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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-06-26 - Orange Coast Pilot7 Dollar Plummets To Reeord Lows 0 Japan. M~~ket Mali Tied, Gagg~d t •• . . In Irvine Hotel I • ) , ~ . . Room Robb.e~y . . \ .... • . , DAILY PILOT .oc. Man Prime Suspert . . -* * * 10< * * * '" San .Juan Slaging MONDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 26, 1978 VOL. 11, NO, 117, J SllCTIONS, JO PAGES Engine Failure Blamed • TORONTO (AP> -An Air Canada DC·9 jetliner lost power in one engine on takeoff and crashed into a ravine at Toronto International Airport today, killing three people and injuring at tfast 45 others among the 107 • aboard, authorities r~ported. The twin-engine Jct, on a domestic night. skidded off the runway and plunged about 30 feet into the ravine, a Canadian trans portation department spokesman sa1<l. One witness said it broke into three pit'~cs, but no fire wa1' reported. Officials al a hospital where some of the injured were taken said al least eight were seriously hurt. Air Canada spokesman Brock Stewart said the pilot had to abort the takeoff when he lo~t power 1n one of the rear. mounted engines, but was una· ble to stop on the runway and tbe plane went nose-first into the ravine. Stewart said the tail section broke off and the wings were 4amaged. Airport workers and firemen doused the wings w1lh foam to prevent the fuel tanks Crom catching fire and explod· ing. The jetliner. Flight 189, had arrived from Ollawa and was bound for Winnipeg and Van· couver wjth 102 passengers and five crew memb.ers aboard when the accident occurred at about 8:15a.m. Reports on the number injured varied but most said between 45 and SS persons were taken to h ospitals near the airport. situated in Mississauga. about 12 miles northwest of downtown Toronto. L. A. Worsley. associate ad· ministrator at Eto b1coke <See PIANE, Page A2) Damages Aimrded HAMILTON. Ontario <AP> -The. Ontario Supreme Court ha s awarded a Hamilton man nearly $9,000 in damages .'ind costs because a Pepsi- Cola bottle cap blew off and bit him in \he eye. Samuel MercanU . 30, won bis suit against Pepsi· Cota Co. ol Canada and a Hamlllon reslauranl owner after a cataract formed on hi• eye one month after the accident. Mercanti said an employee of bls garage got the soft drink from the restaurant. He saJd that wben be &tarted to open it, tbe c:ap blew off and atruck blm ln the ne. • ' . AP Wlr9pNtlO .. Midway City Man Suspect Sa~ght . . . . ·l In SJC ·Slaying t Orange County Sheriff's or-shooting. ficers continued today to seek a Members or the Arbiso fami~ man they desctibe as a prime said· rosary will' be recited for s uspect in the murder or ttre·viclim at 7:30 tonight m the Carmelita Arbiso, of San Juan old ·miss ion. Mas s will be Capistrano. celebrated there.at 9 a.m. Tu.es- Inyestiga!Qr Y!'.ilJi~ Stansbury day with interment to follow ~t .idlml.if'led -t~e·..su1;~ct:.36-:-p-aU(.::· ltely·Sepulcber €emetery in BJ Benjamin Black, 47, of Midway Modena. · , City. w~!>· he said, was se~n _at . Mrs. Arbiso ·W<1s a long tim~ the A'rb1so home shortly before member of the San Jua:!f WRECKAGE OF AIR CANADA PLANE LIES IN RAVINE NEAR TORONTO AIRPORT At Least Three People Killed, 45 Others Injured As Craft Skids Off Runway the killing. Capistrano Historic a!-Societ,. Mrs. Arbiso, 64. was shot to und a popular parish worker al death in her home al 31421 La the old mission. ·, t1 4 A.ttaekers ~a llera. DffiCJ!rs said the sqQOl· Sti.e is. s urvived by he;, mg occurred shortly after Black husband. Paul; a dau ghlet~ wasseentoenterlhehome. Marie Rodman· of Laguna' Mrs. Arbiso was the wire of Niguel; a stepdaughter, Ali · Paul Arbiso, 83, said lo be the Gasteleum of Anaheim; fo $50,000 Loot Taken From Irvine Home Man Tied, Robbed oldest living native or San Juan brothers. Frank. -Louie. Euge C.apistrano. He is a gardener at and Raymond O'Campo all the Mission and each mornJng Santa Ana and 11 grandchildrc· rings the mission bell. · • Jewelry and antiques. valued at up to S50,1Xl0, were taken tn lhe burglary of an Irvine home Saturday. pohce reported In Irvine Hotel Stansbury said Black G p d threatened a( least one other ays ~ra e . 1 person with . a gun before he ~ wenctoTheArblsohome. · , · Thomas Skah1ll , 49. an in duslrial real estate agenl, of 51 Nighthawk in Woodhridge. re ported the loss. The burglar cut through a locked screen door lo s.:ct in, police said. Objects taken included an oak tantalus, a 50·peso gold piece on a gold anchor chain, three diver's watc h es, a color television set. a sterlin~ silver trophy, an antique English egg boiler, a stereo system . three antique compasses. a tool box, a Buck knife, a jewelry case and jewelry. Los Padres Burns FILLMORE CA P» A brush fire scorched 60 acres Sunday in a rugged, heavily limbered, mountainous area of Los Padres National Forest, authorities said. A Canoga Park computer pro- g ram mer was bound and gagged with his own clothes in an Irvine hotel and robbed today. Lawreace E. Meise. 28, told police he was covered by a hedspread during most of the in· r1dent. but got a look al his four black assailants when one un· covered him and removed his gag long enough so he could tell them he hadn·t any money. The men. one of whom had a gtin, did take his watch, jade ring, wallet, credit cards and car keys, which Meise valued al $600. , Meise lold police he had just checked into the Airporter Jnn, al 18700 MacArthur Blvd, He said he was standing by his room window, admir~ng the view, when he heard a noise behind him. turned-..and -saw-a man pointing a gun al him. Meise said he was forced lo lie race down on the bed. His feet ·were tied with his belt, his hands with a sock. His other sock was stuffed into hi s mouth as a gag. He said it \S known that Black . In. San Diego ~· became angry with Mrs. Arbiso :· Arter the burglars left, Meise said he easily freed him~elf Md called the hotel operator . who called polirc. because the victim's niece ended SAN DI EGO <A p ) .. A.n~ their common law relationship estimated 700 men ,cmd wome . by moving out. .of.'.illack".sc.hotne ~ -ti-d ...,..,,. · h s · o · and into her aunt's home. mare e u1roug. a~ icgo_ t Stansbury s aid Mrs. Arbiso ~he fourth a{ln.ual Gay Pn 11nEl._Black bad. ~quarreled on___parad<! <r~~ed stQry. A5> •• · The burglars. whom ·Mei.se. dcscrihed as flas hy dress~rs, had placed :l "Do Nol Disturb" -sign on the! .room 's outside doorknob. several occasions prior to the A raltyal B":tlhoa Park on S day en.ded wh<il sever1 A trail of dropped clothing led to a nearby elevator GIRAFFE BA.Bl' Posr.HUMOUS MARWELL HALL, England (AP> '-Victor, the giraffe who IRA SI • T Jd collapsed while trying lo mate aying 0 and diedqast September because BELFAST Northern Ireland · he couldn't gel back Qn his feet, ' <AP > -Police found the hooded ~as left a baby ~,;;aughter , body of a man in a car near the arwell Park~ o~f1c1als say. . . . The baby, Vtctorta, was bom border wlth the Irish RepubUc. __ §aturd~.'!! the !22:.YJ~tor~haJl -~und,a~-Aa-··•U~ymous-.eaJler 1mpregnateofier mother. Drib- 1dent1fled tht; v1cltm as a~ tn· bles. five months before his ratil former, working fo.r the Bnt:--h attempt with another of hts and sa1.d he. was lulled . by Insh three spouses. Republican Army guerrillas. _ _._ __________ _ described as "the gay Fourth; July.'' Speakers.criticized a.propos state constitutional amcndme to prohibit homosexual teachc · • I · ·-· Jti'a»ert --N' ~ct" mo ing loWtt clou.P,s .~\Vith sunny after· noon -Tuesd~y. Lows lonight 58 to 63. Highs Tuestlay .11¢ar 70 at the beaoaes to mid·70s inland. Dolla~ Value Drops in ·Japan I .J INSiDE TOD"~ It 1 :, hard to /ind a Republican who1ll admit he is runni11g /or 'the presidency. yet there U• no',.shortoge of candfdatet to be candidates. TOKYO <AP>'-The American dollar, which hit a record low today and has declined 2S percent in value aaalnsl the Japanese yen in less than JO months, Is not worth enough to buy a glass of beer in Tokyo·s fashionable Glnia shopplna district It won't even buy a cup of coffee. or a cheap souvenir. The tall of the dollar and other forelan currencies in relation to the strong yen, however, has not helped Japanese consumers.buy imported goods al lower prices, lar1ely because distributors want to keep the prices high. ONE IMPORTER Ot U.S. ftlANlJFAcnJRED cosmetics has said he would like to bring down the price of his goods but his Japanese distributors will not let him. "Our distributors fiaht any attempt Jt price erosion because ·they want to give large kickbacks to their rct.allers," said the American Importer, who asked not to be named. Kickback:a to retailers are tradltlonal, and Le1at, In Japan. . / Consumer groups occasionally .,t;ave. protested that kickbacks make it unnttracUve for retailers lo push lower priced items. THE DOLLAR IDT RECORD LOWS ON the Tokyo foreign ex· change market today, dropping to 204.50 yen and closing al 206.25. Traders and economists blame the sUde on Japan's huge trade sur· phlsH, buraeonln1 U.S. trade deficits and American lnllaUon. Another factor Is the expectation that the dollar surplus Jn Tokyo wUl Increase toward the end of the month. At the hotel rate of 202 yen -the rate ot exchan1e for tourtsts I~ olways less than what traders receive on the forel10 exchanae market -the cheapest mug or befr at the Muncben Beer J.fall was $1.'73. Coffee at a shop on what is called Fifth Avenue Alley was $2.'48. And a tet ot Jive postcar~ pjctunna ceisha &iris sold tor $1.•9 at a abop near the Imperial Hotel. (See DOLLA& FAILS, Pap AJ) Story Page AB. : ·ladex . .•• -........... :.4~ .. ~ ... ..,,·..Ma..1 ;)~ ..M>.a~~-.. i~• ~ littt. h•• 1 '· .. . _ .. __ .. ·-·--,. ...... -~-u.t.""""~kfW'llsc'ftfJ,'kfi . l ' ......_ __ _ ' NEW YORI( <AP> -After five days spent. waitln& ln line ror • •hot at • Job, about 1,000 New Yorkel"S got appllcaUons to- day for one ot some 500 appreo. ticesbips.. Just the chance of employ· ment brought many to the s treets where they set ,µp camp and waited up to five days out· aide electrical and plumbing un· ion ornees. But the long walt. may have been unnecessary as in some cases the number of applications available considerably exceeded lbc number or would bu craft workers oo the lines. At the Electrical Industry Center in Queens apprentice training director David Smith said there were only about 1,000 In line when the doors opened an hour earlier than scheduled at 8 a.m. Smith said 1,250 applicants were needed before an aptitude test may be given for 500 in· dividuals. Those who gel the ap· prenliceships enter five years of " lf • on· the.Job training, startini at t $3.90 per hour and working 'f to $6.66 an hour. .,. ~ About 80 men and wodien ~ were in line outslde the h~· ' quarters of Plumbers Local ln Manhattan when applic:a ns were made available some~e between 8 and 9:30 a.m., a*· < ing to Pete Marzec, app ce J instructor. The union plann lo hand out 500 applications f 50 jobs, and late arrivals si ly , walked In. \ No. 89 in one line, Denny · Kuperman, is a P.re0law major at. City College or New York. He saad he was lA line because "l figure my chances of having a future here are a lot better than in law school. You either have to be in the top 10 in your law class or go to Yale or Harvard to sue· ceed." The unions are looking for peo.. ple between the ages of 18 and 23 who have high school diploruas. The electrical union bas agreed to enroll 100 women among the 500 ap rentices -the firs women ever to join thot union. ·'This Is a once in a tiretime chance," said Cynthia Long or Manhattan, No. 64 in line. "We'r~ makine progress a1alnst sexism in the trades." Some or the women com· plained that the men in line spat at the m or broke bottles, accus· ing the women of "depriving'· ·men or jobs. "We're not taking jobs away if we deserve them," said Vickie Eisen. 19, who has been in line since Thursday night. All a licants will have to . .,, take aptitude tests. Union officials monitored the lines three times a day to gaqard agalnst line jumpers. Pros&>ec· live workers were allowed only 1S 'minutes lo use the neal-by toilets, and many used lire hydrants for refreshment .,,d bathing. Theodore Swiney Jr .• 20, of Coney Island, said he bad ).l<>l bathed since he joined the line Wednesday. "I am derlnilely looking forward to getting off this Hae.·• he said. Fire Hits . Tunes Plant .. 'f Rebel in Yemen ·.In Mesa • A straaroocn ftre Sund•Y ev,n· lnC · al~·the Costa Mesa bead· quartets o( the Los An1•les Tlmea cauJed minimal flre dam••e· but quantities of paper tl'\ap ,lle1 were ruined by a sprinkler system that prevented the blaze from spreading, Costa Mesa firemen said today. •• BEIRUT, Lebanon CAP) - President Salem Robaye Ali of : South Yemen res igned today ~ after army and air force units \rebelled in that nation, the only 1UJ:ixJSl-1~v*~t.~UWiie..Ja.1 tht ·ot1-11ch Arabian i>eninswa, the Iraqi news agency reported. The news agency said in a dis· patch rrom the South Yemen" capitol of Aden that the central com mittee or the National Front, the country's hard-line, pro-Soviet ruling body, accepted Ali's resignation and stripped him or all other posts. It said he resigned after a day· Jong bombardment of· the pres- idential palace in Aden. Observers in Beirut said the rebels apparently hoped to take advantage of unrest resulting Crom the assassination two days ago of the ·prcsident of neighbor· ing North Yemen. He was killed by a bomb in the briefcase of a South Yemen diplomat. An earlier Iraqi dispatch said artillery and afr force planes oounded the presidential palace in th e Aden. suburb of Al Tawahi. Hui 1t said the ''people's m1lit1a" of the Na- ~ional f<'ronl look control of key Youth Seized In Burglary A Laguna Beach youth, arrest· ed Saturday on suspicion of burglary, has been released from Ora nge County. Jail on $10,000 bail Michael Douglas Cather, 20, of 646 Ramona Ave., was arrested Saturday by Officer Bill Yourex on charges of being drunk in public. Police said they found items of jewelry in Cather's possession, leading Ulem lo extend the charges lo include susp1c1on or burglary. He is suspected of laking jewelry valued at nearly S800 from the home of Kathleen Fyhrie, 2833 Wards Terrace, last Thursday. J e we ler H i t By CM T h e if Precious stones valued at SG ,860 were reportedly stolen Sunday morning from a Costa Mesa jeweler 1tS he s-lepl at his home. police reported today. Reginald Charles Childers, 33. told police a clear gray Australian Opal worth SJ,500 was among the gems taken from a display case in his bedroom. Twenty-six other stones of lesser value were also listed as missing. Police said there were no signs of forced entry into the home. 2 Chie fs Confer WASHING TON CAP> -Presi· dent Carter spent more than an hour today conferring al breal(fast w~~ British_ Prime !dinister James Callaghan. . , OR~COAST DAi t\' PILOT n.,~=~~~~~t~•('""' "'"""'ttle """°"'""°'"""" C6Mt P\lbl . ~ Pf ...,,... Ht•t•nrn ,. ... ....,,.,,..,.. ._,.. •• tttr9'tltft ~ ... ., ffW t...,,,. .,.. ~ .. att\. 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Qlll-1 .. k•ocrletltll ft lt"N' 11 M _.." tt -· ..... __ , •Ill"'• ....... a. ..... . lntersections in Aden, the airport road and the highway to Al Tawahi. and street fighting broke out between army reg· ulars· and militiamen in a sub· urboearthe_a~~rt. · .,,,~ck'"t>'alW'o~e ~ft:tl~ from Al Tawahi where the muf· fled thud of heavy guns was heard," the dispatch said. "The international airport was closed to traffic and telecommunica· tion with the outside world was cut off. '·Aden authorities advised tourists to stay off the streets and civil servants to leave their offices and stay home until further notice ... Pi11to Pre ca11tion .,..,, ....... Costa Mesa Battalion Chief Gary Golson said the exact cause of the 6:04 p.m. blaze is under investigation. The fire started in one or four presses at the facility at 1375 Sunflower Ave.. and spread to ceiling area air ducts. Structural damage was con· fined to a portion of the 45·fOOt· high ceiling, Golson said. Costa Mesa firemen responded with two e ngines and a truck company. but found the blaze controlled by the build· ing's s prinkler system. ' The agency said Ali. who has headed South Yemen ·s leftist government since 1969, met Sun- day night with members of his presidential council, leaders of the National Front for Political Unity, the Marxist government party,. and leaders of other lef. tist political groups to discuss charges that they were responsi- b I e roi:; the assassination of North Yemeni President Ahmed al Ghashmi. Phoenix, Ariz.. Judge Bill Dixon heard. about a r ecall of 1.5 million Ford Pintos as potential fire hazards and decided he · didn't want to wait. His car now bears a warning sign on the back -but, accord· ing to a Phoenix car dealer, station wagons like Dixon's may not be affected by the recall. The amount or water damage lo supplies and presses was still being tallied this morning. The fire delayed printing of the Oran~e County and San Diego Monday morning editions of The Times. Ghashmi. 39. was killed Satur. day when a special envoy from J\li entered his office in San'a to deliver a message from the South Yemeni president. When he opened his briefcase to get the letter. the bomb exploded. Tbe envoy also was killed. Carter Plane Use Penalized by Fine Fro111 Page Al PLANE .•. General Hospital , said about 20 of the injured had been brought there and more were expected. He said eight or nine we re to un· dergo sur gery for what he described as serious impact in· juries. broken bones and head and internal injuries $220,000 Fire Cause Traced To Roof Tar South Yemen denied any part in the killing. It s aid the a!>· sassinalion w as a n "im· perialist" attempt to start a war between North and South Yemen and was the work of "subversive clements" trying to block un. ification of the two Yemens. Ghas hmi was the eighth North Yemeni leader killed since the seven-year civil war after the overthrow of the monarchy an 1962. Escape Plot Led to D e ath. Of Warden? TIJUANA, Mexico <apl Four prison inmates seeking to be placed in solitary confine mcnt so they could tunnel their way to freedom have confessed during interrogation lo killing a warden and seven others. aucmmttes-uld. The statement by Ba ja California Police Chief Fran· cisco Palau detailin~ an escape plot differs Crom previous ac· counts, which said that Friday's murders res ulted from a pl anned assassination plot against the warden. The four inmates had planned to create a disturbance in the La Mesa penitentiary yard, with placement in solitary confine· menl as a goal, Palau said Saturday. 18 Feared Killed OSLO, Norway <AP) -A Norwegian helicopter crashed into the sea northwest of Bergen today and all 18 persons aboard w c re Ce a red ·k ii I e d , l h e 'Norwegian coast guard said. Thirteen bodies were recovered so far, a coast guard spokesman said. WASHINGTON {AP> -'the case or Jimmy Carter's pres· idenlial campaign use or a Georgia bank 's airplane, courtesy of old friend Bert Lance, has been settled by the Federal Elections Commission by fining Carter's campaign committee $1,200 and the bank $5,000. The civil penaltaes were agreed to by all parties after the Carter committee and the Na· lional Bank of Georgia anit1ally pleaded that th.e campaign's failure to reimburse the bank for five flights was a bookkeeping oversight and not a willCul viola· tion of law The 'issue arose last summer during invesligations mto the af fo1rs of Lance, who subsequently resigned as Carter's budget da.i.:~clor and earlier headed the Atlanta hank Lance acknowledged that as bank pres 1dcnt he often made the aircraft available lo favored customers, Carter among them , and that some flights were made after the former Georgrn governor had begun his presidential quest Cart<'r aide s later acknowledg.ed that (ive short flights. four in 1975 with Carter aboard and a fifth, in September 1976, for then·Dcmocralic Party Chairman Robert Strauss, were al least partially connected with the camf>aign and should have been paid for. It is unlawful for a corporation to make services or equipment available to a political candidate without reim· bursement. The Carter campaign commit· tee sent the bank a check for more than SJ, 100 last August to cover the cost 6C the flights, moH or which were within Georgia's borders. The bank re· Cunded about SJOO of that after recalculating the expenses. Lance testified that he once contacted a campaign staffer about reimbursing the bank, but the issue somehow was forgot· ten. Prestdenlial press secretary Jody Powell and olbers also h ave said the matter was an oversiihl. F ro.t P a g e A l DOLLAR FALLS ••. Jn New York City, a mug or American beer averages in price from $1 to $1.50 and a cup of coffee between 25 cents and $1. SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS WOULD BUY a small package of American-made candy at an outdoor stall in front of the Hankyu department atore In Tokyo. The package has printed on It in English: "Suggested retail price 20 cents." Tbe Japanese alan on the stall reads: "Sorry, only one pack per customer." A survey by the Japane.se Mlnl.ttry ol Jnternational Trade and Industry published Jast week concluded that the dollar's decline haa not resulted in much decrease tn the retail pr1c:o or moet Im· ported good.1 Of 22 items surveyed. by the mlniatry. 14 fell in price to aome extent, but none by the dollar's decline or 2S percent. Kerosene, h an eumple, was reported 4.8 percent cheaper and color fUm 19 ptrc~nt. L The price of Imported handba11 was up t8,8 percent and one Glnta atore offered a Frtnch destped monoanmmed lacl1'1 baC tor Ibo t.tQu1YalCDl ol '1.,U3. • When the case was taken up last year by the FEC, the bank argued th~t long-departed Lance was the only officer who knew of the flights and hence the firm should not no)V be punished for contributions or which it was not even aware The ·concaliallon agreement" reached with the FEC, formally announced today stipulates that neither side admits any de· liberate wrongdoing However, the FEC said "the ra1lure or the Carter committee lo pay for the use of the aar crart until August, l9'n constituted its re· ceipt of m·kmd l!ontrlbut1ons, an vaolataon' or the Federal Elcc· uon Campaign Act S1m1larl>-. the FEC document said the bank's failure to bill the committee until that date con· stituted an unlawful contriba· lion Dollar Hits Low TOKYO <AP> -The dollar hit record lows on the Tokyo foreign exchange market. dropping to 204 .£> yen during. the. da)' • s tr ad· ing and closing al 206.25. The Bank of Japan bought between Sl50 million and $200 million lo ease the slide. The dollar also got off lo a bad start in Europe. Passengers with minor in· Juries were sent to Sunnybrook Medical Center by bus Ambulances, called in from Toronto and the surrounding areas, had been delayed by rush-hour traffic Policewoman Kills Spouse DETROIT <AP> A policewoman shot and killed her hus band during an argument over her line of 1.1;ork. police S<lld Officer Mary Jones. 30, told detectives she grabbed her gun from under her mattress and fired twice al her husband. L<'slie. 30. after he struck her in the face Sunday. Pol ice said the s hooting ~ulmfoated a -1-ong-standiAg argument over Mrs. Jones' de· cision to become a police officer in May 1977. The couple's three children were asleep at the time of the shooting LA CANADA <AP> -Hot roofing tar touched off a blaze that destroyed the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Mullen and a 35· • foot sailboat that the couple had been building for three years in their yard. County Fire Capt. Larry Ed· miston estimated damage to the Cullen home at $170,000 and the loss of the boat at SS0.000. Edmiston said a workman knocked over the tar, which ran down the side or the house and ignited. A propane gas tank also explosed in the fire, he added. Death T e rm On Ballot? SACRAMENTO (AP> -The sponsor or an initiative to broaden California's death penalty said Friday he had col- lected enough signatures to qualify the measure for the Nov. ember state ballot. -Sen. John Bri~~s . (I{. Fu~lerton> .. ~d calls to .counl.y registrars determined that at least 383,000 registered voters had signed the petitions. He needed 312,404 valid signatures to make the ballot. I ) WHEN YOU COMBINE THE DESIGN TALENTS OF SEVEN · INTERNATIONAL AWARD WINNING JEWELERS- \ ... THt RESULTS SPEAK FOR THEMSELVES. . . ( ASshown- 18 Karat Gold Cut?e Cluster Ring with diamonds. By Lander, twice winner of the Oscar for jewelry design -the OeBeers Diamonds International Award '995 127 Fashion Island. • Newport Center. Newport Beach Telephone: CJ 14) 644-050 l A' ---t ' . ' 7 ' .. Orange Coast ED ITION " Today's Closing N.Y. Stocks 4 ' VOL. 71, NO. 1n, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA C TEN CENTS/ Scary Skeeter APWI,...._ This 1s a larger-than life \'iew of a com mon summertime pest. Lhe mosquito. ThC' 500-time enlaqrement with an electron micros('ope shows the front end of the pl'St. Tht• tiny balls <ffC the insect's e~~s. lht' :mtennne come out of the head and ex tl'nd to the nght and left. while the stinger l' x l e n <I s d o w n o u t o f t h e p i c t u r c . Hl'Scarthcrs hav<' found that onl y the lt•male mosquilos h1tc. Plane Crash Kil/,s Three; 100/njured TORONTO <AP> -An Air Canada DC·9 jetliner s kidded off a r unway on takeoff and crashed into a ravine at Toronto Intema· t ional Airport today. killing three people and injuring at least 100 others among the 107 aboard. authorities reported. The l\\ in-engine Jet, on a domestic flight, "fe ll straight do\' n Just like going over a <'11ff," passenger Bobby G1mby, a bandleader dubbed "Canada's Pied PiJ>('r," told reporters Ile suffered only minor cuts. /\ Canadian tr:msportation de· parlml'nl spokesman said the plane plunged about 30 feet into the ravine A '\\ 1tness said it broke into three pieces, but no fire was reported. Officials at a nearby hospital \\.here some of the in1ured were taken said at leas t eight were Sl'flOU:-h hurt An Air Ca nada s pokes man said an c:.irlll'r report that one of the plane's two rear-mounted ('ngines losl power was not con- firmed Some passen1wrs said a lire hlew out. but that also was not imml'chalely determined. spokes man Brock Stewart said. Pa~engcr H erh Ellis of Boston !-.a1d the jet Isner. Flight JR9 bound for \\'inmpcg and Van <'ouver with 102 passengers and five crew members aboard, was close to 1l.'\ takeoff point when he heard "'hat sounded like an ex plosion -possibly the sound of a tire blowmg out. He said the pilot he ld the plane level on the runway, which runs parallel to a highway, but there was not cnou~h runway for aborting the takeoff and the big aircraft rolled over the hp of lhe ravine Coasa Weather Night and morning low. clouds with sunny after· noon Tuesday . Lows tonight 58 to 63 ll1~hs Tuesday near 70 a l the beaches lo mid-70S inland. INSIDE TODAY u·-hard t o find a Republican who'll admit he is running /cw the presidency. yet then i• no shortage of candidalf!s to be condldate.t Story Page AB. Arnel Cites Need F~r Mesa Housing By TOM BARLEY 04 IM O~Uy Ptlot St.all Developer George L. Argyros testified today in Orange County Superior Court that his 49-acre North Costa Mesa housing proj· eel was designed to help meet an urgent need for moderate in· come housing in that city. /\rgyros , whose Arnel Development Co owns and operates apartment complexes providing 3,500 apartments in Orange County, said he has a lways ins isted that apartments built by the firm cater almost exclusively to moderate and low income families. I le said a pre-construction sur 'ey of the Costa Mesa s1le in drcated that there was a tremen dous demand for the proJect and that the need was immediately recognized by the planning com· mission and the city council. Approved by both agencies was a development that would have put 127 single family homes and 539 apartment units on 4% acres or l and south of South Coast Drive and north of the San Diego Freeway between Hear Street and San Leandro Lane Argyros lawyers are asking Judge Walter Charamza to over· turn the public initiative that halted construction by rezoning the property Launched by the North Costa Mesa Homeowners Association, the initiative found Costa Mesa voters determined to reject the t ype of development th,11t Argyros explained today m -Ole (See ARNEL, Page A2 > Police Chief Mum About Slowdown By JOl\NNE REYNOLDS "Of tto• 03111' "'1101 Sttn Newport neach s police chief Pl•te Gross said today he will have nothing to !-.ay about the s lowdown instituted last week hv some of his officers until he meets with ti-cm Tuesday. The action, which bc~an Fn- d:Jy, mvolvl's only the cicpart menl 's of(iccrs below the rank of sergeant. Officers could give no e s tim ate of the number participating in the action which was airrcecf to at a meeting al· tended by 50 of them Thursday night. The group bas declined to call their action a s lowdown, but said they would be followint: the let- te r or departmental regulations concerning officer safety. They have conceded that doing so will slow theJr performance in the field. ' The officers involved said their discontent is linked to what thry Yi<>W as the city council's failure to ~rant them adequate pay raises in keeping with the work they are expected to do Gross. who was unavailable for comment Friday, said today hl' was disturbed by the news ac· counts or the slowdown. lie said an account in Friday's Daily Pilot contained "a lot or m1smformation." He tlranded it "irresponsible journalism ... Gross noted that Newport Beach city councilmen aren't scheduled to discuss rescinding their recently instituted pohce pay policy tonight, as Friday's story indkated. T he policy, which says Newport poli ce will be paid as well as oUicers in the three highest paying law enforcement agencies in the county, won't be CSee POLICE, P age AZ) Brown .Visits NB Parties Draw Dad Too The Browns came to Newport Beach Sunday night. Governor Edmund Brown Jr. was in town for a couple of fund.' raisers. Mom and dad -the former governor and first lady -came along, too CovernQ( Brown, who faces a re -etectlorf challenge in Nov. ember from Attorney General Evelle Younger, gave a 20- m in u t e pep talk and philosophical discourse to about SOO guests at a Balboa Pavilion dlnner hosted by the Newport Democratic Club. He arrived at the Pavilion aboard a cabin cruiser belong- Jn1 lo tho host of an earlier $250 per person cocktail party. The cocktail event was held at the Linda Isle home or John McNaughton, president of Na· tional Systems Corp. The elder Brown is a member Qf the firm 's board of d.irectors. Pat , the father , circulated among the cocktail party guests, amiably discussing everything from J>roposlUon 13 to the prob- lems of raising kids. J erry found himself hemmed In by P•rtygoers who had an is. Aue to push -off-track horse race betU.ng, completion of the Costa Meta freeway, tho probe· ble constlluUonality of a new <See BROWN. Pa(e AU • State. Aid Nix? Price Too High in Costa Mesa Cost a Mesa stands to gain about $1 million in emergency state aid funds but the city must spend S3 million or its reserve cash to qualify, City Manager Fred Sorsabal said today. "It's penalizing those of us who have been frugal over the years. in my observation," Sorsabal said. "My recommendation al this time Clo the city council) is not to go after it estate aid)." Sorsabal added. Costa Mesa is curr ently harboring a city reserve account of $3.2 million and the provisions of the state emergency aid bill signed Saturday by Governor Brown would force the city to expend nearly 95 percent of this reserve. The city council will get its first look next Monday at a post· Jarvis budget for 1978-79 that has left the city about $3.7 million short in stale property tax funding. Sorsabal said he will present the council with a proposed overall budget of $21.6 million, down 15 percent from last year's tot al financial picture of $25.2 million. No layoffs arc seen because of voter passage of Proposition 13, but a freeze on hiring any new employees is anticipated. The city budget provides for 532 jobs, of which 512 currenUy a re fiJled. Sor sabal said he will recom· mend the ettmination of the 19 unfilled jobs and will ask for a "very close look .. at any poten· tial new hirings. In recent study sessions, tho (See AID, Page AZ) Landlord ·Bits Record Low Rebates Urged LOS ANGELES (AP> -Tax crusader Howard Jarvis and three landlord groups kicked off a campaign today ur~ing apart· ment owners to give tenants any savings gained through the passage of Proposition 13. Al the same time, Jarvis said he would continue Lo try to pre vent the federal government from gaining a tax wsndfall as a result of the tax initiative he co authored. But he said he was not ready lo unveil plans for a na- tional organization to help foster tax revolts in other states. "We are going to stop the federal government from-taking so much money from the people. but we haven't come to any con· clusion on what we are going to do." Jarvis told a news con· ference. Federal revenues will burgeon by an estimated $1 billion \o $2 bi l lion annually becaus e California taxpayers will have 57 percent fewer property taxes to deduct from federal income tax returns, he ~1d. R eturning from a visit to Washington where he tried to ex· plasn his taxpayers' revolt to congressmen. Jarvis s aid lawmakers there were consider· mg 1ntroduc1ng legislation to pass any such windfall back to states that approve tax-slashing measures like Propos1t1on 13. "I'm not sure they got the m essage 10 Washington. but there 1s a proposition being con- s 1 de red lo pa ss a bill 1n Was hington that the money the federal government gets will he passed back to those states.·' Jarvis said Landlords stand lo l!ain a hcf ly s hare of any property tax sav· ings. and Jarvis urged them to pass such savings back lo tenants back to tenants. But Trevor Grimm. member of the board of directors of the Apartment Owners /\ssociallon or Los Angeles-County, and Howard Ruby, prl's 1dcnt of thr Coalition for llous1n g C1nd s pokes man for the statewide Wes tern Mobile Home Associa· t1on. both attacked ;1 Rroposed Beverly llllls ordinance increas- ing apartm ent _owners license <See TENANTS. Page AZ> Starting Young Dollar Won't Buy A Beer in Japan TOKYO <AP) -The American dollar, which hit a r ecord low today and has declined 25 percent in value against the J apanese Vt!n in less than IO months, is not worth enough to buy a glass of beer in Tokyo's fashionable Ginza shopping districL It won't even huy a cup·of corrce. or a cheap souvenir. ,, The fall of the dollar and other foreign currencies in relation to the strong yen. however, has not helped Japanese consumers buy imported goods at lower prices, largely because distributorswant to keep the prices high. ONE llUPORTER OF U.S. MANUFACTURED cosmetics has said he would like to bring down the price of his goods but his Japanese distributors will not let him. ·'Our distributors fight any attempt at price erosion because they "'ant to give large kickbacks to their ret ailers," said the Amer.ican importer, who asked not to be named. Kidkbacks to retailers are traditional, and legal, in J apan. Consumer groups occasionally have protested that kickbacks make it unattractive for retailers to push lower priced items. THE DOLLAR HIT RECORD LOWS ON the Tokyo foreign ex· change market today, dropping to 204.50 yen and closing al 200.25. Traders and economists blame the slide on J apan's huge trade sur- pluses, l>urgeoning U.S. trade deficits and American inflation Another factor is the expectation that the dollar surplus in Tokyo wall increase toward the end of the month. <See DOLLAR FAILS. Page A2> Carter Lashes Tax Reduction Measure WASHJNGTON <AP> -Pres1· dent Carter sharply attacked t.h1 s afternoon a tax bill pending in Congress that he said "in· eludes huge tax windfalls for m11l1ona1res and two bits for average Americans." In a nationally broadcast news conference, Carter singled out a proposal. sponsored by Rep. William Steiger. R-W1s., to cut in half the current rate on capital gains "I'm still confident Congress "'ill act responsibly," Carter added in his strongest statemenl on taxes. The president noted that early this }ear he submitted lo Congress a comprehensive tax bi II that included "substantial t ax relief for almost every tax· payer m our country ... and re· forms in our unfair and very complicated tax laws." lie said the bill under con· s ide rat1on m Congress "contains no major tax reforms at all." The Steiger proposal, which Carter said would benefit primarily "30.000 millionaires." has developed strong backing on Capitol Hill. Asked if he would veto the pending tax bill, Carter said he found 1l unacceptable and "I don't see any poss1b1hty of my approving such a plan." Carter's original lax bill in· eluded a S25 billion cul for in· div1duals and businesses. Since then , after conferences with Dcmocrati<' con gression al ieadcrs, the president has scaled the tax cut, first to $20 billion and, last week, to $15 bJIJ1on. House Speaker Thomas P . O'Neill Jr., said last week Carter also agreed to dropping many of the revisions he asked for, 'including dropp1nl,! allow a. ble deductions for certain busi- ness expenses such as the so· called "three-martini lunch." WU Stark, 4, leads pack acrosi; finish lino to win Big Wheel race for youngsters held Sunday in conjunctton with grand P.rix bicycle race In Costa Mesa. Young Wil. a Costa Mesa resident, finished second last year. His perseverance paid off. To see how the older racers did, twn to Sports. Pages Bt and 83. ________ ............ ~ ... ..---------~ # ·. ' . ...... t .... CAIL Y PILOl Coin Man , Midw ay City Man Released On Bail A Cost. Mesa coin dealer nc. eused of stealing coin collecUOM •ortb more than $50,000 ls free qn bail Wday. His arrest capped en investigation by Orange and Costa Mesa police. Robert Lee Wilson, 33, of 10145 • Tulare st., Costa Mesa, was ar· f'eSted at bis shop at the same t.ddress and charged with nine counts of grand theft. He posted bail of $5,000, police said today. Wilson, doing business as Beverly Rills Numis matics Cor p., alJegedly accepted ex· pensive coin collections over the past year for sales on consign· ment at various coin auctions and shows, police said. Tbe coins were sold, but police allege the collectors were not paid by Wilson. Jnvestigators srud two elderly Orange couples lost a total of tnore than $25,000 in rare coins during the past year. Wilson was arrested Thursdav by Orange and Costa Mesa police and booked at Costa Mesa jail. Newport-Me_s a · Schools S u ed In Damage Trustees or the Newporl·Me5.a Unified School District have been sued for $72,000 by a Costa Mesa couple who claim s chool construcllon is r esponsible for property damage lo the tr home. Mike J . and Diana S. Mustafa, 249 E . Walson St., Costa Mesa. claim in their Orange County Superior Court lawsuit that a re· tainang wall built at nearby Lindbergh Elementary School held back water to the point that 1t ovcrnowed on to their back yard last Feb. 10. They allege that the resulting flood infliclt'C.I d<.im:igc on their properly and lhal the school dis- trict had been warned by them of the ::.ituat1on a:s long ago as 1969. J e we le r Hit By CM Thief Precious stones valued at $6,860 were r eportedly s tolen Sunday morning from a Costa Mesa Jeweler as he slept al ht't home. roohce reported today. Reginald Charles Childers, 33. told police a cle ar gray Austrnlian Opal \\Orth SJ,500 was among the gems take n from a d isplay case in his bedroom. Twenty-six other stones or l<'sser value w<'re also listed as missing Police sa11l there "'ere no signs of forced entry into the borne F r o m P a ge 11 I TENAN T S. • fe e s and other s imilar measures. Grimm said the fee hike would in effect wi pe out any savings apartment owners might have received from Proposition 13. which limiu property taxes to I percent of market value and rolls back assessments to 1975 76 l(?VCI$. KOCM O wner Set For H eart Surgery Gary Burrill, owner of Newport Beach's radio station KOCM-FM, was scheduled to un. dergo open heart s urgery Wday at Hoag Memorial Hospital. Burrill. active m many civic organizations, was listed in good condition prior lo the surgery to replace portions of the artery leading into hls heart. OR ANOE COAST < DAILY PILOT ~.:t.~~~:·r.::.::.::.e;;.c:;. (.Mtl-• ....... c.o-. •• s.o.w ...... -.... ,....,.,_.. ,,.., ...... IM-""""' 10' (Ml• ~ --....... -.-·-.... ~,-... " V•Uey ltvl#\•. s..MMOM~ V•1t11 •'WI "-...... ,_ .. c.o..t "~-· .. -.. -·-i<ti ...... "' -......,... '"" ............................... ,, .. JJll """" ... Sffoelt. caw ......... c.11-•it. ·-·-~-,...,. ...... ~•.c;w.., ,,d_l_Oo_ .. ,..._ ._,It_ C>fl• ~ .. Tr.::" ~Ml-. ~l'-4ttill .... -~fttldll<n Cotta MeH~ IMOI .... '::=::' =~.~-. .,_,. Tel9t>1M>11e m4)M2~ Claaeffied Adnr1111ng 142·5171 ( Pole and Plug Downed Suspect Sotight In .SJC Slaying Orange County Sheriff's or. ricers continued today to seek a man they describe as a prime suspect ln the murder of Carmelita Arbiso of San Juan Capistrano. l nvesUgator Willie Stansbury Identified the suspect as Paul Benjamin Black, 47. of Midway City, who, he srud, was seen at the Arbiso home shortly be/ore the killing. Mrs. Arbiso, 64, was shot to death in her home at 31421. La Callers. Officers said the stbJt. ing occurred shortly after Black was seen to enter the home. went to the Arbiso home. He said it is known that Black became angry with Mrs. Arbiao because the victim's niece ended their common law relationship by m oving out of Black's home and into her aunt's home. Stans.bury said Mrs. Arblso and Black had quarreled on several occasions prior to the shooting. Members or the Arbiso family sajd rosary will be recited for the victim at '1 :30 tonight in the o ld mission. Mass will be celebrated there at 9 a .m. '1\aes. day with interment to follow at Holy Sepulcher Cemetery in El Modena. Costa Mesa police said Raul Torres, 31. escaped serious injury early Sunday morn· ing when the car he was driving knocked over a fire plug and a light pole at Harbor Houlevard and Hamilton Street. According to police reports , Torres, 450 Victoria St.. Jost control of the vehicle about 2 a .m. Mrs. Arbiso was the wife ol Paul Arbiso, 83, said to be the oldest living native of San Juan Caeistrano. He is a gardener at the Mission and eacb morning rings the mission beU. Stansbury said B l ack threatened at least one other person with a gun before he Mrs. Arbi.so was a long time mern ber of the San Juan Capistrano Historical Society and a popular parish worker at the old Dll58ion. Front Page A l POLICE. Nixon to Game? She is survived by her husband, Paul: a daughter. Marie Rodman of Lagun a Niguel: a stepdaughter. Alice Gasteleum of Anaheim; four brothers, Frank, Louie, Eugene and Raymond O'Campo all of Santa Ana and 11 grandchildren. • • reviewed unti.l July 10. The Newport Police E mployees Association isn't participating in the pay protest as an organization, although as· sociation members, including President Doug Thomas, are in· volved. Ange.ls Expect Him ~o~ght Frot11 Page A 1 After last Thursday's meeting, the officers participating issued a statement lbat sums up their feelings: -"Whv should we wrestle in the streets with burglars, thie ves, and violent narcotics users when the public does not appreciate our efforts and gives us Jitlle if a ny support at all, even in emen!enc1es·! -"Jn the past seven years the cll1zcns have given us only m· termittent token raises By the end of this year, we will be behind inflation by 21 .5 percent. "In the past we have madc- cnormous efforts to give our community extra service and protection while risking our own safety. No longer will this be the case. We will be responding to a ll calls as fast as possible, but no short cuts will be taken at our n sk," Gross criticized news accounts of the so-called slowdown as be- ing damaging in terms of timing the slory lo the department"s re- cently announced plans for step- ped-up enforcement during lhe coming July 4 weekend. The police chief was also rritical of the news a<.'counts of that e nforcement plan, noting that lhe city's fireworks prohibi- tion will be enforced "where ap- propriate." ··w e aren't going lo go out and arrest a nyone we see with fir eworks," he said. ·'Those articles just create the kind of problems I've been try. in$! to avoid." Gross added, not- ing that the enforcement plan was devised with the aid or resi- dents of West Newport, often alli Independence Day hot spot. I le said the enforcement ac· tiv1ties would not be restricted to looking for fireworks viola- tions , but would include a wide range of disturbances, s uch as "drinking and partying." The chief said he believes the combined impact of the two news stories has been to place "an untenable burden on the in· d1v1dual officers." He also said he believes the job action announced last week was the work of a few individual officers and does not necessarily renecl the view j f the depart· ment 's personnel But that view was not shared by Officers Cliff Yarges and Gr eg Mattson, organizers o( Thursday's meeting. Citing what he views as a lack of council support in terms of pay raises and a general lack of citizen support, Matt.son said, "If the people don't care about what you're doing, it can get depressing. It's a feeling shared by most of the guys." Former president Richard Nixon is expected to attend tonight's ball game at the Anaheim Stadium , but if he doesn't show up, maybe Gerald Ford will. "The Secret Service was checking out lhe stadium last E'ront P age Al AID .•. counril has suggested that the biggest cutbacks come from the city's Department of Leisure Ser vices , whi ch operated last year on a budget or about $3.9 million. Next in line for program cut backs would be city health and environmental programs, which include general plan reviews. the planning commission, zonjng and enforcement of the city s ign ordinances. Street cleaning, sewers and parkway median maintenance would also be a ffected under community health and environ- mental cutbacks, said Sorsabal. Police and fire department programs would be least affect- ed under the council's post- Jarvis priorities. Ci ty transportation programs which include traffic planning. street and curb maintenance and traffic signals were hsted as the second most important city programs by the council. Sorsabal said the specHic amount of percentage cutbacks in each of the four major city programs would be presented in a tentative budget to go before the council next Monday night. Earlier forecasts, also based on a $.1.7 mmion city loss of prop- erty tax revenues. have listed a 22 percent cutback in city Leisure Services, leaving the de- partment with a S797 ,720 cut- back out or its S3.9 million budget. F ront Page A I ARNEL ... courtroom. A rnel attorney Leonard Hampel has described the in- itiative as being noth1ng-less than a conspiracy to defraud the company and "a carefully plotted attempt to destroy our approved project " The Ci ty oC Costa Mesa is not opposing the Arnet argument that the initi<1tive was a viola· lion of landowners rights. As sistant Cit y Attorney Thomas J. Wood told Judge Charamza that the city believes the initiative ordinance passed by public vote last March 7 s hould be found to be invalid. ,.,..,.. Pa~ A l DOLLAR FALLS .•. At the hotel rate of 202 yen -the rate of exchange for tourists is always less than what traders receive on the foreign exchange market -the cheapest mug of beer at the Muncben Beer Hall was $1.73. Coffee at a shop on what is called Fifth Avenue Alley was $2.48. And a set of five postcards pictwing geisha girls sold for $1.49 at a shop near the Imperial Hotel. In New York City, a mug of American beer averages in price from $1 to $1.50 and a cup or cocree between 25 cents and $1. SEVENTY·FIVE CENTS WOULD BtJY a small package of American·made candy at an outdoor stall ln front or the Hankyu department store in Tokyo. The package has printed on it ln English : "Suggested retail price 20 cents." The Ja~.anese sign 01 •• the ataU reads: "Sorry, only one paclc per customer. A survey by the J apaneae MlnJstry or Jnternallonal Trade and Industry published la.at week concluded that the dollar's decline has not resulted in much dec:r.ue ln t.he ret.aU price of most lm· ported goods. or 22 items surv,eyed by the mlnlstry, 14 fell in price to some extent but none by the dollar's decline or 25 percent. Kerosene, as an cxampla, was reported 4.6 pettent cheaper and color film 19 percent. The price or Imported band'bap wu up 11.9 percent 1nd one Ginza st4re orrered a French dealaned monoarammed lady's bag for the cqulvalcnt ol 11.183. .. . - • week and lts our guess that Mr. Nixon plans to be there tonight.'' s aid ?.jel Franks, Ange l s s pokesman. "Carter is in Texas and Ford hasn 't been here before. so Nixon seems likely - especially since he has been here before." Jr the former president does attend tonight's game between Lhe Angels and the Kansas City Royals. he and his party will be ~<>ated in a box. which can ac. (·o mmodate about a dozen peo.. pie, Franksa1d. · Mrs. Nixon came to a game last year," said Franks. "We put her in a box right near the press, but we draped it ofr, so the press never knew she was there " Tonight's game, schedulCd to start at 5: 10 p. m .. is nationally televised -but not in this area. TONIGHT COSTA MESA PLANNING COMMISSION -Regular meet.· ing, City Hall, 6 :30 p.m. OCC SUMMER LECTURE - .. Stress Management," Forum, 7 :30 p.m. TUESDAY, JUNE 27 NEWPORT·MESA SCHOOL BOA RD -Regular meeting, Costa Mesa city council cham· bers, 7:30 p.m. OCC SUMMER LECTURE - •·Exploring Antique Lands," Fine Arts 119. 7:30 p.m. "OTHERWISE ENGAGED .. -South Coast Repertory Theater, Tuesday-Sunday, 8 p.m . BROWN ••• rarm land biJl. As usual, he often answered a question with a question or his own. In most cases, including the Costa Mesa freeway completion, be vowed to "look into it, get something together." His mother, Bernie, gave him :l little motherly advice. Did he get enough sleep last night? Is that a new tic? Yet at was, he replied. Sh<' said he ought to get a new swt. too. Both men were given standing ovations at the Democratic Club event. . The senior Brown was on hand to receive an award granted in 1975. Mesa Mayors Gathe r -· Costa Mesa Mayor Ed McFarland Cdark s111t ) is flanked by former mayors Robert Wilson OefU , Claire Nelson and Alvin Pinkley at banquet celebrating the city's 25th annivers arv. More than 300 l'elebrants turned out for Friday's birth· day party at the South Coast Pla za Hotel. WHEN YOU COMBINE THE DESIGN TALENTS OF SEVEN · INTERNATIONAL AWARD WINNING JEWELERS- THE RESULTS SPEAK FOR THEMSELVES. Wyndham Leigh ~1~r .. 0 R1 ASshown- 18 Karat Gold Cube Cluster Ring with diamonds. By Lander. ... twice winner of the Oscar for jewelry design -the DeBeers Diamonds International Award '995 127 Fashion Island, Newpa,t Center. Newport Beach TelephOne: (714) 644·0501 u;c op .... OLD HOUSE BEING RESTORED AS SAVINGS AND LOAN SITE Santa Ana landmark Formerly Housed Mortuary Historical Site Spared ·Refurbishing Set for Century-old Building By KATHY C'tANCY OI ''-O•llY P11ot Sull One of Orange County's his- toric buildings has been spared the wrecker's hall. The century old former Smith- Tuthdl Lamb Mortuary :-.ite was built as a phys1c·1an s residence in the 1880:. m thcn-skepy Santa Ana. That wa-. an age w hL·n rural winds someti mes pilefl tumbleweeds up over the home's second story windows, accord- ing to a visitor. AND T H E PROPE RTY'S 116-foot-tall cedar tree became a c:ity landmark, decorated each year Lo herald the Christmas season However. in recent years. the white-pillared building, a long with the cedars, Santa Ana's oldest Pf!pper tree and a 70-year- old magnolia tree, was slated for leveling to make way for a 700- nir Orange County Transit Dis- trict commuter parking loL Today the stalely home and its grounds have been saved from destruction General Cites Need Rut the century-old mortuary, oc·eupant of the site since 1910, has departed. lNSTEAO, T UE mortuary - much to 1ls owner's chagnn - has moved from the Civic Ct.>ntcr to its other location at Wcstc·ltff Chapel in Costa Mesa. To Maintain CIA By JOANNF, Rf;YNOLOS OI ,,_ O•oly Pilot Sl•tl Does the United States need a CIA') If you're Lt Cen. Vernon Walters. former deputy director of the intelligence agency, the answer, ob\'loui.ly. is going to be yes Walters. who M'rved under four CIA directors from 1972 to 1976, came lo Newport Beach lasl week to address a meeting sponsored by the N<1vy League. UC I rv1ne Industrial Associates and the Crcuter Irvine In dustrial League' The ret1 rl'd genera I prefaced his remarks by telling the 50 au· d1encc membC'rs I hat most of his military carl'l'r wa-. SJH.'nl tn m· lelltgence work · 'Ohv1ouslv l think we• need something likt· the• Cl 1\. but that opinion 1s not lwsc·d on my lifetime of scrv1C·e." he com mented Walters. a large man with a ruddy fore• topppcd hy a thatch or Stl'cly gray h;11r, punc•tuated1 n1s spN·c·h with Joke''> and quota- tions from h1stonarh H e dl'llvcred his sl:it1stics from mrmory, citing ev1flencc to support his th<'ory that 1n telligcnce l!<•tht•rin~ s pying is this tountry s pr1m<1ry deter- rent lo war "KnO\\ l<'dl!<' 1-. an c•ffC'rtl\·c· de terrenl <1ga1nst 1>uq,risc, he .sa id ''Effrct1ve 1ntcll1genc1· ~athenn.i:: makes arms hm1ta- l ion agrccmrnt:-. po-.s 1blc> because "'c"re m a <.,1tuat1on to know U1at there 1sn 'l going to ire a ny cheating." The genl'ral said h<' hc•lieves the U S 1s at 1b mo!:.t perilous poinl in history. "We ha\'e less time and less geography separating us from our enemies and we' have weaker allies than at any other point in our his tory,·' he declared The en<'mv WaltC'rs referred to 1s Russia. wht'r<' "military forces are built up far in excess of whal would be nrc·ued to dcll'I' aggression. ''Why?" Wailers suggesterl a look at Afric:i would answer his own question The Russians are Onassis R111nors AP Wlre11"°40 YES TO CIA Lt. Gen. Walters em ploying what he described as ;1 salami tactic in gaining con trol of the contmenl .. One slice bv itse1f 1s not enough for us lo get alarmed about." he said in explainmg the tactic Ii<• said the si tuation 1s analogous to Germany's ag grcss1on in Europe before the outbreak of World War II. Great Rrita1n and France allowed those aggressions to occur ·w1thout declaring war until the takeover of Poland. llitler had expected the Rritish and Frenrh would take the same non combative course, <ind found himself in a "war of m1s o1rcction" when the two <·ountries decided to act, Walters sa1cl. "r have no fear of a deli be rat(• war." he said. "But I do fear a war b_v misdirection." Walters said the people of the U .S. aren't reacting to the Russian aggression m Afnca because of Vietnam. ''Just bringing up Vietnam 1s an absolutely superb tactic to keep us from reacting," he added. Local resi<l<•nts and historians protcskd OCTD plans to level the propt•rty As a result, the $3.4 million parking garage was mo~·<:d to land next door pre· vwusly occupied by a florist shop. rnffcc i.hop and Santa Ana F1rsl Federal Savings and Loan Association. By th._. end of this year. the former mortuary home will be refurbished to its 1910 ap- pe<irance and serve as a savings :.ind loan office. THE STRUCTURE then will be in place between Orange County ~overnmenl 's new S8.3 m1lhon Hall of Administration and the yct-to-be-bu1lt OCTD parking garage_ ll<J\l.<:H·r. the houses former l<'nant isn't entirely happy "'ith the arrangement Times ' Mesa Press room Hit by Fire I\ pre.s!'.room fire Sunday even 1n.i:: at the Costa Mesa head- quartC'rs of the Los Angeles Times caused m1n1mal fire damai:e. but quanllt1cs or paper supplies '-"Crc ru1nc<t by a spnnldcr s_vstem that prevented the bla1c Crom spreading. Costa Mesa firemen said todav Costa Mesa Batt<i hon Chief Gary Golc;on said the exact c·ause of the 6 04 p m blaze is under investigation The fire started 1n one of four presses at the fac·1hlv al 1375 Sunflower /\vc., <lllll spreud lo ceiling area air ducts Structural damage was con· fined lo a portion of the 45-foot· hi~h ce1lin~. Golson said. Costa M esa firemen rl'sponded with two engines and a I ruck company. but found the bla7.e ('()ntroll<•d by the build- ing ·s sprinkler 1iyslcm. The• amount of waler damage to supplies and presses was still brin~ lallt<'cl this morning. The fire dl'layc•d printing of tht.> Orange County and San D1e~o Monday morning editions of The Times Christina 'Won't Wed' MOSCOW <AP> -Tanker millionairess Christina Onassis said today that a British n ewspaper report she will marry a Soviet bureaucrat 1s "absolutely preposterous " •·1 never heard anything so stupid, and I don't know what the hell they're talking abouV' t he 27-year-old daughter of the )ate Aristotle Onassis said when reached by telephone at her s uite in the Intourist Hotel .. l'm here on touri~m nne'l business, and J'U be lcavin& in a few days." The London Daily F,xprcss. in o rePort trom o correspondent In Moacow, reported thwt Miss Onassis rame to the Soviet capital to marry 40-year·old Nikolai Kaozov. the head of the tanker division ot the Soviet freight organization Sovfrakhl. An employee of Sovfrakhl said no one of that name work~ for the organization, but a m an name d Sergei Kauzov recently resigned ).rom the t anker division. Jn Athens. Onassis family sources also denied the Express report. They !laid Miss Onassis' trip to the Soviet capital was "strictly business." to sign con- tracts with Sovfrakht chartering se veral of h e r 300,000 supertankers to the Russians. The sources said Onassis ship- ping companies c hartered five bulk carriers to the Russians in 1976. Miss Onassis arrived in the Russian capital du r ing the weekend by train from Paris and was met at the station by a middle-aged man who took her away in a chauffeured car, the Express reported. The Dally Express said a fri('nd of Miss Onassis told il she met Kaozov in Paris, that he was divorced a week ago, and that they had been carryinA: on a quiet romance for some time. M 1ss Onassi:-. hes been mar· ried and div()ll('e4il twice. ; • ' Monday Jun~ .!b 1978 DAILY PILOT ,-\:J Courtesy o.f Lance ' .. Carter Plane Use Draws $6,200 Fine W ASIDNGTON (AP) -The case of Jimmy Carter's pres- idential campaign use of a Georgia bank 's airplane. courtesy of old friend Bert Lance. has been settled by lhe Federal Elections Commission by fining Carter's campaign committee $1,200 and the bank $5.000. The civil penalties were agreed to by all parties after the Carter committee and the Na- tional Bank of Georgia mit1ally pleaded that the campaign's failure to reimburse the bank for five flights was a bookkeep111g oversight and not a willful viola· lion of law. The issue arose last summer during invest1gat1ons into the af· fairs or l,.ance, who subsequently resigned as Carter's budget director and earlter headed the At l anta bank-Lance acknowledged that as bank pres- ident he often made the aircraft available to favored customers, Carter among them. and that some flights were made after the former Georgia governor h ad begun his presidential quest. Carter aides later acknowledged that five short flights, four in 1975 with Carter aboard and a fifth, in September 1976. for then-bemocratic Party Chairman Robert Strauss. were at least partially connected with the campaign and should have been paid for. It 1s unlawful for a corporation to make services or equipment available to a political candidate without re1m bursement. The Carter campaign commit- tee sent the bank a check for more than Sl,100 last August to cover the cost of the flights. most of which were within Georgia's borders. The bank re- funded about S.100 of that after recalculatmg the expenses. Lance testified that he once contacted a campaign staffer about reimbursing the bank, but the issue somehow was forgot- ten. Presidential press secretary Jody Powell and others also Blaze Damage In HB Tallied At $120,000 The model rocket-caused fire that burned four dwellings in Jluntirfgton Beac-h last Thurs day, caused about $120,000 worth of damage, fire officials said loci av. The blaze at 8101 t"orc11e Drive left 11 persons homeless Investigators said two ~part menls were destroyed and the other t wo dwellings were severe- ly damaged. Police and fire department of- fi cials today were conferring on whether to file any charges agamst the 13-year-old hoy who set off the rocket that landed on the roof They planned to interview the boy and his parents. probably Wednesday, according lo Octet' live Bob Russell. \\ho hc·ads arson mvcst1gat1ons. Ile added that 1t would appear there was no mahcmus intent because the young11lcr himself ran home to call and report the fire startinJ: on the structure s shake roof have said the matter was an ove r•sighl. When the case was taken up lai.t year by the FEC. the bank anrned that long-departed Lance . was the only officer who knew of the flights and hence the firm should not now be punished for contributions of which it was not evea aware. Carter Sinks Rating, Confidence Drop NEW YORK <AP) -President Carter's ability to ''inspire conticlence" m the White House and his overall JOb ratmg both have dropped during the past year. according to the latest Harns Survey_ The survey, taken among 1.500 Americans between June 15 and June 17, found the perception of Carter's inspirat1onetl ability had reversed in one year, from a 62-3 1 percent position rating last ~une to a 64-29 percent negative rating this month. "Without a reservoir of faith in him personally. 1t is goin g to be tough for the president to improve his standing on performance in office in any quick or easy way," the survey report concluded. Carter's overall rating stood at 65-32 percent negative at the end of the latest survey period, a turnabout from the 65-32 ~rcent positive rating he ·had in May, 1977, according to the survey. Panama Canal Vet's Final Rites Held James T_ Albert of Huntington Beach. one of the workers who helped build the Panama Canal between 1908 and 1916, has cited ut age 91. Mr. Albert succumbed Thurs- day at Pacifica Hospital after a brief illness and was burred Saturday following private fami - ly rites_ A colorful local character and l)Oe or Hun ting t o n Beach's petroleum pioneers, Mr Albert liked to recall his days of work on the canal. He once noted. "We did everv- lhing We fished bodies out of the canal, fought fires on ships. ran to the scene of a thousand explosions, covered the waterfront. "It was one damned thing aflC'r another, .. the former Vecatur. Ill., fireman said in an 1nlcrne~· last year_ His work on the canal won for Mr Albert a commendation m edal bestowed by Pres1dcnl Theodore Roosevelt. "He \\as the most marvelous man . . . " savs Mr Albert·s w 1dow. Wilma: who was mar- ril'd to the ear!yday oil produc- tion executive for 31 years al the time of his death. She said that although he pre- frrrC'd to dress cas ually, unlike other oil pioneers such as dap- per Slim Theriot. l'f'.lr . Albert carried himself with a stately bearing. He was owner and operator of /\ and S Petroleum Company for a number ol vears after com- ing to Huntington Reach in 1922 hut later sold the business. Ounng retirement years, he ancl Mrc; i'\blert wintered in Palm Springs, Y.here he \\as a member of the Elks Lodgt•. Surv1rnrs m add1t1on to his w 1fe ml'lude a dau~hlt-r, l\lrs- Sue Wetzel or Tustin, and SIX gnmdl'h1ldren. Funeral rites were under direction of Pierce Brothers Smith's Mortuary in Huntington Reach~ followed bv interment at Melrose Abbey Mausoleum m Anaheim. Readers Say 'Cul Welfare' SAC'R/\MENTO CA P> -If the readers of the Sacram ento Union h<td their way, the forced e<'onom1cs of Proposition 13 would comt• first out of welfare and last out or law enforcement. The ncwsp;;iper said in a poA publts hed Sunday that J.367 readers completed questiona1rcs I 1st10g their funding priorities for 18 local programs_ Recomml'nded for thl' mosl m ass1 ve budget cuts a fteC' welfare were capital outlay:-- that 1s , nl'W building -and management personneL 'Sluirk H u11t Expanded NF.W YORK <AP> Scarrhcrs in more than 50 boats crisscrossed I he watc•rs off·Long fsland's Montauk Point looking for a great while shark that local f1sht'rmen say towed a 40-toot wooden boat some 20 miles. The shark got away Fri- da v whl•n 1t broke the J ,GSO pound nylon line afl<'r a 11 hour struggle. Over the \\-cckcnd. almost all of the $400-a - day r harl(•r f1c;hing boats in this Lon~ Is land com- munity went 2.5 to 30 miles o(I c;hore either to look for th!' shark or fi sh for him. tf 1.0nDOt\ the, ong1nal golfjac1<e;t.-.by ~· FOG If I I r l ~ J I I ' . 1•.,19r, ~rfiz.ct forelldAy w..-:ar compl~t ly w119hsbl<' decron end l'oLLon ' ce.l1bnz. clou1 ,) london faj <"'<clU:11vc available. m l.im, lVOf'/' yo?llc•w, , } n<Jvy. lL qrcze n, 1 endd•mmbluiz · ~ul lT'.'3 lltl t I ng • 44 fashion Island, newport center 644-5070 - . .. \ 'l t ~ I. • ,\.;j DAU. V Pit.OT NATION /WORLD /WEATHER • ""' ,~~1 Palat!e of Versailles Jost ., ~oasting with~ Tom ~Jlf'C'\~' Bomb Blast i ; • ltlarphine Destroys Art COlllNG OF AGE DEPT. -The llttle guy who stood hlgb up on his moving platform hardly looked Hke a case tor a geriatrics ward. He looked young as ever, for that matter. His eyes were clear and bright. The smile was un- wrinkled. There wasn't even a noticeable droop to bis ears. And he was dancing and prancing to lively music. VERSAILLES, F rance <AP> -A powerful bomb planted bebhid a statue exploded early today in the historic Palace or Versailles, wrecking three rooms of Napoleonic art and damaging seven others in the ornate complex.that is in one or the jewels of French culture. A He was the same old Mickey Mouse, all right, doing hia spec:ial thing up at the Magic Kingdom in Anaheim. 8ut thia "happened to be a !iPeclaJ occasion for the Mick. He was on a float surrounded by thousands or tmy dauhng lights shaped like his own famous head and globe·like ears. He was in Disneyland's Main Street Electrical Parade. And the parade this summer is dedicated to him. q MICKEY MOUSE;')tou see, will be SO years old in Nov· ember. Why, it Sffms like only yesterday that I was running down to the Saturday matinee a.nd putting up my dime to watch Mickey race across the screen, sometimes shy;· sometimes confused, but always eluding perils and threats in the end Surely it was only yesterday when my own offspring sat huddled in front of a fli ckering black and white tube. l/imselJ Aboard SOth Birthday Float at Disneyland watching another bunch of kids prance on the screen in Mickey Mouse ears, chanting together in concert with the TV voices· "M·l·C K·E·Y M·oh-you-es·eeeeeee ... " As the Mouseketeers and their li ttle star continued to enchant a new Reneration of youngsters ort television, I can r emember wondering to myself, "How much longer do you suppose thaC little mouse can keep on going? Why, he's as old as I am. . " Well, that was a few years back. The oldest of my off. sprinR who was enchanted by lus video antics 1s now grown and married. The Mick, however , s till has all his old vigor and ap· peal to audiences old and young. You could Cell ;ust by watching the youngsters of today when the mouse and his float came rolling by on Disneyland's main ste m. There were cheers and waves and shouts of, "Yea, Mickey~" How much longer can that mouse keep going, I asked myself, rubbing one of m y aging, aching fe et. FOREVER. YOU s uspect. Mi ckey Mouse is a character of unive rsal appeal. No wonder they honor him at Disneyland. He's the guy who made Walt Disney's mag icland of Anahei m possible. And 1rs really nace to know a guy of your generation .vho is ageless. .. 1 Dead in Maryland Boating Collision ANNAPOLIS. Md. <AP) -Lee Troutner had enjoyed a steamed crab dinner and was giving his young son some pointers on navigation as they took a liesurely cruise on the Severn River. The tranquility was shattered when a runabout plowed into their boat "I'm under the water crying -worried about Timmy. The screws of the othe r engine are turning right on top of us. I thought we were going to die," Troutner said of the ordeal that left one wom an dead and another person hospitalized. The 35-foot Cabin cruiser and 28-foot runabout collided near the mouth of the r iver, and both vessels sank a lmost im· mediately, authorities said. Anne F. Cissel, 40, of Wheaton, Md ., <lied after being tra pped in the wreckage. T routner, 37, photographer for acting Gov. Blair Lee, his 13· year·old son and nine other people were on the cruiser. Two people were on the runabout. guard was slightly injured. There were no reports of damage to the Hall of Mirrors. where the World War 1 peace treaty was signed, or to the royal a partments, t he opera house and the chapel th<1t are the chief tourist attractions in the vast 17th century r1alace 11 miles southwest of Pans. THREE MIUTANT groups two left ist and one Br eton s·e p a r a t i :> t c I a i m e d Faithful Contribute 'Fortllne' KIRKLAND, W:.ish (AP) ~ The faithful at Ovcrlakc Chris· tain Church rendered unto God in a big way pouring $1 .6 million mto the collcct10n plate. their pastor said. Twenty off.duty sheriff"s deputies werl' on hand Sunday to gua r d the offering and an aTmored car hauled 1t away THE REV . ROBERT Moorehead said the total taken an two collections -\\as within $100,000 of the church's goal for a new building, after a contractor stood up al the end of the service and offered all the labor for the foundation. "We just challenge them (lhe congregation I lo step out on fa ith and t1 ust," Moorehead said. Some people in the generally w e ll -to ·d o cong regation mo r tgaged their homes and yachts to raise money. he c;aid Ot hers signed plC'dgcs to pay during the next few months T HE CONSTRUCTION plan calls for butld1ng a nl•w 2.UOO seat auditorium. a chapel and c lassrooms to handle the church's fast growing mem- bership. The churC'h has grown from 13 members to 1,800 mem· hers in eight years, Moor had said. The "super collection" wa-; announced three months ago, so the faithfuJ had time to mull • over what they woultl give to the church . "Some brought their diamond rings, deeds to property and some sold their cars and homes ... Moorehead s aid "We even had some people devote th e ir ycar ·s !>a lary. Some brought their trn1lers and ngs ~nd some brought lhe1r ltfe sav 1ngs.·· HE SAID Hl'N DREDS or church members partt<•1pated in a 30 ·hour prayer ngil that ended Sunday morntng. They prayed that their goal of a new church would be reached, ht· said. The drive beitan three months ago, but the actual coll('ct1on did not co m e unti l Sunday. Moorehead s.~ud it \L41S Cod s wi ll that the church pay cash for the new buildini; to avoid in · terest on loam. Twisters Hit Midwest At Le~t 35 Injured in Indianapolis Tetttperat ure• HI L• P<• Albo'Qv<I " M Am.uwo 101 13 Afl<ant• '2 71 8a1tornor• ts •s ll•rmlf>9,,.m ,, 14 901\'f' 68 0 !Jo•lon ,. u 8rO*"\Ytll• •1 II l'll>ll•lo 12 .. Ch•r•oo 16 M .:16 c111c1n,,.ll 17 .. , ,. <••"•'•"" . ,, 6' Ul Oa1 Fl w~ ,00 7) Oenv., •l S1 00Mol11«. " .. Jl 0.lrOll IS .. 1 Oii .... " .... 62 n .01 l+ONllUIU ., 71 >iOU\IOf\ ,, 71 ICan s Cll'fl •s 11 l..u VtQA• 101 1l l•lll•Roetl •• 7) l..o•A"9el~ .. •1 louhvlllt 93 ,, .11 M•mllfll• .. ,. Miami .. 11 ,. Mlh•AUllM II H .11 Mpl~St. P. IS .. 2.11 N•allvlllt •s 14 New Ott•-t) " Ntw Yo111 ., •S Otle. City 0 " Om•1'41 ., .. 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Sth 11 11 em Srcrf Report Hunttnotnn ~•a<h W•vf' t tn ' •~t with we•t ,,,..It ·~ \llOM wino rhOll 'OncllllOM IJ•nrrtllY l>OOI NeWIH\t\ ~II WAv•• 1 to ) ltfl ""h •outnwt\t \Wtll tondll•on\ llmll•r responsibility for the 2 a .m. bomb blast. But police gave lit· tie c red ence to any of the claims. Hubert Landais, director or French museums. said one large painting of Napoleon was almost destroyed and 15 more paintings and wall panels were heavily dam aged. He estimated the restor ation cost at $1 million - possibly higher if, as feared, an exter ior stone wall suffered str uctural da mage. "Some paintings are in rib· hons." said Versailles curator ticrald van der Kamp "They cao be restored, but 1t will be like a Jigsaw puzzle." POLICE WERE TIPPED at 9 a m.. seven hours after the hlast. that another bomb would go off m one of the two Trianon palaces 1n the palace park. Some art works were r emoved, but bomb experts found nothing, and the Grand Trianon opened for tours as usual. The main palace is closed on Mondays. The explosion occurred about 2 a m in the Midi Wing of the main palace, to the left of the front entrance. and wrecked the lhr-ee·room Empire Suite on the ground fl oor which was opened to the public May 16 by Prest· dent Valery G1scard d'Estaing. "THREE OF THE paintings are reduced to fragments and arc irreparable, including a very fa m o us pa irfting of Napoleon awarding t he first Legion of Honor medals," Jean Dumont. the chief ar chitect for the palace. told reporters. "Other paintings are damaged but probably can be restored The sculpted woodwork of the rooms has been shattered and there is at least six months' solid restoration work." DU~l ONT SAID the l:)om b blasted a hole said by other sources lo measure 10 by 12 feel -into the noor of the Gallery of Battles on the second floor. "But there does not appear to be other damage an the Gallery of Bat· ll<'s." he said lie denied earlier re~rts that the damage extended to the third floor. APWlr..- $EA8R00K SUPPORTERS COUNTER PROTEST New Hampahire Gov. Meldrim Thomson At Clambake Police Arrest 150 Nuclear Protesters Bv The Associated Press While thousands of Cl<1mshell All iance supporters began wrapping up their peaceful protest against the construction of a nuclear power plant in the Northeast, at least 150 backer5 of the Crabshell Alliance were arrested when they occupied the construc- tion site of two atomic power plants an the Northwest. About SO Grays Har bor County sheriff's deputies began arrest· mg the Cra bshell demonstrators 1mmed1ately after they ap· proached the 275·acre Salsop project construction site Sunday eveni ng near Elma, Wash , about 70 miles southwest of Seattle. THE WASHINGTON P UBLIC POWER Supply System. a quasi·public agency. is constructing the two mulllbillion·dollar plants. Sheriff's spokesman Richard Romanelli said the people arrest· ed were released on their personal recognizance. He said lhat they would be charged with trespassing. Romanelli also said that demonstrators found on the construe· tion site today would be charged with v1olatmg a Judge's restrain· ing order. A few miles from the Satsop site. more than 1,000 Cr abshell Al · li ance members and other opponents of nuclear power capped a d ay of entertainment by marching peacefully through Elma. IN WHAT MAY HAVE BEEN the largest demonstration in the history of the nation's anti·nuclear movement, police said Sun- day's protest against a nuclear power plant m Seabrook, N.H .. at· tracted 12,000 people, including tourists, vacationers and curiosity seekers. • • • and how does· YOUR garden grow? Whether it's about a simple shrub, •sophisticated bed of flowers, or a testy selection of vegetables, the Dally Piiot's garden page blossoms every Saturday with handy hints and delightful features. We'll give you tips on when to plant, when to prune and when to pluck. Our writers also brighten the garden section with Interesting features on locel people who grow unuauel plant• or achieve exceptional results. Our crop of atorlet comes up new every Saturday to help you have more succeH and more enJoyment with your growing. If your thumb la green, use It to flip to the garden page In Saturday's Dally Pilot. DAILY PILOT 642-4321 ( ' CALIFORNIA • Workers Stricken Naval Shipyard a Death Trap? LONG BEACH tAP> ·A~ut Qne·lhlrd of tbe employees who h ave worked at the Long Beach Naval Shipyard at leas t 17 years have contracted asbestosis. a lung-scarring (Hsease that il> $Ometimes fatal. according to a Navy study released Sunday. "Some of these people will get worse and some won't, and we bave no way of knowing who will and wbo won't ," said Dr. Jeun Felt.on, the medical director of the Long Beach shipyard. FELTON, WHO DIRECTE D the Navy study, said all the pe<>· ple with abnormal X-rays were notified and attended a briefing where they were told there is no cure for asbestosis. Absestosis. a scarring of the lungs caused by breathing asbestos fibers. causes difficulty in breathing and 1s sometimes fatal. It also can cau!>e cancer, and scientists believe it takes far less asbestos t-0 cause cancer than to cause asbestosis The cancers a lmost never show up until at least 20 to 30 years after exposure to asbestos, and there ls no way to predict how m a n y current shipyard workers may develop cancer HOWE VE R , THlS APRlL the Department of Health. Educa. lion and Welfare warned that hearly half of the J 1 million Americans who had worked with asbestos over the past 40 years may die of either cancer or asbesto!>ls the vast majonty from cancer Although there had been spot checks indicating workers at the Navy's eight s hipyards had a:.besto!:>i:.. lhc test &1t Long Beach wru. the first to examine an entire shipyard. In another inves tigation of hazards to shipyard workers. the Bo:ston Globe reported in February that persons who worked o n the nation's nrst nuclear submarines al Portsmouth, N .H, Naval Shipyard have been dying from cancer at a rate more than dou ble the national average. DR. THOMAS NAJARIAN, a Boston physician, said he found a potential radiation problem al the shipyard, but the Navy said its radiat..ion standards fall within limits set by the federal government. In Long Beach, the Navy test· ed 6 ,640 current shipyard workers and found 16 percent of them had abnormal chest X· rays indicating the possibility or asbestosis. . More than 5,300 of these workers. however, had been employed less than 12 years, and the percentage of abnormal X· rays increased in proportion to length of employment. For ex ample, 239 of 707 current employees who had worked at the shipyard at least 17 years had abnormal X·rays, the study said. FELTON SAID NAVY of ficials were reluctant to say the workers with abnormal X·ravs actually had asbestosis. The of ficial report says the \.\Orkers had ··abnormal findings cons1s· tent with inhalation of asbestos fiber " It's a question of !-.emantac:-.. Felton said .. In m y mmd 1t -; il!.bCStOSIS .. In the past. the Navy has used asbestos mainly for insulation in ships. but hus reduced its use to ;i minimum in new s hips. Most of the Nuvy's ships still have a:.bestos ins ulation, howev<'r. and part of that has to be ripped' out when ships are brought in for overhaul. Rip-out 1:-a messy Job that sends &1sbt-stos fibers flying Arcooology Delay Riles Developer SANTA CRUZ CAP) -"lt 1ust looks likes rocks to me," i,trumblcd developer Roger Gin- lt-rt as hl' poked around the site of his SI million Adobe Villa townhouse project. But to archcologists and Attorney General E velle Younger, it looked like the possible remains of the long.lost 187.year-old San· la Cruz Mission. Younge r obtained a tem porary restraining order Thurs. day stopping Gintert from sink- '"~ ., !'lw1mming pool on the d1:-.putc>d site until the question can be resolved. Gintcrt had planned nine townhouses with the swimming pool scheduled to be s unk in August, '"but there's no chance of that. now If we can't build, somcbody'd better be prepared to buy the land.·· he said . He in- d1c·ated the price could he in the m·1ghhorhood of SS00.000 Bear Gone for Good? Crystal Lake Opened LOS ANGELES c AP l -Crystal Lake was open to the public this morning after ofricials decided a complained to the Army Corps of Engineers. large. black hear. \.\ounded by a friJ.:htened camper. ( ) would not return lo the recreation area, a U S fo'orest 4...'T .4'T''£ Serv1ccspokl'S\\Oman said J I rt 1 • ··The f1:.h and ,l.(amc wardens feel the bear might ..__ _______ __, The 241 -foot -hig h platforms. \\oh1ch would be put between tw'> s hip· ping lanes for incoming :.ind outgoing traffic ~ou th of the harbors. have Uled. or they JU:.t feel he may have gone off lo die som eplace. But they are positive the bear will not come back to Crystal Lake," said Meredith Howell, spokeswoman for the Angeles National Forest supervisor's office SalellilP Launel• To1alglu PASADENA \AP l A satellite that w111 pro \'ide d<.·tadl•<I surveys of nearly all the world ·s oceans even· 36 hours 1i. to be launched this c"en ing from Vandenberg Air Force Base Alun Wood, spokesman for Jet Propulsion Lahoratory described the S9~·milhon Seasat A as a ne" breed of satellite. the first to tllke measure mt.•nh ei.:c·lus1vely \.\Ith r emote m1crowa\'e "l'nSOI S Plolforrn ffo ::ord C'if ed LOS ANGELES IAP1 Two Shell Oil plat· forms propol.ed for the mouth of lhe Los Angeles Long Be<1ch harbor C'Omplex would create a nav1gatio.u1\ "rninefit•ld," shipping groups have ~oul~. be. "an _u~<.1c·c~pta ble hazard to na\'lga- taon .. said Phillip Steinberg, president of the Pac1f1c Merchant Shipping Association Pla11e Pie~e llils Roof BERKELEY CAPl A pu:ce or an airplane dropped out of the sky and hit the roof of a house in Berkeley Sunday, police reported. No one was hurt and no damage wa5 reported. Poh<.'e said the part appeared to be a section of hatch that might fit on an airliners cargo section. The piecc> hit at about 3 · 30 p m .ffore E a!lt Side Hape1t? SACRAMENTO tA P l Two more rapes, one an Modesto early Frida~ a nd one an Davis early Saturday, were carried out an ways reminis cent of Sacramento's east ride rapist, authorities report. . The ea~t si~e rapist, or someone whose vie· tams dcscnb<> him samrlarly, w~s previously re· ported to have assaulted 31 females an the Sacram ento area "md two in Stockton since late 1975 Churcl1 'Full of Fear'? Roi ex -the time of your life. LOS ANGELES !AP> Evangelist Garner Ted Armstrong tcm· porarily banished by his father from the World" ide Church of God predicted a downfall of the religious empire because of its leaders' lavish spending habits and poor finan- <'rnl management. AR1'1STRONG, WHO spent a few days last week with hie; wife at a lodge near Minneapolis. also 1,o,ld the Los Angeles .-im's in CJn interview pubhshcd today that the r hurch i:. a· "house divided · that has ils 65.000 members ·'shot through with fear." The one.time heir ap· 1>qre t'l to head the <·hurch, Armstrong was recently stripped of all his titles by his father, Herbert W. Armstrong, who h eads the Pasadena-based or· ganiiation TWO WEEKS ago, the cider Armstrong or dcred hjs son to take a s ix·monlh paid leave or a bsence, secluded from all but h1s immediate family. Baldwl~~~? 1 i;l I Pianos :r:: • 1 and r : ..:. ~ il: I Organs j · ~ ~ · \ ,K~ ~lttMCI,,_ LESSONS· INSTAUMlNfS Y•11=A f.-lon llMM MO ... -0-. , .... A Roll'' Wclkh endure'> for ;i hfcllml'. Thl' clac;..,1c ..,l\ ling is .1gek..,.,, ilnd till' prcu..,1on craftsm.1nsh1p inc;ure.., con..,tanl accuracy. Roll'' men·.., w.1tche.., 1n ... 1.1mle!-.., ... red A l.>.plurer ll, $615. B Sea Owellt•r with perpetual d.1tt'. 5695 C GMT Master Rolcx, Sf,J'l S11111t'l/1111g 8L'n111!f11l /or El'l'l tfc1111' •• 'i' ROL&lC SLA. VICK~s I on~ )<"'rlt n \on" I I I ' I H f.i.ghooo hl.rnd • (,\'I I \RO NtWf'W,>rt l'\t;i, h La~un11 Hilt~ • WC"mn111Ht-r .. I\,• I .rr•h·r t,,. Anittlt• • ''" 0 11 ii'' • l.ol• Vr>'" ' ......... \4....... "'"" ......... ,..._. • " ........ ~ ............. ,. .,, ...... ,t-...., Monday, Jun• 26. 1978 The Wi1t11er Al'WlrffMM DAIL V PILOT ;l;j Gays Vow To Fight , Briggs SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Decked out in flowers and an armband, San Francisco's first gay s upervisor. Harvey Milk, urged support from almost a quarter of a million gay sym· pathizers to march on Washington, D C. next July Fourth Christine Louise Acton, 23. has been named the new Miss California and will receive a S3,000 scholarship A mwm· graduate of the University of Redlands, she played a flute ~olo in the talent competition "I call upon all gay peoplE.> from all over the nation to gather in Was hington on the Fourth of July. 1979," he told the <·rowd est imated at 240,000 who had gathered here Sunday for the seventh a nnu a l Gay Freedom Day Parade. • "l 'M TIRED OF all the silence from the While House.·· Milk shouted to the crowd at Civic Center. "Jimmy Carter. you talk about human rights · ~ an fact, you want to be the. world's leader for human right<>. Well, damn it, lead." Spruce Goose Gets A Kick in Feathers Scores o f silver.glittered bodies. braless women in T. shirts and bronze-chested men an Jeans turned out for the speechmaking and to watch the promenade or 100 decorated floats and about 250 groups ot banncr·carrying chanters march up M arkct Street LONG BEACH CA P > The Spruce Goose, the only failure of Howard Hughes' aviation S?enius, is being evicted from its air·conditioned roost in Long Beach Harbor to make way for a marine fuel operation, a port of. ficial says "Basically, they've been told to get out," Long Beach Harbor chief James H. McJunkin said over the weekend. BUT HE ADDED that Summa Corp 's $100.000-a-year lease on the specially built T -shaped hangar would be continued on a month-to-month basis for up to a year while a new home is found for the flying boat -the largest plane ever built. McJunkin said the hangar was delaying development of a 20· acre portion of Pier E as an Atlantic Richfield Co. marine fuel terminal. The Spruce Goose was de· signed by Hughes to carry 750 troops across the ocean in World War II but wasn't finished until the \\ ar \\as over Congressional 1n vestagators who belatedly probed the plane's feasibility and soaring costs claimed it would never fly. IT om -BUT only once. With Hughes at the controls. the 220-foot·long plywood plane rose to an altitude of 70 feet for one mile over Long Beach Harbor in November 1947 It was then hidden away in the harbor hangar by a b itter Hughes, who reportedly could not tolerate the thought of a failure. Summa Corp. officials said Hughes spent ··several times" the $18 million the government paid ham trying to make the plane work and maintaining 1t EARLI E R T HIS YEAR, Hughes' Summa Corp. decided to deed the Spruce Goose to a private foundation whic h plans lo create an "Air Muse um of the West." ··we hold no rll wall and we hope they succeed in opening the museum." said Mc.Junkin. The museum foundation. h eaded by Los Angeles Municipal Judge Gilbert Alston. is attempting to raise SlO m11l1on but is reportedly f11r short of its ~O<t) Man Drowne d SAN DIMAS <AP\ -A man who walked fully clothed into the swimming area of Frank G. Bonelli Regional County P~rk , drowned. s heriff's deputies said. The man's name is being withheld pending notification of relatives. The focus of the event, wh1cb received $10,00CI in city funding for the first time this year, was a voter 101tiat1ve on the Nov ember ballot which has been widely labeled anti.gay. THAT ~1EASURE, sponsored by slate Senator John f3riggs. ( R· Fullerton l, would permit school districts to fire teachers for advocating or soliciting gay sexual acts or for publicly and indiscreetly engaging in s uch acts .. , ( Briggs wans he wa II not stop They never do," Milk said "There will be no safe closet for any gay person, so break out Qf yours today and tear that damri thing down once and for all " A middle-aged couple vaca. tioning from Dayton, Ohio, com· mentcd on the event, "We're not for 1t by any means. but 1t sure 1s interesting to watch, isn't it? I mean. "e've heard stories about San Francisco back home and JUSt had to see it for ourselves.·· PA RADE COORDINATOR Cel este l'ie\\ brough said a significant aspect of this year's parade was the ·'enormous number or lesbians parlacipat· ing. How much money may'I borrow for $JOO a month? Because Newport E.quity'Funds arranges interest-only monthly payments on your equity loan the answer is: Ir you like our answer-cell us at: 714 ·644-8824 Newporl f.quifytunds.Jnc UC£1'ISt 0 OPOI\ F'FI • t 12.000 hom~er ~lty loin f0t '"' yNrs ot ten per~tnt simple &onual lotetttl Commission end oel p(octtds very with type eod vahJe cl Pfoperty sKuflog loen At 12 ~I commission, f0t ex•mple. the total of pe~nta 11 $19.JOO. The enoulll perctntag" r.tt~ 11 J 2.8' perc;ent . " 1 1 y 1 l " (. . . orano• eoa .. oai•v P·•o• Editorial Page ............................................................. ~ondav. Jun• 26. 1978 Ro~rt N Weed Publl\her ThOmu K"villEditor Barber• K.rtlbiCh/Editorl•I P-oe Editor Questions Cloud Rente r Tax Relief \ ')'he stance taken by 1rvine Company President Peter Kremer with regard to Jetting tenants share the benefits of property tax reductions may well typify the approach of many major landlords After pledging that tenants of the company's six apartment complexes would receive proportionate rebates of property tax savings, Kremer proceeded to back off with somP qualifications. First, he said, the assessor's estimate that pre-Jarvis * assessments of all the company's properties would have yielded $14 million in property tax -thus an $8 million post-Jarvis saving -probably was too high. So nothing can be decided until November tax bills arrive and the actual reduction on the apartment properties is d etermined. Second, the re rem ains the possibility that the -Legislature will try lo limit the tax reduttion to lfomeowner properties, excluding or reducing the benef 1t for apartment owners. Third, the initiative may be blocked in the courts. Other question marks for Kreme r and fe llow landlords to consider must include the possibility that increased trash collection fees, water rates and other user charges that could affect maintenance of rentals may be imposed by government agencies seeking to make up for property tax losses. Meanwhile the I rvine Company president said the policy of annual rent increases to keep ··m line with the market" will continue. • In short, while renters m ay reap some benefits in the long run, the immediate prospects fo r relief a re lost in questions. Court Closure Tinie ly Superior Court Presidi ng Judge Byron Mc Millan st r uck a blow for reason last week when he ordered an end to costly anu inefficient Superior Court sessions in F ullerton. Staffin~ u courtroom in Fullerton for one half day a '"C'ek on and off for the past 20 yt:ars has accomplished little mor(• than lo perhaps save a few north county attorneys travl'l llmc to Santa Ana. \' For that sma ll return, Superior Court has been obhged to sen<.I a .1utlge. a bailiff and a clerk lo Fullerton for what amounted to brief sesswns that cos t an estimated $900. M ost frcquenll~, the displaced j ud icial trio simply sat m an empty courtroom waiting for nothing to happen. That's beL·n I me with State Senator John Briggs. R·Full erton. \I.ho in W70 sponsored special interest legis lation th.it mandated the Judicial was te and tJ1srupt1on. Brigg~ <l1dn 't mind the: waste and the imposition he foisted off on thr Supcr"'r Court bcC'ausc he was, after all, making points 011 the home front and scormg big with the press in Fullerton But enough is e nough Cheers for Judge McMillan for finally putting a n end to a nonsensical parade that has bee n costing taxpayers a wasted $50,000 a year. Gas Ration P lan The standb~· gasoline rationing plan proposed by the (".1rter ,\rlm101strat1on . with its nverage two-gallon daily ctllotm<'nt per vehicle. clocsn't sound very practical on the ~urlan~ f(lr Soulhl•rn Calilorn1a's lung distance t.'ommuters. But lkpartmL•nt of Encrg~ officials have come up -...1th th~ rather ~urpnsang news that California has a lov.er gasoline consumption per \chicle than the nationa l :1, er age Gl .8 gallons a month. as opposed to 63.7 ~..illons a month nationwide Doubt Jes~ the sh<:cr number of \'Chicles m the state 'vc1ghts this statistic. In anv l'asc. s hould a rral l'm ergency arise a nd Encr({y Secretary James Schlesinger insists the standby ~llan is only for emergency use the idea of ral1onin_g makes a g reat deal mon' sense than llw theor y that the "ay lo cut gasoline use 1::. lo push tor pr1c·c increases Artificially inflated prices s1mpl~ mean that those who can C1 fford them do all the driving they w:.i nt. \\ hilc t hL· lrl\\Ct'·mconw worh.er, ciep(·ndin/,! on hi~ car to get to ~ind I rorn the .1oh, fm1b has n·al income sinking e\·en lo\\ l' I' Tht' Schlcsinger pl:.an t ~1cklt·s the argument that 1al1onm_g cncouragl'S hlack marketing of coupons by 111·rm1lling a ·,~hitc m<Jrket ' "hid1 would make il ll!gal for fhosC' who do not lll't'd lhL·i r I ull 1 a t icm lo sell coupons I 11 1110-;e who do T he plan :.:is propost•d \\cmlcl not provide different r c.ll 1 o n I t • " l' l c; fl> r p 1 I\ a t c t'iH s o r c a r s used by ht15 iness('s <•xrcpt for pul>lir satl'ly vehicles or lake into t·ons1d er;Jl1on an O\\'O(·r·!'i m:cup:ll1on o r place of n•s1dcnce But. sinct' <'\'Pry \ t•h1cll• would receive the same :111lom:it1<: allotment. 11 might nut take too much enterprise> for those who dun I necci thei r r ation to find others who do .1 • Opinions expressed m lhe space above are those ot the Daily Pilot Other views expressed on this paqe are those ot their authors and artists Reader comment is invited Address The Daily Pilot, PO. Box 1560. Costa Mesa CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-432 1 Boyd I Carnivorous By L.1'1. BOYD Questions arises a s to whether a carnivorous pla111 will eat hamburger. No. 11 won't . lls live meat has lo Dear Gloo1ny Gu Re a ll lhfs coofu~aon over government cost cuts : Even a dummy knows you prune dead wood from the TOP' GARDENER st rugglc n llttle to trigger the plant mechanism that re· lt·ases Lhe d1gest1ve juices II am hurgn docsn 't struggl~. Or 1f 1l doe!!, it certainly shouldn't bt• eaten, not even by a carnivorous plant, most pru- hllbly. Flam rmable and inflamma· hie mf'nn the same. Tolera- bl" and intolera ble mean the opposite t.oosen and un loosen mean the same . Fasten and unfasten mean the opposite. Odd, what? Any Oth{'r~., Almost half the Rolr cart.., ~old In this country are made in Polund where there arc no golf course!!. Saic1 Henry Ford : "C8pilnl punishment is as bud B cure for crime as charlly i.s for povtrly " J ack Anderson . Soviet Tricks Harass Jews W ASHTNGTON -Th~ Na.ti holocaust, whose horrors were dramati~ed on television, stirred only weak protests from other European nations 40 years ago. They were too busy mollifying Adolf llitlcr to ery out against llw s laughtering of J ews. Yet history repeated itself earlier this year-behinu closed d oo r s in B elgra d e . Delegates f ro m bolh sides of the Iron Curtain gathered I here for a Conference on European Cooperation. The Amer· ic an delegate, Ambassador Arthur Goldberg , spoke out e1gainst Soviet persecution of the Jews. The Soviet delegatf. Yuliy Vorontsov, angrily threatened "terrible consequences" if the Weste rn nations tried to make an issue of Soviet anli·Scmitism Aghas t . the allied delegates nervous l y b ega n tiptoeing around the maypole. They were more concerned about placating the Soviets than protecting Jewish rights. Vorontsov kept blustering until Goldberg demanded lo his Earl Wa te r fa ('e : "W h o 'nre you threatening?" This cairned the Soviet delegate down. IL should be amphaslzed that the Soviets are not slaughtenng Jews, Nazi-style. But Jews have been branded as aliens in the Soviet Union for the c rime of wanting to leave. These. "refuseniks," as the y're called, have been '>UbJected to offi cial harassment. Many have losl their jobs. Others hav<' had trouble even gelling health care. They also have become rn a rked people Suddenly, close I riends <1re ufn11d to associate wit h them Yet the Soviet authoritws won't let them leave. Sometimes, the refusenaks a re simply left dangling. No action b taken on their applications for exit visas. Often the officials taunt them. This is precisely how the Nazi per~ecutaon began 11 's a chilling reminder of the early Nazi days when Hitler 's neighbors closed their eyes a nd turned their backs on the Jews Goldberg recc1 ved secr et instructions from the N ationaJ Safurity Council ''vigorously to purs ue the cause of human n g't)ts" but ctlso "to maintain a l!lt:!d unity" at Belgrade. .'ihe instructions turned out to be a lmost contradic tory. He reported back to the Whlte House afterward that he found a "club-like atmosphere" among the allied delegates. They were not the least disposed to press the Soviet Union about its human rights violations. FOR SIX WEEKS, Goldberg could get no "allied unity" on the s ubject. But they agreed at last to permit each delegate, individually and separately. to raise the human rights Issue without violating unity . Goldberg immediately assailed the Soviets for persecuting the Jews. He raised case after case, with s pecial e mphasis on the celebrated Soviet dissident Anatoly Shcharansky. President Carter personally spoke with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko about the Shcharansky ca se last fall. Vice President W a Ile r Monda le presented Sh c haransky with a human rig hts award in absentia. This was intended as a signal to the Soviets. The word came back from Moscow. nevertheless, that Shcharansky would be tried for treason. A w1tness was dredged up wh o c h a r ge d tnal Shcharansky was a CIA agent. Carte r r es ponded with a personal d e nial. "l h ave double.checked this .•• " he said at a press conference, ••and r am completely convinced •.• that Mr. Shcharansky has never had a ny sort of relationship to our knowledge with lbe ClA." AT BELGRADE, Goldberg warned the Soviets pointedly that ''the prestige and credibility of the president Is involved." It would be a serious a ffr ont to th e president. Goldberg cautioned, if the Sov1ests should now convict Shcha r ansky of being a CIA contact. This would be the same as c alling Ca rte r a liar. Goldberg said. After the B e l grade confere nce, the president's national s ecurity adviser , Zbigniew Brzezinski. reported behind closed door s to the Cabinet; "We are not satisfied wath the progress on human rights. but. .. Ambassador Goldberg played a prominent and effective role." A few weeks ago. a US. con g r essi o nal d e legation Journeyed to Moscow Cor official ta lks Rep. Henry Wa xman, D.·Calif., qujetJy slipped away from the formalities to check on the ''refuseniks." He visited more than 30 of them in Moscow, Leningrad and Kaev The refuseniks, he found, ar e hounded and harassed. To thwa rt the secret police. they scrawl m essages lo each other on erasable magic slates. IN LENINGRAD. a desperate young couple. Lena and Arkadi Ra binov. had !><!en barred from leaving Russia on the g rounds that the husband knew stctl<-' secrets. They were told they had to wait five )car s for the state.secret period to expire F'1ve yea r s l ater, they reapplied for exit visas This tame they were told they had lo wail for another fi ve years because the w1fc> knew s lat(' secr ets Thjs s tory had a happy endi n g Waxman and his colleag ues intervent'd privately with Soviet officials and the Rabinovs now will be allowed lo leave Waxm~m also intervened f or a J ewis h woman \i.ho couldn't get adcquat«i> mc<hcal care for her sick baby But hundreds of other Soviet J ews aren't so fortunate. Dr. Ben)amro Lcvich, for example. • has been waiting for a visa for sev~n year s. lie has gone tbrough so much harass ment that he keeps referring lo his pre-refusen1k da} s as · my forme r life · Crusade to Split California Revived Assemblyman Barry Keene, running for the State Senate. has taken up the crusade once cham pioned by Senator Randolph Collier. to divide California mto two states. His initial attempt. like those of Collier and others in the past, was quickly snuffed by a lt>gislatavc comm1ltet• Keene's reasons for a spilt are nevertheless cogent one!> He '>ays state government "h as grown Loo b11L too ex p e n s iv e. and too un responsive to la s p eople.·• He a dded that "the north· sou th con - flict s over water and other natural r e· sources escalate aml beccime ug lie r as the years roll by." The discord or w hich he speaks is not imaginary but stems from a d1vers1t y of m Sydney H arr i I teresls far greater than merely water or other natural resources although those are of vas t im· porta nce They have existed ever since the state was ad· milled to the Union and become more pronounced as the popula· lion bu rgeons The fa ct is Nort h er n and Sou thern California represent two d1f- fcrenl worlds THAT THF.SE irrecooc1lable di ffercnccs bet v. cen north and !>OUth existed htts always been apparent lo thOS(' observing t he Legislature. And now that the Legislature is dominated by the South by reason of the Supreme Court 's reapportionme nt d e· c1sion. the people of the North can expect nothing better than the short end of the stick . Not only did the court's ruling render impote nt the power of those in the North to govern but 1t destroyed the ability of all Californians to control their gov- e rnment by est ablishing legislative districts without re· gard lo their community of in· terests. In a state I his s aze that would have been ruinous 1n itself but even without such a dcvasl<ilmg ruling state government •~. as Keene savs. too bis.?. too ex- µe n5ive ant.I too unre.spons1\'e ttJ the people. THERE ARE othe r cnmpell· ing reasons for s µlilling the state. not the least of which 1s tne m alter or representation for its 2 1 m1lhon people 1n the Congress. While p opula tion gives the state a fair shake in the IJousc it, along with a ll others, has only two U.S Senators. But the difference 1s that an equal number of people o n the Atlantic seaboard are represent· ed by 20 Senators because they live in 10 different states. Look - ing at it another way, the land area occupied by California is covered by eleven states the like of Delaware. Rhode Island and othe rs on the east coast. g1v1ng them 22 Senators to look after their 1ntc1 e~t.<; IF TllAT S{'<'ms inequitable'. cons ider the current plan to Jo?ra nl W::ish1ngton O.C full rcpn•sent ation 1n Congress with two Sen;itors ann I WO COO· ~res~ml·n The 01,.tnct is only fi7 square m1lec; and has a popula· lion of i00.000, making 1t hardly bigger than San Francis~o. Ket'ne. who received 4 votes in committee for his proposal could i;tath e r m ore s upport if he amended has plan to provide for a separation of California both abo\'e and b<>low Los Angeles. Those in Orange and San Diego counties '>'C111I~ be just as happy to get shut of Los Ange les as those in the Nor th The three states then formed would earh ~t ill he larger than all but a hair do1en other s talcs Welfare Systent 'Locks' Poor into D ependency Whal our welfarl' program hns done in Amenca is to "lock .. the poor into dependency -ancl then we blame them for not having the guts or gumption to go out and get 1ob11 for the m sci ves. Whal the sociologists call in lhf'lr peculiar Jargon "work dis· t n c en lives·' are built right into the weJCare system. That Is to say, m ordinar y l:inguage, the poor l ose m o re when th ey work th a..n when they don't. WHEN people on Jtenerul as ftistance <or "home rl'lief, .. ns 1l is somctlmc-s culled ), who are alftO settllll: Aid lo Famtllt'll with Dependent Children, take a pnying JOb or even gel a r aise in a low end job, they run the n sk of losing far more than they gain. IN NEW YORK state. for in 'ltance. which is not untypical, a family may exist on $7,000 or $8.000 a year, compnsec1 of (ood stampc;, Medicaid. public hous- ing, nod benefits to de pendent c>hildren Often the onlY. jobs they can get offer mu ch less tha n this whole su pportive network of public nsslstance. 0 b viously. something is rndirnlly wrong w1tt1 a system t hat wai: intcndt'd to reduce pov erty and actually oper ates to en· courage dependent'y. lf the poor can't keep most or whot they earn, then there Is little i(\cen live to work. It Is n o t ia qu<'s lion of "chea ters' or ·wcllare frauds ·· Every impartial study h as s hown that these represent a small minority of r ascs Nor ii< it a matter or "laziness." If work Ing at a rotten, poor payin~ job forfeit.'> your medical benefits, and actually jeopardizes your family's security. 1t would be madness to toss awa y the lifeline NEITHER hbcrals nor con servatlves have yet com1• up with a feasible, workable hum<ine program to 11n lh<' suti me r"cd one·Mth of our porula tlon out of lts chrontl' paver\,) It i~ o poverty that soC"i~ty can '"' ill afford as it..s vit't1ms bot h suffer In differc-nl wa)'~. and mutual r<'senlment:; 1otrow year by yenr Everybody who wants lo work and ls nbl~ to work s hould be ~1ven a JOh that is meaningful and I hat h:.i s some light al the ('nd or I he tunnt.'l If the private sector C<rnnot cio it. I he pubht' sectcir mus t. The New Deal never solved Llw .. problem, and the Old Deal nl'\'c·r tried_ THE OISTANC'E between the hav<'~ and the h:ive.not5 has, 1f anything. w1<1cnctl In the la!>t two decades 'l'l11s is a!'! ominous for till' haves as for the have note;, both H~ a drag on our 1•conom v and :1~ a socwl powder· kPg that can blow up c:it a ey ti nH· Hoth parties hove playc.'<i ooll t H's with the poor , mado JH omt!>t>~. told ht·s. nnd tailed to deliver tr we fail to rise abov~ potllics 1n h andl1n.: thls tra~1cal\y .human quest ion. we deserve whatever rate the furies h«we lo store ror ws. J l ' c c I r 11 J) ~ ·- CWLY PU.OT A 1 . . . . . . ' :..,. . -.. ' . . . Only at San Diego Federal Savings. A spectacular panoramic photo-poster of the Yosemite Valley ... plus spectacular new savings : accounts! Only San Diego Federal brings you both during our 93rd anniversary celebration ... now through July 10th. · Free: spectacular panoramic poster! 1 Thi~ remarkable panorama sweeps : ·nearly 300° across the Yosemite . Valley, looking eastward across the Merced River to the .sheer cliffs of El Capitan and Cathedral Rocks. It' truly spectacular ... ~nd you can have your own personal copy of this unique 58" x 13" poster just by visiting any office of San Diego Federal Savings (one per adult, please. while they last). You can't get this photograph anywhere ebe; it's a San Diego Federal exclusive. So, come in now for your ~rcctacu lar poster ... plus information about our ~rectacular new 8-PLUS • and T-PLUS"• accounts. Calif omia Adventur-e f or summertime savings. San Diego Federal savers are entitled to discount~ at outstanding entertainment attraction<; throughout California. The handy pocket·size California Adventure booklet includes over 30 discount coupons for ~uch places as Lion Country Safari, Santa Cruz Boardwalk, Palm Springs Aerial Tramway. San Diego Zoo and Wild Animal Park, Queen Mary Tour, Roaring Camp & Big Trees Railroad, San Francisco ..Bay Cruise, Sea World ... and there are more! Merely identify yourself as a customer at any office and the coupon book is yours. That's a ll there is to it. .. you're on your way to a California Adventure. trctching dollars as you go. 6·MONTH T·PLUS CERTIFICATE Earn 8.33% annual yield · with our new 8-PLUS~account You can actuall y earn 8.33% per year with our 8% savings certificate, the big .33% plus resulting from daily compounding of interest. Yes. although federal regulations require a substantial interest penalty for early withdrawals, your 8-PLUS account can actually double in 8 years and 8 months, when earnings are allowed to accumulate throughout the certificate's full term. So, save $1,000or more fo r 8 to 10 years in a high-earning. safety·insured 8- PLUS savings certificate ... a savings 'pectacular from San Diego Federal Savings. IFSU:I - Short.;tenn T-PLUS ~pays more than banks and T-bills. Earn higher interest than the current six-month Treasury·bill rate by s~ving $10.000 in a <.ix-month T-PLUS savings certificate at San Diego Federal. After each weekly T-bill auction. the T-PLUS interest rate for accounts opened during 1hat week is se t .25% above the average six-mon1h T-b1ll yield on a discount basis ... and th at's .2Y1 l11gher than banks pay on comparable accounts,1001 Although. a sub~tantial interht penalty is required fo r early withdrawals, the si x-month term makes this a great way to earn high interest in a short period of time. Ask about this week's T-PLUS r-ate when you visit San Diego Fe~ral. it's another saving spectacula~ as we commemorate our 93-yea( anniversary. San Diego Federat~.Y!Jgs I n C•pl1trano Be.ch 3-i206 Doheny Paf1( Road at Victoria BtVd oppoelte Capistrano Beach Plaza Shopping Center Telepflone. 49&-0201 L.-guna Ntguel 30112 Crown Valley Parkway South of Niguel Aoed Telephone: 49~210 S.n Clemente 1650 North a Camino Reel near Av.,,lda Pico Telephqne: 408-6330 . M OAILV PILOT Monoay, June :le. 1978 POLITICS Reagan's Approach Changing QUEENIE W ASHlNGTON -Next time. Ronald Reagan won't be coy. Word from the Reagan camp is that the gosh, gee and maybe phase won't be repeated when it comes time lo talk about running for presi- dent in 1980. Reagan was a bashful candidate-in-waiting for months before he challenged then-President Ford ill 1976. Jn the next campaign; he will not be facing the problems that confront a candidate trying to wrest nomination from a president or his party. PE RHAPS AS IMPORTANT, HIS associates sense a new commitment and a new reahsm as Reagan looks al the prospect of another campaign for the Republican presidential nomination. He knows. says one, that neither fate nor a draft is goin~ to get him that nomination. There is FORD CONNM.LY DOLE BUSH a shadow organizalaon ready to surface and go to work, perhaps as early as next winter. There have been candid discussions of his pluses and prob· lems. Age, for example. He will be 69 years old at the next presidential election, 70 shortly after the !'ext inaugurali~n. He has been told that opponents in a new campaign would almost surely raise that as an issue, but that it can be handled so long as his health is sound and his performance vigorous.- ON THE PLUS SIDE, THERE is new !He m one of Reagan's favorite issues: government spending and taxes. He is making the most of Proposition 13, and of his own effort as governor of California to put a constitutional cap on state taxes. In 1976, his call for a reduction of $90 billion in federal spending through a transfer of programs to state and local jurisdiction, to be financed or re- CRANE BAKIR REAGAN ANDERSON GOP Non-candidates Campa~n WASllINGTON IA P> -Gerald Ford makes speeches and public appearances and works with an orgaruzat1on called the American Enterprise Institute as he doesn't run for president. Ronald Reagan makes speeches and publi c ap· pearances and works with an organization called Citizens for the Republic as he doesn't run for pre- sident. BOB DOLE MAKES SPEECHES AND public appear ances a nd works with an organization called Campaign America as he doesn't run for president. Jt is hard lo find a Republican who will admit running, but just the hope of making Jimmy Carter a one-term president has lots of them trip· pinf? over one another trying to campaign by not campaigning. On~ George Bush. has gone further than anyone else. On Thursday night he told a $125-a-plate fund- ra1ser in New J ersey that he "would like to run for president in 1980. ·• lie is a former envoy to China . CIA director, UN ambassador and party chairman The presidential primaries are nearly two years away. Nobody has formally announced a candidacy yet. 1t would be unseemly. But there is no short.age of candidates to be candidates: "We must have 20 of the m out there." 'says one Republican strategist. THE LIST IS LONG AND LUMINOUS, includ- ing senators, congressmen and governors. There is Sen. Howard Baker of Tennessee. who got a national image as ranking Republican of the Watergate committee; former Texas Gov. John B. Connally, who turned Republican after heading Democrats for Nixon; and, of course, Bush. Newer names Include Reps . Philip Crane of 11· linois, Jack Kemp of New York and John Anderson of Illinois. Reagan's near miss against Ford In the battle for the 1976 Republican nomination and Ford's against Carter in the election have kept their partisans dreaming of what might have been. Re· cent polls showing either leading Carter in hypothetical rematches rekindled the name. DOLE, WHO COMMANDS A LOT of party loyalty for his 1976 campaigning. has C.ormed Cam· paign America, a committee to support his political activity. He has been to at least 35 slates this year, making him and Bu1h the most active prospectl. When Ford passed over Baker for the No. 2 spot on the 1976 ticket , Baker let It be known that No. 2 would not be enough the next time around. There is talk about some young GOP gov- ernors, people like James Thompson of Illinois. Robert Ray of Iowa, William Milliken of Michigan and Pierre S. DuPont of Delaware. No Prepayment Penalty. No Points. $7,500 for only $}40.55 a month. \Ne find ways to help Whether you need S3 500 or S25.CXXl get 1t frOOl the people v.tlo 1800 ll1 II ims Corrrnerc1al Crnd1t Monthly payment based oo a $7,500 HclfT'eOMler I OCW'I. for 84 rmnthS. at Ill rrrual perr.antage rate of 14°6. Total payment S11,8l3 ~ COMMERCIAL C~DIT CORJ'OMTION G} Homeo\vner Loans t,""Of. A ln~n ol SS.000 aoo over mu~I br ~frnr~n ov ,, r11mnon~lt0n ot real af'ld personal properiv Costa Me11a • 870 E. 17th Street • &45-8700 Oranh" • tltl Town & Country Rd. • 5(7.g871 "' Suite 28 jecled there, became a campaign problem. Now it looks like an asset. His schedule already reads like a campaign itinerary: Miami, Wilkes-Barre and Philadelphia in the last few days. Santa Barbara, San Diego, Salt Lake City, Spokane, Indianapolis and Scran· ton in the next three weeks R EAGAN PLANS TO CAMPAIGN almost full time for Republican candidates during September and October. By congressional election· time, he will have covered 25 to 30 states That kind of effort builds the political credits a presidential candidate can call In when his own campaign begins. In addition . Reagan 's Citizens fo1 the Republic, the conservative political action com· mittee founded with the balance of his 1976 cam· paign treasury, is at work in the congressional elections. providing money and research to select· "He doesn't 800 people who are an a foul mood. He hates ed Republicans. competitJon .. Its support will go to an increasing number of ---------------------candidates m the months ahead , again, building contacts and credits that could be useful two years from now. NONE OF TlllS P UTS REAGAN into lh'! 1980 C'Ontesl. He says 1t is too early to talk of another bid for the nomination, and that probably will re· main his public position for well over a year. But with a difference. · · 1 expect that Reagan will run. He hasn't said so. But barring the unforeseen, I see no reason be wouldn't run, and I fully expect him to," says Lyn Nofziger, who runs Citizens for the Republic. In advance of ·the 1976 campaign, Reagan would have dtaowised. and probably rebuffed, such cQmmt nta by 1 lonf•time aide. This time, he is not arguing. He will IMource his decision when he is ready. but In the Nan~ime the expectation that it will be to run does not hurt a bit. For ln the 1980 Republican primary elections, It would not be Reatan VI. The President. It would be an open nomina\Jon, probably with a big GOP field, and the Reagan people say they like the odds ln that kind of compeUUon. ELEMENTARY SUMMER SCHOOL KINDERGARTEN thru 5th GRADE JUNE 29th to JULY 28th at SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA COLLEGE 55 FAIR DRIVE, COSTA MESA 16 CLASS CHOICES ... ... 8:15 A.M. -12:15 P.M. EXTENDED DAYS . . . ... 8:15 A.M. -3:00 P.M. $20 Per Week -112 Day · $30 Per Week Full Day FOR INFORMATION: 556-3610 Ext. 276 Weekdays Get to your money without withdrawal penalty! All eav1ngs and loans aren't alike. We can prove it with what we call a Savings Loan. It lets you borrow money on the money you have in your Mutual Savings certltlcate account -at 1 •/o more then you earn on the accou"t. That's right. It worka this way. Give us a minimum of $1 ,000 that we keep for eight years. We'll pay you 8% interest which yields 8.33% with daily compounding. Now. should you need money we II give you up to 90°'0 of your sav· 1ngs balance al an Annual Percentage Rate of 9~o a year Remember.your savings still earn 8% on the entire balance ANEOVALHOU~NCLENOER AN EOVAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLO YER You pay 9% on the amount borrowed. So you actually pay a difference of only t % . (What's more. you don t lose a cent be- cause of those government imposed withdrawal penalties) The Savings Loan 1s also avail- able on all other accounts including the new six-month Money Market Account You really save when you save with us. So buzz on over. We ·ve got 16 off ices all over Southern California. C•pistr1no·l1n Clemente•: 570 Camino dE> Estr!"llat493-5651 'Corona del Mar 2867 Ei1~1 Coac;1H•qhway 1675·5010 Founlaln Valley•: 17900 Magnolia SI t963·83961 Downtown Santa Ana· 631 North Main 547·9741 ·np..o <;.11111 1.1v-; 10 llM rn :>PM FROM Fash ion Island Newport Beach STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR l ' .... . J I 1 -. ·- .. NAllONAL Monday, June 26. 1978 OAILV PllOi .19 No Prepayment Penalty. No Points. $15,000 1 \Ahlether yuu rir.t..~J How Do You Talk to a RO_se Bush? By HUGH A. MULLIGAN 11,. '-9Cl•I CMt .......... RlDGEHEl.D, Conn. "A rose garden is a ~ery specaut place it's a Oowe r that needs to be visited," ad\'ised the gardening column in one of the big metropolitan daihes lntngued, I read on The centerpiece of the essay was an interview with a country gentlewoman who not only regular- ly visited her 250 rose bushes but talked to t hem. "ROSES NEED VOUR SHADOW," the lady s aid , apparently with a straight face. "tr you are going to have a rose garden. make love to it. Even talk to them " Ever since William Booth penned the line, "feather-footed through the plashy (en passes the questing vole" before going on to become the model for till foreign correspondents in Evelyn Waugh's "Scoop," l have always been a sucker for that kind of bucolic prose. eactl other. I didn't really know how to begin. There was my l>hadow., right over our two rather limp looking tea roses and a few straggling buds. and words failed me. How do you strike up a conversation with a rose bu.sh·~ And how long should a visit last '! THE ONLY WORDS THAT HAD passed between us previously were ''ouch " and a few rhetorical vulgarities when I embraced a thorn in snipping a boutonniere to cut a more dashing figure in the periodontist 's waiting room. Should 1 try poetry for openers? ..., "Flowers in the c rannied waJI, I pluck you out of the crannies, I hold you here, root and all, in my hand .. ·"r I don' think they would like that, being plucked out by the roots so early in summer. and neither would my wife. Besides, I don't think we have a crannied wall, unless you count that crack rn the concrete near the garage where grass grows all winter. WHAT ABOUT ''ROSE IS A ROSE is a rose?" don't want to hear shop talk at all. It might be bet- ter. like the lady said, to speak to them of love, a little verbal cooing and bilting in the snooky- ook ums lingo of foreplay After all. Vladimir Nabokov in "Ada" could speak o( "Eros: the rol>e and sore." uniting the flower and the thorn and love in a little word game that seemed to be the answer to the mystery Ten- nyson plucked from the crannied wall along with the flower. I HAVE A SNEAKING SUSPICION, standing here talking to them like this. while the mailman ~hakes hls head in d1sbehef, that if the roses could talk back, their message might be less eso~eric, more down to earth, which 1s their milieu. Something like "Hey. fatso. cut the jabber and stop blocking the s unlight with your shadow. If you want to talk our language, get some pyrelhrum ex- tract or nicotine-sulphate down at the toolshed and go to work on these plant lice. We have enough paras ites to put up with. without listening to you SJ.~ or S25.ro.J get 11 from the µeo-1.,0~ only pie wllO lerd mil J.~ ~ hons Co01recc1al Credit Monthly PdY· $232 89 ~nt based on J • S 15.IXXl HolreOwllE'r loan. lor la> a month months. at an <ll'1'0dl • 1 percentage rate ot 14°0 Total pay- rreot S27.946 00 \/'Je find ways to help COMME(\CIAL C(\EDIT CORJ>O"ATJON @ Homeowner Loans A loan ol S5 000 Jncl ove1 mus• b!o 1eeurt'd lly" t omll1na1ton of 1u1 and l)tl'sooal ll'OlltrlY Coat.a Me.aa • 370 E. 17th Street • 646-8700 Oran-• 1111 Town &. Country Rd. • 547-&S7l .~ Suite 26 After dipping into the s ports page and the gossip columnists, I alway~ drop in on the peal moss and fertilizer scribblers to learn what new in- sights on life lhey have gained from a worm's eye view or creation. . That might be nice and at least multiply our Ondlt Llf• l1M1uran .. A vaolabt. lo lmirlble B-.rrowen •• GMup Ral.t• numberofioses through poeUcUce~e. Or maybe,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~ all morning." "My love is like a red red rose" or "that which THIS TIME, I FIGURED, THEY must be onto som ething: a bedside -manner for the rosebed. The idea seem~ to be catching on. Just this morning a car went by with a bumper sticker : "Have You Talked to a Plant Today?" we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet." There are lots of rose poems, including Thomas Moore's "last rose of summer ," which ours look hke all the time. Perhaps L should JUSt get in there and give them the old top sergeant's chewing out. You know, "All right. you sad sacks. you aught to be ashamed to call yourselves roses. Look at them dan· dehons. Look at the ragweed. You don't hear them crying out for food and conversation all the time. This is your lal>t chance to make this outfit. Shape up. or be snapped out." WARNING! Well. Y06. l have, on the strength of all this. and_ frankly "'e don't seem to have much to s ay to Your Child's Safety Depends On The Action of The THE FAMIL \ UR<:US By Ril Keane Newport Mesa Unified School District Board Your elected School losd is clecic'-g wlleltler to e1-.... st.••t transportation on Tuesday, June 27, at the Costa MffCI Ci•ic CHter. 77 Fair Dr. 7:30 P.M. . ,,,,. ,,,.. ® NO, THF.Y MIGHT J UST REBEL or write to their congressman or bug out to Canada. Garden clubs and rose societies have a lot of clout these days 1 wouldn't witnt to make a federal case out of 1t like th~ snail darter or the roseate spoonbill Right now my roses look like an endangered species. both or them, so they got the law on their side. Maybe what they need most is motivation. a little pe p talk along the lines or the locker room speeches Pat O'Brien used to deliver for Knute Rockne back in the d ays when Notre Dame was "'inning one for the Capper Or was it Ronnie R eag;rn? Something on the order of "Roses, you may ncvet again do anything so im portant in your lives . Get out there and bloom your blooming heads off. Damn the aphids and the snout beetles. full blo.!>soms ahead ... Th~ thrHt to .timi11ate row dlildis traaspcwtaff• to .ct tro.. school is real! The Board hos dnied respoMlbllity fw tM safety of row dliJd. These areas an at iswe: I. Student Safety 2. Heavy traffic coagestfoll.af school sites 3. PromiMS lftClde by tM locrd. wt.ea it closed lalecric, BayYiew, Harper ond Moftt. Vista Schools to et1swe safe trauportaffon to tM ''Mftt .. sdtool. 4. The fuhn safety of those childrN frOlll Califomia. Mesa Verde, Victoria and Wl&so. Sdlools whetl these an closH. YOU CAM INFlUENCE THSR DECISION! THE SAFETY DEPENDS OM YOUR ACTION. COME VOICE YOUR VIEWS.. OF YOUR CHILD r.ne CSEA A Committee on Safe Student TransPorta11on "Hi, Daddy! I was just gettin' this for you." BUT WHEN YOUR HELEN HAYES'S look more like Bela Lugosis and your American Beauties fade like American Graffiti. it's going to take more than a Dale Carnegie crash course to sweet talk them into s haping up. Maybe after a hard day· in the humus, roses Music for All Ears Symplwnies Lead Cultural Boom CHICAGO <AP> -They may not have the reputations. resources and repertoires of big-city symphonies, but orches tras in Walla Walla, Wash .. Kecwenah. Mich., and 600 other smaller cities are leadjng a rural cultural boom. two music ex- perts say "No longer are the arts alive only in big cities,· says Ralph Black, ex- ecutive director of lhe American Symphony OrC'heslra League. "Americans everywhere are reallz· in g theres m o r e to life than refr1gcralon;, cars and poverty. "SYMPllONIES HAV E COME down off their snobbish mount." Black's fer\'Or for preaching the gos pel of symphony in small-town Ameril'a has led fellow musicians to call h im the ·Hilly Graham of the or- chestra world " More than five million persons saw symphonies last year an cities with Jess than 100.000 population, the league s a ~s Ll'a !'.!ue ex perts estunatc th<tt 15 sud1 symphonies have started during each of the last 10 yearl> The orchestra !(•ague 's annual con- feren ce this :;pnng m Chicago drew 1.200 symphony managers. conduc· tors and musicians more than in any prev1ou-; year BLACK CA LLED THE Chicago Symphony's director, Sir Georg Solt1. "a modem folk hero he's on the cover of the damn phone book! And if Arthur Fteciler were to run for em- peror today, he'd probably win by a landslide People know and trust him because he feeds their hearts ... ,, He said a new wave of enthusiasts is keeping the Walla Walla. Wash- s 1zed symphonies from suffe ring C hi cago Sym phony -siied fin an rial worries. More than half th<' sym phonies with less than 110 mus 1· cians are now out of the red Te n years agq. mwe tha n half had def- icts. •LACK The symphony ser ving fl ood ravaged Johnstown. Pa .. for eumple, ended Its 1977 season with n $132 surplus and $38,000 incre ase in 1ls budget. A June Oash flood there killed 77 people and left three missing "AFTER THE FLOOD, we con- sirlered cancellng the whole season because it m1Rht seem morally wrong," said manager Patricia Minot "Bul it wa!i morally right -- ond by golly. we had quite a sym· phony !" Partly respon'!ible for the success or the Johns town and other sym - phomes with ft'wcr than 100 members 1s the financial support given them by local businesse<> Symphony managc>rs i.ay husml'Sscs contribute for a ~ood rcu!lon to keep residents from lea\.in~ town • American Symphony Orchestra Le a gue s pokes man Zane Knauss says symphony leaders "finally realiied that they cannot hold the m selves above the universe. They're learning they must appeal ta a much broader-based audience or they 're not going lo survive." H E CLAIMS A POPULAR market· mg strategy including T shirts, TV commercials and bumper stickers is responsible for the boom. "Being popular doesn 't demean the symphony," he said. "Many have hired advertising agencies f 've even seen pins nominating the Chi cago Symphony for president " Modified SJC Street Plan OK'd A n•solulion adopting the recom· mended pla n or the Capistrano Valley Circulation Study has been ap· proved, with maJor modifications. by San Juan Capistrano city coun- cilmen. The study recommends enlarging and extending city streets to bring San Juan's circulation plan in line with the county 's master plan of arterial highways. The coUil('il turned down the study recommendation that Alipaz, a street running east and west through the ci· ty. be enlarged to a primary route. Councilmen also termed a proposal regarding any Stonehill crossing as unacceptable a nd asked that the county do a m6re detailed Environ- mental Impact Report on that street's extension and a proposed ex· tension or JuniperoSerra. The council approved reclassifying Ortega Highway and La Novia Street ftbm secondary to primary routes. Record 10, 753 Enroll at OCC A total of J0.753 students have enrolled in Orange Coast College's summer sessiqn. the most in the col· lege 's 30-year history The fiture represents a 19.3 per- cent increase over last year . The e nrollment has been attrlbut· ed to the cancellation of summer school In hlgh school districts and at some Southern California communl· ty colleges. &,:,\:\S "~ :\OV ~ COVER POLITICS In the DAILY PILOT .. __ .... g She's crying for help. Are you listening? She simply can't handle her problem~ by herself anymore. She needs help before it's too late. And she's not alone. Every day. peopl1t no difforeht than you experi ent:e an emotional crisis often pro\'okcd by a troubled pcr~onal relationship. Someone may become so despondent she grows fearful or nervous for no apparent reason. She loses sleep over insi~nificant things. She explodes over trivial matters like the car not starting. She can't carry on with her family . .She needs help. Professional help. The only rc·al hope for regainin~ a normal, productive life. The kind of help avallable at the Problem Talk Shop. A professionally staffed counsclln~ and referral service for people trapped in an emotional crisis. At the Pro):>lem Talk Shop we care for people. Problem Talk Shop is a free service which provides a warm, friendly envlronm<•nt where ' I skilled counc;elorc; help people 'ort out their o\\ n Jives. Herc people gain n ew re~ources to handk the problems they thought "('r<.' too big to handle. If you know someone .who is expcri&nC'in~ an emotional crisis. call tl}e ~®lem Tulk Shop. A trained counselor win be at tht· other end of the line. Ready to help. Ready to :imwer nny questions you may ha\'e. Please make the call that will show hP.r somebody cares enough to listen. pt bl"m talk 1hop (714) 997-1831 1J JO Eut Ch1pm1n A~nue. Suite 109 Or1&ngc, California 92666 (714)768-3831 2S2A3 C':•hot l'oad. Suitt> 10. L1~una Hiii~. California 92653 J 11}0 0.M.\' PILO I M<>nae~ J1.1n1126, 1976 ORANGE COUNTY / OBITUARIES UCI Researches Alcohol Effects PUBLIC NOTIC E . ,..,. SU,.11111()11 COUltT Of' TMll UATEOF C.-Ll l'OAHIA 1'011 THI COUNTY Of' OltANOI ...... w PUBLIC NOTI CE SUl'lllllOllQWltTOl'T .. & STATI 0" CALll'OllHIA 1'0111 THE COUNTY Of' OllANOI He. A..Ult R esearrh into ~1lcohol s effe ct on m e m ory. hor m o nt•:., hmm c~lb and unborn ctuldrt'n 1s c urre nUy und\'r way a t U(' I rvine's n e wly e stablJs h ed Ako h o l R~t>urd1 <.:enter brain p rote in. w h ich 1s involv ed an the learnin g and m emor y P r<><'CSs e!I Eleven alco h o l rt's~tireh p rojects are currently bt·ing f unded under a $269,431 one year ~r;.int fro m t h e Na- tio n a l lns lltute or Ako h ol Abuse a nd Alcoholis m . with more funds ex~>ect­ ed during the n ext fo ur yea rs under the Compreh en s i ve A lc o ho l A bu s e in A 1 c oh o I i s m 1' r e ~l m c n l a nd Rehabilita tio n Act of 1970. THE EF•·•:c.--rs Of alcoh o l o n memory st orage a re th~ t a r get of a stu dy b y Dr Is a bel Bir nbaum, lJCJ pro f essor o r p~yc ho logy. while p h y s iology profes~or l>r. P e te r F Ha ll is invl'sligatin g the effects of alcoho l o n st.•xu a l func hon in m ales. Or. H a ll's s tudy involves working with ruts to de t e rmine how a lc ohol influen<.•c s the ir ability l o synthe size m a le ho rmo n es. S c ientis ts fro m UCJ 's ColJegl! of M e dicine, and its b iology and social scie nce schools are p a rtic ipating in the r esear r h The social setting's e ffect on the alco holic is being s tudie d by Dr. E . Mansell Pattis on, c h ai rman of p sychi<.1lry and human be ha vio r a t UCI. THE RESEARCH foc u s e s on the e ffects o f e tha n o l, a c h e mical pres e nt in a ll a l coh o lic beve rages Dr. S uJata T ewari. s c 1c ntiric d1rec· to r o f the center 1s ronducllng two of the r ese a rc h proJl'Cls H e is investig ating the h y pothesis tha t the family, community, c hurc h a nd w o rk enviro nme nts can h e lp pre - v e nt . promo te o r e n courage r e · h a b ililatio n for a lcoho lis m . ln o n e . s h e 1s !>ludy1n~ lhl' e ffe cts or e tha n o l o n pre~nanl lc m<.1le r o · d e nts a nd l h <'ir offs p ring in a n a l t e rn pt to d c tt•rminc w hen during g e s tatio n the e ffec t s of eth a no l a re m os t pron o unced ANOTH ER STUDY, directe d b y p syc h o bio logy profess o r Dr. Ric h ard T h o mpson . is evaluating the e ffects o f a lc ohol o n c ommunication a m o n g n e r ve and bra in cells In a ddition. O r . T l•wari 1s studyin~ etha n ol's cfrt•(·ts on the synthes is of Dr. Krishna K. T e w a ri. profes sor o f m o l ec ul a r bio l ogy and bioeh e mistry . is prob ing I he n u ture o f c h emical d e pende n ce on eth a no l. Death i"~ot. i~e• Death Not. i~e• KNIGHT Cllrt\I, 30111 N<ouel Rood. Lavu11• Wll~·-JAME s l(N IC.H1 ,.,, N•vu•I. R•• Oh1<1 s S•ndbl!r9 P•"o' dent of L•ound 8Hct<.h, C• Po\\«4d of tt'lv ChuHh oft1c.1at1n9 Interment •••v on Jvt'tf' 2•. 1C'i/8 SI''"'',,, '"' , ... rv1cts w111 t.if> ~Id on Tue\dav J 00 P<tndlnQ •Ip,.. 111c V1~w Morlu.iry P M oil HMbor Law11-Moun1 Olh•e JACKSON M•mor1•1 Per~. 16?S Gl\lor Ave MICHAEL LEE v JACKSOl\f ,.,. Co\I• M•w. C• In lieu Ol llOWfr\ tn• dent ot Litqun.-Ht1•c h c d Po\\t"d fc;1fH1ly ha\ reqUtt\tl'd dOnatlons to tN away or1 JuM 1l 1919 <,urv1w•a o-v Am•11c ian C•ncer !:toc.u?ty Hi1rb01 mothf'r p.,,,.,, .. J•tl W(\ ot Arht,.,t-1rn, Lclwn Mount Olive Mof'h;airy Olrl'Ctor\ Ca , f11tnN R<ChMO Jb(hon QI P~lm S-0 HS. 5prin9' C• t>roH'lit"r of Jtt'llt"\ 0dVld AROISO G•ry ""d Mo<n .. 11• J.>r •-011 1)1 CAR MELITA CECILIA ARBISO A.n•h~1m d l 'U \\H¥•¥f'd by •Qt'64 l U1tLa Cater4St mS..nJuan O'•"omotP,.Pr (lfllf'I K ••lly ot H1>wt\1,,11, C.~l>•\lrano. o.t\s.f"O a way on S....tu1t1•v (,.)rden\ C• n1•pf'\1 w C l'H l\topnt1r "10rn1nQ J~ l•. \t/8 Sne 1\ \urv.-1rd J•t. • ,._.n ot An..tnt•m\. c..41 X-, ..,,, t"\ w 111, ov nt'r hu\btnd Paul A.. At t>•\.O, orw bfli ht!ln on f hur\O"' .ti n noon 1n tn.o tlt1UQMflr M.tnt-~ooman and • wn 1n (h•Df"I .~ P.tt1tu lfl'w Mf"n'O'•dl lftw Junn Rodman of l•Q:u~ N19~1 P•'lt. lSOO Pac•f14. v ,,,._, O r1w,. t• ~,. ''t1>ddugf'lte-r Aller G•\.t•lum N•Npott Bf•ch '" In w u of Uc wt-" OI An•he•m. (.a.'°"' bf'01hen Fr•nti. t•Mtly t"f'Qut"\h Mi•rtt0I••' Con tnbl.I' eu~nt" ~•ymond and lOUlf' o<eamoo hon\. to tMt M1cn.1 I l "" J•t..-.\01\ Ari •U ot S•nta Af\4 Ga Al\O Surv1v.,d by 'Scnotctr'"•o ~uf'CI dt th• Pltlm Sprmq "' \l\tftt Petr• M.ann~1 01 San Ju•n H19n !>t"°°' p.,.,,,~ V11 -. M.lrtt1 • .,, C•P•\trctno. C• 119r~t.ruldren Sl'W dlf~ctor~ 1 lht' wtlt' Of P•YI Art>1)0 Ao.trtr1a<;h M l fffDITH of San Jydn C•P•Slt•no She IS .. GRACE E Ml~( Ot frt ,,.. 10.-nt of fnflm:~t Oi ttwo H1,,1or1c~1 Soc:t~ly of Sant• Ath1 C'1 P• .. ·....O •w.at on J unf' !Ji Jn J ufirt C.ap1\trano. Ca . d l\O 1i ,1111 tn Nt"Wfl0 '1 nrol h l.., •••thfuttv pre~tf-0 Dreialll.f•\t tor IM SurvtY~d by ~r nu\bo-tnd CIVdf' l Ho1., N•fl"\t Sioctf'ly tor 12yedr~101 t'°"f' M~rt-d1th Of ~n1" Al\;t (..J '°"' (1¥04." Old M~!)ton Sn~ t.1)"9h1 tM t tutdrf'n to Mrred1th .Jr of SentA And ca Don oanC<" tur The Sw a llow ' O~y Mf'rf'd1tn of 1 t<KM\\t• 111t1v, 0,,.nO\On t-f'\t1v1tlM •• t"P O•o Mt\\tOn SM al\o 06tA MrrN:11t~ c,t Ju ''" (-' "''•''°" <9'l•to for •~ Old Ml!t.ston c:i.s,ft~U d O\H)htt't K•r.-.ft MNf'cJ1fh uf tu'1• tram A~C•taUon of ttw Hofy ROS.at• Me\•, Ca Q fdl\CJ\.()(\ J1·· ' M .. 1 .. Q11h wdt De ... 1 JO p M Mono•v •flO Moit-.s. of Santo And l.., \l'lolr• tHamnr ,.;.-."' ot (hr 1\P1dn Bunal w11t be 1119 00 A M ntd'r o t (O\I• M,.,4. ( ,, f v•1t'r ·•' Or\ lut'\day J unt' 21, b01h at Serra ~rv1tt-\ will~· twld on Wf'dnf"\<Sd 'f •'' (l\t'Oftl, Old M1ss 1on . San Ju•n tO oo AM 1f\ r~ {n\•Ot·I di p,u,1t1l '••Pl\tritno (". w 1tti Rev Fat,,er V 1f w Mrmuri.tf p,,, k. J~OO P,H lh( PAUi MArlinj P•\tor. oth<1•tin9. Inter· V'lfl• O rivf". NPwonrt tii·,utt c a mf'nt will follow In the Holy ~oultt~r Pdtlf1c V1ttw MnrtuM'f 111r~t !Oh f°rmrt1•ry, OrAno~. Ca. LESNESKI GOOOfYOM MORTUARVdir<t<IOf\ ~ He Is examini ng ribonuc leic a c id CR NA I and dixyr1b o nuc le 1e a cid tRNA I with prot e in, to determine the m clttbohc and beha vioral func· t 1omn g Qf an o r g unis m . levels or eth anol cons umption a ffeclc; the s everit y and frequency of v ira l i nfect ions of the centra l n e r vou s syste m . NOT ICll OF HIAlllM O Of' .. ITITIOH fl'O• "llOIATll 01' WILL AM O FOii LETTllll~ TllSTAMI M· TAltY AND 1'0111 AUTHOltllATIOH TO ADMIHISTlll UNDBll TNE IMOE,.INDENT AOMINISTllATION OFUTATHACT E s t•I • ol ESTHER S GULLICKSON, ALSO KllfOWN AS ESTH EA SYBILl.A SCH WOE \.LC R C.U l LI CKSON AL!>O KNOWl\f AS ESTHER SYBILLA !>CHWOEC.LER. ALS O KN OWN A S CS THER CiULLICKSON. ALSO l<NOWllf AS 0 .J GULLICKSON 0.<eaW'd HOTICll Of' HI AlllNG O~ "I TITIOH l'Oll ,.lt08ATE OF WILL AHO LIT'flllS Tl!STAMINTAlt'f (\l•te ol HARRY E CHAUllETT£, O.c"l<ld NOTICE IS HEllEBY GIVE N ti..t MRS HELEN JOHf:S l\al liltd IWfe•n • pelll•on to-.,,_t• e4 Wiii • .._ ·~· •u•n<o ol 1.#1 .. ,. h•t•menl•ry lo ,,... Pet11t0'1er, 1e4 .. e-1<e to w111cn "m-to• 1ur1n., .,.r11cu1.,,, •nd tt\411 tllt t1mt1 •nd place of "'""''"II l~ W'"4' II•• M<rn Wtl tor July II, lt7t, •I 10:00 • m •• In "" <ou<'tfOOffl of Otr1><trtmt1nt llfo 3 ol .,.,., court, •' 100 Civic Center Drlvf Wot, In tho! Cll'I' of s.nf• All•, C•lllornlf Dr. Louis Gottsch a lk, c o-medical d1rl·ct or o f the cente r , is working wilh Ors . S tanley T e rma n and R1r h a rd W o lt t o examine h o w c hro nic alcoh ol use a ffect s m emory • mid intellectual func tions . THE IMPACT OF alc o ho l o n h ear - in g is being pro bed b y Dr. Nai·Shtn C hu , a s s istant pro f essor o f p sychobilo logy. P relimina r y findin gs a r e tha t a lcoho l con s umptio n does s low d own auditory s ig n a ls a nd that. a fte r p rolonged a lcoho l u se follo we d · b y a bs tinen ce, t h e a uditor y syste m b ecom es h y p e r sen sitive to sounds , w liic h c an e ve n trigger con v uls ions . NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEllf IN! ANOTHER PROJECT of the irs in- v o l ves determining s ympto m s that serve as e arl y warnings that alcoh o l is impa iring the func tions or the liver. endoc rine system and cen - t r a l n ervous syste m . T h e possibility that infectio u s v iruses s u c h as H e rpes s implex are r e la te d to the cons umptio n of alcoh ol is the focus o f a s tudy b y Dr. Edward K . W agner, pro fessor o f m o lecu lar b iology a nd b ioch e mis t ry. S m ee both a lco hol a nd vir uses af- fect the centra l nervo us syst e m , Dr. W agn e r 1s s tudy ing the inte rac tio n bet wt•c n t h e se two a gents to see 1f, a m ong other t hings . c hro nic lo w Dr. Norma n W e in be r g lr. pro fessor o f p sych o biology. is look ing into the e ffects o f lo n g -term a lcoh o l ingestion o n the a bility to learn s i m p le associa- tio n s , which is bas ic to no rma l bfe . The toxic e ffects of a lco h ol on the forma tio n o f R N A a nd p r o te in within the cell are the s u bject o f experi- ments by D r . C a lvin McLau g hlin. In a ddition t b re sea r ch, t h e alcoh o l r e sl'ar c h Cl'nt e r 1s concernl'd w ith tra1n 1n g r esiden t s . phys1e 1aos, g r a d ual t' s tuden ts <.1nd pos tdocto r al fe llo w s in alcohol res c:.ir c h M.llRY LOU SKAUCi h•> 111..0 h•roln" i>flllton 10< Proo.1, OI Will fnd lor I• \u&nce ol Lell•f\ Tt•IMO.nl•r y •nd rur Aulho111•hon to Admlnl\ter undf' 1n• l11dePelldwnl Admln1>1t•llo11 ol E•t•IH Act, reteronu . 10 wt>lcll Is ma<1& '"' lur1he• P••tlcul1f\, 4n<I lllltl In• time ano pl Ke ol nurlnQ the w me na\ bffn Wtl '"' July ti, 1q>e, •I 10 00 a m , 1n lM courtroom of D1~rtmtinl No J ol '<Jld court, al 100 C1 v1( Ct lll•r 01tv• Wl\I, In IM Coly ol S.nl• An•, Cafllornl;J O•ltd JUft<' 10, 1911 WIUIAM E St JOHN. CovntyOartt lllEOAN. OltUMMY, GAltllETT & ltlNG (Al•n I. Wllllel Ott Ma< Art-alvd , Suite 101 Now"°rt .. Kii. CA n ... Ot41 IJJ.llst AtlOl'ney tor-lltettloo,.., Oo ltd J-20. 19>9 WILLIAM E. $t JOltlol, County Clttl'll l'lnEllSOH AHO 1'£T"TEASOH HUS It•._. Olt.t Hwntl11tl011 -..C". CA l71411464J1 AtlOl'lle,s f9f "-tlll-r Publlllle<I 0r.tn0" WU OA1ly PolOI JuM U , 11, July J, 1q1& 24*1-11 P UBLIC NOTICE NOTICE IHYITIHO SEALED ••DS FOlt TH£ COHSTltUCTIOM OF U,.,.IElt AllllOYOSAl.ADA SEWAGE ,.UMPING STATION COHTltACT IA·lt T 11• 8o•rd ol o ..-ectori of '"" Mou1to11 llf•vu•I W•t•r Olilrt<I of Or•nVf' County, ~1ol0<n1• IW•l'iMfltr --------------1 •n \OMf tn\t!.W\CMI retn-red t& 4" .. D•~· Put>ll\lle<I 0r•"9" (04'1 O•ll Y P•lol JutW t• 11 Ju1y l 1~71 10• II PUBLIC NOTICE Irle•. 00 .... ,eoy lftY•I• .... ~ Ooc>I tot tne lollowonv OH<r1~ public wort< 1---------------1 Tne Co11s1ru<11an of UPP<i• Arroyo --------------• --------------l'ICTl'ttOUS SUSIHESS S.lad• ~w-PumP'nv St•llOll, Con NAME STATEMEllfT tr•ct IA 11, l04>"lner wllll •II -tt• The tollow1nq ~'\On i\ OO.no OU\• n•nl woti-. Tf'w're"tO. •1' ,,,,,,._,, In deC..•t PUBLIC NOTI CE PUBLIC NOTICE --------------1---------------1 nt:\\ cl\ •nd dt'\(t lbed •n thr plMt\, ptohttt. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS LYLE .. AUTO DETAllltir •• 1'10 O•dWll\Q\ ""'"°""· --~1hcahon~ FICTITIOUS BUSI NIESS NAME STATEMEllfT Tht tottow•nQ tH:r'o"' ''" a o1no bus1nru tti TRI K INT ERNATIONAL, >1).1 S C•nl•r Slrttl, S..nl• An•. c.111orn·~ 91703 I ldwrentP w KdY• f&JI>? Rnonr Lan•. HunlHIQIO<o Buth, Cblllorn1d '2641 llf~ncy CllywOOfl, IS•" Queen Cir (I~. F=.out"11~1n V41fh~y, C.dlltorn1tt fh1\ bu\1ntt~~ .-. <.onduct1d b~ a oener•l p.trlner\h<p. l•wrtonc~ W KAY'> ( hj\ \l•t~tnent w\)i hll"d Wtth thft Counly Cl•ra ol O••n941 Counly on June a. 1'18 l't'S7'4 Pul>ll\lle<I Ounqoo Co.1\1 Do•lv Piiot, Jun• 12 19, 2• anct J uly J, 1\18 1HO II PUBLIC NOTIC E l'ICTITIOUS BUSINESS llfAME STATEMENT rhf' tottowmq Ofr'°" 1\ ckuno l>u\t ~\\ d\ WEST COAST BACKHOE l711 Wa \h 1not°"'. CO\t• ~..... C1it•••orn1.- 9Uh Gary Motll•~I Wt.I 31 17 W•\"•no1on. C~la Mt>'• Cttt1tornii' '12U6 l ,,,~ bv\tnt'~\ 1\ <Ondut ted b't' •n 1n cliv1duat Ga'y Ml<Nl•I Wo t A st&tt~n• wiU liltd wit" Ow (oun ty c •• ,, ol o ... r>Ql' Counly on )ull~ n. ,,,. ,, ... u PubloSh"° O.a~ Co.t\I Da<lv Pllol, Ju"e 2• •nd July 3, 10, 11, 1q19 1"' 18 PUBlaC NOTICE NAME STATEMENT N•wPorl lllltd Coit• Mew . C•l<lorn•• on 111• on lhl' olflte 01 l!Oyle Engineer Tll• lollOw1"Q r-•M>n ts <10.n9 bu>t· "7•7• onQ Cot PordhOll, HOI Ou•tl Street, n'"H 0\ L11• L """"""° SO'I ( M<ra<t N•wpotl llu cn, CahfO•no•. wlliCfl CiU ARDIANS OF WI LDLIFE Oen S.nlb A"" C•11lorn1~9)101 OOcum•nl\ .,. by lhl\ '~""tnt11 1n• SOC•£TV.2f)SF lowetSl .C.<nt•Me'J.o, T'th\ bu\•M\\ t\tondut h.od by .an 1n· cnroo,•tfl'd htte1n For turth•r- Cd cn&l1 d1v1du4t Pdf llculdt\, retr~n<e I~ ""r~b, mad-r CIH" W Keys, 7o) Flowtir So. l yl4' M<o rc.oclo 10 S410 plMl\, P!Oltl", <1r..w1ngs. """ Co'\\~ Mew, CA. 91t117 f n1!i ~ldtf!rntjnt wo' ttt..o wlfh t~ 11on\, .-u·w:t \CMC'C'tf1c<4Honi tor trtt abova Thi\ ousir.r~\ '' conduc~to ov 11n 1n.. (ountv r1e,..1~ o• Or•nOt" tountv on Cle ,cr1bt'd 1mpr"O~mrnt t!'ntitlr d "COft• d1v1du•I Junt 221 t~18 tr~ct Oocumen1\ df"O Construction Cllri\ Kt y\ "'44a W.t1l•<AlloM dnd Co•l\lructlon Plbll\ Tl\I\ \late_.,1 "'"> 111('(1 "'''" t~ Publ1'~ 0-.l•<Qt<' Co.\I 041ly Piiot, lor tht coo,1ruc11on ot u~r Arroyo Counoy Cl•rk ot Or•n9e Counly on Jun" 2~ dn<l July J. 10. 11, tq19 S.lad• ~'""9" Pump•no Sl.M1on. Con Junt' IS, 1qre Hll 18 tr.;CI IA 12 Solid PldM and \l)e<•llU P"bll\,..,.O Otano@ (OA\I Oaoly Polol Jun~ 19. ?o. Ju•• J. 10. 1~18 2168 19 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE HQn> mov ~ 1>1.,clw\<'d al 1"" oiloce of BOYi• En9•11M1ronq Co•P0'"1'°" for \10 ~' ..,., Ctwrk MY\t ~ madP paya btf> tol"f" Moulton N19~tW•tt¥ 01-.tr1ct. Pur\u•nt tn t~ Labor ~ 01 ,,_.. FICTI TIOUS BUSlllf ESS St.ti~ ol Cdlllotn.d. tne Moullon•NIQU<'I NAME ST•TE ME NT W411f r O•\tn•' f'h•\ dVer t••ned .,," NOTICE TOCltlEOITORS ~~~,·011-1nv r-•\On "OO•nv tM• f;:~:11~~ ···:: ~;h ~··"' :·0 = SUPElllOR COURT OF THE MARIN[R s WAU IWI J•b r. .. ~·•o•:.;: :: °"''..\ d.,:.:d 11n ~he STATE 0 1' CALIFORllflA FOR , I• MU 1 """lonqlon llt<t< 11 Soulll.,n CAhlornta Ma•I•• Liill>O' TH E COUNTY OF ORANGE c .. 11lorn1" '>11>'1> A9re•m1 nt l•ll'O in I"" ofl•t• Ol lhe A\• Mo A·•Sl&S M••" Jdrw 0 1 habfll• l•rr•cf' 'oc ••ttaO G•nfrdt Contractors ot [\t•tta of MU RIEL BERN ICE Coron_,a.,~M.,r (•l•ffHn1• Amrrtrtt Sout~rnC..llforn1d(h.lptf!t ROLF akA M U R 1 f L. B R Ot.. F fth bu\tr\11 \ 1\ 4 onou< It'd O't 4n '" (OO•t\ u• ,,,... 9f""'r•t 0ttva1hn9 r•t~ Ot"<~•s.td Otv1ou.tl of cwt 01,.m w~ d\ ~lt"tm1nf'd by NOTICE IS MERE BY GIVEN to thl M 1111 .. J•nn '"'"' Ot\tflCt tit" on hit' at us. Pfln<•~· t-r .. d1lor\ of,,... dDOv,. named Ot:cl"d..-nt fnl\ \ldtt-~nt ,...., • t11.-i0 Wlll'\ tf\f' (llJC"' yt ~•"*\); to wit 11SOO y P cJl th•I •If ~r\Of\S.f\dv•nq '101rn\ ~oin~t Cou"ty (lt"t~ ot Ot~nQtl (ount'( Of\ RoMS lJQ\'"'41 t-i110~• C...1ttot n1a -" '~ , •• o 6f<:.otnt .irtt requir~ to lttf' June 21 1cn-. f•O\l•ttO b't ~hon •171 ot ow LabOf' t,...m '#+th tnf nKe~wry vouc:t'M!'r\ '" t:t ... I) Coo.-Inf" G>t'UrK tor to w"Om tf°'if' <on- ttw-otficf of t~ Clf'r1' ot ttw dbOve f'O Pubh\nf'O <> ·~ Co..t\• 0 4t11V Pilot tr49ct hf'-rf'h>t 1\ a••rdeia \hatl p0,t it t1tlfd court. ot to C)rf"c,,e.nl '""m lillr•lh Juntt 7• ctnc> July J 10, '1 •ttW 100, therf'Ot di ~ac.h tOl>'\•lf' tn~ nt-C•\\arit VOUCht'r\, to thfl un 14 .. 1 II U \t'\411 Qtl "'dno..tory \lllC)n olffv (on .. d~r\iQnrd at 1\111 S~n V•<"'nt t' --------------ltr•UtOt IOwt'MM'nd<.ontr.ct 1\awdtdN/ 8oulov•rd, LO~ A~I .. CA. wn•th " PUBLIC ~OTICE •n<I uOOll onv >uO<ontr"4.IOr undvr tum "'" P '•'~ ot Ou\1nf'\,. of th~ yn to PA• not 1~, tMn 1M W•c:t ~~<1ftl"d o,.r\1Qn,.d 1n all m.atten P1t t,.1ntnq to 1---------------t •t~ lo 11 1 bO k a lh~ e\t,,tf" ot uid dee~nl. wtlhlf" tou.r F ICTITIOUS BUSI HESS ~~C'~nnit~ .,,;.()lo'::;· b;o,'n~':~~ ~';_. rnontns afttr ow l1r\t pub1tcat1on of NAME STATEMENT 1 of trv. t T n '"'' notict Th" toltow1n9 ~r'°'" tHt~ duinq ~~t:\~.:~e to <:,:,~~~,,,:~,~~a~ O•le<IJunt!lf.1'78 l>U"~ij'~~~ ATkLt TIC rOOTWEAR 'llN•llPd •II S.-rnon 1/1) of Ille Ldbor u~:!:u?o~~:~.0;,7,'A BANK 1001 R"d .,,11 11...,.,..,.., 8u1101no • Suol• 'o;'' C of,,.. UbO'Vf" l~. (O\lft /ii/ltP\4', UlllOtntrt 91o1b n.. onlftKIOt ~""'" PlllV ''''"'' •rwt f"l<imedde'tf"~nt f.fdymorwJ c ,~,n~on\ 1~1~1 fjrty \1C\1 .. 1t>n\~dvmrn t \ to ••ttth GUS WILLIAM f.00(1f vOM, "'" <lent o• 4..ooun., fh·.t• n Ctl P,,11 "'""o aw•y on Jun. ~ J l~tij \1.1r v•Yt'Cf by "" wtfe Strll• Strv1c~ w1tl bf· Ntld u t/ f\OOn on l ofl'\ddy Jun~ II 11Uii .11 P11c1 hc V1t:w tnaOt<I 1n1 .. 1m•l'll .,, P~(1f+C V tt'W Mrl'hOridl Jitl'IJ P.t<1f1C. V1~w Mortu.try O•,.H tu•\ Deaths Design Wi1111er FICTITIOUS BUSIHEU NAME STAT EMENT Tll! IOllOWlnQ porson Is oolnv Du\I ness.•s JOHN A Mc.CANN E SQ. Oa.k~. w .. ~Utun-,t,.,f f"•l!fornt1•ilb8l wor"m"n,..,. to P'''""' the wo'"· Tnom"' c, ~"""'. ,901 K•no" "" u\h "nvt.-1 .-nd ')Ub\tSlt"nt~ pay 11111 s .. ,. Vl<ettte Blvd., Ste. 111 Rodd, NtiwO<H"t flt-•ct\ C.allfornit4 ''MiO mf'nt\ ;jff" Of'f'ned m ,,_~ ,)pgll<ablr Lo• An41•IH, CA-• Roland J Co111n,, l• t O•nlla <Ollt<livr ""'ll<'1n•nv "V'0""'"'~ 1.1('(1 GOit DON OLIVIA 8 {,()ROON "'\•df'nt OI N,.woort fte-itrh (.a P4\W'd '1•iiY on iunt' )4 1~18 Svrv1v1 d Oy t w o ddUQf'lt,.f\ 0..in.d (Jnrt)(W'\ Of Nf'wOQfl O••<r• Co& """""1(1,N ·r fy ~ CordOn of Nt wpott ~a<." C.. l'W'r motf'W'r L.O•\o 8 rtqq\. "' p, tMt"ton. Nt"W York one broth~r Ct•v St°""" Br1qq,. ot M•nh•I fdn 8fl'•Ch (,t Ont' \1\t~t )f'ol\nt Chara ot v.c.trw •o L\r-11t\n Columb1• C.r~m•llon ••th 1nt,.rment bv Bell 8 ro.tO,,.,.•Y Mt>r1uttrv Elll(KSOllf ALINE ElllARE I H IRElTYI ERICKSON ~)~ •wov on Jun• I/ 1•11 tn C•ncun Miflt1to \two """' cl •onQ 1•mc ~~·Of>nt ot l.100 l\IP Survtvf'd t>y t\er hU\~no Hartctn. 1wo \.(in\ M u JH~rl OtV1nt' ~ R~r,o ~nlo Ff", C• 1tnd O•vtd 0~'111,,.. or S..n fr•n<.1\\U c. d SltP •\On A t<ltdt O £t t k \On Of F r ~ e I &no, W 4 \nl nq t o n .tn d • or•nO(hlldtPM Pt1Vt1lt" t~m dv '-erv1(~S ~r1' ~kJ O" ;..1urday Jun.- 74, d t 4 00 PM dt PJ r 1t1c V1f"w Memotlt11 P4\rai., Cf\.,ot11 l~ fdrntly \V9Q~\h """'°"'"I cnntrinutlun\ ttt ttw• •merican .,.~~r\ AftW< 1et1on Pflc lfl( VJew Mortuttry Nt Npo(1 Ht•"-" Otr•'C tor\ BROWN MARSHI\ LOIS llROWN rf\od•nl ol M i\1'on '114!10, c.a PA\\,.t1 .. -~·'Y on June 2S, 19TI Mr\. Drown .,.ia ," n~ttvil of Ct~v,l•ncJ °"'0 .tn<t Wd\ • tnrm11r 1es10f'nt ot Cent• ~\d !:.f'W' 1 .. .,..,,., 10 $Uf\ll\iltt-~r hu'\O.Ond Ph1f10 (HOW" lwt') d •uohlflr\ k n \t.t E nn Arow11 4"d HIChOlf' O,,n1f.,.._ Brown t.lll o• M1\\1on Vl4tJO CA Mrmot1•t \f'r't'I( r\ wlll b~ ~10 0" t~v ~· I 00 p M •• In• ~~phtrO ot ttwt H1fl\ Un1tt<t (hu,ch ot Elsewhere· NEW O R L EANS !AP> The Rev. Abraham Lincoln Davis , 63. who helped the l ate · Martin Luther King J r. form the Southe r n C hris t i an Leader s hip C onfe r e n ce in 1957 a nd later becam e t h e f1r'>I black cit y coun - c ilman h ere, d ie d Sal u r · d ay. C H A PEL HILL. N .C . I A P l Thomas llightowers Collin s, 67. a s y nd icate d columnis t a.nd a utho r on reti r e - m ent livin g a nd fo rme r cx<.-culive e d itor o f T h e C h i c ago D a i ly N ews. died Sunday. W ASJllNGTON (A P ) Edward Hunter, 75. a forme r r eporter. C e ntral Intelligence A genc y as- s o c 1 a t e, a uthor. magazine publis h er a nd ;1 u l h o r 1 t y o n I Ell UOA.OWAT MORTUARY 1 10 Br l •I lw.1y L l<;l.J M f'• ,) b4:? q1•.o ~ psy choto~iral warfar e who popula ri zed t h e l c>rm "h r a1nwas hed ," d i ed S aturd:.n SMITH· TUTHlll·lAMa MORTUARY WESTCll~ CH.AP'El t127E 171h<;t Co~1.1 Me,,a b46·4A88 '1UCE IROTHUS SMITHS' MORTUARY 6?1 M.11n SI H url111UJlt1n B••.tch !>36 b539 SHlfffR MORTUARY 976 So Coast t fwy Lagun.i Boacn 494· 1535 1533 N El Camino Real San Clemente 492 0100 P'U. FAMILY COLOHIAL FUHfRAL HO Ml 780 1 BOlsd Avf> WP'.lm1nc;tpr 893-352!> "ACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL ,.AU CemetNy Mor111,1rv Ch10"1 3500 Pa c 1lir V1Pw Drive N .. Wllf>rl ( ;1htnrn1<1 644 2700 McCORMICIC MORTUARIES Laqun.1 Bt"<1Ch 49 4 q 4 t ., Laquna H ills 768-0933 San Juan Cap1str11no .. 95·1776 tA.Ln:iiiiHO .. NaALHOMI &4&-1424 COSTA MESA 673-9'&SO 0 O M AHA. NPt> CAP) ATthur C'. S torz Sr .. 88. whos e S torz Brewing Co. w a s one o f the lea d i n g h el'r m a k e r s 1n the M idw est , d ied at his O m a h a home Friday nigh t after a le n g thy ill· ncss. Storz w as a lead e r 1n eiv1lian s upport of the /\1r F'o r re a nd the Strategic /\1r Comma nd. Photo Trip Set in Laguna The Laguna B each Sc h ool o f Ar t will s µo n so r a photog raphy exc u r s io n to K e rnv ille Aug 2.'i, 26 and 27. The 1 n s t r u c l o r i s .J e r r y B urc h(ield a nd the cost per p erson 1s $35. Furthe r in form ation m ay be o bta med by c a ll- ing n u r c hfie ld a l llC P h o t ogr aphy , 497-1880. o r I h e La~un:.i Ueach S c h ool o f Art Swim Signups Taken at Y R e~lstratlon will be h e ld Fri day for the O range Co ast YMCA 's s crond s ummer se ssion o r itw lmmlng lessons fo r all a~es. Info rmation is ava lla· blc by c allin1 842·9990. Or:rngl' Coast Collcgl' ~tudcnl Ray Hart. 23. of Co::.la ;\lesa . \\ 111 have his art work featured on the c:cn <.·1· of OCCs fa ll class s ched ule. H art . who g r ad uated this month with a de~rcc in an:h1tcc:t11rc. won S200 for his three-color 1llustrallon. T he schedule will be mailed to more than 190.000 homes in the Coast Community College D istric t during Aug us t OONUT EQUIPMENT LEASING. 141S2 WOOOl•wn. Tu\l•n. CA 92..0 8 Kay c;r_.,.., IOI? WOOOl•wn Tu,1111, C.A t24llO Thi\ ous .... u Is C-Clt'd by an tn dlvldu•I B Kay Groom TnlS \lflt,.,....,t w a\ llll'd w1lll '""' County Clork ot Or•n91J Counly on June IS, 1911 ...... o DUllAllfTE, ELUWOltTH &SHIH'E u m ca11ot ...... •20' U1w11a Hiii\, CA '2UJ Publl'~ Or-CoAsl 0.1ly Pllol Tel: IU-6611 Corond Ck'I Mdr C. ololQrnid 9'•H w •ll> In~ l.lf•CMllm•nl ol lndu,lrtal AUOf'ney torE••<utor Thi\ bu\ln ... ~'\ I\ conouttfd b v ., R,.f,.t100 .. '" l1ft ordnnc.-with Seft1on Publt1iM<I Oran.qr Coa\t Daily P1tot Qt"ner .. tOctfHw•r,rhO 11/J 8 ot thl l.•hor CDdP Juntt 1•. J YlfJ. 10, '1 1'18 ?,,. 11!1 I TP\Ol'l'\d•.G D~rn.r Altl'ul•O'l 1\ O•r ... f' l•·d to 1™" pro ~otdnc:l.J CoiU•n\ \fl\1on\ 1n ~'hon~ t/11 i .tnCI t 111 6 ot PUBLIC NOTICE R•y.-..IC J!n•.n·. '"'" L tl>ur (utlt• c onc~rn•nQ Ill• 1""'' \ldff'"""1ll ""~' t ilflO w1tn «"" ftmo10,mf"n1"40PC1rf'!<nt1tr~b'f t"t> Con Co'iPIY Cl,.r\. ot Or•l'HJ~ counlv on tr•< tor or """ 'uD<onlt6<.fOt unch:·,. lt·"'44 Ju,...11, 1918 n.m s~~~~"c;~c!~'!,~~~~AT;oER ,,....,. ._...,,,on 1111 \. '"amenoto recw1m THE COUNTY OF ORANG E PuOll\htO Ora nQP eo.\I Oa1ty P1toi 11'1• Conlr4'<tor o r -..ut>c.ontra<-IOt No A·,.22' ;.,...., 74 anct Jul~ J 10 11, ''" •mPtOrtng ,,_..,.,...n on "nv dppren HOT IC E OF HEARING OF >u~/· l•<••l>lt OUuP•hon IO •OPlv lo thtr PETITION FOR PROBATE OF WILL 1---------------1101nl •PP•enl1<r•ll•P <ommoll•t AND FOR L£TT£1tS TESTAMEN PUBLIC NOTI CE "~"'"S' 1'"' "1' ot 1~ public WOfh TAltY AND l'Olt AUTHORIZATION pro1•t1 anct .-.... """''""''" ll'W! ..... TO ADMINISTER UHOER TH E 1M~nloet\h1ppravr•m 1n lndtlt<td~l<>r lllfDEPEND£NT ADMINISTllATIOH FICTITIOUS BUSINESS 4 f ~···••<•l e OI •OPfOYal The OF ESTATES ACT. NAME H ATEMENT (U lol>1.ol• ... 11 '''° ... t ... raho o• •P E>1a1e ol LAWREllfCE 8 SCHOEN l>u:~:..\~0~~0"''"9 "''"°"' ••'" <lo<nv 1><•nl 1<•• oo 1ou•nl'VmM lt\oll wolt flt' PUBLIC NOTICF. June .. ,26,JulyJ,10, tt1e UU II PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS BUSINESS FICTITIOUS BUSINESS P UBLIC NOTICE SORN .~.LAW R ENCE BRUCE WESTCOAST ENTERPRISES u..-o on ltM' l)t'rlorm•n<e ot t~ con SCHOENBORN, C>Pc.~a~ tr•ct fn,. 'Htn •J• tOPtN'll1t.P1-lo NOTI C[ IS HEREBY GIVE N lhal VAL LEY ADV[ A TISI NG MA il 1our,...·vmen'" -.u<ll , • .,., <n•ll not~ ELI ZABETH M SCHOEN80Rllf .... , CENTER O~ CALl r ORNIA, lllS8 l'>•lll•n on•Holovf' •rteol NAME STATEMENT llfAME STATEMENT T II~ fo11owi119 °'"~on• .,. do•nv T11e loll-111Q °'"son 1s dolnq bu•l· R·t•m "'""° her•ln a Ottlhon tor ProO.ttt of ~ltilf~~:~1~r~t rountdin Vdllt''f, A Wnfln ·Jn1rrip1oymf1"11 tl't f'W* '1H'"1 Wilt •nd for i\suancf' o t L~tt@r\ Oan1el J tt11nn t7ts& RunonwOOd nf 'OVt',dQf' b'f lrw" io•nt .tpprrn11t~\h•C• T,.\tAmtnl•rv •nc.t for AuthoQr1u 11ion to StrteL FountAin Vttllwv, C•l1rorn1.a • .. mm1tU"f· l"\.d\ ti11:Cf't'dt"d an ottYf'f clQe ol Admtn11ler unotr tl'W' t~peondenl Ad• '1lOI U 1n fN ~ dil f"a PftOr to t~ ttQU~U l>U\ln•u H ,_.,.,.a\ HO'tlCETOCltEOITDRS PACIFIC OISTRI BUTINC. COM SYNAPTICOM. IS6 MeHlll La,_., HO.A·U74t PAN Y, 11&6 Nt wport Blvd , Cos Id Cos1a MU•, U lllorn1• 92621 SUPERIOR COUltTOI' THI! :':,1"~'~:~·: ,o; ~~O~~\ ~!~ rff~~rl~~ Stre':t·. R:=.~~:'\,~:lle~. Oc~·~~::~ fO~ (~~·~~·~·,t;; ~umber Of dDQrt>nhr:P• p•ttlcular\, and tnat the> l•mf' anc:s ,1109 tn ''""""0 "' uw .ire.a e>t<ttd\ d ratH;t Mtw, C.lllornla 9201 HUQh ~rr, IS6 Merrill Ld,,., STAT£0FC.-LIFOltHIA 1'011 William Alnlty, 30"3 Tylrr Way, Cosl• Mew, ~lllo•nl• 92U7 THECOUHTYO,:OllANGE CO$la Mt w. ~llforntd '2677 Tiii\ OU<lnH\ ,, <onduCled by an In-In lht M•lltfOl 111• Eital• ot GOMAR ,. ....... R Jonnson, ,.,q Walldte, dlvloual Ml LFORO ADAMS, •l~o kllOwn .. , Costa Mow C.il11ornl•9~•U kuvn Spence• GOMA R M AOAMS, Oe<Hted pl•<~ ol nNrillQ 1ne same M • bl'i!n sel ol on~ 10 111 .. ,._ O• lor July 11, ""·~I 10.00 a m . In,,..,. Thi< bu'""'" " conou<lfO ov • C W~rn ,,..,. ,,_on 'now lh;)l 11 1. 1nh but lncn IS conoucttll bv " Th., \tal•.....,nl was llll!d wllh '"" Nol•ce Is Mrtbv OIYl!n lo ulJdlloH courttoom Of ~piartnwnt No J 01 ~aid ve ntrel g!~.';i'J~/""" rl'-of~clnq dt fe.n t, 1 lO 01 •h m_.m Qelleral p4rlner\h<P CouMy Ci~rk ol Or•nge County on 11av1ngclt lmuoa4"1'11M Wid<ll'Crdenl Cholrltt R. JOlln!lOn June 8. 1q79 10 Ille Hid <l•tms In I"-olllt • ol lh• court, at 700 C.v1c CA!nt•r Ot1'lr Wtsi. t;:lrt\h11> tnrouon dl)(,,11tnt•C"'\PltP trgm Thi\ sta1..,,.nl wa. lllt'<I w11n IM • FU7'3 <l~rkollhtalorewla courlorloprenn1 1n th~ City of S..nt• Ana,, c~11rorn1a Tf'li\ \f-tte~n\ Wd" flt\ld with ~n4• 1n9 on ttn ltnnYdl bd!tl\ ~talt!Wldfo or O•oed JUM 71 1.,9 Counoy UN~ 01 01 <11'0<' Counly on IO<Alty 0, County Clerk ol Oranoe Coun1~ on Publl\IW'd 0.Ar>Qt' Coasl Oailv Piiot, l"*m lo lllt ur>C»r"\19,,.d •1 IM olf><• ol Junr 8. 1'18 JUM 12, 19,2•.•"dJUIVl. t978 MIL TON w. FLACK. 011 W11\hir~ WILLIAM E. SI JOHllf. Jun~ 12 1418 0 Whtn 1,..,. (onlr.otoor prov•OM l'OU/U 21••·'8 Blvd., I! 300, I.OS A"9<'1ts. C.lllornl• Publl\hed 0.•nvci Co.ISi Oaoly P1101 !--------------90010. w111cll lall•r oll1tt Ii 1n! Pl•<• ol Junr I/, 19, U and July J, 1911 PUBLIC NOTICE busi11u\ ol tM uncttrilfned In •II Mlll COYt\ty Clf'fk FtM•·J f".,.10tn<r f"4t ,,.. •mpfoy~ rt91\ttrNt DAVID IE. 8UltTOH Publ•inf'<I 0.•....,_ Co.o\I Dilly PilOI, ~Pl"""'''~' nn all 01 hi\ CO<olraCI> Oii lur1on. G<1utdht, J une l• and July 1· tO 11 1918 4n dnf'lv"' dv.-r•tOP of not lps.s th.an on< Tllom'°" & H•IWln 2cJi l8 apprtnl•<~ 10 ••qn1 1our~ymon ,.,.So Pall'ltM" Av• \ r,, .. Con,r;tt tor I\ requ•r•d to m_, .. _. Wll1lller,CA telt02 PUBLIC NOTICF. (OnlriOul>Of\\ 10 rund\ "'"bl"""d •o• -________ 1_1s_J _,., ----------ltrs "rt•lnlnv lo ••id ttlale Such •-11.-claims wltn '"" neteUa•y •OU<""" PUBLIC NOTICE R·l4lll SUPERIOR COUltT OF C"LI FOltNIA COUl\fTY OF ORANGE CASE HUM8E R A· ... 11 ,,. Ill• Malt•• o! ,,,. APC>llU llOn nt ROBERT ARNOLOWEBB.10< clla"Q<' ~1n1mi- OADEllTOSHOWCAUSI FORCHAllfGEOFllfAME ROBE RT ARNOLOWEBB na•llll'dA pelit1on 1n tN,court tor anotdf'r .allow ""0 e>@1ihoner to Ct\\1"9lf "'' n.tMf"' tr om ROBEIH ARNOLOWEBBtoROBERT ARl\fOLOST (LAIR 111\ll•rfbyO-Ot•f'd llwll ftll per\on\ In ffr~sh~d in lt'W malter d fOrtW•O •PPf'dr t»for• UH~ court 1n ~0riartrn.-n1 No 3 ..tt 700 C1v1c Cent,.. Orivt Wes I S..nla An• c.:a111orn1• on July 11, 1'18 al II 00 A ,.,. •"0 '""" ttn<l IMr• snow cauwi, II Any 1110 naw. wnv ,••<I ,,..111ton fOf ch.on9e ol ,....,,,.. ~uld not bo Q•Mlf'd 11 1s fur'""' oro"'"° th•I a copy 01 tn1s ordflr lo sllow cauW' bf' pybll\Md In Oran9• c ... ,, Oa1ly 1>1101. o ,..h•\IMP<'• of 9en~••I circulaloon. publl,,..,.<! In lnl\ county at t•clll once 11 Wt"f'k for foyr COf' secullvr Wf"ltk\ Qf'•Ot to lf'I• d~y 01 l"ld 11Hrt"9 Oale<1June1, 1911 BRUCEW SUMNER Ju<!Qt ollllt Super\Or Courl SHAY, STlllLIHO &JONES toO s ....... BIYd L.tH•llu,GetOUI Ttl UIJl .. H7SI Tel· 0 141"1.fllO All••MY• .... Pt tlU-t PuDll'Md °'""9' C:O.SI O•llY Piiot Attorf\e y for. pe41l1oner tM .u1m1nl\ttAf~on at ~POr,.nttt p~h•P Pu111 .. ~t'd 0.•~ Coast 0d•lv Pl ol CP .," o<<>qr•m' 1"' rmploy\ ""<ll\lerf'<I 11> SU PERI OR COURT OF THE must M lllfd or P'flenllJd M alortsa10 STATE OF CALIFOltHIA FOR wllllln lour month\ aflu lllt' first THE COUNTY OF OltAHGE publlt•llOflolllllsnollct' llfo A·,.UO O•ltd Junv, 1~18 Junt ,., 1J, July 3 1~'8 7"1 18 NOTICE OF fRUSTEIE0S SALE p,.,,,,,., "' 10•1"'""'"" .n ~n .. ~p NOTICE OF HEAR ING OF Mltn..•Oouvl.tSAdam\ PETITION FOii PROBATE OF WILL E•t<ulo-ottheWtll PUBLIC NOTICE :::y F~:o L:~EA"usT:::~~~o",; MIL To:::·~d~~· CP '"' TO A DMIHISTER UHDElt THE AllO<'MY•ll.aw HOT•CE 0,. TltUSTEE0SSALE INDEPENDENT AOMIHISTltATION Oii WolSll•l"9•1vd., •JOO T oR:· ~!-.!~~t·ll OF ESTATES ACT. ~::,~;r,::;;~~!°'"11'°"" SM 1 Coroordllon • Ca..,o•n•• Esl•lf ol JOH N HOMEWOOD, Pvbllf~ Onngo Coul Daily Piiot corporanon, !rYl!uly -"'"° tt.,.._ O.cea\ed Junes 11 " 2f> l9/I uriotr •n• ro11ow1no Of'l'Hri~ oteo of -.onc E IS HEREBY GIVEN '""' . • • • lru\I WT\.L SELL Al PUBLll AUC DOROTHY H SMITH l\ots flltd P>ereo11 2181'71 110 N TO THE HI GHEST BIOOER " """"°" for P•obal• of Wiii and lo• FOR CASH (e>aYabl• al 11m~ ol sal• tn 1isuance ot letl•r-\ Tr~tament•rv .. nd 1--------------l l•wful mOtl«'Y of IM Unltfld StiUt'\J t111 or A111toorlra11on 10 Admln<stt• uno.r PUBLIC NOTICE rlQhl t•I" •no oni"<P>t <onvt v•o •o lhf' t ndttPf'r.dflnt Admlnistr~tlon of ano now Mid by 1t unat-r S-dtd Deed ot E\tittts A<I. reterenc~ lo wnich h Tn .. u 1n tnP orooerty her~•nattl•r m•O• Ill' lur1""r Po'rlttul•no. and ll>at lt·2016 04!\C ribrd 111• l•m• 1ndplaceof,..,.ar1nvthesam• NOTICETOCllEDITOllS tRU!>IOR Wallrr Curll\ Par~N Ila\ t>o-•n ~t '°' Jl'[y II, 1911. at 10·00 HO. A·•S614 and JudV Ann PMktr, hu\OdM and • m , 111 11141 tour1roam OI O•e>a•lm4!nl SUP£1tl0. COllllT DI' THE wllr •• 101n1 l<•Mnl\ No lOf \<lld COUrl.•t lOOC•••<Ctnler STATE Ol'CALIFORNIA .. Oll ll ENEF ICIA R Y F•I• T Dr ive Wt'\I, In IM Clly ol S,,nta An<1, THIE COUNTY OF OltAHOI Klu•m•yrr an unmarrt•d wom•n Callfornon. in tn• M•llt • of 1ne"£1llll• ot JOHN R.coro•o Novomo~r t• 191/ "' Olltt!l Jurie21, 1•18. HARLEY MUTCHLER. also known M <11,lr No 1701S 1n l>OO• 170• P•Q• 1•7~ WILLIAM ( St JOHN. J HARL.EV MUTCHLER,~·'° kllOWn OI Oll1t1al Rl'<O•d\ In I~ n1t1c• ol lh• County Clt'rk A> J fi MUTCHLER. O.cta....O R•<O•d&r OI Or""llf' Counlv. ••110 <le<•d ~:s".: GIR~R~ :•GOS .. :.~~~c~.~·.~:~.~!:'9.~.•o,:,~td~~~~ ::o~;~.~· dHWbO lne 1011n .. 1nv H tll vt dtnl lo Ille \otod c1•1m• •n t~ olhce ol Loi ~l ol Tr•<I 111? In me City ol Swllell41eo ~. \k• Clerk ot I"" ·1~~·•d co•irl or lo Co•I• Me•• ~~ \llown on a m•o ""• e m, ...... '"'" 9 v• v-•Mor<l•d In bnok SO P•Of\ 32 10 36 •U«"•f' for. petiOorttf' Pf•l4fnt them to tM undftni9~ •I tM 1nclu,tv t or M+~ftllaneou\ Maps_ 1n Publl\ned Or4119t C.0.•t O•llV PllOI ofltct ot JOHN H WHATLEY, S7l '"" Olli<• ol ..... Counl• Rrcoro .. r ot Junen,'7,Julyl, 191~ ?•19-11 Securlly BldV . ?l• Ea'I Co1or•do uoo Or•no' Covnlv m4Y be al~ PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS aUSllM!SS NAME STAT£Mf!NT Blvd . Pu•d•na, Calllorn.a 91101 known •• 9,. Wt" Oak ~1,901, Co\ta wtHC.t'I t•Uft othte h IMi Pf1H• of tKi\I M t\•. (alltornrA n~n of thit Uf'\(jpf\•Qllfld "' flll n"IAU•r' or a \tr .. I •~'ttS or common o.-. ptir'4lln1r10 to w.a ~~t•lt ~uch cl••m\ ,,0n1uon h\1'0•tth1bovf' now•rr.,n1" 1\ w 111"t '"""' nft~\\•ry vouctlttr\ m u\I qiv~n •' 101h comQlf!lffW'S~ or corrtt t D• lllt<I Of ~l><•nl•O •\ ~IOUHUI M\\I T 0 ~ NO US) II or~nh<f'Able tt.ldf> on \U<h contrA<.tS At P.ttr\er ""d 11 01~1 COllTr•<'or' Of' flw OUC>h<- SM t Corpor•l1on _. C•t1totn1A ¥rfOrk\ \1lfl •r~ mJttunq suc.n c.ontt 1C>u co,.porithon,. au1y .aooou•,1--0 fnl\lt • t1t>n'\ under tht fot1ow 1nu dt·,o·bt'a nrrc-o nt TM C.Ontr.c1or itnG M'ly 'UCM"Onf'.C lrU\I Will ~ELL Al P UfH •C lorun!k>rll1m \n.tll <omplvw1tlll,..,.r~· AUCT ION fO tHE fHCi HE S t Qutrrrn•nl'4JIS..<hMllllS.,,1.i1l11 • 8100£ A FOR CASH tptty..tt>I~ :tt 11m ,. tn tr11 t-"'p1oymiP,.,, of ·'Pl>'"'"UU1\ of uu: lA iawlW mo.nt.v Clf lh.t: Un11 tnforM~t.on , .. 1.1111• •o .eP.P'~· St•lf'\t .tit ngnt lttlP And inlf'tf\I 11c""''up \l•ntJ6rO\ <N•lQ(' \CfW'Outf:\, tOnVl'YPO lo dnO M w Mia t>Y •1 unO•·r ano othl'r tequ1rrmt"nh may t>-" ob \d•O o,,.o ot ftu\I in IN' oreperh t••n~ honi tl'W 01r•<tM of lndustri•t ~,,.,, .. ·~tr d4-\>C Ubl d Rt,oltt 101\l I ••• U1C.tO tfY. Adm1n1•.tr.1tor fAUSTOq W~\llf'r (Vrl1\ Par•f'r ot Appr,.ntl(:t•\l'HO. S•n ("r•nt •\t.O, .lnd Judy Arm P•rll.tir f\U\twnd <ilnO (at1fl)rn1-' or fr twn tN-01v1s1on ot AP· wnr a\ toint IP•f'Utnl' pr,.n1+ct \n1p ~ilnditfO\ 4na 11\ t>tan<f\ 8 E N E~ IC I A I! Y E II~ ~ ofl i<r\ K lu"""Y~' M> "nmarr1rd woman NOT l(f oS Hf REftY GIVEN tlwll R'e<.ordN1 Novf'mbtr 1~ •"111 3' lM Moulton NtOUl'I W•tn 01\10tl w 11f 1n•I• No llOl61n l>OOk o>O• PJOr Ul rM~•v~ .-Al«! buh ,,, ,,... olf<ce ni o• Ofl <t1al AKOrd' <ft ..... Ollocr 01 •n~ Oovlr Enq<nN'""9 CO<PO•Ahon, HOl Re:cordt r of Otano~ Cn\'"'"' \,l•d """d Qu;fil Str~f '· N~won n Al•iH.n. :!o~~~t~t dt\Cribr\ '"" •oltowino Ci\l 1forn10 ug to th., hour of tO ~ m on Lot ~O• ot ''-'<'tit? in '"'" C1h o' Juiv ••. '~1B l1t whlth llm'' f'H'd plitt " co, fa Mt 'o• ,t\ \howo nn 1 "',_0 lhf'V w 1U ti-p11{)1111v ooonMJ ana ,,.ild recordod 1n l>on< ~O. p~Qr' I> IO h S..1d '•olll"d blfh \llAll ""lnr I"" OO•no inclU'\l'ttl'@' o• M i\cr 1tt1nPO\n. M olp\, in nf th" PVOlit wur9' ht.1r11:1nb~for,. lhe ot11c• 01 1"4' <oun•v RrcMorr nl °""'ll>rd """"'°"'~In lne i •ld re-~••O Or•ngft County ., •v b,. '" toluhon known"~ no othtr Qll\IQn11t•on \nflwn. l•<" b~ °' e>rOPo,al ~Nlifl ~ma.cw 10 trusle'f 0 1r-c:t1fJtM• ;f"'l4y ~ Obt•in.-d m;t •nd \uDm1ttK1 on a t0tm to be oO- upon wr1ttpn rffl~""' \ubm1tlt't1 ...,Hnl '"'""'d "'•~off,<_. ot flnvlta Engineer• tO div\ trom "''' out'll•littH>" ot th• 1no CnrPorM1on, 1so1 Ou191i S1rr~•. notic• trl)m f '-1n.-r F"' c n >M l N .. wport F'fl•Ch (r\llforn1a E.Jth bid coroor<tt101'\, P O Ao• JSt, Out.n or oropo\4• mv\t"""' •t.1 omo•n•ed bv • P•r~ (Allforn,,tte»Jt CA\n1t-r 'thf'l<k or<""''~ <"rtlf1Nt tt• • c If A \tr"'f't 1lO't'"'' Of' ctU'Y"lmnn Of"' ,_.\C)On\1btf' b1M'Ut 01 .. b1ddfi:r \bond '°' \iQn•t1onf\\ho.ittn~br1v .. now,.,r,.nty 1 •n .tmnunl l'W)t •~" '"°''" tO"'-of Uw Q111•n ., 10 11\(0mf\lf't,.NI"""' 'Ort•(.t Amount of Ow b'rt or of t~ tnt•t N \1i • •moun' fO' wP\u n t¥y will •«•ot • 1181 71 T"" lollow•nv pe,,on I\ dOH>V bu,. 1---------------1 ,,.,,., Junes. I? .... t•. ••11 wt011n tour mon111\ <'lltt lll<t l1rt1 f11r 1>t11•ltclM• und•" u1d Ottd of pubh<•hon °' .,,., not1t1 T fU\I b Y ff'il\()n OI • ()t'.,,)(h cw dt fault Th• b•M h<••t"f -'"~' '~•a Or~d n conltA<t ""'° m.~ cMy.-b,, in tl'\f' Ot' Trtl'\I ov tP•\on of " bt,.•<n ttr t'Jl't•vlf dfor ru· tn ,,... t•vor ~ ttw> M<>i.tllOl't '" tt'lt ohtlQAliOf'I'\ "'"fUtf"O IM:-Uby Ntquftl w., .. , 01\ff~I (-4Ct\ ~\I(" b&e n•rttatlV,. ••rr utrd .,tnd difiill111,,.M t or OtOOO Al ~II bf-fl•lf'd ..lnd fllfli;J .at trw. .. \lndttr"ont<I ~wt l(f"f\ 0.<1AtAl1 "',. nUu • CM trw C>l\lr-c,t .. , or betor- i>t O•••ull .-nd Ot mAl'\tf fc>t ~If' •n..J thf' t1m ... 1n tnt\ nnt1t • "'""10f'o PUBLIC NOTICE S.U"I 11 IOR C.OURTO,:CALIFOAHIA COUN'tYOl'OltANGC CASI NUMBElt A·ff1'l In tlW #Nll@t 01 •~ Ap011t1Hon ol AON ALO CURTIS t!ORROCKS 10 Ill Bolronl 8•1-l>IAnd CAIUO•ll<• fi .. 1, lot <MnQ<tof n•""' OltDElt TOSHOWC:AUSE FOlt CHAN OE 01' N"MI ROllfALO CURTIS HORROC KS Ill\ Ill~• pellllon In lllll courl lor •nor Ott ~llo•ln9 P"lil!OM• 10 Cll•llCI" .. ,. llMM trom ROllfALOCURTIS HORROCKS lo ROllfAI OCURTISCARUSO II I\ n•rtbyor-td 111<11 •II pn>Oll• 1" rpresle<l In'"" mall•• •t01na<o appu r bollor• 1111, court In 0..0Artl'llflnl llfo l al 100 Cl •I< C'tntor Orlvf' w .. , •. s .. nlA "'""· C•lllornl• on Jun. 11111, "''· •t 11 ·oo O'< IOO • "' ' '"° own •llO '"''~ •llOW CAU\I , II.,., tlity NW. w~y \•Ill Dell llOfl for t l\Anoot ol n""'* •l>011ld not .,. or•nltd It Is furt,..r Of Ott~ INl A 'OPV Oltlli• order lo shelw <~,. bepul)llSl'ltd in T~t O•lly Piiot, 1 n.--.oe.,.r ol ~,,.r•I Clrcul•llOfl P.,1>11\lled 1111111\ counly •I '"'' Oii<• a .... ~ for IOU• <Oll"'<ullnt we•h Prior IOllle d41Y Of H l<I .... , •no O•lt<t #Ny tJ, tt11 llAUCt'W SUMllflM JudftottlW S-IOPC.O..rt "'*'''"'°Or.,... Goef1 O.H• l'llel. Ju11tS, n . tt,2', ''" RONAL D ROSSI R & R ENTER P RI SES 1JS41 A•tt1 ld• lopAno•. Ml\''°" V1fJO. Cit•lforn111 n t•2 P o Bo• 1311 Ml"IOO'I vi.10. C•l1lornl" '1'90 • Ron•ld Rou o. U S•t Ave11id• Tooa 11Q• M1u1on V1•10. C•lllorn•• ., . ., Tiii\ bu\lr .. •I "<On<lvcltd Dy •n ''" Cllwi<1ua1 0 RO\\I ..... , 0•1•<1 J .... 1 ... ,. Ill Ill~ Ol>llO•llOll\ "tur~d lh..,.9by JOHN H, WHATLEY ,,.,.lolo-• to cull'O MO ,,.,,,,..,.d lo AU.,.,.ey Mt \.aw '"'" yndff\IQl!Wd • wt•lten DetlAt•llM SU S.C11flty .... ol 0< la .. 11 -O.m.tn<t '°' S.lt •nd tM I Celer.W a1.-wrlll•n notou of D<each And of tl~tllon ,. • .-.,., Caflt-1 tllOt 10 (aUU IM un<ltr"Q,..0 10 \fll >•IG hi: / ... JIM property lo \8h\IY \lltd o>lll•Olllon' T•I· Ml-4f1J ano 111r•Hftff IN unot,•IOftt'O uu\•d PuOll!lltd OUnQf' Coe<I O••IY ,.llol ••1d f\Ollto nl bt••tll •nd OI tlt(llOll to Junes. U, lt.2~. "" .,.. ·~corato M•rc~ 11 I >11 ., ln\lr 2113 71 PuDlli""'1 Or•,. Coul D•llY Pllot, -------------- June t? 19, 16 •nd J"ly J, "" I No 11qe1 1n boo« 12'-0Q, pt~ l»t 01 H•d Oll•<i•I RKOfd\ UIJI P U RLIC NOTICE. PUBLIC NOTICE S•ld ••I• will ~ m•O. but •llllOUI cov•n•nt Ot w•tr•nty, e\O'•'' or 1mpll•d, ·~-dlnv 1111•, Po' .. "'""· o-encumb••n<n. 10 N Y ,,,. •t•11•1lllnQ pt Inc •i>•I \um 01 I,,. llOlthl \..Curto l>Y \Old 0.td ol lfUll. willl lftltrh l A\ Ill Uld Ml• PtOVldftd, "dv .. n<H . If ~llY, vndt r Int '""" Of .,.1<1 0..t'd ol I ru\I, ... ,. CllMQt\ ;tnd .. pen\•\ OI lllt TrV\lff •nd ol ...... \f\1$11 tr•lltCI by \•Ill 0 .. d 01 tru•I S.l<I t•lt wlll 1M lltld 011 f lluf\Cl.tV, JUiy ?0, ltll •t I I 00 t m 111 Ille Soulll lronl •nlr•nc• 10 Ille Old County Co\;< lhouH '" IM W•ll ,00 1100 OI Miii• .... 8oulhlld. In ,,,. C:ll'I' of hlll• AllA, C•lllO<lll•. Oelt<t JUllt 16, .. ,. \Ml Cl>roo<•tlOll, • C:.lllornla CMl>Ofellon H MlfT~ee. h~-·"" l-Tlti.~y, •Otftl 9Y W•ldO R H..,o, AUlllAllt Sttr.i•tY Pullllt""" Or-Co.11 0.lly lfolot Jvll• h llNI Jl/4y J, 10, lt11 wrltt•n noh<• Of f)tfitt h •"d of fl lf't ff r~~ •bow ",..nhontid <ht-ck nr tKlftO io <•u\t tht untkr\1Qnf'f1 to v·u '-•' '""11 ~ 0•""'"" f\\ ou.u.-nt~ ,,,_., tM ptot)tlrtv to Ut•\fv \<IUd ubllOAlion\ b1ddrr wllt "''"" lntn • '""''"(\ it •ftO tr.r.-•ttrr li'W' ~"•01\.f-O ,.,.u,f"'d •••'Oro'""°..,,,,., •NI """ u bf! ct•1rNt«' u1d nottc• or Off" .. ," •ncl ut .-1•< ti on t ,., l1quH1AtM1"°""'"'~\1t '"' \vtt•~,rut bt , .. <OrON:t M.A rch l1 1q1• "' 1n\tr t>fdU"r rf'fu\«' to t1nt .. , mto thf"' cnin llfo 11•11 In._~ llloll<l. ~· IJH, ~· ,,.,I , .. lo Off1(iAI A't<°'d" Ori1no-'"'"'"' TM \UUP\\fUI hi~r wtll tMt t @ Said'•'" -.1111 IN' mtti'lif, b\11 w1tf\OMI qu1ttCI to turn1\f\" Ofl!ym-.nt bonfi In •n <O"tn•"1 0' w•t riitntv ,..P,,.,, or •movnt f"OVlll ti) 10(r ot '"" contr«t iMPHad tf'QAt'11f\O ,,ur . CN)~"-•\\1nn or J'rlff' _.nrt" IA1thh.1t Of!'rfttmM ct bofM1 •nc'-',,,Or•nct1, lo I.MY tf\r-'"mAln1no 1n •n ttmovt"t .-cau•I to 1oc:r of thtt ,04. prlnt11Mt \um t>f IM l'\nt•'"' \fl't ur.-d lfMt pt1rf\ ,..,.rt tM>nO' 10 Of \•(\H'frrd by \•Id O~d f'Jf lru,,, with 1nt1ttft\I •" from~ \urrty <-~ny \•lh tK.IOf ' 40 In .. ,d not• orD11111f'd, -<lv•nr ~'·II •RY, Inf' Moul IOI• llflQvol W•lf!'r Oi<ldct Y"O•• lllt 1trm• 01 "'"' O•M ol t ru•I, All hrm• •nd '°""'''°"' cont•lnect ltU , (n .. O•• And HOfln\f\ OI 1n• In Ill• lnlorm•llon IOf" b<C!<l~r' .. , l ru•I•• •no ol IM llu\I\ e<r<lltd by t•c~t•t 10 4100 fl P41•t o1 '"" bill iorm' ••Id Ottd of l ru>I \11>d u l• woll bf> ,,..11 vnv•rn '" ll'on\/QI\ tvlly ot"t rlbtd ne10 on T11u,.<1<1y July 111, 1t1• Al 11 oo f m • 111~ Sclulll Ire.II "\Ir Ano lo lh• n•rt1n •n<t '""II .. \0 beto,,... • ~rl 01 Id Cout1ly toutlh<MI\• In ..... W•\I 1()(1 '"" ton114111 t loca 01 S..lf• An• 8oulovud tn t"" Tiit Mo1.111on N•v~1 W3l"f Ot\lrk l <Hr ol S•nt• An" C•lllorni• r•>«rvo ,,... rlQlll to N'iKI ""V -•II O•lfO Jun. .. ; .. ,. Old\ or j)Of"tletl\ OI ,,,., af\O •II bl1h, to !.Ml Cor-•Hon, ... .,d • (ontr¥\ lo-·~" tMll •II of "GelllO-nta Ccw<OO-•llon ,,.. "'""' lor wll«ll """!I'd\ •rt lllvlt· •>wild lru•ln ~or 10 .,.,,.. _.., 1111ott'llallly In • blO 11y to""""""'""n not •fle<•td b'I' ,..., ~_.,. Tlllt CO<'llf)flfty MOUL 1'~ NIGUEL ·~nl WATElll DISTRICT lly W•IOO A H•UO AltM-80w<t, Aol"<Wll 'Ho<rolAry \t<ttlary l'uOh• .... d Or•noe '°"" 0•"• P1101 l'uDll\"'° OtlJnQI <.cMl•I Oelly "'"°'· -1UllOJuly) 10 Ull Ju~)t. JO, 1t7' 1•1t II --- -· • BOATING J AT YOUR SERVICE Food Sizes 1Jnca••t1 DEAR PAT. How many sizes or cans are in use for canned food pro· ducts? It seems like dozens. I'd like a bandy reference to help me de· termine the amount and number or servings tn all the different sized cans at tbe supermarket. It would save time and troublt: and help me decide which can is really the best buy based oo IDY own needs. J .J ., Costa Mesa The ca.a sizes are curreatly med by tbe IDdlWry for canned food pro- ducts carried ln markets. AD in· forma&loa shed .U.at Usu cans by ID- dutry cenns. Ada as Picnic or No. 300, •ltb c:orrapondjag weight. ap. proximate cvps and prlnclpal pro- ducts used for vutoos sizes Is belng malled to yoa. Other readers m., re- quest this .. Ca• Sbe Info." sheet by mailing a seU·addnHed, stamped envelope to At Your Service. Color learu ~--, DEAR PAT: U I fade new jeans at home, does this weaken the fabric very much? l !d also like to know bow much bleach to use for fading. · F.N., Irvine The Good Hoosekeeplng lnslttute's textile laboratory reports that bome fading can weaken fabrlc up to 20 percent. Also buy all-cot&oo jeans in a larger size than you wear because bot water used In lading wW cause shrinkage. After fiW11g tbe washer Senior Nationals . Coli •I prntum• 1'1..., 1tnlt 10 '"' 1"'1114 1''11 "'U 01 rnJ lcii-" 9"lltflll llM' Cl'W"'*'• Wld urllO'I 11w "'~ ,., .. .i •• 1"""1<•111' ,., """""'"'"'' """ lll<nnl'U MU11 II""' 11• ,, .. ,.... '" Pul 0..nl4. Ar Ym.r $f.ri•ict , Oro"ll' f',wl t>oJJ11 Ptlc.t I' 0 Bo~ IWJ C"!MIO Mr.a C:A 111•Z• .\• '"""" 1111trt oa posllbl• 11<.U bf GlllW•rred. t-w ~'d °"''"'"' or k tUu M -ludafto l/wo tf'ntl"' 1 /vU .amt'. odd!Ha ol\d "'-a lluliti' p/loM ""'"bo-tconnuc 11<-(''"'*''lld ,...,~~·~ '" .. zc ric ~llJ'd(ui· .. wllb bot water, a\td deter1eol ud l or l ~ quarts of clalorlae bleacb. Agitate to dletrlbaw bleac• evealy and add )tans. Let tbem 80alr for 3t minutes; then ran &be wasber through lts cycleL Reset for a& least two extra rinaet to remove bleac.b odor. Ca•W"fl i11 °" Clal• DEAR PAT: My brother, who U•es in New York, sent a gift to me via United Parcel Service in June im. It arrived in a severely damaged condition, so I reported this to UPS and was gjven a claim number over the phone. UPS picked up the package, but my brother still hasn't bad this $70 claim setUed. The pro- blem involves an inconaistency ln the s hipping number, and until that's straightened out. the claim won't be paid. Neither one of us are respoosi· ble for a UPS mix-up in shipping numbers, and we feel this settlement is long overdue. I.e .. Seal Beach Allboagb UPS took several months to correct th.ls problem. Peggy Em· briaco of the Somerset, N.J., UPS of· lice, reports lbat although there's atUI a mystery about the mixed up shipping Dumber, your brother wUI be issued a new claim number. When be completes the claim papers, set· tlemcnt sbouJd be made wUbJD 10 days. Monday, June 26. 1978 DAILY PILOT A J l • Fifth to Bermuda Sorcery To Miss Record Ttirner DuPont Winner Jacob Wooc1'1 st.foot sloop Sorcery slowed her pace in the 3,S7l· mlle Los Angeles to TabiU ~ when it ran into llgbl and variable winds about 5SO·miles south of the equator._ HAMILTON. Bermuda CAP> -Ted Turner, the outspoken owner of the Atlanta Braves and skipper of 1977 America's Cup winner Couraceous, will soon add another sailing trophy to b1a collec- tion . Competing under the new Measurement Han· dicap Rule, Turner sailed bis 61-foot sloop Tenacious to the best corrected time average in the four·race series for the Henry B. du Pont Trophy. • The serles winners were calculated Thursday following the 635-mile Newport·to-Bermuda race. The du Pont Trophy will be awarded to Turner at Government House here Saturday. TENACIOUS WAS THE fifth yacht to cl"Ofls the £i.nish line Wednesday .from a fleet of 162 b_o!lts: Sorcery's 9 a.m. Sun· day position report placed it 616 miles from the !hush at Papeete, Tahiti, with litUe or no chance or eclipslna the elapsed time record of * * * 17 days, seven hours set ~~:~~~01~.etcb BYC Yaeht 3rd BUT~ Sorcery runs completely out of &· ____ _,_ RiYl///96 s·1~·--8t wind In the late stages of ITIUU,R,I, ~ «T~ the race it is a cinch for firs t to fini s h and possibly handicap honors. At the Sunday report it was 563 miles ahead of the second place boat, Bob Gosnell 'a 49-foot s loop Tuia out of Hawaii. Third was Willard Bell's SO-fool sloop Westward, about five miles astern of Tuia. Richard Loufek and Art Glaaer or Newport Beach beat out 13 rivals in the Tornado catamaran class Sunday in Cabrillo 'Beach Yacht Club's Small Boat Regatta in Los Angeles Harbor. Tbe event drew 28 boats in three classes. Second in the Tornado class was Dick Beauchamp, Newport Beach. and lbird was Wayne Boyd, Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club. Results in other classes: CAL 20 -1. Paquito, Bob Pfstey, SMYC; 2. Ginger Ill, Gary and Bill Johnson, CBYC; 3. Ram· bunctious, Cowie/Manning, CBYC. CAL 40 -1. Restless, Bob Young, CBYC; 2. Anona U, Fred Leicblfuas, PMYC; 3. Persephone, Jack Woodhull, CBYC. The first to arrive was Circus Max1mus, a &4-loot sloop designed by Yve·Marie Tanton of Newport. Turner, who had never won the du Pont Trophy before, finished second on corrected time in the Bermuda race's MHR divtsion lo A mold Gay of Annapalis. Md .. skipperofthe40·footyawl, Babe. Tabasco, a 41-fool sloop owned and skippered by Robert Aron of New York City, had the best re- cord for boats competing under the International Offshore Rule in the du Pont series. THE TWO MAJOI winners in the Newport-to- Bermuda race were determined Thursday with six or the 162 yachts in the race sWI out. Acadia, a St-foot s loop owned and skippered by Burt Keenan ot Lafayette. La., was the winner on corrected time in the IOR division. Meanwhile, the United Slates retained the in· temational Onion Patch Trophy on Thursday in a four.race sailin& aeries that culminated with the Bermuda race. FIGURES COMPILED BY the Royal Bermuda Yacht Club, a co-sponaor of the event, showed the U.S. team with 193point.s to 171 for the English team, 117 for the South Americans and 63 for the Bermudans. The series consisted of an overnight race from Oyster Bay, N. Y., to Newport, a pair oC day races of{ Newport and the run across the Gulf Stream to Bermuda. The 12 competing yachts were scored on the basis of how they finished in relation lo one another, rather than in relation to the remaining 150 yachts in the various classes. THE FIRST ONION Patch boat to complete the Bermuda race was Acadia. The British yacht Marionette was second in the intemaUonal team series. 59 Boats Enter Langford Tops Sabots Hoping to fini s h. sometime this summer is Neil Kelly's 36-foot ~~~r.n~~~~:.~t~~:k l.~~ Lou. '~ek and Glaser Stripes Regatta lie to celebrate as its ~ • Sunday position gave it The first official weekend of the 1978 summer Kurt Langford of Alamitos Bay ·Yacht Club beat out 20 rivals Sunday to capture the Naples Sabot Senior National Championship at San Diego. The title event was sponsored by San Diego Yachl Club and sailed out of Coronado Cays Yacht Club. The 75 boat fleet was llivided bet ween skippers age 18·40 and those over 40. TWO NEWPORT Harbor skippers placed among the Cirsl 10 in the championship flight 08·40 >. Mark Gaudio, Bahia Corinthian Yacht Cl ub. placed fourth and Cal Preston Newport Harbor Yacht Club was seventh. Fred Schenck Jr., Newport Harbor Yacht Club was the winner m the over 40 classificalion. Summary of trophy winners. CHAMPIONSHIP FLIGHT -l. Kurt Langford, ABYC, 5·1·3-8:\r.i pts, Does it seb filce a Jot of your food is going to waist? At Holiday Spa Health Qubs we're experienced in waist removal. · 2, Hal Brown II, MBYC, 6-5-4-15; 3, Chuck Sinks, MBYC, 2-3-11-16; 4, Mark Gaudio, BCYC, J-4-12-16!14; 5, Alan Jewett, ABYC, 7-2·8-17; Bob Martin, SMYC, 3·11·5-19. SILVER FLIGHT (18-40 ) --J, Mitch Madruga, SDYC. 1·1·2-21h, 2, Tom Nutton. ABYC, 5-2·1-7~; 3, . Judy Becker, SDYC, 2-3-3-8, 4, Anne Bloemeke, ABYC, 3-4-S-12; 5, Peggy Lenhart, MBY C. 4·5-4-13 OVER 40 CHAMPIONSHIP - Fred Schenck, NHYC, 6·4-3-13, 2, Jane Kenny, SDYC, 1·8·5-13~. 3, Hoger Blocmcke. ABYC, 5·7-4-16 , 4, Hal Brown Sr , MBYC, 4-3·11-18; 5, George Sinks. MBYC, 2-6·12-20 SlLVER FLIGHT OVER 40 -1, Jeanne Lynch, MNYC, 1·4·1-6~. 2, Ginny Thorsen, MBYC, 6·1·2--83/4, 3, Geves Kinney, SDYC, 3-6-6-1!>, 4, Denn.>-O'Brian, SDYC, 4-9-~16, 5, Hal Higgins, MBYC, 12·2-S-19 1,628 miles to go. r. s ll B season lived up to its name tor S9 sailboats in nine 0 . n »'Ha oaters classes which turned out Saturday and Sunday ror TUIA AND Westward J:' ••II the Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club's annual Stars both dropped out of any and Stripes Regatta. semblance of a close John Arens and his Balboa Yacht Club crew Mild breezes and warm sunshine greeted the race with Sorcery after aboard the 37·foot sloop Cottontail are returning sailors on both inside and outside courses. Trophy they were twice caught home from the 635-mile Newport, R.I. to Bermuda winners: in the doldrums last race with nothing to shout about -but certainly . SANTANA-20 (S) -1, John Robinson, BYC ; 2, week when Sorcery nolbinglobeashamedof. JeffAllan,BYC . broke free and picked up Jn the slowest race in the Jong history or the THISTLE (5) -1, Jack Cannon, BYC; 21 Dale favorable southeast event, Cottontail finished third in IOR Class E and Hinkle, BYC. tradewinds south of the ninth overall on handicap time. Cottontail also PHRF (4) -1, Dick Bluel, BCYC. equator while its rivals finished third in ita class in Newport Race Week, a SABOT A (12) -l, Jon Pinckney, BCYC; 2, were stiU beating into a series of races on Rhode Island Sound prior to the David Franco, LIYC; 3, Doug Teulie, BYC; 4, southerly headwind. start of the Bermuda race. Cassandra Smeltzer, NHYC. Even if the trades Richard Fon, navigator aboard Cottontail SABOT B (5) -1, Chris Kilpatrick, BYC; 2, freshen for Sorcery, its said 170 miles was the best day's run the yacht Jeff Grant, BCYC. chance for a r ecord made during the entire race. Some skippers told or LI00.14A (6) -1, Bill McCon:t, BYC; 2. Chad cross'ng t's remote It turning circles in dead calms for more than 12 Twichell, UYC. would have to ave~age hours du.ring the race. Fou aald the Gulf Stream, LIDO·l4B (7) -Brian Hench. BYC; 2, Marty more than 300 miles a that meandering current that runs northward Lockney, LIYC. day between now and 8 along the east coast, was also tame, offering LASER (8) -1, Anne MaJanosky, DPYC: 2, p.m . <PDT> Tuesday. neither help nor hindrance during the race. Bruce Twichell, VYC; 3, Gary Mooa, BCYC. Buena Park 510 South~Blvd. South of Li Avenue (714) 826· 1 Huntington BNah 18585 Main Street Main St.at Beach Blvd. (714) 842·1451 Orange 622 East Katella Ave. West of Tustin Ave. (714) 639-2441 We offer a program of peraJnal· ized exercise instruction that talces into account your entire body, fitness level, and desired R<>als. With our Progressive Physical Conditioning Program. each muscle group is exercised to its maxi· nu.on efficiency, so you can accomplish nue in less time. of the finest available in the industry. But there's more to Holiday Spa. For women there's Jazznastics-a Wlique group exercise done to up tempo music. And to refresh and revitalize after exercising you'll find steam. sauna. whirlpool, sun rooms. and more. Don't let any more of your life go to waist.Join Holiday Spa Health Qubs today. And don't waist any time! Diff ermt tnemblrsh;p /mJgrams available including a two-week introductmy jmJgram. ee'3t1t Clubs bMeaandWamen O>.taMeea 2300 Harbor Blvd. Harbor Center (714) 549·3368 Encino 17031 Ventura Blvd. West of Balboa (213) 986.6330 410~~tvd. 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Home Federal Country ·HOME FEDERAL SAVINGS of San Diego Huntington Beach Offtoe: 2111 Main Street• 536-6511 Huntington Beach/Downtown: 411 Main Street• 536-6591 lrvlne Office: 4543 Campus.Drive • 752-6161 San Juan Capistrano Office: 32039 Camino Capistrano· 493-0601 Santa Ana Office: 17th and Main Street· 835-4336 Seal Beach Office: 1350 Pacific Coast Hwy.· (714) 898-3481(213)596-5576 Home f edel'81 Savmgs and Leen As90datlon of San Diego . \ Huntington Beach O~ce\ l .. l j N'NSIDE:, •Comics •Stocks r ' •MOV~s •TtfiYfskm OAILYPn.OT Bl. l).it¥ Pn.t,......, PllriA 0'0-lt aaJSlS ARE SPREAD OUT IN THE SEMOA MEN'S GRAND PfUX RACE IN COSTA MESA SUNDAY AS PART OF TffE CfTY'S 25™ ANNIVERSARY CB.EBRATION. SEE STORY, PAGE 8-3. Can ·Angels _F (' ooo-000-000 )rget Texas? From AP Dispatches Tryisagto tteunceback from three shutouts ina spanoHour games over three days. the Callforrua Angels face the two-time American League West Division champion Kansas City Royals tbis evening at AnabeimStadium. Game time is 5:10 for the nationally televised battle texcept Southern California> with Frank Tanana < 11·3 > on the mound for the Halos trying lo put a stop to the four-game losing streak. Opposing Tanana on the mound is rookie Richard Gale <6-2l. The AngeJs were within one percentage point of the lead before the Texas disaster, capped by Sunday's 7-0loss. TEXAS BATTED around in the fifth inning Sunday night, ex· plodmg for six runs on its way lo the 7-0 trouncing or California. It moved the Ranger!> moo first place. a half-game ahead or Kansas City. "Have we made o.ar•move? I hope it's the start of it," Ranger Manager Billy Hunter said. "It's nice to be in first place. More im- portant. I want to be there when it's all OYer. But by more than A nget. S late AllGamMoft KMPC1110) half a game. We're there. Now· we want to stcq there ... It was Texas' sixth straight victory and eighth Toniqllt K•,.H•C1tv•tC1t1r0<~., s 101>rn. win in the past nlne outings. ~~~ ~!~!!!g:~::~:~::: L~~-~· It was also its third shutout of the series, after Ranger pitchers had picked up only one in their previous 65 games this season. ''WE RAN INTO California when they were struggling, just like our hitters were struggling a couple of weeks ago," Hunter said. He referred to a s tretch when opposing pitchers bad no· hitters going into the sixth mning again&t his team three tia>e6 in one week. Corbett sllel:led out plenty of cash to aoq.oire such hitteTs as Bobby Bonds, Richie Zisk and Al Olivei-in the past year to shore up the a~ hitt:i.n& attack cmd brio&: a pennant to Texas fans this season. He also aOQflired pitchers soch as Fecguson Jenkins. Jon Matlack and Doc Medich toward the same aim. M EDtt:H, 2·3, scattered seYet'l hits and retired 14 in a row late in ea me Sunday, picking uphisfirstshutoutsince 1975.. Bonds, who b.it a pair of three-run homers SaturdaY,_ didn't get anything to k>Ok at Sunday. Losing Pilcher Don Aase.. 4·4, walk.ed him three tim~ once trwmtionally. See ANGELS, Page HZ Argentines Go Wild . Holland Falh in Overtime, 3-1 Tak-1119 011 E arly Shower Mike Asmar. driver of the Little Hustler, is seen bouncing off the hull of his boat, then going into the water in this series of s hots from Miami Sunday. Asmar took his early "showe r " when his boat lost power and speed, throwing him from his seat during the running of the final heat in the Grand National powc.'f' boat races. He was not in- jured. { BUENOS AIRES, Argent~a <AP) -It was Mardi Gras, Oktoberfest and New Year's Eve all wrapped into one as Argentina b egan a four-year reig·n today as the world soccer champions. The country's 25 million SOC· cer fans poured into the streets and cheered their hearts out after the team took the final match and the title in a drama- packed 3-1 overtime victory over Holland. IT TOOK T HE Argentines seven games to reach the final of the month-long tournament. And the last match, played over the roar of 77 ,000 spectators, was fittingly the most dramatic. It was marked by defensive play and few individual stars of the magnitude of Pele or Johann Cruy rr as the Argentines squared off against the goal· making machine of Holland. The Dutch had scored more goals than any other tea m and had a roster that includod eight veterans from their luckless 1974 Cup final against Wes t Germany. But Argentina came through with the goals wben they count- ed and finally provided a hero to a tournament which had none. H I S NAME WAS Mario Kempes, a hus ky 23-year·old with a shaggy black mane of hair. whose gift is to score with his left foot. Kempes booted in two of Argentina's three goals. His t echnique: to s lither through the defense on the front edge of the goal area and force in cannonball shots. ff the goalie punches them out on his first try, Kempes comes back for more, scooping up the ball for a second attempt. Kempes gave Argentina the lead in the first half when his low kick got past Dutc h goal.keeper Jan Janbk>ed. Dodgers LetGBig One Get Away . Lasorda Fumes After 54 Loss; L4 in Atlanta Tonight By JORN SEVANO Of tN Deify,_. S\.tll LOS ANGELES -Despite the clear, blue sky surrounding Dodger Stadium Sunday afler- n o o o, a dark cloud bung ominously over the Dodgers' clubhouse as they packed for an eigbt-eame road tnp beginning in AOanta tooight. The Dodgers had just euffercd an agonizing 5-4 loss to the-Cin- cinti Reds before 50,356 disep· pointed fans. Jl was a game lbe Dodgers felt they should have won and let gel away. The mood in the clubhouse was that of gen- uine sorrow. A saddened Lee Lacy, who dropped Davy Concepcion 's llne shot with two on and two out in the ninth to patte the way for the Reds' victory, could only sit and shake bis bead la diibeliel. A DISH£ABTENED Tommy John, who lost only hls third ~ career decision to the Reds in 14 outings, sat in the training room with his arm packed in ice mumbling he should have won the game. And an irate Tommy Lesorda was fuming. "Hell yes this 1066 takes some or the luster off this weekend," ~ f'atta Bra.,I See PageB2 said Lasorda, his Yoice getting bi~her as be t.alked. "This is a ball game we had to win and should have won." The loss proved costly lo the Dodgers as San Francisco's spill or a doublclreader with Atlanta left LA six games ore the pace. It's the furthest the Dodaers have been from the top since Sep· temberof 1976. "WHENEVER YOU win two . you always want to sweep," said a downcast John. "What the loss will do to this club mentally I don't know. you'll have to ask Tommy (Lasotda> about thaL "Whenever you pitch well enough to win and don't, you're bound to be disappointed," . snapped John, when asked if the loss was upsetting. "What do you expect me t~ do? Run up and down and do cartwheels.?" Of course, the player who felt the worst was Lacy. "I LOST IT mMlentariJy, but I 4Bllll tbouJht I bad it," said Lacy, staring at bis feet. "I iot a good jump on tbe ball and even when 1 lost it I was stlll chprgtng. l just lost tt tn the backtround of the stands. Just belore impact I knew I was in trouble." The error by Lacy broke a 3·3 tle as Pete Rose crossed home with the so-ahead run. Dan .. Driessen then followed with a single to left to give the Reds a two-run cushion. The Dodgers mounted a raUy or their own in the ninth, but fell one short. "IT WENT RIGHT off the \ip of my glove." continued Lacy, who by now had grabbed his Dodgen Slate Afl o-"' •••c cne1 TOfll911t LMA119el.satAtlM1I• 4:J01>.m . lund•I' U•A1199 .. utAtlM!lf 4 JOp.m. w.-11Hd•r Los AnttlM. Atltnl• 4. JO p "'· mitt to lllustrate the point. "You know, baseball ls a fun· ny game. My error wasn't th~ only run that scored. but it proved to be the main one/' said Lacy. I just hope Lasorda doesn't. lose his contldencc in me.•• "I'm not goin1 to lose my con· lidence in anybody," said Lasorda, still angry. "1 'm not go· See DODGERS. Pa•e BZ THE DUTCH TIED it with on- ty nine minutes remaining in regulation time when s ubstJtute Dirk Nanninga beat Argentine keeper Ubaldo Fillo!. Kempes scored the game. winner for Argentina midway through the JO.minute overtime period and Daniel Bertoni added the clincher late in the required overtime session. Cesar Luis Menotti, the Argen· tine coach who rebuilt a team which was known as the "Animals" for their rough play · in the 60s. would not give all the credit to Kempes. ··Look," he said to a packed news cenference aftec the 120· minute game. "Tbis was a team performance. Argentina 1s a team. not individuals. We have no prima donnas. We play for each other. "TODAY WE SHOWED that we could win the World Cup by (Jpside Down being a team. That is what soccer 1s all about." · Menotll, who played in the great Brazilian team of Santos when ~le was aboard, and in the United States when socce~· was still an unknown sport, kept his modesty throu~h the frenetic celebrations. Asked if Argentina was now the besl team in the workJ, he replied: ""Tonight we feel tha1 Yet, we have not played eYery countcy. Let's keep a sense of persp~ctive amid the jubila- tion." "ARGENTINA HAS worked hard. We have rebuilt the team, restyled its cbaracteT. But most j m portant of all we have forwards who can S()Ofe eoals ... he added. In downtown Buenos Aires. streets were so clogged that am, bulances could not move through the throngs of flag. waving Cans.. Ookland A's catcher Jim Fssian fJips on his back after a collision with Kansas City's Pete LaCock in Kansas City Sunday. Oakland won, 6·3. "' -· D OAIL Y PILOT Monday June 20. 11178 mi th, Fans Dodger Star Mis1e1 Game LOS ANGELES -The Dod1era' Reae\e Smlth did not play Sunday but lt wasn't because of hi.a shoulder. Instead, Smllh was .aufferln1 from two swollen handl sustained in 1 fi&bt tollowlni Saturday's game. Two men, Tony Mendo11, 27, and Larry Mendou, 25, of 11 Monte approached Smith for an auto1raph, accordln1_ to Smlth. Smith declined sayin1 Ile was in a hurry and would have to do it at some other Ume. Upset by Smith's remarks. one of the men 1 broke the windshield of Smith's car and the other smashed a bottle of beer over the back of bis head. Smith retaliated and by the Ume security arrived, the Dodger outflelder already had things well in hand. "I WAS LITERALLY fighting for my life," said Smith when asked about the incident. "I didn't do a test on them, but I don't think they uootUMtTM were totally sober." Smith was aSlced if he had sustained any injuries. "I had a headache and my hands are swollen, but no stitches were needed. I'll be fine. I was going to play today but I couldrft grip a bat," said Smith. "If the swelling goes down 1'11 p~y Mon· day night (in Atlanta).'' WITNESSES WHO arrived at the scene shortly after the inci· dent said one of the men was missing part of his lower lip and both had sustained multiple cuts on their hands and arms. "One was incapacitated and the other was well under control by the t.Jme help arnved," said Smith when asked how much dlf· ficulty he had. Both men were arrested by police and booked on assault with a deadly weapon. Smith said he planned to press charges. By John Sevano BASEBALL /MOTOR SPORTS I SWIMMING -~ Wl'""°to JIM McELREATH. LOSES HIS FRONT TIRE AS HE CRASHES INTO TOM BAGLEY (22) IN POCONO 500. NO ONE WAS INJURED. A,. Wlro,,..to Unser Does It Again Winnings Total $380,000 for Tiro Races MOUNT POCONO, Pa. <A Pl A I Unser's · victor y in tht' S400,000 Schaefer 500 earned him JUSt about enough money to buy another race car, but he may have to stand in line with a few other customers. ··Eric Brnadlev makl's them Th,ey re a customer car Anyone can buy one if he comes up with Sl00.000," Unser explained of his dart-nosed Lola. With victories in both the In- diana polis 500 and Sunday's Schaefer, for almost S380,000 in winnings over the two races. Unser 's success is bound to spur the interest of rival teams. "WE NEED ANOTHER one first." Unser said. "We've only ~ot one. With only one. m y crew has to double up and work over· lime to do the work getting the car ready for each race." The crew went to work on the backup car, which Unser said wasn't nearly as good a car. and got it ready for Indianapolis. After a storybook win there, Unser crunched the car up as Mosport, Ontario. "Thal really set us back. The crew worked one solid week just to gel the ca r ready for * * * Milwaukee last week," Unser s:lld ... It was n't really right there. and 1t was still off in our qualifying here. "WE !\JADE SOME changes. and that did 1l. I was runnini! I Lt pc; in the r::ice as fast as I qu.tl 1flcd ;.ind that shouldn't hap· pen." Unscr 's nvals must have been sayin~ that too as he sped away from them without a hitch. "It was a typical hard day at work." he said mode s tl y . "Although not too hard , or ob· v1ously I couldn't have won the race.·· THE PATIERN was much the same as al Indianapolis, where Costa Mesa's Danny Ongais. the pole position starter here. ran in front the first 300 males and then had a car malfunction. Unser "as in command most of the final 200 mile~ But Unser denied he was bid in~ has t1 me in the early goin~. "The days are over when you could lay back and think. 'I'll take it easy for the first 300 miles and then win the race the last 200 ','' he said. "That doesn't happen anymore. The racing is JUSl super competitive these days.·· UNSER AVERAGED only 142.261 mph, well off the track record. because of eight caution periods. From Page BJ ANGELS FACE ROYALS. • • BOB GRICH, the Angels' second baseman, got two of the hits off Medich. He also committed an error on a ground ball that would have ended the fifth inning. Instead. Hargrove came lo the plate and hit his bases-loaded double over the head of right fielder Lyman Bostock. "We're struggling. This was a long 15·day road trip for us, and \\e·re anxious to get home to more pleasant surroundings. It's hard lo play when you're physically down," Grich said. California Manager J im Fregosi said cold streaks "are going to happen We're JUSt not hitting the ball." STEVE GARVEY ARGUES WITH UMP PAUL RUNGE THAT HE WAS HIT BY A PITCH. Tiit 11nofllcl•I order ot llnl\11 •n Sunday • i•oo.ooo SCllHltr SOO •11<• lor 11\01an•POI" ctr> •t Pocono lnt•m•tlonal R•cew•v. with type ot ur. l•ps compl<r19d •l1CI winner • ••"-\Pffd * * * CALIPOllNIA TIUS At Mission Vie.jo Caulkim Finishes Swim Domination Tracy Caulkins completely dominated the first Swim Meet of Champions for women with six gold medals in the three· day competition, including the 200 -meter breas ts troke 1n American record time. Caulkins. 15. broke her own 20-0-breaststroke mark with a time of 2:36.46 Sunrlay night. Another 15-year-old , K i m Linehan, who won three in· d1vidual titles in the meet, also set an American record Sunday riight, clocking 16 : 15.66 in the 1,500-meter freestyle. Caulkins and Linehan thus combined for nine titles In the 12 evenls for individuals at the Mis· sion Viejo International Swim Complex. CAULKINS, FROM Nashville. was the recipient of a $1,500 scholarship to the school of her choice for being the high-point scorer in the competition. In ·other individual events In the meet's final <lay, Linda Jezek of Santa Clara, won the :ZOO-meter backstroke with a 2:15.32. fastest in the world this year, and Stephanie Elkins of Gainesville, Fla .. captured the lOO ·meter freestyle in 57.97 seconds. Noel Moran of Santa Clara, was second to Caulkins in 2:40.SO while Anne Lambert, also of Santa Clara, was third in 2·42 81. Caulkins' old m ark of 2.37 .28 was set lasl year .. LINEHAN, OF Sarasota. Fla .. ,,.. on the l ,500 by some 40 meter~ over runn e rup Cy nthi a Woodhead of Riverside, who was limed in 16:39.12. J ennifer Hooker of Mission Viejo was third in 16 46.38. Linehan broke the record or 16 : 24.60 set by Alice Browne of Mission Viejo last year. Jezek 's vic t or y was her second of the meet. Kaili Cpun of Kailua. Hawaii. was second Sunday night In 2:20.38 followed by Melis~a Belote of San Jose. In the 100 freestyle, Andrea Cross or Cincinnati was second in 58.50, with Enlth Brigitha of Holland third in 58.71. tOO l•Hslyl• -1, Sl•Ph•nlt l!lklns. un•., G•lnovlllt, l'I• • S7 '1 I, An<I••• Cren . Clncln· n•ll PtP\I Mtrlln1, ,..SO, 3, Enllll 8 rlgllh•, kolltncl, Sl.71. 200 bt<ll1tl'OIL• -1, llnd• Juelt., S.nta Cler" sc. t·U.n. ,, Ktlll Chlln. AulH SC, Kellu•. kawall, 2 JO ll. l, Menu.a llelote, ..,,..., S.tn JOM, C•lll., 2.21 IO. 200 b reuUtrokt -I, Tracy Ca111klns, Htsh.,111•, AC, l .a6 4t (American •t<O<"d, 010 me rll 1:37 lt l>y c.111111nt. 19171. J, Noel Mo,.n, Sent• Ctera SC:.. 1 .cl.lo J, ,.,.,,. LA'llbert, Sellt• Clare sc, 2;4211 t,SOO l••slyl• -t. IClm l lnehan, S.rt1ote Sl\8'ks, 1':U .. IAmerlc•n record, olCI m41rk 16 ,. H "' Alie• 81'11 ... ,,., ltl71. 2, CynlA•• Woodl\ .. CI, lllverilde AA. 1':H .tl. J, JeMlt.r Mffktr MIMleilVltl•MMMw ... 16:4' ... AOO lre111ylt relay -I. Cincinnati l"el>\I Marlllu IAnclrtw Cron, Kl'll Ca rllllt, Lori """"'""., -l>l•ne JOl\-tom*ll, J SP.tt. t, Hul\vllle AQU•llC Club, J: st.O.. J, 0. An.re AQU.llct, A:OJ,JI. From Page Bl DODGERS .. I Al Un\er, lol•. 100 l•P~ Ul U I mp!\ 1 Jollnnv Ru\lltrtord, M<l••M. ?00 l Tom SM••. Pen•-•. 100, •. W•llY O•lltnl>ttll. McLorel\. 1'19, S l orry Ooekton, Pen\lt.t. , .. , • G"°roe S..lc1er CoJote, ,.. 1. Miiot M<»ley. ll9ntnon9 1'3 I A Foyt, CoYolt , 1'°· • Al LOQu"to. F1n1tv Chisox Sign Bien ek To Pro Contract 1H. 10, l•rry Ctnrion. Wlfdul, .... It P•n<ho Vince Bienek. a graduate of Car ltr. LIOllln\119. lM •I> r II bl • 0 1 0 • 0 l 0 • 0 1 0 • 0 0 0 '", 11111 Harorove lb ~ o 1 3 Moon u Soto Wiii\ 111 \ 1 I 0 Zl\k If 4 I 1 0 Bondi rf 1 I o O Putn•M dll • 1 0 0 Sul\dt>ero c l t l I H•rrah lC> 1 1 1 l 12 Sheldon l(lnur, WeUon . ti) u. S•lt Fountain Valley Hi gh and 1ng to lose it with him or W•ltt1er. Mcu-.n. iu. u Goroon JOh'"<oo. Golden West College, was signed anybody,'' Wlldctt, IU; a Tom Bigelow, Wlld<•I, 1'1, h . R Mllt~r cl Gr tell lb Bo\toc~ rf F••rlv lb Oo 1or dn RYdl " Cll•lk3D Mulllnlks. \~ Oo•n1n9 '' • 0 ' 0 4 0 I 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 l 0 1 0 B Thompson ti • t O I Totel'I JJ o Io Tot•'' JJ 1 10 1 Jerry Sn•••. McL• .. n. 15', 11 ""' Hucul, as a free agent by the Chicago A BOUT THE ONLY good McL•••n. ua 11 Jerrv 1<1ri. McL•r•n. 149 " White Sox this week. 01nny 0 -ll. P•rnelll llO. 10 Bol>Ov l>M•• C•ltlornoa 000 000 C>l»-0 ~ ... , 000 ''° OOll-1 ne" s t o come o ut of t he e.01e, m , 21 Joe s..1o•n•. E•o'•· 112. 11 Bie n ek played with Oral clubhous<' c·amc from Dodoer Johnnv P•'"'"'· L10111nino. u Roberts University in Tulsa dur· E Gricn. OP-Ton 1. LOB-C•lllorrw• •· Tt u • 8 ?B O•ylor, Hargrove, Suno1>11ro lB- " 13 Merlo Anarett1. Ptn•k•. 73 H Pllll trainer Bill Buhler, who said he TllrUllle, l lglltnono. u . H Jim McElruth, ing the past season and hit .354. ,,. " It l!lt .. so \\Ouldn·t be surprised to see E•111t.st.n .rornB•9••Y.L111111n1no.H .H BuP. He was second on the team in CAllFOANIA R<>oo1e ~m1"th. R1"ck Monday and by Jonn, Wlldc:•I. 51. 21. Biii Vukovich. E•Olt. h"l (74) h "'> ...... t I An• (l ,•·•1 ··~ • ,, • ' 0 ..... !!> Sl. ,, Gery S.tttnllau\tn. Oregon •• JO. Ol<k I s . ome runs "" • LU a Hortt•ll l , I 0 0 l S tc\l' Yeager return to the S·mon.1101111.01 >~ 11 SP•1t.•G•hlh•u•~ bases (117 ). RBl C56l and nxu lincuii £eo1•. l4 n st~•• K•l•11011. w11e1ce1, u, JJ LM avera ne. He IS an outfi"elder. Mtdlc11 1w.1.J> • 1 o o o J Kvnrman, SuQ<il, I " WP -A•"'· T-1·1' A-n .111. ··That·s something we'll have~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ to see tomorrow." contradicted Lasorda. "I have no idea when th('y're goi ng to be ready." CI NCINNATI LOS ANGELES •II r II 111 •I> r 111>1 Rou lb Kn1g11t Jo Oa Coll!M rl BO<"l>On p MorgAn t>ll Bair p Concepc Ion ss f'o\ttr If Drtll\\tn 10 ICtl\nedy 1tl Corrtll c C,erOl'lfMO cf Mo\U U P Groll•v rl l I 1 0 LOP<tS lb 4 1 ) 1 0 0 0 0 ~U•Hll II .I 0 0 0 • 0 0 1 Garvey 1 ti 3 t 1 1 0 O 0 0 Cey Jb 4 0 o o 1 o o o o Boer 11 • o 1 1 0 0 0 0 Lecy rl l O O O ~ t t 0 Nort11 cl J O o o • 0 1 0 Grote c 1 0 0 0 • o 1 t Ooe1110 p11 1 1 1 o S 0 t 0 John p 3 O O o 3 l l O R•utih•n, p o o o o • 1 t O Mondo . pn t o 1 o 1 0 1 1 T M•t11,,., pr 0 0 0 0 , 0 1 1 Tolell JI S tl • Totett ll • I • C1nc1nn•CI 010 000 101 s LO\ An9•I" 110 000 001-4 E-l'O\ltr, LACY, p .Bak•r. OP-Clnclnnetl t. l o• An9elts I. L00--=1nclnn.at110. los Ar>CJtl•• 7 1B Garvev, 0 R•••r Correll HP looe\ tit. ~8-Concopc:oon S R0\41. Oroenen SF LOI»\ M O\kAU eorl>On (W~1l 0•ir I~ H It EA 88 M) CINCINNATI • J l • • 2 0 0 0 0 1 2 1 t 0 0 lC>t AHOl ll!S John I L,I 6) t h 12 S l J .I R•utrll•n '> O o o O O Stve-Oelr (121 T-1·:a. A-50.l~7 * OODOllt NOTU -TIW Oodvlr1 wlll r>l•Y '°"' 11•m<tt with Allent• •ncl tour wllll Clncln,,.11. lncludlnQ • l'rtdey 00ubhth•9gtr on tlllt rffd lrlp . • PrOIMll>I .. 10<" U.. Or ... MtlH •r• •10 ........ , .. ,, "' " ... i. .. De•lll• 14·>1 tO<'lt!'I. 0."I ltl• 17.J) ,,. lllOI ~"'~ (0-11 TWtdley, hr1 H"4tll (H I w. ,.._II Nltllrt CH) WtdnH· dov end 0... l11tte11 17·•> vt Prtt19" k•,,... ( .. JI or MlelltY Melllt r 11·•1. T1t11rMl•y •• , TN Oo091n hed -six "rtl91\l from IM llech ci.rore Suncl•y , , • The Oocloert hit IM I S mllllon merit In •lltncM<I<• !iunclay In JI dattt It IOO-lht1111'dtlnlol'HCI\ l ... IPltt .. 11 lttlyMr. MALCOLM REID Mgr. say1: LEASE A BOBCAT foro.Jy s97~CL 1111.91 .. 11~ Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division w L Pct.GB Boston 50 21 .704 New York 41 29 .586 812 Ballimnrt• ltl :JO .571 91 l Milw:n1!o.1•1• 39 :11 .557 1012 nrtro1t :u :11 .soo 1412 Cleveland 31 37 .456 171 2 Toronto 22 47 .319 27 West Division Tex a!' 38 32 .543 Kans as City 37 32 .536 '2 Angels 36 35 .507 2\2 Oakland 35 37 .486 4 Chicago 32 3R .457 6 ~linnesotn 30 39 .435 7''ll Scuttle 25 48 .342 141h s-u·ssc...-& Tun 7 A..,.t• o Toronto t 1, Clewl-t l MlnMtot• t t, Clllc190 S-6 New Yori<• Ottrotl 1 l!ou on •. f!•lllnwre • O••tand •· Kanw• Clly l SHiii• 10. Mll•eul<ff. T.clay'I 01..,•t l<•nu1 City tG•lt •-21 •I A...-11 (Tanen• 11.J). n lttllmore CFlon•o•n 11 ·0 •t Toronto (Un- . Cltrwooo J.11, n Oalroll 1811111>9,,.m S 41 ti Cttvtlond (HMd ).JI, n Bolton tl!c1<er111y 1·1) a t "''"' Vtrk IMtuer\mltll O 11. n Mlnn~•OI• IS.rum l 21 at Mltw•ultt (~ t.o ,n Cl\IUOO cearrlOt WI •1 SNlll• IMllcltell >-71. " NA110NAL LEAGUE East Division W L Pct. GB Philadelphia 36 29 .554 Chicago 35 32 .522 2 Montrral :Jn :15 ,5u7 3 PittsburJ!h 32 a4 .485 4 'h New York 31 42 .425 9 St. LOUIS 26 45 .366 13 West Division San Fr anc1sco 45 25 .6 iJ Cincinnati 43 28 .606 2'12 Dodgers 38 31 .557 6 San Diego 34 37 .47!1 11 ' ..i 1 louston :io 37 448 131 :.! Atlanta 28 40 412 16 SunPy'sk.,et Clnclnntll S. D.cittn • Phlladtlphla •. CNc1901 Plll'lburgh •. Nn• Y0<~ O SI loul\ I, Mo<11ru1 s Sen Fr<1nc,.co 9-4, All<tnl.1 3 f, Mcond'qtl"'41'1 I lnnln9t Sen 0 1...,.,1, HOll'lton '"" T ... y·10-1 Oedttrt (Rl>Od<'n•·>l al Allanta 10•.,,,~•·11, n N•w Yori< !Br..n•rt 1·S> ti Clll<190 I Ourro\4 )I St loul\ IUrru 7 7 •no Oenny •·61 Al Plll1buro11 CRobl,,_ ~end ltoolltr 7.f) 1. n, 11t 9ame compt<11tonof , .. _...,.do•m• Pl\lltdtlpl\ia (C.rnon I-•> •C MontrHI Cll09tr~ I 11, n ClntlllMtl cs. ...... ,, •l Hovtton CAndul« J0,11 S•n l'renclsco CKnt!llM• &·SI et San Dte90 (Owchlnto.o HI, n Borg Rallies; Connors Wins Only o•,.,,.. acl\edUlect LEASING ••• ALL MAKES ALL MODELS NEW WIMBLEDON, En1land (AP> -Top·seeded Bjorn Bors bad to fl1bt back from a 3·1 defJclt in set.I today to beat unheralded American Vlc Amara ln the flnt round of the Wimbledon Tennla Championships. While Borg was beating Ule towering Amaya 8·9, 6·1, 1·6, 6·3, 6·3 on center court, ·No. 2·seed Jlmmy Connors eliminated Russ Simpson of New Zealand 1·5, t.S, G-1. But another·aeeded American was upset, No. 10 Dick Stockton lostn1 to Australian John Marks 6·2, 9·8, 7·~. • 'U I can 1urvlve the flnt two rounds I will be more con!i· dent," Borg aald before hls match, which be almost dldn'l aurvtve. Most experts feel that the men 's tingles champion will be Borg or Connon and that the battle for the women's title will be more wtde open. ln tho tlo-breaktr for th• first -- set, Bora bad two set polntl but wasted both -the second by double faulting, one of a dozen double I aulta he served in the flrat three sets. TOOAV'I MAfCMll Mell'•111191tt ""'·-,, .......... SwHtfl, .. ,. Vic AIMY•· u .1.!. M , .. 1, , ... w. w : Jl!Mly ~. u.1 .. "'· """' SIMp-, ,._ &t•ltfld, ,.f, ...... t i JIM Mens, A1111r•ll•, ttf. Olctt Sl•d'""· u.• .. ..,,, M. n , IYtltr MO!lr...,,, 8rtlel11, fjff. 0...1 .. I'll"'· 1 ... o•n, 1•1 •.. ,. w r OW ~. 1""'"'11, ""· P:rM S.lli.. Auttrellt, ._., M , 7-S.! OleMI OcleP. pe, Italy, •1 ~.._,, 11,_, 1;a<Mlll*lt, ........ ~ .... 600 W. COAST HWY. • "EWPOIT llACH • 646-02'2 OR USED PEOPLE IN SPORTS/ GOLF I HORSE RACING For Sl.5 Million Detroit to Sign Kings Star Vachon? From AP Dtspakbes TORONTO .,-The Toronto Star said Monday that Rogie Vachon, the 32-year-old goaltender whose National Hockey League contract with the Los Angeles Kings expired June 1, will sign with the Detroit Red Wings for a reported $1.S million for five years. In a New York-datelined !.lory, the newspaper said I.hat Red Wings General Manager Ted Lindsay is expected to announce the signing at a news conference in Detroit Tuesday. The New York Rangers, who have been spending heavily to rebuild, had been reported interested in signing the talented free agent. But the story quotes an unidentified source as saying the Rangers ran out of money arter sign- ing Swedish forwards Anders Hedberg and Ulf Nilsson from the Winnipeg Jets of lhe World Hockey Association. Vachon played in 70 games for Los Angeles last season, compiling a 2.86 goals-against average with the 10th-best team io the 18-team league. Arter negotiations between the Kings and ROGIE VACHON V~c.hon's agent, New York lawyer Larry Rauch, broke down early this month, fo~r NHL teams -the Rangers, Washington. Van· couver and Chicago -and Edmontoo of the WllA were reported interested in acquiring him. The Star said that although the Red Wings are not legally bound lo pay compensation lo the Kings they are likely to send a)Oog a player or l wo. ,,------ttuoie of lhf9 Day------ BUly Loes, a right-hander with lefty logic. on why he never won 20 games while patching for the Brooklyn Dodgers in the 1950s: "If I win 20 once. they·IJ expect me to do it all the time " Elsewhere in Sporo ••. BASEBALL -Cleveland Indians pitcher Rick Waits took over game opening duties by singing the national anthem before the start of the Indians' doubleheader with Toronto Thev splat Mike Torrez upped his record to 11·3 with a 4·1 decision over Baltimore before 33.525 to put the Red Sox over the million mark 10 home allen dance El Toro's Graig Nettles drove an the tac-breaking run to lead the Yankees past Detroit. 4·2 Roy Smalley hit a grand slam homer to lead the Minnesota Twins to a 9·6 vie tory over the Chicago White Sox in a sweep ol Sunday's doubleheader Tony Armas belted a tic-breaking homer as the Oakland A 's defeat cd Kansas City. 6·3, to gel starting pitcher Matt 111a WAITS Keoough, a Corona dcl Mar High product.. off the hook Keough allowed three r uns in four Innings before being relieved Garry Templeton doubled home the win· mng run to pace St. Louis to a 7.5 win over Montreal Rennie S~en~ett.and John Milner crashed two-run homers to back the five hit patching of Bert Blyleven as the P ittsburgh Pirates defeated the New Y?rk Mets. 2-0.. . Greg Luzinski's two-run ho~r propelled the Philadelphia Ph1lhcs to a 4·2 win over the Cubs and a four ~ame sweep to give the Phils a two-game lead io the Nat.Jona! League East TENNIS -Australian veteran Tony Roche defeated John McEnroe, 8-6, 9.7 an the finals of the Queen's Club International tourney ... Czechoslovakia's Vladimir Zednik won the West Berlin Grand Prix tourney, defeating Harald Elscheobrolch of West Germany, 6-4, 7-5, 6·2 . Butch Newmab defeated Alex Olmedo 6-1, 7-5, to claim the U.S. Tennis Assn 's over-35 hardcourt championship. Newman and Jim Parker added the doubles crown •with a 6-2, 6·2 win over Lag una Beach's Dick Leach and Hocst Ritter of Pasadena. MOTOR SPORTS -A crowd of 62,716 was on hand Saturday· night for the Supcrbowl of Motocross al the Los Angeles Coliseum with Mike Bell the winner on a Yamaha ... An engine transplant four hours before the race proved successful as Huntington Harhour·s George Follmer captured the -75.000 Can·Am race in St. Jovite, Quebec Sunday ... In companion group features at St. J ov1te, Mont" Shelton and Bob Tullius were the winnNs . . Jan Lammers of Holland drove a Rall Toyota RTI to victory in a Formula 3 Grand Prix auto race al Monza, Italy ... Rain forced postponement of the Evergreen 100 NASCAR Winston West Grand National race at Monroe. Wash. 1t will be run next Sunday ... Actor Paul Newman continued on h1s successful path lo the Sporl!-icar Club or America nationals PAUL lllEWMA" with one win and a third place while quahfying for the pole pos1· uoo in ootn events. OTllER SPORTS -Mark Roth won his sixth professional bow ing title this } car and topped $100,000 by taking first place in the San Jose Open. He eased lo a 200-pin margin over runnerup Jay Robin on ... Phil Lansford, the brother or the Angels' Carney Lansford. signed a contract with the Cleveland Indians . . Bill Green captured the gold medaJ in the 200·meter dash In an interna- tional track meet in Mexico City. His time was 21.02 ... Judy Casella. a 25-year -old apprentice jockey, rode Roy Rogers' colt Triggeroy to an upset $93 victory In the third race at Hollywood Park ... Jim Colclough was named head football coach at Boston State College . . The United States finished third in a water polo tournament at Sofia, Bulgaria following a 5-2 loss to Bulgaria .. An American women's all-star team lost its third straight tour gam e as the Chinese Army team took a 96·77 victory in Tokyo ... Californians Ron Skarlo and Jim O'Leary cl.ahned top honors in the Great Wa.ikok>a Bike Race in Hilo. Sport11 on Radio, Televbiou RADIO: Tonight -Baseball -Los Angeles at Atlanta, 4 :30. KABC (790); Kansas CUy at California, 5:10, KMPC (7 10): Horse llaclng-Feature Race from Hollywood Park. 5:30, KIEV (870). TV: Baseball -Bo6ton Rad Sox vs New York Yankee6, 6 30. Chanoel 7. Taped lagunan Wins Bike Race Linda Haley or Laguna Beach <'aptured the women's 20-rnile race as the Jone Orange Coast area winner ln five divisaons of the fourth annual Costa Mesa bicycle grand prix Sunday near Estancia High School. ln the featured 50-mlle senior race, Kevin Luu o! Pasadena, a U.S. national cyclina champion, was the whmer in 2:07.58 over teammate Clark Roberts. MNIOlt I & 11 OIYIMON 1 ICwlft Ulli CPA~ Altl .. lk A-~ $Aft CHiii"...._ t#,11; 2. On~('°"' ~1. S S~lcl C\111"'9 CA!Ye"lcl91, &. AMV CTRotlUy CS..t1le B•rl»r•l, S Jell LMlk CAl.l5!r•ll•I. .. P•ut VIM 1$611 !kr,..rdlf'Ol, 1 l(M Futtff CColV M t .. I; &. )ffry FuOw IColt• Me'-'I Y€Tl!ltANS DIVISION l. """ ~rn«<I• IP•••--eve .. Ctub. (1-.el, SI OS; l. 0 10 SWw_,, CIMwl>\ry """°'' 1. Tom S<-fTorunc.el. 0\lltft· l. kntO H••oeto <Olll• Mewl. WOMEWSDNI~ t. l.lftd.I Hlti.y IUNtl .. l.•0""6 ~Klll1 0.7'. 2 fill•n 0.-.. to•NllnOllll. l. iu .. --0.•>on•I· Nlfl!OA 111 01 Y'llOH 1 FrMICI Gerti• (HO. HOft'(WOOd W .. "'*'-V•• ,...I, 4'.llt t. Oleft AIN'llNftt l'SMrf'• Madf'oal: a. M CoM.nl "811 O'-' n""'Olt Of vmOle , ft<ott ............ IUMtt, ~ ''""' t Bob BtrOOIM C._..IO!tl; a. Mlctoffl ~ ·~1. Broadbill, Albacore Landed Pl.UMlllllG HEAllNG Al• COffO Monday. June 28, 1978 DAILY PILOT JOCKEY BILL SHOEMAKER BOOTS EXCELLER (RIGHT) HOME TO UPSET VICTORY IN THE HOLLYWOOD GOLD CUP. Exeeller Exeells • ID Gold Cup INGLEWOOD (AP) -The rich Hollywood Gold Cup Handicap was only the second race on a dirt track for Exceller, but that didn't stop the five-year-old former grass specialis t from soaring a sur- prise victory in the final strides. , The focus was on Vi~ors, nicknamed the "While Tornado." and .1 .0. Tobin, winner of the only race that 1977 Triple Crown wan- ner Seattle Slew has ever lost, but Exceller s neaked through on the rail to capture the 39th running of the $35,000 Gold Cup on Sunday, THE WORLD'S winningest jocke~. Bill Shoemnker. was a~ard the winner, marking his seventh Gold Cup victory. The 47·year-old Shoemaker has now won 731 stakes and races worth Sl00,000 or more 131 limes Exceller prevailed by a neck Text. a 29-to-l shot . was second, tbe f <n ored Vigors was third and J 0 Tobm was fourth Ul Lbe held ol seven A CROWD OF 53,099 set a record for betting for one race. The wagering was $1,010,937. ll broke the old mark of $982,948 set last year in the Swaps Stakes. Shoemaker won that race aboard J .O. Tobin in the memorable defeatofSeatlleSlew. Sunday's 14-mile race was expected to be a duet between J . 0 . Tobin and Vigors, However, J . 0. TObin bore out toward Vigors and Shoemaker brought Exceller in on tbe rail for his vic- tory. Shoemake!' later said that he expected J .0. Tobin to lug out. Jockey St.eoYe Cauthen agreed. Cauthen also said his horse did tire. DARREL McHARGUE, aboard Vigors, said, .. J thi~ what hurt us was Cauthen coming out wide Ill the stretch on J .0 . Tobin and forct.ng me outs ide . That may have been enough to gel us beat." t\.fter Golf Vietory Baseball SINKS BIRDIE PUTT Golf Winner Pat Bradley Exhaustion Helps Stop Lopez's Bid llER!:>llEY, Pa. <AP > -Still i-m1lln~. rookie Nancy Lopez turned to her caddie on the 18th green and whispered : "Al least we got a standing ovation. That mak~ 1t worthwhile." The darling of the Ladies Professional Golf Association tour had just railed in her bid to win 3 n unprecedented six str::aif.'(ht tournaments, but .. Nan- cy·s Nttvy, .. her pastel swarm of followeri:., was clapping s imply because she was there. Lopez bowed Sunday to the limits of J>Qrfectk>n and fatigue, finishing 15 strokes behind Pat Bradley, who fired a 10..Under par 206 to win the $50,000 Lady Keys lone ()pen. "J told her coming in from the green. 'Don't worry •bout it, this wasn 'l a tournament, this was a media event'," said her caddie, Roscoe Jone6. "All the fuu over h.cr record was just enough lo dun the sharp edge S'he needed to win. Damn, I've never seen so maay reporters. Si.e's mentally C>d'.l•USlod." S1ace Un\ing pro la6t. July 29, Lopez has woo $156,!66. Mental Adjustment Next for Lietzke Leaders HATlONAt. LEAGUE PulUHI" Burr1)\19hl Atl eowa Pru M<idlOO !,F-6rtl"1y (IA L-L.A l'O">IHC..11' G AB II II() 2H JI ... 711 78 ol 2•1 JT S1 I'll 31 II 286 43 t>O no 41> 70 271 ., Sl t-S U 70 240 "' M 258 40 H ,.<1. II .318 ,,. .122 86 .3'22 62 .:Uf 91 .Jl8 10 .311 17 .314 61 .JI) ,. .JOI ,. .a OAKVILLE. Ontario IAPI Bruce Lietzke has some adjust· mg to do. some goals to set This was a big', big stepping <;lone an my career.·· Lietzke 'laid Sunday after he'd hun~ on with a two-over·par 73 to score a one·Slroke \llClory rn the Cana- dian Open golf championship. Tm i:Oing to have to do some mental adjusting I've never been a goH·orie nted person. After winning those tourna- ments last year. I kind of put it on cruise. I've gone for more than a year without a goal in mind. "Now I'm going to have to set some goals for myself, perhaps try to have a beUer season than I had last year." HE 'S LESS than halfway there. Last year Lietzke blitzed the early part of the season, win· ning two quick titles. lie was second in two other tournaments a nd won more than $204,000. With his victory in the 1978 Canadian national cham· pionsh ip. the tall. cross-handed putter had won one. been second an one and collected $85.393. * * * LUd•nt u enn ... ., MOMY-~lf•Ot II\ ,~ .. \tS0.000 C•n.ao"" ~n Golt Tourl\6-Cl" t~ 7.0SO vard. IHlr 11 Gl•n At>Oey Goll Clubcourto!' Bru<~ L1pt1~e. UO 000 T• 61 b1 1i lSJ Pal Mc Gow ..... ,,. soo 11M·l1 11 lM Bt n Crenstwiw S1• ISO 70 '• •• 11 ?8S L•" Tr•vono. SU ISO 7• 71 •• 11 ?ts M1kt McCullOUQh, \q.Oll 7J 10· 11 11 186 ~'0" Burn•. i• Oil 7) 10 13 /(). 181> Rev Floyd, U .OIJ 7• 14 •• n 2e. Jonn Sc11r-.. '5.I04 1• •1·11 I~ 191 Jt lf Htw•s. SS.804 67·13 /1 a ~1 J IM COibert. U ,l!W 71 10·13 13 ,., 8 111 Kro1urt. u.ecw 11>-10_.• 12 '181 Tom Purltf'r, U ,804 1• •• 1111>-191 Bunky Hen<>t, SS IOo6 71 10 11 •'1-'ltl Arnold P1lmer, U 8IM 70 IC..13 63 781 J•<k Ntekl•u\, U,ISO 1J.1112 12 28" Grallam M,,r\11, U.ISO 1•·11 6111 28'1 Bob Slltarer, '3,ISO 11-11 11 I• 78'1 0 A WelbrinO SJ.TSO 13 71 10 bl 28'1 Bob Lunn, '3,ISO ll 13 1?71-28'1 EO Sneed, S?,81S 7S &~ ll IJ 1'IO J~ lnm•n. '2.81S 1J '•&'I 78 ?'IO Miit Sulllv•n, 57.281 11·1' ~ 11-n1 Charles Coodv, \1.791 IS IHI 74-ttl Jolln M..Wtev, \2,281 1~7l·7l-1l-2'1 Curlis Str•noe, U,1111 79-71 11 ., 7'1 Gary McCord, ll.9'll 73-IHl-IJ-m Ptl&f' Oo•ltthul\, $1.tZS 76 12·7t·13-7't2 Phll HMl<otk, 61,97i 7S 15-6'·1• 1'? M<Hk f'fell. s1.•se n 11.10 73 m Jim Simons, '1,H8 16 1'·10·13 m Celvln Pffl•. St.45f 7• 13 11 n-m e111 Pell••m. $1.'58 1• ••·1• n m Rod FunMlll, Sl,4SI 74·74-l:J.12 m Ptlll Rod<JM'\. Sl,ASI 71 u Jt 11-m M•rk L,•, ll.4SA 7113-19 11-nl G•y Br.-er, Sl.•SI 1S 1• 11 11-m Wo,,. Lno. ..... SI 7l IH• 10-7'1 D.,.11y E~ WSI 71·70 IHl-793 'Winning this golf tournament m eans more to me than winning any of the others,·· Lietzke said. .. ,t tells me last year wasn't JUSt a streak. lt tells me I can wm when I'm not playing at my absolute peak:" HE WASN'T at has absolute peak. but, then, neither were has major challengers. "l gave it away," said a dis- gus ted Lee Trevino. "It's my own fault. I lost my composure. When you bogey three of the last six holes, that's giving it away. f had him. l was doing just what 1 wanted to do and I gave 1t away." Lietzke finished with a 283 total, 1 under par and the only man able to break standard figures on the Glen Abbey Golf Club course Jack Nicklaus de\ signed as a permanent home for this national championship. Jordan Sets Spike Marks . Paywn Jordan, 61, coach of the Stanford University track and field team, set age group world records in the 100 and 200·meter dash events (60·64 l Sunday 1n the Senior Olympics champion.c;hips at UC Irvine. Jordan had an 11.8 in the 100 and 25. l in the 200. Other world records for their age groups were set by: Shirley Oietdcrich. 51. Berkeley; in the 200 (33.6) and 400 (1 :21.7); Josephine Kolda. 60, San Fran- cisco. inthc400 (1 :31.U; Walter Wesbrook. 80, Arcadia, in the triple jump (22-7); Christel Miller, 43, Glendale, in the triple ~juml)" (29-0~); Ellen Rose, 49, Irvine, in the 800 (3:00.9). Roso also won the 400 in 1:16.2. a senior Olympic record. UC I Chancellor Daniel Aldrich, 59, set a U.S. men's rec- ord in the one-kilo discus < 1611·10) and also won the . 12- pound hamme!' lhrow with a '°5s or 1'13-8. It Smith LA !."""'""' S1l. Porker Pgh H-lluns t.uronsk• Pt!lledelpnta, 16, FO\ter. Clnclnn.all, 16 K tnQmM, Chocaoo. I•. Parker, P•UsbUrgl>. 12. Mo~w. l.Ol A11 .. 1e,._ U1 Wlntoetd. 5.., O.t90. 11.. RUM 8.n.d lft l'o\ter. Clftc•nnatl, SJ; Wlnlield, S-~.47: G....,..y, L.ot A,,..i.s, 44; --·· Noe'w Y~. 4). L.ul•nSIU. Ptl1l-4pl\ta. 45. Plt.tlll"'I (7 Oe<t~Oftl I BOfl"-1,.,, CoM1nn6ll, I I. ~rv. San OleQD. •2; Men~l.nco. !>en Frenchco, 7·2, Grlm st.,y, - tr.,.I, 1t • UKWv, Hew Yo••t. 1-J. Blw. S... l't•n<.~ tl).4 AM5 .. CAN LUOUE C.,f'wMln PlnltllANY Ric• es" Ronol~Su Cubb6~M1rt Sunclt>ero rn l. Y"<' 8"' Re. Jecu .... c..i Cooper Mii LtzcanoMll GAaRHht. ... "" '° 13 .3A1 &11 ... 2254.m " 1'4 j.) 9S .3lJ ., 242 2• 1a .m SS 170 II ~ .311 •S 71~ 22 71 .317 ... U• J.f 74 .JI• S• 164 24 .51 .JIS .51 .. s :n ol .313 Ml 19S :n 61 .313 Ho_R_ RIC9, BoslOfl, 12. &aylcW. CMMonlt•, '6; J . TllO~. Del•o11, 11. G Tlw:>rnas. M•I~. 17. E Murra,, Balltmore. 15; E-.s, OoslOn, U; H..._.8-9.U. llUM8illfedht R lc.e. l!OSIOfl, 6S; Slaub. Ori rnll, ., ; H-, 00>11111, 41, J ThOmpM>n, Delrolt, 41; .il•k, Tu-., ... 21. Pllchln4 11 oechloflsl Guodry. NPw VO'k, 12 O. Ti•nt. BoslM, 7 O; 'orr•1 . So\ton, tt 3. T1n•na, C.tUornia, 11 .. J ; f.<kerMev. llollon, 1·2. c a«:. K1ns.h CHY, 1>-2; f 1.,.,..,,,., &11.more. 1 I·•. Jmtior Track / Summaries 1'1,...1,lll\ Sufld<lv "' , ... AAU "'111on•I IU'"OI" ..,.,_ ond fle'd ..-1 al Bloommc)lon. Ind MEN 1.000 ~lttOll'<M"' -1 Gn'OM('k, N-w Jer..,,,y Atfl'-1•< Alto<. 9 03 9 2 M•f'Oan. Pf'nn SI q 01 OJ 3 H~\\, urwll • 11111 • S<MIU. K•M<t) Univ, ' 1S )I S L~1) C.IPnd.\lt Coll, 9 2' 6. 6 C,..S.O, .. ,.,.,.~•PP! C.0..•1 Club, 9 .. 0 400 hurd~ I Per.on. Plalnl~ld N J. ,. S .• S1 0 1 Plltll11K S.n ~~ C.oll, SI 7• l FO'e,,..n, CCMVern"' Athlfll'• H .S7 • Carl\0<1, WIW•ton Coll. S1 ... S. Allf'n, St. Jolll' s. Sl. .... 4. -n1n, Okl•llOm• SI Sl ..._ 10,000 wal~ -t Sll•re>. unall • SO S4 7. 1 Morrl\. New Ywk Ac . SI Je 3 3 PtlltS, Pellwm N Y H S , SI .U 6 • Moll•rd, Club Nor\llWP'.I. S2 01 O S Llnbloorn, unall , S2 48.2 •· Veon. Me\Of\ Clly, IOWe '3 11 I 1,SOO '"" -I Hart>eur, Bay~. 3 :'7 11. t Oo,...011""· 'ii JOhn > 3 •1 98 3 McAlllsh!r, 11n· all • J •• •• 4 HH1r le kM!n. Porta~ Nor\ hem H 5 . 3·Sl.S1. S Frkktf". Soulhern CAI Road Run- M rs. 11 S3 O'I & Sperav1e, N•w York A C.. l : SS 01 Trtptf' 1umo -I. Owol•"'· ll&lders A.C., S? ... 1. Artis, Mlddlt T~-\IH SI, S?·3" J. Tyler, Alnltll\ '" Action, S2·1'/ .... Bibb••· Tl!oml<M\ H S • 51·'1•. s M•r•ln, unal1., O ·IO'ti. 6. SV'l'>oioift-,Unl•OI llllno•s. 0 ·1'1•. WOMEN 400 l\ur<llM-1. 8r-n, Klub KtpysloM, 60 ... 1. PolllOn, Mempl\41 SMlby Tretk, 61 J.C.. 3. HHI· opr•on, Fl•-.Mlles Tra<k Club. 63.09. 4. Allwl~. Pu41m.,. W••" H S • •l 37 S. Ince, Metroolo Srl<,.~s. 63 S1 •·Brown. SouiM•t. ~2. 1..soo ""' -1 w11n,.,.,,s. San Jose Clnde'9-tls. • 7\ ~ t wells, Mem!>lllS $Mlby TrKk. 4 21 '1. J Cry\lel, Col..oo Gotd, • 21 ... •. Coleman. Fal<on T c ..• -i \. l"ellll, Ad•-T.C~ 4.21 l. 'MM--.1,.!Mr'W A..C. 4.2' IS.• All-CIF Baseball PHYSICAL FITNESS $2,500 How much will do it for you? COfl1"ne'l"dal Credit's been helpi~e f<J" rrore thal sixty years. So 'Mlatever yw need. A few luldred. () even as nu:t1 as ~.cro Just ca" us about a loan. We ftnd W3ys (0 help. COMMEROAL CRJ,DIT PLAN. INC. Ca Wal . The rint albacore wel1hed ln at Newport Beach wu cheeked in Sunday by the boat telictdad by Dlck Hausman. Hausman's son, Rick, caught the 19 pound, 4 ounce lonafln 70 s:nUes • \I L"-11~ r..r•1<• H-\t.,h et v-._ ~ .. ~ ...... ~ y-.... 1 FOi MM WOMEH. STUDEHn TENNIS MEMBERSHIPS $150 Annual Limited Number CAPISTRANO RACQUET CLUB 493-7676 (A CalllOfnla C.p0ta.onl rttsonal lOf\ns OoltaKeaa • 3'70 E. 17ftl 8tnet • 6'14700 aoutb of San Dletio at 1:30 Saturday. CO~TA Mtµ642• 1JSJ IW....._..91.- MIHIO-v1uo495-0401 2"'2 c;em1,.. c...i.ir- ' . 1111,.., • I tft?ORT BEAOf 752-7084 -FOUNTAIN VAUEY 847-3011 Orc-• 1111 Town la Coos\\IJ Rd. • 5''7"'8'71 •-Sut'926 Otlllb We s-"°' A~ i.. tuclWa ........ tt Otoa .... ... -· •• OAll. Y .. 11.0 I IN Monday's Clo ing Prices . NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS ~ .... ~ .... 1IM ... \Qlp\ ._, '°"" ..., SGlft "" ~ .... 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' ' '•"<In l)O 6 II'°' 'J ~ • •• u --• Llbtlplll! • • Ov~1n 70 7 al u:.., • ""~" • T2 18 .. -\, Wa<hov .0 9 l'I II"'•·~ S70CKS I sus:NEZS • Nabisco to Off er Pregnancy Test? By MlLTON M~OWIT'l The company that brmgs you Ritz crackers, Oreo cookies, Cream or Wheat cereal, Chuckles 1elhes and Mis· ter Salty pretzels will :soon seek your patronage for a do·lt· yourself pregnancy tes t . The company is Nabisco -short for National Blscult Company -and thi$ fall it will have in drugstores a k.il to eoab1e a wo~n lo determine if she ts pregnant. THE KIT HAS A CllEMlCAL solution that lllUlt be mixed with a sample or the woman's urine in a test tube. It this combination produces a dark brown ring ln the tube, that's a definite indication that the woman Is pregnant. This ring signals the presence or a hormone round in the urtne of pregnant women. The kit Is expected to sell for about SlO, which wiU make it compet1t1ve with a s1m1lar test introduced last year by Warner ·Lambert, the company that brings you L1sterinl'. Jtoluids, Schick razors, Chiclets, Trident. Certs, Efferdenl. uf'ld Oynammts. Why you would trust companies which make products or this ilk to deliver a reliable pregnancy test ls a good question But m this age of conglomerates you never know who's making what. If you gel nervous whlle you're waiting for thb kit to do its stuff (the test take no longer than two hours), you can chew c h1clets or munch Oreos. NABISCO SQUARING OFF AGAINST Warner·.Lam· bert might tum oul to be a good slugfest. Although both compantes boast long product Imes, they have never re.ally gone to the mat agains t each other. They both know how to advertise. Warner-Lambert 3pends $200 m1lhon a year lo rank as the No. 5 advertiser in the nation. Nabisco stands Z7th with an ad expenditure or $100 m1lhon a year. • N a b I s c 0 h a s "r~.=~~------.... already promised that tt w111 be promoting its ~ Money pregnancy-detector kit ,-,.. , liree w1tb a "ma1or mass media advertising cam - p a 1 g n ." Wha l that means is not known. Telev1s1on would presumably be ruled out because of the nature of the product. i\nd 1t will be interesting lo see the euphemisms the ~opyr1ghters come up with to descnbe this product. THE DRUGSTORE JS A NATURAL terrain Cor Warne r·Lambcrt, which has on its roster two long- estabhshed makers of prescnplJon drugs, Parke-Davis and Warner/Chilcott. Nabisco's turf 1s the supermarket, where 1t dominates the cookies and cracker shelves, but 1t eased into drugs tores 6~~ years ago when it acquired J .B. Williams J S. Williams,. m akes such w1nners as Geritol. Sommex, Aqua Velva, Lectnc Shave and the Rose Milk skin care products. It also markets the No. l comb brand, Ace. And it's J.B W1lhams that 1s carrying the ball for Nabisco LO the IDtroduction ol the pregnancy-de~tor kit. THE KIT lTSELF IS BEING made hy another com· pany, North American B1olog1ca ls, m which Nabisco has a s mall tnlerest (2 5 percent). 1f the product proves to be half as s uccessful as Geritol, Nabisco will probably move to absorb all of North Amencan B1olog1cals. And 1f il nunks, Nabisco will probably sell out its position, 1ust as ll dumped Auro ra Products last year after trying vainly for five years to make money m the toy and game bus mess. Warner Lambert doesn't make toys or cookies or crackers it does make Cool-Ray sunglasses. Stock Markets Hit By Further Decline NEW YO RK IJ\P l -The stock market declined broadly today amid expectations of a continued rise m tn· terest rates The Dow Jones average of 30 industnals was off 10.74 points to812 28 Losers outnumbered gainers by about a 5·2 margin among New York ~"tock Exchange-listed issues. One of the few pockets or strength m the market was the gambling related group. The stocks, caught up in a speculative buying binge since the openini:t of Resorts In· ternallonal's casino in J\llant1c City, N J., last month. scored further ~ams today Sto~k11 In The ~'ipotlight NEW VORI( IAPI· S..ln 4 pm Orlte anO "'' <~ <II tllt 1111..,,. mo•t •<"•• NtW York Stoel!. E•<h•nqe IOuu , H•O"'O n.ttlO<Wfly It more lhel\ ,, R•m•d" '" t s" soo I "• -IV. Pe,,nCtnt I 519.tOO J • • , Sou1Db Corp 81 4 iOO Jf • 1'• PldyDoy En 6'11 ~00 lJ • 1 All•Q l'lrl , u• 000 10'> -~ t:::::.~',~' ~;: m :~:: -1:! ------------------ Oow(ll•m 322 •oo 141 ..,.. Ro,..•n • 176 IOO 71 •• -1• • B•llyMIQ 7'1 100 l~'• '" ~O"Y Corp 20 SOO 1'• '• Eu oll • 21S 200 •J'• ~. tjowrd John lt4,100 u•. 1 !t•r•Rooo 1~ )QC) 71 1, -'• Harrfhl • 201 •00 1S'· -4~. 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IAPI• AOvtn<td Otcllntd Untll•l\Qf<CI Total •n o"' N~w lllQI\\ ,.,,.. '°"'' .. Odd Lot• "''"· 11o°"'Y ~ o• lJI • ,.. 7•) ... llS ,. ,, tt 10 NEW YORK 1.-P> -l l'tt N~w Yor11. S*- Eotll•noe repoot..o tl\tW OOd lot Iran~· lloni l>y prlnclpal *aler\ for FrlNYI Pur<hUff OI 10 110 ll!ertt. HIH ot 297 .f>lll •ll~r~ 1nclud1119 1/0 Wl•re• SIOl<I •ltor-L • ' ENTERTAINMENT HY GARDNER I POP MUSIC Monclay, June 28, 1978 DAIL y PILOT BG They're Still Socking It to Judy Q : I beard that Judy Caroe, lbe one.time "10tk·lt·Lo·m~" rom~i~nne of "Laugh·ln," was re~ently biuted wbUe dole' a play ClncLDDatl, •Ue&edly for forging a dru1 prescrtpli o. Have you aQy Idea where's sbe's disappeared. to -J.M.P., Yoadgst.ov.'D, Oblo. A: From her parents' Northhamptonshire, Judy, mterview "News of lhe World, · descri~ h ur policemen <rrderoo her ( th stage of a Cincinnati lhea r while she was starring in a p y, to question her about the p si!ription. To conduct a arch "they m ade me strap in ront of them." she claimed. "I never wear underclothes ." she added , "but the cops re· fused to lea\'C the dressing room orturn their backs.". · c.utNI! Finally allowed to dress. Miss Carne, (once mar· ried to Burt Reynolds 1 sa 1d she was handcuffed lo a chair and dragged off to her Oat. She then described the beatings she took at the jail and says, ·1 kept lhinging lo myself, this isn't really happening. I'm By The Associated Press The following Is Billboard Magazine's com· pilat1on of bcst-selhn~ records ror the week ending July 1 as they appear in next week's issue of the magazine. HOT SINGLES "Baker Street" Gerry Rafferty {United Artists> 2. "Shadow Dancing" -Andy Gibb fRSO> 3. "It's a Heartache" -Bonnie Tyler CRCA ) 4. "Take a Chance On Me" -Abba <Atlantic) 5. ' Use Ta Be My Girl" -O'Jays <CBS> 6. '"You Belong to Me" -Carly Simon 'Elektra> 7. "Still The Same·· Ilob Seger <Capitol) 8. '"Love 1s Like Oxygen " Sweet (Capitol> 9. "Dane£· With Mc" Peter Brown <TK~ 10. "The Groove Linc" -Heatwave <Epic) TOP LPs l. 'Saturday Night Fever"' soundtrack CRSO > 2 "City to City" Gerry RaHerty <United Artists> 3. "Fcel~SoGood '' <A&M I 4. "NJtural lligh" Commodores <Motown ) S. "1''M '!-ioundtrack -<MCA) F:ASV LISTENING 1 "Bluer Than Blue" -Michel Jackson <Capitol I 2. ''If E'er I Sec You Again" -Roberta Flack (Atlantic> 3. "Even Now'' -Barry Manilow <Arista) 4 . "You're The Love'' -<Warner Bros.> 5. "Songbird" Barbra Streisand lColumbia) SOUi, SINGLES t. "Stuff Like That" -Quincy Jones <A&M) 2. "Close The Door" -Teddy Pendergrass (Phi ladelph1a International) 3. "Runaway Love" -Linda Clifford (Curtom> 4. "Use Ta Be My Girl" -The O'J ays < Ph1ladelph1a International) 5. "You And I" ~ lllck James <Motown) ('Ol"NTR \' SINGLES 1. "ll Onl} llurts For A Little While" -Margo Smith !Warner Broi. I 2. ··1 Belt eve In You" -Mel Tillis CMCA) 3. "There Atn t No Good Chain Gang" - Johnny Cash & Waylon Jennings~ Columbia> 4. "l Can't Wait Any Longer" -Hill Anderson <MCA> 5. ··On Iv One Love l n My Life" -Ronnie Milsap !RCA> Jill~ 8.ued on " lt\Jt> s1.,n,, .... f'hu "PRISONER OF SECOND AVENUE"• JIL~I u"4111 11ou t~ ~2 NOW PLAYING fOWARDI' llWPOftT •t Newport &Nell 64~·0760 cumu WEST • t WntmlnS11r 89H•W BUHA PARK DRIVl·IM Buena P•r1c 82H070 .JOHN n.AYOLT.A "GREASE" lf'GI JOHM n.AYOLTA "GUASI" lf'GI ··ou• WIMHIM~ SE.ASOH" ~".A DIHIED"f STOU" IP~ lt!U&.lllW ...... UH .. I rtll-- AL.L..aW .............. •o ro JUAN",,., I ••• _...,, ...... , t 'Glad You Asked That' by MarUyn and Hy G.-dner filming an episode of 'Police Woman' or something. It was all a terrible ordeal," the unhappy actress commented. ''I admit I 've smoked marijuana and have taken enough pills on prescription for my various ailments Lo sink a ship. J 'm no angel, but I've never consciously done anything evil." ReleaBed on bail, other drug charges agaiMt her were eilher dropped or thrown out of court. She's moved to New York and aims to make a fresh s tart in her domestic life. Revealing that when her focmcr second husband, TV producer Robert Bergmann. heard she was in trouble "he came to see me for 10 mmule.s Now it looks as though he may be staying for the next 10 years!" Q: Who originated the safe-drhlng slogan, "Drlve Slowly -We Love Our ChUdren"? -Jerry C., Lubbock, Tex. A . "My father, Eddie Cantor." proudly re· veals his daughter, Marilyn Cantor Baker . <Now married to announcer Mike Baker, the couple have two children. Lynne and Jed 1 Marilyn also tells about the Ume Eddie. a practical joker, sent her a wire informing her that she'd won a big prize in the Irish Sweepstakes "I was wild with joy," she remembers, "and rushed to Saks Fifth Avenue 1YICME RATINGS RJR PARENTS AND YOUNG PEOPI.£ f"'t .. ,Hr"'e"' ,,.._ '•'f'ftfl ft,. tit'-ilft NIMll tbOtlf '"'' ~rlt•Mf' o1 ...... ,-....... ..,.,.,,,..,,,,...,, ... All AUS ~OlltlllO ~tncr11 •1.1t•tN"•\ ... All l 'U AOllllllO '•"'"''' w14MK• $\lojfolu ·!i- -.\ 'Cj;. a -o • , .,.,,l,,·• '•''-""0•''"" ...... H ...... lOQt .. '91• •t-·•~ WILLIAM LEE HOLDEN GRANT D\MlfN €.)MEN lI Tile ti rst ti me ·w~ only a warning. R <"'"""°"""" ~ ltN'o'~ ltllJ. 0 •• " ... •t·•--. .,,,,, •• fit'ITT ORANGE 634-9284 EDWARDS SANTA AHA 540-7444 STADIUM DRIVE IN 639-7860 GMeet Mo~li. the mal\ cub. Baloothtnhs he'll mahe a darn good beu Shere Khal\ thtnhs he'll mahe a darn good meal. ___ , ·~~ r-·7 ,. r; HARr?•S ~ • ., .. ,~CAROi , ,,PQIMA c;...,,~SANDERS 11-10uONAY • PJr VA!iD i..1P-,•r iG ( It) ..... ~. "·"'(1.;t' COSTA MESA Manns Sou1ll Co.lsi Pia.ta 5'6· 2 711 WESTMINSTER BREA Manns Brea S29-~339 ANAHEIM UA Mall Cinema 893-0546 ORANGE Q31Wury 21 Cinema n2·8902 EL TORO UA City CA3f!fre 634·39 • 1 ()arqe Man 6 637·034-0 Pac~cs Chnge 0 I 558 7022 EdWUdl s--68l;Ul!O FOUNTAIN VALLEY EawMdt f ounl•" v111.., 11311-1600 PAC.I f IC D o Sst 7012 tatct .. _.. .._""" '" ,.._,...., " ut1 Sl'·fREC c1nenamE 6 scAEen 6JU 2553 comPLEX C1upman Ave • S.nh Ana f'reaway MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY "THE BUDDY HOLLY STORY" "CAPRICORN ONE" (PG) 'THE LAST WAL"FZ " (PG) "MAGICAL MYSTERY TOUR " "THE CHEAP DETECTIVE" (PG) "CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIAO KINI;>" ' "THE DEEP" (PG) 'AMERICAN GRAFFITI " (PQ) "THE STING" ----- STADIUm e;scAEEn K.lt•ll• .... , 6 3 9 -7860 OAIVE·ln , ..... ,"' "OUR WINNING SEASON" "RETURN TO MACON COUNTY'' "WHERE DOES IT HURT?" (R) "THt; LAST WALTZ" I' '"GOOoaYE GIRL" (Pa) "RABBIT TEST" "THANK GOO IT'S FRIDAY" "THE DEEP" (PG) "DAMIEN. THE OMEN 2" (A) "THE SENTINEL" "DAMIEN· THE OMEN 2" (R) "THE SENTINEL" Al.I.. 0"1"1·1HS 0 "lN fl)O,.M.Ml•tf'f\'f Clllld Ul'lter t 1 ,., .. Unl•u • Kl41'1• ,, • .,,,..,,.. where J bought presents for everyone In the faml· ly, the maid, cook, our eh?vator man and our dog. Suddenly Dad came home and asked If 1 got a kick out or the telegram, that it was all a joke. He felt far worse than I did," she comments In retrospect, "especially when he had to pay for all the pre11ents I bought!" Q: We enjoyed George Jessel at a local vaudeville theater and noticed be walks wlth a cane. Why? -Mr. & Mrs. R.T.11., Miami, Fla. A The patriotic performer was injured in Vietnam jumping from a helicopter that was under enemy fi re. Incidentally, the cane Georgie leans on these days was given to him by a friend the world once leaned on -llarry S. Truman. Q : I beard that rock star Rod Stewarl got lnt.o a flght and had bis Up split open. 18 this true'! - Mindy o .. Athens, Ga. A. lt was not In a right. While performing in San Francisco, Stewart s lipped on a Oower and smashed his race against a drumstand, pokin& a nasty hole in his lip. lie sang the rest of lhe song through a blood·soaked towel. Then was rushed to the emergency room at Children's Hospital where he received eight stitches The next morning. with a stiff upper hp, he flew back to England for his next engagement. l EXCLUSIVE ENGAG~MENT AT EDWARDS LIDO CINEMA -111-SOlllD THE ULTIMATE EXPERIENCE! • HtWrOltT ll\'D AT VIA LIDO MEWPORT HACH 67l·llSO I ( • •t'f ... -..... , 494·1'!.14 ltO' iCMffOf• JAWS 2 tl'OI n .. >*4)0eett .. •1 l U OD ~ ..... ~ 11110" OOU\D e IAMU HOUH CAl'llCOtlN ONI ll'OI , ..... lllV( .. Afl Yf""COft llO WIO..UDAT ll'OI "'-U' MVll'S UINtl'Or uuon OOUlO • 'AMI' ••OUN CAl'llCOltN OHi 1001 •tu' THI INPOICll 111 ltO• i CHUote JAWS 2 !l'OI •l -·-· -•••• ,. .._, ........ A OUtNN e IA(O\;fllNt •tlMT THI Gllll( TYCOON t•I u u • J .. , ... 0 •• 41 ...... , •• JAN llllllt< ... •U VUrf(IN'T 110 WIDNISDAY tl'OI "u' OIVIL'S llAIN ll'OI IUIU RfYf'fOLDS "THE if'fD" IRI '·"I. " Uf/\UH -2 ....... ,. "A DIFFEREl'lT STOltr" IRI "WHERE OOH IT HURT7 " "llG WIDMISDA Y" "Gl "ISL..UtDS IH 1'Hl STRUM" .:-:::~ ~~ ClOSii~ltfhfi!:~f THI J3~1iM.~e~7!9!9e~so~ CHOSIN sifKC1~~1s 1•0 .Ult ICTNO<H e SAUY llUO T"I IN0111 f'\Ut lOVI A OIATM ll'OI ~~-----~,.-H~~~M-.-ll-Yl_HC_IH_l __ ___ 110 WIDNISDAYt,Ol "lUS CHH•INO llCTION (I I 111g;:li~r~~=,--:·o• ICMllDU ~ JAWS 2 ll'OI •«M " •o o .. ,..,,. "• ,., ... , WAlf IMtHIT'S JUNOU IOOK 101 rius llON OP IOIRO 101 NOW PLAYING UA CINEMA • -a.1, ... ,, •• ,....~. •J~#_., .. i,,r."'".<1 . ' an (Al tW .. ,,,. · ., un~~ L~ [ .. ,,,,, /~' rr ·w(:.man P lul edw~rds CIN NTff' Sl•rlng • L•"'" i ...... o •• ,d._ ... , c.o, ... ,."'\" r.,1LL cLAYeuRGH Night M"''' ._.,. •UOfCtHTte Ot 41•tJ------tlJ ....... --... --...:::.!C APRICORN .-.. ................ , •• , r 4' E ,.._,. .. ., ... w,. ~ .. 4~ ~ Clll~~OUlO _. " fHlVSAVAlAS -... 0 I •• ltlAAtN•lACK J N ,., • :.:t~ • (PG\ .. F·l·S·T..:· "THANK GOD •lu•i~• IT'S FRIDAY" T HE <A> NeilSimon's GH.EEK "THE CHEAP J'\C(~N DETECTIVE~ A nthony ,,-:-e r"-:-ai""'.".l"d'-s iT'tlnnrrw;=, ~ Quinn ...... •oe••--'°"c.°''-... ,. U l e\1) lO Jill '• U-IH4+t• t• M I!:,_ .....:::I New 4 Track TH[ BUDD"" ~Dolby Sloreo• 'I. CLOSE ENCOUNTERS HOLLY STORY Plu~ (PO) HIOH ANXIETY" I s1.,nn11(PG edw~rdSHUHllNGTON GARY "~~;·.-;·;. ·• BUSEY ''THANK 000 IT'S FRIDAY" PLUS (PG) ........... M&M Plut 101 ,--.,....Clof"":m=rn:::-... "The MouH And Hl1 C:llllCI" Wllll Ot~NlYS \ "'UUNGLE MATINees ..lllrui~uir BOOK DA1L v · FEVEn -OJ tOHN 11111\/0LIA • •• '· "" -lllu1 (9') Pl\IS 101 aMlnrm JOUNTAlll YAtl(l ''THA,.I( 0'00 ''THI llOH ~ ·~-..... li'-1••••-IT'S "UO,""' %01111110" "'9lll41!'••U" '" IMll (PQ) • I 116 OAIL Y PILOT Mo,,day June 26. 1978 Television \Hl\/U:\ Y EVENING UO 1J 0 8 NEWS 0 EMERGENCY ONEI An "lnKtiYll" Oii ~II UNtllr • ~ l'lol'M tl(UPIS. 0 OUNSMOKE A gano ol outlaws. lryrng 10 reGOYllf IOIM lo6t lool, TUI\ 11>10 Man. lPert 1) 0) Pt.EASE DON'l EAT THE DAISIES .. Tiie 8tg Br11JS Blonde" CP ADAM-12 A girl IMds Ille olfl<:«S to 11 9USpociOUS plan& Dtld ~ In the MOIJnllltnS. tzl) E.LECmiC COMPANY m IT'S EVEAY900Y'S BUSINESS · Corporations· (J) C8SNEWS @) ABCNEWS 1;30 D @) BASEBAll Boston Red Sor. at New 'fort! Yankees; Louise ge" a "Sign" !hat 11er m&1T1ag11 .-doorneo, George 1s l0<ced to make• dl!ClSlOI\ lhat COUld Chllf>9e lhlltt loves lR) 0 LITTLE HOOSE ON THE PRAIRIE "freedom Flight" When tile !Hder of a small band ot nomadic Indians ernvea 1n Walnut Grove, the 1ownspeople become alarmed end begin 10 arm themsehles lor an attack IRJ 0 MOVIE • • • "Fronkanste1l'I" f 1932) Boris Karloff. Mae Clarke A scicnusr creates a lt111ng t>erno trom parts ol dead boc:loea. p hr.. 30 mon) 0 MOVIE • • • ', "Suspicion • (l9•11 Caty Grant. Joan Fontaine A young woman suspects her charming husband ol plannong a murder (2 hrs ) TUBE TOPPERS NBC EJ 7:30 -The Vanis hinl! Land Orange County's growing use of prime agricultural land for housing is probed in this KNBC docum entary. KHJ 0 8:00 -"Suspicion." Cary Grant and Joan Fontaine a re teamed in this 1941 mystery drama with Sir Cedrw Ilardwickc and Nigel Bruce. KCET @ 9:00 -Canal Zone. A three-h ou r s p ecial on the life of American l'esidents in this tense strip of Central American land which the United States has owned, operated and c:on- trolled for more than 60 years. of 2)(RJ Q NBC MOVIE are outwotred by a l1Jmale colleague l 1 h1 30 m111 ) (10) MERV GRIFFIN Guests Mclean Stt•ven son. Dr Manuel Smtih. O• George Weinberg, Mildred REPOR'f 1130 tJ 1111 CBS LATE MOVIE * * * SPt llbt\unO c IQ4:>) Gregory Pttck l11grid Bergman A '"mat., ps~c111atro" .noeld'J "" 11rnnes1a v1c11m rtorn mur- der cnaro ~ ... h,,. ""°' ku•g t< prov@' h1P. 1n,1o•~OnC.tJ 0 TONIGHT Guest l>Olll Jolln Oav•d· son Gue~ts Kroskon I t:<l SaH". AnQte D1.;t..1n~u11 St..lleS and Hendt.r~on 0 LOl/E. AMERICAN STYLE Love And Tile Propo!>dl · Harold Ooutd hiru .. n eGCress to herp hom 91•t OIJl 01 <1n 1rnpuls111e e11gage· mt"nt 0 I~ SOAP )( • ( 1950) June Havoc. .John Ru~tell ID OfCI< CAVETT C.uebl Frencl'I 1t1m doroctor Lou•• Mane l 00 0 TOMORROW G11n V&<non Wallen• tor· mer utde to fille pr11$1den11, wolf d1scuas hrs wnu• House eapeuence~ 0 MAVERICK · Prey 01 TM Car .. t!} MACNEIL I LEHAEI\ REPORT 110Q NEWS (f~ WIU>. WILD WORl.D OF ANIMALS • Chlncoleegue Ponies" Once a ~. the dlmlnu· •·~e ponies ol Chin· <.01e1oue Island ate 1ound- ud up and e~ceu numbers auctioned ott 1300 HEWS t •58 NEWS 2·00 0 Q) NEWS 2.208 MOVIE * • ''Wild And Wonder• lul · ( 1964) Tony C\mos. Chn111tne Kaolmonf\. 0) MYTHREE8~ ErnlQ ~ a 1nank-you note b the Statue of l.ober1y. and tile French Big Brother 0) CAROL BURNETT ANDFRIENOS Guest Sammy Davos Jr Q) L.A. STRINGS TENNIS Eli) SPECIAL • • "The Gtrf From Pe1rovk<1" ( 197'1) Hal HOlbtook Golote Hawn An Amencan /()Utnaltst bawd 1n Moscow lolls •n io.re with an 1.1nconven11on- a1 Russian girl Newman, Bernard Be1kow1tl. 0. Thotn.ab Tullo.O (lp1sodu 7) TOO Campbell 1.m111y '' on lor d surl>ftbl' wnu11 Surf .nlroduct'> his e>IMt-.< ~'rt the MJlOr <"IJPts 11.u l itlt' 11orne whim ,,,. c11ptore~ .m tH,..my· Jl's~a 9e1s a v''"' lrnm Clles1er ~ sec1u1t11 y. fR) (Nelworl( otlv1>~ •·Noil'r d•'IC•euonl 0) HOGAN'S HEROES 4· 10 tJ NEWSMAKERS •40 8 STEVE EDWARDS ' go11emmen1 1nv11es the Oou9las IOMllY to Wa5h- tnqton. CP 'ROOKIES l WO llll•COIWlcia &rll loose In Ille Crly cany'l"IJ oonta- 'Q!_OUS meningitis Ed Asnl•r befriends a young barrio boy <Guillermo San J uan> whose m other was the victim of a shooting on Lou Grant. tonight at 10 on CBS. Channel 2. · Vooth Uoomptoyment: A 0U89CIOn 0 1 Survival" A look al several cllronically unemplOyed yOUf\9 people and w11a1 their unemploy- men1 s1a1us means to 111em and the ~ of "1elf Q!nll1'81101\. m MERV GRIFFIN Guesra Mclean 5181/en· ~on. Or Manuel Smllll. Or Gec:vge W111nl>efg. Mildred Newman, Serna rd Berkowttl, Or. lhomas Turko 10-00 tJ CJ) LOU OAAHT Reporter 81lhe Nt!wman > CUllOUSllY to ifWllStlQdle .. gang snootong on a LO!> Angeie. barfto leaos her and Lou ID an area wneri' v101ence "' ollen a way ol hie (R) L '' Klin"-r~p&.ice-... 91 , St 1101tz w•ln ,, tOU<,1t1, 110- nnn>t<n~ q1.1ard Q) GET SMART 5rnart c;.1111 d ma~lm11rn ditl•I wt>.·n lrlll•ilr•S llVtdl "" wM uni~~ lhe~ <l"' lh!.'11 'OUl'll ry bdC.t.. Tuesday•• D a yti"'e 1tlo ~ie• MJRNING W OVEREASY Gorso,. Kanin, Dr Abram Sactiar. Choncellor ol Brandeis world hgures crlm<'! prevention traud and 6windle. ~Trader voe·· Ber~<>". ,.lauranteur (11) m REAL ESTATE AND YOU "Sl'lould You Buy"• (I) TO TELL THE TRUTH 7:00 E) C8S NEWS 0 N8CNEWS 0 LIARSCWB 0 BOWLING FOA OOLlARS (I) I LOVE LUCY Lucy's wmdta11 al Ille CB!lt· no 5lar1s trouble t>e~ Che Mertz0$ and f:llcard-06. ti) ADAM-12 A 6-ysar-old boy is saved trom death end e 13-vear- old drug addicl •S 1!.2PUJl'l&ndod. W MACHEll / LE~ER Channel Listing• 8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles 0 KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles O KTLA (Ind) Los Angeles 0 KABC·TV (ABC) Los Angeles (I) KFMB (CBS) San Diego G KHJ-TV (Ind) Los Angeles (Ill) KCST (ABC) San Diego OJ KTTV(lnd) Los Angefeo; Q) KCOP-TV (Ind) Los Angeles ED KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles lI!> KOCE· TV (PBS) Hunlington Beach DRAMATIZING PROBLEMS OF RUNAWAYS Shawn Daywalt of South Laguna KOCE to Air Juvenile Saga "Dianne: The Story or a 601," a dramatic film documentary dealing with the new state law gov- erning juvenile justice. will have its premiere on KOCE·TV, Channel 'SO, Thursday at 7:30 p.m . It will be followed by a live panel program from 8 to 9 p.m. with local authorities on juvenile Justice. in which TV viewers will be invited to dial 898-9811, with their questions to any or the panelists. The film documentary-four months under production at Channel 50 under special grants- will deal with how juvenile officials are dealing WJth lhe new Dixon bill CAB 3121). THIS NEW LAW, ·AUTHORE D by A s· semblyman Julian Dixon, removes juveniles who are "601 (SIU\.lus) offenders'' from incarceration. This.means that juveniles who commit minor of(enses. such as run.aways.., truancy, or violation of curfew, can no longer be placed in detention in juvenile haJI. Instead, they must now be dealt with in other ways, s uch as diversionary and counseling centers where their attendance is voluntary. Producer-director of the documentary is Tom S mith, a cinematographer and writer . The documentary dramatizes a hypothetical runaway, enacted by 14·,eer-old Shawn Daywalt or South t...aaunL rr IS INTF..lll..ACED wrre t:bterviews of BC• t\181 runaways, their parents, and dJversionary center counselors who deal with the problem every da,y in OranRe County. It lUustrat.es the experiences of a young girl wbo~way Crom home, her apprehension by Poli detenninaUon or her riahts es a "stat.us of- fende " under the news laws, and what happens to her. A h ftJmed in Oranie County, tt explalns hov.1 thousands or juveniles are bow beloc treated under the new law in CalifQmia. The TV panel program. r0Uowln1 the document.ary premiere, wUl have Channel SO newsman. Mike McKeown. u host. The 90-mlntrto program on Juvenile justice ls made possible ln part by grant.a from lb• CaU!orrua O>uncU for llumaniUe<1. AEPOOT m BIX BEIDERBEOKE MEMORIAL FESTIVAL · Sod Dawson's New Cl'lo<:a- go Rllyihm Kings (!) JOKER'S WILD 7:30 D $25.000 PYRAMID 0 VANISHING LAND An e~plorauon ol Che orow1ng use ol prime agro- cutturnl land for riousong In Southern Calolornla ts presented 0 NEWL VWED GAME 0 JOKER'S WILO 0) THE 000 COUPLE Osc:&r ac.cuses the director ol Fe11~ s etea11ve wnt1r>o class ol 1,audlJIOnC ad\l\lr- 11s1ng. Q) AMERICA 2NIGHT Guest Karen B1aci. a) 28TONIGHT mJ FRENCH CtiE.F • Ham Translo<m1111on'· tA> (() $100,000 NAME THAT TUNE 8.00 tJ (§) THE JEFFERSONS When a super111t11ou~ W OUE PAS.A. U.S A.? Pepe and Juana ato upsel when Carmen comes home lrue. but pardon Joe of Che 1>3me s•n untol tlley learn the b6d MWL (RJ 8:30 8 CJ) GOOD TIMES J J. receives a preetiglOUS 1ob assignment but ooesn'I know II rt was h15 talent 1n art ex Ille b056' dilughter l/laf was rescon- s•ble (RJ 0) S 128,000 QUESTION m OVEREASY Garson Kanon, O< At>ram Sactiar. Ctiancenor ol Brandeis. world ligure-i crime P<evenlion fraud ,md swindle. "Trader Vrc." 0ergerori. 1estauranteur. (RI 9:00 8 @ M•A•S"H Wtlll Hawkl!)t' and HOI l 1ps considered • batile c..1suall1es. 8 j lnolt<lleS an onau111or12ed hehcopter '>earch for Ille pair. (Parl 2 fD CANALZONE Frederoek W1seman's doc· urnenlary depoets daily ~le in tilt Panama Canal Zone. Zone 0011ernmQnt and the opera hon ol the Canal (R) '1!) DAVIDSUSSl<INO • Mirr0t. Morror, On The W11/I •• The Beautiful An<l The Ugly Tell All" 9:30 8 Cl) 0N£ OA Y AT A TIME Jutte colltdeS with a parked car, cons Iler way into a job and ~s rntaruar- ed w11h .,. Older man. bringing an end to 1ran- qu1l1ty on the Romano household Wart 1 of 4) (R) 0 TWILIGHT ZONE ··1 Sing The Body Electric~ Anne, Tom and Cyr111y l'tave rt-oe chOICll of 1tv1ng wolh their aunl or buying an elec::tronlc grendmolh· e< 0 MOVIE • *" ··S1c1n Game ( 1971) James Garner, Lou Gosseu . A pair ol con men ~EAOEA.L 10:d m'N"eWs ttOQDO O (J)~ NEWS 0 LOVE. AMERICAN StvLE love And Lady Luci<. · Tom and Cynthia go to La> vuqas lor IMtr hOney- moon. ~Love And 1nc Cryptic G~t" An apartment dweller buys $Orne ceme- tery plots 0 MOVIE • • "lower 01 l onoon" ( t939) Basil Rathbone. Bofls Karlofl Richard Ille l hord oold-bloodedly Climo nates those wl'lo stand In tile way ol Ills ascensoon 10 tile throne (2 hrs ) m Tl1E ODO COUPLE F ehx is torrnenled w•mn he learns lhat ~ e•...,.le ·~ daltng the b101oer ol Osc.ar's 91r11r1eno Q) MONTY PYTHON'S FLYING CIRCUS '1!) MACNEJL I LEHRER r..«)ANING 12.00 0 TWILIGHT ZONE A tJ,rthOay pdrty 15 1111.-r rupl<'tJ by rt'PO• ts ol an ommon-ootimy .. ,~bllt: dlltlCk 0) HIGHHOPES Q) HONEYMOONERS WlllOO <1-y Oy htS tOlf' on '"' amatu,;r play AJlpll d•>G•d.,i; Ile 1i. ll<'<1ded lor Holl'f"IOO<l but a r a11>n t sceiut pock• Alorp lnStl!dO ED DICK CAVETT Guosc LOUIS Malle 12 03 0 ~ POUCE STORY Booghl Ano Paoo r 0t" Poloe<> 1m1estogato1s worl>. 10111•11sh1y to 1ocatt• a ..,n11ng m.1n responsoblH '"' lhl-de;)tlt of " lujjo.., otlo- ~· (RI 12:30 0 MOVIE • • 'Spronqlln" In Tl'ttl Aociu&; ' I 19 '7) G~i.~ Autry Pollv R• wi... ~ OJ CROSS-WITS Q) MOVIE • • . • The Slory Ot M otl) t t 30 m * *' 1 The Unlonoslled Danco" (1947) Marga.ec 0 Broe!'\. Danny ThOmas A young g1rt ... ho worsrups e GiJrraon ballerina WleS lo prevent anoil'8f' ballet star lrom 1ak1n9 het place w'hh or~atilrOUS r~ '2 hra,. ..:o rnm I AFTERNOON tt:00 l) * * 'Ci rlleft Hell ' f1940) Douglas Falrbanl<s Jr • Joan Benne11. An .. •POO•t•Ol'l 1n10 the 1ung1e, warQl1ng tor Inca tr&R· i.o~c. NnS into llOSllle n.:11tves. (I tir . 30 min.) 3:.00 10, • * •. · rnren.rat" ( t973J M1ir10 Oberon. Robort Woid•'<s A woman laMs on 10\lt' wol/1 .J onucn younger man or\d 1>olh i;ufler from OV1 !oi<le tnOueftces ( 1 llw ~ 30 mon) 3.30 D • • * ''&MM Bride<l f or Sevon Brothers- ( 1954\ Howard Kee•. Jllntt Powl'll A ltoop of ..ild orothr•f'i dec1<1e 10 marry al!or one al ttoem tokes Ulll leao tl rir • 30 min I Silverman's a Tough Aet to Follow By JAY SHARBUTT LOS ANGELES tAP > ABC's new programs chief says Farrah F a wcctt-Majors ~ill r eturn t o "Charlie Angel" .and Joh,n Travolta will return to "Welcome Back. Kol· ter" next season, but each on a limit· ed basis Okay B1~l how does Anthony Thomopolous. a httle·known ex ecut1ve. fell about following a tough T\I Plo11s Readied <1ct -succeeding Fred Silverman, who helped make ABC No. 1 and now will try do that for No. 3 NBC? "IT 'S A QUESTION 1 was un- prepared for." he deadpanned in a 45-minute lunch chat with some 90 TV critics here for lhe press visit tbe networks give each year. His reply clrew laughter • • 1 have enormous respect for him." he said of Silverman, who to· day scheduled his first news t'On ference since becoming head of thl' NBC television and radio networks on J une 9 T homopouJos. 40, who 1ronically began his career al NBC in 1959. was pic ked Feb. l to s ucceed the man credited with helping first CBS. then ABC achieve ratmgs dominance. DESPITE THE GREAT attention given Si lverman's programmm~ e\. pert1sc, Thomopoulos took <:arc t o cite his famous predecessor's rcl'ent remarks to NRC affiliates about the importance of teamwork. • 'SJturday .Night Fe\•cr." he said the ::ictor had offered to live up ID he; contract. to be tn all 22 "'Koller " (•pssodes made next season a nd forsake his busy movie schedule ir A RC' IOSIStl'<i "l must tell you. I applaud him .... he sau.l, adding that agreement was n«.1chccl for the actor to appear ._ anrl star -in just eight shows. He also sC.11d Miss Fawcett-Majors. t•mbrotled rn a la...,suit when she left the-htl "Charlie's Angels'· after its first :-.ca.son to work m moV1es, will return ·-hut JUSl in three episodes nc'\l season. Miss Universe Pageant "I agr~ with him," he said •·Nri man can do this job h{mself I le mus t r ely on lhc expertise or a very strong support team ... H E DID NOT say iC the two would c·ontmuc in lhc1 r shows after that. The visiting TV critics laughed and applauded his reply to a (luestion ahout when he thinks, with Sil\ er man gone. he will make his fl\\ n m;irk as head of programming at ,\RC. Out of T-his World? Without saying if he felt ABC would stay No. 1 in ratings next season. Thomopoulos !>aid "v.hal I hope to accomplish 1s to adfl bC.1lam·c· and dt .. ersity to our i-choclult· ·· Jh MEXICO CITY <AP> -Organizers of next m onth's Miss Universe Pa~eant were so confident of its financial success they donated all ticket proceeds to the Mexican Red Cross -before one ticket was sold. Ticket saJcs began recently for the pageant to be held 1n both Mexico City and the P acific l'esort Acapulso. The final com pell lion will be televised worldwide July 24 at9p.m. "We expect to donate at least $250.000. The Mexican telcv1s1on network Televisa has promised for the organizing committee. ONLY 2,500 SEATS tn the Ac apulco convention center were available at $100 each. The other thousand seats were reserved for guests, j udges. the media and dignitaries The or ganizing com mil t ee is headed by Ernesto Soto. a real estate attorney who has been promoting the pageant in Mexico for several years. He keeps the expected gross income fi gure a secret more tightly guarded than the name of this year 's winner. to be selected from 93 contestants. "This TV program is the third big- gest television show on earth, right a'fter the World Soccer Cup and the Olympics," Guerrero said . "It at- tracted 500 million viewers last year and we expect 600 million this year. Those aren 't roy figures -CBS s ays so." DoWns Chief Of UNICEF UNITED NATIONS CAP> --T e levlsion personality Hugh Downs is the new chairman of the U.S. Com- mittee for UNICEF. Downs, known for having host ed the NBC-TV '"Today" s how tor nine years, now host s the weekly ABC-TV "20·20" show and the daily PBS-TV program "Over Easy." UNJCEF acllvitle11 include maktn' "Uic.lc ot' treat for PNICEF" Halloween coUec· Uons, selllng UNICEF t'ards nnd disstmlnatln(l inlormia- tlon a bout the needs of children in developing coun-tries. did not elaborate. .. I think 11 II be determined when TWEl ... VE JUDGES include Mex-\OU people take me out of short pants ico's mos t famous comedian, Mario ON TRAVOLTA, WllO went from and pul me in long pants," he sald Moreno -better known as "Can-ABC's "Kotter" to movie fame in ~tth a wry grin tinflas" -who starred in "Around -------------------------------......_. the World in 80 Days," and Cnstian Martel Aleman, Miss Universe 1954. She is married t.o Miguel Aleman Jr., a vice president of Televisa and son of former Mexican President Msguet Alem an. Other judges are movie actor Alam DftlOn and actress Ursula Andress. 't'he eight-event p ageant begins with opening ceremonies in Mexico City's National Auditorium near the legendar.v castl~ where Maximilian and Carlotta reigned over Mexico in the last century. T here will be s umptuous suppers a.t . pos h hotels and restaurants in Mexico Ctiy. and a parade of floats down the capital's Reforms boulevard. T U E CONTESTANTS will be flown lo Guadalajara, Merida and Cancun on lhe Caribbean. the Mayan ruins of Chichen-ltza in Yucatan, and driven to Cuenavaca and Cocoyoc. where fabled Aztec emperors vac;ationed. In nearby Toluca, the contestants will watch a Charro spectacle, a bull roping and wrestling event not unlike Western rodeos. They will' be accompanied ever- ywhere by Mariachis, folkloric musi· cians, and serenaded by Mexican crooner Marco Antonio Mui?. With the Villa Fontana violins in the back· ground. T H£ BALLET Folklor ico will perform during the pageant. The entire production is costing $1 million. Guerrero said, and when it is over , Mex.ico will add to the cor- nucopia of gifts for Miss Universe 1978 a house in Acapulco. British to Air 'IV 'Holocaust' LONDON (AP) -The British Broadcasting Cor p . wm show the tr .S . television mlni serl ~ "Holoca~t" this fall. Critic Alexander Walker ot the Evcnina Standard wrote after a pre· view that the emotional Impact or tht mm sboul Hitler's extermination of lbc Jews "wUI help res tor tht moral credit that Israel has pro. bably lost by her unresponsive at- t itude to the Middle Eas t peace moves.·• THIS WEEK Sp end Th e Night with JOHN DAVIDSON and Jn-.; g11e .... r .... · Al1J.!l~1 Dicl\iO.'\(I// l\resl,·iu Leo Soy<•r Sl~iles & I le11dPr'¥>1t El he Sommer Carpenlrrs /(1p Aclclotta Florcn('l! llenderson ,]C'rrv Vnn D y/,•,• .., . Elliott Gould 'r'1 •onm• El/mum Anthony Newl1•y Rob R1•11wr Stephanie Rdwnrd-, Dr. Wayne D.wr THE TONIGHT SHOW KNBC: CHANNEL 4: 11:30 PM • .. .COMtCS I CROSSWORD MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson "There ore times when I wish our TV set was out of order!" FUNKY WINKERBEAN BJ2m. F ~ anrz. t;~::tlT' ~~. CASEY MOON MULLINS GERIATRIX WHAT ON E:?A"™ -1~ V\-ITCH (;\?ING? . .,.HE:''~ AJTTlt'G F\..EA Ccu..A~ ON "THE GOPHei:zG l OENNIS THE MENACE 'WH EN Of~IS SJ..YSHf 010 rr, IT USUALLY ~s THAT RUFF 010 IT.' . ...· .. . Monday, J.mt 28, 1978 DAIL V PILOT If 1 BOOMER by Wm. F. Brown and Mel Casson l J ~~.DO YOU ~~At...LY THINK iWO CAN LIV~ AS c~eAPL.. '( M OH6 ? IN FACf I 1\\0 CAN MArZDL.Y I.~ AS C~fAPt:( 1-J-J..--~lf-\ A? 1WO ! PEANUTS f CAN'T 6EUE\E Tr1~f i ll'A 5 ,.\u.µ.1i F,(Jr\\ HO,\~E FO~ faJJ WEE~? by CharleS" M. SChulr f ~E\'ER T~OU~T l'O ,t\,.\r..c IT " r THOUGHf I 0 O:A1..1i. UP .. INSTEAO, f FEEL AS THOU6H l'VE ,\o\.\TLIREO ... MISS PEACH by Mell THERE'S 'f'OUR MOTHElt WAITING FOR l/OU AT THE BUS STOP. •• by Tom Batiuk ' ,, By Charles R 0 odriguea DOOLEY'S WORLD 0c1I ! 'lillS IS MURDER! DR . SMOCK SOY, AM I 0t::A1" ~ S IX H OURS U NPe:f< 0 1"HO Se Ho-r ~ICSH-rs! ' ~-~ .... -;.,.-...-., D MOTLEY'S CREW WHY NOT' GNS AWAY T\.IE \IEOefAl!>W5 'YOU CAN'T tl6E r eu.,.. AF1"eR MUS1"6R1N ' At.-L-MY SKlt.-1.-S, ;! DIP l..t::ARN ONe: i"HING ... ~ by Roger Bradfield by George Lemont NESVE:R PL-AY 1 F IVE: CARD s-ruc::> .. w 11"H c:::>oc-ro~ 1 ! M l i.,1.-e:Rj ·:~OWl~ys· 17d v BAR ~ L.t by Templeton and Forman ... .. WAt.tT5 'fO "fURIJ MIM5~L.F IM ... ~A'/'!7 HE'5AC~f Ca.\MIJl-llfir,,, GORDO by Gus Arriola TODAY'S GBDSSIDID PVZZLB PEPITO! f ClaAlit ~. WMAT A SWBET ~P'R15:/ TEHtJ.AIJA MAMA! J. AAD 10 COM~ MDME: fOfl A ~ALITV f l)(/ JUDGE PARKER HAVING FOltCED ~GIA TO GIVE .,..._,.... 141M THE ~25,000. ,.._,~ LfH DORElL T?ll.5 HEit HE AAS AN IMPORTANT APPOINTMENT! TUMBLEWEEDS tr'S ~1€1 eoos's, THE. WIDOW 00/oJtAU:t1 TE:U:.· POi:zl.EfZ ! r&., HOW 1-0:i:t 51Alt ~~ TAAV~l.Sf ~4 by Harold Le Doux &Slt>f5, J FIGURE THIS 15 JUST ~ST MONEY ... 6f<AU5f THERE'S A LOT M.ORf. COMING! YOO EVEA HEAR ntE Ei<Pf1.f.5510H THAT ONE PICTURE 15 WORTH A TH005AND WOROS? WELL. r'M GONNA TAKE ONE TH~'U & WORTH ____ _,.. S20 MILLION! /Wl-==::;;;;.o... by Tom K. Ryan OR170 PLJ'f IT ANOTHER WAY: GOOC/fJYE, FRONilFR N~· HELLO, FANTASVLAN17. WHO ELSE WATER SKIS EfEl11NP THe WAR CANOE? NANCY I HAVE AN IDEA·· MAV01: THE SHERIFF WON'T NOTICE US ACROSS 1 Innocent a& • 6 Hindu festi· vii 10 Early Scol. 10habitan1 14 Mortal 15 Prepos.1oon 16 Does ··· Dav of w1a1h 17 Thal 11ngs • • 18 Harvest 19 lectures Abbt 20 l~ s1able 11 Fa< off 2• SaVO<y iellv 26 lvnc compo· llllOOS 27 Artery tis· we !aye. lO Otceove 31 Time ~nod· 1tth"c 32 Typewntet chefecter 37 Did the mile 38 Most minute 40 ... lion 41 Eisenhowef, for one 43 ····it1: Ouiet 44 M.n's nick· NIM 45 Upholstmcf footstools 411 Stett 51 81oetlde S2 Small l1u1t S4 Fo• and lu1che1 58 GeologtGal eske1s 59 Moderate 61 Of lO•e<' s land p, .. ,,. 62 Form•I p•O· ceduie 63 Rl'SOll CM· 1ers 64 Amer c;olo- n•~I S g1etl1ng 65ho~y 66 S111cht\. 67 ().ploma. lloklen. DOWN 1 lnlefll!C 11ons ot wrpuse 2 Tropical dis Nst 3 Pr1Vt!f sign- off 4 ....... bll· i1rd btN 6 Jo4n I C8U1CI 6 Violent storm 7 ()pen. po· t he: I Burden 9Not-m· bled: 2 words 10 [f9ne parts 1f -... you UNITED Feature Syndicate Saturday's Puzzle Solved -. ---~ A I I A £ . ' s t ~~J ( .. 0 Ill A H 0 N J I• ' •• 0 • (1 f H 0 s S I • c' s • l r .. s . s • l r I II [ 11 l ( a o•s • • G l H ti s • l ( H 0 o•-vlo " • l ( . r• H A W rlo •Hcl• " c w s • 0 OJI [ o-. o o L r Ill • ro • ( . . ( o •o ( .. s ( •• ,o • A I C ( .. ( • l 0 f .. I G 0 D I co " o 0 , ( • S • I ... I 1( H A•C I •• .!.~e H I c .. ' ...... • 0 ~~ r T "a t • 1110 T ... ~ ~.!.. .!~ • ., f \ IS c .. ( loud an~ 38 Crownr.ke clear heil00<ec& 12 AClress Jud'f 39 Stoth 42 Gdtl>ered 13 E xpe11mt'nl!. cio1h 21 Slender 43 Ore D<ocess l1nia1 ong plant 23 Active PdS 46 Golf bag """' uem 25 Sp high 47 G.:wng amo· wav~ •oustv 27 Wyalt 48 Type ol 28SMkc squash spea1ean 49 11 You Knew king 29 .Juduh com 50 foolish 1atk P05el 53 . measure 33 Mean~ss 55tnt Air 34 Nick Trans. Ass Charles' dog 56 Alleged 3S Gas IOf fOfce hgh11ng 57 SalUf ates J6 811d5 60 Nonced I • BB DAIL 'I f>ll CH Monday June 26 1'78 I . I .. 'The overwhelming majority qf menthol smokers reported that low tar MERIT MENTHOL delivered taste e£JUf1/ to- or better tluln-/eading high tar menthols. Ogarettes lulving up to twice the tar." - -Nav National Smoker Study Kings:B ~:· 0.611(1 nH:otine av. pweigarene, FTC ReponAug'.77 • l 00' s: 11 mg'· tar:' 0.8 mg nicotine av. per cigarette by FTC Method. Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health . ...__ _________ _.,. O~IUp M.,.n1 IM 197a ~&lOO's I ., . ... INDEX: •Ann Landers •Lifestyle -ff oroecope •Classified . ....,. ..... *8 Sock it to ~em with anklets. Fold 'em down, roll 'em down or sq1tish 'ein down. Fran Sorenson is the catalyst behind the camaraderie in Eastridge. ' By JUDITH OLSOl'f OI tN o.lty Pilot Si.ff Fran Sorenson has just been elected "Mayor" ol Eastridge for ~mother two years. The pay is small for the Job ed the bours are long, considering lO isn't a fulltime job, but Mrs. SoreD80Dloves1t. • Eastridge is a small subdivWon in Costa Mesa, ~omprising tb.ree streets-Alter and Iris place& and Lilac Lane-which has become a lightly knit community sinoe its mayor started work. As the "le ader'' or t ile nei4bborhood, Mrs. SorenS<lft has actively engaged ln plaMing social events of all kinds in the last few years for all u.e 30 lamlll• ln Eutridge, There have been Cbrhtmu caroling J>U't1u, a chm eoot.elf. Fourth ol July polluclc:s ud a swap meet. New neighbors ha•e been welcomed in style and old ones greete11 warmly wbeo they tome l>ack for Lbe parties. ONE OFTRE nicest project.a or- &an!Md b.Y Mrs. Soremoa la u.e booklet which Is gt.ell to each new resident. All the old neighbors wbo care to participate (almost all do> fill out interest sheets and supply their oames and other intbrmatioo about their family aod lhe papers are eompUed lnto a permanent source boot for the newcomers. Fran Sorenson, who still drope r 's like a true Bosloner, is the calalyst la all of It. There are severaJ reeeons foe' her interest. she nid. Overriding lt aJJ Is her like for peoif le. "I love peop'e, I really do. she said. Then, she t.a seen the reeults or what happens wbeo a utUe love is dispemed: alotmoreiareta.ned. She recalled bow friends brought in food for the family when her father died and helped ease lbe paign. Hu church. Fairview Com· muntiy In Costa Mesa, also ts an ex- ample because it Is "such a caring, giving" place, ,uld llnally1 she re- members how friendly the Navy wives were when 1he lived ln Norfolk and her husband was eone (See MAYOlt, Page C2> DAll'tALOT eoturing~·~----CJ Sock·O Su mm By MARCIA FOR$URG OlftlitD•llo#f'llCltlUlt Just slip your toes into the Jatest foot fetish -ankle socks -and you'll be right in vogue for summer. They're smart accents for those popular full circle skirts, plus they look wild with rolled-up straight· legged jeans. And now, with the heatwave coming on, you can keep your legs bare all summer long while causing a fashion stir. • Ankle socks cost about the same as panty hose -from $1.35 to $6 - and they come in cool pastel colors.. But the favorite is white. The ones shown here are from Bullock's, Jag Ud. and Contempo Casuals. There are a couple of ways to wear them: Fold them down, roll them down or (with a knee high), squish them down. You say you wouldn't be caught dead? Don 't be hasty to shun them as "too new." They were popular in the '50s, remember? "Sure. it's a trend of the ·sos. and the idea (o f ankle socks) has ex· plod e d with the new mov- ie. 'Grease '." says Debra Escarsega, man ager at Contempo Casuals. "They re a lot of fun to wear. · Are the little-girl socks here to stay? Evidently the manufacturers think so -·We're getting them in now in the fall colors ... says Ms. Escarsega. Sock hops. anyone? o.iry ............. ~Ye ..... Fran Sorenson, front, with Esstrldgers: Her hobby is her neighbothood. I DAii Y PllOf Mother Is Sick DEAR ANN I have a friend who 1n h er youneer years once told me how m uch she loved w little nephew and •ow adorable ht> was. She confided that when the was alone with the hild she would spank im or give rum a little ~inch to make him cry. U.,O she'd comfort him tlM love him up. She A•• ......... ~ lioned that she also this to other young ldren. cop tn Santa Barbara. He's the one who com- plained about being in· terrupted on his lunch hour by people who saw hjm in uniform and just expected him to serve them 24 hours a day. When the eop asked why the public assumes they have a right to expect this, your insensitive reply was, ''Maybe, it's because his salary is paid by tax dolJars." a day. SOME people do think so, however -and TilEY are the ones ~bo Interrupt police officers in restaurants and five postmen boxes &o take to the post ornce. My com- ment was by way of e:l· planation -not a state· menl of my personal views. y friend Cnow 23) is a rm·hearted person loves children. She ed if I thought ething might be ng with her because s he ls doing the same thing to her baby. She · confes>sed that she gels a kick out of making him cry by inflicting pain and then derives great pleasure from comfort- The raft ot angry let· ters once agalD proves that no matter bow you say it -somebody Is sure to mlsundentand. • Tng h im. Her question wa s, "Do you think something is wrong with me?" I couldn't give her a n a nswer. Can you, Ann? -S.B.B. You are paid by newspaper dollars. Does that mean any person who reads your column an t h e pap er i s privileged to come up to you on the street and ask your advice about a miserable mother-in-Jaw or a drunken husband? DEAR ANN: A friend and I just got our driv- ing permits. We had an a rgument on the proper way lo place one's hands on the steering wheel for maximum control of the vehicle. This may seem li ke a dumb thing to argue about, but we'd like a reply. -A AND D \, I l DEAR S.B.B.: Ves. Something is wrong wilh her. She has a geranium iJI her cranium. Some people have the s ame problem -only they use words as weapons. When a mother Inflicts physical pain on her child Just so be will cry and then "loves hlm up," she is really trying to prove &be can get the child to Jove ber no mat- ter bow she treats him. That's pretty sick. My husband is a naval officer. also paid by tax dollars, but this doesn 't mea n he has to serve the public every waking mo· ment. Why don't YOU wake up and smell the coffee? -PRIVACY IS A NECESSITY, NOT A LUXURY D EAR A AND D : Pretend lbe steering wheel ls a clock. Place yoor bands on the wheel so the clock says 10 minutes past 10. Got It? DEAR ANN LANDERS: I 'll bet ) bu · r e going to get plenty of letters complaining e:1bout your reply to the DEAR PRIVACY: I did get a load or letters about my comment &o th e cop in Santa Barbara and I'd like to set the record straight. Wedding and engage. ment 07lnouncements run on Sunday m the Dally Pilot. F'orm.s ·are atxUlable at all Druly Ptlot of/ices or by calling the F'eotures Department, 642-4321. I do not believe that just because a person is paid by tax dollars be should be expected to serve the public 24 hours •• .Mayor (From Page Cl) weeks at a time on his job with ·Northrup. "l 'M PARTLY repaying what was given us.'' she explained. ,"This neighborhood is great. There is such caring and ~upport." When lhe Sorensons moved to tris Place there were "two distinct oeigbborboods," she said ... Each bad a Fourth of July block party and I wondered, 'Why can't we s hare?" Las t year the first joint ef:ort took place and this year the whole neighborhood has been recruited to plan the festivities for the Fourth. A c hili cook·off was a n1gn11gnt of the fall Fourteen people en- tered. there wen· three judi:es. and 129 Eastndgcrs came out lo watch and 1>harc "otluck rare. Events usually arc publicized with flyers but this year the resi· dents have put up a big sign on a va- cant lot on Lilac Lane. They would like lo buy the property. turn it into a park and put up a permanent sign to advertise the events l\10ST or: THE r esiden ts participate in some o r a ll of the events. Mrs Sorenson said. She personally knows all the families ' except one coupl e on the street and sh~ s ays '"that's their choosing." Mrs. Sorenson has had corree at n ea r ly every tabl e in lhe neighborhood and has al least been in ever:v house S he loves the nei~hborhooct , because of its variety or people and interests. "We have babies a nd grandparents and some who are almost great-grandparents." s he said. "That's the fun or the thing. "We have teachers, policemen, insurance brokers, hairdressers, a n optometrist and construction workers." Mrs. Sorenson bas often been told that the neighborhood is un- usual and she agrees. ''Maybe we are not typical of California," she said. "The secret is somebody to go out to them. A lot of people have a hard time being the first. It's a matter of getting involved." FOR MRS. SORENSON, being the first is a natural part of her life. She says she has always been an "assertive, friendly person who loves to visit. "I've always been a big-mouth," she added with a laugh, "I've always had such good friends. I've kept in touch." Mrs. Sorenson. who enjoys ten· nis, arts. crafts and camping, says h e r h o bby is r ea ll y her neighborhood. But she d isdain s any thought that she has much lo do with lhe un- usual friendliness and camaraderie m Eastridge. ··n isn't me. You've got to have caring pe<>ple." Get Rid Of Unsightly Bulges!! PRESENTING OUR NEW CONCEPT IN INCH LOSS NO Starvation Diets NO Pills Also W• tpMMIJIH Ill NOM.s.,ik• '-• Uft!Rt •e-t . Dry ~ • ()tty SlM w ....... u.. ......... H,_...,_dter~. .......,,........ .... e.I fw "' ........ ...., $<Mnity SKIN WE& FIGURE CONTROi. aNTERS HUMTIMGTOH llACH 194·7'42 ...... .., H4o1'141 T • 01 ;1 6>t-HIJ NO Shots • ( Horoscope TUESDAY. JUNE 27 By SYDNEY OMARR J ARIES (March 21 -Apral 19 ): Take in· ltlatlve. Be first, independent. an innovator, a pioneer, willinJ to play high stakes for your ideas and original approach. Cycle is high - you land on your feet and you'll be a hero. Gem lnl, Virgo, Sagittarius could be part of your personal scenario. TAURUS <April 20-May 20): Check behind the scenes, be aware of subtle nuances. Another Taurus, Libra and Scorpio figure prominently. Adjustment in home situation is Indicated. Money question is re~olved with family member -if you are diplomatic. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Accent on friends. hopes, wishes -romance is in picture, hidden meanings, subtle nuances and necessity for discretion. Pisces, Virgo figure prominently. Element of deception is present -if you so permit. Apparent setback will boomerang in your favor. CANCEll (June 2l·July 22): You know where you want lo go -you d1scover what is re- quired for ·"journey." Capricorn person is in picture. Accent on ambition. prestige, standing in community, the way you relate lo lhe ··ooss" or superiors. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22>: You gain signal honor, special privilege, acknowledgment that past views were correct. You are vindicated. Aries, Libra figure prominently. Your influence now extends beyond past efforts. Long-distance communication is also featured. VIRGO <Aug. 23·Sept. 22). You get to heart of m alters concerning lease. rental , financial obligation, security in relation to partner or mate Areas previously considered mysterious or ·occult" could now be bathed in light Leo. Aquarius figure prominently. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22\ Go slow in sense that you absorb information. Become aware of intricacies, inner workings, legal matters, public responses. ways to get point across to those who may hold opposite view If single. there is "marriage talk " SCORPIO <Oct 23-Nov 21 l Be flexible where basic issues are concerned Don't be too strict with yourself rr diet r esolution is breached, give yourself another chance Key 'Aow is adaptability, optimism. humor. willing- ness to expand sphere of work. SAGfITA.RIUS CNov 22-Dec 21) Accent on breaking free from restrictions, creating your own methods, style. Affair of heart could be part of scenario Your personal magnetism is activated. Change, variety, travel, leam1ng to appreciate personal capabilities -these are highlight.ed. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) · You learn by observing what is close at band Be thorough, determined: build on solid structure. Gemini, Virgo persons could play prominent roles There wiU be changes, but basic material will not be outdated. AQUARIUS (J an. 20-Feb. 18). Relatives. fl air for beautifying surroundings, being willing to forgive, forget and to admit your own errors -these factors highlighted. Short trip, domestic adjustment also accented. Taurus, Libra, Scorpio individuals figure prominently PISCF.S (Feb. 19·Marcb 20): St~r clear or get·rich-quick schemes. Invest rather than speculate. Protect possessions, assets See places. people as they are, not through haze of wishful trunking. If analytical, you gain. lC care· less, you pay an inflated price. The choice is your own. If June Z7 is your birthday you have ability to illustrate, to dramatize. lo put points across in m eaningful manner. Aries, Libra persons play Important roles in your life. In August , you travel, pressures are relieved, social activity accelerates. You have fine sense of humor, but some persons think you make "cutting'' re- marks. Next month, someone who taught you in pas~ could make reappearance. You are passionate, impulsive, restless and very fond or music and food. ANN LANDERS I HOROSCOPE Patients Form Pacemaker Unit By STEELE BOLMAN ATLANTA (AP> - Heart paUehts with pacemakers benefit from the most advanced medical technology, yet they may fear the ap- pliances in their homes or worry about getting back to work. Cardiovascular sur· geons admit that wbile they can easily treat the human m achine, they often cannot, deal with the sea or emotions re- leased when a patient depends on a pacemaker for life. A pacemaker is a de· vice 'that electronically helps a person's heart maintain a steady beat. T he International As- sociation ot Pacemaker Patients was formed in Atlanta last year to take up where the physician's care ends, to provide a humanitarian link between pacemaker pa· tients and their fellow patients. "Doctors say there is a great e motional in· voJvement In having a separate device that gives patients new life," said Robert H. Ferst, the association's ex· ecutive director ··rt is a problem in the sense of their depending on this device and not televl&ions, fluorescent get emergency help. Ii "' I · " T h e d o c lo rs guts or e ec\ric-eye thc01selves have such a garage door openers. "l't!al need for this ... "This ls a wonderful n thing that we 88 an or-it Lukes the pressure off ganlzation can bring this tht-doctor tu fill this message to the patient." need." he said. ··1n fact, he said. a doctor in Milwaukee has paid for the mem-Tbe association wa s bC"rshap of 14 patients, founded by two physi-because hC' felt th ey ciaos and a form er employee of the Atlanta _n_c_e_d_e_d_1_ru_·s_a_r_r_il_ia_t_io_n_._ .. _ Heart and Lung Clinic: Dr. William Logan, Dr. WiJliam C. Maloy and Linda Morgan. The fledgling aasocia· lion's membership or about 400 is only a tiny percentage of Am e ri cans w i th pacemakers -estimat- ed at 2SO,OOO. "Let's say that in the next year or two we hope lo have 70,000 to 80,000 members," Ferst said, adding that the as- sociation will depend on c urrent members and cardiovascular' surgeons to h elp r ecruit new members. · Ferst said his or· ganization, in addition to setting up local chap· ters, was compiling a TM 8"cl.b"y - ~wpon 8(o,lch",. "•<f'('ll•On.,I new lnlerl0< ~Sign >1v1ho .•. o11nd mofel Of~rtncmrt• '"'~'K"" I<>< conrr•ct •nd re~ld""''"' •<counl$ And .in e•co•ll~M showroom of fine •n1111ue,. "n<I orlgln&l ari. INnRIOR DESIGN ANTIQUES·ART 349 north new port bhd. newport be.llch • 645-SCIO directory of members a nd li s t s or cardiovascul ar specialists and clinics in the United Stales and abroad where traveling pacemaker patients can being able to talk to lhe -:::--::-:::--::--:--::-::~-:-:--::-:-"7""7""'7-:--:--:--:---:-~--­ doctor or other patients * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * to sharethisfeeling,"he: WOMEN'S SUCCESS : said )'he association pro· : RA LL Y ! vides pacem aker pa-Jt tients with an outlet for • Toe8day, Jun .. 2 7 • 7 Pl\1 : those emotions, such as * Newporter Inn • • • . Newporl &ada • the anxiety lhat comes • Marcille Wtlltams author ot • with not knowing* whether the patient will • "Th.t> Neu; Exectditv> Woman" • be able to return to bis with Strategies for Success • • • job, Ferst said. ,.. "We want lo help • Call (714) 971-5236 or 675-7195 : the new patient, his con-* /or reservations or information • cerns. bis medical pro-* * * * * * * * * * * "* * * * * * * * * *.,, * * * blems, to understand what to expect from this device," he said. Quoting a publication by a pacemaker center in Newark, N.J .• Ferst said pacemaker patients sometimes didn't realize they could bathe, that they could go outdoors, go to the beauty parlor or wash their hair. SALE June 27th-July 3rd ~-VJ-Vi 2043Westclitf Drive -Newport Beach, Caltlom1a 92660 They are warned to sta y away fr om microwave ovens, which ran disturb the device's rhythm, but Ferst says -==================~ there's no harm in being a round hand dryer s . Your Dally Piiot cenbe Recycled. Oranoe Co,,st Colleoe Is lhl' 01t1clal rec ye lino center !or Cost.i Mes•. Ttl[?()IJQi()UT '-'UL'1~ '-'()1~ MIL() H:ALTli CLUl3 ft)V l+tMI:~ t=Vt=m= ()t= l~ITIATI ~ CtiAVt3~. The Thinnery Now in Newport Beach Plaza Newport 1000 North Bristol Street (714) 955-1353 r~onday thru Fr1dny. IOAM rn t'IPM Saturd ay and Su11uo1y. lOAM to t,f r,1 JAN FEB MAR APR MAY JUN JU L AUG SEP OCT Figure-and-fitness·conscious women will find Milo a bargain at any price (especially this one!). Orange County's premiere femalc·only health club offers you: •Racquetball • Exercise-To·Music •Weight Room •Sauna •Jacuzzi • Exercise Area • Diet Counseling •Circuit Jogging•Senior Women Health Program •and now Aqua·cize A simple $25 per month fee covers unlimited use of all these services and facili ties. If overall health ls important to you, now · · while there's no $75 Initiation fe e • • is .the W~~ time to come to Milo. ."WJ-..1 ~ W4l~UT~~ \t'l)()VJ ,L\Cf1 Open eorly for working women; Monday -Thursday 7 am -9 pm. Friday 7 am Saturday 9 em -3 pm. The tastiest and most delicious low calorj~. sugar lree Choco-l;:it Cakes, Creme Puffs. Strawberry Tarts, Mocha Mousse Crepes, Apple Strudel, Icy Crerney Soft Serve Dairy Desserts and o h ... so much more. Select from more than 70 gourmel desserts and spe- cialties. And, no matter whether you're watching your weight or not, The Th1nncry's got some- thing great rn store tor you. 8ut JUSI in case. calories. carbohydrates. food exchange equr- valents and ingredients are fisted so you know exaclly what you're eating . Do yourself a favor. Do your tastebuds a favor. Visit The Thlnnery today. You'll never know th e difference. Open 7 days • Products del1V11red fresh daily There's a Th1nnery in - LAKEWOOO ', )6 Soulll !ii .. 1 .... -b".d ~OS ANGR r9 P"11hll••1 N<J t<Ol l vv, 100 1:'".t~ V.(.lt 'V l\ •\ l'"Ll.I 6rl'!l'ltl'• 11M r 1•0 1 '" 1.1,C#V"' W•~ c:,,.,. "':i ... ~ ~;~;e e 11 11!.•un , ••$ C"r.tt" "\\I •·,.-Mil ·~~ 11.i w •• ,. i..a,, ti><• <I )11••1 lOrtr•Alnl f~1. ~Hi!" r11••t 2W~ ""'~ (:oa~1 1i.y, tll'Lf<lm T~f"\.11d Ml r.,.,..,., 01.., l•c•l"t>f\\l hOO"t V.£1\T LOS llNOELES 1011~ PICO 11 Y<l WOOOlANO ~II.LS Wot-~...,. .llll\• 11 ... rt·~· 8..., Sugar Free Desserts & S ecialties I • ons Ear11 Rlwde ia Degr e Two brolhl·r~ bolh gradualt'~ of (.'or una dd Mar lligb School, re ce1ved degret'' from IA>:-. Angeles umvers1ues Casey Conway re ce1vcd a Master of Scienee in safety mana~emcnt from USC and Kelly Conway was graduated corn luude fro m UCLA with a degree m economics. They arc the sons or Wanna Co nw ay of Corona del Mar. PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE TO CIU!'OITOllS SUPl lll~ COUllTOP: THE STATE 01' CALll'<lllNIA FOR THl COUNTY 01' OllANGE No.AHSJI Re pons Clash SAL I SBU R Y , Rhod esia <AP ) Rhodesia reported a border dash with bhH·k natwnahst guerrillas as an /\n~l1can bis h o p call ed on Britain to send troops to hunt down the killers of 12 whites al u mission in another purl of the COWltry. The military com- mand said its troops ex changed rocket, mortar and s mall-arms fire with about 100 guerrilla~ Sunday morning on the border with Botswana. E>tolo ol CHAR LES KELLY t!ALDWIH. OltC•o...S ( J NOT IC.E IS HEREBY GIVEN lo the /N Sff ORT < •"1110• \of '"" Mlowt Mmtcl ""Ctd.,nl ., ,,.,., •" penons n••lnq cl.t1m~ i.o•ln•1 .._ _________ _. the W10 ot<lf'(litnt ~f'ft req1.11tf'd IO fll• tnem w11n '""" ""'''~,.., ... ¥0u<Mt\ 1n 11>• oflou of ,,,.. clen ot Int> •oo•• tn t1ll•O <o"'1. Of' lo or•-wmt them w1tf\ Ute n•c ,,w,.. VOUd\N"\, 10 '"" u,, <lef\lqMd •I '"'° Olh<o OI lHELEH MARRIN, .JOHNSON & BRIDGES U) ~ull> F•o-r Strttl. LO\ Ar>qelu CA, whl<h t\ tne pt.c• Of bU\tf\I'\\ Of I~ unOt'P\IQfWd 1n •II ~""'' Pf''t"1n1no In tht ~\Iott Ill w1il Ot-<r.,..nl wllh1n tour monlh\ •fltt tn~ ''"' c>uOlu.ol1c.m C>tHH\ Mt•CP 0• 1•0 JU/IP I J 1919 JAMES W RALOWIN £ r-•cotor df th• WtU Of tht' ttbOv~ naf'nit'OO\'f"~nt THELEN, MAAAIN, JOHNSON & BAIDG[S US South l'I-•• S"ffl LO• An9olet, CA'°°" Tel U7·HH au°'"'' for [•1te11tor Publ"IWO 0to"9" c.o~'' Oo11v Pllol 1Jnt' 16 July J, 10. ti 1918 1•H II PUBUC NOTICE FICTITIOUS 9USINESS NAM[ STATEMENT 1 ht< toltow1nq pe-r "°" t\ 001nq bu\t ... \ ,., P( N\I ON f VUOIH(; AND J H<AN C.tAl. COMPANY )S' ~.in ..;Y;tqv .. 1 C>r.¥~ Su•te· 70• Nn 1;port k• ~' n r ~ 1torn•• 9lMO P•u1 t-ruthbom ~Oll Cortt•nd Ur•v• C.oron• d("t M"' <-•1tlo,n16 ll•H r tu bu\1f'W-.._\ 1\ toodu< lfld by •tn '" •J1v1c:Jut1t PAUi f ruchbOm l n1\ \t•tf·OM "t w,1· f1tWJ W''" thf' r.ounrv (lf'r'k vr 01 .. nqt Countw on lun• S 11/ft FOU1'1 Publi'fth .. d ()-itnQJ <.t.kt\t Od1lv PtlOI *'''h 11 ,.,_ /t>JncJJultl 1918 nu 11 PU81.tC NOTIC t~ LEGAL HO TICE whl·rc g uerrillas o f Jos hua Nkomo's Zam babwe African Peoples' Union are based. A communique sa id the firing s topped when Bots wan a forct.-s in - t erve ned , a nd there were no Hho dcs 1an cas uall1cs w /\SlllNGTON I td» A for m er con g re ss man from L o u1 s1a na , Otto P assm;:m, was dedared competent today to s tand trial on con· spiral') brth<'ry and l<1x eva'\ton dwrges ar1~1ng from rtt'<' sales to South Korea . "Perfect physical and mental health 1s not 1 c· 11u1rcd, .. so1d l ' S r>1:-. lri<:l Jud~e Barrington 0 Parkt'r 'Goud phvs1cal and m e ntal health 1s nut required · Halher. he said. 1t Y.as 1mport<1nt that <i dden· dant have a r:1t1onal un dcrstandtni;! or the pro ~eedings and that he be able to assis t his l<iw yers. NOT 1c.e ts HER El!Y c.111rN '"•' ,,.,~ R 1• II,. IOllOwtnQ lleM\ 01 IO..nd O< Id••<! ~llrt ff. I fl fl •• ,,,0_."V M'¥'~ t;wn n1•IO by tnf Poli(.~ l>t-P•r '"" nl nl ,,.,. I ••~ "' C O\I~ M~'• \.\' i\ S 111 '.'l:G TO'.\: (/I. P ) fOr ft pt•r10C1 ttl •·•(••\\ flf 01f1t•y I'°' S 0.,0 The l'. Suprl'mc Bov' V•llow Hu•ly 10 Spa BocvrlP Court ruled I) :1 today (loy , Orown xnw1nn 10 SPCI U•tvtt• h N y k C l I o~ 81M ~ & °"'" Urown ""'"' conl••n l at ' rY. (II' I \' l Ol'S •"'I 11 '"""' "'"' 111.,. . .,,,.,.,"" J not have to c·omp~nsate spc1 Bic~r1r. Aon Yr11-scnw1nn 10 th<' p e n 0 Cent r a I !tPd f11t vc1 .. (,1r1 .. RNll Ro~ct• union 11.cv<le ~,,.,.,u s o .. ~,. A" f•nk .i-atlroad for its refusal to M1dtond 1ltn.n,,..•C8A""•°C•••0 a llow the railroad to ll C••nn4'1 C. U R..O•O & Cl•roon C•• l<•d•o hutld an office tower u o11cF ,., ~v11nirR c•vE N 1"~1 abo\'e its Grand Central 1f no 0 1'ttr"'r dPC')r1,H\ .itnd provt\ n1' nw """'"P01 ll>t l>'Ol>Htv wolnon -.f•M Station t 11 a.t~\. tollaw1nq tn. pubhf..tt1on ot 'fh l I I th l 11,., Noi ... ,,,.. , 11, in*•t•o ,.,,. .. ·~•• e JUS ices ru t!( a on tn .. l•ndU ol II••" 00' OM CH In IM !he dC\ l'IOpmC'nl ban re , •h ul lO'lo•..t ~ ..... '" wn1t1' tot\•· 1n.• It ( lh l 11'01>"•1• ,,,.11 ,,. "'Id ... P<lhltr .. uchon :-.u 1ng rom c Cl " .. •141'"""""a•h to""'"'"°"n"o L.indmarks Prescrva Oo••o ~"t' ~ ;~• t 1 n n L a w d o l' :> n 11 t ' ..... o• 1>01. • reprPscnt a .. taking ' of l '»blO\""<I Of onqo tu~•t I>•'' Ptlol !H'Onl•rty SO no f'Onl Jun• 11c l'fllt , ... 7'\A 1s pcnsat1on 1s requ1r1·d Pl'Rl.I{' NOTICE R 241'° NOTICE TOCREDITORS • .. EARINGDATE11 7' HO A·'4l2' SUPElllOR COURT OF THE ST ATEOPCALll'OANIA FOii THECOUNTYOFOAAHGE In 1"f M•tltr OI l•t r ·~•~ol LOVl'>r IUR NER lJ<'<U'l('CI N olie .. ,, htff'bV q1v.-n •o urdUor "" w•f•Q r IA•M\ rtQ"•"""' -h•· "'"'"""< rdf'nl tn 111,. ""d C'IA1m\ 1n lrw> \ift•tf• ol '""' ,,.,,al lt'lPditQrfl\.11drourlor lontfll\t"nt '"•'tn tn IN" vnt1N4-••JN·l1,.t ,,.. .. ott1u· "' ttf Nf.IYW \OW At10t1W-y .1tl.tw )"IQ Wih f """ A•~n \uih 11'0 1n I'-~< 1ty nt l n• A "Orltt· •O tni ,tft n' 1+tf ( ouoh ""'"'' '' ,\It·• "'' l tttl" c·t~1 1• ''' hu\• "'" Qf tl"W-una. t\1Qr11•n '" .10 mAttf'lr\ .,,., l;lln•t•u H> · ol•d 1 \l14h· •,,, h ( 1.,1rn\ w 1tn ft,, ,.,., ·" 4H~ .. ,..,,._n, '' '''V\.t OP 1 It rt or P" v nh"1 "' _.1a1pu10 w 11Pht'I tuur r• <>t•ft1\ 1tllrr tn.-fir •,I Uubl1< •l•Of\OI 1ru"nnt1(1 0A1l'1 Jvf'rl. t'1"' Jo\.,.ph 0..nt'h\ n .. v, ,,. Ad'lt1t'lt\h .. t'."'fJlt .... ~ "·ti"' nt ~.fill ( }4 ~ .. ,,,t\I WENllYW LOW •Uof'ft•J•IL.•w StOG W 1t\fHrf' 81•0 ~ ..... 1110 LOIAft'lflO\,OtOOM Puolt ,hf~o (.)r.u~ CO·•"'' 041ly f'ilol lun S 1'1 l'-1 lf\, l~'l 71ftl ,, PllRU{' NOTICE fl·~> SUPElllOA COVAT 01' THE STATE 01' CALlf'O lllHIA 1'011 THE COUNTY 01' 011.llHGl No A· .. Ut NOTI CI! OF HEAll lNO OF PETITION 1'011 PltOIAT( 01' WILL ANO 1'011 LETTEltS TliSTAMEH· TAlllY ANO FOii AVTHOllllATIOH TO ADMINISTE R UNOEll THE lltOEPENOEHT AOMINISTltATION 01' ESTATES ACT E\1411" ol MA RTIN f\AUMANN, ~CU\"d NOllCE I\ HER£f\Y (illlf N l~ol STEPHEN W BAUMANN M\ 111"<1 n~rt'1n • Of'fit•on tor Pf'otMt~ ot Wtll •l\O fOf' t\W*'Cf' ot l rltf'f\ Tf'\t•mf'n ••r y "nd tOf AMlhOrU•t•On 10 Ad •tUnt\(t' undirt.. ...... lnc:t.OPndiPnl Ad m•n•'''"'tQ"t ol'E\lAt•\ Act '~''''""<• lo ..,,.,,h '" m•d• t'or '"''"•' O•t tu ul•t'\ And OMI tf'wt. llmfll And pl•c• Qf N•r•no ,,_ ,..,,..... n." or-tn ,., 10• Jyly 11 1'11 ol 10 00 II M I" ,,,. courtf'oom of o.p.rt,,..nt No 1 nt \~IO ro..•I 01 /00 Ct•IC Ctl\lt • Ot1_. w .. 1. in thl' C•h of S..-.nl• An• C..11fotn1A Ooted J,,,... 11. ,.,. WILLIAM E SI JOHN, County '"''k LIWITT, HACKMAN & NOE,l'LIN U4U Yonlw• lll•d , $ulto II If ••telnt, Cll '1&1t Ul>I ttO 2110 At*"•otw. ,...It'-• Publ,.Pw!d 0.e"O" Co.t\1 Delly PllOI Juri. it. 11. Juty l. ,.,, 1411·11 PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITlOUS 9US1Nt:SS NAMI STATIMINT Tllt loll-•no PffWWI II dolr>Q bli\I nnsn STC WAltTS UAlllCU .... Yk 1MI•. Co••• Mt\.11, C•lllo.flt• .,.,, ~1 ...... , f(ldt• 1H.oc•mtw1 ... Ill( torta, Cosu l'fW•• Colllo•nlA ,,.,, Thi• bli\I""'" "<OflOvfttG by •II in 0 ........ 1 s•-•n ""'"-'Tiit• \lel-1 Wti llltd •1111 ""' Co.1111, Cit•\ 01 O••n" t.11nty 04' J-n i.,. P' .... J l"ut>lllMd 0.~ Coe\I 0.tlly Plitt, J11 ... tt .-.cl Jiiiy >. 10, "· 1011 201 11 ('or Sole11 l 'p DETROIT 1/\l'l Ne w-car buyers ha\ e turned ravenous 1n the fa(•r of a "'nibblt>, nib blc " pricing policy h: l ' S automakl'r.,, hut ..1rrnl\sts are al ndds over \\h(•tlwr lhc s urge 1s a lt•a<;t for tht· in· rt us Ir~· or a hurbmgrr of ha rd t1m1'" to l'<lmf'. St'< months <1~0. lht• nat1 un·~ hell\,ethl'r 1n du :-.try hacl every11n1· rwn·ous as 1t strugglt•d 1 hrough an uncxpl•Clt•cl "ant('r-long slump B111 on · some mal!t<' <lil.\' in M.irrh , as one a11~ilv<;t put 1l. auto salc.., took nrr 1\ ml'rit·.111s bought more c:1rs m :\IJ\ than 1n any month 111 h1.;torv, a ncl ,· .... o sl r:11 ~hi I It <I :iv salt•s n ·rorcb havl' ht·c·n sl'l so far 111 June. P«•o'·'~ fJb!Jf O<"lt>? ('J\JHO, F.gypt IA P I Egypt at.•c·us<'d Israel tod ay of cn·atang ob· s ta c lcs t o p ea c e bv rushing to l't'Jert a nt·w Egyptian peace plan even before it was com pl et ed. The Foreign Min1strv 1 ... surd a statement "'"' 11\!f~Egypt "finds IL VC'l:Y strange'lbat lsra~I took al m ost a m onth t o ans" er ques tions put to 1t by the L'ntl<'d St;1les :ind now ru>ihes to rc)ect proposals which are still bctn~ prepared m E~ypt a nd which lsr ••cl does twt yN know of · \'kffnu ffonor~d SKOKIE. Ill . <AP> Instead of racing a rally by brown shirted, goose· step ping American Na7.l s and a potentially vio l en t ('O unt rr demons t ration, res1· dt'nts here shared tears, prayers and lau"hter. As some 300 other pco· pie gathe r ed ut o .ynaAogue Sunday to pny tribute to vlctlms or Nazi concent ration ~1lmps, Mayor Albert K Smith sald, "It 's a beautiful da y .· APWlre ..... to DOLPHIN GETS A HUG FROM TRAINER Curt Horton Gives Encouragement Whale of Job Trainer in Command Bv J ULES LOH ap'\f><Kt•I Corruponcltnt MYSTIC, Conn Anybody who has ever tried lo housebreak a puppy, and tried and tried and tncd. can only marvel at what Curt Horton accomplt~hes. llorton 1s a trainer or whale~ and rfolph1ns and seuls, wild r reatures made lQ do ..1s he commands He 1:-. as fa~t.·mated with his Job as all who watl'h 1n ay. e a' he does 1t .. I GOT INTO THIS work bv a1•t•1dent,". h1• s:ud .. Now I know it's \\.hat 1 'wanl tu do I \'an L 1magtnl' ('\l'r getting t1rc·d of 1t · Horton works at the Mystic Aquarium. an 1ron1t 1n..,t1tul1on for this town ~yst1c 1s a salty old coastal vi llage, a rt•stored whaling port Tuunsts climb aboard a nt ique whaling ( ) ships. built tn an AMERICA earJl(.•r day for the killin g of '-----------' s t' a c rt.• <ll u r f's , then walk down a aquarium, butll for \hem. c·ohblcd street to the the care and study QI Scvt•ral times a day Horton pUts his charges through lht.•1r paces. At the touch of a finger to a fin. or at thl' sound <>f a whistle, dolphins jump through hoops. seals catch b<ills, whales leap and c<1vort "IT ISN'T Qt:ITE RIGHT to say th.it what we do 1s teach an animal to do a trick.'. llorlon !>a u.I , .. although they indeed do tricks What we do. lt!chnically, 1s called behavior modif1cat1on. "It lakes a lot or ti me and a lot of pa- tience and 1t 1s based simply on rewarding them when thl'1r behavior 1s what you want 1t to be and w1lhholt.hng reward when it isn 't ·· When the <.'rcaturcs get good at it, :tC· corfl1ng to ll<>rlon. they take on a certain in dependt•n<·e. hkt• pampered movie stars . ·'Take Sas~v . for ins t ance She s a flolph1n Shl• ha~ four behaviQrs and c;he knov.i. I call for lhL•m 1n a certain order and l!l\'l' llt'r a nll'C fat fish aft<•r t·ach one ''SOMETIMf.S. J UST TO BE ornery, she ~tll do all (our in s ucccsston without s top ping, as 1f to say Let's gel il over v. 1th .· When the n • an' people watching 1t can be rmbarasstng. "That ·s nothing c•ompared with K1mo K1mo IS my ravortl\• dolphin '"There will ht.• :i lug crowd. and I have to lalk to them. 1•xpla1n the behavior I 'm going to dc•monstral<' l\1mo v.ill hear me begto and ..., ii I go down to I h<· lmttom and not come up for five mmut<·"· 'IX minutes. seven minutes. lt•;1\ ang mt· up th1•r(.' trying to <1d ltb Yes, he doc' 11 on puq.><i:-.t'. sort <Jft<'lhng mp to ki'iS 1111 llt>rlon . 28. b('~:.rn working \\ ith !>ea m ,1 m m<il:o. ht· t•nrn•cts vou 1f you c·all them fishes six \l'iff'\ a~o Y.hcn he answered an ad for a t.·uratcir Jl :i s mall Cape Cod dquanum. "I DION'T KNOW WHAT a curator was so I Jpplted I found out that a curator was somchrxh Y.hn dc·ans fish tanks" lit• tx·came tnl<'l'C~tNI 1n tr:11n1ng, :ind twn yc>ars ;1go c·~1me tn thl' aquarium in M) st 1e. one of tht• lwst in the East Hr ltkC's his work so much that he often goes on his day off to the aquarium. where his lra1n1r1g tN·hn1ques an• aµpre<'iatccl . They :ir<'n 'I , he <lisl:ovcrcd, necessarily ;1pprccial· cd at home. H E OISC'OVER E D THAT ONE day when his year-old son, Bri.in, was crying and he told his w1fo. Sheila. not to pick him up until hr s topped Withhold the reward. you sec "She kicked me and picked up the baby.·· Saddleback Group Seeks Volunteers The Saddlcback Summer Stock Company is seek- ing voluntrcrs J8 or older to usher om· night al each of its three major produrtlons. Lillian llellman's clac;sic "Little Foxes" is l!chcdull•d for J une 30. July l and July 5 through 9. "llow the Other Half L ov rs '' .ti n /\Jan A.xckboum comedy runs Jlly 11· lff nnd 20-23 The scnson closes with "Cabaret " on stllge Aug. 4·6ond 10·13 lnterP11tcd persons can call Barbara Bclcht.>r in lhe Soddlf'hOrk Com· muntty College com · munlty ser vices omcc• Ill 831· 7850 or 1132 7813 Advertising Honors Won Trocy Thomas o f Newport Beach wa s a m o ng eight s tudents ' fCrad ualinR from UCl.A scl<.'cted for a n advert1s- tnfC 1ntf'rnshlp by the Los Ange lt's Advtrli111nR C lu b Ms . Thomh Jtraduah.od with a degree in rommunlcatlon. Paper War Lost? Carter Vow to Stern Fl<Jw Fading WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi· t.lcnt Carter's war on paperwork, which stute d like a cavalry charge, has bogged down in the trenches. Tht're were advances on the lax form front, but then the bat- Ue of the bacon report was lost. and the skirmish over truckers' lo~s is going badly. THE FIGHT TO reduce paperwork is nearly s ty m ied, and has been for six months, ac· cording Lo figures l>oon to be re- leased. The r eason ? Pi c k one. Tang led governmental organiza- tion Industry resistance Lack of legal weapons. Most impor· Lant . constant introduction of new programs and regulations, Y.ht c h gcnerall• !>ti ll more paperw1Jrk The now ·defunct ft'ederal Pap er work Com m1 ss1on estimated last year that the an- nual cost of federal paperwork may e xceed $100 billion, or about $500 for each U.S. citizen. MORE R E{'ENTLY, THE president's Office of Manage- ment and Budget estim ated that Americans s ptmd 785 million hours a year filling out federal forms Carter told a group of busi· nessmcn JUSl after he took office that 1f his presiden cy ac· t.•ompltsbed only one thing, it would be ll\, cut the number and eompll•x1ty of ·reguJations, gu1d1:hnes, d1rcct1ves and re quired n·ports Offat•1al estimates show that d unog the fir,t nine months of the Cartl•r admm1strallon. the government n·duced by 9.6 per cent the ttml· taxpayers s pent f1lltng out federal forms. ap- plications .ind other paperwork IH' T IN T II E N E X T s ix month~. ending April 1 , the burden decreased only three- tcnths of I percent. accordinJt to the n<'w fi gures from I.be OM B. "We hit the l'asier ones at the outset," said Stanley E Morris, h('a d Qf OMil 's paperwork s hrinkage shnp. ··1t 's go1og to J:!l'l t<Jugh(•r from hl•re " OM H 01n·ctor .James T Mcin- tyre cont·cdcs tha t 'red"Uc.ing t ed Lapl.! C<lnool he accom pLi~hed overnight," anrf says Carter in· lends to keep plugging a way MOST FEDERAL agencies predi ct new reductions. and there alreadv have been notable declines U1 ·federal JOb·safety forms anri federal red tape linked lo regulation or private pension funds. The Internal Revenue Ser vice, which ge n e ra t es more paperwork than an) other agen· <'Y. says tl has t•ut tax-f1hnlf lime by mon• than JO percent since January 1977 Hut papel'work has increased s haq>ly dst>whcrc. generaled by <'qua l employme nt regulations and by new t r>ntrols on toxic l'IH•rnic•u ls, sewage and other pollul1on EVEN SOME OLO r egula tions Co11tract Fraud Probed By Pane l \\'ASllTNCTON <AP > Every vear, says patnt1ng contractor Rohert A Lowr~. the corridors o f I h e P <' n t :1 J! on a pp c ar lo h1•1•oml' larj?cr <11HI n ·qu1rc more paint In fa ct. Lowrv insists, 1f the hu1lcling were as large as lhe p~11nt1ng contral't ~ often state, it "shoulri now be silting in the Potomac RivN" instead of a half mile away as actually 1s Lhe case. T H F. MARYi.AND cont ractor was a k<·v witness before a Sena te s ubcomm1ttec· examining <·harges tha t ~ove rnm en t bureaucrats a nd unscrupulous <'onlractors often join to write contracLc; for work that is never done )I A trio of officials from the General Services Administra· tum . "h1ch admm1slers lhe con· lr':icts. acknowledged that a re- t' en t 1nvcsl1Aat1o n s ho wed widespread fraud. much of it in the Washington area. • Vincf'nt Alto. who six weeks 31{0 was named acting inspector general of GSA, estimated that fraucl Is costing tlw taxpayer about $(''6 million u year and that "more than 500" f(Overnmenl <>rn ployees 11nd contractors mi~ht be involved . LOWRY, OF SUB U RBAN MarylMd, Silid he went out or business aftf'r he refuNCd to cooperate with contractors ond with government <'mployees who agree to ovt<rlook work not done in return Cor hal( of lho pro- ceed s. "In 1973, I painted the third noor corridor of lhc Pentaeon, which at that time contained 500.000 square l et or palna..bl surface," ~wry explained. PAPER FOOD FOR BUREAUCRACY Avalanche Defies Presidents like the bacon r eport CJ nd t ru c kers' Jogs are h a rd y varieties that resist atlempL, at weeding. T h e governme nt requires long-haul truckers lo fill out dai · ly logs, on pain of fines up lo $500, showing how they spent each 15-minute segmeot of their day. The job lakes an «.>st1mated three minutes a day plus more lime for eoilecung. sortinJt. evaluating and st o ring the forms. which must be ke pt ror a full year. Federal truck-safety enfo rcers say the forms help keep fatigued drivers awav from the wheel Federal regulations limit t he time that long-haul truckers can drive between rest periods. The logs enable the 128 inspectors from the Bureau of Motor Car- ner Safety to keep track of 4 million trucke rs, or so goes the argument. KENNETH PIERSON, TllF. bureau's deputy director, says lhat under prodding by OMB's paper tigers he's hared a prtviitc• consultant to explore ways to do the job without t he logs. Hul Pie rson says he C':tn't 1mai.:1nc what alternatives will be ~ug gested. As for bacon, the Agr iculture Department require~ meat pro ccssers to send in weekly re· ports on lhcir production. 1nclud ing, a m ong other things, the amount of bacon they 'heed Earlier this year the depart ment lrted to make tht· r er><>rt monthly, i nstcad of wct·kly, estim atmg that would s~vc pro cessors more than 1110.uoo hours of form-filling annually 8l'T TUE PROCESSORS tn· s1stcd lhat they need the weekly report themselves. A monthly report "would j ust be h1stor~. 11 wouldn·t do us any i?ood for planning, .. says Ewen Wtlson. t•hi<•f econom ist for the .'\mc.•rican Mt•at Institute , the Q'll'alpal:kcrs' tradt.• association. Thi.' bacon fi gures are ei:.pt•t•1ally prize<! hy those who speculate 111 the 01ult1-billiun- d o l I a r pork bt>ll y futur es market. anrf also by the Com· m od1ty Futures Trading Com m1 ss1un . the fed e r al a gcnc\ charged \\tlh keepin~ pork·bell~ t ra~t·rs honest. R<.•s ult the hacon report stall 1s y, eel-ly FOR SOME, THE paperwork problem 1s ~e ttin g wors e Farmers spend ab11ut 10 pcrct:nl more lime fillmg out .ippltcalion forms for loan~ and s ubsidies from the Carter adm1n1strat1Qn th;rn undt'r lh<.' frcc-markt't p11l1<:1cs of the Nixon and Ford yt•ars The Environmenta l Prole<·tton Agcnc·y mcrc·ased paperwork for business and stale and local gov l'rnmt•nts h~ 21 percent in th<.' first nine m<mths of the Cartl•r administration and 9 perc<!nl more tn lhl' 11t•xt six monU1s. dt'sp1H• what has been cited as a modt'l paperwork-reduction pro- ~ram This was largely because !-:Pi\ \\aS ~IVl'n the new job of regul~1t1ng pollution from tox1t' tndus tn.11 tlwm1cals . which had not t><'t'n controlled before 1977 "Thl'n' s no gelling amund ttw fact !hat hfe gels more com pltC'.tll•d <'very day," observed EP/\ 'J><>kc:.man Christian Rice. IRS Guilty Red Tape Creators Tagged WASHINGTON < /\ P ) Thf' biggest generator of federal paper work is the lntc•rnal RC'vf!nuc Service. which accounts for 78 percent Of the hours which the publtc Sptmds dealing Wit h federal forms, accol'din~ to official estimates Here arc the five b1 g~c!ll r reators or federal red tape and th€' time the public spends each year r1llmg out their forms, as estimated by the president's Office of Mana~e ment a nd Budget. -IRS : 612.6 million hours HEW: 43 6 million ~ Independent regulatory commissions 40 R m1ll1on -Labor Department 18 G m1ll1on -Agriculture Department 10 3 million THE mtB SAYS THE MO'ST burdensome feder al tn<'ome· tax forms, as m easured b~ the number of hours spent f1lh ng them out, are: -Form 1040, ind1v1dual income tax return, 149 million hours. -Form W 2, wage and tax statement for each e mployee, 109 million. Form 941, employers quarterly return for lnx w1thhhold· ang, 87 million. Form 1099, rcnipts or Interest and dividends, 53.7 million. -Form l040A. lncl ividunl incom e l ax retur n short form; 32.8 million. AMONG NON·T1\X FORMS. OMR !!Sy!! the rive most burdensome federal forms. as measured by the time the public spends filling them out, Me: -FCC radio station progrnm logs, 18 2 mllllon hours. -,HEW form!! rt>questlng medlcarc ~upplcmenlal insurance benefits. 10 5 million. -FCCtelevlsion!ltallon projlrom IOl(s. 4 4 m1Jhon -HUD ccrti!1cat.Jon required by Real ~•t• S.tUement Procedures l\cl, 4 2 m illion , Labor Department ~late employme nt !lervict application. 3.9 mllhon. , C l OA1LY PILOT The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad (642-5678) One Call Service Faat Credit Approval ~~!.~.~-·-~···~~:::!.~~~ ........ ~!.~.~ •...... ~:!.~~~ ....••. ~:::!.~~~ ........ ~!!!.~.~ ....... ~:!.F;':.~~ ......• J~.~!':'!:. ...... . ._...... 1002 ....-at 1002 CieMt".. 1002 G........i 1002 GtMral 1002 G.......af 1002 G...... 1002 GN«al IOOZ ••.•..........•....•••. ··••··•····•··········· ......................................................................................................................................... ... EQUAL HOUSING OPPOIHUNll V hlll..,.'s Motiu: A1J real estate advertised ID tJus newspaper 1s sub- Ject to the Federal Fa1 Housing Act of 196 wh.ich makes 1t illegal l advertise "any p re · ference, h m1tat1on, o dlscnm1nataon based o race, color. rehg1on, sex. « national ongm, or an inleotion to make any such preference, llmila· lion, or dl!tcnm1natton." IACK l.AY Fine 4. bdrm . 212 balh farruly home on quiet cul de sac. Ovet"sized pool. playhouse. extra storage. Reduced to $179,000. MES.A VERDE Attractive 4 bdrm., 2 ba. home in immac condition. $99.000. IAYNOHT Several fine bayfront homes with pier & slips BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 3 4 1 Bo ~1de Orno1t' N B 6 75 -6161 GttWf"OI I 002 G.-rol I 002 11us a:-ewspaper wall no •••• •• • ••• •• ••••••••••• ••• ••. ••• •• •• •• •••••••• knowingly accept any ---------i advertising for real HARIORVIEW HILLS 2 STORY-4 IB>RM e:;tate which t!t m viola-Sp EC TAC U.L AR. +POOL-FAM RM tid"n oft~ law forever Calalma. ocean & IEACH ---------views . Huge main -Walk lo the pounding ERRORS: .Adnrli~ should chedi tt.eir ads daity and report ..... rars i,...,.diahfy. TM DAILY PILOT crHumu liability for the first itt- cornct iMertion otiy. •............•......... 1002 ....................... "ABANDONED" 3 BR. l '• RA w wall of J?las~ O\erlook1ng cov- ned danct• pavtlwn G•Runtic l1v1n.: room, i:ourmel k 1tchcn w /all new appl & formal dm mg Sep master swte & overs1ied <'hildrens quarters. Loe un curv- ing, tree-lim•d street m better part of Orange Co. Low down to vets. Full pnce9>7.000 KateUa Realty 847-606 I 546-9366 t.cnance free lot This 3 swi from this execllllve Bdrm + family room 2 story home. Hallan en· home IS an immaculate try. huge rooms. vaulted Jewel. ffighly upgraded. ce1lmgs To see 1s to buy air cond., even a mini CaJI 96.1-7881. pulling green! For the <•Hi'" '· ' • •, • . • di.seeming buyer !teekmg [ ~ 1 ~ ~~rveanci~y _el~~~~~d a~~ ~t~ld31l1 $275.000. . . BIKETO IEA.CH H igh l y upgraded . beaut1fuJly landscape<f 5 --------i bedroom home less then MOUHT AIN IETREA T FOREST FALLS San Bernardino .National Park f'• ve bedroom , 10 year:. old This home ts Cor large fam1hes or farrulies that would ltke some extra room This is a must see & pn1:ed well below market at $85.500 CALL 751-3191 c;::: SELECT I PROPERTIES study, hobby room, ram•· IE.ACH RETREAT ly room. Two fireplaces, VIEW $6 I ,900 & above the smog, almost l,.2 acre includes Steps to pounding surf & home plus two loL'l Call crystal sand Back yard for details IS Bay area playRround ' COLE OF HEWPORT Winding wooden walk Rr: • r EST "'TE REALTORS ways to secluded entry, ~ "" gourmet kitchen. step· MANAGEMENT 675-5511 down conversation area OPPORTU +fireplace Suns hine HITY breakfast patio, pool. ~COATS & WALLACE ~REAL ESTATE, INC. A LOCAUV OWNED COMPANY Sl~VING THE SOUTH COASJ AREA SINCE 1963 2·1·2"s SIDE IY SIDE -Eastside Costa Mesa location for the investor or builder. We have 2-R·2 lots, each with an income producing income unit on it. Prices begin at $90,000. Call 640-6161 PIOl.ATE S.ALE -Older 3 BR, as is, but upgraded copper plumbing, painted, etc. 70xll0 lot, nice tree.lined street. Asking $67 ,000 but submit any offer -no matter what! Cal 546-4141 Serving Cost a Mes a-Irvine Huntington B each·N ewport Beach !'!~~!'! .......... !?~~1!'!~:-! .......... !?.~~ ESLEY N 1\.YLOR CO REALTORS since HM N!W EXCLUSIVE-$174,900 Well known designer, featured in L.A. Home Magazine, designed the living & dining rooms of this highly customized 2 bdrm, 2 bath Big Canyon Townhome Price rncfudes L . R. & D.R. furnishings. Really plush! WESLEY M. TAYLOR CO., REALTORS 21 I I San Je>aqlliw Hits Rood NEWPORT CENTER. N.t . 644-4910 GeMral I 002 Gffffal 1001 .....•....•...............•................... SPYGLASS HIU The perfect family home, 6 BR. 41tl BA, formal dining, game room. maids quarters. A gorgeous Cape Cod m CdM school district SJB.S.000 ~ L l<;~i1 1t1 \ll' " 1 \ 7m l Cois1 H•1 Co1on1 dtl M1r .. THE WOOD$" GHAT ADULT CONDO! 2 bdnns, frml din rm . F1 lA. VA or conventional buyers welcome. Great area has secunty gate entry, pool, rec hall. Condo 1s air cond1t1oncd & e.reat pnce o1 only $78,900 includes washer. dryer & refrigerator. Call today. 545-9491 A prime presliRious EASTSIDE jacuzzi, volleybal I ' Newport Beach location. VA Terms. great 4 Bdrm Garden I 1ving at at 's ---------\ top local firm with 2bathfamilyhomeinex-ranest. Call quick ! C I r.___L. years or successful ex· cellent location Pnced 847-60l0.oan t ~ IH'rtenr<' Newport lo sell at only $84,500. l•IHll•t'»•' , ""'"'"', lnWntcJiff Real F..5tate lk•ach n•al l'state ex Call 54&58HO [ -~ The dream home of a lJ"ncnce prderrt!d A re· ~ ' ·. special area. Country .iJ opportunity to grow & kitchen. 3 lgc bdrms. hl'lp others Applic;ittons brick entry. beautiful ht-Id m stnct confidence. patio, skyhtes. blln 1-'lease reply to Ad it282. ------------------1 bookshelves. shake roor, Oaaly Pilot. P O. Box OHL Y $49 ,500 many other features. As· 1560. Co:;ta Mei.a, Calif HANDYMAN'S Super sharp 2 BR condo. sumable 1st TO. ~ DREAM. all new carpets and • ---Garage fully insulated. pamt. Proressional de IEAUTIFUL & THANKS Built 1n work bench cor Super location Sft.ACIOUS MR. JARVIS Large lot with RV ac· Adult complex (16 yrs or "CiREIHIROOK"! cess Newly p ainted, over). Dill you know that now paneling and wallpaper. l'J ----....-~---·--------·I 2 story, 4 bdrms. fmly yuu can arrord more Four Bedroom Home in I rm . fr ml din rm . house for your money? Mesa North. Truly a 962·4471 V:::)546·8103 ---------cathedral ceiling:. in hv r>ue tu property tax re Great Buy for $7S,OOO. ---------1 rm & mstr bdrm. lluge dU('llons. your payment 541>-2313 loft overlooks llv rm. will be lo"' er than ever. , .• .. ·• , ·. , . ::fXER UPPER nus lge lvly home 1s m ~~'~e c~:r ~uis :ha~~ fa linia§;J..I! $59•5oo ~;s,~~na~J~0~a~d~~a~~0ci ~~Ta0b7~\~~~~or ~~~~! L~Jifuijjfj S<>~~:~ T~ ~0i:" + PRIME E-SIDE ~rs~;en~7. ~r~~!/~ has never been a better pool! A handyman's $79,500 only$123,500.545·9491. llmetobuythunNOW' 1---------parad1Se! Pa111t and pro 540-3666 6 IB>ROOMS flt and you have yourseir 2 Bedrm, I~• bath. RV an estate Excellent storage, alley access. IRING FAMILY Tnhm Living. Call qwck, Call Almost '>"I acre in 847·6010 SHINGLES. P.AMES AND rtCICETS! Classic old Corona d el Mar charmer : Grey shingled Cape Cod 3 bedroom. 2 story with paned windows and a white picket fence Other old fashioned features include clipped ceilings. French doors and a pleasant back ya rd bordered by a picturesque timeworn brick wall To help with the payments there's a 1 bedroom income unit over the ~arage. out in back. A Unique llomC' al $212 ,000. U~IVU~ ti()MI:§ REALTORS' 6756000 2443 East Coast Highway. Coro11a del Mar .ilso in M•·< 1 V1·11k JI !.AG !>990 ?'~:! .......... !?.~~!!'!!~~~:! .......... !?.~~ TRANSFERRED They hate to leave, but dad was transferred & a quick sale is in order. Come see this Royal home that's re- ady for you 3 Bedroom, spacious Jiv- ing room with f 1replace, a iry kitchen & bright. friendly family room & big pn v ate yard all for only $8.5,950. Call: M.A. MATHEIS. REALTOR 964-1926 or 551-0567 G~ral 1002 Ge-neral 1002 ..•...•.•.............. DOVER SHORES $325,000 Vei; presti~10U!> t·u~tom execut1"e homi:' Palatial gated entq Formal living & dininJ!' roorru.. Fabulous k1tcheQ & breakfast room load:. of space LarRe dlxe family room Wet bar Luxurious ly lari:e & pn\ate masler wing Roman bath. Walkmm ••••••••••••••••••••••• CRAWFORD CA.MY OM North Tustin a rea, be<1ul.l.(uJ l'<>untrY settmg on 1• acre with view or hllls Space for RV. 3 car garage, l year old: call 546-5880 ~HERITAGE • REALTORS wardroben Ma1d 's1---------quarters , Superhly •--------- landscaped! Ownt•r will ftnance To see 1s to lov e -Come by toduv 673-MSO t .f1 '• t I • ' ·. ST ARTER HOME Vacant with a FAN TASTlC OCEAN VIF:W. Large lar~e yard. Freshly pamted 3 Bdrm home wa1tmg for a fam1 ly Close to harbor. parks & srhools. $47 .500 CaH 729-5966 fw yow oppt. WALLA.CE & CO. REALTORS DESIGN&> FOR EXECUTIVE LIVIMG This beautifully u p · graded Buccola Home! Spacious Living Room with big Firepla\!e. Large Master Bedroom, highly upgraded with private entrance to garden area. Slump stone planters highlight the room-backyard . Mesa Verde Living at its Best! $129,000. Call 54&2313 """'' • '• '" ·,. r")gf Ii,; (• [®IH~Hiil RB>UCB> $3,000 Maplewood Estates area nN .. r > • • ''"' 1 ,,, .,, 1 645-9161 .,.,Oo••• C.••••·· of Orange. A really µ~ •1 Have somethmg lose II? Classified ads do it welt CUSTOM RAMCH $139,500. 4 BR. Fam Rm. wetbar . large exec home. S Coast Plaia area. New paint, total upgrade. Super yard. Check this Olll 1 'TT Se\11lle. fully loaded l!I.~ miles $200 cash & take over lse at S2461mo <..'<tll ~ 7727 24hrs. CLASSIFIED INDEX J t Place Yaw A( Call 642·5678 EHottS Athorlho,. •lt•wl<I <MC~ ....W .. ....., ... tt ,.,,.,., .,,..,. .._..Mrt.ly. n.. DAILY f'llOT .. _. 11.wtity ,.,. .... flnt '"'"""d •OHt•-"""Y HOUSfS FOR SAlf 1001. 1100 spacious family home for . ' ·• act 1 ve people. Lols of square footage which ID· eludes large separate ram1ly room, 1·ombma lion den study, formal dining room and two separate master suites $120,000 BAY &OCEAN VIEW $295, 000 Located 1n one o f - Newport's most des1ra WAHlvRONT ble areas. this elegant HOMF" home provides gracious REAL ESTATE living in the midst of a _____ 6_3_1-_14_o_o __ 1 Grecian atmosphere Unu C-Omes complete with tile pool & Grecian fountains OLD HOUSE surrounded by an abun- 2 Bed room, cop per dance oftrees & ent'losed plumbing, 220. separate by a wtute brick wall to garage & close lo insure the ultimate In schools, shopping. A privacy. Newport Beach great home for rental living at lls finest. In· with a positive cash now. quire today. &46-7711 ~~~~ ·c~t1~r~~:, o f (~l\'Mi:JJiiltJii t;; SELECT Rell E'ltate ,f;:V?j\ STAR GA'ZE~1C"~ u1ts !11<1\YRl\•ll\-.; Ill•• /'11: w~ • 11 ~ Y°"'' 0011; Acfrt,i f C1t•d• 11. , 1, .. • .. ,.'1--.,,,. '' ~tt'Otd•lti"I I ,~. ~tOtl ..,. 14 ..,: .., .. , 9 f4 7l-T d'""'' p • ,I I ' l V"').j"' ·~·'SS-S6.al-I ,,od,.')f he'"'" ""1 nqt;.,~._, : !: ~: ~( ot v ~ lt d·oc. "''''" •9r t lMty )' To ,,~ JJ(f'O"t• l •n.vr. llh •(•titfl~t )4itr..tt""9 )0.)1 l~~o•u1 &C~ti 'IP'fot It ..Clliy l1 To tWP'W" le, ... ll•1._,, l9'i<M!I • tUP·.., to!•IY 4ot SA'.,, ""' .,~ .. , ''~"' .,~'°" fl To t.llt1~ ,. """<-* .... ,. I\ Afl'ld ·~ Gont.a.ttd t•Att...O .. A ''~"" •1•m~ ,,,...... 4t~.no• llW•ll ... .._~ """"===i JO~wt'""'nr ~ ... ~ ,., , .. __.., ~· c..-.. .... 11 .. Yll-Jll• \l lM4 J•A ~A nNiot 1a ,...,~ ... "'" ,.~ ll ShovlO ~, ,,.,..-c. .. 6t k • "~°'. ur .. ... ,.., ., o., fl!lll-...... 880..·"'9 eot-. "'O 10°'""' ,,,.,.~. "'"' '3Gt~w .. -, 14~111 l~WttP\ ,. " "on~· 180.ttfOti'I '9l-110a... ft•-llMt IJi(tfl"tj .. .......... 116-•l••r• KOU IO f II ' ~ev11~ l•~1'1 •1 ·" •) 11).1~ • )A0tMAMVS ,,.rr1 I> I A Ct( I -r ti 6 ,~,. ll 1~ NF.W custom hu1 It, ranch st yle ex<'rut1v1• home ' lkauttful bn«k facade Ma's" e stone f'Ja RED CARPET' ·-645-3474 fireplace. Large family r m w / 2 n d b r 1'oe k A HAPPY HOME Ci re p I a t• e E x t r a This spotless 2 story Con · spacious kitchen 4 dowill make you happy• Bed rm s. 3 bath<; Tlus 3 bedroom charmer Detacht>d bonus room 1 won't last! Pnced at only Mature rruil trees ~1.500.Calltodayforde· Choose your lench•r ' ta1ls 963·7881 Owner may help fmance o.., '111 ., • 1 '• ,,, '"H' " 1 too! Call today 752· 17tl0 [ ~ m1 ,.,.,,,,., ,, .... ~l:wliW . ~fill] UMrrs u~rr~ . -*VETS* ODOWN-OCLOSING Homes mall areas of ORMIG~(;()UNTY VET AGT. Two4-pexes Xlnl rental areas. owner may carry $911,500 call 54().99'l2 ARE YOU A. DISCRIMINATING BUYER! then come & see this gorgeous 2 sty. 4 BR home situated high on a hill w/an ocean & canyon view. Too many amenities to describe in this ad, so call! Exclusive agent. $143,900. LOOKING FOR A COUNTRY CLUB ATMOSPHERE? Situated right on the fairway , adjacent to the 3rd green, this elegant 4 BR St. Andrews model will tum you on! Refreshing ocean breezes & a typically breathtaking Laguna Niguel view will help make it a dream come t r ue. It's spac & modem & won't last long. Exclusive agent. $239,500. ARE YOU A BUDGET CONSCIOUS BUYER? READ THIS AD! 3 BR, 1% BA. located in desirable El Toro. Screened in patio, large backyard w/orange & apple trees, brick BBQ, just perfect for lhe outdoor life. The interior is completely carpeted & draped . Built·in kitchen, cozy fireplace. No down GI. miD. down FHA. or conventional & seller wHI help w/buyer's closing costs! $73,900. Exclusive agent. ARE YOU LOOKING FOR YOUR FIRST HOME? 2 BR. studio typ_e condo. Private bath on each BR. Lush & green patio. The association includes: pools, s pas, parks, cable lv , exterior maint. Vacant. Anxious seller. $75,900. Exclusive agent. 640-9900 1470 Jamboree Rd , Newport Bcb. <.:hamber of Commerce Bldl(. •••••••••••••••••••••• TWO DUPLEXES One oceanfront & adjoin· Ing one on Balboa Blvd., must be sold together. Oceanfront has 2 bdrm., 2 ba. lower & 3 bdrm .. 2 ba. upper; blvd. duplex is 3-story with ocean & bay views; 3 bdrms .. 2 ba. each unit. All units exceptionally spacious with lots of extras. Priced at $650.000 673-3663 646-8723 Eves AMOTHE:R DUPLEX 1002. ••••••••••••••••••••••• .AYALOHSln Small corner lot with room for cozy cott.&ge. Will have ocean view, and convenient location for wilting, 1boppin1 and beach fun. CaU for de· t.a.lls . 642-5200 j PETE J BARRETT \,. REALTY Close to beach: 2bdrms.,1--------- 2 baths each; large yard. Upper has some view. Owner anxious! S189,500 67J.3663 673·8086 Eves associated BROKERS-RE AL TORS JOH W 8ofbn~ 671-Jblll OWNS DESPH.ATE Must be sold this week for best cir. No qualify. l.ng, 1mmed possession. 1 Yr. old 3 BR, 2'12 BA con· do. New redwood hot tub in pvt. patio. Prine. only. Call John agt at 962· 7788 5.ACRES ________ _. A builder's dream, with COROMA DEL MAR TRIPLEX A rarity in Corona del Mar · a legal 3 unit pro- perty, l·blk. above Bag C-Orona Beach. Thb 1s ""'e of our best rental areas. $215.000, Owner will help finance BAY& BEACH panoramic ocean view, Jlt'il m.Ulutes from Oana Point Yacht Harbor . Horses O.K. Can you vis· uahzc white rail fences. lenrus court, swimming, pool. etc .• etc." A fine in- vestment al $350,000; set among other magnif1 cent estates ! I\ 01vision or llarhor lnve!'itmcnl Co. Tnplex. 2 !Sr eacn. :ml3 450 NEWPORT CTR. DR. P CM •125 000 759 Nil\ omona, . .. • . 1J1J Marshall Rl ty, e-75-4600. pTHBt Rf.Al ISfATf 1200. 2t00 a94TALS JI00·400 T' PROPERTIES Wan~ Ad Results G42 5678 11f.O'ht Yle•t 191• 680- 17A.chort .... ~,..,. "'°"" toe..~ Call 541-0800 Or&~ GeMraf 1002 G ........ 1002 IUSIHlSS, IHVfSTM94T RHAHCI soos .sou AHHOUHCEM94TS 1100 1.0ST & FOUND IJOO '8tSOKALS suo .. HU~I Dl•ICTOH •000 SCHOOLS6 IMSTaucno.. 100• X>ISWAHTtD 7071 .Hal' w AlfTID 7100 MBtCH.UIOISI ......... ... TOTOU IOO 10.us 'MARIHI ~IT MtO.tOtO nAMWOllfATI~ .......... AUTOMOllLll UI0·9'74 • S©~~lv\-~t-~s· Tliof lnfri9uin9 Word Gome wifh o Chudlt o•-·o• .. _, "' "'* '°"'' "'0""h'-d """"d' ~ low IO tor"' fowt ltf'IDl41! wo•d• RA ti R 0 T 11 I r I I SUP EA r 11 I I I lfOWAt1 I~ .. ~ • Ji i I I A $1Qn on • We r419air truek . _ ~ . . • Invite 111 to yO\lr nexi ------........ --·· I B I R LA TI I I I I' I ' o c _,.,,... .... ~""'"· qvOl9jl '-· _. _ __._.__ ..... __., _ __....__, hy l+h•"'fl '"' th• ~·Ut,..~ ~tJ~ ..,,__ d..-.t.,-o f,OM ttt• No J bfl"iiu• :JO.. 600rM1W 6•V (.'-'c.icul GtMcal 1002 Gwrei 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• fllc~~.!.~~ .AN EST.ATE IN WOODMIDGI! Very few areas have excited the imagination like "The Estates." The very best qualities of home and condo. combined in this lovely 2 Bdrm. den. 2 bath, single level .. J elf erson ". Price realistically at $104,950. • COl.OWILL IAl«9I co. 6'4·9060 .,,, .... ~ .... u.1.-0 . IN Nl['MllORT Cf.NTli. 1002 GeMrcll 1002 ····•····•······•·····• .............••••.....• cae: llDIDE ELKINS CD~ QVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE ROOM FOR EXTRA UNIT R 2 F:a s t s 1dc BeautJfully Remodeled 3 Bedroom, 3 Bath Home In Move·ln Condition. All Plans Approvrd For A 3 Bedroom 2 flalh Addition. Flexible Terms . Call For Dclnils. 631-1800 .••.................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• -~ macnab I lrvtne realty A HOME Foa F.AMIL Y UVING Comfortable home w/4 lg. BRs & terrific family rm off huge patio + pool-size yard. Done in neutral t90es. Lovely neighborhood close to best schools. Park & shopping. Seller transrerred & rorc~ to leave . $175,000. Jane Paquin 642·8235. <F·122) M2·123S M4-6200 tOI Dover Drive H•rbcW View c.anear lrvlne at C.ITIJIU1 V•li.y Cent.r 7$2-1414 : , l ~ 'f .. I • t !=.~~ ....... ~!.~~~ ........ ~!!!.~.~ ....... ~!.~~~~ ....... ~~.~~~ ...... .'.!~:~!':!~~~....... Monday,Junt26, 1978 OAILVPll.OT (,11 91 I flll 1001 dl&M. 1022 ~~ ....... ~~.~~ 1 ............ 1040 ~~~~ ..... ~~.~~ ~~~~ ..... ~~.~~ ~~::!!.~~.~~ ........ ~:!:.~~ ....... S.C~ 1071 ............... .... .. . . ... .. .. .. .. .. ... .. . .. . . .... ... .. .. .. . ..... ... . ·------------------·~ 2 STCHY C )lJr 20.. Lra cov p11uo, ... ..,... leach I 069 Me~ lteth I 069 ....................... ~ .. -+ -.. JASMIN! IEB vacut. M~H dcl Mar. .., .. + POOL ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• • COU.....,.Y .. -_.. Stunn1n& 3 Bdrm. 2 bath, SSl.-.7<>. " "'"' + ..... ,... tam rm. 2 J>atloa PTof. ---+HACH 5'1,500 OUTSTAMDIHG OPPOITUHITY SITTING t.onted Har beach decor•led thnl-oul Teo· sure EASTSIDI Pnme Huntl .. atoo Beach PllCI co lnv•t ln NB. Lovely to ... _ · ~·• •-t _, .... 1 1 .... ILU-s 1 ...... b .._ But clo&e u1e beach• • '11.000 ummab .. lo.'lD. QI.I courta, ...,... .. )ac. .ovety 3 Br. 2 ba, fam rm lotatlon our achoo s. " rT dup ex .,..tween ay .. See Uua brand new offer· No mw loan COfttl Best Aaklol $2'5,000 by w/crn.y frplc &r wctbar. parlt1, sbopplna centers Summufu.n w/ml.ncare. oce an. Owner will I nc that p r ovides • financing available. Act owner 5"-8116'1 A.11 neat ab D pin Low "aolf courae. SlSSO total 1lus lvly 3 bdrm, 3 ba la rinance. Michael Real apacious fmly l.m.ng at ; Now! ~96S-676'7 V'f(i,LASS HILL price lnclud~s pvt ln law lnvesunent to quaillyioa • vucant & Nady for oc-Estate. 873·8880. dya. it.a nnnt In the 3 bd, 2 ba • Ol'f•1•119., ..... , ~·, quartt:n w/pvt entrance buyers. Owner will help cupancy Lvly crptlng, 968-8880, eves. ~eauty Jult reduced , [ fii 1Jll11'1!·1J1 ~~t;o::!;o12s1~~ ~~8o~0\';~Reva~to{!!eti ~~!~C:i1~~6'7advao· CUSTOM REDWOOD HOME :~~~=~~t~!i!~:: $10,000 On Sll9.~.6'6-'T7ll. ,,,., £iLWllJ) corner lot. Wltb 20% land1c1Apin& & much lw>tNr11Y ·llH1JN'"'t<l"' 1· Cloletoscboolll,parks & . ----I .. =·-=-down, owner will c•rr)' much more Just Uated [ .-,ma fii LI -TN• ..... It perhctty llNahd to .... poola. End unit w /great ... Cr.cit Needed $54,SOO ~~=::~~%$268,500, ·~~!!~:;:~~$~' ~; ~@'•(~ =~~.: ::0":';.1-:.:.~..;~·· greeobeltview.'l~IM~t. ~~~fn 3p~·~d.:~:~ C5i1 Walker & lee Real Estate lllJI! ... n OCE....... n.. Wartllrioa Co. -.. n: -oocl I ·-· Eatlblutf. Paymeota OD· "~ Af"lll dyna-.. kite"" a rffw •--l)' SUMI. per mo. Owner MESA VERDE NICISLASHID L{llf9' faMJy room watt. wet bcr IR oclclff• will finance. nurryd ft f,\v ~ I ,U i I llYlPi\1 JV •SAN JUAN VlLLAGe• 3Br, t~Ba Condo, pool. lake. str eams, RV atoraae,. Priced below mkt for q uick sale. lJnmed pou. S61.500 Why rent T Spectacular vallHll Cory townhome mreat! 3 large Bdrms! Enterta1nen pa\iol Teo· nis courts! FHA Terms! Can't last at this price!! 6U 1\1 llJU•, '''-\. l l l JPt U~ 3 bdrm, 2 ba, ram rm. up SI O,OOO to th r • • b • d r o o,., I. a• d l 'Ii HARl9R VIEW woo't lut. #Uk tor E .. I 00/o DOWN OK! .. graded, beitut. red brick Extr em ely anxious . b.tht. •. $279.000. M~.a.co Chem0w9M·2455Agent. plante r in patio. By 499 45*' l ~~ · owner. 557.5591 Open Owo.er'a purchuedot.her • ~ Thil expanded bome 111 MIWPORTHTS. By ownr 64().1037 home. 4 Br, 2~ ba, 3 Bdrm •· f il JlouseSat /SUn 12-4 jmt nght ror entertain· , • am Y rm., formal din area, cozy meot. Game room with like new home. with Owner will help ftnance charml.nc 2 BR home on R·2 Jot w /room to add 2nd unit. Pnced to sell al ---------1 frplc ln llv rm, spacious 500 square reel and shingled walls. beams. l!ACHHAVEM $11,500 '"Hun'y. call 645-0303 FOR ESTE OLSON Sl38$). Agt. 640-5112· let's gourmet kitchen w/Jrg lrrN 10441LOCJll'Mlhoth 1041 custom wall unita. Close rouah wood Ir a unique eating area, lrg fam rm ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •~ belt S"hOOI and bri-,_ frnlc ..,4""""" overlooking your 17x36 "'green • ~ · "" •,. · ~ .,,..,.,. Costa Mesa t 024 Make Fudae! pool oo a quiet cul-de·sac YICTotllAM ••••••••••••••••••••••• Gourmet klt~en. 3 bedrooms. dl!n, eating area, family room and 2 fireplaces. Pool. too' $12A,950. BKR. 540 1720. ~· ~pagir:~.edy~;d°'!~ PRICE REDUCED Luxuriate! and your own land. Call CHAIMH ~ ........ \ ..... OCEAN lllEEll ___ •_·~----~---! &6monew,3Br.21.7ba. -sura DUPLEX hm w JV A terms. Agl perfect loc. w/loads of In this Temple Hills us oow. '152·1920 and ask 3 Bdrm .• old fashioned pnvacy Submit your 3 bedroom Plan 43 in landmark of wood and for John Shea, our bomewithoakrtn .. tugh terms. Hurry. Culverdale. A super loca· glass. 3 BR. a large den Harbor View Spec1ati~t. ceilings, leaded glau & Huntington 8each1-549-80GZ ___ . _____ _ -duple& in resldeolial REDUCB> mirrored walls and ocean e ow. • cuestquarters. $152,000. ii Uon with brick fireplace anddaul.mg views or the J QUAIL. wrought iron; separate I ,,0.43,1 and large patio areas. b I S225 00-0 area. Live in one-rent 4 Br, 2 ba, formal dining. TARBELL '>ne. J ust $0,000 moves briclt frpk, corner lot, 2 you in, Call 962·7788. or gar 900 Ooitwood. 1CEY IEALTOtlS Phone 751-0774 eves. ..#I In Califomia" -@ ::::'b"""' ..... eau '°' "" PLACE ~:.= .... ~tan ,.,;·.=!~· iHSiit MOVIMG?n •••POOL••* •4 BR, 2\.ll BA • /IRB>UCED f/1•,11 I .1 rl• / •11 •iuo 1,,,.,"" vu· Stu·•·I 494 9473 ')44 0116 EXCLUSIVE ii HST Need hoo.!lng inro '> Call toll free 1.80(). 525"6920 <:oil Pk 751·3910 Rkh agt "Hurry !!~ Sel l er traosft"rrcd -'M csa IMMACULATE 4 br Verde estate between 2 Jsl spent $6000 in up· golf courses, 4Br, 3400 sq grades. '$89,900 tm -Ct,Jyrsold,1188,900. By BEACH CONDO 3 BDR 217 ba, dbl gar, $66,000. 963-7079 or 652-4278 llGCAHYOM Elegant El Dorado townhouse in Big canyon has 3 bdrms. 2~ ba. is close to pool, jacuzzi & tennis courts. Sunken Liv rm, wet bar, frml dm rm, big mslr bdrm w /balcony. Owner will MIWPORT SHORIS Immaculate 3 Bdrm. 2 WnfwliMhr f'l.!8 ba beach house dream. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Only $109,000. Call now VA/FHA TERMS ROOMMATES 1042 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ext. GU'l4 or GU40 No obligation. A service ol Affiliated Independent Brokers. mediale -occup nr best agent lieth . (714) ll UN TING T () N schools. '151-1806 P .P 964-2431, 963·9101 or (714> HAR 8 0 UR ARE A RANCH REALTY Two large master suites. each with a full bath. walk m closet & sundeck are yours in lhls fabulous new 3 Bdrm E n glish Tudor residence The craltsmanstup is like a Stradivarius violin. And the decor is impeccable. Call for an appointment AgtSSS-4556 3Br, 2Ba. db) gar, Lrg bckyd. Move in cond. ~.000. Bkr, 536-1493. lease. 7SS.1501. 3 Br. 2 Ba, r m to add on. Offwt' RNA Eatat. Qua.int 2 story, lg lot. •••••••••••••••• ••••••• 83.5-0211.pager #9515 EXECUTIVE DUPLEX 551-2000 ... _________ 1 3 bdr beauty, bag back Scou llealtys:J6..7533 --------- yard. Must sell Asking TOP LOC. Mesa <lei_ Mar. ----"'-----1 ~ 90/o Loan WATERAtOHT $66,400. Call Ivan 2 sty, 4br. 3ba. danmg. lrviM 1044 ON THE SAND lmmaculat.e,profess.de· 631.1470 encl patio, ~en. n r ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lovely3Br,2Ba.den,& corated home; 2 bdrms schls/park. $114 ,goo . RT FOR A KIHG ramily room home In the &den +dnung rm . large . .. Owner751--0383 presll g ious Ranch. 14 I 0 OCEAMFROHT Mobife HCMM1 Trudi Deem Rlty for S.-I I 00 quarryUleinhaU&den, OHLYSl26,900 Priced well below huge patio & deck IAAMDHEW!! .Poolhotnebyowner nuselegant2storyhas4 market al $93,950 Call $350,000 Including land & 3 BR. Family Rm. 2 4Br. 3Ba. many xtras lge bdrms. 3 baths. big owner 558-3211 aft 6pm MAYO CK {213)S96·3897; 420·187 1 ····················-· SI 5,000 DOWN Newport Crest lse w /op •BY OWNER•BEACH uon to buy . 38r, 2'h Ba 1s JU.Sl 200 steps away. Condo. t600 mo. Call ror 3Br. 2Ba, frplc. 2 car gar details631·1843 llUNTINGTON BCH '73 Lancer. 24x60, 2Br, 2Ba, Roman tub. AC. Wshr/dryer. 1mmac .. (S13297XNU) """~ts'·p•. baths f 1 ( 11 lmmac. reduced below frplc in fmly rm. sharp weekdays ...,., u • 1rep ace, u y tn· , •. rt ---''-------lcAoa lay Pr sula t ~d Eastside. appraisal, $109,000 Open parqurt entry w vt • n• ••M \I•""' 380 GLENNEYRE LAGUNA 8(,t.CH op. Sat Sun 1·5 or by app't wood h;1n1~lers Up Realton 184.900. 545-7428. 975 Ucnvtir graded cpllng in 4wtll IT'S POPLAR (714)494•2148 tn a Carmel-like selling --------- on a pvt !>l. m Lido Sands Eastbluff 4 RR. fam rm. Sl38.500 645·1262 din rm, 3 ba. on green· Califonia P«Klfic * 675-7060 * RoyMcC~ · Dnve. Pnnonly earlhtones Close to IHWOODIRIDGE 1110 Newport ll•d. parks. pool & schools. For the people that want LGCJ111M1 Hiiis I 050 belt by pool. $164.500 M H. Sale& 638-0300' Cotta Mna 548·7729 ---------1 Choice end unit. 'lSS.1501 lhe f mest and want 1t TRADE YOUR REAL ~~~~~~~~~ EASTSIDE r--....i.,,.-~ .. -now check thlS Poplar ··•··•·•····•••········ BIG HOUSE P&IHPOIHT Agl. 8J3.1366. 551-6131 LAGUNA HILLS Dbl wide. 1972 Lancer. overloolung golf course 15 min to bch. Rock scaped. frwt trees. SUper buy $21,000. ll2148X) ESTATE FO.R A FINE -Spacious 3 Bdrm with Model in Creekside with Custom remodeled in· YACHI'ET.WEARERANGE IYOWHER oversized family room. itsextraUuckcarpet.the 2 Sly. 5 Br. famrm s1de1oul, 3Br. 212Ba. ALL D AILS. NSIGN 4 Br +beautHul pool quality bwlt with shake ---------green landscaping, the w wet bar. 3600 sq ft · Qwel street. nr bch & UDO ISLE 2800 sq fl. Owner financing 4 br, 3 ba, din area. hg hv rm, ()fc set-up. Mod kitchen serv porch, patio, pnv bch, lrg lot. Owner YAOITS67S·2650 Mesa del Mar area. Will roof. fplc. and bu1ltins NEW 4 br, 3 ba 2 story, 34 patio with cover. the decrt'd & lndscpd like a bay $249.000. IS.OW MARKET sell contract of sale Now v a can l Sc e Oakdalu, Woodbridge. custom drapes. tile en· mdl hm Will trtl lor Bkr 752-1108. _, Sh b o II ~ rrv, lhe cushioned con· sm1llerhm $169,500 MoWle HCMM Stew-. (7141848-1895 $62 000 _.,500. own Y appl anytime wncr w1 $119.900 Owner. 213· ~J • only. Call 642-8825.·pno carry financing Call 657_4376 versallonpit.The cond1 JoyWYeahCo Back Bay on NB. Golf Gracious. 2 story sun only 54(}.1151 ___ lion Is tops. the price is 499·2237 Course, 1 i acre · horse $29),000 675-6259 TlREOOFRENTlNG Bargain price dbl wide, dollhse in Orange. Only $18.500, Space r 4tnl $112.50. Miramar '65. {2153XNUl CAUFORNli\ PACll-'lC M.H.SALES G38·0300 filled garden home. 3 .;._ _______ , BY OWtJER low.Call for details ranch 2 houses. l Spacious bedrooms: EASTSIDEDUPLEX " JUST REDUCEU to workshop&sloragerms . DOYER SHORES Secluded patio. Don't Large yard & aJley ac-New Turtlerock Glen $62,900 3Br, 2 ba condo Beaut vu of golf course & PClllOl CllRIC •l•w wait. Call &46-'1171 ress. attracllve owner's garden home. Heather A 1C, dbl gar Shows like lots of rm £or horses, • '•'•'' ,. ''"'• •"· • unit $97.SOO lliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•illiii--1 model. 4 BR. 3 ba. fam model OPEN hs<' 6124 Must sell, O.A. S149,00IJ. Oflocklcay [®-I H "'Pl...,CHI,.. r m llighly upgraoed 23341 v1a ~un Mi ••ul•I ooodterms 5497971 4000sqftof grac1ous hv ' ·. ~6E7A5-4~lo9R2s"' *DUPLEX * :.Ad~;,!t7 & view Sl64,000. -----•---V1llJ /\'!>tic (.'athy 0 --ing offer t>tn vi<'ws of Great ~tartcr 1n-..c~t .,. ... ,..,., 768 5008 By ownr. Back liay arca, Back Bay and l-'ash1on l b d & ... utl " SPARKLllllo..IG 5 BR. 3 ba. "2 frpks. 3000 Center l." pvt master -------men . rea " er ' f'Y o•m.rF.R Turtlerock. f"I' "' BR .... I t ' "'' 1 --HJ-....J I 051 sq rt hSe w 11rg yd In cul swte w /sunken tub & --- FAMILY PAHK $3.000 Wldcr pnced....Dbl wide Goldenwesl. Frwv else. AC. ::>• park (LB'T117·73) FIXER Located in Mesa del Mar, t.tus 4 bedroom. 2 bath borne needs wmc T.L.C. but could be a charmer. Walle to tennb. park & schools, Make an offer. lhe owner I!> anx IOUS. CALL 556-2660. C:::SELECT tPROPERTIES MESA VERDE $63,800 2 BR studio type condo w/bltns, crpls, drl)!j , clean & sharp' Pnced low for fast sale. JACOBS REAL TY 675-6670 1006 ••••••••••••••••••••••• RUSTIC CAPE COD Quaint 3 Bdrm , 2 bath, 2 story home PLUS rental urul. Ideal location: 1 • ~lock rrom South bayfront & 3 blocks from downtown shopping . Must see lo fully np predate the CaJ>(" Cud charm. Askmg 1279,000 Call (714) 838·6755 1714) 673.-7 115 BEST BUY EVER! On Balboa Island. owner will finance the purchase of these 2 uruls on a full size lot . Askin~ only $1.54,500. Make offer' Agent 67~6700 __ NEWUSTIHG Uke new 2.Br .hse + 3Br a pt. our ~xc lus1vt> $4.S-1103 GREENBROOK units ~per ocu aon JKr. 28'1 , smole fa m hme POOL _,,...... 'r"""' 11 Slloooo l k , ,. 11 ,.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• de s ac Must se skylit es opens onto Sl37.000, oo terms. lushly lndscpd yd & · ac~•t .._.i onlrgpnvlotA/C,lush Gd 64().51 l2 atnum w fountain & up· For year round enJOY-0 c•n 97 t 4 Bd 2• b .A. ~7 1 jacuui Add1ion 3 RR & 2 grd flooring thruout men · rms,, 'l a · full baths + maid qtrs IYOWMER 4 Bdrm. 2 bath Ex· tremely popular Camelot Model. This lovely home 1s located in an excellent neighborhood on a cul de sac, w1Uun easy walking distance of S Coast Plata Shopping Many outstanding features in elude CU~"TOM DRAPES UPGRADED CARPET!\ LARGE COVERED R.C TJ\V'LOR COMr"tANV A~At..T OR~ flt Vl:.LOP( fl~ POOL Mesa Verde pndefullv cared for 3 hcdrom~. den & frplc !Sew k1tch. carpets wallpaper & paint Ownrr Jnx1oui.' Must sell' !)ubm1t ufrcrs. &~7221 OE S I GNER .., PATIO Ontu WALLPAPER '''21 it'x8' SKYLIGHT r ' OUTDOOR GAS BBQ -~, ....L.-I 11 t ,. s"pu;f? ~~~-f RF-oli~ __ _!!~tcllff Realty T/REAR 979--8123 f>nn only please $109,900 4 br 2 ba, K 2, 4 pll'.\ 1>05S1b1l.1ly. $130,000 645 3500 --- Close to comm park. pool extended family room Laguna Niguel Dl.X. BEACH DUPLEX w/full bath. Home bit &. elem schl. $123.000 PLUS a 3 car garage, ~ Immaculate properly a r 0 u n d c e n t e r Open hse, sat/Sun 1·5. makes this the perfect Realty --~~~~ ... Owner must sell rourtyard;SpanlSh style •--------- Pnn only. 833-0c.tVf home for the most act a Vt' .... -.~...., S 182 500 0 w n I Ag l ""' · for comfortable living De Anza Bayside, 3 BR ra!TlllY 642-3338 15x25' kitchen w /bltn mobi.le home. alum in· Mobit. Hotna Stott C7141148-88'5 Woodbridcp IT HAPPiHS H.V HMS PHASE lit-BBQ. game rm le bar rm sulated siding, a real By owner. 2Br. l 1 2Ba EYYYTIME OPENSATJSUN l·S makeUusaperfecthome bargain. NB. $34.950 condo Cov patio. gas Owner must leave this l r t · terms. Owor/bkr mov BBQ, upitrds. Nr park. BR. rormal dining, fa mi 3Br or 2Br & den w /fan· or en l e r a In Ing . 615 8458 631 4920 new elem schl F'1shing, ly room home w/2 car t.astic nile IJte vu , soft $415.000. M.C. Financial ing. · · · I · wtr, gar dr opnr, up· _{~7_14_>_994_·~------o s a 1 1 n g . s w 1 mm in g garage. Many attractive 5 MINUTES FR M BCH lagoon. pools, & more up gr n des see -graded a pp ls, attract ---------Cozy smgle •ide 1972 $68.500 Call this wkend, buyL,.,$117,500. lndscpd w/dck Pool. jac NEWPORT Ramada w /encloseit 559-0151 496-2413 493.9494 & tennis F'ee land . Walle to the beach Crom porch, brick fmt, imma~· PRESCOTT 't523 C,OrtPtl5Dt.·IRVIHE 49S-5220 830.5050 ~S:u:·:f:::a/:2A4 Port this fantastic duplex . fR~~70~ PP ea 11 n ~ Woodbndge Place 1. 5, __________ ,_MU_ST_S_E_Ln~ d Ho me & income op· MobUeHonwStore !)r, 3 pa. next lo lake,•• SMOKE TREE price rc~u~:uitcg.~g· HARIOR VIEW =ru::·r.: Y~~":ie!ds~ (714)848-8895 beach club. <714 )731·4484 ow n e r b c i n g HOMES Lots of xtras. Pn ced to ---------A delightrul and sought trnn~ferred. 3 Br, 2'"' Ba, COUMTRY . iu1...J..11-u~ Stor• after 3 Bdrmsinglestor" ...,.., ..., sellnow!Call540.ll.Sl -~~ ' fcatao, view, exclusive b I end unit on greenbelt. Nr FR£.a...tCH Ass um a es. re 1 J·a 2· le ni' and oc. $83,500. Call owner ...,. possessions, buy rentals, poo. cuz i. n s alt.!.._pm, 83_1·0147 . SOMERSET F ·nr bike trails $79.900. rent town. or 1 o Call for Details M11sion VI.Mn I 06 7 Redesigned f i v e ,._ _________ t_7_l_4_t 8_48_-8_89_5 __ MESA VERDE .. __ p-:.-& I 026 -.-•• .,...... '"'"'' 552 ~ 64._.7 2 I I •••••••,!••••••••••••••• bedroom. three bath with ---------F~~TIC BUY A beaut 4Br home and an ·••• •• •••• ••••••••••••• ·eves. ,....:-£ C..a...la.S outside brought indoors. IACK IA y anxious young coupll' Ocean vu condo $l t5.000 S&SQUALJTY elm ...-C"J _.......,. OC Professionally decorated Dbl Wl Kingston. 8 mo. .Att.ntiOft V.ts Own your own pool llome. 3lir. 2Ba. dining & family $89.975 Musl i>t:ll' leaHng area and willing Nr harbor :Hlr, 2•.,ha, 2 &IY home. 4Br, 2,28a. 3 Br. ~·h ba. fam rm. and upgraded Ma n)' 3br2ba w/addilional un-old. a t pet park, nr t.ohsten Sll9.500. lse/opl Om 01 H tty bonus rm. sep ram rm I ~ forml danmg rm. 2 frplcs custom appointments. it or 4 br 3 ba. Lg pool, fwys & h. Open fir phm Agt 64~1103 83l·7600 w frpl, form dining. _ • • Lge lot 2 lge patios, Owner will help finance. cslm rblt w/Oak firs. low space rent Pnced sprklrs rmt/back. New CaJJ 752 1920 170'x.60' lot, blt-1ns. 2400. below markel al S321~ Lo.TS ........... · .... °" ....... ac •• h •• • •• o.4.o. ~~: ~~~&afr:1e1~~~-L01J1ft1 leKh I 048 paint 1n1oul Walk to ' QUA.IL sq ft. Must sell. $124,000. <SH2781·78) ••••••••••••••••••••••• schls. shops, & rec cntr 556-1182or5!17 1668 ~Home St~ _Bkr_.536_14_93_.___ ComforhOfHCMllt $119.000 by owner PL' •cE G E (714l848-1195 YORKTOWN VILLA Woodbridge Sycamore 2 without the bother. 2 837·3298 or 831·3877 ~ SH:IUM TH OF st If I h 4 G000Uff7 FlXEDL"ICOME~ Sharp2y~arl\eW,2 story Y sg amiy ome. Bdrm .. 2 bath OY·O '" 3br2baCondo,aircond, · PROHllTllES ... nd d 3 BR BR 2•-ba highly up Ste""' lO tennis courts & Singlewide Starr-comer e urut con n w · --.. • · block to Laguna's Main crpts. drapes, pool. sgl , .......... Tll l :JO P.M.I ,... Room! 3 Bdrm. family room+bon us room makes this a j!reat fami ly home' Great Mesa Verde area! Only ~.000' .1~ Ba. plush upgraded graded. 559-0633 Beach. sss.950 5 t 0 r Y S 6 6 , 7 5 0 ~ clubhouse, 150 yds tn I~. fwy else, upgraded, carpets, separate laun· 0 ,,,, ~c Lido Chan nel. large super savings at SH.400. d r ·' u d COLLEGE PARK 714/.....,........., kitchen, sunny patio, I · (S27~l ry acu1 es an garage R x Up & Save ------• ..... .-.....i•-._. __ S"--Well maintained com. JUST REDUCED $40001 EASTERN CHA RM level, 3 bdrms., 2 baths, __ .,.. ...._.... ..--~ •-. Co 11 od 1 1 n at Needs paint & carpets 40 fl. lot. room t o l71,.l8"• •a91r: mon area w1pool "'mini me m e · ro .,a · Loads or potential Children can romp here .. --~ park Close to all ed entry lo .all :ric~ Sweeping ocean views. &enjoytheirown-play-en large Owne r --------- amcrulies. snap it up at patio. Massive ric Laguna location . 2 ground. Comfortable tranaferred.$226.870 •WALKTOBEAClt• $73.500 ·fireplace. f1oor to cell Bdrm .. huge den & 2 ramily living. in this 4 llG CA.HYON Single. wide 60' long. ang bookcases. Galley BR 2 Ba +Jo'am Rm, ~ encl'd porc h. 5 Star $68,000 Each '-960·4361 ~ . kitchen. Family room, baths. Sl.21 ·500· w/cozy brick fplc. On cul S~~T! Park. Pool &. jncui:o ~::~.~.?·~g ill!IMli =~:.t~¥i~~·b1 ~~~~~L!~ t.:!;ltJrr.:~~-:.~ S!::~~~·:~~w.~ 00""1TY ~;\.~·" ........ •• RED CARPET 7S4· 1202 plan&, included. Ready today 752-1700 mentonly. LIDO lSLE for bldg ~rmits. Choice r"'"' ,,, 9 . "' wrv • ,,, ., .. , 2 BR home w/aep lrg apt. Htwport a.ach I 069 Plush 1977 dbl wide- E.Side, CM . $135,000 -----....-..----1 [® •. ·. ~ & ofc. Across from bch ...... •••••••••••••••••• ~~~~~~~~~~ 61l-7JOO Lancer. near ocean. im· Firm. 642-2741 after 5 S&S Resale Specialists . , $245,000 Also super 5 RXR8.UPPRB ____ Ao_-_._ .. _.., __ .,_ ... __ mac. (834·lS8) 3 BR. 2 ba., ~ bl.k. to b11y. PM,673-9479 3.4 or 5 bdrm models k b h WI 1 IA\ SR Mobile HOMI Store Now $179.500! avail, some w /pools. pie.it, bl lo c · 1 'Charming 2Br coua1e on IY OWMIR HEWPORT HEIGHTS 148 .. 195 Man;hall Rlly 675·4600 Very elean 2 s tory. 4 968-4602 water· S395.ooo. Agt, large lot w/prlvate rear Nwprt Hgts lrg corner 2 BR. 2 BA on large lot 1--------- ~, ......... 1007 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bdnn. 2 bath. on quiet Pennington Properties CONDO! 3Br.2~Ba 494-861! yard, separate hobby lot. 2 bdr 2 ba, family rm w/room for pool. New Acnagl for S. UOO PEHIHSULA r · street near So. Coast Family rm.S91.500 LOW DOWN room w/ba attached to + bonus rm. $119,500. shake roof. carpet & ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 Bdrm. 2 bat • den. Plau. $(M,500. by owner. JOG TO BEACH ~' 752·5086 Lease op\lon & sales con· garage. Sll0,000. 6'.S-'lOM. ()po Sunday greenhouse too! Only MIMI UNCH SIT£ Owner.S189,500,675-5e60 '151-0Z2lorMS-7440 Super buy, highly up.1-=~-------trac•. Avail in c;:0 .-()'tllnerwUlfinance. Sl29.900.Call6'0.51l2. uaded. 3 bdr Just burn Beaut ! br. frplc, 1 \.'! ba ~ tt1 MIWPOltT 11.ACH DOVER SHORES 2~ Acres in the heart of C.O-cW ~ I 021 Conieact.I Mar I 022 your toothbrush" move Windsor model in The Laguna Owner must sell 4Br. ranclling country. South ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• lft. Open sunday 12 noon Tcrra<'e. Univ Park. Nr. P.P. 499-3715. RI.ALTY 675-1642 3Ba. prol lodscpd, & de· ol Orange County, all tit sold. 5151 Sparrow. pool. clbhse. Price 1 _...,__. IOSZ 1 _...__. 1052 corated w/jacuni It usable,Xlntterms.BKR F.dln1ter /Rois a Cb lea sluhed t wk only froO\ ::z:::~••••••••• :z.;:;::?::: ••••••••• pool. Bltn i:nlcrowave. =====----(714) 616-5717 file~!,~~ "OLD COIOHA" 2 Fabulous properties under $150.000 Both in xlnt cond .. on R·2 lot.a GREAT OUPLIX 45xll8 Ft. R-2 lot. Xlnt cond., with nice guest unit. Good Income poteoUaJ. A COUM'&L IAMDI CO. 644·9060 Agt. tm.'150 to $82.950. Pnnc many otber xtraa s.ca...• 10761 ___ o_R_S22_·2080 ___ _ .--------•I oolyowner~. $229,500. Opn Sundays ••••••••••••••••••••••• 700 ACRES TIME IS RIGHT Available now 2 Or, 1 ""1 ba. Swedith frplc Up· graded earthtooe carpet t hruout 2 Car itar, w/laundry racllltlct Prlv1.1te patio c;ondo home . Ruorl like Cacitltacs. RV parking ava.11. Close to 11chools, J>Mk It beach. l\nxlous. I .... ., .. I -Condo.Oranl(etr.-. Plan(, 1 BR. l bi), on the wnter SU.000. Daya, ~. ev~ 6r wlulda. Ml 6383. WOODBRIDGE •ADMOOR Allpcnwood • bedroom 11nate story beauty. A new home 'ocated on a cul-Oc .ac near park-.nd pool. Call tod,y f!j WOOOU.IDG! IU.LTY Hl·lOOO r .. c 11 ea 1ce 12-5. W1 Highland Or. ,_ '?'~ BRO<l~ ~0'-1w! ~PEI IUY SEHSATIOHAL FAMILY HOMI Next to Niguel Golf Course. 4 Bdrms. 2yc.. baths. 3 car garage. Just minutes to bus, benches & freeway. Hu~e Fam. Rm. Lots of Views. $189,500. A ~OUWIU IAHK~ CO. 496-7222 831 -0836 ~ ... ..-di..., .... ............. HVll Carmel Model. 3Br. 2Ba. doee lO pool, park, a.a.sum• loan. 1826 Port Charles. $138,000. Call 644-2841 THEILUffS 3 Bdrms .. 2\; baths, formal d.lnlnl rm .• coun· try kitchen; 1oraeous de· corl View to &rffnbelt. Priced to atll now at $135,000. 4~l640-~ TtRMS TO P .P . lBr. 28a, nu paint, crpta . Open Sun pm. 155 Walnut.W·aeee ,, ... ....... ..... _ .. ...... Last chance l o buy Oceanside homo In Presidential Hght1. 10 Homes avail In laal phase. From $79,000. An o rly vl3lt la recom· mended. 492·27tt0. SUnllet Pac"1c Home Bullder11. .....,.... ..... ' You Loved 10 Yrs A10 4 Beaut. cual hom es w /panorttmlc ocean views avail for sale from -.ooo. Vou mu1i aee the quality of tbua bomel. AA earlY vlalt l1 NtCOmmended. • 0200 or U1·1U2. Sanut Pacll1c Home Bullden . , R1vcr11de County :al ~ lane frttway off ramp. Some xlot commcrcral potential. Rapidly de· veloping area & 2 m1teoi oC r~w1.1y frontaao. ln vestot terms. BKR. (71~06'77·5ml ORS22·0530 l:lOO ....................... ......... w. Nrw to.unit CM, xlnl loc:allon, &!'031 lneome S3'7 ,aoo. $4'7s.ooo, 2s·~ down. balance at 9~ft. Pri.ftoal.y. Wln!nd3, Ut·5ll00. Wdya. '131·3850 • . . . . OHktR...tal ...... u.~ ...... u ......... d .,...... ... ~ ~eh u.tw.. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• M-1.n U.rw-...d ...,._. • .._. 3240 ... ...,_.. .._.. 3J6t ..... ,, • =• 3101 eo.t. Mete 1124 ..............•........ ..... 4400 Offlu Rental 4400 O>JLY ... l01 Mo Junta. 1111 3214 •• •• ·o· •P••••H••o·u· :·.: • • • • • ·:: ::.· • •• • • • • .. • •• ·.:.:.:. ·,,· • ;: :···Lo····a· ··1· ·······a·· y:-,;··1 ·b ~ • ;•~··ii·;: •••Pw I •tr 1400 t1 Jtt.a. ~. tO C:O.toW.... EN ~ ~ABtmn w_.. H7.,. ve >' urge 3 r w/enclosed a•r••c & ·-········1· ...•..... ._.. a 0 •••••••• w •• o.·w·; •. •••• •• ••• New an\ 2 bedroom before )'OU ray som• bltns, fplc. Close to bch, ~aUo. J.2S().,., ft. 821-3410 EXECUTIVE ROW, Inc. ,, .. = office ''•c.• I• Mew,ort l c ll/ ..,.. Tuhflll ~ lotliby. ttle,.._. .... -te IUYIU, ~o.f9"WCt roo.n. ldtdlaA. -....,..., ... _,,all 9 ..n ..... 1a. clc:t•"" • con -.•h . " .,..,,., CHHlt ... 1, Cota,.ttrfatd ty,.Httl"CJ. C n ... llle MCr'et.&GI Mrric:H .. CllilhMe .. ... ~ ,.,._ $320 ,.,. nlO. ••••••••••••••••••••••• + den (1515). Cedar & a 1 ency or t be ahops. dln1na. Vrly hi'"'-.., ~EWPORTBLVD.CM e 3 BR C.bltl Bia SlSO 4br Zbr jacunl window home. 5 Blocu "RUNAROUND" Call Adlt.a.833-3307; 073.7071 oc "'""'norpeta, Primecomtn'I * .._ A1J ' .. r +sauna f,.,.1<' df'W aar ._ h. Pri 2 Gl50Sqfl.<06-5iOI .... ar. pl.De at," p, ~ .. ·-.Smt'!:. .•••• -.. to .,,.,ac vale ·car CONSUMER'S GUIDE. 1 bdr-"rpts sto .. 2 Br, 1 ba du.Pie~. pvt. n:r Coll• 1tt1n• 9IO,OOO . .....,,., .... .,._ 1arue. Ji'ully main· Many have and are glad . .... ... · v,.., Yant. & iar. av1U now <'• .... rLeb/ OW'D/a&& ea11u.-.asu. •CONS\JMER'SOUlDE ~yard. Adwt.s. No tbeydidll S.vetime,iaa refna.atepstobeach. No ~/mo.e.au;sc-0947, ~~ U OO pct.s. ~ lath St. m•> ltmoney&onfee. peta. $275 mo. Incl. -rr"• o.tofr--Aw Lee. 4 BR. 2ba. bom• in --· IOOO'sof•--"alal \ltllilles. Yrly lease. Nlceoew2.Br,2balha""*•. ••••-••••••••••••••••• a. ~·r -sso Mesa Vfl'do. Avatl. J1dy ~ ..,.., .. -Obit kit. (2 ) .,,..,.,,., 6 ...... ""' at I , ___ ....... _____ KlOS.PETS WELCOME 8'7$-~'73 Encl 1ar's. S3:i0/mo. l96'7 p a paces • ••• ••••••• ............ ••• .... .. $48$. r int Ul lno. ISSO •• br, 2 ba, ram rm. An&Mim Bltr :)57 02.83 AJarborMe,muriaJPark. rent. families only. A/C,beaulifulS&.Sbome 645-4900 C.-.. M. 3122 • · 1&5-4170 fW4lrtec.Oce•rl• 549--l&MDa)'I lnprimearea.No.otEd· ()pen7days9·7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• New2br,Jba,allblt.n.s, CJ! relit 4413BEDROOM &M-2507 Eves. lnaer between MaanoUa Townbouae. 2 BR + den, frplc, encl. gar, patio, c• l7 I 4t 1sz.1110 .... ~opiity 4600 VA·FHA Ntw 2 br, l~ ba condo " Newland. l59'2 elb 2~b ~ r-6 -..; lnd.ryrm.~. •0;;,:;;~;~i·:· CAR~g,~~~!OME ::\:~~0ne;5:0br,n2~ ~:1i~~ty &19-M23 ~or~opt.~.5702mo. '(l !J.~r-~& TSLM&mt M2·1603 IUDUCTION 1--433-9914 garaae, pool, jacuui. GREAT 3 br,2ha,t rplc, 3 BR, 2 ba, lovely 2r!'°Pe:.-a~~·kJdsok.Af*°t"'"t'.......,., ....,...tost.cr. 4300 hes 1.757. I 623 °*>Se your crpt color. d&bwhr, patio, fncd yard. Westcllff area. Nr ahops 645-2274 ••••••••••••!!!_!••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• "PrimeShopplJliCtr. Victoria & Canyon. Klda & pet ok. ~ .. 3&. & achla. Avail Aug 1, GARDEN APTS . S.CleMt.... 3116 •HOMESHAR1NG ~ Beacb Blvd.• ID 'HB. 531.208() ~ 8C8·2320 CORONA .OEL MAR 1 Br Easts1de, $240. Small ••••••••••••••••••••••• SERVICE Produced spendable$$ 9G4·2566Agt,nofee. 2 B T bo f I c y w/ at I d 2~ yean youn1. Scott kid k SEAVlEW, 3Br beauty, r own use, rpc. oz. n ura woo 2 Br, lge potth. walk to NoFeelTUPlaced ReaJ•u536-7S33 RAMIUMG t -$)50Fee3.I!~ ... ~. 3 b'dtm, 2 ba, N~w t'rpt, comm pool. Tennis. Pool, tennis. Some ocean cabmeta & beam cell beach, fenced yd. $325. 530-249' "J ...,,_,, yrd, nr Marina HI &Catalina views. Close lngs.St.ove.731·60019am Eva498-03l8 Collclo•l•l•••fTow•· COUMTRYESTATI •HOMEFINDERS• $450./mo Avail 7 ·1 _,Ilse. to Fashion Island & fine tolpm. 3 bdrm. bse, else to bcb .._..for ldit J 700 2~ acres w /adjacent 7i.Ai 89!2-4658 Betty Grubb Realtor beach. M4·2flll s-t. A.a 3180 $1.SO mo +-\.it uUI, acres optional. Separate 4Br, 2ba, 2 car gar, 644-0818. Unlum.Lshed Duplex 1 Br ••••••u••••••••••••••• 848.9S56 ••••••••••••••••••••••• professional artist's landlord will do yrdwrk. &.pert $2.50 fncd yd patio Apt. E'side CM . $200 3 Br. 2~ b1. lrplc, we studio. Open beam ceil· $420/mo. 775 Joann petspoolsm fee~ l..UXTO~OUSE Lux 3 BR, 2\\ Ba, front Gaa/wtrpd.548-5673 Norl_h Broadway . 26yroldtemalewantato bar. dbl gar. $'12,900 10% ings in llv rm, overlook-(213)~5831. •CONSUMER'SGUIDE. 3 Br, 21h ba, view deck, du lex New c ts alio Spacious 1 bdrm, re· share 1pt & expenses down. IREN. 968-2297 ang heated .PO O I. 2 frplc. Steps to water. 32' P ~ 673-7fl3 • ~ • 2 bdrm, 1 Ys ba, $325. pool, decor• t e d , fr p I c. e.au al\ 5. 544.1538 Brdms+den or 3 bdrms. 2 bdrm house SUPER DELUXE pvt slip available. S'765 gar, · a · car port $195/mo adults 547·23311----· .. ----- llicw Property 2 000 Newcpt'glhru-0ut. ~. $12.S 4br 2 ba tie patio lse or lse opt. Call C.02ylbdrmw/lrgpatlol ~~ ™ Roommate to share de-....................... ,,_Mowt73_..626 64.2-7864 ltids/pelssmfee64s.-t900 642·3033, after 7pm blkfrmbe1ch.CallAn· Ar lwllh,.,,.IMd luxe2br.2baapt.oear -Golf Ir Ou• --•CONSUMER'SGUlDE 675-1215 drea075-l399 Bachelor. good E·side ""oru.twwi·...._~ 3900 Orange Coast College. -UrandnewSanClemente .. ....._ U lllC. ,EASTSIDE loc., ~mo. 759·1131 or -Tennis courts. pool, dU'plex. ~rap.around 1631 E .17tb5t,.C, SA 3 br, 1~ t>a bome. Has 3244 Super exec. condo. 3 or 4 l bdrm waterfront upt 49t·2966 ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• Jacuul. etc. $19S + y, view, backs on course I•--------.. lOlS of used brick 10 bv· tnlM br, 2~ ba, frplc. family $350, yearly lease. TiiE EXCITING uW. 957-1027 Two 3 Bdrm., 2 bath un· ing rm & family rm. ••••••••••••••••••••••• rm, run rec. facil. S'7SO. 675-3282, 9-S. 2 Bdrm, 2 bath, USO sq fl. PALM MESA APTS. a...1£&• •1RPOIT Relrig, dsbwhr & 2 •-.rru5 67J.3313or67s.87U Encl garage. Frplc. un.n..,.ESTONPT Ju. ExceUent rent dis· ~"" IUil"'O•""-3 24 D/W, G/D/ $350. Mesa ••u•v .. trict. $165,000. .Super ranch home, like patios. Only $475. mo. 2 BR, 1 ba .•.. ,, · .. $(25 Bluff 2200 ft 3 8 eo.ta M.141 I Verde 751-8888, 979-8S33 BCH. .new, oo 10 acres. Com· Call Hayward· Watson 3 BR, 2 Ba .•.••.• $500/640 s, sq. ·· r, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bach, 1&2 BR Gain a rehable roommate. 645-7464 •SHARE A HOME• s,-llltM...- Cooverted to31Ullts. Uni- que property; newly re· modeled with impressive facade. Ocean view. it~.ooo. mute daily or Oy lo your Rw Estate, 731..s.581. 3 BR, 2~ Ba..... . . $625 Cam. rm., pool, view Sur-o..11CE Deluxe 2 BR. refrig., all from S220. & up.. $775 Mo. Agent 644-0134 U\ "" dul p work and ranch. Pool, 18r Adults no pets •BR,2~Ba ... ~/640 •l..ockedg.ar.w/lgslor. uW.incl.$305. A ts.No ets jac, fireplace (& fe.n~ed. $2 7 O. u li I pd 2 O 7 i 4 To 5BR. 1 ~ ba .•.. 1675 * D/W, patio, lndry rm Agent 8J3.978J (5 B~i:!~r ~:~port CALLNOWbeore1tslo I.Newport #DRE'. Days 5BR,2~Ba ....... $600 S-Cltw9nte 3276 •Specialcabinetspace Bra.ndnuapt,AvailJuly. Blvd.) Roommate. wanted, nice apartment. Pammy, 631·518.5. Work, 645.()566. late. 64.2-®S Eves 646·64.23 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •Gas heal, gas cooking E/Slde 2 br, 1 ba. No 546.9860 1·247·263 I L.se ocean view condo, gas hot water all free. Newport Beach, Ocean· Land Division Coty 1 Br. $165. gar. JBr, 2~Ba. 2car garage, •Adults, no pets. ~~mo. 1·99'7-47ZO, front. 3bdr. Vrly. NORJMSREALTY 9"HWdeR.£.lnc. Plxsmfee.645-4900 2 patios. spectacular lBrS270,2brS310 It... 4000 WasbfDryer. Fem pref. • C 0 N SU M E RS ' S view. $A2S mo. 498.2168 Month to month ,.._ ._....... ••••••••••••••••••••••• 675-2986 •494-8057* RNIEstat. GUIDE 2323EldenAve,C.M. _,.._.. 3826 Room w/kitchenettc •------------------&c:hmtge 2800 $3953Brgar +view 642·7605 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $50week&up. NeedAR~t•? 7 UNITS C.M. ••••••••••••••••••••••• &Side 3 Br, gar, frplc, Sundeck. Fee. 557-0824 SPARKLING Clean l br , 548-~ To Professionally Find &auUfw brund new 4·1 Want Beach property for fncd , lldlts. 1st & last. •HOMEFINDERS• 2 Br apt w/encl. garage. bltns. nr. ocean. $250. No THAT RlGIIT PERSON br, loft, f/p. 3·2br, 1..-. ba ·exec bome .in Anaheim. $400. Ava ti July 1. ---------$280. mo. 19l2 Wallace. kids/pets. 493-7231 aft Ambassador Inn in Costa QousE.-OJ.AJU Ut.luMJrEIT townhouse, oil bltns, Call535-2334 or 535·0568 s.s7·12SS. -.523 CA'4Pt15Dl:IRVl"E 5c;:trano 3278 645-51.26or637·S89S 5PM ~~~·l~ted~~~~~: UM~~~'"' <:rpts, drps. Hurry, buy ....,... -ec.s-rs lewcrt!! ....................... Ule, bright, airy & new 2 HMtliiqOR leodr 3840 MANY wath kitchen, c..> ~ ~...q now. Tom Lee. Rllr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• before you pay aome San Joaquin Townbome, 2 Condos 1 stry 3 bdrm, 2 br & 2 ba, frplc, pool & ••••••••••••••••••••••• phone & 1V. Sw1mmLOg 832-4134Sanc~19'7t 6'2-l603. HollMI ,._,.shed agency r or l he golf course view, 2 BR. ba w/frplc, pools & park, jacuzzi. Adults, no pets. SHARP, beach, 2 & 3 BR, pool, jacuui, and rec. 1--------- fotEWTRlrt.U ....................... "RUNAROUND''. Call 211'1 ba & den, S600 mo. walk to schools, mission, 548-0421 rrpl. dishwasher, room. Daily & weekly CMrCll)tl IY IUILDE:R lalMMI llkllld 3106 CONSUMER'S GUIDE 559·1448 aft.6pm. all new, no pets ~SO /mo garage, patios, 96().2358. rates st.art.Ing from 154 a forll.t 4350 1-4 BR, sgl st.ry & 2·3 BR; ••••••••••••••••••••••• Many have and are glad Woodbndge 3br, 1 lh ba 842-3935 PreYl"ew Open1'ng "'0 r, -"'ldreo welcome. no week. • •••••••••••••••••••••• allspaetousdeluxeumts. •BAYFRONTBEAUTY• theydJd!!Savelime,gas Townhouse. $410 mo ...., u.u 645-484() Wantedgarageto renlin B"·e tD .__h fr·om here 3BR38A,p1er. &imoney&onfee. cc"·l""'7 s-taAIMI 3280 -....ae .. BnU pets,startmgat$24Smo. NB or C M Call Dick S lA198,00""0 r .p . 2•1 2 Av1June24/Ju11.0wnr. IOOO'sofR...tals! ..,_'" ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~•u "' 846-8>7 SulnnwrR...tah 4200 · · · · ~ .. B df rd Pl h Occupancy late June ----------••••••••••••••••••••••• ,_S48 __ •7_is_1_. _____ _ Delaware HB.S36l7t8 673·6204 KIOS.PETSWELCOME M302br+fam+dine ra o ace lwn se lBdrm "'"om$280 ME .. ut 1E.a.CH .~ ' 64r .. 900 G F cc.7 ,,....... 3Br l YrBa nicely de "' SOAA -PROMONTORY POINT Dbl garage near Hunl· lc6oo P • sul 3 107 ~ ar. ee. ~ . ........, ' ' · Beautiful park· Like at & CIVIC CENTER June 15th to Sept 15, all mgton • 2 TR!rl.EXES • ••.I••••~•••~••••••• {)pen 1days9-7 •HOMEFlNDERS• e<>rated. SS6·1.977· mosphere, pool. spa. Ex· BRAND NEW. Spacious or part. lBr& loft. cmpll· Ctr. $40 pr mo. Nr Lake Park. Mm to .QNTIIEBEACH"' ·doK Be tf II d led 4 Condonnw•'li•U111S111111S cellenl location near deluxe3&4Br.Allbllns, lyfum.Tenruscrts,pool. 847·2ll9 ~~~~~~·~~a;i·1:ns ,s3253br2bamores.:i;fee 2,!RPe~~~~~~c~~yer & Jrl:n1.~1lba.~~:arm,nr Unfwni.IWCf 3425 beaches, shopping, etc. frplcs, gar, lge yd. 520 activilies.Agt67S·S626 . .gar, fp;,,1c·s~ $189.ooo ~a. •CONSUMER'S GUIDE 1954-B Meyer. 549·3484. pool, tennis, guard gate ••••••••••••••••••••••• Adults, no pets. Open Yorktown . Just West of l709-l713 Alabama. LLB 64.5-4900 $340& S3l0. S650/mo lease 559.5229 M1N1 OCEAN VIEW, 4 dally 10·6. 2250 Vanguard Beach Blvd. 960-2219 or BALBOA ISLAND. 2 Br Offiu Rental 4401> " Bdrm 2•~ b dbl Way (Al intersection of SJS.1718 house. Sips 7. Wkly S225. •••••••••••••••••••• ••• SJS.1718 Corona cW Mer 3122 C·l ZONED home. Attrac· Turtlerock·Campus vaew. $49S. C;at!' & ~~~~::~ Santa Isabel & Newport Mo/SSSO. 073-8970 eve 2 adj. of cs, pvt ent. approx COSTA MESA 6UHITS ••••••••••••••••••••••• live3BR2pa, 1aundry, 3 br, 2 ba, ~lrium. wet 962-44.54 Blvd,C.M.>540·9626 HUNT I NG T 0 N 1----------8x33·. $350 /mo. 1827 E.-&astic y,·.--lge fplc and dining area. bar, s Pr 1 n k I er s. ---------LANDMARK CONDO, 3 Ocean f'ront 2 s lry apl. Westclifl. NB63l·0900 rum ....... Super modem kitchen+ landscaped, 2 palaos + ToMlhouse 9UICIC IH BR 2 Ba. wetbar, pool & Best loc .. grl b c h . --------- from this partially garage ofc for business extras. Lovely. $.S25. mo. UnfwniWd 3525 New tnhses, 2 br, 1 1'2 ba, rec tacil. $450. Coats & $400 /wk June 20·July Omce sui te. M.V. at Here·s what you've been looking for. New 6 unit apt house w1lh four 2 Br, 2 ba and two 3 Or, 2 ba All elec. kitcb w /bltns. 2 <:ar parking each unat 310 Va<'lOrt:l 642 2164 0wnr/8k:r. furrushed 2 Bdrm & den venture. $600 mo. 1742 lo respon. tenant. Avail. ••••••••••••••••••••••• E·side. Cpts, drps, all Wallace,962·4454 Call494·S317or675·SS30 Avery Pkwy. Deluxe. 750 home. Older adults only. 'fUstin, CM. Agt. 640-3255 I\ u g . 1 s t . D a y s 2 bd, 2.,, ba. encl gar. bltns, fncd patios. Sml sq ft. SSt sq. ft. Prufer '$750/moyrly. -(714 )645-2233, eves patio, frplc, No pets ctuld&petok.Only$37S $2052br1"'2bapool!Kids. ON THE BEACH 2 Mgmt,831-7444 --3 BR 2 Ba. dbl fplc in Fam SJ3..8282 '-"'-e, """"'/mo 581.6985 mo. Dnve by 2536 Santa Gar. Sm fee 645-4900 & LR A ·1 u•m """"' CONSUMER'SGUIDE Bdrm, 2 bath. Patio, Executive Offices near On The Wafer · S475 mo. vaa RSJ2Br &denhighlyup· aft6 Ana Ave then call * BBQ, TV Gated com· OC Airport, all services Pr d · h oow.Agt.646-325S ---------642-0282. SHARPINEW2BR 2b est1g1ous <:on o wit gradedoneolfcrse.$.S75. Lrg 3 bd, 21h ba. w/ al· . a, munlty.S'700/wk available. $22$ mo. pnme 1Jay,4>cean & :Tel· 0-.. Point 3 226 752-5281·75&-0717 tached gar. door oper, 2 BR, b It 0 s, D /W . fS3rp101c .. 962g~77r.88• nMoachckildren, 152 287:t SAM CLEMENTE lY views. FUii secunty ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' view, pool, sauna, trash balcony. gar. adlt.s, no ON THE BEACH 4 Bdrm .. r.a.cH,,...IPLEX bldit. Pool and dock for 2Br, den. 2Ba, dbl gar. or Lc.J-aleodt 3248 comp, Ana Hills, $445. pets 548-4291 ; 645·9857 2 bdr. 2 ba. condo, pool, home wall\ privacy at Pim.a -'" SO f'1. boat 2 Bdrms. 2 Marina. $395 mo. Weber •••••••••••• • •• ••• •••• • &KUH Ye Suites Spac10W>, sparkling 3 2 2 baths. Fully furrushed. R.E.493-7766 Victoria·Laguna Beach 637--8828 Central loc. 2 BR 1 ~ Ba. carporl, adulls only Sl!OO/Wk. {)(fice avail. Overlook!> 1n top loc ation at .$1500/moyrly lease. bouse,2bdr.frplc,ocean ~xnu..fwn 3600 near new townhouse $3l0.95S-3007 WATERFRONTHOMES airport & mounlains Sl57 500. WATERFRONT HOMES &Toro 3232 view. steps lo beach. S650 ••••••••••••••••••••••• f'ncd yard. air cond. $345 Ocean view 2 br, 2 bs. 631 .1400 2082 Michelson, Irvine Di:;RTHA llENRV 631·1400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• _lse_._scs_-0666 _______ Elegant 2 sty, 3 Br 2•, Ba. mo 64S-4655evs frplc. $350 mo. 2~ 19th 1----------1 752 0234 REALTORS $4003brk1dsgarpet •--Hills 3250 spiral stairway, fplc, ----------St.962-8fW7 ------- 21S De1Mar 492·4121 ....._ __ ,._,__1_L _ _. Vard.Fee -557·0824 .......,--O""" beam clgs, lndry .. rEARNEW 2 BR l BA,---------NEWPORT BEACH . &KUtiY•OfficH ~ ~~ HOMEF.INDERS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,,_.. ,, Lo I 2 bd 2 b U ~ ... CH * • rm. lge patio. decks. an ve >' a. w /pauo. steP6 bay I beach. HTD Prinw 0 C Airport LAG MAI-•••••••••••••••••••••••----------View Condo Laguna upstairs apart. Nr. S. beaut. drapes & w/w POOL A 1 k ' ' DPLX • Gcraad 3202 PIO 3 br, 2 ba, kids ok. Vl1Jage,3Br,2ba,2 gar, q;;:,et nb~hd .NClos~ lo Coast Plaza and sbag, w/dishwasher & Call NO~a;0~3~1w=~s . Loc.atiolt By owner, income $710 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sharp! 557.0824 f'ee refng, A/C, t en. 3 pools. ~ ct.r,slt~pt gts Woodland Vig D/W, nice blt-tns. Walle to theater & Dennis at 645·6646 or For lease: 3624sqft12 lg. mo.113S,OOO.$l0.000dwn •LO~RENTAf..:5• •HOMEFINDERS• $450 529·0384. (213 ) mo. · cpts&drps.lst,last SlSO bigshoppingctr.Smin. 759-0117 exec. suites w/priv. 642 9401 1000 s of vacancies Fountain v~ 3234 333-7715 dep. Adults, no pets. Call lo bch. No sml children balhrm. Lg .conference •HOMEFIMDERS * ...... , --.--------Apartnwnts f,,ntished $46.5880, ask for Leslie or pets. Call 963·3795 NB summer rentals. 1 &. 2 rm (seats 12) w /bit-in Dumpy duple'C w1lh two fireplaces . 228 Albert Costa Me s a . Blcr 831·2170. All areas-All pnces •557-0824• t.IFETIMESERVICE Good in all 22 offices 1 FEE then FREE for ••LIFE•• ••••••••••••••••••••••• LEISURE WORLD New ••••••••••••••••••••••• bdrm furn , next to bar. Lg priv. recpt. area Beautiful 2 story w/bonus condo, gorgeous bluff aa.oarettiftsula 3707 ----------S2S9. Spacious 2 Br, new beach. July/August open w1lounge. Sep. klchn. ~ room. 3 br. 2 ba. frplc, view. 2Br, 2Ba, A/C, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Spacious 2 br garden apt. cpl, patio. 2 kids OK. 20430thSt NB675-4490 additional orfices. Ca n dshwhr. Kids & pels ok. w /D, vacant. SSOO/mo. $?.SO 2br walk to beach + Pool, ja.cuzzi, garage. 847·0967 -------Cum. or partial. Location 30UMITS ORANG£ COUMTY PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP $495. 964·2566. Agt, no 1>1J.464.2. moresm fee 645-4900 adult livmg. From $295. $350 /WK provides ample parking, fee. '....&.. l 55 •CONSUMER ·s GUIDE 177 E. 22nd St. 645-2498 Lrg 2 bdrm, 2 ba, palio, Glamorous 2hr, 2 balh in ready access to airport, J lomes apls dplxes bachs SlSO Share house SUM> 1 brutal pt pd $240 2 br luds pets .._e florfft 2 yard, gar, w /d hookup W freeways, & restaurants. Huntift9'onleach 3240 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ColtoM.sa 3724 LargeJBrtownhouseapl, immac clean, no pets, Promontory /forever ••••••••••••••••••••••• On the lake 3 br, 2 ba. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 ba, frplc. patio, garage. $350/mo968-089S vtew. Pool. Jae, sauna, Call 7141752·0651 Quit I Ad ll tennis. Waterfront ---------- F'our years new Townhouse des11tned Prore ss 1onally landscaped & manal(t.'d WALK TO BEACH A/C, pvt spa, club & lake $50 WELW & ur e comp ex. u s, 3841 ~ ts $400 ""53381 •-leach Homes631·1400 FUUSE:RVICE $410 4br 2ba fn cd yd palio ..,.,nvgs. S64S. 871 ·3889 no pe · .,.. · or .....,.._ $335 3 br kids pets ok $375 4 br kids pets ok. ,. Studio. 1 bedroom ""'5 ctu9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• DB.UXE OFflCES gar sm fee 645·4900 '" . .,.... f\I ho. La I •CONSUMER.S GUIDE MissiORVleio 3267 Maidservice.pool Lrg 3 BR. 2 ba condo. m . c ice guna oc Call today & move! ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2376Newport Bl. c M. $400. 2 BR 2 Ba, fplc, pvt . ocean view laundry 6 rms, 2~ ba home. Personal telephone/ re· S48·97S.Sor6453967 yard, lndry rm, gar. no facU .ssoo.494:5225 Quiet, prtvate. ('Onv cept1on1sl. secretary, I YOWMEJl Cluse in seven to thirty lalM>a Island 3206 <lays on /\ITU, r1)nlra ct. ••••••••••••••••••••••• <1r subJect lo Will ac WAMTB> 4Br. '21-iBa, 2 ma's to bch, 1 blk lo grade st'hool. public park w /lenrus crt.s & bike trail to bch. Kids OK, no pets. Ava1lJ\ug 1. S600/mo. 962 0616. $4153-0r kids ok, gar Fd yd. Fee · 557 ·0824 •HOMEFINDERS• pets. 83.1·3307 agt, Wall< to bch. $1200 mo. conference room. coffee ......... on leach 3740 -'------~---1 Studio modern bath 494-7430 & hosp1tahly services •••••••••• •• ••• •• • ••• •• .. V .a. •L JULY I ST ' d I 'i----------Excellent local.Ion, near «ommodJte cxhan1te 1 .. , •o ISL ... D Sl,200,000 Call 752 l920 ,_. • A .... Super 3 br, 2 ba, frplc, SMALL BEACH HOTEL dshwbr, luds & pets ok. ROOMS$37.SOWeek ' QUAIL PLACE 2 or 3 Bdrm home or apt, annual lease. Nice Pvt Av a 1 I now. $4 3 s. Apt $185/mo. s.36-3037 ----party. 642-5255. -'--'---------13 BR, P • ba, crpts. drps, IALIOA ISLAMD bltns & gardener <Close _964_·_2566 __ • _agt_._n_o_re_e_. __ $385. 1 Bdrm, Huntington Htwportleach 3269 Landmark. Coats & ••••••••••• •••••. ••. ••• Wallace. 962.4454 PROPERTIES"' Large 3 br. 2 ba duplex lo schl, shop'g & bch. COpettTill:lU'.M.I Cor annual lse. Avail. 1460mo.!J60.1417 Sept. Refs req'd. $625. ----MAKE O FFER mo. Part. furn. 075-5724 $1651 Br gar, yd, ut1l NO FEE! Houses, condos, duplexes. Rental Pavilion. 675-49l2 Bkr. part pd · f'ee557·~ ~~awhe~amou, rC.poslelax .Mle9s6a7. a.Aoa PfttiRsula 3207 __ •_H_O_M_E_F_l_N_D_E_R_S_•_ Open! Buy Like rent, 4 Br, ,...,, . 3 ba, jacuui, etc. 17l2 Well bwll. 8off s t pk'g ••••••••••••••••••••••• $t803brgara!(e·yd Highland. $325.000. 11400/mo 1 nc. Bkr IAYRlOMT COMDO Petok. Fee. SS7·M24 home. Agt .. 631-0900 -557.()283 .Luxury l BR, 2 ba unit •HOMEFTNDERS• 'W/view. Avail monthly, SUVIEW IOUHITSCM or• lease opt. SS9S. Beachwalkoondo,3br,2 Unobsttllcled view or Townhouse·type2 br . i •.; ~2981 ba. upgraded cpl.'i, bltns. ocean and Newport ha, enc ~ar. 1 yr l)ltl r-.1.."---•-h 3 218 Vrly lse. (7l4)645·l219 or Beach. 38R, 3ba. New, $415,000. Owner 675 5275 ._..,...'""911 -ac (21.3)439-0281. full security. Ten nis, ---·•••••••••••••••••••••----------jacuzzi. s wimming. 35 U. NIE.AR IEACH 3Br. 2Ba Custom Oplx Wow! $350 4br l\.'J ba, yd llOO/mo consider lse opt. Htwport leach 37 69 ••••••••••••••••••••••• STEPS TO llE.ACH 3 Br. 2ba, Penm $650 2 Br & guest, Pen1n SSOO 3 BR. 2 ba, yrly. $425 SUMMER RENT AL Bayfroot, 4 BR. 2 ba. on big bay. S8SO Week associated BR01(£RS REALTORS JO]", W Bolhoo b'1 166 J Luxunous adult secunty w /frplc. ocn view, no pool sm fee 645-4900 A.gt/Owner. Ask for Rod bldg. Seller will finance pets. $500 mo. 496-8024 I •CONSUMERS GUIDE al (714) 325·2996 or Dean w /S400M down. Agt CoroMdel Mer 3222 $240 bll.ns, lndry, kids, + al (714) 832·51«. Speciry•--------- _'8JS.49'2 ___ 1_. ------••••••••••• ••• ••••• •••• more sm fee 645-4900 Sea view Home. $80 n~~ ~o~~u~1 ~cular Harbor View •CONSUMERS GUIDE New 2br 2ba pool ! $460. $200fumpool +more ~~/ ltg l BR. $47$ mo 3 Br 2"" ba condo good i)lcd kids sm feeMS-4500 $200super tbr util pd ~ 2100 9'75-0927bel9&S. ~.From $400. iREN, _•_C_O_N_s_u_M_E_R_'s_c_u_1_o_E_I •CONSU~:iGUIDE ••••••••••••••••••••••• CH.ARMING 2 BR de· 968-329? Newport Hts, 3 BR. 2 ba, ---------- Industrial acre. wesl$lde \ac~ed unit w /beam Beaut prestigiOWI Hunt · fam rm, pat .• dbl Jar., Costa Mesa. Almost last 'ttil s. frplc, deck, O/W, ingtoo Seaclllf, 3000sq n. etc. $S2S. 6'2-7845 q lwflh coe 1vall. Pb1l Sullivan, dbl aar, lauod area. Nr schls, shopg, bch. U.fwahlN4 RJtr.S48·2103. HcliS4~0 /mo .. !.~l!.;. •39 Gardner, 1775 mo . HrbrVuHma.48r,2ba, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' ....... ...__ cr....1.-2~00 otrope ....... •UiR _842_·4330_______ Avail Sept l. Nr schls, GSM: al 3102 .._. ,.._.--A ,.__...._ .......... _ 3 shops. pools • park. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• _.._._ 224 1 Bedroom condominium, Avail furn, S'7SO/mo incl 12621 Flower Street, MULTJPl.E ZONF.D ••••••••••••••••••••••• pool, tennis, super loca· &ard/Wlr.&40-Q89. Garden Grove. Large LOTS. Need partner or Tunqull Panoramic tJon.$2SO.Call6464477. ....,..,. Mo., newer 3 Br •· one bedroo. m townbous~ builder. CAlJ..&42·96CM. View. 3 mstr az Bdrms, ....,.,., "' 1 ---------12th ba. Frplc, sep SUper 3 br 2 ba blt·ln•, fain. rm .. custom borne closetosboppng.1.aun· OfACI ILDG SITI baJeony & yard. Auto frpl, paUo, ta fncd yrd, on Bia C.anyon Fairway. dry h c 111t1 u . No Huntinaton Beach &&,..ae opera. OW, trash 892·6519, 840· 1$06, _A .... it....._~ __ n_se_-0087 ___ cbildrcn; oo P"ls· Call "' ""' crpts, rps. pane •n~. Nice 2 br apt, 1'2 blk to b<'h 2 br townhouse $375. wa.lk lo bch. no k1tch. utll Newport. Sleeps ?. $195 freeways. Adults, 646-2010. ~,!l!~~c.!170, 1st & last. wk up. 07J..360l. IAJCY CENTER --~ (714)979-2161 2Br. upslaJrs, nr shop· BACH APT. new k1lch ping Very clean, neat, 2 bdr, den, ocean vaew, '-' New cpt.s, .,,, blk bch CdM OFRCE~ avail 7/1. $230, refs, blk from beach, year Ne..nvl.rt.Slps 4 673.3601 ldnDnthsrentfrff adults 549-4225. 556-3900 round. $475 mo. 494-7287. -..- Avaal. July I, E/Sade 2 BR 1 Ba, newer, Adlts, no pets S32S. 67S·S312 ; 546-5880. 2 bdrm, newly renovated. Near Nwpt. & Bay. No pets/children 968·3636 2 bd 1 bath, carpel, new drapes garage, adults, no pets $285. 319 Monte Vista, 831·299'7. .t!W 1561 -Bnghl and cheery new · Super view' Newer 3 BR. ()(face swtes So. of Coasl 3869 ••••••••••••••••••••••• r ARK MEWPoRT Bachelors, 1 or 2 Bedrooms & Townhouses 2 ba. home A1C. pool, Hwy. Available now ' tennis. 3 To 4 mos., $1200 You must see to ap- mo. Agt 64().6500nSS.0087 preclale. Call Linda B I G C A N Y O N _07_5-_23_11 _____ _ Townhom~. Avail July 15-Aug 1. 2 Br, tennis court, jacuzzi. pool. 759-1594 From $329.50 Spectacular spa, total recreation p rogram, social program. 7 pools. s 1----------1 tennis courts. Al Fashion LAGUHA IEACH EXP ANDING? 100.13,000 sq ft C-.elfflv.~ Conntrce Partt lsland, Jamboree & San 3 Arch Bay, 3 br, 2 ba, Newport 833-88 I l Joaquin JUUs Road. close lo beach & lenms . MESArlMES 1714164 ... 1900 Super view. Pvt com· ONTHEWATER 2 Br ~. Pool. jacuzzi, munlly. 644·1814 adults. no pets. 26so Eastb1urr 3 br. 2 ba. 1ge Deluxe Suites Harla Ave, CM. (Mesa mstr sle, all bltns. Dbl ~ Clemente, steps lo · Verde Or. E. off Harbor gar w/elec. dr opnr. Pool pi.er, lSO degree ocn 'IM1270 sq ft Blvd). 549-2447. & rec facil. Adults, no v 1 e.w • P 0 0 I · ( u 11 LOJU" pets. Pref. married cpl. funush~. 1Br. 18a Con· .a.• ffl "TifESEVlLLE" 5'25. lse. Avail. July 1. do. avail now. $200 wk or Am Clllllft. K 2 Br w/gar, adlt.s, cpls, 7se.l7'5 tooOroo.552·31168 Udo drps, range, fncd yd Yar:affo. ...... 4250 McriH V-.,. w/paUo. wtr pd. $'295. Nwpt Hgt.s lpvely ~rea, 2 ....................... .,_wpori 6754662.. 2619 Santa Ana Ave. bdr 1 ba. pnv. pat.lo. gar. LAGUNA BEACH Ocean 63Ml.201·5 no pets. S32S mo. 548·5804 v· blk.s ,A b b 3 OC AIRPORT or'94~ 1ew, l 'h .., c , $3115. 3 BR 1 BA, lower, br, sips 6. ~ per wk. #I LOCATIOH new decor, carport, no Newport H'I 2 BR, 1 ba, (TI4) 494..SOU. Execolc avall. pets. 1021 Valencia frplc, gar .. crpls, dl'll6, in , .... 9'7S-01Zl . ~ etc. Older adJts. S295 yr· Modern cab . ~c Ar·•--------- ly. 548.s:ll& rowhead. Excel sun Oftl&S,.C.forl...+- EA.5TSIDE 3 Br 2 Ba , no deck, phone. TV, 3 bdrm, Desk, chlir. utilities. pet.I, $3llO UM 21.st St., Nlct 2Br Oplx upstairs, 842-8114 s». s.36-7504 avail July lS. 546-6985 f rplc, WI O, gar age. ---------1----------adults, no pets, nr Udo On So. Lake Tahoe. 2 BR N«-wish bldg, 750 sq ft, lsle. sbopplna. Avail ap· condo w /dock, pool, nr $395. Excellent parking. MtwTwt .. eAph prox7/lS.L&e,cr4dltrcf. casinos. Ownr aft 6; Nr. Plua in O.P . 21.000 sq. n. lot near romp, beautifully cpt'd It 846-1371 $2952BR + iaraae Walt.et at (7l4) 89HOl3. Pacifica Hoapltal, 5 dralal~~-oul. To aee BtlllBR.2 ba,inclrefri•. fee ·SSNl824 lllMHllllCIRd 3106 POIPUBEACHKAUAI PolntaShop. Cntr&Clvlc.-c_v_•"°'-........_______ super cl~aJJ le PY\. f415. •HOMEFJNDERS• ••••••••••••••••••••,•• 38drmt, l~ Baths src. t~e:en:::· ~~fu:'g~ Hawaii oceanfront. pen· So. Laauna; tlny pen· I 'IJ Mile le9Cll $:500 mo. 4N.,o3 644-6604 Montgomery B . t: . 49S-1.2168 Cen~~~::~e Rllr t:m 3 br 1undeck lrid4 + 1_goo._m& _______ Harbor Vu H mea-1,!!'"°p':t.1!. '!tit n1~e:.~a~e~ F)repla~s. Patios. frpl, all blU~. $450 yrly. thouse. • br 3 ba, Jae. In• thouscoffice: leue$200 peta6mfte645·4900 . ,... 2B d 2Ba .. l!J Dithwuhers. D\sposaJs 542-.4657. sldc condo. Fantastic Approx. 500 sq. n.. ofc. 5489950 .CONSUMER'SGUIDE 3Br, 2Ba, country kit , ... onaco. r+ en, • crpt & pnt. ~. l'T1Y· L&undl'JFaclUUes couUlne&aunaet view •pace, ocean view. $3'7S crackJln frpl , super moo.Call54M7SS. 67S-3859 For tae. Npt Terrace. 2 TI4 /4!rl-6841 Month,lciis('I VACANT LOT DRAMATIC1... nu 3 bd, 2'11 dean, aardaner, MIS. H ... •-y-w --------1175 MeM'o'fl• St. BR, 2 ba, fam rm kltch. Tu ~ 50 X 100. aoned for ba.2aty,FP.Nrbch.La CaUtosee,841·3341 -~ q; Your friends and coodo.Gar,pool,jacuni, CATALINA-year round met · duPlex, '-' blk oll Pee. yd11S7S.112S. 148-l(L'SS Brllht " cbaery, 3 BR. nel1hbon uu Clu1Uied MZS/rno M<>-03S7 nopt't.s S4e0mo. ~.eroa lcue, roomy 2 BR bome, 1_R_eal_to_rw ____ 499_-459_1 Cit. llwy. •'I.Ill ocean Walk to bcb, 48r, 1~81, l•lt)I. "Monaco Plan". w b • o th• y ha v • spect•cuJar harbor vi w. view lllclud J)ana Pl. ~ l BR. uPStalra. pet bllna, 1ardnr lochJdcd, Tot.ally lresh, move ln eomethlng toaell. They'll 3Br, 2&, paUo, bwlt·lns, 2 auodttk:I, fUmlalled or $1UCIO.A&t.n..at11n, OK-145Maa -.~or SSSOmo.w/~1cc4cp. now•t -50pe!'mor\lh tell you how wtll It SPJ...L td.J• llem1 with a btwn ocean la bay, unfurnished. ISLAND Ed SoebMl. 1411-1'M5 MN0'74 Ai• ftO.J,1IO worked for them I o.ll)' PUot Clasalrled Ad 5'7$-12lle, '*"871 REALTY 21.J.Sl0-11~ I Self with EASE I Jl'a a BREEz-£ Cl ... i.fl~ Ads 642..w7& ----··· 7 ' •I] ; 1 • ) i .. ) .. ~ .......... ~ .. ~ .... : .... '~!Ill' ~-' ... ' T .. ' 1 ... • ... • ..ii • ~I DAILY PILOT Cl 1) •' .,. •• , • ..,. .. h, · ..,.ac. c .... /C_ ... ,.,1.g Ht· , Ho••cte-., ....... ...,/P.-riRCJ '~"....,... • ""9 ..................................................................... ·······•••••·••·•······ .........•.•••••......•...••...•.•..........•••......•..............................••...... ·········•••·•·····•••• BAJ ~Sen. T)'JliAa Senu.. wall de· PoundaLlou .... la1ntn1 W8SfEAN F'l!:NCECO. HaullnJ·Y•rd 4' aarage DIRTYWlNboWS? Patntlna. Extr/lntr. Ex· PETERS PAINTING REPAIR" REROOF'. ~ TIUPCRARC£$10 UV..~ Call ~ uy watla, bll)('b, paUo.s. WoocU5Cb&mlibk cle&D11,p111. Lawn insta1Ja. CALL LYNN pr'd. honoat, neat, reu. E xpr'd. Reu Ratc::s. t y .Pe• 1 bin I Le•· -111 s A "M-~.-..1 UC!'d U......., .. ,..., •"-1•-Uon 1J removal Tree & Uc'd96'·1MSDave f~ree Est. Call Gene rockabakea·eomnn·tv . .-.,,,~am.~ ... -.....,. .-. · .......... ....u _._, abrub remova't. R•I . .\16.T1ll 960·5844 ,...... __ ... ,-.u..., ,.._ .... ""--.,.~ P . b ~ Freeest.$41-5931> ----------1-pl he Cemoot work, all typea, .... , Frank lveAI. 531-0384, Kowlecleanlng per day at rUR r.ner. 1.1.Dl.Ulg Yl---------t::::~-------· • rt« a.,_r. 1 ................ ....... call wttnda or wltda19 aft ....................... M2-8Q5I k>w COft w /experience. R. Sinor. St. lie., ins. Try Paper hangini, est. locaJ· 1h ....................... Carpenter.~~ est. Any 5.IG-IM82or846-3S51 •V.tRYLOW PRJt~• ...... .did , I Free eat. Call Celia me.836-~24hra. l Y · Euro Pe• n ...................... . -S.nllooer am jobs. CaU AJlu or Ci•ect• O«lrlOnC 9 ardenlfta 1!!!°20t.1 .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 548-2JOG YOUNG MAN 5 yn expr crafumanship. Call r.F.R•M•C We. New ortt· Orh..-a-•Parkln• lot Tony 646-8649 -_. ~ •----------ln wall"over.ln Free S-9PM.54C).2880 model. Free est. ~t . ~-• . ........................ w-~ a REALLY CL~A .. I Bea·"' homes, ho ....... & " ig .......... 1 ..... 7 •Repurs ·~akoatana ,...,, ,__ m'I ..... ...ru, "'' .... .,D 64.S-857 And,' 1 ,.,.,,,. we come. _. •Lie. NB, CM s1rsuu. ~arpen~. com •• Room Adcllllona & Clean·upa, Haullng, HOUSE? Call Gingham apartmentcleanine.Ex· est.a. 6 Y· lnt.ext.~vin1arearor alts NphaitlW6-48'Jl ra.. No Job too small. ~modellng.3lyrse.xpr Landscaping. lrruned. GirLFreeest.645-5123 cell.work.8'7·3637 WE WILL PAINT AN yrs. Prof. qual work.a------------------i John.s.Jl-*182or846-04.2$ w/bard to build aJtt:s. aervicin •. if.2..9907 AV}l;RAGE HOUSE Reason. Neat, Ina. Dave. T~ ~ le. IMAGINATION la our G til a--t-~ Floors, carpets, baths, Housecleaning & ban-t.erlor. 1249. Aver. 4.~~ -~---------••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... c.,.ts.r. password, Quail Buildera CM __.....,... walls, paUos. windows. dyman r epairs. Npt ..... _ .... ....,.. • ... .,.,..,.,, E"p cus tom painter. AU subjects. 1st Ulru 3rd .,, ...................................... Gordo IU• -i ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~-pri-!orva'"O'ro-0 -b/CM e Bo ded I" oC.A• ..,... .............. .. E bll h I .,..odergarden teache:r ,..,......,. o.,..._ ~ ... • °" ar a . o S47-13:M Surfaces s anded & xper. pu c •c oo II Cd~ h Shampoo & steam clean. HANDYMAN: Carpentry, a dMces. cpl. 556-4123 after S or 0 teacher. £aslblutf area. ava my "' ome. Color briihtenera: wbt California Coaatal electrical. plumbloc & TboeeGuys 974..()810 weekends. Prof painting. Ext & iol. ~~!~d . Lie . nu 644-0J80 Mon, Wed. Frl, S -S. cptslOminbleach. Clean Service. New. temodel & fln.84'7·Z78'1, 557-i:i04 "'r """ 644,9806 '· d .... , .," A ha··"-"'--. •~ Immaculate Cleanino Co L-..t..-mt-9 Low rates. Refs. Free i-R---d-.--. --S---. -uv, ID rm. IUll ...... vg ....,,g ... ,~ esurna.._. ftp I .. ·--r• est 536-47&0, 536-4383 --~fl--'-' eme. 1at1on er v1ce 'lkymRcpair rm $7.50, couch $10, chr CaJJMaxat492·6393. --I For those who deserve ....................... ---------~ •• :!':":••••••••• Tut.onngGradesl ·Z ••••••••••••••••••••••• $5. Cuar elim pet odor. ••••• .. •••••• .. •••••••,• lhebesl.759-03'71 Landacaping. Tree trim· l'ailltYoirCastt. Neatpatcbea&t.extures 832-9012 Mobile Bicycle Repair At Cpt repair. 15 yrs expr. c:J~~~ Rec4~1i~~ " Haul, altlploader dump Carpet ~leanlne win· ming. Clean-up. 8 yrs SpeclallZJ.Dg in residen· Rlll EST. 19J. l 439 Wflldow ClccmMcJ Your Home. For Appl Do work myself. Refs ~r&'Ass! 673-7~ trlt, '!~db\z. tree wrk, dows, ovens. wed~ It all! el(]). Free est. Noboru. Ual home.. int. & ext. ,.......,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Otll89l-14SS. 531-0101. · demolit.ionsetc.83l·l2S7 ""'-Moppe•·"•" """'" ~or89?-2&62 Pl ase check our r• -... .... • ..., ...,_....._ r e Ll 32088"'· .;:"•••••••••••••••••••• .:>erving CM /NB/Irv./, -....u s.r.ic• CahrillCJ 8ectrical ttLI. g Walls ee'li ,,. n & U•wy erences.. c If 1. 1 b w t Reas. Coast Cleanloi ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• . . In .... oors ••••••••••••••••••••••• Guar, ansrd , fre e Any P um 1ng, a er Service 548-SSlJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,......_.... Bcc:tri windows cleaned. Call est.'Ted. 636-708S serv. leaks, balhrm encl,•----·------VATA l"ROCESSlNG Weddings, !l ummer c OCCSludenl.lTont.ruck. after6PM 646-6145 Bnclcwork. Small jobs. ceramic tile. R¥s. Getaclearviewfrom Sen-ices fOI' 11 ...... ll bust-parties, wine tasting. lJc327136 645-6974 Trash. tree trim, Ron ----·-----Newport, Costa Mesa & .. _ Cab F Th F' .., • ., ~Q3 .....,...,,...,. 1...n~. 67c:317"eves. House Pa111ting, Int., Ex· 832·2A68 "A CLEAR VlEW" Co. nesses & professions. ana-'!r e ine ELECTRICIAN·Pticed ...., . .,, • J,.,,...,._. SUMSH1ME GIRLS '....... .... " ter. Free etillmates. John 631·0'217 833-14'10 Ans$(\r Custom programming. ArtoCCat.enng. 645-9858. righl·free estimate do Lite hauling.moving. The professionals In P..-,,tr.,.nng Beck. &e.S..2161 HOM~AVERS. Plumb- Reasonable. Southwest Jaroe or small jo'--Gar age Yard clean·ang home and orfice clean-••••••••••••••••••••••• ing & Heall.ng. Free est. Services. 957-0162 SEU. Idle items with a Lie~ '673-0359 Reas. r~tes. 642.0705 • ing. We are fully insured All p ROFESSI ON AL Int e r1 or I E x t er 1 or. $10 hr. Hooesl & reliable Have something you want .Daily Pilot Classified Ad. -ls your service? Free Painting. Inter /Exter. Reason. rates. Jo'ree esl . service. BorA. M JC OK. lo sell? Classified ada do 'Sell __ i_dl_e_it_e_m_s_· __ 642-5678 642-5678. Want Ad Help? 642-S678 Sell idle items 842.5678 esµm&te, 546-9525 Reas, work guar64a.ooa6 Call Mi.ke. 548·5937 979-80Mor847·0383 it well642·5678. t>fficeRftltal 4400 ~ Mort~ Trat •• ..... • • • • • • • • • • .. • • • • Oppot lwnity 500 S DffdS 50 3 5 Ptf"IOftCIU 5350 .JoblW.+ect, 7075 H.lpW•hd 7100 HelpW•hd 1100HtfpWCMttcf 1100HelpW.t.d 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •AYRtOHT OFRC ES Cannery Village-New of· fices from 300 s q fl fant a s ti c vi e w~. lg pat1os -p a rk1ng & JarutonaJ included. 2808 Lafayette 1\ve., ..N B. 673-1003 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Lady to do housework. Ad . . t . Bookk ClericaJ pan lime. Lido 2ND Mort 1 $10 000 Own trans. Tburs and m 1 n 1 s t r a 1 v e Baker or baker's helper eeper area. Typing & book· 'SALES needed o:i;:Ye ~ome. 'pis H'1 lfheret. FTidayopen. 548-0595 Secretary. Please see Full lime. Will train. Prr <>PPO•TUMITY + k . g essential Call ~bshntialprof'm I ---"-------rourSWldayadunderOf· c lean.up h e lp also Uyou'vegotil,youhave eepan • ean be yours an a busi-call for details, 642-0898. 111 wnre when I find work! Hltp W..ted 7100 fice Manager · potential. needed 548·3031 w GROW WITif US. Ex-_67_5-803() _______ _ ness to suit your time 10% And more yield on Hove o nice tnp Fred ... • ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••aTMEMT panding Real Estate ----------srheduJe. Add income to TD's. Well secured by MOPP Lil Jone ... "You· ACCOUHTIMG CLK "'r""' Development & Property Clerical your current pos1t1on Long Beach Apts. Know-what" Bev. "Pick A/R & A/P for expand· MANAGERS Banking Management Company ~~~~~t~:J~n~o:~!~ !3~~~1 ask for Bob Yourself Up" Borb ... To ~~~:~~::l~ wc/~~:e~I f:fu1o~':n~~~v~ O~ Ne~EPJ!2~rlcS~as ~°e~:r~t aCe~l:~~~ Oocumentat•1on. reqwrements; ability-to .,._---------• ev~elsethere with Please send resume to: site full lime position. lmmed opening ror a lceeper/Ofrice Manager II ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 DELUXE OFC'S <:onl rm., seat 25, all paneled. sm . whse in re· .ar. 1 or 2 yr. least!. l.ake F' or-es t Jr ea . Ke nt Hark ms. 7lt·S81·9393 deal w!J)eople&desireto 1st 1'.D '$30,000 at 10%. Class Amorient Petroleum, Call Mike Sullivan (714) Recept. The p er son with experi ence thru make money. Contact Well secured. Property Inc., AccountJng Dept .. 752·2809. QUAJL PLACE selected will take & FIS. Must be able to ban· 833-0320. value $100,000+. 979.5099 I LOVE YOU 30100 Cr own Valley MANAGEMENT. direct calls on an elec· die pressure & meet de· •· ~/ Parkway , Laguna l r o n i c p u I s e adlmes. Join our young SNACK SHOP -~·---A LOT APT MANAGER th l d ,_.._., -"' .. Niguel, Ca 92677 sWltchboard. wall take grow onen e com· located an mu Ill million Lost Ir FoWMI <See you at home Mom!) Mature cpl lo manage messages. will greet & pany. Excellent Salary. $$sports complex. Over .. me Account ing clerk for faulpt1 .. complexp. rrwoGmoodan ass is l cus to m e rs & Be ne fits, Ye ar End '$7000/mo. Only $18.000 ••••••••••••••••••••••••----------small dynamic office Ume. man · perform va rious lite Bonuses for righl in· fuJ I pnce. Agt. 7S1 1400. ~19h 5100 sprit.al Reoder oear Or. Cty airport to s a I a r Y + a Pt · N o mai.c. duties lD include dlv1duat. ----------1 OISTRllUTORS ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1815So. El Camino Real perform variety of tasks. ~~~~e;M Call 673·8803 typing. No exper nee R.C . TAYLOR CO -6400 sq fl San Clemente. Fully lie. Should have 2 yrs ex-Good sal & benehls. Con IMC 'Showplaceoflown U.S. Telelron. one of the * PAM * Forappt.492·7296 penence, typing. lG-key. ASSEMBLERS tact: 640-5112 Meaa Verde Dr Plaza lergt s t Mfr or giant Salary open. Please send TIM PERA.LT"' L2:> Mesa Verde Or. E. "l'V 's, as seekrng <hs• RELAXING MASSAGE resume lo Boll 265, c/o B.ECTROHICS '"' OYS CM tnbutors in the Cos ta We're going to miss you. BobJames-Llc Masseur Daily Pilot, P.O. Box lmmed openings for peo· Regional V P IUSI 54.S-"l23 Mesa area. 4nvestmn'l We wish you thebesl in OutcallS.9,494·5111 1560. Costa Mesa, Ca. pie w/exper. 1n P C MAHUFACTURE:RS EXPERIENCED __________ , secured by inventory. the future! 92626 Boards & wiring. Grow· 'IA.MK Stun Noodle Restaurant, ----We w1llpartially financc hffT..,,..eet *SANDY'S* lngco. Xlnl bens. Apply l20lDoveSt,N.B Newport Bea ch , 215 'E SI DE C M . S h ops . n ght andivd'I Csll for DoeT-'-' Scientific Drilling Con· (7l4l 752-0600 River side Apply an d fc's, hobby, wholt:sale. appl. 1213)442-1435 rr"""JI Oulcall Massage Acctng Bkkpng trols, 4040 Campus Dr, pe r so n betw ee n genuse.1-r SSS.548·7249 JU.OnJ-iud 9'73-0329 TEMPO•ARY N.B. or call 557.9051 & F,qua!OppEmplyrm/f 8am·lpm. t-ndus-tri-.-ol-Rental--4500 Sy lChOCKc bTa'AylLSFree· SCRAM-LBS •SHERI LEE• Register Today to work askforRayGilman Carpe t & Uphol ste ry CerU!ted Masseuse on various accounting & Bart.ender P rr. apply 6/23 ••••••••••••••••••••••• slandlng bldg, gd park bookkeeping assign· ---------•! 9am. Jaspers, 3672 S Cleaner. over 21. Dnvers .Ullo To SUIT tng, long lease. Termi., ANSWERS House ~ls6838· By appt. k · S Ile. &i0-2700 .,..... ments. Wor close to ASSEMBLERS Bnslol, .A. S,000 To20,000 sq. fl. M·G agt.751 1400. your home , ·Figure CASHIERS ume, C05ta Mesa 8'ainns Wanted 5010 Mortar -Pause -Clerks to Sr. Accoun· SO Trainee Assemblers Bartender. ex penence in Wl::SLEYTAYLOH CO ••••••••••••••••••••••• Woman -Tribal -p~ SerTf~ 5360 tants needed thr uout Needed Immediately high volume d inner G~~;:1~~.~~~:i~ns REAL TORS 644 491D BLOW OUT ••••••••••••••••••••••• -<>range Co. Long & Short Term house necessary. Apply W . C Be f t -----Lease t \,uy body shop Sign on a tire repair Robert Hall's Assignments Mon· Wed, 3·5PM No e tram o. ne • s 3500 Sq ft. 2 ofcs del door. J..S,000 sq ft w.Jboolhs & truck: "Invite us lo your Let us help you with your Account.emps JShlf\a Available. phoo& t-aJls. The Victor METRO CAR WASH 23< Sq rt. Cc>!>ta Mesa. comp. s.54·5565 anytJme next.8.LOW OUT." ~~fnog~~ a ~lchcaard e ~~ SOOS. Main, Ste 501 Musthaveown tTansl>. Hugo lnn, 361 Cliff Dr. 2950 Harbor Bl. CM 64>0191.675-0508 ••nfihtwnt Lost&Fcmtd '5300 Rigler & -'fsoc. (7 l4) No.Tower,UnionBank Cc1Today5S6-8520 _La__;;;_g_Bc_h_._____ CASHIER Redlands t\'ucaipa. -adJa Wantwd 5020 ••••~•••••••••••••••••• 752-6800 . In 1be City of Orange Free. Top Pay. Vac Pa-I Beauty Salon 1n C M Telephone Needed for cent .Sa n Be rnardino ••••••••••••••••••••••• l..IJsl or Found 3 pet? Call 714/835-<4l03 Vid«TetnpCM"c:wy needs Wig Stylists. 65';(, Sat.Sun for C.M. store. F'wy 15,000 sq rt MR Businessman wants \o in· An i ma 1 A 5 s is tan c e Social Clubt 5400 I•---------SerTicH commissaoo. S48·3446. S3 Per hr Apply 8·5 Mon· eel 11 I h h •••••••••••••• ••• ••• ••• C'.,.. Th "' I' Pl b w n 5 yr o' tat up on vest or pure:: ase yac l League537·2273. no(ee. ·---------1---------•I Div Walter Kidde& Co n I. e r.ar s um · 4 S acres. <"lr:ir sµan 24' brokerage in Newport or•----------ACCOUNTING 4341 Birch Street Beauty salon an CM net>ds 11\!l, Inc 1533 W. LmC'oln. iru.ulaled u:•1hng. !IOOA , Long Beac h Harbor LOST . M !rash seller. StNGLE? ClEaKS Suite2l3 hair stylJsts. 65'.i com An a h eim or phone Clerk MSI Dal• Corporation. the acknowledged leader ti\ portable appbcations terminals. has an 1m mediate ope01ng for a Documentation Cleric Will provide support to our data processing ~earn. Excellent typing end gener a l c lerical ahihty ts required to ma1Dtain the detailed concise records required by the department. TbtS position can provide an excellent ave nue to learning the rundamen• tals or data processrng We offer excellent salary a nd fringe be nefits. Please apply in person or call Al Bennett. (7141 549-612.5. MSI DATA. CORPORA TIOM 340 Fischer A venue Costa Mesa, CA 9262'7 Equal Opportunily- Eroployer M/F 240 4110 power T rurk areas. Call Mr. Jackson Under I YT' old. No tags. Call INTROVIEW for the 1'be Irvine Co. ls current· Newport Beach mission. 548 3446 642-17~ext 11 well A 1C. crpted ofr Gd at&:J3.3894 after6. Vic Cameo Shn;, CdM. intelligent & discreet i;o~uaJ Opportunity •.r T ---------l•--------- 1 bo • h r -ll"."l72S lo eet · 1 ly seeking accounting ~ IEAUTY -slSTAM Cashi er Wante d . part ""'ERK a r .,. ousang area ......__.to 1 _ 5025 _ .... __ ,..... ___ . _____ 1 way m 11ew smg e Employer M JF S '-AJ 4Br modern house on .._ .. , ._... people. 752-54.11. clerks. Req's 1·2 yrs A/Pl•---------ror busy salon. Oppor lo ume, Thurs. Fri, • at. & prop also :t\'aal. Ideal for ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lost: Reward. Fem. med or A/R w/some exposure receive best training pro-Sun. Call Barbara for PART -TIME hghl mfg or warchou,,e l'\lllCK C •SH sz wht dog w/sml blk to co m pu le ri ied ASSISTANT APT MGR gram. Prefer neat , appt S40-3280 TRAINEE Call79S-2A07 ,..._,., A spots on back. Has sore Ea • ..,.~~ systems, & 10 key by Couple pre ferred , fashionable applicants. C"'.rHI~ CompanywiUlrain alert. ------on shaved leg. HB/FV. flrepcrcn;;;;;;;;; touch. We .orrer xlnt general handyman & Apply in person. 200 -.... 4464 S"' FT ~t & 2nd Trust Deed _84_7-056 __ 1 _______ 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• working con<ls & com· m:lint, Uv~ on premises. Newport Ctr Dr, N R With !Jte bkkpng exper dependable. mature in ""' •-ed r .r-L--L-· h I be nefit F t.Jme Days Muldoons d iv a n i nte r es t t n J.: 2 pnvatt"offict·'· ..,ans arrang or any FOUND: Male blk & whl ~&1~ pparcke aegen.s ve ~ .... f!~.lablpwtnp9AroMv-51dPeMd . Beauty Stylist, trained lo Rest:iurant.640·4110. service promotion + ret·pl. & uen'l offlcc, 4 reason. Credit no pro-1 _Jl'WIO._ 7005 ...,......,.. 1• ,. l r d <> bl Bo h · puppy 5 or 6 mos A so Call a AA.3389 lake over cuentele, top sys em or new car e· restrooms, 120 '208 V, 3 em. rrow -on t e in· · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• '"'' , __________ 1 al p · · 1 cd '' adult fem bllc: Lab mix 9• u 't.IJ Noon wages. 837-8779, 837·4250 ,, ers. 06atioos ocat µh skylights. space creased v alue or your · · · PIANO& tu"" CO CASHIER an c.~ & other OC beaters i-:xcclL loc:il1on. home. Call today for fast, _ii45-__ LSOB _______ • VOICE LESSONS THE llt.YIME ATTEHTIOM Beauty Operator, If you Need indiv. w /mm 1 yr areas. Filing exper, no <"all Mr Hardage wurteous mlormallon. FOUND: Blk male Lab. Call me for info 550 Newport Center Dr SUMMER JOIS are rash1onably aurac· cashier ex per. Pleas ant typing. Start $2.SS hr, ad- Tn·Co Realty wht patch on chest, abl 1 Maryann 55$.708S Newport Beach 11 OR OVER live, like people. & would pen.onality & abillly lo vancemeol within 60 645-0621 f-:\.l\ \..AJ.aX CO yr, vie Hunt Ha rbour F.quai Oppor Employer like a career m makeup deal w/pubilc. Xlnl ~e>. days. Pd vacation & --l,!.:""'~H • 846-7564 EamHighSchoolCredits· If you are new to Costa artistry; tf you have a ben·•'a'ts. hol1°days Apply Mon· <._ w ""50 11 ,., ., 1 1Al11""" ----------• lnde....,....ent StudyRcad· ----------· "' ...;io"""'~ ~ ~"' ACCOUHTIMG CLK Mesa, temporarily dis· background in or a flair Ca ll644·33899am-noon Thur from 8:30AM to ••••••••••n••••••••••• Licensed Home Loan Found Aust. Shep. 6 mo, ing, Math, Spelling & continuing your cduca· for c06 met1cs, then there THE IRVIME CO 4PM at Nu Orm Plan. -:R v tr.Uler, motnr home lirokers s er ving So. fmle. Irvine nr Barranca StooySk1lls. Open enroll Keep your rigures an uon, recently discharged is an exciting oppor 3194c Airport Loop Dr , sl(lrage Llghl~I &. fenced .ca11r for 17 ~ rg ca.11 our &Jeffery Rd. 552· 1996. ment. Total cost $200. shape! Ple asant sur-from lhe service, or for awailinP. you. we are 550 Newport Ctr Dr C.M. or call for appl 554 1040 n e ar es t o f r 1 c e . Woolbright Academy roundings, great loca-any reason seeking lem· looking ror the right 10• Newport Beach 5-l9-l035 714·837 3744 Found 17th St., C.M. 13861 Beach. Wstmnster. t.aoo $800. Call Michele ... i;-Aual Oppor Employer b Se call Do porary or career employ• wv lo manage our cos LAt R...tali W~ 4600 Ins Her wney 897·2855 Kuhn, S40-5001. Snelling ment. consider this uni metics dept. tn this pro ••••••••••••••••••••• •• Savings 64.2·74.22 til 1 :00 & Snelling of Newport Th & aressave s· Ion For , ppl •' 1.sl, 2nd & 3rd T.D."s. or979·3273 Daily Word School. Sum· que oppor. e women -a · a CIVIL R e liable , wo rk ing Cred1tno problem. merProgram.Ages2-12. Beach Agency, 4340 men we are looking for pl e a se c all Ga r y EHGIMU.IMG Journalist needs one 738_4271 Found: Lg blk/wht Collie 9am.3pm + extended Campus Dr. may be llred or typing. Comp l o n 6 4 2 · 6 16 4 bedroom cottage or apt She pherd. La g una day care.7lOSo.Cam-f o ld i ng papers , <Professional li cense LeadlngOCfirmoffers by July 1 l·n La ouna Arranged by Beach. 4ruo,....... --h .... ··-jo'--& wo·r·k· req'd> outstanding oppor ror u..,•ch. Newport n':..uch __ ,.._·--t Home Loan" ..,.....,"' bridge. Oranige. 633·1724, ACCOUNTING "'"'' v""'" "" d .,.,.. ..,...o ........,, " Ing for a limited income. project engineers. e or Costa Mesa . $200 or OO YOUNEEDCASH '> Penonah 5350 _t6J3. __ 5562_______ PAYROLL Work w/young people. Beauty operator w some signers & draftsmen ex· less Qwetncss essential 1st. 2nd & 3rd ••••••••••••••••••••••• CLERK Rapid adv. possihle. If follow. Manicunsl. Ass't per'd in subdivis ion & Reply to Ch1ss1f1(•d J\11 Homeowner loans PREGNANT? C aring. RE.AL ESTATE_ you are l8 or over & Modern salon. CM1NB land dev e l o pm e nt ll l!J2, Daily Pilot. P 0 arranged fast. conlidcntial counseling & LICl!a..JSE PART-TIME would be ava1I to start area Call642·S381 enganeenng. Regastra· Box JS&>. Costa Mesa. Borrow SlOOO, $lOO,OOO referral. Abortion, adop· l;f"'llll EDP exper. pref'd. Will work ammed. Call betwn lJOn + 3 yrs exper. req'd Cal. 92626 or t elephone tion&keeping. SCHOOL train if applicant has 8:30am&2pm loatAssetnbly for project engrs. 2 Yrs ~9301 flexible terms . pas t APCARE 547-256.1 strong manual payroll 64.r ~s 1.111 Day or night. We train. min exper req 'd for de- credal no problem. Call ----------1 OFFERS ;i-v "' 1631 Pl u· c M & d r A ovnor. or ot.her account· acen a. . signers ra tsmen. P· BUSINESS man needs 3 us no obligation. UMDA & VIQ(I _..., pl in person to · Mr SfERLlNG FfN SVCS ing exper. 10 Key by Boat Manufacturer Y · · or 4 bdrm house lo lease 714/955-1610(bkr) o.tcGI Mcnsocw G.st Lecture Fne ~h and Ute typing re· Automatic transmissions. We are interviewing for F\Jenles at Robert. Bein. Must be near Newport ---------• For the,_~ M! q d. Approx. 20 br~ per R & R man, MUST have the following positions: William Fr~t & Assoc . Harbor High Afler6PM llS ServingallOran,geCo. wk . Apply, Natio nal cmpltsetoftools.Exper 1) experienced produc 1401Ql.lai1 St,N.8 . CLERKS UTOTEM Ope.rungs Now Available for full or p/t1me clerics on 2nd & 3rd shafts. Nil exper necessary-we tram. Advancemenl OJ>· porturut1cs to lhose who qualily. For information go lo our nearest market or cont.act lhe personnel office at 12442 Lampson St Garden Grove 537-4840 Equal Oppor Employer '751 1706 Go ,. __ • --· 835-7313 •Crash Course available Systems Corp. 4361 Birch preferred. MS-2288. lion foreman, capable of "'encal .t _. __,. •Matenalsprovided. St N B <Nea OC "' Employedmale,42.wants ShrlTenit~ XXDANCEOFFUNXX •Small clas ses for Ai~ o rt). E ual OP· Automotive Service now c~artlng a 2·3 pro-PARTTIMF. CletKTYPIST qU1et room m pri v home. penonaliied instruction. P E ~ w r 1 t e r e x Pe r · d duct line & capable or 12 MOCMt-5 PM ('Mor NB. 548-7524 v ....... Capital Beaut nooe girls. Dance •Choose own taste-day porturuty mp oyer w/German' cars. Must be managing & scheduling Company wants depen-lodiv. w /good appear & ---------t New businesses. busi &rapsesslon.satournew &nightclasses, reliable. Servicing C.M. of .Personn~I. 2> ex· dable mature individual pleasant manner needed Wanted beach hse for ret ness acquisitions or ex· location is the most lux· •Placement-up to 80% & N.B. areas. Sal + penen~ed tl'im cnrpen· who can handle phones, for loan broker farm wnter. Bal. Penin. SSOO pansaon, any worthwhile urious In Orange County. commission. comm. 642.1604 ters Wllb to?ls. All apph· lit~ typing, & gen ore Some phone work. Near lsetyr.675-9347 purpose. U you desen-e lhe best ACCOUNTING cants seriously ~on · wrk. Start $2.SS per hr. ,_F_as __ lli_o_n_l_sl_e_.644 __ -8824 __ _ -M-a-le"--s-k_s _f_u_rru-.-sh_e_d_r_m-4 FrHCOllllllffGHoft ~~·d~;w open 2A hrs Free3Week AUTOSBVICE s lder.ed. Many fnnl'e Advancement within 60 CletlCTYPIST w /bath, pvt entra nce Callror ap~. Interstate 2 0 6 0 So . Eu c 11 d • Sale. Tralnina. • CLERKS ADVISOll benefits. Call for an appt. days Paid vacation & Hotel.Salet Heavy lYP· Nwpt Hgls preferred, 6r 8W1ines11 rvices. 10-8 Anaheim. Excitln& de· C4ll For D.taila Alajuela Yachts. 645-9177 holidays. Apply M·Thurs Ing, gen. ofc wort. 4 Balboa Penn. 646-7445 ~;rl , 9'12 Sal. tails5J4.1581 lll-1001 493-0442 ·Toyota agency lo Hunl· BOATREPAJRMEN a~ Nu Orm Plans 3t94C Day/wk, 4 Hra/4Ay, rm50. Katella tnaton Beach needs ex· Mech J EI e ct I H u 11 Airport Loop Or. CM or Newporter Inn, &44-i'lOO. ht. 2ad & 3rd "' .Divorce/Bankruptcy Real Eatat.eScbool MSI Data Corporation. 8 perienced service ad-Repair / Re fin lsh Ing Callfor appt S49-l035 ext538Sldney. EOE. 8'11Mu/h••est / Fift•e. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $50. 820:11 Camino Capistrano leadinl electronics firm, vlsor. 5days a week, best yachts lo 80'. Mut1l have T.O. LOAMS Action Typln&. 960-54li San Juan Capistrano haa need for experienced of benlfita. Call Mr . waterfront boat yard ex --------•1Coc.ktail Waitress, t"X~r. ARRANGED l\«oWltina Cler~ with Smit.h.847-&SM per. Blac kae 's Boat Clerico! Apply 8 /23 . 9am • Cnclt Mo flroblu11 TOUCH Of CLAS$ Summer acbool. ages 1·3 years' expenence. ----------1 Yard. 673-6834 Jaspers, 3672 S. Bnstol. ...... SOOS. ___ 6_33._l _,_IO_lkr_· --• MODELS 2 ~ · 12, s w Imming . Background should In· Babysitter. P rr ror 8 mo. ADP S.A. Oppcwtwitr .• ruding. 1130 mo. Page ell.de good typing akllls, old girl, Mon/Wed/Frt. 4 Bookkeeper/Sec'y -------- ....................... Moot. T t School.&42--0tll poeUngabiUtyandtOkey brs/dy.5411-Sl&s. Mature person. ex· PENSION _ CodMllWeltreu INTERESTEDlN o;J.J'a, ,_ 5035 £SCOm adding. perienceneceasary, neer Scltool SELLING YOUR ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... W-.ct. 7075 Babysitter. needed tor 10 Or. Cly airport. '752-0894 SERVICES Earn up to $300 per wk COINLAUNDRY? 97s,.o062 64 .. 7111 .. ••••••••••••••••••••• Weofrerexcellentsalary moo girl, Mon ·Fri. Low twlion. Plac.ment CALL NOW• LOWEST . R..pooa!bl• proreaslonal and 1ood c ompany Mpm. Sinai• parenl rcq BOOKK.EEPl!:R /FC Op •-b LI ~ .. of •·t 7519., .. ..... B/A .. M/C ... Viu man desires to •pend beoefita. PltJH call or reap ~t. Your home or Growioa Mrg Jo'lrm In por ... c a en " · 181"' • .-. Colnl=!~~e;~1963 .....,.... .. .._. UA.M.-;\A.M. time at bHch. Wllt eppty ln person lo Al mlne.675-31M,aft7pm. Santa Ana need• full ~~'N~~:C,:r~a~~~!~ --------- ,71 .. ) 5.a7.59-i4 htT.D.'a. .a.o watch YOUT bollto, start 8oMd1 <714> S4Ml.2S Bab)'lltter fOf' a mo old cbarJe bookk"Pf'r \bru firm located fn Fashion COLLEGE GIRL "' "' ~ MT.D.Loml. ESCORTS M)'llme. 2 •Ill-a rooe, boy. Tuu " Thurs. T/B. lnformal wor)dn& 1.slancl. We have lmrnod. Bachelor neod,a l\Upr, l.«&1 bualness requlrea pcraoo wbo llke1 to work w/crafta " can meet public. $CTSO. Inventory Fairest Tmns ltnce lMt 83'7·5'. TOil)'. MSI 8-5:30. Weatcllff pea. enlld .. pod •al•ry · Coll openlnaa for: Dana Pt. Condo, fuH Wtllf' MkJ. Co. OUTCALL Mat111e refhied woman W-7454. Tl4·f7t.5400 Pcn1m1I Ciet41 p11vUe1., Call for In· HZ..2171 r4M6 l 1 dtlllra live ln pot. ., DAT A Babyaltter /hsekp'r. Jive-IOO«JlllPB ~perlcnco R~red ta'View -~ JlJn or Is equip. Income polen· Retired couple hlll mooey UaJ, $1&-~.ooo t.hla com t.olend. lit 6 Znd TO'• 558-2677 companlon aid. Lile cftlallftl.ATION in.tor9}'rboy,lrvarea. Tustin. F/Ch1. P/tlme. Cltricd Denn,y nunin1. Xlnt drl v~r . ..,,.,...._ lllOwtl. Call m IOM. SnWI irow1na plalllJcs Fll'ltt op• hle typln1 1na year. Call collect, A&"'t. l-&71·37.,. B/A. .. M/C ... VlSA 675-1'194 MO~~rAvenue •---------• ""•· l1"C1s sharp bkllpr C.oala Meaa. CA 92627 BABYSITTER wanted. for 3-4 hrt a day. Could '714-439-5000. Anytime. WANTED-BUiat• ror clat· Retired Buslneu Man The fastest draw ln the in&. Saddlebael( Club 'nDt4 pe.rt time puma. Have aomet.h1nlt to sell T WesL . • Daily Pllot m-9489. 58HJ27 'l\'ee ne n t em pl o .1 men t. Cl.tSSlfitd ads do Lt well. Qu:alfied Ad.~. '9 f1>.t2d ov r 18. 2 m°" child, ·my 1-:ome f JU me wlthln ft-8 homo. Approx 20 hr wk. mo't . Woalern Cue. cb'lleY'l Oex bra 13/hr, Inc , lmt Olan'lbctrl 'Rd. Own trans 175-3823 Tustin 838-8400 XJnt wriclna ~nd.a le co. benefit& offered. Coot.ct 844 4360 ext~ 7 .. ~.~.~~.~ ..... ?!.~! ~~~ ..... ?!~ ~~-~ ..... ?!.~ ~~-~·~ ..... ?!~~,~~~.':! ..... ?!.~~ ~ . ~'!!~.~ ..... ?!.~~~~-~~.~.: ... ?!.~ ~~~~ •..•• ?!.~~ HlllpW_... ....................... 7JOO omcE CLERK Retail marine hardwa re store seeks otrice clerk with 10 "ey experience. Lite accotmling for sales reports1 filing & purch asing. Natlona company with all major benefits. Beach Localion. C all T. Walker 493-4455 for fnfenftw & AppcMahnnt ------.. EXECUTIVE SECIETAIY Oltter ont.nted penon. &Lnlle prd'erred, 1orne bookkeeplna lutowled.ae. Must speak perCecl Enabab. lt'or a 1rowina •uccuuful Jewelry Bus. Apply ln J)Ul'IOD 3800 So. Pl.a Dr. Sant.a Ana, Ca. ------- GOOD JOI ~a l>aya per wit. Perm. car. No &ell· ina. 6'13-ZZll9 GUAIDS FWJ & p/Ume. AU ueu. Unifonns fum. A&tt 21 WemaJ auditor f l med. MAIO & Maintenance MESSINGU PART TIME I.lie Or:uige Co bolpltal. Man foe Ute malo App-with xlot drlvin1 rec • W..k w/controUcr ~t ~ ly, ~· elodae. 020$ w own car. Paid mileai&e & hc»plt&I up, •tron& oo CoutHwy, N.8. btly waae. Guam 20 bra EVENINGS ca.l reports, budaell, •-----"""------• per wk. Call Debbie. acct anal.nil " reeon· MAID wanted full Ume or 6 • t · 8 8 1 1 I 8 : a O • s . Adults With outltaodin«. dliatioo. PO&it100 avail 1>/t11ne. Seacllff Motel, Proreulooal Mortaaae attractlve personaUtlc1 hmned. Call ~ext. 1&81 S. Cout Hwy ' Servica. who rnjoy worklnr wllb 403 Laa\m.a Bch. GM892 ---------t k1da. Start at $3 50 per MOUING hr. Phoae 842-4321 •250. o r o v e r . R e t I re d JAHITOI Manacemeot welrome. No exper Early bra, flexible, a MAMA<Httl'l.AIMUS neccss. Appl)', UnJverhJ days per wk. Good tor A oatldGwtde Jewelry co l'rotectloo Servi~. 1226 student. $3.25 per hr. wHl &ucb you the between 3:00-S:OOP.M W. St.ti St, Santa Ana. ln· ~767 jewelry busloea1. $250 a lervw hrt 9-12" 1-4 Moo· wk + comm. No txp nee!. MACHINE Equ~~=ity OPOATORS Employer Receplloqlat. p /Ume, evea /Sundays. Reels Hair Stylina, S40-l888 UCll'TIOMIST Prefer recHtly rcllred mate or fem. lnt&Wrent. cooveraant • well l1'00IDed to direct Vis· ftors 41 an:1wcr phone eves 4' Sundays. M0-8096. Eecept.lool.at 2 da)'S per wtt + vac•Uon 1ub. Lite typlns req., boat knowledge helpful. Volt· ed Yacht. Brokers Frt. _ J•Uorial Wort& Will train. For appt call Immecl lfalnee posiUona HAIRSTYUST Part Um~~~~~-time. 9'2-51Q. • avail on. graveyard shift Exp. bartender wanted .,.,.,..~ 1 A.1t•/U 1 ln~ilutics maiiuf. co. We f/presUgious restaurant 1 atatiun now available MAMA.-~ ff .a 59 Newport Center Or. for rent. ALSO t p/tlme J*1lltor, Janilrets. p/Ume p a l v A T 'E ol er an lt!At bendal pkg. Fa:ahlon Island, Nli 11tation for rent. Very le I/time. Irvine area. RECREA'tlON CLUB, Start S2.75 per hr + 25' PAYROLL 631-3133 p A y R 0 L L UC.,-IOMIST CLERK Clerical duties, bvy bUsy $h0p. Easy to build Will train. Ideal for Harbor Area. Otfke &hill promiwn. Review FASHI ON Mind ed cllentele. Tona Rae housewives, student.a & du\les, supervise main-ln90days. Women. Fanta11\1c op· Hairstyles 64.5-4012 cpls. Call betwn 3-6pm, teoaoce peuonnt l " A & f PART-TIME pho.nn. cua\.Omer con- .,."P exper. prel'd. WllJ tact. 4 Day wk/MOn· c.u Tbun al-MOO, traln lr applicant h&11--------- por. SUbstanUal eamlngs (714)833-7015. coordinate aoclal pro· DataTecllMllogy wttbout neglect.Jng your Hair Slylista gram1. Mid-we.le days 3120 Airway Ave ~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I f •mi ly. Fu 11 or p /t. Exp. with followl.ng tor JANITOR.AL off. Call 545-7506 evea. eosua Mesa ~9-8353 Unlimited chance for ad-booming beach area. AP· p /T evenings. Exp. ---------1 Equal Opp Emplyr m/f ffefpW•hd 7100 HfipW•ted 710CI vancement. Call Marie, ply lo person. 326 couples. Clean 2 banks MANICURIST stroni manual payroll RemodeUns, all trades exper. or other account· needed. Deveto.,er Ron an& ex per. 10 Key by Tay bi S49-l1811J499-392Z touch & Ute typina req'd. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••0 •••••••••••••• 547-7334, ext 2103. Marine, Balboa ls. Ask NB. Top pay. Call (213) Sharp. New Salon --------•!Dent.a.I Assistant. Ftr.u· FOOD PREPARATION forTlna. 927-0115 C&l1S48·22S6 per COA pref, aalary . • Mot.el Night Clertt, 40 hrs_ Apply 1'ravelodge, 6208 W. Coast Hwy, NB Approx . 20 hrs per wk. Rental yard man, person Apply, National Systema to help w /cuatomera, Corp, on Birch St. N.8. JDe(ban.lcs, &en'I labor. CNear OC Airport) Equal Apply U~ Placentia, Opportwlity Employer C.M. Commercial Loan Officer open. Lag Hills/El Toro p /tame. hrs flexabl,e . HAIRSTYLIST JANITORS MAHICURIST 830-1130 Start $3 hr. Male pref d . Balboa Island shop. Call '""'-le. Days. Apply m Needed (or b us y Motivators needed to take area. · Call lft lOam for appl. 6'1S-3'101. p;:.. Newport Dunes, fashionable salnn in N.B. over management l'eSP. PIX Allaw.,. Sen-. LE. Sdes Dental as111at /r ecepl. 979-0747 Wl n -.. Ba Dr Ne Ex""'r a must. Following d p/time bus. Complete All s'-·•~ avai'l. Eirn.r One Of S. CaUf, leading Ftr. Mission Viejo. area. HANDYMAN .... c... Y • · • pra Apply in person. training if qualified. preC':rbul will lr~. btdrs and developers. is -----~.-~-~- £xp.only49S-0223 Foreman trainee, tor Retired man needing to KeypunchoperatorPffl 200NewportC\rDr.N.B. M&-1176. Weekends a must. call In the process of in-plasUc lnjectaon molding supplement income. Job SJC "-II t--.1 · ,. th · C td k h M • ha e I . b yr exp. area."" -.ATURE WOMAN M"'~ycledebvery,F{f, forapplS57·7777EOE. ..,.newing ior ei.r re-oranfl8 QUR~ Dental fron es • recep-s o P · s '; . v cons ls ts o I 1 g t 661-1211 D.P. mgr ... """"'" sale division. We are .& Uoolsl in CM. Super op-n«banacal. ability. 2nd ~anitorial work, packag-p/lime to welcome clean-cut, bondable. non· PBX seeking ambitious, ag-Loan officer w/mln yra por. for sharp gaJ w/exp. shift. Plasucs Develop· tng pickup & delivery in &.moratory AJ• newcomers & contact smoker: 640-6111. 2A hrs, Anawera ng service gressive. licensed 10 , lending exper. Must be Call anytime 979·8511, ment Corp. 33091 ~lie co~pany truck. Small Exper. in phlebotomy & merchants. Fiexlble hrs. Moo-Fri. operator full & P tr. Call dividuals who have a -capable of ns::.umang eves 675-3473 Perfecto SJC Apply aft 4 co. Apply GLG Systems back lab procedures to Need car. lite typing. MOTOR RO•.--. s:is.3561 positive mental atUtude future admin1strat1ve . PM Inc. 11152 Condor Av, k I Uni I I b · 547·3095. .,.,.,. d # respons1billt1es & be Dental Aul. ~ham;1de . . FV. 549-4777 ~~~-;ho~e ~().0:40 I~ The Daily Pilot has a PIX OPERATOR and a real esire ior sue· growth & profil orientet.1. Exp, X-ray lie. Lovel~ of-F lo care for disabled askfor Margaret. MECHANIC FOREMAN large route in Missi.on ll-7 Shift. Full & p/time. ~·~wg~J:!~~~ Major bank loan trairung flee in CM Call anytime woman. Exchange for Exper, trucks, forklifts & Viejo. Moo thru Fri af . .Exper'd only. Please can only be reached by 41 MBAdesirablti 979-8511. eves675-3473 rm/boa.rd in CM 548-8596 Landscape maintenance, e q u Ip . M us t be ternoons. Sat & Sun i.cootact personnel dept. hard work. We willtrain, Aggressive tndependentDentaJ ore needs experGAS MAN for local car HOUSECLEAMIHG rulltime,40hrwk.Mon· knowledgeable ip momings.Mustbavede· San Clemente Gen'I callforinterview.Mon-hank provides xlnt Pff h Sal HS., Fri. Newport Beach & troobleahooung,repair& peoda.ble car. SS& c~sh Hosp.496-ll22. k r benefits. promol.Jonal op. typast/recept, For · was · ary + comm. f\all lime, Mon-Fri. Part· Irvine area. 644·4894 art 6 preventive maintenance depGSat req. Good drivltlg Fri. 9AM-4PM, as or partunittes & sal com Call644-0683. CallS4S·l039. time work avail. during PM. programs.d3·5 Y 1 rsd mech record. Call 642·4321 NX t>-rator Bun. 960-Ull mensuratew/exper. For DentalAssistaol,oralsur-General orr1ce. good week or on Sat. Will ac· exper w/ Iese esara· Leave name & pbooe Willtrain.-1'1:/time. llpm·t--------- 1mmed con s1derat1on geryooly, N.B. typist vaned duties, good cept students for sum· Legal s.cret..., ble. Submit resume or Your call will be re· 7am. Contact Maunne. R. E. Sales please send resum~ & 644~161 beneflts.00-5997 mer empl oyme nt. HBofc. salary cammens letter w/exper & salary turned. Newporter Inn. 1107 BIJSY & H££DIHP s alary history an con !>4().9525 w/exper, min 2 yrs ex-requirement s to MOTORROUTE Jamboree Rd, NB 11 t1dence to DENT AL SERVICE <Htwral Offic. per. Classif'led Ad 11193, D:uly 644 noo. EOE Uruque Homes or Mesa EXEC. OFRCE.R COOtlDIHATOR Resp., decisive ind iv Housecleaners, Tues-Fri, 963-5657. Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Daily P1lal route in 1---------Verde is "plugged into" POlox71 20 Person w /front ofc den· able to work w/11le 8·3PM. Call Janice·s CostaMesa,Callf.92626 Laguna Beach & South Persoo to work m print a reloca\ion rererrat ..._. _ _...S.ach taladministrationexper. superv1s1on needed for RaggedyAnn"s.645-11!00 ~S.Crefary M ..... 'cal/Recept. all r"" Laguna. afternoon~. shop Various duties. serviee that has created nc~,.-.' ' Fasluon Isle. investment EKper d secy for gen'I """ -... Monday •"~·nb Friday Graphic exper helpful, d 1 92660 needed to work in houslde firm. 64().0123 Housekeeper• ex per. practice. Non smoker on-sktµs for G.P. 3S hr. Mon· plus Sa~;:;5 and SUn· but. not nee Dnver lie. a -Oeman or more "' 1 Op E 1 e s upporting our fie w/car. perm. 5 dys, gd 10• H.B-Top SaJ"""· Ma" Fri. Start 9/1. Reply to .. ,.A,. ~""o salespeople. We are busy • rA1ua Por ropoy r servicereps&coordinat-Y • ~.. "' Bo 1222 I Th o ii day morojngs. S4S0.00 Hu ... 5........,,,,, and need help! Ex · Cook, dish-up, some ex· per. Spaghetti Bender ~ W Cst. Hwy, NB GEMIE:RAL OFRCE ·pay. 768-79'l6. fl helpful, but not nee. x • c 0 e 8 Y per mo. gross prof at. 1---------d lllg service activ1t1es. We uo.l400. PtJot, Cost.it Mesa, 92626. . PILOT pe ri enc e or n ew offer a career oppor w1a Help wanted. over 18 for Housekeeper, lite work & ~ _ ~.00 cash dePoSlt re· salespeople may applv maJ.or data nroceesmg gen'l <>fc work. F/l1me e ve meal. Mon -Fri, G d T quired. Call 642-4321 ask Corporate. exper'd lig.ht Attractive {aoliq· ues) of r M .,.._. k Legal Secretary oo Medical Office rainee. r Ci ut · r -e __ .. l A firm for an antelhgent, 9·5:30pm on nl As 3 6 pm. own l rans . or re auoo. ~av : presswi""" wan. pprox rice & top quality (peo highly motivated. for Ted or Marilyn, 714/835-7206 slulls. Salary dependent gen'I assiat.ing. Spanish Name. Address. Phone 60 brs per mo. Send re· pie} associates \o work ---------i ...... culate mdiv. w/good 646-4838. upon experience. Laguna skilla needed. Llte lYP· Number and Make of sume g1vlllg rallngs, hn wath. Contact Sandy .... .. -Ho k e c M re Niguel orrice. Resume to ing. Must be able to worlc Ca Good f tud t 0 •. 'd COOK/ cleri.calskills&exper.inGeneralOffice use eep r, · D ·i Pll k d r. or s en r ... compensation req. OrlowskiorJimWoodat Ured lad" have car, 6 Box 264. ~ aa Y ot. eves &/or w n 8 .... edpe. "'""'D to Jack E 8 ... 39"" «ITCHEH MAM ~eallng w /people. Please Reservations, type, must dys. p il. s1 on ·Sm k r . P .O Box 1560, Costa 548·7771. r...1r ,_, . Bi~ch, ste • E. iN~~po~ ,_546-5900 ___ . _____ _ Days & Nights call Pete Meade 546 6080 be able Lo meel pubbc & 642-8494 Mesa, Ca. 92626 MURS~VM Beach. Ca 92660 Apply after 3PM ~ or send resum! t.o· work weekends Apply 1n MEDICAL ASSIST. ~ll Shift. F /t.ime. S9 bed --------- The Ancient l'tfariner ~-IDC Pl!TSOfl NewPortDunes Hou.sekeeper.Utework& Lioe coo k, ex p e r . Exper.lophlebotomy& · XI b PRESSPERSOM 2fl.11 W Coast Hwy, N B. Dental Practice 1131 Bark Bay Dr NB ' eve meal Mon Fri, or Downtown Lag Bcb Rest. back lab procedures to facihty · nt ens Systems • Ask for Nina or John. Bayview Conv. Hosp. Full tame. ITEK & AB· 22831•'airviewRd live In w1 pvt rm . 4949765 work in clinical lab in 2055 Thurin Ave. CM Okkexp. Laguna Hills Costa Mesa 644"1311 · · N.B. Phone 640·0l40 &c 642-3505. location. Cal~ for appL -------• ~neral HOUSEKEEPERS LOT IOY ask for Margaret. ---------7141586-3150 Top pay, all shifts ava1la OENT AL RECEPT. *Su Job MURSES A.IDES ---------- COOKS tile l\pply between mmer S No exper nee 1-'/tame. Experienced. Good driv· MEDICAL RECEPT. ., -"HUES ,RESS PE.RSON z 5· D n y · ~ Pediatnc dental office. Good pay & be o s . mg record. s day week. To work in cbnacal tab in a<"'"' · Pm ' c n d. Co6ta Mesa. Expenence EARN Bayview Conv Hosp. Company beneftls. See N 8 T · g 7.3 & ~11. Willtrain June Rapidly growing S&L Restaurant. 529 Aveni a . ed """ noo • • y p I n . ds M v d c seek! indlv. to handle a l Pico, San Clemente. reqwr · ....., . ...,.,.. 2055 Thur in C M . Wit Kraetze.r at switchboard, filing. Must gra . esa er e onv. ed 00,.3505 E.O.E work weU w/people. Call Hasp, 661 Center St. CM person shop fo• qw~k COOK S W a n t e d , D~AL As$isl. want • VACATION$$ f pnnt1.11g uf forms on a Breakfast lunch & dtn· p/Ume. Flex hrs CaTI Housekeeper, Attendant Margaret or-•PPt NURSESAIDES 1250 press. Thoroogb ner shifts: Ma Barker'• 87~7820fortntervw. for disabled person r•:ll• 640-0140. Full time & Ptr. Day knowl of Itek 1() 15 E Lt Needed Immediately Positions avail p/tlme, IC L $hifl & night shift. Call camera a must. Call 1\estaurant, 212 · l7t Dental Recpt.. NB Ortho ./Cltrtls f /time, llve·in or out :e MED A Garfield Convalescent. 8J3..8383 St.C.M.646-00.1 ofc Orthoexpreq.Start ./a.rirTypish Oelaals contact Dale lodrOfcA.ssbt..t 7181 Garfield Ave, HB. St.ateM!flualSavings ---------i atupto$8SO 642 · 2526 (4S WPM) Mclntosh Centes for the Busy Nwpl Bech OB. 847·96'71 4001MacArthurBlvd. CORRESPOMDlHCE Dental Recept Mature I Seftior TYDish disabled !714> 898-9571 GYN office. Expr'd only __ M_U_R_SE_S_AJ_D_E_S__ Newport Beach SECRETARY woman. Type50-60wpm. (GO WPM) need apply. Please send Equa10pPorEmployer Be Ji 642 5997 /S..._. f...J ts resume to Ad 238, Daily All shtft.s. Top pay. Xlnt Excellent oppor for in· ne its · ., .._ rr1 IFYOU DOM'T Pilol. P .O Box 1560. bens. Bayview Conv. div washing to becomE DENTAL Assast. p /time. I AccCMMtiMJ Clerks WANT TO WORK Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Ho6p. ~ Tburin Ave. Vu.lee Operator rn word N 8 f X U 'd ./looldlupen ; CM Printed Care wt Dnllcrs. ':f sh.Hts. experienc~ or trainees. 557 9544 Rn...._, Lunch counter Food Preparation Person wanted lo wor~ at lunch counter in large health food store. Food- preparation. Previous experience desirable but not necessary. Uniform furnished. Medicd &r hospital beneflls. Apply Lindberg Nutrition. between CaroUllll Bullocks, lowec lever .. So. Coast shop.Ping _ center. CM. Ask for manager. Restaurant BOB'S (HoMIOf ~ ligloy~ 1>rocessmg center. Typ . · 0 c. ray c req · RILL-TIME. Medical Assistant mg 65 wpm, handle m1::.c Sal open 642·6880-.tnX Operators DOH'T! I Urology back office. corresp. Stattst1cal & DES« CLERK I Sec:retari•s Kelly has a perfect op· Mature woman. Typmg, !~gooaJd dcocoummmenutn·1tcyapt1~og~ For downtown hotel In withorwathoutSH port unity for men· ---------1 sterlltzang & x -ray . •-.---.... ---•! Immediate-openinp In. OHace manager for•• ou.rfaaulyrestaurantsat.. established interior de-l'URCHASIMG> CLIC. nearby locations. We re., " " L B ach Must women 0 7 or over) to LVNorRNoeededp/lime 548·2247 ~kill~ including gram-aguna e. · Work where you want & earn ext ra cash as """ Sa 3 Wed 1---------. _. •. have ex per. JO 4200 NCR 11 7 rd/ tor ·11 /· 2 rnar. spelbng, ..,..1tmg."' macb. 1\pply to Auditor, when you want with mailroom helpers every · . Medical Office 1 ·Spm, f.~11<-'!~_t33891on. Will tram. betwn lOam & 5pm, VOLT Long & short Mon-Tues night In ihurBe ~l°dMb~~eh~O typing, daily chart en-""' '"" term assignments lfoli-Laguna Niguel q: v r Y a r. . yies 644-6813 9am 'til noon _4_94_·_1_152_______ day & vacation pay. Victoria, CM 642-0387 -. . THE IRYINE CO Desk Clrk /Nile Adtr. AP· Hospitaliutlon plan Th.ls is an ideal way for LVH'S MED. RECEPT. ~ NewPort Ctr Or ply .fo 4)erson. Surf & available. SR C f T I Z EN S . 3_11 Medications. Full & Busy Drs. ofc. Exp. only. NewportBeach Sand Hotel, Laguna NEVERAFEE H OUSEW IVE S, & P/t. Mesa Verde Conv. _Be_ne_fi_t.s_._646_·3903 ___ _ Equal OpPor Employer Beach. A'PL Y STUDENTS to supple· S C M ---------i ment their Income on a Hosp. 661 Center t, · · !•--------Dishwasher needed. App· *VOLT* perm. p/lime basis. No _S48_·_S58S_. ______ 1 M84-WOMEH --------..-i ly Mon-Wed, 3.5 PM. No exper. needed. Call Im· Machinery Assemblers, sign firm. Lite bkkping, Part-time. Jmmed open. quire no previous exper. order expediting. & gen ing Cor inruv. desanng to Join ou. friendly team. ofc work w /public con-work 3 days a wlc. 1 Yr Come see us today betwn tact. Salary com mens gen'l ofc work preferably 2-4pm. w/abllity. Location nr in purchasing or ac· Cashiers o .c . Airport. 549·1945. counting. Must be good CookTrailltft.. communicator . Typing W...J&en SO wpm, filing & heavy llllT phones. Waffnsses Call 644-3389 ~A venida de la 9am 'lil Noon Qlrlotta, Laguna Hills. TH! IRVIME CO. 154 E 17th St. C.Mesa Office Ass•t 550 Newport Ctr Or-7311 Edinger. Hunt. Och Newport Beach 4.501 Campus Dr, lrvine ~OSMETICS phone calls. The Victor TEMPORARY med. for local interview · Some shop exper nee. E,U:B:h"'· 361 Cliff Dr, SERVICES KB.LY SERVICES Start lmmed. Call Dave ESTEE 546-4741 831-0$42or833·1441 orBob9S7~61. ReaJEsl.ateSales Rn tawwtMtfp Distnbutors & Sales Peo· 3848Campus Dr. Sl.e 106 Equal Oppor Employer MACHINIST SHiMe .. r • Welcome-F/tlme Cook, F /lime ple.Supplement yourm· AcrossfromOCAarport U you qualify, we'll T' foodPrep&F/timeOis- F.qual OpPor Employe,. Equal Opp Emplyr m /f Truck Drivers waMed for f:urope. New plant in Irvine has need for capable person to handle vanous phases of office procedure. Must be good typist & un- derstand bookkeeping_ Opportunity for persona- ble. self-sufficient in----------d Iv Id u a I . Call 714 1556-2930 for appt. come. Vitamin co. 200% 879_9330 N.B. co. needs Class A teach you ttus skiU. pay Older lady, permanent FREE 3 WEEKS h A 1 . LAUDER rofit (714) 7511706 for MachioistforBridgeport youwhileyoulearn.and pos1uoo.Sa1ary,pnvrm bwas er. PP Y 11>-P I . . '1624 Orangetho-Wy Instructor Mill •. U -...l;ft' ge Lathe. h r lit .. TRAl ..... , ..... G person. Muldoons. 2oa further lllfo. Anaheim.,..¥ ""IOU....aD "' na.n.1..... . give you one of the best & ba m ex~ ange ?r. e f"'lll f"'lll C 0 N B w " CI06e tolerance prec1s1on be n e f i l pa ck a g e 5 house.keeping & sitting. Newport tr r • · · We currently seek l ---------1 Equal OpPor. Employer INSTRUCTOR/ work. Exper req'd. To~ 811ywhere. Then you'll 493-95n Mew c.......-_64CM __ 1_1_o_. ------ qualified person to sell DRIVERS rtLOTS beos. E.O.E. 557·9051 as earn your k ee I> 1 n Oral surgeon surgical as-M.w 'rolfNrity Raltaurant ~tee Lauder cosmet.acs Men or women 2S yrs or To conduct weekend ac-,_ro_r_Ron __ A_d_am_s_. ---Europe. Join the people s1stant. Experience •A.b~olutely no prior ShortOr*f'Cooks onafulltamebasisinour older. Know the coast General OfC celerated clinics for wtio'vejomedlbeArmy necessary. Call 963-0'12'7 traaruog or expenence Exper'd graveydll 7 F'OiSIUon rsland location. clt.aes. Net $180 a week or priva•e tnst.rument com· Cal•-or 751.910. -"er 6 PM. necessary. 1 0e' • 1600-s RE edl ° C to $1000 • _.,., "" .... •Personahzed anstruc App Y nny s. · WeofferF' Em cal. more. range oast mercial FAA exams. 0ppA4tw.itMs Hunt.ingtonBeach. ,;on Cstlfwy,LagunaBeach. dental&lifcmsuranceas Yellow Cab. 17300 Mt. Travel by company Costa Mesa 540.1026 "' 4941660 well as profit-sharing, Herrmann, Fountatn nus lovely ofc overlook· 1UJ1>lane & airlines to $1 6~e DAY Huntington Bch 962·8821 Painter. 3 years exper.. •Professional on the job -----------1> at d vacations & Valley. (No of Slater ing ocean needs sharp major ciUes nationwide • r Laauna Hills 768·S2SI brush & roller. $3.50 hrto trairuog. employee d1scoun1a. IJ betwn Newhope & persoowhohasgoodofc Requires CFl -1 or That's youpayfor AnEqual start.642-0386aftSPM •Upto80%commission. RFSI'AURANT th.is interests you please Euclid) skills. Will be working d · t d a JO day ad in the •Choice of top office .--------•! /top mgmt w /very groun anstruc or a · ()pPottunlty Employer Partner wanted , take locations. call 64H212 or st.op by w vaneed & Instrument DAILY PILOT for an Interview. generous employer. Call certificate. Xlnt _,81 & over expansion project in Be your own boss wath a .ntE IROADW AY DRIVER Chris, 540-6055, Coastal be.ns. Ideal position for SERVICE Mervyns ls now taking ap· Orange Co. Oppor for 6 lop notch professional or· 47Fasbionlslund,NB Penoonnel Agency, 2790 form er military or DIRECTORY plicalioos for P/'T' Snles, figure income within 6 ganizaHon. £qual0pPor Employer Salu~day &d li~u nd0a 't ~ALLbor. CJOMBS FRE"' alrh.ne r>llots. Interviews DO IT NOW' and stock. Daytime. yrs. Forbeappts only call Katella Rea~ morrungs to e ver a1· "' being cheduled for 6128 6 ..... 5671 evening. & wkeod ahlfls 646-4533 twn 9-Uam. ly Pilot lo carriers in 1 · ..... ~ I 98 fw cWalh call So ---------1 Call 546-7360 weekdays avail. App}' at l l PART·TIME GIRL, 4 hrs Count.er glrl P{f Cor dry l..agWla Niguel & uth General()(rice or submit resume to u.a...w-L....I 7100 AdamsAve.HBBelween 831-IOOl 49).0442 cleaner. Mr. Best Laguna.Musthavelarge c-•1tr..,.. .... D.....,CE personnel director PO ,_,. _..... l0.2.E.O.E. per day, l :J0.5:30, typ---------- Cleaners, 2939 E. Csl. ata• 1 -wa0oo or van & a _.._."'"" '""" ••••:;••::•:.:•:••:;•:.:•:•:••:•::•:•:••:•:•:•:,••:..:=======:::;-I Ing, phones. client con· ---------...,.. .. led u Box 2820, Newport • 892338 Hwy, CdM. 67s-3306. 1ood driving record. For NaUona uca on carp. Beach. Calli. 92663 Equal _t_a_ct_. ___ 1_____ Rea.I Eatate _ __;;._;.__ _____ --1 information caU642-•321. has posiUon avall In slu· ()pPortunity Employer INVESTMENT Part time sales service. IXCl!PTIOMAL O>uple wanted \o manage ask. (or HalT)' Seeley dent services dept. Typ· 0 P P 0 r t u n 1 t y f 0 r SITlllll busloess. PJtime. ----------1 i"" en wr.m & some letter Joint work with Newport ...,..., -... g selfstarter w /proven Mr.Hall642-J634. 8tchwlcTeclt5 wrlting. Customer ---------S~r:~c-m:i~.a ~~i sales record. COM real lmmed openitl,. & op· service exper. helpCul. Insurance SALES estate office ta expand· -CUSTOMER portun.1Ues in an estab. Good position Cor lndiv. I PENSION Carol or Joe, 640-4Jl9 or Lng. Extremely favora-RB.ATIOMS co. in Oranae Co. airprt retumit\gtojobmarkct. _&4G-Gi0 ________ ble commission spht for MONDAY area. Applicants to Pl'e&ltfious second trust deed Investment F\nd wbat you want i.n first apphcanta ac · 7AM.IZNOOM ~~l~:~c '::S~~m:. Entry ~:;?t·f.o.titlon ACTUARIAL ~°!~ s:i~in.g ~.~~:erb:~et~ ':!a~cf:~°.'l Dllib' PUotClusifieds. cepted. ~5262 TUE-RI 7 AM. I I AM Recent ans.101 & digital gradmg exam nations SPECIALIST loans . ..... W..ted 7100 Compan7 ha1 ~penlng l'Xper req'd. Interview Req's neat handwntJng ••••••••••••••••••••••• for alert, personable, by apptonly, SS'7·9051 ask &lite typtna. Growth within our aroup Prefer Individual with aood Investor base .- .mra\ure JndJv to be the tor Busch. pen.slon operation pro-and Real Estale sa.lea llcen!'!C. ~for n nrw car de· ----------t Apply National Sntem1' vtdes an oppor. for 9 •ler't1 service dept Po.I· Employed bu.~ .. ~an1t to c.orp, GU Birch St, N 8 . qu•llflcd person as • Thie la an exceptlonttl opportunity for an In· .-a • make more w1u .. 1ul eav· ..,_ oc "' ... > E I pena lon •ct u a rl a I dividuaJ with aucceas Jn SecurlUcs Salts and tJon local'"" on Harbor i .... -t '-"? Call ror (.'>Car '"'1>0• • qua -"· P lo _. I d al Iv d. Inter eat l n 8 -·~.r:.-;;:-,;1~ Opportunity l!:mploycr apeci ..... t. rev ua ox-looktna ~ enter a arowth orient~ n 1.11lry ~ustomer relnUona wor11.1; .. ;P;~;·;-.ro;:..,,:;-;;::;:;;;~~~;::;~~~;::~~1 per. In icroup defined without the concern of market decline. ;St.art $2.8.5 br. Advance-11 benefit pension plan -(1)el)ta. Pd vncatlons & ISCIOW Ga, Ofc ....,_.. valuation, a computer Excellent commla.slon schedule permit• un· Jtolldaya. Apply Mon· SICUT"•Y Oponlns ror r eliable Cln Fortran) prosr•m· limited personal arowth and lmmodlate lo· 'lbur f~m 8:30 AM--4PM -per1on. Duties lncld mine b act1round & come . Present lnvcstmo·1t Coun1elort osrn a ·at No Orm Phm, 3\IMC The Jrvtne Co. is s-eelclng phone, t y p \ n it & math de1ree are 1eneral minlmum ot tas.000.00 annually. "' rt Loo o c M a seuctary w/cxpcr in cmtomer ~-backup. ro~ulremenu for tho ,.,rpo P r., ' . I UU U n... "l In ..... O I rl t l tlt t ~1 ti , _ _. or call for appt. S4lM035 real eat.ate oans, e or '600 mo + pald berus. vac poe on . ...,ne11 • c 1a10 ur oana ore w t en o a ac •""'' s ~..,., MCTOW. Ability ~ &Mial It hot CAii Mary Ann, medical dental 't lulUon Investors seeking 11ecuro lnvestmtnll with Deli v•ry Stoc-lit Person eu,,t.orncn, some t1plnc 631·ZZ'72 ref\.U1d. yield.a averqlng 1.23. F\lll Ume, summer appU· l"f.q'd. XJnt co. tMtneClla. ---------1 ~tact Penonnel Dei>t cants OK, irood driving Cllll644-~ WMn )'OU call Clau1fl\'d CaJI Extt. VP. al 7U·&H·8824 l"ttCrd C.H or apply In tam 'UI aoo«> w place an ad . you· re as ® PACIFIC mlJT\JAL 700 NtwPOrt C.nter Dr Newport & ach Equal Ol>Por Employf!r per9a0. ~ Bath Mart THl-llVIMl.CO. sured ot a fri•ndly 2 T l l B E C o a a l UJ Newport Oenlu Dr welcome and help In lOpwa.y, COM 67s..4830 Newport Burb wordina your ad for bt'i11 EquaJ Oppor Employer rtsronsc Ca II Now' M2 5878 Want Ads HEMQrT EQUITY FUNDS, INC. 620 Newport Clnttr Drf\ft, Suitt 21 J Newport Beach, Califomlo 9'1660 NURSES NEEDED RN'S, ICU. CHARGE $102·$108 RN'S, ICU. $92·$98 RN'S Floor $80·$85 LVN'S $52·$60 Aides & Orderlies $42·$44 All Sblfla Net'ded For Ha1pltat • St11ff R.illef Work hours ft bnspital1 oC your choice. Fr M.alprac:Uc:e. Group ln.surence available wttb d11count tor worklna for Wo~tclitt. Skill as- sessment t.catt are alvrn. Reforrnc•s ft d• p~ndAbllity a. mu.tL Health clearance r quired. Come In Mon·•·r1day 9 S • Westcnrr Nor!rs Regmry 1617 Wcstcliff Dr. Ste 212 Newport Beach. 631-0610, 752·9118 JACICIN THEIOX We have lmmedlate openings available for Coonter Personnel on al I shifts, fuJI and part time. Please apply in person: t020u.IAv. ...... .._ ..... ~ lt4621Mc:ttllvd ............ ech Equal Opportunity £mployer M IF RN·For (EENT> doctors om~.•~ dys wk. 9-S.30. MZ-8250,ssz.4933 RN'S 7 .3 Supervl1or. 11 ·7 Chanf• NUtt•· Good aal &. fringe bens. Mesa Verde Conv. H<>1p, 661 Cmte.r St, CM 548-5&15 ....._.,It., I Mop Womon needed for Housecleaolo1 Serv. ~-0'1$1 Whcth r you'rt buylnt or aelhna. Clnulflrd 1d vert1. lnlJ will set your. meuoJte to the rljlht peo- plt' Ulll "l'oday• ~. ' • 7 .... W..W 11 HelpW..ted 71 HelpW_,... 7100 .... W•t.d 7100......... 8005 FrHtoY• 8045 ......................................................................................................................................... Mond . June 29. 1978 OAILV PILOT Offiu Fwwitw• Ir loah. 'ow• 9040 lllhlrcvdes/ SALHGtll. !CR ET ARY /TYPIST Service St.a Attendant C~Htlott AMTIOUES M half Dob11~ pups Cull EqMl,_M 8085 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sc.oot.n '110 TltMS SHOP full tlme, ibor&baad aper'd. ~U or pl\lmc'. ~tTT£R/ al W H 0 r. ~SALE Gf.2.5788 Before2 PM ••••••••••••••••••••••• FOR ntECLASSIC ••••••••••••••••••••••• OUI. e:xper or w\ll t.raln be!P'al. a1'Pl,J 10 pe.noa ~Arco Statloa lTih 11 J'l..X.11 PRICES 6,000 aq. ft Adorable tmd 4 mo old " SAILBOAT BUf'F ~ '78 RM 12:$, never ....... be '"'tr ... \O Ir. r.uates, al .. • CM • nPIST eh "d I ~o.wbll&c.hromt ........ _, ~ .. -"-r . -u.me. Robtirl ~aa. WUllaai war ouse pac e w kittens, shots, free to The roaraa1 20'1 are ra-. ........ uc.,. "'1UU. $500 ~'12. ovt:r 500 lnlere:sUJli pc1 &ood home 831·22:57 New Io rm I c :.i l o P reflect e d In th c 8'JS.IBOB ---------.i Sl.~6Asloc. l40~Qua.ll Service StatJon Alteo· Experienced with Oak chlna cab $99. Mar· w/walout $75 ea. 5 workmanahlpoCthis floe.--------- SAL.£S/HU'dwu.e • ewportBuc dul, uper'd, Day '* knowledae of cold ty~. bl• w uh:i tapd SH. r..n1t.. 8050 matchloa chrs $25 ea. 10 meter crw1ln1-race 78 HONDA 550 Super ~.pn:I F /tune.App. Secm.anal·PtnnaMnt Ev•.FllU•plllma.Ap.. l!:xcellent company Lowes t p..rcea ln ••••••••••••••••••••••• 960-4147 tloop.Needa!oodclun· Sport, pufecl cond. t1 lo ftersoa Crown CARE,...o ob'. Sbell 8taUon. 17th fr a..-..-n•-, •pply '--tw4 "'n Sou'hern Calaf Ca•hl I BUY b· .. b I a ly 8 -~·-... custom P • l n l • l:lardwan. ncn E. Coast OPPORTVNlTY INine,NB. 4f,';.'i & SPM. Mond;y ~ks/ Visa/ Mc. ac· ** * * IBM Electnc typewriter ~ -tM>~ b '"""""' wtnd.ableld, new Ure " llw)',OBI •~r bus ---man to .,_ .,._ u-i __._.1 •"-·•h ""'lday Aak for cepted. Open everyd•Y Good used Furniture & Model C. Tbermofax ..11r..:_ a.tr' ad-ut open to battery. $1,150. 536-767& SAl151ADY Elqler'd. GU\ Sbo9. App- ly, BucP lntemaUonaJ, 2063 West.cllfC Dr, N.B. Salesl ady ror jewelry store, l or 4 dayatwk. Re&required. 548-3402 ~· + m.:: •• sml. ._m.,.ed ..... !!"'upa~be 1"'8 '. 0:;.'9cuu~rres · 10·6. Come ha antl A~llancea-OR 1 will copier $200 for both. ~i -·.· . ._y-~u.... ,,. .,. .. W"'""'"'' 90 ..... ...._ -• 0°• GECO .. .,T b L l Ml ... -SELLforYou. .....91.3'7 _,.. _.._ 7• -no>nAJI • ra ..... ••apbj.c dal-olc.! as· Da.y/ru• .. l thi ... a avail. nn.N ,...; rowse. OS n e "' -. Vhl" s~· Ill I d bl I s 5"00 ""' -I a ... " DAILYPlLOT Mercantile 18430 Ban· MASTEltSAUCTION ............ 1017 -· 011 9 m.rror • • slat principal n ally nau or pit, APPb' 990 E. w Ba s dill. c· 1 F v <71 .-wo miles, $200. &U-9484 after bus. funcllona. Other OltHwy, NB 330 • Y t., er ire e · · 4) 64M686 & lll·9625 ••••••••••••••••••••••• New 3 5 • BI u er l 11 &PM duties incld: cl.lent con· C:O.ta Mesa 964-~ll Remember cat.I iet fleas Sportl\lber. Avail In 2-3 -------,.,-- tact, new bua. dev., goocl Service Sta Attend. Equal()pportunlt)' For .Sale : A,ntlque too. Bringtheminfora wks.Twinen&,30+knts. BELL motore.ycre secy akllls, bkpna. F /lime, exper'd, lite Employer * * * * * * funuture. 2 Diliini room flea dip, Lng haired cats many xtru. us.ooo. helmeu. Slie7-S/8Super Bright aelf shrUng mech'I knowledge. App· Typbt/recept for dental ~?~~:l"~.E sets. 1 dlneUe set, l drop dematted. Joroan·s Pet 551~.MO-~. Mapum, $.'IS. Slze 7,af8 mature attJlude,organlz. l,y, 2:i9()Newport Bl, CM olc wanted exper For leaf table, l dresser w /t Shop. 2"12' E. Cout Hwy, RT, $20.MS-Ml4 aft6PM Salesman, F/T. Shoe w tdetails + people "--·C!••A"-"' ,.,. '"-P/t Ptr Call"; ... 0683 • JonatlMMlhcby'a mirror shdina &lus COM 644-4000 uleamao wanted in orieoted.Applybyletter, ~·--....... _ ,,.. · ,... · 2911CroddyWay doors.526-4924 · loah.W 9060 s.,.t'Cs..t '76 HONDA 750F. LCJ miles, low price! sa&-7111 or980-~ Fashion Island for w/resume & salary bis· da.Yllhlfta.Hrl,y +comm. Waitress, Apply in SantaAna,Ca 540-2911 rsa..o.&OrcJans 8090 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '/OUDg. rapidly arowine tory to J . Churth, 220 callt7S-3320 person, Sid'a Blue Beet, Oak, Church Pew Bench. ••••••••••••••••••••••• FUJI. y AMAHA ~m any. Gd pay & Newport Ctr Dr. NB.~·--·-"·.,-UY721.stPl,NBaft3pm &--a---1010 Faantml Couch, deak, Le Cooda Player plays o•a•-s •-.. _ .. r Mo rey ...,... LUMAU•UUll ..,.....--. desk ctu·. misc ch rs & • 11 --.- .... l'>i& or r ' ll2660 Experienced or inex· tbls, couch, anliQ vie-wall. books. 22 ro 1' Yacht Brokeraae ~. SecteWy perienced. Immediate 't;allreas, ~us bo)'.. & ;·~·~;;;.-·;;~·~·~·~·~·~ trola.548-6998 9>0/b9t9SH160aft.&pm. LllUnpWanted! Molar.._ .. Sde/ .... /Sfw ... fHO ••••••••••••••••••••••• SAUStei YACHTS DEC SECUTAlY openin1s.M.M40t =:•:s~ve:rtM~~:~ HCYI'POINT SALE. 3308 SpoitMgGooch f094 Sollftlwnhn ..Prefer experien ce tn To The President Viejo Country Club. W. Warner nr Harbor, Desk, lrg st.eelcase, oak .. ••••••••••••••••••~• Ylldlt S4.s Rent e l.9'T7 £xecutJ•e brokerage & sailboats. Real est investment firm or AJA to Sl1 hr. 831-1550 Santa Aoa. 9'19-292l veneer top, fine cond. Regulauon pool table, 21116 Newport Blvd. llotorbome or Mini Commission ooly. Kona ror educat ors. Good ExecSecy to$l2K •Washers, dryers, clean $95 644'2644 Solldslat.e,SSOO. NewportBeacb motorbome from Hwb turioe.61>1403.. career oppor & very Sec Word Proc to $950 WANTED late mc>dels, yr guar ;."glass top corree table 87>2213 (714) 673-9211 Friedlander. Call aJlJ or SUespenon, exper want· ed for wet.swt & sports clolbing, Ftr. Call eves. 6f.S..7201. challenging. Xlnl tyi>-Jr.Secy/Recepl $850 MEN.WOMEN SlOO up, delivered $75 ' Oame/dlDetle Hl tbeeeoumben 1.nitsh req'd. Exec secy lrvinePeaonnelA1ency ALLDEPTS Kl.llg's.636-2840.MIC .646-3442 6425208 TV,R.&o. l&lll.nder30. MK II. super atMn7 exper a musL CaU Eileen a E l7th Costa Mesa Merchandising, d isplay. S7S. ' · l-IR, Stereo 1098 boat, many xtras. $23,500 537.7771 at640-0123. SuiteZM 642-l470 domestic appliances. Maytag washer or Ken ~Sale 1055 ••••••••••••••••••••••• PP. sales & service. 6 lOPM . more washer S75 Late ••••••••••••••••••••••• CB Radio, 40 channel ___ ..:.644.:..:...·l:.:836~·-__ •1 ____ 1_l_N __ l _8_1 __ _ Salesperson wanted for SECRETARY I c1atbing st.ore. Apply at Challenging pos. Job ha.a 1140 s. Cat. Hwy, Lag variety includ Ille Bch. <in Village Fair) personnel work. Sb 80, Blwn 10..6pm. typing 60. lrvlne area. Stodl & Delvery Good drimg rec. Apply in penon, 1526 Newport Blvd, C:O.ta Mesa. ~ day Sat. No exper. model Kenmore wa~her Coppertone refrig, $6S. Realistic, including ~-• 7 5 c A p E 0 o R y RENT 23• FlrebaU, aall· needed in some areas $125. Guar & dehv'd. used 48' sliding glass der dash rack for qwck TYPHOON 19. Cull keel contained. Lot.lohtru. ___ ....;.... _____ , Call for appt. ~7639. SALES PEOPU EOE. SUMMHJOIS P..+-Tit. *rwterf/R --' B o a t a s s & m b I y . Relines, housewives, .c...,... Male/fem. Day or niab\ tud W h For N.8. dentist. Accur .. s ents. e ave open-sh i ft . W e l r a I n . inga lo our H.B. Jr. typing & lile bkkpng re· MacGre1or Yacht.a, 1631 Market, (comer Botsa q·d. Xlnt working cond.s Placentia, C.M. Chic a & Ed 1 n g er )1_&..:.pa-'-y._642-__ 46_12_. ________ ...:._ ____ _ Eves/wknds/holldays. Hrs flexible. Starting rate commensurate w/exper. Please apply in person, Seagate Liquor, 16101 Bolsa Chica or call (714) 840-271 l. SALES WE KNOW ¥OU WANT AJOB!!! MONEY (&PRIDE) TI-·Llfe Libraries, .. ... ...... ... Ii ......... .,. ... IJlfor riml•. -lcrtillig ... ". d• ........ Top wages, profit shar-S46-8672 <loon. xlnt cond, $85/ea, removal and trunk an· · bo ._.NIL\• ~2281 ing program & incenlive Garage full of clear tenna. Almost new, $75. sloop, basic a\ ~., ____ ,;__ ___ _ pay plan. For interview cabmets. 642·1077. 187 E. 64.S-9'a84aft6PM With lrlr & extr.-$5.500. FOi' Rent: 29' Pace Al'· phone after 1 PM . Washer, dryer. dlx 21st.CM. HONE 542•91161 row. air. gen., cruise, 9'19-3862 model3, completely re· ........_~ 8060 RADIOTELEP · 12' Kite, trlr, cover , 2 istereo. nu It beaut. bwlt, refinished, year ..._..... ruJI 11 channels, we~ther sails xlnt cond. $500. 63()..49(M W AHTID DRIVER t y h · ••••••• •• •••••• •• •• • •• • ch a n n e I m o n 1 l o r · 1---------SUNDA Y OMLY t1:aena~Fre:u~e~v~~~~ Reg 'h Arab Mure. Loves speaker, trunk antenna. 54Z-80l8. 'NEW 'TB 31' Pace Arrow. To deliver Daily Pilot Sale ends June 30th people Very versatile. e~y installation. Almoi.t ·77 Catalina 22, many Sips 5. Loaded. Weekly bundles to carriers. Re· South Coast Appliance. '650. Jeannie 646-1934 new. $'950. 645-9484 aft x tr as, x In l co n d , rent• I 6nly. 646·2136 quires van or large st.a· 531.2542 J.welry 8070 6PM $S500/80. 495-6068 days,646-6595eves. lion wagon and a gooJ ~~~~~~~~~!••••••••••••••••••••••• loah&MmiM •73 Robie Cal 18'. Xlnt ·72 Pace Arrow 24' Furt.y dnvlng record. Phone Fr~zer hke new $250. DIAMONDS 1q111,..... cood. Extras. $1300. or loaded. Sips 7. Gd shape. ~3~1!;d ask for Penneys 20 c u . ft. 1~<.;aratGIAappralsed •••••··~~··•••••Vc••••• best.Keith,539-0576 $8ll00.~,646-2l.36 EQUAL 968-1157 $4400, wLll sell for $2600. loah. wtew• Cal 34, atomic 4 gas eng. TRADE •n T -Bird for OPPORTUNITY Game Show Winner 30" .'.1a11's 7 cluster of 43 ea Serrice 020 ISO jeni, spin, strm jib, e qui l Y i o M In l -EMPLOYER (3 01 total). Appraised ••••••••••••••••••••••• anchor. RDF. d1nohy, Motorhome.646-4864 self cleaning elec oven $8900, sell for $4900 Mecharucal or Electrical " WAREHOUSEMAN WATCHMAKER cWhirlpool), SS69 Make G1·9:121 Problems? Call Fred al full cushions. Super '76Cbevy El Dorado, ltlnl offer. Gene 559-1916 ---------1 646-4005. Grand Banks cond. 675-092' cood. man_y xt.ru, only 8015 ••••••••••••••••••••••• GEMS PRIVATE ESTATE expert References. Santana 20 •~ "llum· $10,250. ~. Tl~l422 loClh. Maria~ rrungb1rd''. F trace. cu" 1978 Monaco moc.ortiome, ~-_... 9030 class champ. Dellv Apnl ... n engine "ass tape .....-r--"" '77. Hardly used 0/B. '"" • " · ••••••••••••••••••••••• trlr Owner anx1ou11 deck, cab a, roof air, MsfM lothrf Salea Wltd'y eves 2131578 0964 Onan cenerator. le11S I ' than 5,000 mi. Many ~~~ ~~~~1~:,:.~ Columbia 21 Sailboat. other extras. $17,000 . Batteries. 631r4343 Big, fast. comfortable 581-3399 *AUCTION* daysailer Open cockpit ----.AppraiMd $24,975. loah., Poww 9040 seau 8. Xlnt bay cruiser .....,s.nlu, P.ta ••••• ••••• • •• •• ••• •••• • & able ofr shore boat. F 4 Ii Accnsorin 9400 MCllldcry J_. 26. 7PM Tons of American Oak, dressers w /dbl mirrors, high· boy chests. press back rockers. secretaries, roll lop desks, china cabinels. Pt.US English hall stands. drawleaf tbls, wardrobes. piano:., beveled mirrors. leaded glass windows & etched glass doors Stl for $8,000. ltu. Welc:raflt W~ sruls & out.board. Nwpt ••••••••••••••••••••••• 21· w/233hp motor, like sUp avail. Must sell for Aut.obody Repairs. Major .wt. flaWl1 Marquis new cond, fully covered. only Sl.650. 499-4940 oa Minor collision. Bjg aavincs. Alan 556-4011 sips 4. Pr\ced to sell 22· Columbia Galley --~-----­ $11.900. Ask for Mack Model. Honda outboard. A.lllolfw S. Dfstrwu ••. ly appt. Oftly l714J 54M710 8080 962·7788or963-102Seves. VHF radio, M-COO. (213) ••• .. •••••••••••••-••• Bay boat. 18' LapstraJce 007-3851 ~/ Classic; Gray l/B. Xlnl. LASER No. 7968 a lt CIOuks 9520> ..,.95"• d 7cno250 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..., , .. a e ,,.,. eqwpmt. Bestoffer. 6"·0S30 11154 Packard Patrician, 4-dr. auto, Z OW113on1Y. F<>R SALE '75 Erickson 29, super have' ownecJ for 12 yrs- 1975 24' Remell Segdan boat. wheel. span, many Gal' enclosed. $55001 Bndge, OMC 225, xtra xtras. $Z3,500 P .P . John rU"ID. 552-1753, 991..fllC>. We Aho how Y• LJke '9°'* &Y•Ll&eTo Talk Wtt.rfett.lcleal poliffOll for you. . to work for• A•-,. To assist engineer w/developmenl of de· licate prec111e mstrumen· tauon for oil field. Good working conds +co. benefits. Top pay. EOE. Scientific Drilling Con· lrols Newport Beach, 557·90Sl ask for Ron Llt· Ue. OON1 MISS THIS ONE! clean. dual station, VHF. 67>9060. Al 640-24%1 '$l BUICK. Runs goocf: depth finder, bail tank, LUGGAGE TAGS many xtras. Priced lo Santana 20. #83, "Hurn-$l50flrd. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Secretarial ~n...&Jt. looks hen prGYH to be a C)nClt ct.c.cefor st.:tewh. l'IDOftlightet"S & ,..., arrt'fais to ~ CGllf. to ecrn ...,.-,.ha'fe,_ lrfeetCJOOd abo9t IM~ns. WHAT MORE CAMYOUSAY7 CALL 833-8095 lot-Alt 1ntertl•w Irvine manufacturing company wants a self· starter with good skills. Interesting job. 1622 Browning. Irv, Ca. Bonanu Fans. SECY /OF-C HB.P p/time. (2) Positions 10-2 & 4-8. IMIHl666. SECRETARY Xlnt opportunity for self- s ta rte r . Cu stom e r service or construction background helpful. Good typing a must. Xlnt salary & benefits. 752-1660 ask for Lyon SECRET ARJES TIME-LIFE Llbrarin. tnc F,qual Opp Emplyr m tr Immed openings for ---------•secretaries to work for S.C-Stnss.. The lrvine Co Apply ln person 18170 Secy /Comln1/llMlmt Eucl!d St, FV 557.5220 Background in real est., Seamstress. expcnenced Sails & SaJI covers. Ex· cellenl wages & in· sw-ance benefits Local· edinNB.~l sales, leasing. escrow or documentation helpful. Typing 65 wpm & diet.al· phone. s.cyo...c• Secretary lo work as Secretary, for law ore. needed . l ·3 yrs Pff summer help, gd secretarial exper. Typ· typing & shthnd. Exper 1ng 60 wpm & die · notnecess. NB 644·5040. taphone. Secretary ,Admamstrauve s.cy /firtoltce duties, w /adverusing & ~etary with good tY"P· copy-writing background mg. Some stat typina, 10 nded to start lmmed. key & dictaphone exper. C.all Ken Lewis. 754-7841. Excellent benefit.a & fan· ---------• t.asUc workln& environ· SECUT4lY / menL/R~1..__.._. «..-ch Aull...,. __ , ~-~~ .. OH ISLAHO Secretary w /xlnt typing. Ecooomlc research nrm sh helpful & dictaphone. L • 1 Muat be polaed " able to aee .. s sec Y w /x nt deal effectively w /all statistical typinl skills. Varied duties, assist types of people. wtresearch projecla. ca.rirTyplst As hley Economic · ........, ...... Se.rvices, ~SS. Clerk typist to handle H · _SIC_:a_tET_.....:All_Y_/UC __ EPT __ •1 =lyw::.y phooa fr E!per'd, for N . B . PleasecallS".&!19 an:hitedural flnn, Perm tam 'til 0000 posiUon staru .July l ntltaVJ .. CO Salary oeco. 67$-123.3 ror s."!C> Newport Otnter Dr appt. Newport Beach SICllT ARY Equal Oppor Employer Hotel. To d.ir of 1aJes & 1----------1 ule:s mar. 01rtaph, hvy 1---------tnan& fr ad.min abiJ1tie:J ~-.- Resume req'd. Leading *.-.nn•1H* N.B. hotel. 6"·1700, ut ~ ()(fTbe Beach!! I 312 Dona. EOE Many Bkk:pn, Gen_, otc $eCretary "\yplall to Sld Part tlmo, 10.Z, Tues, .Employers Pay All F ... 10·2 Tbura. Mus t be U.1RelndersA1ency ,,,,__ .. iood skills, d~ 4020BirchSt.Ste104 WE OFFER: ..... Hrtyw.y •C-. P.W W..t&Jy .............. •NT~rt• CALL TODAY START TOMORROW 714/833-8095 TIME-LIFE LIBRARIES INC Equal Opp Emplyr m /f 18.EPHOHE OPBlATOI lmmed. opening for i n· div w /heavy telephone background to work f /time. Must be poised & penooable. Lite lypmg req'd. Please call 644·3389 !>am 'lil ooon THE llVIME CO. 550 Newport Center Dr Newiiort Be acho Equal Oppor Employer WllG AS from your business card. move. rrungb1rd". Hardly used. 642.-4751 HIMG ST. s.uclowwAnticptHLtd. Send one card for each lestoffer Jo, t race. Curr class1--------- Rece1ve & weigh 152921ohaChicaHI tag plus one spa re. We • cbamp.O/B,trlr.Owner30-4 dr, 3 window "A .. vitamins & minerals 1714,893-7509 return permanently HARRISON'S anxious. Wkdy eves, greyi~ellow strippine Good math. English sealed attractive lag & 213-578--0964. rebuilt original eng. speaking, neat. Fringes. ~~~~~~~~I SEA RAY IOATS Et 950 ~ ~ Apply, 8-lOam, Mon-Fri. = strap, meeting airline •• Coronado 25, 3 sails . ......_;...' -·----'-' ---Linwilco Labs. 2148 llicydH 8020 1.0. reqwrements. Pre· 3101CoastHwy.N.B. 7,'!! Honda eng, super ~ NewortBl,CM ••••••••••••••••••••••• vent I06s & theft' For a 631-2547 clean w/slip. Must. sell. Vthicles 9530 ___ _.,; _____ ---------1 personahted tag enclose ---------1 64.S-0749/645-21659. ••••••••••••••••••••••• wallpaper . fabric or '72 Ford 1 Too .an,sland. .WOMEN! BE SURPRISm AT WHAT YOU CAN DO! 1lilil is big news. Hun· dreds of Army skills are apen for women. Only a few specialties rema m avaJlable Lo "men only ·· Move fast while lbe op porlun1l1es I ast. Ca II your local Army representative now J oin the Army and be the fulur<' COlrta Mesa f><t0-1026 HW1Ungton Bch 962·11821 Laguna Hills 768-5251 WORK AT HOME Cycle & Company GRAND OPENING SALE New & used bikes, big dascOUl'IU, 10 spds ~7 .50 leadtCruiun Foxie Mopeds Mato-Cross bikes pdrtS· access. Repairs all makes. Buy sell·lrade consign 2470NEWPORT BL CM 642 7910 "Day Glo .. paper & we loah.. SUP6/ b bbl ood d will back & trim your SEA RAY BOATS Docks 9070 up u e. g coo . Fully equip'd, refrig & tags. Or try lwo cards ••••••••• •••••••• •••••• slv. EJ ISO. Call 675-1193. back to back N 0 SLl'S AV AIL.AILE-;...' ------PRICES ow pen VACNewport646-05SJ Au'Stream70lwin31'very S'Zeaor3/SS M clean. $5,995. Call 4/5tagsS1.60ea. Until SP 30' Avalon mooring. lo 846-6096 6/9tagsSJ.50ea. front of Sean's & swim -4-WhMl---0-,;---9-5-5-0 IOor more $1.40ea 7 Days a week area. $25.000. 673 5099 Yff Sales Tax Included •••••••••••••••••¥•••• NOCARD? ONCE A YEAR Draw your own or send name. address. phone & we'll make one \'.ard per CLEARANCE la&. Add 25' each Send check or money or IOATSUP NEEOE'D JM'· MEDIATELY for 38' power boat 10 Newport Harbor. Days; 640·5050. Eves; 552 0790 derlo· PILOT PRIMTIMG Scn-e $6,370. Out of town owner would COSTA MESA AMC/JEEP #1 IHCAUF. 1971 CHHOIEE $6995 Came & P 0 Box 1560 E.,f;!...t 8030 Ccfita Me98, Ca. 92626 30' Sportbridge, twin 1.Jke slip 30· sail btwn V8's, lrim tabs. electnc Lidu Isle & Penn (714) refng & stove. dock side 645-28mor (213) 247-0321 power. shower, 200 ----- (J8A16NN127783) 32 Cherokees In Stock ••••••••••••••••••••••• Designers Leftovers Liv. 200nn MHdlor rm Brkfmt $400 /ofr Sofa Sl2S tble Sl).S. LI{ Anl chair 646-7314 eves PX>. Bdrm furn ~·$400. gallon fuel. many extras loats. SpHd & lonly.Stock #632. Sid 9080 San $3,532 24· Express Cruiser V8, t.rlr. electric refrig, dock ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hondo flatbollom , 440 Qlevy, with V·dnve, xlnl slu boat, 963-6055 OVERSTOCKED CJ5Pickups Wagoneers $1300 Discount on some models. Phonesales 7-llam. Teller, part time, ex· 5JG.S220 perience preferred. Wall --------- consider trainee . Xray technician, pt/tame, M i n i mu m l y p I n I f).10 hrs wk. Orthopedic 40WPM. Mutual Savings surgeon's offc, Fashion It Loan. 570 Camino de lsle, 640-4940 BRONICA ETR Mint cond. Speed gnp. A E finder, 2 backs, F2.8 75 mm , bag, filters $900/bsl ofr. 957 1160 afl 7pm Anuques $20 up Hdbrd & spread $225. Sleeper sofa $12S. Sal & Sun 9·5 332 Evening Canyon Rd. CdM side power, tnm tabs, -·uH bo Bl d Salw-ft ... _ A. I• ...,_ ar r v . wipers, 100 gallon fuel. •-r ~,.. .. • COSTA M"'"A &trella, San Clemente. E.O.E. Ml!RhmMIM loaded. 2 only. Stock '76 19' Sea Ray 195SR 9-1~02~ PHONE MATE '#631 , 673. No dealers Runabout. MerCrwser, 714/54 ~ w /war ran l y S79 please. 188HP w/888 outdrlve. --__;~----- w/remote S.149. 750.;n91 Inspect al 407 Bolsa 1976 Ford, F250, 4x4• Roger Brown SaY• $3,245 Ave., N.B. 54tH2G4 Sub· Ranger , V·8, 4 spdk. mlt bid to so. coast cruise, AM /FM 8 trac • ••••••••••••••••••••••• Golden Retnever pup· Family Membership to :~~:.d~e~b'l'f~ x:h~~l~: Marine Surveyors Inc. aux. tank, cycle ra~k. TB.Lia ........ , 8005 pies. AJ<C Field & show John Wayne·s Tennis hermen's delight. Only 5732 E. Second St, Lonit Xlnl cond. 30,000 ma s Level beaded & cheerful ••••••••••••••••••••••• pet. Shots . wormed, _c_1_ub_._c_·a_ll_83_1·_7600 ____ 1 ooeSt.ock #SS4. Bch 9()803. (213) 434·84711_6.1_1_·1.159 ______ _ teller needed p /Ume. AMERICAN OAK raisedw(TLC. Xlntd1sp White Fox coat full Bid subject to approval '77 Cheyenne Blazer, ~ta. ctLeeM~ ... ~1'?6xlonlmo~ Laraest Selection 1213) 425-1561. length. was Sl 100 Must SaY• $1 ,893 ol owner. Bid sale con· buckskin, loaded. Best ... D .,.. .. in Orange County eludes noon, 6/30178. olfer over S7400. *-4366 perial Savings & Loan Stewart Roth Anllques AKC Fem. Cocker. S7S or sell '350. 673-9149 t'ves 20' Runabout, V8, t:rlr, •---------alter 5 PM. 550NewportCtrD NB best rr Good f mil oneonly Stock#S70. r, , 750£.DyerRd.S.A. o er. a Y 65 yds A·l rust carpel Tt•rp..ttltto. . EOEM/F/H (atNwptP'wy)751·8922 dog.493-061.S SlOO 2 good used toilets ••••••••••••••••••••••• 74 Blazer Wagoneer. Tow Truck Drivera ex----------Golden Retriever pup· S25ea.642·2741 HARRISON'S C ,., .. SM/ A/C, PIS. P/B. stereo. per'd.. Top pay .. Apply• p· F male SJ5 SU RAY a.wt 9120 much more. Top shape. GflWTowing, 1000lrvine AntJ~::~:~n~~es! ies, e 96J.7M2.' 2=~b~:~~ ~· ~ ~d 3101CoutRwy, N.B. ..••••••••••••••••••••• _lm-321 __ 4 _____ _ Ave, NB642·1252 Clocksf cond 962 2012 . 631,2547 SHELL TOP for Import Tnsb 9560 HUGE SELECTION AKCreg blk Lab pups . P\du.ip. Brand new. s;l30. ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• T~t:~ E E~~~i::i'a~~~ Al9nc• 640-4090 .~~30 Irvine Coast Cnuntry CT'duale 1930 bridle dk Ph~9177 •a lnlcm'l PU. Short box. mechlne days, f/llme lnlttHtioftcll Club. Class A family cl'Ulser GM dsl. much Caml)er shell for 8' bed. wbtspoltewhll, lf"lltnob· EngUsh:alllna. Pr G._.,.es Enghsb Bull doJS, AKC 3 membersh ip STSO teak. sreat UveaboaJ'd. 34 .. high, carfo door. blet, 4·c1l en1. Ofr. ' ln&ea. A ' .. lO Mon males,Sfem.tRarewbl +tranafer fee Ca ll Sac. Bo1ardus Yactrl.I. S27S C$ll a t 6pm, m.Gl83or75'.0H& .~ rrl, Un ko w.,_, 2148 ~nK~~rl~~ 1~!~ male Call MO 0332 m.906'7 $17,000. 548-$5.'56 '95-S127, Mr. Pintar. 70 D9ttm PU (J J\Wwport lJJ. CM (714) 754-1777 FrH to YCMI 1045 Office ~altw• & TRADlt YOUR YACHT VW Cam r. 19'10, recent 4 eyl.. ~ speed, radfo, ftAYa "-GIEMT --------•I••••••••••••••••••••••• ~,...... IOIS FOR REAL ESTATE. overha~. good cond, but6. Camper shell.f ~ Twoninewookoldkillena, ••••••••••••••••••••••• WE ARRANGE ALL otolfer."' .. ,. .... ,,,, (8S132T)(St.k.'1118BT).J Newport/Irvine. Min 3 black short haired male Divert-A-Call al~ pnce · DETAILS. F.NSION $1900 ,,..,........,, $1717 ' >Tl dPG'· Call 7S4·l.S55. JONATHAN'S and black and white Iona ~I vet & rorw1rd.a your YACIITS. 61~2650 Motorcydft/ TIAYB. AGINT ANTl QUES haired female. Please ~calla. Nearly new. Scashu ti 50 Esl*''tl 11./or worklnf WllOLESALEONLY call 631-3149 al\or 5.30 Only IOOO. 7~Jt A$k 21' ReineU, 1/0, cabin ••••••••••••••••••••••• ENGLlSHSlllPMf.."NT PM. lot Smith or Haese. cruar1 like nu, mny xtrs T'7 Yameha XS7500. ahal\ 8040 Docp ••••••••••••••••••••••• THEODORE ROBINS FO~D wrtner·~19618• ONSALENOWll ~ lncluae VHFi prvt hud, drive Better than now 1833$MT.LANGLEY Dobit/lrtsbSett.erpup NCR Cuh Regls ler, dlnshy. 1a ley, tndm XtraiS1595.Btwn4.aPM: FOVNTAINVALLS:Y 6~t.bs.houaobroken. mod m. value SSOO. Allt_; trlr.71M72·9320. 87J.5G7Ron .._.._... Newport Beach al:MUO pendeblt. New port 0.11 ror Appt/llltab '14 Travel ,\cent. Minimum• _:Bucb~~,!area.::.,::::.;lfl::,:3·~5625~~-11---------1 yrs J,nternaUonal travel ••ency experience. Call Mn. Dryer. 54t-ZM$ -..w1 Lovable Ing '350. or trade for ola --·------- 1CM' tl/\Wl\llM ~IV!' (()q/\M"A f.l; ()OlfJ Secreter)', must bt mewre A esperi~nced. Short.twld. Dte bk~PI ,... q'd. Room for adv~ meet. Good ulary. P'OllDlala Vall•J arH. __. ... ror Nacy. SMretary:. lnnovalln ,....w~.No •b req•d . Cell Mu. Hipr111·12ll Seartty OHken Qlab'l ucuri~ firm Med.I reUaW. mu A womeo for uniformed HCUrlt1 poslUOH la Coll• Me.ta. Fall or l)/tlma . Betlr-ed ftlcome. Phn• rnalft otc roU«i ror • Colt• lleu appt. (211) II.WIN Free to lood home gold eta 64.5·9~. Boa~ ·~ 17' custom, 'T1 Kawa1akl KH400. Ex· "10 'Blulr, rm lood. 1-li-. 66'·2120 Heavy duty work ~~n: •• ~r:o~.8·p~1:~ collent R11nn1n1 Cond. AM /Fii, CB. Obup, ftUCIDIJV• SLOT lUCIDNE FOR Gold Rlrvr/Oerm Shep benches. draft.ln1 tbls, is ~.-.n. ::o,o:ino.C.lltlt-3081 S3QOO.MS-«IOl5. Dlillvery pttp, VIUmlD SAL.£ 18133 MLll5 Golden mix very attract ttova· dn. woodto desks $76. • · · ••Chevy~ T auto lnNI flrntn.al ~a. Gd math. 8ielJ iOI: machine. Xlnt bl•, 'habrla\. Xlnt w/klch Metal d b 185-up, N w 24' Arenacral\ fibel'llUI 73 Honda. 11,000 orlt ml. abll1, llO.;. lltf.. H1L t.iftinlNCJ'clXDowLA• CXDl. SllOO. 8*9123 or m.ooa desk " fllts 1119.llS . & teak. <?MC 210 h.p. etmi cwitom. fl«IJ to ap. Gclt.alt.o9dll. ... '3U Oruc• Co. Days. 1'"r· T-..oo13 Woodan1heMna. 1''\sh or a\~. FullY equip. ptte. Sl ooo 842·2Sf7 lftpa. J;aalitb 1peakln.1. ntautttu.l tlgtt striped C.E. WllOL£$AL£ + RDF. 01" & t.ralltr -___;.,• -----'74 '-\T Ford, new tins, Nat• clean. Appb' 1-10 Make your a hoppln1 fem. Bwu and her OFnCE FURNITURE Xlnl cond. IG,999. Also 7' '76 &uutJ, RM12S, lllnt abocb. clutch. overhaul, llca-l'rl. UnwUC'o wbl, euSer by ustn1 the Dally nu!fy IJ'IY rem. play. *4 PlacenUa. C.M. ftl>eralus dlnChY $110. cond. Ra~ rnd7. Mlke. su'Viet body, SZ,t&O. Qa 81vd.CM l"lk$Clwlfiec1Adl mate.~ SSHm IU·2.5'TO 11'2-<mO. 17$-ID ~.~ CJJ 8 DAil Y P1l0 T ....................... °"'fla'dB1 Nni.. 350. VB. ......_ll~. PA PJB. Ur cmd., AM/ ......... ~~'° ibeO. smo or belt oller m.41.D (lN). tTN:lll& ~ '81 Ford PU, noo. V-41, ~ "' T, asa ena. a· bed. gd cciad. $1.SOO. Spm ...... 541-18'1. '9 lnt.eroaUonal 'Runs good. $550/80. ~Zl51117~ll. • Auto1, laporled Autos. lm,..,tecl AMtoa. l•p•r+td A.Mto.. Used A.uto1. Uatd AMfcK, Ustd •··············••·•·••· .................................................................................................................. . Mone!l!X. June 291 Ul78 W. W..e.d 9590 ...... 1_,11 ttct JW 9725 POl"ICM 9750 Votwo f71Z c.ll1c tt IS C......... tt30 ttat•9 9'51 ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... .•..................... . ............................................ . WIWl.l.IUY Mlm t720 '15 '1at u1 AM/l"M. a ·azau bite hie OIAMGICOUMTY "10~deVllle,lomi'1, "15MatltlV. While. Fil.lb' ·es M~. ~~ 3 1pd YOUIDATSUM _ .... -•••-••••• track. au&.o, *2,0QQ. CUl ~ :hls.'lllDt ~ VOLVO 1ood en1. '1300. l...YDB. loaded. Orla owQer. oo nr, Wr $9)0. P ...... ~roaoa......... TSU S ea-...-... ...,,. ......,.,...... ... _m llSMl88l.~ t1B>O.Pb~1~ ._m.sm ______ _ nw •w• •DA M * \..._ ----au...,. · EXa.\JSIVELYVOLVO ~ TOf' DOU.A' a-1' f\at ua SDoil L. must 1M1 Poncbe Cobvert.. ~Volvo Duler '11 Yark V ua llust.ani. Wu $1295. '°''°'CA.IS '-le S1hd Mil. best ollta. ltG-43ZI --...... OD bllk, lood ce"~·-tyl lmmac! P.P. 64()..8444 DOW $800. Li&bt fender & Of Al.....,_ aft IPM • .. .., ..... BUY or LOOE Weekdays, I» crUl dama1e. 547-31112 BAllWIU< DA T'>U N 831 1 )7')~9) ]]/') WEIUY Cl.IAMCAIS ftftUCICS ""' • ....,L.,. ... 0 •NO conditkJo. p .P · '9'7-3289 PA.inic~cB ...... 9727 DIRECT -A -;.;;;:;:7i· .. t:.:fi.i~ ~ HONDA Can '78 93t, s.ooo miles under 2025 S Manchester COSTA MESA DATSUN ZM6HARBOR BLVD . 540.•4 I 0 540.02 u 'foC:Y,,_ warranty~i:S· Anaheim 750-2011 MUST SELL! "75 Ghi•, Corwtt. 9'32 V-8, auto, loaded. Xlnt •••••••••••-•••••••••• Cond. $3SOO/ofr. ~~ 1968 Muatang convert.Ible. excellent condltioB. 642-2338 ma Datsun Kina Cab PU f'ftlilUl:'l I ster casa, CB, s hell, "unnu.L 742•0% 8 eyl., 4 speed, air cood.: mag wheels, radlal Ures, AM /FM ateree . (700JCZZ) <Stk. P!M70). UNIVERSITY um tns. only •500 mi.~~~ ••••••••••• •CORVETTES!* 16to Choose From 1972tlru 1978 HOWARD Chnrolef OOVE & QUAIL STS. (Near MacArthur Jamboree & Bristol> NEWPORT BEACH 833-0116 833-0555 '74 Mach I, V-6. 4-spd, clenn. loaded. $2800. 833-0652 Noneman tires, Muc CHEVROLET Morel Very nlce.P.P . ~ 28?.BH.arbor Blvd. COSTA MESA ~ leep Ma piclt-up. 327 54._1200 <liev eng, big Utes, new 1 ___________ 1 -pllint. runs 1ood. 645-4561 ALLEN 1 GMC TRUCKS . 1978 ~MC >/•TOH YANDURA WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP USED CARS FOREJGN, DOMF.STIC or CLASSICS U your car • exU'a ct.ean aee us first. IAUBIUIQC 2925 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 979-2500 Autol. llllporled ••••••••••••••••••••••• THEODORE ROBINS FORD 'J060 HARSOR 61VD CO~TA MESA 642 0010 a..a.a. air , sunroof,1 leather, .... ~ 9905 Ll.-..&-c GMC AM/FM loaaed. Muat -,._ ... • sell. Sl.8,Soo. 640-8208, ...................... . Tnidts •70 Hornet, nu brakes, nu ~Harbor Blvd. "67 Brown 912 Targa t Ir es, nu a t art er. Coata Mesa 540-96'0 Saddle interior l'iOO/BO. call alt 6pm. 644· 1481. 53M407. "76 CIVIC CVCC R..ut 9755 -------•• ata':!r. '74 MATADOR, 30.000 mi, ••••••••••••••••••••••• mechanically perfect. ~~r~ :adio &1:!~egr~ TESTl>RIVEOUR Make otter. 673·0200 lmmaculate! (033PBY) •1LE CAR days, 548·•<M6 eves & ~~ltl. OFTHEYEil .. Good inventory in stock. Hurry while they last! THEODORE ROBINS FORD MIRACLE MAZDA/REHAULT 21SO Harbor Blvd. wlmds '71 Gremlin, ong owner, 57,000 mi. auto, radio, $1095. P.P. 552-9586 Wck HIO • •••••••••••••••••••••• 1975 CAl>IL&.AC ~ COUPE DE VIUE ••19• .. ,.,..,,, ..... 00 ..... "9clOfV ... -. • ..,,. -& 1 'ff .,.,.,....., C236P\IK~ S6495 1974 PLYMOUTH SHRIMG cou" 1976 CADIUAC io Hardtop, PSJPB/AC. $1000, or offer. s:s.2-7168, aft 6pm. Olck11DbHe 9955 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -------•.-I '68CulJass, AC/PS/PB. Qxvette-Buis now bemg LDt like nu, nds paint. lakeo on lndy 500 pace $900. 979-1471. car In stock. Ftetcher•--------- Jones Chevrolet 6633 ·m Olds 442, auto. A/C. Westminster Ave , ~. West m 1 n s l e r . Ca . 586-94.ll •882-·.4444 _______ 11973 Cutlass Supreme. VB •ulO<nll!C ,,_ -1 MM 9ayge1 6 7JI \0 #'tU'tOfl rTGU llllOll046181 2060 HARBOR Bl VD COSTA MESA 642 · 0010 ~ ............. !?.~~ ~~~~~~~~~· 'l• F'OX, blue 4 door. AC, --------'76CVCCCUSTOM GT. COSTA MESA 645-5700 Gold ~~·~ -· H CG/14 . -6 1 'f( WWT"'ltf 11301 I 65.000 mi's, AJC. vnyP '76 Qxvette whL wired roof, PS/PB. $2100/BO. stnppLDg. w'ht lthr ml, T-556-0363. wk. 957·0110, top, AM/FM stereo. PS, rune. Ask for Marty or PB. PW, AC, lilt wh.I, lo ,_Le_M_Y_· ------ nu. $9100 673-7773 Pinto 99 57 Rois Royce 9756 ' Ce l V 6 .. lik '71 350 auto. loaded, excel ••••••••••••••••••••••• 58995 Bwck Sedan '67 98M, One Owner $600. 675-3809 1978 GMC •h TON PICKU,. r ru1 o"•' tulh' h c101r llQUt~/ICOU8Z6213!i01 '$4295 WE HAVE A GOOD SELECTION OF JIMMYS. SUBURBANS &VAN CONVERSIONS MH"I,_ ..... , •• , ""' .,,l•OOl'l<• COll""'~lift"O..U.1"&1 AM/FM, auto. $2300. A-1 ·n Datsun 280-Z, AJC. S.spd Hatchback. yel/blk shape, T.L.C. 968-1486 AM/FM ate.reo 8 track, Int.. AC, Blaupunkt mags, louvre w"1dows, • AM /FM st ereo, tarp, spd, 18,000 mi. Pvt ply racing whls, tach, cocoa $7500. 963-0867; 542-2790. mats, flared fenders, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 76 n u.ry . '4 .... r. e cond. $5195. 546·9245. Ford Pinto, xlnt•cond.r *l DEALER IN U.S.A. new, 10 ml. $3400. 1971 CHEVROLET wkndJ 831-1789 9,ooo au. S280o firm. 536-7313 cn1vun 636-8662 dys. 110.3oos 'Tl Audi Fox Wgn, AC. 1\M/FM cassette. snrf, $4.500. 536-1203 AM . IMW 9712 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1978 BMW's 'HERE HOW! COMPLETE IODYSHOP NOW OPEN EXCEU.IMT SB.ECTIOH OF IMWRESALES * DRJVEA * * LITILE ••• * SAVE A LOT Gurney Victory mags, 13" Goodrich radial T /A's, front s poiler . dechromed . 40K mi. Very cherry. See Oct. 1975 Playboy mag for twin. $3750. Eves, wknds, 64().0608 m ROY Cacllac 9915 ~~~'f.Yi:,_~~ :'.; '78 Vet. loaded. blk 7K m1, eves ~ ~~~:~~~~c ··LTDEDirioN·· ti "j~cj2f5 si•.5001~~13 .... ~-o-~-~-~e-~-M-m-,eF-t~-1u-·c-,t-~-~e-c~-~ ~ !:.."~~ BHcll l978 Cadillac Biar riti .... 1111! .. MllWllll!l!!I!"" Cougar ' 9933 steel radial lires, 4 cyl, \"---...... Last of the big ones . .,... _ __....._~, .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• stick Bst ofr (714) cws1osuNDAYS $27,500. cn4) 49J..6287 or m -·~·-11• 1977 Cougar X R7, im· 545-9089 SHOP&COMPARE BARWICK DATSUN ...,,Ill I 1t.tll ' .1 p1 ~I I .i" ' 831·1375 493.3375 1961 Rolls Royce Silver Cloud II. Beaul. car. ---.-72-1-lo_n_d_a ___ $19•500· 64G-7030. 600spl.cp. $995. Toyota 9765 586-9413 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •16710SfftWgn IEfOREYOU •speed, sunroof, r adio & 76 Cvcc y~llow s.tnwgn, SEU. YOUR beat.er. Super clean car. ID8JS, radials, air, FM Less than 18,000 mis. radio, nunt cond. $2990. TOYOTA. <473PCF> _848-_J036 __ . -----SEE us• $3259. ......,. 9730 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• MA.RCi)UIS TOYOTA '73 XJ6 Jaguar, bas every MISSION VIEJO option av a 1 I, show rm _8_3_1_·2_8_8_0_4_9_5_· _12_1 o_ cond,perfectbody,pnt& "7 6 Corona , mu st int,$7700.496-66.58 sacr ifice! Emerald THEODORE ROBINS FORD 72S-0485 mac u I ale, b I k 1-.---------. w/cbamois Lnl. & lnm. 76 Sqwre. Wagon. 6 cyl. ALLEN • Orcmge COU11fy'1 S.•i•c.....,. • (t OlllAC ·Ol D~MOfi1l f (,,M ( JA•JC...K~ \•n 01~ Fw v AwU'f i. ••f LAGUNA "tlC...Uf l 9917 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '76 Low miles, auto. P /S, P /B. 6 cyl, AM /FM stereo tape, rally wheels, new steel. radials, con· sole, tinted glass, woman o wner . beautiful buckslun in and out $4195. 540-0400 All eqwpment + to mi auto, A1C, AM , ~M. low See this one Isl. P.P. miles 644·2292 days !)G.8JJS7 _S9~·0597 __ e_v_es ____ _ Ford 9940 '72 Wagon, AM /Fl\t, ••••••••••••••••••••••• mags, ong. owner, $1400. ~--PHIL LONG FORD 494-SSSl Ptytmuth 99 60 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1974 Ply. Satellite Sta. Wag. 9 pass .. P IS. P/B. Air. Gd. l1res. trans Cooler, air s hocks. trailer h1lch. CB Radio met. Good Cond. $1.800. 921 S Orange, S.A. We may have your next Mada 9738 green, radials, a ir. Vcms 9570 car an our inventory. Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• AM/FM ster. tape deck. 2060 HARSOR BLVD COSTA MESA 642·0010 -------- TEST DRIVE A DIESEL SEVILLE '67 Camaro, mags. 6 cyl auto, oew trans, $799. 586-9413 '71 Ply. Satellite; A/C, ~~~·~~('.!:.:°'· .. :;,;:;; new paint. auto., new •••••,.••••••••••••••••• us today! '72 240Z, pri mo, 57 ,500 disc brakes, lo mi's, xlnt •12CHEV l/J Ton 131-2040495-4949 mi's, A /C, Michelin cond.Call839·1596. CMYl'Olet trans. & brakes; SlO<l Or • 1 ~" Wh~t b-se Van radials. ma gs, AM /FM , ....... '6 --~ ..., · defogger, $3675. 646-9546, vs. J speed, air cond., """-IMJ3 CREVIER miracle mazda .................. !!!.~ '75 LTD Sta. Wagon. PIS. ~toffer.5S4-IM6" ' '77 Celka Uftback 5 spd P /B, A/C, great shape. ·71 Plymouth Fury 111 • GT, copper w/tan int 1\.l-1bers ,. it 979-3214 AC. P/S, R&H. Lo mi's. radio & healer . -~---------'(1'729UK). 1Slkl826AT) $2496 $ '00 510 $400 as 1s. Good 2150 Hwbor ll•d. ~.499-1.866 Ci 'Wld 11 ~ • '73 Pinto Wgn. rack. air, ~P~3·5739 or 529·3237 I ST & lllOAOWAY tra n s car . NI c e Costa M.sa 645-5700 "72Corona Mark II, a •. ac .. .. clean. xtra car, $1500 ------- SANTA AHA persona lily. terri blc AM /FM, air. aulo, 46,600 • it 965--0388 '73Scamp. 6-cyl, A/C. 835·3171 body. Must sell. 548·6338 Mwc-. hm 9740 rru's, gd cond. S<?lOO. 1600 ll,1rh111 Blvu • it 9947 PS/PB. radio, auto. ---------••••••••••••••••••••••• (714) 842-3612 aft 6pm. ,. it Mcrttrick $1650 752-2282. dys. THEODORE ROBINS FORD THE ULTIMATE 0A1v1HG MAC.+•HE Two , 77 280Z. s. C pe c_, ._, ,1 Mn,1 :'i-111·'1 Joo ... ... •••••••••••••• •••. ••••• *USED .MW.* '71 MZB ~E. Xlnt cond. '76 "'-Uca 5 Spd L1· ft ....... ck ... ... p · 9965 w/aut.o trans. 8-trk & air. 85 ooo $6700 Ph ~ "" ... .... 1972 Grabber. 302 V 8. ontiac 2060 HARBOR BlVD. · mi, · w/shade, a1·r. AM /FM. ... ... '712002 4 spd (75314) 2+2 4·spd 8 trk & air. a H "' 7 "-•"54 6 ... ... auto. P /S, radio. 631 0780 ••••••••••••••••••••••• _....,14 ; ..,..,... 1 .,,.CIV'I. 998-4784, 634-9551 ... "" '7220024sp.(544LIA ) "2.QIM _,.,., llARRJTZ •77 • eves ·oo Pont. Cuslorp S, air, '7•2002A,A/C/(598LP0) '68 ~E. 4 dr. Immac. '74 Mark II. auto. PS, air, Whi t e on w hile E l ---PIS. P /B. $650/BO COSTA MESA 642·0010 '74 Ford Surfer w.o S4M. '75530i Auto.C916M'IV ). '76280Z2+2. xtr lo ml. A-1 F\IUy equip. Compl. re-AM I FM stereo. x Int Dorado fully loaded. Xlnt '76. vinyl roof. PS, PB. 673 2170 dys 492·4160 $1600/take over pay. '782002,4.sp.5/R(SUPHZ> cond, AM/FM cass. P.P. cood. engine. New tires, ood 2 3 aa~ A202 _.. 1714) 493.6287 or aulo, 14.000 mi. AC. good eves • meot.s 75l ·a407 aft7 '78S.'lli ;Lux(606PHM> 842·9852 compl. serv. records. c · < 1 ).,....... eves "vuu. cond PP S3700 559·1745 ---------• 728--0485. '1.ow,rkn!.. ·-7 "' b ...... E l "76530i;S/R(S81RCS> CallLastDetail75l·l337 . Triumph 9767 Mercurv 9950 • rlre 1ru spri • Metal lac black, .-..._ .......... ,,....S11•d-.. ·n 280Z, 5-spd, loaded, ••••••••••••••••••••••• '6SC d v ·ii LEASING -, loaded, 23.00<> mi's. T r adesman 100 t977 --::p 14,000mi,likenew .$7900 '73450SLCOHV. ·16TR7 4 spd xlntcond. pee I e ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~846-6371 of Pp 979 """4 EXCELLENT CON· 494-1131 546-99'7 ·s _,.,,., Dodge with AM /FM 4>1lAHGECOUMTY'S or r. . . ...,., eves. ~/FM radio. air, 67.000 Alr, c~ss, s~rf. mask, DITION. ORAN~EEWCOEUSTNTY .rd 9970 ~tereo, PtS, P /B (disc) o• ft.Es• '71 240Z AU /FM. air. IDJ s. xlnt cood. $14.500. CO¥er ...... 000.675·9319 IW} ... 533 .... camel color carpel. -~ '' "' .,.,...,, "'' LINCOLN-MERCURY ••••••••••••••••••••••• 0 mags. mso. 837~ ext 64().,...,.,. paneled, well seats, . 55• wkdys 497.2616 ,67 Classa·c Coupe. lo mi·. ·~R4/0Btar0g.alop,rollbar. 1973F1eetwoodBrougham Oealersh1p1snowOPEN 'i6 T-Btrd. fully loaded. mags, Tear Drop win· _,,, SeauJe gold w/malch'g n ._Y 11!.1 ._DEIOE 1mmac. $5000. Pvt party dows. roof vent. tinted eves/wknds mint condition. 957--0620. 833-1023 bm velour int, 58,000 mi, ~O~ERCUHY 540-7800 or 524·2157 ~r;~ ;~~w~~:~~ ~%~ Sales-Sel'Vice-Lea.&ing '75_280 Z, xlnt cond. Low .631-2519 Voldw-9770 ~~~~~5. See & 16-lSAutoCenterDr. eves/wknds. R C •-ml, fully loaded. $6600. 71 """""L ex cond 2 ~-SD"'··y Lake Forest ew1't v-9974 -easy miles. Pvt ply. Art oY ~ arYB,lllftH Call 557.4240_ "°""' · · · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• c .. -" -~ 5pm wkdays 645-7857. Rollsftoyce BMW tops,. b r n /t a n int, WEBUY&SELL 1963. 2·dr hardto p , IRVINE ••••N••••••••••••••••• Must seU. buying new 1S40Jamboree '72 Datsun 1200, needs eng $13,500. Dr· Mi lier· • absol ute perfect rond, 130-7000 CHEVY VEGAs \'U ! Nmunnrt Beach 640-644-4 work, $500 or offer. 639-4901 VOU<SW AGEHS have to see & drive 1t to 1969 Chevelle Sta lion 1976 Wagon, 1975 Coupe, ----------~~-""-------• 07S-3227eves. 1970 280SE. drk brn/ drk Largest Selection a PP rec I ate 6 4 6 . Wagon, very tired! $250. '75 Marquis Brougham. 4 le 1 9 7 4 + 1 9 7 2 Autos Want.ct %90 '74 BMW J .OS. 49,000 Mi.\ ~....... 9725 bm. auto, full Power, air , In The Area!!! 3107 /Eves, 64S.0071. PP. 546-4519 dr, loaded~. xlnt$2cRoOndo Hatchbacks. (170HSll. ••••••••••••••••••••••• air, auto .• dark blue; n<1n 2K · WESTGERM._.... 72 .ooo mi 5 · Pncedfrom WE Buy elec. sunroof; Becker ••••••••••••••••••••••• R/H. 7 m1, $5&95. 1964 An '64 Loaded, vry gd cond. '65 SPorts mod Impala. 842-5762. ONLY SI 175 FM , Mi c he lin XVS •R .. TS .. •E!• 190 sedan, mid-red/ blk IMPORTS $1050. xlnt tires, new ball & USED. CARS radials. Call7S9-l"2l on all Fiat clutch. top engine over-645-6120 ' ' · Mllltcni 9'52~fl'DF• A ~ stk shifl, new brakes. (714> 540-2740 brks good cond $650 ~ ... rt ·II Mfrs CALLGARTJI ·m 2002. runs, needs wOt'k. 121 & 131 haul. $1.895. 673-5886 '60 Cad. CDV. Uke new in 67J-4593 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 969 Had>or. Costa Mesa Used Car Mgr $1.650 or best offer. Eves. models <Brava except-'73 Soper Bug. Runs good. & out & mechanically. 00 El Camino w/camper '65 Mustang Conven 289, , . 642..0195 r SA"SSJO ~1-~ ed) al MG 9742 looks good. Great trans. See lo appreciate. $1600 shell. Sacrifice $2400 Air. Arr. P S, P 18, tac, _,.. ....,. ...,.. Fact-t...oic• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646-7901Afl5 64().7084 847-7926&536-0lOlevs mags Ofr.640-0433 '73 Vegn. Good shape, IOll~SO~ & so~ '77 BMW 320i auto AC -' ·n Midget, new motor. gd must sell. $750 Blpt radlo, wbt/tan: out'. plus dealer installed ac-cond. msl sell. 631·2743 or VOLKSW .._GE.._. Autos, N•w 9100 Auto1, H•w 9800 Auto1, Hew 9800 &12-2073 standing cond . $9,150. cessories. il any. Offer 548 9551 "' " ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• --------- 2626 HARBOR BLVD ~12A2 gooci.:b~~ MG~ 9744 Sales-Ser-Yice T odAy IS-• LINCOLN·MERCURY COSTA MESA • c.,t 9715 Imports ....................... Top Dollar L d ,, .. u~~U:Rs! ;~·~-,:;~~·;;;~~.-;·:;t ~~;~~BJ~~CH ·=~~i~~~~.~ ~~~M~O~UTHO~R~S~~ ,,REGA MoN AY We re then~ Chevrolet st.eel blt.ed radials. $1500. 537-7777191·6777 •••• dealerstup an the lrvme 548-)8>6 aftSMon-Fri .76 131.clean 22 mi '66 MGB GT g r eat SINCE 1953 Aulo Center. We need -·. . · st.ereo/cass, auto, $3.soo: transporlat1on Good l44lSo. Bristol _\Our used car! 1974 Capn, 4 cyl. air, lo "2-6049 919.7613 body. Only $4SO. 675-2604 Santa Ana JOE mi, xlnt cond. $2400. ' .66 MGB, nu paint, gd 546-0220 MAC PHERSON' 646-6532 '75 Fiat X.19. loaded, xlnl cond, $1300/BO. Approx. 2 mi. No. of CHEVROLO Dahm 9720 cond, 832-0840 7H·72S-7571/498-1669 South Coast Plaza. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ . 9746 21AutoCcnlerOnve ood __..... '74 bug, AM /FM radio, IRVINE '71 Datsun 1200, nds work. '7• Fial 128, green, g •u•••••••••••••••••••• new tires, excel cond. 7 68-7 222 ~. 586-9413 coodit:ion~ For Sale: '73 Ppel. 1.9· $2.495. 673·3899 liter engine, p lvaged Autos, Hew 9100 Auto1, Hew 910CIMtos. Hew 9100 ~. ·m Opel Codel body. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• gooci condition. Private ·n Super Bug , rebll eng, new clut~h & brks, xlol cood $2100. 833-7517 WIN -- 1978 FAIRMONT FUTUltA ABSOLUTELY FREE WHERE DUNTON FORD _ CORNER OF ~IN_ & W A8ME~ SANTA ANA HOW Co•• • md tnt .-. •• _, ..w • ..... c• or tr.di bl ow '-91 ln•...tory. C• to IM gl•e, SWtlf 1:00 P·"':- JO .. of June 1971. .......... , ...... ..,.,ow..- ..... VtMCtllfoe .. OttnnUc ... party. 827 .2057 9747 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1971 Pantera, 15,000 orig. ·~Beetle, reblt eng, must sell. Bargain! $800/BO. 6'75-9558. miles, blue, beautiful, '67 VW Sqbk, good trans. P /P. Phone evenings Must sell. $500. (7H) •99-4155 or write 673-4457 aft 5 PM. "Pantera", 443 Promon· tory Dr. West, N.B. 92660 1968 Bug, looks gooci. nms PondM 9750 xlnt. $ll~--01M, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Priallne of Hunttbtgton ·~ VW. radials. xlnt run- Beacb is offering lacquer rung cond. $700. 646-5228 paint, metal finlslll.ng & Sonday or Monday. fende.r narlng to Poracbe 1967 VW Beetle gd run· owners. S:..7888. ning cond,' si 100 /best •73 9.1"1.7 U1bt blue, ex-Ofr. 540-7800, 5U-21S7 eel cond. must sell~-e¥et/Wlmda ...... 5778 ------~--· -----------'77 VW Convertible, Porsche. ·se Cpe, sunroof, chrom e yellow. xlnl new crpt, new palnt, cond. $5500. 496-8024 very clean. 8'2·27$4 VotYo 9772 '8992UT'I/II1'71 Ena. 7'' ~I· ••••••••••••••••••••••• k>ya, (91.8ADH) llFORI YOU IUY 4 USID VOL VO, '73911TTarga. Recaroa. see ua at Southern (38SIDtN> <>ranee Coo:nty'a Volvo •u Sunroof coiape (570UPW) ........... OPENTDAYS Hudca.ua.rten. MAICi)UISVOLVO MlSSlO~ V1EJ'O 131·2880 ~fJ·IZIO Sl .. 7881 Swed.lab Volvo MecbanJc at lvan'a, 1.99S Harbor Poncht. lt75, 914 1.1, 5-Blvd, c .M. &44-lJa 1pd, atr, moonroor • ...;.._;_.:..•..:....------ AM /FM CNS, ~K m l, ·a Volvo 12ZS. Stat w.n . xlnt. $6700. 557·810 Good en1. At 11 9650. wttdya. MAI)' m.a234 al'l 5. look AT TltESE SuapaisiNG PRicES iN TitE SuRpRisE CAR of TltE y EAR 7 I DuntinltoD Beach. . .. . Fo1•ntalD Valley EOATION VOL. 71, NO. 177, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI fORN IA Afternoon N.Y. Stocks TEN CENTs/ Huntington Blldget Faces Citizen Quiz The citizenry will get a chance lo speak Lontght on how it wishes to balance the Huntington Beach city budget. The publlc hearing. which·wiJI be held at 7 30 in council cham· bers, follows on the heels of a re- port over Ute weekend that the city will receive a $2.8 million one·time grant from state sur· plus funds. Mayor Ron Shenkman said to· day that h~ 1s delighted by the allocation and that f'it allows us to buy badly· needed time" for reorganization and redirection. The new state money also ap· pears to assure the city that drastic cuts will not be made in the police or fire departments. Earlier budget recommend&· tions suggested the layoffs of 60 persons in the police department a nd 31 more in the city's fire-- fighting force. Chief Earle Robitaille has said previous ly that the possible police layoffs would have been a disaster. City Administrator Bud Belsito had recommended a budget or $34 million before the Jarvis lnitlative hit. With its passage, the city stands to lose about $10 million in property tax revenues. Belsito previously told the city council that about 150 employees in all were facing loss of their JObs without additional forms of revenue. , City officials who have been wrestling with budget cuts for two weeks, last week considered imposing a ma>limum $6 per month user fee charge for each home and apartment in the city. That action would raise about $3.5 r:nillionforthecitytreasury. In anoth e r cost saving measure, Councilwoman Ruth Bailey has urged the scrapping of this year's F:ourth of July Parade which Is expected to cost about $20,000. Mrs. Bailey said today that she also will propose a salary cut for the city 's 1,069 employees. She said that she will seek a 15 percent pay cut for all those earning mor~ than $35,000 per year. She said UK>se making $25,000 •. or more should receive a 10 ~r­ cent cut and those below $25,000 should get 5 percent reduction. Mrs. Ba iley cJaims that e mployees appear willing to aecept the cuts. "If they don't, there are lots more around who would like the work.'' she said. Shenkman emphasized tbat the state allocation is only a one. time thing. 3 Killed • m Air Canada Crash Carter Pla11e Use Bank, Panel Fines· Levied WASHINGTON <AP> -The case of J1mmv Carter's pres· 1dential c·ampaign use of a Georgia hank's airplane, courtesy or old friend Bert Lance, has been settled by the Federal Elections Com mission by fining Carter's campaign committee $1.200 and the bank $5.000. The civil penalties were. agreed to hv all parties after the Carter t'<Jmm1lll'E.' and the Na· t1ona I Hank of <•eorg1a initially pleaded lh<tt the campaign's failur P to reimburse the bank for five flights was a bookkeeping oversight and not a willful viola· t ion of law. The issue arose last summer during investigations into the af. fairs of Lance, who subsequently r esigned a s Carter's budget director and earlier headed the At l anta ba nk . Lance acknowh .. '<ii,:t'<.I that as bahk pres- ident he oflt'n made the aircraft Blaze Damage In HB Tallied At $120,000 The modl'I rocket·caused fire that hurncJ four dwellings in lluntinglon Beach last Thurs- d ay. caused ahout $120,000 worth of damage. firt> offic1als said toduy. The hl;17e at RIO l l''orelle Drive left 11 persons homeless Invesli~ators said two apart· m cnts were destroyed and the other two ctwellings were severe· lydamagl•d Police anll fire department of- ficials today were conferring on whether lo file any charges against tht• 13-ycar·old boy who ~cl off the rocket that landed on the roor. They pl.mncd to interview the boy and his parents, probably Wc>dn esday. acrnrding to Detec- t 1 ve Hob Husscll, who heads arson investigations. Ile added that it would appear there \\as no malicious intent hccau<.,c thf' voungstcr himself ran home to call and report the fire st<trt 1ng on I he structure·s ... hake roof orang.a coast t::: -4 c=rr7~ --.. \\'eatl1er Night ond momin(( low. clouds with sunny after· noon Tuesday . L o ws t oniJ?ht 58 to 63. Hi ghs Tuesday near 70 al the l.leachcs to m1d·70s inland. INSIDE TODAY · It ·,, hard to /hd a Republican who'll odmit he is running /()r lht prt11dency. yet there 1' no 3horlog~ o/ candtdotr• to be condwotu . Stor11 Page AB. Index available to favored customers, Carter among them, and that some flights were made after the former Georgia governor had begun his presidential quest. -~-......... Carter aides later acknowledged that five short flights, four in 1975 with Carter aboard and a firth, in September 1976, for lhen·Democratic Party Chairman Robert Strauss, were at least partially connected with the campaign and should have been paid for. It is unlawful for a corporation to make services or equipment available to a political candidate without reim- bursement. WRECKAGE OF AIR CANADA PLANE LIES IN RAVINE NEAR TORONTO AIRPORT . • At Least Three People Killed, 100 Others lnlured As Craft Skids Off Runway The Carter campaign commit· tee sent. the bank a check for more than $1,100 last August to cover tbe coat Of the flights, most of which were within Georgia's borders. The bank re- funded about $300 of that after recalculating the expenses. Panama Canal Vet's DailyPiwt F. I R. H Id Empwyee Aids 1na 1tes e Saving Home Lance testified that be once contacted a campaign s taffer about reimbursing the bank, but the issue somehow was forgot- ten. Presidential press secretary Jody Powell and others also have said U1e matter was an oversight. When the case was taken up last year by the FEC, tbe bank argued that long.departed Lance was the oruy officer who knew or the flights and hence the firm should not now be punished for contributions of which it was not even aware. The "conciliation agreement" reached with the FEC. formally announced today, stipulates that neither side admits any de· liberate wrongdoing. However, the FEC said "the failure of the Carter committee to pay for the use of the . . . a ircraft until August, 1977, constiluted-..i'8 re· ceipl or in·kind contributions. in violation" of the Federal Elec· t1on Campaign AcL GIR4FFE BABY . POSI'HVMOVS MARWELL HALL, England <AP) -Victor, the giraffe who collapsed while trying to male and died last September because he couldn't get back on his feet. has left a baby daughter, Marwell Park Zoo omc.-tals say. The baby, Victoria, was born Saturday at the ioo. Victor had impregnated her mother, Drib· bles, five months before his fatal attempt with another of his three spouses. James T. Albert of Huntington Beach, one of the workers who helped build the Panama· Canal between 1908 and 1916, has died at age 91. Mr. Albert s uccumbed Thurs- day at Pacifica Hos pital after a brief illness and was buried Saturday following private fami· ly rites. A colorful local character and o n e o f Huntin gton Beach's petroleum pioneers, Mr. Albert liked to recall his days of work on the canal. He once noted. "We did every. thing. We fished bodies out of the canal, fought fires on ships, ran to the scene of a thousand explosion s. cov e red the waterfront. "It was one damned thing afte r another." the former Decatur. JJI.. fireman said in an interview last year His work on the cana l won for 'Mr . Albert a commendation m edal bestowed by President Theodore Roosevelt. "He was the most mai:velous man ... ," says Mr. Albert's widow, Wilma, who was m ar- ried to the earlyday oil produc· lion executive for 31 years at th/ lime of his death. She said that although he pre- f erred to dress casually, unlike other oil pioneers s uch as dap· per Slim Theriot, Mr. Albert carried himself with a stately bearing. He was owner and operator of... A and S Petroleum Company for a number of years after com· ing to }luntington Beach in 1922 but later sold the business. During retirement years, he and Mrs. Ablert wintered in Palm Springs, wt\ere he was a member of the Elks Lodge. Survivors in addition to his wife include a daughter, Mrs. Sue Wetzel, of Tustin, and six grandchildren, Fune r al rites were under direction of Pierce Bq>thers Smith's Mortuary in. Huntington Beach. followed by interment at Melrose· Abbey Mausoleum in Anaheim. .Damages Aunrded HAMILTON, Ontario (AP > -The Ontario S up re me Court ha s awarded a Hamilton man nearly $9,000 in damages .lnd costs because a Pepsi- Cola bottle cap blew off and hit him in the eye. Samuel Mercanti, 30, won his suit against Pepsi· Cola Co. of Canada and a Hamilto n res taurant owner after a cataract formed on his eye one month after the accident. Me rc anti sa id an employee of his garage got the sort drink from the restaurant. He said that when he started to open it, the cap blew off and struck hint in the eye. Fountain Valley Fire Depart· ment arson investigators today credited a Daily Pilot circuJa· tion department employee with saving a home hit by vandals. The r esidence of Oscar F abella and his wife at 10437 Avenue Cinco de Mayo had been ransacke(I and a partially dis· mantled car in the carport garage area set afire about 3:30 a.m . Sunday. Daily Pilot e mployee Ray Gier or Costa Mesa was drop· ping off bundles or papers for carrier boys when he drove past the Fabella home in Fountain Valley's Colonia Juarez. "When I was driving past I noticed flames coming up through the drivers window." said Gier adding that he tried to arouse the occupants but no one was home. Gier dashed ba~k to his car and sped to a s tore whe r e employees called police and firemen. Investigators said dama~e was limited lo $400 althouJ?h the hou se p robably would have burned down if the blaze was not noticed . Investigators said today they were told that the F abellas who are visiting in Texas have been harassed by Chicano gang mem- bers from Santa Ana. ws Padres Burns . FILLMORE <~~ -A brush fire scorched 60 a8's Sunday in a rugged, heavily limbered, mountainous area or Los Padres ""NAtional Forest , authorities said. Baek ilits Reeord Low TOKYO <AP) -The American dollar p which hit a record low today and bu decline4 2S percent ln value against the Japanese )'en in less then 10 months, is not worth enough to buy a glass of beer in Tokyo's fasbion1ble Glnza shopping district. It won't even buy a cup or coffee. or a cheap souvenir. • The fall of the dollar and other foreign currencies In relation to the 1trong yen, however, has not helped Japanese consumers buy imported goods at lower prices, largely because distributors wanl to keep \be prices hi1h. ONE DIPORTBR OP U.S. MANUf'AC'MJRED cosmetics bas Hid he would Uke to brina down the price of hla loodl but his Jap&Dele 4!Jstributors WUI Dot let hlm, "Our cllslributol"I fl1ht any attempt at price ero Ion because they want to &ive l•rte kickbacks to tMlt tet.allen," said the AmertC'an Importer, who ukod not lo be named. • Kickbacks to retailers are tradJtional, and legal, in Japan. Conaumer croups occaaJonally have protested that. kickbacks make il unauracUve for rclallera to pusb lower priced ltoms. THE DOLi.Ait tUT RECORD LOWS ON the Tokyo foreign tx· t honae market loda~ dropping to 20(.SO yen and closing al 200 2S. ( . • Traders and econom ists blame the slide on Japan's huge trade S\lr· pluse~. burgeoning U.S. trade deficits and American inflation. Another factor is the expeet.ation that the dollar surplus in Tokyo will increase toward the end of the month. At the hotel rate of 202 yen ~the Tate or exc.hance ror tourists is always less than what traders 'receive on the forel1n exchange marl<et -the cheapest mu• of ~rat. the Muncben Beer Hall was $1.73. eocree at a shop on what ls called Firth Avenue Alley was $2A8. And a 1et.-ol five postcards plcturln& teisba alrls sold for $1.49 et a shop near tho Imperial Hotel. ln New York City, a mus of American beer avcr11es in price from $1 to $1.50 and a cup or cotfee between 2S cents and $1. 88VENTY·nvE CENTS WOULD BUY • small packa1e of Amcrtca.n made candy at an outdool' stall in front ol lhe Hukyu department store in Tokyo. Tbe paa.,e hu printed on lt in Englis h; ''Su,ae led retall prtc~ 20 ctnta." The Jar,aMee 1(p oe. the stall read&: "Sorcy, only one r.•ck per customer. ' A. survey by the Japanese M nlstry of JoternaUonal Trade and tndustry publh1hed last week concluded thet the dollar's decline hu not. raulted In much decreaso lo the retall prtco of moat im· ported goods. At Least lOOMore Injured TORONTO <AP> -An Air Canada DC·9 jetliner skidded off a runway on takeoff and crashed into a ravine at Toronto Intema· lional Airport tocj ay, killing three people a nd injuring at least 100 others among th~ 107 aboard, authorities reported. The twin·engine jet, on a domestic flight, "fell straight down just like going over a cliff," passenger BObby Gimby, a bandleader dubbed "Canada's Pied Piper," lQ)d reporters. He suffered only minor cuts. A Canadian transportation de· partment spokesman said the plane plunged about 30 feet into the ravine. A witness said it broke into three pieces, but no fire was reported. Officials at a nearby hospital where some of the injured were taken said at least eight were seriously hurt. An Air Canada spokesman said an earlier report that one of the plane's two rear .mounted engines lost power was not coo· firmed. Some passengers said a tire blew out, but that also was not immediately determined, spokesman Brock Stewart said. Passenger Herb Ellis or Boston said the jetliner, Flight 189 bound for Winnipeg and Van· couver with 102 passengers and five crew members aboard, was close to its takeoff point when he neard what sounded like a n ex- plosion -possi bly the sound of a lire blowi ng out. He said the pilot held the plane level on the runway, which runs parallel to a highway, but there was not enough runway for aborting the takeoff and the big aircraft rolled over the lip of the ravine. Ellis said the passengers dicf not panic, but some of the in- jured were moaning. The rear e mergency door was jammed, he said, but the fronl door and the doors over the wings opened. Ellis said one crew member in the rear of tnc plane appeared to be badly hurt and could not help passengers leave lhe aircraft. The airline s pokes man said the tail section broke off and the wings were damaged. Airport worke rs and firemen doused the wings with foam lo prevent the fuel1.anks from cat ching fire and exploding. The accident occurred at about 8:15 a .m. The plane hnd arrived earlier from Ottawa . Ocean View Eying Cuts Tr us t ees of fiu.nt i n g t on Beach's Ocean Vi ew School Dis- trict will slart d eliberating tonight on the $2 million worth of cuts district officials say will be necessary to balance their 1978·79 budget in the wake of Propoption 13. Al)l(lng the cuts proposed is lhe elimination of busing for all studehts except those who are mentally retarded or physically bandic,Dpped. . District Superintendent Dale· Coogan predicted trustees will be voting on some items during their 7:30 11ession at Westmont School, 8251 Heil Ave •• Westminster. 2 Chi f & Cooler W ASmNGTON (AP> -Presi- dent Carter spent more than· an hour today conferrln1 at. brcak!nst wlth British Prime Minister James C)l•chan. , No Parking One driver apparently found an unusual place to park - in the third floor wall of a New Orleans parking garage. No one was injur~d. but an attendant had to sweep the debris off the lower level vehicles. President of Yemen Resigns Under Fire BEIRUT, Lebanon CA P> - President Salem Robaye Ali of South Yemen resigned today after army and air force units rebelled in that nation. the only Marxist-governed republic in the oil-rich Arabian Peninsula, the Iraqi news agency reported. The news agency said in a dis· patch from the South Yemen capitol of Aden that the central committee or the National Front, the country ·s hard·line, ero·Soviel ruling body. accepted t\li 's resignation and stripped bim or all other posts. Jt said he resigned after a day. loog bombardment of' tbe pres- idential palace in Aden. Observers in Beirut said the rebela apparently hoped t-0 take tdvanlapi of unr.est re8Glt.lng from the assassination two days ago or the president or neighbor· Ing North Yemen. He was killed by a bomb in lhe briefcase of a South Yemen diplomat An earlier Iraqi dispatch said artillery !llld air force planes oounded the pre$idential palace in the Aden suburb of Al Tawa h i. Hut it said the "people's militia" of the Na· tional Front took control of key "intersections in Aden, the airport road and the highway to Al Tawahi, and street fighting broke out between army reg- ulars and militiamen in a sub- urb near the airport. "Thick palls of smoke spiraled from Al Tawahi where the muf· fled thud of heavy guns was heard," the.dispatch said. "The international airport was closed to traffic and telecommunica· tioo with the olll.aide world was cul ofr. 1,000 . ' IAne Up For Jobs NEW YORJC <AP> -After five days spent waiUng in line for a shot at a job, about.1,000 New Yorkers got applications to- day for one or some 500 appren. tlceshlps. Just the chanee of employ. ment brought many to the streets where they set up camp and waited up to five days out. side electriclll and plumbing un- ion offices. But the long wait may have been unnecessary as in some cases the number of applications available considerably exceeded the number of would·be craft workers oo the Unes. At the Electrical Industry Center in Queens apprentice training director David Smith said lhere·were only about 1,000 in line when the doors opened 8Q hour earlier than 5cheduled at 8 a.m. Smith said 1,250 applicants were needed before an aptitude test may be given for 500 in· dtvlduals. Those who get the ap· prenticeships enter five years of on-the-job training, starting al $3 .90 per hour and working up to $6.66 an hour. A bout 80 men and women were in line outside the head· quarters ol Plumbers Local 2 in Manhattan when applications were made available sometime between 8 and 9:30 a.m., accord· ing to Pete Marzec, apprentice instruct.or. The union planned to hand out 500 applications for so jobs, and late arrivals simply walked in. No. 89 in one line, Denny Kuperman. is a pre-law major at City College or New York He said he was in line because "1 figure my chances of having a future here are a lot better than in law school. You either have to be in lhe top 10 in your law class or go t-0 Yale or Harvard to suc- ceed." The unions are looking for peo- ple between the ages or 18 and 23 who have high school diplomas. The electrical union bas agreed to enroll 100. women among the 500 a pprenlices -the · first • women ever to join that union. "This is a once in a lifetime chance," said Cynthia Long of Ma nhattan, No. 64 in line "We're making progress against sexism in the trades.'' Some o r the women com- pla ined that the men in line spat at them or broke bottles, accus· ing the women or "depriving" me n or jobs. Times' Mesa Press room Hit lJy Fire General Cites Need To Maintain CIA A pressroom fire Sunday even- ing at the Costa Mesa head· quarters of the Los Angeles Times caused m inimal fire damage, but quantities or paper supplies were ruined by a sprinkler system that prevented the blaze from spreading, Costa Mesa firemen said today. Costa Mesa Battalion Chier Gary Golson said the exact cause of lhe 6 04 p.m. blaze is unde r investigation. The fire started in one of four presses at the facility at 1375 Sunflower Ave., and spread to ceiling area air ducts. Structural damage was con· fined to a portion of the 45-foot· high ceiling, Golson said. Co s ta M esa' firemen responded with two engines and a truck company. but round lhe blaze controlled by the build· lng's sprinkler system. The amount of water damage to supplies and presses was still being t allied this morning. The fire delayed printing of the Orange County and San Diego Monday morning editions of The Times. ORANGE COAST HIP DAILY PILOT ( By JOA.NNE REYNOLDS Of ti. O.lty ~li.t St.aff Does the United StaJ,es need a CIA ? If you're Lt. Gen. Vernon Walters, former deputy director of the intelligence agency. the answer, obviously, is going to be yes. Walters, who served under four ClA directors from 1972 to 1976, came to Newport Beach last week to address a meeting sponsored by the Navy League, UC Irvine industrial Associates a nd the Greater Irvine In- dustrial League. The retired general prefaced his remarks by telling the so·au- dience members that most or his military career was spent in in· lelligence work. "Obviously I think we need something like the CIA, but that opinion is not based on my lifetime of service," he com· mented. Walters, a large man with a ruddy face toppped by a thatch of steely gray hair, punctuated! his speech with jokes and quota· lions from historians. He delivered his statistics from memory, citing evidence to s upport bis theory that In· telllgence gathering -s pying - is this country's primary deter· rent to war. "Knowledge is an effective de· terrent against s urprise," he said . ..Effective intelligence gathering makes arms limit&· lion agreements possible because we're in a situation to know that there isn't goin& to be any cheating." The general said be believes the U.S. ls at Its most perilous point in history. "We have less tlme and less geography separating us from our enemies and we b1ve weaker awes than at any other point In our hlatory:• be declared. • The enemy Walterw ref erred to Is Russia, where •'military forces are bvtlt up far tn exeess or what would be needed to deter aggression. "Why?" Walters auuested a look at Afrlu would artswer his own question. The Ruul1ns are employtn1 what be d crlbed as a ul~mJ tacUc ln 1alnlnJ con· trol of tbe conUnent. "One slice by Unll 11 not enough ror us to set alarmed about." bo wd lo explain.Ins I.he APWl,..,....e YES TO CIA Lt. Gen. Walters tactic. II e said the situation is analogous to Germany's ag- gression ln Europe before the outbreak or World War II. Great Britain and France allowed those aggressions to occur without declaring war unW the takeover of Poland. H ille r h ad expected the British and French would take the s ame non·combative course, and found himself in a "war ol misdirect.ion" when the two countries decided to act, Wailers Hid. .. I hove no rear or a deliberate war," be said. "But. I do fear a war by Ulisdirection." Walters said the people of the U.S. aren't reacting to the Ru11lan a11reaslon in Africa because of Vietnam. "Ju• bringing up Vietnam is an abAlutely superb tactic to keep ua from re1ctlna." be added. Walters said be belleves there will always be a need for the, CIA, but he stressed that its re-· latlonshlp to pollUcs h11 got to be reduced. He s u11H ted the aaency ml1hl be overseen by a panel conslsUn1 of Alx p.aple-two appointed by the pl'Clldent, two • by the Houaa of Repraontauves and two by the Senato. • Murder Suspect Sought Orange County Sheriff'& OC. rtcen continued today to ae$ a man they describe as a prfme s uspect in the murder of Carmelita Arbiso, of San Juan Capistrano. Investigator Wlllle stanabary Identified the suspect as Paul Benjamin Black, 47, of Midny City, who, he said, was seen at the Arbiso home sbo~ bel~ the killing. .,.,... ........... FINNISH STUDENT AT WORK ON MURAL OF U.S. FLAO Tb• Gra11 lan't Alway• Greener on Other •Id• of ~tlantfc Mrs. Arblso, 64, was shot to death ln her home at 31421 La Callera. Officers said the shoot- ing occurred shortly after Black was seen to enter the home. Mrs. Arbiao waa the wife Of Paul Arbiso, 83, said to be the oJd~st livirur native of San Juaa Capistrano: lie ia a gardener at Finn's Views the Mission and each mondnl rings the mission bell. StuJem Looks U.S. Over Stansbury said Black threa tened at least one other person with a gun before be went to the Arblso bome. Finnish forel1n exchange stu· d ent Petri Paivarlnla, 18, is learnin2 aJJ about the U.S. free enterprise system from U.S. Life Savings & Loan Association and having fundoingit. Paivarinta. who just finished Huntington Beach High School, is one or several contestants in a mural-painUng 'contest on tem· porary plywood walls surround· ing the firm's new orrtce under construction. He paused while pJintlng bis bUlowlng Old Glory on the wall at the corner of Beach Boulevard and Garfield A venue recently to reflect on U.S. life. "Before I came here -in Finland -1 thought the United States would be the great.est place to be and I thought of stay· ing, ·· says the slender young artist and photographer Dabbing away judiciously at his portrait of Old Glory, Petri evaluated· bis e xperience in America He said that. after a year on the Orange Coast. he ap· predates the quality of lire in his native Finland Car more "Everybody knows In Finland the taxes are high, but we get free medical care. ·•he said. .\ quiet youth who is slaying wllb Huntington Beach U>m. pany General Manager Stanley Young and h~ family, Petri is quick to say be isn't downgrad· ing U.S. life. · He has simply had a year 's comparison time to understand the grass can be as green -or greener -on the side of the fence you've just left for greener pastures across the Atlantic Ocean. A camera and motorcycle en· thusiast, Petri comes from Lahti, a community 60 miles north of Helsinki. Petri's camerawork -both st ill shots a nd movies -are oriented toward landscape and portraiture. He scouts out m aterial on bis motorcycle. "It is rather small," he says of bis· motorcycle. ''But I myself have modified it so it Is about as fast as a 350cc bike." He lert bis m otorcycle in Finland, but brought bis camera to the U.S. .. And I just blew $500 on a Bauer movie camera," he adds. Petri says he hasn't sold any freelance photo work yet, but a portrait of the parents of his host is such a well-appreciated study in age and wisdom he gives the prints a way. He said It ls known that Black became angry with Mrs. Arblso because the victim's niece ended their common law relation.ship by moving out or Black's home a nd into her aunt's home. Stansbury said Mrs. Arbiso and Black had quarreled on several occasions prior to the shooting. Me mbers of the Arbiso family said rosary will be recited for the victim at 7:30 tonight in the old mission. Mass wlll be celebrated there at 9 a.m. Tues· day with interment to follow at Holy Sepulcher Cemetery in El Modena. Mrs. Arbiso was a Jong time m e mber of the San Juan Capistrano Hi storical Society and a popuJar parish worker at the old mission. Sb e is s urvived by her husband, Paul; a daughter, Marie Rodman of Laguna Niguel; a stepdaughter, Alice G asteleum of Anaheim: four brothers, Frank, Louie, Eugene and Raymond O'Campo all oC Santa Ana and 11 graodchiJdren. Huntington Scouts Aid Retarded Kids Policewoman Kills Spouse DETROIT <AP> -A policewoman shot and kiJJed her husband during an argument over her line of work, police s~ud. Officer Mary Jones, 30, told detectives she grabbed her gun from under her mattress and fired twice al her hus band, Leslie, 30, after he struck her in the face Sunday. By AR11fUR R. VINSEL 0. -OMly ~I ... Staff Santa Claus and his helpers wore Boy Scout uniforms when they made their rounds Friday at Nueva View School in Hunt- ington Beach, almost six months to the day early. John Waite, 13, or 17401 Lido Lane, Huntington Beach, a can· didate foy Eagle Scout r ank, and fellow members of Troop 586 de· livered three bicycles, two push cars, a pedal car and other toys and stuffed animals. Children who attend Nueva Vie w School -drawn from seven Orange Coast area school districts -need them for learn- ing simpler subjects than the old Three Rs. Some simply need to be taught to handle personal needs and play peacefully with others. There are 90 of them. pro- foundl y mentally retared and physically 'handicapped, but for the most part, sunny, serene children, says retiring Principal Rose Lee. One of the students ls a sister or a member or Troop 586. ? "One or the things I have to do for my Eagle project is to do something for the community and society," Waite explained Friday in a formal presentation to the youngsters. He decided to collect and re· pair old toys from the campus at 17200 Pinehurst Lane in North Huntington Beach. "I made a bunch of flyers and passed them around my tract," s ays John, who lives not far from the school where special kids get special help .. The project will help him at· lain the last merit badge, for communication that he needs to attain Eagle rank. while some others among the 30 in Troop 86 will gain credits as \'well as satisfaction. The ser vice project head- quartered at Waite's house took about three weeks including planning organization and re· pair. The assembled children Fri- day were clearly as impressed with the Scouts' well-pressed un· iforms and arrays of merit badges as with the toys. Police s aid the s hooting culminated a long-standing argument over Mrs. Jones'-de· cision lo become a police officer in May 1977. The couple's three children were asleep at the Ume of the shooting. Death Term On Ballot? SACRAMENTO (AP) -The s p onsor of a n initiative to broa d e n California ·s death penally said Friday he had col· lecte d enough signatures to qualify the measure for the Nov. em ber state ballot. -Sen. John Briggs (f{. Fullerton), said calls to County registrars determined that at least 383,000 registered voters had signed the petitions. He needed 312,404 valid signatures to make the ballot. WHEN YOU COMBINE THE DESIGNl'ALENTS OF SEVEN· iNTERNATIONALAWARD WIN.NINGJ~ THERESULTSSPEAKFORTHEMSELVES. Wyndham Leigh~f.~t .. 0 R1 I ASshown- 18 Karat Gold Cube Cluster Ring with diamonds. By Lander, twice winner of the Oscar for jewelry design -the OeBeers Diamonds International Award '995 127 Fashion Island, Newport c.nter. Newport Beach Teltphone: (714) 644-0501 .... 7 7 l Irvine E DITION VOL. 71, NO. 177, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Today's Closing ~.Y. Stocks TEN CENTS 3 Killed • m Air Canada Crash j 'Break to Tenants' At Least IOOMore • Apartment Owners to Pass On Savings? Injured LOS ANGELES (AP> -Tax crusader Howard Jarvis and three landlord groups kicked off a campaign today urging apart- ment owners lo give tenants any savings gained through the passage of Proposition 13. At the same time, Jarvis said be would continue to try to pre- vent the federal government from gaining a tax windfall as a result of the lax init1at1ve he co authored But he said he was not ready to unveil pla ns for a na- tiona I organization to help fo:,ter tax revolts in other state~ Schools' Future Oouded? The st ate Legislature may have resc u<•c.l school programs this year but Irvine S<•hool District 1rus tel's and L1dm1n1 strators alrl'ad~ :irl' worrying about next year. Thl· lr\'lne D1slrH·t ·s share of a SS billion rt'llt'f lull lo hc:lp school d1slriC'ts rC'co up pr<rpcrty lax rev- enues loi..t unc.J C'r the J arvins in- itiative-~tll b1 mg the budget to within 4.4 J)t!rcenl of its proposed S<!8 ti million budget. or S27 4 m1ll1on A Stanley Con·y. supe rinten- dent of schools.\\ ho had predicted such lcg1slat1on and persuaded trustees not lo iss ue warning notices or la) offs to teachers, sa1d today the relief money mearu; there "tll ht• no s ubstantial cul· backs in school proJ,!rams llo\\t•\ r 1-. Cort•) s:111l budgets for sclir>ul supµhe-; \\ 111 h<H e to be rcducl'd. and lt•vl.'ls of main· tcn<m ct• and opt•rat mns pared G e n l' II a r t I 1 n c . <1 s s 1 s t a n t s upr n nlt•nclcnl fo r f 111a nee. said proposals for trunsport al1on re· dm·twns indudt·s t·'\pandini: the racl111 s w1th1n -.t·hofJh wh(•rc ~choul husing 1s not available llartl11w 111cl1catt:d "mttrkcd in- crcasp.., in \VH.JkmJ.! distances,"' bul had nn-;pt•t•i f1<· f1 J,!1m·s lie saul f1t•lct lnps t•o uld be cun.11leo ll,11 t li 111' .il-.11 ''"cl that 1f a pro ''"ICln 11ftlw-.1.1l l' .110 lnll concern ing tC•ll'n1 r<,,11:.nt·'1s intt·rprctcd to m r <Jn ,, rrc•t•1c·on s<1laries. some SI 3 mtlhont·ould ht· pumped bCJck mto thc•d1-;tnt·t bu<lgt•t Another po .... s 1blc lmdget s a\'Cr. Hartl1nf' s ;iu1 . \\O lll ci hr lo allow Junior and M·n111r students who clon l m•c<I th1• <·rNhl to attend school f1\t'. rnlht'r than six. class periods Corr~ said a cl1•t:11lccl li st of pro- posed rC'duet111n:-. '' 111 be available Tursda,· In ~aturcl:i y s huclJ,tet workshop. mc•mhcrs or the sC'hool board frC'ttect more ovl'r what may trnpj)t.•n :'lflC'r this yrar ·'The rral prt1hi<'m is .·' Trustee Frank llurd said. "What's going to ha ppcn nrxt year? What can be donC' to prevent a truly traumatic s1luat ion next year?,. <See SCHOOL..'\, Page A 2> Or:n:J .~o-ast Weather N11:ht and morning low. clouds \\;lh sunnv artfr noon Tues d av : Lows toniJ!ht SS lo 63 Highs Tuesday near 70 ut the beaches to mid-70s inland. INSIDE TODA l' · lt '11 hard tt> /fnd a Republican who'll admit he is running for the pmndcncy, yet there ;,.r no slll)rtage of candtdate11 to be candidates. Story Pagt> AB. "We are going to stop the federal government from taking so much money from the people, but we haven 'l come to any con- clusion on what we are going to do," Jarvis told a news con- ference. Federal revenues will burgeon by an estimated $1 billion to $2 billion annually because California taxpayers will have 57 percent fewer property taxes to deduct from -federal income tax returns, he said. Returning from a visit to Washington where he tried to ex- plain his taxpayers' revolt to congressmen, Jarvis said lawmakers there were consider- ing introducing legislation to pass any such windfall back to states that approve tax-slashing measures Hke Proposition 13. "I 'm not sure they got the 411 m essage in Washington, but there is a proposition being con· sidered to pass a bill in Washington that the money the federal government gets will be passed back to those states," Jarvis said. (See TENANTS, Page A2) Four Attackers Man Tied, Robbed In Irvine Hotel A Canoga Park computer pro· grammer was bound and gagged with his own clothes in an Irvine hotel and robbed today. Lawrence E. Meise. 28, told polict! he was covered by a bedspread during most or the ln- r1dent. but got <i look at his four black assailants when one un- covered him and removed his gag long enough so he could tell them he hadn't any money. The men, one of whom had a gun: did take his watch. jade ring. wallet, credit cards and car keys, which Meise valued at $600. Meise told police he had just checked into the Airporter Inn, at 18700 MacArthur Blvd. He said he was standing by his room window, admiring the view. when he heard a noise behind him, turned and saw a man pointing a gun at him. Meise said he was forced to lie face down on the bed. His feet were tied with his belt, his hands with a sock. Hi s other sock wa!> stuffed into his mouth as a gag. Arter the burglars left, Meise said he easily freed himself and called the hotel operator, who C'alled police. The burglars. whom Meise described as flashy dtessers, had placed a "Do Nol Disturb" sign on the r oom 's outside doorknob. A trail of dropped clothing led to a nearby elevator. South Yemen Chief Ousted From Post ing central committee reported· ly battled army units loyal to Ali. -· O•lly Pflot Photo Illy Rl<Nnl K-ler PARAMEDIC BOB TRAUTMAN AIDS VICTIM LIGHTFOOT Irvine Man Injured In Head-on Collision in Newport Irvine Man Injured In Newport Crash An Irvine man. injured Satur day morning 1n a head.on col iision in Newport Beac h, was listed in fair cond1llon lod<1y at Hoag Memorial I losp1tal Firemen had to cul Joe Car· roll Lightfoot. 23. of 81 Orchard Lane from his Volkswa~en after he reportedly lost control or the car while driving northbound on Newport Boul<'vard near the Arches overpass at West Coast Highway. Lightfoot's auto reportedly ~werved across the c enter d1v1der and struck a southbound car driven by J ohn Wilson Karder. 27. of La Mesa. Karder was treated and re- leased from the hos pital after the 2:30 a.m. mishap. Stephen .Wayne Mortenson of Riverside. a passenger in L1ghlfoot·s car. was also injured and was listed in good condition al Hoag today. TORONTO CAP> -An Air Canada DC-9 jetliner skidded off a runway on takeoff and crashed into a ravine al Toronto lntema· tional Airport today, killing three people and injuring at least 100 others among tbe 107 aboard, authorities reported. The twin-engine jet, on a domestic fli ght, .. fell straight down just like going over a cliff," passenger Bobby Gimby, a bandleader dubbed "Canada's Pied Piper.' told reporters. He suffered only minor cuts. A Canadian transportation de- partment spokesman said the plane plunged about 30 feet into the ravine. A witness said it broke into three pieces. but no fire was reported. OfficiaJs at a nearby hospital where some or the injured were taken said at least eig ht were seriously hurt. An Air Canada spokesman said an earlier report that one of the plane's two rear·mounted engines lost power was not con- firmed. Some passengers said a tire blew out, but that als.> was not immediately d etermined, spokesman Brock Stewart said. Pas senger Herb Ellis of Boston said the jetliner, Flight 189 bound for Winnipeg and Van- couver with 102 passengers and five crew members aboard. was close to its takeoff point when he heard what sounded like an ex- plos ion . possibly the s ound of a tire blowing out. lie said lh<• pilot held th<.' plane level on the runway, which • runs parallel to a highway, but there was not enough runway for aborting the takeoff and the big ai re raft rolled over the lip of the ravine. Ellis said the passengers did not pam<'. but some of the in- jured wete moaning. The rear emcq~cn<'y door was jammed. he s aid, hut the front door and the doors over the wings opened. Ellis said one crew member in the rear of the plane appeared to be badly hurt and could not help passengers leave the aircraft. The airline :-;pokcsman said (Sec PLJ\NE. Page J\2) BEIRUT. Lebanon (AP) Pres ident Salem Robaye Ali of South Yemen was forced out of office today in a clash with members of his Marxist regime two days after his counterpart in North Yemen was assas:,inatcd. the I raq1 news agl'ncy reported Air force pl<1nes bombed and strafed the prcs1dent1al palace. the priml' minister's office and the defense ministry. the Iraqi agency said. Suspect Held Mier Irvine Funeral Rites Set The Iraqi r eport. quoting South Yemen ·s state radio 1n Aden. said the central commit- tee of the ruling National Front Party accused the 43-year-old president or . 'trying lo stage ;J military coup d 'etat." Militia and air force units loyal to lhe National Front's rut Sorcery Still Far in Front Sorcery was sailing through rain squalls and light airs today as she struggled through the last 500 miles of the 3,571-mile Los Angeles toT~hiti yacht r ace. At the 9 a .m . position report Sorcery was 482 miles from Tahiti and 499 miles ahead of Tuia, the number two boat. Jn third place was Westward with 997 miles lo go and Celebra· lion was 1,556 miles from Tahiti. <For earlier story see Boating, PageAll>. -,.hc' group that emerged v1c· torious in the clas h is known to be more pro-Soviet tnan Ah. Tht! hardliner!>, headed hy .National Froru leaCler Abdul Fattah Ismail, recently accused Ali of tr y 1n~ lo improve South Yemen's rl'iatmns with Saudi Arabia, which supports North Yl'men. North Yemen has close tics with the conscrvat•ve Saudi gO\'ernment. The Iraqi news agency said in a dis patch from the South Yemeni capital of Aden that the centra l committee of the Na- tional Vronl accepted Ali 's r<'si(lnation and stripped him all other posts. ft said he resigned after a day. long bombardment of the pres- idential palace in Aden. Observers in Beirut said the rebels apparently hoped to take advantage of unrest resulting from the assassination two days ago of the president of neighbor- ing North Yemen. He was killed (See YEMENI, Page A?) t:~"~~,~~t. ,., pc c t toda y 1n a \\eekend burglary of SclfJ.000 to ~50 000 in jewelry antiques from the Wood- bridge home of an industrial real estate agC'nt Officl'rs slopp(.'d ahd Sl'arched a van thl'y followe<I onto tht• northbound Santa Ana 1-'rt'cway near Red HHI Avcn\Je, at 10 a .m. today. It apparently matched a description givC'n hy neighbors The s us pect was not i m · m ediately identified. l'ol1cc claimed that goods lost in the burglary were found in the van He is being investigated in con· nection with s ever a I other burglaries, they said. The victim. Thomas Skahill. 49, of 51 Nighthawk, reported the loss SaturdaY.. The burglar had cut through a locked screen door to get in. police said. --. For UCl's Dr. Babb Funeral services are scheduled Tues day for Howard Babb, chairman of the English depart- me nt at l 'C Irvine. who d1l'd Saturday after s uffering a hc:ut attack. GIRAFFE BABY .POSI'HUMOUS MARWELL HALL. England <AP> -Victor, the gira ffe who collapsed while trying lo mate and died last September because he couldn't gel back on his feet, has left a b aby d a ughter, Marwell Park Zoo officials say. The baby, Victoria, was bOrn Saturday at the zoo. Victor had impregnated her mother, Drib· bles. five months before his fatal attempt with another of his three spouses. Dr. Babb, 54. "as stricken "hi le S\\-1mmin~ in lhcsurf at 18th Street in Newport Beach. He was a ided by hfl'guards Gordon Reed :md Doug Prichard, arter being stricken about 5 p. m .. but died an hour later at Hoag Memorial llospilal. Graveside services will be con· ducted at 1 p.m . Tuesday al Pacific View Memorial Park in Coronadel Mar. A professor of English and corn· parative literature, Dr. Babb was a founding member of UCl's faculty. joining the staffin 1965. He also helP<.'d establish the Ir vine divis ion of the UC Academic Senate. He held a bachelor of arts degree from Kenyon College in Camb1er, Ohio. and he earned both his master's degree and doc- torate at Harvard University. -Bock Hits Record Low Or. Babb taught at Ohio State University for 13 years before Joining the UCI staff in the un· iversity'sopeningyear. He leaves his widow. Corinna. of the family home al 2507 Via Marina, Newport Beach: a son, Stephen Babb of Newport Beach. and brothers Webster Babb of Cumberland, Me., and Warren Babb of Seattle. TOKYO CAP) -The American dollar, which hit a record low today and has declined 25 percent in value against the Japanese yen in less than 10 months, Is not worth enough to buy a glass or beer in Tokyo's fashionable Ginza shopping district. It won't even buy a cup of coffee, or a cheap souvenir. The fall of the dollar and other foreign currencies in relation to the strong yen, however, has not ~elped Japanese consumers buy imPorled goods al lower prlces, largely because distributors want lo keep the pri~es high. ONE IMPORTER OF V.S. MANVFACl'VREO cosmetics has said he would like to bring down tho price oC his goods but his Japanese dislrlbutors will not let him. "Our distributors fight any attempt at price erosion because they want to give large kickbacks to lhelr retail en," said the AmericaJi importer, who asked not to be named. KlcScbacks to retailers are tracllllonal, and le11J, in Japan. " Consumer groups occaslooally have protested that kickbacks make it unattracUve for retailers to pU5h lower priced items. TUE OOUA& Rn' llECOllD 1.0WS ON the Tokyo fortlp ex· chan1e market today, dropping to 2CM.50 ym and clostna at 208.2$. Traders and economists blame the slide on J apan 's huge trade !!Ur· pluses, burgeoning U.S. trade deficits and American Inflation. Another factor is the expectation that the dollar surplus in Tokyo will increase toward the end of the month. At the hotel rate or 202 yen -the-rate of exchange ror tourists ls always less,+han what traders receive on the foreign exchange m arket -the cheapest mug of beer at the Munchen Beer Hall was ,1.73. CofCee al a shop on what Is called Firth Avenue Alley was $2.48. And a set of five postcards picturing geisha girls sold for $1.49 at a shop near the Imperial Hotel. · Jn New York City, a mug of American beer averages In price from $1 to $1.SO and a cup or coffee bttween 2S cents and $1. SEVEN'J'Y.FJVE CENTS WOULD BUY • small p1ckaae or Amertcan·made candy at an outdoor stall ln front or the Hankyu dCtJ>arlmenl store in Tokyo. The -package bas p11nted Ol\ tt ln English: "Sugsested retail price 20 cents.•• The Japanese 1lgn OJ• the stall reads: "Son')'. only on:Cf:~k per customer." • A survey by the Japanese try of tnteruUonal Trado and lnduat.ry pubU1Md last week concluded th•t the dollar's decllne . (Seo DOLLAR FAILS, P aae A!) f ~~--.l .... .._; •. ._~·-, Tax Reform Eyed LAS VEGAS, Nev. CAP) - Tax r eform, burned into the public comciousnea!l two weeks ago when CaJJrornia voters over- whelmingly endorsed a $7 billion property tax cut Initiative, is a major issue Cacing some 3,500 delegate! 85 the meeting of the nntlon'a largest AFL·CIO union opens today. The union's mem· bershlp in Callfomta wns hit hard by pa aao or ProposlUon 13. As of Friday, 2.100 public employees. including 1,275 teachers, bad betn llld ore duo to pa~e of the lnJlla.tt.,e. I DAllY PllOT Murder Srapect & -ht .~ Orange County Sber1tr's or. l~rs conUnued today to seek a 11 they describe as a prime "pect in the murder of ~elitw 'Arbiso of San Juan p1straftb.· Investigator Willie Stansbury i tlfied the suspect as Paul njamln ·Black, 47, or Midway ity, who, be said, was seen at e Arbi$o bome shortly before e killing.- Mrs. Arbiso, 64 , was shot to eatb in her home at 31421 La allera.. Officers said the shoot· g occurred shortly after Black as seen to enter the home. Mrs. Arbi.so was the wife of aul Arbiso, 83, said to be the ldest living native of San Juan apistrano. He is a gardener at e Mission and eacb morning ings the miss1on bell. Sta~sbury s aid Black hreate.nec:\ at least one other erson with a g.un before he ent to the Arb1so bome. He sai~ it is known that Black ecame angry with Mrs. Arbiso cause ttle•viclim 's niece ended eir common law relationship y mov.ing out of Black's home nd into ber aunt's home. Stansbury said Mrs-. Arbiso nd Black had quarreled on ve ral occasions prior lo the s ooUng. M.embers of the Arbiso family laid rosary will 'be recited for Ge victim at 7:30 tonight in the old mission. Mass will be celebrated there at 9 a.m. Tues· day with interment to follow at Holy Sepulcher Cemetery in El Modena. ~rs Arbiso was a long time ~mber of the San Juan ~pistnmo Histori cal Society IJld a popu\ar parish worker at U.e old mission: She is s urvived by her husband. Paul; a d a ughter. Marie RQdman of Lag una Niguel: A. stepdaughter. Alice Gasteleum Of Anahe irh ; four brothers, Frank, Louie, Eugene and Raymond O'Campo all of Santa Ana and 11 grandchildren. •I It' t-E'ro1tt Page 1l I TEME NI ... I lot a bomb in the briefcase of a S9uth Yemen diplomat. c-An earlier Iraqi dispatch s aid artillery and air force planes oounded the presidential palace .wa. the Aden s uburb of Al T.aw ahi. But it said the •·people's militia" of tbe Na· lional Front took control of key 1ntersect1ons 1n Aden . the airport road and the highway to ~ Tawahi.. and street fighting oke out between army reg. ars pnd m ilitiamen in a sub· b near the airport. .. Thick palls of s moke spiraled rom 1\1 T.awahi where the muf. ed thud of heavy guns -was eard," the dispatch said. "The nternationul airPorl was closed o traffic and telecommunica· ion with the outside world was ut off. .. Aden authorities advised ourists to stay off the streets nd civil servants to leave their ffices and stay home until urther notice.·· The agency said Ah, who has eaded South Yemen ·s leftist f?Overnment since 1969, met Sun· ~ay ni ght with members of his residential council, leaders or he National Front for Political nity, the Marxist government party. and leaders of other lef. list political groups lo discuss dbarges that they were responsi· ble for the assassination of North Yemeni President Ahmed a l Ghashmi. I Still Missing AZUSA (AP) -Investigators c:ombed through the· rubble of an Azusa chemical plant over the weekend, s earching for one worker still missing after several explos ions and a fire that kilted another worker and injured nine persons. OAAN0£ COAST DAILY PILOT TMOr-C'Mt!O.•ty"'lol wtl!l-ftk- -l!loHtwo ""~ .. ..,_""..,.°"-CMot_._C-..,y ,... ... --... ..,...,_ -•Y lllfovql\ l'r'OOy ftr GKtt ---1 !kt<~. '4 ..... ..,._ -~/­..... V•lltY. lr•i"•· S.ddJ-..• v., .. ,. ~ .._ ... ~-~~ .. .....,.__ ._,,..,..,_ ............ -~ ... , ... =-~~=-~~~~.:i._m Wn& ... , "-"--~•-Pwi~ he••~ ¥0.,,......t.O""-• .......... ~·"-' (dtlOf y-., • ........,.. ~-l ... f.411!0< CMl1Hlt .._ ---~··· ""'~" ... ' Ma .... l .. £0.tor) Offleet °"~-... JJOW.11 .... _ U-ltt<ft' H•Of-tSt-"':.\:o'1.;2.~:.~~~~Wit~"....~ atWOl9"f'r- T-'tptlO"e {71t)"°'321 CINlllRed Advertttllng M2-M71 ~ . ., •. ...,_°".,. Al.QIO •.-""'c........,. ...... :i: ~~ ~...:..~:= Mtll°' .. -'1"4-0 ...... ,. llltY .. ,.,. ........ ,_ 11«'-' ... ,....,_ .. ciwr~-· ~ ~·-.... :: ""' "' QUI ....,.. Cell~•· 1.-.C• ••-W c.nlff o w, _...,, L~ ~· •11&.wy Mond1y, JUN 26. 1978 Surprise Party ... ~ Enrollment PrefJlena College Eyes Next Budget Saddlebaek College apparent· ly will receive enough money next year to support a $17.1 million .. bare bones" operations budget. but college officials must still grapple with increas· ing enrollment in the wake of~ duced funding under Proposition 13. Trustees will meet al 8 p.m. today to consider la~t income estimates following approval over the weekend of a so-called Proposition 13 ··bail-out bill" in Sacramento. The bill provides community colleges a portion or the s tate•s $5 billion aid to local govern· men ts. .. We're facing an lnereased enrollment," Barletta said. "All conservative estimates project an enrollment Increase over the next several years." He said college officials were estimating a $29 million budget prior to passage of Proposition 13. Thal budget would have in· eluded $8 to $10 million in so. called •·capital projects," build· ing programs such as the north campus and a new classroom buildiAg for the college's main campus in Mission Viejo. Barletta said most cuts in the $18.8 malLion post-Jarvis budget would be in the capital projects area. He could not s ay whether trustees would approve a ten· lalive budget for next year's operation tonight. Irvine Police Department clerk Ina La Bella, opening gift, almost didn't make her own party Friday, because she noticed Police Chief Leo Peart had been wailing in the room a nd didn 't want lo disturb him. Mrs. La Bella came to work a year ago, hasn't missed a day and has become beloved of fellow employees because of cheery, positive attitude. Shown celebra ting with h e r are co- workers Cherie Cooper and Linda Regan, from left. District Bus iness Manager Roy Barletta said today officials are s till using figures they came up with for projected income but expect to get figures from stale offices today. "Our trustees are most anx· ious to have the most updated in· formation," Barletta said. "At this point, we ·re anticipating an $18.8 million budget." He said the district might also get extra dollars from a savings program initiated when passage of the controversial Jarvis-Gann property tax limitation initiative seemed "imminent." He indicated the board might set a special meeting because the tentative budget must be in the hands of county school of· fi cials by July 1. Tonight's meeting will take place in Room 105 of the college library at 28000 Marguerite Parkway in Mission Viejo. -1,ooo· Seek Jobs • in NY But, Barletta. said, the district could lose funds depending on a county tax assessor's decision over apportionment to the com· munily college of a portion or the one percent al1owable taxes under Proposition 13. Fro•PageAI NEW YORl{ tAP> -After five days spent wailing in line for a shot at a job, about 1,000 New Yorkers got applications to- day for one of some 500 appren· ticeships. Just the chance of employ· ment brought many to the s treets where they set up camp and w~ited up to five days out· s ide electrical and plumbing un- ion offices. But the long wait may have been unnecessary as in some cases the number of applications Front Page A J TENANTS. • La ndlords stand lo gain a hef· ty s hare of any property tax sav· ings. and Jarvis urged them lo pass such savings back to tenants. back to tenants. But Trevor Grimm, member of the board of directors of the Apartment Owners Association of Los Angeles County, and Howard Ruby, president of the Coalition fo r Housing a nd s pokesman for the statewide Western Mobile Home Associa· tion. both attacked a proposed Beverly Hills ordina nce increas- ing a partment owners license fees a nd othe r s imilar m easures. G rimm said the fee hike would in e ffect wipe out any savings apartment owners might have received from Proposition 13, which limits property taxes to 1 percent of market value and rolls back assessments to 1975· 76 levels. ··voters wanted tax relief, not a lax s hift." Grimm said. Grimm joined Jarvis and Ruby in urging landlords to pass net Proposition 13 savings to tenants but warned: .. If there's no savings, we ask you to give no money back." J arvis has spent the past We<!k in New York and Washington, D.C. in search of support for the proposed group~ "I haven 't d~ci ded yet whether we would have two or· ~anizations. one a tax group and the other a political group," J arvis said. The 75-year-old landlords as· sociation director has gathered national attention, appearing on network television interview shows and the cover of Time magazine, since Proposition 13 won landslide voter approval June 6. · Policewoman Kills Spouse DETROIT <AP> -A policewoman shot and killed her hus band during an argument ov.e r her line or work. police sa1d . Officer Mary Jones, 30, told detectives she grabbed her gun from under her mattress and fired twice at her husband Leslie, 30, after be struck her ~· the race Sunday. Police said the s hooting c:ulminated a long-standing argument over Mrs. Jones' de· C'ision to become a police officer in May 1917. The couple's three children were asleep at the time or the shooting. liz 'Doing Good' LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ac· tress Eli1abeth Taylor, 46, ls ex· pectod to be released from a hospltru this week alter treat· ment for pneumooltJs, a hospital spokeswoman said. She wa1 li.st· ed in 1ood eondiLioo Sunday at Cedan-Sloal Medical Center, aald apok.cawoman Tesa GrWJ.o. available considerably exceeded the number of would-be craft workers on the lines. At the Electrical Industry Center in Queens apprentice training director David Smith said there were only about 1.000 in hoe when lhe doors opened an hour earlier than scheduled at 8 a .m. Smith said 1,250 applicants were needed before an aptitude test may be given for 500 in- dividuals. Those who get the ap- prenticeships enter five years of on.the.job training, starting at SJ.90 per hour and working up to $6.66 an hour. A bout 80 men and women were in line outside the head· quarters of Plumbers Local 2 m Manhattan when applications were made available sometime between 8 and 9:30 a.m .. accord· ing to Pete Marzec, apprentice instructor. The union planned to hand out 500 applications for 50 jobs, and late arrivals simply walked in. No. 89 in one line, Denny Damages Au:arded HAMILTON , Ontario <AP> -The Ontario S upreme Court ha s awarded a Hamilton man nearly S9.000 in damages and costs because a Pepsi- Cola bottle cap blew off and hit him in the eye. Samuel Mercant1. 30 , won his suit against Pepsi· Cola Co. of Canada and a llam i lto n restaurant owne r after a cataract formed on his eye one month after the accident M crca n li s aid an employee of has garage got the soft drink from the restaurant. lie said that when he started to open it, th e cap blew off and struck ham 10 the eye. Gays Parade In San Diego S AN DIEGO CAP) -An estimated 700 men and women marched through San Diego in the fourth annual Gay Pride parade (related story, AS). A raHy al Balboa Park on Sun· day e nde d what severa l described as "the gay Fourth of July." Speakers criticized a proposed s tate constitutional amendment to prohibit homosexual teachers. Front Page A I SCHOOLS. • Hurd suggested one remedy: A new initiative measure, to qualify for the November general elec lion ballot, to guarantee a source or school financing. Corey warned further that the r e al impact or the Jarvis Initiative and the state bailout of 11chools Hes in the control over education. "The ultimate control of the Irvine Unified School District," Corey said, "has pa8l'ed from the boord or education to the leg isl a lure in Sacramento." The quallty of education, Corey complained, "comes at the laraesseoftheleglslature. •• He said lawmakers were ableto provide relief this year "after cardully atashlna the money away for ~ars." that mlaht have bee.n uaed to promota educalion. • Kuperman. is a pre.Jaw major at. City College of New York. He saad he was in line because ··1 figure my chances of having a future here are a lot better than in law school. You either have to be in the top 10 in your law class or go to Yale or Ha":ard to suc· ceed." " 4 . The unions are looking for peo· pie between the ages of 18 and 23 who have high school diplonias. The electrical union has agreed to enroll 100 women among the 500 apprentices -the first women ever to join that union. ··This is a once in. a lifetime chance," said Cynthia Long of Manhattan, No. 64 in line. ..We're making progress against sexism in the trades." Some of the womeri com· plained that the men in line spat at them or broke bottles, accus· ing the women of "depriving" men of iobs. The new law sets a one per- cent of market value ceiling on taxes that can be collected from a property owner. "Thal Cthe $18.8 million budget estimate> can go up or down if our local a pportionment turns out different from the figure we used," Barletta s aid. The bus iness manager said college officials would seek ex- tra slate aid to augment a build· ing prog r am -including Irvine's north campus -un· dertaken to meet rising enroll· ment demands. PLANE .•• th'e tail section broke orr and the winRs were damaged. Airport worke rs a nd firemen doused the wings \\1th foam to prevent the fuel tanks from catching fire and explod1n~. The accident occurred at about 8 · 15 a m. The pla ne had arrived earlier from Ottawa. Quake R eported TRIESTE, Italy CAP> -An earthquake registering 5.5 on the Richter scale struck an area around the Yugoslav-Albanian border Saturday night, the Trieste seis mological institute reported . "We 're not taking jobs away if we deserve them," said Vickie Eisen, 19, who has been in line since Thursday night. Angel,s Expect Him Tonight All applicants will have to take aptitude tests. Union officials monitored the lines three limes a day to guard against line jumpers. Prospec· la ve workers were allowed only 15 minutes to use the nearby toilets, and many used fire hydrants for refreshment and bathing. Theodore Swiney Jr .. 20, of Coney Jsland, said he had not bathed since he joined the line Wednesday. '· 1 am definitely looking forward to getting off this line," he suid. F ormer president Richard Nixon is expected to attend t on ight's ball game at the Anaheim Stadium, but if he doesn't show up, maybe Gerald Ford will. ·'The Secret Service was c hecking out the stadium last week and its our guess that Mr. Nixon plans to be there tonight." said Mel Franks. Angels spokesman. "Carter is in Texas and Ford has n't , been here before, so Nixon seems likely -:: especially since be bas been here before." Front Page Al DOLLAR FALLS .•. has not res ulted in much decrease in the retail price of most Im· ported goods. ~ or 22 items surveyed by the ministry, 14 fell in price to some extent. but none by the dollar's decline of 25 percent. Kerosene, as an example, was reported 4.6 percent cheaper and color film 19 percent. · The price of imported handbags was up 18.9 percent and one Ginza store offered a French designed monogrammed lady's bag for the equivalent or $1 , 163. Ir the former pres ident does attend tonight's game between the Angels and the Kansas City Royals. he and his party will be seated in a box. which can ae· com m.odate about a dozen peo- ple. Frank said. ''Mrs. Nixon came to a game las t year," said Franks ... We put her in a box right near the press. but ·we draped it off, so the press never knew she was there." Tonight's game, scheduled to start at 5: 10 p.m .. is nationally televised -but not in this area. KOCM Owner Set For Heart Surgery Gary Burrill, owner or Newport Beach's radio station KOC M·FM, was scheduled to un· dergo open heart s urgery today at Hoag Memorial Hospital. BurriU, active in many civic organizations, was listed in good condition prior to the surgery lo replace portions of the artery lei;ading into his hearL WHEN YOU COMBINE THE DEStGNJAlENTS OF SEVEN' INTERNATIONAL AWARD WINNING JEWELERS-- THE RESULTS SPEAK FOR THEMSELVES. AS.shown- 18 Karat ~Id Cube Cluster Ring with diamonds. By lander. twice winner of the Oscar for jewelry design -the DeBeers Diamonds International Award '995 127 fashion Island, Newport Center. Newport Beach Telephone: (714) 644·0501 , ......... ------ , • 7 Laguna/South Coast EDI TION * * VOL. 71, NO. 177, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES Afternoon N.Y. Stocks TEN CENTS ' t \ 3 ·Killed • m Canada Crash Controversial Plane Laguna Mulls Beach Dog Ban Laguna Beach city coun- cilmen will consider a con- troversial animal ordinance which would all but ban dogs on city beaches Tuesday night io a meeting that is expected to draw a crowd of supporters and oppo- nents of the proposed law. The proposed ordinance. drafted by councilman Kelly Boyd , would ban dogs from the beach between 7 a .m . and 6 p.m. The ordinance would prohibit animals on the beach between those specified hours, those dogs off leash anytime. and would punish owners of pets who fail to pick up their animal's feces. ,.,..,~ SCNa~s Planning Director Boyd termed his animal con- t ro I ordinance "more than fair" in an interview last month, calling it a "pro-people ordinance -not a n anti-dog law." WRECKAGE OF AIR CANADA PLANE LIES IN RAVINE NEAR TORONTO AIRPORT At Least Three People Kiiied, 100 Others Injured As Craft St<lds Off Runway Bulle County Plal)ning Direc- tor L. J . "Jim" Lawson has been named San Clemente build- ing a nd plannmg director. effec- t 1ve July 17, succeedmg Richard Ahlman. who will retire Satur- day .• Lawson. 42, will be paid an an- nual salary of S25.680, said City Manager Gerald Weeks "I am interested in the poten- tial San Clc·menle has lo retain its unique small town character. if major development ant1c1pal· ed in the city's foothills is handled properly," Lawson said rn a telephone mterview today. •·very large developments do not necessarily disrupt a com- munity," he said, "but it makes planning crucial. to protect a distinctive co mmunity character like San Clemente's." Weeks s aid Lawson was selected as buildmg and plan- ning director. because his back- ground indicated he would be well pr<'pared to see that San Clemente's anticipated g rowth is processed professionally at the city ~evel. (See PLANNER, Page A2) GIRAFFE BABY POSTHUMOUS MARWELL HALL. England CA P > \'1ctor. the f!1ra ffe who collapsed Y.h1le trying to mate and died last September because he couldn't get back on his feet, h as left a baby daughter. Marwell Park Zoo officials say. The baby, Victoria. was born Saturday at the zoo. Victor had impregnated her mother, Drib- bl es. five months before his fatal attempt with another of his three spouses. Boyd said he has plenty or sup- port for his tough, new or- dinance from people who are tared of dogs running loose on the beaches. li e c ited exa mpl es or bcachgoers being bitten by dogs, 'health hazards from their waste and lack of adequate enforce· ment of the city's current leash laws. While many in the city agree the leash law s hould be en- forced, several individuals and at least one civic group have cit· ed their op(?Osition to the strict hours in w'hich dogs can be .... alked -on a leash -at the beach The Laguna Beach Taxpayers' Association announced this week they s upport the strict law with the exception of the ban between 7 a.m . and 6 p.m. Trevor Cushman, president of the taxpayers' group, said in a letter to councilmen this week that his group believes the hours should remain as they are, with dogs prohibited between 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. during the s ummer months. ''The board approves all of the proposed changes, .. Cushman s aid. "including the new schedule of fines. the proposed a~ions to be taken against dog owners whose dog feces are not cleaned up by the owners." He warned, however, that "no matter how the city's ordinances are finally written with regard to dogs, none wilt be successful unless the implementation of the ordinances arc ca.-ried out to the fullest extent. . .. Counci lmen have approved a new fine schedule for unleashed animals which calls fOr a S25 fme for a first offense. rismg to S50 for a second and $HXl for a third. And the council has appoved deputizing s ome permanent lifeguard personnel to enforce lhe city's leash laws. Other arumal related items to be discussed Tuesday night in· <See DOG BAN, Page A2) S. Yemeni Chief Ali Quits Job BEIRUT. Lebanon (AP) - President Salem Robaye AJi of South Yemen r esigned today after army and air force units rebelled in that nation, the only Marxist-governed republic in the oil-rich Arabian Peninsula. the Iraqi news agency reported. The news agency said in a dis- patch from the South Yemen capitol of Aden that the central committee of the National Front, the country's bard-line, pro-Soviet ruling body. accepted Ali's resignation and stripped him of aJl other posts. It said he resigned after a day. long bombardment of the pres- i~ntial palace in Aden. Observers in Beirut said the rebels apparently hoped to take advantage of unrest resulting from the assassination two days ago or the president or neighbor- ing North Yemen. He was killed by a bomb in the briefcase of a South Yemen diplomat. An earli er Iraqi dispatch said artillery and air force planes pounded the presidential palace in the Aq en su burb or Al Tawah1 But 1t s aid the "people's m1htia " of the Na- tional Front took control of key intersections in Aden. the airport road and the highway to Al T awah1. and street fighting broke out between army reg- ulars and militiamen in a s ub- urb near the airport "Thick palls of smoke spiraled from Al Tawahi where the muf- fl ed thud of heavy guns was heard." the dispatch said "The inte rnational airport was closed <See YEMENI, Page A2 ) B1utUng Business t.ocation ls important to a retail buslness. Stephanie Marsha ll, 10, and Heather H art. 9. knew this when their market analysis showed them that Pnrk Avenue and St 4 f\m1 's in Laguna Bench would be a prime 1 } \ place to sell lemonade. at least during the tenni1; tournament unde rway the l ast two weekends. The demand was hrlsk at IS cent' per ~lass. Tennis players ar thirsty people on hol days t • Dollar Won't Buy A Beer in Japan TOKYO CAP> ~The American dollar, which hit a record low today and has declined 25 percent in value against the Japanese yen in less than 10 months, is not worth enough to buy a glass of beer in Tokyo's fashionable Ginza shopping district. It won't even buy a cup of coffee, or a cheap souvenir. The fall of the dollar and other foreign currencies in relation to the strong yen, however, has not helped Japanese consumers buy imported goods at lower prices, largely because distributors want to keep the prices high. ONE IMPORTER OF U.S. MA~UFACTURED cosmetics has said he would like to bring down the price of his goods but his Japanese distributors will not let him. "Our distributors fight any attempt at price erosion because they want to give large kickbacks lo their retailers," said the American importer, who asked not to be named. Kickbacks to retailers are traditiona~ and le1&1, lD J apan. Consumer groups occasionally have protested that kickbacks make it unattractive for retailers to push lower priced items. THE DOLLAR HIT RECORD LOWS ON the Tokyo foreign ex· change market today, dropping to 204:50 yen and closing at 206.25. Traders and economists blame the slide on Japan's huge trade sur- pluses, burgeoning U.S. trade deficits and American inflation., Another factor is the expectation that the dollar surplus in Tokyo will increase toward the end of the month. At the hotel rate of 202 yen -the rate of exchange for tourists is always less than what traders receive on the foreign exchange market -Ule cheapest mug of beer at the Munchen Beer Hall was Sl. 73. Coffee at a s hop on what is called Fifth A venue Alley was $2.48. And a set of five postcards picturing geisha girls sold for $1.49 at a shop n ear the Imperial Hotel. <See DOLLAR FAILS, Page A2) Cops Seek Suspect In San Juan Slaying Orange County Sheriff's of- fi cers continued today to seek a man they describe as a prime s u s pect in the murder of Carmelita Arbiso. of San Juan Capistrano. Investigator Willie Stansbury Identified the suspect as PauJ Benjamin Black. 47, of Midway City, who. he said , was seen at the Arbiso home shortly before the killing. Mrs. Arbiso, 64. was shot to death in her home al 31421 La Callera. Officers said the shoot- ing occ'urred shortly after Black was seen to enter the home . Mrs. Arblso was the wife of Paul Arbiso. 83. said to be the Qlde.st livin~ native of San Juan Ca~1stranb. He is a gardener at the Mission and each morning rings the mission bell. Stansbury said Black threatened al least one other person with a gun before he went to the A rbiso llome. He said it I~ known that Black became angry Wllh Mrs. Arbiso because the victim's niece ended their common law relationship by moving out of Black's home and into her aunt's home. Stansbury said Mrs. Arbiso and Black had quarreled on several occasions prior to the shooting. Membefs of the Arb1so family s aid rosary will be recited for the victim at 7:30 tonight in the .old missio.n . Mass will be celebrated there at 9 a.m . Tues· day with interment to follow at Holy Sepulcher Cemetery in El Modena. Mrs. Arbiso was a long time me m be r of the S an Juan Capis trano Historical Society a nd a popular parish worker at the old mission. S h e is s urvived by her h usband, PaµI ; a daughter, M arie Rodman of Laguna NjgueJ; ~ $lepdaughter, Alice Gasteleum ot Anaheim; four brothers, Frank, Louie, Eugene and Raymond O'Campo all of Santa Ana and 11 grandchildren. Nixon to· Game? Angels Expect Him Tonight Former president Richard Nixon is expected to attend tonl1tht's ball game at the Anaheim Stadlum, but if he doesn't show up, maybe Gerald Ford. will. ••'the Secret Service was ~becking out the atadfur:o la.st week and it.a our 1uess that Mr. Nixon plans to be ther~ tonight," said Mel Franks, Ansell apokesm1u~. "Carter is In Texas ond Ford hasn't been here before, 10 Nixon seems likely - e.pecially •Ince he has been here before." ... Jr the rormer president does attend tonight's game between the Angels and the Kansas City Royai.,, ho and hiR party wnt be seated ln a box, which can ac- com m()d,te about • dozen peo- ple, FranJuald. "Mn. Nixon camo to a game last year." said Franks. ''We put her In a box right near the preu, but we draped it otr, so the prcu never knew s he was there." Tontaht's game, scheduled to atart at. s: 10 p m .. 11 nationally televlsed -but not ''\ tl\ls area. At Least IOOMore Injured TORONTO (AP> -An Air Canada DC-9 jetliner skidded oft a runway on takeoff and crashed into a ravine at Toronto Interna- tional Airport today, killing three people and injuring at least 100 others among the 107 aboard, authorities reported. The twin-engine jet, on a domestic flight, "fell straight down just like going over a cliff," passenger. 8obby Gimby, a bandleader dubbed "Canada's Pied Piper," told reporters. He suffered only minor cuts. A Canadian transportation de- partment spokesman said the plane plunged about 30 reel into the ravine. A witness said it broke into three pieces, but no fire was reported.· Officials at a nearby hospital where some or the injured were taken said at least eight were seriously hurt. An Air Canada spokesman said an earlier report that one or the plane's two r ear-mounted engines lost power was not con- firmed: Some pasliehgers said a tire blew out, but that also was not immediately determined, spokesman Brock Stewart said. Passenger Herb Ellis or Boston said the jetliner, Flight 189 bound ror Winnipeg and Van- couver with 102 passengers and five crew members aboard, was close to its takeoff point when he heard what .sounded like an ex· pldsion -possibly the sound or a tire blowing out. He said the pilot held the plane level on the runway, which runs parallel to a highway, but • there was not enough runway for aborting the takeoff and the big aircraft rolled over the lip of the ravine. Ellis said the passengers did not panic, but some of the in· jured were fllO&ning. The rear emergency door was jammed, be said, but the front door and the doors over the wings opened. Ellis said one crew member in the rear or the plane appeared to be badly hurt and could not help passengers leave the aircraft. The airline spokesman said the tail section broke off and the wings were damaged. Airport workers and firemen doused the wings with foam to prevent the ruel tanks from catching fire and exploding. The accident occurred al about s· 15 a .m. The plane had arrived earlier from Ottawa. Death Term On Ballot? SACRAMENTO -CAP> -The s ponsor of a n initiative to broaden Californ ia's death penalty said Friday he had col- lected enough s ig natures to qualify the measure for the Nov- ember state ballot. ' -Se n . John Briggs, (A- Fullerton), said calls to county registrars determined that at least 383,000 registered voters had signed the petitions. He needed 312,404 valid signatures to make the ballot. Coast Weather Night and morning low. clouds with sunny after- noon Tuesday. Lo ws tonight· 58 to 63. Highs Tuesday near 70 at the beaches to mid-70s inland. INSIDE TODAY It 's hard to /i nd a RepubUcon who 'll admit he iit runnfng for the preftdency, yet there ts no :hortage of condidate1 to ~ candidates Story Page AB. > DAILY PIL.Or Monda Juoe 26 t97ll rell•ent Preble.a ollege Eyes. ext Budget 1ddleback College apparent· wiU receive enough money xt year to support a $17.1 ~Ilion .. bare bones" operations d1et , but college officia ls uat atlll grapple with increas· •Jal enrollment in the wake of re. ~ed·funding under Proposition Trustees will meet al 8 p.m. ~ IDday to consider latest income •estimates followine a pproval • over the weekend of a so-called 1 Proposition 13 "bail-out t>ill" in , Sacramento. , The bill provides community colleges a portion of the state's billion aid to local govern· •ent.s . a property owner. "T ha t (the $18.8 m illion budget estimate) can go up or down if our local apportionment turns out different from the figure we used," Barletta said. The business mana1er said college officials would seek ex· tra state aid to augment a build· ing prog ram -including Irvine's north campus -un- dertaken to meet rising enroll· ment demands. "We're facing an increased enrollment," BarleUa said. "All conservative estimates project an eprollment increase over the ned several years." Budget Sessions ·slated Two aieclal meetings of the Capiatrano Unified School Dis- trict board a re planned this week to elicit from taxpayers suggested cut.a which would bring the 1978-79 district budget tn line wlth reduced property tax re- venues. The fi rst board meeting this week is scheduled tonight in the g ymnasium at Capistrano Valley High School, 26301 Via E scolar in Mission Viejo. A second meeting ia planned on Wednesday tn the cafeteria at San Clemente High School, 700 Avenue Pico in San Clemeote. Both meetings will s tart at 1 :30 p.m. Distrlc;t Business Manager lloy Barh!tla said today officials are still using figures tht!y came up with for projected income but expect to get figures from state offices today. He said college officials were estimating a $29 million budget prior to passage of ProposiUon 13. That budget would have in- cluded $8 to $10 million in so- called "capital projects," build· ing programs such as the north campus and a new classroom building for the college's main ca mpus in Mission Viejo. It Didn't Get Away At a s imilar m eeting last Thursday at Da na Hills High School in Dana Point , teachers and other members of an au- dience estimated at 800 people, ad vised the school board to re· duce administrative expenses a nd m a ke certa in school services and programs, like bus trans portation, mus ic and athletics •. self s upporting. .. Our trustees are most anx· ious to have the most updated in· formation," Barletta said. "At this point, we 're anticipating an $18.8 million budget." He said the district might also 1et extra dollars Crom a savings progr am initiated when passage of the controversial Jarvis-Gann property tax limitation initiative 1eemed "imminent." But, Barletta, s aid, the district tould lose funds depending on a eounty tax assessor 's decision over apportionment lo the com· m unity college of a portion of the one percent allowa ble taxes under Proposition 13. The new law sets a one per· cent of market value ceiling on taxes that can be collected Crom Times' Mesa Press room Hit by Fire A pressroom fare Sunday even· ing at the Costa Mesa head· q uarters of the Los Angeles T imes caused m in i m al fire ::;ldamage, but quantities of paper :-.upp lies were ruine d by a aprinkler system that prevented the blaze from spreading, Costa Mesa firemen said today. Costa Mesa Battalion Chief -C ary Golson s aid the exact :: Huse cA the 6:04 p.l'Q. blue is • under investigation. The fire atarted in one or four presses at ~the facility al 1315 Sunflower Ave., and spread to ceiling area eir ducts. Structural damage was con- -. fmed to a portion of the 45·fOOl· .high ceiling, Golson said. Co s t a M esa f i r e m e n responded with two engines and a truck company, but found the blaze controlled by the build· log's sprinkler sysle m. The amount of water damage to supplies and presses was still • being tamed this morning. The fi re delayed printing of the Orange County and San Diego Monday morning editions of Tbe Times. Youth Seize d In Burglary A Laguna Beach youth, arrest· ed Saturday on suspicion of burglary. has b een r eleased from Orange County J ail on $10,000 bail. Michael Douglas Cather, 20, of 146 Ramona Ave., was arrested Saturday by Officer Bill Yourex on charges of being drunk in public. Police said they found items of jewelry in Cather's possession, leading them lo extend the ebarges to include suspicion of burglary. He is suspected ot taking jewelry valued tt nearly $800 f rom the home of Kathlee n . Fyhrie. 2833 Wards Terrace, last " Thursday. ORANGE COAST UK DAILY PILOT Allison Helms. 7, of Laguna Niguel dis- plays a pair of souvenirs from the fishing clinic and derby for kids 6 to 16 at Laguna Niguel Regional Park. She was first in the 6 to 8-year-old category . Barletta said most cuts in the $18.8 million post.Jarvis budget would be in the capital projects area. He could not say whether. trustees would approve a ten· ta ti ve budget for next year's ope ration tonight. He indicated the board might set a special meeting because the tentative budget must be in the hands of county sc,bool of· ficials by July 1. Dolphins Perform For SC Beachgoers Services Set For Victims Of Collision1 • S u p e rinle nd e nt J e t'ome Thornsley said that despite the s tate 's eme r ge ncy aid, the Capistrano Unified District will have to trim an estimated $3.3 million from its $35 million budget in order to compensate for property tax revenue losses r e s ulting from passage or Proposition 13. Ton ight's meeting will take place in Roo01 105 or the college libr ary a l 28000 Marguerite Parkway in Mission Viejo. Cold water kept the rescues down along South Coast beaches ove r the weekend, but it didn't stop a school of dolphins from pe rforming for thousa nds of beachgoers a t San Clemente State Park. "They were lipping in lhe air Carter Sinks Rating, Confitknce Drop N EW YORK <AP> -President Carte r 's ability to "inspire confidence" in the White House and his overall job rating both have dropped during the past year, according to the latest Harr is Survey. The survey, taken a mong 1,500 Americans between J une 15 and June 17, found the per ception of Carte r 's inspirational ability had reversed in one year, from a 62·31 percent position rating last ~une to a 64·29 percent negative rating this month. "W).t.bQut a reservoir of faith in him personally, it is golng to be t ough for the president to impro\'e his standing on performance in om ce in a ny quick or easy way," the surve y report concluded. Carter 's overall r at ing s tood at 65·32 percent negative at the end of the latest survey period, a turnabout from the 65·32 percent positive rating he had in May 1977, according to the survey. LB Newsman Due to Leave SCC Hospital Veteran newsman and colum- nis t Hu bbard Ke avy wa s scheduled to leave South Coast Community Hos pital today after exploratory surgery at the South Laguna lacility. T he Laguna Beach resident underwent surgery last week and was in the intensive ca re un· it for several days following the operation. Keavy, 15, was a Holl ywood columnist for the Associated Press and c hief of the Los Angeles AP bureau. He began as a reporter for a Sioux F alls. South Da kota, paper in 1922, making $18 a week . He offset his meager earnings by selling local news to the Associated Press -which garnered another $7.50 a wee!< for lhe reporter. He retired from the Ass~iat· ed Press in 1968 and went to work for the South Coast News. Post as executive editor. He now does freelance writing. ~e Reported TRIESTE, tt.aly <AP) -An earthquake registering 5.5 on the Richter scale struck an area around the Yugoslav.Albanian border Sa turday night , the Trieste seismological institute ·:"~ported .• f'ro• Page A l PLANNER .. "We were looking for someone w\,l h a planni:lg background, who understands the day·to·day operations of a city planning de· partment and has good manage- ment abilities.·· s aid Weeks. " (Lawson > met those criteria." Lawson has been Butte Coun· ty's planning director for eight years and previously worked for the cilie~ of Santa Clara and San Jose. Weeks said. He has a bachelor's degree in a rchitec· ture. a master's degree an public adm rnlstration. and he is a Jacensed architect Sa n Clemente's new building and planning director is mar· ried, the father of a son, 13, and a daughter, 10. He said he and his fa mily will soon be house hunting in San Clemente Gays Parade In San Die go S AN DIEGO (AP > -An estimated 700 men and women ma rched through San Diego in the fourth annual Gay Pride par ade (related story, AS). A r ally at Ba lboa Pa rk on Sun· d a y e nde d wh a t se ve r a l d escribed as .. lhe gay Fourth of July:· Speakers criticized a proposed state constitutional amendment to prohibit homosexual teachers. Ero. Pa~ A J DOLLAR FALLS ••. In New York City, a 'mua of American beer averages in price from 11 to $1.!iO and a cup of coffee between 2S cent.a and $1. 8EVENTY·FIVB CENTS WOULD BUY a 1maU packate of American-made candy a t an outdoor stall ln front of the Hankyu department store in Tokyo. The pactace baa printed on lt tn English: "SUggested retail prtce 20 cent.I." Tbe Japanese algn or. the stall reads: "Sorry. only one pack per customer." A survey by the Japanese Ministry of Intem ationa.l Trade and Industry published last week concluded that tbe dollar's deellne haa not resulted ln much decrease lo lbe rttail price of most Im· ported 1ooda. or 22 items surveyed by the mlni1lry. H fell in price to some extent. but none by the dollar's decline ot ~ percent. Kero1ene, u an example, was reported 4.$ per~nt cheaper and colpr film 19 percent. The ~ of imported handbt11 was up 18 8 pereent and one Glnu stbre offered a French deslped monorramme<l lady'1 b&I tor lht .,ul\talenl or $1.183. \ and doing all sorts or tricks," said Dave Perry, state lifeguard seasonal supervisor. He said s cores of the large mam m als frolicked in waist- deep water. catching the one to th r ee foot waves off th e crowded slate beach. T he Sunday sea show was watched by an estimated 6,500 people, Perry said. Chilly S8 degree waters kepl rescues down in Laguna Beach, whe r e 3 5 ,0 00 s un seeke r s crowded onto the caty 's stretch of beach Sunday. Lifeguard Stev~ Morreale said about the only people to venture into the water were wetsuited surfers who enjoyed one to three foot waves with good shape. .Only a dozen minor rescues were reported at San Clemente city beaches over the weekend, according to supervisor Barney Vorhees. Seven thou.sand visited county b e a c h e s cov e r e d b y San Clem ente guards on Saturday, climbing to twice that number Sund ay. City beaches took on an on· slaught of 13,000 visitors Sunday, Vo rhees said. Wate r temperatures in San Clem ente ranged from 59 to 63 degrees. Fro"' Pa~ A I DOG BAN ... elude a report on a contract W1th the City of Irvine for joint animal s helter use; and a dis· cussion of the c ity 's a nimal shelter The meeti~g ~gins al 6 p.m. Liz 'Doing Good' LOS ANG ELES 1AP1 -Ac· tress Elizabeth Taylor. 46, is ex· pected to be released from a hospital this week after treat· ment for pneumonitis, a hospital spokeswoman said. She was hst· ed in good condition Sunday at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, said spokeswoman Tess Griffin . Services are scheduled this week for two L aguna Bea ch m otorists who died in a head-on collision on Laguna C anyon Road Friday night. Carolyn La Ve rne Stoddard, 26, of 1035 Balboa Ave .. and Michael Lee Jackson, 21, of 2'755 Solana Way, were pronounced dead at the scene of the crash just inside the city limits shortly after 8 p.m. Friday. P olice investi gator s aid J ackson's eastbound c ar ap· parently veered over the center line into the path or Miss Stod· dard 's automobile. Memorial services will be held Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. at King or Kin g s Luthe ran Church in Garden Grove for Miss Stod· d ard, according to officials at McCormick Mortuary in Laguna Beach . She is s urvived by parents Sheldon and Joan Stoddard of Santa Ana, sisters Donna Per· ru22i and Arlene Slarherty. both of Anaheim and J ulie Runnells of Santa Ana. Miss Stoddard was a dental assistant for Dr. James Chen of Irvine. Services will be held Thursday at noon at Pacific View Chapel in Newport Beach for Michael Jackson. A private burial will follow, a ccording to officials at the Newport Beach mortuary. Mr Jackson was manager of a restaurant before his death. He is survived by his mother, Patricia J ackson of Anaheim; father Richard Jackson of Palm Springs; brothers James, David and Gary and 'sister Michelle, all of Ana heim. He is a lso survjved by a g r a nd m othe r . Cleo Kelly of Ha waijan Gardens and nephew Christopher J ackson. Donations may be made to the Mic hael Lee J ack s on Art Sc h olars h ip F und al P a lm Springs High School. 2 Chiefs Confer WASHINGTON <AP) -Presi· dent Carter spent more than an h o u r ta'd ay con ferr ing at breakfast with British Prime Minister James Call aghan. Frowt Page A J YEMENI •.• to traffic and telecommunica- tion wi th the outside world was cut off. "Aden authorities advlsed tourists to stay off the streets and civil servants ~ leave their offices and s tay home until further notice." The agency said Ali, who has headed South Yemen's leftist government since 1969, met Sun· day night with members or bis presidential council, leaders of the National Front for Political Unity, the Marxist government party, and leaders of other lef· list political groups to discuss charges that they were responsi- ble for the assassination or North Yemeni President Ahmed al Ghashmi. Ghashmi, 39, was killed Satur· d ay when a special envoy from · Ali entered his offi ce in San'a to d e liver a messa ge from the South Ye meni president. When he opened his briefc ase to gel the letter , the bomb exploded. The envoy also was killed. South Yemen denied any part in the killing. It said the as· sassina li on w as an "im· per ialist" attempt to start a war between North and South Yemen and was the work or "subversive e lements" trying to block un- ification of the two Yemens. Ghashmi was the etghth North Ye meni leader killed since the seven·year civil war after the ove rthrow of the monarchy in 1962. Dollar Hits Low T OKYO <AP> -The dollar hit record lows on the Tokyo foreign e xchange market , dropping to 204.50 yen during the day's trad· ing and closing at 206.25. The Bank or Japan bought between $150 million and $200 million to case the slide. The dollar also got off to a bad start in Europe. WHEN YOU COMBINE THE DESIGN TALENTS OF SEVEN · INTERNATIONALAWAROWINNINGJEWELERS- TH.E RESULTS SPEAK FOR THEMSELVES. • Wyndham U!igh ~l ~t.P'" ASshown- 18 Karat Gold Cube . Cluster Ring with diamonds. By Lander. twice winner of the Oscar for jewelry design -the OeBeers Diamonds International Award '995 127 Fashion latand, Newport C"entw, Newport Buch T ttephc)ne: (714) 6"·0501 7 ·Orange ~oast EDITION ' Today's ~losing N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 71, N~ 177, 3 SECTIOt 30 PAGES N TEN CENrs I Gav's. Mother Suggests New Suit D11lr P'llet St.tll Pllolo PAT ANO JERRY BROWN AT COCKTAIL PARTY ON NEWPORT'S LINDA ISLE The Once and Present Governors Mingle With the Party Faithful Jarvis Urges Passing On '13' Savings LOS ANGELES IA P J Tax crusader lloward Jarvis and three landlord groups kicked off a campaign today urging apart- ment owners to give teuants any savings gained through the passage of Proposition 13. At the same lime. Jarvis said he would continue to try to pre- ' cnl the federal government from gaining a tax \\indfall as a result of lhl• la'< in1t1at1ve he co aut hnred But he .,aid he "as not ready to un' C'1 I pl ans for a na- tional organi1at1on to help foster t ax revolts mother states ··w e arc• going to .!>lop the federal government from taking so much money from the people. but we haven't come to any con- clusion on what we are going to do,·· Jarvis told a news con· !ercnce Ft•dt•r;.11 rC'venuc~ will burgeon by an es timated SI hilhon lo $2 bill1on ;,nnu;.tl l y because Cahfn1 nw tux payer~ will have !l7 pcrcclll fewer property taxes to deduct from federal income t ax returns, he said Returning from a visit to Washmhrt.on where he tried to ex- plain his taxpayers· revolt to congressmen . J arvis s aid la\\ makers the re were conside r· ing introducing leg1slat1on to pass any such windfall back to states that approve ta x s las hing measures like Proposition 13. ·"I'm not s ure they got the message rn Washington, but there 1s a propos1t1on being con- s 1 de red to pass a bill i n Washington that the money the federal government gets will be passed back to those s tales.·· J arvis said. Landlorrls stand to gain a hef- ty s harl' of any property tax sav ings. and .Jarvis uq?ed them to <See TENANTS, Page A2) Coast \)'eather NB to Make Cuts Despite Surplus Newport Beach City Man ager Robert Wynn said today a list of $2.8 million worth of budget cuts probably won't be spared by state surplus funds expected lo come to the city. Legis lation giving the local government portions of the sur- p Ju s funds wazsi ned this weekend by Gov. Ed und Brown Jr Wynn said he 1 still trying to get a copy of the bill to find out precisely how it will affect Newport Beach . Councilmen tonight are scheduled to take final action on t heir budgets and the S2.8 million worth of cuts necessitat- ed by passage of Proposition 13. Wynn estimated the city will lose about $4.2 mill ion of an- ticipated income by reduction of property taxes. Al his recommendation coun· cllmcn tC'ntalivcly have agreed to cut the S2.8 million from the budget and to wait six months before making any other recluc ltons Wynn said one of the d rafts of the bill he saw prior to passage m a n dated that cities with budgeted surpluses would have to deduct the surplus from their allocated shares of the state sur- plus "If that 1s still the case, then I estim ate we will gel about Sl.84 million from the s tate," he s aid. That would mean councilmen '' ould then race addition! reduc- 110 n s of <1bou l $400.000 i n DN·ember Wynn conceded that the list of cuts lo be voled on tonight "prob- ably contains some items that were added in our haste to come up with a lis t." He said he expects those items which may need to be retained could be put back into the budget during the fi ne tuning pr~ess in December.·· C'buncilmen will meet a,t 7:30 to lake rinal action on the pro- µoseo S26 million budget and the proposed S2.8 mil hon in cuts. Strieken in Surf Funeral Rites Set For UCl's Dr. Babb Funeral services are scheduled Tues day for Howard Babb. chairman of the English depart- ment at UC Irvine, who died Satur day after suffering a heart attack. Dr . Babb, 54, was stricken while swimming in the surf a t 18th Street in' Newport Beach. lie was aided by lifeguards Gordon Reed and Doug Prichard, after being stricken about 5 p.m .• but died an hour later at Hoag Memorial Hospital. Graveside services will be con- ducted at 1 p.m . Tuesday at Pacific View Memorial Pa rk in Corona del Mar. A professor~ English a nd com· parative literature, Dr. Babb was a founding memb.er of UCI 's faculty. Joining the staffin 1965. llC' al.-.0 helped establish the Irv in e divis ion of the UC Academic Senate. He held a bac helor of arts degree from Kenyon College in Cambicr. Ohio. and he earned both his master·s degree and doc· tor ate at Harvard University. Or. Babb taught al Ohio State University for 13 years before joining the UCI staff in the un- 1vers ity'sopening year. He leaves his widow, Corinna, of the family home al 2507 Via Marina , Newport B'euh: a son, Stephen Babb of Newport Beach. and brothers Webster Babb of Cumberland. Me . and Warren Ba bb of Seattle The Browns came to Newpart Beach Sunday night. Governor Edmund Brown Jr. was in town for a couple of fund: raisers. Mom and dad -the former governor and first lady -came along, too. Governor Brown, who faces a re-election challenge in Nov- ember from Attorney General Evelle Younger, gaTe a 20- m in u le p ep talk and philosophJcal diS«>Urse to about 500 guests at a Balboa PavWon dinner boeted by the Newport Democratic Club. He arrived at the Pavilion aboard a cabin cruiser belong. ing to the host oC an earlier $250 per person cocktail party. The ooclrtail event was held at the Linda Isle home of John McNaughton, president of Na· Lional Systems Corp. The dd~r Brown is a member of the firm's board ol directors. Pat, the father, circulated among the cocktail party guests, amiably discussing everything from Proposition 13 to the prob· lems of raising kids. JerTy found himself hemmed tn by partygoers who h ad an is· sue to push -off-track horse race betting, completion of the (See BROWN, Page A.2) Chief Mum On 'SloW' Cops Paper's Account Rapped By .JOANNE REYNOLDS Of 11W Dlllt., .. 1 .. t St.tlf Newport Beach's police chief Pete Gross said today he will have nothing lo say about the slowdown instituted last week by some of his offi cers until he meets with tt-em Tuesday. The action, which began Fri· day. involves only the depart menl 's officers below the rank of ser geant. Officers could give no esti mate o f the number participating in the action which was agreed to at a meeting at- tended by 50 of them Thursday night. The group has declined to call their action a slowdown, but said they would be following the let· ter of department.Bl regulations concerning officer safety. They have conceded that doing so will slow their performance 1n the field. The officers involved said lheir discontent is linked to what they view as the city council's failure to gr ant them adequate pay raises in keeping with the work they are expected to do. Gross, who was unavailable for comment Friday, said today he was disturbed by the news ac- counts of the slowdown. He said an account rn Friday·s Daily Pilot contained "a lot of misinformation." He branded tl "irresponsible JOUrnahsm." Gross noted that Newport Beac h city councilmen aren 't scheduled to discuss rescinding their recently instituted police pay policrtonight. as Frtday·s story indicated. The po li cy, whic h says Newport police will be paid as well as offi cers 1n the three highest paying law enforcement agencies in the county. won't be reviewed until July 10. The Newport P ol i ce Employees Association isn't participating in the pay protest as a n organization, although as· sociation members. including President Doug Thom as, are in- volved. After last Thursday's meeting. the officers participating issued a st atement that sums up their feelings : -"Whv shottld we wrestle in the streets with burg la rs. thieves. and viole nt narcotics users when the public does not appreciate our efforts and gives us little if any support at all, even in emer~encies? -"In the past seven years the citizens have given us only in- termittent token raises. By the end of this year, w e will be behind inflation by 21 5 percent <See POUCE, Page J\21 D•llv Piiot PhOIO "" RftMrd Koellltr PARAMEDIC BOB TRAUTMAN AIDS VICTIM LIGHTFOOT Irvine Man Injured In Head-on Collision In Newport Irvine Man Injured In Newport Crash An Irvme man. IOJUred Satur day morning in a head-on col· i1s1on m Newport Beach. was listed in fair condition today at Hoag Memorial Hospital. Firemen had to cut Joe Car· roll Lightfoot. 23. of 81 Orchard Lane from his Volkswagen after he reportedly lolil control of the car while driving northbound on Newport Roulcvard near the Arches overpass al West Coast ll1ghway. Lightfoot's aut o reportedly s werved across the center Los Padres Burns FILLMORE CAPl -A brush fire scorched 60 acres Sunday m a ruJrn.ed. heavily timbered. mountainous area of Los Padres National Forest. '1uth6rities said. d1v1der and struck a southbound car dr1ve11 by .John Wilson Karder, 27, of La Mesa. Karder was treated and re- leased from the hospital aner the 2·30 a .m. mishap. Stephen Wayne Mortenson of Ri vers ide, a passenger in Lightfool's car, was also injured and was listecl in good condition at lloai:: today Plnne Crash Kil/,s Three; 100/njured TORONTO <A PI An Air Night and morning k>w. clouds with sunny after- noon Tuesday. Lows t onight 58 to 63. Highs Tuesday near 70 al the beaches to mid-70s inland. l~SIDE TOO~ 't' Buck Hits Record Low Canada DC-9 jetliner s kidded off a runway on lakeoff and crashed into a ravine at Toronto Interna- tional Airport today, killing three people and injuring at least 100 others among the 107 aboard, authorities reported. The twin-engine jet, on a domestic fligh!, "felt straight down just like going over a cliff .. , passenger Bobby Gimby, a bandleader dubbed "Canada's Pied Piper," told reporters. He suffered only minor cuts . It -.~ hard l o find a Republican who'U admit he u running fM the presukncy, yet there 18 M •hor1oge of cand1dale6 lo be candidates Story Page AB T()KYO <AP> -The American dollar , which hit a record low today and has declined 25 percent in value against the Japanese yen in less than 10 months, is not worth enough lo buy a glass of beer in Tokyo's fashionable Ginza shopping district. It won 't even buy a cup of coffee, or a cheap souveni r. The fall of the dollar and other foreign currencies in relation to the strong yen, however, has not helped Japanese consumers buy imported goods at lower prices, largely because distributors want to keep the prices high. ONE IMPORTER OF U.S. MANtJFAC?VRED cosmetics has said be would like to bring down lbe price of bis 1oods but his Japanese distributors will not let him. "Our distributors fight any attempt at price erosion because they want lo give large kickbacks to their retailers," said tbe American importer, who asked not to be named. Klckbacks to retailer$ are traditional, and legal. In Japan \ .. • Consumer groups o«asionally have protested that kickbacks make il unattractive ror retailers to push lower priced items. THE DOLLAR IDT RECORD LOWS ON the Toky~ foreign ex- change market today, dropping to 204.SO yen and closing at 206.25. Traders and economists blame lhll slide on Japan's huge trade sur- pluses, burgeoning U.S. trade deficits and American inflation. Another factor Is the expectation that the dollar surplus in Tokyo will increase toward the end ot the montb. At the hotel rate of 202 yen -the rate of exchange for tourists is always Ids than what traders receive on the foreign exchange market -the cheapest mua of beer at the Munchen Beer Hall was $1. 73. Coffee at a shop on what is called Fifth Avenue Alley was 12.48. And a set of five postcards picturing geisha girls sold for $1.49 at a shop near the Imperial Hotel. In New York City: a mug of American beer 1vera1es In price from $1 to $1.150 and a cup o( cofree between ZS cent.a and $1. ' ·' A Canadian transPortation de- p artment spok'esman said the plane plunged about 30 feet into the r avine. A witness said it broke into ihree pieces, but no fire was reported. Officials at a nearby hospital where some or the injured were taken 1aJd at 1cut eight were seriously hurt. An Air Conada spokeaman said on earlier report that on& of ( PLANE, Page A2) - ' ... ,,_ DAIL y PILOf N 1,000 Line Up or Jobs .. NEW "'VORlC <AP > -Allft' five d1Y1 1pent wa.Stini In lme !or a ibol t a job, about 1,000 ~ew York.en got appllcauoos to. day for one ot some 500 appren· , Uceships. Just the chance or employ. ment brought tnooy to the streets where they set up camp and waited llp to five days out- side elect.ricl\J and plumbing un· ion offices. , - But the long wall may have been unnecessary as in some cases the number ol applications available considerably exceeded the number of would-be craft. workers on the lines. At the Electrical Industry Center in Queens apprentice training director David Smith s aid there were only about 1,000 in line when the doors opened an hour earlier than scheduled at 8 a.m. Smith said 1,250 applicants were needed before an aptitude test may be given for 500 in· dividuals. Those who get the ap- prenticeships e nter five years or on-the-job training, s tarting at $3.90 per hour and working up to S6.66 an hour. About 80 men and women were in line outside the head· quarters of Plumbers Local 2 m Manhattan when applications were made available sometime between 8 and 9:30 a.m., accord· ing to Pete Marz~c, apprentice instructor. The uruon planned to hand out 500 applications for SO jobs, and late arrivals simply walked in. No. 89 in one line. Denny Kuperman, is a/'re-law major at: City .COilege o New York. He said be was in line because '"I figure my chances of having a future here are a lot better than in law school. You either have to be in the top 10 in your law class or go to Yale or Harvard to suc· ceed." The unions are looking for peo- ple between the a ges of 18 and 23 who have high school diplomas. The electrical union has agreed to enroll 100 women among the 500 apprentices -the first women ever to join that union. • ''This is a once in a lifetime chance," said Cynthia Long of Manhattan, No. 64 in line. "We're making progress against s exism ln the trades.·· S ome of the women com· plained that the men In line spat a l them or broke boltles, accus- jog the women of "depriving·• men of jobs. .. We're not taking jobs away Ir we d eserve them," said Vickie Eisen. 19, who has been in line since Thursday night All applicants will have to take aptitude tests. Union officials monitored the · lines three times a day to guard against line jumpers. Prospec· tive workers were allowed only 1S minutes to use the nearby toilets, and many u sed fire hydrants for refreshment and · bathing. Theodore Swiney Jr., 20, of Coney Island, said be had not bathed since he joined the line Wednesday. ••1 a m derinitely looking forward to jetting off this line •· he said. ' CIR.4.FFE BABY POSTHUMOUS MARWELL HALL, England fAP> -Victor, the giraffe who collapsed while trying to mate and died last September because he couldn't get back on his feel, has left a baby daughter, Marwell Park ZOO officials say. The baby, Victoria, was born Saturday at the zoo. Victor had impregnated her mother, Drib- bles, five months before his fatal attempt with another or his three spouses. ORANQECOAST M DAILY PILOT -ni.o...,.. C..st o.lty ll'ltoc .... , .. ~ ... _ _, ..... "'\.-. ...... _,_...,_°"_ C-.t_l.,,"'9c:on..n• S.-.ot•t<totloM"'• =~~:::·~.:~~-..::.~ Ulft V•H•f. trwlftf". s.dcl~• Y-4WV •ftd ~ ... ll/5ooll .. C....t ·~ ....... -UM " ,...,,.,,.,. s.iw .. •n .,., -.. ... Thi> ~c..:-.::.v.~.:...ia Wt• .. , ......... _ ........,,_"""'_ ..... cw-. .,......,. ___ ~ ,,....It .... Ul'9r ._A....,_ -.......·- Oll'e.•'-..... "'_ ,........ ........ ...... • • ............ Midwag f:itg lflan ~ Suspect Sought In SJC ·slaying Orange County Shertfrs or. ficel"s continued today to seek a m an they describe as a prime suspect in the murder of Carmelita Arbiso of San .Juan Capistrano. Jnvestigator Willie Stansbury identified the suspect as Paul Benjamin Black, 47, of Midway City, who, he said, was seen at the Arbiso home ahortly before the killing. shooting. M embers or the Arbiso fam1Jy said rosary will be recited for the victim at 7:30 tonight in the o ld mission. Mass will be · celebrated there at 9 a.Jn. Tues· day with interment to follow at Holy Sepulcher Cemetery in El Modena. WRECKAGE OF AIR CANADA PLANE LIES IN RAVINE NEAR TORONTO AIRPORT Al uast Three People Kiiied, 100 Others Injured As Craft SkJda Off Runway Mrs. Arbiso, 64, was shot to death in her home at 31421 La Callera. Officers said the s~ ing occurred shortly after Black was seen to enter the home. Mrs. Arblso was s Jona U~ member of the San Juan Capistrano Historical Society and a popular parish worker at lbe old mission. She is s urvived by bec- hus band, Paul; a daughter, Marie Rodman of Laguna Niguel: a stepdaughter. Alice Gasteleurn of Anaheim; four brothers, Frank, Louie, Eugene and Raymond O'Campo all of Santo Ana and 11 grandchildren. Nixon to Game? AngebJ Expect Him Tomght Former president Richard Nixon is expected lo attend tonig ht's ball game at the Anaheim Stadium, but if he <.toesn •t show up, maybe Gerald Ford will. "The Secret Service was checking out the stadium last week and its our guess that Mr. Nixon plans to be there tonight;• sa id Me l Franks. Angels spokesman ... Carter is In Texas and Ford hasn't been here before, so Nixon seems likely - especially since be bas been here before ... tr the rormer president does attend tonight's game between the Angels and the Kansas City Royals, he and his party will be seated in a box, which can ac· commodate about a dozen peo- ple. Frank said. "Mrs. Nixon came to a game last year," said Franks. "We put her in a box right near the press, but we draped it off, so the press never knew she was there... . Tonight's game, scheduled to start at 5:10 p.m .. is nationally televised -but not in this area. South Yemen Chief Ousted From Post BEIRUT, Lebanon CAP> - President Salem Robaye AU of South Yemen was forced out or oHice today in a clash with members of his Marxist regime two days after his counterpart in North Yemen was assassinated, the Iraqi news agency reported. The Iraqi report, quoting South Yemen's state radio in Aden, said the central commit· tee of the ruling NaUonaJ Front Party accused the 43·year-old. president of "trying to stage a military coup d'etat." Militia and air force units loyal lo the National Front's rul· ing central committee reported· ly batUed 'army wilts loyal to Ali. Air force planes bombed and strafed the presidential palace, the prime minisler·s office and the defense ministry, the Iraqi agency said. The group that emerged vie· torious in the clash is known to be more pro-Soviet than AU. The hardliners, beaded by National Front leader Abdul Fattah Ismail, recently accused Ali of t rying to improve South Yemen's relations with Saudi Arabia, which supports North Yemen. North Yemen has close ties with the conservative Saudi government. The Iraqi news agency said in a dispatch from the South Yemeni capital or Aden that the central committee of the Na- tional Front accepted Ali's res ign ation a nd stripped him ull other posts. It said he resigned after a day. long bombardment of the pres· idential palace in Aden. Observers in Beirut said the rebels apparently hoped to take a dvantage of unrest resulting from the assassination two days ago or the president of neighbor· ing North Yemen. He was killed Sorcery Still Farin Front Sorcery was saillne through rain squalls and light airs today as s he struggled through the last 500 miles of the 3,571-mile Los AngelestoTahitiyacbtrace. At the 9 a .m. position report Sorcery was 482 miles from Tahiti and 499 miles ahead of Tuia, V>e numbertwoboat. ;. In third place was Westward with 997 miles to go and Celebf'a· t ion was 1,556 miles Crom Tahiti. (For earlier s tory see Boating. Page AU) • Jeweler Hit ByCMThi'ef by a bomb in the briefcase of a South Yemen diplomat. An earlier Iraqi dispatch said artillery and air force planes pounded the presidential palace i n the Aden subur b of Al 'fawahi. But it sa id the "people's militia" of the Na· tlonal Front took control or key intersections in Aden, the airport road and the highway to Al Tawahi, and street fighting broke out between army reg· ulars and militiamen in a 6Ub· urb near the airport. ..Thick pajls !lf smoke spiraled. from Al Tawahi .·:tiere the muf· fl ed thud or heavy guns was heard," the dispatch s.Jid. "The international airport wa~ closed to traffic and telecommunica· lion with the outside world was cut ore. "Aden authorities advised tourists lo stay off the streets and civil servants to leave their offices a nd stay tome until further notice." From Page Al POLICE ..• -"In the past we have madei enormous efforts lo give our community extra service and protection while risking our own safety. No longer will this be the case. We will be responding to all calls as fast as possible, but no short cuts will be taken at our nsk." Gross criticized news accounts of the so-called slowdown as be- ing damaging in terms of liming the story to the department's r€· cently announced plans for step- ped·up enforcement during the coming July 4 weekend. The police chief was also critical of the news accounts of that enforcement plan, noting that the city's fireworks prohibi· lion will be enforced "where ap-propriate." "We aren't going to go out and a rrest anyone we see with fireworks," he said. "Those articles just create the kind of problems I've been try. in~ to avoid," Gross added, not- ing that the enforcement plan. was devi~ed with the aid of resi- dents of West Newport, often an Independence Day hot spot. He said the enforcement ac- ti vities would not be restricted to looking for flteworks viola- tions. but would include a wide range of disturbances, such as •·drinking and partying." The chief said be believes the combined Impact of tbe two news stories has been to place ••an untenable burden on the in- dividual officers." He also said ho bolieves the Job acUoa announced last week was the work of a Cow individual Preclou itonea •alutd at otficen and does not necessarily $G aeo were reported•.. atol.n reflect the vlow of tbe depart. sad -c.... v • mont'• personnel. •1 mo • ......_ from • Cetta But that view waa not shared bMeaa Jewele.r u be slept at bJ.s by Oftlct1rs Cll!f Yarfiea and ome, pollce reported today. u Reginald Charles Childers, 33, Oro1 .-..~U.soo, or1an sen of t o ld police a clear tray Thursday a meetJna. AuatraUan Opal worth p 500 Citln,i what be views as • lack wu amona the cems taken frorn of council ~port In terms or a di1plQ cue ln hla bedroom pay raises a 1enerJI lack of Twenty-six other stones· or cf ~lien support. Mat~n aatd, lesser value ~re alto lilted u lJf the ~le don t care •bout miHlnt. Police aald there were what you re ~·· lt can get no li&Da ol farced eD&r7 iD1o tbe depre11t.na. lt 1 a f ~ ahared homo. by most of lhc l\qS. p...,.pageAJ PLANE ••• tbe plane's two rear-mounted engines lost power was not con- firmed. Some passengers said a tire blew out, but that also was not i~ediately determined, s pokesman Brock Stewart said. Passenger He rb Ellis or Boston said the jetliner, Flight 189 bound for Winnipeg and Van· couver with 102 passengers and five crew members aboard, was close to its takeo!! point wben he heard what sounded like an ex· plosion -possibly the sound of a tire blowing out. He said the pilot held the plane level on the runway, which runs parallel to a highway, but there was not enough runway for aborting the takeoff and the big aircraft rolled over the lip of the ravine. Ellis said the passengers did not panic, but some of the in- j ured were moaning. The rear emergency door was jammed, he said, but the front door and lhe doors over the wings opened. Ellis said one crew member in the rear or the plane appeared to be badly hurt and could not help passengers leave the aircraft. The ·airline spokesman said the tail section broke otf and the wings were damaged. Airport workers and firemen doused the wings with foam to prevent the fuel tanks from catching fire and exploding. The accident occurred at abOut 8:15 a .m. The plane bad arrived earlier Crom Ottawa. Newport-Mesa Schools Sued In Damage Trustees of the Newport.Mesa Unified School District have been sued for $72,000 by a Costa Mesa couple who claim school construction is responsible for property damage to their home. Mike J . and Diana S. Mustafa, 249 E. Wilson St .. Costa Mesa. claim in their Orange County Superior Court lawsuit th~t a re· t aining wall built at nearby Lindbergh Elementary School held back water to the point that it overflowed on to their back yard last Feb. 10. They allege that the resulting nood inflicted damage on their property and that the school dts· trict had been warned by them of the situation as long ago as 1969. Mrs. Arbiso was the wife o( P aul Arbiso, 83, said to be the Qlde.st living_ na~ve of San Juan Capistrano. He is a gardener at the Mission and each monU.ng rings the mission bell. Stansbury said Black threatened at least one other person with a gun before be went to the Arbiso bome. He said it is known that Black became angry with Mrs. Arbiso because the victim's niece ended their common law relationship by moving out of Black's home and into her aunt's home. Stansbury said Mrs. Arbiso and Black had quarreled on several occasions prior to the E'roa Page AJ TENANTS. • passsucbsavingsbacktolenants. back to tenants. But Trevor Grimm, m ember or the board of directors of the Apartment Owners Association of Los Angeles County, and Howard Ruby, president of the Coalition for Hous ing and spokesman for the statewide Western Mobile Home Associa· lion, both attacked a proposed Beverly Hills ordinance increas- ing apartment owners license fee s and other si mi lar measures. Grimm said the fee hike would in effect wipe out any savings apartment owners might have received fr.om Proposition 13, which limits property laxes to l percent of market value and rolls back assessments to 1975-76 levels. •·v oters wanted tax relier. not a lax shift." Grimm said. Grimm joined Jarvis and Ruby in urging landlords to pass net Proposition 13 savings to tenants but warned: "U there's no savings, we ask you to give no money back." Jarvis bas speht the past week in New York and Washington, D.C. in search of support for the proposed group. •· 1 haven 't d ecided yet whether we would have two or· ganizations, one a lax group and the other a political eroup," Ja rvis said. · The 75-year-old landlords as· sociation director bas gathered national attention, appearing on ne twork television interview shows and the cover of Time magazine, since Proposition 13 won. landslide voter approval June 6. · I Still Missing AZUSA (AP> -Investigators combed through the rubble of an Azusa chemical plant over the week end, searching for one worker still missin g a fter sever al explosions and a fire that killed another worker and injured nine persons. Fro•PageAJ BROWN ••• Costa Mesa freeway, the proba- ble constitutionality of a new farm land bill. As usual, he often answered a question with a question of bis own. In most cases, Including the Costa Mesa freeway completion. he vowed ~o "look into i~ get something together.•• · His mother, Bernie, gave him a little motherly advice. Did he get enough sleep last nigbl7 Is that a new tie? Yet it was, he replied. She said he ought to get a new suit. too. Both men were given standing ovations at the Democratic Club evenL The senior Brown was on band to receive an award granted in 1975. Accepting the plaque, be com- mented that he had waited three years to pick it up "lo be SUN I really deserved it. .. His son, who was also given an award by the group, spoke without notes. touching on many of his well-known views about the necessity for limiting gov· ernmcnt. ''There's a hard lesson in rashionmg limits," he said. "Bu1. the limes are such that that's what our future will be." After the speeches, both men were mobbed by autograph seekers and they graciously • complied with each request. Leavin~ the dinner they were gre.eted by passersby. The former governor spotted some familiar faces and waded mto the crowd shaktnl.! hands. His son simply greeted the ap. plauding crowd. "What about abalone laws;· asked one man. "You going to change them?" ••What is that?" asked the pres- ent governor. "I don't know what it is." And he got into h.is blue Plymouth and was driven away. KOCM Owner S~t For Heart Surgery Ga r y Bur rill , o wner 0£ Newport Beach's radio station KOCM-FM, was scheduled to un- dergo open heart surgery today al Hoag Memorial Hospital. Burrill, active m many civic orga nizations, was listed in good condition prior to the surgery to replace portions of the artery leading into his heart. WHEN YOU COMBINE THE DESIGN TALENTS OF SEVEN INTERNATIONAL AWARD WINNING JEWELERS- I \ ' T~E RESULTS SPEAK FOR THEMSELVES. ASshown- 18 Karat Gold Cube Cluster Ring with diamonds. By lander, twice winner of the Oscar for jewelry design -the OeBeers Diamonds International Award "'995 127 Fashion Island, Newport Center, Newport BN~h Telephone: (114) 644·0501 • Saddleback EDITION * * VOL. 71 , NO. 177, !J SECTIONS, 30 PAGES Afternoon N.Y.Stoeks TEN CENTS 3 Killed • m Air Canada Crash Armed Forces Rebel in Yemen BEIRUT, Lebanon <AP) - President Salem Robaye Ali of South Yemen resigned today after army and air force units rebelled in that nation, the only Marxist-governed republic in the oil-rich Arabian Peninsula, the Iraqi ne"'~ agency reported. The news agency said in a dis- patch from the South Yemen capitol of Aden that the central committee of the National Front, the country·s hard-hne, Carter Use Of P lane Draws F ine WASlllNGTON <AP) -The case ot Jimmy Carters pres· ident1al campaign use of a Geor g ia bank ':> airplane, courtesy of old friend Berl Lance, has been settled by the Federal Elections Commission by fining C<irter's campa ign committee Sl ,200 and the bank ss.900 . pro-Soviet ruling body, accepted Ali 's resignation and s tripped him of all other posts. It said he resigned after a day. long bombardment of the pres- idential palace in Aden. Observers in Beirut said the rebels apparently hoped to take advantage or unrest resulting from the assassination two days ago of the president of neighbor· ing North Yemen. He was killed by a bomb in the briefcase of a South Yemen diplomat. An earlier Iraqi dispatch said artillery and air force plan~s pounded the presidential palace in the Aden suburb of Al Tawahi. But it said the "people's militia" of the Na· tional Front took control of key intersections in Aden, the airport road and the high"'ay to Al Tawahi. and street fighting broke out between army reg- ulars and militiamen an a sub urb nearthe airport "Thick palls of smoke spiraled from Al Tawahi where the mur. fl ed thud of heavy guns was <See YEMENI, Page AZ> Enrollme n t U p Seville Daredevils Chuck Jones in car above seemed as· ~urcd of at least a photo finish Sunday in the seventh annual Grand Prix of the Seville llomeowners Association in Mis- sion Viejo. His racer was the only one s porting a camera. The winner was Dave Romo of Laguna Niguel. below. with his shiny number eight. He also won award for best design. At Least IOOMore Injured TORONTO <AP> -An Air Canada DC9 jetliner skidded off a runway on takeoU and crashed into a ravine al Toronto lntema· tional Airport today, killing three people and injuring at least 100 others among the 107 aboard, authorities reported. The twin-engine jet, on a domestic flight; "fell s traight down just like going over a cliff," passenger Bobby Gimby, a bandleader dubbed "Canada's Pied Piper," told reporters. He suffered only minor cuts. A Canadian transportation de· partmcnt spokesman said the plane plunged about 30 feet into the ravine. A witness said it broke into three pieces, but no fire was reported. Officials at a nearby hospital where some or the injured were taken sa.id at least eight were seriously hurt. An Ai'r Canad._ spokesman said an earlier report that one or the plane's two rear -mounted engines lost power was not con- firmed. Some passengers said a tire blew ou t, but that also was not immediately determined, spokesman Brock Stewart said. The civil penalt1\'.!s were agreed to by all parties <iftcr the Carter committee und the Na tional Bank of Georgia m1tially pleaded that th~ campaign's failure to reimburse the bank for five flights was a bookkeeping oversight and not a willful viola- tion of law. Saddleback College Gets Bail-out Fund Passenger Herb Ellis of Boston said the jetliner, Flighl 189 bound for Winnipeg and Van- couver with 102 passengers and five crew members aboard, was close to its takeoff point when he ' heard what sounded like an ex- plosion -possibly the sound of a tire blowing out. The issue arose last summer during investigations into the af- fairs or Lance. who subsequently resi~n ed as Carter's budget d1rcctor and e<irl1er headed the Atlanta hank Lance acknowll'<lged that as bank pres· idenl hl· often made the aircraft available to favored customers. Carter ;imong them. and that " some fli ghts were made after the former Georgia governor had begun his pres idential quest. Ca rt <'r a id es later acknowledg<'CI that five short fli g hts, four in 1975 with Carter aboard and a fifth, in September 1976, for then Democratic Party Chairman Robert Strauss. were (See l.1\N(.E, Page 2) Saddleback College apparent· ly will r~eive enough money next year lo support a $17. l million "bare bones .. operations budget, but college officials must still grapple with increas- ing enrollment in the wake of re- duced funding under Propos1t1on 13. Trustees will meet at 8 pm today to consider latest income estimates following approval over the weekend of a so-called Proposition 13 "bail-o ut bill" in Sacramento. The bill provides community colleges a portion of the st ate's $5 billion aid to local govern- ments. District Business Manager Roy Barletta said today officials CUS D Meeting Set On Budget 'Cuts' TY. o special meei.ings of the Capistrano Unified School Dis· trict board arc planned this week to eliC'1t Crom taxpayers s uggested cuts which would bring the 1978-79 district budget in lme with reduced property tax re- venues The first board meeting this week Is S<.'hcdulcd tonight in the gymnasium at Capistrano \'alley High School, 26301 Via F.scolar 1n Mission VieJO. A second meeting 1s planned on Wednesday m the cafeteria at San Clemente High School, 700 Avenue Pico in San Clemente. Both meetings will start at 1:30 p.m. Al a similar meeting last Thursday at Dana Hills High School in Dana Point, teachers and other members of an au- dience estimated at 800 people, advised the school board to re- duce administrative expenses and make certain school services and programs, like bus transportation, music a nd athletics, . self supporting. Su perintend ent J erome Thornsley said that despite the s tate 's e m e r gency aid, the Capistrano Unified District will have to trim an estimated $3.3 million from its $35 million budget in order to compensate for property tax revenue losses r es ulting from passage o r Proposition 13. are still using figures they came up with ror projeded income but expect lo gel rigures from state offices today. "Our trustees are most anx- ious to have the most updated in- formation:· Barletta said. "At this point. we're anticipating an $18.8 million budget." I le said the district might also get extra dollars from a savings program initiated when passage of the controversial Jarvis-Gann property tax limitation initiative seemed "imminent." But, Barletta said, the district could lose funds depending on a coun ty tax assessor 's decision over apportionment to the com- munity college of a portion of the one percent allowable taxes under Propos it10n 13. The new law sets a one per- cent of market value ceiling on taxes that can be collected from a property owner. ·'That <the $18.8 million budget estimate> can go up or down 1( our local apportionment turns out different from the fi gure we used ... Barletta said. The business manager said college officials would seek ex· tra state aid to augment a build· 1ng prog ram including Irvine's north campus -un- dertaken to meet rising enroll- ment demands. ''We're facing an increased enrollment," Barletta said. "All conservative estimates project an enrollment inerease over the next several years." lie said college officials were estimating a S29 million budget prior to passage of Proposition 13. Thal budget would have in- cluded $8 to $10 million in so- called "capital projects, .. build- mg programs such as the north <See BUDGET, Page A2) . Nixon to Game? .. Angels Exp ect Him Tonight Form<'r president Richard'· Nixon is expected to attend tonight's ball game at the Anaheim Stadium, but if he doesn't show up, maybe Gerald Ford will. ·'The Secret Service was checking out the s tadium last week and its our guess that Mr. Nixon plans to be there tonight." sai d Mel Franks, Angels spok~man. ''Carter is in Texas and t\'{ord hasn't been here before~ so Nixon seems likely - ~spec tally since he has been here before." Bock mts .Record Low If the former president does attend tonight's game between the Angels and the Kansas City Royals, he and his party will be seated in a box. which can ac rommodate about a dozen peo- ple, Frank said .. MTS. Ntxon camt' to a game last year,'' said Franks. "We TOKYO CAP> -The American dollar, which hit a record low today and has declined 25 percent in v against the Japanese yen in less than 10 months, ls not wo ougb to buy a glass or beer in Tokyo's fashionable ping district. It won't even buy a cup of coHee, or a cheap enir. The rail or the dollar and other foreign currencies in relation to the strong yen, however, has not helped Japanese consumers buy 1mport<..>d goods at lower prices, largely because distributors want to keep the pnces high. ONE IMPORTER OF U.S. MANUFACTURED cosmetics has said he would like to bring down the price or bis goods but hls Japanese distributors \\!lll not let him. "Our distributors light any attempt al price erosion because they want to glve laree kickbacks to Lbelr retailers," said Lbe American Import.er, who asked not to be named. Klckb:acb to retailers are LradlUonal, and le1al, in Japan. Consumtt groups occasionally have protested lbat kickbacks make al unattractive for retailers to pusb lower priced Items. THE DOLLAR HIT RECORD LOWS ON the Tokyo fortlgn ex· <'hange market today, dropplnc to 204.SO yen and closln1 at 206.25 I Traders and economists blame the sUde on Japan's huge trade sur- pluses, burgeoning U.S. trade deficits and American inflation. Another factor is the expectation that the dollar surplus in Tokyo will increase toward the end of the month. Al the hotel rate or 202 yen -Lbe rate of exchange for tourists is always less than what traders receive on the foreign exchange market -the cheapest mug of beer at the Munchen Beer Hall was $1.73. Coffee at a shop on what is called Firth Avenue Alley was $2.48. And o set of five. postcards picturing geisha 1irls sold for $1.49 at a shop near the rmperial Hotel. Jn New York City, a mug of American beer averages ln price from $1 to $1.50 and a cup or coffee between 25 cents an(! $1. SEVENTV·FIVF. CENTS WOULD BtJY a small packata or American.made candy al an outdoor stall tn tront of I.be Hankyu department store in Tokyo. The pack .. e ha1 printed on it ln English: "Suggested retail price 20 cent.a." The Japanese 1t1n oi. the stall reads: "Sorry, only one pack per customer." A 1urvey by the Japanae Mlnlatry of tntefnatlonat Trade end Industry published last week coot1luded that the dollar'1 declln has not r ulted in much decrease tn the r tall price or most Im· Ported good.I. (Ser DOLLAR FAILS. Pa,e AZ) ,> I • put her in a box right near the press. but we draped it orf. so the press never knew she was there." Tonight's game, scheduled to start at 5:10 p.m .• is nationally televised -but not in this area. ' Tax Reform Eyed LAS VEGAS. Nev. <AP> - Tax reform, burned Into the public con.'4ciousness two weeks ago when caurorrua voters over- whelmingly endorsed a $1 blllion property tax cut inltiatlve, ts a major ls.1ue facing some 3,SOO delegates u the meeting of the nation's largest AFL-CIO union opens today. The union's mem· bcrshlp In California was hll hard by passage or Proposition 13. He said the pilot held the plane level on the runway, which • runs parallel to a highway, but there was not enough rumvay ror aborting the takeoff and the big aircraft rolled over the Lip of the ravine. CSee PLANE, Page AZ> • Aid D e tails Awaite d By Trustees Saddleback Valley Unified School District trustees expect details at a special m eeting tonight on anticipated school support following passage of a so-called Proposition 13 "bail- out bill" over the weekend in Sacramento. Superintendent Richard Welte said today officials still do not have concrete budget figures but are anticipating a $28.8 million budget -a $7 million drop from the ,current budget. Welte expects to present a ten· tat1ve budget to trustees at their regular meeting Wednesday in school distract offices. The tentative budget must Oe filed with county school officials by July 1. Trustees also will hear a re- port on the Ali so School Im· provcmenl program at tonight's meeting. The meeting will t>egin at 7 p. m . in district offices, 25631 Diseno Dr. in Mission Viejo. Co ast Weath er Night and morrung low. clouds with sunny afler- n o on Tues day. Lows tonight 58 lo 63. Highs Tuesdty near 70 at the beaches to mid·70s inland. INSIDE TODA 'Y . Ir's hard to find o Republican who'll odmU he is running /or the praaicUncy, uet there ia no $hortllgc of candldales .to be condfdotes. Story Page AB. • SB Mona.t JJM 28. 197' .,,,,..,..,uspect Sought SJC Slaying range County Sherlrf's of· .._rs ccatinued today lo seek a tn they describe as a prime spect in the murder of rmellt.a Arbiso or San Juan ~C.pistrano. " lnvestigator Willie Stansbury ntified the suspect as Paul V)tenjamin Black. 47, of Midway City, who, he said, was seen at !Idle Arbiso home shortly before .. t&e k il.llng. • Mrs. Arbiso, 64, was shot to •death in her home at 31421 La r Callera. Officers said the shoot- tng occurred shortly alter' Black as seen to enter the home: Mrs. Arbiso was the wire o( Paul Arbiso, 83, said lo be the ..Q.ldest livi~ native of San Juan Qpistrano. He is a gardener at the Mission and each morning .rings the mission bel I. Stansb ury sa id B l ack threatened at least one other person with a gun before he went \o the Arb1so no me. He said it Is known that Black became angry with Mrs. Arbiso because the victim's nlece ended their copimon Jaw relatJonship by moving out of Black's home and into her aunt's home. Stansbury said Mrs. Arblso and Black had quarreled on several occasions prior to the shooting. Members of the Arbiso family said rosary will be recited for the victim at 7 :30 tonight in the o ld mission. Mass will be celebrated there at 9 a .m. Tues· day with interment lo follow at Holy Sepulcher Cemetery ln El Modena. Mrs. Arblso was a Jong time member of the San Juan Capistrano Historical Society and a popular parish worker at the old mission. She is survived by her husband, Paul; a daughter, Marie Rodman of J.,.aguna Niguel; a stepdaughter, Alice G asteleum or Anaheim, four brothers, Frabk, Louie, Eugene and Raymond O'Campo all of Santa Ana and 11 grandchildren. Carter Sinks ~ !:( Rating, Confidence Drop ·NEW YORK tAP) -President Carter's ability to ''inspire confidence'' in the White House and his overall job rating both have dropped during the past j'ear. according to the latest Harris Survey . The s urvey, taken among 1,500 Amen cans between June 15 and June 17, found the perception of Carter's inspirational ability. ~ad rE;versed in one , <'<l r. from a 62·31 percent pos1t1on rating last June to ~Iii 29 per cent negative rating this month .. W1thoul a reservoir of faith in him personally. 1l is go111g to be tough for the president to improve his standing on performance in office in any quick or ensy way." the survey report concluded Carter's overall rating stood at 65-32 percent negative at the end or the latest survey period, a turnabout from the 65-32 percent positive rating he had in May 1977, according to the survey From Page A.I ~ ~DOLLAR FALLS .... 0( 22 items &urveyed by the ministry, 14 fell in price to some extent. but none by the dollar's decline or 25 percent Kerosene, as an example, was reported 4.6 percent cheaper and colQ.r film 19 'percent ~· The pnce of Imported handbags was up 18.9 percent and one • Ginza store offered a French designed monogrammed lady's bag 1or the equivalent of $1,163 From Page A J JIUD GET •.. campus and a new classroom bu1ld in~ for the collci::e·s main campus in M\i>i>1on Viejo. Barletta said most cuts Jn the $18.8 mi llion post .J arvis budget would be m the <:ap1tal projects area. ' He could not say whether trustees would approve a ten- tali ve budget for next year's operation tonight. He indicate-cl the board might set a special meeting because the tentative budget must be in the hands of county school of. fklals by July 1. Toni~ht's meeting will lake pl ace in Room 105 or the college library at 28000 M arguerilc Parkway in Mission Viejo. Liz 'Doing Good ' LOS ANGELES CAP> -Ac- treas Elizabeth Taylor. 46, is ex- pe~ted to be released from a hos pital this week after treat· m ent for pneumonilis, a hospital s pokeswoman said. She was list- ed in good condition Sunday at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, said spokeswoman Tess Gr1Hin. OAANO[ COAST DAILY PILOT nw °"-c.e.nr o.tur l"fltl, ~·· -·~ "'""' =~= ...... ~ .. ":"'=..:.:::: ~··""""d Mo"d~r '"""W«lft ,,.._.., •or (ft'\la :'!:" v:.~:.=~ =·= ":~:;-;, SAC C Se ts Prop. 13 Proposals Saddleback Area Coordinating Council's executive board is· scheduled lo make proposals at its meeting tonight regarding school budgeting cuts following approval of Proposition 13. The board also wlll take a look at Saddleback Valley Unified School District residents' drive to recall trustees George Henry, Ca r ol Neustadt and Mary Phillips. a SACC officer said. Also scheduled for consider a· lion is an 11-point guideline document regarding "affordable housing" in the $addleback Valley. The proposal is to be forwarded to the County Board of Supervisors for consideration an forming policy for low· and moderate-cost housing projects, the officer satd. The board is to meet at 7 p.m . in the south Or ange County of. fice at the corner of Moulton Parkway and Lake Fores t Drive. 1 Still Missing AZUSA CAP> -Investigators com bed through the rubble ol an Azusa chemical plant over the weekend, sear<:hin' for one worker slill miss&n g aCter several explosions and a lire that killed another worker and injured nine penQ11s. APW~ W RECKAGE OF AIR CANADA PLANE LIES IN RAVINE NEAR TORONTO AtAPORT At Least Three People Kiited. 100 Other• Injured Aa Craft Skids Off Runway General Cites Need To Maintain CIA By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of IN D•llf Pllol Sblf Does the United States need a CIA? If you're Lt Gen Vernon Walters, former deputy director of the intelligence agency, the answer, obviously, is going to be yes • Wa lters, who ser ved under four CIA directors from 1972 to 1976, came to Newport Beach last week to address a meeting sponsored by the Navy League, UC Irvine Industrial Associates and the Greater Irvine In· dustrial League The retired general prefaced his remarks by telling the SO au· dience members that most of his military career was spent in in· tclligence work "Obviously I thjnk ;.ve need something like the CIA , but that opinion is not based on m y lifetime of service,•· he com· mented Walters. a large man with a ruddy facC' toppped by a thatch of steely eray hair, punctuated! b1s s peech wtth jokes and quota· lions from historians He deliver ed his s tatistics from memory, citing evidence lo s upport his theory that in telligence gathering -spying - is this country's primary deter rent to war "Knowledge is an effective de· terrent against surprise," he said "Effective i ntelligence gathering makes arms limita- li o n agreements po ssible because we're in a situation to know that there isn't going to be any cheating " The general said he believes the U S is at its most perilous point in history 'We have less time and less geography separating us from our e ne m ies and we have weaker allies than at any other point in our his tory," he decla red The enemy Walters referred to is Russia, where "military forces are built up far in excess of what would be needed to deter aggression. ''Why?" Walters suggested a look at Africa would answer his own question. The Russians are employing what he described as a salami tactic in gaining con- F rom P a g e A J YEMENI ... heard," the dispatch said. "The international airport was closed to traffic and telecommunica· lion with the outs ide world was cut orr. "Aden authorities advised tourists to s tay off the streets and civil servants to leave tht>1r offices and stay hom e until further notice." trol of the continent. ''One slice by itseif is not enough for us to get alarmed about," he said in explaining the tactic. He said the situation is analogous lo Germany's ag- gression in Europe before the outbreak or World War II. Great Britain and France allowed those aggressions to occur without declaring war until the takeover of Poland. Hiller bad expected the British and French would take the same non-combative course. and found himself in a "war of misdirection" when the two countries decided to act, Walters said. IJamages Aimrded HAMILTON. Ontario <AP> The O nta rio S upreme Cou rt ha s aw<1rded a llamillon man nearly S9,000 in damages and costs because a Pepsi- Cola bottle cap blew off and hit hlm in the eye. Samuel Mcrcant1 , 30. won his suit against Peps1- Cola Co. of Canada and a H a milton restaurant owner after a cat<1ract formed on his eye one month after the accident. Mercanti said an e mployee or his garage got the soft drink Crom the restaurant. Ile said that when he started to open it, the ca p blew ofC and struck him in the eye. Policewoman Kills Spouse DETROIT CAP) -f\ policewoman shot and killed her husband during an argument over her line of work, police said. Officer Mary Jones, 39. told detectives she grabbed her gun from under her .mattress and fired twice at her hus band. Leslie. 30, after he struck her in· the face Sunday. Police said the shooting culminated a long.standing argument over Mrs. Jones' de· cision to become a police officer in May 1977. The couple·s three child ren were asleep at the time of the shooUng. f~ro,,. Page 1\ J P LANE ... Ellis said the passengers did not panic, but some of the in- jured were moaning. The r ear emergency door was Jammed. he said, but the front door and the doors over the wings opened. Ellis said one crew member in the rear of the plane appeared to be badly hurt and could not help passengers leave the aircraft. The airline s pokesman said the tail sectfon broke off a nd the wings were da maged. Airport workers and firemen doused the wings with foam to prevent the fuel tanks from catching fire and exploding. The accident occurred at about 8: 15 a.m. The plane had arnved earli<!r from Ottawa. Times' Mesa Press roo m Hit by Fire A pressroom fire Sunday even- ing at the Costa Mesa head· quarters of the Los Angel<:s Tim es caused min1m<1J f1rC' damage. hut quantities of paper s upplies were ruined by a sprinkler system that prevcnled the blaze from spreading. Costa Mesa firemen said today. Costa Mesa Battalion Chier Gary Golson said the exact cause of the 6:04 p.m. blaze 1s under investigation. The fire started in one of four presses at the facility at 1375 Sunflower Ave .. and spread to ceiling ar~a air ducts. Structural damage was con· fined to a portion of the 45 foot - high ceiling, Golson said. Costa Me s a fir e m en responded with two engines and a truck company, but found the blaze controlled by the bu1ld- mi(s sprinkler system. The amount of water damage to supplies and presses was still being tallied this morning. The fire delayed printing of lhe Orange County a nd San Diego Monday morning editions of The Times. Gays P a r a d e In San Diego SAN OTEGO f AP J -An estimated 700 men and women marched through San Diego m the fourth annual Gay Pride parade Crelated story, AS >. A rallv at Halboa Park on Sun- day ended What s evera l clcscribcd as "lhe 2ay Fourth of July.·· Speakers criticized a proposed state constitutional amendment to prohibit homosexual teachers. 1,000 Line Up· For Jobs NEW YORJ( (AP> -After five days spent waltll\I In line (or a shot at a job. about 1,000 New Yorlcers rot applicatJom to- day for one o some :500 appren- ticeships. Just the chance of employ. m e nt brought many to the streets where they set up camp and waited up to five days out· s ide electrical and plumbing un- ion offices. But the long wait may have been unnecessary as in some cases the number Qf applications available considerably exceeded the number of would-be craft workers on the lines. Al the Electrical lnd~try Center in Queens apprentice training dJrector David Smith said there were only about 1,000 in line when the doors opened an hour earlier than scheduled at 8 a.m. Smith said 1,250 applicants were needed before an aptitude test may be given for 500 in· dividuals. Those who get the ap- prenticesh.ips enter five years of on-the-job training, starting at S3.90 per hour and tAorking up to $6.66 a n hour. A bout 80 m en and women were in line outside the head· quarters of Plumbers Local 2 in Manhattan when applicat ions were made available sometlme between 8 and 9:30 a.m., accord. ing lo Pete Marzec, apprentice instructor. The union planned to hand oul 500 applications for 50 Jobs, and late arrivals s imply walked in. No. 89 in one line, Denny Kuperman. 1s a pre-law major at. City College of New York. He -..aid he was in line because ''1 figure my chances or having a future here are a lot better than in law school. You either have to be in the top JO in your law class or ~o to Yale or Harvard to suc· ceed." Th,e unions are looking for peo- ple between the ages or 18 and 23 \\ho h ave high school diplomas. The electrical union has agreed to enroll 100 women among the 500 apprcl)t ices -the first women ever to join that union. ·'This is a once in a lifetime c·hance." said Cynthia Long of Manhattan, No. 64 in line. "We're making progress against sexism m the trades." Some of the women com· plained that the men in line spat at them or broke bottles, accus •• ing the women of "depriving" men or jobs. GIRAFFE BABY .POSI11UMOVS MA RWELL HALL, England <AP> -Victor, the giraffe who collapsed while trying to mate and died last September because he coul dn't get back on his feet, has left a baby daughter, Marwell Park Zoo officials say. The baby, Victoria, was born Saturday at the zoo. Vi ctor had 1 m pref:'nated her mother, Drib- b les, five months before his fat.al attempt with another or his three spouses. Locusts Check ed NA IROBI, Kenya CAP> Almost half of the SO giant locusl ~"arms in Ethiopia, Djibouti and Somalia have been checked b y aerial s praying of insec-- t1 cides. the Desert Locus t Con- trol Org:rnization for Eastern Al rica said. The aiency said Ali, who has headed South Yemen's leftist government since 1969, met Sun- day night with members of his presidential council. leaders of the National Front for Political Unity, the Mar:<ist government party, and leaders or other )cf· tist political groups to discuss charges that they were responsi- ble for t he assassination of North Yemeni President Ahmed al Ghashmi. WHEN YOU COMBINE THE DESIGN T1\LENTS OF SEVEN· , INTERNATIONAL AWARD WINNING JEWELERS-- THE RESULTS SPEAK FOR THEMSELVES~ ASshown- .._ ...... ,,..,. .. ca. .. ,.,.._ ............. ti... •• _,._ s.1 .. e.n -~' ,,.. ""'..., ,.,..i ... 1.,. ,...... II "' m l'ltf4 &oo• Fro•PageAI 18 Karat Gold Cube Cluster Ring with diamonds. By Lander, twice winner of the Oscar for jewelry design -the OeBeers Diamonds International Award ·' ~Coo&M---... ~tto<.i.-... _,._ --·· ... -·,..., He•··°""' "<•....._ .. , ___ __ TMMHl(- (ltHO' .,......&--.. ....,., ...... °""'"··"-_ ...... &'6 ... .--........ ... ._. a OSskctl v...,~ l9tt IA--.... Oillca,.._ om... --=i:.'t:~~~=-. ..._e.ec.., llttO...........tif'M! Tllfephot1•fM4)~ Onlllfled AdvertJllllf IU-M71 ~' .,., .. ,_Ofllc• A14J10 ~J91\C--. ---ef'r-~-cc= •. ~ n,.':;,.r... t11~=~.,~~:;,;:,: ....,..._, ... _ ..... ""!f! ,. .... c.. .. _,...., '""' .. "'" ···"·~~·~ .. ..., •• ,,,., u ,. =::..•,:::!....:..,, INMMfl Mll'l .. f • LANCE PLANE ••• at leut par1.1olly connected with the campaiJen and should have been paid for. It ls unlawful for a corporation to make aervtces or equipment ~vailablo to a pollticaJ candidate without relm· bursement. The Carter tampallft COlllmll· teo sent tho bank a check for more than Sl,100 tut Au~uat to cover the coat of the fllahla, moat or which were within Georata·s borders. The bank ro· lunded a~t $300 ol lhal after recalculaUn1 lhe experues. Lance tntifled that ho onco contacted a campaian alafCer about teimbur1ing the bank, but the isauc aomebow wu roraot· ten. PresldenUal PreM tecrfiaty Jody Powell and others alao have snJd the matter wu an oversight. When the cnse wns taken UJ> last year by the FEC. the bank argued that long·departed Lance was the only ocncer who knew or the Olaht.s and hence the firm abould not now ht' p unished tor. contributions of which lt was not even aware. The "ronclllntlon agreement .. reached with the FEC, formally announced today, 1tlouh1tes that neither side admits any de· liberate wron1doln1. However. the FEC said "the fatlu~ ol the Carter commlttee to pay for the use of the • • • aircraft unlll Auauat. ltTT, constituted lts re- ccl1>t of ln·lclnd contrlbutlon.s, ln vtolatton" of the Federal Elff· lion CampallJl Act. ' l • s995 127 Fashion Island • NewPort Center. Newport Beach Telephone: (714) 644 0501 L > Dally Piiot Staff ~ LAGUNA'S JACK VINCENT TAKES A TRIP TO OZ 'There's a Lot More Than a Tin Man and Scarecrow' Wizard Whiz Wllector Seeks Oz Books By STEVF. MITCH ELL 01 IN D~oly PllOI St.ttl For Jack Vincent. discovering a first ed1t1on or L . Frank Baum 's "The Wi zard oC Oz" 1s tantamount to finding the Dead Sea Scrolls Vincent is a collector of Oz books. Has been since 1957. And the Laguna Beach mail order businessman has three firs t editions or Baum 's most famous Oz book. two or which he would sell to yotl for $450 a copy. ··sure that's cheap, .. he says before you ask "But these two aren't m good cond1t1on." The one he won't sell you 1s in much better shape, copies of which go for around $2,000, he said. But Vincent would much r ather talk about the characters of Oz. the various authors and ii· lustrators and the land of Oz described in the 40 o r so published Oz books "That's mor(' exciting. he says. than talking about his 300·book c·olkction worth in the neighhorhoo<I of S20,000 "It's a rc:.tl shame most kids never get past Baum ·s first book ." Vincent says. shaking his head. ''Tht•rc's a lot mon• to Oz than a Tin Man and a Scarecrow" But it's the first book . published in 1900, that draws all the attention. mostly because of the 1939 film starring July Garland. Kids can nam(' her dog, Toto. but have never experienced Shag~y Man. Pollychrome Cthe Rainbow's Oau~hter l. Captain Bill. a one legged sailor . or The Gump, a being comprised of Shark Hunt Expa1uled NEW YORK (AP> Searchers m more than 50 boa ts c risscrossed the waters off Long Island's Montauk Point looking for a great white shark that local fi s he rmen say towed a 40·1oot woode n boat some 20 miles. T he s hark got away Pri· day when it broke the 1.650-pound nylon line a(ter a 14·hourstruggle. Over the week e nd , almost all of the S400·a· day charter fis hing boats in this Long Island com- munity went 25 to 30 miles off shore either to look for the shark or fish for him. sofas and pillows tied together \\1th a head made of antlers and wings of palm leaves. "The magic powder of life was sprinkled over the sofa creature and it became alive," Vincent exp lamed. Then there's the Ozm a, the good Queen of Emerald City and a variet y of good and bad witches a nd, of cour~e. the Munchkins. And there ·s been almost as· many authors as characters in the s ix decades of Oz books published since Baum 's first fie· lion masterpiece. Baum died at his Hollywood home. called "Ozcol, · afte r publishing 14 of the books Ruth Plumty Thompson took up w~ere Ba~m left off. signing with Baum s publishers to con- tinue the series A new T ho mpson Oz book appeared each year from 1921 through 1939 Then John R. Neill, who had illustrated all but the first Oz book, 'added three more to the series. with others published by ,Jack Snow, Rachel Cosgrove and later Eloise Jarvis McGraw and h('r d aug hter Lauren McGraw Wagner Ironically, Baum wanted to knock off the kid stuff after his seventh book and get into other interests. "He got tired of writing the books. but lost money on plays he wrote and other books. so he went back to Oz." Vincent said Vincent's collection includes first edition copies of about 25 of the 07. books, but he doesn't stop after finding just one copy He 's got "reading'' copies "<those you can handle and read I as well as first editions. which he carefully keeps from his two daughters' reach. He also has copies of Baum's other books. many published un- der pseudonyms such as Laura Bancroft. John Estes Cooke. Suzanne Metcalf snd Capt. Hugh Fitzgerald. "He wrote some books under the name of Edith Van Dyne that were appealing to teen-age girls," Vincent said. "They were equivalent to a sort of early Nancy Drew book." The Laguna Beach man is moving soon to Big Bear where he said he m ight --just might - open a restaurant·hotel called "Ozdom Lodge Hotel." It would be staffed with waitresses dressed as Oz c hara cter s, with h is Oz paraphernalia and memorabilia sca ttered t hroughout the est ablishment. But then, he shrugs, that's a horse of a different color. Onassis Rumors Nuclear Damages Curbed WASHINGTON <A P ) -The U S Supreme Court unanimous- ly upheld a federal law today imposing a $560 million ceiling on damages that nuclear power- plant operators would have to pay after a major nuclear acci- denl. The justices said the Price- A n de r s o n Act, p assed by Congress in 1957 lo encourage the private development or nuclear electric J?OWer. does not violate any constitutional rights of potential victims of nuclear ac- cidents. Wri ting the court's main opi· nion, Chief Justice Warren E. Burger said the 1957 law bore a rational relation sh ip t o Congress' concern for stimulat- ini:: private industry's involve- ment an the nuclear energy field. "That the accommodation struck may have profound and far·rcachmg consequences ... provides all the more reason for this court to defer to the con- gressional judgment unless it is demonstrably arbitrary or irra- tional," Burger said. Today's decision reversed a r uling by U.S. District Judge James B. Mc Millan in a case from Charlotte, N.C. T hat ruling stemmed from a lawsuit filed by the ERvironmen- tal Study Group against Duke Power Co. involving two of the firm 's power plants under con- struction in the Charlotte area. They are the Catawba Nuclear Station on Lake Wylie, about 15 miles southwest of Charlotte, and the McGuire Nuclear Sta- tion on Lake Norman , about 17 miles northwest of the city. The e nvironmental g roup challenged the Price-Anderson Act that, as amended, fixes S560 m1lhon as the m aximum all persons could recover for injury. d.Sf!t h or property damage in the event of a major nuclear acci- dent. Judge Mc Millan ruled in a 61 ·page dec1s1on that the liabili- ty limit law unconstitutionall y infringes on individuals' rights or equal protection and due pro- cess. The Suprem e Court today re- JCc t cd McMillan's reasoning, but left unanswered the question of whether the liability limit represents an infringement on the constitutional right to be compensated for lost property The court·s decision, not total- ly unexpected. is an important one a nd a s1gmf1cant defeat for tho!>c foes of expanded reliance on nuclear energy H ad the court upheld McMillan's ruling, the dec1s1on could have caused s ubstantial delay m the development of nuclear-powe red electrtc generating plants Under the Prtce·Anderson Act, power companies must pa:. at least the first S60 m1ll1on from private. commerc1allv available li ability ins urance The federal government must pa)' the re mainder in case or accident Had the liability ceiling been lifted . nuclear power firms could have been faced with 'astly in creased insurance costs \ Reciders Say 'Cul Welfare' SACRAMENTO (AP > -tr the readers of the Sacramento Union had thei r way, the forced economies of Proposition 13 would come fi rst out of welfare and last out or law enforcem ent. The newspaper said in a poll published Sunday that 1,367 readers completed queslionaires listing their runding priorities for 18 local programs. Recommended for the most mass i ve budget cu t s arter welfare were capital outlays - that is. '1ew building -and m a nagement personne l. CIA Plot Cited BANGKOK, Thailand CAP) - Cambodia, fighting a lingering border war with Vietnam claimed Sunday it had smashed a recent plot by Hanoi and the CIA to topple the Cambodia n government m Phnom Penh. Christina 'Won't Wed' MOSCOW <AP> -Tanker rnillionairess Christina Onassis s aid today that a British n ewspaper report s he will marry a Soviet bureaucrat Is •·absolutely preposterous.'• "I never heard anything so st u pid, and I don't know what the hell the~e talking about," the 27-year..Old daughter of the late AMstoUe Onassis said when reached by telephone at her suite in the Intourlst Hotel. "I 'm here on. tourism and business. and I'll be leaving ln a -few days.'' The London Daily Express, in a report from a correspondent in Moscow, reported that Mlss Onassis came to the Soviet capital lo marry 40-year ·old Nikolai Kaozov, the head of the tanker division of the Soviet freight organization Sovfrakht. An employee of Sovfrakht said no one of that name works for the organization, but a man named Sergei Kauzov recently resigned from the tanker division. In Athens, Onassis family sources also d~n1ed the EKpress report. They said ·Mtss Onassis' trip to the Soviet capital was "strictly business," to sign con- tracts with Sovfrakhl chartering seve ral o f her 300,000 supertankers tcrthe Russians. • . The sources. said Onassis ship- pmg companies chartered fi ve bulk.. carriers lo the Russians in 1976. M1's Onassis ~rrlved in the Russ.Ian capital during the weekend by train from Paris and \(lb m et at the st ation by a middle-aged man who look her away In a chaufreured car, the Express reported. The Dally Express s aid a friend of Miss Onassis told It she met Kaoiov In Paris. that he was divorced a week ago, and that they Md been carrying on a quiet romance for som e time. M lss Ona."sls has been mar- ried and divorcro twice. Monoay. June 26. 1978 o.ily Pi'-Slaff -OLD HOUSE BEING RESTORED AS SAVINGS AND LOAN SITE Santa Ana Landmark Formerly Housed Mortuary ,, •• .. Historical Site Spared·} Refurbishing Set for Century-old Bui/Jing i' ,: .. By KATHY CLANCY OI ti. Dally Piiot St•ll One of Orange County's his toric buildings has been spared the wrecker's ball The century-old former Smith Tuthill-Lamb Mortuary site \\a!'. built as a phys1c1an's res1denc(; in the 1880s an then sleepy Santa Ana That was an age when rural winds so m etimes piled tumbleweeds up over the home's second story windows, accord ing to a v1s1tor AND THE PROPERTY'S 116·foot-tall cedar tree became a city landmark, decorat ed each year to herald the Christmas season However, in recent years, the white.pillared bu1ld1ng, along with the cedars, Santa Ana's oldest pepper tree and a 70 year old magnolia tree, was slated for leveling lo make way for u 700 car Orange County Transit D1:s l rict commuter parking lot Today the stately home and its grounds have been saved from destruction But the century.old mortuary, occupant of the site since 1910, has departed INSTEAD, T HE mortuarv much to its owners chagrin has moved from the C1v1c Center to its other location al Westchff Chapel in Cosla Mesa Local residents and historians protested OCTD plans to level the property As a result, the $3 4 m1lhon parking garage was moved to land nt>xt door pre v1ousl)' occupied by a florist shop, coffee s hop and Santa Ana First Federal Savings a nd Loan Association By the end of lh1o; Yt>IJr. the former mortuary hom~ will be refurbished to i ts 1910 ap· pearance and serve as a !;avings and loan orftcc. THE STRUCTURE then "'-Il l be in place between Orange County government s new S8 3 million Hall of Administration and the yet-to bc·bu1lt OCTD parking garage. However, the house s former tenant isn't entirely happy with the arrangement. ' Mortuary owner Kirk Lamb ~ai~he \\'anted to buy the pro- perey he had been leasing from a Santa Ana businessman. But city officials said Lamb d1dn 't speak up in time. RIC H ARD GOBLIRSCH, manager of the Santa Ana Redevelopment Agency. said the city alread)' had completed ar· rnngcmcnts lo sell the site to Santa Ana First Federal before they learned Lamb was in- terested "We were never even offered the opportunity to buy,·· Lamb !>aid "We thought it was very unfairly and wrongly handled." Lamb added, "Even though I feel badly about having lost out in the battle to stay . . . I at· plaud the (savings associ . lion's) desire to retain a little b or history." I ASSOCIATION PRESIDE~ Clifford Benson said he is Cf · thusiast1c about plans for ~ s ite •, Additions to the building aee being removed, inside woodwodc refinis hed and mtenor areas opened up. he said. 1 The valuable trees will be rt- t amed, Benson continued, anlt the overall structure will be rt:. soled to its 1910 appearance. I Benson explained the associ1- lion for some ti m e had sought la new Civic Center site since Ufe exis ting offi ce would be leveJJd for the parking garage. r Bil.:e B11ilt for 12? .. ,., ........ /\. dozen members of the Chinese Acrobatic Theater re- hl'a rsc their cycle routine at the Royal Albert Hall in! London The acrobats are making their first appearance' outside China. ., • ... ••• ... , ,_ i.onoon the. or1gina1 golf jacke;t ... by i~ FOC Ill 'Jt: n•1 •.,) £a • ... JU9tl ~rf<Z.Ct for ell day wear comple.t1y washable. dacron end coUon ca.hbre. cloth a london res exclusive ave1lable.. m tan , \• l\lory ,ye.1!0v.t, , J navy, 1L grtz.en, I and demm bluit I requlars and longs. I \ I , \ lt.~\Qht ··_),;i wmdoruil<er 44 fashion Island, newport center 644-5070 , ' • II I • I ' I t ., ' _, I I I 1 ~- 114 DAILY l'!l\.Ot . -,..---------------------------------------~" Q Palaee of \'ersailles wiCla":~ Tom ~~~\' Bomb Blast Mw.rphine Destroys Art ' COMING OP AGE DEPI'. -The little gtiy who stood blgb up on bis movlne platform hardly looked UJte a cue for a gerlatrica ward. lie looked ;Young as ever, for that matter. VERSAILLES, France <AP> -A powerful b'omb planted behlnd • statue e~ploded early today in the historic Palace of Versailles, wreckil}g three rooms of Napoleonic art and damaging Jeven others in the ornate complex that is In one or the jewels of Freneh culture. A His eyes were clear and bright. The smile was UD• wrinkled. There wasn't even a noticeable droop to bis ears. And he was dancing and prancing to Hvely mUJlc. He was the same old Mickey ¥ouse, all right, doing bis special thing up at tbe Ma.lie Kingdom ln Anaheim. But this happened to be a apetial occasion for the Mick. He was on a noat surrounded by thousands of tiny dazzling lights shaped like his own famous bead and globe-like ears. He was in Disneyland's Main Street Electrical Pa rade. And the parade this summer is dedicated to him. MICKEY MOUSE, you see, will be SO years old in Nov· ember. Why, it seems like only yesterday that I was running down to the Saturday matinee and putting up my dime to watch Mickey race across the screen, sometimes shy; • sometimes confused, but always eluding perils and threats in the end. Surely it was only yesterday when my own offspring sat huddled in front or a flickering ttlack and white tube, lllmstlJ Aboard SQth Birthday Floo.t at Disneyland watchmg another bunch of kids prance on the screen in Mickey Mouse ears, chanting together in concert with the TV voices· "M·l·C K·E·~ M-oh-you·es-eeeeeee ... " As the Mouseketeers and their little star continued to enchant a new Reneration or voungsters on television, I can remember wondering to myself, "How much longer do you suppose that little mouse can keep on going? Why, he's as old as I am. . . " Well, that was a few years back. The oldest or my off· spring who was enchanted by bis video antics is now grown and married. The Mick, however, still has all his old vigor .and ap- peal to audiences old and young. You could Cell just by watching the youngsters or today when the mouse and his float came rolling by on Disneyland's main stem. There were cheers and wa ves and shouts of, .. Yea, Mickey!" How much longer can that mouse keep going, I asked myself, rubbing one or my aging, aching feet. guard was slightly injured . There were no reports or damage to the HaJI of Mirrors, where the World War I peace treaty was signed, or to the royal apart ments, the oper a house and the chapel that are the chief tourist attractions in the vast 17th century palace 11 mUes southwest of Paris. THREE MILITANT groups - two leftist a nd one Breton se p ara,li s t -claimed Faithful Contribute 'Fortune' J KIRKLAND, Wash. (AP) The faithful at Overlake Chris· lain Church rendered unto God in a big way -pouring Sl.6 million into the collection plate, their pastor said. Twenty off.duty s heriff's deputies were on hand Sunday to guard the offe ring a nd an armored car hauled it away. THE R EV. ROB E RT Moorehead said the total - taken in two collect1ons -was w1than Sl00,000 of the church's goal for a new building, after a contractor stood up at the end or the service and offered all the labor for the foundation. "We just challenge them (the congregation 1 to step out on fai t h and tr ust,.. Moorehead said. Some people in the generally we l l ·lO ·do congregation mortgaged their homes and yachts to raise money, he said. Others s igned pledges to pay during the next few months. TH E CONSTRUCTION plan calls for building a new 2,000· seat auditorium, a chapel and c lassrooms to handle the church's fast growing mem- bership. The church has grown from 13 members to 1.800 mem- bers in eight years, M:oor had said. FOREVER, YOU suspect . Mickey Mouse is a character of universal appeal. No wonder they honor him al Disneyland. He's the guy who made Walt Disney's magicland of Anaheim possible. And it's really nice to know a guy of your generation .vho is ageless. The "super coJlection" was announced three months ago. so t he faithful had time to mull '--------------------------_, • over what they would give lo the 1 bead in ·Maryland Boating Collision church. "Some brought their diamond rings, deeds to property and so m e sold their c ars and homes,·• Moorehead said. "We even had some people devote the ir year's sa lary. Some brought their trailers and rigs and some brought their life sav-ings.·· ANNAPOLIS, Md . <AP ) -Lee Troutner had enjoyed a steamed crab dinner and was giving his young son some pointers on navigation as they took a Jlesurely cruise on the Severn River. The t ranquility was shattered when a runabout plowed into their boat. ''I'm under the water cryini -worried about Timrriy. The screws of the other engine are turning right on top of us. I thought we were going to die," Troutner said of the ordeal that left one woman dead and another person hospitalized. The 35-foot Cabin cruiser and 28-root runabout collided near the mouth of the river , and both vessels sank almost im- mediately, authoritjes said. Anne F. Cissel, 40, of Wheaton, Md ., died after being trapped in the wreckage. HE SAID HUNDR EDS of church members participated in a 30-hour prayer vigil that ended Sunday morning. They prayed that their goal of a new church would be reached, he said. Troutner, 37, photographer for acting Gov. Blair Lee, his 13· vear-old son and nine other people were on the cruiser. Two people were on the runabout. The drive began three months ago, but the actual collection did not come until Su nda y. Moorehead said it was God's will that the church pay cash for the new building. to avoid in· 1 tercst on loans. Twisters Hit Midwest Albu'oue Am•rlllo A ti ant• 8elhmort" e1rm1ng,_.m 80•\.• 80SIOl'I B•o•.,.svlfl• Bulla lo Clli<"90 C•l\CIM•ll < ........... 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Ottlo Valley af'ld otMr ~f1s ol IM Mlc!Wttt. lite Nl llONI WHUlff S.rvl<• Hkl ._ IOI',..._. touched OOWI\ SUf'lday l\IOlll lf'I lf'ldllf'lll'Olll, <I VSl"9 U • len1•v• aamaoe. •lld one 1111 at PllUDorO,nortllhSlofllleCapllalcltr • TM 111c11.._i11 P'lr• Depat1me111 Mkl II Mflt tNCU Oii "INndrtdl OI fllf'll " wlllte IN tlonn battered IM city tor atmo11 •-11011r\. 011 111t<111rt 11111 to 1111 te .. !lllOM• to route IM l•IK't ~ -'>IJll<etad electrOf'll< ....,......,.., bl ... ovt. At t .. tl U jlMplt .. ,. lrHled few t11Jurlu at Wltll ard M•"'o•l•I Hetplll l1 •lllcll rtPC>rted lllal llt Ila M,.,. "' tmef'leM' room a wtr• I-II I -1 M IM S 10 7 lllCllH Of relf'I tNI fltll tft IN City "'411f11Mtltl .....,tat '-'" .,... ..... 10 _ .. for , ... ,,,...,. • ..., flll11tle\ ....,...,. Will..,,.. H-llt Mid city •Mtti.v.s ....,.. f!IM!llted i.Ny to -"Ille,......,.. efflltt Hlldllvt Wkl 119 Ullrnate OI City -<Mm.oe WH IYlllable r 1uw11ere. • ""'"••••l••m llUfftlled llaU er<d ' lllCM• Of ra ll\ In 1414111nffttenl Ml<~tef'I CaU\lllQ aft ••'11>eft --• c.11..-. Ii.Ml"' .,.. .tpart,,.•nt <Omple.. Wa\1111\0 OVI road\ •'"' for(•nQ tlw evacuatton of 41 bOu I I 00 llon•<" Ca lifornia Fair $~les ano temoe•••u~t '" Irle fOw IO\ •r-~ forec.8~t for Tuesday •n ,,,. l.O• AnQelft .. ra. Wit~ n19hl •ftd morn IQ" IOQ .tnd low <IOUds ns>tttea In 1111 San 01~ eru , l•te l\IQM al'ld urly mo<n1r1q 1ow clou•h •"a f0!1 art predltt.CS, burntl\Q oll l•ln In tllt df Y to become """'' and •llo1111y <OOltr HloM w111 ,..,. lrom 71.77 ,,.., '"' cont 10 l>·M '" the 1n1,,.e1 valteyt II\ Sal\ Die90, \UM of , IO J-1001 IWtfll aNI ).to • I-~a•en al tt -Ofld 11\lf<v•ts WUf ... s>ttlfd, Wllll Ille O<HI\ lf'"ICltUlu•e II )t Coiutal Weather N 10111 al\CI morn•"ll tow < touos wHll ""'"Y afl•rnoo<I• 111rouo11 '"'"".,. Llolll varlabte w11\C1\ n19111 •nCI mornln9 llOUo l ~'°"'Mar 10 Co11111 1e,..ralurt• wlll range tlttweef'I 60 •f'ld 10 11\IAl\d •~m perah1ret will •enoe belwt<on 60 •lld 7 7 Tiie wal"' will be U . S un, Moon.. Tid e. ~DAY Se<olllfhloll 3.0pm. •·• S.<of'ld tow • ,.. o."' ' I TUISOAY Flr\I lllQll , 23 a m J t Finl low t "6 a .m O I St<Of'ld lllOll 4 011.m. S I Second tow II 13 pm I• Sun rfH1 S ..i a m w1s I ·oe o m • ""-rlM• 11 •J • "'. ,.IJ 11'1' 1.m S urf Rrporl Hul\tl"9!0fl BH<ll W•vH I to , '"' will\ -•I •-11 """ "'911' wlf'lf (llOp ,01\d ltlOI\\ ~l\.,allf POOr Ne"'"rt ee.-11 w.,,., 1 10 l lt•I wltll \011111 ... tl $-II C:OMlhOftl •lmllar ' responsibility for the 2 a .m. bomb blast. But police gave <I.it• tie credence to any of the claim s. · Hubert Landais, director of French museums, sajd one large painting or Napoleon was almost destroyed and 15 more paintings and wall panels were heavily dam aged. He estim ated the restoration cost al $1 million - possibly higher if. as feared, an exterior stone wall suffered structural damage. "Som~ paintings a re in rib- bons," said Versailles curator Gerald van der Kamp "'They can be restored, but it will be like a jigsaw puzzle." POLICE WERE TIPPED at 9 a. m ., seven hours afte r the blast, that another bomb would go off in one of the two Trianon palaces in the p alace park. Some art works were removed, but bomb experts round nothing. and the Grand Trianon opened for tours as usual. The main palace is closed on Mondays. The explosion occur red about 2 a.m. in the Midi Wing of the main palace, to the left or the front entrance, and wrecked the three-room Empire Suite on the ground floor which was opened to the public May 16 by Presi· dent Valery Giscard d'Estaing. "THREE OF THE paintings are reduced to fragments and are irr eparable, including a very famous pa i nti n g o f Napoleon awarding the first Legion of Honor medals," J ean Dumont, the chief a rchitect for the palace, told reporters. "Other paintings are damaged but probably can be restored. The sculpted woodwork of the rooms has been shattered and there is al least six months' solid restor ation work." DUMONT SAID th e bo mb blasted a hole -said by other sources to measure 10 by 12 feet -into the floor of the Gallery of Battles on the second floor. "But there does not appe-ar to be other damage in the Gallery of Bat· ties." he said. He denied earlier reports that th~ damage extended to t he thi rd floor. .\. . APWI,..,_ SEABROOK SUPPORTERS COUNTER PROTEST New Hampshire Gov. Meldrim Thomson At Clambake Police Arrest 150 Nuclear Protesters Bv The Associated Press While thousands of Clamshell Alliance supporters began wr apping up their peaceful protest agamst the construction or a nuclear power plant in the Northeast, at least 150 backers of the Crabshell Alliance were arrested when they occupied the construc- tion site of t wo atomic power plants 1n the Northwest About 50 Grays Harbor County sheriff's deputies began arrest- ing the Crabshell demonstrators im mediately after they ap· proached the 275-acre Satsop proJect construction site Sunday evening near Elma, Wash., about 70 miles southwest or Seattle. THE WASHINGTON P UBLIC POWER Supply System, a quasi-public agency, is constructing the two multibillion-dollar plants. Sheriff's spokesman Richard Romanelli said the people arrest· ed were released on their personal recognizance. He said that they would be charged with trespassmg. Romanelli also said that demonstrators round on the construe· tion site today would be charged with violatmg a judge's restrain· ing order. A few miles from the Satsop site, more than 1.000 Crabshell Al· liance members and other opponents or nuclear power capped a day of entertainment by marching peacefully through Elma. IN WHAT MAY HA VE BEEN the largest demonstration in the history of the nation's anti-nuclear movement, police said Sun- day's protest against a nuclear power plant in Seabrook, N.H., at· tracted 12,000 people, including tourists, vacationers and curiosity seekers. • • • and how does YOUR garden grow? Whether It'• about • simple shrub, a sophisticated bed of flowers, or a tasty eelectlon of vegetabtes. the Dally Pilot's garden page bl~oi:ns every Saturday with flandy hfnts and delightful features. We'll give you tlpa on when to plant. when to prune and when to pluc~. Our writers also brighten the garden section with Interesting fe•turea on local peopte who grow unusual plants or achieve exceptlOnal results. Our crop of stories comea up new every Saturday to help you have more aucceH and more enfoymont with your growing. If your thumb la green, uae It to fllp to the garden page in Saturday's Dally Piiot. DAILY PILOT 642-4321 • I- ' OAl\.Y Pll.OT s J ....... ... ~ ... Soln .... SOit> '*' s,-loo·• ~ ..... 1<..... "'"' r t .Jc:'"' (•..i 't1'61o.t (!If •t~•O... (flt Pl 11\d\l(tow ("Q 'f ,h<t. C-("Q Pt.•'4' (W (•"I 'l l'-" (..., [l>J ·-, M ti"' In lllCed I! It .. ft" ltlll"~ "'lO " lt"'H .... MMM 1 I• '11 ~'<-~' 0..I M• 1 Jl I l ll • felt Oii l2 .~~ •• /'<C, 2~ • 10. II. g.~ 1 u ' ~; ~ •'Oii J. • I . . . M11m• pfl JO • If nte.. . Min Pl. l.M 1• 10 It 0...•10' 20 20 .. 10 ...... Tell•'! I s II ·-h NtAF I'~ •• '""· • ~ ... t JO -i.-'""" • II • \.. Hul\ICli .)C II ,..,~. \, Ml,,OAI .. • • u-. 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""• . irlNo pt " • .! 714-14. f>':iff~ ~ ~ ·1 16~ it,.~·~ Ian Uh ~ ~-t,11 MeHr• .40 •• ts !tV.• "" P$1n ~ 10. ., 1t0 11~.. T•nBril 11' 1 11 41,. ,... lYrntnd .. 1 1~ t•V.-..., rlNo pr1.e\ ii aq~ \t l>\I t.·19 1190 '214. 'A "''~\Ptt. it I I "' rt;11<0 .40 t Jl t•Yt ~ '"l'Uf t.OI ..• 090 ""-· . ~~t "1° n 'l~ ~ = · 10 :. 11tl6 • =-. ft~.~ :~ l! · =: ,,. .. ~ .... Al;& lot .~~ .. Pa~"~1Ui t~ ~~': Takeover Set .,,,,11 1 : 1) m 12 vi °"'•i= := ·· ": ~1~ "'°" uoli ,. ·~····· Mth11fr. u 10 no ~ v. "' folM'(UJ d10 1114 . KANSAS CITY, Mo. CA P l _Unit· l111ller111 • 1 t "'-Dull A 't ) fl I t • 1 + ~ Memtrn I "l c.I" • "41 vN I .. 1 '1 "°" '""" .,. .. ca ,..-.::·v; ,,__~ 1 -l .,; 1 ... 11e1 • ., ·"'° , .. 1 .._ "~r<su .111 t "'"'--~ d t.12 • 441 ,,.,, "' ed Telecommunications. Inc . and c-c: ...... .•• • ~ ...,1,1 ,, ., ,,\!>-~ ""'<" uo u ,, ,,~ "' gl!§ -4• .., . t , • ..., "' c a\ '• • .. u-.-'-E '· 11 • ~ -u111 1• .. uo ""• -. ~'" • J ' ).!•-. I! ,1, °' ''° "'"' •• Cnlma Co., h<'odQucrtcrcd ln Su.n· ~I I ,. I"*--' t· .. · · t2\4t-.. HeMe ·'!f 11 U ldP'9+ V. Metrly M tj1 ,.._, "' £' 110 11 • • TI'-" "' 1 C lil "'" • 11 -"' ~ 1: · ': !! .. It;=:•" l.iJ f m ff::-. MtMht • .on JOJ JJ',,.._-. l!G ,i1.., . • u... ..,, nyvo e., n • ., have signed nn all'ff· ~ , •. , :: f.:: ~ 0v1cha .i1l 11 TT111:: ..... :1~ •1 • : ;-: =: ,:=~ 'I ~~.·;; ,..$[!< ::H: . f.X :!+: m<'nt for lhC!' acqulsit1on of Cu.t1aa by ... "" ·'• ·~ m 11 • i. OYme • ' I to\lto-"' $~ .•1la101 '1 • v. MO• 1IO!l16 .Q mu 1•. PUU ,,, n . uco to •• United TflC(Om. HA pl I 10 101 It" DtM'" · Ii ·~ .... tllftll A t Ila ,..._ Ill ~""' 1 iO 11 ... M·-\'I l"ullflO )ll JJ I Ar '• • 11 11 -\.. -• -91 1.1 • '" t~t " 1111"~ Ff°'. 1 u~ -.,.. ...,.1110 • " •"'-•• The announcement said United c t)O' " " '-1~0 &a 11 Sf ti ... . ' l u Ioli s .f1 ' I ""• ... PA C.l'I\ • ,, ~ ... -... T"I "'O 1·' u1 11th· LI _ ... Nat , .. ' ' rr:"l-" Ml .. 1 ., t + ~ I tt ~. Ill • I • ,,.,., \le "•SPI. 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Hll.ltf t t 4 IJll~..... ~ ..... t t'6,. .•. /llA M(h t,11 • ti--"' • ,,.., .W ii It IJ -\1 " <I ~" IU \IV ·~-"· • -. . -- Drugstore l'-it Nabisco to Off er Pregnancy Test? By MILTON MOSKOWITZ Tt\e company thnt brings you Ritz crackers. Oreo cookies, Cream or Wheat cereal, Chuckles jetties and Mis· ter Salty pretzels will soon seek your patronage for a do-it· yourself pregnancy tes t. The company is Nubisco -short for National Biscuit. Company -and this fall it will have in drugstores a ktt \o enable a woman to determine ii she Is pregnant. THE KIT HAS A CHEMICAL solution thnt musl be mixed With a sample or the woman's urine In a test tube. tr this combination produces a dark brown ring in the tube, that's a definite indication that the woman is pregnant. This ring s ignals the presence of a hormone found i n the urine of pregnant women. The kit is e xpected t o sell for about $10, whkh will make it compet itive with a similar tes t introduced last year by Warner-Lambert, the company that brin gs you Listerine, Rolaids, Schick razors, Chiclets, Trident, Certs, Efferdent and Dynamints . Why you would tru~t companies which make products of this Ilk to deliver a reliable pregnancy test is a good question. But in this age of conglomerates you never know who·s making what. If you get nervous while ylll.l're wailing for this k1l to do it s s tuff (the lest take no tonger than two hours), you can chew chiclels or munch Oreos. NABISCO SQUARING OFF AGAINST Warner -Lam - bert m ight turn out lo be a good slugfest. Although both companies boast long product lines, they have never really gone to the mat against each other . They both know how to advertise. Warner-Lambert s pends $200 millio n a year to rank as the ~o. 5 advertiser in the n ation. Nabisco stands 27th with a~ ad expenditure of $100 million a year. Nabisco has already promised that 1t will be promoting its pregnanc y -detector kit with a "m ajor mass media advertisin g cam· paign ... What that means is not known. Money Tree Television would pres umably be ruled out because of the nature o f the product. And it will b e interes ting to see the euphemisms the copyrighters come up with to describe this product. THE DRUGSTORE IS A NATURAL terrain for Warner-Lambert, whic h has on its roster two long. established makers of prescription drugs, Parke-Davis and Warner Chilcott. Nabisco's turf 1s the supermarke t . <.·here it domin ates the cookies and cracker s helves, but it eased into drugstores 61/ol years ago when it acquired J U. WilHams J.B. Wrlliarns makes such winners as Gerltof , Sominex, Aqua Velva, Lectric Shave and the Rose Milk skin care products. It also markets the No. 1 comb brand. Ace. And it's J . 8 . Williams that is carrying th e ball for Nabisco m the introduction of the pregnancy-detector kit. THE KIT ITSELF IS BEING made by anoth er com· pany, North American Biologicals. in which Nabisco has a s mall interest C2 5 percent). JI the product proves to be half as successful as Geritol, Nabisco will probably move to absorb all o f North American Biologicals. And if it flunks, Nabisco will probably sell out its pos ition, just as it dumped Aurora Products last year after trying vainly for .. five years to make money in the toy and game business. Warner-Lambert does n 't make toys or cookies o r crackers . It does make Cool· Ray s unglasses. West Coast Ba11k Eyed by La Jolla LA JOLLA <AP> -La Jolla Bank & Trust'says it will app.ly to reg ulatory agencies to t ake in West Coast Na· tional Bank, based in Oceanside, producing the fourth big. gesl independent bank in San Diego County. The combined assets amount to $80 million. La J olla Bank opened in 1973 and grew from $5 million in deposits after a year to S42 million last December and asset& or S45.8 million. The proposed merger would need approval of s tockholders of both banks Sm.all Business Workshop Slated Sources of capital. management problems. regal te· quirement.s and selection of good business location ror small businesses will be discussed during a free workshop set for Westminster. o n July 12. The works hop has been arranged by the Orange Coun- ty Chapter o f the Service Corps of Retired Executives <SCORE>. The program 1s co-spon sored by the Orange County Public Librarv, Wes tminster branch, and the U .S. Small Bus iness Adm.inis trat1on. It will be held in the community room, Westminster branch. 8180 i3lh Street. from 9·00 a . m . to 4: 15 p . m . R egis tration will be~in at 8: 30. FV Coml!.uter Firm Offers Stock Data Adventures Jn Computing Inc., a Fountain V alley rirm. s11ys a new H'rvice will provide own ers or it s personal computers w~th stock portfolio mformatlon and other financial services Using a telephone linkup, users o C "Apple II" Com · puters wlll be able to dla1 Dow Jones "Stock Quote Reporter Service" for s tock and bond quolaUons. This in· formation. along with Apple software provided by Adven· tures In Computtna, will e n able the Ul'let to determlne cur· rent portfolio value, ~hort and Iona term gains. and rate or return. among other things. Ne Gasohol Lone Station Closes LJNCOt.N. Neb. (AP) -The only servleit station tn Lincoln selllng gasohol -a mLICtUtt of euollne and alcohol -bas closed. But operators s:ald a poor location far from rcsldcnUal areas was relponslblc rather than leek of ckmand for the fuel. The stallon bcl1•n selling gasoho l four months lCO at 69.9 cent.a per 1allon. It la a~ 80 perttnt unleaded auoUne and JO percent grain akotiol. Station ownera &aid they h ope to reopen ln a bfl.lcr locauon. ' ' PEOPLE IN SPORTS /. GOLF I HORSE RACING 1.5 M i lli on Detroit to Sign Kings Star V aclwn? From AP Dispatches TORONTO -The Toronto Star said Monday that Rogie Vachon, the 32-year-61d goaltender whose National Hockey League contract with the Los Angeles Kings expired June 1, will sign with tbe Detroit Red Wings for a reported $1.5 million for five years. In a New York-datelined btory, the newspaper sakl that Red Wings General Manager Ted Lindsay is expected to announce the signing at a news conference in Detroit Tuesday. The New York Rangers. who have been spending heavily to rebuild, had been reported interested in signing the talented free agent. But the story quotes an unidentified source as saying the Rangers ran out or money after sign- ing Swedish forwards Anders Hedberg and Ulr Nilsson from the Winnipeg Jets or the World Hockey Association. Vachon played in 70 games for Los Angeles last season , compshng a 2.86 goals-against average with the 10th-best team in the 18-team league. After negotiations between the Kings and •OGIE vActtoN Vachon's agent, New York lawyer Larry Rauch, broke down early this month. four NHL teams -the Rangers. Washington, Van- couver and Chicago -and Edmonton of the WHA were reported interested in acquiring him. The Star said that although the Red Wings are not legally bound to pay compensation to the Kings they are likely to send along a player or two. -------Quote of die Day ------ Billy Loes, a right-hander with lefty logic, on why he never won 20 games while pitching for the Brooklyn Dodgers in the 1950s: "H I win 20 once, they'll expect me to do it all the time." Elseachere in Spor111 . . . BASEBALL -Cleveland Indians pitcher Rick Waits took over game opening duties by s mgmg the national anthem before the start of the Indians' doubleheader with Toronto They split ltlCK WAITS Mike Torrez upped his record to 11·3 with a 4-1 dec1s1on over Baltimore before 33,525 to put the Red Sox over the million mark in home atten dance El Toro·s Graig Nettles drove in the tie-breaking run to lead the Yankees past Detroit, 4·2 Roy Smalley hit a grand slam homer lo lead the Minnesota Twins to a 9-6 vie tory over the Chicago White Sox in a sweep ol Sunday's doubleheader Tony Armas belted a tie-breaking homer as the Oakland A ·s defeat ed Kansas City. 6-3. to get starting pitcher Matt Keough, a Corona del Mar High product.. ofr the hook Keough allowed three runs in four inninl'(s ~fore being relieved Garry.,Templeton doubled home the win nmg run to pace Sl. Louis lo a 7·5 wm over Montreal Rennie S~en~ett_and John Milner crashed two-run homers to back the five hit p1tch1ng of Bert Blyleven as the Pittsburgh Pirates defeated the New Y?rk MNs, 2-0.. . Greg Luzinski's two-run homer propelled the Philadelphia Phillies to a 4-2 win over the Cubs and a four game sweep to give the Phils a two-game lead in the National League East TENNIS -Australian veteran Tony Roche defeated John McEnroe, 8·6, 9.7 in the finals of the Queen's Club International tourney ... Czechoslovakia's Vladimir Zednik won the West Berlin Grand Prix tourney. defeating Harald E lscbenbrolch of West Germany, 6·4, 7·5. 6·2 . Butch Newman defeated Alex Olmedo 6-1, 7-5, to claim the U.S. Tennis Assn ·s over-35 hardcourt championship. Newman and Jim Parker added the doubles crown with a 6·2.6·2 win over Laguna Beach's Dick Leach and Horst Ritter of Pasadena. IUOTOR S PORTS -A crowd of 62,716 was on hand Saturday- nsght for the Superbowl or Motocross at the Los Angeles Coliseum with 1'1ike Bell the wanner on a Yamaha ... An engine transplant four hours before the race proved successful as , . -,. Huntington Harbour's Georce Follmer captured .; the $75.000 Can-Am race in St. Jovite, Quebec Sunday ... In companion group features at St. Jovite, Monte Shelton and Bob Tullius were the winners ... J an Lam mers of Holland drove a Rall Toyota RTl to victory in a Formula 3 Grand Prix auto race at Monza. Italy ... Rain forced postponement of lhe Evergreen 100 NASCAR Winston West Grand National race at Monroe. Wash. It will be run next Sunday ... Actor Paul Newman continued on his successful path to the Sporlscar Club of America nationals PAUL NEWMA"' ""1th one ""in and a third place while qualifying for the pole posi-uon in ootn events. OTHER SPORTS -Mark Roth won his sixth professional bow- ing title this year and topped $100,000 by taking first place in the San Jose Open He eased to a 200-pin margin ever runnerup Jay Robinson ... Phil Lansford, the brother of lhe Angels' Carney Lansford, signed a contract with the Cleveland Indians ... Bill Green captured the gold medal in the 200-meter dash in an inlerna· tlonal track meet in Mexico City. His time was 21.02 ... Judy Casella. a 25-year-old apprentice Jockey. rode Roy Rogers' coll Triggeroy lo an upset S93 victory in the third race at Hollywood Park ... J im Colclough was named head football coach al Boston State College ... The United States finished third in a water polo tournament at Sofia, Bulgaria following a 5·2 loss lo Bulgaria ... An American womf90's all-star team lost its third straight tour game as the Chinese Army team took a 96-77 victory in Tokyo ... Californians Ron Skarln and Jim O'Leary claimed top honors in the Great Waikoloa Bike Race in Hilo. • "ipor111 on Radio, T e le vi•ion RADIO: Tonight -Baseball -Los Angeles at Atlanta, 4:30, KABC (790); Kansas City al California, 5: 10, KMPC (710 >: Horse Racing -Feature Race from Hollywood Park, 5:30, KIEV (870). TV: Baseball -Boston Red Sox vs New York Yankees, 6 30, Channel 7. Taped l.agunan Wins Bike Race Linda Haley or Lsguna Beach captured the women's 20-mile race as the Jone Orange Coast area winner in rive e ivisions or lhe fourth annual Costa Mesa bicycle grand prhc Sunday near Estancia High School. Jn the fc:atured SO-mile senior race, Kevin Lutz of Pasadena, a U .S. national cycling champion, was the winner in 2 :07.58 over t eammate Clark Roberts. l•NIOtl I & II DIVlllON 1. l< ... ln I.AIU (P•~ Alll .. li< AIM\., j.lfl Gallrltll, 2:111'.a ; ~ c1.,11 llober1t !Sen M..-lnol: , S•IP Cutt1f'19 IAl ... r\ldel. ' Rory O'Reilly IS.nla B.,bara), S. Jell LHllt tAu•lrallal; 6. P•ul Vint ISAn BernMdlnol, 7. K•fl Fuller IC.. MeM), l • .lffry Futltr IC:O.ta ~WI. VETl!ltAN$ DIVISION I , Pnll G\1Mnkc1e (Par•mounl Cycle Glut>, 8rHI. S\.OS; 2. Dick S-...t (Newbury Peri<I. J Tom Scanlon CTorrancel; Olllerl. I. e.rno HltberO IC...a/MWI. WOMllN'S DIVISION I. Linell ... 1.y (Unall .. l.AQvlM 8eac:lll. SS 19: 2 EllMn a .......... 10..emontt; a. H-•"Nortl\ (I.A Jolla). S•NI~ Ill DIVlllOM 1. l'r• ... ~le INO. HoHyw-Wlleelnwn, Ven Nuysl, '9 U ; 2. Glen Abr•ll•m ISl•rr• Madre); a. Jot Conlur•I !San 01-1 JUNIOa DIVISION I, S<ot1 ~ !Un•ll .. UPlend) t·U H. 2 tlob 8erQ<l•lll (8velltonl: a. Micha., Ouncl1 CGA<'mlCllHll, Broadbill, Albacore Landed Monday, June :ze. 1978 DAILY PILOT fl3 JOCKEY BILL SHOEMAKER BOOTS EXCELLER (RIGKT) HOME TO UPSET VICTORY IN THE HOLL.YWOOO GOLD CUP. Exeeller Exeells in Gold Cup INGLEWOOD <A.P l -The ric.h Hollywood Gold Cup Handicap was only lhe second race on a dirt track for Exceller. but that didn't stop the five-year-old former grass specialist from scoring a s ur- prise victory in the final strides. A CROWD OF 53,099 set a record for betting for one race. The wagering was $1,010JJ37. It broke the old mark of $982,948 set last year in the Swaps Slakes. Shoemaker won that race aboard J .O. Tobin in the memorable defeat of Seattle Slew. The focus was on Vigors. nicknamed the "White Tornado," and J .O. Tobin. winner of the only race thal 1977 Triple Crown win- ner Seattle Slew has ever lost, but Exceller sneaked through on the rail to capture the 39th running.of the $35,000 Gold Cup on Sunday. Sunday's 14-mile race was expected to be a duel between J . 0. Tobin and Vigors, However, J . 0. TObln bore out toward Vigors and, Shoemak-er brought Exceller ln on the rail for his vic- tory. T HE WORLD'S winningest jocke~. Bill Shoemaker. was aboard the winner. marking his seventh Gold Cup victory. Shoemaker later said that he expected J .O. Tobin to tug out. Jockey Steve Cauthen agreed. Cauthen also said bis horse did tire. The 47-year-old Shoemaker has now won 731 stakes and races \.\Orth SI00,000 or more 131 times Exceller prevailed by a neck Text. a 29-to·l shot. was second, the favored Vigors was third and J 0 Tobin was fourth in the field of seven DARRE L McRARGUE, aboard Vigors. said, "I think what hurt us was Cauthen coming out wide in the stretch on J .O. Tobin and forcing me outside. That may have been enough to geL us beat." SINKS BIRDIE PUTT Golf Winner Pat B radley Exhaustion He lps Stop Lope z's Bid HERSHEY. Pa. <AP> -Slill sm'lling. rookie Nancy Lopez turned lo her caddie on the 18th green and whi1>pered . .. Al least we got a standin~ ovation. That makes tl worthwhile.·· The darling of the Ladies Professional Golr Association tour had JUSt failed in her bid to win an unprecedented s ix straight tournaments. but "'Nan- <'y's Navy," her pastel swarm of follower1., was c.Japping simply because s he was there. Lopez bowed Sunday to the limits of perfection and fatigue. finishing 15 strokes behind Pat Bradley, who fired a 10-underpar 206 lo win the $50,000 Lady Keystone Open. Mter Golf Vietory Mental Adjustment . . Next for Lietzke OAKVILLE. Ontano <AP) - Bruce Lietzke has some adjust· mg to do. some goals to set This was a big. big stepping c;tone ID my career:· Lietzke c;atd Sunday after he'd hung on with a two-over-par 73 to score a one-stroke victory in the Cana- dian Open golf championship. 'I'm going lo have to do some mental adjusting 1 've never been a golf-oriented person. After winning those tourna· ments last year. I kind of put st on cruise. I've gone for more than a year without a goal in 1Jl ind. "Now l'm going to have to sel some goals for myself. perhaps try to have a better season than l had last year." .HE'S LESS than haHway there. Last year Lietzke blitzed the early part of the season. win· ning two quick titles. He was second in two other tournaments and won more than $204,000. With h is victory in the 1978 Canadian natio n a l cham· pionship. the tall. cross-handed putter had won one. been second in one and collected $85.393. * * * LHO•nQ HOrtS And monty•W1nnln9s In IM S7S0,000 ~aclian Open Golf Tourna,.,.nl on Ille 7.0SO·ylrd, 1>1r·71 Gl•n Abbey GOU ClubCOU<ie 8ruct L•tllkt, ,S0,000 7.,•7•7 1l 193 Pal McGowan, $19 ~ 12._,·72·72-2" 8•n '''"'""*· su 7)0 10 ''·•• n-m Let Trovlno, SU>7)0 ,, 11•911 2tS MIU McCullOUQll, '9,0IJ 73 10.n.11 * ~OrQt! Burns, ~9,0lll 13·10 1J.1f>-n. Ray Floyd \9 Oil 1• 1' ,...,._* John Scnr-r SS.eo. 7• .,.71.7~297 Jtlf Hewn. SS.lllW '1 1J..11-1J-1t1 Jim C.Olti.r1, SS.'°' 71 70.7J.1J 1t7 8111 ICralren. SS.IQ.I '• 70-6f.12 -111 Tom Purller. SS.eo. ,. "·11·1f>-H1 8unky Htnry SS.Iii>' 11 10.11•4-HI Arnold Pai'""'· SS'°' 70 1 .. 1J-., 211 J.atk Nltkla~. S3 ISO 13 12·11-11 2" Gra,,am ''"'"" U.ISO 74 77·'7-11-2" Boll Sntartr. S3.7so 71 71·1176-2" 0 .A Wt1bri1>9 SJ.ISO 73 11·10'41-1" 801> Lunn, U ,7SO 73·1l-11·71-2" Ed SnHd, S1.87S 7S 6f.7H3-1'0 J.,. lnm•n. Sl,1'5 73 11>-6'·1 .. m Mlle Sullivan, U,2tl 72.74 .... 77 2'1 Cnarlts COOdy, '1.191 7S 7S.•7·7'-2'1 John Manalfey, \7,281 73 ll-IHt-1.i Curll• Sl•&nve, S?,281 1•·12·11·6'-2'1 Gary McCord, s1.cns 1l·7s.7U3-m P•l•r Ooot•rl'luls, \1,9U 1 .. 12.11-1)-m Pnll Hancock, s1.cns 7S-IS.6'·7•-m Mark Pleil, '1,458 73 11-IG-13-2•l Jim Simons, Sl.•58 7._7'·10·73 m ca1v1n Ptt1a, si.•se 1 .. 13.n.n-m Bill Ptlllem, Sl,•SS lA·6•·1•72--l'l Rod Funs.th, si.•,sa 7•·1 ... 7).72-m Phil Rodoers, St,4MI n 1•·1J·11-m M•rk I.ye, $1,451 11·1>-,t·71-2tt G•y Brewer, s 1,•se 75-76-71·71-m w~vn• l.evl, Sl,451 1l·11·1'-~m Oenny Edw.,.ds. SI.AM la.70.7147-ttl 'Winning this golf tournament means more to me than wiMing any of the others." Lietzke said. ··u tells me last year wasn't just a streak. rt tells me I can win when I'm not playing at my absolute peak." HE WASN'T at his absolute peak, but, then, neither were bis major challengers. "I gave it away," said a dis- gusted Lee Trevino. "It's my own fault. I lost m y composure. When you bogey three of the last six holes, that's giving it away. I had him. I was doing just what I wanted to do and I gave it away.·· Lietzke finished with a 283 total. 1 under par and the only man able to break standard figures on the Glen Abbey Golf Club course Jack Nicklaus de- s ig ned as a permanent home for this national championship. Jordan Sets Spike Marks . Payton Jordan, 61, coach of the Stanford University track and field team, set age group world records in the 100 and 200-meler dash events <60-64) Sunday in the Senior Olympics championships at UC Irvine. Jordan bad an 11.8 in the 100 and 25. l in the 200. Other world reeords for their age groups were set by: Shirley Dietderich. 51, Berkeley; in the 200 (33.6) and 400 (1 :21.7); Josephine Kolda, 60, San Fran- cisco, in the 400 <1:31.1); Walter Wesbrook, 80, Arcadia, in the triple jump (22-7); CKristel Miller, 43, Glendale, in the triple jump (29-0'f.z); Ellen Rose, 49, Irvine, in the 800 (3:00.9). Rose a lso won the 400 in 1: 16.2, a senior Olympic record. UCI Ch ancellor Danie l Aldrich, 59, set a U.S. men's rec- ord in the one-kilo discus 066·10) and also won the . 12· pound hammer throw with a toss of 113-8. All-CIF Baseball Baseball Leaders N.t.TIQHAL LEAGUE PuM HM 8urro1191ls All Bow• Pn1. MadloO SF Grttt.y C1n 1.-LA Fo~ter C1n R.Smlllll..A Simmons Sii. P.,klr PQI\ G Al R 60 14' JI ,.. 211 21 l>J ,., 31 ~2 ltl J2 11 , .. •l .a 110 •• 10 111 ., >.l •9S 3' 70 20 JI> 6S 2S8 IO K-Rl>ft• H .. CL II 1.18 .. .312 8& .322 •2 .311 .. .319 IQ ..Ill 17 .l" •1 .31> , •• JOI ,, .306 t.u11nlkl, Pllll-1p111.:i, II>, Foster, Clnetnrwti, II>, IC1n9Man, OllCt>VO, u . PMkfr, Pi11sbur9'1. tl. Mondo , l.oa Anttl•S. U; Wlnheld, S•n Ole90, 12. RllllS ll•twd In F061er, Cln<1nn.u, SJ, w 1nn .. 1d, S•n Oi•OG, ''; Gooey. Los A...-. *I Monl&Ml, New Vorll,. ~. l.uti~kl, Pllll-11>1\la. •l Plltlllnt C7 0.C"40ftt I Bonham, Cln<on.,.Ct. I I, P•nv. San 01('90. •t: Mont•fuw.o. SM\ Fr•nc•tco, 1·2, Grlmsl~y. Moft.. 1ru1, 11 •. lA«."6'1, New Yori(. l.J; Bl~. S.. Fr..-c:l\C.O, I~• AMElllCAN LEAGUE Car-Min P1n1tllA NY A•c• B~n R•vnotd•Su CuDlhl~M•n SundberQ Tu Lynn 8tn lie. Je<llJMlll C.I eoop.r Mll l.UCAnoMll G A8 II 6• 21' 0 •& 11>4 21 II 2'• SJ ... 20 26 SS 170 11 l>S 22• n .. 2.M ~ s. lk ,, SI 195 32 .0 ltS 31 H-11- .. Pct. 13 .:U7 ,,. ..l?9 9S .l2J 71 .m ,,. .311 11 .311 74 .3•• SS .Jh 61 .JIJ ., .313 Rlce. ~\<!". n. ••YIW. c.11 ...... 11. 16: J. T"omp\On, OelrOll, 17; G T"cunas. Molw-tt. 11, E. Murray, Balu~. IS, £w•11s. 8osl0n, IS, HOl>ton, BO\'°' IS. llMM811l••lln A1ce, Boslon, •s, Sl.oub, O•lroll. 4'; H-. Bo•lon, 4; J. Tnompscn, Oetro•l, o. Zuk, Tu. .... 11 Pllcllitlt 17 Decitlon• I Gulary, N•w Yo•~. INI, Tlanl, Boston. 7~1 T orrtz, Q~ton, 1l J, T •Mnl, C1lltornl•, H·J; Eckersley, ~Ion, 1 ?. Ga", ICans.u C•l'I'. 6 2. Flanagan, 8t1Umon, 11..1. Junio r Track Summaries Rasuti. Sunday In l1'e AAU Mllonat 1ur11or lr•Ck •nd lield ,.,.., •I 8loorn1nc;i1on, Ind. MEN 3.000 slHP!kMW -I Gr~goro. New h•SltY Allllelte A!llt,. 03 9 , M•1>9an. Peftn SI. 9 07 OJ. 3 Han, .,.,. ... • 11 1• • Scna111, IC•nuis Univ, • 1S SI s l..ew•s. Gt."""I• '°"· 9 2'.L •• C..MO. Mlnh•IPPt C...st Club,' "6 0 •OO nurdlH -I ~''°"• Pla1nl1eld N J. H.S.. SI 0 2 Pn1ll1~. S.n J~f' Coll SI 7• J F.,..-. Concerned AllllelH. 5? )I • C.rl'IOf'I, WllHto.. Coli, S2 _.. s Al...,, SI. .1o11n·s. 53.'4. 6. Manin. OltlellOm• SI.~ 44 10,000 wal .. -I Sllerp, unall SO S' 7 1 Morr!\, Ne,. York A C , SI • 3 3 Ptllls. Petn.m N v H s .• SI 44 •• M1ll•rd. Club Nor111we>t., S1 01 0 ~. 1.lnllioom. unall,. )1.oll 2. •· v..,,,, MHOft CllV. Iowa, Sl 11 I. l,SOO run -I HarON•. Baylor, 3.'7 18. 2. Oon•Qll\H, SI. Jol>n's 3 H 9t 3 MotAlll\ler. u,.. all., l •• ff •. HenrlckWI\, Port•ge N~ H.5., 3.SI SI. S Frick~. Soull>ern C.I RNcl Aun• 11en. 3.S3 O'I. Slle•NlA, ...... vorll A.C..l :U.Ol. Tripi• lump -I Owol&Dl. A•lderl A.C.. S2-'. ,, .. Artis, Middle Ttnnenee SI, S2·3'~. J. Ty~r. AlllleleS In Action, 52·1'" I Bibbie, TllOrn\on H.S. Sl·'I• S M•rvln, unall., '9·101/t. 6, St1lngte11ow, Unl•ol 1 lllnols.•t.H• • WOMEN 400 nurd!n -I. 8rown, Kt vb Kevst-. 60.46 2 Polllon. Memptils S/>elby Treek, 61.:M. 3. ~­ du..,.., Flesn.tlH Track Club. U.09. '· Allwine, Pullm•n Well\. H S • U 32 S. ln<A, Mall''Q91U Sl•lder1. ~.s1. •. llrown, Souli.Ast, M 2. l,SOO run -I. Willi.ms, Sen Jose CinderQlls, ' 21 16. 2. Wtlls, MempN• !tMlby Tr111<k, •.21 '1. 3 Crvst•I, C.Olor-Gold, • 2U6. • Goleman. Falcon T .c ... 2'.2. s. F•ll•. Ad•mJ T.C .. •:21.J. •· Marmaune.1.~v Ac.. ••19.15.• "I told her coming in from the green, 'Don"t worry about it. this wasn"t a tournament, this was a media event '," said her caddie, Roscoe Jones. "All the fuss over her record was JUSl enough to dull the sharp edge she needed to win. Damn, I've never seen so many reporters. She's mentally exhausted." Since turning pro las t July 29. Lopez has won $156,266. l.Hdl119 ~~ ancl n>OMy wlnnll\Oj In Ille "°·ooo L.Oy K•l"tone o'"'" •• tne '·"' r•rd, par·'2 HtnlleY C.Oul\lry CluO. Alf.CU' I"" l•-11 OF-Ke" Touon <Satrt• Cl•1'9l .'22; Fl"ITHm Oaf\ Meo.. IPHO R-ll .171; Ul- P-O•mlen L-1 ISi c;.n. .. 1 .... 1. l.eroy Sapo IYU<C• V•ll•YI »t; Al- 9·0. Ernie Carruco (Cn•nnel ltnA'(,..,llSant•VNtl ... 1 Islands> 11.i, Josn R•l'dlll All·CIFS-llk-<Bre111enl 10-1 . C-All•n Moo•• FlntT•- llCern V•ti.yl •en, 18 S<ott H•Q•n P-Terry Mersll•ll (Riv. C~t.I P•I Bradt"'· '7 • .SOO J-tltetodl, U ,040 Joyce IC erml•rslll, SJ.•20 OonM Wlllle, U,1•3 0 Spu1lcll. U .2Al Jerilyn 8r111, l>.10 !8re1llrenl .se>. Inf ·Jell W•lhr ''"'· Brie., HUQ!let (Moftt<lelr Praol !Kern V•l .. y) "': Tffry ... f'dleton t >. Ml•• McGarl'lln llUo HonCIO ICMnnel lll-•I ..$4,, Clllp BowOn Prep) •t. ,,_ ltt9a11 (Avalon) t-1; 10..,..1-* < Fiii morei ,40•, OF-Cl•r•n<• c -oa ... Soul t8rent-I .500; 10- .,.n .11-210 Wllson r111-..11>9tonl ."4: O.nnlt MIU Miiier (Av•lonl .uo: lnl- 73·7147-113 Torrn !C.rplnlerl•I .soo. Mt•• Devon Janet IM.lr-t~I .l.SI; Tom 13-1'·10-211 Ara90n ISi c..notvle,,.I .343, UI-M<K•Y <MonlCIAlrl .469; 8'Y•n 7HJ.11>-217 Cnrh Vair CAlemanyJ .SSI, "•I Langtnwalt~ <Or.n99 Lullleranl 'l-72·71-217 Woollty 1Row"1ondl .StO. .•U; OF-Jim Enc;i .. m.n IHtl!lerla ICAl!ly Wnll_,_,,, "·'°j ll•tty 1Cl119, \1,60$ 15 7s-6e-211 l«-TMm Cflr.I .0 3, K.., Ful .. , (Rio Hondo $2,500 How much will do it for you? Commcial Credit's been hetpuJJ people tor rrore ttm sixty years. So whatever you need A few hlnted. ()-eveo as ~ ~$.5.ax>. Just call us about a kk'Yl. VVe ftnd wap to help. Al Yu T11, tl.QO J•nny Smith, Sl,tlO Oel>bl• M• ... v. "·~10 Jtnt Renntr. '1,210 Pevc;iy Conley, 't:JO VIUI• fltroon. $930 N•n<y 1.-r. StlO 71·71·7l-211 P-Tecl RoOOen (Boron) IJ.S; P•ul ProJ .01; lloger f!.1115 IOweM 1'·14-11-Jlt" Marriott (LA 8•Pll•ll t ·2. Jtcll vallol ·*• 1:1-1 .. 11-uo er-lcn 11..Salltl 1·2, c -oeway -'-;.;...;;.""---......._ _____ ___, 703-7>-220 Stroud (PHO Robi.sl ,4,.; 18-0rtQ 'o.7Hl-UO WArcl (Alm ol CM w .... ld) .41•; lnt- •9-IO-n-121 Lynn WMtl•r fl.A l.ulher•nl .i1s1 7M1-72-221 J im PijfOI IAlemenvl .•OO; Tom 1>-1'·1'-tll W•l•fl (Not,. Oeme, Riv.I .4) I; Walt Gibson of Balboa A.nallna Club won the first broadblll of the year nag by c•tchlng a 260'Aa-pound swordfish ln one hour," mtnutes. The flab was caught elaht rnllee off the east end or Cata1lna in 68 degree water aboard Gibson's boat, Walrus. .... ~ .... 'S .. t.UM81NG "llATtltG AIRC°"D PHYSICAL FITNESS FORMIM. TENNIS MEMBERSHIPS $150 Annual Limited Number CAPISTRANO RACQUET CLUB 493-7676 COMME~l~L CR..EDIT PLAN, INC (A Calllomla Corpora11on) P~sonc\I loans The first albacore wcl1hed tn at Newport Beach wa1 checked ln Sunday by the boat • Fehcidad by Dick Hawman. Hau&man'1 son, JUck, cauaht lhe 19 pc>und. •ounce longrtn 70 mllea eoulb ol San l>leeo at 1:30 Saturd&)t. \I Li< >II•)' S.r•1Ce T+mool.IMh<ll Y-~ IC•ll S-t ~ .. , Y°"r Ar .. 1 c;onAM&1oA642·17S3 tU.~- MlHIO.. v1eJ049S-0401 HtUC:-... ~\lr- D ..... ., ' NEWPORT BEAot 752-7084 WOMIH, 5TUDINTS fOUkrAIN VAU!Y 847-3011 • Cotta u... • 870 E. 11\.b Stnet • 6'54100 Oran,. • 1111 Town It Country Rd. Suh.eta • 5' '1 -68'11