HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-07-26 - Orange Coast PilotI I
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DAILY PILOT
* * * 10' * * * 'A"fJel Dust' Victims
TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 26, 1977
YOL 11 lfO •1,) SECTIC*S •~AGES
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• • • • I
I
I
e Co. Owners Mull Options
1 Korea S«!andol
Haiina Facing
Bribe Charge?
WA S HI NGTON CAP > -
Congressional leaders are await-
ing formal word on the identity of
five persons whom the J ustice
Department wants indicted in
connection with the South
Korean influence-buying scan-
dal.
House Speaker Thomas P.
Tot's Toys
, 'Set Afire' ·
I ~.~~=~.?.:
t
police custody today on suspicion
of bumin~ his granddaughter's
high chair and musical rocking
chair.
Donald Ray Jorgensen, 49. a f plumber. was arrested al his
home. 1370 Glenneyre Sl., after
his daughtc r ·in Jaw, Donna
' Jorgensen complained lo police
that her daughter 's chairs had
been broken up and were being
burned in the home's fireplace.
Responding officers said they
found a fire going in the fireplace
when they arrived at the. res-
idence at about ll:30 p.m. Mon-
day.
It was the second visit police
had paid to the home Monday. Al
9:50 p.m. they had responded to a
disturbance call al the house.
Mrs. J o r gense n . a San
aernardino resident. told of-
ficers she had been threatened
'\Vith assault. and had been
warned that the baby's furniture
would be burned.
Police said they stood by while
Mrs. Jorgensen packed clothing
and took her daughter to a motel.
Leter, police said, the woman re-
turned to the house to meet her
JlUSband. Staading outside, she said she
<See.IAGVNAN, Pace A!)
CARSON <AP> -One man was
hospitaU1ed, •bout 30 people
'"-re held f~ oblervatlon and a UU'ee-bloclr. ..... around a frei8b1
lard ... ccriaOed oft btlelty ~
day .,_. rldlaUon leaked rrom a
canllter. authorities aald.
O'Neill sai~ Monday he was in·
formed last week of the impend-
ing indictments but was given no
na mes.
While O'Neill said he does not
know if any present congressmen
will be indicted, sources close to
a separate House investigation
of the Korean affair said they
believe all five are former mem·
bers o(Congress.
An aide to O'Neill said two in-
dictments a r e expecte d in
August and three in September.
For the past year the Justice
Department has been investigal-
i n g allegations that Koreans
spread cash, gifts and favors
among congressmen in an effort
lo keep their support for U.S. aid
and other programs benefitting
the Asian country.
The Justice Department in-
vestigation was reported last
spring to be focus ing on former
Reps. Richard T. Hanna of
Newport Beach <D-Calif.), and
Cornelius Gallagher <D-N.J .).
who had business dealings with
Park.
A former Korean Central In-
telligence Agency director, Kim
Hyung Wook, has testified under
oath that two former m embers or
Congress offered to s upport
Korean programs if the KCIA
would help them and Park on a
rice deal. He did not identify the
two in his testimony.
Former congressmen known to
be under investigation include
Louisiana Gov. Edwin Edwards,
who acknowledges his wife ac-
cepted fl.0.000 from Park, and
<See KOREA, Page A2)
Suit D ismissed
SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -A
federal judge has dismissed a
suit accuslng Lockheed Aircraft
Corp. of improperly ustng gov-
ernment-owned machinery on
non11ovemment work, and claim-
ing illegal bribes as legiUmate
business expens~.
'
moved in the yard.
Grant said th& man lnlUally
was reported in good eondlt10n
after tbe 8:40 a.m. inctdent, but
would bebelil for obeervaUoo up
to48bours. • •
• Big Rig ID the Gulf
Gingerly paying out cables, 2 n eet of
tugbc1ts and derrick barges begins lower·
ing the base of what will become the
world's tallest offshore oil platform off the
'An gel-dost' Victim s
A~Wl ..... 1e
coast of New Orleans. The base alone is
175 feet high, and it is being lowered into
Gulf of Mexico waters 1,030 feet deep.
Police said the heated quarrel
came to a end when. Juan Car-
rasco1 26, of Santa Ana, sta1-
geree1-out of an aPattment at 800
S. Fairview St., stumbled a few
aleps and collapsed.
By the time poUce arrived
shortly after 7:30 p.m., Carrasco
reportedly wu dead from mulU· pie stab1'0UMI lnhla body.
ArTested lnslde U\e apartment
and ~arged ' wU1i the man's murder wu SbU'\*l A. Verrtt.
31, ol the Fairview St.reel ad·
dteu. ·
Raw-Land
" Sales
Possible
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
OltMO.llyl"lletli.tf
Principal new owners of the
Irvine-Company said today they
are studying options that include
s ale ol raw land, sale of assets
and refinancing of existing proj-
ects to meet debts incurred in their $337.4 million company
purchase.
But in a press conference held
in company headquarters, new
owners Donald Bren, A. Alfred
Ta ubman, Joan Irvine Smith and
new company President Peter
Kremer declined to discuss the 11
bank loans that s upplied the cash
for the purchase that became
final Friday.
They also were unable to give
any specific details of the con-
templated transactions, saying
all plans are tentative and still
under study.
Few glimmers of the operation
or the company in the future
came through in the hour long
question-and-answer session.
One of the few concrete an-
nouncements came at the open-
ing of the session when Kremer
announced the promotion of War-
ren Fix from the position of vice
president and controller to ex-
ecutive vice president of fin~ce
-a post that Kiemer said will
make Fix the company's "chief
financial officer.'•
Fix will replace Lansing Eber-
ling, who has resigned to go into
business with former company.
officers Ray Watson and Tom
Wolff.
Some of the other items dis-
cus&ed by the four include:
-E:xpaaalon or agriculture:
<See RA.NCH, Page A2)
Co ast
1Vea•h er
Tbe cout is the only
place to be. It will be bot in·
land wb"ere temperatures
are expected to soar into
the 905. Rtlhs at beaches
will be in mid· 70s. Lows
toDlaht in eoa.
INSIDE TODAY
Monv peopi. who IJ)OmOred
Vf•U•omcH /omiliea two ~tort. OQO how dri/tfd oway. ~. POiie Bl /<W 0 ator, <1f OM
tllOmClft tdM> l»ot "°' deacned w v~ /Nftdl.
t
I
I
, Al DAIL y PILOT s Tue!day, Jm !!, 1 m
'·Philip 'Blocked~ PJ..ineess' ••r~i~ge·
•
A,.Wlropllete
LONDON (AP) -Prince
Pbi11p, 1motivatecl by both
personal dislike and concern for
the royal family, was mstnunen-·
ta.I in blocking the marriage of
bla alator-in-law, Prineeaa
• Margaret, and·-war hero Peter
Townsend 22 years ago, accord·
ing to a new blo1rapb1 ol the
princess.
Philip bore a grievance against
Townsend because the Royal Air
Force fighter pilot, as an adviser
to King George VI, counseled the
king to prolong the courtship and
d elay the marriage of Philip and
Elizabeth, the future queen, the
book says.
Au s trian a uthor Willi
Frischauer's "Margaret -Prin·
cess Without a Cause" paints a
vivid picture of the love affairs of
the two princesses and of an elee-
tr1fying clash of temperaments
behind the scenes at Buck-
ingham Palace.
Margaret's abQrtive romance
with the divorced Townsend was
headline news around the world
in 1955, when she· finally an-
nounced she would not marry
him.
The princess' eventual mar-
riage five years later to photog.
rayher AntonyArmstrong -
Jones broke down last year and
th e couple, who have two
c hildren , live se parately.
Townsend is now married· and
Ii ves in France.
Frischauer writes that after
World War II Philip, a naval of-
fi cer courting Elizabeth, and
Townsend, a military member of
the royal household, were "in-
compatible and jousting in a nar-
row space big enough for only
one."
Kang George, who had no son,
admired the handsome and
dashmg a1r'r'Orce officer and soon
promoted him to deputy master
of the household
ROYAL WRANGLE CL·ntral figures an new biography
about thl' Bnt 1:-.h rn~ al f<..1mily include <clockwise, from
top ((•ft J Pclt•r Townsend, Prince Philip, King George \'I
and Pnnc·ess l\hirgarN
.. I'd have liked a boy like
Townsend," the author says the
kmg once told Margaret.
According to palace insiders,
Townsend. as the king's closest
adviser, inspired a plan in 1946 to
F rom P age .rl I
KOREA ...
fnrmer Rep. Ott<> E. Passman
( D I ,a J. who has been accused or
us111g iJ llouse subcommittee
ch<Jirm<J nsh1p to win Louisiana
n et' sales <J l:lroad
Just1ct• Departm e nt in -
Vt'St1gators also have a ledger
belongmg to Park recording pay·
ments of $.5,000 each to Hanna
and former Rep. W1ll1am
r
Tip Pays Off
Police 'Finger' Gwunan
Cl llCAGO GP J /\ man alt empting to rob a dry
cleaning store blew off part of his finger with a
shotgun. police said
• Mmshall IR-OhioJ, in 1970.
"This is no toy; the gun is loaded.·· the robber
said to victims Monday in the Pekjn Cleaners on
Chicago's South Side.
Police s aid the robber. wearing a red
handkerchief over his face and carrying a sawed-off
12·gauge s hotgun, then opened the gun to show it was
loaded . When he closed it, the weapon fired. taking off
l WO-thirds Of the litllc finger Of his left hand.
The llouse ethics committee is
conductmg its own investigation
of Korean activity on Capitol
l11ll
Atty. Gen. Bell and Asst. Atty
Gen. Benjamm Civ1 letti, head of
th e Jus tice De partment's
criminal division, agreed to meet
with members of Congress on
Wednesday to discuss the prog-
r ess of their inves tigation.
St'vcral junior House members
have crilici7.ed both the Justice
Department and the House in·
vestigations as moving too
slowly.
A number of present con·
gressmen say they accepted cash
campaign contributions from
Korean rice dealer Tongsun
Park, whom a foreign Korean in-
telligence chief has testified was
an influence· peddler.
But the congressmen s ay they
thought they only were accepting
contributions from a foreign
businessman Such contributions
were legal until 1974
House sources, including two
close to the House ethics commit-
tee's Korean investigation, say
word has been circulating in
Congress for weeks that the
Justice Department's strongest
cases are against former con-
gressmen.
Beach Re opened
POR'l'ERVILLE (AP) -Se-
quoia National Forest officials
reopened Sandy Cove Beach at
Hume Lake-Monday after treat·
ing the area to guard against
bubonic plague.
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
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After the gun fired. he took SlO from the cash reg-
ister and a portable television set from the counter
and fled. police s aid.
Despite the shotgun blast, police said they re-
covered the tip of the finger and were able to kt a
fingerprint.
Defense Rests
Killer Claims Act
Jekyll-Hyde Deed
COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa
(AP) -The defense has rested in
the case of a military policeman
who admits killing three
teenagers but says it was the
dark side of his Jekyll.Hyde
personality that did it.
Spec. 4 Johnny Lee Thornton's
defense was rounded out Monday
with a tale of a startlingly abused
childhood.
His mother and other wit·
nesses tol<l of a broken home; a
father who choked and beil h\m
and even shot at him; a mother
who was rarely home; a baby slt·
ter who tried to molest him .
Then, without calling Thornton
to the stand, the defense turned
the case back to the prosecution
for rebuttal. ·
Spec. 4 Thornton. 23, was a
military policeman at Ft.
Leonard Wood, Mo., when four
teenagers on a double date were
shot and left in snowdrifts oo lhe
base Jan. 12. Two boys and a &Jr)
died, but the other gtrl escaped.
The survivor bas testilied that
both girls were sexually au.eked
on a remote corner of the base..
'11lomtoo 's d~ensec b hilbly
unusual: be concedes be did the
killlna but aay• he la affilcted by a-dual penonaUey ancl was act-
ln1 under bl• sec<>nd personality.
· He pleaded ipnocent· b)' rease>o
or insanity to lederal ~barges ot
npe, murder. kldnapift1 anc1 as·
sault with intent lo kill.
The U.S. Diltrict Court j"ry
has Sten vltleot1ped hypnosis
Jeep Tires Take11
Thieve. Jacked up • nearly
new: Jeep at aD .\U.C JH p d•alersblp ib Coit• Meu
aometltno before Monday ~1 las, tak1nt U... aQd rhu valued
at $72$. EmPJo)'ea at th• AMC Cle· alenhip, 2Sa. Harbor B~Vd. told
police lbe hW•lara alto '40lt a
1pare ur. li'Om &he c~ .. _, .. ,,,
~I '
sessions in which a dominant
personality, "Johnny," pleads
with a darker personality,
"John," to leave him alone and
not hurt anyone.
Such schizophrenia, public de·
fender David Freeman said last
week, Is "every bit as disabling,
every bit as crippling, every bit
as killing, as cancer itself."
A psychlalrlat testifying for the
prosecution's rebuttal, however,
said Thomtoa de1nonstrated "or·
dinary, \ElVeJ11day lying," rather
than a penonallty dlsorder. ·
Or. Charles Otteosmeyer of the
medical C'en,er for federal
ptlsonerll '°'ln Sprh11tfield, Mo.,
said thit'"O'n the nJg~f of the slay.
ings, Thornton "kne'w be was do-
ing wrong" and "simply set his
conscience aside."
The defense cont.nds Thornton
committed the 1'vtle, heinous,
corruptible crimes" whlle his
"absolutely ruthless, sadistic,"
submerged ~ Waf ia
control.
·~eep ElluhetJrand Phlllptrom a .. robbedtheloversota supporter in Brussels was arranged for
quiet marriage so tbe king could who lov~ them both as much as Townsend. Over the next two
••obeerve Pblllp over a time at t bey Io v e d each o t be r," years, be and Margarei saw each close quarten before deciding Fri.schauer says, and a group or other occasionaJJy·, but in·
whether be could become a courtiers beaded by Philip began variably they always were in tbe
memba' Gt the royal famib'," applying pressure on Margaret 'companyofot.ben.
Frlschauerwrites. • tod.rOp'j'owmencl,. Flnally, ln her first and lut
Philip was furious when Ile Phlllp'a personal dlaBke for statement on the romance.
found out about Townsend's in-Mm was combined with court Margaret announced on Oct. 81.
terventlon. The king followed fears ol an uproar like that of 1955: ''I have· decided not to
Townsend's advice, the author 1936, when Maraaret's uncle re-marry Group Caplain PettT
says, but in November 1947, fused to give up American .Townsend."
Philip and Elizabeth married, divorcee Wallis Simpson and ab-· Frlschauer says he relied Oll8
with the king's blessing. dlcated before he could be .. great many" sources tor
Margaret then became · the crowned Edward VIII, Others Maraaret's life story and tbat
center of attention. Though who lined up against ToWT\send "friends and foes of the princess
linked bt 905sip to every availa· included tben·Prime Minister were very forthcoming, iJ equal-
ble young man of birth and rank, Winston Churchill and Anglican Iv anxious to preserve tJie\r
the only man in her life was church leaders. anonymity." Townsend, Frischauerwrites. The queen, though sym-
But the 12·year friendship and pathetic with her sister. told her
romance of Margaret and thattheaffairwas "underminmg
A spokesman at tiuckmgham
Palace said the royal family
would have no comment on Lbe
book
Townsend was doomed. The the dignity of the throne.'-'
king's death in February 1952 An assignment as air attache
Slutttle
Again Rides
Jumbo Jet
EDWARDS AIR FORCE
BASE (AP) -The Space Shuttle
went through a final rehearsal to-
day for its first free flight, riding
a jumbo jetliner at 28,000 feet and
rehearsing the maneuver that
will separate the coupled craft
Aug. 12
The nour·long test "went very
well" said mission controllers at
Houston's Johnson Space Center,
and astronauts Fred Haise and
Gordon Fullerton. who sat in the
s huttle's cabin, were reportedly
pleased.
With the 150,000-pound shuttle
securely rastened atop its
fuselage, the Boeing 747 reached
a speed of 273 miles per hour dur-
ing the separation practice.
As the Boeing touched down at
8:47 a.m. after the flight, the
crew tested the shuttle's landing
gear, letting the two main land-
ing gear and the nose wheel ex-
tend out of the cruft 's fuselage.
Haise and Fullerton will ny the
shutUe when it is al last released
from the Boeing to make a five-
minute powerless descent from
about23,000 feet to a gliding land-
ing on the desert floor.
Today's rught served as prac-
tice for the maneuver that will be
used to launch the experimental
craft. That separation is to be ac·
complished by heading the car·
rier plane into a shallow dive,
while explosive bolts part the
coupling to allow the shuttle to
"pop up" and away from the
Boeing.
The ouroose of the free fiiRht was to test the shuttle's gliding
ability. The craft is designed to re·
turn from space as a glider
when il becomes operational in
· 1980. Disposable rockets will
blast the craft into orbit to carry
out scientific and technical mis-
sions. lts fuel expended, the shut·
tie will soar back to Earth and
land like a conventional airplane.
Fro• Page A J
LAGUNAN.· •
saw the interior of the home il-
luminated by name from the
fireplace and saw the furniture
being broken apart and thrown
into the flames, police Sgt. David
Avers said.
Officers believed Jorgensen
had been drinking. However. no
booking for drunkenness was
made, Sergeant Avers said.
Jorgensen was booked on a
penal code arson section pro-
hibiting the willful and malicious
burning of another's property.
Bail was sel at $5,000, police said.
S VCHA. DEAL:
IUD S4D CADDIE
P IEDMONT, Ala. <AP> -This
classified ad appeared In this
week's edition of The Piedmont
Journal:
"1966 Cadlllac. Air, power
steering, power brakes, power
windows, power seal. None
works. Takes very little gas but
lots of ol.1. Brin& a leash and drag
this dog away. Noeda coat and
skin (paint and tires). $600."
AP Wl,..pP>Oto
MISTRESS SHARES EARRINGS WITH MUTT
Mary Terrisi With Bejeweled 'Marmaduke'
Puppy Love?
Dog's Ear P ierce_d for Earring
TAMPA, Fla. CAP > -Mary Torrisi believes pierced earrings
can lead to romance -or at least puppy love.
She didn't want to have the ears of her three-month·old great
Dane cr~pyed in the traditional short·pomted fashion.~ she took
Marmaduke to a jewelry store and had one of her ears pierced.
"OOBBIE THE DALMATIAN, NEXT door, just fell in love
with her when he saw the sil ver earrings. He just sat and stared,
sort or mesmerized. Now he follows her all around," says Miss
Torrisi, 17, who received Marmaduke. named after the comic-
strip character. as a birthday present from her parents.
After okaying the idea with a veterinarian, she checked with an
ear.piercer at a local jewelry store who said all right as long as
Marmaduke agreed.
"I HAVE THIS THING ABOUT earrings," Miss Torrisi ex-
plained. "I've always liked them. And one day when I can afford
it, Marmaduke and l will split a pair of good diamond earrings."
That's possible because Miss Torrisi wears three pierced ear-
rings on her right ear and two on her left.
"I'll give Marmaduke one and I'll use the other for the third .
hole in my right ear," she said.
Ransom Note
Wment Told
LOS ANGELES <AP) -The
ransom note penned by the kid·
napers of a busload of Chowchilla
school children directed
authorities to put $5 million in
two suitcases and drop them
from an airplane, published re·
ports said today. {Related story,
AS)
Stories in The Los Angeles
Times and The Fresno Bee sajd
the note was written by James
Schoenfeld, 25, one of the three
defendants who. pleaded guilty
Monday to.27 counts of kldnaplng
for ransom in the July 1976 ab·
ductton or 26 school children and
their bus driver.
Schoenfeld, his brother.
Richard, 24, and Frederick N.
Woods, 25, said they were inno-
~nt. of five more serious counts
of kidnaping with bodily harm
and a bearina was set for Aug. s.
Dad Pots Lye
ID Baby Bottle
. LOS ANGELES CAP) -A 21-
year·old man was convicted of
e ndangering bis 5-month·old
d a-..ht6r·• ure art.r putUng lye In her bottled.baby formula.
~ Ollt. A\ty, David Disco
aald Eddte Veal ot Los Angeles
plac..t Ute 11• in the formula u
part~ a plan to sue the baby tood
manulacwr.r. Surcery wu re-
quJr.S to save the life of Jeaneue
Veal, wbO suffertcl severe bW't'IS
ln Itel". moUth aM tbt'Oat.
A Superior Court Jury de·
Ube.rated Uu"ee daya be.fore hand·
tn1 down tbil v tdicl. Sentencln1 11scMciwed Aur.1&.:..
I
From P age A l
RANC H.· ••
Mrs. Smith said the proposal is
still under study but mentioned a
possible 33,000 acres in tboe ·
foothills which she said would be
s uitable for crops.
"I'd like to see the hills tum
green,·· she said wi~hout ~pecify
ing where those hills might be
other than on the Irvine Ranch.
-Irvine Center: Krerner
pledged to continue the high
quality planning for the re~ional
shopping cenler to he built in the
triangle surrounded by the Santa Ana, San Diego and Laguna
Canyon Freeways.
'Taubman, whose primacy bttsi·
ness interest is in develop-
ment of large shopping centers,
conceded that bis company
"would be interested" in hand-
ling the development of the Irvine
Center.
Both he and Bren, a '*ne
builder, indicated interest. in~do
ing development projects on the
ranch, but Bren stressed that
their po&iti.onl u meqibers or Lbe
company's board of directors
would not give them an inherent
advantage in competing for
projects.
"We would do it at arm's
length and be like any other de-
veloper," hesaJd.
-ffoustnc projects: TM fO\.lr
declined to d.lscuss in apeelfic
tetms future hoDHt develop~t
on the company's T1 ,000 acN111 In
the heart ot Oranae OOuntJ.
Krem r, however, noted that
resldantial cona\ruclion is
"prhnarlly reocUve to rnanet
dtmiand.
• I
"If Ultte l• a demand for u Ln·· crHe*9 D\lmbe.r' OI unit.I, n 1wlll
certanl1 .t11 l0 be respOCial""° Lbatclltn~0 b0~1~
I ',
Orange ~oast
EDITION
VOL. 70, NO. 207, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
' T o day' Closing4
N.Y. Stoeks
c TEN CENTS
Hanna Korea BMbe Scand~~. Stlspect?
WASHINGTON CAP)
Congr ional leaders art awall·
in& formal word oo tM identity ot
fi ve persons whom lbe Ju.slice
Oepartmenl wants lndicled In
connection with the South
Korean Influence buyanc scan·
dal.
House Speaker Thomas P
O'Neill said Monday be was in·
formed last week or the impend.
ing Uld.iclments but was given no
names. .
While O'Nelll said be does not
know if any present congressmen
will be indicted, sourc.ea close to
a separate House invesUgalion
of the Korean affair said they
believe aJl five are former mem·
hers ol Congress.
An aide to O'Neill said two in-
d ictments are expected in
August and three in September.
For the past year tbe Justice
A n1e l D evelopment
M~yor Explains
Project Okay
Editor's Note Costa Mesa Mayor
Norma Her1zog was one of four coun-
cil members to approve o 665-unit
home ond apartment pro1ect owned
by the Amel Development Company.
That 48-acre project is currently the
sub1ect of on initiative campaign by
north Costa Mesa homeowners who
oppose at. In the concluding portion
of a two-part anten new, the first of
which appeared M onday. Mrs.
Hertzog discusses the a/fort by
homeowners to force a rezone to
single family homes m the a rea.
By STEVE MITCHELL
OftlM O•llY ,.llot Sl•ff
QUESTION: What are your
feelings on the rights of citizens to
use the initiative or referendum
processes to bring about changes
in zoning laws such as the one un-
der way in north Costa Mesa to-
day?
ANSWER: As long as the
philosophy is that a person has a
right to sell or
lease hls land
and another
person bas
the right to
build on that
land, it's very
diffic ult to
come along
and say those
rights are dif-
ferent for any one person. . HEH"ZOO
The community should have
the opportunity to respond lo
building proposaJs, but, after all,
that particular project <by the
Arnel Development Company >
was reviewed for almost two
years, with the plans revised
about five times.
The community was consulted
on development of the project,
and I feel the project is ready to
go ahead and should go ahead.
Those of us who have had this
type of issue to deal wilb before
know what the finished product
will look like. What it looks like
on the blueprint and what it will
be like in terms of traffic circula·
tion and how it will affect the
quality of life.
I really think when it's fini shed
the Arnet project will be a very
nice one. The other project we had a
problem with was Mesa Verde
Villas and Vista Del Lago. There
was great discussion and concern
about horrendous traffic there,
and I can't see any difference in
traffic now that they are com·
pleted.
· 'Phos~ two projects hav. 1100
units and you wbuld think tht
would have a tremendous impact
on traffic.
That's what I fnf:an when I said
I don 'l think the (Arnel > project
will be as bad as those people
think it is.
On the initiative process, my
feeling is that this situation is a
misuse of that particular law. I
think that (initiative> is in the
<See MAYOR, Page A2>
Irvine Company
Stiulies Optiom
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
OI -O•llY ,., ... lt•lt Principal new owners of the
Irvine Company said today they
are studying options that include
sale of raw land. sale or assets
and refinancing of existing proj-
~ts to meet debts incurred in
their $337 .4 million company
purchase.
But in a press conference held
in company headquarters, new
owners Donald Bren, A. Alfred
Taubman. Joan Irvine Smith and
new company President Peter
Kremer declined lo discuss the 11
bank loans that supplied the cash
for the purchase that became
final Friday.
. They also were unable to give
any specific details of the con-
u;mplated transactions, saying
all plans are tentative and still
under study.
Few glimmers of the operation of the company in the future
~dme through in the hour Ion&
ci,Uestion·and-answer session.
bne ot the few concrete an-
nouncements came at the open-r~.,e ol the session when Kremer
al)nounced the promotion ol War· tep Fix from the position of vice
p~~sident and controller lo ex· ~C.ulive vice president of· finance
-a post tbat Kremer said will • 'lie Fix the c:.ompany's "chief
anclal officer.'' · ix will replace L~ain11 Eber·
ling, who has resigned to go Into
business with former company
officers Ray Watson and Tom
Wolff.
Some of the other items dis·
cussed by the four include:
-Expansion of a~riculture :
Mrs. Smith said the proposal is
still under study but mentioned a
possible 33,0-00 acres in the
foothills which she said would be
suitable for crops.
''I'd like to see the hills turn
<See RANCH, Page A%)
Cat Burglar
Flees With . . ....
Cashin Mesa
Department has been lnvestigat·
tnc allegations that Koreans
spread cash, gifts and favors
among congressmen in an effort
to keep their support for U.S. aid
and other programs benefitting
the Asian country.
The Justice Department in·
vestigatton was r eported las t
spring to be focusing on former
Re ps. Richard T. Hanna of
Newport Beach CD-Calif.>. and
' Cornelius GaUagher (D·N.J .),
who bad businen dealings with
Park. '
A former Korean Central In-
telligence Agency direct.or, Klm
Hyung Woolc, has testlfied under
oath that two former members of
Congress offe r ed to support
Korean programs if the KCIA
would help them and Park on a
rice deal. He did not identify the
two in ru s testimony.
.. ,. .........
ROYAL WRANGLE Centra l figures in new biography
about the British r oyal family include <c lockwise, from
top leftl P eter Townsend. Prince Philip, King George VI
and Princess Ma rgar et.
Muddled Marriage
Blamed on Prince
LONDON (AP > -Prince
Philip, motivated b y both
personal dislike and concern for
the royal family, was instrumen·
ta t in blocking the marriage of
his siste r-in-law. Princess
Margaret, and war hero Peter
Townsend 22 years ago, accord-
ing lo a new biography of the
princess.
Philip bore a grievance against
Townsend because the Royal Air
Force fi ghter pilot, as an adviser
to King George VI , counseled the
king lo prolong the courtship and
delay the marriage of Philip and
Elizabeth, the future queen, the
book says.
Austrian author Willi
Frischauer's "Margaret -Prin·
cess Without a Cause11 paints a
vivid picture of the love affairs of
the two princesses and of an clec-
trifyinl cla$b -of temperaments
behind the scenes at Buck·
inghal1\ Palace.
Margaret's abortive romance
with the divorced Townsend w~s
headline news around the world'
in 1955, when she fin ally an·
nounced she would not marry
him.
The princess' eventual mar·
riage fi ve years later to pholog·
r apher Anton y Arm strong-
J ones broke down last year and
th e couple, who have two
c hi ldren . live s eparately .
Townsend is now married and
lives in France.
Frischauer writes that after
World War II Philip, a naval of·
ficer courting Elizabeth, and
Townsend, a military member of
the royal nousehold, were "In·
compatible and jousting in a nar-
row space bjg enough for only
one."
King'George, who had no son,
admired the handsome and
dashing air force officer and soon
promoted him to deputy master
of lbe household.
"I'd have liked a boy like
Townsend," the author say the
king once told Margaret.
According to palace Insiders,
<See ROYAL, Pate A%)
Forrner congressmen known to
be undet .,UlvesUgatfon include
Louisi»ll Gov. Edwin Edwards,
who acknowledges his wife ac-
cepted Sl0,000 from Park, and
former Rep.' Otto E . Passman
<D·La.). who bas been accused of
using a House subcommittee
chairmanship to win Louisiana
rice sales abroad .•
Jps ltce-i>epartmenl in·
vesti.laton also have a ledger
Cobalt ·
Concerns
Carson
CARSON (AP) -One man was
hospitalized and a three-block
area around a freight yard was
cordoned off briefly today after
workmen feared a shipping
canister containing cobalt was
leaking radiation.
However, the intended recip·
ien~ of tb~ cobalt told
authorllie$ there was no radia·
lion leak.
''Everyone got all scared when
the canister fell warm," said
Clara Prehoda, an orficial of J .L.
Shepherd and Associates.
"That's how they normally feel."
Los Angeles County Sheriff's
Sgt. Mervyn Poppleton said
freight yard officials reported
what they believed was a leak
after two forklift operators said·
the three-by.four fool canister
felt "hott.otb~touch."
But autWorffies later de·
termined aft~ taking radiation
readings and contacli~ the
Shepherd firm that there was no
danger. OfficiaJ readings from
the County Health Department
were being analyzed and were
not iinmedlately available.
Rick McCray, 25, a truck
driver iii Ule yard who touched
the 't?...._ta-t complabled of
nausea and was tlken to nearby
Harbor General Jtospital, where
be was reported in good condi·
lion.
"Re's not feeling very well. He
feels nauseous. bas a headache
and he's diuy," said hospitaJ
spokesman Stan Grant. "What
we hear from the field was that
the ratllation was not at a
dangerous level."
Thirty other workers in the
freight yard were held at the
scene for precautionary observa·
tion , authorities said.
Mrs. Prehoda said, "The
canister contained radioactive
cobalt wit.ti a lead shield a.round
it and a fire shield around the
lead shield, which is the proper
packaging for tbi.6 sort of thing.
There was no leak. It felt a little
warm to the touch, that's all.
"This was a perfectly legal
shipment. The one who went to
the hospital got butterflies in his
stomach."
A three-block area around the
freight yarcl was blocked <il for
an hour by sheriff's deputies
following the 6:40 a.m. report.
belooging to Park recording pay-
ments of $5,000 each to Hanna
and former Rep. William
Mihshall <R·Ohio>. in 1970.
The House ethics committee is
· conducting it:s own investigation
of Korean activity on Capitol
Hill.
Atty. Gen. Bttt and Asst. Alty.
Gen. Beajamin C1viletti, head of
the Justice D e pai;lment's
<See KOREA, Page A2 >
DAiiy PllM ~tt ,_..
LEFT THE AREA?
Ex-Congressman Hanna
Harma
Leav ing
NB Area ?
By PIDUP ROSMARJN
01 tM O.lly Pllel Staff
Forme r Orange Count y
Congressman Richard T. Hanna
of Newport Beach has resigned
as a director of the county-funded
Economic De ve lopment Corp
and has apparently left the area.
Hanna is one of severaJ con·
gres smen and form e r con·
gressmen under in vestigation by
the U.S. Justi ce Department in
connection with alleged influence
buying in Washington, D.C. by
South Koreans.
County records show Hanna's
resignation from the entity
formed lo attract industry was
tendered July 8. The resignation
was not publicly announced.
Hanna was quoted by the New
York Times in 1976 as saying that
while still a member of Congress
he became a "silent partner " of
Korean businessman Tongsun
Park.
The Times reported t hat Han-
na offered financial collateral to
Park in an import-export venture
that netted him $60,000 to $70,000
from 1972 lo 1975.
The Times quoted Hanna:
"<Park) often told me I was rus
oldest, dearest. closest, most
valuable friend."
Hanna reportedly tol.d the
Times be did not believe there
was anything illegal about his
business relationship with Park,
but broke it off when he became
"uncomfortable" about the pro-
priety or the relationship.
In his letlJ:'r to County
Supervisor Ralph Die4rich, who
appointed him to the economic
development group, Hanna said
he was "going on an extended
<SeellANNA, Page A2)
Co ast
•• . , ., .. .... M cw . .., ... , .. .. a M
,4-2 DAILY PILOT C
RANCH ••• • areen:· •h• said wlthout 1peclfy. ms where the e hlll• ml&ht. be
other than oo th• Irvlnt Ranch.
-lnl•e Ceater: Kremer
pted1ed to ronllnue the hi1h
quality planning for the rc,lonal
i.bopptna rl'nlt'r lu bt built n the
tnan1Je 111urroundt'd by the Santa
Ana. S•n l>lcacu ~and l.aiiun•
Canyon F'rf'ewoy'S
Taubmtr1, ~hu\t• pr1mory bu!ll
rH'li5 1nlcrt>~l I ii in develop
mtnt ol larae llhoppln& centera,
<'onccdf'd that hb company
·would he 111terestt'd " In hand
hng th\: t.levelopmcnt of the Irvine
<.:enh•r
Both he ctnd H1 en, a hume
builder. indicated interest in do-
ing development pro1ects on the
ranch, but Bren stressed that
their PoS•llon~ as members or the
company's board of directors
~ould not give them an inherent
dd vanlaJtl' an t·ompehng for
prOJCC~ "We wou ld do 1l at arm'::.
length and be hkc any other de-
veloper," he said
-HouslnJ projects: The four
declined to d1scu::.s m specifi c
terms future home development
on the company's 77.000 acres in
the heart of Orange County.
Kremer, however, noted that
residential construction is
"primarily reactive to market
demand.
"Uthere is a demand for an in·
creased number of units, we will
J:ertainly try to be responsive to
th al demand," he concluded.
-Utlgatlon: Mrs. Smith s aid
her suit to block sale of a large
portion of the Irvine coast to the
slate is "under study." But she
s aid there is no agreement
between her and the new board of
directors which would affect that
la wsuit or any other she may fil e
in the future
TONIGHT
"JACQUES BREL" South
Coas t Hep c rtory Theate r .
lhroul!h July 30. 8 p.m
WEONESDAY,JULV27
NEWPORT-MESA SC HOOL
BOARD Special meeting, 1601
16th St .. 5:30 p.m.
MUSIC OF AMERICA -Free
Concert, Music of the 60's with
J ohnny Lopez, South Coast
Village7·JO p.m.
f' rOtfl Pag~ Al
ROYAL ...
Townsend, as the king's closest
adviser, inspired a plan in 1946 lo
keep Elizabeth and Philip from a
quick marriage so the king could
"observe Philip over a time al
close quarters before deciding
whether he could become a
member of the royal family,"
F rischauer writes.
Philip was furious when he
found out about Townsend's in-
tervention. The king followed
Townsend's advice, the author
says, but in No vember 1947,
Phthp and Elizabeth married.
with the king's blessing.
Mar garet then became the
center of attention. Though
linked by gossip to every availa·
ble young man of birth and rank,
the only man in her life was
Townsend. Fr1schauer writes.
Rut the 12-year friendship and
romance of Margare t and
Townsend was doomed. The
king's death in February 19~
.. robbed the lovers of a supporter
who loved them both as much as
they lo v ed eac h other,"
Frischauer says, and a group of
courtiers headed by Phi Up began
applyin1t pressure on Margaret
to drop Townsend.
Philip's personal dislike for
him was combined with court
fears of an uproar like that or
1936, when Margaret's uncle re·
fused to give up American
divorcee Wallis Simpson and ab·
dicated before he could be
crowned F.dward vm.
OftANOE COAST c
DAILY PILOT
..
Deity ...... , ..... ,_
NEW OWNERS. PRESIDENT OF IRVINE COMPANY MEET THE PRESS
Donald Bren, Peter Kremer. A . Alfred Taubman and Joan Irvine Smith
Schmitz Touring County
Former Congressman Mum on Candidacy
While declining to publicly an·
nounce his candidacy for any
elective office, Orange County's
arch-c onservative former
Congressman John Schmitz is
quietly making the rounds in the
local breakfast-luncheon club
circuit.
Clad in a blue and white·
checkered dress coat, Schmitz
acknowledged the presence of
local media al a Tuesday morn-
ing meeting of the Capistrano
Va lley Exchange Club.
"l guess they (the media) ex-
pect me to make some public an·
nouncel'llt!nt since enveryone is
a nnouncing their c andidacy
these days," he said.
"Actually, I'm planning on go-
ing down to Chile to 'Study cam·
paign techniques." the one-time
independent party presidential
candidate quipped.
Schmitz, sporting a crew-cut
hairstyle for his stint as a reserve
Marine officer, proceeded to de~
liver a crisp lecture on the his·
tory of American political parties.
Th'e former defender of right·
wing causes in the California As-
sQmbly and later in Washington
could not resist making com-
m en ts about the prevailing
political scene.
Paraphrasing Voltaire,
Schmitz said "lf there would
have been no Jimmy Carter, they
would have had to create one.''
Schmitz said he believed the
Democratic Party was based on
a coalition of six groups. Those
groups are the big cities, labor,
ethnic factions, the south,
Washington, D.C. blacks and the
eastern intellectual establish·
ment.
Trio Plead Guilty
Richard Schoenfeld, left, 24, his brother, James Schoen-
fe ld. center , 25, and Frederick N. Woods, 25, p_le aded
guilty to 27 counts of kidnap and ransom in the
Chowchill a kidnaping c ase Story on Page AS.
'Dry' Laundromats
S4un Dirty Clothes
SANTA CRUZ (AP> -Laun·
dromat owners in this drought-
plagued city vowed to stay closed
today in protest over water aJ.
locations, forcing residents lo
t a ke th ei r d irty laundry
somewhere else.
Angered by what they say are
excessive fines levied by the city,
proprietors or more than 20 coin·
opera ted laundries s topped
operations Monday. They said
they will remain closed until
water allocations are rals~·
Following the shutdowns Mon-
day, residents traveled by bus
and car to neighboring com-
m unities lo do their wash.
"We h ail to do ~." said
Norman Bei of Bei-Scott Com·
pany which operat.es 12 laundries
in the city. "Unleas we get the
water we need we'll stay closed."
Bei daimed bis company alone
owes the city more than So'(),000 In
fines for exceeding its water al-
l oc a.t.ton.
'11:tey're giving us only 70 per·
cent of 1975 water usage and thia
ts 1977," said Bei.
The laundromat operator said.
his company is laying off about a
dozen employes because of the
water supply problem.
He said the drought has forced
people to use public laundromats
instead of their own washers and
dryers. In addition, a large
number of students and elderly
persons do not have their own
washers.
City Water Director Morris Al·
len said be was "shocked that
these laundromats could be so ir-
responsible as to come to the end
or their allocation and then close
their doot's."
He said applications for
variances from water allocation
have been received from the
operators and that "more water
has been given to tb.ertl in every
case.
"But we can't allbw them to
have all the w.ater they want,"
said Allen. "w you have to allow
everyone to hav~ alJ the water
they want."
More Bodies
From Flood
Noting George McGovern's
failure to bold the coalition
together in 1972, Schmitz said
Carter is having problems with
the ethnic faction over the abor·
tion issue.
fi'ro• Page A I
HANNA •••
vacation."
Hanna further wrote that he
plaMed to move bis family and
take up a residence "which is not
likely to be in Orange County."
Hanna's personal secretary.
Jackie Baron. said he plans to
move out or California. He bas
left his legal counseling business
in Irvine, she said, and intends to
vacation most or the summer.
She said she did not know how
to reach the Orange County Dem·
ocrat.
Hanna was a regular attendant
of the monthly EDC meetings,
and was a member or the board
executive committee, Roland
Loveless, EDC president and
general manager, said today.
Hanna attended the board's
June 21 meeting, Loveless said.
but bad no further contact with
the EDC until Loveless received
through the mail a carbon copy of
Hanna's letter of resignation.
* * * From Page A l
KOREA •..
criminal division, agreed lo meet
with members or Congress on
Wednesday to discuss the prog-
res s or their investigation.
Several junior House members
have criticized both the Justice
Department and the House in·
vestigations as m oving too
slowly.
A' number of present con·
gressmen say they accepted cash
campaign contributions from
Korean rice dealer Tongsun
Park, whom a foreign Korean in-
telligence chief has testified was
an influence-peddler.
But the congressmen say they
thought they only were acceptin:l
contributions from a foreign
businessman. Such contributions
were legal until 1974.
House sources, including two
close to the House ethics commit-
tee's Korean investigation, say
word has been circulating in
Congress for weeks that the
Justice Department's strongest
cases are against. former con·
gressmen.
'Miss Kitty'
Visits Dodge
QODGE CITY. Kan. <AP> -
Guofigbtera and horseback
riders traveled the atreeta of
Dodge City again, but this tJme
they mingled amona the
automobiles and tourists to
welcome a "local" celebrity -
Miss Kitty.
Amanda Blake, who played the
legendary saloon owner ol the
Jona·nmniDI televlslon aeries,
"Guosmoke, .. returned to Boot
Hill Moodaf 'Via a Wells Fareo
staae coach. accompanied by
ucortaon bonebact.
In a ceremony at the Loni
Bran~h Saloon,• Ml11 Blake
donated to the Boot HUI Museum
one ot the dresses ahe bad wom
ontb11how. 1
F,....7-AJ
MAYOR HERTZOG. • •
state~ for. T87 dlf· .f erent puf"P08• ud Dot Jut
becW IOIDeOGe dis.,..._ wttb
a decllian made b7 the COUDdL
I think tbere abou.ld be pJ'OOI
there bu been somethlnt illegal
or a real reuon for usinC the
referendum and Initiative ~
cess. I think if all decisions are
now made and then undone by
referendum or inittaUve, there's
no point in having a council.
QUESTION: What about the
Nabers Cadlllac refef'endum
last year. How do you relate that
with the cur.rent situation in
north Costa Mesa?
ANSWER: That' one set' a
precedent. I wouldn't have near
the concerns about referendums
and}nltiatives lftheywere honest.
They are not honest. People vot-
ing on them are voting on an emo-
tional issue based on personal
concerns of one or two people.
If you check boll\ or those situa-
tions, you'll find one or two peo-
ple who did no\ Uke the dect5ion,
and they then distorted the facts
Over Firing
and caused a tremendous emo-
tional impact lD \be eomll)unil.1
witb dlatartklDa ud told people
tblnp that would oover happen. ln the Arnet cue, they told
people their children would be
bused to Santa Ana. The people
on the Nabere Cadillac referen·
dum were told the whole (res•
idenUal> area was aoing to gd
commercial. So when you use U\
emotionally cbaraed issue and
ml.sinformatlon, you can aet eeo-
pte. to sian a petition. But they
sign a petition based on wrong Ith
formation and 1 think that's in•
valid.
So I think the way lt has ~ used bas really been an abortion
of the reason tor it. That's the
way I feel. Uthe council has act·
ed Illegally, or wrong for
what.ever reason, then I think
that's what the process is for.
But just because there's a di!·
ference of opinion for personal
reasons, I don't see that as
enough of a reason. And particularly when the
facts people used have not been
honest.
Ex-Anthony Aide
Files OC Claim
A former aide to Orange Coun-
ty Supervisor Philip Anthony has
filed a $176,000 claim with the
county alleging he was fired
without justification.
The filer or the claim was H.
Ted Hertz, brother of Amanda
Hertz, a close personal friend
and business associate of indict·
ed financier Gene Conrad.
Hertz, a recent law school
graduate, wolked ror Anthony as
an executive aide from late
December 1976 through March
11, 1977.
In his $176,000 claim, Hertz
said his abrupt firing by Anthony
was "a willful and malicious
breach of an employment con·
tract."
The former Anthony aide said
his dismissal caused him a "loss
of employment and income and
reputation and mental distress."
He asked for $76,000 to com-
pensate him for the loss of in·
come and $100,000 to cover the re·
maining alleged damages.
Hertz was fired as Conrad, a
donor through various fronts of
roughly $48,000 to Anthony's
campaign, was drawing
headlines for the alleged
malfunctioning of his loan
brokera~e firm,, Pension Funds
or A"menca.
Simultaneously, it was being
revealed in the press that dona·
lions and loans to Anthony's 1976
campaign from Conrad had been
listed as loans and donations
from others.
Aides to county supervisors
are not subject to the same hiring
and placement practices as other
county employes.
According to an ordinance
adopted by the supervisors and
revised in 1974. aides serve at the
pleasure of the supervisor they
serve and they can be terminated
for wh atever reason the
supervisor deems to be just.
Should the Herti claim be re-
jected by the county, he would be
free to file a lawsuit seeking
redress.
Shuttle Completes
Test Rides on Jet
EDWARDS AIR FORCE
BASE CAP> -The Space Shuttle
went through a final rehearsal to·
day for its first free flight, riding
a jumbo jetliner at 28,000 feet and
rehearsing the maneuver that
will separate the coupled craft
Aug.12.
The hour-long test "went very
well" said mission controllers at
Houston's Johnson Space Center.
and astronauts Fred Haise and
Gordon FuJlerton, who sat in the
s huttle's cabin, were reportedly
::;leased.
With the 150,000·pound shuttle
securely-fastened atop its
fuselage, the Boeing 747 reached
a speed of 273 miles per hour dur-
ing the separation pracUce.
As the Boeing touched down at
8:47 a.m. after the flight. the
crew tested the shuttle's landing
gear, Jetting the two main land·
ing gear and the nose wheel ex·
tend out of the craft's fuselage.
Haise and Fullerton will fly the
shuttle when it is at last r eleased
from the Boeing to make a five-
minute powerless descent from
about 23,000 feet to a gliding land·
ing on the desert noor.
Today's ntgbt served as prac·
tice fot' the maneuver that will be
used to launch the experimental
craft. That separation is to be ac·
compllsbed by beading the car·
rier plane into a shallow dive.
wbile exploelve bolta part the
coupling to allow the shuttle to
"pop up" and away from the
Boeing.
The ouroose of the free ffiJ?bt was to ~AAt the shuttle's gliding
ability The craftis designed tor~
turn from space as a glider
when it becomes operational in
1980. Disposable rockets will
blast the craft into orbit to carr~
out scientific and technical mis·
sions. Its fuel expended, the shut-
tle will soar back to Earth and
land like a conventional airplane.
Dad Puts Lye
In Baby Bottle
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A 21·
year-old man was convicted of
endange ring his 5-month-old
daught.er's life after putting lye
in her bottled baby formula.
Deputy Dist. Atty. David Disco ,
said Eddie Veal of Los Angeles
placed the lye in the formula RF
part or a plan to sue the baby food
manufacturer. Surgery was re-
quired to save the life of Jeanette
Veal, who suffered severe·bums
in her mouth and throat.
A Superior Court jury de·
liberated three days before bandi
ins down the verdict. Sentencing
is Scheduled Aug. 16. •
·Planni.ng Action
In action Monday night, the Costa Mesa Planning Com·
mission:
SIGN LA•: Denied a request for a variance to con-
struct a 200 square foot ground alp for Harbor Rest
Memorial Pan, 1625 Gisler Ave. Tbemulmum allowtdun·
der the sign ordinance tor that bUslne11 la 15 square feet.
I
.
Dlilly ............ .., '8trtcll O'o-tt
IRVINE RESIDENT SAYS HE OETS A 'THRILL' OUT OF BEING HAM TV OPERATOR
Hugh Davi• (Right) Chata with Buddy.In TuatJn, Dr. M.W. •Doc:' Conway
Dam:v Show and Tell
'Home Brew' Gear Aida Yisual Impact
By IDLARY KA YE
Ol llM oanr Pli.t Haff
Hugh Davis may be the biggest
ham in Irvine.
. Not content to send just his
voice to fellow ham radio
operators, Davis now sends both
hia voice and bis picture. He's a
ham television operator.
Davis broadcasts regularly
from his Irvine home, talking
with buddies in Tustin,
Westminster, Newport Beach
'and Santa Ana. He can even
reachNorthridge.
One night this past week, Davis
went on the air and soon was
chatting with "Lee" in
Westminster and "Doc" in
Tustin. All three could see and
llear each other.
In fact, a Daily Pilot reporter
conducted a three-way interview
Tt'hile sitting in Davis' home.
Davis, owner of an electronics
store in Costa Mesa, has been a
TV ham for about six years. He
says he made the switch from
radio to TV because be wasn't
getting "enough of a thrill" out of
being just a ham radio operator.
Most TV hams are electronic
whiues like Davis and outfit
their studios with what they can
••homebre w," or homemade,
equipment.
The Irvine resident says it cost
him about $300 to equip his studio
and explains that the price varies
depending on bow much of the
·f:Quipment is purchas ed and bow
much is made at home.
, Davis' studio includes a porta-
ble camera set up on a tripod,
\wo amall TVs (one to receive
end one to broadcast), and two
tadio&.
. Davis, like hi!J counterparts, is
llcensed by the FCC as an
amateur radio operator, but does
not require a special ham TV
license. The frequenc)(~e ls as--~igned is so high it doe~ot cause
interference with any other com-
mercial radio or TV staUons.
Most broadc'asts involve sim-
ple conversations, often about
new equipment they've put
mgetber.
But sometimes, broadcasts are
f aney. and come close to being
what one could call actual pr<r
ffr~'::'1:.~·wport Beach ham,
Ueb.se Mowry, conducts what he
calls .. Saturday Night at the
Movies" each week, according to
Davi.a.
1 :·Mowry, a home movie buff,
sends his films over the airwaves
each Saturday ntaht and attracts·
"a pretty bll crowd," Davis
aaya. . •
Davis bu about 100 cohorts in
ttie Amateur Television of
Southern California Association.
Those wbo live near each other
·and broadcast back and forth fnt·
PILOT REPORTER (LEFT) CONDUCTS ~-WAY INTERVIEW
Hilary Kaye, Hugh Davia ea Seen In Tuatln, We1tmln1ter
quenUy form tight·knit groups, hesays. ..
•'We're a friendly bunch of
guys," says Davi.a.
His buddy in Weslm.instel',
"Lee," <Lee Carey) adds, "We
just call each other by flrst
names on the air. I've gone years
without knowing a ham's last
name."
The Orange County continlent
of TV hams meet weekly on
Saturdays for lunch at a Costa
Mesa restaurant.
"I'd say between five and lS show up each week and some
bring their family and friends,"
explains "Doc," better known to
his patients as Dr. M. W. Conway.
Doc says be started radio ham-
ming about 45 years ago, "When
I made the ml.stake of trading my
Dad's crescent wrench for a
crystal set. Been bammlnl ever
since."
Davis explains that TV hams
have a limited range becauae
they've been given a high fre.
quency on the radio wave spec-
trum. He says that basically they
can broadcast only in their line Qf
sieht.
On a good day, the averate ls
about 70 nUJea. Davia uys that
on occasion be.can l'eacb down
into San Diego •.
Moet hams have elaborate an-
tennas OP their roofs, but because
Davis lives in Irvfne, where
homeowner assoclatlon rules are
strict, h1a antenna la in his attic.
''Ob, the guys tease me about
my inside antenna, but the pic-
ture I send out is among the best,
so the joking's all in fun," says
the electronics buff.
Davis points out that TV hams
are divided into two groups -the
"operators" and the
"tinkerers."
Operators love to broadcast
and spend a lot of their time on
the air. Tinkerers are the ones
wbo love to put the sets together,
put them on the shelf and then go
on to the n~xt one.
When asked what he was,
Davis sbnigged and said, "Ob, I
guess I'm half and half. I love to
do both."
Copter Aids
Rescue , of :. ':
Boy at Beac~
A 14-year-old boy was airlifted
from .San Onofre State Park,
Beach by M arln.e Corps•
helicopter Monday after a spill
from bis surfboard ruulted in a
brokenpelvia.
••
Tuesday, July 26, 19n * DAIL y Pt LOT AS
'Snuff' Film Case
Mes.an Denies Plot·
. .
·To Tort11re, Slay .
A H-year-old Co1ta Mesa
,fUTnltun upholsterer baa
pleaded tnnocent to ebarees ~at.
tempted murder and aolldtatlon
of murder In an alleged acbeme
to t«ture and dismember nude models at a remote daertahack.
Fred Berre DoUglu entered
the plea Monday at hia arraltn·
ment ln West Or~e County
Municipal Court.
A prosecutor cbariecl c!uriq
the. court bearin& that the antics
of the Costa Mesa man would put
the infamous Marquis de Sade to
shame.
But the accused man's de-
fender characterized him as
"juat an average Joe Blow
citizen" whose alleged torture
tools are not:hine more than
"common, everyday camping
items."
By the time both sides ol the
courtroom debate bad their say,
.Municipal Court Judee Marvin·
Weeks iowered Douglas' ball
from $250,000 to $150,000.
Judge Weeks also set July 28 as
the date for a formal bail bearing
and scheduled a preliminary
hearing for Douglas in West
Orange County Municipal Court
for Aug.~.
Douglos was arrested in Yucca
Valley last week and charged
with luring two undercover
policewomen posing as pros·
titutes to the desert for a lewd
photo taking se6Sioo.
According i1Garden Grove
police, the d porno picture
taking session as to feature the
two women in lesbian love mak-
ing scenes as well as acts of
sadomasochism.
That done, the photo climax
was slated to be the real life
muWatlon murders of the two
models, police contend.
As a result of the alleged morbid scenario, Dol.l8laa was
arrested and charged with at-
tempted murder, solicitation to
murder and conspiracy to com·
mitmurder.
By-the ttme formal char1es
we.re filed in West Oran1e CoQnty
Municipal Court Monday, the
con1piracy charge had been
dropped.
But Deputy Dist. Atty. Mel
'Shoot Him'
LINDSAY CAP> -Police sur-
rounded a house here for a1.x
hours and talked a gunman lnto
surrendering as bystanders
urged officersi\o aboot him, aitef
John Beeneaaid.
Officers were called Monday to
th~ home of Jack Ar~, 26,
after hil wife, Judy, 30, was shot
in the neck SundaJ nl&~t.
"We bad people wan&g us to
shoot him, people wanting us to
go in," Beene said later. "It was
kind of disturbing to me the ,..ay
people reacted to this. They
seemed to really want to see the
man shot."
tell a friend_
Jensen let Judge Weeki know
that be believes the Costa Mesa
. up~ was leading a double
lite involving .. hideous crlmee ol
an almost unbelievable nature. ..
But defense attorney Patrick
Magera argued that )li5 client ha:s
no previous arrest record, bu
lived ln Costa Mesa 18 yeara and
baa been married to the aame
woman for 26 years.
To Magers, those facts mean
bi.a client la ''just a plain suy who
baa never been in trouble before
and la not a. threat to either lkip
:town or to harm anyone.''
Tbat arlUJDent notwitbltand·
ing, Judie Weeks •treed onlY to
the $100.000 reduction in ball,
leaving Douglu in Jail in lieu ol.
$150,000 ball. •
It will ata.y at that amount un-
less Magera is able to convince
Judce Weeks later this week that
h1s client ls entiUed to lower ball.
And it will be at the A\l8. 3 pr&-
liminary bearing that the Judie
will decide ii there is aufficlent
evidence to make Do\l8laa stand
trial in superior court.
Dates Asked
JFK 'Mutress' Under Probe.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Judith Campbell Emer, now of
Newport Beach, bas been ordered by a federal oourt to list
the dates when she pUl'J)Orledly had sexual relalions with
the late President John F. Kennedy.
HoweverL U.S. District Court
Judge Albert ee Stephens ruled Mon-
• day that Mrs. Exner's answers will be
sealed to protect her from public
ridicule.
Attorneys for Midnight Magazine
had asked the judge to order her to
answer as part of their defense in the
1976 libel suit she broueht against the
magazine. Mrs. Exner filed the sUit
following an article that intimated &be
DH• spied on Kennedy for the Mafia.
The judge refused to order Mrs. Exner to answer three
other questions posed by the magazine's attorneys: whether
she uses narcotics, what her street address is and where she
allegedly had sexual relations with Kennedy.
Firefighters Halt
LA FOrest Blaze
LOSANGELES-(AP)-Aided
by the· weather, firefighters con-
tained Califoi:uia 's biggest forest
fire of :um, today.
Cootainment, wbicb means a
10-mile-J.ong line bas been built
around the entire burn area, ls
the first major step toward put-
. tinC" eu& &be blaze that· seared
3,800 acres in the Angeles Na-
tional Forest.
"We don't expect it to jump the
line now, unless the weather con-
ditions flare up," said a U.S.
Forest Service spokesman. "We
should have full control later to-
day." .
One person was killed and
another was critically injured
when two helicopters mapping
the fire collided Sunday night.
The fire began Sunday morn-
ing about 30 miles north of
downtown Los Angeles and a
U.S. Forest Service spokesman
said reports indicated the blaze
may have been touched off by
bullets used at a designated
shooting area.
The type of powder used at the
site was being investigated.
Black powder could legally be
used at the site, the spokesman
said, but tracer bullets would be
.. lllegal.
· Hot weather and high winds
helped fuel the fire Sunday. but
on Monday the winds died,
permitting the 1,000 firefighters
to clear the ring around the •
smouldering flames.
"It looks beautiful," Russ
Leland of the California Division
of Forestry said. "The winds
have died down. We don't expect
trouble unless the winds blow
backup."
No homes or cabins were in the
path of the blaze through the
rugged, sparsely populated ter-
rain on the slopes of Mt. Gleason.
The copter crash occurred
near the Mill Creek ranger sta-
tion aa helicopters from the U.S.
Forest service and Los Angeles
County approache<l a heliport.
Killed was Thomas Grady, 32,
of Glendale and critically hurt
was Ted IDllmers, 33, of Granada
Hills. Both were aboard the
county helicopter.
Two men aboard the Forest
Service craft received minor in·
juries. • .....
.!~.:0 .. Q Phone :·Strike QK'eJ . ···~ $r1 Workers 'Ready to Walk' Next M~
wlc•
To111
vphiae
• • Rl('K \ Tl('K Y l'OLITIX .
Mari•n tt .. r.i•·1wo , the da•
lmli(Ul!\ht>d school hourd pOraon
from N1•wµ01 t Heacta. /\et out up
un ht•• whatl' l hargcr yeste.rd&y
• lo savt> tht• Ht•pubhcam Party
from 10.~l( an our coastal regaon
ra M ~ lk•rt(e .. un announced her
.~ andadacy for the Hth Assembly
• lhi.tnet .. l'at She wall run an the
, ,.June Primary election
Any bod\. tan rapidly calculate
thMt Mr.. HtAq~eson 11 getting an
tc<a rly 1 unnant( .. tart with her
w h 1 t l' (' h a q: l' r T h e J u n ~
i. Primary 1s onl) a tad short of be-
ing one yeu1 d W U\
~ SO WHY SO £ARLY'! And bow
t'dO 1l b~ sug~ested that the
st'hool board person would be
saving the Grand Old Party from
HM•lf"1
Bt.~uu:.t· la:.l November. the
GOP took an enormous pratfall
1n the 14th Assembly District.
WASHINGTON <AP 1 TJl~t wotkva an PreJltred
to la\lD(:h a naU0pwid 1 1trike
next month to back d•mudi for
PMY m<:ruitse1 Wld other benefits
ln • oew contrac-t wltb the Bell
Syawm.
Glenn E. W1ttl1', pre1'1dent of
th' Communication~ Workerf of
Amedca (CWA), said Monday
overwhelming support for a
strike ''makes it clear" that his
!>00,000 members "are ready to
wulk out 1f that becomes
necessary "
WATl'S SAID THE raftk and
file, in a ~l'et·ballot election
earlier this month. voted by a
margin of 6-1 to give the union
leadership authority to can a
strike.
A formal strike date witi. left to
union leaders to decide, but a
walkout could come as early as
midnight Aug. 6, when -current
contracts expire
"We want a settlement, not a
strike," Watts said. "But the
situation is very serious and it's
getting very late."
TUE CWA IS TBE lugest
u.Uan in the negoUa\jom Ulat be-
Uft May 19. The International
Brotherhood of Electrical
Workers and the Telec6tn-
municatlons International union,
wlth a combined stre~gtb of
nearly 200,000 1tdditioqal
employes, could be ex~ted to
join a strike if ~e is called.
Each union bal'gains separate-
ly , with the C,WA usually setting
the pattern for settlements. ·
The uWOPS rejected •an initial
co~ltact proposal July 21 that in-
cluded a lO percent wage boost
over three years, and an addi-
tional 10 percent in cost-of.liviag
raises. It lbade nomeotionofjob
i.ecurity. the union's key de-
mand.
"WE CANNOT POSSI BLY get
together ,'' Watts said, if the com-
pany thinks it can ~imply beef up
its original offer without address-
ing "the essential ingredient of
job security . . and the. real
needs in such vital areas as
pensions. health benefits and
union-management relations."
Nearly 100,000 Bell System
jobs have been ~to a.ioaaatMln •
in tbe·three years •ee tbe tast
con.tract was ne1otl•ted,· and the
unions have dem•nded
l!afecuarcb in a new aareement
a.galnstfurtber losses.
A strike, if it comea, ii unJ,ikely
to have any mtijor, immediate
impact on te)epbon4'1 .1e1;vice
because of auto(l'lation. cO(llpany
spokesmen say .
' BVT A &TVQY dOfe. tar' the
CW A contends that a ltrfke. "is
bound to have far-reaching. ad-
verse economic and social re-
su)ts that will itnping~-oa the
quality of ~~·s lives in.I the
conduct or the n'atton's busi-
ness."
• The union says the average
phone company worker earns
$6.46 an hour, a figure that puts
thetn in seventh place among
other industries. But the com.
pany says its emp\oyes already
are well paid. It cites a federal
study sbowing Bell salaries in-
creased 39.7 percent under the
current contract while the cost or
living rose 27.4 percent.
Big Muddy •• . '.
Cool retreshing mud was the ord~r o( the day for
Charyca .Forister. 11. one of about 400 children who
participated in tt .slip-artd-s lide competition at a park in
Nashville, Tenn~ The event was sponsored by the Metro
Parks and Recreation Oepartment and Johnsoo Wax
Company .
-------~----------------
fm fh.•puhhcans. the election
was a l'lassH' study In political
c·ompla('Cncy Look al the <hs
t ric·t Its houn<.l<.1rit·s cm brace the
Rt·µubl 1l'an s lronghold or
Nl•WPt"lrl Bcuch, stretch mland
through 1<;1 Toni. Misslon Viejo
anrl th!' SaddlehaC'k Valley and
w111d rluwm·oa:-.t lo Oceanside
Panel Approves 3 West Bank ·Towns
II total . lhc 7<1th has lhe
hca\'lC:>l Hl•pubhcan maJOrtty of
<Jn v d1stn<'l in C<1liforni a
'fhu.-. lkpubh<'an nomin<it1on to
this As:-.cmbly sc<Jl 1n a June
Primary 1::. t;.mt<Jmount to elec
tum m November
You l'an break out the cham-
pagne for the• GOP victor nght
;1fler the Junt-voting No need \n
-.1;,ip out any more campaign
s igns November victory 1s cer
ta in You can mail 1t in
La:-.t year. however. il got lost
1n the mail It came hack to the
Republicans s tamped, .. Return
, lo Scndt•r "
WHAT HAPPENED was that
the afort:men tion cd Mrs
Bergeson ran 10 the GOP
primary against a political un·
known, auto dealer Jim Slemons.
· The Republican hierarchy s at
ha<'k fat and happy. calrulalin~
that Mrs. Bergeson would win in
a waltz
But Slemons \lo as heavily
financed Slemons blitzed the dis
• trtcl with a computerized letter
campaign. ll attacked Mrs
Bergeson 's service as a school
trus tee lie won the primary
elel·lion by 2.393 votes
After $lemons becam e the of
ric1al Republican nominee, he
s teadfastly dodged debate or <my
public confrontation with the
Democratic candidate. Deputy
District Attorney Ron Cordova
It was also di vulgcd that he
had tangled with immigration on
a matter of importing sexy
publications and that some of his
claims for endorsements by GOP
bigwigs were flawed.
Despite this mounting
evidence. the GOP hierarchy
stuck by their candidate. After
all. he was their own.
TEN DAYS BEFORE the Nov-
em her election. Mrs. Bergeson
was again m 1t this lime as an
official wr1le-m candidate. She
drew an unbelievable 34,860
votes a strong. clear signal
from the electorate that voters do
look at a candidate's qualifica-
tions. despite what the party
bigwigs may think
Mrs. Bergeson sphl the GOP
vole and Democrat Cordova won
the heavily Republican district In
a spectacular upset.
Now will the Grand Old Party
forgive Marian her sin of going
against, the "oHicial party
choice" and costing them the As-
sembly seat?
We shall see.
TEL AVIV, Israel (AP> An
Israeli cabinet committee gave
legitimacy and perm anent status
today Lo three Jewis h settle·
ments established on the West
Rank of the Jordan River. a
spokesman said. But 1t remained
to be seen whether the govern-
ment would aJlow further settle-
ment in the occupied Arab ter-
ritory.
The de<:1sion to recognize
Camp Kaddum. Maale Adumin
and Ofra came at a meeting of
the ministerial settlement com·
mittee, the spokesman said. and
must be approved by the full
cabinet. The committee met one
day after Prime Minister
Menahem Begin returned from
talks with President Carter in
Washington.
Officials said Israel was con·
:-.idering Carter's request lo
refrain from establishing new
Jewish communities on the West
Bank until peace talks resume
with the Arabs. The cabinet
spokesman said it would take up
the issue Wednesday.
Kore a T alk.a E nd
SEOUL. South Korea tAP>
Defense Secretary Harold Brown
ended talks with South Korean
officials today on the U.S. troop
withdrawal plan, pledging con·
tinued military support and re·
assuring Seoul that the United
States will not negotiate with
North Korea behind its back.
A communique issued at the
conclusion of two days of talks
said the two sides had agreed on
formation of a combined military
command. lt also described in
gener al terms the planned
phased. pullout of 33.000 U.S.
Truce Quiets
Egypt-Libya
Borde r Fight
CAIRO, Egypt <AP> Egyp-
tian and Libyan forces were ob-
serving a truce along their 700·
mile frontier today, an Egyptian
military spobaman said. But
propaganda warfare continued
unabated.
''Both sides are sincerely
honoring the cease-fire," after a
week of major border. claahes,
the military spokesman told The
Associated Press.
ground troops , and said the
Carter administration would ask
Congress to ap11rov.t a new
military aid program for South
Korea.
Pipeline Damage d
FAJRBANKS. Alaska <AP>
A blast from an explosive device
of undeter mined nature
damaged the exterior of a section
of the trans-Alaska pipeline but
the now of oil was not affected.
authorities said.
Slate Police Lt. George Pollitt
said the blast, which damaged in-
s ulation wrapped around the out-
side of the line but not the pipe
Intrepid Kitty
(_IN_SH_:OR_T __ )
itself. occurred about 9 p.m.
Monday abollt 17 miles north ct
Fairbanks. In that area. the
pipeline runs about one mile
north oC a cafe and five miles off
a state highway.
La11ee • A ppreeed •
W ASffiNGTON <AP) -Sworn
testimony from Budget Director
'Bert Lance and the "imminent"
sale of 200.000 shares of stock in
"Sissy Earhart .. dons helmet and goggles for the finals
of the All -American Glamour Kitty conte.st in
Hollywood. Fla. He is six months old and is owned bv
flight instructor Jean Pyatt of Philadelphia. Pa. ·
Cai-ter:· Rais.es Holl!!·
:Po~ A.nm ·Control~
• I
WASSJNGTON <AP) -President Cuteraays tbe,..is "a 1lfmmer
of hope'' that the 1pread ol atomic weapons can be limited, -'b
though '!evf!D step 11 going to be a challen1e ln Itself... • ·-
"Six or etlht mootha ago tberre was a 1eneral l~I ~ cite
world that n0thtn1 could be done, that It was too late, tit at tbf' atomic
genie was out ~ the bOttle and ·
that nobody could ca~h it to re-wm it to captivity." the Pftsi.
dent.said.
' the Atlanta bank he ~e headed
are defl,&Si.og a threatened Sel).ate
investigation into the personal
fmances of ·the top 08.rtff ad--
ministration official. ·
One. senator heario& ~ance's
expLanat.ion,i of vario\U; alle&a.-
tidn& Mond\ly slid tt -clear
that members of the Senate Gov-
ernmental Operations Commit
tee we~ .ready lo vole the b~get
director 'i'tf\e G()()<f. Houselfyep-
ing Seal o Approval.''
Kent S~arled A ga•n
KENT. Ohio <AP) --Consl(UC·
lion of a gynmasium annex at the
site of the 1970 Ke.nt,State shoot·
I I
, ....
ing~ .. approved by a county court.
faces further pot.enUal entangle-
ment The university's Board of
Trusc.ees. ealled tt meeting-today
to discuss the future of plans to
~"ild the g~n:i ~nn~x .. following
.i..~~~lingMon<\aY .. ,
' J l t tl\e bmeltime. tbe tJ.S. Jn.
tenor Department said it was
studying a proposal to make the
site where.Mur sl\Jdents were '~n~i. 1-~lle~of riOe fkefrom
National d'uard'men during an
anti war protest a national his·
Lorie landmark. It was not clear
what effect if any. the Interior
0.epartmenl announcement
would.have on.the huild,i.ng plans.
Suspect·, ~·rr~i9'1'~"
Memor:ial Service . -. I
Set. fOr~ 6 ·Viciims
...
•
Busnappe.-8 l1148d Guilty
Trio Fa.ce Battle t0 '~v'WIJ-Life1 With'out Parole
OIUD..AND <AP> -ThrM }'OWll men who, in a atunalat and •lrift'...,. plt141d pllty to tht rwom lddn~ ~ • CMwdlllla
RJlioal ~ _. "ett tu clrivw .Ul wqe a l•••l b1\Q• toitther
to •wild llf • ia pr"-•ltbout Hl'OI•. HYI a delenH att«M~. · ·~:re., are~ \o 11t lt over wttb eel they are 1Ull friendl,' ·
..W pUllc defmder IAltft Gtftdton aft.tr bl• clltnt, Jam .. Sohoen·
tead., 25, Seboenteld.•1 ~. Rlehvd, M, an4 Frederick N. Woods . zs. tllidecl • year-• m71t.ry Mond1y and wltbdrew their innocent ....
ftl8 ftlaBS bEPSNDANT8, wbo como from wealthy f&lidll•, pleaded PlhY to 27 COWlta ol )ddnap for ransom, 1\'hich
curie& a Prbob ~im ot ftve yeva to llfe. '"1t they retained thelr in-noea pleas on fl~• charJ• fll kJdnap with bodll.Y wm.
U ecmYlcted on the aeecmd and mor. •edoul eb-.r•es, they could
be teDteneed to llf• ift prllan without poulblUt)' of .parole.
D&YID lllNJE&, dlatrtet •ttonle1 ID Mad« a Count)'. where the abduction at cunpomt oecurnd, d~ 1acounta ot armed rt>bbery
in udl.aD&e for the guilty. pleu."' ~ tobber)' counj.a involved
pereonal trinkets takeu frcD the )'QUDISlers .
"';Justice baa been served," MlnJu uid, but he ~wed to fJght
for a C<lnvietioft on the'bodily harm cbaraes.
"We'Te coins too" the body scratches, the cull, the nose bleed-
ing, the claustrophobic. effectl ol being buried under1round and the
emotional barm tbosecblldrensultered." he said. . .
THE 21 CIDLD&EN and their bus driver were atMlucted al-«un· point near Chowchilla, a dusty Central Valley farming community.
on July 15, 1976-The children, ranging in age from S to H years,
were herded into vans for a ~mile ride north to Livermore. where
they were imprisoned in a moving van buried in a rock quarry. They
scratched their way to freedom 17 hours later.
Superior Court Jnd~e Leo Deegan ol Riverside, called out of re-
tirement to handle one of the most bizarre crimes in California has·
tory, set Aug. S for a hearing on the bodily harm charges. Each de-
fendant.waived a trial by jury and Deegan will decide their guilt or
innocence.
.• YaaowitJ reluled to discuss his chuge in strategy aa he left tbt
cou= but Gendron ouUined what be celled a hopeJess cue for
tbedef ff, 01 I , '
"It .. as an impossible cue to try in view 0( the •vidence. "·be said, outaide court. "U was at\.Overwhebnlng pf05ec\l\iOO case, and;
we felt the best defense wouJd be to compromise as best we could."
11IE THREE DEFENDANTS J.Dd their lawyers bad review~
the 4,800 pJeces of evidence ag~nst them last Wednesday in a
personal lilsj>ectl~. That evidence Uiclu.Sed a $S million ransom
note found ._t the W9ods estate alone with a detailed kidnep plan and
a list of Ute kfdnap victims.
Scho~I f.inancing
Ref o i-nis Studied
SACRAMENTO (AP> -Sixteen potential points of disagree.men!
face the legjslative cpmmittee which started work this week on a five·
year, $l.rf.bllliqn,v~an.to reform California school financing.
Tht s~m'&(l COQ'lQ'l~tee created last month by the Senate and As
sembh: f(>rl'l}~lly .convened 'fdonday, but the discussion of specific
points was delay~ tp working -·:...------------
sessions starting todl\Y. Greene, a Democratic as-
lssues facing lhe committee in· semblyman from Sacramento~
<. lude how .much extra state suggested possible compromises
money shoul~ go into public on several points dividing Senate
school-; over the next five years. and Assembly conferees on lhe
how much of that money should issues.
substitute for local taxes. and But Republican members of
how much should be used to im-the six·man committee request-
• DAILY Pll.OT ft§ TU!!d!y, July 2e, 1en
'Flog' A nyone ?
Gendron said he and the younger Schoenfeld's attorney, Ted
Merrill, had, been prepared for two week~ to avoid a trial by plea
' bargaining.
WOODS' ATl'ORN.EY, Herbert Yanowitz, fought bitterly to
quash a search warrant of the Woods' Portola Valley family estate
south of San Francisco where the most damaging evidence again~t
them was found.
proveed_µc ation ed an extra day to study a
Call!omia's i.!f>o' school (!is· lengthy legislative staff analysis
lricts. musl adopt' their 1977'78 ' . presented Monday by Greene.
school-yt'ar budgets t1}t Aug. 8. So 1 A $3-billioo appropriatiora lo
they need to know by early next continue school support at pres·
week how much extra money the ent levels was included in the
state wiU provide, school finance SL4.7·billion state budget signed
committee chairman Leroy last month by Gov. Edmund
Patrons at the Silver-K golf course in Oxnard have a new
name for their game. Owners of the par-3 course explain
that the letters were intentionally hung backwards after
a recent renovation. Aficionados of the game say no mat-
ter if you call 1t golf or 'flog ' it's still one of America's
greatest recreational pastimes.
G r'eeii Uict · ' · · Brown Jr.
Oil Tanker Terminal
'99 Percent Dead'
SACRAMENTO (Al»
-Opinion seems tQ be
•· growing that the ~
mil Ii on oll ta n ker
terminal proposed for
Long Beach will never be
built.
The Sacramento Bee
said Monday tbe ~d
ministralion or Gbv. Ed-
mund Brown Jr. is
maneuvering to avoid
blame for failure of
nel{otiations for the ter-
minal,, where tankers
would bring Alaskan oll
for pipelinirig ·to Tex.as,
where it w()uldbe refined
for Midwest customers.
The Los Angeles
Times quoted. Tom
Quinn, Gov. Edmund
Brown Jr 's Air
Resources Board
chairman, as saying he
is "not very optimistic"
and the federal Environ-
mental ptotection Agen-
cy. Sohio had not com·
pleted its application for the project.
about the terminal, Quinn i s to brief
which he says •would be, C"1i/omia congreumen
anairpollutionproblem. in Washington, D.C., Otis
The Times also quoted week.
Rep. Mark Hannaford
CD.Calif.), whose district
is involved, as saying
there's about a 9S per-
cent chance that negotia-
tions with Standarp Oil
or Ohio woulo break
down.
Quinn said that despite
warnings from the ARB
l'he Bee's Washington
'bureau quoted an un·
named source as sa1ms ;
the. project is "90 to'~
_,p~r~t dead'' itftd Qui.n4J
would.attempt to pin the
blame on Sohio'~ laijaae.
to promise adequate .all· ',
ti smog safeguards. ~. . .
' . .
Rock Group Held:-'"!
·On Battery Rap ~-~:·~.,
I.Sf.._
. ~ellfY . WYnb,erg, . one-
time -~tt;:o( actress
,Eliza be~ Taylor, ~s bee~· 5.e~ie,nced ,ifl,
Beverly :HUls. to 90,_
days. in ~j an after
pleading no, oontest .
'to charges.of' his' con-
ttect.ibn tb a sex· ~ase·
. involving high scJ)ool :
··~ ~rls-
OAKLAND CAP) -Four associateg of the
popular British rock group Led Zeppelin, ~tuding
drummer John Bonham, spent three hO\U'8 !n jaH
here after being arrested on a battery com-plaint.
omcials said.
Besides Bonham, 29, the band's rnanagu, stage
manager and a security guard wer&-book9d for' in· '
vestigation or charges stemming (Tom an' alleged
altercation with stage hands following a Saturday
concert, Oakland police said.
THE AllllESTED were identified as Bonham,
manager Peter Grant, age unknown, Stage
manager Richard Cole. 31, and security guard John
Bindon, 34, All listed London as their hometown.
They posted bail after their short jail stint and
dashed out with coats over their beads to waiting
limousines, apparently to avoid television cameras .
ACCOU ING TO POUCE, Cole and Bindon
were booked on two counta of battery; Bonham and
Grant were booked on single b'attery counts.
Each posted bail of $250 for each·count
The band performed concerts Saturday and
Sunday before :f0,000-plus fa~ at the Oaklantt
Coliseum. ' ~ -l'j~g~g Police said the arrest warrant stemmed from a• f~ .
ci>t'1l>1aint flied by three d'\pioyes of rock en-~ -··-"'•
trepreneur BUl Graham, who sponsored the Day~!' \
I.he G~ copcetta. , ". . \\\.Jl~'l\DJl,;.I!~,
HOME
,(i)\YNERS
,,_...,,,. . ..,,.,,.,,
And wh'atever sh9~, costs.
Here's one simple solution. Keep your indoor temperature at 78°
lnst~d ,of ?0° ar;ia,you could <1l:1~ yq,ur cooling, costs up to 30 percent.
Air 'cenditibning,is supposed to· keep you comfortable, ·not cold..
'B~ the way, mak~ sure all iiour doors and windows are dosed.
Why pay lo air condition the neighborhood?
Agrun, temember. Indoor .iemperatm:e 78° or higher.
It's another way you can help conservation. And it will definitely
pay off-next time your meter reader shows up.
l'I • "' t
l
-
AC
DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
·A False Assu1Dption
Tbe on .. CoantJ 1IDiN of~ ... voted a "'moullJut to aak it.at.I Atty. Gen. Eve Ile •to e ov r th a p~ 'Of IDdletecl cow. r,: •lion Ralph Diedrtdl'aacl •blllp Anthony.
,. I WU tbe board•• reuoallll tb&i ~viol the l1'1ic.t attorney from the cue would ll1Qultaneoualy ~ any poulble coalUct of lntentt taint from
liure board deallnp with tho D.A.
• . Unfortunately, lt ta too late for tbal
• Jt WU the dislJ"lCt attomey•a ofnce that. on behalf
cl( tlw (rand Jury. dlrected the lnvest11aUon leading
C.OJ)ledrlch 's and Anthony's lnd!ctmcmt.
Now that the lndlctmenll have been handed ~ prosecution or the two county supervisors lies ~the judicial proceu. There. Diedrich and An-~ have the same safetua.rds as any defendant no
•litter who pr05ecutes the caa-e.
U it is the attorney 1eneral who prosecutes. it is ~that an,YOne, least of all the likes of Diedrich. -.DI be persuaded that the road leading to the indict-ments wasn •t paved by the district attorney.
And the move aimed at removing a conflict of in-terest taint from the Board of Supervisors' dealings '!'lb the D.A. won't accomplish much of anything.
. Risky ~slation
The rush of Congressional business before the
August recess will make it necessary to continue until
Sept.ember the hearings on HR 10, the bill that would
tepeal the 38-year-old Hatch Act.
emP)oyes and well organized public employe unions.
the llatcb Act ls needed more than ever.
Touted as a measure that would "encourage"
federal employes to participate ~ore fully in politics,
HR 10 would ln fact leave them and their jobs open to
the pressure of power politics and coercaon by labor bosses.
Citizens who agree that the Civil Service must
remain untouched by partisan politics would do well
to communicate their views to Senators Alan
Cranston and S.I. Hayakawa at their state offices
during the Augwit recess.
Solar Outhouses?
Commenting on the problem of equipment thefts
during construction of the Alaska pipeline. an official
noted that the most popular items were heated
outhouses. especially designed for the freezing
temperatures. Hundreds were carried away. u a heated outhouse sounds somewhat luxurious,
consider the fact that the U.S. Forest Service has
spent some $60,000 on development of a better privy
for national park campgrounds.
Models tested thus far are a far cry from the-old
wooden one-holer .
Many are enclosed in streamlined plastic shells.
The "Sunbeam John," now being tested at
Yellowstone National Park, uses solar panels to
convert sunlight into electricity to power pumps for its
self -contained· waste treatment system.
•
This dangerous piece of proposed legislation.
passed by the House of Representatives and heavily
backed by the AFL-CIO. would remove the
prohibition on participation in partisan politics by
federal employes.
It was passed in 1939 as a direct result of political
corruption of federal employes in the 1936 and 1938
campaigns. Today. with almost three million federal
The Portable Sanitation Association,
representing some 20 manufacturers of modern
outhouses, even has a Washington lobby. With
demand in the public and private sector adding up to
an estimated $10 million annual market, competition
is keen and new models are unveiled with a flourish
that would do credit to Detroit. ·
Grandpa wouldn't believe it. Nor would Chic
Sale.
'Sorry! Our thing is saving people from
communism -not squalor and bomelessnesS!'
Cambodia: World's Most Brutal Dictatorship.
W ASIDNGTON -The uproar
over human rights has ignored
the world's most brutal dic-
tatorship. Adolf Hitler at his
worst was not as oppressive as
·the communist rulers of tiny
Cambodia.
In a nation of 7 million people,
an estimated one million have
already died
from mis -
treatment
and execu·
tions. But the
entire
populace has
been enslaved
in a fashion
that violates
every intema-
l ion al stan·
klard of human conduct. Only the
commlDlists have any rights in
Cambodia.
·They have tried. with frighten·
)ng success. to hide their horrors
from the world. They have sealed
off their country tightly. The
borders are mined and patrolled.
Only nine nations have opened
embassies in the capital city of
:Phnom Penh. Yet these
<liplomats, most. of them com-
munists themselves from friend·
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
I cannot see the logic of the
Alaska to Argentina Hi·gbway since U .S .
Americans don't even dare
cross the U .S.·Mexican
border by auto.
· L.C.
ly countries. are restricted to a
street about 200 meters in length.
When they wish to conduct of·
ficial business, they are picked
up in a government car and
escorted to their destination.
Yet a few refugees managed to
escape, some of them after har-rowing experiences. They told
essentially the same story about
the conditions they had left
behind. Some even br9ught out
bootleg photographs of the
atrocities.
WE PICKED up their stories
fr om intelligence sources and
began publishing them as early
as June. 1975. But U.S. in·
telligence agencies were hesitant •
to accept the word of refugees.
All other intelligence channels
bad been effectively cutoff.
But the reports can no longer
be dismissed. Too many indepen.
dent witnesses have now reached
the outside. The story of the
brutal Cambodian repression,
therefore, calf be told with
authority. i
It began even'before the com-
munists swept tqvlctory In April.
1975. Some of the last classified
cables out of Cambodia reported
(JACK ANDERSON J
that the communist guerrillas
had turned upon the civilian
population with a sudden
savagery.
The last American am-
bassacb'. John Gunther Dean,
gave Washington ·this secret as·
sessment of the communist ruth-
1 es s nes s : "Inquiries as to
motives of the KC (communists>
have proCJuced a similarity of
response, witb the answers vary-
ing only iri degree of sophistica·
lion.
..THE REFUGEES express
the view that the KC forces con·
trol most of the land area but
need more people. The attacks
are seen by, lbe refugees as
enemy punisbment inflicted on
them for rejecting KC offers to
come over to the KC side."
Many or ttle Khmer Rouge
soldiers were young, illiterate
and so unsophisticated. accord·
ing to refugee accounts, that they
were frightened or foo4 that came in botUes and tin cans.
They were also consumed with
uncontrollable hatred.
Within hours after they
swarmed over Phnom Penh on
April 17, 1975, the wholesale
slaughter began. Tbla was not
the ravages, however, of un-
disciplined troops gone wild. On
the contrary, it was a deliberate.
disciplined campaign to remake
the society from the ground up.
First. the civilian populace
was ordered out of the cities.
Hesitation brought Instant death. The people were herded into-
death marches, without food or
water, into t¥ countryside.
CounUess thousands of the sick.
the aged and the children fell by
the wayside. The survivors were
forced to subsist. on in.sects and
roots.
At the end of the death
marches, the harassed people
were organiled into small
villages called ••peasant
cooperatives" and were put to
work planting rice, building
dikes and digging canals.
Families were separated and
marriages forbidden.
THE KU.MER leaders.
meanwhile, grimly began purg-
ing every trace of the old culture
and foreign influence. Orders
went out to execute doctors.
teachers, anyone with an educa-
tion, anyone wbo could read or
write. Every soldier above the
rank of private in the old army
was sentenced to death.
By the thousands, Cambodians
were dragged out of their
"illages to be shot, stabbed or
bulldozed alive into mass graves.
Some bad their hands tled behind
their backs and were beaten to
death with hoe '1andles; others
were forced to die more slowly.
with plastic bags tied over their
heads.
The number of executions. ap..
parenUy. has now fallen off. Peo-
ple are given verbal reprimands
for stepping out of line or failing
to show the proper ••enthusiasm··
ror the revolution. After three
such reprimands. according to
refugee reports, the errant
cjtizen simply disappears.
The people bave been or-
ganized. along military lines, in·
to squads, platoons, companies.
and so forth. For the average
citizen, life consists of long hours of work followed by more long
hours of indoctrination.
Rice is rationed: the current
measure is balf a tin can per
person each day. Families are
still kept separated. Marriages
are now permitted, but a Love af·
fair can be a capital offense.
There fs no monetary system:
everything is obtained by barter.
There is no educational system.
no ..telephones, no newspapers.
Three short propaganda
messages are ~adcast dailv.
Health problems are tr~ated
with folk remedies. Coconut
milk, for example. ls used as a
plasma substitute.
THE CAMBODIAN culture_ economy and political system •
are beinC recast. Even the na·
lion's name bas been changed: it
is now known as .. Democratic Kampuchea ...
The cities remain virtually
empty. Phnom Penh, once a
bustling city of 3,000,000 before
the Khmer Rouge came. now bas
a population around 50.000. • The ultimate goal of the com-
munist leaders, U.S. analysts
believe. is total eell-suffici~ncy.
To obtain it., they have resorted
to outright barbarism ~emi:nis
cent of the Dark Ages.
Federal ReServe Guards Its Secreis
WASHINGTON -The origins of the Federal Reserve System
are less well known than those of
the CIA. The present operations
of the CIA. with its new visitors'
tour of its Langley, Va., head-
quarters, are better understood
than the doings of the Fed,
although ot the two organizations
the Fed is by far the more
powerful and important to the
daily life of our countrymen.
Aside from an occasional
burglary or botched assasslna-
&n attempt, the CIA doesn't do much besides brief our top of-
ftcials with unreliable and lnac·
curate information. The Fed, on
tbe other hanO, bu much tc) say
about employment, prices and all
the other economic questions that
vexandoccupyua.
Tbe evolution of tbe CIA during
and after the second World War
is pretty well doctimented. To
this day, however, the authorship
of the Fed is a matter of some un·
certainty to historians. Did the
Idea come from the con·
1re11ional leadership of 1913 or
was it, a.a some IJ\llpect, hatched
in 1910 at a secret, week-long
meeting of New York bankers
held on Sen. Winthrop Aldrich's
I
( VON HOFFMAN J
remote estate on Jekyl Island.
Georgia?
The bankers' desire for in-
visibility plus their incompara-
ble faculty for making straight
ways crooked have obscUNCI tbat
and everything else about this
critical organ of money, credit
and finance ever since. Even now the operations of the Federal
Reserve Bank are exempt from
outside audl~ and much of the
Freedom ot Information Act.
cry Bobhevik1 Such credit al·
location b rarely permitted. but
Reus• s,.ys the Federal Reserve
Regional Bank directors chan-
neled credit to real estate invest-
ment trusts and utllltles cluring
the early '70s.
Tbls wu tbe periocJ when
many real estate investment
trusts were going belly up faster
tban ftab in a polluted stream. 11
was also the period when uUUtles
were demandina and getting rate
rai1ea on tbe basis of their cl~
that they couldn't borrow money.
That doesn't'mate b1m a Wdqae.
ly bad chairman of the Federal
Reserve Board but aiml>lY ()De
wbo is carrying on a tradJflOb ~
disregarding and refusing to talk
to the pigs wbo pay the taxflt and
do tbe votinl·
A MODERN Fed e&airman
would be one who understands
that the right way to hold power
and status lsn't to keep the public
mystified and confused. A •
modem chairman would be out explaining tbe operations ot the
Fed and the policy quesUons
which ltmuat.S.ecide.
• .. l
·~
·l
Single Parent Can Succeed THE QUES'nON of what the
Federal Reserve ta up to has
been raised 10,000 tlmes and
most recently by Rep. Henry
Reuaa (D.·Wisc.), the chairman
of tbe House Banklna Commt~
tee. After exquJslte difficulty,
Reuss' staff secured the ml.Dutes
of the meetinp of the 12 re&toaal
Federal Reserve Banks. AC'COrd-ing to Reuss the mafertal abow9
that the directors of the banks
improperly, although not megal-
Now it turm out they were able
to borrow. so perhaps some com-
pensatory rate cuts are in order.
As far as tbe real estate trusts are co0cerned, you can tran&late
what Reuss is saylf\i into an ac· cuaatlon that a cabal of baftken h~ve med tbel.r· 1overnment·
created ~lions to fnlltrate the
free mlrket by keeplftt 4ead· beatl and IOeen alive through
f avoritlsm.
But we don't have a modem
Feel chairman. We don't have
one not only because Burns ls an
old·atyle economist who is afraid
he'll lose his magic it we un-
derstand what the de.,ce ~e's taJJdna about, but also becaus4'
we don't have I lnodem sJSt,em.
TJie Federal Reserve law must be pulled apart. modernl.zecl and
re.aacted op the baais of t.od•Y°•
values and underatandinas: • Benty lleuss can take crediUor a
good beatnnina.
'• •' It is a truism that a child from :a broken home confronts an early
·llandicap in life -but, like most
:truisms, this seems to state only one side of the coln.
r What has constantly amazed ,me in my reading -whether it
·be in the arts.
ithe sciences.
:or public life -ts tbe vast-~ly dispropor-
't i o 11 a t e
'number of f ••1reat men••
lo r ht g h ,achievers
lwbo lost tbeir
f atben at an ·
earlyaae.
J bave Jost been leafin&. ~Ulrou,h a MW blosraphy ·of thtt.
:tyarquis de Lafayette. hero ol
'two revolutions. It. turn• out tbat ~hl1 father never aaw him, t:ltber ~at. birth or afterward•. OU•
&mother was taken out of a con-• e.nt. ind merrled to h1.I f aUt• It
:the aie ol 12. He imprepated
'tber took Off !or lhe S.ven Yean ·~w.r. and died when Lb Jad wu
•four.)
If a computer we-t• pr~
iramlnid top u.t0u1ll the molt eom~ ctt~ ot bk>-~sraf111. I •• IUN " •Ould dll-
"" .
( SYDNEY BARRIS)
close that an improbably high
percentage of illustrious men
arew up fatherless. <It would
ala°' I am convinced, show the opposite: Lbat moat Wuatrious men 1lred mediocre aons, who
were overwhelmed Into lm·
moblllty by tbeir fathers'
eminenca. >
JN OV1l OWN time. we need
look ltttl• turther than tbe on.
1pl'ln1 of the ChurcbJU1 aad the ~ooseftlts, two 1r.at d)'Jlaatlc
f am Wes that both culminated
and expired with "Winnie .. and
l'DB.
It "°'1ld take tho s.klll ot a
Fr-4 ('Whose ct.au.ht.er. lnclden· tally, followed tn hls footltcp_s more than b,111on did> or an Srtk J!tlUOD to *'tl>lalh why and bow
eo sq fatherleM bore rudaed
the top rung ln nitiY•r _.
terprlM they devotel tbimiiil•• to. •
Did d..rcumltanC• fore• \Mm.
to •Mw'• lbOr'e nPtd.lr tba boy1 1il normal famlllea? Did they aee t.betllfff Yll M 1Utr'01$
.. hHbaactt" to their motbera
from an early age? Dld the
absence ot a lather, rather than
crippling their development in
some way, actually remove an
element of unconscious conflict
that permitted them to flower
faster and laraer?
NO ONE ean answer these Jy, have been lobbylnS for
questions; we lack both theory legislation and pJayin1 credit al-
and empirical evidence for Jocationgames..
anythl_ni more than a surmise. I Everybody lobbiet coYe1:UJ er
brtna up the matter !or two re-overtly. but credit allocaUon II a
aaons: first, because, as stated, t far more 1eTlou1 accusatJoq.
have been replarly eurppaed at When people on the left urp '*on the nwnbet ol eminent-mm~ .oeTiilf oTUii poorenlllfir.d-1~'..:......f-!-U~~~
had oo Pat«nal lnfluence; and, population, people oo the rill*
secotld, because I think we hav~
ttaded to overemphaalzo lh6 \
rtetratlve aspects of the so-called ~'bfioken home," and lt ts quite
JM)Plbte that a child brought up
by e>no patent may have certain
c:ompenslltN benefits we have
11nored.
Certainlf, if there is open or re-
rular'C'Onlijct between the mates.
th• child t. "damaged" u muclt
N or more than If li via, with on-
11'. one of tho parents. For
a.aoth«. • cUt.aln amount ol ad· nnlt.Y ia childhood mlJht be as
1llmUl;dM '°'tdl911 u a ctrtaln
amount d economic advenlty II to a;WbO&a ~re. Wt 1tll1 kDoW
too UtUe abcNl then thtn11 .
•
ORANG I! COAST
DAILY PllOT . '
RobeTf N. Wmt.~ 1 ~~--.~-ThoawKMdl. Mar _ -__ BOt~~ EdUortGl~Edlor ...... . ,,,. ............ ., .. ~
fllo~ Htkl to laaform. •nd
• TueSdg, JUiy 2e. 1011 DAILY P1LOT At
• Claims Growth
ATL\Jlt'TA <AP> -The llltuaP la Use ume:
radal pmitJ. Communlltl bave bffn added to
bladm u tars•tia for tbetr aqer. TIM Ku KJu Klan
......... bur'Dlq Cl'OUel ...... .
~na of raw.. lD Cohambua, Ob.Ao, and
"-ldlnt Carter'• bome town ol PlaJna, 01., made
~ .,a.1• newt aCl'Ola Amertca. There bH• been tcftbla&M raUtee 1eau...ct from New York to
OaJlfomla.
But la there relllly a n1ur1ence?
1'be JOu tQ"a >'"·~nobody elle does.
.. Wl!'•B oaOWlNG T&EMENDOUSLY," Aki Robert Shelton, imperial wlaard of the Unlled
Kiana of America from bl.a 'bome ln TuacalooH,
Ala. "We 'll be t.uln1 a 111ore a.,f'elalve position ln
tM comtna month.a; you're 1oln1 to see & 1ot more
Gfua."
But 14lll~·Ume Klan observers say the fec:ent 1lllJl vWbWty of "lbe lnvbible empire" far out·
peees Its lnfiuence.
Tbe Klan ii called "a relic of antiquity that
doe1n't amount to
( )
anythln1" by Jormer U.S.
NEWS .4 IU .4LVS/S Rep. Charles Wellner, an _ • ,., •. , •· • " Atlanta Superior Court
judge. Wellner was a
leader In a mld·1960s
House investigation of the KKK.
THE ANTl·DEFAMATION LEAGUE of B'nai
B'rith said the Klan, no friend of American Jews, is
DD longer of much consequence. The Rev. 'Joseph
Lowery, head of the Southern Leadership Con·
ference which was founded by Rev. Martin Luther K1nc Jr., said he no longer thinks or worries about
the KKK.
The FBI said it no longer coun ts membership in
the KKK but estimated three years ago that there
were about 1,200 bard-core members of various Klana.
· A national Jleadcounl that low is "really
ridiculous," said Imperial Wizard Bill Wilkinson of
the Invisible Empire, Knights of the Ku Klux Klan,
a Louisiana group.
NEITIIER HE NOR OTIIER rival Klan leaders
will give figures, so actual membership is unclear.
But it is clear that the Klans have embarked on a
new strategy -one of speaking out. going to court
and going after recruits -after at least a decade in
decline.
'Health Hazard'
Diabetic· Drug
Ruled Illegal
WASHINGTON (AP) -HEW Secretary Joseph
A. Califano Jr. bas announced he is banning pben-
formin, a drug used by an estimated 250,000
diabetics, because the government determined it
constitutes "an imminent hazard to the public
health."
Califafto, on ate adyice or Commissioner
Donald Kennedy of the Food and Drug Adminislra·
tion, invoked the "imminent hazard" provision for
the first time in department history Monday to re-
move a drug summarily from the market without
years of hearings, appeals and red tape.
. -CALIFANO'S AcrtON CAME 10 weeks after
Ralph Nader's Health Research group asked for a
ban, claiming phenformin ktlls more people than it
saves.
Pbenformin has Jong been associated '!ith a
rare but deadly side effect known as lactic acidosis.
The Food and Drug Administration increas1ngly
has restricted its use and labeling b4t up Until now
has permitted its con·
( )
tinued sale.
MEDICINE Phenformin is sold
under the traae names
--------" DBI a n d DBI -TD , manufactured by Geigy
Pharmaceuticals, and Meltrol. manufactured by
USV Pharmaceuticals. Both companies repeatedly
have contended that the benefits of phenformin out-
weigh its risks.
IMPERIAL WIZARD -
Bill Wilkinson says
the FBI 's low
estimate of Klan
membership -about
12,000 i s
"ridiculous."
..............
CROSSES BURN -
Klan c laims rallies
like this one in
l..Duisville, Ky., are a
sign the organization
is growing once
again.
They still advocate separation of the races and
admit no blacks or Jews. But their rallies now con·
tain more denunciations of Communists in the gov-
ernment and left-wingers in general than racial
vilifications.
The competing Kl ans have little mutual respect
for each other. Wizard after wizard calls his own
group "the one true Klan," dismissing most rivals
as fools or publicity-hungry money-grubberS.
BUT THEY SPEAK IN ONE voice when they
complain that their civil rights have been trampled,
their complaints hauntingly echoing the past cries
of black civil rights groups.
Shelton. 48, accused the FBI of harassing the
KKK, spreading vicious stories about It, even set·
ting up phony Klan groups to give the organization a
bad name. The F31 has little comment except to
THE
EARL'S
PlUMllHG
·HEATING
Allt COMD. tTl•tt_., .. , ........
Service Ill v,,.,, ArM C.ill MISSION VIEJO ml? C<lmlno C.pl\lrAno IS•11 Diego Frwv. •t Av~rv P~wy l
495.()401
COSTA MESA
ISU Newport lll•d
. 642-1753
51. Lie "111.S1
ALLERGY?
(714) 543·9~24
Recorded
Message ·
ALLERGY CONTROL
FUUNOATION
Boa 1583, Orange Ca 92668
Write fa.-Fne lnformatiQll
************ *r··-· .. --.,.
•1 ..
"I AM DIRECTING TH E commissioner of food *I It
18)' Jtm lanier routinely lnvuttgatea lbe Klan.
It the President ii really· serious in hi.a talk
about human rifbta, Shelton said, be will meet Klan
leaden to UIUN th.em that human rights cuaran· tea ... ppa, &o tbe everyday citilen in the U .s:•
SHELTON BECENTL Y FIL~D A FEDEBAL
a\jt akln1 that the FBI be kept from destroying re-cants of Klq IUJ'VeWance and Klan-related ac·
tivlties.
"Since the blicka and the Communists have
used the courts to get thi.J country off the track,
we're willina to try to use the courts to get lt back."
be said.
Willdnson, 34, the Louisiana Klan leader, com·
plained to the Justice Department that his civil
rights bad been violated in the Plains incident in
wfileh a man drove his sports car lnto the midat of
the rally, .,winl more than 30 perions.
BE·DmN'T SAY THE FBI was to blame for the
incident. but be also claims government harass·
meat ::~arked, he said, "by our opposition to the
Comm ta and J ews who control this country.•·
Klan leaden say their numbers are growing
fastest among roung people. Klan leader James
Venable, 73, o Decatur, Ga., said young folks
"never had a taste of this integration until the last
few years, and now they.find it doesn't work."
Wilkinson says be expects support soon from
American businesses displeased with the federal
government "forcing them to hire and promote un·
qualified minorities.••
BUT SO FAB THERE'S LITfLE evidence of
new Interest in Klan membership. Outsiders aay
KKK ranks remaln tiny_
Weltner said that in the 1960s the Klan was in·
deed growing and had reached as many as 15,000
members.
"It could have been a very dangerous force in
the community," he said. B~ be said expasure
through the congressional bearings defused it.
"It's aWl defused," be said. .
CIA Memos Released
WASHJNGTON (AP) -The CIA in 1949 sought
and received suggestions on how to commit the
"perfect" murder, newly released documents
show. ·
A memo from an unidentified person, dated
Nov. 29, 1949, and addressed only to "Bill." dis-
cussed ways murder could be committed without
leaving any clues that would Indicate murder.
Another memorandum, addressed to the direc·
tor of the CIA and dated July 14, 1952, <'UUined how
the agency used drugs and hypnosis to interrogate .
two Russians who were suspected double agents.
At Dial, we make even our largest homeowner
loan in days, not weeks. Start to.finish. Any other
questions you'd like answered? Just call your near·
by Dial ott1ce. Ask us about payments. rates. ma-
turities-anything concerning large or small loans.
W?"ll give you quick, direct. courteous answers.-No
names. No sales pitches. Because at Dial. we don't
want you to hke us just for our money. l'!ff"/tA
Dial Finance Vii "
Homeowner Loans to $50,000
Anaheim: 344 West Lincoln Ave.
Buena Park: 7091 Lincoln Ave.
Costa Mesa: 2750 Harbor Blvd.
Space 88, College Center
Fullerton: 228 Or1ngefair Mall
Garden Grove: 12062 Brookhurst St.
Orange: 1020 N. Tustin Ave.
Santa Ana: 2007 South Main St.
3729 South Bristol St.
Westminster: 16372 Beach Blvd.
772·7425
821-6450
979.5901
879-8606
530-4390
633·7861
545·0411
557-9852
893·2477
Homeowner Loans over SS.000 are secured by" combina·
toon of 1eal and personal property.
Here are the facts. savers ·who have cert If icate
accounts at Mutual Savings can borrow
up to 90% of tl}elr savings account balance wit
an Interest charge ot only 1·% per year more
than the interest their account is earning .
EXAMPLE: You have a certificate with us for
$10.000 earning.at the rate ot 7%%. A need
arises -vacation. new car. emergency. what-
ever-for you to have some cash .
You can borrow up to $9".000 from us
at only ~%%per year while
your account continues to
earn at 7%%.
The advantage is obvious.
You can afford to put
your savings in a certif-
icate t~at pays con-
siderably higher Interest
than a passbooK and drugs to take immediate steps to assure an or· * J~
derly transition of patients from phenlormin to it ...
other therapies, to be .completed within 90 days." * I .. ~ Callfano ,said in a 66-page order suspending prior ,._ .,.
approval of the drug.
During the three·monlh phase-out period. *
specific shipments of phenlormin will be permitted it
"if necessary," Califano said. *
--------~~Wh~~ ... a-,-.1-1·---·1-s-. account without having to concern yourself
about the required
Frank St11ng
Fan Adopts Name
NEW YORK (AP> -"01' Blue Eyes" has
just about had it with "Lil' Miss Blue Eyes."
While Frank Sinatra was filming a
television movie outside tbe stat-; Supreme
Court on Monday, his lawYers were inside try.
lng to have a court order reversed which gave
a woman the right to use bis surname.
The lawyers claimed that Donna Lee
Morris, who l\as been given court permission
to call tienelf Donna Lee Sinatra becinolng
Aug. S. w~ al~eady using the name. They also
said sh& was try1n1 to pass for Sinatra's
da\llhter. Mis• Morris bad lllso been sendlni ••1ona,
ramblint lettens almost daily" to Sinatra
signed "Ul' Miu Blue Eyes," the lawyeJ;J
1al~. 'Ibey alao said abe had used the Sinatra
name ln 1978 to penoade the Waldorf·Altoria
hotel. to Jet her use a room ~led by Sinatra'• ........... .i.lae Hortense w. Gable alsned an order
CUrectlnl Illa Morrll to ahow by ~ug. l wby
iermJAion for the name chance shOuld not be
nversecl.
H , •1 ks penalty should you need .w I WO' funqs from the account
: FRIE~~~~DER: . •,before It matures.
* is MAKING • Wh A •i Naturally, Mutual : FifEE : ere JOU ge 1 I • ~avings accounts are
.. OIL CHANGES * insured to $40,000
As recommend<•d bv *
*tht factory ror h loni; ,. by an agency of the federal gove. rnment. It as• you own your car. Jt
.. A DENG £FWY ,. I
.. .
.0.diU•cs t.o Go-Carts
Wbatever the Fad
Roll ·em off the market
Wflh a Clanlned Ad
CaU Now I 642-5671-
compare where you presently save. All savings -. tnstltutlons are not the same. 'fou will fine!! It
easy t o open an account at Mutual savings since
we· can arrange to transfer your funds from
wherever they are now located. Call or visit
ar;ly of our 16 southern California offlees f0r
further details.
'3f DAILY PflOT T~ July 29, 1977
~or Coaat Proj~t•
;Fr~ew~y Funds · Sought
•1 UTBY CIANCI'
....... IY"llt ... A roque:at for ts mUUoe lD 1t1te
1.1 fUndl to 10 towafd com· 9Ua1 tbt Corona del Mar ••1 or wldenlnl Pull1o ~aat Hltbwar la Newport
waa endorsed 11oodat bJ
Oran&• County Trauporta-
tioa Comm.Wk>D. •
1 'lb! mow waa the latest la tbe
tGmmiaslon'a batUe to obtaln 1
1reater ahare of CalTrana
~an for county road proJeeta
and to Increase the amou.at of
moae1 aet uid for bulldln1 new
roedways.
WILLIAM ZAUN of the county
!;nvlronmental Management
Agency said 53 percent ot the
county's proposed $59 million
share of CalTrans money for the
nut six years has been ae.t aside
for maintenance, rehabilitation
and bike trails.
ODJ~ •T percent of Oranie
eount.)t'a tbare baa been pro-DOileid fOf' a.w road conatructlon,
._ a.Id, wblle '15 percent ol Los
~-Oounty11 share and 84 percent of Ventura County's
IMre bave been earmarked for
MW l'Olldway1.
Tbe SS million request for the
two Oranse Coaat projects would
not lnctUM the county's aha re of
CalTrana fund.a. •
• INSTIAD. ZAVN suggested
the monoy could come from $9. 7
million wblcb la now part of <>ranee County's proposed share
of highway dollars but which is
now earmarked for unnamed
maintenance and bikeway pro· Jecta.
Zaun. who serves as chairman
of the commiaalon's Technical
Advisory Cominittee, said the
committee agrees maintenance
is Import.ant but believes addi·
tiooa1 funds also are needed for
new road building.
Commissioners were told
earlier th1a month that Orange
County residents the past 10 ~
years have generated nearly
twice aa much ln state highway
dollars as came back into tbe
county In the form ol CaJTrans
projectg.
IN GENERAL 'Northern
California counties are receiving
the greatest proportion of
highway dollars compared with
the funds they generate in
gasoline tax revenue. according
to officials of the Southern
Californi~ Association of govern· ments. ·
As a result. the three-county
region which includes Orange,
Los Angeles and Ventura Coun·
ties is suffering, they said.
For the -Record United Way Sets
Record Fund Goal Bird••
HOAGMEMO"IAL Jtolyll,1'17
ORANGE COUNTY
Day.Camp
Grants
Available
Scholarships arej
available for youngatersi
who would otherwise be·
unable to attend San
Juan Capistrano's Camp
Calafia day camp.
The scholarships,
sponsored by the city
and the Community
Counseling · Cent.er, ·ar~i
available for camp
sessions Aug 1 to S, 8io12
and 15 to 19.
Japanese Course Set
An intensive course ln eonversa·
Uooal Japanese will be given atartlnc
Thursday at the Japan Cultural As·
IOCiation, 181.S N. Bush St., Santa Ana.
The 10-week, Tbursd•Y ntlht classes, 7 :30 p.m. to e:so p.m., in-
_.can us first. take a
Firs1 Nallonal Home Improvement Loan. 11~1lrallllf411111'1
and go directly to your
contract OJ! Con.sider the
possibilities: A new·,
family room. Central
air condlllonlng. A
swimming pOoL A
bullt·ln kitchen. Al·
eludes Instruction in· proounctat!oft.
vocabulacy and aentence conJtrucilon
udul ln everyday conversaUon. :
Rellltratico and other in.farmat1on
may be obW.ned by callin• ~1·7'U.
Orsanlzers sa.y 10..a·n domo ~ato
yourself for it later. .
most any t:.tm• Im-..== provemenn.-redecorating you an think ol
can be yours with 11 low cost Home Improvement
Loan from the First ~Bank of Orange CoUnty.
MAINOFACE
At the Plaza in downtown Orange
COSTA MESA: Mesa Verde & Adams
IRVINE: University Dr. & Michelson Dr.
· LAGUNA HJLLS: Alicia Parkwalf & San Diego Freeway
H05 .. ITAL·P•IHYTIRIAN Mr. -Mrs. Ao0er1 AedWllL, t....guna
JU11U•.1t71 ~ ......... bO'( July ti, 1'71 A record goal or raising $4,375,000 for the cur-
rent year has been approved by leaders of the com·
bined north and south Orange County United Way
organizations.
People interested in
applying for the·
scholarships can obtain applications at city or---------------------------------
Mr •nd Mr$ Eric Nutter, S6S \lie lorla, Aj)C. o. Co>I MMa. l>Oy Mr. ar>d Mn. Richard JoM•. 1wn Carmanla Ln., Huntington "each, boY Mr and Mr\. O.nnl• H1.let. 17501 JordanA .... , lf10A. lrvl,.e,9lrl Mr atld Mr•. Rodolfo Pun, 111 Al· le9llenv, Cosla Mew. bOV Mr and Mrs. Timothy S•mbrano, 71401<:at'lllnoTrebol E1Toro,9lrl Mr and Mis R1tllard B<troer. IMO AnalMtlm SI . Cos la Mesa, girl JUftel0,1'77 Mr er>d Mrs C>ou9•a• ~ ........ IJJI Baur St .. Al>C. c .. CoslA Me,,., girt Mr and M" Vine..,, Trllr, 1"*2 weemSl.n . HU'lll"llt°" Beach, boy Mr and Mfi T-.,a• uw~. 1576 W•de R1wr Cir Founlaln V•lley,
girl Mr """ Mr•. OouQla• Frll1tll. 31' CedarSI ,N•w-IBU<ll.bOV Mr ar>d Mrs. uiureano Garcl•, ~241 Stratford Ave . WHlmlnsler, boy Mr and Mr$ Tomas IMr•flllU.I. 167" Vie,. Polnl Ln , "22S. Hunllr19IOft
Mr. and Mn. A~ Barrllto, O•na Point.girl Mr. and Mr1o. SNgerv Chino, S.n Ju.n Caplltrano,glrl JtllytAl,tm Mr. llftCI Mrs. Timot/\y Tunget. San Clemente, boy Julyl6,1'17
Ml.and~LoubW.otrt,EIToro.boy
Db•olutlon•
01 Marriage
~led Jiiiy ii
RIZZO, RtcnHd •nd Calny. MAfULtS, M•rg<1re1 01at>e dnd M•r9eris; STROM. J•mes Rulleve and Linda ._.,..,M; THIELE, 01""<1 8.
•nd A-II C.; JONES, C.tny •nd M1Cll•el Alll!n; COLLINS, CMrtn •ncl Norm.t A$os; PRINCE, John c. """ EllM Louise; LONGBRAKE. G.iyltn -Ow•yne G.; RAMIREZ. Be.cll.bOV Jyly 1, 1917 800 N and Sandr• E.; Mc PEAK, Mr """ Mr\ Jerry Rynder1. 6JJI Contue M.ae•ndSlewnGuy. .,_ SEIBERf, ic: .. 1ner1ne Gail and l'alllngw•lt.'1'" Or· Hunur>glon ..,.«II, Cll•rtes Edwin; LAWLER. Snerry
'::,,Y ""°Mr\ lllOmas R•~er. l60SI ttrld Sleven Ow1gn1; STANGER. ~llryer Ln • Hunllnvton Be« II, bOY David tN and t<•tll1een V.; I( ILLE N, Jlllv1, 1tH L•nd• L"e •nd Ron•td Myrie; Mr and M"· '""rlH Slltrm•n, 5e02 TA THAM, Myrn111 Lee •ncl J•mu
Abr•llam. We\lmln5'tr, l>OV A1d1•rd; CARROLL, Slle11ey Mdrte Mr. and Mr• Ju•lln Ulu,il71 SkylUk •nd Rancsy Eu9ene; MURPHY• SI .1rvlne.t;1lrl 8<1rbtHd N. 3nd Car lion A •• Mr,3nd Mr\.WayneRowell,,.7SS.I\ HOllATER, Lou•• R. <Ind LIS<I F.; Rat.el.~ta-w,glrl OEBORN. K•wvn :i. anes W1ll1•m Mr , and Mr\. OU-Klac:ltner, 177&1 0.ar•es; FENIMORE, Oonlw Mane
OulnlaNl.n.,Huntlngl.,..9HCl'l,9'rl ~~~~E.. """'""'' M. and Ro~rt July>, "11
The quota recommended by Campaign Cabinet
Chairman Robert W. Clifford, president of Air
California, was given unanimous approval.
UNITED WAY BOARD of Directors' executive
committee members readily agreed to shoot for a
17.5 percent increase over funds gathered· during
the past year. $3,724,000.
· Stressing •he importance of more voluntary
funding to keep pace with lhe county's population·
growth, Clirford stated·
"WE RA VE RAISED OUR sights for '77 in light
of the heightened needs of our community. Growth
of population brings with it growth of human pro·
blems. It is the role of United Way to alleviat•those
problems by assuring the availability and quality of
community resources to safeguard the well-being of
our citizens.''
United Way collects and disburses funds to 76
member agencies in north and south Orange
County, covering a broad range of social services.
Driving Habits
LeCture Slated
Mr. and~ Oougln Rys. 1201 DeVOI\ L., t<LEINtiOLl, ROOPfl E. ,.nd H•n-Ln . Newpot'I Beacfl. l>OV <Y S.; COOP€R, OWttu Don.ltd •nd Mr. llnd Mn. R-11Kooltett,6'J 20!ft Aim" F•Y<' Prlu .... CRISP, H-•rd SI . Hunllr>Qlot18eec:h,boy R. •nd Sendra J.; WARD, Sh.orot1 A. Mr. •nd Mrs. Oanlel Balley, nt •nd O••HIA.; LEGHOH, Stettn Allen weot1ia. N--1 Beach, boy .. Re<iee El .. ,,..; ALLEN, Ullt ..... J. Mr. •nd Mn. -mMad ~·. andClwnes;BUROtO<.Sus...>J.-7" e wi1_,,eosu.Mu•.bOY M¥tt s: Mc.COAMicK, H•rry J.""" A driver improvement lecture series. whi ch
Jwyt ''" -Unel R.; WJU....U~ P. ilnd Urry t h d f d · · h b · I
Builders Plan Meeting
Mr. -"'~ K~tri Orton. son J.; GALLANT. Rooon.J .. Jr anc1 •n eac e_s e ens1ve . nvmg a its. wt! be offered by
vearllr>gAve, 1n11ne.t1oy ""'""'"• Coastline Community College. Mr and Mt\ WUlf'Y Smith, •• w N d The class will meet Fridays begining Aug 5 SycamoreCt~:,1r,-;;;;l)O" oman ame through Aug. 26. from 9":30 to ll:Jo a.m. at the SeaJ
Mr and Mrs. w111tam 1>11mi.r. mu Beach Great Western Savings and Loan community · s1elnw3yClr.,EIToro,91r1 c •• II W · Mr. and""'· Anclr-Sw•vely, .,. OD....-0 er room, 2999 estm1nster Ave. c ... 1a~St .. ~ •• ~.g1n For further information about the free lecture
Mr ""° M•:..,.ri.•;.:,~1MorT1s. 20m I:orie Arnold has been series, call 963-0811ext.227. so1nc:1n•1 Hun11ng1on&.«ri.b0v named controller at
w """"'''" R•vmoncl Hendrkltton, Costa Mesa Memorial SU6111SI, Hunllr>gtonO.ach,bOy Hospital. Mr and Mrs Wllll•m Grun, 511
fices. 32400 Paseo
Adelanto, or at the Com-
munity Coun seli n g
Center; 32141-B Alipaz in
San Juan. Fot more in·'
formation, phone-
493-UTI.
ATTENTION
PROFESSIONAL
and
SEMI-
PROFESSIONAL
PEOPLE
Are you willing to rest on
your achievements · or are
you a bit restless? Feel
dissatisfied? Ha s your career oeakert out
reached a plateau? Would
vou welcome a challenqe which would with 6 to 8
hours per week
1. permit you to re1a1n the
security of your oresent income. while
2 startinq vour own
independent business oart tome?
No matter how h•oh you r income or how
comfortable your present
surround1nqs lheN" is no
form of oa1n fut employment that can
compare with really
runn1no YOUR OWN
BUSINESS
Th•s 1s opportunity YOUR
oooortun1ty -to fully exercise your ability to
ltve a challenq1no life to
the fullest . and to reap Harlford. Hunllr>gion !Mach, olrl M rs . Arn 01 d w as
souTI4 coAST formerly an accountant.1 COMM~:.·;~ ~:,SP'ITAL at the 100-bed general
The Orange County chapter of the Construction n u m er o us re war cf s
Specifications Institute, Inc., wilI bold a mem· financially
Mr.•r>dMT\.Oougta.Anen,s...Ju.n acute care hospital. Sb&
~:.''~:.:'·!':~. s1o1111n H.vvo, and her husband live in cap1wanoee«n.01r1 Garden Grove.
bership meeting Aug. 2 at the Holiday Inn in Costa CALL
Mes~embers of the building industry are invited to 17141644-5391
~ n ~1 attend. Cost iB $7 per person which includes dinner. D 0 IT NOW!
Deatiu. Etsew~e 'fF~o~rf~urth~er~int~orm~ati~·o~n!~c~al~l 835-~9~123~·~· ~~~~~~~~~~
BROOKLYN, Maine
(AP} -Katberlne
Sergeant White. 84, who.
as first fiction editor of
The New Yorker was
credited with helping
establish the careers of
writers such as Vladimir
Nabokov, John O'Hara,
Mary McCarthy and
Ogden Nash, died Wed-
nesday. She was the wife
of author and editor E.B.
Whit~.
LOUISVILLE ', Ky. <AP> -U.S. District
Court Judge C. Rhodes
Bratcher, 59. chief judge
for the Western District
of Kentucky, died of a
heart attack Monday
nlght.
WASIDNGTON (AP)
-Dr. Pblllp C. Brooks.
71, a government
archivist who organized
the Hatty S Truman
---------Library and directed it ________ _.. 14 years. died Sunday
n ight at St. Lukes
Hospital in Phoenix,
Ariz.
1.un-111GHOM
FUMUALHOMI
Corona del Mar 6 73-9450
Costa Mesa 646-2424
Vacation in San Francisco, San Jose
& Oakland with a Sunjet Tour.
111.LHOADWAT
· MOITUAU
110 Broadway Costa Mesa
642·9150
SMITH tvnllU. UMI WH1C~CMAP&
427 E. 17th St.
Costa Mesa • 84tH888
Sant.1.Ana Chapel
518 N. Broadway
Santa.Ana• 547-4131
l'tllCI HOntllS
WTHS" MOlrTUAlf 827 Main St.
Huntington Beach
536-6539
,...n'Mltr--
~OLOttlAL PUMMAL
NOMI ·
7801 Boin Ave.
Westmtnster
893-3525
PAClftC YllW
MIMOl14L PA._ Cemet•rv Mortuery
Cha"' 3500 P11e1t1c View Drive
NtwPOrt.
Callfotnla --844·2700
Arrange It all with Just one call. Complete Sunjet Tours pr1ced from
only S28.95~three days. two .nights (per person; double occupancy).
Money saving discount t.ores for famllies, groups and mllltory. It's the ·
easy w~ to vac.atlon In the Bay Area .•. because we're with yoo oil
the way. ·
I
DEWYORH
STEAR ...............
~li~~~~;~~f~~k s JI 99 •
served with soup or salad, •• •
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 II
be consumed on the premises and Is served from 2 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Airport
Bound!
/
I
• ,,_ ______________ .... __ .....,..
DB.AR PAT: WhlD'• can l loeat. a doctor qualUled In ortbomolecular (meaavltamln)
therapy(« treatment of mental d1aonlenT
F.O., Irvine
TM Buie, ludtate fCll' BIOIOClal lletearcla
aa• l&• cUrilia. U.e Amertcaa &•lllpl.reala Al·
MClaU.. effet a rderral llA ol establllhed or-
daomolecalu·peyclalau, pracUtloaen Uarou11lout
~e coatry. Snd a stamped. self·addreased ea·
.elope &o &Mm at UH Pint Ave., Ne.r York, NY
lMZL
0.teopatlu Bad Kbtk 111 Licea•~
DEAR PAT: Could you please help me locate
an osteopathic doctor? They are hard to find since
they became M.D.s a few years ago. My former os-
teopath died, and now all I can find are M.D.s who
don't believe in it.
S.F ., Santa Ana
Names ol Ueemed D.0.1 caa be obtained by wrtUn• &o &be State Board of Oa&eopatblc Ex·
amiDen, Ul Uda St., Salte tzll, Sacrameato, CA
ISIH. D.0 .1 have been licensed aiaiD In California
sbaee 1174 wbea t0te 19'4 regulatloa that osteopaths
alJo mut be med.lcal doctors was ruled aaconatlta·
tional. Tiie State Board of Medical Exambaers'
Verification Section, 1430 Howe Ave., Sacramento,
CA 95825, can tell you If a particular M.D. also u a
D.O.
Photo Finn Snapped Vp Picture
DEAR PAT: 1 wrote to Lambert Studios in
August 1976 asking if it could locate a print of a
snapshot, which I enclosed. I sent a self-addressed,
stamped envelope for its return. When I heard
nothing in response, J wrote letters in September,
November and December. asking that my snapshot
be mailed back to me.
D. W., South Laguna
Lambert Studios appears to be oat of business.
Altbougb thue ls little chance that you will be able
to obtain your snapshot, you may wish to contact
tbe Photo Marketing Association, a group of '·"'
plloCo retaDers aad fla!alten. It forwards connmer
photo related complaints to the company Involved.
Write to Mld1ael Buda, Consumer Aflalrs Director,
683Lam1ag Ave., Jacboa, Ml 49ZOZ.
Broadca•tlng School• Luted
DEAT PAT: I am interested in a radio or
•
QUllNll
c·~· ... ....-.. .,...... ... ..._._ ........... ~.,...,.,,....
··1 wonder where we ate."
Higher Heels
Health Hazard
CID~AGO (AP) -The bigh-rise heels of high
fashion are a hazard to women's health, says a
Boat9fl orthopedist.
· 'the ultra-high, slender heels which have
become the fashion or the season create problems
not only for the foot but also for the back, be says.
THE ORTHOPEDIST, Oil. A&THUll W. Trott,
president of the American Orthopedic Foot Society,
said in an interview that shoe designers are more
interested in making money for manufacturers
than they are in foot comfort and health.
''The minute you go for style you go in for
cramping and that sort of thing," he said.
He was particulary critical of heels that rise 4 YJ
or five inches on a base the diameter of a dime or
smaller.
TROIT SAID THAT WHEN a person is stand·
ing in low shoes, 50 percent of the weight is on the
heel and 50 percent is on the ball of the foot.
But the high·rise shoes place perhaps 80 per-
cent or the body weight on the metatarsus -the ball
of the foot.
Pot Plane Crash.
Yields Good Crop
television broadcasting career. I'd like to find out WARTBURG, Tenn. (AP) -When an airplane
the names and addresses or broadcasting schools carrying two tons of marijuana crashed in David
· G.L., San Juan Capistrano Wyrick's pasture two years ago, he was told some
You can get a list of broadcasting schools and <I the illegal weed might grow. It did.
fnie career guidance booklets from the A1sociatlon Wyrick, a farmer, was charged with cultivating
for Profesdoeal Broadcasters, 1771 N St., N.W., marijuana for resale after Morgan County
• WasbiJlgton, DC zot36. authorities round 464 six-foot plants growing in his
cornfield near here. Gift Wrap Wa.-..• Walb a. Well "The water line be bad going from his house-up
DEAT PAT: I have heard that an inexpensive the hllb{de gave him away," said Morgan County Sheriff F1oyd Long.
TUf!!!Y, July at, 1977 • pA!!. Y Pn.O'f ..
~caped Con Captured
Motlier-~ RapfJ of 5-year-olil~
BLOOIONOTON, DJ. (AP'I -
An e.eaped murderer wbo ab-
ducted and terrorized a family ln
~ motel room waa recaptured
afttl' the presnant mother at·
tacked bJm as be tried to rape her
5-year-old daucbter. accordln8 to
Police. Roy E . Schultz , 42, or
Springfttdd, was reported in fair
condition in a hospital here with
head injuries and a broken leg.
BE WAS RECAPTURED Sun·
day, five days after be escaped
with another inmate from the Kansas State Penitentiary in I.analng. He w·as servlng two con-
sectttive JO.year-to-life sentences
f01"1laying a policeman.
Police gave this account:
Schultz was driving a stolen
car when it broke down Sunday
near Washington, Ill. A family
from Metamora, who police re·
fused to identify, stopped to give
bim aid, police said.
THE MAN POINTED a gun at
them and forced them to drive to
A.rt-Heart
Tourney
Scheduled
An ''Art for Heart"
golf tournament, co-
sponsored by th e
American Heart As
sociation and Aaron
Brothers Art Marts, will
be held Sept. 28·30 at the
Los Lagos golf curse at
the Costa Mesa Golf and
Country Club.
Registration forms are
available at the heart
association office, 1043
Civic Center Drive West.
Santa Ana, or any Aaron
Brothers store.
Baldwl
Planoi
and fr.;;u
Organs I
F•ctory Financing
LESSONS • INSTRUMENTS
'-~~:~~R , Mitton l•lend '40-l020
-" &P'lll 1 ...
a motel Ill BJoomlqtoa wbere
&bults bouncl and ••"ed the father. Be tpen got clrlmk and
took off bla cJothu.
When be tried to rape the fli'l,
her mother grabbed a gun wblcb
had been lY1DI on the bed. Sbe
held him at bay with the cun
wblle sbe freed her husband.
Then the two men began to flgbt
and the woman began striking
Schult.a with the base ol a Mavy
lamp.
Both the husband and wile
tried to lboot tbefr abdudcll' d•
lal&baapllMlttbefua~
DUUNG TllB STaVGGLS:
Sdmlt& sot onto the balcoll)' .Ill
the NCODd·Ooor room and wa,
spotted by two police offtceq
who were eattna dlnaer at tbt
motel. Tbe officers arrested him•
Nice tald there were alx SUD.I
i,o the motel room. and a~
$8.000 ln cub.
The couple'• 2-year-old '°"
wu.uabarmed.
Three Held on Vice··
R,pps at Golf Club
LA COSTA (AP> -The catering manager of the La Costa Coun·
try Club and an Oceanside couple have bffn booted for inveaUga·
ti on of pandering and conspiracy in connection with an alleged pro-
stitution ring at the posh golf resort. ·
Sheriff's deputies said the arrests late Monday of catering
manager Frank Rayo, 41, auto salesman William Bishop, 48, and his
wife, Terri, 30, came after a month·lon& investigaUon.
t/1-t 7,. 2'4,
SfdiiilkSalel
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
JULY 29-30 1977
OUTSTANDING SUMMERTIME SAVINGS FOR
THE ENTIRE FAMILY ..................... ..
JOIN US FOR THIS FUN -FILLED WEEK·ENO
SATURDAY, JULY 30 WED. thru SUN.
STREET ROOS UNL TD. JULY 27-31
Presents YESTERYEARS
CAR SHOW
SEE OVER 100 CARS 0
1954 VINTAGE OR
OLDER ON DISPLAY
IN OUR MALL ............. .
PET ZOO
BRING THE KIDS
TO THE COLORFUL
BIG TOP TO PET
THE AN!MALS.
HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER
2300 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa
( Harbor at ,Wilson)
way to wallpaper a room is to use wrapping paper. Long' said he bad "strong suspicions" the il-
Can gift wrap be used? legal weed in Wyrick's field .spouted from seeds in •-11
A.J ., Dana Point the plane's cargo.
Yes and. no. The paper has to be somewhat A Lockheed Lodestar crashed and burned in the
heavier than average, accordJng to Mary Ann field May 29, 1975, killing two men. While much or
Odom, a designer for Hallmark Cards. Hallmark the marijuana burned, authorities said some of it
cantes heavy·duty "Country Store,. paper that can scattered across the pasture.
be used as wallpaper. You also caa use the -----------------heavyweight paper to decorate cabinets, lamp
shades and room dlv1den. Use tbe basic waUpaper.
Ing technique. Cover with vinyl sealer If you want
wasbabWty.
For Classified Ad ACTJON Call a Daily Pilot AD· VI.SOR
C•ll 642-5678. Put a few word• to work for you.
If som~ like this
has happened to you recently,
ignore tills ad.
It's not that were
prejudiced against drivers
who've had a fender
bender or speeding f · ·
ticket. It's just that ~
this ad is for all rou
A·l drivers. Youre
what's known as pre-
ferred risk.
, Under preferred
• risk insw-ance you
get all the c;overage
you want at the
lowest available cost.
For example, if you're
I married over 25
• years of age, drive
less than three miles
to work and only
want to meet the niini· mum state require-men~~ ptan with
$15\uuu/$30,000
bodily injury and
$10,000~ ~ts just $116
a yeaz; But do you know
what cpst suits you?
I Here's how you find I
out. Just call Fem at
The T earn: ·Llnda Blue, Doug Bulley
and Jack Barnes in Newport; Don
_Herzog and Cort Kloke in Laguna
Hills; and Bernie Brown in San
Diego. And they all have ·the same
. thing in mind: Arranging an Equity
Loan for you.
Here's an ex.ample of a Newport
Equity Funds-arranged Equity
Loan: Borrow $10,CXX) for 10 years
at 10% simple annual interest.
You11 have 120 monthly payments
of only $83.33 (interest-only) and a
final principal repayment o£ $10,CXX>
The Annual Percentage Rate is
11.7%.
Call the Team at Newport ~uity
~unds. They wo.tk t~ tO help
you get themon~ you need. .a;.£ t /n!r
\
alley Theater
~pens 'Pooh'
That a1eln1 chlldren'• cla11lc "Winni• the
Pooh" com• around for anotb r local 1tastn1 um ~. lh1I tlmt by t.M Fountaln Valley Com·
.at)' Theater whlch 1.,.cl1ll1e1 In produetkml for
._ 10W'l"er 1rt.
Pat Burson ls dlrectln1 the mu1lcal show,
Wch bouta a cut or 35 youn11~n and adult.a. kavtna lost tta home on Mt. Baldy Circle, the froup
lrtJJ perform the play at Los Amletoa Hlah School, tell Newbope St .• Fountain Valley.
Robert Palnnr playa the title role of Pooh, with
Alcaro portrayh\I hll frtend. Cbtlatopber
Others an the Fountain Valley cast are Kyle
, Joe Reaser, KrlsUe Palmer, Janine Mafi,
Buckley. Robert Oswald and Paula Schaefer.
Winnie the Pooh" will be staged for two
ends with performances at 7:30 on Fridays,
on Saturdays and Sundays Reservations are
~en at 962-1243 or 968-2365.
, TB&l!I! LOCAL PaODUCTIONS will give
~final performances this weekend. Winding up
their respective runs are "Jacques Brei is Alive and
1Vell and Living an Pa ris" at South Coast
Intermission
Tom Titus
Repertory, "Norman. is That You?" by the Hunt-
ington Beach Playhouse and "Story Theater" al the
Westminster Community Theater.
"Jacques Brei" plays tQnight through Saturday
at 8 p.m. with the cast of Teri Ralston, James
dePriest, Richard Doyle and Martha McFarland at
the Third Step Theater, 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa
Mesa. Reservations 646-1363.
"Norman" completes a five-weekend run as
the first offering of the Huntington Beach
Playhouse at the Edgewater Hyatt House on Coast
Highway at Westminster Boulevard in Long Beach.
Randy Keene directs the comedy, which plays Fri-
day throug h Sunday evenings . Reservations
828-058.1. Final performa nces of'" 'Story Theater" will be
given Friday at 8 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday af-
ternoons at 2 at the Westminster Community
Theater 7272 Westminster Ave. Bonnie Flagg is
directing the evening of children's fables, with r~
servations at 893-8626.
CONTINUING THEIR RESPECTIVE musical
productions are Orange County's two Sebastian's
dinner playhouses. "My Fair Lady" is at Sebas-
J.ian's West, 140 Avenida Pico, San Clemente, while
"Carnival" plays at Sebastian's at the Grand Hotel
lnAnaheim. · Both shows are on view nightly, except Mon-
day, at varying curtain times. Call 492-9950 for re-
aervations in San Clemente, 772-7710 in Anaheim.
Also on the boards is the Neil Simon comedy
"The Odd Couple" at the Harlequin Dinner
Playhouse, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana (a
block north of Costa Mesa). Performances nightly
except Monday with reservations at 979-5511 . •••
CALLBOARD The Laguna Moulton
Playhouse will hold auditions Sunday al 1 p.m. for a
revival of "The Royal Family" ... director Doug
Rowe will be seeking a cast of 11 men and seven
women of all ages ... tryouts will be held at the
theater, 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach,
where the play will open Sept. 13 for three
weeks. . . '-
~f~~ If you're ~t / " .
· ·) ~ 60 years old \:·
1 ' ••• or better,
·i First National Banl<'s
V.l.P Account is forYou.
All you have to do to qualify for a First N&llonal
V.l.P. account (Very Important Person) is be at least
60 years old. You get 11 FREE banking services.
including:
. FREE Unlimited checking. no minimum balance ~ required. as long as your account 1s not
overdrawn
FREE Money Orders
FREE Cashiers Checks
FREE ldenbhcat1on Card
FREE First National City Bank Travelers' Checks
FREE Automatic deposit of Social Security checks
FREE Personahzed checks
FREE Photocopy
FREE Notary Service
FREE Postage-paid Bank-By-Mail
FREE Collect phone calls from anywhere to
verify your account
Just stop in at any First National Bank. office.
We'll have you enrolled In a Jiffy and you can start
saving on Important bank services right away.
I First N.~tional Bank :.::.•
MAll!Of'PUllH """"lll-°'-.,_OlllM6,
-Slat. COlllqo' Bii
·'
-..-wua.$911-°""""'Ad .. .._....,,. COSTAMll'-: __ ,_ .. _,~,,..,._
llNMa~0. .. -0.. l.MlllllA llU.9• -_, & llonOltgo ,._., OIWIOL ..... 6 ~
IMITA """'· ,,.., t. lit'*"' lUltwfl-... ~ ~~~:i.,.'W'IUA•_..,._,_
Member Federal Qeposit
losufance COfporatlon
-
I DAILY PilOT
.~e ExpeciancY. mses
·As Heart Attacks Drop
WASHINGTON (AP) -Today's
atrl bablea can expect to live to 81 and boys to almost 72, nearly three years
toncer than expected before, because
fewer people are dying of heart at-
tacks, the Census Bureau aay1.
•
In a report releued Monday on
population projections of the United
States. the CensW$ Bureau said the
death rate ol adulta over 35 declined
much more rapidly between 1973 and
197~ than it did all during the previous
decade.
Kowever, a major jump in the
elderly population is predicted in 2030
when the combinaUon of declining
mortality and the aging of the post.
World War 11 baby boom gener ation
will swell the elderly poptJlation to SS
million. That means that anywhere
from 14 to 22 percent of the nation's
population would be over 65, a silua·
tion that would have a major impact
on social and economic institutions. ..... w ......... ,.,
NetDLook
Goodby e Mary
Hartman , h e llo
Louise Lasser . The
a ctr ess who
popul a riz e d the
pigtailed hair style
(above) is changing
he r image to s hed
he r ide ntificatio n
with the Fernwood
dingaling C below).
TUE DECLINE; WAS due largely to
a reduction in deaths from major
cardiovascular diseases, such as
heart attacks, the report says.
Asked if this was a result of im·
,Proved medical techniques and lower
cholesterol diets, Signe Wetrogan, a
4emograpber who worked on the re-
port, said, "We just don't know. We
don't know much about the mortality
decrease of the last few years."
The median age of the population
has increased from 27.9 in 1970 to 29 in
1976, the figures show. The report
proJects that by tbe tum of Ule cen-
tury, the median age will range from
32.5 to 37.3. The median age means
that half the people in the country are
older than that and half are younger.
THE REPORT SAID unless there is
a large-scale war, major epidemic or
other catastrophe, the over-65 popula-
tion will grow from an estimated 22.9
million in 1976, which was 11 percent
of the population, to 31.8 million in the
year 2000, about 12 percent or the
population.
'
SOCIAL SCIENTISTS say that as a
result of this growing proportion of
elderly persons, the country will have
to consider changes In pension,
medical care and education al
systems, as well a s make decisions
that will affect the quality or life the
elderly will eajoy.
Demographers have a hard lime
predicting the future population
because they can't be sure women
will h ave the approxima tely two
children each most now say they
want.
FOR TRIS REASON, the estimated
populatlon In the year 2000 is slightly
less than de mographers predicted
two years ago. Today. their best
estimate ls that the population will be
about 260 million by the turn of the
century, about 2.5 million less than·
they estimated in 1975.
Whether because of a n uncertain'
economic climate, the fact that more
women were working or ) because
there was an increase in the divorce
rate. women did not have as many
ch.lldren in 1976 as they previously in-
dicated they wanted.
~~' '' 11»1;.
. (/) dj.
~~ ~ ·-~l~,M\' ;-.. .-". m\' It(/
-· The friendlY skies
fly more nonstops to the
Windy City than any olher
airline. 9 every day from the
Los Angeles area, including the only
nonstops from Ontario Airport.
And no one gives you more Night Coach
nonstops to Chicago than United. Maybe that's
vvhy more people fly the friendly skies to Chicago
than anybody else.
For reservations, call your Travel Agent. Or call
United at 537· 7521. And follow the nonstop leader.
Partners in Travel with Western International Hotels.
Nonstop sen/ice to Chicago ·
'
•
• ( f
Fast Ball Eno Ugh
To Blank Do.dgers
LOS ANGELES IAP> Craaiii
"" dl1 atd he had nolhln1 but 4'
t,1:.l ball, bul ll Wt& CD_!)U4_th to
I. ... ep tho LcMt An1.te1 Dodt•n
fro'1) cetttna an.vt.hln1 at all.
··1 dlcm-.. have • 11lder and I
didn't ha~ a curve ball,'' the
New York Meta' pitcher 1a1d
Mooda, alt r ptlchln1 a t~
h1tter ln the Met.II ' 1..0 victory
The )feta buncheld four first In
nlna tac.a ror the only run that
Swan needed to even hi& record
al a.s. Steve Henderson's rb1
double followed a pa1r of singles
"Wit.bout a doubt that wu his
best job ol tbe year," said New
York Manager Joe Torre "He
p1tcbed out of situations and he
seemed tc, have control of
himself throughout the game "
Swan did not allow a hit after
lhe third inning when he over
came his only trouble. With two
out, the Do<teers had the bases
loaded on two singles and a walk.
But Swan got Ron Cey to fly out
und wu in comm nd tho rest of
the way
"It wws easily my moat satisfy.
Ins wln evtir," aatd Swan, a prod·
uct of neuby Long Beach. "It
t1eema twas wild enough to be er-
fecUve. l walked rive, which ls a
D....,.,.•81.ne
A110.,l'M•"ICA8CllMI
July I• Pl\fl-lpftl• •I LO\ A._lu 111
iUit ii Plul-lpl\l••l lO\ Al\9WIO
Ju•• 1' Pn•'-1111>1••1 lo>At>Qele\
•)Op m
I 1Sp m
1 Uo m.
lot for me, but it seems they
couldn'tdig in on me."
Swan said the fact the Mets
traded away Tom Seaver added
no pres.sure whatsoever.
"I'm not pitching any more
than I was before,•· he said. "I'm
still pitching every eight or nine
days. 1 certainly miss Tom
however, since he was a team
leader."
Swan, in savoring his victory,
said he no longer gets nervous
pitching in Dodger Stadium,
... _.
CRAIG REYNOLDS THROWS OVER BOBBY BONDS.
S lams 2 Homers
Robinson's Advice
Pays Off for Baylor /.
SEATILE (AP> ·-Nolan Ryan
has become first 14·game wiMer
in the major leagues. pitching
the California Angels to a 7·2 vlc·
tory over the Seattle Mariners.
"l don't like pitching here,"
Rvan said. "The power alfeys
aretooshort "
He also called the Mariners
"the best expansion club I've
seen since I've been m the major
leagues."
.. Ryan struck out 10 and scat·
tered five hits Monday night. He
now has fanned 10 batters or
more in a game on 99occasions.
Sharing the limelight was
teammate Don Baylor. who
A11geb Slate
.1111 O•m.,on KMPC R•dlo 11101
July 76Calllornlft11001ano
JlllY 11 Cllllorlllft Al Ol!Mland
:July 28Callfornlaa10,01•nd
I )Sp'" I Upm
1 Up rn
dubbed his 11th and 12th homers
of the season and batted in six
runs as the Angels wrapped up a
~three-game sweep of Seattle to
take the season series, 9·6.
Former Cleveland manaaer
Frank Robinson , now a
California coach, has been work·
log witb Baylor each day to try to
help him snap out of an early
seasonalump.
. While Baylor won't have any
more chances aeainsl SeatUe -
a team he bas gone 10 ror 21
aaainSt in the past six games -Robinson said he is making
progress.
"U J get him up to .Z30, they're
going to put my name on my
locker," kidded Robinson.
Baylor actually ls cloae to .240.
"He's willln1 to listen, to tQ'
the t.blnls J sugaest and aUck
with them," Robtnsoo 1ald.
"This iS Uae ftl'lt U~ ~e'W1'Ull.J
stone ~ k\,. Thal s ~ 1ood
si~~mrntd h7tor -trH
m ad• HYet•I minor c~. auch as ~nc hll b.._, _..
lnl clOI« to tM plate, k.._
blJ .,.,.)Kk wl DOl jump"njf
ttt.beball Baylor'• tbree>run homer ott
SeatUerellever EftrJque RoSMila
the seventh Jnnlnl came afts
Bobby SciOdl had doubled borne
Rance Mulliniks, who,likeBayler
had three hits.
All together California collect·
ed 13 hits, seven of them for extra t bases off Mariners starter Dick
Pole, 6-7, and Romo.
Baylor chased Pole with a two-
run 11hot-in the sixth, erasing a 2· l
Seattle lead on the strength of
Dave Collins' s acrifice fly and
Dan Meyer's 13th homer in the
third.
The Angels had drawn first
blood when Mulliniks tripled and
came home on Baylor's two-out
single in the top of the third.
St!Wlllle manager D'arrell
Johnson said Romo "doesn't
have the slider to set up the big
guys with his other pitches.
CALll"OltNIA nAnLI
"'11111 ffr1t1t1 R•my21> s O 1 0 Gru.a 211 3. 0 0 0
Mulllr>lhn s 2 JO Co111nslf f O I 1
Bonduf S I 2 I Mey•rtt. >I 2 I
Sol11t1 lb J 1 ' 0 S«..-itOI) rt 4 0 0 0
A,TOrrftcl 0 0 0 0 Au.J-cf 4 0 0 0
81;1or11 4 2 l 6 Sl11l1a 3 0 0 0
Flor.sll O o O O 8r•"'1dll 1 O O O c11a1k., • o 1 o eoac • o o o GoodWt"dll • 0 I 0 C.AayllOldhs • 1 2 0 8r1119S lb • 0 1 0
Humptweyc • O 0 0 •
Totals 31 1 13 1 TotaH 30 2 s 2
C•lllornla 001 002 400 -7
S.ellle 002 000 000 -2
OP-S.attle 1. LOB -C.lllqt"I ... s .. 111., 28
Goodwin, C.R.-,noldS. Sol•lti. en.tic. Collms, M•y.,., &onds.a&-Mlillllllkt. HA ---CUI.
8aylor2 1121. SB -Mlt'fllr, er-. Mulllnlka. S -
Cr111, SF -c..illflt. ,.. " " •••• so • ., ... cw, ... , • s 2 2 • ,,
POle CL.~11 S t ~ a I 2
A-l\'11 • 4 4 I 1
Ll1110ft t~ • 0 0 0 J WP-R'fM.T-2:~ A -10.-.
where friends and relatives often
come Crom Long Beach to watch
him ..
The Mets pitcher recalled his
firal "appearance" al Dodger
Stadium in 1* when. as a 15·
year·old representative of Long
Beach's national Pony League
champlon, he tossed out the first
baU of th~ World Series.
Doug Rau, 11·2, took the loss,
snapping .his win streak at ,six
games. The lefthander gave up
seven hits in seven innings, three
of them m the first when New
York scored its only run.
LeMy Randle and Felix Millan
singled to lead off the game. Hen·
derson, who came to the Mets
frolJl Cincinnati m the Seaver deal, then dropped a double into
right field aod Randle scored.
The loss is the Dodgers' 10th in
its last 14 games. but they still
haven't lost any ground to
second·place Cincinnati. The
Reds lost to St. Louis, 9·8, for
their seventh s\raight defeat.
Rau's loss was his first since
May 30
NtiWYOIUt
•b, 111>1
Aanclht:lb 4 I I 0 Mlllatt~ 4010
Her>clotr'°"ll • O 1 1
Mllntir lb 4 o o 0
SIHrllH 1 0 I 0
Youl\QblOOcl rt • 4 O 1 O
Mullllcl • o 1 o
Flynnn • 0 O O
Sw•llP JOGO
Toi•~ Jl I I I
N•wYoril
LO\CI AnQeln
LOS ANGELES
Lope~ 21:1
RU\.C-llH
Smllhrl
Cty3b
Garv~y lb
Balter II
Burke cl
Powell on
Haie<I
Goochonlltl
Yeaqe<<
Raup
Mola!lh
Garnwnp
•b, "bi
4 0 0 0
3000
• 0 I 0
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• 0 0 0
l 0 , 0
l 01) 0
1000
0 0 0 0
'0 0 0 1000
'0' 0 '0 0 0
0000
fol•I\ tt 0 l 0
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Vilas Tops . .
GoJtfried, . ..
Newsman
WASHINGTON CA P I
Gulllemio Vilas bad little dif-
ficulty coping with the weather
and Brian Gottfried bul he had
l>roblem s with a
newspaperman's typewriter en
route to his victory in the cham·
plonship matc h of the
Washington International tennis
tournament.
Vilas, the 24-year·old Argenlin·
ian who was the No. 1 seed. had
to wait nearly two hours Monday
night while r~n delayed the start
of thetoumament finale.
He then went out and defeated
the 25·year-old Gott.fried, the No.
2 seed, 6-4, 7-S to take the firs{
prizes and become the first
player to repeat as champion in
the nine·year history of the
tournament.
While Gottfried was netting his
forehand approach shots and
missing with his backhand short
shots, Vilas complained several
limes about the typewriter of a
reporter in the press tent, situat-.
ed above and away from the
court.
The reporter. Barry Lorge of
the Wast)i~ Post, was work·
ing againsl a deadline and did bis
typing only between pofnts and
games. He had his machine
nestled ln a wooden box designed
to muffle the noise.
Three times Vilas complained
to the umpire, who asked that the
typing be stopped. But a touma·
menl official informed Vilas that
the reporter would contlnue to
write bis story durlng breaks in
the action.'
VUas, a runnerup in 1974 and
the wipner the following year.
won P>.ooo. He broke Gottfried's
service ln the' first game of the
Urst set, establishing the pattern
for events that would follow.
Gottlried twice held t(!mporary
advantages but he placed his
backhand into the net both times,
and then the tall, lerthanded
Argentinian scoTed a winner
with a forehand passing shot as
Gottfried went to the net.
"I started oU real well." aaid
Vilas, wbo now hu beaten Gott-
fried in t1ve of five matches on
clay wblle holding an 8-4 overaJl
edge over Gottfried.
n.day. July 29. 1977 DAIL V PILOT 8 J
THE DODGERS' BOOG POWELL ACCOMMODATES SOME ADMIRERS.
New Challenge for Powell.
Pinch,. hitting Big Adjustment for Dodger
LOS ANGELES (AP) -His
days of superstardom are
over. and John Wes ley
"Boog" Powell, the man who
ranks fourth among active
players in career home runs,
says sitting on the bench and
awaiting a pinch-hitting call
is the toughest thing he's done
in baseball
"l come to the ballpark all
keyed up like I always have."
!>aid the massive Los Angeles
Dodgers first baseman
"Then the 'game· ends for me
with infield practice.
"It's been a difficult adjust·
ment, but if I didn't still feel
fired ~p, I shouldn't be out
there ..
During his long and dis-
tinguished career with the
Baltimore Orioles, the
powerful Powell was the
· scourge of American League
pitchers. But the 35.year-old
slugger is used sparingly now
by Los Angeles
A smiling giant. who looks
more like a defensive tackle
than a baseball player at 6·
foot-4. 250 polVldS, Powell was
signed by the Dodgers this
year after a tryout al their
Vero Beach, Fla. spring
training complex. Following
14 years wilh Baltimore, he'd
been traded to creveland in
1975 then released by the In·
di ans after the 1976 season.
He's philosophical about
growing .. older" in a young
man's game, and actually
seems to enjoy the challenge
of pinch hitting.
"l reaJ1y believe you're Just
as old as you feel," Powell
said with a smile. "I've been
m baseball a16ng time, came
up when I was 20, but 1t
doesn't seem like it's been
that long. l don't feel very old
and I'm still enjoying the
challenges of bas.eball. It's
still a labor or love.
·'Everything they say about
plnoh hitting being hard Is
true," Powell continued.
"Although you're not playing,
you have to stay in the game.
You have to watc h the
pitcher, figure out what he's
throwing, think what he'll
throw if you go up against
him. You really have to keep
your concentration.''
Powell, whose 339 career
homers rank him behind only
Sao Fra.ncisco's Willie McCovey, Pittsburgh's Willie
Sta r ge ll and Carl
Yastrzemski of Boston among
active players, is bitting
around .280 for Los Angeles
this season, but is still looking
for his first home run as a
Dodger. "I'm seeing all these Na·
tional League pitchers for the
first lime," said Powell, a
266 career hitter. "I know
what most of them throw, but
you don't know how much a
pitcher's sinker sinks or bow
fast his fastball is until you
actually face him."
Powell said he doesn't know
if he wants to remain in
baseball as a coach or
manager after his retire·
mentJ but then again, be may ' spena his llme runrung his
fishing marina in Key West, ·
Fla. "Just like baseball, I've
always enljoyed boating and
fishing and decided to see if I
could make a profit at it. I
really like it and it's worked
outfine," he said.
·'I consider myself a luclcy
m an; I feel like I haven't
worked a day in my life.••
Sports Clipped Short
Rose Sets Hit Record
ST. LOUIS --Cincinnati's Pete
Rose established a major league
record for switch hitters with a
single in Monday night's game
with the St. Louis Cardinals.
Rose's one-out single in the
fourth inning was the 2,88lst bit
or his 15-season career, one more
than compiled by Hall of Famer
Frankie Frisch nearly half a cen·
tury earlier.
Rose's shot to center came oft
Pete Falcone on a 3·2 pitch after
the Reds' infielder had fouled
back a 2·2 offering and looked al
a curve outside.
A Busch Stadium crowd o£
35,000 gave Rose a lengthy ova·
tion when his record feat was an·
nounced. St. Louis won the game,
9·8. '
Dri~DJe•
·PHOENIX -An El Paso
sprint car driver died Monday aa
a result.of injuries surrered in an
accident July 16 at Manzanita
Speedway here, said a
•P9kesmllll for the race track .
Steve Bartram, 21, ha<l been
hospitalized at Barrows
· Neurological Institute since the
accident.
Bartratn suffered bead in·
juries after his car hit the wall
and flipped several times.
Fldf11Ch Out
DETROIT -Mark Fid.rych,
the Detroit Tigers' alllng
pitching star, was placed on the
21-day diaabled list. Monday to
give bis sore right arm time to
heal.
"The Bird" tested h.is rigfit
arm in the bullpen and said it still
hurl every time he took a pitch.
··The hurt is still there. What
more can I say?" Fidrych said
after lobbing about 10 throws to
bullpen coach Jim Hegan.
''Same pain, same location.
same everything. It hurt every
lime I threw. And I was just toss-
ing the baJl soft. I! I had corked
up, it would have killed me."
Team physicians last week
diagnosed Fidrych's condition as
tendonitis. TM Tigers &aid the
2l·day disability status was
retroactive to July 2Q, putting
Fidrych out of action at least un·
. til Aug. 9. (
Spain A d von ce'4s
BUDAPEST -Spain ad·
vanced to the rlnaJ of the Euro-
pe'an B·rone Davis Cup tennis
tournament Monday, defeating
Hungary 3·2 as Carmona Jose
Higoeras beat Balazs Taroczy o..a, M. 6·4, 6-4 in a match which
had been haJted by darkness Sun·
day night.
Spain will meet Italy in the
final of the European B-zone
tournament. The winner or that
series will play France ln the
Davis Cup semi,tinals. Argentina
meets Australia in the other
semifinal.
Tennis IJp set •
LOtnSVILLE -Rain inter-
rupted Monday's first round ac·
Uon at the Louisville Interna·
tional tennis classic with only a ·
acattertna or finaJ results.
Two upsets were among the
day's spoils, however, as Chris
Kachel defeated 10th-seeded Zel-
Jko Franulovic, 6·4, 6·2 and No.14
seed Bill Scanlon fell to Emilio
Montan.o. 6·3, 3·6, 6·3.
A1so, Dick Crealy ousted Bru~
Manson, 6-7, 7-6, 6-4, and Victor
Pecci defeated Bernard Fritz,·
6·0, 6-2.
B rewer• Sign Wgna
MILWAUKEE -Veteran out-
fielder Jim Wynn, released by
the New York Yankees earlier
this season. was signed by the
Milwaukee Brewers today.
Trave l-we ary ,
·Nastase Takes
Defeat, Boos
FRESNO CAP) -The Golden
Gaters put down the Los Angeles
Strings and a travel-weary llie
Nastase Monday tQ gain a 29-21
overtime victory in World Team
Tennis play.
Nastase new into Fresno froro
Paris only an hour before the
match and bowed out mid-set in
the men's singles._ trai.lini Tom
Okker, 3-0. His early exit was
met with boos from .the crowd.
Dennia Ralston replaced Nastase
and went on to ldse 6-2.
Nastase reappeared later to ·
team with Charlie Pasarell qa
men's doubles and beat Oklcer
and John Holladay, NS; wlnninf
a tiebreaker S-3.
Francoise Durr and Betsy
Nagelsen beat BOS!e Casals and
Val Zle,en.fu.ss. 6-3, in women••
doubles to ;ive the Gaters an eu-
ly lead. Casali beat Terry Holl.-.
day 64 ln women's amltes.
Frew McMlllan and Durr de'-
feated J ulle Ant hon y .and
Pa1ai'ell In the mlxect claubles,
f.2.
...... ;;:i<-_o;;.oA.-.1.;;;..1.V PILOT TuHdAy, July ~e. 1971
~Costa Mesa Spikefests:
More Than Just Fun
By aoo ll C.:AaUON
OI .. Deity"""" at.ti
,..,.,... •• an old clich4.' 1bout
eath1Qa ln ure belna rree -but then ere eacepUona. And one ts
at Colt.-Mee a tl11b School where
~can Cry h1I or her luck In
tile ·all-eomen &.rack and field
meets.
A.ad· about anyone docs• Crom FOi• vaulter Steve Smith (18-5>
and IPftnter Clancy Edwardl to
sls-year..olda with an eye on Im ·
lll'O,emml
Thunday the champ1onabip
meet b scheduled with wiMer's
~ or ribbons the bounty.
but CJne catch 11 that you mu1it
have three prior meet.a under
YOW' belt thia summer to collect.
1l bec1m al S wlt.h •l•ll"OUP ac-
tion ltartlns at 4: ao.
Cotta Meaa Hl1b coach Joe
Flaher holta tbe aplkefeat wllh
everytblna rrom the 50-yard duh
for age FOUP klds to the open
pole va\llt and bitb Jump to a
conclud.lna three-mUe nan, which
u.ually includes virtually 'every
contest&nt.
"We had '87 runnen in lhe
three-mile once tbla year." aays
Flaher.
Smith, the ex.Cal State <Long
Beach> ace, aays the Costa Mesa
meet is unique i.n ways
'"lbl.a is juat a nice place, ..
aaya Smith. "There is always de-
cent weather and the people here
Ai'• excited. It's a fun day."
Aaide from that Smith says he
competes at Costa Mesa to keep in
shape for his vaulting wlth high
Jumping, aand sprints usually.
Other action keeping Smith in
shape ls s11rfing.
The El Toro High hurdlers who
led that school's girls team to the
CIF 3·A championship, Lisa
Gourdine and Cheryl Gluier,
were at Costa Mesa Thursday-'
gettlng tuned up for a an upcom-
ing meet. "It's just a fun thin&."
says Gluier. ''But it's also to
help improve our technique."
Brian Theriot, the former
Newport Harbor High ace who
has done a 1: 50.4 in the 800
meters, says he shows up at
Costa Mesa for the mileag~. But
you can run anywhere. WJiy al
Costa Mesa? "For the com·
petitive edge,'' says Theriot.
Former Laguna Beach ffigh
pole vaulter Stu.art Foster says
the Costa Mesa meet affords him
the opportunity to work on
technique with the competition
factor.
Otllty Pllet ,..._ .-, PMricll O'o...tl
And San Luis Obispo native
Mike Gordon, eyeing a berth on
an All-service team later in the
U.S. Navy, says Costa Mesa's
major attraction is the people
and good competition. POLE VAULTER STEVE SMITH COMPETES IN THE HIGK JUMP.
LISA GOURDINE NEGOTIATES A HURDLE.
Fountain Valley res ident
Gerald Bailey, 26, says he's gel·
ting himself ready for Cal State
(Long Beach) after a five.year
layoff. He's done a 23. 7 furlong. A
former Pomona High standout,
Bailey says· "It's a chance to
run against myself."
There are other meets aroond
the summer circuit-at UCLA
S unday a fte rnoons, Pierce
College Wednesday evenings and
Mt San Antonio College on
alternate Thursday evenings-
but all require an AAU card.
Not at Costa Mesa. Just bring
your body. And some ability, too,
1f you expect to do well.
Go odell Duels Shaw
Mission Viejo Swim Meet Launches Friday
Brian Goodell or Mission Viejo
and current world record holder,
• \\'ill tangle with Tim Shaw of
Long Beach. a former world
standard bearer, in the featured
.400.meter freestyle event Friday
night (5) 011 opening day of the
favorites in the men's competi-
tion. Steve Gregg of Long Beach
and an Olympic team member in
the 200 fly. is also entered.
200-meter ny and also holds the
high school girls 500 freestyle re-
cord.
llaseball S tandings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Dlvlslon
Baltimore
Boston
New York
Det.roit
Cleveland
Milwaukee
Toronto
W L Pct. GB
56 41 .577
53 42 .558 2
53 44 .546 J
44 52 .458 11''2
43 5 l .457 111 2
43 54 .443 13
34 62 .354 21''2
Wesl Division
Chicago
Kansas City
Minnesota
Texas
Angels
Seattle
Oakland
58 36 .617
53 40 .570 41a
55 43 .561 5
50 44 .532 8
46 48 .489 12
43 58 .426 1811;,i
40 5~ .417 19
Monf•y'1 Gamei
Mlnneta1•l,oal<lon<1 1, 11 lnnlno• 8•l~.Mflweu1o..,3 '''""'"~ ClllC80Qf, Boston 7
Tedtt, Cleve!-•
Otlrolta, TOfOnlo3
K•-OtvelNe..Yortt.Plld '~'" Cellfornle 7, S.~11" 1
T...,rsOenM1
Mii.....,.... ISoAnsor. 1·JI ,., &o-itoro 1s1 .... ••Y
6-!),n
TexH (81fl-n ,_,)ill TorG(lto IWdlls HI.II
Beltlmol'" IGrlmsl•y •·O •• N•• Yori< IFIQ-.._11,'1
Detroit IR~• 91 etOl1CAQo IK..-7 •I."
M llWW$0Cil (Tbormocl-d 111 el S.Mllw 141>·
bOll 6·71, II
C411forrua IT......., 11•1 •t Oa•••"<I 101 .... • 111,
°"'~~~·eo
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Dlvbion w L Chicago 56 38 Philadelphia 56 39 Pittsburgh 55 42 St. Louis 51 46
Montreal 46 49
New York 39 57
West Division Dodgers 60 37
Cincinnati 48 46
Houston 46 53
San Francisco 46 54 San Diego 42 58
Atlanta 35 61 . _ • ., .• w..., ..
ClllC800 9, liQUllon 1
Plthbur9f16, Allenle 3
St LOUIU, Clnclnn.118
Pct. GB
.596
.S89 ...,
.567 2~
.526 6~
.484 10...,
.406 18
.619
.511 lOlf..r
.465 15
.460 15lh
.420 19'i>l
.365 .24VJ
PlllledetPlllO, ~ 0~~. \t "'"~
Mont'"''· SM\ Fr•nclsco J
New Yori< 1, l.otAf'r99lt10
Teder"•O•m•t C1nc:lnn.t1 IHormen,_.> et Chic-(R.lleuSdltl
ll JI
.. """"" fRl<ll.tr O •·7) •I P iiis,,.,... 1c;a... df!lerle I0-31. n
.. ... u .... e (Aut ....... 3•)111St Lou11CIForKh l7-AI, •
Plllledetot>te 11..onborQ 4·l """ C«tlon 13-SI •I
lOl ... llQlllftlAl\ocl9f>10.7_H_on'"41,2,fl
MOlltt'MI CBl'OWfl 1·1 and °''<•le HI at Sen
01-IFreis-1 ! end We!Ymeltttt' I 1 or S..wytt' S.!I, l , n
New Yor• IZ.ctwy • 10! el S... Fr•nc:..co IMon· t•luscoUl,n
Mission Viejo Invitational swi m·
ming c hampi o n s hips a l
Marguerite Recreation Center
Goodell, winner of the 400 and
1500-meter events at the Olympic
Games in Canada last year in
world record time, will be the
favorite aJthougb Shaw is back in
peak form and re ady to contest
the young star from the host
Nadadores Swim Club.
Mark Tonelli of Mission VieJo,
heads the field in the bacqtroke
events along with Dan Harrigan
of Long Beach. Tonelli, swim-
ming for Australia, was a finalist
in the 200-meter back at the
Oly mpJc Games.
Bruce Furniss is the defending
c·ha mpion and world record
holder in the 200 individual
medley. He will be contested by
Jesse Vassallo, the defending na-
tional champion in the 400·meter
race.
In the 400-meter freestyle,
Browne finis hed second -to
Nadadores teammate Jennifer
Hooker in the s hort course na-
tionals and the two will be among
the favorites Friday. Also com-
peting in the event will be Nic6le
Kramer, an Olympian from the
Nadadorci; and Lee.
Donna Lee Wenoerstrom of
Los Angeles is a strong entrant in
440 WINNER Huntington
Beach youth John Soto, 7,
wins his dJvision in 440-yard
run.
-Mbv'•G•m" Molweultw ill Bcnlon, n
8•1~ et ..,ew Yorh. n
Oelroftel Olic_ego, n
Cleve'-el K•nsas Cll f n
C&llforn1a al Oa•l•nd. n M•nnewta et Sealll~. n
Only Qetne• SC:lle<IUle<t
W-Hch,'•G•'"H C inc 1nn.tt1 •t Olre.>90
New Yortt •I Sen Frentlsco
HOU\ton 11 PlttsllurQll, n """"'••I SI Louos, n MO<llrUI •• San O•eoo."
Pholldl'lpll.., al lo• A119e1.-11
the 200-metcr individual medley
atongwit.hMoniqueRodahlofthe DH Ph ·ca1 Nadadores who was a finalist for Y81 8
Also expected to reach the
finals in the 400 will be Jesse
Vassallo of Mission Viejo, Doug
Northway of Tucson and Bruce
Furniss or the Beach Swim Club
of Long Beach.
Friday's prograrn will open
with the 100.meter butterfly with
Joe and Mike Bottom, both stu·
d ents at use. as the early
The Nadadores will have the
top two contestants in the
women's 100-meter butterfly in
Valerie Lee and Alice Browne.
Lee is a fotmer American recot"d
holder in the 200-meter and 200-
yard butterfly events.
New Zealand in the Olympic Physical exams for all
Games in the 400·meter race. prospective Dana Hllls
Friday's competition will High athletes will be
begin with quallfYtng races in the given Wednesday from
fourindlvidualevent.sandonere· 8-10:30 a.m. In the
lay race at 10 ln the morni.Dg. school's wreatllng room.
Finals and consolaUon finals in The cost.is $3.
both men's and women's com-Physicals for boys are
petition will begin at 5. The same scbedUled from IHO with
schedule will follow Saturday the girl5• physicals set
Browne, a Corona del Mar
High ·sophomore, is lhe current
American record holder in the and Sunday. from 10.10:30. ~..;;._~~----~----~~_;;.~~--""----~--~-
Stars Face Tucson
At Vni Tonight
Still trying to regain twice, is 8·7 on the
Lbeir winning form of the season.
early season, Orange The Tucson squad is
County's Stars talce on below full strength for
the Tucaon Sky tonight in tonight's match -hitter·
International Volleyba11 blocker Meliton Jimenez
Association UV A> action has pulled tendons in his
at University High ankles and will be out or
(Irvine). Game time is action for two weeks.
7:30. ··We 've p 1 aye d
. After winnina four of be.nealb our capabilities
· · ttieir first five matches, two of the limes we've
•• 1 the stars have slipped to played the Sky," says
•• 10-11. Tucson, which has Stars player-coach
·.,:. beaten Oran1e County Dodge Parker. "I'm not
r' really sure why, but I .· .. ~---Country think that mentally ~ we're going to be ready
.,.. ,_a..Mlter-c-trt for all our remainin1
tt".'. ---~"" matches with Tttcson."
: • 1.~==,, 11 ., IVASTANOINGS
• • ~ ~ ,_...on1: 1 14<11mo Western DiVlslon-1. u• .. "-~._.. Santa Barbara, 9-9, .500;
'· "...-C1eft c:Mmef*) • 1• '· 2. Orange County, 10-11. • ._..,M&n «c:.p11tf-B•it<hl, l -~16· 3 San Dlego 7·8 ~ ~.,.~ .. , ... . . . .
01 .. ..,__... .467. ,.~":r t.~<tenO-•IS .i:, Eastern i)hision-1.
,";. ·i. ._..."~~-""''" ' rrum Denver, 12•S. .'100; 2. Ill ,.. ... '°':::"' .... ~~ "1,.. Paao/Juar~ 9-9, .500; 3. ~ ,.'a..... «l"llllllr'4111>• ,_i-"°911rt~ Tucs~n, $·9, .471; 4.
,, 1~VIW1t~). PhQeruit. &-12, .400.
Volleyball
Tourney Set
The Laeuna Beach
Open, one of tbe major
beach volleyball tourna·
ments of the summer, is
scheduled Saturday and
Sunday at Main Beach,
beginning 10 a.m.
Top fln.lsbers.from the
entry liat of 64 twe>-man
teams will quality for lbe
1977 World Cham -
pionship ~f Beach
Volleyball scheduled
Sept. 3-4 at Wiil Rogers
State Part in Santa
Monica.
The Laguna Open wUl
feature some of the top
athletes in the sport.
Games will be played to
21 polnt.s, requlrin& at
least a two.point victory.
RARE SILE!
2 quarts:
Yzgallon:
Limited time only. You save $2.75
.
ltallsta~,
tomorrow:
All the fun, all the exci tement starts •. tomorrow. lt's Del Mar's 38th season,
and it promises to be the greatest
ever. All the action takes place in
the unique setting that has made
this resort track famous. Fresh
ocean breezes. Charming Spanish
architecture. A colorful infield,
ablaze with flowers and trees,
' . sparkling Jakes and fountalns. And,
of course, there's something new!
Major expansion of the Grandstand
area. Sixty thousand square feet of
new facilities to make Del Mar even
more enjoyable. Doiens more parimutuel
windows. A beautiful new Grandstand Ter-
~ race. Four double-width escalators. Eight --~refreshment st.ands. In other words, a lot more
ways to have a lot more fun at DeJ MM! Other than
that it's the same, great Del Mar! Famous Jockeys, like Bill
Shoemeker, Laffit Ptncay Jr., Darrel McHargue, Fernando Toro.
Beautiful, fleet Thoroughbreds. Yes, ifs the same, great Del ~r.
We wouldn't dare change lt Just make lt betterl
Be there tomorrow, fqr Opening Day. Come often dur1ng our
43-dey se.ason~ You'n quickly discover why we behave ~ .•
•
nRales
Martin's Fate
Up to Paul·
AlaJDitos
~cing
Results
...,.,....,
Cl-, 1rNll 9'aat
. .
PUBLIC NOTICE
I \
DAIL V Pfl.OT
PUBLIC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE l't1BUC NOTICB
NEW YORK <AP) -Billy Martin'• mana1erial
fate wilb tho Now York Vankoea ruia on bow he
stacks up qalnst team pn:alde:nt Gabe Paul'a ··Sevm Commandment.I.••
'1•1T llAC9 W v•rd' 1 ~ .. ,
old• t. up. Otlml1t9. ll'lll'M .a100.
h tron 1114 CCllrcllM.tl
tn aa &ir-cle&l'tQI aealoo MClftday ni1bt in
Ya.a.keel OWDe'l' Geor1e steinbrenner'1 olflco, S\eln·
brmner pn>vided for th modla the ppel on &ood
maot,LDI acrorcbna to Paul:
-The tum 'a won·lou record.
-Doet t.ht m anaaer work bard eoou1b !
ls he emotlonally equipped to lead lhe rocn
undcrbim ..
-ls h orcantud~
-lJ he prepared'
-Does be understand human nature7
--ls be hooonble'!
Paul saJd a manager has to mee\ all seven
c rlteria to lteep hJs seal in tbe dugout, but rel used Lo
comment on whether Martin had sinned. ''J'm not discwsslng it," Paul said, adding that
he's constantly a ssessing Martin's job
performance
... no i 40 , .. ,00 .J••~•w-1 Hll•llln 91111 (tlrOOIU)
ll--1100
210 , ___________ _
.\Ito ll•n -Cll•U GolO'IUUI, PUBLIC NOTICE
SP«lel Nell~, 0-.rlMI l<K-.t. C.P -"---------"'""'.'--Cwffd lfN'leflet, UM 1,.1111(11,. 0.Yllle H~lca TOClllOITOH ht,ltallfGold surealORCOUltTOl'THlt
\Creldlt<l-•8•r All>qUe STAH Of'CAL.,OllNIA ,Olt
U l llldll •e.n.e 114 ... ,. ..... ' 1141COYNTY0, OllANGE
ret\, .... UUI. No.MIMJ
t!Uole of EDWARD WALTER
ANDE RSEN. •Ila liDWARO W.
Al'IOERSE'N. Oecused
llCC*O llM:I -400 .,,., •. ) ,.M
old• All-enc:ia. 11\ina ~.
L.OU. u.ctcy (Dornl1111Vt• I
11«> 7«J uo
Moore,,...,._. IL.lpl\em) UO ' 20
.J•b',Jet <CMdoal •.20
Tlme-J0.01 Al'° Ra11 -Foay 8oa, Oeottl
Char-. Jotw\le 8t'°"'"· Go Wllclom
... tuol<Jll1,.
'THlllD ltA(ll -400 yerds. 1 y .. r
oldl. Ctelmlfte. l'or rne<deM. PurM 12100.
M1u1CotleMOote lAou111't
s.20 2 90 3 20
... 110 Go'.,.,.., ITreuure l 3.20 3 20 Oer.,,,.., (PeullMI 6 to
Tlme-20.11 Al>O Ran -Jells L.errv. L.• Donia,
M~pe Dick. MIU Tippy T•mmy,
,., .. t Tl,,.,, Emmy1 Mark, Pr-•
Time
l'IOTICE IS HEREBY GIV EN lo tht
Ctf'dlton ol IM OOO•• named de<-nt IMI llll pt'l'W\S Mv1nq Claims •o•in•I u.. Hid oece<k!nl to Iii• tr.em. "''" tne l\eOsHry vouch!'•'· Int~ oll1co of lne
clerk ot tn. aoove ent1llrd court, 0< IP
pruent triem, w11n tn• neces><lrY
vOll(Mni, IO IM ...,.,,,_,19rwod et 11\e Of•
11<4' ol MILLER ANO MAUTINO. Al·
IO<MY\ •• L•w. JOS Bon• ot ... ,,,.,,c ..
Bulldi"9. Wl\1111¥. CA '!0601, whoch "
lhe pl act' o! 1><1s1nen 011no; wnders19~d
1n all maH•rl °"""'"Ina to Int' t'Stal• ot said decedent, w1lh1n tour tnOl\lh> o1ller
""' 11rst pu1>1oc.i110<1 ol tn•> nome. • OoteC!Ju•v 1, 1911
ELIZABETH A P"lht
El!t'<ult1• of Int 11\11tlof
tht'allo~,,.~dett'Ot:nt
MILLEllANDMAUTINO
AHor,,.yutL.•w
PUBUCNorlCE
S-'60'7 PUBLIC ~OTICE
,~c~"i~!:~!·:::s l'ICTIT10UUUSINUS
lne lolio.tone r;ier'IOnS aredoongOUS4· NAME STATEMl .. T n~n "\ Tiie lolloWl"IJ PefSO<I• I• doing bu$1-
I( o M. Co .• 711 Souln Gn11d nenu. Avenue, Sant•An.t. C•lltornla9l70S THE BADGE M.AN, ?:1611 Mersate,
KUIOA FARM SUPPLY CO., INC. LAQune HlllJ, CA '2•SJ
Paul 'b op1n1on on
managerial ability becomes
particularly important because
S(elnbrenner charged him with
the sole discretion whether to
fire or keep M artin.
"Whatever Gabe recom·
mends will be accepted by me,"
Steinbrenner said after the
Yankees' game with the Kansas
• Scratched -Ael•• An Ea9le,
f' •Icon Jel, Med Aboul You. MIQl\I
Mine
)01 ll•nll of A-rtu 8169.
Whlllier,CA-1
hi: IJUl69 .. 07J
Allor"•"''°' Eaeculn•
1 Cellforn o• corporat ion, 7 11 All.-. B. Whitt , 2J611 aMrs.Ca,
sou In Grand Avenue, Sant• An•, Lltllune Hiii,. CA. 91653
ca111ornia'270S. Tiii& l>uSlness fs conducted by.,. ln-
Tnos bus•"""S •• conducted by • dlvill<i••.
City Royals had been rained out. ••L.L.Y MAllT•N
"It's totally his decision. But there 's nothing immi·
nent in the matter."
Based on the reasons Steinbrenner called the
press to his omce, Martin could be found failing in a
couple of the criteria. ....
"I want to clear the air," Steinbrenner said.
"I'm not out to get Billy Martin. That's a lot of crap.
It's a copout. And it's not even a new copout."
Steinbrenner was annoyed with Marlin's com·
ments which followed weekend rumors that Martin
was going to be fired from his fourth managerial
job in eight years.
"Sure I'm displeased with the r emarks.
They're just not factual," Steinbrenner said. "Cer·
ta in things have been said that just aren't so."
The Yankees owner referred specifically to
Martin's account of a locker room shouting match
between the t wo during spring training and the
reasons for the argument. He also disputed Martin's
contention that Steinbrenner called and apologized
aftertheincidenf.
Steinbrenner said he could see history repeat·
ing itself in Martin's anti-management position, a
stance that led lo his downfall at Minnesota, Detroit
and Texas.
"His statements have been misleading," the
owner said. "He's saying 'They're making a
martyr out of me.· Well, look at the history. It's hap-
. pened three times before.
"I'm tired with all his selfservlng statements. I
don't want to be part of making a martyr out of
Billy Martin. He's got the best material in the
American League. The manager's job is to
motivate and make his players perform.··
And the Yankees, champions on paper, haven't
been performing to their capabilities, finding
themselves today in third place in the AL East.
"I thought it was beautiful when Cincinnati
manager Sparky Anderson blamed his team's
failures on the manager," Steinbrenner said. "How
the team performs is the only yardstick you have "
Los Alamitos
Race Entries _T .... pt
P'ln• ""'' 7:4'
SIXTIC a...ca -150 yar"5. J yur
• ol•b ~ uP. Rllles ~ ,.,..,. .... Clalml1'9.
Pwr•SDll. Oelmlne ewk• $5000. -•MMOC!y UIOUQlll ~Kltttn (H.tr1)
TOP Ser Eevle (Aclelrl
"llST aACll -lJO yerds. 2 ., .. ,.
olds. Clelmlng. For maidens. Purse
u .100. c1111ml"9 l>'k• u.ooo.
Sl\•keAl0n9 (CMcloal 1?2 Fancy Affair IWardl •
111
171
tit
119
WM C&5tl (Allison I
Min Kipty 0oo (Her11
Tiny Sip IWerd)
JetsCrltt. IPeullnel
Tiny Chicken (TrH \urel
llt EapressYeurwlf (Oelombel
I It Drop O' Horle.,..._ IK,..,.)
lit MluL-.E-f~ 1n L...,y•s Reel Trlnlt•t 18'eoksl
122 Pl\llllClll tM/khelll
"• "' lit
tit
122
• Creeping Olerlle IC.Ill
1.IQuld~ (0.lombll)
Uncle Roc'o (AOUQlll
Aunfof1he90ld IOomlnguezl
172
11'
122
tit
SllCOHD a Aca -)j() yanH. l yHI'
Olds ~ WP. Clelml"O-Pur'M \2,300.
Clalmlng prlcU2,!00. Ac>a<l\e Oler91 (L.lpl\aM)
Go C.JUft lAlllJOI!) ToptontoBetat~al
Roc.ltateller ICMdOUl
MOOnsi.ke (Rough)
Nevada Flyer CT,...,..,..,
Flylno O.Wld <Wera>
11'
lit llf
. 1n
11' in
1 It
THlllD a.ace -m yanlL l yMr
Olds & \Cl. Clalml119. Purw $3,JOO.
Ciel mlnQ 111'1<• S4,l00. -Sir R..,_• (C.rcloul
Toll le 11o9tl IH..-tl
C.11 loml • 5'eYen ( Ctngerl
8eM'lno (C.111
LltlleGoF'-1 IRouglll
ftl91\10nWlllle IWatdl Over En (Upf\em)
Roc ..... TestCTrNwre)
122
"' 11'
"' 11• •n
122
'"
'" lit'
'" 122
122
122
tit
"'
111
111
•H , .. ,,,
11~ u• 111
Area Scores
I
SE'n"lfTM ttACa -· ~ ymb. J yeer OldS .. up. A.llowatiee. PurM
$6000 Chic PM Go IKnlgflll
8eken Bet IM'fleS>
Fest JVltt ICercloU l
"TM• Oii's LAM <Adalrl
54MSNM (RouOfl) *<ILlelS Trace (HM't) Duff., __ (Oelomtle)
lflONT'N uta-ISOY9f'd5. 3 YNr
OICIS & ... Clelml.... Purse $3.wlO.
Clalmingpncel6SOO. R-Slrip (ICmgMI
So111r°*119 IROUQlll
New WOftcl I Otlomtle I
Goj.t lc.ntollll 8elll• Bo 1Ctff9erl
T..,derWerrlor IMllCl\elll
Rosy JoYQl3 (AllllOll)
TUCIOl\Jet (8rookS)
N IQlll 5-d ("4e1r)
"' lit
11•
'" 11'
lit
"' "' 122
Mltent ltACS -250 yerds. a year
olds. PurM $3100. ClaimlftQ price
$4000. R.wltiM CMylnl Bl9MTrvO-V-IOe~> Oyps'f'sMoon (Ward)
ASll Ker Bows ICA.totrl
T.,. Slemmer 1Kn'911U
Honltrtonli ""911 ( ROU1111 l '*'Y 1r1111 coom1noue11
Ima Kllltv"""' IC.II) A-• IAlll-1 o.r1n•s oe..-IAOelrl
Deep Sea
Fuh_Report
111
1t1
'" 10 •:n
117
1t2
117
112
'"
I
$S llUCU 2•MIM Katie ,,...,.. & f.
HelleOr-y,,_ld_.. •••
~tn'H ··~ -'70 v•ros., ytar otds & uo. Oltlm1nq Pun• S?IOO.
GlddY'• Rocket IC.rclotel ?UO 760 lto
Roy•IGoFleet <Rough) ,,60 3.00
P•wa's &rat IBrookll t .40 Tlme-..,.11 Aho R.n -Wind Jammer, 'Tis
TouQll, Joe Fruler, Hiio Blob. Kn19111
Fifi~
Scratd.ed -CwSlom T ellored,
C.Mece ~lrip, Hawaii"" h i•. Mr. T lgu Rocut.
f'lfl'TH •ACE -400 vents. 3 year
Olds & UI). Cl•lml1'9. Puru MOOO.
MIU Banducci (Alllsonl
45.60 11.60 s 00
Min Reward 8.., !Br004(S) S.00 1 60
CM•!je toO..nce IAd•l•I 3 IO
T;rne-20.«>
Aho Ran -l(lptydoodle, Rutll
Allee,,..,,,., IC•IS
Noscrlllehes..
SIXTIC llACa -3!0 yards l year
olds & uP. Clalmlftl Puru s.noo.
COl>V RIQM IOelomOel
6 '° •.60 3 '° Mr Oocy &.rs 18.,.ksl S.60 ) 40
fHI Bee IROUQlll 4 60
Tlme-17.11
Also Ran -Jusllk~ Pa, The Jewel,
GoQOIH, Dog~·"· HI Temp, 1.lmlti
RocUI No scratchn
IS ilaacta SO.C:.0.y lllllfrt 66-Mr. 0.. ty •an , .,.Id I 14l.M.
SEVENTIC a ACE -400 yard\ l
yf'ar Old\ & UI). CIHSll...S allow...ce"
Purse $6000.
Twn TwlnJel (Adoolrl
, 90 ?cllO
S.00 S 00
Published Or-CO<l\I D•il'f P11ot. CorpOrahOft. Alltn B. Wl\11•
l(UIDAFARM SUPPL.YCO.INC Tiiis ............ , was llled Wiii\ "'-Ju1y n. 19. 24.•nd Auoust l, IQ/I
I l0l1·11 By: PaUI I( ICul.U Cou11ty Cl-ol Orinll9Counly111 J.,.y
Tl\1\ 1tatemEftl was tllod with tl\a "· lt17
PUBLIC NOTICE Counly Cle<k OI Oran~ Coun1y on July "1ft71
PubllSl\ed Oranve Coast Delly Ptlo1,
P1Mff July 19. K, and "4191HI 2, 9, 1977
14, 1917.
CP.-JAMESK.NAllUSI!',
NOTICl!'TOCREOITORS All-'(olllUW
SUPERIOR COUit TOi' THE ISISW.11 ...... ac .. ••vd., SU1lelt0
STATE OF CALll'ORNIA FOii P0>IOfflullesJ01J
THE COOtHYOFORAHGE G•r• ..... C.li!Gnlla'°M7
No. A·tl,.I UUI »1-4ll7
Ettale o1 SPENCER DUANE RED· Publl$1\ed Orenqe Co.tSI Oe11y PolOI, FIELD. SR.. aka SPENCER 0. REO-~ .. ,1 .. ..aAuou\119 1911 ll•?·71
"'~~g·c~;"~~Eov GIVEN to 111e P UBLIC NOTICE
3119-71
9'1CTITIOUS eUSINl!SS
NAME STATEMENT
Thi IOl!ow4ng pertoft 11 clolnQ ~I·
neues:
OAEAT AMERICAN WINDOW
COMPANY, 12092 A«lan •205. Garden credo I ors of tho! aoo•e n.:imed a..cecten1 11\al all t>Hsons oovono cldoms a901n\I "CTITlOUS e USINISS ------------1Grove,CA.92640
, .... $11•0 oeceoen1 •re r~Quo-.o to Ille NAME STATEMIHT
llll'm, wlfn tht O>Kt>U•Y vouchers. In The tollowl"9 persons •••do•"ll busl•
Into o•h<C' ot tM ch•r• of •~ •bOve en neu •S
ltllodCOurt,O•IOP<t'lo<'lll" .. "'·"'I"''"" HIS PLACE. 1100 s. Co•tl ,,.c ... arv YOUCntors. lollll unoers19ned Ml91>wey, ~ Beacn. c• t?OI
,,. 11\e law oflo<t' ol CARL. P. KULVK, El•I~ OallOfl, 313 C•ll• Gueymas.
q•c.1 Grlndlay St"I"'· Suite 106. SlnCleme<lte,CA'261l
CvP"''· Ce11lorn1e '°630, wn1cn Is ttw 5"orley welss, ''"Stern, Sl\erl'Ntft
place of buS•nt"\\ ol the U<IC!ersogned In OeU, CA •
"11 milllers peorla1n1n9 lo IN! Mt ate ot Tn•s l)usl..-s is conducted Dye llmlt· ~1l•O M<~t. w11.-.1n four mo"tM att~r f'dO•r,,.,SP\lp
'"" ffl'SI puOliulionot lnos nol•<•. El•IN O.llor1
O•ledJulvS.1917 Tiii• st•l-1 w•s flltd wlll'I the
CHARLES GROESCHEL. Caunly Oer1c 01 Orange County on July
AOmtnlstr.11orwll,,W1ll 1], 1911
Annexedol lhe•>l•l~ot
the abOve named decedent
,,....,
PubllsPltd Or•nve CoeSt oa11v Piiot. C~ltL.P.ICUl.YK
tot Grtncll•Y St., S..lt•-
Cypreu. CA *JO
TO: 1710121-2211
Atlor,..v lor Mmuolstr•tor CTA
July 1', 16,...aAuoUtlf,9, "11 Jlll·71
PUBLIC NOTICE
Ooneld Hensen, 12092 Adri•n,
Garden t;rove. CA. 91MO
Tl\ls bus!..-, is conduc:1e<I Dy~ lt>-
divld ... I.
Donald"-" Tiiis stalement wes fllea wlUI the
Counly Clerto: OI Orange Collnty on July
1', 1t77.
'7N70
Pul>llsl\eO Or-COMt O.lly Pilot,
Jiiiy ... :it.-""911sU,t, 1917.
JOSS-71
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OFSHEltll'f''S SALE
No. l4SIJ8
DE STER REE FISCHER. Plalnllll
Y$. BRUCEJOHNSTON.elc Oef~ndanl
8• •Ir~ of an •~•cullOfl 1\.....0 on
Mav 21. tt17 bY ll\e S.-rlor Court.
Publ"htd 0r•"9" Coast Daily Po~I July 12. 19, 2', and Auqu,.12. 1917 ~------------1 Countv Of Otl!O!je, State ot C.lllornl•,
3071.71
PUBLIC NOTICE
"CTITIOUS eUSINESS
NAMI STATllMllNT
Tiie foliowl"9 .. ,Miii ts OOl"IJ l>llSI· neues·
~7"52
MOTteaOf'TllUSTt!•'SSAl.E
lkli).14414
On AUOll51 ll, 1977. •I 7:00 o'clOdl
P.M.. et the IOlllhfront entr•nceof th• oeo Or•nve C.ountv Court-1o<•t.ct
In ltle 200 bl«ll ol West Sanle Ana 81"4.,
!formerly West Sll(UI Sl,..11. In Salle. An•. C.lllornlo SECURITY PACIFIC
NATIONAL. BANK. ~ OUl'f 119polftled
lrllll .. undet' tre deed of INSI dat..S
November' 17. 1tn made by Coste Mesa ~oc19e Bulldfne <:Mporelio<I r.corded
011 Dec•-S.197l. lnb00tt 104S4, paoe sosotOttklel R-lnlheotliceoflne
Counly Rec-• Of Or~ Countv.
Calll0<nt•, b\r re.son ot detaull '" ll•
.,..,m..,1 or~ ol ool19et10M
MCured t....-ebY, •Notice OI Def•ull and
Elecllon to Sell Under Deed ot Trust PUBUC NOTICE
n•v1119 been rocwded as provided for by 1----------------
I•• end ..-e than -"-"" ""ve NOTICE TOClll:OITOQ elepseo tlnco "'°' ,.cord•llon, will sell 0, aULK TRANSPa a
•I public eucliar1 to tne ,,i9no" 1>40der (SoctMel'10l_.117 U.C.C.>
t0<cUl\,pay•bleinl-tu1moneyol""' TO CREDITORS OF CL.ABIA ORY
Jc20
Or. Twl"""us Clr.esurel
Mr. En.tio ll.lptl•ml Tome-20 07 s.ao -------------
J. W WOOD PROOUCTS, P .O. 8o•
1)61, Newport Be.tel\, Ca. 92'60. 11S
Harbor hlancl Rd , 1'1--1 Beac:ll, CA
t'1"63
upon • judQmenl .-.1ert0 In lavor of
Ol!STER REE FISCHER .. juaqment credllor and a9el n51 BAUCE
JOHNSTON. ak11 B. S. JOHNSTON as
ludQm~nt dt'btor. ~tlowlnq • net
balan<t of SS,SflO 85 acl"4111Y d..., on $a1d ludclm..,t on tnr d.ll• of 1,.,. i.suconce ol
Mfct ~•e<uho ... , I IWV!" litVtf!d wipon •II the roght, t•lle and om-\t ot said 1udQ-
ment deblor '"the pr<Jt>erlV on the Coun·
ty ol Oranqe, Stet~ o! C•IUorn•a.
desert bed as 1011~:
UnlledStM~ofAmer>c.e•lllmeoh•le, CLEANING SERVICES, I NC,.
wltnout coven•nl of wuranty ell· TRANSFEROR:
l>'HW<lorlmplledesto111 .. ,-•10ft NOTICE IS HEREllV OlllEN tNt
orencum11t<1nces, tno1nter~tconYeyed the Tr.,..sl_ ls ~ to meke • l>Ylll
to •nd now htld tw It 111\0tr said deod of tr.tln$1er of property IO 81MA Corp.,
trust, In ..a to lhe preperly In Or•nge TrtllSfor•.
Ser etched -8ooQlt' Blue•
EIOHTIC "ACIE lJO yants. 2 yHr
old\ C1a1ml11Q. Purse suoo. Husli.t> Beech (Broo••I •UO 8.20 6.20 Clevereut~Ber <~rdoie) 3 20 2 40
Catc!M Go IAdalrl J 00
Tlme-11.0?
AIM> Ran -Mr. A!aml~ Good,
Tu•edO Go Call Me Nlek. Solld V•lue, Alal<aa m, 80-11• To. L.a
01osaOu1ce
Stratclled -Brave Brown Flath, L.uOy7S n ~ 2·H11>11..n llo cll & •·
Clettr Olte ..... '122.fO.
"INTM llACll -l 50 varos. l vur
oldl. Oelml1t9for FllllH Purw U!OO.
Ol'"9I MobM Wllto11I
TooNi<e IB.-sl Queen Tu IMll<helll
Tlme-17."
IS.GO •.10 6 40
12.20 6 2f
120
AIM> Ran -Crema Roc~•t. MIH
Cindy Perr. Bunny's llunnv, I.omit• Mlu,$weetRetreet.Oro Prlete. Tau
Bow NoscmdlK. U becU ~ Melslle, & 1·TM
Hlu,,..io$17t.f0.
Sports
Calendar
S-MOY SUPERIOR COUllT 01' THE
STATIEOl"CAL.IFOllNIA FOR
THECOUHTVOFORANGE
No. A·tZJZ•
NOT ICE Of MEARING 01'
li'fTITION FOii PROBATE OF WIL.L AND l'Olt L.l!'TTl!llS TESTAMIN
TARY Es .. te ol LEONA 0 . PALMER.
Deceased NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN IMI
MARV MINKShrJ fllld herein a pe11
toon lor Probateol Wiii and tor tssu.,,.ce
OI t.~tters Testamentary to tno pell
llonor '"'eren<e to wtllt h '' mt!de for
turlh<!r par'llcuiers. """ '""' •~ ume dnd p111<~ ol llll•r1"9 IM same nu been Ml for AUQUSI 2. 1,71, •• 10:00 a m • In
11\e courtroom of Oe!Mlr1,.,..nt ND ) ol
said court. al 700 Covoc Conter Drive
Wtsl, on lhe C1ly of S•nt• Ane.
Calllornla.
Oelecl Juty IS, 1917. WI LU AM I!. SC JOHN,
Counly Clerk
MMCtcllY &ICL.EIN, INC.
llOI Ce......, l'Mk Ease
s.lte7•
L.H A1191fft,CA900a1
hi: 12UIV1-1M A~for: PeCHl-Puot1Jtled Orange Co.Kt Deily P1IOI,
July 1t,10,2t1. tm
21'"77
P UBUC NOTICE
,.,..,.
PubllSl1ed orange Coast Oelly Piiot.
July 19, 26. Md AllgulU, 9, 1977. 3tU-n
PUBUC NOTICE
IC.,.,..111 G Withrow, PO. Box
1:161, Newpon Beach, C•. 9U60, llS Harbor .. ,_ Rd.,.-l>O'l B..cn, CA
92663
This bu5lnen 11 conducted by ill in·
dlVldu•I 1<.-111G.Wltl\row Tiiis JIM.,.,...., WU filed with tlw
County Clffl< of Orenqe County on July
11, 1917 "'"" Publlsfllld 0r'11"94' COll•I Dally Piiot,
July It, 1', end AuQusl 2, 9, 1977 JOl.4-71
PUBLIC NOTICE
Loi 117 Tr.-ct IOl8ot BoOI< 194paou
:it lo 30 of MAPS In tilt oll1ce ol Ille
Ore nee County Recorder
Property Is commonlv kncnm os:
21~ Carob Slr"l'•t. Newport 8eo<l'I,
COi 1forn111.
T099t~ with ell end \IOQUla< IM
tenemen11. heredilamenls and a1>·
ourcenances 1r.ereun10 CHll011Ql"9 or ,,,
•nvwlseacii>erlainlno.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on WcOnet<U>y, A,.gu~ 17. 1911, at 10:00
o'clock A.M. a t M"ln L.obby,
County, State of Ca111orn1a, dffcrobed Tiie business •ddr enn of thr
as: TtM1$feror Mid u. Tran•teree •r• as TN Soutl\Hsteriv IOI 32 feet of 11\e follOM.
NorlhWKlerly 522.7' Ifft of L.O( ., ot Tr-Mfllr:
""'port ~1Qh4s, ••per m•P recor<Md Oetllr ~ 0Hni"9 S«vlces, low .•
lft -4, -13 of M1sc~llaneou1 660 Nl#P0'1 Coentff Drive, ~lie m . Mept,recortlsots•dOr-Cowftty. N•wport O.acll, Orange County, Tne s1.--reualldot~comm0<> ~lfornla92'60
dts19nMion, If anv. ot U... •HI l>'-•t• Tr""\1-: dHcrlbedM>Ovei1purporledto1>e: lllMA CorlJ., 660 Newport Centwr ~ Eau lltll StrMI, Cott• .IM~. Drive, Sult• 820, Newport 8•.acll,
Celllornlamv Or•1191C.ounty. Calltornl• 926'0
Ttie undel'Sl9f"'d Trustee dlsctaims The locotloM of tM P-1Y '° .,..
"-----------• Cour1,,.,..w, 700 Clvoc Cenler Orlvt' any ll1tblttl'(f0r....,lncorrec:tneuof Ille V-~are: "• Slrffl ~ erld oUIW COmmot\ de-IN. east Ory Cle.,.fn9, 2tJt E, C:0.U West, Col'f ot Santa AM. County of
Or•nqe, Slate of C.lllornle, I wlll wll •I
11111>11< auction'° the h19MSI blddtr, for cail\ In lawNI moM'f of Ille United Sletes, ell 11\e rlQM, lllle end lnlerest of said lucleme<>t debtor In Ille ebove
described ew~ty, or..., much lllereot as may lie neces~y lo sall1fy Hid U ·
ecutlon, wlltl accrued lnlerast end
costs.
algn9tlorl, 11eny.-n11eAln. Hwy., C:W-del Mar, C.llfOrlll• 92S2S
Said Ule wlll lie made 10 CMtY the ot>-Ml. llHt Ory 0e•nl"9. 401J W. Pt
1199tlon$sec:.,,....byselddMdoflruslln· Loma Bl...S., Soll Ola90, C .. llornl•
c1ua1n11 ell costs. lee• Mid eq>ense• of 92110 irvst .. -ot 11\e trlM et .. ted by said Ml. Btst Orv Clunlt111. 4•tS Genesee
Offd ol lrust; a11 w ms upended wndef Aw., S... oi.eo. C~IUornla 92117 ,,,. terms ot seld.dHCI of '"'st. no1111er1 Onl Hour M•r11nirlnQ, 518 N. 5e<ond
._.,.Id; and u1 ,000.00 nmelnlnQ orln· Strwt. El C.lon, C.lllornl• 91021
dpeloftflll-MC:UrMiltYMid-Of O.HowMar1inlllng. llSt H~
fNjl, .ir111Mer'et 1rorn Howniller 1, A>oe.,'6111onal Cl~.c.llfonlla'2050 D•lcO at SanU Ana, Cellfomla, July
11,1971 lt7 .. s lnYldnot•orowldN. ~Ory tiNl)«S, 201S Mission
OetedMy 13, '9n Ave.,ae-ide, Collf1Wftia910M BRAD GATES.
Sllerfff·C-SECURITY PAClll'IC The IW'OP9r1Y to I» Cr-lerred Is
COuntyof O.ari~. Celuornla
By R. Tun610ll,
NATIONAL.BANK,asTru&lff d1Kr.-h19"1efeles: LeWlsw'.M<MuUln, All of lhll TraMleror's m eclllMry.
RMI Eslll•Offktr IC!Ulciment. fumllure, l"urnlshl111ts. fl•-JOMN L~t:'Ju PvbllShed 0r81199 c .... 1 o.11y Piiot, twes, ... ....,.., lmprovetneftts, stock
July 26,-A&l!l•isU,t, 1911 3196-71 In trede, ln--1ory end oU...r prc>Slerty ,. .. 1111111·1 Anor•y
t~1'Hamllr1 y.., .,.,,,,ea.tMtt
PubllSl>td Or-Cout Dally Pllot.1-------------
-r~ used In «inMC11on wl"' «ff-lated to U.. ~ Of Trmnstffor loUttd M--....nsted addresws.
Juty "·"·-Au9U•12.1m 301J.71 PUBLIC NOTICE 5o fer as Is known to ttoe ,,..,...,...,
PUBUC NOTICE
ell other bul4MSs namM arid b\1$1ne~ 1-------------•addreutt used by tl\O Tra11steror $TA1eMllN'rO,AMN~Ml!Nt within 11\rW veor• la st PISl are as . o, usa °" 1o11ows; U-4673 l'tCTmousaustNl:UNAME 1n•ernatlonat Risk Manaoe-"'· SUli'l!lllOlt COUllTOI' THI!! Tl\e fOllOwl"9 per1011 lies~ Inc., 1421 EM• 17'1'1 St~et. Santa Afta,
STA tl!OF CAL.I f'C>aNIA FOR Ula ttSilof tlw flctltlous llllSIMM name: OrMOt C-.y, Calllomla '270t
THl:COUNTYOli'OltANGIE TUFF ·COTE R 0 L. L ·ON Tl\etlulklr•sferWlll becon'41mrnat-
,.._._,_,. SYSTEMS. tao.·-· St..Co$tll Mne, Id on or .tier AllOVJI s. 1m. at 11\e of·
N 0 TIC I! 0 F H I: A at N 0 0 I' CA. t2'» tic. of Mft1n, Ruton & T\ldlff, 401 l'llTITION l'OA r RoeATE 0, WIL.L. TM Fletltlous 8Ullnna ....... "'" Civic Cenlff Orlw Wut, Sont• .....
AND FOii Ll:TTl:llS TESTAMEN· fe<Tld to -wn filed In 0rar191' 0raneeeounty,C11lllornle. TA•Y ANDAUTNORllATION TOAD-Coulltyon~U2.197S. o.tt!ll: July 15, 19n.
M I H I St I! a U H D IE R TH I! WILLIAM N. JOHNSON, IMJ tuwa SIMA CORP.,
INDEli'IEND«NT AOMlNIST•ATION sc .. eosi.NWsa.CA9261' Transferee
Of' ESTA TIS ACT TillU111Sllwu-condlldOClbyA11 In-II'( Wllllam J. Com.II,
Estale ot FREOl!RICIC HATICEN cHvlCIU.C. Pres~
WATERS. DKHMG. Tiiis .. ':".n:n=:::'edwlll\lll C-. st1l"4SM 0.. IWTT, H OUI ltt[ NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that ., llUTU & TUCICI" OOESSA WA Te RS, ..... DESSIE ly Cltttl OI Orenee County Oii Jun$ 2t, 491 0wlcC:.WDflve-.e
WATERS,ll11Sllledllertln11pelltlonfor lt77. folllle.AM,CA'2112
Prot>ei. of Will and tor In~• of Let· "41417 Teh 1714) a~ZJtl l•rs Testlt'Mntarytotl\e PellUonarand Put>ll$11ed Oranoe CoMt Delly Piiot, PlltllllhlO Ora!199 Coen Delly Pilot,
auir-latlon to ..smlnllter lhf .,.,,. July S, 12.19,26, t9n 2111.n ..My2',""
under 11\e l~t Ad.mlnlstratton
of E\lalos AU'~ to Wlllcl! ''1-------------.:.....----------..,"":"'-~ tor~ per11eu1ers. -1"-1 ... rnuc NOTICE PUBUC NOO"ICE ' ll\etlrN...ctpleeeof11HrlnQ1r.s.me ..-~ ...
,... .,.... _.for AUoust t. t917,et 10.001---------------~~--=~---:::------
a.m .• In "" ~oom ot 0.119r1men1 Consotldated Report of Condition of ~~i..!~::~1~~t~ofc~1~,~~~~ INTERNATIONAL TRUST CORPORATION
Celllornt•. Located •t Ntwport le•th,
Oeted JUiy IS, 1"1. Ora1191 COunty • C•llfO"'la '2"2
w1L.uAN11.stJOt4N, B•nk No.10'2 COOl(S~~ .. & ASSETS Court Tnast' Prfv•tit Tnms Combfned
Howuo.1..c. Un ThoUsands of Doll•rs)
maa.mu• .. w...•Nt· cash1ndduefn>n"banks........... ... • ..• 259 259 ~:,111;-~t~. Obllgetlons of States and po> llt1c11 50 A._.,...,., ,..111_ subd1vlslons Cpar value ................. ' 1so 300
Put111tMc1 0ranee coast oe11., PUoe. Bank premises, fuml tu re and fixtures and otfltr
Jui., 1•.10.,., ,..,7 3131·71 assets representing bank premises . . • • . . '
PVBUC NOTICE ther assets. . . . • . • . • . . . • . . . . • • • • . . . . . . . . . 16 ---------TOTAL ASSETS ........................ ,. 1SO 429 · c~ LIA&ILITll!S
..,,. •• ,~couaT~tMa OtherUltbtlltJes ......... · • ·• • ... •• · • ••••· '!~~-::;~~·~::: .. :." Ol'ALLIA81LtTIES ................... .
170 270
170 170 ' ••·•UU CAPlTAL ACCOUNTS
"OttC• OP M«AltlNO OP COmmonstock-t*I parvalut
l'lttTION rott l"ll09A~ 0 , WUA. (Numt:lerst-.raauthorliectS,000) too
60
•9 209
200
60 .. ,
309
519
8 j DAILY PILOI
MARMADUKE
l U!!d!y1 :Mr H , 1 tn
by Br1d Andenon BOOMER
~~u.o, ~60t1S!
by Wm. F. Brown 1nd Mel ~sson
t~ JIJ5f SUN
MY '7€Nl151' -
1W1c~ 1tJ ON~
'IC-Arz !
1-2(,
PEANUTS by Charles M. SChulz
IF ~OO'RE 60ING TO SE PEPfUMINi PATTl('S
WATCH006, l((Xfp 8€TffR
Wf AlON6 A.WEAPON
MISS PEACH by Mell
"No. thanks! This Is one time I'll pass up my
equal rights!"
FUNKY WINKER BEAN
YJ IF c..oJ'RE LOOKIN6 FOR
A NEW CAR C.ctf'£ tJEE U5 !
TANK McNAMARA
MOON MULLINS
I
• I I
o~,Fo~·· You SHOULD START WITH
"Dear Madam~ NOT ''Dear Madman'!
HE~E:,1AADE' PLACES WITH ME ...
GORDO
TODAY'S CIDSSIDBD ·rvZZLI IFGC'P
14ADIJ'l' ME:ANT
FOR Ob
1::> J:AT
SOC?A~-ACROSS 51 ·····food
I Insect e1ke
5 Turning· 52 Ca1d game
Suffix 56 Yuko11's
10 Rhymnte• neighbor
14 Yukon Of 60 Fe~ to
Aln b ehode Include
15 Apply11n 81 Go···· ·•···
ointment: 2 bple1n
words thoroughly
16 F1r'1 pa11ntt 64 Plftlwllr
Yewtetd1y'1 Purzle Solved:
CH E F & IC & D H A p c;
L I n I F A T n P
OfL Aw Rf 1 R.USTY
A t: A IR
15 l E c .• ~ l )
f R A I' '"' EI!' IT U
~fo,Jt,
AA\IE MADE APPL.e1 PVMPKttJ CWFFOJ
rt.O
AICTHIAf' I l "ll11NIC: l'T"§
ielttll!JL' THAT cenAIN crur~~ HAVE 10 LNE
IN n .. e WATS~ I
by Tom Batiuk
BUr I~ 5Pl1E. OF 1HA'f ...
by Jeff Millar and Bill Hinds
by Ferd and Tom Johnson
CAN I
CONSIDER THIS
A PROMOTION,
Mil H,A~T8URN ?
DOOLEY'S WOR LO
OR.SMOCK
~ C.OMf. WE
ilME GOES .SO
FJ.Sr DURING
VACATION,?
f'ROFE.$SOR .
w HeN A G .P.
s w eARS He'i...i... Ne veR M A Ke ANo"T'HeR Hous e CAL-t..., 1,-•5 O N e
THING •..
MOTLEY'S CR~W
:JUS"T' t.OOK Ul' ,
AA6AD IF YOU DOli 1' ~1.1evc ME I!
THAT'S A 6000 IDEA ..
l'U. TAKE ALON6 TM.E
MOST DAN6EROOS WEAPON
EVER DfVISED 8'l MAN !
e u 'T'" W HESN A
SHR IN K SAY S "T"H A I , YOU CAN eei.,1e v e HIM!
by Roger Bradfield
00\l'r -rntY ll:ACH
TttEMNM1flNG 1"1
satOOl »#N-IX/£?
by Templeton and Forman
by Gus Arriola THE GIRLS
17 a .... 1ng 1nlo form
P!9U• 6S Snare
.,.. , ....
I RIO .LY T l N
T " T 1111 //I,
5 H 0 IR T i J Z t. JUDGE PARK.ER
19 Coal r'Hldue 66 V.ole1no of
:?O U S gene-al Europe
21 Mede bell· 67 Rured
l1U sounds 68 8l11ng 1nseets
23 Terminated 69 Obatfved
26 Bom: k . DOWN
27 Spiritu1I
talent
30 Lobe
3' Photo-
grlJ)Mr's
8CCllSIOty
35 Out ol ···••
37 ·-modt
38 Llngu199:
Abbf.
39 llimponam
41 211cwt.
42 Cerd
43 A1cldras ·
'44·F«c•
4$ CoMtct
'7 Type ot dr ..
50 Amount
ritlltd
I Freil thing
2 Tur1uah
general
3 Venetian
blind part
4 Golf club•
S CoulffS e Robot d11me
7 J1p1ntM ......
I Ou1nlltyol
liquor
9 MantuYef
10 Suppontr
11 MAit1rv
criM:Abbf.
12 Gerdener'•
tool
13 Tinted
I" " lllt: t:
Ao• I NS I C
D E y u N !i " t ~ t: 11 U I A
AIM to N ~ 0 N l IT IR t: I
HO w s r:; F S T H 't. 1"11)
18 Goldie Hewn 4' Mikes wiMf
role '6 lene11ed
22 Comes clow 48 Avoids
24 Him i1 up lulfHllng
25 Movtd 49 African river
swiftly 52 Purse itern
'l7 Wea1her· 53 Rom1n god
men's wotd 64 Nesl of
28 For this phe111ants
1111on !55 At 011ce
29 ••·•• food 57 'S11iate
calle 58 Cows, of old
31 l•nguagt 58 ···· Bean·
32 ltngthw!se American
33 G1rmenc 11trOn1ut
36 Starch 62 •• • tee: dffc>IY Perfecc
39 SpouNt 83 OldlMtV
40 AIOOlQ tnd ~ tides·
Abbf.
IVE BEEN ASKING
F!"OR A BICYCL.E R>R
1'W'O MONTHS·-
by Tom K. Ryan
i
.. , ""'' luslamtlftr
PLEASE CONNECT
MS WITH VOUR
SHIPPING
DEPl\RTMENT
"Ob dear.just when I can atop worryina about whit one country
mlaht do, another one •tarts &0mcthina."
DENNIS THE MENACE
..
'
'~ waaay We Go' Again.
Jackie Gk mon Coming Out of 'Retirement'
t'ORT LAUDERDALE, fo1a CAP> Semi
rt•llt t ls over for lbe rotund, 1ravelly voiced
<'umtc ~won his way Into tho annals ol 11tardom
1hrouch '1'h Honeymoonct11 "
All• a veraJ yura out o( tho 11potllaht and re· <'~nl plauc aur•~ry to rebutld druopln1 ey~Uds and
Tonight's TV
Highlights
CBS fl 8:00 T he Retirement
Revolution. The economic. social and
psychological proble m s of r etired people,
whose numbers are steadily increasing,
are examined an this CBS News special.
KHJ 0 8 00 "Pyro " Arson pro-
vides the terror an this 1963 horror flick
with Barry Su Hi van and Martha Hyer.
ABC D 9 ·00 "The Wrecking
Crew." Dean Martin dons his Matt Helm
character for this 1969 adventure movie
with Elke Sommer, Sharon Tate and Nan-
cy Kwan.
TV DAILY LOG
TUESDAY I
EVENING I
6:00 n CD u m et~i News
0 ~ (§) m 1Ui llfts
O Voya1e to tJlt 8ott0111 ol the Su f Gomer Pyle
O Gunsmole m The P1rt11dp fam1lr
CD Niu Smith ' Jonu
( lZl \J )( n (e > News m JourMJ to Adventure
CltJ I l.Alwt Lucy
fD Electric Com111ny m Dn1111hc Stnes
. W Woodumr's Wotbllop
-6:30-
D SOUND Of ANGER * With Burl Ives
D Movie: CC) (90) ''The Sound ol
Anter" (dra) '68-Burl tvu. James
fillenhno, D°'othy Provine. CD News rn m Andy Gti1t1111
<lQJ Merv Griffin Show
(tf1J aJ) My Three Sons
(.Ml Did Vin Dyke Show
fD l.oom
(C2tJ (f)) Bewitche4
el) Ml• Builda, IU11 Otstroys
7:00
(]) £Mr1ency One
CIUanCM
(J) My T1lrtt SOllS
om""' :I> To Ttft t1ie Trvti. ., Colitelltrltiofl
GI I Lowe lucy
Cl)Tht Fii
(@ (J)) f1mlly Aflilr m Mtrican lvael Jttrisll Hour a Mayberry RFD ·m Mac.Nti._Lthr1< Report
(QI) Cl)) The P'artrld1e hmilJ
ell Rul Cstl1e ' You ·
-7:30-IJ C.ndld Camtr1 a LM Amlfic1n Style ()) Tiit Odd Couple
(J) TM Gtftc ~ow u (JD) m Hollywood Squarts
Ill The Ji*er's Wild m ltwitdltd
((11) Cil) llasllYill• on the ll01d
IBJ ttopn's Htl'Ots fD Channel 21 Tonlcht
(fSJ ())) l rHy hnd1 '1!> Pllotoer1,hy: Here's How
8:00 0 RETIREMENT: REWARD * OR REJECTION? CBS
News Spetial Report
looks at every fateU 8 ((fl) (})) CIS lttws Special hll1e ~etuement Revolution" Tiit
inlenstly personal problems assoc1
aled with lhe rapidly txplodine
numbers ol re1111d persons-psycho
lo&icaf. econo1111c and soml are
uamined. • e o (j) m 111J Ba• au Biid SllleJ CR) Pappy laces a court mar
tlal 1ftu he clashes w1lll the newesl
mtmbef ol lhe "black 9/ltep," lhe
lcion of a nch. well connected family
wllo 1ccuses Boy1ncton of slralhne a
marine unit. e llowle: (lllr) "The Cowlloy ""' Ult Litty" (wos) '!>8-Cary Cooprr
(I) Mtflt: CC> (Zhr) "lattle
..,_,. (dra) '57-Rotk Hudson.
• c:1> <II ca ro> Him 0111 Rtlpll sets himself up as a leenaae
bookie but Whlll.fhe odds iO 1plnsl 111111 llld lie loses all his money, 1 b1a
bnllser livts him 2A llouri to P'J up or tis..
CJ) F1tM Aplllll SIMrJ ""' m •II* Cl:)(nr) ""rro" (dra)
1&,1-Bany SulllYtn, Mirtha Hyer ........ a.. ..
•""1*-.... = f.:;, (211r)-ollty ..... ,_., Cn) '59-M1D1t P'er~ns. en.,..,.sac:a
" '*91 It "" -1:30-
• (J) Ill<• CJ)) u... .. 5Mr11r "c.tllfO lltlle" Two MW
1tars 11117 k borlt "'*' a Matthy 1ntrepr111eur •••11 lneu1e ind Siii~ eiftet111 aid ftlb to IPOf*'
tlltlr ctfmS.
atc..4nb • aii.e ~,,..,....
t:.00
" ((17J (])) ... .,.... (J) W'itll
Ille 4q7 7th tO sllort of llloOd !Mt Col
""• uys -0racui. flOll!ldn't ,find • qllkl snack 1round httt, ll1t
SUlllQI t•ins MIHlte • wfdt fllll• or C<l-ta a ~ l&-lio''
Ol*'ltinc.-.. ,... .... I ::'~I ... .,._ I~
1bt inftatlpl• ti I .. W.ppuic 11 • 12.,..,..w ffl _.. t.tw -····-~ ,_ uu ) at ..n;
• .:. c." (Nt~Ote• lf*.•Cie ..... ~ , .... ~k-.... ...
in gold intended to bolster the
811t1sh economy 1s h11ac~ed 1n
Denmark by d C11me 11ng headed by
Count Contini, Matt Helm 1s once
roort called upon to p1evenl an mler-
nat•onaf rala~lrophy m Mtf'f Gnffin Show
(£) Tiie Vifc11uan
fD ()pm Thutrt Jack A Flash
fanlas( Gilda R.idner and Victor
Gdrber are the happy eo lucky Jae~
4nd Jill ol Hearts in this mUSl(al
eaplosoon ol tdrds. nursery rh;m.s
~nd la1ry talu '°' adulls ~ Mulerpiece Theatre
-9:30-
0 ( 11,ci ) One Day at A TI111t
(R) Shne1der 1s on Cloud Nine when
his p11de and fOY, ntphew Harvey,
comes 10 VISll But Ann has ne .. s that
could b11n1 him back lo earth.
10:00
0 (lt1J (lJ) (I) Kojak (R) Mana
Schell guesls as i Yugoslavian prin·
cess involved with iewels and eangs·
leis.
U all (J) Em l8J P'olict Story
(R) "Nightmare on Sunday Morning·
Pot1ce officer Ann Wells and her
partner. Phil Logan capture a pair of
1ap1sl~. but lhe v1c11m·s reluctance lo
filCe her allac~ers m court threatens
to destroy the use
0 O News
I lJ Mme: t C) MDead Man on lht
Run" (dra) ·1s-Peter Grans.
Pernell Roberts fD l'icudtlly Cirelli
ED £1 Biecl Amldo E!1> At tl1t Top
-10:30-m m ED llews
11:00 o 3J u m iu; n1 llfWS U -l1 I {) m llfWS 0 C~ Cl)) l.Alwe American Style 0 Ironside m FtfllWOOd 21111111
CE llbrws Welby
(liTJ (J)) The Ranch Show
(21) lest of Gloucho "'3 LltillO Contortlum ID DraNtlc Seriu ~ MlcHell/Ulnr Report
-11:30-
0 C<m Cil) CJ) Movif: CC) ~Pal
Gurett and Billy the Kid'' (wes)
'73-James l'.oburn. Kris l<nstolfer·
son. Bob Dylan. Jason Robards.
Cl ~[{)ll)11)~ tnJn
(() r.to.ie: "bell Dawn I Die~ (dra)
·39-Jamts Cagney, Georee Raft
fJ ())ft~ c~ ({;) Movie: ·rhe Red lent"
o~ a.1111a
ID Mtlronws ~ The 700 Club
6l> ~tioatd ABC Atn m CtrieN l4
12:00
OTwrll1htZ-
CJ Motlt: "Ctty ef F•r" Cdra) '65-
r erry Moon. Paul Ma•well m w.rld ot Surma!
Cl) Mo.le: "Boll Mlth1u Slory''
(dra) '!>6-Bob Mal111as. Wild Bond
-12:30-
• ~ntt ID Movit: "In Old California" (wu)
'42-John W1yne, Patsy Kelly.
1:00
U Q]) (]) tUl T OlllOfmr
U Movies: "Diamond Quun:·
"The Ceremony," "Everybody's
Danc:1n1"
-1:30-• ,...: "lbn 1114 tllt MoM1t('
(hOt)-EMlque Rarnbal, Martha Rot.h.
2:00
l'J ~ "()ftlr Tw Call P'llJ"
(com) '62-Peler Sellers, Vir11n11 Mlsliel~ Mat Zettfl1111£ D ""6a: "l1ll llM Wiii ....,., w-. .. .,..... CtaM"
-2:30-
• ..._ "t.upt.• "Miss Grlot Ta.,es Rd!llOIMf"
u double cbln, Jackie Cleasori once again la utterln&
··And awwa111ay we 10.''
"Ir you hAve real talent, it Just doesn't d1aap-
1>ear,1' Gleason said In a recent Interview wllb the
Miami Herald.
A Gleason film, "Smokey and the Bandit," has
proved lo be this summer's sleeper. Gleuon, play-
ing a bad·tempered southern lawman, nearly steals
lbe ah.ow from co-star Burt Roynolda.
Gleason started acUng soon after he was or-phaned at ts.
"The night my mother was buried, I had to do
the show al the Follies Theater. I had $1.36 when I
wulked from the stoop where I lived.
··I spent 10 cents coming and going and had two
watnes with apfle butter and cream. I had a nickel when left when got home.
"Thllt is a standing start."
· Kille r Bee Flick Set
New Title
LOS ANGELES (AP)
-A new title for "High
School," the Motown
production for Universal
directed by Martin
Davidson. It will be re-
leased later this year as
"Senior Prom."
llCH.UDl'UOl
IH
"GREASED ll6HTlflN6" l : 1 .. 4:05-5:50
7:45-9:)5
THE YEAR 'S BEST MOVIE
(PG)
FRl.·SAT.-12:00.2:30-5:00.7:»10:00-12 MIDNIGHT
DAIL Y-12:00·2:30-5:00-7:30-10:00
,nwPORT 0 OENTllR, SORRY
• : NO • • • •
.. SUI WAIS'" CN I
•A H IM I
TOO,Ar CPO I
"AHIDOI
TOO PAI .. Cl'OI
Tkf c•tY SHOPPING CENTRE'·
OAAHOE • ~911
f1.\ CITY CENTRE C INEMA'> ...
S.A. "RWY IMANCHHTEll E>U O.G. FAWY ICJ TY OR. EX.I
· '•14n11
SO. COAST PLAZA
J41tl~•ltlfl '4'1111 l•H-
"TH! DHP0 .,.01
OAA. Y-1:30.9:45
IAT/~l:JO.l:40.
l:IM.'810:10
S . COAST LAZA
J41t•a•K. .. H lll lllltt..,.M
''T .. IOICHH" "' ...... ,.1\H "'''*"" ,,.......,_ "FA.MU. Y PLor· ..... ,,.. ......
. COA T PLAZA
J4tt l111ttl II S.I 111 t ffll ro11~'
"ROCKY"' lftGI . ... ,.~
"'''-......... IOtH "HARD TIMES" ,....,_ ...,,.,. • .-1 .......
.. THE DEEP11
lf'GJ
I :JO.J:4C).
5:50-l:OO. I 0: I 0
CINEMALAND-
UltS. ll•IW AUlc•Wlitl 1110-.. ORCA lftGJ
THEWHALE11
ALSO CH~RLfS l ltOHSOH
" • IVES"
LA MtllADA 4 • lAllfWOOD 4 WAU IN IAllOAIN N ICI I t IO
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'"TMf ONI ANO-oNlYr'
VIVA KNllYILI (N I "UI '
ltOCKT tl'Ol
. " DAIL y PILOT B f'. ~ Tuesday, Julx 26, 1977
A different
kind of ...
<
Prouudly Presents
DONNIE BROOKS
TUESDAY-JULY 26
I 0:30 P.M. -OHE SHOW OHL Y
/
,.
.. DAil V PILOT Tunday,Ju!x H.1m .
Mesa·S&L to Be Formed
l"ormalioa of an lndependtnt aavlnft and loan
auoclatJon t.o urve th• Colt• Meta and Newport
ileach area hH been announced by Dou(lu E . Pat-
ty, chairman ol tho board.
Orana• Coast Savlnp and Loan wlll b9 located
in temporary headquarten on Wut Adami Avenue
al Meu Verde. Colla Neaa. A perm anent atructuru
ts planned for the aame addraa.
THE oa.\NGB COAST SAVJNGI' otf1rtn1
etttular wu laluad July e and sale or 1t.ock la under
way. 'n.t off ertna l• for 200,000 aharoa of at.ock to be
.cMd at StO a a.batt. lbua capitalbina the uaoclatlon
at 112.000.000.
Patty aald sale or &be stock la beln• concentrat·
ed in the Colta llleaa area.
<>ranee Cout Saving• wUI be the onJy lndopeo·
dent aavlnp and loan ln Coata Meaa, Patty aald.
Memben or the board or
dtrec:ton lncluda Albert An·
toyan. Dexter Armatrone.
Robert 0 . Brlau. Patty.
Ray E. Prehm, Thomas
£.Sparks and Frank G. Turley.
· Antoyan, Newport Beach. is
the owner of Antoyan En·
t.erprlses and is a partner in
Praser ~s Bell and Crown
RestAurant in Westminster.
AJlMSTRONG, ORANGE, IS BUSIN~ ad-
ministrator for GlasselJ Day Nursery, Orange-
Olive Preschool and Almond Private School,
Orange schools operated by Calvary Temple
Church.
Briggs, Costa Mesa, is the president and prin·
cipal stockholder or Briggs Electric, Inc., an_d is
president and principal stockholder or S. E. Bnggs
& Son. Inc. He is a past director and governor or the
Electrical Contractors Association or Orange Coun·
ty and is a director of the Costa Mesa Sanitary Dis·
trict. Patty, Costa Mesa, is the president or Patty En·
·radio •arr
WIDE AREA
COVERAGE ORANGE CO.-L.A.
'17.10 .:.:r=
NO DEPOSIT ON
APPROVED CREDIT
PAYROU
MEmODHJT
WASHlNGTON<APl
-An Army payroll
system that handles s.1
billion a year in salaries
is so poorly designed that
one clerk could write fie·
titious checks for himself
without detection, a gov-
ernment report says .
The General Account·
ing Office also said the
Army's computers that
generate checks for 68
percent of its civilian
e mployes are pro ·
grammed so badly that
they could issue a
paycheck for $9,999.99
for two weeks ' work.
Thal would be equal to a
salary of about S260.000 a
year.
( T'•KING ) terpriles, loc., and is in· 1~ volved in construction. STOCK real estate development
-------and personal invest· ment.s. He la a founder of
Heritage Ban.t, Anaheim, and ls a member of its
board ol directors.
Prehm, San Juan Capistrano, is president and
prlnclpal atockbolder of Professional Escrow
Services Company and the chairman of the board
and principal •~kholder or Professional Control.
Inc. He la on tbe board of directors of the Escrow
Jnatltute of California and ls first vice president of
that orsanb1Uon.
8PAllKS, NEWPORT BEACH, is a certilied
public accountant and a partner in the firm of
Sparks and Heinly. He is a member or the American
Institute or Certified Public Accountants and the
California Society of Certified Public Accountants.
Turley, Laguna Niguel, ls tbe president and
principal stocltbolder of Frank Turley, Inc. and
Statewide Plastering, Inc. He ls an owner, builder
of apartment units and rental homes in Orange C.ounty. .
/tfariner• Mn• Ll•tlng
· Mariners Financial Corp., owner and operator
of Mariners Savings and Loan Association. head-
quartered in Newport Beach, has been approved for
listing on the American Stock Exchange.
Mariners' ticker symbol is MFC. The company
was previously traded in the national over-Uie-
counter market.
"We believe this listing will provide us with na-
tional visibility and will generate increased in·
vestor intecest in our stock," said Raphael Cha1kan, president. ~
Neu;,port Flrtt1 Get• .Job
The Reynolds Environmental Group, Newport
Beach consulting firm, has been selected by San
Diego County to prepare an ~onomic. operations
and maintenance study on 12 regional and com·
munity parks. •
Goal ot the study is to ptovide the public more
recreation opportunities at less cost and to improve
the over-all cost·effectiveness or Ule county's exist-
ing and future regionaJ and sub·regional park
system.
Oalnook Report• Record
Chinook Mobilodge, Inc .. Newport Beach, has
announced a sales record for June, 1977.
Mini·Motorhome sales totaled 563 class "C"
motorhomes delivered to the· Chinook dealer
network throughout the United States, representing
more than four million dollars in sales. Retail sales
showed a healthy 35 percent increase year to date.
the company said.
Firna Ope11• Newport Of lice
Ebasco Services Inc., an engineering, construe·
tion and consultant firm. has opened an office in
Gateway Plaza, Newport Beach.
Richard A. Donnelly, vice president of Ebasco.
1s in charge of operations, Wilham J . Rom 1s
manager of engineering and projects.
STANDARD-PACIFIC CORP.
MOVES TO THE NEW YORK
STOCK EXCHANGE
$2.04
Standard-Pacific-Corp. moved today, July 26, 1977, from the American
Stock Exchange to the New York Stock Exchange. ·
Standard-Pacific Corp., the geographically diversified builder of
medium priced, single family homes, Is currently active In 30 residential
developments located in Northern and Southern California. the Pacific
Northwest, and Illinois.
Revenues Net Income
Fully Diiuted
Earnings Per Share
'76 $80,517,477 $4,875,238 $2.04
75 $46, 195, 122 s1,ns,oao $ .81
'74 $42,624,439' $1,718,636 $ .69
'73 $39,096,254 $1,255,152 $ .50
'72 $26,545, 784 $ 431,638 $ :.20
The company's 10-year record In the home building field ranks among
the Industry's best.
Among the nation's largest, independent, publicly-owned homebuild-
ing f lrms whose revenues are derived prlmarlly from the construction
and sales of homes, Standard·Paciflc Corp. ranks 9th largest In total
revenues, 6th largest In net Income, 3rd In profit margins, and 1st in
return on e~ulty.
m. STANDARD-PACflC CORP.
Corporate Hem:fquarters
1565 West MacArthur Blvd.
Costa Mesa. California 92626
For a copy of the 1976 Annual Report
and Six-Month Interim Report, write to
Robert St. Lawrence, Vice President of
Finance, 1565 W. M~Arthur BIVd.,
COsta M~. Ca. 92626.
. ....................... .., ......................... ~
Sta 1np of Energg
To promote the development and conserva-
tion of energy, the U.S . Postal Service has
issued these stamp desigs for issuance
later this year. The designs also will be
used on embossed envelopes.
Missile P resented
• • • • •
• • • •
The first production MIM-72C Chaparral mis-
sile has been presented to the U.S. Army by Ford
Aerospace & Communications Corp.
The missile was presented in Texarkana, Tex ..
by Lows F. Heilig, vice president and general
manager of the corporation's Aeronutromc
Division. Newport Beach, prime contractor for the
M IM ·72C Chaparral.
Mail Order Soles
Engine Adds
Glider F11n
KANSASVILLE, Wls. <AP) -When Joh.o
Moody jogs, he often ends up f mile above tbe
ground.
Moody walks out his back door. straps hh:meH
int.o his SO-pound motorized bang glider, turns it on
and nms across the yard, about the length of a ten·
niacou.rt.
THE WHOLE THING TAKES A few seconds,
and his "motor scooter of tbe skies,•• Js airbome.
His tennis sboe3, or "landing gear,·• dnngle for a
moment before be pulls them up.
. "It's just a ball," sa~ Moody, 34, a former
electrical engineer who designed the powered bang
glider after becoming frustrated by the ?4ldweat'a
lack of big hills and open spaces for soaring.
Moody sells the powered glider in $1,500 kits bf
mail order. •'The concept is not new." be says. ''Some peo.
ple think I'm crazy. but this is one of the most stable
and most forgiving and easiest to fly airplanes in
the world."
ITS SO E~Y TO FLY, he .says, that bis
customers don't need pilot training. Not even
ground school.
The Federal Aviation Administration bas ruled
that the motorized hang gliders are not airplanes
and that neither machines nor pilots need to be
licensed, registered. certified or inspected.
Moody, who says be bas sold several dozen kit.s
domestically and in Europe, Australia and South
America. says he uses a standard 12.S horsepower,
2-cycJe go.kart engine to crank the tiny propeller
behind the pilot's head.
"IT'S NOISY," HE SAYS, "but when you get up·
you turn it off and just ride the currents."
Moody , who has taken his glider up to 8,000 feet,
chortles at stories of how non-powered pilots drive
long distances to steep cliffs and spend hours drag-
ging gliders uphill for 15-second flights.
"When I start getting too low, I just kick the
motor back on and up l go again." he says.
Moody says his powered glider not ooJy allows
flying from flat ground, but also makes it easier and
saterforthe beginner.
Over The Counter
NASO LI stings
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Ul'ICMl\Otd •• ·'· •• Totall-...•.••• ~::~:: .. :::·::·:::::::::.
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~ 1~ uded. Net ...., Pttcttrt~ c~rw,ies a,.. U.
16,'t ,,.,.. dltterenc.e t>e!Men the previous cl05lng
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MUTUAL FUNDS
Tueeday'
Clo ioR Price1 NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
OU.tell-llllNdit ,, .. ,., UW .... Yot-, Mldww1I, ll•dflc, llBW, loalOfl, 0.11'9ft •M Cl11cl11Mll 1t0<-t~t ,,,..-"" h the N•llon•l Anocl•tleftof $Kurlll•• O.•i.. •lld l11•llnel
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lueeday, July 28, t977 DAILY PILOT •z
Deadly Image
New Name ro Add Li/e?
By MILTON MOSKOWITZ
When the atockbolders or International Fuoer•l
services gather ln Denver on Aug. 12 for their annual meet-
lnl, they will vote on cb&ftling the name of the compat)Y &o
IFS Industries.
There' a not a sclnWla of doubt that the change will be
approved. It's a manaaement proposal -and 1n U.S. bul·
ness a management proposal b.u as much chance of losing
aa Leonid Bruhnev bas of belng unseated aa leader of the
Soviet Union.
WHEN A COMPANY CHANGES ITS name, it usually
reflects a diversification that has r endered the original
name obsolete or inappropriate. With International Fuoera l
Services that's not the Ca$e -yet. The comp~y derives 90
percent of it.a revenues and 93 percent of it1 pront.s from tak·
tng care of people after they have died.
IFS, headquartered In Des Moines, owns 98 funeral
homes and 16 cemeteries. That makes lt one of the largest
factors in this "industry," and l1 sot there by acquiring
local operations around the country. Even in the funeral
b•iness, the ·'chain
store" is a way or life
(or death).
IFS began buying
funeral homes in 1968
and cemeteries in 1971.
Result: IFS sales leaped
from $2 milUon to $37
million.
Money
Tree
The original names of mortuaries and cemeteries have
been retained. So you may have an IFS entity ln your town
without even knowing it. In Jacksonville. Fla .. the IFS
cemetery is the Chapel Hills Memory Gardens. In San An·
tonio, IFS operates Roy Akers Funeral Chapels. In Forest
Hills, New Yprk, it's the Schwartz Brothers Memorial
Cbapels.
THE COMPANY'S LARGEST CEME TERY is
Greenwood Memorial Park in San Diego. There it has built
the Bible Mausoleum, which contains 23,000 crypts and is
being expanded to a capacity of 50,000. IFS proudly
described this edifice in its annual report as follows:
"The mausoleum , part or which is four stories high, will
cover 21h acres when completed. It contains enough steel re-
inforcing bars to stretch from San Die10 to AUanta.
Georgia, if laid end to end; eoough concrete to construct 2S
miles or two-lane highway; and the corridors or the slrUc·
lure total more than two miles in length. Marble facing in
the structure, if Jajd nat. would cover more than five
acres:"
With such impressive achfevements. why is Interna-
tional Funeral Services becoming IFS Industries?
FOR ONE TIDNG, PROFITS HAVE not been great. In
1972, when the company's sales were 40 percent lower than
they are· today, IFS earned $1.5 million. roughly what it's
earning now. For another thing, there seems to be little in-
terest in the company's stock, which was recently selling on
the American Stock Exchange for the ~retched price of
S2.25 a share.
IFS Industries will thus signal that the company Is
eager to get lnto businesses other than burying and cremat-
ing bodies. It already bas one such bwiiness. Dried Whey
Inc .• an Iowa company that sells dried whey. Next month it
will resume negotiations to acquire another Iowa firm, Van
DiestSupply Company.
First. though, it bas to knock "funeral" out of its name.
The association bas been deadly. After Aug. 12 contact IFS
Industries in Des Moines if you're interested in selling them
a company -or buying a cemetery or funeral home .
Market Hits Slump
2nd Straight Day
NEw YORK (AP) -The stock market, depressed by
ren=w concern over the economic outlook, posted its sec broad I ln a row today.
sts s~ traders were edgy over projections that
Ute ecdbomic growth rate might slow later this year and in
1978.
The Dow Jones index or 30 stocks lost 6.06 poinL'I to
908,18. I
NEW YO"K lAPJ· S•ln, • p.m. prkt arid Mt thal\Qe o1 tM ten "'°'l .ell.,,. ,.,...,,<.,. Stock e11c1111n99 Issues.
lredlno natloNllv •t moo 111•11 SI NelS<M\ L8. .. ll0,000 •''> ~ MouOllM . • . tS.«lO )l''t • .,.
RelGrp w1 .. . 7',toO l'I• ....
Net Pal~I.. 61,IOO '"' + V1 Colt!N!I . • • . Sl-'00 ,., .. -·~
Husky 011. .••• Sl,000 ll'I> -1.11 IC•wente lt1.. SO.too M + ~
Cut11ln •. . . 46,000 311'11 -\lo
Tosl•r Cp.... IS • .00 ''"' -''• Ae-11nCI A.. •,ooo ,, ... + 111
Advar>e~ OtCllntd UftCl\enQrd Tol1l I...,.,
Ntw 1~11 "'Ol>s New 1'17 low•
NEW YORK CAP) ·NV Slocll a.I~ APOM)J< flnll .................... 21,3'0.000 PN'vlOUI 0.Y ....•.•.•.•......•. 20.00.000 week aoo , ...................... l t, M.000 ~Ill ave»~... .. . . .. . . . . .. . . . 21,610,000 v .. r ego ....................... u,ns.110 Two YHf'I aQO .......... • •••••• '9 ..... no J•n 1 10 dlt• ............... 1.ou,1.0,000 1'76 to csa1e . ... .. .• . . .. >.~1.on,"3 t•1s to dale . .. . . ... 2.•7S.~,010
WHAT AMIE )( DIO
NEW YORI( CAP! ""'" TOCS.y CS.y
Adv~td Oecllned Ull<l\aft09d Total lssun
711 290 3111 lS7 712 :1116
-9lJ ___ IJ_p_•_a_n_d_D_o_..,-n-.---1 ~:: m~ r~ 71 l9
11 '
''
lltl. Up 11,7 Up 1U Up 11.1 Up Kl.O Up t.1 Up 7.J Up U Ult 6.7 ~ ti Up S2 UP $.I ~ S.I ~ t.l
VII •l Ull •.S Ull 4,3 u. •.a
AMEil SALES
APIWO• llNl total . . . • • .. • • .. .. • 2,&S0.000 Stoo .... " YMr... ... • • !,Ml.SSS •PO<Cl'C 111\el "°"II • . . .... . .. •• Sl,l00,000 aoncr Ula YHf' 990 •..••.•••••• \1,116,000
St~lu In Tlte
Spotllglat
NEW VOfll( (API• k!H. t pm 11'1<• •!WI 191 ~ of 1119 t111Mn most .ctlw Ntw Yori< $10<11 •llCNnoe ls-S. tr~llll llM'-llY et tnOf't 111111 SI Occldell "-t. .. S7'.600 U 't -" GlllfW'stll • • .. .. IOt, 100 tt -... Eu[ ... ...... w·• JI~ -'o INC 1,.ICI •• ,..... 1 .700 12~ -llo
"''' """" ... .. ' .tqel "'"' + •• Tllnff IN,.,.,,. • ,toO ts"' -~
HOn4eMot ...... 202,700 21 ... -'· Col\l T•.......... "°·'°' 17\'t + l<t Art.n IUty. ....... '9,.300 4t,1; + \o> Otft Molen... • 111.soe 61 ---. US StMI.......... i .. ,SOO 37\'t -'• 'fewaco IM...... "7,000 tt~ -l/'t Oow OI... . .... U7.= 1t ..... Col11m Pl<t.. • , 1f7, 16\'t .. lh Mas. P.t......... 14t, ,.v, -v.
..
-·DAILY PILOT Tuetdey, July 2e, 1917
..
,L./ATIONAL OlL
CO~P~~y
ouf
on a
.s//ck,
/eoVe
· U.S,. Jobs Open by Thous~nds
WASHINGTON (AP> Look:' ( J a clue as to which occupations
lnt for a job? The government r -" DE"E"'RS are ln demand in various com· uya thousands of them a re ~~. muo.ities.
available, part..acularly ti you're a
aecrelary or clerk, waiter or Waiters and waitres ses are w~bor Department'& Job connecting 150 job bank offices most in demand this month" of·
Bank OuJlettn for July shows acroes the country and will be • ficials said, wlth.14,925 full-bme
382,000 o~nlnp in 142 high· made available at most local openings llated. ~mend occupaUona across the employmentofficea.
country They noted that some jobs list·
OFPICIALS 8A.ID THE hst 1s ed may pot still be avaJJable, but
compiled throu1h compute rs s aid the publication does provide
a ow-.......
jtJStpic
MATERIAL HANDLERS were
second at 12,MS jobs. followed by
secretaries, 11,512. and general
office clerks, 10,000.
Otber occupations listed as
mos t in demand i nclude
automobil e m e chani c ,
carpenter. cbarworker· porter.
clerlr·typist, kitchen helper.
nurse-orderly . •jnsurance
salesperson aod sect.1rity gua('d.
Area:! of ihe country listed with
a SO percent or more lncrease in
Jobs available were N e w
Hampabire, Fort Lauderdale.
Fla.; Utica-Rome, N.Y., and
Akron, Ohio.
Any low-tar cigarette will give you a low-tar number. -~Ciiii
But there's something else that yoil should consider. We f.;} ~~.
citll it "filter feedback:' l ~ . .
As You Smoke, tar builds up on the I ,; ~-~mem
tip of your cigarette filter. That's "filter
feedback:' Ordinary .flush-tipped filters put that tar build-.
up flat against your lips.
And thats where low-tar Parliament has the ad-
vantage. Parliament's filter is recessed to ·keep tar buildup·
from touching your~ lips. So there's no "filter feedback~'
All you get is that srriooth Parliament taste. 11
1
• • \
NEWBIKrll
FOR A111EIS1S
AUSTIN. Tex. <AP)
Madalyn Murray O'Hair is about
to open a new American Atheist
Center, claiming "things are go-m. so well that ii I weren't an
atbeiat. I might even say. 'Goel is with us."'
She said the election of .. born
again" Baptist Jimmy Carter as
president helped spur the growth
ol her organizations -American
Atheists and the Society of
Separatlonlsts.
er.
IO mg.
~
12mg.
lOO's
.·
'
-----~-· -·-~-
.. •
. ' ~
Friend lndee~ f'o Vietnamese Need
By CtlE1tVl. llOMO
Of II• o.11, ll'ilM lt.,I
Am d1 dy mean.K, ·' l hav• lo 10 to lhe bathroom.
It Wll3 lhc-(Int V1ctn11m•c Cl(pr Ion learned by a 34·year:
old, m1n-d l"becitu"c I don't work for money,") elementary
11t•hoot le cher by lht' n11me of Judy Gielow
T~·o )cars ~il" 'ht• w.aa one of iht.i volunteers who lau1ht
children. bc-1mnw.: with l .. 1mp fo'1 YC School, In C1&mp Pendleton.
Am dJ dy
Little words for the little war refugee» who came lo this coun-
try ft•ehn1e .done. rnuhtened and deprived of even lhe di&nily of
knowu\11 lhc langua~c an the plucc thtiy now culled home.
SttUnJ' in a lJ\ 1ng room half filled w1tb boxes containin1
children s )tamei. und hcr olde•t son, Ted, busily ndJn1 his toy
fire engine -Judy Gielow 1s a warm &Dd articulate yount
woman.
Stuffing newi.pa~rs into a plastic bag, sh• says wllh a shrug,
'We rt.'<'yde ever)' thing·• and reflects on the current status of the
\'1ctnamcsc 1mm1grants
· They '\~ adJustcd quite well except for the heartbreak of
being so far from thl'ir homes and friends
.. ITS HARD for the older ones and it's hard seeing your
children taking on ways of life so different from yours. They're a
proud peopll', dnd, in the Vietnamese trad1t1on, the father Is king
of the household.
· "If he doesn't speak English and has to hav~ his kids translate for him it's upsetting "
She add!. that many of the original sponsors have drifted
away from the families and she stresses many of these people are
lost without a "loving contact "
She first became mvol ved with lhe plight of these people as a
'olunteer babysitter during the baby lifts, and was then recruited
by the Red Cross as a volunteer teacher.
She eventually became assistant director of the camp school
with 1,200 pupils.
But Judy Gielow has not deserted her Vietnamese friends. In
D reams Come
True for Teen
By MARCIA FORSBERG OllM Oatlt Piiot Sl•ll
When Christy Moller was a lit-
tle gicl, she wante~ to be two
things -a teenager and a prin·
cess. r
At 17, she 1s a healthy, active.
typical teen, hanging up the
clothes she has left draped over a
chair and straightening her elec·
tric curlers during an interview.
As for the princess part, she
has her crown. Christy Moller ,
the pride of Jonesboro. Ark .. was
chosen as America's Junior Miss
on national television in May.
In Los Angeles for interviews
and vis its to some or the
pageant's sponsoring companies,
the young spokeswoman for the
class or '77 talked about what jt
means to her to be the country's
Junior Miss. or the 25,000 participating
seniors. she got to know ·49 of
them at the pageant. which was
held in Mobile. "They are all
such outstanding girls," said
Christy.
After winning the title, "It hit
tne. I thought, 'Oh, no, I'm not
ready for this job.• Now I know U 's
up to me to try to tell everyone
wbal the girls are lite, and to
represent them.
QUIT" a
all-American pretty. tall and
slender, with honey blond hair
cau ght back with a simple
tortoise shell rectangular bar-
rette.
The women are judged on the
basis of scholarship. physical fit-
ness, poise and creative talent.
fact, she says many ol the Vietnamese customs and tradllions re·
mlnd be,r of the way she was raised in conservative New England.
Judy, her husband Tom and their own children have sh&N!d
their Costa Mesa home with refugees off and on since the closing
of the camp al Pendleton. ·
The garage or the small, three bedroom home is generally un·
usable because it serves as a storage place for donated furniture
on its way to a Vietnamese family.
THE CHILDREN'S ROOM Is crammed with four beds
because the two Gielow boys often have Vietnamese roommates1 but, she says, if necessary, "I think we can squeeze another bea
in here."
Mrs. Gielow grows her own vegetables in a backyard
crowded with playground equipment and says it's important for
these victims of the war to spend time with American families
and to see American customs.
Her most r~ent guests were from the famil'l of Mr. and Mrs. Huu. ("Their last name is really Mai; but the Vietnamese custom
1s to use the first name," she says. "They call me Mrs. Judy.")
The Huu's have 11 children and live in a two bedroom apart·
ment in Los Angeles to be close to Mrs. Huu's sister.
The two oldest children's parents were killed in the war, and,
says Mrs. Gielow, "Mr. Huu just sort of adopted them."
Mrs. Huu. al 45, is dying of cancer. She's been released from
a hospital where doctors removed her stomach. She has six
months to a year to Ii ve.
"Five of the little girls haven't even started school yet." says
Mrs . Gielow, who met the family at Pendleton two years a~o.
Huu is attempting to support the large family by domg odd
jobs with his oldest son. He says he was drafted during his first
year of college and served in the So uth Vietnamese Army as a
major prior lo coming to the United States.
The family also is receiving some welfare support says Mrs.
Gielow.
"WHEN WE FIRST found out their sponsor had deserted
'~~.::...:;
Junior Miss Christy Moller
I
.!.
them, all they had in the house was a rented sew Inc machine u4 .
a crib foe the baby.
"They had no food and were sleeping on the noor. 11
Together with friends. she appealed to her church membe~
for help. "We tried to motivate people -and by Christmas_ we al
leastgotthefam.ilyofflhe fioor.11 • •
But Judy Gielow makes it clear she isn't doing anyfbin1 11~
doesn't want to. The Huus are her friends.
Part or the Huu family spent the Fourth of July holiday in her
home and the youngsters decorated bicycles and participated in
the Mariner Park Bike Parade of which Mrs. Gielow was
chairman.
She adds how proud Huu looked when youn1 Cong and Tuy
were awarded prizes in the contest.
"The kids are learning to overcome their rear of loud noises
(a common problem experienced by war victims> and enjoy
watchingtelevisaon. Especially 'Happy Days' and wrestling."
She thinks they like these programs "because the good guy
always wins.
"It's neat having them here. Once you get past the language
and cultural problems-they're just kids."
BUT THE HUUS are not the only family Mrs. Gielow is in·
volved with. There are others like the 19·year-old Vietnamese girl
she helped rind a job and who is getting married soon.
And then there's the ramily or Vietnamese in Garden Grove
sponsored by her church, and all the others who still need
someone to help them get on their reet.
Then there's Judy Gielow who just can't seem to find the lime
to finish fixing up the house or to make slipcovers for her worn
chairs.
And then once again, there's the retired 34·year-old teacher
expressing her concern for lhc future of the Huu family and say-
ing, if worse came to worse ...
"It's not unknown in our family to raise someone else's child.
But the Huus are such a close family, I'd like to see them stay
together.''
Just add a little more water to the soup.
Members of the Huu and Gielow
families gather for a
holiday. From left, Thanh,
10; Cong, 13; Tim, 7; Ted, 5;
Judy Gielow, ToHang, 12,
and Tuy, 9
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
T.....,'Y,JU126, 11177 C1
Re tlil rn Home
Exh.·ilarating
NEW YORK (AP> -Mary Hemingway has no tears to shed
for the Cuban home she once shared with Ernest Hemingway.
"I didn't feel sad. Wh at lhe hell, why should I? I had a very
good 17 years there," she said In an lnterview here after return·
iog from a visit to Cuba AS the guest ol Fidel Castro.
Mrs. Hemingway was in Cuba ror research and a remem-
brance of her late husband for an MGM film, "Hemingway.''
She was impressed by Castro's durability. t
"I have to tell you, the first thing I said to Fidel was, 'You ha-ven't changed at all.·
"He doesn't have the stomach Ernest had, but otherwise he
looks so much like Ernest-the beard, the way bis head sits on his
shoulders, the height. Fidel is just the type of man who appeals to
me," she said.
''He was very gracious. He said the Cubans would help in any
way they could to make the picture," Mrs. Hemingway added.
Mrs. Hemingway said she and Castro swapped recipes ror
seafood dishes, he offering a way to prepare lobster and sheorter-
ing a way to serve raw fish.
"He had just come in from snorkeling and spearing fish
which ls what started this all oft, 11 Mrs. Hemingway said.
"He told me to take fish heads, bones, t.alls and othet dis-
regarded bits ot fi sh and make what the French call a court
bouillon. Then cook lobster ln lt. lt makes tbe dish much richer
much tastier. '
"So then I told him my sevtche sei:ret." Seviche is a South
American way of preparing raw fish so lt doesn't tute ra'1r.
"As {Of seViche, the great secret ii.not to slice the Ume until
you're ready to squeeze it. Don't put tbe lhoe juice ln a jar. The
action of the air bas some sort of chemical effect. Just squeeze
the juice on and five minutes after you do, the flab is 'cooked.•
# Sbe and Castro talked about s1*t9. "~says Cuba would like to play the Nn York Yankees at
baseball 'because we think,... can beat them •• ,.
Mrs. Hemingway, who now divides her tim& between New
York ldd Idaho, said she foUDd it ''exhHaraUns" to visit the
Island .mere sbe spent mott ol her marrifd lite with the famous author. .
Asked why she went back after hutnc said for ye us that she
nevet would. 1he replied:
"First, of coune, tliere wu the picture. Tlien tbey kept lnvlt-
inl me. When we cot there, the rwstottbe pt0ple1t.,ed ln a hotel
but I wu a state auest. They put me ln a sueet house iA what u.aed to be the country clubdlstrict-e veryrlcti p~of Havana ...
What hathne done to the Havana that wu tbe ••mbUnc spot
Of tbt rich wben Hemlnfwaypu al.Ive? •
Mn. a.n.mpa, r.portitd tb.at the 1treett are cleaner and
the ~e 1oC* w.U-led.
And thi Oldlfemlnrway hoUst ln CoJlmar, near Hanna!
''It's in w~M ocrilh6iDI Hit• .. wt;tt. NOt>tin1iebtray outof~1ce,"•M1DI.
·•Md I'd i.n JOtl, lbis;TiOof MiUolineliahd.
"I'm hnPl"•••d Md '°"'"i•aa bM ll:'OW'ft. When ... 1-.thecblet&Mna.jjMI *MliliM~wWdslsona hill, waa tJaitdomeotilMtNa~~·
"NeW t•a 11Ui'M1h·rlMI -,...,... WI~~ JOU ~~~1 ... -<'7" 1la1Dtll.''
r
... ~---
'fQ DAIL V PILOl Tu•.O•x. July 2ti. 1c11
Odds Against a 'Sure' Bet (Ann Landers ~
DEAR ANN l..ANOERS. You
are auppoHd to be a am.rt
cookie. Can you fl1urt U\la out? I
bet my wil• $10 yuu'd nunk Jwsl
uwedid
tor of his own learning M&Jor
emphasis Is on cross-araded,
mulU·ethnlc learnlnc with the
maln objecUve bejnc to learn
reapect (oc the uniqueness of a
p~raon."
oeeda to learn a.ow to express
hlmseU In simple terms.
The parent of a HoUltotl hlth
1ebool pupil received a mes11a•
from the 1cbool principal con-enlnt a 1pecla1 mMllnte on a
poaed new educatioo&al pro
am.
The parent responded: '·Dear
Prtnclpal: 1 have a college
dearee, speak two fore ign
lanauages and know four lndlan
dialects. I've attended a number
of county fairs and three goat
ropings but I haven't the faintest
Idea WI to what the hell you are
talking about."
What be meana la: '"We are
plaanln1 a program fol' studeeta
of all races whlcb we hope wW
encourage tbe brl&hl.er oaes to
move ahead at their own speed.
Grading will be geared to th~
learning level or the student. ln
th11 way we hope to teach and
grade each student according to
bla abllUy to learn."' P .S. Pay
your wife the $10. Or better yet •
send It to your local Heart As·
soclaUon.
Tb• meHllO read. "Our
Hbool'• cro11-1raded, mulll-
.chAlc, individualized learnin~
fr'Ofram la dealaned lO enhanco
\he concept or an openended llarniftl proiram with emphula
on • continuum or multi-ethnic,
academically enriched learnin1. uslnC the ldenWled lntellectually
&i(ted child as the agent or din~c-
OK, Ann, do YOU know what
the principal was trying lo say? DEAR ANN LANDERS :
Gala
Funds
Clinic
Chapman College's
Commuoity Clinic will
benefit Crom proceeds
raised by The
Fashionables, a s upport
group, at the 10th an-
niversary party' at Buf-
fums, Fashion Island.
The invitational gala
will begin al 7 p.m.
Wednesday, Aug. 10, and
will include a buffet din-
ner.
Also on the bill of fare
will be a social hour
which will feature music
by the Sunshine Express
and the Frank Lester
Trio, magic acts by the
Hollywood Magic Castle,
a fashion showing, dem-
onstrations on how to
string tennis rackets by
expert Earl Opie, and on
closed·circuit television,
the showing· of the Long
Beach Grand Prix.
The clinic offers a
range of services includ·
ing ·the International
Reading and Learning
Center, a Child Study
Center and a Speech and
Hearing clinic.
Chairing the benefit
and The Fashionables is
Mrs. William Mead.
TWO DUMMIES IN FORT
WORTH
DEAR FRIENDS: I doo'& think
you are dummies. Thal prloclpal
Amidst your pile of kooky letters
this isn't going to sound like
much but it's a complaint I've
heard trom other secretaries, so
Hostesses, the Mmes. Jack H.
de Kruif (left) and Helen
Clifford await celebration.
..
Gemini: Anplyze Reasons
WEDNESDAY, JULY 27
By SYDNEY OMA RR
ARIES <March 21 ·
April 19): Accent com-
munication. Put point
across. Be positive so
others know your mean-
ing -and that you are
correcUy quoted. Being
headstrong now could
cost a "pretty penny."
Changes occur and you
doubt benefits.
T AURUS (April 20-
M ay 20): Investment
which beautifies sur-
roundings is good -
don't fret because friend
or relative attempts to
belittle your efforts.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20): Analyze reasons -
take nothing for granted.
One who cares for you
wants some "evidence"
that feeling is r e-
ciprocated. Reject
superficiality -dig deep
and you could strike pay
dirt.
CANCER (June 21 ·
July 22): Cycle moves up
as day progresses. You
get rid of some secret
fears, doubts. Clan-
destine meeting proves
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
You have greater
freedom. You could be
called UPOn to finish as-s ignment begun by
someone else. Travel
might be involved. Keep
communication lines
open.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.
22): Make new start in
new direction. Be in-
d e pendent, a self-
sta rter , original,
creative -and unafraid
to love. Message will
become crystal-clear!
Accent on money ob-
tained from property.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct.
22): Idea can be de·
veloped into something
solid, valuable. Don 't
sell yourself short. In-
dividual who teaches
asks your opinion.
Morale soars.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23·
Nov. 21): Element of
luck, timing rides by
your side. You can have
fun and make money.
too. Know it and relax.
Means get rid of tension.
Social affair could pro-
duce valuable allies.
You realize that your
own style, methods are
identifiable. You hear
sound of your own voice.
You're unique.
CAPRICORN <Dec.
22-Jan. 19): Situation is
more favorable than
might be imagined. Cy-
cle is hlgb -gel going,
be direct, independent,
trust Intuition.
AQUARI US (Jan.
20-Feb. 18): Friend vis-
its, imparts information
of value. Spotlight on
area of chart featuring
desire and how to ful!Ul
it.. Arliustment will occur
within family.
PISCES (Feb . 19·
March 20): What seemed
a lost cause is revived.
New hope on horizon.
Key now is to define
goals, make terms
crystal·clear, get rid of
superfluous material, be
willing to streamline and
to race facts as they ex-
ist.
S H 0 P
ANNUAL
• that your worries were i for nothing.
SAGITJ'ARIUS (Nov.
22-Dec. 21): Element of
excitement prevails. 200/o OFF . .. ~
At 8ff'J ege you can •m t!)a 5eCfetS that
hlNe made the P~ girls WQdd ftnious for
over 50 ye~. In Ju•t • few shon Weeks,
belutlful things c.en h~ to you. Call or
come in today for a compflmtntary enalysis
Ei progrem dlscuulon . .......... -~ ..
DECORATING
SALE!
..
Ut Ut help you crtltl t more
btautllul lloma. 0Uf' tralntd decwatort Harell our ftbl'lo
•nd cl .. 19ft llbftry to not only *'v• your tlmt but to l)fftf the wrf l>tfl colOI' anct /•brJG CO• ordlthtlone. T1'11 • I• no addllfon~I chart• far 11111 ""''°" )'OU P•Y only tor Ill• flltfOlllndltt )'OU ltltet.
it isn't just myself I am writing
for.
1 work for a firm of busy
lawyers . One of my
responsibiUUes is to handle
the phones. When I tell Mr.
Hossenfefler that Mr. A is talk·
ing on a.not.her line, you wouldn't
believe how many limes I'm
asked, "Can rou tell me how long
he will talk?' Most ot the people who call
here are not yokels, Ann. They
are business executives and
other attorneys. Sometimes t get
so irritated I want to scream,
"How in the world do I know?"
secretary can usually gau1e the
Importance of the caller (lo her
boH) compared wlUl Ute penoa
he•s &alldq to. U tbe caller la
more l.mponant, sbe could say.
"I'll alJp M.r. X a note teum, lllm
you are oo the line and be will
eltlaer coaclude this call or get
back to yoa shortly... She caa
then let ber bosa decide what be
wantatodo.
He?: Don't bet the rent. There
is no evidence that a wedding
band will serve as a tourniquet to
st.op a man's circulation. II he's
running around during the
courtship he'll probably conUnue
to run after marriage.
Goins to a wedding? Giving
one? Or standing one? Even if
· you 're already married Ann Lan·
ders completely new "'The
Bride's Guide" will anawerques-
tions about today's weddings.
For a copy, send a dollar b~
plus a long, self-addFessed,
s tamped envelope (24 cents
postage) lo Ann Landers. P .O.
Box 11995, Chicago. Ill. 60611.
Can you suggest a dignified
response to this absolutely cruy
question? -ERNESTINE
DEAR ERN: A competent
If it's a run·ol·tbe-mW call, tbe
secretary should aay. "'I really
don•t know. Pleue leave your
number and I'll ask Mr. X to re-turn your call.,.
CONFIDENTIAL to He
Promises To Change. But Will
No Kidding
Road to Insanity
AT ·
WIT'S
END
By ERMA BOMBECK
Every year, there is a chlldless writer who
will set down suggestions on how to travel with
children and have a wonderful time.
They paint a picture of serenity . . . the
children's little noses pressed to the windows
waving to cows, Mother pointing out national
monume.nts, and Daddy leading the entire group
in a moving rendition of "You'll Never Walk
Alone."
The latest article to come across my desk is
one of the best yet.
"Put pillows, snacks, a change of clothes and
some of the children's favorite toys inside the car
where they can be easily reached.
"Plan for rest stops about every two hours
and if possible take a brier walk on these stops.
''Once back on the ~oad talk about what they
saw and did during each stop.
"Use your imagination for other kinds of en-
tertainment. Play guessing games and sing
songs."
Doesn't that make you want to go rlgbt out
and buy a child for your next trip?
Well, friends, you're not talking to an
amateur today. I have traveled with children for
the last~ years, been to three rest homes, five
CALENDAR-
WORKSHOP: Social alternatives to the
typie!al bar scene for singles will be explored at
an all-day wor kshop, ~ponsored by Coastline
Community College.
The session will begin at 10 a .m. Saturday,
Aug . 6 , at a Newport Beach hotel. Pre-
registration is required by July 29.
Lecturer Norm Rockmael will present
techniques· in developing a positive self-image,
initiating cor. .. ersations and keeping them flow·
ing, body language and dealing with m anipula-
tion.
encounter groups, written 15 letters to Dale
Evans asking for spiritual guidance, and was in
analysis two years after I once admitted to aban-
doning a 10.year-old in a roadside gift shop. I
have a few suggestions of my own.
The r.mow is a great idea. The first one who
whines, 'Make him stop looking at me," gets it
-rlght over the lace.
As for commercial games and toys, forget
'em. Children usually like to make up their own.
There's "Name That Thud." With her bead
turned toward the no-draft, Mom bas lo guess
what is making Robbie cry out to pain. There's
"Window Roulette" where all the bodies in the
back seat are airborne trying lo get a seat by the
two windows. Other cars will often slow down to
watch this one.
·1 personally like ''Statue," a take-off on the
old summer game where Mom reaches over the
back seat, gives each a thump and no matter
what position they land in, they must remain that
way for the next200 miles.
If yoo encourage a child to share with you bis
observations of the last pit stop, be prepared to
hear language from a restroom wall that will
make your radiator boil over.
Throughout the years I have discovend
there is only one way to thoroughly enjoy your
travels with children. When you're over-kidsed.
travel under sedation.
IAST o.op
'' •h .. Vi s.urchlno for new or ... perlanced 11111n1 for film~ TV, st•o• & commerdars. CAlltf'ltton:
AOVERSISIHG AGENCIES/ PRODUCERS. We are an e.cellent tour<e of lalenl for you. I
(714) 957-0282
WYER c:.--.o.1r .......... -·---GUAUMTEIO FUS ALL•• .. ••••• _ ..... QH.
AL&. t t .. , --UH. -""• ---. AM.•""-t_A.._ -a-... JAMES PATRICK
CUNNINGHAM
I Ut7.S. c-.t Hwy.
L .... IHcll ....... , ........
4f7-1702
=I ·t ->) ·>) ·»·>) ·t ·» ·» ·» ·)) ·» ·» ·» • • • ... .. ~~~· .. • .. • • • • • .~
~et
~~
• • • • • •· • ..
n:t:J""11,Yt;) • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ..
,..
CLEARANCE
Up to Y20ff
Swim Suits
Blouses
Sweaters ...
Pantsuits
Accessories
Designer Gowns
Afternoon Dresses
~
~ ~ ...
~ ~
~ ~
~~ ~ • • M ~ •• ~ .. • • • .. • • .. • • • • • • • • • • • • •
.
Musician Faces Ouster Refugee
Clarinetiat, Landlords Battle Over Club ·Hassle
Eruls • f"N• 4P Obpatthe•
ciartn~lt1t P P09atala'1 landlord• aare lry \na lo met b.1m frOm h.1s Bourbon trttt nJ1hl club
in a dlapul• over hJ1 raUurc to puy th *3.250 mon·
tMy not~ O.Cembtrr
In a eo~ utt. founl111n ch•lmit the ownens
didn't \eoep tbelr part <ii Ole 1ea&e t'ouotam con
tcnda the owners Chrle. Napoli and lnternaUonal
Property lhn•Jement Inc , failed to repulr the
building'• roof u they had a.cre~d to do
Fountain claims lhC! ownert reduced the value
of his ltase by renting proJ>ftrt y next door to .a
Japanese fu t·food 1tore •
fleet. Dnamtto. acqwtted l..a\ year 1n the
murder-roMp1racy tnul of the San Quentin Six. wus
badt tn jail as accused or ;st
tempted robbery in Ouk land
Oakland Police Sit J obn 'iai•••lll•• said Drungo, 32, wu
booked alone with two other
meo after a 20-year-0ld man re-
ported an apparent robbery at-
tempt to a passmg officer
Drumgo, who bas spent
most o( h.is adult life In pnson.
was released from San Quentm
on Aug. 26 on unsupervised
parole. DlllUMGO
Drumgo also was a defendant an another
celebrated prison trial. l.be Soledad Brothers They
were charged with the 1970 killing or a Soledad
Prison guard but were acquitted
* Gov. Marvin Mandel testified during hi s
political corruption trial that he loves Maryland too
much to have sold his influence
for an estimated $357,000 in busi-
ness interests, Florida vacations
and gifts
"I've been m public oHice
since 1952." Mandel said in U.S.
District Court shortly before he
completed direct examination
by his attorney, Arnold Weiner.
"If I've ever done anytbing,
it's to the benefit of the state and
MANDEL its people." he testified. "I love
this state too much to do anything hke that.··
* James Earl Ray and six inmates who climbed
over the wall of Brushy Mountain Penitentiary with
him last month were indicted by the Morgan County
(Tenn.) grand jury on escape charges. Warden
----------Stonney Lane said.
( PEOPLE )
Their cases were re-
ferred to J.he grand jury ..... _________ after they entered inno·
cent pleas to escape
charges in preliminary hearings last month.
Paul Pbilllps. assist ant district attorney
~ra1 , said Ray and the other escapees were not
called to testily ..
A rticord wbum on Uie life of the late sheriff
e.rord Puuer, the Mc~alry County (Tenn.)
lawman made famous in the
"Welkin• Tall" movie series, is
planned for release within 10
days.
Author W. It. Morrls and
Compaaa Records said they
would releHe the album, based
upon Morris' interviews with
Pusser, despite a $100,000
lawsuit and restraining order
sought by Alabama music ex-
ecutive t\J Cartee. ~uHu
Pusser died in an automobile accident in
August 1974.
Cartee contcnd11 that Morris. the author of a
Pusser biography. "The Twelfth August." broke an
agreement with him to produce a similar album.
*
Singer-songwriter Tom T. Hall donated $1 ,000
to the Music Industry Students' Association at Mid-
dle Tennessee State University.
HalJ 's donation will be used to form a student
LOS ANGELES (AP)
-"The only words that
come to mind are relief
and happiness," beamed
the mother or an adopted
Cambodian refugee who
was allowed to keep the
child after nearly two
years of legal battles.
Marlene Langenwalter
and her husband, Vern,
signed the final adop-
tion papers Monday for
their 31h·year-old son,
Toup Ven. The legal ac-
tion marked the end to
lengthy court battles
challenging the way in
which their son and 19
other refugee children
were adopted.
Superior Court Judge Lester Olson bad ruled
nearly two years ago
t~at Family Ministries,
performing group at the school and for operational ( )
expenses of the association. SI' ATE
Last spring, II all taught a songw riling course at
the university without fee.;, an independent adoption
agency, had illegally
placed 20 Cambodian or·
phans put in its care. Christa Waldheim, 18-year-old daughter of
U.N. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim, and two
other Waldheim relatives were
seriously injured i n a n
automobile collision near Linz,
Austria, police said.
The Austrian Press Agency
said the accident forced
Waldheim. a native of Austria,
to postpone a trip to China.
Instead, the U.N. chief new to
Austria to visit his injured re
latives in a hospital. Police said the passengers c11111suwALDHEIM
in the car with Christa, who was driving. were Hllde
Ritschel, 80. Waldheim's mother-in-law, and her
sister, Valerie Kroboth. 83.
*
Charles D. "Pug" Rave'ne1, a former Harvard
quarterback who rose from political obscurity to
gain the Democratic nomination
for governor of South Carolina in
1974, announced that he will seek
the ·party's nomination for the
U.S . Senate seat held by
Republican Strom Thurmond.
No other challenges to
Thurmond. 74 and a 23·year
veteran of the Senate. have
emerged.
However, Olson ruled
Monday that the orptlans
should remain with their adoptive parents
despite the unconstitu-
tional manner in which
they were placed.
Bug FoUfJlat
SAN DIEGO (AP>
Sex hormones lethal to
male Japanese beetles
a r e being installe d
a round Lindbergh Field
in the battle to halt the
airliner migration of the
pests to the West Coast.
The bait, a chemical
duplicate of the sex
hormone secreted by the
female beetle, also is be·
ing used at airports in
Los Angeles and San
Francisco, where record
numbers of beetles are
arriving from infested
states east of the Mis-
sissippi.
• Tu!!Say. Julx 29. 19n ;
No Cost Drop
Whimper Ends
Housing Boom
By THOMAS D. BU.AS
The big boom of the last two years in California
real estate iB beginning to end, but with a whimper.
not a bang.
Putting the cla mps on the ever-increasing price
splralisonemajorfactor: asbortageofmoney.
INCREASINGLY, REAL ESTATE BJlOKEllS,
would· be speculators and even buyers who intend to
live in their purchases are making deals and then
finding that lenders don •t have the money to fmance
them.
Th.is is not leading to ' SOUTHERN
a big dropoff in prices; in CALIFORNIA
most areas, there is no FOCUS
drop al all. But it does in----------~ evilably ca u se a
slowdown, with purchases held up until money
becomes available.
So far, about 10 percent of the saviqs and loan
associations in Southern Calllomia, where sales
have been quickest and speculative profits
heaviest, have been forced to pull out of the lending
market for at least part of the l~t two months. The
number of S&Ls affected in Northern California is
somewhat less.
IN SOME CASES, THE SHEER volume of
purchases has been so heavy that lenders dldn 't
have adequate staff to process them all. Tbat bas
led to some delays, as S&Ls have refused to make
new Joan commitments until they've procesaed lhe
back.log.
More often, the lending slowdown has been
spurred by money shortages, with lenders malting
commitments ~at took all their availabl~ .money.
When that bappens, the savings and loan must
wait until savers deposit more funds or until it eeta
substantial repayments of existing loans. It can
also try to sell bond secured by the various
mortages it alread bolds.
ANY OF THESE STEPS TAKES time,
measured in weeks and months, and while the
lender waits, so do the would-be borrowers. And the
market slows down.
While the major impact of the slowdown has·
been felt by s maller savings and loans and their
customers, even the major statewide associations
are bracing for a shortage.
Home Savings, for instance, has issued )ending
limits for each of its offices.
Home is also readying a bond issue to be sold
within the next few weeks. Other associations malt-
ing similar moves include Great Western,
American and Imperial, all statewide.
11.rwlre,....•
S..,.port D11ie
Actor Art Carney has
been ordered by a
New York Supreme
Court justice to pay
$500 a week tern·
porary s upport to his
estra n ged wife.
Barbara. pending
divorce pvoceedings.
Studems
Horwred
ByCSF
The spring semester
Dean's Honor List for
Cal State Fullerton in·
eludes these Orange Coast students, wbo
earned at least a 3.5
grade point average:
a.1 ... : R~ Bebn.
eel-.a lsl..,41: Oenl•I Allm•"•
Juotlll Key, 0.-tid Scf\efff.
ca,htra•a •••di: Greoory
Duck~ C.,... _.MM: Ar$ Gules-1 ....
CHt• MIU: Maroer•I Ber~r.
81r-e Bein, Lindi Beut•,.,,.lsle<,
SltP"en Betvwll. N•ncy e.ro. GUHln
Butt.--th. O.rrkk Cllewi~ou9h.
Joanne Curtis, Linda O•vlu.
Galllrltlle Ftrnandu, Klmllltrl• Floyd, Pamele Fr~t. Mery Fritts,
Ad•lenne G•nl, OtlotH c;.11>ero. llul"tl Glllesple, Jerry <>o.r, ROMI GolUI!, Eltlne Grooen, O.ne Harl • R-111 Howell, Rollert IMll<S, ~tel" Johnson, Lindt Johnston, IClm Josejlhlon, Mark Krlkorl•n. Shanon
Hutt, Jeffrey Ortn, Jtmes Riii•. • Roderick Rots, Rtn•ll• Sllal•r.
Wllll9m Shea, David Snld, Sltvtl\ T~~~~ ~;i;:~1,wo~:1:1:-.~:~;i..
Vtronlca 'Thorllas.
ClwppySeas
. Delay Trials
Revenel. a n investment
uvuEL banker, was ruled ineligible for we guoernaton al candidacy by the st ate Supreme
Court in 1974 because he had not fulfilled residency
requirements.
*
During debate on a treaty to perm rt U.S.
citizens convicted or crimes in Mexico to serve their
terms in U.S. jails. Sen. John Tower had a few good
words for the prisons in Texas.
Mort1 Hostage
LOS ALTOS <AP) A
39-year-old Los Altos
man , Matthew
Samaduroff. was arrest-
ed early today, after
holding his mother .
M ary Samaduroff .
hostage in their home
here for more than five
h ours while police
pleaded for his sur-
render.
THESE FINANCIAL MOVES BEGAN in April,
when the Federal Home Loan Bank of San Fran-
cisco raised the interest it charges savings and
loans by a full percentage point. (Citing healthier
and more stable conditions, the federal bank
lowered the interest rate to member S&L's by ~ of 1
percent on Monday.)
Only 3 percent of all the money loaned by
California savings and loans comes from the
FHLB, but when S&Ls are in a pinch, they can
quickly borrow money from the federal bank.
El '°"' Lawrence S.llomo, Lydi• Brown, P1lrkt. Clerk, Heidi Oeorool. Wllll•m Donato, f.d9ar Grey, Kim· berlyG<--. , ....... ,. Vallty: Tllc>mas Bowmltn,
Conni• Butfow, Rlcll<lrd 8unow,
Mlchellt Oe<ulr, Marl.an Grondzlk. Joyo Howl'd, Tllerose Ian-.., S:.n-dr• Laurence, 'The<efa Lff, Sll•ron Meu, Terry Tiiieman, Maroaret
WHM!r Glenn WrlQl<l. H-flfliM 9e!Kll: Chtrvt Abella.
Judith Abeita. L.arty O..ncl•. ~" • Cubit. Uno. 0.vll•, Art Oen-Heyer Timothy DerOy, Judy Oltrollo, Oerotny El•clflo. Thomas Farrell Carle Hertls, Otlllr~ Halfleld, C..rldecl 111'\frre, K•IN•IM •norem,
Hlrold JecklOn, Kelly .J..:ooson. Jtf· fl"fy Joll..,, J ey Korn, Mlcllael Kort.
O•vld Lawrence, Ro111y11 Mallo.
Br1ant Manin, Melanlt MellUll•w•.
Terry Hltnlluls. M•rvot Honk, Cerolt Onwi... Gell PoMy, Donna 511~, Wllll-SUiat1, Owl~ Wtllll,~nWolf.
• " .
.
NEWPORT. R.I <AP) A modern ocean-
racing yacht would have weathered the 25·knot
winds and six-foot seas with no difficulty, but the
conditions would have been too much for the 12-
meter yachts involved in the America's Cup trials,
officials decided.
So the New York Yacht Club called off the races scheduled Monday between Independence and En-
terprise on Rhode Island Sound and rescheduled
them today.
"WE WOULD HA VE LOVED TO have seen a
good heavy-weather contest between Independence
. and f;n~prlse, but 30 knots is no wind for a twelve
to be out in. We were all agreed on that," said Bob
Bavier, one of fi ve former America's Cup skippers
serving on the selection committee.
The others are George Hinman, the chairman.
Emil ''Bus" Mosbacher. Robert W. McCullough
and Briggs Cunningh~m.
Courageous is scheduled to race Enterprise on
W edoesday, the final day of the observation trials.
INDEPENDENCE AND COURAGEOUS
stayed dockside Monday after the postponement
was announce<!. Hut skipper Lowell North took En-
terprise out to try some new heavy-weather sails.
Meanwhile, the New York Yacht Club said that
because or measurement priorities, the American
12-meter yachts would not race with the New York
Yacht Club fleet on Saturday on Rhode Island
Sound as originally planned.
The foreign twelves, now being measured, are
scheduled to race Saturday, a club spokesman said.
The Americans are to race on Aug. 6, he said.
"l have never spent any time in a Mexican jail
myself," said Tower, "but l have friends who have.
and they tell me they did not exactl y relish the ex-
perience.'' A few of the senator's friends have spent time in
both Mexican and Texas jails and, he said. "They
find the Texas jails far superior in terms of the
cuisine, the quarters and all of the other accom-
modations that go along with it.·· •
Thunderous applause drowned out occasional
boos for a performance of Richard Wagner•s opera
"Tannhauser" at the opening of the annual
Bayreuth festival in West Germany.
Both critics and Wagner lovers have attacked
the trend toward modernization of the works of the
romantic composer. who built a theater at
Bayreuth in the 1870s to stage his epic operas.
The audience gave a rousing ovation to East
German director Goetz Friedrich, who put workers
and farmers onstage with the pilgrims in the final
act of his controversial "Tannhauser'' arrange-
ment.
*
Sen. Hubert Humphrey says, "If you don't
overcome self.pity, the game's over ... ,"when a
person is fightinR Hainst cancer.
Writing in the August issue of Reader's Digest.
the former vice pr~sident admits, "The worst mo-
ment of my life was when I discovered that I bad
cancer."
But taking an optimistic tone, Humphrey adds •.
"Deep down, I believe in miracles. They have hap-
pened to a lot or people who were given up to die and
then were restored to health."
~Thunderstorms Continue
' .... ... .. Shou:er Activity Heavy in Many Areaa
""" '--,, '3
f7 .. • 10 ,.. n 75 11 • ., 01
15 •5 I IJ •5 1s . ,, u _, . ,. '° .. .,
71 ,,
IOI fO n .. ., ,,
,. H
.. 1$ .,. ., .. ~ .. ., ,. ,.
., 10 ...
.. lt l. .. IS N ,. ~
PllCttd lo -a "'911 fll '2 Wflile ,,,.
Mlltllft Wiii be In tM IOw "°'-W ... ftf
-"'·"~ ~ ... w1tl Hljoy IUMY ,, ... t•
tlltmott-1.~-<ICKldlMPlft Ille .tt_,. Te.._,.,.,.,..., a,.. ell•
pectedlo• If\ tht IOW IOI.
0tM'1S WOft'l M lffl"O m\Kll
(l\lllO', Wltll ~·t~ tttNltllllf '"Ille"'°" ••lll(lllas lta In tilt ._ ..... n.1111w ._..,...,. wlll 11•..., wfttr
tM ft*\. ~· bolCt<M "' ll(t!\ twnlldlty, llOt ............. .,,,....,
1111-. "f'lt4tlof l\Hlltl ecM"'1n at•~ w .. Saft~. ••11 O•btl•I, f'o~o11•·W•t111tt,
Ill_... ..... ""'*"'"" ... ...,.. .
P ol i ce sai d
Samaduroff was taken
into custody at a bout 1: 35
a.ni. afte r a police
negotiator abruptly
ended fa ce-to-face
bargaining at the door or
the house and wrestled
th e s u spect to the
ground.
Town Saved
BURNEY (AP>
Residents in this tiny Jog-
ging town were hoping
calm bTeezes would pre-
vail today, after a wind·
whipped timber blaze
danced across acres of
timberland and burned
-tu the-edge of theiT town.
"If the winds s tay
calm we'll be able to con·
trol it completely by to-
day.'' said state Division
of Forestry spokesman
Gary Harlow. The fire
charred 750 acres of
Umber before it was con-
tained.
-lllllge Rapped
LOS ANGELES CAP>
-A state Court or Ap-
1>eals has been picketed
by about 100 dem -
onstrators represent·
in& a coalition of a dozen
women's groups protest-
ing last week's ruling
that overturned the rape
conviction oC a man who
picked up a female
nftcllhfilker.
In the decision, Jucf&e
L)'.nn Compton said it. was "not unreasonable
for a man'' wbo picked
op a woman hitchhiker
••to believe that the
temaJe would conaent to
sexual relations."
Raising the interest on that money bas liven
local lenders more incentive to find money on their
own, where they don't have to pay as much interest
foriL
. SINCE ANY OTHER MOVE TAKES more
time, the result has been a waiting period for some
borrowers and closer scrutiny of new loans by
alm06t all lenders.
The surprise in all this has been that home
prices have nevertheles s continued to rise, if more
slowly.
Generally. a price dropofr is expected.
whenever a money shortage develops, because the
lengthy waits create more of a buyer's market.
Speculators are taking comfort in the fact that
this has not happened. It is their hope that as more
money inevitably becomes available and home loan
approvals ease once again, prices will resume their
steep climb. •
This may or may not happen, but one certainty
has emerged. If the bottom were going to fall out of
the California real estate market, it would already
have started its drop. And that means the big boom
will not be followed by an equally large bust.
A.pprentiee Chef
lr•llM: Ven Abbott, ICatllleen lllKl>of. Stuart ~ns, OVlt.1~
GaynOf', Vivien Grett, Carolyn Knl911t, Ellloll linker, Ellnn
Matsumoto, 0.vld McOufflt, M•ry Mltchtl, CMol Btrln, Cynthia PertY •
0.lllr• OulM, Matll-RemMNd, Br1tee Rockwell, Slleron Rutk-1, Sandra Snydtr, Joyee Sltnt>erg, Marlltt Stir-. Henry Thayer. ~ IJNdl: Mary Giisdorf, Vic-tor lrtlend, Glorl• Lane, Jolln Pickett, Oonald Aommtl, Barry Schirm, Mlcllel• S.aman, Walter wus.1, Aleunclra Y akutl1. Lae-Hllllt SUs.tn Oel•no, Robert Frlll, Gererd Hltblu, Esther Wing. &.et.,.. Nl1 ... 1: Nancy Cherrin,
Pepe Elttam, Alan Good man, SltfenltHl'rl.Mll'I, Katlly PIKIOll•.
MIUIM Vt•i-: Undt AlltllOtro. Cheryl ........ e ... ~1. MMllrn Cle-
ment. Jon Frnt, Mike Gellor, Kris Men"· IClndr• McMahon, Greo PIJl'k«. N....., INdl: Katherine Colllns,
J amn Coon, OavlCI Ferouson. Wllllam Franltlln, QrOlyn c;.1.,u,..
Carol MU11rot, Gt990ry Pt1rson. Chrlntll ...,.,..,II. Ellrebetll PlllCltr
lftl o-1.t> Amelie 0-.•lton, Oouoft1 'l•ld, Cristen Greaves.
Oovvl• l..r#IS.. Ronald Pe11nlnoton.
5.elt -c:a,IW-: Sue a.. ... Pa Mela Clay, i..-le Jec:k.
Seel a..dl: Jemet Hoyt.
5e41111 UlllM: Shel• Oouo~s,
Program Adds Spice
By JOYCE L KENNEDY
Dear Joyce: I would !Ille to *9me
a dlel ...._ I Set oat of hlP acllool.
Coald )'OD Hild me aome lnfonnadGllT
-T. K., Cldeaco, m.
Many se.boola and colleges offer chef·~ FOJf•ms. from vocational hicb IChoolt UU'OUgb universities. But
take a look at a new federally·backed
cbef apprenticubtp frogram that
btlps you find a payin Job while you
Jeatu.
Tbe natlon-1 .•t>l>HJ1t1~ pro-era.m ts •PoOIOt'ed by &ho American
C\&Jlnary Federatlon Educational
ln.atitut.e (ACFEJ), wh1cb bu 95 chap. ten Mrcu the' country.
( __ C4RE_E_ns_J
. 1• Ume cA apprel)ticesb1p U YoU can de·
monstrate prollclenc)' baaed on pre·
vlous food service training or ex-
perience.
~allfy for an ACFEI appr~n
tic , you must. be 18 or okler. and
a bilb scbool Jrad or equivalenL You
must complete nqulred but re·
uoaably USJ ~ aama Onclucfutg
a taste and smell test) • The ACFEl appnoUC*lb.Jp aelec-tJoo committee Ol*'•tel on a non-
d .. ~ bu1' •Ith considera-
tion gl\tell Gbl1 to qualltkattam.
&rl'D TUE INlTJA~ l?roba:
tlOD11'1-PtrlOd, JOG W'.lltN ~ 1tfttb t.bO l)tji)U'UQent OI LibOI' and of-flel.ny eoDtracted CO Uae ~er·s
aul*'YlilU 'dMil ud the ·IDiomorint ACFl'J,Mftliate chapter. U'PoQ com--
pletioli OI )IQUI' apprenlicelbip. you
~lU bt ~ls.ct•. CertUled Cook, ioCl llv• an ap~ to Mmaln Wber. 10Q t.t~ 61' ~mded f OI' a }ob pl.c.ment .is.where.· ax,.n..cea cbtfl ~ ""' ... '° ........ .,, aecvUve cbcla cm earn .... more;
!
Cf OAILY "1.0T
PUBLIC NOTICE
.. CTITIOUS aUSINISS NAME STATEMENT The lollowtng perMlflS ere CIOlng bull·
MHH' SNACKS N THINGS, t306V, W
OCeen Franl Dr., NM-I 8eec.lt, CA
92643 Anthony J . ceulse, 17141 Sef\t•
PUBLIC NOTICE P\IBUC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
CP-41a FICTtnousaUMN•SS NAME STATEM•NT
Tiie loOowlng pe<toM en OOjng bu~ Mssas· • 1001SUNDAES.71'°H•l'llcw lllVd.,
Cos1• Mew. CA 9262' Gerald M. Kins,,,.,,. 16'03 Sovt11 L.aew•rCI A..e., Cerritos, CA t0101 Elva May KlnsmM1, I~ S.Wt" L.aewardA ... , Cerrltcx, CA to10t This buSINU 11 <ondutled by •n Ul'I• ln<orPOr•teCI -l•lloft on.er tl\en • partner"'lp.
Elv•MayKI~ G<tnld M. Kl,,,men Tiiis "•tement wH llteel with the COUflty Oerk ol Of.no-County Oft July
21, 9'17,
""°'.SSIONAL UCROW SERYICIS
1'21 Net1ll Twtlt1 Aw. ,._.AN,CAf!101 a.cr.w•.17.-.MO nn11
Pvb!ISNCI ()renge Con1 D•llY Piiot,
Ju1yn,eno~t2,•,i.,1m n11.n
PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE INVITING llDS Notlte •S lleuby 91,,.11 llWlt the BoerCI ol EC1ut•11on of the lrVlfle U11lhe4 5<11001 DhtnCI of Oren" Coufltv, C.llfornl•, Wiii recel,,_ -led f>Mh UP to 2:00 p.m. of lhe tOtl'I day Of AuvuSI 1911 el '""left time Mid bids wlll be PUbll<IV _,.., -rffel for Audio Ills------------·------------u.1 EQul""*1t. 81d <Ofldltlons •llCI ,,,. PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE struct1ont -bid '°""' mev be o«>.
-----------------------11•1...0eltheOlflceaf llU'SINSJS-1
S."'lces. 2t4t ""°" •-. 1 ... 1,,., Comptroller of the Currency c.111orn1a. r... 0111r1ct ,..~ 1,,.
Adm lnistrator of National Banks rl9ll1torefK1 MIY or •II bldeorM ••Ive REPORT OF CONDITION •nv lrr@9Ul•rlllH or 1n1orm•llUu In .,., eny bldlor lntheblddlnv. IRVINE NATIONAL BAr.K of lrylne In the state of 1R111NEuN1F11Eo
California, at the close of buslne~ on June 30, 1977 scH00t.01sTR1cr
published In reponse to call made by Comptroller of the =1~::1:_.,.
Currency urtder title 12, United Sta'tes Code, Section \61 . Publlsn.d or.,. eo.11 o.uv Piiot
Charter nul'T'ber 16168. National Bank Region Number Ju1y2hnclAUVU"12. m1 · 14th. ,,.._n
State of Resources and Liabilities PUBLIC NOTICE
ASSETS Thousands of dollars ----------Cash and due from banks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3,849 w.tM
U.S. Treasury securities ........•.............•. 855 NOT1aToctt101TOtts
Obligations of other U..S. Gov't. 5~~~~'::~~~~~~A':C:tt 0~1Y:~~sao~s~:r::and.i)Oi1.tic~1 · •· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · 1•357 T"11cm:.~~:.~:1~0•H
SUbdiVISt.OnS 2 247 Ill the M•ll•r ol Ille Estele of •' •. '.". • .. '•'"." ... •. •. " •.. ' .•. •... ' OROELLE RAYMOND JOftOAN, Federal Reserve stock and corporate stock . . . . • . . . . 60 Dl<.eaMd.
Federal funds sold and securities purchased Nouce 11 11ere11y 111,,.11 10 <•ff.
under agreements to resell ........•...•...... 3,000 11ors 1101119 c•••m• •11•11111 Loans, Total Cexcludlng unearned th• .. 1e1 e1ecee1e111 •• II•• u1e1 <l•l IM 111 Ille oflkt "' the dent of tllt lncorre) ................. 15,589 ••or•seld <-1 °'to.,,....,. INfft te Less: Reserve for possible Ille unoenl9*1 •• the otfk• of PUT·
tAAA ,___ 108 MAN .. As.soc. PNI• A. PubnMI, "" "'''"' rv;, .... .., • " ' • ' " • • ' • ' ' • ' ' • • • ' • ' • IOrMy et"-• 161 .. lltetll 111..0., 54.llte ' Loans, Net . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .• : . . 1 S,481 "'· H11nllnot011 Btech, CA m47, wl'lkh
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and other 1111~ office 1s t11t oleo"' tiuUneu ..
assets representing bank premises ..•............. 480 ::: ~0"::;~:.~ ~!l:! =-~ Other assets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . • ...•. 288 N<ff .. ry -.<Nn mun be filed or
TOTALASSETS ........ : .... •······-· ... 27,617 Prue11ted es •lorewld •lll'lln row
LIABILITIES mofltt1se1•111e11n1pu1>11ctU011tlf tlll•
Demand deposits of Individuals, ""c:~JuMt ''" partnerships, and corps ................•... 12,909 R0&1:'11n(a.
'Time and savings deposits of lndlviduals DOHALoo.sr1wAttT
partnerships, and corps • . . . ........ .'. . ...•.•. 10,091 !":::=.1"'""'11"
Deposits of United States Government ..•.......... 282 PMiu,.A.PUTMH
Deposits of States and pol ltlcat .,.,,.,..w•
subdivisions..... . . . • . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . ......•... 100 :~;::!-~4:: .. m
Certified and officers' checks... . . . . . . .....•..... 1, 145 """''"" ...... ~.cA,.., TOTAL DOMESTIC DEPOSITS •..........•..... 24,527 Publllheel or.,. eoeu o.11v Pliot.
· Total demand deposits •.....•.... : 14,336 Ju1vi.,enc1Au111n12.•.1•,1t11
Total time and savings deposits .... 10, 191 327H 7
TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC
AND FOREIGN OFF ICES .. : .......•....... 24,527 PUBLIC NOTICE
Other llabl II t ies ....•...........•...........•.•.•... 183 1u,.u10tt cou11TOPTM• • TOTAL LIABI LIT! ES CexclUdlng subordinated 1TATHf'CAUP'ot1M1~ "'°"
) ., 710 TKICOUNTYOPOllAMO• ' notes and debentul'es • . • . . . . . • . • . • . • . . . • . • . . • • ,4, .... ...,...
EQUITY CAPITAL MOTI CI Of' "•UtNO 'oP
common s1ock e. No. shares authorlnd322,SOO r&TtnON,..,.. Plt<*ATl o" WILL
"" b. No. shares outstandlno 264,390 (par value> .... 1,322 ~::v"::O L~•.i:,a,..:::~~r:;
Su'/ilus ....••••...•.....•.......••.•.....•....... 75' TO ADM11111T1tt uNo•" TN•
Un lvl....,.~Ofl.. 826 INOl .. INOllMT ADMIMllT•ATIOM """ •• '' • ' • • •. • • • • • • ' . • . • • •. •' . ' ' ' Ofl ltTATH ACT CP.oeAT• COOi ·TOTAL E ITV CAPITAL ....... ·• • •• •• · • • · 2,907 IHSTH0.1
TOTAL LIABILITIES ANO t1•teteetMAV1tH. 111CMdOSON, EQUITY CAPITAL •••• ' ••.•.•••.•.•••••.••... 27,617 ... MAYH •RAUN ltlOjAltOM*, N'EM09'~NDA 0-•Tc'i veraoe for 30c•lender d•vs .._"3Jo~E.,~·~~=::.~':..'::!
•ndlf'9Wlth reP.Mt dete: ·~1t1o11terPnt1 .... fWl!l..,.tert"
Cash and due fi'om t>enttt..... • .•.•......••.••.• 3,118 :::f.:.: = =: = Feet. funds told end tec"rltJ" purchastd 911!11.., "'•llM•.,..., .. ,...,._ under agr96~MS lo '1.,..1. . . • • . • . • . • . , . . . , . 4,500 *"' A"91llllftr.tltft _. .. ....._ Acl
To\llloant ........................... 1',93t =:::::..'::!:::::• TlmedeposltsofStOO,OOOor 11\ore In ..,. tt1e11t1tlltM1M'4«t .... ~ ~fcofflcits., t •••••••• , , ••.•.• • •••.•••••• 2,'32 .. eemt Ml .... e.c fet A119111t f,
TcUI .... ts.,................... . ........... 25,253 ·:;:.::,::::,_"';•: .':.'::::": TOT~ ASSl!TS • • • • • • · • · · • · · • • • • • • · · • • • • · •'· • · 21,450 CMc ~ Ottw-..,: !fl Wiit CltY .,,
TlrN e,•cat•• of dtc>Ollt '" dtnoml nations of •••AN. c.tlif*'Na. Ste0 or."*" ..... , . . .......... -. . . . . . , , ..... 1,,390 o. ... l::Y"~· ~t• fn imoutlttof w....,. .......
$100,GllDormore .................................. too ti.•ete=:Z..ocvm• lrclt. W. CRl;IGHTON, Ex.cutlvt V1ca President & .__.,. • ._.
... ol tht ~·""'"bent dO Mreby ~ct.,.. that UM 0-M ....... "'
Ulla RIPCl'1 of ~ltlon It true 1nct cornet to U._ bttt of ===,~-1tnow1.-. ana bell... ,......,. ... ,......... ,
/1/ R. W. CREIGH'rON 1111';:-:-.:::.c-.:: .,_., ~ """to. 1971 ..-._ "' wn.n It W..h ~ dfrecton •ttest hcorndness 'ti llt°ltli••-' of Nt0Urct11 lftd t11bllltlu. Wt cMcl1r9' llitft bltmlnM by us, IM to tM belt of our
and biltltf Is tr~ and correct.
JOHN '1/t. RAU r • ftlCHARO S.. STEVENS ol~ISLYNCH
.... • a,1..ctotl """1•or~eom o.11y l'flot Jvty2', tm m.4-11
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...._.. cMck tt.tlr ocls •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • •
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.., -,.port ..... -------i·------1 w_;m:;':'!;.,!: Reduced $30,000. ESTATE SALES! CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX
1 .. mt,twtMflnt• ~"at~:c;':O~m~ ti~~~~1S.1?a. ~.~.I.9 3 IR, 2 IATHS IACH
eolftet ......... Ollly. ceiling living room, 4 Acre. R·l. Area of very Anxious owner invltes offers On this
bedrm, 3 baths, large expensive homes. Mln. splendid duplex· with identical units: ~:'!ft~~~:Om~ tibi~ 6'Lo~~~1~:.02 bath, 2 top quallty construction with over· ,....._, •• Motfce: 1ar., VIEW! A buy at blcks from beach. La sized rooms. Close to beach. shops &
Allrealestateadvertlsed sics.ooo. We TRI harder Jolla. Now acceptin1 schools. Drive by: 514 Iris & then call
lntblanewapaperlaaub· at11UHA.RBOR. , bids. u s for app't to inspect. Aisklng
jed to the Federal Fair BRAND NEW 3 bedrm, 3 $179,SOO.
Housing Act of 19H 400CJllU-... ~ fOR.~w bath, 2 story. ocean view
wbicb makes it We1al to ~~~1-111-~-~-;J w/ sep. older 2 bedrm on advertise "any pre· 4 . .. . ..... one lot. Laguna Beach.
rerence, limitation, or -$250,000. 103 Down.
ditcrim.inaUoa based on 2 BEDROOM. fixer on
race, color, religion, sex, 3rd St. Coronado Island.
or national orl1Ui, or an FOOTHILL HIGH Value i:i in the land.
iateotion to make any Delighllul 4 bedroom, 2 &tate may accept bid of
such preference, llmila· bath wilh family room. $47,500. Super buy at this
tioo,ord.lscrimlnation." central air conditioning price.
& a lush tropical yard World Wide Brokers
Th1s newspaper will nol complete walb pool & 673-4S45 Distress
759-0811
fiut .,.._
Guo! Wu® 'Btq.
knowingly accept any jacuz.z.i. Fantastic loca· Property Specialists
advertising for real tion. Full price $99,soo.1•--------'-___. 1002 Gtalfel 1002 e&&ate which is in viola· CALI.7513191 ... __...._ t.ioaof the law. · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
.SELECT POOL & ~!!':~.~......... PROPERTIES JACUZZI ~
Gt•ral I 002 --------• This btfi well kept home ••••••••••••••••••••••• MEW LISTIMG really s hows pride of .. •LEX ILUFfct VIEW owners h i p ! L a r g e .......-~ • energy saving fiberglass Only 3~ yr. old Pride or $135,000 pool & jacuzzi w/solar
\V ESl.J-:Y '.'J
TAYLOR CO.
l{EALTUHS ~111t ·1 · l !HI>
Ownership units wilh Freshly painted with blankets lo beat to a
over 4,600 sq. ft., alt un· new carpeting In & out. comfortable temp.
der a heavy shake roof, Inviting "J" plan 3 Bdrm Spacious 3 bdrm, 2 bath
air conditioning; private Condominium home >:Ith w/cozy frplc. in Jge faml·
patios! balcony in VIEW loca· ly rm. Only 2i,,2 yrs. new.
tion. Ready for occupan· Just listed. Seller bought
cynow. larger . better act
HARBOR VIEW • $179,500
Best "Palermq," buy on the market!
YoY own the land! Lovely 4 BR f am
rm in newest area. Beautiful large re·
ar yard-recently lands~ap~ Near pool, tennis court & new shopping ctr.
2239 PORT LERWICK
4 IR· $75,000
Sl.250 +COSTS!
Great family
neighborhood. Palos
Verdes stone fireplace.
Family kitchen . 4
Spacious bdrm s .
Enormous lot. VA buyers
welcome-pay $1,250
down plus closing costs!
Won't las t at only
175.000! Call now 752·1700
OPfN Ill 9 ." s fl)N ro ~I N'(I'
THE REAL
ESTATERS
DUMPY
DUPLEX
Pride of owners hip
would be hard lo rind
here, but if things like a
low price or $49,900 &
rent potential or $420
month interests you.
CAI.J.. 556·2660.
«=SELECT
I PROPERTIES
-
WATERFRONT
HOMES
REAL ESTATE
631-1400
CAPE COD
$68,000
Garden paradise or wand·
ing roadways leads lo
secluded entry ! Ex·
ecullve liv. rm. and
gourmet kit c hen
highlight California liv·
iDg. Soaring staircase
leads lo bdrm .complex.
Securi ty gates and
private grounds enhance
this twnhm. livin g.
Owner must sell, try any
offer! 847·6010
Ol'fN Ill Q •ti \ I UN IOHI NI(!•
[e~IH!!li\I
What's Your Trade?
SI .62 per Day
That's litUe to pay
for an ad in the Daily Pilot
Service Directory that can
establish yoor proress1onal
identity. Jo'or more in·
formation call 642·5678.
TODAY! 646-7711
2111 San Joo.-ln Hiii ltMd .
HEWPORT CEMTER. H.1. HtMt I 0
SPECTACULAR
5'AHISH VILLA Wrought iron entry to ~al I 002 GeMf'ol I OOZ
huge living room with ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••,••••
vaulted ceilings. Formal
dining room. gourmet
kitchen. Decorator's
dream home. Lush ter·
races, boat access. walk
to beach. Hurry for this
unique buy. Call 963-6767
LAKE FOREST OLD
LAKE VIEW COROMA DB. MAit
S 110 000 Charm beyond discrip·
• Uon. 3 Large bdrms, 2
OPfN "' 9 . ti s If.JN ro 81 N>(I.
Panoramic view of charming baths, bright
sparkling lake and rustic open kitchen, fireplace,
clubhouse from living private brick patio. has
[.
room and cocktail patio breaklasl. patio. open •~ off master sulte. 4 Twin beams, natural wood
-,~ ...... _...~~· sized bedrooms, and 3 paneling. Solid pine
h··;,,,· ·~· ;:;;"'Q':~~~~~~~~I full bat.ha. Warm invitin g paneled doors. Cedar ~ covered patio hosts cl06ets. Next to tennis BA YCREST private luxury jacuzzi. courts. Short walk to
Premium grade floor beach & s hopping, 5 BEDRM and window coverings there's more! Call now
Spacious EXECUTIVE throughout. For appoint· or you will mlaa this
HOME w/Cmly room, menlcall962-77ss. beauty.646-7171
formal dining rm, two • KE:Y ' ~if~;Jkf~t;~~' R€ALTORsA [iiiidl
ed. 646-7711 TOASTING -=-
MAllHBS
•
SEEK & FIND• CURRENCY FACES
WAT AJA HIRE G J KI R Z L Q.M
S J H W C E V V Q E P S H E S A H C A
C L E V E L A H 0 E L Q K H P I 0 U 0
C 0 C F 0 W X W R H 0 A N G A S 0 R A
H A H N F C H E 0 L H G L 0 C R 0 R I
Z H A I L E X T B H I L K H A R F E E
R G A I L N R Z M L C H N A N I K N R
D V 8 V N 0 0 S K 0 H Y E L N I K C M
H E M L N S S T 0 C X N C l T C l Y N
D J C I K K H N l H 0 S I D A H A f A
N C 1 N A C Z A Y 1 0 G C J U L B A D
0 K 8 J I A 0 R M l M S C A D V l C W
Y C L 0 H J ~ G T 0 H A t S E E V E S
HS AM HI l IKE CM HIP H Ei 0
C E T l G N 0 T G H I H S A W V A H W
EXTRA
SPECIAL
MARSHMALLOWS
Jn front or your huge
finplace on those lon1
winter nights ii gonna be mighty pleasant. 4 Large
bdrms 2\.i baths comple·
ment this 2·story rustic
charmer. Beautlrul
galley kitchen to please
the resident chef. Cov-
ered patio surrounded by
weeping willows and
fruit trees. All this and
best Eastside address
SCHOOUJUllCI .. a liCl.riii tMaucy with lge
back yd., close to
Marlners School A park.
New crpt & drpe. Only
$79,9:50. 646-7711
Xtra clean, spacious. at·
tractive College Park
home. 3 bdrms, 2 bath,
dining rm. Huge fmly
rm, office/den. Encl'd
patio. Recreational vehi·
cle access. Nicely
landscpd for easy main·
tenance. Convenient to
schools & shopping. Just
listed. 646-7711
Real Estate
too! 646-7171
OPfN Ill Q •ti S fVN IOL'I N>(t'
•
. v ..•
•• <j ~\~,,. ·~,4
THE REAL l
ESTATEl!_Sj
~ Walker t; lee
Real Estate
HAUTIFUL
2·STOIY
U you have ever wanted
a 2·story home lhls l8 it! 3 + den or 4 bdrm. Lota of
warmth and charm here.
Stone fireplace • cedar
paneling • 1alley ldtcben
. -
lnmuctlom: Hidden words below •1>9t• forwtrd, beclt· wtrd, up, d_, °' dl"90Nlly. Find tech and bo• it In. ~
Chase Jackson Wash1.ni100 ~
IEACH RETREAT
-.. $58.000-·
·Steps to pounding surf
and crystal sand! Back yard is bay area play
ground. Winding wooden
walkways to secluded en·
try! Gourmet kitchen.
Step-down conversation
area + fireplace!
Sunshine breakfast
patio. Pool · jacuzzi ·
volleyball. Garden living
al its finest. 847-6010.
UMIELIEV AILE • almost new carpet.
$20,000 Reduction! freshly painted, covered
Cllanee-1>1 • ltfethtre to .pati4>-.H1tndance-of -
buy In Bayshores: 3 trees·largesldeyardfor storage or dog run. A ~rma.. 2 batfuld cf md super sbal'P home on a
P etel y remo e e quiet cul·de·HC. Don't
prden home; you must walt callnow'M8-7l7l
see it to believe Ill Call D'f,; 111 9 "" M rO• NfC1,
V111on Madison Jefferson ~
Lincoln Franklin McKinley r
Grant Ha.i1lton Cleveland
Tomorro.f: Aerodynamics
QPfN Ill Q •ti S FUN 108i NI(('
t•Ulll
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
IS MY SPECIALITY
John Saar Agt. 752·2020
MEREDITH
GARDIN ESTATES
TRI-LEVEL
2STORYHOME
nte entry to raised ll v.
rm. sliding alass doors to
wood deck patio: Huce
family room with
rireplace. New carpet.a
tbrouihout. Dramatlc
atairs to bideaway
master suite & S balha.
~UllSM'm O'(N Ill 9. ,. s tUN IO ti .Hitt I
ftilN •
M·I LAND
Several parceb to chOOle
rrom. Buy outriaht, or
will bUild to ault. Hunt·
lnaton S.adl to La•una
Ntauel • hex-Ible terma •
developer or ttm uttT
tax benefit• avaUablt. C.1187U550
Ol'fN t• t• •I\ IU"'t0tlHl('1
I
iI~~~~~lo [.Wl!gi\11
GtM..e 1002 &tMtel 1002 ..............................................
ILUFfS
End unit on greenbelt, close to
pool. 3 bedrooms, family room.
formal dining. View of mountains
by day, Newport lights at night.
Just listed at $147,500. •
•
--...~~ -~~ •lo ,.-_• r ·---• • -~ ~ T' -~~-~--
• ~.~!4!'! ....•. 3~!~.~••••••• ~::.~.~•••••••1 ~.c:'!!!!.~~-~~••••••• ~!!!.~~••••••• .T Jul 2e 1917 ONLY PtlDT "
.... ,.. 100 ... ,.. IOOJ ., .. ,.. IOOJG....-.e 1002 G ... r.e 100.J Coroftact.f Mcr 1022 ~!!.~.~ ....... ~-~~••••••• ~!.~~ ....... . ······················ ....................... • .............................................. ······················· ....................... c.-c:lel -
PAM'S Pl4CI
Pam 's Place is u ''hidden" two story
l.n Mosa Verde thnt Pam amd Gary
Roth hove developed lnto a charmlnl(
family domicile. 1'herc're 2 storiee;, 4
be drooms. form a l d inin& r oom, ~unken living room, 3• baths 4lnd u
beauutul pool
Pam and Gar y urc going to New
Orleans and leaving their home
behind, properly pnced at Sl42;SOO
lJ,._,l()UI: tiVMl:S
REAL TORS". 646-5990.
1525 Meu Vlfde Drive, East, Costa Mesa
alto m Corona del Mar, at 675·6000
1002<MMr• 1002
~······················ ........••••...........
TENNIS ANYONE?
5 Bdrms., 3 baths; o verlooking s ite of
Davis Cup Matches. Immac ulate! ·
$174,500 OR jog in the park opp6site
this lovely 3 bdrm., 2 bath, a lso with
view. $139,900. . [I
Sunshl'ne HUGE 2 STOIY ........... ~!' ••• !~.~~ =-~~!" ... !~.~~ ~':'t!'!~.!!~!
A MOUNTAIN HOME D&UXECONDO ~~~ u,...ecWAad
Fish from your porch on the Colorado paan Into tbl.a lovely Over 3000 aq. ft., 3 BR, .,._CIMte,ool,.._
River lJ\ Lakes area, near Granby. family bome. Larae. ~:a~'m':Ul~~.6~ _J.Jeffc, 'J {una ~ani •/i 3 Br, boQua -r;1,otamll,{
Colorado. 8 Rooms, S bdrms., on l 'h b rl & b t and sun o Y Llled BA, me entry, ~( ---~" t 'J ~t.:.l'f:: tt.c:k ;t.s:
acres in beautiful , secluded valley. hedrma, comer lot. bua~ frplc:., wet a,,r, bhns, In· w/cu:stom pool, Jaeuni,
E!ipedally designed & constructed fOl' :!:!t:~!j1:t~a!'t cl= comeactor, aep. There's a big tree for s wings & pool sweep, tlrepll. lie
Mummer & winter living. A steal at lf livana. The price ts ~bl. 1., r,:,::v~~ cllmbin' & room to grow on this 7Sx12S =~ ~r~c·~:
SlJ0,000, or exchange. For fuJJ details. rtghttoo. solar bronte i lass. TV ft. lot! Roomy 4 bdrm .• 3 bath home. NC Pier Dr. HB. tor
call -979-1050, 559.6100 cable tbru-out, even light & bright. Great Irvine Terra ce --• b -900 w · WBC plumbed Cor tee maker. n..,•~-~wno~-B:.. . .:. 673-4400 ~e rc:open oryou *'"'n location. $142,500. .....,.._, .--.._
DM1loa of Hart.or""'"'"~ Co.
... -·*· 7 fl3" 7 /2'-
21 JACOISREALTY ........ ~OWnadJ~2 __ B_R_c_o-nd-o-.-.-p1_r_at
.. ...:Sii:iUr-RF~RU.~~TY IUY~Fs;!::EEK W!!t~673,-M!JI E~5.~~:;.
Charm, Charm, C.b•rm, 2431 I. Co.t Hwy .. C.... clel M.---------1 3Br.2 Ba.tenn11,wattt~ _____ ..-. _ _ _ ·rnnwArea
BLUFFS beach • shopptn,. wont ~:e:-~:--..-... s 1r s. • bdrm, 2~ ba.
Best early area 2 BR 2 last. ()pen House daily. ,,........._u-_ IOZ .. ,,........._MeM 1024 Cam. d.lnioi. lae muter
b c din' h • C.116"-7171 -.n1........-""_... Ille 3000 ... ft 3cat"•ar a., orm. ·• uge onN111v·11s 1uH10t1H1Ct• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••-••••••••••••••••••• cl~ao t;'a~bla/b°::ib:
1 pallo. Like new! $120,000 f , •., MESA VERDE · ~ ..... -... !~~ ~ .......... !!!.~ R~: L:~~~a4811tiNll ~ E .s ~1'1.J~7[ o E -~ ~o:te 1f:Jrtii~~t= 7~-=:ESAC
_ '--= 111:11:1c~ spac1oua 3 ~m and Verde section of Colrta ~. CJua.lc. Extra lg.
PENINSULA home. 4 Or 5 BR , 3 ba,
all amenities. Lovely neighborhood, a
few s teps from the beach. $195,000.
OTHER prestige w aterfront homes
From $395,000 -Up
Bl LL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Boy.,,J,. Orov" N 8 67S 6161
OCEAN 41R Beautitut rustle duplex. 2 family + large den and Mesa. 3 BR, ram. rm .• & ~v!fpa~~~:!1~~: DUPLEX BR. & l·BR, beam cell., wet bar. Upgraded poutble aueat qua.rt.en. Owner will help finance.
4 Bdrms 2 bd garde& patio. $149,500 thruout. Just ll.ated at Astin& S16S,OOO. Shown anytime. Opeo
d o wn. ·s~'nde /:1i: PAULMARTIN $77.777. Hurry. call Agt.S'Js-8800 S.t•Sun.5.291GleMtooe
balconles & patio; just Real Esta"' 844·7383 546-588!> CABIN FEVER Dr .• HB. 213-43CMl807 "
steps to beach. $180,000 Below market 2 br + 1 br won't be a problem ln ,_213-4» __ 3482 _____ _
associated
673-3663 S48·07lS Eves duplex. 719 Marigold. W. spacious 4 bedroom, NEAR DOUGLAS '68,900
Owner 'anxious to aell. 2 bath, carpeted home By owner, will fmance,
OROKfRS-Rf AL ~Oll'.j
202', W 8olb .. o bl' 1•6
$149,500. Prin. only. wit b ma mm o t b nocloalolco.t.3Br2Ba.
640-78CM. OpenSuoday Presti fireplace-PLUSH 28lll5 Fam Rm, X lge lot, RV f8 cabin-like den 1 Lovely acceu. 891-7272 -----------•BEACH Mesa Woods Eastslde locaUoo & only1 _______ _ ~~~ DUPLEX* VIiia S7•,500. . u2.soo.
Good Reductions! Loads ot ctiarm In this 2 A th 1 s · 1 !I INTHIS MARICm GtMrol I 002 GeMraf I 002 On 3 brand new pro-Bed r 0 0 m p Lu s 2 ln~ :'\'fi1s P~~~r 5.~d I... Qlacu· all l 1.5 Miles to the beach, 3
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• perties: cute 1 story' 3 Bedroom. with patios. home.• Bedrooms. fami· Iii P. . • bed.rm. l 'h bath. large
3 BDRMS • 2 STORY bedrm home-now j ust BBQ's , & fire places. ly room. big full sized ...__erti.. lot & paUo. Vacant. Call BEACH VETER AM $81,500. The others are 2 Walle to 1he sand. Call for dining. Birch wood, I~ ..--• _,.752·1920 fa.L
HOUSIHG SERVICE stories 3 bedrm homes-more information. sized ftrt!£lace. Centr 1400 OUA1Ln "'~' •1•c14 SCOTI' REALTY Secluded parents retreat now $89,500. All are well s•6 SlJ or ideal for sewlllg room . Call your l~al Veteran bui lt with fi replaces, air coodlt onlng, sunken Low ~ -7
bn.ght d h home loans. Call: BKR 540-1720 f
G.-ral
step down fam. rm .. a Counselor for info. on VA shake roofs, tile entries rm Jlvfng room, $105,000.
an c eery coun-and extensive use of ' . loW Pricel W""111To11e""CH try kitchen • big back Hkr. 556-7777. 20fRS. ood I I . --
ard · h ed w · ... L. • Like new, beautiful 4 Br, I 002 Y wit cover patio. PETE BARRETT I For this auperb area. pool ... jacuui step up t
You will be amazed what 2 BR -COTT""GE REALTY INC. ---~---··pride ... _·out, 3 r~~· AIRiR•:, romanu0c •••··~··•••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• S86,900 can buy. Call now ~ REALTY vwa.:c uuu ..,......, .... 6".16
FREE 842-2535 $47,900 - -714/846-1371 · "#1 lnCaUfOrma .. · bedrooms, den, eating pit. Priv ply mus t rvcellent Ol>INlll9•HH•JNlflttt• I Qw el tree hned Street, 642-5200 • area, COZY brick 54cJiflce,'99,!5()()968-9'0J u VILLAGE CH4RM · ftreplace & tam.Uy room.--------.... view & a 3rd BR at no !•·. ·.,.,J1l.l'!i ii~ corner location across Weekender or artist's ~on rumpus room, S4Y .. HELLO'" . Starter Home Bx~~a 2~~·1:· ~!~~r~ ~· ~iittnlr.t f~.r;::a::o:.ar;:n~:~~ --.-· retreaL 2 BR, 2 BA with BY OWNER $75,000. BKR call 'T04GOODIUY
·s ee this beautiful 2 Crest at 2 BR pnce. . · ---==··-·-~ kitchen. Flower filled C b "d ( room to· grow. $122,500· Charmlni clean 3 Br, 2 540-l720. Valuelsthewordforthis
bedrm home near South Needs fast sale. ---yard! A doll at only am n g9 State Maylease-option. Ba, freshly painted in· 2Br,2Badecoratorsbarp
Coas t Plaza. Great VAWY 640·9900 $47.900!Callfast752-1700 College Par~, 3 bedrm, 2 HALPINCHIH terior. Dining rm, new I A••&L borne. Featuring walls of ~~~~~~·~~l·d:~a~~~1--------•I R-2 ZONING [W~'·""i!itll ~~~h s=!~So~~C~eeaa~ :~~~~~ ~~~fo,"dglpcs~r c~:~!:~. ;, :c~~ =1iuf~~Pct!io~~
S64,500. 549-8655. A 7000 ft 1 t · for pool Culdesac street w /Work bench. Corner • $1119; 750. Ask to see it t-... dl. f ff·~· pprox sq .. o m ·~ . ' Original owner. Room Dupl~x So. or Hwy on lot, fncd back yard. NOW!
UPERB <llUUUI 0 I way tum of cul-<le-sar. ldeal . . . for s mall boa t a nd Dahlia. Only; 12 yrs. 3br, Room for boat or RV D-P-L.& 1026 .
CdM DUPLEX, bedrm to ~tJ!.ld one more unit. trail"'" _,, 500 2ba ea. unit. $172,500. parking $163 700 645-7054 --~ Shoncrest OMES & 1 bedrm. Preferred Existing h?me a 2 bedrm BAl,...G THE "' . .....,, .4 Ownet Appt831·9835 or6'2-0676to~ap.pt. ••••F•:::•IL•Y••L••,V••,:.•G••••• ~ R....Mu location. Oversized lot + mother· in-law or guest "" 546-41 I ---·-------1 ~ " ._ . ., .:;iiiiii;;;iiiiii;::;;:i :;~I with room for a large ad-rm w/sep bath. Near SUMSHIME IM CHARM I NO Duplex, 3 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~14 Bdrm, 3 bath, din rm, ~ 146-5573
---------• ditional unit. $155 ooo. Newport Hts. Reduced to Four: bdrm~. that open Br, 2 Ba, & 1Br.2 Patios, COLLEGE P4RK den, rec rm, bobby rm & •---------
R£• "'X 644-7270 ' $72,000. feeling:, walk t.o t he Cloee to tennis. $162,000 3br, 2ba. Corner lot. Lg sauna. 3500 sq ft. Nr i--------· .._ a beuch, live on aqwetcul · THIS IS Owner640-7030 shed. ()po Hse 10-6 daily. Harbor. *'ll0,000. By 111-...&.---..1 $4450. ' 2BRt run S j( ~tNew II . de-sa c, r~du ced to -~wu ii~:g w/st;~wn t.~~: ~ S#iidl $83,SOO. These and many DELUXE DUPLEX n 9•5oo. Owner. 2284 owner. <n•>496-9723 Owner wants immediate
formaldining"Gall eria" . · ~--A..L more ingredients are Close To Ocean First ColgateDr.&&2·9919 FounfainValr.y 1034 sale.Spac4br,2ba,fam
& pyt. entry courtyard, "T'"'RCA_LT.~ORr--ANYTIME yours, Call now! 546-2313 IT! ! tim41 offered for sate. 3 Hew Custom Hom. ••••••••••••••••••••••• rm. fplc &h bltna. Newt SeeittDday. _ ~ • OPEN111v.,1\1uN101<1t;i1• br,3ba&paUo+2 br,2 lBr,2 fullbatbs,dbl carpet-urry. a
V 41.LEY 640.9900l..:iiiiiiiiiii:;;i:iiii;;;i:iii::;;::11•i.iiii1iiiliiiii•----[ ~ -~ ba. ~car gar, elect door, frplc's, plush thru-out. * * * S7~~~.;"", eves 968 "'l",;
Tolkf ler Time!
---.. ' ' REDUCED $I 0,000. soft water system, Laun-Broker 752.9023 .-.-N ..,, ""
· • Har bor View Hills. 3 dry rm, xtras. 317 --J.A.Landess lnt1REH~~ortt 4 BORMS bedrm home with huge Larkspur Ave. By appt JUST LISTED 706 Fern.leaf
2 BATHS -family room. It's really only. 1210.000. Ownr/All. E4STSIDE CdM
SS6.700 MESA VERDE ~ady {o;;,. YCOU! l~l~ 544-4910or 731-0599eves. A truly pride o r Y~::e.:::H:..or
Not a Condo! Beautiful CUSTOM HOME acres · orona e OLD CdM. By owner. ownership home. Oa one (Sl.5.00vaJue),to
WONT LAST!
Beaut. 3 br, 2 ba w/fam. rm., dining area, service
porch. Liv rm w/frplc:. Cov'd patio, ahlngte roof.
Won't hut! Just listed for
$77,500.
single family home in Fabulous custom home Mar. . ha rming 2 br, 1 ba of E-.stside's most de·
good area. Vaulted ceal· in Mesa Verde. Super im-Open Doily 11·2 use on xtra wJde R'"'.2 sir able stre ets: Too RincJlhtcJ lros.
ings • brick fireplace · ma culate 3 Bdrm with Sat /Sun I 0-6 Jot. S139 500. Open FTi. tmo.y amenitie5 to list + ..,._Ir loft.y cedar cabinets -much farruly room, formal din· or Sat It~-11• Marigold'. priced rieht. MUST SEE Clrcut
more ! Why not see this ingroom aad pool that is Cal Merge Benton 640-~ FOR YOURSELF! Aug4tbruAugl3
home today. befo re its completely renovated. 640-.6161 644_1353 H. ""·"°· AnabeimConvenUon em -ST .. .-.E W Ti Su• d sold!Callnow842·2S35 Jw.tbeready to move in DUPL.r..X Sharp Z Br, Center,800W.Katella ,,...._ ;RI# rap-le n ress Ol'fN,H9 •1f\IUNl0ij/Nl(f• and see the Xt.ras: Two owners unit W /2 Br apt, Tickets must be ex· ltl4LTY,IHC.
, •.. · -~ fireplaces. extens i ve corner Jot. $164,000. Open changed for reserved ~ 141-2323 ~· .. ~ landscaping, custom Sat/Sun 1·6, 620 Iris. seata at the Cooveollo.o i---------~)$ ·t built-Ina, Jar1e enclosed 640-7862 Cent.er ahead of time. ENNIS DREAM! ~;
·'?.:::.::. · ,:;,, patio. Call now 546·2313 OPEN HOUSE Call 642-5678, Ext 333 to mile to beacbf J Br 1%
CORO MA DEL MAR [:i f I lllil 2~~~~ Jd~ Older SJ~~~~~ li•Or· =ou=:::~. Jlv· ~~~1f.~~
DUPLEX · -NEW OFFERING l/2 llk to OceCltl upper. lng room & den, dinlnc Marine.rs Cove. Lse/opt Lovely duplex, each unil Beautifully loeated for Completely remodeled WebbRJty 831-2170 room, 1~ bath, cement· considered. 536-8795
having 2 bedrooms each. carefree living. Condo in 00 ah' ove1"1ized lot. A ONCE IN .._ ed RV access large lot.
Walk to beach. Priced to Newport Beach with 3 smashing 4 BR plua den A Fountain VaUey 962-8734 • PACIFIC SANDS
sell. f ln GB£ ... T WHILE $79,500 IMPERIAL HOME
~
I l .., lo.. fll I~ I \ I I 'I
~ ( ' ' I
ljf~ £ Cm! H•1 Co1tn• ilel M.,
1002 G.Mral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
CE
110111 ILllNS CD.
OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE
REDUCED! C PLAN
JN THE "BLUFFS"
OPEN DAILY 1·5
Spectacular 2 Story Townhouse In
The Newer Bluffs. FuJJ Balcony 2
Suites Plus Large Family Room.
Highly Upgraded'. Overlooks Pool &
Ramada. Offered At New Low
Price Of $157 ,500
2444 VISTA NOBLEZA
II I DOVER DRIVE 831-1808 .
G, .. ,.. IOOJ' G1•rill •. 100 .............................................
),
bedrm, pool, tennis, plus armal d log ptua ~ Enclosed, patio foun-ocean breezes for onJy huge family room with .. we have the privilege to Hi.fffte)toa •acla I 040 ta Ins & Jacuzzi, , Br,
$129,500. Call open beams, natural list a home In Im-••••••••••••••••••••••• l~Ba, 1600 sq ft. 20:2U 640·6161 wood textures and ocean maculate-co~dltio~. 5, .... .,Ll,...G ,..___ R fL
~
COATS& WALLACE
REAL ESTATE . INC.
VA TERMS!.
EASTSIDE
Seller wiU heJp finance
on a conventional loan.
Newly remodeled. plush burnt orange ca rpe t ,
modem kitchen, sunny
breakfast area, lge
master bedrm w /dress-
ing area, prof. landscpg.
Much more. hurry I 6'5-0303 •
FORESTE
OLSON
p~l ....... , ..
and jetty view from "'-:1J: to •-T'"-Aftft "" ""vwn ee n. $92,!5()0. mas~ suite & sundeck. ' room. 2 story ex-_... "" '""""' ... ""• nca move lJl.w. ...... I ....... DM ""RK ...... _.._rR ... alt-
Just steps to Ocean Blvd. ccuUve home is avaUa. Huge lot. 10 fruit trees. 96 9771
$235,000. ble at yesterdays prices. Highly upgraded 3 bdrm,
Cc1H644-721 I All the amenities to fmly rm, open reeUng.l-Tl•0-.. •c• .. -.•0•EU-G•HT-sweep you off your feet. Great entertainment .-. ""'
~NIGEL
llAIL(Y &
J\SSIJCl/11 £5
Priced well under com-ho01e as well as gracloua BeautJ.ful •Br pool home, pauble homes in the lmly livin1. Call now to convenient to acbls.
area. Call today for an see this lvly home. shopping & beacb,. Jo
appointment. 545-9«91 maintenance yd, lg
540-3666 P a l m a • tr o p i e a l CORONA land.scpd. Call Marleen
HIGHLANDS aea1 Ettate = Real Estate by
TheJd .. I comblnaUon o ··~~~~~~~~~ a n e., ho m e in a n S&5 Resale Specialists. 3, l-
Br. ZlOO sq ft Glen Mar.
For aale by owner.
Reduced $3500 to $83,900.
Tbla la my laat week
~ore moving to Jdabo &
Dating W/realtor. See at
~tuctet, or call
e 1 t a b l I s h e d _..l!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!~-'or 5 bdrm models avail, neighborhood. featuring some w /pools, 968-4602
all the latest appoint· Pennlnilon Properties
me'otl . Oversi1ed l .. garase, lar1e rooms, "'ES4 HOllTH
bath, step down wet· bar , CED4R GLIM •
mint ocean view, aU tull1 NIW USTING
landscaped, walldq dis· ExctpUonaU1 clean
$185,~. lee. n er b o m e • F r o n t .. LANDMARK tan~ to private beach. ~ abaJ'1'11 decorated cor·
CALL 644-72 I I , • court1ard. Abundance
... ~ .... r: oemeat work "pfaoten.
BJ owner. S br, 3 baths. 3
car 1ar, brick patio, up-~t.to.ma~ --------1 ••AL mnwrJa ~=~:=•
<2> ~~ ~" 3~~~w\. one1'eW. obe remodeled. su.soo. Prln only Close to 17lh Street shop-~ ping and Newport~--~~~~~-•
Harbor ~b. A Sul*° fn·
veatment. Hurt')', JI.lit ,,.~ ......__
listed, call 5"-5880 --
~ ... HERITAGE
. • R ~ALTOR~
J
fmly rm. Onlt '83,500.
7bla Is a must oo 10ur U.t.MS-t&Sl 104%
~ Walker & Lee ISLAMDUYl..-
481', 2~ba waterfront
bome. Concre t e
dedt+85' boet dock. Why 1•••-----1 MUJe for • Condof Buy 0 W ~ E R W.bomercp,ooo " Pumdl::z.81tmet Bcb
ANXIOUS m,., 11·~=
Beaiatltol Olea lier .... -.............. .
•
~ ---:
•
...... Lw PILOT u.-...--. Fer s• HOUHI For Sale Houns for Sek Other Real Estate °"""Reel Esfitj H1111n Uafw I I • """" T T ............. llY July,... 1•11 ,,...... • •••••••••••••• .... •..!••• ---------~-----.....;--.-;;.;;;&,,1,,;• ;.;;.;;~'""";;.-..· ...-•;.;.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••• • • ••••• •• •••• • ••••••• • • • • •••••••• •••• ••••••••••••••••• •••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• C:.-clel M J~u · th 1n..,.S. ..._.,,._.s. . H .. nhrr59 ._,,._ S-Jw S-.._ ._,,..,.rty .ZOOO a.c-rro,.rty 2000 ............. !:" ....... .
-····················· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• c.11ar.. 1011 ~ 1011 c.,a....... 1011 ············-········· ··.·c··R
0
•• ..... •5·~·n·A··M·10··:·5••••••• iJ ,,,,... I 044 1""'9 • t 044 ~...... I OIZ •••••'••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. ••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• REDUCED S 13,000. COYl..OTON IROS.
UMIVllSITY ,4RK IRYlMI J.4. 4 br, 3 ba. 11. back llACH DUPLEX
$94.HO 3 liec1rm, 2 ba, Hay llv· LOOKATTHISI yd. Bike trail to ocean. FOUlt.ft.EX
an,.. b .. ut londapd & BRA.ND N£W·ZBr. den, Lota of wallpaper. &iperSpaniab style, end Two ~m uni~ wilh COllONA DEL MAR-
EarlUnt .Ed1nbur1 J*t.lo. Muat ... Lo ap. !:!. frpk, wetbar, Im· L• P,800.0wner.4.93-5828 olcul-de-aac.Goodarea. ~vate pali<M5oodes.lr•· Spectacular unyon &
el townhom• w /'J prwc OCCUPeDCY. Ac..-. 1ngo s.ta... 1010 $200,000. ln<:ludlni e corner lot in ocean view 2 BR +deo =· =11.,:cl..)':;d 6'6-38211545·3483 rrom Laauna Nl•u•I ....................... aepa.rateowoer'au.alt. ~~P~!i ~!!~~ )'Wl¥~.$600/mo. •
•/brkk ~ ftrepll. ReCkm&1 Pt. -~· 8 >' RulfsrAn exterior, Jandacaped/ a.osE TO WATER-in
W.urlronlllum =-= •IYOWNElt aprinklers. Old eotoaa d.el Mar. 2 '"
•Tur t 1 • Ro c II.. :S •---1.. 1041 " ls N allfvl..., e ...,. a.ot'></ Ill Hoo WISTNIMI co .... DoM1M1uM }.t~,~~ni~'f'j,~: I& 19=11 ~ ~~:.'~!~
BJtflll9 soo y 11 uwu --" On 1011 course: new 1--a.. men · o qu # -•· REAL TY INC. no...,..._... mo.
' • 0 ....................... thruout. end unlt, 2 -2 .._....._ I 1H1t1t plus den, s....,.. 538-0157 Pr._... ties --~~~iTRS AmRIMINT bdrms.,2batht.'82.SOO ....., wlttt _ _, upcJf'OdtJ. LoYely brick 7 l 4 /846-l37i -r752.1920 . SUMMER RENTAL-
175-.a H.AVIH ~ wltllt fruit tree& ••cl loYely MOOOUAIUt.NIWPOll IUOt One block from China
..... 'W_ALNUT ___ SQCOHDO 2 ltdrm • 2 bath O·Y-O 7~9·;;Z6 .__ ...... • • • ·S66•250 100/oDOWM •TRl-PLEX• FIVE UNITS ~lv~a~cb In Corona
-owntr, 2er. 29 11, din "Jlt· A atone'• throw to 493-8812 . le move into th1& 4 br Pride ol ownership, only Prlde of owoersblp. COLE OF NEWPORT ~. ci.n&ntl air, t'All tor UW ocean " downtown. f&• .. -. ITDl LAGUNA SOUTH LAGUNA Bradford Place home. 2 yean old! SP.aciouS 3 Beautiful neighborhood REALTORS
a PP l • $ s 2 0 J u 9 Uaht & 41l.ry, very clean. ~=== =: ~ NIGUEL LAGUNA BEACH M08t desirable greenbelt bedroom, 2 bath owner's In prime rental area. 67S.5511 .
eves/wtnda Fln•ncln& avall•bl~. -.1120 "99-tSSl 497·2488 loc. This one won't Jaat. unitwilbfireplacel Close to sbopplog &1---------'H~RINS REALTY $62.000 tramport.tion. CostaMeto 32%4 T~~<;.'-* 494-8057 * Niguel Shore:[ •tJ.55'-4556 1 ... &.Dp!!!jQPt':.t':.IWflOll•'·~ :mr. fam rm. 20oa. m·wly ----::'~dnr':,~~":~ ~atb~ ..__,... IMcll I 069 .-wport leach I 069 _____ _ ~pleteed L1trlulpur It, 4 IR·l IATHS view home in private ... •••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• OtherReal Estat• · 712."20
lllnl locauoo, S124,9W \'1t:w! L.iu. ll\I. rm. bas community. Includes J01 Udo luxury Condo, 2 lalaoafotlrp .. x ....................... wooau.1ut.N1 au.Gt ,~..,_ beam t't!il • frpl. walls of fa mi I Y r oom ' 2 br, $290.000. Open Daily Sub.it y_. Offer Mobile Hon.• -==-====:::..:..::.:.:.:..:..:;.;..:..:..~1t-==...:===-==-=----=----1
• Jlaacho San J oaqwn :!J:Sr. gla:.s l~ed tu pallo & lath fireplaces, jacu;d ln 1·5. Rlog ~F for Agent. Newly rebuillfourplex.1 For Sc* 1100 TWO 4-PLEXES
den, ternflc v1~w. un lOlh holut~' 1famdry. rm.; bllnA. master bath; over 2600 67s.al00 Bedrm and 1 bath in each ••••••••••••••••••••••• COSTA MESA
tee U 14, 5 O O. own r ~~si2Ga.:, area. square feet. of luxury· unit. Across Crom beach. I'railer space up to 8x3S'. ExceUeot corner loea· ~ MlsalooRealty 494--0731 $325,000 EASTILUFF Good beach area op-Adult park, no pets. lion. Can be sold
GORGEOUS Blg 5 bedrm home. port.unity! BKR962·5511 548-6173 separately or together. ade or may lease/op. •---------Newly painted and com-GRHHTREE! lion. Jmmac. 3 yr old 3 Lar1e Ya rd with '58 Hlcks 8xt5, 1 br (cap. pletely upgraded.
BdRENdTWOOD 2/IBHl. &, ouH~:1d+e2gBasABhBmQw&/poof;.1e· ~:7ca~larneJ~~~odus:~ DC EJAN ~·sp!::!·A°J~t ~f M~ $1!i9,000each. en; ecor · w o s o ""' .. Sl48,000. with $3000 al·· park. ~. 548_..l 73 wood, paper. Lush yard, ring. l o Lag Hills iowancefornewcarpet. , . IQ ~
brick patio. firepit. spa $81,500-$25.000 equity + ltoy Mee..-.. llh p~-pool Next to p11rk caBh for Lag. Bch pro·1---------1 IREPOSSESSIOM~ .._..,
DELMAR' IUILDERS,ECIAL SPECIAL Duplex w /plans for Redec3Br2Ba avlnow. $86,sOOOwn /Agt 831·7568. perty Lake forest I 055 Rftlltor II I 0 Newport . Prap--&.··-. "
"' ··" k RI ,.__,,,_ .... ___ 548 7729 EW Bank must sell 8 re• ...-. --,.,agrvuz y, lr. •••••••••••••'••••••••• "'4nTill.....U • VI 752•1920 ~o~~~le~=-~a~ $450 mo. 6'0-296i
4 Ir· $89,000 49Hl6ll ~DOWN, no closing I•--------PoSSeSSed Mobile-Homes uooGUAtLST.Nl TIUOf
B 2 in parks. Save thousands direct. OWner will carry NEW3br,2~2ba,famrm.
financing. &46-5948 ask Incl. Clbhse .. pool & 2~~ba,cenl air, ram/din costs, charming 3 r llREDUCED././ oCdollars.lCH5%down.
rm w/frplc. $89,000. You OCEAN VIEW LOTS 8a house. Best buy en· SouthlandM bile Trade Up? for Richard. teno. c~. 673-6672 choose cpts/drps. tire area. VA ussum, MUST SELL TH J S 3 Bedroom with open ° Owner/Agt 559·8146 dys, $25.000 to $60,000 pm ts $595. P .1. T . I. WE.EK! beam ceilings nestled In Homes Sal.a We have listed a number 3br, 2ba. fam rm. crpts,
552-8481 eves. 5021 Fausta Vitali R.E. 837·8273 or Dr. Held. 4 Br, Seav1ew $229,~ •. acres of parkland! 17141898-9904
Dutcher . Call 499-2241 1·59&-1221 s ame h 0 me. w 1 th $82,500! Call us now! Red 1---------oforoperties indifferent LohforSale 2200 drps. North CM. $395.
prlce ranges; up to $2 and ••••o••••••••••••••••• Avall 8/1549-21646
------1067 furniture selhf!g for Carpet, 754•1202 _______ ,Missiott Vieio $279,000. Don't wwll Call S 3 m i 1 l i o o m i n i Builders Frff Rtftt, 6 mo. warehouses. Let us tailor Attenti~ ! i---------1•••••• ••• • •••• • • • •• • • • • now 548-8614 NEED A Brobdi·gnag . By orig. owner. L<!vely 3 JOHN VA.NIAN co.
LARGER Br,+ FR M.V. VHIW loll--------
ls not imaginary! Travel home. Nicely decr'd & ANXIOUS OWNER HOME? swiftly,Gullivartoquiet lndscpd. Walk to MUST SELL. Expansive
. • seclusion and superb Marguerite rec. & shpn'g greenbelt, Bay Vu. 3Br, nus could be the an~wcr ocean/can yon views, cntrs. A/C. cover ed fam rm, beamed ceil's,
lo r .You r g row 1 n Ji with lush vegetation sur· ·patio. Hurry al $88,000 2~2 ba. Priced to sell r a m 1 l y • s n e c d s . ! rounding this enormous 5 51J6.S323 $1.55.000.
Bdrms .• 2•~ ba. lam bedroom, family room, 3 ·-------NEWPORTR.EASSOC
rm. + formal din. rm. bath home. S209.000 (352) 3 BR, 2 ba. ram.rm, cor· Call Ms-6625
New paint inside and out oer lot, 11~ yr old, up· ---------
PLUS a great location graded & landscaped. NPTHTS with unobstructed view $78,500. 831·2551aft.6
of mountains . $108,000 BY OWNER, a furnished model. Elegant 4 BR, 3
Ba, exec. hm. Best area.
Great value. $137,500.
(213)393-4516
HOME
Custom blt. Engineered.
Xlra sturdy built home.
Extensive tropical yard.
3 bdrms. 2 btbs. Lots of
. JUST_L_ISTED! .. _wport •-ach--1-0,-9-• wa lnut pane Ii n g .
l"'l'C -8¢auUful flreplc. FA Mint cond1t1on; 2 bdrm. ••••••••••••••••••••••• THE CALLISOH CO. condo.minium. Close to IEST IUY Realtor
New mobile homes for an exchange for you. 14 Ac+ for 4 uruts. Gre~l
DECORATOR'S sale in modern Adult Century 21 Sporow C.M. loc. Owner will
DEUGHT Parlt. Rent $60-$70 mo. IovestmentDivision carry 1st T.D. Only
Immac, 3 Bdrms, 2 sty, Also space tor rent. San 96~7866 $67,500.
A·frame, only $104,500. Bernardino. 714·88&-2518 -lobbe Suildti
Also 3 Bdrm, 2 ba, beach ------------------UNITED BROKERS
bowie, a steal at $82,500. Adult parlc in Irvine. 2 646-7'14. . 751·S959
Property House 5308 w. BR. 2 ba .. sunporch, lge. COYIMGTOM ~ofc--a.. CoastHwy,N.B.642·3850 yard.S29,500Agt646·2414 ....._,_ is be tu • -~~ .aw.a ~ a au # us Property 2550
IY OWNElt. 41R Crvine, Adult S star park, Ana.beam. $183,000. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Lusk in Eastbluff. Pool 2'x66 Santa Anita, up-~ISL.AMO . :> c E A N F R o N T
wtsolar beater. Corner graded, PP. $36,900. Az:u!P!1d!~1.0~1p PROPERTY
lot Sl75,000 Ph 644·1009 552-367$ 'l'rtptex fu a prestigaous Lg 3 br, 2 ba, sauna,
LIDO ISLE M. ust. Sell 42' Mobile Home area. $24.9,500• frplc, magnUicent view. Mini Warehomes Exclusive pvt. beach in 3br 2ba beamed ·ceil· m lovely Adult Park. Nu Tb es e are re a 1 Carlsbad. $253,000. By ingi thruOOl. South brick Rdrig, metal awning & mooeymakers! Located owner.M6-$>13
41e•oom
dining rm. fplc, 2 baths,
double 1araee, patio.
w;Q/mo. / __
RoyMcCm'clle
Realtor 1810 Mewport
Costa Mesa 548-7729
1,2 and 3 bedrm Condos.
Unfuro. S300-$350-$400
'Agent 646-3255
Mesa Verde Exec.
4 br, 3 ba, 3 car garage. Shows like a model
borne. $695/mo. 'incl.
gardener. 557-8717 or patio. B y owner. color TV. $3700. 752..()861 from West Covina to Sao
$1.S7,500.673-8423 or541J.7471 Diego. ENCINITAS •-644-·-354.S ____ _
SanClemente 1076 ~forsale 1200 LAMD
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• from B aJ slow to Oceanside. shopping & beach. Many extras! Hurry on this In Newport Crest. 2819NewportBlvd. LOCATION! Great 3 Br,
one! al $76,500 Beautiful, spacious :: Newport Bch. 675·4.962 2 Ba, home on beautiful
THREE ACRES
Fantastic view has this 3
bedroom, 2 bath home
with beautiful pool &
jacuu.i. Plenty of room
for horses & etc. Terms.
BKR.
Many different size
parcels al different
Beautiful cus tom bit COLLEGEPARKHOME·
home on wide Ocean 4Br, 2Ba. or fwy, shop.
view lot. 3Br. 3ba, 2 ping & OC College, avail
frplcs, $137,500. Owner Aug 15. 839-109'7
1-753-76'70. KJDSfPETSOK prices. Bdrm .• 2 bath condo. canyon with view or Real Estate Eastside 2 Br. $34.5 Wanhd 2900 Spacious twohse, S36S
't523 CAMPUsDt~IRVINE
mA~41_...,,,..., Kitchen with separate IE.+.UTIFUL HOME Riviera Beach.. On l'r~
uu Ll'.:ILn:.-> dining area. Upgraded IY OWMER lots to insure view aod RANCHO OO@eil'tl'W carpels & drapes. Ex· 3250Sq Ft ,.Uh view. lge privacy. New listing al
SA.... 4 99·2800 cellent condition. Tennis pool, fam rm, living rm. $125,000.
RIVERSIDE
TRIPLEX + 3 bednn
home PLUS vacant lot.
All for $85,000.
• •• •••• ••• •• •• • • •• • •••• 1 Br Duplex, $260
Will buy your house! ! 67~or646 4848
..,. -------courts, jacuzzi. guest fnnl D.R., 3Br, 3ba, 2 BERTHA HENRY JOA~ul u Must sen. Wlk to heh. park:ing,etc.$122,500. frplc,lg den.'2sundecks. REALTORS
677-5681
OR522-0530
Century 21 Sparow
investment Di vision
963-7866
Cash in a F1ash !
Scott Realty 536-7533 Newport Riviera. 3 Br
Condo w /den, frplc,
2"Ba, 2 cu: garage, -
pool, tennis . sauna,
jaconi included, 'S4ZS
mo. 759-0654 or 759--0191
..,. Secluded 2br, frpl. bltos, 67J.5558 675-4985 3 car gar & court.Yard. Del Mar 492-4121
Choice n eig borhood. lO"'o dwn. Sl29,500. -Sec. gates. $259,000. Ph1·--------UMDERTHE
-------letltab cboice location, choice 499-2438 * BLUFFS * 642-0665
property. San Lui$ Rey ;..:_ H'--1 1052 Original area. (BR, 3 ba.
OLD OAK TREE
Huge Oab cover this 20
acre fantastic view pro-
perty, creek bed, partial·
ly planted, near new
home with shake roof,
a1r conditioned, wet bar
etc. Terms. Broker .
---------...................... .
FOR SALE HolMt "'""sited
model, 3 bdrms., 2'2 ~-~· end unit. Tot.ally redec. baths, utility room. En-••••••ec•••••••••••••••• Mbve·inready. $149,000 LONESOME
Vacant 3 bdnn., family
rm. home in super
Newport Heights l<><:a·
tlon. Sl14,900 With as·
swnable loan!
GAZEBO
New wood exterlor
custom home with 3
bedrooms, 21h baths,
also ocean & golf course
view, jacuzzi, hi·beam ceilings, trailer access,
private street. Asking
$167,500.
Mini Warehouse Storage ••••••••••••••••••••••• facility. 100% leased in lcAoa ,...,a l I 07 Newly redecorated 2 BR.
prime location. 12% cash ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 Ba. fed ynl, pet ok.
on cash return for 5PACIOUS Oceanfront 4 $300. lit/last dep. 333 &.
$250,000 down payment. Br 2 Ba completely furn 21st St. See Mgr.
Callforappt. hme. Ji'plc, wshr/d.ryr, J Bedroom condo with
joy the good 11re or this SPLIT LEVEL ttASTIMGS & co.
!.i':h ~~~~~;u;~t:I Charming 4 BR w/2~2 Rli.LTORS 640-5560
-neuby; close to ever· BA, 16x20 Fam rm )'thing. Priced at a re· w/massive frplc & wet Udo Isle Chat mer
alls · bar. 2nd Frplc adds 4Br, pvt beach·tennls 676-5717
SS2·2080 M A Y 0 C K ~~:2iio2 ~~ m~~yr~~ ~~':i~~~~.Fi8~i; · tic $1.J4,500 warmth to master BR. $22SM Owr,Agt. 673-0289 OPENSUN14PM ~rvc'H 644·9582 garage, pool, tennis, Newly decorated & re·
ad y to m o v e into . HARIOR VU
$142,000. PALERMO red hill ~ ....
S:i 2-7500
608 Calle Del Cerrito . ATTBmOM
IUILOERS
INVESTORS
C714)4M•2t48 Costa Meso 3124 sauna, Jacuzzi hlcluded. .,_________ ••••••••••••••••••••••• $425. Call 6'6-4471.
4J;lr, 2~2Ba, fam rm, d!n 7 ,.. !$l&ALTTJ,
---------1 tO: rm, prof lndsc pd, .. ~----------1 jacuzzi. Ownr $186,900. 20U'-1Wa..N.I .
AMCHOlifH
IMVISTMBfTS
17141496-771 I
PRIME 115 A h DUPLEXES,M.8. Sl6S. 1 Br, MH kids pets ?BedrmbotJse..$360/mo.
ere ranc • 2 duple.xes, block to OK.Fee 2Bedrmduplexw/gll{& 90% ocean vlews, zoned eflnd 557 """"' u to 2 acres tor sub div. beach. <Z> 3br, 2ba, encl. Hom ers . ...,.. s malldogOK$325. ft ~ 644-6221 .646~4463 j~ ,.,g9"'J,'i . •-:amp-. -le-te-ly-redo_n_e_B_luf_r_s ----uc-•ED-S•I
5
•,•
0
•
00
•.•
or lot split. All util. thru garages. $165,000. tWwportleach llt9 2 .:!.e:room duplex.
,AMORAMIC properties. 4 Older TomLee,Rltr,M2·l60l .. ••••••••••••••••••••• fvaif n~ Century 21 ,1'\A)"" condo, single level 3 Br, 2 Kai
, Ba, w/fplc & sunken llv· ~~!~~~G3,HbLAr, N21~ DbRa,
OCEAN VIEW leased hms. XJnt terms. Duples.Eastsfde-CM 3 br Lido Isle 2br 2ba. Sips 6. 5C8-U68orpm557...oo75
VACANT & OWNER Byappt. Bkf.1-487·9367 2 ba + 2 br 1 ba 3 gar. SepU1400. (~13) 793-0427
io.g Rm,~ Vista SUerte. _...,_ nr
--N•E•V•E-R•A•G•AIN---1 Open Daily l ·S, Sl.11,900. fam. rm. Beaut. corner ANXIOUS. For quick ~3'0 Acres 18 ml'• S of S14.2,000.0wor834-10'8 ONTBEWATER COLLEGE PARK 3Br, sale, 3 bedrm, 2 bath, H t E' 1 f v· ll ~ 2Ba, Jg yd, $4.20 mo.
Agt. 645-9950 lot. Xlot. oeikbborbood. WllL YOU BE ABLE OPEN HOUSE 1-SPM
like new in and out. BllD eme • . as. 0 8 Tllln.EX, O.M. Z Story• 3 Br home Tricia833-8221, 752-7846
micro wave, trash com· Late. Agncultureoraub-Grat location, newer 3 w/boat dock. $790/mo, . .
TO BUY OWNER WILL $149,900. A HOME CRAWFORD&~SOC.
pactor, etc. Priced below dlY.$&50per ac. .A br. 2ba, frplc, yard. (2) yrly Jse. 631· UOO tBR,2 Ba.newJyp&Ulted,
marketat$129,950. 2~ acres Deuert ttol ·2br, lba, patios, encL Waterfront Homes. new c:rt>ts, drps. dbl gar.
SCOTI'aEALTY Sprtnp, S600 per ac. gara~70 ooo. fed. yrc1.Gdloc. S450mo. AT$8~. .CARRYFJHAHCING 957-0701 495-1020. ""--= ru'tr A2-1:603 lba,.pr,.lp.yrd..$3?5 JS. lat+~ Refa.-eq. Olfered by owner in Sparkling 3 bedrm, 2
La1unlf" Niguel (714 ) bath and family room.
496-00SSAM or PM Lowest priced sin1le --------t family home in pride of
•--------•I ownership Eastblurf.
~
Now vacant. Seller
motivated. For details,
call 540-lUl.
, f. , ... HERITAGE
. • REALTORS -IRl'HT & SUNNY We 11 decor ate dlllli ________ ,
Highlands home with NEWPORTCREST
c h eerful use of ND<>
wallpaper. Exterior n....a.~ CO ,ooo 3 B
'
f 11 I d d £W<a~ $10 • t, tas e u Y an scape 2~ BA, wet. bat, PQOl,
with sprinklers front 11 tennis, sauna, mini· back. enjoy pool ocean Tlew. By owoer.
clubhoose.. playgrounds $114,500. taU MS-6317. & greenbelt within walk·i-__;. _______ ,
.lngdlat.ance.$94,500 WATaFIONT --------1 DOLPHIN R.E. New 800 1q ft Mobll ~ 494-1511 Bomt, IBr, Illa. •,too..
r
536-7511 ~vm • furn, $350 unrurn. se-7237 •---------eo leftl acres So. of Indio. 548-S838 •---------BUILDERS PANORAMIC Ocean• Citrus or agriculture. fDUR PLEX ? BR. 2 Ba, Condo. Brand :~:eCU~'!te~ view. Gorgeous c~. ta50pr.acre.485-1020. olooeBedroomApw Holllesu..f8nlshecl new. Frplc, disbwsbr,
aide, owner w /comlder ~:.S.~~$160, . ......._,......., 1400 4EnclosedGarages ....................... trash compactor.
arrry back TD. Priced at ••••••••••••••••••••••• Excellent Location .._. l"-d 1206 6'5-2062 dayS, or 64S-3S61 P.ooo.Agt.MS-9950 OMTHEIEACH FORSALE/LEASE 641Shalimar ••••••-•••••••••••••••,_eves __ .-------
$10,. 2 Story, 3 br, 2~ ba. Apsirox. 20,000 •Cl· ft. ln· DoNctDlsturbTenaata BAYFRONT, Pier f br, 3 SHARPS 81"2 Ba, HUGE
Many special features. du.stria) build to suit. $130,000. ba, fam no, no pets. Boaus Rm.all bltns, fplc,
1255,000.G8-IM84. Wt-up. MAULWILSOM $1100/mo, 7rl1 lae. quiet cal de sac'. $450. Pric~ s-..._ lmleck REALTORS ~ &e.m
Reduction Caphtrmo 1071 COIPOliTERLTY 645-5557 ecpstr..oleadt3211 Meeade1Kar.3Br,2Ba.
I .... •••••• .. ••••••••••• 7 I 4-SSa.170 i ne--c M Ir pt. f t ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nu cpts, drps, We. encl Baycrest' bednn, am a BR + Olnin"/FamllJ a.a.--· ·• g 8 • 15 patJo, 1rdnr, no dogs. no•40'PGOlwitb•party • B C..fe!YLob/ $645 945-2978 llJeclpat{cs. $179,500. but rm. A/C beauty. Y ,....,,,.,.., 1500 •--· -------'' b-•t all owner. $84,890. Call for -rr•• PR~GIOUSHOME -..-.. aaya I U . .... appt. '11.4.al-l.505Hurryl ................ -..... l:oi:>U .J
often ,aocatlnowl Sacrifice companiod
645'7221 MODOWM YA crypt. Pactttc View
No down VA Jr. Ex-Memorial Park. $1150, ecut1ve. hltb OQ hW over· aave $330. L.L. Hastings,
looklnl d1.7. LC. a br, 2 "80Z3 Silver Spur Tr.,
be. pJOllbe Jd. &abmtt Palml>Mert.Ga.82390
.. oatennt -----------Weitclff..., BKR.ar-0680•-..oo c=t.!:~i7o'O s....... • ..................... .
c.,11tr-1071 C .. lllr•t 1071 LelrareWarJdTowers ............... -.. ••••• ....................... Las retire. Meals.
•
t
maldl. JK dn. $35,000. •I.MO
....... U•fww a.~ "-aet U•fwWJl!iM ' ......... Ua,_..._, ..,_ t11Wt1b Fuml1h•d ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •T.. · HJ Co.to Meso 3724 .................. ••••• .,..... JJ44 ... .,.,. ..... 3269 ...................... .
New 18clnn... l ~-baLb "' •••••••• ••• •• • ••• •••••• ••••••••••• •• •••••• •••• ~ AIC, It. p.Uo, ~I. llHT AU ~P? ~N°?S LcJe Fvrn 2 Ir
can,p, ~tu um 2 BR. I !Ml . • ••• Ml0/425 M ... A1 a , .f~ •11.f'OO Pool maturll odllll llO --~ • B.R .. •-......... ..,.. on.... 1eo....... -• ·
.. I --... JUO "' '.&OW...... .. ..... ,,_ -pet.s. $2SO. 44S 3971 ~· .. •• ................ ::~·~~:·· -~ • Bdrm oD Penlnaula HMotllMJoeleoch 3140 tfililOR VIEW HILLS W/thY w11lll to Bay It •••••••••-h•••••• •••• Duch. Wood1y II warm ' 4.BR a&a. ;· . "760 ln prtme locatloQ , lBr, 18&. up11t1tlr11, close ANAJIEJM UILL.'1 U so I m 0 yr ly I se. IO beach. $205 mo. 5~
lDR, z& · $UO w • t er t r on l Ho D\ e 1 l''rankron 963-87~
fm·1400 .._..,... hoch 37 69
Blufrs 4 BR, 3 ba. lovely ••••••••••••• • ••• • • ••• •
1r•enbel t. Former
model. Aaenl 6"·1133
. -----·---.-......--:: -_ .. --
Aporlftl•nta Unfw1I. Aparf•9ftb Unfwa. T~. Ju'X 28. 1917 OAILY PILOT (f .
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •
Co.to MHo 3124 Costa Mno 3124. Apa l£••t1.....,..., IOOMe 4'000 ll..tal 4400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
5Mflst11M(j/
U.,.O leocll 3141 ROOMS $2!S wk up with Land.s<"aped open ofc l4'C
••••••••••••••••••••••• kitchen. SU.SO wk .& up Nur O.C. Airport. Avail.
LlVE JN A CASTLE apts. St8·97SS (o1· lmmcduate occupan·
Acte$ ol 1arctena. wide l'\lm rm. w /pvt bath, $l2S c~. 1 ~ 8 unit.a. 50-3122 ~anviews.H~e2br.2 mo. Nr. Victoria & 8.30-12.30Moa-Thurt. ~
of !i~:;~~=~~~~~ ~fre:fatc~.' p1!~: r~~: Harbor, CM. 631-06SS PtiM Pt. prominent, new,
with luxury aQPOlntments and Antiques. HJgh ceilings. RM. w /lrllt'h pri v for prof ocean vu. Coast Hwy•
sue>erb recreation at a premium Giarage. Pool & apa. or atudenL $30 w /o ldlcb, SlTOup. 49&-lMO
1oea11on Tennls•gym•tt\er8i)y Estate Uvtn11 Close to $3l.SOwith. 848-3713 CdM dlx aulta, uut pd,
spa•swlrnmng•bllllards beach & s hoppin1 . "tr 1............. 4..,00 A/C ample pt1 from
Jr. one Bedroom . asls-1685/mo. ind. util. -••r .....,_, • Sl6S:Nolaereq.87~
One & Two Bedrooms. One Bath , Mature adult.. 494"'653 •••••••••••••••••••••• • ,
, F~ ~o. ·~ Uoc:r.2 1VibQ or '94-6017 M.I. OCEA.MFIONT A.BSOLtrl'ELY the most ...-... ._._ J -··••""'""'\t V"' Be ut. 3br 2b I 8 RB AS 0 NAB LE .
U1 ci..-1 • Oceanfront old Medal a • a, 11 eeps • FINEST full servt
l"orLeue-3Br, 3Ba home, 550 Paulortno •~• .. Costa Mtso 751-et95 Villa on cnrr abo_v~ Aug "Sept. 642-lfl03 ec. orfl~es ii\ Ne::rt
w/rommandlnl( view or rt--....., •• ~,_., crashing surf. ~ass1ve Newport Beach near Center. From SlJO to
ocean at Nwpt Harbor. beams, leaded windows, ocean. L1e 3br, 2ba, ear. $295 64C).f669
walk IA> Ensign & Harbor 3822 Costa Mna 3824 3 frplc's, 3000 sq n + · Avail. oow! 6'2-1603 1--·-------
2J ~b Schla rrom quiet Possibly moet diatin.ctive CXftce &lite, 2 rooma, wet •.c ""~~aua ""-·'-•we ..,.,_ Rd d ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• on Calif. co--. ""'-""' to Balboa apt. sleerw 6 ... ..,.. bar, bath, new C:"'ls. REA\. TY INC. T<I '-Mfn>illMCIPli~'"" IMIJ.. a drea, avail GREAT RECREATION: CLOSE .., ... O>W,... ,.. _..... ·r Sept l Owner 548-4192 ---------pvt bcb. BeauL trees, wk " up. or mo. rate. burllar alarm. $1.50. mo .
• -'•'•"•/•146---l•l•7•1--fUBTL£ ROCK 3 Dr, d.a.vs.Nz.uzaeves. SwJmmfog, saunas, 2 .... toBeach quiet.~luded.Sin&leor 675-S810;or642-0393 AsltlorGall,144-1211
··arn Rm, a Ba. w/VIEW, health clubs, billiards, . ·rei \I CLOSER cpl pref'd Refs req'd ltte yi1rd, or tennis & 3 Br Condo 2~i Ba, view, night·lighted tennis '''' ..,~~~-~ ~ • around. OCEANFRONT2 Br, 2ba, Downtown office bldf ., Very mce 3 br. 2 ba. DW, p<>ola. S5Zli mo. A&l. pool $38Smo. courts. Pro & pro shop, J,." "~-~ to Shopping & Freeways 494-279'f0 • year · furnished nicely $350 wt Huntington Beach. Good
q&a. drpa, Z c.-ar 1ar . ?S2-0l88 . 646-2700 golf dnvwg range, party s · July, U7S/wlt Aug. parklnc. $125/mo.per
le.need yard. k11u1pet room. CORONA DELMAN. CLOSE J No.end.nr.Shaw'sCove; Waterfront Homes suite. Call Scott Realty
OK. S37S. tti.3-4567 Act .. 1--------·1 SPYGLA.SSH!LL FUN ACTIVITIES·. r l ·Bdrm. apt. all e lec. 631-1400 ~7533 • N f p I 8 2 Br Townhouse, r).llc. 0 ee. Two Bedroom$ anoram c ocn vu, 4 r. l"ullt1me director. free Pool. tennis. Some ocean lo Best Value in Town TumeS26S M.roAanthaoc. • .... 1177 Bal Island wtrt'mt. 3 Br, Distinctive Office, desk , •rto HOME Rancho 2~2Ba. formaJ din rm. 3 5 d BQ ..... "" <>~-car gar, auto sprnklrs, un ay brunch, B 's, & Cat.ntina views. Close · weekly/or 1 $350. Call space $125 per mo.
Brand new 2 br, 2 ba, .-..Joaq 1495 custom tndscpg, $950 mo. trips, par.lies. s port to shopping & !me beach. 2 Bedroom luxury adult 2 br apt, ocean view, 2601 ~27S2or&42-9562. Mariners Mile Square.'
tiriclt fpJc, woven woods, Un Pk. Viii. lJ S4SO SllS-2078 t.ou.mamenlS & more! 644-2611 &faauly aplS from only Sohmo Way, Lag. Beacb. NB. Ui·SOOO x218;
wet bar, upgraded plush WaloutSquare $375 ---------f B E A U T l F U L --------$285 Call497·349S Newport. Ocean view 642·~ crptg, pool. sauna. RanchoSanJoaq SS2S IA.YFaOMT A p ART ME J';.T s: • across from beach at ---------
jacuui, $475. 963.7866 Deerfleld . $375 New2 Bdrm .. 2 bath con· Singles, l&2 bedrooms. VlEW-2 bdrm, 1 bath, •3 Pools•Dishwashers• 2 BR, 2 BA, untum. apt, 53rd & Seas bore. 2 Del.uxe garden office for
Three Bedrooms do . $990 Month or F\irn. & unfurn. Models w/sundeck, Cpl~-. gar., Jacuzzl•Playgrounds• oa North End w/apec· bdnns. Plenty of party lse .5<M sq ft, 2 omces,
Neat 2 br. 1 ba, cpt.s, drps, University Park S47S lease/option open dajly 10 to 7. Room· WI D. ,all uppl1 s. Nr Scll·cleaningovens• tacular Ocean & City space. Weekly rat.es for $360 mo. 833-9658 1151
2cargar.,fencedyard CoUegePark S4SO IAY&IEA.CH t . 1 N park. beach 1n CdM. views. Lge terrace. Aug.&Sept.642-4489 DoveSl.SUlte285.N.B.
Kids/pet welcome. S34S. Villagel s.a75 mae service a va!. 0 $'50molease,675·606l. 2SUW.Sonnower Responsible adults. BEACH HSE. Ste .... to_m-__ 9657 ______ _ 963-4567 Agent, no fee. 0 T REA.L TY 759-0811 lease required. Sorry. -----------5S7-4800 $450/mo 494 5397 before .,.y range ree S450 ---------1aduJLsonJy,aopels. Lge. 2 BR. encl. deck, • · sandinNptBch.Luxury AJRPORTAREA
NR BEACH. 3BR condo. Woodbndge Si17S Harbor Vu 3Br, Cum rm. bllns. Adults, no pets. Detached 2 Or, frplc, 9p~. 3br, 2ba. Avail now. $300 Dix furn private omces
Dbl gar, pools. tennis crt. Rancho Sun Joaq $595 Im mac. Neutral intr, O a.kwood Agent 641·2212 patio, cpt.s, drps, adlts. Newport hocll 3869 week.1·985-6952 w/aervices for R.E. Btr.
• ise.$375.962-6365. FourBedrooms lovely yard. Pool G.,,. .. den ----Nopet.s.$310.337E.18tb ••••••••••••••••••••••• CallBobm.&533 ---------1 Culverdale S475 facihties. $59~/mo. ~ St Call675-6736 Balboa Penn.1 blk tobc:h. ---------
Uruv Pk VIII. Ill S600 960-5272 Apartme nts Costa Me10 3824 · · · PARK HEWPORT $170/weekly. Slps4 Proreaalonal ofrices for 3Br, H2Ba, corner lot,
close to schl & shopping.
$'W0 mo. 962·2615
u · p k $S2S ------••••••••••••••••••••••• Sharp2bedrm,lba,huge Bach elor s, 1 or 2 646-6238 lse. Air cond. Xlnt ruv. ar *HAR 8 0 R VIEW . FROM 5230 patio, priv. gar .. pet .Bedrooms&Townhouaes security systems, Newly
Near ocean &: shop'g. 2
BR. pool. $335. Ask for
Mac. 962· TI87 or 546..s609
red hill ~:.:.
552-7500
t, 6 or 6 Br + formal dln1---------•I
rm, ram rm, pool &
jacuzzi. 2650 sq. ft. exec.
home in S&S Park Hunt ington. l yr lse. Call
968-4602
Pennington Properties
New Woodbridge Condo
2 Br + den. 2 ba .
$500/mo. Lse opt, $87,SOO.
644-41147 or 673·3022. Own.
Agt.
Spacious 5 Br, fully H•wport .. ach/Horit\ welcome. $285/mo. Drive From $259~ Bal. Penn. water front, crpt'd, beautifully d e· carpeted, 3 car gar, nr HHO lrnne '(at 17lh' Mature adultll only, no by 2211 Apt A, Pomona Spectacular spa, total l~ & 2br apts w/boat corated entry & recepl
pool. Available now. 645·0550 pets. Large 1·2&3 br Ave. Larry,546-5880 recreation program. slip.$200-$300.894·3523 area. Xlnt CM location. 640-1644or548-2873 apts Dsbwhr. gas BBQ. ---------• socialprogram.8pools,8 549-2922
H•wport hoch/South Gas pd. 778 Scott Pl. Bach&: 1 Br apts, new de· tennis courts. At Fashion 2 Br 1 Ba, fplc, dbl gar,1----------NEWPORT BEACH 1700 ltith St &12·5073 • cor, from $15S lo $170, bland, Jamboree & San pvt back yd, S. of Hwy. lusinns lt...tGI 4450
14 YFROHT <Dover at !fit h l Fox:hollow VillCHJe av!. 751-1514 eves. Joaquin Hills Road. ~92.86 or6"-1160Cd.M •••••••••••••••••••••••
2 B<inns .• den. 3 bath 642 8170 6:!1 w W11son646·20lO 2 Orn; Ba twnhse brk 1714164 .. 1900 NB. 2 Br ocn vu, wkly 4D&UXEOFC'S
condos; extra lge. living FURN OH. UN FURN fplc, gar, tge patio, adlts, Steps to beach, 4 Br 2 Ba, rates, avt monthly Sept. Coot. rm., seat 25, all
rm. & mstr. suit.e. Furn. __ W_A._TERf ___ O T •2brtownhome w /frpl no pets. $285. 22-17 Elden fplc, cpts, drps, $S.SO "tly 1.S. ~7573Agt. paneled, sm. whse in re-
$1125 month; unfurn. R N •L"C patio & enc. •'aragc Ave 646 7027 eves J ar. 1or2 yr. lease. Lake $000month And water view luxury •Adults. child 16 &over · · · lse.642-34-43 Wklysummerrental,3Br, Forest area. Kenl
RANCHO San J oaquin, 2 LIDOREA.LTY apt.s. l·BR, $1200 mo., 2 Pool&jaeuzziavail. Lrg.Bach. Gd loc. Pvt Nwpt Shores area~ 1~ 2Ba, furn. avaU now. Harltins. • * * br, den, 2 ba, super up· 673•7300 BR., $1500 Mo -------patio. Adults only. $180 + blksocean, 2br, lbadplx. easy access to ocn & 714-581·9393 • h 1 grades, view. $525. Lse. BILL GRUNDY Spac. ncwtnhse. 2br, 2ba. gas 646-4546 y 1 lse 71• o.c:.a 5871 pool, SlSO wkly N.B.1---------
Mic ae Muloy 644-6537 REALTOR 675-6161 many xtras incl f/p, yd, --· r y . ., . .....,. 673-0116 ATTENTION Artist & 388.'J{;=[~evlew Univ. Park Terrace, 2 br, BAYSHORES ---garage, lndry rm. E· $280, llR, 2BA 2 Br, near ocean, yrly. OCEANFRONT/LAGUNA Crafts~e~. $S0 to $400
38 2B f I bit side Onlv $310 642-1603 Family, no pets. nr So. ..-....ic,sundeck, $340. mq. VUI U1cl. UNIQUE You are the winner of 2 ba, Crplc, \•iew. Nr . r. a. rp c, ns. STEPS TO BEA.CH . --· -· Coast Plaza. 546-965'1 ~.,. S48-3348 3 B!', 2ba. Sips 9. Private rel. studio "The Fae·
two frff tickets pool. $425. 552-7896 or patio. Pvt beachrus. $675 2 BR. 2 ba $42S yrly Sl\arp 2br. cpls. drps, stairs to beach. $500 wk· tory" 42S E . 30th St.
($15.00 value), to 5SH2A5 yrly lse Im med. oc-3 BR, 2 ba S500 yrly bltns I child OK. No 2 Br $24-0. 1 Br $210. C/D. OCEAN VIEW yrly 2 Br 1 ly. Call497·2042 Newport Beach or call
RincjllnCJlros. TURTLEROCK cupancy.642·3286 SPECIAL RATES pets. $230. 574 Joann St, refrig, patio. adults, no Ba dplx, $400 mo. Voc:affonRlfttals 4250 67s.618lor67J..4271
lomum & Balley 3 Br2 Ba. btn & cozy in&: -----For summer rentals _ Apt~645·3417, 832·3448 f.ti~?s/24 James ~t . .6U-6780or642·3639 ••••••••••••••••••••••• DESK s pace at 17875
Circus out. I.Be. SS9·S229 Newport Shores 3 BR, 2 Adult 2 bedroom, beam Lg 1 Br, new cpts, paint, 1 block to beach. 1 br apt Beach BI vd., near
Ba, 2 patios. Close lo ·1. t ~10 ""a s · 2 B 1 b · SJ furn. $100 week or S2SO T lb i H i Aug4thruAugI3 •THEWJLLOWS. 4 Br, swim'g,tennis· ,bch.~_.95_ ce1unj?.nopes -. . ._, pac1ous r. a. up-15x30 patio, 00 mo. . . a ert n untngton Anaheim Convenu·on b " W. Wilson. inq . Apt F. sta1"5.-CalJ)Ort, gd prk'g. Avail Aug. 1. 761H676 or mo. yearly. Util. incl. Beach. _,.. per month. 2 a, llv rm, din rm. fum mo.yrly.642-2072 I----------. New~t/pai~nl •---' ~IV\Nt • m" ......... 2., .,., Center 800 W Katella .,. u ~.. -vu 1; _. ~os Brin1 own furniture. Our . · · rm. $425. 644-1480, 2 br, ulil. furn. Children $240. 3647&897·1383 ---------Tickets must be ex· 8.'J0.,5050 exl22. Walk to Beach, 3 Bdrms, ; ok. No pets. Mgr apt 6. Acrossrrom Beacb,2 Br, htttalstoShare 4300 receptionist will answer
changed for reserved ----·--S495. • SSlS. $600. yrly' 1960 Wallace 642-8447 l Br apt, part furn, util pd. 2 Ba, fplc, cpts, patio, ••••••••••••••••••••••• your phone for $10 per seatll al the Conve~Uon 5 IR. UNIV. PA.Rte Call Property House Sl7S W h .. ~ M F d OK Br 2.L month. Daily Pilototrice, Center ahead of tame. Nr pool & tennis. $650. 642.385() Winter rental. deluxe4 Br BAY MEADOWS mo. D/ • was er/ ... ;,., gar, I , 1 ep , 3 r.r 642-4321 Ca.1_1642-567~, Ext 333 to ca11497_3230. 5Sl-623l 2 ba, ~2 blk to bay & bcb Serene & cozy at-· 631.()655 blk, to tennis, mature Ba Condo w/pool. NB .. 1---------
da1m your tickets. . • EAST BLUFF ·4 8 r • no pets. $450. 644·1103 mosphere. Spac. 1&2 br Lrg 1 BR apt, for $200. & adlts. No pet.a. 1.vt Sept· 63H806aft 5orwlcnds. LAGUNA 1 blk to City * * * The Terrace 3 br Cam· 2~Ba, twohse, bltns , . --npt!i. Avail. Aug. 1st. for pool.Call June.$3115,lse.645·5036 AVOIDIMCOMPATIBLE ~· S,000.19,000 sq ft.
---------• bridge Model. Nr. pool & wshr/dryr, refrig, nr Bach Apt nr~ NB pier. $175 s t ab I e ad u I ls. No 548·7924 2br.nr.ocn,diah/wasb .ROOMATE.5! PrimeC·2. 494-5049 Really sharp, 2 br, 1 ba j a c. S4 7 s /mo. Ls e . schls/pks/shopping, $650 per mo. Util pd. 121 24th k'ds ts .-.30 t S290 ---S31.5 1 N t arin St 673 """'"~96354"2 · 1 pe . -o . , ST 0 1 yry. opet.nucp 'h... .•• ,....,,.--n·-··-Newport·M er'sMile Condo. Close to comm. 644-6537 mo. 759·1983 · ·c.u.>o .. ,. • » 648.0073 EA SI ~· arge 2 l28~H~t;gar;6">2117 ~·\.UJ\lu ~•w ~sq n store nr Post
pool, nr all s hops & w•TERFRO .... T l Br. orunfurn. Adults, no --bdrms, patao •. gar. DU1----------Takes'lbeGuesswork ex S640 & 548s fl $300 frwys.$300/mo.963·7866 ~Rock3br,2ba,fam "' " . pets $225 2421 E lGthN LG. 2 br, den, els. lo carp, DU paint $295. SanClemente 3876 OutofFinding (2~)47HOOlJe~ ·
rm, din rm. upgraded. 3 BR, frplc, bltns. Avail Hts MS..lBol · · HarlX>r Blvd. ?:;p pets. 642·5466645-4483 ••••••••••••••••••••••• THATRIGHTPERSON SURFSIDE $500/mo, 6 mo or longer Sept. Jsl. Yrly lse . · $3SO mo. 644·6537 OCEAN Sl'ORE FOR LEASE
3Br. Twnhse, new cpts, lse.Agt/Owr. 759-1288 774-4384or675-6169evs._ Win le r R e nt a .I . -EASTSIDE l Br, u sed Scne SS by Sharing 4500 sq ft. Finest loca-
drps, immaculate, swim· . ---Completely furn. Very VIEW OF OCEAN & brick !pie, higb beam VIEW ____ 1_1_2_-4_1_3_4 ___ 1 tion. Harbor & Newport
ming pool, kids OK. $400 ~~all~~~~rl~':nh:~: S. Clemente 3276 lge 3 Br 2 Ba . Encl gar. 1 CITY. 2 b~, 2 ba. frpl~. ceilgs, encl patio, all util Brand new 2 bf s, Blvd. C.M. 5'S-340l or
mo. Agt.. 842·4466. ~mo. 752.0617• Agt. Hse from ocean .• ,.75 mo. beam ce1l., Jacuzzi, pd. $260. No peta. 642-6355 SZTS.$325. Near Pico Bch. Room for rent. woman, Eves .,.o_.....,0 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... g g $315 $395 1 os D 1 R un .. -r •s lca't pn·v re . ___ .,.... __ -_. ___ _ --------962-8244 ; (213) 445·1829 ara e. . . EASTSIDE l Br ketUe e e Po, o. "'" • ' , ·.-
BRAND NEW 2 Sty Woodbridge Crossing ~~. 2b!!!!:~~e~h~~e~ ~-ec. apt. Lge 11'vm· gr ... , 645-&56or979·3376 fplc, all ut.il pd. $210, DO 114/496-52'75 asonablerent646-2600 ~shop in ibusY..!b,op· · ' Brighton Model 2 br & """ ... f1r ., ... """" v · B t i Yng Jem , looking for pUlg center, ior ....., m· .BR,21,2 BA.4Blks (rom den. $510. 546·8474· Fam rm. frpl. cpt.s & dirung,2Brorl+den.2 MESAVERDE,2nd ,2 pets,,,___, . ery nice 2 rap n same toshrlurn2Br med.2180 HarborBlvd,
be h. S•-d Ii 1 • .. _ Yr lse/•cttft mo B F&L · Br, 1 Ba, gar, mature 38 triplex. Pool, sundect. 2 • CM '""" ft .-.00 ac ....,p own vng 646-3903 U&J'O· • _.,., • a. +security. ad lts. No pets ......... onhach 40 blks bcb. $260/rno. apt, PkNwpL $170 +. ,u.uusq ••• mo
rm. wshr /dryer book-up, Agl., 492·2100 $700/mo. 644-4839 Eve/wknds S4S.9S26 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '94·72S7 St0-8665 total. The Brush le Nall,
ba y (ronl window .Patiohome: 2br&dcn,2 SanClentent. 3776 IR.A.HDHEW! ,_fU5.07f11 _______ _
Negotiable $525/mo. ait. ba, A/C, 2-car encl gar, S. JucM ••••••••••••••••••• •••• 2 Br apts. From $3lO/per SanCGp(Jum .....___ 2fem'l, 4 bdrm 2 ~tory, 2~ "-'8striol Rlfttal 4500 84&J311. adults over 16 only. $395, r-.J1.___ 3278 V . 1 B t . mo. 1 .. , Delaware. HB srr-3878 ba, pool/jacUUl, cln & .---------i · Jud d · I ~ ~ ery nice r ap tn ~ reliabJe $175 mo plus "'-••••••••••••••••••••••• UJCt · 88 gar erl1!1gd, poo • ••••••••••••••••••••••• lri...iex Pool sund·..... 2 Open 12.S Daily. 1 Mile to ••••••••••••••••••••••• 70
---------1 enn1s, assoc. ues. ~ in • ' ~-... 6 96 A ocm• ..... VIEW utiJ 840-1409 1140 aq. ft . Xlnt loc. 3 Poolside condo, 2 Br, 2~ 552.3822 :>pac. new 3 Br twnhse, blks bcb. $260/m9. ocean. 42· 01 gt. _,.. · doonoff PlacenliaSt.at Ba, attch'd 2 car gar. im· qulel Joe, fplc, upgraded 494-7287 536-1808 Brand new 2 Br, $275 to Share 2 Br furn apt., $130 782 W. 20th. Call Saun·
mac. model. Beach WOODBRIDGE, new S Br tbruout. $385 lse now. . $325. Nr Pico Beach. 105 +util. Costa Mesa area. derson days 642·0212.
Garfield. No Pets $400 3 Ba ~escoll Model, $750 S36--0687; 1162-8098 Aec;w tments ~~1~:J!!'c!:c!: ~~= DeJ Reposo. 714·496-5275 646-26Sl eves546-2277
PJ PPh:?S4·0446 mo. ·5403:640·1986 1BR,fam.nn,cpts,drps Unfundsbed ceilings. Call collect s..taA.na 3180 Garogn • BRAND NEW-Light &
Duplex, 3 br, 2 ba, $350 & many extras. ~00. ••••••••••••••••••••••• eves, (213)660-0926 ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• forlt...t 4350 bright. ofc suite +-1600 sq
Cul de sac, pvt. yd. Lagwtahach 3248 493-7780 General -. 3102 28r. garage, patio, con· 2BR,H~BaCondo •. adu1ts .. ••••••••••••••••••••• f\fadoryorwarebouse.
R&O,clean, no pets. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• lWoofOrongeCoun!y's sider sm pets, $295 mo. only. $220. Off ~nstol & STORAGE sgl. gar Drps, crpt etc. Ideal loc.
Chapman Rily 848·0 Beaut. 3 Br 2 Ba, walk to WHhNMfer 3298 most beoUllTul oponment Agt 536-?54.2 Warner, S.A. AvaiL Aug. w/alley access. $40. mo. W per sq fl as is or will w ALK TO BEACH beach 1>c;>use. New . cpls, •••••••••••••••••••.... 2 Bdrms. Never Ii ved in. communities. A reloxilg -i. 636-3803 alt. s 548~2 Improve to suit needs.
JBr.famrm, ~an vaew, submit on l m1 to beach. Also de· senlngwtlhSlreams. DaUXEA..nS 4400 ~t_?1rHfln owner,
frplc,D/W,2ba. Fres childrenorpets.$825. 4br~b:.~:~vail luxe new townhouse. wat8110lls,andmO!astlc 2 or 3Br, 2Ba, w/frplc, BRA~FORD PLACE·~~~•••••••••••--"'""'_ ..... _____ _
painted. Lg e Yd . 1¥estige Propertiea now. Children, pets OK Open 12-5 dally. 1407 trees. Featuring poolS, patio, enclosed garage, S~CIOUS -48r, 2Ba, pool, WESTCUFF •am• Starw 4550 ••oot mo. 21252 Cupa 494·0706 0 Delaware. Huntington lndrv .facilities. Great kids OK, $3' ~ mo. "' 10A ~ ~ $36S/mo. wner 546-5880 Beach 642 9601 846 1826 Joeuzzl, sauna. blUlords, I • t . $28S & 846-3751 NEWPORT BEACH ••••••••••••••••••••••• l.ane. (714)559·5927 o 3 Br 3 Ba oceanfront &at · • • ondexclllngclubhouse oca ions up. i•oo Sq. rt. two pvt. R.V. Storace Orane,e (213)67s.8828 • . . . 3 BR. 2 BA. Twnhouse, OC' .._.. ··-sociol ""'e .......... _IS. , 847 ·2622 South I ---3886 • c l l ---------$1350 mo. Lease. Billie, Stanton~ Pool. Fncd yd. ""'' .,, 11~ '"'"' ~ baths. S400 per mo. o u n l y n tern Rentl'hi1Heat41R 8J3..3J.SO; Dave, 639-0560 S325 1.st&last673-4545 gym,ond"""...,.,,,Dot •Bach. nr Golden West le ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642-0200 Raceway. 7Sc per ft. per evs · 8ol»oa Peninsula 3807 • .,. ... ,.,.., Westminster, hot plate, Lge, quiet, luxurious, ex· mo. Complete service
·2 Bath home with d~l Sbarplbr 2 ba Cplc ow ••••••••••••••••••••••• TheVUloge.Moreof rctrlg. $1.SO. All uliJ pd. ec. 2 br, 2 ba apt. 65.rasqFT dept.7tf.67S-l.290 1ara1e on a sweepin OCEANFRONT On curr, • •. • 'YEA y B ewMhlngyou·relooklng N Elevator to scenic prlv comerlot withbigsbad above sun 3000 sq f\ cpts, drps, nace area, RL . H~. locks to '1"' opets.833-8974 · 1617WESTCUFF·NB R.tlltahW.tecl 4600
trees. Lai-ae back yard. oldMeditv'ma.Seec.la~ kldsfp~t OK. $37S. beach . Avail. now: for.Fumllurelsovoloble. •Locatfon ~Pa:U~~m;:':t AGT.541·5032 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ to da:: kitchen wit 3848 983-4.567, Agt, 00 lee. ~~~ ~~~7f~~·. P h · One and 1Wo Bedroom *Price . living or wlmd retreat for 150 I Westcliff Dr 3 to 4 Br home for 6 mos,
tns & terior freshly G ... 2 Bd d Lovely 3br 2ba frplc Adulf LMng. , •• the adventuroua adult. = FtnancL&· 1 Ctr• ":1!/!....,.res p. fa mil 1 . fepalnted. Kids & pe mit ... ew, !m• en, dabwsbr, trg ~ area,' OCEANFRONT, Ocean & Orflcesopen 9:00106:00. *-xury Startinl at $5U/mo ._.........
OK. SUS/mo. Call A gen 2 Ba, de<:k, patio, (rplc: new J y d ecorated . Bay View 2 Br. $385 yrly. 2 bedroom from $270 ' G9-2835 • Office S,.C. •---------
&!7.Q98. No ree. Nr townl_beach. 494-6930 Gardening incl 'd. S46C incl ulil. Ad Its only, no Now reming. Banbury Cross·842~ ~~-t-L.-~ Call on Site Manager Hoose or apt rib am all
C ll 213/392 •o·~ 67""''"2 ... ,,....._ (714)642-3111ext2'48 store, Costa Mesa area. a br, H~ ba condo ne So: LagWla. Whitewater Cdi • ·• .., pets. .......,, Bldg. on Van Buren , ot' s"-d 3900 Call545-()818
tie-ch. Car port. Cover vtew. 2 Br, l ba.. fam rmt ~ . $210 Nice 1 br resp North of Jl.8. Commun!· ••••••••••••••••••••••• AJrDort OHien
l'lt.lo· Pool, tennis, park. frpl~. bltns .. •lovely paUo. saQS mo. 4Br, ZBa, re· pertn. ad~. noi>eta. •• ty Hosp., to be comptt•d THE EXCITING --1!ioNTllFREE ......_!""est/
. Cl2S.536-2990 ~s.t;;:· $550/mo yr· cflcorated, bltns. E.BayAve .. Apt.8 JateAug.Nowultlngli$t PAl.MMESA.A.nS. 11\illaerrice.Nolease re· An•c•
Near Beach, immac & lndscpd, 963-911' Capistr.o leach 3818 = 2 '& 3 bdrm Apta. ~O NPT q'd. 200400 sq. ft. Plenty •••••••••••••••••••••••
4Uiet 3 Br, boat gate, lge •-H"' 3250 ~--o•••••••• ••••••••••••• 2 DR, l Ba, children •-oBfiparkl ing. 2082 S. E ........ 3ard, $425. Lse. S36·0687 --r--"'' Unfurnlshtd 3425 ~ ... Bacb,1&2BR. r sto St, Newport Oppa i4ty SOOS
... •962-8098 ....................... ...::. ....... :......... pets ox. 'sno. mo. Curtis trom $210. & 1.U>· Beacb. 557·7010 ....... : •• -:: .......... .
'; . NutWnllm.Lrg3br,2ba. Sa.oJwmCap,2 BrlBa, Real Estate. Ca ll Adulta,NoPet.a ~ : ba, cpts, drps, Pvt pool, tennis & club. pool, nr beach. $27S mo. Gani 962-2'58 1561 Mesa Dr. ·.-1 rpl. Nr. Bushard SGS.~ W\r/trasbpd.496-?l58 Sen.ien.~artd:J.e:1.ts. CSBUcsEulofNewPQrt 6 M.atna. $38S mo. llll, ... 2Br, 288, nice area, no · Blvd.)
• tut $150 dep. 64S...s&1 LaglllMI Hlcptl 3252 TovmhlMll• M~ Apts #2 ~. em child OK, $225 546·9860 !f!!lcwknds. ....................... Unfurnls"-d 1525 275 E. 11th St, c.M. _mo_._968-_9_~_74 _____ 1
N41W I Br .atcyUahts Joi\ ~~loll ::furae. abr, •H•••••••••••••••••••• 6ll·300l 2 BR, Hit Ba Cond *~ 4000
6lcd yard, fplc, 2 blu u; s.z,1';/,,, ·~ui. l •t. F'.V. •· 3"ba, lra bonus w/frpl, pvt. lndry, pool & ==••••••••••••••••• ""~ -.il.11 lve 1n11. . t room, poot, jacuzu, ten· ~YDS TO THE 8eauUhl1 Nortllriew 3Br, nil au. ~ mo. Call
CH.v • vt a b 2 2~ S>t . $495 lnct•i 2D/392-4042Coll. ery P · r, wtr/fardclne.r.-.em
_lttt, l'P, far. USO. Br m Afalmlllh,_,..._.., ~. 3 2Ba, Pa Rm, view, ·-•••••••••••••u••••• a.. ars mo. ut • =~Ot~u ... COih MeM 3724 lMit.
'8N.'MJ &.Ill....... . llll .......................
tAKEls MO\JN'l1Alf VU 3142 N du~ prtv, HWnl • ............. teanla. etc. Call 1ea.\ttt
J BR Conde>. mle& ~ft 1144 6 ~aft 118.Q)' aml!JQ~ 'A 8PJI.
•tobdL WJ)'3N117 ---"--'-"--.,;....----· ................................
-i6iliilM w "'°' .... M' 11ae u•
-.. tttot mo. Ast 1171. • ............. _......__..~~~ ..........
..
• •
..
}
g DAILY PIL.OT
.~· : Opp11t.Rr SOOI .......................
~· Ul~'TRJBUTOR.SJJll•
01>4tt1te from hnmt•
C 0 l>. t>.sl1 Part ur rull
um., 1nv.t l«'urt..J In
dustrlaJ MMipe t\v~r111tt
Jl)('Ort>O t!X( ft!lltnl S.:000
mthly mo ~ !Wi23
COCKTAILS
Gl'O' fl.~. Muntb
No food. no t'nLf'rt&aln
• mcoL Or111D11J owner o
16 yrs. tn poor be1dth
tV t time on roarkcit
TJME, 7Sl·l.00 ___ _,.
EMPLOYJd ENT A1(1nt'r
an Npt. Beach Car ace
df'nl t o owner fotct111
qw('t aale W.000 with lo
down to ri&ht p1arty. C11ll
t•arly, It aoea to l 11t
qualified ~er' SS6~ -----lmiMss Welfthd SO I 0 •••••••••••••••••••••••
*** Msylktd
1250 Act.Am:.
Coeita Mesa
Yuu are t..be winner of
two fr'ff ticuts
($15.00 value). to
Riec:JliRcJ lros.
....... &lol~y
Circus
Aug 4 thru Aug 13
Anaheim Convention
Center, 800 W. Katt!!Ja
Tickets must be ex·
changed for reserved
seats at the Convention
Center ahead of time.
Call 642·5678, Ext 333 t
daim your tickets.
*** Investment
Opportunity 5015 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Energy
Discovery
Patented/mfft & market·
mg investment. $20,000.
Sec. Mr. Robertson,
213·Z78·6333
Moneytoloan 5025 •••••••••••••••••••••••
I st, 2nd & 3rd T.D. 's
LOANS AVAJLABLE
Credit not amportanL
Broker. 673°4883
SWIMGLOAMS
2nd & 3rd T. D'S
1 DAY APPROVAL
Credit-No Problem
Construction Loans
CALL ANN 673-1166 ·---Money Wanted 5030 •••••••••••••••••••••••
>$12,500 NEEDED Im ·
mediately for PRIME
R. E. lnv. $25,000 return
w /in 90 days. 559·5311
·~CICJe'• Trust D~I 5035 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Tuwf-it'Juty 2!, 1977
·-· -
J
Schools and
Instruction
ORANGE COUNTY'S ARST ~AFTER-LICENSING"
REAL ESTATE TRAINING SEMINAR!!!
This seminar Is designed to give you, the new
Salesperson, the "nuts end bolts'' of real estate •••• a
right start after passing the state exam and a firm
foundation grounded ln the basic• of this complex, yet
highly rewarding business..~ wlll receive more than
your money's worth in accurate, up-to-date knowledge tor
immediate use ln the "real world" of real estate! ·
-ACCBHATED REALmAll.11WHIMG SEMIHAJt-
,2 Day Session • 18-hour program
MICHAa McGfHHIS,
llALT~LECTUl!lt
Mte"••• "4oGinn•• •~•~ ,..,, ........ _ll>Mdye6ent1cltcaM .tClasses Commence in Sept.
./Call !or location,
date & further info.
• al onty 28 .....,. ol eoe Ouftn9 "'•
'"'"' ... -aold .,_ $48 Mllllon WOtlh of ptO-ty. Cle .. IOJ>ed 3
COfpotlbOnl --lrl¥01"9CI ...
•l<tullty ~ ,_ o1-&I••· M• ~ on ect-in ,....,-°'-Coun!'f AMllOr "°"' bnn~ .... ,..,,_ -p oo.J.1 ....
tecnnialex~~-
ENROLLMENT UMrTED! -
P~ISTRATIOM U9Uf5TED!
•·---'-'-'"an ••CftiAO ~-.on! Scor• -IC-Ol~W!O.County ,._ .. ,_,., -1*'9<1 ''°"'
heMlno -dynamo; 9f>d ~ V0U"9 """'-•
•• NEW'M)RLD
DISCOVERY SYSTEMS,INC.
A l.fAANtNG COAPOAAOOH
ART CLASSES
NEWPORT BEACH
on PafntinCJ-DrawincJ
Childl tftwTeens-Adulh
by ELLEN CREELMAN
Noted Artist of the
lmoresslonlst School
CB.A. Univ. of Ariz. Post Grad)
CALL:
1714) 996-3460
(COLLECTJ
206 S. Ptacentfa An.
Pfacentfa
I
MICROWAVE
C.OOKING
CLASSES
STARTING NOW
Personal Instructions
Complete Selection
Microwave Accessories
Now offering specialized c~urses
* Mexican * Party Foods * Low Calorie Classes .Stcrt Soon * Classes For Holiday Meals
•'Le arn to really use your
expensive investment." We teach
every phase of
MlCROWAVf, COOKING
Complete 11 .. 2 Hour -
3 Week Course
LOANS 93 Maintaining the same degree of
.. Also 2nd TD Loans instruction from individual to group &
For Enrollment lnforfnaHon
Call 7 68-50 I I
MICROWAVE MAGIC
COOKING SCHOOLS ·
Fairest Ter ms since 19491
assoc~tion classes.
Sattler Mtg..Co. I For infoflllCltlOfl call:
642-2171 545-0611 644-5485
'Private party needs ... --------------ii ~.-...,,.-....~_.....,_...._._.....,,. ...... ._.....,._,,,_~ $30,000. 2nd T.D. oo
Laguna Bch. hom el
valued al $285,000. w/ls~ TD of $150,000. Will pa
JO'i}, w /5 yr payoCf.
4!17·1517
. Announcements/
Personals/ . Lost & FoUnd
••••••••••••••••••••••
Lost &Found
Lost: 7-13·71 Tiny Toy
Whit e male Poodle .
Answers to t.he name
Pierre. Vic. of Monte Vas
ta & Orange. Reward!
Very friendly. Day ·
675-1374 Eves646·2033
Lost: Grey & whit
• Malemute (H uskey)
Female dog, Lag. Be
tags. "Cah" lost m La
· Bcb. Reward 494·4604
Lost: Burmese cat, male
2 yrs old. blue collar
CdM area. '"Leroy"
759-1218 $100 reward.
$50 Reward! Bob·tai
_tiger cat. Lost 5/25 vie.
Pinecreek Village, CM
• ~-3561 or S4o.8263
'Lost: Smooth ha1r whit
toy Fox Tern er w /lri
••·colored face, blk spot o
back, docked t all.
Reward. S l ater
IRVINE UNIVERSITY
SCHOOL OF LAW
·4400 c.....,. Dr, Hewpcwt leach, Ce t2HO
l'ttoM: 979-0751 C-t,.1
1 gn Fall & Winter
Enrollment Open.
•Evening CIHMS -4 Year Program
• Now In 5th Year of ln1truction
• Gr.ctu•t•• earn J.D. or L..L.B. degr ..
. • Gr.ctuates Qualify to take Callf. Bar EHm
• 2 Yrs Cotlege A.-A. degree needed tor
admlulon es regular stud•nt
• Dlltlngutahed faculty of judges a. attomeya
Wnte or phone for
Bullet1n/Apphcat1on
Nalm .......................................... .
Addrese ....................................... .
Phone .................................. Zip •.• (P)
Newport Air Associates·
Flight School &
Flying Association
LEARN TO .. FLY
$805
IS22S.OO Do-J * FAA APPROVED * c-..~ . 35 Hours flight time In Cessna 150's with 20
hours dual Instruction. Individual instruction. tailored to YOUR ability. 38. Hoors Ground
Sch.001.
20 AIRCRAFT AVAIL.ULE AT
LOWEST RATES IM ORANGE COUNTY
Le.ft to tty now --cmd haTe fWI!
* S,.Clal lotH for Connet cial or
IMtnnent Shtdeftb. ·
For CCMlllpl ... D .... 1 Cal HOW
979-1155
l,f 711 Airport w., South
Mestte ... T ....... .._ . o,....c....,..,.
Geraldine, HB848-043l. -=============== LOST: Mans diamond I ---------------ring, S. Coast, Fashion RICHARD'S . lsl, Westcliff, Lido,
. tt.ughters keepsake, re· BEAUTY COLLEGE
. ward .. 675-3122 A !Jnte(nal"onal A Beauty Career Has It Allt ·FOUND: Sml Toy CoUie 1'
• Meadow View Sehl, Spr ~lc1nlc~l\..:.C."'ri Tc,ichcr.it G."'llC~
• jogdale ·Edineer, HB. '-· :.~5093
FOUND: Male Collie, •P· corm TRAINING pros l yr. vie Orange ~ft .. ·;;:::.82wb Seuer, Earn BA or MA Degree
~;:~~0•• Nwpt. __ _ _bJ.Jj8CDmin~-·..i.-..-4tt
-~--= -=in=-,-ron-ty-ar-d..... International Montessori
'J.lc'd wblte man'• 10 1pd
bi.b. 54f.uos Teacher
... OUND: St. Bernard,
• 4/ll. vtc. Bolaa Cb.lea & , IW4 HB. 213-59.2-52'3 or
:Tl+84CMll500
Cl'Ound: Re\rtever P\ll) !
1 "M.le. Men Verde Golt -course area. 548-7138
Excellent Career. Can Be Teaching
In Little More l han A Year.
Fof. Him For Hitr
·-"Ut\TTM1'fe'"-
e.mlng potential,
recognition.
eecutitvt
Income ••• a
glamourous career,
prMtigel
-..
Now offering
NEW600hour . course on
facial & skin
care techniques
(Cosmetician) ... "
'I
For f Mr ther lllform•tloe re9•rdla9
Thi s variety of fine schools
could Introduce
. plac ..... of ................. .,.., ..,
SdMMlll ..d ............ o ....... .
Call 642-5678 · you to a new tomorrow Ext. 325
11:1Jin:e College
of Business
llldrp1•al•c. ...t Ca•-1:• .. ,_.. wlllil·• .. ,~118 g, _. ~ loltf At lnlM we c... ••• .._. yae ........ tM .,od lob Mr•
,.... to ...... We'I .... ym le fJ11 ...... T• ,_.. ciiolc. of c......i
SICUTAltY • uc.nc>MST
SllMOGIAPHH • IOODWH
GBBAL OFFICE ASSISTANT
MIDICA&,UGAL SPICWJIATIOM
TYPIMG • SHOITHAte UUSHoUP
DAY AND EYEHIMG PROGRAMS
A pr•r 91C1 CGl"Nd • ' 111 ••la 1 1at, aoc-... a. tM .. of tM
Mewpol"Mn ... lwh1ss ..... II I 1Mal Ca .. ln.. JGb Plec1•1"'
Allhl•1:e? MCMt ael ... ,.t ..... lad 15 _.... .... •oo u••orir• ...,.,, .. dwd8"m9lllluML
C. MOW for,..... ..,_llWlllfGll md lwodsft.
1700 E. GARRY AV.
SANTA ANA 92705 c....,.. ...., ... DJtr lt4J
556-8890
• Individual
Programs to * Correct * Reinforce * Rehabilitate * A·dvance
~tudent Abilities
Child ren's Fundamental SUMMER
SCHOOL Class
CMtots H eh S•1u10.y1 s1.so Each S•turct1y
Ent111 .. CIHI Member To:
• Comprehensive Reading Readin ess
program for pre 1st graders .
Cleu
12:45 l u te""''"
Senion Included 1:30 -4:00
. CCMrH of lnstr.ctf.
•Skating Posture •Forward Skating
•Timing of Music •Backward Skating
•Stopping on Skates •Couples Skating
•Dance Steps
BABBOl/eJ/a Im
Newport •t 11th, Coat. M•M • 548-2330
IN COST A MESA
MONTESSORI
HARBOR-MESA SOiOOL
"Introducing The Chlldren To The Joy Of
Leaming At An Early Age"
PRM'RIMARY & ELEMENTARY
(Starting At 2Yl Years)
DCB.LENCI! IN EDUCATION
ACCREDITED A.M.I. TEACHERS
Individual Attention .
Phonetic Reading Program
Music -Foreign Language
• Half· FuU ·Extended tra
• Creative Art
• Qpen Year Round
3025 DIODAI nwo l0CA110HSI
t701 WIST IAKD
549-3803
ORANGECOUNJY
SOCCER DAY CAMP.
~-Glrt16to 13.
~;,ITi~
Five 1 WHk S.11lons • 9 '!f. · 5 PM
Diagnostic testing · evaluations
• Reading workshops· 1st through 6th grade
• Math worl<shops -Basics through Alg• :1 .
STUDENT
IMPROVEMENT
CENTER
EMatfoMI fitildance
CALL to I D°"" Dri": Wte 206
H•wpori INdt,,. c:.Af. 642-9088
A CAREER OPPORTUNITY ..
BANK TELLER
JOBS AVAILABLE
• MEN AND WOMEN . .
• DAY AND EVENING CLASSES
• PLACEMENT ASSISTANCE
• FINANCING AVAILABLE
7· 14~97 3-1366
AMERICAN TELLER SCHOOLS
111 S. Main St., SMlt. 175
Orange. CA 92661 •
Across from Fashion ~uale
............
MOMTISSOll SCHOOLS
~Gl*•21/J ttn IJ~
•Plan Md progname •
•R•~dlng, W11tlng. Geography. Music. Arta.
PhV5 •• at · Ed. Attttunetlc:. l.ngoaoe.. ~.
Independent Study & Social Aotlvltlta,
Summer Ptognim AllO Hd R.medlat ANdlno
. ..
f
•
•
_ .... , --.i. . T -----.. ~~~··
Schools an·d
Instruction
This variety of fine schools
could Introduce
you to a new tomorrow
SCUBA
DIVING
PROGRAMS FOR TEENS & ADULTS •11••1CU1A CimWAllOM S4UO
A I...._, ....,... ceeabt ... et ala l·ll-r
... ~ ......... 1 ...... ....
a.t.WATil SCUIA CIATIHC4TIOM &
MR 'W COUllSI SIUO
., ......... ;I kliellaJh b1.c•ce.w ....... ca.... ........ ce.l1h ..... Kem
.._ __. lldwes •Air C1uu ptlcw 9" Dlvw ._, ... ,,][ ...
~Y.ANC9 SCUli
CIMll'iC4TtOM $41.00 2 fer $16.00
To .. ttlb ca.a '°" -• Ila•• O,-.Watw
...._ _. llavo ~ .... ., ... Tllo Ila --._ -.d loc ..... la tWt ctaaa coHr tM precfk .. .,,,,.4 t.c•llt"H of U•derweter .... yeaco
c.lrol, ........... S .. vago, D~ 9"
Mgllt Dfotlltc).
lN>BWATD IDUCATOllS Dll'I CLUI
Ow cw. ..... -""'1 hr ................. ~ Tluiro b ..... ......, M«ll • .,. -
..., •• w Meake trip. CWt _ .. .,, ..
..elW .. spocW 6c...n -... ,.... • .., • ..... ..-cW ecHYIHes -4 fllo fm of ••h fl I .. • 9'"' C--. .._. .._ ... 525.00 witll •
....._ 1" of SI S.00tt.flnt1"'"·
SIGMUPMOW! CALL l7 I 4J 557-0035
ClasMt offtr•d throughout Oran«Je County.
tt•s DAILY VACATION
CHURCH SCHOOL for 4 years
old It.rough 6th grade.
THEME: "REACH OUT"
PLACE: Community Presbyterian
Church
415 Forest Ave.
Laguna Beach. Ca. 92651
Telephone: 494-7555
OATES: Monday thru Friday,
August 15-August 19
TIME: 9:30 a.m. to 12:00 noon
IYBYOMI IS WELCOME!! • Registration forms may be
picked up in the Church Office .
RfflmATIO .. CLOSIS
fridey, Aeptt I 2ttl
TRAIN FOR
WOMEN
CIVIL SERVICE EXAMS
Postal Clerk~arrier
$5.88/HOUR
FIT• Ctem ••• Typlata •.. Guards
Many Other TypH Of Jobs.
• Paid Vacatlona
• Securtty
• Promotional Oppof'tunltlea
• Generoue Penal ons
Many Other Benefit•
Keep Your PrHent Job Whlle Training
\
Call 135-7330 For Information
National Programmed
Learning Institute
1535 E.17th St., Suite "T"
Santa Ana, California
--------
C0tinH St ..... Mow! Miu'-Viejo, Coate Mote, HH•,..-f lead
lrlw9 This Ad Wlttl Yoei W-.. Y• p,..aog11tor Ir S•n $S
KATELLA REAL ESTATE
LICENSE SCHOOL
Join tfte most respected
names in Real Estat•
* Free guest lecture. * Accelerated Crash Program
available * All materials provided * Small classes to provide
personalized instruction * Free advanced sales train mg upon
joining Katella Realty
BE AHEAD OF THE REST
JOIN THE BEST
Call Undo for ddoll1. 991-6761
1741 W. katelkl Ave .. Wt. C
Anwlm
------------
American College of
Paramedical
Arts and Sciences
~ ~
"IN QUEST OF EXCELLENCE'"
New Classes Starting Now
in the Followinq:
Operating Room Tectinician
Respiratory Therapy Technician
Emergency Medical Technician
Lawyer's Assistant
fiftaBdal Aid ProgrCllM -
Job Placetneftf Anl1t.c•
Call Today For Information
t7 I 4J 547-0306
1600 Horth lroodway. 5-fa Ana
Day & Night Classes For
Men&Women
PACIFIC TIA VEL SCHOOL
610Eat 17tttSfNet
s.ta Ana. Ca tZ70 I
CALL 17141 543.9495
Established 1963
Financial Aid Programs
Accredited by The Accrediting Colnmisaion of
The National Association ot Trade & Technical
Sc hoofs_
NURSES llD
TRAINING
Would you like to be trained as a
nurses assistant? We. Will provide 50
hrs classroom instruction & 100 'hrs
clinical practice for qualified
applicants. Must be interested In
working with long term patients &
motivated to learn. Top saJaries &
benefits. Call Mrs. Oarms & make
appointment for interview.
EXTENDED CARE
HOSPITAL
of Ano,..IM
SO I So. hoch llvcl.
828-7730
Tu.d!y.Ju!y2e, 1917 OAILYPILOT q
P.....ai S..-.lces 53601 r.. ....... Senieet 5160 Help W..W 7100 .....................................................................
AlTORNEY
Uncontested divorces, $150 + costs.
Industrial injuries. automobile
accidents. criminal matters.
7(4-512-4104 JI 3-6ll-Slll
Lott & FoWMI • 1300 ,....... 5350 ....................... ...................... .
Found Calico kitten 10 EXOTIC GIRLS
wks, nr Hrbl" Hi, owner Musage & Modellnr or Interested par~y Outeall542-3Ul9/5'3-32SO fW.5.«M.2.
FOUND: Male all white DANCE OF FUN
d 0 g. breed ? vi c BeauL nud~ glrla, dance
Hamilton/Harbor C.M. & rap sessions. lOAM to
646-973S 2AM, Mon thru SaL 62S --------1 N. Euclid, Anahe.lm.
MECHAM IC AL
PUCtSIOM ASSIMILBS
We are a 1mall manut co.
w/job oppartuftities for
preciaioa mechanical aa·
llelllblen w/fJ mo'a ex·
per. You will have tbe
chance to move Ul> to ful-ly qualified machine tool
builder. We offer &ood
beaefita & )'OU will WOl'k .
on a variety of PCB drill· inf machines. adjuatinr.
trfmm1D1 fs fitting to
tolenoee •
Apply In Perscm
ADVAHCED
COMTIOL
647YomgSt
s.ta A-. c•t.
F.qual Oppor Employer
FOlJtlf D: Cat blk/wbitel------..---·r-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
male, talless, cerise col· hnonai S«Yfces 5l60
lar, vie: Harbor/Adams ••••••••••••••••••••••• C.M. 545-8868
FOUND: Blonde ter·
rier/mlx do11 Jong, short
legs, looks like Benji
892-9036
*** Jomes Plktrlon 1m Danube Dr.
Huntington Beach
You are the winner or FOUND: Collie dog, July two frH tickets 2', BioothurstNlctoria, H.B. 1163-2'27. ~ to <SLS.00 value), to
identify ll~ lro1.
FOUND : Adams & larnum lailey
Bushard, H.B. 25 to 35 lb Clrc1t1
blk dog w/sligbt Brindle ~:h~1~~~:vufofi'on
markings 962•3420 Cent.er, 800 W. Katella
Found, Irish Setter. male. Tickets must be ex· Vic. Euclid & Staler, changed for reserved
F. V. Now at O.C. Animal seats at the Convention Shelter, 634-7301 Center ahead of time.
--------• Call 6'2·5678, Ext 333 to Found: Southeast Hunt· claim your ticket.a.
ington Beach-7 /21. * * *
Small black dog, recent· --------
ly bad puppies. 963-2919 ywmat &
Found: gold & white male ~atioft
puppy, vie. Beach & ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hazard, Westminster. Jobs Wcmfed. 7075
8:8-2524 545-"282 •••••••••••••••••••••••
ASSEMILERS
l 1t. 2acl $Mft$
Jq\mediate O~&S OD '
1st &c 2nd sbilts for ex-perienced assemblers •
We are lookioJ for 6 months recent PCB aa· sembly bacltgrouod .
Otndldatea few 2nd shift
must have worked Zlld
abill In the past. Must
have toucb·up " solder experience. •
Please apply in person
TRENDATA
CORPORATION
STAMDAID
MEMORIES
DIVISION
An Applied Magnetics Co
3400 W. Se~trom Sant.a Ana. • 9270f
Equal OpportwUty
Employer M/F
Larr: ~Lab & Collie, MA~Elady,who playsj~~~~~~~~ Fem. Vic:. Harbor & 19th gd bndge, paints, does ,_ ______ _
CM. Please call MB·532S er~. _grows plants,.en· ASSIMIL Y LEAD ------• tertamrng, great cook.
REWARDSl.00.
Lost, small female dog,
part Pekingese, red/wht,
Vic:. Mesa Woods,
Wakeham park area.
Nds medication. S40-064S
Lost : 6 moa o ld WElMARANER male.
Will do light housekeep· Assembly ~ small !lee· ing, be companion to t.ro mechanical qevic-:s.
alert single lady. In ex· Requ_lres exper. 1n
change for room, board directmg work of u.p to 10
& salary, must be qualit assemblers. Day shift.
home-No Drinkers · STACOSWITCH IMC
References exchanged. ll39 Baker Cost.a Mesa
554-1517 549-3041
Vic : Newland & Warner. Fashion Writer · Exper.
Reward. 847-4651 Feature/Advert. Prom().
Equal Oppor Employer
--------1 tional. Former Fashion
LOST: Lt. Brown, wire Editor. 631·389Z Assemblers. precision.
baried Dachshund, male a.w... w-.a......a 71 OO male or fem. 4 ""'"· min
ASSEMILEIS
vie Brookhurst/ •....-lllm'WV .,.-
Hamilton H.B. Reward! ••••••••••••••••••••••• exper. Good manual dex-
963-2S'12 ACCOUNTING terity, good eyesight, aoldering & microscope
LOST: Chinchilla, wbt. Expanding mortgage exper. Small compo-
Rewatd! Needs medica· banking firm in Orange nents. Hard working, de-•
Uon. Vic UCI. 83:H92'7 & Co. bas an immed. open· dicated individuals
5&9302 ing for an indlv. w/ex· needed. Small co.
•--------• per. in corporate acctng. w/good benefits, gd. op-Found rem Shep/terrie Must have prior ex per. in por. adnnc:e111ent. Call
mtx.Umps.vicAUam.a& mortgage banking. Cerol;S81·3830,MV
Newman. 980-2310 Please Contact Cathyt---------1--------1 Thompson at UniCal AUTO
Found yng fem dog, Mortgage, 7141963-7873 ...._ + FtoatW
B e a g I e m i x ? .Equal Oppor Employer Mechanic needed. exper. Bllt/brwn/wht. Vic ,.B. pee.
Central Prk. 842.QJ31 + ACCOUNTING DEPT U. Medl•lc
F d i J Need exper'd AIR. A/C, foe tuneup ca.rburation oun J pa r g asses, inventory control. clerk, S li • 'd Both
Marguerite & La taz, on Burrroughs L6000 ~t' c:.libereqal • Misslson V. 581-2946 I eomr: <1•r7313 Jc poll lODI r comm e.r. _,.. 85 + 1uaro. Apply. Orange
Found Fem Shepherd for J · Co. Auto, 2401 Tustin
mix. Lrg pup, Blk. Vic ACCOU..,.TING Ave,S.A.5'2-S673 Beach 4'i AUant.a 962· 7087 n
I CLERIC AL Automotive ~: ......... !~.~! Va~ious ·accounting New Deta~=~P needs
.Drinkint problem? · duties. Stat typing• good Top wages paid. Engine cau Alcohol Helpline fig~ apUtude. Apply I Steamers. eng painters.
2'hnaday835-3830 National Systems Corp., buffers le polishers,. up. •-----------t 4361 Bltch st, N.B. CNear b I t h PREGNAN1'? 0C Airport) EOE. c~ke~. ~i::~:d:: Caring confidential livery AppJyat
coun.euna 1c rererrat. ACCOUNTING mHarbol'Bt.CM :!°~lion, adoption le A/Rec. exper. req'd . 645-1030 ~A°ifE 547•2563 Preparation or journal liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii --------t vouchers & gen'l ledger UMDA&VtC10 • ~nalyat.. Apply, Na· o.tc• M...,.lt ~~rs~~.~.~N:~; Fortt. Mof ! QC Airport) EOE.
Servinl all Orange Co.
835-1313
SplrihlalR ..... J.815&o. El Camino Real
San Clemente. Fully lie.
For appt. 4n-7296
AVON
NlfD EXTU CASH?
F.arn.inga are good-boors
are fiexible when you're
an AVON represen-
taUve. Call ~70'1 or 1.enith 7-1358.
....
I
.. ,
•
~. • •
• (" l 0 DAILY PILOT Tueadey, Juf>t 28, 1 m • ..
Add it ... Bu1ld it .. Diaper 1t...Hammer t ... Carpet SERVICE DI RECTORY Plumb at. •• ate 1 ... pe at ... emo e • ,. it.. c~m~nt lt...Wlre H ... Hoo lt ... Ctean it...Move I I • Roof it. .. Landscape it...Tile it ... Trim lt ..• SeWlt •. :
1t. •• Prc~., 1t Paint 1t .Nall lt ... Ptaster IL.Fix It.. Haul it.. . .Add It ... Plant it. .. Alter It... learn it ...
"""me• ••,.tr c_,.t s.nlce C.Ml..t/Cettcrwh Gar•.-, Hm*RCJ Hausede..&fllCJ '~/P.,.,..CJ P~/P ..... "9 . . ................................•...........• •·••··••••·•·······•·•• ··········t········~··· •··••·•·•·······•·•···· ..........•.....••....•...............•........••.•...•......•.•...••••.••••..•......•......
\l'l'l IANl'l·: HY.l'l\111 C'ltfllt't M;an will h1y yourw D&1) Concrete. All s>h1111e11 'rof1 Gcarct.ntf" Hauling, movinj, cleanup e Moppets Cleaning PETERS PAINTING nn«' work, State Uc & in·
-·
$tO S.:rvhd'ull ur 10111" Kevalra" <'OOcroto, block & brick Act now!. for C'Omp $7/up.Treework.Reas, Service. Call us ii you Expr'd. Reas llatea. a.rd. Eittenor specialist.
t:.11<1111 )4'1 i•~ 1 leuo1t11 tool Ouar woTk work. t"t" C.\jl.I. f,1c & mamt. or lawns shrubs fast, lreeest842·4591 need a good Job done, Free Eat. Call Gene Tty rne-Callco83S-5.555 ~Whctwol ut bln•r Hvlnp. Jo'rc:e hooded~ & trees. Res. &; comm. HAUL-ING. Odd Jobs. Referrals.546-2393 552·-0458___ • WOR.KGUARANTEED
•••••••••••••••••• ••••• ~ l. ~ 3646 Concrete Re Ju vcntors. M~Weeney, 645~124 _ Law student neeca work. Haewrk wkdya. 7 yrs Paint & Papering, 2C yrs Intenor/Extr. Free esL
Anh. a~rvl<'1 ""' t11.n1wd Sb•mpoo " •tt-11m ~lu110 clt!IU\.'I ru.11l & ml cull for MOWlNG . EDGING J1m494·58M P alm Springs area. serv'g Harbor area. St ~yrsexp."2--0295 1----------:--:--
fM hv1na i.p1u•c-l'M> <:11t <'ol"r hn6'hhm1•r•, whl !:"'oo~t.&12·8416 Trimming, Cleunups, ----------Reliable.963--3458 lie 183281. Reta furn. aRepair
•m;:.ti» HlKUl'Mll'l\1 l·ptalOnuubluiu.·h Clt>1111 81 k SI Haulin& titc Reas CHEAPEST haullna ln -642-2356 Knowles Painting .•••••••••••·~• .. ••••••• Liv. dtn rm h~ll $1!> Ave .oc waJlt, ump ston"· ~52 · t.own. Fr ea~. CHEAP! Roseman e's Cine Svs ---Int/Ext, commercial . d-oos patio akyllihlll ~ittiftg rm f7:ill rnuch SlU rhr Concre'e P»,1os , -642-2995or&45-1390 Xlnl work. Refs, gd PAlNTlNG lnl/Ext. Ex· apta, residential & &rpn'Reald '&comm'l ••••••••••••••••••••••• so Ciuur' .-Um pel ~or. dnvcwa)'J. Llc 1270013. Genet-°' S...-.lces OCC S d l Bi '4 T rates, owu trans. 64s.3439 P'.d.,. honest, neal. Reas. mobilebomea. 836-~ fr est S&:Mn7 LuklY.; 1 ~h•lW"I.'& IJtVt'Ollonh· M> Cpl rt'puu· 1~ y111 ex"r 714·548·7892 ••••••••••••••••••••••• tTtu enh. g ~ a.ftS:30 Lied. Dave964-1°'5 298233 •, .. --truek. as , tree tnm, Quality work 30 yrs ex-1\om" l"M J.m11 I rl'f11 , IN> worlc mya..,ll. Ref11 a.ctrical Home&Apartment etc. Randy 642·57Q3, Landscaping Palnf YoarCastle per, honest.'dependable1-R---.A.w.-------..... -
11A· rnrli HI !>4~ IOll7 ~1·"101 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Repwr & remodeling 5'19·3666 ••••••••••••••••••••••• at. reas pr'ce Llc _, .. .._ 642·6783 Aver11e Exlr 1 Stry S39S • • · • ••••••••••••••••••••••• CGINMtMoktn9 Cahrieg El,ECfRICAl.. SERVICE --Landscaping, 30 yrs exp. 2St.ory$S45,Intr5'Srm bonded and Ins. Res. II IJ.epairs. Uc & Ins. All
••••••••••••••••• ........... •••••••••••••••••• <.:Al~..')~~ hr, & SMALL HANDYMAN Carpentry. Housec:l•aning F r ee est. Licensed. Prices incl matr'l-Jabor Comm. Kene:is-5405. typea. Froe est. Walt.
fourmw .. &: <:c·n I t Jr l'"-'" C11lt'n1111 lur your p11rt1e11, JOBSS42 8233 electrical. plum bin~ & ••••••••••••••••••••••• 645-8149, C·27·l072 Guar/Jnsrd, Free est. ... ... _ri_ Pa.intin" _Olll an)'tl_me, 541·5930
f h \ I ~• I n 646 6851 847 2787 Wanl a REALLY CLEAN ---------ed .,.,...., -• Ir), 1n 1\ 1111: \,11 Wl"UdlOgb ck tell!!, ti.. Ht.bbardEl•dric oors . ' . HOUSE ? Call Gingham Tre_e. Plant Remove, T M2·0134or63e-708.'i SUMMER SPECIAL r-<lr~fc• "'!Ind,, fr 1·'1" '\brk l111hlu ref'' M:! 7207, Tri La R u ....... ~ • •I ,,_,.., ~'17 !l.!7:! ti4L 1871 Lie 3'l7136 64S-69n Hauling, moving, pa1ol Girl. F'ree est 645·5123 m. wn enova. on PROFESSIONAL Paint· M06t l story houses 1250. ••••••••••••••••• ... ~ ••
mg. gar clean. trash. & Spr1nklers. Misc. ing. Inter/Exler. Reas, Moat2stwybouses$350. Removing, t rimming. C~lrttt C.nJncp Acoustic G_.._._ marnl, Janitorial, yd Windows/Housecleaning 548-5863 _ wor1ciuar64.2-0386 Professional work~r 10 topping, frest. Uc/Ins.Jn
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••~•••••••••••••• ---.-.., t·are. Comp! service Goodrates -GoodreCs u--ynex,nor , . .,. ... al4""'"."'ony"~co:1?..t •••••••••••••••••!II'••••• C 1l M, L 536 77 ~"' J r-aa"' J•• I ' ~,._ <'arpt'nl ry . "n y l ''"" &·onomy A1·ou11t1cs (Juul I' •. bl E 'd J S.1Hl067 or 542·3394 Rob, a r ynn · 11 ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• Master Painters 847·5408 'e"a e xpr apanese WillorClanc~. · · · -------Buu's Landscape Mj\in· l'unel. door.,, t•h' Al'o sprayed tt'thn~s. re· gardener & landscapt'. ----Alice's Housecleaning Fireplaces·Planters Custom PatnUng, com· XOUNG Man. ~yrs expr tenance & Tree Trim Comm'I. l.lc,l':>l Alt 5, pairs, i:uar, Lie If 329695, Reasonable. free esl GrodincJ Reas, reliable, refs. Own ·Bnck Concrete Patio pet.ltlve prices. Int/Ext. 1n wallcovenng. Free . 546-3247 .. 111 27l9 f~ e.st 536 1800 645-5230 Mike 11336732 •••••••••••••• ••••••••• trans. 646-4871 anytime Block Walls BBQ Pits 552-0515 .---__ ests. 645-8576 aft 6. Andy mmg. evei. -
1-) .unmg, mush. n·111odl'I. C"9ent/Concret• WEEDING·CLEANUPS Sluploader, dump truck, Housecleao~;-M;ture, Refs, flits. 646-0464 _ J'.ainl.lllg. Local-Estab & ~hr/Repair ....
r"pa i rs. l.1 <' ti ur "k •••••••••••••••• • •••••• Weekly M1untenaoce hauling, tree work, grad· experienced. reliable. Brick block slabs frplcs insured. Tons of refs. ••••••••••••••••••••••• For Classified Ac't • '~rv1 ce . Wrk .:ua1 Phillips Cement Co Freeest 642·9907 '!1!·~~mo,etc~l-J930 $?0,refsS36-0950 ston~work.'20 yr~ expr'. Frienbly/erticleot VERYNEATPATCH ACTION
962 8314 Pallo5. room add1t1ons ----Rel ts 586-0358 673-4967 Call a Concrete work 751-5657 VERY LOW PRICES! T r y _a Dai I Y Pi lot IMMACULATE CLEAN· _ _!:,!S __ . -------~----JO~&TEXTURE Daily Pilot·
SELL idle 1tenrl. with :.i C..11 10 AM to 9PM he on gardening main · Classified Ad l_O buy, sell ING. You DF..SERVE the Have something to sell? Fin~ w~at you ~.ant in Free est. 893-1439 AD-VISOR
Da1ly Pilot Class1f1ed Ad bond/~-_ le~ance. ~eorg.!.~~~~-or rent something. BEST. 759-Q.177 Classilted ads do it well. Daily P1Jot Class1f1eds. Want Ad Results 642·567 642-5'7&
Hdp Wanted 7100 H•lp Wonted 7100 Help Want•d 7100 Hflp Wanted 7100 Hefp Wanted 7100 Help Wanted 7100 Help W.t~ 7100 Ht4p Wmted 7100 Help Wanted 7100 ·••·•··•··············· .......•..............••••.••..•••.••....•.........•................•........•..•.......••••.....•...•••••....•.••..•..••.•••.••••.••••••. ··················~···· ...................... .
BEAUTICIANS wantt·d. i---------•I DEL I MAN AGER, ~~ Kitchen & Dining rm. MANAGEMENT Nurse, Practical. Lave in.1'-•.•P•R•O-D•UC-•T•IO-H•;-
l'.1kt• ov"r busy dit•nll'll•, Clerical Pt time duys. Must be i-·et.>sPaid//\lsoFce Jobs HOTEL help. Mature wom110 in Mgr adult mobile home Care elderly lady. CdM. ~ & E S tt>res lo S12K ulGHT AUDITOR gues• home. 7·3 shift. . ....,., CO .... TROL SUPERV i.:0•1d salary + l·orn respon, cxper over UI. xcc et " C • park in Orange Co. Nr. _.,_, .... _7_4_71__ " •
m1s.,1on. H.B 968 808ll ur Q.C. ANALYST Ask for Mgr aft2pm, Call Secy/At•ctns:, to Sl2K Perform aud1l duties m· .M. 846-6716_. _ __ beach. Some ex per. Responsible for plan· 581·3634 Acctng Clk EDP $750 lud .:~ NCR HURSERYMAM rung scheduling & con ~A 979·3590 Irvine Personnel Agency c mg opera.....,g Lake Patrol lifeguard. Congerual surroundIDgs. ' ' · Immediate opening for a Deli.very. Home delivery 4200 & 10 Key adding n~ume ....,..w·red. CPR. Offering free coach Exper 'd, f/time. Mature trol of all productioo1lc-rlL~AUTY OP"'.llATOll "''.Analyst.has .. ~come 488El7thCostaJ\tesa ach·oe S ·~ ·-... ·i b 1nale over2l.6Days in-tiviUes.Mustbe ramWar ... r. -c'"' "" of Th R · t · th f m 1 · ome exper. Red Cross. 40hrs per space & ut1 · A ove NEWPORTEHINN available due lo rapid e eg1s erm e11 . Suite224 642-1470 pref'd. Hours: llPM· week . Sun & Sail. average compensation. clud. Sat/Sun. Work w/EDPsystems.
1;.w 0661 &640 .. 1740 s:rowlh. Mu st be ex -~np~n~fG~ t:!h f~~Y~ ~~~ 7:30AM. 5 Nights per 586-IXl60 Contal.'l (714)64().66()(). w/plants &trees. $3Hr& STA.COSWITCHIMC
'fOllS J>t,'ncnced in opassave A s300 s400 F 1 F d week. Outstanding co. -----------------up. Overtime. Ins. 1139Bak:erQ>staMesa 111-:\UTYOPEllA • and active electronic pprox . mo emae a ory benefits. LEGA.LSECRETARY Manager/~a~Frr for Benerils. Advancement l.cadmgCdMSJlon Must have dependable Pack~ A I 9 .. F. . The F1sb Bucket ..,.._tial. Laguna Hills 549·3041 •• &H-7321or552 09.JJ eomponenls. Ability to car+ backup. 540·3008. S'l.50 Per h~·to-st11rt. PP Y am-noon mon· rt 2-Man oCc u~ Lag Beach. restaurant, Ba I boa. ~~~ry. Inc. El Toro. Equal Oppor Employer work w1lh data collection --------Personnel Department nee. d. s .s k1lled secy Some restaurant exp. D AS S Merit raises. 1SJ7 MARRIOTTHOTEL 830-5653 llkkpr,slattyp1:.lforP.A. andpro~icdicncyinreTpahrt ENTAL SI TANT Monrovia Ave, N.H 900N rtC D w/lll1~alion exper, xlnt pref'd but not nee.----·-----PRODUCTIO ... ufr, 11 B. s II nol n•q'd wnling is es1rable. 1s Exper. pref. Benefits. S48·S12S. ewpo enter r bent!fats, salary neg. Call RererenAes r equired. NURSE/ R.N. " ~~.~~~~~3Art 61':\1 1:. an hourly pos1t1on. Ne_wpo __ i:!_~ach 644-9211 F.qu~ro~~:T~~ m/f Shu~~ey (714) 831·2292:__ Call for appL 673.7420, FIELD WORK, MEDI· Ru TRAIHU
Dental recepl/business FRONT OFFICE. p lime L~A.LSECY AskforScoll CAL REPORTS. Moo bber hose products. Come 0 row with us m our f I k •· book ..,. thru .,,_.d O g •-Irvine area Call for
BOOKKEEPERS
•FOLL CHARGE
•ASSISTANT
•ACCTHG CLERKS
•I 0 KEY BY TOUCH
•CALCULATOR
OPERATORS
I.on~ & short tt•rm as
:.1~n m<:nts. holiday &
\i ;1 l' a t i o o p a y ,
hoo;p1talt:rat1on pl<Jn
,1, J1lablt'
VOLT
TEMPORARY !ll:!hVCEb
3848 Campus Drive
546-4741
<Across From
Orange Co. Airport>
Equal Oppor Employer
" assistant e:icpcnenced or pos. or c er 00 • • ----r11 ay. ran e .,. ·
s."1ea•wrtmf:giCisha· tlya.ryExanc~.11ee~~ trained. Fountain Valley keeper. Ex per. w /public 'IOUSECLEANING S . Onelsto 3 yearsh erthxperd. xlnt MANICURIST Sa(21n3)~~e5g.3016Clounty Area. ,_a_p_pt_. S40-__ 7639 __ E_O_E_' __
u area.968-1648 &enthu111asm a must. In-.-erv. skat • nos o an re-Exclusiv~ N.B. Salon . ..,. , t•ellent eom pany ___ _ tervwsWedJuly 270nly. needswomcn,25yrs +. q'd. Call for 11ppl. Exper allpbases CIJen-1---------P(l'lMEEVEWORK
bl•ncf1ls, including a Oenta I Ort ho a:.sl 6 30-8pm, I.JOO Campus 8 ~·3 30PM. P1t1me or 752·2518 telepref'd. 642.8484 NURSES AIDES Must be 18 . Warner cr~d1l union. medical Pttime for fnendly. low Or NB No phone calls F,tlme Own tra.ns. Call . ---------&ORDERLIES Drive-Ino.Afler6pm.
and dental insurance. pressure ofc. RDA or pie.as~ . Pam. 536-9522 LEGAL SECY ·Trainee, MASONRY & Concrete Exnar'd. Bayv1·ew Conv. Plc.asc apply in person or · ---------Nwpt Sch. Some exper. Construction Worker . .,... quality Assurance • st:'nd resume with salary RDA eli gible. Salary Housecleaning Women helpful. buti:ot nee. Must Expr'd. Call586·03S8 Hosp, 2055 Th\Jrin Ave, lnspedorjTecft
h1:.lory lo based on exp ability. FUND RAISER wanted lo work p/llme, be xlnt typist. 640·8900 ------~M._64_2_·3505 __ .__ --Xlnl oppor. in small co. Irvine. 559·0777 · a ft G Tues thru Fri. 8·3 Call Lois McGill MATURE W 0 M AN
TRENDATA
CORPORATION
STANDARD
MEMORIES
DIVISION
An Applied M aJ(nC't1cs <.:o
3400 W. Se~erstrom
San la 1\na, Calif 92704
Equal Opportunity
Employer M /F
&10-4292 P art ·t1mc, flexible Janice's Raggedy Anns ------p/time to welcome HURSESAIDES for qualified man. Musl -------schedule. for Orange 'f G d 1 trvd Exper pref'd. F/time & have 4 yrs min exper. in Dental Asst. Exper'd, Self County non profit or 675-6.553 -----Lt e ucr / ns newcomers & contact P /time. All Shifts. App-electronics. Call Carol.
motivated, happy. 7am· gamzalaon. Experienced HOUSEKEEPER/Cook. Pref. Rec exper F/T merchants. Flexible hrs. ly, Park Lido Conv ...... 581_·_3830 __ . ~----3pm. M·F. Irvine. S:il 1·11 public contact, public li . bo d •. summer , PJT winter. Need car. lite typing. Ce Fl h' Rd ve in a ar "' rare Call 837-6100 ask for "'7·3095. nter , 466 ags IP • i---------~n. 7~·7556 relations with some home. Full or p time u i·ke ..,.. ----N B.642·8044 ... Real Estate Salesperson Dependable adult to wnting skills. Write to Santa AnJ 835·7061 or Mature Christian lady lo 1---------IOO% .
o pe rale pttrking lo t Ad No. 918, Daily Pilot, 839.3073 LiqoorStoreNightClerk, work w /toddler s in NURSES A.IDES
sweeper. Midnight to P. 0. Box 1560, Costa ,-ls -k I d4h -· F/time. Eves. 646-6676, church, Sundays, mid Qualified applicanls in· CommiuionToYau
Sam.5 nl,.hts 545.2611 M~_<!:_Ca 92626 ·ewor ncNe rs per daysS49-1422. week,$2.2Shr.S49·1040 t.creskd in nurses aide We furnis h desk --,., wk. Mon/Wed or Fri AM -------- -training. Classes start. telephon~ecretary &
DRIVER
SUHDAYOHLY
-· GA T E <i U A R U or PM. H B. Nr Bolsa LIQUOR CLERK MEDICAL ASSISTANT Aug. 8. Apply, Park ~Ip.
Male/Female, 1131 8Jck Chica & Edinger $4 hr. Honest,expernecessary, Back office girl. Hunt· Superior Healthcare, BtllThompsonRlty~ ~_Y_D_r ~.B. ~~10 Mrs .Jenner 846-7343 aft 5 nights, 3PM·l0:30PM. ington Beach Physician. 1445 Superior Ave, NB. 28892 Marguerite Pk't'Y· G~uEn "L OFFICE !Pm. ~ill_p~~~if~ec.:.._ Top wages. C.M. 559·5992 Reply classi,(ied Ad #977. 642·2410 Ste 120 Miss. Vlejo Deliver Daily Pilot ....... """ Daily Pilot, P .O. Box ---------Oays495·1870
CLERK. office. Aug, Thru h\.lndlcs t.o carriers. Re· Need typist/recept for INCOME T A.X Live-In M"id, pvt room, 1560, Costa Mesa, Ca. PA.RT· TIME Eves 831-0737
Sept +. $2.60 per hr quires van or large fa.stgrowmgedueat1onal MAKEANXTRASSOOO. salary. Ex~r'd. Must 92626 Make $3 +good hours.~~~~~~~~~ * * BOOKKF.EPING 548·7~~ appt wagon and a good dnv publishing co. ~ear OC m 4 months. part time. in love ammaJs. 642-3444. 1---------Must have car. cau 1·
it) g record. Phone Airport, $650 mo. 751-2113 eves & wknds as a tax MEDICAL RECEPT. 751·258.S Real Estate Sales <.:dM realty and develop-Clerk office·full/prttime. 642-4321, ask Cor Harry Ask for Diane preparer wilh Tax Corp. Live in wanted: a~trac-or gen'lfrorifofc medical 1---------10 Min of your valuable
mcnt firm needs exp'd StV Xerox Copy Center. ~ley. Equalopportuni· -----... -.---. of America. No exper. tive, sUm female, age 18 assistant. Immed. open· •PART-TIME• Ume willconvinceyouto
J!lrl Friday. exec/secy 830-0890 ty Employer ·General. Office. Typist req. We tram. High com· lo 20. Contact Mr or Mrs ing. 636-!MOO ~tab'l firm needs 2 peo· J"oin our staff. Ask about. type. Must have COO· -----------D1vers1f1ed pos1llon The R " 420 v·
T PST missions. Call· osenuerger, IC· ple t.o do telephone work our commissio n :.truclton bkkpg exp. CLERK Y I DRIVERS lrvine area. 9·3 $400/mo. 552.9600 636·0l22 toria. CM In trailer in Mgmt Trne, perm. 'Earn from home. Make appts schedule, free tra..i.ning
Communication skills es-for busy ins ore. SH g..rly AM. 3·6. delivery 9'79-3376Ask for Terri . ~:_Or[_ Co. 49~~1 __ back. up t.o $1000 mo. Fuller for estimaters . Current prog.
:.c nt1al. Salary open. helpful. Must be able-to L.A. Times, C.M. $300 General Office Brush (714)712.-4247. stafCearns$5-$1lpe.rhr. lkrsassistat
Wellon & £0. 675-6900. dhandle ~~~e·,}J,a511 833-9511 llJO +. 545-0110, Bob REGISTRAR L VM 7.3 MOLDS MAKER 1.arry. 67~-4447
BOOKKEEPER F/C -~sor ............ eves. INSTRUCTORS Medica tions & treat· cdltinL DRIVERS & KELPERS Pas. req's lite typing + p "R•·TIME ment. Nurses Aide llpm· Mold maker lor plastic PIX Answft' SerY. Call for appt., 152-6116 Mull! books for prop. CLERK TYPIST (Part· for local rurmture mov· 10 key. AbiJUy to handle A •· mgml. Call 640.0123 ti me) 60· 70 WPM . lpg company. Exper. details accurately. Work Accredited Instructors 7am. Mesa Verde Conv. injection molds. IJ!l class Varied shifts. Exper. REA.I. ESTATE
----- -Newporter Inn . Call prer.768.0643 w/minor supervision. Wantedforrapidreading Hosp,66LCenterSt,C.M. lddmakerneeded. Exp. pref'd, but will train. LICa.SEES-
BOX BOY Ba rbara Bartos (714) Apply, National Systems course, P art· Time, Ex-548·5585 in mold consl. & rework. Good co. benefits. Occas. -'OU should poss1'bfv-b~ 700Ext536 E 0 E DRUG CLERK .... 11 t I · · Clean & steady, well wltnds a must. EOE. " " " F1time & P/llme. Must 644-1 ... · Corp.,4361 BirchSl,N.B. cvuen ncome, trallltnlJ LYM .est.ablishedco. 646-8000. with us-in a simplier.
speakgoodEnglish.App· COCKTAIL Cards & Gilts. P /time <NearOCAirport)EOE. provided ror selected ap· Vacation R elief & C"'MBROMFG. •---------richer life. Our invest-ly, us w. Lincoln Ave. 640-7373. • plicants. Phone Mr. Ad· 1 . p kL.d Co "" PESTCO...,,.OL mentdivisionhas3o-n-Anaheim. WAITRESS 1---------1Gimeral0ffice cock, A.G.P . l nterna· P time. ar 1 0 nv. 760lClay.HuntBcb. TECH "c'i",.... )"'
BUILDING MANAGER
1Jart. time, for industrial
park in Costa Mesa.
Sal ary ne1toliable.
549 2988
CAMP Counselor. must
have van or sta. wgn.
Sl25. wk. Call Susan
498-0176
Learn in 40 hrs the most. PROOF REA.DER tional (805) 969·0'760 Center. 466 Flagship Rd, (W. o r Beach. s. of NI An ~~~:~rc~~!r :a!hllf~~
exciliog, glamourous. Electronics Home s tudy div. of ---------i._.N_.B_._64_2_-8044 __ . _____ 1 GarfieJd> Steady job for right
l ... su• "TIO... ·-business-oriented peo· highly pald profess. Day private edu'catiooal tn· " -" MAID, f/time for beauty E.O.E person. No exper. nee. pie. Personable trai,aiJg.
or eve sessions. Place· SR. TECKNICIAN stiwtioo hu an opening INSTALLER salon. Richard OueUette --------P!·Profit sharing & group fascinating, challengihg.
mentassist.Goodjobop· for a proor r eader of Needed lmmed. Ex· Salon. 200 Newport Ct.r MOTORROUTE bealth.App!y,Wed..8-1!, excellent commission
por. educational material. per'd, Batt. Hangers Dr,N.B. The Daily Pilot bas ;a Uoyd Pest Control, 566 plan. Call Bill Genie.
Call 714/75 I .9194 With a minimum of 2 P /time morns pref'd. 0 n I y n eed apply. 1----------t large route in Newport E. Dyer Rd, SA THE GERRIE CO. (tt4)
So. Cali . Cocktail yoodears e~eliknence1 1tdnd ACopply,4N36a1u8o!laJhSSyt"SlNcm8s _1_141_sss-._1_6_1s_. _____ 1MAI1800DWHarBboa~lnn0a BMl";del thruBeachFr, 1adftern~tns~fl!~ _ PHA.RMACYTECK..-640-Gfl00. _ Waitresses Inc. 17922 .g wor ... ing ow e ge rp., ire • . . . . .au · ay, .... ... ~u . 1.....;.._...;;~-=__. __ ...,..._
Sky Park' Bl, Ste C, ordigital,logicaodsome (Near oc Airport) IHSURA.HCEOFC NewportBeacb,675·3463 mamlnp -.GoocUorbigb MJ.r. drug c ba1n,1---------
lrvine Ca92714. analog, and electro· E O.E. Immed opening, perm. scboolorcollegestud6t. Newport Bch, exp. pre· RECIPTIOMIST
--· -mechanical experience. ----Gen'I ore skills, insur. ex· •MAIDS* $50 cash deposit 're· f'd. Typing req'd. 50 Do you likeworldnt'lffth
CA.HVASSERS Companion/hs~kpr for The ideal prior ex-GEHERALOFC. per pref'd, will train Tbe lnnatLaguna quired.CallMZ.p21,u~ wpm. 40 hr wk. Retail people? We are lOOJdDg
elderly woman10 Corona perience would be in 10 key add. $2.50 hr. rigbt.person.833-0422. 211N.CstHwy,Laguna for dttUlation, lea.~ Cl.k.member.AlkforK. for a well-groomed l.n-
Up lo ~-00 ~r + sizable Del Mar. References re· l r o u b I e s b o o ti n g ~3224 MAIDS WANTED nam, ud pbooeor ~Jne Hyder or P . O'Connor, dlvidual wltb a good romms.P/Ume,artnoon quired.494-4SS4 peripheral devices such -----ln.wrance Billing Clerk nonnu:voteMotel in and fill out applies· btwn8&5PM.642 .. 2211 ~allty to ............ the &eve. T nJ.1.-Fl GIRL FRIDAY p/ti.me. Efficient. person ""..... tion. M ..... own car and ....... ~.. ..~ .... -call 557.2108 COi...rYROLLER as ape ..,..,...,. oppy d 1 d ( 2100Newport81,CM wn --------1 public and work our "' Disc, Mag Card .readers, S m a 11 cp. t e q's w/soun know e ge o 1---------t have good driving re· P~TICS switchboard. This full
CASHIER
32 Hrs per wk. Thurs &
Jo'r i. 12·9, Sat & Sun
Modems. papet' tape re· hardworking, dedicated gov'l insurance billing MAIL ROOM cord. IM PRS time position ffq41ires
aders, etc. We tre a pro-lndiv. Typing a must. sh re<t'd for clinical lab. Ac-Muat be able 'to lift •MACH I 0 * somo light typing at. 45
sressive dyn amic \pret<'d. Resp. person for counting&computerex· es, Corkllrt ex-per. Further expapsl<>n wpm. Pleaae call
• 9:30·6. Exper. pref 'd.
Architectural, engineer-
ing, & development com·
pany needs controller,
preferrably CPA, to
work with )'Oun g
managemenl team. Call
Eloise. 714·759-0213
growth company with a diversifie d duties. per. hl&hly desirable. helpful. Lite main· 5 Needed NOW creates perm. open11lss Persoanelforanappoint-
comprebeosive fringe Maouf. secretarial ex· Ability to handle patient •-An"""' wort also.~ Dav fot exper'd c!c t rainee meh~ . •
benefit package. Come per. a must. Call Carol, inquiries. Please contact ;;" ~benefita. l\ppi¥ machine oprs on 2nd & WILLIAJ(HARvi:f Min. wage
Kenn Rima Hardwar-.
2666 Harbor Bl. C.M.
• CHEF $1300 Mo. Sid's
Bhae Beet , 675-3333 alt 3
p.m.1CY7 21lll Pl, N. B.
CHllDCA.RE
... Wo man to car e for
ch.lldttn, 2 to 6pm, start
Sept 12. 644-7095 art
8:30pm
<LEANING & ?tfaint for
pre..gcbJ~ Hrs flexible cau 640-8820.
COOKS
Exper. fry cook & dinner
cook. Holiday Ion
Laauna Hills, contact
~·s:ioext~----.1
see our fine ne'\V facility. 581-3830. Jan Hillyer640.0140 Nalional Systeaias Corp., •T .... • 3rdahilts. Ourtraining 4t SantaAD• 114/83$-"22
Please supplJ resume or GROUNDS KEEPEI IRONING Someone lo do 4361 Birc.b St, N.'8. (Near Exper'd in commarclal ::-10:.. re;!~il:S:!~: Equal~ Empl M /F apPli~tioo .,..1th salary <LongtenhSubstitute> my ironing in thelr_oc_A_irpo~rt_>E_.o_.E_._---4 ba.ntina. meat for all employees
hi.story lo: Saddle back College, Mls· ...:bom~~e:..:. I~rvtne:.:.·~·:..::552~-609=.l!__ ... Jti--------l who have the basic ablll· t•--------
TReHDATA
CORPORATION ·
$tOIMlardMHWi•s
DMtlon
An Applied Mapetics Co
3400 W. Se1etstrom
Santa An•, Ca 92704
Equal Opportunity
Employv M /F
s ion Viej o. Hour a J "'CK, ... THE IOX ~"' •~ AMCE &.Y •desire. Good P•1 + lECIPT'IOM.lST, 7:00am 4pm, Tues· S.t. "' " """"" 1 .....,. ldgbt abifl bonua le profit Weekends $4..42 p/hr. 831-9700 ext. is accepting applicatJona PERSOH sharing + xlnt frlnie . 8:a0~~:~1n~.
302,303.btwnS-S ror our Mldnile ohln. Eitper'd ln Ammonia benefits . Appl1 Aakforllrs.J....,. F\ill & part time open-refrigeration or gen'I &am·5pm, · Coadwtl~
HAIRDRESSER ings avail. Pis. apply machJoe m~lntenance. CIMCO
Apply In Person every Tues. & Thu.rt., 3 Several o--•'Qgs. Start 26S Bri""S• Cott.a M-• 644-9060 :·
R · DA s I to SPM, 2398 S. El _... .... -egis .... auty 8 °" Camino Real, San Clem. now • .F..ictralona t.t~ 1T802SkY Park El\'d (l Bit.So, of Bater So. Ost Plasa540.:s888 SC.lOl IHi,o, OttRedhlU)
Ho6tesses. Now acceptint Eq\aal ~'Employer s-... 1 Op~E ....... 11 1ppllcaUon1, Cao<?;. KEYPUNCH ""'tu.a P mg; m
Restaurant, 2241 w . ..-29 ._ 029 .... Hf.CUIK-Coast Hwy, Npt BctL Ap· .-F T Good I bU . Hune, wtnd,s for
ply in persoi 3·SPM •54'6 DATA. REC. I • w P1t ~· tltdelrly lady °" Balbo' ThW'S & Prl. 1-It 1 ,_ •T "I 9610 neat appe.rance . •m n..;...a_ .....,. .. .._ ,_ ,.... ~ trala.. Traul Lodfe, Mlllt •-"'--.--"----· ---1
HOTIL •ICIYRU 8cb &NL~ Preuer, eombfnat}on
Front d.etlt c1er1r ~ reUet •1..ol.EX HOW HIRING woo& 1t ailk. lmrnediat4i nlaht a udllor-, ~oia. •UHIVA.C optn1n1 . .-.ueU014'&.
Jl'/Ume & P/Umo ~·· •CHC l<IYTA.P& ~~~=~~~el 8alM Lady I.pc' rucl)'·to-Qout HW)'I., S. t.aeuu OOllil open. E p , but )dll a:pttlenew: lex· i;; ~Jlhop in Dan• Pt. (AJl>b• .. u Sho,,i.1
___ .,. ___ ~ tas=:?~~:;.::.--...-,~lfMr'llln'll'llll:'.:'a'iDIET"ZcdleQt Pl)'. DlY le swtilt ~IMAM llaftaa.J or • na,_ .,.o.&.. __ >·-· -----,_..,..-... ,
ablfta avall. Loq "ibOrt Wl'9o•er. tor C1tMJlc 1,,,.~~::"rr'":t"::::o-~~ t~ 1salpmeota, boll· Ohl#da ,..ounda 1um· •pt
day fr vacaUon P•>'• +ttOOmo.CalJ~1*
he1pll1ltUllOD ~~~iJUJ~~~-;~~~~~~~~~ availabla. II
r \
..... W..e.4 ... W.t-4 1l .... W.-ted 7100 H.epW•t•d 7100 Dogs 1040 Mlsc.tlc:IMOtK 1010 Tuesday,July26, 19n DAILY PILOT CJJ .................•••••.•.•.•. ~ .. ············ .•..•••••••••••••••••••••....•.........•..................................•..••..•.......... AK.C PoodJ i i Mbcel•1ous lotO MusJcd IHh la MCll'iM
SALISPIASOM SHIPPING a UC. = ~ K~ttt;:. ~~i toy, an m::,upp cs. t ny WANTED ....................... NtrwltRt• eon .... ,... ...
Pl\lme. Approx 30 hra VaUd Calif. dJ1vera lie., aOlll.Y ln penoo, S.•pm, ~ TOP CASH DOLLAR COUCH SZS. Wit C. Eltt. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
111otmAU for Na.M)' per wit. Y\ltt be II Avail forklift exper. Pr f~r oa· Orljlnal Pina, 2121 PA ID F 0 R Y 0 UR can opnr. SlO, ski boots Con.a Min·O-Molic elec. G1Mr.. 90 I 0 to won ~ .. " wkndl pcr. lnat Mallwerehoua-Balboa BJ. NB Mini Scbnaurer, AKC, JEWELRY, WATCHES, SlS.646-7178 . or'an. excellent condl· ...................... .
llCPT·TmST
Matwe pe...on (CH' IUll
time. ~klo .. tet'•J>-
u-.i.t·l)'plat In attra~
• o(flc:-e at 0 C Alrpor\. P\uM call, 7'2 O"ttO
lleatal Qore
'fAIDMAM
Mech•nlt1'1Jy u1t'Untd. P'JtirM. I Day wit Wltdy <tf. N\lel be neat In •1>·
peer • have oea
b&Ddwrtlln1 Will train.
Apply suo Newpor
Blvd. CM_~--
RESEARCH SUBJKC
wanted ap l7 or olckr
for probl•m tolv1n.,
"'tudy, rtciulNS ~,hr. $3.
•'\U be paid Heh I UbJect.
please cont.act Juanita
GS.S7S
~,..r wtpl ...... •~ lo"'·r 1n21 or:ralJon MUl\arv _ -female, 3 mos o)d. ART OBJECTS GOLD tion ..,_ pp """ •-n , ............. C fl / ,.... ,...... • ,,.. 'J F d l II Pb SILVER SER. VlCE° CARPETING ·-· · ......... ......,., "'wu ru w moor cub Jpfut, but not ntt 1upp11 e~e r . very WAITltlSSIS orce 0 se · • 180 d.s t• Ina oeeds work $5000 Apply In P•rton to hdpl\lJ. Ap y, National ltDISHWASHSlS 6SHl6S FINE FURN. fl AN y grn carpe ang, YAMAHA"G·SS ~ 18' Australian ur
Tob.t'conl1t, .Jn<' 7717 ~y1tem1 orp .. '381 N • • d • d . Imme d . TIQUES. ~-2200 .xlnt value $SO. Drps, 1\2 year old, nylon g. Ing aaitboat. Tele&raµh
Ulnt• Av•. H 8. Blrcb St, N .• e.. (Nr oc emJ)l.oyment. Must speak "'"to You I045 LUGGAGE TAGS rt!:!'~~:s & misc strin1. Xlnl ror be(ln· ~ on trlr. 1117$. Nt'!w
AL P:S . •• nd •I•. 111 Airport) EOK. Enallsb. Reft. Apply. ••••••••••••••••••••••• · ning student. Good <"ond1· 23• Santana sailboat hull.
t1•-. SwMp m~t. 0 C SHtfftN• CLllllC 2ISS3 W Cout Hwy• N. 8. Two klttens 8 wks. old rSerondm your busdlne,s11 cardh. TV Portable B/W. plays l 1 on . As' lo I S s O. no dec:k. $500. M6·2730 or ...-557 3795 one car or eac good. $32. Kenmore vac· Stepb&nie, 646-3819 after ~
.,. .. Conal1tanl, rc•P· F.xper. desired, but not W411der)rrecltfon • tag plm one spare. We cuum, cannister. $17. 6pm. "----------
Pay US SCI p /day, req'd. WIUtraln. lrvlne Small co. need• hard .BlackLab,fem.approx 2 return permaoeotly 646-1S2S -.-loah.Maintncince/ Sat/Sun Mu1t h1&ve vehi· area. Call for appt. Id d dl t d sealed attractive t ag & S..ke f020 d• tJ\ai wUI haul •UP· $40-78.'ll l!:Ot: wor n 1 • e ca e mos. loves kids. strap, meeting airline ORA FTI NG T BLS & Office F'llmfture Ir •••••••••••••••••••••••
PUC!! 8t~ru 11~. 7/31. ___ _. · worker. Call Car ol , 6Sl--0323&768-1.SS6 J.D. requirements. Pre· machines. Make offer. Ecfii,...at 8085 Expert· Fiberglass Boal
Apply 711W.11th St. Ste S II 1 P P I N G & !i81.J830. FREEadorablelonfhair vent Jou & theft! For a 4lM·l98'16PM.SP?lf •••••••••••••••••••••••·Repair . Trailerabli:
J 7C.M. RECEIVING Cost a Weneed50peoplewhoare Ouf(ykJtten.s. personalized tag enclose . Pitoey-Bowe.s add~11er boats. We come to your -------Mesa Stationers, 270 E. at least 10 lbs over· 536-9971 wallpaper, fabrtc or Qn sz waterbed, includes prlnterwithlOOOplates. location . Call J eff
SAL.IS TaAIHll 17th St. 'CM. 8:SO·S:OO weight Call Ms Stone at "Day Glo" paper a. we special mattress pad, 2 644-1405 96S-ZW9 He.illtb l''ood St.ore. E•· Mon· Fri. Appl1 ln perliOD 751.9175, we c.;, tell you Mixed Shep. puppy, 3 will back & trim your sets of sheets $200. ----------1..:===-------
per helpful, perm put. Wl.2. how to lose pounds & mo's, needs h ome tqs. Or ll')' two cards 644·7789 ZCONF.Tbls,l recpt.tbl, loah..Morin•
ISOO 1urtinJ. Apply In ST"'l ... ID/Lm:•ftED earn money at the same w/tender, loving care. backtoback. lab Crib 525 mile. chts. 768·W2 or Squipmtnt 9030
peraoo, 10· llacn unly. "' " ....., lime. 842·2872 PRICES. Y 833-2683 •••••••••••••••"•••••••
S.t 7134/71, Uuward'1 GLASS BUSINESS nds 6'5·7688
d F K 'tt Bl k $2eaor 3/~ "M bond dry copy mach. *ZODIAC Nutntaon, 1072 HayaM!e helper, expr' in all WindowCleaner&Carpet ree I ens . ac · 415 SJ.60 ,,. Or, (at Jamboree) N.B. phases. Eves 676-3175 Cleaner Helpers. Nice AdoFable. Need a good tags · ea Sears overload springs, Auto paper feed. Xlnl Port AM ·
TU
--·-a.•--•-or h"''"'"· Must home. CaU64S-5067 6/Stags $1.50ea. $55. extension bumper bond-type copies. Make · · anne
S DEHTs-JOIS ~keprldeln w';;""&self. lOormoreSI.40ea $75. 2 Dodge Van Seats, offer.649-2922 .!!!!leoa~~elgeeBoCa~
Restaurant Me ·n Edal--ES------· FOR SUMMSl 640-2700. • 2ma1Tigerlstrtf 'pedRkittdy'sr. 1 Sal~Jc~I~~~ded $30. pr. 839·9808 -7714)5'o.io7o .
PiJ:aa Parlor needs de SAL P /time for $414.40 per d. e, em. ea Y or p 0 Jiverydrlvers&ccoolls 2 YOUDOM'T mo.Growing co . .Must be Wom.anover40yrs.Com. · g bome.675-7474 Draw your own or send •CLOSING• eh 8 87 loats.P wer 9040
ol V '·d C 11r bo I win •· I f name, address, phone & THIS 5 "'TURD .. y ••••••••••••••••••••••• o yrs . aae. au a . HA.VETO 18+. Call lOam·lpm, Ulterve g ... reie COCKERSpaniel,2yr old A A ••••••••••••••••••••••• dnvers he & good dnv STA.MD OM 714n51·828S. oo phones fo~ nurses re· neutered male, papers. ~e'l~madd~!onehcard per Save Son mirrors, * • * 30'CHRISCONNIE67
ang re<:. W1l1Jng to work YOUIH~ .. 0 glstry. F/hme. Must Gd w/oider children. g. ...,-eac · wallshelves, tables. Fl brid ·
MU.,., •-~ .. ods. ..., 70 $3 '"""' S ft LL.-~..a Opr ""rk k d.s & fie" hrs Send check or money or-1 h 1 . losil Witt )' ge, twin screws, ~·-"' -• -TO E.JHD w c~ Y.v w n ... . 752-7472 derto: g ass s e vmg, sconces, canvas rm, bristol. (714) hr 20-40 hrs wk. H 8 . n P/llme eves & wknds. Refs. nee. Call AM or PILOT PRINTING wine racks. fixtures & 317 Ruby "'4054, Owner 847 ·1214, Stanto AGOODJOI! Will train. Su perior eves~l. Pekinese, male, 2 yrs, much more. Nora's Balboalsland
892-5525. T1me-LHe l.Jbraries baf Answering Serv .. 250 E w· omen wanted for shots. 642·0176 eves, P.O.Boxl560 Home Accents Village Youarethewinneror '60 Drake Craft 36 ' ---------i absolutely the rinest 17tbSt,Stel,C.M. houseclean~ng service. 642·3755dys Cost.aMesa,Ca.92626 Fair 1128 So. Coast Hwy twofnetlckets Custom Fly Br. Sed.
RETAIL
CLERKS
p/time sales jobs availa 1 Free home demonstration Laguna Beach ($1S.00value), to Many xtras. Bendix auto
ble In Or ange Co. Ne SwitchboardOpr ~I' P/thme. $3.20 hr. 11!.._:a..._ 8050 on a new F.ilther Queen CARPET •-Pad, used, R~'-llrot. Pfaitlhoot'meBteenrd, iBxenrde C'a< door to door & no pre· Hot.el Laguna. Apply to u 8 t a v e 0 w n ~ "' ""r" ~ !>Sure tactics. We use a Auditor, 494·1151, 425 S .. transJ)Ortation. 559·0327 ••••••••••••••••••••••• vacuum wit power like new, redecorating. BanlUnl loll•y AD F . Twin 2 7 5 HP
nice easy friendly ap CoastHwy,LagunaBch. Merchandise STOREWIDESALE head. Call 642"1560 for See to appreciate. Circus Chryslers. etc, e tc.
UTOTEM proach & our reputation · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• New & used furn, appl's, appt. 96().J277 Aug 4 thru Aug 13 S 2 9 , 5 0 0 Io r of r .
is number 1 in the busl· Telephone Tool Room •-"---1005 mlsc. Wilson's Bargain 8 fool yellow/white velvet HIDE·A·BED Kngsize Anaheim Coovenllon 714/673·5099
Oonnnlenc•Mwbts ness. We orrer a base Sales·Earn to $20,000+. ;;:·.r.; ••..•..•....... Nook.545&814W.19lh1 sofa, in g~ condition. i.et, dbl d ~esser , 2 Center ,800W.Katella ---.------
Positions open 1st, 2nd & salary + a commission & 11 Locations. Orange Co CM. 642·7930 &548·3262 Needs cle~nmg $50. High guitars, Flair fenders. Ticket s must be ex. New 18 diesel Squadron
. 3rd s h i lt s in Sa n a great bonus plao. & LA. Great benefits. Wonderland back chair, needs up· F60x14 tires w/Crager changed for reserved Yacht ~ay launc~.
Clemente & Laguna ThereisexceUentmone-y. security & rapid advan **I BUY** holstering $20. Call mags.839·4089 seals at the Convention Evess75·7665
Beach. Other areas have on the job + the at· c~me!lt. Call Republi< Of Antiques·! Good used Furniture & 979-8123 or 557·5153 Center ahead of time. lS' Fiberglass boat w/lrlr ,
·openings also. No exper mosphere is casual & D1strabutors, lnc. Mr }{ u GE war e h ouse Appliances-OR 1 will . . SIMMONS Hos pt. bed, Cal.I 642·5678, Ext 333 to $27S. Good Cond. req'd. Apply at any ol fun. Try a job you'll en· RDy, 714/834·9088. crammed with over 500 11 SELL( y Wrought iron dmetle 4 Everest & Jennings cJ31myourticket.s. 493.c:,,...9 se or or ou. chalrs and ro.und mar.ble pre m 1· e r W h I Ch r . * • • """ our stores. joy for a change. We music boxes, nickelo· MASTYS AUCTION t bl t F Q 1 2588NewportBlvd bave (3)Part-timeshirts deon pianos, circus or· a e op. me uaity, Bargain price also. l4'FiberglassBoat,35HP Costa Mesa 642.770, & Full·time is, of course, Telephone Sales g ans, w a 11 c 10 ck s, 646-8686 & 83 3-9625 buill to last a very long walker. 494-6007 • Pianos & Orcians 8090 Evinrude, plastic cover. ---------1 available. Our staff peo· YOU DON'T grandfather c locks, CASH PAID lime. $200. Call eve. . . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Battery nds charging,
·pie enjoy excellent HAVETO fascinatingantiques. 63l·3474. Air Conditioner, Whirl 5'BABYGRANDPIANO. c lutch nd s adJ . . RETAIL SALES For good used rum. anti-Pool llOv 8 mo old. ad· HOWARD NEWPORT Ot.h · · d h benefits 10cluding health STAHDON Over$1,000,000Wort.fl ques & color TV's. CLOGGED DRAINS . t • . d• od 1 XI t . erwise mg s ape. Sales woman needed for &life insurance. YOUR HEAD American International 95"1-8l33 (loc 81 >. Th row away ~~~ wMin0v0
1.wngm, •tuse t' selnl. BEACH. CALL 759-1111. $500. 673-8790
gourmet food store in Tl It You11 Galleries; 1802-T Ketter· 1 D bl .. v uu. " Costa Mesa. Call for TOFtHD s 1 yo~r P ungers. ou e $225.S81·9066art6 Baby Grand Kawai, 5', '73 Boston Whaler, 14'. 40
a t •• ., 9282 lk• It! ... GOOD JOI'. 1ng l., Irv ne. Tel. SPECIAL SALE action p1ston·vacuum & ebony, near new ... 000. HP Johnson. 13 gal. ·ga" pp . .....,. GI C ~ 754·1777. Open Wed thru lnl id ood ff •-d It ' th Anti N t' IC h -~ VEUSA ALL Time·Llle Libraries ha! Sat.9AMlo4PM.Visit! a w co ee ... en pressyre. s e que a 1ona as re· 551·1280 tank,trlr.Allxtras.Likc
SALES ForAPersonallntervw absolutely the fi·nest tbls, reg S340. Now only vacuum action that guler & 2 jewelry show ""w $2500 ., .. ,.3027
833 •095 •0< S · S t breaks it up. Ph. 548-0872 cases. $700 for both. Call TY, Radio, '"" · · <M.r SUPPLEMENT "9 p/time sales JO. bs availa· Furniture Stripped & $...... tarting at a TlME-LIFE Refi mEFURNITURE 9·10am,6·7pm. after6,496-8137 HiR,Stereo 8098 YOUR INCOME LIBRARIES ble in Orange Co. Ne misbed by Experts. CONNECTION •••••••••••••••••••••••Boats, Soil 9060
Ssss Ssss door to door & no pre· 752-5059dys,646-6826eve "" H iJ u · L H B 1928 A Ford Roadster CARPET SPECIAL Equal Opp Emplyr m /f ssure tactics. We use a 7""'1 e ' ml · · · Plckup, better than new. Decorat.or's mistake Concept 5·5 receiver• •••••••••••••••••••••••
PARTTIME nice easy friendly ap-lnstant cash paidforcom· 842-1244 191JSlud b k T rin Plusb brown. 190 yrds. PhilliP6 212 turntable. 4 '66 CAL 25. Custom 'rELEPHOMEWORK h · pleteant..aque sboplnveo· . e a er ou g. quadraflexSJ9speakers. galley. LPR, GEN. SEAMSTRESS, for Live proac & our reputation tori es. Call Larry GOLD Velvet 9 C01fC h & 642-9574 SS.10 yrd. Call Jennifer 5yrguar.$1000.64.2·6S67 SPIN. Oingyincl'd. Good
HOUSEWIVES Wire Cl eaners. 439 is number 1 in the busi· M (714) ... 3955 loveseat $195 H1de·a· 675-9417 d b organ .... o-· · FIREWOOD. SIJ5. cord. con . $7900 /or of r. COUEGE STUDENTS Forest Ave. Laguna Bch. ness. We offer a ase -bed SllO. 897·6285 . Sylvania Console color TV
G t d H I ,,. 3536 salary + a commission & Solid walnut roll lop desk $7S. \.~ cord. Euc & Org . Modular garage cabinets ~= Call _4_96_--08_17 ______ _ W~;:aP~u:eeonus~u;:~ _4 .... _· _________ a great bonus plan. S·roll s1350 Beaut' JORDAN BROWN, near Del.&stack.688·6690 in 2' lo 10' sections, up· ,,..,.,. J1~~74. JO'YAWL
pm to 8:30 pm. Call s~~MS1:RESS. There is excellent money cond 640-8208 • · nu,40"X60"oval.Patio DANISH Md . pers &/or lowers. Also Aftcabin,newmotor. e46-4223orcome to250E. Expdmsallmakmg. on the job+ the ul· ' or dining ta.ble w /6 rn.sofaS165· cstm wall uni~s. kitch HOMEVIDEO $4,995. AY 646.9000
645 7n"'" mosphere is casual & 18 .. ..,SH "'RDW .. RE chairs. $500. 640·8208 Occasional chr, like n~w rmdl. 675·3175 SANYOV·CORD II ·"1'1lhSt., Costa Mesa. ·""" ~ A "' $85, 5 candle cbande!Jer•----------------------------1 fun. Try a job you'U en· ' KNOBS. HOOKS. Wrought iron dinette 4 $12.50.536~2376 Miscellaneous 2 hr. home video i:e· KlTESAILBOAT SALESPERSON joy for a change. We HANDLES! chairs and round marble . corders & ADVENT $500.
Expr desired, but not re-•SECRETARIES• have (3) Part·time shifts SULLIVAN'S table top. Fine Quality, Antq Sanger, all elec. at· . WClllffd 8081 VideoBeam large screen Si0-82~
quired for JewlHry Store. Le«JCll-Gen1-R.E. & Full· Time is, of course, ANTIQUES built to last a very long tach. runs well. $25. cust ••••••••••••••••••••••• TV's now in stock. Call Stan Miller racing sabot.
Resp person, full time. Employers PayAllFees available.Ourstaffpeo. l237S.Main,S.A 'time. $ZOO. Call eve. maple cab. fit s all $CASHFORS for .<_>u r.low prices, Ukenew.UllmansaiJs.
NB/CM area. 548.3270 Liz Reinders Agency pie enjoy ex ceUent 7days, 10-6, S41·4174 631.3474 645·4948 Good used furn/refrigs Pac1f1c Video Products, 646-3S72 4020 Birch St, Ste 104 benefits including health 1 F 714·S47-8834 •---------________ _.Newport Beach 833-8190 &lifeinsurance. ANTIQUE TIFFANY ·SylvamaConsolecolorTV TENN IS D.R ESSES. ~~~ers & s toves ---------1
SAl.E>ADVERTISIMG Call ror appt/estab '65 Try ft YCMl'U HOUSE : S150 Call eve Problems find 1ng the IN Ukelt! Losing garage storage. . 631·3474. "fl t" in fashions? Want to ext'hange 2 NEW CERWlN VEGA
GIVE US A CALL 20 to50% off. Tbls, desks, Custom designed for you. tickets to Pageant of 217R spkrs. hsl $399 ea. 1
CLIPPER 26
Loaded·Desp-Hurry
Tom 645·0229, 645·5252
eve TOURIST GUIDE SECRETARY For A Personal Inter vw chrs, chlna~misc. July 27 FnMn Harbor Vu Home ,_64().886 ___ 1______ Masters for Aug 4, for pr only $280.
PUBLICATIO.._. Public Rel. 12 lime, sec 833 •095 & 28. 425 31st NB. Can· Btfl Spanish hand carved another dale. Kathy ATLANTIC MUSIC '76 Catallna 22. Lake nu.
" 2\.~ hrs day, flex hrs. • Villa ' din' t f bd 83" .,..,,,,, E 24 9AM E ITH ST C M
all C I TIME·LlFE oery ge. 10g se. so a, rm -..~vu xt 6 · 445 .1 . . . Many xtras. P/P. Call Nwpt Cotr. C aro , set.644·7716 5PM847·0813an6PM --------•8Jl·a598al\6PM
$425toS1275 wk bus hrs640-4119 LIBRARIES OAK ANTIQUES ~lldO~-a;:-c~~llii&~•--••••ijiiiljiliiiiil ... iiijiijiijiiiiiiilllliiiilililB~-• Commissions PLUS ex· Equa10ppEmplyrm/f S·roll top, secr etary, Solid Oak & Ca n e
penses on trade out plan Secretary·. Corporate china cloiet, sew mach. w/neutral herculon :
PLUS renewal accounts. legal pos1llon, l':lewport•-----------cab., butter churner, hall couch, loveseat. rocker,
-Complete training. 3.5 Center. Experienced. TELLERS/ tree,nilestand.569·5868 ~~lo & end tbl. $575.
Years outside sales ex· Call 64().0800. .............., perlence necessary. NEWACCO~TS Appliances 1010
Protected territory in SECRETARY /SALES Permanent full t ime, -·•••••••••••••••••••• KING SIZE BED MAT·
OrangeCounty. ~\p'l·::l'::: ~:tgty~~: typing, req'd, previous Washert dryers Clean T R ES S & B O X
req. Newporter Inn. Call exper desirable but not late mOttels. $10o, 1 yr SPRINGS, $75. 673·9149
MR.LINDSAY
12131429·'763
Barbara Bartos {714) necessary. guar. Free de live r y. .r... M 1-s...1-Mutual Savings & Loan Mstr Ch . Will also bu.y. -per o• ''"7 -644-1700 Ext 536. E.0. E. 2867 E. Coast Hwy CdM 636·2840 g Al s.lper COftd. .. --------.i Secretary-Help! Mr. Kull 675·5010 · Antique teacher 's desk
Sales Clerk, mature, resp. Business & Financial1~Eq~u~a~l~Op~ty~E~m~p~I M~/~F~ FRGHT DAMAGED $100, Maple P o rt •-=~R'lr"-'"·: person to work 4.5 nights c 0 0 8 u I l . d e 5 Ire si. HOTPOINT SALE. 3308 wardrobe $.50, SEWING
a wk at 7·11 Store, 28933 ver satile, capa ble W. Warner nr Harbor, ENTHUSIASTS: Medit ... _.._.1~
Crown Valley Prkwy, person. Contact Ray, Santa Ana. 979-2921 Credema style sewing --~--
'. Lag. Niguel. 979-7919 orS4&.8640 TRAINEE macb cabinet CTeak ) --~ ... ~~~~.,:?'.
•SALES• .. Experienced. Mature at·
• titude essenUal. Perma·
nent position. Must be
dependable. ...,. -So. C(>ast Village
"Call.Dorothy 557-6963
SECURITY
OFffCER
Outstanding opJ)Ortunity
for conacientio~s in·
divldual able to work
flexible hours. Some law
enforcement knowledge
.c. ----------1 helpfu1. Xlnt co. benefits . Apply9am·noon Mon-Fri
Personnel Dept
MARRIOTI HOTEL
.. SALES
,. i:xper. to bridal ,
,.. womeas ready·to·wear,
1~ & SJ)Ortswear for Cine
,, .1pecialty shop. CaJI
.,. T~l2 fo t appt.
•.J • GENE'S
" 900 Newport Ctr Dr NewPort Beach
Equal OpJ)Ortun.ity
Employer M/F
u •cHl.._.E OPR CASH PAID opens to 8xt' workable, '""" " For Wsht/Dryrs/Refrig buillin chair & drawers, ......... _.~·'' Must be mechanically in· worltlng/not. 957-8133 brand new $350 bargain ._.__.
clined.Severalopenings. ----=;__------!price. 540·5057 or
Start now. Extra long 892·9137. 1•~-•-1 term. • ••
o ~
Tl MPORAA f tlf l P
540.4455
17802 Sky Park Blvd
Ste 101 Irvine
Equal Oppor Employer
Myford DeCoster French Prov. Sofa, Newly
1 Park Newport upholstered. Was $425 .
Newport Beach Sell $225. 768-8494.
You are the winner of King Sz Boxspring, malt
two frM tickets & frame, new. $195. New
($15.00value),to queen sz SJ.75. & doubles ~ lros. $95. 768-8494. ......... it lolley _Kin;_. _g_s_z_Bdr __ m_Se_t_, _m_a_tt-.11
Circus sprgs & spread incld . .., •• 1i.;
AU& 4 thru Aug 13 $225. 848·1241or962-3052 Anaheim Convention
11 ., Laguna Hills Mall
• '·~ Westminster Mall
Cenltt,IOOW. Katella Corner Group Set. Will
Tickets must be ex· swap for boy's bunk bed
SECY/RECEPT TRAVELAGEHCY changed for reserved selorsellSSt.1727 _....__
6aleslady f/t. perm. for Youn I grow in I MGR aeata at the Convention d Mortaage Co., need s For fast growing agency Center ahead of time. CALL Now for free es(. on ~ c,h 11 rl~n. ~ills ho~. ~harp personable recept jn Newport Beach. Call Call 642·56'78, Ext 333 to Uphols tery. Special mi• .. L:iJ'J
; Jqanaae a ty an I & general ofc worker. 642-455()• claimyourtlcketa. price on Hide·a·beds. ~ 4"exp. helprul. Begin Im· Bright & self directed. ---------• * * * 768·8494 _· .. m,....ed_.552_·_3046 _____ 1 963-0743 TRUCK-Dr\ver, m ature Ii ---------•G_SOCJl __ Scff ______ ,
5ALIS/ORGANS77? SEC'Y /RECEPT. ~:~~!~eliv.ery •••••••••••••••••••••••
· Ne Y• The One for oew 1 man law office.•----------• We are looking for Irv. Good skills essen·S-llilll _______ ,
1MVeral bi&b energy level tlal. WUI train le1al if
todhiduala tor an excit· nee. No frinae benefits. toe career 1n the music Salary l600 mo. to atart. -~145lne11. We are the ~3btWftt-5.
--:o&:gan ~chan&e located lo (10) So. Callt. refional Service
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.... C ... l .. 2;;;...;;o ...... ~ ... L._Y~Pr_,Lo-.T.;._~:------..:.T:::unct~ax!L·~Ju~rx~n!!1..., ,!.!,n!!. Autos w..tect •no A.uto., '"'poti9d AMtoa. l"'porltd Autot, l•,.,W • MfM. Ute4 Aldot. UM4 ....._Still ...._,_ T kl ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• •••••••••••••••••••• .. • .................. !!~~ .... }:::.,. '*/160 ~~ .............. !~.~! WE'PA y Aat 9725 Por9Clw '750 ~...... 9770 Qnrolet 9UO ,..... ,, ...
. . I
2$ I\ d
1
~ N r\h "••••••••••••••••••••• 00 Ctwvy PU wtcam,.r ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~.;;·i.To••25•0c;;••1•·~ -
Slar ~ ~flj. raoe, av.STOKAGEOCIR
75
, ~~1~,: .~';.Ad ~d TOP DOLLAR '75 124 S~ider. AM/FM '75 Poncho 914, 1.8 mre. '73 DEL~Jt Bua, id. -:~ae~n·~~v~ N:;a. stADdloibu.fat:aoo._ • « c:n.ilae. J'uU,y ruuQd, per f\ per mo C-Ompl FOR MtfTY cass, al oy. rl ms. xlnt m 81 a, FM st ere 0 cood., 1o ma., new Mich. thna ~ o •5 on 148-32.U • ,,
"«'r"Y cl.-<An. R•plac-ern • • r v I c • d
0
P t 57 ·t'ord \9 ton Pick~ IMPORTS cond. ~-9$3-41130 tape/radio bra cover radial&. $!200. 646·752' • e am '° pmci ---------ul~ over ,000, Mak 17H>f1Hll90 CC>Od enic. ure~. elc 'f.i Flat Wagon, mdl 124, xl.otcond,t&ioo.'93-5"0. atUPM ~·~ia~la·llU, wko "!.!!tTD 2
d! ...
8
rtun. ~!
otftt M22'71T 1llO<> batorr 9!1:um MA.JlQUISMOTORS auto, air, lug. rack, 6441842 POPTOPCAMPER. • ot~=iUJJer.ltO--
---------'71Wtru 1~1 .. lren ~Mar.iuentePkwy rt350 67~ 57 SPEEDSTER '76 vw. AM-FM stereo. "13 Monte Carlo Landau,
•.a.t C• •••••JI' UJ' Mo4Gf'born•. P111h air, N721/a Dahun Pie~ Ml~ION VlEJO •72 SPORT COUP• XLNTCOND. fl300. Lo mMike nu. Mun seU. PIS, P/D, P/W, AM/Ft.1. ''1 S t or d LT I) • • ···--radio, tape CB uw lnh:r1or & P1unt 131-2810495·1210 a; 6'0-WlS · 642M68,63l·l3CM wsw, A/C, Clean $2150 PB/PS/PW, FM/.4.M n..an. Loaded for enit. Compl1,al1 8 /C Lo S!:t5C) ----5-spd, mag wh.,els, • «-m1al\er6pmwkdy1 atereo. VinYI top + ~
11\1 a .ooo. ~'!!.•VW-8" 90'78 M7 431l2or630-0'11M A.utos, lmporl.d AM /FM radio, dual Socrific Sale' 72 VW 1700ccl rebuilt lras Top cond Jo ~1 151..._. •••••••••••••••• ••••••• pipes, blk vinyl hard-top, • • • eng .. heavy duty cluu:h, ST Corvatr Mooia no, mileage make offer MOTOR llOM t;s 75 Uabun Pickup, cui.t int Genet-al 9701 canary yellow. Good con· Late 75 Porsche 914. FM custom int. MS-7981 64,000 ml, one owner, 536-'1882 •
t'OR Rl!:N'l' 4< '""l: wide mag whla, ••••••••••••••••••••••• diUon. Asking 11950 or stereo cae. lo mites, $1.200. 644'°'96: ~ ---------B'nr aale '73AquanuaD rromt150wk.T70-0S44 AM .Ht 6tcreo cussclle, ,69 M d makeofCer.M6.381811rter clean. Just s~rviced. '619 automaLic VW Bue. &&Corv irConve"" needs Grc.ToriH~ EsccpOon.allyclean Sol\ -644-0448 ercc e1> 220U SpmorG73-7144 andl-ve Bestofr.Call6S200U Excellent cond. $1200. to a.1 t 1 ''"k "1STopoftbe •'-· Vinyl )'ellow /whlle trlm.2S' C.."h.lnook Molor hmc, ----Sunroor or '75 Rabbit 4 .,... Eves~390i p,pan, ntwor ,$4.50 • .._,... •· Tandem 111lt< ltlr. 10 HP Ood"• 413, root. c1b 1alr. 1!.147 Chevy \!ton P /U. door, 11ut-0 AM / FM tupe. msg for Tammy· 1961 Porsche. new red · or orr. 848-3525 top, split re~lloer seata. 1·1
Mere De lx rlcilnc 41CW Onan iien. xlnl SWchmai.'600/blltofr. OeluxeS49·3804 llnlFian24Bsedan.4·dr, paint, new int, xtra 1975 VW R,abbit, 4 dr, ~':.:r~ :~~o'i; ~M:w~ l
$7000 nrm,Wtll arnve ln cond. Wldow ll lH' ri r • -S4D 1S47 Atfo Rotnt -9705 Radio Gd cond sharp. Runs great. $3900, 24,000 ma , AM /FM. door l lea , I ' 1 Calif Aua 1 ~·~10 112.500. tlM 001 ti8 ''he , ,
1
, -0 · 963-4607 • PP. 6'6-5187 Pirelli radials, slick, C...,_.... 9925 •1oc b'I rt;moedte m1 r· -------.. vy '• on Pkup, ••••••••••••••••••••••• $2800 548-8IOl •••••11••••••••••••••••• ror, ,.t w , tint g ass
LAPWOITH )6 "1'l Pare Arrow ~·. Roof ruru. 1t1_,~l. new radial '74 Spider, bought new in Honda 9727 '72 914, New tires. brks, · '75 cordoba, lc&&tb, seat.s. AJC, Wht sidewall r•~l
Rn lot w /Nwpl moor-atr&cn II Trk 1l~r Lo t1n·11 , AM /f'M stereo '76 t5,000mi. Xlntcond. ••••••••••••••••••••••• AM/FM. Lo mpg's, xlnl 'fJ)VWBugw/taj)enu.eng loaded 400cld llK mi tires.deluxewjalcovers',
sna. i3o.ooo. Ownrr nu's Xlnt rubber. P P $1350. 6't2 4758 Hood bra . AM / 1'' M B and.._. •77 cond . $4200/bst ofr. clu, upol, brks, dist, gen, xlntccmd ssoOO '95-6633 • I OWHEA CA.I ~l 002 21!k!t .
75
U ti. PU D l i.tereo 968-0863 r ,..ew 673-6230 batt +. $1000/ofr . Coe ... ..;al . 536-6618allerSPM• •
21'MOl&OM :n·-Pace Arrow, 2 wk~ cab.H211~~oo 1~1 ~~nxte '74 Alra Spy~FM HONDA Cars '59 Porsche 1600S, new 642-2!17S .... ~ ............ !!.~~ ua Rancbero 500 OUT ISL.A.MD new, a\atl to rent Aug c~d Call&t.2·5482 i.tereo. Xlnl 18.000 mi'!> MA.NY valves/radials, cleun, '65 VW Baja1 new clutch, ''13 MARK IV loaded w /camper s hell. i.~
L d d i h II
1300 Pvt ply SS6 0149 Vans 9570 Ork ~rn Mus t sel I To Choos. From! S3SOO. Trade? 494·2L30 ~7a_~ rebJt eng. -$lli0. Xl.nt. cood. p'ncM fo; o-uleaae. Bstofr. 557-6361
ua e wt a new -962 5245or (1) 995 2268 '" ~ -•-equipment aod ~leepa 6 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -UNIVERSITY '68 Porsche 912. Green. 5 s..-c. 552·9134 LMcoln 9945
adulti in comfort Trallen,Trov.I 9170 1972FORD Audi 9707 spd. Gd cond. Orig '63 BUG. Mags, new 'int •70 Lincoln Mark 111 ••••••••••••••••••••!'!••
Atomic 4, Genoa, VHF,••••••••••••••••••••••• IUllLETOP VAH ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oldsmoblte owner. $4900. PhMs-4751 AM/FM,' retilt eng, nds d<!Jlnelit car In Orane~ '89 Lincoln, 2 dr, ~75.
dinghy. 6' 3" he;id room '7S Jayco Tent Trlr. sl(l5 6 A camper special fully '741 • Audi lOOLS, 4 spd. Honda Cars • GMC ,64 p h 3S6SC SU body work. $500. 67S-4584. County, new Michelin Mechanically ¥lilt. S22.~.673-921lbkr to 8 . W/brks, bltn self contained & In ex au. AM FM .. tcrco. i.un Trucks Gd~~.e$t500 or~~~: '74 vw 411, 4 Dr, auto. Ures,bestotrer.StS-1822, 557-6361 w A NT E -kitchen. 12' • like nt:w · tcllent cond1t1on $4200 roof. lo mi. $3350 llJ0-9495 2850 Harbor Blvd. Ph (714)87S-4450 New radiafs & brks. Xlnt 9AM-5PM, 673·8969 art -..... -_-_.-ck _____ _
D Y a c b t ~ &68-4207 Pn. ply 531 -7977 or 586-6712 Costa Mesa 540-9640 cond fl895 847 01'"4 5PM/wlmds '""' .. on'
9941
salesman. Ex per s ail. '75 914 1.8. AM-FM 8-trk, . .. . .., °"· •••••••••••••••••••••••
Ei..cel oprl. Mariner '74 Tent trlr. Sips 4 only. 1973 CHEVY VAN Austin-Heafey 9709 '74 CIVIC Blue Metallic. orange, 21,000 mi. $6,SOO. '74 vw We:stpbalian Pop-Corvette 9932 '75 2Dr., 6Cyl. Like new. Yach~67S-1J93 ~~1~28a1um. body GYSPY CAMPER ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wht V-lop, new clutch 752.1726 top Camper, air". elec. ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• 16,000mi. $2300. Stiek
,
7
SSol Cat
18
• Many xtrus, __ . _ COHVERSIOM '61 Aui.ltn Healey Sprile. New llres & brkes. Best refrlg, propane slv. 1975 CORVETIE s hirt, radial Urea.
induct trailer. Bst orr. Nimrod Tent trailer, s ips new clutch, all orig. re· o{ferover$2300. 752-9299 Renault 9755 AM /F M cass. stereo, 2To(l5. Flame red w/tan S»SSOt Automatic. pwr. steenni: cent valve Job $850 --97lO ••••••••••••••••••••••• xlnt cond Low m1· · te · A to · · ---------2131592-5663. 4 (double beds). & brakes. low mileage & ~-8814 art SPM · · JOC)Uor • • m nor. u mauc, &lr '72 Maverick, must sell, G MS-9322 ancxcepllonallyclcan •I• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ss.750.644•9823 aft.7pm cond., pwr . steerin&. cyl, l ow mileage.
Hobie C<lt 16. Good cond. ------ton uml. (227PEG) EZ BMW 9712 '75"2 XJ·6C. 8,000 m1··s * * * '67 VW Bud. Must Sell. AM/FM radio, chrome $1600/offer. 675·9098
Must sell $1195. 673·2050 76 Invader, xlnt cond., 1111·...u. Pri ... _ -wi·re wheels Wh 1 I dys,646·0389evcs used 2 mos. 24' awning, terms·U.A.C. l yr. parti. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $l0,4001bstorr. """" uwau• Days call 83S.S5ll, even b . o esa e u-9950 & labor service poli cy Call673·3924 9827Continenta1Dr. 962--"""" k{ G" luebook-$6500: re · ~wy ----never U!ied. 1350 BTU avu1'I. Aulo Ccnll'•r's' Huntin~nBeach ........ as or maer. lail-$8065. (839MVG) .•••••••••••••••••••••••
Lldo 14 for sale. with lrlr, A/C, 545·5174. 498 .. 3755 u ---Our · · goodcondition. priccis Classic sedan '66. 3.8S. Youaret wlnneror '72 BUSX1nt.cond.Camp pnceis '76 Monarch Ghfa.
846-2230 Auto 5.,-vlu, Ports HOW 55399 lthr, wood, wire whls. Lo two free tickets equlp'd. Mich. Tires. OHL Y $6671 AM /FM. stereo, auto,
---& Acces5°"es 9400 HABERS mi beauty $3900. 646·1355 ($15,00 value>, to $2400. 673-6004 MARQUIS VOLVO u i r. f u II p w r, V 8 ,'. Bo~~ips/ ••••••••••••••••••••••• AUTO CENTER COME IH & SEE '72 XJ6 green w/tan in-RlflCJllttCJ lros. MlSSION VIEJO ::~ul. $4600/bsl ofr. ••••••••••••••••••!~?.~ SAVEWITH t4258akerSt.,C.M THEA.LLNEW terior. Make oHer. lamumflhlley 831 -2880495°1210 USED&REBUILT •3 blkeastofliarbor Bl 630CSIHOW!!! 642·599lor645-9794. ClrcllS Volvo 9172 ---------1972 Mercury, Marquis f·OREIGNCARPARTS 54().9109 Aug•thruAugll ••••••••••••••••••••••• Brougham , 4 dr, all
'Engines COMPLETE Mcnda 9 7 38 An h . C 01111 .a. .._.r-E COU.._.TY • * * white, whlte vin lop, l WANTED: 30' Sail slip.
/Trani.mission:. ••••••••••• ••• ••• •••••. a e1m onvenllon ""'"""" " ----'77 Chevy 1 ton. auto BODYSHOP Cent.cr,800W.Katella VQ•VO ClndyEstrado owner, very cle·an. ~loor1ng needed Buy. /Rear Ends trans. P1S. P B. radio Tickets must be ex-lo 416 Victoria Loaded. Fact.. air, PS,
I
./Tires UC 3 31 HOW OPEM h d r EXCLUSIVELY·VOLVO PB. radio, Pwrsplltseat,
Lido 1:.le res. would like
same. 675-7756
rent. case 646-3728 eves, ,/L'enders ,,.,.,. I c ange or reserved Costa Mesa 213 532·3842 .-----seats at the Convention Largest Volvo Dealer You are the winner or Pwr door locks, PW.
------• /Doors '74 GMC Vcm SADDLEBACK Center ahead or time inOranaeCounly! twofrfftlckets cruise control. $2&sn BoSkiat~, Speed & 9080 ~Bumper:. PS . PB . AT . AC . VALLEY IMPORTS Call 842-56711. Ext 333 to BUYotLEASE (Sl5.00value>. to 75L--0808 eves; 751.594g AU~~~~iLY AM F~~~i:t~ S4395· 831 -2040495°4949 2150Hwbor8"cl claimyourtickot.s. DIRECT Ri'"Jlht9lro1. _d...:..y_s. ______ _
101 N. Manchester. .-----Costa MHO 645-5700 * • • ~·,·~c~.I~•'''~··~ lomum & lalley '69 MERCURY Station
* *
~ Anaheim 776-9900 ·75 Chc\y bubble top \'an Ci'rcus Waaon. Good cond. $'700.
........••••...••.•....
-.76 PISTON ENGINE '61 RENAULT Eng. rebll. 968-9'73
J hnsall
, con\•ersion. like nu out of car+ body $400 Aug4thruAugl3 o nn 64 ·77 Used Mus t ·1ng 10000 ,.., Mizer station wagon. · · ---------'7 • • • m1 $7""1. 963 1941 Call 'u"""""" ••-~ •--"-'mConvenl1on ........ t ''52 :!895 Clubhouse Rd Parts. 990 No. Parker. ----& De I u x e 4 · d r , r ed, : .....,.~ 2025 S. "'141tU~let ,......,..a ...... s ClftCJ • Costa Mesa Orange Call 997-2000 '72 Ford Surfer Van, xlnl 1 sr "UOAOWAY 30+ MPG, roof rack & Rolls .. oyce 9756 Anahe1·m 750-2011 Center, 800 W. Katella •••••••••••••••••••••••
Y h
-f d 1 r SAHTA AHA AM FM M " Tick~ts must be ex-'66 A to 289 57 ooo · ouarcl cw1nnero ALL WORK DONE con . o m1, 6611435 at I cassette. ov-•••••••••••••••••••••••1---------h d f u . , ong two fne tickets al re-5PM wknd~ 835·317 I ing to Europe next week, #}DEALER IN U.S.A. 1968 Vf»IYo 144. c ange or reserved mi. 2 ownrs. Xlnt cond .•
(
.,,
5
oovalue) tn as. prices. Free est . TH!ULT1MAno1uv1HGMACH1HE must sell. $2500 Flexi-$975 536-0130 seats al the Convention $1800.831·1648
'"' · ·,.. Chris tian Car Co . l974Ford,Bubbll•topVan, •USED BMW's* ble.642·501l Center ahead of time.
Ba""'"' & lail•y good cond. 34,000 mi, P\ t •71320i 4 spd 491 RKS Mercedes Bent 97 40 CARVER ~ claim your tickets. •74 3 OC c R 7•6LWB equipped. xlnt! Private
'70 Auto trans, 302 eng,
56,700 mi. orig owner.
new paint, xtnt cond,
$1600Cash 839-4062
Rinqlln9Bros. 549-8098 all self condt 'd, very _____ , IRR ROY '76 262 G ' 'A , fully CAii 6'2-!1678. Exl 333 lo
Circus Autos for Sale pty. 493-3191aft6PM · pe ·"'1 .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• r ROLLS·ROYCE party. f7995. 714:541-4789 * • • A h A '7620024spdS1R401PDP '75MBZ450SEL IMO J•mbom ug ~ l ru ug 1~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• l·lon '66 Chev step· van '&12002. 4SP'· Air. ZKG138 .,....,._, 1141•<11 '68 Vol W St' k hill '75 Ora d T t ~I t Anaheim Convention ~s/ w ,73 Ii cyl. eng., 12 '733.0CS. 4.spd. 220KMT Silver exterior, leather ,.__ __ __, ~ 51750 vo ag. ic s · d ,r;;,b l ~P-An ~7 Mustang, 6 cyl, auto.
Center,BOOW.Katella Cloulcs 9520 mpg .. C\'crylhing good '76 3.0si 4 s pd S I R interior.sunroof&stereo Cl SlOSOMoAVI 'catt640-a:$.t. con. 652·0sl4~ r. PS, reblt tr-ans, clean,
Tickets must be ex-••••••••••••••••••t•••• cond. 14·xs· ht•d, \\In-S72PQM cassette. Low miles --:-;.;..:..~..:..::...;.;:;,;..;;..;.. __ , __ -=.;:::.:=...:;:::.::..--~cono, Sl095/ofr. PP,
changed for rescrv_ed 1923 T Chevy Drive train. dows , extras Ca 11 Closed On Sundays !67SMIN). Buy or lease. nA nV LL\N f1 '72 1800£S Sport Wgn. '73 Corvette. Brown. Cully 213-429-2968
scats at the Conve~t1on you'll find none better 645_32.69: 646•7698 Other fine MBZ's in l--'L ~ _hi Xlnt. concl. $5100, A equipped, immac. 32,000 ---------tenter ahead of time. 646-J229 ----ORANGE COUNTY'S stock to select from. Classtc. P /P. (1)8'10·7480 easy ml. Best offer over '65 Mustang 289, • spd,
Call 642-5678, Ext 333 to -'71 Ford Super Van. 14 OLDEST Mo1-,, ric.,, Co $6000. 645-3009 or 541-0SSS super clean. Runs great.
claim your tickets. • Recttertional ton. low m1, l'Ui.l paint. '75 MBZ 450SL . 1~ '-.:Cll · '70 Volvo U5·S $1900.1-'---------$875. 497-3195 · *** Vehicles 9530 xtras.S26SOS.t66549 &· lnsuperbcondilion&has Rolls Royce & Bentley Radials. radio, auto. i4Corvette350auto,brn 'S7MUSTANG
••••••••••••••••••••••• stereo, cruise control & sales&servlce . Wgn. 7031,~ Poinsetta wisaddle in t , fully
18' '75Tah1ti Super Tiger 1977 Ford 3
4
tons wag '77 Chevy Van. 6 cyl , other luxury eqwpmenl. t '63CLOUDIII Ave.CdM. loaded, lk new. P /P . S67
5
w/trlr.4550ldseng.L1ke 5000 mi 5th wh.lr ali stand t;rans, PS, PB. 1 .,._ Fantastic gavingal Q>nverslon.Gd.cond. ,71 1~. u· k •-$6S00.968-L810aft.6pm
631
"
3737 838
:
7986
nu. $4950. 830-4758 xtras. Sell logethe'r or 3.500 m1. $300 & T O. P Sa es-~rvice-Leasing (025506) $11,500 (733NOK) . ... s c . new eng "' sep. Illness.
673
_9-1
08
Aft ortrans car.960-2666 RoJCarver,lnc.. · 7M"A"W 17lbSt CM transmission, xJnt cond, '72 VETTE Cusl. body, SUPPSERPSP,~CI~! SS llP Chrysler O/B ski & p Roi'-BMW ,714) 63· 1 """a' PP.Jlest.ofr.494·4087 pearl wht. Rag le hard 1970, • B,.., mi, make
ram recreation tn-hull. 6 M l~ C~rvair Gbre
1
en Brie r ... ~5'~~mboree '72 MIZ 250 ' ""'"" Allto9, U d top. Lots or extras. Best offer. 552-177~ 675-6666
35 total hrs. "Wards Sea 4 Wheel Drives 9550 . mp etely r l eng & N wport Be h 6'0-&444 COUPE. In excellent COHCAHHOH'S M ofr. overSlliOOO. 982·7478 69 Grande, gTeat car.
King·· Make 0 r r . ••••••••••••••••••••••• d1rrerent1al. Nu pnt Best e ac condition. luxury equip· ::.:=::•• .. ••••••9••9•1•5,. ,..-~· 9933 mustseU, best offer. ~9-2922,642-3495 .a.MC-JEEP orrer.557-6361 Dats.M 9720 ment & low miles. HORSELISS -----s-9687438
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Transportcmott •••••••••••••••••••••••
Airer oft 9110 Nc:r.o~:n~ei~spor~~ ~e:::Y All Models New & Used '77 Seville SHOP & COM PARE Merced.es. Cl57NRN>. 2711 E. Coa.&t Hwy COUPI: D.EVILLE brakes, stereo radio,
711000
mi, xlnt.cond. New
only limited number still Leasing Available '77 Thunderbird (714) 675-0930 Cabriolet top, tilt wheel, vinyl top. Wholesale ~e:io&:~~1~f.i $1950 or
avail.633-6817&544·3197 Costd~HO '77TransAm cruise control, AM!FM bluebook -$3000; re-AiiitC Jeep '77 Volare Wagon Subaru 9762 stereo witb t•pe player. tail-$4100. (295LEB>. Our Okkenobffe C~. SaJe / 2S24 HARBOR BLVD. All at very low lease ••••••••••••••••••••••• (496KZ1). price is
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boot. jacks & xtraa. c J . s • s. c J . 7 's, Autos Warrt.d 9590
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9150 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'76 Honda XL·l75 for sale
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FOR TOP CA.RS _o_rr_._Ca_ll_640-_6369 __ . ___ .63 Scout, 4 whl drive,
'72 Penton 125, Curnutt.s, reblt eng & trans. Very
Sun rims, fast, relia. clean. $1400. 681-1174
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rblt eng & trans, chrome cusL bit eng .• many ex-
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hausl, new tt..rley rear (~). Auio Center's
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KAW 800, Wind.lammer 6 HA.IRS
rack. must sell, 1etUn1 AUTO CIMT'lll married. ~t. MZ-uet 1425 Baker SL. C. M. ~ blk eut of Harbor Bl
540.ttot
, -:.~ 'i T A ~ p, I\
OAT',UN :n· •
BARWICK OATSUM
'°'\Ill I 11.tl1 j li'I t t .t1u1
Bll -137S 493.3375
WE BUY
CLUM CARS
&TRUCKS
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
2828 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
546-1200
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR
FOR TOP USED CARS
FOl\EIGN, DOMES'l'IC
or CLASSICS .
If your ca.r Lt extra clean
5416ut0rst.
IA.UdlUICK
292S Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa ... t7t·2SOO
TOP
DOLLAR
PAID
FOil CLEAN
~;·
'\ I' '.• 11 111 •
t• •, •, i F • •
• •• ' I ' 'I
FORTHEIEST
FLEET PRICES
~al Jim MHdham
TODAY!
88800VESTREET
Near MacArthur
&Jamboree Roads
833°1300
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cond, AM /FM. xlnt cond low mi, xlra clean, sun· -~-..__..;..8_e_v_~'"'------1
$1950. 963-8204 roof, new tires. f"11y '75 Corolla Deluxe, air,
Ch equip. Maple yellow radials, defogger:, xln
'74 arger, nu r adials, w /bamboo uphol.
CUTLASS SA.LOM
Finished in bronze w /tan
interior. AM/FM stereo,
pwr. ateer ing-brakeS·
windows, bucket seats.
vinyl top, air cond.,
cruise control, tilt wheel .
Locally llriven cer ..
(828NJG).
OMl.YS4995
MA.A$UIS VOL VO
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131·2UO 495-1210
'73 Cutlass Supreme lUU
pwr, ·AC, new Best~on-.
PP04-4087
I
Hunting~on Jlea~b
Fountain V lilley EOl~ION
VOL. 70, NO. 207, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES
. TU~SSAY.» JULY 26, i977
Afternoon
N.Y. Stoek8
-.
Hanna Korea Bitb~ .. SGandol Suspect.
WASHINGTON CAP)
Congressional leaders are awa.al
Ing formal word on the identity or
nve persons whom the Jwillce
Department wanla indicted an
connection with the South
Korean influence buyana scan
dal
House Speaker Thomas P
O'Neill s&.1d Monday he was tn
formed last week of the impend
ing indictments but •as riven no
O•llf Piiot Suff Pi.oto
LEFT THE AREA?
Ex-Congressman Hanna
flanna
Leaves
NB Area
By PIULIP ROSMARIN
01 tllil Oelly Plt.C Stefl
' Former Orange County
Congressman Richard T. Hanna
of NeWJ)ort Beach has resigned
as a director of the county.funded
Economic Development Corp
and has apparently left the area.
Hanna is one of several con·
gTessmen and former con·
gressmen under investigation by
the U.S. Justice Department in
connection with alleged mnuence
buying in Washington, D.C. by
,South Koreans.
County records show Hanna's
resignation from the entity
formed to attract Industry was
tendered July 8. The resignation
was not publicly announced.
Hanna was quoted by the New
York Times in 1976 as saying that
while still a member of Congress
be became a "silent partner" of
Korean businessman Tongsun
park.
The Times reported that Han-
na offered financial collateral to
Park in an import-export venture
tbat netted him $60,000 to $70,000
from 1972 t.o 1975.
The Times quoted Hanna:
"(Park) often told me I was his
oldest, dearest. closest, most
valuable (riend."
· Hanna reportedly told the
Times he did not believe there
~as anything illegal about his
business relationship with Park,
but broke it off when he became
'.'uncomfortable" about the pro·
wiety ot the relationship.
In his letter to County ~upervisor Ralph Diedrich, who
appointed him to tbe economic
.development group, Hanna said he was "going on an extended
(See HANNA., Pa1e A2>
Coast
Wea,.her
The coast ls the only
place to be. It will be hot in·
land wbete temperatures
are Qpected lo aoar into
tbe 805. lllahs at beaches wW be in mid-'108. Lows tonl&ht ln eos.
INSIDETOD~Y
names.
While O'Neill said he does not
know if any present congressmen
will be indicted, sources close t.o
a separate House investigation
or the Korean affair said they
believe all five are former mem·
l>eri. of Congress
An aide to O'Neill said two in-
d 1 cl ments are expected in
August and three in September.
For the past year the J~tice
Department hu been investtgat·
in& alleltaliol'l• that Koreans
spread cub, glfts and favors
amone coneressmen ln an effort
to keep their support (or U.~ aid
and other progra11ns benefitt'ing
the Asian cowitry. .
The Justice Department in·
vestlgation waa reported last
spriJli to be focusing on former
Reps. Richard T. Hanna of
Newport Beach (D·Calif.), and
Corn'ellua Gallasher <D·N.J.),
who had business dealings with
Park.
A former K()Q':an Central In·
telligence ~gimcy dlrec:tor, Kim
Hyung Wook, has t;estifled under
oath that two former members of
Congress offered to s upport
Korean programs if the KCIA
would help them and Park on a
rice deal. He did not ldentify the
two in his testimony.
Radiation Scare
Cobalt Causes Carson Concern
CARSON <AP) -One man was
hospitalized and a three-block
area around a freight yard was
cordoned off briefly today after
workmen feared a shipping
canister containing cobalt was
leaking radiation.
However, the intended rec1p·
1ent of the cobalt told
authorities there was no radia·
tion leak.
"Everyone got all scared when
the canister felt warm," said
Clara Prehoda. an official of J .L.
Shepherd and Associates .
"That's how they normally feel."
Los Angeles County Sheriff's
Sgt. Mervyn Poppleton said
freight yard officials reported
what they believed was a leak
after two forklift operators said
the three-by-four foot canister
fel t "hotto the touch."
But authorities later de-
termined after taking radiation
readings and contacting the·
Shepherd firm that there was no
danger. Official readings from
the County Health Department
were being analyzed and were
not immediately available .
Rick McCray, 25, a truck
driver in the yard who touched
HB Elementary
District Faces
3-cent Tax Hike
Residents within the Hunt·
ington Beach City School District
can expect a three-cent school
tax rate hike even though county
assessed valuations have
already risen dramatically.
''We are at the mercy of
Sacramento; it's as simple as
that," said bo·ard President
Brian Garland. He noted that as
assessed valuations go up, state
school aid is reduced.
County hikes in assessed prop-
erty valuations have risen
about 20 percent in the Hunt·
ington Beach City School District
but district officials say they
must up the school tax rate or
face reductions in school pro·
grams.
If. the tax rate increase is in·
eluded when trustees adopt a
final 1977-78 budget in August,
homeowners will pay $2.93 in
school tax per $100 in assessed
valuation.
Last year's school tax rate was
slightly less than $2.90.
District officials are in the prc-
es s of completing a 1977-78
school budget of more than $12.8
million dollars, a substantial in-
crease over last year's $11.l
million budget.
The budget hike is due primari·
ly lo a 6. 7 percent teacher salary
hike which will cost the district
$834,989 next year.
Yet t.o be settled is a contract
between the distr ict and its
classified (non-teaching)
employes. Negotiations are cur·
rently at the impasse stage
although neither s.ide hu dla·
cussed potential salary in·
creases.
Garland conceded t bat
classified employes may receive
pay raises, but added that tbe
district intends to matntahl an
ending balance of at least ftve
percent. •
the cani~ter, complained of
nausea and was taken to nearby
Harbor General Hospital, where
he ·was reported in good condi-
tion.
··He's not feeling very well. He
feels nauseous, has a headache
and he's dizzy,'' said hospital
s pokesman Stan Grant. "'What
we hear from the field was that
the radiation was not at a
dangerous level."
Thirty other workers in the
freight yard were held at the
scene for precautionary observa·
ti on, authorities said.
Mrs . Prehoda said, "The
canister contained radioactive
cobalt with a lead shield around
More BodietJ
From Flood
JOHNSTOWN, Pa. (APJ
-Weary cleanup crews,
dogged by foul weather,
hard luck and .unfounded
rumors of more flooding,
have taken 60 bodies from
this flOO<l·cavaged_r~jon
as their search for victims
nears the end of its fin1t
week.
Stai.a poUca. aalci today
that the lat~t victim, ideo·
tified only as a white male,
was found In the eastern
part or the city. where
Mayor Herbert J . Pfuhl
said Monday there were
reports of up to 60 missing.
Heavy rain pelted the
seven-county flood area
Monday, bringing warn·
lngs from Civil Defense of.
ficlals for people In low ly·
ing areas to seek higher
ground.
Parents Seek
Damages for
Boy's Suicide
Parents of a youth who hanged
himself in Orange CQunty
Juvenile Hall last May have filed
a $100,000 claim against-the
county.
The cl~im alleges that the
suicide ol Jeffrey Poole, 16, of El
Toro was . due to the county's
negligence and seeks compensa-
tion for, among other things ..
costs usociated wtth 1fteyoulh 's
death.
Should the claim be rejected by
the county, the dead boy's
parents will be free to· file a
lawsuit seeking compensation
for alleged damages.
Confidentia l county r~ports
covering the youth's death show
that there were. repeated mention
of self deatrucUve tendencies in
memos written by-t<>unty person·
net in the five days before he
. hanged himself in Juv~nile Hall.
it and a fire shield around the
lead srueld, which is the proper
packaging for this sort of thing.
There Y"\S no leak. It felt a UtUe
warm ~.Hhe touch, that's all.
· 'Trus was a perfectly legal
shipment. The one who went to
the hospital got butterflies in his
stomach."
A three-block area around the
freight yard was blocked orr for
an hour by sheriff's deputies
following the 6:40 a .m . report.
Traffic was allowed to resume
after officials determined the
green canister was safe. It was
then forwar:ded to its destination.
The cobalt is to be used for re·
secrrch purposes, officials said.
Ex-Anthony
Aide Files
Over Firing
A former aid~ to O~ange Coun·
ty Supervisor Philip Anthony has
filed a $176,000 claim with the
county alleging he was fired
wi~Yuattr~a.ticnh_ --
The filer of the claim was H.
Ted Hertz. brother of Amanda
Hertz, a cl05e personal friend
and business associate or indict-
ed financier Gene Conrad.
Hertz, a recent law school
graduate, worked for Anthony as
an executive aide from late
December 1976 through March
11,Um .
In rus $176,000 claim, Hertz
said his abrupt firing by Anthony
was' "a willful and malicious
breach of an employment c~>n·
tract."
The former Anthony aide said
his dismissal caused him a "loss
of employment and income and
reputation and mental distress.·'
He asked for $76,000 t.o com·
pensate him for the loss of in·
come and $100,000 t.o cover the re·
maining alleged dam~ges.
Hertz was fired as Conrad, a
donor through various fronts of
roughly $48,000 to Anthony's
campaign , was drawing
headlines for the allec_ed
maHunctiortlng of hls loan
brokerage firm, Pension Funds
of America.
Simultaneously, lt was being
revealed ln tbe press that dona·
Uorts and loans to Anthony's 19"16
campaign from Conrad had been
listed as loans and donations
fromothe.-..
Aides to county supervisors
are not subject to the same hlrtng
and placement practices as other
co\.lltty eanptoyes.
Accordrng to an ordinance
adopted by the supervisors and
revised in 1914, aides serve at the
pleasure ol the supervisor they
senre and they can be terminated
for whatever reason the
supervisor deems to be tust.
Should the Hertz" clam be re-.
jected by the coun~y, he would be
free t.o file 1l lawsuit seeklna
reitress.
l"'prmer congressmen koown to
be under lnvesUiation lnclude
Louisiana Gov. Edwin Edwards,
who acknowledges his wire ac·
cepted $10,000 Crom Park, and
former Rep. Ott.o E. Passman
(D-La.), who has ~n accused of
using a House subcommittee
chairmanship to win Louisiana
ri~e sales a bro~.
Justice Department in·
vestirators ~o have a Jed&er
belonilng t.o Park recording pay-
ments ot $5,000 each to Hanna
and former R ep. William
Minshall (ft.Ohio), in 1970.
The House ethics committee is
conducting its own investigation
of Korean activity on Capitol
Hill.
Atty. Gen. Bell and Asst. Atty.
Gen. Benjamin Civiletti, head of
lhe Justice Departmen.t 's
<See KOREA, Page A2) "f
A,.llVI...,.....
ROYAL WRANGLE -Central figures in new biography
about the British royal family include <clockwise, from ·
top left> Peter Townsend, Prince Philip, King George VI
and Princess-Margaret.
Muddled Marriage
Blamed on Prince
LONDON CAP> -Prince
Philip, motivated by both per~onal dislike and concern for
the royal family, was instrumen··
tal in blocking the marriage of
his sister -in-law, Princess
M.Prearet....and w.ar hero.-J>eter-
Townsend 22 y~ars ago. accord·
ing to a new biography of the
princess.
Philip bore a grievance against
ToWQ.sebd be<:ause the Royal Air
Force fighter pilot, as an advtser
to King George Vl, counseled the
kint<to prolong-the courtship aM
c1elay the marriage or Phlllp and
Elizabeth, the future queen, the
book says.
Au strian author Willi
Frischauer's ''Margaret -Pr\n·
cesa Wit.bout a Ca11se" ealnts a
ViVid picture of the love affain of
the two prtnce.sses and of an elec-
trif yfng clash of temperaments
behlad the ic~es at Buck-
ingham Palace.
Margaret's abortive romabce
•ith the divorced Townsend wu
beadl.lne news around the world
in 1955, when she tinally an-
nowu:ed ,she would not naarry
blm. Tbe princess• eventual m~
riage five years later to photo&·
rapher AntonyArmstron1-
Jone1 broke down last year end.
the coupl&. who ba\'• two llve Hparet..ay.
'
I
,
'
r {.
A% DAIL v PILOT H /F
C'mmdl Aetlon
2 Appointed
llB Planners
GETS 4-YEAR TERM
Planner Hoffman
F r o'" P a ge A I
KOREA ...
criminal division. agreed to meet
with members of Congress on
Wednesday to discuss the prog-
ress of their investigation.
Several junior House members
have criticized both the Justice
Department and the House in-
vestigations as moving loo
slowly.
A number of present con-
gressmen say they accepted cash
campaign contributions from
Korean rice dealer Tongsun
Park, whom a foreign Korean in-
telligence chief has testified was
an influence-peddler.
But the congressmen say they
th ought they only were accepting
contributions from a foreign
businessman. Such contributions
were legal until 1974.
The Jtuntln~ton Belkch Cllv Council named D.r. Frank V. Hoff.
mun, 53, ll psychiatrist. and
J ohn Stern. 28, a realestate proJ·
ect coordinator. to poats on the
c ity's Planning Commission
Monday
Hoffman. of 17822 Beach Blvd ..
replaces former commlssioner
Brian Parkinson whose term ex·
pired June JO. Hoffman was ap-
pointed to a four-year term
Stern. ol 526 7th St., replaces
former commissioner Joseph
Boyle who resigned his post last
month when he moved from Hun
tinglon Beach. Stern will com
pletc the last 18 months of
Boyle's term
A 12->ear Huntington Beach re
s1dent, Hoffman is a widower
with two grown children and two
grandchildren.
A 1952 USC Medical School
graduate, Hoffman ser~ed as
actin g chairm a n of the
psychology department at. UC
l rvin c and was lhe fir s t
psychiatrist on the school's staff •
in 1964.
Ile has been a volunteer con-
sultant to the Coast Community
College Distri ct. Hoffm an
for med the ..district's student
health services program.
Hoffman h as a private
psychiatry practice jn Hunt·
inglon Beach.
Stem, who is single and a six·
month Huntington Beach resi
dent. works 'for the Mariners
Savings and Loan AssoclatJon in
Newport Beach.
Stern holds a BA in philosophy
and an MA in architecture and
urban planning from UCLA. He
taught mathematics while serv-
ing in the Peace Corps in Uganda
in 1970.
The newly na med planning
commissioner has worked as an
urban planner tn the Los Angeles
are;i and is still an adviser to
communit y redevelopment
groups there.
The Huntington "Beach Cit y
Council interviewed eight appli-
cants for the two commission
posts before naming Hoffman
and Stern.
Valley School
Vandalize d ,
Burglarize d
A group or youths took about
$900 in equipment and broke a
number of windows at Tamura
Elementary School, 17340 Santa
Suzanne St.. Fountain Valley.
some lime over the weekend.
school officials reported.
Fountain Valley police detec-
tive Vic Deutsch said today wit-
nesses are being questioned con-
cerning the break-in.
Items taken include: a coffee
maker, refrigerator, microwave
oven and two fire extlnguJshers,
according to Fountain Valley As-
soc iate Superintendent Bob
Reed.
The youths apparently broke a
window to enter the school and
scattered paper and other ob-
jects throughout the rooms. Reed
said there was minor damage.
The school is dosed for s um-
mer vacation.
•
..... ,..,....
MISTRESS SHARES EARRINGS WITH MUTT
Mary Terrier With Bejeweled 'Marmaduke'
Puppy Love?
Dog's Ear Pierce d /or Earring
TAMPA. Fla. !A P > -Mary Torrisi be' .:ves pierced earrings
can lead to romance -or at least puppy love.
She didn't want to have the ears of her three-month-old 1reat
Dane cropped in the traditional short-pointed fas hion. So she took
Marmaduke to a jewelry store and had one of her ears pierced.
"00881£ THE DALMATIA~, NEXT door, just fell in love
with her when he saw the silver earnngs. He JUSt sat and stared,
sort of mesmerized. Now he follows her all around," says Miss
Torrisi, 17, who received Marmaduke. named after the comic-
slrip character. as a birthday present from her parents.
After okayin~ the idea with a veterinarian. she checked with an
ear-piercer at a local jewelry store -who said all right as long as
Marmaduke agreed.
"I HAVE TtOS THJNG ABOUT earrings," Miss Torrisi ex-
plained "I've always liked them. And one day when I can afford
it, Marmaduke and l will split a pair of good diamond earrings."
That's possible because Miss Torrisi wears three pierced ear-
rings on her right ear and two on her left.
"I 'll give Marmaduke one and I'll use the other for the third
hole in my right ear." s he said.
F roac Page A J
HANNA •••
vacation."
Hanna further wrote thal he
planned lo move his family and
take up a residence "which~ not
likely to be in Orange County ...
Hanna's personal secretary,
Jackie Baron. said be plans to
move out of California. He bas
left his legal counseling business
in Irvine. s he said, and intends to
vacation most of the summer.
She said· she did not know how
to reach the Orange County Dem-
ocrat.
Hanna was a tegular attendant
of the monthly EDC meetings,
and was a member of lhe board
executive committee, Roland
Loveless. EDC president and
general manager. said today.
Hanna attended the board's
June 21 meeting, Loveless said,
but had no further contact with
lhe EDC until Loveless rei:eived
through lbe mail a carbon copy of
I lanna 's letter or resignation.
Santa Anan
Slain; Police
Hold Woman
A boyfriend-airlfriend quarrel
in Sana Ana ended Monday night
with the man dead in a pool of
blood and police arresting the
girlfriend for murder.
Police said the heated quarrel
came to an end when Juan Car·
rasco, 26, of Santa. Ana, stag-
gered out of an apartment at 800
S. Fairview St., stumbled a few
steps and collapsed.
• By the lime police arrived
shortly after 7:30 p.m ., Carrasco
reportedly was dead from multi·
pie stab wounds in his body.
Arrested inside the apartment
and charged with the man's
murder was Sharon A. Merrit,
31, of the Fairview Street ad·
dress.
KiditoSee
liloFriday
House sources. including two
close to the Hou se ethics commit-
tee's Korean mvesttgaUon. say
word has been circulating in
Congress for weeks that the
Justice Department's strongest
cases are ugainst former con-
gressmen
Crash Kills Pilot
CllEYENNE. Wyo. CAP) -An
Air Force board of inquiry will
investigate the crash of a T38 jet
a ltached lo the Thunderbirds
precision fl ying team which
plowed into the Cheyenne Fron-
tier Days Rodeo arena, killing
the pilot.
New Principal Set
For Dwyer School
An excursion to the San Diego
Zoo t or youngsters between the
ages of 7 and 14 years will leave
from the Fo untain Valley
Recreation Center Friday a~ 8
a.m.
Deadline for re,lstralion for
the trip l& 5 p.m. Tuesday at the
Community Cent.er, 10200 Slater
The Thunderbirds were to have
put on an air show Wednesday
morning at F .E. Warren Air
Force Base in Cheyenne, but the
engagement was cancelled.
ORANG• COAST H F
DAILY PILOT
==~~~~·r.:::.==8.: C...•1 '''"""'" .. ,_..., ....... 111-.... -·~ """"n t~·-,,.,.., ""' Cl't1• MIN .... _. 8u0 tjQ!oh ............. ,-
,...,, V•Utf. lrv1t1f S•ddl..,,.(11 V•tl•v W ~=~t~~~.~:.:"'~~·~ ........... _,.~ ........ , ,, .. »I ~ .....
"'"'·CM .. IMW C.•llorlllt,._ --... -~ ....... , ... l'\IN•-
Jut • ~ Vkel'l'MIOl~l-0.-M~
'
Dr .· Franc;,s uennae, ..
language arts coordinator trom
Plan Edge, New York, will be the
new principal at Dwyer School in
Huntington Beach for the 1977-78
School year.
Huntington Beach City School
District trustees made the ap-
pointment Monday night follow-inc a reassi&nment request from
Dwyer's current principal,
HarryTumer.
Turner will return to
clasaroom teaching when Dr.
Dennie takes over the $24,689 per
year post.
Trustees &lso made three
personnel changes amona vice
principals durlnt Monday's
school board meetlnA.
Keith Wesley w111 transfer
from Sowers Sch09l to Geisler·
School when classes open this
fall. His former position will be
filled by Bill ~lng who will
transfer Crom t>wyer Scbool to
Sower•.
The nmaining vice principal
spot at Dwyer will be filled by
Ian CoWns, torsnerly..asaianed to
Geisler. '
Carter Lauds
Italy's Envoy
Ave. .
Cost o( the trip is $4.20 which
in c ludes zoo admission,
transportation and trip in-
surance. Youngsters wlll return
to Fountain Valley at 5 p.m. Fri·
day. For more lnformaUon, call
963-8321.
Drug Raids Big
SAN DIEGO (AP> -Officers
sald •1 ~rsons were arrested In
drue rJids durin1 the weekend at
Ocean Beach by a special police
team.
-'
r •
t.ag D ela y S een ,
BB Shoppirig
Compkx · OK'd.
By RAYMOND ESTRADA JR.
OI tM o.llJ P'llet St.ff
The Huntington Beach City
Council, acti·ng as tbe city's
Redevelopment· Agency, cleared
the way Monday for a proposed
shopping center at the currently
vacant. 15-acr e lot on the
northeast comer of Golden West
Street and Warner Avenue.
But city planners said it may
be as long as a year before the
center is constructed because or
property ownership problems in
the area.
The city. as the redevelopment
agency, has the power lo con-
df!mn those land parcels which
cannot be sold, officials s&d
Clouded ownership may exist
on as many as 15 of the former
"encyclopedia lots," as they are
called, said City Planner
Monka Florian.
The redevelopment agency
will now hire an apprai£er to
value lhe 169 lots owned by more
than 40 different land holders.
Huntington Beach owns 13 lota in
the Golden We.st-Warner lot.
Mrs. Florian said the ary
could not be develoi)ed beca~
of the many landowners and Ufe
unusual configuration of lots.
Property owners ln the ar.ea
are being asked to sell their hol4-
inge lo the redevelopment ag~
cy at a fair market price.
The city will then sell the land
to a pair or developers who plah
to buJld the proposed .shoppiDB
center, 0Hic1als said.
7 School
Btis Stops
Ellininated
ClalmJng a need for improved
stude n\ safety, Huntington Shuttle
Again Rides
Ju~bo]et
• Beach City S.chool District
trustees voted 5-0 Monday night
lo eliminate seven bus stops and 1
reduce service at two others for
the 1977 -78school year .
EDWARDS AIR FORCE
BASE (A P > -The Space Shuttle
went through a final rehearsal to-
day for its first free night, riding
a jumbo jeWner at 28,000 r_eet and
rehearsing the maneuver that
will separate the coupled craft
Aug.12.
The hour-long test "wenl very
well" said mission controll ers at
Houston's Johnson Space Center.
and astronauts Fred Haise and
Gordon Fullerton, who sat in lhe
shuttle's cabin, were reportedly
pleased.
With the 150,000-pound shuttle
securely fastened atop its
fuselilge, the Boeing 747 reached
a speed or 273 miles per hour dur-
ing the separation practice.
As the Boeing touched down at
8 :47 a.m. after the flight, the
crew tested the shutUe's landing
gear, letting the two main land·
lng gear and the nose wheel ex-
tend outo!the cral'l's fuselage.
Haise and Fullerton will fly the
~hutUe when it is al last released
from the Boeing to make a five-
m inute powerless descent from
about23,000 feet to a gliding land-
ing on the desert fl oor.
Today's flight served as prac-
tice for the maneuver that will be
used to launch the experimental
craft. Thal separation is to be ac-
complished by heading the car-
rier plane into a shallow dive,
whlle explosive bolts part the
coupling to allow the shuttle to
"pop up" and away from the
Boeing. ·
The ouroose of the free fli~hl was to test the shuttle's gliding
ability. Tbecrartis designedtore-
turn from space as a glider
when it becomes operational in
1980. Disposable rockets will
blast the craft into orbit to carry
out scientific and technical mis-
sions. Its fuel expended, the shut-
tle will soar back to Earth and
land like a conventional airplane.
'Miss K it ty'
Visits Dodge
DODGE CITY, Kan. (AP>
Gunfighters and horseback
riders traveled the streets of
Dodge City again, but this time
they mingled among the
automobiles and tourists to
welcome a ''local" celebrity
Miss Kitty.
Amanda Blake, who played the
legendary saloon owner of the
Jong·running t.elevlslon series,
"Gunsmoke," returned to Boot
Hill Monday via a Wells Fargo
stage coach, accompanied by
escorts on horseback. In a ceremony at the Long
Branch Saloon, Mfss Blake
donated to the Boot Hill Museum
one ~ the dreuea she had worn
ontbeshow.
The move will leave two buses
available for extended field trips
as well as save the district ap-
proximately $20,000 in expense1.
district officials said.
The following stops will be
eliminated:
-Golden West Street at Palm
Avenue and Golden West at Little
Harbor Drive, because it was de-
termined to be too dangerous to load passengers on heavily
traveled Golden West for
lransporlation lo Smith School.
For Dwyer School students.
s tops al Delaware Street and
Commodore Circle and Beach
Boul<'vard and Cons tantine
Drive will be eliminated because
safe walking routes are available.
school officials said.
Stops at Hamilton A venue
and Spyglass Drive <for Burke
School ), Hamilton and North
Shore and Hamilton at the
Lutheran Ch urch (for Eader
School) also will be eliminated.
Trustees decided to retain
stops at Magnolia Street and Ells-
worth Avenue <for Moffett
School) and Lyman Drive and
Bushard Street (for Hawes 1
School > for kindergarten through 1 second grade students only.
District P.fficlals said older stu-
dents at these schools will be able
to safely make their way to
classes on root.
New crossing guards will be
added if needed. school officials
said.
Conservation
May Eliminate
Water Cuts
SAN DIEGO (AP> -The
director of the state Water
Resources department says
mandatory water rationing may
be not be needed in Southern
California because people are do-
ing a good job of conservillg water
But while the era of rationing
may not come, the era of big~
creac;es in waler prices will, said
Richard Robie during a visit
Mondav.
Robie, here lo kick off" a pro-
gr am or distribution of water·
saving kits, said the high prlce,5
will hit Southern California In
1983 when the current, inex-
pensive electrical contracts ex-
pire.
His d e partment now pays
three-te nths of a cent pe r
kilowatt hour for electricity lo
pump waler, then added: "We
will be very lucky to get a new
rate ol three cents per kilowatt
hour.
The present cost of pumping
water over the mountains from
Nor.them California to Southern
California is ~O per acre-foot,
Roble s aid.
E~-county
Priest Dies
I Fram. Crash-:
I
Irvine
VOL. 70, NO. 207, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES . ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A TUESOAY,JULY2~1W7
I
T~day's Closing~
N.Y. Stoeks
TEN CENTS
Hanna Korea ·Bribe Scandal . Suspect?
WASHINGTON (AP> -
Conl"$$1onaJ leaders are awall-
1nc formal word on the ldenUty of
five persons whom the Justice
Department wants indicted in
connection with the South
Korean influence-buying scan~
dal.
House Speaker Thomas P.
O'Neill said Monday he was in·
formed last week of the impend-
iag indictments but was given no
names.
Wblle O'Neill satd he does not
know lf any present conaressmen
will be indicted, sources close to
a separate House investicatlon
of the Korean affair said they
believe ail five are former mem-
bers Of Congress.
An .Ude to O'Neill said two in·
dictments are expected in
Auglqt and three in September.
For the" paSt year the Justice
Department has been investigat-
lne allegations that Koreans
spread cash, gifts and favors
amooe congressmen in an effort
to keep their support for U.S. aid
and other programs benefitting
the Asian country.
The Justice Department in·
vestigation was reported last
spring to be focusing on former
Reps. Richard T . Hanna of
Newport Beach (0-Calif.), and
Cornelius Gallagher (D·N.J.),
who had business dealings with
Park.
A former Korean Central In-
telligence Agency director, Kim _tll'.jftfi Wook, has testified under oat at two former members or
Congress offered to support
Korean programs ir the KCIA
would help them and Park on a
rice deal. He did not·identify the
two in h.is testimony.
Former congressmen known to
be under investigation include
Louisiana Gov. Edwin Edwards,
who acknowledges his wlfe ac-
cepted SJ.0.000 from Partr, and
former Rep. Otto E. Passman
<D·La. ), who has been accused of
using a Rouse subcommittee
chairmanship to win Louisiana
rice sales abroad.
Justice Department in-
vestiaators also have a ledger
beloneing to Park recording pay-
ments of $5,()00 each to Hanna
and formor Re9. William
Mlhshall (R·Oblo), in 1970.
The House ethics committee is
conducttni its own investigation
of Korean activity on Capitol
Hill.
Atty. Gen. Bell and Asst. Atty.
Gen. Benjamin Civiletti, head of
the Justice Department's
<See KOREA, Page AZ)
e Girl, 11
Dally Pllol SU.ff PMlo
LEFT THE AREA 1
Ex-Congressman Hanna
Hanna
Leaving
NB Area?
By PIDLIP ROSMARIN
Ol I.,. Oally tollot Slaff
Former Orange County
Congressman Richard T. Hanna
•of'Newport Beach has resigned
as a director of the county-£unded
Economic Development Corp
and has apparently left the area.
Hanna is one of several con·
gressmcn and former con·
gressmen under investigation by
r the U.S. Justice Department in
connection with alleged influence
I baying in Washington, O.C. by
South Koreans.
County records show Hanna's
resignation from the entity
formed to attract industry was
tendered July 8. The resignation
was not publicly announced.
Hanna was quoted by the New
York Times in 1976 as saying that
while still a member of Congress
he became a "silent partner" or
Korean businessman Tongsun
Park.
1'he Times reported that Han·
na offered financial collateral to
Park in an import-export venture
that netted him $60,000 to $70,000
Crom 1972 to 1975. The Times quoted Hanna:
••(Park> often told me I was his
oldest. dearest. closest, most
\ialuable friend.''
Hanna reportedly "told the
Times he did not believe there
was anything illegal about his
business relationship with Park,
but broke it off when he became
"uncomfortable" about the pro·
ptiety of the relationship.
• In his letter to County
'Supervisor Ralph Diedrich, who
appointed hlm to the economic
development group, Hanna said
he was "going on an extended
" <_See·HANNA, Page AZ>
Coast
Weather
The coast ii the only
place to be. It will be hot in·
land wbere temperatures
are expected to soar Into
tho 909. lDghs at beaches will be in mld·'10s. Lowa -toni ... t In 908 • . ~
. IN81DET8·.4~
ByIDLARY KAYE
DI tlle O.lly tollol Slaff
An 11-year-old Irvine girl suf-
fered spinal injuries Monday
when a large limb fell SO feet
from a eucalyptus tree and
struck her while she was on a
school field trip in Arcadia.
Suzy Gilstrap of 14941 Mayten
Ave., iS"in the intensive care unit
at Rancho Los Amigos Hospital
in Downey today. She was taken
there because of the hospital's
comprehensive facilities for
treating spinal injuries.
Suzy and 59 other fourth, fifth
and sixth graders at Irvine's
College Park School were at the
Los Angeles County Arboretum
near Santa Anita Race Track
when the accident occurred.
Jean Anne Turner. summer
school coordinator at College
Park School, explained today
that the children were feeding
ducks in the pond at the
arboretum when the limb, about
two feet in diameter, suddenly
broke off and fell from the tree.
"The children heard loud
crackling noises above and said
Private Rites
Held for UCl's
John Pellam
Private family services were
held today for Dr. John R.
Pellam, UC Irvine physics pro-
f essor who died at his home in
Newport Beach Saturday after a
lengthy illness.
Or. Pellam, who was 62, con·
ducted research in the field of
low temperature physics and is
most renowned for bis pioneer
studies of liquid helium.
Dr. Pellam is survived by his
wife, Ruth-Ellen; three children.
John, Mara Allison and Gregory ;
and one grandchild, Jennifer Al·
lison.
The professor came to UCI in
1965 and was a member of the
original founding faculty at the
school. He created a low tem·
perature research laboratory at
UCI.
Dr. Pellam, a native of Rome,
New York, conducted research in
anti-submarine operations for
the Navy and Air Force from
1942-45 'and received a presiden-
tial certificate of merit for ,that
work in 1946.
He earned bis doctorate at
M assac;husetts Institute of
Technology in 1947 and was
employed at tbe National Bureau
of Standards,-Galifornla Institute
of Technology ana the Garrett
Corporation ol.Los Angeles prior
to coming to UCI.
In 1953, Dr. Pellam was
honroed with an award for
meritorious service from lhe
Secretary of Commerce and was
elven an award ln. P~>"slcal
sciences from the 'Wublniton
(See PEUAll, P11e Al)
later it sounded like a nock of
birds getj.ing ready to fi y off the
branches," Mrs. Turner said.
"Some of them looked up into
the tree and saw the limb come
crashing down. They scattered,
but not all could get away in
lime," Mrs. Turner added.
Nine people were treated at
Arc adia Methodist Hospital
following the incident. Suzy was
transferred from there to Rancho
Los Amigos Hospital in Downey.
Mrs. Turner said the massive
limb did not fall onto Suzy's
back, but appeared to have
brushed against her back as it
fell.
She described the limb as be·
ing about JO feet in length. "It
looked like a tree, not a limb,"
she s.Ud.
One other Irvine child, 9·year·
(See SUZY, Page A2)
One Hospitalized
Carson Roped Off
In Radiation Scare
CARSON (AP) -One man was
hospitalized and a three-block
area around a freighl yard was
cordoned off briefly today after
workmen feared a shipping
canister containing cobalt was
leaking radiation.
However, the intended recip·
ient of the cobalt told
authorities there was no radia·
lion leak.
"Everyone got all scared when
the canister felt warm," said
CJara Prehoda, an official of J Y:,.J
Shepherd and Associate~
"That's how they normally feel."
Los Angeles County Sheriff's
Sgt. Mervyn Poppleton said
freight yard officials reported
what they believed was a leak
after two forklift operators said
the three.by-four foot canister
felt "hot to the touch."
But authorities later de-
termined after taking radiation
readings and contacting the
Shepherd fttpt. that there was no
danger. Official readings from
the County Helllth Department
were being analyzed and were
not immediately available.
Rick McCray, 25, a truck
driver in the yard wbo touched
the canister, complained of
nausea and was taken to nearby
Harbor General Hospital, where
he was seported in good condi-
tion.
"He's not feeling very well. He
Man Cleared
Of ~ape Rap
William E. Manrow Ill,
a Newport Beach real
estate man, bas been
cleared of all charges re-
1 a ted to an incident in
Irvine laat month.
Mllnrow was arrested by
Irvine police and charged
with raping a woman in
her bome after he had
shown her several houses
for sale in the lnloe area.
feels nauseous, has a headache
and he's diuy," said hospital
spokesman Stan Grant. "What
we hear from the field was that
the radiation was not at a
dangerous level."
Thirty other workers in the
freight yard were held at the
scene for precautionary observa·
Lion, authorities s aid.
<See SCARE, Page AZ>
Another Suit
Snags Irvine
, <I Al"Wln,._..
ROYAL WRANGLE -Central figures in new biography
about the British royal family include <clockwise. from
top left} Peter Townsend, Prince Philip. King George Vl
and Pri~ncess Margaret.
~~!!~!~~.~1:8 Muddled Marriage
Irvine related to skateboarding
was fil ed Monday by the Bl d , p • ~arkcrest Community Associa· o-me OD r1nce lion. A.AA.A.
Miles "Pete" Peterson, presi-
dent or the association, said the
,suit demandS'" -removal of the
. skateb9ard course in University
Co,nmunity Park, plus damages
totaling up to $400,000.
Homeowner s claim the
skateboard course is a nuisance
and allege negligence on the part
of the city and City Council for re·
fusing to rnove the facility.
The first sketeboarding suit
was filed by North Irvine
horoeowners, who objectea to the
colbmer~ial skateboard course
planned for Herita1e Park.
Homeowners won the first
round -a preliminary injunc·
tion prohibiting the city from
proceeding with the project.
Rather than fight the suit, t.l\e
City Councll voted to drop the
project, However, that decisiqn
led to the second suit by J•Y Hen·
derson, president of Leisure
Specialties,• In~.. the company
that was going to build and
operate the commercial
skateboard course.
Henderson is asklne $2.25
mlllloo ln damaaes. Tbat suit bas
r not yet been heard.
The latest suit concerns the 88
(See SUIT, Pace AJ)
LONDON (AP) --Prince
Philip, moUvated b y both
personal dislike and concern for
the royal family, was instrumen·
tal in blocking the marriage of
his sister-in-law, Princess
Margaret, and war. hero Peter
Townsend 22 years ago, accord·
ing to a new biography of the
princess.
Philip bore<l'grievanceJlgainst
Townsend because the Royal Air
Force fighter pilot, as an adviser
to King Goorge VJ, counseled the
king to prolong the courtship and
delay the marriage of Philip and
Elizabeth, the future queen, the
book says.
A us tti an au th or W i1 li
Frlschauel"'s ''"Margaret -Prin-
cess Without a Cause" paints a
vivid picture of the love affalrs of
the two princesses and of an elec-
trltying clash of "temperaments
behind the ~cenes at Buck·
ln&ham Palace.
Margaret's abortive romance
with the divorced Town.send was
headline news around the world
in 1955, when she finally an·
nounced she would not m•JTY
him. .
The princess' eventual m.ar-
riage five years later lo pbotog·
rapher AntonyArmstrong·
Jones broke down last year and
the couple, who h ave two
c hildren, live separately.
Townsend is now married and
lives in France.
Frischauer writes that after
World War 11 Philip, a naval of-
ficer cou~ting Elizabeth, and
Townsend, a milit.ary member of.
the royal household, were "in·
compatible and jousting in a oar·
row space big enough tor only
one."
King George, 'Who bad. no son,
adtnired the hands~me and
dashing air force offic~r. and soon
promoted bim to deputy master
of the hoaebold.
&
Al DAA.VPILOT I T!ed!y.Juttte, tm .3_t:ee .. , A•wk .
I .~~gel Dust'
Fells Lagunans
Three Juvcnllu and • 31·Jtar. turned home al about 11:30 p.m.
old man were round unconacloua Puramedlcs, two Lataiuna Be•ch
111 • Laguna Beach home Monday tire department units and two
alter inaesUn1 • whlto tranular ambulances were s ummoned to
chemical believed to be "an1t1 ald t.be two younf glrl1, a youna dual." an anlmal lranquiUaer. man and the adul .
Th• victims w•re found In the Of the four, Robert J . Morton.
llvlna room by a parent who re. 31, of 353 Cypress Drive, Laguna
Beach, was the most severely
atricken, accordln1 to police and uo•o Bodie'• lire department reports. IQ • .,... 0 Mort.on was treated with the
others at South Cout Communl·
From Flood ty HoapitaJ. Alter lr~atment, the
Juveniles were r e leased to
custody of parents.
J OHNSTOWN, Pa CA P> Al about 3 a.m. Laguna Beach
-Weery cleanup crews, police were called to the hospital
dogged by foul weather. to help subdue Morton who had
hard luck and unfounded begun acting in a bizarre man·
rumors of more flooding, ner. according to Sgt. David
have taken 60 bodies from Avers.
this nood·ravaged region The man was transported to
as their search for victims the UC Irvine Medical Center
nears the end of lt.s first mental health unit for rurther
week. care. Morton was booked in
State police said today absentia at Orange County jail
that the latest victim, iden· for alleged possession or a con-
tified only as a white male, trolled substance and contrlbut·
was found in the eastern ing to thedelinque~cy ofa minor.
part of the city, where Laguna Beach firemen report·
Mayor Herbert J . Pfuhl ed finding a white granular sub·
s aid Monday there were stance in the home. It is believed
reports or up to 60 missing. the chemical was taken with fruit
Heavy rain pelted the juice.
seven.county flood area Due to the nature of the
Monday, bringing warn· symptoms and the appearance of
ings from Civil Defense of-the chemical, authorities ten·
ficials for people in low ly. tatively identified the chemical
ing areas to seek higher as PCP, used as a horse tran·
ground. qullizer and known in the street
parlance as '•angel dust."
'Dry' Laundromats
Shun Dirty Clothes
SANTA CRUZ (AP> -Laun·
dromat owners in this drought·
plagued city vowed to stay closed
today in protest over water al·
locations, forcing residents to
take their dirty l aundry
s omewhere else.
Angered by what they say are
excessive fines levied by the city,
proprietors or more than 20 coin·
operated laundries stopped operations Monday. They said
they will remain closed until
water allocations are raised. •
Following the shutdowns Mon·
day, residents traveled by bus
and car to neighboring com·
munities to do their wash.
··we had to do it," said
. Norman Bei of Bei·Scott Com·
pany which operates 12 laundries
in the city. "Unless we get the
water we need we'll stay closed."
Bei ~I aimed his ~ompany alone
owes the city more than $40,000 in
fines for' exceeding its water al-
location.
"They're giving us only 70 per·
cent of 1975 Wjlter usage and this
is 1977," said Bei.
The laundromat operator said
his company is laying off about a
dozen employes because of the
water supply problem.
SCARE •••
Mrs. Prehoda said, "The
canister contained radioactive
cobalt with a lead shield around
it and a fire shield around the
lead shield, which is the proper
packaging for this sort of thing.
There was no leak. It felt a lit~
warm to the touch, that's all.
"This was a per(pctly legal
shipment. The one who went lo
the hospital got butternles in his
stomach."
>, three-block area around the
freight yard was blocked off for
an hour by sherltr's deputies
followin& the 6:40 a.m. report.
Trame was allowed to resume
after otrlcials determined the
green canister was safe. 1t was.
then forwarded to Its destlnaUon.
The cobalt is to bo used for re·
search purpose•, otticial1 Hid.
ORANQI COAST
He said the drought has forced
people to use public laundromats
instead of their own washers and
dryers. In addition, a large
number of students and elderly
persons do not Jtave their own
washers.
City Water Director Morris Al·
Jen said he was "shocked that
these laundromats could be so Ir·
responsible as to come to the end
of their allocation and then close
their doors."
He said applications ror
variances from water allocation
have been received from the
operators and that "more water
has been given to them In every
case.
.. But we can't allow them \o
have all the water they want,"
said Allen, .. or you have to allow
everyone to have all the water
they want.··
Conservation
May Eliminat~J
Water Cuts
. SAN DIEGO CAP > -The
director of the state Water
Resources departmel\t says
mandatory water rationing
ma1 not be needed in Southern
• ~alifocnia because peopl~aredo
ing a good Job of ~nserving water.
But while the era of rationing
may oot. come, the .era of b.it in·
c~eases in water pricea will, said
Richard Robie durina a visit Mondav.
Robie, here to kick off a pro-
gram o{ distributiot\ o( water-
sa ving kits, said the high prices
will hit Southern California ln
1983 wheq Uw. current, hiex·
pensive el~trical contracta et·
pi re.
His department now pays
three-tenths of a cent pqr
kilowatt hour for eldelhiqilf. to
pump water, then addtd: 'We
wiU be very lucky to 1et a new
rate of three cents per kilowatt
hour. Tbe present cost ot puJQ:e;· g water over the mount.ins · m
Northern Californta to ~ em
Caljf orn.ia is $10 per acre-foot,
Roble said.
Because the droul{ht la cen· ter~ Jn Northerri Callfornia,
f esidents thtte bave betn uk9Cl
to cut back drastlcaUy tn con-
sumption and bave rts~ed.
aclUevtng reducUON of up to «»
percentotnormal., Robieaald.
liowever. SoutherD CaUfor.
oiabf also are dolnf i •ood Job ot
CoasetvatiQD, Jtoblt lald. l\ll· &elUna tht IUftdator) ratiOG•
ha1 may not be needed. 10 Lot Anatn_ r~n h~v• .,..n
atked to cut water uao bf 10 per· c•nt. •
•
04'ily ...... Staff ,,_
NEW OWNERS, PRESIDENT OF IRVINE COMPANY MEET THE PRESS
Donald Bren, Peter Kremer, A . Alfred Taubman and Joan Irvine Smith
f"rotn Page A I
RANCH ... Ex-Anthony Aide
would not give Utem an inherent
advantage in competing for
projeclc;.
"We would do it at arm's
length and be like any other de·
veloper." he said.
FiJes OC Claim ..
A former aide to Or'ange Coun· and placem ent practices as oth~
ty Supervisor Philip Anthony has county employes.
-Housing projects: The four
declined lo discuss in specific
terms future home development
on the company's 77 ,000 acres in
the heart of Orange County.
filed a $176,000 claim with the According to an ordinance
county alleging he was fired adopted by the supervisors and
without justification. revised in 1974, aides serve at the
The rilcr of the claim was H. pleasure of the supervisor they
Ted He~tz, brother of Amanda serve and they can be terminated
Kremer. however. noted that
residential construction is
"primarily reactive to market
demand.
Hertz. d close personal friend for w h atever reason the
and business associate of indict· !>upervisor deems to be just.
ed financier Gene Conrad. Should the Hertz claim be re-
Hertz, a recent Jaw school jected by the county, he would be
graduate, worked for Anthony as free to file a law~uit seeking • • J( there is a demand for an in·
creased number of units, we will
certainly try to be responsive to
that demand," he concluded.
an executive aide from late redress.
-Utigation: Mrs. Smith said
her suit to block sale of a large
portion of the Irvine coast to the
state 1s "under study." But she
s aid there ts no agreement
between her and the new board of
directors which would affect that
lawstU.t or any other s he may file
in the (uture.
The four owners declined to
·discuss the outcome of the fair
housing suit saying only that they
are in negotiations with the
liti~anL'i.
From Page Al
KOREA ...
criminal division, agreed to meet
with members or Congress on
Wednesday to discuss the prog.
ress of their investigation.
Several junior House members
have criticized both the J ustice
Department and the House in·
vestigat1ons as moving too
slowly.
December 1976 through March
ll, 1977
In his $176,000 clai m , llertz
said lus abrupt firing by Anthony
was "a willful and malicious
breach of an employment con·
tract."
The former Anthony aide said
his dismissal caused him a ··1oss
of employment and income and
reputation and mental distress."
lie asked for $76,000 to com·
pensate him for the loss of in·
come and $100,000 to cover the re·
maming alleged clam ages.
Jlcrtz was fired as Conrad, a
donor through various fronts of
roughly S48,000 to Anthony 's
campa i g n , was drawing
headlines for the a llegec!
m alfunclioniog of his loan
brokerage firm, Pension Funds
of America.
Simultaneously, it was being
revealed in the press that dona·
lions and loans to Anthony's 1976
campaign from Conrad had been
listed as loans and donations
from others.
Aides to county !iupervisors
are not subJect to the same hiring
MISTAE8$ SHARES EARRINGS-WITH MUTT
Mary Terrill With Beleweled 'Marmaduke'
Puppy L~ve?.
Dog's Ear Pierced for Earring
1'MIPA, '1a. <AP> -l'llary Tomai b.eUeves pierced earrinp
can 1 ad tO rom,.nce -ol' atJ'aat puppy Jove.
• Sh didn't want to have the ears or her thr.e·m<mth-old treat
Dane ctO.PJ>ed In tbe traditiooal short-pointed fashion. So she took
rm.d\&he.'° a J ~ltt.Uore and had one of her eari pierced. \ ~
•1)08816 THE DALMATIAN, NE.IT dOQr, just fell in love
wlth tier when he saw lbo silver earnnas. He Just aat ~nd •tared,
sort of mesmerized. Now J\e fo1low• her all around," ••ra Mias Tarrial, 17l who recetved Marmadulre, named after the~omlc·
strip char1~1r. u a blrthd.'1 oi:eaesat frorn l\er parenu.
Attttok.1yln1 the Idea with a vMerinartan, af\e cheeked Witb •n
••r·,,&ercer at a local Jewet,, stnre -who aald all n1ht 111001 u Marruchake aaretd.
Parents Seek
Damages for
Boy's Suicide
Parents of a youth who hanged
himself in Orange County
Juvenile Hall last May have filed
a $100,000 claim against the
county.
The claim alleges that the
suicide of Jeffrey. Poole, 16, of El
Toro was due to the county's
negligence and seeks compensa·
lion for, among other thjngs.
costs associated with the youth's
death.
Should the claim be rejected by
the county, the dead boy's
parents will be free lo file a
lawsuit seeking comp ensation
for alleged damages.
Confidential county reports
covering the youth's death show
that there were repeated mention
or self destructive tendencies in
memos written by county person·
nel in the rive days before he
hanged himself in Juvenile Hall.
f'rom Page A I
SUIT ...
Parkcrest residents who live ad·
jacenl to the skateboard course .
Peterson said they have been try·
ing for eight months to get the
council to move the course.
They claim there are problems
or nois.e, inv~ion Qf prlvac,y and
profanity. The council con-
sidered the matter at numerous
m eetings, but the last decision
was a 3·2 vote to leave the course
where it is instead of moving it to
Woodbridge.
The suit !fats the city and entire
City Council in the demand that
the course be moved. But the city
and only three council members
-Mary Ann Gaido, Gabrielle
Pryor and BiU Vardoulis -are
listed in the claim for damages .
Those council members are the
three who voted to leave the
course where it is.
The sult is seeking damages re-
lated to nuisance and neglieence,
plus llomeowners are cJaJmJng
Inverse condemnation, since
they say-their property values
tlave been lowered due to their
proximity to the skateboard
course. ·
FroaPageAI
SUlY •••
•
Ex-solon· .
Making
Rounds
While declinin1 t,o p~lcly ..,
nounce his candldacy for ~
elective office, Orange Counly I
arc h ·conservativ e torm..,_
Congressman John Schmit%
quietly makln1 the rounds ln tht-·
Jocal breakfaat·luncheoo cl
etreuit.
Clad in a blue and white-·
checkered dress coat. Schmitz
acknowledged Ute presence of.
local medla al a Tuesday mo
ini meeting of I.be Capistra.Qo
Valley Exchange Club.
•·1 euess they Cthe media> "'°
Reel me to make some public an-
nouncement since enveryone i:I
announcing their candidacy
these days,•· he said.
"Actually, l 'm planning on go-
ing down lo Chile to study cam·
pnign techniques." the one-time
independent party presidentiaJ
candidate quipped.
Schmitz, sporting a crew-cut
hairstyle for his stint as a reserve
Marine officer, proceeded lo de,
liver a crisp lecture on the his·
tory or American political
parties.
The former defender of right·
wing causes in the California As-
sembly and later in Washington
coukt not resis t making com·
mellt,s ail the prevailing poJitfhJ SC
Parap f\asing Voltaire.
Schmitz said "If there would
have been no Jimmy Carter, they
would have had to cre~e."
Schmitz said he b«l.ijlted the
Democratic Party was bued on
a coalition or six groups. Those
groups are the big cities, labor
ethnic factions, the sotlth'.
Washington, D.C. blacks an~Jll!!
eastern intellectual estabi.-.
ment. ·
Noting George McGovern«
failure to hold the coalitio~
together in 1972, Schmitz said
Carter is having problems with
the ethnic faction over the abor·
lion issue.
Space Shuttle
Finishes Final
Jet-back Ride
EDWARDS AIR FORCE
BASE (AP) -The Space Shuttle
went through a final rehearsal to-
day for its first free flight, riding
a jumbo jetliner at 28,000 feet and
rehearsing the maneuver that
will separate the coupled craft
Aug.12.
The hour.Jong test •'went very
well" said mission controllers at
Houston's Johnson Space Center,
and astronauts Fred Haise and
Gordon Fullerton, who sat in the
shuttle's cabin, were reportedly
::leased.
With the 150,000·pound shuttle
securely fastened atop its
fuselage, the Boeing 747 reached
a speed of 273 miles per hour dur-
ing the separation practice. .
As the Boeing touched down at
8:47 o.m. after the flight, the
crew tested the shuttle's landing
~ear, letting the two main land·
mg gear and the'nose wheel ex-
tend out or the craft's fuselage.
Haise and Fullerton will Oy the
shuttle when it is at last released
fr<;>m the Boeing to make a five.
minute powerless deS<?ent -fi'Ofn ~bout 23,000 feet to a gliding land-
ing on the desert floor . ·
. Today's flight served as prac·
lice for the maneuver that wilJ be
used to launch the experimental
cr aft. That separation is lo be ac-c~mpllshed . by heading the ear-
n er plane into a shallow dive
while explosive bolts part ~
coupling to allow the shuttle t9'
"pop up" and away Crom the
Boe1na.
The ouroose of the free fU«iht wa_s to test t.he shuttle's tliding
atullly. The.craft is designed tore·
turn from space as a glider
when it becomes operational in
1980. Disposable rocketa will
blut l;h• cr~ll into orbit to cal'T')'
out sc1enUfu: and technical mis·
sions. Its fuel ex.pended .. the shut·
tie will soar back to Earth and
land like a conventional airplane.
Cycle Mishap ~
Injures l!air
-............. ....... ,.,,.,,.
VOL 10, NO. 'io1 , 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES TUESDAY, JULY 26, 1977 .
"fternoon
N.Y. Stoeks
TEN CENT
•
Hanna Korea Bribe · Sc8ndal Suspect?
r
"4
WASHING?ON <AP>
Congressional leaden are awatt
mg formal word oo tbe Identity of
five persons whom lbe Justice
Department wants indict.eel in
connection with the South
Korean influence-buyina scan-dal.
House Speaker Thomas P.
O'Neill said Monday he was in·
formed last week of the impend·
lng indictments but was 1iven no
Dally '!lot Slaff """'•
LEFT THE AREA 't
Ex-Congressman Hanna
Hanna
Leaving
NB Area?
By PIUUP ROSMARIN
Of IM Dally 1'11•1 $!all
Former Orange County
.t Congressman Richard T. Hanna or Newport Beach has resigned
as a director of the county.funded
Economic Development Corp
and has apparently left the area.
Hanna is one of several con-
gre~en a nd former con·
' g~esmT'en under investigation by
the U.S. Ju.slice Department in 1 connedion with alleged influence
buying in Washington, D.C. by
South Koreans.
County records show Hanna's
resignation from the entity
formed lo attract industry was
tendered July 8. The resignation
was not publicly announced.
Hanna was quoted by the New
York Times in 1976 as saying that
while still a member of Congress
he became a "silent partner" or
Korean businessman Tongsun
Park.
The Times reported that Han-
na offered Cinancial collateral lo
Park in an imporl·eXPorl venture
that netted him $60,000 to $70,000
from 1972 to 1975.
The Times quoted Hanna:
"(Park> often told me I was his
oldest, dearest, closest, most
vUluable friend."
Hanna reportedly told the
Times he did not believe there
was anything illegal about his
business relationship with Park,
but broke it off when he became
"uncomfortable" about the pro·
prlety of the relationship.
.~ n his letter lo County
Siwervisor Ralph Diedrich, w~
agPoinled him to the economic
d41velopmenl group, Hanna said
he was "1oing on an extended
1 • <See HANNA, Page AZ>
Coast
Weather
The ~out is the only
• place to be. It will be b(Jt in·
land 'Wbere tempera\ures
are expected to soar Into
1 tbe 90I. Highs at be~cbes
will be in mid·'lOs. Lows
tonl;tit In eGs.
lli-4!!-1'--~ ~~~ ~~~-·
ll INSIDE rl'OBA 't'
'f M°'ll/ ~,. IJ>OUOf'ed
f i1tnamt,. /amm., hoo weon GQO lkWe driftld,~.
SH P.'afll Cl /or.o ltorv of Grit wman &Mo "°' net dc..n.d ,,., ~ frindl.
names
Wlule O'Neill said he does not
know if any present congressmen
wtll be indicted, sources close to
a separate House investigation
of the Korean affair said they
believe all five are former mem·
bers ol Congress.
An aide lo O'Neill said two in·
d1ctments are expected in
August and three in September.
For the past year the Justice
Department has been investigat·
i ng allegations that Koreans
spread cash, gilts and favors
among congressmen in an effort
to keep their sup Port for U.S. ai.d·
and other programs benefitting
the Asian country.
The Ju.slice Department in-
vestigation was reported last
i.pring to be focusing on former
Reps. Richa rd T. Hanna of
Newport Beach .<D·Calif. ), and
Cornelius Gallagher <D·N.J .),
who bad business deaUngs with
Park.
A former Korean Central In·
telligence Agency director, Kim
Hyung Wook, has testified under
oath that two former members or
Congress offered lo support
Korean programs if the KCIA
would help them and Park on a
rice deal. He did not identify the
two in histestimony.
gel Dust Fells
Four in Lagun~
' Three juveniles and a 31-year·
old man were found unconscious
in a Laguna Beach horn~ Monday
after ingesting a white granular
chemical believed to be "angel
dust," an animal tranquilizer.
The victims were found in the
living room by a parent who re·
turned home at about 11 :20 p.m.
Paramedics, two Laguna Beach
fire department units and two
ambulances were summoned lo
aid the two young girls, a young
man and the adult. or the four, Robert J. Morton,
31, of 353 Cypress Drive, Laguna
Beach, was the most severely
stricken, according to police and
fire department reports.
Morton was treated with the
others at South Coast Communi·
ty Hospital. After treatment, the
juveniles were released to
custody of parents.
At about 3 a.m. Laguna Beach
police were called to the hospital
to help subdue Morton who had
begun acting m a bizarre man·
ner, according lo Sgt. David
Av ers.
The man was transported to
the UC Irvine Medical Center
mental health unit for further
care. Morton was booked in
Carson Cobalt Canister
absentia at Orange County Jail
for alleged possession of a con·
trolled substance and contribut·
ing to the delinquency of a minor.
Laguna Beach firemen report·
ed finding a while granular sub-
stance in the home. It is believeu
the chemical was ttJ<en with fruit
juice.
Due to the nature of the
symptoms and the appearance or
the chemical, authorities ten·
tatively identified the chemical
as PCP, used as a horse tran·
quilizer and known in the street
parlance as "angel dust."
Radiation Scare
CARSON CAP> -One man was
hospitalized and a three-block
area around a freight yard was
cordoned off briefly today alter
workmen feared a shipping
canister containing cobalt was
leaking radiation.
However, the intended recip-
ient of the cobalt told
authorities there was no radia·
lion leak.
"Everyone got all scared when
the canister felt warm," said
Clara Prehoda, an official of J.L.
Shepherd and Associates.
"That's how they normally feel."
Los Angeles County Sheriff's
Sgt. Mervyn Poppleton said
freight yard officials reported
what they believed was a leak .
after two forklift operators said
tbe three-by-four foot canister
felt "hot to the touch."
But authorities later de·
termined after laking radiation
readings and contacting the
Shepherd firm that there was no
danger. Official readings from
the County Health Department
were being analyzed and were
not immediately available.
Rick McCray, 25, a ·truck
driver in the yard who touched
the canister, compla ined of
nausea and was taken to nearby
Harbor General Hospital, where
he was reported in good condi-
tion. ·
"He's not feeling very well. He
feels nauseous, has a headache
Greenbelt Funds
Inappropriate?
By JACK CHAPPELL
Of t11o Dally l"llot Slall
Allocation of $12, 780 in
Laguna Beach federal revenue
sharing funds to the Laguna
Greenbelt is not illegal, but could
be considered inappropriate, ac·
cording to a confidential memo
to the city Council from City Al·
torney George Logan.
The City Council will re·
consider its allocation of the
funds at its next regularly
scheduled meeting Aug. 3.
The council voted last month to
grant the funds to the Laguna
Greenbelt, a local conservation
and environmental organization
and restricted lfle money's use to
educational and promotional ef·
forts.
Al the time, Councilman John
McDowell questioned the action
noting that the city' and the
Laguna Greenbelt Inc., were fac·
ing suits arising from land use
decisions concerning Sycamore
Hills, a so-called ''keystone" of
the Greenbelt. ·
The greenbelt c9ncept en·
visions conservation of an arch of
undeveloped land separating
Laguna Beach from urbanization
inland and north and south along
the coast.
The city will receive about
$128,900 in revenue s haring
money this year.
T he council apportion~
$12, 780 to the Laguna Greenbeit
and the remaining $115, 720 to lhe <See FUNDS. Page Al)
and he's dizzy," said ~pital
spokesman Stan Gr411l. "W)aat
we bear fl-om the field was tba.t
t he radiation was not al a
darllet'OUI level."
Thirty other workers in the
freieht yard were held at the
scene for precaullonary observa·
lion, authorities said.
Mrs. Prehoda said, "The
canister contained radioactive
cobalt with a lead shield around
it and a fire shield around the
lead shield, which ls the proper
packaging for this sort of tbing.
There was no leak. Il fell a lltUe
warm to the touch, that's all.
"This was a perfecfly legal
shipment. The one who went to
<See SCARE, Page A2>
Santa Anan
Slain; Police
Hold Woman
A boyfriend·girlfriend quarrel
in Sana Ana ended Monday night
with the man dead in a pool or
blood and police arresting the
girlfriendfor murder.
Polite said the heated quarrel
came to an end when Juan Car·
rasco, 26, of Santa Ana, slag·
gered out of an apartment at 800
S, Fairview St., stumbled a few
steps and collapsed.
By the lime. police arrived
shortly after 7:30 p.m., Carrasco
rePortedly was dead from multi-
ple stab wounds in his body.
Arrested inside Ute apartment
and charged wl(h the man's
murder was Sharon A. Merrit,
31, of the Fairview Street ad·
dress.
" Tree-Limb ~j11res G~I
Former congressmen known lo
be under investigation include
Louisiana Gov. Edwin Edwards,
who acknowledaes his wife ac·
cepled Sl0,000 from Park, and
former Rep. Otto E . Passman
(0-La.), who bas been accused or
using a House subcommittee
chairmanship to win Louisiana
rice sales abroad.
Justice Department in·
vesti£ators also have a ledger
belonging to Park recording pay-
ments of $5,000 each to Hanna
and former Rep. William
Minshall (R·Ohio), in 1970.
The House ethics committee is
conducting its own mvestigation
of Korean activity on Capitol
Hill
Atty. Gen. Bell and Asst. Atty.
Gen. Benjamin Civiletti, head of
the Jus tice Department's
<See KOREA, Page A2>
,.,. .. ,..,....,.
ROYAL WRANGLE -Central figures in new biography
about the British royal family include (clockwise, from
top left1 Peter Townsend, Prince Philip, King George VI
and Princess Margaret.
Muddled Marriage
Blamed· on Prince
keep Elizabeth and Philip from a
quick marriage so the king could
"observe Philip over a time at
close quarters before deciding
whether he could become a
member of the royal family."
Frlschauer writes.
Philip was furious when he
found out about Townsend's in·
tervention. The king followed
Townsend's advice, the author
says, but in November 1947,
Philip and_ Elizabeth married.
Margaret then became the
center of attention. Though
linked by gossip to every availa-
ble young man of birth and rank,
the only man lo her life was
Townsend, Friscl)auer writes.
But the 12·year friendship and
romance of Margaret and
Townsend was doomed.
Parents Seek
Damages for
BoTs Suicide •
Pareata ol a youth who hanged
himself ln Otan'e County
Juvenile Hall tut May have ftled
a sioo.ooo c)aJm against the
couuw.
Tbe claim alleges that the 1
aulclde otJettrey Poole, 16, of El
Toro waa due to the county's
~ml aeeb·-cornpensa-;
tlon for, amone other things, f
costs usoctatH with the youth's , death.
Sbould tti• claim be rejected by
the county, the dud boy's parlllU will be ,,.... to me a
law.wt ~ compensation forall~ctam., ...
More Bodies
From Flood
JOHN~'TOWN, Pa. CAP J
Wury cltanup crew1,
doaat.od hy foul wuther,
h•rd lu1·k •ind unfouodt"<I
rumon1 of more noochna.
ha\ l' h1kt•n liO bocht'li from
lhJi. nooct-rov1t11ed realon
as lht-ir aea.r-ch for vl<'tlms
nean. lhl• <'nd of 1lll f1r:1t
~eek
State Jl()hec u1d toduy
that the l1de11t vu·Om, Iden
t1f1t'd only Ab a whJtt' male.
w u found In the eaatem
part or tht' ('It)', where
Ma}or Herbert J Pfuhl
:.aid Mondi.y th<-re were
rt' port~ of up to 60 missing
Ilea' y tllln Pt·lled the
~cven ·rounty flood area
Monddy, bringing warn-
ings Crom C1v1l Defense of
!1r1al::; for people an low ly
ing ctrea~ to ~eek higher
eround
Ex-Anthony
Aide Files
Over Firing
A former aide to Orange Coun·
ty Supervisor Philip Anthony has
filed a $176,000 claim with the
county alleging he was fired
without ju::;tification.
The filer of the claim was H.
Ted Hertz, brother of Amanda
Hertz. a close personal friend
and business associate of indict·
ed financier Gene Conrad.
Hertz, a recent law school
graduate, worked for Anthony as
an executive aide from late
December 1976 through March
11. 1977 .
fn his $176,000 claim, Hertz
said tus abrupt firing by Anthony
was "a willful and malicious
breach or an employment con·
trarl."
The former Anthony aide said
his di smissal caused him 2 "loss
of employment a nd income and
reputation and mental distress."
He asked for $76,000 to com ·
pensate him for the loss of in ·
come and $100,000 lo coyer the re-
m ainjng alleged damages .
Hertz was fired as Conrad, a
donor through various fronts of
roughly $48,000 to Anthony's
campaign, wa s drawing
h eadlines for the alleged
malfunctioning or his· loan
brokerage firm, P ension Funds
or America.
Simultaneously; it was being
revealed in the press that dona-
tions and loans to Anthony's 1976
campaign from Conrad had been
listed as loans and donations
from others.
Aides to county s upervisors
are not subject to the same hiring
and placement practices as other
county employes.
According to an ordinance
adopted by the supervisors and
revised in 1974, aides serve at the
pleasure of the supervisor they
serve and they can be terminated
f o r wh atever r eason the
supervisor deems to be just. ·
Should the Herb: claim be re·
jected by the county. he would be
free to file a lawsuit seeking
redress.
Front Page A I
suzy ...
thickest
Thls is the second bad incident
Suzy bas had at the arboretum.
according to Mrs. Turner.
Two years ago, when Suzy was
in Mrs. Turner's fourth grade
class, s h e traveled to the
arboretum for the first time and
suffered an asthma attack.
LA Cops Face Snit
LOSANGELES (AP) -A civil
suit was filed again.st the Los
Angeles Police l>epartment and
its commissioners in an attempt
to s hed llehl on cases fn which
police orticers were dlsdpUned
or have had cltJzens complaints
tiled qainst them.
ORANQI C:OMT ~1\C.
DAILY PILOT
Tu.1oav, July 26, 1971
Ex-solon
Making
Rounds
While docJJnina to publicly an-
nounce hla candidacy for any
eledivu office, Onmge County's
a l'Ch·con11erv all ve former
Conaret11man John Schm.Jta is
quietly maklnai lhe rounds In the
local breatkluat-luncbc;on club
circuit
Cl1.1d in a blue and white·
checkered dress coat, Schmitz
acknowledged the presence or
local media al a Tuesday morn.
Ing meetlng or the Capistrano
Valley Exchange Club
"I guess they (the media) ex-
pect me to make some public an·
nouncemenl since enveryone is
announcing their candidacy
these days," he said.
.. Actually, I'm planning on go-
ing down to Chile to study cam-
paign techniques," the one-time
independent party presidential
candidate quipped.
Schmitz, sporting a crew-cut
hairstyle for his stint as a reserve
Marine aviator, proceeded to de·
liver a crisp lecture on the his-
tory of American political parties.
The former defender of right·
wing causes in the CalHornia As·
sembly and later in Washington
could not resist making com-
m e nts about the pre vailing
political scene.
P a raphrasing Voltaire,
Schmitz said "Ir there would
have been no Jimmy Carter, they
would have had to create one.··
Schmitz said he believed the
Democratic Party was based on
a coalition or six groups. Those
groups are the big cities, labor,
ethnic factions, the south,
Washington, D.C. blacks and the
eastern intellectual establish· ment.
Noting George McGovern's
failure to hold the coalition
together in 1972, Schmitz said
Carter is having problems with
the ethnic faction over the abor-
tion issue.
........
MISTRESS SHARES EARRINGS WITH MUTT
Mary Terris! With Bejeweled 'Marmaduke'
Poppy Love?
Dog's Ear Pierced for Earring
TAMPA, Fla. CAP ) -Mary Torrisi beli ves pierced earrings
can lead to romance -or at least puppy love.
She didn't want to have the ears of her lhree-month·old great
Dane cr~P.ped in the traditional short-pointed fashion. So she look
Marmaduke to a jewelry store and had one ol her ears pierced.
"OOBBIE THE DALMATIAN, NEXT door, just tell In love
with her when he saw lhe silver earnngs. Ht JUSt sat and stared,
sort of mesmerized. Now he follows her all around," says Miss
Torrisi, 17, who received Marmaduke, named after the comic.
strip character, as a birthday present from her parents.
After okaying the idea with a veterinarian. she checked with an
car-piercer al a locaJ jewelry store -who said all right as long as
Marmaduke agreed.
"I HAVE THIS THING ABOUT earrings," Miss Torrisi ex-
plained. "I've always liked them. And one day when I can afford
it. Marmaduke and I will split a pair of good diamond earrings."
That's possible because Miss Torrisi wears three pierced ear-
rings on her right ear a nd two on her left.
"J'll give Marmaduke one and I'll use the other for the third
hole in my right ear,·· she said.
Dona Bills High Tot's Toys
'Set Afire' Principal Predicts
'Return to Basics'
By ANNE COOP E R
Ol llM 0.llJ l'llet Slaff
New Dana Hills High School
principal James Krembas said
Monday he foresees a return to
the basics in his school district in
the face of a national trend to in·
creased reading problems and
low lest scores.
·'There is so much available
for our diversion, and it's readily
accessible -why should we ex-
pect our kids to sit home and read
about something they can be ex-
periencing firsthand?'' he said.
This trend to look outward,
rather than inward, is reinforced
by the ''tearn1n& by doing••
educational philosophy, as well
as by the trend lo work ex·
perience and community-based
courses. Krembas said.
The .new principaJ, whose ap-
pointment to succeed Darrell
Taylor was announced Monday,
said he believes any school
system s hould be grounded in the
basics.
"I am very supportive of com-
petency-based graduation re-
quirements, which will require
that a student prove he bas
mastery of certain skills before
be is allowed to graduate from
high school," Krembaa said.
"We have to get ac~ to our
students that the so-called 3-Rs
are cruciaJly important to
virtually everything else they're
invoJvedwithorwiU wanttodo."
Although reading and other
test seores have beep slipping
throughout the country, Krem-
bas said tbe problem in Southern
CaUfomia m8.)' be more dJrecUy
related to locale.
"We in the school system are
com~ with the beaches and
tbe mountalns and the year·
round good weather for the atten-
tion ol our student.s.,. he said.
Krembas attended hitb JthoQ)
hJmsell fn Southern Callloml•. in
BACK TO BASICS
New Princfpd'I Krembas
Los Angeles, and may be
particularly conscious of the call ,
of the waves to a teen-age boy, as
be had recently moved from Ohio
when he stamct high school.
"By the time I was a high
s chool ju_nior, I eouldn 't see
myself in any other field but
educatJon," Krembas said. "My
interest in the field developed as
a natural process, starting with
my involvement with YMCA and
church youth groups.
"Over the years, I've had op-
portunities to move lnlo other
areas professionally, but I've
never really given it serious thought.
"I can honestly say that in the
16 Yfl!'l l've s~nt in tbe fteld, I
haven't recret~ one single day
thatl'm in teachin1 "
By Grand Dad
A Laguna Beach mnn was in
police custody today on suspicion
of burning his granddaughter's
high chair and musical rocking
ch air.
Donald Ray Jorgensen, 49, a
plumber, was arrested at his
home, 1370 Glenneyre St., after
hi s daughter-in-law, Donnct
J orgensen complained to police
that her daughter's chairs had
been broken up and were being
burned in the home's fireplace.
Responding officer s said they
found a fire going ln the fireplace
when they arrived al the res·
idence al about 11 :30 p.m. Mon·
day.
It was the second visit police
had paid to the home Monday. Al
9 :50 p.m. they had responded to a
disturbance call at the house.
Mrs . Jorgensen, a San
Bernardino reside nt, told of.
ficers she had been threatened
with assault. and had been
warned that the baby's furniture
would be burned.
Police said they stood by while
Mrs. Jorgensen packed clothing
and took her daughter to a motel.
Later, police said, the woman re·
turned to the house to meet her
husband.
Standini? outside. she said she
s aw the interior of lhe home il-
luminated by n ame from the
fireplace and saw the furniture
being broken apart and thrown
into the flames, police Sgt. David
Avers said.
Officers believed Jorgensen
had been drinkJng. However, no
booking for drunkenness was
made, Sergeant Avers said. .
Jorgensen was booked on a
penal code arson section pro-
hi biting the willful and malicious
burning of another's property.
Bail was set al SS,000, police said.
F,...Pa.,eAJ
FUNDS •••
..
Paper Work Cited
School Seeks. -·-
Computer Age
By ANNE COOPEll
Of .. o.i ..............
With a $90 million budget and
2 000 employes, the Capistrano
Unified School Di.strict is buried
in paper work, a burden com·
puters could do much to al·
levlate, according to Superinlen·
dent JeromeThornsley.
"We are in the Dark Ages with
regard to computers.'• Tbornsley
told district trustees recently.
Computers would contribute lo
better teaching and more effi·
cient administration and would
enable the district to make better
use of tax dollars, be said.
The superintendent has asked
lbe board to approve a gradual
s hift to computers, wilb the dis-
trict ultimately owning its own
equipment.
"We can't go from lhe Dack
Rites Held
For LB's
Meachelll
Private funeral ser vices
foJlowed by burial at sea have
been held for George James
Meachem, longtime Newport
Beach boatyard operator and
marine engine wizard who died
Friday. .
At lhe time of his death in a
Newport Beach convalescent
hospital due to a brain tumor Mr.
Meachem was 76 years old.
He and his widow, Madeline, of
1033 Flamingo Road, Laguna
Beach, lived in Newport Beach
for many years folJowing Mr .
Meachem's World War 11 Navy
service.
A Los Angeles native, Mr.
Meachem moved to the Harbor
Area in 1937 and managed the
Chris Craft agency marine
engine shop along Mariner's Mile
before opening his own firm.
He and his wife went into busi·
ness as George J . Meachem
Marine Service. which was local·
ed where the Ancient Mariner
restaw-ant stands today.
"He was better known as one or
those who kept them ticking than
he was a yachtsman. himself,"
aays one old hand on the Harbor
Area yachting scene.
During his World War II Navy
service, Mr. "'Meachem was sta·
tioned at Farragut, ldaho. on
Lake Pondrey, where he was a
marine engine specialist. and
later at San Bruno.
He also was a licensed yacht
broker.
Survivors include his wife, plus
daughters, Georgia McCauley
and Jo-lee Lacki, both or Hawaii;
a brother, Frank Meachem of
Pierpoint, Catir.. and a sister,
Kathryne Meachem of Los
Angeles.
Services and burial at sea were
under direction or the Neptune
Society.
FroaaPageAI
HANNA •••
vacaUon."
Hanna further wrote that he
planned to move his family and
take up a residence "which is nol
likely to be in Orange County."
Hanna's personal secretary,
J aclde Baron, said he plans to
move out oC California. He has
left bis legal cou.n.seling business
in Irvine, she said, and intends to
vacation most of the summer.
She said she did not know how to reach the Orange County Dem·
ocrat.
Hanna was a regular attendant
of the monthly EDC meetings,
and was a member of the board
executive committee, Roland
Loveless, EDC president and
general manager, said today.
• Hanna attended the board's
June 21 meet!ng, Loveless sald,
but had no rurther contact with
the EDC until Loveless received
through the mail a carbon copy of
Hanna's letter ot resignation.
Ages to the Space Age in one
summer," he said, emphaslzinl
that the changeover would be
eradual.
He said be would like to see tbe
district lay the foundation ttili
year for shifting all compuier
services to the Newport-Me ..
Unified district during the follow·
Ing year.
"Right now the district 1$
spending $100,000 a year on ~
puters. contracting about MS,000
with Laguna Beach Unified," he
said. Another $10,000 annually Is
contracted with Westinghoqse
Learning Corporation. The re·
mainder goes for the lease·
purchase of a mini computer and
supplies, Thornsley said.
The proposed computer phase-
in program with Newport-Mesa
could be done without increasing
annual experuUtures, or with on·
ly moderate increases, be said.
Computers wouldn't reduce ex·
isling staff but they wouJd mean
hiring fewer new employes.
"CUSD is simply doing by
hand many activities which, in
an organization or the district's
size, should be done by com·
puter," the superintendent said.
Private Rites
Hel,d for UCl's
John Pellam
Private family services were
held today fo r Dr. John R.
Pellam, UC Irvine physics pro.
fessor who died at his home in
Newport Beach Saturday after a
lengthy illness.
Dr. Pellam, who was 62, con-
ducted research in the field of
low temperature physics and is
m ost renowned for his pioneer
studies of liquid helium.
Dr. Pellam is survived by his
wife. Ruth-Ellen: three children.
John, Mara Allison and Gregory;
and one grandchild, Jennifer Al·
lison.
The professor came to UCI in
1965 and was a member of the
or iginal founding faculty at the
school. He created a low tem-•
perature 'research laboratory at
UCI.
Dr . Pellam. a native of Rome,
New York, conducted research in
a nti-submarine operations for
the Navy and Air Force from
1942·45 and received a presideQ·
lial certificate of merit for that
work in 1946.
He earned his doctorate at
Massachusett s 1nstitute of
Technology in 1947 and was
employed al the National Bureau
of Standards. California Institute
of Technology and the Garrett
Corporation of Los Angeles prior
to coming to UCL
In 1953, Dr. Pellam was
honroed with an a ward for
m eritorious service from the
Secretary of Commerce and was
given an award in physical
sciences from the Washington
Academy of Sciences in 1954.
Members of the Pellam family
suggest memorial contributions
in Pro(. Pellam 's name to the
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
Society in Los Angeles.
Funeral services are uqder
direction of Pacific View
Mortuary, Coronadel Mar.
E',.._PageAl
SCARE.:.
the hospital got butterflies in bis
:stomach."
A lbree-block area aroundu:e freight yard was blocked oft or
an h~ur by sheriff's ~eP~ts rollowing -~i :-40 a.m ·"POlit-
Troffie was allowed to resume
after officials determined the
green canister was safe. It was
then forwarded to Its destinau~.
The cobalt ls lO be used ror r6-
search purposes, officials said.
'fiR Pay,s·Off .
Police 'Finger' Cunman
. .....
Orange Coast
• EDITI ON
,
Today's Closing •
N.Y. Stoeks
. 70, NO. 207, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNlA TUESDAY, JULY 26, 1977 N TEN CENTS
Hanna Korea ~rihe ·Scandal Suspect?.
WA SHINGTON <AP>
Codgres.siooal leaders are await
inf formal word on the identJty of
flf• persons whom the Juatice
ue~artment wants lndlcted in•
col\nectlon with the South
KQfean influence-buyint 1cao-
dal.
Rouse Speaker Thomas, P.
O'NeiH said Monday he was in-
roqie(j_ last week ol the impend-
illl'indictments but was Jiven no
numett.
While O'Neill said he does not
know lt any present congressmen
will be indicted, sources close to
a separate House investigation
of lhe Korean affair said they
believe all five are former mem-
bers of Congress.
An aide to O'Neill said two in-
dict men ts are expected in
August and three in September.
For the past year the Justice
Department has been investltat·
ing allegations that Koreans
spread cash, gifts and favors
among congressmen In an effort
to keep their support for U.S. aid
and other programs· benefitting
the Asian country.
The Justice Department in-
vestigation was reported last
spring to be focusing on former
Reps. Richard T . Hanna or
Newport Beach <D·Calif. l, and
Corneliut Gallagher <D·N.J. ),
who had business dealings with
Park.
A formet K"-Orean Central In·
teJUgence Agency director, Klm
Hyung Wook, has testified under
oath that two former members of
Congress offered to support
Korean programs if the KCJA
would help them and Park on a
rice deal. He did not identify the
two in his testimony.
.
NB Meeting Set
Former congressmen known to
be under invesUgaUon inclJJde
Louisiana ~v. Edwin Edwards,
who acknowledges his wtf e ac·
cepted $10,000 from ~ark. and
former Rep. Otto E. Passman
<D-La. >.who has been accused of
using a House subcommittee
chairmanship to win Louisiana
rice sales abroad.
Justice Department in-
vesth!ators also have a ledger
Salary ~aise
Angers.· POiice
The 191 members of the
Newport Beach Police Employes
Association, an1ered over the
lmOositWn of a six percent salary
and fringe benefit mcrease Mon-
day by the city council, said to-
day they will meet Thursday to
decide.what steps to take next in
their dispute with the city.
same settlement on the police as-
sociation as was given four other •
city employe eroups, lauded the
negotiatioos conducted by the
police and the fact that they
never "stooped to intimidation
tactica;" s uch as work
slowdowns, sick-outs or strike
threats.
"The whole city should ap-
preciate that. It's a touch of class
in my book," he said before sug:
gesting the pay raise retroactive
to July 16. Groups that sirned
contracts received their pay
raises effective July 1.
o.lly "IMC Slaff f"Mto
NEW OWNERS, PRESIDENT OF IRVINE COMPANY MEET THE PRESS
Donald Bren, Peter Kremer, A. Alfred Taubman and Joan Irvine Smith
Association spokesman Jim
Oardiner appeared before the
council Monday with the associa·
tion 's proposal for a one-year
contract calling for a total in-
crease of 16 percent, includin& a
three ~rcent pay ralise, a cbaaae
of retirement systems and in·
stilution o( time-and-a-half pay
for overtime worked by officers.
He said today he feels the as.
sociation and the city "have
reached a crisis situation"
because or the council's rejection
ortheoffer .
The only dissenting vote Mon-
day came from Councilman Don
M clnnis who· said he doesn't
believe negQliations should be
ruled out by imposing a settle-
ment. Irvine Co. Eyes Options Association n e gotiators
contended that the pay raises and
fringe benefits sought ,r e
necessary to maintain the de-
partO}~Pt's ~ompe~itive ~ition
ln the"Qtabge County fo1flnarktt,
a pesiUon they say has eroded
over the past few years.
Gardiner noted that the action
marks the second year the police
association and the city council
have failed to reach an agree·
ment and councilmen have im-
posed a salary settlement. New Owne~ Stiuly Ways to Pay Debt
"They are forcinc us qito a ~ti-Mt labOr &:Ole., .. he.commented
"where the philosophy seems to
be that Mflll~ement pays as lit-
tle • it can aftd doesn't hrry
about thequaUty of the product.
t · By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of -Dally l'llot Sl•lf Principal new owners of the
Irvine Company said today they
are studying options that include
!>ale of raw land, sale of assets
and refinancing of existing proj·
ccts to meet debts incurred in
their $337.4 million company
purchase.
But in a press conference held
in company t\eadquarters, new
(Owners Donald Bren, A. Alfred
' I
T aubman, Joan Irvine Smith and
new company President Peter
Kremer declined to discuss the 11
bank loans that supplied the cash
for the purchase that became
final Friday.
They also were unable lo give
any specific details of the con-
templated transactions, saying
all plans are tentative and still
under study.
Few glimmers of the operation
of the company in the future
\Shuttle Completes
·Test Rides on Jet
EDWARDS AIR F ORCE
B~ CAP) -The Space Shuttle
went through a final rehearsal to-
day for its first free flight, riding
a jumbo jetliner at 28,000 feel and
rehearsing the maneuver that
wiU separate the coupled craft
Aug.~.
The hour-long test "went very
well" said mission controllers at
Houston's Johnson Space Center,
and astronauts Fred Haise and
Gordon Fullerton, who sat in the
sbutUe's cabin, were reportedly ·
. :;leased.
With the 150,000-pound shuttle
s e<?urely fastened atop its
• rurelage, the Boeing 747 reached
a speed of 273 miles per hour dur-
1 ing\he separation practice. AS the Boeing touched down at
8:47 a.m. after the flight, the
crew tested the shuttle's landing
geaf", lettJng the two main land·
1 int gear and the nose wh~I ex·
lend out of the craft's fusel~e.
Maise and Fullerton will fly ibe
stwttle When it Ls at last released
f'run the Boeing to make a fi.ve·
rofftute powerless descent from
about23,000 feet to a glidina land-
lnll on the desert lloor.
TOday's flight aerved as prac-
tic~for the maneuver that will be
I oHd to launch the experimental
1 craft. That separation ts to be ac-' coat~ by heading the ear-n. p)ue Qlt.o a shallow dive,
while explosive bolts part the
coupling to allow the shuttle to
"pop up" and away from the
Boeing. ·
The ouroose of the free Oil(ht was t.o IP-"l the shuttle's gliding
ability.
Mcinnis Asks
NB Tax Rate
0/$1.02
came through in the hour long
question-and-answer sesslM.
One or the few concrete an-
nouncements came at the open-
ing of the session when Kremer
announced the promotion or War-
ren Fix from the position or vice
president and controJler to ex·
eculive vice president of·finance
a post that Kremer said will
make Fix the company's "chief
financial officer."
··We feel v«Y strOagly that the
councU has been unresponsive
and won't listen at a reasonable
level. They doo 't seem interested
in the drop in our position in the
job market,·· Gardiner said.
Councilman Paul Ryckoff, who
made the motion to impose the
Harbor Island
'·we will be discussing what
and where to go from here," he
said. "The re may be more
drastic action taken."
Gardiner declined to speculate
what that action might be.
Fix will replace Lansing Eber-
ling, who has resigned to go into
business with former company
officers Ray Watson and Tom
Wolff.
Some of the other items dis-
cussed by the four Include:
-Exp•nston of a~riculture:
Mrs. Smith said the proposal is
still under study but mentioned a
possible 33,000 acres in the
foothills which she said wouid be
suitable for crops.
County OK Ruled
For Tideland Use
"I'd like to see the hills turn
green,'' she said without specify.
ing where those hills might be
other than on the Irvine Ranch.
-tr'\llne Cent er~ Kremer
pledged to continue the. high
quality planning for the regional
shopping center to be built in the
triangle surrounded by the Santa
Ana, San Diego and Laguna
Canyon Freeways.
Taubman, whose primary busi·
ness interest is in develop-
m ent of large shopping centets,
conceded that his company
.. would be interested'' in hand-
ling the development of the Irvine
Center. <See RANCH, P•ge AZ>
By KATHY CLANCY
Olt1110.lly 1'11.tS ....
Orange County s upervisors
said today residents or Harbor
lsJand in Newport Beach and
some other shoreline com-
munities will have to Set!k county
perinission to continue alleged
encr.oachments on public
tideiand$.
Either that, or they niay be
forced to remove patios, walls,
.walkways and landscaping that
extend onto cou'nty-controlled
beach areas.
Supervisor tom Rlley voted
against the order in the 4-1 baUot,
asking. for an additional stx
monttiS to wort( out the encroach·
' Sister City?
BUlwp Geta NB Chambers
The City of Bishop, which is buUdina a chamber for its •
city council, ls in need of furniture for the new buildlna.
In a goodwill ge!ture. tbe'City of Newport Beach will
donate the innards of tts old councU cbamben to the Inn
county town.
ment problem with Harbor
Island residents.
Supervisors also asked County
Counsel Adrian Kuyper .to seek
their permission before pursuing
any }egal action against any•
property owner.
The e ncroa c hment s
·supervisors were referring to in·
volve patios, walkways, fences,
walls and a portion of ooe swim-
viing pool on llpbor ls land.
ln addition. they involve the
yards of two homes and the
· Laguna Royale Condominluma
swimming pool in Sou\h Laguna,
600 square feet of concrete and
railings on a 'blu'ff overlooldng
Dana Point a.i-bor and two ~r
owners in Lower Newport Baf
who hav.e refused to pay en·
croaehment permit fees.
The:r also tnvol ve homes along
Sunset Beach whete residents
have installed sandbreaks, re-
tait:rlng walls and iceplant to cut
down on blowing sand.
Jn some areas lh Sunset a..tb,
alle&ed eo~roachments lllvolve
11 patios, U fences, portions of 11
homes. a~ aeveral paved .,-eu
<8ee Atn..lNG, Pace AJ)
belonging to Park recording pay·
ments of ~.ooo each to Hanna
and former R ep . William
Minshall (R-Ohio), ln 1970.
The House ethics commiliee is
coJtducting its own investigation
of Korean activity on Capitol
Hill
Atty. Oen. Bell and Asst. Atty
Gen. Benjamin Civiletti, head or
ttR Justice Departme nt 's
<See KOREA, Page A2)
D•llY l'llet Si.ft f'Mto
LEFT THE AREA?
Ex·Congressman Hanna
Hanna
Leaving
NB Area?
By PIDUP llOSMARIN
Of IM O..lly "'lot Stett
Former Orange Count y
Congressman Richard T. Hanna
of Newport Beach has resigned
aa a director of the county-funded
E conomic Development Corp
and bas apparently left the area.
Hanna is one of several con-
g resamen and former con-
gressmen under investigation by
the U.S. Justice Department in
connect.ion with alleged influence
buying in Washington, D.C. by
South Koreans .
County records show Hanna's
resignation from the entity
formed to attract industry was
tendered July 8. The resignation
was not.publicly announced.
Hanna was quoted by the New
York Times in 1976 as saying that
while still a member of Congress
he became a "silent partner .. of
Korean businessm an Tongsun
Pal'k. ·
The Times reported that Han-
na offered financial collateral to·
Park in en import-export venture
that netted htm $60,000 to $70,000
from 1972 to 1975.
The Times quoted Hanna
"(Park) often told me t was his
oldest, dearest, closest, most
~aluable friend."
Hanna reportedly told the
Times be did not believe there
was anything tOegal about his
business relationship with Park.
but broke it off when he beeame
"uncomfortable" about the pro-
priety of the relationship.
In his lette.r to Co'#n ty
Supervisor Ralph Diedrich, who
appointed him lo the economic
development group, Hanna said
be was "going on an extended (Bee DANNA, Page .U>
Coast
,.
' .. ' '" .
DNiilJip ''-loe~ed' ···PriQeesS' Marriag~
LONDON (AP) -Prince l!UWMltb, tM fUtilre ~the Tbe prlncw' neotaal m.-KIDI Gecqe. wbo bad DO scm. lean d ID uproar Uk• that d variabtytbey alwa.ya •ere in Uao
Pbllip, motivated by botb bootHfl. rlaee llff Jan later to~ •::::;4 tb• lludaome ud 1-wbela ...,ant·• wle..,. comPQ1ofothen. i>enanal dlallk• and cooc.u for Au1trlaa autbor WUU rapber ADtonyArmitronl• d llrforeeeftloerandlOOll f11Hd te 11•• up American J'tD.al.bt, tn ber flnt and l•
the royal ramlly, was tn1tnunen·· FrllcbaU91"'1 "Maraaret-Pftn. Jon• broke down lut .,._aid ~td bliD to depu~ m.._ dl'nlft!ee W.W.Slmpaoa and ab-atatement on the romance.
tal m blot'ltlnc th~ marri•&• of ceta Without a CaUH" palntl a tbe couple, who bav.e two Oltbe""°Mbald, dlcated before fle could be Margaret announced on Oct. 3l,
his •I tt"r tn law, Princeu vlvidplC!tureoftbelovtaffalnof chtldren, live teparately. ..I'd bave Uked 8 boy Ute crowned Edward VIU. Others 19SS: .. I have decided not to
Man:ur••l, i.nd war hero Peter thtlwoprinceaaea andohnelec· Townsend Is now married and Townsend," the author say the who lined up agaimt Towmend marry Group Captain Peter
Town.""nd 22 yf'urs atao. accord lrl()'lo& cluh of temperameni. llvesin France. ldnconcetold Mariaret. included then-Prime Minister Townsend."
1na to a nl'w b1011ruphy ot the b.:hlnd the scenes al Buck· Frtschauer writes that after According to palace insiders, Winston Churchill and Anglican Frtschauer says he relied on a
1>1 incc~i. lna:hum Palace. World War II Philip, a naval of· Townsend, as the kine's closest churchleaders. "great many" sources for
Phihp bon· a grat'v¥rit·•· aau1nst Margarel's abortive romance ricer courting Elizabeth, and advlser. inspired a plan In lM6 to The queen, though sym-Margaret's life story and thlll \o~ n~l·.nd bet·au~t> lht• Royal Air with the divorced Town1e.nd was Townsend, a military member ot keep Elizabeth and Philip from a pathetic with her sister, told her "friends and foes of the P.rin
t' orec f1ghtt-r pilot, a& an advl•er headline newi; around the world the royal household, were "In· quick marriage 80 tbe king could that the affair was "undermining were very forthcoming, 1f equ
tn K1nG Gt•orge vr . counseled the In 1965, when she finally an· compatible and jousUng in a nar· ''observe Philip over 8 time at the dignity of the throne." ly anxious to presene th
ktnl{ to prolonJ: the courtllhlp itnd nounced she would not marry row space big enough for only close quarters before deciding An assignment as air attache anonymity.''.
dt:la) 1h1• marrau1t1· of Philip and him one." whether he could become a in Brussels was arrang~ for A spokesman at liuckinghun
Schmitz Touring County
': Former Congressman Mum on Candidacy
Wtule dcdining to publicly an·
nounce h1i. candidacy for any
elective offit·c, Orange County 's
arch conser\ alive form e r
Congressman John Schmitz is
quietly making the rpunds in the
local breakfast luncheon club
circuit
a coalition of six· groups. Those
groups are the big citJes, labor,
ethnic !actions. the south,
Wastungton, D.C. blacks and the
eastern intellectual establish·
ment
Over Firi11g
Noting George McGovern's
failure to bold the coalition
together in 1972, Schn)ilz said
Carter is having problems with
the elhruc faction over the abor-tion issue.
Clad in a blue and white
checkered dress coat, Schmitz
acknowledged the presence of
local media at a Tuesday morn-
ing meeting of the Capistrano
Valley Exchange Club.
"l guess they Cthe media) ex·
peel me to make some public an·
nouncement since enveryone is
<1 nnouncing their c andidacy
these days," he stud.
Ex-Anthony Aide
Files OC Claim
"Actuall y, I'm planning on go-
ing down to Chile to study cam-
paign techniques," the one· lime
independent party pres1dent1al
candidate quipped
Sehm1tz, sporting a crew·cut
hairstvle for his stint as a reserve
Manne officer. proceeded to de-
li ver a crisp lecture on the his·
tory of American political
parties
Thl' forml'r defender of nghl·
win~ causes 111 the Cahforntil /\s-
scmhly and later in Washington
t·ould not n·!>1i.l making com
m l' n ls ah out l ht• pre v a i 11 n g
pohl1l'al srcnt•
P OJraphras1ng Voltaire .
Schm1l1. l.a1cl "Ir there would
ha\'£' hecn no ,Jimmy Carter. they
would hi.iv<· had to crP:ite one ..
St·hm1t1. said he believed the
Oemo<·rut1c Party w:is based on
,
A former aide to Orange Coun·
ty Supervisor Philip Anthony has
filed a $176,000 claim with the
county alleging he was fired
without justification.
The filer of the claim was H.
Ted Hertz, brother of Amanda
Hertz. a close personal friend
and business associate of indict·
ed financier Gene Conrad.
Hertz, a recent law sehool
graduate, worked for Anthony as
an executive aide from late
December 1976 through March
11 , 1977.
In his Sl76,000 claim, Hertz
said his abrupt firing by Anthony
was "a willful and malicious
breach of an employment con· tn.1ct. ..
The former Anthony aide said
his dismissal cause!;! him a "loss
of employment and income and
reputation and mental distr~ss."
Council Action
In action Monday night, the Newport Beach City Coun·
Cll
TRAFFIC SURVEY: Set Aug. 8 for a decision on which
n.·c·ommcndattons in the Corona del Mar Traffic question·
nJ1rc !.hould be implemented.
BUDGET COMMITTEE: With Councilman Ray
W11l1ams absent. killed the proposed formation of a citizens
advisory committee on the budget on a 3·3 vote.
MORI\ TORI UM: Called for a public hearing Aug. 8 on a
proposals to put a building moratorium on the ballot or t~ do
a complete review on the city's general plan rather than 1m·
pose a moratorium
SALARIES: Imposed a six percent salary and fringe
benefit increase on police and.blue collar workers after both
i::roups declared an impasse in negotiations.
FIRE STATION: Agreed to hold a public hearing Aug. 8
on the expansion of the fire station in Mariners Park.
Services Conducted
For John Pellam
Private ramlly services were
held today for Dr. John R.
Pellam, UC Irvine physics pro-
fessor who died al his home in
Newport Beach Saturday after a
lengthy illness
Dr. Pellam, who was 62, con·
ducted research in the field of
low temperature physics and is
most renownea for his pioneer
studies or liquid helium.
Dr. PeUam is survived by his
wife, Ruth· Ellen; three children.
John, Mara Allison and Gregory;
and one grandchild, Jennifer Al·
Ii son.
OAANGI COAST ..
DAILY PILOT
... ~::ra:. =:,..,---
~'< •.... :..:.~-.:. t".::r .. ~
"-"•ti( ...... .. , ...
~·A, ......... M.IM>..,"I.'""
0.-tM.""9 ~l'.IMll "' .. ""'' ........ """'"
The professor came lo UCI In
1965 81Jd was a member of the
original founding faculty at the
school. He created a low t.em·
petature research laboratory at
UCI.
Dr. Pellam, a native of Rome,
New York, conducted research in
anti-submarine operations for
the Navy and Air Force• from
1942-45 and received a J)residen·
tial certificate of merit fo:r that
work in 1946.
He earned his doctorate at
Mauachuaetts .Institute of
Technology in 1941 .. and was
employed at the National Buteau
of Standards. C~Ufornhl JnsUtute
of Teeiplology and the Garrett
Corporation or Loi Ane~es prior
to-cominJC to UCI.
In 1953, l'>r . Pellam was
bonroed witb an award for
meritoriou1t-••r-vlce ITo& tbe
Secretary ol Commerte and Waif
given an award. In phyalcal
sciencet from ~ WuhiAttan
Academy ol SCierieet M '1154. •
Merqben of tb• Pellam family 1uacest memod•l contrtbUUoee
h\ Prof.. Pellam '1 name to tM
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclel'Olil
So4;iltY ln Los Ant•let.
F\lfteral aervtc.. aft uiair dlrectloo of Pacific View
Mortuary, Corona del Mar.
He asked for $76,000 to com·
pensate him for the loss or in·
come and $100,000 to cover the re·
maining alleged damages.
Hertz was fired as Conrad, a
donor through various fronts of
roughly $48,000 to Anthony's
campaign, was drawing
headlines for the alleged
malfunctioning of his loan
brokerage firm, Pension Funds
of America.
Simultaneously, it was being
revealed In the press that dona·
lions and loans to Anthony's 1976
campaign from Conrad had been
listed as loans and donations
rrom others.
Aides to county supervisors
are not subject to the same hiring
and placement practices as other
county employes.
According to an ordinance
adopted by the super visors and
revised in 1974. aides serve at the
pleasure or the supervisor they
serve and t.hey can be terminated
for whatever reason the
supervisor deems to be jttSt.
Should the Hertz claim be re-
1ected by the county, he would be
free t.o me a lawsuit seeking
redress.
Police Chief
Recovering
From Surgery
Newport Beach Police Chier B.
James is making a satisfactory
recovery from back surgery he
underwent Friday. spokesmen at
Hoag Memorial Hospital said to·
day.
Original estimates were that
Chief Glavas would remain in the
Newport Beac-h hO!tpihl for
about a week.
The longtime Newport Beach
police chief delayed the sureery.
required (or a spinal problem.
during the period in which his
successor was being picked. He
is listed in good condition.
Chief Glavas retires effective
Aug. lS, at which lime he will be
succeeded by Los Angeles Police
Department Deputy Chief
Charles "Pete" Gross, 49. . .
Carter Lauds
Italy's Envoy
WASHINGTON <AJ» -Pres!·
dent Carter welcomed Itali: n
Prime Mlnlster Giulio Andreotti
to the While House today, calling
him one of the worJd•a most "ad·
mired, respect~ and trusted'.
leaders.
Carter said Italy is a "ve"ry
dear and very im~ant" friend
or the Urut~Slates and a valued patnerlntbeAtlan~c alliance.
member of the royal family," Townsend. Over the next two Palace said the royal fanjl,y
Friachauer writes. years, he and Margaret saw eac~ would have no comment on the
Philip was Curious when he other occasionally. but in· book.
found out about Townsend's in·
tervention. The kine followed
Townsend's advice, the author
says, but in November 1947,
Philip and Elizabeth married.
with the king's blessing.
Margaret then became the
center of attention. Though
linked by gossip t.o every availa·
ble young mart of birth and rank,
the only man in her life was
Townsend. Frischauer writes.
But the 12-year friendship and
romance of Margaret and
Townsend was doomed. The
king's death in February 1952
··robbed the lovers of a supporter
who loved them both as much as
they loved each other,"
Frischauer says. and a group of
courtiers headed by Philip began
applying pressure on Margaret
to drop Townsend.
Philip's personal dislike for
him was combined with court
FroaPageAJ
HANNA •••
vacation."
Hanna further wrote that he
planned lo move his family and
take up a residence "which Is not
likely lo be in Orange County."
Hanna's personal secretary,
Jackie Baron, said he plans to
move out of California. He has
left his legal counseling business
in Irvine. she said, and intends to
vacation most of the summer.
She said she did not know how
to reach the Orange County Dem-
ocrat.
Hanna was a regular attendant
of the monthly EDC meetings,
and was a member of the board
executive committee. Roland
Loveless, EDC president and
general manager, said today.
Hanna attended the board's
June 21 meeting, Loveless said.
but had no further contact with
the EDCuo.Ul Loveless received
through the mail a carbon copy of
Hanna's letter of resianation.
* * *
Fro• Page A I
KOREA ...
criminal division, agreed lo meet
with members of Congress on
Wednesday lo discuss the prog.
ress or their investigation.
Several junior House members
have criticized both the Justice
Department and the House in-
v es ti g a tlons as moving too
slowly.
A number of present con·
gressmen say they accepted cash
campaign contributions from
Korean rice dealer Tongsun
Park. whom a foreign Korean in·
teltigence chief has testtned was
an influence-peddler.
But the congressmen say they
thought they only were accepting
contributions from a to.reign
businessman. Such contributions
were legal untll 1974.
House sources, including two
close to the House ethics commit·
tee's Korean investigation, say
word has been circulaUne in
Congress for weeks that the
Justice Department's stroniest
cases are against former con·
gressmen.
SVCHADE4L:
BAD S4D CADDIE
PIEDMONT, Ala. (AP) -This
classified ad appeared in thiE.
week's edition of The Piedmont
,Journal:
''1966 Cadillac. Air. power
steering, power brakes, power
windows, power seat. None
works. Takes very little gas but
lots or oU. Bring a leash and drag
this dog away. Needs coat and
skin (paint and tires). $600."
Al'WI~
ROYAL WRANGLE Central figures in J}ew biography
'8bout the British royal family include <clockwise. from
lop le(t> Peter Townsend. Pnnce Philip. King George VI
and Princess Margaret
George Meachem
Buried at Sea
Private funeral services
followed by burial at sea have
been held for George James
Meachem. longtime Newport
Beach boatyard operator and
marine engine wizard who died
Friday.
-At the lime of his death in a
Newport Beach convalescent
hospital due lo a brain tumor Mr.
Meachem was 76 years old.
He and hl$ widow, Madeline, of
1Q33 Flamingo Road, Laguna
Beach, lived in Newport Beach
for many years following Mr.
Mea~hem's World War II Navy
service.
A Los Angeles native, Mr.
Meacflem moved to the Harbor
Area in 1937 and m_anaged the
Chris Craft agency marine
engine shop along Mariner's Mile
before openin& his own firm.
He and his wife went Into busi·
ness as George J . Meachem
Marine Service, which was local·
ed where the Ancient Mariner
restaurant stands today.
"He was better known as one of
Fro• Page Al
RAN~H ...
.
those who kept them ticking than
he was a yachtsman himself,"
says one old hand on the Harpor
Area yachting scene. .
During his World War II N~yy
service, Mr. Meachem was sta-
tioned al Farragut, Idaho, on
Lake Pondrey. where he was. .a
marine engine specialist. and
later al San Bruno.
He also was a licensed yacht
broker.
Survivors include his wife. pins
daughters, Georgia McCauley
and Jo-lee Lacki, both of Hawaii:
a brother. Frank Meachem of
Pierpoint, Calif., and a sister,
Kathryne Meachem of Los
Angeles.
Services and burial at sea were
under direction of the Neptarie
Society .
Fro• Page Al
• RULING ••• ·
L
.Saddleback
L. 70, NO. 207, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES
Afteraooa
.Y. Stoeks
TEN CENTS
Hanna Korea Bribe Scalltial Suspect?
WASHINGTON (AP~ -~al leaden ere ¥.V•ll· be fonDel .._..on the ldenµty of fl'11 penona whom lbe Justice Dlft~ wanta lndi~ tn ooanection wttb tbe .South
kere.an iJlfluence·buylna ~can·
dal.
House Speaker Tbopiu P .
O'Neill taid Monday h4' was in·
formed last week of thtf Impend·
tn1 indictments but wu given no
• I . D•llY .. , ... Sl.tH .._.
" LEFT• THE AREA? .i Ex-COntetsman Hanna
iimfn:a ~ifving
~.1'1 Area?
y ~p ROSMARIN
1
I t•o.11,,.li.tStatt
Form r Orange County
Con an Richard T. Hanna
of N · rt Beach has resigned
as a or of the county.funded
Econ-Olb Development Corp
an<l li~1 parently left the area. H is one of several con·
gress n and former con·
eress under investigation by
tbe U.S. witice Department in
corinectl with alleged influence
buying Ti Washington, D.C. by
1 South Ko ans. I _.C,punty ecords show Hanna's t resignal n from the entity
1 fOrmed attract industry was
t.nJlered uly 8. The re~gnation
waa not p licly announced.
Hanna as quoted by the New
York Tift}~ in 1976 as saying that
whUe still member of Congress he becan\e a "silent partner" of
• ~~ ~butsinessman Tongsun
the Ti reported that Han·
l\a. offer inancial collateral lo
1 P.ark ~~Jt~· port-export venture ; t.b~ n ·m $60,000 to $70,000
I tror.p 1972 t 1975. l , The Tl es quoted Hanna:
••.tt.'ark) o told me I was his
'· old~st, de est, closest, most , v~ablef · "
.J\anna T T.lllles he d not ~lieve there
Waft an g illegal about his
bu"ness alionsbip with Park,
but.broke otr when he became
'ltancomf:~ble" about the pro-
KietY of r~laUonship.
.ln hlsi etter to Coun.ty.
'&ipervlsorl alph Diedrich, who
appolnt.ed. 1 tjim to· the economic
dewloplJl 4 aroup, Hanna said
blS was 41 •i on an extended
~ .. (See NA, Page AZ>
Coast
nam•. While O'Neill said he does not
know lf any present coneressmen
will be indicted, sources close to
a separate House investieation
or the Korean affair said they
believe all five are former mem·
bers ol Congress.
An aide to O'Neill said two in·
dlc tments are expected In
August and three in September.
For the past year the Justice
Department haa been lnvesllgJt·
ing alle1aUon1 that Koreans
spread cuh, &lits and favors
among coneressmen in an effort
to keep their support for U.S. aid
and other programs benefittibg
the Asian country.
The Justice Department in·
vesUgaUon was reported la.st
spring to be focusing on former
Reps. Richard T. Hanna of
Newport Beach (D·Calif.), and
•
Cornelius Gallagher <D·N.J. ),
who bad business deallnes with
Park. ·
A former Korean Central In·
telUgence Agency director, Kim
Hyung Wook, bas testified under
oath 1hat ~wo former members ol
CongresJ offered to support
Korean programs if the KCIA
would help them llftd Park on a
rice deal. He dtd not identify the
two in his leslirpony.
Radiation Scare
Cobalt Causes Carson Concern
CARSON CAP) -One man was
hospitalized and a three-block
area around a Creight yard was
cordoned off briefly today after
workmen feared a shipping
canister containing cobalt was
leaking radiation.
However, the intended recip·
ient of the cobalt told
authorities there was no radia·
tion leak.
"Everyone got all scared when
the canister felt warm," said
Clara Prehoda, an official of J.L.
Shepherd and Associates.
·'That's how they normally feel."
Los Angeles County Sheriff's
Sgt. Mervyn Poppleton said
Creight ..,Yard officials reported
what Uiey ~lieved was a leak
after two forklift operators said
the three·by-four foot canister
felt "hotto the touch."
But authorities later de·
termined after taking radiation
readings and contacting the
Shepherd firm that there was no
danger.· Official readings from
the County Health Department
were being analyzed and were
not immediately available.
Rick McCray, 25, a truck
driver in the yard who touched
the canister, complained of
nausea and was taken to nearby
Harbor General Hospital, where
he was reported in good condi·
ti on. •
"He's not feeling very well. He
feels nauseous, has a headache
and he's dizzy," said hospital
spokesman Stan Grant. "What
we hear from the field was that
the radiation was not at a
dangerous level."
Thirty other workers in the
Creight yard were held at the
Parents Seek
Damages for
Boy's Suicide
Parents of a youth who hanged
himself in Orange County
Juvenile Hall last May have filed
a $100,000 claim against the
county. ·
The claim alleges that the
suicide of Jeffrey Poole, 16, ol El
Toro was due to the county's
negligence and seeks compensa-
tion for, among other things,
costs associated with the youth's
death.
..
sc~pa for precautionary observa·
lion, authorities said.
Mrs. Prehoda said, "The
canister contained radioactive
cobalt with a lead shield around
It and a fire shield around the
lead shield, which is the proper
packaging for this sort or thing.
There was no leak. It felt a little
warm to the touch, that's all.
''This was a perfectly legal
shipment. The one who went to
Over Firing
the hospital got butterflies ln his
stomach."
A thrr :·block area around the
freight yard was blocked off for
an hour by sheriff's deputies
following the 6:40 a.m . report.
Traffic was allowed to resume
after officials determined the
green canister was safe. It was
then forwarded to its destination.
The cobalt is to be used for re·
search purposes, officials said.
Ex-Anthony Aide
·Files OC Claim
A former aide to Orange Coun·
ty Supervisor PhiJip Anthony has
filed a $176,000 claim with the
county alleging he was fired
without justification.
The mer of the claim was H.
Ted Hertz, brother of Amanda
Hertz, a close personal friend
and business. associate of indict·
ed financfer Gene Conrad.
Hertz, a recent law school
graduate, wQrked fof'Anthony as
an executive aide from late
December 1976 through March u .um.
In bis $176,000 claim, Jlertz
said bis abrupt firing by Anthony
was "a willful and malicious
breach of an employment con·
tract."
The former Anthony aide said
his dismissal caused him a "Joss
of employment and income and
reputation and mental distress.•·
He asked for ·$76,000 to com·
pensate him for the loss of in·
come and $100,000 to cover the re·
maining alleged damages.
Hertz was fired as Conrad, a
donor through various fronts of
roughly $48,000 to Anthony's
campaign, was drawing
headlines for tlae alleged
malfunctioning of bis loan
brokeraee firm, Pension Funds
of America.
Simuhaneously, it was-being-
revealed in the press that dona·
tions and l.oans to Anthony's 1976
campaign from Conrad had been
listed as loans and donations
from others.
Aides to county supervisors
are not subject to the Slf!le hiring
Stereo Gear Stolen
Stereo equipment valued by the
vic:tim at $893 has been stolen
from a Laguna Hilts home by a
burstar wbo entered via the un·
locked window. Orange County
sheriff's offlcert said the theft
waa repor:ted by Javier Sosa, 27, ·
of 23455 Los Adomos, who was
away from home at the time of
the break·in.
and placel'llent practices as other
county empioyes.
According to an ordinance
adopted by the supervisors and
, revised in 1974, aides serve al the
pleasure of the supervisor they
serve and they can ~ terminated
for whatever reason the
supervisor deems to beJust.
Should the Herti claim be re·
jected by the county, ~ would ~
free to file a lawsuit seeking
redress.
OK Predicted
WASHINGTON <AP> -A $10.4
billion public works spendin&
bill, containing a compromise on
18 controversial water projects
that one lawmaker said was
"written in the White House," is
on its way to anticipated ap·
proval by President Carter. The
measure was passed 318-61 in the
House. ·
More Bodies
From Flood
JOHNSTOWN, Pa. <AP>
.... Weary cleanup crews,
doued by foul weather._
ll1l'diuclt ana unfounded
rumors of ~re flooding,
have taken 60 bodies from
this fiood·ravaged region
as their search for victims
nears the end or Its first
week. •
State police said today
that the latest'Ylctim, Iden·
tified only as a white m•le,
was found in the eastern
part of the city, w}lere
Mayor Herbert J. J>fuhl
said MondllY there were
reports of up to 60 missing.
Heavy rain pelted fhe ~even.county flood area
Monday, brin1in1 warn-
ings from CfvU Detense 'of.
ficiaU! tor people In low ly·
lnf areas to 19'k hiiher ground.
Former congressmen known to
be tmder Investigation· include
Louiaiana Gov. Edwin Edwards.
who. ackaowledges bis wife ac·
ceP,t«l $10.000 from Park, and
former )tep. Otto E. Passman
~D·La.), who bas been accused of
usillg a House subcommittee
chainnanship to wln Louisiana
rfce sales abroad.
Justice Department· in·
vestIRators also have a ledger
belqing to Park recording pay-
ments ol $5,000 each to Hanna
and former Rep. William
Mlnsball <R·Ohio), in 1970.
The House etbica committee ls
conducting Its own investigation · ot Korean activity on Capitol
Hill.
Atty. Gen. Bell aod Asst. Atty.
Gen. Benjamin Civiletti, bead of
the Justice Department's
<See KOREA, Page AZ>
..... ,......
~OVAL WRANGLE -Central figures in new biography
about the British royal family include <clockwise. from
top left> Peter Townsend, Prince Philip. King George VI
and Princess Margaret.
Muddled ~arriage
Blamed on Prince
keep Elizabeth and Philip from-a
quick marriage so the king could
"observe Philip over a time at
close quarters oofore deciding
• whelber he could become a
mem~r of the royal family,''
Frmchauer writes.
Philip was furious when he
found oul about Townsend's in-
tervention. The king followed
Townsend's advice, the •uthor
says, but in November 1947,
Pbiijp and _Elizabeth married.
Margaret then became the
center of attention. Though
linked by gossip to every availa-
ble young man of birth and rank,
the only man ·in her life was
Town6end. Frtschauer writes.
r • . . ..
·At DAIL V PfLOT se
Ex-sol on
.Making
Rounds·
MISTRESS SHARES EARRINGS WITH MUTT
Mary Terrfsl With Bejeweled 'Marmaduke'
Puppy Love?
Dog's Ear Pierced for Earring
TAMPA. Fla. (AP> Mary Torrisi believes pierced earrlnes
can lead to rom;rnce or al least puppy love.
She didn't w!Jnl lo hav!'J.the ears of her three-month-old great Dane cro~ped 1n the trad1llonal short-pointed fashion. So she took
Ma rmadukc to a Jewelry store and had one of her ears pierced.
"008BIE T HE DALMATI AN, NEXT door, just fell m love
with her when he saw the silver earrings He JUSt sat anct stared
sort or mesmerilcd. Now he follows her aJI around," sa~s Miss
Torn!'.1, 17. -who received Marmaduke, named after the comic·
strip character, as a birthday present from her parents.
After okaying the idea with a veterinarian, she.checked with an
ear-piercer at a local jewelry store -who said all right as long as
~I armaduke agreed
"I HAVE TJDS THING ABOUT earrings," Miss Torrisi ex·
plained. "I've always liked them. And one day when I can afford
it, Marmaduke and I will s plit a pair of good diamond earrings."
That's possible because Miss Torrisi wears three pierced ear·
rings on her nghl car and two on her left.
''I'll give M<Jrmaduke one and I'll use the other for the third
hole in my right car," she said.
'Dry' Laundromats
Shun Dirty Clothes
SANTA CRUZ CAP> Laun·
dromal owners in this drought·
plagued city vowed to stay closed
today in protest over water al-
locations, forcing residents to
take their dirty laundry
somewhere else
Angered by what they say are
excessive fines levied by the city,
proprietors of more than 20 coin-
o per a led laundries stopped
operations Monday. They said
they wi ll remain closed until
water allocations are raised.
Following the shutdowns Mon·
day, resid ents traveled by bus
and car lo neighboring com·
munilies lo do their wash.
"We h ad to do It," said
Norman Bei of Bei-Scott Com·
pany which operates 12 laundries
in the city. "Unless we get the
water we need we'll stay closed."
of their allocation and then close
their doors."
He said applications for
variances from water allocation
have been received from the
operators and that "more water
has been given to them in every
case.
.. But we can't a ll ow them lo
have all the waler they want,"
said Allen, "or yo u have lo aJlow
everyone to have all the waler
they want."
* * * F ront Page A I
RATION •.•
water over the mountafos from
Northern California to Southern
Californi a is $10 per acre-Coot Robie said. '
While decllninc to publlcl1 an·
nounce his candidacy for any
elective office, Orange County's
arch-conservative former
Conaresaman John Schmiu l&
quieUy makin1 the rounds In the
local breakfast-luncheon club
circuit.
Clad in a blue and white·
checkered dress coat, Schmilz
acknowledged the presence· of
local media at a Tuesday mom·
ing meeUna of the Capistrano
Vulley Exchange Club. •
"I euess they (the media> ex·
peel me to make some public an·
nouncement since enveryone is
announcing their oandidacy
these days,'' he said.
"Actually, I'm planning on go-
ing down to Chile to study cam·
paign techniques," the one-time
independent party presidentiaJ
candidate quipped.
Schmitz, sporting a crew-c ut
hairstyle for his sunt as a reserve
Marine aviator, proceeded to de·
Ii ver a crisp lecture on the his·
tory or American political
parties.
.The former defender of right·
wing causes in the California As·
sembly and later in Washington
eould not resist making com·
ments about the prevailing
political scene.
Paraphras ing Voltaire,
Schmitz said "If there would
have been no Jimmy Carter, they
would have had to create one."
Schmitz said he believed the
De mocratic Party was based on
a coaJition of six groups. Those
groups are the big cities, labor,
ethni c factions. the south ,
Washington, 0 .C. blacks and the
eastern Intellectual establish·
m ent.
Noting George McGovern's
failure to hold the coalition
together in 1972, Schmitz said
Carter is having problems with
the ethnic faction over the abor-
tion issue.
Tot's Toys
'Set Afire'
ByGrandad
A Laguna Beach man was in
police custody today on suspicion
of burning his granddaughter's
high chair and musical rocking
chair.
Donald Ray Jorgensen, 49, a
plumber, was arrested at his
home. 1370 Glcnneyre St., after
his daughter-in -law, Donna
J orgensen complained to police
that her daughter's chairs had
been broken up and were being
burned in the home's fireplace.
Responding officers said they
found a fire going in the fireplace
when they arrived ~l the res·
idence at about 11:30 p.m. Mon·
day.
It was the second visit police
had paid to the home Monday. At
9 : 50 p. m. they had responded to a
disturbance call at the house.
Mrs. Jorgensen, a San
Bernardino resident, told· of·
flcers she had been threatened
with assault, and had been
warn~ that the baby's runuture
would be burned.
0.11,, ..............
BACK TO BASICS
New Pr1nclp•I KrembH
Principal
Goes Back
To Basics
By ANNE COOP ER CM-Dally P'lle4 Sl•ff
New Dana Hills High School
principal James Krembas said
Monday he foresees a return to
the basics in his school district In
the face of a national trend to in·
creased reading problems and
low test scores. "There is so much available
for our <! version. and it's readily
accessible -why should we ex·
pect our kids to 6il home and read
about something they can be ex·
perienclng firsthand?'' he said.
This trend lo look outward,
rather than inward, ls r einforced
by the "learning by doing"
educational philosophy, as well
as by the trend to work ex·
perien~ and community-based
courses, Krembas said.
The new principal, whose ap·
pointment to succeed Darrell
Taylor was announced Monday.
said he believes any school
system should be grounded in the
basics.
"lam very supportive of com·
petency-based eraduation r e·
quirements, which will require
that a student prove he has
mastery of certain skills before
he is allowed to graduate from
high school," Krembaa said.
"We have to get across to our
students that lhe~o-called. 3-Rs
are c rucially i portant to
virtually everythl i else they're
inrotved with or will want to do."
Although reading and other
test scores have been slipping
throughout the country. Krem·
bas said the problem in Southern
California may be more directly
related to locale.
"We ln the school system are
competing with the beaches and
the mountains and the year·
round good weather for the atten·
lion or our students," he said.
Krembas attended high school
himself in Southern California, In
Los Angeles, a n d may be
particularly conscious or the call
or the waves to a teen-age boy, as
he had re<:enlly moved from Ohio
when he started high school.
"By the time I was a high
school junior, 1 couldn't see
myself in any other field but
education.'' Krembas said. "My
interest in the field developed as
a natural process, starting with
my involvement with YMCA and
church youth groups.
'Angel Dust'
Fells.Laguiians
Thrff juveniles and a 31-year· poUce were called to the bospttaJ
old man were found unconscious lo help subdue Morton who had
in a Laguna Beach hotne Monday begun acting in a bizarre IMl'I·
after lnaesline a white aranular ner. according to Sgt. D d
clwm!caJ belle.ved to be "angel Avera. ·
du.st," an animal ttaQquilizer. The man was trans~ to
The victims were found in the the UC lrvtne Medical C~
living room by a parent who re· m entw health unit for furtlter
turned home at about 11 :20 p.m. care. Morton was booked in
Paramedics, two Laauna Beach absentia at Orange County )ail
fire department ul\Jts and two for alleged possession of a con·
ambulances were summoned to trolled substance and contrlbut·
aid the two young girl!. a young lng to the delinquency of a mhv.>r. man and the adult. Lagtma Beach firemen rePOrt·
Of the tour, Robert J . Morton, ed finding a white granular aub-
31, of 353 Cypress Drive. Laiuna stance in the home. It Is believed
Beach, was the most severely the chemical was taken with ftult
stricken, according to police and juice.
fire department r~ports. Due to the nature of the
Morton was treated with the symptoms and the appearance of'
others at South Coast Communi· the chemical, authorities ten·
ty Hospital. After treatment, the tal1vely identified the chemical
juveniles were re leaaed to as Pt;P, used as a horse tran·
custody of parents. q uilizer and known in the street
At about. 3 a.m. Laguna Beach parlance as "angel dust."
Tip Pays Off
Police 'Finger' Gunman
CfilCAGO GP> -A man attempting to rob a dry
cleaning store blew off part of his finger with a
s hotgun, police said.
·'This is no toy; the gun is loaded," the robber
s aid to victims Monday in the Pekin Cleaners on
Chicago's &Juth Side.
Police said the robber. wearing a red
handkerchief over his face and carryin~ a sawed-off
12-gauge shotgun, then opened the gun to s how it was
loaded. When h e closed it. the weapon fired, taking off
two-thirds of the little finger or his left hand.
. After the g un fired, he took $10 from the cash reg-
lSl er and a portable television set from the counter
. and fled. police said.
Despite the s hotgun blast. police said thev re-
covered the tip of the finger and were able to get a
fingerprint.
Shuttle Completes ,
Test Rides on Jet
EDWARDS AIR FORCE
BASE <AP J -The Space Shuttle
went throueh a final rehearsal to-
day for its fir$t free fiighl, riding
a jumbo jetliner at 28,000 feel and
rehearsing the maneuver that
will s'Paf ate the coupled craft
Aug.12.
The hour-Jong lest "went very
well" said mission controUers at
Houston's Johnson Space Center,
and astronauts Fred Haise and
Gordon Fullerton, who sat in the
shuttle's cabin, were reportedly
~leased.
With the 150,000-pound shuttle
secure ly fas tened atop its
fuselage, the Boeing 747 reached
.a speed of 273 miles per hour dur·
ing the separation practice.
As the Boeing touched down at
8:47 a.m. after the flight, the
crew tested the shuttle's landing
gear. letting the two maln land·
ing gear and the nose wheel ex·
leod out of the craft's fuselage.
Haise and Fullerton will fly the
shuttle when It is at last released
from the Boeing to make a five-'
minute powerless descent from
about 23.000 feet to a gliding IAnd·
ing on the desert floor.
Today's flight served as prac-•
tice for the maneuver that wJO be
used to launch the experim~tal
craft. That separation is to be ac·
complishcd by heading the car-
rier plane into a shailow dive,
while explosive bolts part the
coupling to allow the shutUe lo
"pop up" and away from the
Boeing.
The ouroose of the free niJ(ht was to test the shuttle's gilding
a bi lily. The craft is designed to re-
tu rn from space as a gilder
when It becomes ope.rational in
1980.
F ro• PafJIC! Al
Bei claimed tus company alone
owes the city more than $40,000 in
fines for exceeding its water al·
location
"They're giving us only 70 per·
cent of 1975 waler usage and this
is 1977," s md Bei.
Because the drouihl is cen-
tered in Northern California.
residents there have been asked
to eut back drastically in con-
su mpU.on and have responded,
achieving reductions or up to 60
percentofnormal, Robiesaid.
'Patient ls No. 1' HANNA •••
vacation."
Hanna further wrote that be
planned to move his family and
take up a residence "which ls not
likely to be In Orange County."
The laundromat operator said
his company is laying off about a
dozen employes because of the
waler supply problem.
lie said the drought has forced
people to use public laundromats
instead of their own washers and
dryers. In addition, a large
number of students and eld~rly
persons do not have their own
washers.
City Water Director Morris Al·
len said he was "11bocked that
these laundromats could be so ir·
responsible as to come to the end
OftANOt COAST SI
DAILY PILOT
However, Southern Call for·
nians also are dolng a good job of
cons~atlon, Robie said, sug.
gesting that mandatory ration·
ing may not be needed. ln Los
Angeles, residents have been
as ked to cut wat~ use by 10 per·
cent.
Roble supervised the startup of
a six-week program ln whlch
state and local governments are
combining to distribute 37._000
free water-uvtng kit.a Including
devices We• shower-flow restrlc·
tort and fUters to cut the amount of water used in toilets.
Officials wm try different dls· tt1botkJR s~ tn 1b.--.,O,OOO
t .. t that ls to demoiutr•te .the
, moe& efficient way of gettlba kJt.s
t.o lhepul>Uc.
Officials then, hope to expand
the Jll'OIJ'•m to covC'lr t.be entlte
atat.4.
Hospice Comforts Terminally ID
ing to do."
Then the hospice should take
over and let the conventional
team go back lo c:urint people,
Jett said.
"Thls is no slam at our present·
day hospital," said Jack Stanfill,
a Hospice Orange County dlrec·
tor who headed the lund-ralstng
effort to ~did Saddl~back Com·
munlty Hospital. Hospitals, he
said, simply aren 't set up to treat
the tetmjnany m.
Stanfill said be has been bit·
tling cancer for ,four years.
Although it.u now under control.
he said, "( know exacUy how I
will reel tr J finally become a termtnaJ case beca.l!le 1 know ex-
actly bow I want t.o be ta~eo care
of."
Atcordins to the hospice
philosopt\Y, tho paUent stays at hom' With the fa mtb' as tone as poulble. Hls treatD'lent La C•ated
towefd allevlaUo• pain a.Qdo&ber
1ympto'"t and m aldnt blm ~h)'tlcalb and meot.ui com· (ortable, ,
"The patient 11 nu.mber cint on
the team and dlrectl what'a to-tna on, not &M ~ ;• aald Mr•.
Wood.
The ramlly aJMO lt lnvolwd. and
they 're all supported bY the dck:-
tor. nune, otfier-r Jm)f .. 1louals
auoll u •~lal worh rt abd
clerpiW Ind \tohanteihl. K~ O\'anre COW1t1 caonol &t'C patieotS al ~t, tho
foU Mid. U1 CUrNDt rol lt
lo WariD ~e,.OI tM effort.
taaott ~ a&DUt death Ud dJ'· ln1, recl'lilt vol-.n te9ra and
cbi;lft ~ frlClletl. ~ • ftaaDri eocntidttee ........ w ~ ..... atarted to
raise funds to support a perma·
nent office, paid director and a c~re laclllty. Rather than build
dnother hospital, Dr. Jett said,
'.he)' hope to lease space in an ex·
tsUn« medical laclllty.
It all began when Mrs. Wood
joined Dr. Jett'& geriatric prac·
dee after belng out of the pro·
resslon for .12 years, taking care
of her <!hildren.
Dtssatlslted wtth the way dytng
people were bethg treated, she
started reading and attending
tectutes on death and dytng.
''l waan't.loo illtrigued with the
Idea at first," admitte4 Dr. Jell.
He even asked b.is nurse to sh•lve
her book.I bl4wardl so bis pa·
t.ienu didn't ale the degJessing
titles.
Hanna's personal secretary.
J aclcie Baron, said be plans to
move out of California. H& has
left his legal counseling business
in Irvine, she said, and intends l.o
vacation mostofthe s um met.
She said she did not know bow
to reach the Orange County Dem·
ocrat.
Hanna was a regular attendant
of the monthly EDC mfftiogs,
and was a member of tht board
executive committee, Rolahd
Loveleas, EDC president.• and
general manager, said today.
Hanna attended the board's
June 21 meeting, Loveless said.
but bad no further contact ..-ith
the EDC until Loveless r~ved
through t.fte tnall .a carbon.eopy of
H a.nn,·s letter of resignation.
* * * Fre• Pafle Al l
KOREA •• ;
criminal d!vtsioa, qreed to.meet
with members of ConaNIS tll
Wednesday to discuss the Jnl· rue of their l11ve1tllattoft.
Several junior House mfmbets
have crtttcbed both tM IJ,1Pt1ee
Department and the Hoae "1·
vHUt1tton1 •• moYill too
1to"'lY· '
'
.-\-1 DAILY PILOT S
.Jut ~
Coa ting ,~~t .. @O
wltb
Tom
arplalne
RIC-KY Tff'KY POLITIX :
\t a r utn B1•r .ic•!rnn. the dli:i
llnitut!'<ht'<t '<'hool board per11on
from NE-wporl Bhst·h , 'let out up
on ht'r whit<• 1 hurRl'r yc11terdity
tu 'UH' lht< lfrpubht'an Party
from 1belr in our <'01u1ta l re11on
Mr:-. Ht-ri.:e,on announced her
l'andlda<·v for the Hth A!>'>embl)
1>1,tn<'l wat Shl' wa ll run 1n the
i:. Junt• Primary elt'Clwn
An yboch t·an raµ1dly calculate
" that Mr' Hcrgt''IOn 1!'. getting an
t'arl' running start with her
"' h 1 l l' t' h J r J! .-r T h e J u n e
PnmJr~ I!) onl)' J ldd '>hOrt of be
m g onl' yt.>ar aWl:l'I-
SO WH\I SO 1-:ARLY'! And how
<an 1t be suggested that the
~chool hoard person would be
':i"ing the Grand Old Party from
Jtsclf"
Ht·<·ausc hist November. lht-
<:<)P took an 1mormous pratfall
in the 14th Assembly 01stnct.
!''or Republicans, the election
wa!'> a cl assic study an political
C'omplacency. Look al the dis·
I ra:t IL'> boundaries cm brace the
Hc·publ acan !>t ro n ~h old of
Newport Beach. 'tretch inland
through 1-_:1 Toro. Missaon VieJo
and thl' Saddleback Valley and
wind downcoa!'>l to Oceanside
It total. t he 74lh h as the
heaviest Republican maJOnty of
any district in Cahfo rnia
Thus Reµubhl'an nomination to
this Assembly !'.(.'at an a June
Pra marv is tanta mounl to elec
turn tn November
You can break out the cham·
pagnc for th<.• C O P victor right
after lhe J unl' voting No need to
s la p out a ny more campaign
signs November victory ts cer·
ta an . You can mail 1t in
,, Last year, howeve r. it got lost
in the mail. It came back lo the
Rcpuhhcan' slam peel. "Return
~ to Sender · ·
WHAT tlAPP~Nt.:O was that
t h <.• afore m <.•nt1 o n e d Mrs
Bt.·ri.:t·son r a n 1n t h e GO P
primary against a polil1 cal un
known, auto dealer .Jim Slemons
T he Ill-publican h1crarl'hy sat
back rat and happy. t•akulaling
that Mrs Her i.:c'lon would wan in
a walt1.
Bul Slemons w .1., heavil}
financed Slcmons bht1.ed the dis
• tncl with a t·ompulcn .tcd letter
('a m pa1gn ll a ttack ed Mrs
Ber geson's service a' a school
trustee H e won the primary
election by 2.:193 votes
After Slemons became the of
facial Rcpubli<'an nominee. he
s teadfastly dodged debate or any
public confront ation with the
Democratic candidat e. Deputy
Dis trict Attorney Ron Cordova.
It was also divulged ttlat he
had tangled with immigration on
a matter of importing sexy
publications and that some of his
claims for endorsements by GOP
b1gw1gs were flawed
Des p ite t his m ou ntin g
evidence. the GOP hierarchy
stuck by their candidate Aft er
a ll , he wa!> their own
TEN DAYS BEFORE the Nov·
<'m bcr election. Mrs Bergeson
w as <Again in 1t lh~ time as an
official write an candidate She
d rew an unbelievable 34,860
votes a strong, clear signal
from the t:lectorall' that voters do
look al a candidate's qualirica-
t ions. despite what the party
b1gw1gs may think
Mrs Bergeson split the GOP
vote and Democrat Cordova won
the heavily Re publican district in
a spedacular upset.
Now will the Grand Old Party
forgive Marian he.r sin of going
a gains t the "offi cial party
choice" and costing them lhe As·
sembly seal?
We shall see.
Tuesday July 2t, 1977
Phone Strike OK'd
Workers 'Ready to Walk' Next Month?
W ASHIN GT ON t AP l
Telephon~ worker~ ure prepared
to ltaunrh a nationwide atrike
nu t mouth t.o back demand• for
p<1Y increase:. and othe r benefits
111 u nt1w rontract with the Bell
Sytih!m .
Glenu E w .. tL\, pre11idenl of
the Commun\cations Workers or
America (CW A>. said Monday
o vt!rwhtilmlng l'.l upporl for a
~trike "makes it clear" that h1::.
500.000 members "are ready to
wu lk out 1f t h at becomes
nt'ce::.sar}
WATTS SAID THE rank and
file. in a secret-ba ll ot election
l'.'arlier lh1s month. voted by a
m argm of 6· I to g1 ve the union
ll'adership authority to call a
~trike.
A formal strike date was left to
umon leaders to decide, but a
walkout could come as early as
midnight Aug. 6, when current
l'ontracts expire
"We want a settlement. not a
strike." Watts said. ''But the
situation is very serious and it's
getting very late ...
THE CWA I~ THE largest
union in the neeotiatlona that be·
gan May 19. The International
Brotherhood of Electrical
Wo rker s and the T e lecom ·
munications lnternallonal union.
with 1t combined strength of
n early 200,000 additional
employes, could be expected to
Join a strike if one is called.
Each union ba rgains separate-
ly. with the C.W A usually setting
the pattern for settlements.
The unions re1ected an initial
contract proposal July 21 that in-
cl uded a 10 percent wage boost
over three years, and an addi-
taonal 10 percent in cost-of-liying
raises. It made no me ntion of job
security. the union's key de·
mand
''WE CANNOT POSSIBLY gel
together ." Watts said, if the com·
pany thinks it can simply beef up
its original offer without address·
ang "the essential ingredient of
JOb security . . and the real
needs in such vital areas as
pensions. he alth benefits and
union-management relations."
Nearly 10-0,000 Be ll System
jobs have been lost to automation
in the three years since the last
contract was negotiated, and the
u n i on s h a v e d e m .a n d e d
safeguards in a new agreement
against further losses.
A strike, if it cohtea, is unlikely
to have any major, immediate
impact on telephone service
because of automation, company
s pokesmen say. •
BUT A STUDY done for the
CW A cootehds that a strike "is
bound to have far·reaching. ad·
verse economic and social re·
suits that wlU impinge on the
quality of people's lives and the
conduct of the nation's bus i-
ness.·· •
t. The upion says the average
phone company worker earns
$6.46 an hour, a figure that pu~
them in seventh place among
other industries. But the com·
pany says its employes )llready
are well paid. It cites a federal
study showing Ben s alaries in-
creased 39. 7 percent under the
current contract while the coat of
living rose27.4 percent.
Big ltl11ddy
Cool refreshing mud \\a~ the or der of the day for
Charyca Foriste r . 11. one of a hout ·t~ children w~o
pa rticipated in a s lip·and-slidl' compet1t1on at a pa rk m
Nashvi1le. Tenn. The event was sponsored by the M etro
Pa rks and Recreation Department and .Johnson Wa x
Compa ny.
Panel Approves 3 West Bank Towns
TEL AV lV. Israel (AP > An
Israeli cabinet committee gave
legllimacy and perm anent statui.
today to three J ewish settl e-
ments established on the West
Bank of the Jordan Ri ver. a
spokesman said. Ilut it remained
to be seen whether the gove rn-
ment would allow further settle·
ment an the occupied Arab ter-
ritory
The decis ion to recognize
Camp Kaddum, Maale Adumin
and Ofra came at a meeting or
the ministerial settlement com-
mittee. the spokesman said, and
must be approved by the full
cabinet. The committee met one
day a fte r Prime Minis t e r
Menahem Begin returned from
talks with President Carter in
W ashinglon.
Officials said Is rael was con
s 1derin g Carter 's r equest to
rcfram from establishing new
Jewish communities on the West
Bank until peace talks resume
with the Arabs The cabinet
spokesman said it would take up
the issue Wednesday
Korea Talk .. E•d
SEOUL. South Kore a <AP l
Defense Secretary Harold Brown
ended taJks with South Korean
offi cials today on the U.S. troop
withdrawal plan. pledging con
ttnued military support and re-
assuring Seoul that the United
States will not negotiate with
North Korea behind its back
A communique Issued at the
conclusion of two days or talks
said the two sides had agreed on
formation of a combined military
<'Ommand. It also described in
general t e rms the planned
phased pullout of JJ,000 U S.
Truce Quiets
Egypt-Libya
. Border Fight
'
CAIRO. Egypt (AP> Egyp-
tian and Libyan for ces were ob
serving a truce along their 700-
m ile frontier today, an Egyptian
military spokesman s aid. But
propaganda warfare continued
unabated.
··Both sides are sincerely
honoring the cease:nre." after a
week of major border. clashes,
the military spokesman told The
Associated Press.
EGYPTIAN PRESIDENT
Anwar Sadat scheduled a na·
tionally televised speech tonight,
e xpected to deal with ·the con-
mct.
''The cease.fire will be in force
111s-long--as there-er no~
military provocations." a
Foreign Ministry spokeaman
said in denying that Egypt. bad
laid down other conditions for the
truce.
One report sald the condlt.iani
ineludtd tht di1maatlln1 or
mothballing of complex •lee·
trontc surveillllnff QStelDI built
fol'Llbya bytbeSovl.t U,alOft.
gr ound t roops. and said the
Carter ad9'f\nis tration would ask
~ to a pprove a new
"' military aid program for South
Korea
PipeHn..e Da•aged
FAIRBANKS. Alaska <AP1
A blast from an explos ive device
of und e t e rm i n e d nature
da maged the exterior of a section
of lhe trans-Alaska pipeline but
the now of oil was not affected,
authorities said
( INSHORT J
itself. occurred about 9 p. m
Monday about 17 miles north of
Fairbanks. In that area. the
pipeline runs a bout one mile
north of a care and rive miles off
a state highway.
l..culee •Approved'
WASlllNGTON (AP> -Sworn
testimony from Budget Director
Bert Lance and the "Imminent"
sale of 200.000 shares of stock in
Stale Police Lt. George Pollitt
said the blasl, which damaged in-
sulation wrapped around the out-
side of the line but not the pipe ~~~~~:.-.~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
Intrepid Kitty
· ·s1ss\· Earh art·· dons helm el and goggles for the finals
of the All A m e ri can Glamou r Kitty contest in
llollywood. Fla. lie is six months old and is owned by
fli ght instructor J ean Pyatt of Philadelphia. Pa.
Carter Raises Hope
For Ar.ms Controls
W ASWNGTON (Al>) -President Carter says there is ·•a 1Umroer
or hope'' that the spread of atomic weapons ean be Umlted, even
though "every step ls going to be a chaUen1e in itself."" '
·'Six or eight months ago therre w~ a teneral feelinl around the
world that nothinc could be done. that it wu too late, that the atornJc
geoie.. wa&..Ja&l ol tbe .bottle and
that nObody coulct catch it to re·
turn it to t:aptivU.y." the Presi·
dent said.
the Atlanta bank he once headed
are defusing a threatened Senate
investigation into the personal
finances of the top Carte r ad·
ministration official. ·
One senator hearing Lance's
explanatioM of various allega
Liot'Vl Monday s aid it was clei..r
tha t members of the Senate Gov
ernmental Operations Commit
tee were ready lo vote the budget
director "t.he Good Rousekeep-
mg Seal of Approval."
Kent Snarled Again
KENT. Ohio <~P) -Construe·
tion of a gyrunas1um annex at the
site of the 1970 Kent State shoot·
angs. approved by a couoty court,
faces further potential entangle-
ment The university's Board of
Trustees <'ailed a meeting today
to d1scusl'.I the future of plans to
guild the gym annex. following
the court ruling Monday
At the same time, the US. ln-
lenor Department said 1t was
studying a proposal to mak7 the
site where four students were
killed an a volley of rifle fire from
National Guardmcn during an
anti-war protest a national his-
toric landmark It was not clear
what effect. if any. the interior
De pa r t m e nt announc eme nt
would have on the hu i ldin~ plans.
Stupef."'i A rroig11ed
Memorial Service
Set for 6 Victims·
KLAMATH FALLS. Ore <AP I Six young people who frequented a
Klamath Falls night spot as friends only to diem a mass killing will be
memorialized Wednesday an a joint church service
The man accused of shooting them. Dewitt C Henry, 26, was ar-
raigned Monday on charges of murder and attempted murder .
~lamath -';dunty c lerk Bt II Bozgoz, asked the court lo order
Maine. an Episcopal minister. is prosecutors not to question his
to conduct the memorial service t•licnl without hii; knowledge.
at the Ch~rch of Jes us Chnst of saying that had happened after
Latter -day Saints here Th~ Henry's arrest Saturday. He also
church was se~~ted b~cause it 1s asked to be given a tape recording
the largest fac1hty available. of the Inte rrogation.
THE FAMJLIES OF the vic-
tims agreed to a joint church
service because the dead were
friends. They will be buned in
separate services.
The s~ were shot as they left a
south Klamath Falls mghtclub
wh~t'I it closed early Saturday
morning. They we re hit by semi·
lnrtomatkrlfte-fir~;;rs they sat on
a planter a few feet from each
other.
Amid s tringe n t s ec urity
measures, tbe 6-foat-3. 230-pound
Henry limped tnto the court room
Monday, his face a patchwork of
gauze pads from state police
buckshot that hit him following
an early-morning chase Salur·
day. The attempted murder
charges stem rrom his alleged
shootout wi~h two polite officers.
THE HOUR OF THE arraign·
me41t was kept secret In an effort
to prevent a large crowd. Sheriff
Tom Duryee said a number or
threllt.IJ on Henry's life had bee n
received.
Henry's_ ciltorn~y. £nver
..,J
The 1udge made no ruling on the
motions but ordered Henry, a
former bouncer at the nightclub,
to be held without bond .
A~WI .......
HELD V/ITHOUT BAIL
Dewitt C. Kenry ·
-.. Mfli1w Djunps Retiremenl .
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Ti.edar. Jutx 2&1 1917 OAIL V PILOT 81.
Deadly Image
New Name to Add Li/ e?
By MILTON MOSllOWlTi
When the stockboldcrs of lotcrnatiooal Funel"al
Services gatb«1r ln Denver on Aug. 12 for lhelr annyal meel·
i.ng, they will vote on changing the name of the compAJ11 to Its Industries.
There's not a scintilla of doubt that the change wlll be
approved. It's a management proposal -and ln U.S. bual·
oess a management proposal bas as much chance of loslng
as Leonid Brezhnev has ol being unseat~ as leader of the
Soviet Union.
WHEN A COMPANY CHANGES ITS name, it usually
reflects a diversification that bas rendered the original
name obsolete or inappropriate. With International Funeral
Services that's not the case -yet. The company derives 90
percent of its revenues and 93 percent of its profits from tak •
ing care of people alter they have died.
IFS, headquartered in Des Moines, owns 98 funeral
homes and 16 cemeteries. That makes it one of the largest
factors in this .. industry," and it got there by acquiring
local operations around the oounlry. Even.in the funeral
business, the "chain
store" is a way of life
(or death}.
IFS ~gan buying
funeral homes in 1968
and cemeteries in 1971.
ReslJ}t: IFS sales leaped
from $2 million to $37
million.
Money
Tree
The original names of mortuaries and cemeteries have
been retained. So you may have an IFS entity in your town
without even knowing it. Jn Jacksonville, Fla., lbe IFS
cemetery is the Chapel Hills Memory Gardens. ln San An·
tonio, IFS operates Roy Akers Funeral Chapels. In For~st
Hills. New York. it's the Schwarlg Brothers Memonal
Chapels.
THE COMPANY'S LARGEST CEMETERY is
Greenwood Memorial Park in San Diego. There it has built
the Bible Mausoleum. which contains 23,000 crypts and is
being expanded to a capacity ot 50,000. IFS proudJy
described this edifice in its annual report as follows:
"The mausoleum, part of which is four stories blgb, will
cover 21h acres wben completed. It contains enough steel re·
inforcing bars to stretch from San Diego to Atlanta,
Georgia, if laid end to end; enough concrete to construct 25
miles of two-lane highway; and the corridors of the struc-
ture total more than two miles in length. Marble facing in
the structure, if laid flat, would cover more than five
acres."
With such impressive achievements, why is Interna-
tional Funeral Services becoming IFS Industries?
FOR ONE TIDNG, PROFITS HAVE not been great. ln
1972, when the company's sales were 40 percent lower than
they are today, IFS earned Sl.5 million, roughly what it's
earning now. For another thing, there seems to be little in-
terest in the company's stock, which was recently selling on
the American Stock Exchange for the wretched price oC
$2.25 a share.
IFS Industries will thus signal that the company is
eager to get into businesses other than burying and cremat-
ing bodies. It already has one such business. Dried Whey
Inc., an Iowa company that sells dried whey. Next month it
will resume negotiations to acquire another Iowa firm, Van
Diest Supply Company.
First. though. it has to knock "funeral" out of its name.
The association has been deadly. After Aug. 12 contact IFS
Industries in Des Moines if you're interested in selling them
a company -·or buying a cemetery or funeral home.
First Time
Gasoline Prices
Hold· June Line
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -The California State
Automobile Association says gasoline prices sampled in its
monthly survey failed to jump this month for the first time
this year. a . b.l . . an·1· 'te 10 .d The American tt.utomo t e Assoc1atton 1 1a s8.l
motorists in Northern and Central California and Nevada
paid about the same for fuel during July as they paid in
June. December 1976 was the last time the su"ey failed to
show a significant monlhly price increase.
THE A VERA.GE FOUND BY THE club was 65.8 cent! a
gallon for regular grades of nationally and regionally ad-
vertised brands;, 70.9 cents for premium grades and 68.1
cents for no-lead products ..
The-club said the prices break down to 67.5 cents per
gallon for regular grades at full-service pumps a 64.1 cents
at gas only and self-service islands.
Highest midsummer prices were reported in resort
areas around Lake Tahoe, Yosemite Valley, Monterey Bay,
the inland areas north of Sacramento to the Oregon border.
and al several points in Nevada.
SDG&E Credits
PUC for Profit
San Diego Gas and Electric Company has reported
second.quarter earnings of 61 cents a common share, up
fn>m the S2 cents a share earned in the aecond quarter or
1916. •
Tbe company uld its earnings benefited from last
week's decision by the California Public Utilities Com-
mission (PUC> in SDO&E's general rate case. That de-
cision, wblcb granted a $9.4 million electric rate increase.
a1ao permitted the utility to add $4.3 million to seco11d·
quarter eaNtinga t9 renect J)T'eviously deferred revenues
h'om lbe sale of natural gas for power plant fuel. These de-
fel"l"ed .revt1'ues, wblc:b amount to 2a cents a share,
nipn!Sent a one·tlmo adjustment to eamlofs.
SOO&E ope.rati:n.a revcnu~ for the quarter ended June ao reached $119 . .S million. lnclucl.lng lbe $4..3 mUUon in de-
ft!IT1i!d revenues. This compares With $10f.S mUUon earned
In lbe second quart.er of 1976-Oporatina ~na~s of $98.9
millloa were 13 percent btaher than a year eartltr.
Net hicome. before prefened <lMdtnds. was $1S
million, compared with $12.1 m.llllt>n earned in tho 1ec0Qd
quart.tr of 1978. Without the deferred revenues from power
plant gas sales att.riblltable to prior 'Sl"rloch. net h>coma would bave been '10.7 million.