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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1975-07-29 - Orange Coast Pilot-. I • OC Jets Lalid· \ 'Wrong Way' In Airport Test • .a TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 29, 1975 VOL .... HO. 210, 3 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES re A , En Garde! UPI Te..-. The statue of King Louis IX in front of St. Louis' art museum appears about to be challenged by some modern knights. in armor. Act~ally., t~e men are r sandblasting the statue by a special technique used to clean outdoor· bronze sculptures. oc· 'Airport ~est' ~witches Takeoffs Normal operations al Orange .aQ>unty Airport were reversed eatly today as four jet airliners approached for landings over .rp ord Assures ~ t Jlalt inAid • WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi- dent Ford has given private as-~nces that he would support a •&torr of economic aid to Turkey U that country's opium crop en· ten the tnegal dn.&1 market, .. Jlep. Lester L . Woltr•a)'S. u. The New Yort Oemoerat said ODday tbat the pronilite came a breakf Ht meeting with ord on July 17. A congressional n agalnal mtlitary aid to rkey, ln1i1led upon by the ........... , bu caueed a ~ of .... ....,.... ,,., .. Upper Newport Bay and eight took ofl pver industrial mas to the north of the l:>an Diego freeway. Norm Ewers, noise specialist at the county airport, explained the takeoff add landing patterns were turned around between 7 and 9 a .m. as part ol a DOiae monitoring experiment. The one-morning test was con- ducted al the request of Daniel, Mann, Johnson and Mendellball <DMJM>. the consulting firm that is preparing an environmen- tal impact report on the airport and its environs. "This was the last day of noise sampllna and we wanted to de· termine noi1e levels U11n1 the re- verse runway sy1tem," J:wers said. Ewen said today's unan- nounced tell was desletted to ob· lain tbe most normal type ol re· adlan fro~ re1lden'9 ot homel al llol>~Gtthe airport. •· ' Ford&ul In Visit To Camp OSWIECIM, Poland (UPI) - President Ford walked through a rusting barbed wire gate into the Nazi death camp khown as Auschwitz today, laid a WTeath lo the estimated four niillion lo six million victims, bowed his bead and said: "Horrible. Unbelieva- ble. Horrible." Secretary of State Henry A. Kissin~er, walking behind Ford, bent h1s head in silance and sad- ness. "I had some family members here," the J ewish German· born· Kissinger recalled shortly before h e and Ford visited Poland's reminder· of man's in- humanity'to man. Ford, his brows fixed in a sad scowl, walked as if in a funeral procession from his helicopter down a path built over the cremated remains of Adolf Hitler's bloodiestdeathf actory. He pass ed the dynamite~ crematorium whete Nazi SS mefl burned the bodies of as many as 30.000 persons a night between 1940 and 1944. "Very, very s a• .. A tragic period. A tragic I'eriod," said Ford, so stung by the emotions of Auschwitz that he talked 1n un- usually short sentences with his Polish host. • The President penned this in- scription in the visitors' book: "Tbis monum ent and the memory of those it honors in- spire us further to the d~cated ·pursuit of peace, cooperation and ·security for au peoples." But perhaps his feelibgs and thou~hts showed most in his face when he made an unscheduled (SeeGRUI, Page.AZ) CITY PAIS FOR MEDITA'DON? CEDAR FALLS, Iowa CAP) - Mayor Jon Cr~• says the city may foot tbe t:lllll if municipal empJoyea •ant to study transcendental medltaUon to "'help them cope with tbe streaes amd strai.M of lhclr jobt .• , ~. 28, took a ·course ln t.rauettdental medJtatJon this sprinc. He aaid he paid the $12S tultloo out o( • (unll let aside for travel, conterences and •emlnars. "1 think that course wu more useful lo me as mayor than sorae conferuces I've attended that con the clty "°°·••Crews said. ' I II Family Rescued In Huntington Apart1Dent Blaze • er a I es are es ts Demot t°" Mulled Assessor Chi(,£ Portner Received Facing the Ax? i.:~r~~!t? B JACK CHAPPELL the assignment or personnel un-Oftbe D•ilJ Pilot St.lit Y Oft1t•D•llrP11etSUft derthecity manageris atthedis-VENTURA _ A witness in San Clemente Police Chief Mel cretion o.f the ci.tY m~nager, Orange County Assessor J ack. Portner may t;>e demoted ~wever, m cases involving ~a-Vallerga's trial in Ventura Coun· because of City Council dis-JOr d~partment heads, t~e city ty testified today that co~nty satisfaction with the running of council assumes an "advise and workers were used to prepare thedepertment. consent" role. . and test a computerized ap- .Portner, a 23-year veteran of Carr not~d that the; chier. ~ad praisal system sold to Spartan- the San Clemente force, took been appointed to his position burg County, South Carolina, in over the department about a year ·about a year ago. . 1973. ago with the departure of then-"It is normal and customary m Spartanburg paid Orange Chief Clifford Murray. any situation to r eview prior. to County $2,045 for the system. The question of the chief's fir. completion of a ny probation According to Vallerga's pro-. ing is in flux today, however, period the P~rfo.r~ance (of an secutor, he and former Orange with'6ome backing away from an empl~ye) which is m the case of county a ssess or Andre w original position in which pubhc safet~ pe rsonnel one Hinshaw were collectively paid Portner's demotion from chi ef to year." Carr said. $7,176 for consulting services and a police lieutenant was seen as a "If there was to be a nr expenses connect~d with the near certainly. replacement necessary, I don t sale. City Manager Kenneth Carr think it would be done ~s a ~esu~~ Assista.nt Orange County Dis- confirmed Monday that the re-of the . Teamsters s1tuation, trict Attorney Michael Capizzi assignment of the chief was un-Carr s~~d-. . ., drew the admission from Dr. der consideration. The Teamsters situati?n re-Robert Anders on that employes "There is a possibility that he f ers to~ rift between the city and in the assessor's office were used could be reHeved in which case the pohce de1;>artm ent employes to prepare and, tes t the appraisal he would be reassigned to the who have hire~ the union to system. previous position of lieutenant ~epresent ~hem L~ s~ary and fr-Hinshaw is not charged with which he held before assuming mge be~efit negohati~s. any crimes related to bis even- the position of chief of police," The ~ity by resolution banned tu al profits from tbe sale. Carr said. · ~~ J>!>hce ~mployes from any af-But Vallerga, who was a cowity Carr declined to say what filiation with t he Teamst~rs and official at the time, is defending prompteddiscussionolthechief's has refused ~o recogm~e the himself against seven felony position. agreement with the uruon or charges involving alleged con- Under normal circumstances, <SeeCJDEF, Pa1eA2) <SeeVALLEf:lGA, Page' AZ) . . Ne ighbors Credited HUntington Family Saved From Blaze BJ KATHY CLANCY Of Tiie Ollty rlW ... A Huatincton Beach CamilY of three waa rescued by their nellhbons early this morning as. fire swept their apartment. Fire Captain Roger Hosmer said Braley Homer, bis wile, Diana, and one-year-old soa. Joshua, we.re asleep in their bomeatj113ll Koledot.ane. wbeo • tbe fire tiroke out abouU a.m. He credited prompt action by three nei1bbors1 w.ho wer,e awake and apotttd Ila.au throuah a Uvina room window, wtth racuina the Camily. H011mer said the ~e erupted 4'° a li vlna room coudl where a ·cl1arelle bad beep dropped earlier 1n UM •vealac. By the time firemen arrived, be said, the fire bad spread through the living room and kitchen, and there was heavy $JDOlre damaee through the rest. otthe apartment.· Hosmer said three neighbors, Jim Bridges. Brenda Blacbard and Gary Page, rushed to the Homer hOme after spotting the flames. Bridges kicked in the ~t door, Hosmer said, then the three awoke Mr. and Mrs. Homer and carded Joshua out- side. Firemen had the blaze under control fl\ about 10 miuutes, Hosmer said. There were no Injuries. Dama'e to the Homers' apart.- .-ent and beJonging1 waa ~Umated at $12,000. Weatller Increasing low clouds and fog Wednesday with hazy sunshine after mid· morning at the beaches. Continued cool. Highs near 70 at the strand to the rnid·80s inland. · · I NSIDI! TODAY A SO·Jl~dr·old, 13·/oot _ ichooner ii dockftl In Neqaort Harbor. looking non. the worv far tHOr. of tn "'°"" od- venture1. See P.oge BS. liltlex • I ' • l • I • l UI ... . .. f ' ' 'A.! DAIL 'r PILOT s Tuesday. JUiy 29. 1975 nape Rev~nge Ki11ing Points to Man NORWALK CU PO -Deborah l<antaeng did not are the abot th;it killed tho man sbe said raped her , the de ad man's com· panion bas testified at Mrs. Kan· t aeng's murder trial. The 19·yea~old divorcee is on ·..trial for the death oC Dannye . Al· • 21, Santa Ana, who was shol in the Cacc 'with a s hotgun as be entered her home in 1..o(lg Beach Oct 3. Mrs. Kantaeng told police ~t Allen and another man ab· ducted her the pre vloua day, r~ ber at k.nlfepoi.nt in an Oranae<County park, and forced her {o 1ive tllem her phone number and.tddress to let her go. Carl Tice, 21. of Santa Ana. who went to Mrs. Kantaeng's home with Allen, testified Mon · day that Allen w~ abot by a · man. .. It looked to be a man, beca~e of the rrpme or the body," n~ testified. • He said hi wa• in the dootway, about 12 fee t frQJn Allen, wben Al len wu killed. Tice whirled and ran. "Al'e }'Ou positive in your mind right now that it was a Iman?" asked prosecutor John Bax. ·:Yes ," replied Tice. He s aid the man was not Md. Kanlaeng's father, ~bert Boyd, who committ«l 1ulclde by takfni a dnaa overdole last month. Tbe wbl1clty sur.-.undin1 bis death caused •the Judie at Mrs. Kan· taens's rlrsf trial to declare a D)istrlal. Boyd, who opened the door tor them, had no gun and was still in the doorway when Allen was killed, Tice s aid. Hls teJtimony contradicted hints by de!ense attorney David Fishman that Bovd did the shoot· ing. In his openln1 statement. Fishman told the jury they would • hear that after the sbot was fil:ed, Boyd "ran to Debbi and shoved a gun in her band.•' Over d e f ense objections. Superior Court Judge Beach Vasey admitted into evidence Boyd's testimony at a pre· liminary hearing before h1s de· ' ath, in Yrbicb be tmpllcated his ct•uChter as the killer. Ile testified tbat he opened the d()(>r and Allen "walked ri ght through me like I wH.Sn'l there. I heard a blast or 'pop and 1 tumed around and I saw Debbie with a gun and I s aid '0 my God!' and I went over and took lbe gun from her and said, 'Debbie, you didn't have to do that' and she said 'I didn't m ean lo, Daddy'." A Victory fc;>r lficks ... -County Board to Discuss Staff Tram/ ers By TOM BARLEY Of tll• 0.1ly PlleC SIMt District Attorney Cecil Hicks' d ear cut victory in the lawsuit qarked by the Orange County _$upt>r visors' decis ion to transfer one third or his investigative staff to Sheri ff Brad Gates appeared destined fo r discussion today by the county board. County officials made ll clea r late Monday, however . that dis- cussion of Superior Court Judge Byron K. McMillan's ruling by the supervisors would almost certainly be in executive session . behind closed doors. D eputy County Counse l Charles Sevier . defeated Monday in the courtroom, commented after the hearing that a decision on whether Judge McMillan's ruling will be appealed rests with the board. Judge McMillan closed a day- long bearing into the issue by Hidden in Measure J •• Pay Hike for Top Officials in Bill i WASHINGTON (AP) -It • m !ght not be apparent from read-~ ing the title of the measure. but • the Sena te is considering a bill to ! increas e the s a laries of con- ~ gressmen and other top federal f officials. ' The bill is list ed on the Senate's I legislative calendar as an act to • amend Tille 39, United Slates f. Code, lo apply to the Postal \Ser vice certain provisions of law ~providing for fe deral agency sa f e t y pr og ram s and 1 respons ibi lities a nd for other 1 purposes. " In a n unannounced action. the " Senate P os t Ofhce a nd Civil .. Service Com miltee added the pay raise section to a House- ~ passed bill lo r equire the Postal Service to comply with the Oc· cupalional Safety and Health Act. The new section would give salary increases to Vi ce Presi· • dent Nels on A. Rockefe lle r , f Front Page AI : CHIEF ••• -negotiate w ith the office'rs' 1 Teamsters repres entative. ~ - Carr rctused to comment on when discusslons of the chief's ' position may have taken place declaring that matters discussed • in executive (secret) session are , privileged. • Chief P ortner . contacted Mon· ~ d ay, declined lo comment direct- ~ ly on the situation saying that • any comment at this stage should ' come from the council or mem· ' bers or the city manager. J Sources who asked to remain ,. unidentified r eported the general • lineup of the council finds Coun- • cilmen Pat Lane and Charles • Fox in s upport of the chief. r Mayor Ton y DiGiov anni and · Councilman Thomas O'Keefe r e· port.edly are in favor of removing • him . Councilma n Art Holmes originally was see n as the swing Cabinet members. top-level ex· ecutive officials, federal judges and members of Congress. The amount of the increases would depend on how much of a cost-of-li ving adjustment Presi- dent Ford recommends for gov- ernment employes in general. For example. a 5 percent in- crease would boost lhe annu<1l pay of a member of Congress from $42.500 to S44,625. The Senate ope ned debate on the bill Monday nig ht. The . legislation was defended as sim- ple justice and denounced as a backdoor atte mpt to insulate Congress from the ertects of in· n ation. Sen. Gale W. McGee CD-Wyo .), the P ost Office com mittee chairman, said the r aises a re needed to attract t alented people to government jobs. He said the number of people involve d represent only 1 percent of the feder al payr oll. Sen. Hiram Fong <R-Hawaii>. the c o mmittee 's ranki n g Republican, s poke or "bard· pressed federal officials in the upper echelon" who he said have "suffered long enough from con· gressional inaction ... Sen. James B. Allen CD-Ala.). ,announced h e will offer a n amendment to exclude members of Congress Crom the pay in· crease provision. If Congress m e mbers we re excluded, "I think you will see enthusiasm for the bill greatly da mpened," he said. Allen and Sen. Harry F . Byrd (Ind-Va.), complained that the pay raise was buried in a bill having nothing to do with pay raises, and Allen s aid members o ( Congress traditionally have sought to avoid a vote squarely on the issue or whether their own salary should be r aised. "They want lo more or less come in the back door," Allen . said. The sala ry of_ m e mbers of Congress has not been raised since 1969, when it was increased Crom $30,000 to $42,500. The pay of other top officials also has been frozen since then. flrmly ruling that bis court had jurisdiction to uphold or reject the supervisors' decision to transfe r 22 investigators to Gates. "Tha t action was arbitrary and capricious," he commented. "I have heard e npugb here today lo s atisfy me that the board had no right t.o act in this matter." Sevier unsuccessfully argued that the board's decision was always open to challenge in the Corm of a referendum, r ecall of county officials. or an election. "The District Attorney chose to bring the issue to·the courtroom," Judge McMillan commented. ".He Celt that we had jurisdiction in the matter a nd I am obviously agreeing wilh hi " m . Hicks ' investigators greeted the ruling with sighs of relief. UPI Tel.,i .... e "None of us wante d this transfer," comme nted a veteran investigator who asked not to be identified. "But quite apart from our personal feelings there was no doubt that a ·crazy rfloveof tbis kind would have seriously ham- pered the operation of this of- fice." MENNIE PERSON OF MEMPHIS ADMIRES THE $11,500 CADILLAC BOUGHT BY ELVIS She Admired Singer's Auto-So He Bought Her One, and Clothes to Go With It Chi ef Deputy District Attorney J a mes Enright stressed that point during the he aring before Judge McMillan. "These investigators are a vital part of our crime fighting forees." Enright said. "And jt has been made clear in r ecent weeks that the pu~c is utterly opposed lo such cavalier action.•,• Enright condemned the board approval or the transfer as "half witted" and wa rned that any dilution of the district attorney's in vestigati ve for ce "would seriously hinde r our crime fight· ing capability." Hicks declined to comment on the ruling late Monday, but in- dicated he will be prepared to discuss the issue when Judge McMillan issues the final draft of his ruling and signs the writ of mandate sought by the district attorney. Judge McMillan made it clear that the free zing of the transfer will remain in effect until he signs the writ. (J()() Atwnd Colby Rites Piek One Out Elvis Gives Admirer a Car MEMPHIS, T enn. (AP) - Mennie Per son never expected to meet Elvis Presley while brows- ing in a car lot, much less wind up on his gift list. Mrs. Person wa s caught by surprise when she was admiring Presley's custom -made Cadill ac. "I had m y head over in it a nd he came oul of the back parking Jot and asked if 1 li ked it," said Juror Blast.s Sepa~at,ion Of the Sexes the bank teller. "You don't ex- pect to find him on a car lot that ti me of night." • Mrs. Person. 33. s aid she was "still standing there with my mouth open," but managed to complime n t Presley on his personal car. ''He said, 'That one's mine, but 1'11 buy you one'," she said. -. - ••.ffe caught my by the arm and carried me back to the parking lot where he had come from and told me to ' pick one out'." The car Mrs. Person selected was a gold and while model that lists for a bout Sll,500. Mrs. Person said that when Presle y learned her birthday was today, he handed her the keys to the car, wis hed her ''Hap- PROVIDENCE, R.l. (AP) -A py Birthday" and told an aide to woman juror has protested the write her a check •'lo buy some separation of jurors by sex. Court clothes to go with the car." officials say the c ustom is aimed She did not disclose the amount al preventing possible sexual of the check. hankypanky. Mrs. P e rson s aid s he told Ros lyn Tinker , a his to ry Pres ley tha t s he and he r teacher, complained that the husband, Troy, already owned a segregation or men and women Cadillac, a 1974 model, but said jurors at the Providence County that didn't bother Presley. court.house was "incomprehensi-"He told m e to keep it," she ble." s aid. "He told me to give itto my LOS ANGELES <AP> _ Au But judges and other court of-husband or whatever we wanted estimated 600 persons attended fi cials , concerned about what to do." memorial services for actress might ha ppen during the long Presley's gifts of automobiles Barbara Colby, who was shot t.o waits between trial duly, s ay the over the years have gone to death with a friend last week in an custom is very practical. friends, profess ional associates apparenlly unprovokedattack. "We have had som e un-and in one case, a politician- From Page Al GRIM ••. tour or a barracks where Jews and other inmates were lodged in s ix-man bunks before being sent to the gas chambers. The Polish guides rattled oft the statisti cs of death. They told Ford how the Zyklon-B gas was dropped into the chambers dis- gui sed as shower houses, how the corpses were stripped of gold teeth fillings a nd even human hair before being cremated. Ford looked grimly down at the empty bunks. . Kis!iinger did not bring his 13-year-old son, David, on this. grisly side trip from an otherwise triumphal visit among the cheer· ing crowds of Warsaw a nd Krakow. The secretary, his eyes nar- rowed, looked and looked and looked and said nothing. Ford raised his head and gazed throu gh the rotting r afters toward the heavens, turned and walked out to the fresh air. Ford as ked one of his Polish hosts how long he had been a prisone r in Auschwitz. Four years , the man said. ··1 w as libe rat ed by the Americans." "A de pressing, a strongly depressing sight,'' Ford said. Then he turned to his host, Polish Communist party leader Edward Gier e k, and said, "Thank you. l '11 see you in Krakow.'' 'Neither man s miled. The services were held in an pleasant experiences.'' Superior former Shelby County Sheriff open air theater atTopanga, an Court Judge William M. William Morris Jr. Oil Sp1·u E ed artists'hamlet siluatedinarusUc Mackenzie said Monday. "The During the past weekend, 8 Y canyon between the San Fernan· jurors are away from their Presley had a turboprop airplane MIAMI (U PI) _Coast Guard d V 11 d th al spouses for two weeks and we de· I ed t $1 2 ·11· d U ed o a ey an e coast com· va u a · mt ion e ver pla nes and h e licopters are 't fM l'b cldedwe'dha vefewerlroubJesiC t La v i i.t hi l mum yo a 1 u. o s egas as a gm o s ong· watching two additional oil spills .Miss Colby. 37, the daughter-in· we kept them separate." time manager, Col. Tom Parker. o(( the southeast F1orida coast. law of entertainer Ethel Merman, 1-;:===========:;;;;============;;;;;;;;;========;:;;;;=;;:=~;; was shot lo deaib along with actor James Kiernan'as theyleflanact- ing school in the Venice area Thursday night. • vote. but Holmes, r eached today, ' said he is in favor of retain1.ng the • chief atlhis time.'' Fro"' Page A J JOIN THE ESTABLISHMENT! ORANGE COAST ., DAILY PILOT 1"hir Or.mQt C.n•' t fU•IY r ,1.,t ,..,,.,., wn.r~ I\<'"""· btrwdl""'r,.,,41'• Ptt'\\ • put>l~dbythrf'0rftl'• Cot" P\i.blt\l'l•flQ (O~.tt\y ~.,,. M 1tk)M .,. p,nufJWICI ltNH't06V t nrovof't f rkMy tor (.O~t• Ml·..-~"•Pt>rt ~.ch Hu"•inaton ,.,._.,l'\/JOUft t.11n V1•U,. y, t'"'"·· ~d~lt 04, • Vttfl•y ""'It l fl'OV"•• 8t-«" ~h ("•\I A th'Jty 'C'°O"~ "''"()4"1 '' JN«»'•~•O S•tVfctl'f'\ 61\iO 'U1W1Ay• ,,_ ..,,..~•Nt ov.-•\l\1no pt11tnt h 1t 1lD W..\t OAt ~IHet, tn\t• M., •. C..e•1torni" mi. Rober1 N. Weed P1'911•n• •no Pv"'•VllH Thom as K~evll f.OllO< Thomas A. Murphlne ,... ,,.,,"'I (di tar Cna rles H. Loo~ R1ch.lrd P. N~ll AnO\l•nl IN,....,_. f.41ilor~ Off CH •o•laMo•• JJOIN+\l .. yitfft' N w!l"'t -..c 11 lDJ H•-_,,,v••O 1 •""'1• O.<K.11, llK~~,..., .. .-.ttnal"" ~"'" 1/-)\1111 ..... .,..,...vf'• s.Nd~ V•lt.y J~,.11> ""' llMd .,,..,°" .. "'- T•1•i*One f114» Ml-4R1 Cl•sslfled AdvutJtNlt 642-5671 ~It-• V•I,.., ~Olft<• st1-'J10 f '"" $M> <•·--OS.O.JO (OPY••tlll !ti t Or.--C' .. 11 fl\l .. l\111 ... '-" .,, ........ , ...... '""",."""' ....... . .... '"" ... .,. .... ~·· ..... , ...... , ... o prnowr•d wU.hMlt W.C.••• ,,.,,,.,, • ..,. Of •OCl1 .. Qfllt-• ')orollil <••n ~,.., .... •• c.M• ~. I.•"•"'",. ~111WUltM•.,...,c.,,.., P •~!.l. -.-11""'9..-;;-. ... ., ....... _ '""""'"'"· V ALLERGA TRIAL. • • m ets of interest brought against him by the Orange County Grand J ury. . Anderson's testimony opened the second day of the trial in Ven· Lura County S uperior Court Judge Robert Shaw's court.room. Anderson was identified as • phys i c is t who r e presented Spartanburg in Orange County during negotiations Jor the purchase of the :;ys tem. Earlier , the man who agreed to pay Hinshaw $6,000 for consult· ing services related lo the ap- praiso.l system purchase said he didn't know ball the lee was earmarked Cor Valleraa. As a matt.er of fact, former Spartanburg asses..,br John Q. Ebert testified Monday, it wasn't untfl recently that he learned Vallerga received S3,000 Crom Hmshaw. Furthermore, the Oren1e County a"essor dJd nothin1 t.o earn lhe mCllley, accordihg lo Ebert's testimony. And, be said, Htnahaw•s services were ll,Jlliled to i.Dawer· lng qucstlona aaked durSn1 a series of pbooe calll be made to l.be Republlcao congreuman's oatce in Wublnston. D.C. But. UM former Spe.rt.anburg useHor •aid, th.e 4edakx> lo make ~ Umlled use ol tho services fo r which he agreed to pay Hinshaw $6,000 was bis own. . Ebert said that be agreed to pay a flat ree for the services in mid-Ma rch, 1973, while the con· gressman and Vallerga were in Spartanburg. Shortly after that visit. the Oran.Ce County assessor was _paid $714 to cover consulting servlces aod exp:en~ incurred during his two-day vi.sit A Grand Jury indictment . handed down May 6 charges Vallerga with a conructotlntere5t in bi.j dealings with tbe South CaroUnacounty. The asaenor ts also charfed with embezzlement. grind theft aJMI misappropriation tn connec· tion with the money be receiftd ltom Spartanbu.r1. 1ncludin1 the '31~ funneled through Hlmhaw. wnen' crou .. umlniftl E~ defense attoMey Rlcbatd Mw])hy drew admissioos from him that the con1alllna lees were .., open tr1n11ction. Ebert 1ald there was no at- tempt or •uHeaUon made to db· gulse lhe payment.. Neither Hinshaw nor Valluga lncticatecf to blm.tbat tbe money J>aid tbem wu for &nJ parpoee atber u.an CGIDIUlUn& ~ Ebert tf'Ufied. • There is a definite advantage in doing business with an ESTABLISHED local firm. W e are interested in doing business wit h ESTABLISHED mills. which we have determined after decades of doing business. There is no.way, unfortunately, to tell how a mill will back its products until there is a problem! Carpet stores Interested ONLY in price have no one to back them.-and consequently walk away form complaints. A few times through the years. we have had to stand the OOS1 of replacement when a mill wouldn't. This will only happen once to us, and then the samples are in our tr'Jsh can. What this means to our customers la that the lines we catry are from reputabte mills, and that they can buy with confidence from Alden's. DEN'S : iiisia11itiaii :: custom drapsriss *•••••• carp• UC. NO. ?l04tt 1663 ,LACfNTIA AVENUE • COSTA MUA, CALI,, 92627 • ~HONE 6 .. ~·4838 -6°"6~2355 t ,f'-----------------------&15 W@M(( ®@ [[WO ©® Th«> column appears d11il y f'XCl'Pl Saturdays and 1'1ondays. r.tlf ti /l'U/J/1 Pll I 'f'/lt'll U'fl/t' /'u/ lJu1111. l'ul It'll/ C'UI /t•d 111/11' ,,,., ,,,,. 1111."1 t'f,\ c111d uc I 11111 11111t 1w1•d to \11/11• 1111'1/lllfl('S /rt 11111 ·1·r111111•11/ w1tl 1111.,1111·\~ /\Jc11/ ''"'" 11111· ... 111ms 111 I: II I JI 111111 '" \ 11 II r ,\ ! fl I ( l' 111111/1/1' ('OU\/ I i<11/11 l '1ft1I I' fl l111J ,,,,,, ""·''" 1\/1>.~o , < I •1•1,11, ldt'/i/iUI t /Ill/I I t I /111 /11111• J/llllf Pn-il f o P et11 DEAR PAT: I am constantly horrified to see how many people leave their pets in cars at shop- ping cente rs while the t e m · perature soars, m aking a car like a n oven. It seem s that folks do not realize that a dog can have a heal stroke ahd die very quickly. My veterinarian says this is a serious problem and the public should be educated regarding this health danger to family pets. B.W ., Laguna Niguel The only rele.se animals have for perspiration is their feet pads. When overheated, they pant and become dehydrated, ac- cording lo a veterinarian con·. &acted by ATS. Panic usually fol.lows, causing the dog lo try to escape from the bot car. This &ends to m ake the body tem- perature rise, possibly resulting in a heart stroke, shock and then death. U it's necessary to leave a pet in a car, be su re lo park In the shade and leave all windows rol~wn sever al inches. It's .y&ylo leave a pet in a parked c ar for longer t han 30 minutes during warm weather. Watch Out DEAR PAT: 1 bought a Timex watch about four years ago. I'd a lways heard they were very good watches, but mine worked properly only for one year. It's been in and out of the shop ever since. Can you give me the Timex r epair center address? Maybe it can be fixed there. M. T .. Costa Mesa Mail your watch lo Timex, 7000 Murray St., Box 2740, Little Rock, AR 72203. Repairs cost ap- p r oxim a t e l y $S for out-of. warranty wat<~hes. Send your watch by certified mail, return receipt requested, or by In.sured • mail. Include date and proof of parchase, if possible. If you pre- fer to deal with a local authorized r epak source, check the Yellow Pa ges u n d e r "Wa tc hes" (Timex). Cook• A Id Aging DEAR PAT: Why are ex- pensive wines sold in corked bot· tles and cheap wines in bottles with scr ew top lids or plastic corks? L. G., Dana Point Corks are u sed for holding l ood wine because they are not attacked by the acid in lbe wine. This is because the cork allows a s mall amount o f air to get into the wine, and this usually results in aging. The bark cork continues tbe process of wood aging that began in ba rrels at the winery. A rt E.rewept DEAR PAT: HI return to the United States from abroad with an original painting that is duty. free, may I a lso bring back $100 worth of merchandise under my exemption? L. L., Balboa Yes. A V .S. Customs Service representative explained that since paintings that are wholly band·executed are free of casloms duty, their value would not be included in your $100 ex- e mption. 800 Fighting Timber Fire KING CJTY (AP) -A fire believed started by a cigarette burned out of control today over 7,300 acres or brush and timber land on a military reservation near King City. Harley G r e i man, Forest Service information orficer, said ' the 800 men fi ghting the blaze • with help or 11 aerial tankers ti hoped lo contain the fire on the • Hunter-Liggett military r eserva· tion by tonight. ' '\ Artistic Boost Chris Scott. 7, of Newport Beach, lifts Julie Eastman, 5. of Corona d el Mflr, for a better look in the junior art gallery of the Festival of Arts. The works in the junior gallery were done by school children of Orange County and were juried to select the best for exhibit. 2 Competitors Vie For Health Agency T he two competitors for the federal designation as Orange County's Health Services Agency (HSA) are trying to win as many endorsements as possible before a showdown later this year. So fa r. it appears the existing county Health Planning Council has gathered the longest list of backers. The county Board or Supervisors is the other com· petitor. Whichever e ntity gets the federal nod will be given sweep· ing ne w powers over health facilHies review, planning and health care g rant fund ad· ministration. · A spokesman for the federal Health, Education and Welfare Departme nt said the formal guidelines and application forms for the HSA design:ition will be ready toward the end of August. "We would probably expect to receive the fo r m al npplicalions from the county and the Health Planning Council in September and make a decision no later than November,'' the spokesman said. Jean Emond. a spokeswoman for the existing county Health Planning Council, said her ngen· cy believes endorsements will count heavily m the final federal decision. ''But they will a lso look at our track record." sh e said. · endorseme nts her uiVt has r e- ceived those o f the county League of Citiel'\_ chapter ;md the Orange County M edical Associa· lion, which has 2,000 ml:!mbcr doctors. "We now have 17 cities aligned with us and others on the fence that ar e leaning our way." she said. Supervisors made a bid to win the medical association's sup- port but presentations last week by Paul White, assistant county administrative officer and Ray. Rhoads. c hief aide to Supervisor Ralph Diedrich, failed to swing lhevotes. H the existing health planning agency fails to receive the federal designation, it would technically go out of existence ~t the end oC this year. But whenever the decision is made. the counc il has three months of transitional funding due. The feder al law that created lhe l leaJth Planning Council ex· pired last year and was replaced · by the measure that authorized the llSA system . The term of the existing hea lth council was ex· tended through this year to give lhe HSA time lo lake shape. Earlier this month, Gov. Ed· mund G . Brown, Jr. designated Orange County as Health Services Area 13, one of three single-county areas in the state. Tuwf.y, July 29. 1975 DAil y PILOT A 3 Enormous Last Supper Seals in the Shark SAN DIEGO CAP)-Twohefty harbor seals weighing 300 pounds have been found in the belly of a great white shark caught off the Southern California coast near Catalina Island. The l ,OOO·pound man-eater wais brou,ght.to ~rt here ~o_nday and eager b1oloJ?1sls wast~ no time in dissecting the sea creature whose swollen stomach had aroused som e curiosity. The consumed seals weighed in at 175 and 125 pounds each. The dissect ion was continuing but scientists said they were sure nothing more of interest would be found i n the g real white's massive digestive system. "It was obvious Lhe shark had eaten just before it was caught, .. said Dr. Lanny Cornell, curator of mammals and vice president of research al San Diego's Sea World. The 14 foot-lo ng monster, whose li ver weighed more than 140 pounds. is drawing scicnhsts the way the movie "Jaws" is drawing audiences. and Larry Mansur, captain of the boat that caught it , s aid he would like to sell the creature to a scientific in- stitution. The tactics used lo land the shark were similar to those used in the film "Jaws."' The shark was harpooned and buoys were attached to the har- poon's line Lo increase the drag and tire thl' s hark. Mansur s aid the harpoon severed the b ackbone a nd punctured vital organs. But the huge s hark still battled for more than an hour before dying, he said . "Thal might have been a lucky shot. bt!ca usc the shark still pul up quite a struggle do.spite the murfal wound," he said ... ll took 600 feet of thick hemp line and 23 plastic buoys d own with it. Thal was about a ll we had. "But a fte r awhile, the buoys popped back to the ::;urface and we knew we had il." Refugees Get A.po logy for Poor Chow Brig. Gen. Paul Graham, com· mander of lhe r efugee center al Camp P e ndleton h e re, has apologized to J ndochinese re· fugees angered by the poor quali · ty or food served to them by a civilian contractor . Graham's apology came after some refugees dumped servings of rice and cream ed chicken into garbage cans outside the Camp 8 mess ha ll, camp officials said Monday. The refugees complained the food was unappetizing and the portions were s mall. A Marine Corps s pokesman said the food served to the re- fugees Monday "did not meel Marine Corps standards." U Pl T•kt>holo THE ONE T HAT DIDN'T GET AWAY OFF SAN DIEGO Brian Hawthorne Shows Off Great White Shark Pilot l Logbook J He's Had It Up To Here With Jaws By \\'lLUAM SCHREIBE R Ol t!MP O..tly Ptlol 5l•ll Jaws. jaws and more jaw::;. T HE WAY people are reporting shark sii:?htings these days. you'd think the ocean was teeming with great white denizens waiting lo be fed . ll all stems. of course. from Peter Benchley's beslsell· ing novel and the subsequent movie about a maneating shark that tcrrori tcs <i n ocean front resort community. Every shark sighting gels headlines these days and every minor incident related to sharks gets coverage even though there hasn't been a fatal shark attack off Los Angeles a nd Orange Counties for 30 years. WHEN I READ lhe book ''J aws" I h ad the fee ling Benchley had one thing in mind scHRe1ee1< a fat movie contract. The re- s ult. 1 understand, is another in the latest wave of shock and thrill screen e pics. 1 re fuse to p::iy to be scared out of my wits by a mechanical s hark just as 1 refused Lo pay to be frightened by a little girl possessed by lhedcvil. The impact of the movie, "Jaws.'' on the public may be. greater in the long run than any of the other death and destruction flicks. Sharks <.ire living, breathing mysteriC:!S that people don 'l understand too well. Backers of the county Board of Supervisors believe the council's track record will be a principal target of supervisors when lhe county's application is made. The council has come under fire in the past for being cum- bersome and rife with internal bickering. Those charges have lessened since the council re· organized last year. County_ Physician's Death Trial Slated BUT T HE Y understand enough Lo drive lifeguards and other pubhc safety types btinCJnas . Take the guard I talked to this p::ist weekend at Laguna Niguel Beach Park. ··Everybody :·wcs sharks in the seaweed,'' he said. ''I'm getting tired of thio; nonsen::;e ." I took my three little cousins from Stockton to the beach with me. One of them had Ol'Vcr even seen the ocean. but a ll three had seen "J aws." Miss Emond counts as the top Cyclist Falls To His D e ath. LOS ANGELES CUPI> -A 29-year-old motorcyclist lost con- trol of his machine on a freeway interchange, crashed through a guard r a il and fell 90 feet to his de- ath on the highway below. Maxwell Scott was pronounced dead at the scene Monday. The Highway P a trol said Scott was traveling extremely fast on the southbound San Diego Freeway transition to lhe west- bound Santa Monica Freeway when b e los t control or his motorcycle. Nationalization CARACAS, Venezuela (AP> - The lower house of Congress ap- proved legislation Monday night to nationalize U .S.owned oil com· panies running Venezuela's oil industry which earned lhe nation $10 billion last year. RALEIGH, N .C. (UPI> -A federal judge has rejected all de- fense motions for Army doctor J effrey MacDonald and ordered his trial to begin Aug. 18 on charges of murdering his wife and two daughters, the U.S. Al· torney's Office said today. Assistant U.S. Attorney Jay Stroud said he was advised Mon· day night that U.S. District Judge Franklin T . Dupree had turned down tbe motions and set a dale for the trial to start. Stroud said a formal order would be entered lalerintheweek. MacDonald, indicted earlier this year by a federal grand jury' is cbarged with murdering his wile and two young daughters while he was st ationed at Fl. Bragg in 1970. . MacDonald m aintains that a band oC hippies burst into his apartment at the post n ear Fayetteville a nd stabbed him, then attacked bis wife, Collette, and their daughte rs, Kristen J ean, 2, and Kimberly, 6. Dupree earlier rejected a r e· quest from MacDonald to move the trial from North Carolina to California. MacDonald is now director of emergency operations at St. Mary Medical Center in Long Beach and Ii ves in Huntington Beach. During a series of pretrial hearings earlier this year, Mac- Donald a rg ued the indictment should be dismissed. lie said the process of selecting the grand jury was discriminatory on the basis of r ace a nd sex, and argued that pretria l publicity and the conduct of government pro· secutors would deny him a fair trial. "YOU 'RE NOT ~elting us into the water,"' they said. "We don't want lo uet chewed up." Once they s aw the surf filled with swimmers, two of them took a chance :mc.J waded in. The third waded around in ankle-deep water, apparently convinced no sh ark could survive in water that shallow. He became the first casuaJtyoftheday. A small JCllyl1~h brushed against little cousin's ankle and turned tl bri~hl scarlet. ''l 'M NEVER sw1mmin(! in the ocean again," he vowed. fighting back the tears. "Maybe they should make a movie "The Jellyfi sh" next. The kid 's got potential. IL would probably be a box office smash. ..._/ SOUTH COAST VIL LAGE .. _r :I'~ PREltilTS ~ .... -Pc MUSIG or llMt;RIGll ~ Every Wednesday Night 8p.m. Thi~ Wednesday Night on the Village Green THE BIG BAND BEAT Featurin_g Stan Freese Fishing Trial In Laguna • and his Orchestra "A return to the nostalgic hits of the 40's." hoppes Open Mon .. Sat. 10-9:30 ~un . l l-<> The owner of n San Pedro- based commercial fisblmt boat will appear in South Orange County Municipal Court. Aug. 8 to answer charges that he illegal- ly netted 3,500 pounds of blue fin tuna oH the Laauna Beocb con t.line July 19. Ant.onto Inarande, owner and skipper of the Margaret F, Wll.S d ted by Robert Terwtlllger, a ttate Dep•rtnlent o( Flab ant\ Game Warden, alter the com· m ercial boat w u spotted in waters about Qne-hal! mile off Abalone Polnt near Irvine Cove .. Durtng the pe riod May 1 to Sept. 10, the use or a purse seine <net) is r estricled along the Orwige County cQasUlne. It also ls unlawful to fis h .,within three miles or th e 15 horellne on Sat urdays and SUndays. ln· I grade wascit ed on aSaturdav. , The 3,SOO poundR of tuna 1s valued ot $832.80. The fish has been sold and the money is being he ld by the D~partment of Fish and Game until the case is dis· posed o ( ln court. The department also has (iled a civil action in Superior Court de manding that lngTande be or· dered to Corf elt his seine, valued at'4,000. , • Across tt\e street from South Coast Plazn at Bear and Sunflower. A 4 DAIL y PILOT .. Tu.Sday,July29, 1975 :-r Apollo .~Iipup' Blamed Nigeria Chief Ousted Smiling Gen. Goivon Hears News at Meeting ... HOUSTON <UPJ>-The bre~ .in communica t ions with the descending spact!Ship lasted only a split-second. But it was just enough to cause a human error f!tat forced hospitalization oC :Atnerica's last t.hrce Apollo ~strouauts. During the break, space of. ficials said, astronaut Vance Brand missed flipping two ~witches. The err or allowed 'poisonous roc k et propellant fumes to fill the Apollo cabin. UKANU, <.:OUGIUNG heavily f rom the thick, potentially fatal 'fumes, s till managed to deploy parachutes to float the Apollo to a :;plashdown in the Pacific Ocean. Glynn Lunney, direct.or of the Apollo Spacecraft ProgTam Of. flee, said air rushing into the ~abin from outsid~ -which also carried in the fufnes -and a momentary squeal on the pilot's .headsets made it too noisy for Brand to hear fellow astronaut Donald "Deke" Slayton's com- mand to flip the switches. On the wate r, Commander Thomas Stafford dug out three oxygen masks, pre venting further harm to the pilots' lungs from the ye llowis h -brown nitrogen tetroxide gas, otficials !iaid. Brand, Stafford and Sl ayton were quickly hospitalized. They were t o leave Tripler Army Medical Center today for 10 days m private milita ry beach homes and a reunion with their families on the island. Doctors said they were pro- gress ing well but wanted them to r~l and prevent any contact with • !iUCb common res piratory l(erm~ • as colds and flu. THE NITROGEN tetro:<1de 'part of Apollo's s teering rocket 1>ropellant turns to natric acid "\\'hen it contacts the eyes, s kin •112nd lungs. The s ubstance irritat- U~ITe ......... OUSTED IN COUP Gen. Ya kubu Gowon KAMPALA. Uganda (U PI) -"rmy omcers today ovttr- threw Nigerian head of state M aj. Geh. Yakubu Gowon while he w3s here in K~mpala attending an Organization of Arri can Unity summit conference, Lagos radio reported . Lagos radio said Lt. Col. Josepli Nan van Garba the chief or Gowon's pet'Sonal bodyguard, led an apparenUy bloodless coup in the West African nation lhat sells $45 million of oil each year. THE NEW GOVERNMENT clamped a dus k to dawn curfew on the capital of Lagos, ordered all but essential service vehicles off the streets, closed the airport and cut telecommunications, the radio said. The radio said authorities would deal "severely" With anyone d isturbing the peace. The coup marked the third military regime in nine years to take over the world's largest black nation, ripped apart by a three-year civil war, tom by political strife, ao<Nivided by tribal violence ever since it gained its independence from Great Britain in 1960. The 40-year-old Gowon heard news or his ouster during an OAU summit conference session in this Uganda capital. He s at Detroit Police Quell Violellce After Shooting DETROIT (UPI> -The ratal s hooting of a young bl ack touched off a night of fiery violence and looting in a West Side neighborhood Monday night and early today. Eight other persons were in· jured before hund reds of police restored order. POLICE SAID a white tavern owner spotted a blal·k teen-ager tampering with his parked car late Monday and fi red at the youth. The leen-agcr died nine hours later. Almost 700 policemen were or· dered to the scene. sweeping the area on foot in search of looters and vandals. More than so persons were arrested. An elderly man was dragged from his car a nd beaten by the mob, police said. The uniden- tified man was taken to a Detroit hospital where he was listed in critical condition . · POLICE SAID at least seven other pe r sons. inc luding a µoliceman a nd a fireman, were injured, none seriously. motionless for several minutes as his 11ides clustered around him, then smiled broadly at newsmen and left abruptly. He had no lm- mediate com meot. The OAS meeting was halted for four hours. GOWON TOOK POWE.ft IN a July, 1966, military coup, de· posing president Gen. J .T.U. Aquiyi-lronsi. Aquiyi-l ronsi, asked to take over the govemment foll owing the assassination of thr~e top e.wuian oCClcials six months earller ... was_himself slain dwin& Cowon's coup. Gowoo, then a lieutenant colonel and the Nigerian Army Chief of Staff, Aug. 1, 1966; announced be had taken over t~t: C?OUO· try of 60 million persons and would "shoulder the respo!ls1b1lity of the nation and th~ army." He promised to restore parliamentary rule but changed his mind last year. Sporadic violence among the Hausa , the Ibo, the Yoruba and several smaller Nigerian tribes exploded in July 1967 when the eastern section of the country, populated by the Ibo, proclaimed tbe l~dependent Republic of Biafra. Veterans Day Back ToNov.11? WASHINGTON (UPI) -A House s ubcommittee has decided Lo make an exception to the seven year old practice of celebrating some national holidays on Mon- days in order to give Americans longer weekends. The pane l voted Monday to r e- turn in 1978 to celebrating c 1 t.~~D~~~~l~J "' of the last Monday in October . UPI TtltPMI• Congress decided in 1968 to make four national holidays Call on Monday -Veterans Day, Columbus Day. Washington's Birthday and Memorial Day. l•raelf Raid e ed. and burned the pilots' eyes ·, ~d caused severe lung inflam - 'Mations whic h forced their tiospitalization for at least five . fiays. As many as 300 persons, most· Jy black, gathered in a three- quarter square mile area near the bar and be gan roaming the s t reets, burning a nd looting stores and showering police and firemen with rocks and bottles. Da mage estim ates to stores ;.ind busines s es in th e neighborhood were not irn· mediately known, but a police squad car was burned and a police helicopter peppered with shotgun fi re. Oh, Luck-y Ma11 BEIRUT, Lebanon CAP) - The Lebanese Defense Ministry said an Isra e li ground force raided a southern Lebanese village early t oday but was driven bac k by L e banese artillery and borde r positions. • . Chief Astronaut John YounJ:! :'told a news conference that after 'the foulup the astronauts re- • c overed and "were s till <methodically stepping right _:_Uu-ough the checklist doing the steps they were supposed to do to 'el ready to hit the waler." ' · Young said that although the · 'Apollo was floating upside down ' ih the water. Stafford unstrapped · trlmself, fell to the bottom of the 's hip and c r awled over the 'couches to reach oxygen masks . Asked if Stafford saved the ~·lots ' lives, Young said: "I sure on 't know. but I 'm sure glad om did it, cause he really oved fast. 1 "He really moved fast and it ,.,as the right thing to do unde r Jhe circumstances.·· t Officer Aids ~rial Defense ' 1 RALEIGH, N.C. (UPI> -A policeman testified today he had to look up to see the bra and tiegligee of Joan LitUeonthe door cf her cell where a jailer was ~lain, implying it would have been tiifficult for the 5-foot-2 black "1oman to place it there. ' Johnny. Rose, a 5·foot-ll 'Was hington, N.C ., policeman, \esti fi e d und er c ross-~xaminalion that when he saw ~iss Little's bra and negligee, "I ?1ad to look up to see it.'' Miss Little, c harged with iurderin g six -foot jailer larence Alligood, claims Al- good tried to rape her and she abbed him to death with an ice ck to fight off the attack. 111 Humperdinck Loses Round In Lawsuit LAS VEGAS. Nev. (UPI> Singer Engelbert Humperdmck lost the opening round of a paternity suit in a ruling Monday based on the rights ofthe child. The suit was brought by Di ane Marie Vincent, a model, asking Humperdinck be declared the father of he r 4-year-old daughter and required to s upport the child. Humperdinck , d eny ing h e fathered the child. asked the suit be dismissed on grounds too much time has passed for the case to proceed. District Judge Howard Bab- cock denied the singer 's motion and ordered the case to trial, say- ing it would be wrong to dis- criminate against illegitimate children, "a class of individuals branded by what society deems to be immoral conduct of their parents, simply because actions were not brought on their behalf al a time when they were unable to act for themselves." # Portugal Clash LISBON <UPI) -Communist c ro wds clashed with a nti· Communist demonstrators in the resort town of Sintra north oC Lisbon early today and prevent· ed efforts to oust the left-wing ci· ty council. "We intend to investigate this incident thoroughly and to make ::.ure that justice prevails," s aid Detroit May or Coleman A Young. who was al the scene of the disturbance along with police chief Philip Tannian. "On the whole. the people showed control of themselves with few exceptions ," Young said. "The police acted in a pro- fessional m anner ." THE TAVERN owner, Andrl''' Chinarian, 39, was held for ques· lioning by police in the shooting ofthe black youth, Obie Wynn , 18_ Wynn was s truck in the head and taken to Mt. Carmel Mercy Hospital whe re he died after un· dergoing em ergency surgery. Tannian orde red all available police offi cers temporarily as- signed lo the area precinct in an attempt to beef up patrols in case of further disturbances. "My crystal ball is as hazy as <-veryone else, .. Tannian said. "I can make no pr edictions about what m ight happen tonight. We will be prepared for any even· tuality that might arise." Daily Pilot Deti'~ery Is Guaranteed Monday-Friday II you Ckl nol hdve your paper by 5 30 p m , call before 7 p m and your copy will be ae· livered Salurday and Sunday· If you do not receive your copy by 9 a m Sarur· day. 0< 8 a.m Sunday. call before 10 am. and your copy will be delivered. Clre11latlOt1 T.t~ Mosl 01anqe County Areas 642-021 Northwe$1 Hun1tng100 Beach. and Wes1m1ns1er . . • •• .. S40-11JO San Clemente, Capistrano Beach, San Juan Capistrano. Dans P0tnl South Laguna. Laguna Niguel . . • . . . . . 4tW6JO .. .. • ~ Gulf ~epression Eyed w..H• ...... •1 .. 101 t i ,.. llAHI Cr"ll C-Yoft )I .U ~ 1119'1 In dowft'""' I.el Anatlet.. M '"9lkJI f~ IS #onday. •M •-1~ .11 ·-'9dta<Ml-lnlllelO•ICM.. ll"tdtt l whelher the deprnslon wlll form lhe season·s lhlrd lroplc•I ~lorm, which will be Nmed Caroline, Mt!&nwh•l• In the l>attl• bo'tween Ille '-' ancl a prof.cted bumper corn UllP, tl'lr WHtMr .i.eems to be wt.,. nlnv. Corn h wilMrlno ln 1CIO-dpqr~ htal In IM n•ll0<>'t midland&. FarmerS<en only IOOlo. lmpl0f'lt19 ly at tll" slcy llflCI . ~ lor ralM ,,,., ~Id HVe the <roe> -end the lh,.•I of a second slralghl• vear ot dr011Qht·v•no11l,hed elf~ Some Pttchy low foO loCl•'f anoWto- reWS.y, Olllerwl~ warm LIQhl varleble wind\ nl"" ef'C1 mornlno hOurs bMomtn9 _,, to IOUlllWHI I to u ~nots U'll& •ftot~. "'°"" ladey ""' 70. C..stel lt<nperatwru .,111 ,.,. llel•"" '4 and UI. Inland tem· !M'f4"11As wlll r•noe lltl••n '1 .,.s .,, Tllewatertemcitr•lv1'9will ll9 ... s....,111..., TIU. c .. , .... .. TUUO•Y hlft.,_14 ........ relry Ct.Ill'- _. 9f 1911111t•n Calltornl• '""°""" mldweell after lll11ndusllowe" ---l11ttrl0r erHS Oii MCW\$y. -...~ IOOl~llllt19Urll!a-e ~ In .._ $afl .. rMrdlllO N .. •'-• FoAS(. "'1t only -,.,. • ., a.tarted. l'lr•fl•llt.rs 411lc'ly ~ ........ ".C"TI" All Air rorc• llu,,lun• llU11ter 5-condlllOll t:ot,,m. 4 s pl-1r.w from I IOf'ld•'t ~le• w-1-e.UJ>ll'\. l.1 ,, ... loOar le <llt<ll on • lnlCllUll WlfONllOAY •IP"•Mlon drllllt19 \lowly aero"' fht P'lnt 1119" J;OJ • "'--> 2 nonlle•tl••n 01111 01 M*•'<o end Fl"t IOW ,:.ue.m. , o 111 ... wlno M••r taint •9•1n1t Ille SoKondlllth l itOp,m. •·• .. .-. S.COfld •-1e:at '""· t.t ~atten at llle N11i-1 Hur-141n'ltaU:02a.m., .. taJ.111Mft. rlwllt """' .. ._It••' toow1, • iMMftrfMtt:'1t,m,.Mts11:Ra.m. Mik e Brestensky, 20 , of Terentum, Pa . receives handshake from finalist and a kiss from his sister Michelle after winning Pennsylvania lottery drawing Monday. He will receive $1,000 a week for life. The Is raeli military command denied the report and said the border area was quieL Toilet Paper SOS Saves 4 Climbers Drug Test• End WASHINGTON (AP) -The Army is investigating the head or its progra m to lest chemical compounds on human volunteers at Edgewood. Md .. and the test· ing has been s uspended. GLENNALLEN, Alaska (AP> Thousands of feet of paper toweling s pre ad to form an "SOS" on a rocky patch on a glacier led to the rescue of four California c limbers missing for rive days. The m en, all said to be in ex- cellent condition, were picked up Monday by search aircraft near Coffee Firms Up Wholesale Cost Sharply . NEW YORK (UPI> -Two ma.. jor coffee marketers have in· creased their wholesale prices sharply in response to reports the worst cold wave in a half-century may have ruined up to 80 percent of Brazil's 1976 coffee crop. It was ne>t known bow sharply retail coctee prices will increase. But the announcements - General Foods hiked wholesale ground coffee prices 20 cenls a pound, 31\d Ehler s boosted its prices by 10 cents a pound -sur- prised coffee industry experts by their size and suddenness. Ul"I~ l•J•r~d American Indian Movement leader Russell Means was treated for bead wound after be was struck by shat- tered glass. Apparently, an object was tossed at Means• auto in Mission • S.D. Monday. 1 Nabesna Glacier in the rugged Wrangell mountains Urmas Franosch, 20, of Fresno sai d , "We've b een okay throug hout the whole trip. Everything went according to plan, until six days ago when we went to the wrong pickup point." THE MEN, ALL experienced climbers, Clew to Alaska for the climbing trip across glacial ice fields Jllly 8 and were to have been flown out 100 miles north of Valdez last Wednesday. But their charter pilot could find no trace of them at their rendezvous point. The other climbers wer e How~rd Wea mer, 32, of EJ Porto; Hennk Norman, 27, of San Jose; and Stan Cunningham, 32, of Modesto. "There was confusion on our part as lo which airstrip next to a lake on the edge oC the glacier where we were to be met at," Franosch said. HE SAID T HEY found and moved into an uninhabited cabin next to an airstrip. In it were food s upplies and paper towels . .Franosch said that after five days of poor weather, "we figured out we were at the wrong place -because we saw planes looking for us flying up and down the glacier. We knew they were looking for us, but we knew it was up to us to be found.'' The Army said Monday that it is investigating Dr. Van M . Sim as a r esult of questions about Dr. Sim's background before he took over the civilian job with the Army 19 year s ago. Navy E%panaon WASHINGTON (AP> -the U.S. naval communications sta- tion on the British-owned island of Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean is expected to be expan- ded into a support base for a Navy carrier task force. Both the Senate and House took steps Monday that furthered the project after s upporters de· fended it as necessary to protect U.S. interests in the sea lanes used to transport oil from the Middle East Terrorf•t Ar-red• TEHRAN, Iran (UPI) Security agents have arrested two left-wing terrorists, one of whom confessed to the slayings of two American a dvisers two months ago, the Paris News Agerrey said today. It said the arrests were made Monday following a gunfight. The two Americans -Col. Paul Shaffer, of Dayton, Ohio, and Lt. Col. Jack H. Turner, of Carbondale, Ill., both 45 -died in a hail or gunfire in an ambush in a Tehran street May 21. Both were married with children. Sect Severed l~ritance to Family ,FLEMINGTON, N.J . (UPI) -A New Jersey heiress has been ordered to use part of her wealth to support her estranged husband and five children in- stead o! spending the money on a Buddhist sect. · A COURT ORDER disclosed Monday directed Sally Sulllvan to pay $'l,250 per month to the husband, Dan Sullivan, a psychologist, so that he may support their children in the style "to which they bad become accustomed.'' Mrs. Sullivan had inherited $160,000 per year from the estates of Henry Welling, owner of a Trenton Oil Company, and from .Judge J amet> Kerney, former publisher of the Trenton Times. In his suit, Sullivan claimed that from the Ume of the couple's marriage they had ~reed to live on the proceeds of her inheritance. MJlS. SVLl,IVAN CUT of(the funds earlier thb year, saying s he wanted to contribute most of her money to the Arica lmtitute, a Buddhis t religious sect she bad joined in Boston, and also wanted the children brought up .. wit.houtlwcurles." • Firebonili Suspect Repeats? SACRAMENTO (AP) -A sus- pected firebomb killer who ap· parently has a grudge against a center for the handicapped may have struck for the seventh lime, say Nor ern CalHorniu authorities. They confirmed Monday that an arson fire was set Friday night in the automobile of Mary K. Joyce, a secretary of Gateway ·Center of nearby Yuba City. It ( State J happened at Sacramento Municipal Airport where Miss Joyce had gone to meet arriving relatives. Six other fires in the Yuba City a rea since Feb. 19 have killed the center's director, Don Garrett, and caused major damage to the center itself or employes' automobiles. AUoio C'rit icl:ed SAN FRANCISCO <UPI> Mayor Joseph Alioto has been sharply criticized by a committ- tee of the local Grand Jury, which said he has failed to clear himself of conflict-of-intere::.t charges. Their Day • ID Singer Dionne Warwicke filed s uit Monday in Superior Court for $5.5 million against songwriters Burt Bacharach and Hal David, alleging breach of contract. She says the pair failed to keep an agreement to produce one album a year for four years with her. Frank DeMarco Jr., Nixon's lax lawyer, was arraigned Monday in federal court on c1iminal charges of faking a $576,000 income tax deduc- tion for the former pres ident while he was · in the White I louse. 820049000 Suit Co Ort Actress J ane Fonda has been ordered not lo release any evidence gathered in pretrial depositions in her $2.8 million suit charging the federal gov- ernment with violatin~ her civil rights l>y '"spying" on her. TUMdsy. July 29, 1975 OAILYPILOT AS 'Test the Lo11.-' \ Mom Seeks License For Male Bordello- LODI (AP> /\ housewife here wants to turn "the olde:-,t profession" on its ear by opening n house of pro::.t1t ut10n -for women. Anne Meyers, a mother of four. has applied for u bu::.in css license in this agricultural town 10 miles north of Stockton 111 hopes of opening a male bordello atop of a beer outlet operated by her and her husband. BUT UNLIKE most of her il- legal counterparts, Mrs. Meyers wouldn't open ju:st any brothel. "ll would have lo ~done fir::.t class. It would have to be pro- per," s he said in an mlervicw Monday. Mrs. Meyers admits she is not · as interested in operung a house of prostitution for the ladies <ts she is in striking a blow against laws s he says discriminate against woml'n. "I read an article in a n ewspa p e r July 17 from Brockton, :\1 ass. entitled 'Male Prost1tut1on No Crime' where a judge ruled that it was illegal for females to be prostitutes. but not for males since the law didn't mention them.'' s he said. "Really, what I 'm doing this for is lo tt'St the law. I've tal~t-d to men and women about this cu1d thev 'r e all angry about ioe- qu:ihty." MRS. MEYERS s ays principle and money figure in her motives. "Most people ask me if J woul~ go through with it if I got tfle bus!· ness license. and the answer LS that I. naturally, would," she said. "I'm :i business woman and I think a venture like this would be very profitable." But Lodi City Atty. Robert Mullen doesn •t believe Mrs. Meyers will gel her business license. "We can't grant it. We've gQf. a stale penal code section th~l says any person who engages m Pro· stitution is breaking the law, and we don't license illegal busa· nesses." he said. .. Besides. we could be subj6':t to a suit by women if we allowM male prostitutes. What's good Nr the gander is good for goose, I guess.'' The four-member committee which prepared the report said Monday ques tions revolving around the acq uis ilion of a steamship company with a favorable San Francisco port lease by a company owned by the Mayor's family raised the ques- tion of "satisfying ethical stan- dards.'' Panel Rules Suit Cost,s 'Wasteftd ' LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A state appeals court ruled Mon- ll:iy that a person who brings a das::.-at'lion ~ui l docs not have lo pay lo notify all members of the class. Damages Sought By Beauty Queen Actor 'Cop' Puts Pinch Judy Garland's On Suspect . F ':lrmer Hubby Gets Jail Term LOS ANGELES <AP> -Eddie Egan. who used to do it for re;.il as the New York policeman who helped brt•ak the ·'French Con- nection" heroin smuggling caSl', was a TV make-believe cop the other day when he tried to make an arrest. Beauty •Eferated• LOS ANGELES C/\ P> -Robin Ridenour was e levated from Miss Bakers field to Miss California-World in competition with 52 other contestants from throughout the state. Miss Ridenour, a 21-year-old model, was chosen last night to represent California m the Miss USA contest, scheduled for Aug. 17 in Springfi e ld , Mass. The win- ner will represent the United States in the Miss World contest in London in September. The decision strengthens class- .i ction litigation in California courts. The ruling by 2nd District Court of Appeals Justices Otto N. Kaus and Herbert L. Ashby means Sandra Lee Carll does not have to pay the cost of a S30 million class-action suit she filed against Stand<trd Oil for <tllegcd - ly misleading customers about the benefits of the Chevron F-310 fud additive. SAN JOSE CU PI> -A spunky, deposed beauty queen asserts thut there is nothing wrong with ~pending four unchaperoned nights with a guy and her word ought lo be enough when she says nothing untoward happened. Rhondu Renee Herrin, 20, filed a $200.000 damage suit alleging breach of contract by local beau- ty pageant officials. Monday she called what may have been the area's b('st attended news con- (erence to tell all. · And when it was over she said. "I don •t plan lo enter etny more beauty pageants.'' beauty said. THE BRUNETTE BEAUTY was house-sitting all by herself and invited the young gentleman, whom she refused lo identify, lo stay with her because I was fnghtened and I didn •t want to be alone." LOS ANGELES (UPI ) Sidney Luft, former husband :intl manager of Judy Garland, was sentenced Monday to five days in jail and fined $500 for contempt of court. The sentence was suspended pending appeal. Luft was charged with violating a court or- der that prohibited him from in- When pageant officials found terfering with the sulc by Trophy out, they stripped her of her lille,. Productions of 28 tapes of Miss took away her Sl,OOOscholarship, Garland· s t e I e vision a p - took her out of the running in the pcarances. Trophy and its prt•si- Miss California beauty contest dent. Barnell Glussman, won the and then covered up by telling order in a civil suit a~ainst Luft the news media s he was ill. last year charging defamation. Egan was in a police unifor.m for a role in a n upcoming SCs:!· ment for the " Joe Forrester" TV St!ries when hew andered in lo the Regal Liquor Store Friday to look at magazines, a spokesman for the poJjccman-turned-actor said. Film Sets Bun1ed CULVER CITY <UPI> -Afire al the former MGM Studios back lot Monday destroyed sets Crom ~two well known films of decades past. SUPERIOR COURT Judge David Thomas earlier ordered Miss C<trtt to notify 700.000 Stan- d;Jrd credit card holders of the suit since it was filed on their tx•half. Luft was accused of calling FOR THEIR PART, pageant But when Miss Herrin filed potential buyers of the tapes a nd officials quickly issued a four-suit. officials released a state-told them Glassman was a REAl.-LIFE officers said about that lime an unidentified man entered the s tore and tried to take some beer without pay- ing. When the clerk. Muha~m~d Chitapzour objected, the umd~n· tified man allegedly struck hlm in the face. page statement saying they m c nt that th e committee "pirate," a "racketeer" and a ~tripped Miss Herrin of her believes s h e "no l o n ger "crook.'' • Egan drew his nonlethal pistol and marched the man oulsKJe where he turned him over lo a traffic patrolman. The man WliS freed later when the liquor store clerk refused to press charges. Thomas ordered her to send notices to her fellow card holders by third class mail -6.5 cents postage each. Miss Carll felt the procedure too costly and ap- pt>aled. crown as Miss Santa Clara Coun-represented the dignity or her Luft, 58, was described in court ty because s he was "no longe.r predecessors, honored th~ .tradi-documents as ''unemployed ex Flames consumed a false building front that appeared as a girl's school in the "Andy Hardy " movies starring Mickey Rooney and a stable front from .. The Philadelphia Story." Firemen said the fire may have been started by children, who often "camp out" on the former movie lot, playing wilh matches. deserving and worthy of her Li-lions and/or respectability of spouse or Judy Garland, fallen on Ue . '' Miss California candidates.'' hard times." Rhonda free ly admitted she ......:==-::=~------------==-=:..:.:.::.:.:.:.:..:..... ____________________ _ "Neither due process nor the in- tegrity of the class-action process demands s uch useless and wasteful procedures," the judges spent the night on four separate occasions in the company of a young man in the home of a vaca- tioing pageant official. "But there was absolutely no sexual conduct and nothing im- moral took place, "the dark-eyed said. · The Social Security Administration and the Treasury Department have established a new prog ram for Direct Deposit of Social Security Checks. The prog ram js voluntary; you don't have to sign up. But w e think you should - immediately I First, y ou'll never have to w orry a bout losing your check again. Next, your check can't be stolen from you or from your mailbox. M ost important, your check begins to earn interest from the very moment it is d eposited. And finally, your check gets deposited even if you are out o f town, on vacation or unable to come m for any reason. In addition, the new Direct Deposit program will ellminate a great deal of government expense. And that's good for everyone. All you have to do is bring y our next Social Security Check to the New A ccounts Department at any Avco Savings ofhce. We'll explain everything and help you fill out the necessary form, too. Now you can stop w orrying, automatically. 13;., BRISTOL ST .. OPPOSli'E THE SOUTH COAST PLAZAI &40·7591 . EDWARD MARI~ M~R. • LASTS DAYS Fur Salon Innovators Pavilion Dresses Emphasis Dresses Town and Tnvel Shops Co2ts, Suiu, Dresses Emphasis Sportswear Active Sportswear Knits, Country Clothes Millinery & Wigs Sherwyn Shops ulifornienne Shops Little Money Coats MJtcrnity Lady Bullock Bridal Sal~n Collegienne Sportswe<lr Collcgicnne Lingerie Fashion Jewelry Handbags Small Leather Goods Women's Hosiery Fash ion Accessories Blouses Plus Young Juniors Girls' & Teens' Lingerie Young Shoes F 1shion Shoes Collcgicnne Shoes · herwyn Shoes Men's Clothing Cosmetics Men's Shoes Daytime Llngeric, Sleepwear Men's Sponswcar Bra and Body Fashions Men's FumishinJtS Robes & Loungewcar Jnfanu' Wc.-ar & Furniture Toddler Girls, Boys 3-6XGirts 3-7 Boys Men· s Accessories Boys' Oothing F orcrun.nct Shop Wynbricr Shop Men's Sbcks & Coordimtcs BULLOCK'S AUGUST HOM£ SALE WILL CONTfNUE THROUGH AUGUST 31 SANTA ANA, 547-7211 •LA HABRA, 694-wll •SOUTH CO_AST PL~, 5~6-0~ll • 8 ' DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Not Biting the Bullet The Ford admini~ration 's proposed handgun control legislation as disappointing. While any control probably is better than none. this bill represents a small step, rather than a giant s tride toward curbing the principal accessory to a murder rate that has risen 100 percent since 1961. The proposed law would assign 500 new Treasury agents to 10 major metropolitan crime centers to at- tack the black market in handguns. It would ban the importation or manufacture of the cheap, easily concealed handguns known as ·'Saturday night specials." It would require dealers to obtain and verify pers"nal information about gun buyers. It does not include any provisions for hand gun re- gistration or licensing, nor does it require even minimum jus tification for ownership of handguns for protection. Law e nforcement officials from the attorney general and FBI chief lo most local police chiefs have r~peatedly pointed out the need for tougher handgun controls as they combat an increasing crime rate. While recognizing the difficulty of getting gun control legislation of any kind through Congress, we still must feel the administration could at least have tried for something stiffer. Money-saving Bonuses Orange County supervisors have put into effect a program that pays county e mployes cash bonuses if they come up with money·saving bright ideas. The bonus w i 11 be in the form of a percentage of the savings realized to prevent the reward from being an illegal gift of public funds. A single award can't be any larger than $1.SOOor less than SlO. The program that has been devised seems to be a . good one. Most obvious loopholes have been closed, including elimination of supervisors, their aides and top administrators from the deal. Also, employ es who come up with ideas within the scope of their particular jobs wouldn't be eligible either. All ideas will be carefully screened for validity. Any idea with a potential of ~aving tax money is worth recognition and this incenllve can only help. Consumer Boondoggle The latest ta xpayer-funded boondoggle comes up with the news that husbands might make more effi· cienl food shoppers than their wives. The consumer study, funded by the Department of Health, Education and WelfMe, didn't send anyone out to the market to buy food. It did test the math skills of 34,000 17-year-old.s and 4,200 adults aged 26 to 35, using exercises simulating common food· buying problems. In the test, we are informed, more males than fem ales came up with the right answer when asked to calculate, for example, the price per ounce of a box of rice. While it may well be that the average 17-year-old ma le can calculate faster than his fe male coun- terpart, one is dis posed to ask how many 17-year-olds of either sex do the family food shopping. A more logical survey might pit the youngsters against middle·aged homemakers who have s perit a dozen or more years balancing a household budget. Presidential consumer adviser Virgi(\ia Knauer says the re port s hows that '·many consumers do not have the m ath skills necessary to solve day-to-day purchasing problems." It also s hows that government will never s top finding new ways tospendour money for us . F~OM 1U~KEY WITHOU T MU<H LOVE ""\ ' r I l ' • t • I ' I ' t I . ( l ' I I .. . . ., I Our Views Of Foreign Food Shift State Deportment B~ks Off (SYDNEY HARRIS J Four of us went lo di.oner in Greek Town the other night, c.ind had a splendid "ethnic·• meal. As we left. I thought of James Thurber·s funny old essay on his mother a nd her avers ion lo "Greek restaurants." When I was growing up in lhe Mtdd1e- W est, th e p h r a s c ···Greek restaurant·· was a term of t.lt•rogat1on. much a s 1t w as to Thur be r 's m o ther i n Columbu !>. Man y ~1 mother like his ..,ould command Dad to drive 50 miles out of the way to avoid such a place on lbe highway. In those days. Chinese food had already won acceptance in the provinces. and Italian food was beginning to make its influence felt <a lthough pizza. today's most popular Italian food. had not yet made its American appearance). WHAT WE called a "Greek joint" in those days was a restaurant owned by a Greek who tried to se r ve American food, and had no interest in it. He was still vaguely ashamed of be- ing a Greek immigrant, and catered to the hamburger:and- hot-dog crowd, while eating g~ Greek cuisine at.. home with his family. We Midwestern provincials never knew there was a fi ne ethnic cuisine of Greek origin, and probably wouldn't have ap- preciated it at the time if it had been offered to us free. ONE OF the welcome changes in our society within the last d e- cade bas been its increasing Dear Gloomy Gus If inflation has increased your debt load, consider the plight of Uncle Sam: The interest alone on the federal debt is just about the s ame as the total federal budget was just 40 years ago! And guess who gels to pay it... M.A.D. Gloomy Gus comm•nlS .ar• i ubmtllt<I by r~~trs ~nd do not nec•ss,•r••• rtt~t tM "'~"'~ ot tP,it nitwsp~per Stnd your ~ Pffv• lo Gloomy Gus. 0.loly P1lol oppenness to for e i g n foods. Rather than being diffi· dent a bout his origins, the Greek restaurateur now proudly flaunts his native dishes. which are de- licate, delicious, and reasonably priced. Greek res taurants (archly called "Gr ecian" now) are chic; and even the joints ad- vertise a few native dishes along with our American abomina- tions. Within a square mile of my neighborhood there have sprung up in tbe la s t f ew years restaurants that feature the food of India, J ava, J apan, Korea, and a dozen different exotic locales. When the cuisine is authentic (as too often it isn't), and the service good, you can get the best food in town in such places. THE U.S. has a long history of intimidating its immigrants and making them ashamed of their native customs ; the phony ··melting-pot" t heory tried to simmer down everybody to the same bland stew. But World War II opened the eyes --and taste· buds -of mill io n s of servicemen, and post war travel did the same for millions more civilians. Our release from gastronomic slavery also freed our immi- grants from their huge cultural mferiority complex, and they began showing us what food could really taste like. If Thurber's mother were still alive today, even she might go SO miles out of her way to find a fashiona- ble ''Greek joint ... tre Safety Settlrg· D A Soft Line on Hard Drugs WASlllNGTON -The State [ J Department's r esponse to opium 1 traffic king abroad has ranged ( JACK ANDERSON from leaden a pathy lo blunt _ _ threats. A pro-U.S. dictator. for ------------...J example. was m e naced with an clusions, .. a <.'um mis sion immediate $35 million aid cut-off spokesman s aid. if he didn't ex- tradite a drug kmgpin. The a s.- tounded dic- ta t or. Parag uay ·s Gen. Alfredo St r oes s n er. s t ammere J that c utting the aid would be like ··an atomic explosion·• on his impoverished land. But the Stale Department man on the· scene, Asst. Secy. Nelson Gross, persisted and bullied him into submission. THE DOPE KING, Augusta Ricord, was snatched from his luxurious life in a Paraguayan hoosegow, alt hough l>araguayan courts had previously held the extradition was illegal. He was put on a plane lo a grim U.S. prison a nd, as a re s ult, Stroessner kept his S35 million. RUT ANOTHER factor may be its unstinting criticism of the way the department has dealt with the drug problem. The study ronrluded that ''the Stall' Department is not likely to rcspQnd rreali\·cty and rapidly to (any) new forei gn policy in - ilialives." The snafu on drugs is impor- . tant because once again the na- tion is being flood ed with heroin. Turkish opium fields are blossoming and "skag" from the mountainous r egion of Laos. Thailand and Burma is being loaded on mules for eventual shipment to America. The report indicates the Stale Department has no machinery even for dealing with its own "country t ea m .. me mbers a broad and fights constantly with the Drug Enforcement Agency. the While House, the Na- tional Security Council and the CIA over antidrug tactics. When President Nixon's White House team picked 60 major drug trafficking nations in 1971 for U.S. pressure, t~e State Department went <it the job with all the zeal of oc.togenanans at a pillow fight. The White Ho use quickly "became disenchanle<l with the slowness and unimaginativeness of the Stale Dc1rnrtment"s response,·· ac<:ordm~ Lo the re· port. SECRETARY of Slate I lenry Kissinger ·'typically concen- trates on a small number of policy issues Narcotics control was not un his a ge nda .·· Narcotics, the report obser ved acidly. ··is nol lhe Cuban Missile Crisis.·· To justify its do-nothing at- titude, the Slate Department began g rumbling about the narcotics agents attached to em- bass ies abroad. The striped pants boys fear ed the agents would offend a llies with talk about " 'those damn Turks' or 'those damn French,' Poisoning our youth with heroin ... Stale also complained about the CIA, which issued reports lambasting corrupt narcotics police in Thai I and , d rug - trafficking officials in South America and bumbling "narcs" in Mexico. Exasperated. the WhHe House finally look m atters in hand. Gross was named as the Stale Department drug_ chief and got some things accomplished by "persistent brute strength," as in Paraguay. But he left his job and was convicted of unrelated lax and witness s uborning ~harges. Then. lhe White House itselC gaml'ly if inexpertly jumped in. "IN THAILAND, for example, lhe <White House> Domestic Council all e m pled lo link drugs to ins urgency aid." It also brought about "remo•;al or an ambassador to a Latin American t·ountry in 1972 because he failed lo take strong action ... ·• · In Mexico, it tried to tie sterner police efforts against narcotics lo U.S assistance on Mexico's long- standing effort to develop more fresh water facilities. But there was loo much con- fusion and the Watergate debacle hy 1973 had sapped the strength of the drug program at the While I louse. Footnote: Until 1973. the an- tidrug crusaders in the White House had a dream of change. Today. the manpower and the spirit have both gone at a time when a new h eroin crisis threatens every. American main street and school district. I • .. .... The conventional diplomats in Foggy Bollom were so stunned at the audacious and probably un- lawful threat that one official re- port inaccurately slated Gross had "threatened the head of state with nuclear extinction." But the State Department is rarely so zealous. according to a suppressed staff study by a blue- 1ibbon com mission. Some am- bass adors refused to believe that Asian heroin ever even made its way to the United States. Deserving Students Getting Lost in the . Scholarship Maz.e ' • I I The commission. whose mem- bers include Vice President Nelson Rockefeller and Senate Maj o rit y L ea d e r Mike Mansfield, D.·Mont., was set up to produce in-depth papers on U.S. foreign policy. While mos t of the papers have been released, the one on the Stale Department's baodling of narcotics abroad has been withheld botb because it is late • and it is "questionable in its con- Have the m ultiplicily or scholarship programs intended to provide fin;mcial aid to stu- dents to further their education become bogged down in a bureaucratic morass of forms and paper shuffling? The sugges- tion that such may be the case comes in connection with California's scholars hip pro- gram which annually is provid- ing more than $30 million in grants. Since the program is based as much on financial need a s sc hola sti c achievement there bas evolved ap- p.l ice ti on form s as perplexing as income tax forms. School counselors re- port that the forms. which must be completed by parents, are being rejected by many, if not becaus.e of resentment at the frying into their personal inances, be c ause of lhe bothersome detail. 'Jbls prevents many worthy students from ob· taining scholarships. ( EARL WATERS ) paperwork for application r e- viewers. BUT THE information r e - quired isn't all that simple. The student must also set forth his financia'l needs including not just tuition and books, but rent, food , clQthing, laundry, m~cal , den- tal, travel and miscellaneous ex- penses. The las t can include recreational money. Financial aid to students bas been a fast growing development in education. From an ouUay of less tha n $100 million 20 years ago frorp all sources, public and private, it now tops $6 billion. Arthur Marmaduke, the state scholarship commission's ex- ecutive officer, has recognized the dangers of the system becom- ing a victim of its own success. He has been working with a na- tional task force in attempts to less costly approach of making flat awards for tuition and books, and even room and board, and let the student fend for himself for such things as clothes, travel and recreation. But in making the awards .California takes into considera· lion the multitude of federal pro- grams available which require or permit allowances for things far '?eYond what was contemplat- ed m the mere granting of a scholarship. It is this !0rest or wil~~rness or program.5, forms , polmes, duplications and con- tradictions that the task force has directed its effort tor" coordination. Perhaps Califomla should consider going it alone and reduce its program to simplicity in the hope olbers will follow suit. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT make the aid programs more cf-Robert N Wttd. Pu'bU11hn- Cective, more equitable and more Thoma11Kuvil.1i:d1tor coherent. In essence that means Barbara Krdbirh, to untangle the red tape which Ed11on11l Page Editor had developed. The editorial page of the Daily A report nea{lY ready for dis. Pilot s eeks to Inform and tribution describes the problem r;tamulate readers by presmUng as being a proll(eratlon "into a on thl11 page diverse-tommentary luxuriant tan gle of programs, 00 topits ol lntere~l by syndittl· ~·' Ii I d ~..i th t h ed columnists and cartoonists by po c es an proc'-"ures 8 as providing a forum (or rcad~rs· become all but Impenetrable views nnd by presentina thlll even to the prof esslonal ad-ne"spap('r's opinions 1Jld ideas ' \ mini.straton, let alone the stu-un currt'nt topic!!. Ttie edltori.a dent.a .•. " opinions of the Doily Pilot nppur • .. only In the editorial column at the , • IF TRF. Caliromia program top or Iha P•lle. Opinions ex· .,, stood alone these problems could prc~s4!d by the columnists •net ..... tartoonlst.s and lttter wrilet1 are " • probably be quickly sol\'ed. Nol their own ind no endoratment o( ·~• only could financial need be re· their vit>wt by the Dally Pilot adily determined by a simple should l>e inferred. .. ..... '" . '· JI the need of the scholarship commission is m erely lo make certaln a family does not have the ability to finance their child's education, one wonders why a s imple declaratlon tbat lls net income does not exceed the permitted amount would oot suf- fice? Since the form u.ted re· quire. parents' const'nt to obtain their Income lax returns, such decleraliona could be easily checked II the need arise". It would a leo e l l mlnate the bu.rd~me forms which can on-'-'"-'---~'------------~---------------------" 1 ly bl'" cata1ln1 mountaJn1 of declaration but the aid needed by Tuesday. July 20, 1975 , • 1 attldent.a could be avo~ed by tho .,. ........ _________ _.;,r••·• QUEENIE By Phil lnterlondi Polltleal Notes Carpenter Eyes· Malpractice By O.C. HUSTINGS Ot \lie O.Uy ..... SU" State Senator Dennis Carpenter (R·Newport ~acb). author of ~nding bills on the malpractice msurance crisis, wall discuss the issue Wednesday at 8p.m. at Martin Luther Hospital in Anaheim. :rhe special H~alth Forum meeting was or· g~n~zed to a cquaint doctors and hospital ad- m101strat.ors and the public with the problem that could trigger another doctors' strike in September. Leonard LaBe lla, executive director of Martin Lu~her Hospital, said Carpenter's talk will be delivered the hospital cafeteria. ••• THE U.S. Postal Service is the target of a bill drafted by three Orange County Congressmen. . The legislation, by Congressmen Andrew J . In a recent s peech before the Coron ado R~publican Women's Club in San Diego, Carpenter sa1d Cesar Chavez and his United Farm Workers will meet head on with the Teamsters Union in violent confrontations over which union should represent the workers. Carpen ter also predicted vegetable prices would climb 25 percent because of wage improve- ments given to rarm workers. • • * 1:HE U.S. Foreign Service is seeking minority candidates for posts as Junior Foreign Service Of- fi~ers. according to Congressman Andrew J . Hinshaw (R-Newport BeachJ. • • • U.S. S ENATORS Alan Cranston and J ohn Tunney, California Democrats, have introduced legislation that would appropriate $125 million in federal funds to reimburse local school districts for Pt1..t141yn.. OAJL YPILOT A7 DR. M~RCUS IACH • 3 Day W0<1<atiop • 5emlNr August 1, 2. & 3 •'THE TOTAL PERSON" ! 0 .... A9f,J ""n.T,WP....- t:lO ...... 4:JO ,_ SIOD• Ill• , .. ,..,_ NEWPORT HARIC>R CHURCH OF RB.IGIOUS SCIENCE 54 I c ....... St .. Costa M.M ........ .,,..&~ll•tl. Tel: 646-1032 For RnenaffOft or lrodllre ( Pilo\ogbook J Candid eommen taries, e•clusively in the .. Just what the world needs -a city hall with a sense of humor!" Hinshaw (R-Newport Beach), J erry Patterson (D- Santa Ana> and Mark Hannaford <D-Long Beach> woul~ g~ve local communities the r ight to de: lermme tr they would prefer curbside or door de- livery of U.S. Ma il. The legislation, in the form of a mendments to the Postal Reor ganization Act, would force the P~tal Ser~i~e . to obey local zoning laws, some of which prohi bit ms tall ation of curbside mailboxes. th~ cost of educating 45,000 Vietnamese refugee children over the next two years. Many will attend cl~s~inOrangeCoun~.r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ DAILY PILOT Woodworking ..... Deaths Elsewlwre SAN DlEGO (U Pl) - Funeral services were scheduled t od ay for Irma D. Gilmour, 84, mothe r of act or Lew Ayres . Mrs. Gil mour died T hu r s d ay i n a hospital. Ayres, a San D iego hi gh school graduate, m ade his mo- tion picture debut with . SANTA ANA'S Patterson has bis name on another Congressional bill that calls on the P resi- dent to devise "a viable strategy for combating the flow of Turkish drugs into the United States," Pair Winners Gene Porter a nd Dean Farmer of Edison High Schoo l , Hun tingt on Beach, took first place in sepa r a te d fvisions of w oodworking at the Orange County Fair. *** . .R~BERT HANSON, a Costa Mesa movie pro- 1ecttonist, has restated his intention to seek the Democratic nomination for the 73rd Assembly Dis- trict in next June's primary. The winner will likely · fa ct! incumt>ent Assemblyman Robert Burke (R- Huntington Beach). Porter won the frosh- soph d i vision w hil e Farmer took the junior· Greta Garbo in 1929 and starred in "All Quiet on the Western Front" and other fil ms. • • • senior division. Edison Deatlt Nol.ir~ VIOLENCE in California's farm fields has been · also won the team stand· predicted for this fall by state Senator Dennis ings placing ahead of Carpenter (R·Newport ~ach). more t han 30 schools. JOHNSON Memorial ~rv1ces 11.00 AM~~- ARTHUR E. JOHNSON, ~loverJ O.'f, P•cll1< V.ew Chapel. Vtsllahon tiu-.., of Mrs. Bell Johni.on; ~her 04 luHCl•Y 12:00 noon to 9·00 PM. Private Mrs. H<tiel C•nlk!ICI, alM> surv1v«1 bv ~loml>f'n4'nt, Melrose Abbey Memo<1al Unruh A t ~r~uonter. Mrs. ArClls Vaugllnano Park, Anaheim, Ca. Pac1hc View C . 9r••l·l1fllnd•on, Robert Jame, Mor1uClrydirectors. 'lil•-,vlln. Services will be held •I 12 Oil FOLSOM ,_, Wednesd41y, Cllurch of The Hills. MYRTES A. FOLSOM ol l.;)guna v· I . Forest Utwn, Hollywood Hiii~ Forttt Hills, ~. O•te of doth July 24, 191S, 10 at1on UlwnMor1u•ryd1tectors, Survl...O by her sisters, Helen Fol_,, WERl(Elt ol Arizona and Jean Eckblad ol ALFRED L, WERK ER. Date of de Or~; n•ece, Barbara Folsom Dnton. ath July 19, t91S. Ruldent ot Y9un.t Servkes will ~ neld Wedne..S.y July Ch d Buch, Ca. Survived Dy his wile, JO, 2;00 PM, Pacific View Chapej Wilh arge Frances Werker of lhe ttome; i;on, Al Rev. Bruce A. Kurrie olhclant. lnum- W.rker, Jr. of Pacific Pallsilde\, ca .. mtnt, Pullie View Memorial P•rk, tr1reegranC1chlldren. Mr. Werker\W~.1 NewPOrl Beech, Ca. Pacific View rellre4 motion picture director for ~s Mortuary directors. F U LL E R TON _ A )'eers. Memorial i.ervices Wednudav CHRISTE NSEN · 10:00 AM SI. Mary's Episcopal Cllurch. LOIS A. CHRISTENSEN. D~tt of de· Fu 11 e rt on a pa rtment ~morlal contributions may be rT1<ICle ath July 2S, 191S. Resident of Torran<e, house owner Was 3C· to The Molton Plclure Relief Fund, Ca. Survived by one brother. Vernon<;:. • Sheller L•guna Beach Mortuary dire<· Cllrlstensen of Castro Valley, ca.; one cused Monday of violat- tors. slsle<, Norma M. Kane ot Moorhead, ing the prOViSiORS Of the PALAFERRI Mlnn.GravesldeservlcesXondaytO:OO U ruh c· • · ANTHONY PA~FERRI. Dale of AM, £1 l oro Cemetery with The Rev. n 1v1l Rights Act Cleath July 71>, 19H, resident ol San Or. Wtlliam 0. Eller, Pastor. Lu~ran by refusing to rent apart- Oemente, Ca. SuNl•eO Dy h1\ wile Church ol the Cross Officiant. bl k Angel•; tllree oauQhlers, Chrisl1ne McCormick Laguna Beach Mortuary ments lO aC S. P9nons ot N•wport 8each, Rose Ann directors. John Konwiser , prin· Sllefer of Laguna Niguel and OenlMt ROBINSON cipa} gener al partner m' Palaf.rrl Qt S.n Clemente, four SOM, EUGENE (Lesl ROBINSON.Dateof • • ~thC>ny, Ronald •nd Gt'ne of Ulgun.1 Cleath July 25, 197S. Resident of L..tguna Daisy II Associates of N ~l,Ml<IRl<hudof Coronaclel Mtr, Hiiis, ~.Survived by his wife, Helen Fullerton, WaS na med as one brother. Raymono ol Los Angtles. M Robinson one son Billy w d f · elQllt granO<hllaren. Gravhlde tuner ill R~Dlnson of Santa Ana' Ca .. on; e end ant 10 the Orange s.trvlcuw1ll De held lucSd•Y 10 OOAM, dfUQhter, Mrs. Donna L.' Hadley of County municipal COUrt al Ascension Cemetery, Et Toro, C. floUl\hlut Utah· mne grandchll<lten J t · f · l d b t h flell Sr~ay Mortuary dtrectors. In great·g;andch1ldren Graveside aC l On l e y C lieu ol flowers, those who w•Yi m•y services Tuesday ti.DO.AM El Toro Or a nge County Fair melle contributions to The American Ce · e· ' H · · canm Society otOr•ft9t' eounty. Ch::':~~r~;"'~:su~~~r~~~n ~·,~~~; oustng .Counc1 ! . . OGDEN SOGN~N of S.lnt\ offl<lahng. MtCormlck Laguna Council offi cials said lt7S. re•lo .. 1 ~t ·~:Jtade!'!'.!~yc~'. BHthMortuanOlrector~. . the SUi t WaS filed in Sunllved by his wife lnu, son, Myron IRVINE response to COmpJaints .Sogn of Lei Verne. Ca.; one brother IDA M. IRVINE, resident ol C.OSl.ot d · t K · JoM of Ln Vev•s. Nev.; slste<-. CMOI Mew,~. O•le of Cleath July 21, 191S. ma e agatnS OnWlSer Swen-. of New J erM!y; one nelll>ew Sur"•.,..d by her s•ster, Flora For~y; by Mrs. Joan Mayfield Mel one ~lece, four grandthlldren. ~tMr. Wiiiiam Bucklt.nger; m.otny WhO allegedly WaS not al- Servkes wtll be held Thursday, July 31 nieces and ,,.,phew. Servoces T~y olt 1:00 PM. Prlnte of Puce Lutheran 1'00 PM graveside, Harbor Rest }owed to rent an apaft- Church, Cost• Mesa. Ofllclanl, Rev. Memorial Park. Baill·Bergeron Costa ment at the Daisy Apart- Allclrew Anderson. En tombmenl Mew Mortuary director$. MelrOH ADDu. Bell Oroadway STE RNOUIST ments, 2357 E. Com-~rtuary dlrectors. MAGDALENA v . STE RNQUIST, rt'-m 0 n w e a l th A v e AMES ~clenl of Costa Mesa, ca. Dateot oeath • • J ULIA M. AMES. Date of death July July 21, 1975. Survived by her h~band, F\Jllerton. ,,, 1975. Resident of CoUe Mt-"'1, c.t. Paul V. Stern<1uist; sons, Paul, Mark r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ SUrvived by her sister. Allee Malloy of and David; two DrolMrs, lour sisters. 11 Costa Mesa. Holy rosary will be 'Nt'cl· Rowiry Wednesday l :JO P M, Mass, r-. THE neselay 1 :00 PM, Oell Broadwey Thunclayl·JOAM,both•ISt.Jonnfhe rE ... RL'S. C/lapel, mass of the Chrlstl11n burial Baptist Church. Interment. Good A Thursday 10.00 AM, St. John The Bae>-Shepherd Cemetery. Ballr·Bergeron list Church. tnterr'l'!ent, Good St>fpnerd COsla Mew MOrtuarv direclors. Cemetery. Bell Broadway Mor1uary JONES OWectorl. GE NEVI EVE R. JON ES, restdenl of •ALFOUR l.AguNI Beach, Ca. Dale of dNlh July ~-....... f .... .t.11 Cc»l9. 111nc1 T1NI nun AT'fOW900« .... ., ___ ,., J"JJ c:-. c.,.lo- 495-0401 JOHN DAVIS BALFOUR of Uguna 18, 191S. Survived by her nephew, 6e«ll, Ca. Date ol death July 21, 191S OWlrles P. Jones; one niece. Kathlffn ~·~by htS wlte, Jeane 8 Uallour. AIC1erm11n Services 9raves•Cle Wednes· t-o.ugtiters, M•rguerlte ~wberry oay, 11:00 AM at Forest Lawn Glen· ·-o.-~ .,.,.-yl'lv, elf StMldll'l9 Rock, Alabanw •no Jeenne CS.le. Balli-Bergeron Corona dtl Mar 1'16 ............... e-- lshm•el ol Cost• Me s•. three MortuMydlrectors. •j111L:., I •'"Z•l75J I 9f~S. David & lance 1,.,,....el of FISCH EA l~~~v;•~~· ~.,~=~~·===~ Olst.. Mes.a ano Richard Dewberry 01 MARGARET HELEN FISCHER, La gufla Nlguel ; l our or•••· -oe "4. Resident of Costa NWw, Ca ~ 9'...acTlilcl,...,; two Droltiers, R4oymoncl 0.te of death July 21, 191S. Surviwd DY Wlllla ms and Lou•~• 8•11our. Mrs. 1'9ttr Maku•ole <Rosalie), of ------------. Haw•ll; three granO<hlldren. Mrs. Fl\- & Joe 8•llour; two sister~. Je•nne her son, Alfred Fischer, Jr.; daUQhler. ~~'\. cher wa5 P<TS•dent Of A.P. Flstht'r OH IALTl'.·IERGEROM Company, since the death of her We cover the waterfront In the FUMERAL HOME 11us0er1 •n 1910. She was a melnMr of Corona del Mar 6 73-9450 Harbor Star Ch•pter 568 oes, •nd Golden H•rbOr Shrine, WSOJ. ""~ ments Dy The Neptune Society. Costa Mesa 646-2424 llU lllOADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway. Costa Mesa 642-9150 McCORMICK MOITUAIY Laguna Beach 494-94 15 San Juan Capistrano 495-1776 PACIFIC VIEW WIMORIAL P.AH Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pacific View Drive NewPort Beach. California 644-2700 PIH FAMILY COLOMIAL FUHHAL ~ HOMI 7801 Balsa Ave. Westminster 893-3525 iMnHS' MORTUARY I 627 Main St. 1Hunt1no1on Beach I 536-6539 UBLIC NOTICE DAILY PILOT Lindora 's unique 10-week treatment and training program will teach patients hOW fo reach and maintain their "lean weight" for life. A safe and practical pion, with proper nutritional diet, and c ontinual emotional support. New audio a nd sub·llmlnol visual aids ore used to motivate the patient. The entire program is under the strict supervision of Medical Doctors. special- ists in Boriotric Medicine. lindolo Clinics ore owned ond odmlnlslered bV Medical DoclOrs tho! reslt1cl ltlolr PfOChce to Borlotrlcs All Clinic Pe<sonnel ore licensed bV lhe State of Co11tom10. Coll for Information Monday thN Friday 8 A. M. to 6 P. M. UridorO"t sto,ooo for only 5 t67.5t a month. Whether you need $5,000 or $10,000 get it fr om the people who lend m1ll1ons. Commercial Credit M onthly payment based on o $10.000 HomeOwner loon, for 120 monlh5, ot on annual pe1centoge rote of 16%. Total payment $20, 101.20. A loon of $5,000 and over must be secured by a combinolion of real and personal property. Commercial Credit Corporation IC\ HomeOwncr Luons cCSJ:J Costa Mesa Santa Ana • 370 E. 17th Stre«!L • 1228 E. 17th Street • • 77.S-ti'i ·IO 517-5871 Crt:tli~ Llre Insurance A•uilaltlc lu Eli~'ilof. ll->1 r•1 , r .11 c;,,. .. ,, 11»1•· FOR The General J et-Air "'· III Get set for holiday driving ... Buy 4 for the 4th! The General Jet-Air Ill features strong four-ply construction, long mi leage Durage n ~ Tread Rubber, and famous twin-tread design. A grea t tire for vacation trips, or around-town driving. Charge it at General Wt _alto honor • Master Charge • BankAmericard THINGS ARE BETTER AT ... WESTCLIFF PLAZA 17th & IRVIHE A VE.-'H HEwroRT BEACH WOttDRURY ''n't•1thl\'d Wt•~.tt•r11 \"''',._.1 .. tu1t1 ••f ~d11~1I A l'uJlt·.:~' Appro\'t"Ct l'ummi~~11m r •• ,. l t>tfl'ht·r Prcp:o .. uurn 41ld Lu:1,•n!>au~ FALL OUAIUEll OPENS SEPT. 15 f :u.-1 Urh•ntrtl ~ll.>drnt Tc • .H'hlna( Orh•ntrd t o1t ully ~,h,,.k'ftl Ur11 nh·d ( nl\ •·no~ Pr.., \ilmt~'-ilm (",.un~"IHI~' \' h:rao ... t "'"')!' lrnv Attl.>tt ~tut.tent Ad' l!-~nl' 11t ,,., ..._.... o.,. f .. ,,,., ,..,, time ~ refen al1 10 ,....., coU~e ••pe~••• Value Size Price M S llttttC 11: • A((QtlNllNCi MU llttfte I•· • A( (QIJNhNr, • llU"Nl \S .. ANAC.f""I NI • tNlt ~NAfl0,.4Al 8U~iNf •,\ • INIUNAllONAL llUSINI)\ lxlltllf et Scie11te Oe11tt 111Cl1~1111 the r1111i ,,. • At <C>VNhN r. • 1NUt1oe o•, r.H • fllU\INt \\ t r ()NOMI' '• .. tNlf »N"-1tf )1' .. AI &IJ'>INf'>S • ~A,...A(,I Mf Nf ... M4R,-f flNU • '0MMl6H •.\t •• , • Oftt(f •OMINf~,,.,,ON • 'O""MIJN1! •l 'f"'" • 11.o< utit 1ouc .. 1•0N • t A\H ION Of~l(jN M1n1Jrs mclude AtCouril1n~. Ad11erli\1nr,. Art. l conom•c· •. 1 d',h"'" Me1th.1ndt\1nP,, f 1nAnct. l11f~1M(1•Jndl Bus1ne\\ ltach1n1t. Journ.• l1vn. ltg~I ln1111onrntnl ol 8u\1ne\\. Managemenl, M1na~em~n1 5ysltms. Markel1,,g. Media Mana~em,.nl, M"chand1\•nv. Ollie!' M.;nJi:rment. Ooe1.if1on\, Per\ol'lntl it lnC:u\lr1al Ret.1110'~\ Pull lie Reldl1on'i, Rtal l \I.tie Sale\ Management. Ytrf-IJlt.ll ACsm1n "1ra11on. F1l1h Ye.tr lt'aChong Credenl11I P1o~r Jm m &u\on~·~ lOucatoon Antc1Jtt 111 Arts Dec•« 11 ~1rt1ml •'•11111ra11 .. 1':>'17 W1IJw .. ~•ord lo• ""~le; 90017 481 8491 PlE A5f SEND INfOftMA ll()N TO OP Norft•~-----------------­ Acidfel\ ~-~~-------------~ Get set for . summer driving with the General Tire of your choice ... VALUE PRICED! ·so F.E.T. size 6.50-13 tubeless blackwall. plus $1.77 Federal Excise Tax per lire. Size Value Price F.E.T. 6.50·13 4 for$ 63.80 $1.77 5.60-15 4 for $75.80 $1.79 7.00-13 4 for$ 75.80 $2.00 f 78° t 5 !. for $87.80 $2.45 C78-14 4 for$ 79.80 $2.04 G78-t5 4 for S95.80 $2.60 E78-t4 4 for$ 83.80 $2.27 H78-15 4 for $103.80 $2.83 F78·14 4 for S 91.80 $2.40 us-1s· 4 for $131.80 $3.11 G78-14 4 for$ 95.80 $2.56 ·Available in H78-14 4 for $103.80 $2.77 whitewall only. MEDICAL CLINIC NEWPORT BEACH 645-3740 COSTA MESA 557-1893 Kt\IN Cl I CK: Shoo Id 0111 \llppl~· ol ~onic ,,,r, l)r UM~ run thon during thh "1t'ftt. .-et.ill honof any ocden placed now lor future daliwry <'!\the ~rt~ price. Poce Protesslonol Mesa Verde Bldg. Pri:>fEt~ 8IOg. Son Bemotdino • L long t.och • Miak)n HUia H<nVthOme • Olong4t. ~teach Gor<Mn ~ • Long a.ocn • PoiocMno Lo HobfO • Woodand Hlllt .. Sh«mon <>aka W.lt eovtno • Fvltecton • ~ • sonto MOnlcO Cotto Meta • Pomooo • Ceftttol • Holtywood , .. Ct." ••••• ti '-.,,,....,.. ~_,,~ ........... ...i. .,. .,.,,.,I~· I•• ...... "" Don Swedlund Inc. 2855 Harbor BIYd. Costa Mesa .._ _______ Soonero1later, you'll own GenpaJs.· _ .... __ _.._. • ..J I I .. .Q .. ., I. " ~ 11 •I I ., l ., I ' : I I . 1 j ' • ' • • • • • • l • I I ,, DAIL 'f PILOT Tueed9. J\Jty 29. 1975 TV DAILY LOG Tuesday Evening JULY 29 1:00 I r31 0 ~{>l ~ m Ql ... ., • 17 3 l:U (Q:t ) llcwl C•1•H•W · WIW Wild Wtit ''""Amt Mod Sqved Mlm Tern• o&tllt lm4111 ft) lltcv1C c.111,...., G'.I hQr ' rr1&n4' '-lO \0 Mt11 Crffh11 5'low CD n.11 <tirt 17~1S,, ai T'1l c-. Cfl'tall I (JJ) DMWa a.. . frMI fill! ~c.w ... 1 Utt\t RllC.lb 1:00 u o o lJ@m m Nm ~1 lrMsi. a.wt1n1 lff Dt!IA" I !) Mod ~Yid (l )Ttlltll " ~-' I W111r1 My LIM! IL-llK'f Tiit Fii lll.IM Q~ Tiie lie V111f7 ED Ma• Shtphtld'J Mtriar ('.2f •l 1) ltulUa d) ~t''" G'J n11t SIMCtS J'JO I .... TrtHUA Hnt · :\Qi ~i Hollywood Sq111rn Lew A111t1itn Style O ltrs M1kt A Deal (I 1 11J LJJ Tt Ttll the Trvth 0 MllllN $ Merit: (90) "rltsh l Fury" (d11) '52 -Tony Curtis, hn Sterhn&. Mona fcttman. m ... , ... , Htftt• I ~ht ' Tiit $1tu11aas ANfi<H Outdttn- .,,llllal Wtrlll • l.ltllc Rlsc.als V.n~ld 10U tat meatloll madt hom M(r' (R) (drt) '73-Alan Aldi, Lloyd Holan, Will G..t, Ruth Got· don, Louise llue1, Cdmund 0'811•"· Alan Alda stan as tilt peaceM sherttt ol 1 town that wems to bt d)tnc 01 old •ae. Unlortu11attly, 1 st1an1e1 comes to town rnd the old people bec1n to dlt ol stm1thtn1 much mort sudder1 and m1~tc1ious. CD MtlY 811111• Sllft ':008 tl1Hlll H1wali f 1tt·O "Bomb. -lomb. Who's Col lht Bomb'" (R) Notes thre1ten1111 1111 Ille of I~ ch111mn of 1 Slate Senate Crimt Com1111ttee b11n1 :>tue McG11rttt into tho 1nvutia1• hon. W1H1am Windon! lUUI$. <I') ~UlllH<lllWu flit l.w 0.. CM lalria S-. The kn of htnl•c 1t l'ops u lmllt "s Gre1ltst"' EI) Sltutliotl Ctllltd) t:)O &) LI Vweftl lk .._tr_ al Ytst11la 10:00 fJ <lJ) (1) (!l l11ub1 Juu "Ooomtd Alibi°' (R) Guest Monte M11kh1m plays 1 dual role u a small time disc )odey and 1 fldin1 weste1n st11 wllo usn his ridlO look alike to pr00tldc b1m with 1n l hbl IOI mu1dt1. 0 ?--:3@lf0l e;, l'tliu StttJ "Cap111n HOOi" (R) Th11 d11m1, bHtd OI\ the true story of a Los An1111u policeman's strusrte to continue doing held duty 11tu los· 1ng his hand in a bomb explosion, lots hono1ed "1lh the hiahest award ol !ht C,1ilorn11 Department ol (Voc.itional) Rehabihtahon. David Birney st.is u the hand.upped ol· I IC tr 0 m U)News ( 6 1 't'IJ Muoa a.-oo o 1.1 r3J '"' tiMS <All ~t lood1 llllrs the quut1011 bolher1111 Ille Cvanm when an tldeily ner&hb« comes to dinner! and bm g1 a m11n course which they suspect is made horn pel 0 (19 I ) 3~ G) Marais Wt~ b7 M.D. w111e ~6 Dl)S" (R) Con suelo loper, nurse·receptionrst to D~ Welby alld Kiley. la~es a bnel lt1vt ol lbsence to hud the ob· sietnul care tu111 lot pre1n1nl women al the r1m1l7 P1~1tt Ctn· Ill and cs called upon to dtl!Vu • baby amid une.cpecled ci1tum s11ncu. Gen.a Rowlands cuuls. c:J Garner Ted Armstrong * ONE HOUR SPECIAL Probes Keys To National Survival lood. I 0 l3 ~1 (l§ m Ma•·l2 ''Some· c:J ~""' Ttd Armm11c lh1n2 Wonh Oym1 fo1" Cond. (RI Cl) ~t Smart Reed 1$ 1•ordtd the Medal ol Valot ~• lirttn ~ru by Los AnP,elu PoOce Chief Cd Da ED l~leraatlonal Ani1111titn futiwal ~1s Bat~ un lht tob 1fte11ecom1ng liom his wounds, Malloy learns thal 10:30 Cl) Nrw1 Reed 1~ cons1der1nri talunri a desk' r:t4 Allrt4 HiUll<.oct JOb. ED Ft~in1 litod "Slre5.1" 0 Mt-M: (Cl (21u) "011t fttt i• m Eaito1 HtH" (wes) '60 -Alu Ladd, Oof1 ll:OO 0 0 0 EI) m G) Ntin Mutr11. Dan O'Herlllly. I ~)Ci)~ @@Hns 1 •J Wtld WiW Wnt . lest tf lirecxlle f)(~(t)l(l)(I)Hap'' O•J• 6 Sfl Bilu "R!Ch1e'$ flip Side" (R) Rich1t be· 1 I Tiit Lucy SllOW comes a tttnaee disc 1ocley and lilluitft: h11poulble 11111110 his friends with hLS llf'f 111.o Sqllld rock and roll 1ma1e. I 'IJ ~Mr. Llldy Mtllday Thru F rtd11 ED The lhin fd1e ~ Dultr's CllOKt 241 TIM Untoud11bles D SIMw 4c hiJ C~11 I ('9 I ) Wa11ted: Ou4 er Aliff 114 lilftlt: (C) (2111) "Tilt Manipu· 11 :.lO 6 17 Cf':.{' C 9$ Late Mn i e: htoc" (dra) '72 -Stephen Boyd. (Cl "10 Rillitlrt-I'll«~ (dta) '71 ED TIM RJn lJ 11 ~ Ho1111n -R1th11d Attenborough, Judy Cre· "lhe Al'tair of the lo!tOlst" the !.On, )Ohn Hun. dulll Of a ptl !o'10tst and the dts Q Q:S(i) ~ m Joh1117 CallOll U/Vtry al a voodoo dolt Ill a lod(llll John Otnvtt IS &uast hcnt, house tocm part of a murdet mys O 1'11t ,...,_rs ter, 1n Vlcioc11n London Pettf [ 6 Movit: "Wick.Ir (dr1) '42 - 811\worth $Ills u private invesll R1Chard Atttn, Buster Ctabbt.. 1a101 Martin He1t1l1 O (29 (a I 0jW"tdt W..W M)'S-Eil El Sii• de SJ!vl1 l'i"al tery ''l ht Boo~ ol Murde(' (R) {}) lapantsc u111111t 1'11(r1m1 c:J Movie: (C) -Valley af t11e l:JO o 117 (}) 111•A•s•H (R) Hen Kines• (•d~) '54 -Robert Taylof. ry Bli~e has the d1H1C1Jlt lob ol IZ:OO 0 TwiUfhl Zone f1nd1n1 thre. wolunteen lo 10 to m c:milEJ JIQ Utt Ri"" Part "'°'~ at a med1C~I aid station cur I Ill. "Butchery" rentl1 under enemy lite and Ha111~· ·m 5et Smalt eye, Hot l 19s Ind Khn&et become 12:30 O NY,D the unlikely thrmome. j 1·00 0 101 TttlOn. 0 Q) t'Oi m NIC Tusl er . m Movie~ "lruktut" (dra) '59 - lllovlt: (C) (90) "Tiie l•pesta(' (R) lhcllard Todd, R1Ch11d Altenborouth. (dra) '75 -Paul HKM. Ba1b11a , 8ulrr. Meredith Baiter, Jolin Ver 1:45 0 ~~le: (C), "Yoa rt Mr Cwtry· non, fdwerd A'iner. Alt u ·Army in· th1n1 (mus) 49 -Dan Dailey, cell11ence oHicu "'"° ICQtpu Anne Bnter. $5.000 to 1ml)trsonale a man tar· 3:00 ~ All·llicllt Sltow: "Tiie Ste"" retcd toe mnslnat1011 becomes Ridt1,• "The M111 They Ct111d Net 1Mohcd rn a com.p111cy to loot a Hill(' land development compen7. I l:lO U MoYlt: (Cl "Tllt It" l'tfr(' 0 (~(a,) (3) CD Ate Tmd17 (du ) '49 -M7m1 Loy, Robert f.111 MOYtt: (C) (90) •t111't It Sllod·' chum. Wednesday DAYTIME MOVIES @ ~ CIA" (mys) '6S - Burt RtyllOlds, John Hoyt. l~ Ql (C) "Cldrtt Cits Hntllel" (com) '61 -James Damn, Otbor1b W1llf.l. Q)@"Son 'l.fttn" (dll) '60- 10:00 0 "Wt11111 Wiit Cute fra tllf Trevor Howard, Ou n Stocl•tll, Su• (dn) '64 -Dawn Addams Wendy Miiier. fn llUl S1lv1. l :JO (l (C) •orum1 Altt1f the Mohawk" (!) ''$1M111 l• A Tutu'" (OOin) ·37 (al!v) '39 -Henry fonda, Claudelle -Au H11rison. YMan Leich. ' Colbert. • 0 (C) "TM lttllflll 1111• (WH) IZ:OO CD -..11tudy" (dra) '38 -Loretta '59 -Cary Cooper, Marra Schtll, Younr. Richard G.reene, Waller Bren I l(arf Malden. Ceorce C. ~oil. n•n. 4:00 O (C) Mtheycnne Allt.u1111" (Wes) • 1:00 D "Twt Cw-Lid(' (wn) 'S6 -'64 -Richard Wldm1r~. Carroll PeQlt Castle, William Talman. Baker, hmn Str"llut. KOCE Television (50) TUESOAY 1·• YOGA WITH MADIELINIE 1'11 IEl.l.C'TlllCCOM,ANY •·• SESAME STiii.ET 160monl 1 tt ,..ISTIElt ltOOER S HEIGHM>ltNOOD ).Jt \'ILL.A ALIEOttlE • tt ,HYSICAL OIEOGRA,HY "C.141SlroPl\lc W••ll~u" 6 10 HISTOlll 't' 0 .. 1'1tT "C..rolingl•n Empl"" 7·oe YOGA WITH MADIE LINE 1 )I THIE UWOUST ,IESTl\'AL t :tO CH Alt LES IVES: AH AMEltlC.AH OIUOIHAL Ito mini , .• ,1E1t1111., nc. t.• WOMAN "Fem.loSuv.ht'(' Tonights Highlights KCET (28) s ·oo - ''The AUair u( t he Torto ise." A m urder mystery ~el in Victorian London and centering on thl' death or 3 pct turtle and the:' ChSCOVl'ry of a voodoo uol l NBC (4 ) s ·JO -"The Jmpost<-r " An cx·Army intelligence ofri\'er ac- cepts $5,000 l o im· personate a man target- ~ for assassination in this TV drama wilh P~IUI Hecht. Barbara B<lxJey and .Meredith Baxt~r . ABC (7) 8 30 -"hn't It Shocking?" Alan Alda plays th e peal'eful sheriff oC a s mall town in which old people sud denly begin dying orr in this TV movie with Uoyd Nolan, Will Geer. Ruth Gordon and Edmund ·O'Brien. MSI Data Earnings Improve Costa Mesa·based MSI Data Corp. has reported net income or $219,244 or 11 cents a share, and total revenue of $8.517,427 for the fi rst quarter of riscal 1976, ended June 28, 197~. ln a n unaudited state- ment or income, presi· dent William J . Bowers said revenues and earn- ings have improved from the preceding quarter ended March 1975 when revenue w as $7 ,807,250 and n et income was $34,784 or 2 cents a share. However. inflationary operating costs and re· cessiona ry economic pressures continued lo influence earnings. which a re approximate- l y equal to the first quarter net income or last year or $218,701or11 cents a share, on a com· parable basis. This ex- cludes $99,985, or 5 cents per share. or net income resulting from a change in an accounting princi· pie. Revenue for the first quarter of fiscal 1975 was $71545, 765. Financial Talks Set Two clinics designed to seek solutions to finan- cial and other manage- ment problems facing the s mall businessman, have been scheduled by the Small Business Ad- m in is tr at ion in two Orange County public library facilities. The first one will be held Wednesday, in the City of Orange P ublic Library. Center Street and East Chapman Avenue. T h e m ain branch or Fu II crton Public Library. 353 Com- monwealth, will be the s ite of the Thursday clinic .. The clinics begin al 7 p .m. and will be moderated by William Hart. Natural Gas Shortage? Utility Chainnan Sees Crisis i n County By DOtJGl.AS FIUTLSCHE becomlng increaslngly reluctant to sell to Southem California Gas Co., Proctor said. R UNNING THROUG H a brief l is t oC "lntcrrup\able customers". he S~lirl that \ht! Orange County firms would be hard pressed to find alternate energy isourccs, a fact which could affect 20,000 jobs. Of 1M O.lly ... _.It.It Orange County and Southern California may begin nmning out of naturaJ gas by 1979, Southern California Gas Co. board chairman Har vey Proctor told a businessmen's audience. His arguments were aimed at gaining support for 1'e· moving regulations on gas prices both as an incentive for new ex- ploration and as a means of sup- portin g capital invest ments amounting to more than twice the utility's total worth. Projects under wuy, he said, iriclude coal gaslrtcation plants, pipelines and liquificullon of overseas natura l g1AS for sh.lp· ment to lbe U.S. in tankers. FINANCE Grain Sale Cost Hike Minimal? Proctor described a number or steps the company is ta1cing to a\•e rt a natural gai; shortage dur· ing a recent luncheon Cor the Greater Irvine Industr ial League. Proctvt· emphasized lhat the shortage will come -unless or- Csct by new supplies -even without a maasive population growth which was experienced in the 1950's and 60's. The growth of population and business general· ed within the st ate, coupled with dwindling r eserves, will be e nough to force the company to begm closing taps, he said. The cost or the projects. be said, is $3.5 billion. The gas com· pany's present worth, he said, is $1.6 billion. BUT THE CR UX of the matter, he said is money. Consumers must pay more through higher natural gas prices to finance massive new capitol investments or face an economically de· bilitating natural gas shortage, he said. Jn addition to lhe financing problems, he lamented construc- tion constraints . The coal gasification plant in New Mex· ico, he said, must receive 100 ap· provals from 40 regulatory agen· cies pnor to construction. McCOOK. Ne b. (UPI) -A Nebras ka gnin dealer said an additiollnl five million ton wheat sale to the Soviet UDlon could create no more · than a half cent increase in the price of a loaf of There are two types of gas customers. Firm customers, s uc h as r eside nces and many small businesses, have now alternative source of!uel. Ford Recalls Vans bread. · Wayne Allen. 58, operator and part·owne1 o f the Perry G r ain Company, told UPI in an interview storage oost~ r es ulting from overproduction a nd lach of export sales would b4 worse than any inc reas4 in food prices re.s uiting from the sale. lnterruptablc customers such as major industrial plants have reserve fu el sourcei such as fuel oil or liquid propane. When sup- plies are s hort, the interruptablc customers are interrupted. For Brake Defects DEARBORN, Mich. (AP) -Nearly 50,000 Ford Motor Co. Econoline vans and light trucks are being recalled because of a possible defect that may result in partial loss of braking power in about 400 of the m, the firm says. The interruptions will begin by 1979 -or a year earlier in the event of a cold winter -unless a heavy drive for new resources undertaken by the gas company in 1969 is successful , said froc· tor. THE 49,740 CURRENT model vehicles all are equipped with heavy.duty disc brakes. T he 400 affected E ·250 and 350 Econolines and 1·250 and 350 light trucks with heavy·duly, double· piston power front brakes may have a loose boll in the brake as· sembly. Ford said . Allen admitted grain prices r ose a fter tht Soviet Unions initial purchase or 10 millioll tons. Much of California's natural gas comes from out·of-slate sup- pliers. Natural gas supplied across state lines is regulated al a price of 51 cents per 11000 cubic feet. A loose boll could cut braking power in the front wheels, although rear brakes would function normally, according to lhe company. The malfunction was discovered during routine testing at an assembly plant. and no reports o! the problem from customers have been received. Ford said. But he said exportsalef benefit the balance ol trade, provide relief tc the taxpayers and belJ create jobs for the labo1 industry. GAS SOLD WITIDN the stale i11 which it is produced sells for up lo $1.90 per 1,000 cubic feet. he said. About 41,600 of the vehicles are in the United Stales, 7,140 in Canada and 1,000_ are in other parts of the world, a spokesman said. He said the vehicles were produced at various Ford plants between Feb. 15 a nd June 4. The Soviet grain deal he said, could result in 1 50·cent p e r bus h el increase for wheat at th• farm level but should nd affect bread prices b~ more than halC a cenlpc1 loaf. Because higher prices can be r eceived within the states pro· ducing the gas, producers are THE COMPANY SAID the malfunction will be corrected by dealers al no charge to customers. Effective Processing Du cussed How companies can make more efficient use of funds spent for elec· tronic data processing will be explored in a two- day WEMA seminar Aug. 6 and 7 at the Airporter Inn in Irvine. The seminar, "Making Your Data Processing Cost·Effective," will be conducted for WEMA by three executives from Arthur Young & Com- pany. In addit ion, spec ial presentations will be made by two industry executives whose firms h a v e developed programs to improve the cosl·effectiveness of their EDP budgets. The non-technical seminar is open to both WEMA m embers and nonmenbers. Registra- tion in form a lion is available from the WEMA office at 2600 El Camino Real, Palo Alto,. Calif. 94306, or by calling the Los Angeles office, (213) 641 ·8910. Koll Project Construction is under way on the $20 million . Nortbridge Business Center in Northridge, ac- cording to Stanley F. Brockhoff, vice presi· d e nt and genera l manager or construction for Don Koll Company, Inc .. Newport Beach general contractors for t he 40-acre Industrial and commercial proper- ty project. O ver 1.,h e Counter MASO Listin9s Tt>ew Quota llon1 Br•nco I 21V> l1V>IEnH9Y C 3~ ••,a Kemper "' • IS Off Vt Los 14•,. IS T11f•ny 1 •o I'• W•r EB"' 11'11 11 suppllecl by the N•· 8'1n-s In 11'.• 11\, Equ 5a.L I ',; 9 Keufl Ess 13'o I•"• ()Qllvy M 19 19\ Towle Ml I ~ Wa~ NG 10~ 10fo hon<ll AsMKl•llon of Blo•dv F •'•• 4"-El ... n A 24 24~• Key 0.la 1~• l'• Qvltb Nr S1 SI Trn Ocen 11' 11 V\.t1mn I 7>, l'• ~urltitt Dealers, Brown Ar 3•1, • Ea.cu In ''• H o K•yos F'b 14~ 1'', Oli10 Fer IS'" 1• Twin D•s 73' • 741 • Wttdeft I '• '• are bl<ls and otters &"-be ~b•o 6'l E•trup us•., llS"• ~4'ysst 11!.'!, 16 7•'• ()pll co.u 10 11 Tym~hr 11'• lti•• W••ot Wt •'• 1. Quoted by over·I~ Buckey 10 10V> F•lr U.e ~· ~M· ·~ l~o ••• Ormonl s•. •'•uB F ·-A. ~Hnv ,.,, I•• Ill.'. counler dt!•lt <I lo Burnp SI • .~. Farlon El 10~ 11•,, IC~ VI 1' IS P•~I Br lO'o lH In.le "" • ' Wsttsl Pl •' • A~> ee<h ~her a\ of Butl4'r M 23 73~. F•rm Br IS'n It. l(nud\ Cp 11 i • Pace er U 2• Uni t;apt ? . ' l W.. l(yGs 13>, 14'1', cloW IE•Sl4'rn Cal *.rw 10'1> 11'11 F•rm G< 61 b1 Kooer Pr 13'·• U P•c G•m 26' 11 Un•Oll Sell IJ '• u •' Wstrrr Cl •Sl, !£' • lime.) Th4' Quot•· CalWI Sv 2S'/) 240,i Flt>Qrtll 2 1~ l(ruegtr f ''> 10' • P•c Lum SI • 5' n T Bn<. 19' 71 ~Ur Fd IS"t l • hons do not lnclud• c...m Iron Fst ~In 1IV) 19•, LKled SI 71•,. 19'• Puller 0 211, 12'1• ~SArl Th ;:l~! 1t'• Wlll•mt I 1•~• • r•t•1I rntrkup, ""'"' 11S 190 ISi T•Fin 8'• t l\ unc•SI H o t .\1i P•ul R4'v 17'• 1l S T k L ll "13, Wll\11 H J IS UP• oown Of' commls Om T119 32'·• l3 tst Unlnc 3H · 36'1> lM>U! 11•1. 12'• Py1n Cu 19" 10 r 'Winni Sir 16,~ 17'• slon; •nd CIO not C-Ml 14 1'1h Food Tw 37'1> 3t~' L.lr~ Co JO JI'. P•Y N Sv 11,. 11'1:. nlw Fds 1'"' 11' W!nl PkT 4~ 1 r~ewnt a ctu•I C.y,,..,, H< IV> For~I OI U'l'o IH• UWWI Pr 21' 1 73 Pa Entrp U V, 14\. V•nco Sn 2'1o 311\ Wisc PU 17 11>• lrtn!.Ktlons. Cn.Jtt' 8lt 10 100,1 Friltlk El H1 I uwter C 11i , 11~• l'ltnJ Off !1l, 13 en Oylt 11 1' 111~ llllOOd Llh 2l'/, n•·, IHDUSTltlA LS CnMl9 RI •''> SI/• Frasr M9 10 10\'o UIY Boy I• 14' ~I H8.H 11 11\ ll•n Wll H't •''>World Sv 4°1> S1• AfCD UTILITIES (.en VIPS lvllt !Oh Friend IC 2l'h 74•,. \A9oet Pl 711 1''• l'ltlrolle IS 7•'• ICIO<I SI 19\, 70'h Wrl91'I W l 'h l'1 Mond•Y CFS Cnll is•,, 16 Fro1 FdE ·~-10Vo Llr Olmp S·'• ·~ Plnlirtn Al4"1 ))•.. l~I Sc s•. & 'Yello Fri 72\• ll July 21, 1'7S Cllmp Pt 31/1 l lo Full« H 10'19 11"' Llmtd Sir 201,. 211,, Pion Hiid 21'• 2'11 OI S1-l'lo n~ Zions Ulh 19'1• ta'.'• Bid A\k O..nl Co a • 1 9 <Ate Lr J I ''> 9 Linc Bd\l I'• 8n Planer W s·,. 6 , AcrM Gf\ si,, •V· c~m CP 20•. 21 1~ 1cw Tr s•n ••1. Loctite IJ"ir tl' o Pill Ntp 30 30"-OTC 10 Most Active . · ACuYvll 11'1, 121/l Chi Br Ir 80'1. 88 Gelto Cp 10'1• 10~. l..Olll! Siar 0~ 9~6 Pre! HM 11' 1 12'. SMCll Volwm• 8i0 A$11M CJ11. AOVn<e R I\• 2 Olr1s Sec Aulm IO'l'o 10h Longtr FD Pren Ml 10 IO~t Penn Offs Gits J6'.000 17>, 13 + •·e /lo.d Micro 10 IO'h 117 121 AuloP l1t.11h 1181,11 •-ws Coll!,141~041, PrPSOQ"}.r 11-7'°1 Amu E•prU~ 69,100 J1 JI'/>-I/• M1o1nt Cp 1111 10111 Chubb Cp 34 3'1'1, n 811\d ...,.. ,,, • .N ..... t•, 10 Rank Oroan Sl.800 2~ J + Y.1 Alell AIK 33''• 3.4~ Ch FrChk U '• Is:\'• Ener9y 13'1> ll~• MO.rm! 81• 9o,. Puln G.lp 4 41·• ExtllanQe Oil 49,100 10't 11 .... • "• Altll B•I II', 19 C.ill $CG• 4>. b~~ Gen Rein Mad Gas 11'" IJ Quakr C.11 24''· 2S' .. Adolph Coor~ 48,000 Ji>, n 1,.-~. Allco Inc 911. ·~ Cltzns UI ,. .... 30 IS. 1st ,,,,., Riiy "'· 1111 Queen c.. 10 II Intel Cp •6.800 u .... ... ''· AllQn Phr H I/• IS Cllz UIA 29'• 301 • Gnl SN le 11'1\ ""'° Me llckl •J•,, 44•1, R•ytm Oorcl!slr Ga~ 4A,700 11 11'4 .... . Alwd enc 191/o "~ Clark Ml 11>'·· ,, .. Gitbtr1 A 24>.!o 1S¥.I Merine c 21 29111 234 239 RdVoly E' pr\~ •2 JOO •• I,, 4S'I• + ..,. Allied Tel 11'.o 121,. Clcvepk 121" 13~• Ginn MS S'IJ • Mirll Frt 6~• l'I• Raymd l l • 9:1(, Pab\l Brew •1'300 J0'/1 31~ ~ .. Am Ac>~I ••1t •'o Clev Tri" 7¥. 3V.. ~y lf 14~ MM"y 11:, 1''1• ""'" RllM Pac ''" ~'I• llnlon 011 JS,''IOO 2 2Vo-\•t• Am E~pr JI 31•,, Clow Crp l h I I-SFd 18 19 Mc. Cmtk lS ~ RK09 Eq 7 7'•• Am Flncl 121/• 11'\ Cobe LAii> 17 18 •hm Ma t a•• *.Owl E 'I'/• '"'°• Reol Belo 11>. 13\I• NASO \/olume tad.Ir 4,663,'JOO Am Flelll 1118'11 19•1. Coourn 0 17 II Gt•., Toi 19!/• 19:\1,. McOve., 10'h II''• Rev EIM 201 • 10\; v•ncH 7S9 ~ ~u;e~ ,~ 1 ~~ ~~ ~~ :!~ :; Tl .~~~ ~~ ,r• =~~ 1~~ ';~ :::!..~"~: 1::~ J~ ~~~~ ~1 .. s Amini Gr Sl !M Cml SIHO 22 23't'i Ch 12 13 Medlrn lb J6\, Rn Plils 9 'l>t. TOTAL 2SO& A *.ro<.y IJQo 1'~ Cwt NIGs IS'I> 16'!1 ... ,,,. EW 6'11 '"' Merchnl IS 1S'. Rf!• P Pr I', 'I 1 • = l~11~~ g g~ ~:'~uio 2;~ 2~~: ::;-;:, B~ l;~; 1 : =~~"Fr ~ ;i.,) ~r::. ~:. :; ... m· Gnitu•rs '""' LO"(",.,. Am Weld q 10 Cplrw1s H• lh •'II.,.. ''' '"'° Mldle• C 10'• 11', Road Ea 44•,. H'. C.AINIEAS AmoSkQ i.•t'i 11'1> Conn Fcl ll'-13~~ • .,.,11 Fl '"" 8~ Moller HS 911, ''11 ROOrl Dis H': 1b'I; I RobtrlsOls .•O lS': + 21'> Anheu:.r 34' • JS'"-Conn Gen 311, 3qv, rved F 17'n Ill/• Milhpor 56 S8 Roll Ins B 21 27 7 Dl!ntoM4?<1 Incl S•• • ~ Aputo 17\> 131/) Cns Peiw «I'• •l'I• Heaccl C MnS.lt A Jiii/) 41'h Ruc~r Ph t 10 3 0!>4el Corp 2>1o +-·~ Aran Myf 1 a 2•0 Cordis Cp .so,, •1•·, a1s1;. 16 Minn Fat> l '• p, Ru•I Slov is•, 141, • lhresltld l etll 11·,.. • Ho Arwldt S•• S\, Cous.ns 2'11 ltt HIOl)e Co 1J'l'1 UV> ""'°9ul Cp 18>o. 1'1.. !>chPrer 10'• 11>. S W.sl'I Sci Ind~ 2 • t· '• Asso Col• 13'• 1••·1 Cross Co 111·1 170,, Hines EL 30'11 37'h Molt• In 1•'·. n•. !><N>ll In 120,, ll', • \/lpcinl Chem J • •; All Gs Ll 13'. ll'•· Curt NOii IS'• 14 Hoovtt 1J"" 14' • _,, S.. 21 • 2711. !>coll Inn 1•, 11, 7 K•mpr;tound •" • ~ All Slttl 17' 1 13'• Oilnl Intl 17'1> 11'~ H~I Cp l6V. 311, Mortn Br 4'·• S XOll\L G 111 I , 8 O.oil C""'C.nll 3~, • " Alwd Ocs ''• 10'. 0..rt Or9 11 llV) l>lngr 31 ll'h 'Mon l\11 71'" 13'1• !>crll)9\ H 71 27' ' Med<om In< l.t.. ~ 119 Baird Alo .s•. 6'• 0a1 .. 100 11 11•11 Hunt Mio 11•; UV,-··-Cp 12"e 11'. S.• Wrld 10'• 11 •• 10 APS lncp .!Ab ,.., • t B•ln:t Wr •'• S•• 0..y1n Ml 27'1> 2'1 Hyall C S>o S\. Mol1on In 17 1, 11'•1 Sv Mer<h 11\• 12"• II NwAmFd .•4d I + 'I: Bakt< 8r lh 3" Dl!us 0. •'• S'• Hyster C 14•,, IS MolOf Cl 4fll ... Svm•slr 22 27>o.12 OlarvtlCO .IOb 8"1 • '1 Ba-t< Fo 2•" ?S•· Dl!Ut> AA :M'I. 3~ IMS lnlnl 7"° l 'lo Ms Smith 11•· 12'. Seven Up JO>; 31''2 ll ~nC•re Corp •'o• "'t Baldwn L Olelll1 lnll 2"-3 Inda Wet 20 20'h MSI O.la ••, ... , Shor•w J~. 41, •• Polle ii Bros _40 S .. '• •IJV. 13" Dl!luae C n >o. ll\I: Ind\ Nucl 4~ S Mulllmt Slmp~ 12', 131,, IS Speclr• Phys 1S • l , a.n., Mii IS.V. t••· Ot•m Cr1 ''"" 11YI lnlore• 3._ J•. all V> 1411> Sn.Ip Tols 2'' 301,1" AnleC«P .Oolb 41 •+l-16 Up 1'? Up. lJ 2 Up 1'\ I Up 10 f Up IO..O Up "I Up 1.l Up-1.1 Up 7.7 Up 7 4 Up 67 Up 63 Up .S I Up S J Up S.3 Up 4 I 6k•m Rtt • •\) 01•m H4 •"" 4 ~ Instr L•I> 6'• 64. NIB-C.. 14'11 I• So C..I WI 12' • 12\, L0$ElllS S.r"'t Fl 11'1\ 121/i Ogll Cmc> 3•, 4' • lntorc En 8' • 91;, NII CnvSI s•..-S" So CnnGs ?0', 2 g, I Sl~IHr, .2Sb S -l'lt Off "3 t Bass.ell F ~ 21~> Ooculel 9' • 9't lntml Gs I I''\ 11:.. t~I Ubly 3:1,, 41., Slnd P•p 18 11'11 1 Mid Cen11PrOP 3 -"'• Off 20 • e.vttts ' ,~, Oollr Gen 7'1• 7\lt lnl Alum •• ,. I NllMn s.. llllJ'> l•'·· Spot< Ira IS IS"'· 3 Tt .. IUre<f PrOd ,. ·--•11 Off l•.1 a.-ln Cp p •••• ,. Donald\ 17'1.o II In 8-W A • f lo NCNB Cp 10\llo ,,., Sp!lotl N 1'"4 IH '1 • c.omdlsco Int 3 -'I\ Off 1S l Bently U U~ ISlh Dorch Gs 11 111/• lnler~I S .... bit\ Net<lhm S~ S'• !> .. rwdy I 13''' 1411, S Hy Gain EIPC '3 --• 00 14.I r.~ ~~ 3;~: 3~~ 8:;1eJ~~ ~~~-~~1 .. :~1~1 u~1 1;~; ,~·1• ~~~1 ~ 1~~ 1~::'. ~::..rui~ :g·1• :~v. '~~~~rr.·1~~~ 1~::-= ,:~ g: ::t 8illy Kid S'I• 6 Oucomn 101 ... 11 amttb 13'1• 14 Nicol•t 1n U '• IS\. SI-N Ale 191•7 19 t Conll Up C.ilif J l1 Off 11 1 81rd Sons 41 0 Dunkin 0 S~> S' .... asn Em 5), 411, Nleri..n A 19•,, 20 Slea-N S q10 10~ q Df!cralofln .20 J .. -l\ 011 ~0.1 BlkHI Pw 3.4 3Sl/J Earth Sci ••1, •'·• hns EF •o•;, •IV• Nlet1.tn 8 19~• 10\\ Slrwb Clo ?l 2•1,, 0 Loom1sCp .OSb •' • "• Off 10 S Block Oii llV1 12 E•$tmt 18'n 1911• Joslyn M1 161, 17 Nordstr 21" 171.\ Sue>er El S~o SI/, 11 Manaoe M\"I 'I 1' lol6 Off 10 0 8ll'OO\ S • •"4 Econ Lab 291/• 19s, K•ls.er SI JI>,. JaV, North KQ 1~ 11V> Syrt Sup 1S•11 lb'·· 12 Sycor lncorp 11 0,,_ 1~• Off 10.0 8MA Cp 12'1• 17:\; EDS Nu< 11 19 Kalvar C 31,-. 411. Nws NIG lw 7¥o Tallv Crp 3¥. l'" ll C.omletll LaM 11-lt.-11/, Oii 9.6 6oO Ewl\S 17'1> 2lV> El P•so 10•1: 1011" K1m11n c 17'4 1av. Noull Cp 11v. 12 TMnPA• 3~1. 33 • 14 Vlklno lnduSlr 12 -tl/.o Oft '• 6otoo"1• IS'l.t 1H~ El Nuce! 91/w 10:\oi Keern Tk ~ 6~ Otun Or 391/• fO Titylor W IS•,; a~. IS Shc!ld~hf Co l~-~ Off '• Boolll NP 22\; 13Yt Emor~ 1 7~11 Ktlly Sor 11:v, 1214 Ocean Ea l 'M 91/1 Tt1Vt41nl l/~. 79" 16 l\l<W1l1con C;p 2°1>-!/• Off , 'l MUTUAL FUND S ......., Yori! -FOi· NtlWCI 1.70 •.SI EATON A Fund '°'"'4111 Is • ll!I of NY Veit ,,,. 10.91 HOWARD: Grwttl bid ~ llktd prl· CG Fund l .'6 '·' B•ln Fd 1.ll 8.S6 lncom "" on Mufull CG ln<F I .... e G.,.,h F 8 IS •.67 lit~I Giii 'llllfi 11 QU01•d 11, ~ ""'"' "4.0l N.L. 1ncrne s.l 2 s.t l Htr'I Lw IN NASO Inc. Ctnt 5"~ • n 10 J Soo<il F S.S. '· 5:" FO CNI ln1o1 t 12 • S Sit"' Fd t .ll t .4S ..... , CHANNING EOIE Sp 17.;at N,L. Ht gt July 2t,ai'15 AMI '..U~S: t.10 I ~r~ f~ ,;-;~ '0:~ ~~·"' Aom Ow l .SI l.IS !Wined 1.41 t 11 EM<vy 12.2• N.L. Imp G< Nim Inc l .22 l.Sl 8nd Fd I •I I 71 Ftlr11d 1.60 I .JI 11'1( Bo~t "'°'" flll •.16 1.1 EQIY G< 6 JO 6 Fm Bure 1.SI N L. Ind FAm Jim Ind .2.SJ N.l . Asso Fd 9~ N t... lnVMt I Qe N I... Ottan •.o N I... TIEIN ROE ,D'S: ~lllnCc 1'.•> H .L. C..plU 7.6J N.l... Slock 11.n N.L. IS GllOUP : Grwlh S.77 6 JI 1ncom 1.n 1 .. Kt""' C 10.J! 11 .OS Smmn 1.12 •.11 55000 for oniy st2t.59 a month. San Franciscans AdvlMr 3.'1 UJ EQIY Pr 2.6J 2.87 l'IEOIEllATED GR· In~ a.1111 ,.-4.1• 1.37 Fnd Am s •s '· '' 111 1n,..st a.tnt Ill 11 ... 12.11 Gtwlh 4 01 4, A Lodr l .OI I. ln,..rn G Nllture 1 II N L lncom S '3 • Emprt 11.M ••• lnw Guld AGE Fd 4 2l 4 . .lt Prov lit l l-C 3 6 .. ,. E"'9 16,JI , , . ln1o1 lnOI< l('CMI 6 24 e.ll 1.47 •.2• 8.tt ··~ 1.00 N.L. 1.tl J.62 Paying Out Less Whethl!r vou need $5,ro> o r $10,CXX> get 11 from lhe people who lend millions Commerc.101 Credit. M onthly povmenl bosed on o $5,CXX> HomeOwner loon, for c..O months, ot on annua l percentage rote of 16%. To lol povment $7,29540. A loon of ~.CXX> and over must be secured by o camb1nation of real arid personal property. CCNmMIWI CNclt CorponUon /C\. HomeOwnor l on~ · .CS SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Despite rate hikes in the last year, Sun Franciscans stlll pay less for utilities than persons in 25 other major American cities. a sta te survey shows. The study released by the Califor nia Public Utilities Commission r --gT--costA Mr.11• • :no E. 17th St.root • 774 6740 A I Cn-d1l L1rot1 .. ,.,_A•al1&1>~"' E11.1i.1, [~,,..,"~""' r.m .. r n..t... LOANS I &nt& Ana • J228 £.17th Street. • ~7-5871 ! ------------$25,000.S400.000 I ~11 l'IAH I ~!v·~. II I "-"-''" .....,.......,c.tat« I 712-HIO I ..r.Sc ... I MONY I I """....,.ca..: ""'· ,.,_ I ~Of ..... ~ .. .. _____ _ I said the total monthly utilities bill for t he average San Franciscan is now $26.07 comparod with $21.23 a year ago. The typical San Fran· cisco household paid t7.52 a month for natural gu last year at this time compared to the current SJl.10. Monthly electrici- ty bas n.sen from $8 91 to S9.27 and fl at rate telephone service has gone up 90 cent.I to SS. 70. The PUC said ln Loi Angtlcs the avera1e customer pay& $2'9.96 a month and ln San Diego lt'1 132.18. Residents ol Houlton pay $34.33 f M their monthly utlllUe. cbarg~s. New Yorke rs have the hl&best bill. paying an av~rage of SSS.SS mon· lbly for gu, electriclcy And telephone ae"loe. • Allsl•t• •.3S 10.0S $peel I U 1.•l l'IOELITY ln1o1 ~ At• Fd 9.11 N.L. V~nlur I SI '· OROU,1 INVEST Am Birth 10.32 11,34 Clltrt Fd 10 SI 11,s 61\0 dtb I." 1.tS COUNSU .. Am [q1y •.31 4.72 CHAH Ce9t•I 1.2' '· Qptm 7,71 8.SJ AM U(,.tESS llOSTON: Conlr• t0.22 N.L. <Ao!C 5" ..... ,, s.21 l'UNDS: Fnll 8°' 6.fO 6, Cv SSec 7.U ... 1'4V•ST Ottv U": Ce9\el s 81 6.3S Frotl Cll J .'1 4.1/ Oty In< 1.00 N.L. IDS Bnd s.~ s.M lncom 7 11 I .to SllTr BS 6.>I 6 .• 7 Dtsl 1.2' .. . IDS Giii S,01 ,. , lnvilm 6.ll 7.4t 59«1 s.n s .• 7 E\WJI; ,, ..... IDS ND •.At •.• Si>oc.I S,10 4.U Cham Fd 1,04 I.It Evt<"st II.JI ... IDSl'f' 1,94 i.~ Sloell 6 JI 4.'IO CHA MNO l'OS: Fllf'CI 11.4"1 14.tl Mlltyef t ,07 t ,71 AM fl'UNDS GltP : Knick F S.:M SIS l"urltn 9.tl 10.03 Sto(lt 16,J2 17,71 Am(.., •·E •·" Kl\lck G s .•1 •· u s.iem F 3.ls •. 10 Select a.u ':l 7 Am Mui 7. ..,. Llbrt\I l.79 4.14 Trwnd "·Cl 20.1 v~ l'•Y '21 61$ and ""' 14, U .).I Menl\t 1.76 • '. "'NANCI AL '""RH s.u s.es Glh Am 4 lS 4.14 Scl'lui F •.29 6.11 Plt009tAMS: I S I: Inc Arn n.n U .13 CIOLOf!IAL Flit Oytt •.06 N.L. ~" •.II s ,. llW Am l'·" t3.IO "UHDa: Fin Ind S.'2 N.L. 1-J.11 4.16 NW ~. •Ii ,..,, (Oj\vor 1.2' '· f'ln Inc: '·" H.L. 'Tnt Vt 3.0 ... W•M\ If. 11.)7 1J.O £quit., 1.n 2.S.9 lsCFIS Vt IO.ts 11.tc T"I Sf\ 12M 13.17 Am 0<1h .... •.es F.-.... 7 ""ST ,, ... "'"' 1'0.IJ 2UO Arn '"''" ··n .... Grwtll •.7S S.1 IHVUTOllle ,.,., ,UNI ~., N.L. """ 111 ... t • 7 N.L. 11\COm •. 07 1.n DIS< Fd •.12 s. J , Owtll ••• t .to A= Gr 2. t I .JI Ventur 1. IS 2.U Gt'Cll ,.d 6.21 '· ~ ,. tS.21 N.L. AfC Olt Colurn 0 1) n N L l~om 7.2. '·"~In lt.•s N.L. G P · Col.,,.,., l~I to StC..11 " ._ .. 1.12 JOtllol 14AlllQOCK: t.!!f..111 l 00 H L. MMC*WL~H ht Mull! 1.tl N.L. 81\0 N it.O. lt.4.t t JS 4 '6 ll&T: " Wolt 11.02 N.L, GrW1ft UI •.U fntOfft '40 7 Of A A l ,It '7 Fdft Gr 3M 1.tt $1~1 I.» 1.ta .. '""°' 10.0ol 11 00 C 110 UI ..cM.INOlaS li:HSfONI : *<tr 4 23 4.. 'l' SOS SU OltOUP! O..t II j•·n 11.10 fllN In• '·'' .... Qt J ... 4 » ~ ·~ Ut ~I In 7. , .... Wt H•tl t 21tO11 8d 1.lt l.S1 lllCllf'ft to 11.~I I &4 7 1·1 AucltlC F 7.21 7.. Fd 7.4S t,10 F Mew.I I. I • ._ I K1 !4l , AXE rd UO N.L. I' S,.11 .. S t.~ I Kl .6J I. MOUCMtTOtU ftw t .00 t .SO f~ ,. 1.D l't.L. "'1 $1 1 .st t•. FllllO A 4.J\ .... .. U1 H.L. ~llAM•UN C\41 $i ,4f t , F""9 a t.s.> 1.10 II' 4.21 N.L. '!: <Ml So) 1.)11 ,_ s.oca U• 4.t• ~c '°'"II ... DH f" ..... C"'t " t n J.C ILC 0 111 •.t7 10.u 6.U N.L. a1 Sf" ! t.~ ""°1.. a .. It ~ t .O N.L. ~ Aaa r ~ 1M l'IMWl a. t• J.'J Al"'°' H1 .. '' US • ~ -10 21 Uodrnfk t·s 7.t1 Btyrl Of' • u· , Dtulr 119-" 10,,. utl "-1 4, ta LD l dlt 1 U .M &ten 141 f, ... ~ Dltlw .. Ul t ,tl lllrt1 C,. S. U7 Ld ldRt I. 1,01 ttffl •• M,~'. Dltlt.a T ••• u ..,, ... l•t? a. '·" LU oaou,: ~ I lltOH e · :f'r-'t:" H I,.. AJ:ll~ t..•7 tAO QI t..Hr \I.It t4, ....,. h 4 •I'd 1,11 N.L. ON1tl 4.'1 4. 4 ~ 9 1.1• , t•,fl N L PUii• NC, IMM'll '°"°' 10. 7 =JP tjr~;t uij•Jt"~~ I ' ~':I 'I' D";",'~ J~·;L'l::t ,, .. .. .. , ~, ,. ~ 1 .. u , tr . 10 ·n .... ~ .. ••• 'r{ "' II. IU6 . •• . "·t· J ).ti yf I.A t. N.L. r.i" I 'I ' 0. t , f'I, · ... l'UNOSt 1~"1 .... ··t N.~. ~ u .... N,L. e.i41 fd 'tH· 1140 Qn4 t;.41 ll.4r · , N,L, 1 C.., J1W .a IN .t7 N.L.. . tl.M l'f,I.,, Y 1 ,C)fw 111r II Or ,., e.lt &.'IOff eui C.. O. M2" s.. ..,0 '°·" \US N.L 1.l>t N.L. 4.SS N.L. Ill Ill .I .i " ' . ~ . • .. . • , • • > ) " -. . ' . . • ,. u .. ' ' •' Warning e d e d .. .. 1975 Cold Rush .. • 'I . .. . .. • • • . Loses Its Shine 2 • • 2 By SYLVIA PORTER t Whal happened to the "gold rush" so widely predacl~d when on Jan. 1. 1975, Anwncans were permitted for the ftrsl time m m ore than 40 years to buy gold bullion'> Jl turned into a turtle rare . } , While specul ilfor s (1n Sw1 t:terland und France l>:Jrt1cularly > bld up the pncc of gold to over $200 an ounce at ycarend in antic1pution of our huge demand and some "gold .&>iJgs" even forecast th~1t ~old would soon sell fo $500 or eiten Sl,000 an ounce. the prict• slipped well below $200 instead Customers did not aowd department and jewelry stores to buy the yellow metal, many banks and brokerage Money's Worth firms actually complain1..'t.I that weeks went by without a single query about gold WHV? T llE FUNDAMENTAi. explanation is that you • were put on guard Aeling separately .ind together. the Treasury, the Federal Reserve System and the Sccunt1 c~ , and Excha nge Comm1ss1on pounded home the risks of buy· ang gold Newspapers the nation over wrote m1lhons of words of warning The more educated you became. the ~more your re luctance to 1 eward the "gnomes ot Zunch" WJth your dollars Buying interes t among Americans 1s now pcrkmg up a ~ bit An illustration was the li vely response to the US . 'Jfrea§ury 's second auction of 500,000 ounces of gold at • S165 05 an ounce on June 30 But as of this moment. you show no signs whatsoever or going on a real gold buying binge Gold, though. has been in demand throughout most of recorded history. und over the long term its pnce trend sur ely will continue upward along with pnces of most other metals and commod1t1cs Its attractiveness m Jewelry and an many areas of industry 1s indisputable It 1s easily 1dcn t1f1able, easy to ship, easy to s tore WH AT'S MORE • .\S TH E value of paper money shnnks, the value of golcJf' usually mcreases Speculators • who tamed their purchases or gold with the · unpeggmg" or • ,i\6 pnce from the $35 an ounce figure set m the 1930s h ave made fortunes as 1ls pnce has chmbed to the $160 $180 :,ringe. Gold has a great allure as a hedge against gallopmg inflation and as a type of fmanc1aJ "secunty blanket " But for most of you, its purchase s imply doesn't make 5ense It's a s peculation, with all the inher ent dangers (l's a "Slenle holding. r eturning ne1the1 d1v1dends nor mteresl ,aod in fact, 1t costs you money lo own gold, for you huve to . pay a premium to buy 1l and then pay for storage a nd m sursnce too • Also, when you consider the interest you lose, the price •r a gold ba r must n se at least 20 percent an a ye<11 for you inerely lo break even 1 Say. though lhal despite all these arguments you still twant to place $2.000 to SJ,000 m gold Here are your 'wdehnes • (1) Genet ally. 1t is" 1ser to buy "common" gold coins ·than gold bars or wafers -meamng coms bought for their gold content not num1smat1c value, which sell for a modest premium above their gold content value Common gold coins .ire 1 arcly counterfeited, are qwckly recogm7.able, arc bought and sold by most dealers at a narrower mark up or spread than on small ~old bars Many dealers and bank~ have toll free · 800 num~rs you can call to get 1mmed1ah.' qµotes on the most popular gold coins AMONG T H E M OST POPULAR common gold coins are the M exkan 50 peso ( 1 2057 oz of gold); the Austnan 100 cru\\ n (Q 9802 oz ) . the South Afncan Krugerrand (1 0 oz ) . ~ml the l ' S doublt• t'al!lt (0 9675 oz I 12) 1'1 y tu bu) gold coins with the smi.lllest premium • ove1 th1.•11 i.idual gulu content (3 > JC ) ou bu~ gold hi.JI s. lt .idc only with reputable de· • aler~, \\ 1lhng tu g u.u antt•t they will buy back your bars al i:I fixed mark up Gold li<1t ~ can be.! c~1 ly counterfeited, 1t s • h ard to sell gold ba1 s to sl1 ange1 sand thus a n advance com m1tment from your dcall.'1 1s solid protection for you If you must have your ba1 s u~sayed before sale, this 1s cum bersome, lime consumm~ and expens.i ve (4) IF YOU BUV GOLD minmg stocks or mutual funds • 1pec1ahzmg m gold mmmg s hares. do not underestimate the fact that these stocks are more speculative than owmng Ule gold itself (;,1hu·r~ 1u1d l.o.1tf"r~ ...... York IUPI I -Tll~ lot-ng h~I • ,,_,. Ille ilOCkS 11\al ll•v• 911~ most -tost tlle mot! biUed on per~t ot ~ on Ille New York Stock ~~<'*'9f t\..ar \ 11rk I ."i ,,,.~, ,, ,., it·t• NEW YORK IUPll -Ttoe IS Kllve •IOC~• tra.U.d on ll>e ~ .. mo\I Yor' Nitl •ncl perctntave <NI~ •reo tt.e • clllteNft<e belwetn Tiie prev~ <l<Kln9 "~k• encl Ille G~~~rl~'s ctOS•ft9 price Sloek Ea<h<Jnge Monday utu 210 100 218 JOO 21& 900 181 900 11• 100 108 600 104 000 t02 900 102 000 101 600 97 900 91 &00 6S 800 ... 000 83 800 Soearl~ Ci 0 O«dnll Pet Polarolel o-°"' lb I Playboy 17 •'• • '· Up 21 • ' 2 LY!'<llSy 70 •••o · t VP 1S 6 J Tel~y11e 31< 71 "° • Ht Vo • S , • lnlt'lec.I 17d 711 • \w Up 8 6 1 S Ill~ pl i CM ,. + I\• Up 7 9 I ~ &;-i,.,._ .. ~r~ 1:~: I~ ~ ~: '' I Humena Inc 12•1, • '• Up 6 • ,,,: &1c ~1!t.deoM: ~:;:: ~ ~: g ' ~ 11 Fidelity •V• • ~. Up 6 J 1 12 O!"rC I 20 1 l'-'t • ~. Up S 1 IJ lly S. 201, • l'lo Up S 1 ~ 14 DIOlorQO Co '"'• • •1, UD S 6 U Celallan :IOI t1h • ~. Up S t m•W Air ~ SV• • I/, Up S t CooOer L•b so,, • V• Up • I uPlan Cp 7'• • Vo UP 4 S ~Oller In< Ho • I 1 Up 4 S ""-rl M I JO 1 P • t >, UP 4 • LOHIU ttn cw pf 1 l.S -21/• Off U 0 nontn ~A ' -I V. Oii 12 2 J ~ W:r~7.:C i"'= ~ g:: :: 3I J .s "" 111!1'9 ,. ' -"" Off 11. " ••h!Wlk AM 2 -\• Off 11 I ~Ull .. JV.-~Off 10 1 ·' • ~ .Cl'h ,, -10\I) Off 103 , It 0... Lvf JM 311, -~ Oii 111 l • ~TFlepf IV. tl\•-I'} Off ID 2 ti Cluett P 30 H•-\• Oii IO O ··11T&TllfE • .. v.-1• ... OH '' ~ Of ... ppr 30 t~-I OH t 6 , litko'Pl ., 11 ... -'"" Off • 0 'f ts ~lweod IO 10'4-I Oii I t '• • 4ilt!Hftst so 11'4-1 Off 12 t1 '9MICor Ill 410-~ Oii I I Tt' .. CO Inc Conti 011 N•tt Semkon s .. rs Co BolW Cs<de Am TetATel Soull'lern Co X~ro• O< PtpPtr Falrcllitel Cm Ouy•ltr Motton 8rao 11-..1 -... 38"--' 26'-"t ... t. ~\,, -I' 37 •l' • .. '• 77'• .. ,, 4q.... • "• IJI 1 • It S~ •I 9~ -I .,... I'• 17 ... , .. ti ' .... A Hl(.-rit•n" 10'11,~t 1lt•fit•t• NEW YORK IUPll -lite tO •Cl••t stoc..,. Ir-on Ill• Amerlcen Stoc~ Eac.ht119e Mond•Y RoOlnte<ll Inc =~~.r Ml~ Etecl ai.,,.., Home ~••tes Pel V S Fiiier 8rn Fr('l'I 8 GRI Cofp Rete•r<h C1 S.IH JI soo 32,lOO JI 600 30 100 27,100 H,XIO 21,100 21 'lOO ,, too to JOO 0-790,, '"'• w. t9Ji. "· ' "~ 14'• • ,.~ -°'· -~. -.~, '• '. "' '• '. -'+'> 'lo 4• • Stf9anl 11141 U'o-'I• Off Io • MNeltN ~ 41h-~ Off 11 NY51E MAltlt;ET (ta ~ l(•I Ind 1\11-°"' Off 11 TltlND ·;·~~~,~~tw~.-~,-r~l'~,-,-r-J:-.~~~---1 ~~ •• ""' Total -=.,~~~ 1071 ... Jn •U 11• 11•1 . ~: Sain \'11l11111r AMIX MAltKET ACl\'ancts TltlND • • .!Ur .,-•r~o•101a1 • •, ~vlou•d.ty 0•90 •' I nl11•90 ••• , •QO ,•I • •O'it •r$4100 ~ \ ~ llqCIA lll ~· ., llod•lt .•\.I loel411a U,tiOCl(IO IS,101 010 1';"2,150 lt,'31,JIO 0.cllMI UntllanQltCI Total 1 , IPftllmlNry covn11 ~""~l ... ,,. 270 301 tOO ,.,. 11,561,UO ..._---------...-----11,111 3'0 ...... ,,,,, ... ,,,,, 3,013,MO,no ;..., " I tS. 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' n ,,.,,,_"' M( ,,,.., " ,Q so • ' ""•..,. 11 «> 1 • ,, -"' Rall Plan e""'erlt ...0 • .. 6\4r-Vt Ouftoftt J~-JO m 171.\ci-tllii ~UAI .... t 11 I~• \'o Mcl>Mlld Cll H 416 ~ + "° f' S A Inc U •V. 9\lf\1"•= .. 1'H 1• 1t1.!. l!~1~ dllPn flf 4"'. l ~-\Ii HOtOllC. JO IO .. 10~-"" ""'t1D .. 1 m , • .,,. .... PllSCof I 10 6 ., 14\.-\l WASHINGTON (AP) -A r~ral 9* tO 1 .,. ··~ .. dlt~ jJf ~\I) l d .,,,_ Vt Hott Intl • 1 109 ... • M< IE 1 .. 11 IS' 19\9 -... l'!>Ef.G ' n • IU IS~ t t l 1)11 t 2U lO>olo+ Vt °""91. 112 I 1)2 17~+ "' Houdli. tot S 11 ,,,., _ \, M< HI J6 9 tfl 10¥>-'II PSEc;,f UO 1» .. •I planning llJCnCy i!! recommending •IN .c ss •• .__ O\IQl.Jd f.H ,. tt Ho11t11 M '° 7 ' "'--~ McK" " 1• , •7• n -, .. PSF,f 1 H 170 " • "' that the P"'nn C"nlraJ and six oUler IWNIV'l1 .7'~1 ...J J• .. _u• OllJQ' _. 20 .->• • H0115Fb 154>11 117> IV•-~ IWl<'•tfl 71 I U 1' • '-PS , ·• i» ... 11.-~ "' " ~ to• -.. _,.. °"'~' 1s • im 11 HDvwFI"<' • ~' u111i-~ lll'Ct°'t11s 1 U 4 n ov .. "' "' ,,. n 71 " .. nort.heostern r:u I roads be consolidat-e-..... _ ... '° • " '°"'-.. Ho-.. "' , U"' . ~ c . • ,.1 u-.. ,.. ··oo 111 • , c.i:Ji. • .i,. J!'t ......... -• •-Ho1AL, 1M10 111 l Y>• 1~ ,,_.~ 1 s ~"' ~s iMJ ,.11 • 11 2n•. \, ed lnlo a lS,OOO·m1le rail S""'lem m lhe C• • , .., ... E Sntm IO 11 JO 19 HClllN1Ga I IS ltl 1 -I\• ~ t 40 t ' 1714 .. PS MH• 1 *I 1 JO II'-~ ,,~ 1 ; 1• 2• l!.,1~ 1 ~ , " .. ~ ,._... .u u '" ,,.._ ~ M " '-• " "" ~".,,. ,. "" bi&R••l corporate rcorganuauoo In ~ • '"' Easceto s 11 ""' • Howmt ~ 1 ' s. ''"' Mel t11w 41 11 112 " ~ 10•• " ' 12 ~,, -"' Amen· "an h lslO""Y. If N 1t ~ -.. ~'1''" A r u> s"' • v. HllbeN uo • ' 1> "' MtftM<• 4l I • ~ "' 1 * • ,.,.. • \\ "' • ~~ ;~ 'HIO E:~ ... ~~ r::~w·.:..:, 1: ::~r: =:.~~.: 1J ::::=1~ =~-"',~~ ni :~~f... .:.:~a .: : u~-~ m'-1.. II + '' o~Ullt IVt r 111t $..,_"' Hu!nallll lfK t I I 1111'1 t • Mef'tULy .. P Ill II \\ f'Wu~ 1 SI 11'-Productivity CMnp •tJ•11 1 1.,.._" atK1s.eu wa ·-~ Hlll'llOl 1••• 11 Uh• -~,..., os• w rn.-¥ 1111,... 1 a~ s tt -"' WASHINGTON <AP> Prod .: l Ctlnfttc Nb • • -~... 1:11c. 1 • 7 I., , ... "' HllttOfl 0 ·:i s ll .... _ " Mtotft" '~ 1tU ..... "' l'llrlltlfl F$11 4 ) • -UCuV • I.:.:~:: r. ~;:-~ l~tif{ii ~ u ll:+ " ~= ~; .~ 1:~-Vt n':'.f. :; ~ l·~ eP\nlalOt ~ :: ~: ~: " ~,g~jJ>n~v,~:re~°TJ ~e ~~~ lo • ,, " a I<-' He .,a 10 20 ,._ • .-. 1c 1n11 uo • " """ • "' """~ • vi ... • • tt"' " • --l ~I"' IC Ind oCA t a10t rti.. 14 Mell I l + \-\ ,.. • 4 -U lft0 Jlnte lhe Second QUarl.cr O( 1Jr74. ' 16 l214' ett11•t .II t J9 --. tC lllCI DU.... l J.J"-• 11110 1 11 tO .. l~ '°' .. U It , .... t \• • J rso "'" •• o • o 12 " 141 ' •CH '"'-"' , ,,, 1-.-"' llo'k: A\ • i a -\\ 211 • --'-•Vi-~ lbe Labor Department reported Mon· :~·~?, , ·~ ~;~ ~ =~1.~~~ •• ,i ,;::_, · :=n~~~ • ,,t n-• tt ~:l.. I , 1 Yi lt•ttlOn '°" ,,11 4J d•y. ::. 1 .. tJ tt\.lo-~. (l~f.~ :: ': i;_ ~ t,CINI Toy 41 1 .. n• + .. MkM• I ' * RMn.6e tt 11 ll1 m . • .. t· tl~U DAILY PILOT Gihron To WFL's Chicago CHICAGO -Portly Abe Gabron. who on<'e s aid he was on- ly a National f<'ootball League man, ha!' d('cidc(I to t:ike the hl·ad roaching-job with the <.'hil·ago Wands of the World Fool· ball l.eag Ut'. "I'm ba<'k in footb4111 and I'm glaJ tu bt.' bark ... It's been my hfc for 27 years.'' said Gabron, \\ho will replace Babe Parrilli. .JG Hor11rti De ad HARRISBU RG , Pa. -Arson <'•1USl'd a fire that <.h.>stroycd 46 thorou~hbrcd race horses at the Pl>nn National Ran• Course, a stale police official said Monday. Fire mars h a l Richard GuC'k<.>lb<.•rger ::.aid the fare bej:!an Sunday night when a flammable :,ubstancc was poured all around ~· 50-slall barn an front of each stull ;rnd then ignited. Officials put the monetary loss at between Sl25,000 and $175,000. Two horses sur vived the bl.ize. but one of th'em had to be dcstroy('d bl·cause of bw·ns. Vilas V ic toriows WASlllNCTON -Guillermo Vilas dcfralt.'d Harold Solomon 6·1. 6·3',Monday night to win the 7th annu;.i l Was hington intt?rm1- t1onal tennis tournament. whjch was delayed for the second year in a row by rain. Czechs R 'in PRAGUE J;.in Kodes t rounced Fran ce·~ Francois J;.iuffret 6·1. 7-5. 6-1 in the last singles malch Monday to h and Czechoslovakia a 3·2 triumph in tht> finals of the European Zone Il Davis Cup tournament. The victory sent the Czechs in- t o the intercontinental finals against Aus trnlia. Nasfase S truggle!J LOUISVILLE. Ky. -Third- seed<.>d Ilie Nastase hud lo strug- f!)c to uefeat unheralded Kjcll J ohannsen 6·4, 5·7, 6·3 m the fir~t round of the Sl00,000 Louis ville Pro T ennis Classic Monday. Sixteenth-ranked Bally Martin was the only other sccdCd player to compete Monday. defe<iling Rhodesia's Colin DowdeswcU 3·6, 6·1, 6·2. · WTT R e sult• lndlaM U, P'"""hrU 'M>m!!n --I vi lie ~I Kemmcr·Sha'# 7-4 and _,,,tiebreaker , Owrton·Bostrom be.tt Kemmer- ~,. J Aushn~ 1. Men -Stone beoot Pat11~on 7-6 and won tiebreaker, S1one·8.trlhb<;MI Pdt11son Ausl1n6-< Mt•eO -MPIVtllf'·Bartll be•I P, Au'>lm-J . Ausltn 1-4 ano won l•f'breil• er. A -1,000 ot tdmonton. Haw~ii 1', Clevtloond 20 Men Aucttnol1 bcdt C.1ll1ndn IJ.2; NPwcombP· O.wtd!>On beat C.r<1ebn1;r·Ctllm..n l·I> .ino won \wbredktr. WOm!!n -Court beat Havoen-Jont.~ 6-3; Jones. $11appbeat Courl·Courld\I 6 3. M1xeo -Nr wtomtie·Couriet't bctcll (;<ilebnef• $l•PPIJ.3. • A -1,•JS at ll1ctorit1. B C. Tu.sday, July 29, 1975 U Pl TeltpllOte N ot a S unda11 Driv e Indy 500 race driver George Snider suf- fered severe face and leg lacerations to go with two broken arms when the accident photographed above took place Sunday in Winches ter, Indiana . The car was destroyed after nipping and rornng down a 45·foot embankment. Snider is hospitalized in Houston. Black Coach for Bell Ex-USC Star Wood Gets the Nod PHILADEl.PlllA <AP> The World Foot ball League 's Philadt:>lphia Bt>ll namL'<I Wtlli t: Wood as its head coach lod<1 y, making him pro football's ftr~L black m entor in 50 yc<JrS. Wood. a former All· Pro safety with the G recn Bay P<ttkers of the National Football Lcagul'. s ucceeds Ron Waller. who re· Others Fi11ed signed last week. The last black head coach in pro footbaJI was Fritz Pollard who coached several teams i~ the 1920s when the NFL was in its infancy. Wood. 41 , joined lhe Bell this yt.'.ir as defensive coordinator. llis ch ief competition for the hc;.id JOb was assistant coach Joe Scalper Escapes: He Lost Mo:riey CINCINNATI CA P > -One of six men c h a r ged "ith ticket scalping durinf! the Cmcinnati Reds-Los Angeles Dodgers series over the weekend was found in- nocent Monday when he proved he actually took a loss on lhe re· sale. Municipal Court Judge Robe1t Gorham found David Hen- drickson, 26, of Roseville. Ohio. innocent. Gorman said the h1w requires a scalper lo sell the tickets for more thun he paid for them to be g uilly. Hendri<'kson was arrested by police outside Riverfront Stadium . for selling five $3.50 tickets for $<t Saturday. Hendrickson s aid he bought the tickets through the American Automobile Association at Zanesville for $4.25. He said the AAA charged 75-cenls for hantil· ing. Larry Basel. 33. Marion. Ind., was fined $100 <1nd Robert Par- rish. 68, Indianapolis, Ind., was fined $150. On Saturday, Roger Dale Gardi. "ho w.is named interim coordan,1tor h' Hell O\\n<.•r John Bosal·to "'ht.'n.Wallt'rqwl. It was not 1 mm el.Ii at<'I) kno"' n whclhl·r Card 1 \\ olild ~lay with thl' team. When he rl'l i n·J from playing pro football in 1 !.172. Wood s aid . "Eventually I would likl• to mo\'<' into a head c1>ach ing pu~itiun. I Ulink th<' liml' will comt' whl"n the NFL will h a\'l! a IJ(a('k coach.·· Wood was born in Was hington. and played college ball :.il the l 1 niv e r s it v of Southern California. ·where he was a quarterback. Ile wasn't picked in the pro draft after the 1959 season. so he wrote a letter lo the late Vin<'l' Lorn bardi, then head coach and general m.inager of the Green Bay Packers. Lombardi signed Wood as a free agent and conve1ted him \o defensive bac k. Three years later, Wood led the NFL with nine interceptions. Jn his 12·year NFL career. he made All·Pro four times and intercepted 48 passes for 699 yards and two touchdowns. He played in the first two Super Bowls, both Green Bay victorie~. Wood retired as a player in January 1972 to become de· rensive backfield coach for the San Diego Chargers. His home is in San Diego. Wood Get_s Chance, Reversing Season .-Heatherly, 25, a manager of a Tenness ee Knot llole baseball· league team. was convicted of <'hi.i rging $10 for a $3.50 ticket but Judge Joseph Luebbers remitted the costs. Heatherly said he was trying lo get rid of 25 tickets he bought for his Lafollette, Tenn., team. The team could not make the game because they had a tournament. Heatherly said he sold 10 of the tickets for the normal price and accepted a $10 offer for one ticket. He was stuck with the re- maining 15 tickets, he told the- judge. UC/ N ETTER BAGS VICTORY VICTORIA. B.C.-UC Irvine's Eric Mann battled lo a starting berth in the 78th B.C. Open tennis c hampions hips . which begin Monday, with marathon triumphs in the first two qualify- ing rounds. What dot's a hiller do when he's in a s lump'! Takes extra hit ting, of course. So what doc-s a pitcher do when h e can't win for los ing'! You guessed i t, he throws more. •· 1 had every coach stand over me and waleh when I was ~oing bad, .. Ch1cC:1J!o White Sox pitcher Wilbur Wood s..i.id MundCty night afte r he bc.·ut Lhe California Angels 3·2. The coachc-s must h ave done somethin~ positive. Wood lost 10 1n his fir~l 12 de· <'isions and looked lake a c inch to Jose 20. Now that he has righted the ship. ht> may wan that many. Wood 's victory was has eighth in his last 11 decisions MondCty mght. collaborating with relief ace Rich Gossage on a six· hitter. ''I'm just thankful manager Chuck Tanner s tayed with me at the start." Wood said. "Now I think it's pay mg off.., In spades. Given three runs to work on in the fifth, an inning keyed by Nyls Nyman's bases-loaded s ingle over a drawn-in AnJ.?els infield. Wood rolled into the eighth in· ning with a three-rutter in the works and a 3·0 lead. But with two out. he walked J e rry Remy. M 1ckey Rivers doubled him to third and Dave Collins ripped a two-run single lo center. Thal was il for Wood as Tanner called for his bullpen savior, Gossage. who responded with his 15th save although he had to weather a walk and a base hit as the Angels madt• threatening gestures in the ninth. CHICAGO "" r " l>i P lfell~y rl • o I o C.-nl H • 0 1 0 11encl•r"°" cf • O O 0 0.-Johnwn dh • o o o M<'Hon lO J I 7 G C 1oM1 lb l I I 0 St~trt ?b 1 I 0 0 ""'""'"If 30 1 7 Oown1n9c. 1 0 O 1 Woodp 0 0 0 0 C.0)"191' I> 0 0 0 0 CALI FOANIA Rrmy7b Fhv~r•.tf Colltn~dh ~IM>lon rl Ch.11' Jc H"rPf'r lb a"'"'" LAhoudpfl M Nt-111"' pr Hamplonc Oorwnv e>ti ,,,.,,., \~ ~Oltl>f\ T11nM1a1> ab r II bl l I I 0 • I I 0 • 0 I 1 • 0 ' 0 • 0 0 0 3 0 I 0 '0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 '0 0 0 1 0 (I 0 J 0 I 0 1 0 0 0 0000 Tot••• 18 J 6 J Tolal\ JI 1 • 2 0\1 t•90 000 OJO 000 J 01110• n1.t 000 000 010 1 OP crucaoo ?. Ca1tforn10 t LOO Chl<"90 '· C"lllorru• l. 78 -Rtvfr), ~8 RtVf'r\ S~ eo-mg. IP H A EA 118 SO WOod CW, 10 13) /I ) I 1 J 1 ~,,_ I' I 0 0 1 I _1 .. nana c1.0~1 v 6 J J 1 ~ SA"" ~ .... qt! Cl)) H 11P -by TaMM l())wn '"9>. by Wooo (Ham111on), by 101\ilnil (~1t1n), l 2 n,"' 20,913. • Hall of Fame Jockey Retires MIAMI (AP> -Hall of Fame jo<'key Eric Guerin, who rode 2,708 winners with earnings of more than $17 million, has ended his 34-year riding career. "Not many owners want a 50- year-old rider on their horse," s aid Guerin, who guided Native Dancer to 21 victories in 22 life- time starts. Guerin took out an assistant trainer's license· after making the announcement Monday. Guerin admitted he may be best remembered for one race he didn·t win --when Dark Star beat Native Dancer, with Guerin aboard, in the 1953 K~ntucky Derby. In the race, Guerin's mount was bumped at the first turn by Money Broker •md the jockey was force~ to check Native Daneer a nd finished second by a head. Blackbird Preys on GoHers DES MOINES, I OWit (AP I - The pond fronting the 11th lee at the Grandview Goll Course hm't the only hoiard. The worst hazard is a bird protecting its turf allhewatcr'sf'd(t. The red-winl(c d blackbird swoopt down at ev<-ry player up- proaching the clump ot bushes it ~alls home. 1l m;:akes special t..rgcll o! players witb bnght caps or bald heads. clubhouse attendunl. "He's a vicious little rascal. You can tell he's mad." The male blackbird, with its brilliant red a nd yellow stripes on the wings, has become ~mewhat of a legend at the golC courst>. While players get through the hole by wa\·ing orr the bird's at· la<'ks with their golf clubs. most would hate to sec the bird go. Roy Dunn, who wears a white golf cap while he's on the links, said the bird has been bothering him for two years. "At firs t I was afraid he was m ('an and wanted to peck my t>ycs out, but he never tried." Ounn said. "H~ hates my wrute hat. He h its it two or three times every time I go by. "For awblle, I thought he was protecting babies. But he bothers gotrera from spring to f alt. There couJdn't be babies in there all th1tt llm@. Mann needed 21'2 hours lo de· real Arizon.i State's Dave Rybacki, 7-6. G-7, 6-3, then rallied to beat Chris Duff of River College of Sacramento, 5·7, 6·2, 6·1. Mann, who recently set a world record of playing 80 hours, five minutes. with Eric Larre, now goes into the 64 ·m an tourney with the other 15 qualifiers. Ex-fan T111ns On Dodgers ATLANTA (AP) -•·1 hilitjust hard enough to s queak il through," said Biff Pocoroba after slapping a two-run single in the eighth innning to give the Atlanta Braves a 5.3 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers Monday night. "We·re bette r than this." Dodger Ron Cey said after the Dodgt>rs Slate All g•MUOft KAIC 17'°) July29Los A.n~lts•tAllMtl• July 30 Lo• A~lo ••Allen•• July ll l.osA~leS •1 Alldnta ' lOp "'· • lOpm, 4 JOp m. game. "We just fell into a rut. This year h as really been frustrating. We're not executing and we're not doing much of anything well. So I ~uess we're getting what we deserve." ••People don't expect us jus t to win," Cey said. "They expect us to win the division. Cincinnati has had everything going well for them and they deserve to be where they are.'• Andy Messers mith, 13·8. pitches for the Dodgers tonight against Atlanta's John Odom, 0·4. ''It was my m ost satisfying game an the major leagues," saad Pocoroba. a {'atcher. "We won, J had a good game. and everything went well.·• "When I was a kid. I was a. Dod ger fan . That's my hometown, you know," he added. "Natmwlly, I wanted to be drafl- ~d by the Dodg<'rS, and I was dis· ap1>0inte<.l lhal I wasn't.'' Right-hander Burt Hooton hadl held the Braves to six hits in seven innings when he was r e· lieved by Mike Marshall in the e ighth. The Braves promptly lo<tded the b<ises on s ingles l>y SPORTS Eurl Williams, Rowland Offi~~ and Larvell Blanks. Pocoroba singled in lwo runs and winning pitcher Prul .Nieki-o singled in another as the Braoei; s napped a four-game losing streak. LOS ANGELES lOP<>S 2b W Vd.,.,.O<d II Wynn ct ~rs11a110 Corvey lb Halerl (.ey lb RuSM>ll~s Buckner pll Po-.rll c M N'ol•C>ll AIJt'rbdCh pr HOo1tnp PaC•OrPk rt ab r h b1 S I 2 0 ' 0 1 I • I I 0 0000 • I I 0 • 0 0 0 1 0 C I , 0 1 I I 0 I 0 J 0 I 0 I 0 I 0 0000 l 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 ATLANTA Garr II M. Perrz1t> Evan•lb E Wtll1•ms 11> C,. lbrea111 pr Lumrf Balcer rf Goo0>0'11b Otfice cf Blanksu Pocorobdc P. NtOrop •b r '1-' S 0 I 'O .. 0 ' 0 3 1 0 0 .. 0 2 0 0000 0000 3 , 0 0 0 0-0 0 4 1 1 1 3 I 1 0 .. 0 >·:i 4 0 l I Tot•ls 33 J 10 J Totals 34 s 11 s Los A"<;ltllts 100 200 ooo-3 Attan111 011 000 03Jc-~ f Powtll 0 P Los Ang~les I, Allan111 2. LOR LO\ Angel~S 7, Alldnla 'I 18-Lol)ft, Powell w. Cr.iwloro. SB-M. ~rel, a.-6r. Evan~ SF Cty. IP H R ER 1111 IO Hoolon I o 2 2 -4 6 M.l••,h•ll tL,6·101 1 S 3 J o 'o P N·e~ro cw. " 11 9 10 3 3 3 • PB Pocoroba. T-2.2• A-4>,378. LA. Hopes Fadin~ Magic Number 45 • For Red Machine CINCINNATl CAP> -·With the latest Reds·Dodgers series end- ing in a draw, the numbers game seems to favor the Cincinnati club more with every passing day. Los Angeles left town Sunday 1212 games behind the Reds, the same distance that separated the two teams before the weekend series. The Dodgers won two games and Cincinnati won a pair in the confrontation at Riverfront Stadium. The magic number, or Com· bination or Cincinnati wins and Dodger losses necessary for the Reds to clinch the National League Western Division title, dropped to 45 with 59 games to go. In other words, if Cincinnati wins half of its remaining games to fjnish with 96 victories, Los Angeles wou Id be forced to win 44 of its last 58 contests, a .729 mark. "Ninety-six could be enough," said Reds manager Sparky An- derson. "But we'Jl win more than half of our games." The record bears Anderson out. While the club has played .500 ball on the road this season, it has compiled an amazing 42·11 home mark , a .791 pace, going in· to tonight's game. Cincinnati has 28 home games and 31 contests on . the road te- maining. . Los Angeles, on the other hand. as J0...21 at home and 24.29 at op- pos ition ballparks prior to tonight. The Dodgers play at home 30 more times, with 28 re- maining road dates. So the Reds feel time is on their side. Not on ly was lhe lead maintained during the series. exulted Anderson, "every ~iay that goes by means it's one day closer until Don Gullett gets back." The lefthander was sidelined with a wrist fracture June 16 and was the club's top pitcher with a 9·3 mark when he was injured. Los Angeles is far from con· ceding defeat, however . The club left ~incinnati with the reeling that ats prolonged rutting slump finally may be over. In Sunday's series finale, a 5-3 Dodger win, Los Angeles hiller$ amassed 14 hits, their highest total in a nine inning game trus year. Previously the t eam average had dropped lo the bot· tom of the league, a far cry from last year's .272 mark, second in the league. "I. don't think anybody's gonn,• play dead or give up," sai<( Dodgers managerWaJter Alston: "If they do, I 'II take them out an~ put in somebody else." ;J "He actually landed on one ~y·s Panama hat and pecked Ht al and he's drawn blood from a couple of bald·hetded guys," •aid Chick Schumann. a "He's the bravest little bird I've ever ~ecn." says gollcr Paul LaMunyon. "You take on a Saturday or Sunday, he's just busier Lban anything.·• "I think he just plain doosn't like 1ollers ... • ~ l'RNGl!L. WHOU •• WE.DNODAY, POOLS AROUND AT HIS GLENDALE UHOM • ~ t ( ' 1' ... ... Tueedey,July29, 197S DAIL y P1LOT A J I parries, Too Area Waters Bigg~t Hurdle: ~~THCi..A~ETHOD Major '...: I League Spink Leads CM To Tie for Title YieldBws Sportsfishln g in Orange Coast area ~·aters continues to f t.'alure bass as a steady '1iel with bonito, bar- 7acuda, albacore and ,-ellowtall running 1'carce. • Paramount's Kuren :).,ombardo landed a 7- i>ound calico baas on the rhannel Isle out of ~ewporl Beach's Art's :.,anding Sunday. ! She was on the long 1 ange free lance boat "'hich leaves at mid· J,ight . The boat 's JJassengers limited out pn calico bass near San ~lemente Island. , Mackerel and rock fish ;vere also in the waters. Art's load of 165 angler& caught 304 bass, 356 1nackerel and 237 rock cod. Davey 's Locker v11trons also hit on bass and rock cod. A total of 295 passengers caught 129 b ass and 856 rock cod. Barracuda action picked up slightly out or Jlana Wh arf in Dana Point. A charter boat out of Dana Wharf claimed a dozen b arr acuda within tbe legal size, and in all there were 19 barracuda ~ded among the eight boats, which had 368 passengers Sunday. Action for the bar- racuda was centered 41round San Clemente Island. ·Aside from the bar- racuda, howe ver, totals ~re off recent outings. GWC, Barons Lose in Polo Fountain Valley ended its Costa Mesa summer waler polo league season Monday night, dropping :.1 4.3 decision to Garden Grove. Jim Davidson bad two goals and Kirk Chaney had one for Fountain Valley's Barons, who ended up with a 3-3 re- cord. ·· ·tn a Cypress College f~ague game. Cypress defeated Golden West, 6-4. Tom Crook had two goals and Doug Fabian and Don Caskey one ~icce for Golden West. The major lake was 967 bass. OANA WHARf'-noanoters: 1.ns bau. 68 b•rr•cud1, 2 halibut, 1 yellowtall, 1 white HI bass, S7 meoerel. HAL 81!.ACH -U 2 a1191e.,: "' M!>d beu, lS cellco ban. 2 ll1libut, 1S ,...tkeu1, .00 rock cod. ea,,. -10'2 tllQltrs: .. -llo, • und bus, 21S m.<kfftl, 2 hallbvt. H!WPOllT CDney•1 LM.llw )-1'1 'MIOl•rs 11 oarr•<ud•, 50 bOnllo, 04 bllu , 1 whllt H • !Miss, lSO ro<k cod,• Nlllbul, JOO MeO.trel. IArl'I UM- lfttl I 14 •ngltr •: • Darr iltudit. l'll b4u, 31 wnd b•>S, 9a ,,,.ckertl, 1 yellowl•ll. II ro<k cOd. LOMG •EACH -30 •noi.<s: " u lic.o beU, 1\9 tnlltllerel, U1 rock Cod. UNTA MONICA -114 anQttn: 73 rock twin, 11 ctllco bus, • send tiess. 7 bl.-flntuna. ••ret -SI anglen: 1'¥1 me<kerel, 100 rock bH$, 1' u tlc• bus.' l\allb\11. MOltllO &AY CVlrt'I UNll .. ) - l2 AnQltn: 20 llnQ coo, .. s rock cOd. SAN SIMEON -7' •"91trs· 11 llng tOd, l,1SI 1'1Kk<ocl, OCEANSIDE -lllt •ngters: S baf'· rec\Hle, '11 callco twin, 1 white su bus, I htllbut, 11 rock cod, 11 m11caerel. MAL1au PIE.It -n 1nolers: 140 cellco ban, 21\allbut, ta uno bass. PAllADISE COltE. -111 itnQltrs: 780 roc:k cocl, SI call co bui. ltEHTUllA -62 engleri: 3S4 ~elp beu, 37 send l>au, 1 ha II but. SAN Oii.GO (M11nlclJ•I ll"i•r- ~Y'I lt•llfftl -149 •nolers: 7Sl alt»cort, 3 bluelln tune, 11 yellowt•ll. ~ bonito, Sl calico bass, I hellbUI, 24 blrraC\lde, 52 rock cod. SAN P E.Otto -80 anolen: 1 yetlowtall, 1 barracuda, 2<14 c•llco ti.au.• halibut, 4-4 "'nd ti.au, l'16 blue beu . ~tltlllfte -16 an11lers: 4S Ul>d ban, HO mackerel, 19t ullco beu, 401 rock coo, 7 flallbut. GW Loses Key Game WHITTIER -East Los Angeles College opened a 43-19 lead and held on to defeat the Golde n West College Rustlers, 99.7g, in the championship and final game of the Rio HondQ s ummer basketball league Monda y night here. Despite trailing by 2A at one point in the first half, Golden West closed the margin to six points before East Los Angeles pulled away. Scott Clark led Golden West in scoring with 18 points. J ack Fletcher and Dale Parker had 12 each. But fouls hurt the Rustlers. They com· mitled33. C.Wtt!Wtstl1'l ., ft "' ·~ JohMOn 2 3 S 7 J.t<k~ • 0 2 • Clark 6 4 • 18 S<lltlllCI 3 4 S 10 Hersclller 2 O 2 • Senders 2 O 2 • Fletclltr S 2 S 12 Perklf' 6 0 4 12 S<hlndltr 2 0 • • Totals 32 1$ :n 79 Halfllme: El.AC, •S..Jl. Mesa Cage League eellf & Grew 1'21 GMn11 (12) •• II .... ,, •• ft "' • 'f~sef\CI 0 0 2 0 C.AOtlman 2 3 0 7 c..1-. • 0 1 16 R. AOtl,,,.n • 1 1 • ,....~ro 11 7 1 31 F.Adleman 1 1 3 IS Yatts • I 1 • Z.mt>al 11 0 1 tt ~,., .. ' , 3 '° O.M<C~kty s 2 1 10 ~II , 0 3 • J. McCIOskey s 0 s 10 t:'t': .. 1 0 1 2 Mathieu 1 1 0 3 s 0 I 10, Fr""'"" 1 0 1 • Total\ 41 10 I• 97 Total~ 37 • 12 112 ....... , .. , M.S.&C 111) ~ ,, ti ,,. ,, •• It "' • ) , I • Allmtlfl .. I 2 ' 0 0 0 0 Ptlngst 10 s , 2S 10 0 l 20 Feldman 1 2 l " • Cuba Cuba is favored, but the United Slates na- tional voll eyball team will have the· homecourt advantage and a lot o{ experience in the North American Central and Caribbean Confedera- tion volleyball cham- pionships that start &m- day with preliminary rounds at Santa Monica and Long Beach Caty col- leges. The winner of this tournam en t gains an automatic berth in the 1976 Olympic Games in . ·Montreal. The U.S. a nd Cuba figure lo have little trou- b 1 e i n preliminary rounds-the U.S. plays Haiti at Santa Monica College Sunday-and ·should collide in the finals at the LA Sports Arena August 8. The semifinals will be al UC Irvine August 7. Cuba is very strong, but the U.S. upset its foreign competitors, 3-0, in the 1973 NORCECA finals. Also, McGown has five players who have been on the U.S. team since 1970. They are Doug Beal, Kirk Kilgour, Dun- can McFarland, Miles Pabst and Dan Pat- terson. The latter has been on the squad since 1966. P abst is the team captain, and Beal was an all-American player-0f- the-year in 1975. He led San Diego Chart House to the U.S. volleyball as- sociation title. l I BE REA LISTIC ON LONG HOLE When faced with a long par-4, like the one in today's illustration, many golfers will be tempted to go for the green on the second shot. But this str1tegy may not be realistic when the green is blocked by a hazard. Stop for a moment and assess the situation Those !>!I nd traps in front o f the green don't lc:ivc much room for erro r. You'd need a very Ion& and accurate shot. In fact, the distance to 4he pin is greater than the distance back to the ~)Not man~ golfers can hit their fairwuy shots lonacr th:in their drives. So your best bet is to play short or the 1rap, and try to chip up for one putt. IRON OUT THOSE IRON SHOTS! Arnold Pllmer·1 booklet "Hiiiin& th• lro"'" gives championship ups to help sha rpen r.our Iron shOl t1chn1qu1. Send 20c and a $tamped. re turn enve opa to Arnold Palmer. '" ca•• ol this newspaper. Los Alamitos Race Results Fer MoMay Nltllt CIH r, Traci! Fut P'lllST AACE-'600 yar~. 1 ~r olclmtloens. Pune$1900. Mack•v·s Joy (Hartl J.60 Thrff Pollcvs ( AO•l r I Fl.WWIY FHlln (Myle~I Tlmt -20.68. 1eo no 4.10 2 IO 2 IO AIM> ran -Run Country, VllltY Rull•, T inker Bam, Miss Mint Dt<k, Ban ADI-, Bold Mtu P•pco, SuQar U>M Crttk. . S<r11tched -Jaouars a..r~, "911eO'S Moon, Krac:klin Ka\lly, IN· '°'Te. St E11uta -7·Mackay'1 Joy & ''"'"" "911cys, Paid su.eo. SECOND RACE -•OO yards. 3 !_W•r olds. Ctelming. Purw s2200. EuyAces (Dreyer I 3.60 3.lO "80 ""'°9bH Go II m it (Rocllard\I Mr. Zlf\9 ICreaoerl Tl,.,..· 10.st. IS.«> 6 60 •.«>: Al'° ran -Arton M1~s1on, Wtta 0..rQ, Paul Scarltll, Ro~y Jtl. NO sc:ra\cho THIRDllACE •OOy•rdS.1~ar oldmaloem. Cl•lmtf\9. Purse \1900. Dtbt11n Eyre (!>feyer I 2•.40 10.«l 4 00 Moan'\ Coe>y tCruoer 1 l IO J.00 Vandy Streich (W•rd I 1.00 nme-2013. AIM> ran -SwlnQlno Allelr, l"mA Ofeamer, D•t Rocket, Vole For Paueo, Sw1m~roo. All Tiie ~. Udy LA Creme. ScratcheO -Graclouslv. \II/Inter Wll'\ds, Wlnwrl911\ And I( lnQ NtPIU<'e Bar\. FOVATl4 RACE -•OO y~ds. J year olds. Clalmlno. Pur$e $7100. K•Yll (Paoel 77.60 1 • .0 4 10 v lclory Ch•"' (Lipham) s.20 J 60 Bio Er•• CAd1lr 1 2.60 11me -20.~. Race Entries Also r.tn -Three Martinis. Persnlcklty, Maro•rlta Deck, Noo Dul, Lii Moon Maid. No scratche~. -4MI Nleflt. f'lnt ... Jtl p l:ucta ~Int lla<t. $S f:UtlH 6ltl, tlll aM tlll ftt<H FlllST II.ACE -350 yerds. 2 '(ffr Old ~leltns. Clalm l"9. Purse $1'IOO. 11' l lttt. llfl)llC• (Hartl PreMnl Arms (Ward I ()ll(k Mick tM<Colnlickl Foay Giere IC.aresozal O>eQue Tt <Watson I TrtQlt End I Cruger) Anurtel"s Red L•dY t8al'ks) Fl FTH llAC E -350 y•rds. 3 year 1" olds & up. Claomlng. Pur\' UlllO. 112 81gJt0 IPa~I 8 60 ~ 00 3.'10 112 Megnoll• Horntt 112 IRlcllardsl 172 Hy Bound tWard I 112 T1 .... -11 09. 3 «> 2 90 HO 119 Al\O ran -Ou~·s Niner. Nloon ·Flyer, uncle Jimmy, Dickey Dotnbl'r. Oalmlf\9 price $$000. Winter Wll'\ds IAlcllardsl Bla<k Cyn tMyi.sl SuotrFlnt ccuaoer> Fast Fell• (Page) 122 SIXTH II.ACE -S49 yards. 3 y.r.<Jr NoKrtl<htS. 111 olds & up. Allowanct. Pvrse 12200. 1n llleAnehtlm B'nel B"ritfl. SIXTH RACE-170y•rds.3yur ln olds & up. c 1a1mlno. Purse uooo. Baskin Robbin (Adair) ~Parr (Walk••> Llk' A lkltltt ICar<IOt•> M9 ... Tt (Hert I ~nwrl~t CU~m) 1(1119 Ntpt11nt Ban tt:all) 119 Sheely Evtretl tP•Ol'I 1n lnltti Priest tCalll 119 Nutlltr Wiiiow 122 S(lur City (Hartl 121 lruly A Ol1mond IC«dor•) 119 1Watsonl S.10 3 10 '·"° S.'10 JOO lit Rulent's van (Lipham I 119 Winni. LOU I Hart) 1n UO'SB•llY (Werdl 3.«> 122 Battert's Baron IRlcllarch) BarMlyor !Watson) 1" Tlme-46.02. 121 Al'° ran -AMndett•, 8UIC\Cl, OI' SECOND II.ACE -3SO v•rds. 3 year ol<ls.. Clalmlno. Pursa '1900. Oelmtn; pr le• "6l00. Mr. Black Dec• (Banks I Rosa Ooo T-cwat\Olll Zip's Son CHenl Go Slltf'lll'f t Richards) Stleste Rebel !Myles I Roell.In See CCardoral Hatflvlllt Rocktt tDrerer> 119 117 119 122 119 112 119 TIUlllD 111 .. CE -3SO yards., 'l'l•r old ,...ldtn1. Pursa 11'MIO. Oelmlng prlc•s.5009. Tiit E11cetslM CrHmtry. Palleo"IMoon (MylHI llt C.lliomla Seven IHart> 112 GuteN Fast CC.rdoHI 11'1 1<090t A-(Ward) ll2 Selin Rott !Ade Ir I 119 Miu Trlplewttli I Richards) llt Marble Pac &alley IC.II) 1S2 Jvsl Ba OUM (Wal Iler) 172 Mr. T. 0Wlr99r CW1Uon l 111 ~lt.(Llpflaml 11'1 POUltTH It.ACE -a10yerds.3 .... o!lr okb I. 1111. Clalm l"'9. Purse U200 Clelmlng price $5000, The Hewi:tort Ferm. lltown Strip 16anksl 112 Din. Pal>9ll"S Lau, Mel M.111411. SEVENTH lllACE -350 yards. 3 yur old~ & up. Fiiiies & marts. Al· iow.nce. Purse i6000. The Lucy L. Jones party. Lanty's Jet (Ad•lrl 1'l1 Easy Alta Jet CCall) 119 Hot One (Lipham) • 122 MlclnlQht 8a(ky cwero> 119 Mary Jet IWalkerl 119 American Ottem !Hart> ' 119 NoKrltCheS. is Eucta -t-N11ffler Wlllew • S.WllW\le Loll, Pakl Ul.H . SEVENTH RACE -170 yercts. 3 yeer olds & up. C11lml119. PurSt inoo. A·On Tiit Hou,e l!"lartl S.20 3.00 2. 10 Knl9htofGlory IC1ll) 4.60 2.60 For Dold IBankO 2 . .0 Time -•5.94. EIOHTH ltACE -'600yarcts.3Ytlr oldS & up. Clelml119. Pune $1900. CtalmlnoPrl<tSl600. SmoolllllOver tRlcherdsl Also ran -A·Cllfll B~r. Bar Fame, Senoulne'a. Jel. Decker's 112 Chief No sc:ralclles. Rocket .104 (CrUQl'r I TrulyaSu,..,..lse !Banks) Jack Simon IWar<ll ~qvnt un1e Ber lllph.tm) WltchCrffl<Ollc (Myles) Et noToott:ardotll Ltoea"sDlal (Hartl KelltGold CCall) Rosy Joy (Walson l 122 A A. J , Ranch and Kris Pllrntr 122 122 entry. 112 122 122 112 122 112 EIGHTH llACE. -JSO yarch. 3 year olds & up. c1aullled •II-ante. P\I rse S6000. Jtt~k IP•Ol'I S.80 3 70 300 Al'dy Go (Hlrtl HO 3 llO M1C1teys Sun Flower (Banks~ • llO HINTH llACE -*yard$, 2 year olos. Clalmlf\9. Pune uzoo. Clalmlnv Tlme 17.91. Also r•n -war Chic's Echo, PrlceUOOO. 81.cll COii llljitlam) ~oovy GrU"'CIY (Call) Black 8rolller 1Har11 Llftle ~ l~uotrl Allert"°"911t (Richards) ... lrn Gold (lltlflkSI 127 A.Joldle <Ward I ~ lit A-TruCvpld (Qrdora) 1n w...,,.,un !Adair 1 ne19rtlnQ Star. Stell• Mor~. ~ I It Crtellt (Aird, Brandy Roell.el, 0...1 1n Ml~ 1 It ~ellttand Gl«y I Hart) 119 You&tt5Pud ICrtaoert 112 Scralclleel-Trlpoll Jet. is Euct• -7·J•I Crttll .... And' Ge,PaW$7UO. Leaders. AMUUCAN LE .. <;Ulr 8ATTING tUO at bet~l CMtw. Min, .378, Har9rove, T.,a, .338, LYM, BUI, .32'; M11 n•on. NY, .JIS; WulllnQton, Oek, .)07 RUNS Lynn, lltn, '9. Alc.e, !hn, •5; Ystn•mskl. &n. ••: c;...rew, Min, M, A. Je(kson, 0.k, 61, RUNS BATTED IN -LyM, 8\n, 7S, R JaCHOl'l,0.k, 11; L.M4y,6.ll, 1.0, Ric~. B\n, 70, G 5(011, M11, 1>1 HIT S Carew. M in , 131; W•~lllnQton, 0.k, 117; Munson, NV, 116: M<AH , KC, 115; G. Brtll, KC, 1U DOUBLES -McRae. KC, 28. LyM, Brn, 2•. RIU , Bi.n. 13; R. JK~"""- 0.k. 23, Y\lr!fmskl, 8sn, 12, 0.:111, Cht,22 Ruol,0.tk, n. TRIPLl!.S -Rivers, C.I, 'I; Ort•. 0\1, t; Lynn, Bsn. •: LeFlou, Ott.•. G. Bttll, ICC. 6; Audi, Otk. 6. HOME RUNS -R. Jt<llSOfl. On, 2S, G Scott, Mii, 21; Bo'''"· NY, 11, Mll~rry, KC, 21; e urroUQllS. TtA, 1• STOLEN BASES -Rlvtu, 01, ss- WHl!lngton, 0.k, 3'. Olis, KC, JI, ~my, 01, lO; No'tn, Oek, 11 PITCHING (10 Oecl\lonsl - .Eckersley, Cle, 7-3, 700, 1 31, Blyleven, Min, t-•, .,'1. 3 20; B. Lr~. Bsn. 13-6, • .a.c, 3.71; WI~. B\n. 131>, .664, • 11; Kut, Cnl, IS-7, .6411, 1 93. STRIKEOUTS -T antna, 01, IS9; Ryan, C.I. 1S4; G. ~rry, T11x, 136; Blyleven, Min, Ill; Blue. O•k, 137. NATIONAL LEAGUE SA TT ING nso •• bet~) -M.tdlO<• en ••. Jn; S•nouillen, Pgll, .3•0. Moro•n, Cin, .l3S. T. Simmons, ~IL. .333; o. Parker, Poll, .331, RUNS BATTED IN -Lu1ln>ll1, Pho, 87, Bench, Cln, 80; W•lson, Hin, 72. T Sommons, SIL, 68; Staub, NY,"· HITS -G.tr~v. LA, 138; Ca\h, PTll, 131; Rose, Ctn. 136; Madlock, 0>1, 137 Mllltn,NY.121. QOUBLES -Bench, Cln, 32; Ro•.r, C.tn, 30, c.uh, Pnl, 2'; Grubb, SD, 1t>, G.ttny, LA, H . TRIPLES -t<enlnge!r, (.hi. 8, " P<1rller, PQn. I ; R. ~lrger. Hin," G<tlley, Con, I , Gross, Htn. 7. HOME RUNS -LUllMki. Phi, '6 IC1ngman, NY, 21; ~f'CI\, On, 10 S<hm;c!l, Pht, 19, SllrQell. P9h, 19 STOl.EN BASES -Mor<)dn. C•n. Q. Br~•. SIL, •7; Looes. LA .•• ~.Hin, 36, P Mangual, Mon. a. C.onu1><ton, Con, 17. PITCHING 110 Decisions) HrabOsll'f. SIL, t.1, .118. 1.4S, Gullrll. Cln. •·3 •• ISO, 1.09; Mont•lusc:o, sr, I(µ, IU.1 77; Suver, NY, 14-&, .I~. 2.07. Billingham. C1n, 11·5, .1>88, 3 14 STRIKEOUTS -!'>taver, NY, I~ Mt\servnllh. LA. 14C; Sutton, LJ\, 13'1, Rlth.trd, Hin, It>. 15-mile Run IS-Mll•&.ach Run at San Ct•,,..~le 1 ~n EdwMd~ (San Clel'T'l'nle Strider\) 1·31.SS 2. Roy Erlck\on IWe~I Ml nste r l L32 1' 3. Chro~ Waicoll ISan Clemente SlriOl'r\I 1.lS.SI '· Oill Aoamotls (Fa llbrookl 1·37 2S S. Guy Pll1lpot (San Clement" Striekr~l 1:37 28. Gary Spink hit the win- ning babket with 45 seconds ll'ft M onduy mght, giving Costa Mesa a 31·29 win over Mission Viejo in the final game or lhe Orange s ummer l>askt:lball ll'ague. By deft.>aling M lssion Viejo, Costa Mesa ended up with a 6·1 record, ty- ing Servile for the It' ague title. Mi ssion Viejo finished third with a S-2 record. In other games Mon- day, University whipped Orange. 37 -23; Servile edged Villa Park, 39-36; Redlands beat f'oothiU, 40-33. De s pit e Spink's heroics, the game was in suspense until the end. Costa Mesa could have won easily in the late stages, but missed four- of-rour fr ee lhl'ows in the waning seconds. 1 lowevcr. Costa Mesa k~pt getting the or- reni>ive rt!bounds. and Mission Viejo didn't gel the ball until eight second:; were left. UiNwerslty CVI ' SMlth M(CIYMOnd> Grttn Howlll P1utell AllllM HAllOfel 61Kk Totals •• n .,,. ~ 1 • I 8 ' 0 0 • 7 ' • 1 1 0 0 't 3 0 2 • 1 1 2 • 3 0 • • 1 0 0 7 lS 1 • R SUH by Ott•,._,_ tJnlV"tnlly 11 I U Or-oe 2 • 10 Byer~ Mlli.r C.ta -.Wsa U I) Ii " 1 7 ., .,, 0 • ? • Or.-." !.p.ntc lot.I~ 0 l 0 II • I a 3 10 • l t MlulMVlei. UO Zooo AcMM~ Saw~r H•llfup Coa c:;.ns.cMn Kennt'dy Toi.JI~ ,, It ,,, "" l 0 J .. 3 0 2 • 1 I ) .S 2 0 ' 4 I 0 J 't I 0 0 2 2 0 2 " .. ' 16 29 Seo,.. by Ouart1., Mlulon VlelO 10 ' , c°''• MAe-.a 1 7 ' 57,000 for only 5t39.03 a month. W1 ·~•her vou need SS,000 or $10,CXX) get it from the people who lend millions. Commerciol Credit. M onthly payment I o<Pd on a S7,000 HomeOwner loon, for 8·1 months, a t on annual percenloge rote o f 16%. Total poyment $1 l,678.52. A loon of .$5,000 ond over must be secured by o cornbinotion of real and personal property. Commercial Credit Corporation IC\ HorncOwncr loons ~ Cnsla Mesa Sanl.n Ana • • 371) E. 17th Street • I 228 B. 17lh Street • • 174-6740 547-5871 f'r••tlil J,i(,. ln<ur:u1r1 1\vn1l:ihll! tn Eli11i\JI~ 801<ro-.·ers "t Croup RAu.s. ' . YOU MAY BE NEXT! IS YOUR MOTORCYCLE CHAINED? 15% OFF All VEHlaE THEFTS REPORTED WERE MOTORCYCLES ~·y YOW LOCil roua ~ilTMIHT 11 I l 2) Golden • • ,, ,.,.,..,,.,.,,., Lyon s 0 10 l'IO••k 2 0 1 s 1 • l 0 s ' 11 11 • 71 119 TlmttoCller;e I Walson) Autleu Tlp tLtcin.m1 SefgiuntNHI (WalkuJ Son of eovr •9t <ca 11 > SWlnQlnoSllm <Alclltrds) f'l ll'TH aACE -.00 yards. 1 .,..r old maloens. P\tn.t '1900. Tiit 5oM of 11•1-rSanl• Ana Loelo• No. 220e. 112 1n 117 112 112 12' 122 HI NTH II AC f! -3SO yard'. 3 ye.ir h.----iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimj olds. Allowance. P.irst »OOO. 'r"'•ls ~ ll '2 " Helltlrnt· Build I. Grow,.._..,. 4x4 SALE ~ 7 J LAMDClutSllt $0FTTOP w""'n ""~ ete (:\a7FVY) s2999 '7J L.AMDCIUllM ~ _.cs, '""'n nubt. t!f OIWld. ., s4199 •• :'rlfCM.¥0 ........ A11._tlt. 11r MM .. ,._ AM,,M_......,.ri_ ~ !J~F '7186 Tottis 3t H•lltlmt. GMrttl, ~I. Baseball .Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division W L Pct. GB Boston 61 40 .604 Baltimore 51 48 .515 9 New York 50 51 .495 11 Milwaukee 50 S3 .485 12 Detroit 46 55 .455 15 Cleveland 45 54· .455 15 West Dlvltlon Oakland 65 37 .637 Kansas City 54 47 .535 10~ Chicago 49 51 .490 15 Texas 47 56 .456 181h Angels 46 58 .442 20 Minnesota 44 58 .431 21 ,.,..,.y't kWM (le...tMd 1, a11t1mort S, 10 lnnlng1 llOtlon 1, Mllwavkff • Ottrett,, N•W YorllO MIM1110tlt, Ka11sas City I Ollc•oo i. cautoml• 2 ()akltlld 12, TtHU THIY'IO.- Of ... ltlld (Hood Ml at 8altlmore CT°'"I I HI Mtlw111fl" CColbOr" Ml at'°"°" (Tlant 1> 101 Oe1rolt <Cotttn.,. "121 11 New Yortl t.Nitcllcl\ M21 KaMIS City (ltlt .. ,.,, at MIMlllOtAI <••rltwtfl ... ) Oll<•llll 10.twft •tl It Ct!..,.,• IHl•ltf Ml TtaH CHarwell H I at 0.lllltlll C,_ny ... ) W• .. ••t'aO- Mll_k .. at eotlOft Cttvelencl et llaltlmare OttrollltHtWYOflt te.-• City al Ml-•te Oii~--Collfenll• l•-•lOl"'9fttl NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division W L Pct. GB Pittsburgh 62 39 • 714 Philadelphia 58 44 .569 4~~ New York 52 46 · .531 81h St. Louis 50 50 .500 11 lh Chicago 47 56 .456 16 Montreal 40 57 .412 2Q West Dlvblon Cincinnati 67 36 .650 Dodgen 54 50 .519 131h San Francisco 51 51 .500 151tit San Diego 49 54 .476 18 Atlanta 44 S8 .43~1h Houston 36 69 .343 32 ......... , k-• Oii< ... 4, Mol\lrtal 2 Atlalltl S, Los A.,.eles J """"tdtlPfll• s. Plt1saiuro112 (lnclllnaUl,S.n l"ranclsco4 New Yon: It, It. Lou!~ 1 San 01 ... !, HCIUtlon 0 TM.ty'tG•- Mo!llr .. I (-.1111.0 4 .. 1 al Clllc.oct (II. Rewdlel Mil New York <Se•v•r 1•• •nd Hall 2-ll et St. Louis tMcOlcl4htfl 10-t •1111 Rted ._., 2 LOS Anoetu CMUHrsmltll 1H) •t A(1e111• CDdon'I0-0 ,.,,lladtlpflla tUntterwtOd 10-1) •I Pltttbur1ilh (l!llh , .. , ~n f'rentlKo ( l•rr ... ) •I OfKlnMtl (Norman WI $.WI OltOe (Mc l111Mf\ .. ) at HollllClll ,....,_ •m ........ , •• 0- ..,.,...,., O.lc-.e '""~"""'' 11.atlanta PNle*llMeat ~ttt~ Siii ,,_lte9 .. (lll<llllWlll Ntw Yen tt SI. &Au4 SMO .... ttHwltOl'I Dl•le,.. Ml\S (Ward) 10.•0 S.IO UO 6.60 3.70 uo Mtl hit (Myln) CioHeatllerGo tAlcMrd\I Time -11.oe. AIM> r•n -lleulells Copy, Co Man's Loulon, Pr Ide 'N Joy, S.rlri 01plty, Eta Copy. HO SC:rllthes. SS Euell -.. Dl1tl•n• MIU • 6-Mi!l lue. Paid tt60.IO. SIVIN ADVANTAOU OUI PAOll onns ......... \. that youn may not! 1 COMrLm' OlANGI COUN1'1 COYllHI IMl114i..t: a..,.. ..... S• C ......... MMIM Ylefa, 1.-'-'"'· • .,.n • LPt ..... .-..... u .... 2 MONTH TO MONTH llNTA\. IAllS 3 NO DIPOllT UOUIHI ON A,,IOYD CllOff 4 ONLY tl1. ,. PD MONTM TOTA\. COIT '""""""' ,...., 5 MIW COMrACT UNIT Siii n v. I 4 • Va) 6 WOICI MISSAM PA6111 AUO AH AVAIL.AIU 7 MILL JID MAlNTINANCI ORANGF COUS'l\ H .\OIO l 1 l f PUONl SHl\'ICf ·~· 1714) IJ5.JlOS .. IO, "'llTA ~I. t,loNTA AllA ,,..... Le~ ... ,_, Miu• Viet-. 0tM Pelftl. S.A (I_ .. , S.• nM (afltlr•... 11 '-• o n 191 .,_ ..... un I AIR CALIFORNIA ANNOUNCES DIRECT DAILY FLIGHTS FROM ORANGE COUNTY! Tak~ off for Tahoe the easy way , •• with Air California. For just $32.00, a convenient. comfortable Electra Jet Al es you direct. Weekdoys or week- ends. from nearbyOninge County Air- port. Special discounts for families and groups of ten or more. Only IMlh Atr Ollifomla . . the airline that con- slstcntly eams the best on·tlme record In the business. One call to Easy Infor- mation arranges everything from Alght . reservation' to compl•te vacation p3ck<1ges, With tickets wnltlng at a M 1uby travtl agent. Easy enough? Air ul1fom1a to Lake Tahoe ..• we're easy to tokt'I Coll Eoay ln/ormatlon In Orons« County.(714) 5404550: ~ (213) 924 3313: Laguna. (714> 498-6000 Los l\ngefes, (2131627-5401 . AIR CALIFORNIA we·re easy to take . .. AJ2 DAILY PILOT L • .ltl. Bo11d 30-hour Week· For Workers? Eat'h person who works ·on a payroll should put in no more than three days a week on the job. Eul'h workday should be 10 hours long. Such a n employe should live far out in t~e c~unlry with the f.amily for four days and fJVe m~ht~. but sleep m the barracks near the job two ni.:hts a week. Business bosses should work two shifts lo make a 60·hour week, thus to get 50 percent more produt'tion out of their costly equipment. This system would take the schools out of the ghettos and spread them around the countryside. It would. boost the rural economy. It would cut city traffic dramatically ina~much as said wo1 ker would only make one trip to the big town each week. and thus 1t would reduce enormously the burning of gasohne. This item No . 7406C in our Bright Igea file is the notion of an economis t named Dr. Millard C. Faudht. POW DIVORCE Q. "What's the divorce rate among those American prisoners of war returned from In - dochina?" ·A. Last l heard six months ago it was 27 percent. Probably even higher now. That's <.1boul double the typical rate for other men in- the same age bracket. ,,. ,, Q. "WHY DOESN'T the Office of Vital Statis tics still report bi1ths to women over age so·.··· ... A. Because they found out most of the ages formerly r eported were wrong. Q . "WHAT WAS the first r;.id10 mm· merc1al?" A. "It's 12 o'clock, Bulova watch time . ., TOMATO ' • h Most popular tomato nutionwide now is said to be the one called .. Big Boy'' ... ALMOST H~LF the practicing psychiatrists admit they've been attacked at one time or another by p atients . . A COMPANY in Memphis . Tenn., m anufactures 250,000 washboards a year. Wonder who buys them '! ••. CR EDIT Missippi, too, as that state whose· name is most frequently spelled aloud .. • ANOTHER BITTER disclosure indicates that :approximately 35,000 Social Security checks get stolen every year. •. I •o I " •i . ,. "DID YOU KNOW that if it had not been for the Polish Army, we would all be speaking Arabic and facing Mecca?" So says Arthur L. Zygmont. "Europe lay prostrate before the advancing Turks . Vienna, the jewel of the Ho- ly Roman Empire, was helpless. But the Polish Army, under the leadership of Poland's King John III Sobieski, arrived on Sept. 12, 1683. The Turks were decisively beaten by the Poles in a s avage battle, and they retreated from the outskirts of Vienna in chaos. Europe was saved!'' Address mail to L. M. Boyd. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa92626. Copyright1975L. M. Boyd. Acquitted Trio Sue San Diego SAN DIEGO (AP) - Three men acquitted in a morals case have filed a $200.000 "invasion of privacy" s uit against the city. Dean S. Cummings,42, James A. Chronis, 56, -and Lee Rodne y Thomann. 48, had been arrested along with 20 men las t year a fter police officers slaked out a men's room at the May Co. s tore in Mission Valley. Cumming s and Chroni s h ad b een charged with felony sex pervers ion and Thomann with the misdemeanor offense of loitering in a If the following sounds like you, pie• call the Sdlidl Weight Control Center. :::: lost wtitflt FAST on ptlb '-' lost wtithl FAST oft slloll .J lost wtitht FAST Oft Witt! din lJ lost Mitht FAST oa hypnosn ..J Gtil!ed Mitiit beck EVE RYTIME ' FAST WEIGHT LOSS IS AlMCST ALWAYS A OISA,.,OllHING FAIL· URE btc1VM yo11 still hive tht WM crn 1111 for tllt Ymt foods th1t m1d1 vou 11nnwitlit i11 the fim plM:i. Schick hes Ml IMWtf •••• 1 pro111m tlllt dmloped out tf tht sarnt Sl,000,000. ,_di th1t ltd to th• t.mous Schick Stop Smoki111 Pro9111'1\ Truly ditfenftt! ~ public restroom for lewd purpose. CALL MOW ' Charges were dropped Jan. 22 after Superior Court Judge Verne 0 . Warner a nd Municipal Court Judge Carlos Cazares ruled that the surveillance was illegal. 558·8404 t'8S Towit & c-try OrOttCJe • Chicken Consomme Soubrette, witft baby shrimp and peas .•• • served with a Cali fornia avocado and crispy lettuce salad --and a choice of Magic Pan special dressings .•• • and our famous Crab Delight Crepe --made wi th chunks of Alaskan ktng crab. tn a delicate bechamel sauce with sherry. Cocktails COSTA MESA South Coast Plaza BULLOCK'S W ING FREE PARKING • 566-1225 S~.9S complete AME"ICAN EXPRESS•MAlfER CHAROE•8A~KAMEAICAAD 1 \ S 11rflft"lf Set E d g a r Buchanan, one oC Hollywood's b es t known character ac - tors, is reported in fair condition at Hollywood West Hospital where h e is schedule d for brain s urgery Thursday. H e starred in TV's 'Petticoat Junc- tion.' Warning · The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. • Liz Faces Soviet Newsmen MOSCOW (UPI) -Elizabeth Taylor, at 43 a veteran of more than a quarter century in mms, says she does not fear growillg old will hinder her career. "I don't thil)k it's a prpblem because I 've been playing character roles since I was 22," she told a group of foreign and Soviet newsmen in Leningrad. THE INTERVIE W took place during a break in shooting of "The Blue Bird," the first Soviet- Ameri can film production, in which Miss Taylor stars. During the .CS-minute session, the actress also spoke of her views on sex and violence in fi.lms, her reticence to give in- terviews, and her Jove of Lenin· grad. Elaborating on her opinion of aging, Miss Taylor said : · "It's no problem for me to age as far as being an actress and I don't believe I h ave any hangup as far as my private life is con- cerned. I think you are as old as you feel. When I was 22, I was playing a woman of 50."· ASKED WHETHE R SHE ap- proves of sex and violence in films, she said, "Believe me, I have nothing against sex and 1 think violence is real and it ex- ists. It is unfortunately there and one cannot turn one's back on it .. She said violence ts tbere "everytime you open a newspaper, there in Cainbodbl. in Vietnam, there wherever YoU look, wh•tever country. l don't think the arts shouldn't show violence because it is real..'' She described "Tbe Blue Bird," based on the play of the same name by Belgian Maurl~ Maeterlinck, as a combinatlpn ''WizardofOz" and "TheSoun~ Music." SHE SAID, "ALL cartoons that go back lo Walt Disney w~c based on violence. Tom and Jerry. Mickey Mouse. Children love violence and there is a cer• lain element of violence in every fantasy." ''· ., ,,, •I ' (.I • Portland Addy tries to p attern her Jump after that of UCLA cheerleader Carole Hall, instructor in UC/'s summer camp. BEA ANDERSON, Editor TltllUy,Jlflytt, lt7S "'"" ROUTINES CHEERED .. ~ • '... rt Elise Kim, coordinator, considers an :I~ .... improved self-image the most important product offered at UC/'s camp. i •• } .I Habit's . DEAR ANN LANDERS~ I have a fri~nd who is as good as ~ gold. J love her dearly. But she can't throw away a newspaper or a magazine. Her apartment has stacks in every corner, on .every chair and ttable. A person can't fand a place to sit down. I worry because she smokes ~ lot and iS' careless with her clfarettes. l'm afraid one )day the whole place will go up in flames . Any advice? - CONCERNED DEAR C. ~ "Goldie" la a menace to ber netslabon •• well •• bertelf. lier neurolla eoul~ c .. ae a dJ.11tter. Tell ber tb•t lf 1be doe1a't 'et dd ot the flre .Uaardt you'll repon lier to t1i1e " ap1rtmemt manager bec•uk you love ber .ad w•nt t.er aroand a wbUe. Then do U. · •\. · DEAR ANN LANDERS: I read recently that Anita Loos, the woman who wrote ''GenUemen PreCer Blondes" nearly 50 years a,o, made the statement that if abe were writing that book today sbe'd call lt "Gentlemen PreCer GentJ~,n." J(as bbmosexuaUty become TRAT widespread? Do you hooesUy believe that the number of IDales who prefer members or their 9•n aex bu accelerated to that d91tee? If so -what's the reason? -BUG·EYED IN PEORlA By LAURIE KASPER Of Ill• Oallr Plkll SUll The garish red, white and blue pr.omotional pamphlet for UC Irvine's summer cheerleading camp is lettered with the usual promising superlatives ... "Dynamic cheer routines ... spectacular pep rallies . _ . sensational showmanship ... charismatic voice ... the most spectacular demonstration for try-outs." All these wonderful things can be had because the camp is the "highest quality ... highly re· commended ... enthusiastical- ly presented"' and participants can "learn the best from the best.'' After all, it is the Super Star Cheerleading and Songleading Camp. But substantial substance lurks beyond this wordy gim- mickry, according to Elise Kim, camp coordinator, and Rod Sherman. assistant director of athletics at UCL Essentially. they promise an improved self-image. YOUTH WORK Miss Kim. a 21 -year-old UCI s tudent, has used cheerleading to help_ young women attending Manners Church and others in an Irvine Girl Scout troop. "They learned. from the dis- cipline. determin ation and good attitudes a nd that they can achieve a lot of things," she said. · While promoting the camp at various schools and recreational centers. s he said, she stresses that if a girl sets a goal and has the desire and right motives. she can accomplish what she wants, whether it's an A in math, the ability to play the piano well or making the cheerleading squad. · And s he gives person a l testimony a s proof. As a freshman in high school , she weighed 185 pounds, was "totally uncoordinated" and wanted to be a cheerleader. Her dream seemed impossible. "There was no way," she said. "l was ridiculed constantly.'' But her father, a medical mi~- ' a Hazard. DEAR R UG: No, I don't b elfeve bdmosesaality bas betome "•ccelerated to THAT degre,t." I do believe, however, that a·great many "queens" are COl\lnl out of the closets and m'9lllll their preferences known. IDme who have "announced" bave been real sb~kers. A great mMay 'people used to think all gays ,.ere lisping, llmp·wrl~te,d oddballs •ho could be .spotted on sight by t~lr makeup, perfume and outlandish dreu. 'Ta .. 't necutarUy so. Some gays are very con1t!rv1tlve dres.ers and yo,'d oever know without being told. •lu Loot's crmmenL not•ltllaltandlnf, I stll believe moat seoUemen prefer blolldea,. t • brunettes or redheads -of the opposite sex. DEAR ANN LANDERS : Nine years ago I married a man I'll call Ed. We had a son, Mark, and were divorced six months later. Part or the divorce agreement was that Ed would have no finan- cial responsibility for Mark, pro- vided he would never atlempt to see or contact the child. l didn't need the money and wanted nothing more to do with the rat. Mark is now 7 years old. My brother and his family have been wonder(ul to rne and my son. We are like one family. I ha· ven'l heard one word Crom Ed aince the divorce. s ionary, challenged her to get rid of her bad habits and set a goal. After deciding s he was '.'tired of being a zero in life," she followed her father's advice, cut her pounds to 115 and more than made the squad. She was the only girl in her San Francisco high school to make varsity cheerleader three years in a row. While doing this, she moved in- to the sc hool 's "in" social circles, becoming editor of the school newspaper and president of her senior class. QUESTIONED She naturally thought she would come to Irvine and con- tinue this pattern. But at the end of h er fre s hman year , a boyfriend asked if she was a Christian. "He maqe me so mad, I almost knocked his head off," Miss Kim recalled. She, of course, thought s he was a Christian. She spoke with Mariners' youth pastor, who explained that being a Christian means having a personal relationship with Jesus Christ, something she bad heard of often but never thought about much. She realized then that she was on "a big ego trip'' and "com- pletely lost in materialism." So she redirected her cheerleading ability into teaching youths. Last summer, she was selected for the All Stars, a squad of cheerleaders who tour the coun- try offering clinics. She thinks re- commendations resulted from this youth work. The opportunity to be with cheerleaders from better known Eastern schools excited her. But she found, generally, "they were insecure. self-centered and vain because they derive their whole sec urity from being a cheerleader ... Many people have a rather bad impression of cheerleaders these days, Miss Kim s aid. And. she added, this r e putation is de- served by 75 lo 80 percent or them. SOCIAL FAME "I've met too many girls who go out for cheerleading because they wanted to meet this or that athlete and gain some social fame," she explained. She also disliked the All Star clinics because they focused on competition, everyone trying to Corinne Cannell's kick indicates ·the sky is the only limit. impress the other cheerleaders and the instructors with their routines, rather than meeting the needs of participants. UCI's program evolved from her experience. It is her "dream camp.'' "This camp. I really believe. is going to be super." she said. She guarantees participants will fiave "the best time they've ever had" as well as achieve some self-improvement. "We're a people building pro- gram," Miss Kim explained. The main goal is lo "help Cthe girls) develop areas where they think they're lacking." But s he and the other instruc- tors, three each from the UCLA and USC squads. also will be positive and point out the good qualities in each of the partici- pants. No comparisons will be made, she said. Participants will be placed into small groups so they can get individual attention. And, awards will be presented to each girl. Also included in the program are workshops in good grooming. and nutri lion, with which Sherman is especially pleased . DEVELOPMENT . Whether a girl makes a squad or not, he said, "it should be an asset in her own personal de· velopmenl. '· He hopes the program also will prove to be an asset to the athletes' scholarship fund which will receive the net proceeds. This camp and seven others are being sponsored through the Physical Education Department by the Big l Boosters "to help solve our funding dilemma in a constructive and positive way " he explained. ' This is the firs t time the un- iversity has offered summer camps, he said. but several other universities are moving in the same direction lo solve similiar financial problems. So far. 125 girls. most of them junior high school students with little cheerleading experience, ha_ve r~gistered for the camp. Miss Kim hopes more will at- tend. She is certain participants will leave with the proper attitude. She and the other instructors, all of whom are " really outstanding women" as well as being very skille d c h eerleaders and songl eaders, can serve as models. · She said they can each share the dangers of becoming overly confident and ego-centered from personal experience. And for those who still need to be more humble. she said she has a plan of attack itl mind. Three one-week camps are scheduled from Aug. 4 through 21 for girls aged 8 to 19. F\Jrther in- formation can be obtained from UCI's al~cs of~ice. Ann Landers The problem : I have kept the pictures of Ed with Mark, taken when he was an inrant. Until re· cently, Mark has been satisfied with the explanation that the person in the pictures is his Cather and his name is Ed. Now I'm beginning to get questions like, "How come I never see my father?'' and, "What kind of person was he?'' I believe in being truthful. How does one tell a child. .. Forget about your father. He never cared about you." Thanks for your advice. - MARK'S MOTHER DEAR M()THElt: lt sound as • 11 Mark ls goln' to bave plenty ol problems. Please don't add t• them by telling him h~ rather never cared about him. Surely you can thlnk of a few decent things lo tell !\lark a~t his dad. Try your damMest and I h.ope you come up wifh · 10metblng -for the boy's sake. Got those wedding bell blues over costs . . . guest Ust • ~ • what to wear . . . and other -. tails? Ann Landers· complettly new "The Bride's Guide" '1rilt help. f'or a copy, send 1 doUir bill, plu" a long, seU·addressed, s tamped envelope <tO eel}~ pc>slage) to Ann Lander1, P.O. Box 1400, Elain, Ill. 80120 . . .... . .R OML. V PlLOT Mark Date Evergreens Babied Mr. and Mrs. John Barklie Saunder~on · Jr. celebrated their SOt h wedding an- niversary with 200 friends and relatives at a party given in Costa Mesa Country Club by their children, Mrs. Richard Alger of Wappingers Falls . N.Y., Mrs. Richard Koehler and John Barklie Saunderson III of Costa Mesa, and th eir eight grandchildren. The couple Ii ved in New York and Pen - n sylvania before moving to Costa Mesa where they are active in Central Bi- ble Church. Nudity Buffs Bared ------..... By ERMA BOMBF.C'K Nudity jusl isn't cakhing on in ltus country Blending into the labor mark1>t has bet>n tried by unclolhc<l pt·o· pll• and failed miserably. Soml'of them ha,·e turned lo ;.1 hfl· of cnme only to experience more d1s;:ippomtmcnt. AT WIT 'S END Al Georgia-Pacific's forest tree nursery at Fort Bragg, the manager in charge of the two million redwood a nd fir seedlings grown each year is Alma Thomas. a soft-spoken, grey- haired grandmother, who gets some goo<l -natured static from men al the nearby sawmill about coddling her millions of ever· green "babies." When the vigorous young seedlings are 8 to 10 inches tall a few months after the seuds are planted, the new crop is outplant· ed for reforestation each winter. They are far ahead of their haphazard wild counterparts try- ing lo make it without out.side help. in this case tender loving care from their "grandmother." Tree seeds actually are harvested in the forest from selected "supe r trees" -- specimens s howing the most vigorous g rowth and best health. They are planted in specially de- signed styrofoam trays that have test·tube $haped openings con- taining an enriched soil mixture. In the controlled greenhouse at- mosphere, the seedlings will sprout within 15 days after plant- ing. · Alma Thomas says that her tenderly cared-for seedlings have a five-year head start in re- forestation of the land, helping make s ure her company's naturally mixed fir and redwood forest will a lways be lush tree country. Alma does everything from wielding a pipe wrench to hoisting the plastic sides on th e greenhouse, and she rides herd on the work force, which expands during the planting season. Oh, I know you ·vc all read stories about Americas 5,000 miles of bl·;,iches dotted with bared bodies under the sun, but 1l ends there. And the reasons hav._. nothing lo do with modesty. prudery. or the law Day after day you read stories of streaking bank robbers who are apprehended minutes <tfler their gel-away. It s~ms no mat· ter how a person wearing only brown s hoes and carrying a s mall black bag tries to "lose" himself in a crowd, he's ah" ays spotted. ything out of balance: ALMA THOMAS' CARE BRANCHES OUT "It's rewarding," Alma says, "to realize that your efforts don't stop here. In a few years today's seedlings will be part of a big California forest-like children being sent out into the world to grow up." 1. Turnstiles in supermarkets would have to be heated. The simple truth is. nudity is impractical. Face it. We live in a wicker-c h a i r -n i nt.'-months -of- winter-h a vc ·the· c11rrect -ch an{?<'· world. If you don "t bdiew it, w;k yourself: Would you hire a man who didn't have a pocket to carry h1s Social Sl•curity card in? 2. Pickpockets would starve. 3. Mr. Blackwell would have to amend his li st and come out with th e Ten Wors t -Undressed Women in America. Horoscope: Gemini - A ft•w unclothed ()<'rsons have gotten temporary work by run- ning across a football field dur- ing a .1-"{ame or appearing unex- pectedly at awards ceremonies, but it's seasonal work. 4. Dis ney movies in which animals appeared with clothes on would have to have parental guidance and discretion. Relationship Intensifies Would you date a man who had - to carry his American Express card behind his ear'! The country jus\ isn't J?Car<.'d toward people who are un· clothed. If we were lo "~o native·· it would throw evl·r· 5. Cher would have to wear puffed s leeves a nd cover her navel to get attention. WEDNESDAY, J ULY30 By SYDNEY OM ARR A RIES (March 21- April 19): Questions con- cerning home, marriage arise. Cycle is such that you do best by getting to heart of matters. Stand tall for principles but make intelligent con- cessions. Would you marry a man who checked into a m otel without lug- gage? 6. A common Band-Aid would be considered costume jewelry. But worst of all, most of us would be greeted not with "How are you ?" but "Whal Hap- pened?"' I couldn't stand that. Burning Desire Habit Snuffed Out The number or women who smoke has doubled in the last eight years. But apparently not all of them light up and like it. M an.v of them want to quit. That's the judgment or the pro- ducers of public TV's Feeling Good, and they have good reason to think so. They received 20,000 requests for "Quitter's Kits" offered free on an episode that dealt with the dramatic increase in smoking among women over the past ten years. The kit included a self-test to help people find out what kind or s mokers they are and various items on how to quit. The m aioritv of the rCQuests were received withm a few days after the broadcast and quickly exhausted CTW's limited supply. The pro~ram. titled You've Come A Long Way ... Maybe, h05ted by Dick Cavett, pointed out that since the sur- j?con general's report that smoking is hazardous lo health, smoking among men h as remained constant. But lfO.FFRL'S UPHOLSTERY '#MeVOllW_. ....... 1 tll H.-i>or It.cl. more women are s moking ~ double the number of eight years ago. CTW, the show's producer, reported requests for kits from all 50 states. They came from women on behalf of themselves and from wives and children who wanted their husbands or parents to stop smoking. One lette r said: "I am 13 years old and I would like to send for this quit· ting kit because when I gel older I pro-- bably will start smoking and· would like lo stop." Many requests came from people who were concerned about a loved one. "I applaud your eHorts to eliminate smoking from the realm or 'ultra chic' experience in the minds of so many of today's American women," wrote a young man Crom New York. He requested a kit for "so- meone very special to me." . A desperate plea came from one viewer: "Please send the Quitter's Kit. HELP!!!'' cardin offers printed wool dress in below the knee l ength. Coth W.-541-02st ANTIQUES SHOP Hip Fashions l Q.OSIH~ OUT SALE LAST WEEIC Fumiture - China • Silwr FANTASTIC IUY'S . COHSIGHMEMT. L11>. 41731atSt., Newport Be•ch Line Long 673·295 I PARIS (UPI> This is the year of the derriere at Pierre Cardin. The designer·s winter high fashion collection stuck to Paris's lube look so closely t hat every bone and curve showed in his bottom ·hugging rib-knit skirts. Tops were very wide and blousy with wide s hort sleeves, 1riving th<.' Cardin mannequins a T· shape. One stunner wu o chocolate-colored rib- knit skirt that lookerl glued on. It waa so tight iu wearer had to bobble down the runway. Cardin '• U,hur skirtl hit a hand's width below the knee . OtherwlllB hemlinea ll'l his collection ' wandered from just below the knee to the ankle. IV . 1J Locations in ~f Hunti119ton IHch , • (Ill,,. AC(Mltl • Ofll¥trlet Elsewhere, the Tor· rente salon featured lac· quered satins. One stun· ·.'l PRESCRIPTIONS &.t i .. """ .-,,_, ner had a gunmetal-gray . "'"''"'._ skirt with a copper-hued , 'l ~ 1 blouse. 1 A s light rise in the ~ ! value of the dollar over :.~0-.~.:_,0fl l the past month lent hope MMtOVll ••._ .... ~.,a 1 hi h ( h• d AMILTO .. H l ·•UJ MIUIO .. ~ among g · as ion e-~'"'"°' eu en.-, s1J?ners that the Paris ~~ :..;..s:-• .,,_. ;41#' , • wmter collections would not collapse in economic 'disaster. Designers Yves Saint Laurent, Givenchy and Scherrer said their buai· ness has spurted upward this year because oil-rfch Arabs are buying custom-made c reations in the Paris salons. Single Servings Cooking for one c•n be fun. \ttedn••d•J• lnth• DAILY PILOT of Banana Chips! TAURUS (April 20· May 20 >: What appears a setback is merely a tern· porary delay. See beyond the immediate. Perceive potential. Eschew get- rich-quick schemes. quick schemes. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): E xcitement, roman- tic interlude. crea- tive projects and fnendsh1p-lhese areas are featured . R e la· tionship is intensified. CANCER (June 21· July 22): You are given test -and you can suc- cessfu l 1 y meet challenge. Finish what you start-expand horizons, core of opera· tions. . LEO (July 23-Aug . 22): New approach brings best res ults . Calling, writing coul d waste time. Be selective, in· dependent and creative. Find different course of action. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Gain shown t hrough consolid a lion . Pull together loose ends. Be aware or budgetary re- quirements. · LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Lie low where de· tails arc concerned. Means"wait to check fine points. forces now tend to be scattered . You could be going in too many directions. SCORPIO (Oct. 23· Nov. 21 ): Much that 1s obscured is due to be clarified. Key is pa· lience, persistence and an outline of eventual goal. You gain flashes of insight. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Be prepared for questions, answers, special reque&ls. Ope n dialogue with member of opposite sex who means much lo you. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Home life, domestic a djus tments , special luxury item purchase-these are spotlighted. Be a com parison shopper. AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 18): Travel plans require review. Check costs, reservations. Be s ure you know what you're getting, for how much and for how Jong. PISCES (Feb. 19· March 20): You get windfall -back pay, past credit due and-the l i ke . Unusua l , un · orthodox events, pro· cedures dominate. If today is your birth· day you have good sense of humor, somewh at of a weight problem, you arc artistic. fond of theater, a dramatic, dynamic in· dividuat who is ex- travagant, magnetic and stubborn. CHILDREN'S SHOES Unbelievaltle Prices I· .Fl•AL MARKDOW•S BUSTER BROWN • KEDS • CHILD LIFE SANDALS • BERNARDO • STEPMASTER • DRESS SHOES • OUTSTANDING SELECTION OF STYLES & SIUS Reqularly to 5 19 $ f'l.IASL AU SALIS M4A1-NO UCHAMGIS 01 18UHDS (JIJ,. wtv,rf- 1 {9'Jo.TWEN'S IOOTERY .. F••hlon laland1 Newport lle11Ch I BOOMER ~~·(. 1otSVA{ ~1G6lf r" GOIN6 OU1 Wlf~ -r~ eo(S TUMBLEWEEDS by Wrn. F. Brown and Mel Casson l Alt hl 5114C~ &IMt~ ~Q n.1£ ~ e'le~ lUAH1' ro (,() M wrr~ 1~ fOV't? / by Tom K. Ryan A'f l..ASi! A FAMll-IAR FACE! IT'S 'TliE 1..1rn.~ INVIAN MUTE:! SA¥, SHORTY, l'M r..osr OUT ~E, r..ow ON SUPPl..IES, AND 6fT'flN<1 I VESrERA~. FUNKY WINKERBEAN I NEE:P AWICE. by Tom Batiuk I "THINK ~AT COMING TO ENGLAND W11H ~I& lE.ACHERS lClJR ~p WAS .REAU..£.> A ~RERT IDEA,ANN I l DON'T KNOW, RITA ···I'M A "-liiL.E. Ol&APPOIITTED ! -rnEt.> CERTAIN\..<,) OO~'T5EEM 10 HAVE. DONE. MUCH R>R . "THE Bl~NNIA\..f FIGMENTS ... :THE~ CEA\ENT INVE~TfD ·~STRUTS TO L£Ff SIDE OF" FUSELAE>E ... TO ..x:>IN (A) ~R ID TH!: (.-\\) 1-K>RIZCtffAL $fABILIZER Mb LINE UP TiiE T'l\O lAIL 51.0r5 .. NANCY NANCY, MEET ME ON THE CORNER--- ! HAVE A SURPRISE FOR YOU , -. . . . .... ~ ...... . f' ... .,h .......... ,,.,, ........... - ·TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ~CROSS 1 01ess ~ 11use1IH 9 Boot.of m•PS 14 AllAl\tl•e< 1 S Molten rcx:k 16 Meatd15h 17 Lenoth unit 18 ··-h•m heAdk>ng" 19 Suspensetul 20 Utopian 22 Warmed bet0<eh'lld 24 H~11G character 2e Olrec11011 or movement 11 Customary time 29 ll\$8"8 30 Llght 1efreshmen1 3.l A•olded one·s worll 37 Becom,. withered 38 Saflle 39 Light ,1ro11e ~S1on1t~ 41 Cod'• 1ei.1tve 42 ll\s«:I dlSCOUl~S 44 F '" bt'hlnd 45 M•e lllCe 46 Study •7 L'nou•ol Old •9 ·--·toe 53 Ot-111oytd a g1eal numt>er 57 Otn 58 In p1eferenco to !>!I Goll club 8t Barren 82 MllSltal symbols 63 Sulfr1ge 64 Lo0g1n9 1led 65 ReQar<11no 66 In lldd•l•on 67 R1oe on snow DOWN 1 StrMll urchin 2 Ammonia compound 3 COl\llols 4 Inhaling al\d ... 11allng 5 F111m1'5 husband 6 lncllnf'O passage 7 )lot concealed 8 Ullllly°I i C!COlder 2 WOldS 9 like care of 10 Goon fool 11 B111ol llvff 12 Chu1ch recess 13 r e•t•hled ovule Yes1erday·s Puzzle Solved AC A'~ p I 8 I 0 s p A T -"A N T A J.l J..I A I lo A ( s T C S I c 0 0 p -" A I H S H C L T C ". N I p p I H C L 0 v ( s •c RA H E S H A 0 A " E A l •T 0 II -" ~ •-s I RI E II S 0 H C R E ~-· P RI£ c £10 (. ! ( A . p • I l ( l u 0 [ s-P E A R I~ i A 1u• I' I B ' l 0 A y lllA 111 u 1 It• Is l ~ l 11 I I' I B I IL I I H I I " p A s s [ 1•1" I' IL I£ L I~ E Ell T • 111 R I' 11 IS K I H IR [ 11 T A ll,1 I' II Is I c I A , ( 0 01 A S 21 ·-· 1J1n· •3 Permit Mental •5 Mos! 1nslllul1on submlu1ve 23 Lelluce unit '1 Ma~e more 25 Piece of 11oor gay cove11ng •8 Pertumery 28 Occurring llQu•ll 0¥81 and o•e< 50 Auslrtan JO Stare Abb<. region· Var. 31 Asra S1 In Pflvacy 32 Son of Zeus !11 Aellt\qu•shed 33 U s .can 53 Ame11can monetaty un•I aulllO< 3A O~llG ~ Btac~. hlghltght Poet 35 Oeslrt greatly SS Pigeon 36 -snslO<l sheller 37 AlllS • 2 WOfd5 56 Moise Code 40 Mu1deled units •2 Potyl\eStan 80 11\diating chestnut ""'°'n n;ame PEANUTS 7. H by Dale Hale by &ni~ Bushmiler. Then trouble came through the door. Her eyes were like marigolds. JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH l'M 601H6 T'O TEL.L MMtGIA TO QUIT ~IHO Mf AKOUNO !! DICK TRACY THE FORMER OWNER TRIEO TO SEU. THE WHOLE MOUNTAIN TO A QUARRY -HO SALE. STONE's TOO SOFT. .... TU!ldly. Juty 29. f97S DAILY PILOT ~ DOOLEY1S WORLD DR. SMOCK GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS ·: WE FVlJNf' A GOLF OUCt< EC.b 1 .. Tt~l-I '1\.0f l !:>~ ~·Alf' IJ J t..,,i\l ON 11, If WOllLD llA1UI I HOM~ 1"0 A Gl.-ASS OF CHeAF=' SHE::RRY' ANP eePPY-eY'e ""7·29 ... --------...J ·: by Charles M. Sct..11 ----------..--....,.----~ '{OU CANT WRITE STOl?tES A60UT A r'R~TE OHECfl\IE WHO WORKS IN MINNEAAXIS . ~D\ILVTH? .. '· by Herold Le Doux: -;f:'AROIP .. -Po" I"' 'f.-1-2~ by Rodger Bradfield .- ••• / -; • .J Ill t.\A''I l~f GULLll\LL, P,UI Hf~ NICL ANO WA~M ! by Georqe Lemont by Rodger Bollen - "I'm only lcllmi: you th l'. Alm.1. llcc:m~e you're ltl.c me-~ you he.tr 11.llc go"'"·'' d11c,n't go any further " OF COIA~~! HOweve~, ONE O.N tJE FHrM ••• by Mell -ANO 5TIL.t.. 9c OPEN TO ?IAGGE~TION,. ----------..--7-1.~ by Chester Gould DEHHIS THE MENACE ' I 1 DAil Y PllO l l "'"'• . J"' 29. ,.,. I Mµsical, Comedy at 2 Colleges Orange Coast College's 20th annual sum mer musical t akes the local stage spotlight this week, while comedy reigns at the main theather on the Golden West College campus. • "Cabart-t" continues a long tradition of OCC musicals at the Costa Mesa college, opening Wed- nesday for a limited four-day run. Meanwhile, the Huntington Beach institution plays it strictly ror laughs with Woody Allen's "Don't Drink the Water." runnin g on the same Wednesday-through· .Saturday schedule. Other coastal playhouses also will have attrac- tions on t he boards this ~eek , in the biggest we('kend for su mmer theater locally. THt: ORANGE COASTCollege musical, ltadi· tionally a sellout, focuses this year on prewar Berlrn night life and the glittering "Cabaret" where a young writer (Richard Rowland) m eets a sultry smgl'r < !'\t ar1a na Renee) amid the upsuri{e of .. "'llaZlsm . Intermission Tom Titus Fridnyi and 3 o'clock SUndays. ''Godspell" is at the Third Step Theater, 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa (reservation 646-1363) while "Nanette" is at Sebastian's, 140 Avenida Pico, San Clemente (re· servations 492·9950). Also on stage Thursday through Satur day is "The Prisoner of Second Avenue" al the San Clemt!nte Communi ty Theater , 202 Avenid a CabriJlo, San Clemente . Curtain is 8:30; reserva- tions 492·0465. I I Curtain ts 8 30 nightly for "Cabaret" with all .-----------~~~~I S('ats 10 the college auctit.orium reser ved. ,\t Goldt•n West. Mark Shaw and Joan Hagerty take the leading roles of a middle-aged couple caught 10 turmoil or another political stripe, taking rdugl' in a n American embassy from the secret 'lOIJ ce of an l ron Curtain country. The comedy goes on stage at 8:30 p.m. Wednes- day throu~ h Saturday at the Community Theater on the Gothard Street side of the GWC campus. Heservat10ns may be made by calling the college at 892-7711 ELSEWHERE ON THE Orange Coast, the area·s two professional t heaters are offering musica l productions. "Godspcll" contin ues in its second staging at South Coast Repertory, while Sebastian·s West Dinner Playhouse has "No, No, Nanette'" in residence. Both shows run Tuesday through Sunday, with the SCR attr action being presented at 7 a nd 10 p. m. Big Actors, Small Roles Q : About ho~ much or a fee do stars receive for brief cameo roles in films like "The Greate st Story Ever Told," "It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World " ''Airport 1975,'' "Around the World in 80 Days>• etc? -Howard Baldwin and Brian Piispanen, Balboa Island, C'a lif. A: It varies. Some stars do it for healthy ex- posure. Others as a favor to a friendly producer. Many (\\hO believe that if you're an actor you 've got to keep :.icting) get paid SAG (Screen Actors Guild ) minimums. Still others let their agents negotiate a mutu:.illy satisfactory fee, usually below 'Glad You Asked That' by Marilyn and Hy Gardner what they'd accept for more important roles. Producer M 1 k e Todd was so well liked -and sue h a great salesm an he con\'inced ma ny names that being in "Around the World in 80 Days" would be fun and that "money -was no object.·· Consequently he doled out dollars meagerly -but gifted certain bard-to-get names with cars, expensive TV sets or other honorariums in the form of wanted m erc han· -dise or products. Q : If the enjoyable musical "PurUe" is sold to the movies, which adre6s is likely to play the lead? -Marie DuBois, Garden City, N.Y. A: Ri ghts to the show are already in the bands of 20th Century Fox. bul casting is a ver y iffy ques- tion. If the decision is made to go for a lesser-known name rath('r than an t!slablished box office attrac- tion, Patti Jo just might gel the nod. Com ing from a dot on the map identified On small type) as Oller Creek. Fla., pretty Patti was plucked out of the ob· scurity of a smoke -fi lled night club by the Broadway s how's producer . She wo" huzzahs from audiences and critics in New York, the n in Philade lphia and Miami. Q: My fa ther used to sing me a song years ago titled "Wh en the Roll is Called Up Yonder." Can you tell me " he n it was written and who wrote it? - Rose V. Cre~t-r , Bossier City, La. A: Both the words and mus ic to this hymn were 1 wri tlen by J am es ;\1 Black and oublished in 1893. Q : I'm t uriou' about Jim Ha rtzo( the "Todav" show. Is tw rnarrit·d'! Does he han-any children?·- T.H .. Charlotlt•. }Jich. A: y, . .., to hoth questions· .Jim . 34, has three children ~ oungl'st i , oldest 13. I hs wife Norma l Send your questions to Hy Gardner, ''Glad You Asked That." care of this newspaper, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. I 92626 M arilyn and fly Gardner will answer.as many ques- tions as thetJ can in their column. but the volume of mail makes per$onal replies imposS1ble. '*'" ...... -JAQ MM:~ , .. -n4f LAST DIT Aa.• 1 .. l f:it ijp iQ!r.jH One gf GUr ""' -~ ,, Dlnesaurs ls Missing JAQI .. IC HOUOtO "REBEL >sa ROUSERS" 7 11 ,_ __ • ., FOUNTA .. W.LLEV • .. ()()11 ..... "•'•~· •Jt-•toO "RETURN TO MACON COUHTY" u~.n JACll "ICHOUOtt "REBEL ROUSBS" , .... -.- GENERAL CINEMA CORPORATION THEY TRIED EVCRYTHINC TO STO, YOU FROM SEEING THESE AOUL T CLASSIC$ -BUT OVER ON£ MILLION ,EOPlf DID IT ANYWAY .•• Deep . Thrut ... THC COMPl£T[ UNCUT ORIGI "' ""1f'Ul; llU#I ... , ..... _ ......... , .. ............ fri.6111 ~~~ .A·--··-·.,.,. . .-.-, l'\.'J.A ._.... -·•O. ,. .. '" ...... ,.,, .. I CHAILTOM MISTOM & ALL STAI CAST s..•~ wftll .. STIUMI "RETURN TO MACON COUNTY11 'L I D O Ht w•on HACH 0 I •11 I UO ~I "SURFING & SKATEBOARDS" 4 Dynamite New Surf & Board Subjects By Gary Wurster Plus Our All-Time Moat Popular Surfing A lm m\'I~-·~ ~~s EHi Cout Hwy "';;-::J, CO•ONA DIL MA• ta.DOYEi! PETER SELLERS trGI 41.. Return to Macon County ~ ...... _MINI 01111n D•tly • U ·lO Mon tf\ru Fri to 2:00 PM · "·2S THE CITY SHOPPING CENTR E ORANGE •532·6721 ~ CITY CENTRE CINEMAS en Bargain :\1atinees $1. 50 Tll 2:30 Senior Citizens 1. 50 at all times SOUTH COAST PLAZA THEATRES SAA OCEOO FW'f. AT BRISTOL -COOLEY .. ..... l:JIW!f- 4:11-e:H ""' ""THI !low.el UOMts· ,, ..... ,..__ .&.f:J .... ~ .. "COOLEY HIGH" tlM W~lll ... I~ '1SMllE" 7.19' .. WfS--1:1•1·1MI .. MAMOIMGCr 6:2 .. t•...zt Wfl-l:J9. 6:11-19:81 Thelerrilyi11g motion picture from tM terrifying No. I be1t M&r. MWS IAIHASTHl$AH0 JAMIS CAAH 'WH .. Y LADY" Cl"GI °"THI FOITUMI'" -Si&FOlp WIHS" Ill "TOMMY11 "'EAllTHQUAKE" .. JUGGERNAUT" CPGt '7• YOY Mil Of SINIAD"' "'WISTWOILD" CP'GJ "OMCI IS MOT EHOUMr llJ "'BGH SANCTION" llJ 17-.1.~~f r;:~ -~,·-~ a n,!l ::·w~··r::.: :f'Jf~.··:1•\Al .:-:.: l:.-~'tti~ ._ij:\At ~yjft.j\" ~I i~ r :<~: i,;.\.:':~:!j .. ~l\: \, .~; -~· • 11----------------------- ·· ·\-·~·. • \" I STARTLING PROOF THAT WE ARE NOT ALONE IN THE UNIVERSE . ..-by CFI •HI •110 I• \L""' (11\\,t( rt< h II\ '" . .... I ...... _ -·---rc1* pt-by AIM~ ,,_..,.,. Wftn.ft-clir-by '* ••-'okJ -·-11, -S.11•"9 ...:=:· ... {CD} (I\~\~ ~-. l"ICIVll~ SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT STARTS TOMORROW! ONE WEEK ONLY! NO PASSES ACCEPTED s .. Theatre Directories For Showtimes -.S'IOlC--~, ... ~c..,.c°"""'°"' ,,. .... ,., P\AIA l ...... l""I ..... •l'llOOl u.-wooe o..- ... l""'!lloot• •1't-91')f C:"9SlC,,.. ... lll•W> -MAU.C-•>IOl<O -().. ..... ~ !>\61Ql1• (PG) lll'GI 4THE OTHER SIDE OF THE MOUNTAIN' CO.HIT JAllEIMASON .. the lllTUllll oftllePlnk Pantl9~' IMtd •ffi11t JKJ ~ CO·HIT AT ONEMA WE "MIXED COMPANY" -·-\041 ... _, ... .._,'"' ~Ill• ~"""""'C-0... \-C19MA WIST w.-.. ... ..,_) HllMWAYJtCU• ..,_ ~ u.-.o.i.toM.odo '11- ~S...0..-4'1'1«fio· 644-0760 THU•·Flll·MON·TUES ,, .... ,. WEO-SAT·SUN 1:~:1 .. 7: .... :»-MIOHIGtn' ZCl~~1~1~1TER tot1\••ttci-ru 979.4141 THE GRAND ADVENTURE Of THE YEM ZCl~.~~.~.~~1TER ... U '"MCbltll 979-4141 ~WBlllOOI _...,_, ..... _.. IJM40 JAMF5 CAAf.J ,. ~ A NOfWAN JE'W15()N film "P.Ol.l..ffiDA1. JOHN l-0.JSEJMN ·~/>&.NO· OiN OECK · WCfilGJNN AWaA H£1«l(£)'·1W11WV. OOffiiAM. rw..PH r<JO-WlJ)5C't.I ~tirWIWAM HAAl\ISOll ·-..Ctrddol>I AtO'l.£ PJ1.£V1N "-""'°--~~·Plod.adcrc:t~t>r~J~ WED., THURS., FRI., MO N. -TUES. 7:30 & 10 P.M. SAT./SUN. -2:15-4:4S.7:30-10:00 12 MIDNIGHT SAT. EDWARDS NEWPORT CINEMA FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT CEHTH (R) HEAi COAST HWY. & MACARTHUR 11 ... 644-0760 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER MW7IO HUMTIHGTOH (~) ~ CIHEMA Ka.CM 4f k.U\_..t 147-9608 847-60 17 "~line Susanm Once Is Not Enough'' ~ NewnNn in ··rhe 0.8'rnlna Pool" ~(PG) HARPER IS BACK! PLUS .,...,., tMlllclMpptng ..• tM llM'der tl1al. .• ..._,,. tN moat ..,.naeful •hocker ........ ~C~~.~.~.TU .. , ... ,tot(t•fll 979-4 141 --ltt•l-oi~1 .. \n.C8118 l92-44tl T~ey.July 29, 1975 OAIL y PILOT S5 Capt. Katz 'Renting' Adventure on High Seas ' ' ~llr Pllol Slaff PholH SLEEK 73-FOOT SCHOONER 'ASTOR' BUILT 50 YEARS AGO Skipper SeekJng Part-time Home In Newport Harbor By HlLARY KAVE 0to..o.11,1>1i.csutt According to Herbert Katz, a fellow who looks like a sea-going captain should look , the "Astor" ls no t you r run-of-the-mill transportation boat. "She 's ad venture on lhe high seas ••• an e legant vessel that restore3 the nostaleia of the sail· ing past," says the captain, 571 leani n g against red velvet cushions in the cabin below. CAPT. KATZ AND the sleek, 73-(ool schooner are docked in New port Harbor -the latest stopping point in a history that began SO years ago in Scotland. • Built in a shipyard in Fifeshire, the boat traveled to Australia. There, it was sold to the prime m inister's son, Peter Warner. w bo c ompeted in numerous yacht races. Fin a ll y, th e boat was purchased by her current owner. William Adolph, a physician from Thousand Oaks. CAPT . KATZ FOUND t he schoone l""docked in Oxnard, rare- ly sailed and sorely in need of re· pa ir. He con vinced Dr. Adolph to let him skipper the craft and says the d octor rarely comes aboard now. "T he hull and mas t were sound, but s he was getting tat· tered," said Capt. Katz. Together with a crew of four young me n, t he s kipper s~nt the pa st year in San Diego r e- furbishing the boat. T he repair job cost about $15,000, a nd the market value of the boat is said to be estimated al a little more lhan $100,000. THE CABI N, FILLED with red velvet-cus hioned furn iture and shiny deep mahogany wood, sleeps 21. East Indian lt'akwood and fir make up the planks in the deck. "The origina l workmanship on Ahzug Backed by NOW Women's Group Given OK to Enter Politics From Wire Services The National Or ganization for Women endorsed Rep. Bella Abzu g, (0-N.Y.) for t he Democr atic nomination for U.S. senator next year in New York state, Karen Oecrow, national president, said. · She s aid it w as the first time the national organization has en- dorsed a eandidate. She ex- plained that NOW obtained a rul- ing from the J nternal Revenue Service allowing il to endorse candidates without losing its tax- exempt st atus as long as its political activity did not exceed half its activities. * Grand Ole Opry star Lester Flatt, who r ecently underwent ope n heart s u rgery, was r e- admitted to St. T homas Hospital in Nashville after complaining of breathing d ifficulties. A hospital spokesman s aid the 61-year-old bluegr ass s inger was confined lo a special care unit where doctors were monitoring heart functions. His condition was listed as fair. * Rep. Morris K. Udall, a can- d idate for t he Democratic pre- sidential nomination, is suffering from viral pneumonia, an aide said. "He's still In some discomfort, but he's m uch better, .. said Bob ( __ P_EO_P_L_E _] Neu man , U d a ll 's press seeretary. Doct o rs origin ally thought Udall ( D-Ari z.-) had kidney stones. He was admitted to Good Samaritan Hospital in Phoenix Saturday night after complain- ing of lower back pains. That diagnosis was ch anged SUnday to a gall bladder inrection. • Even Knie ve l limped in on his diamond-studded cane to Dan- ville, Ill. and s aid if he fails to leap 13 buses next Septem ber in England, he will hang up his motorcycle. Knievel is recuperating from his last, bone-shattering attempt to jump 13 buses al Wembley, England, this year. * Sen. Lowell We icker (R·Conn.) and Rep. Bill Alexander <D· Ark.) will spend part of the August congressional recess in over their heads. For three days t hey will be 60 feet under t he Atlantic Ocean as part of a scientific experiment , the Nation a l Oceanic and At- mospheric Administration said. Weicker and Alexander will descend in the P er:ry Hyd ro-Lab, S20~000 S.obs idy Schools Get Grant For Disadvantaged T he Newport-Mesa Unified School District b as r eceived a $20,000 feder al grant to pay for spreading a unique program for educationa lly disadvantaged stu- d ents throughout the country. The d istr ict progra m lo be duplicated for use elsewher e is called P roject Catch-Up, also funded by federal money .. Both the ori1lnal Project Catch-Up and the newlyfUnded ''Inform ation Swap Meet" are under the direction of Fay H a rbis on , th e d istrict's coordinator of special projects. Project Catch-Up la a prolJ'am that a llows t he district to provide intensive, individualized instruc- tion for students with gaps in their educational background. Laboratories equipped wllh special teacbln1 aides are locat- ed at Pomona, Wilson, Whittier. Monte Vl1t1 and Rea schools. The stude nt-teacher ratio ls about one teacher for every four 1tuden t1. Math and read1na are the main 1ubjecll tau,bt ln the special half ·hour classes. Mrs. Harbison hu already re- ceived nationa l recocnlllon for Project Catch.Up. Lut )'NI' it wu duplic ated at a half-doreo ICbool cUltrictl >n the Kld'"'t. .protram WUl De dupllcaa.d.ancl pro1ra~ will be d lplicaa..d and may be used in any school dis- trict in the country. Mrs. Harbison will prepare a brochure and cassette r ecordings and will also offer in-service training sessions at the district offices. The pro ject .. Information Swap Meet" is expected to get under way as soon as the fUnds become a vailable in September. ANIMAlogic1$ ~ -.., .. \ c[} a cylindt'r 16 feet long and 8 feet - in diameter. On Aug. 3 they, alonl? with Howard Pollock of NOAA and Robert Wicklund, the lab's manager. will conduc t the experimen ts off the bahamas. * Don Snyde r, who compar es his spitting technique with the de- livery of a baseball pitcher, set a world distance r ecord a nd reclaim ed the title in the national tobacco s pitting contest at Raleigh, Miss. The 28-year-old livestock in- s pector from E upora, using the "two-finger pucker" method, squirted a brown glob of tobacco juice 31 reel, 1 inch before a crowd or a lmost 8,000 gathered in a farm pasture. Snyder s a id skeptics doubted that a spitter would ever break the 30-foot mark , but "I knew I could do it. Nobod y has my style; J have a lot of arch in my back and a lot or height in the spit." * Televis ion detective Lt. Kojack paid a visit to Mayor Abraham D. Beame as preparations began for the filming or a sequence of the television series "Kojack" in the City Hall ar ea. "I'm hoping that you're not caught in the layoffs," Bea me told actor Telly Savalas, refer- ring lo the city's fiscal crisis and layof(s o r police and ot her m unicipal workers. The mayor presented the tall, bald actor with a lollypop -his dn-camer a tradem ark -and the pair reminisced about boyhood days on Manhattan's Lower E ast Side. * Rock s inger Mick J agger celebrated his 32nd birthday with a concert at Indiana University, the only college campus on his current tour . * A mistrial has been dedared in singer Smok ey Robins on's $500,000 raise arrest damage sui t against the city of San Francisco. The jury deliberated nearly four hours before telling Superior Court judge Carl AIJen Utal seven of them thought Robinson had a case and live did not. A vote of at least 9 to 3 is needed in a civll t'rial. The black entertainer claimed his career s uffered because or emotional a nguish resulting Crom bis mistaken arrest seven years ago. * Special braces are bein1 de· signed to reduce the possibility that Gov. George C. Wallac:e. who is partially par alyzed, will br eak a leg, a Birmingham newspaper s a id. · The plastic braces would be worn by Wallace only on special occasions, the Blrminf ha m News said. Wallace was shot dwinl the 1972 presidenllal campaian and has been par alyzed since. A fracture in Wallace's s hln was discover e d r ecently. and doctors pul the aovemor in a hlJ>· to-toe ei5l. "I SPENT 20 YEARS stack owuy in Riverside -tryinc lo sluy uway from the water, .. the captain said. "Now I know l made a mist a ke . 1 belong at sea.:• It wasn't until he lost two fingers in an on-the-job accident that Capt. Ka t % d ecided t o change his career. At age 52. he secured his master·s pape rs from the Coast Guard and began his sailing career as a capta in. Capt. Katz sa ys he was at the helm of several sailing vessels before latching onto the Aslor. One of them was the Araner - ov. ned by film director J ohn f'ord and used in Lhe movie '·Donovan's Reef." NOW THAT T HE captain has l<ikcn over command o f the Astor, his biggest problem is finding a permanent slip. The vessel is temporarily docked in John Wayne's slip for the '"Wild Goose" al Lido Yacht Anchorage. Soon, however, the Goose will return and the Astor "ill have lo move on. CAPT. HERBERT KATZ, 'DECK HANO' POOPSIE Sea-going Crew Renting Out Astor -At $450 Per Day "Finding a s lip for a big schooner is no simple matter," says the captain, thoughtfully stroking his bristly beard. .. nut, I want lo stay in this harbor. at least through the sum- mer:· he ~ddcd. this boat 1s unbclil'vably beautiful." says the c<.1p lain, ·•and m y cr ew has returnl'd it to its ori~inal state ... The boat is 73 feel long with a 10-foot bow sprit and 1s 16 feet wide. The main m ast towers 85 feel above the deck. has spent his entire life a l sea. His face is tanned and creaM.'<.I by the wind and sun. lie sports a full beard and thick, gray hair. CAPT. KATZ'S P LANS are to charter the boat at a r ate of about $450 per day. When sailing ('Onditions are right, the Astor spl'eds through lht: watl•r al 10.5 knots. Capt. Katz said . And on u bro<.1d reach, it goes even fo::.ll'I" Despite h is nautical ap- pearan ce, C <.ip t. Katz has pursued a professional capt•.11n's career for only the past five years. althoug h he"s been sailing since he joined the Navy in 1937. l'\oling raised eyebrows at the hefty price, tht: captain quickly explained, "After all, we're not selling a boat ride from one place to another. We're selling adven- ture on the high se;.is. CAPT. KATZ LOOKS like he The captain spent many Yt'ars as a landlubber. working <•'i a general contractor in nivt•r:-,id<.'. and then Hawaii. before return ing to the sea. "A trip on t his boat makes peo- ple come alive." P UBLIC NOTICE 3''1• FICTITIOUS BUSI NESS NAME STATEME NT T"" follow1n9 Pt"rM>M "'' <101nq bu" ne\\ a:. M & H INVESTORS, 115 V1<J Un 01ne Newpor I Bei!C h. CA 921>1>() E<lw•n A Mt:YHVP. 115 Vl<t Undu·•·. NewPQ•l S.:otch, CA <n•l>O R .. v Hdas. 101 Outn11ou D••" Corona~! ~r. CA lhh bu~1n~\\ ·~ condu(tt o 0 1 o 7rwr•lp.>rtner\hlp [d 'Altn A M<~'-4 '"'' P UBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT Ttw fo11ow1n9 person 1> doonq buSo· ne\\ ;n PINE FOREST CUN SHOP. 708-I Newport Blvd .. Costa Mew. CA '71677 Frotnk R. Aiello, 74114 Newport BIY<I., Costa Me!oll, CA 92627 Tnl\ business '' tOnc:lu<ted bv an 1n 01v10 ,,h)1I Fr•""'-R.A•ello lti1\ \l4't~me"1 wa\ f1llid wiu1 ttwt (Quntv C.1erk 01 or..,nge Counly on July 10. t91S. Tn1\ 'ldlemt"nt ¥¥dC. 1.tro w ith u~ County C.1• rk of Or.on11• C.ountv on July F067' Pub11~d OranQ<" Co.1st C>.loly Pilol, FOlti July IS, 22, 2'1, olnd Augu•t S. 197S 7SU IS 1. 1'1S Puolo\tltd or~n~ COd'I o .... 1y Pilot Julr 1~. 21, ?9, and Augu•t ~. t~IS P UBLIC NOTICE 1603 /) ---,,.-=,-.,,.~~~----Ft CT ITIOUSBUSINESS P UBLIC NOTICE l4SU STATEMENT O" ABAN DONMENT OF USIE 0 1' FICTITIOUS IUSIN ESS NAME Tht 1011owl119 ~·sons have abal'dOned lhe u~ ot the toctotlous busint•s n.tme BURNS MARIN E ENT ERPRISES. 1110 C.•anvllf• Drove, Ne10tpor1 BeilCh, CA. 91b60 Tiie tlcllllous bulln~s naml! referred to •Dove W&l filed in County on ll·J0.13. Friink Burns, Inc., 1110Gran vlltc Drive, Nt>wport Beach, CJ\. 97!>60 1hls buslneu wa s condu<ltd by 11 cor poor a lion. rRANK BURNS, INC By ; Oona Id C. Mc O•noel Secretary Thi\ stale~nt w•s fllt<t ..,.th ll>t County Cler• 01 Orange County on J- 7', , 97S F1'MO Pvbll\hed Orange Coast Oallf Pilot, July IS, 27. 29, anc:1 AuguSI S, t91S 2fo01·1S NAME STATEMENT The following per~n '' <IOHIQ bu>1 l\el.Sa• MOOEL·TECH NIC.S. 3191 ·A Airport loop Or., Costa Mesa. Cahfornla 91621> Oouglas A. Yale\, 737•·E Eldl'n. Gcxta Me!oa. Califorruif 91627 Hus business is conducted by an in di vi dual Oou9l11\ A. Yate\ Thls \i.tomenl w<1s l1ttd wllh tile CDunty Cttrk ot Oranqe County on July 2, t97S. F4S-Publlshed Oranoe Coast Oaoly Piiot. Julv8. n. n. 1'1. 191S 101 ts P UBLIC NOTJCF. FICTITIOUS BUSI NEU NAME STATEMENT The following persons are domo bu•i ness as CREATION CAPTUR ED. S07 Orchid, Coron• def Mar, C•h orn111 ------------I m2s P UBLIC NOTICE David C Wf)n dworlh. J73' Po•nw1ha. Coron3 <!"I Mar. Olttorn,, 97US FICTITIOUS austMESS John T P.-r• •:J· Po•nl-r.lh•, NAMIE STATEMENT Corona°"! Mar, C.al•lornoa 'l71>n Tnt lotlowlng perM>ft os doing bus. Th1\ r.u"no~' '' <On<1ucte<1 by a nt\\ ,u general P•r1ner •hop. ORANCE COAST PROPERTY Oitvu1C. WM<lwortn MANAGEMENT SYSTE MS, 9967 ~ohnT Park ';!I ver Slrend, Hu"11notoo 6eech This stett..,,.,nt was toled wotn '"" C.alltornla (l)unty Ct~•k or Or•nge Counly on July Mlch•et Arthur Newmo"· 9967 2. 191S. Solnr !>lrand, Hunt1no1on Btacn F4S410 (.ellfornl& Publ>S~d Or11n11~ Coasl Daily Piiot. This bu•lness h conducttd bV an on l!!!!_t . IS. 22, 2'1. l'>IS 2457 IS dlvlduat -MlchatlA.Newmen PUBLIC NOTICE This llalemtnt was toled with 1"'1 ------------C.OUntv Cltrk Of Or•"9t County on July l'ICTITIOUS8USIN ESS 24, t91S. NAME STATEMEMT Fi'"I The tollowlno l)('r\on h doing busl· Pl.obllwd Or.&noe Cout Dally itilot. l'l!'ISas: July2',•n<1August S, 12, 19, 191S2187·1S SEAMSTERS UNION, 2tB A P UBLIC NOTICE Palmer Strttt, Co•ta Mesa, C..llfornla '17.627 TlmolhJ Palmer MacT •ooen. 118 A Palmer Sl ree t, Cost.ii Mosa, STATEMl!NTOI' AIANDONMIENT Calllornie91617 Ofl Ull! Oft Tn.s t>usr11ess is conducted by •n 1n. "ICTITIOUS IUSIHESS NAMIE dlvlOUat. T~ tollowl"9 person\ nave aban· T. P. MacT aooarr . donod tho uae of lt>o llctlllous buslnft• This st•ttment was toted with I,,.. Mme TAYLOR MADE MEAT COM. Counly Clf'rkol OrangeCounlyonJ11ly PANY, et 120t E. Fourth Streel, Sent• 1'. t'75. F~ "";iW<ti~:itlou\ business name ref..-~ P\lbtishe<I Oranoe Coast Deily Pllol. lo ebow wu fllllcl In Orenve Col.l>ly on July 2•, and Au9usl S, I?.''· 1'1S ttlHS March •, tt71. NI•"''" Jacobson, 12541 Foster Ro..i, Los Alamllos. CA P UBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT T~ tollowono P• • ~n ·~ d01"9 bu\1-ness .i~ 8UTCH"S WORLD OF SPOFIT, m11 Camino CaP1\!r<1no, S..n Juan Op1\trano C.iltlO• "" Edwon GMy H•ll. ~00 MdcKtnllc Pl , Col ta Mt\a, C"l!lornoa '1161~ 1 no\ bv\1ne~\ u ton<luc te<I by an on <11v1ouat Edw1nC.M y tfalt Tno\ sl.itemenl w.i, l!l~d w11n lht Counly Clerk ol Or 1nge County on July P UBLIC NOTICE FICT ITIOUS BUSINESS . NAME STATEMENT The IOllOWll"\Q P<'rSOI"\ IS <IOinQ busl· nessas TAYLOR MAD E MEl'T COM· PANY, 1101 E. Founr> ~llrtel, S..nt• Ana~ C.aflforn1a Marvin Car lis, 17070 Ot~. North Holly1NOOd. c"11fo,r11..t This bf.l~tne·•" is 1.oncsui.. ted by an .n- d1v1oua1. Mclrv1n Carli._ Ttw'". ~'d\PrT-f"nt ""'d~ filed ¥wilh the County Cltcrk. of Orange Counly on Jul'I' 24, 1'1S F~ 17,t9H . , Put>hsl\f'd Orange (cast Da 1y 1>11o1 FUM'-Jutv7'. otn<1 AuQu\I s ., 19 19H?ll!b-IS Put>tos~d Oranq,. C.oast Oaol'f Potot. · · "--July 27. 29. and August S, t2, 191S 2114-IS PUBLIC NOTICE 4Slll' NOTICE OF P UBLIC NOTICE TAUSTEE'SSA\~s.No.mJ ---------~--°"August IS, 191S, at' OOA M . O~l FICTITIOUS BUSI NESS SERVICE CO., a\ <luly •PPOintt-d NAMEST.ATEMENT Trusttt undtr and pursu•l"\I lo O.e<I or T~ lo1>ow1n9 P'' '>On b dOlng bu-5S-TrU\t ~cor<1tc1 July JI, 19n, as onst M S> as No 18606, in book 102•9, PM~ 10, ot Of· CONTINENTAL ENTERPRISES foclal Rtcord\ In lilt' olloC" ol '"" coun CO., t.eoo St Anarews Pl., Unit C, ~ti. ly Recorde• of Or•noe Counl y, And. C.at1lorn1., Calltornl<1, WILL !.ELL AT PUBLIC Jonn L. P,,llam. 114 Voa Lore•, AUCTION TO HIGHEST BIOOER NewPOr1 S..arh,C.ahtornoa. FOR CASH (payalllP al tome of !Mlle 1n This busone._ 1s con<lu<le<I by M\ In• :::~u';';,°~~:~:11~~1~;~~e.,d 1~1~':1of~ div1dual. COUl"\IY courthouSI'. on lh~ City ot !..lnta John L. ~llam Md. C.lllornlot, all roqnt, 1,11,, and in· This stole,,,,.nt w~s ltled W11h t,.,. 1eru1 con.eyed to and ,,0w hel<I by 11 Counly Cleo It 01 Or<1n9c-C.ounty on Jul., undl'r s.aod 1>4!ed ot l •ust ;,.. '"" pro~r-1. 197S. ty sllualtd on ~ch<I County an<I State F 45'111 dt!scrobe<l a\ PubllV>e<! Oranq .. COclsl Daily Pilot. Lot lot Tr•ct No 7381, on tht Coly a1 .July a. IS, n 19, t9H 241>7S CMla Mew. County or OrotnQe.Stateor C.iilltornla. H p'r rnap recor<leO on Book 70 P•~ JJ of Mosullaneous MdP•. ·~ lhe office of Ille County Recor<1er 01 Wl<ICounly. Ti>e l""' add res\ and other'°'"'""'°" dM1onat1on, ol an•. nl the r~.,1 prO!Jrrtr C)e~rlbe<l •l>Ovt' I\ purPOr1t<l IObe. 61SW. Wilson Slr••I Cost• M<!s.ii, C1111torn1• Tnt unclenlqnooo T • u\ll'f' d•1C1a;ms •ny h•bollty tor •ny oncotreClnessot the stre•I a<ldred<I find olher common <le \1gn•tton. tf •ny, \hO'flfn h~rti1n Sd•<I \.lit' .. ,11 t>t-m•<1e. but •olnout covenant or w•rrtlntv .. ••PtC~\ or .,,.. !>lied. r"Qar<lo"9 1111•. posse.s.on. orm· cumbrM\<.~\, to pay tM r•m.a1n1nopr1n C•Pal '>Um of'"' nol• !sl secur•dbV ...,.O OHd of Tru\t, w1tn lnterut Owreon. as P<'O••Oe<I on s•ld notels), advances. ti MY. undf'r llM! t~r ms of S••<I Oet'd of Trust, lets, Cl"IMQi'• •nd ti•~~ol 11"><' T<U\ltt and of the trust~ cruttcl by ~1<1 ~d of Trust. 1he t>eneflclaoy under s.tld DM!d ot Tru.i htretotore £•ecute<I •n<I <I<' livered to the unders1oned d ...,.,Hen Oeclarottion of Oe!ault 11n<1 O.m.tna ror Sale. and • written Nollce of Ol!'t11ull and El~c1lon 10 Sell. TM underlogno.'<l cau1.11d said Notice of O<!tault and [IM lion 10 !>ell 10 l>e r•cor<1e<1 In lht county """'" lht rul 1''01><'• ,, I\ IO«ll.O. Dale July 1', 191~ OSL Servltl' Co. a• ~1<1 Trustee, o, Louroi-s Ga•t•" tAuthor11e<1 SIQn•lurel Pubh\hed Orange Coot Oallv Pltol. Julv n , 1', •n<l AuQust S. 1'/S 2618 'S P UBLIC NOTICE 16416 FICTITIOUS IUSINESS NAME STATEMENT Tht totlowl119 per..,ns arc dotng bu<.i· neUo>\ MARI( SP EC IAL TIES, t180 Mt>nro111•, Cost• Ml'\ot, CA R.J.C. Enl~rpr oles, Inc., a P UBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSI NESS NAME STATEMENT "Tiit to11ow1n9 Pt"rwns are cso.ng bW.J- nes~ •s .. Ill C&L KREllT IONS 121 GllC JEV.ELRY MA.C E HS. 332 For~<.! A- No. 11, Laguna Beat C..or9" ChMlr' .-,.,mrr and Lond• Marie Kram40r. :WO S. Po~ SI . Or ..... Cal liornla '1"2066 T hos bus.nes; con<1uc tt-d fly • ~ral partne"nip. George C l..rolm4'r lhis state mcmt wa~ toled wllh the County Clerk of Or~n9e County on July II, t91S. ..... PubloSlled OranQP Coast Oalty Piiot, July 27. 29. an<1 A1.9ust S, 17, t'17S 711S-7S P UBLIC NOTICE "ICTITIOUS 9USIN IESS NAME STATE MENT The following persons M c clolnQ buSi· ness.s: VI LL.A MESA APAR"TMENT 1'11 C•ylon Or .. Cos Ill Mt"d• C"IHornl• '17.•26 Diane J. McC.,dle, 1'11 vyton Or., Colla Mes.a, C<1toforn1a 91~76 Allee" L. Sloler. ti 1 Morrl\l<JllW"t ~ne.Costa Mew. C.ahtorl"\la '121>'6 This business Is condu<l..:t b'f .tr> l11o <1iv1clu<lt. OlancJ Mc(ardl• This •l•l,.menl wa' l•l•d ""'" t~ Counly Cini! of Orotnge Counly on Jv4'1' U, t'1S. F4'0'7 Publlshecl Orange Cou l 01111, Polo!, Julr 1',•ncl AUQ\ISI 5, 12. 1q, 1•15 71..0.IS PUBLIC NOTICE Motrvln C•rl11, 12020 OtS090 S4rftt, No HOllJwood, CA. NOTICE TO CltEOITOIU C.lllltornoa corPOraloon, lllO MoMovo•. -~~=-=-~:--::-~=-=-==-=-=--SU .. EIUOlt COU llT OF THE ~t• Mew, CA SU,.IEltlOR COURT 0 F THE Thi\ 1111\lnen was conducted by .ii Per1ner1hlp 10.n•r•ll. Motrvln JecoblOn Motrvln Corlls STATE o" CALl,,OltNIA FOR T11111>Uslneu Is be1n9 (O,,dU<l9d by. STATE OF CALIFOR NIA FOlt THE COUNTY OF ORANGE COfPOretlon. T"E COUNTY OF OllA HGE .... ........ Ritl>.tn:I HotCkSIO<k, President .... A ...... 7 E!ilaleolAOELtNE T.McNEW.&1<4 Thi\ ll8l8'1"Wnt 111.0 with Ille County NOTI CE Of' HE A A ING Or Ftnl llnown es ADELI NE THOMPSOI" Clerll ol Or•nge County on . Jlll4l 11, "IETITION f'O lt Plt08ATI! 0" WILL Pl.obllSl\ltd Or11n90 Coasl Dally Piiot, McNEW, 0.<H~. 1'1S. ANO f'O R LETTERS TaSTAMl!H-July '2, 7', •nd Au9ust S, 12, 1'7S271HS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to lhe "u.JSJ TAltY cl"\!dllOnollhO•bovenamo<l~nt PubllshedOranQl'CoaUOailyPllol. EH•te of HAROLD JAMES PUBLIC N011CE t ... t •II ponons 1>.tvlno clalms 1111<11lnsl July n. n . "·and JIU(lll\I s. 1'/S McEWEN. aka HAROLD J. M<EWEN. 11'1' "11<1 cltteclent are required lo Ill• ?601·7S OltceaW<S. lhtm, wllh the neusury voucr.rs, In NOTI CE IS HEREBY GIVEN '"'°' l'ICTITtOUS BUSINESS the office ot Ille cltrll of Ille above l'n PUBLIC NOTICE MAAGARET ELIZABET H M<EWEN HAMii ST AT&Ml!NT tltlfl<lcourt,or topreHnt lhem,wllhthl! 1-------------i ha1llleohtr•ln11 petlllon for l'Toblltol The follo•lnv porton• •rt oolno busl· !'«tuary vouchers. lo lhe unclenlgned Wiii •"d tor hsu•nce of LP Hors neues: at c/o Howser, Gerhr & er-n. Al· l'ICTITIOUS IUllNl!SS Tutamont.,y lo the pellll-r ,.,. t: o U c A r 1 o N A l 1orneys, 4J.tt>.C4'mpys Drive, Box no1. NAMI STATl!MRNT tt rtnu to whlcr> Is rna<1e tor lurthe,. ENT! RT At NMENT OF AMERICA, Newport S.•ch, Calltorno•. wr.lch ,, The lollowlnv persons •r• c:toinQ Ml· p.1rt1culers, •n<l th•t lhl! ltme M>d place 101Sf Cynthia Or., Hunt1n11ton e.ac11, lhe place of buslnon of tlllt underslQnld nenH : of llurlno the ~me hlls ~ ttt 10r CA.n... ln•llmotUorspertelnlngtolh<tettateol HAR8EST .. ROOUCTS, 2J0Ct Au9ult 12, 191S. •I' JO. m .. In lhe John J . Wilson, 10152 CJnthla Or., wid dec~t. within lour monl~ otflOt Qltrry St . El Toro, CA. 'U)(I courtroom ot Oepartmenl No. 3 of 'MIKI Huntl"910t1S.•ct1,CA.'2'46 ttte t1rsl1>Ubllcotll0nolthlsno11ce. Deborah Ann Her vey, ?30~1 coun . .iit700C.•v•cCenlerOrive Wn1.ln Wall.Ce H. WUll\llClc, ?OSll Petloblt Dated July I, 1'7S. 01ury, El Toro,CA . .,UO tne Cityol~ntotAne,C.alilornia. Lene Huntlnoton 114tath, CA. WW OOROnfY M. AUBERT, Rlchor<I Bonnell Ha,.,,..y, ,l041 OetedJuty2S, 1'1S Thf, bu.lnosa It conducled by a e.<ulrlaOf lho Wiii Cherry, El TOf'O,CA. n'30 WILLIAM IE. St JOHN, ""8•at potr1nooNp. of the a~v• namec:t ~t Tiiis 1>u1lnou It co~u(IW by • CovfltJ Citric Wallace H. Wulnaclt HOWSI!•, Ol!llTNl!R A.81t0Wft Otfteralpotrtnonlllp. IOWAltO "·STONE JoMJ.Wllton 4*UftWnOtl"9 Oobof•llH•~Y A .... ,.1u w Tiiis ,1atoment wa1 fllttd wtlh h "·°' •H t ll1 , This ttatement •H Ill~ ,.,.lh tM t ttl•••.,... Ott1•• 0.1.,,., s .. M Otlunlv c1er11 of 0r~oe Goumy on Juty ~ .. .ca, C:.lffot'llle '26oQ Count., Clt rtl Of or....-C.untr on >vr.o -~ .. acll, c.1w.re1 .. f1Me 10, t'1S.. Ttf: .....,_ M. 1'1S.. Ttf: 111•1 ....... ~ ....,_.,. ._ •ncwtrl• f'4Sl1( AttwMy •: ,..Ill.._• "'*'"'" Ofllf\9e Cool 0.tly "''°'· f'\lblltlled ()ret19t CoHt 0.lty Piiot. PuOlltMd <>-'•"411 Coe\t Oellr ~IOI. Pwellthoel Or11n00t C•Ul O.lly ..... JUiy 1$,n, tt,•lld lw911st s. lt7S MQl.7 .N4y IS. tt. "· •nd A119Ust '· 1'7S t•7S July"·"·.,.., ""9VSI S, "· 1'7S ir.f).1j Jul'"· JO, •nd Au9usl s. 1971 ltlt.1s - OAllYPILOT Tuesday.July29. 197'& Should U.S. Delp? N. Vietnam Remains in Shambks By ARTHUR W. GALJ,'TON oi.•;'°llMltH-Y UllltM """~ 1-... 1-1 AU over North Vietnam, red ban· ners and Posters proclaim Ho Chi Minh's proud m otto. a message no Ame rican could qua rre l with : "Nothing is more precious than in· dependence a nd freedom." 1''or most o f June. when I was in Hanoi as a guest or the State Com· millee on Science and Technology, I s poke with North Vietnamese in all wa lks o r life. Crom prime minister Pham Va n Dong and re· search scientists lo fac t ory workers a nd peasants. I found no person who did not believe that afte~ JO year s of batter struggle all ol Vietnam h as now attained these twoobject ives. IN LIGHT OF AMERICA'S own revolutionary tradition and suc- cessful upris ing against a distant imperial power, the Vietnamese l"annot understand why we failed to unders tand their a spirations and their s truggle. T hey have been trained to adm ire America. and so similar do they consider their ob- jectives a nd ours that Ho. in pro- claiming the birth or an indepen- 'Wfll ace gain or lose "'1 l>ftng on the outside looldn9 in"!' dent Vietnam on Sept. i. 1945. abstracted senten ces Crom our own Declaration of Independence. It does not take long for a visitor to get the fee ling that the Viet- nam ese are n obody's satellite, ' aJlhough they freely acknowledge their vast indebtedness lo the Sov- iet b loc and the Chinese for material a id. especially military. For over 4,000 years, as they stress in <;onversation, wrillen history and museum demonstrations, they have been repelling invaders. Now, with independence firmly in their grasp. they ar e not about to com- promise it for a nyone. . . THEIR LEADERS STRONGLY reflect this point of view. Prime Minister Pham Van Dong em- phasiLed to m e as he had to others that in foreign policy Vietnam is if anyone ha~ u.·on the hearts and 1Rinds of the 1'iet na•e•e. it b tlae Rus•ions.' --willing to have friendly relations "i th a ny countrr. irrespective of recent past history . Ta Quang Buu, the Cambridgc- educaled minister of higher educa- tion, outlined uniquely Vietnamese a pproaches to the problem or inte- grating the v astly different educa- tional systems or the north and the south. rft. Ton That Tung, the dyna mic. French-trained director of the Viel Due Hospital in Hanoi, combines e lements of Chin ese. French and American patterns in working ou t a new Vietname!>e medical organization. The head of an agricultural cooperative reject- ed automatic adoption of the Chinese commune model for Viel· nam. The for mulators of seience re- search policy reject equally the dif· fuse revolutionary committee gov- ernance or Chinese research ins titutions a nd the frequently oligarchic:.il style of control in the West. Fo r better or worse, they are d eterm.ined to do it their way. THERE CAN BE NO DOUBT, however. that if anyone has won the be arts and minds of the Viet- namese. it i s the Russians. ~lte 1'ietna~ ••• ha1'~ been t rainftf to ad•fre A•~a ••• ' Evidence of their vast aid is eve- t rywhere, and it is not just military. Even the vast new scientific center in which I lectured a nd worked is be· ingfinanced and built by Russians. Despite the bitter expenences of the last 10 years, the Vietnamese c l aim lo h a ve n o hatre d o r Americans, and d espite the repeat~ ed invasions or the pas t , no xenophobia. Premier Pham Van Dong strongly asserted bis belief that the Unite d States has a responsibility for helping officially in the vast program ol postwar re- (Editor'& Note: The author &$ pro- /U30r of biology. at Y alt Unl~sUJI. end o mem~ of the rnmprofit Scientut&' Institute for Public lnformation~an or- ~izati.on formed In 1963 to inform the public on the acientific background of major sodal ianiea, aw:h.a.s environ- rrwnt. and energy. the effect a of modem weapon& -defolicnts, f&r ezomple - on planta and onimaLY. The institute financed througla granla and prioote donation$. Cabton's trip to North Viet- nam at the invitation of the Hanoi gov. ernment. The inatitute'a and Golston'• purpose was to h elp organize .a laboratory for research in pla1't science there.and to further the instilute'a pro- gram of assisting in the restoration of area.s damaged by herbscicUs during ihe war.) construction. But if such official aid is not offered, the Vietnamese would be ha ppy to accept unofficial aid on a "people to people" bas is. Certainly my contacts wilh Viet- nam ese, whether official or s pon- taneous. e lic ited only friendly greetings when my American na- tionality was revealed. AFTER 30 YEARS OF WAR. Vietnam is badly battered and practically destitute. Despite hard work a nd intelligent organization, the Vietnamese h ave a standard of living that would s hock most Americans. Ninety percent of the people live on farms in houses without modern conveniences. In .the cities, where the average wa~e is 50 Lo60 dongs a monlh (officially, 2.8 dongs equal one dollar >. a bicycle costs 800 to l.OOO·dongs, or m or e than a year's salary. Yet. bikes are everywher e. The cost or food and other necessities is low and stable. A pair of shoes cos- ts about three dongs. So while the Vi etn amese people have food, clothes and shelter , they have little else in t he way o r m a te rial possessions. The long war robbed an entire generation or an easier life. AT TllE THONG NHAT (Unity) Hotel in Hanoi where 1 stayed for lhree weeks. the once ornate but now somewhat seedy lobby bas become a meeting ground of m any nations. Around th~ worn low tables lining the walls, French, German. English. Swiss, Polish. Hungarian. Russ ian. Norwegian and S" edis h visitors talk and drink under slowly rotating ceiling fans. Most have come to aid. some to trade. I mel Swedish. British a nd French medical teams who had come to help build and equip new hospitals. Poles. East Germans and Hungaria ns were there mainly for business, and Norwegian trade union leaders offered a gift of un- restricted m oney to Vietn amese workers. J ournalists from Britain and Poland mingled with photo- g re1 ph ers from F r a n ce an d Switzerland. a nd with diplomats from Egypt, Algeria, Morocco. Pakistan and Finland. A band of Cuban workers. muscular and ir· repressibly cheerful, was putting up a new hotel with the advice or architects Crom Poland. The Viet- namese ~r atefu ll y a nd en- thusiastic:.illy accept lhis attention and aid. AS THE ONLY AMERICAN, I felt strangely out of place, and my presence invariably caused raised eyebrows and exploratory con- versations. It was a revelation to many or these visitors that some Americans. like the group of scien- tists I represented, wanted to hel p their Vietnamese colleagues. ls everybody out or step but us? Were Pr esi d e nt Ford and Secr etary of State Kissinger cor- rect in r e1ecting the concept of postwar American aid to the new Vi~tnam ; will we gain or lose by being on the outside looking in? By 1980. the population of Vietnam is expected to reach 50 million. Reunification between north and south will certainly have been ac- complished by then. and aid from other nations will have helped to rebuild the country. Will the new Vietnam h ave cause to adopt a friendly policy toward the United States? This question needs to be re-examined b y our leaders again st the backdrop of our suc- c es s·fu l r est oration of the economies or Ge rmany and Japan afler World W a r lJ. a nd the diplomatic and economic benefits .we reaped Crom so doing. WedMBday: The pe<uont1 .ond I~ for1n$. PUBLIC NOTICE NOTtCa TO(al01T01t$ SOl"l!lllOll C:OUllTOI" THI • , ST Aft 01' (ALl-OltNIA llOlt THECOUNTYO,OllANOI .... A~ E~ale of HAROLD J . AMBUEHL. ...., HAROLOJENHINGSANIOUEHl, -.. HAROl.D AMBUEHL, o.c .. Jad. NOTIC.E IS HEREBY GIVEN to ow tf'ed.ltor1. et uw etio"• ,.."'ed ~-1 ,..._. ell "9f-llaYlllQ <lalml _,n,I the Wld dlt<.-nt art req11lre!CI ~ Ille thtfT1. with ti. ne<e\MrY YO\IC.....,_ In the otfKt Of IM cler~ of the abow irn- tlti.d <-1, Of to pni.ent t"41m. with the -Mf'f YOU< he", to.,,. W>denlgnecl ,, the otfl<e OI WE8 STER ANO CREAMER, Attorn.y& •I law, •SJO Wll~hlre Blvd. Suite so.. U."'frlv Hiii,, C..lltornl• 'I0211, whl'-'> I• .Che ~· ol ~INU ot ,,.... uncMrilgned In all ,..., tiff') ~nalnlno to the n lele ot wld Ot ctdfflt, wltllln tour monlhS •II~ lh<' llr~t 1>UbUcat1ot1 of lhh notlc•. 0.led July 10, 197S MAAGAAE TM, AMBUHtl, Enculrl1 or the Will of l,... abOYe namt'd Clf:<.edt'nl 'WE8STElt ANO CRUNIElt ""°""" • .-'-"• as.JI W11.-i,. 81"4., s..11. S06 ..... ny Hiiis. Callt.tftl• 901t1 T .. : ft1JIW~t ....._.,srwlEH<11tri.c · PuOll-Ore"9t Coast D•lly Pilot July is, n.1'l.•ndA119u~u. 191s 1*'»-JS PUBLIC NOTICE HOTICE O~ TRUSTEE0SU.LE .... 111 On August 22, tt7S, at 11:00 A.M.. TOPA CAPITAL CORPORAllON. o1 CMPO<•llon as duly appointed Truslce -encl pu'5u.,.1 to Deed 01 Trust te· <Of"clld April 2•, 1914, ilS in> tr. NO. 2>014, In -1 llU, page TM , OI Olflc1al ~Mds 1,, the otfi~e of the eoun1y Rt<Of"Otr ol Orange County, Stale of p C.llfo•nla, WILL SELL AT PUBLIC I.;. AUCT!Ol'I TO HIG H!;Sl BIDDER FOR CASH (paveble ill tlmt: of sale In lawf11I money of the UnlliKI Stales) .ii South front entrance to the Orar>Qe Co\H\ty old CourtttouMt, City Of S..nla AN;, St•1t of C.lllornlct all r i9111. 1111e <tllCI Inter.st <onYeyed to ilnd N>W held by It unaer said Deed of Trll1tt In the property situated In said County ana St.lie oesuil>ed as: lot 208 01 Tract No. 681>t. 1n Ihle City ol Ir"'~ as shown on a map 11\ereot Recorded "' 800I< 2SS, PagesJ'l 1o43inclus•veofM1S<rll~ Mil~. Re~ords ol w1dOr.onge Counlv. lhe s1rtt1 ad<lrus and olhercomrnon deSign•hon, jl ""Y· ol lhe real properly CleS<ril>ed •bo"" is purPOrleCI to bf!; 3581 Cl•remo11t, lrY1ne, C.lllornia. lhe Ut>Clersigneel lruslr" disclatm\ any liability tor eny lncorrrctnrn ot the street addrrss and oth"r common deSIQncthon, ii any. sN>wn herein Said ule wlll ~ mctoe. but w1111ov1 co,,.Mnl Of" warra111y, e1press,,,. Im- plied, teoardlno htle, 1>«>ssess.on,,,,. M · cumbr•ncu, to pay the remaining pttn-<•IWI sum of the note(sl 5e<urt<I by W•d Deed of Trust, 10-wil: M>,811.11, with interest t hereon, a~ provided 1n U•d notets), advances, 1( any, unde,. the ter ms ot saio Oo!ed of Trust, lees. ~h<lr(J4!' and t:apenses of the Trush..:' and of the trusts crt:aled by said Oeea of lrusl. The l>C>M>l1tlary under said Deed 01 Trust heretofore .... ecuted <1nd de· llwrt'd lo trte undNsloned a written Otclarallon of Oelaull and Demand for Sble, anct a wr11ten Notice o• De taull iln<I Ele<l•ot1 10 Sell. The ullO(>r>1gt1ee1 taus.NI ;aid Notice 01 Oe laull iln<I EiC<· hon 10 Sell 10 be record~d 1n 111e counly ..,,...,, .. lhe rt .. 1 proP<'rly •S localoo. O.te: July 11, 1'17S. TOPACAPITAl CORPORAllON, A Corpora hon as s.t1d lru''"" Bv Cart F. En~lhardt A.ss1sl.:>nl V1te Prnido!nt f'ubhsheCI Oranll<! Co.tst 0.01ly Pilot, July 29, ana Augusts. 12, 1'17S ?It.A IS P UBLIC NOTICE UNITEOSTATES 01STRICTCOUtlT FOR THE CENTRALDISTRICT OF CALll'ORHIA CivllA<t;.n f"lle No. CU 7U4l7 EC SUMMONS THC F INANCIAL CORP , Pl.iinhll v FRED W. HOFICN((.HT, MARY J AN( HOFKNEC HT. MALIBU PROPERllES ANO ASSOCIATES, INC., LAWRENCE F. CARLSON. FRANKLIN INOUSTFllES. INC., FRANK Y, OKAMURA. HERMAN F. HOFFMAN , ANO BONNI E fo HOFFMAN, O.lendan1 To Ille a:.Ove named Oetendanl You are hereby •ummoned and re- QOtrt<I to ""'"'e UPOn Arthur Field~. ESQ. of Ervin. Cohen and JessuP pl;t1n· 1111'~ a11orney, whose aodres~ 9~01 W•l~hire 8oulhard, 9111 Floor, Beverly lhlls, C:.llfornla 90212 an .ln~wer to lhe complalnl Wh•Ch •s herewith served up. on you, wilhln 20 d•ys alter s.erYice of ""' summons uPOn you, eacluslve ol Ille O<lY of serYlce. II you la•I 10 do w. 1ud(J'T\ent by oetaull will be t.iken "9'1nst 'rOU tor the rehel den-.nOtcl 111 lhetompl11n1 O.te Augus1 21, t 974 Ed..,ard M . K ttl rm.on Clerk 01 Court M6nn• Neuma1!'r Ot-puly Cl•rlt SEALOl'COUllT IEllVIH.COHEN& JESSUP MW'M~atuw ., WllllllA 81"4. .. 'tffl\'Hllls,Ollt."211 1 Putlll!o.Md Orct"~ Co;,st OOJ•ly Piiot, Julv 22, 2'1, enci Augu~t s. 12, 1'1S 21'04-1S PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE OF THE TIME AND PLACE 01' HEAIUNG Ot- l.CllCAL AGENCY f"OllMATI°" COM- MISSION OF ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA, WHE N A PROPOSED ANNEXATION TO COU NTY SERVI CE AllEA HO. 6 OF ORAHGE COUNTY, AND 08JECTIONS Olt PROTESTS THE R ETO, WILL 8E PRESENTED l'OR HEARING. NOTIC.E IS HE~EBY GIVEN llWll an ~t<.•110tl has been filed wllll ll'te LiKal "9en<.Y Formallon Commission 01 the County of Oran9e, Slate of C..lilOfnl•, r._sllng that said Co<r>- mlss.0t1 ~rov• the propoHd .,,,.. ... hon lle\ignal•d as AnMutoon No. 7s.4 lo Gourtty SerYit• Aru No. •of Or~ C.0..ntv, C..lllomla. TM pr~ efl- comp•nes tl>t! tollowlng 99f!er•llY desolbtd area which Is more ~rtlcularly de~crlbed Oy a legal CleKrlphon ~ n-.p on Ille wllh the Comml~IOr1: Seid .,,...,.atior> contalr>S •llP"OK· lmaltly t23 •crn arid Is loc.ated _,tn.Mtttly of El Toro RNCI beglflo nlng at • point on Ille cent~llne of Mulrlat\CIS &oulevant and eortendlno north of TOI-W•y. In ,,.. El Toro erN. Al ttlt time ol tiw fleat1119 not~ ,_. ... Mid ~tlH ~y lie MDOlfleO llY "" Mdltklfl of ~r territory In the vl<lnfty .. IMOt"opoul. • NOTICE 1$ FURlHER GIVEN that Wld Cof'r\rnl ulon N S flud WedntSdAy ttte 13'11 day of Auoust, 1t7S at lhll f\o<W OI 2:00 O'Clotk P.M, OI said CS.y Ott •• MIO!\ as said metier can be i..re1 In R~ i03 In llM Oranve County Mo mlnl•trAtlon 811lldln9, SU Nortll Sycamore Street, Santa Aile, C.llfomle,., llW! llrN llftd pl«e fOlt the llNll"9 of M id Pf'opo'al t ... tt. wltll all PfotHn •"Cl 001itct1on& ,._,,trto Wflktl "WY lit "'" .,., ....... time PUBLJC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE and ...... " pe-'"'~···-u.r.111 ,.,...,~etMttlellterd. A fleOlllW *<loratloft Nt ... .,... $TAT•M•N~o,wnMDlAWAL l'llOM l"Aa TNlfaSHI, O,•UTINO UNDUt l'ICTITICKIS 8Ult•HS NAMll lhe lollowl~ pera.on h•S wlU.- ., a 1en•r•I ••rtntr from Ill• PM'tNnltlP -rttl~ ulld« .,. fk · llllo.is IMiSIMH "...... Of OllAHGE COUNTY COlll$10N e t '12 Yori< T-n, HuMl"tfM .. Kh, CA, Tl'te fktlllOY'\ ..,,,,MU -lie• INnl fOf I ... 1M1rt ... r•llfjl WIK n1to Oii Sf617S k\ 111e C.111my of Ot'•"Oe· Pt'°" tor tM lllll)e< t fll"llPOWI ..... ,..,.,. bit relM-4 at SU Norttt SYt- St reet, llloom tll, S•,.•• Ana. c..111cwn1 .. w.m.., commaMs l'WIMtw to tM ,.....11,.. Cle<l.,.atlon ~be Mini to ti. •bow eddrus no law .,_ ~ e, ms.. Tiie tlllblk ~ Of! !tit ~w wcleratlon wm e......,,. .. t .00 P.M, Ill ltOOM 502 of Ille Or.nve Gouf'ICy ~htretlon ftullCllnt. SIS H. SV"amot"• !ttrnl, S.m• ,.,.., c;.111«1'1• on 0.ted. Jvly >1. ltU IYOllOERO~ THE l.OC.A'-A~f.NCY llOaMATION COMMISSION 01' OftAlllOl!COYHTY, CALI FORHIA lll lCHAROT. TURNllll l•c11t1,,. Officer Lo<•I Af•llCY lfor~llO!l!Commlulen ofOf~C-&r, (al,._INa, .......... ow.. c.e. Dllll'r ..... ~ ........ ,. ••• Dlt-1$, The Blcct•t MatbtplKe on the Orqe Coast Houses 11or ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS G..-rol . 1002 ........•....•• ._. ..... . You Cai Sell tt, Find tt' [ 842 5878 J One Call S.vice Trade tt With a Wtld. Ad • Fast Ctedil ~ fashJde ct.a NW Excellenc Coista M~a locatton, ncur schools, and public tntn:sporta- t Ion . S pac ious 3 bedroom. 2 both with loL"' or extrus incl,,.ing used brick tireph1ce, covernd potio ltJlcl cyage door opener1 Rt>s Eastslde buy· 41~ $4 1 900. Call .... hlot• ... , .•. 1000.2'99 I.Mt .& fn.-. ..... ·· =·~ MttchcMctiM . • •• IOOO-'°" • .,.. ............. 3000-.. ., ~ ~ .... & .,_ ~"" re:···•-'-'& ff ~ ~··; •..•• frllpltyllleftf & ....._.., & .... 1a1 ......... ~, *' 'J'000.7199 r~*' .... t1CIO-f9'ff 6 4 2 • 5 R.J&tate ••••••••••••••••••••••• HCMtMs for Sd~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• G.neral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ELEGANT DECOR Front row in Cameo lli ~hla nds. Decor ated with dramatic flair. A lovely 3 bednx1m plus den home in a g racerut i:itrden setting. Locate<t in one of Corona del Mar's private com munit1es with private beach es available. Please call for appoint- ment to inspect. 673-8550. 6 Of'(N 111 ~•II\11,N IOf.{ N•< I• . 7 [vtz.IEIU~ 8 ~~lI~n!w~!l •1 Br, 4 Ua & Gallery 2 fireplaces. wetbar Deluxe kitchen Pie r for yacht to 60' You m ay select the finishing touchc~. 675·8120 - Hou•• For SciM ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• G""'al IOOZ GeMrOI 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• VA HO DOWN Sharp 4 BR Cottugc, situated on a Quiet i.treet. Featuring thick s hag <'rpt'g thru-out. Stone frplc. Ele('. bit-ins. Rear patio & prof. landscaj)OO lot. S47 .500 full price. Hurry. will not last! CURTIS Real F~lute 962·2459 EASTSIDE COSTA0MESA 3 Redrooms. l bath , Hardwood floors, lovely home in excellent toca· lion . A ssum;ible FHA loan. Wonderful starter home for those who are price consC'ious. Nice backyard with alley ac- cess. $37 .500. 1£1~:::~~ Prap•rti•• " 752·1920 1400 OUAILSJ, NIWl'ORT llACH VACANT OH ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2STY CAL CLASSIC ASSUME$205 rER MOMTH llR-IUCH Never agoin opportuni t y ! Stor y book st r cl'I leads to fe nced estate w1lh-a cottage walkw;.iy! Entrance into awe:somf' li11ing area. Formal dine Fam rm. Immense up· stairs could be 2 huge bdrms or mammoth bonus room' WALK TO BEACH ! ST1':l'S TO GOLF! Take O\'er low, low $205 per mo. NO NEW LOA N COSTS! Won 't last. Be first! Call 847-6010. Newf><!rt Hei<jhts Corner with boat access. 2BR + detached guesl qtrs with bath. 540·115~ ESTATE RS GOLF COURSE Lovely. lonely & ready HAL PIMCHIM HUNTINGTON for you. Unu~ually sharp REALTOH!; hidden 2 story. Lush 2727 E . Coast llwy BEACH BARGAIN garden setting. S74,9SO 6 7 5-4392 .. *CASH* fullprice.Call&if.·7171. Upgraded 4 bedroom, FORANYHOM1':!! r-u11 '"'1"' ,, , ''•' '1 '11' •PRIME* cath ed r al cei lings , appra ised value paid. [~ ~ Hewport4-Plex D.eano ty pe garden 1''ree home evaluallon. . I Pr1dc-of-owncr..h1p 313R kitchen /f;,i mlly room. Back payments OK. Call . 2ba corner urut has frplc Ext~a large lot. Wa lk to a nytim e. Hick Byers Bkr ~========~ in mas ter BR .ind frplc in beach 542-3676 living rm. Others are au ~·, PARDNERI 2BR 2ba. On fee land. nr • Hoag Hosp. FUii pri1'e • · · D A I L y $32,750 FORMJ-;R FARM rull 1/5 acr e. Eastsidc. Antique fixtures. sash windows. True country ~t>lc h\'· ing. Steal 1t ' Ca l l 645-0303. FOREST OLSON IMC. p I L 0 T ****HELP•*** Yourself s a,·e SSSSS. Price increase prohable in very near future. :! Bed rm. 2 bath. s1n~lc s tory Condos tn Santa Ana. only Sl9,950. Lart,?c !>pac1ous lawns. security gale. pool , etc. tu '• Oown. As k for Frank, 839·8321 , Agent. Oy Owner,S2500 takeover 1-'HA Loan. 3 Br. 2 Ba. poo l , quiet, c le<:in neighborhood. Lots of xlras. Ca ll for appt. 714 -687 -3979 or 7 14·734-2478. Corona area P UBLIC NOTICE ...... u SUPERIOR COURT OP THE STATE 011' CALIFORNIA R>lt THE COUNTY 01' ORANG£ H•.A-M447 NOTIC E OF H l!AlllH O O F PETITION FOR 1"1108ATE OF WILL ANO f"OR LETTERS T IESTAMEN· TARY Estate ot LOTTIE FENSTERMAN. Oec.eas.eo. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lhal OONALOHUNT llas tlleelttere1napet1- llonfor PrObeteot Wiii end tor lssu<1ncr ol Lellen Tes1emenlary lo lhe ~h· honer. reference lo which 1, lnl)de tor I~ parUc11lars, end that tht lime atld plKt ol ,...,,nQ the wme hi• bet<> Mt tor A~ 12, tt75, at 9:30 a.m .. ln the cowtroom of 0.part~t No lot wid tourt, at 100 Civic Center °''"" Wut, In Ille City ot Sanla Ant. Calolornl•. DllteclJuly 1•. 1•1s WILLIAM E. $1, JOHN, CO\lnty Cl•rl< Ml(.HAELJ,MILLER wtTw8"y81"4. '"911 ON, C.tlf..-illa .. ,.. Mtenleytw: PetltlaMr Pvblllhff OHnoe coa,1 0.11., PllOI, July"· ao. Ind A119u" s, tt7S 2'l0-1S I PUBLIC NO'l1CE NOTICI! TOCltlDITORS • SUl"IRIOllC:OU,IT'OFTHI! STATE 01' CALl~OllNIA l'Olll THICOUNTYOPOllAMO• Na.A·MU&. Estate ol JULIA ANN W"lSH, Ctc .. 5". NOTICE IS HER£8Y OIVl!N to ti. ,,_~of thll ellOw named dee..,.. N I ell 119,_ lla11I~ clalms aoo.;i,,.t "'9 Nici ctK-.,. rtq11lr.ci to tllt "*'" with ,.,. ne<enory YOllt~S. In tN office ot Ille c 1tr1< of tllt .....,. en- titled ~I. or to pre•nl t...,,,. wOh Ille nttn,.,.., vwchllr•, to the~ •t tll• ofllc• o l WITTE fl ANO HARPOLI!. Allorrwu o t uw, 610 Newll0f1 01111., Otlvt,. Suite IUO, Nt~ .. K ii, (alllOr!llA fl..0. wnkh Is lhll Pia<• Of tlllslMH ol ,,. \.WI ~ In a ll m.tllert partollntnq to Ult ....... ot Mid .itc~et. wllllln tour menlht .... , thll flrit P11llllctllon of 1rv, "'41<.e. O.tedJvt.,21. 1t7S. OOUGLASALIXANDER WILLS.Sii. btclltcwofth•Wlll of Ute..,.,,. Mined dececttnt WlTT.,.ANOMA .. 'OLa ~5._ ..... .,: .... "Y "· ._ .. l'lt~C.lltffOflwe ..... , ... ~ ..... CA.,, ... Tfl:f11•1~­ ~r-twl11e<lf'et ,_,._. Ot1119t Gol .. 0.Hy l"llat N'I n, "·.,.. Avev...c s. "·ms 1110.11 I c L A s s I F I ·E D Ar e you fenced in? Do you likl' wide open s p aces? Do you like t.'lhow room ? Then see this custom lath/plaster 4 b edroom , 2 1.• hulh home in our 1·xd11"'ivl' Dack Hay or Nt.>wport I Over 2600 rt. In the un· usual home anci 11,000 ft . in the lot. Adjacent to a private lake. VACANT RF.ADY FOR IM M EOlATF: OCCUPAN CY! $93,500. 546-4141 ~ COATS&WALLACE REAL ESTATE , INC. "OLD SPANISH ESTATE" BY-THE-SEA Windin~ brick & cobble s ton e walkwa y:. enchance by ivy covered wall s. Sunken l iving room lightened by akovc bay window:- Ca ndleli~hl din ing henealh domed c·e1hngs & separate brcakfosl nook with built-in hull'h. P aneled den. lf eavy beam ceilin~s. Cowrcd lanai . ft•alur1n~ flaJ{s lone selling w1lh B B Q. and 2nd firepl<•<'c. Just r cd u<•ed S7.000 Sacrifice at ~.000. Call now! 842-2535. Ulfllll(Q• f\I .•, ll,f '· t• [~ THE REAL ESTATE RS HODOWHVA Sharp 4 yr old with loads of upgrades. This JBR, 2ba Select Property has a spacious kilch , fam rm With a wall Of glass to a s eclu d ed front courtyard. Priced ril'(ht al S45.900, CALLqui<'kly. 556-2660 C:: SELECT $137 .500. Call PRESTIGE HOMES R~altors 645-6646 OCEAMFROMT 3 Ddrm s + fami ly. Gar ages + <·arports + rental unit Choi<'l' loru· lion . S175,000' CALL 675-7060 ® herbert hawk ins REALTORS 646 ·3255 $32.500 · 2 story -TWNHS. 3 Bdrms, 2 ba, 2 years m•w' Pool, yard w/ lge pa\ Ill. nl!~tr So. Cst Plaza. t'all 546-3286 (by owner) .. HUMT. IEA€H PARTY POOL 4 BR . l':i bti. Newly re· HOUSE furb1shecl. ~.4:.0 Unbelievable! J Bdrm. 2 CALL 556-8800 bath . lar~1· yard Ytith Balboa Bay Prop. 15x35 sparkhng pool for Realtors warm summer days. C:rn ----------.i be pur<'ha~('d ~ubject to low inll' rest existing G l ----------~ loan Owner says SELL.' Call t~ay ! It won'l lasl! PEMIHSULA PT. Six 2-bdrm . units. I ba<·h<'lor . <·a rporls , parking. slor£1J:t!, sw1m- m1ng puol , on two lgl'. Balboa Pe ninsula lots. Xlnt rental area. JUSl steps to the heach Priced at $225,000 673-3663 675-4777 eve~ OCEAMFROMT 4-PLEX 4 furnis hed l ·bdrm apt s Garages & ha Icon 1 es Sum me r / winter r entals. Owner will trade. Priced a t $135,000 673-3663 548-9673 e\•es associated BROKERS· REA L TORS lOl'. IN Solboo t.11 1661 Only $35,950. 646·7711 o~. POOL HOMES • l I " 2230 Heather Ln .. N.B. /\ luxurious h ome for elegant living with 3 giant bedrooms. a com-1 pletely secluded pool and - on a cul-de-sac street loo. 10 r~ down. $88,000. ••••>••••···· 1820 Irvine Blvd., N.B. al Francisco . Beautifu lly ap p ointe d . Two firepl acrs. country kitchen. Superb carpet- ing and tile. Giant office or playroom. Darkroom for ph oto bu gs. No backya rd. just a giant pool. 10<;< down. $87.SOO. . ........... . Please call our office (or inform ation on these and -, other pool homes. IPROPERTIES ------- l"Quail ~ :, liilPlac• .. Prap•rti•• 752•1920 1400 QUAil ~T. NIW..ORT HACH •9 REDUCED $3,000 Sc paratl'd livin J! quarters make this huge two-sl.ory idl'al for tn· laws. Also. game room with upholstered booth. Family fun back yard in- cludes boal. gale. shuf. fle boa rd, 2 patios. waterfall and heated & filtered pool. ~.900. run price. CALL 962-7788 EASTSIDE DOLL HOUSE Sharp Co1<ta Mesa 3 bedroom, 2 bl\th with h ea utiful carpets thruout. Lar~e covered patio, dble gara~e. Room for boat o r trailer. Hurry. first time offered a nd priced $42,000. Call 546-5880 POOL TABLE SHOWCASE t • lmmaculate•beach home f in and out. Huge 18' x 28' t billi ard s r oom w ith 4 cath edra l ceili ngs. i Separate sewing room. Delightful yards with f brick pla nters. patios and fruit trees. HqRRY! Only $49.950. Call 546·2313 NOW. ,.Q. KEY 'h'P.EALTOP.sii Ol'fN.llt9 •tlS I UNroeFN~P • UNIVERSITY Oceanside/Carlsbad R.E. [~lfi,Hifl ~HERITAGE REALTORS PARK C o n t a c t : R o b e rt l.::~~~~·~·J·· :·~=~-~-~~~!~·~-~·i=~~~ SPARKLER Sha pard, Realtor , 603 ..: Must be experienced lo Mic higan, Oceans ide. Fin~ w~at you ~ant .in be believed. A 3+ Fam . 722-7623. Daily Pilot Class1f1eds. home with a h.inlastic G....-al IOOZG___. I 100'• parents retreat added to _.,....,. "' the m aster bedroom. air ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• cond & a yard large enoug h for small POOi. Bright,• cheery and col· orful. Over 2000 sq. rt. Now reduced to only $59,900. Call 6'4·72U r.Jn NIGEL GAILEY ~ ' 1\550(1A1( 5 ST ARTER HOME $29,950 Keep 8<f· loon. Coty rot taae -while picket rencc. Room for large-vegeln· ble garden , R-2 wne, Rel ~ta rt4'd . To see. c1111 &48·7171 ();'fN 111 0 • tf ~ rt.J""10 "IN (I ' [•:IW&IM Sell thaniis rast wilh Dally Pilot Wanl Ad&. . l REALTORS I 644-7270 ..... CONDO 'ott $lJ,500 U LOOKS LIKE NEW and no yard work toof Gorner 3 1>4:droom Condo. N~wly painted Wlth .upgraded carpet, drapes and c us hion kitchen vinyl. Close to shopping & freeways, · I 2828 E. Coa1t Highwdy, Corono del Mor PROPHTY MANAGEMENT NII H•n IOI .. .,,,.. lllO<llffl MOMCS fH UVl.NC NETWoalC Ill' U I lflf , .. l tr 1111, 0t 1lttl u r'l.Au 1• '"' P.'Jlflff liiiiliiii iiliiiliiiiii HoesMFerW. ,......_ . I ••••••••••• ······~··. •• •• For s. HCMtJes For s• !Ho.SH F-or s. HOltHI For s-. Hottws For s• (;~ 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••• •••• •• ••• ••• ••• • • ~~ral I OOZ G....... I 002 • G......... I 002 G...-ol I ooz Cor0tta del MG--I 022 OAILYPtLOT ~~.'::".~ ............... ~~ ....... ,Ho.Mt For kM -----------··· ···~·.;·;.· ;.;· ·;.;·;;;;·.;.· ;;··;;;·;·;· ·:;·. . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . ..................... . NENCH cu•Tr.•u NIC~ duplex So. of Hwy Costa M•'a t 024 • •••••••••••••••••-•••• •••• ••. •• ••• ••• ••• ••••• Hwtt1ftC)ton hoch I 040 H.tieC)toe leec:lt I 040 ELEGANT BIG CANYON The park-like setting adjoining this luxunou,s 3 bdrm. condo, provides the utmost m privacy. Shown by app't but we~l worth seeing at $134,900 " 81i• lJU'-'I 'f l .l\t=I GeMral I 0021 Gt<Mrol I 002 llG, POPULAR & WAmNG ••• nA ~ in CdM. Beaut gardens. 2 STORY..UCH Owner $91.500 673-4\00 POOL·S32,900 - --- Slulcly enlry to elejtant SHORECLIFFS living room. La rge Vacant J Bedrm, 2 bath garden view kitchen for w/pool. o cenn & canyon the ~ourmet eloquently view Tremendous poten· S«:rves (ormal dining t1al. Asking $139500 Ab't. w1l.h courtyard view. 675·6900. ' Stuirs hwecp to second ---- story s~itcs featuring a llCENTl!NNIAL hu.ge hideaway master. SPECIAL 23 Gra nd _ballroom for Reduced $1776 · I Full the entcrta111e~s. Hurry. rented, low car~ duple!. Owner bought another -first user 's tax br •ak 3 mu s t SACJtU'ICF. . • c · PRICE 1-'0 ll SPl-~EOV Bdrms;. 2 baths plus SALE' Call """7881 SUJ'Cr 2 hdrm., 2 bath. · ,,.,.,,. · • Just $112,724 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ALBACORE SPECIAL Located in Huntington Beach ls this charming, neat 2 bedrm home + an enclosed covered patio. Has boat door right through the garage. You guessed right it 's on Albacore Street. Full price just $29,950. SHOWC~E HOME ., .............................................. WLSl.Fi ~ TAYLOR CO for .a -run loving family to occupy it! AdJacent to th_e Municipal Golf Course, parks. ice skating rink & theaters. Its 5 bedrms & huge family f"OO.~ are. made to order for the act1 v1ty -mmded. Priced at $95,000. UNIQUE HOMES, Redton -546.5990 I 525 Mno V ft'd. Or. East Cotto Mno ..,.,,,1 .. 1v· · • ·• ""· ,, Unlv•rsityReatty [® Rlitl 1 ;;!;;;;~~: .. :~~;,~; l'fft R.ally Scand! io Tell you about This House, You llave Hean.I about The l,ady Who I>ec1ded Not To Sell Her Home Atter Readin.: The n ea lto r s Glowin g Description. Well. H I Describe To You All The W o nd ers In 1'h t s t-'11butous 4 tx'<.lroom, 3 Bath Home, It Would Happen To Me. Ju~l Quietly Coine and St>e lt and Say Nothing . Because they arc Prac- t1cally G1v10g It Away. W il l Arrange E v t' r v l h 1 n g ! C..: ,1 l l 540 :StAA> Located on one of the largest pie shaped lots in the tract. Beauti!Wly landscaped with auto sprinklers front & rear. Many bearing fruit trees + s pecimen trees. The home h as 2 .~1 ., family rms. one ~ outfitted with pool -llSll table & wet bar. A ANYTIME must see! $69.950. HE t\LTUH S ~11u·t· 1H4G GeMrol 1002 Getteral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ELEG.AHT ''ISTRBJT.A" MOOR Customized end unit w /wide view of upper bay. 3 Bdrms. 3 baths, 2 firepls o'size F .R . with wet bar, extr a walls & patids for privacy. Bluffs! SlOS,000 LIDO ISLE ~aterfront 4 BR., 5 ba .. rumpus rm. Pier & float, sandy ~ach. $295,000 2 I I I SClft J.,..-tfels Rood NEWPORT CENTER. N.I . 644-4910 Beaut. 6 BR. 5 Ba. or 4 RR. 4 Ba with 2 BR, 1 ba . Apt. Sand y beach, courtyard, shore mooring. $295,000 General I 002G~ral I 002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Spacious_ 4 BR'. family rm., dining rm, sunny pr1 v patio; 52 ft lot. $179,000 PACESETTER HOMES RANCHWOOD CLOSE-OUT SALE!! Attr. 4 BR., 3 ba .. Lido Soud. 77 Ft. waterfront, sandy beach. $275,000 Selling 4 decorated models + 2 repo 's at extra low prices! 87' Financing ~l so available . Qui ck sale extras inc_lud c : rr on t landscaping and s prinklers. rear fencing. upgraded carpet. oven /range. dishwasher & di sposal. Hurry!! F or more information. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Boys1d.-.Orive N .B. 6 75·6161 ~~~:! .......... !?!!~,~~~~! .......... ~?~~ HARIORVIEW Lar~c :\1 ontPi:o model . 4 Call714: 581-2444 DELIGHT! bdrms . h>rm.il d111111J.: G...eral '0021Getteral 1002 r m .. I '• hath:.. Li-:t• •••••••••••••••••••••••' ••••••••••••••••••••••• frph:. J ,u~c.:iou~ lJncf,cap LAKESIDE COTIAGE HUHTIHGTOH BEACH 1----------1 ·ing, l111:hh uµi.:1•11k<I LOWEST PRICE S87·500 i~ 1i9 canyon C. F. Colesworth1i Beaul1fully landscaped, R It 640 OO 0 view. Uover, 2 b<'<lrooms ___!! ors • HO DOWMG.I. & den. Owner anxious.1---------• Asking SI 19,SOO. ROLLING HILLS Steps from luke. Entry to ~real outdoor s . Your <"h1lclren will love il. Like m•w 2 heclrnoni, (;O RGEOllS F OU R famalv room hom<' VOGEL & BABBITT REALTORS 644·6056 YEAR NEW CLASSIC Beautifullv lanllsl'apcd. llOM 1::. Gard(•n kitchen. ---------•I carerrt'c ~.mt Larl!e 2 Spacious living and din-------rar ~ara )!c Thi:. hilltop ing r ooms. S<>cluded OWNER WANTS comer lot C\ffers a niC'c master a nd childrt'ns view or the ~ently n>lhng :.uites. :-10 DOW!': TO ACTION HURRY! hills Oubt anding value, \!£TS ! Bike to hca t•h. Spacious Coron:i del Mar $48.500. ('all 963-6767 homt-for :.it·l1Vt· family 4 640-6161 I• Bedroom. 2 fireplates . [ ~ 1 1:.trJ!l' secluclL>d lot. Ke,·s ror th r('t' pr1 \ale bt>at·hcs N l'ar equcslnan cenler and ~~ surfing beach. Owner is moving and has pricL-d DUPLEX SITE house for quick sale. On· PRIME NEW PORT lyS861SOO.Call673.as50. ~~1s~~~ (~.~~;;~~7~~ [~(,Ill/ I II• t'~;~;-:!;'i;~~lllJ planned park. Proven I r , ~:r ~~~~~-~~~3r1aJ:r~~ 1 ' ,;~JJ ;J l>IP~TEc ~iRRETT Marlboro Country -REALTY-Cowboys k eep your horses here! Very sharp 675·4060 4 bedroom, 2 bath home. 642·5200 ~ ... ~..,:-~""-.-~-... ~ ... -7111111111-"'!!:."~,..~ ... ----.... db I e g a r a~ e. n e w carpets, cool counl v location. Big 66x.231 fl. l~t zoned R·4. 1-ull pnce on· ly S45.500. Won't last long ! Call 540-1151 ~ COATS& WALLACE REAL ESTATE . INC. 1776 1976 CELEBRATE OUR BICENTENNIAL in an Ea r ly J\menctin type home! Living rm. family rm . formal dine. ga s kat <·hcn, breakfast bar. 3 bdrm, 2 baths, dble gar. + separate 3 room studio. 11& F pool Open Daily 1-5 2540 Vista Baya NB 646-3928. eves 641).4543 W• Ne•d ListiftCJS W•Ha••Cli...ts FOH FAST SJ\L~ • CAI.I.• JACOBS REALTY 675-6670 VALLEY REALTY PRESENTS MESA DELMAR Beautifully maintained 3 ht.•Jroom home in gr<'at Cost;i Mcs u :1re:i.rlo~t·to South Coast Pl:.i1.a and frwys Covt'n.>tl by nne year\\ arr:.inly. $48.500. CAMEO HIGHLANDS Luxurious 4 bedroom view home on quiet s treet. Cus tomized. Family room. beautiful landsrapin~. with ocean view. S97 ,500. TWO, So. Of HIGHWAY Two hne homes on two lots in best South of highway location. Hust11: 3 bedroom with knotty pine decor and massive fireplace & cathedral ceilings Olcler 2RR is a rharmrng rental unit. Sll.5,000. CALL 6 75-7225 EARN 15% PER YEAR LET US SHOW YOU A WAY TO SELL YOUR HO~lE, RECI-:IVE 20'. C:ASll & EARN UP TO •DUPLEX• l br, I ha l'a <:d. inc/ tt-r m :. I' ri m t.• rond. S46 ,000 . 111-11 & 1946 A h S 540-3666 na c1m . l.. owne r . __ _ 498·2995 or 4 9-t 5SO'l 15'< <OR MORE> Pl::R --------- Ranch Villa . HunffftC)ton leoch I 040 LOCJU"a luch I 048 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• S4~.950·GI FHA Ok REACH VlLLi\ QUALlTY HOME YE AR ON YOUR HEM/\INING EQUITY. HARBOR COMPANY HE,\LTUllS Sl.\Ci': l!JI I 673·4400 3 STORY DUPLEX SUNSET BEACH STEPS TO OCEAN N<:ar nc" personal hom"e of prominent ('<llllractur Hcntal unit is a large I bc·rl room with modl·rn COLLEGE PARK Customi,ed 4 bclrm . 2 baths; wrought iron ~ale entry . 2 patios. Walk lo a ll s chools C.ill for upp'l. Corbin-Mcriin Inc. R•altors 644-7662 BLUEHAVEH POOL 3 Hl•druom ,2 h.1lh'>. hardwood lluor .... <Ihle i.:ara1tc . qu1t•I sll'l'l'l. $38,50() Roy Mc:Cardle Realtor I 8 I 0 N•wporl Cuc;la Mt'sa !>IX·7il'J Sens1t1ve r,inch styling, <1 BR THI-LEVI''~ /\ND INCOME shake roof. ovcrhangint: Short w,ilk t.o bc~utiful C h eerful whitewater eat".t'S, Axl·ltra t11g party sand:. or lhc blue Pacific' view 2bdrm home, 200 ft. pa w rooms large • · l • N rth Lag" .. w ·d F.ll•g.int l'ntry opens to o ocean. o .... a.. • 1 c entry lo t:ounlry lush formal hvmg r'fn 5 Pool & jacuzzi and 2 de-~ vin_g ~ u :.i rlers. w1111cl stl'ps down ln hidl• a way luxe units. 494·8611 urn111g 1r cpla 1 re..: I am1I) j.!rJU rm l'l !oud l·erH er Zagrodzky, Realtor game room, I x· .. rooms . .. , . , · --.::.. __ ;:...,:_ ___ _ Childrcns wing xtr-1 lanrtldill . dint• I on · -MOVE INTODAY- ba!h off parents r'"t~l·al ~t':.~~~o ~·~~~~~tl~~~f;t~~ OPEN:2 story:3bd~m. Z BK H., bt•ltl'.'r hurry. call suill' Can "l IJ:.t. at only bath-view o_f city-hills &: 540-1720 sn 500 ocean-massive sun deck· KATl':LLA RF.ALTY under market. at-$57,500- 71 I/ S476001 A~I Terms. 1184 La Mirada. i 9ss H~~:,r 11.d .. ~~:i.".~ ............ ~~~~ ~uintard REDUCf':D BY OWNt-.:H, REALTY 4 UR . 21 • Ua. 1-'IR, O , R. SINCE l946 TARBELL k1 tch(·n. huge cntt'r ---------THIS COUPON bonu!' rm . S6 5,500 JJS5Viatido.N.&.Suit929S 551 -675!1 Pho-642-~l-Aiwtime ta1ners II\ in~ room with ~liclin:.: g las:. wall lo I' r 1 v ;t I t' t: o u r t v a rd Owner s un1L·1, .1 bre athta king world ol t•lt>g an t l'. Gourme t k1ll'hcn feat ure-. 30' island bar for cooking. serving & enlertainin,:: • ~t ES J\ VEHIH;• Large 3Hr. 21 ·Ha. F IL n1~ yard Su~~:r Sharp' ~r. Gell( l'nur:.c-s. JMO Countn Cluh Ur. Owner Rrokci-!17!l-:n88 WORTH Sl ,000. off th!! prH·(· of th1!> S4 I ,SOO·POOL l'Ustom 3 Bdrm + family Fast Oc:c:upancy rm model home with new V A C A N T ' P r 1 m c <·rp t s , t" o ma:.si vc Uni vers ity Park loca· frplcs. 2 garden patios lion · C u I d c ·s ac . M V d w/greenhou!>c. Jn '"mov· Secluded atnum cnlrv. esa er e l.'·in"comlition. ~lunycx · Vaulted be amed cl'il- INCOME PROf' 4 Studios & one 2-bdrm . house in Cliff section. Close to town & beach. Easy maintenance &.low vacancy. $125,000 TURNER ASSOC. 1105 N. Cst Hwy, Laguna 494-1177 Enormous h\'ing rc>om with w· suncleck acl.10111 JOJ! hideaway maslt•r & gU('!>l suites. C)wncr mu:.I sacn rH'l' Fu II J'ril'e only $85.000. Call OO.l·7l'l81. $5000 Reductl.On tras ! Ass umahle VA ings. Spani:.h firC'plaee. loan. l'aymts only S222. Mirrored wardrobes . Trip to the "Sc1uth Seas." per mo. f<'nr Country LIV· Deluxe hath fixturcs .1---------- Yards of lush greenery 1ng. <·all today. 5-10·3666 nri~hl & spa_CIO US ,,, ... , ESTATERS for pravat'Y & b<>;,i utv. Agl ~a rden pal10 kitchen Sl'Cluded re.ir yard with ----~-· Self·dt'an oven. Pn~ate ~ dan<·t• palio. Thcre's3300 GREEMBROOK m o th c_r ·1n ·l~w win~. Sf!. feel inside. Formal . l?Ccnratnr {,irpet1~g. cntrv enormous family Lov<'IY 3 bed1 m . llP· Shady t·us lom patio. I room' with f1~1·placc g-r aded ('rpts & drps. Olympic common pool. candl<'l 1te di n i n · l~uj!e family rm .. Off S6.000 down + c·osu JUST LISTED. I f1rcplact in the parlor g 4 s_unflower. near South buys• Tak<• advant:ige- J mbo u l N . th I Coast Plaza. S5ti ,500. call 752 l700 MESA VERDE l'~untr/ c\uc;: a~t-t ac~ Agent._963-8911:_ -ONN '" 1 •" \ ll'f/ .,.., , ,itrfl [~ ~"/~;~~£~; =~~·: no• 540-1720 ::~?:::~~~.?i·~~."~~ [ ~ 11~a1u1 MOYE RIGKTIN Inviting patio entry welcomes you lo this 3 bedroom home in Cine private community with tennis courts, s"imming pool. recreation center and beach parking. $.59,900 J963So. Coast Hwy. Laguna Beach freshly painll'(I. 4 RIL TARBELL -Fam-rm home ",a hu~c Dana Point 42' oval pool Outstand 29/iS H rbor C ••••••••••••••••••••••• 10~ for SH .500 Call -a ' .M._ -Ry Owner in Dana Knolls. 1026 3 UH. 11.: RJ\. dmin~ a rea ~~~·~4~94~-07~,4~9~·~~~ & bar. frpl. rrnt. & back - patios 55l·l3Sl t;.t4-i211 •BY OWN EH Lo,t.:ly Large 3 Br, 2 Ba w/your home. 3 br. gori:cou~ choice of crµl & drps, yarcb w /lots or room l'\r Large fenced yard with Hal'k Hay OnJy S42.900. pa\ed boat. RV. or 642-05!17 trailer storage area . $..54 .500. 4 gG.008.5. --------- HuntiftC)ton B•ac:h I 040 -----1 Univer s ity Park-Deane Homt'· 4 Rr. 3 Ba. A/C Premium lot. $77,500. Owner 551 ·2843. OCEAMVIEW IYOWHER Instant Cash for vour home F'u II appraised -- -'a luc p::ud. Call now ••••••••••••••••••••••• WESTCLIFF ror free evaluation. ASSUME $32,990 SUBMIT OFFER Seller most anxious lo leave this area. asking 3 BR. 2 Ba. Frplc. 2 car~ gar w /a uto . ope ne r . Steps to tennis court &. High School. convenient lo beach & town. $79,500. 494-4911or835-0202 R"' .... CH Century 21. 546·9521. Sprawling "F'ranciscan A" Fountain " with huge 4 BDR-POOL OWNER 16x40 sparkling pool. -I BR suites, mammoth SI 03,000 d en w /Spanis h fplc Entry to formal livlni:: leaving state Barcelona ki lrhcn and banquet size dining w / c u st om Nu lone rooms. Gourmet garden Co1.y 3 bdrm +den. only renter . Elegant <line . kitchen. Fiesta size rum-minutes to lhe beach. custom bar. ass ume p us r oo m with bar Spacious e nlry opens to S32.990 loan al S369 mo Sec luded master and rear hv. rm ... overlooks no new loan costs. Rkr t·hildrens s uites. Lush playground-size yards . 962.5511 garden with sparkling Gourmet food center, -- ponds and waterfalls /\ r a m rm · h ide~ w a Y Assum low int Fiii\ In ~nly S62.500 for ;.1 charm· Oceanfront Woods Cove. 1ng, super dean 3 bdrm .. Fabulous 6 Bd, 4 ba. ~am1ly rm . 2 bath home SJS0.000. 7r;. or make of- '" the Turllerock area. fer. Own. 494·7156. IRVINE HOMES, --------· REALTORS NORTH LAGUNA 552·7000 Delightfully charming RO B Pl';TIIT home on l~r. comer lol; l Rcaltor-Ownl'r bdrms .. 2 ba .. frplc. Private yard & pal10 SOARING CEILINGS area . ma turc trees. Close to shopping. beach. & parks , makes this a n xlnt buy at 579.500 ~HERITAGE THEHOMETO COME HOME TO F'or the spice in your life try a beautifully built 3 bedroom. 2 bath Pacesel· ter in Mesa Verde. New paint & carpets. 2 lovely i----------i ·---------1 REALTORS swimmcrs par.idise.Call m ~stc~ suite. s c p . Sunny 3Hr .ILA'vc1Con l..ots ofglass.3BR.2Ba today to pre\'ICW' ch1ldren s wing. MUST do (.ol s ()( prl\aCy Townhom<' on Quiel cul· m· A---. SHORECLIF'FS absolute 963.6767_ ~all today: Owner anx-F'amil\' ll\•me. Pools & de-sac. only SS.S.900. Let :o: ' fi~~l:?tn. besl buy. Sincere sellers _ . .,,, .. ,.,.,, '·'·' , '· ,. 1 0 u s . KATE L l../\ P 1 a ·y " r 0 11 n cl . u:. s how you the advan-,...., " ~Il~ back yards with lanai -BEST BARGAIN Seller motivated. Asking Don't give up Lhe ship! IN ALL COSTA MJ::SA· SSS,000. "List" 1t in classified large 4 bedroom. 2 hath $99.950 ,\ delightful ., Development Uvin~. ----- ---have rcduted pn ce to [ ~ REALTY 8476061 .... l a g c s of Planned 499·2800 ~. __ · ..:. _ __ Refri«1v.ashcr dn.·er in· Ship to shore resulls' on oversized M<'sa Vcr<lc UPERB 642-5678. corner l o l N o w three bedroom home. Owner 2 BR. 2 Ba Condo. l'I. s37 .25o full pnre Laquna Hills 1050 b e a m c d re 1 t 1 n ~ s. . new c rpl kitchen frplc 2 00~·8891 Brkr Ai:.k for LE RAISOR ••••••••••••••••••••••• spacious yard --cargarS29,900.968-9782 Mickt.'Y ____ --· TOWNHOUSE <New OMES -V/\CANT. out of town SELL idle items with a o wn er des ires 1m ~•mpua N.!! 5'9·185~1 Daily Pil~lCh1shified All ~ m ediate s ale . Nl•cd., some paint and TLC' hul G.wteral I 002 GftWral I 002 check this price ... tonly Col•ofNewpori Balboa Island 1006 FUNKY COTIAGE LACUESTA REALTY World ) 3 br. 2 ba. cpt.-;. R•altors ,••••••••••••••••••••••• $62,000 4523Campus Dr.lr\'ine drps . b ltns. S3 J ,500. 2515 E . Coast llw,· Beautiful 38r home + OH R·2 LOT 4 Bedroom. 2 bath. 3 Campus ValleyShopCtr. _846·75R2or581·36Z! _ 675·551 I dramatic 2Br Apt. On This 1 BR. l bath cot· years new La Palma CALL 833-8600 JBR. 2h:t. cnlrl air, shai: •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $47.000). llurry!! Call -----Grand Canal. Sml boat tage. set back in the bi):( od t L' 1 bl ---b Su .. ER SH,.,RP dk .. $179,000. Own"r . m c . r irep acc. lns. ·--------•I cpls. ltns. l\:.sume 1•.;, ,... ~ .. trees, located in the Spanish tile roof. up-V \ O 552 95031 Fo I l" 673 3874 · I bel · SHOULDN'T YOU- 1 • wner - macnab I Irvine realty .... SUMMEA r&.ACE" A winter place, a happy place! Dreamy pool-jacuzzi. cheery dining room, family room, sparkling city & harbor VIEW. $174,500. Jack Custer 642-8235. (N69 ) LOC.ATIOM! LOC.ATIOMI Charming cust om 2 yr . new 3 bedroom, family room home in lovely Upper Bay location close to shops & schools. $72,500. Lois Miller 642·8235. (N70) ' coaOM.A DIL MAI CHAIM. New on -m a rket -2 bedroom home w /used bric k fireplace & 011en beam ceilings + near new 3 bedroom, 2 bath owne rs unit w /fireplace. 2-blocks to beach. $112,500. Maxine Williams 64.2-8235. (N71) HAllOll VllW HoMISI POITOAMOI Beautiful 4 b edroom w /finis~ed bonus room. Well maintained - close lo pool & park. $97 ,500. Tom Queen 6'4·6200. <N72> 546-45880 ' rm a 1 v 1nit room · . recreat1ona l · Lion's graded in & out. On Quiet . 5116·!1700. w/vaulted open beam --• -Park, Boys &Girl'sClub. street. Our hn<'St v~Jue-cnJOY the plt-asurcs or a --------~HERITAGE ceilinf.( Gourmet kitchen Balboa P•ninsula I 007 Sr. Citizens Club. all Close to everythin~. Bkr t~rrific ~recnbcl~ loca· LC19una Ni9uel I 052 w/fa m1ly room + new ••••••••••••••••••••••• right there. Greal poten· 536-8836 t 1 o n and a n ~11 r · ••••••••••••••••••••••• landscapin~ Call Spurl· D~plcx .$93,500 tial. Call 546-2313. cond1t1on~·d home.,? This OWNER .ANXIOUS! in~ Investment Corp.. Triplex Sl2.5,()(X) OPEN "' 0 • '' s iuN 10 M wn e h 3 bd b th CLAS E · · M h II Rllt' · 600 1· · on ns ~ms.,-. :i ~ Vacanl lovely 3 BR, REALTORS SIFI .Dwill.sl'll 1t 833·3544 --~s a~-· _6_?~4 ,.. ~ and a low pnccofSSB.500 f.(arden home. Den. Ten-~~~~!'! .......... !?.~~~~~:~! .......... ~~-~~ OCEA~a~~~~c4~~:2 ba )-~ ~I lflllt. ~~sar:ed~~eca .. ~6~~~r . IEST INCOME UHfT IUY 4 units on Penins ula. This has to be Newport's best buy! $99,750. EXQUISITE VIEW CONDO A large s unk en brick patio ov_erlooking golf course completes this 2 bedroom, formal dining room, 2 bath h ome . Top quality throughout. $132,500. THE WAY WE SH IT ••• You can spend money. Or you can )pend money well. We urge you to see this offerin g. 4 bedrooms. 4 baths. Family room. View. $169,500. OCIAMRONT! Steps lo beautiful sandy beach in exclusive area. Large family room formal dining room, 3 bedrooms: 3'h baths. $375,000. Easy.terms WEBSCO Century 21-645-7221 MO BRAG Real Estate VISleN INCORPORATED Capistrano le_oc_h_l_O 1-8 by 1'kVAY Ill.Al.TY 639 --ilm ••••••••••••••••••••••• JUST FACTS s52-1500 •WEKNOW* OCEAN VIEW Duplex. 1500 sq. rt. 3 DR. 2 Ba. Oy owner . S74,500. 491).0672 OCEAN VIEW Duplex. by owner. 3 BR & 1 Br $68.SOO. 496·0672 --- Have something to sell? Classified ads do it well. ---------- WE sell a lot or houses. let us s how you why. Call :>40-3666 540-3666 S©ll~lA-~£trs· T hot Intriguing Word Game with o Chuckle O lleorro111>9 letters of th• lour te rombled 'JllOldJ b.- low 10 fcwm fovr al-WOfdL I ENFEDI A IEAUTY YOU LAGUMA HtGUB. CAM AFFORD $39,900 PRICE* ~E~~~CED - Pride o f owne rship. HO DOWN Ocean view. oceanside o( Gorgeous landscapi n~ IRVINE highway in beautiful Large lot w boat and ri trailer gate. Pnced to Fine Irvine location. Big P vale area of Niguel sell now. Cul-de-sac. family or 6 wants out! Shores. 3 BR. formal din· 968-4456 Will sell NO DOWN ing and £amity room plus A BUYERS DELIGHT PAYMENT to qualified den. Plan to see this veteran. Needs somt> home. Priced to sell ;il SUPERIL Y tender care. Full air con· $89,900. MAINT AINB> ditioned. Cathedral ceil-LCICJllftCI NiCJU'4 Reciffy Easy l o huy. Good ing living room. Huge 496-4040 8.10-5050 neighborhood. Shnrp 4 f i rep I ace . A 11 ti led bdrm, forma l dinhu~ rm, garden kitchen. Large CALL to See This Fan- large lot with covered master suite . Mirrored tastic llome Buy ! 33462 patio. Must sec lo ap· wardrobe. Large patio. Abalone Dr . 3 BR. 21 2 preciale. 968·4456 Fully sprinklered yard. Ba. forma l dining rm. ----1 Take advantage • Call fam·rm. 2100 Sq. Ft. 3 LSE/OPT.orTrade,$265. 752-1700today. Car gar ., 2 yrs new. mo. 3 br. 2 ba Condo. Nr. Ol'fN "' o .,, \ r11N ro 8r N'(f' Partial View. 1, m1. to bch. Frpl, pool, avl. 9/1. [. I priv. ~ach. Rec. center 7 %, S26,SOO. Ownr. 'lliJlljl!ilJ lnclds. Pool. Jacuni. _6_7_5·_0023 _______ ~ JitiHJt;1 Sauna. 4 Tennis Cts .• . .:::::11=•=, ==i=i=ir R•cQuet Uall Childre.n's play area. ta~ &uard. Listed at S87.7SO Now for sale by owner at $8.S,SIOO. ~/a,, Make O(fer . Ca ll 493-SOSS. COIOMA DB. MAlJ Vacant & ready to go! Beautiful view comer R ·2 lot w/slnglc family residence. So. oC Hwy . location! $85,000. Lois Miller 642·8235. (Ni3) SPYGLASS TWO STOIY FeaturinSt rive bedrooms and a bonus plus gorgeous custom ppol with jacuzzi, £ire pit, and gas bar-b-que. Great location on nature park. $164,500 fee. RE AL ESl..\H ·JOO t ,1. • , ·, )/, .. . . ••FOREVER VIEW•• New 3300 sq I'\. oa cul-. de-sac. cu!llom48R, 3b9.. 642 .. JH 644-6200 H1 0.-°"" ... ....,,... ~ fNc"' C.fflomlll NIU MIWPOIT llACH 644.1766 A COLDWILL U*B CO. VEDD.._._... · hrkfst rm, tam rm. l!' ~I 11 hrary . 3 car 1ar. Huitc 1n1rltd tree, Whkh $120.000. C1U 111·9411 bau een Laauna from Its BONO REALTY INC. earll"t dayt lntLU'e.s - pt1vacy on dttk of 3 BR. Classified Ads aeH bl• 3ba. home. $17.500 items. smaR hems or any item. 642..sl'JI. .. I H~wport B~ach I 069 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IRVIH E TERR. CdM , 1m ma1'. 3 bdrm., 2 ba.: s rr1all ocean view $75,000 BALBOA PENIH. Lik(• Ol'W :? bdrm .. 2 oa .: modt>rn k1tch w /blt-ins: 2rar,t:11r Sl$7.500 NEWPORT SHORES 2 S ty. A -Frame; 3 hdrms., 2 h a .; d t:' n1ralor·s drPum. Hu~e 0 l'Otner lot with 2 polios. $69,500 CAYWOOD REALTY * 548·1290 * --- WALK TO BEACH From this !>padous 4 bdrm, J bath ramily I ho me with JU!>l under! 3.000 sq. rt. or comfort Cnmpletely remod<'led. Immediate occupanl',v. Intercom & Mft "aler thru-out. Just introduced l o the market. Only $69,500. 646·771 1 Open Eves. PriceR.-ed $4000. Owner houi:ht ;1nolht•r home & 1s an:..1ous to mo\' e. T h01 s I 11\ I.' I) Schools and Instruction This variety of fine schools could introduce you to a new tomorrow }-'or r11rth1•r inlol mat11on I IT tf tllllJ.: pl:u•t•mrnt 111 ath l'rl1 l.1ng in lh1• l>:.111\ l'tfot St•hoob anti Inst ru1•l111n 1 li r\•1·to~~ CALL 642-5678, EXT. 325 SUM SHINE DAY CAMP ACJeS 4 · thru 12 Free Transportation Swimming Lessons /Bowling. Roller Skating/Miniature Golf, Horseback Ridjng /Beach Trips, Cookouts / Field Trips & Arts & Crafts. For Further Information Please Catt 646-8765 W e:-.t d 1 rt homt.'. ur' 1 ~raded by fussy ownl·r. HousH For Sale Houses For Sale luc a ted on one of the • ••••• • ••••• •••••••••• • • • •• •••• • • ••••• ••••••• • r1 nel>l streets an Nl'wport Mewport Be«t. 1069 M~wport l~oeh I 06Q Be ac h~ A xlnl family ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • home at an xlnt pncc See & compare SOUTH COA~T lNVESTl\11-:NT 549 011<2 LIDO ISLE Lovely 4 br. 2 ha. frpl, patio. a ll eler. k1t1•h. By owner. 673·1334 HPT. BACKIAY VA TERMS Lovely Ne wport Back Bety area, ovt'rlookin~ J!Olf c rs\'. und1•r consl All bdrms. ;u c Master s11.e. Al an unll<'lJevabh' EXP ANO YOUR STYlE OF LIYIMG Jf you like brick. come & see this Lldo Island spacious home on 45 ft. lot. 3 Bdrms., den + family rm. Easy walking & biking distance to beach & village. Copper plumbing. Approx. 3,000 sq. ft. $142,500 LIDO REALTY 3377 Via Lido, H.I. 673-7300 S53,700. All this + no Newport Beach 1069 Hewporl leach 1069 rlown. VA ll•rm s. Ph: ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Interested In A Real Estate Career? IM S WEEKS 'R!ptARE fOlt STATE EXAM UCIHSIMG Pltlf'.UATIOM FOR • Rtal Estate Salesmen & Brokers • Employment Assistance For Graduates With leadinQ Brokers. • Day And Evening Oas5es •Soles Sensi~ivity Training $6 9 -FULL COURSE With Ttlb Ad fO( hrf-H°" ll"oc.._ FrH G11ttt L.ctw. Newport, 325 Mo. IOldl "-Por"t llwd. 548-1192 EDMOND F. JACKSON Real Estate Education Since 1964 ACADEMY REAL ESTATE COMTltACTIMG & IHSUUHCE SCHOOLS GI-Master Charge & B of A Lf'f tMtn CORW to SUMMER DAY CAMP! Each week 's jam-packed full of fun thin g~ for them to do. From 9 AM to 4 PM Mon-Fri. btftdff Care A•aitallle Ws SI 5. for the week or $3.50 per dcry. lllflf I Business Property 1400 Income Property 2000 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• PRIME BA.MK BUILDING $1 ,050,000 $172,000·yearly income Excellent lax shelter Great Newport loca tion Ted Hubert&Assoc. 675·8500 Commerclol FREE& CLEAR 4 PLEX N r. L oma Linda ni\'crs1ty. SSS,OW trade as down pmyt on larJ?e O.C. home or Inc. J>rop. can add cash or other properties . Rick Aldcretle Rltr. 547 ·6469. Property 1600 (2l4-Pt.EXF.S.C.M.s1c1t• ••••••••• •••••••••••••• by side. lluy 1 or both. Lg COMMERCIALPropcrty· units w /bl tn s & Newport Penan. Slorc:'s & ds hwshrs. Onr/Bkr. offiC'cs -7 units. SlR.000 55fi-fi 171 income yr-Terms flexi---------- blc. C<all Tc'<I Tressen. EASTSIDE I PS. 639·6700or&14-51~ UNITS :11;3 !17 14 lll'UDLESTO:'i H. E. 9079Talbert. 1'' V. B~boa Bayfront 120 Feet waterfront pro- perty zoned com'l. Su1ta· ble for manne serYicc We have 5 and 6 unit in- \'CStments perfect for the starter investor or those ready for exchange up from a duplex or triplex BA YfRONT 2 -3 B H DELUXE dock, sport fishing land· 2 Custom lloml's Duplexes. stepe; lo ocean. ang, yacht salC!>. occano-1£· IQ ii ·~ BALHOA PE:'lil;'o;SL'LA Will lradeforeq in home ,::raphy base, restaurant :;i, UQ t:xct•llent 101·al10n on Lhc> or T 0 's. 642 3573 nr :i;hops. Price $650.000. Plac• . Ha.v & only 1 '.!block to lh<.' or will consider lease. Prop ... ti•a Ocean. Each home has 4 N rt•-h 1714) 6 75-4060 752-1920 BY Owner. 1.ov('ly 3+2 + bdrm s. 4 ha l h ~ & ewpo lll'C'CIC PETE BARRETT ••00 ~1!:.."'·W~!.!._IACH Callc>ry. 2 r1rc•placl·s. N <' w P 0 r l c re s t PEM HOUSE fam. rm. /\~~umabl<' 8',~ Townhom cs. S',, down. REALTY 0 ''A I ... Ir g wl.'l bar, ultra modt'rn DI " oan. 1~11 qua I ym . RI, •• APR. 2·4 bcdrm~. Lorrv Hf1ter o~lux~ ....... ~. $79,500. 641, 7>1~1 kitchen & private pier .. , . Jo'ee land. See at 1200 encl ~ar., pool. ll'nn1s. 7352 Garfield New units P OL F.a st Balboa Blvd .. or fr. $58,875 J'h. 645·6141. -;-Huntington HcaC'h, t<1x 0 t'all 675.8120 for more de 12 Robon CL (from Cst Condominiums sheltered property. h.l Newport ll1·1i.:hls; tree tetils. Hwy north on Superior, for 1ole 1700 yr write-off Sll M. Lions hidde n 4 h<lr m .. 3 1"1 -'• miletoc-ntranre). ••••••••••••••••••••••• Estates, SJt-2579 The Bluffs: early area. J Story 3 BR . 2ha S5 7. 000 A i.: L 640 5.51i0 Newport Air Associates Flight School & Flying Club LEARN TO FLY 5595 tFltl ... cl!MJ A'foil.W.1 * FAA APPROVED * . CMne IACWtt: 35 Hours t11ght lime in Cessna f 50s with 20 tiours dual instructio n. Club membership. Free dues. lnd1v1duel instruction. tailored to YOUR ab1l11y 20 AIRCRAFT AVAILABLE AT LOWEST RATES IM ORAMGE COUMTY L~ to fly now --and ha•• fun! '*Special Rates fOf' Commttclal or Instrument Students.. For Compl~te Details Call MOW 979-1155 1971 I Airport Way South Nex1 to th• T cilRMh Mil._ OrGIMJe Cowity Airport YMCA ca111p . OSCEOia . A Unique Mountain Camp Experience For boys and girls 9to12 years old August 9 through 16 Camp Osceola' A lull lacl111y camp located wllhln a 1>eaut1ful w•l<>efness area w11h a program especlalty d"5tQnod tor lh•s aae group Full aoctedlled with the Ameflcan Camping Assoc1allon. Camp FM: $65 for YMCA me<nl>t<s S70 lor non-Y members For lvrihcr 1nlorma1>on call 1he YMCA -6<12·9990 OR send 1n Ille rOQlstrallon 1orm below wllh $10 deposit 10 the Orange Coasl YMCA, 2300 Uruverally Orlve, New· port Beach, CA 92660. ---------------------------:.-----------c.mp Oectoll Aegl11rellon Form Augu11 •1e Addreu ------------ Boy CJ Girl Age __ Phone ------ f>areru /Guardian S1gnat ure: YMCA SCUBA DIVING CLASSES Storti,ng August 11th 45 Hour CA>urse Teens & Adults RHSNCfAL SCUIA M .. HT , ...... ..,..5 .. 7-tPM. ,.__SHdn ,.,... ...... ., ........ Course Fee-$60 Also Advance & Speciafty Courses CALL YMCA -642~9990 Chris LOOMis or Art Daly · Days SSS.0601 EvH 586-5299 or 968-4137 Orange Coast YMCA 2300 Uflinnity Dr .. H.wport hoclt Got A Problem? Would A "Good Job Help? Career Train NOW For: Stcretcwy R.ceptlonlaf lookkHp•r Jr. A'countont Typl•f·Shfto SJMclof .,,, ... Up Cout"M$ Doy.°' Inning Cl~aes 556-8890 ~.Irvine College ~ .of Business 1700 East Garry Avenue Santa Ana. Ca11torn1a 92705 (Newport Freeway at Oyer Road) Orange County's most progressive and mnovattve Caree~ Center. RUG CRAFTERS Offers Classes In Making Ruqs And Wall HarKJiftCJS Course is 3 two hour lessons completed in one week. Mornin9s I O· I 2 Evenin9s 7 ·9 USE OUR TUFTING TOOLS FREE Cost Includes: Three Lessons .•..•..... S 6.00 Instruction Book . . . . . . . . 2.00 Pro;ect Materials • • . . . . . • 14. 9 S Total Cost Of Cou~ .... $22.95 't! For details & . ·•-:.11 demonstration visit qur shop or phone 546-6340 . I Across the 1treet from South Cout Plaza at Bt!ar and SunOowe-r. NOW! READING Sll:CESS FOR YOUR CHILD L..,. how a ladr~to-Schoof Pr'OCJ"Cllll can 9n yow child a Mw S.cuss in school from the nry first day! Reoclftg Cft'lfen wll teoch yow child to read. mtd to read letter. Yat ccn send your chffd bock to real succHS in school by Ml oilft9 today. Back to School Class August 18-28 Phone Now for No-ObliCJCIHOll 'Test Appointment. READING CENTERS 645-9232 haths: k itt h1·n bit-ins, A rare u shaped 1 story s _ HORTH LAGUNA -.-;;;DON'T•:-* - with n0<1k. Danmj.! rm., Br, 3 Ba. 3000 sq ft . like -BY OWNER CO .... DOS 1 ~ family r m , sht'llstone new. $220.000. Lido Jsle. Onvt•r Shores Bayfronl "" Buy any investment unti Industrial/ Houses fvmishtd Houses Unfumfshed Houses UllfwNshed Jrplr. Courtv:m1 entry Pnnc0nly!540-4>111 Homl'lln1'°l't'Land! 0 <.·canViews-2•"3bdrm. you have1 checkro th<:;""' Prop•rty 2100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••, with love Iv 11001. $74,00(1 P-:--Pt-- -l--t -b-c-.. I units from $54,000. complete Y rcfurb1she11 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• G .. -ral 3102 G .. n-al 3202 Balboa Isla-... 320L · ri y wan s o uy Call 5 1!! 15H9.,.,n °0 Y Call 6 75-7225 Hcdrm, 2 bath sin~lc ...... "' """' nu ,.. CALL G) llH·HI.!. direct from own~r. 'fixer S Cl m•nt. 1076 s tory Co ndos. Only ---------••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••, ~A upper' h s e 1n Npt an e Sl9,950.wilh 20',,down& AIRPORTLOOP SUM·MER breeze 1 br, ~ : ~~~BAYVIEW Dplx 2BR.? ~ lle1i::hts. 548-5041 eves or ....................... monthly paym ents or 2 . Industrial condos on $130., util pd, C.M. Als~ 1~·~~ 'J ;~·jj (~I ~I Ba, blt~s. crpt~'. i:ar. lW R tA 1 r' ,,. 1 AM 2 Fixer Uppers on huge $200. A sk for 1'~r ank, Airport Loop. 3,200 Sq. ft. oceanfront l br. $125, ut1l -~·-! ··----·---_ <-'-pphire 213.377.7fi88 J"nr Nrwpor1 .,,.,, OHirt" _"ar Y ocean view lot. Rentc'<I 839-S32I, Agent. each. N i ce oCCic es. pd, Balboa. N.B. 2 br, • Iii· t "4 · -· Hiit YU MOMTEGO · BIG CAMYOH Asking $67 .500. Broker ---$155,000 kids, pets, singles. Walk -ni ~ • Corona del Mer 3222 Sl35.ooo. Bright & cht>crv. 496-7711 TWO 4-PLEXES to wates H.B. 2 br, has SJ25. Hb.8 .dl brl mJk'd ••••••••••••••••••••••• J~.v Own<'r. 4 Br, :! Ba, 11 k'd •-· I · S13S 2 r up ex 1 s 1 story, 3 Rr. 3 Ba. 3 car San Ju--a . 1 s, pe..,, sang es. ' · JEnY VIEW r·am. Hm. J)lt, honu~ .... ---MesaDeJMar.VerywelJ Try this cove cottage 3 $16S.C.M .2br,rnc~ f•ndoscd atrium lpl<rnl~. garage.customJacuui & Capistrano 1078 ****STOP•••• maintained . Lots of br,kids.pets.CdM.Lag. $175.S.A.2.br,family . On Ocean _Blvd, only tnys? l Fl'c. ~wd ~tri•••t sm all pool. Highly up-••••••••••••••••••••••• Wasting money on non-lawn. completely fenced. Beach 1 br. $l65 .. ulil pd. $175. Ws tm1n 2brslud10 steps lo China Cove A f\r. pool & Sl'h•~>I :\tr;1 ~raded. 4Br. 2ba. 1800 sq ft. nt•Jtoliablc rent receipts. recently painted. $80,000. COMPANY Agt Fee 97~ $185. S.A. 2 br fncd large luxurious 2Br, 2ba c-1,-an Ot•cup.1n".v by pla yroom, patio, T ax advantage of in. each Ht-.,\1.TO RS · · $260.Wstmin3+2,kids duplex w /hardwood firs. Sept. Rrkr roo1wrat1on Jndscpd. Lg. Int nr bch. tcrest&taxescould savc SOUTH <;OA.5T :-.l'l'I•: lll·M Costa Mesa 3124 $2SO.Org.3br,garage Formal dining rm.&: invited. SRS.:IOO t;om1 Asking $53.500. lmmd. youlOO'sof$$SS$yearly. INVF:STMF.NT 673-4400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $275.G.G.4br,rncd super Jelly & Oceiln f10anc1ng,byappl.only. occupancy. 25912 2Bedrm.2 balh,single 549-0812 CE-Side)2Br.Cplesonly. $285Tustin 2+2t/hse view. $650 mo. C&ll 832·2200 Aven1da Cabrillo. story Condos in Santa 4.PLEX Util & furniture inc. FURN. $145. H.B. cot. 6f4·72llagent. --4 BR 4 B F 01 "93·?09Jor493 175.5. Ana completely r e-. ----Child ok. 156 Me.rrlll Pl. tage LOCATION . loral10n· I • 8 • am-rm, n-.. .... . H t n gton Beorh M b 8 d r c f M 322~ V"ranllot, ll-l,Newport rm, Air cond. Pool ----furbish ed . still only in un 1 · Lohforsal~ 2200 $310.549-0433 em er oar o os a esa .., .. 'I SJ 50 000 8 Mobile Homes $19,950. with 10<;:, down. Xlnt bread & butter. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Realtors. Detter Busi· ••••••••••••••••••••-. • adl1rc~s. For more mfo. r 0 me· • • Y For Sal• 1100 Ask for Frank, 839-8321 Sho~ing 16',~ return on Laguna leach 3 I 48 ness Bureau, O.amber of 3 BR home, newly d-. -alJ"A4-57"" /\ .... owner. 645-9729 . t t _., 900 r II • • • • •••••••••••• C -~ _ •N ,.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• /\gl'nl. tnves men · .....,, u 7 Unit F.asls1de ltt with • •••o:•• . , ommerce. new w/w cpts and d •• JIARllOH Vll•:W NEWPORT SHORES JOx60' J Br, l,.amily Park -price: $6.300 down or plans. city and coast.al RENT Ch1tr":'1ng rum d. 530-1505 fft A9. $295 mo. No pets. Open F. OncanalW-sidtt.Walkto HuntinJ?lon Stale Bch.4 BR, 1 1'!1 Ba . Govt. takeoverpaymt•nts. commission a pproval house&patao.$185.for --. 9.5. 3Br. 2eac.~.~~ t;,,. rm. """'"· Club wt pnots & cau 536.4785 an. <pm. owned. Ne,. paJnt & cryt. CURTIS REAL ESTATE ••d >:tR sal~rled. oldec .. ,.,.,. or Gtia: :1 J I!: ~ 940 w. Congress. c. M. l 3 Bit d 3 B --lmm1.1c. $25.450. with 962·24S9or968·658l c rl'tiree 41M8170 1· If! !fl II ~~~eP!~fg~gM% ~~:~r~~a1·64~~~· .;Y 8~~~:n;~;J~~-;.,~~~tfo~ =: ~:."s:iu~~:.n~k~~ --TAX SHaTR--i~i'PLJ~'t.~~ N•wpo~1~ac1tliH : r;;:i lffil1 ~~~~:!!~i~~~ .. S74, 9SO-OWNER·M 4 •tlll9, Hoosier Trlr Court. 52:1 . 540-4429 OPEM HOUSE <7l417521920 ••••••••••••••••••••••• · · ~ ..--~ $325 3 Br. &auUlul , VISTA DEL LIDO Bluffs lavfronf Fairfax Or. CM. ~-zno. p ~ lOOO 7931 -0 Holt St, Hunt· M•wport Lot 65 x 150 WfNTER -Oceanfront 3 . FltH SERVICE condition. Ry Owner-3 B'R. 2~ .BA, . lncoM• ror-•r ington Beach. Luxurious S36 SC)O/tenni:'I ' 548 8.'>32 br. 2 ba. S3SO. mo. TO LANDLOIDS Century 21, 546-0521 Spaciou1BayfrontCoodo ou••l"e unit , C""'t. d,,.,.,.., 1~75 2BR, 28A. 2~x56 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2&3 Br aptiL Lions --' ·. --675-8531 Mt-b f Bo d f 1 BR & Lanai. SaJe/l.se ._., v -"'""' Skyline Peb OK Shon u--a I D .-.. , er o ar o a BR, 2 ba. NewlypaJnted. oA bl Nr pool, te nnis, school•. · .,,:.,~ (2) OELUXf~ •·PLEXES. Estate:'I, 536·2579 ,._.,,an, e_..-., 1 BR, 1 BA duplex. enc. Realtors, Uelltr Busl· .,.IU\ Per month. C"'-'ld r••• Opt. Owner. ""°asona e. blk to ocean.-~-.......... !"Ide-by-side. Huy 1 or letort 2400 _,., •Ill .... 615·5853. Im mac. $95,000. 675-41613 ---- ---,, .... U ... rTS ••••••••••••••••••••••• gar, no pets. 131 E. 21.tt cne" Bureau, Chamber of O.K. 640-0020 Agent Hnorvi.w..._.. 3 8', 2 Br. You own land. Ow nu w Ill r.nan<'e. $67,900. Owner/Brkr, 17J.4899 For Classllied Ad AC"'TJON C•fl a Daily P9ot AO·VlSOR &4.2-~ } FLAM INGO-Xlnt ~O/ld· both. Beaut :'lwim. pool, .... " . Sl .. "A" <Rear ) 844-0030 ommer ce. -..-. MewPort Condos Reasona ble . Comp I loc. nr. major shop'g 6 X gross. Will exdtange. Lot Onan.Head Ull1h, J 5J0·1505 Mesa Verde 3 BR, (UJ. 3BR,dfnrm,v1ew.Super furn. LrJt J BR. twin center. Need 20% dn. Investment Dtvi11lon, by yd fr.Sk1Slopei1 Over•'J rm, a ba., 2 fplc.; patio. clean, upjtraded lbruout.. beds. Beaut aduJt po.rlt, YEAGER HEAL TY. appoint only. acrr. $4,995. 83.1-4746 o Hout•• Unftltonllhtd f7N Vly. Prtvary! 2 Dr. owner/<1gent642.SOOO Sbowa Hite model. 890W.1SthSt,Sp 18,NB. 556-6171 QlJAlLPLACE 83J-0887art 6 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~d, pet, s nels, fncd <E.Slde)a Br. Cples_on......,..ly~. Beautltully decoratA!d. Ac~ for .. I 200 * DUPLEX. F./S&de C.M PROPE~T~'i . ltHI Estaf• GtMr.t 3202 JI a' p J 3 br ba UUI & f urniture lac, Owner movln1 out ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• w /hu,re lot $3!f ,SOO C7l4 ) 7 ·l W•t•d ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'ttlda. oo' . 2 ' Chlld Ok. 156 Merrill PJ. ~~l~::t-Hll,900.AC~ 3 Acres In South Latun• Ownr./Af?t 548 l!M2 23 UNITS-Needs outaide •••••••••••••••••••••• FREE FREE LAG. Hiiia 3 br, 2 ba, $310. 54e.0433 '• -$48 000 Makes 6 OC"ean p1int. <14) 28R & (9l HOUSE WNT'OllOUSE Profeaaloul Scrvlc.-hlld t HOWi view p.ar't'els. Only ts~ Try a _ Da ily Pilot lBR. Cd . flnancln" at Fortlosr,dellnqOK. • c ,pe · Don't alve up the shlpr down. Coal & uranium Classlfled Ad lo buy, sell 81 2% Principles only Qwlk Cuh! 67S-8M9 •LAHDLOIDS• BALBOA 3 br. ram rm, 2 "List." It in c la1MJ1(ied CAll NOW can supply all our tnt"rlY or rent som_!thing.__ Bkr 556-6171 Ho"'• f I" de r• • be, •PP~G~~~lt· 1ar. Ship to ll horc rosul'-1 752 • 7315 for 300 yra, but invest Claaaifled Ads sell big ----Classified ads sell biit 642·tt00 HOMIPfMDMS _64_2_·56_78_. ____ ~~ against lnfiatlon. Owner, Items, a m a ll ltema or Have someo,Jni to eeU? ltcma. amall ileml ur any C1Uforni1'1 wryest • ••Z·ttOO• Sell Idle lterns ...... _ 494-tlot or 492-&\'50. any lt~2-~ ClasslOtd •tb do It welt Item. Just call~5678.__ •Rental Service!• ..._._,., • • YOU'RE NOT TOO l.A1'E FOR COLLEGE Your mnturily ;111d t!X()(>ricncc ma~ c..'Ontnbuto to spet•uy com- plet1on of an indiv1dualiz~ B.A. degree lhruuKh the University Without Walls ptogr:im at John· &ton Collel(e, an uCl'Cedited llb- cra~ ar~s clu~kr ~<>llt!~e of the Umversaiy of lkdlnnds. Write or call: D. Murie Slockman UNIVERSITY WITllOUT WALLS ·JOHNOTON COLL EOE University of Redl.rnds Redlands, California 92373 (714) 793-2121 I • • JAPAN KARATE FED. 325 Ho. Newport ll•d. H.B. S.ite #5, Downstairs Days Tel. 642-0326 Nit~s 642-8387 IAcres1 FrOM "-9.....,...., NO CONTRACTS NO GIMMICKS $24 PER MONTH Special rates lo families, college students & groups. FREE TRIAL LESSON * Kcrate-Shito Ryu Shoto Kan • Aillido * MedatatfOft * Judo * Haplddo • YOCJO ANNOUNCING A ONE-DAY WORKSHOP IN ORANGE COUNTY "BUILDING SELF-ESTEEM" Saturday. August 9th. 9:00 AM to I 0:00 PM. Sheraton-Newport, 4545 MacArthur llYd.. Newport Beach. FREE INTRODUCTORY LECTURE Thursday, July 3 tst, 7:30-l:lO PM SMrata..Attaltelm Matar Hohl, I 015 W. lal Rood, Anaheim IMo r'flft'Yation Meded) For Workshop reser"•atlo1t1 •nd laforlftatlon. coll Marilyn Croswell 963-7490. HERE IS YOUR OPPORTUMITY TOBE TRAINED IHTHE ART OF APPLYING PORCELAIN HAILS • For Mor• Information Coll: MAGI'S MAGIC I \ COSTA MESA 642-MAIL NEWPORT VISTA PRIVATE SCHOOL KDG Thru 8 Basic Academics Ext.ended Doy to 6 P .M. •WE PROVIDE An Alternative to Public Schools By: Emphasis on Self-Reliance a nd Discovery in Learning Encouragin~ th e development of Independence E ncouraging Respect for the Ri ghts & Di ffcrences of Others. KAREN A. THOMPSON. Director 1525 Superior A•e. Newport leach. Ca. 92663 CALL 642-17606 SCUIA DIVING COURSES For TH111 & AcWh ~~ 112 PRICE SPECIAL You can get your 30 hour scuba course from 1h price ($22.50) when y~ bring a fri end at the r egular pnce of $45.00. Receive a Padi Naui or LA Co unt y Scub~ Certification upon completion of the course. CALL 557-0035 TAKE THIS TEST! Reading the following paragraph. American Speed Reading Academy guarantees that an tnd1v1dual will be able to read a minimum of 3 times faster than his present rate, with greater comprehension. or his tuition will be refunded; And this guarantee is not contingent upon any homework required. Only fully licensed & certified teachers are used & the course is taught on an individual basis. with a maximum of 10 students m each class. Permanent progress logs are kept by each s tudent. Mechanical devices or other crutches including fingers, are not used. Th~ stuoent is taught to read naturally, us· ing only the eyes & a tremendous capacity of the mind If It Took You More Than 5 Seconds You shcdd Know Abovt. AMERICAN SPEE DREADING ACADEMY 2790 Ha,.bo,. Bl•d., Costa MHo 546-6960 htweett 9 AM & 5 ,M (Absolutely No Obligat1onl LITTLE RED SCHOOL HOUSE Re<jiste,. .,.ow For Summer P~OCJrom 1525 Santa Ana A•e., Costa Mesa Call 645-4381 A<Jes 2'/?-7 Full & half dny progrums P1 t:n1c s _On:n11 ,..:lit L'.1mpouls lk..1.d1 J.:::-;t:u1::,1u1b 1"1vld Tnps * Swimmin9 Lessons A•ailable Open 6:30. AM · 6 .PM l ndl\ 1du,d .\ttL•ntion. E\pcnent:c<l T L' ..i r h~ rs . PI ,1n11\' d P 1 u gram - lnl'1LuJrng JnJLh & 1 L·.id111 ;.: rl'adincss, W'h & <.:l'iilh, lllU:o>ll, !'ILll.:IH.'<?. s lury llll1L', ~o<.:1al ::,tudtL':; & t:rl'.ill\'1.! plan. Tuesday.July 29. 1975 REAL ESTATE??? HAVE YOU ALWAYS WANTED TO GIVE IT A TRY NOW .. THE TMOM.AS SYSTIM" present-, a ore·hcens1n9 program lor yo1i to take to pass the s ta1e license examination. s599s TOTAL COST TO YOU START YOUR CAREER TODAY!!! Coll Mon.-FT-i. 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. CALL FOR RESERVATIONS LIMITED SEATING AVAIL.AILE 752-7300 VALLEY REAL TY A BERG EHTERP'RISE CO. FIRST CHRISTIAN PRE-SCHOOL Yidoria & Placentia. Coda Mesa ACJ" 2'/J-5 "Our inlent is to provide each child the opportunity lo develop as an individual in rhe best possible way physically, mentally and emoliooolly.'' Excellent Staff -Srroll Classes -Reading Readiness -Music -Kinder main -NI - Science -Awareness of Self & others. Please phone 5 48-3468 / 642· I 85 7 for Foll re-gistration information. DAILY Ptl.OT ri. Aft* ...... u.tww.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Corona d•I ~ 3122 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• I liR + sep. gunl rm. le bath 121~. 673-~or 4!17 220:i Evd. Costa Mesa 3124 ........................ Off leotearaltl 1, 2 & 3 Br. Adults no pet11, dshwhrs, shag cpU, clo11ed gar•ge. frpk, ' flHQ. Gas & water pd. • root LA MANCHA AnS 778 Scott Place, CM &4.Z-5073 I Ill CLOFTOHLYl Pvt Patio. frpl, 1 yr lse Jmmedaateoccupancy HAYLOFT Af'TS 28 3 A •ocodl>, CM 645-0143 M.orCo~ CEDARWOOOS 329 Uni\'ers1ty Dr. near Back Bay. 2 br & den. From $275. Easls 1de. $48-7437 or 646·1164 CASA VICTORIA 1,2 &3Br • Deluxe Unfum/ or Furn. gas/wtr. pd. Adults-No Pets Sec. gale l'ool. Rec. Rm. Elevator 525 Victoria, 642-8970 Costa Mesa's Finest Loe. Only kind in the area. Quiet · garden· like·adult living. Lge 2,3, Br, 1,2 Ba. WW crpts, drps. pal10, bltns. some wood hurning Irpl. Beaut. landscpd, heated pool & Attractive rent. M ariinique Aph. 1777 Santa Ana Ave. CM Mgr Apt 113 64&-5542 MEDITERRANEAN VILLAGE l Bedroom 1 Bed room & Den 2 Bedrooms 2 Bedroom Townhoose 2400 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa (714)557-8020 LGE 1 Br w/loft. pool, Jacuzzi. encl. gar, util pd. Adlts only $235. Avail 7 -15 . 393 Hamilton. 642-1960 days, 645-4411 1•ves Quiel 2 br, l''~ ba , Townhouse . cpls only. 610Joann. $100. 548-9573 Hacienda De Mna 160 W . Wilson, C .M. Closed Gcro9es BEAUT. GRQUNDS ADULTS-NO PETS 10 minutes to ocean. Lge l Br $175. Gas & Waler incl Draperies. carpets, ---------------------1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1 gas heat. gas stove, air I· cond1tioning, swimming Houses Unfurnished Houses Unfurnished H Fu • .L........1 • pool. rec. room. washers •• •• ••• •• •• ••••• •••• ••, ••• •• •••••• •••• •••• ••• , ouses rn•~ Of' ""portments Furnished & d I · 324 4 Unfumished 3300 •••• ••••• •••••••••••••• rye rs. r'Ylne Newport leach 3269 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hunti--'on Beach 3740 "o pets, No children·. ·················~····· . ..,. , 3 n FR DR T •••••••••••••••••••••••Balboa Island. So.••••••••••••••••••••••• prer. middle aged or re· r, · · ownhousc 3 BR fam rm dble fplc 2 Bayfronl. 4BR. 3ba, SMALL BEACH HOTEL t ed U I pd $ 55 .. Close toschs.park/pool ba'0 s, co~ner 10°l Family only. Winter Rooms.S2Z.50week. ;2.5848\i . · 1 mo. S450 mo. 833-2708 Gardener & water paid. SiOO. Yrly S900. 675-0525. Apl!> SlOO mo. 536-7056 BEAUT. N<'w RanchoSan Back Bay. Adult family. -----S175. 2 BR. single sty. S435 t h 2298 Condominiums b I c •-o 2049 Joaquin Twnhome. 2 Rr. · m 0 n · U f 3425 Lnnuna leach 3748 e am cea ' "' · 2• i h;i , 2 story. Ovcrlooh Redlands Dnve. 642-0596 n urnish~ -~-·· "A·· Wallace, 646-888.1 642 4387 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ····~········ - -- t:olf cr>urse & lake. SQOO or · 547.7 044 , 55 2. 0055 ------CLEAN 2 Dr condo in San )210. 2 Br. nu cpls & drps. -------BAYS.HORES. 2495 Juan.Poul.walktoshop Summer &Winter Stvrefr1g,carport,enc. RE .... TALS Cr estview Dr. Lovely 3 pin g center. $225 Rentals. patio. No children/pets. *trN~ PAH: 8R,2 Ua,$425.p/mo.yr-496-8528 lBlkBch&Town.Ocean 731 "A" W. 18th St., · ly No pets (213)7994856 -------view. frplc. 4 UNITS. 673-7787 3BR,2 Ba ........ · S385 or646·62l!>° · DuplexesUnfum 3600 Sl50 to S350 per mo. ----------3 BR .2'~ Ba .... $4251465 -.:. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 494.5145 ~knds or afl.6 S235. 2 Br. 2 Ba. bltns, COLLEGE PAHK PAMORAMIC VIEW Privacy + 3 BR. 2 BA . wkdys. ('pls .. drps: very clean. 3 BR. den, 2. ba · · · · · $400 Bay & Irvine Hills. En· fireplace, gar , patio, nc ----.-1130 Vactona 9'79-5099 . Ran~ho~anJoaquin. tc•rtainer 's deli ght pets S29S.CM 646_4414 Studio apt. gar, ulil fu.rn. ZBR,2 2 Ba ....... SOO<I w pool & ga __ __ t s t & last clean g. Sl90 Lge. 2 Br. newly de· TURTLERCX.'K . . me room cor. g ar. waler pd. J BR 2 Ba •• 25 1' antasllc new 4 br, 3 ba . .._ 4!17 -1236 aft 8 PM . .,.. 000 f ~portments Fvrnish~ --Adults, no pets. S.18·9441. W;\LN UTSQL'.ARE 4 sq l custom home. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mewporileadt 3769 ---------3 BR 2 b· S29S wood C'e1hngs. J frpks. Balboa Island 3706 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 Br . gar. slove. refrig. 'c•tal N. ~ ·c· O\'"' · many xtras SllSO. mo. 0 ._. THE IEAC Adults no dogs. S140. 240 S ,.. "R l,.,I 645·7102or63J-0797 ••••••:•••••••••••••••• "' H Avocado544·8Z10. ummer en J -BACHl-.LOR Partly furn. I flr furn. years lease. ---- G rm, 3 Baths .. S2800Mo. 11/\RBOH View 5 br, 3 ba, ~ar prk~ Sl50 mo, util $185 mo 103 McFadden LARGE 3 Br w/patio & 1''/H. 0 K. pool. tennis, pd . Yrly. ll75-27!17 Pl 675·1865 frplc $250. 1 Br $175. • \'tew $650. 640-0008 L 2R b Garden apls wfpool. - --Corona del Mer 3722 A,·aal Sept I! r. 2 a. Adults only The Ven· V,51.H Bluffs. front row; \\aler ••••••••••••••••••••••• YEARLY $300A1so Lg 3 dome,545-86is I view, 2 bdrm!>. & fam .. 1 BR apts . ;\dull only. no Br & Oen. Winter U50 RIAlTY 2,18.'iS4 . fl S700Mo. peLs. 1•~ hlocks ocean St<'ps to ocean. 645·8171 552-7500 t-;aslbluff Hlly 644· llJJ Ulil. incl 2500Seavaew 5000 Nrplun<' 3Br. 1'·2 ba. cpts1drps. nu paint. Seabreeze. $210 per mo. 545·6375 I OFAKIND Co7.y, \'ery tkan 1 BR. 2 Ba . II\• rm . den, front yard xlnl l'ond .. rear yard fully fcnn!d --- Condo Nr Ocean, 2 Br + BACHELOR apt. $200 WinLer Rental, avail now Den, 2' ~ Ba. tennis & mo. includmg ut11. Steps to bcal'h. Modem 2 2 BR. A DUL TS. Bltns. p ool S4i5 mo. Lse. 675-3508 lift. frplc , $235.642-3400 cpts, drps, nr. shops & !179 ·5340, X2Stl days, ------mrkl. Sl8S mo. 180 "D" H42·5451 eves. Costa MHa 3724 2 RR . I ~a. beach nook. Rochester. 675-6527 ••••••••••••••••••••••• a \·a1l. Sept. Isl. Blk --· ------ w iJacuizi ~75. andd NEWLg.2br,2ba.tnCM Houses Unfwftlshed Houses u ......... d HcMIHS Unfurnished s•s UnL..-!.L~.. J.!ardener. 559·4128 Gar. patios. woockd lol. s39 . 95 WEB< & UP "" •-~ D I •Studio & 1 RR Apts --••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.!.•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••UNIV. Prk Tl•rr <.:am· euxeS27S.644·fil~ •TV&MaictScrvAvail CostaMHa 3224 Costa Mesa 3224 Fountain Valley 3234 Huntirte)tonleac:h 3240 bridge Twnhsc. 3 br. 2 BAYVIEW3larjlebdrm!> •PhoneSer\',IJtd f)OOI hcach. S275 yrly. 631-1479 CLEAN 2 br townhou:'le, S40 WK UP 1&2 ad; & 11., ba. gar~ge. $195. 1, h C 1 TV .d Adults. no pels. 548-6357 1ac . o or , ma1 ~crv , pool. THE Mio:SA . EX lge clean 2 Br $140. 415 N Newport Bl, NR Ref & R. Also 1 Br $125. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ha. Comm Pool. SJ!)S 21 i Ba. Rugs, wallpaper. •Children Section M ESA VERDE: 3 BR, 2 2 Slory w /fplc, 4 UR. 2 12 Super 4 bedrm. 2 buth + 17306 Pearh.S.'>2 78.Clli J(aral(e. Avail Sept 1st. •SS OFF week's rent 3 BR, 2 BA. cpt. drps, Ba, Crpts. Drps, bllns. bath, epls. drps, bllns. den, crpls. d~. R/0 . RENTALS ~month. 646-1713 w /ad incd. yd. Nr. So. Csl. fed yd. Kids & small pet OW, $395. mo. Bev or Joe $350. Nr Wc!>tminstcr ---2376 Newport Blvcl. CM )>laza. S315. mo. 642-0445 O.K. $395. w /gardener & 963·4567 963-1786 . Mall 963-4569 Hev or JO<' 1 rvinc NEWLY decorated 4 br. 3 548·9755 or 645-3967 646·9681 Ad Its over 35. 548-2407 AVAIL. Sept June, very FUNKY Eastside 1 br. lgc duplex. 5 doors to Great for bachelor. New O<'Ca n. l br $215. & 2 br cpl. S200. Util pd. 26S3 ~45 Util pd.675-8345 Sanla Ana Ave.631-1289 water paid. 54$-3621 . ----2 RR. 2 Ba.··· · S..1.50 /360 ba. den. frplc. ~teps Lo ----- 2 BR. Reduced rent for FireplaC'e. 3 BR. 2 HA. nu 3 BR. 2 Ba. . . s.125 /47.'i beach Lease s.sso. Ry Lge Fum 2 Br he_l ping fix up. Pool• SHARP 4 BD 3 Ba. Huntlrte)to" hac:h 3240 cpls, drps. S315. mo.&>' 3Br. 2•, ha. fo'.H ... $450 owner645·3370aft.4 Dltns. w/w, drps, pool, pnvgs.2adull.s.631-1886 Twnhse bit-ins. fpl. FR,••••••••••••••••••••••• orJoe,963·4569 Nc"'portHeach -$200. Adlts. no pets 2 BR. Duplex w/ gar & --pool, p atio, $425 lse. OOLLHOUSE! 3 br, 2 ba. -3 BR. 21 '.!ha . . S.'i',O TOWNHOUSE 2Br. 21,, 642-9520 &~ nt patio. No pets. Sml. child COLLEGErARK 8JJ.16S 3 newcpts&drps.Frpl.Wehave2housesw/fplc-;, 4Br,2''l ba,wntr ... ~l ba . po ol. bllns .----""'U"!"'e s ok. Sl80. 642-7830. 3 RR, 2 BA. fam rm, Avl. 8115 . $350. 898-1731 3 BR, 2 BA, cpt.s. drps. LE RAISOR wa!'h /d ry, gar. No pets $185. ATIRAC. qwet, 1 & nt.rwlshed ---bllns. nu cpt. & drps. BIKE to beach, 2 br, $175.. eves bltns. $335. mo. Bev or 675 9188. den, patio. bltns, garagC'. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • lBR unfurn. apt. C.M. Cov'd. patio. $350 mo. kids. pels ok. Also Joe96.'l·4567 ---l Adult, no pet. 2234 B G~Mral 3802 Patio, no C'hildren or 631-1919 sparkling 3 hr. $175., Prestige neighborhood. --REAL TY San JuOf'I Rutgers ••••••••••••••••••••••• pets. Hld pool. 548·9548 kids, pets. singles. Agl. converted 3 BR 2 BA 2 Beaut. .s~o.oo~ home. Capistrano 3278 · ANAHEIM Hunti..-•--h POOL HOM1 Fee. 979·8430 ' : formal h•mg, d•rung •m. 4523 C•mP"' D•., J,.;no ••••••••••••••••••••••• N;oe 1 B• dpl•. Quiet. Sep VIEWS• SPOlll'SI • .,..on -114G 'JQ rook ~ar gar .. covered patio, lge. (am . rm. wet bar & Campus Valley Shop Ctr. New 3 Br, 2 s ty, 2car gar. by gar. Empl adlts over · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• kJi g~~:.• f"R, [>~~~\ EASTS IDE 8 "', 2 ba de· ;:;ant·. $350 P<' mo. Ask f.,,k. 1 8" dwnsta; "" CALL 8l 1-8600 26 s 53 c , 11 e s a n " 3S. no peb. S48· 102t New C ~nyo~ R;m. Apt.• in 2 Lox"" Apts, nr bch utll. ·or. 1500. 919·2SIT o• luxe Condo. Nu appl, ept, 962-4~f!th or f'ay, Bh B" "P· 3 ~" gnr. cu,tom Ba<hm. 714.S4S-2487 Anaheim 11111' gwc you pd. 3 Br, 2Y. 8', f.,,lc, 2 961H 4 05 drps. Frpl. Pool. Gar dr. landscaptn~. Avail. 8/1. -----------all these abundan.tly ' garages, $375. 2 Br, 2 Ba. · opnr. Adults. $345. EXEC. MANSION 3 br $52.5 mo. 10·6, 963-4581, & Univ. Pk Terrace. :I Br, 2 NEW 3 BOHM. dbl. gar .. l BR Furn $185 go~~lry Clul> llvang frplc . l gar. $29S. 3Br,den,kids &pel 673-S003eve/wknd lg. ram. rm, 3 ba. Ne~ wkndsart6,751·646l, Ba.Twnhs~.nrpool,$385 lrA.bckyd,drps.&crpts. lBRUnfurn $165 Ho ·b 11 k t~cli~nis els. 213·598·5425. , $l&s2Br,ehild.angb cpt. & paint. $550. . . }"·833·9'4Z<'<N. NO P>:TS. M;.s;on Rell Lots of hltn" JM>OI, walk oue ac n n•· 1,2&2 ------- , 3 Br, f • m rm. 2 ba, kids. 3 Hr + 2 Ba. furn avail. ll68·'5ta & 9...,17118 38r, l / 12 l1a, Xlnl '"'' hY L"'J""a l•ach JJ4I tmt.• Phone M,. Moseo t 0 , hop p; n ._ '·, m I. b• m + den. >'or mfo WANTED• Aug. I "' aft. ~t. angls, fncd. gsr Fpl, lg ram-rm. rncd yd ocei.n .1 Ntc/wl cpts. • $32. ••••••••••••••••••••..,._• at 493-2078. beach. 931W.19t.hSt. 637..::_4300 Bach83S. o~Ol5 bcr.3 w/pool. Pool 3 br 2 b .. ,.hlld kids ok. $350. 64S·S045. For Renl. 3 or 4 Br, house, mo• s a s t · .., 1 0 Sh · · ------548 l\A92 • Balbo I I _ _. 3106 i:ar . .,, < · > ' ' '"• "' ' fenced yard, encl' patio. C'lunup. 1-735-0636. ar p ocean ''ICW conlen,· Sonta Ana 3280 . ..,.. a I Gnu -pet, applna. $2JO. 2 Br, East.side, no kids. r l $290 A . 1 porary home, 2 Br, 2 Ba. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 BR, 2 BA. enc. gar., Furnlahed SJ7S. 1 br, Stove, very quiet & ~~ mo. vaa 8/l FAMILY ESTATE · den. furn exrep hdrms. 2 BR 2 RA Condo Pool E-SIDE bach w /frplc DELUXE 2 br on Gran<J W/W cpl & drps. l,.°'l mi sngls,pet.Al\.l"ee. clean.S22S.645-25'73. 3BR.FR.PaUo,GiganUc Avail. Aug. at.~5$400 A!C.'Pets&chlld~n oK: Just redecor~ted. Utii Canal. Lillie Bal. l s from beach. children HOMIPfMDBS , 2 BR W/POOL& Yd. 1 yr. yard. Only $350. Call per mo. dcpcn<Janiz uPQn s215. m o. 645.7424 or pd. $175. mo. 67S·29t3 an Boat dock. frpl, rad.ianl OK, no '?elS. S240 mo. .. •642-tfOO* NEWLY Decdt'd .. 3 br, 2 le.ase. $350. 2 m.1. from 1161U~t8or962·77118. no. of tenants. Call 536.1389 5 heal. Yrly. S400. No Bolsa Chica & Wamer. ---------ba. Frpl, pvt. pauo. Avl beac.h. Avl. A~ 1 C.U: 499·2109 c-vcs & wknds or pets/children. 673-0207 See Mgr 4662 Milo, ApL I BR, pool. Sharp decor. 8/ 1. $350 mo. Daya : 7 l .t • 9 6 8. 7 8 2 1 0 r SURF special' 2 br S18S.. Mr .. Brubak<'r at !°>''6·0601 $135 Cottage. singles. Partly rum. bach npl. Ulil i-•bo , 1-......1-~· A. 846-5847 prlvitCY. nice alreel. 7S2-7363,87S-3412Eves. 213-430-1232 1ln1lles, ramiliC":'. Or re dunngworkmghours. jleragC' pd,frplc,gar,yd ,trtts. U1 a •n•n--01 ----------ground• & pool malnt. 7SW Wil uonable 3 br. $220. -----$18S 2Rr ,kids&pet. No pets. Qwet person ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 BR, I', BA. W/Wciit" $425. 2217 Ra lei ah. Clean 2 Br. 7 · son. TWNHSE l or 2 BR. W/0 . singles ok. Agt. Fee OCEANFftONT !U'.0,000. 1"\JRNISHEO ns.s. 1 br, prcr. Sl60. 548-0tOl 3 Br, 2 Ba. bay view, new drps. dshwshr , lrpl, 63l.(I088 or~ Ad u I ti · No Pel s · stove le re rrtg. $17$./$210. 97~8430 Condo. 3 br, 2 bo, 2000 t.q uUI. singles. Agt. Ftt. w a 5 h e r /dry e". N 0 patio, encl. gar. a.Ddttn Mana1er IA. $175/mo. t st &r lasl + $50./$7S. n. Bar. trpl. Sec. guard HOMIFtMDBS t•lleMJIOll .._,. 3740 children or pets. $415 OK. no pets. SIJ65 mo. \fl 1 BR w/garaae. cpts, 2 BR 1 Ba Duplex Gu 552·9565 lni... 3244 $795 mo. 1.se. Adults on ••••••••••••••••••••••• s.48-2649 ml. from beach. Warnet' th-ps, t11c balh, reh19. led yard 1022 vtd«ia' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ly. 544-7678 •642-9900• NO 1NCREAS1': ln sum -l!I Rolsa Chica. 82 Milo a love, a mp le clout szso. mo. isa.8728 ' Hute preatiae 2 &ly. 4 br, SPAC. 2 br. 2 ba Condo. 2 vrn w b lni & f mer renl. Beaut l brfum $375. Yrly 2 hr. 2 ba, 2 Apt. A 846-5847 ' 1 a_pace. Ideal ror matuT• format dine rm. 2\AJ ba, patios & R<'c. ctr. Cls t 2 r · d ng rpl HouHI Furnished°' npt3 Sl6S & S17S. Spanish story• 2 c.r end gar . -----tdUple. No peta of any u91raded t.hruout. 2 Yrs Schls . & shops. 5078 Ap· l"'t1 blks to ~h. Nortr UnfU1'ftlah~ 3300 !ltyle blda, pvt encl gar bakony.642·1&0.r NF.W ddux<', tw>ach .,..., lrl'ftd . No chltdron. BTOf'O 3232 new. Walk to ocean. $475 ple Tree l yr lse S325 en • new pt11nt. S39., ••••••••••••••••••••••• pool sauna lndry adtu' 2 Rr. 2 Ba. d08ed 1w. ,....7 •• .. ••••••••• .. ••••••• per mo. Call Keith or mo. 1st & tut + $100 SC'(' 673 3731 l730i Keels'on Ln • l blk orotto d .. Mer 3822 $275 mo All u\11 pd. • Fay962·4471 w r 8 ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 841\ 1311 or ~4938 "'-- 2Br. Din. area. I&• LR, 2 BR IYI BA Condo, . & S 2 S c 1 e tl n. g 2 Br hou:s<'. refrif!. oi;toH· Exp'd men s~lung r ro • o each off Slat r. 2BR view r 1 Nofrc• ,e1<l p•tfo • ••P 1••· ~..,lio Viejo. Air, •tt. 28R w/den, IY. ba, enrl 213"30·3079 l.•gun• Rt0<h Viii••• .. rty to m•na•• '" JIB 8421114 " otove Xl~t 'ti~..;•"· .J>lllnt. aoo mo . ......, .. • 1•r, pool. Jr. • d.,,., beek>'•nl Mlle to beach. ~rly L•• 831·9t39 Mc N 8 er•• · '38 · 7 39' peU. la95. Open 12.4p:f~ SF.LL idle iltnos wld1 &42.-199'7. 843-8500or 956.1 $230. 8t'7 ·78Sl . Wantadresults 642-5678 ~pi an . ''Mike.. Wantads CaJl642-S878 3:12·AHellotropeAft. ~.!!_YPUotCJ..anedAl , --f • I • t . . . ... . . . .. . . ~.. . . .. "' . . . BJ v """'L.. t-'1LOT TueSday July 29, 197$ ~dd it...Buil~ it...piaeer it. •. Hammer it ... Carpet ~t...Ce me".'t tt...W1re tt...Hoe lt ... Clean it ... Move 1t...Press 1t ... Pamt it ... Nail it ... Plaster 1t ... Fix it. .. SERVICE DIRECTORY Plumb it ... atch 1t... 1pe 1 ... emo e 1 ••• Roof it...Landscape it...Tile it ... Trim it...Sewlt .. . Haul it ... Add it... Plant 1t. .. Alter it ... Learn It .. . ~!':~!!.~~~~! ...... :~!.~~~!!~~ ........ :~~~!~~ ............ ~~!~~ ............. ~~!~~ ................ ~~~~~~!'!? ........... ~~~~!'e.':'! ..... ~!'!~!~~~~~~r.::'!! .... ~~1~ ............. . NANt'Y UAttNi':S John's Ca rp c t & Paleo eovt•ri., d~c-ks, ExfMrt Japanese Garage, lloust-& Apt. Ford's Landscspe Pror 1>a111ter, honest Paperhan~ing L.R. OTJS Plur:nban&: Typing Sl'r\'ll"t'. Ht"os Upholstery. Ori i.h.impoo fenl·es, tot~·· ~·ompet1t1ve Landsrape Gardener Clt•un outs & Haul uway. Sod/Lliwns/Spnnklers work, reas. Int/ext. froo Profes~1onat, lleasooa-Water htrs. nil sites, dis• ralc '> by the page 0 (soil relardunts) pnc~i..8 #28(1~ 830-5503 TakatuNursery-546-071A 545·5475&5571WJ7. Llc /l ll~urt!d:962·7817 e~t. Ref s. 548·2759, ble Free f.i.l, 673·5829 posab, s toppaacs, re• hour 640 5885 or640 S92I Qegreasers & all color -. --------642·3913 Ml 5 PM pairs, remodeling un• brig hteners &. 10 m111 '!o~ J ones C~truchon GeMral Servicet $12 a Lood Japanese Landscaping -repiping Nt:w ConslnK'- Carpe•r bleach for your whllt' 2'J22M:. R?' Ad.d1t. p~uo ••••••••••••••••••••••• Get nd of unsi.:hlly Sod, reseed , spr!nklen1. EXTERlORS SAVE $$$ f'atlos tion. 24 Hrs. be & bofl<l ••••••••• •• •••••••••••• rurpc_ ts . Save money by ~11 !...!:!c est. 64Q.1876 _ "TJI I NGS" by M'"" ... <" TRASll & DEBRIS Free est. C-27 645-3388 R. L . Sinor S t ate ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6'12·6263 SAVt: t. J'rulll. t"uslt>m """ Licensed 1 s d c II ---------d s.a;1ni;: ~e xtru t rips. Gard•ninq Gen w.oodwork. repairs, Coll Student !>48·6428 M n ure a Creatl•~ Dfficins -, ~~s~~~·w~l l'~~~e a,~..,l o~, Clean living room, dnun~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• plumbing, t:lc.642-5613 •• ~!~••••••••••••••• 979.3335 JNTF.H & EXTto:RlOR MAR ~~Ap6~.81NG rm & hall $15 Any r m Q 1 -----Tras h huuled. t:arnl!C/yd p t" M 0 "' • .,...,, tll·~•I!"' i;4::; :~t~I · u11 1ty/Mu111t /ldst•pg · WILLJAMS&So Professionals will paint u 10 c·ovcr.s, a s nry NO JOBTOOSMALL N e w or Ht•modc lan,:: S7.SO,couch$t0,<'ha1r S5. sod sprklr~ so1i ~·ond llANOYM/\N Homes & dea n e d . /\ny.lh1ng ns your home and do it Carpentry,t;le.l''l"eeest· • 15 yrs. exp. is what ~I, .n p \;'12 333 1/. Apts. Consr1e ntious moved.S36·88t14ll•l'hl•rcl S~Kson!?'·11B~ck/8lock & right. lnl/Ext. Reas-Fair Price. Call Ken DRAINCLEARED$6.~ Wurk. No Joh Too L.in~c or Sm.ill MikP&l5 51~ count:f, not method. J do "A6~4a90ou . Cr afts man 645-65.SS aft 4 ----• tone.'-a 5ol ·7829 R work m yself. Gd. refs. _.,..,_ _ n . H041sec leanuMJ C Refs. 497-3169 &7Sl-<J684. 642·1770 or ay 675·9184. Eves/Wknds -Same Prico 531 0101. JAPAN ES~ GA ROl';NER R"'1ove Dri•eways ••••••••••••••••••••••• ollegc s tudent-Airless •QUALITY PAINTING • Scott's P atioCovers Guar SSS.738(» I I G d . DIRT & HOUSEC'L'·'f\NING equip. 4 yrs. exp. Refs. C I h f 1 · CJrper\try Sa' IC'l'S. All C t/C ~ 10 yr:. l'X pf'r. all ph.i:.CS ne ra rng · , ... . ·~ o~r No Job too I~ or sml. Interior & Exterior omp t ru ma inspec Tile t'has~s & K~11hxll·hn~. emen one ltt'a:.onuhll'tK,tuoull'S UEBRIS. 833-212.4 Business. C11ll Jur~ce s Malen al al discount. Ph: Call Lee 8J0..7278 Free e:.t 6112 2624 ••••••••••••••••••••••• t'u~tom Wucid"urk1n~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• <.:a ll 7511!137. Ral!gedyJ\rins.675·6553 673.J6511 ,1rterS. t;.12 7075 Ptulhps Cement Co I DO IT ALL! ------ Cstm Work fo'ret-esl. J f\PANt-:s to: l•:>:PEHT F.lcctric a l , Plumbini.:. Want a Rt-:AI. CLl':AN MoYin9 C~t S~r•ic~ lir/bond·751·5657afl6. CAHUl':N t-:H lndu:.tna l, l'tl' Reas. Rates.548·5203 llOUS~'> Call Gingham ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• - --.---Comtnt•rt·1ill . Rc:-.1dtn Gi rl. 1-'r~e 1-:~t'\. 645 5123. ('ari>cl & Upholst..•n Patios. llnveway.s. Con-u al 54tt 7!1~8154S 5182 !tilt• Way \faintenance <: r t ' k 1 l •JIOUSi!:CLt-:ANINC ,. C'lt•J nin ~. St cJm ,11,i • t: l' .wor · r ;H'. or --. • . • . t-;l~e l'lumb1ni;/ -Ry Reli:.i bleCouplc :-.h.im p t>n •. Free e ~t work . l'reee:-.l.B:n8832. l\H·.X ttA~ MI KI-.~ l',1inlmg Gd rates Hcf:-548-6271 6'167811 Palios--l>;i~;::-Hl~~·k & LaY.nCleant111:) ~ ,iv l'rumnJ.! 615 !!174 After s. Landscapinn .... OTICE Sl umps tone W al l ' Ap<1rtrnt·nb Commd H 1· "ll " • Ptanlt·rs. L1c-/Uund Freeei.l Call~~l49 au1n9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• hn.,.. 0 ,11lv l'llot Class 645-lrt:w ••••••••• •••••••••••••• ROTOTILLING $25 1fw1I ;Ill:. ih~play their ---Cleanup,. t n·C'wurk, •HA ULlNG• Landseap1ng-Sod Sale-;. llll'''·•l!l·s ~·th krubthl.> You dun"t n ('c.-d a gun to rotot11l1n l!. Mino r YARDCL~P Freeesl.Masterchar1:e ~ind 1m l>Jl'l '(htr .ids. \H• "draw fast .. when you landstp'g. lOyrs 1n :irc.1. • * 556 0347 •• Days/eves960-2170 ~II t' pruutl lo ,:.iy. rl'allyj plal'e Jll :tel in lhe D~ll(V 646·l693. llJ\t' -.om 1•lhlllJ.! you-want ---. -. . ':!~·t .~c s ult -.. Phone P1lotW<tnlAcls 'Call no~· ,1., -th t 11 , to sl'll '!Classifll.'dads doSellth1ngs fastw1thDa1ly 1;.i2 :M11K 64'.'·."t·,7u_ r ,.\'l' SO m l' Ill): o St' ·. J> I W t Ad ---------·' n Class1f1l'cl :ub1h•1lwl'll lt\\1•116425678. IOt an s. Movini.: lla uling-Clean- up. 2 (;ollcge Students. Experienced & Heasona· blc 1>40 17 rn Muvm~/llauhng. Student w t lJqte I ruck. Reas. Barr.). 537 9445/839-5779. IFYOU have a service to offer or goods to sell , pla<·c an ad in th(' Dally Pilot Classified Seet1on PhOnf' 642-5678. Painting/Repair. 3S fu f'laster /Repair CERAMIC TILE, New &: work guar lake ad van· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~emodel. Fr~.~t. Sml tageof m y ~xp.536-7056 V ERY N EAT PATCH Jobs welcome. :>J&~26 .• ---- --JOBS & nESTUCCO. Top Soil INT. EX'f .• 1 br, $79. & up, Free est. 1193 1439. ••••••••••••••••••••••• we do a cousllt'. free est., -T s ·1 Com • . fl 4 ,. • t>i".i\ •ncl: • op 01 • pos~• ~ _. _. vrej!.""" '"'"' _ Phlmbing •Mukh•Redwood• Papcr·Painl. 20 yr. Exp. ••••••••••••••••••••••• <.:all 586-69:.l Need work Save S No JUST PLUMllNG? Tree Service ---- Wait. Satisfaction Guar F t s I{ R t Free E st. 645-9951 as ~ crv e~s a es ••• • • •• • • • ••• • ••••••••• Just One (;alt To: Tree Removal, limbing&: Painting-int/ext Xlnt work · ~uaranteed 638·8828 JUST PLUMBING Shrub ('!earing. Rototill-- "'64:.! 4111 • ing. 642·2624. ---------•Any plumhinl{·water SELL idle items with a sc rv-l c;iks-marolite Daily Pilot Classified Ad. enC'losurcs·rcas. 832-2468 Ford's Tree Service Experienced Crew Lie/ Insured 962· 7817 Apartments Unfum. Apartments Unfwn. Apartments Furni~ed ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• or Unfurnished 3900 Office Rental 4400 R~ntals Wanted 4600 Lost & Found 5300 Help Wanted 7100 Hefp Wanted 7100 H•lp Wanted 7100 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• HuntinC)ton ~ach 3840 Newport leach 3869 ••• •• • • • • •• •• ••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• BIKE TO BEACH PARK NEWPORT NEAR SHOPPING .APARTMENTS Ba<•hclor I t>r :! Red mums and TownhouS('!-> Bl·autd ul ne w :! UR ~t ud1 0 <1 pls .Frplcs. hltns. d1~h~ Jshl·rs, 2 car J!oiraj?l' Sun<ll'l'lo.~ F'rom $260 531) 257!1 N~W tnplexe,. 1.2.3 Br Dix thruout. frpll':>. fncd ~·d 2002 11 unlini..'lon St. 536·4022 or 53!1-6779 Fr S22!J 511 OIJl•n !11: D:.11h Spa Pools-Trnm" A cro~s frnm t-·;i:-h1on Island at J ..1mhon :c on San J oaquin H.ilts Ko.11i. (7141644-1900 COHO~\ LH:L \li\lt 2 Ur To" nhoust•. frpk. from s:!i5 I Br fn1m SW!i rool, ll'nn1<;. 1 ontmcnl:JI hreakfasl S11rnl' IM't"111 & (;alalma 'ICY.'l Closr to shoµp1 ng & I int· IJ1·m·h 644·2611 Rooms 4000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 150 I Westcliff Dr. Newport l"inantial Ctr l e asin9 Offic~ Spac~ Call on Sile Manager 171<1 )642-3111 ext246 WESTCLIFF BLOG. NEWPORT BEACH Corner We1tchff Dr,.• Ind lrv1r1e A•• ../Au COMlll.-nq ../ ComOl••• ,..,.1100.i ../"'""" ./f-•IO< ./'uCI "•w b*....W. ../ XefOI Mf.W:• ../ S..cy -•JC• ....... ./ """'" e>o••tn11 Call Mr. Howard 645-6101 .,. BEACll AREA • Two and Lhrce bedroom apL.,,. some with f1rcplaees. e n t'l osrd gara,::cs . ut11Jt1e:. paid. &!10. ;md up BAL ISL Sll•1•p1ng rnom $140 up :-;ton· offices epls · ' , · drps ai r h<1l h. 1730 1 TOBIN REALTY INC. 846·1'.lll H UNT. ll BR. 2 hr, l h;i, bltns, nu drps POQI. o pets. $2.50 m o. 581-11844 no k1ll'hl0n ~!lUl·~, <idult Bedi'h HI II B ~2.2834 $1 10 p mo !~l.J I d!) 48.~. orti'11i li21!1 Hefn gnalor S.•(·urity HOOMS ~.'> "1·1·k up with P1>ol. .lacua 1. Ht•c Hldl! k1tchc-11 ~ol>I !J755 or w 1 c x t-r 1 1 s t' r m G 15 3!1117 Biiiiards ColorTV llt\'INE AT MESA DH Room & Board 4050 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WATERFRONT Newport Beach l·:,.~·t·ullve offices ~l!iO $22S Month \ w " of boab & walt•r BILL GRUNDY 675 6161 Heas. Ha eh or 1 BR for 2 yrs for responsible adll. CdM or Bal Isle. 644-4!/ll. WANTF.D. Space for 40x8' Trailer lrvine teacher. 8:13· 14!18. Business /lnvMt / Finance LOST, <'at. Male, blue· lynx. point ~1amcs e . Rewartl . 494-2490 or 213·4:iti-2A75. tollect. LOST: Urn spare tire t'Ompart dr w/hc. plule l1Hll0Z. valuable. On Adnms CM. Please call 961H914 •••:••••••••••••••••••• Personals S350 Bus11tess ••••••••••••••••••••••• Opportunity SOOS PREGNANT? •••••••••••••••••••••••Caring c onfidential MANUFACTURING t·ounseling & refer ral. PROPHll::TAflYLINES Abortion, adoption & Very prof11abll·. keeping. S60.000 A PCA RE 547 2563 29', down + ----- S m all l nvcntory Drinking problem? HOLLAND BUSINESS C:.i ll Akohol Helpline 24 hrs :i day 835·3830 645·4 l 70 SAL E.S 5"0·0608 Laguna Beat h Tnm & f'abric Shop, good loc:al. Selling due to illness. S'1 .000. pl us invtntory. 49!:!·3705 aft ert::JO Money to Loan 5025 ••••••••••••••••••••••• PROBLF.MS? WF:CARl:: ON!<: WAY IH:LP Cl':N'fER 24 hr llot J,inc f~15-AAOll *SI 0. SPECIAL* CdM 200 17!io "I fl r'J'll Mort9 aCJH, Trust I week only. 6 12 PM AURAXJ\S MASSAGF: lOom to 12pm 7rlays Y.k 1733 Fulll'rton Ave, CM ADVERTISING We are seeking a person to augment our Classified Advertising department for inside telephone sales. Classified experie nce n ecessary . Excellent company b e n e fit s . Sa lary commensura te with experience . REQUIREMENTS tHa.UDE: •Must type 45 WPM (electric) •Dependable •Good speaking voice •Pleasant personality If you are ambitious & want to be paid for your efforts & have opportunity for advancement please apply in person to: ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT 330 W. lay St •• Costa Me-5CI An Equal Opportunity Employer l.11)(1 l 'n1q11t• <"h ar m ' lk,Jllt tlt•t•or ·<f :! hr. II! bm·I-11alio, frpl t,/5.t>J.5!-1 HOO:'ll &. IHl,\Hll 111 c•\ chan~1· f11r hall\ s1ltmg Eld t·rl\ pr1'11•rrt'cl 1>4!i-24:!5 l & 2 Br. 2 Blk<. lo bc:i<"h. J!<i r , p ool, H'ry p\l ,\<fults. no pets l''rom Sl85 220 12th St. !W 391 1 Ba~ front. 2 Hd. 2 Ba, Pvt. Summ~r Rentals 4200 2 Br, Conclo. fng. sl<Wl· Bl·h. & p11·r s.sso yrly ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••631-11114~*_ __ .W,W•ted 7100 Help Wanted 7100 Drrs. ,A 1r t·ond d . dcv.. Deeds 5035 prkf! fi73 4 llO ••••••••••••••••••••••• EXl':(;l 'Tl\.E stult"'-on LOANS t 8QO/ Newp(lrt ll.1rbor 400 to Up Q Jo SPIRITUAL READER ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• pool. 1 male fr IH·h. S2 10 979-1!1:15 & 611-45!0 Bl.K In Bt>ath New Con 2200 ~q J t li<12· lb 11 I I st TD LoCftS-8l/4P Open lOA MtolOPM Adv1c(' on ;ill matters. 312 N. El C:immo Real mo 213 5!J2 2203 do J ;i(·u111 vnllC'vball f>45-4<lOS 1/ .. ND TD Loans WALK TO BEACH Larj!t' :! H H. I ' h;ith Sips Ii $125 wk !lti>l.5700 NEWPORT BEACH Lowest r ates Orang<• Co. San Cle m ente. For appt. 492-9034 4!Yl-9l36 1 & 2 br, lTl. clrps, bltn<;. gar. 205 15th St. & 2 17 .. 16 th S t. 536 <'1259 or Toy. nhoU!'•'. hl111.... I IW adulls. nr l-l11ag llu'JI S2-1U mo 1. 12 l3Xi 536-30~ Nt•w 3Br, 2ha /\pl Jfith & Orange. Call XJ:l 1137 or .EX lge 2 br. 2 ha, dlx offl<'l' !!70 Xl!OO Po0b1dc apl nr lx·h Ault. no pet~ Sll«> 53f>.K31i:! vn:w •1 pl. :! hr. bltn'. ------pool. $251>. mn 2 t 53 Irvine• i\ve fil2 llXX~l L09una Beach 3848 ••••••••••••••••••••••• San Clemente 3876 Drop a pcbhlc.• mlo thl' • • • • • • • • • • • • ••••••••••• Oeean from your /\pt. Lgc 2Hr, 2h••. t•ncln:-1·cl Leas('. Luxury. ~l·(·unty, gar Whitl-wat l'r vww. MatureadulL.,.3J75.5Cst. Adult:. only . S2.l0 -~~499·2835. ilfl8-3097 BAI.ROA P t-:Nl'll l''f Vr!.1r<1bll' dupl~·x, upper ~p~ll ll•U.., lilt.'. t•pt , rbhwshr, ri1sposal Wl'l'I>· ly. Summ1•r 11r lungl•r . Gi3-2H3!l 540 Sq. rt rllx. s uill• Sattter Mtc} Co. l'tll prl Sl95/Monlh 642-2171 545-0611 Rl•alonom1c-s n75-n700 Serv in~ llarbor ••rea 24 years Mrs. Rojas T he hospital won't miss you hut we do! Wish you Busin'"'"" R••tal 4450 PVT p RTY 11 b 2 cl well VERY soon• ••••• ::: •• :-~ ••••••••••• T. D.'~. Min~1 d1s~~u~I. ---Love LOIS l<oom\", 1<1·.1:,r1nahle Hl·n· _________ _. Call: &t2·3573 tal. 1\UJ!ll't 1 hno~e to THE COLO ...... Y ----hc·:.ic·h \ "~"· adult:. " Announcem~nts/ Employment& fiiS 171;:1 30 RF.TA ILSllOPS Personals/ Preparation Prime reasonable s pac·t· lost & FoUnd ••••••••••••••••••••••• Modern :J hi · n·:ir house available larl!;e & sm::ill ••••••••••••••••••••••• Schools & •> n 11 t· t'" 11 • 0 m P I Old worl<l 1·harm -.....ith Announcements SI 00 Instruction 7005 furn1~hl'tl S:.!2.'i wk . West Frt:-nch windows, gahk' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• "1'"'1"11·1 i:rn 1~m Av:ul & lrct-s J\dJaccnt to YF:S.WEDIOIT! llarbor View Pre-School .1 111~ :.!G i\llJ! i nd & J\u.'! I-' c.• s l i v a I or J\ r l ~ July 26, J\f75 now accepting Fall regis . ~Ith ~C-J'ltl5lh <:rounds J\nn<'&fl.oh. 2•~·Kinder g arten . • l ·BDR.M .\l>'f • Apartments.fumished 3 ,\nh n :i " Sn Lag 5HO HROAIJWAY 640-8820 I Blk. ahm c (..(l;i,t llwv . or UnfurnrsMd 3C100 1-\J r 1 · 1 h 0 LAGUNA lil-:AC'll Lost & Found 5300 ------ m So l ·1nun·1 ("lc,._l."111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• rn. rt> c Pll it' · i· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Limit .. <1 enrollments now! ·, . l,h, " ,' • ..: I \ U 3i:!3M; ~ton1nJ.,'l11n Hit , c v-.:ry i ni.: ,, O\t", 4'l9 24Jt; S250wk 494-7915 LOST ,fo'OtrNI) Creative ('(asses August refng, W IW l',Jfl)l.'l $200 Vl~1(l U(lL I ano . A Pf:r·· only. two hours daily . l\1 o n th. l " l 11. paid by llClllllC NEW COllCEPT' Laituna lleac·h t:01y :! Br 960·2900 /\dopt1on. l..ow Joyce. 497.3423 - - -ow~:~S ION RE l.1'Y ADUll 10£StD£ llVINC hnw.1· :-,IJ, .. 7 Wall. lo T II £-: fo' A C T 0 R y -Cost Spay Neuter Info T E N N I S I es s ons ' • • 194.m31 •,. •Bachelors 4!>4 l •~• ;l\a1I in lhe mall •140 LOST: Pull Shaggy Blk. qua I IC ins rue r, . ~ med-si7.ed mJlednn. St(){ per lesso_n. 640.5887 __ • I BR . 2 BR Rentals to sh~ 4300 mo. 673-!lflOO " •2 BR & Oen REWARD ' fi7:1!!260 Jobs Wanted, 7075 Asse mblersjPlcgn General Laboret s TEMPO Temporary Help 17802Sky Park. lrvrne Ca II 540-4455 AUTO Mechanics AMC •Heary Line •Transmission •J••P •4 Whe•I Dri•• • Contact Walt Ir . 'KENDON ,.. AMC'1.JEEP '• ..: •tAr.81l~ fh.i10 COSTil "1ESA S~9· 8023 Aulo Part:-; Counte r Sales man Wanted· fo'ull time-exp'd. Apply in person, Hub Auto Supp· ly. 2120 Ha rbor Blvd , Costa Mesa. Beauty S<1lon THE NEW BROADWAY LAGUNA HILLS lnter•iewinq For •F/T OPERATORS *RECEPTIONIST For an appointment Call 586-190 I Or Apply in Person THE BROADWAY LAGUNA HILLS MALL VE RY SPECIAL 2 br a pt! No one above <>r below. Newly dccor d &. ept"d. Rik. from V1<'tnr Jlugo. beal'h & dwntwn Adults only No peti. S290 497 161 i or (>,\2·6636 i , ...... •fl\A(ClPltO b<>a<·,~?±-shops S20(J "" NC'wport Ideal s hop rf d . l to $8 S S 85 ·:···· ••••••••••••••••• 1&30 Sq Ft. C-2 bldg. 8061 Found: Choe Pt Siamt>:.e ••••••••••••••••••••••• from 175 -4 Cnlll'J!l' '•lUcknt h.1-. fJn l\ols;i nr Bead1 Rh•d OFC MGR·/\ I>'"• ),"'.ASST <Located at San Diej?o l t I h I female. Flt'.11·olla r. Vic: ••• '" f' & EIT Rd Mesa Verde Eosl & Adorns <is 1t· I<' :.ipl on "'" C'r Hc•asonable. 644-6172 Do you need someone to AVON reeway oro ) lo sh arr w , ni;!hl (>f'r-..on -The Bluffs Very affcc· Interviewing Hours 540 ·l800 in Sun,ct Heh ~12!i DELUXE offire. comm"I tionale li 4 l 0421 , :!'1c~·~~f.!~e::~l ?a~m~':r; ~ 9:30·11:30AM CASHIER fo'ull· time only. Age 20+. Serious applicanl'I. Good pay. S Locations Metro CcrWash 2950 Harbor Bl. C.M. CHILD CARE, m a ture Englis h speaking lady to eare for my children in H. B. home. Live in or out . 963-2784 for in· terview. Clerk-Typist Need an e nergellc cleric· typist for the Classified Department of the Daily Pilot. Must be fast and arcurale, 65 wpm (elec- tric). Excellentcompany bt!nefits plus opportunity for advancement lo telephone sa les riosition. Apply: Daily Pilot 330 vi. Bay St .• Costa Mesa Equal Opporturuty Employer Cocktail Waitresses Bar tenders TIFFANYS Pvt Club & Discotheque For inter view: 675-60'» Col students , p/l sis, de· liv. Eves/Sal. car . phone nee. Mr Lyons 848·1004 COOK 2nd Cook wanted for Line work. AM s hift. Sec the Chef· ~ Ltdo Park Dr., NB ------ COOK'S ussl. & short or· dcr c-ook . full time, must be 21. C all for appl. 549·9414 Cooks wanted. Sambo's Restaurant. Mission Vie- jo, Crown Valley Pkwy & San U1ego Fwy. 831 ·9814. -------- COUPLES Looking for serious 2nd income, my wife & I are willing t.o help the n ghl people! 552·8814 for appt. ------ Craflsperson. part time s tained glass. Exp pref but not nee. S4hr s tart. 642-4382 DEN f AL As!>i s t 'nt.. chairsirle, 6mo exp. X· ray lie req 'd. 642-0608 . t213l'>!J2 3l% & industnal spaces. Also 640-14M3 workin~ SupL wtlb exp. LetTheKidsDo &2:30·4.30PM VIEW lg J hr, North end TIIF: EXCfTJNC. S PAnot·s homl' CllM mini warehouses '" LOST: Boston Hull . male in ae e't. personnel. Monday thruSaturday DENTAL Stv/rd g.,nrwderor I '" PALMMESAAPTS. Nl'l'd roommal<' $150 Lagun;iNi~uel&M1ss1on V1r . of <;arf1eld & purc-h , c t e. Sal. r eg. TheHouseworic EqualOppor.Employer RECEPTIONIST blks tol>r h.S2(j()673·37:11 MI Nl.'TESTONPT mo.n7:!:112111,fl7Sl :>rnn V1t·j11 areas llan<ly lo Newland llH Needs 11M·13M.642-5754 ThisSummer -----Part time. experienced, ----BCH San Diego fo'wy. 200 to Med•<'<ll•nn Heward. L09U"a Nigud 38S2 Hach.1&2 llR rrom $165. Gal to shMl' li.:t.> 2 hr ;,1µt , 2000 sq fl. As low as 3(t 962·70116 Couple to live in for Get out & meet people, __________ , mature. Send resume to ••••••••••••••••••••••• Adults. No Pets l'k N pl, pvt huth. Spa . Pt·r sq ft. 831 -1400 housekeeping. Depenrla· add new interest, earn Boys & Girls ~~~~~~/!~Newport A love ly 3 Rd. 2 ha Cl>n<lo 1561 )1es;i Dr pool, t1·nn1s & m:iny l .. < 'arpetcd . draped. \\ith FOUND. Lri.:. Af.1:han ble. d rive, cook, e tc. money s elling quality lOtol4 ye:irsofage. Dai- o n the El Niguel Golf 15Rlks l·"1"l r>fNewpnrt tras. Ca ll J\rnla. da~s r".~tr"'1m•·qu·1·•t "r<>und hound, l1tf• l:in <Mission 642-5299. ----product s. Interested ? ly Pilot deliv<•ry routes DEMTALASSIST. Cour s ". C ·•rpc t 1n°, .. ., ~" "' "' ~.. VicJ.t1 1.Call 5Hli 005!l C II 5407"•1 z · h ... u ,... Rh'<1 1 557 lil22. evt•s 644·42.'lti or floor Mesa Verde loca-"' l h d t. a : · "'' or enil may be available in your Periodontist neecls ex• drapes, d 1s hwas her, b44-72!.15. ...xp ea(' er e uca ion 7·1359 days . ~arba.Re dispo.'ial. S100. S1fl·9t!60____ l ion . Ut i lities paicl POUND. Male Af~han deg.desires p/twork.Nc 1 __________ a rea Earn profilforde· per 'd f/t ime assistant . mo. 83l·9074 aft. 6 or . 2Br llouse lo sh:.ir<'. frpk, Evt•ry thrni:t 1s new, 42S hound. vtr l'lan·nua & phone sol1c1tation . liveries & cash, trips or Expanded duties oppor. 547·96l7 am. sundcck. i:ardcn Lat! ~Q fl. at S325 ~ month 19th., C.M. llas summer 848-0204. m erchandise for selling Xray cert reqd. 842-6631, Newport B~och 3869 494 2250 or 4!14 ?MO /\gcnl ___ a~k for Lillian Help Want~d 1nformal1on please call ---RESORT Ur h. SIJO mo. Sl2.5 dep 546·5990,orfi75ti00l eves. r lip fl46·189fior 540·1SOO, -7100 BANKING new s ubscriptions. For H.B. ••••••••••••••••••••••• -~ndu tri IR -"al 4500 --••••••••••••••••••••••• Con•entionalLOClll 642-43 2 1. fo'rom San DENTAL ASSISTANT ----------• WANTl':O : 2 s tuclr nts to~ s a e'" FOUNO : 7 /12, male cal. Accounts Payabl<'.. $700 C le mente-San Juan Exp'd chairside, en · s hr 3 hr homr in llH ~··••••••••••••••••••••• Vrc. RaleiJ!h & Wilson (fee paid position) Underwriters Capistrano area, t•all lhusiastic. CaJJ548.-8844 MESA VERDE 897.J5&1Bryanl\1rllema 11200 Sq. l''t. M·I w/front CM. Wh1l(' hlk & 1?r1Jy. Exp. in construction&· &Processors 495·063-0and MissionVie· Dis hwas h e r. mature 2 Bdrms., 1'2 h~ith concln LI v ING - -offit·e. ll?e r<-ar door. 220 stnpe:.5414-3 177 capable or Job costings. Downey Savings & Loan jo-EI Toro area, call person. full nr part ti~. with pool. S335 Mo. Fem ale ronmm.11<-w.int 3. Phase nit In. SI85. 629 -Also Fee Positions has immediate openings 581-6310. Mesa Ve rd e Convales· STEPSTOIEACH ed. to :.h ... rc hllme SllS Te rminul Way, Costa FO UND · J>ii;t~un , all CONTROLCAREER initsLoanDept.atSanta EqualOppor.Employer cent Hospital 6GlCenter 2 liR.lba.unf.S285 inc. ut11. Child OK , Mesa Days 540-5710, white Pink eyes. Vi c. EmploymentAgency Anafor LoanProcessors · SEA WIND 548-9653 cves.646-0681 CM. Baker St !>W5565. 3400lrvineStel09,NB & Underw riter s. Ex· -_S_t_.c_._M_. ------ 2 BR, 2 Ba condo$475 ----FOUND ·. Mal" S·,moy--'. 714 /556-8505 perierrced in nil.MC & BOOK.KEEPER/SECY. DISP"-TCLIEB FROM $185 \taletosharcbcautbearh 500' Ml. nr 17th & ' "' ""'' FNM c · I fullt1m e Univer s a l ~ ..._ WE HAVE Male hea~lc type Goldn A onvenliona ' G d ShJf A I S UMM E RRFRl'ALS Oakwood offer s t h<' ~1~m~·re~2;is~~~1l~t:. ~~~/cp~k;;:xh~Ma,ir.2~~ Wst /Warner847·7609 ACCOUNTANT Loans. Contact Mr. Marine,642·2833 inr;;re!o~~ t. PP1 r . ., .. thL 4nnA_,.,,, 646 252 .,A • ........, Ma le or female, full Ric hard Davenport, lo-LL••p1_.._._L:--YELLOWc•• associated 1ne.!-l 1n resort llvinl? al a .-..,u aguna, ,,,,...,,,,, r .. nt11. · 1 ,.,..,.c.c.u> FO\JND · Boy's b11.'yde rharge, to handle thru (714 )549·8811 """""""" '··'7 ~ - prict-you c·an afford . - -. . . Bu yerel>l :.irca financial statements. ----OIMf"ator 186 E. 16th, Costa Mesa S RU l<EA S REAL TORS llll~ VII Balboa 61 • 1661 Theres $1 mdhon inlWork1ng person to sh;m• lJl-.LUXE industnal units 6<16-7842 I"orprivatetenrusclubin BARTENDl-:R, bar & To post accnts. receiva· NOPHONECALLS r el.'r eat1on fa r llll l<'S. hou 11c in CM. F;.c·nc•ed with oHtces:. 1380 ~o ~ Newport Beach. Send re· restaurant, full lime . ble. 1 week per month + PLE~E NIGHT LIGHTED n :N vard. 3 nn. $1.iO mo sq fl. 6"2·4<1n:J or 642-7604· FOUND: Wet Sult. El Call for a ppt 549-9444 I fr· k 3 --642 4382 J\~t on prem scs 711 w sume lncldg salury re· ___ . .,. __ genera o ice wor 2 or 0 St Clerk ___ NIS COURTS. J\ full t1mC' · · · ~ _ · 1· • · Toro Rd, Laguna llHls . q irem ls to po Box afternoons per week on rug ore WALK to n-ach. new 3 br, activitirs d_irector wh. o Off'1c• R•nt.al 4 .. 00 _17th SL .. C M 837-3425 u . en . . BEAUTICIAN.f'xp'd pre· a 11 othe r week s . Fo r l a r g e H .B. ~ I f'fl" "" ~ "' ~:..Newport Beach, Cu f,'d. but not nee. Mtra.c· Richard's Market . .,A.,., drugstore. Expr pref. 2 ba duplex Cpl d """ Pans p a rties. ' ..,_ "· ••••••••••••••••••••••• MISSIO.... LOST f I b "~ t f t ... .,...... · • • ,... .. tnps & more! Free sun * " e m a e asset tve neat person or a · v· L"d NR Approx. 32 hr/wk. Over D/W. gar . Yrly. $4 !5 <tay bruneh. • J MO FREF..Rfo:NT • hound , lri·colored, no Accountanf.&K. l r a e t i v e n e a l 18 1 0 · · 24. 847·2563. Child OK 675 ct642 Plus beautiful s inl!l<'1'. 1 2 3 nm . offlc<-s from VIEJO • tags. Vie. Capistrano <le· for family trust. Compc· neighborhood shop. California l.icensed --------- EASTBLUFF Reaut. r1pt 1&2 b edroom apts, Sl35 pt'r mo. Nea r Ne w Industrial 11paee pol SJC Reword' t e nt in Investments 548·6144. MEDICAL DryCle11ningPresserex· 2 Br, 2 Ba. bltns. frplc, 2 furnished & unfurnished airport No lea11ere-q. now available. 1<100 to 493.1437; 4!18·1356 or an!llysis, tax & financial TECHNOLOGIST ::~~~·n'Oo~r :'a~i ~~ patios. pool ::wail. $350. Rents from $1115. Prices 833·32239Tilnoon 15.000 Sq. ft. lmme<liatt> 4963643 plunn1ng . executive BEAUTYOPF,RATOR to work in 200 bed askfor Mr.Monis. open 10to7 Sorry no pet~ c + ., 0~ Geranimo. ,... . s pace. Fashionable " E I tllf -Ph :&44·03S.~ V;try by IO<'lit.ion Models 80-0' or A()()' w~1' occup.ant'y. Alecia al LOST hlk & wht altcred ability. Full time. call Earn m ore by renting h ospital. Willino to 3 BR. 2 BA. frpl. $35() mo or l'h1ldren. Roomma~· house, rpt. bttod rc1I J?. S/\ VF: MOST m ale rot. black spot. on 'ha1rmun (714) 673·8152. Newport Buch Salon rotate weekends. Exp. in No n;:popnee~. S:~~lf Patio, rpts. drps, 3 rnr service available. prkit. M-L zone $22S mo DEVELOPMENT nose. Vic. Redlands & A t P bl R E Ask for Jim. 644·7321 microbiology. car. Pool. Nr. floa" 646 __ ·12!i2,G44·2Zl.8 ___ ,c:o1 2 . .,40 or aft. 6 p.m M esa . Famil y p t t. ~roun s . ayu Cae,I TUSTIHNOCS'OPMfTMALtJNITY addressed & stamped .. ,., Oakwood ...., " 5434147or645·227R ronstruch on c~. 1 Mr. le 0 pt envlo: Hospt. 548-9341, Eves. 55, PER S"'FT 493·7687 Thomsen. Wilham Lyon auty pa °' (7l4) 83S·0600ext:JOl Sullivan, Inc: 646·2848 Garden """ LOST· l."e orangf' mRlf' Co N 8 833 3600 No following nee. Comm 131 B· Clearbrook Ln -------1617 WJo:STCUFF NR R--ial• W--&......1 .. 600 " -·-· -· -· -. . guaranteed. MS-1050 A t ts GT u..... nn .. unnv "' c:.t w /white flea <'Ollar • Costa Mesa, Ca. 9:21121 .l>elu'<e 2BR.newlyd(.'CC)C'. par m en A S4..!:._"""""---••••••••••••••••••••••• & I u t ag . ''Fla s h A•tl"'otHospital llOC'-•GCLIAIC Carpenters helper in·---------~ Lr~ gara1e lJdo shop'Jt M.wpor1 ln<h SINGt.i-: to 6 rm suites Sin~le, ~pls active. non MontRom e r y··. Vlr. Reept-Cleaning Full or b terested In teaming con· FASHIONS. Wanted 4' nri?a.S27!>8'73-28Zll 8801rvine Avoll 1n plu!lh off1re i1 m ok er. ne('ds room, Harbo r lll ir hl ands. PT.Mon Frlorwknch. Ncwpl(.rl Bea c h 11trucllontradc.IS..21yrs. women 4 hn,-4daya,'6. NWf>'f Shores, 2 Br. 2 Bo. At 16th bldll nr OC Airpor1 l"\.111 C<i n wo rk a payment. Reward. 548·76711 or Orange, NH, Of" Irvine. lns uran <' Co needs old $2.75perhr.499-1044 LO $6. hr. Prefer WO.D\t!ft gara,e. upJ>f'r duplex 6'5-0550 scrv1r!.' incl , Reccp Prefrr bcnrh, in wlnte 548·2067. Write Ad 11329. Daily peraon w / bookkeepinJC --w /famllea. Local area. 548-8912 11onis t . eonrerence rm. too 494.3945 Linda Sut J'llot P.O. Box l:i60. Costa exp. to handle cash re· Oon't drop the ball! Get a Need use or car. s.&-:ua S32S. mo. ---REWARD ! Lost Srnmcse Men. 92626 celpt.& a. must be proli Job with a low-C06t Dally b d • ..,pt Large l & 2 RR 11pl.ll with Xf'r""· ''1<" Call 8J3.3&40 Re~ponsible mixed couplt C"l. n.u bluf• rhlnf'st.onc.> dent tn operat.loo ol JO Piiot CI aolfled Ad. LUX. 3 r up1n . '" d ' ., " -M 11 k S I to ...,7S ,,_ Hta.frplc .p atio,gar.Nr. enC'lose anr s & pool. O!flre fnr r<'nt. xlnt Son need 3 BR fixer·upper o collar. F'rom tlo l e l Apt gr m ature llma ey. • ary .,... • Phoncs.42-6678. new s1n11~ .. Ok. $375. Vo<;,,':n:~~!:~o2o1~760 ;:8~0fap1slrnno Loe. 1.;:n~ ~~2!1 Xlnt re-!ti~~4~;: CaUColccU2l3) ~~~~d~n! Ks~~~~!~.l. £~ Nce°ai.=: Call ClasstOed Ads 642-!m )M.~"!P· \ P'e m ale -18·30 of., fice/dellvcry. Avail Sata. Auto net'. 1615Al-bama,H. B. ...... ,., .. . ......................... . . ... ,. .. ' ....,w .... c1 11001Metpw.tec1 1100 ........ W..e.d 1100 a.i...&..w..e.ct 11·00 ......... w ••••••••·•••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. -.. ......, ........... •hd 7 l 00 Help W.t.d 7100 • Tuesday,July29 1975 OAILYPILOT BJ I ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'JUN 0 NURSESAIDES.mawrc, R.E SAl.ESP1':0PLE SECltlTARYJR. WAITRESS over 21 I R SALESMEN all s hifts. needed. Congt>nlaJ ore. Jnlernutlonal Computcr nrcded ruli tlmt" or lunl."h D09s 8040 furniturt 8050 Mochlnery 8071 • .•.•.......•.....••.... ····•······•·••········ ·•··••···········•····· Call 642~ Individual tmtntlon Firm requires ~n.-iuy part ume t'aJI )49-944'1 Nu Rs-Es A 1 t> Es CALL 96M405 w/m1n 70 wpm typ1na. for appt •PET WORLD• D~droom Wall &.-..11on·1l Bntl&t.·pml !'>1111 , Rot.ary " Cocl.t·rs . C..:h1huohu1.1 . f um 7 P''"' Wood " Tbl, !I ' l.;1lh1" m1.,, PooJI":..' "hlh t"U, ,..,.XI", 'ntt) P.olcl fuu'>h Sl:IS toob ~:Jtl 7011!1orfS9il 6007 "' .... .. vu ~ Joiofa 7' (.'unlt>mpor..iry A1:e~ 12·16. Earn $20·$40 per week i::etting ne w subscribers to the DAILY f.lLOT Hfler ~chool and Saturdays. no dellv ~ric s or col l ecting. 1'ransportallon furnished. Huntington :;::~0Fountaln Valley areas. call B I • Fast m o\•ing otnce en - -ayv ew Convulc!lcent vlronment Xlnt t'om W:utr-:!l!I, p~1rt Ume, o\ er Hospita l 2055 Thur10, p~ny paid bt'nt•fits 2t, tixptmcnccd S day:. a CM.642350S Tu:stin urea For 10 wk Luncht1mc Apply ui L> u b I 1.• • I' 1 l R u 11 x , ~ \d l\ W lk ~1 ' 'o '°''it po o . p e kl' x, u73 ;11~ ll7 a er• "' Mi•cellaneous· 8080 ' \\'l':sl1c::;, 100 ffil'(ed pup ••••• •••••••••••••••••• • Jo:qual Opportututy Employt"r ..... Wanted 7100 Help Wonted 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• . Landscape Foreman 3 .F1~urc ft~ndels nceJ cd yr~ exµer. necessa~y Will lru111, .~v~nin~s & Contact Jim Elmer , weekends. 5:J:J 64~ aCtl'I' Grecnhavcn Gardens 7pm. 646-3927 ' N•neaAldes 11 lo 7 shirt. Exp 'd Prt'· _________ 1 f 'd. ll1follngton Beach R.E. S 1 • ConV1tlC11cent llosp1tal, a ta. . 18811 Florida 11 IJ We have operungs for a 847·3515. • few Select Salesilt'.°ple l ----cam top commission. Part time, high school stu and bonuses. If you'v 1fonl, dclivern:s, clean up hod your basic trainjn & slock clerk. Mu!!l t;c und wunt lo graduate tot per sonable, ncol :1p strong independent wit pea rance. willi ng to a wi1111in~ spm l, cal work. Apply Party World Pete or Ra II. CALI 2025 Newport Rlvd. Cosla 556 · 2till0. SE f,EC1 Mesa. PROPERTIES ----------------1 lerview . t'all Paula i>t•rson Two Guy~ From Taylor btwn 9AM 12 at lluly, 2267 Fuiniew Hd. 832-211 1 Cm SECRETARY WAITRESS WAITER Over 21. Pull/part time No ex per nee. Apply. 725 Raker St. C.M Downey Savings & Loan · has opening in n1·w Santa Ana orrici:: for sharp fo . di vi dual with good s h orthand & typing s kills. Good p 11y & Benl'fits. Call persoMcl WAITRESSES at ( 714) 549·0902 lor Gulliver's Restaurant Is rurt.ber info. coe. intervie wing now for ex· pu·-; Stud ~vs m o'>t Hdrii.t . c out·h. t<1bk. brt•t>d'\. 2525 W 17th ut dr\'''l'f. 1lr<1rt1n• µ1Jn1) l'a1r,·1cw. SA Opc.·n cH''> 612 l!tl:U ~3J 5();!7 2 1 011 (; r.11n 1(1~1 l.1•athl.'r We:.l ll1ghland 'l'crril'I chi ' Ur.a .. :-. N.1il ~ll'ad Pups 1\ll males. AKl', s t11 rn S350 pr 1144 U~'-'12. w k:.. C hump J1 1H· 1·i34 SO&t "'•ALASKAN MALAMlITE I' UPS $5 each TO GOOD tlOMES * tl4S· 7424 • Arr1.1na dhl door rt•fng, Y.h1ll'. $350 Ant1<1uL· gm 11inin.i: rin M.'I, ll111HlMr ftnl ... h, 2 lt•;J\'I''• ti IJJddl'd • h<11rs, SWO. So(.1 love w.1 l ~.iU t'h,11 r, SI 5 J)IJI h l d S ~ 5 1\ ' k ( 0 I Bai hara , 551 :..'OX) SECRETARY prd lunch waitress. App ly in person between Mon N . B orrtce.patcnt law thru Thurs, 3 to s l'M Samoyed Pups, AKC lt'f firm. Car eer oriented ll"tw2 MacArthur, lr\'ln<: Shot'>. 7 wks. Male -" Garaqe Sole 8055 WANTED 'rOI' CMiH DOI.I.AR l'All> }''OR YOUtt 4 J J-:Wt-:1.HY. Wl\'r<.'llt:S, /\HT O~J ECl'S. GOl.1' • s I L v E H s am v 1<..: I·: . 1'' I N Jo: Jo'tJ H N & I\ N T IQUt-:S. 645·2'i0fl MATTRESS •MADNESS* *ALL SIZES* Priced to-Mo•e! IUJ-9625 & 646-8&t6 FREELANCE ARTWORK Humorilll dt•i..1~nt•r, good in rcnd ermJ.! 111 ink & 1n car1ruturcc; Call 510 '1811 LEGAL SECRETARY Part or full lime for general practice, l man omre in Newport Beach Inqu1r~ btwn l & SPM. 645 3020 PIX AnswMfMJ Serv 11 Locations. All i.h1fts avail. Full or p /t1me. E.0.£. 540 1962 R.I<:. SALESPEOPLE well est ablished H.E Of fin? C.M., SPL'Ciabzing i J\pl. sales + exchanges needs 2 highly motl\'al salespeople. Will trajn Bkr. 556 6171 Need not have tl•g:Jl or Mr~ Ht•PP 1-~l·ml ••••••••••• •••••••••••• p3ll'nl law bkgrnd, but "'• 497-2896 ** <;1i:anl11 C:.irJJ.!t.• Sak. Tennis Mcmbt:rshlp for intelligence & good skills W ant c ti . Li v c 1 n He11.ut. female collie 111 <'u" lit 'r l1ll ll'h,1ncl1s t.' ... ale 1 m med. Prestige ---- PIX-Exp'd Nights. Leading N. B. req'd Send Resume or llousckecpcr compJnion Ant14u1• J.:Jml· t.1hlt:" & local clulJ . 833·3643/ r ~ood tlome. No pap.·r~ I I letter or quahficat1ons & Or frma lc 50 yrs old. SJ(). 842 05't9/5:f7.l)Z3!J l' 1r .... IJt le:. tlolh1n~. 58l-7HOO Hotel. Call J ane Ellcn, 1 _________ _. references to P.0 Box Mustdnvc. No~mokang. ____ c·r'''t.11 stl•m war\· ----- 1971, S.A . Calif. 92702 Refs. 547-5233. (.'h1hkr.1fl l'Ol')l IO[X'flia * *I BUY* * 6EN l-:Hi\L office. purl time, h t'il\'V lYPIOI! & phones. 25 hr-.1x·r wk MARIN ~:HS Vi\CIITS Ask for !Jobb1 67S.l393 "" L.cial Secretcmy Busy Huntington Beach O ffice. Experience necessary. Please call 962-6611 644·1700. E.O.E. ----P er son 21 ·10, trn for mgml. $150 wk guarn. Col pre f . Mr. L evi 848·100t. Restaurant -----WllO WANTS TOWOR :-; freetoYou 8045 l l..mud1n1M<''July :11& SECTY,RECPT K . ••••••••••••••••••••••• \ui.t I HI \ \1 lo I l'M, • URJVEJ\CAU! I · h • '112 \1st:i Quiolu, NlJ Boating us1ness, 2 CHOOSE your hours r1s l>t'l l c r A 1'(, t\141'59" openings,fullt1ml•Mon .. work for yourst'lf h~ d esperately nd-, l!d .... t 1-'ri. & part tlrnC'3 days, your own l~s. Me~ or home 2 yrs oltl, m.ih: TllLlll J'HI 'i.\'I', .J llW· Cnod used furniture & avphances, or I waJI Sell fur You. MASTERS AUCTIOM 646-8686 & 833-9625 Girl Friday Varied dulit•s in r ental offit·c. T ype, fi)!urc up titudc. f1 clay week ind. Sat /Sun. Willlngncss to lcurn mort• 1mporl3ot MACHINIST Small, clean shop-40 hr. wet:k & t op pay fur s killed J,!cneral m uchinjs t. Tooling & s ho rt run production. Som e ex p. w / pro- gressi\<e dies req 'd . <..:osla Mesa . 642-8080. Phone Solicitors For athletic organiza· tion. $1.75 hr to s tart + bonuses. Cnll 536-2100 THE NEW BROADWAY meldg weekend:.. PrC'fcr Wom en. C:an be s ll)!htlv 536·1300 _ _ n11(·op1 .1 uf g11C.KI huy-, 22·30. 645·7100 handi capped. Nt'al· Chihuahua-ManC'hes ter. qu1•t•n ~.itt• ~olJ h1·ct. 1n l•---------C lea n ~ppcu r u n cc. needs loving homl' Diit:s fanl l11hM·at.adJu:.lablt• GOING FISHING? La9mta Hills Secy/ Acd. Pay. Vets .. retired. Al-!C 25 to not like do!!s hut is gel sht•l\'l':-O, ll11v.l1ng hall, B'S WORM FARM ~oud w / figures. good 70. Supplcm('nt your in-watchJog 6'12,!Y.!.'.l.'i hn1l val'llum , .;hull v;H'' OJ'Cn Daily 7/\mto6Pm SPhont Solicit«$ To contact pr esent customcrs & quote prices on expanded line of pro- ducls. Office locatl'<l in Irvine. 6 hr day, (9-4~>m ). 3 day wk. (Tue-Thurs.), salary S3.00 per hr. Call Carol for appt. 979-8952. typing skills. Pl1'asant c·omc. Un v<· a cah 6 hrs m1:-.c plant:-.. llr11m1h,1ds. Nile L'rawlt.'rs. Meal Lclc phonepersonality. or more a clay Apply in SPRINC.ER :-il'i\Nl t:I.. 11r<'h1 ds . frplt g rale. Worms.:\fri<:an Nighl ·than cxpr. Ask for IL J. 1146-1311 Interviewing for '*COOKS *BUSBOYS Near O.C.airport. person, Yt•lluw <.:a ll Co., male, Syrs. Frec to gooct ht>1Jut V1ct11riau lun• Crawlers & fiedWorms ___ 833-9312 186 E. 11;th St., Costa home. ~K;K-51-i2K scat " ' m .1u:h1ng-1'11r 17362 tiulhard. HB •GIHL FRllJAY • Interior Uet'Orator Ncl'lh MAID, part ume. C Mesa. a111l a hu:-.t <1( n t h1·r CALL847.5141 SE Y /BKKPR Lon~ h air Chihuahua, M i:ooi11t·~ 44!5 Arr11vo Top notch gal nl'Cded for • 1 yr. !las sboL'i, loves C:h1c11 L.t>-!UOJ lk <11.h 1 ---------- Girl with Sales & De~1~n HAHBOR lNN MOTEL J\ bd1ty 612·2210. 675-3463 1 girl orrice in s mall Merchandis~ k11ts. good pet. 5-W 7X.'io l!~I !Jll2:! o mfg'g co. Requires •••:••••••••••••••••••• IR MBED s l r 0 n g bk k P • g & Antiques 8005 ~ixed P ointer. 16 mm. Evco,thing from lurn 111 A~e unk nown, douhlt> ----"----1 Girl Frn.luy Mu.-.L be ac MAlO WANTED curate & fa!lt w/10 key, Pa rt Time • Call ---- Rea l E s ta te, licensed sales people. Why not work in the hottest area Hunlington Beach/Foun· tain Va lley, Call Phil McNam ee a t Village Re al Esta le 963-4567 For an appointment Call 586-190 I ()r Apply In Person secretarial skilb. CC1sla ••••••••••••••••••••••• male. Lo' l'S kul:r;, all rl1ithing :.!0:3fi l:Jl.t:.) ~11.c. Jkadhoard 4'.: feel Mesa. 642·8080. VICTROLA i..hols, 545-2636/ ~I0-57\J Dr . N 11. s.11 \ug :!ml high, loot board 3 feet La r ge <SI" high, 24 .. days._____ high ML•lal ra)ls. Heady • a vera~e typ1n~ & rl'· Mes a Motel • 64&-0681 t' e i ,. a b l t• a l: t' u u n t s -- -SECY /Gal Friday Huj!e C.ir;1gl' Saito I llJY to ref1n1sh. & S75 00. w ide. 25" rl ee pl Fluffy black Persian only W1·d. 7 .IO !l :>pn~ P hunc 675-0312 or Brunswi~k <Brunswk k Siamese kitlcns . x wk s, F:\'t•rvth1ng I'"' L-d 111 cu. C75 U9811. dedgcr. Phillips Manne MAINTAINENCE Couple Stores. 673·4~ ror Restaurant. Laguna -----Beach area. (;all Mrs. ·THE · BROADWAY For growing insurance company . Located in new offices in Newport Beach. Oood short.b3nd & typin g ski ll s n ecessary. Finance background helpful. Salary to $700 & good company benefits. Call Mrs. Neal, 833-8450 . Bl,ake·Collendar Co .. box tniincd. !>15 11~ 1R l\l1rrur L .Jkt·'. !nine ----Pat. 1918) Pre-electnc, --JU .... K W .a. ..-ED HAIRSTYLISTS Smith, 499·2275 w ' ------ith .foollowini: JMainte nance Helper, a ge wind -up v i ctrola . Affectionate kitlt'ns will IDcerfit•lciT\\nhr>nw:-.1 " ~1"'1111; Mahogany finish. llas me 1 t yo ur h cart H 8060 for scrap metal. Top Newporter Inn Salon 18·23, $2.25 per hr. full REAL ESTATE SALES LAGUMAHIUS MALL five built1n s torage 751-5729aft 2PM •• ~~!•••••••••••••••• dollnr pajd for :.autos or Pl II -bodies. Also appliances. 644-0661 or540·8582 1 time, see F red Solmes. HACIENDA -H -., D ~ p Ben Brown's Motel, S. a ay ~•u ay Laguna Reh. REAL ESTATE. IMC. spaces. ays exce ent· , -.-_ llur:.t'. ulJl'k m<1rc 8 vrs. ly. Ready to refinish. KITTl-.NS l·Hlk & Wht. Quarlt·r. not rn!. Exp etc. hauled away free. siso.oo Phone 675-0342 or In g h air. 1 t' ;1 I11· o ncll'r. I) Hi 21;57 Ed Stone. 968-308l> IAM-lPM or 1PM·5PM -----1 Opens Office *4 in Costa .,r 5PM·9PM. l!:arn SIOO MASSAGE TECH Mesa. Self starters, Cree f Located at San Oie~o Frecw ay & F.I Toro Rd ) lntl'rviewing Hours 9:30-11 :301\!\'l 675-9988. 548-1932 or 642·9612 Toallourfriends Germ Shep. ml; p~ps-:-ti ll~·:.c;·o ., Thorou~hbrl'll + + per week doing en· Young lady (lS.28) for thinkers , true indep. con· j oyablc work in our kg1L1mat e full time posi-tractors. Best comm. in brand new ore opening lion. No ex~r. nee. W e town. Call Service Station Allen· dant, exper'd . Day & Eves. Full & p/lime. Ap ply Shell Station, 17th & Irvine, N.B. \\ks old. !\lso r3bbit & <.cld1n i.; Bl.1.t.k Jlun 1n Orange County hutc h . & Calico cat. 1~·r .l111n1wr, 11,.a hands. JON.ATHANS 751.8884_ 1i yr.; lh•: ..... !1112 55'J7 ur ·near O.C. Airport. Xlnt :sc nrl to sc hool , earn John Rampcllo, M~r "°pportunit y for positive while you learn. Apply in 2975 Fairview at Baker' & 2:30-4:30 l>M Monday thru Saturday ANTIQUES 5;,7.:rnN is having their annual Stray black female kitten, minded ind1 v. F or person any afternoon or 549.9511 personal interview, Call eve. 2112 Harbor Blvd, --- --- Equal Oppor. Employt!r Super Summer free to good home. Call Household Goods 8065 Clearance ti42·9:J74. ••••••••••••••••••••••• SHAKLEE 833·8095 Cost a Mesa. REAL ESTATE ---------CAREER Distributors Wanted, J:o'ine line or Organit· Nights, full ur p 1time . Health & Clea ning Ddfcreotial pay. Xlnl Products. Call546·5397. benefits. Contact Mrs S--· ,-. -Sh I d" Bales lre ri 642 27:1 1 pec1a ity ops, a ics C 0 5 t a .M 'e m 0 r i a j ready lo wear, 111 net-cl or Sale on entire stock -l',inn•lll'd C'1111t rad 2000 ur to 1,..z Ofl•'1 Fumitur~ 8050 yds t'<irpel hduw null HOSPITAL CUSTODIAN Carpel , floor machines knowledge & exp. req'd. Maueus~/Rec:ptnst Super. fantastic opp. for For NEW SPA in Hunt-the go.getter ! Current 1ngton Beach. Full or staffing, very active, part time. No expcr nee. Red Carpet IUtr. Ea~er Wi ll train. 2l yrs or to workwithnewpeople. older. Call for appoint· No lie. nee. lo apply. GI ment between 10 AM & 10 approved. Free trainin~. PM . 7 davs. 96J.7723. .fo'or info. call: Linda RN-CCU 42231stSt. N.B. ••••••••••••••••••••••• cost ini..tJll ~Ii 1'17:!!1 673-6001 GreatSavin~sonUsl'd J I Beautiful bowl & piLcht·r ~~~:~~::C~~1~:.:1~~)k .~:'.~."!. .•........ ~??.~ <blue} Satin & lafrt.·ta s-isW.19th St .C.M WANTED San C lemt!nte Gener ::il Hospital 714 /496-1122 llospit al. 301 Victoria. sh o P s a I es g Ir 1.s. c .M.EOE. managers & ass l. hoop skirt. Elec. hur· -. -.----. . .. • . ric<1 ne IJmp (smll. As Li ving Rm . Set. rop 1,01 (.\~II 1l011.L.\f! ! ... SPECTOR -------558-7555 managers. Orange Coon· sort eel kitchen J?adt!l'lS & Qual_1ty. New. Hcaul1ful I .' ! '·) 1-,< J ll, 'I ! l l , ~! tins ·\ssorted vas~ dis Moving. 968·8822 H .W r.1.lt'I . \\,\Tl 11}-.s . 1, -. Sh tM t ·l MO OFC. Exp. front & ---------Mu~~c~s~~~ n':t p:~t~rn back for busy specialists REAL ESTATE SALi-~ SALES t y area . 646·5388. . . . . . ' .... ,, . . \RT OB.JE<.-rs 1:01.n. hes. C"arnn al g las~. ABBEYRENTSVUHN. Sll.v.,J·:H SEH\ IC'I·:. lay out, bend allowance, ore. 11100 Warner Ave, c~ntury 21 JSM.rf HOUSEWIVES.$ STOCK ROOM CLERK, knowledge of sail boat parts helpful. Some light buying. Apply 1919 E. Oc· eid e nt~I . Santa Ana, btwn 8 :30 & 3:00. 842·3431 ___ 1925HARBORBL.<.'~t 1-'I"'~ Fl It:'\ & ;\~. Beautiful bowl & pitcher CALL (714 > 645·47i2 T ll'l ~:s ll 15 ~> i ool inspection, blank in· Suite 214 · f'.V. lrond Mew Offtc~ • apecl!on & welding ln· M ECHAN lC·Class A. ~>n 17th Street. in Hunt-TOY & GIFT spect1on. F /time. Willing to work ington Beach, 3 blocks PARTIES (blue) Salm & taffeta -...... -.. -........... ~ .. lllllllll•~•lllllllll .. hoop skirt. Elec. hur- Spac~·Teklnd. wknds.Comm.w/guarn. ~romtheo~ean .. Nowtak· Gifts 'N Gadgets will t~2f>la centiaAve.CM Apply 3190 Harbor Bl. 1!lg applleations for trai n inexperienced ricane lamp (sml). As sorted kitchen gadgets & tins. Assorted vases, dis- hes. carnival g lass. 842-3431. ins urance Sccrctar v want~. Personal line's expe rien ce prl'fcrred . T yping, invoicing & of- fice routine. South Coast JnsurancC'. 211 Oceun Ave. La ~una Be a ch . 494·1031. Insura nee/Clerical E'(pericnccd 2 yrs min for general ai::ncy. r rr. 15 hrs wk. 118 a re a . CM licensed r eal estate houi,cwives to cam ~000 SYSTEMS • salespeople. Call Nancy. by Dec. 1st demonstrat-AHALYST M t 536-7542. in~ beautiful lines of gifts Downey Savings & Loan on CJomery Ontu & toys. No dchv·nO col-\ h . I' I , ssoc.. as 1mmec iate Ward "' cct-frec hostess Rifts. opening. for individual "'21 Need car. Call 962·5604 highly skilled in systems Life ~ Gifts 'N Gadgets & procedures. Must have ·-~ 11 __ "Our 25lhYca~ collegcdegreeandmin.4 I ----------yrs. experience. Savings ft SU ranee Receiving/Issue Clerk for & Loan background de· C leading Newport Beach I SALES sirable. Send resume & 0 Hotel. Prefer food & . , salary history to: • he verage experience. Looking for qual d. sales DOWNEY SC1Yi1t1ns WANTED! Old Music Boxes, Metllach Steins & Royal Doulton Tobies. 1 Pc. or Collection. Will pay cash. ADRIAN'S, 3111 V illa Way .NB 673-7202 Fr. Sofa. Baker des k. Chippendale chair, Press backs. More. 492-1610 SALES C a 11 M r . Ho II and. ~pie. both full & pt. ·-~ 644 -1700. E .O.K l~me. Nursery exp. pre· & Loan Jnter viewins: for pa rt lime SUPERVISOR ( d. but not nee. Salary P .O. Box5158 h elp in Mens store for Receptionist for Law Of. comm. w /exp. Apply in Santa Ana, Ca 9Z704 Remodeling Sale . Fa 11 e m p Io y m en l . Immediate openings for fice; som e cleriral skills . person: 230 1 San Joaquin Alln: A. Morsillo Starts NOW 9fi3·5647. .!)tewart A vis Men & Boys 3 Sales Supervisors in the N e w p o r l Cc n t e r ll1lls Rd .. NB. Equal Oppty Employer Back Door Imports Wear, 231 Fore::.t Ave. Orange County area. 714·640·8510 TELEPHON E SALES, 1896 Harbor Blvd CM J,.aguna Reach. Heavy recrwl.Jng neeess. -. E · d f cd ----------~~~ lncom e &growthpoten-R ECPT. Leg a l ofc.SALES~AN Y::ichts. ex-xpenence pre err . ti a l unlim1tert thru Newport Ctr. Must be p er. F.st a b Newport Earnas_mul'hasyou bke Applianc~s 8010 salary, overrides & com· we ll-gr oomed w/typing Rrok e ~a ge. Xlnl lot". by talking to pc<>plc all ••••••••••••••••••••••• IRYINE PERSONNEL SER.VICES 5-AGENCY 488 E .·17th (Al Irvine) Suite 224 Costa Mesa Call 642-1470 • L"' .. 11 c exp Call·&44 5292 548·5556 over Southern OranJ!e Con t inuous c·lean1·n" m1ss1ons . .-u ompany · · · · County from an air Cl)n· " fnnge benefits program RecptToS600 SALESPERSONS d it ione d offic·e. T\\O ceramic lop ele<-stovl' available, as well as rull h'f 0 Almost new $100 673-115.1 Prog r essive a nimal Am erica's La r gest s 1 Ls·l am lo lpm or paid '76 Conference in hos pita l offers excep· Private Security Patrol 5pm lo 8pm. Monday REFRIGERATOR $65 SAN J U/\ N PUERTO lion a I futur e r o r System needs several through Friday Apply al Call 675--7069 RICO for those qualified. versatile, take c harge, self motivating, goal set· 250 I<:. 17th St t:osta --INTF:RESI'EO? matur e person . ting p er sons be tween Mesa , o r c;dl Tony Kenmorc Washer&Ga~ ~~ Call Mr~~!~~~;49 Minimum 4 Yr$. office lR·? to present our re· Sdmie at646-4100. Dryer $75 ea Kenmon · ~ANITOR needed for new cxpr. req. Corp b<'ncfils, sidcntial srcuntyservice --Was he r & l"r1gida 1n · mfgr'g, pl;int. Cleanup & --~~~---~~~-~~-•I medical Plan. Send re· program, in the Laguna TOW Truck _Dn ver want· Wa s h c r S 5 o e" Gen. handyman. Pacific HCR MACH OPR sume to Ad Jt329 Onily Beach, Mission Viejo ed. ex pe rie nccd pre· Guar/Del.546·8672 Tr a wl er Corp. 350 Accountingjllckptg Pilo t P .O. Box 1560. areas. Part time arcep-ferrcc!. Good pay + --- Kalmus Dr .. CM Pe rm. position for ex-Costa Mesa. 9'.!626. table. For more informa· lbrevni·neef1 6t4s2. 125AP2P1 Y lOOO Auction BOIS JOI OPEHIHGS Boat Carpenters Cabinet Shop Assmhlrs Experienced Only Pacific Trawler 350 Kalmus. CM. ---------., .1 ·u JR.CLERK M icrofilming. s t ock room. & mail exp. nee. Apply Jn Person Marin•r't Savings 1515 Westclirr Dr. NB. KEYPUNCH OPERATOR 2nd lhift 12 noon· 8pm Will keypunch and verify ,., on 96 column data re· corder . Requires minimum 2 yurs ex· perlencc. Ex<'elle nt , :speed anti accurocy a musl. Apply; PERT EC J7tl2 Armslront Ave. SantA Ana.C.llf. Jrvine loduatrial Complex fl.. ,i"urn east on /\lton at fJl lled 11111. 3 blocks no. or MacArthur Ir Red tlll1 \n· • ursectlon. t.um right at • Arms\l'Ona. Equal oppiortunlly employer m tf lion call 991·<>100 Monda'' _ · · _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• per'd machine operator.i----------i ·' s I A/P. AIR & payroll. Im· lhru Friday . As k for TV Technician, outs1d<.' to l~r ini:t Sihcr .folatwarc med iate o pening. Co. RECEPTION I ST/ Dick J imcnc7.. 51000 3 m o. for qualified King Richa rd pattern b.Y benr.(its & advancement. CLERK TYPIST man.831-2780 Tow le. 7. 12 c~mpl~tc A I I P ror small electronic Salesperson needed. place settings mclurling PPY n erson, "Am e ric::i 's Largest ----------1 servingpieces.Mustscll. BACK STREET manufacturer. Pleasant Private Patrol System" Best offer. 644·6426 655 B St. Tustin telephone mannl'r for Several self-motivating. TYPISTS bus y l obby. Vari ed Cats NIGHT AUDITOR. clerical duties. CALL J!Oal selling. between 18 8035 I.ong & short te rm as· s1gnmenls ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'd 'd NCR & ? to present our re· exp r eq . 4200 . 549·3041 Equal Oppor. s1dent1al Security Pro-HIMALAYAN Kl'ITENS Pedigreed & Re(:1stered Xlnt benefits. Please call Employer. g r 3 m in the La~u n a for appt.. ---------n h M · · · Balboa Bay Club. eac . 1ss1on ICJO VOLT With shots. 675-0168 H th' t JI? area. Part lime accepta-1221 W.CoastHwy,NB. ave some ing o se . ble. For1'nforma•·on call T•mporory Senices P•nl-ICitteftS 384R Campu.c; Dn\'e .,.. -· '"S 5000 t ''""" Classified ads do il well. "' O't • •ex ·.HAI Tuesday or Thursday 546·4741 Show prospects, :ilso C Across from stud service. most col New Zealand S H 0 0 S K Y ff T R 0 N H T 8 U C U.A U C A R EUDNALS lTRAWET S TAOLOHZEIWKNUllNZMSA HLTA S MANSEAOO C PUAON E P A C I F I C A I. Q 8 8 R A T B T R RKORH C OOKLULAUDY C RB LF 1 TAJ ENN 1 FERllOAAAM A{N E w z E A L A N olN K c o n F. H o NBCHtSURMGCMUT C EPKE D&MF.NE CUO TA LASKK I F.L POYAAYKNROBINI S WOWO A N L ·r S A t. t; R N H T U ft C A U A G LT AKRA1WlM OHL H ORO LOJWLONKMO U NT C OOKMT 8UNYRODNKROMACY8RMD ~ . .. • F.njoy much larpr "!Hit 6 f ind·' puaalu with over i'I() dl~rl111 .,., panel In an •ll·l\"w ..n~ ofl4·iwt•• bookleo. Tt> ordtr vnlum" I, II 1tnd nt. aend $1 for urh. m•kin11 ehtck~ ,,,,vable 111 "Sffk &. Vinti" In .,. of chi• n~w•r•~r 991·0400 between 9 & 10 am. ors. $100 and up.1192-2970 O.C. Airport) SEAMSTRESS Equal Oppor. Employer Beautiful Chocolate Point ~------- Must be experienced in ____ Siamese. Fem:ile, 3 1 'J npp::ircl sewini::. Apply Typist. Fast/Aceurat;-mos. All shots. $25. Li~ht CAR JO Part time to begin. bro~n male, '1 mos. All M /\NU FACTURING Mature persOQ pref. near shots. $5. 494.18.54. -- 684 W. l7thSt, CM O g C Airport Call or c»ll 645-Gsa>, ask for pr:~ !t 0 s4G·•370 <>r Doqs 8040 Shirley 963-2722. • ••• •• • • • ••• ••• •••• ••• • Irish Setter Pups Sec:,..twy fP.T. UPHOLST!RY .AKC. Male & female. To manage office in SEAMSTRESS _$50&$75.547-4897. Costa Mesa . 979-5157 ----------1 Top salary for ex · Cocker Spaniel.AKCRPjl. SF.CR ETA RY / GIRL perienced seamstress In Tan. l Yr. Male. Gd FRIDAY. Seit-starter. cusl o rn upholstering. w/kids. $150 Ph: 549-186'2 Pleaunt atmosphere. 1 Full .o: pnrt-tJme. only days. S81·1932 t\'CS. girl ore. &46·2SOO quahf1ed nectl apply. --------~--------i 645·6457. Dog ObedlenceCln:\S to Secr etary for ne w & St" rt Wed. Auaust27th. pll'asant corporate office In Ncwport·lrvine Area. near Orange County * UTOTEM* 7:30 PM.546-4928 Airport. w~ !\eek ~ood skllls lncl. shorthand, & IMPLOne-n' ability lO deal with peo-O,,OlTUMl'T1lS pie. Wo offer a great op· fo'\Jll or Part 11me Portunlty to the right in· No Ex per Nt'Ce"sary dividu•l. 752·8313· Age 21-65 Eliglblo -----Go to The Nea~t Secrctuy. sh/type Asst TIC TOC MAAJCfo:r to pre11. Future. Versa · For Applications & 1nfo tilt-, Rel dolull MS-21666 OR CALL 9714 l 642-1702 Basset. m11lt-, w/papers $SO : Fem . Beagle Dusel $25. &t puppies 64&-0976 ------1 The r1stesl draw in the Wes\. . a Oally Pilot Clas11lfled Ad. Phone &42·5678. -------Find whal you want in Tic Toe Systems. Inc . ~II idle item s 642-~7Ai...--------1 Dally Pilot Clnssiflcds. For an Ad in Women's Wortd Call Su~ 642-5678, Ext. 330 Lively In Motion The s1•n ~h1nes happ11v on this hvcly, bow·lopped tires\ lhe hod1ce is l1t1cd above a skirt lhal moves heautilully with your body. Srnd now' P1111ledPatletn 916S· M1\SPS' Sizes 8. 10, 12. 14. 16, 11:1. S1" 12 (bust 34l lokes 2~ 2 yerds 45-inch fab11r.. Send $LOO for uch pallero Md 25f for u ch pattern IM tirst.class !NII and handlinR. Sud to: ............. ........ Dept.MJ Of8f1p CoM1 O•IJ ftloe 232 Wot 18111 St. New Yoit. MY 10011. l'flat MAM(L AD· DRE.SS, Ziii, SIZE Pd :\TYlC NU•CR. 0t Yfll kMW boW tJ tit t ,.att1r11 frH? Sfll• MW tor eur 111111 fln-1flattt htt1111 Cai.t.1-ct111 tt""1 l11sl .. ftr frtt ptter11 ot y11r cllol(t. St11• lS-••I Sew + Klllt 1tN ll.25 l11st111t ..... , Cran. _ t .IO h1staat hs)lttl ._ 1.00 h1sta11t Stwiftl lotk _ 1.00 .r· ' Afghan of Shells! A cozy touth 1~ alw•ys wel· come crO('hel al1than now' Oehphl lhe lam1lv with this lour-color al&han that Mc· 01•tes bed or !>Ola Crochet rr ..,.,\led in easy ~htll shtrh. I tr~I tor lr1p~. Pallerl\ 7003. easv 11irtellons S 1.00 for u ch p~tttrn. Add <'~<' eiGh patlern IOI ltr~l"tlas) m~•I and handling. Send to: A16ce Broob . Hndtecnft09C)t.105 Of ... Co• .. O•llJ Pilot IOJ !'3. Old Cllelatt $t1 .. New York. NY 10011 . Prl11t 1111111, Address. Zip, Pattem flumbcr. MORI tMn ever btlore1 200 dr"rn~ nlu• J free printed 1n (tl11' NfW l'l76 N~fOLfCRAfl CAm oc1 Hu everyth1n1. 75t' Crochtt with S•nrcs _ S 1,00 Crochet 1 W11drob~ _ S1 00 Mitty Fifty Quilts SI 00 Rl11'4t Crtthlt '1.00 Sew ._ Knit look SUS Mu•lt'91•1 lttk SI 00 newer Creclltl looll _ S 1.0G lltlrtl11 Croclltl l otk it 00 lnstut Crtclltt looll 1.00 lnsttat MKr11111 lull 1.CIO lwstJ11t M .. n look $1.00 C1m11l1t1 lltt a-. \IM Co11111tt1 Aft1111e • 14 S 1.00 I 2 llrll'e Aftll1111 : 11 50• look of llQ~~=I 50' MtH•• Dllfft k ... U 50• ti Qllllt• '" Toay ~s so, IMk tf 1& lilly hp -'°' CUSTOM CAKES for evc r v orcasaon. mJslt.'rfull)· created for you. T he un11su:.1I is my spl:C'i a lty. Priced rC'- asiinablc with satis fac- tion guaranlCl'ri. Call Jll•lcn now for your custom rlccor;.ited rake at 979-8123. Kn~ Sz. Hcd. !'cw, rnm- plete. s till pkgd. Xlra firm $190 t\\nrth 5425). ()n Sz SJ70. usually horn\·. ind <lei. X:l!°J-1263. ~ordi1·a ,\lµina :.k1s, S11l· ~ T''I' pair. vt'fY' good t·onclil111n. S!5 per pa 1 r. Ca 11548 ·491!7. Orii.!inal Etchings , Goy..1 S65., l\1 odighani $65. Renoir S85., P vt ply .~ 535-55!;1:; Console Color TV. nut \\Orkin~ S20. Dre:.s frorn SS. J.f ' tire SJ. fi42·2895 I RV INE Coast Country Cluh ~1 mbrshp-Oays !I 7 ~I · 2 6 5 l o r E v l' s • 5'18·473 l. SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Define -Tulip -· l lo1st -Sodium - 1-"Lli SH<Yni [loctors sav that we're J!Ol ng to ·ha\'C a fl u epidemic. so I went to my favorite bar and i.:ot a few FLl. SHOTS. -t new 6' chroml' tables w /walnul n C'vcrmar lops. S65 ea. X hi\<-&. chrome stat•kab l e chairs. Sl5 ca Will take S300 for all. S.t5-ltl44 oc 557·~46. New tires. rims & hub <'JPS. 8.75:1.lli.~ ~'1rcslont! wide oval transports. g luJ! Ford. Valut• S400 • will take S300. 5-15-101'1. Old ~asoline lawn mower rotary SIO. Call ;iftcr ·I PM. 615-Hil7 --- Lionel train set. Track. <il'<' .. c.1ri--.ind en~rncs S95. Call John ti7:J-3177 STE!-;!. ~l oral!l' Sh<'d 91 h 4 1 i Like new, $~•1. 645-992'J AIR CON DITIONEH G l~. Window. f>OOO BTU. SUXI. Used 4 m os. 646-4757 Refinishers Special: Old ~Lthoga n y table , I~. hu re au. e hiffcrob c . c·ouch . Also refrg works good, mags. porlabl1• cassell~ w /case. A IL priced to sell! 646-0919 '70 Yam<1ha 125. Lic'd. Utility Trailer, Campcr- Cab o v c r S l eept"r . 960-2800 afl 4 rr.t . W('Ckdays --- Scuha gear, xlnt ('0111J .• SlOO. Wei~hls, 100 lbs .• SHI. Cull 846-2108 1"ri ~1dai re double oven stove Sl9S. Spinet organ $495. Used doors $7. 642 9647 Miscellon•ous WClftffd 1011 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SS CASH nro• Good U!led rumtrerngs f'rtr~ !ltO\('S. 5464768 tlS F.D EXERCISE EQUIPMENT. lloUeni. elec bikes, etc. Call Mrs. onmn aft 6, 646-040il. Laguna Festival ticket.a wanted ; anyUm~ ane< Au•. 16lb Call G9-2BDO SELL Idle lles:m with a Dally Pllol CJuslfaed Ad. &42·5678. \ ----··. -........ . --· ..... ..-.....--. ._. ..... I I A..to U d Autos. Uu d BJ o OAIL Y PILOT Tuesday, July 29, 1975 Autoa WOftted 9590 A..tos, IMpor+.d .... IMpor+.d Autos, l•~ ••••• !• •• !~••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..:~='!:....,.;;..;..;..;;;_;_.;..;..;~.;..;..;-----------... ----...... --• •• • ••••••••• ••• ••••• •• 9957 •••••••• •••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••• •••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••• • • 7J Che I t 9920 l'hlto Pic.o1 & o~ 8090 loab, SHps / Sp.!>rh, Rae•, Wt; PA y 1·op DOLLAR Flot 97Z5 ,.onch• 9750 Volwo ..... 97 •• •••• !~.~•••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ,-·-D k 9070 Rod• 95 .. 0 • •••• ••••• • •• •••••••.,..••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• oc s • ,. FOR TOP USED CARS •••••••••• •••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••• • • • 'Tl • '74 PlNTOs. 2 doorb. T 11 OM As 1' r1 Jn on ....................... ~ ......... : ... ~........ FOlU·:lGN, l>OM1':STIC l..tlu\'ing Cor Alaska. Must , . . Annl•et wy '72 MALIBU. uutomatk. runabo u li1, wa~on.i.. Kc) bourd Or~un .lb !11.'t'O SLJ PS Nl•Wport Bc<il'h 7 0 0 L [) s 4 I j w 30. or CLASSICS $4!11 Yellow '74 Finl X/19 $6 Porsehe 912. nlcelr. r:icw SALE' ractor)' air. vinyl root. PriCt'S starl al $1254 ( 71 i>O Lil\\ r<'nC<' Welk 'ho\\ Sail or Powt'r Lo ad e d f• II 11 Y In lf your car I~ t>Xlra clea Bt-st ore er biS 1>997 & pulnt. red. see Ul vme. • power s tec.rina "bruke.s, 2tlr. Lk. '164CXV> 0083.\.'i.'i b735253 t>&S-8506 lltrumented ind tuch se~uis riri.t. 6735591 1·72'-0:ut •75 VOLVO $22$-l(SlOEOHl Th•odoreRobina Hrun<t new l S Mai.::. IAUER BUICK -9 56 Th•odON ltolMta FORD 'UAl.UWI N \troi.oni<'W NTF.Oonllhorcmoo.-nrandnl·wGll~r 0\JI 292S llurborBtvd. JOC)Uar 97301olsRoyce 1 164E4Dr. fOltD 2 """Harborlllvd Sp1ncl p1 uno L1~ht •nic 8alhoa 1:-land Will Totally ~cbll. .& havt.> re· t:'o!tta Mesa 979. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oemo. ;iutomatic. air 2060 llarboc Blvd. 642 ooTo ~ Costa Mei.u ·' finat-h $60(1 519 2430 hu~ bout tf ne<.· 1173-2746 ce1pts 1' ac. :ur & lltt-r1.'t1 JAGUAR ~l DEALER IN U.S.A. cond .. power steering, Costa Mcsn &42·00IO _ ~I \\'antt-tl llhp, dock or can <.:om petition lfcadl·r~ & TOP DOLLAR IOY /\ M · 1'' M 8 l r a c k • . 73 Pinto h1 ml'g lo prier I l 'pnf?ht. rm•<'\1ct• piano r t1 r 3 7 , E b s e n Gl<•ll~pucs. Rt!ady tor Leose Im CARVER headlight rt ms, rloor '74 El, Camino Cluss1c. xlnl co~d. ~7 9468: 38ui Good condataon S200 Ph r· . 17 . wade s treet or strip. Pvt. PAID Hew or Used ROUS·ROYCE mots. !13614. P /zs, I /b. u1r <.'00<1. Ma~ S Sycumon•. SA 642·8631 ~tt1~Jr.1n 83l 0887 . rt' Owrwr 838 3328 IMMEDIATR Y 48 Months Was $8190 wheels & rudl:tl tires. . - SportiftC) Goods 8094 6pm. or .i . Truck; -9560 FOR ALL ~i;A1~~:~ SavincJt $1004 $1000. 559·~5<14>. Plymouth !!~.~j ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• with S4•-«« 9932 •••••••••••••••••• Sneud~olfdulJciwo<ids&SLf P F'OR R Em:.~.mder TRVCt\S·VANS4 WD's FORflGHCARS I PAYMEHT CLOSEO SUNDAYS NOW $7186 ~~!~!!~•••••••••••••• ATLAS i r o n s. t•Jrt & bJ )! \rch bnd~t>. to'*'. sso. Wanted .Clean.lntt-CALLORCOMEIH DOWN 546·7201<>r55233to mo 673·RM5 •1dls.Cnsh 'G75·~9 TOSHUS 9761 H Corvette Stingray. " Stuh · b e a u t i C u l m ct a l li c W l d ll Huv -R1rh• Wiii Tr a de Use of --CllEVY-EI C.-.-••••••••••••••••••••••• 1\n1a11l"11,;.l brown.4s\>d &allxlrus. an e 1 · lk!aut1ful large sailboat 72 amino. Q/Jt.\IU. UIJ\O Only 13,000 mi. $7200 or Weat~erly .~ro~t~I! or tor sli p u:.e 64t»2345 automatic. vinyl top, EXCLUSIVE .}l , best orfor. <;all 64()..Q))(I Winclif'ster 3000or 270. . l . · power steermg & brakei.. t ·.~'- l'h 6452146cH·:-any •m!_·_ air. low miles & sharp! FOi ~'t'' VOLVO bcf. ~:30 or 673·789:! aft ~· '''" co1rm.in ~h·t·ii•ni: Boat~. Speed& S..1354 <03621 H> JIOOW.CoutHwy.NA Orange County 5:30 h,1~ ... V•'l\'(',l('r .Sllll '" Skt 9080 Theodore Robins 3100 W.Cout Hwy N-&. 0A IYM Horhor < M "·''' •ncn '70 CORVETIE ",It' i J ~ l' $I h l' .1 ·······~··············· FORD 642 9405 642·9405 ~ :1;11,'.1i16 C'llltlS <:ltAt-T Cla.s::.a~: 2060 1lurborHlvd • "-annGhla -9735 Autos.Us ed T-TOP . - 1 ' 19 ~I J ho!! l 8 · -Costa Me!>a 642 0010 _____ "-"' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 454 V-8 eng ine. air cond1-TV. Radio , t•m·kp1t:. Chi) 6 eng .. ----1 rt-~ ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• G I 990 I t..aonang, lealher interior. Ll1'F·1 St.ar.ao 8098 nl'W l'tl\E'r. Bst orr. 73DATSLINStakcPickup, Autos, mpo lC'U 1959 Karmann Gh1u MOTOR ~ra Pampered •-preserved n • ,. " I I •• • • •• • • • • • • • ••• ••••••• k d I b t Cil ••••• • • ••• • • •••••••• • •• ex. ••••••••••••••••••••••• fi75 !<70o e\'e~.&W 7391 4 speed, air. ow ma e~. G 1 9701 I Loo ::. ra 1c u ous. u Sacnhce. 1970 Camaro, by retired U.S .M.C. t•ol Boots & Man ne 52954 (Pl981A) eMf"a ~ets 34 mpg. $300 AUTHOllllH ,,ellow, ··uto, R/H, P/S. onel! (240UHT> • • • •• • • •• • • • ••• ••••• ••• 556 4998 ~ & S.-.k • J u Equipmf'nt 1Tran~portation Theodore Robins SEE EUROPE I · DAVE ROSS p u. 5 nu tires. gd. cond. ••••••••••:•••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• FORD Lornbor9hini 9736 Also; 72 Vega Wa~n. red. Boats. Maintenance / Alrc:roft 911 O 2060 II arbor 01\'d BY CAR I ••••••••••••••••••••••• P'OMTIAC·STUTZ perL cond. a mtrm. ate. Ser •ice 9020 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Costa Mesa 642-0010 Purchase any European 7 5 LAMBORGHINI 24'0 HCll'hor It.do stick shift, lugi,:. rack. •••••••••••••••••••••••1t-:1 Dnrado l'.1mll('r. to' .73 FORD l''·lOO Pi<'kup. Car for dell\'t•ry in •UHHACO Cott• Mesa l\46-JIOl7 586·8617 Ell•t·t rn·al \\ uocl\\ork111g with Jacks c;ood conda automatic. power sh'er-Europe & let us plan your J'lumbin~ ln:-t;Jllat1on ttnn S895. 5.tn·:lbll mg. low miles. & Sharp! 1nd1\ adual tour. t'r om & Repair lnhd l'nl.! re -t:ikc uff to home-landing. pair. Fire :-)~lt•m inst!, Motorcyc:l~s/ S3354 you'll bl· in the hands of m;iint. Sl'l>rpw ~l.innt· Scooters 91 SO Theodore Robins l'>.P~rts Also lease & ren· 548·9704 ••••••••••••••••••••••• FORD tal t-.irs. Ell RALlTO. '73 Dl'~STALl~ 1'nrton ZOt\O llarlx.>r Bl\'CI Lido Ydlag c , N .B. loots •• Marine 9030 "810", :U<o lb. fainn,:t, ;ill Costa Mt•sa 642·00lll tl73·4550. Equipment xtra;. ti 15 23:!1 aft. 5 ------1 •••••••••• • •••••••••••• 5R Foret , .1, Ton trut·k BMW 9712 SWORDFISH PLANK \\ ood<·n. 25 ft Gwd l'Ond. H 1-:ASONJ\Hl.E. ('.Jll ti-t5 77-1·1 ~fl 7 P~I ·75 KAW .\SAKI 900 l'l' l'lll boxt•:-, ;.H'el bl'CI. &1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11ou rn1 ;\lu!'I St·ll ' re b it motor & Q~OO h,.t offer 6424-137 transm1:-... 1on SllS. 2!l!IX i:! 110 :'\ l> \ :CiOC'B. mint Croftdtin. f \I ORANGE COUNTY'S OLDEST & •ESPADA 5 Speeds or Automatics IHSTOCKHOW IMMEDIATE DELIVERY AUTIIORIZEO DEALER SALES S ERVICE L EASING JIM MARINO MOTOR CARS AMC 9905 c-ar 9931 Toyota 9765 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••~•••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• AM X Javelin, 72, Mini 70 COUGAR. low miles, TOYOTA SALE i·ond. Must sec. Auto. only $1954 (951EPW) New •7 5 Pic"·-s A / c · r / s • P / b • S25oc Theodore Robins --r 675·5304. FORD LARGE Buick 9910 2060 Harbor Blvd. SELECTIOll!i...I ••••••••••••••••••••••• Costa Mesa 642-0010 """ 1975 Buick Regal. F.statc ~ Buy 0 r Le as e sale. All extras. Cran· D-..,e . 993S berry with while Lan· •••••• ••••• •••-••••••• NOW! dau. 6900 mi. New-$7200 73 Dart V·S. auto. 4 dr. Now only S5500. Must PS /PB .. A/C, AM /FM. Chryslu /PlvMcMlth Qp(•n Daily & &m. 'Ul \0 PM 2~~!> llaroor Ulvd .• Costa Mesa 546-1934 74 PLYMOUTH Satellite. viny I roof. automatic. power i.tcering & br~kc::.. air, o nly 8,000 mllci., $3454 (051KYT) Theodore Robm1 FORD 2000 M:irbor Hlv\I. Costa Mesa 6'12·00lll • ,.ontioe 9965 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 72 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX SJ Every Cuctory option in · eluding AM ffM stereo w I 8 track tape. factory air conditionin~. vinyl roof, tilt steering wheel. power windows. bucko&. scats, power steering 4ltf brakes, ck. Steal thilU beauty a t bt•lo wholesale Hlue Book!. (~3FKS> ~ $2789 Boats, Power 9040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1•ond $1150 or ol kr. Thi~ ·54 G \IC P .1 nd '\1b \\ ork w1•t·k : 1;;;,.1;.11-t 8:\~l to 22R ·G l' nl! -;-hyllro Hl':\l mt1c I r ~.n~ abo :o.trn Sales-Service· Leasing Roy Carver, Inc. 1200 W. Coast Hwy. 645·1102 see. Richard H aynes. MM ,846-7352 --~""'!''!""'!"~"!!.""~r-.. 493·2928 aft. 6. Except 6J Darl·Slanl 6 cyl. eng. 2 DAVE RO t:LCO 27 Chr\'s . l'ng :-uper A IH~ hait pump ill m ~1rhn C'qWp Rec 'Ur\ l'~ Orig owner '-HOO ti42 64i2 l9i2-500 F our Hunda tunt>d hc•adt•r-. \"f·r~ Clean .\~k 1ng $850 IH2 21; l'l en!! tr.in .. S200 1;;:1.~ 74 CHEVY Pickup 1 4 Ton Rolls 'R oyce B!\1W 234 E. 17th St. Tues. & Thurs. dr. Gd. mi. Nu tires. PONTIAC 69 RIVIERA 646·0493 art. 4pm Mmda Acron from lht ~lboi Bay Club 14 ............. . With all the factory u Ford 9940 c.e....... 14 ..... 17 t ras including stereo, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Costa !\te5a 546-4444 \' 8 . H U I o m ,1 l I l' - . 71 c>-. ... a Trials. \Int l'Oncl tran:.ma .. ~IC•n. Pll\.\Cr 311 ELCO t:.la<;s1c. l!)._'8 c·x Licen-.l·ri. du.ii urnillon strenn~ & hr.tkl·:.. hta\') pre~~. T S. Rcblt f.n~ .... 1 S4CJO 1;44 1 Hi!J clulv tires , 1·u:-tom c.ab. Comp n•done inside & etc· Looks & run:. like .. ut Coe k pit c·out• he:. '73 I lonrla 750. Chopped. &· ne\\ • (757:!3\' 1 \luch More Xlnl Cond ·;3 Triumph 7:i0. Both $4795 Two Roat {)\\ner !\lust Xlnt c·nncl Pn Part'. ___ ....;..... _____ -..... " e 11 I ~ :J k (' I) r ( c r nest offc-r 49-1 fi:!Hl'I • ,,. •ii5·3238. 21>' Lap :.tr~1 kl• 0\\en 1969 Kawosaki 250. "l\Qrls ftsht•r Twn !<rrt•w. l"R. dual t·ontrol~. Eler. llONl>1\ i50 Cu~l pmnt. ht•ad, pwr wenl'h lnm tank. :.cat. chrome'. t•tl- \,1bs. comp n gg1.-.t for Ha r lry rt'ar whl Oil I 1s h1ng. !\1 any mort' cooler. S2.00(). !)63·119-1 \lr as. 55200. G73·343~ Nabers Cadillac uoo ..... ltYcl. C...ta Mesa S40 "°° Bu s 1 nl c 1 national 56 passcnl!l'r Nct-ds !!lass. S300 2~!00 Rrar W. Coa:.t llw~ l';dl ~·6!172 i•\'CS '69 Triumph L>n~tClna !l()() . . Showroom <'one!. Sill5 TOYOTA Pkup H&ll. stl. lW7 OWENS. 33 Ownr 646-8057 am ,5:;u !li07 h!.'ltcd tirc•s Sl.500. or :-;1ps 4. Lin• aboard Slip t·\·es ht'sl ofr 5·Hi 112-1Mt.4 30 ~79 mo l'ew paint top & h u 11. :\11 r & 1 n t i\ 1 •hape Sfi sou Ph 5.56-6337 / I'h on ho<il. 72 YJmaha 2.)1):\IX Xlnt 1•onrl S400 or hest ofl l'r i;75.~JllJ a fter fiP~I 4!J3·~ __ _ ·73.5011 HONDA. Fa1nng & t:nafllght ll.1rdlup Com bag... New. trlr. Xlnt. CREVIER & I ST 6 lllOADWAY SANTA AHA 835·3171 rHE ULTIMATl DRIVING MllCHINE SADDLEBACK BMW EXCLUSIVE & DEALER • S£RVICE RIST • Passenger Cars Toyota Specialist, fair pnres. 10 yrs exper. 646-1439. 20 DEMOS COROLLA'S COIOMA'S MX'S LAMD CRUISER SAYE NOW DWtlwM &TOYOTA_ ~wer windows. fa~ory 69 FORD LTD 2 dr. H.T .. aar ralley wheels: ~~ny! vinly roof. automatic, roof, & Ve ry Cl~an powetsteering&brakcs, (27568) $954 CZLJ912) $1489 Theodore Robins FORD DAVE ROSS Cos~~~'i~rborB~.'oo1o PONTIAC 24'0 ....... Athlr~. COIN...... 146 .. 017 Cadillac: 9915 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CADILLAC Over 70 to choose from. From $1 995. GMAC Financing & Leasing. Nabers Coclilac 2600 ............ C.C.ta ~ S40 .. 68 FORD Country Squire Wagon, Automatic. air, roof r ack, power steering & brakes, $854 (WVT845l Theodore Robins FORD 2060 Harbor Blvd. Cost a Mesa 642-0010 'G7 Station Wagon, gd cond. $625. * 644·4883 * 70 FORD TORINO -· 72 PONTIAC SAFARI STATION WAGON 9 Pa ss enger sla· tionwagon with all the luxuries including V-K engine. autom alir transmission, factory air conditioning, power steering & brakes, power windows, tilt st eering wheel, roof rack, wood g rain sides, & mor e!l (749G BCl .a, S256Y mdnd Bndi!e Cruiser cond 557 ·72fl3 __ • 36'. 1969. No CF2C»4EC 1971 V;imaha 90CC En· Xlnt cond1t1on Offered duro. MinL l'Onrl S2SO. T 0 W TH l ' <: K 2' : Ion G~!C HO" llolm1.~ 515 &. No\' l'll ololly !<Y!>lcm 1-'ull~ l·qu1p ii \Int l'Ond See to ,1 pprcc1alc. SJ.250 Firm St'l' JI K1m'll Tex a<'o. lntcro;late 5 & A\'er~ Prk\\ v No of San Juan Capo ·496 5953 or 831 1:JJ1 REXIBl.E LEASE PLANS • MIRACLE MAZDA 1966 Harbor C M 6d6·9)03 '61 4DR Cad. 84000 actual mi. Air -radial tires-Cull pwr. P er{ cond $550, 548-1955 2 Door H.T .• automatic. radio, heat er . power steering & brakes, air conditioning, vinyl roof, · 7 4 PONTIAC b y Owner, S33,000 iii·~~. 5 Year o r 50.000 Mile Warranty Available on a ll N e w BMW 's. 21 SO Harbor Bl•d. '74 PKUP. Mags, stereo· muc h more. S3.200. Ca11 rallye wheels. 097AFY> LE MAMS COUPE· $I 489 Loaded with V·8 engine, Cotto M~H • 64S-S700 •75 CADILLAC automatic, air cond1tion- ''N Cor ona. 4 spd, new D E DA ing, vinyl roof, AM/F5f aft. 6PM. 644·2588 ----------c;141ti75 1030. ----.vans 9S70 ""' '"'h , . rt 1,...,,., T '7•1 llond.1 2:>0 CH. New. ••••••••••••••••••••••• o74J "" n s , r~ • iJ<JV . win SRUil. t tll after 5PM. :.cr~w. \ ·8 ~. ~Ip:, h, lrg 552 0261 VWCampen AND Jl402M_...,.m rmt-ay '73 RX3. 18.000 mi. s teel be lted radials COUPE e VIU ster eo r adio, power Radio. clock, etc. $2650. 551-1429 Cabriolet top. ruu power . PONTIAC steering. power dlsr c:o<'k pat , t·ompl rt' --- furb1s h NI. !\l usl :-cll 1Joncla 750 Custom hod~ ~. 714 tn75·1519 Ver y :-harp . rebu ilt BUSES 71 PupTop 72 7 Pas~. ;o 7 Pass. 73 9 Pass. MhU-V~jo 131-2040 • 495.4949 UM A •trf rartwcry bit S2200. Ph : 646·5.'i72. dual comfort seals, fac-A brakes. rallye wheels. f: 1972 RX2, n ew engine. '69 TOYOTA Corona Mark tory air conditioning. lilt ,........,. .. ,.... more! (982MIAl .:ngine. ~llOO. S<.·l' at the R o o m Y 2 8 ' L u h r :. <'Orner of So. Cst. Jlwy & ~porthsher. S7800 or best Anita, Laguna Beach. . A/C. tape. xlnt cond. Of. II 2 dr sedan. Pvt party. steering. stereo. etc. Low ~~~Nee~·!!!!~~!!!t!!7~I $3889 fe r. 675.8546 _84_2-_8_7_23_______ miles! (305LIO > -:: off er 538·fi3M Specially Priced And READY for Vacation Time. '71 BMW 2002. Xlnt cond. Ai r . AM /FM s tereo. Ma~s. $2995 Ph: 644-2369 8 2 9 5 '72 LTD. _ _.... ...... ""'!!'!""'9!""'!0!!'"S'P'!!S~ '72 Mazda RX 2. 25,000 mi Tri11tnph 9767 ---"-------Xlntcond. DAVE on eng. Clean. Must sell. •••••••••••••••••••••••Lllllaltlaim.._ Call 646-6794. PONTIAC . ..,.R-AD-;::.-.-.,1 , C· b 1973 Honda7!i0 $1500 o r best ooffer. Trium ph '69 G'.f 6. Cle~n. 551.4887. xlnt mechanical. Pnv. Ford Courier '72 with 2411...._ •• ..,.,.. Mercedes Bem 9740 Party.s..9.36531494.6988 r:::=c.-. __ ..__,,,___MO~~ ... ~~ ~jpy ~r~t~~k~i:!: c.w..... l4MOl7 • .-~ · ~ a 1 n Chopped 51600 Cruiser. i.:d. tond .. for • 0 ,\\'Eni'.4·4:icl:! • lar):!cr or :-malll•r boat or --Datsun 9720 ••••••••••••••••••••••• M.·11 ' 548·7764 Rl\\n. R :lO 'i2 Kawasaki 100 Dart 1\M &:5P:\1 Street ac<·cssories.Super Cond ! S2K5 549·0 129 Garden West VW 2 Rlks W. of Beach Rlvd. 7600 Westminster A' r WI Lt BUY YOUR ••••••••••••••••••••••• Volkswagen 9770 -new tires. sw eo, xlnt .-----11 1 DA'fSUN, TOYOTA, ••••••••••••••••••••••• '72 CADILLAC cond. $1900. 536-4203 64 G1:0 .. r uns ~·e · Tl'< ·74 Tn !full 18 ll : J IO Che\' I 0 Lo"'-hour., SJ600 Ca II 14-lt> '1562 Westminster 638-7AAO --w/wh1t e ant. Ong owner. O R VOLKSWAG EN OVER 100 , REPAIRS-SERVICE SEDAHDeVILLE Moveric:k 9947 Bcstoffer 546·7~7beforc 70 Yama ha :lliO. dirt. new nvcrhall, runs good. 5400. PAID FOR HEW & USED Exch ange & Rebuilds Full power , vinyl roof. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4pm. 1970 FORD Chateau \\In OR NCYr. BROOKLYN BUG CO. Je_alher inle!ior: facto_ry .70 Mave rick. 6 cyl, Arr. --=--------- ]fl' Cabin Cruiser. 40 llP 847.5136 ------- F:\lnrude. Traill'r fo'ully 72 Hondas: iO & 125. eqp rl Sl20Q S.Jt .fi736. Suiuk1 125; ~: S325 : dowed van Lng. \\hi T OP DOLLAR MERCEDES E stimates 548·9141 air ~ond1tt0n1ng, lilt orig. o w n er & cond. '72 PONTIAC base. l ton r hussas. air. CALL OH DISPLAY s teering wheel. :.terco, Sl200 179.7394 CATALINA reblt. eng New brakt>s. SAL BERNADENE House of lmoorfs * YW IUGS power door loeks, etc. ___ . ..;;._ ______ Sedan. Immaculate. v.8, port galley PP 1\:.kini.: 540-0442 AUTHORtZf::D '68 THRU 1847EO.J ) Men:gry 9950 automatic. factory air. S22S/Make dt-al All trick Boots. Soil 9060 sturr for dart. Xlnl cond. • ••• ••• •• •• •• •••••••••• Sellout sale all our bikes. Kite 12nu. l1k1.· nl'w 545-4624e\'l'S S2 ·250 · l)'10 ·5>17S or Datsun Repairs & Sv<' MERCEDES DEALER '74'S $3995 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ve r y rea so n able. &12·1292 guaranteed work. Low 6862 Man<'hester. 25 '70 Mere. Colony Park 8 (800HNU ) ·73 FORD SUIU'Jm Van. pnces. Buena P:.irk To Choose From ~I Cacfflac pass. wagon. Original $1489 646 1439 G d W -... VW owner. Xlnt cond. Tape automatic. mof,!• .. tape · 523-7250 ar en ~· 2600 ..__II•~ l'.nll1nkablt·' l'lca:-ure. --- rac1 n g champ Cost Motor Homes. fleck, excellrnt cond1 .71 DATSUN 260.z. 4 On lheSantaAna 1''wy. 281ksW.ofBeachBlvd. C.teMti9 540 "00 ~~~~~~~5~e{ij 5~~· _D_A __ VE....,.. __ _..P'S~-., taon' $3654 C756f.SN) ---7600Westminster J\vc. • Th ... odo-Rob"1ns !;peed. AM/FM. low 1970 280 SL, S7500. Xlnl W t . t '6387880 -95 SHiOO. 5Cll Sf\50675 fil61 Sale/Rent 9160 -••••.••.......•••....•. Santana 27 hood sad :- OVN muc h 557 4338 lnh<l ~HF. '71 22· ISLANDER. xlnl GIM STY, <'Ond. self contained. mure. PIP, $6995. 846-0446 "" • ~ miles. $5800 Call 546·3286 d B rr ·11 be es mins er · '69 EL DORADO 67000 MustClftCJ 9 2 PONTIAC 1 FORD con . est o er WI • , •••••• •• • • • • ••••••••• • • after 5 pm ! accepted 548 0039 71 VW Squareback. 73,000 m1 , P err. Mech. Sl.500 CLEAN •67 M t :v8 24" ..... At'* t.. Cos~~!~~rbor n~,.~~.'oo\O 1974 , z ,-26oi.1.~; mi. Gd. cond. $1MO or firm. 3128 Broad St, NB. auto. R&ll. ~l.a~lled CelleW... UMll -------- --R.V. Let L:s Clean you up! J,JDO 14, e d ,.ond. w tl rlr. Cle an .u p Committee. & cov S.111 No. 2005. For info. 646-6249 / - ---<'Ond . Lo . m1 . Day 71 t.4ercedeS besloHer . Larl,644-tllHO 548-6764 rads, P /S.$995.536-7234 '65 Chevy Window Van. 558-0474. eves. 675-5987. . 280 SE 3.5 74 VW Thing. dirt whts & '73 ELDO New Sll rad.. , • Sl ,200. 5:Jfi IO:l6 645·2740 6-AT. Low mi. cam1:lc>d • ---tires. Many xtras. Xlnt new brakei;. all extras. 74 MustClllCJ.Wa & ready. $900. firm l'.I'. '74 2GOZ 2+2. Ccx·o brw~. This one 1s a classic & cond. $3000. Cont act Mint cond . 644-7475, (714)497·3042 )II ' I lnb1e w /lrlr & hox \'Pry ~d cond. S950. !>52 4800 B&D Motor Home Rental 646-9611 . 491·8966 A /C, m a~s. l3000 m1. priced to sell' C#3LSO) Howard btwn 6 & 8pm. 549·1008 · Manv extras. PP Call 631.1772. --------68 Mustang , 289 clean. nu '72 Dodge Van convcr~1on bl w ·n 8 J\ M & 5 PM . Chevrol~t 992 m otor parts, built for Brand new never heen DELUXE 28'. all extras, u s ed 14 '1 Sunrlowt•r sleeps 8. By day or week. Auto.. a1 r-cond .. slt·rM 642-3482 11 bor ,. M '68 VW. GD. SHAPF.! •••••••••••••••••••••• racing. xtr as. Best offer. cassette . AM /F~I . 1970 ar ·"'· · S9SO. 548-7764 Blwn. 842·4662 0ana. T acom a whls., r adial Fiat 9725 631·1276 8:30AM &SPM COMHB.L tares. S3000. ••••••• •••• •••••••••••• -------CHEVROLET ~ves : 494 3R8f! ORANG~ COUNTY'S '58 MB 190 SL,6cyl., m int '67 VW. GD. SHAPE! SALES &SERVlCE Uays:SS2-8.1.1!l HEWEST&LARGEST cond.2tops MakeOfrer. S800. 548-7764 b t wn 2828Harborllvd. c; a ii boat pra ced S300 645-J!70 3 _rt_e_r_4_. ___ _ 616·7181 a rt 4 642-2f'49 or Trail•r s, Trani 9170 969·613R ••••••••••••••••••••••• ]4' Kona Cat w t•slm J•b~ 28' Road Runner , srlr Call 644-5591> 8:30A M & SPM COSTA MESA Autos Want~ 9590 IMMEDIATE __ _ ------ & trlr SOOO or lll'!t oHt>r cont. Good <'ond. $3250. ••••••••••••••••••••••• l>ELJVERY MG 9742 66VWSquareback. 546-1200 All Models&Colors ••••••••••••••••••••••• Urgent sate! Good eond. <213 > 926·1882af\ IOl'!\1 call 492·4481 S. C. ----OrOftCJe County's Hi9hest $ luytt SAIL C LEAMING uto Ser•ice Ir on Im__... Dick Miller Motors MG $5()()/oHer. 552-0691 r:IBTiJU Lease !:-!::'. •••••••••••• !??.~ Parts 9400 ,..... •• ARIES !\11\Rl~F: ••••••••••••••••••••••• litl MaxeyToYOta ---•~2 IRl2• --Wa nt to Buy: 1965 El Call Roger or Bill 12o w Warner .1l So Mam HeworUMCI ORANGE COUNTY 48 MOftffts VOLVO with EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO I PA YMEHT L1rgest Volvo Dealer 22' Sloop. F1hcrgla~-.. u-;l' Camino for parts or 1964 ____ M_ 7-~--- of moonni:. nth ~nrk or '65 El Camano n~hl FREE AP,RAISAL $600 714 1175 t<WI ' <loor 1965 Chevelle or El ~.1nt.1 Ana .).'57-2tJ2 · ('um1no dash. Must have We buy used <'a rs & '74 fiat 124 Cpe. Mags. J6 ft. lfon1<' w tnnln raclory air. El Camino t ruc ks . Call GROTH f'M stereo. White/black. DOWN in Orange County! BUY ur LEASB Dl REC.-r Xlnt <'Ond 2 years f)ld dour pane ls. Ask for CHEVROLET for a free Mint. OH er. KRS314 Call 646-53R7 -----Larry. 968·4971 aft. Gpm appraisal. 714/985·1881 Days. GROTH CHEVROLElf UCSB Complete reblt &7, 396 18211 Beach Blvd. '68 f'ial Spyder 850. Xln OFFERS FOR SAl,F: Chrvy V-8 eng. Turbo. Huntington Beach eond. 38 M.P.G. $950 l'tEwr ugr IM PClf\TS 2 0 N LY · So LING 400 trans, complete ly 847·6087 549-3331 494·2_1_48_. _____ --i SLOOPS . 27 ' l,ONG, ti:tlnnced not souped #a .72 FiatR50SPIOER 3100W.Contllwy.ll&. BUILT NORWAY 1!1711 up eng. never run. $500 SELLING YOURCAR7 Xlnt cond. Only 30,00C 642·9405 S AILS. MAST. llOOM. firm . Days. 646·2994, TO, ,RICES,AID mi. Con vert. top. 4( ---------- f:TC. INCLUIHm NO ('\('S 545·7865. Ask l or F ortmports MPG. $2100. 675 2216. Opel 9746 TRAILER Ml'll\1t.:M Tony. Paid tor or Not ••••••••••••••••••••••• BIO C l"ORll 1 XS $l 200 D•an Lewis lnlpcwia '68 850 Fiat Sport Con • 7 3 M o n t a Lux u s . CF0838VXSSSNIIOOPE'' CL SL' Auto1forS• J966Jhrbor.c!.M. vertible. N~w paint. top SHARP' Air . a uto. l ONL N ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 64f·9303 & tires. Silver whee.ls. 11tereo. New radials Jo. SA 1 L8 0 AT 15' fl . ~s/ Xlra sharp! $1295. Pnv mi. $2575. Aft. &P M. INCLUDING TRAll.1':R Classics 9520 Tor CASH! Ply 556-8446 afl6 PM. 644-0530. MAST. BOO M. 3 SUI~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• For cleata used cars & -...:....:..;...:.~-------1 Of SAll.S. MIN I Mt;~t ·49 PI.YMOU11{ special l ru e k 5 ! II 0 Vil a rd '70 8SO RACER 2 seats, ,ortdM 9750 BIOS7SO. • dtlux(', 2 dr. custom Chevrolet. Dove & Quall vinyl top, stereo. Beaut. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6 NE W PORT KITbS p:unt. a:i:s aaving 6. 8 SltteU. nr MaeArthur. blue.lookanew.tuMPG, '66912.5apd,rebllenR.a11 i\LSO AVAILABLE. tra('k lape SS50. 64.S-2468 Jam boree nnc1 Bristol. For TLC People only ; r eceipts. $3750. 835-31 ~g:Mf .¥1~~~~~L !~ .. 50 Willys Jeepster 283 Newport Beach. ~.om ~~487c:~~~~1~~ See. ask for Olana ___ --1 ft05·961 ·25H H A M !I Chrvy 4·t pd. O.D. needs . Half' to but mus t sell p M Mon P'rt work . 1300 /off e r You don l nt~ a ~unto Th" r~stc.'"t draw in lhe '8LACK) 1971 PonJChe ---646 5263 "draw fast' whtn yt1u .. .. " The futesl tlr•w tn e -· -place an •d In the 0011)' West. . a Da ily. Pilot 914, appearance Jroup, Wtsl 8 Dilly lot Find what you want in Pilot Want Ads! Call nc>w Clul\lra 'd Ad. Phone m•g wh t1, om/fm. xlnl 1 Clus.ifle~i Ad. 642·~ Dally Pilot Claai.sifieds. . -642·5678 642·5678 cond. $4100 firm. M&-8483 1--I • . ' BRAMDMEW 1975 VOLVOS 111JorU.. VOLVO DliLER SIMCE 1956 WILLIAMS IMPORTS EXCLUSIVE VOLVO DEALER 8011 Commonwealth '.Buena P •Mt S2t.700C 1964 Chevy JmpaJa, $600. Automatic transmlssi Also, 1956Parts,1964 283 496·4643. 1961 Corvair, good cond runs ~real. 22MPG, $600 962-6513. 1964 CHEVELLE GOOD BARGAIN *752·1588• Olds mob ii• 995 •••••••••••••••••••••• Sales and Service OLDSMOllLE GMC TltUCICS HONDA CARS UniYersity Oldl 2350 Ha rbor Blvd. Costa Mes a 540-9640 '70 CUTLASS SUpreme, new lrans, brakes, a ir. P /B radio. $1100. 831-4666 •64 OLDS88• 548-7800 $300 10 USED FIREBIRDS to choo~~ trom b pies: 70FIRUl&D6 6 cylinder , automatic. radio. he aler . p ower steering. (20988J > , $1589 • 70 FllUllD 400 4 speed, 7.000 miles on n ew e ngine. p ower steering, rallye wheels, ex~eptionally clean. <J.3>BE I) $2389 •• 74 ESPRIT Less than 8,300 miles. VS, a utomatic, factory a ir , r adfo, h eat e r , power steering, rallye wheels. Bala nce fa ctory wa rranty. Beautiful. <S2SLFM > SAVE 9974 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '7t GT Est ate Wan. tSpd. loaded, S2800 «bit Gfr. Call 495·1073. 17 Laguna/South Coast VOL. 68, NO. 210, 3 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES . I .. • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Today's Closing· N.Y. Stoeks TUESDAY, JULY 29, 1975 TEN CENTS • • ortller a · ace Irlll ·- I ludge Finds Pot in· Pots A s mall claims court case led to discovery of an estimated 143 growing marijuana plants in San Clemente by a "very surprised" Laguna Niguel Municipal Court judge and his bailiff Monday. Five people ranging in age from 19 lo 24 were arrt.-sted and booked on alleged possession of marijuana for sale, possession of marijuana ~nd c ultivation of marijuana. Judge John GriCfin went to the home at 337 Call e Felicidad to in· vestigate the landlord's conten- tions that the renters were not keeping up the property as agreed. The judge had a key to the home given to him by the te- nants during the s mall claims hearing about 10 days before. Judge Grirfin said today he and Ba iliff Ken Brumage walkc<1 around the property looking at the growing weeds and dead rose bushes that were matters of con- t ention in the civil dispute. The judge and the bailiff went to the back deck and the sliding glass door was opened by a young man. "He looked kind of strange," the judge said, "and he asked why there h adn't been 24 hours notice or the visit." The judge said no s uch notice was required in the case. After looking around the inside of the home briefly to determine the kind or care it was getting, the judge and the bailiff opened the front door to leave. ll opened onto a courtyard area concealed fro m the street by a wall and locked door. "I look four or five steps out in it and I thought to myself, gee, these kids sure are taking good care of the plants here. · "Then I slopped, my bailiff said 'ob my'," Judge Griffin eaid. Dally Pllet S~I fJ-• POT IN THE POTS PROVED SURPRISING TO A JUDGE.AND HIS BAILIFF IN SAN CLEMENTE Five Arrested on Various Marijuana Charges After Accidental Discovery The judge said he was "very surprised " and after he realized there were five people in the house and only he and the bailiff, he said h e was a little ap- prehensive. San Clemente police were called. The judge bad lo call the court where two San Clemente narcotics officers were awaiting his return tt1 testify 1rl a felony narcotics cue. Police m1ed marijuana plants ranging in s ize from seedlings to five feet tall . In the garage, they said, a special set up had been ar- ranged under fluorescent lamps for growing. In addition , officers seized narcotics paraphernalia, pills a nd for investigation some mus ical instrume nts , s te r eo equipment and power tools which they believe may bave been taken in burglaries. Arrested were Loren B. Parkhurst Jr., 24; Richard W. Curtis, 21; Henry S. Muir, 22 and Pa ul J . Schramel, 21. all of 337 Calle Felicidad. J ana L. Hichens, 19, of 25261 Barque Way, Dana Point, was a lso arrested. Bail was set at $5,000 each. Judge Griffin said that although he currently is hearing lhe felOfly cqurt calendar, he wiJl exempt himself from hearing the cases o{ the five persops ar· rested. Vallerga Aides Used? Mom Dumps Seven Kids Witness Says Workers Prepared Systems WORCESTER, Mass. <UPI) -Seven children were being cared for in a local institution today while authorities continued a search for their mother who dumped the m in a welfare ofCice after being refused additional aid. By GARY GRANVILLE OltM O.lly Pilot SUff VENTURA -A witness in Orange County Assessor Jack Vallerga's trial in Ventura Coun· ty t estified today that county workers were used lo prepare and test a computerized ap· praisal system sold to Spartan· J>urg County, South· Carolina, in 1973. Spa rtanburg paid Orange County $2,045 for the system . According to Vallerga's pro- secutor, be and former Orange county as ses sor Andrew Hinshaw were collectively paid $1176 for consulting services and e;penses connected with the sale. Assistant Orange County Dis· trict Attorney Michael Capizzi drew the admission from Dr. .Robert Anderson that employes in the assessor's office were used to prepa re and test the appraisal system. Hinshaw is not charged with any crimes related to his even· tual profits Crom the sale. But Vallerga, who was a county official at the time, is defending himself against seven felony charges involving alleged con· Or·k::a:·· Weatller Increasing low clouds and fog Wednesday with hazy sunshine after mid· morning at the beaches. Continued cool. Highs near 10 at the strand ~o . the mld·80s inland. INSIDE TODAY A 50·11eor-old , 13·/0ot tchooner ti docked in Newport Harbor. looking none the worae for wear. ofter many CJd. wntures. See Page B.5. ln•ex AtY-w.k• .. , """""'~·-•• ....... . . 8f AllllllU .... H at lrww ~ ll MIMyTrw At L.M....,_ All......... •• c.Mtnll• Al ...... ".... •• E ................... A4 ea = CM11tJ A7 . .. .,~ .... ....ic.. ,., ....... .,~,, ~ ............ .-... .... ............. ............... .. ... ...... ...,,......... .......... . , .... ~ ...,...., ...... ..... • lltllll... •• •. ructs of interest brought against him by the Orange County Grand Jury. Anderson's te51.imony opened the second day of the trial in Ven· tura County Superior Court Judge Robert Shaw'~courtroom. Anderson was identified as a physicis t who repr esented Spartanburg in Orange County during negotiations for the purchase of the system. Earlier. ttie man who agreed to pay Hinshaw $6,000 for consult- ing services related to the ap- praisal system purchase said he didn't know half the fee was earmarked for Vallerga. As a matter of fact , former Spartanburg assessor John Q . Ebert testified Monday, it wasn't until recently that he learned Vallerga received $3,000 from . Hinshaw. ClJSD Offer Furthe rmor e, the Orange County assessor did nothing to earn the money, according lo Ebert's testimony. And , he s a id , Hinsh a w's services were limited lo answer- ing questions a sked during a series of phone calls he m ade to the Republican congressman's office in Washington. D.C. But, the former Spartanburg assessor s aid, the decision to m ake only limited use of the services for which he agreed lo pay Hinshaw $6,000 was his own. Ebert.said that be agreed to pay a flat fee for the services in mid-March, 1973; while the con- gressman and Valleri a were in Spartanburg. Shortly after that visit, the Orange County assessor was (See VALLERGA, Page A2) Ro b er t G • Z ink us • Dep a rtment o f Public Welfare assistant director of services, said the woman enter ed the Worcester welfare office Friday, said she needed mor e money lo care for the children, and left them there when she was r efused. "We've had threats of this happening before, but it ·s never happened. This isn't an everyday occur· rence," Zink us said. Five % Pay Hike Seen Capistrano Unified school trustees revealed Monday they have offered a new, five percent s alary ,end fringe benefit in- crease to all district employes . The new offer was made public as the board considered $483,000 in budget cuts that would create money to cover the increases. The board previously had of- fered employes a combined three percent salary increase and fr- Laguna to. Hold Building Hearing A puhuc hearing on proposed buildin& code amendments that would require fire-resistive con· struction in high fire haiard areu will be held Wednesday night by the Laguna Beach City Council. The standards would apply to new construction and any sub· stantial alteration of exl!U.ng structures in the canyon areas of Laf\lna Beacb. Thls amounts to about 40 percent of the land within the city Hmlts. The council will meet al 7:30 • p.m. al City Hall. Tbe new standards would re- quire that. fire·rulsUve ma- ' teriall be used on substructur-:ui 1~~C:~:C:o~ ~~:;:~mes Sta nl~y Scholl, municipal services director. estimated to- day that the new standanb, lf ap- plied, would add about $1,000 to $2,000 to the cost of building a new home. ScboU said be has reviewed the proposed atandardl wlth several local architects and hu found no OODOliUon to them. ·i.e said that the standards have been applied in cities thrcJq.bolut the atate and that Laiuna. Beach ls one of the few ciliea Uiat dou not have sud~ • ataoda* on UM bOob. l .. . inge benefit package. Teachers entered negotiations seeking a 20 percent salary increase, while non-t e a c h ing e mployes de- manded 12 percent. The new offer calls for a 3.5 percent incr ea se in the base salary of all e mployes and a 1.5 percent increase in the district's share of Cringe benefit conlribu· lions. Jerome Thorns ley, dis trict superintendent, s aid the bo~ autborized the new offer dunng an e•ecutive session July 21. He said the new proposal bas been ouUined to teachers and soon will be presented to non•leaching employes.· The board whittlecl away a.i the proposed $19.8 mllllon 197~76 budget for almost throe ()ours Jrtonday night to come up with money to I und the lncreues. The b oard agreed lo lift $105,000 Crom district reserves aod to reduce a oumberot equlp- mctnt and $'U>Pb' accounts by 10 percent. Trustees also acrttd tenla.tlve- ly to eliminate $122,000 for teacher aldes. They delayed a ranal dedtlon pending juatlfka· tion· for (be aide pl'OCJ'am from <SeeOPl'Ell. PaceAJ) ' Demotion Mulled For Chief By JACK CHAPPELL 0 1 , ... Dally Pl lel Stiff San Clemente Police Chief Mel Portner may be d emoted because of City Council dis- satisfaction with the running of the department. Portner. a 23·year veteran of the San Clemente force, took over the department about a year ago with the departure of then· Chief Clifford Murray. The question of the chief's fir- ing is in flux today, however, with some backing away from an ori gin a l position in whi ch. Portner's demotion from chief lo a police lieutenant was seen as a near certainty. City Manager Kenneth Carr confirmed Monday that the r e- assignment of the chief was un- der consideration. "There is a possibility that he could be relieved in whi ch case he would be reassigned to the previous positioa of lieutenant which he held before assuming the position of chief of police," Carr said . Carr declined to say what prompted discussion of the chief's position. Under normJI circumstances. the assignment of personnel un · der the city m an ager is at the dis· cretion of the city manager, however. in cases involving ma· jor department heads. the city council assumes an "advise and consent" role'. Carr noted that the chief had been appointed to his position about a year ago. "It is normal and customary in any situation to review prior to completion of any probation period the pe rformance (of an employe) which is in the case of public s afety personnel one year." Carr said . "If there w as to be any replacement necessary, I don't think it would be done as a result of the Team sters situation," Carr said. The "Teamsters situation'' re- fers lo a rift between the city and the police department employes who have hired the union lo represent them in salary and fr. inge benefit negotiations. The city by resolution banned the police employes from any af- filiation with the Teamsters and (See CHIEF, Page A2) Laguna Man Struck on Head, Robbed A 41 -year-old Laguna Beach man told police that he was robbed of $170 on Oak Street Beach early today after being struck on the he ad with a blunt object. Jack J erkins, 1067 GleMeyre St., said he was walking along the beach about 3:JO a.m. when he was struck from behind and his wallet taken. Police learned of the incident whe n t e le phoned from the e mergency room at South Coast Community Hospital , South Laguna, where J erkins went for treatment of head injuries. He later was re leased. Jerkins was unable to give police a description of his as- s ailants. Gay Clwrch Group Meets DALLAS (AP ) -More than 2 500 members of one of the na· llon•s largest religious organiza· tions for homosexuals begins its annual meeting her e today. The founder or the Universal Fellowship of the Metropolitan Community Church, the Rev. Troy Perry, says his organ.in· lion's members hip has grown from 12 to 17 ,000 since he held b.ls first church service in 1968. '1 don't lblnk this church could bave gotten ofl the Jround 1.n any other lime, 0 Perr)' said. PerTy 11 the author ol a boat. ''1b6 Lord_ ls My Shepbenl t.Dcl lie ltDowl 1'Dl eay .. •• I 0•11., Piiot St.atl PllOI• FACING DEMOTION? Police Chief Portner Supervisors To Appeal DA Ruling Orange County supervisors to- day ordered County Counsel Adrian Kuyper to prepare an im- mediate appeal of a judge's ruling Monday that blocked transfer of 22 investigators from the Oistricl Attorney's Office lo the Sheriffs Departm ent. The board action followed a 45-minute executive session dur· in g whic h Ku~per brie fe d . superv isor s o n a lternative courses of action in the wake of - Superior Court Judge Byron K . McMill an's decision. Kuyper said the judge's r uling was a •'direct challenge to the board·s constitutional power over budget and personnel.•• The county counsel advised supervisors that the court's de· cision would have an immediate effect on other bo<Jrd decisions re· lated lo the budget. ·•But of overriding concern is its effect on the rules of the game,·• Kuyper said. •·tf it stands, it drastic ally alters our understand- ing of the governing law. of the state as it relates lo county gov· emment.·· Kuyper said in effect it gives in· dividual county officers such as Hicks the right tom ake individu al delermmalions on budgeting and placement of personnel. "This is the overriding princi- ple by which the board is guided and I wouldn't know how to advise lhc board in procedures in the future if the decjsion is allowed to stand.•· the county counsel said. <See HICKS, Page A2) 'Future Shock ' Movie Slated "FU tu re Shock," a color sound film based· on Alvin Toffler's book of the same title, will be shown at 7 o'clock tonight at the Laguna Beach Library. 363 Glen· neyre St. The film focuses on the effects of high speed change on values, families and institutions. Following the screening, mem- bers of the library staff and the county Department of Mental Health will describe ser vices rendered by the two agencies. The evening also will include a screening of "Surface Sli me." a science fi ction (ilm produced by Laguna Beach Hi gh School stu· dents. CrIY PAYS FOR MEDIT.4110N? CEDAR FALLS, Iowa (AP) - Mayor Jon Crews says the city may root the bill if municipal e m p l oyes want to s tudy transcendental meditetion lo "he lp them ~o pe with tbe stresses a md stroiios ol theit jobs." Crews, 23, took a courae ift • tr ans.cendcnlal mOO:itaUon thJS 1 ' sprin1. He said be paid the $1.d n tuition out of a Cund set. aside rot' travel , conferences ancj semln a r11. 11 "l think th.at course was mcire1i1 useful to me u mayor tb-. som•' T' conCettnces l'"e attended that ,,,. ~t the db'"°°·•• Crews&&id. n.1 ,, ... - ' 2 DAILY PILOl L/SC Tuesday,July29. 1175 N Mt's Briefs Laguna Planner On State Board Rub1.·rt JoL' Vasquez. a Laguna Beach urban planner, l1 .. ts bCl'll '-'11.:dcd chairman of the 20-member Educational Innovation and J">lanmng Com· mission of th~ Stale Board oi 1':ducation. T he commission adv1~es the :-lal<.' board on pro1?rums de- :-1~nt.·d lo impro\'C' C'duc<.1lwn 1n the s tJte's c le mentury and w nmdary s1:hoob "Our hope 1s Lo g\\'t' young peoplt' J greater understanding of lhl! working world before they are l{raduated from high school. vasouu Tht.•y nel.'d this in onk-r lo pre· pare realtstically for the future ... s:.11d Vasquez. Vasquez in e mployed by the Irvine Company. He re- sides at 606 Bluebird Canyon Drive with his wife. Leah. and · two children . · ;\'eu· Clhti~ Open«-d A ne w out-patient clinic for alcoholics opens in San Juan Capistrano Aul{. 7 al the new Community Counsel in~ Center 1n Suite Bat 3241 Alipaz Road The c~nler has been establb hcd lo serve people from El Toro south lo San Clemente who need help in dealing with the disease of alcoholism. Trained bilingual counselors will staff the center between 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. weckduys Questions can be phoned m by calling 493-7333 or 831-0016 The Community Counseling Center s taff is also pre· pared to provid e the alcohoht· anu his family with referral clSsistance for me<!.ical, mental. legal and employment pro· blems. Pia 11 t Shmc S lated - Creeping Charlies. wandenng J ews and plants with more plant hke names will be on sale between 9 a.m. and l p.m. Thursday at Dana Hills J ltgh School, 33333 Street of the Golden Lantern. Dana Point .. Thl' pl:rnl!:> were grO\\ n by students enrolled in a s um- mer horlicullural l'la::.s at lht· hi~h school. Prices will range from 50 cents tu S2. The students also are offt.•ri ng to look al any s ick plants and .ins\\ er pl unt-rclat<.'d QUl'Stions Budge • .:lpprot.•e d ,\ S108,000 o peratinl! budget for fiscal 1976 has been ap· pro,·ed b~ directors of the South Laguna Sanitary 01slrict. The budget does not include any ancre<Jse 1n the r es1den· ti al sewer service char~e of S2 per month or the district tax r;.itc. 62 !> C't.'nts p<.•r $100 (jsses::.cd valuation. But Clay :\. Mitchell, pn·~1dent of lhl' distn<.·t board. said incre;.ist.· in the se"er sen ice ree 1s likely next year to offset hi gher costs !·John R. Begg f Final Rites ~Held Today F'uneral sen•ices were held to- day at St. George's Episcopal Church. Laguna Jlills. for former Rt.•publican Central Committee t>Xccutive John R Begg. . \ res ident of 514 South Rays ide. Ral boa Island, Mr. Begg. ·12. "as ;.i native Califor· , niun. Folllowing graduation from • Redondo <Union> High School and Stanford University, Mr. Begg pursu~d a variety of oc- <'Upations. including work with a Jund developing firm in Pen- • nsylvania, public r elations work ~ in Washington D C .. and employ- • ment as manager of a Styrofoam • cup company in Pennsylvania. · ~t r. Begg once lived and : "orked in Mc m phis. T enn . ' "here h e vol unteer e d his services as a layreader in the Episcopal C'hurch. His most re· • cent job ...., as with a Southern California la nd d eveloping firm After gr3du.1t1on from Stan· • ford. :\1r. Bcg,g st•rved as an <.·x cculive officer of lhc Orange and l .os Angeles County Republican C..\·ntral Comm1lte~s. \1r. Be~~ 1s survived by his "ife. Elizabeth . son. John Robert. and father. Foster f\ • &-gg. The elder Begg is a res1- <.lent of Laguna Hills and is past superintende nt of the Manhattan .Beach school district. ' f • .. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT fpv 0,.,..,.Qf f"ttA 'CM t P 1. t "' 1n .f't r., ~,.....,,th• N•"' t • 1,v~ ,., d l. '~ • ""'' ft.~ '01o1• --•'Jr .. o ,,... , , r-, .~, 1' r•u"JI •fol1tj M "'•J•; !l1r,.,111t1 t• tl,it f"" fA t.1 /Vt; ,, to ,. 1 t J 1 1 ,, 1•u'1""' 1• " , ... 1•' I to ,, 1.. ~ .J f t I ~ I ,111uri ~ Rl)l)o r I N WN-0 J•tr ,., ~I '1 f of,. 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A M url)htrl" N ..a ,.,. 1 I tltlOf Charles H l or, R1ch.:lrd P, Nall J; t '' I M•'W".'J•IP\Q l dttOt L.aquna BHCh Offi(t" I It• 1..,t~N•• ytf ~u-... ~ AIA1l1t\q AictOt,.\ p 0 Q.1)1 ~ 9'0) Other OtttU$ r~•• ,,..,. •111 wt'' "-"~ ,,,.,.. .,.#QC'W't ..... • ) I• H f/ 11rpr-.t1 "°"l•v4~A H~t•"'4141" ,_.,.. f\ t IU\ a.Mtii iow~••d I !Jl'J·•f .... /1t!lf' \101l••l t't0_, •' .. .>-•I#••'""*"" Telepf\one 1710 .. 2-4321 Cl•n•hed Adv•rtlsing .. 2'S471 La9un• Buch All Dep.11rtment$ · Tf'j•PMne 4'4·406 '"'" ('~"''~'''• 49S-0630 ( r ft 11t • 1 r.1• .. ,,v (t.•t l ltwtu •"•"1 f IW""'-C-A"it frrrilO ,,_,... •I_, f\ •ftV"'f•h""'• ...,111.0t •I fl, tilff I ,f( ff1•f',f1\lll"t"•Hfil "'ff!t-. ,,.., Of r 11•"'111 r11 'flrtt•9ut ,.,.,,., 't'""'"''•" At \.-(Ond f lA•\ • .,..\t.., ,...1t .C "'°''• ftlll.t1'• t..tiftq•~ ~wbw11oh6'Htrt'"'" tJOOmon•no LU m•d •• \lrtnU1f\1f\f'( '""'''··· dt """'""'~ \) 00 ~a....;·~·....,,~•-n•~·~~~--------~~~~ ' ' F rom Page A l CHIEF .•. h;.is refus<'d t o recognize the a greement "1th the union or negotiate with t he officers' Teamsters representative. Car r refused to comment on when discussions of the chief's pos1t1on may have taken place declaring that matters discussed m executive <secret) session are pnvileged. Chief Portner, contacted Mon- day, declined to comment direct- ly on the s1tuat1on s aying that any comment al this :.tage should c-ome from the council or mem- lx'rs or the c1ly mana~er. Sources who asked to remain unidentified reported the general lineup of the council finds Coun- cilmen .Pat Lane and Charles Fox in s upport of the chief. Mayor T ony DiGiovanni and Councilman Thomas O'Keefe re- portedly are in favorofremoving him. Councilman Art Hol m es ori,ginall) was see n as the s wing \Ole. but Holmes, reached today, said he is in favor of retaining the <.•hief al this tim e." "I'm not rcadv to make thi~ move at the pr~sent tame The council 1s looking at upgrading the entire city and this includes the police dcp.irtmenl." Holmes said. "I think we s hould give the chief ample opportunity lo prove himself. "l don't think we should call a ny body in and s ay 'you 're through.' There a re areas we arc concerned about. .. he said. Councilman O'Keefe would say only ; "The last l heard, the police c hief's status had not changed.·• He re fu sed to say why the chief's reassignment was being considered. Sources an a position to know. however. indicated the council wanted a h ard boile d ad- ministrator in the position to h an- d le the department ·s officers. m.iny of w h om a r e former :\t:mne M ilitary Policemen. Makeup Test Set Thursday. Thursday is t he deadline for re· g1stration 1n the Saddleback College ACT <American College Testing Program> makeup lest. The test will be administered Aug. 2 for students who missed the regularly scheduled nationa l test dates. It begins at 8 a .m. in Hoom 309 of the m•th.;;cience building and is to conclude at noon. Test scores wlll be processed prior to lhe fall quarter to ex- pedite registration. &ddlebark uses the test scores ror place· mcnl ol student.a In Engtlsh and math classes To register lor the ACT lest, br· ing S8 to the S•ddlebAck c:ouns l· In g office todaJ, Wedn~ay or Thursday. O.lly Pilot Stefl Pl\Me Summer Fun Heiress' Park Suit In Court By DOUG FRITZSCllE Of the O•llY Pilot SUft Argum~nts began Monday in a West Virginia lawsuit that could determine whether the Orange Coast will have a new 1,364-acre state p ark. Tht.' propo~l'd parkland in· d udes 3.5 miles of beach <lftd bluffs between Corona del Mar and Laguna Re ach and l , \00 in- land acn ·s in Moro Canyon, run- rung from the coast to the San Joaquin Hills ridgeline. Conclud ing eight year s of n egotiations. the l rvimc Com- pany offered the land lo the Stale De partm ent of Parks and Recreation for $7.6 million last December . Ken Mc Murray, a UC Santa Barbara s tu- dent, demonstrates pot throwing to San Clemente youngst ers at Las Palm as School during summer school. The ,sum- mer session concludes Thursday with an operetta that begins at 7 p.m. Parents m41y tour the school aft.er t he program to look ove r the work of their children. But the proposed Christmas Day transfer was blocked by a suit filed in December in West Virginia by Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith. Mrs. Smith's suit contends the price is too low. d eprivin (! sh areholders of ade- quate value for the sale of com- pany assets. Tapes Nixon Grilled . . on Ownersliip of Documents at Issue Last December, when final negotiations were in progress, a Parks and Recreation Depart- ment s pokesman cited the $15 million estim ated value of the land a nd ca lled the sale, •·a Christmas g ift to th~ people of California.'' WASHINGTON (AP) -A ' lawyer seeking public access to tapes a nd documenlS of Richard M. Nixon's years in the White House said today the former pre- sident was questioned at length July 25 on the tangled issue of who owns the materials. For more than seven hours, Nixon answered questions under oath during a civil suit deposition taken a l his San Clemente home. said William Dobrovir, an at- torney for columnist Jack An- derson. Dobronr d<.'clin<.'d to charac- terize :'\1"<on ·s physical ap- pearance or general condition. In response to a request from Dobrovir, a s pecial three-judge court had said Nixon must oraJly defend his contention that the presidentia l papers belong to him. Nixon previously filed an af- fidavit saying the materials were needed for a number of re- asons, including completion of a book on his presidency. A new law gives possession of the millions of doc uments and thousands of hours of While House tapes to the government. Besides Dobrovir, lawyers for the s pecial W a tergate pro- secutor. the Justice Department, Nixon a nd varaous groups seek- Mr. Palaferri Service Held Funeral services were held lo- d a y for Anthon y "T o n y" P:.ilaferri, 69. o( 2 W. Junipero, San Clemente, who died Satur· day. Rites were conducted for Mr. Palaferri at Ascencion Cemetery 111 El Toro under the direction of Rell Broadway Mortuary. Mr. P a laferri had operated Tony's Pizza House on Harbor Aoulevard near Ray Street in . Costa Mesa s ince 1951. Ile is survived by sons An· lhony, Ronald and Gene. all of Laguna Niguel and Richard of Cor ona del Mar; daughters, Chris tine Parsons. of Newport Beach, Rose Ann Shafer , of Laguna Niguel and Denise Palafern. of San Clemente. a broth e r . Raymond of Los A lami tos a nd eig ht grandchi Id ren. Fro• Page A I HICKS .•. Kuyper said a fter the meeting he will probably take his case to the Fourth District Court of Ap- peals in San Bernardino for a new ruling. He said it is the first time to hi s kn owl e dge tha t the judiciary has directly challenged a local governing board's budget- ing powers. Judge McMillan closed a day. ing access to the presidential materials we re present during lbec(ues tioning. · Dobrovir said the deposition wijl be made public, probably in about two weeks. after Nixon has a cl'lance to make suggested cor- rections to the transcript. The questioning marked the second time Nixon has given testimony under oath in recent months. On June 23-24: Nixon was questioned for 11 hours by two Watergate g rand jurors and Living ~ost Hike Tabled By Trustees Trus tees of the Saddleback Community College Dis tric t have tabled until Aug. 4 a pro- pos al to do away with automatic cost-of-living . increases for the district ·s 200 e m ployes. Teac he r s a nd class ified employes at Saddleba ck current· ly are given annual raises based on the cost-of-living index for the Los Angeles area. That policy this year resulted in 12.1 percent pay hikes for Sad- d I e back employes . School t'mployes in s urrounding areas averaged only six percent. It has been recommended by Roy Barletta, the dis trict's negotiator, that the automatic in- creases be discontinued and that salary increases be negotiated annually, as they are in other school dis tricts . · Trustee Norrisa Brandt sup~ ported that request with a formal motion, seconded by Trustee Donna Berry, but the remainder of the board refused to take ac- tion. It was suggested that action on the controvers ial plan be de- ferred until Trust ee Patrick Backus. a bsent from Monday's meeting because of illness, had an opportunity to s peak on the subject. special Watergate prosecutor Henry S. Ruth Jr. Ande rson, various historians, and the Reporters Committee for a Free Press are seeking access to the Nixon records on g~ounds most should be considered public documents. In an earlier Watergate civil suit, Dobovir was admonis hed by a judge for playing a Nixon tape for friends during a cocktail par· ty in the Georgetown section of Washington. Fro• Page Al VALLERGA paid $714 to cover consulting ser vices and expenses incurred during his two-day visit. A Grand Jury indictmen t h anded down May 6 charges Vallerga with a conflict of interest in bis dealin gs with the South Carolina county. The assessor is also charged with emb<.'zzlem~nt. grand theft and misappropriation in connec- tion with the money he received from Spartanburg, including the $3,000funneled through I linshaw . When cross-examining Eberl, defense attorn ey Richard Murphy drew admissions from him that the consulting fees were an open tra nsaction. Ebert said there was no at- tempt or suggestion made to dis- guise the payments. Neither Hinshaw nor VaJlerga indicated to him that the money paid t hemew as for any purpose other than consulting services, Ebert testified. Tax Rise Urge d WASHINGTON <U PI ) Chair man A r thur Arthur F . Bums of the Federal Reserve Board called on Congress today to ease up on efforts to combat the recession and suggested he might like to see taxes rise next year. ln Judge Thomas McHugh 's Kanawha County, W. Va., U.S. Circuit Cou rt Monday, argu- ments compared the Irvine sale with a sale of 80 acres of land in Huntington Beach to the slate in 1974. Appearing as an adverse wit- ness for Mrs. S mith, William Sh re\\ s bury. man age r of real estate for the Irvine Company, testified on the shifting nature of coastal prope rty values. The coastal commission system. he said, has lowe red the value of some unde veloped coast due to building cons traints. In a recen t interview, Irvine Company President Raymond Watson characterized the park as an essentia l element in com- pany plans to develop its 10,000 acres in the unincorporated land between Corona del Mar. Laguna Beach and Irvine. Watson te rmed the relatively. low sale price a benefit lo both ~e company and the public. Fro• Page AJ OFFER ... school administrators. The board r e fused to a ccept a recommendation by Thornsley lo slice 14 or 18 n ew teaching posi· tions at a savings of $159,000. The teachers would cover additiona l enrollment expected in the dis- trict next year. Tru stees also di r ected Thornsley lo hire about 50 new teachers that will replace in· structors who retired or resigned at t he end of the past school year. Trus t ee R ob ert Hurs t of Laguna Niguel, s umming up the board's feeling, said it would not be right to restrict teaching posi· lions at a time when the district is experiencing growth in enroll- ment. The board is expected to finalize the cuts and addilons when il adopts the final budget. next Monday night. JOIN THE ESTABLISHMENT! There is a definite advantage in doing business with an ESTABLISHED local firm. W e ar e i n terest ed i n doing b usine ss with ESTABLISHED mills, which we have determined after decades o f doing business. There is no way, unfortunately. to tell how a mill will back its protjucts until there is a problem! Carpet stores interested ONLY in price have no one to back them, and consequently walk away form complaints. Jong hearing into the issue by firmly ruling that bis court had jurisdiction to uphold or reject the s upervisors ' dec ision to • transfer 22 investigators lo Gates. A few times through the years. we have had to stand the cost of replacement when a mill wouldn't. This will only happen once to us, and then the samples are in our trash can. What this means to our customers is that the lines we carry are from reputable mills. and that they can buy with confidence from Alden ·s. · ''That action was arbitrary .md capricious." he commented. "l have heard e nough here today to satisfy me that the board had no right to act tn this matter." Sevier unsuccessfw.lly argued that th<.> board's dedsion wa!'i always open to challmae if the form of a referendum, re<!all of county officials, or an election. "The Distrkl Attorney chose to brins the hsue to lhe courtroom.'' Judge McMUl.n comanented. "He Cell that we bad jwUcllctloo 1n the matter and t am obvlousl1 agreein1 with hi .. m. ·a r DEN'S ••••••••••••••••• • -installation~ custom draperies *• ..... carpe UC.NO nom 1663 PlAfENTI" AVENUE • COSTA MESA, CALIF. 92627 • PHONE 646."838 -6"6·23.5.5 , 17 ~rod a v's Closi 11g . . .Stocks Saddlebaek · VOL. 68, NO. 210, 3 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JULY 29, 1975 TEN CENTS I • ··County Aides Used in Co1Dputer Sale? r e money, uccordine to. By GARY GRANV1Ll.t: Of Ill• 0•11~ Piiot Sult VENTURA A witness in O range County Assessor Jack Vallerga's trial in Ventura Coun- t y testified Loday that counly workers were used to pre!Jarc and test a compllterized ap- praisal system sold to Spartan- burg County. South Carolina, in J973. Sp ar t anbur ~ paid Orange County $2.045 ror the system. According to Vallerga's pro- secutor. he and former Orange count y ass essor Andrew Hinshaw were collectively paid S7,176 for consulting services and expenses connected wjth the sale . Assistant Orange County Dis- trict Attorney Michael Capizzi tlrew th e admission Crom Dr. Robt•rt Andt'rson that employes in the assessor's office were used to prepare and lest the appraisal system. . Hinshaw is not charged with any c rimes r elated to his even- tual profits from the sale. But Vallerga, who was a county official at the time. is defending himself against seven felony charges involving alleged con- flicts of interest brought against him by the Orange County Gr and 0.Hf Piiot Sl.Jfl PMI• POT IN THE POTS PROVED SURPRISING TO A JUDGE AND HIS BAILIFF IN SAN CLEMENTE Five "rrested on Various Marijuana Charges After Accidental Discovery 5 Held on Pot Charges SurprUe4 Judge Fimls Marijuana 'Gartkn' A small claims court case led to discovery of an estimated 143 growing marijuana plants in San Clemente by a "very surpriseq" Laguna Niguel Municipal Court judge and his bailiff Monday. Five people ranging in age from 19 to 24 were arrested and booked on alleged possession of marijuana for sale. possession of marijuana a nd cultivation of marijuana. Judge John Griffm •ent to the home at 337 Calle Felicidad to in- vestigate the landlord's conten- tions that thtt.renters were not keeping up the property as agreed. The judge had a key to the home given to him by the te- nants during the small claims hearing about 10 days before. Judge Griffin said today he and Bailiff Ken Brumage walked . at'ound the property looking at .Fatal Fire Probed • In Mission Viejo· "It was too complete a bum. the growing weeds aJ)d dead rose bushes that were matters of con- tention in the civil dispute. The judge and tbe bailiff went to the back deck and the sliding, glass door was opened by a Y<?UDg man. "He looked kind of stranae," the judge said, ··and he asked why ther e hadn't been 24 hours notice of the visit." The judge said no such notice was required in the case. After looking around the inside of the home briefly to determine the kind of care it was getting, the judge and the bailiff opened the front door to leave. It opened onto a courtyard area <See POT, PageA2) ClJSD Offer Jury Anderson's testimony opened the second day or the trial in Ven- tura County Superior Co urt Judge Robert Shaw's court.room. Anderson was identified as a physicis t who represented Spartanburg in Orange County during n egotiations for the purchase or the system. Earlier, the man who agreed to · pay Hinshaw $6,000 for consult- ing ser vices r elated lo the ap- prnisal syste m purchase said he didn't know half the fee was earmarked for Vall crga. As a matter of fact, former Spartanburg assessor J ohn Q. Ebert te3tified Monday, it wasn't until recently tha t he learned Vallerga received $3,000 from Hinshaw. Furthermore. lhc Orange Cour1ty assessor did nothing to Eberl' estimony. . And, h e said, Hins haw'3 service were limit.ed to answer- ing que tfons asked during a series of phone calls he made tQ the Re blican congressman's office · ashington, D.C. But, he former Spartanburg asses or said, the dceision lo mak only limited use o( the ( e VAl.LERGA. Page A2 l 'CQunty A ealS Stung by Ruling on DA Transfer Orange County supervisors to- day ordered County Counsel Adrian Kuyper to prepare an im- . mediate appeal of a judge's ruling Monday that blocked transfer of 22 investigators from the District Attorney 's Office to the Sheriff's Department. The board action foll owed a 45-minute executive session dur- i ng w h ich Kuy per briefed s upervisors on alternative courses of action in the wake or Superior Court Judge Byron K. McMillan's decision. Kuyper said the judge"s ruling was a "direct challenge lo the board's constitutional power over budget and personnel.'' The county counsel advised supervisors that the court's de· cis ion would have an immediate effect on other board decisions re- lated to the budget. "But of overriding concern is its effect on the rules of the game." Kuyper said. "If it stands, it drastically alters our understand- ing of ttie governing law of the state as it rela tes to county gov· ernment." · Kuyper said in effect it gives in- dividual county officers such as Hicks the right tom akeindividual determinations on budgeting and placement of personnel. ''This is the overriding grinci- ple by which the board is guided and I wouldn'tknowhowtoadvise the board in procedures in the future if the decision is allowed to stand," the county counsel said. Kuyper said arter the meeting he will probably take his case to the Fourth District Court of Al>· peals in San Bernardino for a new ruling. He s aid it is the fi rst time lo h is knowledge t h a t the judiciary has directly challenged a local governing board's budget- ing powers. Judge McMillan closed a day- long hearing into the issue by firmly ruling that his court had jurisdiction to uphold or reject the s upervisors' decision to transfer 22 in ves t1g ator s to G.ates. •'That action was arbitrary and capricious," he commented. ''I have beard e nough here today to satis fy m e that the board had no right to act in this matter.•• Sevier unsuccessfully argued that the board's decision was always open lo challenge in the form of a referendum, r ecall of county officials, or an election. "The District Attorney chose to bring th e issu e to the courtroom , .. Judge McMillan commented. "He felt that we had jurisdiction in lhc matter a nd r am obviously agreeing wit h. him " Hicks· mvesligators greeted the ruling with sighs of relief. ··None of us wanted th is (See HICKS, Page A2} Cou11cil Dissatisfied? San Clemente Chief Facing Demotion? ' Dally Pllol Slaff P"'"o FACING DEMOTION? Police Chief Portner • By JACK CHAPPELL 01 Ille Od1ly Pilot Sldll San Clem ente Police Chief Mel Portner may be de m oted because of City Counc il dis- satisfaction with the running of the department. Portner, a 23-year veteran of - the San Clemente force, look over the department about a year ago with the departure of then- Chief Clifford Murray. The question of the chief's fir- ing is in flux today, howeve r, with some backing away from an origin a l positi on 1n whic h Portner·s demotion from chief to a police lieutenant was seen as a near certain ty. City Ma nager Kenneth Carr confirmed Monday that the re· assignment of the dud was un- der consideration. "There is a possibility that he could be r elieved in which case he would be reassigned to the previous position of lieutenant which he held before assuming the position of chief of police,,. Carr said. Carr declined lo say what prompted discussion of the chief's position. -Investigators are continuing to probe the rubble of a Mission Vi c- ·jo home to determine what touched of! the blaze Sunday tha t killed a mothe r and her t w!li children. But so far no clues have been turned up to the $80,000 blaze in the Seville tract that claimed the Jives of Mrs. Barbara Maycock. 31, and child ren Christie, 7, and Susan, 5. We haven't been able to come up with any solid e vidence other than that it probably started in the laundry utility area," Steve. Soltz. a s pokesman for the Orange County Fire Department said today. Five % Pay Hike Seen Under norm al circumstances. the a~signmenl of personnel un· der the city manager is at the dis- cretion of the city manager however. in cases involving ma= jor department heads, the city council assumes an "advise and consent" role. Mesan Jailed In Rape Try Orange County sheriff's of- ficers have jailed a Costa Mesan identified by them as the man who attempted to rape an IS.- year-old girl Sunday in her El Toro home. Charges of attempted rape have been filed against Charles Campbell, 19, of 301 Avocado St., Costa Mesa, deputies reported. He was arrest ed at his apart- ment. They said Campbell is believed to be the man who attacked the victim Sunday as she slept in the upstairs bedroom at the El Toro. home of her parents. The in- truder fl ed as the pare nts Tesponded to the girl's screams for belp. Deputies identified Campbell as a former boy friend or the vic- tim. Jordan Deal Off WASHINGTON (AP> -Faced with congression a l opposition. the Ford admin1str3tion has de· f erred its proposed sale or 14 Hawk missile batte ries to Jordan. A number of legislators have criticized the proposed sale on the grounds the number of bat· teries ta exce.aslve apd would tip the balance of power in the Mid· •Eu&. . The pre -dawn blaze which trapped the Maycocks inside their two-story home on 26445 Fresno Ori ve now is believed to have been burning for an hour lo an hour and a half before it was reported by neighbors. Firemen arrive d at the Maycock home at 4:15 a .m., six minutes after receiving the alarm, but the beat was too in· tense for·lhem to rush into the home. Earlier, neighbors had tried t() save the trapped family but they failed in their efforts. Soltz said investigators one by one are eliminating 15 dilferen\ causes for the fire. One pf the de- vices being e mployed in the pro- be is a "sniffer" to determine if hydrocarbons, s uch as a flamma- ble liquid, were responsible for the fire. <See BLAZE, Page A2) CITY P ..4lS FOR 'MEDIT..4110N? CEDAR FALLS, Iowa CAP) - Mayor Jon Crews says the city may foot the bill if municipal employes want to study transcendent11 meditation to "help them cope with the stresses amd .strains or their job6." Crews. 28, took a course in transcendental meditation this spring. He said M pild the $l2S tuition out of a fund set aside for tra ve l , conferen ces and seminars. ·•t thinllt that course was more useful to me as m ayor thN\ some conferences I've attended that cost the ell.)' $400," crews said. Capistrano U nified school trustees revealed Monday they have offered a new. five percent salary and fringe benefit in- crease to all district employes. The new offer was made public as the board considered $483,000 in budget cuts that would create money to cover the increases. The board previously had of· f ered e mployes a combined three percent salary increase and fr. Something New Malaysian Student on Cotut By JAN WORTH Ol llle Dally Pl .. t SUit Malaysia and California are thousands of miles apart, but there are common denominators ranging from Kentuc ky Fried Chicken to ·' All In The Family .... That is one of the things the Swander family of Laguna Hills is learning this week from their new house gues t , La i F\Jn Chan. Fun, 17, a n a tive or t he Malaysian town of Alor Setar, al' rived July 22 to be the 1975 American Field Service student at Mission Viejo High School. Her host family cannot resist making cheerful runs on the EngUsb meaning o F\tn's name -which t.My point out obviously ftt.s the spukling young woman. "But the Cantonese meaning of the word Is even better," says Jlm Swander, Fun's father for th•~ar ... ll means beautiful fra· grance.'' F\an and her Ametican brother and 1lster, Mike, 13, IU)d Robln, 16, haven't wasted any time get· Un1 acquainted. Fun is uMd to havln1 youngsters a.round the house, coming from a family ol six childrent\nchading nve girls and one boy. (''He's the Jdna,'' Ji\an aaya, lauahin& ). "The minute we picked F\Jn up, Mike told he r he hoped she w asn't too tired because our church youth group was having a car wash the next day and he wanted her to help out," Mrs. Swander said. Arte r visiting with the con- gregation or the Swande rs' church, Shepherd of the Hills United Churc h oC Christ in Laguna Niguel, F\m said, "From wtiat I observed, 1 think the peo- ple he r e are very close and open.'~ f'un ls a Malaysia Buddhist, a reU1lon which blends Buddhism, TeOism and ConfUcianism. She and her family pray three times a (\ay at home and r~ vlsJt the temple except on holidays. F\m learned fiuont ~lish as a student at an. Ettglish medium school. WatcbiDJ all those American tel~vbton shows hel)>ed too. she admil.¥.. "We get both British and American programs, but most PCOPI• llke the A'n\erlcan shows het£er because-they have more ec:Ucm," Fan ••id. Mala)'1ians have the privUe1e ol walchina TV sbowl uninler-rvptet by com merctalll. Tbe . . ' <See LAI l'lJN, '*II) .., ingc benefit package. Teachers entered negotiations seeking a 20 percent s alary increase. while non-t each ing employes de- manded 12 percent. The new offer calls for a 3.5 percent increase in the base salary of all employes and a 1.5 percent increase in the district's share of fringe benefit contribu- tions. J erome Thornsley, district superintendent, said the board authorized the new offer during an executive session July 21. He s aid the new proposal has been outlined t.o teachers and soon will be presented to non-teacbing employes. The board whittled away at the proposed $19.8 million 1975-76 bud~et for almost three hou rs Monday nig ht to come up with money to fund the increases. T he board agreed to lift $105,000 from district reserves and to reduce a number of equip-· ment and supply accounts by 10 percent. Trustees also agreed tentative- ly to eliminate $122,000 for teacher aides. They delayed a fmal decision pending justifica- tion for the ait!e program from school administrators. Tbe board ref used to accept a recommendation by Thornsley to slice 14 or 18 new teaching posi- tibos at a savings of $159,000. The teachers would cover additional enrollment expected in the dis- lrfct next year . Trustees ahi o directed 'J'bornsley to hire about 50 new teachers that will replace in- structors who retired or resigned •l \he end of the past school year. 'trus t ee Robert Hurs t or Lapna .Nipel, summing up tho · (8ee0FFEJl, PaieA.i) Carr noted that the chief had been appointed to his position about a year ago. "It is normal and customary in any situation to review prior to completion of an y probation period the performance (of an employe) which is in the case of public safety personnel one year.·• Carr said. "If there was to be any replacement necessarl, I don't think it would be done as a result (See CWEF, Pace.a> Or:~g:a:•t Weatller Incr easing k>w clouds 1 and fog Wednesday with' hazy sunsbi1'e after mid· morning at the beaches. Continued cool. Highs near 1 70 al the s traod to the ~ mid·*>s inland. · • INSIDE TOD-'" I A 50-year~old , 13-foot ichooner is docked in Htq>ort Harbor. looki11g ttotle th~ irorae /or weal". oft.,-~ act.. wntures. See Page BS. 1 la•ex· I jt 2 DAIL V PILOT SB .. UPI n1ep11e1e MENNIE PERSON OF MEMPHIS ADMIRES THE $11 ,500 CADILLAC BOUGHT BY ELVIS She Admired Singer's Auto-So He Bought Her One, and Clothes to Go With It Fro., Page Al HICKS ... 1ransfer. ·· commented a veteran 1m '-'st1l?alor who asked not to be 1dl'nllfied. ··Ru t quite apart from -0ur personal fl'l'lings there was no doubt th al a crazy move or this kind would have seriously ham pered lhe oper ation of this of· -f1ce. ·· Chief Deputy District Attorney .Jam es Enrig ht s tressed that point dunng the hearing befon: Judge Mc Millan. 'These in vest igator s ar e a '1t :ll part of our crime fighti ng fon ·es. ·· E nr ight s.iid. •·And 4' h.•s bL·en m ade clear in recent "'-'cks that thl• public is utterly opposed lo ~uc h caval.Jer action." Ennght condcm nt'<l the board ' .1ppro\al of the transfer as ''h<Jlf ~ witted .. and "a rncd thal any .' dilution of the district attorney's ~ 1nves t1gat iv c for<"l' .. would : s'-'n ously h111ckr our ('nffil' fight- • m l! capability · ' I licks declined to comment on • t he ruli ng late Monday. but in - • d1c<Jled he· will bl.' prl'pared lo ·,discuss the issue when Judge • ;\k~il l an issues the final draft of h1s rulin g a nd signs the writ of mandate sought by the dis trict ;1llorney. Judge Mc!\111lan made it clear ' that the rree7.in g of lhe tra nsfer ;will r e main in effect until he signs the "' n l. f'romP~AI I ~BLAZE ... . The Maycocks ' laundry room • t'ontame<f a gas dryer and one of the theories being investi~ated is the poss ibility that the dryer m;:iy • ... omehow have touchetl off the I ftrl.'. ~lean" htle. the c3use also 1s hemg inves tigated by the Oran~c ·, County Shen Cf 's offi ce to de- . \e rmine whether foul play was involved . Soltz s a id. The in- vestigation is cons idered routine. The burned-out Maycock home hJs become an attraction for the curious, according to a Mission \'1eJo fire offi cial, who said !\Cores or passers by Mond ay c-.ime to vis it the scene of horror ~ .Horses lrnpounded 'Piek One Out' Elvis Gives Admirer a Car :MEMPHIS. Tenn. (AP) Mennie Person never expected to meet Elvis Presley while brows· ing in a car lot, much ll·ss wind up on his gift list. Mrs. Pers on was caught_ by surprise when she was admiring Presley's custom-m ade Cadillac. "I had my head over in il and he came out of the back parking lot and asked if I liked it," s aid the bank teller. "You don't ex· peel to find him on a car lot that lime or night. .. _John R. Begg Final Rites Held Today Funeral services wer e held to- day at St. George's EpiscopCjJ Church, Laguna Hills, for former Republican Central Committee executive John R. Begg. A res ide nt or 514 South. Bayside, Balboa I sland, Mr. Begg, 42, was a native Califor· nian. Folllowing graduation from Redondo <Union) High School and Stanford University, Mr. Begg pursued a variety of oc- cupations, including work with a land developing firm in Pen· nsylvania, public relations work in Washington D.C., and employ- ment as manager of a styrofoam cup company in P ennsylvania. Mr. Begg on ce Ii ved and worked in Memphis , Tenn., where he volunteered h is services as a layreader in the Episcopal church. His rpost re- cent job was with a Southern_ California land developing fJ.rm. After graduation from Stan· ford, Mr. Begg served as an ex- ecutive omcer of the Orange and Los Angeles County Republican Centr al Committees. Mr. BeJ?J? is survived by his wife , Eliza be th ; s on , John Robert. and father. Foster A. &gg. The elder Begg is a rcsi· denl -of Laguna Hills and is past superintendent of the Manha ttan Beacn school district. From Page A J Mrs. Person, 33, said she was ''still standing there with my mouth ope n," but managed to compliment Presley on his personal car. "He s aid, 'That one's mine, but I'll buy you one'," sbesaid. . . - ·'He caug ht my by the arm and carried me back to the parking lot where he had come from and lold me lo 'pickoneout'." The car Mrs. Person selected was a gold and whit~ model that lists for about $11,500. Mrs. Person said that when P r esley learned her birthday was today, he handed her the keys lo the car, wished her "Hap· py Birthday" and told an aide lo write her a check "to buy some clothes lo go with the car." She did not disclose the amount of the check. Mrs. Pers on said she told Pres ley that s he and her husband, Troy, already owned a Cadillac, a 1974 model, but said that didn't bother Presley. "He told me lo keep it," she said. "He told me to give it to my husband or whatever we wanted lodo." Presley's gifts of automobiles over the years have gone lo friends, professional associates and in one case, a politician- former Shelby County Sheriff William Morris Jr. During the pasl weekend. Presley had a turboprop airplane valued at $1.2 million delivered to Las Vegas as a gift to his long- time manager, Col. Tom Parker. Frorn Page Al LAI FUN ..• ~ commercial messages come al the end of each show or movie, instead of scatter ed through the middle, she said. Alor Setar, Fun's home town, has a population of about 100,000 and is the capital of the slate of Kedah in the ri ce bowl of the fertile nation. The rice crop is fed by 80to100 inches of rain a year and by yearlong temperatures of 78 to 85 degrees. So far, Fun has found the Sad· dleback Valley 's climate dry and. occasionally. chilly. Ford Sad In Visit I To Camp OSWlECIM, Poland (UPI) - President }t'ord walked through a rusting barbed wire gate into the Nazi death camp known as Auschwitz today, luid a wreath to the estimated four million lo six million victims. bowed his head and said : "Horrible. Unbelieva- ble. Horrib~." Secretary of Slate Henry A. Kissinger, walking behind Ford, bent has head in s ilance and sad- ness. '·I had some family members here," the J ewish German· born Kissinger r ecalled shortly before he a nd Ford vis ited Poland's reminder of man's in- humanity to man. Ford, his brows fixed in a sad scowl, walked as if in a funeral procession from his helicopter down a path built over the cremated r e m a ins of Adolf Hitler's bloodiestdealh factory. · He passed the dynamited C'rematorium where Nazi SS men burned the bodies o( as many as 30,000 persons a night between 1940 and 1944 . "Very. very s ad. A tragic period. A tragic period," said Ford, so stung by the emotions of Au!>~hwiti. that he talked in un- usually stiort sentences with his Polishhbst The President penned this in· scription in the visitors' book: "This monument and the memory of those it honors in· s pire us fUrther to the dedicated y ursuit or peace, cooperation and security for all peoples." But perhaps his feelings and thoughts s howed most in his face when he made an unscheduled tour of a barracks where Jews and other inmates were lodged in six-man bunks before being sent to the gas chambers . The Polish guides rattled off the statistics of death. They told Ford how the Zyklon-B gas was dropped into the chambers dis- guised a s s hower houses, how the corpses were stripped of gold teeth fillin~s and even human hair before being cremated. Ford looked grimly down at U1e empty bunks. Mom Dumps SevenKidJJ WORCESTER, Mass. <UPl) -Seven children were being cared for in a local institution today while authorities continued a sear ch for their mother who dumped them in a welfare office after being ·refused additional aid. R o'b e r t G • Z ink us , Department or Public Welfare assistant director of services, said the woman entered the Worceste r welfare omce Friday, said she needed more money to care for the children, and left them there when she was refused. ''We've had threats or this happening before, but it's never happened. This isn't an everyday occur· rence," 2inkus said. Fro•PageAI CHIEF ••• 0£ the Teamsters situa tion ,,. Carr said. · The "Teamsters situation" re- fers to a rift between the city and the police department employes who have hired the union to represent them in salary and fr. inge benefit negotiations. The city by resolution banned the police employes from any af· filiation with the Teamsters and has refused to recognize the agreement with the union or negptiate with the officers ' Teamsters. representative. Carr retused lo comment on when discussions of the chief's position may have taken place declaring that matters discussed in executive (secret) session are privileged. Chief Portner, contacted Mon- day, declined to comment direct· ly on the situation .saying that any comment al this stage should come from the council or mem· bers or the city manager. Sources who asked lo remain unidentified reported the general lineup of the council finds Coun- cilmen Pal Lane and Charles Fox in support of the chief. Mayor Tony DiGiovanni anc..l Councilman Thomas O'Keefe re· portedly are in favor of removing him. VALLERGA ~ervicH for which he agreed to pay Hinshaw $6,000 was his own. Ebert said that he a~ret!d to pay a Oat fee for the services in mid-March, 1973, while the con- gressman and Vullerga were in Spartanburg. Shortly after that visit, the Orange County assessor was· paid $714 to cover consuttlng • services and expenses incurred during his two-day visit. A Grand Jury indictment handed down May 6 charges Vallerga with a conflict of interest . in his dealings wittl the South Carolina county. The a ssessor is also charged with embezzle ment, grand theft and mis appropriation in connec· lion with the money he received from Spartanburg, including the $3,000 funneled th rough Hinshaw. When cross-examining Ebert, defense attorney Richard Murphy drew admissions from him that the consulting fees were an open transaction. Ebert said there was no at· tempt or suggestion made to dis· guise the payments. Neither Hinshaw nor Vallerga indicated to him that the money paid them was for any purpose other than consulting services, Ebert testified. Gay Church Group Meets DALLAS {AP) -More than 2,500 members of one of the na- tion's largest religious organiza· lions for homosexuals begins its annual meeting here today. The founder of the Universal Fellowship of the Metropolitan Community Church, the Rev. Troy Perry, says his organiza· tion's m embership has grQwn from 12 to 17 ,000 since he held his first church service in 1968. •·1 don't think this church could have gotten off the ground in any other lime," P erry said. Perry is the author of a book . "The Lord is My Shepherd and He Knows I 'm Gay.'' Oil Spills Eyed MIAMI <U PI> -Coast Guard planes and h e licopters are watching two additional oil spills off the s outheast F1orida coast. ~lly Pilot St.Iii f>Nte FUN'S FAMILY Lai Fun Chan. 17, the 1!)75 Ame rican Field Ser vice student al Mission Viejo 1 ligh School, r elaxes at home in Laguna llills with her American family: (clockwise from left) Robin. 16 ; Marty Swander ; Fun : Jim Swander ; and Mike, 13. TONO PAH. Ne\'. <U PI) ~t a lC' Ag n t•ul ture Direct or l'homas Ba llow, in a surpri~e ' move. Mo nday impounded 70 · wild horsc•s rounded up by the . feder al government. contending POT ... concealed from the street by a wall and locked door. Though Kentucky Fried 1~::::::::::::============::;::;::::::::::::========::;=========: Chicken is ubiquitous in the must angs are state property. Hallow claims the federal law • "hk h gives the Bureau of Land ~l an age m ent Jurisdiction over . the mustangs is unconstitutional. ORANGE COAST •u DAILY PILOT Robert N Wttd P rtt1dltnC 1Nt P\if>h"""4' Jack R. Curley \I•<• Pr-.ux nt •l>CI {,(lrlH•l .MtM"' Thom a!> Keevil ThOmas A. M urphlne M.ln<Hjln9 Cdll .. Charles H l oos Richard P. Nall ,ll\<"l~l -MV•"9 COilCW' S..ddleb.tdl Valley Office ?\101 IA,.., .. , ..... w.. °""" ,,., ..... ,, otr.erOff~ <9'1•M•"4 J'f_tl .. •!f.lrwl "',.,_'"*"'" n,,.......,.., ... ,,. ... ,'1 ... "'"' •""\ti9" .... t r\ '111) flt" frli '°"If'" l* ct I 1t1J ~fl'!· 91tKf\, 1 ... ~,,..Sil,._.• Te~ptMne rn•> '42-4321 Ctasstfi.cl Advtr11tlnt '42·567t ').MOit-ii 'W41W'I' H•W\ ()HiO Ht .. J10 . ,.,,, ~ ,,_,, .. 4'5-0630 , "I took four or five steps out in it and I thought to myself, gee, these kids s ure are taking good care of the pl ants here. . "Then I s topped. my bailiff said ·oh my','' Judge Griffin said. The judge said he was ''very surprised .. and after he realized there w ere five people in the house and only he and the bailiff, he said he w as a little ap· prehens ive. , San Cle m ente police were called. The judge had to call the court where two San Clemente ncircotics officers were awaiting his return to testify in a felony narcotics case. Police seized marijuana planLc; ranging in size from seedlings to five feet tall. In the garage, they said. a special s et up had been a r· ranged under fluorescent lamps for growing. In addition, officers seized narcotics paraphernalia, pillis and for investigation some musical instruments, stereo equipment and power tools which the y believt! may have been laken in burglaries. Arrested were Loren B. Parkhurst Jr .. 24 ; Richard W. Curtis. 21 ; Henry S. Muir, 22 and Pa ul J . Schramel. 21. all of 337 Calle Felicidad. Jana L . Hie.hens. 19. of 25261 Barque Way, Dana Point. was al10 arrested. Bail was set at $5,000 each. Jl,UJge Griffin said that although he c urrently ls beartng the felony court calendar, he will exempt himself rrom hearing the cas es of the five penon1 ar· rested • Malaysia, Fun has yet to try the All -American hamburger. She sampled pizza, which she didn't like, and spaghetti, which she liked. Even planned communities are no big thing to Malaysians, Fun said. She has pictures of modern d e velopment s near her hometown with architecture not unlike new homes here. Asked to comment on recent events in Southeast Asia, Fun said. "We have 1l saying that when America sneezes, the rest of the world c alches cold. "I really think Americans were doing a great job in Viel· nam and I can't understand why the Vietnamese wanted them out: I am a nti-communist. But we feel safe as Jong as Thailand is free. It has always been a buf- fer slate, and if it went, we'd be very worried." Then the Swanders and Lai FUn Chan chante the subject, lauahing and smiling most of the time. As Mike points out with a grin, "We're a Fun family -in more ways than one." OFFER ... • board's reeling. said it would not be right to re.trict teachin1 posi- tions at· a time when the di.strict is experiencina irowth ln enroll- ment. The board it expected to finalise .t.be cuts and additon.s wtaen ft adopts the final budget next Monday ru1bt. • . . ': .. JOIN THE ESTABLISHMENT! There is a definite advantag~ in doing business with an ESTABLISHED local firm. We are interested in doing business with ESTABLISHED mills, which we have determined after decades o f doing business. There Is no way, unfortunately, to tell how a mill will back its products until there is a problem! Carpet stores interested ONLY in price have no one to back them. and consequently walk away form complaints. A few times through the years. we have had to stand the cost of replacement when a mill wouldn't. This will only happen once to us, and then the samples are in our trash can. What this means to our customers Is that the tines we carry are from reputable mills, and that they can buy with confidence from Alden's. *•••• •• car~ DEN'S :iiisiiilat~iin:·custom .drapsriss , UC. NO. 230422 1663 PLACENTIA A.VENUE • co~rA MESA, CAtlf. 92627 • PHONE 6 .. 6~.4838 -6 .. 6·2355 17 Irvine Today's Cl osing N.Y. Stocks VOL. 68, NO. 210, 3 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORAN<SE COUNTY, CALI FORNIA TUESDAY, JULY 29, 197S TEN CENTS County Aides Used in Co1nputer Sale? lJy GARV GRANVJLLF. Of tll• oa11, ,. ... , suo VENTURA -A witness in Orange County Assessor Jack Vallerga's trial in Ventura Coun· ty testified today that county workers were used to prepare ~nd test a computerized ap- praisal system sold to Spartan- burg County, South Carolina, in 1973. Spartanburg paid Orange County $2 ,045 for the system .. According to Vallerga's pro- secutor. he and former Orange county assessor Andrew Hinshaw were collectively paid- $7, 176 for consulting services and expenses connected with the sale. Assistant Orange County Dis· trict Attorney Michael Capizzi drew the admission from Dr. Robert Anderson that employes in the assessor's office were used to prepare and test the appraisal system. Hinshaw is not charged with any crimes related to his even- tual profits from the sale. But VaJlerga, who was a county official at the time, is defending himseff against seven felony charges involving alleged con- flicts of interest brought against him by the Orange County Grand Jury, Anderson's testimony opened the second day of the trial in Ven- tura County Superior Court Judge Robert Shaw's courtroom. Anderson was identified as a physicist who represented Spartanburg in Orange County during negotiations for the purchase or the syst~. Earlier, the man wbo agreed lo pay Hinshaw $6,000 for consult· ing services r elated to the ap- praisal system purchase said he didn't know half the fee was earmarked for Vallerga. · As a matter of fact, former Spartanburg assessor John Q. ·Ebert testified Monday, it wasn't until recently that he learned Vallerga received $.1,000 from Hinshaw. Furthermore, the Orange County assessor did nothing to County Appeals Stung by Ruling on DA Transfer Orange County supervisors to- day ordered County Counsel Adrian Kuyper to prepare an im- mediate appeal or ajudge'sruling Monday that blocked transfer of 22 investigators from the District Attorney's Office to the Sheriff's Department. The board action followed a 45-minute execuli ve session dur· ing which Kuyper briefed s up e rvis ors on a lte rn a tive courses of action in the wake of Superior Court Judge Byron K. McMillan's decision. Kuyper said the judge's ruling was a "direct challenge lo lhe board's constitutional power over budget and personnel." The county counsel advised supervisors that the court's de· cision would have a n immediate effect on other board decisions re- lated tolhe budget. "Butor overriding concern is its effect on the rules of the game," Kuyper said. "If it stands, it drastically alters our understand- •ing of the governing law of the state as it relates to county gov- ernment." Kuyper said in effect it gives in· dividual county officers such as •}licks the right tom ake individual determinations on budgeting and placement of personnel. "This is the overriding princi- ple by which the board is guided and l wouldn't know bow to advise the boa rd in procedures in the future if the decision is allowed to stand,'' the county counsel said. Kuyper said after the meeting he will probably take his case to the Fourth District Court of Ap .. peals in San Bernardino for a new ruling. He said it is the first lime t o his knowledge that the judiciary has directly challenged a local governing board's budget- ing powers. Judge McMillan closed a day. long hearing into the issue by firmly ruling that his court had jurisdiction to uphold or reject the supervisors' decision to transfer 22 investigators lo Gates. "Thal action was arbitrary and capricious," he commented. •·1 have heard enough here today t o satisfy me that the board had no right to act in this matter.'' Sevier unsuccessfull y argued that the board's decision was always open to c hallenge in the form or a referendum, recall of county officials. or an election. "The District Attorney chose io bring the issue to the courtroom,'· Judge McMillan commented. "He felt that we had jurisdiction in the matter and I am obviously agreeing with hi " m . Hi cks' investigators greeted the ruling with sighs of relier. "None o f us wanted this transfer." commented a veteran investigator who asked not to be identified. "But quite apart from Or:·.g:a~ ... Weatller Increasing low clouds and Cog Wednesday with hazy sunshine after mid- morning at the beaches. Continued cool. Highs near 70 at the strand to the· mid·IK>s inland. · INSIDE TODAY A SO·Jlf:CT·Old. 73-foor achooner ii docked in Newport Harbor. looking none the worse /or wear after many ad· ventures. Set Page BS. our personal feelings there was no doubt that a crazy move ofthis kind would have seriously ham- pered the operation of this of· fice.'' Chief Deputy District Attorney J ames Enright stressed that point during the hearing before Judge McMilla n. ''These investigators are a vital part of our crime fighting forces," Enright said. "And it has been made clear in recent weeks that the public is utterly opposed to such cavalier action." Enright condemned the board approval of the transfer as "half witted" a nd warned that a ny dilution of the district attorney's investigative force "'would s'eriously hinder our crime fight· (See HICKS, P age A2) OC Airport 'Test' Switches Takeoffs Normal operations al Orange County Airport were reversed early today as four jet airliners approached for landings over Upper Newport Bay and eight took off over industrial areas to the north or the San Diego freeway. Irvine Coast Land Lawsuit Now in Court By DOUG F RITZSCHE ot tlM Dally Piiot St•ff Arguments began Monday in a West Virginia lawsuit that could determine whether the Orange Coast will have a new 1,364-acre slate park. The proposed parkland in- cludes 3.5 miles of beach and bluffs between Coropa del Mar and Laguna Beach and 1,100 in- land acres in Moro Canyon, run- ning from the coast to the San J oaquin Hills ridgeline. Concluding e ight years or negotiations, the Irvime Com- pany ocrered the land to the State Department o f P arks and· Recreation for $7 .6 million last December. But the proposed Christmas Day transfer was block~ by a suit fil ed in December m West Virginia by Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith. Mrs . Smith's suit contends the price is too low, depriving sha reholders or ade· quale value for the sale of com· pany assets. Last December, when final negotiations were in progress, a f arks and Recreation Depart· ment spokesman cited the $15 ·million estimated value of the land and called the sale, "a Christmas girt to the people of California." In Judge Thomas McHugh's Kanawha County, W. Va., U.S. Circuit Court Monday, argu- ments compared the ltvine sale with a sale or 80 acres of land in ' Huntington Beach to the stale in 1974. Appearing as an adverse wit· ness for Mrs. Smith, William Shrewsbury, manager or real estate for the Irvine Company, testified on the s hifting nature or coastal property· values. The coastal commission system, he said, has lowered the value or some undeveloped coast due to building constraints. In a recent interview, Irvine Company President Raymond Watson characterized the park (See LAWSUIT, P•ceA!) Girl, 8 , Missing LOS ANG &LES (AP > SheriU'a deputies conllnued their search today for an 8-year-old girl who was aa1d by her mother to have possibly witnessed a murder . Two hellcopUrs and a force of 30 sbertrr•s deputies searched throuchout the night for Lubonda Lynn Hayden. report- ed mlaalnc Sunday nllbt by her mother. r Norm Ewers, noise specialist at the county airport, explained the takeoff and landing patterns were turned a round between 7 and 9 a .m . as part or a noise monitoring experiment. The one-morning test was con- ducted at the request of Daniel{ Mann, J ohnson and MendenhaJ ( DMJ M). the consulting firm that is preparing an environmen- tal impact report on the airport and its environs. ' "This was the last day of ooi.!e sampling and we wanted to de- termine noise levels using the re- verse runway system," Ewers said. Ewers s aid today's unan · nounced test was designed to ob· tain the most normal type of re· action from residents of homes at both ends of the airport. rough the Paces Irvine performing arts teacher Sharon Sircello, a former Irvine schools trustee, helps ballerina Heidi Walter of College Park brush up for the student -written perlorm- ing arts production "Circus." The musical written and performed by the 60 youngsters aged five to 15 in the class will be performed' at 7 p .m . Thursday at the out- door stage at University High School. 5 Held on Pot Charges Surprised,]udge FindiJ Marijuana 'Gartkn' A small claims court case led to discovery of an estimated 143 growing marijuana plants in San Clemente by a "very surprised" Laguna Niguel Municipal Court judge and his bailiff Monday. Five people ranging in age from 19 to 24 were arrested and booked on alleged possession of marijuana for sale, possession of marijuana and cultivation of marijuana. Judge John Griffin went to the home at 337 Calle Felicidad to in-. vestigate the landlord's conten- tions that the r enters were not keeping up the property as agreed. The judge had a key to the home given to him by the te- nants during the small claims hearing about 10 days before. Judge Griffin said today he and Bailiff Ken Brumage walked around the property looking at the growing weeds and dead r ose bushes that were matters of con· tention in the civil dispute. The judge and the bailiff went to the back deck and the sliding glass door was opened by a young man. "He looked kind of strange," the judge said, "and he asked why there hadn't been 24 hours notice of the visit." The judge said'no such notice was required in the case. After looking around the inside of the home briefly to determine the kind of care it was getting, the judge and the bailiff opened the front door to leave. It opened onto a courtyard area concealed from the street by a wall and locked door. "I took four or five steps out in it and I thought to myself, gee, these kids sure are laking good care of the plants here. "Then I stopped. my baillff said 'oh my'," Judge Griffin said. The judge said he was "very surprised" and after he realized there were five people in the house and only he and the bailiff, he said he w as a little ap· prehensive. · San Cle m e nte police were called. The judge had lo call the court where two San Clemente narcotit"S om eers were awaiting <See POT, Page A2} ..,.., ........ ,.... NOtto A JUDGE' AND. tll BAILIFF IN SAN a.EMENTE 'iirtci ......... CMl'gea Aft• Accident.a DfacOYMY earn the money, according 1 to J:bert's testimony. · And , he said, Hinshaw's services were limited lo answer- ing questions asked during a series of phone calls he made to the Republican congressman's office in Washington, D.C. But, the former Spartanburg assessor said, the decision to make ooly limited use of the (See VALLER GA, Page Ail In Irvine North Irvine zoning protesters have delivered more than enough signatures to qualify the zoning for th~ Vi!Jage of Northwood for a fall referendum. according to Irvine City Clerk Carol Flynn, An official count of the peti- tions s hows 1 ,267 veri fi ed signatures. she said. To qualify, the petitions needed 1,027 signatures, or 10 percent of the 10,267 voters in the last. municipal election . The tally will be brought to the city council Aug. 12. By using that date to start the sequence of activities leading up to the re· ferendum vote, the matter can go on the same ballot as a city charter election set for Nov. 4, Mrs. Flynn said. The petition was circulated by an ad hoc residents committee that opposed provisions of zoning for Northwood, which is bounded roughly by the Santa Ana Freeway, Culver Drive. rrvine Boulevard and Jeffrey Road. A chief element in the protest is the development set for the in· tersection of Yale Avenue and Bryan Avenue. The intersection is zoned for a _ park at one corner, a shopping center at a second and apart- ments at the other two corners. · Protesters contend that the in· lersection will be haza rdous. They have turned down as unac· ceptable several city council ideas to reduce possible pro· blems. The protesters have been led by Racquel Club r esidents David Sills, Chuck Winslow. Jim Cook and Kay McNally. The Racquet Club is the only residential development in the planned village, now largely planted in citrus. The lengthy debate on the pro· perty is putting a squeeze on lan- downers . according to Bruce Nott, who plans lo build a mobile home park in Nort hwood. In a recent interview, he said several landowners and poten· tial purchasers who hold options on Northwood land are having financing problems, with banks calling notes a nd refusing ex- tensions. During hearings o n Northwood, several farmers and other property owners urged speedy action on the zoning because of the high property tax- es they pay on the potentially valuable land. Unlike the rest of Irvine, which is under the sole ownership of the Irvine Company, Northwood is held by a number of relatively small landowner s. Two land use plans and the final zoning have been pursued under city sponsorship in an at- tempt to make development in the area compatible with the Irvine Company tracts in the rest of the city. Only Councilman Robert West voted against the Northwood zon- ing, which could brint as many as 18,500 new residents to the 1.426-acre village. Makeup Test Set Thursday Thursday is the deadline for re- gistr ation in the Saddlebaot College ACT (American College Testing Program> make\q) test. The test will be adn:witllerecl Aug. 2 for students who rn1ased the regularly scheduled. national test dates. It begins at a a.m. IA · Room 309 of the rnaU..sclence building and is to cooelakle at noon. Test scores wUl be ~' prior to tb_e fall quvter to ex- pedite reg1slraUon. ~t 1 uses the test SCOl"M foto plat ment of students in Ehdsta ..:I' math cluses. To reflster for~ AC?&-. br ' ing ta to the Sadd~ .,,.._,. · ing office today. 'r Q j!!L·· • 'lbunday. ~Gt" '· .. • A 2 DAIL v PILOl UPI t•ttt>Mto MENNIE PERSON OF MEMPHIS ADMIRES THE $11,500 CADILLAC BOUGHT BY ELVIS She Admired Singer's Auto-So He Bought Her One, end Clothes to Go With It From Page A l VALLERGA services for which he agreed to J>:lY Hinshaw $6,000 was hi5 own. Euert said that he agreed to 1>3Y a flat fee for lht! ser vices in mid-March, 1973. while the con- gr;essman and Vallerga were in Spartanburg. Shortly after that visit, the " '"()range County assessor was paid $714 to cover consulting services and expenses incurred during his two-day visit. A Grand Jury indictment banded down May 6 charges , Vctllerga with a confiictofinlerest in his dealings with the South <:arolina county. The assessor 1s also charged , "1th embezzlement. grand theft and misappropriation in connec- ' lion with the money he received r from Spartanburg, including the \ $.1,000funneled through Hinshaw. , When ('n>ss t•xamimng Ebert, ' defens e llttorney Richard ' Murphy drew admissions from him that the consulting fees were .. an open transaction. ·. John R. Begg · Final Rites ~Held Today Funeral services were held to- day al St. George's Episcopal • Church. Laguna Hills. for former R\?publican Central Committee , executi\·c John R Begg A res 1dc•nt of 514 South • Bayside. Bal boa Island. Mr. , Begg, 42. was a native Califor- • nian. 1 Folllowing graduation from ., Redondo (Union) High School ' and Stanford University, Mr. Begg purs ued a variety of OC· • cupations, including work with a ~ land developing firm in Pen· nsylvania, public relations work ~ in Washington D.C .. and employ- 1 ment as manager of a styrofoam cup company in Pennsylvania. t Mr. Begg once lived and • worked in Memphis. Tenn .. where he volunteered his , services as a layrt!ader in the Epis copal church. llis most re· c~nt job ..., as with a Southern Cahforma land dC'veloping firm. After graduation from Stan- 'PiCk One Out' Elvis Gives Admirer a Car MEMPHIS. Tenn. (AP> - Mennie Person never expected to meet Elvis Presley while br'ows - ing in a car lot. much less wind up on his gift list. Mrs. Person was caught by surprise when she was admiring Presley's custom-made Cadillac. "I had my head over in it and he came out of the back parking lot and asked if I liked it." said the bank teller ... You don't ex- Irvine Sister City Program To Be Cut? Irvine efforts to develop a sis- ter city program apparently are a waste or time, according to Community Services Director Paul Brady. Brady was directed to explore the possibility of an official sister city program after Irvine re· cei ved requests from three Japanese potential sister cities last spring. The requests came from Kimitsu. M atsue and Yakaichiba. Rrady circulated invitations to a meeting on the maller to the \'arious community associations and service groups in Irvine. Including representatives of the city, school district and the lrvine Company, seven persons attended the m<'oling last week. "This is the city's third at- tempt lo bring together potential interests in lhl' formation of a s is- ter city progra m." Brady said. "Some members expressed the \'iew that this lack of interest may be an indicator that the communities in Irvine are not in- t erested in a sister city pro- gram." lr\'ine has a student exchange program with Irvine, Scotland. The program in past years has been supported largely with Irvine Company contnbutions. The company has withdrawn its support this year. However, the program is to continue under the sponsors hip of the University High School Parents. Faculty an~ Friends Organization, Brady !,OJ Id. pect to find him on a car lot thal time of night." Mrs . Person, 33, said she was "st~·u s anding there with my mouth en," but managed to co · ~nt Presley on his personal car. "He said, 'That one's mine, but l '11 buy you one','' she said. "He caught my by the arm and carried me back to the parking lot where he had come from and told me to 'pick one out'." The car Mrs. Person selected was a gold and white model that llsls for about $11 ,500. Mrs. Person said that when Presley l ea rn~d her birthday was today, he handed her the keys to the car, wished her "Hap- py Birthday" and told an aide to write her a check "lo buy some dothes lo go with the car." She did not disclose the amount of the check. Mrs. Person said s he told Presley that,she and her husband, Troy, already owned a Cadillac. a 1974 model, but said that didn't both.er Presley. ''He told me to keep it," she said. "He told me to give it to my husband or whatever we wanted to do." Presley's gifts of automobiles over the years have gone to friends, professional associates and in one case, a politician- former Shelby County Sheriff Wilham Morris Jr. Final Hours In Bertolino Theft Trial By TOM BARLEY OHll• D•ll'I' P iiot ~1•11 An Orange County Superior . Court jury w as told today \hat it had heard "more than ample" evidence of defendant J a mes Bertolino's guilt in an asserted assessor's office conspiracy that led to the indictment of nine county employes. Deputy Dis tri ct Attorney William Evans told the panel in hi s final argument that Bertolino's name had repeatedly cropped up during evidence thal t•mployes had bee n illegally p'1id overtime and vacation pay. Deneotfon Mulled Chief Portner ' "' ' ,,, .. I 9 ... FftCing the Ax? By JACK CHAPPELL ' Ollh• D•llY Pl .. ISutt San Clemente PoLice Chier Mel Portner may be demoted because of City Council dis- satisfa<:tion with lhe running o( lhe depurlmenl. Portner. a 23 -year veteran or the San Clemente for<'e, took over the department about a ye111r ago with the departure of then- Chief Clifford Murray. The question of the chief's fir- ing is in nux today, however with some backing away from aii original position in which Portner's demotion from chief to a police lieutenant was seen as a near certainty. City Man ager Kenneth Carr confirmed Monday that the re- assignment of the chief was un- der <'Onside ration. "There is a possibility that he could be relieved in which case he would be reassigned to the previous po:;ition of lieutenant whit'h he held before assuming the pos.ilion of eh1cf of police," Carr said Carr declined to s ay what prompted discussion of the chief's position. Under normal circumstances. the assignment of personnel-un- der1.he city manager is al the dis- Fro•PageAl HICKS ••• inJ! capability " Hicks declined to comment on the ruling late Monday, but in- dicated he will be prepared to discuss the iss ue when Judge McMillan issues the final draft of t11s ruling and s igns the writ of mandate sought by the distrid ilttorney. .Judge McMillan made it clear that lhe freezing of the transfer will remain in effect until he signs the writ. Ford Reveals Nuclear Stand WASHINGTON <UPI>-Presi· dent Ford said in a letter released today he has "absolutely no plans" to build up U.S. strategic nuclear weapons to the poinl where the United States could cripple the Soviet Union with a "first strike" attack. But Ford declined to rule out the possibility the United States might be the first country to use nuclear weapons in the post- World War I I era to blunt an over- whelming conventionaJ attack - such as might occur in Western Europe or South Korea. crelion or the city manager. however, in ca&es involving ma- jor d~partment heads, the city counCIJ~ assumes an •'advise and consenl"tole. Carr noted that the chief had been appointed to his position about a year ago. "It is normal and customary in any situation lo review prior to completion of any probation period the performance (of an employe) which is in the case of public safety personnel one year," Carr said. "If there was lo be any reA)acement necessary, I don't think it would be done as a result of the Teamsters situation," Carr said . The "Teamsters situation" re- fers to a rift between the city and the police department employes who have hired the union to represent them in salary and fr. inge benefit negotiations. The city by resolution b~nned the ~lice employes from any af- filiation with the Teamsters and has r efused to recognize the agreement with the union or negotiate with the officer s' Teamsters representative. Carr ret used to comment on when discussions of the chi ef's position may have taken place declaring that matters discussed in executive (secret) session are privileged. Chief Portner, contacted Mon· day, declined to comment direct· ly on the situation saying that any comment at this stage should come from the council or mem- bers or the city manager. Sources who asked to remain unidentified reported the general li neup of the cou.ncil finds Coun· cilmen Pal Lane and Charles Fox in s upport of the chief. Mayor Tony DiGiova(lni and Councilman Thomas O'Keefe re- portedly are in favor or removing him. Councilm a n Art Holmes originally was seen as the swing vote, but Holmes, reached today, s aid he is in favor of retaining the chief at this time.'' "I'm not ready to make this move al the present time. The council is looking at upgrading the entire <'ily and this includes the police department," Holmes said. Fro•PageAJ LAWSUIT ••• as an essential element in com- pany plans to develop its 10,000 acres in the unincorporated land between Corona del Mar, Laguna Beach and Irvine . Watson termed the relatively low sale price a benefit to both the company and the pubµc. Puppet Show Three young college students from Huntington Beach will put on a benefit puppet show Wednesday to collect coloring books, crayons and storybooks for Fairview State Hospital. Show times are 11: 15 a.m., 12:15 p.m., I :45 p.m ., 2 :45 p.m., and 3:45 p.m. in the LeBard Park clubhouse near LeBard School on Craimer Lane in Huntington Beach. Ad - mission is a coloring book, a box of crayons or a storybook. The firls putting on lhe puppet show are Linda Colthurst, Tricia Madison and Vana Kleinberg. Their puppets will perform a 45-minute show based on the popular children's story ''Charlotte's Web." Ford SM In Visit To Camp OSwtECIM. Poland (UPI) - President 1'~ord walked throu&h a rusting barbed wire gate into the Nazi death camp known as Auschwitz today, laid a wreath to the estimated !our million to six million victims. bowed his head and said : "Horrible. Unbellev4;1. blc. Horrible." Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger, walking behind Ford, bent his head in silance and sad· ness. "1 had some Camily members here," the Jewish German· born Kissinger recalled shortly before he and Ford visited Poland's reminder of man's in· humanity to man. Ford, his brows fixed in a sad scowl, walked as if in a funeral procession from his helicopter down a path built over t hE" cremated remains of Adolf Ititler·s bloodiest death fuctory. Ile passed the dynamited crematorium where Nazi SS men burned the bodies of as many as 30,000 persons a night between 1940 and 1944. ··very, very sad. A tragic period. A tragic period," said Ford. so stung by the emotions or Auschwitz that he talked in un· usually short sentences with his Polish host. The President penned this in· scription in the visitors' book: ''This monument and the memory of those it honors in· spire us further to the dedicated pursuit of peace. cooperation and security for all peoples." But perhaps his feelings and thoughts showed most in his face when he made an unscheduled tour of a barracks where Jews and other inmates were lodged in six-man bunks before.being sent to the gas chambers. The Polish guides rattled off the statistics of death. Thf'y told Ford how the Zyklon-B gas was dropped into the chambers dis4 guised as s hower houses, how the corpses were stripped of gold teeth fillings and even human hair before being c11emated. Ford looked grimly down at the empty bunks. f' ro• Pllflf! A I POT ••• h.is return to testify in a felony narcotics case. Police seized marijuana plants ranging in size from seedlings to fi ve feet tall. In the garage, they said, a special set up had been ar- ranged under fluorescent lamps for growing. In addition. officers seized narcotics paraphernalia, pills and for investigation som e musical instruments, stereo equipment and power tools which they believe may have been taken in burglaries. Arrested were Loren B. Parkhurst Jr., 24: Richard W. CUrtis. 21 ; Henry S . Muir, 22 and Paul J . Schramel, 21, all of 337 Calle Felicidad. Jana L. Hichens, 19, or 25261 Barque Way, Dana Point, was also arrested. Bail was set at $5.000 each. Judge Griffin said that although he currently is hearing the felony court calendar', he will exempt himself from hearing the <'ases of the five persons ar- rested. . rord. Mr. 8 C'gg served as an ex- ecutive office r of the Orange and Los Angeles County Republican Central Committees. Further efforts to start <J sister city program. Brady said, would be a waste of time. Theydrewthose fundsfor time ·-·~:=:==:=:=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;::::;;::;;::;;:::::::::::::::::::::;.::;.::;.::;.::=::; actually spent working on former co unty assessor Andrew llinshaw's Congressional cam- paign in 1972, Evans charged in Mr. Bc~g is survived by bis wife. Elizabeth; son, John Robert, and father. Foster A. Begg. The e lde r Begg is a resi· • dent of Laguna Hills and is past : s uperintendent of the Manhattan : Beach school district. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT I""" 0• ~M.11 (9 f I t t Ill &,.;• ,,,~ • It -.h t 1 i ·•• ,.,,..,,,"-N l·W t I •• ,..,r-111tf 9IP'\il "''""" ,.. V,-I ~fr>f1\I" 'l t tOy 1 f~I· t~ IKm t • CJl'b•t,h•d IJ ,,,.. •t , .. , ,:_i• I t.1 ,,.,,, (tt •it ""' .. ,., .... "'~' ·°''' .. ,,, •rl t••,,. ,,. ,, '••n \lo1H• ~ " .. , 11t • v .-11.-. •• ,.IJ t •Q'f\"' l'-"•'f"I 'o~ttt I A •,,,, ,,.Q,..tl.41 ll'f•l 1 ' ti "•ti t IOt, .,.fl .,..,.,.,, f~ f '" I 11 o ! " • ~ tf'I •t I;: ~i , t f • t •• I I ; I.,.. I I , I I •• , • HObNI N WP"<l ,,,.,,dr"' ff\ft Pvt>t1,rw• )Mk R. Curley ...,.,, t "" .,,. ,,, •nn V. nfluu M.lll'Yt> • Thomas Keev11 fnltor Thomil<. A • .Murphinl' MA-n•o•~O f t.IHCW Charl~s H Loo<; Richard P. Nall ,t\\;ot4flit Mt1"•QU'M~ Edil•~ Ofti(es ~··Mr•• I W•\1 S.• SI"''' IJlffl--1 .. M f'ol l)t\ ...... """"' ~ 'llAI. l.•OU"• &fio•r"" t '"' ,.,."""'",... \4rt.,t Mufttuil .. Of'I h • Pill 1 ll f • .,.._._..,." ~,;._v.14 ~ ...... ~ V•ll•y 111'>1 I. r., Po.a ... ).fft 0•+9' • ''"'"""' •• Telepftone (7141 '42-4311 Cl.uiifled Adv~rlls1~ '41 S671 ~•bM"V#l-.t N~(1fl , 511-6~10 '·-~"''"" .... 4'S-Nl0 • f!'ff •Q-"l• it J \ 01..,...,. C..-.t f'luDH\f\IM~ 1 f'lpAft_. HD,,..., ~ ... , ltl\l\.frA1 ~· .,,·fMo•t n ll•t •• .. dv ''' .,,...1111' ft••••" ""•f' .,. tt PfOefU(ttl W t"°Mt pec._••I .. ,,,,, .... ft t i ·~•t!)ftl0•1Wf \.,M l <1•\t •O>l'"9t. •d llf ( .. IA M••f , c •lllOrtll• .... _,.,,..,."',,,, •• tJ __ ,_,. • ., "•••• M oe*""f'f'ttrwf . MthtMtde liMttOfft.UIO ~,_., ' Living Cost Hike Tabled By Trustees Trustees of the Saddleback Community College District have tabled until Aug. 4 a pro- posal to do away w1lh automatic cost-of-living increases for the district's 200 employes. Teachers a nd classified employes at Saddleback current- ly are given annual raises based on the cost-of-living index for the Los Angeles area . That policy this year r esulted in 12.l percent pay hikes for Sad- d lebac k employes. School employes in surrounding areas averaged only six percent. It bu been r ecommended by Roy Barletta, the district's negotiator, that the automaUc in· creases be discontinued and that salary increases be negotiated annually, as they are ln other school districts . Trustee Norrisa Brandt sup- ported that request with a formal motion, s~conded by Trustee Donna Berry, but the remdtdtt of the board ref used to take ac- tion. It was suiiested that action on the controversial plan be de f errcd until Trustee Patrick Backus, abseol from Mondny·~ mfftinl because of illness, bad an opponunit.¥ to lpeak on the subject. • the courtroom. Evans asked the jury to find Bertoli n o, 52, of 24116 Via Madrugada, Mission Viejo, guil- ty of charges of grand theft and conspiracy contained in a Grand Jury indictment. The prosecutor insisted before the jury th al Bertolino was one or a number of men <'ounted on by Hinshaw, county Assessor Jack Vallerga and convicted defen- dant George Upton to pay off employes who worked on the Newport Beach Republican's campaign. Evans attacked Hinshaw dur· ing his final argument as "a man who mis used his office aod violated the public trust" bg utilizing county e mployes for bis personal political ambitions. "His campaign was not going well at the time," Evans said. "That is when Hinshaw de· veloped a system that called for the use of assessor's employes and a lso led to the repeated defrauding of the county." Defense attorney Don Tham.er was to deliver his final araumeot to the jury later today. Five of lhe eight men indicted with Bertolino have been fined and placed on probatlon after pleadins guilty to reduced charges of submitting raJse,.te. ment.s. Retired aide George Upt()n, identified by EVID$ today u • principa l defendant with Hinshaw and Vallerga, drew the stiff est sente nce -a $2,.500 llne and three ye,ra probation •• JOIN THE ESTABLISHMENT! ' There is a definite advantage in doing business with an ESTABLISHED local firm. We are interested in doing busi ness with ESTABLISHED mills. which we have determined after decades of doing business. There is no way, unfortunately. to tell how a mill will back its products until there is a problem! Carpet stores interested ONLY in price have no one to back them. and consequently walk away form complaints. A few t imes t hrough the years. we have had to stand the cost of replacement when a mill wouldn't This will only happen once to us. and then the samples are in our trash qtn. What this means to our customers is that the lines we 1 cany aTe from reputable mills, and that they can buy with c:onfldence from Alde n's. DEN'S : iiiiiiilitian :: custom drapsriss uc. NO nom l66? PLACENTIA AV£NUE • COSTA MESA, CAUf, 92627 • l'HONE 6 .. 6·-'838 -646-2355 I •• Today's Closing .Y. Stocks VOL. 68, NO. 210, 3 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESOA!, JULY 29, 1'175 TEN CENTS Lack of Funds Threatens Central Park ByTEllRY COVILLE Ofttle O•llY ~lletSl.IH The nurry of developing new parks has come to a sudden halt m Huntington Beach. The city has run out or money. A few s mall neighborhood parks may s till be built as de- velopment fees from new hous- ing tracts are added to city cof- fer:;. County Aides 'Used?' By GARY G RANVILLE Of ttle 0•111 PllOt ~It VENTURA -A witness in Orange County Assessor Jack Vallerga's trial in Ventura Coun- ty testified today that county workers were us ed to prepare and test a computerized ap- praisal sys tem sold to Spartan- burg County, South Carolina, in 1973. Spartanburg p a id Ora nge County $2,045 for the system. According lo Vallerga 's pro- secutor, he and former Orange county a sses s or Andrew Hinshaw were collectively paid $7,176 for cons ulting services and expenses connected with the ~ale. Assistant Orange County Dis- trict Attorney Michael Capizzi ~ew the admission from Dr. Robert Anderson that employes in the assessor's ofCice were used to prepare and tes t the apprais al system. Hinshaw is not charged with any crimes related to his even· tual profits from the sale. But Vallerga, who was a county official at the lime, is defending hims elf against seven felony • charges involving alleged con- flicts or interest brought against him by the Orange County Grand Jury. Anderson's testimony opened the second day of the trial in Ven- tura County Superior Court Judge Robert Shaw's courtroom. Anderson was identified as a physicist who represented ·Spartanburg in Orange County during negotiations for the purchase of the system. Earlier. the man who agreed to pay Hinshaw $6,000 for coru;ull· ing services related to the ap- praisal system purchase said he didn't know half the fee was earmarked for Vallerga. As a matter of fact, former <See V ALLER GA, Page A2) Argumems In Bertolino Trial Heard By TOM BARLEY Of tlte Oall1 Piiot SUH An Orange County Superior Court jury was told today that it h ad heard "more than ample" evidence of defendant James Bertolino's guilt in an asserted assessor's office conspiracy that Jed to the indictment of nine county e mployes. Deputy Dis trict Attorne y William Evans told the panel in h i s fi nal argume nt that Bertolino's name had repeatedly uopped up during evidence that employes had been illegally paid overtime and vacation pay. "They drew those funds for time actually spent working on former county assessor And r ew Hinshaw's Congressional cam- paign in 1972, Evans charged in the courtroom. Evans asked the jury lo find . Be rtolino, 52, of 24116 Via Madrugada, Mission Viejo, guil· ty or char ges of grand then. and ronspiracy contained in a Grand Jury indictment. The prosecutor Insisted before the jury that Bertolino was one of a number or men counted on by Hinshaw, county Assessor Jack Vallerga and convicted defen- dant George Upton lo pay off employes who worked on the Newport Beach Republican's campaign. Evans attacked Hinshaw dur· Ing his final argument as "a man who misused his office and violated the public trust" by uUlldn1 county employes for his personal political •mbtUons. .. HiS campelp wu oot. foinJ ell at the1 time," Evans said. ... That ls when Hinshaw de· veloped a ayatem that called for t.be uae of aasea.sor's employes and al.10 led to the repeated (SeeJUaY. PaieAZ) But the future of tbe city's crown jewel, the central park, is uncertain. The $6 million park bond ·approved by voters in 1969 is exhausted. And even ir fed eral funds for park a cquh;ition and development can be obtained, the city can't m a tch them as is usually required. · Huntington Beach owns about 270 acres of land for the central En Garde! park. 1t has developed 170 or those acres. Al one time, plans called for acquisition and de· velopment of 435 acres for the central park. "Fra nkly , we·r e at an impasse right now," says "Norm Worthy, city pa rks and recreation direc- tor. ··we don't have enough (un- developed) land for a golf course complex. lf we had enough we UPI Te..,._. The statue of King Louis IX in front of St. Louis' art museum appea rs abo ut to be challenged by some modern knig hts in armor. Actually. the men are sandblasting the statue by a special technique used to clean outdoor bronze sculptures. Ford Saddened By Trip to Auschwitz OSWIECIM, P oland <UPI> - President t'ord walked through a rusting barbed wire gate into the Nazi death c amp known as Auschwitz today, laid a wreath to the estimated four million to six million victims, bowed his head and said : "Horrible. Unbelieva- ble. Horrible." Secretary of St<1te llenry A. Kissinger, walking behind Ford, bent his head in silance and SC:ld · ness. ··1 haa some fa mily mem bers he r e ,·· the J e wish Ge rm an- born Kissinger recalled shortly before he and Ford visit ed Poland's re minder of man 's in- humanity to m an. Ford. his brows fixed in a· s ad scowl, walked as if in a funeral procession from his helicopter down a pa lh built over the cr emate d r e m ai ns of Adolf Hitler 's bloodiest death factory. He p assed the dynamited crematorium where Nazi SS men burned the bodies of as ma ny as 30.000 persons a night between 1940 and 1944. "Very. very sad. A tragic period. A tra gic period," said Ford, so stung by the emotions or Auschwitz that he talked in un- usually s hort sentences with his Polish host. The President penned this in- scription in the visitors' book : ''Thi s monument and the memory of those it honors in- :;pire us further to the dedicated pursuit of peace, cooperation and securi Ly for a 11 peoples." But perhaps his feelings and thoughts s howed most in his face when he made an unscheduled tour or a barracks where Jews and other inmates were lodged in six-man bunks before being sent to the gas chambers. Girl, 10, Hit By Car, Hurt A JO .year-old Huntington Beach girl was in stable condi· lion in a hospital intensive care unit today after being struck by a car Monday while bicycling. Huntington Beach police said Dorothy Renate Mischke, 17761 Flintstone Lane, and her brother, Arthur. 9, were riding their bicycles in a crosswalk at Warner A venue and Edwards Street when the accident oc· curred. Officers said the car. driven by Edmond Fr ancis Brick, 61, of 223 Walnut St., Newport Beach, was traveling with the green light on Edwards Stree t . when the youngsters rode into his path. Arthur was not struck, police r eported. could probably get a developer to build ll." Worthy bas been the most rer- ·venl backer of a municipal· owned golf course for the re- mainder or the central park. But in recent months, the city council has ordered a hall to land purchases for the park, which leaves the southern boundary at a point west or Golden West Street and half way between Taylor Stre~t and Ellis Avenue. It isn't enough for a golf course. Worthy said his department would like to buy land at least as far south as Ellis, and ultimately lo a point south of EIUs, but there is no acquisition money. The city ~as already spent $4.1 million to buy the park acres it has, plus another $2.6 million to develop the first 1'70 acres. And Worthy's golf course pro· posal has yet lo win formal city council endorsement. Whal will happen to the re- maining vacant acres of central park? The council has suggested leaving them v a cant as open space until money is found to do something with the m. <See PARK, Page AZ} C~nnty Appeals. Stung by Ruling on DA Transfer cision would.have an immediate effect on olher board decisions re· Orange County supervisors to- day ordered County Counsel Adrian Kuyper to prepare an im- mediate a ppeal of a judge's ruling Monday that blocked transfer of 22 investigators from the District Attorney's Office to the Sheriff's Department. • latedtothebudget. Kuyper said after the' meeting he will proba bly lake his case lo the Fourth District Court of Ap~ peals in S'1'1'1 Bern a rdino for a new ruling. He said it is the first time to his know led ge th a t the judiciary has directly challenged a local governing board's budget- ing powers. The board action followed a 45·minute executive session dur- ing which Kuyper briefed supervisors on alternative courses or action in the wake of Superior Court Judge Byron K. Mc Millan 's decision. Kuyper said the judge's ruling was a ''direct challenge to the board's constitutional power over budget and personnel." The county counsel advised supervisors l!tal the court's de· COngress' Salaries Going Up? WASHINGTON (AP> -It might not be apparent frolfli read- ing the title of the 11\faSUJ'E:, but the Senate ia considering a bill to increase tbe salaries of con· gressmen and other top federal officials. The bill is listed on the Senate's legislative calendar as an act to amend Tille 39, United States Code, to apply to the Postal Service certain provisions of Jaw providing for federal agency sa fety programs and responsibilities and for other purposes. In an unannounced action, the Sen¥.e Post Office and Civil Service Committee added the pay raise section to a House-- passed bill to require the Postal Service to comply with the Oc· cupalional Safety aod Health Act. The new section would. give salary increases to Vice Presi- dent Nelson A. Rockefeller, Cabinet members. top-level ex- ecutive officials, federal judges and members or Congress. The amount of the increases , would depend on how much or a cost-0f·living adjustment Presi· dent Ford recommends for gov- ernment employes in general. For example, a 5 percent in- crease would boost the annual pay of a member of Congress from $42,500 to $44,625. The Senate opened debate on the bill Monday night. The legislation was defended as sim- ple justice and denounced as a backdoor allempl to insulate Congress from the effects of in- flation. Sen. Gale W. McGee ([).Wyo.). the Post Office conimittee chairman, said the raises are needed to attract talented people to government jobs. He said the number of people involved represent only 1 percent of the federal payrolJ. "But or overriding concern is its effect on the rules of the game," Kuyper said. ''If it stands, it drastically alters our understand- ing of the governing law or the state as it '\"elates to county gov- ernment." Kuyper said in effect it gives in· . dividual county officers such as Hicks the right to make individual determinations on budgeting and placement of personnel. ~·This is the overriding princi· pie by which the board is guided and I wouldn 'l knbw how to advise the board in procedures in the future if the decision is allowed to stand," the county counsel said. Judge McMillan closed a day. long hearing into the issue by firmly ruling that his court had jurisdiction to uphold or reject the s uper visor s' decision to transfer 22 i nves tigators to Gales. "That action was arbitrary and capricious," he commented. "J have heard enough here today (See HICKS, Page.A2) Neighbors Credited Huntington Family Saved From Blaze . ~1!M~,~~CY A Huntington Beach family of three wes rescued by their neighbors early this morning as £ire swept their apartment. Fire Ctapt.ain Roger H06mer said Braley Horner, his wife, Diana, and one-year·old son, Joshua, were asleep in their home al 17381 Koledo Lane, when the fire broke out about3 a.m . He credited prompt action by three n e ighbors. who were awake and s potted fl ames through a living room window, with rescuing the family. Hosmer said the blaze erupted in a living room couch where a cigarette bad been dropped earlier in the evening. By lbe time firemen arrived • he said, the fire had spread through the living r oom and kitchen, and there was heavy smoie damage through the rest of the apartment. Hosmer s aid three neighbors. Jim Bridges, Brenda Blachard , and Gary Page , rushed to the Horner home after spotting the flames. Bridges kicked in the front door. Hosmer said. then the three awok e Mr. and Mrs. Horner and carried Joshua out- side. Firemen had the blaze under control in a bout 10 miuules, Hosmer said. There w er e no injuries. Damage to the Homers' apart· m enl and b e longings w as estimated at $12,000. l' alley Trustees 3 ·Targets of Recall Defend Their Work Three Fountain Valley School Board me mbers, targets of a cur- rent recall campaign, insisted Monday they have been effective and receptive school trustees. Jn their formal response to the recall errort, Trustees Sheila Meyers, Bill Crane and Roger Belgen contended they have worked closely with parents ·and teachers to improve the district's educational programs. Their formal responses, each about two pages long, were filed Monday with the Orange County Registrar of Voters. By law, they must be attached to all recall peti- tions. public. It will be in the Fountain VaJley Community.Center, Hall A, at 10200 Slater Ave. Questions • may be directed to her al 847 -0569 or to Betty Mignanelli at968-2784. In their written r esponses. trustees claimed they have met individually with parents and have relied upon teacher and parent committees lo help with decision making. <See RECALL. P•ce ,U} ' Or:~:'47 :•• Weatller Well·tended Garden Fran Johnson, the mother who is heading the recall effort, has scheduled a 7: 30 meeting Wed- nesday night to begin circulating petftions. She charged that trustees have fal.led to •<perform effectively and recepUveJy .. during the June teacher strike, unification dis· ~ions and parent requests fot" Increasing low clouds and fog Wednesday with.1 hazy sunshine after mid· morning at the beaches. , Continued cool. Highs near , 10 al the strand to the , . Judge FiTllls Pot in Pou in Clenwme . A smalJ claims court cas e led to discovery of an estimated 143 growing marijuana plants in San Clemente by a "very surprised'' Laguna Niguel Municipal Court judge and his bailiff Monday. Five people ranging in age Crom 19 to 24 were arrested and booked on alleged possession of marijuana for sale, possession or marijuana and cultivation or marijuana. Judie J ohn GrUfin wenl to the home at 337 Calle FeUd dad to in- vestlgate the Jandlord'11 cont.en· tiorus that the renten were not keepin& up the pro pe rty as agrffd. The judge bad a key to the home given to him by the te- • nants during the smaJl claims hearing about 10 days before. Judge Griffin said today he an~ Bailiff Ken Brumage walked around the property looking at the growing weeds and dead rose bllahes that were matters of con· tention in the civil dispute. The judge and the bailiff went to t.he back deck and the sliding gtass door was opened by a youni mon. "He looked kind of strange," the judge said, "and be asked why there hadn't been ~ hours notice of the vir>it." The Judge said no such notice was required ln the case. Aller looking around tbe lnslde ' . of the home briefiy to dee.ermine the kind of care it was ,.u.ing. the judge and the bailiff ~ the front door to leave. ll opened onto a courtyard area ~cealed from .t,be •tl'M\ b7 a wall and locked door. "I took four or five at,esa out in It and I tbou1bt. to myself. lee. these kid• 1ur• are taldDa pod careolt.be plants,..... ''Then I I t.ftftaarl, my laililf said 'ob mJ•'frJ"4f16 QdUia aaid. • • n. jgdce ..i• .. ~4' ~eel!' and.etter.liltnirilhld there WeN five ~ a tbe ... .... on.11 ............. (IMJIO'S.P8"All pc"Off am Improvements. · Mu. Johnson said Wed· ,..Uy's meetiDC ia opea to the mid·80s inland. · INSIDE TOD" 't' ~ A SO-year-old , 73 ·/oot· 1ehoontt i8 docked hi Naq>on' narbor, looking AOllC! Cht' woru /or wear.after morq,ad-' wnture1. Sft P.ogc BS. • ..•. ' .. .,_,....-. Aa .....w.... '4 :::i.....a as a.wtl9tft ., = .~~ :..:r.n. c At........... f! =--: =:..::= E;., 0 •• ~.... ~~ ~ :=---·~ . -·· .. ~..... . ...... ..., ,......,,. flW ........ 117 ..... ..................... ..... "'' .. .it! OAIL V PILOT H/F UPI Tekf11Mt• MENNIE PERSON OF MEMPHIS ADMIRES THE $11,500 CADILLAC BOUGHT BY ELVIS She Admired Singer's Auto-So He Bought Her One, and Clothet to Go With Jt Front Pa9f> r1 J ·HICKS •.. to satisfy me that the board had no right to act in this matter." Sevier unsuccessfull y argued that the board's decision was always open to challenge in the form of a rer('rendum, recall of county officials. or an election. 'Thl' Dist 1·1<·t Attorney chose to bring tht• issue ·to the courtroom.·· Judge McMill.an commented. "He felt that we hC1d j urisdiction in the matter and I am obviously agreeing \\1th tllm. ·· Hicks' investi~ators greeted the ruling with sighs of relief. ··None of us wanted this transfer.'' comm e nted a veteran invesli~ator who uskl'd not to be idl'ntificd. ·· Oul quite apart from our personal ft•elin~s there was no doubt lhal a craz) moveofth1s kind would han• o;cnously ham· pered the opl'rataon of this of fice .. Chief 0Pputy Dis trict Attorn\•y James Enrif!hl s tressed lh<.1t poml during the heanng before J udj!e McMill an. 'These inves tigators are a ,_vrlal part of our crime fighting forces," Enright said. "And it has been made clear in recent weeks that the public is utterly opposed to s uch cavalier action ... Enright condemned the board approval of the transfer as "half witted'' and warned that any d ilution or the district. attorney's investigative force "would seriously hinder our crime fight lll!? capability " Hicks dechned to comment on the ruling late Monday. but in· d1catcd he w 111 be prepared to discuss the iss ue when Judge McMillan issues the fin al dran or his ruling and signs the writ of mandate sought by the district attorney. Judge McMillan made it clear that the freezin g of the transfer "111 remain an erred until he signs the writ. $7 ,000 in Tools · Stolen From Car A Santa Ana man told Hunt- ington Beach police .Monday so- meone stole $7 ,000 in tools from his car Monday afternoon while it was parked at the beach. Max Van Horn said the car was parked at the Santa Ana River jetty near Brookhurst Street and Pacific Coast Highway, when so- meone broke in through a win- dow, police reported. ORANGE COAST "r DAILY PILOT f¥0t.,."O"'(t'l•ntU41tyPttf)t .,onwn• "' t~ t ,....0 t,._. 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"You <lon't ex peel to find him on a <:ar lot that lime of ni ghl. .. }trs. Person. 33. said she was ··~till slandrng t here with my mouth open.·· but managed lo ('O mpl1m en l .Pn•sley on his personal C'ar. ··He saicl. 'That one's mine, but Womm1 'Fair' After Tumble From Vehicle A Huntington Be:Jch woman was reported in "'stabilizing" condition today after two days an a coma rt.'sulting from in1unes s he suffered when she fell from a -. an in Irvine Friday. Cathleen L. Melbeuf, 27, 0£6242 Walnut Ave .. Huntington Beach, was "slightly improved." ac- cording lo an Orange County Medical Center spokesman. Irvine police today continued their investig<1lion of the mishap involving a van dnven bv John N. Hodges. 32, or Lakewood Lt. Eugene Nordl;'n said Miss Melbeuf app;arl'nll) fell from the van on :\1 acA rthur Boul evard south of tht• Si.In Diego Freeway about 11 µ.m. Frad;.iy. Assault with a cJeaJly weapon <·harges lodged initially against Hodges have been droppeJ, Norden said. From Page Al PARK ... Worthy also says various pco· pie are looking into thl! possibili- ty of profit making r('l'rcataonal uses. such a s a tt?n111s ('lub. a m i no r go If fa c 111 t y or. :rn equestrian cenler. But no firm proposals have been made Health Measure I ·11 buy you one'," she said. "He caught my by the arm and carried me back to the parking lot where he had come from and told me to 'pick one out'." The car Mrs. Person selected was a gold a nd white model that lists for about $11,500. Mrs. Person said that when Presley learned her birthday was today, he handed her t he keys lo the car. wished her "Hap- py Birthday" and told an a ide lo wntc her a check "to buy some dothes.to go wilh the car." She did not disclose the amount oflhecheck. Mrs. Person said s he told Presley that she and her husband, Troy, already owned a C;Jdi llac. a 1974 model, but said that didn't botht•r Prcsky. "lie told me to k('t•p it," she ~aicl. ''He told me lo give it to my husband or whatever we wanted todo .. Council Asks County for Park Funding In one or its briefest meetings, the Huntington Beach City Coun- cil agreed Monday night to ask Orange County for $225,000 in re- venue sharing funds for park ac- quisition. The council met for less than 30 minutes to formalize lhe fund re- quest and act on a half-dozen lesser items on the brief agenda. A planned meeting with m em- bers of various appointed boards, commissions and committees was cancelled. The $225,000 request from the county is mostly a bookkeeping action.-The money was already spent by the city to buy 17.2 acres for the central park, but the city wants to use the county funds lo replace city money used on the park purchase. City Administrator Dave Rowlands said the county had ac- tually authorized the money more than two years ago, but l>t·C'ause of delays in purchases a nd other technicalities the money was never· transferred. He did not expect any problem in collecting the revenue sharing funds . Ford Veto Finally Nixed by Congress WASH 1NGT0 N (AP) -Health Service Corps . Congress today overrode Presa· Jn addition, it authorizes $30 dent Ford's veto of a $2 billion million for federal programs to health bill. the first lime in five treat hype rtension, $16 million tries this session that the House for he mophilia treatment and mustered enough votes to enact blood separation centers $17 into law a measure that Ford re -million for rape prevenlio~ and jecled. ('Onlrol a()d $10 million for home The vote was 384 to 43, or 99 health demonstration agencies. votes more than the two-thirds Meanwhile, the Harris poll majority necessary to override. says the American people ap· The Senate met in a rare prove or the way President Ford weekend session Saturday to has used his veto power by a 38·33 overtide Ford's veto67tol5. pt:rcent margin. Twenty-nine In his veto message, Ford percentsay theyarcundecided. called the health packaae ex-A nationwide survey of 1,4!r7 cessively costly and said some adults s howed that most of programs duplit"a ted existing F'ord 's s upport came from health efforts. Ford's party members. Ford's The health bill authorizes UHof hisvetopowerfoundravor • about $500 million less for health amons S9 percent of Republicans revenue shanng and nurse train-while •:4 percent of Democrats ing than ln two separate bills opposed hfm, the poll showed. In· which Ford wtoed at the end of dependent voters sided with the the last Congress chief executive by 40-32 percent, He saicf, nevertheless, that the wUJtl8perceot undecided. new bill ·1ulhoriztd more than his •· Amciricans side with Ford budget rf(}Ut>Rl and that the ttlgh rather than with Congress cost "t"ould not be tol~rated." t becauae they arc concerned The bill anclod~s aid to com-abOvl eurbln« federal 1pendln1. munl!y mental health programs, Fotd's s tated objecUve In ov&r· training for r~"iseitrcd nursn, tjdin• the pa!iUge OI more con· medical h~lp to migrnot worJcen grnalonal program'' Ute H,.nis and author! ly for a National Ot'laniiation concl~cdMonclay . Fr .. P.,,e A J They also dalmed they have made profram changes wbcre needed and r'equested, pointing to mat~rtals improvements, read· ing and math clinics, special teacher training, drug <:ibuse education, hiring outside evaluators and setting district performance s tandard'\. ln addition, Crane charged the petitioners represent •'power groups intent upon achieving political gain, destroying the school distrit.•l and defeating un- ific:aUon." The trustees s aid they haven't misspent district funds on the un- JCication proposal, wh.ich goes before voters Nov. 4. Instead, they each contended in their separate. replies, they have spent funds as allowed under the slate Education Code. They said they have been sup- porting the rights of Fountain Valley residents, who petitioned for the Nov. 4 election. They also said they have tried to secure an election on the matter for Huntington Beach residents now served by the district but left out oflhe proposed unification. Trustees claimed state test scores s how sixth graders im- proved in each subje<.·t last Y!=?ar, and that second and thfrd graders rank in the lop third of California schools. In addition, they said, high school district reports show 60 percent of the ninth graders read at or above grade level and 20 per- cent read at the 12th grade level or above. The recall group also had ac- cused the board of illegaJly hiring former superintendent Mike Brick as distrid business direc- tor. But in their responses, trustees said they followed the stale Education Code and the advice of the Orange County Counsel's of- fi ce. Trustee Dick Plum, not a recall target, has char~Nl the hiring of Brick was handled illegally. Mrs. Johnson said her group hopes to collect 7 ,000 signatures within the next two weeks and have the recall m alter placed on the November election ballot. BOBBY SOXERS SWEEP TOURNEY The minor all stars from the North Huntington Beach Bobby Sox League swept all four games in a recent regional tournament h<.'ld in Cerritos. The Huntington Beach team now advances to the national tournament. schcdtiled during the first week or August in Buena Park. Free Movies Set At Edison Center Two feature films. "Dirty Work"' and" Flash Gordon," will be shown twice this week by the City of Huntington &ach with no '. admission ch arge. They will be shown first al 8: 15 p.m .. Thursday, in the Edison Community Center, 21377 Magnolia St. The second showing will be at 8: 15 p. m ., Saturday, on the beach behind lifeguard head- quarters at Lake Street and Pacific Coas t Highway. Horses Impounded TONOPJ\H, Nev (UPI) - State Agriculture Director · Thomas Ballow, in a surprise move, Monday impounded 70 wild horses rounded up by the federal government. contending the mustangs are state property. Puppet Show Thr~ young college students from HUntincton Beach wlll put on a bencm pup~l show Wednesday to collect coloring books, crayons and storybooks for Fairview State Hospital. Show limes are 11:15 a.m., 12:15 p.m ., 1:45 p.m., 2 .45 p.m ., and 3:45 p.m. in the LeBan.I Park clubhouse near LeBard School on Cralmer Lane in Huntington Beach. Ad· mission ls a coloring book, a box of crayons or a storybook. The firls putting on the puppet show are Linda Colthurst, Tricia Madison and Vana Kleinberg. Their puppets will perform a 4S·mlnut~ show based on the popular children's story "Charlotte's Web." Conununity Center to Stay Open Officials of the Fountain Valley Sehool District have found a way lo keep the Colonia Juarez Com· munity Center open next year, despite loss of federal operating funds. District admioistralors had (eared they would have to close or move the 2,000·square-foot facility after a Cive-year federal grant, financing a bilingual pre- school there, expired this year. That also would have eliminat· ed use of the dis trict-owned facility by colony residents for evening civic and social func- tions. But the school board voled in- s tead to move a state and federally financed day care center. now housed in portable classrooms at Lamb School, to the colony building. Assistant Superintendent Jack Mahnke n said the move should be completed by mid-week. He plans to meet later with colony residents to discuss plans for evening uses. He said the day care center will be open w eekdays from 7 a.m. lo 6 p.m ., and the building will be free evenings for other uses. In addition, he said, the district will save about $6,000 a year in rental or the Lamb portable classrooms. About 45 youngsters are enrolled in the day care cen~er. FroMPageAJ POT ••• he said he was a little ap- prehensive. San Clemente police were called. The judge had lo call the court where two San Clemente narcotics officers were awaiting his return to testify in a felony narcotics case. Police seized marijuana plants ranging in size from seedlings to five feel tall. In the gar age, they said, a special set up had been ar- ranged under fluorescent lamps for growing. In addition, officers seized narcotics paraphernalia, pills and for investigation some musical instruments. s tereo equipment and power tools which they believe may have been taken in burglaries. Arrested were Loren B . Parkhurst Jr., 24; Richard W. Curtis, 21 ; Henry S. Muir, 22 and Paul J . Schramel, 21, all of 337 Calle Felicidad. J ana L. Hichens. 19, of 25261 Barque Way, Dana Point, was also a rrested. Bail was sel al $5,000 each. Judge Griffin said that a'Jthough he currently is hearing lhe felony court calendar, he will exempt himself from hearing the cases of the five persons ar- rested. f'rOJ11 Page Al VALLERGA Spartanburg assessor John Q. Ebert testified Monday, it wasn't until recently that he learned Vallerga r eceived $3,000 from Hinshaw. Furthermore, the Orange County assessor did nothing lo earn the money, according to Ebert's testimony. And, he said , Hinshaw·s services were limited lo answer- ing questions asked during a . series of phone calls he made to the Republican congressman's office in Washington, D.C. But. the form er Spartanburg ·assessor said, the decision to make only limited use of the services for which he agreed to pay Hinshaw $6,000 was his own. Ebert said that he agreed to pay a flat fee for the services in mid-March. 1973, while the con- gressman and Vallerga were in Spartanburg. Shortly after that visit, the Orange County assessor was paid $714 to cover consulting ·services and expenses incurred during his two-day visit. A Grand Jury indictment handed down May 6 charges Vallerga with a conflict of interest. in his dealings with the South Carolina county. The assessor is also charged with embezzlement, grand theft and misappropriation in connec- tion with the money he received from Spartanburg, including the $3,000 funneled lh rough Hinshaw. When cross-examining Ebert, defense attorney Richard Murphy drew admissions from him that the consulting fees were an open trans action. Ebert s aid there was no at- tempt or suggestion made to dis- guise the payments. Neither Hinshaw nor Vallerga · indicated to him that the money paid them was for any purpose other than consulting services. Ebert testified. Fro• P"fll! Al JURY ••• defrauding of the county.•• Defense attorney Don Thamer was lo deliver his final argument to the jury later today. Five of the eight men indicted with Bertolino have been fined and placed on probation alter pleading guilty to reduced charges or submitting false stale· ments. Retired aide George Upton, identified by E vans today a s a principal d efe ndant w ith Hinshaw and Vallerga,, drew the stiffest sentence -a $2,500 fin e and three years probation. HOME Unit Meets The July meeting of the Hunt- ington Beach HOME Council will ~held at 7:30 p .m ., Wednesday, m the new central library. JOIN THE ESTABLISHMENT! There is a definite advantage in doing business with an ESTABLISHED local firm. We are interested in doing business with ESTABLISHED mills. which we have determined after decades of doing business. There is no way, unfortunately, to tell how a mill will back its products until there is a problem! Carpet stores interested ONLY in price have no one to_ back them. and consequently walk away form complaints. A few times through the years. we have had to stand the cost of replacement when a mill wouldn't. This will only happen 011ce to us. and then the samples are in our trash can. What this means to our cuetomers is that the lines we carry are from reputable mills. and that they can buy with confidence from Alden's. DEN'S ••••••••••••••••• • ·installation •. custom drap1r1ss *• ..... carpe 1663 PLACENTIA AVENUE • COSTA MESA, CALIF. 92627 • PHONE 6"6· .. 838 -446·,355 ' • Or•nge Coast . Todoy's Clo Ing .V. tock · E TION t -~-O_L_._68~,_N_0_._2_10~,~3~S_E~C~T_IO.;;._N~S,~4~0-P_A_G~E~S------------------~O~R~A;..;.;,..:.N~G~E~C~O~U~N~T~Y~,~C~A~L~l~FO~R~N~IA~------~---T~U~E-S_O_A_Y~,-JU~LY __ 29~,~1-97_S~--N--------T~E-N_C~E-N_T~S .Judge lJneovers 'Pot Gorden' on Coast A small claims court case led to .discovery or an estimated 143 gri>wing marijuana plants in San Clemente by a ... very surprised" Laguna Niguel Municipal Court judge and his bailiff Monday. Five people ranging in age from 19 to 24 were arrested and booked on alleged possession of marijuan4 for sale, possession 'of marijuana and cultivation of marijuana. • COunty Aides 'Vsed?' ByGARYGRANVILLE • Of tll• Dally PllotSU.lf VENTURA -A witness in ·Orange County Assessor Jack Vallerga's trial in Ventura Coun- ty testified today that county workers were used to prepare ·and test a computerized ap- pr~sal system sold to Spartan- burg County, South Carolina, in 1973. • Spartanburg paid Orange C.ounty $2,045 for the system. According to Vallerga's pro- secutor, he and former Orange county asse ssor Andrew Hinshaw were collectively paid $7,176 for consulting services and expenses connected with the sale. Assistant Orange County Dis- trict Attorney Michael Capizzi drew the admission from Dr. Robert Anderson that employes in the assessor's office were used to prepare and test the appraisal system. Hinshaw is not charged with any crimes related to his even· tual profits from lhe sale. But Vallerga, who was a county official at the time, is defending himself against seven felony ·charges involving alleged con· flicts of interest brought against him by the Orange County Grand Jury. Anderson's testimony opened the second day of the trial in Ven- tura County Superior Court Judge Robert Shaw's courtroom. Anderson was identified as a physicist who represented Spartanburg in OrMge County during negotiations for the purchase or the system. Earlier, the man who agreed to pay Hinshaw $6,000 for consult- :iJlg services related to the ap· praisal system purchase said he didn't know half the fee ,was earmarked for Vallerga. As a matter of fact, former (See VALLERGA, PageA2) Arguments In Bertolino Trial Heard By TOM BARLEY Of tlle Dally ,llolStatt An Orange County Superior Court jury was told today that it had heard "more than ample" evidence or defendant James Bertolino's guilt in an asserted assessor's office conspiracy that l~ to the indictment of nine cpunty employes. .. Deputy Distri cl Attorney ~illiam Evans told the panel in hlS final argument that Bertolino'~ name had repeatedly ci:opped up during evidence that employes had been illegally paid overtime and vacation pay. ·They drew those funds for time actually spent working on former cpunty assessor Andrew ltinshaw's Congressional cam- paign in 1972, Evans charged in the courtroom. Evans asked the jury to find Bertolino, 52, of 24116 Vla Madrugada, Mission Viejo, gull· ty of charges of grand theft and dnspiracy contained in a Grand Jury indictment. Jfhe prosecutor insisted before the jury that Bertolino wa,s one of a number of men counted on by Hlnshaw, county Assessor Jack Vfllerga and convicted defen· dant George Upton to pay off etQployes who worked on the N"~wport Beach RepubUcan's c~palgn. ~vans attacked Hinshaw dur- ~ his final argument as "arnan o misused his office and laled the public trust" by lilng county employes ror his personal politltal amJ>itions. ,"HJs camp1i1n was not 1olng well al the time," Evans said. "Thal i• wben Hlnshaw de· vt)oped a system that called for the use of assessor's employes and also led to th r.peated • : <a...nJaY, P.,•AI> . " Judge John Griffin went to the home at 337 Calle Feli cidad to in! vestigate the landlord's conten· Hons that the renters were not keepiD'g up the property as agreed. The judge had a key to the home given ro him by the te- nants during the small claims hearing about 10 days before. Judge Griffin said10day he and Bailiff Ken Brumage walked around the property looking at the growing weeds and dead rose bushes that were matters of con- tention in the civil dispute. The judge and the bailiff went to the back deck and the sliding glass door was opened by a young man. "He looked kind of strange," the judge said, "and he asked why there hadn't been 24 hours notice of the visit." The judge said no such notice was required in the case. Arter looking around the inside of the home briefly lo determine the kind of care it was getting. the judge a nd the bailiff opened the front door to leave. It opened onto CJ courtyard area concealed from the street by a wall and locked door. "I took four or five steps out in it and I thought td myself, gee, these kids sure are taking good · (kreoftbe plants here. "Then I s topped, my bailiff said 'oh my',•• Judge Griffin said. The judge said he was "very surprised" and after he realized there were five people in the house and only he and the bailiff, he said he was a little ap- prehensive. San Cl e m ente police were called. The judge had lo call the court where two San Clemente narcotics oCficers were aw~ his return to testify in a 1.aony narcotics case. · Police seized martj•:•~ ranging in size from s ga to five feet tall. In the garage, they said, a special set up had been ar. ranged under fluorescent lamps for growing. In addition, officers sei~ed <See POT. PageA2) County Appeals. Stung by Ruling on DA Transfer • I I '\ .. ·~ E1i Garde! UPI Tel.,.hote Orange County supervisors to- day ordered County Counsel Adrian Kuyper lo prepare an im- mediate appecil of a judge's ruling Monday lhat blocked transfer of 22 investigators from the District Attorney's Offi ce lo lhe Sheriff's Departmenl. The board action followed a 45·minute executive session dur- ing which Kuyper briefed s upe rvis ors on alternative · courses of action in the wake or Superior Court Judge Byron K. McMillan ·s decision. Kuyper s aid the judge's ruling was a "direct challenge to the board's constitutional power over budget and personnel.·· The county counsel advised supervisors that the court's de- The statue of King Louis IX in front of St. Louis' art museum appears about to be challenged by some modern knights in armor. Actually, the men are sandblasting the statue by a special t echnique used to clean outdoor bronze sculptures. Congress' Salaries Going Up? WASHINGTON (AP) -It might not be apparest from read· ing the title of the measure. but the Senate is cons idering a bill to increase the salaries of con- gressmen and other top federal officials. Newport's Council Squelches Changes The bill is listed on the Senate's legislative calendar as an act to amend Title 39, United States Code, to apply to the Postal Service certain provisions of law providing for federal agency sa f e t y program s and responsibilities and for other purposes. By HILARY KAVE Of Ille D•llY Pllol$Ullf Informal suggestions by Newport Beach City Councilman John Store for electing coun· cilmen by )Vards and for shorten- ing the length or councilmanic terms from four to two years were shot down by his colleagues at Monday aflernoon's study session. However, the council agreed with a third suggestion by Store, that all campaign contributions, even those under $50, be report- ed. An ordinance mandating that chan~e will be presented to counc1lmenAug. ll. Store's first two suggestions would have required changes in the city charter, if councilmen had agreed. Store said he hoped the council would allow voters to consider the changes by placing the items on the ballot. However, reaction from the rest of the council was unen- Ford Visits Auschwitz Death Camp OSWIECIM, Poland <UPI> - President Ford walked through a rusting barbed wire gate into the Nazi death camp known as Auschwitz today, laid a wreath to the estimated four million to six million victims, bowed his head and said: "Horrible. Unbelieva- ble. Horrible." Secretary of Slate Henry A. Kissinger, walking behind Ford, bent his head in silance and sad- nesi. "I bad some family members here," the Jewish German· born Kissinger recalled shortly before he and Ford visited Poland's reminder or man's in· humanity to man. Ford. his brow1 fixed in a aad scowl, walked as if tn a funeral procesaion from b.lJ bellcoptu down a. lath built over tbe cremate remains of Adolf HiUer'1 bloodiest de alb lactory. Re paued the dynamited crematorium where Nul ~ meo burned the bodles oC u many as 30,000 persons a nlg.bl between lMOandl9" . thusiastic and the matter of elec- tion reform was dropped. Councilmen are currently elected by all residents, although the candidates must reside in the district in which they are run· ning. Store said that electing them strictly by dis trict would cut down on the cost of campaigning. because candidates would have to gather votes in a much sma ller area. Also, Store said he believed it would make the councilmen more responsive. However, Mayor Donald Mcin- nis said he believed that those who wrote the city charter were correct. "Our way of electing coun- cilmen is the best or two systems (See COUNCIL, Page A2) BURNS' REMARK COOLS MARKET NEW YORK (UPI) -In a dramatic r eversal, prices closed broadly lower in moderate trad· ing today on the New York Stock Exchange after Arthur Burns. the bead of the Federal Reserve Board, warned that the recent Russian grain deal could be infla. tionary. The Dow Jones industrial average, ahead more than nine points at the outset, lost 2.97 points to 824.86. Declines led ad- vances by about a nine·lo-four margin. (Tables, A9). Prices also were lower in moderate trading on the American Stock Exchange. In an unannounced action, the Senate Post Office and Civil Service Comm itlee added the pay raise section to a House- passed bill to require the Postal Service to comply with the Oc· cupalional Safety and Health Act. The new section would give salary increases to Vice Presi- d ent Nelson A. Rockereller. Cabinet members, top-level ex- ecutive oCficials, federal judges and members of Congress. The amount of the increases would depend on how much of a cosl·of·living adjustment Presi· dent Ford recommends for gov· ernment em ploy es in general. For example, a 5 percent in - crease would boost the annual pay of a member or Congress from $42.500 to $44,625. The Senate opened debate on the bill Monday night. The legislation was defended as sim- ple justice and denounced as a backdoor attempt to insulate Congress Crom the effects of in- flation. Sen. Gale W. McGee <D·Wyo.>. the Post Office committee chairman, said the raises are needed to attract talented people to government jobs. He said the numbe r of people involved represent only 1 percent of the federal payroll. Sen. Hiram Fong <R-Hawaii). t he committee's ranking Republican, s poke of "hard· pressed federal oCficials in the upper echelon'' who he said have· "suffered long e nough from con· gressional inaction." Belly Full . Dance Class Stirs Fw-or A sug1estion from Newport were a waste of money during Beach's parks and recreation tough financial times. staff lbat belly dancing be in· But the majority prevailed eluded amoo' new reereaUon when other councllmtn and tbe olferin,-1 aur•aved a bump from dt.y 1taff •Jreed lhal ~ ~­ adly councilman Monday. tJon programs-belly daocing ln· D•spltc Paul Ryckoff's ex.· eluded-were eelf·lllpporting clamalion that he was "ap· bffauacolnt-'l•lrationfetis. palled" by some of the suggested F\111.bermore. said parlt.11 and olferlnp, bts peen agreed to all recreatioo -h:'ector Cal Stewart. eliblcluses. MVttal wom• have ubd for l\yckoCC insi1ted the classes tbe belly dn~ classes. • I . ' . cision would have an immediate effect on other board decisions re· lated to the budget. "Butor overriding concern is its effect on the rules of the game," Kuyper said. "If it stands. it drastically a 1 te rs our understand- ing or the governing law or the state as it relates to county gov - ernment.'' Kuyper said m effect it gives in - dividual county officers such as Hicks the right to make individual determinations on budgeting and placement of personnel . •·This is the overriding princi- ple by which the board is guided and l wouldn 't know how to advise the board in procedur~s in the future if the decision is allowed to stand,'' the county counsel said. Kuyper said after the meeting he will probably take his case lo the Fourth District Court of Ap- peals in San Bernardino for a new ruling. He said it is the first time t o his kno wl e d ge that lhc judiciary has directly challenged a local governing board's budg«!l- ing powers_ Judge McMillan closed a Mon· day hearing into the issue by firm- ly ruling that his court had · jurisdiction to uphold or reject the supervisors' decision lo transfer 22investigators to Gates. "That action was arbitrary and capricious," he commented. "l have heard enough here today CSee HICKS, Page A2) Neighbors Credited Huntington Family Saved From Blaze By KATHY CLANCY Of Tiie Oally Piiot Slaff A Huntington Beach family of three was rescued by their neighbors early this morning as fire swept their apartment. Fire Captain Roger Hosmer said Braley Horner. his wife, Diana, and onc-year·old son, Jos hua. were as leep in their home at 17381 Koledo Lane, when the fire broke out about 3 a.m. He credited prompt action by three neig hbo r s , who were awake and s potted flam es through a living room window. with rescuing the family. Hosmer said the blaze erupted in a li ving room couch wher e a cigarette had been dropped earlier in the evening. By the lime firemen arrivt'd, he said, the fire had sprt!ad through the living room and kitchen, and there was heavy smoke damage through the rc~l of the apartment Hos mer said three neighbors. Jim Bridges. Brenda Blachard and Gary Page, rushed to the Horner home after spotting the names. Bridges kicked in the front door, Hosmer said, then the three awoke Mr. and Mrs . Horner and carried Joshua out- side. Firemen had the blaze under control in about 10 miuutes, Hosmer said. There were no injuries. Damage to the Horners' apart· ment and belongings was estimated at $12,000. Newport Man Ruled Guilty of Murd,er Michael Lawrence Carden or Newport Beach was found guilty of second degrec~rder Mon - day night after bei tried for the killing of a Cl mont busi· nessman. Orange County Superior Judge William S. Lee set Sept. 10 as the date he will sentence Carden on the second degree conviction re· ached by a jury after a short de- Jiberation. Carden. 34, of 614 West Ocean Front, races a possible state prison term of 10 years to life for the murder or Elmer Julius Boehlke, 48 . He is free on bail pending sentencing. lt was testified that Boehlke's body was found on the back doorstep of Carden's home Jan. 26 shortly after the two men had been seen quarreling in a nearby bar. Police said Boehlke had been shot once in the chest. A prosecution witness testified that Boehlke had repeatedly threatened to "ta~e out a con- tract" on C ardcn and had kickod • No 'Race Riot' , SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A rock concert brawl between Chicanos and blacks that left 20 persons inJUttd was not a "race riot" but resulted &om heavy drinlc:in1. according to authorities. Slx persons •e· malned bo1pitalbed. one in seriou s condition. Monday foUowinC the ·~· lmJfmc and botUe-tbrowlna disturbance involving about 150 Chicanos and an eyal number of blacks &In· . dayn1ght. \ Carden 's jacket around the bar- room floor when the defendant refused to fight. Arresting officers s aid neighbors lold,them they heard a number of s hots fired in the vicinity of the Carden home between 3 a .m. and 4 a.m. on lhe day of the killing. PoUce said they arrived at the home and found Boehlke's body shortly after Carden had called a lawyer friend and reported the death of the victim. Or:•.•:a_:•t Weatltter Increasing low clouds and fog Wednesday with hazy sunshine after mid· morning at the beaches . Continued cool. Highs near 70 al the strand to the mid-80s inland. · INSIDE TODAY A 50-year·old. 7.1-foot IChooner ii docked rn Newpqrt Harbor, looking nont> the worae for wear. a/tt'r many ad- ~rH. SH Page 85 l•ilex ;j ~lly Pllol !ilAll ~-· D POT IN THE POTS PROVED SURPRISING TO A JUDGE AND HIS BAILIFF IN SAN CLEMENTE ., Five Arrested on Variou• Mart juena Charges After Accld••ttal DJscovery H ICKS ... to satisf}' mt' that lhe board had no right to <1l'l in this matter." Sev11.•r un~uccessfuJly argued that lhl' boi.Jrd·s dcc·ision was -:ilwa):-l>pt•n lo challenge in the form of .1 t'dt?rendum, rt•call of t•0unly 0fftc1als. or an election. 'Thl' District Attorney chose l 0 brin~ t hl! i s sue to the t:ourtroom." Judge :\1cMillan commentt:>d. "He felt that we had jurisd1cl ton in thl' m;,itler ant.I I am ob\'lously ugrt'e1ng with h'.m .·· !Itek~· 111ves tigator'i greeted the ruling\\ 1th sighs of relief. ··None of us wan led this tr;m~fer . ·commented a veteran in\ est1gator who <isk<Xi not to be llh•ntified "Rut quite apart from our Pl'rsonal feelings there was no doubt that a crazv mon~ of this kind v.t1ulll haH' ~cnously ham- ' Jlt:'rt•d thl' op1?rat1on of this of fu:t•. Chil'f Dl•puty District Attorney James Enright stressed that poinl during the hearin,:! before Judge Mc'.\1111:.in . "Thl'::.l' 1nVl'St1gator~ Jrt..' ;J 'ti.JI part of our crime fighting forces... Enrii?ht said. "Aml 1t ,. has bN•n made clear in recent ..... weeks that the public is utterly opposed to such cavalier action.'' • Enright condemned the board approval of lhe transfer as "half willed" a nd warned that any dilution of the district attorney·s ~ m'es t1galive force "would sl·riously hmder our t'rime fighl- m~ capabiltty." Hicks declined to comment on · the ruling late Mondciy, but in- t.h eated he w i II be prepared to discuss tht> issue \\hen Judge '.\k~l1llan issues the fmal draft of his ruling ;md signs the writ of mandate sought by lhe district -attornt•y . Jud~e ~c'.\lillan made \t clear th:.il the freezing of the transfer will remain in dfec·t unlit he ~1gns thl'" n\ , Gay Clwrch Group Mee ts 1 DA LI.A~ 1 AP l !Vlort' than 2.:100 mt>mbers of one of lhe na - t1on ·s largest religious organiza- l1uns for homosexui.ll!i ~gins its Jllnual mt>l'llng here today. Councihnen Debate New City Poll Newport Beach city coun- (·ilmen displayed loud and strong opinions of their own Monday af- tern oon as they discussed whether or not the dty should spend $7,900 to conduct an opi- nion poll. They came to no conclusions, however. and the matter wi ll be placed oo lhe Aug. 11 council agenda. Coundlwom:rn Lucille Kuehn was the ~trongesl advocate for the opinion poll. which would up- date information gathered in 1969 from the Newport Tomorrow sur- \'l'Y. ··There's been tremendous change in the dty since the last poll was taken and a new survey "'ould show new and different concerns among the people," ~trs. Kuehn contended. While other councilmen s:mJ that polls should be taken only t'Very 10 ye1:1rs. Mrs. Kuehn rc- lorl ed, "Th e re's n othing sacrosanct about a decade." Councilma n Paul Ryckoff was firmly against polling the com- munity al this point. "I 'm ;;sga inst s pending any money on <m opinion poll ... It's a chancy affair whether we'd get any new information from the poll ,'' Ryckoff s aid. "It m ight be chatty, interc~t­ ing and fun. but definitely not worth $7 ,000. · · he adctcd. The proposal given to coun· cilmen to consider was from Opi· n10n Researc·h. the company th1:1t did the last Newport poll and also recently conducted a sampling in Costa Mesa. The company would spend six weeks surveying 600 homes, ask- ing 175questions . The counci l h as a lready budgeted $3,000 for a poll , but would need :1nother $4,900 to pay the.• cost of the proposed survey. F romPage A J COUNCIL ••. From Page 11 I POT ... narcotics paraphernalia, pills and for investigation some m usical instruments. stereo equipment and power tools which they be lieve may have been taken in burglaries. Arrested Wl're Lore n CL Parkhurst Jr., 24 , Richard W Curtis, 21; Henry S. Muir, 22 and Paul J . Schramel, 21. all of 337 Calle Felicidad. Jana L. Hichens, 19, of 25261 Barque Way, Dana Point, was also arrested. Bail was set at $5,000 each. Jud ge Griffin said that although he currently is hearing the felony court calendar, he will c>xempt him~clf from healing the cases of the five persons ar- rested. F r o mPage A J VALLERGA Sparta nburg assessor John Q. Ebert testified Monday, it wasn't unlit recenllv that he lc.irncd \'allerga received $3,000 from Hins haw. Furthermore, the OranJ,?c County assessor did nothing to earn the money. according lo Ebert.'s testimony. And, he said, Hinshaw's ser vices were limited to answer - ing quest ions asked during a series of phone calls he made to the Republican congressman's office in Washington, D.C. But, the form er Spartanbur~ assessor said, the decision lo make only limited use of the ser vices for which be agreed to pay Hinshaw $6,000 was his own. Eber t said that he agreed to pay a n at fee for the ser vices in mid-March, 1973, while the con- gressman and Yallerga were in Spartanburg. Shortly after that visit, lhc Orange County assessor was paid $714 to cover cons ulting services and expenses incurreu during his two-day visit. A Gra nd Jury indictment handed down May 6 charges VaJl erga with a conflkt of interest in his dealings with the South. Carolina county. Heiress' , ParkSuit In Court ByDOUGLASF8ITZSCHE Of tM Paur ,.,,.. S4Mf Arguments began Monday in a West Virginia lawsuit that could determine whether the Onmgc Coast will have a new 1,364-acre state park. The proposed pa rkland in- cludes 3.5 miles of beach and bluffs between Corona del M ~r and Laguna Beach and 1,100 in- land acres in Moro Canyon. run- ning from the coast lo the SOln Joaquin Hills ridgeline. Concluding eight years of negotiations. t he lrvime Com- pany offered the land lo the State D epartm e nt of Parks a nd Recreation for $7 .6 million last December. But the proposed Christmas Oay transfet wai; blocked by a suil filed in December in West Virginia by I rvine heiress J oan Irvine Smith. Mrs. Smith's suit contends the price is loo low, depriving shar eholders of ade- quate vnlue for the sale of com- pany assets. . Last December, when final negotiations were in progress, a Parks a nd Recreation Depart· ment spokesman cited the $15 million estim ated value of the land and called the sale, "a Christmas gift lo the people of California." In Judge Thomas Mcllugh's Kanawha County, W. Va., U.S. Circuit Court Monday, argu- ments compared the Irvine s ale with a sale of 80 acres of land in Huntington Beach to the state in 1974. "'\ Appearing as an adverse wit- ness for Mrs. Smith. William Shrewsbury, m an ager of real estate for the Irvine Company. testified on the shifting nature of coastal property values. The coastal commission system, he said, has lowered the value of some undeveloped coast due Lo building constraints. In a recent interview, Irvine Company President Raymond Watson characterized the park as an essential element in com - pany pla ns to develop its 10.000 acres in the unincorporated land between Corona del Mar. Laguna Beach and Irvine. Walson termed lhl! relatively low st.1le price a benefit lo both the company and the publk. Girl, 10, Hit By Car, Hurt A 10-year -old Huntington Beach girl was in stable condi- tion in a hospital intensive care unit loday after being struck by a <:ar Monday while bicycling. Huntington Beach police said Dorothy Renate Mischke, 17761 Fiinlslone Lane. and her brother, Arthur, 9. were riding their bicycles in a crosswalk al Warner Avenue and Edwards Strecl when the accident oc- curred. Officers said the car. driven by Edmond Francis Brick, 61, of 223 Walnut St., Newport Beach. was travelin g with the green light on Edwards Street, whe n the youngsters rode in lo his path. Arthur was not struck, police reported. Oil Spills Eyed MIAMI (UPI) Coast Guard planes a nd heli copters a r e watching two additional oil spills off the southeast Florida coast Puppet Show Three youne college students from Huntington Beach will put on a benefit puppet show Wednesday lo collect colonng bookis. crayons and storybooks for Fairview Stoite Hospital. Show limes are 11 : 15 a.m., 12: 15 p.m ., 1:45 p.m., 2:45 p.m., and 3:45 p.m. In the LeBard PDrk clubhouse near LeBard School on Craimer Lane in Huntington•Beach. Ad- mission is a coloring book, a box of Cl'3yons o~ a storybook. The frrls putting on the puppet show are Landa Colthur~t, Tticia Madison and Vana Kleinberg. Their puppets w11f perform a 4~mloute show based on the popular children's story "Chiarlotte's Web." Health Measure Ford Veto Finally • Nixed by Congress WAS HIN GTON (AP> - Congress today overrode Presi- d ent Ford's veto of a $2 billion health bill, the first time in five tries this session lhat the House mustered enough votes to enact into law a measure that Ford re· jected. The vote was 384 to 43, or 99 votes more than the two-thirds majority necessar;y to override. The Sen a te met in a rare weekend session Saturday to override Ford's veto67to15. In his veto m essage, Ford called the health package ex- cessively costly and said some programs duplicated existing health efforts. The health bill authorizes about $500 million less for health revenue sharing a nd nurse train- ing than in two separate bills which Ford vetoed at the end of the last Congress. Irvine Firm Wins Change In Land Use The Irvine Company survived a city a ttempt to set a time schedule for completion of its proposed new corporate offi ce complex at Newport Center Mon- day and instead won simple ap· prov al for a land-use change. The original proposal by the firm called for a ehange in the general plan w h ich would replace residential development with corporate offices al the acreage along the southeast cor ner of Jamboree Road anti Pacific Coast Highway. Debate has focused on lhc potential traffic impact of almost 200,000 square feet or new offices a nd corporate headqu a rters faci lities. Som e suggestions called for a s maller first phnse to be finished and evaluatc.>d before final permission t·amc for tht! total project. Councilman P aul Ryckoff tried with an a mendmc:nl Lo include the timetable. But that drew a 3-3 deadlock <Counci1111an Milfln Dostal w:.i s absent). And an original move to approve the general plan change "'ilh no strings attached passed, The council m ajority agreed that when the firm returns for ap- provals of te ntative tracl maps and other s pecific plans, the council c ould examine the timetable idea and perhaps in· elude it. He said, nevertheless. that the new bill authori zed more than his budget reQ._uesl and that the high cost "could not be tolerated." The bill includes aid to com- munity m ental health programs, training for registered nurses • medical help to m igrant workers and authority for a National Health Service Corps. In addition, it authorizes $30 million for federal programs to treat hypertension, $16 million for hemophilia treatment and blood separation centers, $17 million for rape prevention ant.I control ano $10 m illion for home health demonstration agencies. Meanwhile. the Harris poU says the American people ap- prove of the way President Ford has used his veto power by a 38-33 pe rcent margin . Twenty-nine percent say they are undecided. A nationwide survey of 1,497 adults s hbwed that most of Ford's s upport came from Ford's party m e mbers. Ford's use of his veto power found favor among 59 per cent of Republicans while 43 per cent of Democrats opposed him. the poll showed . In- dependent voters sided with the chief executive by 40·32 percent. with 28 percent undecided. "Americans side with Ford rather than with Congr ess because they a re concerne d ;.ibout curbing federal spending. Ford's s tated objective in over- riding the passi.lge of more con- gressional pro~ram." the Harris oq~anszalion concluded Monday. F rom Page A I JURY .•. defrauding of the county.·· Defense allorney Don Thamer w:Js to deliver his final argument to lhe jury later today. F'ive of the eight men indicted with Bertolino have been fined and placed on probation after pleading gui lly to re duced charges of submitting false state- ments. Retired aide George Upton. identified by Evans loday as a princ ipal defe ndant with Hinshaw and Vallerga, drew the stiffest sentence -a $2.500 fine and three years probation . ·Girl, 8 , Missing LOS ANGELES (AP).-· Sheriff's deputies continued their search today for an 8-year-old girl who was said by her mother to have possibly witnessed a murder. Two heli copters and a for ce of 30 s heriff's deputies searched throughout the night for Lashonda Lynn Hayden, report- ed missing Sunday night by her mother. The founder of the t:niversal Fdlowship of the Metropolitan Community Chur ch, the Rev Troy Perry, s <iys his organiza- tson 's membership has grown from 12 to 17,000 since he held his first church -.ervicc in 1968. and we shouldn't change it,'' Mc innis said. The assessor is also charged with embezzlement, grand theft and misappropriation in connec- tion with the money be receiH~d from Spartanburg, including lhc $3,000 funneled th rough Hinshaw. Spokesmen for the firm said that current scheduling shows a four-year process before the fi rst units are occupied at the site which planners hope will serve as a front-yard "showpiece" for the entire Newport Center com- pie~. . ------------------"------------- •' .. I don't thmk this church could have gottt•n off the ground in any other Lim~·." Perry said f ORANGE COAST .. T' ('), "'' t • I'·• '"' ' ''"'' ,,,, ,., #f'°'· lo\ r 1••1 t •11' "'-',,., • ~·rl 1 , •• 1 •+•fl~ <.."•''' ub••·-" 4111 t fr' • • ...... .,. 1t • .,,,.,,n• "' liUb'tW•• •I ,, I .. • , ,. I "' ...... ro., ... A/ti "f• ""'' l 1 t I U 1 I ,~ I I f t .... •••"'I \. •, h y1t ·1•1 1 I It v Hlfl l -·····.I I ., ' 'I ;\ _, "ill,."' ,~ ,, "1 1 ''' t •O '"" i1v ·•~"'n'"'"' '"" r• "-'. lHi ,...,.L11 "1'"'1 t•••ut 1 ·•' 1• W• .t ll"V !ii'"' r tn lit M1 " C ,1111111111.1 ~lftlft Roll' r I N W•.•.-d ._.. 't II .l•t• J,1c" R C.urlrv I• ' , ...... 1")f\l)f .,, .. Char Ir' H Lom. 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'· ''Electing by district would lead lo what goes on in places hke Los Angeles. where the coun- cilmen are provincial and there's a lot of pork-barreling, 11 the mayor said . The councilm en also disputed Store's theory thal shortening the councilmen's terms would be benefi c i a I When cross-examining Ebert. defense attorney Ric h ard Murphy drew admissions from him th1:1t the consulting fees wer~ an open transaction. Neither Hinshaw nor Vallerga indicated to him that the money paid them was for any purpose other than consulting services. Ebert testified. Elvis Gives Admirer a Car MEMPHIS, Tenn. <AP> - Mennie Person never expected to meet Elvis Presley while brows- ing m a car lot. much less wind1 up on his gift hst. Mrs. Person was caLQCht by surprise when she was admiring Presley's custom -made Cadillac . "I had my head over in it and he came oul or the back parking lot and asked if I liked it," said the bank telltt. "You don't ex- pect to find him on a car lot t.hat Umeof night." Mrs. Person, 33, said she was "stlll standinc there with my mouth open," but managed to compliment Presley on bis personal car ''He said, 'Thal one's mine, but I' JI buy you one'." abe said. .. He caught my by the arm and earned me ba~I< to t.be parking lot where he had come from and told meto 'pick one out'." The car Mrs. Person selected wa. a gold and white mode.I that lilts for about $11 ,SOO. ' Mrs. Person said that when Presley learned her birthday was today. he handed her the keyti to the car, wished her "Hap- py Birthday"' and told an aide to write her a check "to buy some clothes to go with the car." She did not disclose the a mount of the check. Mrs. Person ssid she t old Presley that s he and he r husband, Troy, already owned a Cadillac, a 1974 model, but said that didn't bother Presley. ··He told me to keep It, 11 she said. "He told me to give It to my husband or whatever we wanted to do." Presley's glft.s of automobiles over the years have gone to friends. professlonal assoc:lal.es and in one case, a pqUtJclan- former Shelby County Sheriff William Morris Jr. During the past weekend, Prelley bad a turboprop airplane valued al fl.2 miUjon delivered to Las Vee•• as• gilt to bis Iona· Ume man•1tr, Col. Tom Parker. ' ' I JOIN THE ESTABLISHMENT! There is a definite advantage in doing business with an EST ABU SHED local firm. We are inter ested in d oi ng business with ESTABLISHED mills. which we have determined after decades of doing business. There is no way, unfortunately, to tell how a mill will back its products until there is a problem! Carpet stores interested ONLY in price have no one to back them, and conseQuently walk away form complaints. A few times through the years. we have had to stand the cost o f replacement when a mill wouldn't. This will only happen once to us, and then the samples are in our trash can. What this means to our customers is that the lines we carry are from repu1able mills. and that they can buy with confidence from Alden ·s. *•••••• carpe DEN'S ••••••••••••••••• • ·installation .. custom draper111s t663 PLACENTIA AVENUE • COSTA Ml!SA, CALIF. 92627 • PHONE 6'6·,838 -6'6·23.S.S \ neaklng Up? . :canvas Shoes 'In' Again BJ MILTON MOSKOWITZ Woody Allen recenUy showed up ror a New York benefit wearing a tuxedo and sneakers. Aside from being a greot l"Omic artist. Woody Allen as a prophet an has own hm(!. ~neaker:. hove emerged from the gymnasium, they're on thelr way to be com mg a big fas bi on item , For a long time ~meakers have been the unirorm of the ~for ctuldren They apparently don't have mothers warn-i~g them that sneakers are bad for the feet, as my genera- tion did. Aod they obv10usly don't have school principals V(ho consider sneakers improper attire nut the big action today 1s in the adult m arke t The t ennis boom u1d wonders for ! tttas m arket. And so dtd ,Joogmg Some people Money Tree • .-re now Just Jog gm{.( mto the office with their sneakers 1• T HEY CAN DO 'l'llAT because sneakers are no longer Ail.her black or whale canvas s hoes They come an many dif- 1.iercnt colors. They're lighter than they used lo be. And •.-they're a\iatlable m leather. suede and nylon uppers Also. while many kids still have lo set tie for the $2.99 sneakers piled 10 bms in the supermarket. Dad and Mom will shell out up lo $36 ror lhe1rsncakers No one is sure about the pree1se number or sneake rs ·sold m the American market but an educated guess 1s 220 million pair a year . which works out lo one pall' for every m an, wom an and child 1n the country. Sneakers a re pouring in here from everywhere The Adidas and Puma brands are shipped from Germany. ·Tretorn as made m Sweden The Tiger and Nike brands «ome from J apan. And the biggest exporter of all 1s South Korea. Virtually every ma1or snea ker company now gels 90me of 1ls product from Kor ea South Korean footwear '3h1pments to the U.S. totaled $105 mdhon last year. Which as the biggest selling sneaker brand 10 the U S ? 'No one is sure of that either -and it depends on what piece or lhe market you 're talking about THE LARGEST U.S. manufacturer of sneakers is the lire company, Uniroyal, whose ma1or brands are Keds and 'Pro-Keds But Uniroyal has a huge private label busmess, turning out sneakers for J C Penney, Sears, Roebuck antl m any other store chams The second largest m anufacturer is Converse Rubber, a division or Eltra. Woody Allen wore a pair of Converses wath bis tux. But Converse is also a major supplier of sneakers ·sold under other labels The class segm ent Of lh1s market LS the performance sneaker. He re we're talking about the s hoes worn by athletes and amateurs who play a lot or tennis or basketball or who Jog regul arly. The key to this market has been held iiirecent years by Adidas. which ft gured out correctly that the way to sell sneakers was first to give the m away to star athletes a nd then let that v1s1 h1hty rub off on the mass amateur market F igures ar e c losely guarded m this h eld but I have seen one pnvate research report that placed U S sales of Adidas ;it nearly $100 m1lhon for roughly 25 percent of the athletic shoe business R1ght on its heels, m this report, was Con- verse. pnmanly because of its preeminenc.e m basketball. There was then a big drop lo third place Pro-Keds. whose sales w ere estimated at less than one half of Adidas' In fourth and fifth places, respectively, were Puma anu l'rctorn. TJIE NEWEST CONTENDER ts Pony, a brand that started in Canada less than two years ago and 1s now bein g licensed lo compames around the world. Pony plans to m ake a strong run at Adidas. It's sagnmg up athletes It's moving its sneaker hne mlo maJor department stores. ~nd it's unleashing the most competitive adverhsang campaign ever seen m the sneaker market. giving brand-by-brand ~mparisons. Pony will also make a big splash al the Olympic Games in Montreal next year. It's not only signing up athletes lo wear it.s shoes, it's signing up countnes For example, the entire Canadian team has already been committed to wear Ponys In the past this kind of compehllon for the athlete's foot has led to under-the-table payments Sports Illustrated once estimated that Adidas and Puma patd out cash bonuses of $100,000 to athletes at the 1968 Olympic Games m _l'dex1co City. WHETHER PONY IS prepared to do this, I don 'l know But I do know one thing. No one prud Woody Allen lo wear his Converse sneakers MARKET HIGHLIGHTS NYSE Index ASE Index Dow-Jones Ind S & P 500 Stocks IJW Yori< C\JPll -lhe following "'' ~ the stock\ that h•ve gained mos1 lo•t the m ost based on pjfrc-111 of on the Ntw York Stock •<"-'"~ Net and percon\aQe <llanQI!~ arP Ille ttnence bet-•n The prfv~ <10\inQ Ind lht current <l~ong prl<e OAINl!RS 1 Cll 111 Rily 21'. + ~-Up IS I 1 Cluett P 30 6V• + ~ Up II I a ..... ~ 2~ .. 1. lll> 10.0 .t S.f91rd IM <IV.+ I • Up I 1 S liltllMOe llllt It\+ ~. Up 7 I • C-lfo 311l 36'14 • l~ v. 6' 1 'l'SI (:Mp .0 1J~+ 4~ UP 6 1 ..&C#MIO Inv 2 • Yo ~ 6 7 t ~1 rrnprt 6V. + ~ ~,, 6 S l\0-M:,nc I IW>+ 4'to Ull 60 t H 40 • V• • V• Up S, t n """ ~· vst O\ • v. Up s.1 ~'<NA&.pl 2 10 7"' + \lo Up S • 47.20 8969 824.86 88.19 off off off off 0.31 0.65 2.97 0 .50 NMe \'ark l:i /tfftNf ;1 <"Ii t•«- Due t 0 l a t e trans missio n today's listing will not appear 1n the Daily Pilot. M lltftOl8 .111> ?•o+ 't\ Up 5,J 4$"Sl!MtC ... 11 • I Up 5 O 1---------------,-."1.lCotll .A2t> I .. \'o Up 4' O k'\IOOttD V ~ + 1iit Up 4 9 .. NEtt ct «Ml 1~1h t 1'11 Up 4.6 19 Amrwp COtp 7 'II+ '" Up 4 5 J11 ~llOtl C" 71H ~1 Up 4 5 t ,.-c Awt ·t 'Gt£__ Cotll ,;~~oe2r. ~Cltant Mio ·~~~·1: '0111'S11Pf\ u ., Sflldl r Auo LOH~~-~OH 111 1"1 ... Off \4) 21.-~ Off IU 2~-~-Off 13 6 1~.-~ Off It 5 ·~-It Off 10 1 111h-t v. Off IO 1 11>4-·~· Off 10 s ,,,,_ i.. Off 10. 149-~ Off IOI IYo-Yo Off 100 1JV.-P4o Off 's A llH* ri<· n" 10 /tf,,,,t Ac-tit~•• Due , 0 I ate transm1ss1on today·s hsting will not appear in the Daily Pilot \Hf! AevrtC 2 SC> 1ro1J 111v wu 'f~MOIC. Ill 10 'l Ett .. rn Air • Gftat A&P ·1'Cleft I llStr 2k s -v. Off '1 1111'a-IV. Off .. , ICW..-1 Off .. J 1---------------•'-'o-"' Off • 3 2~-~ °" to •• ,.,_ .. Off 1 7 a ly11<hSy 20 l"'ClttnSe •s. • .,.,_ \lo Off 7 7 6 -11 Off 7 7 ' ~Is Crell ""''°" 1 non .... Corptn .;..,.......,;:.._ ___________ ......., "i . •At . ' ... .. 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" n.u l \'tt 11~ ~ }~::-~lo t."Utll 1\.'l 1 11 u -. • Hiid A 1 t0a S I 1'V>+ Iii MttE~ HO 1100 )t\.'J • \Ii m·..'!Jf,ti,B i'' 11tl1r~1.~ •• ~ .. ~ .~ ~: ~~~ ~. tt~~1 ,'; 2t ·m ;~ ... ;'~ ==::~ ·: l: ,~ ~: ~ =~tj10 1 "1# m::·~ .. ,.. .. :.11 ,, B ~ ... ai ,)4 IJ 4Je ttl!I.-.. J;thllftM 0 14 10$ 21~• Hvi1\W)I In< t • lt\"t • M!<hST 1, ! ))~ U h -J'I ~a.t u ~"' • \'o I t • •• l•lnll JI\ "' ~ ...... 1•"' °" Hlollll Cll U II 14 1• .. v. Ml<~, , 13~ ,.......,, 17 )'°' 1"';, U • + \;; fc-d NC ji 11 -~ 1•--.+ \.. H\lttol'I 0 J2 S 11 1.-.-. 141 Mk,_..,. t 11'--14 ~Ill) I• 'J a """ :. ~~ • I ~-Ecbt!lr I ... t >7 1\li HvrttoC. • ..0 1S 4' H -V. Mlekllf't 1 I " U • ~ I '° IO ff ~'-• '-"'9 4 t " .,.. • • (G t. G n IS 1 1 1• --Hy0reorf\t U S t0 7 .. + "-MIOSeV 1,1.lt I tt.2 14\\--... C. ;. • i,\t-.. llt1' • U ~ '-Iii.Cl A.Ja1K I J\\ -1 1-Mlellend '°' 1 • t• Ull> • • , t 1111 I ~~,: an: .,,,.. .. ~ cos 5tt sou 1•1.. "' IC Ind 11• 4 •1 l.f\6-v. MllelL• 1.• • J 21\'t-~ ""A": u ,.~ .. I (Mo P L I '° j 111 1•1 .. + I• Cle<I ~mo u ,. • IC f'Jfi.... . s IS\4. "' Mllm~ .. 11 ...... ~ --0 .,.__ '(.arP pf 1 '1 a Ui. l:lc.Mpl * ::I ,,,. IOf "''i .,_ 1i. • MM&M I $1 f4 n---'-OWl!Oet to II l• lflA-~ Tt< t 60 4 4 11 ._ LIOln MeU H ... I~ I Id.... l 0. II t7~ "'"•MllWl .. I. I M • 1 1'-" \ -~ ... ~ SEATI'LE (UPI> -The Boeing Co. will ~ul back 8,000 employes this year through layoff and attrition, 1ccord- lng to a Boeln1 spokesman. With only a few days remaining ln July, Bootnf Is faclmt a blank sales month. The ul month the firm failed to recister even a •iniJe aircraft order was A11••11tof 19'71. JI J fl DAil. V PILOT Gihron To WFL's Chicago _CHIC AGO -Portly Abe G1bron, who once said ht? was on- ly a Nation<ll Football League man. has decided to take the hea~ COilC h1n1: job with the Chicago Winds of the World Foot- ball Lt'agut>. "I'm bal·k in football t.1ml l"m glad to be batk ... H 's bt.>en my life fo~ 27 years.·• said Gibron, who will replace Babe Parrilli. -16 Horttn D'ad HARRISBURG, Pa. -Arson c~used a fin· that dC'Slroyed 46 thoroughbred race horses al the. Penn Natwnal Hace Course. a stale pohcc official said Monduy. Fire marsha l Richard Guckdbrrgl'r said the fire began Sunday night when a n ammablc su bstanl'l' was poun..'CI aJI around a 50-stall b<trn in front of each stall und then ignik d. Officials put the monetary toss :ll belWl'l'I\ $125;000 and $175,000. Two horses survived the blaze, hut 0 1w of th.em had to be dl'stroyctl bcc;,iusc of burns. l'ifas l'i~toriows WAS lllNGTON -Guillermo Vilas dt>featcd Harold Solomon fl·I , 6·3 :\1onclay night to win the 7th annual W'1shington inlcrna-• tional tennis tournament, which was delayed for the second year in a row by rain. Czechs ft.in PRAG UE -Jan Kod es trounced F.rance's Francois J aufrrl'l 6·1. 7.5, 6·1 in the last singles matl·h Monday to hand Czechoslovakia <t 3·2 triumph in the finals of the European Zone B Davis Cup tournament. The victory sent the Czechs in- to the intercontinental finals ~gainst Australia. Natrtase Struggles LOUISVILLE, K y. -Third- scedrd Hie Nastase had to strug- gle to deft'at unht-ralded 1\jell J ohannsen 6·4. 5·7, 6·3 m the first round of the Sl00,000 Louisville Pro Tennis Classic Monday. Sixteenlh·ra nkcd Billy Martin w as the only other st'Cdt'CI player to compete Monday, defeating Rhodesia's Colin Dowd~well 3·6, 6-l, 6·2. · WTT R esults lftd1•U ll, P_,,,a ?J -~ -MPIV1llr bo-•I Kemm•:r·Shaw 7~ .)ft(! ""Ofl ht'bre•ktr. Ovulon·Oo~lrorn bccll Kemmer- :.hclw·J. Au.i1t\& I. Men -Slon,. bot Pattl'on 7·6 a nd won tif!bre.i~er. Stont'·Elar lh be:.ll Pd"''°" Au!.ltn6 •. Mixed -Melv1lle·BMln t>eal P. Au.,l1n J.Au~l1A 7-6 ClllO won ltt'breakrr. A -t,OOOat Edmonton. H•wah n . Clevtlillnd 10 Men -BuChl\011 be.it C,111in ... n t,2. New~ombf'· Odv•d'On l>edl C.r<H:bn1.,·C.1lt1n.in I I> .ind won 11ebre•kcr. Wo""'n -Court beat Haydc~Jon<!> "3; Jon- St•dPO De.ti C.our l·Ciour ,,,., t.-3. M ••td -Newtombt!-C.ourlay be.it Gracbner· SldP00-3 . A-l,dSt1tV1tlOrld. 8 C:.. TuMday, July 29, 1975 N ot a Strnday Drive Indy 500 race dlivcr George Snider suf· fered severe face and leg lacerations to go ·\.vi.th two brokcQ_ arms when the accident photographed ab~c look place Sunday in Winche s ter~ Indiana. The car was destroyed after flipping and rolling down a 45 .foot embankment. Snider i s hospitalized in Houston. Black Coach for Bell Ex-USC Star Wood Gets the Nod PHILADELPHIA C.\PJ -The World Football l.cag uc·s Philaddphia Bell namt•d Willie Wood as its head coach todav making him pro footl>atrs fir;i. black m entor in 50 year!>. Wood, a former All Pro sardy with the Grt-en B:.iy Pat·kl•r!> or the Nation;.il Foolb<lll Lc;.igue. succeeds Hon Waller, \\ho re · • Otl1ers Fi11ed signt-d last week. The last black head coach in pro football was Fritz Pollai'd, \\'ho coached several teams in the 1920s when the NFL was in its 111foncv. Wood, 41 , joined the Bell this year as defensive coordinator. His chief competition for the hl'ad JOb was assistant coach Joe .. Scalper Escapes: He Lost Money CINCIN~ATI (AP1 -One of six men c harged v.ith t1ckct scalping durin~ the Cincinnati Reds-Los Angeles Dodgers Sl'rics over the w eekend was found in· nocent Monday when he proved he actua lly took a loss on the re· sale. Municipal Court Judge Robert Gorham found David Hen· drickson, 26. of Roseville. Ohio, innocent. Gorman said the law requires a scalper to sell lhl· t ickets for more than he paid for them to be g uilty. Hendrickson was ;,irrestcd bv p olice outside R1verfro11t Stadium . for selling five $.1.50 tickets for S4 Saturday. Hendrickson said he bought the tickets through the American Autom obile Associalic. .. at Zanesville for $4.25. He said the AAA charged 75·cents for handl- .ing. Larry Basel, 33, Marion, Ind .• was fined $1 00 and Robert Par- rish, 68, Imlianapolis, Ind., was fined Sl50. G ardi, who was named interim eoordinator by Bell owner J ohn .Bosal'CO" hen Waller quit. It was not immediatt•ly known whether G ardi would slay with thl'leam. When he retired from playing pro football in J 972. Wood said : .. Eventually I would like to move into a head coaching position. ( think the lime will come when the NFL will ha ve a black coach." Wood was born in W;.ishington, •md played college ball ;.it the Univers it y o f Souther n California, whe r e he was a quarte rback. tie wasn·t picked in the pro draft after the 1959 season, so he wrote a letter to the late Vince Lombardi, then head coach and general manager of the Green Bay Packers. Lombardi signed Wood as a free agent and con ve1ted him to defe nsive back. Three years later. Wood led the NFL with nine interceptions. In his 12·year NFL career, he made All-Pro four limes and intercepted 48 passes for 699 yards and two touchdowns. He played in the firs t two Super Bowls, both Green Bay victor ies. Wood · r etired :.is a plC1yer in January 1972 lo become de· fensive bac·kfield coach for the San Diego Chargers. His home is in San Diego. Wood Get_s Chance, Reversing Season On Saturday, Roge r Dale Heatherly, 25, a manager of a Tennessee Knot Hole baseball · league team, was convicted of ch<:1rging SlO for a $3.50 ticket but Judge Joseph Luebbers r emitted the costs. J leatherly said he was trying to {!el rid of 25 tickets he bought for his Lafollette, Tenn .. team. The tt-am could not make the game because they had a tournament. Heatherly said he sold 10 of the tickets for the normal price and ~~ccepted a SlO offer for one ticket. He w as stuck with the re· maining 15 'tickets, he told the- judge. UCI NEITER BAGS JllCTORY VICTORIA. B.C.-UC Irvine's Eric Mann battled to a starting berth in the 78th B.C. Open tennis champio ns hips, which begin Mond a y , with m arat h o n triumphs in the first two qualify. ing rounds. Whal does a hitter do when he ·s in a s lump? Takes extra hitting, or course. So what docs a pitcher do when he can'L wi.n for losing? Yo u g uessed it, he throws more. "l had every coach stand over me a nd watch when I was goiog bad.'' Chicago White Sox pitcher Wilbur Wood said Monday night after he heat the California Angels 3-2. The coaches must have done something positive. Wood lost 10 in h is first 12 de- cisions a nd looked hke a cinch to Jose 20. ~ow that he has righted the ship. he may win that many. Wood 0s victory was his eighth in his last 11 decisions Monday ni~ht. collaborating with relief ace Rich Gossage on a six· bitter. "rm just thankful manager Chuck T anner stayed with me at the start," Wood said. "Now I thmk it·s paymg off.., In s pades. Given three runs to work on in the fifth. an inning keyed by Nyls Nyman 's bases·loaded single over a drawn-in Angels infield, Wood rolled into the eighth in· ning with a three-hitter m the works and a 3·0 lead. But with two out, he walked J erry Re m y. Mickey Rivers doubled him to third and Dave Collins ripped a two-run single lo center. That was it for Wood as T a nner called for his bullpen savior, Gossage, who r esponded with his 15th save althou~h he had to weather a walk and a base hit :JS the Angels m<ide threatening gestures in the ninth. CHICAGO •b r II b1 P. K~lley r1 4 0 1 0 ONll SS 4 0 1 0 t<o>rderwn cf • O O O ~.Joh,,..ondh 4 0 0 0 M(>llonlb 3 I 2 0 C: f>NJylb 3 I I 0 Ste11'1b ? I 0 0 Nyman II Jo I 7 Oown1ngc · I o o 1 "'-'P 0 0 0 0 C:.Os~P o O O o ~ALIFOANIA Perry 7b Rtvl f ~C t COlllMOh Slartonrl C:l\61~.ll> Hdrper 10 a .. 1..,11 l.Ahoudpn lo/ NPlll,.~Pf' H•m{>lon<. ~r1~pl\ "'''~~ \ ... llN>ohoh T..,1.tnap •b r II b1 3 1 1 0 A I 1 0 A 0 I 1 .. 0 ' 0 .. 0 0 0 3 0 I 0 ' 0 0 0 0 000 0 0 0 0 ' 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 J 0 I 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 2tl l 6 J Totll\ 31 ' ~ 2 Ch1ca90 • 000 000 000 3 C..lilorn1a 000 000 mo 1 OP 011c•QO 7. C:alllorn1a 1 LOB Cl\lcaoo 2, Ca1tlorn1a 1. 2B ·River~ !>B River~. SF Oown1r19. IP H RE~ 1111 SO WOOd IW, 10.UI /' • } 1 7 3 1 ~wqe I'• 1 0 0 1 I T.srwna IL.<> &I 'I 6 3 J 1 & •. s.i ... Go~!.39" 11S). HBP-by litMM IOown· "'91, by Wood <Hampton), by TaNM 1:.te1nl. T-2·21;A-:I0.'7l Hall of Fame Jockey Retires MIAMI (AP> -Hall of Fame jockey Eric Guerin, who rode 2.708 winners with earnings of more than Sl7 million, has ended his 34-year riding career. "Not many owners want a 50- year-old rider on their horse," said Guerin, who guided Native Dancer to 21 victories in 22 life- time starts. Guerin took out an assistant trainer's license· after makmg the announcem ent Monday. Guerin admitted he may be best re membe red for one race he didn •t win -when Dark Star beat Native Dancer, with Guerin aboard, in the 1953 Kentucky Derby. In the race, Guerin's mount was bumped at the first tum by Money Broker and the jockey was forc ed lo check Native Dancer a nd finished serond by a head. Blackbird Preys on Golfers DES MOINES, Jowa CAP) - The pond fronting the 11th tee at the Grandview GolC Course is n't the onlv hazard . Tht> wor~t hazard is a bird protect.mg its tun at the water's ed g_e. The red-winged blackbird swoops down at eve ry player ap- proaching the clump of bushes it ca1ls hom e. It makes special targets o( player s with bright caps or bald beads. clubhouse attenda nt. "He·s a vicious little rascal. You can tell he's mad." The male blackbird, with its brilliant red and yellow stripes on the wings , has becom e somewhat of a legend al the golf course. While players get through the hole by w a ving off the btrd's at· tacks with their golf clubs. most would hate to see the bird go. Roy Dunn. who wears a white golf cap while he's on the links, said the bird has been bothering him for two years. "Al (irst I was afraid be was mean and wanted to peck my eyes out. but he never tried," Ounn said. "He hales my white ha t. He hits it two or tllree times every lime I go by. "For awhile, I thought be was protecting babies. But he bothers golfers Crom spring to fall. There couldn't be babies in there all that time. Mann needed 21h hours to de- feat Ari zona Stat e·s Dave Rybacki, 7·6, 6·7, 6·3. then rallied t o beat Chris Duff of River College of Sacram ento, 5·7, 6·2, 6·1, Mann, who recently set a world record or playing 80 hours, five minutes, with Eric Larre, now goes into the 64-m an tourney with the other 15 qualifiers. ' . Ex-fan On Dodgers ATLANTA (AP) -"I hititjust b a rd enoug h to s queak it through," said Biff Pocoroba after slapping a two-run single in the eighth innning to give the Atlanta Braves a 5·3 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers Monday night. .. We 're b etter than this," Dodger Ron Cey said after the IJodgers Slate All 1•mu Oft KAllC (nO) .Julv"' Los Anoe Ir\ .st All,.nl• .July)() LO> A~lt'\ •t Alli)nl• July JI Lo~ Angeles <11 All,.nld .. )()om . • )Op rn. • 30p m. game. "We just fell into a rut. This year h as really been frustrating. We're not executing and we·re not doing much of anything well. So l guess we·re getting what we deserve." "Peopl e don'l expect us just to win." Cey s aid. ''They expect us to win the d ivision. Cincinnati has had everything going well for them and they desl·rve to be where they are.·' Andy M esser s milh, 13·8 , pitches for the Dodgers tonight against Atlanta·s John Odom, 0·4. "It was my most satisfying i,!ame in the ma1or leagues," said Pocoroba. a catcher. "We won. r had a good g<imc, and everything went well.., "Whetl t was a kid. I was a. Dod ger fan . That's my hometown, you know ... he added. .. Naturally, r wanted to be draft- ed by tht> Dodgers. and I was dis- appointed that I wusn·t. ·• Right-hander Burt Hooton h<.td held the Bra vcs to six hits in seven innings when he was re· lieved by Mike Marshall in the eighth. The Braves promptly lo~detl the bases on singles by SPORTS Earl William s, Rowland Orfice and Larvell Blanks. Pocoroba singled in two runs a nd winning pitcher Phil Niet<i-o s ingled in another as the BraY'es s nappe d a four-gam e losihg streak. · LOS ANGELES LOI)("\ 7b ""c:r .... 1ord II Wynne I M MShdll.> (,arYI>~ lb Hcll~rl C:evln Ru~Sl'll s' &le~~· pn Po-II< M.Mota ph Auerbach pr Hool~np PM:•Ott:ti: tf •b r II b1 s ' 1 0 • 0 1 I 4 1 I 0 0 0 0 0 • I I 0 .. ,, 0 0 I 0 t I '2 0 I 1 1 0 1 0 3 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0000 3 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 ..,,... ATLANTA c.arr II M P,.re11b Ev.sn'lb E . W1lhorns lb C.1lbrealh II' Lumrf Baku rr Goooson lb Olt1~e ct 81anll•ss Pocorob.l c P. N1t'krop •b r • 111t s 0 ,, 0 4 0 I 0 3100 •o~q o o·o o 0 0 0 0 3 2 'b 0 0 0 .0 0 4 1' ' 3 1 1 0 " 0 '3 J <I 0 I I Tot.tis ll l 10 J Totc1I> 34 s 1 t S LoSA1'19'l~S 100 100 ~3 Atlant" 011 coo 03• S l Powell 0 P Los Angell'• 1, .Allant• ?. l OB Lo' Angoet~' 7, A I lc1nta q, 28-LoP<'>. Powell W. Crciwlord. !>8 M. Perel, 8•~-'• Ev•ns. SF C:ey IP H A ER 89 SO Hooton t. 2 2 4 " M.lrshall (l,6·101 ~ 3 J o 11 P N1~krolW,IH) 'I 10 3 j J .. PB-PO<OrObd. r 2: 24 A-6.328. LA Hopes F~tdin~ Magic Number 45 For Red Machine CINCINNATI CAP) -With the latest Reds·Dodgers series end- ing in a draw, the numbers game seems to favor the Cincinnati club more with every passing day . Los Angeles left town Sunday 12':? games behind the Reds, the same distance that separated the two team s before the wcekcnd series. The Dodgers won two games and Cincinnati won a pair in the confrontation at Riverfront Stadium. The magic number, or Com· bination of Cincinnati wins and Dodger losses necessary for the Reds lo c lin c h the National League Western Division title, dropped to 45 with 59 games to go. ln other words. if Cincinnati wins ha lf of its r e m aining games lo finish wit h 96 victones, Los Angeles would be forced to win 44 of its last 58 contests, a .729 mark. . "Nine ty-six could be enough," said Reds manager Sparky An · derson. "But w e'll win more than half of our gam es." The record bears Ander son out. While the club has played .500 ball on the road this season, it has compiled an amazing 42·11 home mark, a . 791 pace, going in· to tonight's game. Cincinnati has 28 home games ;Jnd 31 conlests on the road re- maining. Los Angeles. on the other hand, is 30·21 at home and 24.29 at oir position ballparks prior to tonight. The Dodgers play ~l home 30 more times, with 28 re- maining road dates. So the Reds feel time is on theu· s ide. Not only was the lead m aintained during the series, exulted Anderson. "every day that goes by m eans it's one day closer until Don Gullett gets back." The le fthander was sidelined with a wrist fracture June 16 and was the c lub's top pitcher with a 9:3 mark when he was injured. Los An geles is far from con- ceding de fea t . however. The cluJ> left Cincinnati with the feeling that its prolonged hitting slump finally m ay be over. In Sunday 's series finale, a 5.3 Dodger win, Los Angeles hitters amassed l4 hits, their highest tota l 'in a nine inning game this year . Previou s ly the team average h a d dropped to the bot- tom of the league, a far cry from last year 's .272 mark, second in the league. • ''1 don't think anybody's gon~ play dead or give up,'' sa Dodgers managerWalter Alsl . ·'If they do, I 'll take them out a· putin somebody else." :~ "Ht' actually landed on one ~·s Panama hat and pecked at it and he's drawn blood from a couple or bald·hcaded guys, .. 1aid Chick Scbumaoo, a "He's the l>ra vcst little bird r ve ever seen," sayi; golfer Paul LaMunyon. "You take on a Saturday or Sunday, he's just. busier Ulan anythin1." "I think be just plain doesn't like folf en ... ~ lnNGIL, WHO'LL BE 15 WEDNESDAY, FOOLS AROUND AT HIS GLENDALE UHO I g .,, 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 t 0 J t s -J s ?. .,. ·r. .. 0 " Orange Coast EDITION I VOL 68, NO. 210, 3 SECTIONS, _.O PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A TUESDAY, JULY 29, 1975 To•lay's Clo Ing .Y. tocks c TEN CENTS :. ;Judge lfneo1'ers 'Pot Garden' on Coast, A s mcJl claims court case led to discovery or a n estimated 143 I srowing marijuana plants in San Clemente by a ··very surprised" Laguna Niguel Municipal Court judge and his bailiff Monday. Five people ranging in age from 19 to 24 were arrested and booked on alleged possession of marijuana for s a le . possession of marijuana and cultivation of marijuana. County Aides 'Used?' By GARY GRANVILLE 01 the D•lly Piiot St.Ill VENTURA -A witness in Orange County. Assessor Jack Vallerga's trial in Ventura Coun- ty testified today that county workers were used to prepare and t est a computerized ap- praisal system sold to Spartan- burg County, South Carolina, in 1973. Spartanburg paid Orange County $2,045 for the system. According to Vallerga's pro- secutor, he and former Orange county a ss e ssor Andrew Hinshaw were collectively paid $7.176 for cons ulting services and expenses connected with the sale. Assistant Orange County Dis- trict Attorney Michael Capizzi drew the admission from Dr. Robert Anderson that employes in the assessor's office were u!ied to prepare and test the appraisal sys tem. Hins haw is not charged with any crimes related to his even- wal profits from the sale. But Valle rga, who was a county official at the time, is defending himself ag4'insl seve n felony .. charges involving alleged con- flicts of interest brought against him by the Orange County Grand Jury. Anderson•s testimony opened the second day or the trial in Ven- tura County S uperior Court Judge Robert Shaw's courtroom. Anderson was identified as a physicist who represented Spartanburg in Orange County during n egotialions for the purchase or the system. Earlier. the man who agreed lo pay Hinshaw $6,000 for consult- ing services related to the ap- praisal system purchase said he didn't know half the fee was earmarked for Va llerga. As a m atter of fact. former <See VA LLERG A, Page A2) ArgurltellU In Benolino Trial Heard By TOM BARLEY Of the D•llY Pilot $1.1ff An Orange County Superior Court jury was told today that it had heard "more lhan ample'' evidence or d efendant James Bertolino's guilt in an asserted assessor's office conspiracy that led to the indictment or nine county employes. Deputy District Attorney William Evans told the panel in )lis fin a l argument that .Bertolino's name had repeatedly cropped up during evidence that employes had been illegally paid overtime and vacation pay. They drew those funds for lime actually spent working on former county assess or Andrew .Hinshaw's Congressional cam- paign in 1972, Evans charged in the courtroom. Evans asked the jury to find Bertolino, 52. of 24116 Via Madrugada, Mission Viejo, guil- t y or charges of grand thefi and conspiracy contained in a Grand Jury indictment. The prosecutor insisted before the jury that Bertolino was one of 8 number of men counted on by Hinshaw, county Assessor Jack Vallerga and convicted defen- dant George U pton to pay ore employes who worked on the Newport Beac h Republican's campaign. Evans attacked Hinshaw dur· ing his final argument as "a man who misused h is office and violated the publlr trust" by utillzlng county e mployes for his personal pollllcnl ambiUons. "IUs campaign was not eoing well at the time," Evans said. "'Thal ls when Rinahaw de· veloped a system that ulted for tbe use or assessor's emptoyes· aod alto led to the re~ated (Sle.IU&Y, Pa&eAl) Judge John Griffin went to the home at 337 Calle Felicidad to in- vestigate the landlord's conten- tions that the renters were not keeping up the property as agreed. The judge had a key to the home given to him by the le· nants during the small claims hearing about 10 days before. Judge Griffin said today he and Bailiff Ken Brumage walked around the property lookirig al the growing weeds and de~d rose bushes that were m atters of con- tention in the civil dispute. The judge a nd the bailiff went to the back deck and the sliding glass door was opened by a young man. ''He looked kind or strange," the judge said, "and he asked why there hadn't been 2A hours notice of the visit." The judge said no such notice was required in the case. After looking around the inside or the home briefly to determine the kind or care it was getting, the judge and the bailiff opened the front door to leave. ll opened onto a courtyard area concealed from the street by a wall and locked door. "I took four or five steps out in it and I thought to myself. gee. these kids sure are taking good care orthe plants here. "Then l s lopped, my bailiff s aid ·oh my'," Judge Griffin said. The judge said he was "very surprised" and after he realized there were five people in the house and only he and Lhe bailiff. he s aid he was a hllle ap· prehensi ve . San Clemente poli ce we r e called. The judge had lo call the court where two San Ciemertte narcotics om cers were awaiUnc his return to testify in a felony narcotics case. Police seited marijuana plants ranging 1n size from seedlings to fi ve feet tall. In the garage, they said, a special set up had been ar- ranged under fluorescent lamps for growing. In ddd ilion, officers seized CSee POT, Page A2} County Appeals \ Stung by Ruling on DA Trans/ er E1i Garde! The statue of King Louis IX in front of St. Louis' art museum appears about to be ch allenged by some modern knights in armor. Actually. the men are sandblasting tbe statue by a special technique used to clean outdoor bronze sculptures. Ford Saddened By Trip to Auschwitz OSWlECIM, Poland (U PI) - President 1''ord walked through a rusting barbed wire gate into the Nazi death camp known as Auschwitz today, laid a wreath to the estimated four million to six million victims, bowed his head and said : "Horrible. Unbelieva- ble. Horrible.'' Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger, walking behind Ford, bent his head in silance and sad- ness. "I had some family members here," the J e wis h German· born Kissinger recalled shortly before be and F ord visited Poland's reminder or man's in- humanity to m an. Ford, his brows fixed in a sad scowl. walked as if in a funeral procession from his helicopter down a path built over the cremated r em a ins of Adolf Hitler 's bloodiest death factory. He passed the dynamited crematorium wltere Nazi SS men burned the bodies or as many as 30,000 persons a night between 1940 and 1944. Tbe Polish guides rattled off the statistics of death. They told Ford bow the Zyklon-B gas was dropped into the chambers dis- guised as shower houses, how the corpses were stripped of gold teeth fillings and even human hair before being cremated. Ford looked grimly down at the empty bunks. "This monu m enl and lhe memory of those it honors in- spire us further to the dedicated .Pursuit or peace. cooperation a nd security for all peoples." But perhaps his · feelings and thoughts showed most in his face when he made an unscheduled tour of a barracks where Jews and other inmates were lodged in six-man bunks before being sent to the gas chambers. Kissinger did not bring his 13-year-old son, David. on this grisly side trip from an otherwise triumphal visit a mong the cheer- ing crowds of Wars aw and Krakow. BVRNS' REMARK COOLS MARKET NEW YO RK (UPI) -In a dramatic reversal, prices closed broadly lower in moderate trad- ing today on the New York Stock Exchange after Arthur Bums, the head of the Federal Reserve Board warned that the recent Russian grain deal could be infla- tionary. The Dow Jones industrial average, ahead more than nine points at the outset, lost 2.97 points to 824.86. Declines led ad- vances by about a nine-to-four margin. (Tables, A9 ). Prices also were lower in mode rate trading on the American Stock Exchange. Orange County supervisors to- day ordered County Counsel Adrian Kuyper to prepare an im- mediate appeal of a judge's ruling Monday that blocked transfer of 22 investigators from the District Attorney's Office to the Sheriff's Department. The board action followed a 45-minute executive session dur- in g which Kuype r briefed s upervisor s on alternative courses of action in the wake of Superior Court Judge Byron K. McMillan'sdecision. Kuyper said the judge's ruling was a "direct challenge to the board's constitutional power over budget and personnel." The county counsel advised supervisors that the court's de- Congress' Salaries Going Up? WASHINGTON (AP> -It might not be apparent from read· ing the title of the measure , but the Senate is considering a bill to increase the salaries of con- gressmen and other top federal officials. The bill is listed on the Senate's legislative calendar as an act to amend Title 39, United States -Code, to apply lo the Postal Service certain provisions of law providing for federal agency sa f ely pr og ram s and responsibilities a nd for other purposes. In an unannounced action, the Senate Post Office and Civil Service Committee added the pay raise section to a House- passed bill to require the Postal Service to comply with the Oc- cupational Safety and Healtb Act. The new section would give salary increases to Vice Presi- dent Nelson A. Rockefeller. Cabinet members. lop-level ex- ecutive offi cials, federal judges and members of Congress. The amount or the increases would depend on how much of a cost-of-living adjustment Presi- dent Ford recommends for gov- ernment employes in general. For example, a 5 percent in- crease would boost the annual pay of a member of Congress from $42,500 to $44,625. The Senate opened debate on the bill Monday ni ght. The legislation was defended as sim- ple justice and denounced as a backdoor attempt to insulate Congress from the effects of in- flation. Sen. Gale W. McGee ([).Wyo.). the Post OCCice committee chairman, said the raises are needed to attract talented people to governmenL jobs. He said the numbe r of people involved represent only l percent of the federal payroll . "Very. very sad. A tragic period. A tragic period.'' said Ford, so stung by the e01otions of Auschwitz that he talked in un- usually short sentences with his Polish host. The President penned this in- scription in the visiton' book; Jflesa Office Complex Plumbing Company Looted in Mesa Burglars who forced open an overhead garage door looted a Costa Mesa plum bing company's storage area of nearly $1,650 In tools and supplie5 over the weekend. Eugene E. West, of Sooner's Plumbing Company, 68> W. 17th St.. reported the break-in lo police after it wa~ dlscovcred when the ataff showul up for woTk Monday. He saJd the loss ln- cludes a nearly-new ~wered jadhammcr. plus 18 of COJ>- pcr tubinC. Plant Thief Nels $1,200 in Posies A potted plant pillerer with a penchant for purlolnlng posies on a I~ scale has looted a Costa Mesa office complex or more than $1,200 worth of ornamental horticulture and containers. Construction manager Wayne G. Rankin, of Margaret Hills Land and Exploration, l2S Baker St., reported the grand theft case when it was discovered Monday. He told police thjeves probably u•inc a truck metbodicall1 f • loaded up 12 large planter con· tainers from walkways and cor- ridors within the complex sometime during the weekend. Rankin described the 16-lnch pols as containing numerous mari1olds, clasus. Antat"Ctica blossoms and star jasmine plants. Not content with thievery. the Intruders 1ll4o UJ>rooted various other plants th.a&. couldDti be car- rledaway, pollcosald. cision would have an immediate effect on other board decisions re- lated to the budget. ''Butor overriding concern is its effect on the rules of the game," Kuyper said. "If it stands, it drastically alters oor understand- ing of the governing law or the state as it relates to county gov- ernment." Kuyper said in effect it gives in- dividual county officers such as Hicks the right tom akeindividual determinations on budgeting and placement of personnel. "This is the overriding princi- ple by which the board is guided and l wouldn't know how to advise the board in procedures in the futur e if the decis ion is allowed to stand." the county counsel said. .Kuyper said after the meeting he will probably take hjs case to the Fourth District Court of Ap· peals in San Bernardino for a new ruling. He said it is the first time to his know ledge that the judiciary has directly challenged a local governing board's budget· ingpowers. Judge McMillan closed a Morr • day hearing into the issue by firm- ly ruling that his court had jurisdiction to uphold or reject the supervisors ' decision to transfer 22 investigators to Gates. ''That action was arbitrary and capricious." he commented. "I have heard enough here today (See HICKS, PageA2) OC· Airport 'Test' Switches Takeoffs Normal operations at Orange County Airport were reversed early today as four jet airliners approached for landings over Upper Newport Bay and eight took off over industrial areas to the north of the San Diego freeway. Norm Ewers, noise specialist at the county airport, explained the takeoff a nd landing patterns were turned around between 7 and 9 a.m. as part of a noise monitoring experiment. The one-morning test was con· ducted al the request of Daniel, Mann, J ohnson and Mendenhall <DMJM ), the consulting firm that is preparing an environmen-~ tat impacl report on the airport and its environs. "This w as the last day of noise sampling and we wanted to de- termine noise levels us ing the re- verse runway system," Ewerc; said. Ewers said today's unan- nounced test was designed to ob- tain the most normal type of re- action from residents of homes at both ends of the airport. Joint Meet to Eye Industrial ·zones Specific desi gnations for various industrial zones in the ci- ty will be up for discus sion tonight when the Costa Mesa City Council and planning com- mission meet in joint study session. Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley pre- dicted the proposed industrial zone revision could generate lengthy conversation. A report is expected at the 7:30 p .m. meAing in the lsl floor con· Distaff Drug Ring Suspects Held in Jail An alleged all-female cocame dealing operation has led to the arrest of two Costa Mesa women accused of selling the drug to un- dercover agents . Costa Mesa police revealed today. Investigators said the two women are to be arraigned Aug. 4 in Harbor Judicial District. Court. Kathleen D. Raley, 25. of 228 Albert Place, Costa Mesa and Catherine A. Heald, 24, of 424 Jfamilton St., Apt. B. Costa Mesa, arc tree on $l0,000 bail each. They were booked into Orange County Jail late Friday following their arrests on charges or sale of ~aine,. according to narcotics Detective Dave Brooks. He alleged that Miss Haley and Miss Heald were involved in the sale of about one gram of cocaine in t.h.ree separate purchases by police. Detective Brooks added that information developed during the month-long invatigation mates il ap~ar the costly druC is bcinc distributed by an all· !emaJeamu,1Ung and sales ring. ''It's somethinc we've never aom before:• be sakl. ference room behind council chambers on planning com· missioners' w ork on the in· dustrial zones to date. Currently, different zones - mostly on the city's west side - are designated in letters, such as M ·L. M-G and the like to es tablish them as light in- dustrial, medium industrial and other categories. Mayor Pinkley said great con- fusion ·was generated by these new terms, so the city is con- sidering junking the newer, more complicated codes and going back to a s implified version. He said many west side proper- ty owners had complained that under the new system they weren't even certain what their land was zoned for, nor what market value to place upon it. Or:•_g:dA~•t Weatlaer Increasing low clouds and fog Wednesday with • hazy sunshine a fter mid· morning at the beaches. Continued cool. Highs near 70 at the s trand to the mid-80s inland. · INSIDE TODAY A 50·year ·old, 73 -foot BChooncr is docked in Newport Harbor. looking none the wor$e for wear after many ad~ vtnturcs. See P.age 8 5. Index I .A.f DAIL V PILOT c 0.11, P•lo\ $1•11 P""'• l'ro•P~AJ HICKS ... to aausry me that the board bad no ricbtto act In this matter." Sevier wisucce~~fully argued that the board's clt•t:1~ion wm; always open to ('halltmge an the rorm of a referentlu111, recall of county officials. or an election. .. The Dis trict Atlom~y chose to bring 1 hl' 1!)s ue to the courtroom.'' Judge Mc Millan commentt•d. "lie felt that we had jurisdiclion in thf> mutter and I :im o bvious ly u~H·l'in14 w1lh .... , .. 1urn. Hicks· rnvcsl1gaturs grt:ettd lh<' ruling with s ighl:> of relief. ''None of us wanted this transfer,'' commented a veteran investigator who asked not to b4! identified ... But quill' apart from our personal feelings there was no doubt that a crazy move of this kind would have seriously ham- pered the operation or this of· fice.'' Chie f Deputy Dis trict Attorney James Enright s tressed that point during the hearing before Judge McMillan. Puppet Show ti ,.. n Beach will Three young college students from Hun n6 ·r, ct cotorin ~ put on a beneflt puppt!t show Wedne~a¥ lo c:o. e. Hos nt~il books, crayons and storybooks for fa1rv1ew Slate 1 2 45 S · i1·1s 12·15 Pm l .45 p.m .. how times ure . a.m.. · · ·• 1 bhousc nc~1r p.m .• and 3 :4~p.m . ln the LeBard Par~ ,. u ch Ad LeBard School on Crahner Lane in Huntington Bea ooOk mission is a coloring book, a box or crayons 0~ a ~torylthur~t. The girls putting on the puppe~ show are L:anda Coets will Tricia Madison and Vana Kleinberg. Their puph'tdren's perform a 45-minute show based on the popular c 1 · story "Charlotte's Web." Finger Lost In Accident; School Sued From Page A 1 VALLERGA Spartanburg assei;sor .John . Q Ebert testified Mondt.1y. al w:isn 11. h l('Jl'Ol'( until recently th:it c . im Vallerga received $3,000 fat Hinshaw. 0 gc Furthermore, the ran County assessor did nothing to earn the money. according lo Ebert ·s testimony. . . • POT IN THE POTS PROVED SURPRISING TO A JUDGE AND HIS BAILIFF IN SAN CLEMENTE Five Arrested on Various Mertjuana Charges After Accidental Discovery "These inves \igators ar e a vital part of our erime righting forces ... Enright said. "And it has been made cle~r in r ecent weeks that the pub1'c" is utterly ,Jpposcd to sue h c <J valicr act ion." Newport-Mesa Unified School District trustees were sued for unspecified damages Monday by a Newport Harbor High School girt who, according to the suit, lost them iddle finger or her right hand in a gym class accident last Feb.14. Debbie Beatty claims in the Orange County Superior Court action filed by her father, John -Beatty. 317 Ramq_na Place. Costa Mesa. that negligence by school authorities caused the a ccident. And h e said. Jlln!)h<tW " service's were limited to ans\\'t.>r ing questions a::.kcd tlunng •1 series or phom· calls he m;u!t· to the Republic;.in C'ongrc·.,~01•111 office in Wu shingtou. l>.C' llealil1 /tleasure Ford Veto Finally Nixed by Congress WA S HIN GTON CAP> - Congress today O\'<'rrode Presi- dent Ford's veto of 3 S2 billion . health bill, the first time in five tries this session that the r louse mustered enough voles tu cn<td ·Coast Realtor Ogden Sogn I Dead at 64 1''uncral scrvidcs arl· .s t:l ~hurs day for Harbor Area Realtor O~dt•n Sog n. <~1. who clit•d ~londay or ~} hl·.11·1 a1lml·nl that was only recently <l1~co' l'red. Rites for Mr. Soi!n will be al I p .m. tn Prince of P<.·aC'c Lutheran Church. Co:-.tJ ~ksa. under direction of Bt•ll Rroadway • .Mortuary. A r esident of Or:mgc County ·-.since 1957. Mr. Sogn formerly owned we~tcliff Liquor!> and was employed by liniqut• Homes as a Realtor for eighl) e::ir ... He was a memb1.:r of the Newport ll arbor·L'o:.la Mesa Board of Realtor s ;ind h;id been honored as Ollt• of lhl'll' top pro perty salesm en. according to his . friend and employer . Jim W~. Survivors inc lude his wife Tn ez. of t h e h ome at 2722 Sandpiper Drive. Costa Me!'.a. a :;on, My r1rn of LaVerne . a brother. John of La~ Vegas: <1 sis· , ter, Carol Swenson of New J ersey; a niece and nephew, and eight grand chi Id ren Water Board .: To Sell Land 'I. Bids ''ill be openl'd in u month for sale of a surplui. pi e-shaped p<1rccl of land with a minimum • "alue of Sll ,000. the C'osta M l'~a County WatC'r District has an- nounced. The properly is ju:-.t off thl' San Diego Frel'w:ly near Garlingford Street and College Avenue in the Halecrest Park area of Cos\a M~sa. Water Dis trict directors ::.ip- proved disposing of the small parcel which was the site of the l:\1 CWD"s H::.ile('rest Well, which is no ton~cr in use. ORANGE COAST into law a measure that Ford re· jected. The "·ote was 384 to 43, or 99 votes more than the two-thirds majority necessary lo override. The Senate met in· a r <.1re wce\(end session Saturday to o\'erride Ford's veto 67 to 15. In his veto message, Ford t·alled the health package c"· t'l'~si \'ely costly ;rnd sajd some program ::. cluplicalcd cxi~t111~ health dforts Till' hL•alth bill ;1ulhon zes ;1boul S500 million less for health n 'Vl'lllll' sharing and nurSL' tr:lin· 111~ tht1n in two separate hills "hi ch Ford v etoed at the end or the last Congress. Ill' said, nevertheless. that the rww bill authorized more than his hudgel requesl and that the high c:ost "could not be tolerated." The bill includes aid to com· munity mental health programs, lraining for registered nurses, medical help lo migrant workers and a uthority for a National J leallh Service Corps. A r:..itionwide survey of l,497 adul s showed that. most. or Ford's su pport · came from Ford's pilrty members. f<'ord 's use of his veto power found favor <tmong 59 percent of Republicans while 43 percent of Democrats opposed him. the poll showed. In· dependent voters s ided with the chief executi vc by 40-32 pe rcent. with 28 percent undecided. "Americans side with Ford r <• th er l h a n w i t h Con g r e s s because they are concerned about curbing federal spending, Ford's stated objective in o ver· riding the passaS:?e or more con· gressional program." the Harns organization concluded Monday. E'ro,,. Page Al JURY ••• defrauding of the counl}." Defense attorney Don Thamcr w.is lo deliver his fi nal argument. to the jury later today. Five of the eight men indicted with Bertolino have been fined :ind placed on p robation after pleading g uilty to r educed <·harges or s ubmitting false state· men ts. Retired aide George Upton. identified by E..-ans today as a principal d e fendant with Hinshaw <1nd Valler{!a. drew the stiffest sentence -a $2,500 Cine <1 nd three years probation. f"rom Page A I POT ... n.1n.·ot1t':-. p.i r.1phern:.1liJ, pill:-. and for inves tigation som"' musica l in struments. stc:reo equjpm<'lll and power tools which they believe may have been taken in hurg larics. Arres ted were Loren R . Parkhurst Jr .. 24 ; Richard W. Curtis. 21: Henry S. Muir, 22 and Paul J . Schramel. 21, all of 337 Calle Felicidad. Jana L. Hichens . 19. of 25261 Barque Way. Dana Poinl. was also arrested. Bail was set.al $5.000 each. TONIGHT '·GODSPF.LL'' -South Coast RC'pcrlory Theater. through Sun. Mp.m . WF.DNESDAY,JULVJO ''CABARET" -Orange Coast College s ummer mus ical, Auditorium. July 30, 31, August 1, :! 8.30 p.m . Adm. $2. :\tUSIC OF AMERICA South Coast Village. 8 p .m. UCI LECTURE -"Interior Design." Room 204 Humanities Hall. 7 p.m . F.nrighl condemnt..'<.1 the board ;.1pproval of the trans fer as "hulf witted" <.1nd w;1rncd that any dilution of lhL' district attorney's inves tigative rorce "would seriously hinder our crime fight · ing capability ... Hicks declined to comm~t on the ruling late Monday. but in· d1caled he will be prepared lo discuss the issue when Judge McMillan issues the final draft of his ruling and signs the writ of mandate sought by the district attorney. Judge McMillan made it clear that the freezing or the transfer will rema\n an effect until he signs the writ Gay Cluuch Group Meets DALLAS CAP> More than 2.500 member s of one of the na· tion's lar gest r eligious organiza- tions for homos exuals begins its annual meeting here today. · The founder of the Universal Fellowship of the Metropolitan Community Church, the Rev. Troy Perry. says his organiza- tion ·s membership has grown from 12 to 17 ,000 since he held his first church service in 1968. "I don't think this church could have ~otlen off lhC' ground in any other ti mr .' · Perry said. The lawsuit states that the in· jured girl was helping fold a ping pong table when the legs or the e-quipment collapsed and trapped her hand in the center divider, s napping off her linger. The action seeks the awarding of damages by a trial court judge or jury. Mesan Jailed In Rape Try Orange County sheriff's of. ricers have jailed a Costa Mesan identified by them as t he man who attempted to rape an 18· year-old girl Sunday in her El Toro home. Charges of attempted rape have been filed against Charles Campbell, 19, or 301 Avocado St., Costa Mesa, deputies reported. He was arrested al his apart- ment. They said Campbell is believed to be the m an who attacked the victim Sunday as s he slept in the upstairs bedroom at the El Toro home of her parents. The in· truder fl ed as the parents responded to the girl's screams for help. Deputies identified Campbell as a former boy friend of the vi<' tim Heart Attack Fells Mesan R. L. Wilson Newport Man Ruled Guilty of Murder Death came s uddenJy Monday Michael Lawrence Carden of for Costa Mesan Robert L . Newport Beach was found guilty Wilson, who was found sitting in of second degree murder Mon- his easy c hair, a magnifyinJ{ day night after being tried forth_e glass in his hand and a heavy die· killing or a Claremonl bus1- tionary at his feet where it w<1s nessman. dropped. Orange County Superior Judge Police w <'re called by a William S. Lee set Sept. 10 as the neighbor, Janet T. Ricks. who dale he will sentence Carden on rhecked W1l son 's <.1partmcnt al the sC'cond degree conviction re- 2868 La Salle Ave . to sec if th•· at·hed by a jury after a short de· 6.5-year-old heart p::itient was <tll liberation. n ght. Carden. 34, of 614 West Ocean Investigators said he w<.1s ap Front. faces a possible. s tate parently fatally stri c·kcn so swift . prison term of 10 vears to hfe for ly lhul he didn't try lo arise from the murder of 0 F.lmer Julius the chair and seek help. Boehlke. 48. He is free on bail Coroner's deputies said lo<h1y pending sentencing. il was a natural death due to IL was testified that Boehlke's heart ailment and arrangemenL'i body was found on the back doorstep of Carden's home J an. 26 shortly after the two men had been seen quarreling in a nearby bar. Police said Boehlke had been shot once in the chest. A prosecution witness testified that Boehlke h ad repeatedly threatened to "take out a con- tract " on Carden and had kicked Carden's jacket around the bar· room floor when the defendant refused to fight. Arresting officers s aid neighbors told them they heard a number of s hots fired in the \'icinity or the Carden home between 3 a.m. and 4 a.m . on the day of the killing. But. the form t•r Sp.1r1 .111111111! a ssc·ssor said. lh(' cl1·1'1"1'111 111 make only limill'll \l.i\' of llu · :-.C'rviccs for whid1 he agn·1•d 11· p;iy Hins haw $6.000 W<JS l11s uY.1> +:bt•rt said thut tic ;ij!rt'l'tl lo pay a flat fee for the sen ·,,, .. 11 mid·M <irch. 1973. while the r11n· gressman and Vallerga were 111 Spartanburg. Shortly afler that visit, the Orange County assessor "'~•'> paid $714 to cover consulting serviceio and expenses 1Jll·urn:d during his two-day v1sjt. A. Grand Jury indictment handed . down May· 6 charges Vallerga with a conflict of interest in his dealings wilh the South Carolina county. The assessor is <Jlso di.irg1·d with embezzlement, gr;ind llwfl und misappropriation in con11t·• .. lion with the money he rccc·iw1I from Spartanburg. ineluding the $3.000 funneled t hrough Hinsh;iv. w .... hcn cross·cxam1111ng Ebi·rl defense a tl o r n t• y Rich a r tl Murphy drew admissions from him that the consulting fees were an open transaction. Neither Hins haw nor V:illcrga indicated to him lhat the money paid them was for any purpose other than consulting services. Ebert testifi ed. - Boy Dragged _ Beneath Car A Costa Mesa boy Psc·;1µc·J \\;thoul serious injury Mont.l<i\' when he and his bicyl'lc wNc dragged beneath a c;1r. John J. Reveia, 13, of 2001 Siln· ta Ana Ave., was treated Cit Costa Mesa Memorial Hospit;,i l for a leg laceration and rclea~cd following the accident at We~l 19th Street and Ma pie Avenue•. Police said Nancy J. Zuver. 17, of 443 Hamilton Street, Costa Mesa, was apparently making· a left turn when her car collide1l with Reveia and his bicyck. which went under the auto. Officers said conni clin~ :t<'- counts of how the <:ar-versu~ bike collision occurred madl· 1l 1m· possible to determine if l'ilher ken ager was al r .. iult. Oil Spills Ey~d MIAMI (UPI > Coa~l Guard planes ahd helicoptl'r s arc watching two additional <>ii spills off the southeast F1orid:l co:.i'"L were being handled by the Nep· -:,...;.-;;_...;..;;;,.. ____________________________________ _, tune Society or Newport Beach. No memorial service had yet been set for Mr. Wilson, whose ashes will be scattered at sea, ac· cording lo society spokesmen who said the family usually docs this through a church. He leaves a son Steven. of Anaheim and a daughter Deborah. of San Francis co. JOIN THE ESTABLISHMENT! There is a definite advantage in doing business with an ESTABLISHED local firm. DAILY PILOT 'Piek One Out' W e are interested 1n doing business wi th ESTABUSHED mills. which we have determined after decades of doing business. There is no way. unfortunately. to tell how a mill will back its products until there is a problem! Carpet stores interested ONLY in price have no one to back them. and conseQuently walk away form complaints. I I I I I 'I Robert N WN>fl P'f''ll.11')1111"1 •M P'uDh•N1 Jack R Cur1Pv Wt( ft> ,.,'"'iOf',,1 ianct (,,irR!'f•t MiltMO"'i Thoma<, 1<ei>111I ldtll>< Thomas A. Murphin(' M.4f"4U)tf\Q l f!t,.\QI' I,, Charle<." Loo<. R1chc\rd r>. N<11I A\'11.•\f•f'" M41'\A0•"41 d!IOt\ Cos~ Me~ Office l)O W•\t "•• S,ffHt M.lthf"Q •rtft,, , r o &o• t ..o •~t• Ot~r Offices ._,,,.,Oil"•t A,.,.,,. )•HNt•tr"t"" tt.,Hl"I .~. f ... "' t .... , .,. • ,., ' .,. .... W\t ;;!Of\ f\t•<.., \fl /\ ... A 11 ~ f .. , •• .., • ~·•n..ft V41tfllil'.-)\)oft•••l~1'4o•I ,., "-""'It~',, _, • ., T•lephoM 1114) M2-4J11 Cl•ssltled Advt!rtls1n9 M2 S.11 fOO•'''ll'I' 11 I 'lt4"J"' r~A t ••\ilet,,tll1111t ,.....,,~,., f ~ I" "' to• • 11 ••t Qf"I\ r-0••...-1 d 6"*•"'' •• "'""'"''''"'~""'' "'"' .. '" '"•• r .. ,.•N\\t,•41 ••'"Ovt ._..,, •• ••• f'ft•\\•On •' 'l'ftVf'l •J*N r rl'\l\d Cl•\\ ..,,1.-0-P•":t •• to\ttt ,._,..,. tfOff"•• '"~ ,, .. Mlr,fWt,_,,,.,., \JOl~Nf, ..... '4 . .,_1111"""11 ........ dt\lllWll-UOO .,,,, Elvis Gives Admirer a Car MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) Mennie Person never expected to meet Elvis Presley wrule brows· ing in a car lot. much less wi.nd up on his gift list. Mrs. Person was caught by surprise w hen s he was admiring Presley's custom -made Cadillac. • • J had my head over in it and he came out of the back parking lot and asked if J liked it," said the bank te ller. ''You don't ex- pect to find him on a car tot that time of night.·· Mrs. Person. 33, said she was "still standing there with my mouth open." but managed to complim ent Presley on his personal car. "He said. 'That one's mine, but I'll buy you one'.'' shesnid. "He caught my by the arm •nd canied m e back to the parking lot where he h ad come from and told me to 'pickoneout'." The car Mrs. Penoo selected wa~ a gold and while model that lists for abotst $11 ,500 . Mrs. Person s aid that when Pn•s lcy learne d her birthday \.\as lo<foy. he handed her the keys lo the car. wished her "Hap· py Birthday'' a nd told an aide to write her a check "to buy some clothes to go with the car."· She did not disclose the amount or the check. Mrs. Person said s he told Pres l ey that s he and her husband, Troy. already owned a Cadillac, a 1974 model, but said that didn't bother Presley. "He told me to keep it." she said. "He told m e to give it to my husband or whatever we wanted to do." Presley's gifts of automobiles over the yea rs have gone to friends. professional associates and in one case. a politician- formcr Shelby County Sheriff Wllliam Morn Jr. Durln1 the past weekend. Pre.<Jley had a turboprop airplane valued al $1.2 million dellvered to t.a1 Vegu as a gift t.o bl1 lon1· time manager. Col. Tom Parker. I I A tew tames through the years. we have had to stand the cost of replacement when a mill wouldn't. This will only happen once to us, and then the samples are in our trash can. What this means to our customers is that the lines we carry are from reputable mills. and that they can buy with confidence from Alden's. DEN'S : iiisiailatioii:. custom drapsriss tJC NO nom l66J PLACENTIA AVENUE • COSTA MES~ CALlF. 9~627 • PHONE 646-48;l8 -646 235$ I .. ,