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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-07-10 - Orange Coast Pilot7 'I 11 Alleged Cocaine Factory I \ , • .,. r'. l f I j • ' Dissident Trials Grenade Wielder Threaten U.S., Takes as Hostage Soviet Relations Judge, 3 Others oman e MONDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 10, 1978 \IOL 71, NO. m. J SIECTIOttS. J6 ll'AOIES NB Man Jailed New York Hostages Grenade Man Friend Wounded_ By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of IM O•ilf Plio. Si.ff A West Newport resident, w h ose ne i g hbor s became suspicious of the odor of ether coming from his apartment, has been arrested on c harges of manufac turing and s elling narcotics Newport Beach police booked Aaren John Burcham , 25, after allegedly finding wha t one officer described as a complete laboratory in his apartment al 7406 W Ocean Front. Police claim that Burcham was making a cocaine substitute o ut of a compound calle d hdocame Narcotics investigator Mike Hietala a lleged Burcham also had a pound of cocaine of undetermined purity in his •apart m e n t whe n he wa s i arrested Friday evening. • Burcham was booked into city jail and is being held in lieu of '$50,000 bail. Hietala s aid Burcham told him he Is to report to Chino Men's Priso n next Monday to begin serving a term for a nar cotics conviction ! handed down last year. . Burcham was arrested after ' po lice were called by an , unidentified neighbor at about 5 l p.m. who complained about the odor or ether coming from : Burcham 's ocea n fr ont t~ apartment. Officer Michael Hyams drove to the a rea and s aid he also ) sme lled the odor coming from the ) residence. ( Hyams got Burcham lo come ' to the front door and when he " asked if he could check the apartment Burcham told him ~ bis girlfriend was asleep in µie t r J Kennedy Tale Due 1 WASHINGTON CAP) -Joan f ( Kennedy says a detailed account of her bout with alcoholism will • be published in about twp weeks ' by a national wd'"man 's ' magazine. The article· will tell J bow she became addicted land I the therapy program s he ; follows. I POElS L4BOR TO P.4Y BILLS Mao doee not live by bread alone, but even poet.a have to make a living and they find It cl1tficull in today's world. See Featwinc, Page Ct. -. r oom from which the ether s eemed to be coming. H yams reportedly told Burcham he feared for the girl's sa fely under those conditions and searched the apartment, finding the lab equipment and nar cotics, but no girl. Holds Four Hietala said today there was s o much equipme nt and paraphernalia confiscated that a truck had to be borrowed so the bulk or material could be taken to the Sheriff's crime lab in Santa Ana . Most of the chemicals and narcotics were taken to the police station and Hietala said he would be spending the next few days taking inventory. "It's worth thousands," h~ ventured today about the confiscated materials. NEW YORK (AP) -A m an threatening to detonate what he said was 80 pounds of dynamite with a hand grenade and claim· mg to speak only Polish was holding four hostages -one or the m a judge -in the World Trade Center today, authorities said. Thousands were evacuated from the building. Members of the police hostage negotiating team were talking to the man by telephone through a Polish interpreter , according to police. Lt. Frank Reilly. of the police department 's Emergency Soviet Dissidents Plead Innocent MOSCOW CAP) -The Soviet Union put two leading dissidents on trial today in cases that threaten to aggravate the growing tension in U.S.-Soviet. re latio ns . Both pl eaded innocent, and the wife of one appealed to Washlngton for help that she said could free her husband. Anatoly Shtbarans ky, 30, a key member of the Jewish e mmigralion movement here, ref· ected allegations tha t he sp ed for the CIA ~d said he considers them "absurd," his brother Leonid said. He faces a possible death penalty but ls expected to get a long term in labor camp tr convlcted. A court official sai d Shcharansky was accused of s upplying agents with state secrets, "including information about the locations or a number of defense enterprises which are secret." In Kaluga, 100 miles south of Moscow, Alexander Otnzburg, 41, a longtime human rights activist, pleaded lnnocent to a charce of anU-Sovlet agitation and propqanda, punishable by up to 10 yean at bard labor. But be told the court he might modtty hfs plea lf his gullt could be proved dur i ng tho procffdlnp, his wife aald. Weuere reporters were barred from both courtrooms. 'I I ---;) Shcharansky's wife, Natalia, told a news conference in Paris she believed further statements by President Carter and the Cong ress might e nable her husband to "be free and go out from Russia." S h e said s he could not recommend specific actions that U.S. and other world leaders could take. "I'm no politician," she said, but s uggested tha t Congress pass a resolution on the case. Mrs. Shcharansky, who lives in Israel, said she went to Pa ris to help mobilir.e world opinion in her husband's case. She is to travel to Washlngt.on later this w eek t o m eet with Vlce President Walter F. Mondale. Speaking to reporters during a r ecess at the Moscow trial, Leonld Shcharansky said his brother "l oo ked we ll. self-confident and cheerful" and smiled at him. Ginzburg's wire, Irina, who saw her husband for the first time since his arrest 17 months ngo, told Western reporters, "He refused to testiry but made this r efusal conditional on what witnesses said." Officlala of the three-Judie court, In a plnk a nd yellow former mansion, said Oln1burg was accused of distributing and preparina anti-Soviet litt.rature con talnl n g "slande rous <See TRJALS, Pafe A.2> . . . .. .. Services division, said eyeWit nesses saw the man holding "a World War II potato masher I a type of grenade>,.. in the hear ing room or the state Workmen's Compensation Board on the 36th floor of the center's Tower Two. The center is the world's largest commercial office building com plex. Se veral people said the man was a claimant and that his case had just been postponed for two months to allow ne urological and orthopedic testing when he pulled ou{ the supposed potato masher. Reilly said the m an also was seen pulling a •·pushcart, on which h e s a ys h e has the dynamite." The hostages were identified as a judge, an attorney, a stale insurance representative and a court reporter. Several thousand people were evacuated from five floors or the 110-story tower Two. Adelina Walker. a clerk in the hearing room who escaped, said the judge "had just told the man's attorney that there would be a two-month delay for reports and then suddenly the m an took an object out of a bag and I walked out the door." Ms. Walker described the man a s in his e arly 50~ with a Northern European accent and dressed in casual clothing . She s aid this was "at leas t the ($ff THREAT, Page A%> f'mrQueen Suzanne Rubio. 20, Cost<1 Mes a. will reign as Qu~en of the Orange Counl y f air following her select ion for the honor during weekend competition. A former M1s!'- Newport Beach. she work~ al Dis nevland as an a rtist and attends Orange Coast College. Irvine Cops Hunt Suspects in Heist Irvine police today hooed an all-points police alert would turn up.~an attractive woman who lured a French·Canadian news cameraman ore the freeway Sat"rday so her two male companions could rob hJm. The woman. who wore a short Levi skirt and a form -revealing sweater, pretended her car was broken down and stood on the s houlder of the San Otego F reeway, near J effrey Road, waving al can for help. VlctJm Andre Gnrit'py, 34, ot Vlralnla, on aulgnment In ~ J An•elea for the c_;,nadtan Broadcasting Co. and staying al a Newport. Beach Hotel. steered his rented 1977 Cadillac off th • road al the sight or her He later told police she leaned next to his car window and told him her car was n't worktna Gatlepy followed her to the light blue Ford Pinto halchbotk sedan. and llft.ed the hOOd As he dtd , two me n a p proacbed hlm. On<? had o gun Gariepy said he couldn't see them clearly \n lbt' 4 45 a.m darkness. but sald they climbed out of e roadside ditch. (See LUBE, Pace AZ> ~ Seriously Sanl:.s 1\n:.s police tod;iy are invest igating lhc p re-d a wn shooting death of a woman an<! the ser ious wounding of her male companion. Details of the hom icide wen · sketchy and thl! vi ctims remain unidentified as investigator~ .. woopcd down on the shooting :-.ccnc It was the park in~ lot outs1dt tht• Ancient Manner restaurant • ht 300 N Tustm Av!! Initial reports indicate tht' man and \\.Oman were together 1n an automobile parked outsidL the restaurant when accosted by tht•1r assailant Early reports ;i lso ind icated the man was shot as he sat 1ri th(• a uto The same reports s howed lht wo m an apparently was either dragged from the auto or ran fro m 1t 111lo a neighboring pa rking lot. She fell mortally wounded on the pavement and was dead at the scene while her companion was taken to Santa Ana Tustin Community Hospital where he. r (•p o rt edly 1s in c ritical condition Pohce investigators said when the wo man left the car s ht crossed the city boundary into Tus tin a nd that th~ slaying therefore 1s under dual pohct· (Sff SHOTS, Page A2> Coast Weather Night through m id · m o rn ing low c lo uds . otht•rwise fair through Tuesday. Lows tonight 58 to 62. Highs Tuesday In up- pe r 60s at the be:.iches to upper 70s lnland INSIDE TODA~ f'ourte~n ,.Amtah fom1he!i move to 30uthtm Wa'Scons1n wh~e tlwy seek better 09 portunittea Story Page AB. 41YMr'l9""1W ... ""' l lltl!Mtt C.ln.tlttlt Cleu111_. c..-10 c:,. ..... DHllllHlk" •.. ..,,.., ..... •~t.ru1-, .... 111t ladex • l l ( '· .u DA.IL Y Pll.0 T s Monday July 10. 1978 Fish Harvested Soviet fisherm e n at a collective farm h a rvest sturgeon, from which caviar is ex- tracted. Some 10.000 Lons of fish come from fa r ms like this one in Guryev region. Missing Bodies Found Pair Held in Murder of Texas Family WINNIE. Texas <A P > -Five mem hers of a family missing from a blood-spattered rural home here since July 1 have been found buried in a wooded area. and a woman was charged today with one count of murder tn the case. police s aid. and a ma n is in custody Authorities said a former in· law c harged in connection with the dis appearance directed them Sunday ni g ht to the gravesite in neighboring Jef· ferson County. Joe Dug~ 31. of Port Acres. has been he ld in Chambers Countv Jail in Anahuac in lieu of $500.oOO bond. A prepared statement from the Chambers County s heriff's offi ce said, "Positive identifica· 'Too Young' Patty Won't Tell All ATLANTA <AP> -Patty Hearst. resisting sug· aestions that she write about her life. says she's t oo young to write an autobiography. .. . .. People tell me I should write a book. Mi ss I rearst. who is sen·ing a prison sentence at t~e Federal Correctional Institution in Pleaseinton. said in an 1ntcr\'icw w it h the Atla nta J ourn al· Constitution. .. My f celing has been that anything that smacks of an autobiography at 24 is arrogant to :.ay the least. .. Mi ss Hearst a lso said s he continues to be fascinated. as well as puzzled. by her trans formation from newspaper heiress to revolutiona ry. Miss Hearst i~ serving a seven-year sentence for her part in a bank robbery staged by the re\'olu · lionary Symbionese Liberation Arm y. She will be eligible for parole in 14 m onths. Ohio Gas Rupture Hurts 37 Workers CHILLICOTHE. Ohio (AP> - Gas pouring from a ruptured chlorine line at the Mead Corp. inJur£'d 37 workers today and forced evacuation or about 300. authorities said. F ire officials s aid a lane feeding liquid chlorine from a railroad lank car to a s torage faci lity near the pulp mill and b ol ler house of the paper com p any ruptured a l midmorning. Wo rkers In the ar ea were evacuated as a valve at the tank car was capped. Assistant Fire Chief Howard Hendershot said the chlorine turned to gas when Outage Hits Town BURBANK <AP) -A burned· out transformer at the main electric power genera ting sta· tion knocked out electricity in this community of about 83,000 for about four hours early today. s pokesm an for the Burbank Department of Wate r. Light a nd Power said ~~~~~~~~-- 0 AAN0 E COASl' ~ DAILY PILOT ~0t,....co~n• ()ltty p,._. wtitl'I~"''',..,.. bont<I , ........... , Prt\\, "°""'""'° .... ,,...,Or M'ttr CM\ll'llll'•"'•"9C-••• S.-modtl-"'• f:lllJbh4.Nd MclftCl .. f tf'lfO\IGi' ,-,~9 fOf C..f4 --..u Nt •PO'I 8•Mft t4Uf'ltlftCJtOft 8f.CPll f.~ '•"' VAlltY •'"'"t SeOOltb«ll ¥111.-. •ftd ~t l!f>.t<fl ~l•Coou '-'~'"' ..... '"°' t'til\ I\ owbH\ht-CI \•tw•41t \ .., ~' '""' ~:.t0~~~~'1.~i,~lz.::i.."" '' •·• "_,, __ _.,t\•ttitM•"CffllvWl~I JK-" C•lt• \h(, ...,,,, .. ,_,•I'd Gt""•' w~ .. ott 0 ...... ,0 ... 11 l!fllOI TMMt•A M....,...,,. IOl•••01"9 !1111.., CMf .. '" ~ 111<~..il' !UM "'"'"'°"' '°"'"•Ol"Ofel<lor• 0«1e .. Co\l.,M•• )JOWO\I h•'W .. I l.Al ..... t .. .t<ll ll .. 0•-•••M'"I H....il"OIOft l .. <11 1111' lloo<~ !llwlt•t•-,,_lte.<• Vtll*f HIGI u P•1 ll- ol """ o .... ~•-h l'.....,. (7t 41 e..2-4321 CleHltled Advertlelng"2·M11 ~·-•Vtllt,-Ot•oC• 111-e110 ·-~c .. -4....., _.. __ ,.o..,...c;o,,.,,,~lt ... '40-1220 C.'1'•i:-~ :.::. ~ .. <:t:!,.=:."!\.~, ~''' •t eeYft•tttMt~n Mt•lft ;;;~, .. ,.., ..... c.. ......... , .-.c••• .. '"''".._ .. C-.Ytitfll-• liM•fMI ctau .. ,, ... N fd Ail Co••• Wt• (:4 1tfAtftl• \w•u,t•tllft b't t•t t••t U \6 =~~~~·a:~:~.;· f'MI''"'~ .,,,,,,,,, ifhit the air and was allowed lo dissipate. Twelve people were admitted to intensive care but were listed in fa ir and good condition. Medical Ce nter H ospital President Wayne Foster said. He said 25 others were treated in the emer gency r oom of the hospital. Fire officials said workers returned to their jobs a t about noon. War Exercise At Pendleton CA MP PENDLETON (AP> - A t raining exer cise Involving 17.000 men. 24 warships and 250 helicopters and planes began to· day. A major beach landing by 7,000 Marines is scheduled Wed· nesday. The 10-day exercise under the eyes of s everal m ember s of Congress was supervised by Maj. Gen. Charles Cooper and Rear Adm. Richard A. Paddock. Fro• Page A I TIIREAT ••. second or third time he had had a hearing." On a normal workday, some 35,000 people work ln the entire World Trade Center complex, located on the southern tip of Manhattan. The twin, UO·atory towers are the world's second talles t buildin11. after Chlca1o's Sears Tower. Malaysian Wim KUALA LUMPUR. Malaysia <AP> -National elccUons gave a reaoundln, victory lo Prlme Minister Hussein Onn and the coalition of ethnic parU• U.at has dominated Malayalan · poltUcs alncc l~ federation's blrth in 19ft. lion was established as mem· bers or the Phillips family miss· mg from their residence in Win· nie, Te xas, since July 3." The victims were identified as Bis hop Phillips, 64 ; his wife Ester. 66; a son Elmer. 31 ; his wife Martha ; and their 4-year· old son J ason. The latter three lived in Woodward. Okla .. and we re vacationing in Winnie. Dugas was once married to a daughter of the elder Phillips. Justice of the Peace Jack Cr avy. wh o co nd ucted a graves ide inquest , said the bodies were close together. "The sha llowest grave was 18 inches and the deepest was 4 lo 5 feet. .. A utopsics were ordered by Cravy. and J efferson County pathologists took cust ody of the bodies Cravy said authorities were not certain what motivated the killings . Dugas· brother. Richa rd Lee. has said in a s worn statement that Dugas told him on July 4 that he had kidnapped the Cami· ly at gunpoint J uly 1 and had taken them to a "prepared gravesite." Let> said Dugas told him he was in the company of a woman at the time he abducted the family Linda Mac Burnell. 30. was arres ted at her h ome in Nederland today and charged with capital murder before State Dis trict Judge J ack Cravey. lier conncctton to the case was not immediately known. Dugas had previously denied having anything to do with the family's disappearance. The disappearance was dis· covered whe n o ne of th e Phillips' sons returned from a weekend trip to Houston and found the house blood-spattered but vacant. Newport Cops Seeking Lead On Nude Man Newport Beach poli ce today sought leads on a naked man who threatened a Newport S h o r es woman over th e weekend . 'fhe J6.year -old victim told police she was walking on Newport Shores Drive at about 9 p. m . Friday when the incident occurred. She said the man pulled his truck into an alley in front of her a nd jumped out. He ordered her to commit an unnatural sex act or he would shoot her. The woman said sh e r an anyway and heard the truck driving orr. Youth Buried In T-shirt SAN DIEGO CAP) -J ohn Mayes ki, 16, has been buried In a T-shirt with the name of his favorite rock mus ic group. Aerosmith. Inscribed on t he back. "I wanted his friends to see him 3S h e was," Kathryn Mayeski aald at the rosary Sun- day for her M>n. who was shot to death by kidnappers . Police said Mayeski and his friend, Michael Baker, were killed at Mayeski 's car 11hortly bdore a bank holdup last Wed· neaday. Baker. also 16, was buried Saturday. The bo)'8 were nei1hbors. Ac· cused of murdering them are Rober\ Hatti«, 2S, or Visalia and his brother. Daniel. 18, who were both In San Die10 County Jail after t.'.elr arraignment. Postal Pact Viewed Federal Mediators Enter Stalemate W ASHI NGTON CAP > - Federal mediators stepped into the stalled negotiations today between the Postal Service and unions representing more than 500, 000 emplo~ees. The Federal Mediation a nd Conciliation Service entered the talks with 10 days remaining in a three-year contract. T here has been no agreement on any ma· jor point in the nearly three· month-long talks. Postal labor leaders. who have expressed resentment al White House "jawboning" in an effort lo hold clown inflationa ry effects of the postal contract, welcomed the entry by chief mediator Wayne L. Horvit z. "I am hopeful that the pres· encc or Mr. Hor vitz will move the talks off dead center." Prest· dent Emmer Andrews of the American Postal Workers Union said today. The outcome is important to Pres ident Carter because more workers are involved than in any other labor contract up for negotiation this year . a nd because the settlement may set a patte rn for future labor negotiations. The talks have been under way since April 20. Both sides pledged continuous talks start· ing today. Horvitz said. in a statement. .. A Her talking with both sides privately. and exploring the cur· rent status of the talks. l have concl uded that the time has ar· rived for serious mediation ef· forts." James LaPenta. of the mail handlers d1v1 ~1on of the Laborers International Union. said Friday that "we·re at a real. real impasse .. Postmaster General William F . Bolger says he is confident there will be no postal s trike. an AP Wlr ...... lt To Geiaeva Secreta ry of State Cyru~ Va nce says he'll be going to G e n eva Wed ne s dav for strategic arms talks d°es pitt' U.S. cancellations of othe r meetings with Soviets t o protest mistreatment of db s td en ts. action that is illegal. In 1970. how ever. posta l employee~ st<.1ged widesp r ead local walkouts and former President Nixon called out federal troops to move the mail. F,.._PageAI LURE ..• They ordered Gariepy into the ditch. told him to lie down and . empty his pockets. Gariepy did and gave them a SS bill Disgusted. they also took hi-; wa llel. watch and bracelet Gariepy valued the loss at $350 They also stole his car. and the woman drove off in her Pinto .• Gariepy climbed out of the ditch. n agged a motorist and reported the crime to polic" fro m a nearby res taurant telephone Ile described hts robbers as black and in their 20s . The woman. he said. was about 5-fool-Cive, the men s1x·two and five·seven and of medium build with beards and moustaches E verybody. hl' said. wore dar k beanie caps Visit Canceled WA SH I NGTON CAP t - Barbara Bl um. deputy director of t he Environmental P rotection Agency. ha~ canceled a week· long offlc1al v1s1t to the Soviet Union. citing "deep disappoint· men' .. over the trials oft v;o SO\· 1Cl J ~wish act1v1sts Brooke Probe Finished U.S. Senator May Face Perjury Charges ROSTON (AP 1 T he in· vest1galton has been completed to determine whether a grand j ury should consider possible perJury charges agains t U.S Sen. Edwa rd W . Brook e. authorities said today. M iddlt>Scx County District Al· torney John J . Droney s aid he would make public his findings at a news conference Droney l aunched the pre liminary inves tigation somc three weeks a{to. s ayi ng he would have t o study all evidencl' in the case before r ecommend· ing whether the re was sufficient cause to take the matter to a grand jury. Brooke. who •~ running for re election this vear . defe;,it ed Droney. ;,i Democrat, 1n the 1972 race. The matter was referred lo Droney by Probate Court Judge Law re nee Per e ra who found E'ro• Page AJ SHOTS. • • jurisdiction. However . Santa Ana officers ar(' taking the lead role in the investigation and the search for a possible suspect. Police said they did not know lhe relation sh ip of the two \'lctims and indicated they did not believe the shooting was a result of marital entanglement. They ruled out the possibility that the d ual shooting was anything like a murder·sulcide Santa Ana police r e ported receavmg the em ergency call at 4·20 a .m . th at t h e Massac hu sett s R epublican had m a de f ats<.> statements on sworn documents in connection with his divorce case. Brooke. the Judge found . had misstated both the source and the amount of a loan the senator claimed to be S49.000 Perera p<.'rmitted Mrs Brooke to reopen the divorce actwn because of those fa lse s tate ments. A hearing 1s scheduled fo r Thursda y in the d ivorce case The d ivorce would ha vl' become final June 15. but will have to be tried again and a new property settlement worked out by the senator and his estranged wife Remigia Perera r eopened the e a ~c following published reports that Brooke had lied on hi~ s worn statements. Brooke said in a deposition he owed $49.000 to Hoston liquor dealer A. Raymond Tye He later Gunman Robs Store in HB A s ho.-t. tanned bandit. wea ring a red bas(!ball cap. robbed a Huntington Beach party s upply s t o r e S unda y afternoon and n ed on foot with $155 in loot. police reported The fi ve-foot. two·mch tall bandit forced two female clerk!. into t he back room of Glee·s Party Shop. 5886 Edinger Ave .. while brandishing a pistol The incident occurred at I. 35 p m . police said. A customer telephoned police but the bandit had fled the scenc by the Ume officers arrived. admitted in court that he owed only $2.000 to Tye and that he owed the estate of his I ate mother-in-law some $37,000. F ro,,. Page .-1 l TRIALS .•. fabrications defaming the Soviet L'nion ... including wo rks by ('X tled Soviet author Alexander Solzhenitsyn ~l rs G1ni burg s aid th~ 1nd1c tm ent m e n t io n ed Solz h cnits yr ·c; "Gu l ag Archipelago ... among others. Gmzburg. like Shcharansky ..i .J l'.'w . mana)!cd u fun d Solzhenitsyn finance:-. lo aid thl' ram ll1e!-of Soviet po l1lil'<.ll prisoners. Two other trials also got under way today. o ne i nvolv1n ~ Lithu<1nian hum an rig h ti. aet1v1sl Vikloras Pyatkus ancf I h <.> other a my<;tery fi gurt' accused of spying and identified by thl' Sovi(•t press only as "A. F il atov " Me mbe r s of tht• d issident movement said they had never heard of him Shcharnnsky. a computer expert. also w;,is charged with giving a foreign slate assistance by conducting hostile activitie" ~gainst the Sovtel Union and with ant1·Soviel agitation and propaganda Th£' U S. Embas!.v sent second secretaries to the ·Shcharansky and Ginzburg trials "to show our concern and the concern of the people of the United States in these tnals." Both were barred from the courtrooms and stood outside with foreign reporter" and members or the dissident movement. You're Invited to Our First Ever Major I Savings to 50% Off On Our Entire Selection of Suits & Sportcoats! Equally Great Values On Our Famous Selection of Neckwear, Shirts, Trousers & Sportswear. 46 Fashion Island. NcwPort Booch Cn4) 640.aJlO --------------·- Orange Coast EDITION Today"s Closing N.Y. Stoeks , ·-"VOL 71, NO. 191, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JULY 10, 1978 C TEN CENTS Mesa By MICHAEL PASKEVJCH Ot -D.llly l'llol $'-ff Costa Mesa City Councilmen wlll eye the fine print of the city's post-Jarvis financial pic- ture at a public meeting set for 2 p.m . Tuesday at City Hall. Having been presented last week with a budget that calls for a 14.9 percent reduction in city f?X penditures for next fiscal year, the council mus t now •·. Woman Slain In SA Santa Ana police today are in· ves tigating the pre-dawn s hoot· ing death of a woman and the serious wounding of her male companion in the parktng lot of a restaurant Details of the homicide 9.'e re sketchy and the identity of the dead woman remained un- known. The wounded man has ten- 1 talively been identified as Mike S. Reynolds, age unknown, of Long Beach. Initial police reports indicate the man and woma n wer e togethe r in an automobile parked outside the An cient Mariner restaurant al 330 N. Tustin Ave. Police s aid the pair were ap- parently shot by an assailant who fled the scene. No motive has been established in the 4 . .20 a.m. murder. The rear window of Reynolds' late-model car was blown away and its owner struck by two _ bullets. His woman companion ap· parently tried to escape the al · tacker on foot and was s hot about 100 yards from the auto. police said. She fell mortally wounded on the pavement and was " dead al the scene while her companion was taken to Santa Ana-Tustin Community Ho~pital Reynolds was reported m critical cond1· tion. Police investigators said when the woman left the car s he crossed the c·1ty boundary into Tus tin and that the s laying therefore 1s under dual police jurisdiction. However, Santa Ana officers are taking the lc<td role m the in· vestigation and search ro r a possible suspect Flames Char SD Hotel SAN DIEGO IAPl -Fire chased more than 100 people from a Mission Bay hotel early today. No tnJunes were re po rted. The fl a mes destroyed one wing of the Catam aran Hotel on Mission Boulevard and sent • s moke damage throughout the res t. spokesmen said. Firty firemen were on the scene with mopping up expected to last all day. There was httle warning to the sleeping residents but "a thun· der ·like sound of ~lassbreak· ing. ·• a hotel employee said . The damage was estimated at ~ $250.000. The cause or the fire r was still being determined. . ~ I r HeLaruled -&rely RAMONA <APl -The sky rained nudists. includ· ing one who narrowly mis· sed hitting e chain link fence and landing in a tree. The best jump by one or the four parachutists Sun- da y was bf Pat Moorehead, wearing only a crash helmet and knee pads. He made a perfect landing in a big "X" on the ground. There we re several dozen spectators for the (irsl Miss Nude Galaxy P ageant won by Bobbi Oallo, ZT. of Long Beach. Becky Neilson of Eugene. Ore., was first runner-up. The other winners in- cluded Pam Johnston, 24, of Newport Beach, Miss PersonoJJty. I Council Views Jarvis Budget· make recommendations on specific city programs. As it stands now, the city's financial outlook because of passage of Proposition 13 doesn't call for any layoffs or major cutbacks. In fact, non-manageria\ city e mployees may see their paychecks fattened through normal pay raises for seniority and the proposed budget for police and fire protection is up $390,000 over last year. The proposed budget of $21.6 million to run the city next year also includes budget increases in general governme nt, public works and recreation programs. The decre ase fro m last year's budget of $25.5 million comes primarily from capital improvements which have been slashed more than 50 percent to a pfoposed $3.1 million. The city would keep $4.2 ............. NATALIA SHCHARANSKY HOLDS PHOTO OF HUSBAND Press Conference Held In Paris to Protest Trial Soviet Dissidents Plead Innocent MOSCOW \AP> -The Soviet Union put two leading djssidents on tria l today in cases that threaten to aggravate the growing tension in U.S.-Soviet re l ation s . Both pleaded mnocent. and the wire of one appealed to Washington for help ~ t hat she s aid could free her husband. Anatoly Shcharansky, 30, a key m e mber of the Jewish e mmigration movement here, rejected allegations that he spwo for the CIA and said he comlders them "absurd," his brother Leonid said. He faces a possible death penalty but is expected to get a lo ng term in labor camp if convicted. A 'court official s aid Shcharansky was accused of supplying agents with state secrets, "including information about the locations of a number of defense enterprises which are secret." In Kaluga. 100 miles south of Moscow, Alexander Ginzburg, 41 , a longtime human rights activist, pleaded innocent to a charge or anti-Soviet agitation and propaganda{ punishable by up to 10 yeprs at hard labor. But be teld the court he might modtly bi• plea if his guilt could be prov ed during the proceedings, his wife said. Wes tern reporters were barred'from bottl courtrooms. Shcharansky's wife, Natalia, told a news conference in Paris she believed further statements by Presldenl Carter and the Con gress mlgbt enable her husband to "be free and go out from Russia." She said she could not recommend specific actions that U.S. and otber world leaders could take. "I'm no politician," she said, but suggested that Congress pass a resoJution on the case. Mrs. Shcharansky, who lives in Iarael, said 1be went to Paris to help mobilize world o_ptnlon in her husband's case. She 11 to travel to Wuhinaton later this week to m eet wlth Vice President Walter F. Mondale. Speaklnl to reporters dur~ a receu at the Moscow trial, Leonid Sbchar1n1ky said his brother "lookcid well , self-confident and cheerful" and smiled at him. Ginzburg's wife, Irina, who saw her husband for the first lime since his arrest 17 months ago, told Western reporters, "He refused to testify but made this r efusal conditional on what witnesses said." f'ai r Qlleftl Suzanne Rubio. 20, Costa Mesa. will reign as Queen of the Orange County Fair f ollowlng her selection for the honor during weekend competition. A former Miss Newport Beach. she works at Disnevland as an artist a nd attends Orange Coast College. • million in reserve funds. City Manager Fred Sorsabal has asked councilmen not to seek any state "bail-out'' aid. The city would have to spend about S3 million to get $1 million from the state because of a clause that penalizes cities with reserves that account for 1Dore than five percent or the overall budget. Costa Mesa traditionally bas maintained a 25 percent reserve and the council has been asked by Sorsabal to keep it that way. In viewing the budget for the first time councilmen said the real financial crunc h from Jarvis is not expected to hit the city until the next two years. The council has asked for a 10 percent reduction in city staff by that time. Normal attrition already has reduced the city staff by about four percent and no new h.irtng is planned. The City Council will not be enacting any general property tax rate this year because of Proposition 13. The city expects to receive $2.2 million from property taxes, down 53.4 percent from last year 's property tax revenues. The $390.000 increase in the public safety program would go primarily for the purchase oC new police computer equipment. <See BUDGET, Page AZt 'We Want Facts'· CM Freeway's Future Eyed \ said he didn't see how the state panel could make a decision without at least some environ1 mental data -like how many families and businesses would have to be relocated. By KATHY CLANCY Ot U. o.ltr l'llet S ... ff Unless they are banded more facts than they have now, Orange County Transportation Commissioners said today, they will continue to fight a CalTrans proposal to erase any future ex· tension of the Costa Mesa Freeway from state highway maps. Costa Mesa Mayor Ed McFarland said during a county trans portation commission re· view of the freeway's status this morning that officials in his city want CalTrans to conduct an en· vironmental impact report before elirrunating the freeway. Drug I.ab leads to NB Arrest By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of IM o.lly ...... Staff A W.est Newport resident, whose neighbors 'became suspicious of the odor or ether coming from bis apartment, has been arrested on char ges of manufacturing and selling narcotics. Newport •Beach police booked Aaren John Burcham, 25, after a lleged ly finding what one officer described as a complete laborat.ory in his apartment at 7406 W. Ocean Front. Police claim that Burcham was making a cocaine substitute out of a compound called lidocaine. Narcotics investigator Mike Hietala alleged Burcham also had a pound of cocaine of undetermined purity in his a partm e nt w h e n h e w as arrested Friday evening. Burcham was booked into city Jail and is being held in lieu of $50,000 bai l. Hietala said Burcham t-0ld him he is to report to C hino Men's Prison next Monday to begin serving a term for a narcotics conviction banded down last year. Burcham was arrested after police we r e called b y an unidentified neighbor at about 5 p.m . who complained about the odor of ether coming from Burcham 's ocean front apartment. Officer Michael Hyams drove to the area and said he also smelled the odor coming from the residence. Hyams got Burcham to come 'to the front door and when he asked if he could check the apartment Burcham told him his girlfriend was asleep in the room from which the ether seem ed to be coming. Hy ams r e po rtedly told Burcham he feared for the girl's safely under those conditions a nd searched the apartment, finding the lab equipment and narcotics, but no girl. Hietala said today there was so much eq uipm e nt and paraphernalia confiscated that a truck had to be borrowed so the bulk of material could be taken to the Sheriff's crime lab in Santa Ana. Most of the chemicals and narcotics were take n to the police station and Hietala said he Would be spending the next few days taking inventory. POETS LABOR TO PAY BILLS Man does not Uve by bread alona, but even poets have to make a lMna end they find ll dllficult in toda,y1s world. See Featurtna. Page Cl. \ '1 It has been on state drawing boards since 1944. But Robert Datel, CalTrans regional director. said he views preparation of such a. report as too time·consuming. "What we are saying . . . we have a pretty good hunch that this is fantasyland that we are ever going to bui ld this freeway ... Datel said. So far . the Californi a T r ansportation Commiss ion hasn't started the process of rescinding the freeway route down Newport Boulevard through the heart or Costa Mesa Al Hollinden. chairman of the Orange County commission. Between now and Aug. 14. of. fie 1 a Is from Costa Mesa, CalTrans and the county agreed today, they \./ill try to come up with some facts and figures that can be used to help the stale Transportation Commission de· termine the freeway's future. Datel said the item awaitmg presentation to the stale com- mission will just begin reviews leading to rescinding the route. <See FREEWAY, Page A2> •ut ERTON Pl ACENTIA BUENA PAR~ ANA ~IM ® ST~NTON @ GAA "' GR MAP SHOWS ORANGE COUNTY SANITATION DISTRICTS Sewer Charges Proposed to Offset Effects of Prop. 13 $5 OC Se-wer Fee Topic of Hearing A public hearing is scheduled July 19 on a proposal to charge a flat user fee of up to $5 per month for sewer ser vices throughout Orange County. The flat rate would affect 1.5 million citizens ift 23 of the 26 cities served by the Sanitation Districts of Orange County. The only areas not affected by the sanitation proposal would be Laguna Beac h. San Juan Capistrano, San Clemente. Irvine and the Saddleback Valley. Up to now, each of the seven sanitation distt'icts has collected revenue from property taxes. But officials say that dis tricts may be required to change over to a flat rat e s p e ci a l assessement be ca use of the passage oC Proposition 13 which limits property taxes to 1 percent of the 1975·76 assessed valuation. General Manager Fred Harper said today that the district prefers to continue with the past assessment practice but that a great deal of legal uncertainty clouds the issue. "That fiat rate charge would be a standby measure.·· Harper said. "We would prefer to stay wtth the past assessment practice because it ls more equitable." Harpel' pointed out that some small usU"S would pay slighUy more if lbe flat rate fee ls lml>OMCS. Ae added that owners of . \ • property with high assessed• valuations will have a reduction in costs. Har per said that the districts~ would collect about $17 milliol\' by the flat rates. , Sanitation district officials \ a lso are propos ing that th~ county tax collector collect thet flat rate revenues. Coast Weather Night through mid· morning low clouds. o the rwise rai r through Tuesd•f· Lows tonight 5& to 62. Highs Tuesday in up. per 60s at the beaches to upper 70s inland. INSIDE TOD-4 Y Fourteen Ami&h familiea move to southmt WfscOMfn. where tlwtl ttek better op. portunitiu. St~ Page AB. •••• ! I ~ r I I t J t>All'r PILOT Hearing Probes Radials WASHINGTON <AP 1 A 1House subcommittee ts resum- lna hearings on tho Fireston·e 500 Stttl Beltod Radial Ure, which the 11overnment olatm11 Is 110 unaafe It should be rocalled. Fires tone ofticia l s a r e scheduled to le!Jtify today before t he House lnteratato and i',orclgn C'.omrnerce committee's overal9ht P•ncl. The aarne lfUb· «O m m It tee conducted hearings m May. The Transportation t>ep1i1rt· m ent said Si.turday that the tires "have l1tlled in 11ignlticant numbers" and recommended that tho firm recalJ them Im- mediately. Uut thCJ d~partmenL 's National Highway Trame Safety Ad· minlstrallon did not order the recall ror the 13 to 15 million tires estimated to be in use. A dete rmination will be made after a heiring Aug. 7 The company oppoHs the re· call, said Bernard W. F'razler, fi'ire11tone'11 public rc l1lion11 director ··There 1s no saftity-relaled reason for the public to be con- cernt•d ubout continuing lo use th e> Fires tone Steel Belte d lladiul 500 or uny other properly maintuined f·ire1tlonc-m1de ti re.·' he s u Id "Tht' 000 is pro- v Id Ing rcll a blP service to m lllion11 of motorn1tft today es it h11!4 ror year,; " The company <1ult muklng the top·of·the -llnc tire early last . Vt·ur \ -··· d•1' ca\en TONIGHT COSTA MESA PLANNING COMMISS ION R eg ular rncl'ting, Cily lla ll , 6:30 p.m . OCC SU MMER LECTURE "Stre~s Management ,"' forum, 7 30 pm TUESDAY, JULY 11 N EWPOllT·M ES/\ SCHOOL BOA RD Regular m eeting. CoRlu Mes a c ity coun cil l'humbers. 7 30 p.m OC(' SUMMER LECTURE · Exploring Antiq ue Lands. · Vine l\rts I 19. 7 30 p m "OTllERWISE ENG AG ED" Soul h Coast Re pertor y Thl'a tcr . Tu e~d ay Sunduy throu~h /\ui:. 1. 8 p m Federal Mediators Emer Talks W t\Sffl NGTON I AP l l-\·der.11 mN:lwtors ~tepped into llw :.t<•lll'd negotialion11 today hl't Wl'Cll th<' Postal Service and unions representing more thun 500 ,000C'mployees. The Federal Mediation and C.:onc11iation Service entered the talk~ wllh 10 days remaining in n t hree-yN1r contrnct. There has been no af(rccment on any ma- 1or point in the nearly three· m onth·long talk:.. Postal labor leaders. who have l"'(1>r()1111t'<l resentment ai While lloufte "Jawboning" In an offort to hold down inflationary effects of the postal contract . welcomed tht• entry by chief mediator Wuyne I. llorvlli ·( am hopeful lh<tt the pres- t'OCt' of Mr. llorvitt will move the tulks off dead center.'' Presi- dt•nt Emmer Andrews of the American Postal Workers Union snld today The talkis huve b\!en under way 11lncc April 20. Both sides r.iedaccJ conUnuou11 tulks start tttl toduy. OAANOE COAST DAILY PILOT , .... ,_, v ... "'"""""11fOt1111ttlMoo ...... '~:::."·~ t "J.."'::/.,..'\":1:.,,. 0.tt9' K Wtt Ill ..... It !NH """'"'"' ~···"" ... ...... ( (/11\.f j I OJ.J !O ru1111< 11o11 ... i 1 OJ o~o HOW C.TY IUDO!T PIE WOULD Bl! SLICED In ~•t• M•H, • Big ReHrv• H•IP• Out f'ront Page ,, J BUDGET •.• Public eafcty departments I police. fire. building safety> &c · count for 34.4 percent of city ex penses 1.ind employs 295 of the city '1 613 employees. Meas police. fire and other safety programs would operate on $7 ,453.080 I( the city budget was approved today. Public safllty spent S?.003,865 last year. General governmeht pro - grams would receive 14.269,950, a slight lncniuse over last year's sli ce of $4,1Z7,355. Public works. which Includes maintaining city streets, light· Ing and tramc e ngineering . would receive SJ,483.150 under the prop<>8ed budget. Last yea r the department operated on just over $3.2 milUon. Despite a loss of eight employees In Leisure Services. the department would operate on a budget of Sl.606.130, up from last year's expenditures of $1,558,470. The city will ~ operating with 19 fewer employees. As for pay raises ror non- managerial employees. Sorsabal today said he is askin~ the coun- cil to a bide by a '"m em orundum of understanding" signed with t'tly employees in November 1977 This agreement calls tor regular pay raises bas ed on seniority Newport Cops Seeking Lead On Nude Man N cwport Beach police today sought lt'ad!I on a naked man who threatened a Newport Shores w o mun ovt•r th e W('<'kend. The 36-ycar-old victim told police s he w.is walking on Newport Shores Drive at about 9 p. m , Friday when the incident occurred. She suid the m an pulled his truck Into an alley in front of her and jumped out. lie ordered her to commit an unnatural sex act or he would s hoot her. The woman said s he r an unywuy and hea rd the truck driving orr Underwater Device Eyed WASlJINOTON CAP ) Despite numerous ob11tacles, scie nti s t s will pla ce an e xperime ntal sens ing d evice 1 000 feet under the sen floor to e~c if It Improves 11tudieft of lhe enrth"s crust and monitoring or earthquakes. The device 'fill have to withstood underwater pressures of lens of thousands or pounds per sguare inch; it. will be difficult to p0eltlon In s uch a deep hole Md It won 'l be ea11y to get it out, National Science F'oundation o rrlclals said Sundoy. The Relsmlc device will be placed under water early next year. New York Hostages Seized NEW YORK <AP> -A man thre atening to detonat~ what he said was 80 pounds of dynamite with a hand 1renade and claim- ing lo 1peak only Polish was holdln1 four hostages -· one or them a judge -In tho World Tr ode Center today. authorities said . Thousands were evacuated from the building. Me mbers or the police hostuge negotiating team were talking to the man by telephone through a Polish Interpreter, according to police. More thon three hours after the siege began. the situation re- mained n l'llnndofr between the mun and police this afternoon. Lt. Frank Reilly. of the police department's Em ergen cy Services divl11ion. said eyewit- nesses saw the man holdinl( "a World War fl potato mashe·r I a ty pc of grena de)," in the hear· ing room of the stote Workmen's Compensation Board on the 36th floor of the ce nter's Tower Two The centC'r is the world's I argest <'Om mercial office building com plex. Several peopiC' said the man was a cl aimant and that his case had )USl been postponed for t WO m onth11 to allow neurological und orthopedic testing when he pulled oul the 11upposed potato masher. Reilly said the man also was seen pulling a "pushcart. on whic h h e 11ays h e has the dynumite " The hO!'ltagc11 were identified as a Judge. on attorney. u gt ate lnsunince representative and a court reporter Several thousand people were e vacuated from (Ive floors of the 110-story tower Two. Adellna Walker, a clerk In the he aring room who escaped. said the judge "had just told the man s attorney thut there would be a two-month delay for reports and then suddenly the man took un object out of a bag and r walked out the door." Ms. Walker described the man 1ts In his early 3011 with a Northern European accent and dressed In casual c lothing. She said this was "at leas t the 8econd or third lime he had ha< a hearing." On a normal workday, some 35.000 people work In the e ntire World Trade Center complex. located on the 11outhern tip of Manhattan. The twin. 110-story towers are the world's second tallest buildings, urter Chicago's Scars Tower. Me!a Police Set Auction Saturday Bikes. tape decks, CB radios. Jewelry and other unclaimed Item" will be 1old to the hlahest bidder at an auction Saturdar ut th e Costa Me11a Pol ce Department. The auction begins at 10 a.m. at the police 3taUon. 99 Fair Drive. 'Too Young' Patty Won't Tell All ATLANTA CAP> -Patty He arst, re1l1tin1 IUI· gcstioni that she writ~ about her Ufe, H)'S 1hc'1 too young to write an oulobiography. "l>eoplc tell me I should write a book." Miss Hearst. who is aervlng a prison sentence at the fo'cderol Corrcctlonol lnstuulion In Pleasanton. said In an Interview wi t h the Atlanta Journal· ConstilutJon. "My feeling has been that anything that smacks or an autobiography al 24 Is arrogant to SU)' the lt!Ml." MiH Hearst ol•o said she continues to be f Hc1naltd, 11 woll a& puzzled, by her tranAform1Uon from ne~paper heiress to revolullonani. Ml11 Keaarat i• aerving u !e\'en·year Stntenct for her part tn a b.-nk robbery stas~ by the revolu- tionary Symbloncae Llberatlon Army. She wlll be eligible for parole In 14 month . ( BroOke 1'uling Canceled BtJLL£TIN BOSTON CAP> -Alter a three-week lnvestlg1Uoa lnto whether Sen. Edward Brooke abould be charged wt&b perjury, the Middlesex County dl1trld at· torney said today be bas no jurisdiction ln the case. District AUorney JOhft J . Droney, a Dernocrat who was defeated by Brooke In the 1972 Senate race, 1114 he ~ould take no furttMr aedoa on the matt~r beciauH any poeslblt olfenae OC· curred In Suffolk Couoty. BOSTON (AP) The tn· vestlgation has been completed to determine whether a grand Jury should consider possible perjury charges agoin11l U.S. Sen . Edward W. Brooke. authorities said today Middlesex County District At· torney John J . Droney uld he would make public hl11 llndln11 at a new1 conrerencc. Droney launched the pre· llmlnary lnvoatlgotlon ftome three weekR ago, saying he would hHvc to study all evidence In the cnKe before recommend· Ing whether there WI.lit sulficicnt cause to toke tho matter to a grand jury. Brooke, who 111 running for re- e lcctlon this your. defeated Droney. a Democrat. In the 11n2 race. The matter wos referred to Drone)' by Probate Court Judge Lawrence Perera who found that the Muuachusetts Republican had made false "tutem ents on ftworn documents In connection with his divorce ClllC. Brooke. the judge round. had ml1111toled both the itource and the amount or 0 loan the 11enalor claimed to bo 140,000. Perera pcrmlltcd Mr11. BrOOkl' to reopen the divorce action because of those false s tale· ment11 . A heartna 111 !4Chodulcd for Thun day In tht: divorce C8fte. The divorce would have become Clnal June 15, but will, hove lo be tried af(aln t1nd a new properly settlement worked out by the 11<.'tHator und hits c11trllnMed wife Rcmlj(lu. Mesa Housing Hearing Set By Committee Mc s<t "!'. !lousing a nd Com - munity Dcvt•lopmcnt Committee wall hold u public hearing Tues· day night to discuss progress In d evelo ping prog ram ~ to be financed wtlh fede ral funds With a fourth year grant of S852.000 from th1: federal office of Housing and Urban Develop· ment IHUD l. the local commit- tee has been working toward de· vclopment of u sub11ldlzed hous· ing project and a community center. The committee has been sur. \•eying sltc11 for low.cost ramlly hous ing. About 1500,000 or the HUD runds have been 11et aside for this project The function or Tuesday's m eetin~ is to r eceive public comm°"ts on the proposed ex- pendllurea and to hear 1u111es- tlon9 as to other way11 the funds could meet community needs. according to coordinator Tony Cannarlato. The meeting begin• at 7:30 p.m . •t the Costa Mou Co~ty Water Dh1trlct meeting room. 1965 Placentia Ave . Bomb Blaata In NY Center Nl:W YORK tAP > -A srnalt. crudely made bomb went ofr lhll morning In a stairwell of a building 1n Rockefeller Center on Lhc same n oor H 0 Soviet tourist ~ency. . . . Police suid no inJuneS or s tructural dam uge wer e cau sed by the explosion at 9:'5 a.m. PollC!t uld the stairwell wu on the eighth noor or the International Building nt 45 Rockefeller Plua. 't'hat noor Is occupied by o ffict!s or lntourls t . u Soviet tourlJt corparutlon. and the Parker Pen Co. Marine8 Held After Melee In Laguna Four Camp Pendleton Marlnea wero being held 1n Orange County Jill ovor lhe weekend aft.er a tl11t-swlngln~ fracH with police In Lufluna Beach Saturday night thal al· legedly Included one officer los Ing hi" revo l ver lo it leatherneck. Booked Into Oroniic County J81l on chargel'I of a11uult on u police ortlcer w e re Ricky Cornell. 19 , Steven Patrick L<.>onard. 19, Garry !\lien Besl. 22. Facing charie11 on suRplclon of unuult with u dc udly weupon on o police omccr 111 Gary L Field~. Police Slit. Terry Temple 1w1d Orrtcers Fred Martino and Doug John11on were wolkln~ root patrol In North Main Dench Pa rk at about H p.m . Saturday When they !18W three of the Marlnel'I alttlng on the bench drlnklnf( beer. When the officer" began citln~ two of the Marines (or being too youna to drink. the young m en began uraulng with the officer s At about that lime. police suld. Field purportedly got Into a wrestling match with omcer Martino. Rucce1111fully pulling the policeman'" revolver from Its holster and pointing It at thu of fleer. Martino gra bbed Field "!. gu nh and, und pus hed the weapon d~ep Into the s and to keep it from going off. Two m Ort' omccrs arrived and the four fighting Murlnc11 were subduPd und taken to Laguna Beach City J ail Marines Cornell. Leonard and Best were being he ld on SS.000 bail Field was being det ained on S25.000 bail because of the more isenous <1 llegat1onb FREEWAY. • During those reviews, he con- tinued, loeal orrtct1ls wlll be 11sked to comment and CalTrllns will present reports on the route. Mc rarland said he ls worried that onee the rescinding process ril•rt11 It will be hard to atop. "Most of the trarttc problems that we havt• ... are directly related lo the lack of completion or the inactivity on that portion ot the fl'oeway ," he contJnued. "We feel it completely stymies any solution thet we would want to initiate." McFarland said. He noted the rescinding r~­ vlew would affect only tho por 11on ol the freeway pla nnetl btltween Jiuy Street and Pacific Coast lU~hway. Without thttt part. he s aid. the rest of the freeway 111 u11eless as fa r alJ 11olvlng Costa Mestt traffic wous. Mc P'arland said it would be hnrd to m"ke a decision on the practicality or the route without an environmental study. "We can 't play on a hunch." he continued. "We have to de· pend on facts that we can look al Jnd hopefully make Hn In- t d I 1 !lent decision bas ed on that " D11td describe d ha s hunch iJbOllt the route's fut ure u~ an ed ucut cd guess ba!led on 30 yciJ rs· cxper1cn<'C' planning lrt'l'WU Y., up a nd down the :.tiJ le · · Bystander Nabs Suspect In Santa Ana Snntu Ana polico credited an unidentified motorlt1t with cap turing a hit-and-run driving 8\ls pe ct whose cur struck und killed u pedcstraun early lodoy. P olice said the m otorist ch<i:.cd the sus pect two blocks before forcing has auto to stop and then "kept him occupied .. until police urrwcd ldentlrled as the s uspect wa~ Francisco Pinedo, 30. of Santli An u P1nt><la was arrested and l.'h arged with vt>h1 c u lur m a n~laughtc r . drunk driving and felony hit und run driving. fnve11lh:talors early today were altt•mpUnl( to \dentlfy the man r1•portcdly hurlt•d 140 feet when ~truck by Pineda 's auto In thl· IWO block of West First Street 10 Snntu Ana Pineda W<t!> dravmg e ustbound on First Strt'et ut I :SO u.m . when h111 car asscrtedly hit the uniden- t IC1cd victim. a man described us a bout 40 years old, pohcc :.aid The fatally anJured man died 1n Mercy General Hospital about two hours uftt•r the accident. ar c·ordanJ( lo Polic(• 5 Cars in Irvine Crash; No One Hurt Five car s were tn an Irvine smashup at the lnter11ectlon of MacArthur und Jamboree Boulevards Sunday afternoon. none of the occupants was hospitalized. • Police said a car driven by Kim Lee Andrew11. 19. of 1071 Santa Cruz. Costa Mesa, crossed MacArthur on Jamboree and s lammed broadside into a pickup truck travelin g MacArthur The truck rolled over once. dumping Its load of grnvcl. ce ment ba g s and s t ee l reinforcing bars onto the top of a third car driven by Mi c hud M 11 ler . 29. of 809 rro montory Drive West II also struck a fourth c:a r CJrivt•n by Dana Street, 33. of Plucenlia . a nd s heared orr .1 left-turn street signal at its base f''urthcr. police said. a one-way s ign wa!> dctitroyed by the truck St reel '!i car was knocked i,,to u hfth cur, driven by Dennis Frost. 22. or Anaheim. Several persons were trealt:d at the scene for cuts . According to police reports . driver Andrews went through :.i red li ght ul MacArthur. You're Invited to Our First Ever Major I Savings to 5~ Off On Our Entire Selection of Suits & Sportcoatsl Equally Great Values On Our Famous Selection of Neckwear, Shirts. Trousers & Sportswear. Gentlemen's Clothlng 1 lnaplred by Trodltlon 46 Fashion ftklnd. Newport 9each .(714) 640-8310 O.lly ~Sutt ~ ..... LAGUNA BEACH CIVIC ACTIVIST EXPLAINS THE LAW TO A DOG NAMED BEAGLE John Gabriels Knows Hl1 Wey Around Art Coforiy P•rks And Munlc:lpel Code 'Dog a Slow Learner' Wgunan Pulls Out Stops to Fighl Fine By STEVE MITCHELL Ol U. D•llr Pl19' Sl•H John Gabr1els, Laguna Beach civic gadfly. had his day in court recently and left with both ha:. S30 bail intact and four cans of warm beer. It all started May J when the long-time Lagunan we1s stopped by an officer while we1lking on the beach in Laguna witb a girlfriend. a Labrador named "Beagle" and two-thirds of a six pack or beer Ga bnels was cited for ( 11 wa lking a dog off-leash on the beach. and (2l possession or :ilcohol on a public beach. But the fi csty Gabriels was not <1bout to cough up $30 in fines without a fi ght Instead, he sub- poenaed the police chief. two animal control officers, and the pres ident of the town 's Pet nes oons1bihty Committee. The subpoenaed quartet was JOined in So uth Co unt y Municipal Court by Gabriels, armed with sect.Jons of the city's m uniripa l code. a photo or "Beagle" the Labrador and friend J anirc J udgt• A1~1 r liarnl'tt listened patie ntly a!> tht.· two animal con· . trol officers explained the leash- 1 a w v1o lat1on . Jl e heard testimony from the police ch1d u nd the P ct Hesponsi bility !>pokesman Ga brtels wu1ted until the Assailant Stabs Cypress Store Clerk .... A Cypress market clerk was s tabbed by an assailant who lea ped from a storage room as the clerk opt'n('d the market Sunday mornmR Police said lhl' clerk, Kenneth Eugene Moore. 22. of Cypress. was in stable t·undit1on at a local hospital early todav A<.·cording to police. Moore was opening Ftizio' Market at 9937 Walker St., Cypress. when a m an Jumped from a storage room . repeatedly s tabbed him and then fled on root into a nearb y r es 1d c nl1 a l neighborhood. Police said they have not yet uncovered a motive for the ap· parc ntly unprovoked 8 a m . as· sault on the clerk Paper Firm Gas Rupture Injures 37 CHILLICOTHE. Ohio CAP) Gas pouring from a ruptured chlorine line at the Mead Corp. injured 37 workers today and forced evacuation of about 300, authorities said. Fire officials said a line feedin~ liquid chlorine from a railroad tank car to a storage facility near the pulp mill and boiler house of the paper compan y ruptured at midmorning. Workers in the area we re evacuated as a valve at the tank car was capped. Assistant Fire Chief Howard Hendershot said the chlorine turned to gas when If hit the rur and was allowed to' dissipate. Twelve people were admitted . to intensive care but were listed in f air and ftOOd condition. Medical Cen te r ltos plt"l President Wayne Foster said. He said 25 others were treat~ In the emergency room or the ho pltal. Fire orrtcinls ~aid -~kers returned to t:1eir Jobs .,~ .ibout noon. tcst1monv was comotete before playing his fir:.l trump card ''Your honor." he said. 'Td like to refer the court to Section 6.16 070 of the code." That section deals with work· 1ng dogs -those animals that do not need to be on a leash. Under that section "a hunting, obe- dience. tracking or show dog s hall not be considered un leashed while performing his duties." • • 1 was merely training my dog in obedience," Gabriels told t h e judge. Amidst g r oans. Gabriels admitted the dog is not a fast learner. Sure. replied the judge Seeing that maneuver go down m flames, Gabriels turned to hil> second line or defense. "T he dog is n 'l mine. it's hl'rS ... he s hrugged pointing to friend Jamee. To back up his claim. the pair brought out a rabies certificate and the "Beagle's" dog license. both made out in the name of Janice Elliott. "In other words." Gabneb continued, "the officer cited the wrong person ... Down came the gavel Case dasmis~'Ci. Turn now to lhc alcohol on beach violation. Gabricls argued that a city or dinance a llows one lo drink beer "with a bonafide meal. .. a t Heisler Park. He said he was en route to said bonafide meal in park sWToundjngs at the time of rus run-in with the officer. The charge was dismissed at the request of the Laguna Beach Police Department and the Dis lricl Attorney's office. "The way 1t was written." Gabriels explamed, "an old lady can be cited for walking home from the store with her bottle of sherry.·· You can see the logic in that And so could Judge Barnett. After dismissing the second case and ordering the police to return the four cans of beer. Barnett turned lo the former defendant. "Now Mr Gabri els." he began. "You've been very polite in your questioning of witnesses. but it's taken up a lot of court time. and the time of these peo- ple "In the interest of Proposition 13, please do not come back here" Tht> amateur attorney JUSt smiled But the Gabriels had hi s own kind words for the judge this week. "l feel Judge Barnett 1s a paragon of virtue in administer· ing j ustice in Orange County and I see g r eat Supre me Court potential " That should helµ next ltml' he's in court Gravesite Found Texas Pair Held In Slaying of 5 WINNlE. Texas <AP> -Five me mbers of a family missing from a blood-spattered rural home here since July l have been found buried in a wooded area, and a woman was charged today with one count of murder in the case, police said. and a man is in custody. Authorities said a former in- law charged in connection with the dis appearance directed t h em Sunday night to the gravesite in neighboring Jef· ferson County. Joe Dugas, 31. of Port Acres. has been held in Chambe rs County JaH in Anahuac in lieu of $500,000 bond. I\ prepared statement from the Chambers County sheriff's office said, .. Positive identifica· tion was established as mem· bers or the Phillips family miss· mg from their residence in Win· nie. Texas. since July 3." The victims were identified as Bis hop Phillips, 64 ; his wife Ester. 66 ; a son Elmer, 31; rus wife Marth11 : and their 4.year· old son Jason. The latter three lived in Woodward, Okla., and were vac,1tioning in Winnie. Ougas was once married to a daughtei-of the elder Phillips. Justice of Ute Peace Jack Cravy, who conducted a graveside inquest, said the bodies were close together. "The shallowest grave was 18 inches and the deepest was 4 to S feet." Autopsies were otdcred by Cravy. and Jefferson County pathologists took custody of the bodies. Cravy said authorities were not certain what motivated the killings. Dugas· brother, Richard Lee. has said in a sworn statement that Dugas told him on July 4 . that he had kidnupped the fami· ly at gunpoint July t and had taken them to a "prepared gra Yesite." Lee said Dugas told him he was in lhe company or a woman at the Ume he abducted lhe family. Linda Mae BurneU, 30. W8'1 arrealed at her home In Nederhtnd today and charged with ctlpllal murder before State --. .: District Judge J ack Cravey Her connection to the case was not immediately known. Dugas had previously denied having anything lo do with the family's disappearance. The disappearance was dis- cove r ed when one o f the Phillips' sons returned from a weekend trip to Houston and found the house blood-spattered but vacant. High Speed Chase Nets Trio in SC Two illegal aliens and one naturali zed citizen we re scheduled to be arraigned on smuggling charges today in San Diego's. federal district court following a ·high speed chase up I nters tate 5 through San Clemente Friday The chase, which featured speeds up lo 100 miles per hour, b egan , say offi c ials. when Armando Cardenas Camacho. 23, of Mexico, floored his 71 Pon· tiac past st artled U.S. Border Patrol Officers al the alien checkpoint south of San Onofre Officers chused Camacho onto Basilone Road where the alien driver was cornered and as- s.ertcdly backed into one officer, knocking him down. before s mashing Into a Volkswagon and another car. The officer was shaken up but not Injured. a spokesman said today . The chase continued up ln· t e rstate 5 to Calle Estrella. where Camacho headed Into the San Clemente Hospital parking lot and was captured. There were eight other illegal aliens In the car. a Border Patrol spokesman said, lnclud· Ing Juan Zamora. 17. identlril>d as the alleged guide for a .. idlghtly primitive version of a big-time smuggling operation. ~ . Monday. July 10. 1978 DAILY PILOT A:J' 4 Mayors Included .. 1,200 Backers Sig Petition for Spftrks'. Nearly 1.200 s ignatures from Laguna Beach residents are ex· pecte d to be presented l o Laguna Beach city councilmen Tuesday night supporting sus pended Police Chief J on Sparks. And s upport for the police chief. who was s u s p ended without pay in the wake of a bar fight June 29 at the Ivy House. has also come from four past mayors of the Art Colony who spoke with new City Manager Fred Solomon for a ha lf hour last Friday Solomon. who assumed duties July 1 and whose first action was to suspend the 42-year-<Jld police chief, was unavail able to comment on the impromptu meeting Friday al City llall Speaking on behalf of the police chief were former mayors JQn Brand. Phyl1's Sweeny. Charlto'h Boyd and Hoy Holm F ormer Mayor Ho lm. an eight.year councilman. said the ··common thread that brought us c the four mayors> befort' Solomon. was that all of us re cognize the chi ef has done an ex traordinary job m what has to ht.• one of the toughest police chief JObs in the state "Without really knowing all the details, wc wanted the new city manager lo be awcire of th<.• Cact that Jon's P<'rformance. at least from our point of view. was <.'xceedmgly good C:1 nd might bt.• very difficult to duplicate "Secondly. some of us shared with Solomon the thought that if Laguna Beach wa:. to take aC' hon in terminating Sparks, 1t was most certainly the end of his career "Again," Holm :.aid. "1f we ussume 1t was poor Judgment I on Sparks' part l or per hap::. s li ghtly worse. the real question remains whether a m an's career should be destroyed for an inci- dent like this.·· All four former councilmen were on the f1vc·member panel that appoanll•d the former Arizona pohcc chief Pbylhs Swc:ency. \.\ho was de fcated last March in he r bid for a second term on the council. ha::; be(•n acl1Vl' an th<' petition sign ing campaign on hehalf of lhe chief Yomh Buried In T-shirt SAN DIEGO IAP I J ohn Mayeski. 16, has been buried m u T-shirt w1Lh lhc name of his fa vorite rock mus ic group, Aerosm1th. inscribed on the back. "I wanted his friends to see him a s he wa5," Ka thryn M ayesk1 said at the rosary Sun- day for her son. who wa~ :.hot lo death byk1dnappl•rs Police !.aid Mayeski and has frie nd. Michael Bakt>r. wen• killed at Mayesk1's <.'ar s hortl}' before a bank holdup last Wed nesd av Bake r . also Ill, was buried. Saturday The boys wcre m·1ghbnr:-Al' eused of murdering them art Robert Jl arns, 25. of Visalia and his brother. Oaml'I. 18. who were both in San Diego County Jail after lhe1r arraignment She said ~upport for the chief has been strong, "and people seem quite eager to sign the petition ... she said today Mrs Sweeney s aid Solomon indicated to the four past coun- cilmen "that community input would be very important in his consideration of Jon's future "I think that wus very com· mend able of Solomon.·· s he con- tinued. "He certainly has a dif ficult pos ition. conside ring 1l wa s his fi rst week in town .. Meanwhile , realtor Jdy Murley said his group ha:. col· lected 1.187 petitions in support of the cruef and he plans to pre· sent them to the city council al the beginning or Tue:.day s 6 pm. meeting .. r ex peel a few other people Ill town will be there to see how tht.· council responds." Murley said today . Sparks pleaded innocent last Thursday to a s ingle misde meanor count of battery follow ing a bar fight June 29 in which he allegedly s hoved a carnation into the face of a fellow bar patron Wilnes~es said the chief then pushed a table into the che:.t or Delbert Mathieson. 31, of Costu Mesa. and pummeled ham on lhl' face and head with his f1:.ts San Diego Transient Viejo Body Traced By Fingerprints The partially clad body of a man dumped in the fast lanes of northbound Interstate 5 in Mis s ion VieJO Thursday has been identified as Ke ith Arthur Klingbeil. 23. a San Diego County transient Orange County Sheriff's in· vestagator~ said this morning Klingbeil was ide ntified over the wt>ekend by the FBI through fingerprints S h-e r iff's off1c1als said. however, they still have made• no advance5> in investigations in vo l va n g two o the r bo di es dumped in unincorporated coun· ty areas during June Investigators are stall awa1ltn~ toxocolog1cal re ports on the death or Camp Pendleton Manne R1<.'hard Allen Keith, 20, whose nude body was found June 19 on Moulton Parkway in an isolated section of Laguna Hills Still unidentified. an official said. 1s the body of another man found Jun1.: 27 m an orange grove near El Toro Manne Corps Air Station Inves tigators now belie ve the man was an illegaJ alien and may never be •den· tified The victim bled to death ftom a neck wound at first bel le\led to Truck Crushes Toro Driver The drive r of a Toro Disposal trash truck was crushed to death beneath the side of his vehicle at about 9:30 a m. today when at overturned nea r Prima Oesht>cha County Dump a bout four miles east or San Juan Capistrano Orange County parame1cs working to removf' the still un- 1dcnt1fled driver -;a id he was dead Witnesses said they believed the driver wa~ thrown from the doorless cab when thl• truck wentoutofcontrol Toro Disposal officials. based 1n El Toro. were still mvesti~al· mg 'the cau!!e of thc accident . The company colle<.'ls t ra!-h m El Toro, M1ss1on V1cJO, LJguna Hills and Orange b<• a gunshot His band:. wer\• strapped behtnd his back with 1:1 belt, investigators said. Klingbeil. who was dumped from a vehicle on Interstate s near Le1 Paz Road, was found by motorists at 3:30 a .m . Thursday Records show he apparently was ..,till alive when found shirtless on the freeway but wa:. reported dead on arrival at a local hospital Investigators said this morn- 1 n g that Klingbeil seldom worked and apparently lived on money provided by family mem- bers. He migrated between San Diego County. where his mother resides in Chula Vista. and Everett, Wash where hi:. father lives . Officers now are attempting to find persons who saw him last. His mother. investigator<> said. last saw him about three week~ <igo In vestigators said Klingbe1 1'' left nipple had been burned off his chest. a ppa rently with .1 car's cigarette lighter. CaUS(' or his death. however. is still un known pending results of a lo'C 1c•olog1cal r('port Swlen Trirek Recovered From Lake Whoever stole a Midway C1ly Sanital.Jon District service tru<.•k Saturday ni gh! JUSl kept on lruckin' into the lake at ,, Westminster graveyard, polit:t· said today The little foreign 1mpor1 i>•ckup was exhumed from th1 · pond :it Westminster Memorial Park a nd Mortuary Sunday and rNurncd to the agency that own!. II Investigators said the degrct· of damage lo the stolen veh1 cll· taken from the lot al 144!'11 Ceda rwood St . Westminster was s till being assessed today Police indicated whoever took the pickup apparently wa:. JU'>t 1oyridan).(. our bcz,st s<Z.l hng U,blcz.cloth rmta to ~ wrth 8 5 color var. :y or Op cord long P,?nts . go for th q,,al th1aj Ott.In pacific 44 fashion Island, newport center 644·50?0 A.j DAILY PH.Or Jost Coasting Mond4y J"'' HI 197!l Q ;:-...~ ~ wicb" r Tom Morphine A Revolting Tax BOSTON GAS PARTY: Just the other day. a newl> dis patch circulated in our region suggesting that two or our regional government agencies are considering some new taxes. The proposals were attributed to a pair or outfits known as the Southern California Association or Govern ments, known as SCAG ror short, and the South Coast Air Quality Management District, which doesn't have a s hort. According to the report, these two outstanding bodies are considering new ways lo clean the air. The new way would be with higher taxes and fees upon t he already· battered motorist. One consideration allegedly involved a $1 12 per gallon gasoline tax. ~ LET'S JUST LOOK at what that kind or a levy would do to the poor working stiff who is compelled to drive his family heap every day to get to his job. Let's say he's paying 70 cents a gallon for fuel now. in· eluding a large chunk of existing gas taxes. rr gelling to work consumes a modest 12 gallons a week, he's right close to s pending $36 per month just to get on the job Add a $1.12 per gallon t ax and for that same 12 gall ons. he'll have a fuel bill of roughly $91 per month. The bureaucrats apparently believe that this will fore<' t he working man to take a bus, walk to the job or j ump on a moped may~. But it's too far for most people to walk, Commuters at Rtuh Hour After New Gasoline Taxes the bus lines have largely failed to provide a viable alternative and some people just can't handle a two· wheeled puddle jumper. SO ntAT WOULD L EAVE a large group of work· mg stiffs with tripled gasoline bills-period. Now one SCAG official was qU'lted as saying the $1 12 gas tax craziness was "d' liber ~Y outlandish" so 1t would provide a point from wl some tax could be negotiated. That's like saying the best a , :oach to a citizen is to threatened to clobber him over t .. " head with a 10-pound wooden club. Then the burea ucrat smiles and says sweetly, "Hey, you're s uch a nice guy, I've decided not to whip you with that big, old nasty club. "instead, l'm just going to whack you a little bit with this rubber hose. See how much better that reels?" The citizenry, thus whipped rather than battered. ts then expected to fall upon its knees in gratitude. YOU WOULD THINK that public officials would have learned something about taxes after the recent California revolt. But some or them seem to be very slow learners Maybe next they'd like to see an initiative where the c1llzeory outlaws all gas taxes and sales taxes. The populace has already taken the dub away from the bureacrats once and hit them over the head with 1t How many blows does 1l take to get their attention? Lo11do11 Tall" Sadat Waives Egypt's Plan VIE NNA. Au!ltria IA P l -President Anwar Sadat reportedly says h~ wtll 111othhall h•~ pea<'e plan. rejected by Israel, if the Israelis will discu~~ prmr1plt·s r ;itllt'r than details when the rorelgn ministers or the two counlrit•s m1·1·t in London next week. Saclal mt•t hen• Sunday with Shimon Peres, leader of Israel's op· pos ition 1.ahor J>urty Af· tcrwa r1t. l't•rt•s' spokc·~.m:m re· pcW1t'cl S.1dut 1w1d hi· would oo willin ~ lo "put llu• pl un u-;1dt> 1f the d 1st·u~·rn1n... movl' I ow a rd declara tion of pnnt•1111<• ... and not dt't alled plant> " I N J E R l's" r. I·: M • r ri m e M1n 1sk r Mt•11,1dwm Bt·~rn 't­ ca b1nl'l r<•J1'l'ktl lhl· i':HYJll Ian proposal. d1sl'los1•d la!>l Wt•drws· day. as ··cc1111plt•lt•ly unacct•ptu- blc " But lltl· cJbtncl ;ign·1·d to s<.'nd Forugn M 1mster Mo:ihc Dayan to ml'C't July 18·19 in Lon- don with E gyptian Fore ign M1n1ster Mohammed Ibrahim Kame l and Secrctll ry of State contribute. will do his best to rontribute to the resumption of the peacemaking process." But cabinet Secretary Arleh Naor told reporters: ''No change Ill Israel's plan was decided upon." Sadat t-0ld a news conference before he met with Peres that a ··dangerous sltuatlon" could urise U the London talks fail. Uut he said he was counting on the United States as a "full partner" ln negotiations to "use its efforts to ease the situation" if the 'impasse continues. Cyrus Vance THE EGYPTIAN leader said The official agenda is to con-Isr ael had not changed its posi- s1st of thl' E~ypllan peace plan lion enough to warrant his meet· ;md an lsral'11 plan that Egypt ing again with Begin, as he did vt•lol'd last Uecember, leading last Christmas in l smailia, to lht• bn •ukdown in direct talks Egypt. tlw following month . Peres· "When we can s peak one spokesman, Yossi, Beilin. did not language, or whenever there are s~e~1fy how far Sadat w!luld be new elements, we can meet w11l1:is to lc.>t llw Egypti_an del-• again ," Sadat said. 1gat1 on dt·11~1rl from his pro· posals m London. BEGIN S.\ID AFTER the rab1net mct·t1n~ that Dayan, ac- companied hy l •H' aides, "will present our vcat•e 1Jlan and will ERA Group lobbyi1ig Congress W ASHI NG T ON <AP >- Bac ke rs of the Eq ua l Rights Amendment. who marched by the tens or thousands Sunday in support of tht> proposal, were lobbying memb<.•rs of Congress today to extend the March 1979 de a dline for r a t i fy ing the measure. Several hundred persons con· grcgaled at Umon Station this morning for ks~ons on lobbying, then set out ror t he Capitol four blocks away Riots Halt Bull Fiesta PAMPLONA, Spain <AP> -Pamplona's run· ning of tbe bulls was called off again today for the second day because of political rioting in which one person was killed and at least 135 hurt. Riot police patrolled the streets, and officials said it ha d not been decided whether to cancel the re· maining three days or the annu a l Fiesta o f San F e rmin . But 150,000 frightened tourists fle d from the city Sunday. The government feared more violence as rriends prepared to bury German Rodriguez, a 21-year·old leftist slain Saturday when police fired into the crowd or 20,000 s pectators during a clash between rightists and leftists in the packed bull ring. NATION I WORLD I WEATHER UNDAUNTED RESIDENT of Chicago's Marquette Park area relaxes as police gather during de monstration b y Nazis Sunday afternoon. Several hundred police stood guard during the rally and although ant1-Naz1 de- monstrators were present. no major clashes were re· ported. 62 Jailed, 7 Hurt During Nazi Rally C HICAGO <APl -Nazi leader Frank Collin stood atop a white van and spoke passionately of a "1978 white .revolution·· in which he said Jews and blacks would be "wiped off the face of the Earth." There was no applause. Police say about 4,000 persons were looking on as Collin gave his "White Vi ctory•· speech in Marquette Park. The park. situated in a white working class neighborhood. has been the scene of past racial confrontations, including the stoning of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr .. when he attempted to lead open housing marches in the 1960s. HUNDREDS OF POLICEMEN separated about 20 brown- uniformed Nazis and s mall bands of counter·demonstrators, whose shouts of ''Death of Nazis" at times made it impossible to hear Collin. Collin said there was a "minimum or violence" at Sunday's rally that left 62 persons arrested and seven injured . He s aid he wished police had stayed away so that Nazi supporters could have attacked the counter-demonstrators. "Our objective was to get the community out and mobilize the s upport or the community and we did,·· Collin said. standing in the barricaded party headquarters about four blocks from the park. AUTIIORITIES SAID MOST of those arr ested were young peo- ple charged with disorderly conduct. No Nazis were arrested. Five officers at the scene were treated for injuries at a nearby hospital and released. Another offi cer , who was treated for heat exhaustion. was admitted One civilian was treated for minor cuts a nd bruises and re· leased. Dad Urges Girl, 14, To Turn Prostitute? DETROIT IAPl -Police say a father has been charged with pers uading his 14-year-old daughter to turn to prostitution for pocket money. J ohn Brammer of suburban Hamtramack, a $175-a·week laborer also known as Ronald Miller, drove his daughte r on tht• Fourth of July to a red-light district and stuck around to collect from her customers. a uthorities said. "t 've never seen anything like this before," Sgt. M 1kc Dowd -.aid Sunday. BRAMMER WAS CHARGED with inducing and cnt1c1ng a female to become a prostitute, and accepting earnings of a pros titute. Each charge carries a maximum 20.year prison term. Police said they became suspicious last week when Brammer reported his daughter kidnapped, but when she was found Fnday with a man in suburban Southfield, he was reluctant to press charges Hundred~ of other ERA sup- porters met 10 advance with their own llou~e members and '.'>Cnators and w1th members or the House Judiciary Committee, whl'rl' J ml'a:;ure lo e xtend the ral1flcahon deadline now lies. MILDRED JEFFREY of the N.1 t 1onal Wo m en's Political l'a u cu~ e~l1matcd that up to 5,000 women <ind men would be lobbying Congress today for the a mer.dment The amendment will die next Ma r r h 22 unlesor; three more i:.tatcs ratify it or Congress ex· tends the seven-year deadline it set in 1972 A propo~al to do that has run into serious trouble in the House J udiciary Committee, which put off a vote 1t had scheduled for this week in order to give E RA s upporters a chan<'e to lobby more intensively. 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S.n C.ot>rltl Po"lOOO ve11eys 1no IM R••tr)•~ S... S..NrOlno <1rH Cocutal Weathf'r Nlohl 111rouon m1omorn1no low cloud• 01he""''° lair 11..--11 Tun · d•Y LIOM v•rltl>I~ wind' nlQlll an( morn1no '-" MIQM tueso•r '" the UOP<lrMl\ LOUlel t•mP"r•lurU Wiii r anQ41 t>elw••n ~• anl.I 61 1n1end lom· ooralure• wlll • MIQ41 111>1-n $8 •nd " Tne ••IH •-r•luro wlll M.,. hmi>er•lurn ll<C!Pr*l lo tllt SO. In peril of IPle Hor111wu1 Solltrt<f 11111nc:tut ho•••• c on11nu•d 1n nortMm •lleho • ...,..,. •'""' wvtr•• S tl•· ftloou Tides d•vs of rein, mou111e111 ttrH m\ wert • .., ·~ rlt1nQ. Tl't..notntormt conllnutd In MONDAY tollllleesltm Color-.,,d Mtu ourl 5'>cona low ' 19 pm. 11 Tlla Sou111 wu CMlfllY cfOllOy tlld Stcono 1119" n .a• m 4 1 ••rm wltll a ltw 611o.,.,. llnQtrlng In TU£SOAY '°"IPleHlern Al..O.,.,. 1nd M>Utlll!rn Flrtl low 1 u • m O • Georol• r "" "'O" ? o 11 m 4 1 A low l>l'"Wrt ••~ltM IMI 6fo Sfotonu 10.. I • 11 m 1, 'llllOl>tt O .... t Nlfllltrn r ... nro11 nn '1un rl\~\\ 'JOA I'll •~hi 01 P m \11nd•Y tll•WMll H •ll•r•d ll•u" Ml.><"' II\(!\ 10,. • m. WI\ It 17 dtr,torm\ •nd QU,ty Wlf"tCh ln.~t I M knckkM OW f Oftf' ~It h"°,.,. tn C•toou C4un1., •nn ,,. .. , """"" ttlt O"""• 11n.-,er I•,., ,.., •• C•d•rlown No 1~1uri•• wtrt •• j!Otltd ('ollf ornlo Suri Rt>port llurtllnQI"" ll•a<PI W•"*• I 10 J t+tl w ttti """"," ''*i&U (OMJi0<'f"\ fair kt.,Pofl °"(> II 'I ~··• I IO 1 1 .. 1 ,il'•itt\ \t')Ut,._ <Ii (~.hon\ fair •rid THAN WALTER CRONKITE HARRY REASONER JOHN CHANCELLOR In a typical half-hour show. a television news personality reads only about as many words as arc printed every day on the front page of the Daily Pilot. Thus. your Daily Pilot carrier brings you a lot more news of the slate. nation and world than you see on TV. And. you gel' complete news and pictures of events close to home that Walter. Harry, and J ohn don't have time for . There are more than 900 Da ily Pilot "newscaste ("s". Each is an indepe ndent merchant learning valuable lessons about pco. pie and business. Boys and ~iris over 10 years old can earn while they learn as Daily Pilot earners . To become a Dai ly Pilot ··newscaster" just call 642-4:J21 and ask fot" the circulation department. Chances are ~ood you ·11 find a profitable carrtt•r roulc near your home. WHltcr really doesn't mind the com. pet 1twn DllLY .. PICOt • .. .,: • • , '<"-L 642.-4321 I CALIFORN IA Monday. July 10. 1978 DAILY PILOT A5 Manson Interview To B ollgwood Boy 'Hitches' On Airplane Killer Soon Eligible for Parole VACAVILLE CAP > -In a r are prison tnten 1ew, con vi cled mass murderer Charles Manson admits he got i~ trouble "for cutting people, for shooting people," but he claims be didn't want to kill. "Not because r wanted to, but because I was forced to." he said in a copyright s tory Sunday in the Vacavllle Reporter. "THAT'S PART OF the game or being an outlaw and I've always been an outlaw," said Ma nson, 44 and serving a life term for planning two Los Angeles mass s layings -the Tate-LaBianca killings of 1969 -and two other murders. T be leade r o f the so-c alled '',Manson fa mily" normally turns down requests for interviews. prison officials said, but agreed to meet with r e porte r Chris Weinstein because of a recommendation from another inmate As ror the "family," many also behind bars for crimes ranging from the Tate-LaBianca killings to the al· tempted murder of former President Ford. Manson said, "This thing just happened this person had no pl ace lo stay and this person was lost and had no place to stay. and l didn't have no place to stay. "THEY WERE NOBODY and I was nobody. They were out in the i.treets kicked out or their houses and I was kicked out of my house. ll just happened. and another thing hap-pened " In New Poll Manson would not elaborate on what specifically happened, saying he's saving that information for a new trial he hopes to get. He also was critical of suggestions that he had any hynotlc power over Manson family women. "Charlie's girls -Charlie never had no girls. All Charlie's girls belonged to themselves." DURING THE INTE RVIEW, he told Ms. Weinstein he doesn't mind the prospect of spending the rest or his life in prison. 'Olar&e'• girb -OaarBe ~ ... d •• fflrl .. All OaarBe'• glrb belo,.ged tot~ll'ea. •• ' "I like trees and I like lo be out where I could be left alone," he said. "But when I'm outside ... I find it hard to be left alone because all your children don't have any parents ... So I'm stuck running from your childr en or being r esponsible for something you don't want to be responsible for. Ms. Weinstein said Manson ap- peared for the three-hour interview with a bandana tied loosely around his neck. He had turned up the collar of his neatly pressed shirt. He sports· a well-trimmed goatee beard and Brown Show-s Voter Gains LOS ANG ELES CAP> -Gov. Edmund G. Rrown J r 's popula rity is increasing among California voters, a pparently because of his response to the passage of Proposition 13, a poll published today shows. Ha li of tbe 1.072 voters interviewed last month m the Los Angeles Times poll said they would vote for Brown if the gubernatorial election were held now. whale only 41 percent s's.id they would vole for hi s R e publi c an c ha llenger . Atto rne y ( ) General Evellc Youn ger. STATE In a ~tmilar poll con· ducted in late April. only ..._ _______ _, 17 llt'f('l'Ol or the voters f<Horcd Bro~n . while 41 percent backed Younger \o ,tJore Bear and Grin It moustache and a casually combed full head of hair. SHE SAID MANSON was a bit nervous at the start of the interview. bul eventually became more al ease. displaying a dramatic flair that often reflected on bis face -sometimes with a smile. sometimes a frown. "J create my own lifestyle, my own world. You live in the world that was created for you. You accept the things you accept because you don't know any different." Manson said. ·'I don't accept the things J was taught. I don't accept the trees being cut down. I don't accept the water be· ing polluted. You people accept that." Finally Manson reflected on his public image. "IC somebody is afraid of Charlie Manson, they're afraid of themselves." ''YOU'RE IN PRISON more than I'm in prison," he told the reporter. ·•tt's all prison. You've got more rules to live by than I do. I can sit down and relax, can you?" Manson is a high security inmate AP WI,....._... 'I WAS FORCED TO' Chartes Manson at Vacaville Medical Fac1llty. a California prison a bout 50 miles east of San Francisco. Under state law. he. becomes eligible for pa role con· sideration later this year Radiation Leaks 'No Peril' SACRAMENTO CAP> -A state study shows that workers and the public were not exposed to radiation when radio-active wate r leaked at the Rancho Seco nuclear power plant last month. No dangerous radiation escaped when water from a pump in the reactor's primary cooling system leaked into a closed storage facility. state Industrial Relations Director Donald Vial said. Inspectors from Vial's department visited RanchoSecoon J une 28. LOS ANGELES CAP) -A rast -talk1"~ runaway from New York somehow slipped put airline security at Kennedy Airport, boarded a pla ne to Los Angeles. hitched a ride to Hollywood and a lmost scored a free bolel room before an,yooe caught on to his act. police said Sunday. Derek Hartfield. 11. was picked up by police at the Holiday Inn in Hollywood Saturday night after a clerk didn't buy the boy 's story about coming lo Hollywood "to see the stars," a police spokesman said. A QUICK CHECK SHOWED Derek was listed as a runaway in Queens. N Y .. said Officer Rod Sieg. The youth told poJice "some wild story about how he had gotten on the wrong plane." Sieg said. "The story didn't jibe. So we checked with New York City police and round out he was listed as a runaway." An American Airlines s pokesman said be didn't know how the boy got aboard the plane which brought him to Los AngeJes. "OUR PEOPLE USUAU.Y are very alert to that sort of thing. This is very unusual." the s pokesman said. But, he guessed, the boy may have "got on the plane with a lot of people -made himself look like a member of the family ... Quasar Study SANTA CRUZ CAP>--. Preliminary studies of s tar-like objects called quasars indicate the ex· pansion of the universe is slowing down. scien· lists at UC Santa Cruz reported. YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK <AP) -No more cute names like "Sugarplum" for Yosemite National Park's marauding black bears. Instead, 1 he bears will get numbers, "Bear No. 89" or "Rear No. 254," just like criminals. 1t was plain "blatant foolishness" to give them names in the first place, says ranger Dick Rie_gelhuth. head of the bear-management pro- gram. as law as Robie" \I a~rine Dartgeroau ATLANTA <AP l The California Department of Health has withdrawn approval of a rabies vac· ('1ne of chick embryo origin for immunization of dugs because the vaccine can cause rabies in dogs, the center for Disease Control reported Friday. The CED said California public health authont1es withdrew approval of the vaccine June 1 because a study had s hown that it can cause rabies m dogs at a r ate of about three cases per milhon doses No other va ccine has been so in· 1·riminalt-'CI, the report s aid ,~uke Pla11t• Win Nofl WASl-flNGTON tAP> -An advisory commit· tee to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission is rec- ommending that two nuclear eower plants built near an earthqua ke fault outside San Luis Obispo be licensed ror 6peration. After two days of m eetings with represen· tallves or the NRC staff and Pacific Gas & El~ctric Co .• which owns the nearly completed Diablo Can- yon plants, the Advisory Committee on Nuclear Safeguards agreed on Saturday tp recommend that the commission license the plants, subject lo some. safety modifications to sW'engthen their re- sistance lo earthquake pressures. l!nemploynaent Rote Dip• SACRAMENTO <AP> -The state-'s unemploy- ment rate in June decliaed to 7.2 percent, half a perC'ent below ·May's 7.7 percent Jobless rate, a state employment spokesman said Friday. But the survey was taken too soon after the J une 6 passage or Proposition 13, which cut S7 billion In local revenues, for it to reflect any job losses triggerl::'d by that measure. The nation's unemployment rate ror the same per iod dropped from 6.1 to 5.7, the lowest rate.in nearly four years. Fall Brings $343,000 LOS ANG ELES CAP > -A Los Angeles Superior Court jury has awarded nearly $343,000 to a Pasadena dentist in a s lip-and-fall case. The Jury said that the manufaclurer or Dr. Paul Webb's shoes, F lorsheim, was negligent because it had not done safety tests -but that the shoes were not defective. ... BINGO ... TUESDAYS-:--7 P.M. Doon 0,.. 6 P.M.........., • * 6:30 P.M. VETtRANS OF fOltEIGN WARS HAU. OWl8 lANf, HUNTINGTON lfAOf ...... &a.tr ..... J llecb s..-. ........... ,....... .... ............. CilDS tt.IO IActf • I POI 12.IO ......,_,,et a•....,_, '* ...................... "" ''" ..,., .. ,-dlaM .t a_..,., .. ,,.... C::..-4 .. e ~· The friendly skies give you the best run for your money to Reno. 35 fU.ghts a. week from Los Angeles. 5 nonstop jets every single day to Reno International Airport-gateway to the Reno/Ta.hoe a.res.. Fly for a.n unbea.ta.ble $31 on a.11 flights Tuesday and Wedne~ And on fl.1ghts before Leave 7:15a.m . 10:45a.m . 2 :46p.m. 6 :30p.m . 10:15 p.m. l Arrive 8 :22a.m . 11:63a.m . 3 :53p.m . 7:38p.m. 11:21 p .m . 9 a. m. and after 9 p. m. all through the week. All other flights are discounted to just $41. In Reno, you can take a.dva.n~e of special rental car rates and vacation pa.cka€es. For information a.nd reservations, call your Travel Agent. Or call United at 537-7621. Shuttle service backto Los Angeles Leave 8 :50a.m . 12:46p.m . 4:30p.m . 8:10p.m . 11:50p.m . Arrive 10:03a.m . 1:68p.m . 6:43p.m . 9:21 p .m . 1:01 a .m . Only Unladgives JOU SB low-price shuttles to Beno every week • l')J t1ae frlend)Jskies at Unit.ecL Ill , I I l7 - ~ " , ~ • i 8 8 "<>m our ors tt'r ' ln lter >018 ·ut Vl'S II"(\ m<.' ner J nal Uh• UI> uly 1al es t I~· '~ or le& 1;ii on nd •30 •ty )fl on gl· o•ano eoo .. 0.,1, Poto• Editorial Page ......................................................... .,. Mond3y, July IJ 1978 Ro~rt N WHd/Publl~hier Voters Don't Need t"'his 'Junk Mail' Or1:1nge Count) s uperv1:,ors a rew ye~rs ago helped ~hem selvt!s lo an mr umbent officeholder's s poils when tbcy agreed to give the mselves budgets ror "constltu(!nt communications ·• In layman te rms. lhe budget appropriation meant ea c h of the five supervisors can s pend up to $15,000 year-· ly to send m essages to homefront voters at taxpayer ex- ~nse. For the mos t part. t he maile rs a re messages highlighting the virtues of county gove rnme nt. A fre- quently favored s ide light is a quest ionnaire asking voters to comment on current issues. Last fall Super visor Laurence Schmit set a new low s tundard for such ma ilings when be sent al laxpayer ex- pen se a piece that was only a short step from a campaign brochure. In the controversy that followed , s upervisors learned the r e were no rules governing wha t is or is not allowed in s uch mailings . Sc hmit's piece, for example. contained seven P.hoto· graphs of him as we ll as his. repeated "budget hawk ·self des cription. Supervisors now wa nt to set guideline s that will avoid :,uch abuses of their m ailing privilege. That isn 't e noug h. Supervisors should abandon the practice of a llowing the mselves mailing s poils . If they do. perha ps their elected counte rparts in ~acrnmcnto a nd Washington will follow s uit. The n. vote rs throughout the stale c.tnd nation will be spared the ex- µt!nse of finding out little mo re tha n what fine fellows they elected to office Price of lndepend~nce The regula r round-trip air fare from Washington. O C . to P an a m a is $716. News orgamzattons sending re- porter s to cover P res ide nt Carter 's recent vis it we r e billed by the White House a l the r a te of Sl .000 a per son. That was a cheapie. Fo r each re porte r accompanying t he president on his seven-day t rip to South America and Africa t he c hc.trge wa s $4,023. An earlier trip lo Europe CJnd the Middle E ast cost $3.500 pe r correspondent. The White House is n 't making any m oney on the fan- cy <.tir fares. The re porte rs travel first class in one or two thartcred commercia l aircr aft and the fee.-covers ground Lrnns portalion. bagga~c· handling and the use of special 1clephone and Te lex facilities set up along the route. But the correspondents -o r rathe r their employers a lso pay directly for m eals and hotel rooms The news organizations don't have much choice in th~ matter The Presid e nt of the United States is n ews whe r ewr he goes a nd word and picture coverage of eve r y movt> has becom e m anda tory. Of course othC>r traveling heads of state move about with a n entouragt• of 1otirnulists, but their governments usua lly pick up thP ~hnlP trave l tab, making them pretty much spok("Hnt>n tnr 1h1• 11tflc1a l de legation By µa -.111,:? tht>11 uwn way. the U.S correspondents. and thc11 1.4mploycr:.. a lso buy the freedom to tell the ~Lory of eat'h journey a~ t~ey see it. favorably or un- f a von:Jblv ci ne! I ha t ·s lh(' way it should be W e lcollle Dollars \I :citure lovers who de plore the machination s of cor- p•11'<.1 l<.' Amer ica m ay have to think again when they p1.:ruse the Hst of donor s who have given the Nature Conservant·y enough dollars to assure the purchase and J.n·e~ervation of Santa Cruz isla nd. off the coast from San- tti Ba r bara T he t:onscr vancv has raised $2.6 million of the $4 m 1l11on it wi ll need to buy 55.000 acres of the 21-m.ile -long bland mil but 7.000 acres) from cattle rancher Dr. Carey Stanton, who inhe rited the a creage from his family a nd has resisted its development. The purchas e fund was put together with donations from the Atla ntic Richfield Foundation, which gave more than $1 million, the James Irvine Foundation. Chevron U.S.A. Inc., the Ahman son Foundation. Security Pacific National Dank a nd an anonymous donor. The conservan cy now is confident that the remaining purchase m on ey can be raised by public s ubscription and is 'planning to begin offering tours of the island this fall. Santa Cruz. with pe aks rising 2,400 f~et above sea leve l. is the home of birds, animals and plants found nowhe re else in the world. a trea sure trove fo r students of n a ture. In an e r a w ht>re corpora te motives often a re suspect. this g ift ~tantl:. qul as one of lasting benefit to the public • Opinions expressed m the space above are those of the Dally Pilot Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment 1s invited. Address The Dally Pilot, P 0 801C 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 . Boyd I Collectibles By L.M. BOYD Watches and clocks are the preferred collectibles among physicians , I'm told. The New York auction house Sotheby Parke Burnet knows this. Jl holds its watch and clock auctions on Wednesday afternoons because so many doctors take that time orr. Credit Connecticut as t.he place where calU e branding originat e d Jn 1644 . \egislation lhere called for D a r Gloomy Gu Maybf' some of those fired teachers can flll the new Job openin~s ror integrntion bus drivers. 1.C U the branding or beeves and hogs. The West took up the pr3clice later There are a bout J ,000 languages into which no portion of lhe Bible has ever been translated. No people eat more eggs than the Israelis. About 420 per persoo per year Q "Are there any countries wherein all lhc c itizens can read and write?" A. OnJy two. Canada and Czechoslovakia. In the Unit- ed States. 99 out of 100 can Likewis e in Denmark , Finland, Iceland, Ireland, Norway, Sweden, Great Britain, West Germany, East Germany, RomRnla a nd Australia. Worldwide . though. only S9 percent or the • population Is Ut.erate "La Marseillaise-" is a pret. ty Jiood name for a na.uonal anthem, what? UtUe wonder the French renamed it alter Claude .lo eph Routtlt de Lisle wro~ It with Wie UUe, "War Song or lhc Army of &be Rhine." J ac.k Anderson Viet Vets Still Poorly 1 Served WASHINGTON -We recent- ly s uggested that Pres ide nt. Ca rt e r had neglecled the veterans who s erv e d In Vietnam, the war America would like to rorget. Many can't find jobs. others a r e Ian · guishlog In drug re - habilitation center s and prison cells. Carter's veterans pro· grams, we re · ported, have failed. Taking exception, Labor Secretary Ray Marshall dropped by our offices afterward to dis- pute our findings . Before we wrote I.he column. we had invited Mailbox the Labor Department to com ment; wear~ now happy to carry Ma rs hall •g belated response He claimed the unemployment rate tor Vietnam veterans had declined by 47 percent during the past year. He also promised that the drive to find jobs for40,000dis· abled vets would succeed As evidence. he offer e d a smorgasbord or statistics. WE ARE NOT wholly con vinced. We had reported that Roland Mora. the assis tant secretary in charge or veterans employment, had run up a more impressi ve travel bill than hiring record. He has now been e ased out of his JOb bec ause o r a l ac klus ter performance. Wt have ah10 obtained a con fide ntlal draft of a General Ac· counting Ortlce study of the Labor Department's programs. The report confirms our earlier charges. "Although many veterans benefited " from the job pro· grams, the report d eclares. "much more could be done in those programs to find jobs and training opportunities for the veterans." FEDERAL regulations re· quire that certain veterans. in- cluding the disabled, should re- ceive referential treatment in federa job placement. But the g overnm e nt e xamin e r s discovered tbat "special con- sideration was generally not given to priority veterans." The report also cls1ms lhal s om e of th e 1mpre :i s 1v e statistics. whicb Marshall laid before us. are inOated In the c ase of certain employment training programs. states the study: "Data Labor provides lo the Congress and the public on number of persons served by the progra m are inflated because (participants) are counted a s new enrollments more than once. and priority vete rans are counted tn a~ rnany priority categories as are applicablQ .. TH E AUDITORS found ·various degrees of double counting. with overstatements ranging from six to 74 percent .. Some participa nts we re counted as new enrollments ctS niany as three times " When we confronted MarshaU with the GAO's findings. he told us the GAO. in h1~ opinion, "could be unreliable · · BOTTOM UP : So ci a l drinkers across America tipped their glasses last week to a new report. which claims a little im· bibing won't harm the health of mos t people But there's & slight catch: we've discovered the report was financed by the U.S. Brewers Association Tbe beer brewers. ha rdly advocates of temperance, gavt• $136,590 for research over three years to the Kaiser -Permanente Medical Center of Oakland. Calif Kaiser-Permanente ha ppily concluded that o ne or two drinks daily won •t harm most individuals and. indl'cd. that social drinkers may be less sus- ceptible to heart attack~ than teetotalers. The findinj!s dt• li g hted the Bre we r s A socialion. wh1ch pa id for them . A spokesman stoutly defended the research. "We want to know as much as possible about the possible side effects of our pro· ducts ." he told our re porter Josh Levin. The brewers did not tell the researchers what to study or what their findings should be. said the s pokesman Why N9t Charge Fees for Summer School? To the Editor: I would like to express the racl that somebody out the r e wrecked my s ummer. Nol Howard Jarvis. Not the elderly couple down the street whose children have loog since grown. Not every owner of a car th~l sported a fiery red "Yes on 13 • bumper sticker. Not every person who dido 't car e enough to vote. Not even myself. It is everybody's fault in general and nobody's specifical- ly that I will not get my driver's l icense this year b e caus e s omebody canceled summer school. There is absolutely nothing thal I could have done to prevent the fact that the sum- mer theater production that I was cast in was canceled for lack of funds or that I won't be able to make up the credits I could have earned las t semester. SO I SIT and ponder over the possibilities and the long range effects. I think of all the kids who will be roaming around looking for trouble to fill the time they could be earning credit towards their future and the higher crime rate that will ensue due to this and a possible decrease in police protection. I wonder bow s mall the graduating class of 1980 may end up being and how many stu- dents will be on the "five-year plan." Somebody is sacrificing our future; for we. your children Art Hoppe are the future and the only way we are going to be able to pre· pare for it and change it is to have an education. A lot of peo)>le are finally com ing lo the painful realization lhat the answer was neither "yes" nor "no" w Prop. 13 because neither one is a solution. I offer no solutions, but I do have one suggestion -why not charge a fee to students who want to take summer school? Where I attended tugh school previously on the East Coast, we were charged $20 or $30 fo r courses and not only did stu- dents still want to take them. t his eliminated those who weren't truly motivated and would have otherwise been wast ing their time. This would not only encourage students to take summer school more s eriously but possibly make them work harder during the school year to avoid the cost To go from bad to worse Is not progress because in order to achieve progress you can't step backward and regress in the process. GISELLE M BISSON 1t'Ja9 Namn"! To the Editor: Today's fronl page includes a wire service report on the arrest of 17-year-0ld Alexander Hanna, son of the former Orange Co\lnly congressman. Why has the Pilot printed young Hanna's name? Has yo~r pohcy of not identifyrng Juverule offenders or accused offenders been recently changed, or have you merely made an instant tactical dedsion to capitalize on the current notoriety or Richard Hanna? Also, on page 2 of today's Pilot 1s a story 3bout the arrest of a Newport Beach man for possess· ing hig hly explosive fire · c rackers and -3 S men tioned in the seventh paragraph -several Thai sticks. Is $25.000 reasonable bail. or is that figure a misprint? LANE B. BLANK F'atrly or unfairly, children of weU-known public figures become newnoorthy in both negative and postlive aituatiom because of their parents' identUy. On Question '2. the $25.000 boil figure was correct. It i3 the amount normally uud for persons accused of felontous crimet -Editor f'lf nn• tor Sealor• To the F.dl.tor : 1 have been working ror 19 months to have the supervisors or Orange County and Area Agency on Aging implement a physical fitness program for senior citizens. This program would save the taxpayers a minimum of $12.5 million by cutting Medicare costs. Medi-Cal is difficult to document due to age variations of recipients. All l needed was $15,000 to encom- pass all interested seniors. I was told the following : fl is not a priority program <hard to believe in ttus day and age >. no money 1s available, <when carry-over money was on band). a"nd I was not asking for enough money. Now the supervisors and AAA have an ace in their hands by Prop. 13 winning. I ask them What happened in the past 19 months prior to Jarvis? I HAVE petitioned to place an initiative on the ballot. l am us- ing my own funds to finance lhe entire project. l am appealing to all registered voters or Orange County to help in this worthwhile caus e c alled "Save Our Seniors." Volunteers are needed to solicit names. Your aid is needed to insure that this in· itiative gets on the ballot and al low the citizens of Orange Coun· ty decide whether this is a priority program and to save possibly S30 million or more by spending $20,000. I am a 68-year-0ld senior and wish lo keep my fellow seniors out or hospitals, convalescent homes and away Crom the doctors . WILLJAM SELVIN 2125 N. Tustin "3 Orange, CA 9266S • Letters f1'om readers are welcome The nght to condense letters to ~t spoce 01' eliminate libel u re&erved. letters of 300 words or ~u will be given pre/er~ce. All letters mu.tt in- clude aignature and maibng oddrtss bc.l names may be withheld on re- quest if .~J/icl~t reason u opparent Poet'll wiU not be publtshed. Young Must Recognize Duty to Social Security Hail to thee, graduating clas of Tamerlane Senior High School. As you go forth from these cloistered halls today, al- low me to offer you but one word of advice: Breed. l know that membera of my generat ion ftave been warning the world for years about the dan.ers o r l ll e awesome popu I lllon exp loslon. I know we have pr.eacbed the virtues of voscctomies and ha\le madt cl\lld-beerlna, lf not pre· • cisely a crime, at least an anti sotial act comparable to driving an eight·cyllnder car. But the fact is we seem Lo have rather oversold our case. And now th3l we are ap proaching the golden years or richly earned retirement, It turns out there aren't enough oC you young people around to sup· port us in lhe manner to which we have become accustomed. HECK, I know breeding um 't much (un. I realize there's a lot of other lhln~s you'd raUicr be doln". But duly calls! Personally, I have always favored Lbe COm'CPl Of an WI volunt~r army or breeders . But this just haim 'l worked oul I don't WR.Ol to acc:Wte you, YA\IOI 1 people of being selfish, but the truth is that all too many of you have put your own Interests ahead or those or your country And that's why, on your gradua lion today. you face being draft· ed under the Revtsed Selective Servke Act. Some of you. of course, won't have to go. I'm sure there are honest conscientious objectors among you. You are certainly entitled to the sexual preference of your preference I only hope you enjoy your alte rnative service in hospital nurseries and dav care centers. Some of you may stand on principle end ao to jail for your antl·bree<lln.i beliefs. A few cow. nrds ma.y nee to CanadD. And nalurally. there Will be lhoae ot you who will be tested and found wanting. You have my sincere sympathy. A young man who b. ~Umped 4-F carries a heavy burden through hfe OKAY, OKA V • I can hear you subversives in the back of the auditorium chnnt.lng, "ltell, no, won't breed•" Well , let me tell you long-haired draft dodger~ u thing or two. You should be honored to J01n the s e rvice Wh ere would Amt rice b e t oday If Oll r rorefather1 hadn"t bred for their country~ Think of those brne young men and women who at this very moment are doing their part to keep our chei-1sh ~ Am erica n Sociol Security System sttona ... ORANQE COUNTY Camp Cleanup Volunteers Sought Orange County Council Camp P'ire Girls S<>ek volunteers to help clear the und"rbruah at their Camp Haydo 11\e located ln the Black Star Canyon area. Removal of the underbrush is re- A Your Delly Piiot c:•n b9 Recycled. 0.C.C. oper•IH official center flH Cotti MHa. quired to m aiee lbe camp1ltt compb' with d istrict fire de partment re1uJa· lions. pubLici\y agent Jana Gable 1aid. ON JUL\' IS·H, Aug. 19·20 and Sept. 16· 17. the girl1. parents and frtends will work from 6 to 11 a. rn. and 10 a. m . Lo 4 p.m. preparin1thoc1mp. The girls in District E camp will serve rolls andcoflec. Mu. Oablesald. Interested pcraons can call the Camp Fire office at 541·5984 . - 63 -a year for xour money. And you don t even have to leave It a week. Suppose you open a regular account with us tomorrow. Any amount. Then later you decide you need cash a nd you take some or all of your money back. Your money still earns at the full 6% rate, from day-m to day-out. There's no withdrawa l pena lty. Anytime your account balance is $5,000 or more, the interest rate jumps to 61/z%. With the same hberal withdrawal terms. And whatever the rate, we compound it quarterly. No rrurumurns, no tie-up, and 6%. It'll pay you lo call us for the details. Available to individuals, corporations, and organizations residing in California. COSTA Mf:SA 370 r.ast 17th s• 645-8700 COMME"CIAL Cf\.EDIT COMMERCIAL CREDIT rt.AN. INCORPORATED ANAHEIM 650 South Brookhural St. 174-8740 HUNTINGTON BEACH ORANG& 16075 Golden WHt St 1111 Town & Country Rd. 847-7771 Suite 2S ~47-M7 1 Winning Sisters Kami Peden. 11. left . and her sister Karissa. 9. of Costa Mesa won ribbons in the literary competition at the Orange County Fair ln their age division. Karissa won first place for an illustrated story. and Kami won a white ribbon. also for an illustrated story. Mainland China Topic at OCC Corona del Mar businessman Len Seltzer will dlscus5 the People 's Republic of China during a lecture he will give at 8 p.m. Aug. 7 at Orange Coast College. Seltzer toured China for more than three weeks last October with the U.S.·Chlna People's Friendship Auoclatlon. The 23-day tour included stops ln Canton. Shanghai, Nanking and Peking TIC'llETS FOR THE TALK are now on sale for $1 In the OCC Community Service Office, localed In the college's Administration Building. A college spokesman explained that due to budget cuts, the community 11ervlce lectures wlll be operated on a self supporting basis · The Sl ree will pay for the use of the c ampus Forum and the lecturer's fees. the spokesman ex-plained. Tlcketa are on sale from Monday through Fri- day from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m . She's crying for help .. Are you listening? She simply can't handle her problems by herself anymore. She needs help before It's too late. And she's n ot alone. Every day, people no different than you experience an emotional crisis often provoked by a trouhlcd personal relationship . Someone may become so despondent shtt ~rows foarf ul or nervous for no apparent reason. She loses sleep over Insignificant things. She ex pl odes over trivial matters like the car not !it artin~. She can't carry on with her famil y. She needs help. Professional help. Thtt only real hope for re~atnlng a normal, produc-tlve life. The kind of help available at the Problem Talk Shop. A professionally staffed counseling and referral service for people trapped in an emotional crisis. At the Problem Talk Shop we care for people. Problem Talk Shop is a f rce service which provide a warm , friendly environment where ~kllled counselors help people sort out their own lives. Here people gain new resources to handle the problems they thought were too bl~ to handle. If you know someone wh o is experiencing an emotional crisis. call the Problem Talk Shop. A trained counselor will be at the other end of the line. Ready to help. Ready to answer any questions you may have. Please make the call that will ~how her somebody cares enough to listen. pioblem talk lhop (714) 997-1831 J l 10 East Chapman Avenue, Suite 109 Or•nge, California 9ie86 (714) 768-3831 25283 C•bot Road, Suite 104 Laguna Hl11'. California 92653 ' Monday JUiy IC :A7,, DAIL y PILOT • A 1 A•d to Ed!ieation Mangers Off Bill~ Assemblyman De nnis Mangers. D·Huntlnaton Bea~h. s ays he may wtthdraw as co-author of cJ con troversial education resolution but plans to introduce related legislation of his own. Mangers. who servo" on the AG· sembly &ducutlon Committee. said the resolution by Assemblyman J ohn Colli e r . R ·Los Ange les. was deacribed lo him as staling that th~ Leaislature intends to support local control ovt>r e ducation desp1•.t Proposition CJ. HOWEVER, WHEN HE saw tht· final resolution. Mangers said. "!t seems to suggest that local school boards will have all pre rogatives It would apparently seek to eliminate any atate or federal involvement In the loca l schools." Mangers. a former :;chool prin· cipal. said he believes lhe resolution goes loo fa r ·'What I really wa nt 1s to send ... message out that l don 'l w11nt to be ~ party to a state takeover or the school system ... He said he supports a reduction 10 manda ted programs . Al present. schools are requJred to offer certalr. programs and recelv n mon ey earmarked for others. such as Early Childhood Education. Blllnguul Education. Mentally Giiled Minors and Educationally Dis advantaged Youth. MANGEllS 8AJD HE Is serving on a task force that during the next year will evaluate such programs to see If their res ults Jwitlfy their continua. lion. In some cases. he s aid. the pro· grams may have had detrimental er- rects on student.3 Mangers said he will then sponsor leglslatJon based on his conclusions and those of the task force. He said he sees the changes as an overhaul "of our whole approach to financing of the schools and lo educatJonal re· form." l n :'l'l'Ud or "l'C'l n g rt>Corm as ~ometh1n~ to be handed down from the !.late. ManJ(cl'1' 11a1d, "I thlnk our loc·at S<'hool tru~tcei;. t1dmln1straton and tcochcr•. c.1rc prob11bly be tte r qualified to mDke thc11<• decisiong In mar.y C'&l'le~ · HE NOTED THAT next year. alter th<• :-.late :.urp1w. run~ out. schools will hav<' to mah addllionaJ cut· backs Manger~ -co ld hl' believes there I~ more · rat" in special pro grnmr. lhan 1n r<!RUlar r lH sroonu. 'The public schools ure 1n for some rtal chanjle~ ... he 11ald "A~.-rormtir edu<'ator. 1 m not. afraid or them.. l want tc recapture· -;om e traditional V21UCS. On<: Of which I" an •bsOIUh• pursuit or excet:encl• in bael~ stulb nr~t . Hearing Slated On Hoag Scanner Updme A public hearing will bl' held July 13 on .. proposal by Hoag Memorial Hospital m Ne wport Beach to Invest about $400.000 m updating ll.6 cow· putenzed scanner. which uses u ty&>P. of modem X ray photography Tom Homrighausen. chairman of lht-Orange County Health FacUitie!'. Rc.>v1ew Co mmittee. explained lhtli his group holds public hearings on a ny plan by c1 hospital to spend SlS0,000 or more on d prOJCCt. The meeting wilt be held at 7 30 pm. July 13 m Newport Beach City Council Cham ber~. 3300 Newport Bl vd T ht-committee re<'ommendallon wilt be lorwarded to the Orange County Health Planning Councll. "After having swimming lessons for 2 months with Greta Andersen, Melanie, our 14-mo"th-old daughter, fell into the pool in our backyard . . . we never heard her! We don't know how long she was there! When we finally found her in the pool, she was f looting on her bo& anc::t wasn't eWf'I crying! Without having had the lessons, she. probably -would ha ve drowned . Thank you Greto. for saving my baby's life!" Si~ - /Ws . John Stout, Downey Greta Andersen, OIYmPlc: Gold Medalitt and 1st Per- son ever to swim to Catalina end back round trip, Plus swam English Channel s times. Other people teach swimming, but no one e lse has devoted thef r who1e llfe to belno the best In swimming and teaching. When vou want the very best, it's Greta Anderun•s Swim SchQOI. lnroll Now -Start Right Away DON'T DELA I . . 4 ' . I .. ' * • 0 ~ ' • • 1. " , . • s a n )I n h g ~- t' .6 a d .0 .n a ·2 e. ls st rd I DAILY PfLOT Ami.sh Move Culture ..... 14 F amilies Seeks W isco nsin· Opportunities I BRODREAD, Wis. <AP> -A black , horse.drawn car riage aurges over the hilltop and veers c.a. a road where a sign pomts • .... blacksmith's workshop. mUe down the road the •· *91rer reins the snortin.e horse :~talo a steeply r ising lane ...... leads through withered com =7 .. lks to a secluded white ·~-.Ohouse • 9aE BEARDED driver dis· :..itNunts lo the late afternoon ~ lllilklows cas by a windmill and •' flalf .filled silos Six huge work J)o ses graze near the house, re firewood is stacked on the • b •: scene out of the 1800s? ·:. o, unfortunately, for the 14 (Amish fa milies who have just • moved to this area in southern Wisconsin. The world's busiest airport is jQfl 100 miles a way a nd the Amish know it. They know, too, about factorie;;, cars, tractors, telephones and electricity. So -PERHAPS MORE than . ever -they heed the warning of • Romans 12: 1. "Be not con fonned to thJs world, but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind that ye m ay prove · wllat is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God." .. Industry is making land too e~pensive," said John Henry • Wlletstone, deacon of the new Amish church district along , _?:tsconsin's southe rn border ''Y.here some of us came from • -Indiana, Illinois and Iowa - young people have a hard time • buying land. They have to work ~ 1n factories. That's not our way. .. Mostly that's why we came here." WHETSTONE'S sister·in·law, Edna Yutzy, her husband, John, and seven children were the first Amish family to settle near here. They moved from Milroy, Ind., to a s ma ll fa rm just southwest of Evansville on Oct. l. 1975. Whetstone, his wire and fo ur children followed three months later, moving to a 160· acre farm east of Brodhead. Seven Amish families -in· , eluding a blacksmith -moved " here from New Glarus, Wis. Three families came from Iowa, two from Illinois. .. At rU"St, there were all kinds of s tories about ua," s aid ( REUCION J Whetstone. •'They aald we didn't pay taxes, dido 't buy anything from anybody, didn 'L send our chlldren to school -all sorts of things that aren't true, Now, we're accepted as hard·working neighbors who use horses ln· stead of tractors. .. WE SELL OUR products like everybody else and we buy farm supplies and some food at the stores. "Years ago Amish farms were more productive than other farms. But horses really can't compete with the new giant trac· tors. "I could use a tractor -if I wanted to join another church," said John Yutzy. "We don't have e lectricity because we don't want our children watc hing television and getting strange ideas. The most important thing is keeping our family together. 1t'ia11er Laura Oster of Irvine took a blue ribbon in the story con· test for 6 and 7-year·old wr iters at this year's Orange County Fa ir. Her story was "The Little Kit- ten." .. WE HA VE 011R troubl&S, too," said Whetstone. "But we don't ha ve your cr ime or juvenile delinquency or broken fa mllles. I've only heard of one or two Amish marriages ending in divorce. We just believe our wa y is best for us . At first , their children at· tended public schools, But last sum mer the Amish men built a one-room, wood·framed school house on a hill overlooking a wooded creek bank. Twenty.two students, grades one to eight, ca me \D"lder the instruction of 17·year·old Vera Detwiller . Vera Detwiller . Amish teachers don 't have to be accredited, a right guaran· teed by a U.S. Supreme Court ruling. More than 200 Amish schools are in operation in the Un ited States. CLAS.SES INCLUDE English, history. reading and writing, m ath and German, the language the Amish use at home and in r eligious services. "The reason the Amish came to this country in the 1700s was freedom," said Whe ts tone. "E ven more important tha n plentiful land was freedom of re· ligion and the freedom to raise our children as we want. In Europe that wasn't true, and the Amish fled persecution." No Amish live in Europe to· day. Most or the world's some 25,000 Amish live in North America, with a few settlements in South America. Converts are not accepted. C HUR CH BUILDINGS, automobiles, tractors, electricl· ty, life insurance, dancing and acceptance of governmental aid -are prohibited, although a s mall group called "Beachy Amish" are less restrictive. Wo men's lib is naught, the Amish believing "Man was created in the image a nd glory of God," and woman was made "for the glory of the man." Amish women and girls wear dark, long homemade dresses with no patterns or trim, and prayer caps at home, school and church. Men and boys wear dark , ho m e m a d e but ~on trousers, shirts and suspenders. I . •, l• I ·~ \t,. I .. , . ,. > ' • .1 Have you looked behind you lately? Not exad1 thrilled with the mw? Holiday lf:th S~ can help make your hind a s1gbt wa:th seeing. We offer a~ of persOO_alired exemse instruction that takes your entire body. desired go@}s, and fitness level into account At Holjday Spa we've also got tremendous ~ht To refresh d • .:....t:~--A.....:;: • • an ren~cui.a exerosmg you'll find stlJettl, salUUl, whirlpool, stm rooms, '3l1d more. And fer women there's Jaanastics-a unique group eXercise done to up tempo music.· Use some foresight and join Holiday Spa Health Clubs today. We'll help you improve your hind site. . NATION By Bil Keane Carter'• 1t' Gfl <!' "Will you pioneers turn off the TV set and go to sleep?" Sex Refused Job Victim Granted Fund NEWARK. N.J . <AP > -A former employee of Public Service Electric & Gas Co. r~eived $20,000 in a settlement of a sex discrimination suit that al· leged she was fired after refusing her boss' offer of after·hours sex. The settlement. signed by U.S. District Judge Herbert J. Stern, ended a three-year-old suit by Adrienne Tomkins, 33, of Bayonne, who worked as a stenographer for the state's largest power utility until she was fired in January 1975. T HE COMPANY SAID MIS.S Tomkins was fired because of excessive absences. but the wom an alleged her discharge was the culmination of sexual harassment that began when she rej~t· ed a pass by her boss. The woman said her boss took her to lunch in Oc· tober 1973 and told her she would have to have sex with him if they were to establish a "satisfactory working relationship.•' Miss Tomkins complained to other superiors, the s uit alleged, but she was harassed, her pay was cut and then she was fired. THE SE'M'LEMENT REQUIRES THE utility to establish a panel to hear discrimination com· plaints by disgTUntled employees and to inform all employees of their rights. Miss Tomkins' person· net file also will be amended to its condition prior to he r firing. The settlement was reached after an appeals court reversed a ruling by Stem that said an employer could not be held responsible for a sex· ual pass by a supervisor. The 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of ApJkals ruled that the company could be found guilty of sex discrimination. Media Views Get to Top WASHINGTON <AP) - Watch out, Mr. Presi· dent. You might not like what you're about to read. -"The best and perhaps the only way for President Carter to put a n end to the babbling in· coherence of his administration's foreign policy is to rlre Zbigniew Brzezinski." -"The problem with the Carter administra· lion is not Zbigniew Brzezinski but Jimmy Carter: be is afraid of ge nuine debate about public policy." THE nRST, FROM THE Nation, and the sec:ond, from The New Republic, are just two samples of comme ntary available to the president as be opened the weekly White House summary e>f current magazines, prepa red for his reading while he vacationed at Camp David, Md. They represent a dose of sharp criticism typica l of that seen by Carter on almost a daily basis as he watches network television news pro- grams and reads daily newspapers, magazines, and staff.prepa red summaries of newspapers and magazine articles from across lht country and the political sped.rum. He is hardly sheltered from unpleasant news stor ies. columnists' views or editorials if he chooses to read them. On occasion, he is quick to react. ONE R ECENT HEA DLINE I N THE Washington Post so displeased him that Jody Powell. his press secretary. got an early.morning call at home Crom the president of the United States expressing his complaint. Within a few hours -by 9:45 a.m. -Powell called reporter s into the Oval Office, where Carter , delivenng a rare public criticism of the fourth estate. called the Post's story about pro- blems in the Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty talks "totally inaccurate.·· Each president an recent years ha& developed bis own method of keeping up with the news. Richard M. Nixon was presented summaries of stories in maJor newspapers, but he was cushioned from s harply critical copy. ·sum IS NOT THE CASE WITH Carter. ac· cording to deputy press secretary Rex Granum. Lyndon B. J ohnson, far from insulating himself from the negati ve news, was an avid r eade r. keeping close watch of news service teletypes running constantly in his office and on three television sets in the Oval Office tuned each evening to the network news programs. The tickers and televisions are gone from the Oval Office these days. but the president has ac· cess to both. A SINGLE TELEVISION SET is hidden dis- cretely in the private study be often uses and the White House Communications Agency videotapes the evening news programs so the president can view them as bis schedule permits. Buena Park 510 South Beach Bl vd. South of Linooln Ave nue (714) 826·0381 Huntington Beach 18585 Main Street Main SL at Beach Blvd. (714) 842·1451 Orange 622 East Katella Ave. West of Tustin Ave. (714) 639·2441 Costa Mesa 2300 Harbor Blvd. Harbor Center (714) 549·3368 Encino ~ 17031 Ventura Blvd. West of Balboa (213) 986·6330 Long Beach 4101 Atlantic Blvd. Comer of Carson (213) 426·8874 North & We.t Valley 9143 De Soto Ave. at Nordhoff (213) 882·5912 WetltmiMtm 6757 Westminster Ave. Westminster Center (714) 894-3387 Holl1woocl 7080 HollYWood Blvd. Comer La.Brea Ave. Safa Medical Center <213) 469·6307 Each muscle am1m is exercised to its maximum eifia with our Progressive Physical ~tioning ~-one Cl. the fastest, nm effective ways to get in shape. And IOO'll ~out on scme d. the finelt exercise eqt.lipment available in the industry. Dif/emd mencbmhip /1nJgrams OfJOiliJbll W/wling tl ~ Uttrodudory /1frfrram. Im llaa end W.1•a Now~The......,thefimllt.oar...,W.Loe~Chb • 1114Soath....,-(_~lhilQ.C.UllOW8»711l. -· ... r I I INSIDE: •Comics •Television •Entertainment •At Your Service Monday. July 10. 1978 DAILY PILOT Cepeda: From No. 30 to No. 0700·1SSA i.. i I , 11n CHICAGO CAP> -lie was once among baseball's best, No. 30 With the San Francisco Giants and a sometimes star with four other teams. Now, he is No. 0700-lSSA and expects trouble making the ~r1son softball team. Orlando Cepeda. a boyish 40, tries not to look back on a 17· year major league baseball career that included being named the National League's Most Valuable Player in 1967 when he led the St. Louis Cardinals to a world Championship. Sometimes he can't help It, however, as he sits ln a minimum security prison at Elgin Air Force Base. Fla .. serving a five-year term for possession of 65 pounds or marijuana. ''I LOVED TO HIT, more than anythlng else." said the man who carved out a .297 lifetime batting average. He hit over .300 in nme ot tus seasons, and hit 20 or more home runs In 12 seasons. "But thls softball, I don't know if I can hit it. I never played softball before. only baseball. I know in softball you can't cock your bat and spring out at the ball." Cepeda Said. He was interviewed recently by David Israel, a sports colum- nist for the Chicago Tribune. and his comments appeared in Sun- day editiqns of the newspaper. Cl:PEDA, WHO RETIRED from baseball in 1974, was arrest· ed in December 1975 by drug agents at San Juan International Airport as he picked up baggage containing marijuana. He was ro11nd guilty in a non-Jury trial and exhausted all appeals last month, when be began serving his prison term .. "It's no sense to look back and say, 'Well. Jeez. why me?' and feel sorry for myself," Cepeda said. "After 2'h. three years. I'm beginning to be at peace with myself. I don't have to worry about facing people anymore." CEPEDA'S FATHER was once hailed as the greatest baseball See CEPEDA, Page 82 Angel Star Belted • in 11-7 Setback All-star Tilt By JOHN SEVANO OI tlw CMl)l'f Pllet $~f The conc;erN over the pitching problems of Nolan Ryan con- lirlue to mount. Ryan . who was treated cruelly by Kansas City (five innings - five runs, eight hits> last Wed- nesday in his first st art since coming off the disabled list. was bombed by Seattle Sunday af- ternoon as the Angels dropped a n 11·7 decision before 21>,969 at Anaheim Stadium. The Mariners, who possess the wo rs t r ecord in ·the m ajor leagues <J0..58), touched Ryan for nine runs (eight earned> in only 5tr.i innings of work. Jn his last 6~ innings, Ryan has al- lowed 49 earned runs for a 7.271 ERA. Ryan sat dejectedly in front of his locker a fter the game. The mystery surrounding his recent slump had him baffled. "l'M NOT GE'ITJNG anybody out," he understated. "I 've been ver y inconsistent. My fastball is Slraight and the hitters are just wailing for it because I'm not getting my curve over enough to help." Somebody asked Ryan if he could ever remember a more severe drought. "I 've had periods where I didn't win. but never where I've t hrown as poorly as long as I have this year "'Physic~ly I feel fine. If it. was one particular thing I would change it." THE MARINERS jumped on Ryan for two in the second, two in the third and five ·more when they batted around in the sixth. A tolerant Manager J im Fregosi mercifully brought in Dyar MiJler in the sixth when Ryan could manage to get onJy one out. Asked why he waited so long AngebSlafe All 0.-ell ICM,.C 17111 ToniQllt Idle r ... sd•Y All ll•• c;.me \ IOom WeclnH4•Y Idle in pulling Ryan with the All-star break and eight pitchers at his d isposal. Fregos1 ans wered. ··1·m trying to get Nolan back into shape and I can't by taking him out. "I DIDN'T TmNK he was bad today. I just think he didn't get the best of it. We played poorly behind him defensively." Fregosi then ended specula- tion as to Ryan's future in the starting rotation. "He wiJI stay in the rotation. My pitching is set for the month of July." The heart of Seattle's attack was s uppllect by the thlrd, fourth a nd fifth hitte rs as Bruce Bochte. Leon Roberts and Tom Paciorek combined for eight hits, eight runs scored and four RBI. THE ANGELS, who battled to the end. were led by Carney Lansford. Don Baylor and Ken Landreaux. La ndreaux, a last minute replacement for Rick Miller. had two hits, two RBI and made a spectacular over-the-shoulder catch of a fly ball by Boehle that saved two runs in the third. Baylor's 21.sl home run in the third cut the Mariners lead to 4-3. and his infield single with two out in the ninth led a late Angel charge Lansford. in only his t hird game since being removed from the disabled list. collected three RBI and three hits to raise his aver age to 291. THE ANGEL LOSS closed their lead over Kansas City to one game in the American League West, but for those who believe In tradWon. all is not lost. Only four AL teams since the league went to divis ional play nine years ago have come up empty after leading at the All· star break. But Chicago Jed the AL West by 21ri games las t year and lost to Kansas City. and Baltimore held a lh-game advantage at thls time in 1977 before finaJly being overtaken by the Yankees. Is Fregosi worried at all? .. I'm a game In front. If I was 10 games behind I m ight be con- cerned. ··u 's my opinion it's going to be a three-team race to the end a nd 88 gam es will win the division." For the Angels to reach that See ANGELS, Page BZ SAN DIEGO <A P> -ThP lineups for Tuesday night's All · Star Game underwent further revisions Sunday when starting catcher Johnny Bench of Cincin· nati was removed rrom the Na· tional League roster and the Amer ican League lost reserve third baseman Graig Nettles of the New York Yankees. Bench ha ; en limited action ove r the last s ix weeks because of a back injury. The National League has two other catchers on the squad in Ted Simmons or St. Louis and Bob Boone of Philadelphia . Atlanta Braves catcher Biff Pocoroba was named to replace Bench. Pocoroba was batting .267 with four home runs and 24 runs batted in before Sunday's contest with San Diego. It will be his first All·star Game ap· pearance. M eanwhilc, hot-hitting out- fi e Ider Larry His le of the Milwaukee Brewers was added to the AL squad to replace Net· Ues. who injured a toe while bat- ting Friday night in Milwaukee. X-rays of the big toe on his left foot showed no fracture but Net· ties will be unable to play. A spokesman for the AL office said Nettles. a native of San Diego and a resident or El Toro. didn't want to pull out of the gam e but the injury would pre- ve nt him from playing . However. he will be in uniform and will be introduced with the res t of the All-Stars. o.ity'"'ltt f>""'9 h l'.trica O'De!IMM ANGELSHORTSTOP DAVE CHALK WAITS FOR THROW AS SEATTLE'S LARRY MIL86URNE IS OUT AT SECOND. ... ~ ORLANDO CEPEDA PONDERS HIS FUTURE. Dodgers Fall~ 5-1 Richard Erratic ..•. But Don't Tell U HOUSTON (AP> -Although he's won 46 games over the past two a nd a half sea sons. H o uston 's J a m es Rodney Richard will be spending the All· s tar break the same way he spent it the past two years -at home. Richard. the major leagues' s trikeout leader. tossed his second consecutive four-hitter while rolling to his seventh s traight triumph over t he D.odgers as the Astros dropped Los Angeles 5·1 Sunday. "I'll probably visit my sister who just had an operation." said Ri chard. 8·9. who also contribut- Dodgers Slate All 0.-S ti! ICAeC (7 .. 1 TonlQM Idle T.,.Sdoly All"l•r Gamt' Wednesd•Y Idle S.tOpm ed a two-run single. "I m ay do some fishing, but I really ha· ven 't made up my mind yet." THE VETERAN right·hander hurled five innings of no·hit ball before Bill Russell lined a sharp single to cent.er to lead off the sixth. Russell moved to second on Ron Cey's grounder and s('ored on Steve Garvey's double to account for Los Angeles' only run as Houston broke a four- game losing streak. Richard walked six and s truck out 12 to raise his season strikeout total to 157 and he says he's throwing harder this year than last year when he won 18 games. "I'm getting the ball over the plate more and I'm throwing with more velocity than I did last year. "I GOT ERRATIC out there to· day. Six walks can blow a game open sometin:ies." Houston jumped on Dodger starter Don Sutton, 9-7. ror a first,inning run on doubles by Terry Puhl and Jose Cruz and added a thlrd inning run on a sm~le and stolen base by Puhl and Enos Cabell's RBI single to center • AL.THOUGH HIS TEAM lost the game. Los Angeles out· fielder Reggie Smith believes his team won its "weekend war" wi th the Astros. "W e beat them three out of four," Smith said. "The feeilng_ that we're going to win e\fery series is back. The Giants are looking over their shoulders. We know we have the better ball club and we're just going .. to have to go out there and ,prove. tl... . LOSANGELE5 "OUSTOH L-lb Ruuell \\ Nor111 P" R Smit" rl Cev lb G•rvev tb 0.8.i.tr II ~OndO t i f~rQuM>n < SuU011 p O•vetllto llt1 Ho\IQll O o .... pl> •• , 11111 JOOO • I I 0 I 0 0 0 \ 0 0 0 4 I) I Q < 11 I I 1 0 0 0 • 0 0 I) I 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 I 0 0 •l 11 o on I 0 t 0 WalhnQ II Punt ct C•~ll 3b J.Cru< rt Wahol'llb Be•Qman lb Howe 2b Pu101s < F1S<hlln '\~ R1cMrd 1> •r ttlll ~' 0 ~ • , 1 u • \).I I 4 I I I I~~:::~ l• I I I ') '0 fl • l Cl 0 ,. • 0 ' J Tol•I~ lJ t • I Total~ ll \ I ' lo• Anqet~ 000 00\ 000--1 HO<.ISlon 101 OOl 00•-~ E-J Crw, RUU4!11, F1sc;Mln, Looes LOB-Lo• Angeles t I, Houston I 16-Puhl, J.Cru1, G«ww. SB-Pullt, J Cru1, ~. 11' H a E• ee SO LOSAHCElES Su11on ll,._/I • / ~ J • 1 Hougll 1 o O o 1 u Rtt,.ard IW.a." HOUST,!>M • I f • '' HBP-FtscN1n 16y SUllOnl WP-Rt<lte<d } T -1 lO A-l0,1'S. Flanagan Dominates .surf, s-2 . . FOXBORQ. Mass. tAP i - Mike Flanagan scored five goals to lead the New England Tea Men to a 5-2 North American Soccer League victory Sunda~ over the California Surf. SUNSHINE TRIPS lXJNNBC'nCUI Elder Wins; Trevino Gets Raves Flanagan's goals made him the NASL's leading scorer with 27. Flanagan opened the scoring ~t 16: 14 of the game on a re- bound of a Keith Weller shot. He scored a second goal about t& minutes later to give the Tea Men a 2-0 halftime lead . The CaUforrlta Suns hine jumped tnto the American Soc· C"tr League •est lead Sunday with a 2· 1 victory over Connec- ticut Sunday afte rnoon at Orange Coast College. The win gjvea the Costa Mesa- bas ed team 83 points. The second place Los Angeles Skyhawks have 78. The victory elevated the Sunshine's record a.o 10·5·2 while the Skyhawks are 10-6-1. The Sunahine won it on St.eve Klaasen's 1011 from about 12 yarch out Int.be 75th minute. Connecticut had scored first, but Lbe Sunsbi.rie tied tt In the 15th minut e when Paul Renkert's 18-yard ahot hit the cross bar and rebounded Into the goal. The Sunshine ho. u the New Yark Apollo Sund1ty at 4. Milimukee Open Ends After Eigh'1-hole Playoff MILWAUKEE CAP) -Lee Elder, once again an automatic qualifier for the prestigious Masters and Tournament or Champions, readlly admits that the real winner was the Greater Milwaukee Open gotr tourna· menl. , •' The reason, Elder said , is the class of Lee Trevino, whom Elder defeated Sunday In s n eight·bole s udden-death playoff for lhe title in the star s lighted GMO and a $30,000 first prize. 'Tm sure Lee tried as hard as he could, but I believe that Lr he hadn't been in a hurl")' to meet his wife. ln Chicago and catch a ~lane for England for the BrlU h Open, It could have been a dlf· fe rent story," Elder said. "I TIDNK the fact that Lee came here and played as hard as he did when he planned to go to England right afterward says som ething about what kind or man he is," Elder said. . Trevino, whose $17,100 check for second place put hlm In third on the tour's earnings list for the year at $198,420, as usual was one of the few big names to play in this tournament, which many stars skip in preparation for the British Open starting Wednes- day. Trevino said that despite hl defeat -assured when his G·foot pull rolled dead at the lip of the I cup on the 197-yard. par-3 eighth extra hole for a bogey -he will continue to support the GMO. "l'M VERY HAPPY for Lee Elde r and for the tournament," Trevino sald. "This Is srobably the best thing that coul happen to the GMO. All week long I felt I could w\n this thing, but It just wasn't meant to be. But I'll be back next year." Elder started the final round lied for the lead with Bob Lunn at 206, 10 under on the 7 ,010· yard. par-72 Tuckway Country Club course He birdied rour of his first eight holes to go 14 under. 2 strokes ahead of Tte~lnor Elder -------·· ~..---~---- lost a stroke when he bogeyed No. 16, and Trevmo forced a playorf when he sank a 20-foot birdie putt on the 18th. The two were tied at 13-under 275 for 72 holes. •·1 THOUGHT, 'Not again.' .. said Elder. beaten by Trevino in a 1972 playoff at Hartford, Conn. "He did pretty much the same thing in 1972 when he sank a lS or 20 foot.er on the last hole." On the ei1hth utra hole, Elder drove the green and 2 . putted for par. Trevino hit lnto a bunker and blasted to 6 feet before putting short. ··t felt I could wln on each ex- See ELDEKt Pase BZ California's Malcolm Lord tallied early in the second half to cut the lead to 2·1 but Flanaaan scored again to re-establish a two-goal New England margin. Lee Barrett cut the s core to 3·2 with 20 minutes left in the game. but Flanagan countered with his fourth goal with eight minute~ left to give the Tea Men a •.a lead. The NASL 's leading scorer closed out the scoring with 21,~ minutes left. fo'lanagan·s ftve goals in one atame tied a record set by Giorgio Chinaglia, Ron M<>ott and Steve Dav\d. The vlctory gives the fi~t place 1'ea Men a 15· 7 record while the Surf fell to 11·13. ~ DAI YPILOT Monday Jul~ 10 ''"' ,.,....r.,..a1 CEP EDA IN PRISON. • • ·-.,layer lo Puerto Rico. Fans called him ·'The Bull." Before lhe son became a star with the OlanlS and St. Louis <be also played for the AUanta Braves, Boston Red Sox and Kansas Clty Ro)'ala), Puerto Rlcan fans called him "Tbe Baby Bull." After bis arrest, however. he became a social outcast. "People were afraid to talk to me," he said. "They said 1 was M,fla and all that. They used to have pictures of me at lb• baUparb in Puert.o Rico, but they take them away. the people say 1..,. a bad example to my boy and to their boya. Some day, the peo· l>l• will lmow." CEPEDA BAS UTl'U to say about the crime. He neither con-f'irms nor denies his gullt but under proddlnl he says: ' ,.l have money. If I'm golng to take a risk like that, ii I'm 10· \n1 to do something Ulegal, I'm going to do 100 kilos of cocaln~nd JD'ke '500,000. I'm not going to do marijuana and make SSO,uuu," ~ht! '!timated value of the iiiariJuana found in the suitcases. "'t!J)eda approaches prison rue with equanimity, despite others' serlhtg shorter terms at the same prison for more serious crimes. 'q'M NOi' BITl'Ell, '' be says. "I thank God this bas happened lo tne. Sometimes people don't see reality; sometimes people don't see bow things are until they get ready to die, and then they un· d~nd reality. ' .. Well. now I have seen reality. Here, nobody Is prtvlleged. Everybody ls equal. There are lawyers,· doctors, bankers, judaes. gnlutea ln all kinds of fields. • '"this is the greatest experience any man tan have. People are surprised by my attitude, but I'm not. I deal with what's in front or me, not what's behind me." A MOVE IS NOW under way, by som e people who remember 9epeda 's baseball Jreatness, to get him out of prison, particularly )>eopte who remember that Cepeda and Roberto Clemente, the burgh Pirates' star killed ln a mercy mission pl e crash, aa the wreatest baseball players to come out of Puerto co. t.:ookle HoJas, a coach with the c.;rucago <.;ubs, s the leader of a froup of major leaguers who say they intend to titton President ~art;er to pardon Cepeda. '.: Cepeda bas beard of their efforts but says not holding out $Y false hopes. Nevertheless, in another breath, e muses: "Roberto Clemente, be had to die before people ln Puerto Rico said be was worth something, maybe a hero. I hope the same thing does not have to happen U me.' Jlollywood Park Race Results hrs.My Ffnt PIC-Sl>Ol'IO-. 20.00. ,,,0. S.20; Hot t •ooetT'f, 3.20, 2.IO; Born To Follow, 1.60. ~ .-~11. 4'60, 3.IO. 3.AO; Mof'll Pro Soccer Scores Nortll ._,iuft SO<cer LUI• New En111-S, Suri 2 A1t~o •. S... .Jose 2 Chlu90 •.~-1 Tor onto•. Mempl"' 1 Mon!Wlle, U.00. t.C ; El s---. I.ID. S2 0.lly Oovl>le 1 lftd 1 P91d S61.IO. Third rac-Ouh A•-. e.20, t.eo, 2 . .0; lonetrH . 3.60, 2.IO; OU.tlfk MkMI. 2.•. SS IM<t.-s •n<I • s>eld $6UIO. Fourtl\ reu-~lie ICl'lltflt, UO. UO, 2.40; Brm, 1.20, 4.00; SUrf N Fleet, 3.60. Filth rK.t>-A·Stevor, 7.20, • 00, 2.60; Contldor, I llO, •.OO; Rtssend\'11, 2.60. U hacte 1 end J 1Nld '119.00. Sixth ••<•-Wranqle, 11.,0. •.oo. •.40; 8 Forever C..119"1, 7.lO, S.20, Brewley 8r-~r. l.10. Seventtl rKe-O>nclll•lon, 4.IO, 2 60, 2.20; Mt. ''" M .• 2.60.1.20; Rlnoo To<. 3.00 u Eucte I •NI S SM Id '2'-00 El9'1th ren-Elt-lllQ, 11-40. •.AO, UO. Of. P11c11e1. '-Ml. 2.IO, Tut. 2.10. U.S. Junio r Spike Teani Tmnbles MOSCOW <AP> -The United States 400 meter relay team set a Junior world record, but the Soviet Union's overall depth helped the Soviets to a 190-163 victory over the Americans In a two·da)' junior track and field meet. The American relay team - Bryan Genman of New York; Eric Brown of H'ampton, Va.; Mel Lat.tany of Athens, Ga .• and Carlton Youn1 of Philadelphia -was timed in a record 39.51 seconds Sunday. "The ex.ceUent track at the stadium was an aid to the U.S. runne rs." said Bruce Frank. coach of the American sprinters. UC Irvine's LaMont King finished fourth in the 200-meter run Sunday, clocking 21.98. WOMIN 100 hlH'Cllet -1 Oya, USSR. 13.90. ?. YOUft9, USA. 1J.t1 J. t<•lyellln•. USSR, U 01. 4 Fltrgerald. USA. 1' 21. ?00 • 1. eoo,IN, USS9', 1S.Q6. 1. o..n1.,.i, USA. IUO. J. B4*ft, USA. UM.• Yutllcheflllo, USS9', i..02 • 800 -1. Shlroltov•. USSR, 2·11 7 2. Blc1(tcwa. USA. 2· 11.7. l. Aoleldlnova, USSR, 1 11.0 • Aff9MI, USA, MZ.S. Oluu1 -'· t<on leo, USIR. 167·•Vt. l Kushnlf ... kO, USSR. 1'1·1\l'a. ), Prle, USA, u~. 4, DeMll. USA, 1""4'4. Hl9'1 Jump -1 Rod'-"•· USSR, ~·h. ? Aalnstran, USA.HI/?. a. Metulf, US•. S.101/f ' Oya, USSR, S.10'.lo. 1,,00 rel•'I' -1 USA (l~merson, Gardner. Fr•nlllln, Coelbll, 3:43.2. 2. U5SR, dlsquallfleel. MUI 200 -1. Bro*n, USA, 21.S4. 2. PrCJkofVw, U!>- S9', IU 4. 1 LllVlno'il, USSR, 21.1S 4. Kint. USA. ?UI. 100 -I. H~. USA. 1: ... 1. 2. Utwtnov. VS. SR, 1: ... J. l. Af900", USA, t:J1.0 4. Tro$11thllo, USSR, 1:Ul l.000 11~ -1. _,..,,, USA. •:02..9. l Heu, USA. t:OU. 3 LollOtllov, USSR, •:2U • Venl\11tln. USSR, t :J0..4. S,000 -I Ne¥olollln, USSR. U :JI 7 t Oonollue, USA, U :J1.0. ). Anumm•, USA. 1':)7.•. •. v-...,, USSR, 1'·4.0. H'911 J--1. Fr-. USA. MV.. 2. R""IOle. USSR. 1-1.1 Sereda.• 1CML 4. Flowen, USA. ldld not cte•r nwtlnQ m.11111. Shot put -I. Ge.,ryustlln, USSR. ~ 2 Clrtw, USA,~ 3. Qokbtnlth, USA, ,._,..i •. •· Gotl>enko, USSR, ss-2 ..... Trlple Jumt> -1. Qiernlllb\I, USSR, U-Wt. 2 Oulelly, USA. S2·1'Vt. J. KotkO¥. USSR, Sl-2~ • •~111. USA. Sl-4'4 Ol•~us -1. l lncllenko, USSR, 192·'"" 2 IColnoocllenkO. USSR, 1n-2. 1 Seraflnu, USA. 161 ... 10.000 •ell< -1. C..Vrllft*o. USSR, 44:0U 2. ProtM"'ln· USSR. 4':2t.S. a. S1Mtrs1. USA. '7: 19.S .c. MO<Tl1. USA, 41•42 .. F 01'1 L•.-nsal~ 2, H~ICH\ I •mM<M Soc:~ l,.e- '>un)hlM 2, Connedlcut 1 New Jerseys. Clewland I Ninlll rece-«ereiin.. •.20. ) IO. 2.40; Cli~ Wave, S.20. 2.60. Que Boni!•. 2 20 U Eucte I and Jpa1osn .oo.Attn -1'..111 1,,00 relo· -1. UnlttO Slain !Pierson T 111ere110, Ool~. o.ntn.nl, l :ot.I. 1. Sovi.1 Ul'llon.) 13 '- 1978 CARS I and TRUCKS. ALL MAKES! 833-0555 Alie ForOur lW( SPltlAUST at HOWARD Chevrolet eor-o• o.w.. ono Owtt S•• NEWPORT BEACH MALCOLM IEID Mgr. •.ys: "DON'T WAIT! ORDER ~~¥1 TODAY11 Blalock Takes Stand 'Lopez Isn't One-Woman Show' WHEEUNG, W. Va. <AP) -Jane Blalock is trying to prove the LPGA tour isn't a one~woman show. Stealing the spotlight away from Nancy Lopez for the second straight week, Blalock coasted to a seven·sbot victory Sunday over Kathy Martin in the Wheeling LPGA Classic. And alter setting a tournament scoring record with a nine-under·par 207, Blalock took on anyone who claims Lopez is women's golf in the United States. LOPEZ WON F IVE s traight tournaments earlier this summer and has won seven tournaments this year "I'd have to argue that," said Blalock. "The galleries have been large and the big purses were settled on before Nancy started winning th.is year. That's an insult to the <Judy) Rankins . the <Debbie) Austins and the CJoAnne> earners. "Nancy has meant a great deal to the tour this year, but to say that she is the tour is exaggerating -iµid that's putting it mildly." .B la lock shot a safe, consistent par· 72 after all but wrapping up the title Saturday when she fired a five· under 67. Thal gave her a seven-shot lead going into the final roWld. HER 7Z, COUPLED with earlier rounds of 68 and 67, enabled her to break by two strokes the Wheeling tournament scoring record of 209 set last year by Debbie Austin. Blalock, who won here two years ago in a playoff with Pat Bradley. was never in a ny trouble. Kathy Martin. a non-winner in seven years on the t.our, fired a two-under par 70 to finish second at 214. She was never able to get any closer than seven shots. LUOl1>9 SCllf'H In Ille Wlleellfto LPGA OHtlc Oft Ille CNr-n . 6,2'1>-y•rd Soeloel Goll Course: Jane BleloU, S11,1SO Kattly Mertln, S7.* JoAnne Carner, l'.17S Penny Pull, S', 17S Joyce Kerml.nkl. S'.17s Sve Rotler1S, .,.420 Jerll.,n Britz. $2.650 ear~r• 9M•-. Sl.llS Sandri Sl>Uflch, $1,tH Belt'f Cullen, S1,t 7S OeDOle A.mln. 11,11s Pel M•~l'I. Sl.17S .11nel Colts. S1.17S KaUly Hitt, $1, ltl Uure fllUll\. SI. It! Mary Miiis. Sl.ltl Oel>t>le MeSM\', Sl,1'1 SMiiey Hemon. s1, 1.i E"• Oleno. St. tt1 M J. Smlttl, SWO Janet A~,noo .._.1.n -201 .. 7 ... 70-21• .. , .. 71-215 n-12-11-21~ 11-1).71-21$ n-10-11-211 n -n -1._111 11-7•7-21' 1J.7S.11-21t 7S.7).11-21t , .. , .. 11-2tt 70-7•n-21t 11-7•72-21' 7S.7S.10-220 , ... , .. ,t-m 7)-7$-72-ZJO 72-7"7-220 ,,_, .. ,._uo 14-71-7~220 10-n.n-221 1).7t-1.._221 Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE West Division AnJ(els Kansas City Texas Oakland Minnesota Chicago Seattle W L PCt. GB 46 40 .535 44 40 .524 1 42 41 .506 21h 43 44 .494 3'h 39 42 .481 41/:i 38 46 .452 7 30 58 .341 17 East Division Boston Milwaukee New York Baltimore Detroit Cleveland Toronto 57 26 .687 48 35 .578 9 46 38 .548 11~ 45 40 .529 13 42 42 .500 15~ 39 46 .459 19 32 53 .378 26 ~,·,seer-. $Hiiie II,,.,,...., 1 Clevel-7. Bostan 1 Oo•<•oo s, Toranto 3 MllWtlil< .. I, New Yori(• ICanus City 10, .. m_ • r .. u •, Dttrolll lUlnnl~l T•Y'I 0-1 No 91"'" tchedUled T.-.,·1Geme AIMter 9MN-' Sen Oie90, S ~Pm NA110NAL J.,EAGtJE Wat Division San Francisco Dodgen Cincinnati San Diego Atlanta Houston W L P d. GB 52 34 .605 so 36 .581 2 49 37 .570 3 42 45 .483 lO'h 37 47 .440 14 36 46 .439 14 EIM Dlvlatoa Philadelphia 47 34 .580 Cttlca10 43 39 .524 4'h Pittsburah 40 41 . .t9' 7 Montreal 41 45 .47'7 8'h New York 36 SO .419 13~ St. Louis 34 53 .391 16 s-.y•, ScMet Hooslon s. ~ 1 Pflll.O.lpllle I. MofttrMI ) Chic .... , ........ Y9rll I PlltSburell '·St. Louil I ClnclnneU I. 5-1 Fren<IKO 1 Atllnt• J, S9ll Ole9o 2 T .. y'aO-a Ho .. ~ sclledlil911 ,....,, .• o.-. •ll·ttar 9-11 ltn Olt90. S;JO P."'- JOHNSON & SON LEASIMa ••• ALL MAKES ALL MODELS HEW I ,, . 600 W. COAST HWY. • MIWro.T HACH • 64'-0UJ OR USED BASEBALL I GOLF I PEOPLE IN SPORTS DEJECTED FIGURE -George f~ollmer of Huntington Harbour. who had the third fastest qualifying time in the Watkins Glen, N.Y. Can-Am. is consoled by friend A~~ Brian Burgess afte r Follmer spun out in the first lap and was unable to continue Sunday. Warwick Brown of Australia won the race driving a Lola T-333CS. ,,,...,.age 8J ELDER ••• tra hole. but I got a little tired on eight, and the ball had no legs and went into the bunker , .. Trevino said. ELDER SA.ID he muffed hiS chance to win in regulation when he let his mind wander before he bogeyed the 16th . "I let my mind gel away from the JOb at hand, and that was playmg golf." be said. "I was thinking that 1 had a lead with two to play, and then I thought of all the things I wanted so bad· ly -the chance to play in the Masters again, the Tournament of Champions, the top 60, the chance to reach m y goal of $100,000 this year." Elder and Trevino parred the first five playoff boles, birdied the par-5 sixth and parred the No. 7. Trevino shot a 68 and E lder 69 in the final round Miller Barber shot a 68 Cor third at 278. ~ou Graham , Tim Simpson and Dave Barr tied at 179. Lee<tlnv sc0<es •n<I Nrnl"9S Sun<lllv In tne Greeter Mllwa<Jkee Open GoH Tourtwmenls ovt'r th• 7,010.yard. par.n Tucuwey CouMry Club coorw lx-wanplayofll· &·Let EIO.r '30,000 LH Trevlno$17,100 Moller Bertie< '10 .. 50 loo Gr•Nln '6.200 Dave Barr '6,200 Tim SlmPtof\'6,200 8ob l•ncler Sl.112 Gll>fly Giibert Sl.112 Homero Blanc.es U,71? MK Mclendon '3,711 J•lfHHSSl,112 0..,• l!lcllelllffllff Sl,181 Grier Jones Sl.112 Gery ICOCll $2,SlO Jim Colber1 Sl.SlO Mark L~ $2,550 Merli' Flectr.men $2,01S krM'( ~$2,02S JOiin Adarm '2.02.S t>on tv•non Sl.llA llOCI Lunn Sl,124 Vic~ 11 ... llOO St,JU JOM l llt9r $1,32f Jeff H-es Sl.J2• Jeff Mll<llefl S1.J2• LOii NlelMf' Sl,l2A Pllll Rod9enSl.Cl20 lloOlly Wedlllns Sl.G20 Ger'( O\t,..._ St.CUD ... 10-10...-. 11 s •t-1.,......._ns 1~1*""m ... 11-11-11' .._7CH0-71-m ''""*11-m 11 ....... 11-ao ,, ...... 71-2'0 ''""*n-ao 1~10-2'0 7C).7C).I0-10-2IO n .1C).10*-210 ,,.,,......._* 7().l:Hf.+t-211 15 .. 6~2'1 ... ,,.,,..._211 , .. ,, .. ,.,._212 10.10.11-11-211 ......... ,J-412 14·1~1>-S •t·1CM1·n -m 11 ... 10-11-m 1•11 .... 10-m 1 .. 11 .... 10-m n~n-10-10-m 11-10....n-m 1• 10-10-10-2"' 1Hf.n·1>-2"' .. 11-11-14-2"' f'l"OBI Page BJ ANGELS ••• mark it would seem the)''re go. ing to need a healthy Ryan for the second half. HATT\.K "'"" MllllOlirl'lt 2b 1 I 1 1 Re.,noldt M s ' I 0 eodtteclh s 2 2 0 Rolltl"ltrf 3 J 3 2 PaciONk If S 2 J 2 Meyer 11> 4 o o t W.Sttln Ill 4 1 1 1 Htle ct 3 1 0 0 Ph1mmtr c t o 1 2 StlnllOfl c 1 0 0 0 CAl.IPCMINIA .. , .... Grich 11> ' o I o CNllk H S 0 0 0 Bostoo rf s I 2 o Rettel'lmund dll 2 1 0 0 So1a1t1 p11 1 o o o 8a'(ICW II> • 2 2 I 9'udllf • I f 0 LAMlcwd 311 • t J ) Oownlnvc • o 1 1 LAndr1111• cf • 0 t 2 Tolel1 "11 12 10 Tettll » 7 IJ I Seettl• ott oos 200-11 Celllornl• o:io 210 011-1 E-Hon•vcull. Rv•n. Ruell OP-Se•lltt 1 L08-S..it1e S, Celitonw• 10. 28-Pe<IOl"H t. r.:~'::s":'~:~~:i.~~~a~::0~(1!1. HOfte'rC\111 Romo lW,•2> ... ,,..., II' " ...... so H A TILE J··) s 41') • I ' CALll'09'NIA 1 J 1 0 0 0 Ryen (l,>tl SYJ I • t • I O.Mlller ~ ' l 1 0 0 IC.Brett 1 I O 0 0 ? Htr1Jtll I 0 0 0 0 I H8P-Oownln9 IBy Romol, RoMr!J INy HtrtHlll. '#~yen. 8al--T-1·Jt Victory Savored Navratilova Rates Navratilova No. 1 From AP Dispakbes BOSTON -Fres h from her women's smgles victory at Wimbledon, Martina Navratilova claims she is the top women's tennis player in the world. "I've won 59 of 62 matches this year," she said Sunday after being welcomed by a cheering crowd of about 100 at Boston's Logan Airport. ··1 think that makes me No. 1." After she defeated Chris Evert in three sets for the Wimbledon crown Friday, Navratilova returned to Boston to resume playing for the division-leading World Team Tennis Boston Lobsters. She ls presently the top.ranked women's singles player and leads in several other categories as well. Navrattlova said she is going to savor her victory at Wimbledon before beginning to think about the U.S. Open at Flushing Meadow, N . Y • later this summer. "First l'm going to enjoy what I've done," Navratilova said at the airport. 'Tm on cloud nine. Everyone's going to be trying twice as hard to beat me, but when the U.S. Open comes along, I'll worry about it then." MAVHTt.SOVA Na vrat ilov a, who defected from Czechoslovakia three years ago, said Czechoslovakian newspapers published just one paragraph about her Wimbledon victory "and they didn't even mention my first name." ------Q-te •I die D••------. P at Zadlry, New York Mets pitcher who was selected for Tuesday's All·star game and was one of five players traded from Cincinnati last year for Tom Seaver: "Tom Seaver bas been like an albatross around my neck. r really don't want to talk about or be compared with him any more." E,__,ltere I• s,,.ri •... BASEBALL -Jeff Btll1'0Qlbs slammed a tie·breakine two· run homer in the fifth inn1nl and lmuckleballer ftlU Metro made a rare relief appearance, pacing the Atlanta Braves io a 5-2 win over San Diego . . . Dtek Daris and Sobba Yount drove in two runs apiece and Larry Hlale scored three times to give the Milwaultee Brewers an 8-4 victory over the New York Yankees and a sweep of the tbfee.game series . . . Buddy Bell belted a grand·slam to back the pitching of vete ran Rick Wise as Cleveland topped Boston 7 · l . . . Du Driessen singled home the tying and go·ahead nms, Tom Ha•e ended a personal nine.game losing streak and P ete Rose extended his bitting skein to 25 games as the Cincinnati Reds routed the San Francisco Giants 8·2 . . . Danell Porter and •uDDY HU. John Wa&han hit successive home runs during a seven·run third in· ning to lead the Kansu City Royals to a UH victory over Baltimore and a sweep or the three-game series ... Minnesota's Dave Geils hurled 7~ innings of hitless ball to lead the Twins to a '7·0 win over Oakland. It was Minnesota's eighth stari&ht win •.. Bobby Matter hit a two.run homer and Bruee Sutter stifled New York over the last three innings as the Chica10 Cubs beat the New York Mets 4·1. TENNIS-Nintb·seeded Mike Cablll of Eagle, Wisc., captured the men's singles championship ln an intemaUonal toumamnet at the Raleigh Racquet Club with a 6·3, 3-6, 7-6 triumph over Wlllem Prlnsloo or South Africa ... Kathy Jordan, an 18-year-old Stan- ford University freshman, earned three titlea at the National un· der·21 Amateur clay court championships. J ordan won the singles. doubles and mixed doubles. Gabriel Mattos, a 20-year ·old native or Brazil. beat Mike Harrington 6-2. 6·1, to win the men's singles ten· nis title. FOOl'BALL-The Rams are scheduled to officially begin prep· arations for the 1978 National Football League season today with ihe opening or training camp for quarterbacks and rookies t Cal State Fullerton . . . Quarterback It.on .Jawonkl, "The Polish Rifle", wbo threw a NFL blgb 18 touchdowns last season, says the Phlladelpbla Eagles fans can expect lo see a "revamped of· fense" this season ... llmmy Cefalo Is prob· ably the only NFL rookie who can count on his name belng prominently displayed in the New York Times for the next five days. The Times wl11 be runnjng excerpts rtom a yet untiUect book In a flve-part sertes this week. ROtl J Awotthl HORSE RACING -After only five days rest , Effervescing came back to win the $107, 100 Citation Handicap al Hollvwood Park Sunday .. Oamod a Sworcl, ridden by Angel Cordero Jr. In the sixth race at Hollywood Park. fell and died on the track. A track spokesman said the horse died of Internal bleeding. * 8pert•-118dlo.Te~ RADIO: No events scheduled. TV: Tonlaht -Horse racina -Taped results or today's Hollywood Park action. 10 p.m .. ChAnnel 22. . . t COMICS I CROSSWORQ MARMADUKE by 8rH Anderson "It can't be that bad ... three dog movie stars endorsed it!" FUNKY WINKERBEA,. MOON MULLINS HELLO , FIRf; D~PARTMENT? STANDBY, .. GERIATRIX ourzR~SHOW "YCU 1'2.E Q>..'~WN 'SS0,1S, Mfl.S, ~LS.,., ----- ~ DENNIS TH E,,_M..,E..,,N..,A...,c_e ____ -v. ~04--u 1-IO '~ Lcfro ... 1 CM'r ~I' BOOMER GO~.~ ~A tif.tortrA~ a: GA? Oil •. PA~ll . ' iOO SAO Wf, DON'f ~Avt A 5Ll12PL.U~ or: so.i1.-.,,6 Wf.. COLJL.O ruo~ Off. MISS PEACH AltHWL", f'M SllNG ~fATIO "T?> TME MDVI~ 'l?:>NIGMT' ... ''JAW~ II'' by Tom Batiuk AND 1Hl5 M05T BE Q)OR troTHER! ANY MAN ~~Y~. "WE WILL 1,, ll / IOV YOGI. ~~& ALL. BAD· by Ferd and Tom Johnson SORRY, EM/'Jo.A ··BY THE ilME I GOT ;o THE LAST ONES, ii-IE FIRSTONE:S H,AD BURNED DOVJN .....___. ..... ~-'-';----:::~--~ t' ,, ',, /, GORDO JUDGE PARKER TUMBLEWEEDS HOW ARI: 'TlilNGS GOIN& FOR ~OR iRIEJE:1 Fa.LA? ~~..;._,;~___, ~~ NANCY THAT LIFEGUARD IS 50 HANDSOME, l1L.L MAKE HIM SAVE ME by Wm. F. Brown and Mel Casson ... Pf.OPLI ! DOOLEY'S WORLD -5<) 1HIS GUY ~YS,'su~, \WCJU> 'JtXJ GIVE ·~ 1l> SURYA SAXa>HONE Pl.AVER ?" OR.SMOCK by Mell by Gus Arriola by Harold Le Oo&nc by Tom K. Ryan I S066t:ST YOO ~URRY 10 AN Of'lOME'TRISi. Mondly.July 10. t978 ONLY PILOT PEANUTS by Charles M. S.ttult _ by Roger Bradf(tl,S 7 ·10 l~o ~ .. ! . . ! II lty George Lemont TDDAT'S CIHSIDBD ruzzL' ,: ACROSS I lianq un evenlv 4 Remove h~11 from 9 On f'vrrv \lr!P 14 Pewter COin 15 Ind slow manne< 16 Unfelll'fed 17 lhosf> not on lhekl'l()w 19 "The Gll!f'n Har· avthOt 20 Ot11Hv 21 Pas!>lng grade 22 Concett 1J Sea b11d 74 footpronl~ 26 Move bv 5mall dl'glt'i!~ 29 Un1am1ha1 31 Booo 32 Turk1:.1> leader HAlt'li 49 Egyp1. onrP 50 V1SIOI' orq;in SI light treil<I S2 Measured arras • Sot Notch 511 N T boo' 60 R~def'll of Sutt" 61 Raw~ wll•l~ 62 F.iust tor ~ 64 Nc}Okon 66 Meal covrs- 67 Ah Pofl 611AO01 BC 69 Sundial l)clrl 10 hllaustecl II War'<! DOWN tWca!it:I 1 A~ Generally 3 Bowl foolball spectacle 33 Addison and 4 Coastod 'i Owned 6 V01'11Clll 36 As 500!1 as 38 and gra vel rool 39 w arship 41 St1a1pes1 '3 Famer Arab 44 Eiect 46 ASP118tt0ns 0 Head ges ' 3 l ,. 17 11 ... ., ,)I 7 Accept con· d11tons 2 11110<ds 8 Shade of red. 2words 9 Lahn wings 10 Lucrena 11 Formosa •xiion 2 UNITED Feature Syndicate Saturday's Puzzle Solved , I 11 IO Ill 'IS -· I A D W A N I 1 ... -........ --~r--10.,IE lllA -A II l A !_!..!,I l lOlilt Ail •t 0 II 0 I (A CM lalll• .,_ AN A 0 l I I II [ -n le IT lo N . l ( v ( l ( • c • ( Di( !11 c 1 •11 (l - " u • -c 10 l D $-l I l lAIC A 0 I l -l II I p S -l lllNl'I , ( ( II S I s 1 " ' s • NI 1101 • I I A T T • s T II u 0 Oflll' s ( A p 0 II '. T A • l (- A II C •• II • ( .. A II u .. . " I 0 A 0 I l II I A It I II 0 l ~ D l CL p l ( I ' 0 " ' 0 ( ;II s ' I II ( .. WOldS 12 Put 10 WOllt 13 OecITTlill SVli l!'m bdsc t8 Ofle gcmng a tdn ?4 Do a clea11 ong1ob. ') words 25 Leaves a group 27 Abyss 28 lornnt an11 Moss JO Yale SIU- dents 33 Sh'TIC>V 34 Small drum 35 In a learned wav 37 Vf!fV $!range: Vr- O I ( II 0 0 ' 40 Down 10 r eaflh oot.'S 42 SeW1n9 im,. ~ ,,. . plement ~ ~ 4501das~, on: 2 w ,. 48 Helix "';!' .-53 Metal 1~ ... 1ng , 56 Meal~~;. ralcer !# ~ 56 Chem P"' hx SI Walk on '59 Manufoc tu red 61 Cen11a1 1<1<?.1 62WW II sov group 63 Butter qu.i11 htv 65 Wme: Prehl . ' =-t-t--+--1 ~ ~ ~-.--..~ I _.. ...... __.~ ~ '"'."'1'"'11-t--...... +--+--f $ ~ I I ~1 i , ~~+-.._ ... ~ --+--+-t-+-1 t ' -=-t--+--1 ; I ' _..__. ...... .al D.\IL Y P1lOT lloaad Brltala Raee Acapella Surprises p L YMOUTH. Enaland (A p ) - The s urprise of the trrst atqe of the Round Britain Yacht 'Race. wblch beaan here Saturday. was lbe fourth· place arrival of Ireland early Mon· day o f the American trimaran Acapella. Raced by Walter and Joan Greeoe of Yarmouth, Maine, the Acapella la one of only two American yachts among' the 74 boats entered in the grueUnJ. race, which coven about 2,000 miles around the British Isles. The other U.S. entry, the eo.root trimaran Rogue Wave, ended the firat Jes of the race at Croashaven, Ireland, Sunday afternoon. NEWSPAPER publis her Pbllip Weld, 6.1, of Gloucester. Mass .• skip· BOATING per or the Rogue Wave, Wal far ~bead ol tM rest of the record neet and la rated the tavorite ln the raco wblch will end at Plymouth. Weld, tb1rd ln the laet two Rowld Brltalo races in 1970 and 1"14, was followed by two blg British J&chts ln second and third places. But race observers were surprised when the Acapella, only 37 feet long, showed up fourth after aailint rrom Plymouth to Crosshaven with the wind ~ton the noee all the way. THE DIRECT distance ia 280 miles, but the boats sailed much further because or their coru1tant need to tack into the wind. Greene, 34, said before the race that he hopes to finish among the lint five boats. "There are a lot or boats that could beat me but I am not sure they can sail eff\cienUy 24 hours a day," be said. "Mi.De is a sr.oall boat and Joan and I can push her round·the·cloek." GREENE BUILT the trimaran himself. to his own designs, in hJs backyard. The outer hulls are con· structed of fiberglass and the main hull is of wood. H e said he h as clocked the Acapella aa fast as 18 knots, and she has sustained 12 knots over long period&. The couple crossed the Atlantic from Portland, Maine, to Bishop Rock light, in the Scllly Isles off the southwest tip of England, with an average speed of Jul under eight knots. The crossing took just over ts days. Victoria to Maui UP FRONT -Balboa Yacht Club's Brad Wheeler lakes a dvantage of his rival's spinnaker Snafu to take a decisi~e lead on his way to winning the Governor's Cup junior racing series. Lead Stretched by Merlin HONOLULU <AP> The 67-foot t LOB vessel Merlin continues to stretch its lectd in the 2,310-mile Vic- toria-to-Maui yacht race. reporting in just 526 miles out or Maui Sunday. IN THE IOR DlVISION, the cor- rected time leader continues to be the Friars 48 yacht Bravura, of the Labaina club. Bravura held a aix-bour lead over the C&C 38 vessel Topkapi, or The West Vancouver Yacht Club. Bravura ls the clear favorite to take the corrected Ume bonon in the division. Govenwr's Cub Back At Balboa ¥ acht Club At that pace, Merlin is ex~ted to be the fint to cross the finish Une near Lahaina on Tuesday, slashing 21.2 hours orr the record pace set by the yacht J oH in 1974. Merlin. or tbe Corinthian Yacht Club in Seattle, held a 92-mile lead over the Lahaina Yacht Club entry Orm.er on Sunday , Leading the PHRF Division I Sun- day was Zuben Ubi U, a Cascade 47 Veaael from Lahaina, which has re- linquished ita lead only once since the race began July t Brad Wheeler brought the Gov- e rnor's Cup back to its original home at Balboa Yacht Club with three straight victories in the finals or the junior match racing series Sunday. · A.t Huntington Lake The Governor's Cup competition took a new tack this year when 20 sklppers were selected instead of the original 10. The 20 were divided into two groups with each skipper racing every other in the group and the top two from each group being selected for the final sailoff. The new format resulted ln four days of match racing in Santana-20 sloops over a five.mile windward- leeward course off the Santa An a River jetty. Lido-14 Champiomhip Races Launched da WHEELER AND HIS crew or Ty Beach and Gorde Murphy wound up 0 Y with seven wins ln their division and Lon~ Beach Yacht Club, with Peter Li do-14 s ailors from throughout the Uniled Slates. Canada and Mexico .ire expected to compete for the na· 1ional championship of the class -.1 <•rt ing today at ll untington Lake in I he Sier ra Nevada mountains northeast of Fresno. Nearly 100 skippers and crews are i•xpected lo enter the competition with the first preliminary race .. cheduled at 11 a.m. Aller three pre- liminary races today and Tuesday the flt!{)t will be divided into the Champ1o ns h1p Fligh t a nd the Consolation Flight The first championship race will .... tart Wednesday at 11 a. m. with three races to be sailed for the title. THE LIDO-l4 n ational ch a m-Kent as skipper topped the division pionship regatta follows the annual with eight wins. High Sierras Regatta which was In the other division Oceanside sailed on the lake Saturday and Sun· Yacht Club's John Gresham and St. day. The Lido·14 had its beginning in Newport Beach with W.D. <Bill> Shock developing the class which has g r own l o b e on e of the moat nu merous a nd popular sailing dinghies in the world. LARGEST MAJORITY of the fleet as e xpected front Southern California clubs, including Newport Harbor's Balboa, Newport Harbor, Udo llle and Bahia Corinthian Yacht Clubs. Dave Ullman of Balboa Yacht Club is the defender, having won the title t hree years in a row. Fiver Wins First in IORRace King Harbor Hosts Regattas Francia Yacht Club's Pa ul Cayard were the two top teams with six wins. each. In the Sunday finals Wheeler de- feated Gresham In the first match while Long Beach Yacht Club's Kent was ta~ the measure of St. Fran- cia Yachf t;tub's Cayard. To wi .. the Cup Wheeler and his crew had to defeat Ca~ard in a Breezy race in about 18 knots of wind. THE f1NAL SCORE was Balboa Yacht Club. Long Beach Yacht Club, St. Fra n cis Y acht Club and Oceanside yacht Club In that order. Other clubs competing were San Diego, San Francisco. Bahia Corin- thian. Mission Bay. California, Santa Barbara. Corinthian Sailing Club of Dallas. Tex. and Monterey in the red division. Competing in the black division were Huntington Ha rbour, Newport Harbor. Dana point, Ft. Worth (Tex. J Sailing Club, Lido Isle Richmond and Alamitos Bay yaght clubs. A pair of CF~4J sloops c n ptu red the two top places In the lntern a· tion a l Offshor e Rule <IOR> division of Long Beach Yachl Club's Pt. Fermin Invitatio nal race Sunday. King Harbor Yacht Club of Redondo Beacb was host to two championship 11illnl regattu Saturday and Sunday -the Calitomta District championship for the Light.nlnc Class and the Soutbem California championship for lh• Colum· bia-Challenger class. Winber in the Lightning Clua wu For Sail. sk.ippered by Myron Lyon, Miuion Bay Yacht Club. Second was Meranatha. sailed by Manning Barber, MBYC, and third was Paddlin Madelyn, GOVERNOR'S CUP MARKED BY CLOSE ACTION ON RACE COURSE Alemttoa Bay YC lcMlt Takes Stern of Richmond YC Entry BOATING I BUSINESS '500,000 Plaza Starts Remodel Job The original wm• of South Coast Plaza shop· ping center in Costa Mesa is undergoing a $500,000 facelift to catch up with the modem design of itis newer malls, officials said. Skip Stephenson, general manager for South Costa Plaza. said. "The intention is to more close- ly tie the original wine or the Plaza <anchored by May Co. and Sean> to the newer wings." The construction is --------.... under way durtna late TAKING night and early momtna• to minimi.le problems for STOCK c u s tomers. 1 a ld '"--------Stephel\IOI\. The projecl includes the replacement of planters and imtalla· lion or marble n oor and skylights. Work abould be finished in ai.x to eilht w"ks. Ther e will be one casualty o1 the con- struction project. The Carousel merry-10-round will be shut down until the fi rst of September to make room for construction. lt'efJb Get• Ma•a~t lff Del E . Webb Corp. and JPK Inc. have entered into a 20·year contract for Webb t.o mana1e ~ new La Posada Resort Hotel, under conatrucUon near Scottsd.ale, Ariz. The companies said that JPK is scheduled to build the 2'76·room hotel and complete other im- provements in the 30-acre resort complex before the end of 1978. Restaurants. shope and banking facilities are already in operation at tbe La Posada shopping plaza. The new resort will be mana1ed by Del E • Webb Hotel Co .. a subsidiary ol Del E. Webb Corp. William M. Dougall, president of the Webb Hotel eroup. direcu seven company-owned and/or managed hotel and caaino properties, with two new facllitiea. the Sahara Reno Hotel le Cutno In Reno, Nev. and the Park-Tahoe Hotel Ir Cuino at Lake Tahoe. Nev .. scheduled for July openinp. The resort will be the second hotel in the Scot· tsdale atta managed by Webb. The Webb-owned Mountain Shadows Resort Hotel is located a quarter·rnile from La Posada. Webb alao owna and operates the Townebouse in mid-town Pboenht; tbe Newporter Inn in Newport Beach; the Sahara and Mint Hotels in Las Vegas. Nev.; the Sahara Tahoe in Lake Tahoe, and the Primadonna Casino in Reno. «Anlt....ecers Atdetl Business knowledge is as crucial as hammer and nails to a bu.ilding contractor's survival, says Bank of America in ill latest Small Business Reporter. The report, "Building Contractors... is the latest issue in a series published by the bank for owners and managers of s mall businesises. Coples a re avallable withoul charge at bank branches For mail orders, postage and handling charges are $2 per copy. 1a Otten Anis••~ The lnt.emaJ Re venue Service ba.s a program to help Soutbem Californians who are unable to re- solve tax problems throu&b normal channels. The uslstance is available through a problem resolution office in the agency's Loa Angeles head- quarters. Taxpayers can get help by wriUng: Problem ResoluUon Offtcer, lntemal Revenue Service, P.O. Box 1791, Loe Aneeles, CA 90053. Nabers Deafenftip Clced Nabers Cadillac, Costa Mesa, has bMn (iven Cadillac's "master dealer award" for Ute lbfrd s traight year. Competition Is judged by performance in four categories: sales, service. parta and management. N8 (:oaapa•fl Cll•..,,e• N..,. National Systems Corp., Newport Beach, has changed lu name to NaUonal Education Corp. The company's trading symbol on the American and Pacific exchanges was chan1ed to NED. It ls a publicly owned voc:aUoaaJ traintng school company with more than 70 owned and rrancbbed schools in the United States and more than 100,000 students in the fields of aviation, real estate, medicaJ and dental asaJstance, aecretarlal and. through correspondence counes, 11 other vocational areas AU.Ccate Sraflda c...,,&eietl A branch office of Allstate Savint• and Loan has been completed by tbe Koll Co. of Newport Beach at the new Corporate Piasa ln Newport Center. Stan Brockboff, Koll senior vice president. said the two-story structure was built at a eoet of $900,000 and contains 16.000 square feet of space. Allstate will occupy the ground noor wttb or. fices and public spaces. A community room de- s igned for use by groups and or1antzations will also be provided. The second fioor will bave general office space. . Bissell/August Architects or Newport Beacb handled the design. The winner was Fiver, s ailed by designer Den· nis Cboate, and run- nerup wu Silver Fox. s kippered b y Bob Kelleher, both of the bost club. Wlnne r s in othe r c:lasaes: Wendell Harter, KHYC. I'.-.... .-F • l Vlll Viti, skippered by Howard Ludwig. ~r r,n,a KHYC, was the winner in the Columbia Challenger class. Runnerup was Keith Ancel's Minda II. D-uJ,•o 'W'O KHYC, and third was Blue Streaker, Stan Cook, ~ t.e i ~ KHYC. HEBER CITY, Utah CAP) -Ftna1 reeulta in the Luer N1tlonal Sailboat Champion11h1ps, wblch concluded Satur· day at D eer Creek R•aervotr: No Bear. No Bull. Our six-month money-market certificate earns .253 more than lreasury Bills. . PHIU"-A -I, F==-:1..e ~~~~::,~=~,rM:: Ha:w.keye Captures L.aVC1 I. ... ~ •t1<' .,.._, CIVC. MOit, -I, ht.,,..... MC(MU, L.IVCl ......... "'"" , ..... NavY Bog Ra T•t1 ·~"'"'·'""·11 -'· ."'""'· art ce. 1 e Alltll" ,.,.._ AIVC; 2, Dultf, T..iy ltl<MctYlc, SI BYO. , c•i.·u -1• Aw•, .ieci. ,...,.., Hawkeye skippered by Mike Schacter Balboa t:~g,: 1• Molt• 0• •.c. '1"'9Nh. ' Yacht Club ;.,as the Class A winner ln the fifth r.;:t,·':, ;" '~2!1";,:•~:~:: rSea~ of Voyagert Yacht Club's Humphrey Bo1art AIY(, utl SUDdll)'. State Report SACRAMENTO (AP) -St1te hipway pro· ject1 un comply wl\h envlronmeetal revltw requlremHt• without der11ln1 ~1tructloal th• •t•te Mid.ttor 1ener .. tei4 ln a •N• npott. Clue B wbmer was Aloha IJ, skippered by Glenn a..d, South Shore Yacht Club. The Bogart Series ls for yacbtl rai.d under the Perfonnuce Handic•p RaclnJ Fleet measure- meat•rstem. Sunday'• race : Ct.ASS A -l. Hawkeye; 2. Nqie Too, Jim Nu1eat. .BYC; 3. Sequoyah, Jlm J109ro, 8VC~, C~ B -1. Aloba II, Glenn Reed, SS•C; t. Howltn' Owl, ~llen Stewart, VYC: a. Olmllle Sbtlttr Too. John Barrow. VYC. 1. Carl Buchan, Mercer liland, Wub .. 5 poin\I. 2. Andrew Menkart, Bethesda, Md., lS. 3 . Cralg K e aly, RichmOQd, 23 \.it. 4 . Ed Baird, St. Peter•bur.ah. Fla., 27~. 5 G" Marctor . Quebec. Canida, tt. &. Jan Sn.ice, Quebec, 40. 7 . Kurt Mllhr , Hermosa Beach, 41. 8 . Mark Brink . Kirtland, WNh., 42. Bear or bull market. here's a guaranteed short-interest. guaranteed for the full six-month term. \erm gain. (Minimum deposit SJ0,000). If you have eidsting certificates or Treasury · Your Interest rate ls established at the Ume Biiis maturing soon. we con arrange for transfer yourMoney·Mnri<et Certificate is l$Sued. You get of funds to Republic's new Money-Market Cer· .25" mo ... then the weekly auction average tlflcate. (There is, of course. an Interest penalty rate for six-month Trea1ury Bille. Once you for earty withdrawal on certlncete accounts). open your ecc:ou11t. you t•rn this some high Republic Is good for th• economy-Yours. Every u.... the Rooster CIOW8 rour •ner a.,,.. • REPUBLIC FEDERAL SAVINGS , t • , ' STOCKS I BUSINESS Mo n d ay'• CJo ing Price NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS ~I .... .. , .. I ff ("'l Monday. July 10, 1978 UN DAil V Pll.OT *~ Unity Ahead lnfl,ation Geu Di8sent By JOHN CUNNIFF ., .......... rM The.re la unity ln infiation, or so 1t u; said. To many Americans thta mlahl not seem so. because with lntlation comes conflict between buyer and seller, fear of the future. and tax and other dodges that enable people to keep more of their cheaper dollan. 8 l1T STUDENTS Of 11IE poUtical-economlc &cent note also that dbtresa over lnflaUon is brinlf na people together In oppo1lllon to fed.eral de.licit.&, waat.eful iovern· menl apend.lna at all levelJ, and "handouts." School and at.ber bond blues have been turned down . rebelUona a11lnat real estate taxea have occurred. and poUtlclana up for re-election are assur· lnl voters they a.re ln the foretroot of the movement. It goes further. After patiently and 1enerously. supporting Increased Social Security benent.s for years, the public finally e~resaed Its fear and anger over the resulting higher taxes. And another big s pender. President Carter. bas been forced to trim tus budget deficit, and even to trim bis tax cut 10 that deficits wlll be lowered, and to call a.a weU lor a lid on federal pay increases. ANALVZING THESE AND similar event.a, Michael Levy, dJrector of economic policy research at lhe Con· ference Board. observes that a common distaste /or lnfla· lion and its consequences is unitinl people. "lnl1ation ls the common cause that bas brought logether the business community, the FederaJ Reserve and the majority or working consumers in an unorthodox alliance favoring a new fiscaJ c:onservatism," be states . Whereas the consumer movement tended to pit con· sumers and producers in opposition to each other. the new movement against rising prices and taxes, 1a.y1 Levy, i5 merging their mutual concerns. "PRODUCERs.CONSUMERS ARE putting up their first serious resistance to the income traoafer process that escalated rapidJy and went virtually unchallenged durlni the last decade and a half," he observes. While this new unity bas expressed itself at the polls in California and in some other states. its real national strength, or lack or it. might be better observed in more ge neral elections this ran. But. while consumers seem to be rebelling against the government's use or credit. and the government's use of their 010ney, they seem perfectly willing -even en· tbuslastic -about personal spending and debt. THEY ARE NOT JUST HEDGE buying. in anticlpa· tion or higher prices later. but may be hedae borrowing too. elCpecting that with continued inflation they'll be able to repay their debts in cheaper dollars. For' many months the level of outstanding credit had been growing at a rate of $2.6 blllion a month, but it surged in late spring In March the total was tncreased by $4 I billion : in April by $3.7 billion. Some economists feel that. Uke Uncle Sam. the con sumer bas reached his debt limit and soon will be forced Into a more conservative mode in which bills will be paid nod purchases delayed. BANKERS AN D ECONOMISTS will tell you that con s umers very accurately determi ne wbe n they reached their limit, it usually comes in a direct message from their wallets and pocketbooks. In a $e0Se, therefore. these economists are proclaim ing another conservative unity, this one with Uncle Sam. and they say that lf it doesn't come to pass we might be un ited tn still another way That way is spelled recession Listless Trading Ends on Upswing • • • • .. .. ,. • .... 'I I .. OM Y PILOT MondQ. July to 1971 Television TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS EVENING ... , •• MEWi EMERGENCY ONfl Pererneoic Qeoe • ChOMn .. "f.U." to • Hiter ot llllten.. G GUHIMOKE An outlaw fall1 In love with the widow of • man lie 1111 ~ klfo.d to kMI In 1841· defenae. • PlEA8£ DON'T fAT THE DA!81E8 ··91g Men On Cempu1" • l'TAEETS ~ 8AH FMNC18CO Three young revolutlon- wles attempt to smuogle their newly KQulred, elec:- 1ronlo bombs thtough c;ua.. 1om1 at Ille Port of SM Francleoo. • OVERfASY Daniel Schorr; Paul Natllanaon on ieg.i guar<ll- 8Mh!p: llOfM11rown ettell• IPfOUtl WOii JOfln Bryan. (R) Cl!) rrs EVEr1B0Dv·a 9U8INE.8S ''Management'' i C88NEW8 ABC NEWS t;aG MY THREE SONS Robbie runs afoul ol en old ltall.n cuatom When he takM • girt walking In the park and learn• he's ~ed to many her. W MICHAEL JAa<SON Glen Craig. commlaaloner of tile Calllomla Highway PatrOI, examlnea tt\O dll- l11tence betWMn the police and the highway patrol ~ REAL ESTATE AND YOU "What To Know AbOut Encumbrances" Cl) TO Ta.l THE TRUTH Q1) MERV GRIFFIN Guam: Wayne New1on. Jackson Stars Janet Jackson, the youngest member of the singing J ackson family, joining Jim· mie Walker on Good Times tonight at 8:30 on CBS, Channel 2. Shelley Berman. Fre<1<1y Martm. 7:00 8 C8S NEWS I N8CNEWS LIAASCLUB A8CNEWS 80WUNOFOR OOUARS • ILOVELUCY Lucy lrleS to reunlle a VenetJan gondoliet wlln his brother. who lives tn Amer- ica .rJ THEF.8.1. Inspector Eraktne lnvesll· gates an unu1u1I case where a young man 11 paid $25,000 10 take Ille "rep" tor a crime he did not comm11. fJll MACNEtL I LEHRER REPORT ml TRAINS, TRACKS AND TRESTLES 'Bench Wort! And Wiring" ?:30 125,000 PYAAMID 1pokHwoman. Mary SchMIOt. lat "Stop ~ ERA Movement In Celtt0t· n1e. reec><>nd to the ERA dlacuNion broeoeut on May ,S, 1978. ID ,MHCH CHEF "Nepole0n'1 Ollcl<en" (RI Cl) ALL...a'TAMATSEA WORLD fad Leitllef and Laurie Sing« will Interview the atata ot lhe game to be played 111 San Diego, on July 11. 81 well u Bueball Hall ol Fatnefl. (II HOU.YWOOO SQUARES 1:00 9 Cl) THE JEf'FEASONS Tom Wiiiis makec the oe>enlng of his new bull- neu more lmpOrt.nt than family and friends -Md endanoet11 both. (Rl 0 UTILE HOUSE ON THEPAAIAIE "To Run And Hide" Walnut Grove's lown doc10t (Kev- in Hagen) becomes despondent over a patient'• death llll<I retiree from practle:e. (R) 9 MOVIE • • • • "Giant" (Part 21 I 1958) Ellzat>etft Teylor. James Dean. Edna Ferber's story at><xrt Texas ranch Ille and the por1t11t ot oil weaJ1h Is recreateo. (2 hrl.) • @) LAVERNE & SHIALEY "Ori~. She 5ald" Chaos reigns when Shirley a1temp11 to teach Laverne how to drive. "ExCUM Me, May I Cut In?" The girls persuade Riehle and Pot· 5le to take them to • danoe coniast. D MOVIE C'ha1111e-I l..bti119• • KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles i JOKER'S WILD CONSUMER 8UYUNE B NEWLYWEDGAME ROCK: THE BEAT ODES ON • • "~ "A Place For Lovers" (1969) Faye Oun•· way, Marcello Mntrolannl A termlnally·ltt woman tries to conceal her late from hef loller. bu1 he finds out and inslltl upon her hospt· t1Hzatlon. (2 hrs I D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles g KTLA (Ind ) Los Angeles 8 KABC·TV (ABC) Los Angeles (J) KFMB (CBS) San Diego G KHJ-TV (Ind ) Los Angeles 9 KCST (ABC) San D.ego e KTlV (Ind ) Los Angeles tJ JOKER'S WILD • THE ODD COUPLE 09Cllf ano Feh ere lnvtled to appear on • lelellisoon 2-!_melhow till 28TONIGHT • CAAOl. 8UANETT ANO FRIEN06 Guest· Betty wrMte • MOVIE ., KCOP·TV (Ind) Los Angeles ID KCET-TV (PBS) Los Angeler. 6Iil KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beacn HOii Clele Rober1s an<I guettl. Republican Con- gressman John H Rous.. ~ot. Councilwoman Don· na Wiikenson. and • • 'h "She'• ( 1965) Ufsula Andtws, JOhf1 Rieherdson. A myaterlOUS wOfl'llll con- 111neeS en EnghShmen trav- eling In Palestine that he le a reincarnation of tier lat· Brinkley Roasts Rivals Defends Role of Anchor Man on 'IV News By DAN LEWIS TVO...Sffvke With his calm, folksy manner of s peech and seemingly im- perturbable personality, NBC's David Brinkley can shred an ad- versary's ego with some brist· ling comments. He r e are some s amples gleaned from a recent interview Brinkley ser ved up to visiting t e levi s ion editors in Washington: "If Roone Arledge thinks he can deflate the role of the anchor person on the network news programs. he's far off bas e " Says Brinkley, the anchor man is a necessary fi x· tu re, " ... the only continuing element in news programs. THE NEWS CHANGES vast· ly. hugely. so r apidly, to the point of bewilderment, that familiarity, I guess, is an impor- tant part. Since we <the anchor men) have to tell the people a lot or bad news. the viewer finds it more palatable to hear it from someone familiar to them." Arledge plans to introduce the rotating anchor desk at ABC. where he has become president of news as well as sports. And if Roone reels he is eminently q ualified to handle the news supervision because of his ex- perience in sports, Brinkley bas other ideas quite to the con· trary. "I don't know Roone ... never laid eyes on him." Brinkley said. prefacing another verbal poke at Arledge. "It may be that moving to news Crom sports sounds plausible. but it is not. Sports a re scheduled events. Everyone knew a year ago that the Kentucky Derby would be held this year. So there was plenty or time to prepare. "NOT SO IN news. Sports isn't good background for news re· porting," Brinkley declared, contending that tbe news re- porter bas to make quick de· cisions on things developing at the moment. Ar WI,.,.... 'ANCHOR NECESSARY' Newscaster Brinkley So much for Roone Arledge. Next target: Barbara Walters, who left NBC to go to ABC because she didn't get the co- anchor spot on NBC's Nightly News that was given back to Brinkley. Brinkley is unimpressed with Miss Wailers' "newsmaking" interviews. "HOW MANY times during the year did she hitve productive interviews?·' Brinkley asked rhetorically, answering quickly. "Maybe four times." "The others were not much," Brinkley continued. "Interviews with public figures us uall)' aren't productive. They get un- interesting and self-serving. The answers are very predictable. She <Miss Walters) hasn't pro· duced much." Target No. 3: Tom Snyder. Snyder has been menlioned on occasion as a possible replace- ment for Chancellor, who is leaving the show. THE ME RE thought set Brinkley off into a la ughing fit. First he smiled, then giggled C.11642-5111. ., .,, ...... -" .. (I ... Put • few word• to work for ou. . ..... o •- ..,.. ... '\illlt .............. ... slightly and broke into un- restrained laughter, shaking his head in apparent disbelief at the notion that Snyd e r might become bis new co-anchor on N BC's Nightly News. "I'm not sure he'd want lo do it, or even if he·d like it. After years. it (being the anchor > can get to be simple drudgery. He <Snyder> I gather . . has a flamboyant personality.·· Brinkley did TlOt think nam· boyancy has a place on the nightly network newscasts. THE SUBJECT got around to former Secretary or State Henry Kissinger and his role as an NBC commentator on a high· priced regular basis. Was it pro· per. Brinkley was asked, for form er top governmenta l of· ficials lo get paid for comment- ing on government matters in which they may have a direct or indirect link from the past to the present ? K iss inge r was specifically mentioned. . Brinkley defended Kissinger's relationship with NBC. contend· ing he (Kissinger> wasn't any different from other former of. ficials who wrote books . Brinkley emphasized that Kiss- inger was being paid for his opi- nions on world events. and wasn't being paid w interviews, as H. R. Halde~ and later Richard Nixon were remuneral· ed for their TV interviews. "Remember, Kissinger is full lime on NBC's payroll. I think he's very us e ful to NBC," Brinkley noted. He also noted that Ford has a similar contract with NBC. "I don't know how useful he will be." Brinkley said. FINALLY, HE trained his detlator at the new crop or broadcast journalists. contend· ing that the young aspiring television reporter was more in· terested in "hair spray and makeup and beeomlng a star so waiters could recognize him," than getting a strong back· ground in reporting. TV TUBE TOPPERS KTLA 0 8:00 -"Giant." The con- clud ing segment of this highly rated movie from 1956 with Elizabeth Taylor. Rock Hudson and J ames Dean (in his final tole). KHJ 0 8:00 -"A Place for LOV· et s ." A tear jerker from 1969 with Faye Dunaway as a terminall y ill woman and Marcellb Masttioanni as her lover. KCET@ 9:00 -Opera Theater. The bBC production of the opera "Falstaff" is presented, backed by the English Chamber Orchestra. mer lower 12 "''.. l ,.,. 8D WESSEX TALCO "A Tragedy Of Two AmbHIOnt" The dogged. 1.1pward cMmt> 01 two upit· inQ )'OUnO Clefgyrne<l IS lreglcalty thwlll1ed by the unllmety retU<n of their Orumten fa111er from Cana- d•. wNWe they had. In lac:t. bllnllhed 'him '5> sPECw. "lndlan Sutnmet" ~In, • 12-year-old bOy. talles .i took at Ille In hi• Senla Ana pueblo teeerv•tlon 1:30 8 (J) GOOD TIMES WHlona and the Evans d••· cover the well-kept secret ol a rnyalerlous Hiiie girt wno comes lnlo thelr fives. (Part 1 ot .C) (RI I CROSS-WITS OVEAEA8Y Daniel Schorr: Paul Nathanson on legal guardl· anahlp: home-gfown allalla sprout• with JOhn Bryan. (R) 9:008 (1) M'A'S"H Colonel Polter •• shOcl(ed to learn hll un11 has received unfavorable proll· Cl8nCY repo<t1. lrom one of the/f own memt>en (Al D NBCMOVIE • * \'; "The Gitt In The Empty Grave" ( 1977) An<ly Grilfrth, Sharon Spelman A small·lown she<ilf 1nves· ligates tile Cleath ol a COU· pie whoae repuledly d-ued deughltf \ ... S seen alive just hours belore lhetr demise (RI B ®l THREE'S COMPANY Pizza to Go J-1 pr ..... Jaell and Chrluy Into Mtvice u babyslttlKl. (R) • MERV GAIFf1N Gue1t1: Wayne Newton. Shelley Berman. FredOy Mlll11n. Cleo Laine. Pete Barbuth. • OPERA THEATER ·•Falstaft" Gerllln\ Evans. Regina Resnick. April CanttlO, Nonnan Bailey. Notm• Burrowes and Nell Jenkins a<e lealured in this BBC pro<luctlon of Verd1't comic opera. witl'I Ille Eng• llsh Chamber O<CheStra. f!) DAVI08USSKIND Part I '"Pkfase Glw UI A Home: Older Children WhO Want To Be Adopte<I" 9:308 (1) ONEDAYATA TIME Schnelder decld .. lo save Julie from an older man. causing even more trou- blu tor bOth Julie and Ann. (Part 3 of -4) (R> 8 IIll CARTER COUNTRY "The A1eslde lklrnslde lkldget Chat" Chle( Roy has to chOp $20,000 trom lllS budget wtltlll lhe MayOf promltes. in a radio talk, to cut Iha police budget (R) 10:00 8 Cl) LOU GRANT 81lbe's story ol a homeleS8 family and Rossi's lnYMll· gation ol a pol•ticlan t>cxh backfire on Lou and Ille Tribune 11alf (RI 11= Hugh Downs hosts • broa<leeSt e<lition or a newamaga.tlne 1M1utlng majof 11ot1• dOfM by vatl- OUt eot~ta. I LET'S MAKE A DEAL 10:ao I NEWS t1.00 • (I) 9 HEWt LOW. AMIRICAN ITYlE "LOW And The Pllot>MI" Ywett la alttkl of entering• man's ~ment. "Low And The ~ W0tm" A MYenth ton ii 10 wed a MVenlh Oaugl'ltlf G MOVIE • 111 • "Darling" I 1965) Laurence Harvey. Dirk Bogaroe • THE ODO COUPlt After 11'1eit apenment IS robbed. Felix ldcl Otcat Into moylng Into "Secuflty Amil." • AME.RICA 2HIOWT Gunt: Merti HM'lill • ~CAVETT au.t-Mic:tMll PaYIOlf. •or· mer <lencl' Mth Olaghile¥ Ballet. G MACH&. I LEHMR MPORT t t:JO 8 Cl) CU LA TE MOVIE • • • ··Ae1n1r• County'' (19571 Montgomety Clift. Eliiat>elll f aylat. 8 T<>*lHT °""' hol1: DtVld ~teln· berg. Questa: Otana Nya<I. Latralne Oar;. Nell Cat18f. Ken Page • LOVE. AMEAICAH 8TYL£ "Love And The Artful Co<lget" A c:o4lege ptOI .... tot nu a triO ot l'lan<lmal- <1e11a. 8 9 80AP (EpllO<le I I l Jesslca tel< .. a firm llend llQ8Wll hef phlland8f'1no husband: Corinne contron11 Peter •boo1 his beh8Ylor. Burt and MlllY ptepere !of a 1ong-entlclpated e11en1. (Networtl edvi ... -<11tcre11on)(Rl • HOO.AH'S HEROES HOgan hes 10 tree three prltOM'I lrom the German NCfet pollce. I GETSMAA'T CA.lrnON£D ABC NEWS MJRNING 12:00. TWILIGHT ZOHE "The Bewltchm' Poor· ·~ .. A Mattllf Of Ute And 0..111~ Ralplt taue an 111. tlmoed IOolc "'lo ttwi tuture Wtlll retulll ttNtt P'Oll8 highly amutiflO 10 every. one but Ratpfl. 12!03 8 di POUCf: STOfrf "Two Froga On A Mongooee'" NareOtics OHi• C.I tlnd themeel\l8e In competition with redetel agentl on the trail of • drug ring, (RI 12:$0. MOVIE • • "Trall To San Antone" ( 19"7) Gen. Autry, Peggy St-111'1. A oowboy OOIMS to lhe aid ol a ~•tut gift In Texaa. ( t hr.I 1 1121.000 QUE8TIOH MOVIE •• "Wake Up And l(IM" I 19631 Robert Hottman. LIN Guton1. A young man and 1111 girlfriend get c:augM up In the excite- ment of a kte of crune. (t hr .30mln I t!OOD TOMOMOW au-11: Cea! Gold. WflO builds rec>lica.I ot the Auburn Boattell Speed· ster: end Ed O'Gara, hUd ot the Stutz Motat Cat Co.: Alaon C1enet, The Qenet. G MAVERICK "The Becrayel" t:108 NEWS (JJ) WILD. WILD WON..D ~ANIMALS "Al~Amerlcan Raccoon" No ~ llfllmal ,,., played a wldef role In the ~-of Amerlc:81'1s than the m11- cmev.ou1 raccoon. ;:1:--NEWS 2:20 Nl!W$ 2:11 NEWSMAl<ERS 3:16 l'T'EVE EDWARDS T~•dat1'• Daytime Mo.,~• h«>RNfNG '1:30. * •'h "Wheel Ot Fonune" ( 19' 1 I Ftances Dea. John Wayne . N=TERNOON 12'Q) •••• ,., "5amer" ( t962l George Montgomery. GM. bert Ro&erod. 3:00 0 * * ~ '"The l..Mt Child" ( 1971) Mic:tleel Cole. Van Heflin. 3:30 8 **'It "Mr And Mre. Bo Jo Jones" (197 t ) Deal Arnaz Jr .• Chris Noma . Crawford Real Late Bloomer SPOKANE <API -It took $.S a nd 25 years fo r C leve Richardson to really get himself established. Richardson, better known pro- ressionally as John Crawford and the sheriff on television's "'The Waltons. ·• was so shy in high school. he refused to read in front or his class. Harry V. Starbird, a teacher at the Colfax, Wash .. school, of. fered Crawford $.S if he'd read - after another teacher threatened to rail him. "THAT MAN'S belief in me - that was the biggest thing," said Crawford. who has appeared on numerous television shows, in· eluding "Police Woman.·· But It took a 25-year courtship to really get the actor settled. Wh en he met hi s wife, book· ing agent Beverly Long, she was iiin gle, but he was marrted. The cast of Lave rne and Shirley appears ready to dive into a giant pizza served up by Phil Foster <left). Others are (top. from left> Michael McKean. David Lander and Eddie Mekka and <bottom> Penny Marshall. Cindy Williams and Betty Garrett. The show will be aired for a n hour tonight at 8 on ABC. Channel 7. Ten years later. he was single. but she was married. Twelve years later, she was separated and be was single. but she went back l o he r hus band and Cr3wford married again. FINALLY. THREE years later. both were "available" and they were married. Crawford expl ained. Tholl18S Telethon Slated KTLA CChannel 5> will telecast the second annual St. Jude Children's Research Hospital Telethon Sunday, July 23, beginning al 8 p.m. Danny Thomas, hospital founder, Kate Jackson and Marlo Thomas will co-bost the five-hour, live. fund rai~er for research and treatment lrt catastrophic childhood lllnesses. After her divorce, Erlu got to know some pretty Interesting people ••• lndudlng herself .. HO'l'I CJ~Olll Crawford just finished making "Tilt," a film featuring Brooke Shields. He a lso will be seen in "Desperate Woman," with Susan St. James, "Trait's End." a Disney production and another Disney feature about gliders and smugglers. which isn't tilled yet. ENTERT Atr~llMENT I MOVIES I POP MUSIC Monday. July 10. t978 OAIL V PILOT 87 Scorcese Captures End of Rock Era By PETER J . BOYER HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Autumn 1976. The Band. arguably the world's best travelln& rock 'n' roll ensemble. has called it quits. Offered as con· solation is one unimaginable rock spectacle -a ,farewell concert featuring The Band, Bob Dylan. J onl Mitchell, Van Morrison. Muddy Waters and more. But even for the fortunate faithful who· were witness to the Thanksaiving farewell, "The Last Waltz" at San Francisco's Winterland seemed slight recompense for the loss felt by Band fans. There was one surreal performance by roclc 'n · roll's legends. an evening almost loo big lo ap· preciate. then no more. Silence. The concert was filmed and there was vague talk about a movie or television special, or s omething, but most folks figured nothing much •would come of it. A film version of ''The Last Waltz" figured to be just another cheap, e)tploltlve ·concert film. P9pel.C01a TICKET OFFER TO GllBAR~ Flnt M.Unee Performance Wedne.da.)'. Thuraday, Friday and Saturda Now .th.nJ Jul U . Detalb at. Food Stores. NOW PLAYING UA C'llEMA " 0..., • ~ • , lO • ~ lO • I .... 10 00 Cosll Maa (714) !>40-0594 •? l)Mlof •1 ,; • t )Cl • 4 ~) • I UO • 9 IO ~ ~-I -·-·~ .... -! •-,ftll CMIA~ MIK'ftWI .... ~ ·-·= ............. .... T,,_NIMI &.---•Ml-AW COHVOYr-........ ,,... BUT MARTIN Scorsese was the man who made the mm and, 18 months after lhe ®ncert. he bas given us his surprise. "The Last Waltz" Is not just another concert film ; in fact, it is not a con cert filmatall -ltls a Martin Scorsese film. Scorsese, who worked on lhe filming of Woodstock before moving on o morable features like "Taxi Driver " and "Mean Stree ts." approached "The Last Waltz" as if he were making a feature film. I nslead of videotape, Scorsese used big, immobile 35m m cameras -seven ol them -and kept them aimed at the performers, not darting back and forth from the au. dience lo the stage, providing a concise rocus on the players. sco11c£se Scorsese, an Intense fan of rock music, knew a story was being told on Winterland's stage -a story of long years on the. road, artistic com· raderie and rivalry, an the end or a rock epoch. He got the story on film. "IT'S A DOCUMENJARY, but then, ll really isn't a documentary," Scorsese says. "It'• like a music mm, but then, it lsn't really a music film. You know what it is? It's an opera." St:orsese explains. "For me. this wan'l just shooting a concert. The Band meant so much to me -their music drives me crazy -that I was trying to give them something, like a gift. What happens 1s, the film progresses through motions, Uke an opera. "You have one song, and that song leads to another song, and that song leads to another kind of song, which is influenced by different kinds of music. It becomes very American -a melting pol. "I DECIDED NOT TO take a ny closeups of the audience. We weren't interested in the audience. Like (guitarist> Robbie Robertson told me, every song is like a round in a prizefight. l wanted to capture that." At the concert, The Band may have been just a fine 1roup of rockers doing a toney farewell gig . but ln Scorsese's film, The Band Robertson, drum· mer Levon Helm, singer Richard Manuel, organist Garth Hudson. bassist Rick Danko -are actors in Scorsese's little drama. "It's almost like minimal cinema," Scorsese says. "I hate to use that phrase, but that's what it's llke. You concentrate on performer's faces, their eyes, the playing of a guitar ... you concen· trate on how Robbie tries to get everybody on the stage, how he keeps ~em together. .. YOV CONCENTaATE ON the relationships between him and the g~ests, between him and the other members ol the band." Scorsese's method ii best demonstrated when ~::,:r-.;.:;• maestro .Bob Dylan takea the stage. Dylan made KW stars or"nle Band b)' making them his touring ··--..-:.·o;;;·-'"---==----=-'"'__;;-;;.;~;.;..~---_•....;t-':....;;;--=-=~r -band in th.-'60s; amt-to irome people:· tPat's Who The Band was -BO'b Dylan's touring band. The B;tnd welcomes Dylan to the stage. but Scorsese's dellcate touch ~res the unspoken message from Tbe Sand -"This ls our show." <l]ll.~1 ,_.,., •tU•t• St '71·9150 ,,_,,, . .. ~·· 171-9150 .. ~,, 1''1111' :=: ) _!!-.!! HH271( .",,.._ .. ~­....... f. fNf KU• COi¥•- -.-e•c••--~ Tiii -· fTCOOM• fWt • um.I ...., llUSC , .. , tulf llTMOUI 'THI-" ••• ,, ... "" .. ,,.._...,...,, CUllCOIN I VOT• ft) THI IDOi Of rMI WOIU "'91 _ • .,..... .... u.,••• fMI IHD1•1 Kiii LOYI ... DeAfM1"1 , . .,._, ... TMI ~IMAN INI &AA Mn Of ..... OH &Aini 1•1 ...... ,._ ... (...., fMI ?u~MANINI IUN9ll eooc ~· ... YeUMY MIDeY MOlL T <NI ~u• "°" ue.it w •• un !NI n11 CHIA~ DITK'nVI IN! ~,,. 'IMIDllPrNI ... ,.-...... A• AUi I AU lfM u.an "" ~ IOICTIYlr .. 1 KW fMI UIOOTISf IN I tiiah;ili ....... -·--· MWS 21N1 .UY ~90WNIMI "When Bob Dylan takes the st.ail!, there is a kind of quiet le1L11ion," Scorsese says. "It's very in· Le.resting." . . . ''We went in there with those 35mm cameras WILLIAM LEE HOLDEN GRANT NOW ru\ y IN\. MIU11t1111St.'*1711 fl(IPIMllt "HEAVEN CAN WAIT" NS s11111wtr so.m2 rm Pu11111 I ACADeiif _,.,_, "CLOSI IHCOUHTHS MTHITHllD Kl .. D" lPGI OAl\.T-l~lW:& ,,, .. ,, .. l0,1$ IONIVNOPAIKI "THI ...... , • 111M.eMlft ''LOVI & DIA TH .. ............ ,. Oill 842-51178. Put a few words to work for ou. and started shooting." Scorsese says. "I thought, what's the worst lhat can happen? At worst. I'd have a reportage of their last concert. even if it's put in the archives and never shown. ''BUT WHEN WE SAW the rus hes. 1 thought. 'My God! There's something happening out there between those performers.' I'd never seen anything quite like it before. By the end. you have the story of rock a nd roll of the late '60s and early '705. by virtue or the guetils who were there and the songs they chose to sing." Among the best music -Muddy Waters doing "Mannish Boy," Joni Mi tchell. the swaying hips temptress singing "Coyote," Neil Young agonizing through "Helpless." Dylan's "Forever Young,! and. of course, The Band. with "The Last Waltz Suite" and "Stage Fright" and "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down." By using the steady. smooth 35mm cameras. by picking up the onstage moves of the players as they deliver cues to one another OT cover UP. mis· lakes. Scorsese delivers more than a music film. By The Associated Press The following are Billboard's hot record hits for the week ending July S as they appear in next week's issue of Billboard magazine. HOT SINGLES 1. "Shadow Dancing" -Andy Gibb < RSO) 2. "Baker Street" -Gerry Rafferty <United Artists> 3. ''Take A Chance On Mc" -Abba (Atlantic > 4 . "Use Ta Be My Girl" -O'Jays (Philadelphia International) 5. "Still The Same" -Bob Seger <Capitol) 6. "Miss You" -Peter Brown (Drive>' 7. "The Groove Line" -Heatwave <Epic> 8. ''Dance With Me" -Peter Brown <Drive) 9. "It's A Heartache" -Bonnie Tyler <RCA > 10. "Last Dance" ~ Donna Summer <Casablanca> TOP LPS 1. "Some Girls" -Rolllng Stones <Atlantic> 2. "City To City" -Gerry Rafferty <United Artists> 3. "Natural High" -Commodores <Motown> 4. ''Saturday Night Fever" -soundtrack CRSO > 5. "Stranger in Town" -Bob Seger & The Silver Bullet Band <Capitol) EASY LISTENING 1. "U Ever I See You Again" -Roberta Flack (Atlantic) 2. "Bluer Than Blue" -Michael Johnson -tcapitol> 3. "Songbird" -Barbra Streisand <Columbia> 4. "You're The Love" -Seals & Crofts <Warner Bros.> 5. "Even Now" -Barry Manilow (Arista) SOUL SINGLES 1. ·•etose The Door" -Teddy Pendergrass <Philadelphia International> 2. "Stuff Like That" -Quincy Jones <A&M > 3. "You And 1'0 -Rick James <Gordy> 4. "Boogie Oogie Oogie" -A Taste Of Honey <Capitol> 5 . "Runaway Love" -Linda Clifford <Curtom> COUNTRY SINGLES l. "Only One Love In My Life" -Ronnie Milsap <RCA> 2. "There Ain't No Good Chain Gang" - Johnny Cash & Waylon Jennings <Columbia>. 3. "Love Or Something Like It" -Kenny Rogers (United Artists> 4. "I Believe In You" -Mel Tillis <MCA> 5. "Tonillht" -Barbara Mandrell <ABC> JOHH nAYOlTA "ea.UI" fNt ''DOHA FLOR & HEft 2 HUSBANDS" (R) c1nename Ei scAEEn 634 2553 c:omPLE X MATINEES SATURDAY l SUNDAY "THE BUDDY HOU .. Y STORV" (PG> "CAPRICORN ONE" CPG} 'CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND" "THE DEE~" (PQ} "THE CHEAP DETECTIVE" lPGJ "HEAVEN CAN WAIT'' CPGl "AMERICAN GRAFFITI" CPG) "THE STING'' STADIUm Ei suH:F.n 6 39 ·~1.u ORIVE ·t n "ClOSE ~NOOUNTERS OF TH& THIRD ~IND" ·~HE OE~P" (PG) "CONVOY" "EAT MY OUST" Cpq) "GOODBYE GIRL" (PQ) "RA8QIT TEST" . .. HEAVEN CAN WAIT" "AM!AICAN HQT WAX." (PO) "BIG WEDNESOA Y' "THE E~FORCER" (R) "~I~: THE OMEN 2" (A) "THE SENTINEL" Al..1-ORlVS•INS O"N 61IOPM. .... HT\Y ~•tld un .. , 12 ~,, .. u11i.., • ttlddl• "1•Yt1•111'0 Stage Jtlotlaer Lucille Ball sits in the dressing room" 1th he r 1 daughter. Lucie Arnaz. and ~on . Del>t Arn;,i1 l Jr , after Lucie opened in lht-t1tlt role of 1 "Annie Get Your Gun .. 1n the J one~ Beach 1 Theater m Wantagh. N. Y 1 '\nruno!lY 1' WILLIAM HOLO~fN ..l' NJ/;H T 1 n rnAN r FEVEn · Q\i\116" iOHN TRAllOt '" ~MEN n: PLUS (R) V U "THANK GOD ~-'-:""==-=-=~'h IT'S FRIDAY" ·•~s llSSTlll cm l•J • \ rt II tM:."°'ui.t~1:°:f...,_ =-) . ~~~l vo.n m11lQ• ' - ~ ~ BURT • ,,_. ftlYNOC.DS . ' .,. . L-..L. I .~ "THEfHo., ~.) ~ .. DAIL V PILOf AT YOUR SERVICE I NATION Fornier Gunslinger T o wn Drifts·r..fo wartf.Prosperity THURMOND. W Va <API - Jack Kellv h\es on a tull.side htgh above th.il> one time boom town he first v1s1ted back 1n the days when 1l was known as "The Dodge City of the Eal>l " He says he missed most of the fighting, if not the fun. "I CAME TO Thurmond in l917," says Kelly. who will be 82 in December. "lt wus still a go- in g town back then although most of the killings had stopped a few years before I got here. In those days, they<! find three or four bodies an the river every weekend but I've only stepped QUEENIE over a couple or d~ad men an my lime.·· Back then, the New River coal boom still was tn progress T hurmond had seven saloons. two banks and the fa med Dunglen Hotel. one of the fan c1est hostelries th1s side of Cm· cinnati. Railroad records s how that during the height of the New Rive r boom, Thurmond out· stripped even that bustling Ohio River city as the busiest ship- ping point on the entire C&O rail line. with 21 trains stopping each day. .. -I l _...----=- ! -,..v-{?U-.1~' '1~/{> • .....,,~ .... ,,."~,,.... lt'tl _.,. ¥i!Plorq.t\f~ ":\Iv d1c1 1,.,n'1 working out My body is still react.mg to IOloU ·cot a problem? Then write to Pat Dunn. Pat will cut red l ape. getting the answers and act ion you need to solve inequities m government and bt.diness. Mail your questions to Pat Dunn, At Your Service, Orange Coast Dally Pilot. P 0 . Box 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92626. As man11 letters as possible will be answered . but phoned mqwnes or letters not including the reader·s full name. address and business hours• phone number cannot beconsutered. Thiscolumnappearsdat· ly e rcept Saturdays • · Gro111td Beef Fat Li..Uftf DEAR PAT: I re member reading about a new law <ibout labeling ground beef lo indicate fat con· tent Can you tell me the maximum a mounts of rat for each grade of ground beef? K.P .• San Clemente Since J an. I, 1977 state law (AB 1823) requires thE' fat content or labeled ground beef be clearly printed on each package, or posted in close prox- imity to the meat in the display case. Spedflc cawgories denned by the biU Umit maximum fat conte nt to30 <regular>. 22 Clean) and 15 (extra Jean) per cent. ·Surplau" Certoi11lt1 1~0 Bargain Ol::AR READEltS: The phone rings, and so· meone at the other end says, "Hello. I have some government s urplus office supplies I 'm willing to let you have at a discount price. The government program that Qed them went out of existence. You reallzE'. of course that since you get some go\l.oo e rnmenl funding, it's to your advantage to use these supplies." The General Services Administration <GSA> warns that what this caller says isn't true. Wblle GSA does sell surplus government office equip- ment, such as old desks and typewriters, office :-.upplies are passed on to other government agen· cies. They are not sold as s urplus. A llbough these vendors &enerally deliver tbe supplies you order, they are not necessarily sold at a bargain price. In some cases, organhations bave found that the prices are evea higher tbaa those or regular office suppliers. If you or your organization should receive a call like this, tell the caller you need time lo de· cide. then ask for a number lo call back. In many cast's you will not be given one. Requt>st the name and address of tbe caller. and ask where your name was obtained. U the caller tries to pressure or tbreaten you, bang up. If the caller represents him or herself as a GSA e mployee, check with the Federal In· rorm aUon Cenltt by phoning (213) '88·380t. And, to learn aboat the types of equipment GSA do.-s sell as surplus; and bow you can purchase it. get a copy or the free pamphlet, "Buy· ing Government Surplus Personal Property" by writing to Consumer Information Center, Dept. 628F, Pueblo, Colo. 81009. E.rernptiOH Reeo~ation rer111anent DEAR PAT: Several years ago I applied to have my earnings from the ministry exempted from Social Security coverage. Al the time I was told the exemption could never be ~thdrawn. I un- derstand this law was changed recently. Can I re· voke my exemption claim? G.W .. Costa Mesa The law now prnvldes a one-time opportunity for m embers of the clergy to revoke tbeir exemp· tion from Social Stturlty coverage. An application for revocation must be filed with tbe Internal Revenue Service before the clergyman becomes ellglble for dlsabWty or retirement benefits, or by April 15, 1979, whichever comes first. If you revoke your exemption now, you cannot later file for another exemption. llatr Boo•C lt'ell P..,.eized DEAR PAT : J was j ust informed by the Huntington Beach Post Office that my post office box rate wUI Increase from $10 every six months to Sl4 in JuJy. I'd like to know how the Postal Service can raise rates with hardly any notice . J.C., Huntington Beach "WE HAD TRAINS s topping here day and night and there was a poker game in tbal hotel that lasted tor 14 years." says Kelly who. as much as anyone is the keeper of Tburmond's legends. But you'd never know it from reading his ''business cards ... ··J ackson William Kelly -re· tired, .. proclaims the printed card. ··when l have the urge to ex- ercise. I lie down until it passes over. No business. No Worries. No Money. No Prospects ... BUT THE CARD IS strictly a out-0n. Kelly didn't retire from the railroad Wllli he was past 70 and still manaees to keep busy. t e nding flowers and tomato plants. trading guns and swap· ping tall tales about the "good old days ... "I was raised in Raleigh Coun· ly, near the Fayette line ... he re· calls. "I worked in the railroad 's machine shop for a while when I first came to Thurmond. Then I went t.o work tor the telephone company and quit that job to start firin' on the trains. And it f)(' wa&n 't too long after that before 1 was promoted to engineer · Ke lly has hauled countless tons of coal out of the New River gorge. a wild . remote a r ea which once blazed with the hgbts of a dozen coal camps and the fires of a hundred coke ovens. Of these communities. only Thurmond rema ins. AND ALTHOUGH THE town's population has dropped from more than 2.000 to fewer than 100, the recent arrival of the while w11ter e nthus iasts has l /_ '-../ FILT R C IG.V -TTES I J LOW TAR CAMEL QUALITY Huntington Beach Postmaster Wendell Goens nys po8tal bo• prtc~ hikes are pa.rt of the general overall lncreue In po l•I i.ervlces rate1. A June 1 bulletin from lbe U.S. Posl•I Servlce outlined new rent.I rates bas~ on lockbox site, aton1 with rate boost• for Spttlal detJvery and baodllng, certified mall, calh•r !lervl«. dome.Uc money orders and lnternaUooaJ po1lal service. Warning The Surgeon General Has Determined Thar C1gare1te Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. pumpt."d l>Ome new blood into the quiet hllle community. whic(J 14 cnt into a dechne when th~ coal boom burst following World War i NOW. after years or stagna- t 1on Thurmond finally is ut· tractmg some new residenb. "These raft t rips have revived our town, .. say!> Kelly, who its delighted to have new neighbors, ·'The Dragan brothers -they're the ones that sta rted this raft busines~ -arl· good people. They do things right.·· . . •. .r J ' I ~ j • Skins Whdteverfurrowyoudigintheredearth, Whatever the tree you hang your lights on There comes that moment Wheiudlatyouareis what you wiU be Until fhe end, no mattn Whatptayeryouanswerto-alife Of margins, white of the apple. white of the6J1e, No matter how long you hold your handaout. You gta.nce back and you glance back. Ahead. Ul the distance. a cry Sh reeks like a chalk on a blackboard. Through riprapor backfill, sandstoneortidedrift You go where the landshed takes you, ' Onewordatatime,stiU · Counting your money, wearing impermanent clothes ~·.Charles Wright ~,._·-·.w....._,11..__,,._.,...,_,~ '<frr. Poets 'You cannot make a living of poems no matter how much you sell.' By CHERYL ROMO Ot ... o.ily l'ltNt Stan Man does not Jive by bread alone. But even poets, whose words are nectar to gentle souls, have to make a living. Emily Dickinson, who stuffed most of her work into cardboard boxes and who was not published until her sister found the verse after her death, was supported au her life by her familv. Walt Whitman worked as an ac· countant until fame came to tum in his late years. He did admit, however. that a re w poets like Rod McKuen manage to appeal to the masses aod are able to make a career of it. Charles Wright also added that the only r eason he bas a job teaching is because be is a poet. He does not have a Pb.D but only a master's degree in literature. "If l didn't write poems, I wouldn't have a job," be acknowledged. But even if he didn't make a cent writing, Wright said he would do it anyway because it is bis way of explaining "myself to myself. And l also like the sound of words." o.lty ...... ..-S lty .... , • .,,.. Most professional poets. like Charles Wright, who teaches poetry and literature at the University of California. Irvine, are college professors. Very few bards scrape out a living selling poems. Susan Filley agrees. A graduate student, she started writing as a sophomore in junior high school. She hasn't tried to publish her work because. she said, she doesn 't really like the "romantic, drugstore-type" or poetry that is selling today and the only lrind she feels a young poet bas a chance to sell. Susan Filley: for personal growth. Cathleen Douglas, wife of the former Supreme Court justice, is practicing Jaw in Washington. Charles Wright: A way of explaining 'myself to myself'. An Exorcize in Nonexistence Kiss on thecratoling night's death, youstrainedlJutteTflyof day. We all Jmow'what it's like to be mistaken, misplacedjromoUfewmchi3notouroum. I 8-lt ft?allythe sameneuof things. or the irreproachable illness of mWeading thought that haunts and.hides, waiting.in the darkness of the soul? -SUS<mi'illey Mary and Pierce Ommanny at home. Others, like 22-year-0ld Susan Filley, who works as a salesclerk in Costa Mesa 's South Coast Plaza. write for themselves and really never intend to publish a nything. Wright, who lives in Laguna Beach with his wife and child, was the 1975 recipierat of the pres· tigious Edgar Allen Poe Award for bis book, "Bloodlines." The collection of poetry also earned hint ao American Academy and Ins titute of ,Arts and Letters Award and the Melville-Cane Award from the Poetry Society of America. 0-n what lo-vely, perhaps spiritual, thing was his $8,500 in prize money spent upon? With candor. the professor replied: "It put a roof on the house. got the car fixed, and let us move. "You cannot make a livtne or poems no matter how much you sell, even if you sell to The New Yorker which is the highest paying in the country," said the poet, while pondering the state of the art under the trees one sunny day on the university campus "Writing is kind of a sidekick for personal growth," sbe said. "I write for myself.·· Another published poet, Peter Everwine. a professor at Fresno State and the author of three books of poetry. saJd during a recent in- terview at Orange Coast College, be feels the government should s ubsidize the art with federal grants. "It's difficult to be a fulJ·time poet. One of the odd things about it is that you don't wake up in the morning and say 'I'm going to be a poet' like a truck driver or whatever," be stated, contending that poets are artists and should be recognized by society as such. Asked about government sub- sidies for poets, Charles Wright thought a moment and then said in bis soft, Southern drawl: "It might not be a bad idea. But it might not be a good idea either. I would have written my poems anyhow ... But. then again, you have lo make money." Mrs. Douglas Cathleen Douglas says she 'd like to be the best lawyer in Washington. Baek to the Family WASIUNGTON (AP)-Things have changed a lot in the pasl dozen years for the pert and pretty sociology student from Oregon who came to the nation's capital as the fourth wife of n con· troversial supreme Court justice. There is no fanfare by tier list· ing in the yellow pqea as one of 7 ,800 attorneys in the District of Columbia. "Douglas, Cathleen H .• " the list· • Ing says. But Mrs. WUliam O. Douglu' amall, clutt~ office ls part of the promioeat law firm. And it is just two blocks from theW~teHouse. . She moves easily in lhe social and business circles of Washington and says you would have to pay "a lot or money" to buy her services .for an hour. "For now, I'd like to be the best lawyer ln Wa3hington, D.C.," she t•Y•. Sbe la Of1 the way. ''Because I am married to who I am, I have had a lot or doors open to me that would not be open otherwise, particularly to someone at the age of 35 -and I relish that," she says. "But it works two ways. When you 10 into a courtroom for the first t'-~ You are known for a namei ·.)'OU a~e boW\d to make )'Our anateolmlttakea. ••A,M 10U dolt tn the spoWgbt of that ..-e,. But. I have a«epted both•ldM~l~· Mn.-Dodllilt was.· tntervie-nd Lti W.u11tn1b• reeeAtly by The S...t.tla nm•. Tiie Jusuce baa · Web eODf'lDeC tA:\ a wbeelebalr unce • amulY.._.t.l'OU three jean •10. rr. She Jacl J..,µ~ Douglas an lteal resklenta ol Goose Pn6rlt, Wash., a tiny hamlet in the Cascade Mountains. Sbe says abe want.I to retum someday to UHi <See DOllGLAS, P11e C2) -. 'Proposition 13 may have done for the California family what turning off the TV would do ... an opportunity for some healthy, old-fashioned stuff, ' says a fam ily guida nce c ounselor. By 11IOM LECOQ be .. °""" ........... Parenta wbo bad cou.ated on summer tcbool to ward off the inevitable "ftrlom, . J'm bored, there's notblng to do," may ftad tome help ln the words of psycbolotilta Pierc'e and Mary Oro- lllaDDY· Tbe eoqple share a f amlly practice, the Psyehologlcal Guidance Center of Anabelm, 8Dd agree that cancellatloo of IQmmer school means numy families bave a chance to de•elop closer ties betJJeen members and an opportwilty to punuepenooal goals. .. Propolitlon 13 may have done for the Callfomla farnlly what turning off the TV would do," said Pie«e. "an op- po rt u nt ty for some healthy, old fashioned stuff .•. like the Waltons on televllloo.." ., Mary added, " ... the kind of activities where tbe cbtld feels in- volved." Picnics, travel together and Involve· ment in each family member's favorite past time are all part of that recipe, she suggested. But when thlngs get too dull for a child. there are activities at the "Y", library programs (including just plain reading> and many church and park iroups to fill tlme productively. Both Ph.D's cautioned against becom· Ing an entertainment director for children. ··A lot of parents provide too much entertainment and spoll lbeir children." said Pierce. Mary added that the payoff for doing that is an ever·increaslng ap· petite ror more and the subtle gtowth of control over mom and dad by the cbUd. . . "The child runs the sbow lo too many homes," said Pierce, "but they're never happy or satisfied because too much is never enough . "Many of the really wealthy families knew that. That's why the Kennedy and Rockefeller children only got a dollar a week. so they'd understand the value ot money and the lives of other people,'' said Pierce. That translates this summer into making children responsible for their own entertainment and learnin1 . A lot of parents will spend the sum· mer carting kids from the beach to the pool to the movieii, somet.hing Mary shakes her bead over. Doing that, she cautioned, denieJ <See fAMlLY, Pa•e Q) - • I \ Q OAIL Y PILO I Mondoiy July 10. 1811 ••• Faintly <From Page {'l) then let lhem h:lndle It them the chance to learn to ~e their tame well "And it means you 'gain· an image as chauffeur. hostess cook. party manager but 1f you want t he inner sat1s facllon of being a good purent -a ·good person-1t 's not a particularly 'good point of view," Mary said The Otnmannys have four children, 'three babies arnd a boy lS," ·smiled Ma ry The Ommannys saac.1 they'd like lo t\elp out with • 1ort or Each One Help One protram, and will take calla from those whO would like to get help -and those with help to ofrer -<turlnc the week or July 24 through 28. "H you want to be a song and dance man to your kids. that m ay be all right-if you can find a planet where the child will face no expectations, frustrations or consequences ," chimed in Pierce. The two p!lychologists s aid it's too bad tha t so many people have lost jobs because or summer school cancellation, but added that it m ay well hurt some students with special needs more than lt will dis missed teachers , Their olf1ce will do the matching on an Informal basis . they said. Call m.1350 for lnformaUon. The Ommannys hope the pro1rarn will work. "Berore tho hlgh.falluUn1 educational 1talts were built, we used to help each other this way." Some children in need of academic, speech therapy or other special classes, however . needn't do without, lhey said. He added, "ln the face of overwhelm· lpg approval ot Proposition 13's cutbacka or thoee atalfa), It wlll be In· teresUnt to aee if we can pull ort help· Ing each other that way again or whether we'll have to have the 1ov~rn· ment do It ror us." Giving youngsters responsibility tor their own lives has its limits, they <.1greed. "A child without limits de· velops no self confidence," said Pierce Out-of-work teachers might be able lo provide informal tutoring-in ract. a nyone with some special talent or H · pertise could give a hand. Parents should be sensitive to what responsibilities a child CAN handle, Getting these people totether with those who need help Is the problem, Pierce saJd. Aunt Is Stingy With Groceries DEAR ANN; My S IS· ter-in·law figure'! he r groceries so close you need a search warrant to find an extra piece or bread In her house. La s t Sunday m y husband and I und our two children were invit· t:'d to drop over In the mid-afternoon. Arter an hour our son said, ''Aunt Lucille, I'm hungry " ~he ans wered, ''Wait till you get home. I don't want to spoil your s up· per " I was so burned up w h e n I h ea rd h e r etnswer lhe boy like thet. J said, "Let's leave " Now J'm sorry I didn't tell h er off Should I have said something? If .,o, w h at '' STILL BURNING DEAR BURN: What ~oo d would it have done? Since you know how stingy she il'I, reed your children belorf! you take them to Aunt Lucille's hou!le. Or, Ir ~·ou want to be obvloU11, brlnlJ sandwlchea lo a brown bag and ask If you can use her dishes. DEAR ANN LANDERS: l JUSt read these s hocking stetlstica put out by the Popula · tion Reference Bureau. Over 40 percent of all first marrh1ges in the United States will end in divorce. In California it 1s one out of two. Will you please rerun the e nclosed column w hi c h appeared t en y<'urs ago? ll made a lot Ann Landers of sense then and I'm sure it wi ll mean more now Thanks. Ann. - WHERE A RE WE II EA DING'> DEAR WHERE: Wilh pleuure. I agree It de· ~erves a second look. Thanks for ask.ing: DEAR ANN : May I comment on that letter s igne d "Woke Up Too Late"? I think the gel is still asleep. She said ... At least a prostltut<> can have a day off and spend her money as she pleases." Then s he went on to grip<.• because a wife m u st prepa re her hu11band's meals. raise his children, put up with his relatives . run his er· rand~. keep has house In order , take care of him when he's sick. etc. M y hus band is a labor er. He leaves the house ot 7 a .m. and puts In a long, hard day's work. tr be can get over. time he grabs it. When he comes homt' at night he paints the house. fi x. es whatevor needs it tand something always does>. keeps our c ar running and help11 with the kids. At the end of the week hn hands me hi s paycheck and apologizes because it isn't more. He never complains when I give him ground meat In 11 dlrferent shapes. Al night when he puts hls arms around me and pulls m e close J fee l that whatever l 've done for him during the day wasn't enough. Love and marriage are a cycle. The more you do for a man the more he loves you. The more he loves you the more he tries to do for you. The more he tries to do for you the more you love. And so it goes. It's so simple, why don't m ore people figure it· out? -OHJO POINT OF VIEW DEAR BEAUTIFUL OHIO: I've read nearly a mllllon letters but yours got to me as few have. The next Ume you fix ground meat in one or lbose 11 shapes. pleHe know you are the envy or tbouunds or women who wUI be din· ing on ruet mignon or guinea hen tonight. You ha ve Jife'a m ost pre. doua 1llts -the reeling that you are needed and 11 husband who adores you. This makes you a ver y rich lady. SEMI ANNUAL 10++ lRVINE AVB~5<t8~ •TUWPC>kr BBM!H, CAUP. • M .. ter Charge • Bat'lkAmer1can:J • La Qall.na Ct11rvt ( Horoscope T\JE8DAY, JtJLY 11 By SYDNEY OMARR ] ARIES <March 21·Aprll 19 ). Serious thought must be given to Important move, such as sif nlng a contract, forming partnership -or gett nt married . There are pressures. respon slbilitles which become evid ent. TAURUS <April 20·May 20): Finish what you start. Deal with Libra, Aries persons, check s ervices. avaUabllltles. Dependent sar.s you were right -and concedes a major po nt. At· tend to basic chores, keep diet and health res· olutions. GEMINI <May 21-June 20): Good lunar aspect coincides now with change, speculation intenslfied r elationship. Leo, Aquarius person~ figure In scenario. You .make marvelous con- tacts; you mei!t creative people. You could rail madly In love. Take a chance on happlneis~ . CANCER <June 21-July 22): Practical mat· ters, questions ol survival dominate. Build, store essentials, get files in order, know how to obtain key ract.s. LEO <July 23·Aug. 22). Plenty of action, movement indicated -message or call could be highlighted . Gemini, Sagittarius individual:. figure in scena rio Be adaptable, display versatility -and humor. Horizons expand you get good news and a windfall VIRG-0-(Aug. 23·Sept. 22 l You get valid an formation concerning costs. income Potential. in- vestment requirements. Individual who speaks bluntly does have your lnter~st.s at heart LIBRA <Sept. 23-0cl. 22): Luck, timing arc with you -strive for p ioneering actions, tn· dependence, glamor, originality. Leo, Aquarius persons play key roles. Accent on individuality, ne w starts. cha nges, personality, general ap. pearance, vitality and love. Make personal ap· pear ances. SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21J You gain in· sights to family problems, questions you h ave solid opportunity to improve living condl lions. Taurus, Libra persons figure promine nt· ly. Go slow, be diplomatic. You're on brink of major achievement. Private me<'ling or con fe rcncc will set tone -in your favor. SAGITTARIUS <Nov 22·Dcc 21) Em· phasis on winning allies. fulfilling desire Pisces . Virgo pers ons fi gure an scena rio Romance, creativity. successful outcome of business transaction are featured CAPRICORN <Dec 22·Jan. 191 This could be your powerplay day You gain authority. prestige and take over re ans of your own destiny Bring priorities into focus Refuse to be sidetracked by one who is petty, envious and lacks breadth of vision. AQUARIUS <Jan. 20·Feb. 18): Good Moon aspect coincides now with ;ourncy, publishing, educational project, communication, s piritual revelation. You are capable of completing 1m · portent project, assignment. Libra persons could figure ln scenario. PISCES <Feb. 19-March 20l' Be specific, direct. get to heart of matters. Emotional responses are accented. Financial concerns or close associate. loved one could dominate. New contact proves worthwhile, could lead to excite · ment, creative ful!illment. ••• Douglas <From Page Ct> Washington she refers to as "my stale." But ahe doe1m't know when that will be "You want to be close to good medical help. and there's not much of it in Goose Prairie," ahe aald with a grin. The Douglasea have frequent visitors. and he still goes to hls otrlce at the Supreme Court every day lo tmJah the second volume of his autobiography. ll was ln July, 1966, that the 23-year-old Portland, Ore .. student sent eyebrows arching when ahe married Douglas. Then 67. She now works for the Washington. D.C .. law flrm of Levahawes. Symington, Martin and Openbolmer, for whom she represents many cllenta before federal agencies. An advocate of the Equal Rights Amend· · m ent, Mrs. Douglas says, "Many of the horren· dous results feared by some because of the ERA leglalation aren't coming to pass.·· Watch (or It In the DAILY PILOT Th• ilfl<kb11v Ntwport 81!-'Ch • t(Ct pllon.,1 1 rll!W lfllf'llOI dt'~•,ln \IUdlO . """ mort l D11llnc11.,. ~•'R"' ror '°"''"'' 41ncl rttlden11"1 Actount• 1111d 11n ••ctlltnt •howroom of lint •nuqu•• Mid Ot131n.<1 I A11 INTPICMt OUIGN ANl'qJlS·ART )49 "°"" l'INpatt blwt. Mtrport -.h• CM,•,llO -~ :••• c.r---------~ . . . .. .. ANNLANOERS /HOROSCOP~ Gordon Nelson of London wtll be Of South Coast Plaza m C.OSto MeSJJ at the Reglt Hair Stylists on Sunday and Nooday, July 16 and 17 and Crowwing T=°::nd Wedntldoy July 18 and 19 lcx:ct persons w1stling to toke part as a Hair Model in this advanced training seminar covenng the latest style cu ts. please coll The Regis Hairstylists at 540-8888 or Crowning Glory at 546-7186 Get Rid Of Unsightly Bulges!! PRESENTING OUR NEW CONCEPT IN INCH LOSS NO Starvation Diets NO Pills Also Wt tpeelaliat HI HOK-S11r9cal Foct UftW., ACM • Dry SkM • Olty Sklll WriM*•LiM1•l.._,1Mt C.U for "' ab twt todey $~ SKINCARE & FIGURE CONTROL CENTf RS HUHTIHGTOH HACH 894-7542 NO Shots S.to .Uo 557·0120 ............ f .... °'-Jt 639-ltll Ul·tlOO ......... ........ .-_ ...... __ TtiOOU3ti UT ,IUIY-. ~()I~ ~IL() ti~ALTl-1 LU? ~ I W()M~~ t=l!t:~ ().= l~ITl4Tff)~ 01Al!f7~. JAN FEB MAR APR MAV JUN JUL AUG SEP OCT F 1qu re and f i tness·consc1ous women wd I f incJ Milo a bargain a t any price (especially 1tw; oncl). Orange County's promwr<> lt:m<ilC only licalth club offers you. •Racquetba ll • Exerc1sc·To·Muslc •Weight Room •Sauna •Jacuzzi •Exercise Area •Diet CounsLlil"<; •C1 rcui t Jogging •Senior Women Hoal th Program •and now Aqua·cu e A simple $25 per month fee covers unlimited use of all these se rv ices and faclll ties. If overall health is important to you. now . while there's no $75 initiation fee · · is the ~Ln-n"-"."IDl!i..rl time to come to Miio. Open early for working women, Monday -Thursday 1 am -9 pm. F rlday 7 om Saturdey 9 em -3 pm. 1W·~I ... NATION I OBITUARIES Triggs Withdraws Name Fears Publicity on Sex Soliciting Charge YAZOO CITY, Miss. CAP> - G e ne A. Triggs, wbo has "'ithdrawn his name from con- l>ideration W> deputy secretary<>( agr i c ultur e. s aid b e- bowed out because he feared publicity ti bout his arrest ln 1976 on a charge of soliciting sex from an underroverpolicewoman. In a statement issued from his home here, Triggs, 49, said the in- cident was a "clear case of en· trapment and false arres t" and that the charge was later dis· missed. But th chemicot com})any ex ccullve s aid he learned that the arrest might be reported and, "rather than expose the Curter adminii,tration to any embarrass- ment or needless inconvenience, I withdrew my name, contra ry to their wishes ." Triggs said he dropped out or consideration for the No. 2 job at the Agriculture Department because or the high cos t of living in Washington and the emotional strain of uprooting his family. 'Star-spangled' Soprano D~ad at 87 PASADENA (AP) -Elektra Ro2anska, known as "The Star- Spangled Soprano" because of her efforts in gelUng "The Star· Spangled Banner" named as the National Anthem, has died of a heart attack, her attorney said - last week Sbe was believed to be 87 family members. Triggs did not menlaon the ur rest in that stateme nt In a later state ment Triggs said the White House had full knowledge of the a rrest and "proceeded with the appainl· ment, including the FBI check. on the assumption tha t this was a matter of little or no conse- quenee to the nomination." Triggs, an executive with thll Mississippi Che m ical Corp in Yazoo City, said that after the charges were dismissed, he was told the police record was ex· 11unged Triggs said the arrest occurred in Washington in March 1976 as ht> walked to a drug store lo buy shaving articles. ··A woman a pproached me and AP Wire ..... \• MOVIE FOUGHT Actor Burt Reynolds nsked for a date." he said. "J told E'nd 'E _ J' her no. c hastised her for ber pro· IUA. fess ion and kept walking. She followed. and when we reached Ai the comer where a plice car was m o+ parked. she said, 'You arc under 'J arres t for soliciting ·" Panel Fight MILWl\UKEE !l\P) Monday, July 10, 1978 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUSIUSINESS NAloll STATIMl .. T Tht loll-lnq Ptrson '' do•nQ Du" nan•• GA8ECO 2110 w 8••Doa Sl•d Ntwp0r\ BeiKl'I, CA ~ MitllMI Rober! CHbtlet. QOI N 8•Yft0f'I (Ult1c .. 1>1-(• ~667 Thi\ bustne\\ 1\ tO<lducteO by an on dlvldual Mi<hffl II Gabttel Hiil '1•111fT\l'nl •bS filed with 11\f County Cl~r~ 01 Oroncae Couotv on Jutv •• 1918 '""" Publi•~ Or•,_ c.o.iu Oa11y Pltol July 10, II 1~. ll 1919 1610 I~ P UBLIC NOTICE 1«1 II PUBLIC NOTJCE l'ICTITlOUS IUSINISS NAME STATEMENT f he lotlOWt"Q per\Ofl I\ OOtnQ bu51 ne>' •S MAlllNER'SWALlt, 1MMI Jib Cir c t• No •, 1<un1tn9 1on B••<h . C.•lllorn••'ll""' M ike J•~. 4l ls.tl»ll• Terr•<t. (Mon• del -r C...lll0t,,ta n ... !KISjMU •• CondU<lecl ,, •• n '" 01v1du8f "'"••J-" Tht\ \lat-Wts filed wolh Ille County Cttr .. of Or•t>Qe CoUnlY on Jun• n . "" ,.._, OAILYPtLOT PlJBLJC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS IUSINHS NAME STATIMtfNT Tho tollowln9 pet\Ofl• ••e 00111ci bus.nen~ HOBIE "THLETIC FOO'TWEAll, 3001 Red Hill AY!tnut, Bulldl"9 4, Suolr IOt, C.0~11 ~. C.lll0-111• •Jt1' Raymond C. Je""ln~, ISIS1 Gt•• O•k\, Wu \mtniter C.llf0tni• 9Ml I"°"'.., G 0...1t1er, 1'111 l(ulQ\ Ro<KI. N.,.,_, llHcll, C.lllMnl• •1MO ROl•nd J C.Ottlnt, Jll Dllllt .. C.Oron• del _,. C.lllomt.t ~1} fllh 1111.i...,u '' coftlfutte<I OY ~ ~ner•lpannenh•P 11,(,1'1\.; ;Cl _,..,,,.,.r Rot-J Collll\t A•ymond(.J.,,lttn> Ttus u ate'"""t w•' t1l@O •1tn ~ Cou,,lv Cl•r' ol 0r•ft9e C:O..nly o" J~n. "" ,,_ PuDlt•Md Or•nve c.o.,1 Oe1I• 1>1101. June 24 •nd JulY 3. 10 11 ,.,. PUBLIC NOTICE ,....., SUPE•1oa cou•T 01' TNI STATE 01' CALll'OltNIA FOlll THE C:OUlfTYOl'OlllAHGE NO. DtU• Mr s . Ro2an s ka . wh o pe r formed in opera and films. died last week as she r ecuperat- ed Crom a fall at the California Convalescent llome here, said attorney Bernard Lauer . "She was eccentric, she didn't want her age known, and there was some mystery about where s h e was born ,•· said h e r daughter, Eugenie Von Vallier of Detroit. Ptoooooey! Tops Mark EAU CLAIRE. Mi c h . (AP > One enormous "Ptoooooey ! " That 's all it took for William Mobley to s et a world r ecor d last weekend and win the hrth a nnual che rry pit s pitting champions hip. Tht· W1 scons 1n c hapter of the Polish Ame rican Congress is lryin~ to put <1n end to Burt R eynolds· new movie .. The End " Pulllt$t'W<I ~-C.O.\I Oatly Pilot , 1-------------IJun.l•ancl JUlyl, 10.11, 1'19 PUBLJC NOTICE NO'l'ICI 01' COMMIUIONClll'S SA\.E <* l'OftECUISUllll 01' OEEO 01' TltUST She began her career as an opera singer in Detroit during World War I, singing in benefit concerts and soldier camps "the way Bob Hope does ," Mrs. Von Vallier ~aid. The singer probably is best re- me m hered for the movement she started ln 1929 lo have "The Star Spangled Banner" adopted as the National Anthem, Laue r said. Her efforts were rewarded by Congress io 1931, after which Mrs . Rozanska became known as the "Star Spangled Soprano," the attorney said. Mrs. Rozans ka billed herself as a Russian countess. but her grand-daughter, Anne Hays of Huntington Beach. said s he wHS American-born a nd of Danish ancestry. S h e o r gani zed the firs t American Legion Glee Club in Boston in the 1930s. Jn addition lo s inging, Mrs. Rozans ka taught. deaf childr en to speak and performed in several films, including ''The Buccane{!r" with Yul Brynner, Lauer said. She also appeared at the Pasadena Playhouse. With a s pit of 49 feet, 2 inches. the 30-year-o ld from Find l a y , Ohi o. dethroned Richard Hahn of Benton Harbor. Mrch. The chaptl'r . whic h claims more than 15,000 me m bers. has proposed t o sta t e /\Lt o rn ey G e n{:ral Bronson La Follette that ad\•ertise· m ents for the motion picture carry warnings Lhal the script may be 0H e ns 1 ve to viewe rs because or Reynolds ' Polish-joke dialog Ha hn spit a pit 47 feet , 7 1:: inches las t year La Follette replied that he found the film in· s ult i n g l o Po li s h · Am~ri c an s. but tha t the re was nothing he c o uld d o ub o ut something protected by the Conslltution Her parents were Dr and Mrs Ludwig von Oolke, but the exac t date and place of her birth were not known by s urviving The singer is survived by Mrs. von Vallier, five grand-children and four great-grandchildren. No funeral services are planned, Lauer said. The competition c.ttlract· ed a dozen pit-spitters lo the Tree-m endus Fruit Farm in thi s s outhwest e rn lo w e r Michigan community. Deatlt Notl~~• President Announces PEltltY OORI!> "OC>i..LIE" PEARY,~ to. COLHEN torm r r ••~oem Of Col.Ill Mt~. C.., SlltrltV C.Olr,.n pe-.1 •way on Julv PHS<!d .... .,July•. 1971 .It ,,.. IC•IWr I, ,.,. Site ... ,. re~"""' ol O•an<ie. FounaetlO<I In FonlilN , C.. S"' wo Ca. Snt 1s survt...., by ne< hus~no 00'" June S, 1897 In '"' ltleol M.lnn Merm•11. son, Arnold & two Site w•s llSO ii ••llr~ rest•urai.ur in Qr ilnOclllldr•n, Orew Mlle hell & Cuc11monoo, C.. ....,.,._ 'Sile operal.a Phllllp Jily Co4""'1 1me<men1 services Oolllt's C..re 511'! was • member ol wore lltld on Mond•Y July 10, ttll •I t!le Comm..,..lly fUl>llsl Church 111 On· 1 :00 PM .1t H.,IJOI l.lwn-Mo..,..1-0llve 1.,..10, C• Slw 1s wnrlved by lllr.e SIS· M<!morlat P•rk Haf'tlOr l.lwn-Moll!'ll lerl resrd11'1Q In Tile ISi• ol ~nn. one Ollve Mortu a ry of Cost• Meu O•llOllttr, Dorotl'lv Dishman, re•lden\ Oltetlors So().SSS4 Reshuffle ·of LEAA Of UPI.Ind, C.I. INM Qr....OCNIOrPn AllENOWITZ • OtMi• DAV•<l50n, CMOI Cotem•n ... ,,., Lou15 Artnowttz pas~ ""'•Y on l(aren DlshM6n. and llltU 9real J11t y 8. 8'79 H<! Is survived by hi\ son gr•ndchllelf'ell Servl<ei •Ill be lleto Albrrt Arenowtu M D , & two Wt aneSd•Y. July 12 •• 10 lO am al grand<lllldren, Fred•klt !>., t. Dt•ne ,,.. Slont Funer•t Ho,.,., l5S EAsl 9tll M. ArenowlU Interment strvtcM were SI , Uplilfld, C.. tnttr~n• wlll i.. In Mid Mo"°'y July 10, 1'71 at 1 p m. ._,_.,. C...,.tery •I Ofttarlo, C• a t 1-l •rbor Lawn·Moun1 Ottve Friends mn call •I Ille Mortuary "'-morlat P•rk. H•f'bOr Lawn-Mount i=~~· ~I~~~~ P 0~;~~~ Olive Monuary ot C.OS.la Mes•. S40-SSM "'1·136• PETRO C.ATl'lEAINE PETRO IO<~ re.I 6t"I of C.0$IA -· C..., CMU4td .t"'•Y July 8, .. ,. In Grant• Pas>, 0 rf9(1n. DeathJJ t Elsewhere WASHI NGTON I AP) -President Carter announced today a reshuffling or the Law Enforcement Assistance Adm imstration. which he said has s uffered from a de cade oC "un- c oo rd in a t c>d and i n e ffective" performance. As a candidate tor pres ident, Carter had accused the LEAA or wasting millions of dollars "while m aking almost no contribution l.o re- ducing crime " But today he pro- posed to lea ve the agency's budget' authorization intact. a nd he raised Lhe possibility o( an actual increase In spending. SM'• "urv1....S ~OM"°" Rn Lillie 01 Bould~• City, Colorado two d.tUQ!ller•. Alma lver""1 01 Gr•nts ""~~. Ore & E'"' !>tet1w•9•n 01 Boutd•r CllY, Cotor•do Fun•••I \ClrV1te\ win Ile "4!1d Wtdneid~y. July n. 1918 al 10 )I) AM .II a.tit Mortu•ry tlt•e>et Aev Brue• oc;11rrle olllcl•li"9 tnt•rmenl wlJt be rn Rou H•lh Memorl•I Par~. Whltll•• C• Bell 8 ro.dw•Y MMlv<lrv Ol<Kto<\ M2 'IO Ca rter's propasal would, among othe r thinl'(s, attempt to channel DEALE. Md. <AP) -more money to crime-ridden area s. Chase Carpenter Gove, but wilhout reducing the amount \hat who was taught to shoot a ny stale could qualify for under a riOe by Calamity-Jane prcseotdistribution formulas. lflL .. 04DWAY MOltTUAlY I I 0 Broadw<1v Costa Me!.a 642·9150 SMITH· TUTHlll•UMI MOUUAlY WUTCUFf CHA'fl A27 E 17th SI Cosra Me~a 646-4888 'IYCE lltOTHElS SMmtS' MottUAltY 627 M arn SI H untington Beach 536-6539 SHEffU MO«TVAIY ~76 So C08$t Hwy Laguna Beaci'I 494-1535 1533 N El Camrno Real San Clemente 492·01 00 f"flt( FAMll 'f coioMtAl FUHEl•l HOME 180 I Bolsa Ave W estminster 893-3525 a nd who listed Buffalo' Bill as one of his friends. E'ord Offirial Probed died Saturday at the age NEW YORK IAP) -A former of 95. Gove. an official of Ford Motor Co. officia l was pcud a the U.S. Mail Service, large bonus shortly after he was ser ved as postmaster of forced to retire because of his alleged railway and ocea n mail. part in a bribery scheme in In- ANNAPOLIS, Md . <AP> Isadore Lubin, a noted economist who was one or the original m embers of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's "brain trust ," died Thurs day night of a hearl attack in Anne Arund e l General Hospital He was 82. Countian Installed donesia. The New York Times re- ported today. Pa ul F. Lorenz, who was Ford's executive vice pres ident for diversified product operations. re. ceived an unexpected bonus last year that may have been as large as $100,000, the Times quoted company s ources as s aying Officials of one of the divisions for which Lorenz was r esponsible . Aeronutronlc Ford. agreed in 1975 to pay about $1.9 million in bribes to an Indonesian general to obtain a S30 million communications system con· tract. Company auditors reportedly uncovered the bribery plan in August 1975, and Lorenz retired a year later at the urging of Ford president Lee A. lacocca. Henry Ford JI, chairman of the company, authorized the bonus paymen~ shortly afterwards, sources said. Slefllab H cu Probie.. JOHNSON SPACE CENTER. Houston <AP> -For the third time in less than two months , the Skylab (_1_N_SH_O_R_T_J s pacecraft has d eveloped powe r system problems which have e aused itto lose altitude. NASA reports. T he craft's inability to orient itself has left its vital solar cells facing a way from the sun. r esulting in loss of power. NASA s pokesman Bob Gordon said engineers believt' the "attitude shift" is the result of an on-hoard power problem which occurr<'d Sunday after· noon. F1ight controllers attempted to correct the situation but were uns uc- cessful, Gordon said. Militarr1 Sea.res Po"'er PARIS <A P l -The military seized power in the West African nation of Mauritania during the night and ar rest ed the desert country 's longtime leade r. President MokLar Ould Dad· dah. the F're nch news agnccy Agence Fra nce Presse reported today An AFP dis patc h fro m t h e Mauritanian capital. Nouakchott. re. ported the "military Committee of National Redress" announced in a communique it suspended the con- stitution and "dissolved the govern· mcnt. the parliame nt, the People's Party of Maurit a nia and all its branches·· Gtcnntan S lap I raqui LONDON <I\ P > -Gen. Abdul Ra zzak al.Nair. form e r prime minister of Iraq, died today of bullet wounds from the second assassina. lion atte mpt against htm since his overthrow 10 years ago. A gunman shot \he 44-year-old ex· lie twice in the head at close range Sunday morning as he was getting in· lo a taxi out.side the Intercontinental Hotel in the s wa nk Mayfair dts· trict. NOTICE TO 910DERS NOTICE IS HEREBY (;ti/EN lh•I tt>e Boero ol EOuc•tton Of '"" L•!IUM Bt<l(h Unlllea Stnoot 01\lt•<I 01 O••nv• Counh C...llforn1• .. 111 ,. u1n 1.111 to. but nO •ate< t,..n l 00 p m Mond•Y, July 18. 1~18. ~lea bod\ tor Ille IU '8 OI d ter1•1n llO(l>On Of tht 1><1r~11>Q ~.ti El N!OrrO School In 4C cordance with 01\trl<I specll1c.t lion• and condition\ S.1<1 bod\ >1>an be ,. t •lved In ""' Bu•'""'' Off1et! of llW' Olstrt<I al SSO Btu"'°"' Slrfft, L•Qun.1 Buell. C•lll0tnla, .no \l\dll i... Ol>t'MO •n4 pullfltlY rHCJ •IOUd •I Ir... dDOVt stattc1 11- Cona1t10M. ~lf1cat1ons ~11d 810 Forms m•y be Y'<urt<I •\ l'1e Bu.,.~\ Office of '"' Ols1r1ct .u the .tOOrtts thlld dllO.-.. Each bid musl conform .1nd llt re\POfl\lvt! to thts lnv1t•1ton. the Se>e<lhutoons. '"" Cona111on•. •nd all otht r perllnenl <Olltr•t l dOtll m'nts Ea<h ti.cl ""111 be ..ccoml>"'1111•d bv • Ct rtllled M OISh~r·s (MO P<IHl>lr to 1119 Di.lrlct, or U lht<llMY 810 Bono on tavor ol 1r... O.strtCt. twKule<I bY the blOder h l>f'lllCIP<ll •nd • wtlslac \ory surt lY <-ny as wrelv tn "" •mount not r."' than five petetnl IS""' Olllle b1G.tft\0Ufll T 11e 8011rd Of Eouot1on r"serves ·~~ r19nt 'o re1tc.t MtV .no •If btos. or to W·•l"9 •ny '''eQ\J'•'"'tt.Owr~n Cl'f(lt H Lovelady J r , Busines> M.t,,_r LA9Un1 Bee<h Untlled School 01>1•1<1 L-Bea<ll, Catlton'11I PuOll•lled Or-C.0.tl 0..11v Pllol July 10, 11. 1•1t 1'1• 18 P UBLIC NOTICE l(ITTY HELEN ARTl<UR, LOUISE H PE NN , HELE N C. LEATHl:RWOOO. EDITH CAROL ·-----------iARTt<U R ANO BETTY ARTHUR Pl••nllff>, PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS I USINEU NAME nATEMENT The 101klwlno peo on I\ OO•no bust n"s\ I\ (;UAROIANS O' WILDLIFE SOCI Et ". 2•1 Flowt! SI eosta IN.-, C4 9n11 Cllros W ICe~ 2U Ftowu SI., C.OSI• Mt!Ml, ~ '11>11 lht\ buS~S I\ C-Cled by dll tn· d lYldU•I Chris Key\ Thi\ ............ , wn l llOd Wtllt Ille County ~terlc ot 0t•nQt eo..ntv on JUM IS. 1'78 Pub'"""" Or-CMS! DilllY Pilot Jun<: •• 16. JUiy }, 10, ••78 13'6-11 PUBLIC NOTICE •• GEORGE Ci. O'N EAL ~ A~ SOCIArES, IN(., I C.llltorn1<1 <01 por•POn S A l'ECO Tt T lt INSURANCE COMPANY, NEPTUNE & 681'1 !. TS . • Limited Par1ner\lt1p, •nd BAHi( Of' NEWPORT, ooes ' 111rov911 v.1nctus-w , Oetend.11115. NOTICE IS. HEREB'I' Gii/EN IM\ by • JuO<ln*lt ol Fon!ctOW< .. ot .. Oud ot Trv\t -0.-der ol Sat• •"" der"a on June 11. t'78, '"" •bO•t· .,,tltle<I Court llH -nl90 me (.Qm tYhSSte>ner •o 'MU, •ncf o<dtr"ed mt" to sett, lhe re.ti Pf'Ollf•IY sllual.O tn """ Ct\¥ 01 Newoon 6uch, Oiluntv of Or<>r>Qe, State OI C...lllOfll••. ~rll»d 4\fOllO•\ A Parcel OI Land fl\ IM CllY Of )'lewporl e.e<h, Counl'I' Of OrMi~ Sl•te o l C.•ltlorn1a. duu1~d •' ------------llOllOW\ l'ICTITIOUS aUSINESS NAME STATEMENT Ttil" toHo•lnq PfrWn) ••f' do1nQ b4.l"MI\ ff P t<OTO POSTER~ UNLIMITEO 2Sll w l(ftO• Ave . 5.ollw An•, C• '"°' lvll• S.ITISO\ RUOln. U ll W Kno• Ave . S•nla NW. C.I 4?104 0.,DOr• -HI R.,.,;,,, 1SIJ W ltno• Ave 5.1nl• Al\a, C• 97700 Tf'l1' but•ne~" •s conc:tucted bv • genet•I ~r!ol\ID Decor• ,,....._ Rubin Tll•S H•l-t .... llleO woll'I lhe County Cterll Of Or-Covn1y nn July .... ,. ""n" Pllbllsntd Or ... eo.11 Oatly Pilot JUIY 10, 11 1•, ll, 1•71 Ul2·11 BtQ'M •nQ •I '"" tnte<-hon 01 Ille Morll'lweUerlY Ii ... Of LOI , 01 81001 •7 ol RI...,. s.Kllon NewPOr• fk•c n. •~ "'" -ci rec.oro.ci •n 8-4 P•oe n OI MH.cell-AMII', tn ll>r ()Ilk• of IM GounlY RtKMder ol s•ut '°""'Y ••ttl tt-. No'11>USterly llne 01 Nep1.-A-~ .. Id 1nt~llO<\ I\ V.Own °" • Mllp flled In 8oolo :n, ~ !oO of Reuwd OI SUr\ley" In the Oltttr ~-~.i;,~,A~r.~~.;:w;::P;',: Nortll•H terty lint of -.10 lot •nd II<> °"°'ll1e.05l..-1V Pr"""-110<\. then<" •I right •"91ff ~II V IS'JCI" E•tt lO 00 I~\ lo • ""'"' on tl'le Mor\-lefl• ProtonQallO<'t d N 5ooutM.t<>le••Y """ of '-••O Loi I, tlM!ftee South O 44'30 W •._t t )ft ct1 ff"'t AIOn Q 'S &HI PrOIOfl9••--Uld !>oulMn l•r'• 1---------------1 -------------1 nne lo • "°'"' In -. .. o MO<lt.ffll'""• NOTICE INVITING BIOS llTITEMN0.>17 NOTICE IS HEREBY Gii/EN lll•l se•l.cl PrOPOS.llS will bll re<~lnd llv ,,,. c•IY of C.ost• Mew, 10 •It f~ C•IY Council, Poi.tOttlte Bo~ 1100,ol tne u IV ol CoSl• Mew, C.1lltorntd. on 01 !MIOft 1"9 ,.,,,, ol II 00 • m , on f'rj d•Y. July 21, 1911 tt sll•tt 11(1 the respottslbHlty ol ll'lt bl-• to oettv., "'' Did to Ille CJly oen.'\ ottk• II• Ille proP41r announced lime Bl<H w111 tM PUbll,ly OC)ell4td •nO read .llOud •• 11 oo • m , °' ff s-. 11,.rt•fler •U P'•<ll<•b•• on FrkNY. July n ""·In the Coun<ll CNmber•, City H811, 17 F•tr Drlvt. Cost• Mt$.t, C.liloml•. lot L ABO R AND MAT E R IA L TO REPAIN T A l"S AME RIC.AN LA FR ,,.N CE PUM PER TRUCI( EOUIPMENTNO 1'3 Addltlonal sM\ Ol '"" SDl'<lfl(alloM IYlilY be OOo.•lned •I the OfflU Of the Pu<ehil\l"O A~I .. 1 II F•lr Otlvt , Co>1• M•U, c.111orn1• B•d• \hOutd be returned lo ll'le dllenllon ot IN! Clly Cttrlt, tn • .. .,1e0 envetoe>e, tdenlllltd on \lie OUl\•df> wit h Ille BIG llem Number nnd IM ()penlnq 0..le E•<h Dtd shill SPfJ<liy H(h 8 "4 every •ttm as .. I forth on Ir.. \PKlflca- tlons Anv """ "" hCePllon\ to lilt se>et ll1c•llcns mu•I lie ,1ur1y \taled In the b•d .Ond l•llure to WI rorlh •ny lltm 1n l!lt SPe<tfice11ons Sh•ll be 9ro1111os !nr re1e<:1ton of me Did E•<" bod ,,..11 set 1or111 111e lull n•m•\ •ncS •r<I-OI •II Pt<r\Ofl\ and parllos 1n1tr~\ted "' ltt. proposal as p11nc11>11ls. in <•Mi ol <OfllOrallon•, 1n<tUOf ""' na~ of IM President Secre1 .. v, f~<t\Urtr, and MartaQtr The C.llY Counttt ol ll>e <tlY ol C°'I• M9~ rt\<lrYe> Int rlQltl lo rtje< I •ny or .i111>1m DATE 0 July •• 1•1a Puell•hed Or-(.o,\\I 0dllY Piiot Jutv 10, 1978 Jbt• It PUBLIC NOTlCE SE R\/ ALL WEST INC , 1•19 E W•r,,er S•"'~ An•, und•r "~"" o .. 11ershlp as ot l\pfll I, 1'TI, .. 111 not bl' re•llOll•lble '°' <1nv llM>lllllH 0111er tft•n ,atrlUt" warr•ntt~\ t rom m•nul•Clu,.r afld Se1...,·All ,..,,ranlles a fter II>(> .tiove <Mle Pubttsheel Or-Cont Dally Piiot JlllY 10, I I, 11, 1'711 ?.o'l•ll PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS •Uf>INES$ NA.ME STATEMENT fM fotlow1nq """°" I\ aotnci bu:H· t\eU•s .. LYLE'S AUTO OET AILING, l•lO NewpOrl BtYd , CMt• Me'"· C•t•IO'nl.t ,.,.,. l y .. L -t-. SO'I E MCF.ld· otn. S.nl• And. C•ltforfl•• •1101 Thi. DuSl"6S ·~ <ondU<led by on •n dlVldU•I \.y\eMefC- T~ .. ll•temtlll WAS llled Wllh IM County Clerk ot Or•n~ County on J-U.1'11 PUBLIC NOTICE """ Ol Neolune A...,,.,.,, Utd hnf' IM•r>O • Cl.lrVt cont• ... Sout-Ultr1y n.,,1n" -------------1 • ••d•us ol 3'J9 74 f~I. e r•d'"' SU .. Eltl~ COVltT OF TH£ UATE Of' CAUFOttNIA 1<0111 TH£ COUNTY OFOlllAHG£ .... A-M.1\1 NOTICE Of' HIAllltNG 01' Pl flTIOtf l'Ott P1t09.\T£ 01' Wl\.L ANO LETTl:•S TISTANlll!lllTARY FOR AUTHOllllZATION TO AO· MINI STE lll UNOltl THE INOtf PENOINT AOMIHISTltATIOH 01" aSTATESACT E•l•lt Of GEORGE FlllANICLIN CAMPBELi... 0Ke•5ed NOTICE IS HEREBY Cll\/EN -· CLAltENCE C>.\1110 CAMPBELL 11•~ llled Mre•,. " pell lion ~ ProC>ele o1 Witt and tsHl•nc• ol Ltlle" Tnlament~Y 10 Ille ~II•-• ilnd 10< •utttorlzallon to ..,,.,,,ntste< -· '"" lnclepenoent .Omlntstr•tlotl ol Est.1th At t, ret"'..-ce to -.ch ts m-'°' rurtller Pif'11cU<ar" ""° tlWlt the II~ •110 Pl•C. Of lle•ll'IQ Ille '°""'t II•\ 119en wt 10< Jutv U. ••11, •t 10 00,. m , 1n the t ou'1,_,.. of De1>9rlmenl No J ot ~1d toUf'I, at 100 Clvl< Genttr Orin WH I 1n lht City of S•nt• An" C.lffOtnt• O.tted J-21 ... ,a WILLIAM £. S\ JOHN, County Ci.rt STEVEN T OU •• ltlOGE 110J lrvlM ...... Sult•" T111ll•"CA._ T•I 111·111' AltWMY f ... : P .. 11'-<' Puoli•hed Or.lnO!! C.0..st 04itlY PllOI, tllrouQh Utd POtnl e••" Nor If\ lA' 3''11" EaJI; I~ Norlhw,_lt!IV ll .0 fttl along ...a ~ur ... lh•0U9" ' central angle OI <I 21'J9" to llte p01nt 01 the bl!Q1nnl"Q T "t SI--OU ol 1111~ pr-n y " •110 Nep1une •n4 11t "'II Streel, Newport 6Hcll, Gltt'°"'4a ()ft July ~. "'19 ... " QO •.m '" ltw L•w Ofllc~ of JACK H Ytr<GER tO<•ted .It tOll HDt111 8r'ottclw•"• Sutl• 117, S•nt• Me, C.llfornt•, Or•"O• C-ty. I _.,, wfl -.,,_rty, or ... rnvc.n ot •' a" f"ltCtiWfV. to ra•se tM •um• suftk lent to.,..,. IN .. _,,., ot ..art. '"" l~t tn tne sum of s 1n ,11• "· and cosn •nd ln tt r •s• thereon lo 11'8 date of Ute, lo tht IUOh•S.1 tudder •or <..•\h tn ••Wl\11 n'JOl\•Y Of '"• Un1teG Statt~s v t Amt1r1<-• O•led J-1'. lt18. JAOC H VINGER, Co'""""1on1tr GARVE GUHOERMAM Altomrylor Pt•lrrtllf JACK N. YINGElt ~MIU- -NK1~ 1.-.a,, s.Hi. 712 S-\t A ... ,CAn:r~ ""'~ Pullftsnect 0r,,,. Cools• 0dllV P1101 Jiiiy J, 10, II, 1978 1SJl·l8 PUBLJC NOT JC E July J, •, 10. 1971 1------------2S~7t PUBUC NOTICE 'ACIFfC YlfW ..-lMOllAl,.H Cemetery Mortuary Chapel Garden Grove at- t orney William L . Zawila has been i n- stalled as president of th e We s tern State Univers ity College of Law of Orange County Alumni Association. The assailant . d escribed by witnesses as about 2:; and of Middle Eastern appearance. was captured after a 200·ya rd chase by the hotel doorman, Ronald Rusby ~~~~--~~~~~~--t 3500 Pac11tc View Onve Ne wport Cal1forn111 644-2100 McC:OIMIC• MOITUAltlH Laguna Boacn 494·9415 Laguna Hrlls 768-0933 s nn Juan Cap1slr3no 495-1776 ,, An a he im attorney David M. Harrison was selected vice president ~ Fu I le rton attorney Marga r e t Case, treas urer and Leonard Herscovfteh of Los Alam It~ secretary. Anny Denti8t Ends Course De nt i s t <Maj .l Charles W. Wekefield, son of Mrs. Mary L. WakerleJd, 2333$ Buckland l..aM, El Toro. corn plctcd tbe Army Medical Department of· f\cer advanced couree al the Academy of HPlth Sciences of the Arttiy, Fort Sam Houston, T~u~. Supply Firm Loses Suit SACRAMENTO (APl -A $2.8 million award }las be.?n made in the wrnngful death case of a 4.· year-old girl at the Sacramento Medical Center In 1973. A Sacramento Superior Court Jury assessed punitive damages against the American Hospital Supply Comeany at $1 million and edded SS00.000 in the wrongful death judgment. A second defendant, the eatdon Chemical Company of Compton, was assessed •1so,ooo in punitive damages and an additional $500,000 for wronf'ful death. JB UBI OJ'ER FR4l/D SACRAMENTO <AP) A M\11 Valley psychotogl1tt has been ordered su.,pended rro1n the Mcdl-Cal proararn a.fter belrti convicled of acquiring food stamps by U.nderstaUng bL'I in· com e. offtclal1 say. The CaUfomla Depart- ment of Health ~rv1ces announced that Walter H Voight waa also round by an admlnbtralive law Jud ge to have falsified seven elalms for Medl-C_, payment. PUBLIC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUS •USIMES$ NAMI STATUt\INT Tiie lotlOWino e»ertOn I• 001119 1>11•• MU•• COM rfiMPO HAI It F ASHIONS, 1"27 M•onotl• ,.. ..... Foun1a111 V•lltv, Ca 11:•1111-UlllM! UIP9, 401 W l'll"St $1 •• , •• s...i. ,.,,., (.A '2101 Tiii\ ll•lllf•tt\ I\ tonckKttd llY .,_ fn. dlvlCklill IUU18"11L 1.- Tlll\ \\-1-m Wt\ II~ wllll tM Couflll' Cl.,k ol Ort1>9t piunty °"'July •• 1911 P"7* Pul>llNleel OraftOI Cotti 0.0y PllOI JUiy 10, 11, ,,, )I, 1'1R 1•1\ ll PUBLIC NOTICE .... I DAil y ftlt.OT Monday July 10 1971 OTICE IV•••1011 COU•TOI' Tiii ltOT"I 0 1'MOtt·•Ol'Oflll81Un' tTt.T•OPCAUPOtllUt.l"O• Net;..• 1\ ho< ... .,_, !NI "'9 WI TMa OOUWTYOl'O•u•• 0.IMQt'MI wtlt -.. ,_ ..... lo< -...... el\Y .. llh tr lleltillllM tOllO~leO 11• llOTICI 01' .. IA•lllCJ 0 ,. .~, .... otNf ~ "'•IAll. Ot t lC.t ••Tl T IOtt l'Oll "4t09A Tl 01' W ti. 11111 o.te t.•o ~•nan ,,n..,.. .. n•11Y 0,wo 1111u .. •oav ou-1t1t f!•l•I• el l'ltA•IC I aAtf!S 1 .. &c:.rwGot....., Ott••-1)11\IMl(Alaij NOTICE IS HlllEIY GIVEN 111<11 $MIC'-*"'° llUfH ~ aATIS ~ II ... Nttl" e c.Jlf f2t'1 • 11tlllle11 ler ~· DI Wiii •"41 la MonlOO ......... , 1,,1.,IOfl -nc• of Y, .. f\ Tt•tiMne""''' t• tllt JIUI .-01110 1111 ..,..11'-<. -.49"tft(t IC> w111c11 l1 "'3 1..'9lln• Nl-' (.>. tor ,.,,,_ -11c:lllotl'\. -llWll t Publ"""" °'·-GM•• 0.11, Piiot, time eno pl«• of -lllQ lllt .. ,.... Jwly i, •. 10 "'' lttl *" vt ror .l<llt II. 1'7t, .i to.oo Ut~ll •·"'" In .,. ~-of O...,.fl-nl No. I 0t ~d ~ 9' lOO ,, .. le ~-r Orlve WHI, I" llw O ly or S.nta Allll !------------; c:.11101n1e. PUBLIC NOTICE Otted J-,., ltJI Wll.UAM I , ... JC*N, l'ICTITIOUS IUllNCU c-ty Oen N.t.Mlf STATEMUIT lllOll•T.t..•AITMAN The ro11ow1no perton• ••• 0 01n u.. ... ,.. ~ u.. au ,,..,.,.." ••· Cttta--.CA... WESTCOAST ENTEPPAISf!S; Tel,'*411at VALLEY AOVERtlSING · MAI At ...... r•1 "'9ttt..,._ CENlElt OF C""l..IFOIHllA. tlU PllCMit-Or-C.0.st O•llY Piiot 8ullonwood Slrett, F°"'1t•in Valley J111v l. •. 19. 1'11 1531· J c.e111orn1e fllOI PUBLIC NOTICE SUflalUC)jlt COURT Of' TM& STATI OP CM.ll'OaNIA l'Oa Oa11iel J l<•lln 1115' 81111ot1 5t r .. t, Fountain Vt ll•v. C.lltornl fllot M A-K-1/UI 811tt0flw Sltttl. Foun1eln Vellor , Cet11ornl n1ae THe CIOUllTYOl'Ol'ANOE Thi• bu•i,..u '' COfldll<le<I bY IM......_ (lt ,..r•I Ptrt,,.r\Np N 0 T I CI 0 I' NI A a I N 0 0 I' Oanltl J K.,.,. ~ITITIOM l'Otl Pao.AT• Ofl WILi. n ... ,,.,_I ..... lileo ""'"' I ANp Lln••I Ta5TA,..INTAaY Counly ClerlL ol Orange COIHllV o ANl> AUTllO.llATION TO AO· Jvne 71. 1'11 "' r If I 5 T • • U N 0 • a T 11 I ,.,.. INOl~lllOENT ADMINllTaATIOM Pu~-"'-C.0.•I O•llY Pt101 Ofl llTATCS ... CT J11n•l••nctJvlv). •O, 11, Int E"st.io f//f JAMES T Al.Bl!llf , ·~· J"ME5 fROUTMAN ALllERT •nllt-------------1 J"'1o!IES Al.BEAT, OKet~ NOTICE 15 HEREBY GIVEN rn•t PUBUC NOTICE IUCH ... RO I' HILOER8A ... HO nat 1----------- r1100 .... rein • Ptt\tl<lft '°' PrOCMlt or LEGAL NOTICC Will end luu•nc e ol Lt llof\ Not•CO I• lltrtby Ql•tn 11\t l II\• T Hl•M•M.,.,, IO Ille Ptllfl-r and for Polio Oepert,,,.nl of ,,,. Clly or Cott• .. u111ortll•lion to-'"'"" unoer 1~ Me>• will hold• PUblic euct1on or un. 1noepe110ent ....,.lntslreflon of flltles c1e1med i>r•>On<ll P<09'11Y o" S.lur Acl. rert._. 10 .,,.lcll It m-10, cuv. Julv ti, 1911 •t 10:00 a.m. ti lht turther llt'1kut..-.. Mid 111•1 ,.,. 11,.... Co••• Me .. Police Oe11trtment. t •nd pltct ot Mittl"9 11,. umc "'"' Ftlr Or•vt, Co.ta Me ... C.llrornla bftn Mt for July tt, 1t1t. •I 10:00 • m . ~i.!r :~~ In IM courtToom of 09pertmenl Ho l P Ct ot H id coun •t 100 Civic <Aftlt( Drive UOll\-Or•nQe CoHI Otllt' Piiot, Wut, In lht City ot St111t An~. Ju•r IO, 1911 ts50-l1 Ct llfornle O•ttd J-Jt. 1u1. Wll.UAM l!.14 JON,.., County Oer~ PUBL.IC NOTICE DONALD 0. H••wooo NOTIC:I TOC:•llDITOltS .. A.WOOD & AOttlNSON SUP'••1CM COUaT 01' THC .... tOlllC.e ... ,_, SlATIE 01' CALIA)ltNI ... FOii .... _..n ...... CA t"4) THE COUNTY 01' OllANOI Tel: -.uu .... A-ffl'IJ A~fW:,........... E\let~ ot ALBERT lEGGETT. P..t>tt~ Or-Co<tst 0.11 ... Piiot o.c; .. ,.., July >,•, l0.1t71 ,)Jlo.7t "OTlCE IS HEllE8Y GIVEN 10 Ille -----------crt011ors DI,,,. -ve ,..,...., clK-nt tPwt all oer!.of'ls twvir'Q <l•1ms ~••nst ,.,. ~•·d ~--reQ<llred to Ille ------------1ttwrm. with the ..C:ftMrY vouch9n,. 1n NOT!QTOCll8DITOltS IM Ofll(t of .... <•erll. of lhe fboYe P UBLIC NOTICE SV~••1CM COU•T 01' TH• entlfleO court, or lo pr-I \llem, with STAT• Of' CAl.tl'O•NIA PO• ti.. 11tu"ary vouchers, 10 rho un TME C:OUNTY OP' OllANOE a.rsloned "' the Diii<• OI ll'oe P11bllc .... A-ttnl Admt nl•lrt tot, 1)00 Soulh Greno E\tele ot CH.t.ALES l<ELL'I Awnw, SM!t• .t.ne, C:.llrornla Tl/OS. 8 ALOWIN, OKH-w nlCh ll Iha pl.ce of ou.in .. , 01 Iha NOTICE. 1$ HEREBY GlllEH 101i.e unoer\IQM<I In •II met ta" perta1n1ng <•HllOfS.,, rhe -.. MmtO Cle<*""I to , ... Ht••• of w ld dK-1. wltllln •lltt all Pt~ n••l"9 <l•lmt """'' '°"' mot1llll •tier tne llot l>U4>11,•llon IN said -...... .,. reQ<1lrH to lltt or th!\ notice. ,,,.m, w111t IN rwcesMry ¥OU<lwrt, In OaltO J1111t 2', 1t1t. IM Dlflce of !!'It <I-ot IM e110vt en· JAMESE HEIM "'""' cout1, or to 11"-t them, will\ PUbll< Admlnl\lrtlO< '"' naceuarv •o..<Mn, 10 lh• ...,. .. .amlnl•lrato< ol 0trw~ ti !ht O!llce Of HtELl!N, lhettlllltOflha MARRIN, JOHNSON & BRIDGES. >H •bov.ttWmeddltcedo!nl Sou"lh Flower Stt'MI, LO\ AllO"lff, CA, ADRIAN ICU'l'P'Ell, wn•<h I• the !>lac.. Of OUtl~l Of tlte COVllT 'I' COUNS&L a_. ""'""'Cl-"' •II mtll•o ptrtttnlno ••llJAMIM ~. D• llAAYO, 10 lllt "I.tit Of WIG OOC-nl, within Ol!PUT'r lour month• etler tilt first 011ollcat1011 ,. , o. I t• "" 01 tl\I• nouce. S.ftla An•, C.lltornia •1711 Otttd J une 13, 19'9. AttorMyt ter-lll11ta1 .. J.t.MES W 91\LOwlN PubllshtO Or .. ""''' 0••1¥ PllOI Eucutor or tn. Wiii July J, 10, "· , .. "11 2JJt·ll Of tMtDDV• ntmedOK-1 fHIEl.EN, MAlllllN, J°" NSON a a111 DOIS SSJs..tll ,.._ 5ttwl ~A-•CA-71 Ttl:6J7.aw AtterMY ... lllKllW Publl.,,. 0r.,,.. OM•t O•llY P1101 PUBUC NOTICE NOTIC61 TO c •EOITOIU s u .. •••OR COUltT OP' THE 'STATE Ofl CAl.ll'OllNIA l'Olt TMI COUNTYOFOllANG& .... A-ffitl J-Zt. Juty l. 10, II. 19/f 20).11 Eslt l• ol MURIEL BERNICE ------------tROLF, al<• MURIEL 8 RO LF . Oecu~ PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lo Ill<> ------------1 crtdltof\ of lllt-... nerneo O.<edenl th•I •II .,.,$OllS ll••lllQ Cl•lm• .. o•IMI Ille U ICI OK.o&nl art require<! lo lite '"'''" wllll tN necess.ar> -..:iwrs. In tnt ornce ot tllt clerll Of l~ •bo•• en llllta court OI lo 11".,...I tl>em. wlln Ill• nectn 6•Y vouchers, lo Ill• un- dtnl o ned ti 11177 San Vlctnle 8oulevuo, Utt 1tnoe1.s. CA. wlUclt I\ 11\e Pitt• ot bU\lneu of II\• un· °'"'II"" In •II Mallen pen.lnlno to 1111 nt•I• of wlCI oec-n•. within tour montll• •lltr tlw 11,,1 publl<•llOf' of lhl\ notice SUP'e•10R COUltT 011 CA 1.1 "l>lt N t A CO\IWT'I' Of' O•ANGI 100 O'fk t-1 ... Ofl•t s...l•Ant,C..llfM"lt M•lt•r or Adoollon Pelll1on or OonalO F HO\IWlllS CITATI~ (~aOaATll CASC NUMll!lt AO.lttOJ THF PEOPLE OF THIO STAT£ OF OLtf OANIA. '0 Timothy 8trl<or Ol 1160 w .. t tth ~I , Coront. C..1110.,11• You ere ........,.,. ClleQ ano required to ,.OP*4't ctt • ""•"nQ •n thlt court on Srotem~• 2&. 1'71. •I '1:00 • m In OtP<trtmont t , •nd to Qi•• <Inv l~I rea•on wh'(. •uord•llQ to tnr •rflll.O Pf'llllnn 111.0 wltl\ this co'"'· l 1mo1nv 8Ml<er It Nlurel t•lher ol ( nllo IO b• adOPl~O bV Oon•ld Neuheu\ T"8 natural moth., ht• f>oi oeen •Olt lo re~ll Tlmotlly 8er1Ler for J yurs •no Ills t•ll --n -tn Is 1n Corona Tlmotl\y B•rl<•r I• lo I» <ll ed •nd Ql•en nollt• Ol lllt -IOfl Oaltd J~ 1' IUI 8y W""l TEAT Ktr..G o....,., 1.INDAL TOOt -e. 4111 SI., S.t. 11' ~"'• .. ,.,, CA "1tS T•I; MT .. z.t ,....,,..,, .. ~ PuOll>lltd Or-Coast 0•1ly Piiot Jiiiy l 10, II. ?l, ltll 2~1 It Oateo June 14, lt11 UNI TEOCALIFOl!NI ... BANK E •e<.U10< ol 1111 Wiii ol tr. •bow n•mtld do~llCMnt JOHN It. Mc:CANN eso. 111'7 Se" Vic""• llVf., Sir. 111 Lt\ ""'''--· CA_, Ttl1 eJ.,_..i.t Attor,,.y tor E•t<lllOf' Publl•ned Or•"9t CO.st Oallv Pilot JuM 2•. Jul'( a, 10. ti, IUI 141' It PUBLIC NOTICE 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 , ... •1t1•t\ ltiltt•--.•IM•'-t vt" UM <.h•"'"41 Go•M DAILY PILOT CLASSIP IED ADS ·•·••••··•··•·········• .....•........•.•..•.....................•.•.. ····•··•··••····•·••••• Yew t•" ~•U M '•"41 •• •••O. ,, ......... *•"" .... Ci..... I 002 Ci....... I 00 I 002 Giewr• I 001 ········•·············· ..................... . •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• W L~l .LY N 1002 TAYLOR CO. 1002 GtM,... •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 10-.,\J.1()1\:-, ·.11111 t :1·H; IACK U Y ft'ine 4 bdrm., 21"4 bath family home on quiet cul de sac. Overaiied pool, playhouse, extra storage. '"°uced to $179,000. MIS.A YMDI Attractive 4 bdrm.. 2 ba. home in lmmac. condition. $99,000. 1.AYNONT Several fine bayfront homes with pier & slips HAbott VIEW -$226.500 Lovely view or ocean & awiset from the llving room or this spacious 4 bedroom home. Gracious entry, attractive atrium & ex tra large tam room. Beaut Patio & garden. W I S&.IY N. TAYLOR CO., IEAl.TOlS 21115-J ....... ~ Ml WPmT CIMTER, M.I . 644-4' t 0 T...,.S AHY~ Get lnto the tennJb habit on pnvate courts. Enjoy 3 bdnn. pool for only $675. C .. '4M 161 SUMMm IS .._.. Here ·s your chance to own that run house with th~ pool you've wanted. Swim the summer away in that 40' pool. Big 2 story in Mesa Verde Cor $149.500 . Near Country Club. c .. 546-414 1 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR ........ 1002 GtMnt 1002 SP1 v1nq Cu~.l.i M· .,,, lrv1111· Hunt111qto11 Bc>.t< 11 Nt·wpur l Be.id1 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 141 11,,,.,"'' 011v• NI\ ti/';, 6161 1002 G....,,.. 1001 N I W ON T H E WAI.IC TO LAKE C>Fflltll> •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• M.UICIT SIU,900 1 STOllT (QUAl HOUSING OPPORfUNITY Comple\ely redecorated Tlus eleo1&nl 2 5lo"" has 4 .... + Dlbl..I & r etaodeled 4 UR . 0 ·~ .. R'll home. Kltchen hlte new. bdrms. 3 ba. bag Crplc rn +,HUGE FAM SURF & SAND ttuh compactor. water fmly rm. s harp parquet Lo•'ated near b":."h entry w /btCI wood • • • DUPLIX softener & Intercom are ban11lers Upgraded S73.000 as.sum.able loan th be SOme of Its (entures To No """W 1-·n C""'lS 0~1• Only steps to e ach. c r p l 1 n g a n q u 1 e t ""' ""' ""' · _, • Great mveslment & as see this lovely home call earthtones Close to ftnanc111g uva1lubh: A l1. owner OCC\lpant you will 546-SBllO parks. pool & schools Now! Call 963·6i6i breaUie the fresh sail air Choice eod writ. 759· 1'01 <111"' ''' 11 • "'' ~. •n" "'· ' ;,:r3:~~::::u~~i !9·1Hlll;II 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• bdrm for tenant. Your!~~~~~~~~~~ _ .... ---••i•- ,......,..s Notice: dloice. Hurry. Phooe FtXH + LAHD! --------nu All real estate udvertised now! :>45-94.91· Near the beach! Older AIAHDONID 5 Ill U The sellers were forced OLD HOUSE ~~~ nu,:s~:re~a1n'~~?; (Qrl J'ID!i1 iilflUUI ~~2e r n bu~~ :o~ f~~e~ ~o ~aeve u~"J5 1~~~g~~~ 2 Bedroom. copper Housing Act or 1968 R al eo..l t po8lllbilitJes! Would you maculate mo•·e:in "ondi· plumbing, 220. 11ep1&rate HAllOa VllW HU.LS S P ECTACULAR forever Catalina, oce.:.n views Huge maau tenane9 rree k>t. Tha 3 Bdrm + famliy room home II! an 1mmiH·ulalt- Jewcl. t£gbly upgruded air cond • even a mini putting green! For tbe discerning buyer seekmg pnvaC)'. ele&ance and seren ity . Offered •t v.s.ooo. ~m-- • f Ill I ' I I \ I ,J "•• J• • • V.1 wtuch makes it llle1u1I to e =a c believe only S68.000' ! • .. gar age & close to lldHrthc .. un y prt>f· NEW WATERFRONT Bette r hurry! Cull lion. Beautiful tiles. up-schools. s hopp1ns. /\1---------- crt>nt•c . llm1l~1twn , or home with boat slip. 645-0303 Hr ad e d car Pe La great home for rental OWNER tUscnmtnation bused on Coral cay Below mkt. throughout. Huge rooms. wtt.b a pot1lt1ve cash now race, color, reliiiion. sex, Bkr 556-4380 the latest In fixtW:~ aod Gave away price or DESPERATE! or nallonal on gin. or un equipment. A sacn(ace Ill 4L500. CALL 751·3191. Intention to make any IHR a.~ Take advantage .SELECT Has bought another: and Call now "'~"2313 v-anxJou11 ! Secluded such preference. bm1t11· -c"'mOO"'? ......... ~.,, .. rv " " Oi'l'•"•o "'''VN'U"""'' PROPERTIES charm & atmosphere• tion. or dti.cnmanation You'll enjoy the taste of -·~.....,c-Warm I 1v1 n g rm . This newspaper will not knowingly accept any adverl1~1nA for real estate which u1 111 viola Uoo of the law ~m~~\~~i~st:~r~ ---1AS-·T·s·10-1--·1 ['fl lfillil 2 ~~OL1v~~c~.,HM :~ ~:;: +~~E;~ Front u n l t fac e 1 VA Terms, great 4 Bdrm • ~ rm. Kldeaway iu1tst neagb borhood street. 2 bath fanuly home an ex· FAM RM + IONUS Walk to the poundang qu a rt ers ! En J oy Open reelin g 3 lge cellent locaUon. Pnct>d ONLY S,l,500 surl from this uecuUve sectuded pool & laniu: bdrms. spacious w /a bun-to ull at only $84.500. ExecutJve rambler. less 2 story home ltollan en· Take advantage or low dance of storage. Asking call 546-5880 than 1 mi le to sandy l1)'. huge rooms, vaulted pnce! Call MS-0303 •IOIS: ~dntitMn $83,950. Lowest pnced bearh. Shows 1 Ike 8 ceilings. To see 1& to bu)' lhould ctt.c:k their acts ~~'!_<>,.kl.view condo . model. 4 bdrm. 2 baths, Call963-7181 ,,...,......, formal dining room . Ol'fN11tO·•'"IJf'"0 "'1'1' 6: ~;~;:r;~ ("""'!l!f ,•,a1a flXlll Ul'l'Ell ~£ii c:U J:~~~ [9 1HM1 l--'-·~ _____ c-__ _ llaMllty for HM first ht-a a e $59,500 · FOs::lEST E OLSON . . . cOIT«f ins«tion only. ADULT CONDO $2500 Total Down (~IWil!jHJl!I UJ;J $56,900 Soanng 2 sty, 4 br + For the dis<'nminatmg pool? A handy man ·.l> ~ f s• couple. Large master paradise! Pamt and pro a•••••••~••••••••i .. oi ~~!:i ~~. d8'c:~!m:i ~~ ~ia°:'e~a~ex~~~~!~~ ~ 0 kitchen. extra large liv. Tnhm Uv111g Ca ll qwrk, ••••••••••••••••0 ••a •• rm .. encloaed patio. 1147·6010 TWO FOR ONE Seeluded &qwel. Pool & or•"'"',. '11'"''''111 '"' !:!'.E~:~:·t~~ ;E~;;~~t ~'.'. :·· ! ~ IH$11\l1 =~,:di: dc~;~~l: !~'lll!HJ! REDUCED ALL MEW . --·-11•••1!. Owner bas moved & DECO• "'TOR must sell this spacious. Real Estate Ne wly remodele d I duplex. quality thru-out 1 Best buy on 8 .1. $205,000. -well a ppoi nt e d 4 SHOWPLACE bedroom. 2 bath home CLASSIC local.ed an Costa Mesa's _,.11111111...__..._.1111111111.-.... _., A CONVfHICNT SHOPPIHC -~r;m kWIHC CUIOE roa TH[ REDUCED IEAUTY hnes t neigh borhood CAL~ THE GO $25.000 Fanw.sllt· location on the tSland. Use your connec lions on th1!> fnwr upper duplex Reduc ed LO 12~.000 MESA VERDE Plus h wall to wall fantastic lge add on rm· carpeting. large rumily ly rm w/14' used brick room . park·Uke grounds. frplc Lge bdrms, each on a wide shady slreel wtwalk·m closet . Huge add up lo a real value at yrd ·rm for pool. 4 bdrm. frml din rm. kitchen su7.soo. CALLM6·2660. nook. wet bar. Motivated • SELECT selJers sa.y submit your PROPERTIES *VETS * 0 OOWN-0 CLOSING Homes in all are~ of ORANGE COUNTY VET .AGT. C_. 541-0IOC> LEASEOrTIOM ~per family home 5 BR. den1 formal dining room & living room Owners have a new hnme so try $129.500. UNDER MARKET! l''ountain Valley family home. 5 BR, 3 BA on a large lot Reduced to $84.500 Su bmil all terms. ofCer. Please phone to· day to see. !>45-9491. (~l\t1!3§1$1Jj Real Estate VAODOWN 'This lovely home in the Bluffs is completely UP· graded Custom wood. tile decor. 3 bdrm, 3 bath condo ln fantastic loca· / lion. Cl~ to park. pools New carpets & paint make this 3 bedrm home sparkle. Huie back yard 0 too! Just listed. Call 6'6-7171 .. CJl'!f.N''ltJ• f\'O'i1 '( hf~'"' ~Hlth PW [~IRIMI Balboa Island Really \\Of\\t'~IY._\."r~.-,'n 673-1700 MOVIMG 777 Need housing 1.11!0. • RE.AL EST A TE ca11 toll free 1.80().525-8920 MANAGEMENT E:itt.GU74 orGU40 OPPORTUNITY No obligation. A service /\ prime pres llg1ous of Affiliated Independent Newport Beach location Brokers. A top local firm with!~~~~~~~~~~ years or succeesful ex· pcrle n cc Newpo rt Beach real estate ex perience preferred. A re· al opportunity to grow & help olhors. Appticlltaons held In strict confidence. Please reply to Ad #282, Daily P ilot, P O. Box l~. Coi1ta Mesa, Calir. 92626 Use the Daily Pilot "Fast Result" service directory Your ttrvlce 1s our specially Call 642·567lt ext. 322 IEACH ltlTllA T VllWI $61 ,,00 Stepe to poondlng surf & Cf')'$1.al 111n4! Backyard la bay area playaround! Winding wooden walk ways to isecluded ent.ry ! Gourmet kitchen. atep down conversation area + fireplace! Sunshine breakfast patio. Pool. jacuzzi, volleybalJ make garden living at lt 's finest. Call ror appt. 847-6010 OPfl'w ''' O• ,, 'tur-. '<.'t ',.., 1 [ .• ft~MM I 002 Gt Mral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• file<?!~.!~ DUMATIC V~UI IM WOODlllDH 4 bedroom popular Blscay . never lived in and slgnl((cantly under market. Large family home with cathedral ceillngs. 2 tlreplaces. 3 car garage, near community fac ilities. ready for lmmodlate occupancy. $147,500. A COl.DWIU. IAMl9 CO. 644·9080 21t1 IANJOAOUltf taU RO. IN NrWP0M C€.nD Real Estate IAY& OCEAHPROHTS SA.LIS • RENTALS USIDIHTIAL INCOMI CALL ALL THI TIMI C7l4fg75·6'70 JACOIS REAL TY 2919 NewpOrt 81 vcl. comer 30th Newport Beach Sell your own home FIXED , not % fee. As· sist in adt. fin. etc. Real· LY Fr~ Homes~1530·222A R.E. ADVISOR 1 SERV WANT ACTION• Classlfed Ads 642-5671 & tennis club. Ready for occupancy. 759· 1501 ~ Walker & lee Real Estate IRVIHE 4 IDRM $19,900 Spacaoua 4 br, 3 ba patJo home locatM in one of our molt desirable ~as. Freshl} paa.nted & newly carpeted lbruoul plua many xtras . You can't afford to miss Ulla ooe. Just listed. 646-7711. OCEANFttONT 3 Bdrm. + den home on 30X85 l't. lot; ffl>I., built· los. paUo. beamed cetl- mgs. $375,000 673-3663 642·2253 Eves associated II J. (, .. I I II I ,, • JI • 'Ii\' r ' • f • ' ' Ge•r• 100 GaMNI 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• macnab / lrvtne realty DOVll SHOUS VllWl Immaculate property -new on the market! Lovely new decor, richly coordlnoted by owner/decorator. Lg . llvina rm W/marble rplc ope,nln1 onto sheltered patio. 4 BRI. d1ning area. informal f amlly arm. $349,500. Beverly Morphy 642·82M. <H ·116 ) '42·12H 644 .. 100 901 OO•r Orlw H•rbOr View C:.nt.f trvl™f ., C.mpus V•lle., '*'ta' 751-1414 \ 9210 e.20 l "" 1lf-...i._ 11TM-r ..... THIS SllP Of A OllCSS is •llu11na tor oanc111& undtt Ille stlfl or n • sundreu. Nott Ille •t1hlt beclict ~~ that flatten fat:' h1u1e. l~llW r11nttc1 attt111 9210 ~ Sizts I. 10, ll 1', IS. II, 70 Sue 12 (bm 34) II-l 118 ,aids 45 111<11 ftboc 5-4 SUI._ -...... ~nc .. .-,..,. .. ..... ..... ......... SeM ti! Pattern Dept. 442 Daily Piiot U2 Wiil '"" k, .... '"'-111 lM\ \. PMt ~ =Dr. Sill M •• LOOK RICH YOUNG, SMART on • bUCI aet 1 Sew flt• tolt dlH1111S fOIJS, t~llll, !>'ftlS ·•II 1n NEW SPRINO..SU"' MCA PAnlRN CATALOG fret r.nern COllPQll Se1ld 15' ., ....... s.i.. .... R. , ......... , .......... l=C.... ..... ,.. ... .... sµe ,,, t,A6ci B~ L11h1Wttfllt tno i<wely fOf hlncheoni to ttlt-CS•• ,...,, Am~ lleiplltly al oarlleS I" .. at1mor011s Qpe.snawl Crochet scttd rotce then racy Otsiln of 11~u1ted ~ut1op1. Utt wor $11d. Paltein ,,~, eilSY·IO-lotio. cltretttOllS SUO lot etell oartein Aad JS. tten P11tt1n lor l11s1 clnt a111N1I •nd halldtinc SM4 te: ..... NeedlKren Dept. 10s Oail y Pilot leltU, ON CW.. SU.. ....., YoR. lfY \0011. rri11t lbnle, AHf-. ~ Pafttnt luMMt. VAlC( PtC 19711 NHOU CAAn call, t!loost lrOtll 71~ cle11tnt. liet 141Sl<le All C!arts lln1t Ciochtl S4:nct 1~c lat Cifb 'it' ~ SI SO , .... sa...4ffl Sl.50 SWH '11' P1ff Qtillb ... Sl.U Stffdl '1' r 11e11 0-ifb SUS ClltMt wltlt ~ SUia Clltllet• ...... SI.Ila llifty :i= Sl.00 .. ,,.. Sl.00 s.w a •• w Jl.2~ Nua.=-:-.. ... Sl.00 f'IMf W Sl.00 1t11tplft Cl'ldllt W Sl.00 ltllllaal Citdllt llill $l.OO llllllllt ........... Sl.00 , .... .., .... 11.00 C:.,W. Clft W SJ.GO· -\ij"' ... 1% """ • tz . . 1S4 ..... \6 ll 1~ ...._ .... n 1s. ~ ':'::' 7!1C lU~ . . 7)f l s .. s d a c I• " II !. ·r '· ,. ':• •• G ,, • - ' J ..._., Jor S. Ho.aet fw S. HOtdH Fw S-. Hout .. for S• HCHttes For ScN Mondoy July 10 1973 CAil Y PILOT cs ···•·•·•··••·•····•·•·· ..••...•.•..••....•........••.......•......•..........••.•••.•.............••..•••...•...... ~~ .......... !~~ !:~~ .......... !?~~ ~~~~ .......... ~?.~~ ~.·.~~~ ..... !~.~~ :~!'!~~ ....... !~.~~ ~~!~!!.~~-~~ ........ ~~!~~!.~~-~~ ........ ~~!!~!.~~.s.~ ........ 1~-~~~~!::~.~ ....... ) LOWEST PRICE BY OWNER k-t-iM I 044 rriM I 044 LOCJnl .. och I 041 L.ocJ-o lcoch I 041 POOL PATIO Uupl ·x on 1,.1and l v. o l ~tes• Del Mar tt13,U:,O 4 • ••• • •• •• •• •••• •• •• ••• • •••••• •• •• •• • • • •• ••• • • • ••••• •• • • • ••• • • • • • • • • • • '••• • • •••••• ••••• ••• • •• UR . Sl7!l.O-OO o\i;t . bd.ramrm5463797 ~1103 LIVING CoroM dM Mar I 022 MESA VERDE ••••••••••••••••••••••• AXER 1AS Y TO IUY HUge 2300 sq ft ram1ll Owner offers 10'.1 down & home Needs soml! r1xm' terffibLovely~HRhomti Take advanla"e now on R 2 lot w /room lO before seller starts to n·- build 2nd unit Geniunc decorale. value at $138..500 C;i II for ",l, '· ' · ., '• VACATION AT HOME Saahng. swimming. tennis. vollC!yball and shuffleboard plus a lake. spas a nd pools. All or these amenities are yours. Pick the plan and price hom~ from these beautiful new Woodbridge hom es. .. 4 llDIOOM OH UOO ISU Here's a new I is t in g on Lido : 4 bedrooms (or 3 a nd a den ), 2 story home with beamed ceilings, paneled rooms, decorator tiles, attractive wall coverings, atrium patio and strado ~ntry. A Unique Home offered at $285.000. F'amily....,,I for 11:.rbor llllPl. ~l(ln & MJnner Schools Lltr#t' 3 f'ldrm, 1~. 8& + \, ba + Atru bobby room F. lect n c is l ove & O t W X l n l Ellsl.81do CM Taxei. arc low So 1s the prl('c al $87.000 Assume low Fiii\ 11t l!I ~·4 pay S32S per mo ··~-~·112 [~ lflllil f-.1 I fi\• 1 1111 I I Jr,..lll/1f'°' • ASPEN MODEL- C REEKSIDE $92.900 CLASSIC OLD LAGUNA RESIDENCE U,._l()Ut: 1-f()Mt:S REAL TORS', 675·6000 2443 East Coas1 Highway, Corona d el Mai dlso 111 Mesd Verch· ,,1 511() 5990 8tcJcMt T riLenl TIAILH srACE This charming 4 bdrm. tri·levd offers the most in gracious hving. Hu~c fmly rm w /{rplc. rrml din, rov'd patio. 3 baths. space ror boat or tna1ler New <'rpl t hruoul Reduced to $104 .950 759-1501 IHIHliHP lllVILIJPlllt1 t/,.ACRE lmmac 4Br. 2B a . 2 frplcs. hme in Cam eo $10,000 dwn . No <1u11Uty Assum. 8"'1 VA loan. 4 br. 2 ba. Collegti Park Ownr 64().0008 or 646·2821 lh~hlando; Oct-un & l'•'" IT'S COOL! Mesa del M;ir von \'lt'~~on ' • ;11·rl' P\l atea.4Br. big pool.d en /· bch access 0pn Sat/Sun. bar . WT.500. Owner wil l 1·6pm or by upp'l. 709 help finance. Princip on Cameo Highla nds Dr. I) Call owner for appl $247 ,500. (Fee Land I 541Vi530 AS PENWOOD-BROADMOOR 107 .500 WILLOWS-CREEKSIDE 110.500 WILLOWS-CREEKSIDE 118.000 POPLAR-VILLAGER CONDO 69,950 ASPENWOOD-BROADMOOR 109.900 OAK WOOD-BRO A DMOOR 99.900 For information on a ny o f t hese Woodbridge specials. call today. -011 ,.... occaslolt1, • C)"'Odout ,,..,...... wlttl oW L.-,...a c"'"" 11 off• ed for '*· TIM OW'Mn wt• to tr•v.e ... wtl IHn you o forM W.'-J "°"' wfftt FNKh doon ·,: .. Oftd wt.dow iHh. brick ...,..,. old 1tyte ., cowty.d wfft9 flowtn .cl fnllt tntt. two lonq bak-.S wfftt oc•• •t.w•. fow ,_... bt• ow. .cl .. withi11 • tMrt wall to sd1oob, Yill~ eltd beecltet. Off.,..d Pn nc only 673 1592 ---------at. . . . $249 ,500. f!j 497.3331 ___ .-:... _____ Must Sacnricc-01vorct'' IRVIMfTfRAACf Mesa Verde North lmrtW c.-uJate J br l ba Beautiful .t br homl'. home, $185.000 f'nn 1111 ~hows l1 k ~ m o d t'I ly By appt 759 1897 SB!l.500 Prm only 7 9AM or after SP M. SS7-677K lrviM I 044 t.,... leedt I 04' SPYGLASS l.ARGAIN .•....................•.•.••...•••.•.•..••.... SHADED PARADISE COLLEGE PAIK 3 Bedrm, 2 bath. 20x20 (a mity room. New paint, roof. water heater. Owner a nxious. Cul-de-sac. VA $77.500. PU:U IEAUTY 4 Bedrm, fam ily r oom . 2 bath. fireplace, dog run. Don't miss this ooe. $8S,OOO. l OPEN HOUSE REALTY ~ 645-9161 , ........... -. .. ... Real ~late MES.\ VERDE Best valut 1n this beauliful area. 3 large bdrms. 2 baths. ·over sized ram1ly room. fplc, all this near 1-Chools. park & shoppin)( Now vacant. Asking only $79,900. Call 540·1l51 ~HERITAGE REALTORS 3 UR. family room. BY Owner A 1 Cont.I 1' 1 UNIV. rARK IRV formJI d1n1ng rm. 2 LKocahllon 3 11:lr. 1 ba WOODlllDGE La Salle 4 Hr l'• ba f r plcs 3 c ar o ar. itc en JPP iances I REALTY " Car aa N w l absolutely bl•st buy 1n l--"'-"ap1n". «•nnklcru, .. r l' concre e "'"''"· ,., .,,, ., dn t"~ ·4· f 551 3000 an:a Pnm1um home 2 l'or lot Room ror """'I & veway, " ,,x.;, . rwl • "'"' trccs n·c g r·• 1 "On lrpl i:: ... cryth1n" done more. in ore. m or l'' · · 1 e a uer ·.: ,.. etc blk f I t f Air cond, wall·pupcrcd . Ii u a u l 1 ( u I h o m e . er enct', o o ' f RV & •··· t Loi m1rro1 ed ,\II t'll'Cl beauu ful price <•"9.000 space or uva . ...,.. li6 120· • k • kttt•hcn Plu:.h cplb This 1s real vulue Shown sz x · ... s mg p nct' MHIMfflu_..lngt~Oft .. oc:h I 040 Hl.tmnclon Movt• in rlean SJ 21.900 oy appl. &10·5112 agt $67 .SCIO Ll•t ·s makl' a ••••••••••••••••••••••• H.-bOur I 042 Ow d l' a I Mu:. t l-e II Ca II • ••••• • • • ••• • ••• •... • • • __ n_e_r_ss_2·_1i_!)8.I ___ _ lA>zy l bed rm. R·2 lot . 63H170. rAICf SLASHB» 3 IR·VACANT! rurn. close bcuch/llhops, ---------It U N 'f I N G T 0 N Sl.25.000.6"0·G-064 Prim\! t::asts1de. J Br, $10,000 H ARBO UR A R EA R~edSJOOO f:11n lly , 2Ba , l!Uellt Extrem e ly a nx ious EXEClITl VE DUPLEX F:i.:t'tllt.>nl Lin 1 vt>r~11y $79.500. Owne r · s p ure h a :. ed Scott Realty 536·7533 Park :o<·auon :; 1.k!1lrm Agt, SS9-45Sli anollier home 4 UH, 2'"4 ----~----beauty on rru1Jor ~r•'l'n Coftlfort1 Of Ho.-'' without 1h1• botht:r :• Bdrm . 2 bath 0 Y 0 '.• block to La~una·s MOj111 Beach. 185.950 Fix Up& SaY~ Nt.-edt> pa mt lit carpets Loads or p oll•n ti:.i l Sweepin~ oc:ean views. L1n~u n ;; :oc:.i11on i Ud rm . hu~l' den & :: ball~ SI 21.SOO NORI MS REAL TY * 494-1057 * 618)AOOMS IRING F.AMIL Y CREAM PUFF ba. formal din :irea. cozy lrvifttt I 044 bclt locat1on llUl!l' 11v1n..: fplc in hv rm . spar1ous •••••••••••••••••••••• • room formal d1n1n~ rm 1----------.... gourmet k1tch ·n ~ /lge ---------· BI J\' k .. 1 .ill' J l ri um 1002 G...-at 1002 .............................................. EXECUTIVE HOME PRICED RIGHT nus 5 bedroom. 3 bath 260t> sq. ft. home h as 1l <tll. Calli~ral rcibngs, pool table SIZ~ htm1ly ruom with wet bar & air cooditJooin". Locawd in one ol Fountain•Valley'i. r111esl neighborhoods on a gn.>enbell & cul de sac Tht: m aster l>t!d room !<WU: cvt!n h:u, 1l 's own l>cCluded balc.-ony. Onl~ Sll$.500. CALL SS1i·2fi60 C.AAIUFfS 11lli, lovely country horn~ features u n 8 car se paratt! gar age. rully air-cond & heated; the 3 bdrm. ho m e 1s s ur- rounded by over an ac.-re of beauttrul Rrounds wtuc.-h include large pool &JliCUZZi Can be dividt!d fo r r uture b uildin g ~.!00 Almos l 1:i a<.'rt' 1n Maplewood EstalL'S area of Or a nge. /\ re;.illy spa<.'lOUS ramtly ho me for active people Loh. of square foolaJ!e wh1t h 10· eludes I arj!e l>epa r all' fonuly room. t·ombma I.Ion dl·n :.tudy. formal dining roum and 1wo separate maSll·r l->UJ k!- Sl.20.000 Wahorfront Homes 631-1400 CostoMeso 1024 ....•.•••.•......•..... IROOKYIEW As~ $6',500 Wu)d1nl! road111tay lo ex ecull\ e 1 iled cnt r)' L,,,1,ll 11' rm w /secluded courtyard Gour met kitchen + formJI d111 c Soaring !>latrWU}' lo ,.prawlin ~ bdrm compkx ' l'ool 1 lt'nn1b m11ktl~ this ~ardcn hvm~ al 1ls finest : <.:all tor appl ~17 IWIO ' ·. .. New paint. carpd. ap phances, make th1:. sought after. i:olr c.-ouri.e. <I BR. 3 Ba at SH7 .500 A Bk:ST BU Y ' Im m e d poss~1on OAC HALPINCHIN REALTORS 675-092 V4 TEAMS :'111t·c ~stsrdl' IO<'allon llas J br. I·' I b<i. lot:. or Ul>cd bnck. 2 p;.it10:-& 1s 1mmacuh1le Call to !>l'l' now Hayward -Wal1>on Heal F.slate. 731·!>StU OWNER-:!Br. 1·1• bulhs. fam rm. 1 1~ \'rs new Sl.14,000. 110-1522 dys. t=:SELECT I PROPERTIES AIAHDOHfO! lq ~N CDMDUPLEX Home + lncom Walk to Big Corooa! Owners urut 3 Bdrm 2 bath, + 2 Bdrm 2 b:ith just South of ~71·7300 __ ,,. .. _ ... Highw a y Lo11ds 11f __________ , builtins. <I ctir i.Wrctlll' It t, ' I • [ ® U!Hil ; .. ~~· Near Schools ... ., .. tor·, sr1e1.AL $46.000 FAMILY HOME He rt!'S lhe chance for Wellpn cell PETE BARRETT REALTY 642-5200 RB>UCED 4 Br. 2 ba. formal d1om.:. bnck rrplc, <.'Om er lot. 2 c.-ar gar 900 Dogwood. Phone 751·0774 cvei. IAANDNEW!! liuarded gateway vru lt!ds lavish ttrounds & pool! Secludi:d c ntry to excculivi: l1v r m • S uns h 1nt< gourmt·l ki tc h en overlook s priva te courtyard Sp1r a l1n" s ta1 r c a i:.e -.1.Dds to bed rm (•om plcx The fine!;l an l wnhm h v 1ng. Call quick! 847·6010 your growing family to hve in Newport Beach & Oiere·s plenty of room. too! 5 Bdr ms + den, mirrored bar. <tit on a bl'a ul 1ful tree ltn ed Rrccnbell A tcrr1 r.rl•--------- valuc at Sl!W.4!00 3 RR. 1-'a m •I> Rm . 2 baths. ftrcplaCl'. full) 111· :.ulat ed ~ac;1 :.1de $1W.m. loyMc:Carcle 11 I 0 Newport ll•d. .._,., 11tV •''., f •, qf '• f [~lijPdHJ IEATTHE 673°4400 HARBOR \ fll\ '"''"" 111 11.1rh11r ln\'l•..,tmt·nl t'n lltV1HE SMASHIHG LASALLE Model on cu l de sac m University Park AdaJa· cent to wide Rreenbelt Country kitchen. lur1te ram1ly room. enormous master swte und loads of s«>rage thruout Close lo Costa Mesa 541-7729 GREEN BROOK BY OWNER IM'TEREST RA TE Take ovt!r loan on lh1l-o ---------•I ----------1 pool. jacuzzi. tennis and libr ary Orfered a l $134.000 .t Bdr m . 2 balh. E'I· trcmely popular Camelot Mo<lel Thi:. lovc.-ly home is located 1n an e xcellt'nl neighborhood on .1 l'UI <li: h1ghJy upgra dod 3 Hit . IAY&IEACH HEW DUPLEXES family room homt' on this Ir~. pvt cul dl··~sc :.lret.>l Payml'nls only S'llYl P I. llt 91.'" Won't ~ LlSl\lil fn \LIY Two duplexes under con· sa('. w1lhm eusy w<ilkm~ struclion on adjoining distunce or S Coast la:.I, call now' ' ' I 751~ I Co~I H•1 Cmna del Mar lots in Eastside Costa Pia.ta Shoppm~ Many 540-3666 Mesa 3 Bdrms .. 2 baths outstanding features 1n each unit You ca n cludl• Wltela11 rho1.1St! ynur t'Olors Plans CliSTUM UR!\ 1'8S in our office $164,500 NfWLISTIMG ! UPGRAOEDCl\RPf.TS Each BAY AVE . char mmi;t ~I l.A RGf: COVERJ::D HEW USTING! bdr m . 2 balh home. dbl P.\T !O REAL ESTATE MES.\MOITH RXH $71,500 Great opp()rtunity lo buy your own home at lh1:. barg:un pn ce A bit or clearung and f1xi.n R and you have made dollars Rent. sell or llve in. you c.-an·t miss Sunken living room with fireplace Lovely ra m1ly room The pofular PALE RMO brick rrpl . jacum. patio flf'_...,1t;:-.. EH mode r n II A R 80 R &2c.-ar garage! $195,000' WALLPAPl-:H v 1 E w H 0 M E s 4 lolM>a lay Prop. fx8' SK VLIC HT l:ldrms. J baths, 2.000 RHltor OUTDOOR GAS BBQ sq n .ofhvtnl'!space.Oul s 1\UTOGAR OR OPNR of slate owner anxious• * 675-7060 • Sl'H1;..:i.:1.i::n:-. P nce $167,500 FJtO;o.:T II E.\ il IAY & lf.\CH 979·8123 AUL TY 7 59_011 1 lolboa ltland I 006 Pnn only please SH!!J,90U ....•.•........•......• - 450 Newport Center Or 3Rr. 21.Ja. fr~h patnl. va Newport Reach RUSTIC canl. lrg cov patio, Mesa Gourmet kitchen. four SHOAT DOWu,,?? big bedrooms. Covcrc.-d " patio. big yllJ'd, s hake Anxious owner wilt help roof. etc .• etc. call oow. you finance this s harp won'l~la.'ll al this price. H.B. 3 BR. t sty. J-l~e Call 546-Z313 family rm, full prlc.-e u•1N 11111 • '' ~ ru111 10 ~1 NI< t • $'19,SIOO. Hurry take a d· [~11111 ·~1v•~~::s . ·~ .::::11-=•-1 :1111:11• z, Clas..<i1f1ed Ads 642·5678 G__,.., I 002 G.-ral I 002 CAPE COD ~:.~r m !s410 Quam t 3 Rdrm .. 2 b;11h, 2 story home Pl.US rental l#Ut. Ideal loc11t1on '~ block f r o m Sou th bay(ront & J blocks from downto wn s hopping TOP LOC Mesa del Mur !.! sty. 4br. Jba. dmmit. end patio. den. nr sl'hls par k Sl 14,900 Owrll'r 751-0383 Mwol sec lo rully ap· ---------prec1ate the Cape <..:od charm AskinR $279.000 Call C714t8l8·675S 4714J67l-7185 EASTSIDE .............................................. -------- Spuclous 3 Bdrm with overs1z1..>d ram1ly room. QuulHy bwll with shake roor, £pie. and bwltins. Now varunt See anyl1mc Own er will carry f1n anc.-1ng Call 54().1151 cac: 810111 BLllRS GD. OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE IOOM fOI EXTRA UNIT R -2 Easts lde Costa Mes a . Beautifully Remodeled 3 Bedroom, 3 Bath Home Jn Move-In Condition. All Plans Appr o ved for A 3 Bedroom 2 Bat.h Addition. Flexible Terms. $110.000 Submit. IW~S NEW LISTING Immaculat e 3 Bedroom. End Unit Trin a )todel -Back Bay View _.. Tiled Jacuzz i. New Oven . Dishwasher. Dispos al Aod Water Heater. New Custom Drapes And Carpets. $179,500. II I DOYll DalYI 631-1800 Duplex. new on mrkt, charming 2 BR collal(e, .Oeam celli ng. lrplc J>LUS 3 BR apt Agt. &&s-1103 Trade your old stufr ror n e w good ies with a Classified ad. 642-5678 ~HERITAGE . • REALTORS j STAR GA'ZER"~ _.....,....-.-...,.. ___ Ill U \\ A NU \' k ,..,. °""" .. , ..... , c;...a. ~ V .Acco•d•tt9 •o t"'• Sto'• To d••~IOIJ "''"oqe I c lut dOv teQd ~ < °' •t'll'nd ·"') Ill fVl"tvoc 91 yout f f(jot)I b<Uh \IJln Qwel street. EZ <·:ire yard. Sunny 4 bedroom home with dining. eatmg area :ind firepl ace P:it10. ~.000 BIOL <.:all :>41} 1720 TARBELL ' "#I ... Calfornio" 2 br condo w 1th W I D hookup. garage Owner. Sell Fli.A-245 642·4610. COOL POOL Mesa Verde 3 bedrooms. dl•n & fireplace Ne~ k 1 t !' h t' n . t' a r IJ e t " . ~a ll pa pe r & p .11nl Owner anxmu~· t>l5 7221 Ontu~ u:ri rirr21 .. Wtttc:liff Reolty Dano Poiftt I 026 ••••••••••••••••••••••• t Br. cen t r al air . spn nklers. lrg cov patio. new ext paml. 33691 Bag Sur 661·3351 agent Hw1li•qon leach I 040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• TIME IS RIGHT Available now. 2 Br. l''l ba. Swedish fplc Up graded earthtooe carpet thr u out 2 car gar w i lau ndry fac1hl1t!S P ri\·ate patio condo hom e . Re sor t Ir k c £ac.-1lilies RV parking avail. Close to schools. park & beach. Anxiou:< i ......... ii MIRA S&S Resale Specialists . 3,4 or 5 bdrm modelii avail. some w /pools 968-.t602 Pennington Properties Ya.ICTOWN VILLA Sharp 2 year new. 2 story CJ'ld uolt condo w 13 BR t \o'J Ba. plush upgraded carpets. s eparate lauo dry facllllies and garage Well maintained co m mon area. w pool & m ini p a rk Closl' to all amerulies. Snap it up 111 $73.500. ~ I I ' ... II II I \ I I ' ••, • t ~u' Ww• ,., "''_. 11:! M.u JOOTOBEACH $u!)l:r buy. highly UP· graded. S bdr. Ju11t burn your t~hbruah & move In. Open Sundey 12 noon tll sold.' 5t~I Sparl'ow. ·•Edinger J)olsa Chica N,11. SACRI P!Ct: 4 b r 2 b u v:1ca n t toWnhom •'. Mu11t sell M9,400 o r orff!r Agt 546-7739 eating area. lge ram rm WHAT'S YOUR Supt'rb .1n,dl' .ton O\'t!rlook1ng your 17x:IB l'LlASUAE? home Stt:ric-to pool ..ind pool Upgraded thruoul. Bike lo the lakt' rrom tenn1~' Im mcdrult: Ol' lowmainlyardm pcrfel'l ,>ourcOl}2Bdr m .2 bath c upann·· Ownt·r h ... :. loc • v. /load:. of P"' IH'Y Townho m e 1n Wood purcha1>1..'<I hurr) 1 a ll to Submit you r termi. bridge. 1-~cehn~ la7.y" d a} • ~ow uni.> S00.500 llurry' Stroll to the pool close l>y i~ 1100 '60·43" sunbath on your Sl'dude<I I I Want solitude" Take a l iVdl1 ~1•dwood dl·Ck Thi~ Mi!bbLJ home has <tll lht• ftnl' --· -----quaHt1~ or a n S&S bwll home HURRY ON THIS LCICJMO leoch I 048 •...••..........•....•. llR +POOL ONI'.:' 918·500 + IUCH $65,500 Cdl for Detail5 C.:U~'TOM 3HH .. lrR den Pnmie lluntmgton Beach 644-7211 or rec rm. :i• ~Ba. formnl location near sc hools, d1n1 ni:. oclan v1l·'4 :.. parks. shopping centers ... magmf1cenl trel' "ettin.: & golf course $1550 tota l s , Owner /bwldcr S28\l.OOO investment to qualifying I 1 ~ , • Cun s 1 d l' r t r a d e :s buyers Owner will help .!!!.!!1!!!1~!!!!!!!!@!~~~!!!!!!? _4_94_·2m __ s ___ _ hnance. T a ke advan· tage C<.111963-6767 • > '1 t 'I • '\ • ''J' •'t ' BEACh CONDO :I son 2' >z ba. dbl gar $66.000 003 i079 or 652 .i2iK POOL HOME 2Br. Ilia , <'Orner lo t home, cpl<;. cui.tom drps. brand new gas rangt' & seU·clearu.ng oven. new dishwasher, RV acress or u.">e as a 10X l2 garden 11reo. gas heated PoOI with all needed cleaning tools, btrl lnrRl' patio area with blln BBQ. fan tasl.lc for retired couple or ataner hom . S72.000 968-8561 an SPM OWMf" Win Fin•u S&S Poo l h o m i! Completely u pgraded Call owner. 964 1132 LAN DING 400 MODEL Must sacnftce llcduccd Sl0.000 4 Br. 2 sty. bch. 3 car gar llu~c h v rm &:pr fom rm w 1frplc rorm dm mi Swet:pm 1 :.lairs to nmss1vc maste :-.u1lt: & gu e:.t qr lrs Pnced below mkl fo quick sale Sho rcllne A~ soc1ates. t714 • 9&l·2576 NO DOWN 3 BR. 2 ba. nr bcac.-h. p;.irks Beaul1ful Owner &w·l09-i OVER 66 AVAILABLF: 2, 3. 4 BR homes. w tlow in l ere:.l. :J!'t.s um ab l to1m.s no new .oan Ice. WOO<ibndge Sycamore 2 sty sg l family homt'. ,, HK. 212 ba . h1~hly up gradL-<l ..:'l5.'f·ll6:l3 SIOK BELOW MAHKET Btful 3Br. 214M sq ft. $133.000 673-4311. Ai..'l Air cond . .tBr. l:nt'' Pk IMul twnhsc :: 1rpk!!- ['lu!>h. mo\" 1n. <·1Jm plt:lc Owner SI l!l.~111 5.S2-~. CHAMPAGNE TASTE BEER POIJETBOOK We have a Pla n 2 a nd Plan 6 in Ora nRetree Both located ON THE W/\TER. T otally up i:raded with many add1 tional features. T ennis. gym . poo l. s pa ,rnd saunas. Under s.'>J.000 • ~ ,... l RANCH REALTY 551-2000 S.\CRIRCE Woodbrid&l' Villager. :i br I', ba Any reasona· ble oHt!r a Cl'l'Pled SW.0965 UNIVERSITY PARK 3 br :! ba s111gk family home in Viii Ill on pre· m1er sl 5.S2-t632 $62,500 Pnmt.> h:H'alion Walk to town & beach 1 llrl own )Our own 111 Ilk•• nl·lllt cond Be.iut. wdl ma1nl bldj!. ~ar. laund 1.w1I Mus t St'•' to :ippre1•1ate HUR ({ V on Lh1i. om• Eldorodoln•eshntnts 497-3818 M.ARIHEIS POINT New offennR on senl>;; tional ocean view lot 1n pnme San CIPmt·nt{· neighborhood. Ont-year old custom 3 bedroom. den. formal dining room. Tas teful quality for SZ42.500 «ii Coldwell Banker J Monarch Bay Pl ala Laguna Niguel 496-7222 831-0836 Views! Views! rrom every rm of ocean & city Cus t bit 3 BR on oversized lot Till' e ntry. sunken tub, rrf'lt•rowav1•. Jena1r cook 'Y' ..ind more. Sl 79.SOO Aalan ;?,.,, l ... ', ,,., , , 1( !l0(1 1, ,.,. ,,., ., S/•1·1 I 4Cf4 q473 54q 0316 REAL ESTATE. Rl':O SA I L~ IN 111-; SUNSF.T Snu~ ha rlJor wtlh coastline vww from tlu,., with t'Ove da1.zlrr J bed.room. family room J b111li. S230.000 GO 1st <.:A HI N' Hunk down in cap·n quartcri. Plenty of room for t hl· crew iocslc aft . Heady tu set :sail. 2 bed room. :! bath ludeaway overlool. in~ V1t1.ona Bcal·h l'O~l' Sl<C!.500 AVA.ST Y E LUBB EH~ Small c raft warning::.' Batte n down the hatchc::-. Set lhe '>PY~lass o n I.led.. on Lh1~ :11Jcdroom ;: llath Sl:l-1.500 SUNKl'.::'-1 TR1' •• \.'-L HI-. llu~ rare• Jcw~I 1~ J plJ'ale" find 3 be<lroom J bath. S215.000 ORY OOCJ< Plenty 01 lame to Pollsb )'Our l>ra:.:- ~1ake plans lo bwld your own crwse ship. 50' x 100· IOl. 165.000. llOCSo Coast Hiwuy LAGUNA BEACH 497-2457 PANORAMIC VIEWS Oramattt• ocean & hill vww!> complement t h1~ ludeawuy home u; upper ~1)'!1ltr H.llls Bn $?hl & titn 1-pauous & a1n ' bdrm 2 bath n1•stletJ pe aceful!) ..i mong the· hills & Ol't!a n Xlra Ii:~· lot AJl th1:-& mud' mor"' r II r 0 n I > s I 7 !I • :, II h 640 i71 I Real F.'>latt :! !IOUSl'<; • '>lUtllcc . beamed dn~ "· frplt'' lob ol ch.ilrm o•·•·J11 'wwc; I blk V1ctur 1J Bch. By own1;;r S238.500 <.:on!.1der trud" 494 i&lj 'LCICJMO Nigtllttl I 052 Clrquabryml( Call no"' --------- REO CARPET HEW CARPET TOf OF THE WORLD ••••••••••••••••••••••• --~--·9_3_ll ____ , CuJverdale's award win 2 STORY nlng Plan 43 1s an oul l'OOL·IEACH e.tanding buy a nd va lu<' SS9.000. 3 BR. park· like on today's murket place. I This J BR beauty ran be entry to hugl' ivrng yours for JUSl $86.!lOO room ~·orm al d1n1n1t over look s e nc losed You'll frel ir you miss a t r I u m G o u r m e l this bet' kitc.-hcn . .sweepinl( stairs to secluded master s wle. & ch1ldrens quarter'>. Ow n er sac r i f 1c 1ng townhome. KcMIGReofty 147-606 I 546-UH Lease option. 3 BR, :? b11, assume 7'~ VA. 16642 Rho n e L n $78 .900. 675-2018 ....... ""'°" twtiow 1042 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• ltltu KrYH 660 Htwport Ctr. Dr. Hewportleoch You ore the wlnnr r or 2 tickets.($13.00 Vu lull I to the JULY 15 8:00PM Pcrformuncc or ttw RoyllUpiaan s ....... at the ANAH ~IM CONVENTION CENn :n July 14. lS. 16 Qill S.U.G618. ext 329, lo claim your tlckeUI ••• red hill a · 55 2-7500 WoodbridC)e Patio Homes " Bd.rms. ram rm. J bo; like new Laurelwood Model with atnum a nd l>eauuful Ital.Jan lilc en· lr) To Place your "fast Result " ~rv1ce Directory ad Ca ll Now 642-5678 Id. l2J and a view to matl'h ' fo:x cellent split l(•vt'I home w1lh thret• bedroom s $149.500 COU OF MEWPORT REALTORS 675-551 ' *DUPLEX* Ocean side or hwy, lC\el lot. easy acc.-ess to beach Na'<is patnl. minor re pairs. 1dcul ror home & incom e Hurr y on ly rue.m Mission Really 4!14·073\ Laguna Niguel Realty .. YOU'HIMTHE DRIVHS SEAT! Own r ha11 made a .. ,, tum 6r reduced this 1m mac. J SR Pac.-esetter I home SOOOO. Race for I hl' ,•b '<'r k t-rl'd f l al! at Slll6.800 49 .. 2411 493.9494 495-5220 830..5050 S©\\.~µ-~t,~s · Tliof lnt ri9uin9 Word Gome wiflt o Cliuclcl~ -----t ..... , h CV'~ • '°"""' 0 ft"fttlO"Oe 'eiftt n ~I 'ft111 IOI.It ll(t01'1'bfe.d WO(O\ b- fo-•e 'Of"' '°"' t1l"'Oi• -och I MF.VR A l I I 12 I I I I I NA RIC c I 1 r r r r 1 7 7 - Howes U•fw1111htd ........................•.•••.••.•.••••....•.•.........•..••.•.............................. ···········•·•······••· ..••.••.•.•....•..•..•• *Ma For S4* HcM&U~ fof' S,-. Ho.Mt fof' S• $cM c-.... t 07 6 Mobn. HOim • --rrop.rty 1000 Out of~ Coda Mna 3224 lrriM 324 4 • • • • • • • •.... •• • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • •• • • • • ••••••••••••••••• •• ••• • • •• •• •• •••••• ••• • • •• • • F.-Sale I I 00 ••••••••••• •• • •• •• • ••• • ~ 2S SO ••• •• • •• •• • • •• ••• ••• •• • ••••••••• •••••••••••••. 119For-n1 toss Ueapwi.._. I06t Ml•porf •oc.h 10'' OCIAMSIDIE ....................... 38 UNITS "•••••••••••••••••••••• $U5. 3 br 1 ba. ca~i.s. ••••••••••••••••••• • • •••••••..,••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• COMMUNITY EXCEPTIONAL BUY COIOHA dra~. W JD. stov~. Kida Beautltully decorated 4 ~RT HEIGHTS o{ Pre1udcot11.1I 1Mght11. Dblwde gold mttdal FAST CLOSE By owner. 7 month old OKtnopcb. 548·5981 ~ie2~~~:~:'a~!'~ LEVERAGE ' owner, $10,000 do•o. \00/mo, •Br. :sea. den ous rm. 2 welban, no edit needed. 9$7-L891. l. BR i HA \j>llh klb ul HOWDY STRANGER WTlh all the benefits or Stereo thruout. Stop OUAJER WILL m o d e l h o m e . • bdrm. 3 b11, family molear.e838-:ial0 ~. aevt' t'llflM!l •• bal11 San Clemcnlt' llvm.i 7 down Ir Enclad p(lrch. "'" ProCes111onally decor:ittld home 81 level sun deck roul. •1reenhouHon t·x Wl\(!Jl """ .. Jy execuuvo luxury Towobomes (S35$3XXU-89) RHANCE lnt.enor & hmdscapltlg C.:IObe.to ocean. R.V. ac: M85.. Dttrf1eld Condo. :r tra de~p lot. $1211.000 ~~ mt-Jn corpor.Ht' available Pnc~ rrom Mobla.HoM. Store flrf•ofOwwenhlp Air cood1t1oned. 3 cess. 1898 Parltcrest BR38a, DR, fP.garop lGtO-$ 2 When "-t' ll"'Y Oover I $79,900. NOW Is th Lime 84841895 0...,. Comity Bdrms. $82.950 10~ 1575/mo 673.6133 daya, 1_nr_._833-3307 ______ _ Shor,~ \\t' mean pre:.• to buy. 02-2180 or CENTRAL ORANOE BeauUCUUt.ownbowle un-clown.CaU714-1:J7-G09S. 752-0327eve:.. 3Br.2ba8eaull.fu11ydec. 11 lA•'' I• f lf"/it..•• ~"" tt110 Wht'n we sam fam1 831·9310. OUNTY c .c Ila. Cao close oo one 3 Bdrm Lge family rm omm pool. t ennis Owner · Sacnnce Sale ly homo we mean Sao Clemente c u11tom Priced ror quick sale. week oo contract. AlTD. P..trPloc~ 1..., ba New dl.Shwasber' courts. ~ mo. Grdru 13,000. Lg. 4 bd, 3 ba. 2 U • c 1 o u • 11 v It> & • 5 billslde bome nearing Oblwde new moon, !>• or subject to. Underlyl.ng 2 6 3BEDROOM qU1el r=esad area. Walk tci Incl. Can be lseJopt 01," • Hf 'f I, t ..... M't or; 2300 sq ft cul I.I· &est beach buy, Nwpl bedroom. fh1?11ly roo~. I completion 2,000 sq.ft .• 3 pa.rtt. (S\41'9&-419) 1st usulnjble or owner VA·F'HA schls $4SO /mo. eves 752-0283or549-7751 Agt •C, 'ate, beuut'. decor. Shores. JBr, 2Ba . <;>nly pool & jal.'uu1. We Invite BR. 2 ba, Com. rm.. MoWle~ Store will carry~%. Will ac· CARDENTOW~OME M9-6297 ' •ramie tile en\ry. 2 $105.000. Agl. 559-4MG. you & your ma.Hu., to call break fa st nook . 848.-S commodate exchange. 2 Cur Car11ges . Go see this. 3 br-. 2 ba. p\cs, cover patio. au«> THIE ILUFfS us for your pnvate 11how fireplace, wet bar. sun Ca11752·19i0 1-433-9924 Nr ocean' 1162.SO 2br frplc. dsbwbr. kids & inokler 3 car ear lllJ: of this very ~~caul deck, 2~ car g1truge Stlwdew·expando. J AIL' ""'"oshrf~~ pets<*. "35. 964-2566 or /opener'& more. "' $135,000111 home. Prine. only. 714/~74 1978 Kirkwood. Illness Ci)U hn 1-757-1623 ':CoNSUMER'SGUlDE 9'13-a71,4gt.nofee ime $80.000 note. ~ Not OOt! or t.hose •. smull or71'/960-4180. rorcessaJe. (1.268068) Wi"-·-1 2 B hs -'-"high de t U\ Ontu ..... -L.11e u~5"'--PL.t&CE -~b l'"b """"11 "-h a.., ... "· sag r e. A .... escrow to end on or • n s I Y ' .a. •"VE THE 1ir. .a.CH -..._ ._..., II' In Mt t.as. sen foothills 20 -..)'d r'"ee';,.;:.!.r' . ..,.,w fplc. 2 car gar. p\lt yd. !fore AUi 31. Hurry. lts .. this 3 bdr~ • 2~ ba.. ..,. -t;A 848-8895 f & ed C .....,...""" M25 be ~ ft 1""'""' formal dining rm . "21' Ultimate REEFGATE rtlOPSlTIES"" ac.o pane c ar orcst •CONSUMER'S GUIDE mo. · a ...-.. -~~ ,.,. w/sorne pasture. 5 spr-6:30 .UC.Yi dramatic 1900 sq. ft -,;:==;=; f)'j WEST condominium. LAGUNAHILLS 10,.Tlll:H P.M.I mg:s & orchard. s yr old 2 bedrooms ~cwly ren ---------iefo 1067 beautv &Jts ruz.bt on tht' •• Rarely available. now Bll1 dblwde key west. ~.-.. • "--custm bwlt farmhouse. ci v 3 t ,,. d .. 0 3 1 Beaut. 2 bdrm home. near ••••••••••••••••••••• greenbelt' Cusu1m !let .,._ Ceftfw th t $131 soo t Coun•..., Club lvg See to _... -.-"' ~ _...._ls pool p k hop .... r & .._ ... ,_.' ree a • 0 .. , • ~sq ft. 5 m1. west or We5tmins l er Costa _....... · • ar · 5 • vner J Broker 111ust orator eutures i;po• 640.5357 $165.000. appreciate. Brandoew&m Clemente Sblngletown. Calif. Mesa pmg. ~prmolse. W/O 1criflce this Im · less Lbruout Don't w111t1---------1 BERTHA HENRY (F07330U-71) duplex. Wrap-around Sl:J2.soo.9161,.74.3340 · incl.833-1661 •culate3.000sq/f\exec forthepncetogoup .. act REALTORS ~Hon.Store Vlew. backa on counu.•. tclDS19CT ime. ui Mtss100 Viejo. oaw&caUtoday• THEILUFFS 21.SOelMar 492.4121 848~ Two3 Bdrm .. l bath un RedEstat. t • ... Sote 3 br lt,; ba condo. W/D. rof landscaped, and Agent640-5560 Charmmg Medit. style lls. £xccllt:llt runt dis· b~ 2100 EA.STSJDE. 1ri duplex, refrig, ~70 mo. 5S9-1*. ecoruted. Buy for condo; golf course view, OtMrReal Estot~ '74 Obi wd, 2 br. 1~ ba in t.zict. $1M,OOO. ••••••••••••••••••••••• SJBS.646-4848.875-8258 9'13-4673. Aslt for Mr. ,0,000 under curr ent $12,000 dwn 3 lge. BR, 2'h ba., 1uper •::::.i::•:.._:•::.._•••••••••• a dult pk. Ideal loc. c.u-1-1.M--• Want Beach property for 2 Br. cpt.s. drps, kids o11:.1_Ho)'t __ . ______ _ 'arketValue.581-2600 vaJueat$113,500. ;:;'Sc...,,_' I IOO 7ll0-0205eves/wknds . ~--..Oft exec home in Anaheim. nodog.s.$2.55. WOODBRIDGE __. .. --1. I 069 Agent 640-6500/640-4271 Cooverted to 3 units. Uni· C811535-2334 or 53S--0568 64.S-2274 2 br + den, near lake • .... r--. -$1075 /mO ••••••••••••••••••••••• EXCITING .que property. newly re-ba.c. u., .. ...,.. o I ••••••••••••••••••••• MEWPORTHTS. • • modeledwtthimpressive RedEltah Vacant5Br.28ill,sbarp& _., ........ ._. wner WADEWIMDMODEL Byowner.3Br.2Ba.01cc SELECTIONS •EXCITING• racade. Oceuo view W..t.d 2900 clean.goodCMlocaUon._A#J._. ______ _ nmaculate home In pool. indoor UOQ, movt'· Luxury U•lwca $195,000. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $495 mo. Call Larry, Woodbndge 3 BR, 2 ba. ;>yglass Wltb xlnt night in Ulday, oo qu&.Ufying MOTIVATB> ~oa lch Exquisite 1975 Mad1son 2 o w N pr 0 pc r l y 1 n 546-5880 d en. frp lc. sogl hse Rh t view• p ool & _95'7_·_l998 __ • ------• Vict.onan charmer with Absolutely breathtaklng br, 2 ba. Lge living rm. .....,...Rl.._.S n1:. .a. 1 ·n Inglewood. Hawthorne N rt He" ._._ 3 BR .,, w J at r i u m . Be au t 1ruzzi •u""'" 2a .. oh (20Xl2). Tern fie toca-....v " ~ or So. Bav area? ewpo 1g,~. ' 1...ar......a commun poo•·. Best buy in WestclHf 2 bd oak nrs .• leaded glass; 3 ~. r. ""°' rumpus •·-With · d 49 .. 111057 " Ba D/W ( I a r ... .,........,.... ~ MEWf'ORTCEMTER ' bdrma .. sep . aueal rm & bar. 1975 Royal ......,al. ~i,numm ow~ * ~ * WIU.PAY CASH!! ard .• ,..,~mope~~~·· parks & lake. Lse $600 .EA.LTY 640.1812 ~s:1o':>er~~~se opt. quarters. As.,king Lancer in 5•Park. Ten· Wt m:iuuY paymen. Ph.TomO'AllC1isandro Y ·~ ·'"""'""" mo.640-3S54Janet.eves. $1.52,000. Anxious. make nis courts, s wimming. on1t=~~1:!:~~ WE u .a.yr. WH .&J T.D. PROPERTIES $190 furn bacb +pool 1_599-_9996 _____ _ $15,000 DOWN ByOWNER offer! jacuzzi, social aL-tivlties Mobile HomeSal(! ""' K; ~ (21.1) 674-6907 or (714> $210lbrlm1s/petsyd ,_ .. _.. 3241 •BYOWNER•BEACH 4br3bo. POOL. ramily OCEAHVfEW and much mocb more. YOU MEED 5'16-620lanytlmeor(714l Sma11Cee 557-0824 --r--rm, 2 fireplaces. 235() sq (JT2081·2). Z106 llurbor, Ste 208 HOMEFI.NOERS ••••••••••••••••••••••• I just 200 steps away. ft . lathe & plaster. cul Hilltop giant With 3 c .. forNaPoclflc 540.5937 For your 1st i.nvestmenl ~S22laf\6PM. • * $100. Blue Lagoon Villa 2 Br. 28a. frplc. 2 car gar de·sac. Pri"e reduced bdrms .. 3 baths, family or an exchange up. we "--kl R-...11-ll.&IL.. ..-2 br luds +gar + z ocnrmt 00 pvt bch. 2 1aCarmel-llke setting $17,000.7l4/~ rm .• 2 frµlcs~ shukt.>. Moblle HomeRealty Sll.950 h&vl!tbepersonoel w/thl! .,,..... _.,..... S';.uree.5!57--0SaC poo l s. t e nni s, oapvtst..iDLadoSands wood & bnck.. $179.000 20706HarborSte208 l!Xper .• knowledge & 9126A , go •HOMEFINDERS• 114-499-3%17;213-703-0ZIO 138,500 64.5-1262 Owner/Agt $lS2,000 Ownermayfinance 540.5937 2 br, 10xS4 Skyline. Low knowhow. Fomt•V911y .y OWNER NEWPORT A MUST_ SH! De Anza Bayside, 3 BR low dsp~ce ren~. iood Our hs tmgs lnc many Vouarethewi.nnerof 3 BR house, Wes\s1de. lge ~cious 3 br ocean vtew CUSTOM 3 &inns family rm re coo · uper par 10 sin2lc farndy homes & 2tlckets·<Sl3.00Value) feoced yard. dbl gar Ir coodo, ~ l"""T1. um8 lrg corner ·· . ·• · mobiJe home. alum in· 0 range county . -··" ,_ b b ·t -... r--... ·"b~ G h 1 modeled home· abmgled 1 ed 'd' 1 "~°" +. totbeJULY 15 wor .. s op, su m 1 on ~ ot, 2 bd.r 2 ba, family rm orgeous ran~ sly c • su at s1 ang, a rea 00164()..63 2 ~I ., M •-....... _ •. •A'>< SOO b .1 N , walls, rough wood & bargain. N.B. S34.950 a. 5....__ ~xes ...... u ... up 8:00PM Performance -..-. "'pets._....... mo. Isl NorthLa be h ~ bOous rm. $119. . custom w tan ewport. tmcks. 1149,900. Also terms. Ownr/bkr mov· Mabi HCMM ,._..... 6U ta ............ $22SM ofthe & last + $200 deposit. gun.anr. ac . A>7°'4. Opn Sunday. Quiet cul-de-sac. Red aruuous' . 87r DACD 63l 920 956-4500 lOTnplexes .. $16SM&up .~ u..a--cau Leslie at 549-0076 or New contemporary 3 Br. OOVERSHORES bnckpathwa.yandwh1te CUll G46-4463 ang . ............,, -'4 l2Uruta .•••...•• $420M 5:!;._t;::-;:-afl 7py, call Joe at !,~·· frpl., ocean view rail fence 2 Massive SZS 500 26 I $17 M& ~ -• 7733 •·-)wner must sell •Br fireplaces. Beamed ce1I· ~1 lft EXC J • •·P exes···· 5 Ul> at the 557· Smashing 2 Br . all new 1Ba. prof lndscpd, & de: ings. Huge family room ~t!F.-.;R e I ING e ~~~ ~J.aM,:~~F;~~ ~~:0.7:g~elp you find COANNVAHENTEl 1 M0N O..PoW 3226 lrikbeod& ba 1 th: shinbdgled, ·orated w /j8CU2ZI & W/11 rt Wl'l bar. True -------••••••••••••••••••••••• sta1ne g ass. Wd. oool Bltn microwave, country ::.tyle kitchen. _________ 1 SoPaciflcPcrodiM ly=ktt!,_~.!. YOU IET CENTER $&503br kidllpetgaryd. firs .. frpl, VanLu1l ma o Y o t be r Jt tr a s Fanla5tic 66' covered ANXIOUS! Get away Crom it ail in July 14, JS. 16 Small fee. 557~ paper. $500. S229,SOO. Opn Sundays patio! RV parking-and AVAILAIUE this bln appointed 2Br, ----~-----f! # .. 1 Call 642-5678. ext. 329. to •HOMEFINDERS• 3 BR. Frencb coontry: 2 12-5 t.531 HaibJand Dr. mucb, much more' lBa, extra lg lving rm • iJJ !] ~ claunyourt1cketa. 1----------1 new baths. all new coon-~. Owner will carry 2nd l ... VITIMG! U4x20). All in tastefu! AaeGgt for Selle 1200 _ * * * Foul• Yal.y 3234 try kltcben, bdwd. fl.r.. .. WXURY At the leach lo Lido Sands, only steps to beach. tennis & com- munity pool. A s pic & span 3 Bdrm single story with huge family Toom &nd a newly added livmg room. $137 .ooo Call fw D•hllh 644-7211 rJn NIGEl ~AILEY & ASSOCI ES BLUFFS 1 LEVEL VU end unit ANGELITA. 2br, 2ba. lrpl. assum loan. $157,0UO ownr 644-4201. T.O. Full price JUSt VACANT! So. Pacific decor in 4 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• lttltJt.c.. 1----------••••••••••••••••••••••• frpl.;greatview.$650 . $225,000. Hum. call lo· Park. Pnced to sell at UNDER THE OLD 146-1171 ~ Deluxe Tiburon condo. 3 I BR + bunk rm .. din. d.ay!673-8550 Nl.'\."d a place Lo movl' to ooly$17.900. CFH'.17821 OAK TREE ---------••••••••••••••••••••••• Br. 2h ba. wet bar, A/c, rm .. frpl., new tale~ °''N"'v·•• '" •rriN"'' ammt·di.1tl'ly'! St•ll1•r CGlfonliaPaciflc This marvelous view, ~F.llillMd pool.Sia95.847-4S25. ID.t.cben&bath;b1gdeclc [ •.. '.·.-· ·. ! will <.'Ons1der renting tall ~O:i5~4~;9~3:7l:~ oak trees & a ruce home SIDEBY SIDE ~::.:.".:i;;;d ..... iio6 Beaut 4 br. 2 ba, 2 sty ·due>l~g~4fH.7551 ~ , ~~~~t:;~~~c:~~ _ ~ti~!s~:i:e"~e~h~ DUPLEX :=:::•••••••••••••••• w/frplc. dahwhr. cpts.1----------- in the fabulous Blufrs. 3 --------n.nd, Won'tlast. FARGO You can live in a lovely Lge2Br.2ba, frplc. laun· luds&petsc*. ~. Agt, LmJ-atlls USO BR. 2, .. BA. Clean •-..............u u~ S&-.-,....... three bedroom apart· noCee964-2566973-2971 ••••••••••••••••••••••• THE BLUFFS ,..,. "' ..._....~ ~ <714)676-5717 b dry rm, pvt patJo. St~ps «Nl3+dinekidspeta spark.lmg thru~ut Very Assumables, re -OR522-2MO men~ and have l e to bch. No kids/pets . IW--•leedt 3240 &mnfee.557--0824 Pnce slashed on this 3 pvt patJo. very nice IXJ68t!Sllions, buy rentals, ---------secunty of a handsome Refs req $67S/mo yrly ••••••••••••••••••••••• BR, 2 ba., conversa\.lon neighbor s & VERY renttown.Forinfo IUILOERS montlllyreotcheckrrom lse. 67~2426 wknd/eves. •HOMEFJ.NDERS• pit w/frpk; popular Q WELL PRICE 0 · 171411414195 South of Orange Co., ~other ap~rtment all 835-6000, ext 261 M-l". OPEN HOUSE MluiollYfeio 3267 Plan.~·~ Agent $131.500. choice lots & acreage. ~ood ~~~«>;· C:~~ s.spm. ~~1ff:-,~t2 ~ ••••••••••-••••••••••. 543-1290 s7n~~u>eB:o~~:g. ~~i~lc~5~rot:s~ Calltoday. 752-1920. t .... 1t9091eoch 3140 windowto. be b.homPri~ ~~B2locks $42SSmaJ3br1bdsr s:t7~d I'd h 5 St J ~~AC~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ac vai.c: -car ee.~........,. UOOISLEBESTBUY I J;~!!!~-!!!!!!!!!! enc pore · ar subdivision acreage Full ai HO .. EFINDERS 205 Via Jucar 2800 sq. ft. ~ Park. Pool & jacuzzi. available. Last or tbe $150 frpl dowh pool! Ex ~~·ard. A~ul~. N~ • .. * sprawled over 1\.-!t lots+ Must sell 960·5844 or s peculative market. loc sbr. Fee 6.45·4900 pets. ~ 18th St. (7l'4 ) Mewpwtleoclt 32•9 rm Cor 2 pabos 4 X lrg 536-7711 FARGO. ..CONSUMER'SGUIDE 960-6331 -••••••••••••••••••••• bdnns. 3 ba. frplc, sµar '----5*-9911-=----' Me rt leoch t714) 677·56Jl NOPE:RTIES"' ttc.Ms ....,_.sited NO FEE! Houses. cood05. lvngrm.mod lut+bur. 1170.....,_"...,.._.-.W'POF 1 522-0530 IO,.Tl~OP.M.l ....................... NewS&Sbome.3br.2ba. duplexes . Rental serviceporcb,dblgar,nr c ... ..-... c--.. ~~i!!~e::l~~~ou!~ ....._P'topett., 1400 __ ......_ ______ Gi-al 3202 den. $515. Rent. 1se. ~Ii Pavilioo,67s-49l28kr. teonls. pvt bcb etc MEWTRIPUX •h•••••••••••••••••••• 1st, last. & deposit. ""' OWNER FIN AN c E airy, jJJ\34160-77. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cheer840-ss:n. Open! Bey like rent.. Br. AVAIL $26J,000 OWNER S-a.-llh I 076 Mobile HCMM Store 133' OCEAN FRONTAGE IY IUILDER •HOMEFINDERS• 3 ba. jacu.ul. etc. 1712 675-6259 •••••••••••••••••••••••. ____ 848 __ -8895 __ . ___ Superb restaurant loca-1-4BR.sglslryd 1&i.~.~R; lOOOsofreotals •HOMEFJNOERS• Highland. $325.000 Back Bay By Owner. 2300 ~q ft. 3 ITg bdrms. 2 ba. hvang rm & dmang rm. xtra lrg family rm, 2 !pie's, skylight entry, ---------1 Jmmi SI87.SOO. 642-8135 SI 0,000 Reoc:luctioe P .a. uoR ..a. MIC ·· tJon. Carlsbad. One of a all spacious e wee w.uts. All areas . all prices We bave: bome. All .. a1..oeoo ""'" ""' New '77 24XS6'. New adlt kind, $280.000. Hurry! Bike to bch from here-. SAMPLE: Lifetimeservice Oc.eGll Vl.w Homes park.. Fu 11 er t on . w R M R E A L T Y $198, 000 f . p . 24 12 S195'lbr gar fncd yard 22 loc. to serve you. SIAYEW Newport Crest Condo 2 4 luxury custom homes Landsca ped. 0 r r . o w n e r / a g e o t . Delaware. HB. 536-1718 S2052br pets, yard 36 years ln business Unobstructed "iew ol available w/benefits of 1-87'9-51.84ev. n 4434-l73S •2 TRJ•r.vr.s• $3503brlddsok garage WHATAGUARANTEF.! ocean and Newport $1 62 Pv'!r 0 ay Br. den. 2\-i ba. Priced to • " sell F~T Owner's anx SanClemenlecoastalllv·1---------.-~ WbysetUeforless? Beach. 3BR. 3ba. New. mg. Homes Include wet· * Wallt lo Beach• Single CemtCrfphteryLoh/ 1500 Nr Lake Park. Man lo lcAoaPeMw'o 3207 CALL! full security. T enn1!'. Thnt 's al you pay for 1ous. a JO day ad m the Realty World 631-165() bars, greenbouse win· wide 60' long w/cocl bcb.1-48R.3ba; 1·3 BR. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 557-0824 b. Part. II f S b BR b 1..a.YFROMTCOuDO 1acuzu. swimmin g . DAILY PILOT dows. Nutooe food cen· pore 1a Y urn. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2'":1 a: 1-3 . 2 a. 5 ,,,,. " SSC)() Imo consider lse opt. ters & much more. YOU star park with super * • * gar, fprplc's; $189.000ea. Luxury l BR. 2 ba unit Why pay rent when you Agt/Owner. Ask ror Rod MUSTSEf;! Priced from clubhouse and pool & Mary Ridgeway 1709·1713 Alabama. HB. w/v1ew. Avail monthly, can bu,y Uus 60' trlr an at (7141 ~or Dear> $!28.000.Alloffers w1llbe !!.c!~;or1."'~u77s1t1_s0oe0lt.l llSSo.u.-M.. SJ6.ln8 or lease opt. $595. >Hs.B~S"::[ek8eac~~00°j. at(714>832-!5144.Spec1ry SERVICE SEAVIEW-NEW BED· DIRECTORY FORD 4 bdrm. 2i,.; ba. & OOITNOW• ram rm One of bes t considered. FUii Bkr. CO· """'"'"" o>.114r .... ,. '"" ~2981 '" SeaVlew Home. operation. 498-0200 or buy before you see tll.1s Taffn SAN CLEMEKTE 1ac. clubhouse and all the --------- 831-9122 location. Youarethewinnerof IEACHTRIPLEX Waw! $325. 3br. 2ba, On fWlOClivingallhebeach H ar bo r Vu Hmes - 2Uckets-C$13.00 Value> Spacious sp11Tklmg 3·2·2 ocean. Sm ree. 64.5-5900 for a small wvestment. Monaco. 2Br +den, 2.Ba. 642•5678 vtews-h est buy. By ---------• owner $279,000. 644-7412 n·s so EASY 10 PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD •You may use the handy order form pnnted below to furnish us with CoPY for your ad. •Please note that the bottam DOrtion of the coupon may be clipped and affixed to voor envelope, saving you the lime to write our correct address. We pay the postage! e 11 you need more room for your message. 1ust pnnl or type 1t on another sheet of paper and mail 1t. •You may place your ad by phone. if you wish. Just dial (714) 642-5678. ._, .................................. ~ ... , ... , ..,eO' .. r r-•-ll ...... ,, ........ _ .......... .,.,-1 ,,;1 r11111111#r• '"<11111 II I 111<1 111111 I •#ll#llo ¢ lo4#eC## USE THIS HANDY ORDER BLANK. WE PAY POSTAGE! 4 WO•DS MAKE OH£ U~ AD l.ISS THAM l UHlS $1.45 $6.10 SIMO S7.JS SIJ.75 SIJ.70 SJ7 • .H Sll.00 14 1'IMIS U UI sn.10 PAYMENT ENCLOSED D SEND BILLO to l'ICWll COST Piii onl)I one word on each @ace above Include your llddfeu or phone nu-Tile OOlil ol Yo" ~ .... lhe end ol tt>e hne on wt11Ch '"* 1m1 "'°'d ol )'OU• .ci II wrollen Add $3 00 eJ1tra II v<>u dM•re ~ 01 OAILV PILOT 8o• lllfV!Oetlf•lh ,, ,., ....... . . . . . . ..... .. . . ..... , . . ......... . 1191Hlcl repllot , .............. PtlQne .... a 80X SERVICE ORDERED ••ti ••• 111r11 t tt I I'# t t Claulfled De,t. , I I I II' I' l'I I tll •# I ••1#11 Ill l#llloell I .. ,, . BUSINESS REP\. Y MAIL ''"''0.AMot:-•oC>., oasr•-c:M.-•• Orant)e Coast Daily Piiot lox 1560 Costa Mesa. Calif. 92626 -------------------------C-·--------·-.. --""'"-- .. -- totheJULYlS In top 'location at .CONSUMER'SGUIDE Call now. must sell $595.Ca11S49-87SS. 8:00PM Performance $157 500 $12.000/ofr. 9&0-5844 or of the BERTIIA HENRY eoro-dll Mtr 3222 !536-7711 Duplex 2 br. I ba, wshr/ REALTORS ••••••••••••••••••••••• dryr, stv. refrig, grdnr. R50'ftallialonUpblanShow 215 Del Mar 492 4121 Jasnune Creek. lg 3 br, &tper sharp 3 br condo. mature adlts. no pets. --------·--fain rm & study Brand $495. IREN. 968-%291 or $375.Jmo 517 Bolsa Nwpl al the San Clemente Brokers 4 oew. FIJU secunty. Ten-963-0867. Hgl.s 548·5041 ANAHEIM urut& across the street rus, pool. No pets. $975. 3br I~ ba _,..pool' Yd & m..c T .. CONVENTION from ocean. Concrete Les Holmes. Da ys ......., · _.. ,. OWDc• CENTER steps to beach. Financ· 833·3030. eves (213 i ~0~S{,~~S~UIDE 2Br. den & wetbar. Jul.yl4,1S,16 mg arranged. $225.000 947-4115. 2t,;Ba. frpl , cablt'. Call 642-5678, ext. 329. to CaU for brochure BJ Be b' ....,,... 2b f 1 d 4 BR. 2 ba, good cond. $430 secunty. Pool & tenn1s. clalm)'~~!ets. Assoc Brokers768-7839 ki~~l(e;'645_;900rp Y mo .. Isl & last & clean-SBSO/mo.875-SSJS. .CONSUMER'SGUIDE ingdep.960-303!5 YEARLY. ~e 3 br. H2 Couu•rclal EASTSIDE Sharp 4 br. 2 ba. frplc. ba. I ~ from ocea~. Proptt1y 1600 COSTA MESA REKTfLEASEOPT. cprt. fncd yard. Kids & m>mo.L&e3br.2ba, :> ••••••••••••••••••••••• Large 2 bdrm, den home 3 &lrrns .• 2 ba .. patio. So. pets ok. $4SS. Agt. No fee. block park & bay {beach . SI 00,000 PRICE w/gleaming hardwood or hwy. New carpet. 964-2566or973-2971 l.,_ blks lo ocean. SliOI' 1tll!.ftUCT10M noors PLUS 3 separate drapes.paint S600Mo. ---------1 mo.67~18or67~5 ....-. GE Agent 673-5354 Great 3 br. 2 ba. rrpt, PrimeSboppingCtr. income WlllS on LAR dshwhr fncd yd. Kids & Bluffs Plaza ~o. 4 BR. On Beach Blvd .. In HB. LOT Agt. i714):;sB-1809 2 br, 1 ba, washer. dryer. pets ok.' 5'135 Agt. No fee. ~~5~67:~~~~~-T,1ii Produced speodableS$ Zhousesl lot S79500 Bes stove. refrig. gar, 964-2566 orW73·297l 2"l2VistaHogar. 2'h years young. Scott offer Ora~ge 'Co~nty g a rd e n e r . $ 4 9 s • ~ty!536-7533 · · 714-833-1709 Super 3br. 3ba. rrpl. 5"1-t054 ---------dshwhr. fnc'4d yd. gar. H~rbor View Spyglag:. ~"/ 4er Zba 3ar 2baduplex CostaM.M 3224 Klds&petsok.1465.Agt, Hill.Vuhome .. 3Br.fam "'9lh S. 1100 • · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 00,,....964 ... =~973 ....... 1 rm. community pool on Balboa Island. Bay . ""' ~ ''"" G d I t d ••••••••••••••••••••••• view Newly remodeled. Tr.anqu1\ Panoramic ar ener w r P . MULTl·UNIT Property ~.ooo.752.1978P/P. ~1ew. 3 rnstr sz Bdrms. S24S2brk:ids/petscute flOO/mo.752~ Xlnt. locatloo. $125,000. ---------1 _o,.c, ba. Frplc, sep $3503br2slorykids Br. ocean view. (rplc, Days . 6"2·9604 evs UL.EX balcony & yard. Auto Smallfee.5!57-0824 newly de<'ora t erl , 998-38SS. Costa Mesa. 4 large 2 garage OIJllrs. OW• trash __ •_ll_O_M_E_FI_N_D_E_RS_•_., gardener. Adults, nQ a.c:o...Pr rt. 2000 bedroom units. 2 have comp.beautltuJl)'cpt'd& $4002brbcbhseydg11r pets. Monthly SS75 ope~ separate patios Creal draped thru-0ul. To see $5255br 2sty kidsok 646-8746evl'!l ••••••••••••••••••••••• l<><:at1on. Only lts4.SOO call613-2282. Small fee 557-0824 1-----· ·---- DUPLEX/$27,500 David Bourke, Realtor. "--n .. w-!! •HOMEFINDERS• Ocean' $2.50 2br boat slip. A short drive from 546-9950. -_.,. Smfee64!5-4~ Oran.ie Co. gives you a before you ray some 2 BR, 2 Ba condo with •CONSUMER.SGUlDE hl.ghly des1· rable area NEWPORT Dupleit. like a gen c Y o r I h e "-"'lace """I " tenrus new, blk to bch. MU$l .. RUNAROUND" Call '"""' ' '""" . BR. 2 ba. A-frame bch ::;r ~m~:ti~astro~~ sell.839-0730. CONSUMER'S GUIOE. Sl3Smo 64.2-t830 hse $575 yrly lse. Ownr. rrom your investment. Many have and are glad """-3244 &&5-°'23.646-3666 For complete details. DUPLEX!! they dJd! ! Save time. gas ••••••••••••••••••••••• HARBOR VIEW C..973-4626Mow 2 duplexes In San &mone,000Y,~ofooRr~t llHTALS Portof1no lux spac exec Clemente. clolle to ocean. .. ~ l lttt twJe R.L lac. Ab&olutel.y tlle best deal KJOS.PETS WELCOME 2 BR. l ba ...•.•• • •. $425 bme, many xtras + poo 1631E.17thSt.SA ln town! $l00.000 & 64S-4'900 38R,28a ... ~/575 "apa.tsOOmo.640-5048 Sll.2 000 Or trad"' A°' 3 BR, 2Vt Ba ....... ~ .... ,.. BR ..__ 1 BR SUMITS · • "" .,.. ()pen7 days 9-7 •BR 21h Ba SS25J640 .,.. acre•·~ ~ 714/49'7·3009 4 To SBR 1 ~ b~ · S675 bse. 3-room workshop, 2 br bouae + • 1 br apta, located In good rental San Clemente, by owner. area of Laguna SCacb. Btl\IJ Span style duplex. Ot-ean vl~w. t blk to red Wt.i roof. gorgeous ~ch. rno.ooo. PO Box goll course view. stained 1S20, Lag Bch. 92052 glass wlndOws. Each u.o.it 28r. 2"'8a. 64(). t326 SHOUSES Choice ~·sid e Costa Mesa. Compleotely re modeled t.hruout PaUos. encl yards. Agt &U-1103 WldwsDtlC)ht TWo separate hou.sH on mra large lot. Try City for more uriits . All. 6'73-77'J7 -. DRAMATIC. nu 3 bd. 2h SBR.2~·Bu .... 1675 1torage sbed. tree:;. ba. 2 aty, F'P. Nr bch. LI · · · · · · · horses, on goll course. yd. $515-$625 646·1035 $1000 mo. !556-0810, 754-1039 .. 7 7 \ ... '"-n U..W-.hh n d lf. llw.h ..,_ ...... u..w.. .,_ t .. ah u.tw.. Rooma 4000 Office R...t• 4400 Monday. July 10, 1978 DAILY PILOT .,, €7 I •••••••••••••••••••••• "8elawl ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·······~~·····~·;..::.· ···············~······· ••••••••••••••••••••••• MadfMlt ._. Slff ....................... c:.t.Mne Sll4 ---11\amlshed room NJ. SBYICI ...... a..tl ,_.. 1300 ldl1• & .... .-................. t 1 u 4 MOI .................. ..... ............. .......... Coeta Me3a DB.UXI °"'Cll 0,91 t.llty 1001 ................ ....... ...,_.._ 7005 •&Urn• -·••••••••••••••••••• c. Cod l ·nha z b 1~ OC!:ANYRONT 848-2318 Per9oQll t~ephonel r• ....................... Lott: LOST DOG •••••u••••••••• .. ••••• ·~~an~Mo. \1111 Flower l&rHl, ~ rec1ee.\au!' ••~en, •-.. 9~~UX,!.,... Ul ceptlool1t. HcreUry, TIAVB.AGIMCY l'l\end" pet'° a Utt.le Hl&bScboolCredlts =~~,,..-..-__.._.1_.:-. ___ 1 Garden Orov Lar1e uaetadlu -Ma-1Z76 1•6 r-om -· u ca.st Ho. 4 l IO conference roorn. com~e ·Own vour own retail l}rll. Wht 2.Slb 1ba11y. IJ\CMperideftl StudyRead· nn. dla rm, C!Clf'Mt' kit. doN to l.aun· .,_,.... JU• r lu_n ••• _ .... N Cllrr l!:lelant retirement home & hosp lahty aervloe1. travel agency and c male Pull. Loll n Sl•,;..,SkUli ()peneftf'Oll HY kD1 rm , am ooebecb~e:ntl q -lncl.M&-OliOI ....................... i " be re h 1na Math Spelllnl & I I l I ~ , .... u. ~· . 1 Excellent location. near part ot 1 billion dollar ln· Corona H.lfhllftdt ana, ~t T • ·1 t .....,.· Inc .,.r. l blk rrom dry u c t ea. "o ......... •••••••••••••• Of. belo bwy. Ocoan vu. near Pa m Sprln I•· freew•YI· d•t.l'Y· Ex.peritoco oot CdM. Ana~t to Smoke. men . o.a ~ -vv pool il50 Pbflt.-cbUdrw:l. DO pet.a. Call \ bd, newt1 decor clean. lrS pat.lo balcony. Adlt.a. Privat.o le Hm1 pnvalti IAM• CIMTla neceuary . Start up. Pleasecallll78-0433 WoolbrilM Academy ._. _ Deno.>' or Doris at (7U l adlUI reU1 dep req. $'n5. aopeta. '900, rooms. 1ourmet food. 2 (7l4)979.21111 tninins. technical. " JJMl Beach. Watmn»tvr ,..._.-__., lllMOla. 83U70.'S 4M-3017"73-50ll hot mineral pools, family cnerchandl1lna s upport LOST: lrl1b Setter,._Wl_·...;-.a _____ _ 4 br 2\la ba. Uvlft& rm, · type atmosphere. Call laattn low IK provided. female. wblle flea collar. d1niDC nn. ckl\ ltlfovcly ..... ..._ 3'06 tW .... ••• 3*40 MtwportlNdt ll" '114 /329· 9981 tor Total In vestment 11 Jamboree fl Briltol. NB. REAL ESTATE N 8 r e I ' d • n t l • l .............................................. ••••••••••••••••••••••• brochllfe. 0 r c • t • c e I n m.ooo (tnctudlna •• ooo M0-5837 a.ward. ~ $1200 mo. New 1 bdrm a Pt • SHARP, beach, 2 ai 3 BR, , ... MIWf'OIT S.-1 _.. 4200 ~~A rt'ort Aro. tranch.lee tee. it.art up -6 UCa.SE .u.::s.uaevee. fireplace.:. patio. yrtr. frp l. dlsbwaabe r , Bachelors I or 2 ••••••• ~ ............... conrerenoeprr:~ :~';.;: equipment cost.s. "pro· Lolt:Vlc.lrv.Terr.cd~. SCHOOL WeatcUft 2 br , 2~ ba ~::U~b:7n!w~S~~~I . aaraae.paLioe.M0-2:3S8. Bcdroom.ftT0wnbouaea WltEKLY secy serv. dlctatt1'g & Je<:tedworktnacapltat>. Welsh Terrier.l~Ukt t.ownhouae. retna. 1\ovc, ..........__, L___. 1107 MIAI llACH s rro1mS329.50 t t 1 3Br . . . s.100. copy mac hine. From TNYtlMetwft. sm':,~~:.1~~·1:0. •t.T1·. OFFERS P" peUo gar. Pool " -u a liCIVIC c--a ~ctacu ar spa. o a 2Br 1200 '320. (714)752•7110 The Travel Franchise. N.8 .87S.M72, Reward. Muna. Washer It dryer. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..... , recreation ~roaram. ·· · · · · · ca 11 M r . Bee c h . ---------• tBSO. 6?5-0MO. azso 2br refri& kids ex loc. BRAND NEW. Spac1ou11 aocl&l proaram. 7 pooll, ti ~13~~7~~· CdM OFFICIS 714..a38·aiM2. L O S T : P o o d I e 4hnt IAdm• flNe --------~• Sm ree ~ deluxe 3 & 4 Br. All bltn1, tennis court.a. At Fas Ilion I it...,....._ rewt frH Dac h s c h u n d m ix . S!OObacblrtdspclayd •CONSUMER'SGUlDE trplcs, gar, tae yd. S20 Island, Jamboree & San Waterrront NB. 2 bet , Bright and cheery new OPPOITUMITY blk/red brwn. blue cot· •CraahCounuvoUabl~ Sl50 bouleboal utll pd Yorktown • Juat Weal of Joaguin Hllla Road. home, patio, 1250. /wk otCice suites So. or eo81t To work at your own tar. F. vie Welt Meea • MatAtrialt r.<:vtded. SmalUee.557·0824 C.-.. M9r ll22 Beach Blvd. 96().2219 or l7141644-1900 546-6299or55Hl848 Hwy. Available now: p1ce w /unllmlted in· Verde.Aft5pm.557·72l7. •Small c 81588 for •HOMEFINDERS• •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• 638-17l8 You must see to •i· come. Sml tnveatment S per'IOGAIUMCI inl\l'\IC:Uon . -::-:----::--:-=--:--:----::-:--t•--------•I . Nwpt Kgts lovely area, 2 Avail now. $1000 mo . , C 11 ,1 a will incl tnventorv. "-ll Brwtf'/wbt Ens M pr· .aioo.e own t.ute-dlil~ Waterfront. 3 bdrm. a bfl. _, $259. Spacious 2 Br. new bdr l ba, priv. patio. gar, Spac. 2"41 ba, nlcflly ruro precia.e. &a "' n i ~ ·1 ~ Inger, answers to Rou. &n18htclQHS. comm ten n la/pool. re ............ Cpl, 11aUo, 2 klda OK. nopeta.S325mo.5'8·5804 l..quna home. Catalina 57s.23u orappt. vie "T " St Bch. San •Placement-up to 8Q<,; = Shorea f12$ mo. ~,, [!~!'...~.~ 847-o987 or6'-m.3 vu. Walktobch49'·7430 EJCPAMDIMG7 Beer & Wine bar tor sale Cleat. Reward. 492·8403. coouniuk>C\. "'----~ ••• Summer rental Hunt 1-IJ 000 ft by owner. Nwpt Blvd. _48,1.o831() ___ . _____ _ ~Ms•• 327 • _.....__ low~ Nice 2Br DPlx upstairs, YV" • ~ CM 2 person operation. ' -t M dog. 1~1.a like Fred Week ----...... t~lc , w /l>. gara~e. in1ton Harbour. spec· c tttl -~ Ca an 12noo HJ\ ........ ......... Sales:1:Ji.· GARDEN APTS II S u1 L d t•cular 4 BR. 3 ba. pool, °""' •• rvw'W• 11 n, S48.......,l. s -1 Oerm. Sh"P• blk/ 20l76 •4••D • t. ts, no pets. nr o .. C-rct r.-tc wb""t . Re--...... ._.; ..... c., Ctll for Se~Vnt.ge CORONADELMAR .._.._._.._h Isleshopplng. Avail ap· 60'boatslip,S700wk,Ju Lagunadeli.lcafe ___ ,-_•n_,_. _____ 1 1Jl·IOOJ 49)..0442 1·1eveJtwnhae.2Br.2Ba 2 Br Townhouae. frplc. v::are~ewlnoeror prox7/l.5.L&e,creditref. ~~;898-3S33. Newport lll-1113 Beer & wine. All new REWARD ror return ol Katclla •••••••••••••••••••••• + den. tennis, pool. ~~=·v=~~c!: 2tickets-<$13.00V&Jue> SSOOmo.41M'6303 IAYFttOMTOFffCIS equip.Maytrade watch . class ring. " RealElt.a~Sc:bool Jacuni. Ad Its $450. to Fashion Island 4r fine to the JULY U September Rentals Balboa Peninsula l BR. Cannery VIUaae·New of· S35.000Aat'94-'7S5l papers lost al Crystal 32001 Camino Capistrano Avail AUi 1· 645-6890. art beach. M4-2l61l 8:00PM Performance Furn or Un!um slps s. compl furn. Sl80 rices Crom 300 sq fl· D I N N E R H O U S E • Cove, 7 /3/78. No ques· Si1n Juan Cepiiltra.no _et>..:.....m_. ______ _, oCtbe 3Br.2Ba, =· wkly. 646-6238 fantastic views. la Oran1e Co landmark. tiom asked. Mr YOWJa. Beach! 3br 2ba 11undeclt Roy• U,..._ Super sharp, yrly lsc. F\Jm. Stud to w /kitch in pat 1o1 ·pa r k 1 n g & S70.000 /mo Owner retir-960-4317 or PO Box 88, Help W-.41 7100 S38S pix fee&&s-4900 3 bdrm, 2YI ba, new cpts, ~ Sllow 2Br, lBa, $300. Laguna w /patio. Close to Janitorial mcluded. 2808 mg. Agt, 751·1400. Hunt lkh. 92llM8 •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• .CONSUMER'S GUIDE dishwasher , patio & atthe 9 mos. upetainunlt. heh. Wk or Mo. Sips 4. Lafayette Ave .. N.l:J COCKTAILS b th Loet: Marte·fem. Wbip·l•--------garage. $525 Lse. ANAHEIM Fant~Ucbach,$250. 673·1003 Y e sea . .aff,JLIASEOPT. 873-7513.All CONVENTION Yrly,utllinc,slps2. Start.5$165.494-7118 needs good operator . pet, tan. vie of 34th St. Acdng 8kkpn~ 3 Bdrmll .• 2 ba .• rrplc .. L di t d CENTER l.2935tbSt,NB-2BROR BACHELOR 250-500 sq c!l. d}x ofc ~ Terms. Agent, 751·1400. NB 63H2l2.6i3-4499 TIMPOIAlY condo. Carpets, drapes , ge atu o <conver e July 14, lS, 16 Agt, Gus. 213·966-1711. A.pt ~ blk to beach m 19th St, M. rom S ,.. _.. VEL AG-.CY Lost: Capo. Bch area Register Today to work M.'iO Mo. All· 4117-3388 ::2:.>no' S:~8oi i,,0c'i: Cal.I 6'2·567~. ext. 329, to 2 bdr 1 ba. beam ceilings, Newport. Reasonable. mo. Tom 540·2200 1 ~ IR"ll Poodle mix. aray. "Hap· ::;:~=~~~;~~!- WANT LARGE ROOMS? $250. 1.st, last+ SSOdep. cl&Jmyourt1cket11. patio, gar, Nwpt Hgts. Wklyrates.673·3601. Medical unit, good C. M FRANCHISE py"Reward.'96·'7992. meots. Work cluse to u NEW 3 BR 3b ,,,.n7030 *** N t /k 'd $325 loca tion . De lu xe Thenewwaytoowna .-.uge . a ,....,. ope• t s . · Lovely3br 2babeach apt Reasonable.c•'<>.2103. $100Rewardfordarkbm your home . Fiaurt: spill level. Ocean vu · d ~1682 on ocean. AvaH by week. .,..., travel agency· Travel Burmese c at. Muted Clerks to Sr Accoun altylite · deck • 4·car Costa Meta 3824 NEW dlx 1 ~r. custom e· July 15·Aug 5. Call .. , EW PO RT BEAC H Network. Start your own. male. vie Legion St. Lag tants needed thruout _ _.. .. t650mo.492.771S ••••••••••••••••••••••• cor. All bltms, 6 blks to ATBEACH !! ,., Exp. not required. 0 Co ....... LA MANCHA Ans ~each . Pre r gay or l200 util pd pool ! Kids 213/795-1985 or 355·2444 (Airport> area> Recep· Complete support & long Bell. Please call 49'4·1581 rangRooertHalf s $395 3br ldds ear view! Large 1,2"3 bedroom liberal. S300/mo. 960-5742 S300 2br util pd pool! ror details lion & 2 of cs w /pvt bath. term service provided. _evs __________ 1 Accountemps Smalllee.557-0824 garden apts. Dsbwhr, Rick Kids, yd. f'ee645-4900 Oceanfront House avail S175. Ron Henry, Bkr Call Mr . Charles . Ul&t. Family member. tl 500S.Maui.Ste50l •HOMEFINDERS• blt.nll, encl. gar, gas bbq. ~ abr pool ! Kids gar •CONSUMER'SGUlDE July 15 to 22nd. $350/wk. 9'79-6666. 714-838·9242. yrs. Wendy Lou. 713 El No. Tower. Union Bank S."-Pool. Gas Pd. 778 Scott bltns. Sm fee645-4900 •DILUXE-646-2510 f\lm. office Bank of Costa Furn . s l r Ip pi 0 g Toro. F. Beagle max. lnTheCltyofOrangt-c:.tstr..o 3271 Pl.fl42.5CY73 •CONSUMER'SGUIDE Eastbluff 3 br. 2 ba. Mesa Plaza $95/mo. No Ftancb.i.aeElstab2yrs in overwgt. ta n /whl. 114/835-4103 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SUPIR HICE Bachelor apt. Near beach. Lease. Incl. spac. master W• still ha•• SUllW9r lease ~ 3900 great CM loc. Off at well 837·m9 aft 4 :30. Harbor Lane, 1 mlle from •Locked gar. w/lgator. $200. Includes utilities. suite, din rm & dbl rtRtd• .. ailable.. SU B·LEAS E Ground below set up cost. Sac Lost BI k Fem . Af'.,T"""'1M ocea.o.3br.1"41 ba,frplc. •D/W.patio,lndryrm 847.9939 garage . Aut o door frot11Sl50to floor MacArthur Pla.za. S7000/firm548·7622Tues· Da sc hund . nam e Exceptional co seek!> brick patio, $475. mo. •Special cabinet space opener avail. Pool & 900 + sq rt Be au t Fri g.5 "Heidi". vie Mi111. Vic· pers w/knack for figurt:S Comm. pool. 493~ •Gas heat, gas cooking 3Br, 28a, ~lnt location. recreation area. Adults $100 par wt&. paneled. separate encl lftyHfmllf JO 7/3 &37-«133 for an interesting poi. $4353+dine rncd ydkids aasbotwaterallrree. cl06edgar,lyrold. only.Nopets.$450. IN BAYSdHOllRhES. T."!o glass exec office Full W..ted 5020 Loet gray" brwn fem Cal1Katbi848·1288.Den Small fee. ss7-0824 •Adult.a, no pets. ilS().1014 865 AMIGOS WAV bedroobdr mh o ocus1 e °' 3 space or share, partially ••••••••••••••••••••••• NS & Oenrus Personnel l Br $270. 2 br $310 m c armer. ose to rum w 1desk. chairs. ad-, Cockapoo C.M · Uc. Vic· Service or Huntington •HOMEFlNOERS • 'Month to month 2 Br. 2 ba. frplc. ')'ard. Steps to boat slip, bay & pvt beach m gated com· dang ma ch copier ~lnessman wants to ID · E.Costa Mesa.5'8·9895 Seacb. lSl6SBeach. Wut ... tw 1298 2323EldenAve,C.M. ffS::/mo.960-S376or be~ch.~Brcondo,lnew:y muoity. $350 to $425 typewriter. Avail im' b~ or p~c~se yacht Fem Shepherd Blk/fan --------- ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642-7605 . pha nteed. comp ete Y . wBeeEAkC. H lN FRONT or med.1·757·3607 LonegraBgeeamcbewHpoarrtboorr 11 yrs. 60 lbti Ans. to Adve rtising Sales for 1 11 utter ,dblgarw/lots Hydie. SE H.B ~14 ~rowing trade publlca "bdrm, 2 ba home. lrg Luxury apt. 3Br. rorma of st.orage&autoopener this decorator~ bdrm THE EF.ACIENT areas. Call Mr. Jackson 982--6371 uoo.Locallsnauoo&l lll'· fenced yrd, built ins. 1 NEARNEW2BR1BA d,ining rm, country 24' boat slip. $750/mo. bomew/fabulous vlew or at833-3894after 6. ,.,... ... ts. Expen ence pn.! blk to schools. & Mile . • kitchen."$500. 964·1507 """7717 ft6 o .,..,.... Sq. Park. OH July 8 & :1 upstatrs apart. Nr. S. l>oN' a P· · BOATING activity and ~to 1.09t 5025 Lost: Brown & white ferTed. Consider malt.o or 15792 Las Solanas or call Coast PI a z a and Townhouse, lovely, sp~c. 2 Br. l"4l ba lnhouse style. jetty. Lots of privacy. ALTERNATIVE ••••••••••••••••••••••• Siberian Huaky. rem. 40 remale. 7141956-2680 wkdy• (213) 728·1973. WoodlandVlg. D/W, nice & home-like. 2 br w1lh Adults, no pets. $265. Sli ll AV A I LA 8 LE Mo. to mo. rent incl d •. d TD . lbs. Ch oker c h ain $C15 . ., cpts lsdrpa. Liil, last $lSO pvt, gated entrance + 2 548·21682. WEEKLY in JULY at R e c e Pl . s c r v . lst. Jr"edit~o:-roblem . s. 546-1562. Reward. ADVaTlSIHG ...;_ ________ , Gep. Adults, no pets. Call paUos. Some with all. $800wk. personalized phone cov· 731-4271 . Salesperson for Orange ConlJoes•dwns 546-5880 ask for Leslie garage. Swimming pool. SleP6 to beach, 3 yr old Waterfront Hotnu erage, conf. rm. ma ii ed b Found :T errier /Poodle. Co. Maaume. 751-4675. UclfwnlslMd 3425 • Jacuzzl.Tennis courts.1 duplex. Lte bedrm . C...a"6311400 . & I Arrang y white.femate.vlcSanta -• serv., parking more n Coast Home Loans Anaarea.July4,968·1101 ••••••••••••••••••••••• blk lo Huntington shop· bltns, yrly lse_ Begin Newport. •m """"do, 1 br. Nr bch & 2Br, upstairs, nr shop· ping center mall. Adults. Aug. lst.e?S-11106 TIIB EXECUTIVE DOVOUNEEDC .. "H" p II SJSO '" ....,... In V I l No pets. From $435. Nwpt Ter. twnhse. !um. 3 ""' · ,.,., ~~~~pgln&' sl:~!~l~i: ~v:i1 7eg ~.' ~::s: Seawind Village, l.S555 S..Cletnt:lh 3176 br2~ ba, pool. July/Aug SUlTEM<>-5470 Ro~~~:r~ns ••••••••••••••••••••••• 96J.12l2 1 adults.64&-0983. Huntington V1lla~e Lane. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $550. ~ Psych or MFCC. rurn of· arranged rut. SplriW ._.... H.B. (714)898-9961. Deluxe 3 bdrm. across st. ... 5 race, $1.SO mo. Newport • 00 l8lSSo. El Camino Real Tonha•t --EASTSlDE 3 Br 2 Ba. no rrom ocean Concr ete VCICCIHcM: R...tals ~2 0 Harbor Counseling Cntr Bonow StOOO. •1 .ooo San Clemente. FUiiy Lie. U......,.d 3525 pets, $390 184 21.st St., lniM ll44 steps to beach decks ........................ 833-1610 fl exible terms, past Forappt.492·7296 ••••••••••••••••••••••• avail J uly lS. ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• garage, reCrlg. $395/mo. Palm Springs Vacation credit no problem. Call *DDHIOHEW* BJ & Assoc Brokers Condo on MJsa1on Hills Single two rm suite usooobligaUon. RELAXING MA.5SAGE 2 l;xl. 2"' ba. encl gar, DllM :88-783!1 Country Cl~b. 968-5'\30 available near Or Cly STERLING FlN. SVCS BobJames·Lac Masseur pallo. frplc, N o pet s MewTWllhle Apts -airport. Full services 714 ~16l0tbkr ) Outcall9-9,496-5lll ll"V1D8. $425/mo S81.a85 & l/J Mle leodl •YIHl"S MIWIST Soan 1 br. onbch. $340 mo ........ to Shore 4300 available For more in· .....__, 1111. .. _ ... &1\6 Al'fCOMMUHITY i ocludea \JUI . New ....................... rormauon714/83J.3640 www gig .'.--I FOXY LADY Decor. 492·3'710 •IE SB.ECTIYI• Deidi • 5035 Avail Aug. 1. 2 bd. 1'~ ba. plitl o . carport. nr pool HB loc. child ok $395./mo wkdys 9&"17'1 eves 962-m<>l 3 Bdnns,1"41 Baths Fireplaces. Patios. t>ishwasbers. Disposals Laundry Facilities llRITAGE POINT Lrg 2.Br +den. wilt to bch " stores. rrp le. nu crpts/drps. $330/mo. 49'bl096. Bradford Pl. 3Br. ''"& enc gar , no pets $360/mo. 556-1977. 1175 Molw'o•io St. Agt on prernlaea Sat/Sun $l25/mo . 640·0357 Af ·-·"'""shed •••••••••••••••••• ••••• New 2 br. 2 ba. all bltns, ..... , ... , .... 3707 !~~: encl. gar, patio. An apt commuruly de· signed with you in mind featuring 8 spacious floor plans. Furnished or un· furnishe d 1 2 & 3 bedroom apts. Available for occupancy June 20th. ON OCEAN!! 1240 2br utll pd K&P $310 3br 2ba util pd K&P Sm lee. 645-4900 •CONSUMER'S GUIDE ~ilh r.r'ftblMcl orUnfwftl..._. 1900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• uau.17 nn.$350. BAYFRONT RENTALS TSL Mgmt 642-1603 FIATUllUMG 3 br, 2 ba. July & August l BR, 1 ba upper. encl •Park Ulte setting. weeks. Also Sept. 1st to gar a 8 e , $265. ca 11 •Llghted tennis courts ••••••••••••••••••••••• lS. S48·5647. Robinson, 751-9905 leave message •Recreational facilities At).. •Pool &jacuul nlE EXCITING PALM MESA Ans. MlNUTESTONPT BCH. eon-.. Mar 3722 if~i;!!,1~ n:Rpe~~ ~: :&,a:,~~ clean 1auo· ••••••••••••••••••••••• S48--0816aft 4PM dry Bach, 1&2 BR. from $220. & up. Adults, No Pets 1561 Mesa Dr. 3 BR. 2 ba. summer or •Garden patio lutchcn yearly. 516 I ria, CdM. 2 Br. 1 Ba , fr P I. I ~ g •Open beam ceilings Leave measage. 640-9019 landacaped priv patio •Kingslze bedrooms Eves & early AM ; Gd location. $325 /mo •Largewalk·in closels <5 Bllta East of Newp()rl Blvd.> 7:;&.1367 _67_5-068 __ i.______ •Private dressing areu ColN MeM 372 2 BR 1 Ba, ~pts. drps, •Accented waits. ROOClll 546-9860 4000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lndry facil. fresh paint. Near comer of Walnut & •••••••••••••••••• ••••• S?2S 1 Br mobile home. $265 mo. 269 Apt C, E. Jeffery otr S. A. Frwy. Room w /kitchenette Matur. adlu only. No l6tbPlace.S44-04:>2 (714 )559·7000, sorry no ssoweek&up. peg. Quiet. secure. 1991 $170 2br 1 Ytba pool! J ac. pets_ Rental center open 548·9'75'5 Nwpl Blvd. 846-8373. Sauna. Sm fee 645-4900 daily 9 am to 7 pm. Ambasaador Inn in Costa ........... •odl 374 CONSUMER'SGUIDE Orangetcee 1 BR lake ron· Mesa, 'lZ77 Harbor. Cen· ••••••••••••••••••••••• M•c. • _,...S do. AC. rec racU .• S300. trallY local.ed, 23S rooms. S,.. .. , 'BEACHH""'EL .,_.,.. ... ., MANY with kitc hen, ~ v• 1 Br $285. Pool, jacuui,,_eu._9541 _______ phone & TV. Swlmmmg ROOMS$37.:SOWeek adults, no pets. 2650 L.agiilMI •eclt 3141 pool, jacuzzi, and rec. Apt $115/mo. ~3037 Harla Ave, CM . <Mesa ••••••••••••••••••••••• room. Dally & weekly ... ,,,.,..._. 376' Verde Dr. E. off Harbor 1 bedroom. ~ blocj( from rates starttna rrom SS4 a ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• Blvd). 5'9>4M47. . beach. Kitchen. $310. week. --------12 Br l ba, quiet Mesa _ ... :;::12:::=11=·494;·=7287====~l=:;===64.5-=4840=:;;;=-;--51WtS TO llACH v;f;;e cul-de-sac. Older "' 4 Br. 2ba, ~ child ok. 12115, lllt/laat + l Br. lba, yrly. $300 $100. Refs. Ph: 498-1936. 3Br,2ba, Penln ISllO SUMMll R8CT AL Beytront, 4 BR, 2 ba. OD bi& b&)'. $8llO Week associated 11 .l • I J ti 1 "· L 2 br 2 ba. den, covered patio, new p aint & carpet. etc. $&25. 751·2080 2Br, lBa, troatyd, 1ar. G90/mont.h. 875-042l. 1 br, cpta, drlal. no pets. sm.mo. M6-2274 WJtJCXLY Lee l br , utll pd, E-1ide, 3Br ....•... · .. .. • • S350. covend deck. 12A$. mo. 28r . . . .. .. .. .. . • .. $250. -E. 20th. 6'6-'3117 J.IUStbSt, NB. m.-.1111 KJDSOK 3 bf, ·~ ba, pool, $3()0. 1 BR. compl furn .. 1Um· mo. MWCJM lOam to 7pm ms or~. Promoa· -------- tor)' Pt. Leave meaaa.ge; Lower 2 BR, aas & Wtr -.1011 Evu Is early paid, no pet.a S&SO. Hai All: 7 .. 1Jl'1 ltov9ftNfr11. 8:'1·2177 4"" 2 ............ 2 Hup a BR, £/Slde, uUJ ............... DfW, pd.,(lpeObeamclp,focd S600 •· _.. •f7t. rd.•umo.MMJBT MNS41 =lout· quiet 3 bdrm • apt w /11• pvt S. Ckem• 1776 .,.uo. Pool. Adul&.1. Sorry ............. •• •• • • • ••• oo peta. •· M$-338l or OMllACH ,_f7_s._ .. ____ _ ~a-a...tepitr, a.per ci..n a BR. 1 be; 1u:m7 ~ 28r, Ila Opeo 9'tn U.S: Adlta; 319 .,.., r.UJ tum, 11'11 tloDCeVllta.8U·a97 • •tmo. or moatllly 1u•mer rat ti . Capi1trano lhalty, SELL lcllt tteme tritb • • 5»' DUl1 PUot ClualJled Ad. ~ ~ STARTING' A NEW BUSINESS? ACOOfdtng to C•Nfomla 8ualMM •nd 1t1ofe11lon• Code {leo. 17'00 to 17ta0) ell person• doing butln•H under 8 ftctftloU• ft81M mutt th 8 etetenwnt """ tM County et.fie 8ftd h.v• It publl1hed tour tlm.. In • newt.,., MrYlnt the .,.. In .t\loh the bU .. netl It Joceted • 'rhe •t•tement I• ,.qutred b1 I•• •nd I• MOetQry In protectlnt your bueln ... n•fM· Moat b1nu require proof ot flllng to open commerc111 •ccount•. TM DAILY PILOT ptOYldtt bOtf\ flllnt •net pubMc1t1on 1ervtce1. W• h.v• 111 th• necHHrJ tonst• end malntlfn • flllly HMM to IM °'8nee county Cow1houte. lltMr ~one of our oonwnlent offloff 0t the LIOAL OUARTMINT 142 , tat. 132 tor ,..... lnformttton •fMt form:I. Gain a reliable Office space. CdM. street ....................... o.ec.I M••• roommate. 64.5-7-tM level. S14~~~9' LOWEST M/C 73 l·lH I •SHARE A HOME• -~-ema_l_e_r_oo_m_ma_l_e_w_a_n_t-.1 ....... Rental 445~ ......_, R .... ed to share 3 BR. I'\ ba ••••••••••••••••••••••• htT.D.'1, 4lho condow/2 19yrold work-E tSIDE C.M. Shops, z.dT.D. L.cMM. PREGNANT! Carine. l confidenllalcounaeUng& refernl. Abortion. adop- Uoo Is keeptn1. APCARE S47·2563 ing girls . Nr Beach & offc's. hobby. wholesale, Fairest Terms since UM9 Atlanta. HB. Frplc. nr genuse.Fr $85.548·7249 SattlarMf9.Co. UNDA&VICIU :.I. a~~y~~~~$1!~ NEWPORTBLVD.C.M. 642-2111 54S.061 I o.tc .. M:;ri 67~ Pn me comm'l locat1on Retired couple has money II!-...._ -of 1 4950sq.ft. 494·5608 ,..._..._ .._ ----'------to lend. Lst & 2nd TD's Serving all Orange Co. Male 18-25 to shr bse. NB Agent. Hl37·1744 I' 835-7313 w/2 others lmmed. 5400Sq.Ft. $183.33 + Aft l . 642·6882 Sho r 21 o/o YIB.D * * • wplaceo town SB0,000 2nd T D o n u 11 .. - Female wanted for lux· Mesa Verde Dr. Plaza &condido's most spec. n co "--urious C.M. pool home. lS25MesaVerde Dr.E. tacularview.2Sacresbe· 645$t.AmtsDr. Nominal r ent. Call Cos~iisa tng divlded; behlnd tst I a...,..leecll 54()..4891. ---------1 T.D .. ~or sales' price. I Youarethewinnerof 2yngprof.mcn seek same l~ l.otereat. all due 3 2tlcket.s.(Sl3.00Value> to shr 3 br apt. Ideal ~t82·2488 Newport Blvd. yrs.20%disc. totheJULY lS Nwprt local. 673 0855. Cost.a Mesa. Approx 900 ~1-4826/493-11$3, eves. a·OOPM Pefformance eves sq n. plenty of parking. Invest $30.000 for 3 yrs at of the SSOO mo. 642·3490 10%. CUily secured. Write loytl Upla. F ~m ! t;til~ ~ nb\~ ~; lndlllltrt• R..... 4500 Adlf300. Dail¥ Pilot. Box ~st.ow bcb. NB. 213~3871. 9.5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IS60. Costa Mesa. Ca at the ---------1400 s.r. ortce & gar. In 92826 ANAHEIM Cvtdown Irvine lndust bldg. CONVENTION UriacJbpetnes! w, /~~ood t.~ .. ~~o s.r • .. a !'~-/rth/ J~~~18 Shareahomeoraptment en .. ..,..y · ....,.. . ....,.. rwwww• Call 842·5178. ext. 329. to Qou$E·02uu ~TU> 4 , ooo sq . rt . New ••~•~•~•••••••• claimyourUclteta ~'i«pNJU~" warehouse space. HBln· .,u•ca•wh 5100 ••• ru ~ h.>ut"Ot,..q dustrtal Park. 894-S3Sl ••••••••••••••••••••••• u •SS .6.1!!..£. 832-4134 Sance 1971 For rent or Lease: 5000 sq ....,.. ~•5 fl industrial bldg, ioned SCRAM-l£TS AGUU MODILS 61o...T...t 4350 for MP. co rner of ANf"tWmtt' ISCOITS ••••••••••••••••• ••• ••• Pullman St " Paularino _,1 IU_, OUlCAU OHL y St. CM. Fenced, paved, M 1 C --1. D h * • • parking, fire i.prinklers. arve -r ..... -aya, eves, r R.Joan 110·220 wired. Inquire WhllCA::~h -6Jl•2140 246 c.-W.A. Oosta, 7141549·9671 News Item· "Sadat hu *811 _..1 l'W'V Mewport leach Stof• 4550 so many enemiet now ~IUll • • Youaretbewlnneror ••••••••••••••••••••••• that every morning he ESCOITS• 2Uckets·C$13.00Value> Downtown C.M. Prime ~~" ... sELom .. ~ne at.art his Phforapp't 83$-3749 to the JULY 15 location. $250 mo. ,,_... 8:00PM Performance 541.M>1'or5411-3270 Ult& Femd IJOO ENJOY COMPLJM EN· olthe -~w-.a-....11 4600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• TARY "CllAMPAONE" ltor"' Upfn• ----With tnodela ot a tOV(h of St• Sito •••••••••••••••••••••• • Ul&t or Found a pet:' Call c1au °" w Senoua female UCI sud AnlQi a l Aasist ance "·ESCORTS" ANa~lM student. 33, seeks quiet. League 537-2273, no lee. "OU'OCALL" CONVENTION private studio, ~tage. REWARD! SSS Larae F '75-0062 CENTER apt, etc for Ions stay Great Dane 7 yra F IS Jul.}' H, u , 16 from Sept. Slngle. ref's bluetatey. Please call Wlttm HIW AC ,..._,. ..... -.... 329 to 299-2038, bme "565-6604. -..1 ..... e ... -H your I a ~ c h D s '-'&ll _..._,.,. """" ' w or It . Sao D I e Io. _... -""""'' c bar a ct er . Is h lg h clalm)'OW'Uclt.u 11mlynn. Cats, reward. bit " wbt, fu!Uoa or lookalike the • • * no eouan. sh.rt balr. Vlc llrl oext door. call roe an oara1e for reot. Good t ;.,::~,,..../ Back Bo10 ov Shn. appointment for a locaUon. Near beach. '15 •9785. panooal Interview. You month. M7·9939 ••••••••••••••••-• •• •• LOST . SMALL BLACK = ::: n:iod.;~ ~ OHIMI..... 4400 t 1ftt1• LONGHAIR KITTEN. don't hesltatAt, call .-ow ....................... 0,J I rt.lltf 1001 VIC : COSTA II f.:SA and uk for Elite or Jae· ••••••••••••••••••••••• STREET C M . WE ~Ii. tat.->. New York ON THE WATER WOMIM'S HIALTH MISS HER · PLEA.5£ W.lModela LL..w Suit Cl.UI CALL.~al\8¥1m. PROF.HYPNOTIST UlllllAI 8$ EulllnaoPPG~u.nlly, all t.OST-FemOerm a n HOllESHOWS ,_.1270 Sq ft «1\d~tlnc uded V Sbepllerd. Blk Is tan. Ma56 ~ .8UTHA,!!._ENft PlUH call H3·5358 --------R~i vRS Reward S..W CW. 5400 Al •lllfffet 215 Del Mar 492 UZI 1-;.;_ __ . ------•••••••••••• • • •••••••• • U. REWAJlb: Brown ae --------.............__ v---. Do Y~ need • warehouff whit• Spttnser Spantel --... __,... &r o<nc.a al the alr'l'Oft fem "Lucy"LolU/\ Ph ... ..,.... '75-1662 and a P9"0" who W •t·im · · be1vy manaaement __ ;.._ _____ _ Make your shopplna mtrlrtttn1 •1pel'i•nce. Lalt: A.lull. Malamute. ..ier by using the Dally a l 1 o I m p o r t l n I us ~le. WOii 1ray • Pilot Clu&illed Ads lmowledle? MN7'3 wi.t. Qwanl. NJ.13.W. SIMMl1 Call INBOVISW for the lisi.lll1tnt • dl1creet W11 to metlt MW tlAIJ• pte19!1e. '?U•MU • . . . .. --.... . IQUALUX Needs Salespeoplt- Management potential. Call for appt. -496-3010 AQUAl.UX Needs Survey People . No sales. Call collect for appt. 496-3010 Are you ambitiou.s & de · sirous ol malting extra money without leaving present Job:' Call for appt. 494-5Ul8 ART NEEDLE WORK Reap>naible adll w Jelt· per In needlepoint. ltmt· lin g . eroehettnt? " crewel. Wanted f&r pos1· Uon tn art needlework shop, some retail exper belpfUl. 645-3493 aft 9am ASSIMKBF/f Able to assemble light machinery. e lectro mechanical or machtn1sl bckgrnd pref Non· smoker. xlnt benefits lnq. Rima Enterpnse:. 1Sll5 Chemlcal Ln, H.B. (TI4)~ ASSEMBl.EIS We are loot&ng for tn d.lviduals to work tsl or 2nd stuft who possess 1 ·l year s experience m these areu. 11.ECTROMIC ASSIMILEIS WW be sotdenng small electronlt' components under 11 mtcroscope and sttifinl PC boards. MICHAMICAL ASSIMILEIS R.eapooaible for assembl· Ing small mecban.lcal de· vtcee. Tbele poejUou offer ei .. ceUent atartina aaJan cs and compan)' pai d be netlh Including rnedlcal, dental and llfo lnauraace PLUS the en· joymeftt ol worklna with COftle1ual people an a modern atmosphere Call C114> 540·1111 or cocne ta for an interview IJMrv .. wa wlll be ar· r&QltCI {or your convc· lllence tllrouabout the waek . INCLUDING SATVRDAY, July 8. EIWAIDS PICBIAIU smms 1tt1s.1....-. '"'-•CA tz7 t 4 OCVl.SJON OF AllEIUCAN HOSPrfALSUPPLV CORP. EQUI Opp £mplyr •lllb -. -----· ..... _,. -. . . - .... DAILY PILOT Monctaz. Jutx 10, 11n1 • I ..... c ...... • I us.rice cae ... ... hi II , ·I ..... 9de •• , ..... /P.,.rkNJ , ... JP .. ,... ...... ..,.... ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• f••···················· Bfl J ~~·. Dhwce/ Bankruptcy We dd l o 1a. aummer •VERY LOW PRICES• OCC Student. l Ton truck. SUNSHIHI Glll.S PETERS PAINTING ~ ., Ext.:r J:lntll1g & Addition. remodel all TIUP GEJlO S50. par1ies. wine taaho1 On Oarderuna !hint Trash. tree trim. Ron Profeuional home and Expr'd . Reu Rates papenna. Wal pa~r 30'X types constr. Free Cllt ~Mam.S.A Mloo Typio,a, 960-5419 Caba.n.-~ The F1no Geor1e 549-20lS SC.$103. 97M489 oMce cleaning. E\!Uy in· Free Est. Call Gene ott. lt¥ selectlon. Roacr Low rates. Llc'd 548-8250 549-at.22 85T 0169 DATA PROCESSING ArtolCaterio .. MS-llSll. Clean·up11, Hauling, CHEAPEST baulin1 In sured. Free estimate. M2·0.SS 549-1884 or873,~l ....... ., .......... Sentet'l$ for small bU11 Ja006 Euro1M1an Cater · Landsc:aplna. lm med. town. Ft. esta. CHEAP! RE work & empties Painting. Exlr/lnlr Ex· Pa1nt1ng, Int. qual. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• nesses & proresilons. 1t>a. Surnrner parties, servicing. &u.9907 ~2985 or 645-1390 welcome. pr'd, booest, neat. reu. matertalll, rates negotia REPAJR & REROOI-'. All •Savc Moner Custom programming. b•nqueu. weddlo••· 540-9525 Llc'd 964·104S Dave ble. 494-0589 t y ~es ·sh 1n g l e1 Reuonable. Southwest 66l·:M67 Gfioeral service. Kaullng. Hauling-yard & garage Onv~a.ya·Parldng lot Services. 957-0Ul2 trimming. yrd mainl.. nu cleanUl)8. Lawn lnat.alla· tfOUSEKEEPER Fine Exter. Painting by Painung-Cus tom work. roe shakes·compo-t ar •Repairs •Sealcoating EnergetJc yng lady will ~ft a t. 541-5600 •Lac:. NB. C M S&S ec.trwctor lawns.~7926 tion 6: removal. Tree & clean your home for SS.00 R. Sinor. St. Uc: .. ins. Tty Int/Ext. Home or om ce. PerionA1 Budget Service. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'brub removal. Re l. me. 83&-SSSS 24 hrs . Also exp. wallpapering WALKER ROOFING Asphalt 646-4871. lt'or info on bow to effec· R.J . Huffman &Son. Exp. Japanese Gardener. ~ank Ivens. 631-0384. brl)'. Call631-2219 aft 5. Free est. 675 ·1338. Lie J326489. all types lalbylJtti9g tively budget/ manage Remodel & additions. Complete yard service. ·6059 Xlnt housecleaning done YOUNG MAN. 5 yn expr 64().(M73 roofing. rreeest. 892-5352 ••••••••••••••••••••••• f.:~ Income 673-8587 tK5-4M4 or 548-4541 . Reliable &: neat. Npt b~ lady w/exp. Dependa· in wallcoven:J.. Free Working mother bas 7 yr. Licensed 4c Bonded. Bch, CdM area. 64S-0694 Students: Hauling, yard & ests. 6'5-8S78 A y. Do you want the best for TrwSenfc• garage clean·llP· b e, own tr¥ns. 847 ·363'7 less? Call Dan for fn!i? old airl attending El c.,. .... G.aA;g WE WILL PAINT AN ••••••••••••••••••••••• Calllornia Coastal $36$77 .,.... est. 5 yrs exp. 640-8197 Rainbow palm tree .:x l\lorro Srh. t.Jeed some· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Service. New. remodel & ••••••••••••••••••••••• AVERAGE HOUSE ex-on~ to ~are for her Haul. sklploader dump th 1ede••ug ••••••••••••••••••••••• terior. $249. Aver 4-unit ......,./Repair perta; neat & clean. any and send her to achool. Carpenter. Free est, Any hauling. Free estJmatca. fronlng. reasonable rates. hgt. 494·16e8. 4~·S7$2 size Jobs. Call Allan or <:all Max at 492.f.393. trlt, grading, tree wrk, ••••••••••••••••••••••• apt. ext. $375. #34Ql35. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 7AM 5PM Prefer LB Tony. 648-8849 demolitions etc. 831-~7 Want a REALLY CLEAN Park Newport. 547-7334 Neat patches & textures Tutorillc) mother with child In 640--4051 Custom Remodeling & Wtert mMI s,o.ts HOUSE? Call Gingham At&EST. 191·1439 • •••••••••••••••••••••• :.amescbool. 07-3156. lod carpenter. comm/res. Additions. Call Vince Girl. Free est. 645-51.Zl L..Mc1plilll9 Pror painting. Ext & Int. Tutorlng by readin~ + p ainting. R eason Lenborf & Assoc. 673-74<M ••••••••••••••••••••••• Low rates. Refs Free " t'-9 ...., Sen-left 5" aluminum seamless lmmaculat.e Clearung Co. ••••••••••••••••••••••• est. 536-4780, S36-4383 specialist also math rates. John. S31·S082. Landacaping. Tree lrlm· • •••••••••••••••••••••• GM930 afters pm. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6'0-5001 Bedrlul raingutters w /baked on For those who deserve VJVIANE WOOOAHO the best. 551-2479 mlng. Clean·up. 8 yrs Custom Wallpapenng PERRY'S PLUMBING ••••••••••••••••••••••• enamel. Cstm bit on Job. We clear any drain or WL.11a "' Clecmillg COSMETICS c.,.t Set-Tiu It t hrd &tctrtc The Guttennen. 542· 1242 61>· Free est. Noboru. All work guar. Free. est. sewer anytime! Free ••••••••••••••••••••••• Complimentary ••••••••••••••••••••••• Carpet cleaning, win· 8411-4043 or 897 ·2862 673-4158 Lic327136 645-6874 esumates. Call ror low Serving CM /NB/Jrv./ Facial& Make-up Shampoo & steam clean .......... dows. ovens, we do It all! ELLERY DEATON Color brighteners; wht ELECl'RlctAN-Priced ••••••••••••••••••••••• The Moppets S46-ZJ93 lnt/Ext. home or omce. lb.lse Painting, Int .. Ex-wknd rates. 673-3181 Reas. Coast Cleaoini,: int. plant maintenance. ter. Free estimates. John Service. 548·5811 968-8365 cpts 10 min bleach. Clean right-free estimate on Gen eral Handyman. DIRTY WINDOWS? plaiits below retail for Beck. 64.S-2161 ,,_ SerYfct , Repain tiv, din rm. ball SlS. Avg large or small Jobs. Painting. carpentry. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Get a clear view from liqct.R .. CALL LYNN do-it·yourselfers. sele<:· nn S'7.50. couch $10. chr Licensed 673-0059 roofing, masonry. Any 53&-7711 960-5844 uoo & consultation. Call Painting your home. apt Lido Pool Service. Qual. ··AC.EAR VIEW" Co ••••••••••••••••••••••• $.$. UWlt elim pet odor home malnt.epance or re-or office? Call "Local Har bor /Sad -NB/CM/lRV 63.1·0217 Mobile Bicycle Repair At ftRC: .... In Living Color. 640-1338 s vce Cpt repair. 1S yrs expr. modeling projects. J . Housecleamng pr day at Color" for rree ~timat· dJeback Vly. 645·0247. Your Home. For Appt Do worlt myself. Refs ••••••••••••••••••••••• Waugh. 631·2233 lo c:ost w /exp. Free est . t'81tol111•c:• lng serv. (7141642-9259 Cal. lf you·re m the market Olll 89H4SS WESTERN FENCE CO. 531-0101. Cella. SS6-4518. • •••••••••••••••••••••• for a better car. be sun~ Wood & Cbainlink Make your shoppin g Trade your old stufr for to cbeck the many autos Rerooeing, asphalt sbingl· EUROPEAN EXPERT St!ll lhmgs rast Wl~h Daily Classified Ads. your one-U cit245-151 636·1837 easier by using the Daily P'ind what you want in 111g. Ca.JI alter 12 noon. Painting. r emodel, ne w ~oodaes with a advertised for sale an l'Uot Want Ads stop shopping center. Want Ad Results Bq-5678 Pilot Classified Ads. Daily Pilot Classifieds. MU417 plumbing. Fr est661·2467 (..1assi ied ad. 6'2·5678 Claaaified. 7 7 He4p Wcmt.d 7100 HetpW~ 7100 Help W..ted 7100 Http Wmtted 7100 Http WaMed 7100 Help W-.tecl 7100 Htlp W..t.d 7100 Hetp W..ted 7100 ...... w .... 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ASSEMILERS .Banking Cocktail Waltrn1 General omce. mature, Hardware sales clerk. full Legal Secretary MATIRIAL Part lime help wanted for B.ECTRONICS 1MhllnltntL091 School DRIVERS good typist varied duties. time. 46 bo~r week. Rion 3 man Lake Forest law CC>t4'ROL CLERK sandwich shop located Officer I A.u •t Mgr Earn up to $300 per wk. Men or women 2S yrs or good benerits. 642·5997 Hardware. aslt for Phil. firm needs legal Exper in mat'I & produc· near Or. Cty airport Call lmmed openings for peo-Low tuition. Placement older. Know lbe coast secretary with good lloo control helpful. Must bef 11 or aft 2. Mon·Ft1 pie w /ex per. 1 n PC Aggressive, independent assist. 751·9194 cil1es. Net $180 a week or GIHBAL OfflCE Hostess·Cash1er. Sam· skills. General cwil ex· 833-3294 Boards & winng. Grow· bank seeks a career more. Orange Coast Must enjoy phone con· 2pm, no wknds. 586-9419. perienco pref erred . have good skills an lyp- mg co Xmt bens Apply minded installment Loan ~oa/Hskpr Yellow Cab. 17300 Mt. 9am-3pm ; art Spm & 768-7~ mg. filing & gen'I ore PART TIMF _ ScJent1fic Dn llmg Con· omcer/Ass't Mgr. Xlnt t a c t • working duties. Good benerits Qualified lave· in I ady Herrmann. Fountain w/customers & detail wlcnds,826-0319 Liquor Clerk. Costa Mesa EOE Call for appt. trols, 46'0 Campus Or, oppty for advancement. Valley (No of Slater N.8 . or <'all SS7·90Sl & Send resume in con· Care & lite hskpg for work. Vacation . sick Top wages. Exper nee 557·9051 ask ror Mr .c.k for Ray Gall'llll n fidence U>: ad IH89. Daily semi-invalid widow bet wn Newhope & pay, profit sharing & HOUSECLEANIHG Call aft Spm 559-5992. Stevens. EVENINGS Comfort.able COM beach Euclid> HEl.P --Pilot, po. Box 1560. health 1nsur. Apply, Assl. bkpr/recepl ~ta Mesa, Ca. 92626. home. 4 days pr wk. $132. Mon· Fri. 8am·noon . F/t-Ptr. rtton-Fri. Wknd LOAN MATURE WO M AN Adults w1th outstandm~. 955-1313 Barden's Pest Control. work avail Must provide COUNSELOR p /t ame to welc:o me attractive persooalttae~ Balboa Is land -Sedronlc Techs Ca II 675-3960 Cook aide. Part/time. lmmed opemngs & op· ms Randolph St. Costa own trans. College stu· A position is avail. for a newcomers & contact who enjoy working with ---Banking Must have Transporta-port.uni~ in an estab. Mesa. dents welcome. 540-9525 person who bas the de-merchants F'leiuble hrs. lads. Start at $3.50 J>t'• /\tt.:ndant. part lime. for LENDING Pl.A TFORM Need car. ht~ typing hr. Phone 642·4321 :250 paralyzed youn1t woman, SECRETARY t Ion. Hun l Bch co. i.n ange Co. aJrprt Gen Ofc $650 Fee Pd Housekeeper & babysitter sire lo ,om an aggress1 .,,e 547.3095 between 3:00.S:OOP.M Sat1SUn 10-5. Balboa Isl Headstart 842-0052 area. Applicants to You'NTheO..! for rnuJy W/2 Cluldren. mortgage loan co. dom~ Ask fw Sllson troubleshoot. repair & business in So. Oran1te MB>ICAL 675-5652 lmmed openang for Cook needed a boa rd test electronic systems. Well known co. orrering llve·m or out, fuU or part Co. Cahf. Real est Equal Opportunat )I -adv & variety awaits tame. Fringe benefits. RECEPT /Sf.CY c:areer minded indiv. Reub e n E . Lee Recent analog & digital license required. Employer congenial ind.iv. for resp Must be mature . non· (2 P061tlons open' for ATTENTION wtcomm'I &/or install· Sternwheeler. Some ex· exper req'd. Interview smoker, own trans Call Preference will ~given ment lending exper. Re· perience prererred. bul by appt only, 557·9051 ask post. Call Shann o n lo college graduate busy Cos l a Mes a PIX Answer Sen. SUMMER J OIS q's good secretarial will train. Apply in for Busch. 848·1288. Also Fee Jobs 64(). 7314. W/prior exper. in the Cturopract1c ofl'. 3-5 dy All slllfts avail Ex per II OR OVER person. 151 Pacific Coast Dennis & Dennis Person· work week. Top salary prer'd, but wall train skills. Xlnt advancement Housekeeper. exp. w /car field of fi.nance, real est. potent.Jal. Hwy, NB. EMPLOYMENT nel Service or HWltington Perm. 5 day wk for dis· 1J1Surance or accounting. ror fully qualified girl. Weekends a must. Cill II you are new to Costa Contact Bud Davies OFFERS> Beach, 16168 Beach. abled lady. Refs. 768-7926 Xlnt saltcomm schedllle Will tram 1r good basic for appt SS7 7777 EOE Counter Help. exper'd., secy skills Call64&-0516. Mesa. temporanly dis 848· 1234 for appt. Small lite manufacturer Gingham Girl Houseclng ' permits unlim ited mature. Mom hrs. Per m ~BX L'OnlanUJnR your t!duca· Pacific City lollk ~. VILiage Donut Shop, ne<."<is rull time welder . service nds women P rr . HOUSa<HPElt personal growth & 1m· MEDICAL OfftCE Answering serv 1c1• uon. recently d1sch:mwd with general s hop ex· med. income. Send re· frorn the service, or for Equal Oppor Employer lrvine. 552-1441. penence. Call 979-2290 · top S. car nee. 64.S-5123 (NIGHTS! sume to G. Kaufman, 620 12·5PM. typing. dally operator full & p rr. Call charge enlne5. 644-6813 83.>3561 any reason seeking tern· Couple wanted to manage days & 548·9801 eves & Girt Fri. OH. Gen. bkking. The Marnott Hotel is Newport Center Or. ste porary e mploym enl, Beauty salon in CM needs small business. P /time. weekends 5 days, 6 hrs. Apply 1260 seeking a r e liable 211 Newport Beach. Ca Medical r eceptionist . consider this umque OP· hair stylists. 6S'li com· Mr. Hall 642· 1634. BLogan Ave. C.M housekeeper to work the 92660. front office. expenenc:ed Personnel por The women & men nussion. 548·3446 Escrow evening stuft. Enjoy ex· 111 LOSura nc:e. 546-8240 or ADP we are loolung for may Couples or Individuals Seeior Offiur Girl Friday Recent H.S. cellent co. benefits Loan Processor 644-0499. CM area be tired or typing, folding Beauty Salon in C.M. wanting to supplement Laguna Hills area. 1 grad, typing nee. bkkpg Apply 9am-noon The Greater Irvine papers, warehouse jobs needs Wig Stylists. 65% family income. Will not l714) 768·1222 desir able. M V a r ea Mon-Fri. Personnel Credit Union has am· Medical Asi.u.t. Urology PENSION & workt.ng for a hmited commission. 548·3446. interfere w /present job 768-0331 MARRIOTI HOTEL med.iat.e operungs. Some b ack ofr M ature ancnmc. Work w /young Call fo r an inter view. ~~ GUARDS ~Newport Center Dr 0 M V. & loan cit· woman Typan~. stenhz SERVICES people. Rapid adv possa-Bea uty Op r w /som e 675-0230 Exec Secy to $12K Newport Beach pencncc desired Eit ing & x·ray. N.8. 548-2247 blc tr you a rc 18 or over follow. Assistant. Will (i.Ofc/lnterdesr to$750 Perm. refiab. F\JIJ.tirne. Equal Oppe>r Employer penence with on-ltne Oppe>r le challenge or & would be av&al to start teach Sassoon method. COUPLES earn up lo l Person ore $12K 3rd Shift. P /ttme Isl computor syswm a plus MEN WANTED rered to resp. individuals work 1mmed Call Tues & 642-5381 $1000 per mo. in your Bkkpr /Construe $12K shift. Retired welcome. Full benefit package LO our Newpe>rt rmancaal Wed only belwn 9 3-0am Boal cleaning J)E'rsonnel. spare time. ~2403 lrvUle Personnel Agency Car & phone req 'd Please caUSS6-3110 Work when you want to firm located 1n Fashion &2 :JOpm M/F. $2.75 /hr. No exper DEUVEltY 488 E 17th Costa Mesa Irvine Complex. Call ..... claho,.-. Lot Afflfftdant work. All s hirts avail Island. We have immed 645-65 14 Suite 224 642-1470 83J..3000. ext 191 for m· Tbe Straw Hat Pizza in Factory. ware houi.c. operungs for· necess, wall train Mature. dependable ~ [ terview. Equal Oppor. El Toro has full & pt. Must be 18 Im med gen'I laborers Daily & P~Clerb 645-7100 person lo make de· time. day & nite positions openings . Full & Part weekly pay 556-1.943 Expenence RequJred liveries. handle orftce Exper boat mecha01c. Employer m If time. Company benefits ATIRACTIVE BURGLAR ALARM now avail. We are a fun Clerical GIRL supplies & equipment & Eqwp Ins tallers. xlnt family restuarant with Call 557-0520 ..,.., & Escorts Senice Man take core or gen'! omce working cond & benefits. GUARDS Figure ap & Lite Typm~ Fabulous pay for a very needs: heavy litt1ng. Pa ci ti ca Marin e great pride in products LVN F/tJme for doctor'' MasMtlMS dabX Int work.mg rond:-& Jttract1ve. soph1St1cated Expr'd only. No others movement or furniture 714/646-5011 SECURITY and people. rr you enjoy ore. Good PR. Ex per F'emalc Top money. ro benefits orren.-d. girl to model pn vately need apply. Top wages. required. XJnt benefits. People & have an outgo-Veni PuoL1.ure. 754·1274. Mu.st have car 631 2140. for a few hours <i week. m any benefits . 228 Factory TraiMes Due to our recent ex-ing personality we m ight -Contact 644-4360 ext 2tl2 Apply J ack G. Raub Co. Nurse aide. exp'd . 7 lo3·11 Girl selected must be ex· Forest Ave. Lag. Bch Attn: Eflther Rogers. ~ Top wa3es & benefits. pansion program .. Wells have what you are look-MACHINIST lo 7 Country Club Conv tremely groomed. very Baker St. Costa Mesa w/r apl ly ~xpanding Fargo Guard Services is ing ror. Apply N.B. co. needs Class A --Bus Dnvers, School bus. Straw Hat Pizza Home 549·3061 PEST CONTROL stable & be over 18. Ut· for Sept. $4.04 to start. (714) 751-2510. gage manuf. lmmed hiring security guards 24402 Rockfield Blvd ror Machinist for Bridgeport lll08t pnvacy. discretion Lie req or wlll train. E .0 .E-M/F/11 opening ror right person. for: more Info call 837-4230. MJIJ & 1-lardinge Lathe NURSE AIDE. woman. $3 Trainee. Steady job ror & respect is assured. SS!Hlllll E O.E. Call 545·0401 for info & in-IRVIME/ Close tolerance prec1s1on per hr. 8 30am-2.3()pm n ght person. Profit st111r Please wnte detailed let· Deliverymen for early tervw. Dellronic Corp. NEWPORT IUCH Interior Plant Maint. Ex work. Exper req'd Top Mon thru Sat Must huve mg. group health. Appl_v ter Lo: Classified Ad #251 CASHIElt/lllER AM newspaper In C.M. 929 Baker St , Costa SANTA AHA / ~erieneed in s trong bens. E.0 E SS7-9051 ask car 645·395.'l . Tues 9 Lo noon Lloyrt Dally Pilot. P. 0 Box Experienced only. Perm. Perm 01t. Mu st have de-Mesa. orticullural back· for Ron Adams Pest Control, 56tl E Oyer 1560, CosLa Mesa 92626 Chasin'sSo. Cst Plaza pend. <'ar & be rclla. 4 .MAHEIM ground. 494·4189 Nurses Road, Santa Ana SJOO. S350 mo .,.646-5844 RIERGLASS FUU.EttTON I MAIDS RN · LVN Ba b ys ll ter wanted, Plumbing Exper dram C 1rc ulators · Get Nat'l co now hiring hand Janitorial positions avail, Apply in person only /\h AM & PM shafts F\all weekdays 7 ·301\M·SPM. signatures for Nov. elec Detin ry·Sales laminators & chopper IUEHA,ARIC p rr night work. Pays Baba Mote l 2250 Ume or part tame Hlght!r cleaner wanted. Busy Su N.iwporl ho me Pb uon $6-$10 per hr. Easy, SS Hr. Must have own gun operators. Wages COSTA MESA& well. Miss. Vie JO. Irv. Newport Bl. CM than average !>tarting Lag Co. Great PH 644~141 no exper nee. Pt·lame for trans P /lime s !*. open. Medical & Ure ins THE WHITTIER AREA CM & NB areas. Call salary Xlnl benefits. Ap 495-1465.Leavct messagc Banking ru11. 18 or over. Call s:n~. bens. Apply 2581 Kelvin 9AM-10PM. 979·3652 Maid wanted. SeacltH ply F1a~sh1p Convales Pre-school teaC'her & TB.LEI 772-1770 or 551--0934 Dental Asst. Exper. only. Ave. Irvine. 754-6341. TOP GUARD PAY Motel. 1661 S. Coast Hwy. cent Center. 466 Flagship teacher-aide. Huntington !Yet , .. 1.g Fwntklwd Jew.try SaltMMft Lag Sch 494-489'l Rd .NB Bch Headstart 842·0052 ~l)er pref'd. Lite lyp Clerk ror H.B. drugstore. M. V. area 495·0223 or F\JU or p /llme. Must have Jewelry exper not req'd. mg Neal appe:ir Sal exper not necessary. Min 837~3 worked in fiberglass. S4 Mature. Wall train an all MAIMTEHAHCE NURSING Ir <.•ommensurate w /ex per age 24. 847-2563. ofc. th-. 847-8310. Apply in person Monday . phues or business Xint A II around exper'd tmmed1atc op c•nang PRINTER. exper d~ared. DENTAL ASSIST. Friday 8-Spm at: on small pr~ work 4 Please conwct F /ti me· X-ray lie nee FURNl TURE-o ffice WB.LSFARGO ca reer oppor Great general mainlenanc·e available ror R N or day work week. please Doris Mitchell J:l.ERIS Tues thru Sat. Call Tan furniture, commercial/ working conds Co. worker. Be able to ltfl L V N. an busy Newport call for appt. 557-2654, SS8·S280 ror appt ny.536-9331 contract s ales with GUARD benefits. rurnllure. paint. Ille Beach plastic ~urgeon·s Liberty Print1ng Co UNIOMIAMI wholesale design firm. SERVICES KJrtc JewtNn plumbing &. gen'I repair. office F\all time or part Dental asmtant looking Design Newpe>rt. 640-8222 Coeta Mesa ~9485 Salary based on exper. time 0 R cxpenenl'e .:s· PRINTING tHO Newport Center Or UTOTEM for challenge or ex 1532 F/time position. Apply. senlial. 644-4900 Newport Beach panded duties in pro. General w. c-........ k .Ac co.t•t Nauonal Systems Corp. Hutriffoftid EqMr ..... u Equal Oppor Employer Openings Now Available gresaive preventive ~CA Must be exper'd thr .J 4361 Blrch St, N.B. <Near ,_,,. ColWor ()pr ror rull or p/time clerks ori e nted p ractice. * Su;nmer Jobs Trial bal. Knowledge of OC: Airport) Equal Op· $20.000 1s t year .. on 2nd & 3rd shifts . No Medkal + pension & OR com p uter syistems port.unity Employer benefits. working in neld Should know snape>ul & Banking exper necessary ·wc profit sharing plan. Mon· Monday. Tuesday, Wed-helpful Plc:m• l'Ull for ol Banatncs. work in continuous rorms. Will SA.MTIAGO train. Advancement OP· EARN CM/HB area. fo'or an consider trainee w /so mt· Thurs. 962-3319. nesday. Thursday, lOam· appl. 645·5000. ext 520. IANIC portunilles to those who 6pm, CWSED Friday Male for Snop Assem op & terview. app't only. call collator background qualify. For information Dental Asst. X-ray be .• VACATION$$ at: Landscape installer. min PRC'kaging Possible Miss Wilson. 213 973-2010 S.A. are.a or Orange Co. &fl•dilt9 go to OW' nearest market exp'd or school. Costa z1ow.w.....,. I yr cxpcr, must be able sales & dell very. 556· 1750 Otfice Nurse. LVN or RN 540-8027. Excellent opportunat y or contact the personnel Mesa 546-3000 to install spr inklers. for Bank exper'd person· ofOceat Needed Immediately ROOlll 217 plants. trees. seed & sod. MAMAGEMEHT tor doctor's ofc an Irvine. ........ Wortrers nrl 12442 Lampson St Oenlal Asst Chrsd . I Cltrb s..taAna.CA Must also be wllll.ng to Bus1.11ess man req's re· 4"'1 Oayli wk. 552-8250, :? s hifts avail 5 30/\M 111 lmmed. openings ror: Garden Grove 537-4840 f /time, good benefits. ./a.rt& T'(t;h State Lie. No. C·G0.16 work hard. Call 675-7833, liable person U> manage 552-4933. finish Tues & tOPl\1 Iii ASST.OPHATIOMS Equal Oppor Employer H.B. m-5032. 846-3540. <9am-7pml. dlstr. consulting busi· fuush Tues night.'! AP· surav1soa (45 PM ) ness . Oppor to estah. OfftCl MAMAGElt prox 12 hrs each, Apply DIMTALLAI ls.lorT~h GUARDS Landscape SUpervlsor. Manne hardware store your own bu~ w1your i.n person. Pennysaver. Mu.,i be e.xper'd In all Clttk typist. interior-plant Openi ngs In C M . (60 PM> F\JLI & p/time. All areas. min 3 yrs exper. m~l be spare time without an· Simple acc't background 1680 Placenlla. CM phases ol operation. compa n y, sal e s Ir Orthodontic lab. Wiii ./Stat Typhh Uniforms ·um. Ages 21 able to s~rvlse and in· vestment. 631-SOOS creferred. E'lcell TB.Las seNice. lrvine area. has train. ./Ace a 1 tMg Clertrt or over. R e tire d stall sp nklers. plant ener1ts Dana Point Must be out1olng & peo-a positloll avaU, 5-6hrs, 5 Shl&Clk~isl trees & shrubs. also seed a r ea As k for Tom 9'1•tr Co.trol , ....... ,.,. welcome . No expe r pie oneated. Airport & d,ya/wk, M~ Fri. Ph ror Set· p Te clan necess. Apply. Universal or sod. Must also be will MANUFACTURING 493-4455 Imped or Tu:atJ.o offices. app't , 2·4pm, 557-0150. Wire Bender 1ruo,.,..._.. Proteclion Service. 1226 Ing t o work hard C&.BKTYPIST Barbara. And M.ore. F /Ume, long I S.Uet•IH W. 5t.h St. Santa Ana. In· 675-7633. (~am-7pcn>. Pholol'late Partner w1intc:d. Uke Tl.AIMEE c .. , '" ~· term employment. Good with or without Sii tervw hrs t-12 & 1-4 Mon-i.e.tal Sect. Exper w1tb n TrairteH over expansion project In We seek an l.nd1v1dual for CJ.ril Typkt benefits. 751-4442. Orange Co. OJ>Por for fl flt'St stuft to work an our Mu.!t have accur. ypinfl Fri. t ecbargeabllity&em r1gute 1ncom(' within ll Permanent position H -Work where you want & We a r e 1eek1ng Ill . Qualit,y Control Depart· & fl.ling lkills. Compute lralnee for accounting D e p endable m a ture IVhen you want with Handyman. mature for pbaa11 on domes tic & dMduals ror fir:.t shirt yrs. For 11pplS onJy call m ent. No expt'r1encc k:nowtedie helpful. dept. in NB insur. co. woman, 3·11 shirt for VOLT l.ona & s hort iuestbomeinC.M. c:lvtl UtJgaUon work tor a posltlons ln our Produc· 6*-4533 bet wn D· lla m necessary. w •will truan. SICY /RICIPT. Ute~ skills. Sloalary guest home . Rers . term a1.,lgnments. lloll-MH716 Newport Center l•w of· tJon Oepiar\rnenl No ex-rART TIMI ONLY Xlnt lyplo~ & com-'500. co. benefits. 846-6716. day & vacatlon pay. rice. Sal open. l714) penence necessary. we Exe.,11.:nt company mimlcation a Us. Muftt aa.MSO Donut abop, niabt shift, Hospltallutlon plan HANDY MAM ~ will train. Excellent Mu~t now be employed & beneCUs tncludmg maJor enjoy public contact. ground noor opportunity rree lo wor~ in my am11ll PIOOPOPl. Cl.alTYPIST 25·4S yr:l, no exp . available. F\Jll or p/Ume. Le1a1 Sec'y, O C. airport in electronics l«Wustry apph11nct> bus. of air nMldlcal nnd dental Call Sure touch 8 pocket NCR Perm. Politioo as tralnee neceuary. 6464lZ2 NEVER A FEE (714) 549-3942 atta. H yrs 11uruon treatment cqwp M tf . or appty in person 3952 AmY ex per. XI n t !I 111 s Campus Dnve, Newport 'm.Jhll·I. ror gen office work. Driver &r Maintenance USE THI 7S2-Z519 Compr ehenisive com · 6·10 PCV, o r M 1Thur Beach. •71'' ~40·6080. X.lot beo«flt.a & sa la I') Varied d uties, ph. & p/llme for mttal 1tore. •VOLT* PAILY PILOT pany ben~fils Including 6-l()pm & Sat 9 30am Equal O~portu n 1 ty commeosurate w /ex per. type. Costa Mesa. Betl Calif. drivers Ile. No Lea•I Secretary. exp. Nr m~or mediral and den :?:~m S400tmo 5ol or Employer. /FtH. Cootact Com\. 60-4372. tlckete. Goldtn~st Ren· TWMOa41Y *'PAST Ofanae Co Airport. l tal. Call or a~ply tn prof t sh11nng proj.lram SANTIAGO a.mTYPtST tala. 7081 w.-\Jnlnt te r S8YICIS RMSULT" 11rlolc. 751-1.831 r;rson · 39:>2 11mpus wl1ich4'ver you prel No TRAHSMASI I.AMI Ave, WeAtQ'lnlter. ve~rt Beach, exper nee. Some mgr OP• lodiv.'wt1ood appear at 14M741 SIRYICI Lecal 8ecretaJ'Y, exper In (714 > . Equal Op. pt'y avail. For 1.ntervlew COIP. PD90N'NELOFFICE fil~uant manner ncedN Drtver, p-owtng company 3848 Campus Dr. Ste 106 DIRICTOIY ~ lnlury felainUH ~ortunlty Employer call aft 1 PM. 979-3860 ~.tatst or loan broker firm. hu lmmed need '°' resp Aeroa from OC Airport lna de enH . l /l"/H. WMn )'OU need ueert Tua Ca9211a> Some pbooe wort. Near = '''ood dnvln1 17t·tll0 For Result mao ofrlce ln L11una U )IOU're !ft the market SD-5300, E.O.E Faablon lale. 644.a:M uat be 18 yni Service CtU 8eacb. Lit• bookkeep~ TIAMSMASIC a f\'tce or Npaln. turn for a better car. be sure old la ln need ot a tu.tu.re. lat Orantttborpo Wy Ing. Salar~ commen1 to the Servlct1 Dire<!tOC'7 to c~k lbe many autos Have IOIMChlnL w aeU? Gd wa1 .. ~em1. Aubetm 642·1671 w 1exper. eeded I rn CORP. ln Clau1flcd to sot\'e advertised for sale m Want Ads Call IG-5"711 t1llllnecl Ml il welL CllJIGtta. Equal ()ppor, Em~er bt.JJ2 mfd 49"'17119 )'OU1' problem. Cl.aatfied ••It..: • .. . .. . ,. •-" ..,_ . .....,, •• 7 7 t' ... W..ted 11 ..... Wahod 71 ..... .-w.-4 11 M .... W•t.d 11 OCI MR ct.... ......... . IOIO ~~--. •••............•.• ~~--. ............................................................................................................. . Monday. Juty' 10, 1974 RAIL Y Ptl.Q'r MaJ lltaCAI SalG11)«1'150lllo ---1..-&llf SALl&<CR£ATJVf. ---------1 ~!'.·.' .......... ~~~~ * *' IUY * * Mhc•--IOIO ....... o,..... IOtO ~!:~~ ..... !!»~~ New UB otnce. eiccell""'ftt __.' -r e h'I a It d • t l In• r I· •r Good uaed na mlture at ....... u••••• ••••••• •• ••••• •••• •• •• • •• ••• • • •• Soc:aUon. leoel'OIAI ~to ~ J~ 4clfn\O~o~'. jeweler oCfen faaclnal-'11.CIETAIJ JONATHAN'S Appliance1-0R I will UMIGA61TA9S Kimball conaole plano.1--•l'O-R•S•AL-l-- 1r"1lve comml•• 0111 benelila Newport Ctr. lo& . ...-rm pt-t.lm• po.w1 ANTIQU!.S 1ellorSEL.LforYou. rrom~bualneea card. llb ne~ <3 yrs>. trod. 1175 24 , RelneU S.adart ~~!:~J.ro~!cnt~:n~ _ca_ll_&M_._,_._E_.O_._E __ 1 ~~: '!'/~~i ':!':e~~ ~=: ~:s~~:.·:~ WHOLESALEONLY MASTllSA.UCTIOH 8eod one card ror each ilyllna si2oo. Dy~ Ondic. OMC m. xtro I • N B -··"'T.... ENGU8H1SHJPMEN1' 646-1616 I IU·t625 tag plua Oftt apare. Wt _648_639_3 ______ 1 cleM, dual atatlon. VHF, t1a1 Interview .. RE , h~lllalst .... -w. above avera1• typln1 ON• .. • •Now1 1 return permanentll ... IOt4 Callahan Realty' Alk for •ldlb and txs*itncttd ln Qn..Wi:. • od "°"'""' • depth flnder, bait tank. J .. _ · I•--------11 rt d 11335 M'l'. LANGLEY 7·PC 8dno Set. m em eealed attnctlve taa •••••••••• ••••••••••••• many xtrH. Prtcvd to _UTJ__;._._2l»a4 __ ... _. ____ -1 Lovely Nt port Fuhlon BAL~ a secrtla al ullet. FOUNTAIN VALLEY Medlt errunean, Ortho strap, mtetin1 airline New <F•nwlc'-·Qulck) Real ....... ,_._,es Isle otc need.I pleasant Poeltlon enta1J1 heavy 981-Wl !!!' 1pmg & matt, $&25. l .D. requirement•. Pre· "' i"' bln move. lest---. c.e ...... ._. pertOn to anawor their HALF o•v •t•U•tlcal typln1 . ~~!!!!~!!!~~!!! _.-78'$ vent lOll. theft! For. Baas rod&rce com •· ........_- ..... IFI w.... buo Phon•• • h1ndle "' manatln1 petty cub = ---------penonaU1ed 111 enclose lion, SM. New ( Garcia· ~-3 w11u15 IOme Ute varlety dullet. NICE PAYtt flow. heavy telephone * •• * * * Sota, chair W/OU.oman, wall. paper, fabric or Penn ) ocean flahln1 HAU.ISOM'S. r"IUAii 51\ Needaoodaccur.~yplna communlcatlona. Sue-con1ole 1tereo. Very "Dey Olo" paper 4' we combination , 140. TIAININ& " rni.\urlty. Very COft· Enjoyable phone work ceurut candidate will ~~~t!'~E (lood cood. 83a-3441 wW back " trim your Stevens dbl bl 20 n11 C genial co·worlter1. good with good salary + have maturity and ex· I I...... lagll. Or try two carda abotg.un. SIS. M2t n Mew ....., bens & atartln« ul $750. bonuses & coinmlss 1ons. perience. Excellent JOR...._ -r'• CASH PAID back to back. ao.30nne, $85. 545·2083. SIA IA Y IOA TS 3101 Coul Hwy.I. N.8. 6Jl·2S47 M.wPre.,.rfty Call Sally, 5'0·6055. Mornina. afternoon & benerlt pack•I•· Apply 2911CrodCSyWay For 1d used rum, anU· PRICES: TV, ..... •Ab1olu'el" no prior "'-·-t Ip ·•A evening 11hlft1 avu1·1 ln""rso"at·. SantaAna,Ca.M0-2911 q\M!ll&clrTV's937·8l83 eot 3... "' tralnlnl 'or" experience ..,.,.. a eraonn.,. 1en· . ..-" ~eaot /.., tlfll, Stereo 1091 81' Bertram Sprtriaber. cy.2790Harbor.CM Good spealdna voice & White Indian cotton 1ofa 4/5t.a11$1.60ea. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ready to riah, enc ~~~~·llzed ins\ruc· ALLJOBSl'~REE phone cxper. dhelpful U.S.DIVllS AnUqueMu11lcBoxe11! + lovueat, pecan 6/9l•p$1.llOea. Stcl'\.io, Kenwood 3130 re-blminl. VHF. CB, ADF. College stu e nt s . 83a3W.Wamer Slo\MachlnH! w/canecocktalltbla,brn 10ormoreSl.40ea. celver, DIC 940 tmtbl. Xlnt value.124 ,900. Call Uon R.E.Sa1es hou se w iv cs & SanlaAna,CAD2'102 Clockal velour sofa/loveseet, Sa1esTaxlncluded AOC 3031\X apkn. $115. 67$-0255. :r~f!"g~lonal on the job BIJSY 9 NEEOIN~ IDOOnli&htera this is an (7H) 54o.t010 H\JOESELECTlON parquet; aame ael, cof-NO CARD? 073-5D. --------- awu• • a ldealjob. DFAmerican fee tbll , aerver + Draw YOW' own or send 15' Performer. xlnt cond, •Up to'°"" comml111lon. UnlQue Homes of 'Mon Call 83'1 1995 An Equal Opportunity bOoltcasea. Queen bed • name, addresa, phone & Giant screen TV. SU per lOOKP Mere , 646.eeel aA •Choice of top -omce Verde ls "plugaed Into" '1"1J Employer M /F lntemaUonal beige hldeabed. 558-U'71 we'll make one card per picture Wknd special. 4 &evea. locaUona. a relocation referral For A PenooaJ lntervw Oallerlell lat· Add~ each. Only .W9. Call 759-0690 or ---------De yolo\t own bos• with a eervlce th.it bas created TIM[/1.lf( ()pen Wed. thru Sat. 7' 1old oUve aoCa Sl5(). Fr. Send cheek or nloney or· 540.2505 34' aklpJack F.1!5. Low topnotch proCea1lonal or· a demand for more 1802 Kettertn1. lrv. Prov. bdrm P>O. 971M~l37 derto: hours. IOU or eqwpment. Cani&allon. aaleapeople. We are busy •lecrehriH* (714) 754-1777 after& PM. PILOT PRIMTIMG ,,eat shape. MS-8071 <H> KatellaRH~ and need help! Ex · Libraries, Inc. TralneeSecy,type~ ... Stile IOH P .O.Box1560 IHh&M•h•~ 546-899l (W) t--~ .. perl e nced or new "'ftualOppltmp'orm/f Xlntpbonevolce. G.E. portable dlahwahr, ••••••••••••••••••••••• CollaMet1,ca.82626 .... ,_.. 33• Ow Cl 1 Sed .._. _._ c saletpeoJ>le may apply. ..,.. Y For our ofrlce. ---------•••••••••••• ••• •••••• •• ens aaa c an. ll I· I OOJ 491·0442 Attractive (antiques> of· Employer1 Pay All Fees =·~~!k top. like nu Oarage Sale: refng. 1181 Desianers Leftovers Liv. GtMc ti 90 IO Iott.a boat ror lllOOO. nee & top quallty (peo-Salespersons! Mature & LbRelndersAgency dryer. corner •roup, nn Brklml l400/ofr Sofa ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642·8630. pie) associates to work exper norsoo for retail 4020 Birch St, Ste 104 200 Yr. Old Bakers rack & game table 111 14 chalra, tble 1115. !"fi Ant. chair N Wh t Ilk dln h 7· E "·h Do ... c h I h C S d ...-toys, bookl, etc. 498-2545 -.... """'-urn...,. ... "". ew •,er· e 8 >'· l ng.... ry • ....., P w l . on tact an Y jewelry 11t.or~. Alao want· Newport Beach 833-8190 armoire also 200 yrs old. _, uwm ~-Al 12 rt /tic M t I & full cov Orlowski or Jim Wood at ed, YO"" .. nara()ft ror re· Ca ll for Appl/blab '64 Mrs . car l w r l tt ht. Antiques 120 up Hdbrd" IO _;;a w3 ..... ' I ere eng, r kr or k. Real btale WANTED RIAL ESTATE SALES PERSONNEL ...... rnnn -...-~~~~~~~~~! • 3" glass shelvi.ng fan1, ad....,_ 81..... r pump. 675.....,51. 67 -~7 er. S!500. m e r. As .....,.....,.,., tailloyst.ore.~. .: 646-5031or640-7320 book•. pictures. odd $~ s;l& ~~~s·~~ loots M9ift• forSleveal$44-9630 Sandwich at Salad Al· Secy Lei(al tme 18400 sized pieces of plywood & Evening Ca a yon Rd. Eqi.}pMtnt 9010 :M' Cuatom blt F/B, bait Relltaurant semblen. 5AM·lPM. •MO SH• Collectora & Decorators, many other tblnp. 333 CdM ••••••••••••••••••••••• tank. twln Chevy, full BOB'S Musl be neat. clean & lncredlble oppty to begin 2 flne Eng. ant. tables: 1 :· llt.b, Apt. 8· Cost.a . . Mast 28', alum w/boom & canvas, alps 9. $5500. dexterous. S3 Per hr. reapec\ed career oval burled walnut esa. Olive green hl·low cpl g. brdwr Beal oHcr over Owner musl sell. Call CHOllW Of TIM 979-074'7 ror appt. af\ wt reputablc local at· vrncer top. cofrce lbl. MllCflmt•• 1010 Approx 125 Yrds $1.SO. S20C>.213/357·633l d)'ll 673·5280evs675·3274 . •'• loy) lOAM. Lori's Kl\chen tor ne y . Ca It Caro I hgt, unu11ually beaut. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Round walnut coff ec --~itcellent opportunity lmmed;;: openings 10 "'--re'"..., IMB-1288, Dennlll & Den· 11150.lEarlyl800mahoi. 1 ....... w..._ table.(approx 36" in) loah,Power 9040 15' Me rline Flb1ergls. [,~~v:nt'~!i~!~~·~~;;1 with ourfamlly restaurant.a at ~it''i(me 11ecretarlal nl11 Per110Mel Service of iame or consul tbl S700. llOi"'"s...ttor. Dr. Make ofr. Good clean old ••••••••••••••••••••••• stainless 11teel tr r, both l\EAl.ESTATt: near by locations. We re· position ln Newport Huntington Beach, 16168 Price110e1dble.642-8652 comfortable living room t'Ompletel.y redone. lllOO. OFFICE quire no previous exper. Beach office. Job re· Beach. Yo~~~:~or ~~~~Dusty Rose) $IO. SEA RAY BOATS 988-M43CLASSlC BO/\T COIOMA.DILMAI Join our rnendly team. quires an accurate typist Service Sta. Attendant, .... 8teff 1010 2llckelll·(Sl3.00Valuc> II expandJn1. Extremely Come •ee us today belwn w Ith d I ct a Phone exper'd. F\!11 or p/llme. •••••••••••••••• .. ••••• to the JULY 15 Now Open Rare 26' Chrt1cralt Con· favorable commission Hpm ttanecrtblng oblllty. You Appl)', Arco Stallon. 17th FRO KT DAM AGED 8 OOPM Performllnce MllCtlCIMCMIS tine n ta I. 19 5 6 a It spUl for first appUc1i1nta Casltiers wiU ~ reapofllllble ~or & lrvlne, CM HOl'POlNT SALE. 3308 ofthe W..ted IOI I Until BPM varnished wood. Twn accepted CookTr-..S handlina routine omce w Warner nr Harbor It .. u,a ••••••••••••••••••••••• eng .. lop condition. 67$-6122 W.aten procedure11 & 11ome ~It" Service Station Allen· sAnta Ana. 979-292l ' S~ s:_• WANTED : Backpacklng 7 Days a week _2_13_1_888_·60.'I_• _____ _ aftNt bookkeeping work1na dant, exper'd. Day It ---------°" w equipment. Duck or IHll •tote Stllft W lff wilb an automated ac· Evea. F\!11 & p/Ume. Ap· •Washers, dryers, clean ot the goose down sleeplng baa. 2395! Avenlda de la counts payable 1111tem. pl)', Shell Station, 17th It late models, yr auar ANAHEIM 2 man lent w /Cloor. ONCE A YEAR ~/ IARHI0°/• Cerlotta,LagunaH\lla Salary commenaurat.e trvlne,NB. $100 up, delivered. CONVENTION bacllpackln& pack etc. _........ tOSO ~~:~:\1~~':n~rJ~~-1a\5: ~~e~~Hcu~~~h ~.~~:rin~~;4~.ablli· Serv Sta Help needed im· King's. 636-2MO. M /C. J~:if ~~18 547°"112 c ••••••••••••••••••••••• U:ll. Call Jackie al lrvlne 4.001 Ca mpus Dr. Irvine med. F\!11 or p/t. Appl.y \V a s her . Or\' er Call 642·5678, ext. 329, lo Mmlcal LEARANCE Wanted to chart.er. part Meadows R. E Equal Opp Emplyr m /f Secret.ary Muketlng, thiA 990 E . Csl Hwy, N.B. Dishwasher SIOO ca Color claim your llckeU. ....._ ... , 8081 time, lwtn diesel. 3 atato ,. .. ·--------• b d k 1 rm11 w 1sk1pper Local S4 ... 7'7!U ,52.02113 usy e1 tequ res a TVSlOO 646·5848 *** ••••••••••••••••••••••• •.L l ------Wl'll ~roomed, well or· Sewing-Overlock exper. -------------------I SGY• -· 70. cn.nslng, exper boater. Hecept.Jorust RITAIL gan.Ued peraon w/good Top pay. 1580 Monrovia, Sea.rs Wa.sher $100. Coln NEED STAMP t2 FOR 1 HllD AM A.MP! 30' Sportbrld1e. twin _El44_-m_1_6 __ --- Permanent Ptr poslt1on. 11NM••t.11t.,_ & S/H&typlng.Mln2 yn N.B.842·3472. op.comm'ISpeedQueen Ralph1 Number One Preferably an old Vl'1,trtmtat»,electric no typing necessary. ,.rt tlM• ••lu & experience req'd. Xlnl .... ---.a.._._.._. dryel' $176. 846·3690. Prize Party Cadillac. Fender Baaeman, but mr1g & 1tove, dock 11lde Fle1tlble hrs, near Or ltl benenu. Salary 1'750·'800 _...........,.. Wiii spUl S0 /50 on t.he anythin& In good working power, s h ow er. 200 loots, Sail 9060 Ctyalrport.7141752-~J ceshl•r po• Oftl mo. Clll Barbara Bell, MKh•c Refrlgeratw,wusber& prlte or $10,000. Call condlllonforaroundSlOO gallonfuel,rnanyextras. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••llable. Apply lft 714/657-7100 or 11end re· For indwil'l ahop. Muat dryer.210Adamll, HB. 645·7857 evs. b efore will do. CAl1661-626t an lonly.Stock llu.12 · 7 ~ C /\PE 0 0 RV RTc:;c;>t~~:~ler 1 rv me ,...._. Wwd & H.,.. aume\o P .O. Box Cl9569, be able toahoar. punch Is Between8-5pm. 10pm. _5_:30p-=-_m_.______ TYPHOON. 19' full keel, Credll Union hu Im· rinclon ~. 1275 lrvlne, Cul 92713 E.O E form. Exper. req'd. Call CASH PAID •HMMH ....... Druroa. 8 piece Ludwlg 5--f• $l,Sl2 aloop, basic boal $4000. lri CM I.OE. 1130·11200 8am·4 :SOpm. w h I D /Rf I -rv" "theZ1ld•en"ymbals& 24• Express Crui11er V8, Wlt.htrlr&extras $5SOO. mediate opcn1nis . stot • · SECRETARY /TYPIST 494-723'16pm·8pm. s r ryrs erg 18' above ground swim WI " " trlr,electrkrefrla,dock $42-9861 Heavy phonc11 • 1£x ----------• full lime, shorthand worldngornot957·8133 pool w/pump, filter, " extra set or new heads. " _ I llh II S .. , .a. •. R 1 1 Excell cond. Rick side power trim tabs Cal... 1 per ence w on-nc ru.~ helpful, apply Ill person Shlppln1 oo oce v na. Refrigerator. frost-free various acce»Borie&. Best · ' ' "'"· atom c 4 gas eng. computer 11y11trrn de· WJt. CllRA.C! CO. to Mr . Fuentes u t Must have clean driving waaber, dryer. Servel I offer. 752.5911 _67_5-_97_20______ ~'fd~d. 1r o~\~~~n s~~~~ 150 !~eni, spln, •trm Jib, 1lred. bankin g PlC · Jndustrial comPOundand Robert 84110, Wll(iam record. Stnall manuf 181 refrlaerator, uied. OfJlctf!Vmtt...li 11631. u:i. No dealcn anchor. RDF. dlnghy. perlencc a plus Full cquipmeTll Rcqulm>· sue-F)'ost&A1111oc.1401 Quall plant. H .B. 894-5351 Be11l Appliance Ctr. 210 Wanted : Tent trailer or .... ,..... 1015 please full cushions . Super benefit puckugc Please cc11afuJ 11ale1 background St .. Newport Beach. E.O.E. Adams HB .. 6 APacbe 110Ud wall, good •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• cond. 675-092.4 c1115Sl-lU10. with mechanical ap· ' ' · condition, s ip 6·8. Will Sl Ulude. Established bual· Secretary SPIAYPA.IMTIJt ...._._ 1020 consider renting . Sweda caah reglsti:r. 2 S••• .245 Cal20,Cullequlpt,'74.Uk~ r.vlC S..,.RIT"'RY bl f I I ..... ,...... r...o7 "JD" years old, 7 functions . 24' Cuddu Cabin. V8, lrlr. nu, $.5.500. 714·644-8511', nt!llll $15.000 per year -.,.. "' Capa e o •PP Y ng •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• .,. ... 06 """ll-"er .. pm,87"·"""1. # salary and commission To The Pre11ldent furniture type Cln.ish on "'" •n " .. -loaded. Readt to f\sh . ru1-eves1wkends OFP'E~~g~VlCE7 rorhquadlifled personls Real eAl lnvestmenloflrm W02,dh produclll. Start Cycle & Company J~ ~·~~~hr~~ o~~ ,... 1017 ~~~~: -~·ght Only 14' Hobie with traller-2 wit a vancement o ror educator11 ood Si& ...... r. Sl,390. Hurry &64-6502 ••••••••••••••••••••••• sails &st offer Let the public know with sales management. For career oppor & very Spray Painter Trainee GRA..aD LOVABLE fem Guinea S.n Sl,ltl Mll-7668 an ad In the Dally Pilot appointment. call A.J . chaUengln~. Xlnt typ· Start S:UO hr. Our work 1""111 Exercycle, Walton. Pig, 8 moa old. Long ~';!.'!.~~~l~~~ Perrotta 111-1 1 871·"37. lng/sh req' . Exec s1ccy lcla highfl~~AahUly in a ligh1t OPl!Jl..ll..aG 185. hair.16. A..k for Rhonda, 2000·eonR~~~S~~lk -~~0 lrlr. 22· Ca!.allna1.1 !;•000cel l -;;:-'d-;;. Jo"'or mor;-ln ~~a?;~~n:Uese!1y, 9 :~~~~t.CallEleen lne:e"~~Hef;:;,:.~~~ S~LEJ"'lll &48·3036 645-'78.S7. Y ahape .... ~l~.-. fonn&tion and complete Placentia Ave. CM A Plano. studio upright, rs-& Ort--1090 HARllSOM•s ratMcallMlMi678 SELL idle items with a Secretary· iood ofrlce New & Wied bikes, big MOO. Cofree table. Span. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Columbia 26 Mkll, "Oii . ---------1 Dall)' Pilot Classlried Ad. sklll.t. ahorthand helpfuJ S&ock • deUver, full or discounts. 10spds IDT.50 135. !lee mower GS. Sohm er & Co 0 rand SIA RAY main & work In& Jib. but not requi r e d Ptr. Clean & neat. Appl' ..... Cnllsen Ma PI e cab In et S3 . piano. Walnut carved art 3101 Coast Hwy, N.B VHF. de~lh flnder, lOhi> .W.W-.d 7100 ....,Wllllh4 1IOO MIM158. at4951!:.17lhSt.CM./\s PoxleMo,-ds Wrought iron bar stools case, clrea um. 14500. 631-2547 lnbrd. oldlng litnk. ~~~"!"••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Secretary, excellent tYP· for Larry or Paul Moto-Crosa blkes parts· Sl2 ea. 942.7309 PhoneM2·1304. Sl0.500. 714 /545·1450 JF YOU WANT TO SUCCEED, SlmER WANTS YOU! Division of ColHns Foods tntemational, Jnc. Our .business 1a booming, so help us open our brand new restaurant in Newport Beach. We have part time and full time opportun1t1H tor • Service Attendants • Hostess • General Counter Help • Broiler Cooks • Cashiers • Busboys We are one of the nation's moat f'eapected steak house chains offering outstanding opportunltln to aggressive and amb1t1001 people not 1f ra1d of working 1n a tast-paoed envcronrMnt. We have hours 10 f 1t your ecttedule on days, n1gttt1 or weekend•. So Moma come on 1n and work lunch" from 11 :00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. da1ty. If your experience 11 l1m1ted ... fine - we have • dtd 1ca ttd professional restaurant management who are here to help you succeed. Wt off•r company paid medical, ltfe 1naurance and a paid leave ~•cation. APPLY IN PERSON ~a noon to 5 p.m. daily at • 1000 BrrttOI Street North Newport Plaza Newport CS-Oh. OA ln1, ahortb1nd required. s.ttc..._...Opr. acce111. Repairs 111 • * • * *"' * * • • • • • • * * * * * * ** • • * * * * * • * * * • • * * * * '* • • * *• mag card A ft leaal ex• F\111 & p/t. Wlll \rain. makes. Buy sell-trade· FIND VlDUR NAME « per. prer. Excellent eo. Musl be rclla. & able lo consign, ; «« beneflt8. St1lary com · work cvesiwknds . Ph 2470N~WPORT BL. CM ~ men1urate wllh ability. 14$·'7&66 642·7910 • Send re11urt1e to : Law Of. it nee. 610 Newport Centor SWITCHIOAltD/p.fa. • • Or. # 1220, Newport Will train U nee. 3 Practically new, smalleat it ., Bc1i1ch, 92660544·0311 wkdya +wkods. Bauer boy's Molo X. 2 whir, "30. it Moton. 2925 Harbor. CM CaJI W-B78S. • Secretary tor restaurant 979-2500 ....... Mcrteri .. 11025 • .... • • • deelgn rt rm, -Corona dcl ••••••••••• •••••••••••• ,. Mar area. ~xcelle n Tow, Tr~ck Drivers ex· Bricks, new and used. all • benerlts.644 ·1000 perd. rop pay. Apply, types. round clay pipe, ,. SECRETARY Of&WTowing, lOOO lrvlne all sizes, reasonable ,. Small Irvine cllatr1butor· Ave. NB 6U· l26J prices. Phll 538-6974 ,. ~0(1 SEETHE • ·llflin . can ... ROYAL LIPIZZAN • t1cke 4r ing co. need11 a sharp Tralnee Recept S7280 C.. & it s~retary, that can type, r.n..r.,111 ..r" ... 1010 .. hkila.111 l~_tehbookklhe1ept1nR Hlghly respected firm .. ; ... ~............. ,. s t .. w o can nk or seeks frteodly voice for herself. Salary llOO pr really 1rut pos. Call ~ri<' autor-Uc su~r • mo.lot1tart.549-2l86 C.rol &48·1!111 Dennil& o.or regu ar move it STALLION SHOW SATURDAY Worth $ ts • • • 13 fr • • viewer 6 11pUcer. new it Denn Is P er 11onne1 c.'Ondltioo. $16. 545·2083. ,. Service o( HunUnaton 1---------JULY 15 SECRETARY No Sh Neceuary Must type 60-GS accurate- ly ft be familiar w1dic· tapbone. For appt. pleue contact Ila m · loam. Lynn SUnsrleld. Avco Flnancial Sttvices, 620 Newport. Center Or, N.8. 644·6t!OO Equal Oppor Employer Beach, 1&.168 Beach. CClh 1035 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• • 8PM c........... Persian kittens. CFA l't'li?· : l~tl'rl'c1 Excell\"nl n11ttffi£R / quaU\y, Beautiful long • r'.J halr. Show quality it TYPIST •·mi : Experienced with Do'JI 1040 •A ~l'Nlll'umily -~ ( ....••••.•..........••. knowl\."Uge o cold type. It show . llllcd wllh Excellent company Golden Retriever pup-,.. ---------1 *enls. Apply between plea. AKC Field & ahow • --------• 4PM ac 6PM, Monday pet. SholsL. wormed, • SICllTARY through Friday. Ask for raised w/l'L\;. Xlntd11p · * IOOICIC•B Dave lJutlerrei. (213> 425-1561 . it color. e:'(citemenl . com edy & be1:1ullful horses. ln nddilion Gold I f ORANGE COAST M citl AK C en OPPortun ty or DAILY Pll.OT . uat sac ce . . . reg. • lhe right peraon. Heavy Shlb-Tz_u.1.. 7 mot. old • t.-i"g • 1h 1klll1. Lite 330 W. Bay Si., female. Mlf·7'45 ,. ,.,"' CQ1ta Mesa bookkeepll\I. Phone ex-Equal Opportunlly AKC Female Poodle. 13 ,.. per. Only qualirled Employer wka old, brown. $100. • persona apply. Mu1l have neat appear.'lnce & Typist-1 ......... •t Cal17M-5683an 7pm. : to the Llpl7.7.~ns th<.•n• u rc scverol other breeds or horses: even mules & n pon~. and they all perform ~Haat petsonallt~. Wearelookln1foranac-German Shorthair • wort~co. =W.:Jr~ curate typiet, mlnJmum Potnter, 10 wks. At<C. • to music. b 16 Wpm. Nuat be well IOC>d huntinl breed 1100. • da, II 0.1100 . Na on lroomed" enJoy mMt· 751.-aevta. • Speclal rutl!s Cadlllac. HOO Harbor lftl • wortllnlJ wtth peo. F 1 f Blvd, CO.la M••· 1 So ti 1 OobermU. ema e. t yr, • or groups ~~~~~~~~~ g e. ml! recep on s1 blk/tan prot trained. • _______ _. s:t~~~:y ls~~o~dNln Sl'().~'fl It Performnncl' lecrttatl• •mok~r. Call Mra. Davls, Fnete Y• 1045 • limes are: TVmSTS 1141.1... ••••••••••••••••••••••• : I In Typlil, "•t, accurate, Free to gel bome. 3 yr old 8: 00 PM •r"1ET• .. £s 11111019r helpful. B\18)' spayed tern Samoyed. it Fri. July 11 '1lAI Ml word P r o c •II• . Nd chlldr.n. fncd yrd. • IJ 00 PM o 00 P't Do nH«iHtta money lnl~Un• service. 48H733 • .,: • n : If le -.to1 varttl)'. Ltt the TheOftlce,&48•1188. ractllllltn Male 9 : Sal. July 15 rreecloln • nex.lblllt,y of na u\ bota Mo.u63 2 00 PM won.tn• tamporary es· TJpl1t·l•••l/word proc. 537 aa?a 1 • • • : 11lpuMftta ot )'O\.lr choice tiP,. helpful but not re· • •. Sun. July 16 wcrt ror you. call Im· q'd. NO law oltiu. Sellw\tllEASE! mtdl•t•ly. M4il400 lt'uBftEEZE • Phone :C 714) 635·5000 ~ 0 f f1 a • • ·w • 'TCHMAtC• CIU1ltled Adt t42-5678 • OVet\Oad To UllU u1lnter It w /dtvtloJ>ment or de· * H 7 ·004 I Uc.ete preciff lnatrUmen· l'Or a ... u1ec1 Ad • tnDB\ttb9t.N.8. ::::,~ ~~~i~· ~ Agl~~N : uel .!m loytr beoeft .... '1'99_,ay. EOE. De1111>Uot • ~Mtlftc onmna Coo.· Al).\'llOR • IOO W. IC9tefle A••· hehel"', C.llf, t1'ot It's easy. Look for your name and address in today's classified section. If you find your name and address call 642·5678 Ext. 329 we •u arrange for you to pick up your com .. pllmentary tickets at the neareat off Ice of th•--• • • • • • .. .. • • .. • • • « • « • "AIRS « i\BOVE : TllE • GROUND''• • Secretar1 Part/lime.. H1u'lllo1ton lea Qh .Headstart. IU-~ trola M•"POrt Bueti, •1678 • •tal aP ror Ron Ut· ,, « k ~······•***********'***•*******·~············· --~--~ ,. ---. . .... • -· 6 -·---·- 7 f Qf OM,VPILOT Mc!nd!y.Jtr '0. tt71 ............. ,.... ....... Dried Alltos,l•porW MMl.UMd ....... UM4 ...... UM4 • • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ..-.w tl6ani..-..-~ 9170 H60 ...W t712 .._. t73' IGlll.,ce t7H Mell ftlO C • Hll Mllcwy 9910 ...................... . ........................................................................................................................................ . UV&ABOAJU>IJI Dl"Oltt .._..,.,Me Too o.... PtJ "79 AMJVM I OIA.MfllCOUMTY'S *lDEAURIN U.S.A. ~~t~ 4-dr lt76CHIYY ttnlOICAT ~-==.7~ =-11· 6'.b wbed. at, CB. wtwa.. 1hell. OlDl:ST rm IOY 557.s.seo. C.W•IO S9'•IWAGON o· ~ Wk. perfect r0t ~ffD~ mM ~/olr6?5-708I • 1 o CARVER alUpm/wkeods. va. air cond .. r•ll>'• ve. automatic. pwr. ferro·cemeal yaclat. m dirt biMm, blcydea. V-9170 ROUS ROYC£ wheels Is ool)' 20,000 1t•~n • air cood. • ftailll wl\oola Pf'OYided. 1f50Jbat o fr . Call •••-••H .. •••••••••••• · 'Tl Parle Avtnue. l4,000 miles. t087PUP). .... a•··eo. CH13). -1 -•· 1 SO H._....., IMOJ.•.....,.. ml. Llke new cond. Way ~L•• Ana ~· i.oc. "" materl .... lJt. llllM8ICll' ._.,. .... ?2 CHIV 112 T• -.. .......,.. ... c11 ~... llt..AJll eluded fiH Hll It n~~---·--Wbed Base van ~ice-IAui.DI c..w.. Ml-1700 ....... wdermkt.6'U908 ~ al'OQ9d lbe #Oftd '°' im n· ---=:&"· eau -· ~c..... 111e. v Nabers Nabe nm ol ,_, ti.I~ _.. aAer a Piii fs VI. 3 1peed. alr cood , RolJt ce • BMW ~.... ,740 ClOUO SUNOA S. '76 Buick Slylarlt, a nut rs pr1ce131.000. 11-...:11 rad l 0 " b •• t 6 r Jamborti ....................... 19Sl Rolla Royce Silver ~;tLoa~. all7,000~loo'' ··-o c~ ..... ,.... (1'7290KLc.SlkUIZl8ATt. ,.,_-rt Beach 6tC>-"'4 '68 280SE,' dr. lmmac Cloud ll. Beau\. car nm e . .-ra a. -· . ""'' _...,._ AUTOCBn'IR 67'-2ff0 CONTIACTC>a-S szno , __ ,_ "1U)' equip. New Ores. SL8,.500...0.7030. cwoaee. Di v.olNabenCadlllac Div.olNabenCadlllac . --------' omce trailer , l 'xU' "'16 2IOllZ. Sunrool w /vtsor compl. aerv record• T~ 97'5 C1 •u 9915 1421IAIC• ST. 1425 IAKB ST. Columbia 21 Sailboat. Air/beat. Xlnt coad. All/FM cau. More Call Lutl>eUH151·1337 .................................... •-••••••• ACROSSc,J.Rf>~!.f'!'CO ACRO$COST"f'~f.FfCO Bia, fut. comfortable .-oo.-.L391 Mutt aeU .-. (714) llFOU OU v~·---~ ~-~ ~· OpeJl cockptt um zsu..• ... ""• sell--· 833-7723 74 Ml2. 4505&.C Y it 540-t I 09 14A • 1 Ot Xln ba ruiM Ta ~ wu Ori 1loal tbruout ! S&L YOUI .,..., :--.,:off t t!a r \alned., alot condition. BMW 2002. 1978. suorf, ~~J.· '!:.. r,..>a.teerina TOYOl'9' .a., '77 camaro, sliver. T·top, 1912 Me~ury Marquis. sa&ae~. ~!'~ S3500.883-T.M.t ~37:ereo. auto, call ..... """""(4-v ··~ lomi,auto,power.$5600. XJnt condition. low 'Slip avail Mull sell for ~Senke,P.U Qevy "73 3$0 V-8 eng. ~ $16,995 SEE US! ~1154 miles, vt.oylroof,aircon- ooty $ll50. -...o. & Accee1°"'" 9400 T. vao. map. ~auoo· Ul89 Bavaria. AM/ FM. HOWAltD CM•rolet MAIOUIS TOYOTA dltlon, power brakes. , ""••••••••••nn•u .. diUon. 5?.8-5555 4-spd, real fine. OOVE&QUAILSTS. MlSSfON VIEJO • Qur., ff20 power steering, st.ereo, 30 cllpper marine. lt75. 28S Chevy motor needs 499-3710 tNearMacArt.hur. lll·21104fS-1210 °=',..........,., ••••••••-••••••••••••• aoodgasmlleqe. Sl.975 f /&, VHF, lath. llnot· work -•--_,. 6 "'Y' linder '5 Ji"ord Van &300. $1800. ' -·1 .78 .. • C I rf 536-6n4 meter. 9.9 bp. Elect n~t'o ...... ff•r""':'-.. ~es. Pb1·1' w mi's Xlnt cood call ,..__. t715 Jamboree&Bristol). '" ~ -oa~e ar o. ID • -------- •...... .,...,..,...,. ~ .. .... .,.,,._ __,.., NEWPORTBEACH '1'2~Marltll, power wind., AM/ FM ..,. .. C start. ,_.. _.._ SS974 '••·•-· •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• lll-0116 AM /FM. alr, auto, 46,800 • 8-tr. 37 ,000 mi's. Asltiog ?6 - '16 Fiberllua sail boat AlllOIW..teci 9590 ~Afu~1::1~~: ~· mi's,gdcond.$1900. TEST $4&00. 752·0380, dys. MON•ICH4Doar M f I r M z. Marl 0 e, MoeforS. ••••••••••••••••••••••• .54&-tl806 al\8 Moa·Fri '62Claasic 220SE cpe, unl· <n4)8'2-3812aft6pm. Wkends/eves,Slii2-JJS2. V-8. auto-trana. factory Aluminum mas\, GYloo ••••••••••••••••••••••• WIWIUIUY • que car, reasonable 1.977 Cellca GT eoupe.5 DRIVE '87Novasptcoupe. Auto. aircondltJooing.AM/FM salla,notaUon.cover. Ul· •-•.. t510 YouttDATSUM '72 caprt 6 cyl. Air cond. P.P.SSJ.1868 apeed.alrcond.,AM /FM • DIES l owner, new batt. rad, Slereo w /t ape, vlnyl tJe use. $750/0fr. Udo -•••••••••••••• .. ••••• PAIDFORORNOT auto.Bestoffer M----' ·-/8 •· k d k A EL ••-.a•~10· t n.·--g t roof. s peed cootcol. laSe673-7123 548-7658 .,. ... ~es 450SEL. 1973, s~.,., w ... ac • ec ... ~......... . '"1llO rea . <9:55NLF> :liO llbort blk eng. Brand TOP DOU.Al 28,000 mi 00 new engine, rack & morel Must sell! SEVILLE 631-4781, (714> 846-3864, $6495 Col. 43, diesel, 9 baga new fctry packed with FOR TOP CARS "71 capri, good condition, sunroof. new tires. all ex· <New CeUca Just came _6'2-_7680 _______ 1 540-5630 sails. loaded w/equlp· heads. MOO/ best offer. lo ml. AM/FM 8·trlt. tras. 9~7·8191 during ln). Call 962·9824 or • ment.. well malnt. P .P. Muataell.492·131.S $ll00.833-l.2S2dys. businesahrs. ~9303"ukrorRick. s.56-9133 4Wlile.tDri•" 9550 .,.._ 9720 •77 280E. fully equip!d, t972TOYOTA Nal:>ers Ludersl6.2complete&eta ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• $17.000 or make offer. COllOHA2DOOtl olsails,goodcood.moor· COSTA MESA WE BUY •DATsu~s* Call lOam·lpm or 6pm· Coupe. Auto. matte. atr Cad1·11ac mg Newport H arbor AMC/JEIP f"'lll lOpm; 979-6742 cood , radio & beater. Make offer. Also 14' CLEAN CARS ~ Selectlott '70 28CS. ivory w/brwn, (476"0[). 2600 H.11h•11 Blvd. (11\IJ M-:\J 54().1J I 00 a.,.w '925 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1011\SO\ ,\SO\ • LINCOLN Mffict.fn "7S Cordoba. bl.ken. tan 2626 HARBOR BLVO. leather ~nt. loaded. COSTA MESA stereo. a ir, cruie. all --------- elec .. lo ml. $4800 tlul&WJ tt52 675-531>4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• "74 Ghia 11. auto traDl!, hl'i~.t~ k e s k 1 ff· #I IN CALIF. & TIUICICS Of AM Modefa immac. air, full power, ONLY $1375 1971CHHOKH SALES-LEASING n~.tires & valves. 125K ~~Mcw ... tw~IMll~I 19' PCAT. Racing rigged. CONNELL PARTS-SERVICE Dll s._. Mui;t see to ap. U.llai'tlot ao.ux 21' AQUARIUS. O/B, $6995 WeNeedCleanDatsuns! precJate. MMttl -----___ ,eo..titMtfltDll '9lO ~.PB/ AC. AM/ f'M, ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,,,00/oC SS7·2356 lJ'lrsforbotb. 9C-40'M (J8Al6NNlZ1783) CHMOLET $S500 ~ • .!========- Hobie 14. xlnt cood. 32CberokeeslnStock '76 230. exeell. cond. '72 ~rina. complete new w /trlr. a djusta ble OVERSTOCKED 2828Harbor Blvd. AM/FM stereo. air, elec. engme. AM/FM slerw, torstay & trapet.e. $1050. CJSPickups COSTA MESA 2845HARBOR BLVD. snrf. Mustsell. ~-8153 new Ures. wht ~xt/blk 642-67119ask for Luis w 546-1200 54"'6410 54"'0211 Int. $Ui}S 1080.631·362.4. agoneers -v-'78 2'SOD. A/C, elec snr1. ·~.,./ $1300 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR 74 260z Ivory/tobacco. 37 mi on· '72 Corolla 4/dr extra ex· ..,_ t070 Olscounloo FORTOPUSEDCARS ly.833-72.38.~9286 clot. cond. $1099 /offer some models. FOREIGN, DOMESTIC 8cyl., 4 speed. air cond.. 494·4378. 135 Emerald ••••••••••••••••••••••• SUPS AVAIL.AIU YAC Newport 646-0551 m. Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA 30' Avalon moorioa. In 714/549-8023 [root of Scari's & s wim --~----1 area. $25,000. 673-SOM. Tr&lll 9560 ••••••••••••••••••••••• For Sale: 19' cus\om· made, jet powered skl boat and trailer. top cond. 54().()378. 30' Searay Weekender, must sell, immac, pro- fessionally maintained by skipper Twn 454 Crusaders. 40 hrs. elec rclrig & stove, sips 4·5. Call an 6pm. 640-7822. 8ef &pm, 540-3383. Tua pan..._ ••••••••••••••••••••••• c ''"" s.H/ .... tl20 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1971C9MC liUYWA&ON •-Alrcond.PM.._, .. I brdH c:rul•• c:ontrot ~ -'*' '""""'"' ITOR2teU& 14ll02l ••••••••••••••••••••••• 57976 Older camper •·sale, w/o t ruck. $ISO Stovo as WE H "'VE re{rig. 64().2700 A ·1s Font camper van, rul· A GOOD ly equip'd, 10 rn1, aft a SB.ECTION =7m from s..s call OP JIMMYS, or CLASSICS mag wheels, radlal tires. '77 45QSEL. all xtras snrf Bay AM /FM s ter eo · ·-~·-------If your car ls extra clean (700K.ZZ> <Stk. P3470> leth. cass. etc. 22M mi's. ~-r deal' 74 Celica GT see us fi.rst A· l cond. S22.950 or $3600 & 11"'-IAUER IUICX $4779 take over 1se at. Sll8/tm. Mags. am/fm. 52.000 mi. 2925 Harbor Blvd P. P. &16-4644. $2,SOO/otrer · 494·5348 THEODORE Costa Mesa 979-2500 . . l.!nl Toyota Corona 4-dr WE BUY USED CARS CALL GARTH Used Ca r Mgr 540-5630 1011\SO\ ,~ ~O\ • LINCOLN·MERCURY 2626 HARBOR BLVD COSTA MESA WEIUY USB>CARSI We're the new Cbevrolet dealership in the Irvine Auto Center We need your used car' JOE MACPHERSON CHEVROLET 21 Auto Center Dnve IRVLNE 768-7222 WANTED! ROBINS FORD 10C>0 HARBOR BLVD COSTA ME!>A Ml·OOIO 70 280SE classic, xlnt sedan, air, xlnt -cood cond, full power. air. $1250 &42-0874 $1.S,000. 675-8\11 ·---·-------T,..... 97'7 "73 MB 220D. 4-spd Orig ••••••••••••••••••••••• o~e~. $8000. 640·1l80. '7S TR7, AM /FM cass. 7 .»9.00PM air, lo mi's, very clean. o,.t 9746 646-163C>or646-U05. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '74 i,; TR6. mint. '72 Opel Manta, 4·spd, $SSOO. 557-3220, ext 190 ~~·~:.1~ ~£~~~ M2·40i6, Nancy. or752·5522 VolrsWOCJlll 9770 Porsclw 9750 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------1 ·······················VOLKSWAGEN Pristine of Huntington Saln-5.nlce *DRIVE A* *LITTLE ••• * SAVE A LOT SHOP&COMPARE BARWICK DATSUN ...._ i11 I • .1111 1; 11,,1\11 8 3 1·137S49J.Jl7S ~ '78. auto. A/C. 6000 mi's, must sell. $8500 54~121.9 494-0536 Beach is offering lacquer -- paint. metal finishing & Top Dollar fender Oaring to Ponche owners 536-7888. Paid for Used VW's COMMONWEALTH 1!111 911S. only 4500 m1, air, sunroof, leather, MOTOtlS AM1FM. loaded $18,SOO SINCE 1953 67.>4878. 494-1619 1442 So Bnstol Santa Ana l.!115 Carref'fa, 29.000 mi. 5 .. 1.. "'220 elec. windows. A/C, -.v-v leather Int • cassette. Approx 2 ml No of polyurethane pa 1 n t. _Soutb __ C_;oa_as_.t_P_l_u.a_. __ ALLEN RESALES lt77TOYOTA STAnON WA450M ., ... ••1-• ..., 5-~(~ . 53995 1974 PLYMOUTH SBIUN&COUP! elM>ll ···-meg -l8C:IOrY .... concl ' ..,. ...... IS. t3tt.42l 52995 lt76FORD THUtealllD lM NEW!lt lltfoN IW •X1tflot. lull power I wlr• wllHll 8Ml1ll CettHWO.I 56995 19710U>S81 4 DOO. '"DtESB. • F11lt'1' l1c:1ot,, •outo1>•ct l1>elvdf119 .... -uu llrMd ME'#!ll 11'71141 MUST SEE TO APPIECIATE '77 Mark V .,., r . · lmmac! P.P.640-8444 ·m :m V-8, auto, PS, PB. Weekdays. 9·5 air. stl belted radlals. '78 MK v. Diamond $1250. P.P.5'6-&97. Jubilee. 460 V-8, all op-1967, &ood cood. 8,000 on tions.9Mmiles.752·1978 new eng. Mus t sell. $2000/080. Eves Hl2 642-8738 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Qda•lslle HSS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Corvette-Bids oow being 1971 Cutlass Supreme, taken on Indy 500 pace xlnt car, death In family, car ln stock. Fletcher must sell. $4900. ~. Jones Chevrolet 6633 eves. Westmins t er Ave.1·.--------W est ml o s t e r , c a 63 CUTLASS V .a. auto. 8BH444 PIS. Runs good. S400fof· _________ , rer.6'6-~l Linda . '76 Corv. beige, leather i.n1. AM /FM IHrlc. T·top. A/C, lmmac. new ti.res. te.SOO. 111.000 ml. 640-1751 Doct,. tt35 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '77Dedgit ...,... 6 cyl, stick. shift. AM /FM Stereo. <096SPN) S:Sl.95 540-5630 1011 \SO\ & SO\ • LINCOLN Ml RC Ufi\o' ?SOlck c.lle5s Sll&p1 ·-v .s. auto·trans , radio landau top, l5l6PXZ> 13495 540-5630 1011\sox & so~ • LINCOLN ·MERCURY 2626 HARBOR BLVD OOSTAMESA ""'° 9957 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '75 Pinto Runabout. air. AM/FM , PS/PB • .C.sp. 2626 HARBOR BL VO 8C7·21lll 833·3420 COSTA MESA -------------73 Runabout. xJnt cond., 1 '6S Dart. 2·dr. &·stick. owner. lo mi, AC. 4 spd, • clean lo & o ut. nu $1660. PP 644-4493 radials 24M PG $.'595. '74 Squire Statfonwagoo, 968-9921. lo mi's. AM/ FM st.er, ford 9940 lmmac $?..400. 1~1099. "12 VoUtawagen bubbletop SUIURIAMS camper This one bas & VAN everything Porsche CONVERSIONS engine. new Urea andNtll•..-•••--• battery Excellent coodl· Late model Toyotas, '74"'-2l60Z 2+2. Bronze Volvos, Pickups & vans Alr. stereo, new radials Call us today! 29,000 rru Mmt cond Pvt pty 776-3678 1.973 Datsun 240Z. auto. black. new Perelll tires VW '74 Super Beetle, sun· Best offer 3907 Seashore r'f. AM /FM. auto. red. Dr. NB 675-5344 x Int cond $2 . 9SO ~1440. 1978 PORSCHE 91 1 SC 1973 Bug, xlnt cond ....................... ~-·· 9960 ... llmllll!IBll!l!!!'aill ~FQAPLHONf L.5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1970 01.11ter. A/C. new paint, AM /FM slereo, xJnt medl. rood. $1200. 536-7476 lion. 59.000 miles 830-315'7 CABOVER Camper for s hortbed truck Xlnt cond w /xtras $900 631-0317 or 6*8402 ............... c .......... ~ •46-tlll or S40.U'7 A/C, mags, AM/FM, xlnt cond $H50. 837 .605() ext 554 weekdays, 497-2616 eves & weekends Th. . 1 d d', Yellow, lo mi. AM/FM 1s one 1s oa e . ' radio. many xtras Sl350 Mocha brown eirtenor & &eQ.9328 aft 8PM . low miles Pn pt.y Call --------- 538-5120. ·m VW Bug. less than 200 '78 Special Edition 280Z. mi's on r eblt e ng & atn SEVIL.Ll Jaguar XJ·6L '75, '76 or loaded $2000 down 1.972 914, 1.7 liter, needs transm. Body llke new. Camper like new Datsun 'TT under 30M ml Wht, T.O.P P.P 6754584 work· terrific buy $3200 Call 540·6900 ext 2SS W /ASTROROOF 1'oyota Love $375. Truck yellow or s ilver P /P. • as Is. financing avail 9-5pm. Aft 5 call 549·~ Leather Interior. full tiresS35ea S4S-963t Call644H220. 77 280Z. s ilver cpe. auto. 54.1·4898 power, fac..-tory air cond'., · '631nlem'l PU. Short box. fully loaded. immac ---------Divorced. mus\ sell '89 AM /FM stereo w/slant Motorilld IU&n 9140 whtspokewhls trg knob· Student needs dependable cond, xpertly tuned, lo '65 Porsche 356C. clean, VW, lo ml's, $1395 '68 CB, Wt steering wheel & ••••••••••••••••••••••• b\es, 4 cyl e'ng Ofr trans. Must be reason rru's 642·6694 red/blk. reas onable VW.$875.644-1059 wirewbeel covers 21,000 Peugeot um. l.500 mi's. 979-01&1or754-014i able Lane548·2335 P.P miles (5273) '76280Z 557-1868 • '7S Rabbit, air. AM /FM x.lntc:ond. SS40. '70 Dats. PU Alr cond .. sereocassette. ster, loml's. gd cond. SI 1,788 C:.111197-6204. Aallos.1•parled mags & CB Metalhc '64 356C, blk. chrome S2800 64().8358 Nabe Mill ... ~ 4 cyl. • 4 speed, radio, ••n•••••••••••• ••• • • •• brown & Excellent cond whls, Need cash. $4900 ---------rs ~/ 915 beater. Camper s hell G-rd 9701 (AUMS42> 29.000 actual O.Pl.661·3930 '69 Squareback $600. <a:5832T> <Stk.#1718BT> ••••••••••••••••••••••• miles. 879·2361 days 960·2308 "'U1'0 CRW"PRm ··••••••••••••••••••••• $1565 '74 Maseratl Marek. ...ann 19111911£ Rebwltenglne eves&wknds.$teve "' ...... ,...,. Ronda MC 450 Mod forks. rf , d 1 d d .,._,., AM /FM stereo $7000 or ---------Div. of Nabers Cadillac custom seat. headers. pe ec. con · 08 e · 548·2196 offer 586-2SOOor 770-0366 '77 VW Dasher, back from 1425 IA.KB ST. tunS·loob perfect. Mov· 11•1658-2244• 714!92S-0807 -.7-4-·~-2-60_Z __ A_C___ Europe pickup. lo m1. ACROSS FROM FEDCO ing. mUS\seU. 536-7711 or call collect. ..., · / ' auto, '77 9llS. lmmac •. sunr'f, sunroof. stick, mu.st sell. COSTA MllA 981).58'4 AlfoRc.nto 9705 AM/FM tape, mags, llhr. stereo, crwse. al· 8estoCr.2L3/S92·S227 ••••••••••••••••••••••• _l_ou_v_e_rs_._S4200 __ ._75_1_·0930 __ ._ toyS, loaded. T.O. lse • + ---------54o.9 I 09 ?2HosldaCISOO "71 Spyder. MINT COND. '76 Datsun 610 St.a Wag. S. P .P. Call x30·3060. 1988 Baja Bug. reblt eng, ----.-.-.--- Call 768-91.23 afut· Must sell. $l300. Call $3500 or bst ofr. 586-1Z34 831·2323. nu paint, wbls & tires, ---------l Cbe '61 f'ord ~ to 287 Af 6 •· k d _ __... _______ , aslung $1300 Eves. aft lob HetTod Two Hondaa 350 4 cyl. '73 Pi~p w /shell. run~ &12-l506 ~77 t .,. w n s '6S 356C P0rs<!hr.:Nevade 4Pm. ~7526. 21149 Los Alsos one lesa \ban 1000 ml, a e re at M alte offer IMW 97 '2 · car Must sell this week 1,...;:.._.:...-------Mi sloes Viejo collectors Item. cherry m.98Si ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rat 9725 395 Victoria, CM. 752-0238 '7S VW Rabbit. stereo. s Bi(). Other excel ll, ---------1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4-dr, xlnt. $2200. Ask for Youaretbew1nner of mi$600.Lid873-7123 '78 Chev~ T. pickup,. '76 131-C lean 22 m l. '739142.0.App/Perf grps, Rlchard.833-8296 2tkketB-C$13.00Value) nuvaJves&brakes . totbeJULY IS Most seU 1974 Honda 750, auto. P JS. P/B, AM/FM stereo/Cass, auto. $3,500. $4600 543.2597 '70 White Bug. Good cond. 8:00PM Perlormance bro cass stereo. Xlnt eond. 642-6M9. 979·7613 $1500. Call 5S\·S948. or of the custm paant. c me & $4500 OBO. 963-5476 '67 912, new radials, new 646-2212 1__. U-'-- many xtras. $1000 Ran· '72 850 Spyder, convt, webers. Marshall Sale. I----------1-r-dy, S56·758S, all Spm; '71 Ford Rancbero GT, w/removable hrd lop, 2PM July 14. Newport •74 Bug.t owner. lo mi's, stallion Show SS7·90fl0 loaded, must sell. Sl495. AM /FM. mus t see AutoWorks,CM. lClnt cond. $2300 firm. attbe Kawasaki. 76-400. Safety 963-52.88. 968-2251 1978 BMW's $1.975/ofr. 548·3049. '7 hi . 673·31m ANAHEIM bars, rack, new chain & '68 Dodge "> Vart P.U. HERE NOW.I '75128 Sport mint cond. 4 4 9ll. w te. au, AM / CONVENTION tire. $800. 551-SJS7 Xlnt cond. Nu t're" •. Spd 6 FM cass. 20M mi 's on v.-1.. 9772 CENTER ' "' "' • 2 ,000 mi. $2700. re bit. OBst ofr over unO July 14 lS 16 ....... ao·-. CX"ell. ,, __ .... rims Uner 42.000 actual C'"' ... _ l!!'W'tll 642-2210; 548·1SSll. """""""'. 982.2369, ••••••••••••••••••••••• c~" ..... .,...... . 't 329 t LOJ•o ._ " "'""' ml. UUJ boxes ~2161 ~-• 15 ~ llfORI YOU IUY .... '""'"''"o• ex . • o tioo, lo mi, ~50/beat. IODY SHOP 76 X 1.9. Llke new. stereo ...._.. 9755 claim your tlckets. ~UIOI '89CbevyPU,goodcond. NOWOrEH Sac. $4,150. Priv p ••••••••••••••••••••••• AUSIDVOLVO, *** Sl.800 or bst oCr Call aft 644.:i887 See us al Southern '75 Hooda XI.175, llOO mi, ROt>ert TEST DRIVI OUR Oranae County's Volvo 18 Seville. 3,000 mi, all $450/0fler 640·2181 . 4pm.960-25ll9, · IXCa&.INT .._. 9727 "LE CAR Headquarters. hilt. Loaded. Im mac ~ Mil aeU "78 Toyota SR5. S&ICT10MOF ••••••••••••••••••••••• OFTHEY~"'R" MAJt9UISVOLVO cond. Warranty. $13,500. ....._..._..w.V t.eavtnc State call Nick 1Mwus•w .,._.-w·1a IOA M1s.s10NV1EJ0 Pri1P49f.161s JC.A t 0 8'7.aMl b Good lnveotory in stock O ... ,::e•• 6 We may ave your neirt HO~"'A Cars Hurrywhllethey last! lll-2110 4tS-121 "13CdV. leth int, vynl top, •••••-•••••••••••••• .. 'M Chevy Panel truck car ln our mventory. C.11 ~ MIRACLE _ ... ~ COU...-loaded. $3000. 675·3411, Rent a 1m EaecuUve wtwi.odows. Reblt 283. uatodayl MANY ~ "' • dys.6'4-S32S,eves. lllolorbome or Mlnl A/C,xlntc:ood.$1500./ofr t31·2040495-4949 ToC11aoMFrofttl MAIDAJREHAULT VOLVO = ~ .::i: ~ . UNIVERSITY ngoc:,.~~IJ~d. EX~USIVELY VOLVO "!:;i:=r~· Ca~~~,~~ tbesenwnben '58 GMC CtuSLc, stock oe..a.a. 64S.5700 Urjeet Volvo Dealer 1 top, full pwr, cruise, lfl.6777 V-3, 17MPG. very clean. ..... C... • GMC ln8<rrvai:.t~~I 1 AM /FM stereo. tUt whl, 5~7•7777 Sl100orbetolr.540-9049. $ *** RECT 1 immac. SSSOO/beat ofr. ~ 1 sr a ••OADWAY Tl'WICU DI 1 Call 552-5110 ·rmv·~:.!::Arrow. ~b=:~EL~ '"'~'*4TI~~:~:~!~. K~~!°.re~,-7.. ~:: ~. "'·~i,•L:~.~·~:: Sips 5. Loeded. Weekly SoUt seats, Ult wheel. •USED 1uW1• -n Youarethew1nnerof ~~..A..~-~-~ rental only •49·2138 AM /Flll steno " mag ___ <u':'Ll"l .. ••••••••••••••••••••• 2t.tckets-<$13.00Value> 2025 S ~ ?3 8.......___._C• .... CSQa,-...evea. _.._ __ ,_ LIKE NrWI I' ••--P· .,.. . " '88 Gb l1 "Clean" nu totheJUTY 1.. --"'• -"""--------• WIJC'CUJ. "" • '142002A.A1C1<598LPOl M M .., ol Anaheim 750-1 c.us.c.1304 25• Kncutive, Diplomat (,\E5Q218), ,755301 Auto (916M1V) radials, A /F cass. 8:00PM Performance _. _ Oforrenl.$3SOperwk.9' $5211 '762002,4spS./Rl54tPRZ°> Bra, cover. + ittras. ofthe 2 S w edla h V o lv o 1 4 Fleetwood Tallaman. pe r ml 498·2145 or "76530l :Lwt(808PJtM) IZ200/betofr 973-581.2 Roylt~ Mecbanlc1 n e w a t 50,000 ml'a, collector's •SOtO .. t-L.-rs '78530l; S/R(581RCSl '6S, llght blue. ster. xlnl SI•• S..Ow lvan'a, 19!>5 Harbor item~ xlnt cond. $7500 or 1 ~ '77320; 4spsr <'121SMV> cond, suoo. at the Blvd .• C.M.~1982 bltorr.M6-1S9S. BIU. ..,~ =.!:otor AUTO CacT• CtoMcl °" S.d11yt S3l·9S60. co~~N '70 UM, nu tires, shocks. t sell '76 El Dorado bome. A.IC. P /B, P /S. Dtv.olNaben ~dlllat '14 3.ocs. sUver. sunroof, Mmda 9731 CENTER AC/AM /fl'M, letb Int. coavttt.,xJntcond,aJlop- llllllO. \nllll, HS pn, llM I 421 IAla ST. a Ir. AM / FM ca 11, ... •••••••••••••••••••• JW, 14, u. 18 SUOO/olr. 548•5929, pm. Uona. 55:1-0776 ...,, only drtven lt.• ACROSS FROM FEDCO ab1oh1tely MINT coodl· '73 RX-2. XJ.nt cond. New <:all 642-5878. en. 329, to 1988, lo ml'I, lood cond. f72 C.dlllac sedan, bha m1·1, su.ooo. '1Mllll. COSTA MISA Uon. ..oK ori• ml. $17,.500. ures, palnt. $1800. cau clalmyourtkkeu. Sises. P.P. wtwbt vloyl top. Xlrrt lilt So.. vue. S.A. 14~91 " •1180 IJG..4.lm, • • • MM toe. cond. s:noo. 968-4044 l.et>••-1: .. -0....,, ........ ~ ... ...-. ....... c:.i.... ,....... '77FORD Gtl.UIADA4DI. VS, auto. traps., auto. trans .. power steering & brakes, stereo r ad io. heater. w/s/w tires and wheel covers. 007SWS> CStlt. s:n A> $4396 THEODORE ROBINS FORD '2000 HARBOR BLVIJ COSTA MESA 041 0010 t965 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Don1 Miu This '68 Cslm built Pontiac. Big eng .. Cstm air, ccmd. Full power, windows, seat. a.ntenna. reclining scat, 8 track stereo tape. t\ll whee l. all main tenance <every 1500 m1 >. new sparks. wires & plugs every SOOO Ma.int recorm on file A Classic w /custom radial tires. disc brakes Best offer g uaranteed . (714 > 556·7767. days t2ll) ~-388.S 'IE Ventura, 2·dr, vtn top, xlnt, auto. A IC P /S. P /9 9)0.548-8849 Flreb1rd. 73·Eaprit. Ac. am/fm. clean. sPorty P/P. $2,750.837-1055 "76 Granada Ghia, Im· '71 Pont Wagon New mac & loaded, $3900. transnussion $ll9S. Day ; 898·3S33, eve; 54S·9624 846-6050 '71 Ford LTD Country Squire Wagon. A/C, P /B, P /S, low miles, good cond. Trailer pkg. $1500. or offer. 645·2788 '70 Ford Galaxy, 2·dr, P/8 / P /S, 63M ml. seoo. 644£48 an 7 or wknds. 64 Ford Ranchero. 6 cy. s t andard trans. & camper shell. $795 or bes\ offer. 49'l·8121-Ga.ry 1977 COROLLA SRSLJmAa< 4 cyl., 5 speed, AM /FM radio, rallye wheels. radial tires & less than 19,000miles. <302SPT>. $1999 THEODORE ROBINS FORD ~ObO HARBOll BLVD COST/\ MESA b"1'2 r"'1C> ~~~C~tt,~· A~ 11u •aWrd 9'70 Cobra Jet heads. Good ••••••••••••••••••••••• work truck $1600/be6l of. "76 T·Bird. Cully loaded, fer.SS&.S861or847-86SS. lmmac. $5000. Pvt party . S40· 7800 or 524-2151 '73 Ford LTD Country Sq. evestwknds. Wgn. A/C, AM /FM, New bnkes. new Urt!9, Good '73 T· Bird. Full power. cood.. $2200673-2692 New radials Wife's car MIMftdl t947 Asking $2900. 892-1&12 ••••••••••••••••••••••• v.,.. 9974 '78 8 Cyl. 4 dr •uto. Air •••••••••• ••••••• ••••• • cood. P /S. 14,000 mi's. 2 *** Yrs warr. s:noo. or bst Mtlrry Wood oft. s:il-1145. 1435 Mo. Coat Hwy '70, 2-dr. 8-cyl, auto, nu LegllillCI t.aclt Urel. air. very clean. 2nd You are the winner or ownt. 1195. 988-9921. 2Uckeu-<S13.00 Value) 11 to the JULY lS Mlicwy 9'50 8:00PM Performance ••••••••••••••••••••••• oftbc ORANGE COUNTY'S ltorai u,ta. NIWUT ~Sllow UNCOLN·MLRCURY at the Dealenblp Is now OPEN ANAHEIM lAYR.ADr•o•. OONVENTtON LINCOLN·MEKCURY CENTER lt.18AutoOet1~r or. July 14. lS.18 SDFwY·Lake Focestex.lt cau 842~8. ext. 321. to IRVINE clalmyourtlckcu. IJ0..7000 ••• • 1 7 t l f " B1•ntington Beach Fountain Valley EDITION l VOL. 71 , NO. 191 , 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES I 1 ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JULY 10, 1978 t\ f ternooil N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS f"Hutton . Outspent Other llB Hopefuls ~f The five successful candidates Bame apent $19,263 and Bonfa ln addition, the Community International Corp .. Waltham, J .E . Groth. auto dealer. $200 , executive. $50: Irene Carpenter tn last April's Huntington Beach spent $15,782. PoJiticaJ Action Committee of Ma ss.. $ 2 0 O; Nu c I ear Heinrichs of Huntington Beach. Newport property manager, $50. ~·city elections spent a totaJ of J ohn Thomas was the biggest the Huntington Beach Chamber International Labs Inc., compute r softwa r e, $200: Fred Plotke, Santa M onie~. [ $75,000 on their campaigns spender in the city council race . of Commerce plunked in $31,278. Waltham, $100; Robert Stem, National Spo rts Sco ri n g d eveloper, $80; Dr. J.R. Rosda1I, according to documents filed He used $21,281 of his own M acA !lis te r was the only contractor. Sherman Oaks. $50; computer service, Fountain Pomeroy, Iowa. $50; CREPAC. withthe cityclerk. money,recordsshow. successful candidate backed by Shappell Government Housing, Valley, $200; WilUam Sangster , Huntington Beach·Foun t atn • Gail Hutton, who wo n a Among the othe r council the chamber unit. Beverly Hills. $200; Georgiana r eal estate broker, Orange, $50; Valley Board or Realtors, $200· ~ landslide victory over J erry winners, Don MacAUister spent The following contributions Sc hara. school couns elor, Jean Schumacher, Huntington Cr a ig Clifford, builder, SantJ .. Bame and Don Bonla in the race $8,502; Bob Mandie, $4,336 and were reported by Mrs. Hutton: Missoula, Mont.. $100. Beach housewife. $200 ; J oe Monica, $200; Rainbow Disposal for city .attorney, was the city's Ruth Bailey, $3,912. Melanie Clifford N e drud. Also Harriet Gugge nheim Noblin, Inglewood furrier. $200. Co .. Huntington Beach. $100. spending champion with a total Dr. F rank Hoffma n spent Missoula, Mont .• $200 ; Dr. Mark Newport Be a ch, S-2CO. Jane A I s o . Mark N i e Is e n , Also. Robert Guggenheim . . . of $37,069. Sl4,899ina losingcause. Nedrud, bfissoula. $200; Nuclear Dehne. Huntingtoo Beach, $50; Huntington Be a c h I umbe r <See SrENDING, Page A2l .NB Man Facing ·Drug Rap By JOANNE REYNOLDS Ott.lie Dall, ...... StMt A West Newport r esident, wh ose ne ig hbor s beca m e sus picious of the odor of ether coming from his apurtment. has · p een a rrested on cha r ges of m a nufacturing a nd sellin g narcotics. Newport Beach police booked Aa ren John Burcham , 25, after alle gedly finding wh a t one officer described as a complete laboratory in his a partment at 7406 W. Ocean Front. Police claim that Burcham was making a cocaine substitute o ut of a com pound calle d lidocaine. Narcotics investigator Mike Hietala alleged Burcha m also h a d a pound of cocaine of unde t ermined purity in his ·ap a rtm e nt wh e n h e w as arrested Friday evening. Burcham was booked into city jail and is being held in lieu of $50 ,000 bail. Hi et a la s aid Burcham told him he is to report t o Chino Me n's Prison next Monday to begin serving a term ·~for a narcotics c onviction handed down last year. Burcham was arrested after police we re calle d by an unide ntified neighbor at about 5 p.m. who complained about the odor of ethe r com i ng from Bur c ham 's ocea n fron t apa rtment. . Officer Michael Hyams drove to the area a nd said he a lso smelled the odor coming from the residencl'. <See DRUGS, Page A2) Stnkn truck Recovered From Lake Whoever stole a Mi dway City Sanitation District ser vice truck Saturday night just kept on truc kin ' into the la ke a t a Westminster graveyard, poli ce said today. The little fo reign i mport pickup was exhumed from the pond at Westminster Memorial Park and Mortuary Sunday and returned to the agency that owns it. Investigators said the degree of damage to the stolen vehicle take n from the lot at 14451 Cedarwood St.. Westmins ter was still being assessed today. ' Police indicated whoever took the pickup apparently was just • joyriding. Soviets Dock 'Progress 2' MOSCOW IAP> -The Soviets have succeeded in docking a second unmanned space ship to the orbiting Saly ut 6 space station, sending letters and supplies to the two cosmonauts aboard. Tass, the official Soviet news agency, reported that Progress 2 linked up with the manned station Sunday afternoon. It broueht fuel, other s upplies, ' letters from home and other items to Vladimir Konlenok and Alexander Ivanchenkov1 who are in their fourth week 01 Earth orbit. f. POEIS UBOR f 'IV PAY BILLS f Man doe3 not Uvc by bread I aJone, but oven poets have to make a livtng and they find lt r dJfficult in tod•y's world. ~ Fta&urlni, Page Cl. APWI ......... NATALlA SHCHARANSKY HOLDS PHOTO OF HUSBAND Preas Conference Held In Paris to Protest Trlal Soviet Dissidents Plead Innocent MOSCOW <AP ) -The Soviet Union put two leading dissidents on trial today in cases that t hre ate n to agg r avate t he growing tension in U .$.-Soviet r e lati on s . Both pl ead ed innocent, and the wife or one appealed to Washington for help t hat she said could free her husband. Anatoly Shcharans ky. 30, a key m e mber of the J e wish emmigration movement here. rejected allegat ions that he s pi ed for the CIA a nd said he considers them "absurd," his brother Leonid said. He faces a possible death pena lty but is expected to get a long term in la bor camp if convicted. A co u r t o ff ic i a l sai d Shch aransky was accused of s upplyin' agents with state secr.ets1 · including information about the locations of a number of defense enterprises which are secret." In Kaluga, 100 miles south of Moscow. Alexander Ginzburg, 41 , a longtime human rights activi~t, pleaded innocent to a charge of anti-Soviet agitation and propaganda, punishable by up to 10 years at bard labor. But be told the court he might modify bis plea if his guilt could b e proved during the proceedings, his wife s aid. · Weste rn . r e porte r s were barred from both courtrooms . Shcharansky's wife, Natalia, told a· news conference in Paris she believed further state ments by President Carter and the Congress might enable her husband to "be free and go out from Russia." She s aid she could not recommend specific actions that U .$. and other world leaders could take. ''I'm no pollticlan." she said, but s uggested that Congress pass a resolution on the case. Mrs. Shcharansk,y, who lives in Israel, said she went to Paris to help moblHze world opinion in her husband's case. She is to travel to Washington later this week to meet wlth Vice President Walter F. ·Mondale. · SpeaklJll to reporters durinf a recess at the Moscow trlal, Leonid Shcharansky said his brother "l ook e d well , selt-conlldent and cheerrul" and .. smiled at him. Ginzburg's wife, Irina, who saw her husband for the ri rst time since his arrest 17 months ago, told Western reporters, "He refu sed to testify but made this refusal conditional on what witnesses said. Suzanne Rubio, 20, Costa Mesa. will reign as Queen of the Orange County Fair f ollowlng her selection for the honor during weekend competition. A former Miss Newport Beach, ~e works at Qlsnevland as an artist ond attend Orange Coast College. $5perMonth Hearing Planned On OC Sewer Fee A public hearing is scheduled July 19 on a proposal to charge a flat user ree of up to $5 per m o nth for sewe r services throughout Orange County. 'fhe fl at rate would affect 1.5 million citizens in 23 or the 26 cities served by the Sanitation Districts or Orange County. The only areas not affected by the sanitation proposal would be La guna Beach. Sa n Juan Cap istra no, San Cle me nte. Irvine and the Saddle back Valley. Up to now, each of the severr sanitation districts h as collected revenue from property taxes. But officials say that districts may be required to change over to a flat rat e s pe c ial assessement because of the passage of Proposition 13 which Ii m its property taxes to 1 percent of the 1975-16 assessed valuation. Gene ral Manager Fred Harper said today that the district prefers to continue with the past assessment practice but tha t a g reat de al or legal uncertainty clouds the issue. "That Oat rate charge would be a standby measure," Harper said. "We would prefer to stay with the past assessment practice because 1t ts more equitable." PlACENTIA Harper pointed out that some sm a ll users would pay slightly more if the flat rate fee is imposed. MAP SHOWS ORANGE COUNTY SANITATION DISTRICTS Sewer Charges Proposed to Off set Effects of Prop. 13 He added that owne rs of property with high assessed valuations will have a reduction in costs. Harper said that the di stricts would collect about $17 million by the flat rates. Sanitation district officials also are proposing that the county tax collector collect the flat rate revenues. Residents of Newport Beach and Huntington Beach would pay-the highest charges because of requirements to pump sewage to treatment plants. Huntington Beach residents could expect to pay an annual New York Terror Grenade Wielder Holds 4 Hostages NEW YORK CAP) -A man threatening to detonate what he said was 80 pounds of dynamite with a hand grenade and claim· ing to speak only Polish was holding four hostages -on~f them a judge -in the World Trade Center today, authorities said. T housands were e vacuated from the building. Members of the police hostage negotiating team were talking to the man by telephone through a Polish interpreter, according to police. Lt. Frank Reilly, of the police de partment's Em e rgency Services division, said eyewit· nesses saw the man holding "a World War 11 potato masher (a Gunman Robs Store inHB A s hort, tanned b andit, wearin1 a r ed baseball cap. robbed a Huntlnfton Beach party s upply store Sunday afternoon and fled on foot with :SlSS in loot, police rePoned. Tbe five-foot, lwo-lnch tall bandJt forced two female clerka Into the back room of Glee's Party Shop 5888 Edln1er Ave .• while br;.:dl~ 1 plJtol. The incident ocwrTe'd at 1:35 p.m., police aatd. A cut\olner telephoned Polle• but the bandit had fled the scene by the Ume officers arrived. • ' . type of grenade )," in the hear- ing room of the state Workmen's Compensation Board on the 36th floor of the center's Tower Two. The center Is the world's largest commercial office building com· pl ex. SeveraJ people said the man was a claimant and that his case had just been postponed for two months lo allow neurological and ort.hoJ>edic testing when he pulled oul the s upposed potato masher. Reilly said the man also was seen pulling a .. pushcart, on which he s ays he has the dynamite." The hostages were identified as a judge, an attorney. a state insurance re{)reseotatlve and a court reporter. Several thousand people were evacuated from five floors or the UO·story tower Two. Adelina Walker, a clerk In the hearing room who escaped said the ;udte "had just told the man s attorney that ther e would be a two-month delay for r eports and then suddenly the man took an object out of a bag and I walked out the door." lb . Walker described the man as twa hi• early 50s with i Nortbem European accent and dressed In caaual clothing. She sald Utls was "at least the second or third Ume he had had a hurma." On a nonnal workday. some 35,000 people work in the entire World Trade Center complex, ~ated on the southern tlp ot Manhattan. cha r~t' of $55.03 while Newport Beach resid ents would pa) S59.70. The public heann,g will b1· held July 19 at 6 p.m. at the· district'<; office. 10841 Ellis Avl·, Fountain Valley. • Notices or the public heannµ. were mailed last Thursday. Man Escapes 2 Kidnappers ROSEMOND (/\Pl A Lo.., Angeles man was shot while tr} ing to escape from two men who a ppa rently were digging his grave before killing hi m near this southeash!rn Ke m Countv ' town, authorities her(' said. · Kern County sheriff's depuhe:- said Mau rice Bus by. 20, called • the m al about 2:30 a.m. toda} after he escaped from the two me n who he said kidnapped him in a dispute over a girlfriend. Busby said he was kidnapped at g unpoint in Los Angeles, handc uffed , bis feet wired together and placed in the trunk of a car, deputies said. Coast Weather Night t hrough m id· m o rning low c loud s. otherwi se £air through Tuesday. Lows tonight 58 to 62. H.lgbs Tuesday in up. per 60s at the beaches to upper 70s inland. INSIDE TODA'\' Fourteen Amlah familit>s move to IOtdhem Wi!con8in where they 1eek ~lter op- Portunitf« Story Pcge A8. la .. ex llU ,_ hnlee .. .._._. Q ... ""' .. •1111 Lot~ C2 ........ ..,, ...... ..., ~lfwllll• AJ ......... ~ M ,Q ....... ,... u" ou-.. C:-y ., c.tlc• ., ....,, • .., ~ ., .--~ ., .,. .. """'8 a rttnt-. M I~..... M fM8tlft M"' ............. ...., .. 8'119f •• ,....._ CN •9"1 "'"' a.t,a ' ... ,,.,...,..... Secretary of State Cyrus Vance says he'll be going to G e ne va Wt•dncs day for 5trategic arms talk s des pite U S C'anccll ation~ of other meetings with Soviets to protest mistrc<.1tmcnt of di~ sidcnts. Boy, 16, Nabbed in NB Store Newport Beach officers. <.uded by Huntington Beach's police do~. cornered a 16·year-old boy m a Fashion Island department s tore Sunday night The youth s urrendered to Officer Ron Rodgers after a half-hour search in the darkened J C. Penney store. The search was touched off by a s ilent burglar alarm Hodgcrs said he was sent lo the store at 24 Fashion Is land at about 8 p.m. when the alarm was activated H c s aid he found a hole leading from the outdoor garden s hop into the indoor ~arden s hop. Rod~ers who crawled into the s hop lhrou~h the hole said hc found evidence that the intruder had gone into the main store, so he called for additional help. After the brief search, the youth reportedly ste pped out and s urrendered while offJcers were combin~ the ground floor. The boy, who told offi cers he t ook a pen and pencil set. was • released to the custody of his parents. residents or Glendale Fro• Page A J DRUGS ... Hyams got Burch<.im to come to the front door and when he asked if he could c heck the a partment Rurcham told him his ~irlfriend was as leep in the room from which the ethe r seemed to be coming. H yam s r eportedl y t old Burcham he feared for the girl's safety under thos e conditions a nd searched the apartment. finding the lab equipment anti na rcotics, but no girl. Hietala s aid today there was s o mu c h equipm e nt and paraphernalia confiscated that a truck had to be borrowed so the bulk or material could be taken to the Sheriff's cnme lab \n Santa Ana. Mo!il of the chemicals and narcotics were taken to the police station and Hietala said he would be spending the next Cew days taking inventory. "It's worth thousunds." he ventured today about the confiscated m aterials Plane Downed BILLINGS, Mont. tAP> -A Port Angeles. Wash .. man trying to set a world record for a long- dis tance light plane fli ght was killed when his plane crashed near here. Autbontles identified the man as Dr. Rodney Thomas H. Nixon, 49, a bone specialist. ORANGEOOAST ,. • DAILY PILOT TMO. ... ColUO.•r•Pf'OI '#!tf'twtMch '\((ll'ft ~"'°'"",...""" Pttt\ 1\out>t1\N'!Oftt bOt~ CN-'\t ~'"''tlq ~~. ~~"tfl'f'(I fiOf'I-\•,. ~'"'"° MonG•• U~f°'-141'1 ,.t•dlty fOt (OU• Mr'4 --· 11 .. 0 Hu•h~OI\ .. «h F-t••" ¥111•¥ "'""• S•dd••·o.ctt YAI .. , '"° ~8'«" Wv1"'(H\1 4 \,11 ... , .. ~_.lfod• lt(llft •~ CMlit4•LMil s.1;ytd•¥\ ~ ~ T ... ~~:;~~c::~;~~'l/.i:o';~~~»-,,_..,, ft•• ._., .. ._ tl'tHtO.ftt •M ,,. ... lft:r , .. , 11 twtn Vttt PtH~A,ltftCIC,."'"M ~~ '"'eiM•••"" .. tdllo• U•-•A """""''"° "''"'•Qlnt '"''°" 0-•rlMH IAM Ill<._.,. lfd A\l'tl•nl """"111"0 EClllOf\ "-····"'., W,t~ OranQolt Covn1, (di tot Huntlnaton ••Mt! Ottlc• 17t1fll .. (h ............ ..... ,,,. ~H••" ,. 0 &Go "O ._ Office• ""9V"•~•<h, lltliO'-••Sl,..t CM\a~-6 )IJOWt•t~~---•Y•O" tUlll~""'"-"' $t'I 0... ,,..._ T•i.ptloiM (114IMMU1 CluelflM MYentalfltMN171 ,.,_ _,,, o. ..... c:.v..i, °'""""""'"' ..0-1220 Moncsar J"'X to. 1a1e Brooke Inquiry Complete BOSTON IAP > T he in- vestigation has been completed to determine whether a grand jury should cons ider possible perjury charges against U.S Sen . Edward W Brooke. authorities said today. Middlesex County District At torney John J . Droney said he would make public his findings a t a news conference. Droney launched the pre· liminary investigation som e three weeks a go. saying he would have to study all evidence In the case before recommend- ing whether there was sufficient cause to take the m atter to a grand jury. Fl(fla B arvested ...,,.,.....,_. Duo Face Rapin 5 Deaths WINNIE. Texas <AP> -Five members of a ramlly missmg from a blood·spattered rural home here since July t havE> been found buried in a wooded area, and a woman was charged today with one count or murder In the case. police said. and a man is in custody. Authorities said a former m- law charged in connection with the disappearance directed the m Sunday n ight to the gravesile in neighboring J ef• ferson County . Joe Dugas. 31. of Port Acres. has been held in Chamber!' County Jail in Anahuac in lieu of $500,000 bond. Brooke. who is running for re- e lection this yeur, dereated Droney. a Democr at , in the 1972 race. The matter was referred to Droney by Probate Court Judge Lawrence Per era who round th a t th e Ma ssac hu setts Re publican h ad mude fuls C' statements on s worn documents In connection with his divorce case. Soviet fi she rmen at u collective farm harvest :;turgeon, from whic h caviar is ex- tracted. Some 10.000 tons of fish come trom farms like this one in Guryev region. A prepared statement from the Chambers County s heriff'c; office sa•d. "Positive ident1fic<> uon was established as mem bers of the Phillips family mis~ mg from their residence in Win- nie, Texas, since July 3." Brooke, the judge round, had misstated both the source and the a mount of a loan the senator claimed to be S49.000. Irvine Cops Hunt Suspects in Heist Pair Shot In County Park Lot The v1ct1 ms were 1dent1fied as Bishop Phillips, 64 . his wih• Ester, 66: a son Elmer . 31: tu:. wife Martha : and their 4-year old son Jas on . The latter thre<> lived m Woodward. Okl::i . and we r t> vacationing in Winnie Dugas was once married to J daughter of tht: elder Phillips. J us lice of the Peace J acl< Cravy . who conduc t r d a graves1de inquest . s a id the bodies were close together. '"The s hallowest grave was lR inches and the deepest was 4 to 5 reel. .. Perera permitted Mrs Brooke to r eopen the d ivorct' action beca use of those false state- ments. A. hearing is scheduled for Thursday in the divorce case. T he d ivo r ce would h ave become fina l June 15. but will have lo be tried again and a new property settlement worked out by the senator and his estranged wife Rcmigia. Irvine police today hoped an a ll -points police a lert would turn up an attractive woman who lured a French-Canadian news ca m era man o ff the freeway Saturday so he r two male companions could rob him. The woman. who wore a short. Levi skirt a nd a form -revealing s weater. pretended her car was broken down and stood on the s houlder of the San Diego Freeway. near J effrey Road, Fro• Page A J SPENDING TALLIED • • • Newport, $50; Rich a rd ancl Doris Felman . Santa An a attorney, $120: Jerry Matney. Huntingto n Beac h . school administrator. $55; J eanne R e in , P acifi c Palis ades decorator. $200; Huntington Be ach Company, $200: Roger Slates, Huntington Beach real es tate broker, $100; Paul and Carrie Macmillain, instructors. Orange Coast College, $100 Also, John Anderson, Santa Ana attorney, $50; Cameron and Hoffman, Fullerton. a ttorney. SlOO; Helen Boyle Clifford, Newport Beach , $200: Ann Andres. Santa Ana, a ttorney. S 100: Ke nneth a nd Rhoda Martyn. Huntington Beach. SlOO; Steve Chase. Huntington BC'ach. attorney. $50: William Anthony, Hunting ton Beach investor, $100. Also. Doris Felman, Santa A na attorney , $100 ; K .G . Kiraith. attorney, UCLA, $50 ; Me rcury Savings and Loan, S150; Priscilla Groth, Newport Beach , $200 : Geor ge Logan, attorney, Hunting ton Beach. $200 ; Groth C he v rolet , Huntington Beach, $200. Mrs. Hutton made loans of $29,864 to herself. The following conlri butions were reported by Mrs. Bailey: Phil Hohns tein. president , Hainbow Disposal, Huntington Beac h. $98; Gordon Hatch. Hunting t on Beach , owner Or ugorama, $50; Ruth Finley, housewife, Huntington Beach, $166: Ron Shenkman, s avings and loan executive. Huntington Beach . $90; Dr. John Howell, Santa Ana, $120; Elizabeth M 1gnanelli , Huntington Beach. S50; Gail Hutton. Huntington Beach. attorney, $77 ; Donnu Kee ler, Long Be ach. S160 ; Rh oda Martyn , Huntington Be ach. Ame rican Learning Corp. $8.5. Mrs. Bailey also received a loan of $300 from her husband, Sherwood. The following contributions • we re reported by Mandie: Gordon Hatch, Huntington Beach. Drugorama, S50; Ken a nd Rhoda Martyn, Huntington Beach, American Learning Corp .. $50. Mandie also made a Jo(ln or $2,679 to his campaign. The followi ng contributions were reported by MacAllister : Ric hard Bechler . S50 : Sky View Marina Corp., $200 : C REPAC, Huntington Beach. Fou ntain Va ll ey Board o r Realtors. $200; Al Sanbrano. Huntington Beach. en gineer. S63 ; Al Hatc h, Huntington Beach, $50 . Bob a nd Donna Mason. Huntington Beach, $55, Roger Slates, Huntington Beach . real estate broker. $200: Ron Shenkman, Huntington Beach, savin gs and loan executive. $100 : Fra nk Buccel l a . Huntington Beach, contractor. $200. Also, Mercury Savings and Loan. $200 ; Byron Ryberg. lluntington Beach. SlOO : Ralph Bauer, Huntington Beach. S55 : Jc-rry Kine feck, Huntington Beach. $72; Norma Gr aves , Huntington Be ach, secretary, $105: Gerald Arriola, Huntington Beach, $70: Dennis Towgood, Huntington Beach, $70. Also. John F. Dolan, Orange. StOO: Ron Kiter. Newport Beach, $200; Lindborg Racquet Club. Huntington Beach. $200; Anthony Bartoli. Huntington Beach, Con- tractor , S200; Real Estate Mart, Huntington Beach. SlOO; Tobin Realty Co.. Huntington Beach. SlOO , L.D. Zehnder. Huntington Beach, contractor. $100 : Stephen Smith , Huntington Beach, $50. Huntington Beach. $50. Also. Hermansen Construction Co., Huntington Beach, $200; Be tty Becke r . Huntin gt on Be ach. $50: Phillip a nd Elizabeth M ig n ane l l i . lluntington Be a c h , $110 . lluntington Beach Company. S200 ; Elaine Hankin, nurse. $55 . James Roberts. Hun tington Beach. cons ultan t. S88.50. Al s o , Barba ra S h a nk . Huntington Beach, $50; LarrY. Lucas. Huntington Beach, school principal, $55; Carol Kanode, Alta Vjsta. $55; George Blank , llunlington Beach, engineer , $55; Archie Kessell, engineer, Ford .. Aeronutronics, $78.50 ; frank Abbott, Huntington Beach, school s uper intendent, SSO ; W&B Builde rs, Santa Moni ca, SlOO : Jerwe l Enterprises, Huntington Beach. $100. MacAllister also loaned Sl.020 to his own campaign. 'Too Young' Patty Won't Tell All ATLANTA <AP > -Patty Hearst, resisting sug. gestions that she wrlte about her life, says she's too young to write an autobiography. "People tell me I should write a book," Miss Hearst, who Is serving a prison sentence at the Federal Con-ectional Institution \n Pleasanton, said in an inlervtew with the Atlanta Journal- Constitution. "My feeling has been that anything ·that smacks of an autobiograph,y at. 24 is arrogant to say the least." Miss Hearst also said she continues to be fascinated. as well as puiiled. by her transformation from newspaoer heiress to revolutionary. Mlss Hearst is ser ving a sev~ .. year sentence for her part in a bank robbery staaed by the revolu- tionary Symbionesc Liberation Army. She will be ell le for parole In 14 month11. .. waving at cars ror help. Victim Andre Gariepy, 34, of Virginia, on assignment in Los Angeles for the Canadian Broadcasting Co. and staying at a Newport Beach Hote l, steered his rented 1977 Cadillac off the road at the sight of her. He later told police she leaned next to his car window and told him her car wasn't working. Gariepy followed her to the light blue Ford Pinto hatchback sedan, and lifted the hood. As he did. two men ap- proached him. One had a gun. Gariepy said he couldn't see the m clearly in the 4:45 a .m. darkness, but said they cli mbed out of a roadside ditch. Assailant Stabs Cypress Store Clerk A Cypress market clerk was s ta bbed by an assailant who leaped rrom a storage room as the clerk opened the market S unday mornin~ Police said th<' clerk. Kenneth Eugene Moore. 22. of Cypress, was in stable cond1t1on at a local hos p1lal early todav According to police. Moor e was opening Fazio"s Market at 9937 Walker St., Cypress. when a man jumped from a storage room . repeatedly slabbed him <1nd the n fl ed on foot into u n earby r es idential neighborhood. Police said they have not yet uncovered a motive for the ap- parently unprovoked 8 a .m as. sault on the clerk. Outage Hits Town BURBANK <AP> -A burned- out transforme r at the main electric power generating sta- tion knocked out electricity in this community of about 83,000 for about four hours early today, s pokes m a n for the Burbank Department of Water. Light and Power said. Santa Ana police today are in vestigating the pre-dawn shooting death or a woman and the serious wounding of he r male companion. Details of the homicide were sketchy and the victims remam unidentified as investigators swooped down on the shooting scene. It was the parking lot outside the Ancient Mariner restaurant at 300 N. Tustin Ave . Initial reports indicate the man and woman were together in an automobile parked outside the restaurant when accosted by their assailant. Early reports a lso indicated the man was shot as he sat in the a uto. The same reports showed the woman apparently was either dragged from the auto or ran rrom it into a ne ighboring parking lot. She feH mortally wounded on the pavement and was dead al the scene while her companion was taken to Santa Ana Tustin Community Hospital where he r e portedl y is 1n cr1t1c a l condition. Police investigators said when the woman left the car she crossed the city boundary into Tus tin a nd thal the s laytng therefore is under dual pohcc· Jurisdiction. However. Santa Ana ofhccr.!> a rc taking the lead role m the investigation and the search for a possible suspect. Police said they did not know the relationship of the two victims and indicated they did not believe the shooting was "' result or marital entanglement. They ruled out the possibility t hat the dua l s hooting wa~ anything Like a murder·su1cide Santa Ana police re ported rece1vmg the e mt!rgency call al 4.20 am Boy, 9 , Drowns SANTEE <A P ' -While his father played baseball at J schoolground nearby. a 9.year old boy drowned Sunday in the San Diego River. Aulops1e!' were orde red by Cravy. and Jeffer son County pathologiSL'> took custody or tht• bodies Cr a vy said authorities we n• not certam what motivated thl· killings. Dugas' brother, Richard Le~. has said m a sworn statement that Dugas told him on July 1 that he had kidnapped the fam! ly at gunpoint July t and had take n the m to a · 'pr<'par ed graves1tP ·· Lee: said l,)ugas told him ht: was in the company of a woman at the time he a bducted the family. Linda Mac Burnell. 30, wa~ a rrest e d a t h e r h o me II' Nederland today and charged with capital murder before State District Judge .Jack Cravey H<:r connection to the cast was not 1mmed1ately known Dugas had previously derued having anything to do with the . fam1l y'l' disappearance Tht disappearance was dis· c·o vered whe n one o f th1 Phillips' sons returned from ·' wee kend trip to Houstor. and round the house blood·spattered but vacant Newport Cops Seeking Lead On Nude Man Newport Beach police today sought leads on a naked man who threatene d a Newport S h ore·~ wo ma n o v er lh P weekend The 36·year-old victim told pol 1 ce s he wa~ w :Ilk• ng on Newport Shores Drive at about SJ p. m f'ndav when the mc1den1 occurred She said the man pulled hi!\ truck mto an alley 1n front of her and Jumped out He ordered her to commit an unnatural sex acl or he would shoot her The woman '>aid c;he ran a nyway and heard the truck dnvinJ? QfC You're Invited to Our First Ever Major I Savings to 50% Off On Our Entire Selection of Suits & Sportcoats! Equally Great Values On Our Famous Selection of Neckwear, Shirts. ifrousers &. Sportswear. Genttemen•s Clothing r Inspired by Tradition 46 Foshlon Island, Newpor1 Beach (714) 640·6310 . . 7 7 I , Irvine ED ITI ON VOL. 71, NO. 191, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNlA Soviet Trials Begun 2 Dissidents Chnrged; U.S. Tension Mounts MOSCOW <AP> -The Soviet Union put two leading dissidents on trial today in cases that threaten to aggravate the erowing tension in U.S.-Soviet r e l a tions. Bo th pl ea d e d innocent. and the wife or one a ppealed to Washington for help that she said could free her husba nd. Anatoly Shcharansky, 30, a key m embe r of the Jewish emmigration movem ent here, rejected allegations that he s pied for the CJA and said he considers them "absurd," his brother Leonid said. Budget Diked He faces a possible death penalty but is expected to get a long term in la bor cam p if convicted. A co u rt o Hicial sa id • Shc haransky was accused or s upplying agents with state secrets, "including information about the locations of a number of defense enterprises which are secret." In Kaluga, 100 miles south of Moscow, Alexander Glnzburg, 41, a longtime human rights a ctivist, pleaded innocent to a cha rge of anti-Soviet agitation a nd propaganda. punishable by IRWD to Propose Service Increase Directors of the Irvine Ranch Water District, meeting at 6 ' o'clock tonight, are expected to a pprove a 1978-79 operating , budget that is 92 percent higher • than last year's, j umping from SS million to $9.6 milUon. The operating budget is small compared to the district overall budget which includes capital project expenditures, which last :vear was over $41 million. With the budget proposal is a proposal to increase cha rges for water and sewer services. The proposed rate increases are 21.9 percent for untreated • wa~er. 15.9 percent for treated water and 14.8 percent for se\\1er services. I I Untreated <agricultu ral > water would . be jncreased from $36.93 per acre foot, to $45 per acre foot. Treated (household> wa ter would go from an average monthly customer bill of $7.70, to $8.90. Sewer charges would go from $7.50 per month, to $8.60. Water District Ma nager William F. Hurst claimed the in- creases are justified because of a projected 32 percent increase in customers served by the dis· tri<:t. Hurst also blamed rising costs for wholesale water the district buys, by 13.l percent, and in energy bills. of 10 pereent to 12 percenL The operating budget includes $i.2 million for Hlaries and benefits for 163 employees. Last year's budget for 128 employees was $~.~ il1crease is 39 percent. up to 10 years at hard labor. But he told the court he might modify his plea IC his guilt could be proved during th e proceedings, his wife said. West e rn report ers were barred from both courtrooms. Shcharansky's wife, Natalia, told a news conference in Paris she believed further statements by President Carter and the Congress mig ht e nable her husband to "be free and go out from Russia." She said s h e could not recommend specific actions that U.S. and other world leaders To Gftlf?"a ...... ,,.,.... Secretary of State Cyrus Vance says he 'll be going lo Geneva We dnesday f or strategic arms talks despite U.S. cancellations of other meetings with Soviets to protest mistreatment of di s- s.idents. 1 Pair Shot • m Santa Ana } ' Woman Succumbs; Male Companion 'Serious' Santa Ana police today are in· vestigating the pre-dawn shoot- ing death or a woman and the serious wounding or her. male companion in the parking lot of a restaurant. Details of the homicide were sketchy and the identity or the dead woman remained un- Jtnown. The wounded man has ten- tatively been identified as Mike S. Reynolds, age unknown, or Long Beach. Initial police reports indicate the man and woman we re toge the r in an automobile parked o uts ide the Ancient Ma riner r estaurant at 330 N. T ustin Ave. Police said the pair were ap· parently shot by an assailant who fled the scene. No motive ' ' '/ . has been established in the 4:20 a.m. murder. The rear window of Reynolds' late-model car was blown away a nd its owner s truck by two bullets. His woman companion a p- parently tried to escape the at- t acker on foot and was shot about 100 yards from the auto, police said. She fell mortally wounded on the pavement and was "dead at 2 Deaths P robed LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -An autopsy was scheduled today for two mentaJly retarded children who died on an outing in the Lake Mead area Sunday. ap. parently of heal stroke. t he scene while her companion was taken to Santa Ana-Tustin Community Hospital. Reynolds was reported in critical condi· tion. Police investigators said when the woman left t he car she crossed the city boundary into Tustin and that the slaying therefore is under dual police jurisdiction. However. Santa Ana officers are taking the lead role in the in· vestigation a nd sear ch for a possible suspect. Police said they did not know the relationship or the two vie· tims and indicated they did not believe the shooting was the re· suit or a marital entanglement. They ruled out the possibility t h at the dua l shooting was anything like a murder-suicide. t • . ' I , f " . Plugging ERA 6rangc County supporters of the Equal Rlghts Amendment staecd local plea for the ConsUtutional proposal at Main Beach Park in Laguna Beach Sunday. They were participants in nationwide rally in support ot women's rights. Crowd was larger in Washington, D.C .• where estimated 100,000 women and sympathJzers marched. <See Page A4 > , , could take. "I'm no politician ... she said. but s uggested that Congress pass a resolution on the case. Mrs. Shcharansky, who lives in Israel. said she went to Paris to help mobilize world opinion in her husband's case. She is to travel to Washington later this w eek. to m eet with Vice President Walter F . Monda le. Speaking to reporters during a recess at the Moscow trial. Leonid Shcharansky said hjs b r o th er "l ooked w e ll , self-confident and cheerful" and (See TRIA~, Page AZ> Campaign Reform Proposed Irvine City Councilman Larry Agran, who was the target of election complaints filed against him last March by chief oppo., nent <Arthur Anthony. who was elected with him). is proposing new city campaign legislation. He's scheduled to outline his ideas at Tuesday's 7 :30 p.m. council meeting. at city hall. Two of Agran 's proposals have to do with campaign financing . the area for which he was most heavily criticized by Anthony. The first would extend an ex· isting $250 campaign contribu- tion from a single donor to in· elude, besides donations to can· didates, contributions involving any t ype of election unde r Irvine's exclusive jurisdiction. Those would include cam - paigns for inJtiatives. referenda and recalls. Agran's second Clnance re- form would 'require organita· tions that aren't under the con- trol of council candidates to: 1 > Conspicuously disclose their name on all campaign materials and advertising: and 2> Disclose on a ll campaign materials and advertising the total dollar expenditures they've made to date in a particular election. This ordinance a m endment directly addresses one of the complaints made about Agran's campaign. Irvine Tomorrow, an independent organization, spent over the contribution Umit in his support. bringing protests from Anthony and other candidates. • The county district attorney. however, ruled that. as an in· dependent group. Irvine Tomor· row was e ntitled to spend whatever it liked. A third Agran reform measure would allow people to register voters. circulate petitions. and engage in campaign activity, in local shopping centers. . Such activity was permitted in the past election by largesse of the Irvine Co .• which owns the local shopping malls. Agran pointed out that the fir m could have: refused <See REFORM. Page A2) Newport Cops Seeking Lead On Nude Man Newport Beach poJice today sought leads on a naked man who threaten ed a Newport S h o r es woman over t h e weekend. The 36-year-old victim told police she was walking on Newport Shores Drive at about 9 p.m . Friday when the incident occurred. . She said the m an pulled his truck Into an alley in front of ber and jumped out. He ordered her to commit an unnatural sex act or he would shoot her. The woman said s he ran anyway and heard the truck driving off. POE'IS UBOR ro P.4Y BILLS Man does not live by b~ad alone, but even poets have to make a llvinl and they find It ditnc:ult lo toftf'• world. See Featurtnc, Pate Cl. MONDAY , JULY 10, 1978 Tod ay's Closini N.~. Stoeks TEN CENT APWI,.._, NATALIA SHCHARANSKY HOLDS PHOTO OF HUSBAND Press Conference Held In Paris to Protest Trial Newport Man Faces Narcotics Lab Rap By J OANNE REYNOLDS Of Ille Dallr PllM S&att . A West Newport resident, whose neig h.b or s became suspicious of the odOtJ>f ether coming from his apartment. has been arrested on charges of m a nufacturing and s e lling narcoijcs.,,, Newport ~ach police booked Aaren John Burcham, 25. after a llegedly finding what one officer descrif)ed as a complete laboratory in his apartment at lroine Cops ~king Trio lnRoblJery Irvine police today hoped an a ll-points police alert would turn up an attractive woman who lured a French-Canadian news came r aman off the freeway Saturday so her two male companions could rob him. The woman, who wore a short Levi skirt and a form-revealing s weater. pretended her car was broken down and stood on the s houlder of the San Diego Freeway, near Jeffrey Road, waving al cars for help. Victim Andre Gariepy. 34. of Virginia. on assignment in Los A n geles for th-e Canad ian Broadcasting Co. and staying at a Newport Beach Hotel. s teered his rented 1977 Cadillac off the road at the sight of her . He later told police she leaned next to his car window and told him her car wasn 'l working. Gariepy followed her to tl\t light blue Ford Pinto hatchback (See LURE, 'age A2> Home Found For Stray Irvine Cats A home for uninjured stray cats picked up by Irvine animal services officers has been found by contract negotiations with Newport AnJmal Hospital, of. rtcials reported. A recently negotiated contract with Laguna Beach for a nimal shelter services did not include car e for such animals . That Cacility will take only uninjured cata. though in previous years it took au. Under terms of the agreement with Newport H,ospital. at 1333 Avocado Ave .• in Fashio n laland, cats will be boarded a. mlntmum of six days for adop· lion or for owners to claim them. Fee is $2 a day, which will be reim butted by the c.lty II an animal l1 claimed. The telephone nu_mber. for In· qulrles about los t cats. is 644·5480 • 7406 W. Ocean Front. Poh ce claim that Burcham was making a cocaine s ubstitute o ut or a compound called lidocaine. _ Narcotics investigator Mike Hietala alleged Burcham also h ad a pound of cocaine or unde termined purity in his apartment when h e w as arres ted Fnday evening. Burcham was booked into city jail and is being held in lieu or $50.000 bail. Hie tala s aid ' Burcham told him he is to report to Chino Men's Prison next Monday to begin serving a term for a narcotic s conviction handed down last year. 1 Burcha m was arrested after. poli ce were called by an unidentified neighbor at about 5 pm. who complained about the odor of ethe r coming from B ur cham 's oc e a n front apartment. · Officer Michael Hyams dro\.c ro the area and said he also, smelled the odo.r 'Coming fro~ tPle 1 residence. . Hyams got Burcham to comt• to the front door and when he ::i s ked if hl• could check thtt apartment Burcha m told him his girlfriend was as leep in tht> room from which the e ther seemed to be coming. H yams r e porte dly toldi Burcham he feared for the girl's· safety under those conditions and searched the apart ment. finding the lab equipment and, narcotics. but no girl. Hietala said today there wa!>t so. much equ ipm e n t a n d • paraphernalia confiscated that a truck had to be borrowed so the bulk of material could be taken to the Sheriff's crime lab in f Santa Ana. Most of the chemicals and 1 narcotics were taken to lht>t poli ce station and Hietala said <See DRUGS. Page A2> Co ast W eathe r Night through mid - mor n i n g low clouds. oth erwise fair through Tuesday. Lows tonight 58 to 62. Highs, Tuesday in up· pe r 60s al the beaches t~ upper 70s inland. INSIDE TOD" '1 Fourtetn Amilh families move to southern Wisconsin where they ttelc better op- porlunUU?a. Story Page AB. l•dex ., ~ I .t~ DAILY PILOT Wonu.r July 10. 1971 4 Hostages Held Grenade Wielded in New York Marine Sentenced For Rape NEW \OHK I AP 1 ;\ man threatt>rullJ1 lo deton<stt• whiit he sa id was 80 pounds of dyna mite with a hand grenade and claim· ing to speak only Polish was holding four hostages one of them a Judge 1n the World Trade Center today. authorities said. Thousands were evacuated from the building. Members of the police hosta~e p D"''' Pll•I Sl•ff ,.,,... f 'air ffaweu S1111111111· Huhio. :.w. Co!->la \11·..,;i '' 111 n.•1gn a::, QU<:en ol lhl· Onmge County Fair lollowmg her c;;elec:tion for t ht· honor during Wl'L'kl·nd (.om pl'l 1t1un. /\ former Miss '\;(•wport Beach. s he work!-> .1l D1sneYlantl as an artist und at t <:ncls Orange Coast \ 'ol kgl'. DRUGS ... lw "ould h<• sptmdtnf! the next fr"' da.v~ t<.1kmg inventory "It'!> "orth thousands .. he ventured l tHfo~ JbOuL lhl' (.•CJnf1sca ttd m;1tt-r1:.ils Underwater Device Eyed WA S HI NGTON !AP l Dl·-.p1tc.• numerous obs tacles. " <' 1 e n t 1 s t s w 1 I I p I a c e a n e\pe rimental sen s ing device 1.5110 fc.•l'l undc•r the sea floor to M't' ii 1t improves studies of th<' c.Irth's crust and monitormfo1 of t•:.i rl hquak<'' T ht• dt'\.ll'<' will h ave l o withstand underwater pressures of ten\ of thousands or pounds p1•r ~qu;ir~ inch . 1t will be d1 fl 1cull to position in such a dt•1•p hole and 11 won't be easy to ~L'l 1t out. National Science F'oun<lat111n o fficial s said Sunda\' ThC' sc1i.mic device will ht pl;1t't•d under waler early lll'Xt .n·:.ir 110 Hurt in Fire MANILA. Philippines IA.P l 1\ fin• that s wept through a nowd1•d mov1chous e Sunday and sent patrons neeing in panic has taken a dozen lives and in 1ured at least l 10, authorities :-md today ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOJ '"• Orcitf'I<>-Co•'' oa.iy r11ot ....,.,"..,...H" ., , ""' f . .,..,f~Nl'I•· "1h'\ \p.Jb41~htttwit),"'C> .-, .-• 1>,,0f1\f'l1"(1 Comn '"• Sro.'"'''" ,.d·I·~'" "'" oubl•,~11d Mffnd.t' lf\fuuQh f ,,,.,,., 11)1 C'o t~ MM.A ._. .. #UOft ~--•e" ... "'"''""'M '"°'"., ro-on t .. " V••f•., ''"•ft• \.tO~U•b.-C.\ V••"<t "4""1 I A~n-..+ A•~fll \ .,fh ro.t'I A \ttlQI• rf'Q .. ~t•f'' t~ufll "· 01.1t-.lh l\•rt SittV"OlllV" ~ C,un"°"'"' ttwo C-'"''<•0'1l OUbll\ .. lfllQ Ol•nt , ., \10 Wtto\f n-. "'"'' ft t•M•\• C••11 •'t1 •"7t7' ttohrtfti .,_.., P1 .. ,.°"'"'And PufM1VW'-4 J•tlt" Cw+., V1 ,. p,,.,,,,_."' •n_, (,,...'""'•' Mi6n4'Q•" Tlll..,,.t\ IC'H -'lt EtJ·•0t lMm.,4 ~~,_. MA~.tQ•l\Q CIS·t .. '"'''H H \.M\ .. ICMnt ff* IUfl 4,,,,,.~t Me11t~f111QE.Olt.,-, Oftlc .. C.O\tAAM\A )'MiWt\f fMy \hH1 L•fl""'•h• Pi ,, .. Gl•nn..,. ... \t•H't Hw"'t 1,...0l'thA't. 11tP, .. M"~¥ill'd ~'tt»c• v.a11,, 1UOH..• p,.., ltnM1 ., \•"I 01t90 ,., ..... w T•l•phon• (714) 142-4321 Cltulfl•d Advertl1lng 1142·5'71 ,.,_,.,.NC'• Y4ll•;~QW-c,. sa1-ta10 nl'i,:ot1ating team were talking to lhe man by telephone through a Polis h interpreter , according to pOlt(.•l• More thun lbree hours after the s iege began. the situation re- mained a standoff between the man and police this afternoon. Lt. Frank ReiJJy, of the police d e partment 's Emergency Services division, said eyewit· nesses saw the man holdin~ "a Marines Held AfterMelee In Laguna Fou r Camp Pendleton Marines were being held in Orange County Jail over the weekend after a fist-swinging fracas with police in Laguna Beach Saturday night that al- legedly included one officer los· ing hi s revolver to a leatherne<:k. Booked into Orange County J ail on charges of assault on a po li ce o fficer were Ri c k y Cornett. 19, Steven Patrick Leonard. 19, Garry Allen Best. 22. Facing charges on suspicion of assault with a deadly weapon on a police officer is Gary L. Field. 25. Police Sgt. Terry Temple said Officers Fred Martino and Doug J ohnson were walking foot patrol in North Main Beach Park at about 8 p.m. Saturday when they saw three of the Marines sitting on the beach drinking beer. When the officers began citing two of the Marines for being Loo young lo drink. the youn~ men began arguing with the officers . At about that time. police said. Field purportedly got into a wr(•stling ma tch with Officer Martino, successfull y pulling the policeman's revolver from its holster and pointing it at the of fiC'er M <1rtino g r a bbe d F1eld "s g unh a nd . :rnd pus hed the weapon deep into the sand to keep it from going off. Two more orriC'ers a rri ved and the four fighting Marine!> were s ubdued and taken to Laguna Beach City Jail. Marines Cornett. Leonard and Best were being held on $5,000 bail. Field was being detained on $25,000 bail because of the more serious allegations. Bystander Nabs Suspect In Santa Ana Santa Ana police credited an 11nidentifi~ motorist with cap. I unng a hit-and-run driving sus peel whose car struck a nd killed ~· pedestrian early today. Police s aid the motoris t t has ed the sus pect two blocks before forcing his auto to stop and then .. kept him occupied" until pohcc arrived. Identified as the suspect was Francisco Pineda. 30. of Sant<.1 Ana Pineda was a rres ted and rharged with v e hicular mans laughter. dr unk driving and felony hit and run driving. Investigators early today werC' attempting Lo identify the man reportedly hurled 140 feet when struck by Pineda's auto In the 1500 block of West First Street in Santa Ana Pineda was driving eastbound on First Street at 1 :30 a.m. when his car assertedly hit the uniden· t1fied v1ct1m, a man described a s about 40 years old, police said The fatally injured man died in Mercy Gencral Hospital about two hours after the accident. ae C'ord1ng to police. From Page Al LURE ... i1ed:in. and lifted the hood A~ h e did, two men ap· proached him. One had a gun. Gar iepy said he couldn't see them clearly in the 4: 45 a . m darkness, but said they climbed out of a roadside ditch. They ordered Gariepy into the ditch, told him to He down and empty his pockets. Gariepy did and gave them a $5 bill. Disgusted, they also took his wallet. watch a nd br acelet. Gariepy valued the loss at $3SO. They also stole his car. a nd the woman drove off in her Pinto., Goriepy climbed out ot the ditch, flagged A motorist and report ed the crime to police from a near b y rest aurant telephone. He described his robbers as block and In their 20s. The woman. he said. was •bout 5·foot-Cive. the men slx·two and five-seven and of medium butld with beards and mouat.ache•. Everybody. he said. wore dMk beanie caps. I World Wa r II potato masher Cd type of grenade>." in the hear. Ing room of the state Workmen's Compensation Board on the 36th Ooor of the center's Tower Two. The center is the world's larRest commercial office building com· plex. Several people said the man was a claimant and that his case had just been postponed for two months lo allow ne urological and orthopedic testing when hi! pulled out the supposed potato masher . Reilly said the man abo wa!. seen pulling a "pushcurt. on whi c h he i.a ys he.• ha!> th ~ dynamite" The hostages were 1denL1fied as a judge. an attorney. a state ins urance representative and a court reporter. Several thousand people were evacuated from five fl oors of the llO·slory tower Two. Adelina Walker. a clerk in the hearing room who escaped. said the judge "had just told the man's attorney that there would be a two-month delay for reports and then s uddenly the man took an object out of a bag ant.I I walked out the door ·· 0•1ly 1'•191 \t ... t P .... o Miring It Up Ms. Walker desc ri~d the man as in his early 50s with a Northern European accent and dressC'd in casual clothing. She• said this was "at least lhl' second or third time he had had a hcarm~." On a normal workday, soml· 35.000 people work in the entin· World Trade Center complex. localed on the southern tip of Manhattan. The twin. 110-stof\ towe rs are the world's secont. tallest buildings. after Chicago's Sears Tower. These lrvme residents are putting a little color into the11 live~ with painting class uffl'red by c1tv's cultural <1rts division. They're learning uppllcd color theory. taught by Mary Thelandcr. at ri~ht near blackboard Cla~st'!-> p lanned for _fa ll include this one. photog raphy. a rt workshop. holiday des ign. drawing. puppetry. beginning weaving. tole painting, s tained glass a nd c raftc; E'ro1tt Page A I TRIALS ... 5 Cars in Irvine Crash; No One Hurt s miled at him. Ginzburg's wife . Irina. wh<i s aw her husband for the first time s ince his arrest 17 months ago. told Western reporters. "I I<' refused to testify but made th1~ r efus al conditional on what witnesses said. Five cars were m :.in lrvi nl' smas hup at the intersection of Mac Arthu r and Jamboret· Boulevards Sunday afternoon. non e or the occupants wa-> hos p1tahzcd P oh Cl' said a tar driven b) l\1m Lee. Andrews. 19. of 1077 'Too Young' Patty Won't Tell All ATLANTA <Al'l Pally l k ursl. rt•sisling s ug ges tions tha t s he write ... 1bout her life. s ays ~he's too young to write an autobiogr a phy. "People t ell m e 1 s hould wntL• a book ," Miss Hears t. who is ser vi ng a pn~on sentence.• a l thl· Federal Correctional Institution in Pleasanton. !)aid in an inte r view with thl' At l anta J o urna l Constitution. "My feeling has been that anything that s macks of an autobiography at 24 1s arrogant to s <.1y the least. .. Miss Hears t also ::>aid ~he continues to be fascinated, as well as puzzled. by he r tra ns form ation from news paper he iress to revolutionary. Miss Hearst is ser ving a seven-year sente nce for her part in a bank ro bbery st aged by the revolu- tionary Symbionesc Liberation Army. She will be. eligible for parole in 14 months. Federal Mediators Enter Talks Boy, 9 , Drowns SANTEE I AP) -While hi~ father played baseball at a school ground nearby. a 9· year· old boy drowned Sunday in the San Diego Ri ver Santa Cruz. Co5ta ~esa. cro5sed MacArthur on Jamboree a nd ... 1 am med broads1d1.• int o ,, 1>1 ck up 1r1.:c·k t r;i\t•l t n J.! MacArthur The truck rolled over 1mc1.· dumping its load of gnive1. c•e m c nt b a~s and steel rC'tnforcmg bC1rs onto the top of a third car driven by M1 chaei Mi Il e r, 29. or 809 Promontory Drive West It also struck a fourlh car driven by Dana Street. 33. of Placenll:i . and sheared off a lrfl-turn street signal at its base Fu rther. pohCl' said. a one way sign was dci.lro~ eel by the· truck St reel'::-. l'ar w<1s knocked into n fifth car. drt ven by Dennis f''rost. 22. of Anaheim Sevt'ral pcrsons wen• treated :.it thl• seenl' for cuts According to police reports. driver Andrews went through a r<:d li ght al MacArthur War Exercise At Pendleton CAMP PENDLETON <APi A trainmg exercise involving 17,000 men, 24 war~h1ps and 250 helicopters and planes began lo· day. A maJor beach landing by 7.000 Mannes 1s scheduled Wed ncsday. The 10.day exercise under the l'yes of several members of Congress was s upervised by MaJ. Gen. Charles Cooper and Rear Adm. Richard A. Paddock. Camp Pendleton Mcarine Tomas Marroquin wa!> sen. tenced Friday to seven years in state prison for the part he played in the kidnapping and sexuaJ abuse of a 15-year-old San Clemente girl. Orange County s uperior court judge Everett Dickey imposed sentence on Marroquin, 22, of Oceanside just 24 hours after he ordered identical pr ison terms for co-defendants Jose Garcia. 23. and Irineo Salinas. 24. both Marines and both of Oceanside. All tbree pleaded guilty to rape in concert and kidnapping. Judge Dickey ordered a five. year term for the kidnapping. but ruled In each case that the sentence can be served concur- rently with the longer rapt! te rm. San Clemente police arrested the trio in Oceanside after they \\ere 1denl1fied as the three men who grabbed the girl from the sidewalk on El Camino Real in San Clemente March 18. It was alleged that the defen- dant s then drove her to an orange grove 10 the Villa Park area where they raped her a nd sexually humiliated her in the back of their car Police said the arres t of the three mannes was made poss1 · ble . when the victim was hyp. not1zed 10 a successful bid to help her recall the features of of her abductor; Fro,,. Page A I REFORM ... pt•rm1s!)10n He says, 10 hb proposal to the council. that "In a real sense our city's shopping centers ar~ the political, as well as the com- merc1al. marketpl:.ices for the c·1t12ens of Irvine ··Engaging m lawful politieal <1tt1 v1t y in tht· city of Irvine !-.hould not be SUbJect lo the ef tectivt• veto of the Irvine Co .. or <iny other large la ndholder. for tha t matter "Rather. 11 shc1u ld be J pro· ll'CIC'd right .. 1\gran's idea 1s 51mtlar to a propos al last March by Newport At.•:i c:h phys icia n Eu gene Atherton. who tried to mount OJ ~t utew1de petition drive tu le J?al 1ze !->ho ppin g ee nter polit1ck1ng. Ile startl'd with a petition he C'1 rculated in Irvine. So far as can be dete rmint.'<f . that was a!'> far as he got : the initiative nc•\ t•r made the hallut Lon Nol Asks Intervention LONG BEACH <APJ The l 'n1ted Nations should inlcrvcnt- in lhe borde r war between Vietnam and Cambodia to check the growing influence of tht.• Soviet Union in Southeast As1<1, form er Cambodian president Lon Nol says The 65-year-old retired field marshal. now li ving in exile in Hawaii, said the year-long clash between the two Communisl neighbors repres ents an a ttempt by Vietnamese leade r s to dominate Southe:.isl A5ia In a rare public appearance he re Sunday at a pi cnic of Cambodian emigrcs, Lon Nol warned that the Soviet Union could u5e Southeast As ia as a military base against both the United States and the People's Republic of China. WASltrNGTO N CAP 1 Federal mediators stepped into the stalled negotiutions loday bl'.'lwecn the Postal Service and unions representing more than soo.ooo employees You're Invited to Our First Ever Major The Federal Mediat ion and Conciliation Service entered the talks with 10 days remaining in a three-year contract. The re has been no agreement on any ma jor point In the nearly thrct·· month-long talks. Postal labor leaders. who have expressed resentm ent al Wh ite House "jawboning'' in a n effort lo hold down inflationary effects of the postaJ contract. w~lcomed the e.ntry by chief mediator Wayne L. Horvitz. ·1 am hopeful that the pres- ence of Mr. Horvitz will move the talks off dead center." Presi dent Emmer Andrews of the American Postal Workers Union said today. The outcome is important to President Carter because more workers are Involved than in any other labor contract up for negotiation this year. and because the settlement may set a pattern ror future labor negotiations. The talks have been under way since April 20. Both sides pledged continuous talks start· Ing today. Hor vJtt said In o 11tatement, "After talking with both sides prl\'ately, and eicplorln1 the cur- rent status of the talks, I have concluded that th ttme has ar- rl ved for serious mediation cf. forb ·• I Savings to 50% Off On Our Entire Selection of Suits & Sportcoatsl Equally Great Values On Our Famous Selection of Neckwear, Sh irts. Trousers & Sportswear. Genttemen·s Clothing 1 Inspired by Tradition 46 Fashion Island, Newport Beach ,(714) 640-8310 f 7 . " 11 l ' I I Lag11na /South Coast 'YOL. 71 , NO. 191 , 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JULY 10, 1978 At'ter110011 N.Y. Stoeks • TEN CENTS Soviets Put 2 Dissidents on Trial MOSCOW <AP> -The Soviet Union put two leading dissidents on trial today in cases that threaten to aggravate the growing tension m U.S.·Soviet r e lations . Both pleade d innocent. and the wife of one appealed to Washington for help that s he said could free her husband. Anatoly Shcharansky. 30, a key member of the Jewis h emmigration movement here, rejected aJlegations that he s pied for the CIA and said be considers them "absurd," his brother Leonid said. He faces a possible death t>enalty but is expected to get a long term in labor camp if convicted. A court official said Shcharans ky was accused of s upplying agents with state secrets. "including Information about the locations of a number of defense enterprises which are secret. .. In Kaluga, 100 miles south of Moscow, Alexander Gintburg, 41, a longtime human rights activist. pleaded Innocent to a charge of anti·Soviet agitation and propaganda, punishable by up to 10 years at hard labor. But he told the court he might modify his plea if his guilt could be proved duri n g th e proceedings, hjs wife s aid. West ern reporters were barred from both courtrooms. Shcharansky's wife, Nata)ja, told a news conference in Paris she believed further s tatements by President Carter and the Congress might enable her husband to "be free and go out from Russia " She sa id s he could not recommend specific actions that U.S. and other world leaders <See TRIALS, Page A2 > Ex-Mayors Back :suspended Sparks Plugging ERA Ora nge County supporters of the Equal Rights Ame ndment s t aged local plea for the Constitutional proposal at Ma in Beach Park in Laguna Beach Sunday. They were participants in nationwide rally in s upport of women's rights. Crowd was larger in Washington, D.C .. where estimated 100.000 women and sympathizers marched. <See Page A4 ) Public Meet Set 'On Water Fee Hike South Coast County Water D1s- tr1 ct customers will have an op· 1 portun1ly to res pond to a proposed 54 percent increase in their water and sewer bi lls tonight at district offices. The bi-monthly charges for both services are being proposed by the South Laguna water dts· trict to oHset losses as a result of the passage of Proposition 13, s aid general manager Ray Miller. The district provides both water and sewer services to areas 11orth and west of Dana Point. including South Laguna. Three Arch Bay, Monarch Bay r and Monarch Bay Terrace, and Niguel Shores . Jt provides only water in the northeastern por· lion of 'ana Point ' Coast lf approved by the district's board or djrectors, water and sewer users would see their bills increase Crom an average $25.15 per two months, to $38. 70 -a 54 percent increase. The district expects no proper- ty tax income for water this year, after receiving $178,000 last year. It expects to collect $32.000 from the s tate this year for sewer revenues, as opposed to $319,000 last year. "The significant increase is going to be for sewer service charges," Miller said today. He s aid the district is "cutting back everywhere we can," but added that costs for water from the Metropolitan Water District "is something we can't control.'' Those costs, plus losses ex- pected as a result of the SUC· cessful Jarvis·Oann lnitiative, account for the proposed hikes. Woman Dies, FrWndHurt lnSlwoting Santa Ana police today are inves tigating the pre-dawn s hooting death of a woman and the serious wounding of her male companion. Details of the homlcide were sketchy and the victims remain unidentified as investigators swooped down on the shooting scene. It was the parking lot outside the Ancient Mariner restaurant at 300 N. Tustin Ave. Initial reports indicate the man and woman were together in an automobile parked outside the restaurant when accosted by their assailant. Early reports also indicated the man was shot as he sat in t he auto. The same reports showed the woman apparently was either dragged from the auto or ran from it into a neighboring parking lot. <See SHOTS, Page AZ> Signers Urging Caution By SfEVE MITCHELL Of II• O•llY Pll<lt Slatl Nearly 1,200 signatures from Laguna Beach residents are ex- pect e d to be presented to Laguna Beach city councilmen Tuesday night supporting sus· pended Police Chief Jon Sparks. And support for the police chief, who was s us pe nde d without pay in the wake of a bar fight June 29 at the Ivy House, has also come from four past mayors of the Art Colony who spoke with new City Manager Fred Solomon for a half hour las t Friday Solomon, who assumed duties July 1 and whose first action was to suspend the 42·year-old police chief, was unavailable to comment on th'e impromptu meeting Friday at City Hall. Speaking on behalf of the police chief were former mayors Jon Brand, Phyllis Sweeny. Charlton Boyd and Roy Holm. Former Mayor Holm. an eight-year councilman, said the "common thread that brought us <t he four mayors> before Solomon, was that all of us re- cognize the chlef has done an ex- traordinary job in what has to be one of t he toughest police chief jobs in the state. "Without really knowing all the details. we wanted the new city manager to be aware of the fact that Jon's performance, al least from our point of view. was exceedingly good and might be very difficult to duplicate . "Secondly, some of us s hared with Solomon the thought that if Laguna Beach was to take ac- tion m termjnating Sparks. 1t was most certainly the end of his career . "Again," Holm said. "if we assume it was poor judgment <on Sparks' part) or perhaps slightly worse, the real question remains whether a man's career should be destroyed for an inci· dent like th.is." All four former councilmen were on the five-member panel that appointed the forme r Arizona police chief. Phyllis Sweeney. who was de· feated last March in her bid for a second term on the council, has been active in the petition signing campaign on behalf of the chief. She said supp0rt for the chier <See CIDEF, Page AZ> The district's proposed budget shows $1.107 million for water and $733,368 ln sewer costs. Last year the district's budget showed $937,14S in water and $712.244 for sewer costs. Athleties, Busing Weather ~ ' l ~: .,. ........... NATALIA SHCHARANSKY HOLDS PHOTO OF HUSBAND Press Conference Held in Paris to Protest Trial ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-·· J '' . Newport Man Faces Narcotics Lab Rap I . •• ... By JOANNE REYNOLDS OI ... Oallf Pii.t si.tt A West Newport resident. whose neighbors became suspicious of the odor of ether coming from his apartment, has been arrested on charges of manufacturing and selling narcotics. Newport Beach police booked Aaren John Burcham. 25, after al legedly finding wh at one officer described as a complete laboratory in hts apartment at 7406 W. Ocean Front Police claim that Burcham was making a cocaine s ubstitutt' o ut of a compound called lidocaine. Narcotics investigator Mike Hieta ~a alleged Burcham also had a pound of cocaine 0 1 undetennined purity 1n h1-. ap a rtment wh e n h e w a ... arrested Friday evening Burcham was booked into city jail and is being held in lieu of S50 .000 bail. H it'l a la said Burcham told him he 1:-. to report l o Chino Men's Pr1<;on nt•xt} Monday to begin ser ving a Lerm . l or a narcoti c" con v1c l1on handed down last year. Burcham was arrested after • p olice we r e calle d by an . un1dent1f1ed neighbor at about s. p m. who complained about the ' od or of cthf.'r coming from , Bur c h a m ·.., ocean fr o nt " apartment. 0((icPr :\iichael Hyams drll\ t' 1 to the area and said he ul<oo :-.m clled the odor coming from ttw res1denct•. llyam<, got Burcham to comt· to the front door and when ht• asked 1f he could check tlw .1partmcnl Burcham told him h1 l> g srlfr11md was asleep m lh1· '°Oom fro m which the clht•r :.et'med to be coming H yam.., reporte dly t o ld 1 Burcham h<· feared for the girl -; :-.atl'ty undl'r those rondit1ons and searched the apartmcnl . tmding the l,1h equipment <1nrl nan·otics. but no girl. CSt."t: ORL'GS, Pagl' \:?I Laguna Burglary Suspect Arrested } Laguna Beach police hav(• a rrested a Tus tin m an 1n connection with one of rour burglaries reported 1n the Art Colony over the weekend. Thomas Lee McDaniel, 19, of Tustin. was being held on $5,000 bail following a burglary at the home of David Lawson. 30. of 246 Viejo St. Police said Mc Daniel was arrested at Crescent Bay Beach a nd 'iom e or the v icl1 m ·._ J b<•l ong1 n g., wer<> l a t e r recovered. Luwson told officcl'lSj mo re than S l.000 worth of 4 camera equipment and clothing l was t aken from his home , Saturday. In other weekend break·in!>. David Gris wold. a chef, told police someone forced open the front door to his home at 916 Skyline Terrace, taking S2.350 in televisions, radios and stereo equipment. The theft occurred·• som e t ime Saturday between·; l 1.30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. ', Night through mid· morning low c lo uds, otherwise rair through Tuesday. Lows tonight S8 to 62. Highs Tuesday in up· per 60s at the beaches to upper 70s inland. Miller said customers pre- viously paid $37.65 for water and <See WATER, Page AZ> CUSD to Consider Cuts Claudia Hirsch told police 'I thieves broke into her home at 560 Bluebird Canyon, taking $656. in carpenter's tools sometime between Friday afternoon and 1 pm. Sunday. ..... INSIDE TODAY Fourteen Amish families move lo sou.them Wuconsin where they seek better op- portunities. StO'JI Page AB. l•dex War Exercise At Pendleton CAMP PENDLETON <AP> - A t raining exercise involving 17,000 men, 24 warships and 250 hetlcopters and planes began to- day. A major beach landing by 7 ,000 Marines ls scheduled Wed· nesday. The 10-day eurc\se under the eyes of several memb rs of Congress was supervlsed by Mt). Gen. Cbarl11 Cooper and Rear Adm. RJcbard A. Paddock. ' I By ANNE COOPER °'""De41' ........... Substantial cuts in runds available for school athletics and bus transportatlon a re among Superintendent J erome Thornsley's recommendations to the Capistrano Unified School District board to bring expenses into Une with Proposition 13 revenue losses. The Caplstrano Unified acbool board la scheduled to conslder Tbornsley'a recomm endations an d approve budget cull at three special board meeUnis. scheduled tonight and July 24 and 31. The meetings wm be(ln at 7: 30 p.m. at school dlltrict offices, 32972 Calle Perfecto ln San Juan CaplStrano. Trustees are expected to adopt a final 1978·79budget Aug. 7. In a memo this week to the school board, Thorns ley said cuts or about $3.6 million mu.st be made to the $34.9 million tentative budget in order to balance expenses and re~enues redu ced by passaae of PropoaiUon 13. Tfiomsley emphasised that thf> fiJture of $3.6 mllUon In anticipated cuts "Is not locked ln concrete," and may n uctuate. "At the same time," sald Thorn sley. "sJ?rlous thouaht should be slven to subsequent budget years which. based upon 311 current Indications, will require even more sti:ingent budget considerations.'\ T b ornsley ·s s p ecific r ecommendations for 1978·79 budget reductions total S4 2 million. They include : -Two alternative reductions in support for the d istrict ·s athletics program, a SO per~nt reduction <saving $172,217> and a 100 percent reduction Csavlng $283.217>. Contlnuatton of school athletics al the present level would re quire fund r aising activities. private busi ness s upport. rental of athletic tSee BUDGET. Pact All I And more than $350 in potted plants were ta ken from the home or Leslie Knox , 64 , at 32!) Weymouth Place early Friday morning. POETS UBOR TO P.4Y BILLS Man does not live by bread alone. but even poet!i have to m3ke a living and they flod It dimcult in today's world. See Fcoturtna. Page Cl. ) 2 DAILY PILOT l,SC Duo Face Rapin 5 Deaths WINNIE. Tcxa4' IAPJ Fi\•e mt•m hen; or a ram1\y missing from a blood·sptittered rural home here since July 1 have been found buned in a wooded a rea. and a woman was charged tod ay with one count or murder m the case, police said, and a m a n is in custody. Authorities said a former in· Jaw charged in connection wilh the disappearance d i rected the m Sunday ni ght t o the gravesite in ne ighboring J ef· ferson County Joe Dugas. 31, of P ort Acres. has been he ld in Cha m ber s County J ail in Anahuac in lieu of $500,000 bond A pre pared state ment from the Chambers County s heriff s o((ice said. "Positive identifica- tion was established as me m- bers of the Phillips family miss· ing from their residence in Win - nie, Texas. since July 3." The victims were identified as Bis hop Phillips, 64; his wife E ster . 66; a son Elmer. 31: his wife Martha; and their 4-year· old son Jason. The latter three lived in Woodward, Okl a .. and were vacationing in Winnie. Dugas was once married to a d a ughter oflhe elde r Phillips. Jus tice of the Peace Jack C r avy , who conducted a g r a veside inquest. said t he bodies were c lose together. "The shaJlowest grave was 18 inches and the deepest was 4 to 5 feet.'· Autopsies were ordered by Cr avy, and J efferson County pa thologists took custody of the bodies. Cr avy satd authon ttes were not certain what motivated the killings. Dugas' brother. Richard Lee. h as said in a sworn statem ent that Dugas t old him on July 4 that he had kidnapped the fami- ly at gunpomt July 1 and had t a k e n the m to a "prepared gravcsitc." Lee said Dugas told him he was in t he company of a woman at the lime he abducted thl' family Linda Ma<' liurnctt. :w. was ar r ested <Jl h er hom e i n Nede rland today a nd charged with capital murder before State Oistrict J udge Jack Cravey lier t'onnection to the case was not immediately known. Dugas had previously denied having anything to do with the fam ily's disappearance Fro.Pa~AI SHOTS ... She fell mortall y wounded on lhl' pavement and was dead <1l lhc scene while her com paruon was 1 a ken to Sant a Ana Tustin Community llosp1tal whe re he rE"po rtedl y is in c r itica l cond1tion. Po lice investigators said when the wo m an left the car she crossed the city boundar y into T us tin a nd that the s laying therefore is under dual oolicc jurisd ict100. However. Santa Ana offi cers are taking the lead role in the investagat ion and the search for a possib\esuspccl . Pohce said they did not know the relations hip of the two victtms and indicated they did not believe the shooting was a result of marital entanglement. They ruled out the possibility 1 hal t he d u al s hooting was anything like a murder.suicide Santa Ana police reported rc•ct•aving the emergency call at it 20 .1.m Outage Hits Town JJU RBANK 1AP) A burned· Qllt trans former at the ma in electric power generating sta· tton knocked out electricity in U1 1s community of about 83,000 C.r about four hours early today, ~okesman for t he Burbank Department of Water. Light and Power said. OAAN0£ COAST LtSC DAILY PILOT ~~~~'~'"T, ::;,::;=:!;<;,~ C.O.\t fltuf)l1"'•"'0 COlftO•"'" ~11tf'fl01t~.,, ~tW'G Mof"ICllV \f\«'O'llO" '"'~" tor Co\1• -W Hr>-wport "'4'<" HVf'llif'IOtM ttr.'4"''°"" '"'" V•llP\t It ... ,,. StHllbH.• V•HftW ·~ L-11 .. 'll ~lll(A•<I ,.._.,_.,..,. hon 1\ DU04h Md \ttur~y' -.cl ~Y\ ,,_ ~~'t~~::::"t.~:.~~~~~-JJO W.'t s., llUJor1H- Prr\"tltt"I tt"9 ""'°''°"" Joo II Cwt.J Y l{t Prf"\lefl't'lt •NI 0.Mtat ~ .. , ntMn ... tit .. VW ld1tor ''::::::~:r.....r.:- OWr•••H 1.-11~ .. IUll •\\ttl•"t Maf'•O•rtO tctnftl\ Leaun• l••dtOfflcM n .. () .. MO•OJl'WI M.\111"'1 A<Mro\\ P 0 !lo• ... t1tll 0tncet (.~tA Mlf\• »OW•\I ft•Y \tn••\ M""'1,..ioo.a..c11 11111 8-a<•IOlut.,,oro 1'o0f10 .... 0 V•lloy 11701 L• P<tt -··~1>1, .. 1.-. ., T~nel114)~ p enltled Adve111.ine I0-117' '-"""• l•tell All Oepalt11wnt1: T ... pho11•4t6-.... rr-om~C'-""'"" ...... ( MoM!X, July 10, 1911 ... ,, . ....,..._ Fish Harvested Found in Viejo Victim Said From SD The partially clad body of a man dumped \n the fast lanes of nort hbound Interstate 5 in Mis· sion Viejo Thursday has been identified as K eith Arthur Klingbeil, 23, a San Diego County transient. OranJ{e County Sheriff's in vest igators said this morning Klingbeil was identified ove r the weekend by the FBI through fingerprints. S h e riff 's o fficials said. however. they still have m ade no advances ln investigations in· volvio g two othe r bodi es dumped in unincorporated coun· ty a reas during June. Investigators said Klmgbe11'c; left nipple had beer. burned off his chest. apparently with d car's cigarette lighter. Cause of his death. however. is still un known pending results or a tox icologlcal report. Fro• PGfltl! A I BUDGET ... equipment and/o r .i s ports p a r ttc1 pallon fee. Tho rnsley said Soviet fi shermen at a rollcct1ve farm harvest sturgeon. from which caviar 1s ex· tr<.ictcd. Some 10.000 ton:-> of fis h come Crom farms Uke this one in Guryc\· region Investigators are still wailing toxocologic al reports on the death of Camp Pendleton Ma nne Richard Allen Ke1th. 20. whost· nude body was found June 19 on Moulton Parkway in an isolated sect ion of Laguna Hills . T hrel' .il •ernat1vc r edu ctions 1n school b u s tra n s p ortation 1n c lud 1n g continued busing of all students. with 1r.c:-e.istd w al king dis tan ces tsaving S35Z.264 l elimination or Junior and senior high school b us rng !saving S347.752l. and elimination of al! district bus ing <saving $655.692) Fro• Page A J TRIALS ... could take. "I'm no politician ... she said. but suggested t hat Congress pass a resolution on the case Mrs. Shcharansky, who lives in Israel. said she went to P aris to help mobilize world opinion in her husband's case. She is to travel lo Washington later this week to meet with Vice President Walter F. Monda le. High-speed Chase Nets 3 Suspects Still unidentified, an official said . is the body of another man found June Z7 in an orange grove near El Toro Marine Corps Air St ation. Invest iga tors now believe the man was an illegal alien and m ay never be iden· tificd. The victim bled to death from a neck wound al first believed to be a gunshot. His hands were strapped behind his back with a bell, investigators said Tho rnsley has r ecommended that a ll school bus ing be elim inated by Sept .. 1979. with trans portation to and from school available with the Orange Coun tv T r a ns at Dist r ict. o r throu gh private contractual arrangements. -Reduction by 10 percent in the dislrtct ·s music program. w ith Junior and senior high mus ic program;; un.iff ected 1savm~ S20.45Jl Speaking to reporters during a recess at t he Moscow t rial. Leonid Shcharansky said his b r ot h e r "l ook e d well . self-confident and cheerful" and smiled at hlm. Ginzburg's wife. Irina. who saw he r husband for the first time since his arrest 17 months ago, told Western reporters. "lie refused to testify but made this rl!fusal condittonal o n wh~t witnesses said. Officials of t he t hree-Judge cou rt. in a pink and yellow former mansion, said Ginzburi:: was accused of dislnbuting and prepar ing anti-Soviet literatun· rn nt ::ii ni nli! "sland e r ous fabr ications defaming the Soviet Union." includ ing wor ks by ('Xiled Soviet a uthor Alexander Solzhenitsyn. M rs. G inzbu rg said t he i ndict m ent mentioned Solz h eni t syn's "Gulag Archipelago." am ong others Ginzburg. like Shcha ra nsky a Jew . ma n aged a rund Solzhenitsyn finances to aid the families of Soviet polil1cal prisoners. Two other trials also got under way today , one l n vol v1ng Lithu<in1a11 human r i ght ~ activist Viktoras Pyatkus and t he other a m ystery f1gur(' act'used of spying and identified by the Soviet press only as "A F il a tov." Memb e r s of the dissident movement s aid thev had never heard of him. · Coast Inn Will Reopen Despite Fire Operators of the historic Coast Inn m Laguna Beach said today the 5l·~ear-old establishment should be feeding customers a~ain by the weekend after a grease fire Friday night. T h e blaze erupted in the kitchen at about 11 p. m . Friday when hot ~rease ignited the hood filter screens in the restaurant at 1400 South Coast Highway. Firemen quickly quelled the fla m es. but d amage to t he screens and stove area will take time to repair. "We're trying to get hold of a re p airm a n today," sa i d ma na ger Bart Rowland. He said the popular eatery should be ser ving food again by the weekend. In the meantime, waitresses are serving coffee and pastries. Fi r e men h ave no damage estimate figures on the grease fire. Two 1\legal aliens and one naturalized citizen were scheduled lo be arraigned on s muggling charges today in San Diego's federal district court following a high s peed chase up lnter!>tate 5 through San Clem ente Friday. T he chase, which featured speeds up to 100 miles per hour. began. say officials. when Arm a ndo Car denas Camacho. 23. of Mexico. floored his 71 Pon- tiac past startled U.S. Border Patrol Officers a t the a lien checkpoint south of San Onofre. Officers chased Camacho onto Basilone Road where the alien driver was cornered and as· sertedly backed into one officer. knockinA h i m down, before s mashing into a Volkswagon and a nother car The officer was shaken up but not inJured, a spokesm an said today T he cha~e continued up In terst ate 5 to Calle Estr ella. where Camacho headed into t ile San Clemente Hospital parking lot and was captured. T here were eight other iUegal aliens in the car, a Bor der Patrol spokesman said. includ- ing J uan Zamora, 17. identified as the a lleged guide for a "slightly primitive version of a big-time smuggling 0peralion. ,., spokes man for the Border Patrol's Anti·Smuggling Unit based an Chula Vis ta said today WATER •.. sewer costs, if you include t he property tax figures that went for those services in the total picture. The new bimonthly bill works out to $39.55. "which means a five percent increase, if you com bine what the taxpayer was paying in taxes and in his water and sewer bill ,·· Miller said. T he public hearing on the pro· posed rate increases begins at 7 p .m . m district offices at 31592 West Slrei?t, South Laguna Fro• Page Al DRUGS. • • Hietala said today there was so muc h e qu i pm e nt and paraphernalia confiscated that a truc k had lo be borrowed so the bulk of m aterial could be taken t o the Sheriff's crime lab in Santa Ana. Most of the chemicals and n arcotics we re t aken to the police station and Hieta la said he would be spending the next few days taking inventory. "It's worth thousands," he ventured tod a y about t he confiscated materials. 'Too Young' Pmty Won't Tell All ATLANTA <AP) Pally Hearst , resisting sug· gestions that s he write about her life, says she's loo young to write a n autobiography. ., . "People tell me l should write a book, Miss Hearst, who is serving a prison sentence at t~e Federal Correctional Institution in Pleasanton, said in a n inte r view with the Atlanta J ourn ~l· Constitution. "My feeling has been that anythmg that smacks of an autobloi raphy al 24 is arrogant to s ay th(! least ." Miss Hearst also said she continues to .be fa scinated, as well as puzzled, by ~er t ransformation from newspaper heiress to revolutionary Miss Hearst Is serving a seven.yea r sentence for her part. in a bank robbery staged by the rcvolu· Uonary Symbionese Liberation Arm y. She will be eligible for parole in 14 months. ' Zamora and another man, Oc· t;l\ 10 Teran. 21. of Porterville. allegedly arranged to sm uggle Camacho and seven others acros!> the border Border Patrol ofricials said Teran was arrested in a border motel at 3 a .m. Saturday after a motel employee repor ted a burglary in progress. "The employee saw him <Teran ) sn eaking a long a staircase close to an open door," a spokesman said. "It wasn't un- til later that we began to piece together Teran 's involvem ent in the San Clem ente chase." The car involved an the chase was traced to Teran . officials sa id . Camacho, Zamora and Teran. who is a naturalized citizen, all fac<! federal smuggling charges in U.S. District Court. a Border Patrol spokesma n said. Wnsultant Funding Cut By Council The San Juan Capistrano City Council has slashed by half a SS.000 appropriation for a propo!>al to lure bu~ and rail 1ac1litie!> to the city Councrlmcn sa i d their reluctance to fund the full amount was based on a n t·x pectt·d s h o r tf ~1 ll i n tax rc\'cnues because of passage of Propos1L1on 13 City Manager J ames Mocali s said use or a con sultant 1s necess a r y because th e application dendhne 1s Aug. 15. not enough tame for his staff to come up with a good proposal. Cal Trans officials recently indicated . M oca l is t old councrlmen. that they would like to have one combined bus and rail facility which would be the only Amtrak s top m t he South County. Neighboring com munities of Ir vine and Mission Viejo have already prepared proposals but San Juan should be a strong contender with the state because it already has an Amtrak stop. Mocalis said. Klingbeil. who was d umped from a vehicle on Interstate 5 near La Paz Road. was found by motorists at J .30 a.m. T hursday Records show he apparently was still alive when fo und shirtless on the freeway but was reported dead on arriva l a t a local hospita l. Investigators said this morn· in g that Kling beil seldo m worked and apparently lived on money provided by fa mily mem· be rs. He migrated between San Diego County. where Ills mother resides in Chula Vis ta. a nd Everett. Wash. where his father lives. Officers no w are attempting to find persons who saw him last. His m other. investigators said. last saw him about three weeks ago Fro•Page Al CHIEF .•. has been strong. "and i>eople seem quite eager to sign the petition," she said today. Mrs . Sweeney said Solomon indicated to the four past coun- cilmen "tnat community input would be very important in has consideration of J on's future .. , think that was very com mendable of Solomon.·· s he con· linued. "He certainly has a dif· ficult position. considering it was h is fi rst week in town ... Mean while. rea ltor J ay Murley said his group has col· lccted 1.187 petitions in s upport of the chief and he pla ns lo pre- sent them lo the city council <1t the beginning of T uesday's t; p.m. meeting. "l expect a few other people in town will be there lo see how the council responds." Murley said today. Sparks pleaded innocent last T hu rsday to a single misde meanor count of battery follow ing a bar fight June 29 in which he a llegedly shoved :i carnation mto the face of a fellow bar patron. Witnesses said the chief then pushed a table into the chest of Delbert Mathieson. 31, of Costa Mesa, and pummeled him on the face and head with his fists No increase an current cla~s si2e (no sav1og l Elimination of community recreation progr ams <saving $78.939) Establishment of a fee sch e d ule for u se of school facilities by community groups <saving $487.822). -No re duction in school health services <no savings>. E .n p I o y e e I a y o f f s r e c o m m e n d e d b y l h l. sup e rintendent inc lude d 3\ c l erical a ss is t ants . 10 custodians. eight groundsmen. four maintenance worker!\ and CJ custodial coordinator. No teacher or administration staff layoffs were proposed by Thorns lev. but he did include in his l ist of pro p o sed cut "' e lim1 na t1 o n of SI" positions as yet unt111eo. By not filling the six ad- ministrat ive posts the district would save$177 .657. he said . Thornsley said he made no re- commendation on a salar y freeze or o n cost of living pay raises. because those matters must be negotiated between the school dis· trict and employee labor associa· lions S2,439 Loot Take n Frotn Niguel Home /\ La~una Niguel family r eturned from vacation and round their home r ansacked bv b u rg la r s w h o c <J r ricd off J<•welry. antiques and watches valued at $2,439 Ora nge Coun ty ~h eri H "• offi cers said the break-in wa:- reported by company pr csidenr Brian Lance Estes. 40, of 3342'~ Dosinia Drive Brush Fire Held SAN OlEGO <AP> -A 570· acre weeke nd brush fire on Otay Mo untain near the Mexican border was expected to be con· lained by 6 a .m. this morning. a state Departme nt of For est ry spokesman said. You're Invited to Our First Evec Major I Savings to 50% Off On Our Entire Selection of Suits & Sportcoatsl Equally Great Values On Our Famous Selection of Neckwear, Shirts. Trousers & Sportswear. 46 Fashion Island. Newport Seoch .(7l4} 640·e310 ) 7 • ~ ( Orange Coast EDITION I I ~oday's C los i ng N.V. S t oek s VOL. 71, NO. 191, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNIA MONDAY, JULY 10, 1978 N TEN CENrS Council to Tusesday nlght, Newport Beach city councilmen will con· sider dumping the pay policy for policemen they approved in February. The policy specifies that police l)ay and fringe benefits "shall be established at levels comparable to the top three cities in Orange County." The policy was approved Feb. 27 on a 6-1 vote with then Coun· cilmao Paul Ryckoff dissenting. :Woman ;Slain & tin SA 1 Santa Ana police today are an· , vestigating the pre·dawn shoot· ' ing death or a woman and the serious wounding or her male <:ompanion in the parking lot of a restaurant. , Details of the homicide were sketchy and the identity of the dead woman remained un. known. The wounded man has ten- tatively been identified as Mike S. Reynolds, age unknown, of Long Beach. Initial police reports indicate ; the man a nd woman we re together in an automobile t p arked outside the Ancient I Mariner restaurant at 330 N. I Tustin Ave. Police said the pair were ap. parenlly s hot by an assailant who fled the scene. No motive has been established in the 4 .20 a.m. murder The rear window or Reynolds' late·model car was blown away and its owner struck by two bullets . Since that time, the council has four new member s and Ryckofr has been elected mayor. A month ago he asked that the matter be brought back lo coun· c il for reconsideration. Councilmen haven't Indicated what they plan to do on Tuesday nigh t, but last month coun- cilmen voted down a request from the lifeguards and firemen for a similar pay policy. The policy was brought to the Review Cop Pay Plan I council earlier this year by Councilman Don Mcinnis who said its approval was merely putting into written form a policy that existed informally for many years. He said that it had not been adhered lo in re· cent years. According to a survey pre· pared jointly by police represen· talives and city personnel aides. as of J anuary of this year , Newport Beach ranked 14th of 25 police agenices in Orange Coun· t v in total pay package. A beginning officer in Newport Beach earns a salary ranging from $1,239 to $1,506 a month with fringe benefits boosting the total package to an average of $1,814.76. Anaheim, the top·paying city in the county, pays a total average salary for a beginning officer of $2,149.63. Both of those rigures have changed since the start of the municipal fiscal year July 1. but no new figures are available . Police association members say they believe the to • three departments -Anah.. .i. Santa Ana and Irvine -have gone higher because of wage and benefit increases. Me mbers of the Pol ice . Employees Assoeiation that lob- bied hard for the policy also pointed out that their take home Neighbors Suspicious pay d ropped three percent 011 July 1. The decrease came about because of a retirement package they negotiated for last year that requires a larger contribu· tion from both the city and the individiual employees. About SO officers below the rank of sergeant launched what was described as a slowdown before the July 4 weekend. They <See PAY, Page A2> NB Man A1·rested Over Drug Lah By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of tM o.111 l'llet Sa.ti A West Newport resident. whose neighbors became suspicious of the odor of ether coming from his apartment, has been arrested on char ges of m a nufacturing and selling narcotics. Newport Beach police booked Aaren John Burcham, 25. after allegedly finding wh at one officer described as a complete laboratory in his apartment at 7406 W. Ocean Front. Police claim that Burcham was making a cocaine substitute out of a comp ound called lidocaine. Narcotics investigator Mike Hi etala alleged Burcham also had a pound or cocaine of undet ermined purity in his a p artm e nt when h e wa s a rrested Friday evening. Burcham was booked into city, jail and is being held in lieu or sso.ooo bail. Hiet ala s aid Burcham told him he is to report t o Chino Men's Prison next Monday to begm serving a term for a narcot ics convic tion handed down last year. Burcham was arrested after p olice were calle d by a o (See DRUGS, Page A 2 l ., His woman companion ap· parently tncd to escape the at· lacker on foot and was shot about 100 yards from the auto, police said Freeway Backed For Mesa She fell mortally wounded on the pavement and was · · dead at the scene while her comparuon was taken to Santa Ana-Tustin Community llospital Reynolds was reported in critical condJ- llon. Police investigators said when the woman left the car she crossed the C\ly boundary into Tustin and that the slaying therefore i!. under dual police j urisdiction. However, Santa Ana officers are laking the lead role in the in - vestigation a nd sear ch for a poss1 ble suspect Police said thev did not know the relationship of the t WO vie· lims and indicated they did not. , believe the shooting was the re· s uit of a marital entanglement They ruled out the possibility that the dual s hooting was anything like a murder·suicide Lon Nol Asks lmervention LONG BEACH \AP> -The United Nations should mtervene in the border war be tween Vietnam and Cambodia to check • the growing influence or the Soviet Union in Southeast Asia, former Cambodian president Lon Nol says. The 6-S-year-old retired field marshal, now living in exile in Hawaii, said the year·long clash b etween the two Communist neighbors represents an attempt b y Vietnamese leade rs to dominate Southeast Asia. Burg lar Too Loud The incident reported early Sunday morning isn't going to go down as the most subtle crime ever attempted in Newport Beach. J a mes R. Harris, 27. of 4610 Dorchester Road told police he was awakened at 3 a.m. by the sounds of what police believe was a burglar trying to break in· to his Cameo Hi ghlands home. Harris got out of bed and apparently frightened off the would·be thief. Investigation revealed the burglar wa~ lrylng to break inlo the home by chopping a hole through &he roof. """"',....._ NATALIA SHCHARANSKY HOLDS PHOTO OF HUSBAND Press Conference Held In Paris to Protest Trial · Soviet Dissidents Plead Innocent MOSCOW CAP) -The Soviet Union put two lead!ng dissidents on trial today in cases that threaten to aggravate the growing tension in U.S.·Soviet rela tions . Both pleaded innocent, and the wife of one appealed to Washington for help that she said could free her husband. Anatoly Shcharansky . 30, a key m ember of the J ewish emmigration movement here, reject ed allegations that he spied for the CIA a nd said he considers them "absurd," his brother Leonid said. He faces a possible death penalty but is expected to get a long term in labor camp if convicted. A cou rt official said Shchar ansky was accused of s upplying agents with state secrets. "including information about the locations of a number of defense enterprises which are secret." ln Kaluga, 100 miles south of Moscow. Al exander Ginzburg, 4 J, a longtime human rights activist, pleaded innocent to a char ge of anti·Soviel agitation and propaganda. punishable by up to 10 years at hard labor. But he told the court he might modify his plea if his guilt could b e prove d during th e proceedings, his wife said. Wes tern r e porte r s were barred from both courtrooms. Shcharansky 's wife, Natalia, told a news conference in Paris she believed further statements by President Carter and the Congress might en able her husband to "be free and go out from Russia." S h e said s he could n ot recommend specific actions that U.S. and other world leaders could take. 'Tm no politician." she said, but s uggested that Congress pass a resolution· on the case. Mrs. Shcharansky. who lives ln Israel, said she went to Paris lo help mobillie world oplnion In her husband's case. She Is to travel to Washington later th\s wee k to m eet with Vice President Walter F. Mondale. Speaktna to reportera du_ring a recess at the Mo scow trial, Leon\d Shcharansky s aid Ms brother "looked well , \ . . self-confident and cheerful" and smiled at him Gin zburg's wife, Irina. who saw her husband for the first time since his arrest 17 months ago. told Western reporters, "He refused to testify but made this re fu s al conditional on what witnesses said. f'alrQMft"n Suzanne Rubio, 20. Costa Mesa, will reign as Queen of the-Orange County Fair following her selection for the honor during weekend competition. A former Miss Newport Beach. she works at Disnevland as an artlst and attends Orange Coast College. • By KATHY CLANCY Of u. o.tl'1 "!Mt, ..... Unless they '4re handed more facts than they have now, Orange County Transportation Commissioners said today, they will continue to fight a CailTrans proposal to erase any future ex· ten s ion o f the Costa Mesa F reeway from state highway maps. Costa Mesa M ayor Ed McFarland said during a county transportation commission re- view or the freeway's status this morning that offi cials in his city want CalTrans to conduct an en· vironmental impact r eport before eliminating lbe freeway. It has been on state drawing boards since 1944. But Robert Date!. CalTrans regional director, said he views preparation of such a report as too time·consuming. ·'Whal we are saying . . . we have a pretty good hunch that this is rantasyland that we are eve r going to build this freeway." Datel said. So far , the California Transportation Commission hasn't started the process of rescinding the freeway route dow n Newport Boul e vard through the heart of Costa Mesa. Al Hollinden, chairman of the Orange County commission. said he dldn 't see how the state panel could make a decision without at least some environ· mental data -like how many fa milies and busi nesses would have to be relocated. Between now and Aug. 14, of· ficials from Costa Mesa, CalTrans and the county agreed today, they will try to come up with some facts and figures that can be used to help the stale Transportation Commission de- termine the freeway's future. Datel said the item awaiting presentation to the state com· mission will just begin reviews leading to rescinding the route. During those reviews, he con- tinued, local officials will be asked to comment and CalTrans will present reports on the route. Mc Farland said be is worried that once the rescinding process starts it will be hard to stop. "Most of the traffic problems that we have . . . are dlrecUy related to the lack ot completion <See FREEW" y. P aae AU POETS UBOR TO PA Y BILLS Ma n does not live by bread atone, but even poets havt' to make a Uvtna and they flnd It d.lfncuh ln today's world . See Fcaturtng, Pace Cl. ® STANTOff @ • • ._ ________________________________________________ __.. MAP SHOWS ORANGE COUNTY SANITATION DISTRICTS Sewet Charges Proposed to Offset Effects of Prop. 13 ' ~ • J $5 OC Sewer Fee \ ~ Topic of Hearing A public hearing is scheduled July 19 on a proposal to charge a flat user ree of up to SS per m onth for sew e r services throughout Orange. County. The Oat rate would affect 1.5 million citizens in 23 of the 26 cities served by the Sanitation Districts of Orange County. The only areas not affected by the sanitation proposal would be Laguna Beach, San Juan Capis tra no, San Clem ente, Irvine a nd the Saddleback Valley. Up to now, each of the seven sanitation districts has collected revenue from property taxes. But officials say that districts may be requJred to change over to a flat rate s pecial ass.essement because of the passage of Proposition 13 which limits property taxes to 1 percent ol the 1975-76 usessed valuation. G e n e ral Manager Fred Harper said today that the district prefers to continue with the past assessment practice but that a great deal of legal uncertalnty clouds the issue. "That flat rate charge would be a standby measure," Harper said . ·'We would prefer to stay with the past assessment practice because it ts more equitable." Harper pointed out that some small users would pay sll1htly more If th~ tlat rate rce is imposed. • He added that owners of property with high assessed · valuations will have a reductio~1 in costs. l Harper said that the d istricts) would coUect about $17 million by the flat rates. C o ast W e a t h e r N i g ht through mid · m orn ing lo w c loud s. othe rwise fair through Tuesday. Lows tonight 58 to 62. Highs Tuesday in up. per 60s at the beaches to. upper 70s Inland. INSIDE TODA '1 Fourteen Amuh families mow to aouthem Wiaconnn wit~ thtJJI •tk better OJ>- portunUws. St.ory P~ A8. l•tlex , • 1 ' • I ; ' ' .-\¥ IL Y PILOT N Brooke Ruling Cance led BlJLLETIN BOSTON (AP) -Aller a three-week lnvesllaatloA Into whether St'n. Edward Brooke "hould be charged with perjury, Che Middlesex County district at· torney said today he ha!> no jurisdiction in the case. District Allor ney J ohn J . Droney, a Democrat who was defeated by Brooke In the 1972 Sen1te nee. said be would take no further action on the matter because any possible offense e><:· curred In ulfolk County. BOSTON I AP I The in vestigataon has been completed to determine whether a grand Jury s hould consider possible perjury c harges against U S SC'n Edward W Brooke. authorities s~ud today M iddlest•x County Dist racl Al torncy John J Droney ~aid ht- would makl' public ha!> finding~ JI a nt'ws conference. Oronev launc hed the 1>r1· l1manary investigation some• 1 hret• weeks ai::o. saying hl' would have to study all evidence 1n the case before recommend- ing whether there was s ufficient cause· lo take the matter to a gr:.ind Jury Brooke.•. who as runntng for re· ell· ti ion th as year, defeated Drone)'. <.1 Democrat. in the 1~2 ral'l' Till' matter was referred to llron('Y by Probate Courl Judge L.awrt•O('f' Pl'r<'r a who found I h ,1 1 t h e M <.i s ::. a c h u ::. e t t ~ Hcpubhran had made false &Latements on sworn documents in connection with his d ivorct· case' Hrookt'. the 1udgc round. had misstated both the source and the amount of a loan the senalo'" <"la1mt>d lo be $49,000. Pcrer:.i permitted Mrs . Brooke to reopen the da vorce action bl'cau:-e of those false s tate- ments A hearing ts scheduled for Thursd<Jy 1n the d1von:1· t'OJSl'. The di vorr(• wou ld h av<' herom c final June 15. but will h;.i ve lo IX! tried again and a new· prop(•rty :,(•ltlem<"nt worked out hv lht' senator and his c.-;t r anl.(ed .,..,fr Rcm1~rn -Newport Cops Seeking Le ad On Nude Man :--ltowport Beach police today -..ough t leads on a naked man who I hn·at en <:d u Newport Shorl•:-\\Oman over the •\t•t•kend The· 3fl Vl'ar-old \'tC'tim told police sht• w<.is walking on Nl•wport Shorc>s Drive al about 9 11 m fo'mh1y when the incident occurred Sht> s;,i1d ttw man pulled his truck into an all ey in front of her and Jumped oul Ile ordered her to commit an unnatural sex act or he would shoot her The woman said she ran .1nywuy ~and ht'urd the truck driving off War E x ercise At P e ndleton CAMP PENDLETON IAP > 1\ tra1mn~ exercise involving li.000 men. 24 war::.hips and 250 ht'licopters and planes began to· da_v A maJor beach landing by i .000 Marine:-is scheduled Wed 11esday. The 10-day exercise under the eyes of several members of ('ongress was s upervised by Maj. G<'n. Charles Cooper and Rear Adm. Richard A. Paddock. ORANGE COAST N DAILY PILOT Trw~MQit coao 0•1•Y Pilot w4tl\Wftu,, "' "'" f)r~I..._ "t•W"I. Pr•\\ l\C>~Of+,fWoodbyttw~A~ C.0.\t Pub11\1'11f"Hl COtrto.l"• \tQiAr,t111> ,.O•f"On"f ltf .. PUOhV'l•O Mo~•• trtrouQ,, f r1(1.y •or CO\tA ~ .. '"°1llf00'1 .. M:f'I Hytlllft"C)fOft .. Mf\ fOV"' t••l't VAltfll¥ lht"fl' ~cklt•IMU Vall•Y ft."Ct lAOUf\t ft.-t<" So\tift (O•\I A~"0'9~1..,,. IMJn '' oubl1~ \Alyroev\ ,,,,.. ~" fht1 ~!~~:n~~~'1:..·.~~~j~.:,:l0 W.\I f\A'I • ......... _ Prh>d9nt ltM Piyoli"-'• h <-11 c-, Vt\ #I P. n•Cfff'lt a"Cj Gif>ftr'f at Milt~ '" ............ . ce110- "'"'""'• M...,...,. lrli\.tMV1~ IOttOf" o ..... ," -.... ·~~ """ """'•"'Ma ... ,, ...... "" OtllcH Ccnte Min.A ))0 W•\.l IH• Sfr_.,.1 LAOVt"lt ft••t f'I 11 .. Gi.,.,,.¥r• "'"' H:'~'r.:C ~~~.! Pl:)'io"f ~",,'*:;'~':;'a •I i..n Olf'OO ,,,.,,.,,,., l'el..,llol'le(1U)842~ Cl•Nlfled Advertltll'IO 142·"71 Monday July 10, 1978 ---,. 0 .. 11, Plle4 -lty P1t"tO 0•0... ... 11 Plugging ERA Hearing Probes Radials WASHINGTON <AP l -A House sub<.'Ommittee 1s re!>um ing hearings on the Firestone 500 Steel Belted Radial tire, wtuch the government claims is so unsafe it should be recalled. Firestone officials are Sl'heduJed to testify today before the House Inte r s tate and Foreign Commerce committee's oversight panel. The same sub· committee conducted hearings m May. The Transportation l)epart· me nt said Saturday that the tires "have failed in significant numbers" and recommended that the firm recall the m im· mediately. He Landed -Barely RAMONA IAP l -The skv rained nudists. 1nl'lud ing one who narrowly mis· scd hatting a chain link fe nce and landing in a tree The best jump by one of the four parachutists Sun· day w as by P at Moorehead. wearing only a cras h helmet and knee pads. He made a perfect landing in a big ''X" on the ground. There we r e seve r al dozen spectators for lhti first Miss Nudti Galaxy Pageant won by Bobbi Gallo. 'l:T. of Long Beach. Becky Neilson of Eugene. Ore .. was first runner-up. The other winners in· eluded Pam Johnston, 24. of Newport Beach. Miss Per sonality Orange County !->Upportc.•r!-> of the Equa~ Rig hts Amendment staged local .Plea fo1 the Constitutional proposal <.lt Marn Beach i'ark in Laguna Beach Sunday. '!'hey were participants in nationwide rally in ~upporl of wom~n s nghb Crowd was larger in Waslungton . D.C .. wherl' c~t1mated 100.000 women a nd sympathizers marched. ISee Page A4l But the department's N at1ooal Highway TraCfic Safety Ad· ministration did not order the recall for the 13 to 15 million tires estimated to he in u::.e A determination will be madt· after a hearing Aug. 7 The company opposes the re- c a II. said Bernard W. Frazier, Firestone's public relation!> director. New York Hostag es Sei zed Police Nab Burglary Suspect A two-hour search m Newport Heig hLs ended Sunday aftern~n with the arrest of a man pohce a llege committed two break·an!> m the neighborhood Booke d o n susp1 c1on or burglary wa::. Peter J oshua Frederick Boss. 21, who told police he was Ii ving m a motel on North Newport Boulevard. Officer Thomas Tolman rt· ported that he was called to the home of Te rry llamlyn at 2905 Broad St. at about 12:30 p.m because Hamlyn had surpris<:d a burglar in his home The s us pect ran off and Tolman be~an searc hing tht• neighborhood for him About e1n hour latt·r a second break-in by a suspect matching I he description of lht• man sought by Tolman was reportt>d at 315 Santa Ana A venue A full-scale search using fivt· police units a nd the polirC' helicopter was m ounted and about an hour later. Tolman said he s potted Boss, who matr hed the description of lhl' ~uspect walking on Santa Ana Avenue m•a r North Newport The victim~ of lht> two break ms reportedly 1dl'nt1ficd Boss a~ the m an who'd h een in their hom es lie \\:.IS booked m city Jail where he 1s held in Lieu of SI0,000 ball F ront Page A I FREEWAY. • or thl' inacllv1ty on that portion of the freewa:>. · he continued. "We feel it completl'ly stymies :my solution that we wQu ld want to initiate." Mc Farland said He noted the rescinding re view would affect only the por- tion of the free way planned between Bay Street and Pacific· Coast Highway Without that part. he said, the rest of the freeway is useless as far as solving Costa Mesa traffic woes Mc Farland said at would be hard to make a decision on the practicality of the route without an environmental study "We can't play on a hunch," he continued. "We have to de- pend on facts that we can look at and hopefully make an in - telligent dec is ion based on that." Date! described his hunc h about the route's future as an educated guess based on 30 years· experience planning freeways up and down the state." t~ro,,. Page A I DRUGS ... unidentified neighbor at about 5 p m . who complained about the odor of ether coming from Bur c ham 's ocean front apartment Offi cer Michael Hyam~ drove to the area und said ht• also smelled lhe odor coming from the residence. llyams got Burcham to come to the front door and when he asked if he could che~k the· apartment Burcham t old ham his girlfriend was asleep in the room from which the e ther seemed to be coming. ll ya m s r e portedly t o ld Burcham he feared for the girl'<; safety under those condition::. a nd searched the apartment. finding lhc lab t'quipment and narcotics. but no girl ll1etala said today there was so muc h equipment a nd ptt raphcrnalia confiscated that a I ruC'k had to be borrowed so the bulk of material could be taken lo the She riff's crime lab an S:.inta Ana. Mos t of the chemicals and narcotics wer e taken lo the police station and I lietala ::.aid he would be spending the next ft•w days taking inventory. ··1t 's worth thousands." he ventured today about the conf1scatl·d materials Fe deral Mediators Enter Talks WASHINGTON !A P J Federal mediators stepped into the stalled negotiations today between the Postal Service and unions representing more than 500.000 employees. The Fe(ieral Mediation and Conciliation Service entered the talks with 10 days remaining in a three-year contract There has been no agreement on any m a- jor point in the nearly three- month-long talks. Postal labor leaders, who have expressed resentment at White House "jawboning" in an effort to hold down inflationary effects of the PoStal contract, welcomed the entry by c hief mediator Wayne L. Horvitz. 'l a m hopeful that the pres- e nce of Mr. Horvitz will move the talks off dead center," Presi- d ent Emmer Andrews of the American Postal Workers Unfon said today The outcome is Important to President Carter because more workers are involved than in a ny other labor contract up for negotiation this year. and because the settlement may set a pattern for future labor negotl a lions. The talks have bee n under way since April 20. Both sides pledged continuous talks start ing today 'Too Young' Patty Won't Tell All ATLANTA IA P> -Patty Hearst, resisting sug- gestions that she write about her life. says she's too young to write an autobiography. "People tell me l should write a book.'' Miss Hearst who js serving a prison sentence at the Feder~l Correctional Institution in Pleasanton. said in an interview with the Atlanta Journal- Constitution. "My feeling has been t_hat anything that s macks of un autobiography at 24 1s arrogant to say the letist. ·• Miss Hearst a lso said she continues to be fascinated, as well as puzzled. by her transformation from newspaper heiress to revolutionary. • Miss Hetirst is serving a seven-year sentence for her part in a bank robbery staged by the rcvolu- tion a ry Symbionesc Liberation Army. She wlll be eligible ror parole in 14 months. Boy, 16, Nabbed in NB Store Newport Beach officers. aided by Huntington Beach's police dog. cornered a 16-year-old boy in a Fashion Island department slore Sunday night The youth surrende red to Officer Ron Rodgers after a half-hour search in the darkened J C. Penney s tore. The search was t ouched off by a silent burglar alarm. Kodgcrs said he was sent to lh<.' store at 24 Fashion Island at about 8 p.m. when the alarm was a ctivated li e said he found a hole leading rrom the outdoor garden shop into lhe indoor garden shop Rodgers who crawled into the shop through the hole said he found evidence that the intrude r had gone into the main store, so he called for additional help . Afte r the brief search. the youth reporl<.'dly stepped out and surrendered while offi cers were combtn~ the ground noor The boy. who told officers he look a pen and pencil set, was released to the custody of his pan•nt'>. rl'sid<•nt!) of Glendale NB Council Meet De layed N ewporl Reach City Cou n c II m e n won 't be meeting tonight because there won't be enough council members in town to constitute a quorum Councilmen will be al· tending a special preview s howing of the Pageant o r the Masters in Lag una Beach hosted by the coun- ty League of Ci ties The council meeting will be h e ld Tuesday. The study session is scheduled at 1:30 p.m and the busi- ness meeting will get un· der way at 7:30 p.m . "There 1s no safet y-related reason for the public lo be con cerned about continuing to use the Firestone Steel Ilclt ed Radial 500 or any other properly maintained Firesto ne -made tire." he said. "The 500 as pro· ,. i d i n g r e I i ab I e s e r v i c e to millions of motorists today as 1t has for years." The company quit making t ht.• top-of-the-line tirl' early last year Front Page A I PAY •.. based their action on what Lhcy say is the city counci 1 's apparent unwillingness to grant them adl•· quate pay for the work they·rl' required to do. The s lowdown <.ictually an vol ves officers runclioning to thl· letter of departmental regula tions regarding officer s afety thus s lowing their response timl· in the field. Officers involved indicated no further job action is contemplat ed should the pay policy bt• rescinded. Salarv neizotiat1ons have been halted by the uncertainty of lht· city's income under Proposition 13. Officers involved in the hO l'alled s lowdown sav thev wall .... ail lo see what the c1h"'. rinan 1·1ul pos1t1on 1~ hef~n· cun templatang further actt0n Police Probe NB Burglaries Newport Beac h police today continued their probe of a series of office burglaries in one of tht· N e wport Center m e dic.i i buildings The break-ins were report('d Friday morning by employees of the physicians and de ntists with offices in the building at 400 Newport Center Drive Police today said 18 case~ have been reported so far and more could be discovered 1n offices that were closed Friday A total of $106.35 in cash wa" reported missing from seven of the offices hit by the burglar Police said in all 18 cases locked doors were pried open NEW YORK !/\Pl A man threatening to detonate what he- :-atcl was 80 pounds of dynamite with a hand grenade and claim ing lo speak only Polish was holding four hostages one of the m a judge 111 the World Trade Center today. a uthorities said Tho usands were evacuated rrom the building Members of thl' police hostage negotiating team were talking lu the man by telephone through a Polish interpreter. according to poltce More than three hours after thl" s iege began. the situation re maincd a standoff between thl' man and pohce this afternoon Lt Frank Really. or the pohce d e pa rlmen l ·s E·mc r gency Services d1vi::.ion. s1:1id eyew11 rw~ses saw the man holdin~ "a World War II potato masher ta l~pc of grcnadel," in the hear 1ng room of the state Workmen'-; Compensation Board on the 36th fl oor of the center's Tower Two. The center is the world's lar~e:-t com merc1al office building com· pl ex Sl•vcral people said the man W:J!> a claimant and that his cast- h:.id JUSl been postponed for two months to allow neurologiral and orthopedic testing when hl• pulled oul lhl' s upposed potato masher Heally said lhl· man also wa~ seen pulling a '"pushcart, on whic h he s ays he has lht· dynam1k ·· The hostages were identified as a Judge. an attorney. a state insurance representative a nd a l'Ourt reporter Several thousand people wen· l'vacuatcd from five floors of the 110-story tower Two. Adelina Walker, a c lerk in lht• hearing room who e"caped. saad the judge ··had JUs t told tht· man's attorney that there would be a two-month delay for report~ and then suddenly the man took an ohjcct out of a bag and I walked out the door " Ms . Walker described lhl' man ~s in his early 50s with a Northern European accent and dressed in casual t'lothing. She ~a id this ~as "a t lea st the second or third taml' he had hati u hearing" On a normal workday, soml! 35.000 pcoplt• work in the entire World Trade Center complex. located on the southern tip of Manhattan. The twin , 110-storv towers are tht• world's secon~ tallest buildings. after Chicago's Scars Tower You're Invited to Our First Ever Major I Savings to 50% Off On Our Entire Selection of Suits & Sportcoats! Equally Great Values On Our Famous Selection of Neckwear, Shirts, Trousers & Sportswear. 46 Fashion Island, Newport Beach . (714) 640-8310 , I 7 I • Saddlehaek EDITION VOL. 71 , NO. 191, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Soviet Trials B ·egun 2 Dissidents Charged; U.S. Tension Mounts MOSCOW (AP> The Soviet Union put two leading dissidents on trial today in cases that t hreaten to aggravate the growing tension 1n U.S.-Sov1el r e la tion s. B ot h pl e ad e d innocent. a nd the wife of one appealed to Washington for help that she said could free her husband. Ana toly Shcha ra nsky, 30. a key m e mbe r of the J e w ish , emmigration movement here. r e j ected allegations that he s pied for the CIA and said he considers the m "abs urd," his brother Leonid said Panel Seeks More Recall He faces a possible death penalty but is expected to get a long term rn labor camp if convicted. A co urt o ffi cia l sai d Shcharansky was accused of s upplying agents with state secrets. '"including information about the locations of a number of defense enterprises which are secret.·· In Kaluga, 100 miles south of Moscow. Alexander Ginzburg, 41 , a longtime huma n rights activist. pleaded innocent to a charge of anti-Soviet agitation and propaganda. punishable by up to 10 years at hard labor. But he told the court he might modify his plea if his guilt could b e prov e d durin g the proceedings , his wife said. W estern r e porte r s were barred from both courtrooms. Shcharansky's wife. Natalia, told a news confe rence in Paris s he be lieved further statements by Pres ident Carter and the Cong r ess might e na ble h e r husband to "be free and go out from Russia." S h e s aid s he could not recommend specific actions that U.S. and other world leaders 'Too Young' Patty Won't Tell All could take. "I'm no politician," she said, but suggested that Congress pass a resolution on the case Mrs . Shcharansky, who hves in Israel. said she went to Paris to help mobilize world o pinion in her husband's case. She 1s to travel to Washington later this week· t o m eet wi t h Vice President Walter F. Mondale Speaking to reporters during a r ecess at the Moscow trial, Leonid Shcharansky s aid his brother "loo k e d w el l . self-confident and cheerful" and <See TRIALS, Page A2) Viejo Body Identified MONOAY ,J ULY1~1W8 Afternoo11 N. \'. Stoeks TEN CENTS Signatures ATLANTA {AP> -Patty Hearst. resisting sug- gestions that she write about her life, says she's too young to write an a utobiogra phy. -Transient · By JERRY CLAUSEN OI t• O.-iry P'ilet St.lff A group seeking the recall of three Saddleback Valley Unified Sch ool Dis trict trustees is scheduled lo begin mailing peti- tion blanks into Leisure World tomorrow because or the walled- com m unity's r estrictions on door-lo-door sohc1tation. Preston Howe ll, co-chairman of the petition group seeking to recall trustees George Henry, Ca r ole Neu s ta dt nnd Mar y Phillips. would not reveal this morning how many signatures have been obtained in petition- ing a imed al a rl'call election on the November ba llot "But Wl' probably st and a bet Ler chance now or reaching the r e quired numbe r (9.200 signatures by July 31) than al a ny time in the past."' Howell said He claimed that Saddleback Valley residents a re unhappy with ··the direction the board seems to he taking regarding budget cuts in result of Proposi- l iOJI 13 .. Howell cited what he said he believes arc unwarranted cuts in Leisure World adult education programs and in district-wide athletic and mus ic programs as issues R ecall proponents originally filed nine charges against the three trustees, ranging from al- leged secret sessions to alleged moves by two of the three to pro· mole friends in the district a d minis tration T he three trustees. however. have denied the charges. calling them "false and the product of a few a mbitious political op portunists ·· The recall movem ent began shortly after the three trustees took issue w ith school ad· ministration by Supt. Richard Welte and placed him on sus- pension throug~ a forced "vaca t1on ·· At last announced count. the . petition g roup had a cquired 2.000 signatures from district voters who set'k a recall elec- tion. Howell said this morning that his group no longer will re- lease the number of signatures collected during the drive. ··w e feel that is a strategic question." he said. "We want them <the board members> to keep wailing for the other shoe to drop " .• Another officer in the petition ' . ' (See R ECALL, Page A2 ) Coast Weathe r .. People tell me I should write a book." Miss Hearst. who is serving a prison sente nce at the Federal Correctional Institution in Pleasanton, said i n a n intervi e w with the At la nta J ourna l- Cons titution. "My reeling has been that anything that s macks or an autobiogra phy at 24 1s arrogant to s ay the least.'· Miss Hearst a lso said she continues to be f ascinated, as well as puzzled. by her trans formation from newspaper heiress to revolutionary Miss Hearst is serving a seven-year sentence for her part in a bank robbery staged by the revolu· tionary Symbionesc Liberation Army. She wi ll be eligible for parole in 14 months. Predawn Shooting Kills Woman in SA Santa Ana police today arc investigating the pre-d a wn shooting death of a woman and the serious wounding of her male companion. Details of the homicide were sketchy and the victims remain unidentified as invest igators swooped down on the shooting scene ll was the parking lot outside the Ancient Mariner restaurant at 300 N_ Tustin Ave. Initial repor ts indicate the man and woman were together in an automobile parked outside the restaurant when accos ted by their assailant. Early reports also Indicated the man was s hot a s he sat in the auto. The same reports showed the woman appare ntly was either dragged from the auto or ran from it into a ne ighbo ring parking lot. She fell mortally wounded on the pavement a nd was dead at the scene while her companion was taken to Santa Ana Tustin Community Hospital where he r e porte dl y is in c r i ti ca l condition. Police investigators said when the woma n left the car she Truck Crushes Toro Driver crossed the city boundary into Tus tin a nd that the s laying therefore 1s unde r dual police Jurisdiction. Howe ver, Santa Ana officers are taking the lead role in the investigation and tbe search for a possible suspect. Police said they did not know the r elations hip or the two victims and indicated they did not believe the s hooting was a result of marital e ntanglement. They ruled out the possibility that the dua l s hooting was anything like a murder-suicide. Santa Ana police reported receiving the emergency call at 4 20 a .m. Youth Buried In T-shirt SAN DIEGO IA P) -John Mayeski, 16, has been buried in a T -shirt with the na me of his favorite rock mus ic group. Ae r osm1th. inscribed on the back "I wanted his friends to see him a s he was," K athry n Mayeski said at the ros ary Sun- day for her son. who was s hot to death by kidnappers. Police said Mayeski and his friend . Mi chael Bake r . were killed at Mayeski 's car shortly before a bank holdup last Wed· nesday. Bake r, also 16, was buried Saturday. The boys were neighbors. Ac- cused of murdering the m are Robert Harris, 25, of Visalia and his brother. Daniel, 18. who were both in San Diego County jail after their arraignment. The partially clad body or a man dumped in the fast lanes of northbound Interstate 5 m Mis· sion Viejo Thursday has been identified a s Ke ith Arthur Klingbeil. 23. a San Diego County trans ient. Orange County Sheriff's in. vestigators said this morning Klingbeil was identified over the weekend by the fBl through fingerprints. S h e riff's officials ~a id . however. they still have made no advances in investigations in· vo l ving two other bodies dumped in unincorporated coun- ty areas during J une Investigators are still awaiting toxocological reports on the death of Camp Pendleton Marine Richard Allen Keith, 20, whose nttde·bod7 was found June 19 on Moulton Parkway in an isolated section of Laguna Hills. Still tmidentified. an official said . is the body of another man found June 'Z1 in a n orange grove near El Toro Manne Corps Air Station. Investigato r s now believe the man was an illegal alien and may never be iden- tified. · The victim bled to death from a neck wound at first be lieved to be a gunshot. His hands we re strapped behind his back with a belt. investigators said. Klingbeil, who was dumped from a vehicle on Interstate 5 near La Paz Road. was found by motorists at 3·30 a.m. Thursday Records show he apparently was still alive when found shirtless on the freeway but was reported dead on arri va l a t a local hospital Investigators said this mom ing that Kling b e il se ldom worked and a pparently lived on money provided by family mem bers. He migrated between San Diego County. where his mother resides in Chula Vista. and Everett. Wash. whe re his father lives. Officers now are attempting to rind persons who saw him last His mother, investigators said. las t saw him about three weeks ago. Investigators said Klingbe1l's left nipple had been burned off his c hest, apparently with a car·s cigarette lighter. Cause of his death. however , is still un· known pending results of a lox· icological report. 2 Deaths Probed LAS VEGAS, Nev. <AP) -An autopsy was scheduled today for two mentally retarded children who died on an outing in the Lake Mead area Sunday. The driver of a Toro Disposal trash truck was crushed to death beneath the side of his vehicle at about 9:30 a.m. today when it overtur ned near Prima Oeshecha County Dump about four miles . east or San Juan Capistrano. AtlaletiC!s, Busiag APW1r...-o r NATALIA SHCHARANSKY HOLDS PHOTO OF HUSBAND • Press Conference Held in Paris to Protest Trial Neivport Man Faces Narcotics Lab Rap By JOANNE REYNOLDS OI tM 0•1ly Piiot Sutt A West Newport res ident. whose n e ighbors be caml' suspieieua or the odor of ether coming from his apartment, has been arrested on cha rges of manufacturing a nd selling narcotics. Newport Beach police booked Aaren John Burcham. 25. after allegedly finding what one offi cer described as a complctt• laboratory in his apartment al i 406 W. Ocean Front P olice claim lhat Burcham Grenade Man Holding Four NY Hostages NEW YORK IAPl -A man threatening to detonate what ht· said was 80 pounds of dynamite with a hand grenade and claim ing to speak only Polish was holding four hostages -one of the m a judge -in the World Trade Center today, authorallcs said. Thousands were evacuated from the building Members of the poli ce hostage negotiating team were talk mg lo the man by telephone through d Polish interpreter. <H"cording to police. More than three hours aftl'r the siege began. the situation n·- maincd a standoff between tht.• man a nd police this afternoon Lt. Frank Reilly. of the policc departme nt 's Emergency Services division. said cyewit· nesses saw the ma.n holding "a World War II potato masher (,1 type or grenade> ... in the hear ing room of the stale Workmen's Compensation Board on the 36th floor of the center's Tower Two The center is the world's larRcsl <See 111REAT, Page A2 > "'a:. making a tOC<llnt.' :.ub:.t11 ult· ou t of '' t•om pou n ri ca lied hdocaint·. Narcotic~ invcst1~ator Mike Hiet ala alleged Burcham alsQ._ h a d a po und of cocaine ol undete rmined purity 1n h1~ apur tm c nt wh<'n he was arrested Friday 1•vemn~ Burcham wa-. booked in10 city 1all and 1!'> being held 1n lieu uf S50,000 ba d . Hietala ~a1rf Burcham told him he 1-. lo repo1t to C hinu Mt:n '" Prison nl'Xl Mond..iy to tx•gin ser ving a krm for <t nart:Olll''> conv1ctwn handed down las t year. Burcham was arrcst<•d afll•r po l1 c t• were ca ll ed b y c1n un1denlif1 ed neighb<>r al a bout S p m. who compla1ncl1 about tht> odor of <'thl•r comi ng from B u r c h '' m · s o c· c' a n f r o n t ''pa rtment. Officer M1ch,wl lly;1ms Clrm·c• 111 th<.' arc•a ;.ine1 s~lld he al,M> :-mclled the odor tommg from th<' r('s1dcnct• Hvams j.!Ol Burcham lo tom,• lo t.ht• front door a nd when h1 · a!'>ked 1f hc tould cht•ek thc• ,1 partml•nl Ourrham told him his g1rllral'nd was asleep in till' room from which t hc• cth1•r Sl'cmcd to he coming ll yam' rrport c•d l y t old Burcham ht• feared for the ~1rl'.., :.afct~· under those c·ond1t1on" · .ind ~ea rcht.-d the• <•partmt·nt · finding the lah l'qu1pment :ind na rcot 1cs, but no ,girl lhc•tala said today then• wa ... ... o muc h c•qu 1pm t.•nl and par:ipht•rnulia confiscale d that J , (SN• DRUGS, Pag<> A2l Newport Cops , Seeking Lead t On Nude Man Newport Beach police loday sought leads on a naked man who threatened a Newport S h or c ;; wo man o v 1• r th t ' weekend Night thro ugh mid- m o rning low c louds , otherwise fair through Tuesday. Lows tonight 58 to 62. Highs Tuesday in up- per 60s al the beaches lo upper 70s inland. Orange County parameics working lo remove the still un- identified driver said he was dead. Witnesses said they believed the driver was thrown from the doorless cab when the truck wentoutofcontrol. CUSD to Consider Cuts The 36-year -old victim told police she wa s walk in g on • Newport Shores Drive at about 9 ' p m . Fnday when the incident { occurred. J She said the man pulled his 1 truck into an alley in front of her ; ;rnd jumped out. fie ordered h 'r 4 to commit on unnatural sex aict ' or he would shoot her ' INSIDE TODA l' Fourt~en Amlah /amiUea move to 30Ul~ Wi8comin WMTt! they 3eek betttr OP· portunfUea. Story Page 1\8. •••ex ( Toro Disposal officials, based in EJ Toro, were stUI investigat- ing the cause or the accident. T he company collects trash in El Toro. Mission Viejo, Laguna JlJtls and Orange. Kennedy Tale Due WASHINGTON CAPl -Joan Kennedy s .. ys a detailed account of her bout with alcoholism wUI be published in about two weeks by a national woman 's maiazine. The article will tell how she beeame addicted and the therapy program s he follows. ' By ANNE COOPER OI •• O.ily l"tlM Staft Substantial cuts in funds available for school athletics a nd bus transportation are among Superintendent J erom e 'fhornsley's recommendations to the Capistrano Unified School District board to bring expenses lnto line wlth Propostuon 13 reve nue losses. The Capistrano Unified school board la scheduled to consider Thornsley's recommendations and approve budget cuts at three special board m eeunas. scheduled tonight and July 24 and 31 The meetlngs will begin at 7:30 n.rn al school district offices. 32972 Calle Perfecto In San Juan Capistrano. Trustees are expected to adopt a final 1978·79 budget Aug 7, In a memo this week lo the school board. Thornsley said cuts of about $3.6 million must be made lo the $34.9 million tentative budget In order to balance expenses and revenues reduced by pa ssa1e of Proposition 13. Thornaley emphasized tbal th<' flture ot $3.6 million l n anticipated cuts "Is not locked In concrete," and may fluctuate. .. At the same Ume." aid Thornsley. "serlous thought should be &lveo to subsequent budget years which. based uJ)On all current indications. will require even more s tringent budget considerations .·· Thorns ley 's s p ec if!<' r ecommend a lions for 1978-79 budget r eductions total $4.2 million. They include : -Two alternative reductions tn support for the district's nthletlcs program . a 50 percent reduction (saving $172,217 ) end ~-!90 percent reduction <savlng $283,217>. Continuation or schOot athletics at the present level would re~ulre fund r aising actlvllles, private bu~lness suppo rt. rental of athletic c&ee BUDGET, Pafe At> The woman said !>he ran iinyway and hl'urd the truck driving off. POEIS UBOR TO PAY BILLS Man docs not live by bread atone, but even poeL'i have to make a living and they find It <lifncult in today·~ world. 5cf' Ft'oturing, Page Cl. ) ' .. . -DAil' f •LOl sa Pef it ion Inke d 1,200 Support Chief Sparks By STEVE MITCHELL Of, .. o.lly f'ttel S\aff Nearly l.200 signatures from Laguna Beach residents are ex- pected to be presented to Laguna Beach city councilmen Tuesday night supporting sus· pended Police Chief J on S parks. And s upport for the police c hief, who w as s u spende d without pay in the wake or a bar fi ght June 29 at the Ivy House. has also com e fro m four past mayor s of the Art Colon y who s poke with new City Manager Fred Solomon for a half hour last Friday. Solomon, who assumed duties July 1 and whose first action was to suspend the 42-year-Old police chief. was unavailable to comment on the impromptu meeting Friday at City Hall Speaking on behalf of the police c hief were former m ayors Jon Brand, Phyllis Sweeny. Charlton Boyd and Roy Holm. f''ormer Mayor Holm, a n eight-year councilman. s aid the .. common thread that brought us (the four mayors) before S<ilom on. was that all of us re- cognize the c hief has done an ex· Lraordinary job in what has to be one of the touRhest police chief JObs in the state. ·'Without really know mg all the de tails, we wanted the new city manager to be aware of the fact that Jon's performance, al least from our point of view, was exceedingly good and might be very difficult to duplicate. '"Secondly, some of us shared with Solomon the thought that if Laguna Beach was to take ac- tion an terminCJt inR Sparks. 1t was most certainly the end or his 1·are'"r "'ro'" Pa9..-;I I BUDGET .•. t'qu1pm1•nt and /or a s ports 1J<HttcirH1t1on fCl'. Thorns ley ;,a111 T hr (.•e a lt crnal1Vl' n.·d u l·t1on s in sch oo l bus tran s portnt1on includ in g continued busmg of all students. w i t h i ncreased walking d ist ances <saving S352 264) e limination of j unior and ~enao~ hq~h school busing <saving $347. 752 J. and elimination of all district busing <saving $655,69'.! 1 Thornsley has recommended that all sch ool busing b e C'lamanated by Sept . 1979, with trans portation to and from ;,chool available with the Oran~c C'ountv Transit Di s trict or thro u,gh pra' <ilc contractual arranRcmcn~ Heduction by 10 percent an the d astncl":. mus 1l' program with JUnaor and senior high mu;,1c proj?rams unaffHtctl ( sa v mg S20,453) No tncreasc 1n current class ;,1te (nosavm g> lWminalion of community reC'reation 11rogr:.ims 1 saving ~7R.fl39 I E stablishme nt of a fel' .... (.'h l·dul(• for use or school fac1lit1es by community ~roup;, ISU\"111g S48i,822l !';o reduction 1n school health ;,cn·1c<.•s tno savings>. l!:mployl'l' la yoffs re co mm cn d <.·d b y t h e> :-upcrinte>ndenl included 31 l' I 1• r 1 c a I a s s t s t a n ts . l 0 1·u;,tod1ans. eight grounds men. four mainte nance workers and a cu..,tod1al coordinator. Nn teacher or admin1strat1on :-1;1ff layoffs were proposed by Thornslev. but he c11d include an h 1s \1 s t o f pr oposed c uts 1• I i m 1 n a t I o n o r s i x l'os1t1ons as yet unit Ilea. By not fallin~ t he s ix ad- m IOI St r:ttivc rosts the district "oulcl savt• $177,657, he said. Thornsley said he made no r e- commendation on a salary freeze or on cost of living pay raises. bocause those matters must be no~otiatcd bet ween the srhool dis· triet and cmployel' labor associa· t1ons ORANGE COAST ~II ·DAILY PILOT ~,!'W:Or~CO•\t Oe11t Poot """'"-"'4hhf0tn .. fW'O tM> .... W\ Pf•\\, l\Ck,lbf1~"¥0WQffW',,, (..,_,. Pv~1...,if'IO C.omo•"'~ \flo~rAl~l"G1t1o•l'"lt'• putttl\~ Ma'W1A• 1'-'iNQf'I fttfj.t't IOI C,4,\la ~ v':r1:~~:,'::;;" .:!~:= "::~:~ t~U-4Jlffll ~'"''"'-'' •·•~rfl.flt'OfW1.0 .:"' '' wb':1~«t \Atwrno' ~ ~' '""" ._;:;(!tS;::"~14~,·.:~.~.;:.,. llO ... , .. , ,. .... ,.," .... 01,w.to-11\l•MP.,...1~ l•O.a C~tn V·tt "'""\+dif'rtt-"° 6-NtWMMf~ rltWP1e\ICH'¥M [dtfOI T-•t.M....,,.,.... MAii\_..,,.. lqoAt CllArl .. M ~ ltl<-•" ,.." A\\1U•lllt M41'tffU"V t.dlton f S..ddlel>•oll V•lley 0Moe 100t t,. P.t1 RaMt At \A4" nfflOD ,_,,.._,,,,,., Office• I C.0-t•Me•• JJOW .. t8ay$1 ..... \ 't11nt1r.Q1fM'ft•A(ft tttlt l)fio"C~f.tou .. \'.,d • ''""' &uc~ 11 .. 0.._.,..,,,.., • Telephone ('7t4)842-4321 • Cteulfled Adwtrtltlnel42,&e71 --•ll•HO-()lll(o Ml-1310 ! ''(t"' °M"' Ct•"'"' .. ....... ..... , ... "" C>:r. C-.1 ,,_ ........ c-C t •• , ~,~w,~ri~"';~r:":!~ :!~:; ;:i;:,;:~,U~t 'M'Ctet ~tmlUIM ef '-coM ,..,, •"'\'•~ ••1 .. •t CM•• -.u C.•ll'•'"t• \vbu••••',." •" ,.,,.., u M "'"""''• ... ,,. •. , ,. ~· "'°'""'l• ...... ,,., .. 1""'9hM'\ \J W "'~"'• I ' .. Ag am." Holm said. ..,r we assume it was poor judgment ton Sparks' part> or pe rha ps s lightly worse. the real question rem a ins whether a m a n's career s hould be destroyed for an inci· dent like this." All four former councilmen we re on the five-member panel tha t appointed the former Arizona police chief. Phyllis Sweeney. who was de· feated last Ma rch in her bid for a second term on the council. has been active in the petition sig ning campaign on behalf or the chief. She said support for the chief has been strong, "and people seem quite eager to s ign the petition." she said today. Mrs. Sweeney said Solomon indicated to the four past coun- cilmen "that community input would be very important in his consideration of Jon's future. "l think that was very com- mendable of Solomon," she con- tinued. "He certainly has a dif· fi cult position. considering it was his first week in town." Me anwhile. r e a ltor Jay Murley s aid his group has col- lected 1,187 petitions in support or t he chief and he plans to pre· sent them to the cit y council at the beginning of Tuesday's 6 p. m. m eeting. · · r expect a few other people m town will be ther e to see how the council responds," Murley said today. S parks pleaded innoce nt last T hurs day to a sing le m isd e- meanor count or battery follow- ing a bar fight June 29 in which he a llegedJy shoved a carnation into the race of a fellow bar patron. Witnesses said the chief then pus hed a table into the chest of Delb('rt Mathieson. 31. of Costa Mesa. and pummeled ham on the face and head with his fists. Federal Mediators Enter Talks WASHINGTON <AP > Fe deral mediators ste pped into the stalled negotiations today bC'~ween the Postal Service and unions representing more than 500.000employees. The Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service entered lhc talks with to days re maining tn ~ three-year contract. There ha~ been no agreement on a ny ma JOr point in the nearly three· month-long talks. Postal labor leaders. who have to>Xpressed resentment at While llouse "jawboning" in an effort lo hold down inflationary effects t•f t he postal contract. welcomed the entry by c hief mediator Wayne L. Horvitz 'I am hopeful that the pres· l'nl'e of Mr. Horvitz will move the talks off dead center," Prcsi· dent Emmer Andrews of the J\me rican Pos tal Workers Union said todav. The ou.tcome i!> important to President Carter because more workers are involved than in any other labor contract up for negoliation this year , and because the settlement may set a pattern for future labor n egotiations. The talks have been under w<ay since April 20. Both sides pledged continuous talks s tart mg today. Hon-itz said in a statement. ··After talking with both sides privately, and exploring the cur- rent s tatus of the talks. I have concluded that the time has ar· rived for serious me diation e r. forts." War Exercise At Pendleton CAMP PENDLETON <AP> A t raining exercise invo lving 17,000 men, 24 warships and 250 helicopters and planes began to· day. A m ajor beach landing by 7 ,000 Marines is scheduled Wed· nes day . T he 10-day exercise under the eyes of several members or Congress was s upervised by Maj . Gen. Charles Cooper and Rear AdD'l. Richard A. Paddoc:k. Man Escapes 2 Kidnappers ROSEMOND <AP) -A Lo!s Angeles m an was shot while try. Ing to escape from two men who appar cn lly wero dlgalng hls l(rave before kllUng hlm near Lhls southeastern Kem County town, authorlUes here sald. K ern County s heriff's depuUcs 'aid Mnurlce 8u.sby, 20, called them at about 2:30 a.m. today Arter he escaped from the two men who he said kidnapped him In a d ispute over a ;lrlfrlcnd Plugging ERA Orange County support er~ of the Equal Rights Amendment staged local plea for the Constitutional proposal at Main Beach Park in Laguna Beach Sunday They were participants in nationwide rall y in support of women s Washington. women and f>a~e A4 l Texas Pair Held In Slaying of 5 WfNNlE. Texas CAP) F'i ve members of a family missing from a blood·s pattered rural ho me here since July l have been round buried an a wooded area. and a woman was charged today wilh one count of murder an the case. police said . and a m an ism custody. Aulhonties said a former in law c harged in connection with the disappearance directed them Sund ay night t o the graves1te in neighboring J ef· ferson Coun\y Joe Dugas. 31 , of Port Acres. has been he ld an Ch ambers County Jail in Anahuac in lieu of $:;00,000 bond. A prepare d statement from the Chambers County sheriff's officC' said . "Posit1 ve identifica- tion was established as mem bers of the Phillips family miss ang from their residence in Win- nie, Texas, since July 3." The victims were identified a~ Bis hop Phillips, 64; his wife Ester. 66; a son Elmer , 31 : his wife Ma rtha . a nd their 4-year old son J ason. The latter three lived in Woodward. Okla., and we r e vacation ing in Winnie Dugas was once married to ;i daughter or the cldl'r Philhps Justice of the P eace Jack Cravy. who condu c ted J Swnmer Class Series Set At Saddleback S umme r program .s a n d classes h ave been scheduled through the Emeritus Institute ror Lifelong Learning at Saddleback College. Notre Dam e philosophy professo r Dr. /\ Robert Capon1gri is lo conduct a lecture series on philosophy and religion beginning Tuesday. July 11 and continuing on Tuesday through Aug. 15.from 9a.m . to noon The lectures. centered a round the investigation of a number of bas ic theological themes. are to be held at St. Nicholas Church. 24242 El Toro Road gra vestde inquest. said the bodies were close together . "The s hallowest grave was 18 inches and the deepest was 4 lo 5 feet " A utops1cs were order ed by C'ravy. _and Jefferson County patholo~1i..ts took custody or th"' bodies <.:ra\') :.:.t1d author1t1es were not certam what motivated the killings. Lee said Dugas told him he was an the company of a woman al the la me he abducted the fami ly . Bomb Blasts lnNYCenler NEW YORK 1/\.P1 A s mall. crudely made bomb went off this morning 1n a stairwell of a building in Rockefeller Center on thl' s ame fl oor a 1> a Soviet tourist agency Police said no 10Jur1cs or s truc tural damage were cau~ed b y the explosion at 9 45 a .m PoliCl' said the stairwell was on the eighth floor of the International Building a l 45 Rockefeller Plaza. That floor IS OCl'Upied by offices of l ntouris t . a Sovact tourist corporation, and thl' Parker Pen Co f"rona Page A I DRUGS ... truck had Lo be borrowed r.c1 the> tiulk or materia l could be taken to lhl' Sheriff's criml' lab in Santa Ana Most of the chemicals a nd narcotics were taken to th<.> police station and Hietala satd he would be spendin~ the next few days taking inventory ··1t's worth thousand!-.." he ventured today abou t the conf1scatt'd matcraab nghts Crowd was la rger in D.C . where estimated 100.000 sympathizer~ marched. (SeC' Fron1 Page Al THREAT .. A commercial office building com- plex. Several people said th(• man was a cla imant and that h1:. case had JUSt been postponed for two months to allow neurolog1cal and orthopedic testing when he pulled o ut the s upposed potato masher Reilly said the man a lso was s een pulling a "pushcart. on which ht: s ays hl· has lht: dynamite ·· The hostages were 1dent1f1ed as a judge. an attorney. a state insurance representative and a court reporter Several thousand people were evacuated from fi ve floors of the 1 to-story tower Two. Adelina Walker. a clerk an the hearing room who escaped. said the judge "'had Just told tht: man's attorney that there would he a two-month delay for report:; and then suddenly the man took an object out of a bag and 1 walked out the door ·· Ms Walker described the man al> 10 his earlv 50s with a Northern European accent and dressed in casual clothing. Shl said this was ""at least thl second or third t1mt ht had had a hearing ·· On a normal workday . som« 35.000 people work in the enttr£- World Trade Center complex. located on the southe rn tiµ of Manhattan. The twin. 110-storv lowers a re lhe world "<> second tallest buildings. after Chicago-., Sea rs Tower Typewriters Taken in Toro Burglars who brokc into adjoining sujtes in an El Toro office building car ried off four electric typewriters valued at m o re than S4.300. Ora nge County s h erirr· ... om cer::. said the machmes were taken from the o ffi ce-' o t Executive Escrow Company and Arc hitectural Concern. Inc . both of 24551 Raymond Way Doors leading to both office~ w e r e pri e d open by tt-l• intruders 3 Nabbed In Chase Onl-5 Two 1lll'ga1 ..tltl!n:-Jnd one n d l u 1 <1 I 1 z c· d c ' I 1 l l' n w c r e ;;cheduled to be arraigned on !'lmugghntl charges today Ill San Diego's federa l district cout"t following a h1gh speed chast-up ln t(•r statc 5 through Sa n ClementE: Friday. Thl· chaSl'. wh1eh ft>utured 5peeds up to too males p~r hour. began . ~a)-o ffiC'rnl i< when Armando Cardenas Camacho. 23. o( Mexico. noored his ii Pon t1 Jc past st artled U S Border P;ll roi Offi cer~ at !.h t• alter. checkpoint south of San Onofre Offacers chased Cam acho onto Basilone Road where the alien driver was cornered a nd as· sertedly backed into one officer knockin~ h rm down , bt•fore <>mashmg mto a Volkswagon and another car The oHicer was shaken up but noa injured. ,, .,pokesman said todn)- Tht• chasl· continued up Jn te rstate 5 lo CallC> Estrella . where Camacho headed into the San Clemente Hospita l parking lot :.i nd was captured Then' v. ere-l'1~ht otht·1· 1 lll'gal alll•n:. 10 tht· l'Ct r ;i Aord<•r Pa trol spokesman ;,:ud, includ ing Juan Zamora, 17, identified J ~. !h t· <tllc·~t·d guHk for .1 '::;li~htl} pram1llvc· \l('r'itOn of J b114·llffil' smugghn~ o peration A :.poke;,man for I he· Border Patrol'!. Anl1 SmuJ;!glang \Jnit ba!>ed m Chula Vista ~aid loday Zam or a and anothe r man, Oc IJVIO Teran. 21. or Portervllll' .illegedl)' arran~ed to i.mugJ!h' Camacho and seven othe rs a<·ro~~ lhl• border Border Patrol offlrtals '>aid Teran wa::. .irre.sted in a bordet· motel at 3 a .m Saturday alter J molf.•I l'mp1oye1• rt·ported J burg lar y m pro~res!-. T h l' l' m p Io y "t• s ~· w h 1 m •Tl•ra n i 'n<•a k1nf! along .1 staircase close to an open door.' a spokesman said. '"It wasn "t un Iii later that we began to piec-1· togl'ther Teran .; involvement tn lhl' San Clemente t•has(' Thl• c<.11 tn\Ol\'ed 1n lht· <'ha~t· wu~ tract•d to Teran. 0Hw1ab 'a11.l <.:a m <Jl'ho, Zamo1 a and Ter:.in. who 1s ,, na turahzc,d c1t17.en. all I act' rederal s muggling charge;, 1n L: S Daslnct Court u Border P~Jtrol s pokesman .. a1c! Fro,,. Page A I TRIALS ... !:-maled at him Cinzburg s w11 e. lnn.i whc1 .,aw her hus band ~or lhl· f1r~1 t1ml ~1nct· his arreH 17 monlh:- <•Jrn . told Western reporter~ Ht• refused t<: lc!:-t1f~ but m<.1dt· thi... 1e>tui-al cond1t 1ona l on \\h.1 t w1tnl0SS('~ ~wad Off1c1ab 01 tht· lhr (•C' 1uog1· 1·o urt tn <t prnk ;ind vcllow fo rme r m ansion, ..,a1a G1n1.burg was ac·cuscd of d1!'t t tbut1ng anrl pn•parang anti Soviet !1ll·l'arur1· t on t ,t 1 n 1 n g ~:" n ri r· r n 11 , t1.1bncat1on:-delaman~ tht· Sov1l·t L'PrOrt rnciudinJ.! w orl<.., h\ c•xilt'd Sovi<'t .1uthor Alc~andt·r Solzhl nits .} n ~I t ... G 1 n 7. bu• 1: ., ,, 1 r. th f' • n d • (' I m e n r rn f' n t 1 C\ n ,. <I S o ! 7 h t• n : t • ' n •. G u I a ~ Arc-hap Iago. '.~mon~ othc·rs Ganzbur~ hkt• S hchal"anskv ,1 .J E' Y. m ;1 n ,, I' t fl .1 f 11 °n ci Solzhtn1t:-yn l1n<1n(·c~ tr. ·••<I thf' ram11a., of ~<'"H'' polit1CCJI prt~Onl't' For persons willing to shar<' their training, tale nts and time with othe rs. the free c lass. "Reach Out/Volunteerism " was s lated to b egin t oday and continue on Mondays from 9 to 10 a .m . in building M on the Mission Viejo campus . You're Invited to Our First Ever Major II. new class in assertive skills. taught by instructor Janice Chalfant. begins Tuesday and continues Tuesdays through Aug. 18, from lO a .m . to noon at Mission Viejo High School. 25025 Chrisanta Drive. The purpose of the class is to develop s kills necessary to co mmun icate h o nestly and directly with othe rs. instructor Chalfant said. ··Stock Market A Fun - dament al Analysis" offer ed on Tuesdays a nd Thursday<> from l t o 3 p. m beginning Tuesday through Aug. 17 at the Baptist Church of Laguna HHls, 24521 Mo ulto n P arkwa y , presents a commo n -sense approach to the stock market. a spokesman said. Reslstralion can be m ade at the first class. E'rona Page A l ~n~!~~= .~late last month that success of the recall drtvc would depend on signature aothering activities over-the long July 4 weekend. Howell said Uie wcckond drive "went very well " b ut he wouldn't r~''<'UI rurure~ I I Savings to 50% Off On Our Entire Selection of Suits & Sportcoats! Equally Gre at Values On Our Famous Selection of Neckwear, Shirts, Trousers & Sporrswear. Gentlemen's Clothing 1 Inspired by T1odlt1on 46 Fosn1on Island, Newport Beoctl (714) 640·831C -.. --... Hearing Probes Radials O.llyl'UoltS~r- l.AGUNA BEACH CIVIC ACTIVIST EXPLAINS THE LAW TO A DOG NAMED BEAGLE John Gabrlels Knows His Way Around Art Colony Perks And Munlclpel Code 'Dog a Slow Learner' Lagunan Pulls Out Stops to Fight Fine By STEVF. MITCIU :Lt. Of I ... O•lly Pilot St•ll J ohn Gabricls, Laguna Deach civic gadfly. had his day in court r ecently and left with both h1i. $30 bail intact and four cans of warm ~r. Clemente Rape ll all started May I when the long-time Lagunan was s topped by a n officer while walking on the beach in Laguna with a girlfriend, a Labrador named .. Beagle" and two-thirds of a six µack of beer i Marine Sentenced To Seven Years Ca mp Pl•ndleton M arine Tomas Mo rroquin was sen tenced Friday to St'vcn years in s tate prison ror lht• pc.1rt he played 111 lhl· k1dn <.tpping and sexual abust• of <.t 15 yel:l r-old :,;i n Cle mente J.:1 rl Orange County !)Upt-rror court j udge Everett D1ckl•y imposed se ntence on Marroquin. ::!2. of Oceanside Jui.t ::!'1 hour:,, after he ordered 1dt•nt1cal pn!-on term:-. for co·defcnd;,i nts .Jo:-.e Garcia, 23. a nd Irineo SC1hna-;. 24. both M arine~ and both of Uce<1ns1dl' A II three plead<'d ~u 1ltv to r apl' m concert and k1dnC1pprng He Landed -Barely RA MONA ti\PI The s ky r<11ncd nucJ1sts. inclucJ m g one who na rrowly m1:-· Sl'd h1U1n g a chain link ft'nce and l and1n~ 1n a tn•c The best Jump by ont-of the !'our parnthutists Sun- da y ~a s by Pat Moorehead. wl•aring only a crash ht•lml't and knee pads 1 k mJ<le a perfect landing rn u l11g "X" on the grounc1 Th e r i' " er t' .., l' v er a I dozen "Jl('Ct ntor.., for the first Mr:-:,, ~uc1t• Galaxy P agean1 \\On by Bobbi G allo, 'ZT. of Long Beach Becky Nealson of Eugl•ne. Ore . was first runncr-up The othe r winners rn eluded Pam Johnston. 24. of Newport Beach. M1i.s Personality Judge Dickey ordered a five· year term for the kidnapping, but r uled in each ca se that the sentence can be ser ved concur· re ntly with the longer rape term. San Clemente police arrested the trio in Oceanside after they were identified a s the three men who g rabbed the girl from the s idewalk on El Camino Real in San Clemente Marc h 18 1t was ctlleged that the dcfcn· dants then drove her to an orange g rove in the Villa Park area where they raped her and !)exually humiliated her in the· back of their car Police said the arrest of the three marines was m ade poss•· ble when the victim was hyp notized in a s uccessful bid to h elp her recall the features of of her abductors. Flames Char SD Hotel S AN DIEGO 1AP 1 Fire c hased more than lUO people from l:I Mission Bt.ty hotel early today. No injuries were• re portcd. The flames d <'S troycd one wing of the Catamara n llotel on Mission Boulevard and St'nl !)m o ke d amage throughout th<: rest. s pokesm en s aid Fifty firem en were on the scene with mopping up expected lo last all day. The re was little warning to the s leeping residents bul "a thun- der-like sound of glassbreak- ing ... a hotel employee said. The damage was estimated al S250.000. The cause of the hrC' "as s till being dete rmined Apparent Victl• &rwi....- . . Archeolog1sts have dug up a crushed skull of a man whlch they belleve o ffers evidence or an Indian massacre of Virginia colonists near Williamsburg in March of 1622. A tale medical examiner said the man died o! a blow to the back of the h ead . Gabriels was cited for: 111 walking a dog off-leash on the beach . ;,ind (2) possession Of alcohol on a public beach. But the flesty Gabriels was not a bout to coug h up $30 in fines without a fight. Instead. he sub· poenaed the police chief. two a nimal control officer s. and the pr esident o r the town's P et Respons1b1hty Committee The subpoenaed quartet was Joi n e d 1n So u th County Municipal Cou rt by Gabriels. a rmed with ~cctions of the cily's municipal code. a photo of .. B<•aglc" thl' Labrador and friend Janie<' Judge Blair Barnell listened patiently as the two animal con· trol officers explained the leash- 1 aw violati o n . H e h ea rd testimony from the police chief and the P l't Respons ibility spokc·sman. G CJ b riels waited until the testimonv was complete before playing his first trump card "Your honor." he said ''I'd hke to refer the court to Section 6. 16 070 of the code." That section deals with work- ing dogs those anim als that do not need to be on a leash. Under that section "a hunting. obc· d1ence. tracking or show dog s hall not be consider ed un· ll>a s hed whik performing h is dutie~ .. .. 1 was merely training my dog an obcd.tcnce ... Gabriels told lht: J Ud gl· Amids t groans . Gabril'li. admitted the dog 1s not a fa..,t learner Sure. replied the Judge S<'l'1ng that maneuver go down rn fl ames. Gahrit•ls turned to his -;l•cond linC' of defense. "Tht· dog is n 't mine. rt 'i. hers." he s hrugged pointing tu friend J anice. To back up his claim . the pair brought out a rabies certifi cate and the "Beagle's" dog hcenst-. both made out in the name of J anie(' Elliott "In othl'.'r words." (;abnels continued. "the offi cer cited thl· wrong person. Down came lhl' gavel Case dism issl'<I Turn now to the alcohol on bl•ach violation G a bnels argued that a c ity or - dinan ce allows one to dnnk beer "with a bon af1de m eal. .. at I le1sler Park. He said he was en route to said bonafide m eal in park surroundings at the time of his run-in with the officer. The charge was dismissed at the request of the Laguna Beach Police Department and the Dis tnct Attorney's office. "Tht> way it was written." Gabr1els explained. "an old lady can be cited for walking home from the store with her bottle of sherry " You can see the logic in that. And so could Judge Barnett. After dismissing the second case and ordering the pol ice to return the four cans of beer. Barnett turned to the former defendant. "Now Mr. Gabriels." he began. "You've been very polite in your questioning or witnesses. hut it's taken up a lot of court time. and the time of these peo. pie "In the interest of Proposition 13, please do not come back here." The amateur attorney just smiled. But the Gabriels had his own kind words for the judge this week. "I feel Judge Ba rnett is a paragon of virtue in administer· ing justi~ in Orange County and I see great Supreme Court potential." T h al s hould help next lime he's in court Ex-solon Accused CHALMETTE, La. IAP l - Former Congressman Richard A. Tonry, who spent six months in federal prison last year for campaign law violations. and his law partner have been accused of trying to get a 10-year·old al- leged rape victim to change her story about u client Tonry is de· re nding ... WASHINGTON <AP I A House subcommittee 1s resum ing hearings on the Firestone 500 Steel Belted Radial tire. which the governme nt c la ims Is so unsafe it should be recalled. Fi re s t o n e off i ct a Is are scheduled to testify today before tbe Ho u se Interst ate and Foreign Commerce committee's oversight panel. The same sub- committee conducted hearings in May The Trans port ation Depart· m ent said Saturday that the tires "have failed m s ignificant numbers" a nd r ecommended that the firm recall them im · m ediately But the department's National Highway Traffic Safety Ad ministration did not order the r ecall for the 13 to 15 million tires estimated to be in use A determ1nat1o n will be made after a hearing Au~ 7 The company opposes the re call. said Bernard W Frazie r. Firestone's pub lic r e lation:,, director "There 1s no safety-re lated reason for the public to be con ccrned about continuing to w,c th e Fireston e St ee l Belte d Radia l 500 or <JOY othe r properl> main t ained Fires t one -m a de tire." ht· said "Thl· 500 i::, pro vidi n g r e liable se rvice to millions of motorists today as 1t has for years · · The company quit making thl· top·Of·the-line lire l'arly la!)t year Marines Held After Melee In Laguna F ou r Camp P e ndl e t on Mann es wc rl' being held an Orange County .Jail OVl'r tht· weekend after a flst·s wmging fracas with polke m Laguna Beach Saturday night that a l leged ly inC'luded one officer lo!-> i n g h 1 s r l' v o I v c· r t o a leatherneck Book<.•d into Orangt: County Jail o n charges of ussault on .i police offiel·r WC'r c Ricky Cornett. 19 . Steven P atrick Leonard. 19. Garry Allen Best. 22 Facing charges on s us picion of ass ault with a deadly weapon on a pohcl· offtct•r I!> Gary L Field. ::!5 Pohce Sgt Tcrry Tt•mple s aid Officers Fred Martino and Doug John!'on wt>re walkinJ? foot patrol rn North MC1 1n Beach Park at about 8 p m Saturday whe n they ~a..., thret· of lhl· Mannes sitting on thc beach drinking beer When the officer:. began citing two of the Marines for bein~ too young to drank. the young men began arguing with the offi cers At about that tim(•, police said. Field purportedly got into Cl wrestling matc h with Officer Martino. successfully pull mg lhl' policeman's revol ver from its holster and pointing it at the of ricer M artino grah bl•d l-'1eld '.., g unhand. :rnd pu-;hcd th t· weapon deep into the ~and to keep at from going off Two mor1..• officers arrived and the four fighting Manm•!) ....,ere s ubdued and taken to Laguna Beach Cal) J ail Ma m es Cornett. Ll•ona rd <1nd Best ~en· being he ld on S5.000 bail Field wa:,, being detamed on S25.000 bail because of lht: more scnoui. allegat1oni. Monday. July 10. 1978 O!.IL y PILOT A~ • .. .. • ") - Copter Caper .e.rw1r........, A British Royal l\l <t rim• co mm<tnd descend~ by ropl' from a helicopter as pCJ rt of the Royal TournCJmcnt which features demonstrations uf militar v maneuve r..., Thl· I ournament 1~ being held at London ·s Earb Court Crunels, Ostriches Run for Charity HOOPER. Neb IAP > Wha t WdS a college dean doing olop J racing camel'' Probahl} lht:' ..,aml· thing tht-capita l uty ... mayor wa!> domg ht-hind an o-. tnch holding on tight. ot tht: Hooper Camel-Ostrich Race!- . · 1 was Just crazy enought tu do 1l Actua lly. 1t was sort of fun." said Caryl Steyer . Midland Lutheran College dean of Mu dents. after dismounting from Sheaba. the camel that ran away with thl' victory The :-econd c·a m el in tht.-ract-. Valt ntint. sent Tekamah school pr1nc1pal Bill Anc1e rson tumbling mto thl dust Several thousand fan!) v1s1tcd Hoopc•r Downs. forme r l y ,1 ballpa rk. during the weekend benEc•fit for community proJeC't:-. 111 this town of 895 residents Besides the featured camel and ostrich races. the entertain· ment included donkey races and a beer garden Admission wal> S3 pet pe rson. and at the end of tht day Sunday. fundr a 1ser Al Croson estimated the town had netted bet ween S7 .000. a nd S8.000 The money goes into the com munity fund Over the years 1t has been used to improve park:-. m e dical ser vices and strel't lighting Following the victory. Steyt·r !>aid he was retiring from l'amll r acing to return to academics "I thought it was a put-on when r got the letter a s king me to b• rn the race. I did 1t because I lik l• this little to wn," ~a 1rl Steyer . who conceded he wa!-,1 httlc nervous before the ndt' "I thought I'd JUSt come herl', tide the dumb camel and go home But m y family cam t' a!-J l'heering M~clion .. Before her race began. Lin C'Oln Mayor Helen Boosah!-made a rapid eXJl from the cart when her ostrich. Boomer. got h1 " feathe rs rufned "lf took four or f1H· men to harness them and t1l' them into t he :-.ulky I had no rdea the) rt :-.uc h -.trong b1rd5-,.. ...ht -.u1d Hers ~a~ a three·b1rd ral'1 Hooml•r l~I by a bt:ak whl'n Jughl•ad . ..,t~red by Unavers1t.y of Nl'braska journalism director ~l·a lt-Coppll'. :.urged ahead ;it I hl· f in1!)h li n t• S u za nn1• Mc :vi a~ter .... mana~ing 1..·d1tor of tht.-Lml·oln Star. cam e rn third ~Ith d bird named O~car M 1kt• EaJ?an. publisher ol th1· I looper Scnlinal. said he got th1· rdl· ... for the races from tht> mov ll' "Doctor Doollttlt: •· Eagan won one of the os trich races with Booml•r. whom he described a:-. ·t ht: :.tar lle hke!) to run and l!l'l 1t over with .. Bystander Nabs Suspect In Hit-run Santa Ana pohCl' credited dn unide ntified motorist with cai>- turi ng a hit and-run drivmg sw. peel whose car !-truck and k1llt'd J pt!de!)tnan early tod:.iy P o lice s a id thl' moto n i.t c ha!)ed thE' !)USpel't two blocks bcfon• forcing his auto to stop and then "kept him ocrup1ed" until police arrived ldcnt1f1cd as the su!)pecl "ii' Franc1M'1> Pineda. 30, of Sant<i Ana P1n l'dH was arn•'-lt'd anct (' h a r I! e d w I I h \'I' h I l ' u I cl ,. mans laug hter . drunk driving a nd felony hit and run dr1vrng lnvl•st11.iator~ t>a rly today wen· a ltt•m pt111 g to identify the man rt•portcdly hurled 140 fcl•l whl'n ~truc k by Pineda'!-auto in th•· 1500 bl0<·k of West First Street m Santa Ana Pineda wa!-drt\inl! ea:,,tbounct on Fir"t Street at I 30 a m whrn h1:-. <'<H a!):,,ertl'dly h1l the umdcn t1f1cd v1ct1m, t1 m an described as cJbout 40 years old. pohc1· ... aid T hi' tatall) injured m an d1t!d 1n Me rcy General Hos p1lal about 1 wo hours after the accident at rnrdmg to µohl'l' 44 fa&t*>n Island, newport center 644·5070 I UAJL' tlLOI hlona ; J1.1l1 10 101a NATION I WORLD I WEATHER lnndon Talk.~ J ust ··· Coa ting Q & with ~ Tom ~~''' Sadat Waives Marphin e A Revolting Tax E gypt's Plan 608roN GAS PARTY: Just the other day. a news dis· patch circulated in our region suggesting that two ot our regional government agencies are considering some new VI ENNA. Austria (AP> -President Anwar Sadat reportedly says he will mothball his peace plan. rejected by Is rael. if the Israelis will discuss principles rather than details when the foreign ministers of the two countries meet in London next week. taxes. ' The proposals were attributed to a pair of outfits known as the Southern California Association of Govern· m ents, known as SCAG for short, and the South Coast Air Quality Management District, which doesn't have a short. Sadat met here Sunday with Shi mon Peres, leader of Israel's op· position L a bor Party. Af- According to the report, these two outstanding bodies are considering new ways to clean the air. The new'way would be with higher taxes and fees upon the already· battered motorist. One consideration allegedly involved a $1 .12 per gallon gasoline tax. LET'S JUST LOOK at what that kind of a·levy would do to the poor working s tiff who is compelled to drive his family heap every day to get to his job. Let's say he's paying 70 cents a gallon for fuel now, in· elud ing a large chunk of existing gas taxes. If getting to work consumes a modest 12 gallons a week, he's right close to spending $36 per month just to get on the job. Add a $1.12 per gallon tax and for that same l2 gallons, he'll have a fuel bill of roughly $91 per month. The bureaucrats a pparently believe that this will force the working man to take a bus, walk to the job or jump on a moped maybt!. But it's too far for most people to walk; CommuleTs at Rush Hour AfteT New Gasoline Tares the bus lines have largely failed to provide a viable alternative and some people just can't handle a two. wheeled puddle jumper. SO THAT WOULD LEAVE a large group or work· ing stiffs with tripled gasoline bills-period. Now one SCAG official was quoted as saying the $1.12 gas tax craziness was "deliberat ely outlandish" so it would provide a point from which some tax could be negotiated. That's like saying the best approach to a citizen is to threatened to clobber him over the head with a 10-pound wooden club. Then the bureaucrat smiles and says sweetly, "Hey. you're such a nice guy, I've decided not to whip you with that big. old nasty club. "Instead, I'm j ust going to whack you a little bit with t his rubber hose. See how much better that feels?" The citizenry. thus whipped rather than battered. is then expected to fall upon its knees in gratitude. YOU WOULD Till NK that public officials would have learned something a bout t axes after the recent California revolt. But some of them seem to be very slow learners. Maybe next they'd like to see an initiative where the citizenry outlaws all gas taxes and sales truces. The populace has already taken the club away from the bureacrats once and hit them over the head with it How many blows does it take to get their attention? Dad Vrges Girl, 14, To Turn Prostitute? DETROIT CAP> -Police say a father has been charged with persuading his 14·year-old daughter to tum to prostitution for pocket money. John Brammer of s uburban Hamtramack, a $175-a·week laborer also known as Ronald Miller, drove his daughter on the Fourth of July to a red-light district and stuck around to collect from her customers, authorities said. ·'I've never seen anything like this before." Sgt. Mike Dowd said Sunday. BRAMMER WAS CHARGED with inducing and enticing a female to become a prostitute, and accepting earnings of a pros- titute. Each charge carries a maximum2Q-year prison term. Police said they became suspicious last week when Brammer reported his daughter kidnapped, but when she was found Friday with a man in suburban Southfield, he was reluctant to press charges terward. Peres' spokesman re- ported Sadat said he would be willing to "put the plan aside if the discussions move toward declaration of principles and not detailed plans " IN JER USALEM, Prime Minister Menachem Begin 's cabinet rejected the Egyptian proposal, disclosed last Wednes- day. a s "completely unaccepta· ble." But the cabinet agreed to send Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan to meet July 18-19 in Lon· don with Egyptian Foreign Minister Mohammed Ibrahim Kamel and Secretary of State Cyrus Vance. The offi cial agenda is to con- sist or the Egyptian peace plan and an Is raeli pl an that Egypt vetoed last December, leading to the breakdown in direct talks the following month. Peres· spokesman, Yossi Beilin, did not specify how far Sadat would be willing to let the Egyptian del- igation depart from his pro- posals in London BEGIN SAID AFTER the cabinet meeting that Dayan, ac· companied by five aides. "wtll present our peace olan and will ERA Group Lobbying Congress W AS HI NGTON I AP >- Backers of the Equal Rights Amendment, .who ma rched by the tens of thousands Sunday in support of the proposal, were lobbying members of Congress today to extend the March 1979 d eadline for rcitifying the measure . Several hundred persons con· gregated at Union Station this morning for lessons on lobbying. then set out for the Capitol four blocks away. Hundreds of other ERA sup- porters met in advance with their own House members and senators and with members of the House Judiciary Committee, where a measure to extend the ratification deadline now lies. MILDRED JEFFREY or the National Women's Political Caucus est imated that up to 5.000 women and men would be lobbying Congress today for the amendment. The amendment will die next Ma r ch 22 unless three more :.tales rattfy it or Congress ex - tends the seven.year deadline it set in 1972. A proposal to do that has run into serious trouble in the House Judiciary Committee, which put off a vote it had scheduled for this week in order to give ERA supporters a chance to lobby more intensively. The National Organization for Women and more than JOO other groups staged the march and a rally on the steps of the Capitol to dramatize their stand that, even if the proposal dies next spring. the issue will not fade away. Northern Plains Cooling Clear Skies Prevail jn Nation's Midsection T eaaperaiure.1 All anti At11n11c City Baltimore Blrm1nq,,.m BolM Boston Brownsville <:Nrllton.SC Clll~ Cleveland Delles Fort WO.Ill Houston lnd'IPollS Ja<kMHlvllle usv~as UttleAoO Mem!lll" Miami Nl\llVllle New0rlHM ... •York ~·· Otll•"""'• Oty Of••nelo Pltllaclelplll• P!Mlenl• Pltl\l>u'Oll Alcllm<>nd St .... te,~o T­ Salt LaMe Clt'f Ml Le Pc, •! ., 80 ., ., ., '16 ,. " ,. .... .. ,. •> ,. 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P:ranclKo •1 SJ Stftl• ""• ,. tO Santa l•rMr• .o SJ Slo<kton 101 t2 fMl"'ll 110 ts UMlall 9' S1 70 Cool ~was spr...olno •"'°'' tlle 110t1Mnl "'-Im lodaY wlll'I "IH remalnl"9 clear from Mon1an1 acron IM Dakotas to Ill• Gre•I lakHr99IOll. hmPtrelurts Cl!'ooC*I to Ille SOt lft Ptrll of Ille North-st. SuUer.O thuftdertllOWtrt COftllllu•d In tn Southl!tn Cllllforn1a at d m .. lr'IM sntem 11oweo on1an<1 bfll>Ql"9 1a1e night And ettrly morn1nq •ow tlouds ~M 101! 1n tne coas1a1 areos •M in· land .. lltys HIQll clOVCllness was upected to In. trHH 111rouo11 Tue5day as• r~sun 01 • dylno trop.01 storm sewn.. 'IOO mil•• 10 Ille SO<Jl'-11 Wl'llle •Ir quality was uoecled lo II& 0000 In 1ne coaital and 11101> ouer1 ...... Ille Soutl'I toa•I Air Ou•lll'J M•naoetnent Olstrlct wanwo 111a1 •1r QUll1ly would ~ unhe•lllllul lo• \ensltlve -4• In I"" mt!lrc>POlltan Los Angel~ -Or~ C:Ounly .. ,.,. •no generally _,,11111u1 1n 1..,.. San Fern1n~S...t• c11r1 Valley" 1n~ San GAbrlttl·~ V•ll•v• .,.., Ille AlvtnlO.·San 8erl\Md1no u .. Nlolll 111rouon m1dmorn1no low <1ouc1~. 01t1trw1w ••Ir 111rouo11 ru<t\· clay Llolll varl•bl• wlndt ntgll! an(' momlno llouri. Highs TveS<Mr 1n Liit "PP*''°'· Cou1a1 ttmoeraturH •Ill n•n0t l>ttwun S8 and H 1n1end lem P<tratur-s wlll r1tn99 belM•n ~ ano 1• TlM w11~ tempu11urt will De•• non11er11 •~. WMr• .... , wwra1 S IUI -oon Tfd-• oev' CJf rain. mountain 1tr .. 111t ••rt • ,,. • ""' rlslftQ, r-...1or11· .. C«lllllutd In MONDAY MlrtllHtlilnl Gotor-IMWI Ml Houri. Second low '· 1' P m 1 ) Tiie South ••t N•llv c~y And Stcond hlgn 11 . .a • m • 1 ••rm wltl'l a ftw •llO-rt 1tnoer1no In TUCSDA 'J liOUIMHltf'll Alaoama al\O SOUllle,11 Finl le>w ,.,. • m 0 9 Oeor9la, fl"l ll•~n 2·4J pm • ~ A low IM'•Uur• 'Y'l•m llltl ell'· S.<ona low t Je pm 2 \ Ytltped 0"9f Mflllefft ~OrjjlA on $un rl•~· ~ f(h m \.-I\. 01 D m Sundt y tOIWMO \CllltflHI 111un· Moon r lltt 10 .a • m .. "'" 11 11 dtr\lorm• and OlltlY wlndl 111.tt om kl\O<ktd owr -rna4>41• 11 ....... 1n Catoos• Countv 111a llltw down U ltpllon• 1>ower llntl •1t1r Ctd.,IOWll. NO lftl•lrll\ wtrr ,. PO•IN Ca Ufo ntla GOOl91' _,,,., wH IOft<HI 1004~ Surf Rrport HU/llll'OIOl'I ...... ,, W••" ! I> I ,...,, wun ~" \wetl r1VM11tto,, .... , N•WMM f\l'<W" Wh•\ I IO l l,..l Witt\ \OOftf ~11 l (lili(j ftf)f1ti l•1t ·~ 1mo,ov1no • contribute. will do bis best to contribute to the resumption of the peacemaking process." But cabinet Secretary Arieh Naor told reporters: "No change 10 Israel's plan was decided upon.·• Sadat told a news conference before he met with Peres that a "dangerous s ituation" could arise if the London talks fan. But he said he was counting on the United States a s a "full partner " In negotiations to "use its efforts to ease the situation" if the impasse continues. THE EGYPTIAN leader said Israel bad not changed its posi· lion enough to warrant his meet· mg again with Begin. as he did last Christmas in Is mailla. Egypt. "When we can s peak one language, or whenever there are new ele ments, we can meet ugain." Sadat said. IOOts Htilt Bull Fiesta PAMPLONA, Spain <AP> -Pamplona's run· ning of the bulls was called off again today for- the second day because of political rioting in which one person was killed and at least 135 hurt. Riot police patrolled the streets, and officials said it had not been decided whether to cancel the re- maining three days of the a nnual Fiesta of San Fermin. But 150,000 frightened tourists fl ed from the city Sunday. The government feared more violence as friends prepared to bury German Rodriguez. a 2l·year·old leftist slain Saturday when police fired into the crowd of 20.000 spectators during a clash between rightists and leftists in the packed bull ring. UNDAUNTED RESIDENT of Chicago's Ma rquette Park area relaxes as police gather during demonstr a tion by Nazis Sunday a ft ernoon. Severa l hundred police s tood g uard during the r a lly a nd although anti Nazi de· monstrators were present. no major clashes were r~­ ported. 62 Jailed, 7 Hurt During Nazi Rally CHlCAGO <AP> -Nazi leader Frank Collin stood atop a white van and spoke passionately of a "1978 white .revolution" in wtuch he said Jews and blacks would be "Wlped off the face of the Earth." There was no applause. Police say about 4,000 persons were looking on as Collin gave his "White Victory" speech in Marquette Park The park. s ituated in a white working class neighborhood. has been the scene of past racial confrontations, including the stoning of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr • when he attempted to lead open housi ng marches in the 1960s. HUNDREDS OF POLICEMEN separated about 20 brown. uniformed Nazis and small bands of counter-demonstrators. whose shouts of "Death of Nazis" at times made it impossible to hear Collin. Collin said there was a "minimum of violence" at Sunday's rally that left 62 persons arrested and seven inJured. He said he wished police had stayed away so that Nazi s upporters could have attacked the counter-de monstrators ··our objective was to get the community out and mobilize the support of the community and we did," Collin said, st anding in the barricaded party headquarters about four blocks from the park. AU11fOBmES SAID MOST of those arrested were young peo· pie charged with disorderly conduct. No Nazis were arrested. Five officers at the scene were treated for injuries at a nearby hospital and released. Another officer , who was treated for heat exhaustion, was admitted. One civilian was treated for minor cuts and bruises a nd re-leased. HE DELIVERS MORE NEWS EVERY DAY THAN I ... W ALTE R CRONKI TE HARRY R EASONER JOHN CHANCELLOR In a typical half-hour show, a television news personality reads only about as m a ny words as a r e printed every d ay on the front page of the Daily Pilot. Thus. your D aily Pilot carrier brings you a lot more ne ws of the state, nation a nd world than you see on TV. And. you gel' complet e news and pictures of events close to home that Walter. Ha r ry .and J ohn don't h ave time for. The r e a r e m ore than 900 Daily Pilot "newscas ters''. E ach is an independent m ercha nt learning valuable lessons about peo- ple and business. Boys a nd girls over 10 years old can earn while they learn as Daily Pilot carriers. To become a Daily Pilot ··newscaster " just call 642-4321 a nd ask for: the circulation department. Chances a re good you'll find (I profita ble carrier route near your' home . 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I ;: ..... ~ I ' '° ,,-.,_ "' l'tfO :r uo ) \' :c_ 1 ,.-.; ~ 1, . ; J& ii • t? ~ ,. . :: ., ,,~·y; 1 u1n n r.~: ~ !"~.!f '.!! :~ ; m:. \\ \ft.. • 4 1116-"' .. , . • J I~ . .. . .. rAi 11...5' &~ iW.... . ~, ·r;, • .dt»\' . : t I~ 1' g~:."(t ,.re" ti : ~· .~ L I ~I t ·;·~ f< ":.to 1t i~ .. '1.\ u==:o lfi• i Ii Jt:-~ • ._ 1\¥ a j z *!I = Mel 1 ' I ~ ~t } II \'J 4 "" •• , ' • + \<II ,:: i ·'I .r:..~... -:; Wt tt.~ .. 1= · 1& • ; ,. .. 1:: ~·~ .r.&n 414 f.t ..... I Merger Views Prepared WASlilNGTON <AP) -Beatrice Foods Co. and Tropicana Products Inc. are readying responses to the sovemment's request tor a perma- nent lnJunct.lon to stop a merse.r of the firms. - The U.S. Court of Appeals ol'det'ed a stop to mercer plans lu t weekend a nd told the competitors ln the oranace Juice buaineu to respond to the Federal Trade comml11lon re· quest. 'tb4 FTC voted June 29 to cballona• tho accautsltJon by Be.atrtce of Trople••· The complaint 11..id lbe propopd mertt1" may s ubstantially lesaen ccnnpetiUon. Unity Ahead Inflation Geh Dissent By JOHN CUN NI F F A~---,. There is unity In lnfiaUoo, or so lt ~s said. To many Americans this might not seem so. because with lnllation comes conflict between buyer and seller. fear or the future, and t ax and other dodges that enable people to keep more of a,beir cheaper dollars. BUT STVDENTS OF THE political-economic sce.ne note also that distress over inflation is bringing people together ln opJ>OSIUon to federal deficits, wasteful govern· ment spending at all levels. and ''handouL~." ... Sc6ool and other bond issues bave been turned down. rebellions against real estate taxes have occurred, and I ' politicians up for NH!lection are assur- ing voters they are in the rorelront of the movement . 1t goes further After patiently and generously, supporting Increased Social Security benefits for years, the public finally expressed its fear and anger over the resulting higher taxes. And another big spender. President Carter. has been for ced to trim his budget deficit. and even to trim his tax cut so U1at deficits will be lowered, and cuNM•I'~ to call as well for a lid on federal pay increases. ANALYZING THESE AND similar events, Michael Levy, di.reel.OT or .. conomic pol.Jcy research at the Con- ference Board, ohserves that a common distaste for infla- tion and its consequences is uniting people "lnfiation is the common cause that bas brought together the business community, the FederaJ Reserv<.> and the majority of working consumers in an unorthodox alliance favoring a new flscaJ conservatism," he stat.es Whereas the consumer movement tended to pit con· sumer s and producers In opJ>OSition to each other. the new movement against rising prices and taxes, says Levy. is merging their mutual concerns. "PRODUCERS·CONSUMEllS ARE putting up their first serious resisla.nce to the income transfer pr~ess that escalated rapidly and went virtually unchallenged during the last decade and a half.·· be observes. While this new unity has expressed itself at the polls in California and in some other states. its real nationat strength, or lack of it, might be better observed in more ~ general elections this fall. But, while consumers seem to be rebelling against the government's use of credit, and the government's use of their money. they seem perfectly willing -even en· thusiastic -about personal spending a nd debt. TREV ARE NOT J UST HEDGE buying.. in anticipa. lion of higher prices later . but may be hedge borrowutg too. expecting that With continued inflation they'll be able to repay their debts in cheaper dollars. For many months the level of outstanding credit had been growing at a rate of $2.6 billion a month. but it surged in late spnng In March the total was increased by $4. t billion . in April by $3 7 billion Some economists reel that, like Uncle Sam. the con· sumer has reached his debt limit and soon will be forced into a more oonservaUve mode in which bills will be paid and purchases delayed. BANKERS AND ECONOMISl'S will tell you that coo t>u mers ver y a c cura t e ly determine w he n lhe-.< reached their limit, it usuaJJy comes in a direct message from their wallets and pocketbooks. In a sense, therefore. these economists are proclaim- ing another conservative unity, this one with Uncle Sam. and they say that ll it doesn •t come to pass we might be un. ited ln still another way. That way ls spelled recession. . . t , • , ' t c ,, .. .- ·~I SDG&E Unhappy ·; At Loss of Funm SAN DIEGO CAP) -Officials of San Diego Gas & Electric Co. have expressed disappointment at the federal Department or Energy's decision not to provide $45 million to build a geothermal electric plant at Heber. The agency announced Thursday it wtll instead pro· vide approximately $50 mwlion for a SlOO mill.ion pla~t pro· posed by Union Oil of California and the Public Service Co. of New Mexico. THE PROJECT IS DESIGNED for the Valles Caldera area of North Central New Mexico about 60 miles north or Albuquerque, and will be the nation's first commercial· scale geothermal power plant. It wi.U use a flash process that produces steam dlreetly from the geothermal brine to power turbine generators to produce electricity The nash process is being used successfully by the Mexican government at Its Cerro Prieto plant south o( Mexicali. SDG&E and several partners had proposed a $50 million plant to produce 45 megawatts of electricity ustnl( the binary geothermal pr~ass. which has never been com· mercially tested. THAT PROCESS INVOLVES using bot brine pumped from wells to vaporize a secondary working flwd that would drive the turbine generators. Richard Maullln. state Energy Com mission chairman, vowed to help the San Diego utility find new private or government funding or project O.W. Gilman, SOG&E vice president ror operations. said the risks of the Heber project are too great to prO<Jeed without (ederaJ aid. But he said the energy department decision is 11 challenge to the utility and its partners to reconsider the kind of plant that should be built ln the Imperial Valley . Shop Center Planned Dra.wlngs have been completed tor a $2.S miJUon shop.- ping center to be constructed by Dtversme_d lnvesl!"eflt Co. at the Intersection of Uncoln and Gilbert 1n Anlheam. The eJght·acre center wlll have 72,775 squ~e feet of buildlntc area plus area for parldng .. cons~~uction is ex- pected to begin later tbls month and Diversified estJmates a completion date of J onuary 1979. . • Stores alread.y signed for the center include Ralph s Supermarket, Skaggs Drug Store and Pacific Federal Sav. ln111 and Loan Assoclotlon. Leasing agent Is the Santa Aft.a offi ce of Coldwell Banker- Toro S&L Opens Today ·" ,. t • Imperial Savings and Loan wUI oclcbrac.e the openint o' IL'J 92od otfice today through Saturday al Bell Towet Piasa. al t.bc comer ot El Toro Ro•d and Raymond Way, El Toro. Eddie Albert, co-slar of the television &bow "Switch" and advcrtbina spok~man COT lmpertal. wtll attend trom, 10 a.m. lo• p.m . Saturday. Refreshments "'}tll be provlded. " I 118 DAILY PILOT Monday. July 10. 1978 Television TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS EVENING L'OO ID. NEWS f.MEAGENCY ONE Paramedic Gage 19 chOMn as "fat'-" to a Mttw ot 1t111ens G GUNSMOt<E An outlaw falls In love with the Wl<low of a man he has t>eer'I lorced to klH In Miii· defense • PLEASE DON'T EAT THEOAISIES "Big Man On Campus" • STREETS OF 8AH FM.NCl8CO Three young rllY04utJon. anes attetnpt to emugote thew r-'Y acquired. -.c- trontc bombs through cus- toms et the Port of San Franc:ISCO fill) OVER EASY Doniel Schorr: Paul Nalhanson on legal guard•· nnlhlp; h<>fne..grown allal!a sprouts with Jahn Bryan. (RI '1i) IT'S EVERYBODY'S BUSINESS 1pok11woman. ~ary SChmidt. ror ··stoo The ERA Movement In Clllifor· n1a, respond to the ERA d1eeu11oon t>n:>edcalt on Mey \S, 19711 G'!) FMNCH CHEF '"Napoleon'• Chiel(en" (A) Cl) Al.L-8TAR8 AT SEA W<>f'LO T ect Leitner and Lauri. Slnget will lntervl-Illa atara ol tt\41 game to be pie~ In San Diego, on July 11, a1 well u Baseball Hall ol Farner• Q]) HOLLYWOOO 80UAAE8 1:00 8 (J) THE JEFRRSONS Tom Withs makff the opening or Ills new busi- 1'\eSS more lmporlant then lam1ly and lrlends -and endangers both (A) 0 LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE ··ro Run And Hide·· Walmil Grove·s town doctOr CKev- ln Hagenl becomes despondent over a i··u~:; Jaekson Stars ·pallent'1 Cleath and retires trom practkle. (A) 8 MO'onl ABC NEWS 1;30 MY THREE SONS Robbie runs alOUI ot an old Italian custom When he takes a gwl walkmg In the park and learns he"s eapected to marry her. Janet J ackson. the youngest member of the s inging Jackson family, joining Jim- mie Walker on Good Times tonight at 8:30 on CBS, Channel 2. • • • • "Giant" (Part 2) ( t9S6) Ehzal>eth Taylor. Jemaa Dean. Edna Fert1er·s story al><Mlt Texas ranch Ille and the pursuit of oll wealth is recreated (2 hrl) Ui) MICHAEL JACKSON Glen Craig, oommisllone< ol the Clllfomla Highway Patrol. examlneS tho dll· letence be'-1 Ille police Md Ille hlgllWay patrol. Shetley Berman, Freddy Martin, G) THEF.B.t. Inspector Erskine invest1- g&1es an vnvsval case Wlltlfe a young man Is paid S2S.OOO to take the ·•rap·· lor a crime he did not COmmll 8 0 l.AVERHE& SHIRLEY 7:00 9 CBS NEWS "Drive, She Said" Chaos reigns when Shirley allempts to teach Laverne how lo drive. "E•cuse Me. May 1 Cut tnr The girls pe<sulde Rk:hle and POI· soe to take them to • dance contest ~ ReAl.ESTATEAND YOU I N8CNEWS LIARS CLUB A8CNEWS D 80WUNGFOR DOU.AAS m MACNEIL/ LEHRER REPORT ··w11a1 To Know About Encumbrances" at I LOVE LUCY m TRAINS, TRACKS AND TRESTLES (J) TO TELL THE TRUTH (!]} MEAV GRIFFIN Guests· Wayne Newton. Lucy Ines to reonne a V-tlan gon4olief with his brother, who 11"85 1n Amer- ica ··eenc11 Wort. And Wiring·· (I) JOKER'S WILD 0 MOVIE **"~ "A Place For L0Yer1°' ( 1969) Faye Quna- WlfY, Marcello MastrOl8nn1. A 1ermlnelly-1M woman tries 10 conceal httr fate lrom her lover. but he llnds O\Jt and lnll1t1 upon her hosp<- tahzation. (2 llrs.) C'lla1111el Ll•tl11g• 8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles 7:30 t> $25,000 PYRAMID 0 CONSUMER BUYUNE I MEWL YWEO GAME ROCK: THE BEAT GOES ON D KNBC(NBC) Los Angeles II KTLA (Ind ) Los Angeles D KABC·TV (ABC) Los Angeles Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Diego 0 KHJ·TV (Ind ) Los Angeles t!JJ KCST (ABC) San Diego m KTTV (Ind ) Los Angeles 0 JOKER'S WILD Q) THE 000 COUPLE Oscar and Felix are invited to appear on a television Q!mesnow ti:) 28 TONIGHT '8 CAROL BURNETT AND FAIENOS Guest· Betty Whlle Q) MOVIE &> KCOP·TV (Ind) Los Angeles fl) KCET·TV(PBS) Los Angele!"> '1i> KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach Host Cleta Rol>er1s and guests, Republtean Con· gressman Jolln H. Rous· setot: Councilwoman Don· na Wilkenson. and • * •.i, ··&ie·· ( 1965) Ursola Anelreas. Jolln RICtlardson. A myslenous woman con· v1nces an Engllshman lrav· flllng 1n Palestone that lie 11 a relncamauon ol her for· Brinkley Roasts Rivals Def ends Role of Anchor Man on TV News By DAN LEWIS TV Oft• Senrlu With his calm, folksy manner of s peech and seemingly im· perturbable personality, NBC's David Brinkley can shred an ad· versary's ego with some brist· ling comments. He r e are som e s a mples gleaned from a recent interview Brinkley served up to visiting t e l ev i sio n edito r s in Washington: ··tr Roone Arledge thinks he can deflate the role of the anchor person on the network news programs. he's far off base." Says Br inkley, the anchor man is a necessary fix· ture, " ... the only continuing element in news programs. T HE NEWS CHANGES vast· ly. hugely, so rapidly, to the point or bewilderment, that familiarity, I guess. is an impor- tant part. Since we (the anchor men) have to tell the people a lot of bad news, the viewer finds it more palatable to hear it from someone familiar to them." Arledge plans to introduce the rotating anchor desk al ABC, where he has become president of news as weU as sports. And if Roone feels he is eminently qualified to handle the news supervision because of his ex- perience in sports. Brinkley has other ideas -quite to the con· tra ry. "I don't know Roone .. oever laid eyes on him ,·• Brinkley said. prefacing another verbal poke at Arledge. "It may be that moving to news from sports sounds plausible, but it is not. Sports a r e scheduled events. Everyone knew a year ago that the Kentucky Derby .rould be held this year. So there was plenty of time to prepare. I "NOT SO IN news. Sports isn't l ood background for news re· 'orting," Brinkley declared, contending that the news r e- porter bas to make quick de· clsions on things developing at te moment. .... ,,..,..... 'ANCHOR NECESSARY. Newscaster Brinkley So much for Roone Arledge. Next target: Barbara Walters. who left NBC to go to ABC b ecause she didn't ~et the co. anchor spot on NBC's Nightly News that was given back to Brinkley. Brinkley is unimpressed with Miss Walters' •·newsmaking" interviews. "HOW MANY times during the year did she have productive interviews?" Brinkley asked rhetorically, answering quickly. "Maybe four limes.·· "The others were not much," Brinkley continued. "Interviews with public figures usually aren't productive. They get un· interesting and self-serving. The answers are very predictable. She <Miss Walters> hasn't pro· duced much."' Target No. 3: Tom Snyder. Snyder bas been mentioned on occasion as a possible replace· ment for Chancellor . who is leaving the show. THE MERE thought set Brinkley off into a laughing fit. First he smiled, then giggled MIMEM11NOS FOR fWENTS AND WUNOPBJPl.E II 142-M7t. Pua a tewr word• lo work for ou. IOlllUlJ u..t ,, ......,., '"......,,... .....,.,_,"""""' • ® ........ tt .. "' .. """ l•I"""..., ... "' ....... ... ,. ~~. ''ttl\illfU 1f ..... ........ . ...... 1111._..e.: ............ . sligblly and broke into un- restrained laughter , shaking his head in apparent disbelief at the notion that Snyde r m ight become his new co-anchor on N BC 's Nightly News. "I'm not sure he'd want to do it. or even if he'd li ke it. After years. it !being the anchor) can get to be simple drudgery. He <Snyder> l gather . . has a flamboyant personality .. Brinkley did i"Ot think flam. boy aocy has a place on the nightly network newscasts. THE SUBJECT got around to former Secretary of State Henry Kissin ger and his role as an NBC commentator on a high. priced regular basis. Was it pro- per, Brinkley was asked , for former top governmental of. ficials to get paid for comment· ing on government matters in which they may have a direct or indirect link from the past to the present? Kissin ge r was specifically mentioned. Brinkley defended Kissinger's relationship with NBC. contend· ing he <Kissinger) wasn't any different from other former of- f i c i a 1 s who wrote book s. Brinkley emphasized that Kiss- inger was being paid for his opi· nions o n world events. a nd wasn't being paid for interviews, as H. R. Halderman and later Richa rd Nixon were remunerat· ed for their TV interviews. "Remember. Kissinger is full time on NBC's payroll. I think he's ver y u seful to NBC." Brinkley noted. He a lso noted that Ford has a similar contract with NBC. ·'I don't know how useful he will be." Brtnkley said. FINALLY, HE trained his dellator at the new crop of broadcast journalists, contend- ing that the young aspiring television reporter was more in· terested in ·'hair spray a nd makeup and becoming a star so waiters could recognize him," than gelling a strong back· ground in reporting. TV TUBE TOPPERS KTLA 0 8:00 -.. Giant:• Tl'le con- cluding segment of this highly rated movie from 1956 with Elizabeth Taylor. Rock Hudson and James Dean <in his final role>. KHJ 0 8:00 -"A Place for LOV· ets." A tear jerker from 1969 with Faye Dunaway as a terminally ill woman and Marcellb Mastrioanni as her lover KCET@9:00 -Opera Theater. T he BBC production of the opera "Falstaff' is presented. backed by the English Chamber Orchestra mer IOvet (2 hrs l 8D WESSEX TAl.lS ··A Tragedy 01 Two Ambitions·· The dogged. upward climb ol two aspir- ing young Clergymen 1s lrogk:ally thwarled by the untimely return of their drunken fatr-from Can•· da. wn.te they had. In fact. banillled him. '1i) SPECIAL ··1nes1an Summer·· £tv1n. • 12·yeat·old boy, takes a look 11 Ille In hit Santa Ana pueblo r~•tion 1:30 II ([) 0000 TIMES Willon• Md the Evans dlS· cover Ille well-kept seeret ol a mysttlfious little g1rl who comes Into their lives. (Part 1 ol 4)(RI at CROSS..WrTS ~ OVEREASY Danlel Schorr: Paul Nathanson on legal guard•· anSh•p: home-grown allalla sproutt with JOhn Bryan (A) 9:008(1) M 'A'S•H Colonel POlltlf IS Shacked to learn his unit has recelve<I unfavorable prolt· ctency reports, lrom one of their own members (Al 0 N8CMOVIE * * 'h "'The Girl In The Empty Grave·· ( 1977) Andy GrlHilll. Sharon Spelman A small-town sherlH mves- tigatN tile dealh of a oou- ole whose reputedly deceased Claughte< was seen alive 1ust hours belore their demise (RI 8 ®1 THREE'S COMPANY Pizza to Go Janet presses Jade and CMuy Into service u bobyslt1er1 (Al a> MERV GRIFf'IN Gues11. Wayne Newton. Shelley Berman. Fredcsy Ma1'11n, Cleo Laine. Peta Bar but It flt OPERA THEATER ··Fat1t1tt·· Geralnt Evans. Regina Reanock, Aprtl Canlelo. Norman Ba.ley. Notma EWrrowes and Neil Jenkins are 1 .. 1urect In this BBC produchon of V11d1"s comic: 09«a, with the Eng· hSh Chamber Orchestra. '1i) DAVID 8US8KIND Pert I ·•Ptease Gove Us A Home-Older Children WllO want To Be Adopted" 9:3011()) ONEDAYATA TIME ScllneKlet decides to save Julie lrom an oldlf man. causing even more trou· l>l8t !or boll\ Julte and Ann..jPart 3 of 4) (RI D O CARTER COUNTRY ··r11e Flr&SKle Burnllde Budgel Char· Chief Roy lies to cf\09 $20.000 trom his budget when the Mayor proml-. In a r8dio talk, to cut tile poliee budget (A) 10:00 II Cl) LOU GRANT Billie's arory ol a homaleSs !amoy and Rosso·s lnvesli· gallon ol a po1111cian both l>ackllr• on Lou ancs the Tribune Stitt (RI 10 NEWS ®I 20/20 Hugll Downs hosts ~ broe<lcasl edition ol a newamagazlne fHluring ma,ot Slorlel done by varl- OUl eo<r~IS I LET'S tUJ<E A DEAL 10:IO NlW8 1 1:00 •• (J) tll NEWS LOVE. AMEAICAH STYLE "lo,,. And The Phobia" Vvett 11 a1r1id of entet;ng a man's apartment. "Love And The Golden Worm" A seventh M>fl 11 10 wed a HVetllh ClllUghlet. II MOVIE • • • "Darling" ( 196Sl L•uret1ce HarV9y, Dirk Bogard a • THE 000 COUPLt Attet t'*' al)arttnenl IS robbed. Fe4tx tllllcs ~ into movtno Into ··Seciur1ty Anna ·· • AMERICA 2HIOHT Guest· Mark Hamill f.11 DICK CAVETT Guest: Mk:Ml Pavlott. tor· mer daflC41t with Dtaghllev Bail9'. C!) MACNEIL / LEHRER MPOAT 11:80 9 (J) C8S I.ATE MOVI~ * • • "Aarnl,.. Count)"" 11957) Montgomery C~ft. Eloubeth Taylor. D TOHIOHT Gueat 11011: David Stefn- b«g Gueata Dtana Nyad. ~r-Gary. Nell Car1W. Ken Page 8 LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE "lo\119 And The Artful Codget"' A college C><OIK• sor llH • trio ol handmai- dens 8 9 SOAP (Episode I 11 Jelllca talles a hrm lland 1gainst her ph1tander1ng husband: Corinne confronts Peter 8bou1 hi• b911aYIOr. Burt and Mety prepate for a long-an1tc1pated event. INefwork acMM5 -d..creuonl (R) • HOGAN'S HEAOE.6 Hogan 11a1 to free three prieoners from Ille German secret l)Olk:e. • GETSMART 8l) CAPTIOHED ABC HEWS P.<>RNING 12:00 8 lWIUOHT ZONE ·Tbe BewitC11111· Pool" I HIGH HOf'£S HOHEYMO<>HEAS A Metter 01 Lile And Death"' Ralph tak., an Ill· tll\'led tooi. into the futil'e wt111 reeu111 that pra... 11ig111y -no to evety· onet>ut~P" 12;03 8 9 POllC£ STORY "Two frogs On A Mongoo141" · Natcotica offl. C41fS find lhet'nMI-11'1 compM1tion w1111 teowal agents on the trail of a Clrug ring. (RI 12:308 MOVIE • • ··Trail To San Antone'' ( llM7) 0-Autry, Peggy Stew.rt. A cowboy Cornet to the aid 01 a beautiful Oifi 1n TeitH 11 lu I I •121.oooOUESTION MOVIE • • "Waka Up And 1(141'' ( t963l Robert Hoffrna"· LIM Gastonl A young man and 1111 g11llrlend gel cauglll up on the excit .. ment ol 1 hie ol crime. 11 llr. 30 min I 1:00 0 TOMOAAOW Gueatl: Cecil Ookf. who build• reollcas Of the Avl>IKn Boallad Se>eed· 11ar. end Ed O"Gara. he.o of the Stutz Motor CM Co.: Alaln Clenet, The Clenet, CJ MAVERICK ··The e.treyal" 1:10• NEWS II) wtl.O, WILD WOALO OFAHIMALS '"All-A,,,..ican Raccoon" No wild animal nu played 11 wiW role on the H\196 ol Americans than the m1 ... chieveaul raccoon. =1e"':ews 2:20 NEWS 2:56 NEWSMAKERS 3:2:5 STEV£ EDWAROS Tltf!•dat1'• Da11tl9W Mo"le• M:>RNING , 1:30 •••• ,., ""Wheel Ot Fortune" ( t94 II Frances Dee. Jolin Wayne. ~ERNOON 12:00 0 * * ~ "Samar" ( 19621 Geo<ge Montgomery. Gii· bert Roland. 3:00 ®I • *'"''"The Last Ctltld" (1971) Michael Cole. \Ian Hallin 3:30 ••• "'"Mr Anes Mrs. Bo Jo Jones"" 11971) Deli Amu ,If .• Chris Noma. Crauford Real Late Bloomer SPOKANE <AP > -lt took $5 a nd 25 y ears for Cleve Richardson to really gel b.imself established. Richardson, better known pro- fessionally as John Crawford a nd the s heriff on television's "The Waltons... was so shy in high school. he refused to read in front of bis class. Harry V. Starbird, a teacher at the Colfax. Wash., school, of· fered Crawford $5 if he'd read - after another teacher threatened lo rail him. "THAT MAN'S belief in me - that was the biggest thing,·· said Crawford. who has appeared on numerous television shows, in· eluding "Police Woman." But it took a 25-year courtship to really get the actoc settled. When he met his wife, book· ing agent Beverly Long, she was iingle. but he was married. The cast of Laverne and Shirley appears ready to dive into a giant pizza served up by Phil Foster <left). Others a re <top. from left) Michael McKean. David Lander and Eddie Mekka a nd <bottom> Penny Marshall. Cindy Williams and Betty Garrett. The show will be aired for a n hour tonight at 8 on ABC. Channel 7. Ten years later. he was single, but s he was married. Twelve years later, she was separated and he was single, but she went back to he r hus band and Crawford married again. FINALLY, THREE years later. both were "available" and they were married. Crawford explained. Thomas Telethon Slated KTLA <Channel 5> will telecast the second annual St. Jude Children's Research Hospital Telethon Sunday, July 23, beginning at 8 p.m . DaMy Thomas, hospital founder. Kate Jackson and Marlo Thom as will co-host the fi-ve-hour, live, fund raiser for research and treatment in catastrophic childhood illnesses. After her divorce. Eriu got to know some pretty Interesting people ••• Inducting herself. "0'111 GAROlll Crawford just finished making "Tilt ... a film featuring Brooke Shields. He also wi ll be seen in "Desp e rate Wo m a n," wilh Susan St. James. "Trait's End," a Disney production and another Disney feature about gliders and smugglers. which isn't titled yet.