennedy.
But he said involving CBS News in a review of
this basically entertainment project wasn't prompt·
ed by fears of "fairness time" demands from
critics who dispute the report's findings.
"No, it was not," he said by phone from New
York. ''It was prompted by our viewing of docu-
dramas of other networks that we felt were major
steps toward a revisionist theory of history.
HE Al.SO Sl\JD HE DIDN'T want children who
watch docu-dramas to grow up with an erroneous
view of history, noting that when kids see things on
the tube "they think that's the real world.
"U we start doing historical things and we're
loose with the facts. I think it's going to come back
and haunt us, both from TV critics and people in the
government.''
Wussier, the only current network head with a
news background, was asked if a CBS News review
of docu-dramas will become the network's standard
operating procedure for such programs.
"NO," HE SAID. IT'LL happen only "when we
decide to go forward with a sensitive subject, a sub·
ject of pubhc concern which still may be. . . an open
matter or open controvers y.
"Then, we'll ask the president of our ne ws
division (Richard S. Salant> or other experts there
about it. We don't want to put them in the position
of final judgments ...
··But we certainly will seek out their thoughts
on the subject matter and. having spent 15 years at
CBS News, l think it'd be a very good idea to see
how they felt.
"The most important thing is, I don't want to be
Friday. Julye. 1977 DAIL y PILOT AT
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• ARAILIA
Regular 39.99
responsible for rewritimg h~is~to~ry~·~"--------=~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!=~===========~~~
"What are you going to do," he
says, reaching into the earl
through a mist or magic ·vapor.
"not give it to them?"
ACCORDING TO ONE well·
placed observer, Joey Varua, a
9-year·old connoisseur of almond
bars, "Sam is the popularist guy
in the neighborhood."
"Yeah, maybe," said Phillip
the fudge bar freak. "but
Conroy's only been here a month.
Conroy doesn't count."
DAM SITE
NOT CLEAR AMLING'S
No argument there. Last year
on July 2 the neighborhood
women, many of them former
members of Sam's clientele.
greeted him on his corner with a
big cake and some nice summer
shirts and several boxes of cigars
and stood with their kids and
sang Happy Birthday to You.
Sam's eyes, which are
chocolate, moistened. He ex·
To Sam Batchoff they all
count, every sticky-fingered one
of them, because they are his
life.
SAM LIVES ALONE a few
blocks from bis corner. He
awakens each morning at 4, sits
alone in a restaurant and
dawdles over breakfast and the
paper until 9, loads his cart,
fastens his coin changer to his
belt and heads for bis corner, his
world.
BOULDER. Colo.
CAP) -"Where's the
Boulder Dam?" is the
question asked most
frequently by visitors
who stop at a new tourist
information booth near
here, say officials.
The Boulder Dam,
built as part of the
Boulder Canyon Project
but better known as the
Hoover Dam, is located
1,020· miles west of here
near Las Vegas, Nev.
Glass in Cookies
~ads to Recall
"COIN WORLD 11
WASHINGTON <AP > -More than 2,000
packages of Archway Chocolate Chip cookies CO(l·
laminated by glass arc being recalled by their
manufacturer. the Food and Drug Administration
says.
Merit Baking Co., of Boone. Iowa, began the re·
call with a June 8 letter to distributors, the FDA
said
It said the recall is under way and it is not
known how many of the 10-ounce packages, coded
with the date July 23. remain on the market. The
cookies were distributed in Iowa, Nebraska. Min-
n&sota. Kansas, Missouri and Arkansas.
, The FDA said the cookies also were being re·
called because they contained nuts that were not
listed on the label.
Kenton Released .,
from Hospital
READING, PA. CAP> -Bandleader Stan Ken·
LQn was released from a hospital here followtnc a
six-week recuperation from brain surgery.
Kenton, SS, had been at Readine ilospital where
he underwent surgery to remove a blood clot from
his brail\. .
The suteery was tbe result of a. fall the mus1-t~n suffered in a garage at a Readine motel May
Kenton's manacer drove him to Philade1phl•
here he caught a night to bis home in Los Aoieles.
~-! at lido Coin Cove
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& SUPERIOR MUFFLER CENTER .
Announcing A New Service
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Muffler PnJblems Qd Tight Budgets!
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12th ANNIVERSARY
SA ·LE
NOW thnt JULY 31st
-I
l
LISC . ~ .·
'Soaps' Bubble Up
Report: Game Shows to Decline
NEW YORK (AP) -The number of soap
" operaa on daytime telev1s1on is Ukely to inc~ase at
tbe expense of game shows thls year, a report by a
major advertising agency says.
game show have &one up signlticanUy -almost.
doubled over the last two years -so they are no
longer an inexpensive filler for a Ume period," the
report said.
The report by Batten, Bartoa, DuraUne &
Osborn Inc. also noted that daytime programming
bas been so successful, mainly at reaching womea,
that the minimum average cost of a 30-second com-
mercial baa increased by so percent in a year.
.. Another reaaon is that serials draw a much
more loyal audlenc4;. and the networks perceive
them to be more stable programming than eame
shows."
THE If.PAGE REPORT NOTED that game
shows accounted for more than SO percent of the
network daytime schedules in 1975. In tbe spring of
this year, they accounted for 34 percent. And the
figure could dlp below 30 percent by the end of the year, BBDOsaid.
WIDLE BBDO SA.ID IT WAS possible that
"One Ufe to Live" and ''General Hospital" would
follow the trend to hour-lone soaps, it quoted an
NBC execuUve, Madeline David, as saying that
longer shows were "not producible."
Soap operas account for 52 percent of daytime network programming between 10 a.m. and 4 :30
p.m., with reruns of situatioo comedies like "All in
the Family" and movies making up the difference.
The agency said the price of a 30-second an-
nouncement ranged from $4,000 to $16,000 at the end
of 1976. For tbe season beelnning this fall, howev,.er,
the price baa risen to $18,000 to $19,500. \
"ONE REASON FOR THE disappearance of
this daytime staple is that the costs to produce a
Alt.hough BBDO released its report as an
.. evaluation" and an "analysis," It was filled with
observaUons to potenUal advertisers about the de-
sirability of buying daytime commercials.
"75-76 Rebate
'Double Tax' Gets
'No' Vote in SJC
San Juan Capistrano's troublesome "double taxation" issue reared
its head again as councilmen backed away from approving additional
tax rebates to residents of two southwest San Juan housing tracts. The issue arose last year, when city 01t1c1als learned that two
special taxing <Ustricts were continuing to tax residents of the Mission
Bell Ranch and Mariners Village
tracts even though they had been
annexed to the city in 1975
THE CAPISTRANO Bay Park:.
and Recreation District and the
Capistrano Beach Sanitary Dis
trict were taxing residents for
services at the same time the city
was charging residents for iden·
tical services.
Councilmen last year
authorized more than $9,000 in
rebates for 1975-76 taxes coll ect·
Disgruntled
ManClwmps
Victim's Ear
THISTED, Denmark (AP>
Police were loolctng today fo r a jooless worker who bit off the ear
ed by the two districts.
City officials said they backed
the rebate at the time because
they believed themselves
responsible for failing to begin a
severance process from the
special districts.
WEDNESDAV, HOWEVER,
city officials claimed further in-vestigation of the issue revealed
at least one of the districts knew
about the double taxation.
·'We supported the rebates last
year because we were responsi-
b I e for failing to initiate
severance proceedings and we
thought they (the two districts)
didn't know about the tax situa·
lion," City Manager Jim Mocalis
explained.
'Roiue' Tips
Fishing Boat
REDWOOD CITY CAP>
-A IS.foot "rogue wave" smashed onto a private
fishing boat, hurling a large
party of fishermen to the
decks and injuring five or
them, authoritJes said.
The 65-foot boat, Captain
John, was just off the
Farallon Islands when it
was hit Thursday by the
towering swell.
A rogue wave is an er-
rant swell in an otherwise
smooth sea.
'Ulsh' Topic
Of Seminar
''How To Raise Cash" will be
the topic or a business dev-
elopment seminar to be held
Tuesday at the Marriott Hotel by
the Newport Harbor Area
ChamberofCommerce.
The program, which runs from
1;.r·~~~·<f~~-.:0'"</1' of a labor exchange ofCicial and
The council voted unanimously
to rebate $1,521 to four property
owners who were neglected un·
der the earlier rebate program.
but declined to refund over $8,000
in recreation truces collected by
the park district in 1976-77.
3 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. features
Donald Royce Jr .• vice
president and director of
corporate finance for William R.
Staats Company; Leonard
Morgan, assistant vice president
and corporate banking officer for
the Bank or America, and A.G ....
Timothy Hay, president or
Security Pacific Capital Corp.
•
Cleanest /tlud Bill i11 Town
With rare form and youthful abandon. the
'mud slide" at Irvine's Adventure Play-
ground gets its initiation and is approved
ror summer use. Dave Cramer, top two
photos, demonstrates how to get the most
out of a hiU. a tarp and a little water. At
the bottom of the slide Dave, right, makes
a smooth landing in the company of Jim
Barnsley, left and Bobby Hurd. Playground
hours are 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesdays
through Saturdays. Whether mothers enjoy
the facility as much remains to be seen.
Mesa Club Limits
Choice Start Tin1es
Lady golfers al the Costa Mesa
Golf and Country Club will get
>referred starting limes only
>nee a week Instead of twke a
week, the city council has ruled.
Keith Van Holt, director of the
~it.y's D!ipartment of Leisure
5ervices, defended the reduction
>f preferred starting times for
.vomen by saying most courses
>(fer only one women's and one
nen's day per week.
"WE ORIGINALLY recom-
nended that the women get
ruesdays only, but we aetUed for
?!1day'1 only," he explained.
Be said Wednesdays wm. re-
nain set ulde for the men at the
l.oe IAgoa course from a Lm. un-
il 1 p.m. Women only Pl~ will
Mt from 8to10 a.m. Frfd•n un-
Sparkler Blamed
In SC Roof Fire
der the new regulations.
Councilmen also approved
special ratet1: for junior duffers
thla week, charging $12 a month
to play the Mesa Lloda Course
and $15 per month to play the Los
Lagos course.
THOSE RATES ARE good for
one 18-bole round per day and
good only after 12:30 p.m., ac-cordlng to Van Hott. The rates
apply after 1 p.m. in the summer
months.
Those rates were to apply to
senior citizens also, according to
City Manager Fred Sorsabal, but
the council decided to bold over.-
decision on the afternoon hours
until their next meetln1.
Some aemors obJeeted to the
aftetne:IOD ttartlng timet, tQtni
they preltrr«S to play In the moml.Qg.
BIOR SCDOOL AND college
team pl91era will conu.nue to be
allowed tree fOlf play d~ the
•s>rlnt according to th• new
rules, but councilmen ])laced a
limit on the number of playetf. VanHoltutd.
"We J~t llmlted tho t amlf to
1.t team playert and two cO&cbes
ror the acbooll," he sald. Tea ma
u1ln1 tM 2$4·acre facltfttet In·
elude Oranie Coaat Coll•••l
Cott.a M•u. E1tancla ana
Newp0r1. HarbOr ltl1b SCtiOOl. .
Newport, Set
For Dodger
Night Fest
Aug. 11 will be Newport Beach ·
ni1ht at Dodger Stadium during
which a host of city dignitaries
led by Mayor Milan Dostal .m
be seea in pre.game ceremonies.
Reserved seats for the game
between Cincinnati Reds and the
Dodgers" are being sOld through
the city Parks, Beaches and
Recreation Department and the
Harbor Area Bueballoftice.
There . are 1,000 reserved $3
seata and 500 $4.50 box seats Oll
sale fer $3.SO and $5. The money
above the regular price of the
tickets will ao to the baseball
program.
Free bus transportation will be
Pf'OVlded lot ~ wbo make iibe1r rwenatlona through the
tecreatioo departlllent or thd butball •.
J'or 1"::&:11ntortnatlon,
eoatact the PB&R office at
8(0.22'7L
. Qaeen Speaks
SENNELAGER. West
Germany CAP) -Britain's
Qu•an Elizaboth I' flew to Cerrnany Th"rsdat and re·
vtewed the Britlab ~Y ol the
Rhine which paraded ln tribute
to her 25 yeart on the throne.
·'That. &ha terralJa ta bild btr9 e11i·
pbatlul OQI' ea.a._• ta
m ainll.Dd ol Europe," abeaald. :
left it wrapped in paper with the
handwritten message· "This 1s
your ear."
The victim was Ame Jensen.
head of the Koldby labor ex·
change office near here. Doctors
put the ear back in its right place,
but told Jensen it probably would
never be quite the same old ear
·POLICE IDENTIFIED
Jensen's assailant only as a 34·
year-old worker who bad been
jobless for a long time and re-
peatedly had refused to take the
jobs offered by the labor ex·
change.·
Police said be came rushing in·
to the office after Jensen had
phoned him to say there was a
jofi for him as a farm hand. The man made it clear he did not
, want that kind of work and then
reacted violently at the prospect
of losing his unemployment re·
lief.
JENSEN TOLD POUCE the
irate wor~er ~umped over a
counter, knock4!d bim to the floor
and d~bis teeth into h1.s lettear.
Jensen fainted aad when he
came to his atta~er bad
vanlaheli. But on the counter wa~
the ear, wrapped in paper. ·
A charwoman and one of
Jensen's colleagues put the ear
in a glass of salt water and took it
and ita owner to the nearest
hospital.
Police said the ear-biting man
would be cbarfed with assault and battery o public . olflclal.
which is punisblble by a prison
term.
·SJC Council
Supports TV
' Control Law
A new law reguJat.in1 cable ~evilicm Ill San Juan Capistrano
b .. been endorted by city coun-cilmen.
The new city ordinance would Dl'OVl.de more control over cable
TV franchlaes an4 ~" tbe in· JttaUc. ol pay TV, wb1cb wu
previously p:rohiblted b1 city or-. clin°"' If councilmen a_pprove tbe or-
cllnuce at their next m~.
the law 'frill become •ff.cdw ao
dafl later.
Clb , ofUojals tald the \aw 1'ould not bav• immodlatt m·
1 pact Oil cable TV comp,ni• but
would ,alJow tMm to apPly tot a ftanch!MJundtr the new r.,Wa· Uona .. Tbe(Jfdjn~• provld• etb rt·
ril•Uoft of cable ratet, 1ttvtce r ..... iddl • smicram11llnt Uid Mrl.._.~#lor uau
c:omplabda.
Councilman John Sweeney
suggested affected homeowners
file a taxpayer suit against the
recreation district. to recover
those taxes.
San luan Area
Tickets for the seminar cost $6
for chamber members and $10
for non·members.
Higher Water Rate
To Stay in Eff eel
Residents of San Juan Capistrano and the adjacent Dana Knolls and
Spotted Ball areas will continue to pay higher water rates originally
imposed on an interim basis May 1 .
County Wat~r District No. 4 directors, who are also San Juan city
councilmen, voted 5·0 this week to raise water rates by 11 percent over
last year's rates.
The new rates of $4 base fee,
plus 33 cents per 100 cubic feet of
water (about 748 gallons) used,
are made necessary by a sur-c barge imposed by the
Metropolitan Water District
<MWDl, which sells District No.
4 its water, officials said.
Distrlct dire&tors also ap-
p rov e'd unanilhously a $1.3
mlllion budget for 1977-78, up
from $1 million for the previous
fiscal year.
Increases are greatest in the
areas of capitaJ outlay and
bisher water costs. said· T.J.
Meadows, manager.
Lindi Hobbs of 'El Toro, a student at Saddleback
Colleae. is among cootu-
tanta for the lltle of Oranae CoUnty queen. to be .select-
ed Sunday ~feitu at the count)'.' fair, cb opeiia Ju-
ly 15. soe 11 e daughter ol
Mr. and Mn. Vlctor Hobbe.
Utility Line
Study Asked
A study lnto the feasibility of
putUng public uWity lines under-
ground along portions or
Stonehill Drive in Dana Point bas
been ordered by the Orange County Boa.rd of SuperviAors.
The conversion would be along 1
Stonebill from Street of the
Golden Lantern t.o Set va Road. .
Supervisor Tom Rtlef said Ule
$300.000 conversion project would '
be financed primarily by the San ,
Diego Gas and Electric Com-
pany. 1
Viejo Man
Serves Again
William C. Kobler, a resJdeot
of lllNion Viejo and trustee in 1
tbe Saddleback Valley UoJI!ed I
School District, baa been re-I elected director of the Calltomla, 1
NeYad.a and Hawail Dlstrict Ex-1 cbaqeCIW..
Kobler, A pa.rt president of the
Excbaqse Club of tbe Sad-1
dleback'Valley, was elected dUr·
tn1 the club's 53rd anAual con-I ftlltlOa In Fresno.
I
I
A visit« from SU 'oee told t Cotta Mesa pol~ aomeone Aole t
he( racQuetbaU bat conlalnlns I
lporb 41tuipmeo~ and eub wblle •he wu planq tbe 11me at ·oranse Cout 1Colle,e Wednes-
da1.
· Judy Rote Sutch. u , aald
tbe baa anc1 conteo~ valued li1 taff, were taken from tb racq~ CCIUl't a.t 10:30 a.
Wedo.du.
L.M.Bo11d
How to Shave
In 20 Seconds
How lontt doea It take )'OU to 1ha'4(f' Men
d1rter gr<'all} in thl!C matter t'cw can do the
1ob in IE>si. than 15 t.t>condi Some 1¥kc 1cveul
m1nutt's Many yeura ago 11 became clear that
ll would do to lurn how to be 1wlrt al that
li(t>long rhore tr you chan&e blades evtiry
third day and ui.e put.hbutton foum , you can
run an avera.:e or ~ seconds pt!r shave.
In lhe old dayi., cin lndum boy wa-given
one name ut birth, took on anolher name at
about age 13. was dubbed with st.JU a dUfereot
name alter perform an&: some notable feat such
as k.111.tng a bear. and wound up with yet a
changed name again upon retirement age
BERMUDA TRIANGLE
Q The Bermuda tnangle. tbal South
All.mllc ocean area between .MUlmJ, San Ju.an
Jnd Bermuda. is i.upposed to be hexed in some
way How many ships and planes have been
lost then.> without a trace m lhe last 50 years"'·'
A More than 60 ships and 40 planes. No
wreckage, no distress !>tgnaJs no bodies, no
:;urv1vor:; (L's weird
Q. "Ho"' dad the Louisiana town of Baton
Rouge get its name?''
A From a red post
that marked the boundary
between two Indian
hunting grounds.
Q .. !l as anybody
parachuted off the Statue
of Liberty and Ii ved to tell
about it?"
A . At leas t one
somebody did A stuntman
named FR. Law. In 1912
Q "Quick, Louie, where's the world s
largest pyramid,"
A. Near Puebla, Mexico. snapped back
he No, that ·s a lie. I looked it up.
ACHIEVERS
Question arises as to what the so-called
super achievers have in common Am talking
about men h ke St Thomas Aquinas and
Thomas Edison and Albert Einstein. people
who do great things Studies show just about
,ill of them were none loo popular as
youngsters. t•\c·ept maybe for a lone friend
each They n·rtainly weren't party types And
a lot of them had trouble in school , too They
were d1fferC'nt in tndcfinahlc ways from the
outset, and miserable most of the time. Might
keep that in mind 1f you 'r e beginning Lo get the
1mprcss1on that one of your kids is an oddball.
Did I It'll you thut one of every four men in
this country 1s named John or Wilham or
Jaml'sorCharlt•s or Georg<."'
Our Language m an says that word
"umbrage,·· which we now lake to mean
reio;cntmcnt, ori~inally m eant a s hadowy
outline.
First of the well known fe male pipe
smokers in this country was Pocahontas.
FnCS.y. July 8, 1977 DAILY PILOT A 9
Coast Folks Urged to 'Save Water'
By KATH Y CLANCY
Ofl,_ D•ll• 1'1'-l$1MI
Orange Coast residents are being asked to join
their nei8hboris throughout Southern Cahfornia in
makine water conservation a new way of life, a
hlih·ranlung water agency offlcaal S4dt[Thursday.
John H Lauteo, general manager of the
Metropolitan Water District, told an Anaheim au·
d1ence, "We are hoping that the conservation we
achieve now wiJI stay w1lh us.
"LOOKING JUST a few year:. ahead," Lauten
told members of Orange County l"orum of Town
Hall, "we probably are going to have a shortage of
water not because of the lack of water as much as the
Jack or energy to pump it..'
Lauten also said water conservation and the 10
percent cutback in water 'use·agency officials are
seeking may not reduce reside~ts· water bills.
BECAUSE WATER agencies have fixed costs
relating to lhe1r equipment. Lauten said, water con·
servalion could result m some rate increases.
Oenms MacLa1 n. general manager of the
Municipal Water District of Orange County. con·
tacted after the meeting, said he knew or no agency
in the county planning a rate increase presently
because or conservation
MACLA.IN, WHOSE agency purchases import·
ed water from Metropolitan and sells it to 36 local
agencies, said increased rates likely would not
come about immediately
The dollars residents spend for water probably
would not change, MacLam said, becaus e rate
hikes caused by conservation probably would be
tied Lo the amount conserved
Tall Club
Selects
President
Solon Goodson of
Anaheim has been elect
ed president of the Tall
Club of Orange County
Goodson works at the
UCI Medical Center
ORANGE COUNTY
LAUTEN A~ told the audience failure by re-
sidents tt> cut their water use could cause rates to
increase even more as water supplies dwindle.
the Southern CaWorn1a area that there 1s a water
shortage," Lauten said. "D~PITE THE FACT that we have the worst
drought in the history in the north and that part of
our waler supply comes from the drought·slricken
areas," Lauten continued, "we still have a large
percentage of our population that does not believe
there is a water shortage."
Lauten said the 10 percent cutback in waler use
will enable Southern California to aet through this
year's drought with an ample supply in storage to
cover an emergency for perhaps lhree more years.
"The 10 percent conservation that bas been ro·
quested should be relatively easy to achieve if we
can persuade the 11 million people that live within
Lauten noted that 42 percent or the water used
in Southern CaUf~nia Is used'by homeowners. half
inside the home and half outside.
Valley's
Warner
Elected
Joan Warner, ex·
ecutive vice president of
the Fountain Valley
Chamber of Commerce,
will be ins talled in
August as the new presi·
dent of the Federated
Chambers or Commerce
of Orange County
Dan Roge rs o f t he
Newport Harbor Area
chamber has been elect·
ed vice president or the
group. Ned Fox of the
Los Alamitos chamber is
l reasurer and Bud
Trai n e r of t h e
Westminster chamber is secretary.
Th e f e d e r a ted
chamber is composed of
c hamber r epresen ·
tatives from 20 Orange
County cities.
DIVORCE s 100.00 , _____ _
h(er C. ~.JD.
AftorMy
494--0737 If 545.0437
DEWVORH
STE AH •••••••••••••
2 DINNERS FOR '• 1 1
Delicious New York Steak II
served with soup or salad, e -
choice of potato or rice pilaf, roll and butter.
Bring this coupon with you and enjoy 2 dinners at a special II
price. This offer is good at Spires Restaurants in Costa Mesa
and Irvine only and ends July 31, 1977. Coupon special must •
be consumed on the premises and Is served from 2 p.m. to 10 p.m. •
The Tall Club or~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-Orange County 1s a
social c lub for the
purpose or uniting and
organmng tall men and
women for their mutual
benefit Membership re
qu1remenLc; for the Tall
Club are 6'2" he1~ht for
men and 5'10 • height for
women, 21 year:-. old or
over. single or married.
Plan Approve d
LOS ANGELES <API
The City Council has
approved a mulli·milhon
dollar financing plan for
a three-story municipal
se rvic e center near
Union Station . The
council voted to all ow a
nonprofit organization to
issue S6-t m1lhon 10
r eve nue bonds f or
construction of the Plaza
Technical Cenkr
a~t\
ea k----r~-----....
SPORTING GOODS 4 SUPER SPORTSHOPS
SELLING FUN FOR 53 YEARS
MID SUMMER \
For the Record FAMOUS MAKE ALL AT · SELECT GROUP
TENNIS DRESS
SALE
ALL AT
.ffarrlage
Llcen•e•
\.\urn 1\1 rr int luth
Jl.H"lt •. ,,,,
r{')Nt FV "Mil•• ,..,.,tr•tk
'c, Pour kt._ ?O '""' hit ( OllM•n. '" bot"
ril Vl•''''""tn .. trr 1•AVt1rc:.~rAr\ 1n1111C·•·•••rl' ''
•rlt• r .ru..,., " t ''I' Jll•h J' .._.,,,
i noh•llnl'~t"
GIFFIN
OHN H GIFFIN ''°,.'"•·I fot Mi
''0"' V1r10 (' "'''"',,' t P.t~'fll'O .hllifA't lu
ly ,. 11111 ~rvo""'(I D'I h4\ wilt· JC' MH'
ct hrqhl~r C•ndv .-no motn1·r Mr.,
l '"'" n ,. G-1fl" Mti-l"'Of••I ,. ',.,,,_,
"'"' Jult Cl, " C04M '' PrHD¥tf•r1•f'
ft'!Vf\h nt '"''' M . .\\I• f 1f'lll"S• M HflVf°' 1lr ,,,.,,W•Y M4'''°" V1-10 \.toel'f wr-.
("-'oP•MOrtUAryd•rHtOf'\ '" roo
M'fVIL RIRCHAl l ltl'1ll'\~~r>H•U
JR Nt•wnl)tl A,..d n ~:H~d ~VI-"'"
fl,Uff"' ,,. (P\~tMm N J
JUNE 10
t lf.M T Mill FR GlPnn Mt" 11 lS
tlnO f~o"""' KMtih•t•n 18 bo·n ni
( l l V~ON ANO[ R'>ON 8r,11 • r Hf tor" 18 '"'d Ctith• L """ llJ, tw1rh of Hunllt'Wllon 8ft1Kh
IC I l GQllf·JS RAN rz vr•gorv ~t'lf'rwOOd 1S tlnd l .,,, J.-,,n 11. DOlt'I
nf l •qvn" CW-"'cn
f\lA(l(l Ell HICl<MAN Jondlnon
lO<fH 18 of '°"°"" Of'I M<tr M1<1
\U\M'I J,.An 1•. ot Aritof\i' C•ty ,,.,,,
\N\"0£11 PA•OR JoflnWllh•m.•R
>f f I ftW"t'I An(I lr .. nf" MA~ •9 ot
f'~n'lPAr• :>l OE \Ml fH 0Aw1d EVQIP'nt". 21 ,.,,
Co\tl1' /ll#vt W'ld Proov ,.~,, 11 OJ
Faont ,.n VAlh·y
JUN E 11
MfYFA A081NSON llOn•ld J 16
Ano GM'llfa Ann_ n bf')thof lrv1nf"'
r.AMAR·STONE Mdr" Jo•v•ph 1J
"~ Ofobordl'I (•rot 11 tw>tP\ ot tfunl
•N)tOin 8t"4'Cf\
Ol'>OH AOlllN!.ON • Mu"h
-----------Artnur 11 ~ Poll11Wlff' CAttd1c .... 11
PIH ,AMILY
COLONIAL FUMHAl
HOME
7801 Bolsa Ave
Westminster
893-3525
PACIPIC YllW
MIMOllAL f'.Uw
Cemetery Mortuary
.Chapel
3500 Pacific View Drive
Newport. Cahforn1a
6 4 ... 2700
McCOIM1CC
MOITUARIH
Laguna Beach
494-9415
Laguna Hills
788-0933
San Juan Capistrano
49S-1771
notna1 SMCt,.mirot,.
HE&AEN lEBO
(,..111!.TfNS(N CHRl~f[NSfN
J0<.00h Edw1tl ~. r1•m,1rr1 ·d AA"'
MdttP •e» bothofD,.,MP01nt
I EHMAN Sl LEGEi> AIC••·yJu•
11 M~d I" rtrt-n Jtdm n bclth al rnun
t1'1nVJ1l1ffy
'CH(l(~t NAVlOV (',,•,-,Hd • •t.,
ind M1t1• Jttdn O haln ot "o"nt.tttf\
Vfllllti.V TANSEY WllLLSrHl ~vfR
M1cnorl J 1•, E-1 foro ,1nd M1Cl\f'ltt
Ann• 10 ll')Mt Of$t1(t1
"EPP.Al.& TAYON D•YldMICM"I
?S Md Pa""''" E l• bolhol lrvln• OEANEll 8AIL1Fr M1ch~•I
E•rlt-, 19. IW'td ftl11ro1Hy M 11 t"M>thof
l aQuflll Hllh1
~TASS.ART WOODS Lor•" A ll
NorlhtH:k1fl' 11nd C1111tt'I., Ann 1\ Huru
1noton e~.,,
JUf't• ,,
H0llAN0 (.Al l .&HAN JoM Al
1-t" 11 and Sc01h JO both ot N,#port
8fl'A(h
MAl'MIS OOVGI AS JuHu' COf'1d't'
Jr 17. L~ Anq.-1-~ •"CJ frenc•,.
M•chPlrnt 11 C•0t\tr11no6te<h
PUTNEY MAC IHTOSH Aon••a •rtttur n. Hunungeon Bf-1,.n. -'nd
Cvntf\16 •nnt. 11 (0\1"1 M4ts.t
Ell ETT HOl TZCl AW Jol•I\
frt•odoff" .)9 •f'Wt Sfotty Met• \0 botrt o• W•,tm1n\1··r
~HIPP~£ Pl\~IJ1rt 0 11 •na
N1f1lyl"li l1 botttbothot lr"Vtn•
PESTA·HALl At•n L•• 11
W•\lm1ntt-r MtO N,."' 'f Jt•n JO
•Nh~tm
THIESING IAW•H Rn11•ld Cl 11,
""" 1<11hl..., M1trl• "·both ol CO'll• Mt'ol
HOOD WAKfl'•ELO r•rry
Edward, lO, llnd V1<lort• Ann. 1• bolh
ol Huntlnoton lle&Ch
GAAAETT·MENOE t<•rmtt Vic
tor, S6, l 1.Kl'f'~ V11trv, oitnd J&'
Qu•lln• G•rdnor. SO. C•Ol•tr•no
6Hd> l
MILLEA·WEBll O•nltl Al•n, 1',
Yucca V•llf!Y, '"" Sh•nnon Collffn,
'°··Co•l8MtM 60U$EMAN 80US&MAN Wllllam
0•1•, 57, ,.,,...,.., Pitlrltla J Sl,
bblhOllNIM
t<Ul U•GOl(ICAYA -s.dtUln. JO. incl ~1lflt. t1. l!Ol1'ol Hunlll'Qlon Bu<h
Hl\NSl!H·GONJALl!l Lori Je•n.
11, Co"• Mna, -.-...., R-r 11, S.nl•AM
HESHelM-C1'Al""TOH "''"'°"° M., 11, -lou<H .&.~N, 17. llOlll 01
·~ "THOMAS·MIAllll.l Alcll•rd
o.n.io, tt. Sim• ""• """ 101hr-,11 A-, 171 -tllOIOll IH<ll
llAllKHVl'ST·LOf'EZ J•""'' J , o. co,t• Mna. _ v,,011••• » lanv 8••<" YILLAHl<.<101..I! M1(11ttl lOV".
30, .... ~.....,,. "· Dolll Of ........
8MCll
CllAWl'OlllO•COOIC RO••t waH~r. ct. Ind 5-E .. lt. ootn .,
"""' l11ttM 9Nt" GAii VtY·OAAVJ!V -lllCharlt J~ Jl, E:IQOr1, 111. ,_;.,ltd l.•Vtr/19 M. 2
CO\lt~
SWIM TRUNKS
LAGUNA -HANG TEN
SURFLINE HAW All
Al Wool-Xnit Stripe Collar, Cuff ond Waist·
20~F
s79s
bQnd it.g. 40.00 Sonia Ano Store Only
ALL GOLF BAGS
McGr99or -A jay
Dunlop -Atlantic
ALL VOIT
SOCCER BALLS
ALL SHOTGUN
AMMUNITION
STRAW SPORT HATS
Planters -Model
ALL ARCHERY BOWS
s109s
ALL WINCHESTER SHOTGUNS
Floor Models SAVE
DURA FIBER LITE
40% s299s
s299s
con. s219
25%
it
'
•
\
--
Al• DAit v PIL.OT Frldax, Ju'X I, ttrr
Mortgages May Meet New Needs
Doaald Laln:norf', lrvlne, bas been named na·
tloaal ula manafer for DtuJ x. He la formt!r nu
tlonaJ a&l• mana1er for Master lnduatlic11 • o..,JuC'ampbf'll of Corvnadcl Mar. pr~ident
and 1en«al manaJ(l'r of Hob e C~l. an lrvlne
div'"°" ol the ('ofeman ('omp•oy, bu been eJocWd
a corpe>ratc nee prtaldl'nt of Coleman. Ile has ~t:n
u1o<'i1ted Wllh Cotemian tompan.IH since 1956 and
JOlned lloba· Cill •ltcr its 1076 acqula1Uon. • Katttt Obrloier ha. bt·ttn named i.tore m»nager
of the I ....... .11tore that lJ duo Lo open tbia fall at
Soutb Coast Plua. She bu been wjth the store
cbajn since 1968 and I• former at.ore rnanaaer in
Pasadena. • Honored with "eotch•n trowel" tiwards by1
the M asonary Trade PromoUon Truat of Oranaei
County wen· Bluell/A.•iaa Auod1&.ea, Newport
Beach, ar<'h1tect, aod Robert Laweoo, Newport
Beach, structural engineer, tor the Irvine Jn ..
dustrial Complex headquarters building; Wllliam
BlurMk and Partners, Newport Beach, architect,
and Martin and Tranbarger, Newport Beach, struc•
tural engineer, for faculty offices and the ad-
ministration and fme arts bwldings at Orange
Coast College; Antlloay and Langford, Huntmgton
Beach, architect, for the airport ttash/fire rescue
station; and Pertdlan Group, Newport Beach,
archnect, walls in for Woodbndge Village, Irvine. • Dr. Jamt>S F. Reagan, Newport Beach, has
been named vice president and senior adviser for
tactical systems al Rockwell lnternational's
Autonetics croup. He has beaded the missile
systems division since 1972 and now is responsible
for developm1.:nt of business plans for tactical mis· sile programs.
* New officers of the South Coas& Plaza board of
directors are Larry Ober of Larry Douglas, presi·
dent: Don Rooten, ftooten's Luggage, chairman;
Joe Metcalf, Sears, treasurer, and &nt Simonsen,
the Hotel Men's Store, vice president. • Charles W. Missler, Corona del Mar, has been
elected president and chief executive officer of
Western Digital Corp., replacing H F. Faught,
former chief officer, who continues as chairman of
the board. The position of president has been vacant since 1975.
Missler was previously associated with Ford
Motor Company, TRW a nd Systems Development
Corp. and was a founder of Cyphernetics Corp.Y'or
the past seven years he has been with the Missler
Group of Newport Beach
• Bank or America has announced the following
personnel appointments:
--Steven Carnevale has been named vice presit-
dent and assistant manager of the Newport Center
offi ce. He 1s former assistant vice president and
credit administrator with the bank's corporate
banking North America division in Los Angeles
-Donald Clavesllla has been appointed assis
tant vice president and business development of
ficer at the lrvine Industrial office in Newport
Beach. He is former assistant vice president and
commercial loan officer at the Anaheim main of
fice.
-Lee Heins. Irvine. has been named real
estate loan officer al the LallWta Beach office He
succeeds Lvnn Schneiler, who has moved to the
Fountain Valley branch. Heins Joined BofA in 1973 as
a teller.
• Barbara Derry, San Juan Cap1slrano. has been
named savings supervisor al the Irvine office of
Home Federal Savings and Loan Association of San
Diego. She is former customer service represen-
tali vein the San Juan Capistrano office.
• Ruby ~I. Boecker has Joined the Costa Mesa
lffi ce or Glendale "Federal Savings as regional con-
;umer loan officer. She has several years' ex-
>erience in the financial industry and most recently
Nas consumer loan officer for a savings and loan in
fan ta Ana. • Gary D. Johnson of Costa Mesa, partner in the
1ccounting firm of Arthur Young & Company, has
>ee n elected secretary or the Long Beach/Orange
:ounty chapter of the California Society of Certified
?ublic Accountants.
He has served in a number of elected and ap·
>ointed positions within the chapter, including
:hairman of the committee on cooperation witb
'red it grantors.
He is also a member of the Board of Directors
>I H1g HrothersofOrange County.
Also elected were president,
rames J. Sullos Jr .. Long
Jeach; vice president. Gayford
j . Hinton, Fountain Valley; and
reasurer, Thomas L. Andrew,
rvine
Elected to the board of
lirectors were Howard D.
lland, Huntington Beach; Uoyd
if. Brown, Orange; Eu1ene J.
:orman, Fullerton; Jeannie E.
hnklns, Anaheim: Lee A. JOHNSON
.asber, Huntington Beach; Evan J . McDowell,
,ong Beach, and W. Richard MUia, Costa Mesa. • Patrick Harper, Newport Beach, has joined
leld Advertlsln1 & Public Relations, Irvine, as
enior art director. He previousl)' headed his own raphic design firm.
OCC to Offer
Manager Class
By nae Anoe lated Press
If you'ro lrylnt to fl(Ul'C ouL way to borrow
enouah mooey to buy a hou.~e. lake heart. The
ban kl are tryloi to fil\ll'C out a way to lend it to you.
Tho problem, u many would-be homeowners
have dilcove.red. ta the soaring price of housing,
which bu required more money down and heny
monthly mort•aa• payments.
THIS PaEDICAMENT HAS many lenders
thlnkiq about a new typo of mortgage.
''We've aot to tailor the mortgage to adapt it to
varying suges ln the life cycle of the borrower,''
suys Tony Frank, president of the California Sav·
m1a & Loan League.
"To have level-payment mortgages u we do
now ls a t&ralaht jacket into which not all borrowers
fit. For example, for young people, we need a
mort1qe th.at perm I ti lower payment.a at the start,
wben tbe:lr lncome ls lower. As their income rises in
later years, their payments would go up.•·
FRANK WOULD LIKE TO SEE mortgage pay-
ments figured as a portion of family income, say 25
percent. so that the payments would automatically
rise as the family's income increases. He notes that
some lenders in the East are able to offer almost 100
percent fmanclng by using a borrower's savings ac-
count partially as a down payment and partially as
a reserve for reducing monthly payments.
Punch
"Bad newe, honey-Jo11u ju1t resigned."
Petitions Filed
In U.S. Court
The following have filed petitions of bankruptcy
in Santa Ana Federal Court:
-Le. S•tnC>Son. Oolng tlll>lneis at
Lee S'"'""°""' AMlques, trO Virgin!•
Place Co~1• Me.. ho llUtd
llU1lllllt> of ~l.IS1 •ftd UMh of
n.~ J udQeA IC PNtpslla•beefte,..
s19,..,dlo1Mc.w
-VIOi EU•n 8rhsev. •001
H•wport SllOr~• Ori••· HtwPOrl
8ucn r.M 11\lfcl Ila•"""" ,,. 16.ttl And uni\ or 11.110 JUOQe A I(
PftelPSIW\l>H<l•st•QnfOIPlheC-
-w on Young °"· '°'""''¥ 004"9 bus•neu .» M.I<"\ E .. on Service St•
11.,,.. MJJ 0orw11 Ori~, Hun1lno1on
8UCh, ""\ 11\lfcl ll•b•IHIH of S 165.SK
Md asset> ot Stl,lOCl. JuOQt A.K.
PtwlP~"·"-""'~lotnecau. -Dan L Harr Ison. IJ1 1 tlh SI , S.el
8 .. cll. MS llSl.0 llobll1tln of Sl• • .OO
and aueh ,,. s•.ns JudOe Pel•• El·
11011 h.s-.isf9'\ecl tottw <•M·
-Co"'"" Glynn Armtt•C>n9. 1t?t
Marguertt, Aw .• Corona del Mar. M l
'"''" ••sots ol 11.011 -11.iillltlH ol Ul,HS Judge AK. Phelps h.ta been
•nl9nl'O to the cue.
-Ritt'Wlrcl David 0-y, 6U 51.
Annes Drive.~ a.ac11.11n t1sl·
fcl ll•blllllH a( S2•.lll -e1wts ol $1. 100. JUOO-A. IC. l>ttel ps hH bMn H •
S•Qne<I to the t•M.
-Pelrkle M DfouQree. 16161 Vlew-
e>Olnt L-. Huntington Beacll. llH
11\lod 11.c.ttttlH ol S1,8?8 -.swtt ol U .00. JuOge Pletor Elliott ... , Oten
~sslgneo to the ca-..
RobHt ~ron•lln Htatll. f0r,...r1r
00U'9 DINntu "' HHlll llQlltlno Su!>-ply Co. He•lll tNrc,,_1,1119 •flcl
Supoty Compeny ancl 01\lritlllllon
Unllmllld. Inc •~ 81rdtwoacl A~
s.a1 &ff<h. ""' 11'1"<1 lltbllltitt of
111111 l111 -nseh of H.-O. Jucf9<' A .. -Ill\ ~ bffn UiitMd IO I ...
<•H· -L0<'1tA OW!Mlroe o.q1.,.. U161 EI c..t>••to. El Toro.""' t11te<l ll•bllltln
Ot Sl.10-Mid a\MU ol UOO JU09t
P,1 ... Elllolt ~ -•u'-d to,,,. .....
-EdW.,.cl ~ Kiii"" Jr., Im?
1'1-rt• C.•n:ie. Huntll\9ton e.ac11,
NS tl\tld llatlllltlft a( S.S.414 and M • se" OI MIO. J\ICllJt A IC. Pflelps NI -•nuslgnecl to ii.ow.
-SI._, E~N Wllll..,..S. 19'1$ San Aflt-. Fountain V•lltY hn 11•1·
•O 11.tl>llJtles OI U.1<0 •ncl auei. ol
11 ... 6. Jud09 ~1tr Elllott NI llHA
•Ulgne(I tot"9 <•se.
-Low•O Oun Gr.oce. llr02 VPl9&
Or. .. , 14untlngton 11 .. cll, ll•S llaled
ll•blllli.s ol 11',011 •nd aH•ll of
Sl,650. JUdc1e Pleftr EHIOlt twl bten anl9M(lloti.u ...
-s..u.n Sff4ev o-., »"2 Blw Lantern, O•ne Point. llH Uattct
llA!tltllltt 01 '11,110 •nd •tMll of
&>,ISO, J"°" A.IC. l>ttelP$ NI bten A._ ''"'"'°''-<-. -WtncM Jeon Uotf, II Ma•'l111•
Drlv•. Stal &Hell, 110 1111.0
llablllllei of SUIOMICI eHeb6'tl10. JU4Jtt ,._w 1:11100 Nt oeen •:u'9Md
IOlllooca ...
-T!loma MIUIHI Rudd, 1-ltl•
trtdt, Wtst,..lnscer, Ilea lltl•d ttaOllllletOl '7,1thllCI ••Milo! SI,,,._
J""'9 A.I(. """"" .... """ •»ltftM IOIMUM.
eel 11.i>•ll~ Of SU."° •ncl HW11 OI n .11o11 JuOgeA IC. Pftelost1..sbtet1as.
"9nt-dto tlltc-.
M1rt r .. t, •nc:., 7" New1on W•Y.
Co1te MH<I. ~ listed ll•Dllittff o1
IJ6.0'6 -IKMIS a( U.lH. J~ A IC. Pllelll\ !\as bM<1 eu~ 10 tM
<•~· R1ci..rc1J l!arry,...n ltt. lor-r·
•• °"'"9 DU>lnHs a1 Frf>cl Hyle Cotn· P•nr •n<I Frttlorm BurlwOOCI ot
C•lllornoa. m vic-1a. Coot• AMw. llH lhtf<I llltbllltles of 1 19.JU •nd e1-
setJ Of 11.on. ~A.I( P!Mlos lln
WH asS19NO tolhtt-.
-Keren leslle IC0tn, t lOO Edinger,
Hunllnoton Beec11. llu tlsuo
tl•blllli",,. 1',111 ..,., eswts of U60.
Juc19t ,...., Elllott NS -•nloneo IOIMc•oe.
-Kat111een A1lft Scott, ltll 5-lor
A••·· N•wPOrt 8uc11, hH lltled
11.1111111 .. ,,. s..sn M1C1 ••~sot u.ooo. Juc19t Pe4er Elllotl N$ -ass~ 10111tcese.
-Olltld A. Brownell. IM"merly do-
lno blislneu M Sit""' Trials tnc., 603 Vlata 8cinlt .. ~ ......... I BeKll, .... list•
"llllfllMtles if 1w.1."3 •nd ess.11 °' Ut.4'1, JUdOe A. K. -IPI NJ boen
•nl9<1"" to tlWl ~se.
-Jowpto Wiiber Hlldr.tll, UA"
T•rreno Orillt. Mluloft Vlefo, 11.s lht-
"" 11..01111 ... o1 m . .., .,,., uset1 of
U.UO. Judge !'tiff' Elllolt NS l>Hn
•Hl9ned 10 the <Me.
-E nche,.ted lflllag•. l11c., •
Cal1forni• c.,.._a11..., 6122 tenott
A ..... I!-P...._ i..1 tt•tecl Hwh or
'3.316,too -11.i>fht!M Of lS.t'°.000-Ju~ A. IC Pllet,,. ""' bffn nslont'cl I01heCaw
-Wllllam Louise •~ion, "°'"9
buuno1 n W.L A. CO">lructl°"·
73'Tl El Mir~. L~"I NIO-. has
li•tt<f lllCllllUH ol iv m -assets
OI H .OJO J udge Ptl"' ElllO(l Ila• bton
nslonect to"-caw. _.__'1 ,,_,.,°" lllnl, doing blis ..
-• • Edlles pistrlllutor s.ies Com-pany, • ~nflll) c_..., ol
Aot>ert "-"'°" Rini and Gory s. Ee-let. doing buSlnoss as T1141 Ec-IH
Com""'1Y. e sole-i.torlhlp. 21051
si..w ~. Huntlnoton lkM<ll. II••• IKted 11Ml1Mlnof $"1.2'° •ftd •swts
a( .... J1.1c19a '-· IC. PMIPS N s *" •UigMd lo Ille caw. w., ...... si.....-1. ••so ~nown u WtYM Ar111Ur S-an. 11'1 Le.-r
Clrclt, HunllftQCOn 8tKll, 11.t1 llst•O
11 .. Uttles of IU,"7 •nd nsets Of '''·*· JudVf Pttt.,. Ellloll ""' b&tn anlvned to l"9 ca ...
-C.,rl"ll!Oft c. a.rrett, •lso kflo~I
.. Cao G.trrttl, 10).4 l• Mlred,a St..
LlMll\lft• 9Hdl. llA ll"ecl ll•l>lllllet OI ll'6,)tt ~ ....... Of S60S. Jucf9<0
Pol ... l!llloO .... •n Hilgnecl I• Ille CHt.
-s11 .. 11 Gr•<• D••dl11. 2Un • .,...""'"'* I&., Huftllftgton .. Kii.
lies llittd ''*'''* _. '10.n4 w ... "11 01 ••· JudM A.IC. P11e•111 lies '"11au1.-to1,..ue..
-SWiii c:.rel Alltft. 1lm M"'°" Clrcte, MMl!tlllot°" ilffdl. Ms listed ll•tllllllH oC ltt1 tnd 1\0 HHIS
Klltdlllt. J ............ e.tllett !\ti ...... .. ,1.,...t11tt1tum.
An advanced executive program for Joca.l busi·
1ess leaders and organiiatJon managel"S will be of·
ered at Orange Coast Colleae. Costa Kesa, begin·
ling in September.
-"1'9 ~¥91 ... ~. '""~ c1rc1e, liUMlllfC111 11 .. c11. Md t>ttM 11~11 .... ol ,,,,. llnd ... -'" .lllclOt lillllw .. IMl1 MllMeil ....... • lol,..c.9.
-DtM 1... '1~11. om s-t•
Sule-. ~•Ill Valtty, Ml 11.-
1!11 ~ J"°"' Pttttr •111on tiff """·~•a.t-. _ .,._ Mtrl"8 Ml)lef, tu"'-tCl!I
TM seminar, whlcb coolers ~ ul\it.1 ot col·
ece credit. will meet on Tuesda)'9 from 7to10 p.m.
'be firat 1es1ion of tb 11-we.ek proirarn Ss
c'*'uled fol' Sept. l3.
"INVlTATlONS WILL BE lSSUBl> tbh 1om-
aer to local cQqJOratlOOI and c>reanlutlons Lo
tcit. oae part1d~nt tor tho nw ldvanced ex· cutlft Pf'Oaram.• aaid MJDlnar d1n!ctor tucbard
•· Greene Jr. ''Otller lrltM'elted J*'IOftS may
l'llOll, but Tt;i.straUon limited."-G~e. a b\15lDeJS ConJu.llant, ls Lb• flUlhor or
'The Ma.nagemtnl Game" o..od '18uslnen Tn·
elUJen<:e and Esplona.ge." n. aem.inar will o!ff!r a now manaa•met1l
11tem tor multl·Pl nt manace.O'lent. Jt •ill leteribe new approaches to predicUn1 the lutur1
uMl impruvtna proft~btuty 1 al'ld will also ofttt new
ritw1 on penonnel ulect.km, dtvtlopment and ralaltll. '
l'or ilafotmaUoa abOut tho Pn>Cram, ~ IMillla.
1i
-WKMY TNINt AA<°'*'-MUS ~ .... .., ~ ,....,...., "•'19t'· ""' llsl.O flliblllflet of M,OI tftCt •ttttt tf
1100. Judtll ,..,. l.ltloll .... """ ... ""*' teu.c-. :M -ht~,'--'fOol,.Ml•
-.. l'"*ldWtMrll Mtn .... c. .. ,.,, ... --~Coll• ,,,,.... ll4lt lltlH llf'>llllte f1f .,,.,., 9M .......
"'4.CS.~ A.IC • ...._..,. ll9t ~ ,...,.._ ...... ~
-Vl<W °""'· m si-1 "'·· c.e. ~ ... .,.._ 11.-illtl• ..... ..,s
............. J\odole "·~ ~,,..-..n .......... ~c-. -OMNI ic.. ,._, Sf., 1 mt WI'
C.f!CMlle, """"41n 'Vat"' NI II_. lltbllllle• ., $12,141 M.41 ...... of
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S&L Chief Proposes More Flexibility
The techftlque, known as a "lip" mortgage,
haso 't been approved for California savings and
loans, but ia expected to be ottered here soon. Frank
thinks it's a step forward but objeat.s to the fixed
monthly payment& required. In fact, be would do
away with the• idea of 30.year, fixed payment
mortgages altogether.
"ll we were reinventing the mortgage today, it
wouldn't look the same at all," he contends. "To
have the same fixed payments for 360 months is ig-
norin' the fact that needs of the occupants change,
their mcome changes and the value of their house
changes."
$40,000, he notea, so the moothly payments might
still be quite hiib. Under a reverse mortgage, the
couple would pre-sell th Lr $40,000 equity to the
lender, who would use $10,000 to pay off the
mortgage. At that point the couple would no longer
bave monthly payments aod the rest ot the money
could be used Lo set up a lifetime annul()' for them.
Frank would also like to see what be calls a
"forbearance feature" in mortgaies to allow for
times when a homeowner ls laid off and uoabJe to
make his payments .
FRANK, PRESIDENT OF SAN Francisco-
based Citnen Savlngs and Loan, thinks mortgages
can also be used to help older couples.
"What an older couple might have is a great
deal of equity buUt up in a home, but relatively little
income and almost no chance of increasing that in-
come. the reverse of a younger couple,•• he says.
"IF HE OB SHE IS )aid orr through no fauJt of
their own, they wouldn 'l have to make payments for
six months or a year,•• he explains. "The payments
would be added onto the balance at the end and it
would give the people some breathing space."
Mortgages also could be used as an "umb_reUa"
for making other consumer Joans, accordmg to
Frank . '
"What could be done in that case is what's
·called a reverse mortgage or housmg annuity,
wbt!te they in effect presell the equity in their home
and get a lifetime annuity.••
"The way it is now, if you have a $50,000 house
and a $30 000 loan at 8 percent and you want to bor·
row another $10,000, a lender will rewrite the entire
loan and bring it up to a new interest rate," he says.
FRANK SAYS THE REVERSE mortgage, so
called because the lender pays the homeowner in-
stead of the other way around, can provide elderly
couples with a way to lncrease their monthJy in·
come without having to sell the home they've lived
in for years.
''l'D UKE TO SEE RIM pay the new rate only
on the new money. It would still be secured by the
home, but he wouldn't be paying higher interest on
the whole loan."
Frank offers the example of a couple with a
$50,000 house and Sl0,000 remaining on the
mortgage. The original mortgage might have been
Frank beHeves these and other kinds of flexible
mortgages will become increasin.gly J!<>Pular i;D
cQ.ming years as lenders adapt their pobc1es ~ fit
today's higher-priced houses and changing require-
ments of homeowners.
Records Told
Avco Financial Services, Inc .. Newport Beach
consumer finance company, has posted record net
earings for the 1977 second quarter and C1rst half. It
is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Avco Corp ,
Greenwich, Conn.
Net earnings for the second quarter and s1x-
months' periods which ended May 31, 1977, before
unreaHzed gains on foreign exchange fluctuations
and extraordinary credits ansing from the car·
ryforward of prior years' foreign tax credits,
totaled $14,692,000 and $27,013,000, up 30 percent and
24 percent, respectively, from the restated 1976
levels of $11,307,000 and $21 ,799,000.
Avco Community Developers, Inc .. a San Diego
subsidiary of Avco Corp., has reported record earn·
ings for its second quarter as well as for its first haJC
ended May 31.
Appof•ted1
Roberta S.
Karmel has re·
fused to confirm
that she h as
been named the
first woman to
serve on the
Securities and
Exchange Com-
mission.
Ov~r l'he Counter
HASO UstiftCJS
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J .. vt CCM-141 '°"*. ,,
TRANSAt:TIONS
ll N DAILY PILOT .4JJ
BealtlaCar~
Reasons Listed
For Cost Hikes
' ... ..
81 SYLVIA POJlTEll
Costa of health care, ranging &om the simplest physical exa.m &o the rnoet complicated procedures, kff P golns up.
And proposed solutions to tho problem, ranstnl hom
restricted protection for cat.utropblc illness to a costly na·
liooal be.altb care system, and comtni trom sources u far
apart u Massachusetts Democratic Sen. Edward Kennedy
and the conae:rvative A mericaa Medical Aasociatlon.
Thia la a good time to review tho reasona for the
problem:
l'ACl'OR NO. l: CURRENT PAYMENT systems otter
lltUe ii any inct1ntive for the practitioner or the patient to try
tokeepeo&tadown.
For example, A. J . needed test.a. "We can do the testa
right here in my office in a few minutes.'' the doctor said,
..but I thought you would want to go into the hospital so i1
would be covered by your inauranc:e."
For another, B. S. went to her doctor every few months
as needed for a checkup. Under Medicard, she bas been told
to go every month, even if only her blood pressure is re·
corded.
FACTOR NO. Z: There often is no
moderate level of
response to a moderate
problem. It is either a
full·dress affair or
nothing.
Money's
Worth
To illustrate, C. D. recently scratched bis eye on a bush
in bia yard. The general practitioner refused to look at it
"because it is an eye problem." The specialist be recom·
mended was unavailable for several days and his fee would
be In the hundreds of dollars. C. D. went to a hospital
emergency room and, after a two-hour wait, was told that
aft.er another three-hour wait, the doctor would determine
whether an appointment would be made with a specialist
the patient could see the next day. When he refused t-0 wait,
someone applied a simple ointment to the scratch. The in·
jury was cleared up in a few days.
FACl'OR NO. 3: DOCl'OBS FREQUENTLY admit they
order unnecessary tests and procedures to protect
themselves against possible malpractice suits. The practice
is called "defensive medicine."
R. M. bruised a muscle in a minor auto accident. He was told to go to a hospital and be put in traction for two
weeks to straighten out any distortion or the spine that the
accident might have caused. He refused. IUs symptoms dis-
appeared quickly. Asked why the hospital had been or·
dered, the reply was: "defensive medicine."
FACl'OR NO. 4: DOCroRS MAY be pressured to fill
hospital beds.
FACl'OR. NO. s : HOSPITA~ and practitioners orten
have arrangements to send all work or a certain type to cer·
lain sources (a laboratory. for example> even if it costs
more.
FACl'OR NO. 6: DRUG COSl'S are high and con·
troversies are mounting about the cause. Pressure against
druggjst advertising or prices continue despite a Supreme
Court decision that the bans violate freedom of the press.
Drives continue against consumer purchases or ''generic''
drugs in favor of often more expensive brand·name drugs.
FACl'OB NO. 7: HOME CARE, cheaper than i.i>.stitu·
tionaJ care and frequently prelerabl.e la not often used.
Dow Loses Grouml
Despite Price News
NEW YORK (AP) .-Tbe stock market managed only a
mix.ed showing today despite some favorable innalion
news.
The Dow Jones average or 30 industrials. up more than 2
points at the outset, lost 1.52pointsto907.99.
Gainenabeld an 8-5 lead over losers among New York
Stock E..'CchanJre·listed issues.
The government reported that the wholesale price in-
dex fell 0.6 percent last month, thanks to a sharp decline in
farm and food prices.
What Sto<-b Did
NEW YORK IAPI
•ovenctd 0.Cllned Unc1111n~ Told! h•~ N•w t•ll l\iQl\S Ntw 1'11 10W1o
WH,t.T AMEX 010
NEW YORK fAPI p,,,.,,
Aoonroc1 3r~v ~
OechMO lU m UftCll•nQl'CI JU 19S
Tol•I ;,~ 911 -----------------1 Nt• tfll llloll• Ml •J
!~ • A~Mlllls
' .....,._. lllC • A~QI 7 Swi~ 11111 JF~~I " .~Am fl rtt;:'~
11 ·~
Olo + I
• Vt .. -... . ~
+ '"" :~ . " .,,
+ \4 .....
+ ~
+ "" • • •'-.. "'' . " . ~
~ct. VD 17.A Up V..O
Ull ;1 UP .• UP ,,I Up t.O
U• 't Ufl t, ~= u VII •I
Up ll Up
UP t Vo .. i H ~ i1
NtW 1977-10 •
.N>Qtt ..... '$
AO!ff'Oll llNI tot., ............... ~.oee
SfO<k "''"' ve•r '911 ............ l.tl!l,1 .. J a1111ro• llnel -............ \1,UO,GOI 80llO Mlft _, llOO ............ i1,!~000
St~lalaTlte
Spot If gilt
NEW V°".C (APl-S.•, 4 ~'"· Df'tce ·~ IOI~ "'V~ of Ille • .,,_, :-1 "'t~ r.::, .. ,:".,.f.:c!\ ~ .. --..
Dow Cfli!. . .. . 111.3 114' -1 ~:r::""~ .. :· ~:ti n.\ :;·-hNI (R... .... m, IOIWt-" ftllH Hut. ...... ,.ti.I #lit -I'~
C•!" !dll "' 213,tQD JI\\ • \lo ff\Oltl'Ollt • • • 1JUO~ tt!Jt • I~ r.aet /llll. • ... JU.JOO 11• -~
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--
.4JI OAll.Y PILOT
Teens on CBs Crash P.artks
LOSANOELES (AP) -Bored? Look·
ln1 fot' tome act.lon? P'ltp on your CB
radlo, cbaM• are lhero'1 a party Just
arwnd the comer.
Tbat'• G8dly what manr teenqen
are doiAI thele da71, and police In 10me
places fear the problem Will tel WOrM
wltb tho warm weather and more partie1
-and more party cra1ber1.
IN not SAN Fernando ValJey, for ln·
atance, police aay it'a not uncommon tor
a party bo.t who invited ~to hll bHb to
tlnd ~500 revelers at the front door,
lhanb to the CIUaena Band.
Lut year, officers uy, one hapleaa
host wu overwhelmed by 1,000 uninvll·
.t au-ts, many of whom heard about
Lb• party over the C 8 alrw aves. ••we·ve bad calls ror help from people
who couldn't get out of their houses
becauae of the number of party
crubers," said Capt. Glenn Levant of
the Loi Angeles Police Department's
Devonshire Dtvision m the upper mid-
dle-class north valley.
.. THESE PARTY crashers, most of
whom are in the age group or Juntor high
to about 25, bnng their own booze or
marijuana, and orten devastate the
neighborhood," Levant said.
Although the old-fashion verbal
ar~ remains lhe primary way of spreadlni new• or a weekend party, Le-
vant aaya tbe CB alrwava increase lhe
numberot penona who 1et the word.
Levant 1trtoed moat ot the party
cratMn aro not members of or1aniied
CiUaena Band radio clubs, but more
typlcal.bt are alOue.nt teen·agera wbo
Ute to uae the CB radlt>t tn lhelr cars
merely to 1oulp with their frienclJ.
THF..SE HEN-AGE taJkers, prevent-
ed by their parents from len1thy con-
versations oo the family phone, carry on
lon1-wtncled diacuaai9ns from the front
seat of their automobiles, police aay,
ctonlnl the alrwave• with chitchat.
IL doesn't take loog for the word of a
party to spread this way and, Uke bees to
honey, the youth Oock to the scene or the
buh, ready to enjoy themselves in spite
of a concerned host who didn't invite
them. ·
Often when the rowdy guests are asked
to leave, the host is answered with a
shower of beer cans and bottles of
various beverages.
WIBLE ADMITflNG there are limits
to what a party host may do to prevent
s uch occurences, Levant suggests
several ways to lessen the chance or hav-
ing a party crashed.
"Got . a problem 1 Then wnte to Pat Dunn. Pat will
cut red tape. getting the an.!WeTs and action you nud
to aolve m~qu1ties m government and bumiess. Mail
your qu.est1ona to Pat Dunn. At Your Seroice, Orange
Coast Dwly Pt!ot, P.O. Boz 1560, Costa Mesa, CA
92626. A.s many letters.03 pcmnble will be answtted,
but phoned mquznes or Letters not including the
reader'3 full name. addrt33 and bu.Uness hour3' phoru!
numberconnot be considered. Thucolumnappear3dai·
ly ezcept Saturdays.•'
Conspen•ation'• Ca.pr~.,e
DEAR PAT: I am a mobile homeowner. My in·
surance agent tells me that the amended Household
Workers' Compensation Act does not allow mobile
home dwellers to reJect workers' compensation
coverage on my homeowner's policy. Is this on the
level? I don't require workmen for any repair or
·maintenance jobs on my coach, and I'd just as soon
save the extra premium cost.
G.T., Huntington Beach
The amended law, erfedive March 26, 1977,
does not allow policyholders to reject coverage, so
your insurance company ls belog straight wltb you.
Other major requirements of the new law are:
automatic inclusion of workers' compensation on.
all poUcies with comprehensive personaJ Uabillty
(CPL) coverage; coverage of owners and occu-
pants, including tenants, and benefits applicable to
employes who have worked 5Z hours or more and
earned $100 or more ln the 90 day perlocl prior to an injury.
Who Works for lob-H!eleer•'t
DEAR PAT: !low do you tell a good employ-
ment agency from a bad one? I've been looking for
a job, but haven't had any success in .locating the
type of position I want. I've decided to contact an
employment agency, but several friends have told
me of their bad experiences. Could you provide a
few guidelines?
A.R., Costa Mesa
The Bureau of Employment Age.des recom·
mends checking the flrm's llcense (wbJcb should be
displayed promloenUy) to make sure it la cW'rent,
avoiding agencies that require an examlnaUoo fee,
and requesting names, adclresses and phone num·
bers or former cUents placed lo jobs. Further in·
formation may be requested from the bureau at
1430 Howe Ave .. Sacramento, CA 95814.
Novel Cure• Sol.,e MlldftD
DEAR PAT: Wh at, if anything, can be done to
restore mildewed books? We live near the beach,
and I happened to unpack a box of books I'd bad
stored in the garage. I was horrified to see that
many of them are in very bad condition. I hope
there is some measure I can take to save them.
L.R., BaJboa
Experts recommend several methods, laclud·
Ing wiping bindings and pages witb a clean, soft
cloth; wiping with a soft cloth sUgbUy dampened
with alcohol and spreading the pages open to dry.
and sprinkling mUdewed pages with coTilStarclt,
closing the book for several days and then brushing
the powder away.
\'Hwaior: No Great Sltalce•
DEAR PAT: Can you find out if the vibrating
belts I've seen advertised actually can help get rtd
of a thick waistline? Reducing fat deposits around
the waist is supposed to be the result or using this
belt, but I'd like to know if this claim is legitimate
before I invest.
T. W., Newport Beach
Aecorllng to the 1971 Postal C.S..tt P~
tlon Fact Slteet. au electde vlbrattn1 belt la f
.. typical mall order ripoff ... Uslal a mild •lbrator
caaaot possibly reduce fatty depomta.
Tiie oaly way to solve tbla problem b by 1-klDI
ID fewer calories and lacreulag yoar exercllle l• or-
der to me •P mra calorte1. Gradual reclocUoa ol
fatty depoldta wW occar Olll.y wllea wel&kt ls l•t
aad mascle toae ls kept nrm b1 resuJar uerdae.
11
He recommends having a guest list,
sending out invitations, and admitUne
onJy tb<»e persons who are invUled.
If Wllnvited guests arrive, Levant sug.
1e1ll the host refuse to admit them ln the
hopes ~1 will put the word out over the
airwaves that the party ls closed to all
but those bearing invitations.
PRE·PLANNED activities are • lood
idea for controlling a party, Levant said,
aa is making sure there is adult
supervWon lf the parents plan to be
away during the party.
If none of these suggeaUons works1 hos ta are adviaed to call the police quick-
ly before any t.l'ouble errupta so that the
crowd can be dispersed •
In the meantime, boats can just keep
their ftngers crossed that word of their
party doesn't hit the CB channels -at
least unW the morning after.
GUADALAJARA, Mexico (AP> -At
least 36 persons riding a Guadalajara-to·
NogaJes freight train illegally were killed
Thursday when the train derailed, police
reported. The police said more bodies
m lght be found in the wreckage.
I SOlARSHINE I
1NO-WAX TILE
Morie
Promos
Blasted
LOS ANGELES <AP>
-Everywhere you look,
there seems to be a
poster or T·sblrt ad·
vertlslng the movie
"StarWara."
And that's the pro-
blem, Cjlalm two com-
panlea that filed 21
lawsuits in California
and Washlnet.on over the
alleged unauthorized
sale of "Star Wars"
wares.
The sulta, filed by Fae·
tors, Etc. Inc. of Bear,
Del., and the Image Fac-
tory Inc. of HolJywood,
seek $21 million in
damages.
In their suits, the com-
panies ask the court to
enjoin the unauthorized
sale of posters ,
transfers, T-shirts and
buttons uslng the names,
charactera, symbols, de-
signs and likenesses
from the movie.
•QUEENIE Bv Phl{ lnterlandi
'IRIPS END FOR YUBA
YUBA CITY CAP> -
Because its liability
insurance has expired,
the Yuba City Uoifl'l!d
Sc bool District bas
cancelled all field trips.
The district, which
was hit with $40 million
in claims after a bus
crash last year that
killed 29, said insurance
rates have soared.
......... ·--.--. .. .... .,..........._.,.._. ..... . .. , .. ~,, ..
•
Youth Counseling a · Family Affa • 1r
9yC-H•;avL ROMO
Ot .... °""' ......... ..
Matt I• 13 yura old Hla hathc>r
dlid three )'t!>litit •flO und alnco
that lime Mau·a mother hu be.-r•
rah.In& the boy and hl11 two al leri.
alone
Ounn1 the last few montlu,
both hb mother and teacheMI
havenott('t!!Cfchangcs In ham.
He's become defiant. reruaes to
attend ach()ol and haa been
stayana out late nl1ht~. His
rnolber recently cau1ht htm
smokin1 marijuana and he's
threatened to runaway
Malt's mother ,, upset and
exprtat1l'i'I her concern lo a fnend.
Tho friend 11uggesta ahe contact
the Youth Service Proar am al the
lorol police department.
She uills and makes an
appointment for family
counaelln1i
Mcrcdlth Bates 1s a very pretty
lady with shoulder lenath, honey-
b lo n d hair and atrikang
mahoaanyeyes
She's also a smgle8arent with
two tousle-headed Ill e girls and
as one ot 30 cowuelors In Orange
County employed by the Youth
Service Program.
She works with kids, and
very often, with lheirparent.s.
But the 28-year-old defies all
stereotypic al desert ptions.
Meredith Bates has a handicap.
or perhaps it isn't a handicap at
all, but, as she says, maybe it's
1ust helped her understand others
with problems.
Because she knows what it's
like to be rejected and
misunderstood when you're a kid.
Born with a rare birth defect
that caused her hands to be
located just below her elbows, life
has been just a bit more
complicated for the petite woman
.
D•tlY Pll01 Pl!Ote by ue P•yne
Meredith Bates counsels kids, parents.
MD Conceives
New Technique
By MARCIA FORSBERG Of'"" D•ilY r uot St•fl
Joel and Hannah Green, both
In their early 40s, are happy with
their jobs and are settled
comfortably in a relaxed
lifestyle.
Their four children are leen·
agers now. The last thing the
Greens want is a new baby.
Nancy Smith, 32, is the
divorced m oth er of two
daughters. Both are in school and
old enough to look after each
o ther until their mother arrives
home from work at4:30.
Although Nancy has enjoyed
an intimate relationship with a
male friend for fi ve years, she
neither wants to marry again nor
have another child.
Richard and Ann Berg are 28
and 27, have been married for
seven years and h ave ·no
children. They love their
challenclng careers and take
night classes toward graduate
degrees.
They delight in spur-of-the·
moment outings, travel a great
deal and devote a lot or time to
hobbles. They feel that children
wouldn't fit into their way or life.
Ron Davis will be 30 next year.
He and a female friend have
lived together long enough for the
relationship to develop into a
serie>us one.
However, he has avoided the
subject or children because he
has never fell the need to be a
rather and he rejects the parent·
Ing role.
None of these are actual
cases. but the situations are reaJ.
For personal reasons, as well as
the increasing interest in
overpopulation, many millions of
people in this country have a
major concern -birth control.
The average age of a woman
who has decided thal her family
is complete is 31.S years. ac·
cording to a public health survey
at UCLA.
That mean s s he bas
approximately 20 more years,
prior to her natural period of
infertility at menopause, to be
concerned about some form of
l:>irth control.
A man. too. must consider the
methods or controlling his own
fertility -for a lifetime.
And once a couple is certain
they have as many children as
they want. they may look for a
s ure, easy way to avoid ac-
cadentaJ pregnancies.
Unfortunately, the ideal
method or birth control has yet to
be developed. The pill,
intrauterine device, diaphragm,
condom. jellies and foam an
have their disadvantages.
SO, MILLIONS are opting in
favor or permanent birth control
-s terilization -either
vasectomy for the man or
laparoscopy with tubal
coagulation for the woman.
Dr. William M. Moss, an
associate professor of surgery at
the University of California
School of Medicine, Irvine.
revealed that these two
permanent surgical inethods of ·
preventing birth are rapidly
becoming the moderD choices for
couples wbo have decided to
limit the size of their families.
yet still have many years of birth
control ahead.
He noted that more and more
people are "eliminating the
worry of unwanted pregnancy for
the rest of their lives" simply by
taking a few hours out o( their
re1ular schedules lo have the
operation performed. •
The Santa Ana-baaed doc\or
baa perfected techniques tor both
operatlons, m1kin1 them
with a bachelors degree from UC
Berkeley and a masters In
counseling from Arizona St.ate.
And tor many of the youngsters
sbe'a helped ... lUe bas beendif·
Oculttoo.
A veteran of the VlST A Corps
and the Neighborhood Youth
Corps for Disadvantaged
Cblldren, she says her handicap
has made ber more determined
to help others. "It's helped me to be more
unelentandlng -more tolerant.
All handicaps aren •t visible;
sometitn.es they're on the inside."
MRS. BATES IS ope of three
full-time counselors working out
of the Huntington Beach Police
Department. She shares an office
with juvenile officers.
Sb• prefers family counseling
so she can see how family
members interchange with one
another. She says, very often, it's
the parents who need help in
learning e(lecti ve parenting,
especially wtien they're trying to
cope with an adolescent.
Most of the youngsters she
counsels as part of the voluntary.
free-of-charge servi~ have been
referred by local police. These
juveniles are generally first of·
fenders and guilty or minor
infractions.
' The program is targeted at
early offenders and ls considered
adlversionarteffort.
Prior lo um, when the pilot
program was initiated by Dr.
Arnold Binder, professor of sociaJ
ecology at UC Irvine, police were
ex peeled to act as counselors.
Most law enforcement officers
dido 't relish this extra duty and
weren't properly trained for the
task. Counseling, at this time, did
not include parents.
The current program, staffed
by trained professionals. Is
CederaJly funded and available in
16 cities throuehout the county
LOCAL OFFICES are in Costa
Mesa , Fountain Valley,
Huntington Beach, Westminster,
Garden Grove, Irvine, Mission
Viejo, Laguna Beach and SeaJ
Beach.
One or the added benefits or
being located in law enforcement
agencies, says Mrs. Bates, is that
"people feel better about the
police." . ·
Although counselors work
directly with officers, she says
they are not always accepted by
them.
·'There are some police who
don't feel we have any business
being here. We're guests of the
department."
Youth Service statistics attest
to the fact that youngsters who
have received some counseling
are less likely to be repeat of-
f enders than those who receive no
cdunsellng.
"The rewarding thing for me is
thatlhaveanimpact. Youcansee
the change, and sometimes,
parents who had trouble with one
child will call us if another child
has problems later on.·· she
says.
Looking little more than a
teenager berself, the soft-spoken
woman says she sees more boys
than girls. But more parents caJI
in for help with their daughters.
What constitutes a minor of·
re~e in a juvenile?
"WE HAVE A higher
percent.qe or girls running away
from home. For boys, it's
generally things like possession
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
Friday. July 8, 1977 Bf
"easier, simpler a~d more
comfortable for the patient."
Dr. Moss, last year's president
of the Orange County Sursical
Society, ~d, ''It's easy to have
birth ~1tol surgery these days,
but a lot or men still th.Ink a
vasectomy ls a terrible·
procedure and that they'll e°1 up
hobbling around."
Likewise, women have feared
stertllzatlon, believing the
procedure to be more
complicated than it actually ls,
beaaicl.
Although they are more ex·
pensive, Lake longer and have a
lonser pertod ol recovery than
vasectomy, laparoscopy and
tubal coagulation <often called
"Band-AJd operation" or "belly
button surgery") have become
simplified in the })ast five years,
Dr. Moss indicated.
QB RAS DEVELOPED new
tecbniqod for the contraceptive
methods during the past ff!W
years. Dr. MOSIJ, formerly a
• general 11uraeon begao limiting
bis practice lo sterilization after
having bis own vasectomy eight
yeana,10.
"It was a 'bad experience,
painful, and there were
complications," he recalled.
or marijuana or petty theft, .. she
says.
The majority of her clients are
between the ages of 13 and 16; but
sbe's d.att with youngsters in the
3· to 5-year-old bracket.
The young children were all
boys and aJl were charged with
settinefires.
When queried as to bow she
deals with children who are little
more than toddlers, Mrs. Bates
replied: "They were all trying to get
their parents' aUention. So, [
work with the parents on
parenting."
Youth Service also oHers
evening group therapy sessions
where adol escent s learn
communications skills and give
each other group support.
And this summer, parents may
participate in a new program
entitled Coping With Adolescents.
It is orcered through the
Huntington Beach office.
Mrs. Bates urges people to
volunteer for Youth Service's
Special Friend Program. "You
become a friend to a kid. After all,
if you're out there and making it,
you 're someone who represents a
success.
''Someone who can give a posit~
ive influence.''
HER EYES SPARKLE as she
describes her own new pet project
for school-age mothers. Mrs.
Bales says many girls who
become pregnant today are
pressured to keep their babies
and continue living at home with
their parents.
She says these youngsters have
complex proble ms dealing with.
guilt and trying to find time to
continue growing up and pursuing
their own interests.
Plans are currently being
implemented for Youth Service counselors to be on call 24 hours a
day. Mrs. Bates appears to be a
little apprehensive about taking
on an even busier schedule, but
says:
''After all, most crises· don't
happen between 8 and S."
While walking out of Meredith
Bates' second-floor office, a boy
or about 14 says, "I walk into her
office feeling like I bate the whole
world. But after I talk to her for a
rew minutes-lreallyfeelgood .
"I like knowing someone care!'>
about me."
Dr. William
Moss says
permanent
sterilization
is rapidly
becoming a
modern choice
for couples
who don't
want more
children.
"Because of it, I became
empathetic to my own
vasectomy patients. I wanted to
make the operation easier to
perform."
Through experimentation, he ·
originated and perfected a single
incision that is now so small that
stitches are not required! "It
takes only about 10 minutes." he
said.
After the operation, performed
in the doctor's office, the patienl
relaxes for about an hour "to
make sure there are no
complications." Dr. Moss
provides books and stereo
(See TECHNIQUE, Paie 82)
•'The phyalcal act ot pickini up
tbe frog and pushine the butt.om
belps them to grup the concept.
of counilne, and eonsequently ad-
dition," Kessner aald.
~I
' '
J
j
_,.... "" -.. -..... --·
.... u..r. DAILY "IL or flrao.x. July a, 1 tn
. .... --....... --..--. " ··.: .. ...-.·-.
One-way Street Dead Ends (Ann Landers ~
Im t:.\llmple, .1 lie" t'ur for ,, was a one· way 11treet." DEAH ANN W1 h,1q· u11h 11111·
~n tlr w.1,. 1tn oul!!l.11111111.: ''" d~nt ~on w 11rholurah1p to a11
Iv\-l.coaiul' Kfhool and wh11t· !>hi
c1ym1 lhert• ht• rnurru·<t
tll11 w1ft·' fum1lv 1i. ~•·ttllh\
bul took lh1• prnCllmn thut 11 ., .1
hu,.,hunft ' r<-11pon111h1llt v tu 'Ull
port hi\ wtft• WI-: "'l'flOtlf'll
lhern holh IWIWI 11ui.lv Ullltl h1
paS&l'(i htit I.UH 1''\,UTIHlllllllll '1'11
th1y he i s u prom1nt:nt 1.1wv1•1
b1rthduy 1snd we a11
1·ondlllonl'<I their home tor the11
unniveraary They are a lway"
happy lo ut•ccpt anything we give
them
We havt! expected very hlUc in
rl!tur n except l ovt• untl
thouahtfulness Yesterday wu~
mv birthday and they plumb
fut'ltOI II
Should wi: Jnnounce lhat we in·
lend lo divert some or lhe Ill·
heritance <which they undoub
tedJy exi>ect to iet 1 '> ll may ruin
o ur relat1on1hip and hurl us
more than them Or should we
JUSl shut up und carry on as
before" FOHGOTTEN BUT
NOTOONE YET
If they don't shape up, I litt
nothing wrong in leavhtll the
money to charity or medical re·
search (bravo!>. The kids can
have the heirlooms -the houi.e.
the car and the family Bible.
are. She wants to have a dlnnl'I
party at our home and lnv1te the
big mouths and the people she ~
been linked with so she can tell
them off. I'm not sure it's a gooft
idea She has agreed to go by
what you say. HOT UNDF.R
THE COLLAR
DEAR ANN What capsulized
udvlce can you give a woman
who has had more than her share
of family problems becau_se of
llt!I Wlft• IU'Vl'I c•un•ct for UI>,
wai. alw..t)l'I unfr1t.•1\IJI) ..111
l.tl(onli.11<' .md .,:11 1·ui.t11• Tht:\
have two chlldrt-n WI! to11llnu1:
to be geoerou~
We 111·t' conzsldcr111g l' hung1nl(
our wllh1. le aving a substantu1I
..amount to charily or medica l rt•
'eurch, and would like lo know
what you think about this Should
we tell them h ow we feel.
especially since nothing can !>(!
done about 1t anyway?
DEAR f'ORGOTJ'EN : I s~ no
reason to a make any announce-
ment•. Parents don't owe their
children glfls or Inheritances.
DEAR ANN LANDERS My
wife and I have been marncd
less than a year. D is gorgeou:.
physicall y and brilliant men
tally, DEAR HOT COLLAR: Your
wife mig ht b e "gorgeous
physically," but s he Isn't
brtlllant mentally II she thinks a
"denlaJ party•· will clear her
name.
·proximity " and habit? <Doing
more than she should.) I am 39
and want to handle m y remain-
1n1t years be tter tha n I 've
handled the o nes so far.
ANASTASIA
We never m1~i.t'<I un uc1:~111011
to pre.,ent tht'm with u lovt!ly gift
The next time one of their
birthdays or annlversarle11 roJh;
around, Just skip It. And ~eep
sklpplng It: If any queaUons are
asked simply say, "We decided
to cut out the gift.giving slnce It
Some so.called fr1end11 have
spread vicious rumors linking
her sexually with my golf bud
dies and business associates. D
1s furious. What's more. s he
knows who the goss1p·spreaclers
The best way to deal with
vicious gossip ts to ignore it.
DEAR A.: \'ou have two
choices. Eltber you alter lhe
"proximity" and break the babll
-or you change yourself so you
can cope wUh the situation.
Seeing
Summer
Through
A ··sCl' t h rough ''
summ er 1s µrov1dcd
by transp:.ir('O I
plastic: fashion!>, suth
:.is lhl' s;rndab. bclb
a nd tuslom made
s horts by G co r g l'
D1ncirdo ol George
and Ray Designs in
\rrc•c>nwith Vtllag('.
From 81
• • • Technique Conceived
headphont·s d11r1n1-: lhl·
hour.
· cum panwns" who ha n·
had the surgery a nd are
..available to a nswer
q ue~l1ons his female pa·
l1t•n ti; may havt•
THE DEOSION I~ J
seri ous one. oin<I
s houldn't bt-con~1derL'4i
unles~ the 1nd1v11tuals
··are f inis hed havin~
c hildren t:verylhing
must ~ considered
what if the s pouse or kids
die? Whal 1f you re·
marry?
He added that · thl' ell'
comfort of the opC'rat ion
1s surprisingly m1mmill
Almost all of my pat1cnl'
say that 11 s urpns<.•d
them that 11 hurt so lit
tie ·
D r M 11 " s .1 I ., 11
. µerforms \~hat ht• term.,
an "uncomplicated
sterilization procedur<·
for women "IL 1s a saf<'.
effective• a nd rapid
method
Sincl.' ht• h<'~an clo111~
laparoscopy surgery fi ve
years ago, Dr Moss at·
I nbutes coord ination. d
ficiency and expc ril.'nce
to his ahility to opc•ratt•
quickly
WHAT IS THI:: udvun
tage of fast surgcrv'? It ·s
a practical one "It
costs l<'ss, bccaust• the
patient 1s 1n the ope rat·
1ng room for lcss time ...
he said
Another wav Dr Moss'
"lechmque" differs from
that or many doctors 1c;
that he provides lhi:
ser vices or lwo wom<.•n
· T hey are with us
when I do the physical
l'Xa mination, they go
with us to the hospital,
and they wait in the wail-
ing room They phone
lhl' patient the next day
to see how she's doing.
"!l's been p opula r
because women seem to
want that perso nal
touch It doesn't work
with the men, though."
he revealed.
Or. Moss claims he is
the only doctor in Orange
County who performs
steril1zat1on for both
males and females. T he
advantage to this, he in·
dicated. is that he can
counSl'I couples who are
considering the opera·
t1on. then help them de·
ride together which par·
ty should be sterilized.
Preliminary consulla·
lion "is t h e m ost
1 m portanl, and it lakes a
lot more time than the
actual surgery." he said.
"I try to give 1nforma
hon about sler11tzalion,
not sell anybody on 1t , ·
he added
Back tn the early ·10s.
when "a lot of women
wanted lo get off the
pill" because of possible
harmful effects. vasec
tomy becam e quite
popular, Dr. Moss noted.
"Bac.k then, it was also
m ore difficult for wom<'n
to have their tubes tied,
so many men became
responsible for birth con
trol. ..
(fr 'added that now.
about an equal number
of men and women ar!'
bein g s terili zed · I
operate on whoever
wants to be infertile the
most,'' he said
Estimates from the
New York-based As
SPECTACULAR
MID-SUMMER
i Thru
Month
Of
July
Our Annual Sol• has c.om. o fnldltlon
am°"9 flloM who-Ww _,_appredot. the
flnHt Mlecffon of doMHRe aRd Imported fiCJltffncJ Rxtures & L111np1 .
Savings from .
1~0°/o to 70°/o or niore.
soc1.it1on for Vuluntarv
Stenlizalion. Inc , rcvt•al
lhat in 1975, Ui million
men and 3 Ii million
women underwent
~terilizat1on operations
According to T ina
McCraw, sterilization
pro~ram coordinator for
the Birth Contro l
Insti t ute. J n c ., in
Anaheim. figures have
"a lways been higher for
men, mainly because it's
simpler and requ ires
less ttme ··
SHE EMPHASIZED
that women are becom -
ing more aware of new
methods and more are
h;tv ine the operation
Ms. Mccraw said the
average m a le who is
sterilized ls 27 to 35 years
old, has two children and
is married. The average
female is 24 to 31. with
two children and "sur
prisingly , most <1rc
either separ a tt·d or
divorced "
She revealed that both
sexes are concerned that
their bodies will function
the same a fte r the
s terili za tion p ro
cedure "They will." ~he
said.
Dr Moss aareed . say
ing. "laparoscop) doc~
nol interfere with the
fem a le h or mon es,
cha nge your menstrual
cycle, induce premature
me nopause. nor does it
a lte r your body or
shape ."
He said the re is no
physical effect al all with
vasectomy. although
there ca n be a
psychological effect if
the man does not realiie
that he will still function
the same sexually
Weddings VV'
and Engagements
ro ;,l\ Old d1sappointmenl. µroi.1wct i\ ('
hnd<''> are remindeft to haH· their \\Cddini:
.,tone., \\Ith black and "h1tc i;l lO!HI\
photo~raph,.4! to the Dall~ P1ln1 Peoplt•
lkpartment one "eek befon• the wed<tin11
1'1 clures rN·ein•d lllt<'r I hat 11ml• \1111
nnt tw usc<t
~·or engaj(ement announcement~ 11 il'
1mperativt' that the story. also accom
panled by a black and white glossy pie·
lure, be submitted six weeks or mort>
llefore the wedding date: otherwi!'le 11 will
not ht' published.
To help fill requiretfle nts on btlth wed
ding ctnd engagement stbriei.. form.:> art>
available in all Daily Pll\>t offices Fur
lhel' questions will be answ~ed by Pt<>ple
Department staff members al 64 321
Horoscope: Taurus
Trust Judgment
SATURDAY,JULY9
By SYDNEY OM ARR
ARIES (Marc h 21·
April 19). Money picture
1s bright you enjoy
c hanges, "good r e
views," realization that
your ideas are dynamic
and will be profitable
aspect coincides now
with cr eallve changt.',
childre n . matters or
speculation , emotional
responses, adventure in
volving 1>ppos1te sex
AQUARIUS (Jan .
20-Feb. 18>: Home base,
security. dealings with
older family member or
a uthority fi gure -these
are emphasized
PISCES (F eb. 19
March 20): Relatives.
trips. unusual telephone
m essages are featured.
TAURUS (April 20--------------------
May 20 >: Lunar cycle RUffELL'S hi gh . lake initiative 'JEFFREY'S
HOME
CENTER Trust judgment. hunch. UPHOLSTERY
Follow through be wt.... y°" want
' ( 'q••q1l.•f1• IJ1•c .. 1.11.11q • . ..,,., ..... ,
('.irp,•h, • f), 11J1". •'oh.id •' d1rccl, confident. Make tti. IHI
11ew starts in new direc-l'22 ~ ll•d.
l i o n s . E m p h a s i z e Coat• Mft-54'-0259 754-0151
personal appearance. ~============~====~~~~~~~~~~~ personality.
GEMINI CMay 2l·June
2() 1: You do best at in·
fighting. Means now is
time to bob. weave. to
get blows in before "op-
ponent" 1s set or pre-
pared Plainly. this is
t1 me for behind-scenes
conferences
CANCER <June 21-
July 22>: You m ake solid
1mpress1on Those who
were indifferent could
become enthusias l.ic sup-
porters. You could win
GRAND OPENING
THE GIFT CLOSET
Unique Hand-crafted Items
Hawa11an Wood Rose Floral Arrangements
House Plants & Morel
COIN In mtd lrowH
0,... MOit. tlwv s.t-10 to 6
1673 lrvift• An~ Suit. E
Costa Mfta 642·7350
p opularity co nt~s t. ---~-----~-~---------LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 l ·
Emphasis un :.landing in
community. confidE'nce,
prestige and iilChie ve-
mcnt You complete ma-
JOr ass1~nmcnt. project
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept.
2 21 l11ghl1 g bl
manuscript s ul>m1ssioos,
long -dist:.4nct' travel ,
special communications.
S tress or iginalit y . in-
dependence. creat1\•1ty
imprint your own
:.lyle
LIBRA <Sept. 23·0cl.
22): Accent on m ystery;
you locate missing arti·
cle. You discern hidden
• Hair Design
• Skin Care·
• Sculptured Nails
Manicure/Pedicure
' I I 20 lr•IM lhci
M•wporl lffcll
171 41 642-1414
m eaninas. Me mber of ---------------------
opposite sex is involved.
SCORPIO <Oct. 23·
Nov. 21): Steer clear of
conflicts over legal mat·
ters. Leave routine for
a nother lime -reach
beyond the immediate .
SAGITTARIUS <Nov.
22·Dec. 21): Take con·
servative course. Check
fine print, be aware of
basic. m aterial.
CAPRICORN <Dec.
22-Jan 191 · Good moon
Peering
Around
NAD I NE AL ·
BRECHT, of Huntington
Beach, has been honored
by the Major Appliance
Consumer Action Panel
with its Volunteer Award
for her masters thei.is at
Cornell University.
Her researc h topic was
·'A Compari so n or
Methods for Determining
the Wattage Output and
Energy Distribution in
M lcrownve Ovens.··
DR~ FRANK T. Curry,
Newport Beach, bas
been awarded a
fell o wship or the
Academy of General
Dentistry I the second
largest dental organiza·
lion In lhe Unlt~ States.
learn to be
your own
interior decorator
lltfthcl ~in ......... .
.... decoratlftq COW'M GYal ... MW
YOU CAM DO IT YOUllSIUI
Learn how to out a room toQether llke a professional
how fo deeorare for your fami1y·1 style of living
how lo get the most for .your decorating dollar . how
to use things you already have . how to "re-do" aod
"make-do''. how to mix tumtture styles .. how to
select lhe ril7f11 colors how to choose fabrics you
can live with how to avoid mllking expen51ve
decorating mistakes ..
' YOU'U Gn rUSOMAL ·~" Your instructor will be Masters e11pert ASIO
Decorator/Designer Nancy €artwfight. She'll help with
your Individual decorating problems. and she'll take vou
on a oolor closed c1rcu1t TV tour of over .00 beautiful
"idea" rooms
CUSSIS STAIT MY II
And they II be held nghc •n our downtown store Yov II
attend one 2 hour class 11 week for 6 weeks. Tt're enrollment fee 1s S35 which includes your Oeoorltor·s
Manual student workbOok Use your Bani\ Americard or M1st8f'Charge
CHOOSI THI CUSS
"44TS CO ... VIMflHT !IOI YOU
Mondays et 7 00 P M Tuesdays at 10 00 AM
Wecfnesoavs at 7 00 PM
Thursdays I I 10 00 A M
CALL JEAMll fHOIGI
TODAY TO MOU.
a1..,..!!'!.!.'.=:~ ...
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Frfd!y July 8 197T DAILY PILOT llS,
PUBUC NOTICE Tiff f \\JILY CIRCUS. By Bil Keant College Costs Up •VNtl•• CI04.l•to, tNI
UAtl WCA~lp.oANIA PO•
tW•C*f•TY0'1Mlf01100 Me llHll NO"~· M twTallflOfol fO till
81AI. ,..OP••T'f AT l'•lltAta IAt.a
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6111&(1 C'llNMINGHAM (nn .. •••1•• HOYlt~ 1\ .. t .. laY (,11ttN WWI
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,1n1n011t '"""'" #AMol IUTIMlllU'
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11 ltl 1•«11 llo\;lt .. 1\1 ilenlOll ( • .....
A I M1'011Nt•Y •r Nf~l
COMl>ANY ~···· .. IMO•lll"••llO<' f •tt•ot"I• Jl\t IC•••I" ... nl# h Ylr>• c ........... ,,.. . y,.,. ~f'Wtl •I ,_f"'IU1ft4lh1il((td Of .. , . .., ... _._
lo I NIArHINf•T ltlNIAL <t\¥l'loN 'f
H•¥tll•Atea.,_, Vtc•,._ .. ....,,(
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l-4 , .. ., ,,.,.1 N-• 1ut ·~ "'wn11.._ •1'.n~ <•••• 0~11~ Potot
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Ti. ...,..,,, '"--"'' ,.,..... P\JBUC NOTICE .... '"' l I o ••••• ,..,,, ...... CM-"'• ,,,. -°' Mibl"<I "' ,.,,,.,., , ... .,_ NOTICI TOC•IOl TO•J
<-ll•nlt, r-.r-. ,.,1,., 1001,. •• \U~lltlOlt~•YO•THI ..., .. ,_ •'9fll•, ....... Of ... , ..... lTATIOfll tA&.••O•NIA f'O•
ttW..,ot1h •f ••• ••• •"• , ,.tum TNICOCJ..:f:~~ltANOl ~~ .. :~:.:!.:.";::~IOCW\..Cl\l-°"\Of fti.tt 01 Nll(HALL A NfU8fRl
lM Pfeo-rttv 1' to 0. \oMt "., 1, 0.C:t~ tlOI ..... ...,. .. ,,...... NOTICE ... H(REllY r.1vEN lo""
• ct\., ., ... ' .... ,,..,~,.d fOt 1"4\ fUO <tf'd•COt't"' tt'lie' aoo .. f' rwrned ck<.-t:tff'll
.. ,.,, •r.ct """"' b9 •n •rr'hnq .tnn wilt.,.. th•t •H .,.,.,~, .,,...,.nq <14111'1' d01ot1n\t
rtc•fYt'G •t ~· Oiiier"' Outr•"-R•n t~ ~•<I l>'tf'Ot-ttt •r• t1Qu1red to 111,.
dO•Oft. M.t<CNf"n .. O•IV. At1ou-...~ t()f trwm vwtttt .,,,.. ,.,., ... , y VOUCNIU "'
\of•d Con\f'rv11UM ot a)()l M•c~rlhur thto oft1ct "' tN" Clt'fll. of lf'Wk •bOw• •n
"What comes ofter 12. Mommy? I'm 'it' for
hide and seek."
PUBLIC NOTICE Bovt•v•tO ..,...,~, BtMf\ (AlltorniJ CtOtdco\H'f o, toe>tt-\ .. nt triiem. w•O\tf\11·
0' l'T\•Y tw tilt-cs W•t" t""' Cfttrk ol \•Id nf(l \\arv w..u<""4t\. to lf'lil" unaer '-l•Qf"l•d Su"n°' (OtHI. or CWftwredtoOurl'r:d •t t htt 0 f I 11 r-of DON AL 0 A
R4n<:IOIOll Malcolm & 0dlV °"'"°"•llY Mc CAR 11 ~1 AllDl"°'Y at lo• 7'PO "CTITIOU,IUSINESS
lilt dny t•Mf •llt"f flr"lt publlc•llM ot H•rC>or Olval ~v1l1 7l• Costa M•)a HAMI STAtlMRNT
PUBLIC NOTICE
'"'' NOh<t •nd bffor~ ""''1n9 \•1d C-ltfornj' '101't. wruc" ., ,,._.. Pl4Ct of T"'9 f~UOWlnQPtfliD"'•redotngous•· \•t• bu\1f\f\'\ of ttw undtt \I~ In all m•t MU •s
Tl>• Or09"'tly "''" ~ Wld °"IM lff\POr,.lnlnQ IOl,,.t•tal•ol••od!J' ROLA, ENTERP•1SES. t,.S
tollowtnq t•r~ C•s"or p~rt t•\h. •no <•,,,.nt ••ttwn lour month\ •ft•r ti'* Sn.trlrw,ton pt •K._, H•wport Bee<Jit. ,,.,t Ottrtred P'YnM:f"lb t,_., <titdll in fin.I publlC•llOl"tOt tnt\noU<«. CA t2"3
no ce-. to ••CdO t•n 1101 yurs lrom Pt<YlLIS NfLCH Ciel Knul H-•. ·~ S/lerlnQIOil
IP,. O•l~ ol • \•It. woln Coni.erv•tor AOm1'"'"•"''011"" E•i.ttol Pl • K11>6. ~W"°'18H<lt. CA~ W"CUflrwJfrotn tMOU~Ch•\!"f' "°t•\,•nd trw-41bO"'f'n.it"'f!OfjfcHtt:nt Ro,ttt Wtt>f'r 406S NoOt• "'"·• .. rnorl-or°""° 01 lru>I on llW r• DONALD A M<CARTIN ~llfrm•nQ.>k•.CA"OOl • ~•tJf'n<•. with'"'" <ldd1tt0n•1 ).Pcurity At1..-~y•t U• ff'll\ b4.l,,,,.S\ '' conaucled b_. •
•' 1\ nf'Ct\wrv •f'd SYtllc1•nt 10 ~(Vt• "''"•f'llllW •tvd Stell• l)tntr.9lo.trl~r,P'110
'°""""""Pl 1'4Ym•nt c.1 one amount"' C••l•M-.CA.,U• OlAFHAHDEl ~ttrr.-o dnG 1f\tt'f\f fn~rto<k'I T~.-P\, Ttf fJU).S..0.l.U1 fh1\ \l•tf'f'T\t'nt WA\ fllf'd with tht
'""' nOl"r•t•nq And m.t1nttn.tncto t"• Att•"•Y tor Adrriit'lllilr•tr•~ <ountv Cl~k Of Oran91 County on June Pt·n\f'\ ,,,..d Pt• mivm .. on 1n~ur~nc#> ctC Pvbll\ht"d OrMiQIP Coct\I o,uly P11 ··t ti, 1,11 (41pf~Olf> •o .,, .. P\JH h1~ .. , ~hc\11 bf• PfO Junt' ', 14 .iina Jul t '· 8 l~I/ 1611 If F111ot
r th•c111\ of the-dnf .. of n "<:ordlng ol, on Publ•'-n...rt Orlh''<ll• (o•'' Odtlv P11ot,
.,. v•,ncfl £, .1m1n,,t ion of ''' '""·1-------------Juf'\t-1.c.•nU Jutv 1.0. tS, 1'111 1•\8 11
••cord1nq of co•wo·v•n«-, lran\lt r ••• PUBLIC NOTICF. ~· :~,:,n:.:~~~;~;~~e =~~~~'~::: l---.. -,-CT-l_T_I OU-S-8-U-Sl_N_E_S_S ___ ,
purch•\ .. , frrrtAME STATFMFNT
For the
Record
Df•••INtfon•
Of Marriage
Fll•J...,•14
CORHWEl.l, RontlCI P ..• f nO
CllfrlM• M ; l<ARPY. Tlmollll"' R.
.,.., lVOI• A .. MILLAGE. R~rl A
•ncl Lorroo"" A TETER, Gil<Y E.
dnd RobortfM VANHAVEN8Et<E.
Ann dlld Nedi GOLDSTEIN, Dorothy
and D·W•d. CERDA, (<1rol C .>nd
EOw•rd, DINE, D•wn MochPll• •nd
W<nd•ll Cart; BAIN8R1Dc.e.
O~bOtd., A •net .... HY E'dw ood
FR ASE R. Wlllo•m """ 8a•b<or• A BAILEY Y...lly Lou rind 1-l•rold
Students Urged to Consider Aid
8y tbe AHoclated Press
The thousands of students get-
ting ready Cor college this faJI
race record costs, but there are
several steps individuals can
take to cut expenses and ease the
strain on the family budget.
A survey by the CoUege En·
trance Examination Board
showed that the typical student
attendlnC a private, four-year
college and living on campus will
spend $4,905 for the 1977-78
academic year, up about S.2 per-
cent from last year.
THE SAM E ST UDENT who
chooses a public four-year col ·
lege and lives on campus will
spend $3,005, up 4 percent from
the 1976-77 year.
The biggest difference in costs
between pubhc and private col·
leges is in the area of tuition and , lees, which also accounts for the
biggest chunk of a student~
spending. according to the
College Board, a nonprofit or·
ganiution that provides tests
and other services for students
and educational institutions.
Board experts urge students to
consider financial aid -even 1f
they think their family income is
too high to qualify. Income aJone
is not the determining factor
f!"'amily size and obligations also
may be taken into account.
keep to 1t The College Board
says inctdcntaJs account for 18
percent or the cost of a year at
college. As a general guide, you
can expect to s pend about $200
for books and supplies and $400
for personal expenses .
Transportation will range from
$200 Lo $400. depending on
whether you live on campus or
commute.
If you have not settled on a
college, consider a public 1nslltu
lion Tuition and fees al pubhc,
four-year colleges will average
S621 for the 1977-78 year. com·
pared to $2.476 for s1m1lar,
private instatuuons. Warrung:
students who are not residents or
lhe state where tbe college 1s
located can ra~e extra tuition
charges of $100 to $1,500.
T H E tU G HE R COSTS of
private schools, meanwhile, do
not seem to be discouraging stu·
dents.
•• • ................. •••• • • -. ~ ~ • r.-: c: . ...., . -.../ . ;)
t !:, . ~ • Ji
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• • • • • • ~ . • • • •
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C QI fT r I'. ... (o ltH RA L Pf I
SfOAf hl/1 lr1o11f'lt Av• s._, '' A
Co''• M,. ,. C • 9?,.11
Tt\• vl"!Ck'r\1qnf'd ,. .. , .. ,.,...,th.: tiOM ,, ..
t• 1fl.C • dnv tll'liO •" b1oc; onor to t•ntt., o•
.tn O•t1•·r cont1rm1r'kl tnt w.i
DdleO JUll• 13. 1'71
I £SLOE N DU"YEA Petthon.·r
FICTITIOUS llUSIHESS
HAM!: STATEMENT
Tht 101iow1nq Pt't\Of\\ •redotno bu\A
n1•\\ d\
ZEPHYR HOMES • llmlleO
O•rtiwr\t\tP \~1 G•'hf'td AVf'l"I~
HUnf•"9ton S...Kn Caf1to1m• •16'6
Ph1hp H MCN•""ff. 1161 !.am•'
Ori"P Co~t., Me\a~ C•lttorni~ 9:1676
l•• SCHAUM Ll'On• E """ ll•" v All.,_ SC1<RECENGOST, J•<• •ncl
C.1nu l DEAN. V1<10r11 L•""o)f\0
~Ml\ Wllllem P&UTZ Jo,•oh'F
d'HS C•rof A MC Gill. Hctnny dn<J:
"FAMILIES CONCERNED
abou\ paying rising college costs
should consider financial aid as
one alternative, .. said Elizabeth
Suchar, director of financial aid
services for the board's College
Scholarship Service. ''The
pur pose of financial aid is to help
students attend a college they
otherwise couldn't afford."
New Stamps
The U.S Postal Ser\'lce ha~ disclosed the design of two
13-cent commemorative stamps due for issuance The
stamp above will be issued Aug . 4 commemorating the
50th anniversar y year of the completion of the Peace
Bridge between the United States and Canada. The stamp
below honors Gen. Nicholas Herkimer and marks the
200th anniversary of the Battle of Oriskany. It will be is·
sued Aug. 6.
ltnc:IConM!:rvtltorof th~ E .... ,, ..
Of Urttef'Cunn1nql'k)m OUltYl!:A RANDOLPH,
MAlCOLMaOALY
a, An" C~rt 8rown.
4>0t M•<Artf'lur&ovlev1,.o
Pott Olloce 8or 1110
A1(f'W'O A h.t·'1• Mt.1DllwHO 1001 >/'ti
Wa\1'•""'0h'"' _,..,. ~I•~''°' C.A -11100
Tht\ t>u '""'' 1\ conouctt>d bv <t
Qtl"tfr•t P•rtN>f\hp.
JU<lt T Hul>l>otrrl
Th•\ t;n~nt Ywrl' 1111'(1 wit" ltv
Covntv Cit''" Of Or~ County on June
D•I• S•mbro, U)O ~"'."""" l <r· r•cft'. Cot~Oll Mar, C.altforn1• ~162S
IJ, 1~11. ~:.-:;;~~c11.CA'8UJ moo
AUOf't'ltyl fOf' P•ttlfontr Ju~~~~.'~~z-~:~ t:·~I ~clil~ PtlOf,
tn1, bu'""" t\ coooucll'<I by .. 11m11-"° Ptrlnt"'11D 0..1• Slmbro
•ttd Con\.,.¥1tor 7,11 11 Pubh\t\t"d ()tJnf)P CtM')t Oddv Pilot -·-----------
Thi .. '.tfd1Pmflnl Wd\ t1ttd Wllh lhe
Counlv Clerk o4 Qr.,~ tountv on June 11. ,~,,
PUBLI C NOTICE July 1, l 8 1~11 116• 11 F11711
Publl\IV'd 0.•"'1!' (tM<I D~llv Piiot -------------1 ------------J~.,., 7••noJutv 1.8 11. 1~11
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS llUStNESS NAME H &TEMENT
fh fhltow1nq Pt'f\On\ dredo1nog th'''
"' \1 •
rl~l\Of MASTfRS TOTAL
PfFUllRl\HlNr. COMPANY a•s
l •hftrly Aw-t-tunt1noton Bfo.cn. CA
'11&'1
frtf' MbUH"\ Gv1ld. '"' 160.S l1oe..-tv A ... ,. Huf'lltl'\OIOnBftl<h C .Af1?t>-t1
ROiler! Jame• SIOM, &H Con9reu Av~ . Co\le ~\a, CA 41t.'7
Thi~ bu''"''' '" conouct~d by ~ t1!''l,.,..,, p.trrnersrwo
T tW" MA\t~,., Gv1Jd 1 nc-
Tom M<MIWWlu\ VP
T'"' 1tat~nt wa" •11t'd with ,..,,.
CounlY C•~•• of Ordf\99Count1 on J.,-
10 "" F1/l1'
Publ1,fW"d C:.-dil\CW' COd'-l 01111.,. Pilot.
Jun~ll.H -J~yl,8 1911
1~11 11
PUBLIC NOTICE
n I ti\
l"ICTITIOOS BUSINESS
HAM£ STATEMENT
l\GAP( RllSoNESS M.llCHIN(S
\t,11 M1f10lt<cott Or1vl' Hunhnoron ltrMt\ l/f>Jq
(tru<r l Od-.;1\. \b/l M•ddl••fotf
Orivt, Hunt1nO'on 0..teh. C•hlorr'Hd •)t.J'
T h1 N1t.1n• ' • 'nnovc 1~ bv t»n ,,,
Olw•OV·ll
R,.,...~ Odv•\
11!.ff
NOTICE or TRUHEE SSAlE r '> l'-41) QU 1-------------1
PUBLIC NOTICE On Jul" 1 t ;n 1t ? 11 A. M
frt11n\I ,., l1tl"" (~ ,. r,.11trun.,.
(oroor,,rinn t\dvl'f·1t"Po•"'' 1Tru'I'• -------------1 unC11t.uvt(IU;w.1ntf·>O••l'JOt hu 1r• ~ICTITf0tJS8USINE$5
U"d'"d ,J<tt., ;.'\ 1'1t ~ 1n t t4 llhi'\ NAME STA.TEMEMT
rn wn• t1H1. f'.-fQit" ••• "' OH1c1\I l"!t h>lfOW1nq ~rson •\ 001no bu).I·
"1fl'tnrc.t' •n th\) olfn.t nl "''-" C:.ovnty tif\\ •' Rnt1rdrr 1'1 flr.•no< (n"nh ~ldl• 01 TH F COTTAGF COi' FEE SHOP ,,,,.1.,,.. .• Will Sf I l "r Pl/81 IC S&? w 19'h 51. CO\la fN••. CA. 41611
AUCTION 10 HIGHEST BIDOfR Woll•dm R Tnomd\. 1015 S,
FOR CASH tp.a'f~n11 di''"",.. ol 'l·'ilf' "' P1v~,. 1rti Av' 'll"I 7q Ri.1110. CA '1111b
•awlul ..,.,. •.• 01 ttw Un•l«I SlalP\1 M CA 97311>
U'IP iouth lfrono ""''"'n<~ to tht~ o•e1 Ttu, busine\\, 1\ CONIU(t~ b't' "" +n
councv (rturthOu"t" •n '™l City of ~dntd dl111dua1
An•. tahl 1111 nant t1tt.-.tnd '"'"",_,, W1f11Am A TN>mt1'
convtvf'O to "'r\d n<Jw f\f>tr1 t>y 1t un.a-.,.. Th1\ \t•t~~t win t11~ wtlh t~
s••d Ott~ ,., f,u•t in '"'" prnPt;rh County Cl,.tk °' OrtYl91 Courilyon June
-.Hu•tttt 1r1 '·••tJ rountv ..,,4 Sftttr-10 ,,,,
dPVf•P'Wd"'·
lot 1A ot ftittr NO JlH "'' o., mJp
rpfOtO• I'S'" Aty1• 1t1r1.-. P.1~· 'i -'I'" Wt 1n
C IU\1't/t" t>I M1 r• llM\f'OU\. M 40\o
Arcnro~ ot Or.11.qt• r ouut-.,
lf'f"\{t .... f~drfr .. \\ tMl)ff'IM'COn'\l~•t"o
~\oiQn.,IH')n 1tdny.(ll lf\I rta~I PfOP.-tlv
Ot,<r•C)ict,.f)r1v1 1\J')Ur,,,....,l•·OIObfo
186'" ruHtC'M Or (n.1it Mt ... ,,. ro. •1•1• Thr undt r 1nn1"41 fru 11 ... d'"' 1,.1mo;,
dl"IY l1dOll1IV fur lillwt 1f'lrorr1•ctn1·\1t; Of th•· .,,,,. •. , ,tdnr11'' ,,,,(~ othf'r common
dt""ilQndl•on, 1t '''"· .,nuwn ht-rt>•n
llht•d '"'1" ¥'1'•11 >· ff\,1(5.• nut w1tl''<H1I
ri:tYf",,.,,,, m ""'"''"'¥' , ,..,,, .. .," nr HTI
Dllf'O, rt·(i.trcJ1M •• """'""'\lO'l M ... n
cumor•"<t-.. to,,, tow rctfn••'""0 pr1n < lp•I \um (')f th. ,. '-<\Jrtd by \c!•d
Oto"' Of TrU'\t wft • JnfftfP\I '"*''~ •h
orow1dtd 1n \·11<1 nof• .. dvdn(... ,, "'""
Ufl.dfol trw-,,.,.,,... OI 'd•O 01 • d nt ft l\I
fff'\, < h~r9@\ ""cl t' ,,,, nv ' nt lh•
fru\ttP AN:t l')f ,.,.. ''V\I .. (rt0dlPd by
'a•dOrflldoft;v't
F117M Pubh!a~ <>•nOf" (M\I Oa11y PUo1.
Ju,... 1• .ii~I 111111 ~ " t 11,
IC~nn•ln, GAMMELL Cl••rle•
MPIVln 6t"d c;..11 tcENOAll. Norval
~,.. .. eno,....,,,. R .. WHITE. Rel><'< <• At\t\ and Jdmf'\ C••YIOf\. CHAP~
MAN, Jonoce El•on •ncl Louoi Em·
mftt
COLE, PAI roe•• L dnO J Am,_ T
STOUlEN80ROUGH. M•Clll!I• •nd J rooo: 8ERTRAUD, Mary P. and
Robert l . MARKHAM, Gpor9e
Wltl ictm .tnd J+jno H ~lt-n
GALLAHER Willlam Dan·•· dM
DI•"• Le• CAl'IAL (, Ronnie R all<!
GI"" L, HEL!>IERN, E•oeunca and
T"oma'\ W1lh,•m OWOAS.CY Al~• •nd .. r dnd Sumniia MC CALLEY
1onn Wllh•.m -eno S•ndrt'.t I(•
8\'""N Nf'n(Ydn<IO.·lm•t
THOMPSON ,,.,,., L df'\d M1<rM.,.I
J 0 8Rl£N Do""" '>u~ •nc1 Jdrn·
(ldfk,. (.Q(ft .. H~tO'd Sh ....... Jd I
Ar"ld l '"'9-1 ( .trol f'F t f10N Nl)rm.Jn
f df\OC..lori•l l<ARP"I". l1mo1r..-R
and lvd1~ A WAlL S
unOd ~, • ._. •• no Rnn.·n fdw.titO
Wit_ SON JoM Artf'ur '"10 l<11rl .Anr'
GORHAM Al1C, •• md (,.tHJ,.q., 81,1r't0fl
ME S'>AMOR E £I\"' M.lv ~"d Cn•l<I
L .. a LAil, v1~1•n C ~nd f.rank C
PUBLIC NOTICE
Th• bf'~•<•"rv 11f'l(f4ar \d•d C>~CI of
Fl70U TrU\I P\•·tHOfOr• .-r~rut.-d •l"'t1 dt< Pol:\lt\ht-0 °'"''O"' ('ld,, Od1ly Pilot
T"'' f,Uf'lf'n#lonl wd\ t111"d w1tP\ ttw
(rtur"ll v Ch·'" ot 0•.rw)e C.Ounty on J un• 1 ,.,,
lulv I ~ 11 11 I~// 1881 II
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS l!USIH'SS
NAMf STATEMENT
Tnr toUOwlnQ 0t·rson ·~ 001"9 bu\1 nf'l\ti .,
CERTIFIED GEMS, 3411 Vi• LIOO
lf t. .. ,~ "'""""'' f\41114rh ( 6 41M) ... Or\"fy 8 l~vllt S1S1 Do..-mtJn Ot
S..n D•f'OO CA •711\
n1\ l>WM1.I" condu<t"" by an In
dtvldu•I
t-41\rwy 8 lt'Vltt
Thi\ ,,.,,....,..,,, wb"' fHf'd with thft
<"ounly CIHk of Or-Countyo" Junt IJ 14/1 ,,,, ...
Pub111""<1 O.t._ Coa.C DAiiy Polot.
lunrl/ 1•.&IKIJUIYl,8, 1'11
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
JHH7
IN-PUBLIC NOTICE
"' l'ICTIT10US IUSINl'SS D•l•nO~nl INTERNAflO ·•• NAMfSTATIMIHT'
H0US£ 0~ PAN(Al(E!, fl al Tit~ lollowi"ll Pf''°"' tr•dolng t>utl·
C r o , ' c n m p 1 ., t n a n r · neu •t·
INfE RNATIONAl HOUSf OF Pl'IN CRAl'TS 01' THe CANYON, tt1'S c A I< f ~ " 0 ' • I \ I 0 n 0 I 5h•Gybrool< Dr • Sllver.00 Canyon, CA
INTE RNATIONAL INDUSTRIES. 41676
INC PamelA G•I• Ohon, HUS
V\ 5h•dVbr-or .• su .. ,_ Canyon, CA
(rO\\ C'ol•"rl•nh Al F PED D DI '1'1•
P1£RRO ol\O DOES 1 1hro119h 10, I,. Cv11ttlla flulll 8rO•lut, 2'251
The scholarship service offers
a free pamphlet to help students
figure out which types of finan·
cial aid they may qualify for. The
booklets arc available rrom high
school counselors, community
agenc1e.'\ and college financial
aid admin1:.tra~ors
It is generally too late now to
apply for financial aid for the fall
term. particularly when it comes
to federal programs, but there
are other things you can do to cut
costs. Fot example:
r • w w w W " . Ill .. .. , .. ..
llll • • llll
It
~
• • • • • • • • ...... • ••
• • • ~
~ • • •
-CONSIDE R LIVI NG AT
home. The College Board study
shows that the student who com·
mutes can save from $400 to $600
a year. depending on transporta·
lion C05ts and other expenses.
~ If 1 1 l.111w1 .11 C >11,~.111\ ,---I I I I)\ '11h1t •
-Make an expense budget for
incidentials including books
and supplies, transportation.
laundry and recreation ~nd try to
Movie Scene 'Too Real'
Passers-by Join Set of 'Superman' Filming
From AP Dispatches
While most or the crew for the new Superman
movie were busy selling up lights and cameras.
Bobby Wilson had other problems.
Wilson looked so much like a vendor, his grapes
lftid cherries were so lush. that he had difficulty
convincing the passers-by oo East 42nd Street in
New York City thal his wooden Cruit stand wasn't
real.
Wilson and his stand were both part of the set for
the first scene of the movie, in which mild man·
nered reporter Clark Kent, who is secretly
Superman, emerges from the Daily Planet with
fellow reporter Lois Lane. The scene was filmed m
front of the New York DajJy News Building. whose
art deco facade was adorned with gothic Daily
Planet nameplates. • KeUy Ann Martin, daughter of New York
Yankees baseball manager Billy Martln, was or-
A federal judge in Cincinnati delayed lhc ··war
Pamphlet" trial of Hustler magazme publisher
Lar ry f1y nt pendm~ a hearing on the rights of two
New York lawyers to defend him.
U.S. District Judge Carl Rubin ruled that 1wo
Hamilton County Common Pleas judges erred In
summarily refusing lo Qllow out·
of-stale lawyers Heral d Price
Fahringer and Paul Cambria lo
defend Flynt.
flLYNT
..,. -SU,.l•tl>'I COU•T O• THI! 1 STAHOl'CALll'O•NtAFOlt
""" •• 51,.,.,_ Ctnvon RO • Slt•••..So C•·
NOTICE' Yow ................... Tll• nl"On.CAm1'
court 1nay tle<to. ...,•ln•I you wll"°"' Thi• llvtl"'ln lt confucl.O l>y •
1our b•lnq "''"' \if\IU• vov ,_.,.. ~ra1 Ptr1"*"11IO
dered released from prison in
Colombia after serving l ~
years of a three-year term for
Flynt. ongmally scheduled
to go to trial May S, was charged
with d1sseminat1ng material
deemed harmful to juveniles,
based on about 400,000 mailings
last Wil'\ter Of a pamphlet depict·
mg maimed bodies or United
States sdldiers that asked read·
ers whether war was not more
obscene than F'lynt 's magazine.
*
I· THECOUNTYOFO•ANGf
NO.A•'11U
ltOTICI Ol'Nl!AltlHO 01' f'ITITIOOI
llOlt 1'•09ATE 01' Wll.l. ANO FOlt
Ll'TTllH TESTAMINTA•Y ANO
110• AUTHOltl?ATION TO AO· ~INISTE• UllOIR THE
IHOll'INOl!:HT' AOMINIST'•ATIOH
01' ISTATU ACT IP•e>eATE CODI!
ttlfTHOI
Ella!• ol HAN$ CHRISTIAN
HOGLIHD. eka HANS C. HOGUND,
•U HANS HOGLINO. Ot H.C.
HOGL.IND. DecHWO
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN ll>et
etU!eN" HOGLINDNIS !lleo ,,,,,.,,.
• P91111on lor Praotlt of Will and lor 11.
suan<e ot lfl•n T'Ml..,,•ntery 10 tl>e ~1111-• end 1.., '"""°'"•llon to ..,_
mllllHtr ""° Hlete .,,_, ,,,_ ,._,,.n.
ct.nl Admlntstre1lon of E~t•les Act
IP<O!Mllt C-ffl et \eQI <•l••M<• lo
wllkll ls -for lu•lhe• .,.,tocul•"·
-INI .... tlnw end Pl«• ot l!earl'"I
ll'W Mme,... bffn .,, 10< July '' 1'11,
•I IO·OO • "' • on "'~ Ct>vrlroom ., 0.tNI"\ ....... NO. l Of \aid COU<I, al /00
C:l•I< ""''"' Orlve Wol. In IN Coty of
Stnl• """'· CAll!wntl. 0.ltfJlln•?t. tt/1 WIU.IAME.SIJOHN,
Gou<llv Cttrk
OAYID STlltLINO Tlf'IOLl'lt
LAW C:Olt"OltATtOH
MNe~~Drlve .., ... ,.
N•w ..... e..tft,CA. fl* Tef1t7KI ........
Att~IW: .... ~
P"'41.,. OrMtt CNJt CMll'I' Piiot, J11111, a.a. 1•11
l "'9UC NOTICB I ~ITIOUIMl.iM ..
l ...,... ITATaldlrl ,,_.........,.,..,_, .............
..... !
••!~In JO OO• llud 1110 '"*°""•tlon Pamf'1ac.a1•01..,,.
hlow Tiii• tlol-1 W•\ llled with !he
Altl\01U.lldllf1i49domenNft. fl County Ctm olO.-C-.VonJ11<>e
Trl..,nel ,,._ dKtOlr co11tra Ud. 1111 ll, 19'1 HUltlKI• A ........,. ow Ud ,_ .... ,..,, ..
O.ntro 0. • 01.. L .. le fltlorln.o<left Publl""" Or-(OHi Delly Pilot.
.... \1 .....
I TO THE DEFfNDANT A clYll
Ju,..11.2onc1Juty1 1,1•n
1U0·11
compleonl t...1 Ot.,. "'"'by Ille plalnUll 1------, .--------
•11•1n1t you 1su1001no1e•1 PUBUC NOTICE e II VOU wl\n IC Ot'lelld lhll lllW\Ull,
'IOU mu\t wllhln lOll•vs all•r 11111s-..1-------------
mon\ 11 \e•ved on you, 111, will! lltit '11c:TIT10Ul l USINaH
coorl e wrl11•n 1>IHdtno In ro~ to NAMI STATIMllfT
1118 complttnt 111 a Ju"oc~ Courl, vou TM tollowlnt pel'tOfl\ .,•401"9 b\111•
mu1t lltt wlllt IN court• written plt.0-MIS u :
Ing or CllU\• •n llr•I DIH01"9 to be en· llHO INV11STMaNT COMl'Af'IV,
••••d In 11tt 00<-•• In ,.,_ to tllt Ottf..,toll Itel., OW-fill Mff,
complaint "'""'" JO O•Y• ellff 11111 "'°""•fKU 1ummon\111•r .. o°""""' "*"I H. Gt-.~ 0.<11191.,,
t> Uni~\ 'l'OU '° ,,,_..i. yourO.-11-,ea.-~-.c.tl,.,,_1 .. JUS
ltult woll t>o ..-10,.0 -AP!lllcAlt.11 Of ltObai'I H. O<'-, Jf 4"1 Flrttl4a
ttw olaonllll end tni< co1trt n\Ay 9'11•• • lrtlo,trvtM,c.tllonilaf)114 1udq~"' ... ,nll l'O<l lb< '"" '911of... "'''* J WolMll .... South "" '"""'"o on,,..,..,.~,., wlllcllcoul<I StrHl.AleMllOtle,v1,..111a,U)l4
rHull 1n g.omtSl\m'nt of w~·· ta• Utt IN. Wllu, 1l66t 0 llH Hiii
'"ll ot "'°"""or ~flY or otlter relld ,.,. . Tu~tll', C.lllor11l•'lMO rra~\lf<J 111 tr. c-lell\I 0-E . ~"91KGl'I, Ull RIO 8t-
c. 11...., wish •• _.,,.. "4VIC••I w.~Hltncl4Ho1Ql11t.CAlllort11otl7'j
.,. ellcw,.., In ttltl m.ner, '" ,....,,d 1(1"1 G 0..ver, JOU Camh'°
M M p...nptly ,. 1twot ~· wrilltft C•ohlrano, C•Phl rano B••<ll. ,..,,..., .. , tta11y, -tbefll"Ollllm•. Calltornl•tltJ4
Otl•d "•b n, "" Tllh bUtl,..o h conch1cltd t>y a Wlll.IAM •· $1 JOHN qtNrfll*'lntrtlllp. County Cl.,k ...._, q.,....
IY l•ttyT_.,, :n.11 utnltfl •• flt.ct wit" Ille D~ty C0\11\IYCl.-'tl .. Oo'..,,,.~IVonJllM ti,"" ~m•1
""''"""' Or91191 CiM\t °'"' PllOI, JllMU.WMJ'l,e, H. 1'11 141•»
drug trafficking.
Miss Martin. 23. was arrest·
ed Nov. 16, 197S. at the airport in
a Caribbean coastal city as she
boarded a flight for Miami.
AuthoriUes said she had about a
p ound of cocaine in her
possession. ·
• 'She was credited wilb KILLYMUTIN l
many hours or handicrafts in our shops and the
Enflish lessons she gave to her Jailmates." the jail
director said.
* Dubuque (Iowa> police officer PalllD'Brleo re-
signed alter bis boss, who also is his uncle, ordered
b.lm to stand ln near lO<ktegree heat for four days
bee a use be fotgot to carry bl~ticket book.
O'Brien submitted hfs resignation, effective Ju.
ly 12 then took vacation leave and said he would not
report again for duty.
Police Chief Robert O'Brten stood on the same
corner for three hours to show he could withstand
the punishment he ordered for his nephew.
11I'm here to show that ll's not beyond the
eapabllitfes or a normal human being to stand or1
this comer for three hours and not become beat and
broken." Chief O'Brien, 63, said as he stood in the 95-d.,,... beat.
Queen EUiabeth II of Great Britain senl a com-
munique to the people of Tillamook. 01"e .. thanking
them for a sample of their pnzed product -
Tillamook cheddar cheese. .
The chamber or commerce an the Oregon
coastaJ community sent the queen a two-pound loaf
of the cheese to help her celebrate her Silver
Jubilee, her 25th year on the throne.
Chamber president J erry Knudsen received a
letter from Vice Admiral Sir Peter Ashmore, of her
m ajesty's yacht, Britannia, thanking the town for
the gift.
,
aJ DAILY Pll Ol
Padres, LA
Duel Tonight
I O S AN<iJo:LE S (J\l'I
Sh ron llou.ch waa watehana ht·r
hu.,band pitch on lt•lcvlalon tht'
other duy wht•n tht• IA '> Anjlelcs
Oodgt·r~ \\t'rc pluylng in San
f'raOClbC'U anll she s1)(1ttcd It nuw
'She :.1.11d I wns throwing lht'
AMC..-•..,tCA•C 11MI
~v•· • '" 0 <)I) •I l o· •"9-'"' Ju • f • r "'ft > t l O An~tM
• I(\-.,_ ('\ Jf'J tl A "U' I.. }
p ..
J U P ''
11 \~&>,,
ball runny," ::.aid llough. recall
rng a game in which hit gave up
Ci\'e ruru. in lc::.s than two inning::.
'She said l>he thought I was
throwing lht.' ball too hard I
couldn't believe -.he rou Id spot
s o m c t h 1 n g I 1 k ,. l h a l o o
tele\'lSIOO ..
No m atter Hough listened to
his wire
Demand ls
Ove rwhelming
PO RT LAND, Ore. (AP)
Flooded by an estimated 18.000
tic ke t a pplic ations. the world
cha mpion Portland Trail Blazcrs
announced Wcdnl'Mlav that a
m a ximum of 11 .300 scuson
l1C'kcts will be offered for next
)ear s Natmnal Baskl'lball /\s
<,O<'iat1on ca mpa ign
'This 1s u promoter's dream
... 1tuallon. but 1l ti.is lls prob·
lcms . · said Harry <":hckman,
l'XC'CUt1 vc VICC president of the
Trail Rlazers "We could sell out
the building if we wa nted to "
The plan lea' cs I .400 t1d.l.'l:-<1l
th e 12 ,700 se a t Memor ial
Coliseum for ad vante mail and
box om ce sales
Halos at Texas
Thurbday ni g ht , 1n lhe
Dod1er11' 7 4 victory o ve r the
llou11ton Astro:.. Hougb posted
hill 19th 8¥ve, preserving Doug
ftau's ninth triumph 1n 10 de·
t•1s1ons with l 11:1 flawless innings.
San Diego invades tonight ror
lhe flNlt of a four.game set with
Tom Griffin (5·6 >or the Padres on
the mound against Burt Hooton
17 3 ).
It was Hough's second s uc·
ccssl ve perfect pe rformance
since tus new-found coach made
her observation.
"Sometimes it's a good idea to
get beat up like I dad aga inst the
Ga ants," the knuckleball rehef
ace sa1d "Nobody hkes to gave up
a lot of runs, but al le ast we won
t hat game and I lea rn ed
som ething."
What he learned was to hsten
to his wife.
The victory e na bled Los
Angeles lo mcrease its National
League West lead to 91.2 games
over idle Cincinnati.
HOUSTO"' 1.0SA,..GEl.ES
ilb r ft•• tlb r h O•
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(1P .. lo Arll) •• ' I ('lf:i HN ton I l 0 "no , .. '\ I" r ,,,.,,,, . ., h.-o r H R k t lo•, Hb'
J (r u1 tfl.Wdl,<Jl"lflU V'tJOt:r t9• SU C,.do•'41
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Battered Tanana
Sorry for Deed
BLOOMINGTON. Mmn. (i\PI
-Good p1tch111g 1i, supposNf lo
take care of good h1ttmg. "In the
long run 1t wall ," sa ys M111nel>Ol u
manager Gene Maur h.
However , M 1nnesolt1 '~ good
h1llmg pre' ailed Thursday n1,gh1
as the Twins won their fourth
straight gaml' with an R 6 '1ctor)
over Cahfornaa a nd /\ngels star
lefl·hander Frank Tanan:.i
Tonight the Angels ope n J
weekend series with the host
Texas Rangers. who arc only a
game bch111ct the llalol> in the
-On T¥ Tonfgltt
: Channel 5 at 5 :30
race ror fourt h place in the
American League Wesl.
·Tanana, now 12·6. left in the
fourth inning, trailing 5·2, after
surrendering eight hats. "I can't
wait until the Minnesota Twins
com e t o Ca lifornia Monday
night." Tanana said afterwards.
following his second setback m
l~ss than a month to the Tw111s
Butch Wy negar did most or the
dam age to Tanana The switch
h i tting, 21-year ·old cat che r
knocked in one run with a
sa crifice fly in the second inning,
then finished Tanana in the fourth
with a two-run smgle
"When you beat ham . you 've
be aten the best," said Wynegar.
"Tan ana WllSn 't at his best
tonight, but it's always nice to
get to him ."
Tanana, who escaped bases·
loaded situalions m the first and
third Innings, hit three batters.
walked two and struck out two in
his shortest performance or the
season.
"He was getting behind the hil·
te rs more tha n usua l." said
Ca lifortiia m a n ager Norm
Sherry. "He's usually ahe ad of
the m."
Obviously frustrated by his
s ub -par e ffo rt , Tanan a
responded uniraciously to the
hootin1 with an obscene gesture
to fans upon his departure. "It
was uncalled ror," the styUsh
southpaw admitted later. "I had
no busmess doing what l did com
m~ orr the field ...
It was only the fourth lime an 20
starts that Tanana was kayoed
In the process. his e arned run
average Jumped from l.89to2.ll
The Twins ' Rod Ca rew. who
has been out of th(• s tarting
hneup since Monday because of a
strain an the lower back, ap
peared as a pinch·h1tter an the
seventh and wa lked. Carew's
average remained al .102
CAl.IFOR ... IA
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I l ' I I l
Connors Clowns
In Ripping Richey
AUSTIN. Tex. CAP >-Jimmy
Connors played the crowd like a
master comedian. and the crowd
loved it.
Thursday. Connors defeated
one of the few players who can
ma ke a crowd pull ror Connors
Texas· own ba d boy. Cliff
Richey.
Recently returned from losing
the Wimble!!on title lo Bj~n
Bor g in five sets, Connors lost the
first set to th e 31·year·old
Richey, then overpower ed him
2-6. 6·1, 6-1. Connors won eight
games In a row in the second and
third sets, breaking the stocky
Richey's ser ve four s t r aight
times.
In Thursday's other s~ond·
round match of the Tournament
of Champions , Dick Stockton
beat J ohn Alexande r 6-4, 6-4
~~·.' '1-·-
THE NORTH ON THE LOOSE -Don Stodola (25) is
hauled down by Brad Chace a s Dee Ward (left >. Mi ke
H ealy (30) and Ste ve Crapo (13) give case. Stodola, of
Anahe im's Esperanza lligh , averaged 10 3 yards per
carry as the North trampled the South belore 7.000
Polished and Intense North Rolls
Rebe/,s Bite t~ DWJt,, 27-0, in Prep Alt.star Football Classic
By ROGER CARLSON
CM '"" 0 •1ly Pilot 51•11
Playmg hke the all ·stars they
were, the North embarrassed the
South to lhf.' tune of 27·0 Thursday
night in the 18th renewal of the
Orange County All-c;tar football
game befon• 7.000 at Anaheim's
I.a Palma Stadium
The South now tr ail<> rn the
'>l'n es. M I. and kreps at:. record
mtal'l of nc' er w1nn111g back-to
bal'k
Althouf!h th•• fmal margm was
onl y :!7 p<Jlllh , 1t was so «onnne
mg, that onlv <• HIM l.at·mi: b) the
North m t!lf~ llVl'rshadows tht• cf
forts of the Yunkccs of North
t·oach l'l'tl' Yoch:r I /\na he1m 's
Esperani'a)
~howing morc 111 l'Very aspect
ol thc gaml'. the• North was better
prepared . r a n. passed and
bloc ked like all·s l a rs and
played the game Crom s tart to
fin ish wi lh an intensity the Soulh
SQr ely lacked
Despite being completely out·
p layed, the South of Edison
<Hunlinl!ton Beach ) High coach
Hill Workman was trailing only
6·0. thanks to a fumble recovery
by Newport Harbor lligh's Dee
Ward m the South end zone and a
fumb le r ecove r y b y Shaun
M eh arfe~· < llunt mgton Beach's
Manna) at lhc South seven.yard
hne a fter Fountain Vallt·y's Mike
M u~so shook thr ball loose.
But clesp1tl' thOSI' <•fforts. plus
other good work by Mul>so and
Fo untain Vall<'y's Bill Grilz.
along w1lh FV rrcc1vrr Ken
Margerum. who was the South
oHense. it was the North's game
all the way.
Margerum caught nine passes
for 111 yards. but he was under
NEWPORT'S DEE WARD TAKES FUMBLE RECOVERY HOME.
San Clemente's Corky Caivert 11 In Foreground.
constant pressure. Quarterback
Steve Rakhshani of Huntington
Beach's Edison completed only
10 or 22 and had one inte rception
and was under constant pressure
fro m a North attack that allowed
little to get in its way as it went
a fter t he South quar terback
T he story. however, is not what
little the South could accomplish.
r ather the fact the North did as al
pleas ed.
Still within range at the oubcl
or the second half. the South's bid
quickly went down the drain with
a fourth·down gamble near mid
field that railed and the South
took it m from 55 yard!> out in
nine plays. But the way Don
Stodola (E s peranza>, Tony
Bus hala <Fullerton 's T roy >,
Steve Fogel (Los Alamitos) (>,rere
running and Katella (Anaheim>
High's Dave Wilson was passing
to Esperanza 's Jim Teahan, it
dido 't really matter where the
North began its drives.
Fogel scored from 13 and 9
yards out, Bushala got bis five·
y a rder in the fi rst hair and
Wilson hit Teahan from 11 yards
It Was Easy
out to co mpl~lc rhe North·..,
TDs. Fulll'lton ·.., lloby Brenner
toed threeol lour Pi\T..,
GAME HA TIH•C~
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American Leads
In British Open
TURNBERRY. Scotland <AP >
-"It's a bit disappointing," said
Roger Mattble, who came from
nowhere to lead the British Open
golf championship at the halfway
point. ''l ex pecte d different
weather and a different kind or
golf.··
In windless cond itions
almost unknown on Tu rnberry'l>
Ails a links -t he 26·year-old
bes pectacled golfer from San
Jose, who r anks 50th on t he U.S.
money winners' list. shot a four·
under-par 66 Thursd ay for a two·
round total of 137.
He was one s hot a head of U S
Laver Rolls;
Friars Beaten
SAN DIEGO <AP) -Kerry
Reid defeated 1977 Wimbledon
singles champion Virginia Wade
6· l Thursday night to lead the
San Diego Fria rs to a 28·22 World
Team Tennis victor y over the
New York Apples.
The victory by Reid was the
third time she has de feate d
Wade this season in WTT play.
Newport Beach resident Rod
L aver, Uie fourth 1*9t singles
player in the WM'. downed San-
dy Mayer 6-4 in men's singles.
but Mayer and Ray Ruffels
topped Laver and Cliff Drysdale
ln men'sdoubles6-4.
Stfl DI• M. New Yen n
Womtfl lletO ISO• bffl w-•• "~"'
Open champion Jlubc.>rt Green
and th ree former Urit1:.h Open
champions Lee Trcv1110, Jack
Nicklaus and Tom Watson
Maltb1c.> was not lhl' onlv
Am erican who caml' to Seolland
expcctini.: hil(h winds and fc.>lt let
down by the .,trnngc calm
'This was gomi.: lo bl.' an ex-
perience for mt'. · 1\1alt b1c said
.. , wanted lo l<'arn the pitch and
run shots whic h I henr so much
about from Scotland ·
Deray Si mon. pla~ ing out of
Cos ta Mesa. shot 78 71 78 an his
three rounds for a total or 2:!7.
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Goll Leaders
'8 )' DAVE CUNNINGllA.M OU .. o.llY ,, ... M•lf
After t.be Orange County Stars
brtezed put the El Paso/Juan~
SOl 12-4 and J..2.5 ln th• flrat two
1amea or Thursday night's In·
te,rnat1ooal Volleyball Auocla-
llah match at Anaheim Cooven-tli Center, it appeared only a m acle could save the Sol.
hen the match waa over 90
m utd lJter, a Stars cklb dtrec· tot mumbled, "'Miracles do hap.
peft."
(.ed br tbe ovtr wbelmln1 ~er of Peilarid'• Ed Skorek, the
Sol r atuta and beat Or•n•e
Conly lD the tiebreaker to win
tht makh \hree ctmtt t.o lwo, ,.
El Paso/Juarez swept the third
and l<*rlh games 12·10 and 12-8.
lheo blitzed Orange County In the
alx·point tiebteaker game 6-1.
''Skorek was awesome,·· said
Sta ra p l ayer·coacb Dodae
P•tker. "He hit every open s pot oo the court. We couldn't atop him!•
&kotek, whont -feJlow playws
throulhout the league regard as
the 1reattst hitter/blocker in the
world, shrugged ort tlis personal
perform ance.
"Our whole team played w~ll
Oran10 County is a ver)'. lood
team mtd we were nervous at
fl r.11t." Skortk uld. ''But In
volleyball • rew 10od d iga or •h.•
can tum the momentum around
completely, and that 's what hap.
pened lor\lght. '·
The Stars coach bad a dltferent
ve r s i o n of th e abrupt
turnal'QUJld.
"We were Just golng tbroqh
the motions t.onlgh\, even ln the
first two games. We only won
bec:a uae they p l a yed eve n worse," Parker said. "They
rinally got their game aoing, but we novc-r did.•·
E l P.aJo/Juarcz ,i:oach Tom R~ad, an .El 'l'oro re~ident and
former basketball n ar at Costa
Mesa Hi&h and Orana Coast
Colle1e. wa ecatatlc about lb
victory.
"It's phenomenal to come back
and beat a team like Oranae
County," Read said. "We're all
SQ high now I can't describe the
reeling."
TM Stars' Wilt Chamberlain.
whose presence probably d.re\\I
many of the Z,504 fans, hit well but played Qnl y In the ftrtt three
J?amee. Patker explalna that Chamberlain aUll haan 't played
enou1h yet to go th• dis ta net
Mlles Pabst led the Start1 In
kllls with 20 out of 50 allempb <A
klll I~ • •hot not returned bY OP·
ponent.> BUt Skor k was by far th• domtnatlnff force In \he m •tda, '"th sz ktll1 ror the Sol
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NORTH'S HOBY BRENNER SNAGS A PASS AS MIKE HEALY, STEVE CRAPO (13) CLOSE IN.
Says South Coach
Wish We Could
Play It Again
Dy a Daily Pilot Writer
There was a m arked contrast
Thu rsday night at Anaheim's L<i
Pa lma Stadium rol lowm~ the
18th Orange County All-star foot
ba l l game as pl a yer s a nd
coaches m1llccl around the µlay
mg f1t>ld m the wake of a 21·0
North COJlQUl'St
South coach Bill Workma n of
lluntmgton Beach's Edison Hi~h
said he \\asn't surprised at the
North's abtlll v to move the ball
or in the way It contained bis own
eleven 's offense
"I JUSt wish we could play ll
agaan, •· said Workman "The
North? They all looked good, It's
hard to pack out a nything that
made the difference But w e
were hurt when we couldn't get
d t•ccnt field position We told ou r
kids at halftime !the South was
tra illn!!, 6-0) that all we had lo dn
was ~core
.. But we couldn 't ...
North coach Pete Yoder or
Anaheim's Esperanza lligh, who
molded an all-star outr1t into one
or the better appearing units in
these past 18 altracUons. said. ''I
felt we could beat them. We only
scored one touchdown in the first
half after three opportunities, but
sometimes that happens. We
didn't capitalize. but I was con·
vinced we could move the ball as
well in the second half. But get-
ting only that one touchdown in
the first half was scary
"Surely, we couldn't give up
the s hi p because of a couple of
fumbles."
had to g 1Vl' ham some room A
player like lhat. ,vou have to
respect him Rut our kids did a
good Jo li on him. t•specially Ttm
A,i!uayo (J\nahc1m 's .Sa v:.inna>."
Tht• difference in a 27-0 rout
I hat could eas1ly have been in th~
.ios had the North not coughed up
four rumbles a,nd been socked
with a dozen penalties'>
"Our hoe had to be doing the
Jo b." said Yoder. "When you run
that well you're doing something
right. And we w~re very pleased
with ou.r linebackers."
'· Summer Sports
Report for Area
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Newport Man,
Gonzalez Vie
In Net Play
LOS ANGELES <AP1 llugh
Stewart of Newport Beach faces
Pancho Gonzalez m the opening
round of the Gr and Musters of
Los Angeles tourna ment today
renewing a rival ry of more than
a quarter century.
T he s chedule of fi rst round
m a tches at the Los Angeles Ten·
nis Club was announced Thu1"9·
day. in the opener, Rex Hartwig
will play fourth·seeded Sve n
Davidson, followed by the top
seeded Gonzalez vs, Stewart. •
In the third ro und match.
second-seeded Torben Ulrich will
face Whitney Reed. The opening
night's final m atch will pit Frank
Sedgman against former U.S
Davis Cup ace Vic Seixas.
Semifinals in both singles and
doubles in the $10.000 tournament
will start at 7 p m. Saturday and
the finals open al 2 p m . Sunday
Tracy Austin. the 14.year-old
s tar from Rolling lhlls, who
played in th e Wimbledon
women's singles, and Southern
California's 18-and.under cham-
pion Trey Lewis will be paired
with two of the Grand Masters in
a n exhibition mixed doubles
ma tch Sunday.
McNamara Hired
LOS ANGELES CAP) -J ohn
McNamara, fired earlier this
season as ma nager of the San
Diego Padres. has been hired to
manage Licey in the Dominican
Republic. a club backed by the
Los Angeles Dodgers. Fo untain Valley High's Ken
Marge rum was about lhe only cf
fectlve offensive weapon for the
South and tile North coach said
he expected the Rebels to go to
the air 70 percent of the time.
"We knew Margerum and we
Baseball Standings
Motorcycle Races
At OC Fairgrounds
Speedway motorcycle racing
returns to Costa Mesa's Orange
County Fairgrounds tonlJht
following last wee k's standing
room only crowd of 10,892.
Tonight's attractions include
last week's major winner~Mike
But, along with Bruce ~enhaU ,
Dennis Sigalos, Jlm Fishback.
John Sandona. Bob Berry. Kelly
Moran, Ron Pres ton, Alan Chris-
tian, l)ubb Farrell and Gene
w~.
Action gets under way at 8:1S .
AMERICAN L.EAGVE
East Dlvl.llOG w L Pel. GB
New York 47 35 .5'13 Boston 44 34 ,564 1 Baltimore 46 36 .561 1
Cleveland 37 40 .481 7"1a Milwal.Jkee 38 42 .f7S 8 Detroll 36 .. .450 10 Toronto 30 50 .315 16
WeatDM•lon ,
Chicago 47 32 .w Minnesota 46 36 .5181 2~ ltansas City 43 as .644 4
An1eJs 39 39 .5()0 7\.t,
Texas 39 41 .'88 8"11 Oa~land 34 46 .42S 131f.a
Seattle 35 50 .4J2 15
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eaat Dlvlslon w L Pct. GB
Cbi<:aJo 50 29 .633
Pbila elpbia 47 32 .595 3 St. Louis 44 38 .537 '11f.i
PlttsburJh 42 38 .525 81,\
Montre 37 43 .463 131,!i
New York 31 50 .383 20
West Division
OodJm 55 27 .671
Cincinnati 44 35 .557 9'~ aouston 37 46 .446 181/a San Francisco 35 48 .442 20~
San Diego 35 50 .412 2H1
Atlanta 30 51 .370 241,4;i
Tll~y .. 5<•--· tllt~1 S4 LOVUO Sa" ,._4'f'C:l14:eS.Sen 0.-1
PllU-pllt• ~ N""' Yot\ A lO\A.-1"1,HOll\tOI\~
()ftl v .-W:-\«S
Friday July a. 19n
Los Alamitos
Race Results
.._,,..., .... .,
(!Ur, Tt•lt f'all
'llUT ltACa )fO ¥11nl< 1 .,,., o'O' Ct .. mtftQ ~ m••Otn... PUhf 0100
Mr t .. 0...... IMYl•'I
"4011>'1 hO ""°"' Sebv ,,,.,,,._, ] .... 1.0 Jell Comr,...... Ct<n1Qn11 l Oil rime ti JI
Alto A~ (f\ttfo4i!.H Covnt'I Sold
Rtply, Tf\lrct Hou~ L •Qutd Amber
p,,1 (Mo\lrr B.J, Wdt F.enc 'I Co1ar
Mr Cut ..
Soc: r•tcMil Mt\'l Ao.tm On Kd
tebO Kid, Stwtoo,. S6ll01e. Wat.r r •I•~
U l•u l• 10 Mr Tff Oum 6 1 •-ak11y.~H111 .. eo
SE COHO aACI UO VMO• 1 , • .,
~~~6., Cta1rn41'9. For rn••dtn• Pu,. ...
81Ut Wntlt IA<1•1rl
6 .00 J oO HO Ala mu..-Slrl"'J ICIPtl\W I
6 •O l IO 160
8•1 Your W•ll~llH•rtl l '° Tom(' 11~
Aho,;f.,, -~n Tippy T•mmv f\11~
GC' Jft ttnddo< 0•11lf'(. l 1n1 Ju.tn1n
'V•noy E<llO. AklinQ HIQI\ Ctwla 0..-
S< r•IC"fd Un cl,. A or co Rt'll.,.lttro Sometime' S•rn HPtt<' r.,.n,,y
THIRD •ACl .t00 v•r<h f .,, ... ,
olO\ Ct•1m•no Put,•UOOU
No' 1vrn.tt Moon CMyli'\ t
C.taO"Y' Of' fA0.1r1 1000 • .0 •XI
l"fO .tlW\
Prot)4: r Count CC11 , • ...,"' • . "' Ttmt >O ..
AllO R~ t'40t l1p .. HOVI•"•"
t...•m•ts HOC>" lf"f' M•n~ Vf'lllt'f'I
SltdQe. A<! I. Oell .. ut'. ~ ... DY Sno,...
Scralc""'d _,., Vay Part', Tin~\
C.oCart,A\11 H~ Bo""
U E .. ci.. J·N0<h1r""I Mooft & • Or•ov o.. Hid t tts ot
~OU,.'n411ACE l~VHd\ 1'•~•
OICI\ (lfo""ng Pu"~ 11)00
!tomt1 fC 1nda HOfftl I Brod .. ' t
1110 Sl>O 1llO
Rlrd\ Limit 'TrftA\Ur~ I 2 ao 1 •O
M r "'~m11 .... Coo<1 (Clf>IO,.,.b• I J 00 T1n--1c 181''f
Aho R.tn -E\plend1do 6•vo H. r Bo No''" Country
No \t,4'1C~\
'''™••CE 1
' 400 VdrOto ) yt .... 0141~,. UI" cr.aurona Pur-.u UlOO
Con•,.~ ,,.t• J..a IMv1"'''
1 00 •.O 310
Ne,.W-(l)W-1 ti 40 S 10
Goll'I ICl'H91'rl • 40
ft--101•
AllO II.,, (ooY lllQlll Jinlllle P•,
Wl"lltf'f l•r-k Mtdt'lil• ~i·f
NO\Cr.CCN \
Slit TH RACE ))() v••O• J ••••
('lld-Ct•uTunq IOf f1ltlet Pur ... U?OO
Oro l'ril'4A (Myle\l
•to 370 ) >o Ml~\ le~ Ecw~ ICltr1\•tt, 1 #0 ) 60
t:«"'d G•lf 10.tomoel • 61.f
r1n•• 11.10
AllO Alli' -Aun Kitty Rf1b1U1,,,1
C.•P•\I', ,.,_,, Tldy's Cl\4r11fr, To~'•
Fnr • Few Su. Mor~
\cratcl\ed -Im• Klph Two 8uti b•tt GumlT'ff, t(ir\.<h l(n1k. Srnooth 1h
>',oopa, 8u.i1 C.lt1
U I ... cw fo.Ore P"el• & .. Mio L•,,.Eous,,.ldUl.00
SfYll!MTit ltACE -3)() y.trd1 I
yeu old• 6 uP, Allowancr FtH lolhh
dnO mar•s. PurM '6100
Tl\t Moon Wol<J\ IH••ll -.0 ?IO 110 C~r9er f.SVCW6rdl J IO 2 10
AtQ•"°"" ICtt-rl 110
Tim• -ti.ti
JJ ho Ran Qktr91tr Go Tr•Yfl'lfthl
W'Omttn Apt to Fly
NO\CrillthH 4
l lGHTH RAC! 8/0y•rd" l •r.u
.. td\ & uo Cl••rnlnq Puf"M '3000 -.u,. C.loMS i l'IOUQl'l I • "° • 00 1 Crot1mu\ ~a--n,~.,u,.t-• \ e.o J t.o•
Dupe._· "Pattf't'r, CCr~r> • .,,
Tim• -44~1
At~o Aan ~ C.ttt)if" Coov Nu
A1td'l.Of'\Q, Oic1t ... , Af'tund On •n.·
HOO\if" 8yrd 8fct1n
No\cr.aunt ..
n Eu<U 1·S.W. Glad to i·Golomo'I\
Plloe ... ,PMdMl.00
NINTH 1t•C:E -<Oil va•d• l .....
old• 6 up. ''"""'"II Pu,_. \1100 Cl'l•rlle 8ucl<el ICl••I'># 1
16.20 6 00 1 60
OICI•• Bui Goodir IDttombat
JJO 11Ct
l1·0 Pr•df"i flrea•urf'I J tiO ''"'~ 10 ~ A\110 R"" -No 5ed 5.oog\, L•o'\
~.-.uv. P\Jnken Tnrt'•t rr.-q1c End.
WH'•~meM. Otiuldh'\ Ct\arcw
Scrtttcl'Wld -K1n<1\ Canyon
II Encl• •·Ow•li• 9tKhl 6 I 010118wtGOOOo•.~•os" so
All,.nd.lntt-& &IA
Pro Cagers Duel
In Sununer Loop
LOS ANGELES -The
Portland Tra ilblazers
are world cha mpions or
professional baske tball
but there seems little
rest for anyone on the
professional circuit with
the Southern California
Pro Basketball summer
league about to hcgan.
It starts tonight al Cal
State (Los Angeles I with
many of the top draft
t·hoices and establis hed
veterans participating in
the s e v enth annu a l
Southern Cal circuit. ·
The league, which runs
from Friday throug h
Aug. 7, features gam es
Friday, Saturday, Sun·
day and Tuesday nig hts.
with most evenings tn·
Walter Davis <North
Carolina) of the Suns.
Among the veterans
scheduled to play include
Slick Watts of Seattle.
although the veterans
list is being withheld by
reague officials.
Admission price for
the league is $2 for adults
and Sl for children under
12.
He re's this w eek's
:.chedule:
TOftiqlll •IC.I !ftt.ate l..01 A"991H
• \.~lil;t'r\VS8U(k ..
~ <;on•C'\ "'' St.tmmttr Pro•
s...turdcly.atO t St•t• t.01 •no.••' Rue.-, vc. Sonic\
'!.Ul"I\ Vo, ~Un"lrn\ t' p,,.,,
> HUOQth~s NB.I' PrO·
Sund•• •tC..I S•~·· ~·' Aflllwl••
\ N lJOOt'i s Y\ Sun<
l "''" Y\ Tr.,.lbll'l1f'' ~ ~f''-C\V\N8A Pro,
T.,fl'id•Y tll C•t Slo1tt l.O\ Anof'lf'\
CIUdlng three games Lare" .-NuoO<>h
Among the entries are • "uc~,vs r ••• 10M1•·
'iiun,. v.. N8A p,o,
Portland, Los Angeles. ,.,..,.,.....,,,,,,,,.. .. ,01100~
S e a t ti e . D e n v e r . : ~ ~=~~":"'
Milwaukee and Phoenix n11nd••IJ111vm.1c""'u•co11-...
DAILY PILOT
KIP ENGEN
SoCal MVP
Engen
SoCal's
No. I
Kip Engen , the 5-7
Laguna Beach High star
setter who transfor med
t ough s ituations into
those rocketing sm ashe::.
b v te ammate Jamie
P
0
lumme r . h as been
c hosen most \ a luablc
volley ba ll player -.for
Southern California and
All-CIF Southern Sec ·
lion.
The OOC·tWO junior
comb1nat1on of Engen
and Plummer led the
Artists of Laguna Beach
High to the CIF cham-
p1onsh1p and the All·CIF
and Southern California
teams run like a log 011
Orange Coast a rea stars.
* * At..,MutMrft C•ltforn1a
Fir'' T••M
*
., •O £ t'IQI ....... -tClu041 ~.c.nl. TOf111
H• .,..-o '~'' (f•·m.·nrl'I Jonn Gruber
I P•lt\~d• , rim HOVI lnd
"'•"'""'\I ·'I ..-"' ., t<1r•tv 'Sant-'
ti1HCMrn) 8r1Jtn Aoff, •Fo~mr•m
V.tttt,.v o ..... Sett-tit 15outn
µ~,•d• n' M••• funrnon' fl d
OU1ntd>
S.Coftd Te.tm
<nr1 AllMCS r "'°"''' cr .. 1 Man 8·••
t4ttfJl'l.tfCt HMV'4r('t· MO'• 0 Al,..,..,..,, •• 0
,,,, H1,nl1nQtt1t1Rf.•'"1 tt-unN114""
·J•t Mt*rfu't JAmlf P1vm~...-
t AQun.t l> .. «11tn' "• v n """""r'n" M1 \IM Vina M,lrt ,,,...,,0..,.
Nt <NpC)rt t1 'rbOf'
T~inlT••m • ._.•
Ftau• f'Af~IO !<.Nr,t Lu.,. !t't'lt•f""'.•
tif"IO •Scln•.it ff IFO.tfl'f ! Jonn fntttll
t A T tflJ, Rob t-i OOv• r f~,a,,
(l .. m•nh ) J~I JGnt"' M1,.1 Ct>tilri
•l)(rQ lUH..,f\t'•C1t1 ·~~n M.)fc• !
Q.ivu1M•'IC'M' •NOf'1h Torr,.,,,,.,
ji,tl-Ct ~Southern S« "°" ~l•\ITum
w 10 f "°""" 'L•QVf"•' I\_.~,. nt rnr •
""<t'O 1(04""oni' ~I MM I Tom Et•orl'1
•C..on Clt"miOntfl, K6r<tl Ktt••v •Sdnt.,
fMrO.,,rAt, J~m1t P•wnmPr 1L,1QUM
f4f"'1tlll 8nrrn Rotf'r II ouottl1n v ... 11~.,,~ o ... ,. ~,,. ttt ·~oot•t
.... , ... ,H·nA MHf' Timrnnn, •I •
S.cfWICf T••m
f11ll (•.fqt"Wrd fHrtrVdrtll M19'• 0 /A
1..-\,Andro ,.,_.Vftt1noton ~.-.<nl lov•
,,,..,., f Mtrif C"o '"") Jn• ra
i Ht \nl'1f'jttf' 1\,H• M.irtO ' It.,,.-.
N t•l•On '~•"" Mitt(O\I Yi v•"'
-v<•r'\on tM1'°1,10f"I VtftlOI. M,tllo Sit 'II
11,1~ 1 NI wporl H..tfbOt'
nu,,,Te•m
P•ul c.,..,,, ..,, .. ,,,,.. r..ttl' C'ort<4"'ft
hf\() '~"'"' u..r·c..r.tt Bot> ._.601'1 ,
'in (h·rnt"f\11"'1 O"v1d M.t•M NOf'lti
TOf't•nc• · '·'4"Q :w•l\titd •f-ot.,rntd•f't
VrtlltV) Jtty l'\nu .. llf'IOlf'w CMXH Pf.It: with the second half of ! ; ~~:~~~~,:,'~;~0,
the season including~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
Houston and Chicago. ~-·•
/lrYU'f'IPt'm.t'li ·~V14llO")
Billed to compet e t · ••••• among the Lakers a re I •
d raft picks Kenny Carr f • _
<North Carolina State>. r•••••# .&.•••••••••••,
Brad Davis <Maryland > I 1
and Norm Nixon <Du· 1 1
quesncJ; Kent Benson I 1·
< l ndia na I. Marques I I
Johnson <UCLA> and I I
Ernie Grunfeld (Ten -I CHECK I
nesseel of the Buc ks; I OUR NEW LOW I
Rick Laurel <Hofs tra>: RACKET I
a n d 1' . n . D u n n PRICES I
(Alabama ) o r th e : I
Trailblazers: and Tate I ·
A rm s tro n g <Duke>· 1 TENNIS CLOTHES TENNIS BALLS : : ~~::y~a ~ll~pMaarr~: ALWAYS Y2 PRICE ALWAYS$1.99 :-
Landsbarge r (Arizona I 1·
State) and Mike Glenn I WAREHOUSE: 185 w. 17th ST. COSTA MESA. b31 0.71 •.
<Southern Illinois I of the I WAREHOUSE. 676 EL CAMINO REAL. lUS TIN, 731 0Y% I ·
Bulls L •••••••• ••••••••••••••• .j Also, Anthony Roberts --------------------~
COral Robe rts I of the
Nuggets. J ack Sikma
I Illinois Wesleyan I of
I h e Super soni cs. a nd
Area Calendar
S.curdty •July ti
Aff'1trlc•n l .. OtOI\ Btt~•h .. 11
,. u11,..,ton Ooootr~ v\ Ml\\iOf'I vu'rt1 i111 ~ad<11.0..c-Calll'OI', 1 pm Cost.-,,.~., "' NtwPOrl H•rl>O< "' <>-•nO'J Co•11 COl1f94',1P m ti-or~b<eel lli\~bett f'o""l•lf•
Va llty Dodoe""' l& Mir Ma. ~Pm Olt15 t.ollt>•ll Ar<ad1a ., S•d·
Clltb&ck ''"" al /l.wny FIPld •dOUDl-&<ltt .. 7:J0p.m I
Sunday •Jiiiy IOI
M•tro 8a1•DAll • Oolaen W•<I COllt>Qt Au\tttr\ ,,, Or..,,qe Co.>n
Collt11• Plr•I•• •I Go•d•n W!\I
Co11..,, 'dovbl--r••-•
TMrOvQllbred bU•D•ll -ColCe
M'•A C•PI•'"' "' l'Oufll••n Ver"y Oodo•n al "V l!K ctr 100v111-.o-r
•t I om.I O«•n Vino Aov••s ..
Orenoe Vtll• Par-11 l't M-n• H ICJl'I
fd0ublef'41-et ~II "'· J
Otr" 'IOlll>-111 S.ddl•ti.(~ SIM• al
A1"1mbr• 1dOU'Ofth-.otr •t 1 pm 1
'77
MONTE CARLO
SAVE ON GUNS & AMMO
EXPERT GUN REPAIR
130.00 OFF
COl.f*lf
A\Atn'OI.
145.00 OFF
WALTim ... /\
.... ~I.
GOLDIN WEST ARMS
17JOJ tlACH &VD. SUJTI 16-.A 11etw.-w__,.,... Sletw -~u
H.,..,,..GTOM U.ACH
141-3311
•'
DAILY PILOT Frida Ju a tm
TV DAILY LOG
l'lllDAY
IVUliCI
8100
•m •111 '' t ._ D ft l •._
I
• _... a.1111.tH COAi d l1u11 ~JON C.lifo1111 '' luo
bl\s•ll lt JC..,,.. .......
-~ .. ...., .... Slll4ti .. ,._
( tf1(J )( rt) llrn eamcc:..t11 .....,....._ .... I Conld
frQlll S 30f'M O.t.i•nd A \ v1 K1nu\
Oty ~1111.
fD Dtctnc C.,..y m DnNtic Se11tS Ci>...._1M'-1
-6:30-.. ...... C (9t) .. A Tllftrt4
... (di.ti 11 Li ·1d b1'4.t1
~ m AM, C11thtll
l!QI Mm "11f• s...
( 1l\ ~ ) .., Tllrtt s-m z-
(lit C•) lewltd!H
Ot .... mT-Tllk
e!l 1'111Ctf11pltr: Htf t '1 How
7:00
('}) Crnt11tnq On. Du fUJ m m m Nm
I 6 ' Illy Thfte Soni
l I To TtH tht Truth
O Concentralton
aJ I low lLKy
Cl) Tiie FBI
( 11 3 ) family Alf.ttr
fl) Action Drama
EID MacNellllehrer Report
( ~ • & ) Putr1dee r am1ly
39 C1oss-W1ts
@ Consume• Surv .. al Kol
-7:30-
D Wild -•ncdom
1 6 Padre Bueball ~·" O·~~c· Pidre~ vs Los An2tlt1 Oooge" D ,101 i11 raJ m Hollywood
Squarn
a The Muppeb
O The Jobi's Wild m Bewitched
( 17 3 ) Dolly ,UtOll S/oow
ID Cllanntl 21 Ton1111t
( 21 e ) Buoty Bu"'h
Jt liars Club
@ Proflltt
8 :00
0 ( u 3 ) a CBS frid1y
Movie. c (l11hr) "lhe Sic Coun
Irr" t M , 1 ~~ Gretorv P•ck Ch~rlt1 n If, Inn Jtan ~1mmu11~
Jim•\ M. K.iv 1Prr~l 1 B~lt1mortdn
<1111vr~ on ~an l!oli•I l•i.1\ lu ma11v the pdmpm• J daur.hl~r ol a prom1
n•nt ranchn Wolh his p,enlle manne1
ano ld~lr•n clnlhe~ MtM~y 1s 1mmP
d1~ltly b1 ~oded a~ a dude by I hP
I ~1ans McKay al once finds h1m~Pll
embroiled 10 a long standing leud
belwe'n his l1ancee's father and anothpr rancher OvPr water 11ghfs D ,,311 &J m ~91 Sanford and
Son · Rmrend S-lnlord (R) fhin~
ing that he can get ~ome lac rehPI
I ied 2ets himself ordained in lh~ 01v1ne Prophtt Churth
O lllow1e: •c 1 (2hr) ''Born to luck" (wes) 11 Hemy fonda
na11ates
D 3 10 ( 29\ e ) ABC flldar
ll1cht Mow1t Ooubltfnture. C (90) "H1&1i Risk" (ad~) /6
VIC!Df lluono. Joseph SKola, Don
Stroud Joanna l\ara Cameron RoonP floup S•• fonner circus Pttl111mers
en~age 1n a Clper lo ca11y off '
pro"less ar11lact from an emba:..~y in
Wa~h1neto11 O C in bmad dayhahl o "'-· 1 c (2hr) ·n1cht of 111c
lost lltlooll" (advJ '60 Marl.h.111 I hompson Mala Powm m l!tnc of !ltllSlftfton
Cl) All That Glitters Is Clobatron
lo'°ng l W to a man' Marsllall and l1nda"s unupecled reunion b11n11s even mo1e uneopected rc1ulls
6ll e!> Wn11tnatoe1 Week 1n Rnittr
Q) El Chno
-8:30-
D tll l Ct) €Iil Qf1 Chiu l the Man "In YoUf !Jal" (R) Wlien Ed
81own's "lucky" hal is stolen and he
refuses to enter a hosp1lal for 1 hernia operation without 11. Chico
goes lo great lengths to 11et 11 !lac~ m Cross-Wits
Cl>'tffJ iu-~I MoYit: CC) "Wondtr Wtmu"
(adv) '14-Catlly lee Closbr
ID e!> Wall Slrfft Week m Cllrique el Poli\'Ol
9:00
0 111 (61 t!;) Sf' QuifttJ CR)
. wke Eyes The mysterious deaths ot seve1af aue$tS It a 1tsor1 hotel
wl!l're Qv111C'f ts a11end1nc 1 111t1tolo
crsts· convention. 111Yolves the med1 cal e111111nt1 in a ~sperate dlOlt lo
prevtnt Ille stOIY hom luk1n£ out m 111en 5ntr111 s• fD ..., W.W "Cllulu fr011teras··
e;> rlriq t.lrlt
-9:30-
D CJ) ® (9 CV> ABC Fr*Y Mo-ti. O..Mtlu1t111: (C) (tO)
•DauMt CM" (com) ·13-Kell M11·
tin, Mel Stewart. Oallu Edw11d
Hayes. lltverly Ballard. White folb
(Martin), • h1lf·wh1tt, h1lf·blac~ man who PJSSts IOI white. comes lo lawn wltere fie teams up with his black buddy, Btoe How•rd (Stewart)
in the Ille irortd'1 second oldut
proltaron, tht con 11mt. llJMM~
10:00
OGh
(f) ... ctJ "Tiie Girls tf ""111·
i•(IM MMe" (dra) '73-Shrrft'
JOlll&. Mtrtecltl t.kelmWu MwallhlllJ tD ~ ~ .. ,_.ncy l>rflfl-Dt
ltclivt" ma .. -.. e PIS .... Tilutrt '•
-10:30-.......
t1100 w •(I) <II a (I)"-I ~ OOlr.':' ..... .
~cm~..., .... .. '*-> '71""*" r•. ShTJ 8'1n
It.,.=.: 8-lllf . ... ....,
~,:: ..
~= ........
-n:•-
'
12:00 8 (ttfl I a ) t C1$ Ult ltl4w1t.
IC -C..1•h011" (com) ·i,g O•v•O
J.nuen. Kim 041br CJ1I Rrinrr Ullla'77
m "'" "" ""' Q) .._.: 1c 1 "W:I of K111111an·
1111• (~v) 61 Marshall lhomp~n e Madttiltldrtt a.,ort
-12:30-
~ lillewlt: C "N1aflt Creaturts"
tmr~) 6/ Pete• Cv>111n1 D All 1111•1 S~o•: .. folln the
Sn, .. "Th lu1n Thal Wouldn"t
Die," ·111t~ lltuMn"
II Sus,tnse Tbealrt fh, R1obr111
Ron, An orn1lt IJnol~ "n' b11n2) together' pro~d rover 3nO a •p1nster
>e.lloollUChet A IOnR ~ue~ ti traz
td•U 1~ •1,~14led w1lh the •1ng •nd •I uu~s llhoc 1n the 1,.e; of l"o ~pie wllO oiscover rom1nte
CD Mcrnt. "flit Sen of Dr. Jd Jll" (hor) SI lou1s Hif"ard
e!) llbcllttl/ltllm Report
1:00
D "' 1 ~1 )t Midn11hl Speml P1ul An~a IS host to Barry Man1lo111.
Richard Pryo• Mac 0dVIS Captain & lennolle. Neil S•da~a ldm~ ldn Jnd
1p1·r1JI ~alule Neil Yount Ollmlltr
-1:30-
0 hlk1bolil
Cl) Movie: 1c1 .. My$tery Sub·
mmne" (adv I '6~ Mat!Jun~ld
Ldr~y M.irld lo1en
:l:OO O Ooublefuture MoY1e:
CJ "Swen1ah,.. "Conspiracy of
Hurts" ,, m All·lli&hl Shor. "fli&hl for free·
tlom," "The '""~ntcl"
-3:35-
0 lolov1t: "Thi fotce" (adv) 49-Caiy Cooper, Jane Wya11
SATURDAY
7:00
O S41rmner Semester 0 D a • €Iil 39 Woody Wool!·
pee: k er SllOll ·
• 6 l'optye CartOOllS
U 31 JQ.(29 ~)Tom l Je-rr1tMumbfy 5""
1 a w111sttee1
O llie m Club m LA. Patterns
Cl) S.m Yorty Siio•
ED Man Builds, Man Dutroys
-7;30-
0 Camm Three D 12ll cu m ,,,, ~nk l'anther
O Pacesetters
D m 10J (~J (t_) Jabberjaw a• First Aid m Motte: ,C) ··~yond Mombasa"
(adv) Sl-Cernet Wilde Donna
llr•d l•o Genn Ron Randell
( 17 3 ) BIKl Buffalo
8:00
O ( 11 3 ) •, Srlnster l
T"'IJ O Mcrnt: "The Kilftr SJ\ar'" (adv)
50 Roddy McOo111all
< 111 14rp Bunny eart-u U1 (16 (}ti T) Sc.ooby Ooo
D Mewic: rei "The SplMsh Marn" (adv) '45-Maureen O'Hara. Paul
Htnreid. Walter Sien~. Nancy Cates m•-.r1oom (.Ml Yoi<t of T ol)'O
-8:30-u (\.111 (3 ) fl) Cl11t Club
I 6 • The Munsten m A 'ortrait of Jamie
9:00 D ((11> CI)) (}; Buas Bunny/ Roadnrnner o '211 m m <ltl Speed eum
\JJ Valley of Ille Dlnouu11
Cl> Womltr: ltul to Reel &l> Ctltbratln1 A Century C)lnsipl
-9:30-
D Oll Cfl m IJil Monster S.ld
& .lollftny Quest O Mow1t: ''Ghost of Zorro" (adv) S9 Clayton Moore a C1J u~1 Ut LL> Kraltts s.rp..
"" m Mo.it: C "Tht '•thlinder" (ady) SJ Georae Montgomert Helena Carter Jay S1lverhetls
IE) Soutlltfw C.ltfon111 mz....
el Esb Es u VIiia
Weekend Calendar
Junior Sailors
Vying for Cup
Ju111or sailor'> frum 12 Southl'rn California
> achl club~ wind up competition today and Satur·
day at the Balboa Yacht Club for the Governor's
('up, an unnual matt·h racing series for sailors 18
and undN
Clubs compt•l111~ b(•s1dcs the host club are the
Alamitos Bay Yacht Club, Long Beach Yacht Club,
San Diego Yacht Club, Newport Harbor Yacht
Club, California Yacht Club, Bahia Corinthian
Yacht Club, Santa Barbara Yacht Club. Lido Isle
Yacht Club, Cabr11lo Beach Yacht Club, Mission
Bay Yacht Club and Oceanside Yacht Club.
The series, which started Thursday, as being
sailed m Santana-20 sloop'>
THE NEWPORT 11/\RBOR YACHT Club is
BOATING
Two Boats
Cl . . a1m1ng
Race Win
host to Star Sailors Saturdav and Sunday in the an· NEWPORT, R.J. (AP)
nual Baxter Bowl Rl·gutta which draws crews from _The crews of both En
throughout California Lerprise and Austraha·s
The Voyagers \'a<"11l Club ha:. two events on Lhe Gretel JI are claiming
calendar this ~eekend victory in an unofficial
PHRF and MORI<' sailors will comJtete m the 12-meter race 1n Rhode
Humphrey Bogart and Laughlin scnes, respective-Island Sound.
ly and dinghy sailors wall compete m match racing. Gretel 11 was making
Catamaran and trimaran sailors will see action her first runs Thursday
today, Saturday and Sunday in the Multihull World since arriving in
Championship regatta at Cabnllo Beach Yacht Newport last week when
Club on breezy Los Angeles Harbor. she met the newest
Southern California Yachting Association American yacht being
calendar put through her paces.
' AJ•~ll l 0 flf A(f"I v;~:,~<:~~ H~~~.~~ull1t1ull cn~1npo()fl\nl1>. lo-. The boats faced off in a 0
"' t~~";.~·,'~A~':~v'~<HI fl 1111 1nvo1.11o~n.lf<'Ch•ll~ oo•elb011\. 'aturday ShOrt race lO windward
""d '"' ""' and downwind. ., ... ~~.Al llfA(HYA<HI <I Uh '""'lll~n~Po·Qilll~ ........... ,.~alurcMy From one vanl3ge
s.1nt•Mon1u a., point. Gretel II appeared
r. H "~71~ ·~~,~1~~~~vv"[~~~«, ! ui1l 111h~,~~:~~,'~~t,';~~~~·~· <;,t:111~~ie'cch~.,; to sail slightly faster· to '"'"~;~~·~~·~·;·~·~ • .,~··:~·~HI r1trn 0 •. ,.,,. Roe•"•" s.otx>i• ~u..a.., windward than En
Ollhl (OA,r CCIRIN llHAN VA('HT CllJI< 1.1.ndN ?ff ""•OMI• t er prise . But at '·''"'~d• Su•'<l.ov N•wpori 0•1_ dockside, the crew of En·
1•Alf\011v11rH r111111 <o"''"""'"" 100.v ~••u•O•• terprise boasted it had '>vn::..~ WPORl HAilo OR YA( .. ' Cl Ufl ll••l1•r (Wwl Sl•"· S•lu•d•Y outs ailed Gret.el ll.
vovAc.r "S ••<Hr ci un 1'"'>"'' tPHRF 1 ,,no L•uqn1°n tMORF • The Australians also 5..,.,.s ..,n ~ '>d1ura-. 01MnyM•t.~'o';.':,..<;Mure1.i, .,.,.,,,a, claimed victory when
Sun.f.~R0NA00 VAC'tU Clllll Mol<ht-11 ~!Of\ trnuncl«Oorcll !>alurdav they arrived al their
COl>ONAOOCAVSYAtHTClVf\ Cl•• •<Srru>QSt·n•• Saturoav berth. But without Of· Srn~l~~11~:,~:~;:;,Hr CLVf\ lull In Sot>O". Saturd•v Sum"'~' fiCial observers, nO de·
SANTA (lARA RACING A'.>SO(IATI )N '>um,.,.., .,.,,,r •II .... ,~, cision could be made. 5'''"~~t~fQGATr YA(HfCll)I\ C,1t•Hovn1 \.'tlnl<!i S.t1urtt,\'I The Enterprise JS one SANOlff".OYMHr ClVh .... '""""". rfMOIH •SuncJAv F,,,,... of three American 12· 5•"• PHPF s.,.,.,., m eters bidding for the HOrU\ A Ad t"l-'nd , .. ,ACM'AYAOtl ' I 'I ~ ....... ~, .. I •u•d•• ru~ht lo derenrl the Pl~~~;~Ar~~~;~;c"~~lc~~"J\ rAt1ot11 (ttt\ llC•hf, ~ .•• "''~.... America's Cup
Boating
FanUly
Horwred
Boats Eye Record
.Drifter, Merlin Leaden in Trampa£
By ALMON LOCKABEY 0.lly ~lol ... Ullil Wrltff
Jn the 1971 Los Angeles to Honolulu
race Windward Passage was 1,101
miles from the finish on her record
crossing for an elapsed lime record or
nine days, nine hours, six minutes and
48seconds.
Thursday was the Cifth day of the
current race and four yachts, lnclud·
Ing Windward Passage, were ahead o!
that record run .
The leader Thursday was Drifter. a
69-foot light-displacement yacht
sailed by Harry Moloscho, Long
Beach. She was 1,005 miles from
Honolulu and 96 miles ahead of
Passage's record run.
BUT DRlFTER IS not yet a cinch
for first to finish. Twenty-eight miles
behind her was Merlin, BiU Lee's 67·
root ultra-light displacement
speed ster' 64 miles ahead or
Passage's position in 1971. In third
place, 1,087 miles Crom Diamond head
and 14 mHes ahead or the record was
Jim Kilroy's 79-foot ketch Kialoa of
Los Angeles. Passage was one mile
behind Kialoa and 13 miles ahead of
her 1971 oosition.
Still in contention despite her fifth
position with 1,018 miles to go Thurs-
day was Ragtime, the elapsed time
winner In the 1973 and 1975 Honolulu races.
A plot of her position shows she was
considerably south of the other
leaders with the ability of a fast reach
in the last 1,000 miles while the others
would be sailing more dead
downwind.
ESTIMATED TIMES of arrival
<ET As) for the lead yachts vary from
9 a.m . Sunday to 10 a.m . Monday on
both sides of the Pacific. A lot will de·
pend on weather conditions in the
often breezy Molokai ChaMel where
the northeast trades blow up to 35
knots and generate giant following
seas which increase the boats'
speeds. Word from Honolulu Thurs.
Jay was that lhe wind was increasing
and may hold for the next few days.
56veraJ local yachts are doing well
on handicap ttme and may finish ~
trophy winners in their res~ctive
classes. Best performance is be·
ing recorded by John Arens' 37-foot
sloop Cottontail which has been hang-
ing m third place overall and in Class
D since the start of the race .
The 50·foot sloop Native Son, de-
si~r\ed and bum bv Duf(v Duffield arvt
syndicated by the eight-man crew, is
holding about the mfddle of Division
II, the 10-boat ultra-light displace-
ment group.
LOCO VIENTE, JIM Seals' 40 foot
Lee-designed ULDB ls righting a
seesaw battle with Native Son in
Division II. ·
Quadrl, a 38-foot sloo sajled by
George Gianandrea, Paradise
Harbor, San Rafael, continues to bold
her handicap lead in the overall and
Class D Division I.
According to ham radio reports
from Honolulu, excitement was
already beginning to build along the
waterfront as the lead yachts passed
the halfway mark recording speeds of
10·12 knots with 285-mlle day's runs.
Speculation is already rife as to which
yacht will finbh first and at what
lime.
Jacknif e Sloop
Gets Race Win
The 42-foot sloop Jacknife, skip·
pered by Jack Greenberg, was
declared the winner of the 473·mile
Annapolis, Md., to Newport, R.I.
race.
The victory gives Greenberg the
Blue Water Bowl, awarded to the cor·
rected time winner by the U.S. Naval
Academy, Jacknife was the eighth
boat to finish in the 7S-boat fleet. First
to finish the unusually slow race was
Eric Ridders 80·foot yacht Tempest.
The Paul Merrill fam1
ly of Alamitos Bay Yacht
Club in Long Beach. hu:-.
won the Cahforn1a Stall'
competition and will
compete among 20 state
wrnners for national
Boalmg Family of the
Year contest sponsored
by the National Assoc1a
lion of En~ml' and Boat
Manufacturers.
The nominations are
made by boating writers
The Merrills were
nominated by n on
Culpepper. outdoor
editor of the Long Beach
Independent Press Tele
gram.
Driving fun. Funcnonal cargo room.
Together in one of the best looking cars
in tovvn. Toyota Celica GT Liftback.
The finalists will be an
nounced by NAEBM an
November. The winner
will receive a $1,200 cush
prize and a free trip to
New York during the Na
tional Boat Show
Brown Wins
PHR.F Series
P erformance II an
d1cap Racrng fo'let•t
yachts from Voy~ger"
Yacht Club and
Southshore Yacht Club
inaugurated a n ew
cha ll e ng e series
recently with J r ace to
Los Angeles Yacht Club
The winner was
Thorobred, skippered by
George Brown, SSYC
Second was Trend.
George McClellan. VYC,
third was Tigress, Gil
Knudsen; fourth was
Redline, Vernon
Mathison, VYC. and fifth
was Lumaran, Bill
Rohrs, VYC.
Fair "'ttti°' '°"'<loud~ •lonq 1,,. tiff<"" Saturci.y mot n•no
l l11t11 v•r••olt wind~ nlQM 1"'1
moml"O"°"'' HIQlll\ln-r'°' Coastal •-••luru wtll r~nQt t>elw .. n ti •nd " Inland ttm 11tr11u,.... wtll ranot btll-n 0 ..,,ct
IO Tl'le-twi.mper•turewttlt>e ..
'' .,, te your Cel1cn ·~ dll tt1e
c..orn1on vou could nsk for ru11
carpeting AM FM Stereo
Reclining bucket seats Tintod
glass. The works All standard
TM Cehca GT L1ft1Jack goes as
11rod as 1t looks There's a 2 2 !tier
SOHC engine under lhe hood
coupled 10 a 5-speeel overdnve
gcarboY
ThiJ Cehca GT Liftback is built
Toyota t1ghl and tough Welded
11rnt1zecl·body construction. Tota1
immersion 111 a rust inh1b1t1ng
primer balh Even the pretty pa1n1
is applied to a thickness lhar
helps withstand the elements
It doesn t cost dn arm and a leg
to buy or maintain a Cehca
Cehcas are Toyolas-and Toyota<:
are economical and dependable
The Toyota Cehca GT Liltback is
truly a functional car
Behind these steel-belled radial
tires is a MacPherSQn strut front
suspension and power a~s1sted
front disc brakes. A top road-
hold1ng and stopping cOl"N>lnatton
Here·s where lhe Llflllack gets its
name Flip up lhe back. Flip
down the rear scat And you've
got fun room Golf clubs A bike
Or functional room for 9 bags
of groceries
~ "'Ill
JACKIE HYMAN, Editor
EEKENDER Arts/Dining Out
Entertainment
I
'tspaniards and mission fathers in the pageant are
lolayed by (from left, above) L.E. "Swede"
Wetzen, Dick Kennedy, Rick Kosbab, Boyd Ames Jr.,
on Sherer and Chip Fenenga. Portraying Indians
right) are Bradley Ashbaugh, Sal Gagliano, Robin
urritt. Billy Ashbaugh. Diane Huling, Bartley
shbaugh and Mike Ellison. At far right, junior
ifeguards race to boogie board practice in
reparation for Ocean Festival.
.. .. , ... '. '.,,,,
Fridav. Julys. 19n f DAILY PILOT ....
The changing face of San Clemente,
· from the time the. missionaries
and the St:.Janiards first invaded
the land of the Indians, to today's
youthful beachgoers, will be
reflected in the pageant and other
events this month in the
Fiesta La Cristianita.
Daily Pilot Photos by Richard Koehler
CJ _...
Fiesta Revives the Past
By PIOLIP ROSMARIN
Of llW O~lly Pilot St•ll
Summer in San Clemente
. eans fiesta. o<'ean ~a mes and a
ek five males and 208 years
back into the hllls behind tht>
Spanish v1lla~c by the sea.
~he orgy or ct•lcbralion they
put on in that town when the sun
waxes hot 1s. 1f not larger than
re. at least equal toll
It starts this year a little d1f-
rently from in most years past,
hen a parade would begin the
ummer festival and, 1f you
idn 't watch out, end at, too.
THE FIRST Annual Beach
m ateur Volleyball
T ournament. an all-comers
two-m an teams competition,
starts Saturday and Sunday and
continues next weekend.
First service is at 8 a.m. each
day. and play continues until
dusk or until they run out of teams.
Competition courts are at
Trafalgar Street and Avenida
Pico beaches, and at the main
beach next t o lifeguard
headquarters.
Rules are those of the Urute<l
States Volleyball Association.
For those less incline<! to the
bumps and grinds or volleyball.
another kind or bumping and
grinding is also scheduled Satur-
day at an outdoor barbecue and
buffet dinner on the south lawn or
the San Clemente Inn, 125
Esplandian.
The 6 p.m. kickoff party for
Fiesta La Cristianita includes
square dancing, belly dancing
and jazz, Polynesian and Spanish
dancing.
Dancing <celebrators don't
have to do the exotic ones> is
until 1 a.m. Tickets arc $6.50.
A week from today, on July 15.
lhe 24th Fiesta La Crisllanita
begins with an Ocean Festival of
aquatic and beach games at and
around the city pier and
lifeguard headquarters.
Games begin at 10 a.m. for the
tw o ·d ay fes ti va l . w hich
continues through July 16.
Ocean Festival events include
a Mini·Mi ss San Clemente
contest for budding beauties 3 to
6 years old, a sand casUe contest,
surfboard races , paddleboard
and swim relays, a one-mile
swim and a five-mile open run .
THE LIFEGUARDS wall flex
some (JIUScles in their own set or
competitive games July 16.
In ConJunction with the Ocean
Festival is a carnival, with
game, food and beverage booths
run by local service clubs.
The Kiwanis Club serves up
breakfast July 16 a nd July 17,
from 7 a.m . to 11 a.m. in a
market parking lot at North El
Camino Real and Mariposa
Avenue.
Orange juice, sausages,
pancakes and coffee or milk are
yours for $1.75 per adult, $1.25 per
child.
'Reboni'
Scientists
Tell Own
St()ries
Richard M. Eakin, a UC
Berkeley professor,
appears as himself (below),
Gregor Mendel (above left).
Charles Darwin (above) and
Louis Pasteur (left).
At 10 a.m. July 16, about 20,000
people are expected to line San
Clemente streets to watch the
Fiesta L.a Cristianita parade or
200 bands, drill teams, clowns.
horses and riders and novelty
acts.
THE PARADE starts on
Avenida Del Mar, with the lme or
m arch to El Camino Real, then
north t o El Por tal. Grand
Marshal will be Macdonald
Carey.
The festival is sponsored by the
Chamber of Commerce. It
co mmemor a t es tbe first
California baptism.
A recreation of the 1769 event is
the theme of the La Cristianita
Pageant, an outdoor play held in
the hills behind the city, where it
actually took place.
Local actors re-enact the story
or the expedition of Spanish
soldiers and missionaries whose goal was to win over the
California Indians to the
Christian religion.
THE DRAMA is produced by a
volunteer pageant association. It
was written and will be directed
by resident Norman Wright. an
author a nd television
clirector /producer.
The pageant was first held last
year. It won popular and critical
kudos, including a Disneyland
community award as most
innovative Orange County
project for 1976.
More than 100 actresses and
actors or all ages. culled from the
community. play the parts of
conquistadores versus Indians.
The play runs from July 22 to
Aug. 7 every day but Mondays.
Curtain time is 8: 15 p.m. Tickets
are $3.50 for adults and $1.50 for
children aged 12 or under. Phone numbers are 492-1131 and
498-0880. '(o get to the canyon site.
take the Camino de Estrella of(.
ramP. of the San Diego Freeway
(from either direction), turn
inland and follow the signs to the
pageant.
The final event of the San
Clemente s ummer festival
season is the annual arts and
crafts fair sponsored by the San
Clemente Arts and Crafts Clu b.
The fair is open 10 a.m. to S
p.m. Aug.20and21.
There are display spaces for
more . than 150 a rtis ts and
craftsmen, located in the Sandy
Martin Memorial Gallery and on
the grounds surrounding the
Community Center, at the comer
or A venida Del Mar and Calle
Seville.
Young Artists Come
To Disney's Rescue
The last of the old-time animators at Walt Disney Productions have been joined by a new group of yo~ng artists to produce the
studio's newe$t animated feature, ''The Rescuers."
Starring the vocal talents
oC Bob Newhart, Eva Gabor
and Geraldine Page, the fihti
depicts the adventures or two
mace ou~ to .save a kidnaped
orphan named Penny from
the clutches or vUlainess
Madame Medusa, who needs
the girl to help find a
priceless dfamond. 111111c• AHO """""o
The young artists are being tralned in the Disney tradition by the
studio's vet.eran animators u part of a Talent Development Proeram
now in its seventh year. Mo~ than 30 artists have ~uccessfully
completed· the program and are now working In all phases ot animation.
·. ONE OF THE DIREC11NG animator& on the film is Don Bluth.
retarded as tbe leader of the new artists.
In 1$55, jl.1$t out ot hip ~ Bluth Joined Dimey Studios on •'Sleeplnl Beauty, .. but quit tO'continue his education. It wasn't unUl
tbe early 1970s that he retumed to anlsnaUon. He wu the first or the
new pneratbl to attain the rm 'of animator auid, in addltlon to his
•odt 00 '!The Rescuers," be 11 directhl1 animator on "Pete•s
Dra1ton," a comblnatlon Uve·acUon/antmatJon niuslcal due at
Chrislmas sterring Helen Reddy and Mickev Roonev.
! 00\er key animators lbclude Andy Ou.kill aftd John Pomeroy,
both 1Wl ln tbelr mld-20s, and Gary Goldman, 32, who m~ored ln Ute
~
drawlng at the Unlverstb' of Ha wall befofe comfna lo Dlaney. He'a ,
resp(>nSlble tor the openlnt MQ\IMces of ''The Rescuers" as well ll
moet orthescenes in vol vinl a dragonfly naft)ed IMntude.
Pomeroy. originally an illustrator, aet out to become a background • art1tt f« lliAney, fell in lcw. "1th anlmaUon whlle enrolled ln the Tale~ Oe\lelopment Ptoiram and. be uy1; hun't painttd any\hfJll 1tnte. He did mQ4t ol the work OQ PenQy ln ~mm. •
~----. ___ _... • • • • • -~· .................. ~ ... 4i.. • .. ... -~ .... .., • -• .. .. • • ... ------·---
' -DAILY PILOT Fr!ct.x..}1o1tx f, t!n
2 New GallePies Open Galleries l Exhibits
ON DISPLAY AT CHALLIS GALLERIES
'Cannery Quay' by Rex Brandt
METAL SCULPTURE -By Frederick Prescott
<lnd William Bri&hl. at openine or Freeh
Sculpture, 114 Agate· Ave., Balboa lsland. l to 11
pm. weekends, 5to11 p.m. weekdays. Free.
'SPATIAL PROGRESSIONS' -Group show of
dght environments, Saturday through Aug. l ,
opening of Atalanta Gallery, 376 N. Coast
Highway, Laguna Beach. 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Thursdays.Sundays. Reception 7 30 o'clock
tonight. Frt-t'.
RECENT PAINTINGS By lnlender, July
13-Aug. 17 at Bird's Eye View Gallery, 3420 Via
Oporto, Lido Village, Newport Beach. 11 a.m. to
5 p.m. Tuesdays-Sundays. Free.
BUSTAMANTE ANTIQUES SllOW -Lincoln
memorabllla, enamels. paintings and crafts, 1 to
10 p .m. July 14-16, I lo 6 p.m . July 17 at
Disneyland Hotel Convention Center in
Anaheim. $2 general, children under 12 free.
Senior citizens $1July15.·
ANGELE HADDAD PAINTINGS Mond11y
through July 30 at Santa Ana College Gallery.
17th and Bristol streeL'>. 1l a.m. to 3 p.m. and 6 to
!I p.m. weekdays, 11 a.m to 3 p.m. weekends.
Receplion6l<>10p.m . Monda) Free.
TWO·MAN SHOW -Landscapes and seascapes
by Lee Weiss and Rex Brandt, Saturday through
July 31 at Challis Galleries, 1390 S. Coast
Highway, Laguna Beach. ll a.m. to S p.m.
Wednesdays-Sundays. Free.
The Arts in Brief
Ambassador Season Set
Appearances by Luciano
Pavarotti, Mstislav Rostrop·
ov1ch, Julian Bream. Jose lturbi
and Carlos Montoya. will be
among the highlights of the
J 977-78 concert series at
Ambassador Auditorium in
Pasadena.
The series will also feature the
first place winners of the Van
Cliburn and Artur Rubinstein
piano competitions.
"Stars of the American
Ball et," featuring Suzanne
Farrell , Peter Martins,
Fernando Bujones and Marianna
Tcherkassky will also be offered.
Additional information is
available from Connie
Creenwood. s ubscription m a n a g e r • A m b a~ s a d o _r
Auditorium box office, Bin 15AA.
P.asaden a. C A 91109, 12 13 >
577-5360.
C'ntalhan 11 rt f 'e11tival
The 19th Annual Catalina
Festival of Art will be held in
Avalon Sept. 16·18, with more
than $3,000 in awards offered to
amateurs and professionals. For
information. write Catalina
Festival of Art, P.O. Box 161 ,
Avalon, CA 00704.
f)ance Cf.Jnt•ert at OCC
A concert of contemporary
dance styles will be presented
Aug. 12 in the Orange Coast ~ollege Auditorium, featuring
. arry Clark of the New York·
ased Viola Farber Dance
Company. He will also be au
l'nstructor at Orange Coast
College this summer.
-Tickets are $1.50 for the 8 p.m.
f»rin<'e••
Judy Berkowitz
play,i:; Princess
Winnifred in t h e musical .. Once Upon
~ Mattress." to be
presented at 8
' p'clock tonight, Satu-
rday and July 14·16
at Villa Park
Auditorium by the
Santiago Community Players, 997-3446.
omedies
.. ·-·-or.led
performance. Information is
e vailable at 556-5506.
l'iedl.er Taking Re11t
Conduct.or Arthur Fiedler, on
lhe advice of bis physician, has
canceled his scheduled July
engagements to take a rest. His
July 22 and 23 concerts at lhe
Hollywt)OO Bowl will be held with
another con'ductor, to be
announced.
Laguna iffauic E'e•tival
Tickets are still available for
the inaugural season of the
Laguna Beach Summer Music
Festival. Concert dates are July
25 and 28 and Aug. 3 at the high
school auditorium.
Patrons are being sought for
what sponsors hope will become
a city institution. Categories
include Life Patron. $500 or
more; Founding Patron, $250 to
$499; Sponsor, $100 to $249 ; and
Donor, up to $99.
Additional information is
available from Masatoshi
Mitsumoto, 645 Cupr1en Way,
Laguna Beach, CA 92651.
Celebrity Lect1wer11
Orange Coast College will
sponsor a celebrity lecture series
this fall . Scheduled are Edgar
Bergen, Sept. 23; Dr. Joyce
Brothers. Oct. 21; Dr. Laurence
Peter. Nov. 16; and Richard
Armour, Dec. 14. All lectures
begin at8 p.m. in the auditorium.
Reserved seats for the series
cost $1 o boy mail from
Community Service Office,
Orange Coast College, 2701 Fair·
view Road, Costa Mesa, CA
92626 . Orders should include
checks payable to the college and
a self-addressed, stamped
envelope. Tickets at the door will
cost $3.
lrt.•ine Chorah:-T'11out
Auditions will be held Sept. 5, 6
and 7 from 6 to 10 p.m. at Corona
del Mar High School for the
Irvine Master Chorale. Members
of the chorale are presently
touring Europe.
For information. write the
chorale al P.O. Box 2301.
Newport Beach, CA 92663.
EVERY WEDMESDA Y MIGHT .. 7:30 P.M.
July 13 -lig land Era with Stan Frees•
Jvty 20 -Bluegrass -Abe Brown awd Ccmyon Gniss
July 27 -Music ~ th• 6011 with Johftlly Lopez
A119. l -Showtunet with JI'" Christensen &'the P~lflc: Pops Orchestra
Aug. I 0 -Dlxltl~ Jan with Jack Mc Vay,
featuring St• 'Fr""
Alig. 17 -LI~ Cl•ucs with JI"' Ct.n1tet11et1 Ir tt.e
P~lflc Pops Orchestre
• A*). 24 -Mnlc .t the 40'1 w~ AftMll Hll
~ 31 ...:.. Measle of ....,.c• with Jlln «;JlrttttftHll •
• tt. Podffc Pops Orcltfftra
•ETCIUNOS OF THE 20th CENTURY' -By
Picasso, GlacometU, Motherwell, Oldenburg.
Pollock, Warh'ol, Klee. Magritte, Lichtenst~ln
und others. Saturday through Aug. 13 at Margo Leavin Gallery. 812 N. Robeftson Blvd .. "9tl
Angeles. u a.m. to s p.m . 'l'\lesdays·Saturdays.
Preview 5:30 to 7:30o'clock tonight.
'Grease' Retains
Nostalgic Charm
By DENNIS McLELLAN
Of Ille 1>•11• l'llat SI.off
When ••Grease.''
Broadway's longest·
running show -more
than 2,250 performances
-cruised onto the Great
While Way six years ago,
it was a refreshingly
novel idea.
What could be more
fun and delightful, in the
cynical '70s, than to look
back at the age of greasy
ducktail hair-dos, black
leather jackets, bobby
sox and bluejeans?
But after six years that
also spa wned
"American Graffiti,"
..Happy Days." and
"Laverne and Shirley,"
will audiences still go for
•sos nostalgia?
Bernstein
Conducts
Leonard Bernstein
leads tho Boston Sym.
phony Orches tra in
Liszt 's "'A Faust Sym.
phony" on "Great
Performances" Wednes-
day at 9 p.m .. on KCET,
Channel28.
And while the,'
words lo the show's'
tunes -"Beauty School.
Dropout," "It's Raining·
on Prom Night," "Alone,
at a Drive-in Movie"-'
are more tongue·in-
cheek than even the
period's own, they de-
finitely have captured
the feel, sentiment and
beat of the originals.
That authentic feeling
is multiplied when the
announcer. sounding so
much like someone from
out of the past, requests
that there be no
smoking, recording or
plcture·taking, please.
.. And," he says as the
lights dim, "when the
Via U do Plaza
3439 Via Lido. S.B.
173·5'30
Summertime 1s here, and very soon now,
beauttrul Newport Beach will be host once agam. to thousands of new ;ind old visitors from around the world.
We al Old World Art will do our best to
make you.r visit a memorable one. We Invite
you all to see our selectlen of the finest in
pa1nttn1?s. cul 1?lass. iewelry. porcelain
fifo.!urines. and many other art effects from
around the world. And we can promise you, that.
the "Old World Arl Connection" will be ao
unforgettable "incident"' in your life wben once
a11ain you'll hit the trail for home.
bell rings, go straight to II~!!!!!!!;!;! your homeroom." 1~
' I ~-\.
P'~, / tcr, •+~~jVl1if'5 1 &rts~
. BN RYflN FflSHIONS
j/48 Fashion Island Newport Beach
jocros< fro"' thr Broadway)
7141759-0506
.• , lie -• f\o'9e cf'lliM Oft ttle
M1dlt1rH11H11 fer selll1111
1110re A•ec-. ,..., °"Y°"•·
All These
Specials Are
Lacal Grown,
A Real Difference
In Flavor!
. "" .,. -
Mc Coo, Math~ Concerts Tonight
TONIGHT, JULY 8
VNIVE&SAL AMPHITHEAT£a Marilyn
Mccoo & BJlly Davl1 Jr., tontaht throuah
Sunday; Daryl hall & John Oatct, Tuo"day and
Wedneeday; Hurt, July 15·16. (213) 980-IM2l.
TBB NEW GAEE& THEATER -Johnny
Malhi.a and Jane Ollvor, to.rU1ht and Saturday;
Tan8crine Dream, Tu~sday : Tho Spinners and
Nancy Wilaon, July 13· 16. (213) eoo.8400.
PO•ONA CONCERT BAND -8 o'c:lock LOni8ht
en Pearson Park Theater. Syc•more and Lemon
t.lreets, Anaheim. Free.
•ONCE UPON A MATTB~' -Musical, 8
o'clock t.orueht, Saturday, and July 14·16 at Villa
Park Auditorium, Center and Lincoln streets.
Villa Partc. presented by Santiago Community
Players. $3 adults, $2 students. 997·3446.
MAGIC MOUNTAIN -Connie 8tevens, 8 and 10
o'clock t.onlgbt through Sunday; Jose Feliciano.
8 and 10 p.m . July 12·17. North of Hollywood off
San Dle10 or Golden State freeway. $7.95 adults,
$8.95 children 3-11, includes rides.
RENAlSSANCE PERFORMERS -Music,
jesters and dance, tonight at Anaheim Plaza on
Euclid Street al the Santa Ana Freeway; Punch
and Judy Show, noon to 2 p.m. Saturday;
Gaertanwood Players, 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. Satur-
day. Free, sponsored by Mus ic Center
Presentations.
'NORMAN IS THAT YOU?' -Comedy.
HunUngton Beach Playhouse at the Edgewater
Hyatt House, Coast Highway at Westminster.
Long Beach. Dinner at 7, show at 8:30 o'clock
tonieht through July 30, Frirlays through
Sundays only. 828-0583.
Scenery Appetizii.g
Californians. like Texans, are often
accused of boasting too much about
their slate. Leaving those down on the
Pecos to praise what they will, we feel
boosters of the Golden State can
present a pretty solid case for any
crowing they do.
The particular feeling and
expression of California was never
more evident than during a recent
dinner at Ben Brown's restaurant in
South Laguna.
THERE IS A distinctive quality -
one is tempted to say magic -about
this restaurant 's location and
atmosphere thal bespeak California's
summer best.
Out 'n' About ·
Norman Stanley
and flllftisbings, through color and
textures, prove extraordinarily
complementary to nature's
handiwork.
BY THE TIME everyone is settled
at the dinner table, it is impossible to
recall a more relaxing and peaceful
atmosphere that is not at least a day's
journey away.
When it comes to selecting dinner
entrees, each person bas to be on his
own. Whatever the taste of a given
moment, there's a dish to satisfy.
LEONARD BARR -Comic, plus Jack Marion,
8:30 and 10:30 o'clock tonight through Sunday at
Laff Stop, 2122 S.E. Bristol St .. Newport Beach.
$3.50 plus two drink minimum.
SKILES AND HENDERSON -7: 30, 9 and 10:30
o'clock tonight and Saturday in Knott'& Berry
Farm's Good Time Theater, Buena Park. $4.25
adults, $2.75children 3·11.
'WESTERN DAYS' -Wild West stunt shows,
7:30 o'clock tonight, noon, 1 :30, 2:45 and 4 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday at Huntington Center, 7777
Edinger Ave .. Hunlif!gton Beach. Free.
BALLET DEMONSTRATION -And
performance by The Ballet Montmartre of
Imperial Russian Ballet, 8 o'clock tonight and
Saturday at Plummer Auditorium, 201 E .
Chapman Ave .. Fullerton. S4 adults, S2 children
12 and under.
Situated where scenic Aliso Canyon
comes down out of the San Joaquin
Hills to meet the Pacific shoreline.
Ben Brown 's is nestled amid
surroundings of unrivaled nalural
beauty. Not the High Sierra, to be
sure, the hills nonetheless have that
rugged and craggy appearance
typical of the state's rustic mountain
areas.
Two orders for scampi (in the
shell). $9.95, netted generous portions
of tasty j umbo shrimp prepared in
olive oil with garlic and white wine.
Delightful, too, was the ac·
companyin g garni and fluffy
seasoned rice.
Cl YOE (SECOND FROM LEFT) ANO BOBBI HEAD GROUP
The Seaweed Cowboys Provide Backup at Ben Brown's
To this setting add the majestic
grandeur of lhe ocean on the other
side and you get a locale without peer.
But it's only the first of many delights
to be found in an evening here.
Food, service and entertainment
are on a par with the environment.
And the handsomely appointed decor
The four remaining family
members rendered decisions for as
many different entrees. Scallops
Mousseline, $7.25, netted the del-
ec table combination of jumbo
scallops, fresh mushrooms and
s herry wine blended with sauce
Mousseline, accompanied by rice
pilaff.
Flavorsome veal Oscar, $3.75
(also accompanied by rice pilaff>.
had been sauteed in butter. then
crowned with king crab meat, aspar·
agus and hollandaise sauce. Petite·
filet mignon, $7.SO, served with house
potato and broiled tomato, was
appetizingly wrapped in bacon and
topped by a fresh mushroom cap.
Chicken a la Kiev, $6.75, proved a
winner: the boned breast of chicken,
filled with butter and chives, had been
bread crumbed and cooked t.o a
golden brown. The dish further
included sauce supreme, rice pilaf!
and spic¢ peach. .
All dinner entrees at Ben Brown's
include soup of the day and salad.
There are three choices for the latter:
house, crisp greens and spinach, all
detailed at length on the menu. It's
beyond believing, however, that you'll
ever find a better spinach salad than
the one served here.
(SeeDINING, PaiceC4)
/1olJen ~~~~ . ...,,. ·~;,d · ~EMPLE <;ARDENS ~-· ; ctJ'NSSS Re8fnt1ra11t ~..z=~5
Z;;;ragon ·--
GENUINE CHINESE MANDARIN DISHES
Specializing In Chinese A lo Carte Dishes .
LUNCH•Olt-tNER OAIL Y
Food tO Take Out
11 :30 A.M. to 10 P.M.
21JJ ...........
COSTA liftSA
'42-7162. 646.9911
NOWI 11
LISD &
,COMPAIY
LUNCHEON AND DIMMER DAILY
Special Luncheoft 8uffft
Monday thru Friday 11 30 to 1 30
RICK SHA COCKTAIL LOUNGE
Featuring Exotic Tropical Drinks
I 500 ADAMS lot HorbMI
COSTA MESA
540.1937 540·1923
And, In GCH'~ft Gro·u•
12201 IROOKHURST
IAt Ch09monl 6l8·7020
PLUS
MONDAY
THAU
THURSDAY
SPECIALS
(Fri .. S.t., Sun.,
'tll 8 9.m.I
RED SNAPPER .••.•. 3.45
MAHI MAHI ........ 3.95
GRILLED SEA BASS • 3.95
TOP SIRLOIN STEAK 4.25
NEW YORK STEAK •• 4.96
LOBSTER TAIL ••••• 5.96
STEAK AND LOBSTER 6.96
and dozens of others
•XICAll .. FA•Allr . ........ .,.. .......... o.._,.c.-y
ltAVf A FREE APPETIZER OM us
wmtTHISAD
DINING • DANCING
ENTERTAINMENT
Businessmen's Luneh Soecials
SIAFOOO •COCKTAILS• F000 TO GO
IAHQUETS • PllVATI ,AlmU
CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH SUNDAYS
HAPPY HOURS 4-6
1750 W. Lineotn • Anal'leim
991-()540
547W. 19th St.• Costa Mesa
642·9764
DAILY PILOT
[ __ T_im_e_s_J_P_la_ce_s __ J
JUDAH-In concert, 7:30 o'clock tonight at
Calvary Chapel, 33733 Bi& Sur, Dana Point. Free.
'WONDERFUL WORLD OF HORSES" -With
Lipluan stallions, 8 o'clock t.onlgbl at the LonJi:
Beach Arena. $15-$7, cbildren under 12 ball price.
(213) 437·22.'SS.
'PRIVATE LIVES' -Noel Coward comedy,
~onigbl through Sunday at Cabaret Garden
Theater Company, Muckenthaler Cultural
Center, 1201 W. Malvern Ave., Fullerton. $6.50.
includes snacks. 879-6865.
MUSICAL COMt:DY -"Stop the World, I Want to Get Off," 8:30 o'clock tonight, Saturday and
July 14·17. San Clemente Community Theater,
.202 Avenida Cabrillo. 492.()465.
•NATAUE NEEDS A NIGHTIE' -Comedy,
now through July 16 at the Harlequin Dinner
P layhouse, 3502 S. Harbor Blvd •• Santa Ana..
979-5511.
CABARET·SfYLE MUSICAL-"Jacques Brei
Is Alive and Well' and Living in Paris," now
through July 20 at South Coast Repertory, 1827
Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. 8 p.m. Tuesdays-
Sundays and 3 p.m. Sundays. $4.50-$6.SO. 646·1363
after lp.m. daily.
GARDEN GROVE VILLAGE SYMPHONY -8
o'clock tonight at Garden Grove Community
Meeting Center, 11300 Stanford Ave., $.5, includes
refreshments.
SEBASTIAN'S DINNER THEATERS -"My
Fair Lady," now through Sept. 4at140 Avenida
Pico, San Clemente, 492-9950: "Carnival," now
through Oct. 2 at the Grand Hotel, l Hotel Way,
Anaheim, $11·$16. 772·7710.
WILLIAM WINDOM -As Ernie l'yle, 7:~\J
o'clock tonight at the Orange Library, Center
Street at Chapman Avenue, Orange. Free.
CONTINUING IN LOS ANGELES -"Grease ...
through July 31 at the Pantages Theater; "Annie
Get Your Gun," through Aug. 6 at the Dorothy
Chandler Pavilion; "The Wiz,'' through Sept. 10
at the Ahmanson Theater. Indefinite runs: "Hold
Me" at the Westwood Playhouse; "Vanities" at
the Coronet Theater; "A Chorus Line" at the
Shubert Theater.
SATURDAY,JULY9
'THE BRA VE LION' -Children's show, 1 and 3
p.m. Saturday, Sunday and July 15-17 at Golden
<See COUNTY FAIR, Page C4)
Real
Cantonese Food
eat htr• or
take home
STAG
CHINESE CASINO
Ill 21,t Pl., Newport Be.ch ORiolt 3-9560
Hoell to Midlllgltt Deily-Wffbfldt Unt!1 I :00 •""·
one u ""'',.. --Allu
Viii
.fbtthtn
SMORGASBORD RESTAURANT
eMOUUfM:ILITID-Ull'f0100~
ff\IN1'1HCITO!f NM:M. COllOMA Ot\.MAll
122 llfAlll IT. AT mt -L COAST HWY.
~ • All SPCRTS EVENTS
GIANT 7 FOOT TY SCREEN
Mo~thur: 11:~ a.m. tp 10.P,m.
Fri, & Sot. 11 ~ a.m. to 11 p.m. . COCKT"" 'LS Sunday .. p.m. to 10 p.m. • /\I
£. AOWS. HUNTINGTON BEACH 962-7911
..
--------. ----.... ......
f
DAILY PILOT Fr1d1 . Jut a. 1971
COUNTY FAIR STARTS JULY 15. • • Wednesday in Santa Ana College Ampblthealer
17th and Bristol streets. Free. '
(hem P1&e CJ) TUESDAY, JULY 12 THURSDAY, JULY 1'
We~t Collۥ"e patio th<.'utor 1.1dJ1tl'l'11l to Gothurd
SlrHl p1trklng lol. llunt1ngton Beach <neur
Ed•nau>. Sl First come flr:.;l•~llkd.
FOLK DANCE FESTIVAi~ 1.atvi 1rn ,
L1thuan1an group11, 7 · 30 p.m . Sa.turduy ut
Anaht'im Convention Center, 800 W. Kalella
A\•e.16-SB. ctuldrent6und under ~ S'T .
DENNY JOHNSTON -Comedian, plus Wally Oalton (July 12·18) and Elayne Booster (July
12· 17) at Laft Stop, 2122 S. E. Bristol St., Newport
Beach. 8:30 and 10 p.m.; s~ond show weekepds,
10: 30 p. m. $2.50 plus one drink weeknights, $3.50
plus two drinks weekends.
'GREAT SCIENTISTS' -Appearance by
Richard Eakin as famous scientists giving lec-
tures on discoveries, 7 to 10 p.m. Thursday in UC
Irvine Room 100, Social Science Hall. $.S.
~UNDA V, JULY IU
LOVIE BELLSON And the Bia Band
Explosion, 8:30 pm. to 12 ·30 a.m. Sunday
lhrouih July 16 al Di:.neyland ; plus fireworks
and electrical parade. $5.50 adults, $2 .50
children.
HOLLYWOOD BOWL-8:30 p.m. Tuesday,
opening concert with Erich Leinsdorf
conducting, Los Angeles Master Chorale; 8:30
p.m. July 4, Peter Frankl, pianist. With Los
Angeles Philharmonic, $1·$6. (213) 87-MUSiC.·
WEDNESDAY,.JULY13
OUTDOOR ENTERTAINMENT -From Music
Center Presentations at o~ning of The Market
Plac_e, &SS Pacific Coast Highway (across from
marma>. Long Beach. Children's program, 12;30
p.m. Thursday; strolllng musician that
afternoon, Concert in Brass 4:!)() to 6 p.m. July
15, puppet.a 10:30 a.m., Dixieland noon to 3·30
band music 6:30 to 8;30 p.m. Aman F~lk
Ensemble members, 4 to5:30p.m. July 16. Free.
'SUNDAY SUPPER SERENADE' -Huntington
Beach Commuruty Concert Band, s p.m. Sunday
at Golden West College amphitheater, 15744
Golden West St., Huntington Beach. Free.
outdoors.
BIG BAND ERA -Music with Stan Freese, 7:30
p. m . Wednesday at South Coast Village,
Sunttower Street across from South Coast Plaza,
Costa Mesa. Free, outdoors.
'PRO PATRIA' -Historical pageant at 8 p.m.
July 14-17 and 21·24 at 31871 Camino Capistrano
San 'Juan Capistrano, $4 adult.a, $2.50 children' 493-8444. .
FRIDAY, JULY IS
MONDAY, JULY 11
FRANK SINATRA JR. -9 p.m. Monday al
Fashion Island. Newport Beach, with Henry
Brandon and orchestra. Free, outdoors.
'BAREFOOT IN THE PARK' -Neil Simon
comedy, July 13·31 at Muckenthaler Cultural
Center, 1201 W. Malvern Ave., Fullerton. 8 p.m .
Tuesdays-Fridays, 6 and 9 p.m. Saturdays, 6
p.m. Sundays. $6.50, includes snacks. 879-686S.
HIGHIAND DANCE ·coNCERT ~ 8 p.m.
LORETl'A LYNN -And Conway TwlttY. in
concert, 8 p.m. July 15 at the Anaheim
Convention Center, 800 W. Katella Ave.
$4 .50·$6.50 635-5000.
FOR A REAL DINING •••
TASTE TREAT cr..1 qoti-riOtel <From Page C3)
z;tirt>orter . Other selections on the evening bill ot fare include veal scallopini, $6.95;
troutsaute amandine. $6.25· toumedo
of beef, $8. 25; bouillabaisse
. Marseillaise (highly recommended
on the basis of an earlier sampling)
$6.95; roast prime rib of beef, au jus:
$8.50; New York or New York pepper
steak, $8.75.
• GOURMET DINING -MEDITERRANEAN AM.
CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH SUNDAYS 10.J PM
• DANCING NIGHTLY -CABARET LOUNGE
• CAPTAIN'S TABLE COFFEE SHOP -24 HRS.
18700 MAC ARTHUR BLVD.
IRVINE, CALIFORNIA
!Opposite Orange CoontyAlrportl
(714) 833·2770 DINING AT Ben Brown's is always
enhanced by drifting to the lounge
after dinner for a little listening
----------------------------and/or dancing music. Currently "Chari front and center in the entertainment ~ =~t that spotlight is the t alented an•d ~~mil · whimsical Bobbi & Clyde group,
H VIII playing Tuesdays through Saturdays. en ...-y at the nlnrfo table In addition to the evening meal, the D ~ restaurant is open seven days a week
th for breakfast and lunch, and serves a
WI• someone n~....n" special Sunday brunch from lOa.m. to ~Wt· 3p.m . Beyond a mea1, Ben Brown's bas all
the facilities to provide you with We don't promise you'll see royalty at The Five Crowns. But our a home away from home. You're next
R 'd Du kl' · hi f to the fairways of the Laguna Beach oast C mg IS somet 'ng even a ickJe monarch Golf Course, comrlete with pro shop;
would fall head over heels in love with. So dine in the hotel-mote complex there are
bl 64 private-patio suites; five meeting no y. At the most authentic 12th century rooms can accommodate private coach house this ·d f B kingh groups trom 10 to 200; the 68 foot Sl e 0 UC am. heated pool adjoins a cabana with a
FNE ~s~~..+..~~ ~ard-playingarea;ashortstroll away _ as the serene warm sand of Aliso
Beach.
3801 East Coast Highway. Corona de1 Mar. (714) 675-1374 Ben Brown's is officially located at
---==-.:.=.:::..._ ______________________ .:_ 31106 Coast Highway, South Laguna.
The address isn't important, though,
if you keep a sharp watch for Aliso
State Beach and the pier. Then
proceed up the little side road on the
north side of the bridge over Aliso
Creek. Reservations: 499-2663.
I
Discusses Porn
"Natatle
· ~~~ \1 Neecrs
Neil Simon's
The LM.BOYD ) DAILY PILOT
aNightie"
Outra~berightful
Oeld
Couple
~ • e~ lJiJuvA 11tta
3S03S. HuborBlvd. Santa Ana Ruervatlons714-979·5511
Diaiag aatl IAKiRg
is Bade wia-
LONG BEACH/CATALINA CRUISES
GO THIS WEEKI 77M111 • 132-4521 • (714) 527"7111
494-IOll/9
l .. S.COAST.-Y. ~IMCH
.,..24Hows
.
· l'l~ANO 1'17'.ZI
Sun. Ooly
July 10
IJ()Ho;I IRAYI
I'. ~l!l~OS
tive Jl1si~ m1~~!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!~~
C.1~lelfOI
ORANGE COUNTY FAIR -July 15·2C at
fairgrounds, 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa.
Entertainment: Roy Rogers and Dale Evans
July 16-17; Jose Feliciano, July 18; J im Stafford:
July 20; George Benson, July 2lj Lawxence Welk
singers, July 19; Hudson BrOtbers, July 22 :
Kenny Rogers, July 23; R"1n, -luly 24. Hurrici10e
Helldrivera, July 18·20: also motorcycle races,
rodeo. Grounds admission. $2 adulls, $1 children.
Tickets at Ticketron.
PAGEANT OF THE MASTERS -Plus Festival
of Arts, Sawdust Festival and Art-A-Fait', JuJy
IS-Aug. 28 ln Laguna Beach. Pageaol
information, 494·1145.
'STORY THEATER' -Westmins ter
Community Theater, 7272 Maple St .•
Westminster. July 15·31, 8 p.m. Fridays and
Saturdays, 2 p.m . Sundays. 893·8626.
"THE WtUJUOR'S HUSBAND' -Comedy, July
15,31, 8:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, 2:30 p.m.
Sundays. Ana·Modjeska Players at Loara Elem-
entary School, 1601 W. Broadway, Anaheim.
$2.50 general, $1.50 students and seniors. 533-5278. ·
BOBBY GOLDSBORO-Plus Harry James and
his biC band, July 15-16 at Knott's Berry Farm in
Buena Park. $&.25 adults, $2.75 children 3-11.
827-1776.
A FRANK YABLANS PRESENTATION •
A MARTIN RANSOO(ff-f1W4K YABLANS PRODOOTION • "lliE OlliER SIDE OF MIDNIGHT"
A CHARl.ES JARROTT ALM • sim. MARIE.fRAta PISIER •JOHN BEa< • SUSAN SARANOON
RAF VALLONE• PR*atllf fRANK YAB~ • t:.o.ile~ HCM\RD W. KOCH, JR.
\. .
Wed. thru Sot.
~ar.riott:t:t
aawwwe-w~c-Dt,
PfloM C7!4) M0-4000
' IVY HOUSE
RESTAURANT
Iliad 11r CHARLES JARROTT ·~bf HERMAN RAUCHER w DANIEL TARADASH
11m1ICDI11t _,bf SIDNEY SHELDON • flUC bf MIOtEL LEGRAND (ii
fiilFi'iTiiiREs;r;;l;;;;M:;;;;;IBl;-::•5j l=-:C~==I PtOlldln ~JOHN De CUIR iaY,......,.... ............. _ l'llllHS8YDHU~· . .
by Brad Anderson BOOMER
O•tn_,_._ ....
"I guess I used the last of the toothpaste to
brush Marmaduke's teeth!"
FUNKY WINKER BEAN
MOON MULLINS
ANO~, 51NC.E ~'Vl
AU.. BE.EN 00 CJ.:o.lD~
FUL , I'D LIKE 1C 00 ~ FlAMIN6 BA'Tt>N
TRIC.K FOR ~ !
.--~~~~~~~~~~~-...
~~o 'b.J JU'IMe~
~Jt./t A Mill.ION
l:kJc'? O~ Bt" IU1'0-
S0Mt, A~Not-o?
I
MISS PEACH
by Tom Batiuk
MAKE UP!!
by Jeff Millar and Bill Hinds
by Ferd and Tom Johnson
HE H,A5N1T BEt;N You rwo WILi.
.JIJST STAND STU.I..
,AN[> t>ON1T LOO~
So MlJCH l.1 KE A
INTRODUCED .. : SCRAlCH •• GET .ALONG FINE
MEET OUR NEW EXCEPT ON
MAILMAN. DAYS WHEN
T·80NE STE.AK'. you B~I~
~LLS.
Gf?·R·R.
GORDO
. TDDAY'S CIDISIGID PUIZLI
.; • t
ACflOSS 52 Parent
' 53 letter
1 W0tdof 54 Tu
mOWll: l1w 57 G11tn1
6 flt.al~ 59 Kind of
tQ ~D• w11e1c:ol.l1se
sttllon 61 CuckhtWlng
14 GrO'A'ing -mammal
outw11d 84 City of
IS H~t: Europe
CoM. fOfm 67 Ettel. UMS
16 M1'11>tt 68 Motel
17 Sig newa· ~ner"1 con·
pllljlr job cern· 2 words
19 Y011ng chip' 70 Shed out ..
20 G~ moon cove1111g
gOdCleM 71 Oiftction
21 Hlrtdti.nd 72 Act up I
21 St1GC1111tz1 atorm
25 HudlOfl 81v. 73 Republic trtle:
t.Q. Abbf.
26 F""' ... 74 Ce~ 27 I ICI
II(. 75 Common bf
29 Crescent'• horH .. ··
telatiw
Jt Polril
33 Comperatlve
t&lfli•
34 Clnldiln
·clOina
36 Rir1N1te: sr.n11
4Q Sh111•
pol'IM't'tf I 42 SpJit.
4' SHtt.e of ool
45 J...:oown1
•.its
47 l.Jngtra
49 F,..
60 R~
OOWN
t 01' relltivn
2 S. Americen
111ountein
3 Avid horse
pl1yen
4 t<lnd of fur
5 M1n'1n1rne
6 Petroleum
ptoduct
? Feelaore
8 Het f.,tures
9 Soehd
10 Composition
11 8ott0111 of a
deMrt bflln
Yeamdav·a Puule Solved:·
I 2 lllll I l\ilntl
13 F1cial
feelur.s
18 French ar 1111"
l2 Asitn n11lon
24 Femm@s
27 Pine of
tioofinq
28 Haflltsl a
crop
30 Oep1encs
32 EQyptlan
VIP of old:
lnfonntl
35 No' outgoing
11 Athens
buMdino
38 Americ.tn
lnd11n
J9 Otcl11'1w1lil
41 lrltn aetttr
43 A<•an
46 NASA ~
conQUISI
48 Situates
St l<ln<I of buHe1
54 Restrtel
55 Mood
56 More tl\tn
enough
58 Blo~•me in
the'Orlent
60 8ell·&triktng
•PPffll\IS 62 Ending wil.h
cepltal end
eoeltl
63 Mt1n1 oftrilll
65 o.,,nwork
fabflc6
66 Dirk
69 Grffl!
goddtu
JUDGE PARKER
TUMBLEWEEDS
l'M MISSING' "T'EN S1~eRS
FR>M A~PE:~ !.A5T NIGl.f"f. ::
SEEN ANY 0~1~E::M?
. ,, -"
Fndly Julye 19n DAILY PILOT CS
PEANUTS
by Mell
W~Lt., TMl!rl! WA!> '11-ie 1'1M2
MICI{ JAGGEC
S:IL.L. _.~L!f~ LANO!r(
AT~£,.
DOOLEY'S WORLD
OR. SMOCK
11'5 A MAN
FROM i-HS I RS
ON 1..INe ONe,
DR. FRelP
MOTLEY'S CREW
JM? PRE5lDl:N'r, AR£
. YOU HAPP"t' W11H
AND'( YOUNC55 WORK IN
1HE UNl't"ED NAilCNS ~
ves ... i-HeN :t''-'-... see YOU ... THIS •.• FRIC?AY'
by Gus Arriola
.z LOVE A .E100D AVO!ENi:Ji'
by Harold Le Ooux
by Charles M. Schulz
Crime and Peace
by Roger Bradfield
-SPARE THE RIBS
ANO SPolL THE GUILD! c,....
.,, by George Lemont
by Templeton and Forman
•• 1H,A.i 1HE' NUMBER OF=
COUN"t'RlES REFUSING "TO
~ECOOl-llZE HI'S PA~Olrr
l'5 6L.OWL.Y 86lNG R€DUC6D!
THE GIRLS
"The Lroublc with barpin dr.-pes is, lo make them look nice you
have to keep remindina yourself how much you saved ...
DE,.NIS THE MENACE
\:
" ...
~
\ .. ..
(11 DAIL'( PILOT Frie!!y, July I , 1977
..... Musician Travels Roxy Road: 1
••
Keith Carradine
Solly Kellerman
Geraldine Chaplin
HaNey Keitel
Lauren Hutton
Sissy Spacek
John Considine
Vivec6 Lindfors
Richard Baskin
Denver Pyle
mus u d MlnP-y Richard Bas.kin
·produced by wri1ren and direcr~'C! by
Robert Altman Alan Rudolph
fifm,-<l in PanavisioO-
SHOWTIMES
DAILY-7:15-9:15
FRl.-7:15-9115-11:10
SAT.·SUN..-1:15-3:35
5:15-7:15-9:15-11:15 T United Artists
A1'an-.ca~
CINEMA CENTER
HARBOR.AT A.DAMS. COST.A MESA
MESA VERDE CENTER 979-4141
THIS SUMMER DRP
IS
NUMBER
A Columbia/EM! Presentation
The Casablanca FilmWo<ks Production
A Peter Vales Film
ROBERT SHAW • .IACllUEUME BISSET • Niel MOUE
'1ME DEEP" LOUIS sossm and ru *1.1.ACM
Based on the novel by Peter Benchley
Screenplay by Peter Benchley and Tracy Keenan Wynia
PrtK!uced by Peter Guber • Directed ~ Pelee Vall!$
=~ .... , .... 1a1111 •. !u~~~~.ljri\ftlijl C . :-·-·-···~··-~·: .............................. ..
NOW PLAYING AT SELECTED THEATRES!
ANAH•IM LA HABRA Clnemal•nd 63S.7601 rashlon SQuare l&.4. BUENA PAAI< 691·06)3 Suen• Park OrlYa-ln 821•4070 LA HABRA COSTA MESA U1 Habr• DrlY<Hn 87:a.186:1 SOutl\ Ca.st PIH• MISSION Vl~O
546-2711 Clneona lllolo U°"t90
WCSTMINSTER Cinema 'N9st 1, 192-4493
HO PASSllS ACCl!;PTl!O DURINQ THIS l!NQAQf:MtNT
fabulous. Since be wrote
tnost of the songs for
Roxy Music, it seemed a moot point that he was
performinc without
them for the first time in
this country. ·
(@] great everywhere we've
:Tops in Pope~ played. One can't expect _ _ moretbao that..
His band -Chris
Spedding and Phil
Manzaoera on guitars,
.Paul Thompson on
drums. John Whelton on
bass, Ann Odell on
keyboards and a
three-man horn section
-provided the perfect
background for Ferry's
uniquely weird. sllghUy
d1abolical rock singing.
"This bas been the
loncest tour we've ever
done," Bryan told m e-a
few days lat.er. "And it's
been the most suc· ceasful, both with Roxy
or alone. We started in
January in England,
then went to Europe,
Australia and Japan
b efore we c ame to
America. And the
reac~lons have been
HARBOR TWIN
HARBOR ATWtLSOM, COSTA MESA
646-0573 646-3266
••f WAS A bit 'appreh.
enslve about the reaction
to me without Roxy,"
Bryan admitted., "but all
those fears have been
dispelled by the reaction.
Obviously tbe people
who come to see me are
Roxy fans -those are
the ones who know who I am. But they certainly
don't seem to be
diaappointed;
"I'm very tired, but
. • f
,\ AIJWR I IJWO\Jll' • IM'C1S '«N:J>:M ~-A \l \IC I IS ~11til."-'
LIZA MINNfllJ · R08fRf DE NJRO ••
"NEW mRK NEW YORK'" ·
!'lo""'l'-I • ... Altl ,4,\, t<Au11 ... "-\Ml 111. " \H '" °' I ~.1-rfJ\ltl.)l.V.. MAU II •• ,.., ....... \l.\111 l' :o« llll-i.~ ,
, ............ ...,. N ll l'IJ .. Jt ···ll«lllUll ll I 'IM.1•.. I
Oopwl :-.. i.. .1011' ._A" 11 JC ...., I NU >I .Hll
U..JS..---'l-1o-M\IJ1llllll'.'4 • t'.......,_°"-11oK.-t-. l
' ~ ... ~f_..n.ti;._..~.••• , • t I
1-.ilii&oot'l"l-IUl:•Al-ililii rLim11111J1111DA1••ts01~
t!'!!!V!!P..9.11 T~~.~.~
"NEW YORK, NEW YORK" PG H•'-"
"THE SORCERER" PG ,. -
A BRIDGE TOO FAR" PO .......
ANNIE HALL" PO
"YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN" PO
"SILVER STREAK" PG
"FUN WITH DICK & JANE" PG
"THE STING" PG
"MURDER BY DEA TH" PG
"EXORCIST II. THE HERETIC" R
"DEMON SEED" R No-
"The Other Side of Midnight" R
'BLACK SUNDAY" R NoP,.....,
WAl T 01C"-'( 't S
"THE BOATNIKS" G"GNOMEMOBILE"
Geraldine Chapltn
sta r s with Ana
Torre nt in Carlos
Saura's film
"Cria!," about a
child who believes
she holds the power
of Hf e and death.
"ROCKY" PG
"HUSTLE" R
"ANNIE HALL" CG
"YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN" PG
SHOWTIMES
"YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN"
MON.-FRl-7:00-11 :OS
SAT.·SUN.-1 :00·5:15
9:30
"ROLLERCOASTER"
MON.-FRl.~:55
SAT.-SUN.~:55-7:10
11 :25
F'rlday. July 8. 19n
Disney Mice Magi~
"THE RESCUERS" displays the Disney
magic factory in top form . The plot concerns u
pair or intrepid mice (voices of Bob Newhart ilnd
Eva Gabor) who seek to rescue an orphan
k1dnaped by the evil Madame Medusa
<gloriously voiced by Geraldine Page>. It's funny and exciting and totally engaging, thanks 1i.. ________ ,,,J
in large part to the animation of Medusa, tbe
crochety pilot or a one-albatross airline (Jim
Jordan-Fibber McGee) and a sputtery dragonfly
named Evinrude. Rated G. .
"NEW YORK, NEW YORK" succeeds in
capturing the sounds, styles and mood of the big.
band era following World War JI. It fails in
achieving workable scenes or audience interest
in the declining marriage of a saxophonist and a
band singer. Liza Minnelli is in splendid voice
and creates sympathy as the patient wife. Robert
DcNiro continues the unexplained violence of
"Taxi Driver." Rated PG.
"SORCERER" is high adventure in the
"River Kwai" -"Sierra Madre" tradition.
Wilham Friedkin ("The French Connection,"
"The Exorcist"> again proves his talent as a
storyteller in this story or four outcasts in a squalid South American town driving truckloads
of explosives through dense Jungle to an 011
blowout. The symbolism is murky and plot Points
have been Jost in the cutting, as well as the
meaning of the title Cone of the trucks js named
Sorcerer). But the film can be enjoyed for its
sheer excitement and visual beauty. Rated PG.
AP /BOB THOMAS
A WILLIAM FRIEOKIN FILM
SZ>~tE~£R
~(~ ~.lfnn<t ROY SCHFIDER
flHl '\O C RI '11 R I H \ '\( l'>C 0 Rl\ll \I
A'lll>OI l!\'10'\ lllLHI Produc coon o,.,,.,n JOll'\ 00'<
<,, ,..,.,,,.1,,. \\ \l O'\ GHI I'\ ''""'Mir 1'1nrlou "' Rl 0 <,\If I II
011•1on.tl '""" lA'\GI Rl;>.F DHf .\\1 lli>•~d on thP nmrl
ThP "''""'of f-l'dr .. fl\. Gr>nrqr, 1\rndud
Oorr< '"d ,1ncl Prndun•d h• v.'111 IA \I fRlfOhl'I
A P.iramoun1-Un~••~I R•fr.,..., 'PG~Plllllll Ql&JCI SMSTU J:l
ll lH"K<.IWlt • C° :I
R StRR IS BORn
A nervous romance.
·woooy
ALLEN
DIANE
KEATON
TONY
ROBERTS
.. : CAROL .. ·:·:·KANE
PAUL
SIMON
SHELLEY
DUVALL
JANET
MARGOLIN
CHRISTOPHER
WALKEN
COLLEEN
DEWHURST
A JACK ROlll1'5 CHAPLCS H JOf f [ P~0[;UC !ION
N•0nl'0• by V..000'1' All(N and ~ARSHAU BR1V<IMN • tJ.0 .. ' <l t 1 t.-OOOr AllfN • Pro1"'''<1''\f CHARL[S H JOH( •
I-:$.~~~ .. ~ T~™.!~.~c!!!!.
-~
LIZA ID6T MINNEW ()f Niro
"NEW YO~,
{PO) NEWYO~'
The Other
Side of
Midnisflt
(R)
.... ... -. ----.... ----.--.....-·
sot ·11ac o \S 1·
... ,1 •• 1
!'rld!y, July a, 1tn DAIL V fltLOT (7
K1MAA DEkiMANS
'DalOFN:E"
I •t,111 r f I f . .. ,., ..
...-...a...-S-.h41
-THIATUI ':ANNIE ~(PG) HALL
OCC Readies Summer Musical
---....---UVUUMANN .....
ML.Uf'fl MOIH T IM
"ALEXAHDll"
DlrectH ty y.,... .....
IT AU. l&.OHOI M.tM. •• "I
7:10 • t liOO
wi.w ....
I
'The first 21
musicals attracted
more than 100, 000
people ... '
'/Ill
WllEllS
IAT A THEATRE NEAR roul
I CENTURY 21 . ~~-=~ I
IFNTN. VALLEY nt.1soo I
I HARBOR c~~~~n· I
Well, for the first time in alx years, Orange
Coast College ls doing a summer mualcal with
more than one word In the UUe.
This piece or trivia crops up as the college
approaches its 22nd annual such event, "Mack
and Mabel." to be staged Aug. 3·6 in the
auditorium of the Costa Mesa college.
For those unacquainted with OCC's annual
summer extravaganza. it all started in 1956 when
the college decided to present "South Pacific" as
a tribute to Newport Beach's Golden Jubilee.
"SOUTH PACIFIC" and the next three
summer musicals "Kismet," "Oklahoma"
and "Guys and Dolls" --were all staged by
director Lucian Scott, who also put on the
college's biggest box omce success, "Kiss Me.
Kate," in 1962, as well as "The Sound of Music"
(1964) and his parting s hot, a reprisal of "South
Pacific,'' in 1968. Scott is now acting
professionally in New York.
John Ford directed six s ummer musicals -
"The King and I ." "Li'l Abner," "The Music
Man,"· "The Unsinkable Molly Brown." "My
Fair Lady" and "Pajama Game" during the
1960s. He was succeeded by Jack I loll and. who put
on one. ··The Most Happy Fella ·
Beginning tn 1970. the summer musical
became an alternating proJect between two OCC
directors, William Purkiss and John Ferzacca
Purkiss was responsible for ··Man of La
Mancha." .. Camelot," · Olive r" a nd
"Carousel.· while Ferzucca staged "Fiddler on
the Roof.'' ··Follies" and "Cabaret."' and 1s
currently rehearsing "Mack and Mabel."
The four-day musicals at OCC have always
been crowd pleasers. The first 21 attracted more
than 100,000 people to the Fairview Road theater.
with "Kate" accounting for 6,200 to lead the field.
TRUFFAUT'S
"SMALL CHANGE"
SUB· TITLES RATED (PO)
Intermission
Tom Titus
Also brea,king the 6,000 mark were "The Music
Man" and "The Sound of Music" -the latter
starring a local girl named Diane Hall who
changed her last name to Keaton and became
OCC's most famous alumna in show business.
"MACK AND MABEL" has the additional
distinction ot being an Orange County premiere
-something a bit hard to come by in local
musical theater.
Robert Engman (in his fourth leading role in
an OCC musical) and April Winchell play the
title roles in "Mack and Mabel," which will be
staged al 8:30 Wednesday through Saturday in
the opening week or August. Ticket orders arc
now being accepted by mail. with tbe box ofCj.ce
opening July 28.
Oh, yes. about those one.word productions.
Reading from 1972 to 1976, they have been
"Camelot," ··Follies," "Oliver." "Cabaret " and
"Carousel."
''TH!DEEP"
CPGt
I :30.l:40.S:So.&!00· I 01 I 0
"THE (PG)
SORCERER"
WICDA YS 7:30.t:JO
SAT/SUH l:JO.J:JS-5:40.7:45-9:50 ~~~--~~---=-=ms=-·
--WIMNll GOLD .. CH.Oii AWAllD - • "ROCKY .. IPCH
$0. ~ WKDAY$-7:J0.9:4S •m SAT/SUN-1:4s.J:SO.S:5M.'00.10:05
IUl'S CllEIAWD MMliL .... ...... ....
"THE DEEr IPGJ
DAl'LY l:l0.3:40
S:So.1:00.1O;I0 --MAIRPORT 77 ..
DAILY-4:00.7:55
"W. C. FIB.D S"
DAil Y-2:0M:OS-I 0:00 --~ .. IL.ACK SUNDAY"
3:05-7:41 .. SLAPSHor·
I :00-S:J 5-1 0: 11
ffOCWEST :lf.Wt1 1--------~--==========---------------
@[NTIMCTON ~o,ir· I
ICIN. vmo -. ·ri~
loRIH6E Mffi ~tffil I
RANG ·I
W..1 "'""t" • 193-1305
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CINEMA NOW ON THE LARGEST SCREEN WEST OF
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MORE AVAILABLE SEATS 1252 LUXURIOus· MOHAlR
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IF YOU HAVEN 'T SEEN.5TAA. HAAS AT
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SERVICE
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Today f or Rate& & Prices ORDER YOURS TODAY!
HA VE YOUR CAR SERVICED BY THE MOST
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PARTS AND SERVICE
Monday.Friday 7:30 am -6:00 p.m.
Saturday 8:00 a.m. -5:00 p.m.
BODY SHOP
Monday-Friday 8:00 a.m. -6:00 p.m.
Saturday-Estimates Only 8:00 a.m. -12:00 p.m.
JULY SERVICE SPECIALS
MINOR TUNE UP TRANSMISSION oft. & FllTER ·~:= t:.°' SPECIAL CHANGE , __ , '26 30 _,._Oi
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1973 TOYOTA PICKUP.
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I ••74 DATSUN COUP~ .
197 4 CHEVY 112 TON PICKUP 1975 FORD TORINO WAGON
Equipment Includes 4 cyl. engine. $18 9 ·9 WITH SHELL. 6 cyl. engine. stick $ 3 3 ·9 9 ~~~J.~t~~.11~t:!~9 '!ct~~k:!~ $ 3 8 9 9 automatic trans .. radio & heater. shift. radio & heater. (892015). rad io. he at er & roof rack.
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1976 FORD GRANADA COUPE
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{252NDDI •
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~8~ ;~t~';'ft~c n·r~a,,"~· fag•~i ;'~ $ 47 9 9
steerlng·brakes·windows·seats &
tilt wheel. (102NLJ).
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va. automatic tr;s .. pwr. steering. $ 489 9 radio & heater. Fun lor the beach!
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1974 JENSEN HEALEY
1976 FORD I T~N TRUC~
ALL PRICES EFFECTIVE
48 HOURS AFTER PUBLICATION.
ALL CARS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE.
All. PRICES PLIJ9 TAX & LICENSE
D2 DAILY PILOf Ftld.av July 8 1117
P\ISUC NOTI E PtJBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
11
""1U
PubllSNll Ore19 CINI\ Oally Pllol,
-'-2'4..S'°"" '•'· u. •m
PUBUCNO'nCE
P'ICTtnou1aust"1ss NAMtf STAftM«NT
The '""~ pet~ Is llOlllt Dusi· Mstatt •
COSTA M£SA PIU!CISIOM, 7111
so. CrOddy W•v IUnil Al, s.ni. An•.
c;a111. "'°' f:crank J. S<hMlci.r. 16" l•brlldor Or,.G~aMHa,CAIH.916»
Th11 blnW.H Is cc1ndu<lecl by an lft·
llwl®al.
~--J.~
This stel-t WH fl~ Wiii\ lfllt
Couftlv Cl~il of Oun~ Counly on J-
17, 1971.
l'71JtS Publl~ Or~ C:O.st Dlllly Piiot,
JUM 17.2•.MICIJuly ••• , 1tn
1512-71
PVBIJC NOTICE
•
111 fN ..,..., .. CIDllll r o•
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llt -Hl!lt ,, .. fH ""' "tU1.0. M IA#U MIC.MAH ~l '°" (--.C.t OI' NAMf
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•-- -(111n ., tl•n ,..,, lw.,. ~( ....... ,,,. .. _ ·-··-~ ... ,, MICHAU. w11oa11.. ••
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........ .1111('1 ... c-"'''" w ••••
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...... lfl!'t Of_..., .. CU<w ... t'°" Ot 1nl .. "'Or...,~., c..11w"'•· ..... • ....... -••>•Ill(~ .. -.. .., .......... "" ... --....... ..........
O.IM:'-11 "n .. UCl! W kJMNf• ...... u. s-.... c_,
~ltAllOIM&TM ...._.u. ... ..__,,~0r..... -.......
-...~~·T .. :171•1--
·~-,..tl-..... _Or_ c...c Dtttl• "''°'· ,... ,,a. u..n. 1t11 .,..,,
P\1BUC NOTICE
~
f'tCTITIOUS aUllNISS
-eS'l'ATEll41lNT
no. ··-ng --h OOl"ll ~ ~.s:
PllOOUCT SEA"VICES. IHC .. Jl•I
Bl•<" Slre11, H••POrt Bc•ct•. c.lltor.,.•'llt60
SYSTEMS ~VCTS. INC, ••
Celllorl't• CO<'llOf'•llo11, 31'7 81rcn
Street, He~ Buch, ~IHorftl'
92660
Tiii• --'' .,_ucled Oy • ~or· Por•llon, svneMS PRODUCTS. INC.
llv· fOWlnA Tretll, P-ioe..t
Tll1> Sta"momt ..,H ltlOCI wUI\ IM
C::-IY Ck/ll Of ClfMQeGoun1vonJUM1 n, 1'77
COOKHY, COl..£M.eN a MOWAltO. INC.
AttotM~atuw
ff1'1. E•>ttlt~SI., WHl 1110,
h.Ul\,CA.t-
F711J7
Publ1Jl\l!d Or<lt19" CCM)I 0 41/y Piiot,
Ju"4!24,MWIJUIV1.8.1S, lq11
PUBIJC NOTICE
FICTITIOUSa USll<ESS
NA¥E STATEMENT
'"• lol'°"'lft!I Po,_ •••-"9 l>ust ,,., ... , .
KONA MARINE, 3-oo V11t Oc>o<to.
S..li. S. N-port Be.ten. C•tt1orft1.t
9266J
NORMAN L COUGHLIN, raU
!><wt T90Qo0'1 ~ •• N~WDO<I S...Ct>. c.aJllor,,14 92660
JAMES STEGALL. IOSVI• Ul\CllM.
Hewoo<t ~.ten, C•lllornl••~
Tllis bus•nl>~· I\ <CH'IOUC~ by • -'"'"'""-;No. Jo~St~ll
TM\ \IM....,..nr wH llff<I "'''" t~ Counrv Cle•1' IWO.M\QI! Count• on Jun-13, 1977 .. ,, .. ,
Publt\IW'O o. .. l!Qlt CCNSI o.t1lv PllO(. July i,e, is_ 12, It/I
21U·'7
PUBLIC NOTICE
fr11sav1 July I, 1ti/ DAILY PILOT
()le Pattern Part!
lu• lhf' t.!\1hl. mo\t com
t ~ldbt~ ftt. P.IJ>llCtled lldnts
11t y0ur bP'.t bet1 One pat·
IFrn p.irl-110 s~e ~m IOf
7092
"'t A6u B~
\o ed~y folll dnd ~ew 111
mdl<~ lhi. bedut1ful Quilt'
Uno u~I Q1111t ·~ hn1\hed d
ynu ~11 1 h" charming ~"
velGPt" Quilt 1\ 1n ltvt tlllt~
n• ,t Whtn tnmplttl'd [d\) ~ri101oblP IC1 md~t f'dl 709?
charts. patch i;ldtletn 01eces
Sl.2S tor each patlPrn Aad
15Q •a h Do'l"fn I 1r ltt<f ~la
anm~·I 1~t1 h~no11r, Stnd lo
this sm.srl style. Aht:e Brooks
P11ntf!d Pattern 9239 Hall Needlec1all Dept 105
•te Wa1~b 27. 29 31 JJ. J5. Daily Pilot
171 . 40 42'7 1nthe~ Sile JI Box 163. Old ChPl'iOa St.t lake~ I , yards 60 intll. New YOf\\ NY 10011 P11ni
!lend SI 25 kl< exit panern. Name Add res~. Zop
3c.. Pauern Number Add "" for uc.11 111nera for MORE thin ever before' 2()(l f11s1<fa~ airmail. handlm&. designs plus 3 free printed in.
Send to: s•de hCW 1976 NEEOlCCRAP
Marian Maritn
Pattern Dept. 442
Daily Pilot
CATALOG' Has eve(}'ln1n1. 75c.
Crochet with Squ11u Sl.00 Crochet a W11drobe $1.00
Nifty fifty Quilts S 1.00 232 West 18th St.. New Ripple Crochet $1.00
York NY I 0011. P11nt Sew _ Knit llaak $1.25
NAME. ADDRESS. ZIP Needlepoint llook $1.00
S I Z E a n d S T Y L E flower Crochet Book ~1.00
NUMBER. Hairpin Crochet Book Sl.00
Instant Crochet Book S1 .00
Instant Mac11me Book $1 .00 Oo you know how to get 1
p1tt1111 tree 7 Send now to:
our ""' faff.winter Pattern Ca!Jlo&-ellp coupon inside for
tree p1tt1111 of your choice.
Send 751 "ow!
Sl.25
Sl .00
Stw -Kni1 Boot Instant Money Crafts
Instant fnltion l ook
1ast111t kwi"I loo\ • SI.DO
St 00
PUBLIC NOTICE
ICOTtCI' TOCONTllACTO.S
C.-Ll..ING l'Olt a1os
Inst.ant Mono Book Sl.00 Complete Gift Booll ~LOO
Co111plete Afchans !14 Sf.00
I 2 l'rize Afclmn :12 SOc
~~d160~~=1 ~c Museum Quill Book ~2 50c
1 S Quilts for Today :3 SOc
l otk of 18 li11y 11111' 6C1'
PU RIJC NOTICE
l<OTICl!TOClll'DITOAS SUPEAIC>ltCOU .. TOI' TMf.
STATE Ol'C.-Lll'OllNtA .. Olt
THECOONT'f'Ol'OllAHGI'
ICe.A·tllU
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTI nous IUSINl'SS
NAMESTATEMl!NT
Tn• tollow<nq--J •r•d<M"9 llU\> ~~'~ .
THE FOSS COMPA ... \,;1 Pl•CP•ll•
6
4 ..
2
•
5
6
7
8
D
A
I
L
y
p
I
L
0
T
c
L
A s
s
I
F
~ I
E
D
D:J ~:::!.~~.~~ ....... ~!!!.~~.~ .....•.. 1~:!.':':..~~ ...... .
GtMral 1002 G....... 1002~ ... ,.. 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• , _________ _. ____________ _
NEW ON THE MARKET . OCE.ANFaOMT
DUPLEX
.......................
IDOIS: A.d•tf'tlMn G.tteral 1002
2 Bdrms. e•. unit: +
sleeplJ\8 rm. & balh m
.iarage. Furn1&hed, re-
ady for summer/wmLe
rental. 1289,500
A FAMILY HOME WITH POOL
4Br. 2'h8a, fami ly room. dining.
Located on one or the fine.st cul-de-sac
streets in Newport. Quality
construction. Quality neighbors.
Complete pri v ~cy. Across from
Cherry Lake. This property will sell
rtus week. U you are a qualified
buyer, call 645-8031.
~ claec.ll ... ir eels •••••••••••••••••••••••
dally -,..... ..... n:n~.TH
DAILY PILOT ossumes
lld»llty fw the flnt ...
~ ........ only •
OPEHHOUSE
SatfSem 1·5
901 c.ttfs
Eastbluff
associated
owoi.: • M-> Rf Al T<>lf~ 'u / ', V\i , , h I') ., • , ! ..... 1
5 Bedrm, family homt>, j~~~~~~~~~~ 2S()O liq.ft. Pnme corner,._ _______ _
location Big yard.,.
~· Motfce: w/Hawaltao Teahouse. Pl I I
All real estate advertised Owner will give $3000. lo ease
m this newspaper is sub· rede<.'Orate. New reduced • •
Open House Sat /S.. 11 ·4
2242 HHIMr Ln. "-wport leach
$169.tOO 0WM1t'/"9f • ject to the Federal Fair price Sl48.000 Bring any reasonable of·
Housing Act of 1968 RoyMc Carcta. fer on th»; beautJJul 3 -------------
wbicb makesitillegallo Realtorl810Hewport bdrm., 2 batb Mesa G....-at 1002 IOOZ
advertiae "any pre· Costa Meaa 548·7729 Verde home. Vacant-·-•••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
ference, UmitaUon. orr-~~~~--""."-I immediate possession ---------•I MOTHER IM LAW discrimination based on possible. Listed al ,._ _________ , $86 ooo c 2 18 iOln8 lo love you tor race, color, religion. sex, 1· • buying this cule 2 Br ~t~~~~a°"~~keora~~ 12J ~~::: fc,~L~ -lrrJ p·p.:JI Nownnrt• Blvd. ~:~~s1!~thc~stsaep~r~~:
such pre(ereoce, llmita· Otli:! new. one remodeled. ·-~~ ,._ "~I"" guest house completely
uon, or discrimination." a~ to 17th Street :.hop-82'"1 • Frontage x 191' Independent Crom the
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept any
advertising for real
estate whlch is in viola·
uoool the law.
P 1 n g a nd N cw p o r l Depth with mechanical mam house. Plenty o(
Harbor High A super in garage and 2 rehtals on room t.o store Your boat
vestment. Hurry, Jui.I POLYNESIAN lherear. Presentwoome or large mob1l home.
IJsted. call S46·S880 ~/mo. FuU price Secluded pool size !cnced LIVING $135,000. yard First time orrered. ~HERITAGE
•
Be the firsc. to see. m ~ 646-7171.
~~ 1re=_:;;:_';;;;'::~:-i:9•"jiijfjijiij .. i•.'0·1··1·!·jja).
REALTORS · COSTA MESA pool ~ ~ ~ ••••••• • l liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitl home. 3 Bedrms. 2 bath Large enclosed lanai. I 002 j_;;;;;;~~~----. -. ___ , ••••••••••••••••••••••• Many gorgeous plants
need cutting back.
FIX AND SA VE BEST BUY $79.460.
$36.500 A~llon vets! Newrr 4 4C.OOM.[.176•, FOR.!~
Charming bungalow on bedrm home 1n goodl.~~~-l!i~-~!,_;....,J qwet tree lined street. area. New crpts, won't 4 • • "' • ....._ vi·ew vi·ew vi·ew Fruit trees too! Prime last. onJy ~.900. flurry. ;ta · • -~
area close to schools and call now. This 4 bedroom, 2'h bath
sboppmg, don't mit>s this ~ home is set among the
s.tll of Hi~y
CdM DUPLEX. 3 bedrm & l bedrm. P referred
location. Oversized lot
with room for a large nd·
dltlonal unit. $155,000.
644·7270
deal. Call now 752-1700. Comm. & Res. HOME & 1.._.COME finest homes in Spygl1t11s.
<J"IN "' ~. ">1u1"0"' N111 • Realty " Open Daily for the dis· I ~~, , ____ •7•5-1·•2•0•6•0-t Charmi~~~T~edroom ~':'~~ting buyel' at _ ~~ ll1liii!D •· hom(' on a large shady 52 Drakes Bay, CdM
IRVIHE Eastsidc Costa Mesa lot. ()pH Daily 1.5 PM
LARGE
~A.MIL Y HOME
Everything 1s new in lh1:1
~pac1ous i story. <I
bedroom. 3 bath family
room home. New ~arpet·
mg, new pt.int, p.o-wax
kitchen floor. new ex
tcriot stucco. Now all it
needs 1s a new owner
CALL 751·3191
t;:S ELECT
T' PROPERTIES ----ILU~S FOR ~95,000?
Yes, we have a 3 BR.
""Cream Puff'. dee. own
home. Close to :.wim-
m.aog, tennis. shoppm~ &
the answer to a truly
carefree hfo:,tyle. Hl~h
quality & lowest prtced
111 Bluffs
VA.LLEY 640-9900
SPYGLASS
BEAUTY
4 1m. 2' ~ BA. panoramic ~iew Fee land Brand
new $279,950. Open 12·5
SattSUn
MJ•~ Schlo~umon ,
Rltr
673-5311
COLLEGE PARK
COSTA MESA
Converse around
circular Swedish frplc in
family rm. Have fun div·
ing into 1Sx35' glittering
pool + 3 lrg BR's. Agl.
642-2237.
1712 Highland Or.
Newport Beach
Spacious 3br. 2•'2 ba. very lrg Cam rm & great
back yrd. Owner's 1mx·
ious. $159,500. Crawford
&Associates, 9S7·070l
The incoml! units help 640.6161 EXECUTIVE make the payment & you ~ $1 22.500 i;ct separate garages &
Secluded 1 ul·de·:.ac loca fom•cd yards. The pre·
lion. hahan tile entry. M!nlowner wall help with
Step up rormul Ii .... rm the hnanc1ng. Full price
Din gallena. High soar $8.1.SOO. OALL 556-.2660.
ing ceilings. Huge sun .SELECT
COATS & WALLACE
REAL ESTATE , INC.
ken family room. Spec.
wcular i.unny gourmet PROPERTIES 1·--------
k1tchen Secon4 story ---------•! holds huge ma11ter win~ MEW LISTINGS!
EASTSIDE C.M.
2461 MORSE plus J more spac1ou:.
bedrooms Beau11fully
marucured grounds. cov
ered lattice patio Don't
wail. call now 752-1700.
Vf'flJUJY • l\llJl\I rl)ttf t.J I'
l•lfilll
MORHIHGSUH
SPLIT LEVEL
UDO ISLE
MIHl!ST4TE
$275,000.
Especially large home
i.urroundmg patio pool.
Pc-rfect for indoor-
outdoor living and enter·
ta1n1ni:. Flexible 5
bedroom home, ideal for
the family who wants
two separate wings.
Situated on two lots and
two green stradus.
OPEN SAT /SUM 1-5
Clean & comfortable 3
bdrm. + family, 2 bath
home; brick frplc. -in
xlnl neighborhood.
SM.500!
COSTA.MESA
Cream of College Park •
parklike entry & patio +
3 bdrm. & family, 2
baths; dbl brick frplc.
Low maintenance .
4 BACK IA Y CONDO 587.500
VIEW WOODBRIDGE
$89,500 Broadmoor home; 2 BR.
Woodsy & Wonderful 2 + den + dining rm. +
story wilh 3 bdrm:.. "Mr eating area m kitchen.
& Mrs Immaculate" hve Gorgeous bra ck frplc. .. ~ Low ma1nt . yard.
'"""''' Sl8.500'
EASTSIDE
COSTA MESA.
$69,900
On quiet tree lined i.trcet
bordering prcstig1oul>
Back Bay area. Sharp 3
bedroom, 1 story with
enormous pri vale
backyard. For appornl·
ment caJJ 962-7788 ..
~ KEY
B~~!t!~~1~!~ 6
units for only S94.900.
Low down. 9.71/o Cap
rate, always rented. Call
now. 54!).8655.
~UPERB
HOMES
9 mos nl"w . Reamed
<:Jlhedrol l'eil1ni;:;
:.lrelch across lh1l> 4
bdrm plan 5 2 story
beauty Stl'Ps le:id
downstairs to J sunken
lmly rm w wet bar. Up.
gr .. dcd cpu Self clean·
11\g oven. Eal in kitchen.
You mwll s~ this lvly
home now <;all lor more
mfo. 545-9491
-
WATERFRONT NEW LISTING!
HOMES Ocean l·blk., deluxe THECOLONY
REALESTATE duplex: 3 BR. 2 ba. ea p• ....... IOO 63H400 Close to stores & Udo -" Village. Reduced to $15,500
CHOICE $167,950! Charming cul de SIH"
HORTH TUSTIN BA YFROHT street. New plush carpet-
OLD Th.is 3 bdrm home has a OPEN SAT /SUN 1-5 1ng Brack fireplace.
CORONA DEL MAR dirung room &~ts on ap· 1805 w. BA y Built-in book shelves.
h prox •-. acre of beautiCul Country kitchen. Ex· This sop 1sltcated and • Brand new duplex: 3 & 2 •Ansi·ve use of wood •· parklike selling in the BR f 1 d k "' "' e\.Clling properly'' F lulH S ., rpcs.,sun ec s,4 wall pa.per. Huge
t bl ' ti I f OOt I 1gh chool dis· Cl i.w a e 1or a overs o P ed f car garage. ose to separate master win". th t I V II b l.ncl. nc or quick t t & I " a spcc1a I age Y saleat$89.500. res auran s p ay Plui. 2 more roomy
lhl.' Sea. Featuring 3 OPEN SUNDAY 15 things. Seller will help bedrooms. Beautiful
bdrmi.. formal d1n1ng 1091 Foothill Bl\·d. finance. $309,000! wood deck & patio cover
room · J fireplace)>. AESOP REALTY CORONA DEL MAR overlooks manicured
Partrnl ocean view and OPEHSUH. 1·5 groun d. Cal l now
pnv&te guest qu.-irt~rs. 73 l-491 I 708 AVOCADO 752-1700. The gourmet kitchen & Ask for Don or Helen °'
Real Estatl'
-----------•Ocean side ol hwy.·, 'fN 111 "'.:11SJuNrc1111Ni<1• baths are done In elegant [ .
BR.EAD ~~=h'.'t,;~~ ';i WHATAH ~~::~!.!~.~~ '; t!Rill Ol'f111111»·11·111Nr1~1N1c f• dPPORJUNIJY! Bob>aBayProp. ..:::::=-: 1::::1 •""'
&. · !B Btdl I~~:··,=~ .. ~~·::··~ · ,~~0
• ~~:n~r:d·~~'. = -be~rooms. 212 baths,~ famtm.21,'iCargar.Tale
formal dirung rm, sep. roof. Approx 1 mi to
walnut paneled family Cottage/Commercial beach, 573,500. To see BUTTER VETS room with fireplace, lov· "On old Newport Blvd." call Betty CanUm. Coat~
cly yard, covered patio, Cute, neat 2 bedrm & Wallace Real E.slall.' ~.900. VA appro1sa I on c Io s c to s c h o o I s , hollli; freshly painted an· 962-4454
Duplex! Totalrents$4751 tlus 3 bedrm <·harml'r beac h .park . tennis side. nicely carpeted
Only $59.000! Call Red overloolong lush "alleys. courts and bike trail. Ready for quick sale!
Carpet, 754-1202 Call nov. · Compare with other pro· Room to e~pand into re· MORNING SUM
perties in the beach area taal t commerc1ol sbop
TWOFOROME! C....&Res. and try to match at while you live right SPUTLIVEL
$73,000 Realty suzooo. Call there. And only $75,000, 9 mos new. Be.med
" h · b 1 751-2060 546.4141 508N.NewportBlvd. cathedral ceillngs .. c arming unga ows stretch across this 4 on R-3 lots! Quiet tree1_________ NewportBeach
lined street. Primearu.1----------1 OpenffouseSot/SUD1·5 bdrm plan 5 • 2 story
"No charge" for frwti--------~ PETE BARRETT beauty. Steps l ead tree.! Clole t.o schoola & IY OWHEI downstairs to a sunken
abo)ll. lnveatorscboice-3Br + den •· enclosed -REA•TV-fmly rm w/wet bar. Up-..,._ ... ... ,. graded cpts. Sell cle•n-co.-steal them! 2 for 1 pal.io on huae lot wt plen· fU·SZN ing oven. Eat Jn kftcben.
low prico-$73,000! Call ty ot trees. New pa.int, y t bis l )y now.~7171 . cpts/drpg. Prin only.---------!~~~~~~!!!!~!!!'.'! OU mus see t v
Cl'fli 111o.11 ~, 894--9?5& home now. Call lot more ..... CONDO NEWJ. Z Br 2 Ba, info. 545-9491.
YALU E on 9th Tee tta.ncho Las
SOPU TOWMHOME
3br, Utiba. S58,000
Palmu CC. Rancho
Mirage, by owner. ~ Walkt!r & ler!
Have IC>metbing you want
to sell! Classified ads do
4br 1~b8, '6$,500
4br 3ba, 1163.500
Crawford & Associates
957-0701
PLUS' 714-646·5608 all 6PM R~at Estate
• Gwr.. --100-2-•G·-... -.. -r.a---,-0-0-2
1t well, 642·56'78. Bea!UJful -4 bed.rm. 2\~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• .. ••••••••
bath home. Located on
quiet, cheerful street.
Priced for quick sale.
Trul)' a food value, if..¥ou
hurry.
979-1050
CEMTURY21
We'reopep lO &!or100
~I
I
04 DAIL y PILOT Frl~\,lly a, 1971 ~------------------------~------------, ................ ..
If your hon1e town is in the South Coast Area,
we're your hon1e town rea.1 estate . company I
"WE WORK HARD TO SELL HOMES RIGHT!"
..
TERRlflC DUPLEX
In Np! HJ!> •re.a on qu1"1 '""' >hocl<>cl
'"""' Lllf' t<>f nrt lot w/room tor b<w
'" 1r•1'•" 11111 .i•e• wnh lou ol P<IVH')
lu•t li;rrd
(7H) 646-nll
FOUNTAIN PAkK
TOWNHOUSE
.\uv11 horn brll Mr. '>q. P.ir•. 11olt, •""""'\* ••t<JU~l b•ll. ,w1mm1nM. t-lf
I ovf'IV UPll' •d"d J bdrm 1 b•1h mo1kl
hume 'onduto"
(7141 '1611-JJ71
NEW CONDO N••" ch.once lur your choirl' ol b•Jlld
""w [•1h1de condO'i. t.ach 1 bdrm ~
li•th 1n 4u1c1 10-unn comple• w/pool
!. ti<U/ll. Onr l\.ttuperbrnd unit· o•
'Ave ~ven m0tt~ wra, ..-c.~n1er homt-
(7141 5-40-8944
2 STORY CLASSIC
4 bdrm, 3 b•tlt. Only yr. old, unr
bdrm on Ht floor, lrnly rm, wt'I b.ar.
torm•I din rm. ••1sed entry. Mgny
r•l••s, carpeted, draped, lmd1c.iped
(n4) 968.3371 Of (714) 546-1754
BALBOA ISLAND
""' U1ted. 4 BR. 2 BA. l119r I.amity
•oum, dining room, bre•klht room.
koom to build addition.al unit. Walat to
th<' b•y or i.ke • 10c terry ride to th•
ncu11.
(714) 646-nn or (714) S40-8944
GREAT STARTER HOME
rhos J bdrm chumer ls perfect for the·
.,,iun~ couple itu1ing out Mugt"
l'ncl'd b•cky•rd lor tne lntle one•
w l~rnon & orange !fees 81cyclt'
J••t•'lCl' to the bea .. h.
(7H) 6#>-7711 01 (7 H ) 540-8~4
CLASSIC BEAUTY
LARGEST MODEL
Mo>t attract•ved('(.k walkwdyenttdn• •'
w bnck lenced couny••d are.a
P11v•cy. ye>. 4 bdrm, fmly rm, lorm•I
din rm, Everything you wan1 & nttd 1n
• 9 mos new btll home. Qu•l11v
<rptrng. Vaulted cellinss. ~luge m;u
bdrm suite. Wallo.-m wet bar. tlr1gh1
abundance stor•ge -only S97.900.
Belltr hutry on thrs one.
(714) SH-9'4~1
MESA VERDE
EXECUTIVE HOME
\Jniquely dt1isned •round a 1.,ge,btll
pool 1hr1 elt11•nt 4 bdrm home is lde•I
for gracious family Irving. Oul$!1ndin11
p1ol landsuplng. 8111 area, dO\e to
the country club.
(7HI 646-nn or (n4) 540-89«
SHAKE ROOF
MANY FLOWERS
Very nrce l bdrm & fmlyrmhom,.un •
quiet cul·de-uc st. Neighborhood
shoW\ p11de of ownt'rsh1p. TreP•'
looking for a lo<c•I Needs only cpr-&
•nteroor poont. \V Jll 10 Beat
dement.al'). Subrrnt """ rN•onabl1•
nffe1 MW
WALK TO BEACH
from this 4 bdrm J b.ih w/dining rm
l•rge lmly room w/conve•Htlon p•t &
forepl•ce. h mile lrom ocHn on quiet
cul·de-Hc. Profeuionally landsaped.
Re.al pride ol ownership home. New
on the markl!t
(714) 646-7711
MARINERS
SCHOOL DISTRICT
) OR beauty wllh large bulcy.ard,do1r
to Mariner'$ School ilnd park. New
orpel .and dr•pt'S. Ju11 lbtrd · only
~79.'lSO.
C714) 646--nn
5 BEDROOMS
GREEN VALLEY
\/try dt'iirable area.commun11v pool;.
p•1ks & rec. lmm.ac 2 story, 2Y1 bach,
trntral aor, step down, l1v rm, 2 bdrm
on hi floor. lge mm bdrm. mirrored
wo•drobe. See & compm.•. $97.500
171•) 968-3371 or 17141 5"6· 1754
5 BDRMS 3 BATHS
ATIN LARGE FAMILIES
Only S yr~ new. ove1 2100 \Q It of (,.
•<•I. Btfl Culverdal., 2 \lory w/a room
for alt the kids. New carpe1ln9. Fre\hlv
p.,n1ed IMide. Cornmuntty pool,
clubhou•e. •er>nii & park. See thi• on<'
now.
1714) 545·9491
PRIDE OF
OWNERSHIP
~pet dean home In deslrableRanrn·
wood lnll Toro.Hi9hlyuw.adedcpu
& drpl. Mint mov•ln co11ditlon.
!>hake root Septrate laundry rm, ga
m1p&oven. Thls1u•al.lluy<11ooly
S73.900. Hurry!!
BUCCOLA BEAUTY
ON GOLF COURSE
f •nt111ic S bdrtl).l 1tory l bath ho-
on the 9th gfttn. Over 2l!OO ,q, h.
hv1ng area. Great floor plan for
executive entertaining & l1m1lv
e11joymen1. Huge lmly rm w/frplc.
Wei bllr, over 1bundance of stor .age.
C•ll •od•y to Sff this one!
(714) S45·9491
SAVE$$$
& lots of work. Ne•r "New Mornmg
5un" "eM So. Coast Plila. Upgr.aded
1hruouL Adult occupied. Quret cul·
de·s•c. l cu11om patios. !>ff new
rnoc!l!'ls & comp.are.
1n•1 546-1754 °' (7141 'J6&.ll7t
MRS. CLEAN
LIVES HERE
Spar\ling S&S Parlr: Huntington. Cefl(
.air cond, popul•• h<ird to llnd Culsway
Model, shows hke a model. P;alnted
•nside & ouL lmmac l bdrrns, lge
sep.atate fmly rm w/lrpk, lge liv rm.
.ibundance of \tor•s e. Price rlgh1 ~
marke« 11 \'J6.S00.
(714) S4S-'"1
REDUCED $2,000
TO ONLY $126,500
In btfl Turtle Rodt. Very dl!llrable
exe<'Utlve horm-wlvlew ol 1he hilt•. 4
bdrms, lmly rm, form.al din rm, lt•li.tn
crle en1ry. tiled rear p.alio. fruil ''""'· Bellt'f hurry on this one.
(n 4) 5-45-9491
DRAMATIC&
BTFL4 BDRMS
tn d!!tirable Dttrfleld. High a:tllng
entry & llv rm. 3 full b.ath1. formal din
1m, lmly rm w lrpk plu$ bteakf.ut rm.
Mslr suile hn 2 levels. ICltdlen has
tr.ash compmor & dble sell deillling
oven.
(n4) S4S·9491
Walker & Lee Sold 13,889 homes in 1976 .•• and that's a record! List your home for sale with the hard-working record setters!
ee
COSTA MESA OFFICE:
2790 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa, CA 92626
(714) 545-9491 or (714) 545-0465
FOUNTAIN VALLEY OFFICE:
17213 Brookhurst Street
fountain Valley, CA 92708
(714) 546-1754 or (714) 968-3371
HUNTINGTON BEACH
MAGNOLIA ADAMS OFFICE:
9032 Adams Avenue
Huntington Beach, CA 92646
(714) 963-5671 or (714) 556-7035
HUNTINGTON BEACH
SPRINGDALE BOLSA OFFICE:
6042 Balsa Avenue
Huntington Beach, CA 92647
(714) 897-0321
NEWPORT BEACH/
IRVINE OFFICE:
2043 Westcliff Drive
Newport Beach, CA 92660
(714) 540-8944 or (714) 646-7711 CH PlAUOA •
Bearer is entitled to Free
JHarket €valuation
· of a Residential Property
Analysis will be made by a Walker & Lee, Inc. market specialist.
There is no cost or obligation. You may return this certificate or
call for an appointment. Offer is good indefinitely-please
retain with your household documents.
-
This CMlllut•"""' bl' d«iated ..,;ct •lthout -lc>L II )'OUf pr_.-ry h PU!Hnlly h<ted "'kh o
•••lt0t,plt ... dknoprd1hlo olte<, •It lo noc °"' w-io.. to .olkil otfe<lnp uf oche< re•ltort.
~-:'!!!!!.~~-~~ ........ ~c:'!!!!!.~~~~~ ........ 1 ~!~!!.~~~~ ....... ~-:'!!::!.~~~ ....... ~:::!.~.~ ........ ~~.':!~~~ ....... ~!:!.':!~.~~ ....... ~-~-~ ....... ~~!.':!~~ .......
GeMrol 1002 Gl'Mrol 1002 Ge.wrol 1002 Gewrol 1002 G.,..rol 1002 GeMrol 1002 GcMrol 1002 G....,... 1002 Gfteral 1002
4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ······~················ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ·····!················· ····················~·· •••••.••...•••••••••••• •••••••·•·•···••••••••• -
AMAZING VALUE
HEAR THE
BEACH
i\ real honest bargain: :!
story, 3 bdrm friendly
hom e 10 peaceful
neighborh ood, just
minutes from the water.
Secl uded parents
retreat. 2nd fireplace in
family room A dis·
Linctivc home planned
fo r gracious living.
Priced at only $86.900.
Don't miss out, call now
for more details! Call
K-12·~35
OPfN tit fl • ,, '\. '• ''Ill fl r..;1 ·t
CORONA DEL MAR
DUPLEX-3 BDRMS. EACH
Hard to find , identical, large units
with 3 bdrms. & 2 baths each; top
quality construction. with overs ized
rooms. Close to beach, shopping &
schools. Drive by: 514 Iris. then call
us fo r app't. to show . $179,500
fiut~
Glut Wuttu 13Ug.
ON THE WATER
BY OWNER
RETIRIMG111 NO!!!!!
JUST MOVING
TO
MY OWN OFFICE
TO
SERVE YOU BETTER!!!
MAURY STAUFFER -
SEA UON REAL TY
1213 MO. COAST HWY., LAfiUHA
497-3311 OR 644-2212
SEE YOU SOON!!!!
l•IRAHil
450 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE 759-0811
Fish from your patio! Boat at your
door! Watch yachts go by. gulls soar.
fish jump! Walk to shop'g, dining &
entertainment. Security gate, patrols.
Ground level corner unit. easy access.
secluded cluster . Spacious 1 BR, I
Bath. den. wet-bar, frplc. gourmet
kitchen. sunken living room. big 215
sq. ft patio. Deluxe upgrades. Wall
coverings. mirrors thruout. Immac.
Aft. 5 & wknds, (213 )5984989. Wkdays
(714)642-6673. Open House Sat & Sun
11·5. Marina Pacifica. 5107 N. Key 21.
Appraised at $108,950. Asking $104,950.
FOUR BEDROOMS, FOREMOST VIEW
Clever four bedroom single story with
professional decorating and landscap-
ing, RV storage area and a foremost
view of Newport Beach, the Back Bay
and beyond. This Unique Home is
located a few doors from the com-
m unity 's tennis, swimming and
jacuzd facilities.
GttlffOI 1 OOZjG .... ral 1 ooz ..............................................
ALOT
FORALl'nLE
$56,000
How's this for value?
Park like selling · com·
rnunlty pool . beautifully
decorated 2 story. 2
bdrm, i i,11 bath adult con·
do minium ! Spiral
staircase · enclosed
i:arage. Priced for <1uick
sale! Don't wait, rail
now~ 842·2535.
OPH.J JU Q •II~ fUN IOttt ~i.,'
[a11111
INVESTOR'S
SPECIAL
$46,500
Guarded gateway pro·
tects lavish grounds with
pool. Secluded entry to
executive ll v. rm. Sunshine gourmet
kit c hen overlooks private court yard. Spiraling stair case
winds to bdrm complex. Owner anxious. submit
any offer. The finesl in
twnhm. llvi n i. Call
quick! IM.7·6010.
OKN llL 9 • rr 5 llH'4 ro 8f Nl(t •
~REAL '
T£RS ---
Getteral 1002
1
GetMt'OI 1002 ~~::~ .......... !!~~!!:~••••••••••!!~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
THE BLUFFS
OPEN RU. 1·5 2323 VISTA HOGAR
3 Bdrms .. 2 baths; 1n xlnt condition!
Offered at a low $117.000. Come visit
Friday or call for showing at your
convenience.
67).4400
HL~BOR
WESLl·:Y N
T ... L\.YLOR CO.
H.EALTORS Sl llC'I ' UH()
LIDO ISLE-4215,000
On corner of Via Lido Nord! Lovely 3
BR 2-story white s tucco with red tile
roof. Inviting den. formal dining rm.
Nice south patio, lge sundeck for sun·
ning & potted plants. Street to strada.
Large storage room off garage.
2111 S-Joaquin Hils Rood
NEWPORT cena. H.I. 644-4910
-!!!!!~D~i•~b~i°"!!!o~f~H~.tMM-!!!!!! ... !!!a~n..~!!!~~C!!!~!!!!~· GtMr~
_.;;;;; ..•..........•.........•.......••..••..•..•... 1002 GeMral 1002
. 1002 G....,... 1002 ..............................................
•HOR$ES
•KENNELS
•STORAGE
•OR77
THIS IS-
YOURLIFL. ·
and you'll love 11pendin1 It in thi.s 3 bedroom, 2
bath home with lots of room on a large lot.
Prime area. Hurry and call OPl.N Ill 9 •ti S fVN T08'NJ(f•
A FORIVll. OCEAN VIEW
This 5 bedroom Broa.Clmoor home in
Harbor View Hills t& a "-m"8t see! 0
Close to park, Po9l, schools, shop.
ping and beach. Leaves nothing to
be desi..ed. $259,500. \
It's really fine at $169,900.
UP'llilVUE tf()Ml:S
REAL TORS~ 675.0000
2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar
also in Mesa Verde, at 546-5990 •
I
1002 G1Mral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
PENINSULA home. 4 Or 5 BR, 3 ba,
all amenities. Lovely neighborhood, a
few steps from the beach. $195,000.
OTHER prestige waterfront homes
with pier & float trom $385,000 up.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 ""Y'"" ll•, r.J I' 1,7J f.16:
caE
110111 1L1111 ao.
OVER 50 YE4RS OF SERVICE
· DOY& SHORIS--
4 llDlOoMSI
Located On Santiaro Drive In An E~ecuUve Area Of Pr•tlglous Homes. Secluded One Story
French Regency With U»Per Bay
View. Gatea Courtyard1Jbltry. All
Large Roornt. Living ROOm With Marble Fireplace. Famtly ROOm
For Informal Entertainln1. Wet
Bar. Format DJntiig Room. All
Electr:tc Kitchan . $285.000
lncliidlrig Eand.
~II. ma en ab I Irvine ?-realtg
FINER HOMES
FROM $72.500 TO $1,350,000
"SOMETHIMG SPECIAL ..
ON SPYGLASS Hill
New on the market & absolutely
beautiful! l ·story, 4 BR in warm
earth tone decor. Features her-
ringbone bdwd floors in entry. din-
ing rm & kitchen. High ceilings, brick fireplace & French doors
leading to raised redwood deck
patio. Family rm, kitchen & Master
BR open to lush landscaping
w/view of hills. $269,500 fee. Mar·
jorie Mahon 644-6200. (C.11)
EICLUSIYIL Y l!ASTSIDI
Outstanding 3 BR, 2 bath con·
· dominium. Decorator perfect
w/plush caramel carpeting, accent·
ed by plenty of wood & matching
wall treatments. Private brick
atrium. 3·car garage w/loads of
storage. Community pool & Jacuzii.
$88,500 . Holly Markas 644~6200.
(C-12)
IDEAL LOCATION
Cbqice downstairs condominium by
tho 10th Tee in Rancho San Joa·
quln. SUper "San Joaquin" plan w/2
BRs. den & dining rm. su.~.000.
Laszlo Sharkany '752-~14. CC· 13)
WOOO .... CMAJltB
Lovely 2 BR condominium highly
upgraded w/aota.-1a11 door in ldtchCDt lots or wallpaper & deluxe
pa,tio w/gas BBQ. Live & \)lay in
this wonder'f\Jl area tor onJy m.500.
Forrest Powers 7$2·1414. (C•14)
.,.
l
llGPOOL
llGHOMI
cm a Me.a Verde cuJ de·
MC. 4 Bedrma, 2 balbs
+larse fam1Jy room cen·
tmng around 16x36 pool.
Shake roo f.doiiblc
fittplace and d11u11g rm
Priced ri&bt, call
~~
~~HERITAGE
• • REALTORS
lc6oa Penimufo I 007 1
•••••••••••••••••••••••
HUDY
$79,950 VA
TERMS .
5 Bedroom home wllb ao :
added family room la • Irvine's "Culverdate·•.:
SUPER SHARP
Low down for vets I :
Almost 2700 square fee$
of luxurious Jiving".
1112,900. Red Carpet.. : 7~-1202
By Owner, Colle1e Parlet.;
3 bedroom home ln the S & S, upcraded, ver'I :
Willows of Irvine. On a dean, cuJ-de-aac, 4 BR ••
corner lot and easy ac· fam·rm, Ille bonus rm. ,
cess l.O rreewa)'ll, abop· 2350 sq. ft., b eaut.=
ping and walk l.O schools. courtyard w /tile four\•
UYEIN
THE RANCH
tam, $115,900. 559-5391
BR, Fam-rm, 4 Ba, 2sty •• a .SOO. lllr Jeffry Rd. :
Irvtae Center Dr. 5122 ·
Skinner. 95.5-2200M2.9503 •
~ll macnab / lrvlne t'--realty
IROADMOOI IH WOODllUOGE
Sparkling new 4 BR "Aspenwood"
model w/central atrium. Jg. living
rm w/massive fireplace, huge fami-
ly rm + deluxe built-in kitchen.
Super location -just a Y-z·bl~k to
Swim Club. $109,500. Forrest
Powers 752-1414. CC·lS)
RUDY FOR YOUR MOVING DAY!
Owners have done everything to
m.ake this beautiful 3 BR home re-
ady for you. Features plush carpet·
ing, outstanding window treat-
ments, 2 patios, indoor atrium +
extra lg. f am Uy rm; in one of
University Park's best areas. Close
to pools, jacuzzis, tennis, schools &
shopping. Owner transferred -
must sell! $107,900. Anita Bradshaw
752-1414. (C-16)
IEAUTIRIL PAU HOME
Formal tile entry -sunken living
rm w/French doors & dramatic
vaulted ceiling -f ormaJ dining -
lg. family rm w/fpl -huge master
wing w/sitting rm -3 add'l BRs
w/3 full baths -spacious kitchen
w/pantry & nook. Lg. Jot -ex·
cellent location -close to pools·&
schools. Professional landscaping;
patios; fireptt. $137,000. Lorratrie
Rennie752-1414. (C·l'l)
IUY TOOAY 'OI I.
TOMollOW'S HArPINISS
4 BR + fam.lly rm detached home.
just beJng built fn Irvine's newest.
most eJtc.iting vtllage. Cho~ of col· on ii you huJTY t samng & fishfne
on Lake nearby + parks, pools,
Jacunis & membenbJp 1n the new Tennil Club. 'l'ruly CaJifonria llving at Jts be&t! Lila Harper 152-141.f. · <C·18)
'NntaOCK CHAM ....
Immaculate 3' BR, 2 bath.f free. sta~ bO~ Waitlq for your
fiaisbfnit:t0Ucbei8 w/flnest qual!~ •'BuclcliUi" ·cupetbtf. ~etely
private, low-maintenance yard
w/sPrtnkler ayatem., 8el*J'&te din· lila area + tarnn, rm w/vaulted cellino:, F1rtt time oflcted! tW!SOO
iick'IUdr Hopy Marku 6'4-6200~ lC.~19)
• , e ,. • I ~ •
HcNtMs For W. . ....._ llOf" W. Ho.n For Sal. ............................................................................................ • .. DAJl..V Pll,OT Friday, July I, 197"7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... ,_.S. ' ..._..,_..We HomnPerW. HonetForW. 1055 MlwportlHclt 10'9 Ml.,.tlffda I06t •actt I06t s.a .. 1rnl1 1076 ............................................................................................ ....................... ....................... .............................................. .................. , ... . ~ ............ !~ I 041 ~~.t.!.~~ ..... ~~.~~ ~.~~ ..... !?.~~ Lake &o.nt 4 bdrm home. MIWPORT HGTs. IY OWMElt
Decorator doslgn $1 24,900 ,.., .. c
VILLA .. 111
UMIV.rAD
An extlUnc "'Oafurd'
model ~ lo Unlv~rai
tr Pull . .Peaturln1 ~ bdrma.. formal rm. •• b~· bon\111
I e I.be pr11e. anal tor faaul1 enter ulnln1. A bu1aUful
~ 6-lcned fur &rtl•l lamil.1 bv{QI. Clooo to put. pool and recruUun
llCUS.1"rlc.c!toldU
red hill _
~~2-7 ~00
NO R I NS
REA L TY
WILDPAITIH
• IMMACULATE THRUOUT *
This is lhe beach home you have been
watUns for. This 3 BR, l~ BA home
has every deslrable feature -walk to
the beach -close to shopping -true
Laauna atmosphere. Surrounded by
trees Cor prlvacy & charm. 2 Car gar,
nice backyard. nagetooe & brick patio
provldes the best of outdoor living.
P'rplc & hardwood Clrs. Lot slze 57.5 x
105.35. $169,950.
WILLIAM POWELL REAL ESTATE
497-1751
tbruout. a patios, pvt p ti l N t Hobie rea a oua ewpor .WWhw...,.Ylew ~. n'.lw4'ed a. "'acbamt'et~ fflt•. corner loeauon LOVB.Y LIDO ISLE '"'"VI • -,__,,& ..., •" .. ,. Custom dc1l1ned w ................ pmtorbobbyroom.All charmer. Tblct, rlusb Lovely 4Ur, 2Ba, fam
m xlnt. cond.. By owner. carpetlna. 0 au PRIVATE BEACAES-TP!NN(S COURTS-rm. pool am lot, e>ttaD ua~. Open Sun. 2272S enclosed brick frplc. CLUBHOUSE view from every room ln
Jalama.re. ~-951'1 or Ste~ aaver aourmet bouse,oneofS.C'1fioe:lt 81~Stt Spacious 3 bedroom. den. 2 b3th. home. Lorire Areaf N~ deeoral1q ---------1 kltc en. Unique step llvln1 room, separate dlnln~ room. modem owner wW belp n.oa.nce:
&!SADOW MOllllE I br, down rnaater suite. kltchen.3cargarage.4SFt.&reett.oat.reet.lot. $150,,_.Bob~
2 .... b ......... - d ...,. Delilht/ul wood abin1led 1... "'-"i.h ,, ..,.,., "" a,_..,__ en. 1"'0 maater bath. Huie ~"'sunny~ pauo. ~ ~p..kT::-~~.'f0t~~f:e separate family rm.. $2%5.000. '73-4239
new inside & out. M.em· toot It wlll be gone
.....
Ccipbtrc.o 1071 benbip beach It tenls tomorrow, call now.
club. Cla to Village ~J~~!.11 srUH•o11tN1cr•· Shops, schla. 6: parka.
24302 Blueridge Rd.
te2,500. By appt. 644-6824
• ••••••••••••••••••••••
Casa Caplatrano. 2br,
Newport leocla I 069~ •a I 06' =56 by own. s,v,ooo. .............................................. · ---------
or lnUrn•u, weeluinds.
Tho perfect beach cot· --------i ta1• with daaa. Open t.,... leach I 048 Loguno HICJUtl I 052
lloorplao Uppctr, ¥Ute lit ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• ••••••••• 0
HEW 3 IEDltOOM
2~ bath homes. Garden·
ing service. Electronic
oven. $500/mo. lnae.
Agt.
tWtlOR VU CARMEL
38R, fam-rm. din-rm,
28A. Prime Cam. loc. ln
Npt. Bch. By owner, in·
cl s land. Open SAT /SUN
l ·S. 1812 Port ManlelJh
LIDO ISLE Tl.AMSFBtltlD . .
Beaut 3 bedrm,·~ bath 2 story. Surrounded by
plush eardena, deep pUe
crptg, cathedral ceWnp.. massive fplc, huge muter bed.rm suite. Qn..
lySTl,900.
LARGEST
model In Culverdal~.
D>tl 11'1· ft., ~ bdnns. ..
fam, rm. Loc11ted 11t the
eod ol qwet cuJ-de-aac. Backa up lo park and open held:. with un
ob51ructed view of moun
taul6. Sl~OOO
apt . lower. 1''et~\lres LAGUNA CHARM IEST SE1.LER 11tamed &lass. skyUgltls, . Roman tub, excellent By owner, cbolc:e N. End, vlew.k3~lobeach lovely shingle borne
I, 1 b f · w l&uest cottage + new A i.pec a ouse or Eng. Cottage rental.
i.pecUllpeople. S149.soo. Street to street, ocean
4 Bedroom. 2 bath, quiet street in Pacesetter I
wilb view. Many up-grades. $129,500.
BOND REALTY
831-9411
()pen House Sat/Sun 1 ·5
22741 Canada Court
54.5-7506 Pl. Call 644-7730
•IWFFS *
2 Bdrm. home with great expansion
possibilities. Stucco exterior. Spanish
tile roof. street to street lot. $180.000
REDCAltHT
49M775 lll·H55 RmREMEHT
HAVEN
view, unique property.
Prine. only. $285,000
494-7473 or 494-t2ll ~ Bd.nm, 2 lh ba, fam/din Original area. 4 BR. 3 ba. 3377 Via Udo, Newpori leach
:! Bdrm., 2 balh O-Y-0 --------MONARCH BAY L rms., sunken den, wet end unit. Totally redec. 673-7300 SUN HOLLOW 4 br, 2~
WOODS COVEi b i · arge bar, air, elegantly up-Mo.ve-ln readv. $149,500 ba. up,,..aded mdl. A/C. apt. A st.one"s throw to • ram I ng home tn rd d C ., •· . g ' . ent. 21645-7221 HASTINGS Ii CO. S79 ooo ....... ...... the ocean & downtown. OCEAN VIEW! pnvaleareasurrounding REALTORS '4()..5560 Hewportleoclt 1069 Hewportleaeh 10'9 __ ._._~_-_ .... _. __ _
Light" airy, very clean. rtREP' "'CE :.pac1ous, secluded Mission v~;o I 067 ----------1 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• C""'"' DE CA"''"''""D"'"'O Financing available. _,, --courtyard. 5 Bedroom, ••••••••••••••••••••••• UDO ISL'"" OPEM 2"fh. condo, (;.:~~t. $85,000. Don't wait! Sat/Sun l.S 314 bath, family roc>!f1. Madrid Del Lago, brand " * 494-8057 * 1881;4l;,r:;yre den. Ideal home ~o~ in· new, beautifully lndscpd, 4Br, 2~Ba, pvt bch-EAST ILUFF! SAT /SUM 1·6 Faces grnblt. Comm
Li RE door, outdoor living. covered patio, planters. t ennis. $225M Agl. Cbartnlni 3 bedrm, 2~ Ju.st listed. New 2400 sq. poo~~E~LPHIN
LEASE ngo · · Close to sand, sea & auto spmklrs. air, pool 673-0289 bath Condo in exclusiv ft. 4 BR + den. Unusual REALTY • Joe Baker 495-1720 schools. Many extras. sized yard. Upgraded area. Swedish fireplace, 1 OPTlollo.I Beslbuyal$192,500. thruout. Pb dys , BYOWNER.juatreduced beautiful enclose e~\!~a n~ien~ <:t~ 493.5337
1"'1111 Canyon & Ocean View. 2 . S33·l9S4; eves 758-1Z74. "Bayahores", boat courtyard. Large 2n w s r_~wn ar, avts r---------Ncw decor, 3 bedroom, Yr wood & glass beauty. THE HILLS or beautiful By Owner. Prine only. docks, pvt beaches, 2 Br• floor master suite w {priv dtecrtgJ g, hugebms~dbdrm ---------i whitewater view. Walk 3Br, 21 ~ ba w /beams, Lag u 0 a N 1g ue1. 4 3 Ba, guest house. Land bath. Owner will help s • amour a w ress-
Tal.I YOUf Pi'ck! to Victoria Beach. Great Pane 11 n g. v I cw Bedroom, family room, 3 Br 2 Ba, Cordova, 180 incld. Guarded comm. finance with 20% down. Ing rm. Loads or mir-
Mi111MVllage
Bran4 new 2Br, 2 story
Condo. Features include dbl oven range, D /W.
s hag cpl thru-out,
drape s. mirrored wardrobe doors in huge
M/Br. 2 car attacbed gar. $57,000.
" tcrms.$159,500. balconies. Vacant. d I t t d 642-1324.$179,500. $125 ooo w ld W"d rored wardrobes+ spec popular Radcliff Plan. eg v ew, ge cu e sac . · or ' pvt den & sitting rm. Kit We have 3 or the finest 4 ~ Sl60,000. Drive by 1255 Rural setting-minutes lot, above tennis crts. Brokers,673-4545. incld's micro-wave & bedrm, single story ~-Cerrilos<ofC Temple from the sea. Walking Many upgrades, VA or trash compactor+ mdl·
home buys that you cLln 'f '-"" Hi 11 s) 0 w n er I Ag I distance to junior hi, conventional. $72,500. BLUFFS like d ecor . Special
fmd ! Whether it's the ~ft .... 759·0358 fenced rear yard for Open Sat/Sun 1 ·4, sr.-aa Le.,_. OPP'ORTUHITY mo' .. er-ln-law sw·le W/
Culvcrdale-:Ze have the "°rf#,,. Spod ous privacy.""' ' · · Unda Model sales assoc. wbo requires pvt ba. Oversited gar, Colony, CQJ.Wroc Park, or 49,,.-""~' · "'°9 995 581 1749 .. ..,..-"" Full time, real eilate "'
deal ror you' All priced ~A) Ranch Styl• Loguno Mtg.I Realty La Mancha-Townhous-e : substantial income, is low maint yd, huJe patio,
lo ~ell'. Don't you a0 rec •·1 • 830-5050 496-4040 Cer vantes Model. Xhtt lmmac 3 Br, 2 ba, dining desnarately needed by all this w /Catahna sun· Mariner Vi''-.. " ' lmmed. possess .. North area. Well landscaped ..-& brt Uc b b .. ..,... 1t ·s best to "lake your ----Laguna, nr. beach, with -:::::::::: location, view, near pool decorated w /many ex-long established local set s w to pvt. c · Close to ocean. Outstand-
p1ck" from the finest OPEHSAT/SUH 1·5 aviewortberollingsurf. ~~~!!~~~~~ C811581-0473 lrasonquietstreet.Com· broker . Outstanding RkhardD.Forney ing nearly new
:.election available?Call 7031AUOA 3 BR .. 2 ba., den & a PAINTBRUSH fortable proximity to earnings available on Asaoc's.Reaffon ' Townhome.3Bdrms,2V.
RED CARPET PORTOFINO.LAGUNA large dining area orr the SPECIAL V8C91da fVI 1 pool, school & shopping generous commission 640..1700 ba, dbl 1arage. Block
Realtors 83 3-3380 Ocean & Catalina sunset sunny country kitchen. C 0 n t e m WP 0 re:.r ,, area. $1(9,500 by owner. split. A marvelous op· ---------• wall around patio. Olym----------1 views, corner. cstm 3 BR Open beams, stained Bring your lawnmower & "Y Open SIS 12-5, 505 Vista portunity for the eager NEW PO RT CR EST pie sl%ecommunity pool. ---------1 & den, 3\.-la BA, 3 frplc's. glass. hdwd. nrs., yard & paint brush & take ad· California Townhome· Grande. 64(M()89 pro(essional. CONDO 3302S Driftwood Court • . ---------i 0 vantage of a great in· just 5 min from Mission ,._ ________ llf Mr Haa"""•''"" """"" Red ed rio ooo 3 B Prt~t.o•"'ll huge mslr suite w/walk· lath garden. pen dally ,. . .......,..,.,..,.,.,., uc -, . r, .-. ......
C l•f c in closet, wet b.a r 1-4. 1640 Hillcrest Dr. vestment opport. 3 Br. 2 Viejo in Laguna Hills. 3 ----------t 211.a BA. wet bar, pool, Ports West~ a I Ustom .... 1n the H1'ghlands BR, l~ ba. AJC, 2 car . r•yG• "'SS HILL 80 .... US · w/beveled g lass, $1Sl,500 ..... · .---1"'1111 tennis, sauna , mini· 661-1455 131·3 32 gourmet kitchen w/all Pool & Must sell this weekend. gar.Only$69,900. Brand new View 4 Br, ROOM ocean view. By owner.r---------nus cuswmized home is appl. incd'g micro-wave O cean Vu, Too! Reduced to S83,950. RED CARPET library. Family Rm. BO ... US SU4.500. Call 548-6317.
lbe talk of the tr~ct! The dYi!n. Plush cpl..s, jacuzzi. Really charming 3 bdrm. R.C. TAYLOR CO. ~~R~eaffo~~n~5~8~6-~0~4~0~0~ Dirung Rm, ()pen wknds 1"'1111 1---------1 Hlghly upgraded 3 br
atrium entry and sunken Call for directions. split-level home In a ____ 9_5_5-_0_3_5_0___ _.12_·5_. 646-__ 1~_1 _____ 1 GARAGE •-·t I ,...._ C t h o rn e • G o o d
living room arc the C1rst .Amtrican Home Rltn BO .... US ~ "•-res. neighborhood, 1 mi to of many things to catch 494•75 13 or ~~lu!~~e~e~~a~e~ut~i DOUBLE DOORS EXCEPTIONAL BIGCAHYON 1"'1111 At$1l2,000,thisspac1ous ocean. Affordable!
your eye! 3 Large 494•100 1 nr. Victoria Beach. & windows are but a few LaM'lJ)cha Townhouse. Broadmoore home. 5br, HOME 2 br. 2'.2 ba, den, Plan 8 Owner 493.3543 bedrms and family areu S229,500. Open Sun. 1_4 of the features in this the Aragon Model. with ~ ba. $32.5,000. Sharp 3 bedrm home, condo 111 a steal. Comp., ---·------
.ill with central air and -THE VALUE 2920Alexander Rd new. single level home. many innova t ive. 213/547-4658 near Cherry Lake in the even to wet bar & trash PATIO Home, 3 BR. l':lr
l h c Io cal 1 on near "··-R--...t-d Located in a pri vale features such as trash· ----county corr Id or. compactor. Move in this ba, all bllns, frplc, 2 car
II E R 1 TAG lo: PARK is Lhcre. Over 10 Ac. of .-n ~ .• ll nc ahborhood Ask compactor. dishwasher By Owner. Leg crnt-lot. Oversized F.R .. 4 car summer! Steps to Ten· · gar. $75,000. Call Donna, makes th'" Jrv1n .. ·., '-~~l R·I, undevlp'd land in H1·...a. C•1'l1'11ns auu •., · & 1 dA · pool · c · & 835 9714 499 1802 J ~ d ~ _,, .. ··"ll ingS87,500. e er. garage .uor 3br, 2ba, f a m rm . ga r. Rea l pride of ms, , JU uzzi · or · buy! t.hc city w/views. Use as Wood & glass ronlem opener. This2bdrm.,1:\4 Remodeled kit w/wal. ownership condition. Do ocean. No. 17 Gretel Crt. ---------
1010
RED CARPET un l.~tate, sub-divide or porary, 3 bdrms., lgc. 4 ANCHORAGE bath, just reduced to cab, peg & groove oak you like Jots of bonuses? ()pen Sun. 1·5. Phone,
Reolton 833-3380 just watch it apprec. dining rm. decks. 2 yrs. INVESTMENTS ~.500. Hurry! flrs. $139,500. Opn Ilse Call Now ! 645-7221 Agt.673·1020 Santa Ana
________ _, $160,000. old. Great ocean view. c. F. Colesworth1c Sat/SUn 1·5. 642-4392 CENTURY 21 •••••••••••••••••••••••
ZAGRODZKY, Rltr Easy wallc to town. Mdny 17141 496-7711 Westdiff Realty 4Br, famrm,HVH · m.1so:sharp 12 yr new
494-8611 intriguing features. A -REALTORS 640..00· o 1--------.-111 ---------M te b borne on quiet cul·de-aac
L F ·~R ---------•must to see! $179,500. 3 1R,31ATwnhm 4 Br-. 2~ba home on fee1---------1 on go, yowner. w/xtra larfe yd. 3 ae aml m NEXT DOOR.. Ope S 1 4 680 W dl I d Cl t b h 1957 Port Weybridge Pl. b n un. · · en Beautiful new home in EL DORADO HOME an · ose 0 eac · $139,500, open house bedrooms +2 baths. Try
3 Bedrm, a. aths. 2 . to Emerald Bay! Love· Terrace. Sea Terrace comumuni· 3Br. 2Ba. ram rm. AC. Asking. $152,500. Call Best of 2 Worlds Fri/Sat/Sun 11-6 Sl0.000 dwn. Agt ~ -
fplcs, near Irvine 11 1 ly 2 bdrm., 2 ba . beach * 494-75 5 1 * ty. Firepluce. Security fullylndscpd&fncd,new 646·7414or631·3900 Charmin& 4 bedrm orcall833-3694 or~2530.
School,$75,750. home. Loads or charm; gale. Fully landscaped. be1gecpt. PP.8J0.0340or ---------1 w/den & boo11S rm in
Roy.,.cCardle beamed ceil., frplc., Hurry before summer! 83'7-1741 -SEAVIEW! Thrilling Newport Shores. Only 3 Broadmoor Seavlew, by ASSUME8in%VALOAN,
Ra...L&--1810 He~ encl05ed garage + extra $103,500 & II blocks to ocean beach. owner. New 4br. 2\.'2ba. with $11,500. Owner sell· ..,.___ -..-·' t L r 11 EL PICASSO I ocean va ey views. '") N Bed Ing beeause or Divorce. 3 Costa MH a 548-7729 carpor . ge.. u Y Ron Elhs-960-2358 • near Y new, Just below Spygjass. Priv. Comm. Assoc. in· "" atnums. ew . . ---------t lndscpd. lot, completely C·21XCntry848-1188 4 Br 3 Ba. panoramic New 4 br, 2 ba, 2 (rplcs, clds pools, lighted tennis £ord model w /view. BR, lgelot,newcrpt,tile ---------rcl'urb1Sbed, with carpet· ---------1 \•iew. Prof ln(l.scpd, air, ct, volley ball, sand 833-3622or64().8557 & paint inside. Gd
WOODBRIDGE ing, drape.ries &. paint. --------• slump, wrought iron, ~~f4~~~6a-~:ii9~~~60 . beach & cable TV . neighborhood, xlnl in· PRESCO'M' MODEL ~ady for 1mmedJate oc-~ BY OWNER $91,500 plush cpts, cov'd pallo, $144,500 lnclds all this Original Bluffs vestment or retirement
S BR 3 b k cupancy. See today at ~ 5 Yr old, btfl Laguna 586·5404 andTHELANDTOO!! ByOwner.CholceGrecn· or fint home. $3000. un ·
.. a., s un en $159000 ~... Niguel Home, pro£---------PRICE REDUCED! 645-l474 belt. End unit. Upgraded der market. l?.,mepts
£am .. din. &liv. rms. Peg ' lndscpd, fncd yd, wood Hewpcwi hoclt 1069 E 1 .. Alt •. --~·--thru~ut. 38r. 2o/o ba. Im S350. mo. Prific. only. & groove wood flrs com · • •• • ••••• •• ••• xpaM ve green..., .,. 'I ,, 752-1038 or SlS-0474 an. ~";'~'.\!":i'..i ~.·~.':'~ ~ t=~ su~~ ~~~~IE,-:., ~:~:~,~~'.=~.~7:, • ~.:.. o:..:... • -:!:~%~m=v~~e;wIT~~;1~~~·~·;· f~~t~:rb~~-:.~~~·~~I· ~~1~~·~· P~~ -~-o-~~-·ll_P_~1_64.._ooo_.s_·1_:' __ V1_1s_t_a, _4"'"p_m _______ _ 18 Willowbrook. By 499·2800 plan. Lge kitchen. 4 . k di I Pricedtosell.$1.SS,000. • --DUPLEX owner $155 000 644-5403 Bdrms, 2 baths all on 1 l 1 I e 't. s pos a ' Enjoy this Magnificent Newport R.E. Assoc. 9UAUTY +LOC MHIS83 ' · ' 4 IR·l l ATHS level in Mystic llills. dshwshr, gas s tove. View home overlooking Call645-6625 4 BR,2 8a,&3 BR,ZBa,
$154 500 ovens, fan, cpts, lndry Newport Bay, ocean, oceanvtew, rum, 10935lh ' PRESTIGIOUS View! Lie. liv. rm. has ' · rm, 2 car garage, cpt'g 1 Catalina, Palos Verdes PRIME LOC. NEWPORT IEACHES St. Shown by appt. only. 2Beautiful Republic hms R ho S J --.z beam ceil., frpl, walls of CORONA DEL MAR yr old pd $18 yd. All walls and Beach cities. Lush. fH EASTILUFF #I VIEW HOME owe 2nd. $190,000. Bkr. nr Calvary Chapel, So.
48 ~boles~oi!;'S:n. ~':el;e~:~P:~~;&~~~ DUPLEX ~~fra~~~e·ur:.u~~~~ t ~~l~:~e;~~:l~~~ei~: 3 BR, 3 Ba, lge fam-rm, 557-7325 g~~T!.$..'::s~' Irvine
1·5. 2 br. condo. end or kilch .. laundry area. A 2 Bdrm Cottage and a showers. Perfect cond. Custom built 4 bedrooms extensively upgraded. , ________ _. 1 go~fcoursc. Tasteful use b ••""500 new!ll"28r,2bathhomc. 2c1s2 L E t d & d < 3 bd •-2 29.57 Catalpa. Open 1•5 ILUl!il!SCO ... DO 3009SoPacificAv uy, .,._, " a s r a a. en or rms "" Sun & Mon. Owner/Bkr rr " or wallpaper & earthtone Mission Realty 494-0731 Bo~ring in good renla. (Crow n Va 11 e y t o dens), 3 baths, dining may Cinance for fast Popular Linda Plan, lg 4Br+ 16xl6 bonus rm,
paint. --------• 4 s t.o tbe beach. La Plata, left 1st blk Vis-room, break.last room & escrow. $1?S,500. M4-0l51 Gmblt,'"1 sty opn beams 3ba, 2616 sq fl+ lg cntr Jim Pate, 551·5169 $189,500 ta Plaia t.o La Estrada & spacious all electric thruout. fir to ceiling atrium. Huge Mstr Suite
Son Joaquift IUtn. *PANORAMIC * DOLPHIN R.E. tum right.> Call eves for lcltchen with large Tap-UDO IAYFROHT £rplc LR. 3Br, 2Ba, 3 pvt w/frplc.
4 Br, 3 balh, lge comer 4944511 appt. (714)495-0088 pan Electronic oven. All CONDO patios, corner unit com· PRICIESUSHED · lot:. Unobstructablei--------·1·~~~~~~~~ spacious. papered roona ptJyredec. closeto sChls, 3130SoRene • *DEERFIELD * ocean view. -with 9' ceilings • noor to All amenities, :spacious shopJ, pools, clbs & bchs, 4 Br, 2'r!I ba, Jarden ldtcll
""'··tom uporaded Aspen •-u.-H-s RJty HISTORIC insert I border! ceiling glasa & doors for 2Br.t31Bal, 24 hrlr seclurldty, prinonly.~975 w/panoram.lc &lass walr.
3'-b! 2~ba .• Reduced to ~nc'J"49 .. -07'"',.1 Artlst'scottage&second LOOKATTHISI unobstructed view. mos edy uxu ouUsedy 1e· Cvd patio. Like model
' Pri all A... t ... .. rental unlt. Both cltarm· BRAHO NEW·2Br, den. Massive floor to ceiling corat • never v n. home
S)l.OOO. n. c &•a --------• inglyremodeled. Walk to 28a, frplc, wetbar doll Marble F ireplace. 38'boatslipavall.Owner iS2·2'13'1 V ic toria B each. house. Acron from Separate Formica COUD· will help finance See-Compare·llall:e Of.
Laguna leach I 041 UNl9UE OCH VU Coastline & whitewater Lafuna Niguel Regional tered laundry center • 3 1215.000. Or will lease. fer
••••••••••••••••••••••• IN MYSTIC HILLS view. $175,000. Pk. $89,950. By owner car garaae. An excellut -~---Ail-=-·-----l Botb Open Sa.tJSun 1.S
Fanta.sUcmtnsidehmw/ REGEMTREALTY 661--0668or831·9489 value at $349,500 • 29% HARBORvtEWHOME GASKEU.REALTY
BEST BUY
See & com~re • mor home ,for your money.
Ocean view. walk t beach. Guest qlrs. o
lower level w /sep. entry.
2 Bdrm .• 2 ba. plus guest
only $135,000 (253)
OPIM SAT /SUM t-5
4607 GOIHAM DI.
COIOHA oa MAI
Cameo Sboffa. beaut. 4
bdrm., 3 bath home wltb
pool ltjacuut; comp. re·
decorated. A lu~ury home ln Ulla beaut. area. s:ns,ooo
VllWLOT
Use your lmqlnaUQI) to
ttfttO )'our d.re&m bome •Ulla au. in Attb Be.ads !Wlhtt,~ nad1 lilll•,500
NOfWtCHIAY·
la &be lbll; • u ...... =~ t.a•t•l•llr ~ht· WIUI U..R.-tol •;ran~. Wfit,, I be. ikHIM ·~wdl lb tllt '*"~ • -... • mat .... w.wisne..ooo
a fam. rm., dining rm .• 3 (7 I 4J 496-950 I insert 1border1 Dn. Owner will carry C.rmel Model, 1800 Port 963-3800
BA & even 4 BR. ---------1--------• JoantoquallfledbUYer Westbourne, 3 Br 2 Ba.
Whitewater view from /'&). ~· Ownr/Brkr. 644°"969 £otmal Uving & dining both levels. Mature trees ~ One Of A Kind Open WK-ends 1·5 rms, lge picture win·
oo lr1. lot. Room enough 11~, Cathedral clgs. In Jlv. dows, huge famllY rm.
ror pool. Don't miss yout ~" ~ ;.o rm. & din. rm. Solid ash Harbor View Hlls next t.o entry kltch, slid·
chance. "'ii fO doors & cabinetry reflect ·-RTO~HO" lng glass doors to pall.o $255,000 ~ -~ ,;:, the quality In this 4 .-v " & pool 11lzed yard w/lus
JACOIS REALTY U ,,,,-~ ::."1'si0r'::: '!::!. r~«~ ::n~; 3:"m ~ :~~~r: ~~a::Jt}. ~!,i ~~~r~s
675-6670 ) SJA4,llM provementa • custom or recreation park. A features. Pool & Jae c Ho I c E No. e n d REAL ESTATE deck, Upgraded thru-o...t.
clu\rmer. 2 BR., lae. llv., By owner. Open Sat/Sun
beam cell., trpl., abut-FAIULOUS 1-S, 1934 Port Trinity Pl .
ters, 1~ ba., brkfsl. rm. WHnlWATER -'SJ._8'-',_soo_. _____ 1 _______ -1
+ delllbUul auest. bouae, VllWl!I HAUOR YU
J)lltlo. SlQ,$00 Hold for lo\lestment ... a PALllMO
XTRA SPECIAL. 2 BR, a<ijacw tau for a tot.al •B " Ba t ... .._ bl., dllJ, rm. + bonu• of 121,000 with e.xcdlentl•-------•1 .. r, .v. ' am rm, utn rm : bdwd. nn., beam term rm. pro( l ndscpd, cell .• Crpt., 1h1alteta, s. Jacunt. OWnt $18$1900.
,.allcd brick i>'Uo; •lk GRe "'T MH221 to beach. SlJ'l ,500 5A s BR., 3 ba., din. rm. INVESTMENT
beaut. paneled den. <>PrOlttUHITY
frpl., 3 car.,~-Lovel Commercial bOatCJlnt
yd. PrHlll• ar•• ~enntl •JconnecUna S-,000 PEO ALLBN BEALTOR 4N-'l
• •
IYOWMIRR2
Doll H<>us.Dream Loe•·
Uon ( I FEEL LJK
BARQAININO I > Bdrm 1 bath 7'20 •q •
IU BUlLDABLE LOT.
Bae• Jiit)', n11 to beach. Gdftl IDOM)' and ....
1our proJed. sas.ooo. ~/Aat.'41-3011
VllWTO
CATAUMA Out&tandinl a bedroom, "2 bath adult con · domlnuium. Sauna, 2
decks w /super ocean ttew + ll&hl.I or the city
ANXIOUS OWNER
NRSO.COASTPLAZA
Jmmac. 2 stry 3br 2\41M, fonn. din rm, (am nn,
uparaded thruout.
187,SOO. 545-2991
below. Call Jor more •1
fea.tures . Ti~-""-B!RTHA HENRY -I Oto REALTORS •••••••••••••••••••••~ ONLY•.* .tr1 I Bdnn, din.lilt rat. AP
P<mt » acre ol bee••W par kUn H tdoe. ToP
nortb Tu.Un area 1b
FocllMl1 Sil dlatrt~ t 11 °"° lloGMBllft 1'5 l:ll W l P'ootblll Bt9d.
AESOP a.ltJ Aatror Donor Relea
0..-....... ....................... . ·~\·:•1 .. 11 00 ......................... "'*' . zax.u Dt>.* l hvta OC'f an Q 3) ino
..... Nlll.-41111
mTMOltu
~-' a.THITIAI
~,~:,,r:;. ~"s.w.!
J11&11 C&pbl.rano uoc.aNT
tt.alwn ~1 OOM « '700 ~• 4n:> tl,. 2 81" ~ Conv•1r. In
adult pa rll, $J 100
~13
~~.~.~~ ..... ~,~~.~.~~ ..... .
..._ ........ ,.,, IOOG ._.... Pror.'rt, 2000 ................................ -..•..•..•.•.
INVESTOIS OPPORTUNITY
IN SAN CLEMENTE!
8 Furnlabed Units, always rented
lo;Jtcollent condition l ow
malntenance. S2S7 ,000.
Peolfk Sllore ~fflty
Old Cttr Pla:ca
111 W. Avemrta Pah;:adn
Son Clemenlt:"
492.5300
. . .
Ollm-IHI..... H-... U11._,.,flled f!Hd!y, July 11 1977 OAll V PflOT •t ••••• •• ••• • • •• • • • • • ••• • •• •• • • • • • • •• ••••• •• • ••• •• • • • • • • • • • • • ••• • •• •• • .;..;.;,;;;;;;,ju.;:;..,..:i...:.:.:~---------~:::::.:...:...:.::.::..i..__.i::... ... a.cMt.. ...... CoroM del Mar 1222 eo. .. Mete 32Z4 ..._., Uwfw1111 ... d Hwff U•ta••• d ..._e1 Ultfwoaltlted
..... 2700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
.. ..................... CdM I an~ l Li Ml!:SAVt;KI>t. ........... ....... JZ40 L.,...aM.... l25Z s-c......... 3276
2 1/1 A~ R.cho R:n: 1~ sr:J/ SQ.ft. "var: SPIC I Al •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
Cleulan<t foreat area· Rm, 3 811, 2 car gar, Rlodttc J Br 2 Bu aJded Sh&rl> 4 bedtm, 2 ba, cpU Mon Summit new 2 hr, · br, 2ba, 2 block• to
Clean MJr, 3000 tt level. woodsy $S.50. 673-120S room, :avl now. $495mo d,,., fresh paint, patio, den. ocean 'u. dbhse. beach. Ocean vlew. Lov
Vltw lot, all utll avail -~2981 fenced yard, kJds & pe pool, $&00. Adults (714) dy tam.rm. cew, ava.11
lJonics w•lcome. $18.500. L&e. co,y bacb apt. $250 OK. $396. 963-4567 Agent 49S-3'7as now. assomo.
PREVIEW RE.Al.TY Utll pd. Adult&, no peta. tbr. i;,.ba Lr& yrd. aar. Nof~. -AA BEALTORSf.92..2100
731 03.13 M4 8983 ~7030 crpts, d rpa No pets SEA TERRACE --------•-A.dult.s w /child. OK Ref BEACHW ALK TWNHSE 2 BR Townhouse. Pree. VAU.IY CINTEll 2 Br 1 Ba house, w/fplc:. ooeded. 13115 mo. 28i K TOWNHOME 2Br, frplc, fncd yd, PoOl. HJl,I., view, &oil "tennis
Sp•e. old atyle adobe M25 mo. AND 2 Br l Ba 16thSl.M2--02~Salrt5Pltf Hardtofindapaclousen tennis. pvt bcb, SUS mo. $3.W.~aft.5:30PM
borne on c.s ac.. 820 apt, $300 mo. 673· 7200 o.r u n I l t n ex c I us l v 61Sl-OSS8 orimae trees, 3 br, 2 be, MS-0260 Dix 2 Br unit In Tn·plex. BeacbwaUc Private on ---------Ocean view Z br, 1~ ba
den, 30x19 Uvlna rm, din· Cameo Shores 4 Br 3 Ba 11'rplc, Jar. patio & rear side.. 2 br, 2 ba, huge ParkUkeyard,beautlful· townhouse . Sln1 lc
lni rm, l2x2A country ocn Vu, pvt bch's, yrl,; yard. No cblldren/pcts master suite overlooks ly decorated.. 3Br. 28a, garase. elec. opnr. Pool,
kit I\ All bit .. A l ' Pref m1ddle age adults gorgeous aarden area ramrm,Lle$52Smo.wtr aolf course. Immac c . n.a . ....,au . lse.Augl.$950.675·6563 or older. S275 /mo . l'ools •tennis courts. incl'd,avallAug 10. (213) Adult•, n o pet• adobe pu.Uo & flower u 0 78 (213 78 ...,...3 a a rd en. veg c t ab I e Costa MeH 3224 642·5872 . Ste.-to beach. $l50/mo. ...1 .... 1 or > 3 . ..,.,,, (714 >'9'l·6293
MACH r AD °"let:!'-t 100 Inc.,._ rro,...ty 2000
It 0-"lton bJ t.b~ S.• •• •• • •• ••. • •• •. •• •• • • •• •••••••• ••••••••• • • • • • •
aardco, fum.ll,y fruit+ II ••••••••••••••••••••••• 38r, Jba Condo. Frplc. 846•2001 LOYELY. Jmmac. 3 br, S-Ju.t
deep WQter well for l Br, fpl.c, range, tiarge pool. 2 car gar. lge pa ho Very nice 3 br, 2 ba home. H• ba home w /fncd. yd. ea.l1trmlo 3171
i rove, g 11 rd en & yard, pnva~e. Adults, no Nice-clean. Nr sch ls Cpts, drps, nu paint, 2 No pets. $425. Ellen .••• -;.;{~•••••••••••••••• W&lk ~\ blorll to b.·11t•h . . ., IOll.60 w ll&e NH'IOh'cf 3 Urub A ver)' l'IJ 3 br, a Tkl·l'LE~ES ( .. ) 187,500 potth ., w / hCt' tlt'cll 1111d ba, 3 br, l ha, • small t'I Profitable w1lt11 In
1 • • " 0 v " r t' d bach. l HH from ocean nice cond. 2S'f. down.
domestlc use. l ncl1 . pcts.S290ublpd.642·083S S350.Call54Q.J590 car gar .• paUo, conv. to Charles Davisson Rily. IHCHARMIM~
grove troctor t r lr. & or646·6423 -----schls & s hops. $373 496-93$2 . · $ ....... JU .......
greenhouse. All for the 3 BR Ho . $310 t •· """ Aca-7 N f · """ """ priceofSl.89,500. 3 BR SUPER SHARP! use. mo, ll. .. .....,.....,.,, Agt. 0 ee. Mlssloft Vlefo 3267 3 Bdrm .. l Y.a bath condo
1>9rch + peuo Next to •'um lncluded $27S.OOO :;40-QMS
dubhoui.t' " pool 1162 ~-----1
l'RICl!:l> TO SELL htcomtProperty 2000
ClffilSMELROSE ft E ESlde. gueat rm or dbl last: $140 UHi Pd! ••••••••••••••••••••••• C o r r e n l .
FOUR PLEX 714 741·2161, 714.7411-1727 gar. FP, lg Cncd yd. 642·9S25 urt 5PM _ Patio ref many more Super 3 bedrma, 2 bath Upsta1rs/downstalrs, 2
~ 7711 <>r SSl ti04:: •• ••••••••• •••••••• •• • •
Inane l\1endowi. ~· Pk.
'lX96 Upgraded ownt'r m 900 M2 367~
3 OH A LOT
l"UblJ Mun loc $93,000
YEAGER REALTY
556·1U71
Hank must -.ell II re •---------i pos:.CN>ed \fobale hom~s
Real &tat Family, pets ok. $425. 3br2ba West CM S425 mo. avl ai. beach Small fee w/fam rm, A/C, cpl1. car garage. carpetln& &
.ione Bedroom Apts ..,_ h t
2800
MS-5607 Children & pets OK. FREE/ L.tfe · Serv Unt d r p a , I o v e 1 y levolors, ,built-Ins & G ~c Clft99 s.56-8402 · · neighborhood. $385 patio Wont last long! 4Enclosed arage:sEx···••••••••••••••••••••• lnstafttMove-in 645-4900 963-4S67,Agt,nofce Cull 646·21S8 day:..
l'ellent Location 6411·--------• Centrally loc . Costa 2 BR. 1989·8 Charle S2:JO * •Conswnen Gulct. 493·0588 evenlng & ShalJmur Do Not Dislurh N 2B 1•-0 -"-f 1 Tenants Sl30.000 T d U ? Mesa Nr new Twnhse. No dogs. no singles l Ha.ntl..,. ew r. ,....,.. ,..,e. rp c. weekend.I. IC no answer
........ Rl<LWILSO..... ra e p. 2br. 13• ba. din rm, Child OK 642·22S9 or LI~~ 1242 dbl car gar . lg ktt pleasekeep try1ng.
l""IA " Wehavelu1tedanumber pallo, gar, air l'Ond. &16-i017 ..__.... w/bltns. cpts 1drpl'I, ---
REALTOR ofpropert1es.indirferent bllns. lndscped. only ----••••••••••••••••••••••• 968~ NEW TOWNHOUSE, :!
64§.5557 pnce ranscs, up to $2 and SJ~. mo. Jw;t 2 left. 1921 Busmes:1 & horn~ <I Br> 2 Br. 2ba Townhome. BR.1\s Ba. crpts, drps. :.!
an p.•rks Sdvl' thou'>;md:.
of doU~r:.. 15', dwn an
dd'g tax •••New Mobile
horn(>:. Buy direct from
~acto r)' SavlnN'>
~-Sl0,000, Low a:. 10'.
dwn 114,-898.9004
Real &tote Cow.nlor
Profc11 1n,cslmenl
analy:.1:.. 11ppn11sals. lax St'l 2 BR-.-l-ba. -~pis in
& <:xt·hange advice great C.M rental area.
!-.pec1ull.t1ng 1n Bcb S2lOKAgtS40.3650 multi plex properties.
5'!11ers & buyers avail.
$ 3 m 1 I Ii o n m i n I Anaheim St. CaU Mgr. to 884 Wes~ 19th. Zone for Super Plwih. Wet bar. 2 $32.'!. 2BR. l' 2 Ba· air· car gar. patio. PoOI, $325.
warehouses. Let us tailor i;ee. &15-46S5 TV repair. F1or1st, Bake balconies. Formal Din patio. pool. Xlnl cond. mo M2·S78S
an exchange for you. shop, Uphol+36 others . rm. Tennis. pool. $395 Condo. 581·2282 -----
Century 21 Spearow VACANT 3 br, 2ba .. Cpt.s, Glass front garage for mo. Call Mr Nelson at E . New 3 BR, 2 ba .. pool,
Investment DlvUilon drpg, dsh/wsh, dbl gar. business. Call for appt. 898-2636Agt. xBceptBa1onfal V1ew·fAICI. frplc., et.c. $375 Wkday!t
Mobile Home Owncrll.
Ml....C)
MOllLE HOME?
llcre·i; d late model 12x60
2br lbu w 1wshr. dryr &
adult.pet park <MN
t.i073> Try for ~I dwn
<0 A.C. I Cord Lancl M II
Hc~11IP:.
()38 8502
Open H:.c ·16 l.an~cr.
24xS6. 2br 2ba. y. c•t bar,
upgrades El Nido
Mobile Est:ltes. San
Juan Capo $35,000.
Owner. 496·0911
Call Ron Ellis
Cenlury 21-iMi-0·2358
Cross Counlry
Free Com1ultat1on
4UHITS
N 1 l' c b u y i n I. o s
i\lum1tos, $149.500
4 UMITS
This one is :l :;lee per.
way under market, 111
Wc:.lmani.ter al $121,890
ORANGE
4 Units. all 2 bedrm. I
bath. (2) w 1 Cplcs, owner
anxiou:.. Reduced tc
$138,000.
COVING TOH
Pride of ownership.
shake roof Fourplex,
located in Hunt. Bch.
$187,000.
COVINGTON Ac~forsot. 1200 nus one 1s a beauty m
•••••••• ••••••• •••••• • • Anaheim $183.000.
2 bdrm 1 'i ba. 16x50,
adult /no pct prk. nu t<>n4 .• Nli. 519,750
t.42-8377 ---------
THREE ACRES
f'antasttt· ha' th1~ 3
lx•droom. 2 bath home
with heauliful pool &
j:icun1 Plenty of room
for horses & ek Terms.
Bl\R
f7 Ml676·5717 on s22.2080
MAPLES ISLAND
\ real pnde of owner!>h1p
Triplex in a prestigious
a N!a S2-19 .500
Mlfti Warehouses
These arc real
moneymaker&! Localed
from West Conna to San
Diego
LAND
llntg Bch. 4 plex, all 2 Br,
Sl.29.000
546-7780 S49-4238or6"2·9596 3 r. 2 • am rm, u Y 635-7210, ext ~l Eves.
963-7166 ------------------Irvine 3244 fncd, immed occupancy. 49-t·!Mll.5
Great Western R. E.
as~ for Peggy. 847-9632
l•--------•t COftlllftMrsleware! Dana,oiftt 3226 ....................... ~~re:a.,.~~:t mo.Santa ---..,..-----3-2_8_0
Rem Estate Before you pay some ••••••••••••••••••••••• REMT ALS ••••••••••••••••••••••• W-.&...d 2900 agencies for the "run 2 BR 2 b $410/45-0 DUPLEX ••••• ":' • .': ••••••••••••••• around • . ca I I Clos!! lo Dana Point ' a ...... Mt---'leoch 3269
TRI ,LEX C' Manna New 3 & 4 bdrm Jor 2 BR, + D, 2 ba .. SS25 ~,..... • Vacant, 2 br, 1 ~ ba Condo
ln family area. Highly
upgraded. $275. BKR
962·.W71
• Prl\ party w"nts Apt. ONSUMERS GUIDE. . 3RR.2Ba ....... $395/575 •••••••••••••••••••••••
FOUR •L11:vES .. Many have 11nd are glad homes for lease 2000 to 8
...-5.A building, any urea, they did. 100•5 of hse'i., 2200.sq. rt. Nopcti.. $.SS<>. 3 R.2'i8a ..... $45-0/SSO
8-UNITS S'22,000dn (2131433·1689, plelC·s & apt's a\'allable ~141752·8511 48H.C~OBS~T··A·M·E·SA .. $495
UL'l'LF:X Co:ita Mesa ani.. devise NOW A Be h u
llCJ Canyon home.
$800 /mo. Golf course
~ew. Atl. Gerrie Co.
640-6600 9'68·30 I I
3Br. 2Ba, su1>er sharp dlx
Condo, nr So. Cst Plaza.
Pool. Rar, 2 wks free
rent S375 6404462
arc•a. (iood l'ond Good · to 1~. tf N:lEcWolr .. l. P 2 Dr 2 Ba. 2 sty. dupil'x. 3UH.3811 .
anve::.tmcnt starter that 0 W N Pro P c r l) 1 n 5 0 l!i mgs hltns. rcfng, gar. cpts.
5650
mnkes monc\ $78.SOO Inglewood, tfawthornc each d a Y Sm a 11 cl.rps S32S 4911·2360 · or So. Bay area·! lee/FREE lire service. ' ·
WILL p ... y C "'SHll &IS-4900 Foulttain Valley 1234 TIU PLl'.:X A perfel't ~ "" " ••ConsunMrsGuic:t. ••••••••••••••••••••••• buy for those wbo want tn Ph. Tom l>'Allessandro
T D PROPERTIES Very pvt exec hme, w 110 get started m investment . • INST ANT IN! wall. 3 Br 2 Ba. t,am Rm. property. Costa Me:. a 1213>674·6907 or 1714 J
Slos ooo 5 6 620 Huge Eastside 3 br. over· bltns. W JD. i.1r cond., 37 . 4 · 1 anytime or sized dlning area. over &s.io.osn
1714l846·S22l aft. 6pm 2000 sq. rt. Lge fenced u.. --_....------
F OU R -P L E X. ES -back yard. Must see 10 .-..m*Jfon leach 3240
Excellent cond. Pnde or Rentals be'·ev~. Fireplac•, new ••••••••••••••• ••••• •• • ownership. Can be ••••••••••••••••••••••• " .... ~
bought as 4 or 8 units. HouMs Funtl1hed ruas. drapes thruout. On-
Anaheim area. $149,900 •••• .. •••••••••••• •• ••• lY USO. mo. Call 642·0282
Newport Shores. 3 BR. 2
ba, 2 patios. Yrly SSOO
Mo. Agt. 645-7573
Clean, large 3 br, 2 bu, 2
bnck fplcs. located on
fine upper bay cuJ-de·
sac. Gre:lt neighborhood.
549.5/mo. Agent 646-8811 .
--
VILLAGE Walk condo :i
br. 2 bu, dbl gar. patio.
pooldac. $385. 644·045!1
ownr/agt.~---~
Mile Square Parle. 4 br,
JUSt palnted, $395/mo.
963·7866
Soutft LOCJUM 3286
Rancho San Joaquin, end 4 Br. Newport Shore:;, 2 •••••••••••••••••••••••
urut. 2 Br. den, 2 ba, lake blks lo bch. PoOI & tennis. 2Br · den, 2Ba Condo. each. IGIH>a Pet1inwla 3107 for appt to see.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
8 UN ITS-Belmont S17S Ulll paid. Bach.
2 Br l Ba. gar, patio,
bllns. & yard . Super
clean, small child OK, no
pets. S325. 645-4855
& golf course view. Im-673-2253 greatocn vu,~ mo lse
House:.. condominium s mac. $45-0. G44·S77l or (714) 499-1720 or (213)
and townhom~s. Monlh 67SSJ64no.9Verde EastbluH single level _7_90-_1392 ______ _
*A. VAH.AILE•
•NOW•
Shores. Near Olympic Duplex Fee
pool & pier. l''antast1c llomeflndl!rs 557-0822
location. i;\11 bachelor un ----its . Full y rented Hewporlleach 3169 !\tesaVerde3br,2Lp,nu
$185.000. ••••••••••••••••••••••• cpts. drps, li:e yd Nr
EVERS & _...SSOC schools. $400. !>45·9ltil
. "' STEPS TO BEACH 1300 Quail SW.et We have summer rentals
Suite I 05 Npt Sch. by week or by month!
1714) 833-0200
G<>rgeous 4 hr. ready to
mo\'e into, family sized
home. Top location.
Agent 546·4141
to month rental:. stsrt1ng home. 3 BR. ram. rm., Weshftl ster 3291
at S32S to $800 l.ol·ated in New Wood b rid g e · like new' Agt 644·1133 " llWlllngton Jfarbour ;,and Sy .._-.. am or c PI an. -------•••••••• .. •••••••••••••
llunllngton Bcat'h. Call Lunflscaped, draped, 4 BE AU T . MAR IN A 4Br. 2Bn redecorated.
wformoredetaals br.3ba, S525 mo. 752·288l Ii IG H LANDS. New bltns, sm children OK -----singlefamlly homel't, un· 139.'>mo. (714)968·9174
UN IV PARK. g rnblt believable low pricc!t. 2 ----
Rutgers. 3 Ur, l''am Rm, Sty, all amenities . Walk· HouMs FumlJhed or
2' •Ha. nr tennis & pools. bike to bch. W. Victoria UnfuntlsMd 3300 Sl95_!!1~ Agt. 752·0188 t o Valley rd. L . to •••••••••••••••••••••••
Ridgecrest Open Daily . --
UHDERTHE
OLD OAK TREE
Oak trees lt.ke you ·vc
never seen t·o,·er this
Jtentle rolltnJ( S :icrc
parcel on paved roads.
all ultl's a\•a11. Terms.
OKR.
I r o m B a r s tow lo ---------
Ocean.side. Trplx, E.Side. C~1. OWC,
Many different s1Ie Isl. Sl60.000. Prine. only.
part'els at different Own. BKR 968·1297
associated
BHOK(AS llUll lOAS
l•ll'i W 8o•b•>Y •'I Ub'
REALTY INC.
714/846-1371 College Park. 3 bdrm 2
ba. fen yard, patio, frpl,
dbl gar. $395.631·0208 I•--------• -----
TURTLE ROCK VIEW 3 $495-650.
lir, Fam Rm. 2 Ba. lgc ------
yard, nr tennis & pools. •HARBOR VIEW S BR
SS-15 mo. Agt. 752·0188 Somerset. 640· l644 or ----548.2873
Macnab -Irvine
ltEALTYCOMPANY
81GCAHYOM
Brand new "El Dorado"
plan w/3 BR's, 3 baths &
view of golt course from
most rms. Near pool! &
tennis. A\a1I. 1mmed. at
$795/mo. un.furn. or de·
corated like u model al
219S/mo. <C·21 >
(714) 677 5691
Ol'l522 0530
prkcs.
Century 21 5porow
Investment D{vision
961-7166
12 UNITS, C .M.
Lge 2 br, I'• ba unlts. 2
yrs old. conv. lot S14.9SO Full ca:.h pm.-e. $450.000 GSI equals
No. CA . 40,80. or 120 $36,100.
Acre. p:ircels. E ·Z TomLee.Rltr.6-12·1603
terms. ~p 40 acre de· ----
eds . 0 w n r a gt BY OWNERS: 19 :lltrac
40ACRES
714;640-1127 lave bachelor units ln
Commercial 0.IJI Mesa. 831-295-0
Proputy 1600 I UMITS.IALIOA
·••••••••••••• •• •••••••• <t duplexes. all 2bt. 2ba. ----- -Macnab-Irvine
4 csr encl garage. Bay
view $180,000 /dplx
Tom Lee, Rltr. &t2·1603
REAi.TY c·o~1 PAN\' NEWPORT lliCH Two 4 plex. 2 bdrm. <t yrs
Newly Remodeled
EAST COST A MESA
' DUPLE..'< S84.600
1 ·3Br. l b:l
l · 2Br. 1 ba
Mk for Jerry Scanlan
Pacific Coast Rlty
12 llJ 433-4968
HS• 01.c)o C0418ty
IEACH CITIES
ExceUent pn\ ate financ·
mg available for prime
income property-
4.2 Multiplier Sl.20.000
18 Units $425.000
6.5 Units Sl. 765,000
8S Units $2.120.000
136 Units SJ.078.000
MALOY
INVESTMENTS
1714) 729· 1129
CARLSBAD, Calaf
zi.& Via Lido Nord, Lido
Isle 4 bdrms. $2500. mo
August . Coll
<213)270·4547 or 1213 1
934-0920
Lulo Isle 2br 2b;.i Sips 6
Aug $1600. Sept $1400.
<213) 793-0427
EAST SIDE·3Br. !Ba. lg
frplc, 2 car garage. lg
fncd yd. wtr/grdnr pd,
sm child OK. $195 mo.
6468545
BELOW MARKET
Sharp 3Br. 2Ba. xlnt
location. $400 mo. Avail
now. Ask for Dan 848 8080
PATIO HOME
$185 Fum! Brand new 2 br, 2 ba.
Pool! Lge 2 Br pal. ref. bnck fplc. woven woods.
many more a\•I ! Small wet bar. upl(raded plush
fei!FREE/LifeServUnt. crptg. pool, sauna,
HouMs Unfuml1tt.d 6!.S:~GftlUIMr'I Gulde Jacum. S475. 963 7866 -
••••••••••••••••••••••• Super area. 4br 2ba. lrg
General 3202 Only S27S! Large 3 Br fam rm w/frplc, bltns
••••••••••••••••••••••• house, Cncd yard, nice! Nr parks. s hp'g Nr
• MODJ ESK~\ CANYON Small fee. &CH900 Goldcnwest & lfetl $425
Sm R.usll<' 2Br hse. lg * •COMUl'Mn Gui~ mo. Coll !Ml-4049
grdn area, 2 adlLS & child
0 1\, Sl25 mo . utll not tn·
cl"d, lsttlst, $100 dcp. ref.
(714) 649·221·1, C21J)
4S0·4170
Balboa Island 3206 •••••••••••••••••••••••
•2 br tnhse Mesa Verde A'ITRACTIVE 3Hr. 2ba.
P · I $325 Cvrd patio, nice yard otio. poo • /mo, W W, bltlns. cpts/drµs WI D hk~~ 833-8974 S39S. 12131596.9676
Mesa del Mar $400 mo. , 3br t ·-•ba. Fam rm, !11!.o. large I .Br. pool
frplc. Nace areu! Small ree.
Two Bedrooms NEWPORT SHOR~S
Rancho San Joaq $465 2 Br. 2ba, new paint, ten·
Rancho nls. pool, walk to heh.
San Joaq $46S/49S $195. 548-3657
Un Pk. Vall. III $45-0 BLUFFS CONDOS
Peter's lownhomes ~ Lenses starting at $500
Rancho San Joaq s.525 Month Agent &e 1-1_133
Deerfield $375 ----"----Joyce Edlund &42·8235
Three Bedrooms NWPT CREST CONDO
University Park S460 4 BR. children OK. Pool. ~WM
University Park $46S teMl.s. walk to bch. Yrly u.funPshed 3425
Deerfield $475 ~. 640-liSl •••••••••••••••••••••••
V1lluge lll $HS SliO. l Brat Beach! Man; N~wport Beach. Jbr.
fhancellorHomes $500 more avl. Small ree. 2 2ba. itreenbelt, Pool &
Campus View SSOO FREEtLlfe Serv Unt jacurn Lse. $.ISO mo
Village 111 SS25 64H900 646·2700. 631·2546
Turtle Hock S.575 • •Comumen Gulde Oce;;-Front· 1 Br .-1 Ba .
Rancho San Joaq SS9S -i.tudy, spectacular view.
Four Bedrooms 5990 2 story new 4 br. 3 pvt bch :.lairs, pool, So
Cuh·erdale S475 ba, 13,000 sq ft cul·de Laeunu $SSO mo Lfit'
University I'urk g;oo sac lot . Nr YMCA. 4D9-2illl
Uruv. Park S.525 ( 7 I 4 l 6 4 0 7 l 9 9 or -
1213)393-2977 old. dwntwn a r ea :10x93 Lot w 1700 sq. Cl. 536·S006
hldg. in desirable Can· ----------'LobforS.
nery Village location. DUPLEXES, H.I .
Agt. 957-0701 unt. 64S-4900
*•Consumers Gulde red hill ~:.
552-7500
CDM lge 3 Br hse, lgc Lav Aparhntnb foumlshed
Suitable for office or
.small retail bus1nesll.
Room to bwld. Flexible
financing. $95.500. <C·20)
Ka)'e Ev;ms 842·823.S ---------
Coftd0Mh1fu"'s /Town·
hownfors• 1700 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Soderllncj & Assoc.
b'7S.56Z6
Hew En91-d Acufttl
Charming Cape Cod
'Y1ll11ge l o Newport
Reach. New :.pltUevel
Condo with natural wood
~xterior. 2 br. & den,
\)rick fireplac·e. hcams.
etc.
Country atmosphere. ~ommwiity tennis ~urt.
lKJOI. jecuut
--
20UHITS
East.aide C01ta Mesa
Super l Br &2 Brs
5YEARSNEW
Sorry·Prlncipals Only
Agent 751-6063
Spacious deluxoe wllt
1·3br H br 4•2br ~way 1bopplna close Ownr wW carry asfe dwn
Rm & 500 sq.ft Fam Rm, •••••••••••••••••••••••
3 Ba, 2 car gar, woodsy. lalboa Island 3706
$S50. 613-1206 •••••••••••••••••••••••
----• ---------1 Elegant Big Cyn & Lovely, lge I Br apt.
twnhouse, view, 2 br. w/patlo. S. Bayfront.
retreat. 2 ba. rorm din S3'l.S mo .. yrly No pel:;.
rm. gar., tennis, PoOI. Empld adlts only. Avl
jacuul, adults. no pets. Sept 1. 673-4377
Avail. 8/1. f79S. Lse. 14111oaPetlinsula 3707
675--9891 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Twnhme. 3br 2~ba. ram Small studio, $175 yrly. l
rm, pool. jacunl. sauna. adult only, non smoker.
etc. Full vu or lovely 675-3063eves.
meadow. Your own lndry CorOM def Mar 3722
& pantry. patio w tserv· ••••••• •••. ••• ••••• •• •• thru window. Newly . pnt'd thruout. fully Blt'h. no cooking. !120
crpt'd, quiet & beautiful. mo. Patio. S blocks lo
N.P. Terrace. S425 . bch. 714-871-4.517ev~
6'2·3453 Costa.... 3724
I
..
• f .·
R~ 4000 ChrOIJlft lusiMu R"9td 4450 ~efMfftt/
••••••••••••••••••••••• for'l.tttt 43!0 ....................... .......,....., . Slttpm1 rms ~'10$ mo. u•••••-·•-•••••u••• · PRIME COMM. l.ost&PoUild
All ~-wk. Shure kit/-tOxZO' 1toro1c iar ate l.OCATlON ••••••••••••••••••• ••• •
bath. Shown Moo.Sat Cosla Mesa. $27. Call 1''or oCc, or sh.op. Coa11l &.o.t It Fo.td 5100 "only'· Call dl lpm bwtn l·!I '3S-4120 Hwy-Laa. Bch. -336 1q. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Hels req'd ~ ~ or ' Ct +-pV\ aarden. Frpl, LOST· 8lk m.ale Lab, v1c ~ ~ G A R A G E F 0 R S27Siocl uUla, G1&mbloer N w pl JI gt 1 are a ,
DAILY PILOT frtd• Jut II 1en ~nh ~ ,.,,...,.. .... Unfum.
.. 61111f•&•1•1-1llilh1 ......... d .,,., .... h u.fwa. \ ·~ .. h u...... ·······;.;·············· ··············:-········ {.!••••••••••••••••••• ••••••• ••• •••• ......... .,. a LOIJl99 iCJ1111 3152 Lac;pina M~ 3152 ....._ • .._. J76t C..ta MeM JIJ4 ~;;;.;;;;••n•••;;2.; ....................... ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• ......,.;-. ............................................................ .
SEA TERRACE APTS STORAGE 10 alley, &11$SOC. 4$4 IM.21 IWward S48 6SlS
•Vaulted Ceilings. paneling Non smk'a fem Fully Costa Mesa. $4$ mo.
• w1nn1""' --"'"'•t•on •Self-cleamng oven, dishwasher fum'd w/pooJ.OSlSO mo l MB-6072 ______ --r c-~J rVllloc)e
5MflSttf N(j/ Lost Tabby Manx cat.
~ .. ,,.....,.,..,..... p lncld ulll ver 18. WANTED l t. 1 .,.,_. store or rent on
ot 1dut11mi11men1 homes • atio. balconies, s torage space ~7'36or97S-4063 ° ren enc Newport Blvd. Nwpt
w1thlu11ury10001n1men111nd •Reserve parking, carports f:ra~ l s pace. Park Bcb.Only~mo.
Bunny lull. Wht hand
feet ~or537·2273
superb r•crea11on er a premium • Pool, jacuzzi. sauna, tennis S..-r Rentah 4200 do ndos IM6·S308
w1mmln1, u unaa, :! loc:1111on Tenn11-ovm•lheraov •Short pvt underpass to beach ••••••••••••••••••••••• Offke ll...tol 4400
be lt.h «"lube, t11lhard1 1101•1w1mming•b4lharw •Garden like landscaping SAN CLEMEMTI! •••••••••••••••••••••••
Burr W ~it\ n ~.dtu
I <"901 Nl.'NU1Hl Bl•J N 0
1114 i 67~ ~6JO
i''OUND, Packa&e on
H4nover St. C.M. 1 wk
aao-
n11ln-ll1htcd 1ennl1 J• one Bedroom Cl Beach homes. condos, WESTCUFfAREA cowu. l'ro a. 111 u i.hull Ono & Two BtKSroomt. One Bath ,. • ose to all s hopping und apt.s. R~rve now. NEWPORT BEACH _ Fbund, small blk female
JDC)Uclnv"'-r11n.ic.11"ll>-~':::,!,!!0· ~~V&l\rS •Minutes to freeway BERTHA HENRY 1400 Sq. ft. two pvt. C.M. 1600 sq.ft. and. $265. Dog, July 2 • Vic. roocn. w'"'"" •Some ocean view apts REALTORS baths. uoo per mo. Also 300 sq.ft oCc: $95. Brookbunst & San Diego
t' UN Al: TI VITI El> &50 '°ularlno Ave , Co1lo MHO 751-IHS 2l5 Del Mar 492 4121 642·0200 646-2130; 679-3709 f'Twy. 846-4252 aft. 8pm
f\IUllmc d1m-tu1. ln•c -·-·-"·· NOW RENTING 1&2 bdrms. Newport 65,fllRSl'\fT OFRCl!SUIT• •• FOUND; Bike. Vist a.
Sunday brunrh. IWQ !I, Beach. Garage. Steps to 1617 WESTCLtFF·NB Griff 1th Bldg, 3471 Via Contact F. V. Police
ltlp:11, parliu, i.port CottoMeta 3824CostaM1ua 3824 I bdrm$275 2bG-m$325 bch.544·6899;67S.7598 AGT.S4l·S032 Udo, lOl7sqA 2ndflr Dept1 963·Wl~ext.344
lourD"rnt•ob &: mu rt•' •••••••• • ••• • •••••••• • • •••••••• • ••••• • •• • •• •• • Ad It · t ts '"' 8 t; A u T I fo' lJ t U commum Y, sorry nope uguna Bch, 100 yds to olc sult.e avail. now. 4 pvt Found: White male Germ
..\PART M E NT s . I Br, 'llovt• & retri11 Utll 1-:asls1dc, t:osla Mc:-.a Office Open Da1·1y 9-6 bch, sips 4 minimum, 150 I WestcHff Dr. ores. Sec. area, rec~p. Sb e Ph e ,. d . VI c : , • · 1xl l Jl!>l.1ir~ \tlull~. no New 2 br. 2 bJ, priv Bit b d Ea tblulf C U"'•• ""r" Su\ilt.-., 1&2 bt:droom~ lit'b Aui: t:.t ii<!IO ~1 patw. spacious, garaee ,7141661-0tOI $200 wkly 494-1602, NewportFinancialCtr rm. ·ID cup oar s s. a ,,_........,
l''urn. " unfum Motlt•la. 1>iow1·1 .ix 1;,11 ,\\,111 now ~no ""r mo. 1•626·2149 ---L.otinCJ Office Space sdrpstoragthre uo&ust.inEkm. pClropytsee' FOUND: Wl\ite s. amoyed .... 1 7 1 .. ~ 23731 Mariner Dr. Laguna Niguel c 11 s·t M open ..... ay lO tu tcx1m ~165&10u~kforLarry BALBOAPENlNSULA a on 1 e anager & visitor prk'g. Elev. male dog, vie Lake
t'T\.ate i.crvact• avail No M !-.:-. ' VI-. It I> r. ·•' l'J blk to beach & bay, apt <714> M2·3lll ext 246 serv. 65' sq Ct per mo, 1 yr Foreal, El Toro. 770-0347 lease requirt-d Sor rv llornt• i.tlmowlwrt• 2 & 3 :\1ESA VERD!':, 2nd flr. 2 1 11 $ 35 k 0 5811010 .idultsooly noi11.·I' IJrt.ll'lui .... Jph ~h 111:~1 Dr, 1 Ha, gar. adlls over u..-.e-•~ h 3840 He-Beach 3869 s ps · 1 per w · DB.UXEOFflCES lse; 62<' sq fl per mo.· 2 _! ·
• ·15 Nu p ts S''SO nurm • ..,.onDCaC ~,..... 962·8680eves Comml & indstl spaces, yrs. Ph 67~9200 -Jo'OUND · Ma x bred , :.! UH. l lid. ~out 't\ .. Shdu . • e • .. . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• O "'kwood "' " 1' \c: wknds 54G ll92G St be b B 8 NPT. BCH on Penm t ~to 2000 sq. ft . As low Business & Home4(4lir). Cocker, rusty color, vie .. l'r11L .... d~. pJtlO. ht•am ·----. --3 B 2 B• ...,u. 2 B 2 B eps to ac • 4 r 2 a, .,~ ft L N. I•-u--bo V t
G d I 1 I \ 1 1 r a, ...wu. r a, fplc cpts drps $S50 yrly blk t.oocean or bay. 2 br, as...,-.sq. · a.g 1gue "" 884 West 19lh. Zone for .....,. ! 1ew ap com ar en ll'I' rp t. ~Jr I II ts . li\Y :\IJo:ADOWS $290. Garage. Rec area. lse 642.3443 • newly rurn·d. sl~ 5. wk· M1ss1on Viejo ar eas. TV repair, nonsl, bake plex. CdM 644·2917
Ap"'rtments ~'7~ ~I Eldt•n531u1 10t; St-rcne & coiy at· l"""llfolly.o•o.8Jll . · •t d l so "' ~ ,,,,, ....., ly rental $275 June & .-an Y o · . r rwy · s hop, upholst ery+ 36 FOUND· S Blk •. Wh
.......... leecll/,..,..
8lj() lrv1ne I .it lith 1
6'15·0550
N_,_+ leech/s-t!it
1700 16th SI
I Dover dl 16th I
64l! 8170
11Kl5phcre. Spac. 1&2 br --DB.UX1:-Se J 1 & $27 Call· 8311400 G m ,. t FROM $230 apt.s. Avail. Aug. lsl. for Lg 2Br, lBa. enclosed • ' ..-pt. u )' Aug. 5· · • others. las~ front fem. t~rrie~·type. Vic
\laturc: utlulls only, nn slab I e d du It:.. No garage, 2 blks lo bellch, East bluer 3 br, 2 ba. ~ itsk for San<!_>'_ ATTENTION Artist & garage for business. Call LaColonia & Slater, FV .
pch LJr~c l .~&3 br kids Pt!lS. Sl30 to $290 walk to stores & bus, S260 Lease. l ncl. spac. master Dana Pomt·Furo, walk to Craftsmen. $50 to S400 ~~pt. 549.4238 or 842-8674.
.tPL.., U!>h"hr. ga, BBQ tH0-0073 mo. 960-51.31 suite, din rm & dbl ocean, 3Br, Cam rm, mo. Ul1l _incl. UNIQUE · •----------
t.J' pll 778 !>coll Pl --garage. Auto door pool.S200 wkorS450mo. eel. studio "The FaC·lndllstrialRetttal 4500 scn•u•ETS
l>t2 5(173 New 2 Br. pal10, frpll\ 2Br, lBa, garage, patio, 1 opener avail. Pool & 493-6736 tory" 425 E . 30th St. ••••••••••••••••••••••• MnrL
-----d w. upstairs. $285. ch.ild no ,.,.,ts, $215 mo. recreation area. Adults N rt Be h 11 ANSWERS ~ '· .. ~ onJ ewpo ac or ca 1140 sq n ·$JOO Very de· . par a ur apt or use 1t as i 586·Wl8 847·6182 Y · No pets. From $367 Beaut 4Br home w /beach 675-6181or673-4271 sirabl~. Unit ,;A .. 782 w · ·
hr & den Jo'rs>ll'. pJt10 & -------up. out front. Completely C k Hudely-Cu.rve -. pool .\dulls $325 No Sparkling 2 br, patio. 1 Br, ground floor, pat10, 865Amigos Way rum. Fabulous view. $750 DESK space at 17875 20l.h St. .M. Call J ae Eagle-Memory..:: ---------•I pt.'h i;.15 JJ!ll or!l:r7·9517 frplc. d1w. 1 story. $265 gar, nr San Diego Jo'wy, wk J uly, $800/wk August. Beach Blvd., near Saunder son· days YOUR CAR
586-6918. udlL~. no pets. $210 mo. Nwpt Shores area, I '12 WATERFRONT HOMES Talbert In Huntington 64.2-0212eves, 546-2277 l just hope we never have WATERFRONT
.\nd waler \ tt•w l1111un
Jplb. I BR. Sl200 mo . :!
RR , SlSOO Mo
BI LLGHUNl>Y
REALTOR li75 lilfil
1 Br apt, I hlk from lwh
yrly rental,
673·5305 C\ll"·
Foxhollow Yilla9e
t.:!I W Wilson 646·20!0
l'UHNOH UN f'UHN
•:!hr lownhome w :frpl
•L1•1• patio & enc garage
•i\llulb. child 16 & over
l'ool & J:tl'uu1 avail
I BR -Sl95
-------tii3 0289 blks ocean, 2br , lba dplx. Be h •<1> th th Something Special' lbr --Yrly lse. 714·956·5871 631 ·1400 f!C . .,.,.,. ix;r mon • Rentals Wanted •4600 to go rough another oil
loft. Beuut interior wood 2 BR. I bu condo ----Bnng own furmture. Our •••••••••••••• ••••••••• e mbar go. T her e's
pllncling. BILns, lrg dbl Nr. llunl llbr Cozy l br, lba, steps to H.B. Watfl"front recepl.lonlsl will answer LOOKING FOR something terrl bly
door refni.:. 1ucuui. bltn S285mo 846·4292 beach. Shores area. 3 Bdrm. fully furn . your phone for $10 per wrong when your de· ~.iuna. Dbl i.:ar Ulll pd m4l95&5871 Washer/dryer, free boat month. Daily PilolofCice, RESP. RENTERS? odor unt r olls on and ~l5()mo 898.7073 · New 2 & :I Br m 5-plex, dock, i.leeps 10. $400 642·4321 Solid, mature cpl. want YOURCARdoosn'l.
view, walk to beach, 509 WATERFRONT on qwet week. $1500 mo nth. to rent 3 or 4 br. house. -
Easli,1<.le newly deco 3br Delaware 536·6002 Newport Island, spac 3 774-4384 or Eves 675-6169 7oo sq.fl. office space Prefer Mesa del Mar Found Male. Uncrop'd
upper. Nice vu. Very pvt. , ---Br 2 Ba, w/!plc & bllns, available. Pacific Csl area. Educated, refined, ears. In~ tail, siml'r to
l)wc:t.1mma1·ulale bldi: 5365. 5-15 .0,101 dy:., NEW2br,2~a.bllns.$300 yrly. Dock ready for San Clemente, beslv1ew. Hwy in Newport Bcb. adult family of 3. No Sc_hn~u.zer. Bolsa
Aparinwnts with beaut landscaping 5'16·S28.i eves mo. Garf ie Id / Be a ch your boat. 774·9408 (714 l l & 2 BR's on beach, fully Call Robbie, 548·0757 pets. Transferred to area Ch1ca/Edmger 846-4436.
Unfw'nlshed Co v c r l' <l .!: a r a Al's -· s:>i 7210 rum. 492·1720 b m a t t I ••••••••••••••••••••••• Adult!>, no P<'L'> Leeward N -EW-PORT -HUGHES LIDO AREA. Ai= Offic.es Y ~o P _ny, op · 0 eas~ LOST: Cockatiel Bird, v1c
2 ILKS Hu ... T CTR EMER '"''D I '"'Y 1 ONTJ"' FREE reqll~~" Dislike Movmg · Mesn Venie, CM. Harbor General 3802 Apb., 2020 1-'u!lt.'rton APARTMENTS ,... Xtranice2ndflrlge2br, """ "' -. Ca ,,_.J686 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Avt.> 11 blk t-:a s l of IBR$1"< UTIL 2br,1'2ba,redec.,new 2 ba,f/p,dtw,gar,pvt. Laguna.·4 Br house Fullservice.Noleasere· Blvd, possibly t o Nl•wport Ave & I blk ""+ cpt, end gar, adlt.s., no $425/mo lse. inc. ulil. wtutewater vu. Pvt com· q'd. 200.60() sq. rt. Plenty Please rent us a room. Brookhursl, HB. Gray
2 Bdrms Never hved in Soulhof B.iy1031·0~7 Adults, no pew. pets ~.842-7301 Mature ad Its only . mwuty, blk to bch, ten· of parking. 2082 S.E. girl in 20'S, & old Germ w/yeUow crest feathers, . --2450Newport Blvd, C.M. ~ rus, pools, 1ac, frplc. July Bnstol St, Newport shep. Will pay up to $140. orange & yellow cheeks, 1 mi to beach Also de· F:-S1dc, 2 Br, lge LH. no 642-7678 before:; 2br, 1'-2ba. f'rplc. crpts, 30 th r u Aug 21 s l. Beach. 557.7010 49:MiOQ5 answers to "Pele" or
luxe new studio. Opcn ~ls Small yard, S2SO d~ No pets. $285. 7111 Br hse w/nice gardn, 1 (1141494-0092 "Peter". Reward! 1 2 5 daily. 1107 !Hll4~lvr5485527 !'.:·Side, 2 Br, bltns. t.'nc Delaware.962·4832 b lk bch, gar, $250. Seeking 3 Br home. S40-0842or S46-0374
Delaware. lluntington ---.i:ar, elec pd Kid~ OK, no 67J.l260eves. Nwpt Perun 2 Br h.se, sun THE (fACIENJ w/boal slip or view In
Beach. 642·9601 846-1826 2 Hr, 111d11·1dual unit. JX'ls. ~.646·4104 Hwttincjfon ---------1 deck. or 3 Br dlx Jpl, ~~ Newport Harbor High Lost. brn Ter ner mix,
orAgt pat111.s.:iJrdropn1·r.fplc.1 --2 BR? B f 1 HarbOur 3842 2 Br.hugedeck,w/v1ew. blkloocean.Avl.July& ALTERNATIVE Schoo1Dist.Willlsefurn male, vie. P .C.H . & ---------•I <l'hw~hr arlulb mature ..ari.:e · ~ a, rpc. ••••••••••••••••••••••• lgeL1vRm,lblklobch. Aug . 675-9034 or orunf,orbuySept.1.Pvt Morro Canyon Rd . pref'd. n'n pets ,:s3:!5 mo o. W, s.:arlJiJgc d1sp. c:ncl HARBOUR LIGHTS SJtlS. 673·12fi0eves. 213 927-6464 Month lo month rent in· pty, 714·536-7384 960-3200 ______ _ Balboa Island 3806 !.16:! !1891 M tl'helll• or t'lem g_ar Prest11:1ous Mesa eludes; recpt. service,
••••••••••••••••••••••• .\s..'t \ erde. across I rom Offers elegant adult EASTBLUFF. Stunning 2 pvr Elegant condo, lge personalized phone cov· MsceUan.ous Lost: in v1c. of N'pl
1 Bd Garage Apt Stove & , Park, SJOCJ 751 8888 or ap1.1rtmcnts Localed in br. 2 ba studio w/frplc & luxurious 2 Br 2 Ba, 45• erage, conf. room, mail Reontals • , 4650 Beach & Hunt. Sch., 2
refng. All ultl pd S3oo:.bdrmunrurnapl \tlults 759-0761 cxl'lus1vc llunlington bay view. Patio. Pool. terra ce o n water, service, underground ••••••••••••••••••••••• lge. acrylic paintings,
mo. Salisbury Heally on)) Harbour The llarbour's Adultsonly.Nopets.Lse w/commanding v1ewof prkg . & more, in T railer space, Costa Mt.scenes,2'x4'.ArtJs\.
6i.,"""'' 1-15"'.139 !-:,Side 2 Hr l'i B:.t, fplc. onlyup •rtn'entcomplcx. ilt"'"50.640-0349 N . h rt & ff "'"""" -., 1 t h K d u • "" bay, Bnlbou Is l. on ewportBench. Mesa, 8x30. Adult park, IS very u o ers re· poo . wn SC style I :. Spacious 1 Br, 2 Br. & 2 --- -d r t th
Balboa P-1'nsula 3807 S'IOOf'F UEP W ,AU OK. S290 S.18·09lti Br + den. floor plans 2 Br, H'J Ba townhse. Nr Bayside Dr. lmmt'd oc THE EXECUTIVE no pets. $85 /mo 548·6173 war or re urn, ey are ""' ST cpy, July, Aug, Sept SUITE · h.isrirstworks
••••••••••••••••••••••• , UNNING 2 Hr 2 Ila L<' ? b d from S250 a re com Hoag. Adlls, no pets. lnq . 0 Busi /I t / 536 2938 493-8275 ua1·dcn i.tpl l'cJol, rec ' ~ r. en. ds. lo I ' 4126A llil · W Sl.200~:9856 ___ --· 640·:;.t7 MSS ft'HI · "'90 Ba h I A n " 'I bo p cmcnu.><1 by enchanting ana ay. -~:.i·: -· Fi ... ·c eor pl. esp, area ~5 7111 w lijthSt. rar r Blvd. No pets d ------~---1 nanc•• LOST Sh It. { · perm. adll. No pets, on SlSOmo.644·6537 gar ens &. streams. a SanClement. 3876 Balboalsl,3Brhse,Aug. ••CdM dlx 2 rm suite,•••••••••••••••••••• .. • : e 1eT m1n
Pen JOO Bay Ave COUNTRY WOODS beautiful clubhou se ••••••••••••••••••••••• mtl,S3SOwk. ulll pd, A/C, ample pkg, llusine-ss Collie), July 4, ri col· ---· -VIEW OF OCEAN & w/sauna, gym, jacuzzi, 1 675·3825 $1.SS.motomo.675-6900. n.....-e.-jty 5005 ored male w/red collar. E.~clus1ve Penm Pt. IOl'. Easts1dc near new 2 br. CITY. 2 hr, 2 ba. frplc, large pool & best of 1111, 2 Br 1 2 Ba, 150 yards -,...--·-· REWARD! Please call Lge 2 Br 2 Ba apt, adults, den. skyhght, all bllns beam cci l.. 1 ac uui, wonderful people. we In· from beach, call afl 6PM M.B. OCEANFRONT 2 Pvt Offices, reception & ••••••••••••••••••••u• ~
no pets. ~50 mo Cull for Adults. no pets. SJ55 garage. $315 $:!95 v1tc you to v1s1l Harbour 49'..?·5557 or830·6725 Beaut. 3br, 2ha, sleeps 8. 2 restrooms. 720 sq ft RESTAURAMT & ---------
ll PPI btwn 6&7PM fi.16-111).lor645-9S43 6-l5-8256or979·3376 Light:. Pac1C1c Coast ocr.•... Aug&Sept.642·1603 lotal.FnlVaUey962·3200 Cocktail•--LOST:7·latVictoriaSt.a •
6i3 8828 II t.o .., Al '"""" ~ 1 taon, Nwpt. Man's Sap-. \ 26 t p l ----wy ·~arner,lo gon-VIEW Rentorleft•A"-"ntown Coastal area. Nlce n· ph.ire blue d1'nner rin". ery nttl' r lint a IO, !liew 2 br. 2 ba, all elce, qwn or orr San Diego Newport Bea.ch near ao-.oUVW \ ..
Capistrano Beach 3818 frplt'. cpts, drJ)!>, beam bltns. gariJge & yard fo'wy exil Bolsa Chica to Br and n ew 2 b rs, ocean. Lge Jbr, 2ba. gar H.B. Medical/Lab/Prof :~~:~i~ci. A$Jgt;~_oo REWARD! ~714) 598-3484
••••••••••••••••••••••• ct·1I .idulti. only, no peb. Gardener Walk to ~hop Warner to Algonquin. SJlS..$365. Near Pko Bch. Avml now• 642·1603 Offices. Ample parking Prin nl I gt ... references S?95 lg.is pd J •-b SllS/$325. mo. incl util. c. o Y own a LOST:Mln. male poodle .~ew delulle :! story 2 br ., . · · . pmg °' us. $325. 321 16700 Saybrook Lane. 1 OS De I Rep o so. 7~68 644·S987 Creamy wht., front bol· duplex apt w i •i bJ ".3?.' .sanla An.1 A\•c. Ogle.5-Ul·3365 714-8463341 7141496.5275 Newport 1&2 br opts. 96J..1243or 96().3224 rrplc. Ocean , iew from 1.>46 24.!3 ------------1 Steps to bch. From SllS a· le & 5_..., tom tooth missing. Sub·
the BluH!> overlook Adull&s1dcl brcollage. locJa.wtaleoch 3848 OCEANFRONT APT. wk. Seashore R.E Pima tcyc ,..... •• ng ject to strokes. Needs
• ing We~L'ltdl' I hr S195 Cpt. Dshwhr. frplc, pool. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Finest in adult living. No 675·5800 &ecutin Suftn , Goods Dealership medical a o n . V i c . Capo. Reach 34638 drrw . ..,l\ I t'h1h.I ok. "1 VII DP Pl Camm0Cap1slruno 5425 ss!3..t91> Jacuzzi. encl. gar. lauo· LIVEINACASTLE pets please. 2 Br. 2ba. Office ava.il. Overlooks "anners 1 ·• · · 5
17Ul49-1·9853alter"pm dry.$300.644-0878 Acres of gardens. wide S375/Up. 1>ishwshr. Trailer, sips 5• on beach. airport & mountains-. a\adable now. Your callcollect714·324·3072 ,, r I All Avail July 16 thru July N II d 11· bo ,....._ I Bdrm C.irdc•n \pl BUHDMEW oceanv1ews.Huge2br.2 rpcs, carport. gas 30.$300.673-4461 Airport/Registry area. are~. ~llona Y a . LOST: s haggy Wbt/blk ar r-~eanV1ewnew2 Slon•. refni.:. i\dlb, no ba apts., Din. rm. paid .. 492·4178 or local 2(gZ Michelson,Jrvine. yerusedlines .. Complele maleDog,"Raggs",Vic.
or 3 BR Duple>., frplc, pet:-. ~ 5-IS 6920 1br&2 br, 2 ba, xlnt loc Firepluce. Part furn. Anahe1m995-ll23. Balboa lsl, 3 Br, patio, 752-0234 inventory, trarnl.ng and Crown Valley Pkwy,
"el bar. bltn!>: wai,ht-r. S250. up. 1767 Oran~e. /I. Li 11 t -1 fplc, gar, $700 mo management as!lstance. 4gg.1461 dryer & rcfng. $415 mo 2 Rr 2 Ba. bltns. dshwshr, Open Sat & Sun 10·4 Gn ques. p 1g al c&ei mgs. South Lagunca 3886 673.4.: .• 4 .. The Complete Offi~e" Wgh profit potential. ---------
H W II R "·'"7993 '"2 1155 arage 00 s pa. ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... 9 nlf' k enry a e.11tor, tpts & drp:i. Patio. encl .,...,. or.,..· EBtate hvmg! Close lo . . VI ices+ wor room, Min. required $15,000. Lot.t Ju.ly 3 med. sz fem
_49ti-1435 i.:ar. S280 mo. Agt. 2 br apt $225/mo. Adults. bench & s hopptng. Lge, qwet, luxunous, ex-YaccrtionRetdals 4250 con fer . rm, vault. YOW' dealership. Nol a dof. Golden brn. Vic.
Corona dfl Mar 3822 838·80tH no pets. Nr. shops. 313 $575·S685/mo. mel. ulil. ec. 2 br. 2 b~ a pt. ••••••••••••••••••••••• lounge. Grnd Door. Xlnl franchise. Call for ap· 21st & Santa Ana. CM. 17th Pl. 642·2464 Mature adults. 494·4653 Elevator lo scemc priv. BIG BEAR LAKEFRONT prk'g. •5' ft. Top Costa polntment. International 548-6459 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Spac. new tnhsc. 2br, 2ba. or 49HiOl7 bch. Party~gameroom, Cabins. (71A )ll66·7701 Mesa loc. 2500 sq. fl. or B i.c y c I es, In c.---------
m.my xtras mcl rtp, yd. Small I Bdrm. Apt. $250. total secunty . .Perfect 494.9727 or839-5173 less. <n4 )540·2200 or (213)884·6100 Found Ju(y 3 black small ~aragc, lndry rm. E · All utilities paid. View overlooking ocean & Jiving or wknd retreat for (714)494-4797 male dog, between Slater
..... v side. Only $325. 642·1603 838•1742 Village Laguna. Apt. on the adventurous adult. 1 block t.o beach. 1 br apt IWal Estate o£fico for sate &Newland. 847-7378.
'[1,, f.,_~.ro_,.cs· ------cure Dr. W/2 BR, 2 Ba, Starling at $515/mo. rum. $100. week or $250. EX!CUTIVESUITES or manage w /op(ion.
VJ..-" .. "" Qwet dplx. East 16th Pl. 2 Br, cpts, drps, bltns, den + lge terrace. _499_·_2835 _______ _. mo. yearly. Ulil. Incl. Do you need an orfice Brokerill.540-1998 FOUND: Aust. Silky
Ava1l 8/l, 2 Br. 1 Ha. (Car , patio.' enc &~r. Wtr pd. Responsible adults. $450 1 Bdrm Apt. Adult, no 871-8471; 833·2105 with personalized phone _Ha_rd_w_a_r_e_s_to_r_e_,_N_e_w_.po_r_t, J!~~r~!c·Rcr~~!¢'.
CORONADELMAJt p\t yd. No pet:.. S32S. S310/mo.Ph.637·33SOor mo494·5397bef.9pm pets S300/mo Walk lo NEW 2br,2~balu.xury ~::V~~!g.e&.!:~Yre!~~!=~ Beach . 67$·5800. 645-4.S89toidenU!y 2 Br Townhouse, frplc. 5-18 8182 993-9977. Chldrn &. pels -bch · t l t ;...,5 · Seashore Real Estate Pool, tennis. Some O<'eun E ------ok. Choice condo at golf crse. . ls I as + ... secun· furn. condo. Laguna, to !wys? You can flnd all ----------irouND: Blk standard
& Catalina views. Close asts1de l br duplex. 3 BR. 2 bu, pool, jacuzzi. ty dep. 4~2496 aft 5 or oceanview Walk to bcb. thas PLUS a warm, Be your own boss. l·man Schnauzer , long tail, vie
t ho I •. r· be Bllru., used bnck, frplc, Sl7S, l Br. stv, ref rig. $i50 Rltr 494 7578 _w_k_n_ds~·~------1 fB{)()Jwk. Adults. 544-6899 friendly atmosphere at mobile wa. sh business l300AdamsC.M. 751_,...,., ,,~~ ""lplp ni;"' me ach encl patio, open beam Gar. • P a l Io . N r 2 BR o o t "'-I aMts Fumlshed 666 Baker St. C.M. Nr OC w/large clie.ntele. Shows --------~-.,......,., ~e1l Adul••, no pets. 1\ll f'atrview /Wt Ison No • r m Y a P · ...,... " 1 Br Condo in J ockey Clu A•-rt (714) 546-2982 FOUND F I Colli ' .., Secluded l ood or Unfurnished 3900 th .... · La v ,....VI' over $20,000 g.ross profit : ema e e, util pd S260. m o pets or kids. !st/last. . qwe. w sy. on es ..... pm s egas "' p .. 1 -'-"'-b
549.3638. $400 Adlt.s Agt 494. 7551 ••••••••••••••••••••••• maid service etc. WU yrly-could be e1panded. .~ear a ... a, mo ""' ool,
1.2, & 3 bedroom ApLo;, m .!!_2-~ --THE EXCITING trade rental time Co For, details, info, call C.M. 549--0:206
super COM location. Agt. Lge 3 br. 2 ba. cpts, drps, COW!hy Settinq View. 3 rms, kilch, bath, PA.LM MESA Ans. beach residence. Cal 1141~ Found Bassett Hound.
6iS.2:JUDays carport. Avail. now. Eastsidenearnew2br& utils pd , yrly s45o. MlNUTESTONPT 1702)386-0023. Autoo1:r1G.., m1le, bm/bUt/whl. Vic
Deluxe 2 Br 2 Ba FP S29()/mo :;.t6-Sl20 den, skylight, sphl level, Mature adlls. 494·594o BCH. Rentals to Shore 4300 Wholesale ~teri~rs Barranca 6: Harvard.
deck, beam ceilgs.'718\~ 2 br, ulllfur;-Cluldren bltns. deck. No pets, AM Bach,1&2BR. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nets $40,000. yr. Worka _l_rv_._S6_1·_21_4_6_. ----
Jasmine. $420 mo. ok No pets. Mgr apt 6. adults. S355. 646-116-l or Unusually spacious Jbr fromS210.&up. •HOMESHARING~ wit~ 600 car dealers 10 Found: Female Do". Bllt:
644-2-105 lS60 Wallace642·8447 545.9543 2ba VIEW apt. Dining Adults, No Pets Calif. ~ Down. TIME, S atter X. 7 /1. •v1 c ·. room, fireplace. North 1561 Mesa Dr. 751 1400 " Year ly $32S. Cute tBr p b .1 Large bachelor n ear end. i block to beach & (58lks EastofNewport r" • EucUd/ffaiard. Garden
house. Small pet OK. :~~ teel r, $185. Ul1. Fairview & Baker. shop~lng. $500 m o. Blvd.) AUTODETAlt• Grove.S30-4016
675-3083 eves or wk.nds. H · find. 557 0822 Adulta onJy' no pets. New Utll1· t es included. 531 546-9860 G t I / db • ome erJ • drps •• blt · I rea oc g wnness Lost·. Irish Setter, lge , cp ... , ns, inc . r.....ress Dr. 1\..... nd refrig. $185. 545-1882 _ .... ...:...;..,,., _______ 1 ...,..""'~ tngOppor. mal.,. Vic. Edlnaer &
Large 2 bedrm, 2 bath
upstairs apt. All bltns,
private patio, adults on• A &.agunaHtlls 1850 ~ lndepcontractorterm• Bolo Cblca. H .B.
Large 3br, 2ba upstairs, ....................... ~ MetroCarWash 846-9288
lY.aoree ..
cpts, drps, no pets, nr. N t hs b '""'""' ,._ -~ •---------OCc.1009 Misstoo, ap\ D, ew wn es, 2 r ~; • ._ _.., • .,·~·-,
S290, 751·3696 3br $4_00 • depe ndmg. ~· ,. 6'6-3928 or 67U517 Lach"~.~~yer11 PIO,~~~EH Gar, air, pool & recrea-~
NEW lbr, lba, dshwhr, tlonf1c1Utles. 588-4e87
&ar. 2005 Charle St. $205. ~Miguel 3852
1 1 I • , .l I S48-5763or635-4781 •••••••••••••••••••••••
~~~~~~~~~r=;:=:;;::=:::=;:=~~;i EA5TSIDE dplx, fplc, 2 cmdoon golloourse. 3br, ?NoorOronge~a Br 1 Ba. bltns + D/W, 2ba, A/C, avail. Aug.1st.
IJ'IOlfblaullU!opomient lndr)' hkups, rncd patio & M25 /mo. 64MM3 pvt gar. Child olc. communllll8. A ralaxtng mo. 557-0206 aft 6PM .Deluxe 2 ba apt, be1ut.
Dejuxe z BR, z Ba, rrplc, llllnOwlhllhoms, ---------1 loulion. close lo beach. wa191fo ... and mojeSllc --,_.... ll26 Pool. ttt. room. 1 cbll
2 BR, t ba, 1ar. Cls. lo
beach. '400. Yrly .
~10.evet.73J.()$99
sllndedr. 806l.4t Ottbld. --o1c ....,.. .... 831 ..,,.. $400p/rnc>.144.:1113 ...... Ftolkd1G pools. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • -· -· ···-
----------· Jocuzzl.tcma.bllordl. SISOFUIUNT SPreTACULAR OCEAN
ondtxellrlgellbhoole Bnnd new 2Br, tba fr VIEW. 3br, aha tnbme, ¥!11ntodclltwta.Tennls. a:er, 2ba. s.105 to SJSO, prl comm., pool. Jae., gym,CllCS~at 245$1 Aha VIUa . aauna, park, bc•cb ac-The WGge, Mori c1 m•-.:m. ceu. $5.'IO. LM. GS-9341; ~you'rl~ IWll9• leodt Jt40 _NT_-751ll_.....,_._,__._;,_..,
tor.AlnlM'tll~ ....................... •te..,oi.1 lt«lt
0ntn 1M) Bec1rD01n aute ..wa Ma~ 2 Br apts.. Ftom $310/ptr ....,....,._...,._.-.,... _ _..,....,..,~.1 ~ -~10 a.l\ft mo. 1'll Delaware, .llB
"''--· -u."\oN. OlM"nl.2-$0017. l WUt to ,_..NDW_ .... _._ • .,.Cf.._.._.___ .. 1 OCUl,l. 8'2·1f01 Alt.
53f..18
FROM S2SOto $335
Friday, July 8, 19n DAIL y PILOT Pl
Add It ... Build lt. .. Oiaper it ... Hammer It. .• Carpet
lt...Cement lt ... Wlre It. Hoe lt ... Clean lt...Move
lt...Press lt ... Palnt It .. Nall It... Plaster lt ... Flx It ... SERVICE DIRECTORY Plumb 1t. .. Patcn 1t ... P1pe 1t ... Remoae1 1t ... 1t
Roof lt...Landscape lt ... Tlle lt...Trlm it ... Sewlt ..•
Haul it ... Add It ... Plant It ... Alter IL.Learn it: ..
Aff'• c• • .,..,. c..,.. 5.,..1ce c.tredor ~.. Housecleaning Masonry Painffng/P ..... nCJ Patios Tiie ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Al'P'UAMC"1: IO!l'AIK t-ih.Ampoo a, ati=.m c:loan, Dl!SlON & CONS1'KUC· ~ t nunl. · Want a REALLY CLEAN Fireplaces-Planters Paint Your Castle CuswmRedwood Patios CERAMIC TlLE. New or'
llt-&n-v1ttC11ll Culor0b~l~~1141~bwbt TJON P .D.l . Corp. r.,m:Vu1 n~ie~r;::,~:· HOUSE'! Call Gingham BrickConcretePatio Avc:rageExtrtStry$39S Coven·Decks·Fences remodel.Frest,aml jobs
£&12..f1IO ~·>'22_ ~ ~n ":r!1• h:fac su. :: '40-7030 weed in i, n au 1 i n g Girl. Free est 645·5123 Block Walls BBQ Pits 2Slory "95, Jntr $45rm 64.5·2333 welcome 536-2426 an 5.
Arc:WIMctwtl rm IUO, ~b llO. chr ktrk.. 541H883_K_e_11_J_r_. ----• ••WINDOWS & HOUSE ReCs, ~ts. 646-0464 Prices incl matr'l·labor Plashr /Repair rY',.. Senice
.. ~ .. -..... -.. ••••••• ~, 011&1' .Um P9l odor. ••••••0 •••u•••••••••• Gwral SerYlc.s CLEANING BY GOOD Free Est: Block walls, Guur/lnsrd, Free est. • ..... ••••••••••••••••• ....... •••••••••••••••• D~ON • C..'ON8TKUC· ~ ropalf, UY,. 9:11pr. ELEC,"1'1\l CAL SERVICE ••••••••••••••••••••••• MAN. ••S36·77ll s l umpst one, brick. TedS52·0l34or6J6·708S VERY NEAT PATCH Removing, trlmmlns.
TION. P .D.I. (.;orp. IJt> work m1"lf. Reta CAU..sSUbr,&SMALL UANDYMAN·Homes & ~ 1 . b Ii bl Res/Com'I. Reas, lie/· Comm'l&Residentlal.No JOBS&TEXTURE wppi.ng,frest,lic/ins.ln MC).To:lill S.11-0101 . JO~ll4HZ33 Apts. Conscientious c earung Y re a e bond. Bob 750-9354, job too big or too small. f)-eeest. 893·1439 area14yrs. Tony8'~5124
C • •--u-,.~ Pb "~ 030 couple. References. CaJI 642·9177 20 yrs expr. Rooms . •g• r•Sen'lc. ~,=r11o--~llectric cra ..... man. : .... s. 2 ~orl-626-6126 ----------t $1.S/up.Fullyinsrd&lic . ......,"CJ Rem'?vals, trlmm1n.g.
••••••••••• ••••••• ••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• lJ'° 3271J6 ~4 G 1 d Bnck, block, s labs, frplcs, Odd jobs too. 6S6-6S9S ••••••••••••••••••••••• pnwng, free est. Lied. 1'~h. • fklencthl" Art. t:.COOOmy Ace>u1Ul'1: QuaJ enera Han. ym~n. Housecleaning. Mature, stonework. 2Q yrs expr. ----------110%offw/this ad. Plumb-lullyinsured642·2624
Vlsu.aJ aJds MeodtC'ul It 1prayt!d cellln&1, r•· f!~~f.'pare'b:p:U-gen~lamfixt· experienced, rehable. Refs, ests. 586-0358 Painting, Painting ing, water serv leaks, Tut~
''""ntal ert'. l*'lt-rina. ~.1uar,Uc 1~Gsdl•1 '"6• ' • $20,re!s53&-09SO lnteriors.Exterlors b th · I 0 --., ...... ~ " up J Wa"a 642-0601 .. ...._YillCJ a rm inc . u eas ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,,,..,.. ·-11 ~. ~ ... 1,,,,. ....... , d•• .. _ ""'"' ••••••••••••••••-•••• · • - ' ,_ Res1·dent1·a1orComm'l 832 ""68 ..... ~ .... ,.,,,,, .. ,. .. v ... ., ..,.._.....,., Ha ndi·wlpers. g reat ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... EHGUSHTUTOR
Quality work by retired c....t/COllC,... RetlabloF.xpr'dJ~anesc HmilincJ rl~aning . Refs. Call Fitzpatrick Moving. Low .Spotless&Reasonable R
iut <Ul"ec:'tor . .I:> yr• exp. •n•••••••••••••••••••• 1ard.~ner ~ Ian scape ••••••••••••••••••••••• S564982or842·0180eves rates. Ins. Fast quality SamJ6yn7_,n .. ~!,inters Oer~i~~r!(e!r~~.ip~:t~~ tEeaacshteerr.nFpormreper11edch1_too} t: 11 l C • s S l u d 1 u . KM v1ce. n e:uonable, Hauling, moving, cleanup ........,., "" '1'4-4!13·l!UI Ch' Man crew. 5 yrs ex free t!Sl. 64S..s:.?30 Mike S7 /up. Treework. Reas, IMMACULATE CLEAN· care. 546·0429 Eves. htrs, etc, all pipes. Reas reporter. Instruction in
prrtence pourln£ & 1336732 fast,freeest842-4SS7 ING. You DESERVE the 642-0709days. HOUSE Exteriors. JO yrs rates. Dick Morris writing. reading. & Caitillllt Mtlfdn9 flru5hlng. &et your own B~ 7sg..0377 p~ 19___. in CM/NB. I'm small-768-7962 comp. Raise y~ child's
••••••-••••••••••••••• Corms, 1avo money. WEEDING·CLEANUPS HAULING Odd J b . -'""~t · "'t"'"ng prices are small 642-6799 d & b d . o s. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ron • RetllOdel & Repair gra es, c oar ~·ontUu .tt Cto'I urpeo· 661 2423 Weekly Maintenance Law student needs work. Th\ Moppets Cleaning PETERS PAINTING ••••••••••••••••••••••• scores. $10 hr. 537-3009.
lry • fJ01)llh1n 1:. /\v11 1I CEMEN"' WORK. All Froeest 642-9907 Jlm49"·58S4 Service. Call us· if you MASTER PAINTER 8-12AM ~ d r 1 M ll • need a good job done. Expr'd. Reas Ra tes. . . Add-ons, patio, skylights ---·------
.,.. 11 !j, r t!,'> ."· " Kwd.s. Reasonable. Free VERY LOW.PRICES.! Sonny & Jer • .Free haul· Referrals.546-2393 Free Est. Call Gene 5 yrs expenence in all &rprs. Resid & comm'!. EXEC&TRAVERLERS 75i -1304.~79t7l 1e:>1Call7~ on gardening m ain · ing,cleanup,etcforw;a---.--------•552·°'158 phases. Call Greg. fresl962-4217Lukay,# FonnerBerlitzt.eacber
Ccrpent•r . . lenance. George 549-2015 . ble items. Fences, bldg's lronHMJ 979-9621 298233 S p an {Germ . Crash ••••••••••••••••••••••• <:oncrete ReJuvenators, . reDlOved. 557_2005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Brighten up the House! course. Will come to your . cleans & restores to a Complete Mamt. cln·ups, 1 ·u d · · Norm's P aperhanging. AGAPEFORCE Roofing Su
larpentry, any type, brand new look. We'll sprinklers, rototil. new Hon.CareServic• ;::: ho':n~~uM~rui~:~~ All kinds, free est. Stale PAlNTING COMPANY .. ••••••••••••••••••••• hmorofc. ccess guar.
Panel, doors. ~le. Also clean stains grease oil lawns freeest545·3385 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 20c.968-3.l62. lie 330986. 835-3705 or 3GENERATIONSOF Repairs. Lie & Jns. All _Ca_ll_<_7_l4_>_M2_·_7ss_7_· --
Comm 'I. lie /esL Aft 5, & rust. So do~'t use a' car '. c AR p ET s T EA M tnS-6480 Painting Excellence types. Free est. Walt. .
548 Z719 t.o cover the driveway. Gardenmg ~rvlce: clean CLEANING Lie. • Bonded -Insured. Call anytime, 541-5930 Upholst«y Cleaning
r-tSerYi & Call Concr ete Re· up .& hauling. weekly SWSQFT WINDOW Landscapi119 Paint & Papering, 24 yrs Refs furn. FREE EST. • •••••••••••••••••••••••
-r"" c J<uvenators 642-8416 maintenance. Reason a· . F1. . ••••••••••••••••••••••• serv'g Harbor area. St Dan a ..... 5851 TelevisiOll R--'r · DRl·FOAM SHAMPOO ••••••••••••• •••••••••• ' ble ra'""• free ...,u· mates. washing. oor wax.mg I 8 R f f Oo>J" ""'""' ...... '"' ( ) JERR'V'S ic 1832 1. e s urn. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Chair $10, sofa $15, Auto t:arpet~anw1lllayyours Phillips Cement Co. After 4:30 ask for Ron. paste-wax 642·3835. LANDSCAPING 6-12-2356 PAINTING Int/Ext. Ex· CANOPYTVSERVICE $1.S,Dick8rown548·9490 or mine. Repairs & Patios, room additions. fi45.7S88or5484987. o......r d cleaning too! Guar work Concrete work 751.5657 civ. woman, 34. wants to &GARDENING Knowles Painting. p: ;• honest, neat. Reas. Ist RATE SERVICE
at bagger savings. Free Call JO AM to9P"11·c1: Prof1Gardeaer housesitwbileattending SERVICE Int/Ext, commercial Licd.Dave964-1045 AtFairPrices960-1633 WindowCle-'---. · classes. Exp'd pets & 492 7748 -· .. ~ est,645-3646 bond/ins. Act now! for comp plant care. Responsible, -----·-----• apt~. r esidential & Have something you want •••••••••••••••••••••••
---------• maint. of lawns, shrubs xlnt local refs. Leave Landscaping, 30 yrs exp. mobile homes. 836·1120. to sell ? Classified ads do Classified Ads sell big SPARKLE CLEANING
Find what you want in Find what you want in & frees. Res. & comm. your home without Free est. Li cense d . Find what you want in it well -Call NOW, items, small items \Ir WindowsOurSpeclalty
Dally Pilot Classifieds. Daily Pilot Classifleds. Mcweeney, 645·51.U worry. 673.0527 645-8149, C·Z1·1072 Daily Pilot Classifieds. 6-12-5678. any item. 642-5678. Free est NOW 646-6703
Lost&Found 5300 Travel 5450 tWpWanted 7100 HelpWant.ct 7100 HefpWanffd 7100 HelpWanted 7100 H.tpWmted 7100 HelpWanted 7100 HelpWmted 7100 ·········•····•···••··• ....................................................................................................................................................................................... .
Foun.d ~1olher_ Cal al lntersludy needs hostess BOOKKEEPER. Assis-1---------·1MANAGER, exper'd or Medit V1~lage, JUSt gave families for Japanese APT. MGR. Mature c~u· tanl. Jncludes payroll, COOK. experienced for Dental Orl~o. 4155 l . ~row Officer, excep· Inspect' will train. $800-$1000 per
t11rth to k1ttens.S46-354.l.t. students visiting for 3 pie needed for 25 umts, cash receipts, accounts brkfast, 1unch & dinner. P/time for fnendly. low llona_I 0 r:>po.rt. for ag· RECEIVING mo+ benefits to start.
•"'UND.· va·c Monroyi·a & wksinAug.557·2357 Costa Mesa area. payable. w.ith c
0
omputer Appl y. Riggu·, 16 pressur~ ore. R~A or gressave indiv. So. West Apply in person. Me 'n
··v 645-1260 •. h l Fashi·on l s land NB RDA eligible. Salary Bank, M. V. branch. INSPECTOR Eds Pizza Parlor. 410 E.
I"' .. , C.M . 4 mo. old P1·t ~ ,...,.. e_xp. °' eavy cons rue· • · b d b'I' E 0 E 49S-6600 J ·
b"u11' 548_3648 . ~Ir ..... --L.J-/ Id tion exper. 833-2287 ask Btwn 9AM·11AM & ase on exp/a 11ty. · · · • eanne Small prec is i on 17thSt,CM u • ~ _........-so t'l'ft" forAnita. 3PM-5PM Irvine. 559·0177, aft. 6 Jesmore machined & molded -----..:.......---------
LOST·. s i·amese .. Brown ••••••••••••••••••••••• We need a num_ber of -.------64().4292 parts for electro ~-.-.-.--..--
good I f ed Ca Sh _ _._ t ---------... Expert vinyl & tile in· mechanical d evices. M•'""YFEEPAID • Pol.nt. v1·c Warner & Sdlools & . peop. e or &mm · · mera op ne"""' par · COOKS tall Call Bob r D An • 1 t time woman for nhoto oir.._.TAL s er. 0 on, P. rofi.cient use of measur· POSITIO...as Brookhursl, 1'~V. 9 mos lmtruction 7005 opemngs. m our e ec ro-· · · r K . h 1;1"'11 at640-2700. 1ng instruments req'd. "
Id G Id l l ••••••••••••••••••••••• mechantcal. assembly !m1sh1ng counter and For Colony 1tc en, 0 : 0 c o ar . dept. Experhelpful, but sales,someknowledgeof Cooks & prep-cooks Assistant/Secretary. Fwnit S • 3·SYrsexper.pref'd. Also Fee Positions
l"ilte Personnel
AeJency
488E17th, Costa Mesa
"::/rhinestones. Reward. SWlm Lessons. Pvt. All not nee. Co. paid benefits photography. CdM. needed, both shifts. good Ptlime. Experienced·all Rep'"r eurexpen·trienpc~pref. STACOSWITCH INC
96<l-1314 ~es.Yourpooloraptor and vacations Cole 673-4670 pay&opptyforadvance-phases. Hours&. sal ... 1139BakerCostaMesa . rrune.S45-1359eves 1 C •----------• ment. Apply in person _o..;.11_en_.sao_._1_130 ____ _.. Wages+% of profit. 785 549_3041 LOST: White Samoyed, n struments Ofp. CARPENTER Colony Kitchen. 23701 W.17thSt,UnitA.CM.
male, vie Harbor/Wilson Certified Teac her ~f 642-8080 EXPERIENCED Moulton Pkwy Laguna DESK CLERK EqualOppor Employer
C.M. 548·7086 elementary math Will ASSEMBLY LEAD r· . h c 11 497 2183 Hills Enquire ID person lo Surf GENERAL OFFICE
tut.or your child with in· rnis • a • ---· -------& Sand Hotel, 155S S. Fulltime. Mature. INSTALLER TRAINEE
Lo5\' t, ~T~~SAtRDS. BlkCLI ab. teresting & individual in-Assemblhy o~ sml adll elec· 4-5pm. --Cooks & Waitresses Coast Hwy, Lag Bch. Ask __ . __ 838 __ -6_153 ____ , 'or w1'ndow tlntm' g, start 1c . an em. struction. lsl. Lesson tro mec aruca ev1ces. ~ M w ·w ,, 9 92 3929 CHILD CARE "'op pay & bener1·ts App .or r. 1 ams. · ..... 50 hr, rais· es to $5 hr <198·1 154 · free.840.J623 Requiresexperindirecl· '' · ·-----------•General Office, interest· .,.. ----------• mg work of up to 10 as· Desire local mature ly 2·5pm, Denney's, 529 DictaphoM Typist 1 n g & v a r i e d within 1 yr. Over 21, tall
Lo;;t Mon. Rhodesian JobsWmted. 7075 semblers.Dayshift, woman to car e for Aven1da Pico. San Full time. Irvine area. responsiblilliesMustlike & neat. Vehlcle req'd.
Suite224 642·1470
MATURE WOMAN
p /time to welcome
newcomers & contacL
merchants. F1exible hrs.
Need car, lite typin&. 547.;ms, r~1dgcback ~ale d!>~· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Stacoswitch, Inc. children in my Harbor Clemente. Ca 11 for in le r view to type & file. Comforta· Exper. helpful. 644-8494
Col I a r w /11 c. Vt c. ATIRACTIVE, Energetic 1139 Baker, C.M. Vu home. Wkdys, 9·6 -COUN_T_E-RGlRl..--751·3800 ble pleasant ofc. Nwpt/ IHSURAHCEGIRL Medicalrecept. Ophth. of-Dog~ood ~ 19th. CM. female. Expr in tennis, 549·3041 now. Sept 2·6 pm. FRIDAY ---Costa Mesa area. Call fice.Litetyping.Sendre· ~teward. 645·5615 or golf, boating. fishing, 644-7095 Reliable &neat, phones. DIRECTOR Mr.Kane645·2640 Personal lines un· sume to: Ad #943 c/o 653-9346 · als k' d · · ASSEMBLERS ----------derwriter. Expr nee . arum , coo g, nvmg, Cl anln d d lite typing, will tra1·n a·n OF ...auRSES Daily Pa' lot P 0 Box: ... ,_ A bl · · e g la y, one ay a " General Office Some Fred S. J ames & Co. • · · L '~t·. Toy s1·1vcr Poodle, W..patch, P R, etc seeks ssem ers, precision, · other dut1·es. SJC RN f or D1'r e"lor of 1560. Costa Mesa, Ca. ~~ ld 1 t male or tem 4 yrs mt'n week. Vic. Huntington ~ bookkeeping ex p er . Laguna Bch. Contact. "8r1·dgctt". July 3rd, oo oor emp oymen · '' · · Har B Pn'nter. Full time, im· N"~es ; ... 96 bed conv. 92626 .,...... Good a l de bour, H . 846-0398 ~ ~ ... F /time. Apply in person Mrs. Sisson. 494·1087 or ----------Vic: P C H & Seward,,_646_·"""°--------• exper. m nua x· mediate opening, h t w · 11 t · ·-ten'ly good eyes1'ght ClE ........ l .... G • "'DY os P • I r a 1 n Coast Transmission, 447 549·30S8. An E.O. E. MOTOR ROUTE CdM.Pleasecall675·S618 • • "'"" -496-3261forappt. qua lified nurse. Gd. fnviron. Scietlce soldering & microscope W. Bay St. C.M. 548·2288. Employer
Lost 7/2 bm Burmese cat Recent grad seeks posi· exper. Small compo· 5 Nights a wk. 6PM· COUNTER Help, fem. p /t salary & benefits. Apply ----------•----------• The Daily Pilot has :a
alt male. Declawed Crt lion in government or nents.Hardworking,de· 2:~AM. Bondable. N.B. &f/l. Days &eves. App. Park Superior Conv. Girl Friday, sharp & JANITORS/COUPLES
d d · d. ·d l o!c bldg 40 Hrs Steady Hospl., 1445 Superior mature. call 979.7550 & P/ti·me ofr1·ce clea"'ng Paw", yellow & flea col· private sector. BA, MS icate rn 1v1 ua s k ,,A~-0606 ' Jy, Stax Burgers, 899 W. ,., ~ wor ,,.... Ave NB ask for Mrs. VanHorn. eves. Hunt. Bcb & lur:s. Vic. Balboa Pen. Environmental Sdence: needed. Sma ll c o, · · 19tbSt,CostaMesa. ·• · · Reward.673-7361. Position desired tnrelat· w/good benefits, gd. OP· CLEANING & light ----"--------__ D_l_R._O_F_N_U_R_S_E_S __ ,Go·Go Girls & Combo Laguna areas. Exper.
---------• ed field. Write M. por. advancement. Call duties. Fridays only Dancers. Good tips & prefd. Must have car &
large route in Mission
Viejo area, good for bigb
school or college student.
Approx earnings $200 per
month. Call 642-4321 and
leave name and phone. Personals 5350 Mirkovich, 1104~ S. Bay Carol; 581·3830, MV C.M. Area, references'. CUSTODIANS SNF experience pre· wages. 9"-6644 h o me t> hone. Ca 11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• F t B lb 1 1 d 1 i!i d Immed. openings for ex· ferred. Apply, Garfield 1-~'---------1 S32..sss8orapplyatl23N. NEEDED HOW Drinkingproblem? ron • a oa s an Asst Mgr Pizza. $720 ~.OOhr.RepyClass e per'd custodians. Conv. Hos p ., 7781 GUARDS Olive.Orange. .· 92662. mo.' • · Ad#983. Dally Pilot, PO Hospital exper. pref'd. Garfield,HB.647·9671. E x perienced auto ~1~~1~°cJh~;~.~~ Professional help _with 646-3224 MonthruFri ~~~· Costa Mesa, Good benefits. Apply in Dishwasher-Lunch. Short p~i:::~#:af.e~rip~. JANITOR :::;.~i~n:ii~el~~~:
your manuscript. . ----------•person. Personnel Dept., hrs. Near Bristol/Baker. Full time experienced · t Cb k PREGNANT? 776·6217 9am-noon; Automotive. ClEANUPMAM San Clemente General Call540-J64l time.Phone &lranspre-floorman.Local.$3.50hr in person o : uc
Caring confide ntial 7pm-10pm. New Detail Shop needs hrs wk Good su . Hospital. 654 Camino de · q'd. Retired welcome. tosta.rt.979·3923 Arnold. counseling & referral. help: . 30IA>36 . • P losmares,SanClem. DISHWASHER Call546-02'74,ofc hrs10.Z. ----------• TheodoreRobina Abortion adoption & Xlnt haircutter wants job Top wages prud. Engine plement mcome for re· Closed Wednesdays. L A N D S C A p E Ford
keeping. ' in strictly haircutting Steamers, en~ painters, Ured man. 548·3031, CM. Delivery man for L.A. M~~~!~ ~ho;ub GU .a.RDS MAINTENANCE .. Work 2060 Harbor. C.M.
1\PCARE S47·256J salon.646-6300 buffers & polishers, up· CLERK for Card & Gift Time paper route. Early 202NewportCtrDr.NB A inNewportBch&Irvine.1----------holstery shampooers, . AM. Hard worker a Outstanding, rellable 40 hr week. Must have Hffd$$SForSummer? LINDA&VICKI GeriatricNurse,liveinor checkout, pick-up&de· S,OOP.P/lime,experpre· must. S4SO per mo. Draperies,Tabler.exper, man for 3rd s hift. t r ans. Expr. n ot Beeline Fashions bas 3
Outcoll Mass~ out. Reasonable fees. livery. Apply at Cd. NB area. 640•7373 494-4055. good wages, good work· Pensioners welcome. necessary. Call 644-4894 p/time openings. Ideal Forth~ Fun of it! 64S-l219aft2pm. 200i9H.,~~bol000r 81,CM CLERK/TYPIST ing cond. 642-1435 dys; Car & P.bone req'd. Plant aft6pm. for women w /small ~ Delivery. Home delivery in Irvine, 8J3.3000. ext ----''---------• Serving all Orange Co. Medical Recept. 4 yrs ex· l n s u ran c e Co. in of The Register in the af. 548-tOOO evs. LEGAL SECRET "'RY children. We educate & SJS.7313 per w /general surgeon, 1 Newport Beach nds bill· ternoon. Good pay for a ----------• l91. llam-2pm. A supply samples -at n<>
Gp boa d · l k I d t in Intelligent. Train as c •. h yr, , appl, peg r • AVON mg c er w g YP g couple of hrs each day. DRIVER House & Child Care, live p I l G 1 C06t. ar .,. p one nee. •MICHELLE'S* payroll, APAR & Ins. HB skills & 10 key. Expr. Approx $300·$400 mo. in e e gin sept sJ1jt752e~l2lla ·• enera cau for persona l, in·
Outcall Massage pre!'d. 968-3793 pref, but not nee. Salary 'Must have dependable ~UNDAY ~NL Y_ Turtterock area, Irvine: terview. 963-7470
10AM2AM 7314462 Hel Wanted 7100 MEEDEXTRAC~SH7 toSSOOor commensurate car+backup.54-0-3008. Deliver Daily Pilot Salary negotiable. LEGALSECRETARY, NEWPORTHarborYacht · · P w/expr. Gd company bundles to earners. Re· 833-1973aft.4pm w 11 F g Bld" SpiritualReader ••••••••••••••••••••••• Eamingsaregood.bours benefits.833-8450 DELIVERY-Earn xtra quires van or la rge----------• e s a r o •• Qubhasapositionopen ACCOUNTING ' are flexible when you're money, early morning wagon and a good driv· HOUSECLEANING , Newport Beach. General forportsteward. Must be 1815So.EICaminoReal an AVON represen· CLl!:nKTYPIST hrs Corporatework 644-8989 ovnor'd ·o tin' gamall · Cl te Full Ii BILLING & llift delivery of LA Times, ing r ecord. Phone womantol!M5yrs,6 · -...... , pera !:ian emen . Y c. tative. Call 540.7041 or 1"~~-..1•-g Mortgage Co. CM area. Ea rn $300 /d 3 d /Wk $4.20 boats;.. maint. of s m. For appt.492-7296 Zeru'lh 7.1359. ...,.,,,........,, b 6424321, ask (or Harry P ay. ay P • Legal Secretary b -. d in' t . in Orange County as an +per mo. 545-0770 Seeley. Equal opportuni· p/hr. Must have refs. 8 oats, a m is ertng
MASSAGE PAYROLL immediale opening for a ty Employer 675-8781aft.6pm. usiness & real .pro~rty boat yard slips & moor· receptionist/clerk typist. DELIVERY &STOCK practice. Litigation ex· logs. 673·7730 for in-FIGURE MODELS CLERK Babysitter/Housekeeper, Must type 5S·60 wpm Permanent position, DRIVER. young clean cul Housecleaning service per nee. Mag 11. Exec. terview. 2children,6mo's&3yrs, P lease call Cathy must be exper.! Beals; felloww/gooddrivingre· needs women25 up. P /F Secy Para·legal caliber.---------ESCORTS Musttype55wpm&l0 ain&Je,non·smoker.Live Tompson at Uni·Cal FineFumiture.Westcliff cord/re/'swhoknowsS. time, own transp. Upto$1000tostart.Pen-l•--------
OUTCAUONLY key.2Yraexper.w/EDP in, own apt. at bcb. Mortgage. 714-963-7873 .. Plaza, New~rt Beach. Calif area to make de· SlS-9522 thouse Suite, 1201 Dove NOW Recruiting sharp.
631·381 I Payroll or Billing 673-US3 E.O.E. can Mr. Smmarco al liveries for MFG Firm. ---------• St,N.B. 752·1313 ambitious man to sell ---------t system. Ph. Arlene for BABYSITI'ER needed for . 642-0262 Su m mer em P o k . HOUSEKEEPER. live·ln --L-VM--'S_&_A_l_D_E_S __ , hardware, tools & shop
•KAREN'S* appt.SS6-8022 lchild. Must have car. COCKTAIL Deli Dri 645-3180 ochnd~. t::rs2 /':nu.!~ FUil time, part time, all eq\Apment to industrial CDI 67s.t815aft.S WAITRESS very •er accounts. Avg S280 per . OUTCALLN~SAGE Learn in 40 hrs the most Dependable, coqscien· 71~8 shifts. A~ply. Garfield wk. No exper. nee. Call
6PM·2PM 973-0893 Corooration Babysitter HELP! Work· exciting, glamourous, tious delivery driver for Engineering g:ficl°d, ira~~7:gJ~ 81 751·9134.
i:XCITING RECORDING 3303 a.A Harbor Blvd. ing mot.her needs expr'd hi.gbly paid profess. Day frelgbtco. 54-0-0501 MA.HUFACTURIHCi HOUSEICEEPERJExprd ~~~~~::.::::~:_.1•--------
A80UT 8EAUT. G1RLS CostaMesa,Ca.92&26 persontositwith6mos or eve sessiona. Place-Delivery p/time. Young EHGIMEER Sdays.Mustprovideown •MAIDS* ---------
559-61SO 1 /535-5363 ---------• old boy, my home, HB, 3 rnenl assisl. Good job op+ man over 18. Familiar For production develop. trans. Entllsh speaking. The Inn at Laguna OFFICE
.......,......... or 4 aftemnooos a week. por. . w/beach area. Llmey's ment or small electro-$125 wk. Rers. Irvine 211 N. Cst Hwy, Laguna
*SHARON'S* Director.Adult develop-538-860C, 9 AM to lPM or CCIII 714flS1·9194 Mattress Warehouse. mechanical assemblies. Cove in Lag Bch. 494·9859 IMM£DIAT[
OUTCALLMASSAG& ment program. Ad· 7PMw9PM. So. Calli. Cocktail M9-8378 Exper. in documenta· HOUSEKEEPER MAIDWANTED
499-1224 minis tr at l v e • Babysit. f.Jveln1tudentto Waitresses Inc. 1'7922 -tion, production line Minimum war., room & UdoSboresHot.el OPDIJtl'.e' ------~--t supervisory program babJ'Slt & do lite Sky Park• Bl, Ste c, DELl&.,!!«YJ00RRIYER troublesbootin\, & ~ost boatd 646-830l-. Call673-8800 ff
;EEKJNG Wltneisea. plannin1. lmplementa· housework. Salary, lrvtne,Ca9271'. .-"vDWC KER ~:J.d.ctlon. egree · . MAD>Wanted.E~r.not s.cr":'~~c:al
Anyone obsenmv· !_!nDrac· lion & evahaati.oa skills rm/brd.645-1066 ~..u-.a•--•-S3toatart.642-2354J. H ...ac Hno..,_EEPER. 5 da-nee. Seacliff Mo•a• 1661 cidentat.Mesa ~ .. e • req'd. M.S. + 1 ~r or ~--.-STACOSWITC I" """~ ,,_ .,... SwttcM111ri TJPl-.I.
West le Adams Ave., bachelor's+ a. Submit Babysltier live In. 2 Expandinglllol'li•ieCo. Delivery man for early 1139BakerCostaMeaa a~,mtddleaaelady ~~t HWY. Lquna K..,,wrp•e•or f.J
lOPM, Th.uni. June 30th resume to: United chlldten. •Ce• a.,. lnOrangeCo.,hasanlm· 1-M Timea home de· 549-3041 for matureeo\Q>le, ll&bt 49M892. ........_--~~·..._ t
im.Pls.contaetDonald Onbra1Palsy,3020W. ~or58W528 mediate opening for an livery, ~o collecting, EqualOpporEmpl01er cooking. Muat llke M•ttt •=--.-~..,-
E • Sm all • o o d Harvard. Santa Ana. blividual to do coUec· Economical car r e· Poodles.673-6S56daya,or O&oose the da.p, Weelm 714~ tlon work in the field. qllired. Adults only. 631-3551eves. c:o.trol O...rutot & location in wblch YOll
AdYtrfhlrMJS.. BANK FUA. VA&ConvenUonel Westminster, Hunt· ~rinl HOUSE PLANT for Blo·Medfcat Corp. work. ~ J~:!'it~~'ffl-ft~u It JOU ai. a aharp, •I· Tri 'ER morteages. Contact inetooBcbarea.638-0126 Upk~ep f 1•~rto:I•
Sue.Ti .. "'&Laura cre .. lve. expeT·d 11.LL Cathy Thompson, D""""'•TG-·'""Practt'ce DESIGM .Retcril&Sen.Co. pro uct on an a -, ___ ...,... _____ aalesper,oo 6 wan~ to SANTABARBARA 714-4163 7813. Equal Op-.,..u.ru. ....... ., EHGIMIER roinstrative ateJS: lab.,
tal""" (0.C.C.) called 7,,., make•\ leut $20,000 per SA.VINGSOFFICE • 1n Npt. Bch. needa front Developmen• des'-& Full U~e rel.all poaition. and Prod u ct lo n
t"' ,., 11'· as an account exec. ~--o-'erred por. Employer ofc. help ror acct'• con· ... ..,.. -AR•.__ 1.... ,,, bill l]asaware proceediop;
1/& • 1PM. PLEASE lortocalpu.bJicatklll.C.U :----v••'"'' Compao.lo.n for~· to trot & dental tu. Must mbdificationafnew pro-f.!~~;,U:•~fi.c..; upgrade 6 asaembl.1 of fi~,_.-,,;fl..-
CALLBACK!J'olm '79o1IS1. CaUFbrA»Polntment care for eldert ady. ~eNCeJitup,640-ll.28 duct lines. devices 4' ~alt eovlromeat •re produclfon aupplles/raw w. .. a;:;~":Z.
lale Uoder 20 Wanted,. .. 4'9·1306 'Pref. n.on•• kr. • n.......1 Cbalnide Aaslat. :?:,11Ji::.:br.~,4!,"ai nca'd. materlalt. $8./br t~ WilPOfO'V**-Friendlbip+Po&•Sbal'J drlnt«r. Jlilhan H-ln. ;t;r" D manuf p iU atarl. AJ>ply at 1601 IJJ.7715 = + + .. .Job•• ,!!,r#•.S...PIX . EQtta!Qppor.Ems»loJ'er bu• ea.-• r•f 'a a.. ne. •~ •Y wk. ret,fs~:.:i~;. 0" FUil Ua»Altt pet900. MoorovtaAvo.,~.a. ~BankerBld&
. r r 1 :~."tbwodraftouOOOM !Cf1:Zn· 1 • t• ~~~S:: •SoUd&UwO.v~ Saleuxp. req'd. hip <tlMO~wBlvd
.,...s;.+101tsJ60 ~~Ut:ia:" eoonw• ,:-,."·"c'oo' 1··· . s&1.C-.a a."'~•... 1.1!.P_rf.ntectClrculta ~!!..!'o:!!!...?i•••tt ~-=L~ sc.aaa" Ne>iniorted :· •••-......... .,...... P1UJ1t16IO«IMI...._ --~· ·~-· ~:1J.sea _ .. _ .... _ .... ..,.-. firm •••k• •la= ,.... 5.c.':or~J :g. ... ~J:a1~ t~~= ~)===-~~ n't'cis=:ai:c ·::i;::-::.~= ~=~u1~ tri:::i111;·~1 i·a1!!.•:!1! .. !!llll~-s--.,) 1-al~Senlee l, -.OSU. ._ •" App1y Patk Superior ·~ofcpi'erct....?C;ray YWDB&kerC.oltdl ... t:unt kaowled,e a =t~•-=' Oeaft Pl~ wotll.
'l'J'pe-Stn.FUe ·' p "'~ ·-~-~·P/C Cony. B~ipt. tUS llaMe.Kno,irledp1llhl· ,, • MH0&1. ,. ST.ftWble~ ........,.cont.rolneoni NOaper.DfC.ll•cwer. ~aa.atiit1 ~...,..,or40 dS. ~\t (l)Pe.doO.otc. !feriorAvo .• N.B.'t1i1 ~-?~1.17 ~1JrQual()pporBml)I01u ~ino ni .. off•ra • ._hll birtoc~'llrtii! X1Dt wor~ coods • 41!.~f580 :Celt.a~ Jlt.e ••t. Eiiw·~ fE,DP ~COOKS. BARTENl>BRS =tr: • ;:, fobdwuettbttlefkpro-of Sb tl'hl' room pay. Day, 1•l•I la ~ 1~cu..,1:.;:t--~~ad •c-DRIVDS:P.Jtlme.Ov« 1\~t)ENTALASStSl'AN'l'] '-t'l! ........ M•' 1um for top S*plo.1ptintooeL &&!~ • ~ ~¥e1.w4~ l JiliUlldiitSillilluliiL.h=._~.,c. r-::;~ ~ sttiff••es. lllut nnt.lmmed:oipe•m ... 1:ttPf!'• pret • .Bt"tnu lJDttAPTSMAH m-41«> $1,ri -=ani _, --°'.'lI "' • • ,. ---.S. _____ _,_ __ •r.~l:i r: '! '·!?.P!:.tc_a,U,1 fo~~\~P11t. AllPl.Y ill'penoa. Al•~ ~BUch.8"-tnJ' •Elper'd. SliMt plal\s. "' ..... ,. •'YOli'' , " ~ office • ' r11t1-t·•"twrha11~'*~ ~~~~~.:...a ~f~ a::-i....:· v.-Cn~i :~~.~ ,.r::~htllir·~ ~ n.it.i)~~t"• £!'~·~._..:..A~ o..tnwaito~ .. 1~--··.~~'°iilllr!'! overload. •&o0u". fam blc -r tlial'' ~..'-~~Ill*'. hda111WJM ,_ , __ ... • befamilian• .......... llM:' ~ uo ,enon w, .. o~~ Wba&enrtMhMI -aa."'!"
ur\110 iroolaaree; i=• .. ait CM~ ~.;i;i'd.:&o.Oru11 Oiidi: ~ tuncL 4 ~ ~ . .-ao"~ ..._., ~ Beti, .... Rclll•dtlbeaartetl lie b.J•J1c.•1101 01 .... 1
•lalev•rr1n AM4. t~ll'lltlAdllc.D• :.~~..!:..~!~\n· llaJlf.rbr·1..........: COit• ~-~·· ana. ·~n~a.m~•~ WUaClliilU ... ~~' ~ lltdMa • •:• .. -..ea,Na, _t 1117.mf·~ ~",,, -:!,~.:1-..n:,... !(:1• .. 111'1. .-1~·1 '"" J. ,..,.__ ~~. L ld9.:utbat.C~. _ ~ ·' )'. _ "".: MOl_.-.nA;>•ii ~ ICallHoWl-.-s 1J.--~ ~ x.
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• DIODAtLVP1LOT F1ld1y.Ju1~a.1tn HetpW..W 7100 H.4pWanted 7100 Auction 1015 f'1rnlhre IOSO GaraCJf Sot. IOSS G_...,.S. IOSS
·•·•···•··············· ····••••·••·······•··•• ·····•·········•······• ······••··•·••·•···••·• ·······~··············· .......•.....•..•...... MdpW~d 7100 t-WlpWOlft'te.d 7100Hl'lpWontl"d 7100 c~ •. , S. A d Wart'hou:H• & 1«h1\'I~ t"ounlllllf Vullt'y Pohn1 Mo\.tna s Ii: Mt1h y u V d S I ••••••••••• •• •••• •• •• •• •••••• ••••••••• •• ••. •• •••• ••. ••• •••••••••••••• ~.t\' lee , ta ll~n "nl, 1 f,u rnltu rt' St rl pp~d & o .. et _. "•f:SU t!r e. ttl un y.
S"'LIS t•x~r'd t-ull or p1tJmt: mo ntenunct'. dd1vern·~. l>t!pt uu~t10,n, J.uly !Ith. l«·fim~h•~I 'tiy 1-:xfM•rt:1 tieloog1ng~ IC1tlh1ired lhru ("nmpmg. g1ir'<Wn items.
PACKAGUS ~ i\pplv t\ri-o Station. \7th .:oocl dri v 1ng n·C'nrd. 10 A:\flu l0200Slttl1•r 752.5059d .11• S•tl·6ll2ti uvv the ,Yean & now mWlt ~o photo & bPOrta> Ile mi.
h 111 •h• ail ·"' I'"' t11 '" SUPPLIMENT '\U:S IV 1 r~11w. c M hc11vy itltLDi 'l'llt'11 S11l > • P11t.10 ru.rn . dt'co bncks. :!!173 J;.iv:l Rd, CM.
•lurt M rril r•1u YOUR IHCOMI REAL ESTATE Non :smoker. St11rl s:i-+ licycl•• 8020 King :me Watcrhed & Elect appl. dl6htHI. -:.!.'ill~ $1$$$$$$ l oll•, (.'oniOll '<'l l ull Sl·rvll'e Sta. Alhmdant, overt&mt-. Win<luw ••••••••••••••••••••••• heater hkenew S1250r clotht•!i&muchmore 418 FHl /SAT /SUNDA\'
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1).-~t.. tdt·i>hone va1'l4d1Um\' Wllltrutn Oesgn, 319 0 Auport ·1.1 M01'0H t:CANJ<;, offer5-IU·9126 . E.16tbSl.CM Fri-Sun 2710 1 HUERTA .
PilTTIMI '•'•h'tul'y hdp ;1<> yl'i. Nt>tt l ,1 ppc•l,lr & Loop Dr. Costa Mein1. t1rancl Hetord. :11lvcl', 10s MISSJON V I EJO .
Tl:tl:f'HOMEWORI< ,,~11 !till Thouipi.on. handwriting Apply,2590 ~6981 110<ltl cond,$lli0.G45116t15 MommN 71 ~· Sofa. Ii' 831 ·2351
HOUSIWIVIS lti-.illut ~If~ 11170 or cvt•s N1•wport Blvd, CM Walnut l'Olf tlJI. 2 Walnut Slit 8·4 t:veryth111g 1~11 ---c ,,,. 1~ISTUDl!uTS ~110737 Wen00d50p00pl11whuue BlcychtBllilt end thl5, vinyl i;wiv<'I Furn. llncms. elothin&. Garage Sal~: s ome ~• " S~rv1ce Stallon Allen· ;il least 10 lbs ove1 ForTwo roc:ke.-w/ottom11n. occ. boaks. record8. 1962 San plants.. antiques. Iota or <;uJ1u11tn·d Uourl>l•--------•I d»nl,1::xper, l9S E.17tb wetght.Cal1Ms.Stont!;1t (;olumbiaTandero Xlnt chr . 2 lamps. $390. Brwiu. NB behind CdM goodies!! Silt, Sun. 640
Wui:r l'lUJI Bonu~. :, :UJ S..I< St., (;()Ma Mes11, Ca. 751-9175. We can tell you cond. $125. 642-8223 & u:1k 842·9936 aft 6PM High _ Cove St .. CM.
pm to 1' Jll 1irn « .. 11 lEA.L EST A TE --how to lose pound!i & for De De -'· -e
''"' t2 ~ m (·11111•• tu~ t: Sl:!:WING Mach. oper's. eurn money al the same --Moving; i.ofa bed $75; 2 4 FAMILIES M esa Vt>rde Garbi:e .... ahi
11th M CoM.1 Mt•:..i SA.LISPER SOM l-.:xp1U1ding mfg. needs lime. Schwrnn F.i1r Lady, with clulHhatrs $50 ea .. lamp GARAGE SALE Ul-4. Car AM/FM & 8 trk
INDUSTRIAL exp. operators. 1580 ---basket & training whls. buse SlO ; cotree table SATURDAY deck. Yamaha 250.. nice ~At.ti:." C>lllc:t• ci.tahlti1hcd 1n Monrovia,NB,642-3472 Women w.ant ed for hardly used. $.50.675·6563 S:.!00 M1:;c items ; all We have 8 little or ever· baby clothes, crib,
Anlr"tiHCo. 1•1..t.,mu.,tuKrc.J~"~'"lf -houscclcan1ng service. xlntcond.644·4397 th'in " a t'que ·iron wlckerchangil\l table.lg 1w1·cl~ ll11(n1l1t'CI :.Jlt·~ I·,, p ·ct 11 1• c'n''~~ d SOCIAL WORKER FuU oe part time. $3.2u WldlrtgMot•rials 8025 ---------~Is. desk,nf~en. dinette dog kennel, vac. c leaner,
v-.-.ipll• 111 t'.•11 tm 101:.11 ,,ull'blll'I :.un DrJwini: t.CSW required. Mar· per hr Must have own ••••••••••••••••••••••• EARJ-Y3 Am~~h'Sor:1 . Gf · tbl & 4 chr s, booka. mower. Pon:he chrome
1iu,11wM"r. ollt·nn,,; wr) ;1< <'uunt r iturn/ind ('ouns . p /T trans. 559·0327 Used Lumber. 4"xl2"xur con .. ma c g. ap e Lcvelour blinds. A lot of wheels, decorator itemsl wu~uc 0U1n 1110Jul·L• l\li\HTIN&.ASSOC. eves In San Juan Capo . <22), J"x10"x16' ("'· tbls. $160 or best ofr. really weird things you ~lots ofjewelry.m.a.king
HESSMAH F u 11 u1 v.11 I t 1 rrH· ~:111471 ~nd resume to Family Wor~ p/t.ime .. earn f/time 2"xlO"xl4'~" (432), T-957-®.S _ ulways wanted. 27131 supples below wholesale.
I\ Ii D11·1. 360"' r 51 'l'o 7~1 IHl>-I 01 • H :.. wknd~ -S<'rv A:.soc 17421 Irvine. 0.n comEmi.s~ion &. in cell· bracket& (26), 644-0878 MOVING ·ro FLORIDA Tos:;amar. on down to 2734 Sandpiper Dr., C.M. ~•.oh f• rt p 1----------1 . · tives. xc1lwg new mov· . r c .. 1 rt'· rt>:1,, M~ttrn _!11~d.Tustw,Ca92680 iescrvice foe Lagun:i BARNWOOD; Good SALE! Baby grand bottom of Street. <TakeaitateSale ofhou.sehold '7!4 •6117~ •·--------... SALESP/fhne SENIOR area. Call 831·3242 ask selection. Will sell or piano. soru, chrs. C r own Valley, t o furnishings, unit price l"rmt4'r S.dci. 1.a ,,;una H1lh Mall. forMikeMcCarthy t rade. Also install dressers. books, lots of Marguerite, turn left, $1600.496·6796
IMtantPrinhr l<t-11111. Mon thru Fri, LAHDPL.A.NMER 009435 Marshall Field goodies! CampoMoro.1:o r1ght) ~ 15 :..'O hrs weekly. $2.75 !:xp'd .. career mindl.'d Merchandise _:,._ · G-W-2742or644-7&12 ----Horse 1060 J-:,..Pt!r 'd onl.v. ITEK ~ u<>r}•r. Sch»dule to be "r· I t · d . & ••••••••••••••••••••••• USED To g & G o -------GAR AGE SALE . s \ " 1J1•·k '""> o~r· tc1r ,.... u ~ .. w crea ive es1gn n uc r ove Dini' T bl 6 h & n -m· odel1ng a·tems Sun ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' 0 .: ""' 1~ a I ranged. Maletremale. 18 t bTti A I · Antiques 8005 Pine. lx8x11:1, 75< a board ng a e, c ri. '"' · ;1:;~~.l\f.~~~n~~a~er~t~ 1"; • ~r.. up 5!16-8444 :~~ !1~~i;~~e ft~~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1;.'!6.J964 __ '-~~~e~.h ~P~~s~1e ~t;~eb 18~ ~;i;ti~o~~Y ~ 1 L:·g~~! PQ!.08~~~ ::,i;.t:e.G;td~~:
l.agun:i llllls/Mii.sion .. BLJllQ(K'S l''uentes, HBT. BEIN. Wonderland D09s 8040 t•ush1ons J draw er Bch. 3 bathroom basins, Xlnt cond. Prof trained.
\'ieJoart<a 5116 3150 ~ ,' SJlt!." ~·Q~~?~~ :a ASSOC. Of A f" 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1•ho:;ts. ro'ckt'r swivel f1,..lures, balh tub , Show Winner. Push but ·1 1 WILSHIR~ ·~'TART!NG S.1.SOllR• ------n 1ques. Al\C rei.:1stered blond l'ha1r . Kenmore lutchen s ink, interior ton.$1500.Ph 675-3590 P tJme Doy for htl' lui · ~har p . ( u 11 t 1 m c STOCK BOY H u GE h I c k r: wash/dry Misc: items. drs, wood outside shut---tory work. l·:>pm day~. • ::;alcspcrsoo nt>cded for Part time. Musl be 18 w 3.[ e 0 us l' mu c Adoc ebrl puppy l '' Xlnt cond 962· 1973 tcrs. pancllmg. good for For Sale: Quarter horse lt>.Ulyrs.645-2702. LOS 11\NOHE::. Npt lk h pct s t or e . crammed w1.,, over 500 mo. ora e, gent c, gara.:e mt, power lawn Mustang mare. Very
REAL ESTATE
SALESPERSONS
C >t>portunity now av:11l.1
J;lc for liccn so d
~alespersons to jurn a
progressive oHice.
Cousey & Company
llMSo. Coast Hwy.
LAGUNA BEACH
PALM SPRINGS !Jf.J-!l337 or 640·0090 ~~~c:h494·0767 Laguna music boxes, nickclo· l~es ch_:!dren. 644-5887 Cheap ~ Chairs, lamps, mower, shower drs, work gentle & well trained.
wooo1.111No HILLS -- --deon pianos, circus or· •LITTLE PUPPY* hideabed sofa. babysw· tbl & many misc. English/Western riding.
NEWPORT BEACH sales STUDENTS. 11thru16, gunsd.fwtahll c llockks, Cute male, will be i n g Ca ll anyt ime . cau Mary Balls640-1995
WOMEN & MEN Earn for newspaper solicita-gr run .a e ru· c oc s, m e dium s 1 z c. _MS_·_l8_19_. ------FRl.SAT&SUN or Madeline Blinder SIOOO a wk. scllmg & List· t10n.s, earn $10. to $.50. ascmatrng an ques. . . Recliner w /vibrator & 640·8277
111g mobile homes. No wkly.492-6697 Over$1,000,000Worth Mustachioed. Last or lit· Sparusb Hexagon table heat , end tbls, chrs. ---------·11 · M American International ter. 548·2140 w /6 ch rs. chandelier, lamps, many other nice F1ashy. weU started AQHA i•xp. nee .. w1 tram. r.1----------Gall . 1802 T K tt ----G Id U WILSHIRt Sims. 898-9904 •STUDENTS• · enes; · e er· ood · cabinet/dry bar, desk & things. 8252 Tyler Circle e mg. 2 yrs, gen e. re·, Lt --------Full or p/time to dis· ing St .. Irvine. Tel. AKC P le puppios, llny chr. sewing cabinet H.B. ( Nr Beach & ady for whatever. Call
a ll•admg fashion spe\'1al-SCTY /HECBPTJONJST tribute zlp code di rec· 754-1777. Open Wed thru toy. ull:;~ots, w/:.torage & top expunds Yorktown) 968·1929 496·4597.
lystorewillopenits f1rst Part lime, 5 days p /wk tones in own area. Need Sat.9AMto 4PM. Visit! ;i30·6455 _ for cutting. Single bed. 7 ---------
BULLOCK'S
Orange Co. s tore in Hi PM. Phone. typing, access to car, over 16. PUBLIC AUCTIO... AKC .2 .lri ~h. S\.'l~ers, drawer dresser & mir· Garage Salt!, bow front PJ':;ke tr~/PP!,~lt. _ _ NEWPOHT BEACH on shorth and, Newport .,3 50 h c7l4 l " female 641 0 142 or ror, 2 end tbls. 6 lamps, china cahi nd:.. nld er me."" or ----------i /\ugusllst,1977 Weoffer f:lcach.752-1833 S:ig_0700pe r r . MA.l\fYITEMSOFFlNE • · ,. -l!l3·1:10Jafl6.30 PM J!wlar & banjo cases. bst.S57-4J22Carolyn
497-2457
REALEST ATE
CAREER
Secunty, independcn1:e.
top mcome! One vacan·
<:yfor licensee. school for
unlicensed. See George
Davis, Red Carj1 et
({ea ltors San Juan Capistrano, 831·9955.
REAL ESTATE
Pleasant. refined brok~r
or a s soc. for o ft·
,..pecializing rn riner
homes & residential in
come property. OJ>-
portunity lo learn c'I
d1;i11ginl! from award
w1nnrr Call JI AL PIN<'lllN. 1;;5 1392 for
t·onr111 .. ntial interview
Equ;il Opport. Realtor
{tl-:t\I. ESTAT E SALES
Sm.all Newport Beach of
,f1ce w 1money making
'team needs 2 morc sales
-people. Ask for Dick.
~Pr~i!CrtY Ho~ 642·~50
an opportunity to Join an -,_ ESTATE JEWELRY. ~S.280~!rt5PM -misc glass items. port. hwtfry --8070 cxciting fashion forward1---------•1 T1':LEPHONES/\Ll!:S ART OBJ l:!:CTS. AN· AKC Mint blk poodle. DOVER SHORES FURN typewriter. 11 track •••••••••••••••••••••••
orgaruzatlon. The follow. See's $800-$1300/mo Students 15 & over to TIQUES. FfNE FURN .. male. 7 mo. Trained, all KtnR mattress. s pnnits. t upes. pictures. vacuum
ing .irea:s for which W(' Le«joJ.G@ft'l·R.E. help on proJect ror non· ETC. PHONE FOR IN· shots, 5125. 645-7634 & spread. low chest. utn cleaner. mus11· stands, WANTED
arc acceptrng applll·a Employers Pay All Fees profit organ1 2at1on . FO. & BROCH U RE. ------oltl wood din set, odds & basketball back board, TOP CAS H DOLLAR
twnsrequirestrong::.1'11 J.izRcmdersAg-ency Work from our ofh ce 645·2200 O.E Sheepdog pups ends645·02U2 misctoob.old roundpic· PA ID !-'OR YOUR
mg backl:(round: -1020 Birch St. Ste 104 Mon thru f'ri pm & Sat -AKC, qua I.. champ Imes. -lure lube Zenith TV tJ
Newport Beach 833·8190 a m llourly wage + BRASS BED 645·~~~-1810. Danish Teak hv rm, din Gibson Ma ndolin. Na-i'ii~EJ-£~J't~ot5: Accessories
Intimate Apparel
& Foundations
Luggage
Millinery
f W1g Stylist CXJl)
Shoes-Women's
Credit
Full·Ttml! Pl•r,..1111
Wl' arc also at:c:\'pl111i.:
ap pl1 cat1on !I t or
B EAUTIC IANS in 11u1
Beauty Salon
Call for appt/estab '65 bonus. Call 494-5559 art tt FACTORY KC p I rm · & bdrm s c t s • lional Dobro. old Martin SI (.VER SERVICE. A ug, ma e, l yr , wshr/dryr k1tch tbl G 't h -1---------•1 pm L~. selection of pure fawn, beautiful Must · . . • lD ar,ot er mtsc1tems. FINE FURN & A N· -------BRASS Beds .. Reas. sell. Offer. 731·3800 eve nusc hshld items 64.2·3419 2383 Columbia Dr. Costa TIQUES. 645-2200
SECRETARY TelephotteSales prices. Buy direct & High Poster two bed Mesa.Satonly90·4 . ---------
SH not req'd. Varied H you like making save• 4 mo old femal~German complete. Yellow, $2S'. One Hampshire Ct <off N~reas.ofrerrefused.ln·
duties, Npt. Ctr. CPA money, having fun & THE WAAG BED short hair pointer $25. And misc 673-8228 . dian turquoise bracelets, l"irm.JOKeytouch re· talking on th e 2334NewportBI. Cashonly.642·8938 · San~iago Dr. Dov.er co ra l ne c kla ce,
<fd. Call 644·6156. phonc ... call us. p /time & ' 642·2712 . . . Beautiful old ornately Shrs.) Dryer. rcfng, pipestone cerpentine. - ---!-'/lime s hifts avail. .--.---Dog Obed1ance Classes. 8 carved Sofa as is. Ask· fur n. clothe:.. g.reat Pvtpty 968.7597 ~l'ret:1ry. pt-time. La~ Great co. benefits. Fast CLOCK, Vienna regulator lessons. $25. Mesa Verde ing SIOO &'8-0°72J treasures to neat Junk. · -
HC'h. (id skills. Flex hrs. advancement. Sal + wall , 3 wts, matching en-area. 893-3098; 549.2374 . · Sat/Sun 10·5 UvKtock 8075
C·tll Shirl •y 8312293 h·t · · graved face weights & Smoke Glass Cof Tbl . --••••••••••••••••••••••• • -c ' . comm w 1 e lr:uning. pendulum. sS7·339l AKC REG'D. ~M~. w /sa, · • $150. Area rug '1ox I<!: 15435 Eirtel Circle <The Reg. Morgan mare. broke SECRETARY Pho~eS40·609_!. --blchcadColhe Fem 4 ~ h T b Ranc:h ) Irvine. Washing . .
(;l•neral off1t·e work 2 OAK Roll T p desk Hall mos S90 or ·hest 'or~ Kite · bl, 6 chrs, I/-macht111'. Dunc Bu,::gy to ~ide & drive •. bl!\ T I h S I 0 • gm. ~. Twn lied, mall. P"rl. C:or,·uar en•• & porade Morgan gelding, iluys week. no shorthand e ep one a es S!.'at w,beveled mirror & 548·4861 S.t5 Tall Lamp, SlO. u :.. ., Eng Weslern (714 \ r1•q'd. B & ll Label Inc. Sideboard + many more ---tram •. :ieat::.. stereo & • Work p1timc. Earn extra tRISli SETTER Dra pe s. <s t i 11 on books 5.,1 '.I t<> .c. Ph 338·1011 t.i5-2284 antqs. Xlnt. cond. Low h 60 "I u ·• ----cash m our c:irculalion pnces! JOANN'S COUN· Puppies. AKC reg'd. ; anl{crs) pr avoc. I x.,.. !lSl :>t3S Moch. 8078 sales room. Flexible hrs weeks. 548-7827 gold brocade pr. pa nel :_..:.__ ----IMJY
A!vl. or PM. Men, women TRY EMPORIUM 10120 -----83x83. 8d:;prd yel. kini.:. GARAGE SALE •••••••••••••••••••·~·· 1" ),us y property orstudenL'i,18orovr A d a m s Avt•. at •DOBIES. J /M. l /F . 644-0736 334 E. 16th St. Costa Rubber tired framing rn;.mager. Fast acrnralc Brookhursl HB 963 6900 2" bl d od I 540-0:JOl LA Times ----· __:_ ....:..__ Xlnt. Rancho Dobie --• -Mesa. Fri/Sat/Sun. saw. 1 . ~ e, m e
SECRETARY
typmg required. llcavy TL'LL'PllON ._. -01\K S·Holl top desk, chump Ins. P.P. 833·3688 Ran~h style sohd maple -. -----315 Radial Skillsaw. lhp. REAL ESTATE µhones Mu:.t be J,!ood "' "' "' 1 or640·9235. duung tbl. ti chrs Lrg 5' TO S2S Childre n 's 49J..1153aft6 with figures. !\hie to SOLICITORS 54"exceptwna c:ond. ----hutch, glass doors. 4 ma· items & misc. Sat/Sun -----·-----
Tailor ffiHer
ForourMcn's
.\ltl'rJl1011 Dept.
SALES work wtth m1n1mal M:iture females w /sales Nels exceptional home. Eng Bulldog, male. 21,., pie barstools & 3 metal 9·5. 1515 Serenade Terr, Misc .. laneous 8080 :Wehaveanopenjn~fora We offer Jn excellent ~upcrv1swn. Basic com-imd or phone exp. Hrly. ~4-~·6J).(J88.5 _ years. AKC. Brindle & uphl barstl:.. Elec CdM •••••••••••••••••••••••
self·mot1 vatcd & ag, compensatwn plan 111 1~ut<:r knowledge a mui.t. +bonuses. 714·008-3384 Antique Shop Moving. -~~e. $50. 673-7773. roaster. Oth«r items. ----WANTED ,gressive salesperson cludingalibernld1scou11t CallSus~n.547-4159 --- ---Su SI 'B . I 545-4545 3 family Garager. Mint
who would l i k e t o onstoremerchand1sc. SECRET RY TEL. P 1t1me, exper. of~r ;ePi na!gai:;4 ~ Old E nglish Sheepdog ___ :.._ -bike. compactor, stereo TOP CASH DOLLAR
become more involved Pleaseapplyrnpel'SOn A telephone solicitor, work Newport Blvd.' C:osta Pups. AKC. s hots SlOO. G<>ld couch & love seat spkr. lots of goodies. PAID FOR YOUR
w /i nvestment pro Dt\lLY 10-12&2·1 i\rl' you proud of your afternoons. Cost.a Mesa Mcsa.646.9541 645-6625&645·7884 $75. Phlhpinc mahogany Sc·S200 1724 Port Shd· JEWELRY, WATCHES.
pcrties . Draw avail. \tork'! T"pe 60 wpm, die· office. No selling. no -------Fru toy 8045 bed & d res s er field, NB. Sat/Sunl0-5 ART OBJECTS. GOLD,
PiR.·ofCes.sTioAnaYILoOfcR. CO. 83 FASHION t.1t1on mach. expcr .. app~. S4 OOper hour Mr. 2 Handel Tiffany lamp •••••••••~•••••••••••• w/mat1springs S120. Set ----SILVE R SERVICE.
1-ll'll'I ofr knowhow. N:it'I Lcwts.549·1819 shades. matching pr. . , . Franc1scanwurc fine Sat1Sun !J-6. E'•erything FINE FURN. & AN 955-0350 ISLAND rn Good benefits. Great Mint cond $800 apiece Loveable hlk /14 ht mix china. srvs 8, Silver Pme ~ocs. Freezer• furn .. TlQUES. 645·2200
-· -group to advance with. TRAVEL AGENT ~163•1579 orSJ7·04JO brt'd re.mall•. 10·1511.>s . 5400. 979-232 1 toys. misc. 16595 ---------RECEPTIONIST Equal Oppor Employl·r N B . c 11 752 8535 Exper'd. Call 759·1931 loves kids. must have -- -------Markham, FV I Harbor-LUGGAGE TAGS . , ., , . · · ar~a: a · - -----A...Jfances 8010 good home.eves640-9460. Couch, chr. mahog<rny Hell> 1.hc W1llwm Lyon Co _ _ __ _ _ -·~~ f!>.!:.Mrs. Galewo~--:;.r••••••••••••••••••• Linda tbl. iron patio tbl, good __ _ _ from your busine!ls card.
;'is t' dw Po r ll B ca c h SALES . FA BR I C SECRE'TARY t Bkpr· Full TRAVEL AGENT Washers. dryers Clean FREE-· 7 month o 1 ·1 cond. bst ofr499-3224 Yard Sale. 3 fam. Baby Set nd lone card for eaWch UJI l'r:Dcve opcr scckl> EXPER. nc\'. f>iT1mc. . ' · _ v items. h sehld gds. ag Pus one s pare. e e~per'd receptionist , CM STORK C:all Mary t,1,'.1',c .~clu l l ty~e w1thatleasll yrexpr& lale models. SlOO. 1 yr Gold en Retriever Brandnew beds,k111gsz, clo thinl\. furn. 1959 r eturn permanently
pleasmg telephone man· 6464040 ~ireta r )/bkpr: "':'ho can good client following . t:uar. Free. delivery. Shephard.&12·0'J03 ' qn s; & full si. also wtr Rosemary. CM Sul/Sun sealed attractive lag &
ncr. :;ome typing, no Sii -----ac\'ept rcspons1b1hty & Top salary. Call 752-90:16_ Mstr Chg. Will also buy. --------heds "ll-3860 Mario !J.5 strap, meeting airline
required. varied office SALES/ORGANS??? follow 1nstru~t1ons. _636·2840. _ __Free to good home. Collie --· ---· --··----I.D. requirements. Pre·
duties. Call 1133·360\) Ask Are You The One lcarnml! many. interest TREE TOPPERS & black Retriever mix-Mo,. 1 n I(. f or s a I e Hunt Harbour Sat/Sun vent loss & theft! For a
for Mrs. l:ri!lshy w c a re 1ook1 nJ.! 1 0 r mg corp. functions. Gd. & PRUNERS f~ ROTG tio°iN·~ ~~~ ~P8 ture. Approx. 2 years old. furmture. like new Call :i-5. Twn beds. lk new: 21 personaUzed tag enclose -----ht'alth,non·smoker,non· __, Very loveable. Excellent aft fl . l:lny evening loldchrsw/writingarm; wallpaper, fa bric or H tJ · t f o or several high energy level In k <I k g Piece work. Full or purl W Warner nr Harbor 644 7775 ecep oms or r . c. indjviduab for aa exctt· ' n ·er. g · wor. ·in con· t' U t tlOO d S · t A 979 2921 · with children. minds · ___ :111tqs. naug Uc plates; "Day Glo" paper & we p 1llme. 5 days, must · lh · ds. w1progrcss1ve corp. imc. P 0 per ay an a na. ~ _ • well. Ca ll 581·0058 for -----trolley fare box. Thos will buck & trim vour t\.pe, exper pref'd . but mg career in e music Send orbnn"J.obresume Call Sonny at (714 ) Alice. G-Sole 8055 olec organ 1"'co1 Chan· O " busint!ss. We are the 08 p" C 675 a .... 2 M th HOTPOINT Wash & --7-~ "" tags. r try two cards notn_e_ce~ary.642_·4532 ) 1• h 1 d lo.332 aseo erveza, · -oo• eves on ru d d...,.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• nclLn back toback. --< rgan :,xc,ange ocate Ste. C. San J uan Capo, Fri,7pmto9pm. ryer. Avoca o . .-> or Weimarancr Fem. s yrs, PUBLIC AUCTION -PRlCES:
in ttol So. Cahr. regional ea 92675 bes t orr. Sear s b.est nds llood home due to l FAMILIES RECEPTIONIST
Jmmed. opening in IJ?. at·
tractive administrative
ofc. Xlnt. opp. for well
~roomed. personable in-
d 1 v id u a I w /ex p . in
telephone procedures.
~tany co. benefits includ-
ing bonuses. profit sha r·
in,,;, ''a caturn Apply :
tli60 Placentia Ave .. CM
shoppinJ,! malls. We offer --· ------vacuum w/serv. pohcy. movfni:. Loves kids. MANY FINE ITEMS OF $2eaor3/$S apresligiouscar('er.xlnt Typist 5125.846-0398 968.3035 ESTATE JEWELRY . 19832PolomacLn CGlen 4/Stags$1.60ea.
training proi:ram . TECHHICALTYPIST ART OBJECTS. AN-Marl Nr Bushard / 6/9tagsSL50ea.
highest comm1guarn. & SECRETARY Typist for technical & Buill·in double oven, 4 FREE KfTTEN, female. TIQUES. FINE FURN., Adams 10 am to 5 pm. 10ormor(r$1.40ea. r · be f. w burner stove. Xlnteondi-ETC PHONE FOi, tN Sat Sun. Small ap SalesTaxl~cluded many nngc nc its " ('hallengingOpportunity statistical documents. 1 wks. Orange tiger , · " · req. professionalism m ToWorkW1'th Must type 65 wpm. Will tlon,white.Sl00.646·3436. house trained. cute. FO. & BROCHURE . plrances, TV. Br set. NOCA D?
th rt f II & """'>CL"> 645 2200 skates, misc. Draw yc)ur <fWI\ Or send e a o se ini.! 11 EngmecringManai:er train on word processing Range w/oven. Wh irlpool ,,.,.,.,,.,.,.,, · ---------strong determmat1on to equip. Proficiency i n elect , wht, brand new. ·--name, addnss, phone &
d S FEMALE kitten. 8 weeks, Office equip, twin beds, Old fashioned Swap Meet: we'll make one urd per skucbocee d. bolme nr~~dn ~periencedTyp1st grammar r eq'd . For Won on TV game show. Black. fluffy, trained Masc h s ld Items! handmade items, home tag.Add25reach.
ey ar a 11ty1sreq · ShorthandPreferr('d appl. contact Carol Wantquicksalc.Bstofr 548•298.5 SatlSun.JulyB-99·5119 bakedgoods.new&used Sendcheckormooeyor· If you are the "bnP-Cull Sm1'tb. Avco Financial over SJSO. c•o-57"" · t r h t D .__ '""' -,,.. "" Lexington Lane CM 1 ems, re res m e n derto: RECPT.TOS600. ap,.,.cJctt.581\.7;,,,., .<ioodSalary ScrviC'cs.(n4)644·~. Beagle/Golden Rel. mix 5,56.8164 s tand. TV · s, p OTPRIHTI
Progressive An1.mal SALES. P ltime £'venmi:s i\ndBenefils EqualOpporEmployer Lady Kenmore washer& 5 mos. old. fem. Need!------relngerator. furniture. IL MG
Hospt. offers ~xc~plional lnquirc Hickory Farm. RBS dryer, $ISO. loving horne. 646-592:3 [; I D 0 l S L E clothes. toys, hanging P .O. Box 1560
future for versalile, lake Weslchff Plaza. For Appt. Call i 64().9'~ BAY FRONT ·antiques, baskets. lots more. Sat , (;osla Mesa. Ca. 92626
(·harge, mature person. -----17 14,493.9301 TypistTronee BEAUTIFULKittens washer /dryer. sofa, July 9, 9-4. parktng lot PUBUCAUCTIOH
:Min. 4 yrs. ofc. exp. re-SALES pllime, no cxµN 'lAM 1PM fornexowriter.17222Von GOOD USED REFRIG to.good horn~. chalrs, lots of goodies. 801 Dover Dr., Newport EM F'
'l'd.NB.644-5460 nee. Will tram 5·!.ll'M. -~urmann,Jrvine. $30 751.9870 ___ Call968·6922 __ Fri/Sat only 9-4. 900 Via _Reach MfilT~ J~~Lfr'v~ ~ --Mon·Fr1$3+hr.S3H»l1 1 TYPIST -· --1" k'tt t b Lido NordNewport ·-ART OBJECTS, AN· ------AMF INC t'reeze r . upr ig ht , ~ur cute 1 ens 0 >t Beach CA.PO VALLEY RETAIL SALESPERSON l. for Newport Ctr . law ftos1Jree. excellent con· RPtlven tollgood homes -- -HIGH SCHOOL TIQUES, FINE FURN .. App'·cutions now beina Pott•r&lrwnfield dit' 9 easeca 586·9505 Bedunitw/bllindrawers DRILLTE"'M ETC. PHONE FOR IN· CLERKS " " flrm,topss kllls. ton.545--05l --& nite stand. Kitch tbl, lliA FO. & BROCHURE.
UTOTEM
Convettlenc:e Mark•••
P-OSltions open 1.St. 2nd &
3t d shifh ,ln San
Clemente & Laguna
}leach. Other areas have
openings alao. No exper.
req'd. Apply at any of our stores. •Newport Blvd
Costa Mesa 642·7702
RMJ1.VH
Full time, patl time. days & PM. Active
Geriatrfc. Jle.l)ab. tfo.pt.
642-3(.10
taken for openings in Division 759.0431 FREE TO YOU: Baby kit k · is having a garage sale & 645-2200 sales & delivery in lrg 26181 2 De refrigerator/frzr, 20 tens. please give me a air hoc ey game,2Cuno bakesaleSATURDAY to ---------
sporting goods chain. o\venida Aeropuerlo TYPIST cu rt. wht. modem design home. 548·5636 wrougllt iron stands. end raise money to help buy Out Board Motor, 2H.P.
I:: x Jl er. in s k tin g. Sun Juan Capistrano Need aood typing ability. $100. 545-7913 & coffee/lb ls. Boston uniforms for the team. $5. Wrought. iron bang-'
breatcak1.Pla. coki·~egr. tlc;_. n. nX1sln&t Equal Oppor Employer • Fwnitutt 8050 rocJulkye9tr,h&*·m1~~· 89M7o·vli48ng7., Come on out & help ing flxlure t · Patio y " Go o d p a y & x I n t Late model wsbr & gas ••••••••• •••• •••••. •• •• .,. v...,, ~~~~~~~~~~ employee benefit pkg in· dry$r. SSS ea. Bltn m t 11• them. 27131 Tossamar, serving cart • Weber ben efits .. Ask tor eludes cost of living dshwsbrSBS.646·5848 STOREWIDESAI.t: us se · Mission Viejo (btwn bar·b-cuetl0.673-5848
Manager. B34'1006. 1-SECURIJY salary adjustments. If N~w & used f~, appl's, GARAGE SALE: Desks. Crown Yly & Oso. off ,
in\erested call: 549·5445. "'·-.u~ misc. Wilson 5 Bargain stools. tbls, toys, lots of Marguerite east on Lall 2 Weeks. Must aell
GUARD STATE FARM --1015 Noolr. 545 &rB14 W. 19th, original art. books, etc. Campo Moro) everythinll Tlbles, JJlli.
INSURANCE CO. ••••••••••••• .. ••••••••• CM. 642·7930&5"8·3262 Sat 9-5. 1707 Plan. Del tors, c!locti:s·,. shelves,
Fathionllland,NI 3333HylandAveCM Sur. Balboa Peninsula GARAGE -MOVING coat.racJts.spooci,·•ck~
Equal Oppor Employer PUBLIC FURNITuRE **I BUY** Point. 67S·3268 SALE Furn. hsbld items, wine racks, teu ahtpe,
Wet•kly PllY & pnid vnc. *AUCTION• Good used Furniture & toys, s,at. orur 8·5.'~l et.age:res. :,.iant 11t1ad11,
Xlnt fringe benefits. Waitress Food/CocktS~dil~ Appliances-OR 1 will 4b~dPedLE Bar sMU11 .. llxl4 I?~~k~11de 8c1rcblarde ,B. ~~fe~. ':ri•p~r~n..'~
Above uverage wages. Apply ,.n. 4P~· 1 s •T_.. 7:30PM• sell or SEU.. for You rru rug. any sm. (flJlOU ton/ us > "
Uniform & equip . Blue Beet, l0'7 iiat .Pl DffltnWelconMt MASTERS.A.UCTl.OM ~~~eu~~d l~~~:4~~·nt2 MOVING SALE: st;;;: ~:i~edA~~~\l::r~ll IN YOUR WALLET furnished. Car & phone N.a Conslsnmenu & 646-1616 & 8U·962S Barbara 'Fv 847-7670 refrig's, fum. lamps, nn· COast RWy, ViUate Fair~
req'd. Call <213) S'13·9150 Wait~s tor Btalboa cof· Stock Llquldations • • · tlquc trunk. di4hes & lots La1una Beach.
SALES • SLAP A SMILE
ON YOUR FACE
lA BULGE
TIME/LtFEt,lDRARfES forlocalappt.E.O.E. , .... , ora Min 3\l?il exp Lovely bdrtns sets. lndianCottot\Sofa&LoY• utG4FAMlLYSALE o ( o ld sti.11{. H1as1----------lillbotbfull&pnrt ---~ ~" · · ~·-. • .. ' ill ~ " ooo Spos1tJons avaU. Scc 'y--legaJ trainee Also'-D hwasbcrt·nuddlo dre111~n. cb..sls, niabt eseata-Loose P ow. Sat/Sun. 2752 San Juan Anuhelm Ave., CM. ,.,ppf'dl( l sq-ft P•le
nN, pcrmanont P/Time ~ 4 lovf~"rtltw"\" wanted. Good skills re· agea. womon. mmed. stands, hdbr'ds, mll'rors, Cbolcc colors M85 8oth Lane.Colt.a Mesa. . Sat/Sun iallday. S48•3'738 . cr~~n: cp"J;t cut pUt't Oncall~ltlonavafl.All 0 .. .. n tr• Over 18 C1ll ('()tfterd~u. bookcas~. Pu!. Lge selection perfect c:o tllflO d{;.. 111bln.a. Call Sant.a AlUl vldua whoure Qli.red.Slhr.FuUor p/\. ~·...-· · bunk bcd11, cbtn'a farops,~feetbls&fint BIG BACKYARD SALE. Con.denslna 5 br to 2 br .,wa1.,1'~r Yt4', raoaa P111chiUrtc Hosp. to~erl'61~ ml\()wto ~ 7p\n$31'8008. cablne~. tbls, lantj>s. bqmefumi&binJaatTHE Sa\/Sw> JQ!y UO. ~l hOme. f.'umllutef Bat 6 \OD,Sat.u.l.soiclafU~
50Ml. '£0~ MuW:e'l'~!!!S$$ Sec'y want~. t.cg11t exp. '!altreas·exper:d. Applj 1V'' coflOCI 4' end tbls. FVl\NlTlJRE CON1'lJ:C· T una Dr· Dana Pt dil\OUe Ml, Pl nlJqa, 21& Vt1 0.4\oa,. N.~ --.~ ~&Mi9-x..lf, • • occ:oesa.ry. 6 week 11um · 1n pcr1<>n. Bob a Family aoraa, refrltttrat9r•, TIO~t '7351 HeJI. Untl L. ~· , cenmtca. Pot4 etc. tor ~&Ml\ ,
Wom..i'nuded for G~~.L.!_ ~!...!cplac:ement. ~.:~'Rl~.Sos~~ wa~..idm-,11tov1,\0>". t1'.8C·l244 sATJISlmhm,m.AJon• :f.~·&Gr~uwich,~~tt°Wwlw~ --............... PLu:>J.OTSOti"MlSC. drll Dt lLB .La Cuesta n $100 'll hOUSJCli•ntnt • rYlco. -......ao...s Clemento • ~VI SAVI Claaalflod •<f• tell tlft Racq.Club, DelewaN llYrainths..HELJ>. ri• ' Oil Nl'.DC>wti
549-0'm .• le"~ ' Servk• Sletlon Attea· WAITRESSES' We h0ttor BofA, MC, ft mt. •mall lWm• 01 & Neml>f\ls PlMo f\ln: ll200otc1Gl'Qd C4M ,_83_29SS ______ ~ Sot-itf''1t.hlb0wtedae ) Cll.t:US TOD•Y dant, expu'd. Daf • • Exp. OnlJ·o\ltrDJL.. CHbler'• Cbec.lcs .. .-01 1~!' ... ~· Juat HJ &mllc. . • ' Sit ls Su~ .. ll\VJNE co~ colllC
o(-. &.6ol ft li • • ~ Eves. FlllU, pftime. Ap· "21» 17\hS~~~~tr·' C.i\SH. No PerletUI &Q."78.[A,'•f;ti ' TRY OliUB 'tlunf~
Jiit .. ..., e.rit supJ C)!f, AND SJ'fJ ~.Shell StaUop. 11th ft .,.-· _,~·' cbecb PLEASE! Food ''~'" ....... ~:1 ·r.~·c" FH It Sal N . M•ny ln· »TOS150.Sat.lr&ln. on· mtcnberablp-or ~ :t!~".$wr~·c!rv_t>;90rt~ " i.rvtne.,Ne. WAUHOUSIMAH l\vallablt. ltems aub.Jftt ,, "I.'•'-"! ..... -t.ercstlnl tums. Come.-ly . Blu e ahl1 ror • ott.SM.2f4Ua'"''lm:i:
I ••Liff I awa••• topnule. , ... j ·, "~' ~l ... ~_.,, twlnbedunJt,.thild..ton. bdr ma., Tiburon +I 't tout ~~'· L•1u:na ~ Sctrvkc St~\~ wanted ilO d 111 MMTMIAUCT10t4 !; 1bl>ltH)'oltr~l"1 •·~ f1im. OOJtr mlla drapes. Mab ofr. • 'J'ndltro,.•t Wi'1dlDI
Deticb: 'J'..'i F • .., :"t'..:J: " ~) Full" M.lrne. $olM 1 M•t~ "'90n ... f 20J5N tUlid c~~~. I tie.retathit fl rt.em.. ~•ion U.y Or, "" Oranad•. W&l"l\ef .. dl'M$, with vdl. 8'10 t o • ...... '.Lua·~a • ~,~! t~ '-~' DM'-..C eiipor. Wp ••lb,.~ ,fr wareh.Jll••,,~~'·' n"14.,..,.111•·,,21· • !~f: rurun1nmbt ' .• CdM.ltO.,SUG B\1$hard1FV. 009-14.,aa...; ft3S .. 9"3·mt~ .... j • .,.._, CadilladtoOO-Cart• ~ ' colhin .. \'~ i:ltt ~·rTt \'~ ~· a ... t; I'' -f(lhoee t!: .-.. --. I Wba&.emi.Mt'hd ~i1 ITIMIJUN ,.,,q 1·1j r; ·~ppl~.~c4ar~·,,liiM.:wtbieaea.ta~ttn· \1"S~i714164MH' . [~~~. )...; D&lij>.Pllfll ,,n· 3 P'aname , pull sink', MOVING! ·Sun tl·S.~2241 MlrU11 ?'11,°it~~\\!4i~(,;12 RoU 'emOUUie.~&. UIUlfls:1Hc;1w 1•'-'tl••roo, w.a s. Cou3 1··~ A=lr ' 1!'·•110 ,~ --,1, ... 111mtd.'lt!l;:5C" .~ ft>C!.k•na <'hr, 10 •Ptl bf\e, Cttann~I Rd • tblbo• A1'1)mn RAK. St.nilter _.'ita.llliCt~,-;~1;!4ui10HiEinpl;rm/( fffft.~lkb.HO~ait AMr·Lin·loe~ J!.,i-tiJLh ~• .. 1: _,..11· \1 .::&..'i;.,eo-...;,.;J:C .~~1.,f)oob. eu, •1otb St. P nln. Appl'.!, f ra, J b.Ataadat.IMwf iso<I "·Ot.1111n1IOll38~ ·· ras-; ..... , .~ .. , <I~·-.. ~-· .a.;,. • "··' 1waa.MI _~.,. Call~ .. l•UB ml3c. -~• ·..,....-~ ---~
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G1111tl fOIO'o...r• 9010 looh, Soll 9060 C~. SoAe/ Motorci;:s/ 150 .:...Fr;.;.:ld!x::.r..:.•.;:,Ju::.:tyo1..8::&•..:.1.:.:9n;..:,._ _______ --:D;.;..A;;,;;IL:;.;.Y,.;..Pl ... L ... o..,,T .... D.._..J ... J.._
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rent • 9120 Scoo ' LI-.1.--U--...... _Vi .... ..._ r-...1_ .. ,~ ............ r-lc• p-&.. •••••••••••••••••• ,.... •••••••••• ••••••••••• •• • •••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ~ .. ~ ~ ~·~· ...--... ...-u ~... • Ulr"YW
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No Otfe1' Bduaed·Wood ---------------CHALL£NGER32 ,7JVWPOPTOP 1973 BMW.R60 /S Fa~rtna. hnt,11toroge 16 &Acunoriff 9400 &AccfttoriH 9400 tre11ure C'.besl, troia 1117$, Oieael, VHF, b t dJtlon ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1\.aad.J, ph•ottr1, GI 11howel\ ped slt'er1ng, AM FM. Ser. #1211. ags, min coo · • •••••••••••••••••••••• SAVJ<;Wl'fH.
plaotl ftf' at. ftlt•c OVERLOADED II depth Cndr, sUp & more. $2,675/orfer. S4S-9S83. USED&REBUlLl' ... ., •• HU Olympk 675-8280or675·7884 Chrt1ffm Cor Co. M/C trailer. large wheel, SO. CAUF•s FOREIGN CAR PARTS
Dr. IJ.&. S4t.a098 2rail, decked, Sl75. LARGEST .-'Encines
NEW
Tw1e u~ at your home.
Guaranteed & licensed
84().37 42 847-6076 Sea R loah, $pffd & 540.4684 neetof"New" Motor '1\oansrnisslona a· ~ aofa, e•rth QYS SW 9010 0 v er head ca mp er. Home RentallJ. Over 140 IRear Ends =•~•~T~~o :t 12' J4• fo• •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• beautiful custom iot. 1973Huslcy"50. 1977modelst.ocboose .'Tires Autos for Sale
Glasapar Bowrider. Nr $800. Flexible. 648·1076 $375. from; 18'to32'. • IFenders ••••••••••••••••••••••• leftenS3D .... ·3'fOl . Wlll .. ovei lt '*' .. pt r-.. ...... new, 135 bp Evinrude, _aft_6_:00_. ______ 1 ____ 64_0._686'1 ____ 1 lnsuranceincluded /Doors ~•/
'7 CUit.om levolor'a hwllflll .... -WIWIU.DOm ' American trlr, akia & 500cc Yamaha TT. 77 Dale'sRVRentals,Inc. /Bumpers · Clcisslcs 9520
Of -1ar 1hutten. 30'X. Me•••••I• Offw>a.twe4 acces, new batt/canopy. Motorilltdlikn 9140 model. Only ridden 4 (7l4)55&:"46 · IMPORT ..................... ..
oU. Low, low price II v ... fill•c&...Ay•.+J. $2750.840-4380NB ....................... times. ---------I AUTOSUPPLY 1956 T-Blrd, P IS, P/B, a.biopbcls~ ''' -W ..,..,. 751 7119 lOlN. Manchester, auto. both tops. Recond. Harri • C!-.-1 "' rtot•-MOPED. Batavus, gd · '73 Open.road. Full cont'd. Anaheim 778 9900 ..nu. 6?"'""""' &\OeWemoWt'r,22" . IOft S ~ flY ,, .. ,11:-""' conci $300.CallShawn, 1977 Kawasaki KZ400 4,000 mt Like new. Must · --· """"'"'" sn..-... 10112 BlinbW')'. 31 O I Pacific Coosf HwY ••••••••••••••••••••••• 640·7828 Special. $650. 54.5-3973 alt sell. 848-8123 Misc yolvo parts for 544, 19$4 Morgan. custom
Wemnmster. .._.,...._.. 611-2147 ~::'!!••••••••••!!.1.~ Motorcyc19?/ 6wkdysanytimewknds Rent2l'Mini.Slps5adlts. ~~~~:;'new bum· fiberglas$ body. lo mi.
Wlact..t.-llodel J.2, 12 '73182Skylane,lilcenew. Scooters 9150 FOR IMMED. SALE A/C. generator, PS/PB. . ·. $C00.646-8045
1•ui• pump pre-lt66, YelloSV/white. 1 Owner. ••••••••••••••••••••••• RONDA CL 360 Six spd. 531·3425 Reblt ~engine, 1965, & '40 CHEVROLET Special =t~!!!'!•· cla111lc ....... ......_ _......_ Sall 9060 King equipment. Low '70 HD Sp«:>rtster. Xlnt Xlnl showroom cond. 253 SESAME St El Toro 24' transmission 675-8738 Deluxe 4 dr. All orig . ..... ---·~ .__. O lO -time. Must see. Days. cond. Rebwlt eng, trans, actual miles. Purchased x 60• '7l Bainbrid.;e 5 eves. M 0 st I y restored . ..,..,.... ' ••••••••••••••••••••• •• 549-9803, eves. 67S-6832 liemi-cbop. $1750 or make Aug '76. Luggage rack, Star Fam Prk Xlnt°I~ $ 2 5 o O I o I r . 4 l 5 ~2 Oupet, wed. rz. sq. yrd. ••••••••••••••••••••••• SOUTHWISTERM of{er.547·1845 adjustable backrest. S)5000 'TJO.Ol59 · WantAdResults 642·567 Marigold,CdU.673-0661
AllPtC>X. 120 yrda. Ru.sty •ZODI •c YACHT SALES New hangers for lease. Please call 499-1237 aft 5 • • •
browQ.613-SZQ II' Corona Airport, hurry 1976 Honda !5501-'ourSS, pm wkdys any time ,,,__ S 1 ..,.. Dod u : 1 Autot. Mew taOOAMtol. Mew 9100
Port· A-Marine Fuji 32. 3S, 45, 45 MKII only limited number still xJnt cond, custom seal, wknds ' .. N.,. a &-·~ Allge tM~n ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Expert ~ repairlna. Inflatable Boats Shark 24 Sloop $6lOO avail. 633-6817 & 544·3197 bars, sissy bar. 645-2953. · ewporter, . x ras .. * * * * * * * * * * * * • * * * * *'* * * * * * * * reuonable. al.!io buy & 29'l5College, C.M. Morgon28equipt $22.5 . •76 Honda 3SOXL st legal Must sell. 536·9533 ----:lt •
sell clocks. Peterson's m4>546-2070 Newpnrt30race $2¢,400 ~. SaJe/ '71500 Kawasaki Mack 3. xlnt cond. $800.'Yamah.i y--11-..... T-ti 9170 •I it • ~ Newport30's<2> Offer Rent 9120 needs motor work $225. MX 548 9688 ruw~, , .. ., *I •
. Wanted good used 45-60 hp Isldr30ll Loaded $31M ••••••••••••••••••••••• Or Best offer. 646·9400 125 $!50. · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,.. If • £:/•vale Party stslhng 0/Bunder$500. · Erwin32Dsleqpt $3¢.5 6AM . 2PM Mon·Sal. '72 HONDA 500/4. Excel '75 SlJrcraft tent lrlr Sip it 1* •
1\ouse plants. Sunday 337.7705 Col.34Super $32.800 •16VWCAMPER Ken. cond. With Fairing. 6, slv, sink, ice box. ,. 'i• •
lOAM, 33071 Buccaneer f'llji35 like new $55M Automatic, AM IF M Makeofr. 536-5825 Hookups. $1350. 559-1342 ,. + •
St. Dana Poinl.661·2298 CT41 Charter or S76M radio, beater & i m · '71 HarleySportster. + • Boats, Powff 9040 Fuji45 anxious Offer maculate tbruoul! Pop· Just reblt. Must sell. 1972 Kawasaki 500, hot 25' TERRY .Travel Trlr. * * • MOVING SALE 2 bwrn ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fuji45Cruise $.118M lop model with awnini: & Best offer. 548-0350 street bike, $.500, bst oCr Sips 8, refng, stv, bath, •
dressers, 1 pwr mower, 4 27' (Trojan Cruiser Charters & Slips almost every conce1va-, or trade. 631·2618 A/C, access. Xlnl cond. • dining rm chrs .• record Twinv8's,rad.,sounder 22'.!0NewportBI. ble extra available. 75 HD Sportster. Low $4200.963-2135 *
player, 1 couch, 1 book Painted, tuned. ready 673.9211 (003PPf4). mileage, xlnl cond. Motor Homes, Sole/ •
sbe1C, Span. Qns1ze $7500 AY646·9000 ONLY 56495 $2400/ofr. 499.44¢4 & RentjStorCIC)e 9160 Wantf'.d: old t~avel lrlr. •
hdboard. 636-3964 LIDO 14 962·7275 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Condition not important. :
O'KEEFE •· Merritt dbl Trailer. Extras MAR9UIS TOY OT A 5700 m1· MOTOR HOM ES Please Call 556--0477 "'" 30' S R $2,195 642·6706 MISSION VIEJO Honda 360 FOR RENT oven stv., avocado, 11lnl. ea ays 8 3l·ll80495·1210 Xlntcood. MustSee. From$l50wk.77o.0644 17' Aristocrat. sips 6, air cond. $200. Twin mal· Cal 20, immaculate with 640-4636 cond., toilet, shower,
tress $20. 962·2611 aft Demo ly Appt. 0 /8, fulJ equip. $3700. Must sell immediately! Rent 23• FIREBALL, S/C, vanity w /wash bas~n, it GREAT o•:ALS it
6pm Harrison's 642-4463askforRich 1974 VW Westphalia '75 Yamaha Enduro, loads of windows & wtr htr, furnace, refng, ,..
S R camper. Pop-lop. A/C, perfect cond, 360 mi, counterspace.645.2283 stove w/oven. Pressure 50G.\IJAl:-;·,;op c;"~ • ,. Approx. 200 yds used ea ay 32• ERICSON: Launched AM radio. Call 673.8190 never been in dirt. $569. wtr system. 5 man r ub· it FREE * ,..
c rptg, good cond. • 310 I Pacific <!st Hwy late '75; bristol cond. & wkends. Good condition. 646·6670. Motor Home Rental be!' boat, w~5 HP eng, & it wlllllllh••htllm• JI-•
avocado, $2. per yd in· Hwpt Bc:h 631-2547 nicely equipped. $2.'l,750. Honda .76 400.FOUR. 18112• to 32• sad, ~tor~ lD closet. EZ * orw .. ..,,.. .. , • ., .. it •
cldg pad. 837·7425 or &10-9-IO!leves&wknds. 8' Siesta Telescoping XI d XLNTCOND . ed. lilt hitch, hkenew. $3200 • . JI-• 675·3183 . Cab over . Gas / 1 1 o • nt con . ' . Fully self contam firm. 548-1372 * GA O£NCROV£FWY • •
Greenl[erculonloveseat. BAYLAU .... CH 66 CAL 25. Custpm Refrig. Stove, Potty, Call673·1on6 -Reserve,nowkrodr *a· ,. "' wv • " g a 11 e y. LP R. G EN. Boot Sips 4 good cond ~um mer unw n s. Jwto Sen ice, Parts ,.
x.lnt cond $125. Sliding 18' Century Lopdrake SPIN. Dingy incl 'd. Good SlloO. 842·2076. ll~~~:o~H507,5Sl. ~25 REGENCY MOTOR & Accffsorits 9400 : ~ it************ ,..
glassbathenclo:suredrs, Completely restored· cond. $7900 /or ofr. HOMERENTALS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... ~ • • · '• =>• " ""~ • Mc ·~ 8491 5-16·8000 or 5:!7 ·2297 N H bo Bl d L• A .,. ~ :r .,... . .....,. varnished deck. rails & 496·0817 -Camper. slP5 4. Fils '~ --!r.!.5 . ar r v • "" . 4/9.50xl6.5 off road tir es & * ~ t t • :.c,. !
Front throw mower & windshield. Equipped Ud 14 .1 l .1 & Ton PU. $200/bst ofr. YAMAllAJOOENDUHO **531·2503** 81ugwhls.$35ea.Toyota ,.m * ,..
s teel catcher, chain w/everyt.hing for immed o . sa1 s. ra1 er f 645·4697 Absolutely clean. S425. '77 FOUR ST AR 23', Land Cruiser 6 cyl eng, ... ~ 898-6777 a>~ d use. Beaut showpiece. cover, 1976• S2,l50 or 0 · . &t6·5961 &646-6356 .. E ,.. ,.. driven, St40. Hideabe Call for details. $4200. fer. 542·0593 Shde·ln ca~pe~ for small bunkbeds. AM/FM tape, gd. cond. Comp exhaust it~ * .-
$100, newledy recovered & 673-8834 , 'Ibo truck. 30 high, good 1974Suzuki380GT. Beaut. crse. control , A /C system & many xtra • ~F"'" : recushion . 962-7408 · 14 Lehman FG,sa1 at. cond. $300/bStofr. Steve, cond. Low miles. $490. +other xtras. pp. parts. new & u sed. ,. • 5"" -'®-,.
P• ,.....,... SALE 24 • .Fanta~y Cab in 673_1~673_1320 aft6581·6767 494·7109; 494·1535 Sl4,000.842·1818 646-1740 •* * * * * * * * * ••• * * **** * * * * * *
_., 1 Crwser, twin screws, or .... 9100 .......... .... 9800 Auto N 9IOO Sat.9-4,overl25ptants. loaded fully nauah . d N Autos.Mew 9800.btos,New 9800Autos,Mew 9100Wo1 ..... ew -.vs, .... ew s. ew
Reas Moving out or 1 • d fl b d~· Cal 24,~loade . W/ ewport ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••41:••••••········· · D CM enc ose , y r ,.e. mooring $4200 state. 161 Mesa r., · 847·8693 or 644·1700 Ext 548.668o
646-8324 531 ask for Larry
b · LAPWORTH Design CITRUS !rees ,eanng '76 Chrysler Valiant. com· Fbrgls SLOOP 24'. Race
frui t. 4 to 8 tall. pl trlr & all equipment rigged, Sips 4, O!B & cx-
S12.SO-Sl6.50. 548-2046 $r.!OO. 960-3724 tras. Recently hauled.
Stairglide Electric Chair. 251 Chris Craft Cavalier 673-3002. _______ 1 Xlnt condition. $995. co_mpletely restored '. Penguin 12· sailboaL Xlnl
673-4256. Bnstol cond. VHF & AM shape rigging & trailer.
ro yds 2 yr old off·wbt radio. Depth finder, full $JOO. 00·0154.
sculpt crpt. S2.50 yrd. canva~. $7800. 675·1552 or 646-7612, 556-0676 _552_· 7_868 _______ 1 14 ·Catamaran w /lrlr. Best offer. <New) hardwood lbl legs 91h·Ft. ding~y. Ackerman Call548·0350
"-k ts I lh ., Ack-Wa-Drnk. Bristol ---------1 w ·urac e . • ess an ' d L. ft ftting· new 12' Kile w /lrlr good cond whlse price other gd con · l 1 s, • • Swap me~t items c~lom oa~s & cover . $700/best ofr. 556·1749
•1183 with or without 4 HP _e_v_es_l_w_k_n_ds_: _____
1 Evinrude. Asking $795 ..... C 1 b' C t d MitceUClfteOUS 645-5465 ,,. o um 1a on en er,
W..ted 8081 • xlnt cond, ~ust sell
••••••••••••••••••••••• 24 SEA RAY, 71 Wkndr. S4995/0f'r. 642· SS
$CASH FOR $ loaded/m~~~~: l 5 lh • S e a S P r a Y
Good used furn/refrigs ---------1 Catamaran w/trlr. many
Freezer s & stoves 32'ChrisConnie accessories, $1150. 546-0768 twn V.S's, radio, etc. _646-_2963_· _____ _
---------i S15.500. AYS46·9000 SOL CAT 18, xlnl cond., WET DRY VACUUM & CARP ET SCRUBBER 24'SEA.R.AY manyxtras.$2000.
for CASH. 548·9490 Sundanccr brand new ____ !163_·935.5 ___ _
---------i witrlr. $26,000 + invest· SIDNEY Sabot, like new ~~-nts 8083 ed. Boat load~. free 100 cond. race rigged $450. 111n..--. gaJ of fuel. Pnced to sell. S4o.298o •
••••••••••••••••••••••• 7141833·2575 aft 7, days ---------1
Conn Min·O·Matic elec. 7 14 / 5 4 6 · ¢ 3 O O. D . 26' PEARSON. Alberg de·
organ. excellent condi· Marsellus sign, Cull keel sloop.
lion. $600, P.P. 532-1259 44' Trawler 1976 Island Scott. 494-7021; 639-5724
Premier D rum Set Gypsy. Loaded. New Venture 21,slps 4.auop-
w /Tama snre, 6 Zild e q u i P . B r i s to I . tions, trailer incld. $3500. cymbals, $550. 75lHl874, 714 /640·6758 642.0245 aftSPM 27• Cabin Cruiser for sale ---------i
Pianos & Organs 8090 or trade. 30' YAWL
••••••••••••••••••••••• 768-3674 Aft cabin, new motor.
S• B b G d p · $1,995. A y 646· 8 Y ran l;tno. 38'xl4' unfin molded---.------., Howard $1300. Npt Bch. fbrgls power boat hull, Columbia 23, very sharp,
Call 759-1111. cabin & flybridge. Deep fully equip. $6000.
112 PRICE SALE V popular design. $12,000 559·1635
AN.HUAL. or trade for smaller boat. 21.' C~pper, ~etract 'keel,
49'Hn Only 67~4 hfelines. hinged mast,
Fri/SatJuly 8-9lh. 18' ~owrlder, 165 Me'rc sail cove,r. 0 /B & trlr.
AMTIQUEPIANOS I/O. Fish/ski. Trlr. Like Mustsell. 847-6439
709S.Main,SantaAna new.$4700.988·5935 By owner, 13' Flying
836-8292 18• Tri·hull + trlr lOOhp Junior. 4 sails. racing
M O/B vt'ri & gear, $495. 12' Lehman, Organ Teacher; ploy a . ere • pwr. m xlnt cond. $325. 14' Lido,
song the first hr. No tilt. $2500. 846-6015 like new, trlr, $1150. lS'
music exp nded. My 2'' Owens Cruiser. Nds lnt'l 470, xtra race gear.
home, 646-3489. underwater brdware re· $1495. 833-5846 dys ; SporthMJ Goods 8094 pair. Bst oCr over $1600. 957-1666 eve/wknds.
•••••••••••••••••• ••••• Ph. 714-644-4545 Newport 30, IB, full race
WANTED 21' DAY CRUISER. Olds gear. outstaodiog cond. Men's single Kayak. No powered. Jacuuj pump. $22.000. 833·5846 dys;
jwik. Call 673-4281 $5.995. S40-7063,963·tl059 evs/wknds 957·1666
TY. RacAo, 18' BAY Boat 1/B. new 16' Hobie & Trailer, Uke MIA. Stweo 8098 valve job & tune-up. new. $1700. Wilh Xtras.
••••••••••••••••••••••• Ma ny xtras. $3100.,_55_1_-032.1 __ . ------•
New PIONEER Model G42-SS83 CAL 20 W trrlr. 6 hp 0 /8.
CTF0191 Stereo cassette 28' Motor Whale Boat, all VHF. 5sails, cvr, extras.
deck, Ust price $449. fiberglass, diesel motor. $4595. ~
Atlantic Music's Sale Goodcond.s42-7058 ICITE.XWCOllCL
Price $279. Atlantic '73 Rlnell 24' Sedan l450PvtPty 642-1802.
Muslc 445 E. 17th St. Cruiser, OMC, stearna----------Cost.a Mesa, Ca. room, $82SO. 673-3826
, .., 18'.0/B. Flybrtdge, 90 bp,
RCACOl.ORTV,25" .aar-COli\pl rig •Jlrlr .. Must
ly American Cablnet, sell. 1995, 5'9~238 or some work needed. f15. ~
963-1719 ~-----~~~~·
4 Channel Pocket Scan·
ner. High & low. $125. can MG-3581.
ALHAMBRA DATSUN
ANAHEIM DATSUN
ARCADIA DATSUN, INC.
WALLY TUCKER DATSUN,
IMC.
BAlDWIN OATSYN
CANOGA DATSUN
COSTA MESA DATSUN
CULVER CITY DATSUN
DOWNEY DATSUN, IMC.
ATLANTIC DATSUN
UNMISITY DATSUN
8AIOEN GROVE DATSUN
ruMOAlE DATSUN
WE DON'T HAVE A MR. F. OR A
MRS. G. BUT THE SAFEW A~
IS TO MARKEi BASKET
~· TELL A RALPHS
FRIEND
fFYbU DON'T
BUY YOUR NEW
DATSUN
FROM
D1d1 Barllo11r DATSUN
YOU MAY BE PAYING TOO MUCH!!
CHECK YOUR CLOSEST DEALER
LISTED HERE. GET THEIR PRICE IN
WRITING. THEN COME ·SEE THE VOLUME
DATSUN DEALER II
'I 111 .
'iii'-.-ll
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
'74VW .. • toted. AM/fM ,_ eAlrl CMa"-10,...... (11tllf01
"Kl•CA•"
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
FOOTHILL DATSUN, INC.
MOON DATSUN
LONG BEACH DATSUN
DOWNTOWN L.A. MOTORS
IMPERIAL DATSUN, INC.
NEWPORT DATSUN
QUALITY DATSUN IMPORT
PASADENA DATSUN
SOUTH HY DATSUN, INC.
IAIWDl IMPOITS. INC.
~ .. " .
Oii DAILY PILOT Frlday1 July I, 1977 Trwkl 9560 Autos Want•d 9 590 lt.Mtos Wanted 9590 Autot, Imported Alltot, lmpon.d Alltot ... ,.._. .... cC/. 4w....on... t u o T,,.;kl tuo ;~·;;;~;·;;;:;:;~·1:: ..... ;~:;;;~~·~~ ................................. SPECiAi. ..... ~,;;;~:;;··· .. ·;;~·~ ;:,;::. .... ,~·····;;;·;
tlJO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• or extra• S3'"'0 Call WE ••••••••••••••••••••••• . "" . YOUR DATSUM IHVE ..... TORY ............................................. .
M t.•A~oln Conhnf'nt•I. AMC·JHP '78 SUverado '4 loo. "5300. blwn &pm-9pm, 673 lMl PAID FOR OR NOT NEED " • .A.LFA ROM!O•
111mt r()nd Nc-w ur11a , #I IR C .. f. 32M 1nl, 9000 on new GM 9170 TOP DOLLAR CLE.AN SALE ORANGKCOUNTY'S
:,•4· $1 tltt 161 ot'7 WI'; OUTSEl,l. l\l.l. mowrC. XJllnt r•ba81>'l·TPvt ••••••••••••••••••••••• FOR TOP CARS USED CARS TR7 Headqllarten! fl DEALER! s-"'•S N[WPOR r o~ JSUN
Jl':ICJ> l>l!:At.ERS ply. a a t ' om an Conversion Co. sell-IAltWICK DATSUN 5 1!176 Supen.harp. Low Ail '77 modclb m i.l<>t'k r-•-~ T Dtrd. Re.toe·~. rblt IN TIU!STATE 963 2l880 or John 838-491'. In& 2 demos: 1. •77 S J C •• NOW -·•cage TR7.5 In st,.,.k, Up to $1500orr on remain lt7' DATSUN ., n « •••·au t! \.,. A Uetor. I otc 912 e.3 ....__ an uan ap..,tra.no c "LL p "PPY nw "" l g "76 od I (1806) MIHiZ%'fdJl111 HU..,l IMVINTOAY . • • cuatom .._....,v., bay win-831-1375 493.3375 .-"" some with raclory air n m c s . 71020oer
All Mo<hil1 New & U•ud iO Dal.lun Pickup w /pipe dowa, 11ucbo & many ex-540 5630 romi Pnced right. Can BEACH IMPORTS Autocpallc with air cond. ~ l.ruam11 Available ruck, & tool box•, $930. lras. Lcmt wh1base.2. '77 WE BUY • b!U' or lease, call today. &18 DOVE g'FREET (3.'59NXM). V.wdet tSJO Cotta MH• -.0188 GMC short whl base, pie. '73 Tri..-TR6 (Near MacArthur Blvd. NOW $3195
-·•••••••••••••••••••• AMC J:?i wtndows, U·bed. many CLEAN CARS .i spd. AM /FM radio. .Uamborff Road> • DOVESTRBET Ram.ciwtMb•tlh '73 Dataun P .U . Lo extraa.95'1-G57Dlr. • .. UCKS l•"'"agerack,LowmUes, NEWPORTBEACH ~ llARBOR L.VI> m1lea1e. very clean , • '" ~626HAJllOR ILVD. -• 52 0900 Near MacArthur brukeU + .,.,._.r tab c~ M•a M!l ll023 $165G. CaUM7.a71 89 Ford Van, e cyl, auto. COSTA MESA Cherey! This week only, 1 • 4&.lamborff Roada off 1.o nt J Mriee J.ev trana, perfect cond. $W95. <SerCF11377U> --------• tU-UOO
siso 541-JEEPS .. 7711 •'72 COUllU# Make offer. 645-7735 CONNELL c .A.R ounET '76 S,.TFtH ~·Spider. bought new In, ______ _ "' /\M Fl\t di d 76• l!I.~. Xlnt eond. lt75 D"T•1 .... 4wti..tDri•n 9510 CJ S'a, C J ·7 'i;, Newpaint4sUres lnFORDAM/FM 8trk, CHMOL£T CashForCers •I •. ra o, 4·sp . Hood bra, AM/Fld "'-"
-••••••••••••••••••••• C.'hero«eea, W•.:unet-r11, (7!1837V>Sl.585/offer P /S, A/C. $4000 ml. p-•..111--0ru-A Low miles. factor y slereo.968-0863 • 610WAGOM Pick UPI , up lo 11.l!UO d ts Clwhtl• c.r Co. 2828 H bo Bl d _... .---._ hard lop and ragtop. Ca n 4 peed I cond. t.e 197) CHIYY 414 count.a. s yr 50,000 mile 6"·2242 ar r v · 21.U HARBOR BLVD buy or lease. (166PQW) '76 Alfa Romeo Alfelta taspe, ~.'& rwheelS ~ 1~~
AutocnatJc, pwr atHnns warnntyg available. 54t-e0'8 1977 Chev Van ~ ton. Cfil~.~~A (Harbor & V1clona) '74 Ponclw 914 GT. Lo m1, olr, AM/FM 1age rack. Jn excellent ~us~~•!•:a:I~ c!~~y Capet...t Mtn lwc 111'74 GMC Spriftt• Stereo cass. P /8, P /S, COSTA MESA S·&pd trans, AM /FM radio. 9900ml.833-9490 condi lion!. D E M O .
other e1Ctras Super low _300_1_E_1_11t_s_·._\ Mll __ 80C_>0_1 AftH•'M, air. Like new spray roam Insulated. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR 642-0653 i.lereo. Nice car·drive it! SPYDER Red /blk lo 1 (871MXH).
1 (1Fl726&)$3,45010rrer f\lllyfitt.ed. Still on war-FORTOPUSEDCARS Can buy or lose . w p. ONLY $4"95
m1 use only 48 ,ooo Chrittt.I Ccr Co. ranty.Call67J.9149 FOREIGN. DOMESTIC WE PAY t757LJ\X) yr. old. 18000 m1 .• sterec •
tl..l64801. Trudl1 9 5 60 or CLASSICS '74 MGI GT &cass. Lug&. rack, Day1
HOW $3925 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5 49-1098 '77 Chevy Van. V-8, air, U YOW' car lb extra clean TOP DOLLAR 4-s pd, AM /FM rad to, 52S.8J02eve&S73-655Z COSTA MESA
DATSUN HAIHS 1974 GMC >/,.TOH Un3FordF2S0.4whldrv. tape, all xtras, 10 mi. seeusfirst.. FORMIFTY Low mileage and really '75Spyder Lthrlnt.SSpd, AUTOC&n'Ell Mint con d. S7 ,ooo . BAUER BUICK IMPORTS Sharp! This week only, Blauplunkt, tJm. Flaw-""·"'HARBOR BLVD. PICKUP MU.'ltSac. Rack, tool box, 64().7665 _... 1425 BakerSl., C.M. Automatic trans . air P1S. nu P/8, CB radio. . 2925 Harbor Blvd. $.!009. Custom financing less. ssooo. ~7--0212 S4M410 540.0213 540.t I Ot AM FM 67~ '6S Dodie Van, re bit 318, ~ta Mesa 979-2500 M "R9UIS MOTORS avail. <706LVR I --------• cood.111on.ing, pwr. sti:er· ·. · ~ '7 1 J-XKE2+2 19741..LFAGTV '76 8210. 2 Door. AM /FM
d •. h cptd & paneled, nu tires 28802Marguerite Pkwy. -~ lt75FORD 1ng. ra 10"' e ater. ;4 Ford Ranchero. Air, & mags. Rel. S1500/bst TOP MISSIONVIEJO Air c ond., AM /FM 2 Door.4 speed,AM/FM radio. Loml. Mintcond.
4X4 BRONCO t9tll37Z). PS/PB, radio. With shell. ofr. Call 631-3873. DOLLAR 831•2880495_1210 Stereo with tape, auto stereo. air cond. & low 842·62 71, 552 • 7181,
Tb is red beauty has $3688 Xlnt cond. $3100 or ofr. p "'JD trans . Loaded! Only miles. 149aN8V). 542~166Connie
wide. heavy duly wheels ~3213 or 833-9199 '71 Ford. Xlnt cond. rblt "" WE'LL BUY YOUR $.5295 <R007C> PRICED TO SaL <91lRTJ>. mtr. crpt'd. Ofr. Mike. FOR CLEAN '74 MG Mi..._t 91:•cH IMPORTS TOP BUYER
Nabe '75DlxLu\',AM/l"Mtape, 4972791 837-6100 USED IMPORT -r l>A See us first, & last! Top sm.Priced-$4488 rs CB. a /cond, shell, SUD· • • AUTOMOBILE .\:\1 -F!\1 radio. 4 ~pd , 848DOVESTREET dollar paidforlmports.
MIRACLEMA%0A roof, mags etc. $3200 or ;3 Ford Custom Van, PS, SHARP! Low mile:.. <Near MacArthur Blvd. COST"MES" Cadill ofr.S48·3839 PB, custom paint. new PAIDFORORNOT t:u~tnmfinancmgllvatla &JamborceRoad) ~ •
2150 Hi::.~sBioi· C.M. ac --------· int, xlnt, $4000/best ofr. CALL SALES MGR bit• t006WQI NEWPORT BEACH DATSUN
2600 H •rbor 8 1..... '76--4x4 Chev 1'1 ton '"" ~., BILLY •TES '75 Fl .. TX19 752 0900 u •u .,_.......... "" ,.. • 2845 Harbor Blvd.
i3ScoutU,37.000m1.xlnt {nstJMesJ 540-911JO :.ho rlbed, l 7 M mi, VW-PORSCHE ol ;.pd, AM /FM Stereo r~ta uesa ., .. """10 loade d . $5700. Ph '69VWBUS • N I ..... ..a: 9707 ~ m .....,...., ·~d N••w all road t1"rc• IMP Sun J uan Capistrano wi.ape. ice car-ow .....,... --------~"" · ~ ~. 55"1•"". 768-0 ""1 John ~sooor BeKt Offer ORT C "'RS be;.t ofr. 645·3007 or ""..u. ....., #" 646.5848 ~ 837-4800 493-4511 price. (470MYQ> •••••••••••••••••• .. ••• '7S 280Z, air, m a gs.
52:!·3311 '73 Toyota P .U. Locally '6S Dodge. Gd running. ALL MODELS ~..._. .:J • '73 Audi lOOSL, xlnl cond, AM /FM tape. c lean
owned . AM /FM Metal rack /Camper73Chevy8eauv1lledlx8 . . Trans p . C11r . Early 4 -dr , man ., air , $S595.832·2759or'75-0432
'67F«dlroncoCrl rad.to+extras. Gd cond. shell . Make orrer . passfamtlywindowvan, SELL idle items with a Mus tang or s imilar panasonk radio. $2SOO.
S!2CJO 833-3411 ~firm. 499.3105 536-5825 w /seals. $3200. 646-7694 Daily Pilot Classified Ad. Pickup or El Camino. 552-9377 1975 DATSUN
,.......___ u ----Under $lOOO. 646·8346, 1"6sour,.aAu oou• Evt.Ro • aRe· '73Audi 100 LS, auto. blue B2 IO FASTIACK A.tos. Mew 9100 .-.-., "ew 9800 Autos, Mew 9800 Autos. Mew 9800 Autos, Hew 9800 "IS·2991. • ~ With l d di & .,. '"9902900 '1•)>ollo!J~• :ur. AM FM stereo. sun 8 r con " ra 0 •·.:,·~······ii"················································································ •ii"ii"i• ii•·~······························································································· ----iiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiliilillliiiiiiiiiiiili roof. :<lnl cond, pp $2750 he a le r . 0 n l Y 2 8. O O O
I 646.5431 miles. t298MXEI. Sale
priced at Take the
SOUTHERN SAVINGS ROUTE
YOU ARE FREEWAY CLOSE TO 5 OUTSTANDING AUTO DEALERSHIPS
0 LOTUS • FIAT Missior\
MERCEDES BENZ .~~ts
SOUTHERN ORANGE COUMTY'S
GROWING AUl'HORIZED 28701 ~rguerite
DEALER
SHOP & COMPARE
OUR LOW LEASE RATES
~
0 BARWICK DATSUN
Parkway,
Mission Vie,o
714/831-1i40
714/495-1700
E) MISSION VIEJO IMPORTS
Q PHILLIPS BUICK, PONTIAC & OPEL
0ALLEN OLOS-CAOILLAC-GMC
8 SADDLEBACK VALLEY IMPORTS
SHOP&
COMPARE
IN
SOUTHERN
ORANGE COUNTY
SAN JUAN
CAPISTRAN!)
~FOR THE DISCRIMINATING BUYER
~ THE BMW IMMEDIAn &' 630CSi DELIVHY
IS HERE NOW! .?~,
DRIVE "THE BAVARIAN -~'---
CREAM -THE ULTIMATE ·' DRIVING MACHINE
Available with 4 speed or fully
automatic transm1ss1on. Multiple lease
& flexible P1Jrctiase plans a11a1labla
oua c~ IODY 5"0'
ISHOWO'IM
SALES-SERVICE-LEASING ..
24888ALICIAPKWY. 837 2400 L.AGUMA HILLS •
O SOUTHERH ORANGE COUHTY1S VAN
HEAD9UARTERS: ~~~;~~~
OUR SUPER SUMMER V AH SALE
IS HOW ON!!! "1' -a~<v HUGE $A VINGS '</~
OM ALL VAN CONVER SIOMS IM STOCK
'72 AUDI
Auto. 4·dr. Mint cond. Original owner. $189S.
673-7932
OMLY $3225
MAIERS
AUTO CEHTIER
1425 Baker St.. C.M.
540-9109
BMW 9712 '73 Datsun 240Z MUST
••••••••••••••••••••••• SELL MAKE OFFER.
SADDLEBACK
BMW
COMIE IN & SEE
THEALL HEW
630CSI MOW!!!
COMPLETE
BODY SHOP
MOWOPEH
SADDLEBACK
VALLEY IMPORTS
831-2040 495-4949
CREVIER
&I ST •HOAOWt.Y
SAHTA AHA
835·3171
TH£ Ul.TIM.nl 0•1v11<G IMCHINI
•USED BMW's*
'743.0CpeS/R 746LWO
'762002 4spd SIR 950NLF
673-5852 nights. 631·3S30
days.
'74 260Z 4 spd .• AM/FM,
mag whls. new eng.
$WOO. 640·6923
1976 Datsun 280Z, air,
AM /FM stereo cassette,
silver, cust int., 831·3967
'76 Dats u n B ·'2l0
Hatchback. AM /FM .
cusl paint. 4 Spd. Xlnt
cond. 768·0143
260Z. A/C, Xlnl cond.
$4300.
968.3985
1975 280Z. Xlnt cond. Nu
tJres. auto trans, c•nvas
cover. $6000/bst orr.
497 .3549 aft spm'
"12 240 z. air. AM/P'M,
mags. 4-spd. $3695. ·
9'Jl-4300 dyg. 837 ·4446 ev s.
197~ 280Z. air, mag:s.
AM /FM COSS, shade,
bra. ex. cond. $7250 ; ofr.
581).7381
'7653014.sp AlysS70PQM --------
'692002,4Sp Air. ZKG138 '75 280Z. 1mmac. cond
'73 3 0 CS Cpe. 4spd M11.5t ~II Air. AM /FM
Z20K)1T stereo tape, mags, new
Closed On S&Mdays tires & brakes. PP. Call art 6PM. 832·2759 or
ORANGE COUNTY'S 675-0432
OLDEST 1976 DATSUM
& l-210COUPE
Sales-Service-Leasing
Roy Carver.Inc.
Rolls koyce BMW
1540 Jamboree
Newport Beach 640·6444
'762002. Alr,snrf, AM-FM
ca ss. mags, sllrk.
13,000m. S7500 644-4671
4 speed, radio, heater &
In excellent condition!
tS89PKE). A reaJ sav·
mgsal
ONLY $2995
COSTA MESA
DATSUN
~KARBOR ltLVD.
540-64 '0 540.02 ll
1976 IMW 2002 '74 Gold 260Z 2+2, ;ur,
.Black cxtenor wiUt sun· AM1FM 8trk tape. Xlnl roor. AM /FM stereo. c ond. $5250. Da ys
100+ mags, low mile• 41 <213l"rnS·60S& or e ves
very clean. (950NYL) <.213)43N665
SalePrlced-$7688 1968 Datsun 1300 w/s hell,
MIRACLE MAZDA SSOO. New tires. Call aft
2150 Harbor Blvd .• C.M. 6. SS2--956S
645-5700 IP!!~ --------1nvr 9725
'74 3.0 cs. lmmac, lo m1, 4 •••••••••••••••••••••••
spd, all extras. '7S 124 SPYDER. Xtnt
714·752-8211 cond. S·spd, AM·F M cass., xtras. Bst ofr.
1970, 2800CS auto, all 548-71.50
xtras. lmmac $9750. Call --------
wk days. 640-7603. '72124 Sr<>RT
cves/wknds640.6852 Canary yettow, with
..,,.. black vinyl top. 65.000 '68 BMW -"W2, sun roor. !biles, AM/FM stereo.
cassette. 4 spd. new 5-speed. dual pipe$, dtsc
paint. bUl. must see lo brakes, mfp, xlol tires,
apprec. 6'0.5327 Must selr. '1850. CaU
'75 BMW JOSI, $9995. Top Tatnmy .t ~3811, t-la
of the line. Low ml'a. .\M. or61s.1144 4.nd leave
Priced for quick sale.,_mess __ -ie~·-----
67HS54. '7S~ 13' SPVDER 5 spd,
'14 Bavaria, btaul. car. AM/FM, :xJnt. toncl. Beal
nick, air, sunr oof , Mer.541-7129
~Uio blue. Must H ll' 1974 13' Spor\I eon'vert, 2
Askln1 $6200. Tim. tops AM/PM stereo
41M-9473or497-4012 ' 20.600 ml, xlot cond'.
Dahull · 9720 •••••••••••••••••••••••
DllYIA
Ll'm.L.
SAVE A LOT
SHOP &COMPARE
WWICkD.+.,.M
5'nJ~Cap1atraao1
831-1175 49J..3l71
rms.
1971 850 R acer , 1ood
cond. 11150. 752·5752 .
613-468Q
~.~!_~ ....... ~·.'."!f~.~ ....... ~~·.'::~ ....... ~!·.·~~ ....... ~·~!·.'~~~.~ ....... ~.~!·.I.~~....... Fr1d!y,Ju!y8.1971 DAILY PILOT DJ3 ~ ............ !?.~! ~.~., .. !?.~~ ~ .............. !?.~~ ~~-~~ .......... !?.~~ !~'!':!'! .......... !?.6070 0V0o1tsw.,. 9770 ~.1!':~••••••• ~~·.~~~~•••••••••••• ~~·.~~~••••••••••• .....•...........••••
.... Mew •77 tm Mercedca ~n• ~ '11J Mli Convt1rt1bh: w1lb l'on.cho '75 014 2 o New 'l'H 1 HY75 11ooo 1111 ~;ii . Vol•o 9772 CociHac 991 S Cod111ac 991 5 tlA..,..D• Carl ••d•n Red w1111r ., lwrdto11 $4$00 cn11. Api>'!ar. airp. t'act runty. "~1,~·M t.iiw l'I' Uave~ Hug oued:s new •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
"'-'" A 11ler.o radio, t <')'I. 1<:11 C'all W 21181 m11g1 Xlnt cond. Lots of ~I Ph979 l586 home 1972 Super Beetle, , . MANY ~I cond
613
6.11
7
xtru. '7000 Call 833·08S9 ---dnlt:ond. 661·0429 75 Volvo .s1w. A1olung 75 C11d1ll11'' Coupe de '76 CPE DE VILLE
8
ownr MGI 9744 af\5 Voluw-9770 $MOO. Avail SUnday 12-6 Ville. fo'ully Loaded. low Lorntll':> 640 b.\51
TeC ..... ..,.._, Y ••••••••••••••••••••••• ------__ _ ••••••• ;;.;:••••••••••• 1970 Volkswagen, radio & al 13712 Andele Way. mlles, beauuJul. $6500. ---UNIVERSITY MBZ ••· 22011• • Dr. 1971 MCHGT W Poncbe, llOQ. Super. hunsr, aaiun1 Sl3$0 Irvine. <The Racquel Brown w/ be1ae Vlll)'l '77 SEVILLE
•-1 , _ ..... "'"' •, .......... A"-'~ ...... 1t ...... o. Lib new lhruodt. $34SO. lW SALE!!! 49M7'7l Club) top. Pri.Party.871-'7075 2300ma 64<>-64S.t 0..•illle MUw, JI n CCJ<RI• e1,vuv _.. '""roo "'"' -·~•---_...::._ ___ :__ __ _ nu .->«> Ph l3IJ o:uc. or 1111.1a'klin• urk lrt!cn _.. • .._ Have An Extellcnt "65. VW Bic, xlnt condl· l9'73 Volvo H2. Beaut. 1970 Cad Cd. v. Vinyl top. --.118 ;;1 Dorado __ _ ....... c... • GMC ,.., .. · ..... , EIMnu nntah h I • I .. Sele r or vw t th l ""
T
_._• .,........, _. ,m11aw \'tllf<>< ow •Ponc .. 911S ... c ion 10!1, ruou . see to cond. Auto & air. factorx air. P/S, P/B. Loaded radiuls ·$.\SO
,_
11
rn.lleil. (2254»8) C Huses &Campers believe $975. 846·2380 494-1109; "94·153.S 6-way P /Seu ls, gold 494.2130 ' · 11!0Harbol'Bl~d ;5 ~£L. 1Uvtt 1r11, MOWS24'7 ~ llLLY.a.T11.S ---l th it ood1--------a.ta1i1_. ~ 16.000 m•, 1U11 root. fully '78 Me~edes-llenztrade A 5 VW BaJa Bug. Rblt 1300. '68 Volvo SlaUoo Wagon. eadler1 n eraor. g &oJdedMJ.9171 llACH IMP,OITS lo and Uke new! All the VW..PORSCHE l''ull Sunroof. gd cond. Orig owner. Automatic. ra a t ares . 72.ooo 1974 CA.DILL.AC
ii lrwl\ CllflC:, AM t•'M Ml OOV~STRE£1' factory ac<:essorles and Son Juan Caplslranu ~. Ph~2924 Xlntcood. sisoo. eu-3353 original miles. Sl800. COUPE DEVILLE
<Nur M•cArthur Blvd low. low miles. Not our 837-4800 493-451 1 87M5M <Fullerton). With lull power. Ono t~ auu 20000+ rnl W MBZ250SE Cpe Xtrt
'Int cond 13100 o~i.i < loun, t'I« 1unroof, nww
MT-alO'I alUP~t bcka, Juattuned Wooden
~Jamboree !Wad) line ot car and mu.5t sell "G9 FASTBACK 1 ownr. '63VOLVO 122S owner car in superb con
NEWPORTBEACU or lease 1mmed1ately 197lVWIUG Rads, AM /FM. rebJt. MAKEOFFER d1t1on. <834KLI>. Mu1tl
752..0toO (Ser 1027). 4 speed trans. A nicl', tr~'..!1250· 644-&39__ &U--0986 see to appreciate!
nil'ecar! (486HEVJ. '75 SCIROCCO 35K m 1, Allfos.UMCI SADDLEIACK
inter. Eve~ & Wknda Ul
..,,. Ovk' Hat.dlbarlt, Xlnt t¥J._75_11 __ _
c«ld 8100.
,.,~ '69 Z80 SE. A J<:, P/W,
41,000 oric m t, CLASSY
CAR ~-4468
MGISPICIALS
Oct your MGB Specials
while they la.st and selec-
ll on is 1ood . Free AM /FM Stereo 8trlt, lugg
rack, wheel trim ring
and special st.nplng. Call
for deulls on our unique
OMLY $1995 AM /F M 8 trk. Pvt. Pty. ••••••••••••••••••••••• VAi.UY IMPORTS
. MARQUIS TOYOTA SJl.60. Eves 1•73S-6922 Gwral . 990 I Sl 1-2040 495-4949
'72HO~DA COUPE
Estellent coadltlon sn ~ M 8. 2200 '13. suclt, Mir,
S7~. 646-0246 days. ~ 9710 67S.S466eves •••••••••••••••••••••••
7Z·JAGUAI XJ6
HOU<;(' of Imports ....... "' ............... .
• I/ • •• • ,1 I..>
MISSIONVlEJO '70 BUG. Xlnt cond. •••••••••••••••••••••••
831-2810 495· 12 IO Porsche seals, low mi. llUCKUM
1974VWIUG
4 speed. radio & heater
Low mUeage &extra, ex·
tra clean! (988KLJ).
Moving. Best o tr . 1.9'15 SVt, white w/saddie
644-1389 interior, AM/FM at.eroo,
,67 VWIUG air, full pwr, orig.
·73 El Dorado, vinyl top.
AC, fully equip 'd good
eond, $3500. 644--09&S
"13 El Dorado. Lo m.I. Ask-
ing Low BJue Bk. $3900.
IW-9534 aft 5PM MA~lng.
~
* 76 PORSCHE •
TUUOC.Alll.ERA
Cstm m ulti pur pose
radio, aunr oof, a now
white, ebony black in·
terior. Only 11,745 miles.
Expresses pride or
ownerstup~Ser 0064 >
OMLY $2795
ma.ouals. Must seU, clue
Excellent condition t.o relocation. S8500. or
$l5() 499·2765 bst offer lakes t h is
'71 VW Cam""r. Almost wk/end 540-1515 eltt 242. "12 El Dorado. Beautiful! ..-Coco w/tan int. Ask
new cond. Xtras. AMC 9905 $3'150. Call 835-2806 PP
1"6!>0UH• 8A(A90Ull11AAO •BAU
/1~1900 ·1•~· D'B.l:'IWAMCE
626 W.17lh St.
Ca II 5't5-0684 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • °"" tlle Oellr Piiot _., telle Camoro 9 9 17
2845JIARBOR BLVD 1970 VW Bug. Good cond. Pacer X only l3,000 ml llOU~r•-111,ourlocal •••••••••••••••••••••••
COSTA MESA
DATSUN
'71 GT. AM·FM cass
stereu. nu t 1rt's Must
'l.'e !lb2 3032 CVll, 5't6·2693 dys
S.S7·92SO 540-6410540-0213 Trans OH & new tires Auto, iur, stereo, P/S, ~•Y-~491r Sl250 &+1-2679 P B. tit whl, elc. P /P. · . !l634133 art 5PM 1'1J"lf"'lj
1975 Camaro. ~ilver.
rnlll'Y whls. high mill-....
Best orrcr .4!).1 8230 Ask for Ron
54 JAG XK140
Original radng model
complt>tly n•sturl·ol 111
side & out. Nl'W engml'
700 m1l~s. n~w tran-.
owners manual. :.t!r' tl·t:
papers. etc 1NFR7891
LEASE
USED
MBZ
'74 450 SL
·~ Porsche JS6C; comp.
Opel 9746 restored. Red sedan.
1!)00 VW Fastback Good Wck---9910 c·ond1t1on. Call aft 5 P.M. ••••••••••• ••••••••• Autos .... w 557.7337 <Kim> • •• '" 9100Autos,H•w 9800
•••••••• •••••••• •••• ••• Must sell $.S200. 542-2738• 1970 BUICK ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
Only $7989
MOTORCARS
D'EUGAHCE
626 W 17lh. SA
517-9250
9732 .•••...............•••.
• 75 Jensen Healy
SSpd,(20903) !>ll'rco,
17,800 ma, dream (.'ar.
buy or lease, s.5995.
Copeland Jeep City
:?001 E. Lst, SA 5.'>8·t!UOO
Karmann Ghia 9735 .•••.....••.......•...•
1961 Karmann Ghm Fully
reCOfl(11l1ont'd in & oul
Excellent. $1600 !'>-lti~IJ:!I
Mazda 9738 .......................
miracle
mazda
2150 Harbor llYd.
Cosftl Mesa 64 5-5 700
·73 Opel HallYl' 2 dr. 4 :.pd. '63 3568. Ol'W p.Hnt. reblt
.ilr I'\ I ply ~llWO eng ver)' clean $4900.
557·8862 552.0522
Lo miles 1Ser06471 Pantera 9747 '66 912 Porsche, runs xlnt,
'75 450 SE ••••••••••••••••••••••• look.s even beller, elec.
~let Silvcl' <Ser !12561 '74 L. Mmt White. rarely sunroof, n ew tires, •75 450 SH. driven. $lli.OOO brakes. clutch & shocks 70 VW S..51 4();V4 Approx 10.000 mi on S9UARE8AC K
to:lt•c. sunroof, Bluct 81uc -974-8 rnbllCO" ''al18am·Spm, ''lllA 9 3 . Llhr (Se 6085) p ot .... ,, " u 2 . Sl 00. Sharp' r ~ 645·3351 afl. S pm. !>1821!!1;
1972 VW 4 12
STATIONWAGON
Aulomallc lran~. one
owner & low mileage.
U99LVHI.
OMLY $2695
MARQUIS VOLVO
MJSSION VIEJO
831-2880 495-1210
SKYLARK
VII, automatic. pwr.
~leenng & brake..,, lilt
wheel. radio & vinyl roof.
(J8701U).
HOW $1 225
NABERS
AUTO CENTER
1425 Bakt•r Sl , C.M.
540-9 109 '73 450 SL ••••••••••••••••••••••• 556-7123 .tsk for Mark '66Bug
Slvrtblk, low m1 <Ser • PEUGEOT * $.520() B.iJa Bug Zt'n1th l'arb '76 Sk h k s
3867) · •unrf. Xlnt •·on·'. "··.·tor Clean makcorrer Y aw .• porty. Like All models now a va1lable ------~ ~ u &.><:"' ,..,., "'8 new 25M 22 '75 450 SL · "68 "l2 Cou ew hl fer 548 "'"""'? ""°·1.-... -ma mpg. including 6045 & 1>1esels. " pc, n w ......,.. S3000. Call 646-2414
S1lver1Red. like new Alsoafew '76s lcftatd1s· w/blk, recent eng over , . l!J&I VW Bus. Lo ma re· ----(Ser2392) counlpnt·e!> haul, xlnt lhruout. 6li\'W.clciln.mu!>l,,et:lo 1Ju1ll engine. $600 1973 Bwck Estate Wag.
'76 280 c BEACH IMPORTS ~11>cst492-4306 apµrcc. $7115. 646~s . Full pwr + ~ t rack
Paskl Rluel llluc, 1-'tid 848 DOVE STREET :.3fi 6347 , AM /FM,. Orig. own.
warr. (331PQI > <Ne.ir :\latArthur Blvd Rofls Roye• 9756 "70 VW t:amJ>l'r. 11op lop, Iii! VW Bug, clean, nu S2SOO. 645-5089 paml. reblt eng .. $1.lSO ----
Many More &Jamboree Road) ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1:r~4l t:und 1 m.rn rhlt Phone aft er ~ r M CLASSI C '6·l Electra
To Choose From NEWPOHT BEACH "1 DEALER IN U.S.A l·ni:. lent inc S:! .oo 675 SlSO Sedan w10.!000 m1. Orin.
BUY OR LEASE 752 0900 ~ 9:177 ., -'8 ~tonth BanJc -m ROY . ownr .. giving up cream· • ii \ W .11r. low m1 new puff Lt> move to Florida.
i-·manctng Avail OAI..: ·P~t w~ R CARVER n \ w Pop Top Cam1x·r tire~ lo.Int mcth cond. SllKX>. 64-$-2'742or644·7882
213.921.assa . hkl' new. tully equipped 51450 557.4165 714 /523·72.50 76 l'cugeol a11on r ROU S·ROYCE. Sharp! 8--16-26:17 '72 L s Economy. luxury, utility 1s..oJ~mborn -E ABRE Cust. Cpe . all in one rar. Uoder H<PwPOrtBuc" i4gldSuprBeellelom1 1957VWBUG Ong. ownr. moving to
1960 MIZ I 90SL 12.000 miles. can finance \'----' M0-4444 Snrf AM ' FM ::.l<'r Ilk~ nu t"all Peter &15 0045 t1orida. A super t:ar al
CONVERTIBLE or lease Call for details CLOSED SUNDAYS I' I' 646-1441 tHfi;691:J S1850. &14·2742 or 644-7882 }Yttb 4 speed trans M u~t (Ser 1381) - -76', Ltd edataon Sc1rocco see! (017725). r 'WK I A ~ 1 fl 77 \V(•stphalaa camper s 11 c k . a Ir. !!It ere 0 '74 Regal. 1 owner. 39,000 NOW$5997 H J \j~JlJ "' FM !!.Irk Bought <·asset le. & xtra~ m1, air, stereo, llll wh.I,
•E.a.CHIMPORTS "' J new 1n Feb a ... 1 ofr tii3~ elecwindows.4S5engine.
HOWARDChevn>lett
~ New •77 Monte Carlo!
MOW
ONLY
No. 484550/0744
s5395
at
HOWARD Chevroletl .
~ Molor riar Co 673 2934 --Beaut cond. Pvt. $3780. 1975 MAZDA 848 DOVE STREET \....:o . · · -67 VW Squareba~k. reblt Ph 646-9273 eves1wknds.
RX4 WA.GOH (Near MacArthur Blvd. R IL R & Be ll '65 VW Bug Mags tires eng, body & paint good. ----11 .. .-...;;
&JamboreeRoad) Ponc:M 9750 sa~e:&s~~~fce . n ey A:\1FMl!trk.B~t~fr.aft SSOO/bstofr.768·3699 '72 Buick Electra. ~~~~~~co:nacdrl~a~ w~:~ NEWPORT BEACH ••••••••••••••••••••••• • "63 CLOUD Ill tUl!P! 570'J or 963·2991 Volvo 9772 ~~~~$2~~500C~r "1;~t/~lr~~
only :rn,ooo miles. 752-0900 PORSCHE 924S Con,ersaon.Gd.cond. •70VW ••••••••••••••••••••••• 979-65-$3
ISW!'IONI. Mercedes 72. 350.450 SL. We have an exrellenl 7SSS;l:~~~~/7~~~~tM 2 Dr 1580BXD I, 1m ORANGECOUHTY
OHL Y $2295 Uttle use. lo mi, musl be selection plus Lhe (714) 631-05'45 maculalc. Sl495. VOLVO
MARQUIS TOYOTA ::.een lo apprrr Tradr. Champ1onsh1p t:d1t1on - ---CoP91and Jeep City E.\CLUSIVELY VOLVO
'HSSl0'.:11 VIEJO 7M""99-:1700 NOW!!! COMCAMMOM'S 2001 E lsl. SA sss-8000 1..Jrge~t Volvo Dealer
-83 1-2880_495_-1210 76 Mercedes4sosr.. Milan llLL YATES HOISH.ESS morangeCounty' "f17 VW Reblt eng, immac BUY or LEASE
J971 l\la.tda 1i16. IGOut•c ~rownlbamboo._ sunroof. VW.PORSCHE STAILES insade&out. Sl300. UIRECT
piston cn1<:. new hrb, stereo, 12·000 mi, Sl8.000 San Juan Capistrano Brokers of fine conlcm Call &t 1-1841
n<'cd;, minor body wk, lmmac. P vt ~ty 581 1065 837-4800 493.45 I I porury
xlnl tran-.p t:ar. S6Sll '69 280 SL Metulli<· ----ROLUiHOYO;
Fir':°. \lu ~t Sell'' 1:oldchoc. It.hr 4 Spd •PORSCHE911S lH:NTLEY II:.>~ Outstanding. 675 0451 COUPE automobile.,
73 RX:!. :m .. clean, good .59 M BZ~80--A 4 Dr .,_... 7<1 Mercedes· Benz trade :.'7 11 E C1>asl llv.)
nd 0 II .;x.-u in. Thia one shows pn'de _ 1714)675--0930_
<'0 • pen, must sr . XJnt rond. ~ or b!lt Call 642 0522 olr. Call 549 0109. or ownership All the fac· Soab 97 60 tory accessories. Priced •••••••••••••••••••••••
Merudn len1 97 40 "62 M BZ 220 to sell TODAY' Call for
••••••••••••••••••••••• Allorpurts more info r mation •SUB •
ORANGE COUNTY'S
It] SAAB DEALER I
For Sales & Service
'76 MIZ 450SEL $350/bstorr. 548-7500 (907KJV>
l.u11ury equipped Strreo 71280$ sunroor air white
cassette. sunr oo r . on bl~ck. gr~al ~hapc.
leather ml_erior & low orrer. 673-5957 males. ln mant cond1t1on ! ------
House of Imports ·••t .... ,, "'''•• , .......... ,.
J •; .,.. • '1• J\\ BEACH IMPORTS
848DOVESTREET
<Near Mat'Arthur ntvd.
& Jamboree Road)
NEWPORT BEACH
752-0900
<086RCQ ). Good sclec
lion of oth('r MBZ11 in ..
MISSION VIEJO 1"1POllf S .. '· -....... . ,. ... ~ -..... ·-..
831 1148 49.S-110•
LecrH
Mew•UNd
OVER 100
MERCEDES
OH DISPLAY
ttomr...1of lmoorts
A zto
• ERCEDES DEALER
6862 Manchester.
Buena Park
523-7250
On the Santa Ana Fwv
1972Ml1250
COU PE . Luxury
equlpoed with low mile1
& is In excellent coodi·
lion. ("9GWG>. Good
scledioo of other M BZs
' ...
Ml~qoN \/II JO IMPOllfS
' ... . . .
8 J llr•IB 4951704
~ffiffiialn
·J:.) ,_,
'7.7DEMO
450 SEL:
~vet, low miles. low prtee, ctll ror q uote.
(~)
'75 Ml'l 450SEL
Silver exterior, f.unrOj)r.
stereo cassette. leather
interi or & luxury
equipped. Immaculate!
(679~11N). Good selcc·
lion or olher M BZs an
stork.
MISSION VlfJO IMPOAfS .. ' .. . .. -. . . .. .
8311148 49Sl70J ----
1967 Porsct.. 912
4 speed with brown ex-
terior. Super c lean !
(982JTK>. s• Pric.d-$5688
h41RACLJ MAZDA
2150 Harbor Blvd., C.M.
645·5700
--------Subaru •••••••••••••••••••••••
Hew '77 Subaru
FllHA.11
CONDITJONtNG (6531)
·12-914-t.7, Orange & 80USED&MEW
black. AM /FM radio,
xlntcond.673·6230 \.~~£Wio0,A MG 9742 -------r u
••• .. •••••••••••••••••• 00 911E Targa, sharp, like Q,ri110 ;;;;,'U 1977 MG new. all xtras asking S. 'iiill u~ :'\
MIDGETS ~ C!ll_Dan, 645-7498 (J1'flf MtJt.f."'-~
NMO: .. in fstock Buyd your • 72 Porsche 914 Ht 5 So. Street
•-et romusan your 1295GWD> Black on 11111 H M74111141sz1.1J11
ToMeau cover 1s FREK black. ~lcreo. 45,600 __
Call ror details about our miles. mant condition. i6 SUBARU s spd .. A c.
un ique MAGIC PLAN buy or lease, $3995. AM/FM 1ilereo, 33mpg.
fin ancing. Copet!ftd Jeep City $2995. 642-4994 aft 6PM
_. ._. .J ' 2001 E Isl. SA 558-8000 ---MUST SELL '77 Subaru
• '76 Por.iche 914 2.0 Xlnl 1600 St.a .. Win •-whl drv,
cond., very low ml., 4-spd. Safari packaae.
, .. sou,,.._A 11CM.•v•110• t11u many extras. 552-7422 A/C. 50,000 mi wrnly.
'''-"1'11>1900 •1,lott4.-1 Eves 8,000on 1t. 675-8643
"7:! \'W Xlnl . I uwnr
Kon1,,. \1u:h '. \M FM
-.lNl'll lape 19~ 892:! & n:n IHI
P('Oplc v. ho need Pt!ople
That's what the
DAIT.Y PILOT
Sl::R VICE ouu.:cTO It y
is all about!
'63 Vol\o wa1ion 818
Huns Xlnt. Ong English
rack Needs body work.
SOOOAft. 4 PM.1-649·29:17
9800 Autos, Hew 9100 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Air
Conditioning
or your
Down Payment
(maximum $429)
when you buy any
new 1977 Mercury
MONARCH COMET
BOBCAT
or CAPRI
Make your best deal
73 Century hardtop, xlnl
cond. 1 owner
675·3583 ----
CodiUoc 9915 ......•........•...•.•.
Nabers
Cadillac
ii
SUMMER
SALE
o,_. County''
S.•W. Cttder
•
1976 CADILLAC
ELDORADO
Full pow('r, le:ither in-
terior. Cabriolet top,
AM/FM stereo w1lh tape
player & low mileage.
Outstanding condil1on.
(550RKQ).
$9788
1975 CADILLAC
COUPE DEVILLE
Cabriolet lop, AM /f:t1
stereo multiplex. cruise
control, leather mlenor,
full power assists, etc.
(Ql45868).
$6688
•
1974 CADILLAC
COUPE DEVILLE
Full power assists,
leather interior, AM/FM
stereo with tape player &
Olbriolet top. (130KRL).
$5988
•
1973 C.AOtUAC
ELDORADO
Stereo mullplex with 8
track tape, Ml leather
Interior, vinyl lop &l
ma n .1 de l uice ex-traa.<11.0BOI).
$4988
tt73 CA.Olu.:AC
COUPI OIVILLI
Crwae control, atereo
tntlltiplH, • 6 Wll)' powtt ant. Ml power, o~. etc. {IAL(;A),
$4688
• New '77 Malibu!
No . 489093/0811
•
JOHNSON & SON HAS A CAR FOR YOU I •
1972 LINCOLN
4 Door Sedan Black with matching 1nter1or
and vinyl rool lull POwPr ot course air
cond11toning and m0<e. many moles of gOOCI
lransPOrtahon at a IOw pflce Loe U33EHP
s2495oo
1972 MERCURY
Marou•'> 4 Door Sedan FJJI POWPr comlorr
IOunge ~IS. radio. air COlld1t1on1nq vinyl
root. au1omatte 1ransm1ss1on. price<' so low Lie 11179ESO
s 1599°0
1972 FORD
Country S(luire Wagon N ice wagon with
oower ~leering & oower brakes radio air
condohonono. real ni<:e tor those weftkf'nd trips. ltc. #242ELU
2626 Harbor Blvd .
All Cars Plus Tax & Lie
All Car« Sub1ect It> P11or Sal<>
1975 MONARCH
Beaultlul green metalhc with Whtie intenor &
marcnong vonvl root. air cond1t10111ng. power
.,1ee11ng & pawer brakes. radio. automatic
transmo~ A teal Jewel Loe. J48tPEV
s4395oo
1974 FORD
Torino Couoe Sr.aro and clean wf'ute wtlrt
black vinyl root & 1n tPr1or automatic
tran~m1ss1on. pow1>r brakes. oower steering
radio aor condohOning Lu: #635LAK
s2995oo
1974 LINCOLN
Conltnental 4 Door Sedan Solt t>eige with
leather tnlenor and brOWfl vonyf roof full
oower of course. stf'reo a11 COl'ld1tt0nong a
Qrf!at family car. an oul,land1ng buy Loe
1666KJC
1972 T-BIRD
Only 29.000 miles. a teal eye cald>er. oower steering & power brakes. air cond1t1onin9
radio. aulomatiC 1ransmisst0n. vinyl rool. neat
& clean Lie. a533DZK
1972 FORD
Pinto Beige wotrt matching 1nre11or. 41 cyl c
speecl radio. •~ss than 40.000 miles L•c
•0 61010
1975 COMET
~ Ooor Sedan A utomatic transmtSSoOn POWe1'
~t11e111>9 radio aor co11d11ton1ng. white with ii
~addle ran interior. priced lo sell U c
•187MXG
O RANGE COUNTY'S OLDEST LINCOLN· MERCURY DEALERSHIP
.JOHNSON a SON
LINCOLN MERCURY
COUGAR CAPRI
197 4 LINCOLN
Continental Coooe. Medium Beige et1arlor.
with dar1c brown vinyl roor. encl b<own leather
tnlarlOf. lull poww. air condiCoonong. stereo .
sooect oonlrot. tilt wheel. & more. See 11 now.
Loe. 110761<.EK
s4995oo
1973 DODGE
Polara 4 Door Sedan. Medium brown metallic;.
with gold oo4ored cloth Interior. oower brakes.
power &teenng. air conditioning. radio.
automatte transmission. ideal lamity &«tan
Pnoed to go. ~c. t663RDK
s2 I 9500
1974 FORD
• Door ~n Nice 9011 yellow, with green
• inter'?' l(ld 1rinvt root. power st~ng & ~
brakes. air cond1tlon1ng, radt0. automatic
transmiSSIOn. lie. •78&KYI
Costa Mesa • 540-5630
AutcK. Used Autos. Us.d Autos, Used Aaltes, Us~ Autot. U1•d Autos, Uted Autos, Used Alltos, UMd Autos. Used ...................... ·····•·•·············· ............................................................................................................................................................... .
Ct.vroa.t 9920 Chevrolet 9920 Continental 9930 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
Cougar 9933 Ford 9940 Ford 9940 Mi.st.c) 9952 PlyMouth 9960 rd tt70 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
1974CHEVY
IMPALA SEDAM
Automatic. radio .
heater. air cond., pwr.
Steering & brakes. vinyl
top & low mileage.
<343SPH). Wholesale
bluebook is $232.5; our
pricebalso
ONLY $2325
MARQUIS VOLVO
MISSION vtEJO
831-2880 495-1210
1974CHEVY
CAPRICE COUPE
Hardtop. Automatic.
pwr. steering-brakes·
door locks & windows,
air cond.. Ult wheel &
vinyl roof. (720JOS).
Priced to s ell at
OMLY $3025
MAIERS
AUTOCEHTER
t42S Baker St .. C.M.
540-9109
73 COHTIHEHT AL
MARJCIV
Si l v er Edition. Fully
equipped including mag
wheels . .J)nly 40,000
miles. <slfMPS).
SADDLEIACK
VALLEY IMPORTS
831 -2040 495.4949
1974 MERCURY '67 Country Sq Sl Wg. Ex 75 Musta~g It Ghia, •73 Ply Cuda '74THUNDERBIRD
COUGAR '73 Gran Torino, 8 pass, rond, A IC.PtB.PtS. new lo~ded, miot cood. Lo (J.83418) v-! automatic, Got Everyth i n g.
auto. air, PS. r;ick. Xlnl ttres. s.595. 673·0.107 rru, 17K, 2 car owner. · d I u Perfect! $4995/bsl orr. Automatic. rad 1 o . cond. S!<ISO. !H5.9203 sac. at 13595• 642-SS05; au-con .• mags, om es. 494-8555 heater. pwr. steering· Uncotn 9945 49C..so5S 2;yr. warranty available.---------~~;~rE;~~· ~~J~sl:fe '74 Mustang 11• V-&. auto ........................ 1974 Mustang II, 2+2 ~:,!c=;·Clty 1~i=r
bluebook is $2975; our p S I p B' 8 I r • r 8 d Io. PLUSH PLUSH PLUSH fastback. xlnl cond. Stick 2001 E 1st SA 558-8000 Sl500 492·8191
price is also !m·S6lS, 673-lOIJB 1976 Lincoln Mark IV. shift, $24-00 or bsl ofr. ---·-""· -----•---------OHL y $2975 75Granada. 18k mi. Choe Creamy yellow. majestic 67J.8167 '64 Valiant 4 dr, like new. 1976 T· Bird. Load ed .
bm. Loaded. Xlnl cond. velour Int, moon roof, ~--L.j•-Great mi. Must see to ap-17,GOOml. Sl.000. MARQUIS VOLVO Must sell. 963-4994 AM/FM Lape, all xtras . ...,___"" 9'55 prec. 675-8710 556-3131
1S60 Valiant, 4 dr.
SlOOasis. ecJ11 9974
MISSION VIEJO 11 000 ml. 640-4910 ••••••••••••••••••••••• orv~ 9932 831-2880 495-12 I 0 '75 FORD ELITE ' '74 Olds 98 Luxury Cpe.
••••••••••••••••••••••• -----------Automatic. rull power, Manrid& 9947 Lille New. 29,000 mi. Lots 540-1672 ..................... .
"87 PLYKOunl. A/C, gd, VEGA 76
cond. Runs greaL $SSO. H4TCHIACICGT
---------I 975 COUGAR XR7 air cond., AM /FM stereo ~··•••••••••••••••••••• ot xtras. $C19S. Pvt ply. •76ELCAMINO '63 Chevy Nova, wagon. CORVETTES HasP,C?weropUons&alr lape, lilt, c ruise, vinyl 73 MAVERICK. 4 dr. CallAMorevea64.2--3984
Classie<438296) loa~d Good trans. car. '.°'lew conditioning. (759NRX>. top,specaaldecorlt:other Sedan,autotrans,lomt ..
675-9697 PP DEMO. 5 speed trans .•
, no air co n d .• et c. ~ nym. Fury. Wag. ,.50 (S:illi/3532), Wu $3'195.
with equipment, steer· brnkes.5484116.$290. CHOICEOF 12 Must see! Special this extras.!272MMO>. new tires. Gd. cond. '70 Olds Delta 88. • dr,
tng, llUlomatic, air, '74 Malibu Sta. Wgn. A/C 1961THRU1977 weekend only al ~W ~!625 :1::;~· 646·9076 aC ::',.~·M~t '!t·a!:'i~'i.
radials, toneau cover, PIS P/B. 2 sealer lug 4 speeds&Automallcs S4288 HAl'""S EvescaJl551·0997 or best offer. Muat Sell. OHL y $3lfl 'T.l • ll8, 4 dr loaded, xlnt p /S. p /B, runs well. W
cond. $2195. PP. 642-1855, 494-83Slaft5:30. HO ARD Chinrolet
2Yr unlimiled mileage rack. Xlnt cond. dean . OrGMJt County's AUTO CENTER '73 Maverick, 6 cyl. 4
warranty available. buy $!000. 548-8618 ~st & Finest Nabers 1425.Baker St., C.M. dr, A/C, nu paint, gd
or lease. $449S. r -•-,ji-540.9109 cond., $1600. 54().4684 Cap1lancl Jeep City ·~ Corvair Monza coupe. _...-. ....
2001 E. lst,SA 558-8000 Comp. restored. Entire t:ZWFELNL~~IENG Cad1·11ac . car like new ! Asking ..,.,,,.,
61 Corvair, must sell by $1695. 645·5465 CORVETTES
lhe 10th , needs body •7SMONZALIKENEW HOWARDCh4t'lrolet
work. 177 E. 22nd St. Apt Twn cpe. 17,000 ml. xlnt. Dove & Quail Streets
_1_1._C_M_._963-0537 ______ • cond. Bestorr. 751-6892 NEWPORT BEACH
2600 H.irbor Blvd.
Cm ta Mcs.i 540.9100
Wanted, Corvair eng .. 64 "72 NOVA V-8 Arr P /B 1 ___ 8_3_3_-0_· _5_5_5 __ t
qr ~ater, nmn.Lng oc not. P /S. A t e.' AM '1 FM: 1976 Corvette-In bea.utiful Doclp 99J5 2076 $1950. 645·5512. condition & with low •••••••••••••••••••••••
'6' Corvair. 140 bp. Looks miles. Pwr. windows, •DODGE CHARGH
aew ioaid,tout. R \lns 'T1 ~m El Camino, cstm man, stereo, air cond. & SE. $4995. aooct. $1950. Ph 968·4647 pa a Al, mags, aunrf . pin 7striping. (452SWT>. ''18Mercedet·Belll'trade· _ 2Dr Che p rf...,., loaded w/xtras, assume For sale·Hltin& $7995. lb and 1 i k e new .
""" d ·E lvy. erf ~~ Sl60mo.ooly96M7SOPP Con.FollLeaslng.Call eon . ng tie pe ect . 645-1661
Dll/otr. 880-2319 eo..tiMfltal 99301---------1
Don't .nve up the ship! ••••••••-••••••••••••• 1973 COlVmE
"1.isti''. it in classified. 1973 Mark IV. All blk. A While/black interior . .,~hip to abore results! real beauty. $4950. 1\lll power, automatic,
"2-5678. "'3-U53aft.6. stereo & in MJNT condl· --;;;;;;~~:;;;::;:;::::~;:;======~1 Uon! (1'9JQG ). Priced thl.t Wffkfnd •l
·~ " Mr•, , t )~. ~ 11 (' '..,, •1 ,., • •
~ I I ' •I"\ .J
.. ..,., .. .,. of 1n1u11rts
• ~ I •
-------
9-4.644-7250eveslwknd1. POlltioc: 996S Dove&QuaUSt.s. NEWPORT SEACH p/s, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 113-0555
'74 Ventura. P/8, P/S.1---------
1973CHEVY
VEGAWAGOM
Automatic, radio, beater ctc mag w h ee l s.
•
For Making Us THE # 1 SELUNG NEW CAR DEALER In The
Los Angeles Zone for OLDSMOBILE DIYISIOll
-We Wa_, I~ Become The #1 SELLING OLDSMOBILE DEALER For USED CARSll
GAS SAVING Economy Specials
'72 .
'73
•75 .
'75
• Automatic. radio. heater. air cond.
& ful:l e rack. (471FWV)
DAT COUPE .c speed. radio. heater & vinyl toP.
(088HOB)
C EYYVEGAGTWAGON
4 speed, radio. heater & rallye
heels. C217MYA)
H NDA HATC .. ACK
4 sbeed. radio. heater & low
miles. (147PUV)
HOMDA H4TC .. ACI
4 speed. rldio. heater. (272MXBJ
LUXURY CARS . T • I ?JOI.DI ----• 1 COUN Alt· _..r. ••nrf rop. AM~!'
........ ·--·-'"'' -C41fFWV~
$1744
'Ur.taCUaY
A .......... ~.JI COl'ld
r;;~.....,·-
S.1744
Wllll l(JMlo(. "" coacl. ,,.,.,. IOP. AM/l'M 11....., II 1.--.-· ............ ft-& ·~-J346MCO. $3477
72CHIYY .. ALICOIO'f. "uto,,.1110. lllr cond • Dwr 1rurln~ .& bfakea. toll10 &
llM1er. CM3MWN>.
SA.VE
'74..acua't
WOMTleOMl ""~WM lop. R&H, l'.8.. A
.... _ ....... (IOIQf) -
. $2244
TRADE-INS
WELCOMED
HIGH ALLOWANCES PAIDllll
WALKING MAN SPECIALS
Take Your Choice
'71 PONTIAC
LEMANS
Air conditioning. R&H. automatic.
(269EAB)
"69 OLDS CUTLASS
COUPE
Air condillon1ng, R&H. automatic.
(348MMD)
'73 MAZDA
COUPE
Automatic. radio. heater. (269LXH)
'70 CHEV.
IMPALA COUPE
r Air conditioning, R&H. automatic.
(192AVA)
'72 IUICK
4DOOR
Air conditioning, full power. R&H.
au1omatic. (909EOO)
'72 CHEV.
CAPRICE COUPE
Air conditioning, full pcwer1 RIH,
automatic. (022FCI)
'71 PONTIAC
-GRANDVILLE
Air conditioning. full pawer. R&H.
a4tomatic. (176CXVl
.5944 51144
PLUS T...i( I ucacSe PLUS TAX & ~l<;:ajSE
NOTE: ALL PRICES ARE
PLUS TAX A LICENSE
17 4 FORD l/4 TON RANGER
Automatic, air cond .. pwr.
steering & dual gas tanks.
(71034U)
1 7 4 CHEVY PICKUP
Automatic. radio. heeter & air
cond. (192833)
SAYE
•7 6 CHEVY EL CAMINO CUSTOM
Automatic. air cond .• pwr.
steering & brakes. hit wheel.
radio. heater & steel belted
radials. (1A82392) s4444
?irSc~~ng~~~~ERO SAYE automatic. white spoke
wheel s. custom paint.
('458184)
HUGE
SAYINGS
"7J POttD WAGOH T~.3-.f/lra.ld.P S. PB. R&H.roof _...
Wlloles• •••••••• $2000
Ret.U •••••.•••••• $1350
-.74 0U>S
CUTUSS SftEMf
• Door. """" llOD. .. a.Id. --11-"'0'.,........,,.,' -·· (OOllJPO WltoletCIM •••••••• $2725 ............... : .• SJ?25
?4 CHl'IY
CAHICI COUPE AlrCOftd..~---·-
OOl'lllOI. -· ---lodoa. C41WV!I ' Wholetale •••••••• $3150
• ................. $4350
. SALE PRICE
s1144
SALE PRICE
·:
DJ8 DAJL v ll"tLOT
WE'RE LOADED W /
177 CORDOBAS •••
73 FORD MUSTAMG
V-8. automatic. air conditioning. power
steering. PoWer brakes. radio. heater.
whitewall tires. vinyl roof. -buci<et seats.
4 cylinder. 4 speed. radio. heater.
bucket seafs. (324E,TL)
console. (062MCEl
s2395 s795
•75 POKTlAC ASTRE 71 DODGE POL.AU
4 cylinder. 4 speed. radio. heater. V-8. automatic. air conditioning. ,power
whitewall tires. vinyl roof. (734LXG) steering. ~ brakes. racho. neater. whitewall tires. 0170UOJ
$1695 s995
161 OLDSMOllU '76 CHIYSLIA COIDOVA
V-8. automatic. air conditioning. power V-8. eutomatk:. air condlt!Qnlng. power
steering, power brakes. radio, heater. steering. pawer brakes. power windows.
Whitewall tires. (862ELU) radio. heater. leather. vinyl roof.
l872PNV)
.$ cylinder. automatic. radio. heater
whitewall tires. bucket seats. (190KLH)
s1795
'6t MERCUIY MAR9UIS
V-8. automatic. alr conditioning. power
steering, PQWer brakes. power windows.
power seats. nldio. heater. vinyl roof. tilt
wheel. (VPZ906)
s995
'75 PLYMOUTH V AUAHT e cylinder. eut~lc. air conditlonl~.
power steef1~. r lo. heater, Whitewall
tires. (031 N )
•74 AMC AMIASSADOR
V-8. automatic. air conditioning. power
steering. pcwer brakes. power windows.
AM radio with tape, heater. whitewall
tires. vinyl roof. tilt wheel. cruise
control. (900JSI) .$2395
'77 PLYMOUTH AIRY SAi.OH
V-8. automatic. air conditioning,
steering. power brakes. power windows.
AM /FM radio. heater. Ser.
#RH41-J7A139543
s5195
'76 PLYMOUTH AllY
V-8, automatic. air conditioning.
steering, pC>Wer brakes. radio. heater.
vinyl roof. (341PWMl
CLOSEOUT
·sALENOW!
225 CID 6 cylinder engine, man'ual
transmission. bench seat, bumper
guards front & rear. Ser.
l!HL29C1BZ79244 •
'73 IUICK CIHTUIY
• #
V-8. autoTStic. air conditioning. power
steering. power brakes. redto. tieater •
whitewall tires. vinyl roof. tilt wheel.
(269HOO) . s1995
70 FOID GAL.AXIi 500
V-8. automatic. air conditioning, pcwer
steering, l)OW9C' bra1(es. r8dlo. heater.
whitewall tires. vlnyt roof. (9078FE)
s1095
'69 PLYMOUTH ROADIUHMBt
V-8, automatic. air conditioning. poMf
steering. power brakes. radio. heater.
vinyl roof, bucket seats. console. (XYC748)
,
IUter aoon t
N .Y.S&oeks
VOL. 70, NO. 189, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JULY 8, 1977
•
1PriceS Take Dip; Unemploynient Ris
I 'WASRrNGTON <AP) -
'tDolesale prices feU sJx.tenths
ot one pveent In June. the bit·
1•t drop in nearly four years,
t.be 1cmm1ment reported today.
B"t thesood news was offset by a
tiae in the unemploymet1t rate h'om s.tpercenl lo 7. l percent.
A bll drop in farm prices led t.M price decline last month. an
lndiA:atlon or an easing of inlla·
tll>nary pi'essures at the
whol .. ale level.
Wboleule prtcea 1enerally ·
presaee prices consumers pay '
and the effects ol last month's
decline could first show up at
supermarket counters following
several months of rapidly ritin,
food prices.
Julius Shi.skin, commissioner
of labor statistics. said the in-
crease in unemployment "can't
be consldered a very serious ad-
verse sign for the future.·'
He a lso told the Joint
Economic Committee that the
drop in wholesale prices is "a
long way from a new pattern."
But he agreed with Sen.
William Proxmire (0· Wis.), that
recent drops in retail sales and in
the index of leading indicators,
coupled with increased un-
employment, "may be the begin·
nlng of some serious trouble that
O.tly l"llet ......_ lty Rkll.lrd ll_.er
NEWPORT BEACH FIREMEN RESCUE ERIN BEACHAM FROM ATTIC CONFINEMENT
Victim Spent More Th•n EJght Hou,. In 1QO.degree HHt Thursday
I I , r
I
I Newport Citizen Caught in Crawl Space
B y JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of I ... O•ilf ltllet ll•n
A 24-year-old Newport Beach
an is recovering from minor in·.
uries today after being trapped
or more than eight hours in a
eiling crawl space in tem·
eratures firemen said reached
ore than lOOdegrees.
9:30 p.m. Thursday by Ciremen
who were called to his home at
7404 W. Ocean Front by friends
who had worked unsuccessfully
at freeing him for more than an
hour and a half.
Fire department spo~sman
Art Morton said Bercham
climbed Into bis attic at about
12 :30 p.m. to do some work on a I Erin Bercham was pulled from
be enclosed attic area at about
10,000 May Get
•
Tax Refunds in BB
'An estimated 10,000 Hunt·
iigton Beach property owners
can expect to receive property
transfer tax refunds lf an Orange
.Ci>uniy Superior Court ruling is-
$ued Thursday survives expeet-
ed appellate court action.
Judge Walter Smith ruled
acainst the city in a lawsuit filed
t.Wo years ago by Orin Berae Jr.
df-:1W71 Sims St., who paid his
d'foperty transfer tax under pro-
~ after buying an apartment
complex.
r Ber1e challenged the tax lpi· eo-ed by the city .la Auautt, lt14, .t od whi~h was re.,,alt:d ~Y
J"oCers in the following May. ~e artued that the $900,000 col· ~ed by the city via property
·~ensffr taxes to that nine-month
~··
&unnY Siturday ~ept
cloudy at bea~hea momtna
boura. LoWs tonight 55 to
e@, Hiiha Saturday lD Up+
per' 90I at beaches to 70. ln·
lend.
period should be refunded.
The tax rejected by the voters
compelled Huntington Beach
residents selling or transferring
real property to pay the city
one-half of coe percent of the sel-
1 n g prlce or market value,
w hichever figure was the
greater.
Berge argued in bis lawsuit
that the tax was a subterfuge by
the city to escape the $1 per $100 of assessed valuation property
tax limit ln the city charter. Judge
Smith agreed.
City officials estimated that
about S,000 property transfers or
sales were taxed in the nine
months the levy was imposed
with most of the buyers and
sellers lnVolved splitting the tax
imposed.
light fixture that hangs over his
kitchen sink.
Bercham became wedged into
the crawl space apparently
because he had loaded tools into
his pockets.
At about 6 p.m . Bercham's
girlfriend. Penny Arthur, came
over for a visit and spent nearly
an hour trying t.o find him.
She told firemen she could hear
his faint cries an<l his pounding
on the walls, but she couldn't
figure out where the noise was
coming from.
When Miss Arthur did locale
him. she C"alled a friend, Mark
Anderson, and they tried to slide
Bercahm out of his trap by cover·
ing him with dishwashing liquid.
Morton said Anderson and
Miss Arthur punched some holes,
in the ceiling near Bercham's
face so he could get air. They
used one for a straw to provide
him with water.
At 8:30 p.m., they gave up their
efforts and called firemen.
Morton said seven firemen
from the city ball station under
command of Capt. Jerry Strom
worked for more than 45 minutes
before they were able to peel the
wood and plaster o(f the walls
a nd ceiling and free the trapped
tnan.
Morton said Bercbam ap·
oanmtly suffered onlv a few
minor cuts and bruJses in tbe or·
deal.
will have to be watched closely."
The increase in the jobless rate
was the first in four months, as
the number of Americans
without jobs itl June rose by
210,000 to 7 million. Most or the
increase occurred among adult
women, whose jobless rate rose
from 6.6 to 7.2 percent.
The price news was certain to
cheer the Carter administration,
which has been deeply worried
over price reports in previous
months that showed inflation in-
creasini at a worrisome 10 per·
cent annual rate during the first
quarter.
However, the turnaround in tbe
unemployment rate could be a
disturbing sign !or the long rwi.
Administration officials have
cautioned that unemployment
might increase in some months
but are predicting the jobless
rate will decline to.about 6.5 per·
cent by the year's end.
Nol ail the job report was bad.
Employment continued to in·
crease last month. rising by
270,000 lo a total of 90. 7 million.
Employment grew by 2.9 million
over the past eight months as the
economy continued to expand.
However, there was also a
large gain in the size of the labor
(See ECONOMY, Page AZ)
Property Tax
Tritns Studied.
. By ROBERT BARKER
Ol 1111 Oa;ly l"llot SIAll
Officials in Huntington Beach
and Fountain Valley are taking a
new look today at trimming city
property lax rates after getting
assessed valuation figures that
show sharp Increases in taxable
wealth in their communities.
Huntington Beach received an
increase of 21.1 percent while Fountain Valley had its valuation
jump 21 .9 percent. (Related
story Page A3.)
While both cities plan tax rate
cuts. it seemed almost certain
that the property owner still will
pay more taxes becaose of the
added valuation.
The exact amounts were not
known today. Official tax rates
will be set in August.
Huntington Beach's current
tax rate is $1.62 per $100 assessed
valu~tion. lf lfle citv were to
ralH only lfie 1&nle 'amount ot
revenue that it did last year, the
tax' ratewotlfd 6e ~ $1.35, ac·
cordlngtoa city official.
However, officials don't expect
more than a 10-cent cut on the tax
rate on a budget of $30.9 million.
A 15 percent increase in as-
sessed valuation already had
been projected into the 1977·78
budget.
Councilwoman Harriett
Wieder is one or those spearhead·
ing the fight to return all money
over the 15 percent valuation
mark to taxpayers.
"There are no ifs. ands or
buts," she said. "We should do
this."
Fountain Valley Comptroller
Howard Stephens said the as·
sessed valuation figures came in
somewhat higher than expected
for his city.
He said that it appears that a
new tax rate of $1.12 would be
sufficient to raise revenues to
meet the budget or $2, 798,484.
Last year's lax rate was $1.21.
It was cut 22 cents from the pre·
vious year.
A Fount.Un Valley official who
asked not to be quoted lly name
said "odds were very good" that 1
the tax rate would be cut to the-'
$1.12 mark. 1 Stephens said the only in·
creases in taxes were due lo the
consumer price index and the
cost of provident services for
residents.
He srud figures OD what the
new tax rate would be if it met
only last year's costs were not
available.
lflinutenaan Halted
Rockwell Layoffs
Seen in Anaheim
Rockwell International will lay
off 700 more employes from its
Anaheim plant because of a halt
in producUon of the Minuteman 3 ml~slle.
The (U'St notices will be sent
out later this month, officials
said Thursday, in t he wake of an
order from the D~fense depart·
ment to halt production by the
end of September.
Other Stories
Additional stories from the
Huntington Beach-Fountain
Valley area appear today on
PageA8.
Meanwhlile, some 3,000 former •
Rockwell employes already have •
applied for un employment
benefits from the state, officials I reported.
A spokeswoman for the slate
Employm ent Development
Department CEDD> said
Rockwell applications were be·
ing processed in groups of about
15 to speed up the process.
About 8,000 workers were lrud
off by the company when PJ'esi·
dent Carter decided against pro-
duction of the B·l bomber.
One employe decided this week
to take advantage of the com·
pany's special job relocation pro-
(See ROCKWELL, Page AU
How Coast Areas Fare
Figures Given /or Aaseased J/ tduation Hika
City
Costa Mesa
Foun\illin Valley
Huntington Beach
Irvine
Laguna Beach
Newport Beach
San Clemente •
San Juan Capistrano
Seal Beach
Unincorp. Total
Orange County Total
Dlatnc:t
Fountain Valley
Huntington Beach
Ocean View
Seal Beach
W~tminster
CITIES
Dollar
1976-1977 1977-19'78 Increase
$377,912,180 445,376,470 67,.464,290
204,873,010 249,754,330 44,881,320
637,799,695 799,952,900 142,153,205
385,3)3,630 498,159,180 112,955,SSO
131,S9'7 ,570 160,83e,410 29,238,840
618,104,626 ~419,317 130,314,691
~,m.100 154,388,010 28,888,220
71,244,440 92,897,190 21,652,750 132,866,600 151,118,630 18,252,030 .
$1, 149,353,345 1.4~.314,620 279,961,255
$8.183,998,341 9,198,732.~ 1,813,733,681
EL~ENTARY SCHOOL DISTRICTS
Dollar
1.-rMt78 Increase
191,780,405 146,421,600 48,663,195
288,749,190 321,380,670 54,631,.-0
$13,T88,080 38914SO~ 76,714,800
100,527,240 106,588,190 8,060,950
2&1;991,806 272,?20,87S 38,129,068
VMnEDSClfOOL Dl8TlUCl'S
Jtn·m •
SS2,0 $,310
m.~.•
a.1,211,100 1.m,tu ,m .
Last Yr•. ·
Percent P ercent
Increase Increase
17.8 20.9
21.9 28.1
21.6 23.8
29.3 21.2
22.2 23.9 19.2 22.6
23.0 . 23.5
30.3 24.S
13 .7 31.9
24.3 20.! 19.7 18.7
P eccept
lacrea.se
24.6
20.5
24.1
8.0
16.6
Percent
IDcreue
28.1
3S.1
218.I
19.0
26.7
. .
% DAil Y PILOT H /F 177
NBC Defense Due
' cottsboro' Prosecution Rests
WINCJIESTt~K 'l'l'nn IAl'I
A fle r cm Otl(lti.al hut t·1111fuiwd
tntamony by th1· 1 h11'f 'kllt1t'i.'
aaalru.t lht' S<-otuboro lioy•. 111t
torn<'\/' r4'"1lt'<l h1·r l'8M.' lodu> 111 ..i
$6 m1il10t1 hh..•l \u1t '*"1dm1l NH<.'
The network planned w cull
t WO main WllOC!lb lHI John
McGreevy. ~ho wrote lht' 1n11>t
for the televuuon movie ••Judl(r
Horton and lht• St•otl!!buru
Boy~."andDr l>unT Curter, a
h11>tory profe~i.or from l':mory
University 1n All<inl..t who ad
"1sed NBC on the mov1t.'
NBC ls fighting the suit filed b>
V1ctona Price Strt>t.'t. now lhe
70-year-old wife of ct Tennessee
tobacco farmer She contends
that lhe network invaded her
prn acy and hbt>led her in the
movie by suggesting that she hed
1n thtSeottlboroeaae.
B1tck 1n the 193011, throueh ,
thnc trhal•. Mr11 Price tesUfied
thol •he and a comparuon were
nip •d by nine blacks as thoy
hatched a ride aboard a freight
train from Chattanooga, Tenn .
to Huntlvlllt. Ala.
·'When they stopped the train. J
w aa 1Ull laying down," she said
Thursday. "One of them was in
there and Ruby was in there and
they woJ<e me up and helped me
get my clothes on "
Mns. Street said she was bleed·
mg from the head and other parts
of her body.
.. And I've got the scars to
proove It from where those black
boys cut me," she said, pointing
excitedly to her chest, her arm.
her face and her back.
35 Others Injured
Teen Boy Crushed
In Chase of Bulh
PAMPLONA. Spain (AP> --
Oozens of men c:hased by fighting
bulls in this city's annual festival
1ammed up at the entrance to a
bull ring today, trampling each
other and being trampled by the
half-ton animals. A teenager was
nushed lo death under the pileup
and 35 men were injured
Authorities said the dead boy,
Jose Joaquin Esparza. 17, a
promising amateur soccer player
from Pamplona, triggered the
pileup when he tripped and fell al
the narrow gate lo the bull ring.
One after another , about 50
men running ahead of the six
charging bulls fell atop Esparza.
rhe bulls then plowed into the
mass ofhumanily, treadingon the
fallen runners for about rive
minutes befort• heading into the
ring
The scn•aming ml•n. many
~overcd with blood. lay wnthmg
.rn the ground until ambulances
arrived.
f'ront Page A l
ROCKWELL
gram. and by the end or the day,
was on another firm's payroll.
Company officials hope this is
an indication their relocation
program will find JObs for at
least half of those laid off when
lhe Bl program was canceled
Jack Hefley, a spokes man for
the firm's B·l d1vis1on. said that
1,200 of the 2,700 B· l workers
already laid off have gone
through briefings about the •
-;alary and benefits due them.
about how to write resumes and
about inter viewing for new posi-
lions.
Hefley said that employe pro-
files will be catalogued by next
week, and will be made available
lo other Rockwell div1s1ons and
to 150 companies thut have con·
tacted Rockwell for cmployc in,.,
formation.
"We're estimating there are
quite a few openings for our
skilled people and we feel we can
relocate up to 50 percent of our
people," Hefley said.
All of the company's divisions
have stopped advertislng for new
employes. he said.
Meanwhile. U.S. Sen . Alan
Cranston <D·Cahf. >. plans to ex-
plore what can be done ror the
laid off workers m a meeUng to-
day with government officials
and Rockwell representatives
from the firm 's Palmdale as-
sembly plant and El Segundo
headquarters.
Richard Silberman, state
~ecretary of Business and
Transportation, said "we are
more interested in work than in
aid." but indicated officials will
look at city. county and state
~ources or funding to supplement
what may be obtained from the
rederal government.
ORANG! COAST Mi i'
DAILY PILOT
Doctors said Esparza was
crushed to death.
It was the second day of the an-
nual running of the bulls festival.
Esparza was the first fatality
in the bull running since 1975,
when a bricklayer was killed and
20 men hurt in another pileup at
the entrance to the arena.
There will be six more rWlS in
the week-long festival. over a
900-yard course from the corrals
through the streets of the arena.
Police estimated that 1,200 run·
ners, an unusually large number,
took part today.
Hotel and bar workers halted a
strike just before the festival
began. A spokesman for the
strikers said the walkout, called
to protest the firing of 70 fellow
workers, might resume after the
heavy spenders leave town.
There were also street fights on
opening day between Basque na-
tionalists and anti -political
hohdayers shouting "Festival -
Yes! Politics -No!"
Boy Seriously
Injured in
Rock Battle
A 9-year-old Westminster boy
was listed in stable condilton to-
day after suffering injuries m a
rock fight with another
youngster.
Detectives are inves tigating
the incident.
Surgery was performed on the
victim, Kevin Cody, for removal
of his spleen, according to police
orricers.
Police Officer Mike Proctor
said the injury occurred July 5 in
a field near a construction site
near Iowa Street.
Proctor said the injured youth
was apparently throwing rocks
tn the air and one struck the other
boy, 10.
The 10-year-old, according to
Proctor, then struck Kevin in the
stomach with a large piece of
aspbalt.
He was taken to Westminster
Community Hospital. The inci-
dent wasn't reported to police for
several days.
F,.._PageAJ
TAX •••
trict next Wednesday.
A ~.S million state allocation
recently authorized for the dis-
trict by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr ..
is expected to cut the estimated
87.1 cent tax rate to 11bout 80
cents ..
But Thompson was not. that en•
thusi~ijc about cutting more
from the lax rate.
• 'I }lave not computed what. the
additional increase in property
t~ funds will mean to the dis-
trict," be said. "Actually, 1 won't receive the official (a.asessed
valuation) figures from~· coUn·
ty until Mond1u•.''
He said it wol.lld be u-p to the
board of trustees to detlde what
the final tax rate will be, "but
any incre-. will have CO go tnto
building the reserve fund."
Tl)ompaon said the dl11trfct cur·
rently holds reaerHs of $1.7
million. or about five percent ot
tbt district'• budget. Re added \bet be feels comfortable with a ~O percent l'e9eJ"Ve acec>ua.t.
Doctors at the original trial
said they saw no signs of blood on
either women.
Nine blacks were convicted of
rape and spent a total of 130
years in prison before they were
pardoned or paroled. They con-
tended they bad been railroaded
ln a racially troubled at-
mosphere.
"tf they'd been a bunch of
white boys, I'd have done the
s ame thing," Mrs. Street
testified Thursday. "It wasn't
because of color that I charged.
Because there's as good colored
folks as there are white folk."
Under cross-examination,
Mrs. Street said some scenes
from the movies were inaccurate
and others were "bold-faced
hes."
&,.WI ........
She also denied testimony from
transcripts of the original trials
haU a dozen times, saying at one
point she may have been con-
fused.
.. It all happened so long ago."
she explained.
GERALD AND CAROL SCHUBRING SURVEY WRECKAGE OF THEIR HOME IN IUJNOIS
Vendela 'Ceme to Deatroy, end Boy, They Dtd • Beeutlfut Job,' Saye Owner
Mrs. Street said she saw the
mm when it was first shown on
television in April 1976.
"It just tore me up," she said.
"The worst part of it was that
they said it was all lies, and I
knew that just wasn't so."
Vandals Destroy Home
Her sister-in-law, Lois Price.
tater testified that the s how had
been traumatic for the elderly
woman, who had told the six
jurors earlier she just wanted to
forget the whole thing.
Illinois Camping Couple Return t~ Chaos
"She is afraid to go out," said
Mrs. Price. "She has lost con·
f1dence in the people she loves.
She was even afraid that her
whole family was going to turn
against her."
PROSPECT HElGHTS. 111.
<AP> -Gerald Schubring and
his family, back from a camping
trip, pushed open their front door
in this comfortable suburb and
rell horror: vandals had kicked
through eight walls, slashed
furniture, strewn food about -
and stolen almost nothing.
Riding IDgh
Amin Ortkrs Tiro Linws?
STUTTGART. Wes t Germany (AP) -The
Daimler Benz motor company says its dealer in
Uganda has ordered two Mercedes 600 limousines.
one of the world's most expensive cars. and the
newspaper Bild Zeitung said they :.ire for Pres\dent
Jdi Amin.
"We don't know who they are for." said a com-
pany spokesman. "but you'd be surprised to know
how many people apparently can afford a 600."
However, the spokesman denied the newspaper's
report that the cars were to be armor-plated and
equipped with extra-strong air conditioning and
direct communications to Amin's palace guard.
The company said the 600 model is made only to
order and about SO are sold annually at prices of up to
SS2.000, depending on the extra equipment. Users
have included Pope Paul VI, President Tito of
Yugoslavia and Mao Tse-tung.
•
Escaped Mom, Girl
Surrender to FBI
WASHINGTON CAP) -A Tex·
as jail escapee surrendered to
the FBI in Washington today, ac-
companied by the 9-year-old
daughter who earlier spent her
savings to ask President Carter
forbelp. An FBl s pokesman said
Patricia Gale Boake surrendered
about 11 a.m. at FBI head-
quarters, accompanied by three
of her daughters. One of them
was Sandy Chandler. who in ear-
ly June made the fruitless trek to
the While House.
handed over to federal marshals.
the spokesman said . He said he
assumed her daughters would
accompany her.
Mrs. Boake began serving a
three-year sentence for bond·
jumping. In June, Sandy
withdrew her savings and came
to Washington, saying she want·
ed Pres1dent Carter's help in get-
ting her mother out of jail.
"But it was all a waste." she
said at the lime. "The only
person I did not see was the
President. He was too busy play-
ing tennis."
Schubring's stunned wire Carol
sized ltup:
"They came to destroy, and
boy, they did a beautiful job. Two
tape recorders and a clock radio
are the only things missing.
•'There was total destruction
everywhere and all I could do
was scream, "Oh, My God!" she
said.
"Steaks, roasts, a gallon of
sourdough starter and other food
was thrown all over the place.
·'Two glass chandeliers were
smashed as if they were swing-
ing on them. They poured liquid
detergent on our bed and poured
oil inside and out of our 1976 auto
parked in the garage. They put
Kitty Litter on our dining room
table.
"They look aJl our slides and
dumped them all over the place.
ripped up our projector screen,
knocked in the television picture
tube and completely dismantled
our eight-track tape player.
"The hedge clippers were
lodged in the ceiling of the family
room and a knife was stuck inthe
wall. One hole ln a wall upstairs
was big enough to walk through.
.. They covered the family
room wall wtlh eggs and
Vaseline. They s mashed mirror
tiles on the wall and punctured
holes in family portraits, includ-
ing a photograph of my 9-year-
old daughter who died three
years ago."
Gerald Schubring is a 39-year-
Service Held
For General
A private family funeral was
held today for Maj. Gen. Edward
A. Wilcox, commander of the lsl
Marine Division who died of a
heart attack at Camp Pendleton
Tuesday.
The cremated remains were
sc attered at sea from the
destroyer escort Meyerkork.
Memorial services for Wilcox,
53, are scheduled Sunday in the
base chapel, a Marine Corps
spokesman said
Sumvors include bis widow,
Dorothy, living in Long Beach,
and their four children.
old computer analyst. His wife
Carol is 36. They have four
children and their home is a
seven-room dwelling in this
quiet. affluent suburb northwest
of Chicago.
Police 82'.Y the neighborhood's
homes are worth an average of
$90.000 to $100,000.
"I don't know who would do
this," said Schubring. "It's clear
that it was just malicious van-
dalism."
But police say more may be in-
volved. They want to know if any
one harbored a grudge against the
Schubrings.
The community is a quiet sub-
urb or 15,000, which has seen
some minor vandalism lately -
broken windows, paint smeared
on walls, the kind of thing many
communities experience. But
police say they have rarely seen
anything like that what happened
lo the Schubrings last weekend.
Schubring and his family have
moved out for now, and are put
ling up in a motel. But be says he
i! determined to rebuild.
"We've lived here for six -
years," he said. ''We 're not go~
ing to be scared away by kids." ':
Workers OK
~ew Contract
With County
A new two-year contract cover-
ing about 8,200 Orange County
employes won the approval of
workers in votes cast Thursday.
About one-third of the eligible
members of the Orange County
Employes Association turned out
for lhe vote, OCEA Associalion
Manager John Sawyer said.
I f approved by county
supervisors Tuesday. the con·
tract will give most workers pay
increases of 5.85 percent the first
year and S.S percent the second,
along with increases in health in-
surance benefits, Sawyer said.
Members or the OCEA general
unit and supervisory manage-
ment unit voted 1,2SO to 379 in
favor of the contract. Two weeks after Sandy at-
tempted to see the President.
Mrs. Boake escaped from the
Fort Worth, Tex., Correctional
Institute, a minimum security
faclllty.
The FBI spokesman said Mrs.
Boake called earlier and told the
FBI lo expect her. It's Your Dolt&;E!
Mrs. Boake was to be taken to
the District of Columbia jail and
Autopsy Set
For ·Drowned
V8lley·Baby
QUITE OFTEN A CUSTOMER IS CONFUSED
WHEN SHOPPING FOR CARPETING. HE ASSUMES
THAT IF A CARPET PILE IS HEAVY ANO THICK
THE CARPET IS NECESSARILY OF GOOD
QUALITY. '
,
NOT TRUE! MORE OFTEN THE QUALITY OF
TH~ FIBER. ANO NOT THE QUANTITY. IS THE
DETERMINING FACTOR WHICH CONTROLS WEAR
AND PERFORMANCE.
IT'S YOUR MONEY --SO. WHEN BUYING
YOUR CARPETING. MAKE SURE YOU ARE
DEALING WITH AN ESTASLtSt:fEO MILL, ANO
EQUALLY AS IMPORTANT, A EtEPUTABLE
DEALER.
Irvine
EDITION
~
Today's £1oslag J
N.Y.Stoeks
VOL. 70, NO. 189,' SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A FRIDAY, JULY 8, 19n
!SB ·College Valuation Soars
By WILLIAM SCHREIBE R
Of .. 0..1' Pli.1 ilatl
The 27.5 percent lncrewse in
S1ddleback C91lege property
valuation this year meuns
tnaslees couJd cut the tax rate by
about 20 cents and still raise the
same amount or money as they
did last year.
District offic1aJs view such a
move as unlikely, however, in
light of the district's continuing
* * *
11truacele to finance new construe·
lion to meet growth.
It is also improbable because
of a new state law that put a hd
on college district tax rates,
permitting them to be lowered
and frozen but not increased
agam without a vote of the elec·
tor ate.
District Business Manager
Roy Barletta had predicted a
valuallon increase of 18 percent
* * *
this year and expressed some
surprise atthe actual figure.
Barletta said the difference
would amount lo "several hun·
dred tho,.sand dollars" if
trustees choose to hold the tax
rate at its present level or 95
cents per $100 of assessed vaJua-
lion.
Much of the valuation increase
reported this week stems from
<See COLLEGE, Page A2)
* * * ,4f ax Cut, Big
Budget Mulled
Irvine could have $120,000
more money in its budget next
year due to the city's gigantic
29.3 percent increase in property
values, but it's uncertain yet
'whether the city will spend that
'money or lower the city tax r ate.
(Related story Page A3 )
Jim Harrington, the city's ad-
inislrative services director,
aid the city council would have
o lower the tax rate about five
ents lo operate with the current
vel of property tax revenues.
That would lower the rate from
1.5 cents lo 26.5 cents per $100
ssessed vaJuat1on.
The city council already has
tentatively lowered the rate to 29
cents, based on the city's as·
sumption that property values
would climb 20 percent.
Harrington said the council
would have to shave another 2.5
cents off lbe rate lo keep the cur-
rent level of property tax rev·
enue.
According to Harrington, the
council seems to be .. headed in
that direction". but he said ifs
impossible to tell yet what the
council will do. The d ecision on
the city true rate js expected Lo be
made at the second meeting in
August.
Harrington said he is surprised
by the huge increase in Irvine
and attributed it to the ''doubling
effect."
He said that assessments rose
so high in Irvine because there is
so much new construction and
that existing property values
climbed so high.
Harrington pointed out that the
highest increase took place in
San Juan Capistrano, which also
has a high rate of new construc-
tion Irvine was second lo San
Juan Capistrano.
Irvine Okays Villages
Couneil Settle• Most Land Use lssiws
By RJLARY KAYE guide future develop m ent in
oiu..o.11yP11ots1.11 Irvine.
The Irvine City Council de-
ided Thursday to allow develop-All that's left to.decide is where
ent ot residential vlllage. 10 the Bonita Canyon Road ex-
nd 14 and lo permlt construction tension should be built, several
C a home improvement center other road matters, and re·
nd a discount center at specific visions of the city's transporta-
ites in Irvine. • tion noise clement and the his-
T hose decisions came at a torical, a r cheol ogical and
ublic hearing, during which the paleontologicaJ e lement. Those
ouncil settled most of the land matters are scheduled for public
e planning issues that will airing Jl;lly 28.
.Freed of Trap
NB Man Caug~ in Attic
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of Ille O•llY l'llol Sl•ll
A 24·year-old Newport Beach
m a n is recovering from minor in·
juries today after being trapped
for more than eight hours in a
ceiling crawl space in tem-
peratures firemen said reached
more than 100 degrees.
Erin Bercham was pulled from
th~ enclosed attic area at about
~30 p.m. Thursday by firemen
who were called to bis home at
1404 W. Ocean Front by friends
wl)o had worked unsuccessfully
at freeing him for more than an
hour and a half.
F ire department spokesman
Art Morton said Bercham
~limbed into his attic at about J.2:30 p.m. to do some work on a
light fucture that hangs over his
kitchen sink. .
Bercham became wedged into
t h e crawl space apparently
because he bad loaded tools into
his pockets.
At about 6 p.m . Bercham's
girlfriend, Penny Arthur, came
over for a visit and spent nearly
sm hour trying to find him.
She told firemen she could hear
his faint cries and his pounding
on the walls. but she couldn't
figure out where the noi~e was
coming from.
When Miss Arthur did locate
him, she called a friend, Mark
Anderson, and they tried to slide
Bercahm out of his trap by cover-
insr him with dishwashing liquid. <See TRAPPED, Page A2)
One of the most important de-
cisions reached by the council
was the confirm ation that
Village 14 wlll be developed.
Village 14 is bounded by the San
Diego Freeway, Peters Canyon
Wash, Irvine Center Drive and
Culver Drive.
Only Councilwoman Mary Ann
Gaido opposed the decision to go
ahead with the development as it
is currently shown on the city's
generaJ plan.
Mrs. Gaido said she wanted
those 1,200 acres preserved as
permanent agricultural land in·
stead of being turned into more
houses, since it is the last major
parcel of agricultural land in the
city.
The one change m ade by the
council was to ask city staff
members to meet with council
members J ohn Burton a nd
Gabrielle Pryor to devise a new
den sity scheme.
The council said it wanted to
preserve the same medium
densities at the fringe of the
village. where it will touch other
already-developed villages such
as Culverdale, but that it wanted
higher densities towards the
center of the viUage.
The land currently is used by
the Irvine Company to grow
asparagus, beans , corn and
tomatoes.
The council also decided to
maintain the residential uses in
Village 10 as now shown on the
(See VILLAGES, Page AZ)
How Coast Areas Fare
Figures Given for A.eased Y aluation Hikes
CJnES
Last Yrs.
Dollar Percent Percent
City 1'71-lt77 1977·1978 Increue Increase IDcrease
Costa Mesa $377,912,180 $445,376,470 67,464,290 17.8 20.9
Fountain Valley 204,873,010 249,754,330 44,881,320 21.9 28.l
Huntington Beach 657,199,695 799,9S2,900 142,1.53,205 21.6 23.8 Irvine 385,203,630 498,159,180 112,9SS,SSO• 29.3 21.2 Laguna Beach 131,597,570 160,836,410 29,238,840 22.2 23.9
Newport Beach 678,104,626 808,419,317 130,314,691 19.2 22.6
San Clemente 125,497,790 154,386,010 28,888,220 23.0 23.S
San Juan Capistrano 71,244,440 92,897,190 21,652,750 30.3 24.S
Seal Beach 132,866,600 151,118,630 18,252,030 13.7 31.9
Unincorp. Total $1,149,353,365 1,429,314,620 279,961,255 24.3 20.3
Orange County Total $8,182,998,341 9,796,732,022 1,613, 733,681 19.7 18.'{
ELEMENTARY SCHOOL DISTRICfS
Last Yrs.
Dollar Percent Percent
District 1976-1977 1977-1978 lncretse Increase Increase
Fountain Valley $197,760,405 246,423,600 48,663,195 24.6 30.0
Huntington Beach 266,749,190 321,380,670 54,631,480 20.S 20.6
Ocean View 313,736,060 389,450,860 75,714,800 24.1 25.6
Seal Beach 100,527,24-0 108,588,190 8,060,950 8.0 30.6
Westminster 233,991,606 272,720,675 38,729,069 16.6 20.8
UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICfS
Last Yrs.
Dollar Percent Percent
District 1976·1977 1977-1978 Increase Increase Increase
Capistrano $454,629,320 582,475,310 127 ,845,990 28.1 23.5
Irvine 237 ,259,640 322,959,590 85,699,950 36.1 25.7
Laguna Beach 196,057,315 247,221,100 51,163,785 26.1 25.8
Newport-Mesa 998,050,436 1,187,613,327 189,562,891 19.0 22.2
Saddleback VaUey 380Ji09,2:i0 482,290,760 101,781,510 26.7 24.4
mGH SCHOOL DISTRICTS
Last Yrs.
Dollar Percent Percent
District 1976-1977 1977-1978 Increase Increase Increase
Huntington Beach $1, 112,764,501 1,338,563,995 225, 799,494 20.3 24.5
JUNIOR COLLEGES
Last Yrs.
Dollar Percent Percent
District 1178-1977 1917·1978 Increase Jacreaae Increase
Coast Community $2,110,814,937 2,526,117,322 4 J.S,363,385 19.7 23.4
Saddleback l ,61S,924,23S 2.060.644,140 444. 719, 905 27.S 23.2
Prices Fall; Irvine's RV Ban
JoblessRa~e Begins Next Week
~Sets Gain Irvine Police Chier Leo Peart ing" signs could be pos ted '-' J J 41 a nnounced today his officers Will around USe city.
begin enforcing the new recrea-Peart explained that the WASHINGTON CAP) -
Wholesale prices fell six-tenths
of one percent in June, the big-
gest drop in nearly tour years,
the government reported today.
But the good news was offset by a
rise in the unemployment rate
from 6.9 percent to 7 .1 percent.
A big drop in farm prices Jed
the price decline last month, an
indication of an easing oC infla·
tionary pressures at the
wholesale level.
Wholesale prices generally ·
presage prices consumers pay ·
and the effects of last month's
decline could first show up at
supermarket counters following
several months oC rapidly rising
food prices.
Julius Sbiskin, commissioner
of labor statistics, said the In-
crease in unemployment "can't
be considered a very serious ad-
verse sign for the Mure.••
H e also told the Joint
Economic ComD'.ittee that the
drop in wbolesal'O pricea is "a
long way from a new pallem."
But be agreed with Sen.
William ProxmJre (D•Wia.), that
recent drops in retail sales and in
lbe Index ol leading indicators,
coupled with increased un·
employment, .. may be the besin·
Ding ol some serious ti'ouble that wm have to be wa.tcbed closely ...
The increase in the Joblesa rate
was the first in four months, as
the number of Americana
without Jobi ln June rose by
210,000 to 7 million. Most ot the
increase occurred aflnon1 adult
women, whose Jobless rate l"OH
from ~.6to1.2 percent.
The price ne11r1 wu c:ertaln to
cheer the eut.r admtil.ttr•Uo!'z
wbtcb hu beeo dMDlJ wontea 'oHr price repor'U_'la pr~
(8" P&ICEI. .... AJ)
Uonal vehicle parking ban begin· following rules are included in
ning next Friday. the new prohibition:
The new law was adopted by · -Motor vehicles wider than 84
the City Council in April, but en· inches are not permitted to be
forcement of the new rules has parked on city streebl unless they
been held up until new "no park· are being loaded or unloaded, are
Destruction
Wreaked on
Pair's Home
PROSPECT HEIGHTS, Ill.
(AP) -Gerald Scbubring 8nd
bis ram.Uy, back from a camping
trip, pushed open their front door
in this comfortable suburb and
felt horror: vandals bad kicked
through eight walls, slashed
furniture, strewn food about -
and stolen almost nothing.
Scbubring's stunned wi!e Carol
alzedltup:
"They came to destroy, and
boy, they did a beautiful job. Two
tape recorders and a clock radio
are the only thinfS missing.
•'There was total destructioo
everywhere and alJ I could do
was scream. "Oh, l'dy God l" she
said.
•'Steaks, roasts, a gallon of
aourdouch start.er and other food was thrown all over the place. ,.,._., stus c:bandellera were
1mabtd u ii they were swine·
inl on them. Tbey poured liquid
detersmt oo our bed and poured
oll lnalde and out ot our 1976 auto
parked tn tbe orue. Tbey pqt
KJtty Utter OD OW' d..in.1.ot room
tab&e. ·~y took all our alldes and
dumped them all over ttie place,
ripped up our PrOJector ~.
ltnoebd ill lbci tetritiloo PfetUN
tub4t ad eompletety diam..Uett
OW' etibt...trldt ~player.
":J'be W1• ~Uppua •ere
lodpd bl the ctWq ot ttiefarmty
room ind 1 kalle w• ltliclc la thl
wall. Olia ..a. an a wan ujiltaln wuwt....,..towait~. "Tbty covered &be familj
room wall wUh •••• aad VMellne. ~-~mMbed 1Dimlr! tllel Ga tbe W.U;·c~ boa.I .. famib p0i1tda, ...... .............. ~,
making deliveries or requJre
emergency repairs.
Non·motorlzed vehicles, such
as trailers and campers, tflat
are not attacMd to a motor vebi·
cle, may not be parked on city
streets, at any time, regardless
of their width. .
-Vehicles parked on streets
for the principal purpoee of being
displayed for sale are prohibited.
Peart said that penoos who
violate the new law will be issued
citations.
He said the reasons for the new
rules are to reduce the dan(er ol
limited visibility ~ pedestriam.
bicyclists and motorists, to pre-
vent obstructions blocldoi fire
trucks or ambulances and to
eliminate coniestlon and loss~
parking space created by cars
for •!lle parked on streets.
Coast
Weather
·Sunny Saturday except
cloudy at beaches morntn1
boun. Lowt ton.ilbt 55 to
60. IB&lw S.turd11 ln up. f:l°' It~ to 70s In·
11V81DB TeDA Y
I'
I
J
'
r 2 DAIL Y Pll OT
,
' DISABLED VET REPAIRS OLD BIKES TO GIVE TO NEEDY CHILDREN
Elvlne Johnson, 69, Turned Hobby Into Community Effort
Hobby With a Heart
Disabled Vet Repairs Bikes /or Children
LAK1'; WAI.ES, r'la. <AP ) At Elvin
Johnson's house. the trash collectors make de
II vcrics a!> Wl•ll as pickups, dropping off any
rusted old bicycles they rand
ParC'nts 111 this C'Cntral Florida communi-
t v eomt• by with bikes that have been out-
groY. n. D<'alers ~1ve Johnson a break on pans.
"I SHOPPED AftOUNl> i\NO got some
olrt bikes and repaired thc·m." he said "Then
I real1ted there were othl·r rhlldrcn who could
not aftord lo buy b1kt'.,, and 1 JU:.t couldn't quit. ..
Johnson. who had st•\ c•11 brothers cind sis-
ters, <.;11tl he know-.; how d1ffll·ult things can get
for lari;:t• famihes y,.1th little• t·a~h
"I i.:111 mv f1rc;t lnkt· hv picking up the
parts and making 1t rn~wlf .. hesu1d
TllE 69· VEAR-OLD DISABLED \'l'ler;m
!-!pt•rHis his day., an "'8 b..tckyard dearung,
painllnJ?. n•pa1nn~ •md reassembling the
bikes Then hl• gives lh<.•m lo needy children
"\\-'ht•n I g(·t through Y. Ith them. the) may
not be nc\~. hut thl'Y run like new," says
Johnson .. And when y<iu make a kid huppy,
you' re• JU st as hapµy . · ·
llt• slartl•d making kids happy ''1th
h1cy l"le!> on Thanksg1 vrng The auxiliary or the
Veterans of Fun•1gn Wars had prepared u food
basket for a poor family, and .Johnson thought
a bout gt'lt111g b1cyc:lcs for the three children.
Bt:T i\ COllVl.E OF TIMES. he.· said, hC'
found out that some of.th•• «hlldrl'n lo whom he
had g1n-n b1cy ck :. could h<1vc paid for them
Now he asks ncighb-Ors <1nd othL·rs m the com
mun1ty tor rccommc>nd;1t1ons
Tested on Do~s
\.\hC'n a youngstt•r <"an affonl a small pay.
ment, Johnson chargt•s a nommal fee and uses
the money to buy parts
So far, hl' has !!old !>IX h1ktos Jnd given
away 32. •
From Page Al
Laetrile 'Dea,dly,'
Claims Scientist
COLLEGE. •
llL'W const ruC't1on. though v1rtual-
lv all homeowners in the college
d1strtt't will pay higher taxes
nextvear
With the averaj!e hom e in the
1hstnc·t now sC'llang for roughl y
$90,000, the la\ bill to support
the college -on such a home
would increase from about S214
las t year to almost S275 this year,
1f the full 27 5 percent valuation
increase is applied (individual
asSl'Ssments will vary).
DA VIS <A P l La<.'trill'. touted
by somt• as a cancer cure, can be
deadlv when taken with some un-
cooked foods. says a sc1ent1st
who t<.'ste<l lht• combination on
dogs.
Out of 10 dogs fed a combina-
tion or Laetrile and almonds tn
;.in expenmt•nl last week, six
died. snys Dr . .l<'rry Lem1s of lJC:
Davis
HC' spelled out his conclusions
on the dangers of Laetrile lll a
paper publisht'd today in the
California Medical Association·:;
Western Journal of Medicine.
The CMA has been the leading
opponent of legalization or
Laetrile in California. A bill to
legalize the substance has been
approved by the state Senate.
Si milar measures have become
law in 11 states in the past year.
Lewis, who heads the Davis
medical school's studies of blood
and tumors, disclosed the tesL"
on dogs m an anterv~ew after the
paper was writte n.
Laetrile. an apricot pal de·
nvallve, contams cyanide. Lewis
wrote that the cyanide 1s
chemically released by a sub-
stance, beta.glucosidase, round
1 n some uncooked foods.
.. In small doses. oral Laetnle
may not be harmful," the re-
searcher wrote. "But when in-
gested with uncooked foods such
as fresh apples, sweet almonds
or bean sprouts which contain the
b e ta-glucosid ase enzy m e,
ORANG I! COAST
DAILY PILOT
~r.~~;.;.~"r, :::.::!:-:.:::.::. c;o.,, P\ftM1"'.,.. c~·"' .,.,., .. ,.,.1,..,., .... ~''::."..:"ri"'.:~~i:r=·=C;. ?.:.!: ~·~·; .. 1nr1":~ .. H!:.=.:: """ .. -·~ ......... """~ , .. t1.::"~~"!.r.:...~·.:,. .. -.. .. t ._ .. __
~ .... ·--~ ..... 11.ewt.y Vl<•~-•-0.-.. ._
t
cyanide may be released, wllh
the patient suffering the <>ffeCLs
of cyanide poisoning."
E'rom Page A J
PRICES .••
months that showed inflation in-
creasing al a worrisome 10 per
cent annual rate during the first
quarter.
However, the turnaround in thl'
unemployment rate could be a
disturbing sign for the long run.
Administration officials have
cautioned that une mployment
might increase in some months
but are predicting the jobless
rate will decline to about 6.5 per-
cent by the year's end.
Not all the job report was bad.
Employment continued to in-
crease last month. risrng b)
270,000 to a total of 90. 7 milhpn.
Employment grew by 2 9 million
over the past eight months as the
economy continued to expand.
However, there was also a larg~ gain in the size of the labor
force last month, which rose by
480,000 to 97.6 million. The labor
force includes those al work and
those looking for wo:k .
The pending budget for next
)'Car presently stands at $24.7
million a nd Harletla said
lrustees could conC'e1vably in·
creast> that figure based on the
additional revenue generated by
the valuntion increase.
Barletta said the additional rev-
enue could be used by trustees
to restore some items cul from
the budget. which started out at
S30 million. Last year's final
budget was only $19 million.
In addition , the business
manager su~gesled that the ad-
ditional funds could be applied to
construction of the d istrict's
second campus in Irvine on a
"pay as-you·E?o" basis rather
than a mo re costly lease-
purchasc arrangement.
Concorde Mulled
NEW YORK <AP) -The Port
Authority of New York and New
.lersey has again postponed a
final dec1s1on on whether to grant
landing rights here to the British-
French supersonic Concorde jet.
35 Others Injured
Teen Boy Crushed
In Chase of BuUs
\ Doctors said ES{>arza was
crushed to death.
PAMPLONA, Spain (AP) ~
Dozens of men chased by fightintt
bulls in this city's annual festival
jammed up at the entrance to a
bull rin«i today, trampling each
other and being trampled by the
half.ton animals. A teenager was
crushed to death under the pileup
and as men •eret~ured.
It was the second day of the an-
nual runnin& of the bulls fesUval.
Espana w41s the first fatality
In the bull running since 1975,
when a bricklayer was kilJed and
20 men hurt In another pileup at
the entrance to the arena.
Tller-e will be six more runs in
the week-long festival, over a
900-yard course from the corrals
through the atreets or tho arena.
Police Umat.ed that 1.200 run-
ners, an unwiualty larae number,
took part today,
Hotel llnd bar workers halted n
strike just before the feet vat
b•J•n· A apoket11>on for the
stnkert •aid thfl walkout, calltd
to 'P~l th~ flrln1 of 70 f•llow
worket11, mtaht ruurne after tho hfla vy l~ndera l~av1.town.
Therewero alsoltrfft Oaht&on
openlq day bel•et0 llatQue na·
tiotHHat aDa anu:pofltiul
holidaytra s outln1 "P'tttival
Yts! POllUc1 -No '
Border
Arrests
Decline
Arrests or illegal aliens were
down this week at the San Onofre
checkpoint s outh of San
Cle mente, after U.S. Border
Patrol agents apprehended near -
ly 500 aliens over the three-day
holiday weekend.
Sunday, the arrest or 444 aliens
on one eii!ht-hour shirt broke all
previous records for a single
shift, said AJex J anicki, patrol
agent in charge. The total
number or aliens arrested Sun·
day was 493. he said, not ap-
proaching the record 570 arrest-
ed in a single 24-hour period on
June 12.
The 776 a hens and two U.S
citizens arrested for s muggling
on Sunday and Monday com-
pared to 206 aliens and a single
U .S citizen arrested July 3 and 4
last year. Janicki said. '
"You must remember that last
vear we dtdn't have the check-point." he said'. ..We had to
have probable cause to stop a
vehicle." He referred to a federal
court interpretation of the law
then extant.
Smuggling arrests at the
checkpoint dwindled to 79 on
Tuesday a nd 73 on Wednesday,
he said.
E'ro111 Pag~ Al
VILLAGES. •
general plan. Village 10 is adja·
cent to the existing Colony home::.
on the west side of Culver Drive.
R esidents from the Colony and
from College Park asked the
council to keep that land us
agricultural property, partly
because they believe mor e
houses would be Jeopardized by
flights f orm th e M arine
he licopter base next door.
But the council voted 3-2 CMrs .
Gaido and Mrs Pryor voted no)
to go ahead and allow the Irvine
Company to build houses in
Village 10
Community Development
DirC'clor Eddie Pea body pointed
out that the Marine Corps had a
chance to buy that land if it
believed it affected helicopter
operations. but thut it had not.
Peabody said there 1s no great
danger due to helicopte r flights
al that site.
Another decision made by the
council was to allow the Irvine
Company to develop a discount
center at the corner of Jamboree
Boulevard and Main Street.
All of the city's commissions
and staff members had recom-
mended against that site because
of concern about traffic. But the
council unaimously voted to al-
low the discount center, partly
because of its recent decision lo
expand the uses m the lrvme In-
dustrial Complex to allow retail
sales.
The council also voted un-
animously lo allow the Irvine
Company to build a home im-
provement center al Culver
Drive and Irvine Center Drive.
Such a project would involve
s mall s hops gear eci to the
homeowner, s uch as paint,
wallpaper and hardwa re stores.
Battle Looming
WASHINGTON CAP) -The
Carter administration is bracing
for a stiff battle m Congr ess over
its proposal to sell sven highly
sophisticated a irborne r adar.
systems to Iran. Even before the
Pentagon announcem ent Thurs-
day of the proposed $1.2 billion
deal. several senators were on
record against it.
Riding High
Amin Orden Tiro Limoa?
STUTTGART, West Germany (AP) -The
Daimler Benz motor company :>ays its dealer in
Uganda bas ordered two Mercedes 600 limousines,
one of the wor ld's most expensive cars, and the
newspaper Bild·Zeitung said they a re for President Idi Amin.
"We don't know who they are for," said a com-
pany spokesman, "but you'd be surprised to know
how many people apparently can afford a 600."
However, the spokesman denied the newspaper's
report that the cars were to be armor-plated and
equipped with extra-strong air conditioning and
direct communications to Amin 's palace guard.
The company said the 600 model Is made only to
order and about 50 are sold annually at prices or up to
$52,000, depending on the extra equipment. Users
have included Pope Paul VI, President Tito of Yugoslavia and Mao Tse-tung.
llllnutentan Baited
.. * . .
· ROcKWell Layoffs
Seen in AnaheiJD
Rockwell International will lay
ofC 700 more employes from its
Anaheim plant because of a halt
in production of the Minuteman J
m issile.
The first notices will be sent
out later this month, officials
said Thursday, in the wake of an
order from the Defense Depart
ment to halt prOductfon by the
end of September .
Meanwhlile, some 3,000 former
Rockwell employes already have
a pplied for unemployment
benefits from the s tate, officials
reported.
A spokeswom an for the state
Employm e nt D evelopment
Depar tment CEDD ) said
Rockwell applications wer e be-
mg processed in groups of about
IS to speed up the process.
About 8,000 workers were laid
off by the company when Presi-
dent Carter decided against pro-
duction of the B-1 b-Omber.
One employe d ecided this week
to take advantage of the com-
pany's special job relocation pro-
gram, and by the end of the day,
was on another firm's payroll.
Company officials hope this is
E'rona Page Al
VANDALS. •
ang a photograph of my 9-year-
old daughter who· died three years ago."
Gerald Schubrtng is a 39-year-
old computer analyst. His wife
Carol is 36. They tt a ve four
children and their home is a
s even-room dwelling in this
quiet, affluent suburb northwest
of Chicago.
Police say the neighborhood's
hom es are worth an average of
$90,000 to $100,000.
"I don't know who would do
this." said Schubring. "It's clear
that it was just malicious van-
dalism."
But police say more may be In-
volved. They want to know if any
one harbored a grudge against the
Schubrings.
The community is a quiet sub-
urb of 15,000, which has seen
some minor vandalism lately -
broken windows, paint s meared
on walls, the kind or thing many
communities expe rience. But
police say they have r arely seen
anything like that what happened
to the Schubrings last weekend.
Schubring and his family have
moved out for now. and are put-
ting up in a motel. Bul he says he
1s determined to rebuild.
an indication their relocation
program will find jobs for at
least half of those laid off when
the Bl program was canceled.
Jack Hefley, a spokesman for
the firm's B-1 division, said that
1,200 of the 2,700 B-1 workers
al ready laid off have gone
through br1ef1ngs about the
salary and benefits due them.
about how lo write resumes and
about interviewing for new posi-
tions.
Hefley said that employe pro-
files will be catalogued by next
week, and will be made available
to other Rockwell divisions and
to 150 companies that have con-
tacted Rockwell for employe in-formation.
"We're esllmatmJ! there are
quite a few openings for our
::.killed people and we feel we can
relocate up to 50 percent or our
people," Hefley said.
All of the company's divisions
have stopped adverl..lsmg for new
cmployes. he said.
Meanwhile, U.S. Sen. Alan
Cr anston (0 -Catif.), plans to ex-
plore what can be done for the
laid off workers in a m eeting to-
day with government officials
and Rockwell representatives
from the firm's Palmdale as-
sem bty plant and E l Segundo
headquarters. '
R ichard Silberman , s tate
Secretary of Bus iness and •
Trans portation, said "we art
more interested In work Ulan ta
aid," but indicated officials witt
look at city, county and state
sources of funding to s upplement
what may be obtained from the
federal government.
Fro•PageAI
TRAPPED. •
Morton said Anderson and
Miss Arthur punched some holes
in the ceiling near Bercham·s
face so he could get air . They
used one for a straw to provide
him with water
i\l 8:30 Jt.m .. they gave up their
efforts and called firemen.
Morton said seven firen.en
from the city hall station under
command of Capt. Jerry Strom
worked for more than 45 minutes
before they were able to peel the
wood and plaster off the walls
and ceiling and free the trapped
man.
Morton said Bercham a p·
oarenttv s uffered onlv a few
minor cuts and bruises in the or-
deal.
It's Yo11r Dollar:!
QUITE OFTEN A CUSTOMER IS CONFUSED
WHEN SHOPPING FOR CARPETING. HE ASSUMES.
THAT IF A CARPET PILE IS HEAVY ANb 'rHICK
THE CARPET IS NECESSARILY OF GOOD
QUALITY. .
NOT TRUE! MORE OFTEN THE QUALITY OF
THE FIBER. ANO NOT THE QUANTITY. IS THE
DETERMINING FACTOR WHICH CONTROLS WEAR
ANO PERFORMANCE.
I
Lag11na/South Coast
I
After n oon
N.Y.Stoeks
VOL. 70, NO. 189, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JULY 8, 1977 TEN CE
College Valuation Soars
By WIU.IAM SCHREIBER
OI ... DMIY ~llet SUit
The 27.5 percent increase In
Saddleback College property
valuation this year means
trustees could cut the tax rate by
about 20 cents and still raise the
••me amount of money as they
did last year.
District officials view such a
move as unlikely. however, in J!.a:bt or the district's conlinwng
11truggle to finance new construe·
lion to meet 'rowth.
It is also improbable because
of 11 new state law that put a lid
on college district tax rates,
permitting them to be lowered
and frozen but not increased
again without a \'Ole oC the elec-
torate.
District Business Manager
Roy Barletta had predicted a
valuation increase of 18 percent
this year and expressed some
surprise at the actual figure.
Barletta said the difference
would amount to "several hun-
dred thousand dollars" if
trustees choose to hold the tax
rate al its present level of 95
cents per $100 of assessed valua-
tion
Much of the valuation increase
reported this week stems from
new construction, though virtual·
ly all homeowners in the college
<See VALUATION, Page A2>
Jobless Rate Up
Prices Take Dip
WA SHINGTON (AP) -
Wholesale prices fell six·tenlhs
of one percent in June, the big-
eest drop in nearly four years,
the government reported today.
But the good news was orrsel by a
rise in the unemployment rate
from 6.9 percent to 7. l percent.
I A big drop in farm prices led
the price decline lasl month, an
'ndicalion of an easing of mfla.
ionary pressures al the
holesale level.
Wholesale prices generally
resage prices consumers pay
nd the effects of last month's
ecline could first show up al
upermarket counters following
ittle Stolen
several months of rapidly rising
food prices.
Julius Shiskin, commissioner
of labor statistics, said the in·
crease in unemployment "can't
be considered a very serious ad·
verse sign for the future.'•
He also told the Joint
Economic Committee that the
drop in wholesale prices is "a
long way from a new pattern."
But he agreed with Sen.
William Proxmire <D· Wis.), that
recent drops in retail sales.and in
the index of leading indicators,
coupled with increased un·
employment, "may be the begin·
nmg of some serious trouble that
will have to be watched closely."
The increase in the jobless rate
was the first in four months, as
the numbe r of Americans
without jobs in June rose by
210,000 to 7 million. Most of the
increase occurred among adult
women, whose Jobless rate rose
from 6.6 to 7 .2 percent.
The price news was certain to
cheer the Carter administration,
which has been deeply worned
over price reports m previous
months that showed inflation in-
creasing at a worrisome 10 per·
cent annual rate during the first
quarter.
<See PRICES, Page A2l
NB Man
HoJD.e Destruction Trapped
Caused by Vandals 8 Hours
I · By JOANNE REYNOLDS I PROSPECT HEIGHTS. Ill. was scream, "Oh, My God!" she OllMD•••Y~ll•UUll
{AP) -Gerald Schubring and said. A 24-year-old Newport Bea.ch
is family. back from a camping "Steak$. roasts, a gallon or man is recovering from minor an-
rip, pushed open their front door sourdough starter and other food juries today afte~ being tra~ped
this comfortable suburb and was thrown all over the place. for !'lore than eight hours an a
It horror: vandals had kicked "Two glass chandeliers were ceiling cr~wl spac~ In tern·
rough eight walls , slashed smashed as if they were swing· peratures firemen said reached
rn1ture, strewn food about -ing on them. They poured liquid more than 100 degrees.
nd stolen almost nothin~. detergent on our bed and poured Eran Bercham. was puUed from
oil inside and out of our 1976 auto the enclosed attic area at about
Schubring's s tunned wife Carol
lzed it up:
"They came to destroy. and
y. they dld a beaulirul job. Two
ape recorders and a clock radio
r~ the only things missing.
• .. There was total destruction
everywhere and all 1 could do
Laguna Asks
Planner Aid
For Shelter
parked in the gara~e. They put 9:30 p.m. Thursday by firemen
Kitty Utter on our dining room who were called lo his home at
table. 7404 W. Ocean Front by friends
"They took all our slides and who had worked unsuccessfully
dumped them all over the place, at freeing him for more than an
ripped up our projector screen,. hour and a half.
knocked in the television picture Fire department spokesman
tube and completely dismantled Art Morton said Bercham
our eight-track tape player. climbed into his attic at about
"The hedge clippers were 12:30 p.m. to do some work on a
lodged in the ceiling of the family light fixture th al hangs over his
room and a knife was stuck in the kitchen sink. ·
wall. One hole in a wall upstairs Bercham became wedged into
was bigenoughtowalkthrough. the crawl space apparently
•'They covered the family because he had loaded tools into
room wall with eggs and his pockets.
Vaseline. They smashed mirror At about 6 p.m . Bercham's
tiles on the wall and punctured girlfriend, Penny Arthur, came
holes in family portraits. includ· over for a visit and spent nearly
ing a photograph of m y 9-year· an hour trying to find him.
old daughter who died three She told firemen she could hear
years ago." his faint cries and his pounding
Gerald Schubring is a 39-year· on the walls, but she couldn't
old computer analyst. His wife figure oul where the noise was
Carol is 36. They have four coming from.
children and their home is a When Mlu Art.bur did locate
seven -room dwelling in this 1lim. she called a friend, Mark
quiet, affluent suburb northwest And'erson, an~ they tried to slide
of Chicago. Bercahm out of his trap by cover·
<See VANDA~. Page AZ> log him wtth dlshwashing liquid.
(See TRAPPED, Page A2>
...
. ! How Coast Areas Fare
Figures Given for Assessed Valuation Hikes
CITIES
Last Yrs.
Dollar Percent Percenl
City 1976·1977 1977·1978 lncr~ase Increase Increase
Costa Mesa $377,912, 180 $445,376,470 67,464,290 17.8 20.9
Fountain Valley 204,873,010 249, 754,330 44,881,320 21.9 28.1
Huntington Beach 657,799,695 799,952,900 142,153,205 21.6 23.8 Irvine 385,203,630 498,159,180 112,955,550. 29.3 21.2 Laguna Beach 131,597,570 160,836,410 29,238,840 22.2 23.9
Newport Beach 678,104,626 808,419,317 130,314,691 19.2 22.6
San Clemente 125,497,790 154 ,386,010 28,888,220 23.0 23.5
San Juan Capistrano 71,244,440 92,897,190 21,652,750 30.3 24.S
Seal Beach 132,866,600 151, 118,630 18,252,030 13.7 31.9
Unincorp. Total $1 , 149,353,365 1,429,3 14.620 279,961,255 24.3 20.3
Orange County Total $8, 182,998,341 9, 796, 732,022 1,613,733,681 19.7 18.l
ELEMENTARY SCHOOL.DISTRJC'IS
Last Yrs.
Dollar Percent . Percenl
DJstrict 1976-1977 1977·1978 Increase Increase Increase
Fountain Valley $197,760,405 246,423,600 48,663,195 24.6 30.0
Huntington Beach 266,749.190 321,380,670 54,631,480 20.5 20.6
Ocean View 313,736.060 389,450,860 75,714 ,800 24.l 25.6
Seal Beach 100.527,240 108,588,190 8,060,950 8.0 30.6
Westmmster 233.991,606 272, 720,675 38,729,069 16.6 20.8
UNIFIED SCHOOL DlSTRICTS
Last Yrs.
Dollar 'Percent Percent
District 1976-1977 1977-1978 Increase Increase Increase
Capistrano $454,629.320 582,475,310 127 ,845,990 28.1 23.5
Irvine 237,259,640 322,959,590 85,699,950 36.1 25.7
Laguna Beach 196,057,315 247,221,100 51,163,785 26.1 25.8
Newport-Mesa 998,050,436 1,187,613.327 189,562,891 19.0 22.2
Saddleback Valley 380,509,250 482,290.760 101,781,510 26.7 24.4
HIGH SCHOOL DISTRICTS
Last Yrs.
Dollar Percent Percent
District 1976-1977 1977·1978 Increase Increase Increase
Huntington Beach $1,112,764,501 1,338,563,995 225,799,494 20.3 24.5
JUNIOR COLLEGES
Last Yrs.
Dollar Percent Percent
Di.strict 1976-1977 1971-1978 Increase Increase Increase
Coast Community $2, 110,814,937 2,526,177,322 415,362,385 19.7 23.4
Saddleback 1.615.924.235 2.060.644,140 444, 719,905 27.5 23.2
Stahle Tax Would
Double LB Revenue
An increase of 22.2 percent in
the assessed value or Laguna
Beach means that by keeping the
same tax rate as last year. the Ci·
ty would raise an additional
$470,000, nearly twice as much as
it counted on getting, Finance
Director Richard Reese said to-
day.
The $7 million Laguna Beach
city budget was predicted on a 12
percent increase in the city's as-
sessed valuation. (Related in·
formation, Pages A2 and A3).
It proposed to retain lasl year 's
tax rate of $1.65 per $100 assessed
value plus the seven-cent
paramedic override approved by
voters last November.
To raise the same amount of
revenue as was raised last year,
the City Council could cut the
rate to $1.29 per $100 assessed
value, Reese said in response to
questions.
The City Council lasl year cut
29 cents from the tax rate which
has declined steadily from a high
of $2.12 in fiscal 1973-74. The
c ity's assessed value since that
lime has more than doubled.
from $73,377,000 to the current
$160,836,000.
Property taxes are determined
by multyplying the tax rate by
the assessed value or a property.
Assessed value is one quarter
market value.
If the city were to retain the
same rate as last year. the owner
of an ~.000 home would pay In
city taxes $330 plus $14 for the
paramedic override.
* * * More Parks
Due for SJC?
Tiny San Juan Capistrano's
30.3 percent assessed valuation
increase -hlghest in the county
-may mean more city parks
rather than a rollback In the tax
rate for local residents. (Related
story, Page A3)
Assistant City Manager John
O'Sullivan said today the city
staff calculated that the assessed
valuation increase would bring
the city an extra $45,000 ln rev·
enues, beyond wb,at bad been
anticipated.
The projected municipal tax
rate for next year ls 96 cents per
$100 of assessed valuation. tt
could be cut about 20 cents to
raise the 1ame revenue as last
yeer.
The city's pl"Oposed $3.7 mUUon
1977·'1lbudget wu based on a 2.1
percent increase in asaessed
valu1tiooa. Tbe final deci.&ion
over whether to bave more parkt
or to roU back tbe city tax rat.
will be made by the City OOUDcll.
•· 1 wm lain to write a r1IPCrt
for tM council a t their next. meet· •
ln1," 0'&.i.IUv.a aaJd. He blnted
that city ata!f wouJd ravor tnOl'e
partt1 as oppoMd to a tu rate In·
crd1e.;
O '&ilJivp 1.td ctlf, OMdlll
t11'lted UM Jncre .. iQ a.sMIMd <see PARP, P11e ~,
Ckmente's
Value Jumps
23Percent
San Clemente's assessed
valuation jumped by 23 percent
in the past year, but city lax·
payers will have to wait until
August to learn what impact the
increase will have on their tax
bills.
"We have r eceived no official
notification of the city's assessed
valuation," Rod <;oloma, city
finance director, said today. "We
are waiting for the breakdown in
August from the county auditor
in order to see where assess·
men ts have increased." {Related
story Page A3.)
Coloma said the city couJd drop
the current Sl.21 tax rate by
nearly nine cents, based on the 23
percent assessment increase,
and sWI generate the same tax
revenue as the fiscal year just
ended.
The increase in assessed
valuation, announced Thursday
by the county as~essor's ornce.
brings the city's total to $154.4
million.
Coloma said the city's pro-
posed 1977·78 budeet was based
on an esUmated 22 percent AV in·
(See TAXES, PageA2)
Coast
Weather
Sunny Saturday except
cloudy at beaches morning
houn. Lowa tonilht 5S to
60. Hi~ Saturday ln up-
per 608 at beaches to 70s lD·
land.
;J
..
1 I .
% DAILY PILOT LISC ft
Pageant Readied
Clemente's Fiesta Begins Saturday
t;H•I )th1nit Imm huffrl tu
bt-ac-h H>ll~' ball lo\ 111 bl· 1Jn tu11 ut
San Clf'mcntt"'I\ :.Mth »nnuul
celebration ot tilt' far'>I C'hn11l1.in
baplaam 1n Cnllfornld, to b<-
launched Saturduy unc1 1·1ml111uc
throuah Au6'u•t
f'1Hta1 J,u Crl11llun1ta, com·
memoratmg lht• l7tl!* bapta11m in
,, local UJ'l)'on, as ct'ntert"d tru<tl
uonalty on a Julv parade It will
be~m S..turdilY with a 5 JO p m.
butfct dmner 11t the St.1n C'h:mcrltt!
Inn, where Mayor Donna
Wilkinson will crown Mli.s San
Clemtinte, Robin llclll·r. queen of
the fltl$U&. <Complete story and
p1t'lul"'U. Pafe l'l ).
AddiUona h1"hhghts or th1:s
year's rlt!isla include.
-B~uch competitions, begin·
nlng at 8 a .m. Suturday with the
F1rit Annuall Beach Volleyball
Tournament.
A c11mival in Plaza Purk
twi:inning 1-'rida>, July l5. •
Minuteman Baited
Rockwell Layoffs
Seen in AnaheiJD
Hockwell lnll1rnat1onal will lav
off 700 more l·mployes from its
o\naheim plant because of a halt
in production of lhe Minuteman 3
missile.
The first nol1ct-s wall be sent
out later Uus month, officials
said Thursday, in the wake of an
order from the Dl'frnsc Depart
ment lo halt production by the
end of September.
Mcanwhlilc. some 3,000 former
Rockwell cmploycs aln.•ady have
a pplied for un('mployment
benefits from the slate, officials
reported
A spokeswoman for the slate
Em ploymenl Development
Department <EDD> said
Rockwell apphcataons were be·
ing processed in ~roups of about
15 to speed up the process
About 8.000 workers were laid
off by the comµany when Pre~•
dent Carter decided again!.l pro-
ductaon of thc B·I bomber
One emplo~e decided this wt!ek
to take advantage of the com-
pany's special job rclocat1on pro-
gram, and by the end or the day,
was on another firm's payroll.
Company officials hope this 1s
an indication their relocation
program \I.Ill find jobs for al
f 'rum Page A J
VALUATION
district will pay higher laxes
next year.
With the average home in lhc
district now selling for roughly
• S90.000. the tax bill -to support
the college -on such a home
would i~rease from about S214
last year to almost $275 lhis year,
1r the full 27.5 percent valuation
increase 1s applied <indnadual
asst-ssments will vary).
The pending budget for next
~ear presently stands at S24 7
million and Barletta said
trustees could conceivably in·
crease that fi~ure based on the
~1dditional revenue l!cneraled by
the \"aluat1on increase. Barletta said the additional rev-
l0nue could be used by trustees
lo restore some items cut from
the budget, which started out at
$30 million. Last year·s final
bud get was only $19 million.
1 n addition. the business
manager sug~estcd that the ad-
ditional funds could be applied to
construction or the district's
~econd campus in Irvine on a
"pay·as-you-go ·· basis rather
than a more costly lease-
purchase arrangement.
* * * Front Page A J
TAXES •••
crease.
··1 don'texpect the final figures
we receive in August will make
much difference. but it depends
where the increases occur." he
said. ''For example, we may find
that the street lighting district is
not up by 23 percent, but only by
15 percent.''
San Clemente city councllmen
are expected to set this year's tax
rate at their Aug. 17 meeting,
when they are scheduled to ap-
prove the final 1977 • 78 budget.
ORA.NOi COAST ~1sc
DAILY PILOT
least half of those laid off when
the Bl program was canceled.
Jack Hefley, a spokesman for
the firm's B·l division, said that
1,200 of the 2,700 B-1 workers
already laid off have gone
through briefings about the
salary and benefits due them
about how to write resumes and
a_bout interviewing for new posi·
taons.
Hefley said that employc pro-
files will be catalogued by next
week, and will be made available
to other Rockwell divisions and
to 150 companies that have con-
tacted Rockwell for employe in··
formation.
"We're estimating there ar(•
quite a few openings for our
skilled people and we feel we can
relocate up to SO percent of our
people.·· Hefley said.
All of the company's d1v1s10n:.
have stopped advertising for new
employes, he said.
Meanwhile, U.S. Sen. Alan
Cranston CD-Calif.>. plans to ex
plore what can be done for the
laid off workers in a meeting lo·
day with government officials
and Rockwell representatives
from the firm's Palmdale as-
sembly plant and El Segundo
headquarters.
Richard Silberman, :-late
Secretar y of Business and
Transportation, said "'we an·
more interested in work than in
aid." but indicated officials will
look at city. county and state
sources of funding to supplement
what may be obtained from the
federal government.
Church Gets
Its Steeple
DENVER <AP> -The
great steeple chase as over.
Police in lhe Denver sub·
urb of Lakewood say the
Rev. Gene Parrett, pastor
o_f the Alameda Hills Bap-
tist Church. received a call
early today from an
anonymous male who said
the missing steeple could
be round in a field in
Lakewood.
The metal-and -wood
structure was undamaged
when it was recovered.
··1 can't imagine what
som'fbne would do with a
church steeple," said Mr.
Parrott.
NB Bridge
Backers Due
At Hearing
Supporters of plans for a seven-
1 an e bridge on Pacific Coasl
Highway over Upper Newport
Bay are expected to turn out in
large numbers Monday for the
coast.al commission hearing on
the bridge permit.
The hearing is scheduled for 1
p.m. at the Huntington Beach Ci·
ty Council chambers.
Newport Beach a rchitect Bill
Ficker. who heads the citizen
Bridge Action Team (BAT>. is
ureing interested people to at-
tend "to indicate to the coast.al
commission that governmental,
civic and citilen leadership are
behlnd thia ~Juect." Tbe '6.6 OD brldae to be
built by CalTrau will be 20 reet
hl&b and will be located aU&htly to tbe north of the ~xlstlng stn.ac-
ture.
lt wUJ have eix throuch lanes of
traffic a1'd a seventh lane roe
westbound tl'afttc that ii tu.mlnl
north on Dover Drt •
Hi1bway orflctala say th y
hope tbe project ii approVed in Ume tosu ~out1ob~bytheemt
or1m.1t would be completed by
mld·lf1111itstQac:machedUlo.
-A fiesta breakfast, Sl)Onsored
by the Kiwanis Club in the
market parkint lot at El Camino
Heal and Mariposa from 7 to 11
a.m. Saturday aod Sunday, July
16 and 17. .
-The parade, with 200 bands.
equestrian entries, floats and
clowns. beginning at 10 a.m.
Saturday, July 16, on Avenidadel
Mar and proceeding east to El
Camino Real and north to El
Portal.
-The La Crisllanita Pageant.
starting Friday, July 22 and con-
tinuing daily except Mondays
through Aug. 7 in a natural am-
phitheater in a canyon inland
from Camino de Estrella.
An arts and crafts fair from
10 a .m. lo 5 p.m. Saturday and
Sunday, Aug. 20 and 21 at the
Community Center, Avenida del
Mar and Calle Seville.
Additional information on the
fiesta is available by calling the
chamber or commerce, 492-1131.
Front Page A J
PRICES •••
However, the turnaround in the
unemployment rate could be a
disturbing sign for the long run.
Administration officia ls have
cautioned that unemployment
might increase in some months
but are predicting the jobless
rate will decline to about 6.5 per-
cent by the year's e nd.
Not all the job report was bad.
Employment continued to in-
crease last month, rising by
270,000 lo a total of 90.7 million.
Employment grew by 2.~ million
over the past eight months as the
economy continued lo expand.
llowc\er, there was also a
large gain in the size of the labor
force la!.l month. which rose by
180.000 to 97.6 million. The labor
force lllcludes those at work and
those looking for work.
Sance more people went look·
ing for jobs than found work last
month. the unemployment rate
increased.
Fro• Page Al
TRAPPED. •
Morton sai<l Anderson and
Miss Arthur punched some holes
in the ceiling near Bercham's
face so he could get air. They
used one for a straw lo provide
him with waler.
At 8:30 p.m .. they gave up their
efforts and called firemen.
Morton said seven firemen
from the city hall station under
rommand of Capt. Jerry Strom
worked for more than 45 minutes
before they were able to peel the
wood and plaster off the walls
and ceiling and free the trapped
man.
Morton said Bercham ap-
oarentlv suffered onlv a few
minor cuts and bruises in the or-
deal
A/,ien Arrests
Slowing Down
In San Onofre
Arrests or illegal aliens were
down this week at the San Onofre
c heckpoint south or San
Cle m ente, after U.S. Border
Patrol agents apprehended near-
ly 500 aliens over the three-day
holiday weekend.
Sunday, the arrest of 444 aliens
on one eidlt·hour shift broke all
previous records for a single
shift, sajd Alex Janicki, patrol
agent ii\ charge. The t ot al
number of aliens arrested Sun-
day was 493, he said. not ap·
proaching the record 570 arrest·
ed in a single 24-hour period on
June 12.
The 776 aUens and two U.S.
citizens arrested tor smuggling
o n Sunday and Monday com-
pared to 206 aliens and a single
U.S. citizen arrested July 3 and 4
last year, Janicki said.
"You must remember ihatlast
vear we didn't have the check· poln~;· he said. "We bad to
have probable cause to atop t
vehicle.•· He reterred to a federal
court lnterpretaUon of the law
then extant.
Stnucglln1 arrests at the
checkpoint dwindled to 79 on
Tuesdl.Y and 73 on Wtdnesday,
be said.
Riding IDgh
Amin ~n Tiro Limo•?
STUTTGART, West Germany CAP> -The
Daimler Benz motor company says its dealer in
Uganda has ordered two Mercedes 600 limousines
one of the world's most expensive cars and ~
newspaper Bild Zeitung said they are for 1President
!di Amin.
"We don't know who they are for," said a com·
pany spokesman, "but you'd be surprised to know
how many people apparently can afford a 600."
However, the spokesman denied the newspaper's
report that the cars were to be armor-plated and
e9uipped with extra-strong air conditioning and
direct communications to Amin 's palace guard.
The company said the 600 model is made only to
~rder and about_ SO are sold annually at prices of up to
$52,000, depending on the extra equipmenL Users
have included Pope Paul VI President Tito of
Yugoslavia and Mao Tse-tung. '
Tested on Dogs
Laetrile 'Deadly'
Claims Scientist
DA VIS (AP) -Laetrile, louted
by some as a cancer cure, can be
deadly when taken with some un-
cooked foods, says a scientist
who tested the combination on
dogs.
Out of 10 dogs fed a combina-
tion of Laetrile and almonds in
an experiment last week, six
died. says Dr. Jerry Lemis of UC
Davis.
He spelled out his conclusions
on the dangers of Laetrile in a
paper published today in the
California Medical Association's
Western Journal of MedicJne
The CMA has been the leading
opponent or legalization or
Laetrile in California. A bill to
legalize the substance has been
approved by the state Senate.
Similar measures have become
law in 11 states in the past year.
Lewis, who heads the Davis
V. Fletcher
Rites Slated
For Monday
A memorial service will be held
for Virginia Fletcher. past presi-
dent of the South Coast Com muni-
ty Hospital auxiliary, at2:30 p.m.
Monday in the hospital memonal
garden. •
Mrs. F1etcherdied July 4 al her
home. Funeral service was held
Thursday at the Church or the
Recessional at Glendale Forest
Lawn Mortuary. Mrs. Fletcher
was83.
Mrs. Fletcher had served as
president of the hospital auxiliary
from 1961 to 1963. She remained
active as an officer in the or-
ganization until two years ago.
She was a 24·year·residcnt or the
area and made her home in South
Laguna.
In behaJC of the hospital, Mrs.
Fletcher had twice accepted Dis-
neyland Community Service
Awards of $1,000, funds which
were used to rurthe r the s er vice of
tbebospitaltoitscommunity.
Burial is at Forest Lawn Glen-
dale. The Dr. Lee V. Kliewer or
the school of Southern California
United Presbyterian officiated at
Thursday's rites.
The deceased is survived by
stepsons Stewart Fletcher of
South Pasadena and Frank
Fletcher of Phoenix, Ariz.; four
.grandchildren and lwo great-
.grandchildren.
medical school"s studies of blood
and tumors, disclosed the tests
on dogs in an interview after the
paper was written.
Laetrile, an apricot pit de-
rivative, contains cyanide. Lewis
wrote that the cyanide is
chemically released by a sub-
stance, beta-glucosidase, found
in some uncooked foods.
"In small doses, oral Laetrile
may not be harmful," the re-
searcher wrote. "But when in-
gested with uncooked foods such
as fresh apples, sweet almonds
or bean sprouts which contain lhe
beta·glucosidase e n zyme,
cyanide may be released. with
the patient suffering the effects
of·cyanide poisoning.••
Lewis said doses varied in the
exper iment with dogs, and
couldn't say which doses would
cause death.
He added in the interview. "My
concern is that there are going to
be an awful lot or people taking
this garbage and some are going
to be innocently injured by it.·•
The man who pate nte d
Laetrile. Dr. Ernest Krebs. said
Lewis' findings were "a proper
area for explor ation." But he
said Laetrile has been uH d for 20
years and poisoning has not been
a p roblem.
E'ro• PClfle Al
PARKS •.•
valuation would mean an addi-
tional S8 on the tax bill of an
average $70,000 home.
The issue of parks was raised
duri!lg co~cil budget hearings
earher this year when city of-
ficials disagreed with the parks
a nd recreation commission over
additional parks.
"ll was a friendly disagree-
ment," explained O'Sullivan.
"We wanted more parks, too, but
the city did not have the·funds to
build or maintain them."
O'Sullivan1 said he believed
most city re~idents would favor
more parks but added they would
ha ve to pay for them through the
increased city r evenue from the
assessed valuation increase.
Doctors Strike
FRESNO CAP> -Staffers at
the county hospital here have re-
rused to sign Medi-Cal forms in a
demonstration or sympathy for
40 chief doctors who walked out
over a contract dispute last
week..
Horde
Of Bulls
Kills Boy
PAMPLONA. Spnln (AP> -
Dozens of men chased by fighting
bulls ln this city's annual festival
jammed up at the entrance to a
bull ring today, trampling each
other and being trampled by th&
half-ton animals. A teenager was
crushed to death under the pileup
and 35 men were injured.
AuthoriUes said the dead boy,
Jose J oaquin Esparza, 17, i
promising amateur soccer player
from Pamplona, triggered the
pileup when he tripped and fell at.
the narrow gate to the bull ring.
One after another, about so
men running ahead or the six
charging bulls fell atop Esparza.
The bulls then plowed into the mass of humanity, treading on the
fallen runners for about five
minutes before heading into the
ring.
The screaming men, many
covered with blood, lay writhin'
on the ground until ambulances
arrived.
Doctors said Esparza was
crushed to death.
It was the second day of the an-
nual running of the bulls festival.
. Espana was t~e first fatality
in the bull running since 1975,
when a bricklayer was killed and
20 men hurt in another pileup at
the entrance to the arena.
There will be six more runs in
the week-long festival, over a
900-yard course from the corrals
through the streets of the arena
Police estimated that 1,200 nm:
oers, an unusuaJJy large number
took part today. •
Hotel and bar workers baited a
strike just before the festival
began. A spokesman for the
strikers said the walkout. called
to protest the firing of 70 fellow
workers, might resume after the
heavy spenders leave town.
There were also street fights on
openin~ day between Basque na-
t10!'1 ahsts a nd anti-political
hohdayers shouting "Festival -
Yes! Politics -No!"
FroraPageAI
VANDALS. •
Police say the neighborhood's
homes are worth an average of
$90,000to $100,000. •
"I don't know who would d<>
this," said Scbubriog ... It's cleu-
that it was just malicious van·
dalism." · •
But police say more may be in·
volved. They want to know if anr
one harbored a grudge against th•
Scbubrlngs.
The community is a quiet sub-
urb or 15,000, which bas seen
some minor vandalism lately -
broken windows, paint smeared
on walls, the kind of thing many
communities experience. But
police say they have rarely seen
anything like that what happened
to the Schubrlngs last weekend.
Schubring and bis family have
moved out for now, and are put-
~ing up in.a motel. But he says he
1s determined lo rebuild.
"We've lived here for six years." he said. "We're not go-
ing to be scared away by kids."
Sellers Confined
SAINT TROPEZ, France (AP>
-Actor Peter Sellers is having
new heart prolems after a bat-
tery in his heart stimulator
malfunctioned, doctors said to-
day. Physicians said Sellers' con-
dition was not serious. but be was
admitted to a clinic Thursday
and conflDed to bed for rest and
observation.
It's Yo11r Dollar!
QUITE OFTEN A CUSTOMER IS CONFUSED
WHEN SHOPPING FOR CARPETING. HE ASSUMES
THAT IF A CARPET PILE IS HEAVY ANO THICK
THE CARPET IS NECESSARILY OF GOOD
QUALITY.
NOT TRUEI MORE OFTEN THE QUALITY OF
THE ABER, ANO NOT THE OUANTtTY. IS THE
OET~RMINING FACTOR WHICH OONTROLS WEAR
AND PERFORMANCE
liS YOUR MONEY -SO, WHEN BUYING
YOUR CAAPETrNG, MAKE SURE YOU ARE
DEALING WITH AN ESTABLISHED MILL, AND
EOUALtY AS IMPORTANT, A REPUTABLE
DEALER.
•
Orange Cea
EO ITIO
Today's C:IOsiq •i
N.Y.Stoeks
VOL. 70, NO. 189, 4 SECTIONS, '2 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JULY 8, 1977 N TEN CE
Delly""' l'llet.slly llk ... t<I K-l•r
NEWPORT BEACH FIREMEN RESCUE ERIN BEACHAM FROM ATTIC CONFINEMENT
Victim Spent More Than Eight Houra tn 1QO.degr•• Heat Jhurad9
Trapped Man Fi-eed
Newport Citizen Caught in Crawl Space
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
OI 1M O.lly Pllel Slall
A 24-year-old Newport Beach
man is recovering from minor in· juries today after being trapped
for more than eight hours in a
ceiling crawl space in tem-
peratures firemen said reached
more than 100 degrees.
Erin Bercham was pulled from
the enclosed attic area at about
9:30 p.m. Thursday by firemen
who were called to his home at
7404 W. Ocean Front by friends
'Y,ho had we>rke<l poauccess(ully
at freefn• him ff1I more than an
hour and a half.
Fire department spokesman
Art Morton said Bercham
climbed W.O b1I atuc at about
12:30 p.ai. to do some work on a
light fixture that hangs over his
kitchen sink.
' Bercham became wedged into
the crawl space apparently
because he had loaded tools into
his pockets.
A JOYOUS REUNION AFTER EIGHT LONELY HOURS
Erin Berc:ham Hugged by Olrtfrfend hnny Arthur
Judge Goldstein Appointed
North Orange County
Municipal Court Judge Leonard
Goldstein of Newport Beach was
appointed to the Superior Court
bench today by Governor Ed·
mundG.BrownJr.
Judge Goldstein, 45, replaces
Judee Samuel Dreizen who re·
tired last week alter 16 years on
the superior bench.
Judge Goldstein was named to
the north county CQurt by Gov·
ernor Bl"O'lm in 1976.
He served as a bearing officer
for the state of California and In
prlvat.e practice before Wing ap-
pointed to the Fullerton bench.
He is a Democrat.
At about 6 p.m . Bercham's
girlfriend, Penny Arthur, came
over for a visit and spent nearly
'ln hour trylng to find him.
She told firemen she could hear
his faint cries and his pounding
on the walls, but she couldn't
figure out where the noise was
coming from.
When Miss Arthur did locate
him. she called a friend. Mark
Anderson, and they tried to slide
Bercahm out of his trap by cover-
ing him with dish washing liquid.
Morton said Anderson and
Miss Arthur punched some boles
In the ceiling near Bercham's
face so he could get air. They
·used one for a straw to provide
him with water.
At 8:30 p.m., they gave up their
effbrts and called firemen.
Morton said seven firemen
from the city ball station under
command of Capt. Jerry Strom
• worked for more UJan 45 minutes
before they were able to peel the
wood and plaster off the walls
and ceiling and free the trapped
man. Morton sald Bercham ap-
parently suffered only a few
minor cut.a and bruises in the or-
deal.
Coast Gas Statifna Alie
Sunny Saturday except
cloudy at beaches mombig
hours. Lowa tonl&bt 55 to
60. Hlaha Saturday in up.
per eos at beaches to 70a in-
land.
Jobless Rate Up : .. 1
Prices Take DiP
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Wholesale prices fell six-tenths
of one percent in June, the big·
gest drop in nearly four years,
the government reported today.
But the good news was offset by a
rise In the unemployment rat.e
from 6.9 percent to 7 .1 percent.
A big drop in farm prices led
the price decline last month, an
indication of an easing of infla·
tionary pressures at the
wholesale level.
Wholesale prices generally •
presage prices consumers pay
and the effects of last month's
decline could first show up at
supermarket counters following
several months or rapidly rlslng
food prices.
Julius Shiskin, commissioner
of labor statistics, said the Ln·
crease Ln unemployment "can't
be considered a verY serious ad·
verse sign for the future."
He also told the Joint
Economic Committee that the
drop In wholesale prices is "a
long way from a new pattern."
But he agreed with Sen.
William Proxmire CD-Wis.), that
recent drops in retail sales and in
the index of leading indicators,
coupled with inc reased un·
employment, "may be the begin-
ning of some serious trouble that
will have to be watched closely."
The increase In the jobless rate
was the first in four months, as
the number of American s
without jobs in June rose by
210,000 to 7 million. Most of the
increase occurred among adult
women, whose jobless rate rose
from 6.6 to 7 .2 percent.
The price news was certain to
cheer the Carter administration,
which bas been deeply worried
over price reports in previous
months that showed inflation in·
creasing at a worrisome 10 per.
cent annual rate during the first
quarter.
• However, the turnaround in the
unemployment rate could be a
disturbing sign for the long run.
Adminlstration officials have
cautioned that unemployment
might Increase In some months
but are predicting the jobless
rate will decline to about 6.5 per-
cent by the year's end.
Salary Flap
Not all the job report was bad.
Employment continued to in·
crease last month, rising by
210.000 to a total of 90.7 million.
Employment grew by 2.9 million
over the past eight months as the
economy continued to expand.
However, there was also a
large gain in the size of the labor
force last month, which rose by
480,000 to 97.6 million. The labor ·
force Includes those at work and
those looking for work. . . .
Newport Employes
Picket City Hall
A handful of Newport Beach ci· ty employes began picketing city
hall today. They said they plan to
maintain the picket line until
Monday's city council meeting In
the hopes of getting city officials
to reopen stalled salary negotia-
tions.
The pickets, who marched with
blue and white signs, are mem-
bers of the Newport Beach
Em ployes League which
represents 127 maintenance
men, mechanics, trashmen,
custodians, gardeners and sign
painters.
League Pres ident Stan
Peterson, who took a day off work to lead the pickets, said his
group is unhappy with the city's
last contract o£fer which totaled
* * *
a 6. 7 percent increase in pay and ,
c hanges in the retirement
system. His group is seeking a
package totalling seven percent.
"The city isn't offering as
much as they did last year," he
claimed.
The picketing marks another
effort by the league to call atten-
tion to its displeas ure over
negotiations. Tuesday, about 50
members of the group staged a
sick-out.
(See VIGIL,1 Page A2) * * * .. -Newpart Beaeh
Meanwhile, the SS-member Ci-
ty Employes Association which
represents the clerks and
secretaries, voted to accept a 4.8 j percent pay r aise which will cost
the city an additional one percent
in fringe benefit increases.
.Valuation Rises 19.2%
The 19.2 percent increase In as-
sessed valuation of property In
Newport Beach could result in a
nickel being shaved off the city's
$1.11 tax rate. (Related Story
PageA3.)
City Manager Robert Wynn
said today the unofficial figures
released by county Assessor
Bradley Jacobs will produce
about $302,950 more in revenue
than was anticipated in the re-
* * *
cently approved city budqet.
That figure, he said, represent·
ed about five cents on the tax
rate. If the city's revenue from
prop~rty taxes remained at the
same level for 1977-78 as it was
for 1976-77, then the new assessed
valuation figures would mean the
city could raist that money with
a 95·c• tax rate, Wynn said.
Councilmen will take no action
* * *
on the tax rate until August when
the assessed valt ation figures
have been finalized. Councilmen
have pledged to lower the tax
rate to offset any assessed valua-
tion increases beyond the
estimated 15 percent on which
the budget was based.
Wynn said the city's property
tax raises about 27 percent of the
income needed to meet this
year's $24.4 million budget.
* * *
How Coast Areas Fare
..\.2 DAILY PIL01' N FrldAw, Jutx e. 1tn
$850,000 Grant OK
Joint llse Won't JeopartBze Center
Councilmen whn rnt•l wllh
fedt"ral ofrlc1al111 Thur1d11v re port~ Wday lhr proJ>011~-d -joint
u•e of~ senior clhien f•c1lity In
Corona dt•I Mur with u prtv11t.-
~rhool 1.1i•1>1>rently will out
Jeopardrit' thl' $850,000 tira11t Uw
city II \l.'llnR, tO set UI> thl· <'Cntt.·r
Thrt°"' rorum·alm4"n -rcte Har
rel\. l.ul"illl· Kul'hn 1rnd ""Y Wilham!! met wath thr~ of
hciats from the Los An..:t>le!I of
ftce ot tht' 01.'partment of llOWi
1ng and Urb.m Dev~lopmc.·111
dlUD).
ln u memo to otht•r council
members, th~ trio reported that
"HUD appears lo have httle con-
cern with whether or not U1e
achool ft aetu.lly there for• f~
more months. but lbat there is an
acUvt pro1r1m under way and a
timely movement toward our ul·
tlm•l" eoal of a full service
iscnlor citizen's fucil\ly."
·rhe HUD orricials a lso met
Wlth 11chool owners John and
J udtth Wilson, center backers
Barnett Larks and Grant llow11ld
~nd Congressman Robe rt
Badham (R·NewPOrt Beach).
The meeting was called by
councilmen two weeks ago after
one of the HUD officials, Herbert
lloberts, sent a letter to the city
ind1caUng the city faced loss of
the funds because of the recently
approved lease extension for the
private school.
C'Atast Community
College Tax Cut
Chances Seen Sli1n
Coast Community <.:ollcg<' Dis-
tract 's ch1cr financial officer
docsn 't sec s1gnif1ca11l cuts in thl'
district's proJCCted 80-cent tax
rate this year, despite a 19.7 per-
cent increase in the district's llS·
scssed valuation.
Corr ellan Thompson. <'X -
ccutivc vice chancellor for the
three-college district, said he
would like to see some of the 4_ 7
percent increase over his 15 per-
NB Bridge
Backers Due
At Hearing
Supporters of plan~ for a seven-
1 a nc bridge on Pac1ric Coast
lhghway O\'er Upper Newport
Bay are expected lo turn out in
large numbe rs Monday for the
coastal cwnmission hearing on
the bridge permit.
The hearing is scheduled for 1
p.m. at the Huntington Beach Ci·
ly Council chambers.
Newport Beach architect Bill
Ficker. who heads the citizen
Bridge Action Team <BAT). is
urging interested people to at-
tend "to indicate to the coastal
commission that governmental.
civic and citizen leadership arc
behind this pro iecL''
The $6.5 million bridge to be
buill by CalTrans will be 20 feet
high and wall be localed slightly
to the north of the existing struc-
ture
It will have six through lanes of
traffic and a seventh lane for
westbo1md trafCic that is turning
north on Dover Drive.
Highway officials s ay they
hope the project as approved in
ti me lo put it out lo bid by the end
of 1977. lt would be completed by
mid-1979 if it stays on schedule.
cent estimations go into what he
said is the district 's depleted re
serve account.
But district trustees might
think otherwise next Wednesduy
night when they meet to establish
the college district 's tax rate.
. T.rus tees approved a pre-
hmmary $68.2 million budgetjusl
last week, and ar~ scheduled to
es_tablish a tax rate for the dis-
trict next Wednesday.
A $5.5 million state allocation
recently authorized for the dis-
trict by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.,
is expected to cut the estimated
87.l cent tax r ate to about 80
cents.
But Thompson was not that en-
thusiastic about culling more
from the tax rate.
"I have not computed what the
additional increase in property
lax funds wi ll mean to the dis-
trict." he said. "Actually, I won't
receive the oHicial (as!>cssed
valuation) figures from the coun-
ty until Monday.·'
He said it would be up to the
board or trustees to decide what
the final tax rate will be "but
any increases will have to go into
building the reserve fund.••
T hompson said the district cur-
rent.ly holds reser ves of $1.7
m1lhon, or about five pe rcent of
the district's budget. Ile added
that he feels comfortable with a
10 percent reserve account.
Battle Looming
W ASHJNGTON (AP } -The
Carter administration is bracing
for a sWf battle in Congress over
its proposal to sell sven highly
sophis llcated airborne radar
systems to Iran. Even before the
Pentagon announcement Thurs-
day or the proposed $1.2 billion
deal. several senators were on
record against it.
Riding IDgh
Amin Orders Tiro Linws?
STUTTGART, West Germany (AP) -The
Daimler Benz motor company says its dealer in
Uganda has ordered two Mercedes 600 limousines.
one of the world 's most expensive cars, and the
newspaper Bild Zeitung said they are for President
ldi Amin.
·•we don't know who they are for," said a com·
pany spokesman, "but you'd be surprised to know
how many people apparently can afford a 600."
However. the spokesman denied the newspaper's
report that the cars were to be armor-plated and
equipped with extra-strong •air conditioning and
direct communications to Amin's palace guard.
-The company said the 600 model is made only to
order and about 50 are sold annually at prices of up to
$.52,000. depending on the extra equipment. Users
have included Pope Paul VI, President Tito of
Yugoslavia and Mao Tse-tung.
ORANGE COAST H
DAILY PILOT
. _ .. __
,. .......... -~,-
Ylce~.:.= .. _.,.,,
n.a:.:r--
~·~ .......... Mo-·~ ~ ... ~ .....,,. ...
M•nl.i111N"ttl ... 1~
'BigRUk'
Spells Jail
For Youth •
ANN ARBOR. Mtcb. (AP> -
Ra)' Hl1genbottom uld he
''waated to ride in a big car just
lite tbe praidtnl." So he stole a
MUM-twice.
Wgenbottom, 19, tried to steal
a beane'l'thnday, but police re-
lea•ed him aft•r tbe funeral home dedlnod to presa charaes.
Proa\ police beadq\lart.ers he
went back to the Mu~~
Funeral bomt. tnbbed a (u
fla1, Jumped Into the aame
hearM -by now in a 1ara1•
drove i~ tbroUlh a wood•n wan aDd "P Ute It.net, ctuuied by pollco a1ala, be wu caulht 'trheft the bean• raft IJ\tci
an em.,....ent at -naturalb'
-FalivkW Cemetery_ .~(W hit·
Uq ...._ c.u dtHtJVlfJI lta dtl,,.,.
H•waMldfor~ •• ...,.,) r.-i
Tbo ~~been operating ~e buU at Ule •eoior
c ler alte t Fifth and
arguerite Avenues on a yearly
I se that bu been renewed
lwice~
l!nder the lease just approved
which will run from Aug. 1, 1977
to June 30, 1978, the scbool will
have use of two or the bulldings
on the site and the senior citizen
center will be installed in the
third.
While the last year of the
school's lease is running, the city
has proposed to build a cafeteria··
auditorium oo the site and to in·
sta II some other recreational
facilities for the seniors.
Running
Bulh
Kill Teen
PAMPLONA, Spain CAP > -
Doie~s of .me~ c~ased by fighting
bulls m this city s annual festival
Jammed up al the entrance to a
bull ring today, trampUng each
other and being trampled by the
ha lf-ton animals. A teenager was
crushed to death under the pileup
1.md 35 men were injured.
Authorities said the dead boy
Jose, J.oaquin Esparza , 17, ~
promising amateur soccer player
r~om Pamplona, triggered the
pileup when he tripped and fell at
the narrow gate lo the bull ring. ·
One at~r another, about so
men runrung ahead or the six
charging bulls fell atop Esparza.
The bulls then plowed into the
mass of humanity, treading on the
Fallen runners tor about five
minutes before heading into the
rinJl
The :-;creaming men. many
t:ovcred with blood. lay writhing
on the ground until ambulances
arrived
Doctors said Esparza was
crushed to death.
It was the second day of the an-
nual running of the bulls restivaL
Esparza was the first fatality
in the bull r unning since 1975
when a bricklayer was killed and
20 men hurt in another pileup at
the entrance to the arena.
There will be six more runs in
the week-long festival, over a
900-yard course from the corrals
through the s treets of the arena.
Police estimated that 1.200 run-
ners , an unuiwally large number
look part today '
Hotel and bar workers halted a
strike JUSl before the festival
began. A spokesman for the
strikers said the walkout, called
lo protest the firing or 70 fellow
workers. might res ume after the
heavy spenders leave town
There were also street fights on
opening day between Basque na-
t 10~ a hsts a nd a nti-political
holadayers shouting "Festival -
Yes! Politics -No!"
Auto Victim
Said Serious
A Corona del Mar woman re-
m ained in serious condition to-
day at ~oag Memorial Hospital
after bemg struck by a car while
crossing East Coast Highway
Thursday morning.
Police said Frances Merrie An·
derson, 52, of 305 Fernleaf Ave.
was struck in the crosswalk at
Goldenrod Avenue.
The driver of the car, Mabel
Fitzmorris. 79, of 412 Heliotrope
Ave., Corona del Mar, was mak-
ine a left tum from Goldenrod
onto the highway at the time of
the mishap, police said today.
Police s aid the accident is still
under investigation.
F,...PageAJ
HEIS}1S •••
into the station to ask directions
to Fashion ls land.
Gamble sald tbe slightly built
man was back in about 10
minutes, lbls time asking the at-
t~ndant lo check lbe oil ln bis car.
Gamble said that when be bent
over the suspect's car ename ••
bard object wu shoved into his
side and be was ordered into the
s tation oft'lce. He aaid the bandit
demanded mone1 from the safe
but Gamble could not open It, .0
he was ordered to clean out the
cuh repter. Gamble aaid the
bandit brandl1bed a butcher
knlf e with a &-lnoh blade while be
was gettlnJ tho money and or·
de red him lo ''be cool."
~Pliiiiiied
SAN DIEOO CAP) -The city
1choot l'yalem ls ~nt civon unW
July 20 to malte 11\~lftcaUou tn
tta dtaein1auon plan, but an at·
toruy ror-tboM pnliiit•• \be c .. ..,. lb& chMI• ~~lll·
Qot molllfJ plal•tlff1. •bo ...... ,,. .. ~
~
o.i1v Piiot St.II Photo
CITY EMPLOYES PICKET NEWPORT CITY HALL
Workers Unhappy Over Stalled Pay Talks
Destruction
Wreaked on
Pair's Home
PROSPECT HEIGHTS, 111
IAP> -Gerald Schubring :ind
has family, back from a camping
trip. pushed open their front door
in this comfortable suburb und
felt horror -vandals had kicked
through eight walls, s lashed
rurniture. strewn food about -
and stolen alreost nothin~.
Schubring's stunned wife Curol
sized it up.
"They came to destroy, and
boy, they did a beautiful job. Two
tape recorders and a clock radio
ar e the only things missing. ·
"There was total desiruclion
everywhere and a ll l could do
was scr eam, "Oh, My God!" she
said.
"Steaks, roasts, a gallon of
sourdough starter and other food
was thrown all over the place.
"Two glass chandeliers were
~mashed as if they were swing·
mg on them. They poured hquid
detergent on our bed and poured
oil inside and out of our 1976 auto
parked in the gara~e-Thev put
Kitty Litter on our dining room
table.
"They took all our slides and
d_umped them all over the place.
ripped up our projector screen.
knocked ln the television picture
tube and completely dismantled
our eight-track tape pl ayer.
"The hedge clippers were
lodged in the ceiling of the family
room and a knife was stuck in the
wall. One hole in a wall upstairs
w as big enough lo walk through.
''They covered the family
room wall with eggs and
Vaseline. They smashed mirror
tiles on the wall and punctured
holes in family por traits, includ-
ing a photograph of my 9-year·
old daughte r who died three
years ago."
Police say the neighborhood's
homes are worth an average or
$90,000to $100,000.
FromPageAJ
VIGIL ••.
The first of the city's six as-
sociations to settle was the
Professional and Technical
E mployes Association which
earlier accepted a five percent
pay raise for its 56 planners and
engineers. That raise will also
co~t the city an additional one
oercent for fringe benefit!>
Thursday, lifeguards agreed to
a two-year contract which calls
for three percent pay raises the
first year except for three of the
association's nine members
Marine Safety Capt. Bud Belshc
will get a 4.5 percent raise and
the two rescue boat operator~
will get four percent.
In the second year, there will
be no pay raises, but at the end of
the second year, the lifeguards
will be taken out of the existing
Public Employes Retirement
System (PERS) and put into the
more expensive California
Highway Patrol (CHP) plan.
Membm'S of lbe police and fire
employe associations remain at
odds with the eity over use of the
CHP plan and both groups have
declared impasses i n their
negotialiQllS.
Fire employes have asked for
mediation and the first session
has been set for Wednesdav.
~olice employes will tak·e their
grievances to the city council Monday.
Parking Meters
f.A)()ted in Newport
Thieves app arently armed
with a pass key have bit parking
meters in central Newport, get-
ting $.570 from meters on lSth
Street between Bay Avenue and
the Ocean Front, police said to-
day.
Investigators said they believe
the money was stolen during the
hours of darkness last Thu111day
and Friday.
Irvine
Expects
Mase
Irvine Company officials said
today they expect to sign a lease
with the Prudential Insurance
Company "shortly" for• portion
of the ll·acre parcel at 600
Newport Center Drive.
The insurance company will
build a 22-story office building on
part of the site, a comp8ft.Y
spokesman said. No definite
plans ha ve been made for lbe r~
mainder of the site, although a .
"prestige hotel" is one or several
possibilities under consideration.
The company has hired
architect Ernest C. Wilson Jr. of
the firm of Langdon and W'J.laon
to design the office building.
The project is to be built as a
joint venture by Henry C. Beck
and C. L. Peck. with construction
tentatively slated to begin by late
1978. Occupancy would be in late
1979 or early 1980.
The building is to be built as an
investment by the insuranoe
company which financed the COO•
strucl!on of Fashion Jsland in
1965.
Wilson said the building pro-
posed 1s under the height limi'
and "well w1lhm" the square
footage limit recently i1et by the
city council's resolution limiting
the ultimate growth of Newport.
Center.
The development of the center -
and the traffic that development
t.as produced has caused concern
among city offi cials who have
been divided over how lo deal
with it.
Two recent efforts led by Coun~
cilman Paul Ryckoff lo impose a
building moratorium on projects
such as the Prudential high rise
have been defeated.
The site lies out side the
jurisdiction of the coastal com·
m1ss1on and 1s already zoned for
high rise office use. so 1t would
not normally come under review
by the city counc1 L
However. City Manager
Robert Wynn said this morning
th:it there as a provision in the
city's general plan which enables .
the city council to r eview any
project in the city t hat might
have substantial impact on the
other parts of the general plan,
such as its traffic circulation ele·
ment.
Drifter Still .
Out in Front
InTrampac
The yacht Drifter report-
ed a position 742 miles
from Honolulu at 9 a.m. to-
day and was 132 miles
a h ead of Windward
Passage's record run in
1971-
Merlin was in second
place on elapsed time and
was 771 miles from the
finish. Both yachts are in
the light displacement
division or the race.
Jn the Division I class A
battle, Windward Passage
had moved ahead of Kialoa
and was 829 miles from the
finis h. Kialoa was 840
m iles out.
The four lead boats were
all ahead of WP's pbsition
of 874 miles to go ln 1971.
Ragtime 's position
placed her 829 miles from
Diamond Head.
Winds we re reported
from 18 to 23 knots through
the 66·boat fleet. '(See
earlier story Page B6.)
It's Yonv ·Dollar!·
QUITE OFTEN A CUSTOMER IS CONFUSED
WHEN SHOPPING FOR CARPETING. HE ASSUMES
THAT IF A CAR PET PILE IS HEAVY ANO THICK
THE CARPET IS NECESSARILY OF GOOD
QUALITY.
NOT TRUE! MORE OFTEN THE QUALITY OF
THE FIBER. ANO NOT THE QUANTITY. IS THE
OETERMIN•NG FACTOR WHICH CONTROLS WEAR
AND PERFORMANCE.
rrs YOUR MONEY; -so. WHEN BUYING
YOUR CARPETING, MAKE SURE YOU ARE
DEALING WITH AN ESTABLISHED MILL, ANO
EQUALLY AS tMPORTANT. A REPUTABLE
DEALER.
Saddlebaek
EDITION
Afternoon
N.Y.Stoeks
·~
•
VOL 70. NO. 189, ~SECTIONS, -'2 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JULY 8, 1977 .
Vandals Wreak Destruetion on limn
PR98PECT llEJGHTS, Ill.
(AP) -Gerald Schubrlng 1md
his family, back from a cumpma
bip, pushed open tbetr front door
lo thls comfortable suburb ond
felt horror. vandals had kicked
throu1h e.J&bt walls, s lashed
furniture, strewn food about -
~d stolen almost nothing.
Schubring's stunned wife Carol
sized it up·
''They came to destroy, and
boy, they did a beautiful job. Two
tape recorders and a clock radio
are the only things missing.
"There was total destruction
everywhere and all I could do
was scream, "Ob, My God!" she
said.
"Steaks, Toasts, a gallon or
sourdough starter and other food
was thrown all over the place.
"Two glass chandeliers were
smashed as if they were_swing·
ing on them. They poured liquid
detergent on our bed and poured
oil inside and out of our 1976 auto
parked in the garage. They put
Killy Utter on our dining room
table.
"They took all our slides and
dumped them all over the place,
ripped up our projector screen,
College Value
Up 27 .5 Percent
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER
Of Ille D•llr Piiot Stall
The 27.5 percent increase in
Saddleback College property
valuation this year means
trustees could cut the tax rate by
about 20 cents and still raise the
' same amount of money as they
did last year.
District officials view such a
move as unlikely, however, in
light of lhe district's conlinwng
struggle to finance new construc-
tion lo meet growth.
.Johless Rat e Vp
tt is also improbable because
of a new state law that put a lid
on college district tax rates,
permitting them to be lowered
and frozen but not increased
again without a vote of the elec·
to rate.
District Business Manager
Roy Barletta had predicted a
valuation increase of 18 percent
this year and expressed some
surprise at the actual figure.
Barletta said the difference
would amount lo "several hun·
dred thousand dollars" if
trustees choose to hold the tax
rate at its present level of 95
cents per $100 of assessed valua·
tion.
Much of the valuation increase
reported this week stems from
new construction, though virtual·
ly all homeowners in the college
district will pay higher taxes
next year.
With the average home in the
district now selling for roughly
$90.000, the lax bill -to support
the college -on such a home
(SeeOOLLEGE, PageA2)
1
Wholesale Prices Down
· ·WASHING T 0 N C A P ) -presage prices consumers pay long way from a new pattern.'·
· Wholesale prices fell six-tenths and the effects of last month's But he agreed with Sen . 1 of one percent in June, the big-decline could first show up at William Proxmire CD· Wis.), that
, gest drop in nearly four years, supermarket. counters following recent drops in re~ail sal~s and in
1 the government reported today. several months of rapidly rising the index of leading indicators,
· But the good news was offset by a food prices. 'coupled with increased un·
1
rise in the unemployment rate Julius Sbiskin, commissioner employment, •·may be the begin·
from 6.9 percent to 7 .1 percent. of labor statistics, said the in· ning of some serious trouble that
A big drop in farm prices led crease in unemployment •·can't will have to be watched closely."
the price decline last month, an be considered a very serious ad· The increase in the jobless rate
indication of an easing of infla. verse sign for the future." was the first. in four months, as
ttonary pressures at the He also told the Joint the number of Americans
wholesale level. Economic Committee that the without jobs in June rose by
Wholesale prices generally drop in wholesale prices is "a 210,000 to 7 million. Most of the
; increase occurred among adult
Overflowing
School Pool Goal, Surptu1ed ..
By LA.URIE KASPER
Ol IM Dally Piiot St•ll
A fireworks sale hel ped
Esperanza School supporters
burst above their $18,200 pool
fund goal this week.
Ruby Edman, principal of the
Mission Viejo school for the
train able mentally retarded,
said a donation of $.WO from the
Saddleback Cosmopolitans
Thursday took total contributions
up to $18,500.
The Cosmopolitans. a new Sad·
dleback Valley organization in·
volved in its first fund-raising
project, raised the donation by
selling fireworks for the July 4
holiday. Members have asked
that excess money be used for
students' swim wear.
pancake breakfasts, Las Vegas
nights, art auctions, drawings, a
swim·a·lhon and the like -con-
tributed from $10 to $1500 lo the
fund, Mrs. Edman said.
She said contributions came
from throughout the South
Orange County area and are
representative of the students
who come from the Irvine,
Laguna Beach, Capistrano and
Saddleback school districts.
The $36,400 pool currently is
under construction at the school
and expected to be completed by
the fall. Saddleback Valley
Unified School District trustees
have agreed lo match funds for
the pool projeet.
The fund-raising effort began
in December, 1975 when trustees
assiened an architect to design
an addition to the facility.
women, whose jobless rate rose
from 6.6to1.2 percent.
The price news was certain to
cheer the Carter administration,
which has been deeply worried
over price reports in previous
months that showed inflation in·
creasing at a worrisome 10 per·
cent aMual rate during the first
quarter.
However, the turnaround in the
unemployment rate could be a
disturbing sign for the long run.
Administration officials have
cautioned that unemployment
might increase in some months
but are predicting the jobless
rate will dedine to about 6.5 per·
cent by the year's end.
Not all the job report was bad.
Employment continued to in·
crease last month, rising by
270,000 to a total or 90. 7 million.
Employment grew by 2.9 million
over the.past eight months as the
economy continued to expand.
More than 90 other individuals
and groups -some who pulled
money out ot their pockets and
others who sponsored bake sales,
The expansion could <See POOL, Page AU
Ho\Vever. there was also a
large gain in the size of the labor
force last month, whlch rose by
480,000 to 97.6 million. The labor
force includes those at work and
be those looking for work.
knocked in the television picture
tube and completely dismantled
our eight-track tape player.
"The hedge clippers were
lodged in the ceiling of the family
room and a knife was stuck in the
wall. One hole in a wall upstairs
was big enough to walk through.
"They covered the family
room wall with eggs and
Vaseline. They s mashed mirror
tiles on the wall and punctured
holes in family portraits. includ·
Ing a photograph of my 9-year-
old daughter who died three
years ago."
Gerald Schubring is a 39-year·
old computer analyst. His wife
Carol is 36. They have four
children and their home is a
seven·room dwelling in this
quiet. affluent suburb northwest
or Chicago. I
Police say the neighborhood's
homes are worth an averag&·of
$90,000 lo $100,000. I "I don't know who would do
this,'' said Schubring. "It'~ clear
that it was just malicious van-
dalism."
But police say more may be In·
volved. They want lo know if any
one harbored a grudge.
D .. IY Pilot l'tlo4e W ltldltl'llf ICMl!ler
NEWPORT BEACH FIREMEN RESCUE ERIN BEACHAM FROM ATTIC CONFINEMENT
Victim Spent More Th•n Eight Hourt In 100-degrH He•t Thurwd•y i
Running
Bulls
Kill Teen
PAMPLONA, Spain CAP>
Dozens of men chased by fighting
bulls in this city's annual festival
jammed up at the entrance to a
bull ring today, tramplin& each
other and being trampled by the
half·lon animals. A teenager was
crushed lo death under the pileup
and 35 men were injured.
Authorities said the dead boy.
Jose Joaquin ~sparza , 17, a
promising amateur soccer player
from Pamplona, triggered the
pileup when he tripped and fell at
the narrow gate lo the bull ring.
One after another, aboul 50
men running ahead of lhe six
charging bulls fell atop Esparza.
The bulls then plowed into the
massofhumanily, treadingonthe
fallen runners for about five
minutes before heading into the
ring.
The screaming m en, many
covered with blood, lay wnthing
on the ground until ambulances
arrived.
Doctors said Esparza was
crushed to death.
It was the second day of the an-
nual running of the bulls fesllval.
Espana was the first fatality
in the bull running since 1975,
wtien a bricklayer was killed and
20 men hurt in another pileup at
the entrance to the arena.
There will be six more runs in
the week-long festival, over a
900-yard course from the corrals
through the streets of the arena.
Police estimated that 1,200 run·
ners, an unusually large number,
took part today.
Hotel and bar workers halted a
strike just before the festival
began. A spokesman for the
strikers said the walkout, called
lo protest the firing o( 70 fellow
workers. might resl!tne alter the
heavy spenders leave town.
There were also street Ci1hts on
opening day belween Duque na-
tionalists and anU-polltlcal
holidayers shoutin~ "Festival -
Yeti Politics -'Nol •
. NeJVPOrl Man StuckJ
8 Hours in Ceiling
By .JOANNE R EYNOLDS Ol IM D•tlY Pilot Si.tit
A 24-year-old Newport Beach
man is recovering from mmor in·
juries today after being trapped
for more than ,eigbt hours in a
ceiling crawl space in tem·
peratures firemen said reached
more than 100 degrees.
Erin Bercham· was pulled from
the enclosed attic area at about
9:30 p.m. Thursday by firemen
who were called lo his home at
7404 W. Ocean Front by friends
who had worked onsuccessfully
at freeing him !or more than an
hour and a half.
Fire department spokesman
Art Morton said Bercham
climbed into his attic at about
12:30 p.m. to do some work on a
light fixture that hangs over his
kitchen sink.
School Heads
Bercham became wedged into
the crawl space apparently
because he bad loaded tools into
his pockets.
At about 6 p.m. Bercham's
girlfriend, Penny Arthur, came
over for a visit and spt!nt nearly
:tn hour trying tO find him.
She.told firemen she could hear
his faint cries and his pounding
on the walls, but she couldn't
figure out where the noise was
coming from.
When Miss Arthur did locate
him. she called a friend, Mark
Anderson. and they tried to slide
Bercahm out of his trap by cover-
ing him with dishwashlng liquid.
Morton said Anderson and
Miss Arthur punched some holes
in the ceiling near Bercham 's
race so he could get air. They
used one for a straw to provide
him with water. ·
Al 8:30 p.m .. they gave up their
efforts and called firemen.
Morton said seven firemen
from the city hall station under
command of Capt. Jerry Strom
worked for more than 45 minutes
before they were able to peel the
wood and plaster olf the walls
and celling and free the t.rapped
man. I
Morton said Bercham ap-1 oarentlv suffered ortlv a few. 1
minor cuts and bruises in tbe or-,
deal.
Sunny Saturday except
cloudy at beaches morning
houn . Lowa lOGight SS to
60. HiCbS Saturda1 in u_p.-
per 609 at beaches to TOI 111·
land.
U DAILY PILO f SB frnj1y. July II Hl/1
How Coast Areas Fare
Figure• Given for Auea1ed J1 aluation. Hikea
ClTIES
L&1t Vrtt.
Dollar Pettent Percent
('lh 11111 um 1!177 1978 tncrf'a~" Increase Jocre.st
Co la 1~.i
Fount.am Vall•y
Huntlniton Bc'~lh
lrv1nf'
'377.912. l!IO $44:>,J7ti. 170 ti7,461,290 17.8
21.9
21 6
29.3
22.2
19 2
23.0
30 3
13 .7
20.9
28.1
23.8
21.2
23 .9
22.6
23.5
24.5
31.9
2<H,87J.OJO 2.S9,754,JJO 44,881,320
tSS7,799.69~ 799,95~.!j()() 1·12.153,205
3~.203.6.111 •1!lH, 1!'>9.180 112,955,550 L iunu lh.•dch
Nc~port H1•ach
San Clem~nte
1:11 .597.5711 JflO,H..16.'I 10 W,238,840
671l, 101,6ai 808 ~\9,317 IJ0,314,691
12!>.~97.WO 1~4 :JS&,010 28.888,220
Sitn Juan Caplatrono
Sul Beat·h
71 ,244,440 92,!197.100 21,652,750
132,1166.600 151.118,634') 18,252.030
Un1ncorp Total
Orange County Total
$1,149,353.365 I .'i29,314,fl2() 279,961 ,255 24 3
19 7
20.3
18.7 Stl,1S2,998,3·H ::1,700,732,022 1,613,733,681
ELEM EN"fARY SCHOOL DISTRICTS
1976-1977 1977 197~
Dollar
Increase
Last Yrs.
Percent Percent
Increase Increase District
Fountain Valley
Huntington Beach
Ocean View
Sl97, 760.405 2'U>..t2J,tj00 48.663, ms 24.6
20.5
24.l
30.0
20.6
25.6
30.6
20.8
266,749.190 321,380,670 54,631,480
313,736,060 389,450,!!60 75.714,800
Seal Beach
Westminster
100,527,240 108,588,190 8,060,950 8.0
16.6 233,991,606 272,720,675 38, 729,069
UNI Fl ED SCHOOL DISTRICTS
Last Yrs.
Dollar Percent Percent
1978-1977 1977-1978 Inc rease Increase District
Capistrano $454,629,320 582,475.310 127,845,990 28.1
36 1
26.l
19.0
26 7
Increase
23.5
25.7
25.8
22 2
24 4
Irvine 237,259,640 322,959,!iOO 85,699,950
Laguna Beach
Newport-Mesa
Saddleback Valley
196,057,315 247,221.100 51,163,785
998,050,4.36 1.187,613,327 189,562.891
380.509,250 482,290,760 101,781,510 r lllGll SCHOOL DISTRICTS
Last Yrs.
D.o!!!_s" _
1977-1978 Increase
Percent
Increase
Percent
Increase District
Huntington Beach
1976-1977
$1, 112,764,501 l,338,563,995 225,799,494 20 3 24 .S
JUNIOR COLLEGES
Last Yr1.
District
Coast Community
Saddleback
1976-1977
$2, 110,814,937
l ,615.9'l4,235
1977-1978
2,526,177,322
2.060.644.140
Dollar
lncreai.c
415,362,385
'144, 719.905
Percent
Increase
19.7
27.5
Percent
Increase
23.4
23 .2
Minuteman Baited
Rockwell Layoffs
Seen in Anaheilll
Rockwell lntcrnalwnal will lay
off 700 more employes from its
Anaheim plant because of a halt
m production of the Minuteman 3
missile
The first notices will be sent
out later this month, officials
said Thursday, in the wake of an
order from the Defense Depart
ment lo hall production by tht•
end of September.
Meanwhlile, some 3,000 former
Rockwell e mploycs already have
applied for unemployment
benefits from the ::.tale, offi cials
reported.
A spokeswoman for the state
Employme nt Develo pme nt
Department <EDD ) s aid
Rockwell applications were be
ing processed in groups of about
15 to sgeed up the process.
About 8,000 workers were laid
orf by Ute company when Presi-
dent Carter decided against pro-
duction of the R-1 bomber.
One employe decided this week
to take advantage of the com·
pany's special job relocation pro-
gram, and by the end of the day,
was on another firm's payroll.
Company officials hope this is
a n indication their relocation
program will find jobs for at
least half of those la1d off when
the 81 program was canceled.
J ack Hefley, a spokesman for
the firm's B-1 div1s1on. said that
1,200 of the 2,700 B-1 workers
already laid of( have gone
through briefings about the
salary and benefits due them.
about how to write res umes and
about interviewing for ne w pos1-
lions.
Hefll'y said that employe pro-
files will be catalogued by next
week, and will be mode available
to other ll.ockwell divisions and
lo lSO companies that have con-
tacted Rockwell for employe in'
formation.
"We're estimatin there are
O"ANQf! COAST se
DAILY PILOT
quite a ft>w opl•111ngs fnr our
skilled pe<iple and we feel we can
relocate up to 50 percent of our
people." Heney said
All of the company's d1v1s1ons
have stopped adverlising for new
e m ployes. he said
Meanwhile, US Sen Alan
Cranston ID·Calif J, plans lo ex
plore what can be done for thl·
laid off workers in a m eetmg to
day with government off1c1ab
and Rockwell reprcsentati\'CS
from the firm's Pnlmdale as
sembly plant and El Sl•gundo
headquarters
Richard Silberman. state
Sec retary or Business and
T ransportation, said "we are
more interested m work than in
aid." but indicated ofCicrnls will
look al city. county and stale
sources of funding to supplement
what may be obt ained from the
federal govE-rnment.
Fro• Page A I
POOL ...
financed by state school building
funds which could not be used for
a pool. So. thl' school's staff and
parents said they would r aise the
needed money in lhl' community
Some people doubted that they
could raise enough money But
Mrs Edman said she studied the
proposal when she was assigned
to the school in March. 1976
After that, she sajd, she knew the
goal would be reached.
Esperanza students have been
using community pools for their
s wimming lesson s . These
facilities. however . often aren't
available m good weather
Mrs. Edman said the pool will
provide her students with both
physical and ps ychological
therapy.
"I ju.st couldn't imagine any
more solid support from the com-m u n l ty ,'' she said. "1 j ust
couldn't lmadne it anv better
than It's been.··
ln addition to the support for
the pool. she said, there has been
an expanded awareness or the
school.
Goldstein
Appointed
Fro•PageAJ
COLLEGE. •
would increase from about $214
last year to almost $275 this year.
if the full 27.5 percent valuation
increase 1s applied (l nd1 v1dual
assessments will vary)
The pending budget for next
year presently s tands al $24.7
m 1 I I ion and Barletta s aid
trustees could conceivably in·
crease that figure based on the
add1t1onal revenue generated by
the valuation increase.
Barletta s aid the additional rev-
enue could be used by trustees
to restore some items cut from
the budget. which started out at
SJO million. Last year's final
budget was only $19 million.
ln addition. the business
manager suggested that the ad-
ditional funds could be applied to
construction of the district's
second campus in Irvine on a
··pay-as-you-go" basis rather
than a more costly lease-
purchase arrangement.
~ien Arrests
Slowing Down
At San Onofre
Arrests of illegal aliens were
down this week at the San Onofre
c h ec kpoint south of San
Clemente. after U.S. Border
Patrol agents apprehended near·
ly 500 aliens over the three-day
holiday weekend.
Sunday. the arrest or 444 all ens
on one e iizht·hour shift broke all
previous records for a single
shirt, sa1d Alex Janicki. patrol
agent in charge. The total
number o ( aliens arrested Sun·
day was 493, he said, not ap-
proaching the record 570 arreat·
ed in a single 24-hour period on
June 12.
The 776 aliens and two U.S.
citizens arrested for smuggling.
on Sunday and Monday com·
pared to 206 alien!l and a single
U.S. citizen arrested July 3 and 4
last year, Janicki Hid.
"You must remember that last
vear we didn't have the cbeck·
point," be said. "We bad to
have probable cause to stop a
vehicle." He referred to a rederal
court interpretaUon of the Jaw
then extant.
Smuggling arrests at the
checkpoint dwlndled to 79 on
Tuesday and 73 on Wednesdll)',
he said.
FPC Cites Texaeo
WASH1NGTON (AP) -Tbt
Federal Power Commts!doo bu
ruled th.at T~xaoo Inc., bu been
burntna oUshoro natuul cu at
one of ltl Port An.hi.tr, Tex., tv-
flncrtts without S>roper a"tborl·
ty, • spot man 1.td Thursday.
Tuaeo tqutd a •C..tement Lo
New York clalmJn1 ll.a UM of tbe
tU WU "eoUttly Pl"Ofel' Qd
lea al" and • 1PQk .. mu •114 ~
com pa:ay wu "not •••led tn an~ ~Y~ptKUrit, ~
Libel
Defeme
To Start
WINCHESTER, Tenn. (AP) -
After emotional but confused
testimony by the chier witne~s
again.st the Scottsboro Boys, at·
torneys reated her case today in a
$B million libel sult against NBC.
The network planned to call
two main witnesses: John
McGreevy, who wrote the script
for the television movie "Judge
Horton and the Scottsboro
Boys." and Dr. Dnn T . Carter, a
history professor from Emory
University in Atlanta who ad-
vised NBC on the movie.
NBC is fighting the suit filed by
Victoria Price Street, now the
70-year-old wife of a Tennessee
tobacco farmer. She contends
that the network invaded her
privacy and libeled her in the
movie by suggesting that she lied
in the Scottsboro case.
Back in the 1930s, through
three trials, Mrs. Price testified
that she and a companion were
raped by nine blacks as they
hitched a ride aboard a freight
train from Chattanooga, Tenn.,
to Huntsville, Ala.
"When they stopped the train. l
was still laying down," s he said
Thursday. "One~r them was in
there and Ruby was in there and
they woke me up and helped me
get my clothes on."
Mrs. Street said she was bleed
ing from the head and other parts
of her body.
"And I've got the scars to
proove it from where those black
boys cut me," she said, pointing
excitedly to her chest, her arm,
her face and her back.
Doctors at the original trial
said they saw no signs of blood on
either women.
Nine blacks were convicted of
rape and s pent a total of 130
years in prison before they were
pardoned or paroled. They con·
tended they had been railroaded
in a racially troubled at·
mosphere .
.. If they'd been a bunch of
white boys, l 'd have done the ·
sa me thing," Mrs . Street
testified Thursday. ··1t wasn't
because of color that I charged.
Because there's as good colored
folks as there are white folk."
Under c ross-examination,
Mrs Street said some scenes
from the movies were inaccurate
11nd others were ''bold-faced
lies "
She also denied testimony from .
transcripts of the original trials
half a dozen times, saying at one
point she may have been con·
fused.
"It all happened so long ago,"
she expla1ned.
f'rona Page AJ
RAISES •••
peak was $32,101. An e lementary
principal at the highest level
could have earned up to $27,193
last year. This year. the top rung
is $28,282.
This year, an administrator's
cost or living raise will be equal
to the difference between the
raise he earned last year and 10
percent.
Ir he earned the maximum six
percent merit hike last year. Ills
cost or living raise this year
would be four percent. IC he
earned no merit pay last year, he
gets a 10 percent cost of living
raise this year.
Assistant principals. deans of
students and administrators in
district offices (except the
superintendent, who Is under
contract) are also included on the
new salary plan.
( Pilot L~book J
Teaching 'Brass'
To Older Folks
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER
01 IM O.lly Pi IOI Sl•lf
MORE AND MORE young people -and young women
in particular -are engaging in an activity lhal's become
known as "assertion training."
Saddleback College has decided such training, which is
aimed at improving self-image and confidence, shouldn'l be
limited to the younger generation, which often is cocky
enough.
So the Mission Viejo school is offer-
ing a summer course that teaches "as-
sertive skills for older peopk." The class
will be offered through the college's
Emeritus Institute from July 12 to Aug.
18 on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 10
a.m tonoon.
Instructor Janice Chalfant noted
that assertion should never he confused
with aggression.
"The intent of assertive behavior is
lo communicate honestly and directly,
standing up Cor personal rights without being demanding, or
humiliating or coercing others," she s·aid.
With practice. assert1on·trained oldsters wlll be able to
create better relationships with authority figures. doctors,
lawyers, bank officials and the Internal Revenue Service,
Mrs. Chalfant said.
SADDLEBACK VALLEY Unifi ed School District
trustees miss meetings now and then but as far as anyone
knows, an upcoming absence may be the first attrtbuted to a
case of measles.
The dreaded red spots struck Mark Howell, the board's
student member, this week.
Howell, selected by a student committee to sit for a
second year as the student member, was to be sworn in at
the session next week. However, district officials doubt he
will recuperate in time.
··He has a terrible. terrible case of the measles," said
Loa Young. board president.
Howell thinks he picked up the disease while attending
Boys Slate in Sacramento recently.
That raises the question 1f some of our state legislators
are also spending some vacation days with the itchy spots
A GROUP OF 39 BOYS from all over Orange and Los
Angeles Counties called El Toro Marine Corps Air Station
"home" for the last two weeks in June.
The youngsters. ranging in age from 8 to 16, participat-
ed in the "boot camp" portion of the Marine Corps League's
"Young Marine" program.
To make the experience as authentic as possible. the
first stop was the barber shop for a "white sidewall" job.
followed by classroom work, drills and a healthy dose or
phys ical training.
"The most important part of our training is to give the
boys respect not only for themselves but also for their
parents, country and nag," said Ralph Hutton, a retired.
Marine gunnery sergeant and founder of the first Young
Marine Unit in California.
Tested on Dogs
Laetrile 'Detully,'
Claims Scientist
DA VIS CAP) -Laetrile, touted
by some as a cancer cure, can be
deadly when taken with some un-
cooked foods, says a scientist
who tested the combination on
dogs.
Out of 10 dogs fed a combina·
lion of Laetrile and almonds In
an experiment last week, six
died. says Dr. Jerry Lem is of UC
Davis.
He spelled out his conclusions
on the dangers of Laetrile in a
paper published today in the
California Medical Association's
Western Journal or Mediclne.
Tbe CMA has been Ute lead.Ing
opponent of legaliialion of
Laetrile in California. A bill Lo
legalize lhe substance has been
approved by the state Senate.
Similar measures have become
law Jo 11 states in the past year.
Lewis. who heads the Davis
medical school's s tudies of blood
a nd tumors, disclosed the tests
on dogs in an inter1t iew alter the
paper was written.
Laetrile, an apricot pit de·
riv alive. contains cyanide. Lewis
wrote that the c yanide Is
che mically released by a sub-
stance, beta-glucosidase, found
in some uncooked foods.
It's Your Dollar!
QUITE OFTEN A CUSTOMER IS CONFUSED
WHEN SHOPPING FOR CARPETING. HE ASSUMES
THAT IF A CARPET PILE IS HEAVY ANO THICK
THE CARPET IS N ECESSARILY OF GOOD
QUALITY.
NOT TRUEf MORE OFTEN THE OUAtlTY. OF: ,
THE FIBER, ANO NOT THE OUANTrrY. iS THE
DETERMINING FACTOR WHICH CONTROLS WEAR
ANO PERFORMANCE. •
Marine Gets 'His Bars
Robert E. Ledee of Huntington Beach, a
Marine air reservist, fulfills a 14-year goal
: of becoming a Marine Corps officer as he
has his captain's bars pinned on by his
wife, Sharon, and Col. Simon Kittler, com-
manding officer of the Reserve Training
Detachment at El Toro MCAS. He was
promoted to captain on a direct com-
mission by Gen. Lewis H. Wilson, com·
mandant of the Marine Corps. CapL
Ledee is one of few persons ever. given a
direct commission.
flaying With
FireLands2
J!oys in Dutch
A pair of north Huntington
Beach boys, 15, who just can't
seem to learn, are back in paren-
tal custody today after being rc-
~inded again you gel burned
when you play with fire.
Police Detective Bob Russell said the youths, who admitted
they are experimenting with in-
cendiary devices, set fire to
street pavement at Montecito
Drive and Woodstock Lane with
Molotov cocktails.
The day before. they were
n.abbed after an airborne con-traption made of a Fourth of July
pyrotechnic pinwheel and a
sparkler lit on a roof. igniting it.
No formal chaq~es have been
med since the fires weren't inten-
tional, police said, but officers
said the boys' neighbors in the
~arina High School region are
becoming impatient with their
experiments.
Coed Gets Grant
Fonner Fountain Valley High
School student Myrene Tierney,
20, now a first-year coed at
Creighton University, Omaha.
~ev ., has been awarded a $1,000
scholarship from the Fountain
. Valley Community Hospital
Gui id .
Terminals Close
LOS ANGELES CAP) -A
strike by the 98-member office
workers unit of the International
Longshore Workers Union over
benefits has closed five major
c::,argo terminals in Los Angeles
and Long Beach harbors.
Labor Unit
Attacked
By Grower
Street Drugs Topic
Of Seminar in BB
Street drugs available through illicit sources and their ultimate im·
pact on a community will be explored Saturday in a day-long
seminar at Golden West College in Huntington Beach.
The free program is offered in the campus' Forum One, with re·
gistratipn beginning at 8 a.m. under sponsorship of GWC and the Cor·
rectional Facilities Nurses' As-
sociation of Southern Califomia.
ORGANIZERS SAY IT is de-
signed for nurses, law
enforcement personnel,
teachers, parents, paramedics,
pharmacists and young people
concerned with the contem-
porary problem of drug abuse.
College credit in continuing
education for nurses and
pharmacists may be obtained by
turning in evaluation sheets to
the school.
"What's Happening on the
Streets?" is the title of the open-
ing morning talk by Hugh
Shanahan, supervising agent for
the U.S. Department of Justice's
Drug Enforcement Administra~
ti on.
"WHAT DID YOU Take?," is
the title of a film presentation to
be followed by a lecture, "Who's
Up and Who's Down?," by Tustin
Police Sgt. Fred Krasco.
"Here Comes The Nurse ••• ••
is a discussion to follow, led by
Kay Coffee R.N., a detention of-
ficer at San Mateo County Jail
and president of the Northern
California division of the Correc-
tional Facilities Nurses' Associa-
tlon.
Anti Brautigam, chafge nurse
at the UCI Medical Center
emergency room, and Donna In·
nis, R.N., drug abuse program
coordinator at Metropolitan
State Hospital In Norwalk, will
assist.
Parents Held
In Beating
Death of Tot
HALLFORD SAID TJIE couple
Will be tried separately with Mrs.
Lewis answering charges in
Juvenile Court because of ber
age.
Lewis already faces a rape
charge stemming from a
separate incident at an Atwater
motel, Hallford said.
BrownE~rgy
Meet Guest
il'HE AUTO TUNE UP ·
SPECIAUSTS
.~fficers ~.,w ,nunng ue~
Ousted in Court May ~eeiflf. flB:~ff ~~e
• The dispute over banner-towing Shooting aircraft operaUdg from Meadowlark cedures June 29.
He said ~ a=!l£e In flight pat-
1ernat!)J.bM,ber "iii~ pl~ now
LI'ITLE ROCK, Ark.
(AP> -A police officer
who told a 14-year-old
Explorer Scout to fire a
shotgun at a car driven
by a man who ran
through some red Ugbts
baa been relieved of du-
ty, along with another of-
ficer who fired t hree
sbots at the car.
The driver of the car,
fatally wounded in a
scuffle with one of the of -
ficers at the end of a
high-speed ~base
through the city,· never
.f i r e d a t p o Ii c e • a
spokesman said.
SGT. ROBERT "80"
Marshall said officers
Arthur Nugent and Gary
Evans were relieved of
duty in connection with
the shooting of 'Edward
Jones Jr .• 23, on Monday
night.
There was no indica-
tion of when discjplinary
bearings for the officers
Airport tn Huntington 1Beacb m~_ql·
timately wind up in court. -~~ to anattomeyfortbectty. 1 •
The towing operations have
sparked controversy after a ~apnec
was accidentally d:rop~'.fnto )>Ower
Unes at an intersection ntiar tl\e ~rport May JP.. 1 ,
~oes .. .,.a6-eJh n.i.mslfo. ' Be ore tfie change was made,
,1'ucker said he, ~trQn&l>' recom-
mended that eJJ:port Q,'tt(ner Art Nerio
take imm,ediate ·action to ternalnate
the oper~tiQD.
TUC°K2R &AID mocijAcaijQnS now JUST ~ D~Y eulier, ·~ git} Was ,now tbe towiqg aircJiaft.~Ji~,part on ~med ill San Juan Ciapistrano when ~ runw.qPIJJ'alie~in& 0th.er ~b.t traf-
ariother banner-to\Viog p'-ne crash-fie instead ot converging from a
landed. , nearby . .-up\Yay.., .
Tbe Huntington Beach Clty C~cJI Tuc}f.ei;._ ~mpbasized that. the
bas scheduled a public heiring on Bf·' l>ivis~°'1 qr N:rqJJautics hu legal in-
legatlona of safety hazard&Aug. L v~lve~=t wUq. ,safety aspects of the
Asst. City Att~. Willia~ Amsbury . ai~r-b:uo:~ai,~ be was disturbed by
said that if the council finds that the · the sta\e and by :Nerio over the operation constitutes a nuisance or . . . . hazard. "the next logical step would continU&11&~~per•t1ons.
be in the courts." ' , AN OFFlmL ,FOR the Federal
AMSBARY SAID rr ls qttestionable
if the city has the autMrity to e~
force a revocation of t business
license for the advertisingjfperators. the Sky Ad Company of untington
Beach.
Earl Tucker, aviation ~o~ult.ant
for the Division of Aerona6tics of the
Department of Transportation, said
he inspected banner~to.t..ing pro-
Aviation. AdmilUstraUon, which has
jurisdiction OVC!J' flyiqg operatiQns,
said he didn't see any major problems
with b~er towing and that there had
been orfu' one in~id~t,
A notice of viqlation. bas been filed
against the pilot involved in the ban-
ner-dropping incident_. who faces a
civil penalty, according to F.rank Al-
len, chief of the flying standards dis-
trict office with the FAA. might be held. Marshall gave this ac-1*1hlriHii~~ .. 1R~~iRi:vr1~ff;Rrii1iri!rffti'*1~*****'11t*'t"*'*"1iifiA'1
count:
LT. L.E. HAt.it said
~cling policd ~t( W.D.r
: Hoot" Gllfton had
ch anged department' pc)licy to authome the __ ._._ __
,release of the bfficers'
nam es. He 'tsaid Gibson
told him to "tell lt'llke it
is, ipcluding if we've
made a mistake.'·
On Monday night.
Marshall bad said Jones
shot. af officers first. But
be said Wednesday tbat
account was .. probably
nolfactual.''
"WE HAVE n~
evidence a iboJ was fired attbe officers, •he said.
&RA e 1117
• • . • ... •.'
• • • • •
TOBIAS
AND' SIDblFllLD
llO. TO 122
( , .
\
EARLY BIRD SPECIALS
IT'S NO TIME
TO SLEEP
VAN HEUSEN
. . DRESS SHIRTS .
PURITAN
. SPORT'SHIRTS
=~~ s,7aa
' VAST SELEO'tl TESf ~LES'
j• J
3 PIECE i·.
..
VESTED SUITS·
Regular to .$150.00 ...... '!•••• S 7 9
. "·5f29 .......... $200 ......... .
1 ... Slrt. Long -Slies 36-50
FAMOUS MAKIS llCLUDllC
Cricketeer and
I aeques.-· Bellini
Handsom9 suits, hand~ rtduc9cl.
1
A Wfde ~
of solids, patterns and plaids. Superb quority·
fabrics. Custom detolls. $.immer and 4 Melton
weights. '
-I '.
•
Friday'• NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
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•
F!'!d!(, Ju'Y a1 um s DA.IL y PILOT .41 I
BealtlaCare
Reasons Listed
..
By SYLVIA PORTER
Costs of health care, ranging from the slmpJe$1 physical
exam to the most complicated procedures, keep going up.
And proposed solutions to the problem, ranglne from
restricted protection for cat.utropblc illness lo a cosUy na·
Uonal health care system, and coming from sources as far
apart as Massachusetts Democratic Sen. Edward Kennedy and the conservative American Medical Association.
This is a good time to review the reasons for the
problem:
FACl'OR NO. 1: CURRENT PAYMENT systems ofter
little if any incentive for the pracUUooer or the patient to try
tokeepcostsdown.
For example, A. J . needed tests. "We can do the tests
right here in my office ln a few minutes," the doctor said,
"but J t.bougbt you would want to go into the hospital so it
would be covered by your insurance.''
For another, B. S. went to her doctor every few months
u needed for a chec:kup. Under Medicard, she bas been told
to go every month, even if ooly ber blood pressure is re-
corded.
FACTOR NO. Z:
There often is no
moderate level or
response to a moderate
problem. lt is either a
fuJJ·dress affair or
nothing.
Money's
Worth
To illustrate, C. D. recently scratched his eye on a bush in bis yard. The general practitioner refused to look at it
"becallse it is an eye problem." The specialist he recom·
mended was unavailable for several days and bis fee would
be in the hwidreds of dollars. C. D. went to a hospital
emergency room and, after a two-hour wait, was toJd that
after another tbree·hour wait, the doctor would determine
whether an appointment would be made with a specialist
the patient could see the next day. When he refused to wall,
aomeone applied a simple ointment to the scratch. Tbe in·
jury was cleared up in a few days.
FACl'OR NO. 3: OOCl'ORS FREQUENTLY admit they
order unnecessary tests and procedures to protect
themselves against possible malpractice suits. The practice
ia called "defensive medicine."
R. M. bruised a muscle in a minor auto accident. He
was told to go to a hospital and be put in traction for two
weeks lo straighten out any distortion of the spine that the
accident might have caused. He refused. His symptoms dis·
appeared quickly. Asked why the hospital had been or·
dered, thereplywas: "defensive medicine."
FACl'OR NO. 4: DOCl'ORS MAY be pressured to fill
boepital beds.
FACl'OR NO. 5: HOSPITALS and practitioners often
have arrangements to send all work of a certain type to cer·
tain sources (a laboratory, for example> even if it costs
more.
PACl'OR NO. 6: DRUG COSTS are high and con·
troversies are mounting about the cause. Pressure.against
druggist advertising of prices continue despite a Supreme
Court decision that the bans violate freedom of the press.
Drives continue against consumer purchases of "generic"
drugs in favor of often more expensive brand· name drugs.
PACl'OR NO. 7: HOME CARE, cheaper than i.naUtu.
tiooal care and frequently preferable is not often used.
BigCars, Imports
Set Sales Record
DETROIT <AP> ~Americans Interested mainly ln big
domestic models and little imports bought 1,115,842 new
cars in June. It was the most sales for one month in-more
than four years.
Sales reports showed June records for domestic and·
foreign car makers, who combined to lop the one million
sales mark for a fourth consecutive month.
Retail deliveries by dealers were up 17 percent from
June 1976 to the highest total since 1,142,304 were sold in
May 1973, the all·time record for any month.
Domestic sales in the month were up 11 percent from
last year to 919,142. Import.II jumped S6 percent to 196 700
grabbinga17.6percentsbareofthemarket. ' '
But sal~ of the m_ost.iy ~mall cars declined from May.
when sales bit an all·time high of 219,600 and gave imports
21 percent of the market.
Analysts attributed the decline lo shortages or some
models and an erosion ol consumer concern over energy
abortages.
Charter Air Plan
Submitted to CAB
WASHINGTON <AP) -The Civil Aeronautics Board
(CABJ has been aaked lo approve a proposal that would
permit the public to buy empty seats on charter fll•bts until the time of departure.
Trans International AirlilK!S, which descrtbes itself as the world's largest charter canier, flled tho petition.
IT ASKED 111E CAB TO allow the sale of one.way
ticteil on cbarter flight.a with unsold seat.s. Board regula·
Uona require passengers on lnOlt charter filehta to buY their :
ticketl 15 to 45 days In advance of departure. They al.sC> are 1
required to buy round·triP tlcketa.
Trana International, with beadquarten ln Oakland, is a
1abl1dlary of Tramamertcan Corp., Sao Franclaco. • .
The duarte.r Une'a ebalrman, Oleo Cramer, uJd bis
codlPl.QTa propoul would make "low cott charter fares
available for the ft.rat timoto millions of poop!• who are una·
ble to meet the board'• advance tlcket roqu.lrement.a. • •
BB SAID THE PIAN alao ~d result in lower charter
fant and rower cancellatlons ol chart.er tU1bca, and that
Hle ol the emlJb> .eau would roduee f art11 by cutUna per.
PUMnlefQIPefat!.DJ cocll.
'"l'bere ll no ruaon why the empty •Hts on a charter
nl&.bt aboa1d fo to wute wben there are lar e nu.m~ oC people who CAD profitably uae them,•• Cramer aa.14.
Trans loternatlonal pethJooed tbe CAB for a perma"*'l
nal• ad a l'peel&l uomptlon lo allow It to operate st.arei.oa
lo Setitember. " •'