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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-07-06 - Orange Coast Pilot1 • ans Nab 3 Countian Inmate's Death In OC Jail Cell Sparks PrObe DAILY PILOT * * * 10< * * * WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 6, 1977 VOL 10, HO 117, •Sf CTI OHS, 0 PAGES Killers of 28? • It · ---AP'Wl~o ACCUSED SEX SLAYERS BROUGHT INTO COURT Patrick Kearney (right), David Hiii (rear) Gay Slaying Suspects Seemed 'Ordinary' REDONDO BEACH CAP> - patri c k Kearn ey a nd David Hill. avowed homosexual lqvers charged with killing and dismembering two men and suspected in 26 other slayings, seemed ordinary lo their neighbors exc e pt fo r Kearney's fascination for knives. <Related story. Page A3 I. ''He liked to come in and look at the butcher knives." grocery store owner Jerry Stevens said Tuesday. "He'd ask me to talce one down and he'd look at it and handle it and ask me about the steel. Then he'd put il back. But County Jail lnmat~ Dies In His Cell it wouldn't be a week before he was back looking at the m again." Stevens described Kearney as ·'a loner, with an eerie sense of quiet about him." Others in the peaceful residential area where the two men lived said there was no hint 9f their fl)volvement in the multiple slayings for which they are being questioned. · ·'They were very quiet, yery nice." recalled Bob Longacre. ROOMMATES LINKED TO 28 SlAYINGs-Story, A3 who lived next door to Keam~y and Hlll ror more than fo\lr years. "It's just one of those things that you can't believe." Kearney, 37, who resigned as an engineer with Hughes, Aircraft in El Segundo, was des· crlbed by bis aupervlsor as "an Ideal worker. a rnodel worker." Kearney's C!ocservaUve dem· eanor was a sharp contrast to his snore Oamboyant roommate, ac· cording lo liquot ston clerk George 1ulsonnet. , "He (Hill) would come in one day as a redhead, .one day as a blond and another Ume he'd ba~e black hair," J ulsonneuald. "&tt they weren't troublemakers - they kept to themselves.'' Kearney rid Hill wete visited frequently by youne men , J-.lsorutet recaUid. unlll their dlsappeara~ abO~ six weeb uo. AutboriU• uld the pair fled (See 8\JSPECn, ... e Al) Two Tots Cremated hi Auto OKLAHOMA CITY CAP> Two children burned to death today after a car In which they were sleeping was stolen and then apparently deliberately set on rire in southwest Oklahoma Olly, police said. OCficers said the children had been left in the car while their rather delivered newspapers at an apartment complex. The two small charred bodies were round about 4 :50 a.m. s hortly after firefighters extinguished the burning vehicle. The victims were tentatively identified as Melissa Isaac, 6, and her brother, Martin, 3. Officers s aid the arsonist possibly was not aware the children were in the car when it was set afire. After discovery of the bodies, police launched a search or the quiet neighborhood for a youth seen running from the burning car by a passerby. Rollce said they were looking for. a 19.-year-old sus pect for questioning in the deaths. Lt. Ted Gregory said the victims' father, Melford Isaac, 25, telephoned police about 4 a.m. arter a man fled In bis car which had been left idling outside the apartment,cQmplex. lnvesttalltors said the compad vehicle1\VN U.ken trom a parking lot all Uie t:hildren slept in a carpeted hatchback trunk area. They safd the rather gave chase on foot but was unable to stop the driver. t Prellmln ary investigation ind icated lbe car was driven dlrecUy to the death site, eight blocka a\fay, where a flammable liquid was thrown on the interior before the car was set afire, police said. . • "It appears some flammable (lee BODIES, P aie A2) Two G~y Lovers, M11rder Suspects, . Just 'Ordjnary' .... ' After the Fall This large section of pine'trees near Phillips, Wis., was flattened by strong winds during a storm whieh struck the northern part of the state. They are viewed by a plane flying over the area Tuesday. 3 Co11ntians Learn V alile of Freedom station where the crew took the Muska after being. released by the Cubans shortl)" arter midnig~t. She said be ~old ber the 'MU$ica was first stopped by a. Cuban . ' <See CVBA, Pace Ai> Runway, Terminal Lots Eyed By GARY GRANVILLE Of ttw o.ity P'ttot S~lf Facilities at Orange County Airport COCA) should ••be expanded to meet present tratfic needs," the 1976-77 county Grand Jury said today in its year-end report. Expansion s hould include enlarging the airport terminal, ·adding parking lots and increasing tie-down spaces for private planes, the Grand Jury said. Also, the jury noted. OCA's main runway should be "extended 7;r7 feet northerly." The grand jury report conceded the proposed expansion projects cannot go ahead until a recently completed airport environmental impact report is accepted by the county. Thal acceptance s uffered a setback last week when the county planning commission sent the environmental report back to staff and the consultants who prepared it for a major overhaul. Nonetheless, the Grand. Jury said the expansion projects are needed to meet air traveler and airport user demands. ·'It was observed by this grand· jury, as it bas been by former grand juries that the terminal i.s inadequate to servJce the more (See AIRPORT, Pa1e A2) Co ast Low coutaL. clouds and fog late nlgbt and early morning hours, otherwise SUM)' Thursday allernoon. Lows toni&bt ~ to 65 with highs Tbur5day ranging Crom 7$to85inland. INSIDE TODAY .._,..._,.'--.DA.;.._-.IL Y Pt L 0 T s W9C.lnw11day Juty 6 1917 ·Busines~-only Mail Rate Hike Sought W \ S 111 N <; T 0 I /\ P > l'O*I mW1ter Oentritl 8cnJ1tmh1 F' B.ulor a"l ked the Po1lt1I Strvlct.• bourd etf 1t<>V•rnor11 today \O tulc~ first l'las~ mull r11te11 for IH.llllll'l>M"s h~ lhn•c n•11ll4 wh1lt• hold1ni.: v••'>l.d rut.-., ror 1odl\ 1du.-b .il lhc t.•urrt•nt l.l ce"h Using Ber Head Hni11r ':1 1 ecommend utlon followed u requut hall wettk by Prciddent Curtor to Ht up u "C'ltlaen'a rate·• for tlrtt·claaa mail lhul would cos t less than ll'tters mailed by busanes~c!>. Cart<·r did not spec:1ry u fee in his request. 8a1lar did not usk the There's more than one way to get the weeks s hopping homl' from the markl't as Delores Flores shows The Baltimore woman. a native or Spain. carrys a bag full of 25 pounds of milk, meat, eggs and vegetables She says 1t ·s quite comfortable. Phoenix Youth Dies In Huntington Surf A 17·year-old Phoenix, Ariz , you th drowned Tuesday afternoon al Huntington City Beach, lif<!guards reported. Orange County Coroner's of· fi cials said an autopsy will be performed today on Mitchel Leonard Hunter who was found by Huntington Beach lifeguards undt>r about eight feet of water after being submerged for more than an hour. Hunter's cousin, David Van Overschelde. 14, of Mission Viejo, was swimming with the victim at about 4:45 p.m. when the Arizona youth called for help. Overschelde told lifeguards he was no more than five feft from • his cousin when he went under. The t~o youths grabbed at each oth~ but lost their grtp. The pair was about 50 yards from shore near lifeguard tower 15, said Lt. Bill Richardson. Overschelde swam to shore and notified lifeguards who quickly began a dive search for Hunter. Richardson said he focated the dead youth after a second sweep OAANQI! COAST s DAILY PILOT of the area in which he had disappeared. Efforts to revive the youth were unsuccessful, officials said. Richardson said the boy had no vital signs at the lime he was pulled ashore. Lifeguards noted that small rip currents, known as "finger rips" had been caused by heavy s urf. produced trenches in the sand below the waler. Young Overschelde told lifeguards Hunter bad shown no signs of difficulty prior to his cry for help. Woman Hurt By Propeller Improving Authorities in Imperial County said today a young Fountain Valley woman who lost her lower right leg in a Colorado River resort speedboat accident is making rapid pro1ress. Janice Bedrosian, 22, or l82'Z7 Muir Woods Court is listed In considerably improved condition at Loma Linch University Medical Center followln1 surgery. A apokestttan for the Imperial County Sheriff's Office said this morning be bad Just cbecked on Miss Bedrosian and both her family and hospital staff members are pleased with her filht to recover. The student beautician endured 10 straiebt houre of surco~y b•fore doctors abandoned f!!forta to reattach the llm b sovered by a a peed boat propeUor Friday. • Slayer GUilty LOS ANGELES (AP> -Art ,18·yHr·old Van NufS man. P.hlllp Gu,y Stephens. hos been found auOty of flr1t detrte murder in lbe:Tape ••d m\uW of ~ Raeda Hi(h. SCboOl atudtflt. Mary ~ HOQde1'9Qq, 15, lul September .• governors to endorse the end to Saturday delivery or mail -a subject that wu expected to be discussed during the meeting - but said that the special citizen rate for letters may win wider public approval for five-day. week delivery if be decides to recommend it. The new rates of 16 centa and 13 cents could not ao Into effect before next spring because tho law requires a 10-month delay for considt!ration of Bailar'a recommendations by the board of governors and tbe Postal Ralo Com mission. The postage rate for letters haa been 13 cents since December 1975 .. Hopefully, if infl~tion can be checked an<l we are allowed to continue attacking postal costs vigorously. the 13·Cent rate for the individual could have a long life," Bailar said. The citizen rate would apply only to first-class matter mailed by an individual to a point within the United States and would involve specially printed stamps. To qualify for the rate, Ballar said, ZIP codes must appear in both the delivery and return ad· dresses, one of which must be handwritten. The letters also must meet standard size and shape requirements. .. , believe that as a matter or national policy it would be in the public interest to pursue the concept of a citizen rate first· class postage for use by consumers," the President wrote Bailar said several months ago that the first-class letter rate probably would go to 15 cents if Saturday delivery were elim· inatcd and 16 cents if at were continued Although rate increases bring the mail agency substantial criticism, the proposed reduction an delivery is generating as much controversy in Congress this tame The controversy heated up when a congressionally created study commission rec-o mmended this year that del- iveries be reduced from six to five days a week lo save $412 million a year, The study group commissioned a public opinion poll by the A.C Nielsen organization that found that the public would rather go without the us ual six-day del· a very than pay more for postage. Key members or Congress disputed the rinding and a bill is pending in the House to order continued s ix-day delivery service Frona Page AJ CUBA ••• fishing boat that wasn't flying a nag about 35 miles north and 100 miles west of the island nation. When the planes began buzzing the boat, one fired several shots across the yacht's bow. "Man, was I scared," the youth told his mother later. He said the yacht was escorted by a naval vessel to the port of Bahia de Cabanas where the c•w -Reidt, Ska(te, Paul Holthus, 20, of Orange; Terry Kohrs. 20, or Kansas City, Mo., and Susan McCarthy, 16, of Encinitas -was taken off the boat and driven to Havana for questionin1 that lasted most of Monday. Skafle told his mother they were driven back to Bahia de Cabanas and allowed to leave at about 1 a.m. Tu~sday. "I never was so glad to be back in America," he told bis mother. ·'The Communist.a there are so terrible." In a press conference Tu.esday in Key West, Reidt, a former Lacuna Beach resident, said two Florida yachtsmen were also being held in Havana. They were identified as Jack Hanst and Howard Bradbeer of Orlando, Fla. R eldt said the Musica apparently was seized after the two Florida men who were aboard another eamna yacht. the Sea Ration, fired on an unmarked Cuban veuel. Fro• Pflfle .4J AIRPORT.· •• tban 1.8 milllon pauenfen who UH thla facllltJ aonutlly , .. the Grand Jury 1aJcl. · "Public parklq hi and around the airport la ata premium. "At PNMDl all 850 tie-clown apac• for 1eaerAi aviation are occupied ud t.bere b a lOftl "•tuns lat, .. the jury laid .. it recapped 1lta ~mm•nd~ '°'rE· &o ~ board "' IU • t Wilnt tm IO 'ilolDt out Uiat AQ Hlen150a Of tlae · naa'"' WiU "aUo.,. depantq alrtralt to reacll a .,.._. .itttude Wn OY~fa1 liolH HHlUH ... il.,... ....... alr1pQrt ... Near San Juan AmbBomb lnjurea 21 PETAH TIQVA, Israel <AP> -A pipe bomb apparently planted by Arab terrorists under a vtltlabl• 1t1nd rlpsatd through a bustling open-air market in this Tel Aviv suburb today, injuring 21 persona, five of them serioutl.v. Suspect Admits 2 OC Slayings It was the worst bombing in Israel since May 1976, when a booby-trapped motor scooter blew up in J erusalern, killing one person and lnjuring 29. Ex-Chapman President, J. Davis, Buried Memori a l services were conducte<1 Tuesday for John L. Davis, president e merltulS ot Chapman College. who suffered a fatal heart attack Saturday at the age or 72. Dr. Davis served as president of Chapman College in Orange for 14 years until his retirement in 1971. Up untij two years ago, Dr. Davis did part·lime work on campus as president emeritus. Dr. Davis, a recent resident of Tustin and a long-time Santa Ana resident, is survived by his wife. Mary Reede r Davis; two children, Robert Lowell Davis and Judy Davis Allen, both Orange County residents; one- s tepson, rdichael Reeder; seven grandchildren, and. one great- grandchild. Prior lo his work at Cbepman College, Dr. Davis served as dean at Lynchburg Colle&e in Virginia and at Hiram College an Ohio. When he retired at Chapman there were just 300 students. When he left in 1971, the campus had grown to about 1,300 students. The John L . Davis Memorial fund has been established at Chapman College in his honor. From Page Al BODIES .•. · liquid -possibly gasoline or an alcohol-based fluid -was set afire in the interior,'' said fire inspector John Soos. • They said the blaze was fed by s tacks of newspapers which Isa- ac, a motor carrier for the Oklahoma Journal, was del· -ivering at the time the car was s tolen. By TOM BARLEY Ol IM O.lly f'iltU .. H One of two men Riverside County authorities believe may be linked to as many as 28 homosexual killings in Southern California assertedly has confessed to two Orange C0W1ty alaylnes. il was learned today. Orange County Sheriff's Capt. Robert Griffeth said one of the two suspects held in Riverside has indicated that he and his companion murdered two young men whose bodies were found in the Orte&a Highway area near San Juan Capistrano. <Related Story, PaieA3>. Riverside authorities have booked Patrick Wayne Kearney, 37. and David Hill, 34, of Redondo Beach on two counts of murder. They were held with ball set at $500,000 each. Griffeth refused today to identity the auapoct who reportedly haa confirmed for Rlvoralde and Orante County uuthorltles that ho a nd · hl1 companion dumped two bodies in the Orte1a 1-U1hway a rea. Neither body has bee n identified. And Orlffelh made it * . * * Fro• P•ge Al SUSPECTS. • to El Paso. Texas, about a month after investigators ,questioned them in connectioil-with the slayingsof John Lamay, 17,of El Se1undof and Arturo Marquez, 24 , of Oxnard. They were persuaded by their families to return and 6urrender, authorities s aid. Kearney and Hill. 34. have been charged with the Lamay and Marquez slayings. Authorities say they are questioning them in connection with at least 28 slayings.,Several or the victims. including Lamay, were found wrapped in plastic trash bags and the case has become known as the ••trash bag murders." Blaze Controlled AUBURN <AP> -A forest fire caused by fireworks was brought under control late Tuesday alter it burned between 125 and 200 acres in parts or Sugar Pinc Mountain between th e communities of Christian Valley and Meadow Vista. clear today that the accused pair may not have been aware of the vlctima' namea at the time lber were mutilated and murdered. One or the two victims Wlll round Aug. 22 by a hiker who kicked a trash bat off the road and then discovered that it waa stuffed with human remains. The second vlc:Um linked to Kearney and Hill was that of • man aged about 21 who had been sexually assaulted and also shot an the head. The body, found Oct. 6, wq badly decomposed and waa discovered less than a mile from the location of the nrst corpse. Authorities In four countiea have already dubbed Keamer, and 11111 "the trash bag killers. • They believe tho pair may have been responsible for as many as 28 murders. O,-an&e County inve5t.igatona have apent Hvtral d1~1 wortdna with Rlvertlde authorlUu on the lnveauaallon. They also have epenl' some time in Redondo Beach. the home town of tho two suspecte, tn the belief that one of the two Ortega v1cUms may have come from that area. ··we aro really juat watuna for Riverside tQ.pau the ball to ue," Qr1ftoth uld today. '1Lo1 An11lea County and San Dle•o County oN'lcera alao want to talk to these two men !1ut we will just have to take our turn." Tax 'Scheme' Brings Jail I SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -A.1 50-year-old Union City man who claimed 200 tax withholding exemptions on his income \ax return was sentenced to two years in federal prison for failing to file income tax returns and providing false information for exemption certificates. William Blattner was convicted by a jury May 19 of furnishing his employer. United Can Co. of Hayward, with three successive certificates claiming, respectively, 50, 99 and 200 withholding exemptions for tu purposes in 1974 and 1975. U.S. Dis trict Court Judge • Robert F. Peckham did not assess any fine, noting Blattner will have some $18,000 in taxes and civil penalties to pay. Walls for all! Drexel wall systems to fit every space and please every taste Repeat oursellles? Neverl With so individuartstic a selection of Orexe .. wall systems. each storage scnerne 1s exactly suited to your space fim1tat1ons ..• and your tasto. Our design stall wlll show you crisply styled contem· porary cases, exotic teak-I 1nished pieces bnght with chinOlsene. units rich in baroque curves and penel~ng. Funclionat touches are equally var- ied-'rom drop desks and bars to sliver drawers, lV and stereo spaeee and display cases with lghtedshel\le8. Watts for all, we say, and -thankS to Drexel -never the sametwlcel r CONVENIENT fl~~IHQ, ~Of£S$IONAL INTERIOR DiSIGN Wl'ntOUT OIUG.\TION AND COMiS>RT~LE PA"KINO. Orange ·£oast ED~ Tl 0 N VOL. 70, NO. 187, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TWay'• Clo slag N.Y.Stoek8 WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 1977 c TEN CEN JU1-y Urges Expansion of·. By GAa Y C RANVILLE OI • ll:Mlty ~11.c •u11 Facllllles at Oranae County Airport COCA l s hould "be expanded to meet present traffic needs," the 1976-77 county Grand Jury said today In 1ts year-end report. Expansion s hould include enlarging the a1rport terminal, adding parking lots and increasing tie-down spaces for private planes, the Grand Jury sald. Also, lbe jury noted, OCA's maln ruliway should be "extended m feet northerly." The graad jury r;eport conceded the proposed expansion projects cannot go ahead until a recently completed airport environmental impact report is accepted by the county. That acceptance suffered a setback last week when the county planning commission sent 'WHAT IF THE COUNCIL DIDN'T PASS IT?' PlnkJey Ponders PleHlng Puk PropoHI . Pinkley PBrk .. Ex,..ma-yor Due Honors? ... By ARTHUR R. VINSEL ~IN O.lly Plloll SUlf The man who earned the title Mr. Costa Mesa-over four decades of community service is about to get a monument while he is still hale, hearty and can go sit there and enjoy it. Longtime civic leader and former mayor Alvin L. "Pifl:k" Pinkley, who has logged more consecutive years of servtce than any other living Orange County officeholder, ls to have a park named aft.er him. COUNOLWOMAN MARY· SMALLWOOD set forth the proposal at Monday's city council meeting, citing Pinkley's local residence since the mid 1930s and bis many contributions to the community. . "l hadn't heard of it," the former mayor declared today when informed of the suggested honor ol having a piece of public real estate named for him. He was busy with ,.a meeting of the city's liaison committee with the Newport-Mesa Unified School l>istrict <See, HONORS DUE?, Page AZ) Stolen Car · Arson Kills Two ~ots OKLAHOMA CITY <AP) - Two small children, left sleeping alone in their father's car were burned lo death today when someone stole the car and then set it on fire, authorities said. Seven hours later, a 19-)'ear-old man surrendered. Police said the fire appeared to have been set deliberately, but said . the thief may not have realized the youngsters were sleeping in the carpeted hat.ch· back area. • The man in custody wat identified M Michael Crtaton Moore of Newcastle, Okla. Police said they did not know of any connection between Moore· and the children's f~ther. A po)ice spokesman said tnve:1tigators believe the car was ta.ken after a drinking party w h lcb apparently led to an Impulse f« ''a short ride." the environmental report back to staff and the consultants who prepared it for a major overhaul. Nonetheless, the Grand Jury said the expansion projects are needed to meet air traveler and airport user demands. ''It was observed by this grand jury, as it has been by former grand juries that the terminal is inadequate to service the more than 1.8 million passengers who use this facility annually." the For Ci t izen Grand Jury said. "Public parking in and aroWld the airport is at a premlum. "At present all 850 tie-down spaces for general aviation are occupied and there is a long waiting list," the jW'y said as It recapped its recommendation for expansion to the board ol supervisors. It went on to point out that an extension of the runway will "allow departing aircraft to 13-cent Stamp To Remain? WASHINGTON CA P > -Postmaster General Benjamin F. Ballar asked the Postal Service board of governors today to hike first-class mail rates for businesses by three cents while holding postal rates for individuals at the current 13 cents. Bailar's recommendation followed a request last week by President Carter to set up a "citizen's rate" for first-class mail that would cost less than letters mailed by businesses. Carter did nol specify a fee in his request. Ballar did not ask the governors to endorse the end to Saturday delivery of mail -a subject that was expected to be discussed during the meeting - but said that the special citizen rate for letters may win wider public approval for five-day· week delivery if he decides Lo recommend it. The new rates of 16 cents and 13 cents could not go into effect before next sprang because the Jaw requires a 10-month delay for consideration of Bailar's recommendations by lhe board of governors and the Postal Rate Commission. CSeeSTAMP, Page AZ) Clemente Wo11Uln Help~ess Four Days An elderly San Clemente woman fell ln her home and lay helpless witHout food or w at.er for four da71 before a worried nel1hbor J)erted police Tuesday. Police forced open the front door of the house, at 229 Via San Andreas, and found 80-year-old Geor1ta E. McCay still conscious on the Ooor just next to her bed. Home l,imits May Be Aid To Pollution Orange County planning commwloners were told Tues· day restrictions on home building in the county's southern reaches may be adding to air pollution tn the area. The building restrictions imposed by the slate Water Resources Board last February will be shown to be contributing to added auto travel in the south county, said Carl Kymla, mao-ier of the Moulton Niguel Wat.er District. That showing will come in a study to be released later this moat.b. Kymla said. The added auto travel is the result of makin1 people who work in the south county travel more miles to their jobs because o( the dwindling supply of new residences, the study is expected to point out. Drifter New Tran11pae ·11ace Leader Firemen who rendered emerc· ency medical treatment said she was dehydrated and had broken a hip. Tbey said Mrs. McCay told them. •·1 feel all ri1ht." She told firemen she got out of bed Saturday to go to the bathroom when her foot turned under her and she fell to the floor. She was unable to gel to the telephone. walk or crawl for help. Marjorie Walls, SO, the neighbor who called police, said Mrs. McCay had managed to pull an electric blanket over her. Mrs. McCay was reported in satisfactory condition today al San Clemente General Hospital. "Do you believe in ESP?" Mrs. Watts said wonderingly today, recalling why she became worried for her neighbor. ••I really truly think I have to believe in It now." Mrs. Watts said she rose early Tuesday. determined to do some work on an oil painting she was doing of the San Juan Capistrano train depot. "But 1 felt totally uncomfortable," she said. "I · couldn't even pick up the brushes to start it. "The next thing I knew, I'm going out.side, standing in the middle or the street -for no reason -looklng at my lands· caping .... and the newspapers in front or Mrs. McCay's bouae." She said, "All thoee papers stacked up -it just shook me up. I dashed into the house. I tried to call her on the phone. I couldn't get her. I tried to call some neighbors, but nobodr was home. Then I called police.• Mesa Street Nizme Changed 'f o Sea Bluff_ reach a greater altltude before overtlyl11g noiae aensltive resldenUal areas aot1th of the alrPOrt." · However , tbat finding, is disputed by those individuals and organlzations mainly ln the Newport Beach area who oppose the expansion projects recommended by the Grand Jury. They have assailed the envirOOIJ!eotal impact report for failing lo come to grips with the enrlrmmental effect.a of specific proposed projects. · The opponents also l)ave faulted the four-year, $300,000 airport study for representing what they call "a general plan for the airport" rather than a study of specific proposals. T h at opposition not. withstanding, the Grand Jury in its final message to the Board of. (Sff.IUJlY. P a1eA!) -~., ......... HE TELLS BOYS OF SOLO OCEAN TRIP Pat Quesnel la Hanging Up His Oars ._Ro~ing Ends Haimii Trip Spells FinU Dl,JVALL, Wash. (AP> -A 28-year·oJ.d man who rowed across the Pacific Ocean from Washington state to Hawaii says he '11 never row again. On July J4, 1976, Pat Quesnel sboved off from La Push, Wash., in a 22·f0ot dory. After 111 lonely days and 2,700 miles of paddUng, he reached bi1 destination Nov.3. "l'M THROUGH ROWING," llE said in an interview. "I did it for the challenge and the experience. It's over. "I was totally surprised at the big reception r received in Hawaii," the 6-1, 165-pound Quesnel ~aid. "I didn't think it was such a big thing. I couldn't understand why so many people at the dock, especially press, were there to meet me.·· QUESNEL IS WQRKING ON A BOOK about his exploits, including the abortive voyage he made in 1972, when he got within 850 miles of Honolulu when a freak wave capsized his boat. He hopes to have the book ready by October. The tentative title of the book is "The Sea Is My Enemy." "The sea tried to kill me,·· Quesnel said. "I could never relax, even when it was calm. That's when the trouble begins. You can't let the sea luU you to sleep. If you do, you 're gone." Bail Bonds11Uln's Office Fired Upon Costa Mesa police are inveaUcaUng a shooting attack on the office of bail bondsman Robert Glazier, who was shotin a 1968 raid on bis home by a mass of Hessian motorcycle gang Ill em l>ers. DetecUYe U. Georie Lorton said today that G~a~ier, 39, repqtted ai least two gunahot.s tired lnto bis office at J30 E. 17th St., on Mondiut •. No q was present lo the of· ficci, Salte G, \vhen t.be shots were fired 1nto Use pxemlses, police aald. G un.sbot.s were also fired lnlo another small office suite OC· ~pied by Crafts by Wrulams. a bobby and artwork shop. "We doo't really thiok lt wu ~eded to the 199 Cleal with the Hessians,'• Lieutenant Lorton said today: Glazier was shot in 1968 when a gang ol Hessians blkers invaded bis former residence oo Placentia 'Avenue. Coast r Nii -Y.iitil Lea~s · · A nww ol nvo C1Uromlam -· wtn&lllbliReldt'• *foot btda mldntibt. · lftcludini lhr'4K' Oran10 County M.a1loa li'Mn l'loriq to Dana She aald be told her the l(uslca ,.... -Mid Uau leaned a POtot. wu flnt 1topped by a Cuban n • • • PP r • c u ·1 l •a to r Tb• w1~• wu hrtemrpted fllbinf boat t&at wua't Oylna a I n d c P • D den c e DI Y a flt' r SW\dai QIPt WMtt the b9at WU flal about IS oUlea oorth and lOO 'Pf'ndlnJ the Fourth or July ua bo•r4ec by m from a cu~ mUeureatoftbelltanclnatlon. prtsonen tn Cuba naval veaiel alter five planes, When the planea began buzzing · I nev r thou1eht America& w•a lncludlq aome Cuban MIGs, the boat one fired aneral shots w Cree." uld Rot.:rt Skarte, 19, bu11edtheyacbt. across the yacht'• bow. of Newport Buch, follow1na hiK Skane'• mother said today she .. Man, was J scared ," the releue Tue.-.d.ay first heard of the Incident early youth told his mother later. Skane wu purl oC a YGuthful Tuetd~ when her aon called her He aaJd the yacht was escorted crew he•dt•d by ,Dr. Ron•ld fro~ Key West'• Co.at Q.1tard by a naval vessel to the port of f\eldt. a former prorH•or or •tat.loo where the ~ew toot the B•hla de Cabanas where the medical microb10I01Y at the UC Mutlca alte-r beta, nteuod by crew -Reldt, Skafte, Paul Irvine School o! .Modklne. wbo the Cubans shortly after. Holthus. •20, o! Orange; Terry ·-:a ~ • What Freedom Is Kohn. m, of Kansas City, Mo .• hd Susan McCarthy, 16, of Encinitas -wu taken off the boat and driven to Havana for queatlOftlni that lasted most of Monday. Skarte told his mother they were driven back ~o Bahia de Cabanas and allowed to leave al about 1 a .m. Tuesday. "I never was so glad to be back in America," he told bia mother.· "Tbe Communist. there are so terrible." · The former UCI professor aald they told b1m they. t_houiht th~ Cuban vessel, which wu not fiyln• a n.,. ml&ht have been a pirate ahtp wben lt a_pproacbed tbelr vessel ••tn a menacing tnanner." Reldt has been on a year-long sailing odyssey which b~ taken him to the Galapagos Jalands, lhroueh the Panama Canal and up the Amazon River. "He's an excellent sailor," Mrs. Skafte added. She said her son menUoned tbat Retdt had received an offer for the boat from a Florida resident and was contemplating seWn1 the bOat and nytq home with bls crew. . . In a press conference Taes4a)j in Key Weat, Reldt. a lormer La1una Beach resJdent.. said two Florida yachtameo were also be1n1 held tn Havana. They were identified u Jack Ranat and Howard B:radbeer of Orlando, Fla. · Reid( said the Mualca apparenlly waa aelsed alter the two Florida men wbo were aboard another •alll.n8jacht. the Sea Ration. fire on an unmarked Cuban vessel. Killer Suspe_ct Liked Knives Grocery Owner Telh of Gay's Fascination REDONDO BEACH (AP> - Patrick K ear ney and David Hill, avowed homosexual lovers charged with killing and dismembering two men and suspected in 26 other slayings, seemed ordinary to their neighbor s -exce pt for Kearney's fascination for knives. <Related story, Page A3). "He liked to come in and look al the butrher knives," grocery store owner J erry Steve)lS said Tuesday. "'He'd usk me to take one down and he'd look at it and handle it and ask me about the steel. Then he'd put it back. But 1t wouldn't be a week before he was back looking at them again." Stevens described Kearney as· ·•a loner, with an eerie sense of quiet about him." Others in the peaceful residential area where the two men lived said there was no hmt of their involvement in the multiple slaxings for which SUCCUMBS AT 72 Chapman's Davis F ro na P age A I STAMP ••. The postage rate for letters has been 13 cents ::.mce Oeceml>cr 1975 "Hopefully, 1f inflation can be checked and we arc allowed to continue attacking postal costs vigorously, the 13·ccnt rate for the individual could have a long hfo." Ballar said The citizen rate would apply only to first-class matter mailed they are being questioned. ·'They were very quiet. very mce." recalled Bob Longacre, who lived next door to Kearney a nd Hill for more than four ROOMMATES LINKED TO 28 SLAYINOS-Story, Al years. "It's just one of those things that you can't believe." Kearney, 37, who resigned as an engineer with Hughes Aircraft in El Segundo, was des- cribed by his supervisor as .. an ideal worker, a model worker.·· Kearney's conservative dem· eanor was a sharp contrast to his more namboyant roommate. ac- <'Ording to liquor store clerk George Julsonnet. "He <Hill) would come in one day as a redhead, one day as a blond and another time be 'd have black hair," Julsonnetsaid. "Bul they weren't troublemakers E x -Chapman Preside nt, J. Davis, Buried •Me morial services were conducted Tuesday for John L Davis, president emeritus of Chapman College, who suffered a fatal heart attack Saturday at the age or 72. Dr. Davis served as president of Chapman ColleS!e in Orange for 14 years until his retirement in 1971. Up until two years ago. Dr. Davis did part-time work on campus as president emeritus. Dr. Davis, a recent resident of Tustin and a long-time Santa Ana resident. is survived by his wife. Ma ry Ree d e r Davis ; two children. Robert Lowell Davis a nd Judy Davis Allen, both Orange County residents, one stepson. Michael Reeder; seven grandchildren, and one great- grandchild. Prior to his work al Chapman College, Dr. Davis served as dean at Lynchburg College in Virginia and at Hiram College in Ohio. When he started al Chapman there were just 300 s tudents. When he leflin 1971, the campus had grown to about 1,300 students. The John L. Davis Memorial fund has been established al Chapman College in his honor. by an individual to a point within the United States and would Two Animal Films involve specially printed stamps. To qualify for the rate, Bailar Se f Lib said, ZlP codes must appear in t Or rary both the dehvery a nd return a<t-Two films for animal lovers dresses. one of which must be l bown · ht • M · handwritten. The letters also wil bes tonig a.. anners Library as part of the Newport must meet standard size and Beach Public Library's rree film shape require ments . series. "l believe that as a matter or The showing al 7:30 p.m. opens national policy 1t would be in the •vitb "In Search of the Bowhead public interest to pursue the Whale,'; a film about the search concept of a citizen rate fint-by the World Wildlife Fund for class postage for us e b y · the rare whale In the Arctic and con s umers." the President . "Nigbtin a Pet Shop" a story of a wrote. pet ape his that escapes from pet Bailar said several months ago shop c~e after dark. that the first-class letter rate probably would eo to 15 cents if Saturday delivery were elim- inated and 16 cents if lt were continued. ORANGI COAST c DAILY PILOT Withdrawal 'Need'? 'TOKYO CAP> -The Chinese government says U.S. military installations as well as troops must be withdrawn from Taiwan and the Formoea Strait before it will con.sider full diplomatic relaUoa.s ~th the United States... they kept to themselves.·· Kearney and Hill were visited frequently by young men, Julsonnet recalled, until their disappearance about six weeks ago. Authorities said the pair fled to El Paso, Texas, about a month after investigators questioned them in connection with the slayings of John Lamay, 17, of El Segundo, and Arturo Marquez, 24, of Oxnard. They were persuaded by their families to return and surrender. authorities said. Kearney and Hill, 34. have been charged with the Lamay and Marquez s layings. Authorities say they are questioning them in connection with at Jeast 28 slaylngs. Several of t~e victims. including Lamay,. were found wrapped in plasti:: trash bags and the case has become known as the "trash bag murders." Phoenix Youth Dies In Huntington Surf A 17-year-old Phoenix, Ariz., youth drowned Tuesday afternoon at Huntington City Beach, Weguards reported. Orange County Coroner's of-' ficials said an autopsy will be performed today on Mitchel Leonard Hunter who was found by Huntington Beach lifeguards under about eight feel of water after being submerged for more than an hour. Hunter's cousin, David Van Overschelde, 14, of Mi ssion Viejo, was swimming with the victim at about 4 :45 p.m. when Fro1n Page '' l JURY ••. Supervisors recommended that the projects at issue be approved s ubject to approval of the environmental impact report. Unlike other recent ~rand juries, the 1976-77 jury did not ad vise the Board or Supervisors· to seek a new site for a general aviation airport to serve Orange County's air travel needs. Nor did the departing grand jury comment on air operations at Los Alamitos Naval Air Station or El Toro Marine Corps Air Station as other juries have done. Service Held For Veteran Valley Teacher Catholic funeral rites were conducted this morning for veteran school teacher Hazel Mary Cummiskey. 64, of. Fountain Valley. who died Friday after a long illness. Mrs. Cummiskey began her teaching career in Minnesota. before moving to California in 1950. She taught in the old Costa Mesa Union School District and the Alamitos Elementary School District until 1955. A reading s pecialist, Mrs. Cummiskey taught al Boos Ele·. mentary School in the Westmlnater School District for the put 22 years. The Boos School Parent- Teacber AlaociaUon has set up a fu.nd lo Mrs. Cummiskey's name for a reading laboratory. Donations may be sent in Mrs. Cumrniskey's name to the Boos Sehool PrA. Mrs. Cummiskey is survived by her daughter, Mary C. Hasson · of Placentia; her aon, Thoma V. Cumsnt.akey and ~lsten. Fern Henryson of Seal Beach, NeU Simm~ and Lenore Hollman. the Arizona youth called for help. Overscbelde told lifeguards he was no more than rive feet from his cousin when be went under. The two youths grabbed at each other but lost their grip. The pair was about 50 yards Crom shore near lifeguard tower 15, said LL Bill Richardson. Overschelde swam to shore and notified lifeguards who quickly began a dive search for Hunter. Richardson said he localed the dead youth after a second sweep of the area in which he had disappeared. TWO-YEAR PROJECT-CalTrans is e*pected to begin next month a $4.9 million project to realign and widen the Culver Drive interchange at the Santa Ana Freeway in Irvine. Shaded area in the above map shows new construction, while white areas designate existing road- way. Project will widen overpass bridge, realjgn road- way and increase the number of ramps. Efforts to revive the youth were unsuccessful, officials said. Richardson said the boy had no vital signs at the lime he was pulled ashore. Smith Nixes Power Giveaway Lifeguards noted that small rip currents, known as "finger rips" had been cal.llJed by heavy surf. produced trenches in the sand below the water. Young Overschelde told lifeguards Hunter had shown no signs of difficulty prior to hjs cry for help. SALISBURY, Rhodesia (AP> -Prime Minister Ian Smith said today his government would not hand over power to the Soviet- a rm ed Rhodesian Patriotic Front. He branded the m ovement, which is fighting an escalating war to topple his white administration, as "'Public Enemy Number One." Smith also dismissed as a "nonstarter" a s uggested a utonomous Commonwealth peace-keeping force during a transitional period to black rule. He made it clear that any external military forces would have to take orders from the present while·lcd Rhodesian army. Drexel wall systems to fit every space and please every .taste Repeat OUl"$tl~? Never! With so Individualistic a selection of Drexet• wall systems. each storage scheme is exacrly suited to your space hmltattons .•• and yoor taste. Our design stall will show you crisply styled contem- porary cases. e1eotlc tealj-fin1shed pieces b~ht with ct11nolser1e, units rich in baroque curves and panelhng FunelJonal toochee are equally var· 1ed, from drop desks and bars to s11Ver drawers. TV and stereo F rowaPflfleAJ gpaces af'ld display cases with hghtedshelllea. Walts IOI all. we say. and -thanl\s to Orexel-never rhe SMlelWIC8I APWo .. ~• FATALLY STRICKEN Marine General Wiicox Pendleton's Gen. Wilcox Dead at 53 By Associated Press The commander of the U .S. Marine lsl Division, Maj. Gen. Edward A. Wilcox, has died in Camp Pendleton hospital about an hour after he was found in Jogging clothes unconscious on a Jawn near his home on base. A Marine Corps spokesman said Wilcox, 53. died of a heart attack Tuesday despite efforts of Navy medical personnel lo revive him both at the scene and at the base medical center. OHicials said Wilcox was found by a postman. who summoned help. Wilcox's d eputy, Brig. Gen Marc Moore. imme diately assumed command of the division, which has 20,000 personnel and ii:. ma10tained at com bat read1nesi:. Wil cox was a 35-year \'eteran of the Marine Corps, rising from the ranks of the enlisted men in World W:Jr I I. li e wa s com mi s!>1oned a second lieutenant in J une. 1945 and · participated in the post-war oc· cupation of J apan. He later served with the 4th Marine Regiment in China and with lsl Division rC'giments in Korea and Vietnam. He attained the rank or brigadier general in 1974 and major general in 1976 and commanded the d ivision for one year. He was the holder of three Legions of Mcnt. the Bronze Star , and numeroui:. other de· corat1ons. .. Wilcox. a natlv~ of Chicago. recei,ed his hq~h i:.chool education in Long Beach and attended 0l'cidcntal Colle~e in Lo!> Ang<•les lie held a doctorate from George Washington Univers1t.,, He 1s i:.·urvl\ed by his widow, Dorothy, two sons and two daughters. Missile Halt Set WAS lll NGTON (/\PJ Production of the Minuteman Ill intercontinental ballistic missile will end when lO missiles authorized two months ago are built. the Pentagon says Action Ordered 1 ~ LA Bus Plan Ruled lliegal LOS ANGELES tAPJ The city schools' part voluntary 1ntecr0Uon plan, which also required aome m and a tor y bue·lng . wa it ruled unconatllu_tlonal t oday by' Superior Court Judge Paul Egly The Board of Education was ordered to return to the court within 90 days with plans which "realistically commence des- egrention of this district by no later ~an February 1978. •• Egly's written ruling aJso said the boar d must consider all reasonable alternatives to any plan it submits. Egly said the current plan failed because "it doe~ not des- egregate any school 1n the district'' and even if 1t did "it would reach so few of the 231 segregated minority schools as to be wholly ineffective in des egr egating this district · · Under Egly's 13-pagc order. the board must prep a re a tentative schedule for its study of new plans within two weeks. after which a hearing will be held lo allow any parties in the case to voice objections. The judge said he will appoint a referee Thursday lo report to the court periodically on the board's work. The refcreee wo uld have auth ority of obtaining court orders to gain access to inform atio n if necessary in making the reports. During Lhe three months of hearings to determine if the plan s atisfied requirements laid down by a 1976 state Supreme Court order, Egly indicated he was less than satisfied with much of the proposal The plan. adopted by the board m March after months of dispute. ca lled for voluntary des egr egation program~ unlll February. Then some fourth. fifth and sixth-graders would have been sent to integrated "learning centers" for nme·week periods each year. Bus rides could not exceed 35 minutes. Length of the bus rides had been one of the m ost disputed issues in the sprawling school d istrict, the nation 's second la rgest. The 600,000 students are in about 600 schools stretched over 600 square miles. Admitting the definition was arbitrary, the school board said that any school with less than 20 percent white or minority enrollment was segregated. Egly d id n ot say what constituted a segregated school, but did order the board to come up with a study of the cost and feasibility or desegregating all i:.chools where minorities are In substanUal majority. Di1trlctwlde, the students are 38 percent Spanish·surnamed, 33 percent black and 23 percent white. But the San Fernando Valley, in the northern part or the' district. is predominantly white, while the southern and eastern parts of the district. as much as 45 miles away, are black and Mexican-American. Three Drug Suspects 'At Large' Only three suspects named in arrest warrants issued after a lluntington Beach police probe of drug dealing at Marina High School remain to be arrested. authorities said toda v. Seventeen among '25 identified adults and juveniles were captured a week ago when teams of detectives and uniformed of- ficers raided residences from Long Beach to Santa Ana Heights. Several more s u s pects surrendered over the long Fourth of July weekend "We only have one adult and two Juveniles who aren 't in cu:-.tod}." Detective Valdon Birkett s:Jid. noting that one of the two Juvenile::. 1s hospitalized in a private psychiatric m~lltution in Santa Ana. None of the suspects under 18 has been r eleased to their parents' custody to await a court hearing. /\II are being detained at Orange County Juvenile Hall. Some adults among the arrest· ees have posted bail ranging up to $20,000 to secure freedom. The raid yielded a total of more than $30,000 worlh of drugs including 20 pounds of marijuana Thai Slicks and a small amount or cocaine at a Santa Ana Height::. res idence occupied by t wo brothers. police said 'Don't Step on Me' The Georgia harvester ant (right), largest ant in the state, is dwarfed by its South American cousin. Dinoponera Gigantea. at left. The giant ant, about !l 2 inches long, was found b y University of Georgia ento- mology professor Murray Blum during a recent Amazon jungle expedition. 28 T _rash Bag Murders? Homosexual Pair Linked to Bloody Slayings RIVERSIDE CAP> -A bloody hacksaw, a carpet and the hair of a pet dog have linked two roommates to at least 28 "trash bag murders." police say. The items were listed in an af· fidavit fil ed by sheriff's deputies which s howed that physical evidence taken from the bodies of several murder victims matched items found in the home shared by David llill and Patrick Kearney, both avo wed homosexuals. The two Redondo Beach men were arraigned Tuesday on two counts each of m urder. But Rivers ide County Sheriff Ben Clark said they might be tied to many more slayings that OC· c urred over a seven.year period. "There are at least 28." Clark said of the cases being linked to the pair. "There may be more." H e said the estimate came from conversations with the two men. who are talking openly with authorities. ed grave sites over the weekend. The s h e riff's affidavit indicated that Kearney, 37, and Hill. 34. were first sus pected m the series of mysterious murder~ when a friend of theirs. John LaMay. wasJound dismembered March 18. In an interview with authorities in April, Kearney and Hill said thev both had had homosexual relationships With LaMay over a period of two years, the affidavit said. During that visit, sheriff's dep- uties obtained samples of dog hairs, carpeting and the men's body hair, which e ventually were matched with evidence found on the bodies of La May and other victims, the affidavit disclosed. Al the m e n 's hom e. in vesligators found a hacksaw coaled with dried blood that matched LaMay·s blood type, the documents showed. boys in Pasadena, Texas. Elmet: Wayne Henley was found guilty of six of those murders. Tbe sheriff said the ''trash bag murders" were linked by other s1 milanties All of the bodies were of nude young men; some were d ismembered and several were s tuffed m plastic tras h bags. They were found along highways stretching from Los Angeles to the Mexican border. Most of the victims had been shot, and Clark said authorities a re sliU seeking the murder weapon. , The affidavit showed that four of the last five victims were seen in Los Angeles' MacArthur Park s hortly before they vanished and a nother was probably picked up as he h1lchh1ked to Long Beach. Tuesday's arrai gnment of Kearney and 11111 drew 150 spectators who stood in the sun- baked s treet as the t a ll mustachi* m en were led into Gran'pa's Old Store To Close Up Shop • Kearney, a former electronics technician at Hughes Aircraft Corp .. led authontiei:. to six alle~· In May, when authorities were closing in, the aCfidavit said. the m eh wrote to Kearney 's grandmother in Barstow asking her lo sell lhe1r house and pay their bills because they were going away. Off• G On May 26, Kearney mailed a 1cer . ets letter of resignation and his security badge to Hughes 'ff ' p a} Aircraft. Ot en ty Authorities s ay that HiU and M unictpal Court. Both wote bultetptoor vests under thetr •1 !-thlrts and were handc uffed ~ Clwrch Hiu Ri,ghu Vote NOBLESVILLE. Ind. <AP> "Gran·pa•s" faramel com had s uch appeal that a chauffeured Rolls Royce Crom Indianapolis drov~ her~ three times a year so its passenger could indulg• bis craving. · But "Gran'pa's Popcorn and Candy Store" -a business l.08 years old -is for iale. along with the patented caramel corn re(ipe that kept three generations of Kearney ned to El Paso. Texas . WASHINGTON C /\ P 1 -The 1 munchers happy. DUBUQUE . Iowa <AP> A but were persuaded by thell" United Church or Christ has de · Georg~ Cullen and his wire. Dubuque police offi cer who families to return and surrender. clared that recent events kindled Lora Jane, both 65, closed their forgot his ticket book is being T hey walked into Clark·s office .. fanatical prejudice" against sh~p in DecelJlher after 22 years. disciplined by having to stand on Friday, pointed at their wanted homosexuals and violations of ' It's very simple," Cullen said a street corner for five days or poster and declared. "We're their civil rights "in the name of of his decision to sell the stor e duty. Temperatures here have them." Christianity" that once boasted 74 varieties of been ne~r 100 degrees. Clark told a post·arraignmeot Citing the recent referendum holllemadc candy. "The wife and Police Chief Robert O'Brien, news conference: "These were repeal of a Dade County, Fla .. I were getting too old to handle who issued the order, is the unde not two ind[viduals who wanted o r d l n a n c e b a r r I n g it." of the patrolman. Paul O'Brien. to remain on the run." disc rim in a t 1 o n agains t Cullen said they want lo find 25 He said the men had been homosexuals. the church said someone to breathe new hfe into "Patrolman O'Brien told me advised of their right to remain Tues day the outcom e there the business ${arted in 1869 by his he got the punis hment because he s i I ent, but had continued to "represents a new reactionary grandfather, a Civil War veteran. forgot his ticket book one day and volunteer Information about m ovement which may eventually There was one inquiry after a was unable to write a ticket for killings, which might reach a erode the civil rights of us all.'' story about the closing appeared an illegally parked car when told total larger than any known The 1.8 million member den- in the local newspaper. to do so by Chief O'Brien." said mass murde r 10 American om1nat1on's general synod srud it "The very first call we had was City Councilman James Brady. history. Previous cases on record "deplores the use of scripture to from a 6-year·old boy," said Mrs. Brady called the discipline include lhe killings of 25 migranl generate hatred and the violation Cullen with a chuckle "Jle said inhumane and promised a farm workers by Juan Corona ofcivllrightsof gayandblsexual he wanted to buy it... council mvestigat1on. and the murders of 27 teen.aged persons. • They would have preferrl'd to ______ ...;;_ ____________________ __:. ___________ _ keep the _business in the family, Cullen e•plains1 but the couple's two daoghters h ave chosen car eers in music and the law. The caramel corn recipe has been a family secr et since his grandfather opJ!ned his first candy stand In a hole! on the courthouse square. but even Cullen doesn•t know where his grandfather got it. The sweet result was good enoush to make "Gran'pa's" a s taple at county and state fairs. while creating a loyal following from coast to coast. "During World War II, it went all over the world," Cullen recalls. Family members also set up c andy stores in other central Indiana communities. but "G ran'pa's" was the last 1urvlvor. "I would say Jtls. the formula," uys CUllen. "I wouldn't single out any one element in it -it's really a delicacy." And altboufh he doesn't know where "Gran pa" iiot hls redpe, Cullen Intends to keep using It t.o make Up" an occ:ulonal batch of caram•I corn for lhe f•mUy. • • An4 I .al. It myatlt. '• he aa.ys. Gem Talk HILLBILLY RUBIES from Carolina'• or~ekbeda Burma. Thailand and Sri Lanka are the exotic homelands or the beaullf1.1l ruby. Those countries prod,.uce almost all of the world's finest specimens. But, right here In j\merica, in the much less-exotic southwestern corner or North Carolina, they're picking up rubies (Nl of mouQtaJo aireatns. Jusl l ast mohth, a young Qlrl almosl threw away a shiny red rock 1he had plc)(ed out or a Macon County creek. Her mother .iopped her .... jusl In Umt to save a al-carat ruby. Now, ~on't catch the next piano cast and expect-to eel rich tn the CJl'()Uft~ bills. Mott 1ood rublcts found there ar• leas than one.fourth carat, and pi any lte Oawed by black spota. DIAMONDS HAVE A WAY OF BECOMING AN EVEN BETTER INVESTMENT WHEN THEY SURROUND AN OMEGA. ..Y Jf Every year . fashions change. What was in yesterday looks llkeyesterday. Yes, tas~ons change, except lor one. An Omega watch. Take this exquisite woman's dress watch. Crafted ln 14K yellow or White gold, surrounded by preeloua d iamonds, with your choice of mosaic opal, tiger eye, or lapis dlal. 0 OMEGA I "dnap Victim CAIRO 1APJ A lorrner rehai 1ous aftaira man1ncir kldnapcd thr4!e dayl ago by me>MOONI or I' ranati<' M o•l~m cull thut preach~ · ucrcd ttorrur" wai. round strangled and shot throuih th• eye todoy an a vlllr. noar the Giza pyramids, police said A medical exammer said 64 year·old Sheik Mohamed Z4'hab1 had been dead 1ince Monday Police said he was strangled and 1hen ahot, apparently as 1t <.'oup de grace Polit'e .trrei>ll'd three university dropouts al the villa outside Cairo and s1ud one or 1hem confessed to the killing, the 0H1c1al Middle Eai.t New:. Agency reported Solar E•ern Baclced WASlllNGTON CAP> A ne" congressional study s uggests the government isn't going Car ( IN SHORT J ~ Shaken fJg Fall ,.,. ........... . Ljndet D.alianas, 25, of Ran~olph: Mass , suffered only cuts and bruises when she fell five flights through the elevator ~haft of'.! Boston apartment building. She was on the roof o~ th<! eight-story structure to watch fireworks when a p,1ece of ply~ood gave way b~neath her. She stopped her fall at th.e third floor by grabbing a pole running across the -~haft. With her is an unidentified hospital nurse. Ration Plan Hit· .. Tough Congress Forecast Time • in WASHINGTON <AP1 President Carter's reported de cision to seek broader standby gasoline rationing authority 11> likely to face a rough time an Congress, a key Democratic senator says. Sen . Henry Jackson <D-Was b.), c h airman of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, says he thinks Congress will reject the proposal unless the country is confronted by a crisis of supply. "I DOUBT Congress. barring some situation that does not now exist. some national emergency . . . will grant that authority to any president." Jackson i.aad ·Tuesday. Administration :.ources i.aad earlier in the day the President is going lo ask Congrci.s for i.tand by authort~ for rationing that could produce a cut an gasoline consumption or at least 25 percent in the event or a foreign oil embargo or other anterrupt1on an supply. The President already has limited standby rationing authority under federal law. But the sources said Carter wants existing restraints lifted so he could declare an emergency and am pose rationing without delay JACKSON SAID HE was ~urprised at the report of Carter's plans, and other members or Congress said the House and Senate should be cautious before meeting a request for broader standby rationing autborjty. I mmedlate congressional response to the President's reported plans was light because both the House and Senat"1"e in recess and few members are in Washington. Rep Robert A . Young 1D-Mo.1, reached in his home slate, said he would be very cautious before giving the President the power to ration gasohne "It's too much power for one person to have," he said REP. GUS YATRON lD·Pa.L said gasoline rationing would be improper s hort of an extreme emergency Carter's plans a tnal balloon, sald tblt, it ratlonlng were ever necessary. the plans would tint need to be on paper. "You may have to print some ration coupons and that sort ot thing," he said. ' During the 1913 Arab oll embargo, the government Spent about $10 mUUop tp pr,nt a three·rnonth supply of coupons. which remain in storage. Jn,.law Held In Murder Of Heiress DULUTH. Minn. <AP)-The son-in-law of slam m11uona.are Elisabeth Congdon was arrested early today and charged with her June 27 murder and that. ol her nurse. enough in its exploration of solar energy as an option to electricit v and natural i;ias. · The study by the Ofrtcc of Technological Assessment, released Tuesday. contends it could be possible to use the sun's rays to produce heat and hot water for large commercial and residential buildings 1'y 1980. rt says rising electricity costs and falling solar equipment expenses may make even small solar electricity units econom1callv competitive with conventional electric power plants. Hunt Shifts ~o Mexico ·'The conservation benefits which would result from gas rationing do not outweigh nor Justify the economic ills which gas rationing creates,·· he said . Republican Rep. Clarence Brown of Ohio said he couldn't ··envision a c1rcumstanl!e short of war or another embargo which would reduce our supplies suf ficienlly to justify the expensive hureaunacy and inequality of rationing.·· Detective inspector Ernest Grams said Roger Sipe Caldwell. 43, of Golden, Colo., was arrested just before 1 a.m. in Metbodist Hospital, St. Louis Park, where he is being treated for a possible heart attack suffered Tuesday. He attended Miss Cong4on's funeral last Thursday. Escapees Wanted for at Least Two Murders CALDWELL, A RANCHER is married to Marjorie Congdon Caldwell, one of Miss Congdon's two adopted daughters. Brezhnet~ NI.re• Meet OKLAHOMA CITY 1AP1 Two Oklahoma prison escapees charged with the killings or a town marshal and a U.S. Corps of Engineers ranger in Arkansas arc believed lo be heading toward Mexico. disappeared. Wili.on 's car was found the next day in Magazine. The escapees are believed to have fone from Arkansas to Purce! . Okla., where a stolen Arkansas pickup truck was found Friday. Al the same time James Melvin Short. 40. a Purcell taxi driver, disappeared after picking uptwomeninhiscab SHORT'S WIFE SAID Tuesda} that she believes her husband 1s driving the escapeei. to Mexico Mrs. Short, a native of Panama. said her husband knows Mexico well. REP. 1'IORRIS K. Udall <D· Anz.1. chairman of the House I ntcrior Committee, said he didn't object •·to having a stand· by plan ready in the event of an emergency" Udall. who called the report of Caldwell wal> placed under guard at the hospital, where doctors said they did not know when he would be able to be moved to Duluth. Mrs. Caldwell could not be reached at the Holland House Motel in Golden early today. WASlllNGTON !AP > President Carter 11. said to believe an earl\· summit with Soviet Pn•s1dent l.con1d I Brezhnev v111ualh can hl' ruled out becaus<' Bre1.hncv oppose' a gcl·acquatnll'd me<•t 111µ A hand·drawn map of Mexico. lorn in hair, was round in the cell of Elmer Fanm. a convict who escaped with the lwo others but has not heen linked to the slayin~:. God Forgi1'es 'Gloriously' THE 83-YEAR·OLD Mass Congdon and her night nurse, Velma Pietila, were slain in the 39-room Congdon m ansion on Duluth's lakcfront som etime du rang the night or June 26 or the next morning In a weekl'nd letter to CarlL'r, Brezhnev repont•dly expressed a strong prderencl' for dclJymg a summit until the lt•adcrs can sit down and ratify a m•w •greemcnt. presumably on stratcga<.' arms curbs. that would be negotiated in advance at;i lowcr level. F.ARL \"A:-./ DENTON, 27, and Paul Rutz. 29. ban· been charged with the deaths of Magazine. Ark . town marshal Marvin Richie and Corps ranger Opal James They also have been c harged with attempted rirst degree murder in the wounding of another ranger. Judge Confesses 'Sins' Grams said evidence linking Caldwell to the murders was found in searches of hotel rooms an Golden and in Bloomington, Minn . including some of the $3,000 in jewelry taken from the mansion S.,.pect Get• E%a• NEW YORK <AP/ l.u1 s Robinson, charged with murder and kidnaping in the hijacking of an interstate bus, will bl' examined by psych1atr1sls for the next month to determine 1r hl' is mentally Cit to stand trial Meanwhile. the hazy p1<.'lure of Robinson that emerged m the fi.rs t day following the nine·hour sae~e at John f' Kennedy International Airport depicted ham as a loner, selC-conscious of his 5·foot·4 height. and frustrated with life m and out of the l' S. Navy Repairs Conflnl.M" ANCHORAGE, Alaska IAP1 Workme n were replacing a faulty L·shapcd portion of the trans-Alaska pipeline an an effort to get the oil moving again through the 800-milc line Spokesman Lou Can<.'elmi said the pipe section was being replaced. The slow process of introducing oil to the pipeline was expected to resume late today. Drug Bost SAN DIEGO <AP> -Police have arrested more than 40 persons on.narcotics charges and c-elated offenses in a series of raids in the Ocean Beach area. The FB l , 1n a complaint l'harging the three with interstate flight to avoid prosecution, said an informant told them Finin would likely go to Mexico with Ruiz, a Mexican. Prosecuting Atty . Paul Williams Jr. says lesser charges relating lo their alleged activities may be filed this week. AUTHORITIES SUSPECT the gu•men. who were serving lire terms when they broKe out of the Oklahoma prison at McAlester June 23. went from Oklahoma to Louisiana lo Arkansas and then back to Oklahoma. In their wake, two men are dead, one is wounded and three arc missing.and reared dead. Denton and Ruiz allegedly killed Richie and wounded a ranger when the marshal stopped their stolen car near an Arkansas lake resort last Wednesday. Fingerprints from road maps in that car linked the two with the marshal's death. David Small. a ranger with the U.S. Army Corps or Engineers, was round beside Richie's body. He had been shot in the shoulder and apparef1llY left for dead. JAMES WAS ABDUCTED. His body was found two days later about 40 miles north or Magazine an Montgomery County. The day before the marshal's killing, two fishermen an Franklinton. La. -Ray Jones Sr., 65, and Art Wilson, 66 - / AUSTIN. Tex I AP I Texas Supreme Court Justat'c Don Yarbrough admits he has sinned against God and the voters. but says God has forgiven him in a ''glorious way.'' He says he hopes the voters will, too. Yarbrough, thought lo be the first Texas justice to be indicted for a crime, made no mention of quitting the job he has held for only six months. IN AN E MOT IO NAL s tatement made while on the verge or tears. Yarbrough, 36. told a news conference Tuesday • · 1 call you here today in order that I might publicly and without reservation confess to each of you my wrongdoing.·· Yarbrough was indicted last Thursday arter allegedly forging an Alabama auto registration and license tag receipt and lying to a Travis County grand jury. THE INDICTMENT came one day arter Harris County Dist. Atty. Carol Vance said he had tapes or conversations linking Yarbrough to a plot to kill former business associate Doug Ford a nd Victoria banker Bill Kemp, a witness against Yarbrough in another proceeding. A State Bar of Texas disbarment trial on the · allegations that Yarbrough violated the law and the bar's code of ethics is set for Aug. 1, and more than a dozen civil suits have been riled against him. The Texas Judicial Qualifications Commission also is considering whether it should try to remove Yarbrough from the nine· member court. U.S. Rain Scattered Tommlo Sighted Near Nevada Town Te.peraturn Albu'Qu• Jlmerltto ""'"'• lllrmlll9fl.tm &olse eot.lon 111ro-sv11tt lllff•lo Clleflstn WY Clll<evo (l~I t'-f-g:-~Wln 04•Mel•S C>een111 kerff ... ~­~Mv " ........ ,,.. . .,,, J.cllf"\olt .. IC9111'1Cli.o l .. .,.... 1..ltt .. lteoi "_ ..... "' l• "r< .. ·~ ., II ., 71 .. 1J " lO n •• ., 11 t1 lO .OI ., 1) ,, .. ,. 11 .... IOI 14 ~ jt .fl Ul1 Tl .. '~ f2 " ... tS .... " ,, ..., '° •J 7l tt ,. .. ,. ,., " ::: ........................ ----------------------,· ~111111 ,,.. W.1111 11 ... Mllweune .,. ~''·'· 71 '"""°"-1J .OJ ..... v-71 Olll•, Clt\I 10 Otllfldo n t 47 ll't!ll........ 1S ~~.Orw. .. .. l<lllllOftGI / ,. .01 54."..... " s.ttukt " ...... ,... u ... 111, " We"1I...... 10 IJ.&8 r m••rw lc•tt•,•• •lt•wtr• •no 1111>,.ctenNwifr• ••"'llf~ -•" PUlttll CelttHf, "ortll•o\ttr-n lttmtO ... e.ntr ......... tfll• "'"' lltfe llH,,111111, lt•l••tO ""'~"""""""-·-''*" ,...,.. -.. ~ ... w,;-......... A 10 tO U mp!! -te Wiii k.,;,p 1M I kl9fl Al lhe beechtJ Ill the 11-t 60~, IM N1tlot11IWMtherServl<eMld. Hl9h1 on!Mcoest .. pll'l"swfll b<tln Ille low lo mid-JOI, with ltm"1'•1Vt'es ,,._,,IOM\IAtA~H-llleS... F1,.,,.lldo end a... Glllrlet VelltY11 reolehl119 ti. IOL T•"'l1frat11<h 111 lfte S.n a.,l\ll'dl,.. Vl'lt*Y wm 1111 '"' "~ '°''o•-• Mw11t11tfl t~r•l11te1 ere to rH<fl ,.,. ,.,.lcl·l'Oa. '" uw ""~ v.11..,,, "'"' '" the le!*''°' h Pnld\Cltd, "'"" "'-.Molew O..n rN<lli"° 100 Mith lff"Ptf'.._ tn " 1-.. HI ere UIM'CfM-tO$ .. c...c.i •-uter ' .... ,. .... lllQlll Md ~ ·-(19UR l~llO~¥ Utlll ~.n.o.1 tftlMlt ~flt artd ~"'91-'J. M\Qlle 111 Ul*f tOt (Onlll 1-.Wr~• wtll ,.,... 1'e1Wetll U tlUI Jt. llllllt' ,...,..,.._....,lllr.,,..IM~61 41111111 T ....... #~ltll'U1"llN .. ~·~ntlft In add1t1on, Spt•akcr Rill Clayton announced Tuesday the House will consider Yarbrough"s removal at a hearing July JS. four days a Cler I he legislature convenes in special session. "WITHOUT REVIEWING the substance of my concerns . now so well known to each of you." Yarbrough told reporters, ··r want to say that 1 never intended that anyone be harmed it's not in me. "I dad make a mistake,'' h1..• :.aid . ··[did sin against my God and against the people who elected me as their servant. I offer no justification nor excuse for indeed there can be none. I have asked my God through the power of Jesus Christ to forgive me and 1 know in a very gloripus way that He has forgiven me. I do apologize and ask forgiveness from those people in our state who s upported me and from those who did not." The Minneapolis Tribune, in a copyrighted story today, said a search or the Bloomington room. where the Caldwells stayed during the funeral, turned up a receipt issued by a gift shop in the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport a nd dated June 27. When we want to find out if our Sc~ool .Program is effective i~ getting young peoP,le involved in their world, ' we ask the ex~rts. Teachers. They leH us our VEC Mhoc>t Prog,.m, In combln1tton with todaf'• neWJpaper, 11 the most effective waj they've round lo buMd ahidtnt -1rene11 and to dew.toe •"*"''' critical thinking, reading, ~ dl•eu•· 11on 1kllla. Our program 11 d .. lgntd to drew 1tudeftt1 Into dlteu11lon1 of todey'• m1for l11uH. IHt of 111, the program. DAILY PILOT challenges kids lo uH their minds end Imaginations and lo become Involved In their c°'"""'nlty and In the world around them. Aa partner1 •llh th• ~lntheedU~atlOf\ofouryoung • ~. w. ffff thl1 ft °"9 Of our moet "'-Poff.Int. R'OJHll. PaqiOjer . . .. Newton . Jn Court ' OAltLAND (AP) -There were no clenched nata in court or cbantlnl ~ter• outaldt when Jaltod lllaclt Panther loader Huey Newton kept a court dale )>Oltpooed from lt'I• when be nect t.o<;uba. . Ntwtan, ltandl~ quleUy to one Piie al the Jlld1e a bccb, wu. arrallMd Tuaday on murder and -aa.lt char1et aad ~ to Ntun te court July lt to_.. hit .... BAIL WAS aet at $100,000 at the request '11 tbe 1u·oaeeutor who called' NfPtoe "a aubataatlal ruabt risk.:' Defense alt.Dey Sbeldon Otis tenned ~bail ''raQlom'" and said he would COll1iflue eflOrta to get his 35-year-old client released on his own recognbance. "'BE DID NOT return to walk out the door," Otb told Municipal Court Jadge Donald Arne. "He returned to face the cbar1ea against him." Otis sai'd Newton Jud voluntarily come back to the United St.ates, although he was "living a free and happy life and could live forever ln Cuba." N'EWTON IS charged in the shooting of a 17-year-old girl who died after he fled Ule country: He is char$ted with assault in the alleged pistol whipping of his tailor and an aUeeed altercation with a polict1man at an Oakland bar. He also ls accused of the false i mprisonment of two women ln a bar. .. f ! . ;-, : ! ,.~., . . . . ~ .,.,.. ·- ,. ...... _,. - B....,.sllfarred The Sllahbanou of Iran, Farah Pahlavi, stands with J . Robert Flu<>(. chairman of USC's board of trustees, at a ceremony 'Msday in which she was given an honorary doctorate. About 500 protesters with signs calling the Shah a "fascist butcher" and "U.S. puppet·· demonstrated during the ceremony. • Tiro Saved in Fire LAKE E~INORE (AP> -Several boys at a military school rescued two women from the second floor as fi re swept through the school building and caused an estimated $250,0oo damage, officials said. The boys, aged eight through 16, used ladders to help I.he women down at the Lake Elsinore Military Academy before fire fi ghters arrived Tuesday night, witnesses said. PEARL CONKLIN, widow or the academy's founder. and Jeri Flowtrs. an owner of the 40-year-old school, were treated at Lakeview General Hospital for smoke inhalation. No other injuries were reported. About 40 or 50 boys, who were attending a summer session. fled the building in their underwear around 11 p.m .. witnesses said. Seven trucks from the Riverside County Fire Department and the state Department of Forestry arrived around 11:15 p.m. and controlled the fire in an hour, a spokesman said. 1nsons .. »"J!!!tldpr. J141y 8. Jt77 D~IL Y PILOT 45 Airlinli N~s DDT·Bath . . . ' . . · Califorliia-tio•d ·Plalies Ordered Sprayed . WASHINGTON CAP) -1be federal acwernment ls orderln& planes leav•ne a Waahlngton airport for Callfomla spray84 with DDT aft.er finding live Japanese beeite• on board a plane, but one airline say$ lt will fight, not spray. King Lovinger, an Agriculture Department spok'esman, said Tuesday the "routine" spray order was aimed at protecting ·California's agriculture industry from the beetles. But Unit~ Airlines, citiJl( an Environtnen\al Ptotectton 'AJency bllO on DDT for farm use, bas~fllledtosprayitsaircratt. U.NITED SPOKESMAN James Linse said representatives of his company and two other airlines involved plan to meet today with officials of the Agriculture Department and · the Federal Aviation Administration to discuss the spraying program. ·•we hope to get total satisfaction that any material that USDA wants us to use in spraying an aircraft is absolutely ~are to anyone coming in contact with it," he said. "Nobody bas been able to explain so far to us why the EPA bas banned it <D DT> but the Agriculture Department gives it to us to use." JAPANESE BEETLES, normally found only in the southeastern part of the country. ' were discovered on a plkne arriving in California last week from Dulles International Airport in suburban Washington. The insects attack more than 400 kinds of plants and can cause extensive destruction, according toexperU. Aft•f authorities in California discovered~ beetles last week, the Agriculture Department d~ c l a r e d D-u 11 e s A 1 r p o r t "hazardous" and ordered the spr ayin1 for all planes flying to California. United Airlines, American Air· linea and ·Trans World Airlines have llights from Dulles to California, an airport official 11aid. fJJ.,000 Bid He said the department qrded n.ot to enforce the order against Uplted unW the differences could be worked out. American and TWA officia.ls apparenUy went along with tbc order, but spokesmen for the t.wo eirlinea were not immediately available for comment. . Lovinger said airline officials aret miataken in the impression there baa been a total ban on the use of DDT. Attorney to Buy Heiress' Ferrari LOS ANGELES (AP> -A high bid or $11,000 was submitted Tuesday for a sports car owned by the late Sandra Ilene West, a wealthy Beverly Hills woman who was buried in her favori~ Ferrari. , Her atoorney, Leroy G. Denman of San Antonio. Texas. tume4 in the high bid for the 1969 Ferrari Pinln·Farina. 1 HE w AS UNA v AILABLE for comment OD his P\lfCbase, but Ills secretary told reporters sentiment had nothing to do with his b>,d. but he knows the car and thought it might be a bargain. John Valentine or Glendale submitted a high bid or $10,650 !or a second Ferrari, a 1974 Dino. NINETY-FIVE sealed bids submitted by 65 people for the two automobiles were opened Tuesday by the Public Atjministrator's of· lice.. . · Mrs. West, 37, formerly of Beverly Hills, was buried in the front seat of her 1964 baby-blue Ferrari, reportedly her favorite possession, during a May funeral in a San Antonio cemetery. Both Denman and Valentine said they would deposit 10 percent or the bids by cash or cashier's check today and sign the necessar.y purchase papers. ·. ·. ae! Dresses to collec~\ NowS25.971 · Orig. $42·$54. 1 or 2 pieoe~1 Wait 'trl you see the selectionl . Here•s Just a samp~:. 2-pc. mitered stripe with 4-gore skirt.In assorted colors. ~er. a.18. MalVphone. Roblnalre Dresses, 115. .. • n PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE More Taxing ~ews Eicc pt for thost• "ho hJ\ l' "i>1:<·11latl'd 1n OrWl1't.' County n•s,1dt-11l1ul Jll"OJlt'l'ly tur profit, lht.· r\l'W lu'lt \H'"k thut the county':s 1977 ~Sf'!\.-.mt•nt roll incrl'll.:st.'<l u r~cord 19 7 J>Crcl·nt m·t·r •• n·ar ufi{o \\ Js anythini.t but..:ood Thal ., h cl"<•llst'. if pa~l lt U('k n·<'ords mt.•un .mylhmg, tht· ht•fty J1.11np an proptirty value~ irnhtulcs thut mo:o.l horncowners can t•X Pl'Cl u 1oll again this y~ur ''hc•n tht.'y get their pro1>ert~ tax htlb When thl' usst•s:o.r1wnt l<.1st ~ t.·<.1r Jumpt>d hy 18.7 pt·rt·t•nt, fw· 1•xamplc, <.1lmost 95 pt•rct•flt Of ltll• l"Ulllll 't ') homt'CIWIH'fs 0 tax ha lb went up Tht.• sJnH· \\Jll lw Lr ut· this y1·~11 if lhOst.' ''ho ~l property tax rdlt•s don t do less grandstanding and mOrt.' (."Uf"l..>1ng Of local government spcnd1ng Grandstanding ('onw" 111lo play \\hen cletted local offl('iab make token cuts m tax rates that don t begin to offset the huge inflation caused gains m propcrt~ values. The token ("Uh provoke officials to make ludicrous claims they are hold ing the spending line a nd rolling ba('k taxes. In reality, however, they arc spending more than ever and coltccting more than ever from those who pay property taxes. Tht' grandst anding goes on when the higher tax bills are r eceived. That is when the local grandstanders can be expected to publicly devise schemes to overhaul the state"s discredited property tax system and to s h<tffil' IC'gislators for not following their advice. An advann• warning oh1 repeat of 1976 eamc last week when county Supervisors HaJpb Clark and Laun·ncc Schmit stumbled over one another in awkward efforts to be I 1rst in line with a curt>-all for rising taxes. LikC' olhrr <'lt'clcd local officials, Clark and Schmit can show their actions speak as loud as their words by cutting spending and tux rates m the taxing agencies lo which they have a voice If they do that, it wiU make little dif - f,•rence that s tate legislators are <.1pparently still groping for an answer to a t:.ix reform riddle that demanded an answer long ago. Double Dividend Only 37 percent of \he dogs found during a door-to-door inspection of 73,252 Orange County homes the past year had county- 1ssued dog licenses. Since dog licenses requ1re rabies vaccinations, county Health Department officials believe many of the 73 percent without licenses also were without rabies vaccinations Unvaccinated dogs present a potential for a r abies outbreak among pets in the county and a possibl e health danger for their owners. The door-to-door canvass took place in 19 county communities including El Toro. Missio\l' Viejo, Laguna Hills, Laguna Niguel, Dana Point and Fountain Valley. County supe rvisors now have made the experimental door-to-door program permanent so il can go forward in other comr.nunities that rely on the county for animal control service. The inspection campaign is a good idea. particularly in that it cost only $68,755 in salaries and supplies the past 13 months yet brought in $168, 714 in new dog license fees. But even more important than the dollar bonus. the campaign encourages pet owners lo have their dogs vaccinated and could avoid a serious rabies outbreak. Schools Battle Clock It's Time to Set Some Program Priorities RPpnnted u.>ith the perm1s.non of Education Son Diego Count.I/ Time 1s a constant factor. You cu nnot s horten it, stretch 1l. stop it. or a Il e r 1l in :.any way . ""Managing lame"" 1s a mis nomer. We really monage what we do. Accomplishments may vary, but time always li cks away on schedule. Public schools were originally established to produce a ltleralc society. Those responsible for the schools realized that an "educat- ed person·· must have the capabthly to read. to write, and to use arithmetic Toda). society demands far more from its schools In fact. the people t hrough the leg1slat1\'e process. h;ive caused enactment of statutes which re· quire schools to provide educ;i· taonal p rogram s that are numerous. extensive. and in many instances. intended to pre· vent and resolve crises. SCHOOLS have been forced to provide instruction in a multitude or new areas with lttlle or no reduction in offerings. It takes only simple arithmetic to verify that adding required areas for instruction without increas· ing instructional time means less time for existing subjects. Driver education was added to reduce the sla ughter on the bighways. Drug abuse education wa.s in" iated to block the human <><;;.>~-tion resulting from the use or narcotics Occupational education has been increased to assure gainful employment. Pro· grams exist lo t>ducate people for (GUEST CORNER] worthy use of leisure time Health education is deemed necessary to assure sound minds and bodies. Education regarding functions of government is de- emed essential for our de- mocracy. Multicultural educa- t 1 on and international un- derstanding are essential to establish and maintain respect for human life. Programs on in- ternational relations a re offered to minimize anxieties and con- flicts. The list goes on and on. IT IS acknowledged that the above proliferation was not caused only by nonschoool peo- Wicks 'If we mot1e 1/116 from,,.,._ 10 ,..,._w•ao~tlul dKNfage lll'OClltdl' pie Educators, as concerned members or our society, have been dedicated and active in seeking solutions to problems by using education to meet critical needs. Recently criticisms concern- ing reading and writing have been more intense; yet people who clamor far a •·return to the basics" are also unwilling to el\plinate other educ~tional pro- 8f'ams thought by them to be es- se_Qtial in preparing young people for a quality life. Let's get back lo the matter of time. There simply isn"t enough for the schools to be all things to all people. Society and the schools must stop blaming each other and join hands and thoughts to set priorities based upon needs and reality. NEW efficiency studies will always be a part of the manage- ment of education, but such ef. forts eventually reach a point of diminishing returns. Let's face the problem -you just cannot get six quarts out of a gallon jug! Harassing the schools will not do the job. Support of the public is essential. If J.he public is will- ing and able to identify clearly what is wanted and will support school personnel in their efforts to establish realistic instruc- tional situations. more goals will be achieved. School people do have the ability to meet the educational needs of society. Choices must be made, but the people. must participate in tbe choices. The time is now .. let's get with it! .. Through Helping Brown? .Dymally Role Viewed With the primary elections now less than a year away and draw- ing closer every day. littl~ or no speculation has yet centered on what the fellow in the state's No. 2 job may be planning. That is the office of Lt. Governor oc- cupied by Mervyn M. Dymally, the first black in the state's his-tory to achieve so high a posi- tion. This, despite the certamty lhat Governor Jerry Brown, should he win reelec- tion next year. will challenge President Carter for the Dem o - c r a t i c Party moni nation 1n 1980. Seem - ingly over -, looked at the moment is the order of succession to his job. AtJeast. so far, none but Assemblyman Dixon Arnett of Redwood City has indicated any desire to run for the office. Even Dymally has left his options open, s aying he hasn't decided what he will do Born in Trinidad , the handsome and debonair Oymally studied at UCLA where he earned a master's degree and embarked upon teaching. From there he entered politics to become an Assemblyman for Mur years followed by eight years in the Senate until his eJec- Dear Gloomy Gus When the Labor De- partment puts out sta- tistics about what the average family needs to live on, it's plain that family dot;.sn 't live in Southern Callfornia. .).E. °'-°"''--.... -, ..... ,.~NM~ ff-lle<tHUlly refle<1 Ille •'-' ......... "" ... -· ~ -... _ ... ,. G-y Ow•. OAlltJi!M ( EARL WATERS ] lion as U . Governor in 1974. Since then his career has been somewhat rocky. Nol exactly finding the welcome mat at Gov- er nor J~rry Brown's door, Dymally also has been the target of what he calls persecution by some segments of the media. INDEED the attacks reached dangerously to vilification as stories stretched to the point that investigations were undertaken by the Attorney General. That most of the allegations were con- cerning acts attributed to others with Dymally being linked solely because he had some official con- nection with them or otherwise knew them didn't stop the in· rerences. It was a ••guilt by as. sociation" involvement. Ultimately the Attorney General report that be bad found no wrongdoing on the part of Dymally hasn't wiped the slate of the trauma which he suffered during the strung out attacks. Meanwhile, Dymally bas pursued the constitutional duties of the Lt. Governor, diligently in· quiring after the health of the governor each day. Up until the time Brown made his madcap entry into the presidential hust- ings last year, Dymally's solicitous anxieties over the gov- ernor's well being were brusque- ly received. ln fact, the altitude or the governor and his staff towards Dymally bad been ar- rogant, aloof and insulting. However, p erceiving the political impact Dymally could bring to the governor's presiden- tial efforts among black voters. Brown quickly changed and called for Dymally's endorse- ment and aid. ASKED WHY he responded after bis shabby treatment for so many months, Oymally said he believed hi s willingness "to help J erry would improve my rela- tionship with him in the future." Having promised , Oymally turned to and is credited for Brown's success in Maryland and other areas where Brown did well with the blacks. Now, more than a year later, Dymally, not without a trace of bitterness, concedes he didn't know his man. Has his rela- tionship with Brown improved? "Not a damn bit," he said, in· dicating it's the same or worse than before. "He has a short memory." Through it all Dymally has - been outwardly cheerful and un- daunted as he works actively al the principal chores given him by the Legislature which include the Commission or the Californias • and the> Border States Project and dther efforts to promote foreign trade with California. But what he will do next year remains, for the moment, a ques-tion mark. Make book he won °l be helping Brown win elections. Your Self Opinion Is Clear to Others Do you know what others can see in your eyes. if they are at all J)'erceptive? They can see your sec'ret opinion of yours ell. William Carlos Williams. the poet and physician, was not (SYDNEY HARRIS] neither inflating nor deprecating yourself then and only then will you amount to something in the eyes of others. I can think of two men [ know. almost identical in a dozen ways: Israeli Tortiire Report Glossed boasting when he re· marked'. many years ago, "On the instant I look into a man's eyes, 1 know what that man amounts to for me and bow how to deal with him. t am seldom In background. upbringing. education. marital status, oc- cupation and income. Yet they are as different as day and nig~t. not merely in the accidents or temperament, but in lbe deeper recesses or personahty. · One knows eitactly wbo he is, accepts himself, likes himself .. and tries to be better. The other is a stranger to himself, conceal- ing hls insecur1ty with brag- gadocclQ, despising bis wealc. nesses and ~i.splaylng false strensths. Tbe second man is more talent~. but the, first will go further ana dt> ))etler, buoyed and sustained by his secret opi- nion or himselt, which is sound enough to win him the good oPi· W ASffiNGTON -The name of .he place in Jerusalem where the Israelis beat up Arab dissidents ~rom the occupied West Banlt Is ;he Russian compound. In Arabic it's Moscobiya. This and more disgusting in· form alion about Israeli torture of the occupants >f the lands ,bey captured LO years ago :ome , not :rom the P .L.O., but from the Sun· :11y London rimes which bas just publ11hed a mammoth disquisition O.!_ ti. JUbJect. Six Ye.tn ~ ~•.'llm• published a report oa tU DliJ.. treatment of· !prisoners tn Nortbern Ireland by Entlllbmen JO lhat tho ne'Qpaper'' concern (ot human ritbta cannot bo ~ailed eitbertuddon or telecUve. Here are extracta from 'lbe rim•• C'ClftelUlkle aa to whit'• Colnl on in brael: "Torture ii or-· •anlaed eo metbodl~ally tbat it =annal be diaaUM.d u • hudl ... Of ~rope eopl' hce41dln&. ~ It la .aJlt.elantc .•• all Of.IVMl't Mtutlty Nimctt ...-ta.,aJca~. , •• Torture HmW to be UMcl for ..,._ pul"POMI ••• to extract lo.' ,.... .... ' •.• Sad~• l>IOPI• to ..:--•~tr dlfeQMI,"' wllkh ~ may or mJ1:. be . guilty ... to persuade Aral>S tn t.ne occupied territories that it it least painfbl to behave passively." .. ' TO BAQ[ UP Utese cbarges The Times inter"vtewed 44 persons who claiMed to be vie· tims of Israeli torture. Twenty. two agreed to allow tbelr names to be used, and they 'have been publlahed. In addition scorµ of other per~ were interviewed II\ an attempt to provo or dis· prove.'Ule victim'• auettlon$. th the opinlon of tbe bewspape.r, the corroborative evidence •ust.alns the accusatiom beyood reasona- ble doubt. For those who do do1Jbt, the material is on depogjt in London. At tbe m.lnlmum, tile .1arae11• a~ts should •bldY ~. c .. t aaaemble4 tcalnat. ... 4f 11\4 come up with eometblri1 more convinclni than tlae 1tat.ement releuid by their eml>Uiy tn London wbJcb 1lmply aalct: "Al· te1atklns ot tbb nature have bMn repeatedly put out by Arab Pl'O" Piiand.a aou.rca In recent y~ and proved to bo totally un- founded Jn the ll1ht ot det&lled and docioD•Ud lnveatJtatlons." Na~alllnl and relianc. oa tn· vetUPl!W conducted by tu.el for Ha own e:itonenllon wUl not do. ~ ( VON HOFFMAN ] wrong." 1 Your seem opinion of yourself -whether it be too blah, too low, arroiant or ashamed -is reflecWCS not only i'O \be eye, but in all ~at proce~ from. e)'t-lo· eye contdet: in poSture, ~estll.l;e, tone and ga~ The tongue ~try to con~al, ~the body dl~IOl\es ande"~· This is lhe maln ~uon th~ all those books givln& acl•fceott how to be popular, bow to cet .... 4. how to make a good im~tori. are ultimately -50 f\.CUlt:': Thoy never start where they should: with your own sec~ oplrilon of yourself. nion ot othert. • DAILY PILOT ' ~ . ( . ... & t 1 1 I .,,, . \ ... Wld;,.p;;;.;.tmd!)'=;,;;;,u.• .-Ju_.txi..;;'•· .;.;:1977;.;..;... ___ .., ... __ _...D...,Al-..L...,,·..;.~.;;:;L;,;:;0.;..iT-:.A.:..s..l • ' " ' . r "" . , . . . • 1st Federal ·savings and Loan Association ·of Hollywood announces its .new Costa .Mesa· offiCe. . GRAND OPENING· July 5 through July 23, 1977 " . ,. ' 1{(5ff ~to Costa Mesa ) • J Plan now lo come in anq see our beautiful new office. The building exterior t~tefully tncorporates a Saint Augustine Spanish design while the interior surfaoes highlight a cduntry Spanish style. We're very proud of puc 12th office and went to show 1t to you during our Grand Openmg, from July 5 through July 23. Join us for refre$hments and discuss your financial goals with our friendly, courteous staff. Glve yourself a chance to save -at First Federal and you'll discover we can serve your savings needs second to none. f£5rJ in interest • on SBVlllf/S ANNUAL RATE ACCOUNTS HOW OFFERED' ANNU.AL YIELD' 6-10 years 73A3 Certificate o! c:>eposit 8.063 $'1.000 m1n1mum 4 years or more 7Y2% Certificate o! r;>epoeit 7.79% $1,000 m1n1mum 21h years or more 6%3 Certificate o~ ~p·oait 6.983 $1,000 m1n1mum 6 1 /. 3 1 year or more :r2. o Certificate of D eposit • . $1,000 minimum 5V..3 •I 90 day Certificate of Deposit sesoo minimum Pa•sbook Account • $e5 minimum 6.723 5.923 5.393 Depotlta rt«11'ed br the 10th um from Ille 111. 'When 1ti19'n11t lel to accumutaie In account. In corilonn~ with the F9del'GI Home LOii!\ 8"11\ Board r~ulehona. wilhdrl'ND Cl' the Mw Certttlcete Accounlt abov9 are e>trmitted bel~ ma11Uity t>vt the inter11t1t .. necs on lhe arnQtJnfw1lhdrawn wlll be al ~ PassboQk reie then beklg plJd (not the ce111tica1e rattJ from the date of latti80<le « fenewat of the Certrlrca • wftlCl)evQr It 11191'. Atao. ,no lnlt,.ll w•i.I f>ie oa1d tor the 90 day period ll'flmedlately pr19f 10 Ille date QI withdrawal. • ' ' 0 24 Hour Telephone Tranafer Service Let our new 24 Hour Telephone Transfer service add earnfng power to idle funds now in a bank checking account. Use Tele· phone Transfer to move these doltara to an Interest pamlng savings account. A 30 second telephone call is all that lt takes to move money IN or OUT Qf your First Federal of HollywOod account. Now you can Initiate money transfers at any hour of any day by using th& special telephone number ~Jven to you when you open your Telephone Transfer abcount. • Direct Depositing of Social Security Check• Your social security check ~n be deposited automaticalfy and directly Into your savings account at Firat Feder1f of HollywOOd instead of having the cheek sent to your Mme. Thllt reduces the chance of your check being lost or atofen. Tax Deferred Plans We can h~p you start a t<eogh or IRA account. Either tax- deferred plan allows you to deduct your yearly contributions from.-your gross Income before computation of your annual income tax. And, interest earned on Keogh and IRA accounts accumulates on a tax free basis until withdrawn to supplement your retirement Income. · · " . . I 1 I ' ! ! I -· DAil Y l'ILOI Wed"t1ct1y July 8, lt71 Bii terlnl( Trip Skater Rolls F(>r 130 Miles t rom AP l)l11p1tch.-, ~unuurn,.J Jnd l''(h1.1Ulltl'<i Amt'rtl'•"' Ell~b• Barr nilh'(l 111111 .i l'l11llpr11n1• mounttiin n·~orl city artt'r a lJO null-trip from MunJIJ Uw hu1d \\JY on rullt•r •k alt·' · I lo\Untl'<l tu 'how tht· "urld "h.&t tht• humen body Ill c.ip.iblt· of clo111i:. · i. .. ud tlw ~" yeur -old gradu.ilt• 1>tudt•nt 1n \'ell•n nary mcd1<·inc "I never thought at could bt• th1i. d1fflcult Butt plannf'<l to makt• the lnp in 36 hours and finish at 5 p m on J uly 4, which i!o. Philippine· American fncndllhtp duy m th1b country Instead. ht' arr1H·d JI 5 1!"1 ,, rn 1ut:i.duy. hi:. foct M> bhi.tcrt-d he could not w.ilk unussistcd onl'c hc rcm ow-d h11> l!kall'' • Eddie •·bht>r, tht• c;oltlen Thro;it" of the 1!150:.. launched v. hut ht• hoJ>l'' "111 be a -.uccc:.:.ful <'Omt•back \\1th j 11ne-n1,i:hl :.land at (;rus-.in~t·r ::.. a rellort hold in the Cabk11l Mountatnll of Nt•" Yori. F1shl'r, no'' in hi:. late 40s, began ru:. car eer at the same hotel when he w~~·· He said has appearance "is la ke a rebirth for me, a new beamning." During the almost 30 years l'ISM.. Of hiS Spotty ShOW bUSJnC:.S career. f"l.sh er has had four wives, including Debbie Reynolds and later, Ellubelb Taylor, run up heavy dcbls and battled with amphetamines. "This will be my last shot," he said. • Jamei> Rehnquist, the 22-year-old son of U.S. Supremo Court .Justice William Rehnquist, pleaded innocent in Marioo , Mass. to charges of drunken driving and driving to endanger after a car accident an th;it resort town that inj ure d o n e p e r son( J slightly. PEOPLE. Young Re hnquist, I who gave his address as ...__ _____ ....._ __ th e M cLea n . V:i., residence or his father. was relca:.l'd on his own rc•cognizance aft<.'r spending the night m jail. His t rial was set for July :!8. J amcs. ''ho recently was graduated from Amherst Colil'~L', had bcL·n v1s1trng fm·nds in the ~t anon an•a. Thn·c On•!!on f;.ffml'rs pa~:.ccl the half\\ ay point on their 1n1> tu tlw F:a~t t'oo.1:.t in a 1~17 Modcl-T Ford that \\a::. p1«kt•d UIJ out of Junk piles and put tOSl•tht•r p11.•cc hy p11:ce . "Wc'n• going to gel our feet wet in the Atlantic Ocean." said one of the tlnvcrs, Dennis Hopper or Woodburn, Ore. Kirk Metleer of Madras. Ore .. explains, "Thl•re's lots of dail y maintenance. She leaks gas, water and 011. We add about a quart of oil a day but l'll bet we got the cleanest bearings anywhere." Hopper, Mctcc•r and David Campbell, also of l\t adras, all high ~chool friends, st artt>d assembling their Modcl-T about two years ago although Campbell, a car buff. ~larlcd p1ck1n~ up µ;.irt:. l'arlier. l Deatlu Elaewhsre PORTAGE. M ic h . <AP> -Sharon Buser!, 38, wife of a member of the Four Lads smging group, died in an auto ac· cidenl near hero Monday. SACRAM~!'iTO <AP > Servloes will be held T hur11doy for form er Sacramcil\to Mayor II.II. "Ill" Uen41nn, H . Hendren, al110 u city t·ouncilman and longtime community le ader, died -;;=;;;jjjijijjj'ljiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiii~ , ... 4MILY COLONIAL ~MIU.L HOME 7801 Botsa Ave Wqstm1nllter 803·3H& P'401ftC YllW MIMO•IAL PAI• Cetnetery Mortuary .Cl'l11>el 3500 Pacific View On11e Newport Caltforn1a 644·2700 McCOIMICk MOITUAlllS Laguna Beac~ 494·9415 Laguna Hills 788·0933 San Joan Capistrano 495·1778 -IALft.1 ... 1~ .. ~t."O I Coron• d•I M•r e ~·'480 CottaM .. ae4t•l4k -.......... w., · MOlftlilY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 842·9150 SMfTMMMU. LAMI • C:iE.~ ~~,.rc>Mwey Santa Nia• IMJ-4131 P9RClllOMU SMmtS' ~U~l't 827 Main SI Huntington Beach 538-6539 at a hops1tal Monday after a lengthy illness SACRAMENTO CAP > -Service• will be f rid&y for Wllllam L. Lyon, 54 real estate de veloper un• insurance broker. l.,yon, head nf Wllllam L. Lyon 4hd A1111oc la teK . d ied Monday. VICNTURA CAP l WaUt1r J, f'orut, 17, a former asse mblyman and 11tate Court or Apt>enl Judu. died Monday . •-UMI T .. OMA~ A OAUMf SI! .. •tStOt"I el fol•.-llt•I 8uc~. (llllOt"•• P•n-.1 fl"'O July 1 1'11 ~•vlffd Dy"''"'"' Alut W D<1umtol folt-;<p0r1 Burl\. Cl , \Of> fl\Q"'•• A, Bau-Jr .• Cotit "'-•••· r • dAuOfO.-r Polrt<f.t A""' Oet~ 'i•uCI• Ar•t •• ~,,,.,Mr, l'••"t•• I! T f'OmO\Of\ (0\14 M t\• C• Four 4'H.tf'\dcn1tdrf'n Mr Baumt-fto:4' ' """.-""°"'" Of trwt f\o4rO tt• Otrrd..,r Co''•' ~!8\.t Cf\dmC>tr ot (urt'ul'H r P•"' On\l<le'"I ttnd '"""''bro' ot OrM"~ Cot\I l•on\ Club M~mi.r ol C.ool Olft ,, c luO Memo.r of Hit CMI• Mn.a Cn•mber·, Gr••t•rs, f'oundallon Ch•irmtn ol Int R991o"•I LI~ Club 55K't'9r ltll\l"dtl~ V1•lltllo" Ttwn., Jwty P, t1toPM Ill l 110llM, Mt ...... t•I ttl~lftt .Wiii ... lltl• •r11, Jiii. I. 10·)0,.M, Coton• oe1 Mar Com"'unlly Ctlll rtffOOMI Cll11rcll1tiI14tlltl,..., Ctrena ft! Miit, Tht "~v. 0.Nlld W. 1<1111 t lll<l•lf"" l'rtv•1• .1n1tr!'let1I, lMtt "'hlll11t ITllV ton •lllul• lo t~• Oran9t County l lon\ Club Tl\tlt>O• Btwl'nt Memortal Fund, n • ltarll Or•v•. COffa ~" or vovr f1vorlle c11ort1v. Otll 8roaclw•v Mtrl111ry 6trtctor,, Leads Pat1~I Vickie M . Evans of Cypress is thei new <'h air person or the Ora n ge Co unt y M an p owe r Com m issi on . Mrs. E\'ans. 31, was the firs t wo m an a p pointed l o t h e pa nel Professor Gets Grant Dr . M y r o n L . Braunstein of Newport B ea ch. professor of p sy choJog y and associulc dean of lhl' School of Social Sciences at UC Irvine. has been awarded a $57,000 grant r r o m t'h e N a ti o n a I Science Foundation to continue his s tudies in visual perception. Dr. Bra unstein will conduct experiments on the ways in which bodily m6tions an(I th e m ovements ot ObJects aid three d1men£1onal perception. A member of the UCJ faculty sincl' 1965. Dr. Braun!>tein is the a uthor of "Depth P erceptio n Through Motion." UCI Prof Get,sAid Dr Steven JJ Wander of Laguna B eac h . assistant professor of art histor y at UC Irvine. has received a grant from the American Council of Learned Soc1et1 es to supp<>rt his research or th e reconstruction of Westminster Abb<'y by England's Ki ng Henry 111 D r Wande r . v. ho Joined Ole UCI (acuity an 1S74, is c urre ntly in England studying the 700-year-old a bbey Funds for the grant were provided by the National Endowment tor t he Humanilicli Driver8 Needed Volunteer drl\l't!rs to tr11n1port cun cc r paUenl• lo apd from medical appointments are ne eded by the Otal\I• County Unit or th• American Cancer 6ooiely. Anyone w'lth a current driver '• llcon1e. an automobile In good eondltiqn and the time to give 11 lnvlted-W Join the Society's ''Anaels on Wheels" trtln1portation corpa. Ptraon1 lnlereated 1n volunteer ing s hou ld contact the society al 4030 Birch St., Newport Beach, phone '75a·le00. 2 Suapended SAN FRANOJSCO (AP) -Two Petaluma ~'" t\IVt been sus-s;endtd N livestock de. alert rot vlolatlna fair trade praeUcr~ and fall · tn1 to tlMP •dtQuate re· ootd•. the-u .s . A•r culture l)ep1rtlJ\ent uld. Sblptintlecl'., da1a were Jesse Amaral Sr. and TOAY G. Brull. " .. Bill Seeks 'Agism' End \ ByO.C. HUSTINGS SMOKING -On a 27·11 vote, the Senate sent to °'*0•11v,. .... ..-the Auembly SB 189 by Senator Arlen Gregorio Rep. Mark Hannaford, the Lakewood CO-San Mateo> to appropriate $2.1 million ror an Democul who respresent.. much of west Oranie anti·•moklng advertising campaign. County, Is backine legislation that would end Republican John Briggs of Fullerton voted for mandatory retirement for rederaJ workers. It. So did Dem ocrat Paul Carpenter of Garden "Passage or this bill could be tht5 first atcp R b · D · c r N l toward eliminating agism, a form or discrl mlnallon Grove. epu hcan en ms arpenter o ewpor Ill vicious and indefensible as sexism and racism," Beach voted against it. • • • says Hannaford. GASOLINE TAX -The Senate, on a 23·2 vote. Currently, federal employes mu!it retire at 70 sent SB 213 by Senator James Mills CD-San Diego> * • * to the Assembly. It would allow seven urban ar eas THE STATE Senate has approved 30-1 an to imPoSe local one-cent gasoline taxes for mass umendment to the state Constitution propoaed by trans it. Newport Beach Republic an Dennis Carpenter. All h o c t t k tk SCA34 wouldpermit thedeniaJofballlfaJudde tree r ange ounty sena ors oo a wa • on thi.8 one and didn't vote. decides a defendant may pose an extreme or unus----------------------ual threat to the judicial process or public safety. * • • THE SEN-'TE bas passed 31-0 another Carpenter measure, SB 923, making acts or terrorism fclonjes. • • • THE FIRM OF JOHN W. GYORKOS A LAW CORPORATION Announces tho removal of 11s offices tor the General Pritctlce of Law to su11e 202 Hunlmglon Executive Park 18162 Beach Boulevard Huntington Spach Calilorn1a 92647·Phone 17141848-0707 SALE fine clothing for women and children. FASHION ISLAND STILL ANOTHER law proposed by Carpenter has been sent to the Assembly on a 25-13 vote In the state Senate. The Newport Beach Republican's SB 204 would make it illegal for a cam paign advertisement to contain an endorsement from a pe rson unless the candidate has prior written authorization fro m the person makine the endorsement. JOHN W GYORKOS · FRED C FENTON ARTHUR J FOLGER · SAMUEL CUBETE ALBERT A FIORE • RONALD H MARTIN of counsel t:. "NI .rl (~ ~ ·h t.H S."'8 • • * HERE'S HOW Orange County lawmakers cas t the ir ballots on som e proposals before the California Legislature just prior to lhal body's summer recess: PRf.88 -By a 54-22 vote, the Assembly sent to the Senate ACA 4 by Assemblyman J erry Lewis CR-Highland> which would put on the ballot a constitutional amendment U> guarantee a reporter oouid keep sources confidential. • Republica n Willia m Oannemeyer of Fullerton, alo ng with De m ocrats De nnis Mangers or Huntington Beach, Richard Robinson of Santa Ana and Chet Wray of Gard en Grove, voted for the meas ure. Democ rat Ron Cordova of El Toro and Republican Bruce Neslande of Orange voled againstit. * • • MOBILEHOMES -On a 46·16 vote, the Assembly s ent to the Senate AB 450 by Assemblyman Terry Goggin (D-San Bernardino) which wotrid increase tenant rights and require landlords to offer 12-month leases in mobile home parks. Democrats Mangers and Wray \'Oted for 1t Re publicans Dannem eyer and Ncsta nde voled against it. Democra ts Cordova and Robinson missed tbe vote. ·'Who Gets The Ring? Argument continues over \\ hether a man s hould ha\·o. the right lo reclaim the diamond ring, if he breaks off the engagement with hii. lady friend. In Engl and. he has this right. even though hc·s the one who has lhc change or heart Here, i~'11 th\' cui;tom bu\ not necessarily lhe ln.W that the womun alve11 back the ring, if she m akes the decision to brea k up, and keeflJ ll, If ho'• l,Jte dQcl1lon maker. Our Love and War man s ides with the American way in this maUe r. He does not believe a man s hould engra\"e "To my darling" in a ring and lhen u~c il over and over again. ADULTERY Q. "Can :.i m an or wom an in France be Jailed for adultery'!"' A. A wottum. yes. A ma", no. unlou ho spends so much on 11 m l•lre•a lhal It hurts ltli; family'!! Incom e. Q. "What kllle(( Nlkolul \,el\ln, the founding father or tl\e Sqvlct Uh1P01'. A. Ui1to1trth11troke. In 1934. Q , "How man y JapaneH Ka(nlkaze pllott blew thomHIVH UP 'Vlth their own planea and iorr.•doea in World War II? . A. 2,ea4 Don"t beli t!ve I ve mentioned lPtely just how much Ume tho aver•1• working person hilli lo put In each d11y to pay the various lHXt!li. It's l~·o hours 42 minutee now. O f Qn CliM·hour 1hirt. Horrendous~ Why, houslns. onl)' coats said worker 90 minute-. And ro0<1, one hour elaht minutes. llGIGG A normal hen'• •H wel1ta1 about twG ouno ... a little more maybe, or loo. 8o Ytl\l can aco that •n •If wel{hlna ttve and a hair &unoe1 l11Qmf •81 Tha waa lho wet1ht or an eu reeenlly laid by a en on the Fatrlteld Countylarm or 8 .J . Gibbs In Ohio. It was only one or many such. He'd been feeding hit hens souped up vitamins. He quit It, though. People didn't want to buy eggs that big. Be1ido11 It tore up his hens. FASHION SQUARE :..m10 ;\no~~ 1Nl HUNTINGTON HA.RBOUft Mb 16''6 YOUR BUTCHER . IS COMING TO (I -·--.i I t~~ LA•NA HILLSI r v,~,P ~ . ' mtOI '-"ttd 11t u bt••' . ·1·11g for yo lls 10 ,.,,g. . wOI I " n114111t 'II Jittd 111rn ns 10 p1'S ' -' Ji sk ond w you bt1llO mtolS· So<>"· no , n'I be onY fht fintSI r1iert WO :( I orrOY of vOll· counttr. beautvlA dY ro jtt\lt J J1.ut-O 1 rrta 1111::=.ers. 11·ve bulC i t 110 d a rtO i (lrt poullrY · · ~ ::I ., \ .................. ,..,.. ... "" ....................... " .. 41, ............ ~ R .. ulot 61.00 NOW s4900 .. ~'~" •s.oo N9W s59oo I Jl.00 ·NOW 589°0 . .. I I l • 0'• lfll GOl o protl4,,,. .. 1 hn wnl• to Pot Dunn Pot Uhll rH tap., fl'IUnQ IM Ouwn-t andocttOlt ~ n.c«d .., .. ~w• .,, "°uw"'"'"' cmd butfta•. Noal •r qwr.1taon1 to Pot Dunn, At Yo.ir Slrtnc•. Orange t ~ Pilot. I' 0 IJo.r 1"10, C0tta. M .. a. CA . A.I mGn)I l«tlne a• poHttJU wdl be GlllWr..0, bMt plloMd mqaun~I Ur t.U*TI not fncludMQ tla. reodu'• full QOmf'. oddrne and buaJwu hotlrt' phoM 1U1mber cOMOt be couwkrtd This col1tmn oppeor1 dal· f¥UC.OpSalurdaJ11 ' P.,.,. Dot• C'blfl'• Age11da DEAR PAT · We moved to Sout hern C lfomla more than a year a10 after many years o resa~ce m Milwaukee, Wis. Doesn't anyone d~ce tbe polka out here? There must be a club s•ewhere, but I haven't been able to locate it. K.O .. Irvine The Oruce County Polka Club meets lite aecoDCI SaDday of eacll moadl from Z to 6 p.m. at Pl•mbera Hall, 3904 W. Finl St. (Bolsa and Har bor>. Saata Ana. Danctaa follow• the meeUngs um& p.m. and moothly Saturday eveaiag dances also are sebedu.led. Write &o Mn. lreae Stolarek, 533 lniDe Ave.. Newport Beach, CA 92"3, for further detail•. Eventng dances attract ap to 3" people, ud the club also plans tri~ and bolds a Jirge aa.nuaJ picnic. Drit.o.er• Should C'lean llp Act DEAR PAT: While driving on the San Diego Freeway this morning, from 1'...ake Forest Drive to Avery Parkway, 1 was appalled at all the litter lining both s ides or the freeway as well as along the median. Can anything be done to eliminate this eyesote? E.A. P., Mission Viejo Bob Nevins, assistant 11uper lntendant of Cal-Trans Orange maintenance station, told A YS that he will check this particular area. Nevins said that tb~re bas been an unusual amount of debris on freewa ys this sum mer. Although maintenance crews clean on a regular basls, work Is running behlnd doe to Increased Utter. Tourism could aceount for some of the problem, but Nev ins said CallfornJa motorists sbould also clean up their act. Scrap• C'an.lt'a,... Chjldren DEAR.PAT. I do a lot or home sewing and have plenty of good·sated material scraps left over. Can you tell me if the.re is any group which could use them ' N. 8,, Newport Beach The Aunt Rose Pl'oject.. which provides quilts d clothing to Korean and Vietnamese children, ways welcomes new material Your donations n be taken to Rose Bir&ler, 16671 Charles Lane, nlington Beach, or to the Retired Senior lunteer Program at the~oluntary Action Center, H W. Balboa Blvd., Newport Beach. Artluitu ·Aid Given 1 A new booklet about 1 living with arthritis and 1 where lo get help is available without cost from the Orange County I branch of the Arthritis I Foundation. For morl' information, phone 547-5591. - Cu•aBound Mary Hemingway (above) is returning to Cuba to research - a/id remember -her late husband's life The widow of Ernest Hemingway said she will help prepare a movie based on lire of Nobel·prize winning author. .. ,. -.. Wednesday, July fl. 1977 DAILY Pit.OT A l ~~~---~...__~~~~~-.~·~~--------------TV Show Defended CASH &CARRY 'Bionic Woman' Explairu Role kOWUI 'AP'lll CO ........ -···-···· FOOD SHY~E ,_OOUCTS SUN VALLEY. Idaho CAP> -Some or telev1s1on's quality problems stem from the fact the medium must reach a nationwide audience, says televLsion's "Bionic Woman." "The feature film media ts looser than televtalon," she said. "If ~Y can attract 15 mlllloa viewers, then they ha~e a hit. If a TV •how-attracts 15 million viewers. it's a bomb," she said. PAPBGOOOS GIFT WIAP Lmdsay Wagner was in Sun Valley for a conference on American heroes. llltOH JAHITOllAL SUPPLIES TUI MERCHAHDISl I AGS SHE FOUND HERSELF and her program lambasted as "pop junk" during a panel discussion by feminist Kate Millett and author Diane Christian. "I see the bionic woman u a girl who once was happy and having a ball on the tenn.la courta and then had an accident. I find it hard to keep her real ror me. I have a con.st.ant batUe aa to what she is. SHIPPIHG CAITOHS e lPTIOllS She said the story line of her show ls determined by others. That often rules out potentially interesting subjects, she said. ''I DON'T CONSIDER her lo be superhuman. I do consider her to be a girl who ls strong," she said. CLOSE OUT SPECIALS OM PAPER PLATES; BOWLS&CUPS ' "We have people called censors. IC they don't believe in ESP or faith· healing or in women, then we don't do stories about them," she said. Ms. Wagner says she worried that children might try to emulate the superhuman feats performed by the Bionic Woman and hurt themselves. BLOwER PAPER COMPANY THE PROBLEM LIES in television's attempt to reach millions of viewers. "It's a fear of mine. I've tried to c14rb her as much as I can and still do the stories that they've wriUen," she said. 1525 E. EOIMGER, SAM'TA ANA .. ,, __ .... ..._. __ Bride Beate"' Groom Jailed • SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -A 27-year·old man was arrested on his honeymoon alter police found his wife in their bridal suite with a broken nose, a broken ear drum. two black eyes and a patch or hair torn from her head. San Mateo County s heriff's deputies said William E. McClymonds. 27, of San Francisco was booked at the San Mateo County jail for investigation of wife beating. His bride, Leta McClymonds, 23, was treated at Peninsula Hospital, Burlingame. Deputies said the couple married Saturday and a bottle of unopened champagne was on ice in the suite at the San Francisco International Airport Hilton when deputies arrived Sunday. 63 a year for r,our money~ And yo~. don t even have to leave It a week. SupJX>se you open a regular a ccount with us tomorrow. Any amount. Then later you decide you need cash and you take some or all ol your money back. Your money still earns at the lull 6% rate, from day-in to day-out. There 's no withdrawal p enalty. Four Fro1n Coast Get SCORE Jobs nvn-oilfn'-~R? llG SAVl~SOM • HOMEOWNERS • AUTO lnMll"Gte• If YOU QUAUFY Anytime your account balance is $5,000 or more, the interest rate jumps to 61h%. With the same liberal withdrawal tenTlS. And whatever the rate, we comJX>und it quarterly. No rriinimurns, no tie-up, and 6% It'll pay you to call us for the details. Available to mchviduals, corporations. and organizations res1dmg m California. Four Orange Coast r esidents have been named officers or the Orange County chapter or the Service Corps or Retired Executives <SCORE>. Irvine resident Isadore Schneider will serve as chairman, Also elected were Laguna Hills residents Garry Hollaar, s ecretary; Hugh McConahey, case assignment secretary; and Harry Kellner, vice chairman. SCORE is a national organization composed of retired business leaders who offer free counseling. to new and pros pective small business men and women. Soon ... SETTER SALADS WILL BE.GIN IN LAG ti NA HILLS! \ • INSURANCE 541-5554 1914 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA COMMEI\.ClAL CRt:DIT COMMERCIAL CREDIT PLAN. INCORPORATED COSTA MESA ANAHEIM HUNTINGTON BEACH ORANGE Call 642-5678. 370 Eaat 17th Street 650 South 10675 Golden Weal 1111 Town & Counlry Rd. Put a few word• ~ to work for ou. 645-8700 Brookhural Street 847-7771 Su1lo 26 Many Happy Returns to you fora Worry-Free Vacation· When vacationing this year, free yourseH of worries by taking advantage of our Free Vacation Aids. Your savings account at Republic Federal Savings entiUes you to free travelers. checks, a free safe depo1it box ($1,000 minimum balance). tree telephone transfer and free direct deJ?Osit of govemment cheeks. All these benefits wff I reassure you when out of town -travelers cheeks protect your cash-~afe deposit 774-6740 547-5871 ... ,, .. boxes protect your valuables -telephone transfer allows you to transfer money from savings to your checking account-and for tho6e receiving social security and other government checks. the direct deposit to )'Our savings account allows )'OU to eam high Interest Immediately, with no worry about loss or theft of iou(check. • For detailed information simpry Inquire at any of our twelve offices. • A JI DAILY f'C\.9l t ' l .44 Caliber Killer Waits Mr"·,.,. o... rr•" 0...W9M•~ 'He Livea in Nishtmare World, Seea Vampire., Monaten' NEW YORK (AP> -Jt. wu a qulet aummer'a nlaht and UI year-old Donna l.Jaurle ut In u car outs1da her Bronl( apartment houa chatuna with Jody ValeoU. lt, who bltd Ju.at drtven her lrt>m from adiacoOlequc Tb• t.emperat.ure wu 71. Thor• wu no wtnd, and the ray1 ot a wuln& moon were hidden by an oYereut. TD DATE WAS July Z9, uns, a Tbund.ay. The lime wu 1:10 A..M . Suddenly, tbe clrllah chit-chat was interrupted by the repeated sharp crack ol a 1un. It sounded u though a lenitb of board bad been apUt with • heavy blow from a hammer. and the echoes re ve rberated through the resident.Jal area of Baychester in the northeast. Broox. Donna Lauria collapsed in death. Jod;y Valenti. wounded in the thigh, was to recover. Both girls had long, brown hair. NEW YOllK CITY'• .44 caliber killer bad struck for the fll"St time. But months were lo elapse before police realized they had on their h ands a blood lustful madman, whostalkedthemlddle- cl ass neighborhoods of the northeast Bronx and eastern Queens in apparently random search of human prey. Three more girls and a young man were to die, and three more girls and two men were to be injured in the year to follow . THE KILLER STRUCK again beneath a new moon at 2 a.m. Saturday, Oct. 23, when Carl Denaro, 20, was shot and wounded as he sat in a car in a residential area of Flushing, Queens, with bis girl friend, Rosemary Keenan. She was urunjured and among the police om cers later assigned to the search for the gunman was her father, detective Rodman Keenan, 54, a 23-year veteran of t he force. · Denaro wore his hair at s houlde r length and in the darkness could have been mistaken for a gi rl. ANOTHER MONTH PASSED with the killer lying dormant. Then on Saturday, Nov. 27, at 12:40 a.m., Joanne Lomino, 18, and Donna DeMasi, 17, were shot and wounded on the porch of Miss Lomino's home in Glen Oaks, Queens. a garden apartment complex near New York City's eastern border witb Nassau County. The gunman approached the two girls. asked directions, theo fired on them. Miss Lomino w as left a cripple, paralysed from the waist down. Both 1irl1 bad long brown hair. Two more month.I ellpted. AT 12:1J A.M. Sund~, Ju. 30, longhalred Cbrlatln. l'reund, 26, wu abot to deatb u 1b1 aat ln a car with her bo~ fl'lend, John HJJAC'I( FM~ TO RELE.4SE · 2 LIMA, Peru <AP) -Four young leftists eeoapld from Cbllt by hijacking a JeWntr with M other persons aboard but failed to secure the releu1 ot two leading Socialists imprUooed by •the fh!Jean junta. Nobodr wu hurt. . • ~. The Peruvian governarent arranged temporary as1h1m for the ~ree men and one woniu at the .. Veneiuelan embassy. ·~,_. HEARS FROM SLAYER Newsman Jimmy Breann Diel, outside the Long Island Rail Road Station in Forest Hills, one of Queens' better residential sections. Diel escaped injury. On Tuesday, March 8, within a block or Miss Freund's murder, Virginia Voskerichlan, 19, a Columbia University student. was shot in the face and killed at 7:45 p.m. as she was walking along the street. Her hair, of course, was long. Now for the first time, homicide detectives were able to announce that the series of shooting were lbe work of a sintle man. described as white, 25 to 00 years old, S.feet·lO to 6 feet tall, with mod·styled dark hair. BE WAS FVRmER described as clean·sbaven, clear-skinned pale·cOm\)lected, rigbt·handed and addicted to shooting in combat style -two-handed and from a crouch. They based their a nnouncement on fleeting glimpses by witnesses in the area of the shootings and on the significant ballistics discovery that the snub-nosed .44 caliber revolver that killed Miss Voskericbian was the same weapon that had taken the lives of Donna Lauria and Christine Freund, and bad wounded the others. • The killer struck again at 3 a.m. &wlday, April 17. Valentina SW'lanl 18. and her boy friend, 'Alexander lbau, 19, were shot dead u tht)' nt in a car in the Bronx ftve blocks from the scene of tbe ftnt murder. BY NOW THE KILLER had grown bolder. ID U1e car where the YOW\I couple died, be left a note, taunt1D1 th• police and vowlal to "dolt ~lain.'' .. He came oloae to giving clues," oae pol.lee source said. ''but In a rambllnt. almost incompreblUiblt at.yle. He lives In a nilhl&Dll'I worfd, wb•e be 11011 blood•IUOldDI Vim~ IUld Frankenstein moutera. • And in hil note to poUat, tbe .44 caliber killer aigned blm1elf "Son of Bain, .. either to plque b1a purau1rt or for 1om1 otber rea~ burled lD hll alck mlnd. IN UPl.1', TBS Pollot d .. partm• lu\lfd an appeal tba' nad1 . •·soa of 11m1 Vfl• now~ Al'e =.·~~~~,,.= to btJJ .YOll aad It &. DOt loo late. Plt~btlp,ou." AP wen the tele;bone num ud the address 1' the 109tb preoioct in Queens where the bu.ot fOf' the 1unman was by now centered. MEANWHILE, POLICE investigators souabt to trace the owners <>f .44 caliber revolvers, contacttnc 2,000 gun dealers throuebout North America. Some 28,000 weapons bad been produced since their manufacture was begun five years a10. and the tuk was monumental. MeanwhUo othu detectives quietly cbec"ed out persons named Sampson or Samson -· "Son or Sam." Mental institutions were contacted for escapees. Decoy police teams in unmarked cars, each with a man and woman in the front seat, were positioned Lo the Baycbester section of Tfte Bronx, in Flushing, in Forest Hills. But the killer ignored the bait.. FEAR BEGAN TO swirl across the nation's largest city, subtly, like a thin mist. Young girls took to tucking their long hair into buns to be concealed beneath scarves. Couples thought twice before parking in secluded areas. Parents worried ror daughters abroad at night. The police force exclusively assigned to hunting down the .44 caliber killer grew to SO officers. The manhunt bas cost the police department $10,000 to $12,000 a day -or more than $1 million since it began. Dr. Harve y Schlossberg, director of p sychological services for the police de· partment, was assigned to assemble a psychological profile of the killer. · "I WAS CALLBD JN between the second and third killings," Schlossberg said, "as soon as they recognized it was a pattern. It's a very unusual case. No conversation. Usually, the killer will say something, almost like a fetish, to explain why he's doing it. Or he'll take something from the victim - a ring, a piece of clothing. "I look at everything -the style of the crime -gun, knife, · does he hit the bead or the stomach? The time of the day it occurs, the area and of course the victims. What do they have in common? In this case, the hair is obvious, but I'm convinced there's something more, some connection we haven't found yet. "GUYS UKE TIDS killer don't kill spontaneously. There's a sort of ritual, it's almost like choreography. It's part of the pleasure they take in building up the fantasy." Then, as the search for tbe.44 caliber killer mounted to a crescendo seldom if ever before matched in New York City, the brash gunman mailed a letter to Daily News columnist Jimmy Breslin. It began: "Hello from the gotten of N.Y.C. which are fllled with de>g manure stale wine, urine, and blood. iiello fropl the sewers ot N.Y.C. which swallow up these delicacies when they are wuhod away by lbe sweeper trucks. Hello from the .crack& in the sidewalbofN.Y.C. andfromthe anta that dwell In these cracks ltJld reed on the dried bloocl of the dead that bas settled into the eracks." STRANGELY, ·aE SPOKE~ his initial Victim, Donna Lauria,· in arfoctionate tones, as though be might have known her. ·"She was a very sweet girl, .. the letter read, "but Sam's a Killer Guilty PUISUC NOl'ICll PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NoTrCE SONORA (AP) -An Escalon man has been convicted of first.degMe murder for the killing of his wife and will be aen- t enc e d June 3~ in Tuolumne Superior Court. A tbr~e·man, nine-woman Jury re· turned the nrdlct after· five hours of dollberattoa at the end ot a month· long trial tor Larry Basacker, 27. · PUBUC NOTICE tbiraty tad and won't let me stop kllllng unW he sets bis rut <>f blood. "Mr. Breslin, sir, don't think that because you haven't heard from me for a while I went to sleep. No, rather I am aUU here. Like a aplrit roaming the ~t. Thirsty, hungry seldom stoppin& to rest; anxious to please Sam. I love my work. Now the void bas been filled. 04PE&IL\PS WE SHALL meet face to face someday or perhaps I will be blown away by cops with smoking .38s. Whatever, il I lb.all be fortunate enough to meet you I will tell you all about Sam if you like and I will introduce you to him. His name is 'Sam the Terrible.' "Not knowing what the future nolda I sball say farewell and I will see you on the next job. Or should I say you wU1 see my handiwork at the next job? Remember Ms. Lauria. 'lbank you." The letter was signed "ID their blood and From tho GuUer. 'Sam's Creation' .44" Appended was a postscript taunting polioe, and .. rging Breslin to "Keep 'em digging, drive on, think positive, get off your butta, knock on coUltu, etc." JUNE 25, A SATURDAY night.. was punctuated by a tremendous evening downpour. But lbe rain had ceased by 3 a.m. Sunday morning when Judy Placido, 17, left the Elepbas discotheque on Northern Boulevard in Bayside, Queens. a commercial artery criss-crossed north and south by quiet streets of private homes and apartmenta. . Judy has been wearing her long brown hair up, her sister said, but let it down that evening to show she was not afraid. She was celebrating her graduation from St. Catherine's Roman Catholic High School in The Bronx, where she lived. JUDY LEFT THE disco with Salvatore Lupo, 20, and they sat in a car owned by an Elepbas bouncer who was to drive them home. U was parked on 2llth Street near 4Slh Road, about a block and a half from the discotheque An unmarked police car assigned to the .44 caliber task force bad kept surveillance of the Odol»•r 23, 19711 Jwo Woflttded 0 • .... __ 111!!11..._;,. •' ' IROOKlYN t. ~ MllfS WHERE M CALIBER klUER STRUCK IN NEW YORK Map Showa Sttea and Datea, Boxea Give Ton Elepbu for a time, but had moved on to another stakeout shortly before Judy left with Salvatore. At 3:20 a .m., bullets smashed through the closed front window of the parked car. Miss Placido was wounded ln the right temple, the right shoulder and the back o( the neck, but survived. Lupo ·escaped with a wound of the right forearm. LATER AT A NEWS coa.terence, Chief of Detectives John Keenan confirmed what had already been aurmlaed, aDDO'mc:lng: "Our ballistics testa showed that the bullets came from the same .44 caliber revolver that was used in the other shootings." Deputy Police Inspector Timothy Dower, beading the search for the gunman. probably knows as much about the .44 caliber killer as anyone involved in the manhunt_ albeit that isn't a • greatdeaJ. "'BE'S QUITE intel• ligent;" Dowd declared. ••very bright. I'd say he's a college graduate. Very cunninC. Very literate." Somo trauma in the man's lite may have started him down _, path of vtoJence, Dowd bellevee, oHenn, as bis opinion: "It could have been the 1oa of a loved me or a retlex to Jilting by a potential female partner. apparently doeSD 't know bow meet and treat and conduet fairs with women -to es a reJationsbip with a you woman. "He spears to have problems." BECAUSE OF RELIGIO expressions in the killer's letters, he's believed to be Roman Catholic or-~ background. All of the five 's killed and the six he's w were Cat&ollcs, althou h investitl~ see that as more eoinddence, aiDce was not believed to have knn*n. his target.sin advance. -y- Tho Daily Ne•• offerecl1 a $10,000 reward for lnfonna~ leading to tbe arrest aDd conviction of the.murderer.~ WAB9·TV added a mat.chUag amount. Meanwhile, as the· feverish. manhunt wears on, the · A4 caliber killer presumably bicteS his lime, ready to strike aga£n, ever "like a spirit roaming '1e night." . l ONE MORE TDING may t»e signi.ficant, as a portent of an f.bd · in the tortuous road of ttae m111derer. I& type of weapon holds five bullets and be . ""5 never flnwlmore than four at cpe l time. · I ! The aurmlae is that he's savlftt one bulle& for the moment w~n • apprebemion looms. when Ute ghasUy game i.!I up, either to flre it at tbia captor -or to uae it oo himself. Ill J < AVl!NUE 'O ·~=._.--.-.. ..... ---t u ... _............. z IC .. .,. HUNTINGTON HARBOUR SHOPPING GUIDE BANK Security Peclftc , NetlOMI Bank hU,.,.... Bank 848-1341 BARBER The Hilt ear.Co. $~yUnci and Cutting 849-9781 BEAUTY .Huntlngloft Martlour H•lrO.algn Complde 8«.ad11 N,_ 841-4HS11 IJOUTIGUI For Lldee Only Sculptured~. Appcftl 84e..o5eS FLdRIST Hunttng&on Beacll Florlat Arlilanl m P'loroctllhlrtt 8*0801 GIFTS Huntington "8rtMMlr H•llm..tc Cardi. "4doMrJ/, T01J1# ~°"II Goodl 84&-0110 f \ INfU'iANCE P8tMl8no J AU "°""'of lnnr • (213) 802211·141 Nit REAL ESTATE Cheer Realty CoU Ch#r Leader for. a llarl:lovr HOIM (714) MtM111 (213) 592-5040 Hunllnatoo Herbour Reattv ~"· M NN .sot.I a. IU-Uet (714) ..-.1 (211),At-2811 RISTAURANTS Hou•GfHum OrWftlCll Cldlf• .... SAVINQ8 a LOAN 1et~Srltnp - Optn &livrdatii 10, o.m. • f ~· m. ~ -- • ~Wed~~~~~~y~,J~ul~y=S._19~7_7~~~~~~D_A_IL_Y_~~L~O-T~.4~J-......J Mate'S Drinking Leaves Wile Accident Weary ..,':!';ff, .. ~:w;~· LlrTE,tATf 1'r MoVtfS it1tf t_tt<f.~. futtN .•1URE:·: · • 8)' i>a. ·r.;1Nl'ROHN O t ar Or . Stt'ln crubn \h ''"band nd 1 huH· lwt'n 111 t\\o to k"Cldf'fltfl U 11'11 I ruc; lhul trouble oftt'n t·omt11 In thrc.11 11 ~mA lllrc-lv I h11t "1• rt' 111 for .1 1rd Bt'fO.-t' lht· prt•\ lllUI\ ('I lWkUfJll, I ft' olved I'd n~\ er rtdt• homt.• from a cocktaJl pilrty \\1th rnv h1Ujtnm1I •t tho wheel H1"' trouble 11 that h1• i6 M ht'•vy drmkt.•r cal pu1r1t•i. ;ind a Ucht drtnke1 ill hom1: lk 1·un t •old tus liqwr wht•n ht• llllWl> mor 1• than usual. CotrCC' dO<''n I hd11. I KEEP A•"n;a h11n !Jul ht• doesn't listen More than once l'vt.· ( J from O\'l'rdrmkmg before driving, DOCTOR IN 11\\111 ~ h1::. M•Ponslb1hty alone THE HOUSE lnc1dcnh1ll} I want to make a plll'h for seat and shoulder belts. IC reaolvoo not lo ride w11h him untlt•r auch 1·1rcum&t1mc<'::. In I he first acl·ident. he bangl·d ,, kn~t! Clip and ('Ul hll-1 fat.·l' Opt.'n 011 tho daihboard. I suffered u brurw<I no1hl and a wrenched buck In th1· ~1·c1111d. I caml.' out w1lh a b1 okl·n h·IJ imd he had a broken log. NOW I A~I WAITING for lhl· third smashup. But not really. 'fh1-. time I'll refuse to go alon!:. If •t man or 38 hasn't the sense to keep "t· had not had them on. I would not bl' hl•rc lo tl'll about 1t -!U rs. l. COMMENT Alcohol and dr1vmg chm 'l mix. Neither do alcohol and l·offct'. These days when cocktail part1~-; are a favorite stopover. many people go overboard with r"10rc alcoholic drinks than they <·unsafely handle.· Coffee is supr>0sed lo be one sur e antidote against too much liquor. It isn't Several eJt.penmenls have shown that the caffeine m coffee prolongs instead of shortens poor behavior m alcoholism. MEDICALETTES According to one recent report "'atchlne porn ograpb1c mov1es could be a precarious pastime for anyone sufferin g from heart disease. For example, consider this note taken from Practical Psychology Newsletter: "PORNOGRAPHY AND T HE H EART. Wh~l kind of. sexual counsel to give a patient "'(IO has a heart condition hus always l;>een a difficult subject for p hysicians. Now a report from Germany has staled that someone with cardiac problems should slay clear or hard core sex Cilms. It seems one gentleman keeled over while watchmg a blue movtt!, creating an intere::.tmg foren!>r(' p roblem. Just where do<'s the liability for this man's death he'! THE ME DICAL EXAMINER suggested that death might have · been caused by the excitement on the screen. f A~LY AMEittc ~H · AND·· ... ··· ·qLJ>·:e~·~H : . " .... One wonders if :>ex movies should now carry a cigarette-like rejoinder: 'Warning: thc Surgeon General h as determined that wat c ~i ng t his f i lm may be hazar~ous to your heart'." ,. .... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij;~ .· QUALITY '· " -FEATURES !\', . ·~ .... ·-: _, . . \ "' . ·:·.· ·. . ... • ••,• :.-:., Utt.at -·. \ " ;J ~ .... , , .. •I ,, DRISTAN 99c TABLETS KOT EX MAXI PADS J49 f AUll·f.U GUAaAHTU \'M -· ~ ........ If •I, rt'-... ,.,.. _.. frllii "* ...... wltlt tli. .,lfi!W .. ~-.. ~·· .. ~........... . 1.62 VALUE! ~( dftiyb.·'·· '@J "\ ~ 4 IOTIU Of I 00 11 • ') REG. 1.39 ... MULTIPlE DAILY 2 201 A v ·~ VITAMINS WITH IRON. . . . • • FOR r ,... ,...~ IOTIU OF IOOli *.') 7 ~ ~ REG. 1.19 ••. MUlTIPLEDAllY 2 )ll ___ __.._r_~ ~ :.A~~~~• • • · • · • • . • , . 101 ;~:~L',O::s ~ RIG. 2.19 .. 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Ftr ~ ., '"'' SMUCKERS PRESERVES --···· : ... .. . .. . , .. ·-.. .. . . ... PREPARATION "H'' 2'' SUPPOSITORIES Peck of 24. Mt.....ni.i4 relief. m "'""""" ~ ENFAMll Ile FORMULA eo. u -01. t"""41. rw ... , .~ 11'011. CHEEZ-IT CRACKERS • • ,, ...... R-ED-U-CE-D ....... I FOR LIMITED ) TIME STYL1E~7· 3c HAIR SPRAY ... ~ ,·-\~ r--- 11-01. l~ tr S·01. tvh. 13-01. leg., Suptr tr U111et11tt4. S.HI ~ ~OSt .It~ ROSE MILK SKIN LOTION A JI DAIL V PILOT WtdnHd1y. July 8. 191'1 Chem~ts Getting Jobs ,_o_u_EE_N_1e ______ e_v _Ph_;_11_n,_e_r1a_n_d .. 1 Sacramento Sues But Salaries Not the Greatest, Survey Shows By JOYCE L KENNEDY Deer Jeyce: Are tller• maay )oba for cbtissl1U! How aDdl moef'y do U.ey make! I am a blalil achoo.I ....... MU. YOWlilllown, Ohio Tbae art" lnlcreat1n1 limes for chcmisli, a11 a umpllnc of dl11cu~slon topics ut an American Chemical Society <AC.:S> meeting bhows: planetary cbemlltry, a futuristic i.pacu colony, and advances 1n aolarcell dcalgn and coal gus1ficallon. The long-term outlook for chemists is favorable, and an ACS study reveals that employment ol chemists is up, particularly among women and minonUes. The le:is happy news ls that while pay u increaalge too. In constant 1M7 dollars. cbemasta are oo bettn off than they were In the late lMOs. ONLY 1.5 PERC~T OF CHEMISTS are unemployed and seeki,Pi work, less than half the 1974 level. Geography plays a role, however: unem'ployment is greate&l in the West at 2.4 percent, lowest in the CAREERS along the Atlantic is l .S. ( 1 Central States at 1.1. and collese. and the top Jobs 10 to those with a Ph.D. ff you like chemistry but the Idea of so much education doesn't lieht your Bunsen burner, you could become a chemical technician . Thia paraprofessional works ln a lab helping chemists and chemical enelneers with experiment.I, tests and procedures, and often trains in a apeciaJlzed two-yeaf community college pro1ram. · READER SERVICE: Seporate T1que8ts are requirfd for ~och of iheie 1wo of/.ra, both of which end Sept. 1. Send a poflcard request for either offer to Joyce Loin Kennedy at tPrft MWpaper. Materials wm be sent by the American Chemical Society. (I J Chemist - "Chemical Career• in the 1980&," 24 poge1, plus "Que~iQru and Answer.!," /uur paue•. (2) Chemical techni.dan -a carter brief plua Un of two-ycor chemical t1tch col~ programs. ************* •I ·-·------• ., * ., ·• • * • --- ,, .... Oops, Wrecker Misses House "' ~ SACRAMENTO CAP> -It m1ght be catted the Case of the Mistak~n Mansion. But it wasn't billed that way when the city o~ Sacramento went to court Tuesday to file a $.150, civil complaint against the poople it claims tore· apart the home of California's first governor. The city-owned structure, built by Peter Burnett, was gutted a few months ago by a work crew that said 1t accidentally did its job on the wrQng house. · . The correct house was a short dlst1mce away, but the crew instead stripped doors, fireplaces, floors. paneling and handrails from the governor's home, city officials have said. Named io the suit wet"e Weit Coast Building Wrecking Inc., Wllllam Smith, an officer in the firm. and Mariano Gutierrez. · The jobless rate --------among women dipped to 3.4 percent in 1977, from 4 4 last year. The unemployment figure for minority chemists, 3.9 P.Crcent last year, is now 2.3. Only 1.0 percent of white male chemists are out or work. Industry usually pays lhe best. The median income there for Ph.D.s is $29,500, and in government is $28,000. Men in management jobs receive a median income of $35,000; those with more than 20 people reporting to them receive higher pay, $4.2,000 median. For having a good.time at home. WNLIKE MEN, WOMEN EARN most in government. where the Ph.D. female chemist earns a median of $23.800, compared lo $23,000 in industry, and $16,SOO in education. The chemist needs a minimum or Cou~ years of Yegg Abandons Cash UNTERPFAFFENHOFEN, West Germany <A P> -A hold·up at a textile sbop here ended when the wouid·be robber changed hls mind, stammered an apology and fled . PoLice said the man forced hLS way into the shop. brandished a gun and demanded rnoney from the 63-year-old storekeeper Tbe storekeeper opened tus till, pomted to the 200 marks -$80 -It contained and said· "Help yourself. But do you think it's worth it?" The stick·up man mumbled. "Forgive me. please," jumped on his bicycle and pedaled away VD Poster Outlawed ·Por Bars HANGING u:-.. \. IRR~~ii~D SHADES : . $12149 tr--CHAIRS s7tS ' • ... $292,.., . ' ton' I ') uo~ ...... S8995 S2JJ95 St\CRAMENTO <AP> The corner bar won't be getting posters and pamphlets from the slate warning of the dangers or venereal disease anv more under a bill signed by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. Brown's office said the governor signed AB 200 by Assembly wo man Leona Egeland <D·San Jose> that repeals the requirement errcelive next year. Whe n the bill was before the legislature. Miss Egeland s aid spending money to distribute the posters and pamphlets didn't make sense because people didn't go to bars to read, and it was too dark there anyway. .. 1 29 . rucoc.oc CHAIU .. PLANT STANDS BURI SETTEES WICKER, ETC. 7552 WAIHEI AVENUE HUNTINCTON l£ACff --·-· 847-4840 ~LIO-I .&S-12· s799s n ltATTAH IEDTaAYS ---s19•s WASTE BASlffi --· ·-,....,... 1210 ti 19C).'2" "° .... 1510 SONY BETAMAX. Sony's 19~ diagonal screen Betamax home video-recording system. Record your TV favorites right on videocassette ... Bur Id a video library or use cassettes over and over. Betamax records while you're viewing and will even record automatically whlle you're away. Brilliant Trlnitron color ano Sony crafts- manship make Betamax an easy·lo-operate addition to hOme.entertalnment. Take Betamax home Immediately or have It dellvered. A great way to reward yourself. All Bank of Newport In lieu of Interest Time Savings Programs ere based on maxi· mum allowable lnlerest, and we can alao arrange to have your fu,,~s transferred from other financial lnstitutlona for you. YDUl\SEU ran SAVING AT wm OF NEWPDl\T OPEN A TIME DEPOSIT AND TAKE HOME SONrs · FAMOUS 8ETAMAX HOME VIDEO SYSTEM ONLY AT tsANt< OF ~EWPORT. mft"' lfMAfJ Open a nme Certificate of Oepotlt~ec>\knt it Bank of IWiH~ aw H I Newport using any of theee 3 Pf-nt... • 1 ~·1/»0 83 month• at 7.2&% 2 Deposit 110,000 '4 months t e.!% 3 Oepoett $1$,000 24 mQnttis at &•f. SHOWllME is a unique home entertainment concept. &qoy an exfYiting low-cost . extra channel that brings you Hollywood's be.st. 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Shelby Sutcliffe, 3, daughter -0f Lynn Sutcliffe, counsel for the National Committee for Automobile Crash Protection, reacts as an air bag pops from the steerine wh eel of si mulator during a Washington, D.C conference to demonstrate the safety of the restraint de· vice. The Carter administration has ordered that all car s beginning with 1982 models have the air bags. a move criticized by Republican congressmen. Vatican Visit Due VATICAN CITY CAP> -Pope Paul VI will receive U.N. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim in private audience Saturday. the Vatican announced. • .. Wednnd!y. July 8. 1tn DAIL y PILOT A JI_ HollywoOd ~£walor ·Eyed •\ CleaR,.up Effort May Restore OM ~mage HOLLYWOOD (AP) -They call It tinsel town, but like an a1ing beauty queen Hollywood Is showing her years. The glitter that once dazzled and delighted mllllona Is tarnished and fiaklng. Years aao. Hollywood was a magic name that lured tourists from places like Des Mofnes to the West Coast. They hoped to see once and for all ·the rantaayland where their favorite movies were made. TODAY, HER STREETS are clogged with a bizarre assortment or pimps, prostitutes and pornographers, each hawking lhelr sexual wares lo the bermuda·short set Crom the local Gray Line Lour, or anybody else w1lh money. Tacky clubs featuring hve nud e acts line once-classy Hollywood Boulevard. Crime is common, raJlging from routine purse snalchlngs to mugging, robbery and rape. LOCAL SCHOOLS AND churches keep their doors locked even during daylight hours. ''ll's rotten, there's nothing good out there." said one frustrated bar owner glancing out onto Vine Street. lie added that he has been beaten and robbed by thugs coming in from the street. "Around 10 at night, I have t.o have a few martinis just to be in here," he said. A DISGRUNTLED COFFEE shop owner lakes even a dimmer view of Hollywood. "Tell 'em to burn it down, tear 1t up," he said . The Ceisty, middle·a1e owner, who opened his 24-hour business last June, was rorced to close thls March after the street people, including pimps, prostitutes and assorted muggers, took over the place, frightening away regular customers -businessmen. secretaries and of cours~ tourists. He now says he can't sell bis Hollywood Boulevard business because "people are afraid .to buy it." aod committee member, she A ••CRIME CULTURE" sea the committee's efforu as thrives in Hollywood mainly merely a beg~nning of a because of prostitution, said revltaliJatlon process she hopes Capt. Harry Holmes of the wlll snowball over the years as LAP D's Hollywood Dlvisloo. mor• citizens pit.ch in. , The volunteers will work on "There ls a tendency to t8llc several committee projects, about proaUtuUon as a stnale including removal of gaudy neon crime, but that really doesn't s i g ll s fro m H o 11 y w o o d reflect what the problem is," Boulevard, closure.ot dog-l~ed Holme~ said. "Tber~,'s a streets. improvement of st.reel substantial number of people lighting, a cutdown in traffic who live off the prostitutes, such cong~lio1', more parking, as pimps and various bunco re,loration of older residences artists. · BUT IF PLANS envisioned by and commerci~ buildings and "Society is gradually elim- lhe Hollywood Revltalizalion even construction or the long-inaling lhe number of places for Committee and other concern~ awaited Hollywood Museum to .. robbery; you can't rob a cab or a • bus of very much anymore Bollyteeed •lier • "•ore &l•t••t because the drivers don't carry I I d • t. ~i any change and neither do gas pron tut 011 811 peraefll°GJI' II •• • •.r-•• stations at night," he said. "So did fll ft• •o•t rirtdelat clatf .. " the street robber comes to I ~~~ Hollywood, knowing a prostitute community groups become display mementos or the motion will be charging a trick from S20 realities, all that will change picture industry. to $50 and that a lot of cash will be soon. But crime is lhe big problem. carried -not only by her but also Gone will be the dreary and by her custoipers." dilapitated night clubs, the TO COMBAT IT, Police Chief disreputable and dingy sex Ed Davis has ordered one shops, the filthy, lice-ridden division per night, on a rotating massage parlors. basis, to send an additional vice In their place. as committee squad into Hollywood even members envision it, will be a though it leaves the donor vibrant community lhal divisionvulnerabletovice. recaptures the glamor of the '30s and '40s when Hollywood was in And Gov. Brown has asked that its prime. And apparently many the California Highway Patrol citizens are willing to work for it. supplement sheriff's forces along the once-chic Sunset Strip. "FOR THE FIRST time as long as 1 can remember, the commu nity is united in something," said Los Angeles City Council member Peggy Stevenson. A longtime Hollywood resident Brown's idea drew swift criticism from Sheriff Peter Pitcbess, who said the move was political and "ridiculous" because the CHP function is traf· fie control, not crime. He also said Brown never asked him. THERE'S BEEN a 10 percent increase over last year In the number or street robberies, Holmes said. Auto theft is up 14. percent. Last year the Police Department arrested some 2,500 male and female prostitutes ranging in age from 14 lo 39, Holmes said . with about 50 percent of those being first-time arrests. One Hollywood division officer said the city offers ·'more blatant prostitution and pornography than Tijuana did in its most virulent days." ere\arewa ryou No--Charge Checking. No monthly service charge, no minimum balance to worry about, and personalized checks at no extra cost. Up to 7112% Interest. Wells Fargo rewards you · ~th the highest bank interest rate the law allows: 50/o on regular passbook savings and even more on longer term certificate accounts-up to 7V2% when deposited for 6 y~ ~~tBox. SQ si%e-or $6 aed.it towards a la~t size (availability may vary &Om office to office). Now, if you keep $2,000 in any Wells Fargo savings plan...-k:ook ~-BE~ or certfficate--you can c · the biggest reward we've ever offered. Travelers Checks. , ,,. Provided with no service chruge as part of your Wells Fargo Reward. Iersonal Service fiom a ~nal Banker.T .. Personal effort built Wells Fargo. That's why we introduced PersonafBankers to offer'you the uonost in personal seIVice. Your Personal Banker will help you set up your Reward Account, and will pay individual attention to all your banking · · needs. DAILY PILOT Men, Too, Get Cancer Of Bre&8t SAN DIEGO <AP> -Men llllo get breut c ancttr and It '1 deadUer than the d\J ttt In womea becaute roalea eldom eomlne I.heir chats and JUt otf treat~t. a re1earchtt Ill'\. Allhouih ll &CC'OUnta for only about 1 percetlt of all unccr In men, "the five and 10-year s urvival rates Jn meo art considerably lower •• comp~ with that ln women," sald Dr. Thomas L. Daa. DAO TOLD A CANCER sympoelum at Scripps Memorial Hospital Cancer Center that 600 to 700 men in the United Sutes get breast cancer annually compared with about 90,000 women. Dao is director of the Division of Breast Surgery and Breast Cancer Research at the Roswell Park Memorial Institute, Buf- falo, N.Y. The Buffalo clinic sees about 100 cases ol breast cancer In men annually. Dao said 60 to 65 percent of those suffered Crom axillary lymph node metastasis, the spread of the disease to nodes in the armpits, compared to 45 percent in women. Fluoride Stopped lnl City EUGENE, Ore. CAP) -Reversing a decision they made seven months ago, Eugene voters have voted overwhelmingly to stop putting fluonde into the city's water supply. The vote was 9,801 to 5,580 in favor of an init· ialive petition to prohibit the Eugene Water and Electric Board from ad- ding fluoride to the waler. THE INITIATIVE repeals an ordinance adopted last November. At that time, by a vote of 20,455 to 19,094, an ordinance was adopted allowing the fluoride ad- d il ion lo the water supply. THE INITIATIVE was s ponsored by a group called Citizens for Pure Water and is the latest development In a controversy that dates back at least 20 years in Oregon's second largest city. The Eugene City Council has said that regardless of the vole to ban fluoride. the issue will be placed on the November 1978 ballot. Driver Aid Dispensed By State Capitol News Service SACRAMENTO - Anti-drowsiness tablets, eye drops and aspirin will be available from ro a d side vending ma c hin es along Highway 99 beginning July 15. Five roadside r est areas will be equipped with macbines dispensing the driver safety aids under a two- ye a r ex p e rim ent co nducted b y the Departm e nt o f Transportation (CalTrans). "We're concerned with driver safety," said Harry Kagan, chief of the Division of Rlght-ot- way. "W~pe that this vending progr am will have a beneficial effect for the safety and convenience or the driver." In addition to the safety aids, auncw•es .. refreshments a na claareltu will be .available in machines J?rOvlded by AmbUSldor Food I , Inc., or Long Bea cb, wlllcb ••• awanted tbe con~oa contract. Beireh Artistry What is it? A weekend mobile. What does it mean? Fun. These are the things Bonnie Shuler, 10, of Glendora, found while camping at Doheny State Beach. Collection of seashells, driftwood and other flotsam makes a fine artistic creation. Students Get U.S. Aid WASHINGTON (AP > -The federal government will give almost $9SO million to colleges, universities and vocational schools for student aJd durln& the 1977-78 academic yeJL the Depart.ment ot Health, Education and Welfare bas announced. HEW's Office of Education said the money wW go to programs in the SO stales, the District of Columbia. Guam, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands and the trust territories of the Pacific. THE MONEY WILL SUPPORT THE National Direct Student Loan (NDSL>. College Work·Study (C WS ) and SupP.lemental Educational Opportunity Grant <SEOG) prog~ams. students enrolled at 3,197 post-secondary institutions. The students may work for tbe school, such ., fOOd aervtce or maintenance work, or for a publiq !" • private nonprofit agency, like a bospJtal, wh\qt> provides the remaiotne 20 percent ot tbe salaries. About 3.600 lnsUtuUons will share almost ~ million for the SEOG program, which tlyes atudet>t er ants ranging trom $200 to $1.~. ONLY UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS QI extreme financial need are eligible for these federal grants. When a student gets a SEOG award, which doe,, not have to be repaid, the educational institution la required to add to it an equal amount of aid from some other source. NDSL will get $310 million, CWS $389 mlJllon and SEOG $250 million for aid beginning this fall. The programs, administered by educational .. ----------------• institutions, distribute money to students according to family income and need. HEW SAJD THAT THIS YEAR 2,615 colleges, universities and post-secondary vocational schools will get $310 million in NDSL money. Federal funds ' provide 90 percent of the principal for the loans with the educational institutions contributing the remaining 10 percent Borrowers pay 3 percent interest. • Repairs • Mountings • Chains • Casting ~ MacTavish flll Goldsmith, Inc. ~ 833-3048 833-3064 4250 Scott Dr., Newport Beach "We Buy Old Gold and Sliver" •Findings • Remounting •Stones A student may borrow $2,500 for vocational study or the first two years of college. No student may get more than $5,000 for undergraduate studies. The ceiling for graduate study is $10,000, including NDSL funds r eceived as a.n .. ________________ • undergraduate. NDSL repayment begins nine months after the ( borrower leaves school. . THE CWS AWARDS WILL cover 80 percent of the salaries earned by undergraduate and graduate ,. IN SHORT ) SUMS It up. In the DAILY PILOT This is who we are and what we do at General Motors. "I trust all the workers~ ,, I think we turn out a great cat here. Eileen Gilleo, General Motors Assembly Division, Turrytown, N.Y. "I have a 1963 Chevy now and I hate to part with it It's still working great But this year, I'm going to buy myself a new car. Sometimes people go right around the plant with the cars they order. I don't think I'll do that I trust all the workers. I think we tum out a great car here" "I started my 25th year m January. I work on the outside moldings It's called supplying the line I have what they call "nests'' that I put the moldings m As the car comes down the line, I take the plasttc adhesive paper off the moldings and the men put glue on each end and put it on the car so that it Imes up evenly 011i1 the doors. "It's a fast job. If it's a four door car, I have to make up three, six, nine pieces of molding within secOl'lds because we're doing better than a car a minute. You have to keep moving all the time. "It's really teamwork. If I putttte molding down right, it's going to be right If I put the stock upside down, then the men might have to take the molding off and reglue it So it's just a case of thinking every time I put the molding down. "Ours is a happy area. We laugh and joke and still do our job first Some people might find the job drudgery. I just really enjoy my work. I feel proud that I make cars. "I think there's more opportunity for girls today. The whole attitude at General Motors has changed in the last few years. I see more girls with different jobs. A lot of them are doing jobs that amaze some of the men. "My foreman is really great. She can do any of the jobs on the line. In fact, she broke me in on the job I'm on now. 0 If a person's really interested, I don't think it makes a dif · ference if they're male, female, old or young. After you're here for a while, for most people doing a gocxl job becomes like an obsession. They're proud of their work." Generar Motors People building transportation to serve people ••• i Foster Leads British Open " TURNBERRY. ScoUiand 11\P l Martin Yo.ter. • ('Jub pro from G al Britain, brok• P•r Or\ both ine1 and ahot a thrl"l• under-par for lhe Ind mid way through tht' rlr1t round today or thu :rill b ()plon aolf tournamt'nt While th• IC llt'ry'1 ''YCI w1•rt• Ormly (lxfd on Americans lake Jae~ Nicklaus and Tom WlllM>•I. Foster 11\« 11 3-1·33. Only onct• was Foster on·r pur, on th1· ea&hlh ll. hen ht• took o rive I k bad rour birdies Tied at 61 werc Nlcklau11, bid dtn~ for hill third lllll• IO tlrn• • tournumtint. Walson und Lt'l' Trevmo. also a two-lime Brit1:.h Open winner NlcklllU!l lllrdled the la:.t two hole:t mcludinii the moi.l Mt>nerous hole on thc Allsa courH, lho p;ar-5, m yard 17th tor a 31 on thti back nine uftt-r •hootln1 two-over 37 going out Nicklaus birdied the 18th with u 2~ foot putt. WatlSOn blew a chance for a lie w Ith fo'011ter when he bogeyed the 18th Watsoncam1!ofl'the 17th \\oJth u birdie and wt.ts three under. but ht• puJled his dnve off the 18th tee into the stands. He got a free drop. but lhe drive appeared to havf' unsettled him. Ile missed an eight-foot putt for par Severiano Ballesteros of Spain birdied the 16th and 17th boles and finished witha69. Former U.S. Open winner Hale Irwin and young George Burns were at even-par 70. Irwin shot a 32 on the back nine including a bogey on 18 -after going three- over 38 on the first nine. Burns had a steady 36-34 over the romISe Comes True: Quax Sets World Mark STOCKHOLM CAP) -New alander Dick Quax kept his omise to break the 5,000·mctcr rid record and bt.'came the t 1rd athlete to shatter an international track and field standard 111 Civc days Officially clocking 13 minutes, i .9 seconds, Quax shaved 1 /lOlh a second off the five-year-old andard of Belgium's Emil Putteman. The new world rccordholdcr, who goes to the United States after running in Switzl'.'rland on Friday, said he was not disturbed by the wind. "In fact. I would have mJdc an honcst attempt to break the record even if there had becn a snow storm. I h:.id promised myself to break it today," Quax said . "Four New Zealanders have been within a second of breaking the world record here. so it was about time som eone did 1t," Qua!\ s~ud after the ract• Qua'\. who missed the \\orld rN:ord b) a 10th of a second here last year. broke the record exactly 11 years after Australian Ron Clarke had broken it here in 1966 · · 1 was scared that Karl Flcschen would overtake me in the sprint. That's why I started spurting when I had about 500 meters lo go." Quax added. •'It is nice to be a world r ecord holder, but tomorrow someone may run it in 13: 10," he said. Countryman Rod Dixon ::ind West Germany's Fleschen gave Quax the support nccdect lo shatter the world record. Dixon, who led the first 3.000 meters. said afterwards. "I had no intentions of being the pacesetter, but when Dick asked me to help hjm, I said. 'Okay.· ... "I have been chasing this world record for two years and it felt strange to help someone else to s hatter it. but Dick is my friend and I am sure he'll help me when I ask him next time." The 29-year-old Quax. Olympic silver medalist at 5,000 meters behind Lasse Viren of Fm1and. •P PhOlo DICK QUAX BROKE WORLD 5,000 METERS RECORD. ran the distnnce in 13: 19.4 last week at the World Games in Helsinki. Dwight Stones once again avenged the defeat in the Olympics to winner Jacek Wazola of Poland and Canada's Greg Joy by soaring? 511.& in the high jump MEN \ 000 m€-ff"f~ • I OtM.-Ne-N l~'11;'U\(j. n 11 'l 1-NOfld ''"(f',-0 old n·COt'"d tl tJ 0 PUtlf'lm '" (\(l()•um. 1Q11' ]. ~lf'U,,en Wu\t Cf>t""d"'t 11 IJ ~ J W• ·~·· W~\· Gef'tndnv. ,3 us J vu~cr,mclnn. f'1'i.t Gf"rtn4nv, 1J I~ S S lt.1,.,.Jt•> Jdodn IJ 1S '· 6 l<lld, J•o•n IJ 21 • 1 M<OondlO U~A. IJ 2~.3 J 000 ~tttr \tf"lOIPt,,a1# -1 I( .tr~t W•"-1 (.f 'mclnv 8 u 1 1 M&l1now'lkt, Po1.1~ct 8 '"' ' ) "'•"'" VSA I 11 6 ' .... uny.ild l<tnv• e JI\> ~ ( .. 1'dt'rVO. SoNf'O~n. d 31 8 t> Sn1ntdllO, Jt10.1n~ i •O ~ 1 SOl)n"t·l .. r'\ -t. t\l'\11 JtJOdn,) 4!"tJ 1 Tt.h,_..,, ~ .. n.,.,,, J .&(11-J l '-"NS•tM, Cuba. l .11 1 .a IC()"loio1·1 ttpny,, l .tin fi S.. rem, k'l>nYd l d \ b H.111 Av,lr(fiht1 l .H ~ t t0.mufpr Nrdh''\ I (.lHln.H, Cv01't, I.) bO 7 ArV(fnt),•1• f:tnl1tnd 14 O• 3 Wh1tl1ttld. USA. U t), .a Pf1otH '• C\w•Uf'rl.tf\d, 1.a JS ~ V~rd, CvtM, 14 JI, s A1,. .. ,, USA u \I 100 ,.,,,.,.,.,, I ( 1'1Wilrd~. USA 10 flt 1 l~,., (ub•t 11 JS) JOtMn•\.On.~w'"<M"" 11 \l J Mwt·b•. J(,..nvrt. 71 S~ S Grrvb'·nl USA 11 I t b Gan •-.on U!>A,118) 400 n'ltlff\ I Ju''"'"'"ni\, CutM ... , JO 1 An<tfPIN\ USA Ji\ Ob l Fr<-dr11t\.-.,on. Sw~n "'P1 .. ,.., ..... c lf'(J\O'j.IOvdW•u H 11 s Jonn\.On IJ~A II II ~1Qr'I IU,.,,P I ~IOfW"'i''i Ut.A I \I 1 l(Ot1nt.•k 11~11 I• • J Jo• C'•n·ld• I l • Wooch U!>A I I s w .. 1n1.1 Potrtne,1 I o• I l fl~lf' tuMf) I OtO'Oo\ USA, Sl • f()nl\I tor 1an f"trv O•'ioC\ol'-t W·•"'"' lJ"A 11& 6 1 Pow.-11 U"A 1•1 • J fhU"n «,\AfNt .. n 101 • • J Stadt"I, USA, 101 .., \ Odf'W"" c l~l'tO k)'ld~ "' , .. ~. " WOMEN tf)O ,..., ff''' ' .,.AQiluf\d Sw-dPn 11 ti-" l Oov11· Au\tr,.11 t 1 t U 1 Pot t rM-1 11 0\ .4•)0 m• tt r... t ~tt••nOtl PofAnC )t 1~ 1 Ndil Au,t..-11i1t 1 ~1 IO 1 ~00 """t•·r 1 l ,lrn•u lull USA 4 10 .u ) l ot1w11 hl'wiH·., l Pol ~nd ' 14 U J W ''""tr f ,int.Ort ... I• '' Sports Clipped Slwrt Dodgers Host Astros LOS ANGELES -The Los Angeles Dodgers, coming off a \'ery good trip, hope their winning streak will continue at home tonight. Rick Rhoden. 10-4. will face Hous ton 's James Rodney Richard. 7·6. in lhe first game of a six·Jlame home stand. It's on radioKABC <790 > at 7:30 The Astros will pl:ty two games. and the San Diego Padres will play rour. i~cluding the season's first do.i.ableheader at Oo&ger Stadium Sunday. The Dodgers split four games with Cincinnati, then played the Braves and won thr~ or four. Cagers Arre•tftl RIVERSIDE -Two start.Ing basketball players for Caliromla Baptist College have been arrest- ed in connection with two burglarica at the campus, and lhe coach suys their possible Sbakiitg oJf the effects of a dismal road trip, the Orange County Stars dominated the Eastern 01Vbion·leadin11Denver Com eta thtee gamts to ol\e Tues· day nlcht ln an International Volleyball Association match before 1,232 at Unlveralty Hlih (Irvine>. Game ~es were 8·12, 12·8. 12-t, 12-f. The \llctory Improves tho ~· retord to 6-6. On th& l'Oad Orante C®nty 11 l•S. Newport Beath product Bob Stafford turned ln one or hi• tine1t pertormucoa of tho Ataaon, and be w., Joined in tho hltdn1 tait blOMtiDI t~Ol'fl b)' MUtsP8t19t. The ~velftow won two Of three ma&etih ttla Denver. w•tcb r•Jnti., ~t With lbebest,......e.UMIYA, 74. expulsion would seriously hurt the team. Basketball coach Floyd Evans. whose 1976 team was th e National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics District 3 champion. said he was "deeply hurt" by Tuesday's arrests of starling center David Clarence ·'Clay" Brown and starting guard Stanley Lee Oldham. Brown. 6·8. 230 pounds. was charged with two counts or burglary and possession or stolen property in thefts at the campus bookstoere and a college dormitory room. Oldham. 6·3. 175 pounds. was rharged with burglary In the June 20 theft at the bookstore. In which about $2.000 worth of goods was taken. McEnro~ Win• :t'JEWPORT, R.I.-Young John McEnroe and Manuel Santana. the 39-year-old Spanish star of years past. gave the Hall of Fame tennis championships an Interesting contrast Tuesday. LOS ANGELES <AP> -The upst\,ot or Denny Crum'a announcement that he won 'l take the UCLA basketball coachlng Job 11 that UCLA still bas no coach. But athletic director J t>. Morgan plans lo lake hl!I time about finding one. "He snld all alon1 there's no hurry,·• aeld o UCLA 4thlcUc do· partment 1r>0kesrnan. "There's no deadline.•' So. tn the w4ke of Crum't '"announcem~nt Tuesday in LOulsvUle, the aearch t'onUnue!t. Many eyet are CastenOd on Gary Cunntnatuun, ~f'eutlve director McEnroe. 18, and a Wimbledon semifinalist. polished off George Hardie. 6-3. 6-2. Santana. however. was a 7-6, 6-3 victim to top-seeded Dick Crealy. 7-6. 6-3. Other results found Tom G\lllikson ousted by John Feavcr, 7-6. 6-1; Brian Fairlie eliminated Bruce Manson. 6-3. 6-0. Andrew Pattison beat Jorge Andrew. ii·3. 4·6, 6-2; Ismael el Shafei dumped Paul Gerken, 6·3, 6-4: Butch Seewagen slipped past Bill Maze. 1·5, 7·6: and John James beat Doug Crawford, 6-3. 3·6, 6-3. Ya.lol'all OMAHA -Winning pitcher Suguro Egawa doubled hoJ1)e the. go-ahead run in the eighth inning Tuesday night as the Japanese collegiate stars edged their American counterparts, 4-3, in the slxlh annual college baseball champlonship series. The victory left the American team with a 2·1 edge In the seven- gamc series. - 6.87S·yard. par-7 0 layout overlooking the Irish Sea. At 71 were Ben Crenshaw of the United states. 19-year-old Nick Faldo or Great Britain and South African Gary Player. Nicklaus had his troubles on the front nlne. He bogeyed lhe second hole and didn't get even untll a birdie on the fourth. Then came the disastrous eighth hole. a 426-yard. par-four dog lei dominated by a single fairway bunker. He took three to get on and three putted for a six to go two over. Blue Isn't Invincible Mter All Even the Angels had begun to believe In Vida Blue 's invincibility at Anaheim Stadium. They hadn't beaten the Oakl- and lefthander on their home turf since man rirst walked on the moon nearly e ight years ago Since losing his maJor league debut against the Angels on .July 20. 1969. Blue had rung uµ 12 straight victories. "It's about time the law of averages caught up with us." AngebSlate All~me•Ofll<M,C ll~lo 17101 Julv 6(-'lltorttlddt Ml~'°'• ~ 1~0 m Juiv K aHttwn••bt M•~\old s nn m July &Ctthlorn1a .. 1 Ttcd\ S )Op m said Angels mannger Norm Sherry Tuesday night after his team had routed Blue with four runs m the second inmng en route lo a 6·0 \'ictory. Blue. now 6-10. had contmut•d his mastery O\'er the Angl'ls \\1th two earlier victories this season, including a 2-0 f1ve-h1ttcr Frtd••Y night in the first game of lhe fi ve game series. At lhe time. Blue s::11d. "I llkt· the mound here." but addc-cl ht• wasn't particularly excited aboul another turn al p1tch1ng in Anaheim. ·' l JUSt take my turn whcncvrr and wherever 1t comes up." he said. Instead, his number came up. California chased Blue with four runs in the second innin~. Consecutive s ingles by Don Baylor. Bobby Bonds. and Mario Guerrero produced one run. Blue then walked Ron Jackson before Rusty Torres' double. A passed ball by catcher Mt.tnny Sanguillen allowed the second run to score. Andy Elchebarren wrappc.>d up the scoring. and chased Blue with a triple wruch fell between outfielders Willie Crawford and Tony Armas. Wayne Simpson, now 4-5. and Dyar Miller combined for a three-hit shutout. the Angels' first shutout by anyone other than Frank Tanana and Nolan Ryan. "The difference is that we foll all along we could score runs early," said Simpson. "But now we're battling more later in the game. No matter what the score is. the guys keep on trying to score more runs.'' The Angels Inter added a run In the fifth inning off Joe Coleman and one in the eighth off Dave Giusti. The victory sent California on the road on a winning note with three straight victories over the A's, moving the Angels two games over .500. The Angels play in Minnesotn tonight. OAl<LANO nrhlH .... Al•a-ru I 0 0 0 P1Cclolo" l 0 0 0 P~PI II> $ 0 0 0 Jo<CM."t\Mnll> , 0 1 0 M<K1~"°"" ID 1 0 0 0 G'ronll> 4000 S411aulllffl c l 0 • 0 Wolll•no•dh l 0 I 0 Cr.t.,IOrdrf J 0 O 0 L.Murray If 1 0 0 0 , Am>~d 3 0 0 0 To .. IS 0 ... .1 ... d C•lhornle CALlfOltNIA .ii> r h &I f'""•<Oh )110 lltmv 1b l O 1 O ("•I• 31> ) 0 I 0 8•v•or II l I I I 80flc!UI 4 I I 0 Gu~rrffo n • ' ? t Ao J•O\on lb l I 0 0 II r0< ... H I • I I 1 £1(1\ttwrrtnc ' 0 I 1 JI 6 It S 000 000 000 0 °'° oio oi. ~ E · GrOIS. OP~oa-1a11d i. Celllo<nl• i, L08· 04-land '• (!ell10rnl11 ~. 28-R.Torfn. JO• Elc°ll•bertl'h.,SD flOl'V\. !.-Rt.,.v.SI' 86ylor. IP H II Ill II $0 8lU.ll,6•101 11• $ • 4 i I Coltmfl' •" 1 i t 1 2 T0<rultw 1 o 0 0 0 GIOU 1 I I 0 0 Stmp\on IW,4·SI 1 0 0 1 > 0 Mlll•r J l 0 0 0 • 1 S•n-OMillfr 111 Pll-S.119ulfttn !<BP Bv Simpton <JorOof\S<tfll r t· 1i A-11.07 Wednesday. July 8, 1971 DAILY Pll,OT 8 J D•llv PHol Pllolo b,.G.lry Am-.. JERRY SMARTT WANTS TO RUN ACROSS THE SAHARA. Smartt Goal? Wants to Rim Across Sahara By CRAJG SHEFF Ot 1ht-O.a1tv Pilot St•U Jerry Smartt\\ ants to be the llrl>t man Ill run across the Sahara Desei-t At first thought. that doesn't sound too l>mart of Smartt But the Westminster resident 1s no ordinary runner. An All-American 111 his collegiate day:o1 at thl! Un1ver-;ity of Houston. Smartt was an alternate on the 1956 US Olympic team in the 10.000 meters. and has been part of five international contingents. At 45 h~ is still m top-night shape 1tr1,d runs weekly m seniors meets throughout the Southland. But why does he want to run 2,000 miles across the Sahara Desert? "Tl's never been done before ... 1t·s a challenge and an ad\'enture." says Smartt, a Santa Ana High School teache r. Running across the Sahara is no pipe dream for Smartt. bul therl.' is one very big drawback -money. "l still net.'<l a sponsor. I ·m tryin~ to gel the 'Ford Co. to out uo the necessary $25.000. That would 011v for the two-month expedition. An English company will provide thl.' men and the land rovers that will carry supplies," says Smartt "We v.ould cross the desert m December and.Januarv. when 1t ·s not so hot." · The JOUrncy would be filmed. and because or that, Smartt says there are a lot of poss1b1lit1cs .. A film of this type could be used in schools s howing all the ancient areas of Africa and the interesting route we follow. It could be used on a TV adventure show There arc all sorts or possibilities." Smartt began running as a teenager In East Texas. lie worked at a small airfield and the only way the aircraft could be stopped after lanciing was lo run and catch up to them. lle'i; been running ever since "I was a s mall kid (118 pouncis> :,o I \\as determined to do something other guys couldn't do ... says Smartt. So he ran off to the University of Houston where he was an All - American for three seasons. · Besides being an altern;itc on the "56 Olympic team. Smartt also was part of the first American contmgent that was sent to Russia in 1958. And he was Iran's national team coach for the 1974 Asian Games. He runs nearly every day and just'rccenUy in the Senior Olympics set an American record <for his age group> of 16 :04 for 5.000 meters. And he plans to continµe running as long as he can. "Running has done so much for me. It's paid my '' ay around the world. Besides. I'd feel guilty 1f I let myself go physically," says Smartt. Surgery Changes Saban's Outlook discharge him from the hospital this weekend. Saban plans to spend three weeks r esting in Bur- falo. then return to coaching work at Miaml Aug. l , Green said. Saban says he a nd his team will be ready and that doctors don't believe bis llne of work will hinder his recovery. "All they've ever told me," he says, is "get ready to go back to work." Nasta&e Debate For LA Tonight II W~netday Juty II. li77 South Football Stars Newport Harbor lhgh's Jim Hanke (lefu and Mike Musso of Fountain Valley High a re two of tht! South's standouts in Thursday's 18th Orange County All-star rootbaJl gamt• Tht• game lS being held at Anaheim's La Palma Sta d ium this year due to re-lighting work at Orange Coast College Kincaid May Return As Cerritos ' Coach ByYouth,1 4 Sportsftshing along tht· Orangl· Coa st area scene remains stabl1· with bass, mackerel and oc cas1onal barracuda tht· major formal for anglers A 14-year-old, Billy Larwood of Dana Point, howl've r. logged a 33-pound haltbut Mond ay off the Sea Horse from Dana Wharr. using an anchov1e with 15·pound test line at the bottom The only other cal ch of note was out of Davey s Locker in Newport Beach Tuesday when Bob Crosa of Anaheim landed a 20-pound yellowta tl orr the Thunderbird on the Catahn;t run Crosa was us111A 15-pound lei.I li ne and also W<1s danglini:: 1w anchov1e for b1ul 0 t h C r l h a II I h ,1 l . I I . " the saml• story out of Oa.,,cy's Lol'ker. Newport Beach's Art's Landing and Dana Wharf tn Dana Point A lot of mackt-rl'I. bass in the Catalina and S an Clemente Islands and strikes on occasional barracuda, bonito and sculp1on. Area ope rators bl ame the cool er wa ler lt•m per a tu res <around 60-62 degrees 1 and are hopeful things will pi ck up with a warming trend LONG BEACtt CQplmOftl P11·rl u ""nol•t &I f I 11n ~\\ "#/ m ' ,.ffol li'ft 1(1> ( l1 4~1. Wft"ru 11 ,.not••f· } yt•llfl'N f.hl l r fW'n•I ," tlltOt'I-'~' 1"1 rOt ~ rod 14tHu+ "·"" \,ANTAMON•CA Q,,oQI r·. Jn41t0iJl A~n.t ru 1 rot\> rt)O n' 8.arqf' 1t ~,.,,,,.,\ ) ,.... •• fi I l\Jt"" ~ r ' If\ thb•JI MAAINAOE L.AEY ll.tnQlu· '""'ncf&M\'-.., ". hut"'"·"""~"'' I'''"'~ DA " 1'"'"" 11.rnd SAN OIEGOflr~WtltCtp.tl Pier) ~'11•nu1,.o 'A ,n n("ltP t V4 Howt,.•I I'!! bO"•'" •~ Ntt.•fl•"•' JO tlir ()b.A\,.10\ml't"'"'' t \,.uv •, lft MAl t8U PtE R .~ .1n~J1 1' '1' t t "'" n' 1 HW' \ tntj "4)tl\( • b-' SAN PE ORO • Por-•\ 0 (.lll 1 m "'' ,., , • ~..irr<l<Vdlll cu c .. lico o"'' tl1 roo ' o 1rMht>u• 1t "'•'' i1:1•t ·•I 1'11nd St LAndlf\ql J .. i"nQlfl't" 'fl IU'ltitt.-11 1\10 (;lllfO htli\• '~ff'! .. ( .... , I )(J bh.t• t<" ~E Al BE ACt-4 H ,,nu11·t "'"rot• , urt 8~1'C~_. ~' ,,,,oh.•r , 11 lli1nll\l ·• ,,u'l/1 n,,,, rt nAht,ut \U ,.., .... ~ .. , ..... ~EWP011t1 t O•we~'' l o<k"d l\)b ;tnQIN' h rttr.lcud.1 /JI bo'11tn 7•W f•tl1tO I'),,,.., I Y••llowt.111 uo rock ((Mj I ht'lltt)UI .. ~h·t• .. r-,. h1• I I\ ,,,t'IC'k"'"' OAHA WHAAF '"'° ,1nQ1t•r liMi tt.h' I l nt0rf1rud1t ,,,,.1,nul 1\1.rl"J(,-.,b"~~ ilm.1' i.Pt1 I R E OONOO 00 ,.nnlrr' IA b•rr1'tu<f,, J wh1t•1 '''•I b~,, If')\ r.\lt(O IM " l h0n1h1 /1#11 ,,...,,( .. •'f"' JJ"ir'n<lr cod 8.uqe llJ1ttlOlttr J75"1'M "•·r·1 Jf •nir,CO<J Wally Kincaid may be back as Cerritos College's baseball coa<'h yt•t but probably not nt•\t season. Kincaid, one of the morl' sul· c e s sful bas eball c o ath l·:. anywhere. resigned two we1..•k:. ago, but the Cerritos College board of trustees refused to t ake any action-until meeting with Kine aid ( toru ghll .. We want to do everything w(' can to keep him as our baseball coach.·· says Cerritos board president Lou Banas "I It: may '<I .CR AIG SH EF}' have to sit out a year. but \\ l•d hke to retain him." Kincaid has been bothered by a back problem which l1m1ts his walking to less than a block. If Kincaid, 51, docs lake a year 's leave of absence. one of tus assistants 1s expected to take his place. If he does hang it up for i::o o d one of the l e ading contenders for the Cerritos JOb figures to be Merced coach Butch Hughes, a former s tandout pitcher at Cerritos . Gary Valbuena will depart Thursday for Miami where he once again hopes to land a job as a backup quarterback for the Dolphins. Valbuena, who prepped al Fountain Valley High, then played at Orange Coast and the University of Tennessee, looked good d urin g the exhibition season for Miami a year ago, but was traded to Tampa Bay where he fi gured to play more. But Valbuena dJdn't see any action at all and was cut by the Buccaneers the last week of the exhibition season. He dJdn't land a job the rest of lhe season, but he's optimistic he can with the Dolphins this time around. "I was in Miami almost the i:ntire month or June working out. I think I'm iq better physical shape this year than I was last season. I'm optimistic I can stay with them,i• i.ays Valbuena. The Dolphins probably will have five or six quarterbacks in camp. Three will be kept . lo the off-season Valbuena bas been working for a Fountain Valley real e~tate firm-and doing quilt•" ell. T he rt•cenl nalsonal outdoor t h r l ' t• w ii I I r a c q u l' t b a 11 ch<.1mµ1onsh1µ~ at Orange Coa:.t C o I I l· ~ t· \\ .1 ... t h l' I a r g est tournamt•nt e \'cr m the U.S., says tournl.'y urig1nator and director Ra rrv Wa llat't' A total of 415 matches and 1,200 gamt'S were played in the three days with over :rno people competing. ·'The bleachers \\'ere full. l'Verylhing was on time and it w a s a bsg s uccess," s a ys Wall an• Golden West College athletic director Fred Owens 1s s pending most of the :.ummer <1t Brigham Young Unt \•ers1ty, v.o rking onhis doctorate degree Su mmer Sp o rts \ummflr' lP.-.uf> Seo,,., RO\-olb.111 l ONI 8,.~,Cft C •lY (;o11f'qf' L~ .. Q"'~ nr,11·tt r 't<n11,.. .. °"' t o••of"fl'A'"' Hunt1rK1ton 8•.u" L••qu.- AI ttunhnQtG" 8,.dC" titQI'\ "''" 1'• "t•• _., n \1•11 • ~··"" J, ,., ., .. y,,11,'f "Wt 1m1n._,,,., Huntu10ton 8•~< n l-t11c:av..- t 1 '"'I f 111(1 ''' .J (O\t+l M•\•1 CdM l~ilGV"' Al (O\l.ol MH• H1Q,, , '""•1\Jt '""''''"' roo11•1iltll11 ~ If,..., II flt•"""''" l'4!irt1ur '' I/ 11 fUt,1 11 1/111!1 ''r,J r "''''·•fl \ ~ "''"""'"""" \' (CKI~ Me,. 0 Pf" \.f~Q~r At £\t.1n<1• H1on ( I \/ 11"W1u.o C'J' IM (,p~f\O'\ Orr.,. ... "• , 1,, r mli H (M C"l1r>Df''" In Mt"lro 8.aubftU r r v l~au.1rn .. .a r.wc Ru\tlr r' 1 COSTA MESA AMt & JEEP Major League Standings 1977 MATADOR WAGON ................. ,._,~,-­ A7A887H192278 1977 JEEP J-10 PICKUP 4+4¥.a,-... , ........... J7M2SMP075789 A1'1ERICAN LEAGUF. East Division :"<e\' Yori.. Balt1mon• Boston Cleveland Milwaukel' Detroit Toronto W L 46 35 -l5 36 42 34 37 39 38 41 36 43 30 48 West Division 46 32 44 36 42 36 39 37 Chicago Minnesota Kans as City Angels Texas Oakland Seattle 37 41 34 44 35 49 TVMcta,•t Gem•• Pct. G8 .568 .556 .553 112 .487 612 .481 7 . 456 9 .385 14\1.a .500 .sso 3 .538 4 .513 G .474 9 .436 12 .422 14 Ai'ltlm~"'' O.trolt 1·~. ?ncto"rn• '' •l"M'l/f"ft• N~w YO'• S Clf>wl•"d • (hlclOOO•, S.;olll~ 1 M1,,~0fi") AA1lwoukr -1 (~lllornt"'-~•lf'l"C11'1 tif.,n-..~CO•• Tit,~'-• Onlva~kMftotl'd ,.,.., .• a. ..... n"''°'' •Pt'lbr't'h 4 11 .-t t\ftll•mor,. 'f1.n;.tw11" • ~o;onio •ll••d0.1l a1 eosr<111 •T1 ... 15" " (ltwl-IWMIS S.11 •I NH• Yor-, .. _ .. • 11, " (-llf(>mo;o lllt<"t ••1 al NII-WU '&ollltf 0·11, " . MllWM••ff' ftf..),es S SI •t IC&rt\~ C1tv ,.,..,,t•f' s fl.ft ()Ml-nd I~" J-41 a\ l•••• •Ai<o-t7 JI, n (ft4(-rw.of17' .. ~41tf'-IW .... i.<ll•jt " NATIONAL LEAGl'E F.a-.t Di\•lsion w I, Chica go IR 29 Philadt'lph1.1 15 :l2 St. L OUIS It 36 Pittsbur~h 11 :IB Montreal :n 12 New York 31 48 Dodgers Cincinnati Wt-st Dlvl~lon 54 26 43 35 3!i 45 :w 47 34 49 JO fl() • Houston San Francisco San Dic!(o Atlanta l uMdllV'\ Giimr\ Mn,tl,.•·f\I ~ (htCl\ontl l'i"lif,utf'lr;nut 0 Nr~ 'f11t~ I '' t 1u11\ 1 Pttl'-ll\lrt>h \ f 11'\ClnnAh ~ .Att""'" l '-·'" l"u·anA ~OV~lrw" I 1Jin1111"10~ ''"i 'f/ nMn4\ U hltdufffl Toda,·1G1m .. Pct. ('8 .62.1 584 3 .550 512 .519 8 .468 121 :i .392 lll .675 .551 10 .444 18"2 .420 201'2 .410 211., .375 24 ~n,,,, .. ,., ·A°"""""~ 71 ,., ('n1c•oo '~lttn"t"U.,. 5 I th·• Y~• M,...11.-k .).l ~l Pn1INitiJ""'• w_..-t 3 1 1,n C.t \ OUI\ I t"'t•r lrflf' 1 ii 11'1 P1tttibUfClh -4 P~f111\o l '1' • ,, ('ll'tinrw•U •Not~Af\ •JI a\ All•nt• ..... 'JrOfllf' 0 p " H;..,,..,,. IAW ... •d f ••al l O\ A,.,,.I* llf._, 1n •• n ,.." "••OO ''f'Hrl•v • ,, •• ~·" ,fA"<:Ht'O IWtUl,,\m\ 1 )•,ft -... ,.. Trap, Skeet Shooting: Growing Sport in Area By &OGElt CARLSON lim1l), Hardesty is no slouch. Twice she's hit 98 of a possible 100 doubles in trap shooting and won the 1976 state singles crown with a 198 score out of a possible 200-which would have been good enough to win the men's crown, too. e vents the 16-yard trap (singles), handicap (varymg distance> and doubles <from 16 yards>. The scene lnclud~ seven trap fields. Of 1 ... Dally "l .. tStall For people wbo make a lot of noise, you don't hear much out of them. They are trap and skeet shooters and although buainess has been brisk the past 10 years at Laguna HJlls Gun Club near Lion Country Safari, the only damage from the buckshot being scattered Iles in the battered clay targets strewn about. The Salt Lake City native is a Leisure World resident and uses a BT-99 Browning. A person with outdoor tendencies she was once a Piper Cub pilot. Trap or skeet shootang costs include $2.45 a round (25 targets). shells usually tun about $3.~ (25 shells> and a day's gun rental is $1 (usually a Winchester Super X Model 1). Trap and s keet s hooting interest is gaining, as the lack of live targets continue to diminish and the crie s or cons ervationalists gain deeper and more lasting footholds And for the participants in the Laguna Hills area , it's a satisfying situation. Wilbur Waddell, a Yorba Linda resident originally from Upland. is typical of many or the sportsmen at Laguna Hills. Re-loading your own shells can knock down the price a couple of dollars per25. It's strictly a competitive sport with the killing aspel'l of hunting not a Cuctor And, men and women of all ages l.'OJOY the sport In 1976 an ave rugt! of 200 shooters per week mutiliated 2,038,925 targets and it's expected the figure will reach 2\.-J mi Ilion this Y.ear. Although he no longe r considers himself a competitive shooter, he keeps in shape wath about nine traps t 25 targe ts eaeh) a week. ·'I was primarily a hunter as a kid," says Waddell. "I used to run around in the sage brwih in my bare feel. But game has become scarce and if you Uke to shoot, this is a good alternate. On the single load level Waddell uses a Perani Competition I_gun. "We have a gr o up o r parupleg1cs involved." s ays club owner Lurry CofCing. "And about 10 of those are as good as any shooters we have." Of th e two t y pe s of competition, trap seems the more popular because of the gre ater challenge. You're· not sure which direction the disc is headed and there is a handicap factor depending on how well you've done before Jn registered events. In July, for Instance, the agenda already ls virtually full at the club with 10 clubs, a Police Olympics and ATA (Amateur Trapshooting Association> action slated "I've tapered oil competitively, but you should stay active, "'says Waddell. One enthusiast is Hortense "Woody" Hardesty, who bas been firing her shot gun for 27 years and, among her conquests 1s the 1976 California singles championship. The next major attraction al Laguna Hills Oun Club is Satur- day and Sunday (9 a.m . starts> with the ATA and among the competltiton are thret> basic Also available. however. are t h r e e s k e ct He I d s on th t• premises, nnd it's a cinch. 1f you're a shot gun bug. you're bound tofind your nil'he here. With a 27-yard handicap <the WILBUR WADDELL (LEFT). HORTENSE HARDESTY TAKE AIM. Alamitos Race Results fltor TU•tOlt ~,RST •Ac& no vt1n1\ 'yr/\,. n tdt. (l;.1m1no r or f'l"litlcten, Pu' .. ,. \1000 Ou" Su"t t~ I OflO#'T\b-' l "10 ~"" l OO J ~·· 1 80 ) 11(1 Fl•llY EllA •HMll R utlf'rt d TOl)\t t( Ar-f'JOt.t T•r'f'P IP •~ Ah o A•n F•H Jpf\ Ao< IUt Ooubtt"s Htir•"~ Stf'p l 1ont1w R"bt P•Ol'\f'otr J.Kk. S•11t al"d \<'9n<• VArn r,,,."'b'~ Gol(1ttvCt1l Go ~crat<P'Wl'd ""'"._. °" th• M.-.,,,,. 01AOh111nnut M1\\ 1Cf9ft• M on .. • r Nrotr.•-.(O\H14't U Euct• ._Oue S.,.•lt a ta'"" £111 ..... '4. ~E COJIO Ill ACI JWI ¥'• O• h••r otd' .AllOWAn<t ,,,, fltlu P11n-• 'lto0 • Of\W~at Pt\v1rwT1 •ArM1r1 1 IO • lln J ~, ~ '"" Rp~l •Wardl • llO S 10 MtS\ 8• A~\Uff'd tM1tcn-t1• '•""II!' 11" J\ It.a Ritn Thtnti ••••Wo"f't ~OVt111I ,..,"'°"· Gvpc.v fay,. K•tt~ \uf'l\rhn .. NO'\Cl'f1fChfo\ THIRO R&CE AOO y•r<h 7 v~r o•d• Cl••"'•OCI. Purs. S1JOO (all~t NICll •Otll>mtwol 11 . ..q l Ml J 10 Torna<!O l •mjt IHMll 1 ~O 1.llQ Alt•"ll.,. l(MdOMI l 00 ""'• 10 SQ. Al>o """ E'l,.,,.r r,o, Sporllna P•I, ••• , ""· LOll't IO Go. ZOOOl•tor No\Cr .. cnta U lucl1 J.Call Mt Noctr ' J· Ter,..tde LIO!'ll. Mid, .... l'OV1n14t•Atl 35h erd• l v••r <>IO~ a uo Cllolmlnci "u~• \7~ Too Too IAO.lrl JOll 780 '~ (&rrler Ca\I• "'""'"" 110 I t11 Pronl M• Roy&l •Coero\...,, J 00 Tt,.,.. 18 I) AllO Ran -Go C•lul'I F.,l Raln.~llllOyAI NOKtet(- U.00 ... ,. t111vc•11.iott •Mt1c11e1n ~ 10 • oo 80Vlllt ,.,,.. rCrtrlfot91 4 <IO Tift'\• 11.:IO Alto '-art l'rei1'I• T~ llw w 1,.• Wi1vt11 Al Bof. $tr•uklnO ~. JO>lllll Jlo. I m I kllll $.<r•l<N<I M $pol OOll tJ 1111<111 t•l'MH , .. jl 4·Th•f ( ... ,,..,,.,,om.• ' Alt.O A,\n Ooc:"• F~or•""· 61An " .,., ~, At~rnlto NO\C,MCl'ft\ EIGHTH RAC£ 810y~<th h•M Old\ I. VO (l.ltn"tNJ Put\f S1 lM M o JOf' 'f1Cn1of\1 ~ ;1 10 •1 tO I 60 P,iiooA .. 9,,u tW1tr<t' l .o '1 M» C"t .. ~c• Str•r" • [)lll('ltn~' J 10 ,.,., -ti,,. /if\(I P.tn £10,,tn Wn"df'" ""' Arro w "'y l it f)1n..-tu f 1f"''' "-on K .no' no,.1 No .. ,.r.111,-nP, u f•HI• 1·Mo Jot, ,. • P•ol>~·· lrAt. f)••d Jt.tJ t0 H•HTH RACE no V•ff'th " ·~·'' Old4 AllO*dnf• Fo,. .,_,, •" Pur • ~/8()(1 I .111-M~ fno Jfr"O"t f ll 00 ) b•'l \, M ( "'•''0""' ' ,ftv IN,.,tt' 1 ti.0 / /1 ""··· r •• ,. fr l\or .. , '1)11 ''""" ,,,."' A1,o P t'n f.'1\S C•nthr 4)",.-, l f"t•lbrtm-. Lnh T Ou Mid Pnc11pt1t , n•v e,,, "10\Cr 'lfN \ U F•H I• ) Lt-• M• Too & • (ft••••r1 l~dv, ~ldUO Ot /itlfOM,tt'l•f , 11? Alamitos Race Entries FCH" ,..,..,.. 0 -0U" Ch,-rQIO't (. ~t,,f)l4' Nl'vl't "''*r'l'•rw:t 1(1111ri\'ft t' Y o.• 1'011.H ~ ' ... fll'I 'I , .. Flnl'°'KI /•O ""'""""""Go Po<JC•~ l'tRt1 tltAC• ~ JSO y~ra\ Moon 'IC1nc:fAMAn1\1ph.m ,..,,,y,u,-Myl~ ... 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MOOtt T roullle\ lttfll<!m I .... , ... _.. , ... ,,, TltMtDllolltOld l~I l'llitVla IOtiH,.l re0tl!MttflnylW"f'9t 11r MuC'll"I....,... l.t.cs.lfl 111 Mau lk• ,...,,..,., ' 11• 'tll.ll't$1\11dYCl\al'llo •Ct~M#AI 111 fllllTM "•c;t -•IO ytMh. l .,.., Old• l 1111. Cltlftllno, ""rw ~'lllO C11tl"l""~keUOOO ltilllLandlnQICell! Ht Sj)41rto1Wle~ .. 10. ..... 1 tll Jo!Wl't ftoc-•t •Htrll tn lll\ $1rwt .. ,.. ITrM~Ol'lll In Jli'1'• MM\''""'-"' .,, tlP't!O. llkoqli•I m ..... ~r IO!rllolll 11• llf9'wrll.4'la'f\I lit '"''" ...cir -·~ l "" llft. c1111,...._ !"\'t'" •• Cl~ .... flnaP!laO ~ NIMnl'll Clwftl l .. lf'll Ht l'tlllMil( "IQM IW«dl lit Diving Results CaLIFOllNIA STAT( ANDOl'IN DIYll'GCHAMl'IONSHt l'1 '•I Ed"Oft "''"' .... ()M.- 80Y\ 3·<'fl0 1JnOtr I JU\t•" Mflrf•tl '8&l~f\llofdl 111 60 ,,,_, •f'<O<d 01,,.,. S frl( ,,.,,_ •l'unhl'Qlon 8tH"I • •·10 I T•Od W AOlto• INO<tllf••I .. 110 '"'~I -ordt, 11 If I. M•I~ Drt-•I~ •NO<llWl-1 7l l 1Q fl U I ftu,ly M•t-tlN'#IV •Norl"'•dO• >I• I, 011•••• J Wey,,. ..... •l'\1111n•o•on &H<"I IS.16 I "°"" 0-Jr •lO< A119fl•'' ~ot. tJ Ol~f" • l(evon llAec• •Hunllnolo11 l••<l\I 11. Gar, MOrll•I' '"""llnqlon ... ,... I) °"'' Pl .. n •l<ul'Ul't lOft .. ""I 11•11 I (IHI Tl btHll ·~· .. Fr1Ml\tOI Jll 60 Oll>t" ) Jom SI~' ·~•notonlHcftl Seftltf Milw'tO... MMtf I D.tvlcl Or11t ' INorlllrlOHI 01.'1. Otftfr\•, IC IV• .. M t .. IH""Uf1910fl .. llC .. I. I. Jim S•mom. IM\1111"'9111!' IH{hl a.y1''nlf .. Meter •·It 1 Oouq I t•\•11 """ rr-"Clt<t l , .. OS 11 11 1, Mika Orevlw• INorlllrtdool 1tt 60 I) U I, '-11JIV MM'llflo!MI l!+orlhfldl)ll 1 n 0 • lf·tt I, k'tv•" MK~ , .. ""11"91on Qut lll H,.10: 01~•,. • Ch ry 111or*•" IN.,..tl~"" flufltl. It (llrlt ''-1• IHullllftflOll l .. tfll. 0 -1· I, Jjl'I\ SI~' 1t<11ntlnoten 9PM11ll1Ul IHl .. 11118'•"""~"' t Ooll Orh•• •florlll•l,..I '''· 0 Olte" e IC•••" M•<• ,...,..,.8" ... hl. 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H•no ''""'' IHO•lftftdt•I •U ~ ,_. ttt .. tt .."'"""--• 10 I fl,tdoell KOl'ltllAft •NllllflhOIOt> 8f•~lrl 1'6,~$ ffllt I •tctrl11 ll•U I OllVI• Jo11•' •Mt'd•t•I J)ol.•$· 11'14 I. ,,,.,~I Jttnt • 1Me4ff411 JU . .O: Uol• 1 Sft•tl Ol'f' IMtllt~UOlll J•) I!~ •Mn l TtelH'dlt OttNtl • •· Jv"" (lllbttl ......... ~ ... "-"t'! 17 ,. ' ll"' .. ...._. '\411'10itt0141400""'' retorllJ 01"''' .... '· ••" ti~~,..,,... ........... "'· ,.... ............. . I ~IVil,__!lil!'IOOitet.iot I' Olh•H ,, ~1h 'U1flt•Wttd IMv..il"'"" 9"Clll: f -041\1911 IHll'lltl'll ... IHtl\I Wednesct1ty. July 6. 1en DAILY PILOT 113 ·Mollica: Versatile Is His Middle Name Calendar -.-.uyu"'•" ~OUINll L~ .. &.«" Htu" I• .-que f(Apt\lrMM>V•ll•YV\. Foouu11 tl \ J/O. ~ ...... ,Wt Ml"'°" Vlftt@ •t • •'· F1C.,...non~ci. ....... 1r•11 f>l•ll• •• vf L..,_ tiff<!\ •1 • 1~1. P'ullerlon Coll-Luqur •':>•d dl•O•<lrt (Oii~ ,,, E• C•m1no .,, DAVE MOLLICA ~ St•ndout • Dy ROCF.R CARI.SON °' ... o .... , ...... ,.~ .. Vl•rtutllaty ••a <'llltt rnodlty everyone alrlVC!I for IUld ror former Cotih• Mciu Hlah rootball and b!AMbllll istu 01&ve r.tolhcu, he'1 a fellow who Hema Lo hold the rhiht carda reaardJeaa of the aam~hc'Kplltyinlf, r.roved has value u a anebacker as a Juni11r And in Thu~day'a 18lh Ornnge County All·alar football game, he'il bl' atartm.: at strong surety 1n the i.econdury with t>ye un receiver J im Teah»n or E~peranza 1Anahc1m) lhgh. The game as billed for an Ii o'clock s tart al Anaheim's La Palma Park and the South 1s favored by two points lo make it two wins in a row, although the North holds a commanding 13·4 edee. Mollica could easily have made the South All-star bast>ball team. too, after dommating selections al tttird base 1 n the South Coast League. "For an All ·ClF quarterback," says Sou th coach lltll Workman or Edison (Huntington Beach) High, ··1 didn't expect to see the type or hitter he is. But. you tend to forget he was an all-league Unebacker as a junior.'' Costa Mesa High coach Tom fo'rench converted Mollica to quarterback and Mollica recalls the situation. "It was after lhe 1975 season and we had no quarterback," says Mollica. "I mentioned I'd play it. but J was really just kidding around. But coach French sent me to quarterback .camp in Santa Barbara and that's bow it started. "Coach French was a confidence builder and he was always un me Really. he had eyes in the back of has head Every UUle thing I did wrong he seemed to see and was on me for it." Mollica Is headed ror Orange Coast College in the fall and OCC head football coach Dack Tucker says: ''We 've been watchin' Mollica since he was a Junior and his abilities flt in with our system." Says OCC assistant Jack Fair : ''H e's got miles or potential.'' Mollica. 6-l'h, 17S pounds, says containing Teahan ts his primary ob1ective an Thursday"s tiff. "l wouldn't mind picking off a pass or two, either." says Mollica, Costa Mesa H1gb's athlete ol the year. Workman pays some supreme compliments to Mollica : "He's everything we expected, plus." says Workman. ''Mollica does everything we tell tum and we only have to tell him once and he's got it. 1 HI s ..... A"• l<llJh l••QUP IUn•v•r!lllY ... S-1..,.U •I S. I .. OU.nt. n -H-•I•. ~n l W-at I!•-'-HIQll ISoul"'rn CalllOtM -0 n W..blOI .... 11e ... all l'CA.,,.8uild-Growall ltl. 8au111a11-•'"•rtcan LtQIO" IPl•ctntMI vs eo.i. Me~ •I 0.•ftQf' C0<11\I (011"9P I\ 1$). Hor-'"'°"' L4'._ 18olW 0<.-Yi Ecltson o>t Fou"l•ln V•ll•V Rt<r••lton P•r• ~ Jo, W•1trn1nitfr Yi .-.unllru~fo" 8H<h ~I T•WIMI• P•r>., 1 JO, CO.I• M<tWI •• E•I-•• 01 TtW•n"e P•r>.. •• N1wpol'I H•rbor YO L• Oulnl• ... O••I\ Fl.icJ,' JO: F-1•1" V•lley ._ Coronn '"' ~r •I 0 .. 15 Fltld, 11 . Tnoro~onored l••ou1 tOr•no~· C•nyon · ~ Ote.n View •• M•r1n• \o'llQll, ':JO: u Mlr..i,, RedS ¥1 "°""· teln Valley OodQf,. et Fount•1n Volll~ Recr#llon Potrll .... Hack or the year In the South Cou.t Leaeue arter leadin& bla Cotta Mesa lh1b t.tammat.ea to their f •rat ·ever winn Ing seaaoo and a share of the leaeue championship as a quarterback, Mollica~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ El Paso Coach Read Facing Big Challenge ByDAVECUNNINGHAM 011,,_ O•llf l'IHM $tofl Things could be better for El Toro resident Tom Read. His pro vollt•yball fr anC'h1sc, the El Paso-Juarez Sol, is struggling with a 3.5 record. His job situation for next year is cloudy. The volleyball program he established at El Toro High is in limbo. And Thursday he takes the Sol against one orthe top learns in the lnternutionul Volleyball Association, the Orange County Stars. al Anaheim"s Convention Center. But you won't hear Read complain. lie :>tmply st ts bark and culls it "an inter- esting challenge.'· Read's goals arc to turn the El Paso team mto a winner, to I and a Cull-Lt me teaching Job at El Toro lugh so he can continue to coach the volleyball team there ... and to beat the Stars Thursday. · All are di stinct possibilities. although the Stars would TOM 1100 disagree with that last one. El Paso h.as added a new player who could turn the team's fortunes :iround He's Ed Skorck, a 6·5 hitter from Poland who is a veteran of four Olympic Games. And al El Toro Hi~h. Rc•art as being considered for a social science te .. 1ching Jnb that could become a reality by Monday. As for beating tht• Stars .. well. that would have to be an upset. Will Chamberlain will be in the lineup, helping offset theSol "s added strength with Skorek. Longtime Oran~e Coast area fans may r emember Read as n basketball standout for Costa Mesa High, Orange Coast College and Whittier College. A 6-6. 205·poundt'r. Head was 1\11·1\merican at Whittier and only got interested in volleyball as a sideline. By 1973 he had bccom<' proficient E"nough to make the·l2-man U S national team which carried this country's Olymp1C' hope~ When tht• l' S L.111l'd to qualify for the 1976 Qlympacs Ht>ad dt•1·1ckcl lw h.1d h:.id 1·nough of amateur c-ompt•t11111n anc1 :.iC'c1•pted an offer to play pro volleyball "I couJdn t cnntinut· tu play and trarn as an amateur and kl•c•p pay1n,:( mv bills ... Read says. ··J was missm~ scho11I and losing ~><•Y. and I JUSt couldn"t afford lo kl•f'p lr:11ning ·· Last season. hi:. first o.1s a pro, Head led the lVA ' tn attacking dfic1L•ney, a perc-entage figured on hitting attempts.kills and l'rrors Near th.-.-nd of the s<·ao;on El Pa:-.o coach Al Skates resigned and Read was appointed hts suc- cessor. Read says llw 1ob mt•ans hL• must be coach, travel agent. mother hc•n and psychologist. ··And ull that whilestlll lryins:? togcl my own game in line:· he says. Read is ramili;1r w1lh coac-h1ng from his experience al El Toro I l1~h . hut thOM.' tluys may be at an end. Previou!lly Read was a walk·on coach. handling the duties :irtt•r has houri. as ;i physical education teacher for Los l\lisos lnlcrme<liateSchool. Now Read has proclaimed he won "t coach another season for El Toro unless he 1s hired full· time atthehagh school Kossler, Captures Racquetball Title Rick Kossler c:iptured the men's open singles crown and Orange Coast College instructors Barry Wallace and Bob Wetzel nab~d the open doubles title in last week· end's national outdoor racquetball tournament at Orange Coast College. Kossler defeated Dave Trettin for the open Net Tourney Entries Set ·Entries arc now being accepted for a men·s and women·s C·D tennli; tournament at El Tori) Hlch School on the week· ds of July 23-24 and 30·31. Competition will be in al.hit~ and doubles. but not miititd doublet Ebtry feta arf' $5 for 1ln1tea and $10 for doubles. wllh proceeds lo bencrlt the El Toro Hlah tennis team. Enlry de· adUno It J~lY UI. Enlri• abouJd bo aent to EJ foro Teanlt Tournq, ~ Aucenn, Mlsslon VI~. with U:i~ check p.,..._.e to El fol'O t nnl• tHiD. r"rtt\er tnr..,~ II avallabl• from Bob 'lohnaon at $8$-llJS fd11•• or 117·'12" (ev lnts). singles title, 21-16, 21-19 while Wa llace a nd Wetzel knocked off Bill Chadwick and Rick Bowen, 21·19, 21·14. In the seniors singles title match. Or. Bud M uehliesen of San Diego knocked oH Wetzel,, 21-17,21·13. N•lltflal Owtdoor Aocqutball TO\ff'Ntfttnt t•l~-C...ICell-1 OP"n Slnqt .. 1 Al(k ICOUI., d<tl o ... Tr•llln21-1b. 71·1• 8 Sll'OQIH -Tlm Ad•""' d•I Jol\n Zani"\ 11 '' 111. 11 • Yruor S•nalf'\ Bud Mu· .., ........ " O•·• 800Wtlll'i 11 1' )I 1l c Sll\Qt,_, KPl'I ....... "." Of"f o ...... Oomtt 10-11 71 • 11 6 If) .,-.o unc>·t Jonnnt S<h.,nt1 di"• St .. w Vrf"betov1rr.11 ,, • 11 t I I Womfl'f'I\ A S.f"QIP'lll O•fllf"A H•1"\' .. , Mal"1"4 EyrcOI 11 11 u Wompf"~ 8 Sif'tl•-. C•noy M•'""' itolO•••l .. •1\11 u 11o1~ 00.n ~-·Mry W•ll«• llol> W•llll O.f ~It C,,_tO Ao(k tlow•n )1 .. 11-1• wo"''"' CMvtlM "atny OA••fl ...... 11, Gt1-""'Joy IC-1 Kttlly ll~CMO• 11 t 11 I ft OOMbl.,.. Jim H•-:Jt\ G4'V Ot'01ll Cit! Oa!'ll•f Acc<>m•ndo Clluc;~ Crt,,l<lV21 ... 11 f , SPECIAL VALUES FOR TODAY THRU SUNDAY COSTA MESA 2946 BRISTOL ST. SO. OF SAN DIEGO FWY. PHONE: 549·1533 FULLERTON 1530 S. HARBOR BLVD. PHONE: 870·0700 SANTAANA 120 E. FIRST ST. AT CYPRESS PHONE: 547·7477 WESTMINSTER 15221 BEACH BLVD. PHONE: 893·8544 Se hob/a Espanol OPEN MON. THRU FRI. 8 A.M.·9 P.M./SAT. 8 A.M.·6 P.M./SUN. 9 A.M.·5 P.M. All·ll 'lU~ $172FET. 4-PLY POLY G78·1~ G78·15 H78-14 IUCKWAll lWMllflUtl 1umm rumm $18.99 $19.99 $ 19 99 " _. S I 97 $10 99 $11 99 -S2 23 $11 99 $22.99 S2'j7 $2199 ° ~ S22 99 • $23.99-. $22.99 I $24.99 $25.99 H78-15 27 MONTH l7e.1s .... ---""'---' LIMITED WARRANTYl_\:f' ~ FIBERGLASS POL VESTER WHITEWALL TIRES $ ...,, n nus tt.n r • r E78·H F78·1 ~ G78·l~ G7815 $24.99 $25.99 $26.99 $27.99 1178 15 $30.99 30 MONTH • ~~~~1----:-&11 LIMITED WARRANTY $ LlMITllD ftOAD HAZAftD WARRANTY• 1Mf ,.., to•• •tVU 4 ••-lflO w-.H•Mh OH (Of...,u hfl\ fl04 A ,,tCt•lfD Ht..•tt I (If f •O•••i. •0•1"" •U IO•• 111,UA.... _... HO••&I hUttoJ 0..f h i lifU • ._IM•t• t 0 WH\ " ... ,,.UO •'1• "• IAtll •OilllUMi1 All\t,t•ffllf (••l«;t tUfG 0.,. lt<iY-•f UUllMIG ••<f •' illW# 0• ,. t <••M flHS VW' TOYOTAS, MGS, Ol'ElS, PO• $ OATSUNS ANO MANY ~ OTHClt IOIWGN CARS 600." 12•n ".,$1469 TUllU$S ILACKWALLS 560xl5 600x 15 $1581 $1611 rlf lt)O I f T ll.77 WD·40 l~RICANT All> RUST PREVENTIVE . \ / 16 FOOT BATIERY BOOSTER CABLE SET ,.,tBJCJ BUTANE LIGHTER lONG lASTWG IUTAll sum Y fOlt THOUSA~ OF UGHTS : ~~:gh~:n~• -o·pr,ool ( e Adiln•CJbjc F'°"" OIL FILTER r leet•il MUete•i1 I•••"' with Now Acid J9 flthtl•t Mlet• ~.,,, . ._ .. TERRY CLOTH AUTO THROW COVERS Sia-Lube MULTI-PURPOSE GEAR OIL 5.AL MAOIS t0w140W"9hf Gt•• Oil ;, • '''"""'"•• ''·""--'"'•~. 4ltf•'•""''•' & t•Ot '1"'•"" [ir··· 69c . ... .. . . .. . ....... " . . -- I OAIL y PILOT Wed11Hda Jul 8 1977 '77 Jazz Festival Ends Successful Since Moving From Newport 8) Jt:n·a•:v 0 ALD•:RMAN ~•:\\ \'OHi\ 11\1' 1 Anti 110~ 1111111 thl• h .. o411t1ful Hm ... l.cnd o .1llroom Ill \he• ht•i,irl of what u,1•d lo tx• °'•'~ 't' 111 '-~ ':!ml St1 l•t•I J .tu tlll1trict, \\ l' pn· .. 1•nt for \ n11r Jr,t•·nmi.: and 1h11w111.: 11l1·u:oo111 l', tl\t' ball11i. of l 01111111 ti.I'll' i.11111 S~ 011 V~I l':nim t h1·"· 1·\t 11 an~ nrl'l1l''tr11• ;1i. \u· 1 c·ni m 1'1 l' .1hout th1' \ t'"' 'Nt•\\ l>41rl .Jua ,..1•st1vul 1u1d 11' h1 410'>\\c'r th1· m1,..1111l ljlll'"lllln Wh y as <:t>or~·· Y. t11n d1un1o:111i.: llw 11•,l I\ ul 1> narnu mixt yt-ar" Tiit; UA."it •; i\NO OLIVER band:s entertained ;in ov.:rflowmg f ruwd Monday night at Roseland for tht' fto~h\al :. fJrcwl'l l danre, something of a tr.uhhor\ dunn.: Nl•""porl ~ ~ll( Yt'illl"S in New York C11y Count Bu' it· h.111 I" 11 'loll I'' i-.e vuutors on lhl' ll..a11clstanc1 hlut'' '"•J!t•r .lot-Will11tm' 11nd 1lrummt·r Jo Joni·' \\ho c·losc'<i oul tht' final :.t'l for Ilic t·ro\\tl And l11r tht• hr-.t t1ml• at thl· flf1't-well cl.111r1· th1·11· \\ ,,, .1 'f1111\kl1ng 111 \011111:: J.){'opll' who pto\ l'd th.11 lilt' 11ll1·1 llug rs f.tr hum dt-dd .ind the·'""'"~., .. , tor lh<' I.inch (hl'r<tlt 1t ,, ... , lht• mo'l sUl'l'l'!->slul ft-st1\al 'inc.-the com·1·rts moH•d h1·n· from Nc\\porl. HI PTomoter <ieorJ:l' Wein ,,ud that the ft'stt\'al ''ill fin1-.h \\Cll an lht• hlJcl.. · . We sold 90 pl'rCenl or the J\ Jllablt• St'ill:i, .. he said T HE FESTIVAi. GOT 0 ..... TO a rousing starl wath Sarah Vaujlhan's Jam-packed opening concerL ;md never let up through 11 days of performances h) such d1vc•rsc )Ult. ;irlists as pianist McCoy Tyner. hassist Charlie M 1ngus, violinis t J o<· ( J Venuti. pianist llerb1c A REVIEW llancock and the Original _ _ '.'.frw Orleans Jazz hand I r 11 m Ar gt' n t 1 n a t ~ l's. ,\q.:cnt1na >. · \lo'I ol lh1• 1·1111l'l'l"b, hl•ld 1r1 pl<in·:. l1k1• ('arrH•g11· .ind t\\ c·r~ F1s ht•r hull:.. w<·n· well at1l•n<ll'd :.ind m:m)-w1•rc· :-.clloub AmonJ! f t"•l l\'al high s pots "rrl' thl• pt>rformanct's or avant garde saxaphonast Ornette l'olt'man. ''ho flll<.•d I\ very 1''1sher with an t·nthusiastic audience or young people. and Miss Vaughan's ..,elloul performance before a crowd of mostly middle-age c·ouplt's. Hancock, who sells records almost as well as lop rock artists. had two sl'llout..c,ho"s Sunduy night IF Tllt-:RE WERfo: A~ A\\ARO for lht-mo-.1 '1gorou:. 1wrform:.i11Cl' 1t \\OUld ha\'e to go to cirummer :\l ax Hoach. whosl' Cl(lended solo Satur clay night .11 ,\\ 1·1 ~ Ft,hl'f' ha<I the youthful .1ud1 <'nn• nn rls lt•t•t and m:im of ttwm \\ondrrtn).! ,,}l\ Roac·h ".1s -.1111 on ht., · Otht•r ft•,11\'al 'tanctout-. \\l'l'l' .JOl' W1 lll<im:-.. who .ippt'.1r1•d Fndav nt).!hl with Basie. and trumpell'r D11.1~ 1;11lt.•sp1c. who appeared on lhl· same bill with the Thad .Jones-Mel Lewis Big Band and singer BPtty Carter. Uut Dizzy, who had hailed oy another youthful audience as though he were Greg Allman. wasn't satisfied with one appearance and kept popping up as a surprise guest at other performer's shows. Hl' was a welcome guest. e~pecially when hl· Hrought flowers lo Miss Vaughan and then engaged in some good humorrd scat singing. ~llOWA \' TlfROl GJI TUE FESTIVAL Wein aonounc<'<l lhal he" <i!-. takmg the name " Newport and mo\'lng it to Saratoga, N Y next vear. The announcement was somewhat confused because the city ot Saratoga rclcasl•<I lhC' nc\\s before Wern c'ould do at hamsl•lf Thr city of SJraloj?a made 1l sound as though AP Wt,..pftoio~ FESTIVAL ENDED The Newport Jazz Festival cam e to a s uccessful conclusion after 11 days of performing by such jazz greats as trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie, lop. a nd singers Jot• Williams and Sarah 1 V<:1 ughn. tnt' ll·Sl l\'al \\t•1 1·tlt·ad 111 Nl•\\ \'1.rk ('II\' 'lo. !'>;IHI W1•111 IUSI !ht· namf• IS mm 111g Thl' :'-it•\\ York fl•Sll\ :.i i \\Ill gd a n!'\l nanw The Btl! \pplP l-'1•st1val Thi· Sar.iloga Fl•sl1val '' 111 start lll•J.l yl'ar for a1Jo11l lout d.ays 111 /\ui.:ust Thl' NC\\ \'01·k fesll\'al w11l 1·11nl1n111· lo run 1111 .1boul 10 da~s around lhl' Fourth of Jul~ The nt•w nam1• for till' fl•Sll\al mah•-. sensl'. even though the rl'asons for the change arc more promotional than logac:.i l. Wean needs that · Newport" namt' lo gt•l thc Saratoj?a <'Vent rolling. THE NEW VORK FE. TIVAL llAS developed an identity of its own and. as Wein said at the fa rewell d ance thl• frst1\'al 1s rt•allv morl' a series of concerts than a fl•sll\ .II The old ~cwporl Fc• .. 11\,11 in Hhode Island \\as outdoors. '' ith all t'Olll'l'rls 1wrformed Crum tht> ,a me !'.tagc It \\.as mon• c·asual ''1th fan .. bringing an hrer and p1c111t.• l>ask(•t-. Wt•1n h:.i' alll•mph'd lo put '11m1· uf that ;itmospherl' rnto th1· "l'\\ \or~ t:11111:erl:-. hut al h:_asn ·l \\Or'-l'U Tlw 11111~ n.n•µtrun has bel'n 1:onccrts hl'ld 1n StanhOJll'. '1 J . at a colonial restoration park (·a llt«I Waterloo I\ 1:011cerl then• Sunday attracted O\'Cr 4.000 peopk. But lhe Waterloo concerts an• sort of a mana-fest ival m themselves an<! don't allrat't that ma ny people from the city. THE W/\TERl.00 C'ONCERTS AR E prohably a small ''ers1on of what Wein wall try lo do al Saratoga: lots of performers un one stage and plenty of people on the I awn t«1tmg picnic lunches Hut the concert hall prcsentulioni. have some notewor1hy advanla,:lcs •>Ver· lht• more relaxed outdoor concerts tht• crowd listens to the music. nobody spills be(·r on }OU and no children cry But theres room for both kinds of resll\'als. and Wean. who saul lhas Vl•:.rr' "ew York "cries" as the best ever frnanc1 all~, M'<'m' rt>ady to tr} both krnds next \l'ar. Blood Purchases Vetoed Los Angeles Fears Dwintlling of Supplies SACRAMENTO CAP>· Gov. Edmund Brown .rr has vetoed a b1ll lhal would allow counties to buy pints of blood from donors. saying Californians will volunteer their blood free when asked . Bul a spokesman for the California Hospital l\ssocaalion CCHAJ said Tuesday that Los Angeles County particularly needs the legis lation as insurance against running out of blood. · A law that became effective last Friday makes It 11legal for a donor to sell blood. unless it's of a rare type and not available in blood banks. The law !"as passed because s upporters said blood from p.aid donors carried hepatitis more frequently than !bat from volunteers. ~119ht Aid Reque•ted • SAN FRANCISCO CAP> Mayor George flit oscone has told San Francisco residents that lhe federal government will be expected to help avoid AUbs tanl1ally higher waler rates to offset city r~venue deficits caused by the drought. • The mayor said Tuesday the city is applying for ' 1977 CARS And TRUCKS ... l TENNIS LESSONS 8 LESSONS/$ 12.50 5ICJll Up Tllh w..- CO ST A ME SA TEHNISCLUI -557-0211- $2.2 million in federa l drought relief aid that would cut in half the city's water department deficit of S4.5 million. Fire Rout• Hotel. G~••• CITY OF COMMERCE IAP) - -Fifty Hyatt House Hotel g uests fled lhear smokefilled rooms and three firemen were hurt in a $100,000 fire. of. ficials say. The three injured [ ) firemen suffered smoke Stale inhalation. One. 33-year- old David Reyes, was '-~~~~~~~-r eported in sta ble condition m Monterey Park Hospital. The other two were treated and released, officials said Tues day. An a rson investigation was under way, fire ofhc1als said. PoUee 1011 s ... peet. 1 LOS ANGELES (AP> Three policemen fatally shot a man they believed robbed and pistol- whipped a 25-year-old woman near her Palms home, police said. The dead man, who was not. ide ntified . apparently beat and robbed Jessie Levett Tuesday, police said. About 25 minutes later, policemen pursued a man who matched the description of the woman's assailant and shot him after he "whirled and fired" al them, investigators said. 2 Balp I• Prote•t MADERA' CAP) -Two physicians have resigned Madera County posts because supervisors voted to provide family planning services to minors without pare ntal consent, as required by Jaw. Alter the board adopted the resolution Tuesday. county Health Director Dr. Dean C. McClure and Dr. R. D. Carty, of Chowchilla, a tam.Uy planning clinic physician, res igned over personal objections tothefaw. C..metlettVf'flfNI t.OS ANGELES CAP) -A prosecutor has uraed a Superior Court jury to convict Leslio Van Houten qain of •'two of the most brutal murden In American crime." those of Le.no and ~a_ry LIBlanca ln 1969. In ftnal arsument!t Tuesday. Deputy' Dist. Atty. Stepbenic.y quoted Miu Van Houten'• tettlmony from trlaJ transctt~. Fllm1 Theater Dence Tehwla10n DAILY PILOT l'~lats at One-third Mark Merlin Leads Transpac By ALMON LOCKABEV Oail~ ~ltet INl•"tWr11ff Spinnakers. "bloopers." stays'ls and other downwind sails started blossoming among the 66 boats in the 2.225-mik• Loi-Angeles to HonoJ ulu race Tuesday as leaders an the necl had logged enough miles since last Saturday's start to put them one third or the way to their d{•!>lination Diamond Head on the island of Oahu Distance traveled and distance frnm Diamond Head varied accordang to whose computer programming could be believed. But plotting or the positions showed that the six lead yachts bad logged over 700 miles in three full days of sailing. AND THE YACHTS HAVE reached the point now where dis tances to llonolulu are more indicative of their progrt'ss than distance traveled from the start Based on computataons from lhe escort vessel. Crabbv. Bill Lec'l> 67 foot light displacement spt-edster had logged 691 malt's from the start at the 9 a m Tuesday roll t·a ll lier distance from Honolulu v.a., 1 526 ~frrh11 along "1lh the other five leadt•r ... \H'rc !'>Ji1111 g \\l'll MJUlh of the rhumbline courst• Computations b} Tom Wilder, off1 c1<1l measurer from Newport Beach. placed Merlin and the other leaders about 20 miles farther along the course. Wilder's computations proved more <1C· curate when plotted on the chart. BUT REGARDLESS OF HOW it is computed, there are six Class A yachts with a better than even chance of beating the elapsed lime record or nine da~s. nine hours. six minutes and 48 seconds set by the 73-footketch Windward Pass age inlhe 1971 race. About 15 miles behind Mt'rlin is another ULDB <:Onlender, Drifte r. Hard on lhe transom or l>nflt•r IS lhe 79·fool ketch Kialoa. follo\l.,·U by Wmclward Passage. Ragtime and Phantom. All six of the leaders an· showing daily runs of over 200 miles after thret' days or sailing .. ESCORT VESSELS ANO SELECTED yachts in the race were reporting winds of 14·16 knots from the northeast, indicating they have picked up the favoring tradewinds that will remain with them m varying strengths the rest of the way. As the trades build up huge followi ng seas closer to the islands. most of the yachts will be s urfing beyond their rated hull speeds. Ham radio reports via Carroll 0 Hudson·:. net t.·ontrol station in Newport Beach already indicatt• that Honolulan ... are stirring their enthusiasm for possibly the fastt>st t•rossmg in tht-71 vear h1o;Lor) of th<' t'\'enl 79 Yachts Enter July _4th Regatta Seventy-nine boal'> in 10 classes showed up on the starting li nes on bay and ocean courses for Newport Harbor Yacht Club's Independence Day Regatta Saturday and S unday. Trophy winners: ETCHELLS-22 (9l I. TLCRYTE. J ack Jakosky, NHYC, 2"-Bon· Bon. Sevmour Reek. NHYC; 3. Otherw1se i:.ngaged, JoeO'Hora. NHYC. THISTLE (51 I, Jubilant. Martha Ball. BYC: 2. Precious. Robert Van'T niel. BYC. 3. Thiss, Jack Cannon. SSYC. SANTANA-20 1:11 I, SEVEN .. hm Norman. BCYC: 2. Summerset. Bob Mari.hall, NHY C, 3, Sunshine. Tom Summer:.. NHYC LUDERS-16 <51 I. Inflation. David Runstrom. SSYC. 2. Wmdsong, Dennis Hoff, NHYC; 3, Angel. Bill Fundenbcrg, NHYC. LJD0-14 <8> 1. Tom Schock, NllYC. 2, Ken Harrison. LJYC. 3. Marty Lockney, LIYC. LASER A <5> I. Tim Cannon, DPYC: 2. John Daigh. NHYC. LASER B (6) -I, BRUCE Twichell, VYC ; 2, Jim Lawson, LlYC. SABOT A (22> 1. Doug Cefali. BYC: 2. Sheryl Rados, NHYC; 3, J erry Norman. BCYC: 4. Molly O'Hora, NHYC: 5, Mark Whitehouse. BYC. SABOT B (10) 1, Kathie Martin, NHYC; 2. Alison Glass. BYC; 3, Mike Manclark, BCYC. SABOT C 151 1, Robert Gleason. NHYC; 2, Sandy Ewing, NllYC. Distress Signals Proposal Drafted The Coast Guard has drafted a preliminary proposal <not yet published> following several years or work on visual distress signals, and will submit it to lhe Boating Safety Advisory Council. BSAC has been studying the need for required carriage of visual distress signals for several years. THE PROPOSAL, TO BE published 1n t he Federal Register for public commentary after BSAC approval, would require recreational boats 16 feet or longer in length <Class 1, 2 and 3) to carry visual distress signals at all times. Boats less than 16 ieet (Class A) would be required to carry visual dis tress signals only at night. The ·proposed r egulation would apply to boats on coastal waters or the U.S. which is defined to SLICKING UP FOR AMERICA'S CUP TRIALS Ted Turner's Son Rhett Joint Father Boats on Vie'W' Many See Cup Yachts All of Nt•wporl. R I plu~ hundn•cb or summer ,·is1tors crowdt.•d the·'' <1l1·1 tront lha:-. w(.-~k to inspel'l the newest arnvab 1n this ~l'ar's Amt•rica·s Cup competition. Arriving last wct·k "'t•1 c th1 · S\\t•d1sh challenger Sverige and her stable mate Columbia, the one-time American yacht that s uccessfully defended the cup in 1958. The Swedish syndicate, beaded by >Pelle Petterson, designer of the new Sverige, purcnased Columbia from Pat Dougan of Newport Beach more than a year ago to use as a lraal horse for the new yarhl ALSO ARRI Vl~G 1:\1 NEWPORT last week ''er~ the t\\o Australian challt'ngers. Alan Bond's new Australia. and Grcll•I II. the 1970 challenger which 1s bcm~ ust•d as a trial hor.,e tor /\uslralJa but will :.l'l'k lhl' l'hallt•ng1:r., rolt.· hc•rself 1f s he beats the new boat 1n tht• /\ugu-.t tnal., Baron Ma rtt'! Bach ., rll'\\ l'rant1• II arn ved earlier an Newport a Ion~ \\1th her uldt·r sister ship F'rancc I. Observation trials lo selecl an American de· fender will sta rt July 16 wilh round-robin races between the two new 12 meters, Enterprise and Independence. and the 1974 defender Courageous. Final trials lo s elect the defender will be held in August. THE WATERS 01" RllODt: Island Sound will be busy in Augus t as that is the tame the elimination trials to select the challenger will be held among the Swedes. Australians and French. This is the first ume that three countries have challenged for yachting's most pnzecl kudos. a bottomless pewter pit cher vanously known <JS the "100 guinea cup" and "the auld mu~ .. The Amen cans ''on at m 1851 when the schooner Amen ca beat a fleet or Bntaan·s best m a race around the Isle or Wight Smee then it has been known as the America 's Cup and has never been lost by American sailors. * * * * * * Sioode Wins Title; Next Stop Newport MARSTRAND. Sweden IAP> -Pelle Petterson of Sweden skippered his newly built Irene to overall victory Tuesday in the world six-meter sailing cup in a brilliant r ehearsal for next month's America's Cup challenge. Petterson, in the lead throughout the s ixth and final race off this west coast town, won his first big title in this wilh a 4·3·1·1·2-1 record. The 43-year-old Swede. who also bas one world championship and two Olympi~ medals in star b9at racing to his credit, said he wil\.Jeave for the United States on Thursday. · . Petterson's computer·designed America's Cup challenger. Sverige. recently arrived in Newport, R.I., where elimination races for the finest prize in yachting starts Aug. 4. · Mav Be X. another Swedish yacht with defending' champion Patric Fredell as helmsman. finished second in the final race and kept the same position in the overall standings. Am erican entry Razzle Dazzle. skippered by Scott Rohrer was only eighth but held on to third place overall. Rohrer won one race lasl week but was dlsquaJmea an tne next to last one Monday virtually giving Petterson the title. include the Great Lakes, Gulf of MeX-ico, oceans, i-------1111 bays and sounds em ptying directly Into those waters, but excluding r ivers and Inland bodies of water. The proposal requires the distress signaling device to be Coast Guard approved and provides de· tailed technical specs for that approval. • ( "Aflar lhopptng for an l!Utomobtle, I found thlt Johneon a Son Llncoln-MlrCUIJ llY9 IM the best deil In town." WILLIAM A. VON RANZOW <>tinge Orange County'• oldest Llncorn-Mercury Oellerahlp r • Wedntsday, July .11977 DAILY PILOT 8 53 CardS LAS· VEGAS. Nev (AJ» -Th~ SLala Gamln1 ('untrol H11""1 uid 1t wUl wam\.'aaln< an Nt•vt1d11 tuh\.~1)(1(·~ hOW d('('k• (I( t'tlf dll lwfol U l>Ulllnl( them in pluv 1 ... ,., ... , •• Mmll' dc•t·k" have-aii1p1•J1t•il frum lhu manuf•<'lUH'r ~1th•'"'' u t'Jrd". Deek?.Coast • ID rilled IA to lnv"1iJate the deck o.llor a man clalllled be lost mace than $400,000 at the Sahara tablea in tbe weeks preceding the inci~nL StuOOnts Shooting Haunts Ki~ . Otric1al~ i.a1d I h1• fllfl\ t' c·111n1 ~ urt 1•r a U -car<i d1•t I. lur t.t ti 1111 al ltw llott'I Saban ht•1c1n \hi\. CO TR01.1m,utu \(.1·,1:-, \H-11• However, hoter 10Cficlal11 put the Jo ·•n atclc)Ser to $25,000. The lnveatigahon was requested by both the~ und Lht! hotel. AN ~XTRi\ •·1v .. ; of !>padc•s "<1-; round In a tll·l'k IJt"111~ used &.it ..i hlackJuck tubll· Tonight's TV Highlights· KTLA 0 ~ 00 -"ThP Return of Frank Jaml'" .. •ftll' l!J.tO sequel lo the 1939 mo\ h' • J<"'"' .J.inw:-." with Henry· Jt,onda hi.u·I.. Ill 1lwI111 .. rnlt• CH...., 8 11 110 l'hl· 'w1 1 l'l of Sanl a Cited Thirty-four Orange Coast residents were cite d for academic <'xcellence during the sprang quarter at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. llonored were: Co"• Me'a fl'1'1..ev 1 Ot,;n('. J••f .. "'" .... t rok•r. J.tmtt .. 1. Col•-.. < "-'''""> tilt .. <..otu.n onc:J Cht1~ R. Sl~Dh"f"· C•th•rlnf' Carnot,.tt. Lrnn Pratt t ooa Ot>nalc:t te. v -.mc""'• I ""Mlnqt°" Buch Nancy L. i e.,,., ~"" J~tl rry s. ff"11""'· • H•wrrPGf't a.•<t• .Julie M. t-farrah. ; ("treuo ~. t<••IY. K•1itln N. M•rder. • t IAIOW I'll. Ro«>erbon •nd O<l11JCI 8 . ~m1tn. f "'"',. t l t1lrYMn,,, Pam~I• A. Yoder an t Ann,n l., hud M•\\ton VH'lO Jv"'o .J. Lt'OQuti Jr. • flnrt O•·hi·r ~A Vol~ l~aun.t N1'1Uorl fl. (la,--. Jart~lt ,. 1 rft '" ' Pt·"™" J Ldoun.. S.it<h ~re,.. A l•~.,n. 1n1 t J-~•ii '>uittn C. Ru1I 1 ,,,, '• '-o .,1n •nd J o"n O JI',,.,, t Al"'°' ••• .,, 1M1hrcu IN•,_,.,,.., V\ f •It•• r~1rn. ( ••""''''·'""' .,, J(h ..Ail n11• 'IV '"'"'• f I f.,,-.,_ Pd1,.....,I J A V1llo11<1 • \111111111\ tlu1n11 Jlld Anna :\1 ,1gnJ111 -.1.11 111 1111-. l!.lti~ ad\•enture mo' 11• .!1111111 .111 11.111.111 '111:.igl' s plot to <·ont•t•.il ,1 11111111111l1111tl1 ..... 111 \\tnt• lrom the <.;t·rmJn-. 111 \\ 111 Id \\ ar 11 · :..:.::r_ . Hu tf1r n ... tr .... ,.,,,. 'Jit "'"'" F < orr '-tn -----·--...-.1 t IPruf'nt,.: Jut. .. S. tif't'dr.tc,,. • o-..nt,un V•lley: f-reo.<tu' C. N+ootft'. -----------• 'ron • d•I MAr, 11no Sl•veft w. "'••IO>. :...>Ju.I" (.-pjllr-. NllC E)(~ .w -1 <..:omt>dy Time. Barbar.t l·\•I\ 011 :-.t.ir~ in .. The Natural Look .. in Hus pilot film with Bill Bixby about a tt·~lc t·osmctu:s c.•xccutivc and , ~her p t'<J1at71.in hus b..in<I. . TV DAILY LOG (WEDNESDAY I 26 SJboteun ol hlem11~ tD G1ut Performances eD 011 Short, On S~ore Authors Blasted as 'Heretics' · LONDON <AP 1 MINISI'ER DEFROCl;;ED MANKATO, Minn. CAP} The Minnesota Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church has stripped t he Rev. Richard Huskey of his ordrnataon ;is a deacon because of his self. confessed homosex · Famous Quip When former attorney general John Mitche!.:. said. "It's nice to be back in Alabama" upon arriving at a federal prison in Montgomery, he inspired u new T shirt design, shown here by Cheryl Slomkowski. Ice Cream .Mali Critictil • A/ter Miami l'lleiknt MIAMI (AP> -A week after the nefghborhoo4. ice cream man was shot in front of them, several youngsters who witnessed the s hooting still relive the horror. "The liUle chlldren are real sad now, .. says 11-year-old Jimmy Kemp, who now believes that someone is going to shoot him, too. GEORGE TAYLOR, 11, HAS nighlmares about the shooting and wakes up screaming. A 9·year-old :t! said she thinks of blood and guns when Sh~ ks oficecream. . The three children were among a crowd that, haC! clustered around their ice cream man -known to them as "Mingo'" -when a &unman robbed the • vendor iind shot him in the chest. The gunman is in custody, and the ice cream man is in inlensive care at a local hospital. "THAT'S A WHOLI-; l,()T or stress for a htlle kid lo live with," one psychiatrist says. .. This 1s the classic problem of referral," says James Mowry, chn1cal director or the Children's Psychiatric Center. ''H anyone -parents, schools,: police, firemen, clergy, settlement workers - would bring these kids to us, we can help them. But we don't have any outreach workers. social workers, investigators or transportation services.·· But the parents in the high-crime area near the scene of the shooting have their own problems and often don't recognize the anxiety their children are facing. psychiatrist. Evalina Beslman says. "IN TIUS NEIGHBORHOOD THERE be a whole lot of shootings anyway so I don't think it af· fected 'em too.bad," .says the mother or one of the i hildren. Last week, a nl'W ice c·rt•am man pullerl his ruck into Mingo·s old place rn the nc1~hborhood. "They're still buying 1ec cream, .. lhe new man says, •'but now they tell me, •1 hope you got your own gun. I don't want you to be·shot. · " I -9:30- Thl0olog1Ltn!'t and n·hgwn '' riters ha\ l' attatk1·d a new 111101-. liv S l'Vt'n l'rotcslant thl'olog1ans 1·halleng1111:: the di\ 1n1ty of Chnsl as hNcllcal and unconvincing. uality. :..:_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~ EVENING 6:00 0 (l)(rf?:13) 39 Htws a 12t1 cu (101 m 11e~ o Voy1ce to Ille Bottom ol the Su 111) Gomer l'yle ' 0 (3J ( 29J Ce ) Ntws O Gunsmole m ,,rtudct hm1ly Q) Altu Smith ' Jones ffi CIUSIC Country MI Lon Luq EID llettnc Co~ny ED Dnm1hc Stun eD M•-1nc II Counl -6:30- 0 Mom· C (90)"81g Jom Mclain" (driU ·&., ,, ',, •'t ,, l•mts Arn«~~. Ndnc1 (JI .~n , & 1 m Andr &r1f1tth 110) Merv Grilfin Show ( fl'J (31) My Three Sont t2tl Dick V111 Dyke Show EID loom (~ (8J ) lltw1lchtd t3V (3J Ntws Cl) litan Builds, Man Ot1l1oys 7:00 ' 31 lmeratncy One 0 0 23 ~ ED ill Ntw\ O I.ms Club 6 My Three Son' 8 To Tell lhe I rulh O Conuntrahon ID I lO'lt Lvcy Q) The FBI ( H 3 ) f;im1ly Aft111 ffi Korun l..in1u11e Pro11;ims 26 M;iyberry llfD tD Ml<Ne1I tehrtr l!tpo1I ( 29 a l p 1rt11d1e r ;im1ly n Cross.Wits ~ Aul uule ' You -7:30- 0 m N1me Th1t Tune O Lowe Amtr1tan Style 6 Tht Odd Couple U M;itch G1me • s Sl21,000 Qaeshon O The Joktt's Wild 10 Wild World of Animals m Bt111lthed ' ( 171 3 ) Pop Gofs the Country 1231 r 8) Celeb11ty Sweepslil-O .26\ Hocan's Her«M!s fn Chilnnel 28 Tonight ( ,_) l 81) 811df Bunch r.1t1 llm Club ~ 81• Bt1derbede ru1,.,1 8 :00 O ((f7) ~>) '8 1 Good T1mts (RI 11. beromts dn 1n\tanl ,.1,t.111v ~lttr w1nn1n& a 101 •I art •huw, i.·11· • , l;ime piovts tn bt e1pen~ovt "'h•n 1 'ihady pol1l•CO ... 1nl1 I J lo Cdll•Odl.n tor him 0 l31 8) m l9 lilt ind l1mu of C11uty Adams (R) f.1t11ly Adams lw'l,,>t'• ho tro•nd J,lad t~r~ h" drowllf'd and 1~ t ;·,nbAd• 1f'Calls th• d•ta•' f f ,,, m ·•I , AllCI rarty dn• 1 .-•h• 0 llo¥.e. C (21tr) "The Return ol frank limn" Or• I 4~ l!t '' Fonda tlJ M-. IC (21tr) "lmt James" (wu) ·39 lywn' Pr"" U CD ll01 ( 291I8 ) Donny and lbrie (R) GunlS "' Mich••I Landon, Don Knous. 1!1lly B111y O Mowie: (CJ (Vu) "A Min Alone0 (wes) '55-Ray Milland, Waid Bond. CD Wild World of Animals Q) All Thal Glitters C2ll Hatltnal Geo(r1phlt fD Tiit fonyle Sap 0> Clllmpioll$hlp Wrestlin& m Austin City llmrts -&:30- 0 (ff'O ()1) lJl M1ril1n M<Coo 11!11 llllJ Dim J1. S/low CD Cna-W'its Cl) My ..... 9:00 tJ IU'O ca:n "' ces we.illtlday llPt !MM; <~ l (211r) ''Tiie Swet tf Sut1 Vittori•" Cad•) 69 Mthony Qui""· AnnJ M1cnan1 Vw"' IJsl. tlirff Knl&tr Strcio f11nc~1. G11nar11 Gi..,n1n1 late 1n YfO!ld WM II, !ht Ge!Jnl11$ 11trmpt to conhsalt tM ~ ~ (• """'°" llollltS d t1111t) ill the anail v1Ha11 ol S.RtJ Ylttaria. But ~II to the cons1trN· tlOll of H1tla'l m1mons 11\d dup111 tllflr bnlqrrty •114 ttwuts. 1111 town MfOf (alld tool) !his upoft • scllcmt i. ltt4e tllt Melllft Ind llSt 111 dt'flOllS lllUU lo kt•P Sant• Vtttooa's &ecr1I • SKTen II (I) D CJtJ CrG Sll1r•11 <10. A ,ftc1U1I ltt'I ... I hltsllt, illtlillblt 1ubbtt doll as • qrachUI • ti41t. •!If~ l l Yfh1ppl• $l8P. • \UIPllU tftlPttlttft, lllt ~II d amltt6 fn j~•h1 ' loc~er • ut <•'<ll> larflta (8) Meo • •. ~d bJ Jiu ldll'J .,., ldle1to#, lllUft~ ,, tt ~--......... ~. ""~ aot!lttdl IWlll •Iii !It~~ !Int ""Utloll Ii liiul1ll Ml !OtltOfl 1111. ' ___ ..... 0 23' t 6 1 m l9 Com~J Time lh• N.ilur.il loo~' A very suctes' I I .ind l1be1a1~d-cosmehts eiecu· 11.e (Barbara ftldon) 1,arns 1l s • 1'.1Pr to mu colors titan careers whrn ~~e Iron to baf;ince the rt• mands of her fOb and those of htf Ptt\ba"d-a p•d11f11C1an (8111 B11by>. Q) Mod Squad €?) Lt Crud1 Bien C11adi1 10:00 0 21 'Ii El) ll K1n1s1on: Conlodenlllll M Iii~ All tr 11 • Ir ~ •l'lnt"O ( I~" h•dJ ul 1 ,111 I tnnrlcm1~rdt ... rnmmi!) su1c•d,. 1 l.t n·1tvt111d mrt fl"'d"frd f (P<11 ,,, • 'I~ !lul 10 RPI "ve"~e b~ 1 1m111.-i rh ... "''u 11r thtn>.\ Wd,, '' pun'>1bl•· OONews 6 J MoYlt: (Zhr) "Millly'' (d1a) .~ f me;t Borgn1ne, Betsy Blair. U I 31!1QI (1~ CB') Chilllie's Angels .. lhe 81g lap Out" (R) l he A11~el• and Bo~IPy pull olf a series of wn~ ID lrip a clevPr compu l>1ve >' 1mhtn whose hab11 ·~ supporled by n" mm1nal achv1l1e\. l:J)bml Totlily 26 Marcus Welby ED El Bien Am•do eD Hon -10:30-m Q) ED News ED Dtill love Or ·"1~'' I• n 11 It• 1•11• • • I 1np•'1 brt .. .,n [lo1ab~I~ t • 11 nil k ,e •I 8ru""'"£ 11:00 0 0 10 El) )9 Ntws O ( :it 8 ) love .lmeriun Sty1e 0 3 13 6 Nm O lron$1dt m htnwaod 2N1(hl Q) lib rttn Wtlby ( 1 T 3 ) The bnch Show 26 All Thal Glitters ED D11matic Senu eD MacNt11/lehre1 Report -11:30- 0 ( 17 3 ) I e CBS l.1le Mowie: C .. Aioi" (dra) '(>9 l1m Brown, (.1·n·· Hukman 0 2J 8 I m •39 Johnny C1rson 6 Movie: "Tht Black Arrow" (advl I~ I ou1s lhvward lanet Blau. U 3 1 10 ( :19 a ) Rookies/ M11tery ol the Week ID Metronews .i& The 700 Club f.:;' C1phontd ABC News .. 12:00 Q lw~1ch1 Zone 0 Movie: t C1 "The Matt Wh.o H1unttd Him~ll" (mp) 'll-Rogfr I/. "' H1ldr11a1de Neri m Cross·Wits Q) Movie· HUllder tlte Gu"• (draJ R hod (~•I, A11d1•t Toll tr. -12:30- 0 D11cnet ID Movie· "Boots Mil lone", I d1 i) l l'.rilldm It ldrn 1:00 0 23 • 6 at l-rrow 0 All N1chl Sllow: "Wyominc Kid," "Siar lot A Nlpl," "Mptery of the While Room0 -1:3(}- Q) Movie: 0 Sluhdown" (dra) ·se- lfowM d Dull, Br11n Dunlevy. 2:00 O MO¥ie Ootiblefulurt: "Odd Man Out," "The Runaway l11S0 -2:05- 0 Mme; 0 An ldtal Husbud" (Com) 48 Paulette Codda1d -2:30-m AM·Nl(hl Sltow: "Under Fi1t." ''f11httr Atud" "l do not myself St'<' how a man c·an be u Christian in any normal or useful sense of the word and m aintain that • there was nothin g !>Upernatural about Je'>us," wrote column1'>t c;eorge Gale in the 21ifi ' l' a r o I d \\ l' l' k I ,. Spt>C'lalnr GAl.F. s pN1f1 C",illv allacl-1"<1 th1• essay hy thl· Hev Muurrn• Will's. a l'anon of lhl' Churt h vf England. "Wiles is very much in .s tep with present university orthodoxy, which is so conct•rncd to m ake Christianitv Ht' ('eptabh.• to those· who 1· h a I I l' n g c 1 t s fundamental prt'tl'Pls that it 1s l'Onstunllv thro'>'111g llw halJv flUt ''1th tlw bJlh \\ ah·r. th1•n ..,ltthenni.: around 011 lh1· bathroom floor t n ini.: tu µrck 1t up .m<I pul 11 h.1t" 1n ag;i m THE ATTACK followed pubhcallon or "The My th of c;od l ncarnall'.'' a collcct1on o f e ssays edited by Ll n1ted Reform t•hurchman John Hick or Birmingham University. The essayists. six men and a womun, aq;uc that J esus was a real man with a normal lather and mother and a lim1ted human m1nfl Thl'V called hrs d1vin1tv u mvth. "a slo1•v .' . "h1ch 1s nol lltt•ra.llv lrul' hut which In\ ;tl'" .i particular alt1l udl• 1n 1b hearers." HICK SAID ;i r<.•v1cw of traditional COnC<.'pts or Jesus was nec<.'ssary because of advancing Biblical S<'hol;irsh1p and the need for Chnsllan'-to improve rel;1t1on~ "''th other rehi;!1ons "A s hilling shorkl•r .. a n d ;1 n o t a b I y uncon"1nc·1n ~ l'Ontnbul10n lo lh<' <'JUSe of unbelief.·' was the verdicl of the Church Times. Bnlrun's leading independent Anglican· oriented weekly. Tax Help Offered To Seniors Se nior citizens seeking property tax relief or renter·s a ss istance should contact their local franchise tax board of. lice. Claims for assistance can be fUed until Aug. 31. Those eligible must be at least 62 wilh 11 total income of $12,000 or less tor property lax relief and a total Income of $5,000 or less for renter's assistance. For more information, call 8.14·6100. ' ~eeWon Costu M~~a rel'ld nt Michael R. Oeocgt received hts low degree 1t ct>remonies held al Teua'r«h pnlnulty in Lubt;Ock. GREEH CRRPET T MRHESYOU FEEL GOOD Rll OVER And only Perpetual ha s Green Carpet Treatment. The Greenlight Express Line lets you zip in and out. Your eyes light up at how promptly the special Action Desk can take ca re of you. You feel richer the moment your Savings Counselor gives you those extra savings tips. You'll like the convenience of our Preferred Service. too -just call and rese rve a time to come in and do business without waiting. All free! And you get interest higher than any bank, savings insured to $40.000, and people to serve you with the biggest smiles in the west! That's just part of Green Carpet Treatment. Try all the rest. It will make you feel good all over. DAILYl'ILOT 'Fern~ood 2 Night'-ls It 2 Much? U)' JA V ~llARBVTT LOS ANGEl..l!;S 1A l'1 rtw lull.' 1 l'llll) U1 uet· IL 'i. rrequtmlly tastele1>s. Al least its rirst two l'hllpten1 are. waa frequently t1&all•lou and rrec1u~nlly runny A nl'W ahov.. "l'•rnv.ood 2NIRhl ''only hnlf lhal It's Norm.m Lear !> lJ week summer series that opened July 4 .. "a Collowup to hls "Mary Harlman, Mary Hartman,'' which closed Friday. The new daily venture, syndicated to about. 30 market.a, is a spoor or TV talk shows like "Tonight" on which Johnny C1tri.on occasionally stars. It is set .~ .... it.z."""ill in mythJcal Fernwood, Ohio, on mythical Channel ' I "THE SORCERER PC .. . . "A BRIDGE TOO FAR ' PG NrJ ,.. fl "ANNIE HALL" PG "VOUNG FRANKENSTEIN . PG ·SILVER STREAK . PG "FUN WITH DICK & JANE . PG THE STING PG "MURDER BY DEATH' PG I\ . ITS STAR JS MARTI N MULL, the fine satirist. gultarlst and foe of the last decade's folk music. He plays Barth Gi mble, a tihb, smirking host who is on the lam from the law in Miami, site of his last TV show. Mull once played Barth's brother, Garth, who in a rousing "Hartm an" episode fatall Im aled hi m self on a n al umin um Christmas tree. The first ·'Fern wood 2Night" servod mainly to introduce the regulars, including Barth, who nervously work:s on a day-to-day contract. THE OTHERS ARE HIS vacuum-headed co host Jerry Hubbard <Fred Willard) am! mid die-aged Happy Kyne MULL (Frank DeVol). Happy runs a four-piece band ~lllP'-111. which sounds as if 1l uses leftover notes from Art .._.,.._..:A..:-4,.. Linkletter's House Party. Happy also sh amelessly "EXORCIST 11· THE HERETIC" A plugs rus hamburger chain, the Bu n 'n' Run. So far, "DEMON SEED" R .. PJ ,.,, so good. But one opening-day guest was a classical "The Other Side o f Midnight" R pianist in an iron lung. Another was a befuddled "BLACK SUNDAY" R N P. ,., motorist, or Jewish heritage, booked to show W•l 1 OtSNE v 'I .. "THE BOATNIKS" G"GNOMEMOBILE" Fernwood's mainly Anglo-Saxon residents what a real Jew looks l1k<' . Barth introduced him and decried prejudice and stereotypes or J tJWS. His announcer latl!r told the guy : "You look just lake the rest of us. It's as plain as the nose on your face." "ROCKY" PG "HUSTLE" R "ANNIE HALL"PG "YOUN G FRANKENSTEIN" PG 1 .. I k l • ' -: U/'..A i\llV\UJ.I ROBLR l DF. '\IRO -: '\,[\l. YORK. :'\LW YORK" .. .; , #I . • I \HI " K \l H .f \I \tt L ,, lj \t \ I \l t \I \II "' I 1-4 -.f t • • mv. t' \l 1, .... I U -· joCI .... HI t t t \ ( M j ,. \t -n -"-•II\ 1111~--·~.,. I .i.,., ... 1..-.-*'• t, ~ .. ', ......... ,, ' .. .... ,.~ v • •• •f :!:,.••••a~ '• U ,. ,--;ii'ii \.-!tr~": 1 .. T Untied Artaats la. IOWlROS \9' NlWl'ORl (INl \IA An'ER THIS ANO TllE iron·lung pianist. I was surprised they didn'l bnnl: on a blind Sicilian to dance the tarantella an a china s hop On the much milder Show No. 2. in a segment Knotts Role R L'RBANK CJ\Pl Oon Knotb \\Ill plav the lead 111 ··niood:-hv." a new comcdv wc.S LC'r n from Wal i D1 snev Producllons Rt1lwrt Alt:nan prc1>Cnb TRUFFAUT'S ''SMALL CHANGE" SUB·TITl.ES RATED (PG) W..ekowu. to 'L.A. a film hy Alan RuJolph Keith Carradine Sally Kellerman Geraldine Chaplin Harvey Keitel Lauren Hutton Sissy Spacek John Considine V1veca Lindfors Richard Baskin DenVC3T Pyle. "'U'IK .u'kl .-.'lit' h\ l,,,."l'-"'\'-J h\ "nlh."f'I ancl "'"''"·'' ~ Wchartl B~kin Robcn Altman Alan Rudolph r '"' ,., ' '•f rf.t,,,. JS··· • • e ~ t"tj) .... •••"•1 t .,,,r I ·~ lRI "'""'' "' "·"'"'''"'"' ¥ Un1t1dArt11ts CINEMA CENTER HARBOR AT ADAMS, COSTA MESA MESA VERDE CENTER 979.4 r 41 called "Bury lhe Hatchet." they brought on a Catholic priest and his non-Catholic parents. Seems they wanted him deprogrammed from a cult. the Catholic Church. His verge-of-bysteracJI mother sobbed "We want our son Joey to be taken away from the Cathohca and to be given buck lo us so we can clear his mind of all that silly mumbo JUmbo." Audience applause gave the nod to the padre. The losing parents got free eats at "Home of Hotcakes" and a choice or a deluxe garden rake or "two pounds of Mix·N·Match nails and screws." TIDS IS CALLED PIERCING social satire But there were some actual funnies, ltke the Mirth· Maker version of dlscodom·~ "Shake Your Booty" in Western Swing Polka style. and a 5-year-old torch singer's "I Didn't Know the Gun Was Loaded." Oillo the guest professor who. having studied harmful effects of synthetic fibers . opined : ··Leisure suits cause cancer '' But such nifty goods were swamped by the del· 1berately tasteless wares, gross-outs. if you will . MAH'S SO. COAST PLAZA , .. ., .. " Mltltt1lll S.-1111 llW'S SO. COAST PWA Cet1' .. " Mii .. .,.. ws.un ''THE DEEP" lPG) I :30-3:40-5:50·8:00· I 0: I 0 fill ''THE (PG) SORCERER" Wl<DA Y!> 7:)0.9:)0 SAT/SUM 1:30.3.35-5.40-7:45·9:50 ,..,._ WIMMEtl GOLOEM GLOIE AWARD un·s "ROCKY" ll"Gl SO. COlSTPWA WkDA YS-7· 30-9:4 s m~ SAT SUl'L-1 :45-3:50-5 55·8:00-1 0:05 ldl'S CllEMAWD MM ~-­..... US.191 It p WED. OML Y-4:00-1: IO· I 0:20 DAILY I :l0-3:40 5:50·8:00· I 0: I 0 wtO Offl.T~OO OA!i.T-4 00 111 "W. C. FIRD S" ""'° o~ ,_, o0t• o1 04tl.T-t OO •·H .tO 00 ,.._ "RUBY" wt0 OHlY-oJ .. 10 IS DAIL Y-2:00·6:05· I 0: I 0 "BU.CK SUNDAY" IRI WID. OML ,_," DAIL '(-l:J5. 7:40 "Scene after scene is unforgettable." -Penelo~ Gllllatt, New Yonter Magazine C , ' na., ___ _ PLUS (PG) "AN ORIGINAL. A MAJOR WORK. LILTING, MARVELOUSLY FUNNY AND WISE. A ~BOR OF LOVE.'' _____ .,. .. LINDA BLAIR • RICHARD BURTON LOUl~E fLf.TCHER MAX VON SYDOW O<ORCIST II TH( HERHIC' (R) KI TTY WINN • PAUL Hf.NRE.ID . ., 1~. l·""'""' • IAME~ EARL fONES l t ''•\t· A.,,, "'" l!.rt·• 11·11 ,.., RO~l'O PALLlNBERG · IOHN BOORMAN f, .. n.f•ol IOHN BOORMAN ... t RICHARD LlDE.RER ~ 1 th n h~ i\\v,·• (' '"''''' rt1 ''"' \. \H'ldu\.lf'rt l>y WILLIAM GOODI IART. [NNIO MORRICONE ! @n0rRE r I l 't ly C.• ,,_ 0••"'1"'. 6).< Q281 w~ m -to L.A. StRR IS BORn PLUS (R) ' -..:-:~-__;;..;..;;~"Islands in the Stream · . . . ~ . . . Wednesday. July 8. 1977 OAlLYPILOT Bf, 'Stop World' Well Done -· l.AUllll RUIY(ll flt.US ANNll HAU'"°' There may come a lime between now arid July 23. gentle reader, when you feel that your herculean efforts have enlllled you to an evening at the theater. "Stop the World, 1 Want to Get Off" at the San Clemente Commuruty Theater may catcb your fancy. It seems that audiences never tire of the Lealle Brlcuase-Antbony Newley classic. YOU WILL WONDER, AS this writer did, how on earth human dynamo Randy Cobb, pretty Victoria Lynne Rukstalis and the rest of a tremendously enthusiastic cast will maintain the frenetic pace of opening night. Cobb appears to be Indefatigable. He acts as direct-Or, set designer, choreographer and co· painter, and he is, moat importantly, that vital central flaure of Littlechap, the cocky Cockney who rises from tea boy to tycoon via the glorious start of marrlagetothe boss' daughter. Cobb ii perpetual motion pers-0nlfled, but he Ian 't too wearied by his multiple roles to give us spine-tingling renditions of the songs that have made "Stop the World '' an evergreen. ~ YOU KNOW THEM AND love them: "Gonna Build a Mountain," "Once in a Lifetime" and a de- eply movin& "What Kind of Fool Am I?" that brought tears to his mother's eyes. You weren't alone, Mrs. Cobb. MIGHTL Y SPECIALS CHOPPED . STEAK TUESDAY 'S SPECIAL LIVER & ONIONS WEDNESDAY'S SPECIAL 1/4 FRIED CHICKEN THURSDAY'S SPECIAL STUFFED BELL PEPPER .u ...... .., -w. ---' ..... ......, ...... 4 ,.._ ,, • ..,. ··-· , .. & INMH. 91141 ,.... ctr.to •• ....... ,. ............... , ... ..., FRIDAY SPECIAL All THE ASH l CHI~ YOU CAN EAT ... 219 I st lff'VfftcJ lftcludes fish & chips. crwamy col• slow, roll & buttft-. KIDDIE DRUMSTICK PLATTER AU POR 199 SUMDA Y SPECIAL All THE f'RIED CHIClEN YOU CAN EAT ••• 239 I st urvlnCJ lncl••h• whipped pototoH, col• slaw, r'Oll & buttw. SOUTH COAST Pl.Ali 54'92071 3333 So. lristol, Cotta .... HOUaSc Mea.-lrf. 114 s.t. 11·7 S... 114 .srA~ "AAS AT EDWARDS NEWPORT CINEMA NOW ON THE LARGEST SCREEN WEST OF ,. NEW YORK ... 75 FEET WIDE BY 35 FEET TALL -2625 ~ SQUARE FEET -I . PRESENTED IN FULL 70MM AND SIX TRACK STEREO - f [](]I oo..svsvsreM I THE MOST BEAUTIFUL PICTURE AND THE FINEST SOUND QUALITY EVER REPRODUCED IN THE THEATRE. . I • MORE AVAILABLE SEATS 1252 LUXURIOUS ·MOHAIR LOGES -50-100°/o MORE SEATS THAN ANY OTHER THEATRE. IF YOU HAVEN 'T SEEN.srAA. HARS AT EDWARDS NEWPORT CINEMA YOU HAVEN'llTEN IT! IF YOU'RE PLANNING TO SEE .J:'l'All. "4 (AND You REALLY SHOULD). Youn.· G~T THE' ST AT. EDWARDS NEWPORT: GIANT SCREeN -70MM - 'DOLBY STEREOPHONIC SOUND -LOTS OF SEATS. . . Mo~l"9 '"m• $ouno .. lt•t [I] I DOLBY SYStEM I~ . No11e Reauct•on . H•o~ 11oehty LltUechap is a very big chap indeed in this glittering San Clemente producUoe, but now our richly deserved praise for Miss Rukstalis, who is one or the best all-around prospects in local community theater on the strength of her roles m this well-mounted producllon. She la superb as Evie Lilllechap, the boss' daughter, who succumbs to the amorous antics of the sexy tea boy. And she ts no less convincing in her additional demanding roles of Ilsa, the nasty Nazi; Anya, the redoubtable Russian, and Ginnie, the don't-give-a-damn. all-American girl. SHE ALSO IS THE OWNER of a beautllully SOl"Tll C '0 .\ST 110 A I ltf clear singing voice that is beard to its most tellina~ effect, we thought, m the delightful "Typicall:t" Engliah." " .. But the show is a gold mine of good music, soll~ teamwork and a Cobb-led camaraderie that Clltered • over the footlights op<?nlng night and clearly del; ighted a capacity audience. ·: • Stop your world and get off at 202 Avenlda: ._ Cabrillo In San Clemente before July 23. You won't.."' regret it. . -~:J . I A • "NA l'I /\• h "• ,, I • •1 ..... R StRR IS BORn "Islands in S the ,, tream COMING SOOM "HEW YORK, HEW YORK" "STAR WAltS" ll"GI "A lltlDGE TOOFAR"CN I •AIRIDGI TOO FAil• Cl"GI THE CITY SHOPPING CENTRE" OAAHOI! • 63441t1 ~ CITY CENTRE CIMtMA~ S.A. l' .. WY IMANCHHTfA IX.) .G.G. FAWV lCITY OAot EX.I 04-1'11 "ROCKY" CPGJ "ST. IViS" "ftOf'U THAT TIME FORGor· "WILODS" trGI "ltUIY" CRI "litlD" IRI A):· WALT ff DISNEY "'OOUCTIONS' stR€1SAnD 1<R1stoi+€Rson edwards MESA CINEMA '*WPOITllYO.AT 19TH ST. COSTA MESA .... sou (IN THIATRI f1) w:x£)( ALLEN aN\E KEAIO'J 'ANNIE HALL' PLUS (PG) ............ 11 'l'llAI' nvr·~tt.ui;-- SORRY NO PASSES __ w_e_st_m_i ns_t_e_r ·._B_9J_.o_s<4_.6__. J . . . . . . . . BB DAil 'PllOI Credit Woes Multiply Experts Poinl Out Trouble Signs as Debt Increases lb I m 1-.t: t 'OOK '·~ , .. ~ ...... _,.,,. .. , Anh1llan11 urt· 1Jv11v"1111( mutH') JI .1 rt'l'llrtl r ul1• 111111 lholl~Jnd" 111 th1·m ,1n· 1•nrl1n..: 1111 "Ith tll•t1t!\ lhl'\ I JO I 111,lllJJ,;I' 1-;,, ... ,,, !'IJI\ 1111 tl.1111:11 '11£11' ~trl' l'•"' tn I l'('Olotlllll' 'I 1111 11' lfl Ir 11uhl1• 11 -\'Ol K Ol I'~ l't\I' OINL (Jl'l>h not u1unl111.i rn11rti:a1w pa)ml"nli-tut,d mur,. th..in 20 pen•1•nt of tukl' homt• pay Sonw !!OUrt't''> 'a} I'> 1w1 n·nt 1.., .1 <1;1flor levl'l tu 11,, "1lh1n \ 011 <ll'J\\ on sa,·rn~.., lo m1·1·I c urr1·nl 1''\p1·11st·'> \ 11u dt•l:iy paym1·nh }'1111 u:.ed to w nd in prompt I\. \nu c·hJr~l' l'\ 1•1 ' 11 .n purch •• ..,, . ., l>U1 h ,1, j.!ron·nt·.., \ oo \l' lo:.l trJtl.. of th1· totJI amount ~ ou "" 1· t'EDER.\L R~SERVJ:: B<><trd figure:. !>ho" that outstanding cons umer installml•nt l'r1·drt. not counting mort~a~''' llll'rt'a'>t'<I by a record amount durtnj.! March lo r\l'arly SIHO brlhun The Natrona! F'oundal1on fur Consumc·1 Credrt. •• nonprof11 orga111l,1llo11 "rlh m on• than 200 counseling C:l'lltl•rs acro ... s th1• country, adv1:-.l'd 130,000 fam1li<''> on money management last year. J\buul 40,000 of thr fam1ht•s wenl into <.kbt managcml'nl program~. long ·ll'rm arrangements des1gnrd to hdp them pay off their bill~ and rcorganiw their frnances Then• arc sig n s that consumers may he J.:t'lt1ng bmarter about spending Thl· number of families seeking tounsehng al roundut1on center' has dropped s ince 1974 and 1!175. when mflat1on and lhl' n•cess111n were at thr1r worst THE 40,000 FAMll.ll:S 111 till' debl managl'ffil•nt program 1n 1976 O\H'd a lolal or S227 m r I hon which \\IH'I..' out to S5,tj75 J family Tlw 5ti,OOO fJmrhco; rn the debt 111un11.it>mt•111 µrugr Jill 10 197 t 11~1·d $370 nullwn m $6.600 a famtl) A ' II II :. c ' 111 •• II I I) I l h ,. fo11nd11l&on s ..11tl lht• t•t•onom1<· t roublt•., or n•t't•nt > 1·urs mu) Jduully hu' 1· hrlped somt• p1·oµlt-face n •all 1 v · I ttunk a lot o( them have h.1d lo pull IJ1Wk, lht• i.pokcsman i.a1d Jerry Larue, director or tht: New York t•ounsl•lini: c:cnte1 , su1d, however, that the current rccovt'ry may lead to Cabe st•curity Ile warnt..~ that peopl<.• "ho borrow too much now may find lhe ml>clves rn truuhlt• 1r there IS C\t'n a slight C'l'OnOml(' sl'.'tback 'l'REDl'f OVERLOAD CAN oct·ur all too easll)," Larut• i.aid Consumers should be a"an· ..it all time~ of ho" mut·h thcv uwe and should kcl'P a running balance or total borr0\4 mg .. Tht• average family that see!..-. ht>lp from lhl' founddt1on·-. C'Ouns<'lmg centers has an annudl rncomt• of SlS,000 aJthouieh there are (·ases of people with Sl00.000 rnc:omes running tnto troubll' T HE FAMILY Tll.\T chtW'>Cs a dt"ht management program usuallv takes about two vcars to pay off all its bills and ,:cry ft'w people wind up in trouble again Not everyone who visits lht C'ouns€'ling centers nc·eds u long.term program. Some family budget problems can ht' solved .r elatively simply For those \\ho c:hoost• debt management. th e program begins with a counselor who helps lhl'.' family work out a budget. determining fixe d l'XpcnsC's and the amount that 1s left over to pay existing 1>111' THE COUNSELOR lhl•n takt•s over dealings with thf" family s creditors and tn<'s to" ork out an .1rrangement for an t·\tt•nd<'d repayment plan The foundalwn -.aid most creditor<; agre1• to the· ( CONSVMER J !iystem ~cause they are assured they will gel their money The counseling centers are funded Crom a variety of sources. including c haritable contributions . In some cases. <·reditors pay a small part of the money they recover to the centers. Participating families are charged a nominal fee S2.25 a week in New York. for l'"a mpl c although the pay ment 1s waived in cases of hardship C RE DIT CARDS ARE not forbidden to families after they pay orr their bills, although somt' people p'refer not to borrow at all The foundation said the purpose of counseling 1s not to crltic1le credit. but to teach people how to use it wisely Larue said he advises fam1hei. to be careful about consolidation loans. "Suppose you owe each of four creditors $50 a month for a total bill of $200. You gel a con solidation loan with a payment rate of $125 a month. You suddenly feel you have $75 a month extra." Counseling services are hi.h.'<l tn the telephone book under "consumer credit." Add1l1onal information is available from the National Foundal1on f or Consumer Credit, 1819 II Street. N W . Washington. 0 C 20006 Suit Seeks to Stop Beloiv-book Selling LOS ANGELES <A P l A shareholder suit agarnst Southern California Edison Company asks the Superior Courl to slop the utility from selling more common stock at a price bolow book value of its shares Purpose or the suit apparently as lo pot pressure on the slate Pubhc Utiliti1•s Commission. which n·gulates utility r ates. The <'om mission has been accused by so ml' cxccutivcs an d s ha rcholders of res tr1ct1ng revenues and profits to unreasonably low levels. T HE SHARE HOLDER who filed the s uit William E Norgrcn. arguL-d that unlike the per.share book value of a typical common ... tock. the book \'aluc or Edison's shnrl''> 1s a "meaningful fi gure whrch rs rlirectly related to. and accurately reflects. its value Book valul' or a company 1s 1ls worth shown on its accounting records after liabilities are subtracted from assets. Edison had a book value of S32. 74 for each of its 53. l million common shares outstanding at the end of 1976, but the shares have recently traded for about $25 per share. or more than $7 a share below book Norgren argued in his suit that rr the company issues n ell common stock al a price below book value. the book value or th(' older common s hares will be· reduced and 1t wall mt> an a loss or investment Knee-high, Plus l t"s b<.'en a long time smce a farmer was satisfied with corn lhat was knee· high by the Fourth or July. but even by today's stcindards. corn 1s looking good lhts year Four vear-old l\l 1c hclle Lm\C~ of Sioux Cilv. lowa. und('rslands v. hat Iowa State ·n1H•r s1t} cxtens'ion agro· mom 1st Dr Garron Bc·nson mean~ \~hen he says. "I just don •t think anybody 1:, go111g to quc•st1on lhrs year's growth rate as a rl'cord 'Gay' Industry Grows ()\'t•r Tiu· Count.-r NASO listin9s Changing Attitudes Build State's Business BySTEPllEN FOX AP 8U\lnfl'~ WriU·r Homosexual'> .lrl' Ml rar tllll or lhc closet that bus1nl''>"l'' catering to or run h\' ~a~ s ha\'t' bccomt> a mult1mlllion dollar industry in Cahforn1.1 Gay bus111l''" I'> lnng Jl·•'>t lh1· s lea1y bar and hJth ... tal!1'. though thcr strll e"'' 'I nu1 I'"'\ l'I. ac· countant. dol'lor i;:.trba.J,ll'man real Cl>latl' broker, plumht'r, auto mechunic or rno.,uranrl• .1~ent may be homosexual Then• an· homose,ual hus 1nt•s<;mcn , group~ ga~ K1\\ Jms Club' 1f you "rll ''GAY CAPITAi.iSM lfi\S arisC'n m th~ la:-l thret' to h\·l· years.·· says Morrrs K1f:hl . who owned a chuin of hutcls in the Southwest ht'forl' becoming acll\'e in th{' gay r h ii ni.:hts movement. "Th ert: u st'd lo be a retardation of thr sprnt gay people tended not to achieve because of thr reur they might bl' exposed. But i::ay hbl'rat1on has counterncted that. and gays arc more "'11li11~ to lry lo be a success no" · · Sex re s~a r c hl'.'r s ha vl' esl1maled that 10 percent or lhe population 1s homos exual . meaning lhal ,gays ha\'(' always had some part1c1pallon an American rndusln What's Ill'\\ rs their o~nnt>ss · "THEY ARE COMING out for two reasons." says Bob Arthur. head of the Los Ang eles Community Guild, a gay busincss ... group with 167 members. "Most gay business leaders are inte lli gent and rea lize t h at until gay professionals com e out of the closet and Identify themselves, we're always going to have this tip of the iceberg problem . "Al$o, l think many gay businessmen h ave said to themselves, 'I'm comfortable financially, I'm in my 50s. I've li~ed a good life and if I'm goi~ to help my own people. I've got to come out. Until I let people see we 're not child molesters, they're going to keep thinking we are."· Openly gay businessmen are prlmarily a big city phenomenon. In CallromJa, most admitted l•Yf are concentrated ill Loa Anielea and San Franchco. Homosexu al bta1Jnt1tmen exl1t in every comer or the stale, buL their profUe ID smaller communities is much lower. ''People in tbelr •mailer c ommunlll ea would n ot W\dtrstand and mlaht be n)o~ ble to lrtfluenc:e their buslnes11 ftnd hurt tt," he says. "They don't have as broQd a base to work from as w do here in l •• A., where there ar• perl'lapa 300,000 nr snort ~Ol'll who are ay " AP WIN'pltoto 'GOT TO COME OUT' Guild's Bob Arthur hrsl went after gay business more than six years ago by advertising in The Advocate. the nation's largest gay newspaper. Insurance compamcs used to be reluctant to do bus iness with homosexuals. says Arthur, 52. but have since learned. as have other industries. that the gay market can be quite lucrative "More and more. I'm writing policies ~here lovers have been together for a year and there is a strong reeling of wanting to protect each other," he says. "As a gay insurance agent, I can talk to them more directly about their com milment to each other.·· ARTHUR SAYS MAJOR corporations are becoming more an d more intrigued by homosexual buying power . "I think the May Company and t h e Broadway would be astounded to know how many gay people are homemaken." he says. "A very large company. which I won 't nam e. hlu com missioned a study of gay buying power and what they buy. "But I think they'll find that th~y ~e underarm deodorant about the same as anybody else. Th~re is no particular product that is strictly gay because our needs are the same u stra.l1bt people." GA'YS DIFFER FROM beteroeexuals In their i1eed for some proresaiono.1 ~ rvicei, li•Y Sid Crocker, a 29·)'81U'·old Btverly Hllls 1tccountant who bas used hls underatandlna ot homosexu3tlty tJ1'd lax law lo aid couples ln a b o ut 40 gay marrtages. "Let's say you !\av~ a aay lndlvlt,uol who h•• a hlah Income and bis partn~r In llte'1as a v~ry low tncomo." lie uu1 "They can 'l file a joint tax rtturn or lr\7thlna like that, •O th y lhO\tld bO cl up u a leaal partnentilp as f~ir a~ lax law s are <·onccrned .. Ray llarlman. a :~·ycar·old homost>xual allorn<'y. has helped ... cores of ga)S rece1v1ng ··Jesi.- t ha n honorable" discharges from lhl' mi Ii tar~ "IT'S SOMETIMES \C'n' hard to obtain employment "1th that krnd of discharge." sa)s Hartman "By law, they also are unable to obtain any kind of unemployment benefits. welfare, food stamps and other benefits." Many gays say their sexual preferenCl'S simply don't have any bearing on their business hvcs, a view frequently shared by personnel directors. "An individual 's sexual or1enlation is a part of his or her personaJ life which should not a nd does not play a part in any of these employment decisions." says George Skoglund, executive vice president for personnel administration with the Bank of America in San f'~rancisco . A LESBIAN REAL estate broker here who earns more than $100,000 annually says the fact that she h\'C'S with a woman "just isn't an issue " However. some gays say they have encountered problems in busanc.c;s because or their sexual pre ferences A 37-year-old mechanic says he lost his job in a Sa n Jose garage whe n his supervisor learned he was gay. The secret lives led by some homose'<uals has hurt the gay civil rights movement. says a San Francisco plumbing contractor "PROBABLY ONE OF the biggest problems in gays achieving equal rights Is that the whole group is hot obvious." he said. "Only a small percentage Is visible to people, and that is bee a use they ma stereotype.'· The contractor said he and other gays are afraid of physical violence In the wake of a recent killing ln which a 33-year-old San Flanclsco homosexual was s bbed to death by street to\r!. ·~ a n ot because or an e$:O ic siluaUoo or bec•use P m Uhamed oC who tarn," he s&Jd, "It's beca1.11e of family and my employes, who coul~ tulftr pb~alcally ii people fouad out. lt'• a shame.'' !\ff llJ YOP,.. tu> 'h, f ";lt _•,t••'J It I , .rt •'(I J tJ1I _1(1n I • ro11•1 f i oil' I\"' n ,..,,,1 r I'• r •iJt•1r t111 1o i • ur •fl't ~. 1n11n I r '' "''"., /\f;-1 hut l\t-Ar'roil "0 l1t /\V"' '1 b.J1f1\J Vi 6(4, Q A't) rl '· u ,, /\llv•·U Af'T\ fin A~ J:-u1n Atr (',,, t A "I·!' A'" r. lrV ,., ,... '""'"" A •·tr OJ A 1,11 f1 Anho U\ l' A 1.-'(I"' Af'r1 M •V' A,.-,y1 , A'(( hot /\1,\. .. \ t I A,air<f A• n,,~., ... "' A•'"" '?II fl"''''R' A' f'i,,,~ .. u r B.-.v1 A}.,. 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II . 1 •• fl I ,,i,q •I IJ •R hi I I I I \ ' :"'t. ,, ... .rmr r·•' t /1 "'", 1(,.• 11J .\rMH1 Ii NYSE COMPOSITE· TRANSACTIONS • Wedn•sd'Y July 6 1977 N DAILY PILOT •• Wde,Save Quiet Campsites Luted By SYLVIA PORTEil For a vacation advtinture on a 1hoestnn1 this summer, lry the ltttJe-known areas in America's National Park System. These off.the·beaten-path places offer as much or the nation's beauty and as vivid a portrayal of our heritag~ as at the well-known parks vi!>1led by millions eactt !\ummer. There's onedlffe rence -nocrowds Wber e to go? From the U.S. Department of Interior, the department responsible ror m~t naUonully uwned pubtic lands and natural resources. come these suggestions -THE DEEP SOUTH. LOOK INTO Horseshoe Ber\d National Mllitary Park. Daviston, Ala., 12 miles north ·01 Oadevllle and 18 miles northeast of Alexander Ci(y. Camping facUIUes ate nearby m Wind Creek State Par)( • Talledega National Forest and Mt. Cheaku State Park. The park ii. the site of the March 27, 1814, battle on the Tallapoosa River, when Gen. Andrew Jackson's forces broke the pO\H'r Money's Worth of the Creek Indian Confoderac:y and OPl!Ot!d Alabama dnd other parts of the old South to settlement -The Southwest. Arazon.i has a host ol lesser known pJrks offering picn1ckm~. campgrounds. \Centc drives. guided tours, museums, ruins, c ampfiro programs, vis itor <'enters, exhibits. Indian crafts and trading posts. Among the m : Canyon De Chelly Nation1tl Monument, Chinle: Casa Grande Rums National Monument, Coolidg~; Coronado National Memorial. llerdord; Fort Bowie National Historical Site, Bowie; Chlricahua National Monument, Wilcox. -Midwest : There are great parks an Michigan, Minnesota. Wisconsin and other nearby states IN l\llCH IGAN. PICTURED Roe-lo. National Lakeshore. Munis ing, is a superlative !>Ct.'nat.• an•a on Lak.e Superior with multi-colored i-:rndslorw d 1ffs, broad beaches. dunes. waterfalls. inland lakes, ponds, m arsho1t. hardwood und conalt.•rous fon·sts. numerous birds and a nimals Then• are pra m1t1vc camping s cn·1ces and stale campgrounds. fishm).!. hiking. sw1mmrni::. hunting. Meals a nd lodging arc availubl(' 111 Munising anti Crand l\lara1s. In Minnesota. lher(' 1s Vmagl·ur:-. Nutional P ark, International Fulls /\ w1ldt•rnl·~s t•xpc•rn•n<·c can be enjoyed m an historical setting the \\Orld of the French·Canad1ari Voyageurs -m the ron'sted lake country along the state·s northern border F1shmi::. boating, boal and canoe (acililre!>1 excursion and forest sn v1cc c.impgrounds all are there. Resort. motel and hotel facilit1c~ arc 1n ncarb\' International Falls · ln Wisconsin . Apostle Islands ~.1llonal Lakeshore, Bayfield, offers the dra matic blaut~ of rock~ islands an the middle of Lake Superior. largest frt'"h \\ ater lake m the world. The park is acc1·:-.s1bl~ b~ bo.11 k<Jvrng d.11ly from Bayfield. Meals and hm1ted looi;1ng ure :.1\ a1lablc m Bayfield. while the park offers churtcr hottt:.. f1i.hmg . limited sw1mmmg. sailing. huntmi:i. lru1h·r anrf rampsiles Stale campgrounds are 111 nl'arby Stockton l ~IJtHI -VIRGI NIA AND NORTH CAROU:'l:A. Sc,·eral historic sites provide exh1b1ts. tours, campmg and hiking trails from Appomattox National l11storical Park at Appomattox. Va .. to the Carl Sandburg Honw National Historic Sile at Flat Rock. N.C For g uides to off-beat holarlayc;, :-.end Sl tu thr Superintendent of Documents. ll.S GovC'rnment Pnnt1ng Office. Washing ton. D.C. 20-102 und rcqurst "Vi-..it a f.!'sser Used Park.·· As k for No 02Hl05·0058!'1 Market 5urrenders Tuesday's W-eak Gain· " NEW YORK CAP> -The stock m arket headed lower today after giving up Tuesday's weak od vance The Dow Jones average of JO 1ndustr1als. up 9-l Tues- day, wasoff5.86Points to907. 73. The downturn came despite widespread hopes for some favorable news when the government report" the Jun{· wholesale price index Friday. Nr w VortrtAP\ ~•N• Dow Jone •vtr•Of) $TOCIC$ Ootn HfQI\ lf;W Clo•" Cho JO Ind 011.&S OfS '.·1 '04 04 'l()l.1J-S 16 20 l rn ?37.78 ~.a. ,J~ 07 :11.1q 0 83 IS Utl 'IS.19 llS % "' ~S611~ Ill• 0 oq &S SI~ 311 SJ JU 116 ~.15 310.1• 1 lO lndu~ . , •.•••• , ..... , .. •• • I IU.SOO Tr en . . • . • •• .. • • • • • • • . • • Jlb.800 Ulll\ ••• • . • • .. • • ,. • • •11.lOO 65 SI• , . . ....................... 2.JOIJ,000 A ...erf<-an Le ader• NEW YOl>O' ""' H EW YORI( IAPI Aoorott fin.It ••. Prl'v :oo.v d"" °''I )Ht •··O 04> '13 4// 1"11() 1811 ~~ 111 ,, ,, ·NY \to<• '•Ith •.•.• 11.no.000 • ••••• 1•.U0,000 Pr .. lou\ «My •• w~o t00 •... Mont~ •QO •••• • YHr eQO •••• Two veer\ MIO .. ........... tt.000.000 .. • • • • • • • 11, 100.000 ••.•.•• tl,•11,1)0 J•n t 10 .WI~ • 191& IO <Ml• • 19H lo <1•1• • .. 7',l".l'JO 1.10•.0?0.0l~ •. Jt'l4 011,7aJ • 1 ..... 1ouoo WHAT AMIX 010 1'( W .,,n~lf AP Adv•"t'°" 01ttln•d Un<ft•n9'1' '"tel •~Wt' Ne-. 1•11 "'"""~ N•w '°'' 'O'*' p,, .. f()dAy CUY'• •I JOI "' 111 )11 ,... ~ ~·~ .. ~ ·• I AMEX )aLtS 4111>•0• linAI lol•I . StOC~ ••I~ v+er "90 t4C>P' o • t 11Wt bOftd • • • llond 'bl(>J w•• "90 • 1 w.o noo ..... 1.161.~ ~ . ·: ...... ~·s:v:: Sto<"lu In Tlae SpotUglu I I t . . . . . . .. -.... -. --~ so I 0 OAll y PILOT w.dn•l<f• Ju e. 1911 $6 Million Scottsboro Libel Trial Underway \\'lNC'lllo:."iTf-:R.1 t•1111 IA l'l - Tn.11 or II $11 n11lhon hhd •U•l 81.itni.t NJlC fo1 lhl• Ol'l\\Otk'i. pn•st•nlt1l 1on of · I utl1w II orion and thl' Scotl\born l\o) 1" b<!1l m' todiy 1n ft•<lc•r11l dbl rl(•t C0\11 l here Thr 111111 w,1" ltlt'll hy V1t·toru1 rrice Strl'el. 70. ono of l WO white GILLETTE "RIGHT GUARD" .. ~ .. ~ .. , , .......... DEODORANT Extra Strength Pain Reliever 60 TABLETS ggc woml'n \\ho cla1mt!d they were rupt.'d by nine bl.irk youths m northern Alabu1nu whilt• httchin~ u rld1: on a lcum Marrh 25, 1931 SHE CHARGES THE movie libeled her, slandered her and Invaded h e r privacy b y portraying her as a woman or SHAMPOO Th e shampoo for short hair Normal. . dry or oily 1 DZ. ggc Thick lash MASCARA or long 'n Lush MASCARA El 1.19 ONt S TRO«E EYE COLOR ,ggc questionablt! character and a perjurer. . The movie said, erroneously, that both women died in 1961. Both f1led suits, but the other woman, Ruby Bates or Yakima, Wash .• ha.s since died of c ancer. The "Scottsboro Boys," whose case became a symbol of racial ;:, HAIR NEEDS COMBS FOR COLOR T.V. Three Games: Hocker. Tennis ' Handball. Converts any standard T V. into an emt1ng .irena ol TV. "FARRAH" Fashion DOLL ftom MEGO HOLLYWOOD'S FASTEST RISING STAR! 12 11<" doll ha~ rooted hair with that ·sun streaked look .. an d real rooted eyelashes. inj ustice m the 1930s South, were tried three limes and most at one time faced death sentences Their final convictions were upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court, but all the defendants eventually were pardoned or paroled. "THE BURDEN IS on us to SUPERIOR rumK 20" BREEZE BOX 12" OSClllA TING FAN by PANASONIC ~ W~y OSt•ll•l•on dll'tlS dll f"nly on a taslom toclin( Jll #f 12114 27.88 VlllAWARl MIXER PITCHtR SINE-OFF s how that her privucy \\tis invaded.'' said Mrs. Street's attorney. Raymond Fraley of Fayetteville, Tenn. "We think the evidence should be limited lo the movie 11nd lo the transcripls of the Judge Horton trial," he said. He said he expects NBC to try to expand the range of evidence. Lawyet'B for NBC. however, said they will show lhe movie was based on court testimony and hlstor1cal records that show the character and credibility oC the two women was questionable. The burden or proof on lhe libel counts rests with the defendants. "G l EE M" FLUORIDE TOOTHPASTE With New CooJ Burst of flavor! NtW-from 'rocter & Gon*le REFRESHING "COAST" DEODORANT SOAP SUMPOO Washes in luslre' 16 Ol. CONDmOHER 9 8 Restores body' C 16 Ol. U. "FAUCET QUEEN" HOUSEHOLD NEEDS "SpRAY·SfRCAM;: ~· ATTACHM~T " f" for FAUCn 6 9 ~\ ~ fits unlhreaded C faucets • 100· 1 ~-, STRAIGHT IOURIOM I "SCRUBBER" Scrubs all cookware 3 gc . SINUS° MEDICIH( WHISKEY 6 YRS. OLD 8 09 ' 88C 1;, GAL. • 24 lllS Ill WI ti 1"""'9UI lltOl - ROL'AIOS ;ANTAdD .. raa IDlt ttlCl.S ftl It• mm. CON -TACT c!Pan Safe for · teflon • 13000 "HAIR SNARE" ~;; ) . Screen traps even 79 lrne hairs from your C drain' •1150 "SOCK LOCK" Keep socks SUF-ADNISIVE Plast!c Paper (j!Sy to · apply. 119 tr12.8' YIS. .·• 1 . paired through 79c washer & dryer · PAK OF 24 •3000 'SPACE FIGUllS "MICRONAUT" 9 ~ , 1'". I • · ..... -...... ' ... -'9 1:... .. . . ---..-.:::;"' @ntadina CONT ADINA TOMATO SAUCE 1.99cl O~ Plfatmaclsts are llitl!ty trained hi tlltir protesslo• ... let tllem help you 011 an questjta JOt llm abo•t medkltlols. ~Y·H PllilllACISTS All! • cetlf£t11S • •m ~ OillJftH The basic M1cronaut Unique transparent design' Your kids will have super Science F1chon lun! ngc #71000 ..a ' ll. {. '\{ 1 '{II} NEW/ PUREX "TOSS 'n SOFT" . FABRIC SOFTENER 8 oz. CANS 7~99c Asst. Flmrs 6 oz. CANS FAllnISS TINY KIT FEMININE SYRINGE Easy to use, comes with carry case, ideal for traveling. #2700 1. 79 PlAYTtX HAND SAVER GlOvtS Prot ec t your hands lrom hatsh deter~ents & cleansers. Asso rt ed 59c sizes Pl. BOX OF 20 SHEETS -69° . ; HOME .CANNERS. BEWARE: •. :· The Old Way's Not Always the Best By BAaBAAA GJtJS.llOWEN Oll .. Oolff•~-· .... Summer for many fru1al homell\akera meant atoc:klna up on fresh food barvottl for letis bountiful U mca ot the year. It abo m~ana that food wrttera like myself 1et inundated wtth matfrlala from various aov· emmenl offi~ and eootWQer a1encie. atreaa· ana the importance ot correct home canninJ pro- cedures. True. many homemaken have been putting up foods for centuries. with aeeminaly aood luck and edlbty-safe results. And. with the asalatance of these various aaencies and their resevch groups, a solid scienUClc bub now exists for de- \ 1sin1 sound processing schedules for home and commercial canrung. So why does further con- cern exist! IN 13 CASES of botulism reported from Oc- tober, 1975 through September, 1976, 12 were at· tnbuted to home-canned foods. Last Apnl, an outbreak of botulism poison- ing involving 45 persons was traced to home-canned green peppers used in preparing Mexican food in a commercial restaurant. No deaths resulted, reports the Institute of Food Technologists, but given the number of in· dividuals involved, It waa the worst outbreak ol botulism in U.S. history. H commercial canners. following gov· ernment-estabUshed procedures, have such an exceptional record of safety (the institute re- ports that five botulism deaths have been at- tributed to commercially canned food since 1940), why do home canners, who put up a much s maller inventory, get into trouble? According to the 11'"'1', It is mostly due to an aversion to change from the old ways of doing things to the new. Many home canners follow directions out of dated cookbooks, whose Instructions were de- veloped through hit-or-miss techniques, with Ut· tie scientific data on which to gauge heat- transfer rates, the effects of acidity, or the re- s istance of certain microorganisms to temperature increases. Effective home-canning depends on the com· bined effect of time and increased temperature on living microorganisms. As the temperature of the food Is raised sufficiently, thes e microorganisms die; and if the food is held at these temperatures long enough. it becomes es- sentially sterile, or edibly safe, free from pathogenic spores. THESE SPORES of bacteria vary in their re· sistance to heat. Clostridium botulinum, the culprit in question, is the most heat-resistant spore, according to IFT s tudies. And , depending on the acidity of the food, temperatures above boiling point may be required before they are destroyed. For this reason, a pressure-canner is often recommended for use in home canning, since it reaches temperatures above boiling. The length of processing time depends on the rate at which heat reaches the coolest , or innermost, portion of the container, to bring it up to a lethal tem- perature. A survey of home canning by the Universi- ty of Minnesota in 1973 indicates that most spoilage of acid foods occurs when the open- kettle canning process is used. Current USDA re- commendations to home canners stale that open- kettle canning is safe only for jams and jellies containing sugar. Many veteran canners, the institute reports. simply refuse to abandon the open-kettle method as well as the water·bath methods of processing, especially if they've been blessed with seemingly safe results. Even some "'recently published "back-to·nature" cookbooks include instructions for water-bath processing of low-acid foods. Summer's Souper For Winter's Stores Ir your household features a fi s hing enthusiast, you know what savory sensations and savings this means for your table and budget. Now, if you also have a pressure canner, you can take extra advantage of your fisherman's fortunes. Cut the flesh into pieces, cook it up with basic flavorings and can It! Your reward will be a pantry of soup bases that you can mix with other vegetables, other seasonings - even wine -for delicious family meals throughout the year. While you're at lt, pack some jars with Corn·Tomato Chowder Base too, now that both com and tomatoes are plentiful. To serve either soup, combtne with 1 cup milk and 1 cup peeled, diced potatoes. a cup of fresh peas, or simply, fresh parsley. Boil gently over a low name 1().15 minutes. Garnish with a pal of butter or cooked, crumbled bacon and pass a tray of freshly made Smokey Joes. Just a reminder -you must use a pressure canner to preserve fish with safety. It's low-acid and requires higher· than-bolling temperatures (240°F .) t.oldll unwanted critters. 7 cups fresh whole kernel corn 7 cups peeled and diced, fresh tomatoes 2 teaspoons crumbled basil 2 teaspoons salt 1 cup water 14 teaspoon cayenne pepper Fry bacon in a large kettle until crisp. Pour off drippings. Add onions and cook until tender, not browned. Add remaining ingredients. Boil 10 minutes, stirring constantly. Pack into clean hot pint jars, leaving 1-inch bead space. (Add bolling water if more liquJd is needed.) Work out air bubbles. Adjust lids. Proceas pints SS minutes at 10 pounds pressure. Yields 6 pints. SMOKEYJOES 3~.pound package smoked link sausage 1 pound ground beef 1 medium-sized onion, chopped 1 1-pound can peeled, solld- pack tomatoes 1 Q..ounce can tomato paste 1 tablespoon chili p0wder 1..bay leaf !,-\ teaspoon salt • IA teaspoon ground black pepper. Dozen round buns But IFT research clearly shows the inade· quacy of theae procedures in preventtng the growthofbotuli. Jn.stead, lbe following steps for safe home- canning are recommended: -Use a properly functioning pressure can· ner for all vegetables (tomatoes are a fruit>. meals, poultry and seafood. -Have the seal and pressure gauge on the canner checked regularly to assure accurate temperature control. -Use the boiling-water-bath method only for fruits, fruit juices, purees, tomatoes and pickles in vinegar or citric acid, following timetables ex· actly. -Use the open-kettle or "hot pack" method for canning jams and jellies only that contain sugar (no substitutes). Follow timetables ex- actly. -In caMing combination foods, such as stews, soups or specialty items, select process- ing times and temperatures on the basis ot the in- gredient with the least acid. For example, a few tomatoes does not make canned~ stew a higb- acld food. -Do not can overripe fruits and vegetables, especially tomatoes. -Thoroughly wash and/or peel any fruits and vegetables to remove pesticides. -Do not overpack jars. Allow adequate "head space.'' -Do not re-use sealing lids or cracked or chipped jars, or Jars not designed for canning. -Do not eat canned foods that show any sign of spoilage-not even one taste. .. BOTUUSM is one of the most toxic of all poisons," says Harvey Lee of the State Health Department and Drug Section. "Even a taste can be deadly." When in doubt as to a food's safety, throw it out -away from children and pets, Lee advises. If commercially canned, put it in a safe place and contact the m arket or food distributor. a local bureau of the Health Department or of. fice ol the FDA. This action could ~ave someone else's life. For added safety, boiling of all home·canned foods is recommended before serving. At least 10·15 minutes at a full boil should deactivate any , toxins that may lie dormant. he said; plus, ir the rood is spoiled, boiling will intensify the off-odor of the product-a certain advisory to dump. Botulism poison attacks lhe central nervous system -which is why it 1s so deadly -occur- ring in a gradual paralysis. "The earliest symptoms which can occur anywhere from 12 to 24 hours after eating con- t~ted food often affect the eyes,'' said Lee. 'The individual's vision may be blurred. His eyelids may droop. He may even have double vision. Eventually the limbs will become numb," he said. AS PARALYSIS progresses to arms and legs, nerve centers controlling the musculature of the diaphragm are also affected, constricting chest activity until breathin~ 1s stopped. Lee urges that anyone who samples contami- nated food -or food Sul.peeled of being con- taminated --get medical attention as soon as possible, and save the food so health offtc1als can examine it and take necessary mca::;urcs to pre- vent its distribution. This season, when garage :-.a les, !'>lrcct parties/bazaars and other non commercial ac· livities abound, no precaution is superfluous in ensuring a healthy, happy summer. Foods most commonly involved in botulism poisonings. reports the fo~DA. are beans , corn. peppers, spinach and asparagus. BARBARA GIUS-BOWEN, Food Editor Wednesday, July 6. 1977 CI Cut sinok~ sausage links into coin-sized slices. Brown beef In a large saucepol; add onion and cook wttll transparent. 1 A chowder baae you can at home becomes a hot picnic COl'npanion to SmQl{ey Joes. Brandy flavors a creamy chicken soup like you've never tasted before. Add smoked ou"'e, saute, then add tomatoes (cut up), tomato paste and seaaonings. Cover and simmer 2 boun. (Or, you can combine evetythh\g In a slow cooker and heat on low 5-45 bou~.) Serve mlxhare on touted bans, allowlllC about ~ cup per servtns. Makes 10-12. Here are some other IOdper ideu for summer meals. Follow them up wltb . fruit salad.a or cold \receta'ble platea and peg a basket« warm bread. ZUcaDNJ SOUP 4 CQP1 chiclteq broth 2 ODIODI. chopped fthe ~cup butte!' or m._....m. , I wbole wccbial. urapared and alleed ~·lncb thlck 1 teaspooe each, bull And tarrap u m..num pouto.. pieled ellCldked Sllllt-~ tn~b o••• or tar•• HU~ MN Clftio,ll la ~ unW .-..; addnccatl • ,.... ~tbel.. liirctb. ·~ ... ~. Md brlni to • ~ COir• aOd simmer30 mlnutes. Tum off heat and blend -small l>Ortions at a time -in electric ' blender or food proceaor until amooth. Return t~ pot and keep warm untl aervJn1 time. Sprinkle wltb paprika. Set'Yet"8. ,-" > with grated_f~~ Serves 6. BEER GAZPACHO 1,-\cupoliveoil 4 tablespoons lemon Juice 6 cups tomato juice 1 can beef broth 1 cup beer 2 medium tomatoes, peeled and chopped 'Al cup finely chopped onion 2 cups finely minced celery '4 teupoon Tabasco 2 teatpoooualt ~teaspoon pepper 2 'Teen p~ppers. finely chopped 2 cucumbel'I. peeled and diced Croutons Beat tog~t oU and lemon Juice. Stir ln tomato juice, bed broth, beer, tomato, onloo, ¢elery, Tabaco, nlt and pepper. Tut• f« IUIOn1'•· Chill' tor at. JHtt tbree b«Marl. Ser" wlt.b peppers. cucurnben, croutonl Hparatel1 -th• pep~r~1 cucumbers ad croutou aDOUICl b• paeaed and added tadtvlduaU1. ;v1e1d. I to I servings. CHICKEN-BRANDY BISQUE 1-':I cup julienne-cut ca.l'l'Ot strips '4 cup chopped green onlon 3 tablespoons butler v. cup sifted flour 1-'l tea.spoon salt· Pinch ol thyme Dash of nutmeg Dash of white pepper 1 10~~ ounce can chicllen. broth '4 cup brandy l cup whipping cream 1A cup milk 1 cup finely chopped.~ ch le ken Saulo carrots and onions tlowty ln butter just until carrots are tender. Stir in tlour, •ell! nutmeg, thymo and wb\l pepper. Slowly 1dd chicken~ and brandy and heatt.o bol~. Lower heat. and almrner alirr•ng conatantly, unul thlcktnod Add cream, milk Md chicken. Return to •hnm~ ?flakes ucrvlnp I ~ /1•' •It· I fl• I•" • '' tit, • ; t, r l ~ ' " ,,,,J tli.1 "l't• r , ''" , Delicatessen Buddig' s 4 Jc MEATS Se\ en '1ir1rl ie' 'l 01. 1Familv Pak f1 or !l9cl American Singles 79c l\rnlt . '"11 h ~111 t· wrnppC'cl x 111 pk~ Cream Cheese . 59e Franks BALL Pm •••• s l 19 'I hf'\ plump '" fht•\ n111k' lh "' Orange Juice . . . 39c \'11.1 P11k d111l1·cl IH "' ~In.,, SLICED SWISS F'rozen Food ORANGE 59c JUICE Trt>esweef'., lin1· q111il1ty' l:! 111. French Fries . . . 49c L\ 1irirn FR rm' in f hr '.! po11ncl boi: Dinners cu. . ... 79e Chicken Chm' ~!em. Pepper Oriental Enchiladas ..•.• s 1°9 Van de Kamp'11 Reef nr C'heei.e' 19 01 Macaroni .., Cllll( • _33e \'an de Komp's .. 10 oun('I' packaite Entrees swMSWs •••• sge Fried Chicken. Ch1ckP n Nibbles, Fl"h 'n' Chipl' N Turkey SHERBET Choice of navoni 7 9 ( Springfield half-gallon • • • and it beg ins with Butcher Shop Service! Old faahioned butchers behind the counter are something of a rarity these days. But - 1f you're an El Rancho Super-Shopper, you know that service makes th.e difference. You get exactly what you want, the way you want it. No bel111 to ring, no buzzers to &0und. Our experienced knowledgable butchers are always there to help you get the most in meat And the quality is always the top end of U.S.O.A. Choice beef and lamb -and the freshest pork, poultry and fish! Try El Rancho thi1 week -you'll enjoy the difference in the market, and at the dinner table! U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF . • • plus • • • PL11S REAL LIVE BUTCHERS! Round ltBak m~.:mcE .......... 1l/ll. En1ov th<' qunl1I\ vou'rr cn111lt•cl '" lt·•in 11•nrlPr l S)) A Cholc'<' twrl ... trimnwd lor \111111' and pricrd for 1illl1~tartion Swiss Steak ... s 1°\ HDuncl 1·111 l ' S ()A <'h111<,. lw1·I Omaha Roast .. s l 2~ Th1rk round rut l ' S () A ( 'h1111'e het'I Hound cut l' S D.A t hu1«.• hel'I Stew Beef •.... 515\ Extru lean. honeles~ l'.S 0 A. rhowf· Sliced Bacon •.. 511\ El Hanrh11':. th1rker "ranch style" Teriyaki $189 STEAK 1b Boneless top round -Choice beef Ground Beef mM' s 1°\ I Rlln dnel' not. ex reed :.!:.!' o flit Beef Rib Bones 69\ Meaty! Choice'. bake or barbecue CHUCK 69c STEAK 1b Center cut. U.S.D.A-Choice beef Ch&Banbriand ::cE .......... ~3. 7 ll. The t>pifume of dining del11:ht' T!'ndt>r 11nd dt·l1ci11u-.I\· ju1rv hl'arl flavor Tenderloin of l .S.l>.A. Choice beef (fJ.U llCU ••• 3.99 •) Chicken ~:.~ . 89\ ralifornia grown ••. 5 lb~ and up Sausage nALIAll sTYU • s 12\ \\'e make it thl' "olcl world" wav' SPARE s139 RIBS FUSH! lb Fresh and meaty from Eastern pork Ham Loaf OVDI u v •• s 1 2~ Ham, Pork, Fresh Egl(s and numbi; Ground Beef WllST s 12\ does not exceed 15', fat rent. rut (CHOPPEI STUKS ... l I* • ... U9 •I WE FEATURE GENUINE MILK-FED VEAL Louk for the difference! a difference in freshness, too! Beef Liver ••••• 69\ Fresh! Young! 'fender! ••• l'\utritious! P t . SJ29 as ram1 . • • . • • . • Ready to eat by the piece! (SUCOl 1.59 •I ~:~~ER69~ Large Gr. "A'' fryer (with giblets) P1ach11 FREESTONE. ............ 8IL1 / Sweet and juicy, with firm yellow meat that'& blell&ed with lu11cious navor! PAPAYAS Tropical treat 4 9 C from Hawaii! M Mellow flavor Bell . 39c . ~p~~~ Large, for value • . POTATOES U.S.No. l 2 29"' White Roee ~ all pufp08e lbs You'll love the difference in El Rancho service! FRESH FllETS! s:.=r s1 1! Firm and flavorful! Broil them! Crab Legs ••••• s21t Meaty and delicioua! Alukan crab Mahi-Mahi. ••••• s1 2t The treat you enjoyed in Hawaii! Catfish. • • • • • • • • $ l 5t Skinned and headlese-fresh frozen Sand Dabs nm •• s21t Bread them for skillet cookery P. s799 rawns om FMCY. • • .. Green shrim p, shell on! 4-5 per lb. Colorado $1''•b PERCH All cleaned and pan-ready! Liquor Dep't. T ., SJ99 equ1 a savn0o •••• El Rancho's own label! Fifth 1Seagram' s Gin • s9 99 A name you know! save 1.30! ~z gallon Seagram's1Ctow .. $119' Blended whiskey reduced l.50 Mi gal Lord Calvert ••• s599 Save ~on Canadian whiskey-quart White Horse ••• ss99 Great 11cotch reduced 1.41-fifth Kamchatka ••••• sgas Fine vodka! Save 61~ on 1.75 liter PAUL MASSON Bu.wind~, Chablis, $ J 29 Role, Rhine, Vin Roee MAGNUM Tomato Juice ...... 39c M.D •. 79c TISSUE C k SUNSHINE 49e rac ers KRlsPv •••••••••• You'll love the tmghL clean flavor or Springfield ... 46 ounce ('8n l · Cake Mixes ........... 55c Your rhoice of Betty Crocker'11 tempting layer cake v&rieties et this price ·-Hawaiian Punch 49~ ('hnn11e the f11miliar Red, or Low-Su1tar nr Grape or Berry~ 46 ounce ron Dressing ....... age Your choice French, 1000 laland! 16 oz fAlSTAFr $ 129 er SIXPMI ••••••• n of 1i1 12 oun~ cans Top Ramen • • • • 22c ln•tant noodlte -all navora -3 o~ rton's Clams &9c Chopped or Minced! 8~ 01 ~ea1!"a..~~~! p!~2 ~~~opt. Rice Chex • • • • • • &9c Four roll pack -colors or white Priu6 in effect Thur. July 7 througla w~. July 1.1 Opm daily 9 to 9 Swul.y 10•to 1 No sal.t!6 to dealeni And cri11py they are, whether you choaee 1al~d or unMlledt l6 ot pkg S·hasta Mixers . 29c Club Soda, Ginger Ale, Lemon· Lime, Quinine or Collins Mlx! liter Cat Food •uvEs ... ~ .. 5 ,.,$1 rhooee Kit.ty'1 favorit.e verieties -and p t plenty at this price! 6V. o; can •• Campbell's Soup 23c Cream of Chicken -10~' ounce can ~try ~!J!~i.~~c~e :C ~e Noodle Roni • • • • 49c Ro!1>anoitor Parm .. no! 6 Cl pq. Cereal:=-••••• 79c Borateem Plus. s111 Makes laundry euierl Big 100 os pq Cat FoocHfl& •••• _59c · Purina'• Moiat -12 oa -all tlawra T' \ Wednesday, July 6 1977 DAILY PILOT C3 In a Jam? Zap Your Berries HIGH PROTEIN Strawbtr,, Jam in Ion lb an 10 mlnutet., Jmpoa1bJe, you HY"' P'oc-IUJ'e, lt'a ponlblt• In fact, with the maalr of microwave, cooklni time ia Jen than lhat rt' quJred for J>N!par at Ion why not tak~ udvuntaae of the htrv\'!ll und pn· Hr Vt' fort at er U.IU.• ' FRE II STRAWBERRY FREEZER JAM Wash and hull 1 quart ripe fresh strawberries Select farm berru~s with bright red color and no bruises. Place berries 1n large mixing bowl and t·ru:.h with a potato Wlt • .b the frwt. pl~nUful, And, 1puakma or pll·n llful, t'rt-sh fru1t.s. they art" dt-hclou!> an upMdt> down caJce11 , madc-1n a J1fry an of couri.e -a mac·rowavi.> Melon Spiced For Spunk From garden to Jar: two easy, delightfully differ ent condiments to store for winter from fresh melons on now! SPICED PRESERVF.D CANTALOUPE J pounds firm ripe can t a loupe 1 tablespoon whole allspice l tablespoon chopped crystallized ginger 1 thinly sliced lemon. :.eeded 31~ cups sugar 1 cup light corn syrup 'z cup water •,,cup dry white wine 1 • teaspoon uniodized salt Halve cantaloupe from stem end to blossom end: discard seed and stringy pulp. Cut each half into quarters. Remove skin. Slice melon pieces crosswise into s li ces abo ut 3 1 inch thick Measure 6 cups. Tic allspice and ginger in cheesecloth b;.ig to make spicebag. In 5-quart stainless :.leel or enamel sauccpot place spicebag, lemon, 2 cups of the sugar , corn syrup, water. wine and salt. Stir ring occasionally. bring to boil over medium-high heat. Reduce heat; add cantaloupe• Stirnn~ occasionally, bring to boil and boil gently about 20 minute:-. Remove from h<>al. place plate on fruit to hold b<>low syrup level Let stand overnight Remon· plate; star in remaining 112 cup:-. sugar. Stirring occastonally. br mg lo boil and boil gt•ntly about 20 minutes Or until rru1t IS transparent and syrup is thick Skim surface . remove spicebag. Immediately pack can- taloupe into clean hot ~2-ptnt Jars. Pour boiling syrup into Jars. completely covering cantaloupe and leavmf.{ '•·inch headspace. Wipe top edge with damp towel. Seal according to Jar manufac turer's directions. Process in boiling water bath 5 minutes . Cool on wire rack or folded towel. Label and slorc in cool dark place. Make:. about 4 < • 2-pinl) jars. PICKLED WATERMELON R I ND Rind from l 120 lb> watermelon Water 1.1 cupumod1zedsJlt 4 cups sugar 2 bottles (16 ounces each> Karo light corn syrup 2 cups white vinegar .t cinnamon stack:. 2 tablespoons\\ hole clove:. Trim off outer thin skm from watermelon rind. cul rind into 1-mch pieces Measure 28 cups In 12-quart saucepot cover rind \\tlh water, stir in salt Stirring occas1onally, bring to boil over high heat and boil 10 to 15 minutes or until rind 1s transparent but still tender cris p Pour into colander. dram I hour. In 5-quart saucepot. place sug ar. corn syrup, vinegar. cin namon sticks and cloves. Stirring freq ucnlly. bring to boi I over high heat. Placc rind m very large bov.J . add syrup Cover. refrigerate ovcrnighl. On second day. drain syrup 1nto 5-quart saucepol and bnni.: to bot I O\ C'r high heat. Pour O\'C'r rind m bowl Cover: refngeratl' overnight On fourth day, in 12·quart saucepol place nnd and syrup Stirring frequently bring to boil over high hl'al lmmed1atl'I~ pack rind mto clean hot pint Jars. distributing spices equally Pour boiling syrup into Jars, complete ly covering rind and leaving 1 ~ inch headspace Wipe top l'dgc with damp towel. Seal according to Jar manufacturer's d1r<'ct1ons Process in boiling water bath 10 minutes. Cool jars on Wtr<' rack or folded towel. Makes 6 !I pmU jars . masher or pastry blender Measure 2 cups of berry pulp Cadd water, it necessary to equal the 2 cups of pulp>. Turn pulp back into the same large mixing bowl Star m 4 cups sugar . Relish It Now The following recipe was successfullv tested in the Associated Press kitchen. PEPPER REUSH 1 small tomato 1 small onion, peeled 4 or S large sweet green peppers, seeds re· moved 7 cups sugar 1 1 :? cups cider vmegar l bottle (6 fluid ounces> hqu1d fruit pee· lln Cut tomato in half l'rossw1sc>. squeeze out seeds and discard. Using the finest blade or a food grinder. grind the tomato and onion and turn into a 2 -cup measure. Grind the pep- per s and turn into a strainer to dram. with a spoon, press out liquid: add enough of the pre- p a red peppl·r to thc tomato and onion to makc2cups. Turn mto a 4 or 5-quart saucepot. Stir m the sug· ar and vinegar Over high heat bring to a full rolling boil a nd stirring constantly, cook at this rolling boil for t minute. Remove from heat and at once stir m the peclln. With a large metal spoon. skim off the foam : stir and skim for 5 m111ull•s l .. adle quickly into hot -;terilt1.ed glasses or wide-mouth fruit Jars. _;:;..,-= -Q-=:_.,j,_;;;-=--"Q~..;. ~&;:;\~.,..>,-~ Yogurt Tops 'Em C utting calorie:.. but not nutrients? Try top· ping cobblers and other cooked fruit desserts with plain yogurt instead of whipping cr eam or ice cream. Sweeten 1l, if de· sired, with a drizzle of honey. A super sweet 'n :.our combination unfoldi. when you first whip real cream with a little sugar or honey, then fold in h alf the amount of plain yogurt. This can dress up fresh fruit, Jello, or sim· pie, unfros ted cakes warm from the oven. CHOPPING BLOCK<S:>< 1160 SUMR.OWH.. COST A MESA SUMFlOWIR 4TF41•VliW 545 0637 DAILY 10 A..M..-71'.M. • GROUND BEEF SALE LEANEST • • . .. • . . • . 9 9 c LI. WHOLE FIL~ET 5. 7 LI .. . . . . . . . . . . s I 99 LI. N.Y. STRIPPERS s 199 LI. SIDE OF BEEF USDA CHOiCE •••• sac LI. FRESH WHOLE TOP S1RLOIM ;:'lA~-.......... s 1 ss L1._ WHOLE s 199 SPEMCER • . . . • . • . LI. USDA PRIME c SIDE OF BEEF •••• 8 9 Lt. mix well. Let stand for 10 minutes. In a H2-quart bowl, combine 3 • cup water a n d one I ~. · o u n c e package powdered fruit pectin (this size bowl 1s necessary to prevent the mixture from boiling over>. fresh rhubarb. Cut into thin shces (you should have about 21~ cups) Add rhubarb to sugar mixture 1n baking dish; toss llll well coated. Spread rhubarb mixture over bottom of dish. In mixing bowl. pre- pare one 14.5-ounce Cook at HIGH 2 to 21".I minutes or till boiling. Stir. Boil at HIGH for I minute. Stir pectin; add to berries. Stir berry mixture gently for 3 minutes. package coconut-pecan 1~~~~-"-~~~~=-~~~~~~~~------~ Ladle berry mixturc quickly into plastic freezer containers or scalded glass freezer Jars (If you wail too long to ladle Jam into ('On tainers it will start to :.et up n ght in the bowl) Cover and let stand 24 hours or till berry mix lure 1s set Store up to three weeks in refrigerator or up to one year in freezer. Makes 5 half-pmts jam. EASV RH UBARB UPSIDE DOWN CAKE Melt 3 tablespoons but- ter or m argarine in 8x8x2·inch baking dish al HIGH for 30 to 45 seconds. Stir in •" cup sugar; set as1dc Wash and tnm I pounrt snack type cake mix ac- cord 1 ng lo package directions (do not mix m baking dish>. Carefully spoon batter over rhubarb mixture; spread batter evenly with a spatula. Cook at MEDIUM HIGH 14 to 15 minutes, giving baking dish a quarter turn every 3 minutes to ensure even rtsang or the cake batter. Let cakt· stand 1 to 2 rmnutes. Place serving plate ato~ cake. Invert cake plate and baking d1sb together. Carefully hft off baking dish. Cut cake m squares. Serve warm with dollops of whipped cream, whipped topping or big scoops of vanilla ice cream For a different twist. try oth(•r flavors of cake or use a different fruit and adjust sugar accord- ingly ( tlead& 5houlde1S 1 sho111po<> CUT ALONG ooneo LINE TAKE THIS COUPON TO YOUR STORE SAVE10¢ ..• " .. .. . ., :l t DAIL V PILOT W<1dnHdav Julv 6 1971 By OON KENDAL.I. A" ,. •''" Wrlltr WASlllNCiTON I A I' J A ~<'n1111 A.:ril·ultur e Tucker Foreman heads the panel She recently added four nt•w mcmberi. to the panel, including three cancer research st•1ent1SL'> claims. As a result. the expert panel was set up to assess the impact of nitrites on the food supply. Panel Looks At Cures For Nitrites Oepc1rtml'nt orf1t·11.1l '>I.I~ i. 1l !!> t1mt• ror a closer look at tht' 11<.1ttinUul cuncer risks of usm& sodium 111tr1te to t•urc meat Bacon, hams, hot doge; and many other meat und poultry produrt~ are treated with nitrite to prevent the growth o( buctcna that can cause botulism. a deadly food pol~on It also is added to K1ve the products an appl'l1tmg rosy color. But under certain cond1t1ons, such as an fry Ing bacon with h1&h heat or m the normal human d1gest1vc prcx:eu, nitrite can combine with other ~ubstances to form a nitro~amine. which some author1ues say l!I among the most potent of can· ccr causing agents A panel or t'XPl'rls originated by the Agriculture Department nearly three years ago met last week to examine evidence relating lo nllritei. and cancer. Ms. Foreman. as i.bc prefers to be called, said sbe expects "some cluhes" among panel members regardjng nitrite and cancer "I'm also trying to do this decision-making in the calmest possible rastuon, Without baVLOg people go gallopmg off screaming in every direc- tion," she saJd in an interview. "IT'S VERY HARD. The Industry people are upset and the consumers -ii you start saying to them 'eat bacon and you're going t.o &el cancer' are going to be upset.'· A 1972 suit filed by the Center for Science in the Public Interest as ked that the chemical be banned as a potential carcinogen because sub- stitutes for curing meat arc available. Butt she satd the punt! has not raced lbe cancer iuuo squarely and, until only now, has foeused on benefits of nitrite in preventing botulllm. "I don't want to frighten people unnecessari- ly. but I 'm 1wom to uphold the law tbat prohibt\8 the adulteration or meat and poultry producta, and I want t.o make absolutely certain tbat we · carry tbat law out,'' Ms. Foreman said. She said she expect.a the panel's final report by Sept. 30. "I would hope that they wUl be able to show a direction that wiU be clear and eaaily ac· compllsbed. but I'm not totall¥ hopeful that dtheroflhose Uungs will gappen,' sbesaid. · Even if the panel makes a firm recommen· dation on the use or nitrites, 1l will be months before the department makes a decision on re· ducmg or eliaunatmg the chemical in meat and poultry. Spea r Some En trees Catch the season's last tt'nder spears for these dinner sensations. Buy a pound and a haH, rinse, cut ofr tough ends and steam upright over boil- rng, salted water, about 6 minutes. Use a pound for the pie recipe, save the rest for salad the following night. Chill in lemon juice with a peeled garlic clove for added flavor. ASPARAGUS PIE 3 tables poon s margarine 1 tables poon corn starch :i.• teaspoon salt 1/1 teaspoon pepper 1 cupm1lk •.~ cup real mayon·· naise 1 p0und hot, cooked asparagus 1 tablespoon lemon juice 1 baked (8 inch l pastry shell ·~ cup grated Romano or Parmesan c·heese In 2-quart saucepan melt margarine over m edium heat. Star an corn starch, 1 1 teaspoon or the salt and pcppl'r. Remove from h e a t Gradually stir in milk, mixing until smooth . Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly, '11nt1I mixture comes to boil and boil 1 minute. Stir small amount or corn starch mixture into real mayonnaise. then s tir into mixture in sa ucepan.Cutasparagu~ into 2 or 3·inch leni(ths. Toss with rcma1111ng 1'2 teaspoon of the salt and lemon Juice. Line pastry shell with half or the asparagus. cover with half of the re· al mayonnaise mixture. Repeat. Sprinkle with grated cheese. Broll about 6-inches from source or heat, 2 to 3 minutes or until golden. Makes 6 servings. COTTAGE CHEESE ASPARAGUS SALAD •a cup cream style cottage chttse 1.a cup real mayon· naise 1 tablespoon finely chopped onion 1 112 teaspoon salt 1 2 teaspoon paprika 14 teaspoon sugar Dash ground turmeric Stir together cottage cheese, real mayon· naise, onion, salt, paprika, sugar and turmeric. Makes 1 cup. Serve wHh ch1llcd, cooked asparagus. Assistant Agriculture Secretary Carol Ms. Foreman said the court dismissed the case on procedural grounds without rullng on the SYATIR BROS MONIY B ACtc GUAAAHTU ON QUALITY MIA 0 I lflJ' tJ•frt rJf _.,, • 1" IN• JN{1•llt'.)l"4:• ''I' ·lA~a~''l l IC, loot 1 .. •.1 ''''-' I')• • J1J'1 "' ,ul • .-+11 '" , ... ,, •l•J\\' "' ,,. ,j ROUNDSTIAK •••• • ao111uss LB. ~ ~ ~ ,,~Jr-----------,~ '•at1SH1•,SuCLlD1_1• 69C ls·u· ..... NClR-.. -H.0-l'o-. N-,.-YMA-R r-.A ... -TSIC_C_O!-.~,·----' %~ ~~ IU'. SMAU .:,. .. •• •• • 1 29 Ml'. CMllCtl. POT I; • v u 5 9 c '\t._, ~ Ria ROAST ~!~"' •• • ARM ROAST .. fAOl .. O,..,,._,•\l><tD 79c l~HY•Sl.ICID $12• MU•CMUCll COOllD HAM •ot P•, u ••n .. ••OllH •ACOll :.;: ,.. 7•-aoAST '"""'""'•"' 89c WH ITING ,, 49c 1m•10Hnm $1 ~. 1t1l'·~·.,..~u WIENERS Ile P•<; IA ••lSH<•OllH s 11 • STIW .MaAT ' .. ......_ ..... 98 c TURBOT FILLET •• 111n•C..uc"11•-,e1.m $I~· ... ,.~·~ru •• SllOULDIR ..... l• n•SnAK $139 ,.s1s• la . ,. $1 •• CU-STIAIC . 79~ .Sc Mlf•kADt.C:Uf 79c .l• CllUCK STIAK ..... l• 9.c • ., .... "'''"°" '"1 $1 3 9 u . RtaSUAK ~~~~ ... ,, •1•••v·1.0l'I •21s le. T•80lll STIAK ...... • 159 llll'•lO"l•Sf[,~ •21 l• NRftRHOUSl ... l• •1 •• ll(lf •LOI"• STU~• IONlll ~ s21 t •• TO• SIRLOIN .. ... •• ! 11 Ol 32C s419 =' ~ 01 • ~ ·• BANANAS 1-0l lllCK ! '' SllAllPOO tt-Ol. . a1mc11111 llllSI e -UCDll• • P.M~~ • SJ39 $ CIPACOL e M•nrwASH " '""°' s219 f::~ t Ol • ·: LAROE • CENTRAL AMERICAN • GOLDEN RIPE 14~ CORN LAAOE •EXTRAFANCY•SWEETITENDEA BA BISCUITS EA. .. :~~· ! 1 5 «i ' I ~ HOUSE PLANT couus · 4-9~ IH•'•POt • C&. . ,,, . . .• . , .. . ·~ . ~j . ·' ·~· • J, , . ·'»'• I'• • ti . ' ' •. A' ... ., '·•t" ... ,., .• "'. ... ~. •,· ,, I . ( ·. .•., ! ., .. ·,, I! I t/. '. 11 ,,. .'I .. .,,.. . '"' , .. .,,- ~t:• """ ,.,-,,; : •• J. ·, 0 ' •1>.1: ·~J i(~ • ., ,, .. •· ">i ,,. J .:.: .... Create Your Own Scoop Summer 1s the scuson for a variety or SCOOP!'> Make your own 1<'l' cream and sec all thC' flavors you can create For a creamy, ric h consistency, you can UM' sweet\lned. c ondensed n\ilk or whole egg:.. BUTTE R SCOTC H PECAN ICE CREAM l ( 14-ounce> can s weete ned condensed milk 1 cup water 2 cups (l pmll light cream 1 ~ cup c h o pped pecans ' :i cup c o a r :-. t' I y C'rushed butterscol<'h c·andy Combine 1ngred1c nb in ace cream freezer con tainer. Proceed accord ing to manuracturer's tn slruct1ons Two (1 1 " ounce) Englis h tofrt'l' c andy bars may be suh stiluted for butterscotch CINNAMON CANDY 1 (14-ounce l can sweetened condens ed milk 1 cup water 2 cups ( 1 p1nlJ li ght cream 1 i cup coars eh crushed hard chmamon <'andy Additional crushi•d candies for garnis h. OP· tional Combine 1ngrcd1e nb m ice cream freezer con tainer. Proceed accord mg to manufacturer's m structions Garnish as desired. Crushe d o ran ge o r le mon drops can be s ub st1tuted for cinnamon balls APRICOT ICE CREAM (Makes 2 quarts) I (17 -ouncc I can upricot halves, dramcd and coarsely chopped l (14-ounce > can Eagle Brand Sweetened Condense'<! Milk 1 cup waler 2 cups < l pint> light C'ream· 1 tablespoon vanill<1 extract · Combine ingredients in ice cream freezer con· tainer. Proceed accord ing to manuracturer's in struct1ons CRANBERRY ALMOND ICE CREA~1 1 cupmalk I cup sugar 4 egg yolks 1 • teaspoon salt 4 egg whiles. stamy beaten 2 cups (1 pinl> heavy cream, whipped l can (1 pound l whole berry cranberry sauce l can (4 counces) c h o p ped toasled alm onds Combine milk, sugar and egg yolks. Beal until smooth. Cook over very low heat. stirring con- stantly unlit mixlure coats a spoon and thickens sliahtly. Chill until cold. Gently fold in egg whites. heavy crea~ cranberry sauce at>d almond.a. Pour m ix- ture lnld a freezer con- tainer and heeze until firm. • • . _W_ed_n_esd~a.y._J_u~~-6_.1_9_7_7~~~~~~_..;;,0_At~L~Y~P~tl~O~T~~C~a~ \:) r Bird Turns Out Tangy Grill Feed .., Planrung a barbecue but befudtlled by what cookmg to put on the g_nll? A favonte alternative to Note: Start c han ·oal fare about JO manutei. meat is turkey, cooked to a crusty turn on the before you begin cooking r1gunng J hours s pit, and flavored with a tanay barbecue suuce minimum for a 6·8 pound bird, on up to 411 hours l.EMON-BU'M'ER BARBECUEDTURKEV 12 cup fresh lemon Juice 2 tablespoons Worcesteri.hire sauce 14 cup brown sugar 1 teaspoon salt 14 leaspoon garlic powder 1-1 teaspoon dry mustard ' .. teaspoon paprika 12 cup butter, melted Blend all ingredients Lay turkey tnll1de u big plastic bag inside roastmg pan or casserole dis h Ponr marinade over anti completely seal ba~ Refrigerate, turn occasionally so all parts get a chance to soak in marinade. 3·8 houri; When re ady to barbecue. re move bird Crom marinade and drain on broiler rack Melt butler . add · marinade and brush liberally over bird during for 10·12 pounders Larger birds we hard on your rotissene motor and really &hould be cooked tn the oven Brush bard inside and out -generously with sauce Insert s pat rod in throuah center of body cavity. parallel to backbone. runnmi it through neck s kin Fasten one spit fork nrmly into breast 01 bird. the other mto the tail. Tie wings close to the body with heavy string Tie legs together &o thighs are not pressed agiunst the body (the dark meat will cook raster this way> Test balance 1l must be perrect 1n ordt.>r to rotate smoothly. Baste frequently Turkey 1s dont• \\ hl'n thermometer register!> 180 F . or when tht: th1ck<'!'ll part or the drumstit'k feels soft when pressed with a finJ(er . Now, all Ralphs stores open 8:00 a.m. Monday thru Saturday tor your shopping convenience. Check your '" local Ralphs tor Sunda' hours. Any Size Package Smoktd·Sh1nk Portion Farmer John Ham Ground Beef II per lb. USDA Choice Beef-Golden Premium Meats U\OA l u" Cubr.' pr• ·"01c1 Stewing Beef lb V\D" S.rf lloull<! Bon• I• pr1 • c11Rump Roast lb U~OA Bf'rf loin Sont-In o .. ·01_c1 New York Steak lb 8ttt l.OH'I 8 0l"t'len U\DA s k T ., °"' ~o·c• tea a1 s lb 8HI Ackmd 8of\•1•n ~-\o~ct Beef Tip Steak ,,., lb Bttl S~•"-~"\c0c~ Center Cut Shank Pt• lb USDA Ouock To Fu 001" Beef Cube Steak o•• lb 139 D P~8L~10Roast 148 D Po•k lo•• Sirloin Pork Chops 2" D v;ai c~uets 159 ~ C1~;;;;;t"eeet Brisket 1" D c~n-VKing Bacon .69 ~ M~hi:Mahi Fillet 111 f 1Hh folltll Pacific Red Snapper P" "' P•• lb p~ lb "'" 10 0 .. lb p .. lb Home 'N Leisure D Pl;ii~··-r~1mb1ers ~ Pi;t$tic Pitcher " 11 or .39 ~ Ha~ti~;;~"euns pag t!H ol 8 Qtl 121 f;2l &;8~''c0t"aws I 01 tllt' pkg O t;;;(;l0Tea Cake .. <h Take advantage of even greater savings withlalphs Coupon ._.racing Post Now you can take advantage of even greater coupon savings by trading manufacturers' coupons you can't use for ones you can at Ralphs Coupon Trading Post and there Is no purchase necessary. One more reason why Ralphs Is Number One in shopper preference in the Los Angeles-Orange County area 129 121 2" 119 129 R1lph1·lmporled Cooked Sliced Ham 4oz. II pkg. R1tph1 -Dehc1ous Olympic Meal 8remt 24 oz. II lo•f Pantry Fiiiers 141 ~ Apple Time ~ Apple Sauce 1 •• ~ sha;t; fee~erages ~ Ra.;;e5c;up· Mix .49 ~ K~l·K;~Dog Food .89 ~ M;;t;;~,..Mustard .89 ~ Pc;p;;;·N~Pkins Vi ti(l~id~~o ~ V;,na Sausage ~sn~k Crackers Frozen Foods Prices tfftctivt July 7 thru July 13. 1977 Wt ....W .. r1gtll to~ 01,._ ~.......,.._,..,, o 11•.,,.tlw.,...,Lewl'flc• ,.....,.,.,..._ .. ...._.,,._ ... , _ _t <-.•·•llt~t• ....... t\M••• ..., .......... ...........,. ............ , ..., ... ~···"" ................. ...... --· .... to Ollll•llllcMI .... 01 ... [I I I .. ,g Ol .28 c•n '' 01 .15 con J 01 .22 pig 6 Ol .24 can hr 24 ,., . 0•9 37 ot 100 • 10 01 .39 Cl• $01 .39 ... 11 Ol .49 pag 1· or .47 o•g 21b 79 p«g I 10' ••t• 1n 2to1. 2" l'«t = ... large3~ $ for Assorted Ftnors Ralphs Sherbet '1 gal.11 ctn. ~ O~joo Pears ~ 8~:;~ Onions ~ R·~;;utr>;;t~~ ~t';;;;o~ ~e;,nr~ :' .29 Pt• 15 lb • P•• 15 lb • .10 :· .39 Wines I Splrl,. ~ $;~;~0< Vodka I t 619 II• ~ R;i;,t; '&;~;&,,, I' 9" Ill ~ im~ed Tequila 8" I ' Ill SUIHH' Dell ~°"4>uqlle J lb 5•• Canned Ham c.., o s;;,cf;;nks 17 oz, .75 pllf D o.Jiciow ..... c._.. Ralphs Dressing Dsti;cheddar f:' Ds';'cream po"4 Cl" • •1 •J • • I> •l ' I J ' I I ··~ ,1:'J I Ii ·'·''•l .. •ll I I f1 •' t•lr .... 1 '"'"' I I "'" ,·, tl1 ,u . lo H I•) '' ''""' . ., ) I. I?. • rfol • h,1,, '• I 1, .... ,,. u'•I .... •11 I I tt tf •'l In : .. >( '• I \( 'lio 1C•t l ., lul d~ ... ) .•I , .. ' ... , 11'1 j I '•:.i t '. • tt I .. ., ·q ~ 111 .. ~ .. , ~ ;1 '\" Q ()AIL V PILQ! I • Carrots Creafe ' . . , l I • Recipes for Cancers l Fresh Catch . . Italiano IC you 're lucky enough lo win this catch .•• BARBECUED SALMON ITAUANO .. ..,; 1 pan·dressed silver saJmoo, 6-7 pounds Sauce: • 1 cup chopped red ~ onion 8 cloves garlic , chopped 2 tablespoons dried oregano r 1 <8 o unce> c an ' tomato sauce i ~. cup apple cider vinegar i 14 cup waler Sall and pepper, to LADY LEE POINTS. : las le ~ Combine sauce ingre· ( dients; set aside. Fillet ' salmon down the center .. ; and remove bones. Wash and pat dry wilh paper ' towels. Place salmon on ' ' grill, skin side down, ~ over low barbecue fi re. Baste with sauce; cook I l lS-20 minutes. ~ T urn salmon over ,.198 T -Bone Steak ca ref1,11l y, baste. and ~ . ~ cook additiona l 15 Boneless Round Steak &ONOEO&Ef • -• ., ( f , ,, l minutes. Salmon is done when il flakes eas ily when tested with a fork. OONOtO OH• 7 -Bona Chuck Steak ~ Ser ve with fluffy r ice • lo and s teamed fresh • zucchini . • ~ : ! Fish ~ t f Citrusy ; Dunk your ravor1te ' firm-fleshed fish steak in ' this flawlessly simple sauce made with sweet ~ oranges: t "'" I ORANGE-CURRIED FISH STEA.KS 4 halibut or other R firm fish steaks SaJadoil C salt and pepper l ;,4 cup mayonnaise ~ 14 cup plain yogurt 11.,. 2 teaspoons fresh ,.. grated orange peel • • " Large ~~!r'~~!~~Pu~. LB. 14 c Fresh !!'u~~~~~~ .. ~~~: 59c Fresh t 2 tablespoons fresh 5 . squeezedorange juice Limes gc ~.,,.~ teaspoon curry t powder RICH IN VITAMIN c .................. EA. , . 'h teaspoon minced Large Qnion Dakes ~ 1 orange, cut in 39 t cartwheels. eo .. garnish Papavas C l Brush fish steaks with J. f · oil, sprinkle with salt abd A TROPICAt TREAT ......... EA. pepper and broil or grill o...... _1 J.oged Q Gonned t 4.5 inches from heat s. 7 ruu<J (.)! • minutes on each side. Reapove from heal and Kern's I serve each portion with . I tbis sauce: p asarvas A 111 Combine in blender, r . • t:r I ' juice, 1rated oran1e STRAWBERRY ........... 32·0Z.JAR I rind, mayonnaise, .. _ yoaurt, curry powder Harvest Day . . r and dehydrated onion I flakes. Let stand at least Instant Tea .A 119 I 10 minutes to let flavors ~ • blend. Garnish risb ................................... 3-0Z.JAR : ,: ~\:_~• "'.'"h orance !!I!'!!'!~'.~ ..... ,,,, 580 i:. FRCSH i;;!~~i,;;~i--'~'99: f t t E CUT -..... ·-·--..... ___ ·--.-...... ii-OZ CM22 Lady Lee Sliced Bacon Top Sirloin Steak 11 . tltSS 80N0(0 8H• l Olf• ~!!'tQ~El~nd Rib Ste~~ .. _ . 1u 1 le p._,o .. 19'8 .. l.139 Cross Rib Roast 80t1UU S80MKDIUrc....c, Smoked Salmon • Mix together dry lqnaJenta. Cut in bu~r or maqarme unw mixture resembl• eornmeal . Add CarroQ and molUMi Ind . mlx unUl blended. Chill 15 mlnut.; then roll oat '4·1nch thick OD llcb11Y·fioured board. Cut withamalleutten; bake on ungreased bakinl &beet at 1'7S-F. 18-20 minutes or until Ut.bUY browned. When cooled, store in tJ&btly covered container. Yleld: s dozen 1 ~·inch waters. SUNSIDNE NUGGETS lAt cut butter or marauine ~cup1u,ar Y.t cup unsulphured moluses legg 1~cupsfiour % c uncooked rolled oata 1 tutpoan bat.Ina~ ====n•IOda :::.,uc:::;:tollda 1 cup crated raw carrota ~cup chopped nata. Cream butter and suaar ,1llltil nu1r1. Beat In molua• an4~. Ills tGcether Dour, oat.I, bakfn&. powder, llOda, salt, ~ and dry milk; add to mlxture.Jl,lxture wW be I . Stir 11( urrots and nuts. Diop tty teupoooaful oo wi1reasecl>. baklnl lheet. Bake at 40CrF. roi: 8·10 minutes or until U1hUy browned. When cooled, at.ore in U.bt11 covered container. Yl~d: 'aosm drOpcookles. 2~!~~~VER ............. te.15 c le 111 11 2" ~~~~~.~ B~~I Pattin .. ..>l• 9402H Skinless Link Sausage 4ec • .vii.Alll JOooN • .. • e oz P~O Boneless Rump Roast ~!~~!~~r.!s~mo_~~.~ ~~~~~-1~ .......... le.141 htAIQ4Nt VI tiO,·lnlOat-H .'fqln~ly Grub I:F~ankly Fast ""'· Idea Hearty ·Here's a hearty main diab Idea that puts to use the kttnels from a lef- tover ear of com. Or, use ball· of a 10-ounce pack ace ol frozen corn. S PANISH S P OON BllEAD ~ ::~ ::: .. :::~:::;:; ~powder • l teaspoon salt '-· 1 egg •1. cup oil 1 cup buttermilk l tablespoon honey 1 ear husked fresh corn. kemel5 and pulp cut and ·scraped from .... cob (about~ cup> f 4-ounce can green chilies, drained and ..,_ diced v 4-ounce jar p1mien· ·t06, drained and diced , 2 cups grated ched· darcheese t?S ·: In a large mixing bowl stir together the cor nmea l wholewheat .>ft flour, bdking powder and salt. In a small mixi ng ~i.. bowl beat together until : combined the egg, oil buttermilk and honey. Make a well in tht• center of the dry ingre- dients; add egg mixture: beat to blend. Stir in l corn, chilies, pimientos I._ and cheese. " Tum into a butlered t J l baking dJsb (about 13 by ;. 9 by 2 lnchesJ. Bake in u preheated 275 -degree H j_ oven unUI set -a bout 30 minutes. Serve hot. Adapted from "The 'fif Forget.About-Meat Cookbook .. by Karen· ~ f. f Brooks CRodale Press I ~~r Salmon • Hi-Or i ~ Souper 103 ct. \ :I . .. t Roll C&H Thia time ol year, qu.lct-aerve dlaben are more popular than ever -on the stove or over the co.lb. AJ.1.meat lrankfurten can fill the bW for a family feed. stven eom• saucy embelllab- metlt. Qoeate these meal-makers trom tbe best variaty doe you can find. CVJlLY KABOB DOGS 10 franldwtera . 1 can (20 ounces> pineapple chunb in pineapple ju lee 1 tablespoon cornstarch 2 t.Jble.spoons each: sugar. ca ta up, lemon Ju.lee 1 \A, teaspoons aoy sauce '4 teaspoon einaer 1 large ereen pepper. cut in ts squares 3 tomatoes. cut In wedges (optional> . 3 'h to 4 cups bot cooked rice · Jn half of franks. make ~ , "' ( parallel slubes in both ends, cut· tine all the way throu1h but lea v- ine two inches uncut in center of frank. (sluhes allow frank to c url durtnc cooldne>. In remain- ing franks. make two crossed slashes downward into each end, u though quarterln&, but leave 2 inches \Ulcut in center. Drain pineapple well, reserv- ing Julee. For aaucf, stir juice in- to comstarcb in saucepan. Add . suaar, catJup, lemon juice, soy sauce, and ainger. Cook, stirring constanUy, until thickened. On each skewer, arrange in- gredients as follows : green pep- per square, 2 pineapple chunks, frank, 2 pineapple chunks, green peppe"r, 2 pineapple chunks. frank. 2 pineapple chunks, and green pepper. If desired, also add tomatoes. Push pineapple close to uncut center of franks. Wedneed!y. Julye. 19n DAIL y PILOT q Bruah enUr~ kabob with sauce. mllt, onion. and dill weed. Cover BroU about 2 minutes per side or and almmer for 10 minutes, or grill over hot coala until untllcelerylscrisp-tender.Cut2 browned. Brusb-wilh remaining franks into V.·incb slices. Slasb sauce before serving. Serve with remalnlng franks at ~-inch in- bot rice, a ereen salad. Makes s • tervall, cuUlaa about~ throu&h. se"inp. OIEESY 80TDOG SHORTCAKES 2 stalks celery, thinly sliced (about 1 cup) "'cup milk l tabl.espoon instant minced onion• Yi teaspoon dill ·weed or thyme 6 to 7 frankfurters 1 can C 11 ounces) cheese soup 1 teupooo prepared mustard V. cup aU~ed green olives (optional) 4 to 5 english muffin or bun halves, toasted In saucepan. combine celery, •• Cook frank• in· simmering water for S minutes, or until curled and heated through. Add soup and mustard to celery mix· lure; stir until smooth. Add frank slices, beating until bubbly. On each muffin half, place a curled frank; spoon about \A, cup sauce on each. Makes 4 to s aervings. Altern.ate franks cooking method: (1) Broil for 3 to 41 minutes; (2) Brown ln skillet in 2 tablespoons maraarine; (3) Cook In microwave oven, turning twice allowini 1-~ minutes for 4 franks. awa11 1-lb. Pkg. Medallion Brand Game Hens Sugar A warming fi s h .. .' . cllowder can be made in the galley or over a grill wilb . canned provisions from the pantry. It's easy -and it requires just one pot. SALMON CHOW CHOWDER 1 103~.ounce con· de n aed cream or mushroom soup 1 10'4·ounce can .-• chicken broth \ t l l·pound can slewed tomatoes, cut up, un· drained 1 7 ~·oun ce can 1f aalmaa. bones removed 1 t eas p oon Worcestenhlre sauce 1 teaspoon lemon "'t;· pepper ' ~ Generous pinch each • 5-lb. Bag . Northwest Bing Cherries clfied parsley and dill · ~-------------~ weed .. Sall and pepper to t~-lute C In I-quart aaucepol. wbltk auaaht.oom soup t n-wllb brotll~ ;tra dtaally •r. stir in .toinatoet, then tal~ tbiio IH l""IDll, StJrrtq COftltantly, heat to boll-.,-0onr. tat• oU taut .ma let stand 5-10 mJiutes before servlftl. c U.S. No. 1 Baking Potatoes *'--...... _ ..... ..,, Prices Effective July 6-12, 1977 Moniy Orders Up To 1300.00 Just 25° \ . . -, DAil Y PILOT Wednesday. July 8 1977' Italians Boast , . Prima Food ,.Wine .. By TOM HO(a; AION_t .. alw .. Wrlltr A i~P of ll»li11n Jt1urnl&lial8 huve launched a quarterly mae:u:ine In the Urutcd St1ttua and Canada which will be devoted mainly to the winos of that country. It will also seek to acquaint .\merlran readers with some or the better Italian food peciaJties. "We have no intention ot tryin& to compete with your American wane and food magazines," said Vincenzo Buonassisi, senior editor of the publication which is called "llalian Wines & Spi1:its." .. We merely want to clve Americans a fuller knowledge of our wmes, since they do stand In first place now among wines Im· ported by your country.'· Total Italian wino imports to America for 1976 came to 17.6 mimon gallons, or a little more than one out of every two botues brought into this country. · The Italians, who go in for cooking with wine m a big way. have some set rules about how to go about this. For instance, if you use wine as an ingredient to cook a certain dish. you s hould use the same wine lo drink with that dish. But. Buonassisi told us, his countrymen are relaxing in other ways. For instance. while wine as an accompaniment to fish was always considered sacred among Italian gourmets. But now they are drinking reds like Bardolino with salmon. But unlike the French who let down the bars and cool that sprightly red wine known as Bea~jolais, the Italians are set against quaffing any red that bas been chilled, contending that it kills the flavor. lo fact, they are against chilling whites too much and comment disdainfully on the American habit of "freezing" white wine. Here's an Italian recipe for a fowl cooked with a bottle of white Soave wine, which is appropriately titled ••Drunken Chicken," 21"1·3 pound chicken fryer Salt 1 stalk celery 2 white onions I medium size carrot 1 fifth Soave winl' 2 bay leaves I clove garlic Rlack pepper 2 tablespoons butter 2 tablespoons while flour Clean chicken and sprinkle salt inside chicken as well as out- side. Chop vegetables except half of onion. Pour wine in stew pol; combine an vegetables with bay leaves, garlic and black pepper. Put the chicken with vegetables in the pot, cover and cook for at least 90 minutes over medium fire. Chop finely remaining hall onion and mix with flour and butter in a small pan over low fire. Add to chicken a little at a time: Leave to cook for al least 15 minutes. Serve chicken with the sauce and boiled potatoes. Serves 4-6 persons. Spicy Italian sausage flavors robust, versatile sauce that goes atop omelets, pasta and more. Inspiration: 2 Ways Italy has inspired a two-way sauce. You can use 1t to top both a Florentine Omelet and Lasagna Roma. which calls for cottage· ch~ese instead of Ricotta which is a more expensive cheese for a filling. Or, you can simply make the whole batch of sauce. freeze whatever remains from your first night·s entree, and use it later to top pizza or spaghetti. 1 ~ teaspoon cream of tartar l tablespoon butter 2 cups Provolone Tomato Sauce Heat oven lo 325 degrees F . Beat egg yolks and pt!pper until thick and lemon-colored, about S minutes. Beat egg whites, water, . salt and cream of tartar until stiff but not dry. F.old beateJl· yolks into beaten whites. Melt butter in a lO·inch 'skillet with an oven·proof handle until just hot enough to sizzle a drop of water. Pour egg mixture evenly into skillet. Cook over low to medium heat on top of range un· til puffy and browned on bottom, about 5 minutes. . Transfer to oven and bake 15· 18 minutes. Meanw.hile, heat Provolone Tomato$aqce to serv· ing temperature . Jlreak omelet into wedees with 2 forks and serve immediately with sauce. IASAGNA ROMA 1%aeniq1• 8 ounces broad l asagna • noodles , 3 c ups cotta1e c heese, drained 3 egga, ali1btly beaten 1h cup 1rated Parmesan cheese 12 ounces sliced Mozzarella cheese 4 cups Pl'Ovolqne Tomato Sauce . Heat oven to 316 decree-F. and butter a J3 x I-inch pan. dook noodlcia ac~ to paekqe dJrecdcm, rime m eold water and dr.tn. Beat cottage e~.· egaa ..S Perm• .. ~ on hi1he1& IPMd of m1'ter Smlnutel. To llHlnble lUqna, lloe ~ tom of baldna pen With \t ot the noodles. Spread ~ ol the cottqe cheese m~ute over the noodles. Top with .t,t of tbe MowNlla cheese sUcea. Cover with ~ Of the Provolone Tomato Sauce. Repeat layers twtoe. Bake 40 to G snlbutea \Jntll hot and bubbly. 'COIL Wra.1> in foll QCl tre.e. To iillMt. NP In. .F~l~-= LAUNDRY DETERGENT . TIDE. Store Hours: 9 to 9 Daily -Sunday 9 to 1 f'rice1 lffedln · Thurs~. July 7 thru Wed., July I 3 P'ric" ~I.ct .. Stoclo -....,.. We Gfodty .t.cc'tpt Food St-.s W• Reserve The Ritfwt To Urnit QuontltiH And RefvH Sole To Deden And Wholesolen. . 1.eMr BAR M EASTERN RIB 1 49. , Center PORK CHOPS • u . FRESH I GROUND BEEF AHY SIZE PKG. 49~ EXTRA LEAH GROUND BEEF 99~ HILLSHIRE FARM SMOKED or POLISH SAUSAGE WISCOHSIHI 39 MADE • · · LB. IARM~CED BOLOGNA JIM S RANCH FRESH EGGS GRADE AA LARGE SPRINGFIELD SUGAR KERNS STRAWBERRY 5 LB. IAG PRESERVES 18 OZ. JAR ·KIKO AN TERIYAKI ·SAUCE SPRINGFIELD .... ·10MATO JUICE YOUNG TENDER BEEF LIVER • FRESH 49c Sl<IHHED u . IEEFCHUCK RIBs49~ SHORT IEEF CHUCK SEVEN BONE OR ROUND IOHE BEEF ROAST g99c· LB. FARMHOUSE TURKEY BAR M EASTERN FARMER STYLE PORK SPARERIBS LEA~ 'H MEATY l.09LL LARGE LOIH PORK I 1CJ CHOPS • .... BARM BULK STYLE BACON 32 oz. BO TILE ' . . .. 'DELICACY' DEBUTS Fruit Fuzzy By DOROTHY WENCK ~=r.~ ~:::r.:: What fruit loolu llkto a fuuy brown en. Is named alter a unique Now 7.ealand bird, and Is told uahi•hprlct'ddellcary., If you 1ue 1ed kJwlfrult, you win the pnle And lf)'OQbaven't tried thla funny fuzzy h:ult from down under. now would be a aood lime Shipments h'om New Zealand are comlJli In, and some marfleta wUl be featunna kiwi~. "~e 100 tibcrry" w1t11 the fint name for klwlfruH when it waa lntroduct.>d into New Zeland from China. When New Zellland be1an to export tbls unusual fruit an 19S3, tbqname w1ts chan1ed to "kiwi" because the fruit superficially resembles New Zealand'snative b1rd, theklw1. On the outside the eaglike k1w1fru1t is not es~lally aUracllve with Its greenish-brown skin densely covered with short brown hairs But the nesb 1s an attractive emerald green with numerous small, Jet black, edible seeds ar- ranged an a circular pattern a.round the center of the fruit. The flavor is s weet-tart, but otherwise not pronounced. and the teltture 1s somewhat sort. Nutr1t1onally, k1w1s are really worth eating as they have twice the vitamin C content ot oranges, · and only 30·65 calories, depcndmg on the size of the frwt Most people eat them raw -skinned, of course, and shced crosswise to show off the circular seed pattern. Their navor is enhanced with lemon or lime, and blends well with yogurt Kiwifruit can also be cooked, as you wo~ld. stew apples or pears, In a ligi1t syrup. Cook them very briefly as the texture is tender. Cooking will change the color somewhat - from bright green to it darker green and the navor is milder. Some people prefer th~ navor of cooked kiwi to that of raw. Kiwi was introduced as a crop in California way back in 1935, but producllon here has been Jimited until recently. In 1975, production was on- ly 120tons statew1dc. But new acreage planted in California primarily in Britte County around Chico, could produce 3,000 to 4,000 tons of fruit by 1980, say ex- perts. Th.is compares with 6,000 tons now being produced in New Zealand .. With increasing production in California, it may be that in a few years kiwifruit will move from the high-priced exotic category to become one of the ordinary, affordable foods on your shop- ping list. Stewing Tribute: The Provence region of France is considered unchallenged for its classic, Bouillabaisse. BOUILLABAISSE 14 cup olive oil 4 cups chopped tomatoes I cup chopped onion 3 cloves garlic, minced 1 bay leaf 2 tablespoons tomato paste I teaspoon sail '2 teaspoon dried leaf basil A French Clas ·sic 1 2 teaspoon dried leaf thyme 14teaspoonfennelseed '4 teaspoon pepper 1,e teaspoon saffron 2 cups water l 11:.i dozen scrubbed clams 1 pound~sh fillets, cut into 2-inch strips 1 2 oound crab pieces in shell ~~4 pound shrimp, cleaned, deveined 1 ~cup dry white wine '4 cup butter Heat oil in a large chafing dish over canned heat. Add tomatoes, onion, garlic, bay leaf, tomato paste, salt, basil, thyme. fennel. pepper • and saffron; simmer 10 mjnutes. Add 2 cisps water and clams; simmer 15'minutes. Add cut-up fillets, crab. shrimp, wine and butter and simmer until £ish Oakes, about 10 minutes. Sweet Tooth Pangs? That seemingly ugly. browrung banana can be very useful since its packed with natural sweetening power. Very ripe bananas con- ripe banana. I egg, a scant cup of cold milk (low-fat can be used) and 112 teaspoon vanilla. Whir ingredients in a blender. Pour into a glass and dash with nutmeg, just for style and aroma. minutes. Remove from ... heat and stir in a cup mashed ripe banana (about 3 medium-sized). Wednesday. July 6. 1977 DAIL V PILOT q Nuts. To· Kids Rice can be fun. Kids love its natural texture, and they'll love it even more when you a~d chopped nuts! Try this pilaf with a vegetable casserole, a chicken or lamb entree one night. It's pretty in- teresting as is, but you can use a rice mixture, hair white and half brown, for added nutrients. PEANUT PILAF 3 tablesPo<Jns butter or margarine 1,3 cup chopped celery 113 cup chopped onion '• cup chopped g'reen pepper 2 tablespoons diced pimiento 3 cups chicken stoclc 1 cup uncooJsed rice 1 teaspoon rosemary l teaspoon salt •,, teaspoon pepper ~:i cup chopped peanuts Melt butter or margarme in a larg~ heavy saucepan. Add celery, onion, green pep- per and pimiento; saute until tender. Stir in chicken stock or bouillon, uncooked rice, rosemary, salt and pep- per. Bring to a boil; cov- er and s immer over low heat for 25 minutes, or until rice is cooked and aH the liquid Is absorbed. Stir In peanuts. · • c5' taste deligJit ... ser-ve ~Jiirm~rs C/Jeef l{!lackJvu~t. An oh, so German sausage 1h,1 t tastes so great you'll have to have another. Each tast~fu~ sausage link is packed full of hearty beef ~1th 1ust the right touch of garlic for · a delicate flavor boost to the mild franl..furtcr seasonings, then smoked naturally for full mealtime pleasure. Just heat and serve - the family will love it. Look for the little Schirmer's Sausage Maker ..,,."-'~"' on the packase in your market. Schirmtrs ® the Sociable Sausage Available in the Deli case of: ALPHA BET A MARKETS Ol&l ~ACTICM GUU.lf!.llD ~ .::~..:::~-..::. ... ·-------.... tB _,.....,._ __ ,_ ·f.;..-..... -.... f.lltC• ... ~--·-­---·~,. .. -........ _ ____ ...____ . ..,,~.\Af '-.. .. -.--.. ~-- • . lain more natural sugar than medium-ripe ones. so less sugar, if any. is needed in concocting famous banana nog milkshakes for breakfast, or custards for dessert. For a tasty dessert that's gooa served warm from the oven, combine 2f.I cup milk, with % cup shredded coconut in a saucepan over low heat. Stir and cook for about 2 Beat 2 eggs with 3 tablespoons sugar and stir into banana mixture. Turn into a greased 1· quart casserole. P lace casserole in a pan of hot water and place in oven. Cook at aso·degrees F . lO minutes or until custard is set and top is just slightly brown. Cool 5-10 minutes. Serves 4. ,.IClS m~CTIV( WlD .• JUlU titau fUES., JULY 12, 1977. All you need for a milkshake for one is l l . If you bought a new mattress without shopping the ds in the Daily Pilot, you lost both time and lftoney. TRIP-TO BOTH ACAPULCO& MEXICO CITY!! All ':oA~m:~?i:f'0tlVID. ,_ llSAU OI COllMllCIAI 1114. ~ ED-X PRICES 1 MAllKET IASKET MEL.O.SOFT ~BREAD • • DAil v PILCH Wednua•y July fl 1917 l~,~~~~~~:~~;:~~~n:y ~~~\!~~~!~ •n ~~~~~!:,~~-' ~~~~ ~~!~~~ ~oo:~ ~n~~~~ ~ aood an • lad•. andchlUunUltet.Culln '• cup chopped KIWIFUZZ KIWIGIAZBDCBEAM 1 teaspoon lemon and bake 10 minutes Klwi.frult slices for u~ru and c•vcn main lo •ctuart:1 •nd aarvc on w 1Alnulb or pecana 111 k'wtlruit, peeled CHEESE PIE juice longer. samlah hea. <They re all d1f. •alud areeM. Top with Mayonnalae 4 ~ llfblrum 1 9.1.dcb prepared 1 teaspoon vanilla Refrigerate 4 lo s Combine comatarch rf'nl namH for thf' klwifru.lt1llct1 Lettuce Juiceofllme 1rah'amcr•ctercrusl Com)>ine cream hoursbeloreserving.An and suiar In aaucepan. m•. funny look 1n1 lllN'l I <'Up cruahed, Kiwifruit shces for t iablespoonsucar 4 packages (3·oz. cheese, eggs, lemon hour before servina. Add walu and lemon It 1 drained pineappl1• may aarmsh l eea white each> cream ctieese, sof-Juice and peel, sugar and make Kiwi Glaze, spread Julee. Stir over .medJwn EnJoy 1l• lo~ c.lo11c bt" 11ubellluled for t"ooked Cov•r dtccd apples 1 cup finely bopped tened vanilla. Beat until light on cheese pie and chill. heat until clear and tpunk alter thr frujl h1tK kiwifruit With orange JUice and lel ice -\ 2 eeas, ~iiten and frothy. Pour into Serves 8. thickened. Add kiwifruit. t'acbed thl' rtrm-rlpe KIWI WALOOR•' stand a few minutes. Siena kiwltrui( ..Um, o/.4 cup sugar graham cracker crust KIWI G~E slices and butt.or. 9ook s f•ae. much llkt1 the,, op Ml.AO Drain and combine wllh lime jwce and sugar in l teaspoon lemon and bake at 350•F. for 30 l'h tablespoons cor· minu(ea, atlninc eenUy mum ftrm rip.! i.tase of 3 CUI* diced red ap-kl wlfruit, celery, nuts blender until fruit is Ii· juice minutes. For topping nslarcb over towhlat. Cool. Pouf vocadoa K\wu. will pl.-1 and mayonnaise lo queri ed , aoout 3b 1 teaspoon grated blend sour cream with ~cupwater over c r eam cheese t• pen at room t em l cup orange Juice moisten. Serie in lettuce seconds. Add egg white lelJlon peel · sugar, lemon juice and 1 tablespoon lemon layer. Cb1ll and garnlab ~r•ture most. rue.Illy I cup pee I e d cup a. Garnish wHh and ice. Blend u1>tll 2tea.spoona vanllla vanilla. Remove pie juice ea c b servln& wHb •hen atored an a plutJc kiwifruit slices kjwlfrult and apple slites foamy. POur idto 2_ ~d!'~ For&oppfng: from oven and allow to 3 kiwifruit, peel~d klwllndtallces. 'ag. You can hasten i frozon foods rrruq by addtne to the Groceries Groceries Grocer es ... +:'an apple or two, pear @ l I Cle Q Westwood Ice Crum 99 f!lbedan~~at. Rllip .. e, un· * MF~'1!_r,',•oCz e~kles 1110 @ !!!~~•nSre~!31~Sf,i Size .21c s!!.~uDT1i.1~~z~r ............... 87c A•t.fleYOrs\tOellonc.rton .......... c: mu Wl .. eep '" -·-· _,, . -.. . . . . . . . . . . ._....,. -. . . . . . . . . . • SweMOn Dinn-. . ;::.~•.,•••• '°' ov« (-JO ~!!.,·~ ~o..".!?.. Graham~ 79c ® ~.!!~~~:~. "' ........ '289 : ~ ~ray Cleaner H .. 81 c ® ~ =~~:;!'. .;~t'. .. :SSC * 1 w 1 <.111 (' K £ N * Ajax Detergent $126 ~DEL MONTE Pam Spray Coating 92c ALMOND ~ for l llUlldry 48 Oz Pt.o • • .. •• . • • \l!!Y ® Sropa Food From SUcluno 9 Oz . . . . r 0 Minuttt Maid ., bon~ f1~12c~!~cai.ts, ~ ~~~;~'!~ .... 95c ~~~~~~ ..... · ..... 77c ~.~teaJ!n~u!>r.•.~~ln~ ....... 58c ORANGE 1r.i1cu~~a~ad!113 t er Heritage House @ sReyno~~!s ~!!P :::-33c @ ~~~,~~n~F·~·:~z'~~ ...... SQc JUICE ches;~~~b~~:!oshoots. YELLOW CLIN.G ~ ~;~k B~Qa .............. 55c diced Q PEACHES OuartsPllG-ot2S ................... .. 2 cups coars ely chopped celery ~DAD'S ~ROOT BEER Reoular 0t Olet-11 Peek 12 Oz Cans 99c Frozen 12 Oz. \... .Can 11,z cups coarsely Sliced or 2 59c chopped oruon Halved 1/4 cup water No. 303 1" pound snow peas Cans For or Chinese pea pods l teaspoon corn· star~~ablcspoons Sherry {IQ ~!~~~ot~~!.~.~~.~ll~ ...... $429 A-1 Macaroni 40c Salad 0< Small Shella 16 01 Pk!>-. . ..• ~e!~~ :.;11~~-~an ....... 43c Plcante Sauce 47c Pace 8 Oz .... ~ .................... . Ctllcken Broth Swanson 13 75 Or ~~~~~1!!~,~!1:oz Pl<g • • •• : 55c Calavo Spread 71c Hol SPICY Avoc:ado Of Orlgtnal 8 Or .. . ~l~~~an~.~-~. ~~~~~ ......... 47c or w s;,~rsauce lo taste <ii) ~hJ!.:v~!h or ~:r~~~z Ca" .... $119 I 2 cup French-fried t:J:::\ Borden'• Prize s 1 !52 0 Your Choice almonds ~ Reg 0< Pink lemOO.Oe M•• • 33 oz . GREEN GIANT Enchilada Beel or c11.... . •112 Van De Kamp • 111 oz Pl<g .. . , ••••• ~!S~ I<~.!!'~~~-Pkg ............. 77c Fluffy while nee 6 large k1w1fru1t, 0 HERITAGE HOUSE CORN peeled and sliced 9 cut chicken into inch FRESH BREAD 2 c ~ubes. Brown '" hot oil tn wn.1e, Wheel. SattOWlcll , lD . . ... · .. 56c Whole Kernel 2 9 c Weight Watchers 8N1Sleait/1'991*•10 Oz Pl<g. $11C VMI P~tana g 'It Oz. Pkg.... • .. • Jarge skiUet or Chinese or :h0e~tn:t~.d b~!~~~ ® ~!!r!~d0z~~!.~~...... ~~a3~3s~~~ ~~ ~s~!'J:~ 1 t 0z ......... 57c s hoots. celery. onion and t:J:::\ Mighty Dog 0ot•-25c water. Cover and cools 5 l.:r.J Aaa«red Flavoos 6'> Oz Can • ••• • to7minutes. "' , A · ~ ~~·~ Grape Juice .... 77c Scatter snow peas on · • ; · • m::1~~:~~E~.~g · ~ "azr ~,re uses or water and J teaspoon .Rt. , ~ ormoresoysauce. Add to s killet and cook until t b ' d Id sHghtly thickened and ' f e· . I • • ~1:::~::~::::·:~:: · o· · · ·· · · un erso • lb at bas been molded in -a~.~:J~ii~~I:~ ... and that includes Alpha Beta, LuclQr, Market Basket s lices and place on lop Ral h s1111.~ d 'l b ke ~ b i ,..L"lli.t ~e~=t~bl~~~~::\.:en:r p s, UI~ an TOOS ••• as t .or asiu;; . plate. Serves 6 Deli-Dairy Groceries :. Groceries Meats ,l J!!. ~· Pll: Of 100 · $149 l 1~!~~ttee 11 Oz Jar . . . . $4 4S ® 2; ~~· P.O~ ~O&SIS lD. age CRANBERRY SALAD WITllKJWI 1 package 13 0 1 1 ra s pberr y flavored gelatin , lcupholw~ter ·: 1 can {16-oz > whole cranberry sauce • t package <3 oz > lemon flavored gelatin · 1 cup pineapple juice <Canned, not fresh or ftozen> l package (3 oz. l cream cheese, softened 'h cup mayonnaise 1 cup cooked or canned kiwifruit drained • 1h cup whippi ng ci'eam 1 cup miniature ~ arsftmallows . 3 fresh kiwifruit, peeled and sliced Crispaalad greens Dissolve raspberry ~latin in hot water. Cool. Stir in cranberry sauce. Turn into 9lt9x2- incb baking pan. Chill until partially set. Dissolve lemon gelatin iD boiling pineapple jpice, Cool. Bea t together cream cheese and may on naise . Gradually add gelatin mixture. Stir in cooked kiwifruit and chill until partially set. Whip cream and fotd i nto gelatin. Stir in • $prinkle f.o Keep olor 0 LAND 0 LAKE CHEDDAR ~-~~~?~!!n ~ Pkg . l b $1 69 @ ~~~I~~ ~~!rter~ ... 49c ( Ricotta Cheese I Prec;IOU~ 1 LD. U Sllced Ham Roll Firmer Jolln 12 Oz Pkg ~ Alex Taco Shells \l!Y 4 0?. PM:'kage ~ Alex Burritos \l!Y A-led 4 Oz Cottage Cheese U Cr.,,ny, far~r. lo-Cal Jerttyrnald Pini C11tlon . ... *1°' ..... ~,99c 93c () 2=!~,., ~~e ...... , .. 97c Health & Beauty 1\ids O ~o:·~N.t ~~t~;t~~~~-53c u ~~ ... ~·1:i ~~~'-~-~~A .... ,., .... ·~· r Q ~!cs'!:!.~. 2!~Y .......... age: 0 ~~!!~:'!~ ......... : .. : .. 78c 0 ~II~~=~ oz ............... 9~ 0 ~cof~~~ .... : ........ 43c Wines and Spirits .. Nice 'n' Soft 44c Maxwell House Coffee s3a9 C) ~~roc~~der Clod .... Ro_aat_slb $128 Fadiel Ttnue • 150 count P~g Reg. Elec Peril Oup e 1 ID Can .,.. """" \ MJB Rice MJxes . 3 s1 () Spencer Steaks $248 v Aatot1ed s 0z Pile .. F.. ,\teats 8"I R•D Boneies• l D Q tns1ant Breakfast" .. 93c ~ Chuck Steak or Roast sac CJ ~~~· Brllket Lb.s1u Herll&Qe HOUIMI 6 Pack \,~ Semi Boneless Beel l b ...... 0 ~~~~.:! .. ~~~~-~ .. ~~~~~ 29c ) ~~~~er Steaks .Lb $118 (j ~:!~lbs ... Lb.69c 0 ~!i .. ~1~: ~~~c~~~~~ . 97c ® ~e!1r~~,!~na~!:'!88ts lb. $1 47 ® ~:'~!!'!~!~!~:-&:. 1 ~:.'.s1c ® ~:!!s':!~!!~ ~.· ... LD. s1•• 0 ;~~~~~~·· .............. .-' s1•. @'~~~~~~!.·~~"Pkg ~ •. s11• ® ~!':,~~!'! ~r~!~~-' $13t o' r!!~~OJ:. 3~~~r!, $141 Produce -. a s CM1ar cut Chapa . • . lb. Shredded Cabbqe 39c () ~~k~o~n ~h~~· lD. s1 7• fftlh Mr.de ....................... Lb. (_) 0 Country Style Ribs '131 ~IL.iS~k~ ... lb. $149 Pen l om lb Q ~·:!!~st St~~ks ...... lb. s1u @ r,~~~ s~!!t• lD. 79c 0 GROUND BEEF 69c PA TIIES Fresh • .. ... Lb ,. a.--NOi (•C.O .)(I .. --1~'JI ® ve'i oPed ROUND STEAK Boneless s 14LB8. Flavorful Beef Steak L MARMADUKE by Brad Andtnon "I think he wants y0u to Jump through It to amuae his frlendal" IOOMER MISS PEACH FUNKY WINKERBEAN by Tom Batiuk TANK McNAMARA MOON MULLINS 1· by Ferd and Tom Johnson E .... iHOS~ '/OIJ />.LPEAf>Y HAYE ----H~1S 1H~ONE ENHANCe You~ BEAUTY·v . ~ BRIN<S OUT 11-lt: SP,AAJ<l.E IN Yol.JR EYES ... · GORDO WHo NEEDS NEW GL,ASSES! TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLI ~,1'1.)e,I Jl~sAC.OWC CHARACTER ACROSS I Swlssriver !i Othef 9 Fleetowec:I 14 Three: Spaniah 15 Mt•lc•n di1h 16 Delighted in 17 RtetOf: Abbr. t8 Ahetd of the tlmH:Var. 20 Fornto• :11 Airport code for Htlslnlli 22 Noted London Jtreet 23 Ganttent 25 Stop 27 C1nac:l11n coon 29 Unb<oght JO Sulwd 34 Over: Comb form 36 Scottish i511nd 38 VIOient frtt· lor·all 38 The OTs 2 words 42 Blfd1 ~ 81blieel men 44 C1me •og1thlf 46 Pret1lnlng tu Cellt 46 Fanntt FrtnchColn 47 V1llev 49 Pedal problem 51 ..... Ana ~ C11ifornoa peak 58 Exceed 60 Wiich paet 61 The "I" ot "ICC" 63 BrulH•" 1rmadllto 6' Metric unit 65 Form1t p11~11ce 66 God of love tl7 POfltble ene"m 68 lmmed11tely 89 Unit ot force DOWN l ·1.1kt I rat on 2 PIKI tor 1otlon 3 fllttOIYH t , dispute 4 S1zeble piece of t.nd I 5 GrHnland ba .. 6 W11titd 7 l\elched I •ilmmlt: 3 word• a Time period 9 British COmpottf V1111rday'1 Puut. Solved: __ ,.. ... ARA p A S T 5 p AN 5 D I' S lA 1 IE IR ,n 1 A p ,n 1114 It.I " A I > • R .E \C R IO ~ 11) .C p Tl IAIC:I~ M 0 OIT T NIT '" I P O E E P II. OIO E o-o o R A A G R E~ • -r: 0 L A S L I IA R >'I ~ I. I IA 14 E N IT E.S S l lllNITI T IR D .,Ill T R I:. H E AR A R E E 1A" E t-.j T R E S 0 TA IT E ASE u • E R N OS E R R E D p E R T !:: N T 10 Frown:V1r. 40 81'(ofthe 11 Of • ceruen lhlPe 12 French flther 13 Wh11tpool Philippine Sn '1 Coto< 46 .... of Freedom 19 Pronoun '8 Endured 2' Kind of drum 49 Bttk ptrtl 26 fl'llplr\I IOl'lll Ii() ••••• VOCI color 52 ld1ho eountv 28 Thrff: Prefix 53 M1kt llugtl JO Pro ... 5' C.ltlogue 31 B1sic 56 Btfort: 32 Frend! natM Comb. form 33 Home, of• 56 B~ son caltltnt 34 lrint 57 s~ 3S I.coll int.fitly Plif'lllf 11 G• . 59 MttOfl'I 38 Flat·IOppfd hammtr ' hillt ~ Ptwttfcoln ~'=!?A .if $Pl~. 1 JUDGE PARKER ' . ~ .:~ ·' r. by Wm. F. Brown incl Mtf Clsson wt Al.I, Offo~rm,, 8U1' 1'~tl.C ~V61' Fa.z ~e ~ING ... DOOLEY'S WORLD DR.SMOCK by Melt by Gus Arriola ~/J by Hlrokl Lt Doux ,.----------.. PEANUTS by Chlrlt1 M. Schult by George Lemont eu-r !!VERY 1"9CH,...,ICIAN C>OWN 'T°H l!!I Rf; NOW HAS 11", 1"00! THE GIRLS "By the way, wbm >'°" dllcuu t1lc tout wfth my husband it would be best DOt to mut.ion that it alJowa plenty o( free time tor ahoppina."' L' . :(JI DNl Yl'U.QT w.doMday, July I , 1077 .. This Gesture NOt So ·Pat Ann¥) Landers DSAR ANN LANDf:RS: How eomt 10U lfOl ,.ounell lnvolvtd in a "IHll)'"J>llUn," ca 1 And w~ayt.ell,do youU.lnt lt l.a "~"toraman t.o ble ·~•atJ•a fOt' a woman ln thi• maooa? It acoma to me ou.t a apont.neoua.. · hooe:lt res)NlSllt to beauty lbould be COftlJdered ll ' compllmcot. I Def« thouJ bt you wen. a prude, Ann, but now I'm bealnninl to wooder. WlU fOU please explain? -THEY'RE BUZ?'JNO IN J1HACA Db& Bllll: I .W.'t '41.t •Yaelf" 1Holve4. • I waa ,.._.. 9'y tlle l&laaea Journal aod aaked to ah•.,.,.._ ol a •u wboW...W pal tile fanny elap ...... femalewllom lledld•kllOw. l leW tM reporter I tboupt tl WU "lrGN, in a.a• tute ud alloald llOllHt &ol~rated." I la&er a.aned tba& loe Na.,aada alloll1d been ulle• for Illa oplaloa. Jle aald U wu "19aPONPrla&e to pat 1 atranae womu•a fauy - eapee(ally • aa alrptaae," and added, "I aever llue41o9el&udloeverwW." Bella Alma& reapoaded, ·•u•a OK te pal a dog. but•awomaa.'' Art Buchwald said it was a matter of 1~. la Italy, he explalaed, lt ls couldered I compllmeqt, Once Oft I crowded baa lo lome, Buchwald reported, a man trled &opat a wo .... o's fanny .. d lhe •creamed. Everyone llared el the 1iay. Be apolotlzed and e•plalaed, "I wasn't , trylnl to let lteab. I wu trying to 5teal her PUJ'ff." I have al.nee learned the reuon fo1 U1e Inquiry revolved arocand a court case lJlatturaed out to be aaytlaJns but tuny. It •eems a male paaaenger patted &Jae tannyOf a stewardesa, no& once, but six tlmet.Sbe uked blaa to stop. Hekeptltup. Fl.Dally the stewardeil became upset and brou&btcba1gea •«•Inst him. · The man was arrested under a provision of the Atr Plracv Act. Ile pleaded «uillY to a reduced claarie ol aN auU OJl a craft, was fined $500 and gJveo •ls·toontbs probation. AcCOl'dlDI to my pocket calculator, if the man patted (be st.ewardess•a fanny six limes, it cost him approximately $83.33 a pat -and a poUce record. I think the IUY ought to find a new bobby. DEAR AN N LANDE RS: I realize my "problem" doesn't mean a thing to anyone but me, but I've been bugged by it for a long time and if anyone can help me, you can. We have two sons. One was born Oct. 20, 1-946. The second son was born Oct. 6, 1951. I am posill ve that both boys were born on a Sunday. 1 recall quite clearly th al bis whole ''fam damily" came lo, visit me right after church both times and I was awfully tired. My husband says I may be right about the first son but I am mistaken about the second. Plea~ dig out some old calendars and let me know if I'm rlghtorwronf.. Thanks a million. -HAZY DAISY DEAR I .D.: Oct. 20, 1946 was a Sunday. Octo~r 6, 1951 was a Sat. Considering the circumstances, you have a rlghttobeconfused. P .S. You r being bugged by an lnslgniflcant bit of information Is what the authorities call "the tyranny of detail " -and It Is not uncommon, honey. HEARING PIC>a.EM?. f SHCIAUU tt4 HllYIDIAIHISS CASIS MAJ<>• MA.HUl'ACTUnl5 •IPHlltfrl.D Tl:H YIAH IH CC>aOHA DIL MAl HAL AEBISOtfR HEARING AIDS Hot L c-t .._,. c--....... -us.11n .... STATE FARM A INSURANCE .. ® ... . FOR INSURANCE CALL ·oeNNIS ROSENE 41 o West Coast Hwy Newport Beach 645-6470 ,, SALE fine clothJng for women and chRdren. Lile •IDC>d ndlhbor. s. Fann ii lbrft.. SUit ,...,,. lllMlnftet Conlpeltles ttom. O!IC.· ~-llliflClls Arthritis Group Foots the Bill FASHJON ISLAND N"wport Beach 644-8808 FASHION SQUARE Sonia Ano ~7797 HUNTINGTON HARIOl18 84~1£66 Postmastectomy? New, seamless Breast Form has natural feel. A natural breast do~s not have a seam. Why should a postmas- tectomy breast form have one? The Yours Truly"" natural-flow breast form by Jobst is a tender. soft envelope of seamless sili- cone. filled with a special gel that weighs the same and moves the same as a natural breast It 1s worn right against the skin in your favorite bra, no pockets. extra straps, bags, or coverings r he Yours Truly breast form that shapes itself with the. balanced behavior of a natural breast is available in thirteen bra and cup sizes. Ask to look at one today PA~K L.lc::>C:> MEDICAL MART 351 HOSPITAL AOAO.N0.112 NEWPORT BEACH, CA 92663 1714) 642-9102 leamto be · your own interior decorator hihdltlfol ........ ........,. ---~c..,.. .. GllMeROW YOU CAM DO IT YOUllmllt Learn how to put a room tOQether like a Ol'Of8$Siollal ... how to decorate for ydur family's style of living. . how to get the most for your decorating dollar ... how to use things vou already have ... how to "re-do" and "make-do" ... how to mix furniture styles ... how to select the right colors ... how to choose fabrics vou can five wtth . . . how to avoid miking ellpenalve decorating mistakes ... TOU'U. MT PlltS01'4AL A~ Your Instructo r will be Master a expert ASI O Decorator/Designer N&l'\CY Cartwright. sh9·11 help with voor lndlvldua\, decorating prol)ltms. and she'll take vou on a color cloMd circuit TV tour of over 400 beautiful "Idea .. rooma. • CLASSIS STAQ JULY II And theYff be held right In our downtown stOte, You'll attend Ol'Ht 2 hour clllle 1 week for e wee+ca.. The •nrollment fee It J315, which lnciudee vour Decorltor'• ~tnU91 ltuder\t wotlcboolt.. u .. vour Bank Americard Of Maatefdwge. \ CMOOtl: lHI CLASS lMAT'S~ITfliOl 'fOU ~eya at 7:00 PM. T~ at 10:00 A.M. W.0 lldl)ll It 7'.00 P.M. T~ilt 1000 A.M. Dr. Phillip Evanski (left) observes as Dr. Theodore Nussdorf examines Mrs. Orville Nelson 's foot m UGI Medical Center's orthopedic clinic. Child Abuse Problem Studied Child abus£' m Orange County wi ll be the focus of a study by a special task force of lhe planning division of L'nited Way of Orange County North·South. The group will utilize police and court records. reports from juvenile authorities, wetrarc organizations. hospitals. and will conduct interviews with mental heal th professionals and parent· child coping groups. The task force will attempt to determine the prevalence of child abuse in the county and will make recommendations for a coord in ated p r ogram to investigate and d<fal with the problem. Findings will be reported al a Septe m ber me~ling or t he planning division, according to division chairman, Joseph J McGuckm Project chairman will he Dr lrving Slone. formerly of Fa1rv iew Stale Hospital. Me mbers of the ~roup mclude Lor raine Adler and Dolores Churchill of the Orange County Department of Social Scrvicci. and Sister Bertillc, Holy f'amily Ser:vices. Others are William Erickson. Catholic Community Agencies. J ac k F eeha n. Southern ·Califor nia Gas Co.; Penny Moore. Orange Covnty Public Health Service. and Henry Paris, Nort.h Orange County Child Guidance Center. The group. also includes Cmdr. Irene Stewart, RN of the El Toro Marine Corps Afr Station and Dr. Sue Tully, UC Irvine Medical Center. ... PANTS bv DAi&.E Girls Extra Shm calcutta cloth in fashion color.Slze X-tra slim 7-14. 5~99 · Reg. U6.00 , ... . . . .. .. . .. ~ UCI Medical Center·s fool c linic wi l l b e enlarged to meet dem· ands thanks to a grant given by the Arthritis Foundation of Orange County. ,Clini~ are held twice a month on F'ridays in the orthopedic ward and provide quality control a n d t reatment of problems. ''The grant will provid e foot pads, special shoes and other applications necessary to treat problems related ti!~ .. 1-t"ll? m~[)lf~S • Hair Design •Skin Care • Sculptured Nails M anicure/Ped1cure • 11201.-..m.c&. Mewpotileecll co 8 17141 642-1414 to bunions, call uses, :--------------------JO tnt dislocation. de- form ities or arthritis." s a 1 d Dr . Theodore Waugh, professor of or thopedic surgery. lie emphasized the prime concern of the chntc 1s control and correction of children's fool problems About 20 lo 25 peoplr visit the clinic each week som•thfne fast 'f For Classified Ad ACTION Call A Dolly f'llot Ad·1tlutr 642-5671 HAMS .. So Good ••• " WRI 'Haunt' You 'tH ff's Go. .. SolllMJ ftt11 w..ti-'7 T••-.., HOMEY BAKED HAM Sliced. •• Reody to Mne ... Mo wost. Yow •• 9'•• y-cNW • Nd fntrt! ._.._rlcwd Metter Char9t • Ready to Serve with Hon.,~· n Spice Glaze • Spiral Sllced From Top to Bottom • We Package and Stilp from Coast tc Coast • Full Service Oehcates3en • Imported Cheeses ORANGE Twsffn-ICatetla 14 It Ho. T•1tltt A•• (714) 997-9960 ANAHEIM TM VIII• Center 1222 s. lroolllNNt lat loll Rei.I (7141 635-2481 CORONA DEL MAR 3700 E. COGtt Hwy. (114) 673·9000 PALM SPRINGS 71550 Hwy. 111 In ltencho Miit. RANCHO MIRAGE (714) 343194 OME WEE« OMl Y JULY6 THRU JULY 14 L Picnics, Lectures on Tap POWH NATIONAL ALLIANCC : I J Padercr.aki Lod1• will hold ns annu11l plt-nl<' Suoda)', July 10. at tht- l...on1 ~acb Pollt-o plalol ranlt plcnk 1round11 The P•Cnk ~Ina •t 10 "rn For further lororma t1on. phon• 12 13) ., S98I. LECl'URE SERIES: Howa ol Enterin1 the Job J Market wUJ be the rocwi J of • four-week t'ourae on J Tueadaya al 7 1> m . • be1hinJna July 12. ln the i l"ountaln Valley Ret'n•u i lion Center • Sponsort'd b) ~ Coutline Communtl> l Colle1e. the i.eries will i t>xplore career 1oali., l handlmg fears and ob f st acles. verbal itnd phy11cal communlca t1ons. and teaming bow to like yourself and be liked by others The course 1s free and reeistrallon Wiii be taken Capricorn al lh• flrlll. aa111on Further lnformauon la available by ealllnai thl' colltlf al 183 0811, t•xt "' 8ALVATION ARMY AlJXILIAa'Y: An or 1anlzatlonal meetinc for •new auxiliary will take placo a\ noon Wednes· day, July 13. tn the 11oclal hall ot Bet.htl Towera, Coata M .. a. Anyono interested In the fonnation of the new 1roup la invited . ReaervaUona are being taken by Mr11 Mollie Rhodes at 644 9838. ART WORKSHOP : The Salei; and Rental Council of the Newport Harbor Art Museum will present a <.:htldren 'i. Creative Art Workshop for 5 to 8-year-olds. on Tuesdays and Thursdays. at 12 30 p m . begmningJuly IZ The sessions will deal w1tn three dimensional t Take Trip i~ <' TllURSD/\ Y, JUl,V 7 By SVONEV 01'1/\RR "· . ~ ARJES (March'21 April 1!11 · 1\..,k question:-. obtain cle<irances. /\void legal tonfrontahons Element or luck or liming IS on your ..,.de Soewl t•vent could be highlighted . TAURUS (April 20·May ~I) Check fine print I. -read tx>twcen the lihcs Build on solid base ! Don't give-or accept flimsy excuses. ex plan· ations . Emphasis on what 1s hidden. inter pretat1on of symbols GEMINI <Ma) 21.Junc 201 Acecnt on friendship, emotional in\'Olvemcnt. sign1f1canl change. intens1f1cd relationship You could \\in popularity contt•st. cspec1ally "here· opposite sex <'nters p1eture. CANCER <June 21 -July 221 I lomc hfr pers9Qal surroundings, conecss1on by fam1lv member -these arc spoUrghted. D1plomati<: techruque lhrou1h the uee or collaae. popler mache and ml1ted media Further 1nformauon 1s 11va1lable by t-allin1 the museum. !:xperlmenting with oil and watercolor wlll bt pre1ented the aame days a t 2 p.m. for 9· to-12· ytar·olda. PICNIC: The annual Worthinfton, Minn. Pic- n 1 c w1 I be held In Pearson Park. Anaheim from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday, July 10. HELP FOR HRAI N INJURED CJIJ LDR EN. I NC.: A mectmg fo1 parents and the public is planned for 7 30 p m f'nday. July 8. in the La Habra f11 g h Sc h ool auditorium S pcal..1n g 011 tht• rehabilitation of Lh c bram in1ured and new con~pts of treatment for the learning disabled child will be Robert Doman, MD. dlreclor of th e Ce ntr e f or N e ur o l og i ca l iibout the clau is avallable by calling 556·576'. SINGLES SCENE: Another s euion for smites will be offered by Coaatllne Community College on Tburtdays a\ 7 p.m. in Mariners Elem- entary School, Newport Beach. Tlle first class will be July 14. An overview of the c urrent singles scene will start the lecture series, which also will emphasize knowing self, involvement in interests, relation to others and de· veloping relationships. Further information is available by calling the l'OlleE?e at 963·081 l. ext 256 CON FERENCE : D eve loping new programs for day care and home health care for senior citizens is the goal of an all-day conference, ent1Ued Health Care - Alternatives for Seniors. Sponsor is the Orange County Gray Panthers, and the session will tuke place at California State University, Fullerton on Tuesday . July 12 . Re1lat.ration 1s at 9 a.m . at the west entrance of the University Center Keynoter will be Dr Ruth Von Behr.en . director of Alternative Health Care Systems for the State Department of Health. Her topic will be the Need for New Ideas. PARALEGAL ASSOCIATION: The Orange County Chapter will meet at 6 p.m. Tues- day, July 12, at Carrows Hickory C hip restaurant. Santa Ana RECEPTION : The Junior Ebell Club of Irvine will hos t a reception to be given for Priscilla Neufeld. stale pre side nt of the California Federation of Women's Clubs. Junior Membership The event will lake place at 8 p m. Monday. July 11, in the home of Sharon Ellis R ch ab JI it at 1 o n 1 n -:;:;===========;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:==~ Morton. Pa . and Bert Tracy, ONR resident de· " JU~Y SALE "' velopmentalisl al 11 BJC in La Habra. 1\1 ore informal ion is availabl<.• from lllllC, ~..,R ANCI_Q-OR R 12131694-fi6.55. I 1 \ ~ ('OUNTRY FAIR: A celebrity auction, fr(•Sh line staticrery corooa del mar produce. antiques and .._ , hand1 c rafl :. will highlight the country fair from 9 a .m . to 3 p.m Saturday, July 9. at the Mardan Center of Educational Therapy, Costa Mesa Proct'Cds w1 II support the Mardan School, which serves the learning -d1 !!ablcd c hildren of Orangc- County M orr information 1s ava1l<1bl1• from the center. 540·4113 Wednesday. July 8, '977 DAIL y PILOT CJ;J Cheese . OI The Weelc SMOKY BAR NOW 3oe lb. OFF OFFER EXPIRES JULY 11. 1977 Hie OfJ '--Smoky I S..0.H C--. a.ii h e ,.,.._. c'-te t ... ..tte et _, YHrt. tt IJ a Mlperior bMM of cMlWlr .ct Swlu c~• ttiet It Mclaory NllOfrt4 to perledNll. 'NI 0.-cjl .... ,.. ......................... ,.. ...... ,. ....... c-.. -.... Mt_,.....,. "m&rk©r1 w~urm~v : COSTA I OF OHIO I MESA South Coast Plaza °:~:~~.:::·::::! Suncny 12 to !5 p.m. : Lower Caro...-1 Mill Bristol at Sen Olago Fr•-•v THE SUPER CHEESE MARKET Phone: 5Co.6991 l t t 1 I • , . . • • ' . J(esture on your part could pay d1v1dends Act <ic· l'Ord i nj.!l\' LEO tJulv 23-Aui.:. 221 · lnd1v1dual 1n p11s1t1on uf <1uthor1t.v •weks your VIC\~S Tread lightly. You're not sePin~ picture in realis tic light Then• c·ould he reprisals. Scrn•t C'Onfor('nc·e c·ould bc on agenda. R EUNION: The class of 1967 from Pomona Catholic Girls' and Boys' High School is planning a r c u n 1 o n r o r t' a r I v September. · Look at These Summer Sportswear Values! i I \'IRGO (Aug 23-Sepl. 22): /\ctc•pt challen~c·. rrsponsibility Member of opposite sex docs makl· demands, but also will gin• plenty in return Emphasis on dij.!gmg bc·nl'nth surfal·c 1nd1c<itions 1.IBRA (Sl•pt 23 Oct 221 Finish ralhl'r than b~g1n Don 't be 1nve1glccl into legal r confrontations Time 1:-. on your side. Know 1t. ptay wa1i,.~ game'. SPotJ1ght on 1omt efforts. 1•ights and rm1s!lions, ft\arital status SCQR IO COct. 2:1-~\t. 21 ) Jlldden talents !\urge (o forefront. You get credit for past achle~ment. Door of opportunity 1s aJar enter with confidence. SAGITTARIUS <Nov. 22· Uec 21) · What m ight be regarded as a bizarre experience turns out to be something solid Emphasis on emotional response, special relallonsh1p. vigor. rh1ldr<'n. speculative venture CAPRICOR N <Dec 22-Jan 19 1 HC' receptive lo expanding base of operations . If on holiday, take siclc:> trips Accent on reinforcing plans, structures AQUARIUS C.Jan 20·1'~eb 18 > · Avoid ' premature actions hy individual ma) not have arrived on scene. Short trip, com municatlons. ability to gel grel'n li~h't from authorities. PISCES CFcb 19-March 20): Emphasis on spending, conservfflg, reaching agreement with member of opposite sex. You find ways of correcting past mistake, recouping loss. Graduates are asked lo contact B eckv Hendrick. 626-6742, ro·r d('lails. F RI F.NDS OF RIG SISTERS: A potluc k dinner for members 1s plannl'd for 7 pm . Monday, July 11 , m the Santa Ana homf' o f Charloette Kimes. SINGLES CLASS: A course to help students develop communication s kills for intim a t e relationships will be of· fered next fall by Orange Coast Co lle ge's psychology department. Titled Training for an Effective Adult Marriage, the two-unit class will be taught on Mondays at 7 p . m ., beginning Sept. 12 Pre-enrollment will be taken at 7 p.m. Tuesday, July 12, in room 105, co un seli n g and admissions building. Fall registration begins Aug. 24. Further information 1 If July 7th ls your birthday, you are sensit- 1 1ve. ~motional. a perfectionist. an idealist. r psychic, possess an aura of glamor. ~::;::::::::::::::::::::::=:=:=:=:::;;:::;;:::;;;;;::;:==:=:=:=:::; I { The Luzzetta Bernard Woman • is the Tqtal Woman. YOUR CHOICE TOPS • T-Shirt1, 1h•ll1, tonics ond halters • Easy car• • Miues' situ S·M·l. SHORTS • Easy-care potye•t•r knit • Ela1ticiied waist • Solidi and patt•rnt • MinH' sizea 8·'20 99 each Ufliie Sears Revolving Charge Scarves sac Ja1hi•nabte prints. Can t.e worn many ways. Auottecl coa.n. Mis ea' Panties a::· 99c Thi• Ad Effective threu9h July 9 . • • • : J : . • ~ . ~ • 1 . : • ' ? • • • • v i L' USDA Choice Beef. full Center Cuts. Bone-In •. ,,_:• Assorted Contains: Center And End Cuts (Approx. 1;4 Pork Loin} lb. Brand ' . I ' ee1a Se .: {fou~k-Pfem~ PAPER DOG EueAf1 ffe:re... TOWELS FOOD Look for the S on the ~ Truly Fine ' label. . .'it marks our finest ~~~ ~ quality & best value! ~~ Large "AA" Eggs ~::':" 1-dozen 6 9 0 Quality Carton Pork& Beans Large Roll Tow", D$ 30-~z.390 H~e ~-Can .. Corn Flakes . =-~·' . Ja-oz.59c LIQUID BLEACH . Quality • .Pkg. Bathroom Tissue . Mll'lgold ~*.==i .4-roll 590 . tn~ .. Pkg. c Shortening Pooth 151h-oz. Cans SALAD OIL Velkay . ~ 991a All-' 1~~~ 3·1b. Y Purpose li::!d. '/ Can ~-----------------~ Toothpaste ~ 55 =!,'· ©•NCIAL 7-oz. 0 or Mint Tube _Motor OH Stteway ~. Ot. 3 8 0 30-Welg~ C8n Tomato Sauce ;!<·~,'~ ~-~~~ Town .. 8 I-oz. s100 · ~~ HouH . Cans Soda Pop · ~ · 4 s100 l'tul Deiantt =:a · Orange Julca ;::. ff ,J1:s.oz.s100 · Froan ._Cina .Cheddar Cheese ......... .,..or s111 · ..... ,J .. .... , ........ wts. lb. L ~ •• ~ ••••• ' •• t • ' •• y ~ ~ -~ NEW 1977 LIST $5782. SAVE$ 800. OUR PRICE $4982 77 FORD GRANADA ~EW \ 9 4 DOOR SEDA~ heel co11ers. bright adial ply tires. w woodtone ~ Steel belted foldings. carpeting 0 6 cylinder ~~'-* e,teno• I '"oonet ,p0tooue. 250 ;1 "doal ""''· i"':": • 7 • 1nstrumenl!I tomattc transm1ss10 bra1<es. dehJl(e r'i. -······· "· -· ,,ont .... • .. ••032 G . ~ p0wer s1eenng. ted glass complete. . ~mper grouP. ttn Ser. ~n17478 '"': N .. LIS1 $5039. SAVE$ soo. OUR PRICE lEASINi?· COflp E OUR DEAL DIRECT AND SAVE FOIU>·. GM cg~ETITIVE RATES ON fJ , CARS·A· NHRYSl.ER • AMC D TRUCKS WE LEASE ALL MAKES AND . MODELS ( '71 MERCURY couo.aaxa1 V·S. auto. trans.. factory air oondltlonlng, power steering. l)ower brakes. power windows. AM/F~ stereo radio w/cassette. vinyl roof. UC: #8830LK Stock #2952 52299 • SAVE WHEN YOU BUY-SAVE WHILE YOU DRIVE 4 speed transmission. front disc brakes, rack & pinion steering, bucket seats. fold down rear seat. electric rear window defroster. steel belted radial ply tires. wheel' covers. deluxe bumper group. Stk. #1238 Ser. •190027 Hardtop. Front disc brakes. rack & pinion steering, contoured bucket seats. carpeting. sound insulateon package. gauges. lockable glove box. wtieel covers. automatic transmission. front & rear bumper guards. Stk. # 1193 Ser #143490 OUR PRICE . s3997 NEW 1977 FORD PINTO WAGON OUR PRICE 53577 ' NEW 1977 FORD MAVERICK 2DOOR SEDAN Front disc brakes. caroetlng. fockable glove box. flipper rear Quarter windows. bnght dnp rails. 250 CID 6 cylinder engine. automatic transmission. front & rear bumper guards. C78x14 WSW tires. Stk. #1071 Ser. #148034 OUR PRICE s.3755 , . NEW '77 FORD F-250 · CUSTOM STYLESIDE PICKUP 300 CID engine. chrome front bumper, full foam seats. foldlAg seat back. dome lamp. headline<. sutomaltc transmission, {4} 800x18.5 o 8 PR tires plus spare. Stk. J0992 Ser. JY42835 $4856 '74 AMERICAN . SPOITAIOUT WI.GOH 8 · cyl.. auto. trans.. air conditioning. l)OW9r steering, radio, heater. Lie. #SOQLHI Stock #9S1A . . . . . . " . . . •• 'IWlY~LOT * l118UC NOTICE PlTBUC N&l'IC& \ • • L I J11<1e 1s.u,2tanoJ uly6, 1m PlJBUC NOTICE • • • It PtJBUC NOTICB D A.: I J. y p I· L 0 T c L A s s I F . I ~ D 6 4 2 . . . . • /JD.NIGEL UJ\li..EY &. 1iSSIJCI/\ ff 5 ~·....,.Pel' will not aw.s FOR 5'5,0007 bOwindY accep& any Yea, we have a 3 BR. advertftln1 for ~eal ••eream Puff", dee. own estate wbieh a. ID viola· home. Close to swim· tlonofthelaw. ming, tenni.s, shopping & NO DOWN ..._, PAYMENT Homet for Sale the answer to a truly ...... ••••••-••••••••• carefree lifestyle. High G1MNI I 002 quality & loweat priced TO VETS Homes located in Costa Mesa and Huntingtop Beach areas. Hurry! ••••••••••••••••••••••• lnBluffs. VAU.EY 640..9900 can 540.3666 FtXAHDSAVE $36,500 Charming bungalow on q\liet tree lined street. Fruit trees tool Prime area elose to schools and &bopping, don't miss this deal Call DOW 752-1700. Ol'fN II( 9 •II S fl/N 10111 "41(1• ~---~, THE REAi. ' F.~~!_~~ GREAT STARTER HOME! This 3 bdrm charmer is perfect for the young couple starting out. Huge encl'd back yard for the little ones w /lemon «i orange trees. Bicycle distance to the beach. 646·7711. a Walker & lr.e Real Estate •HOISIS •ICENMas •STORAGE •OR?? A huge 82.5 x 336 A·l lot wtJ br, 2 ba,bome in up· pet bay county area. S96,500 644-7211 for details ~NIGEL 13/\IU Y f... /\SSIJCl/11 [S llR+POOL 574,950 Matu r e f amily nelgbborbood. Quiet street. Lg. living room. Massive stone frplc. Formal din. FarnUy rm. ov41rlooks pool! Open .s t yle conv,nlence kitchen. 3 family size bdrms. Sparkling free form pool clrcted w/Arhooa Flagstone. EZ care yd, VACANT & WAl'tI~Gt Call fa,t. 646-7171 OPfH rlt 9• 111 NH rolif llll(f • ~~REAil TERS I -_, WOOblllDGE Broadmoor ~e: 2 BR. + den + dining rm. + eatJ.Qr area in kitchen. Gornoua brick 'frplc. Lo.f':'alnt. y~rd . . ..,...,,,. . ........ • 675-7060 * ; i "6.¢$hl; Have something to sell? ClassUied ads do It well. I OOZ GeMral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• a: 110111 ILllRS CD. I OVER 50 YEARS Of SERVICE .. R .. PLAN" TOWNHOUSE! Newer Bluffs, Upgraded End Unit With View. 2 Spacious Bedrooms, 2112 Baths, Den & Wet Bar. All Electric Kitchen. Formal Dining Room, Lovely Carpets. Drapes & Wallpaper. Wood Pegged Floor, Entry Hall & Kitchen. Immaculate. $162,500. A "Joy of Newport" Listing • Ill DOVElt DRIVE tlj ~ •l I I . , - di • .. Pansies and Roses - .. .., \ L W•dl'\eed&y. July 6. 19n * DAil y PILOT .. , ........ '9r S• Hovi" "9r I• He.ate•,_ S. Ho..Ha Pw Sah Houna For S4h Hou•H For S• HOUM$ For S• HouM1 ,_ S. ....... Pw S. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• G ... ,.. I 001 ........ ......... IOOJ GtMral I 002 Gettff'of I 002 Ge.wrot I 002 ......... t 002 C.-.. M• I 021 c..t. Meta f 024 ·~···················· ..•.••••.•.•.•••••....••.•....•..••.••.......••..•••.........•..••...................•...... ····••·······•········· .................................................................... . ®herbert haw kins HEALfOf.<~ . . PllCID TO SIU $66,000 Thi2' 3 lx-droom, i:i~ bath home s hows pride of ownert\hip. No w•x kitchen floor. new <'arpcts. insulated. 11moke det~<'tor. new blo('k fon('e. Quiet area of Huntiniton Beach Near shopping, schools & !rwys. MIW W'GIADID IUUTY $12,tOO Lo~ly new 3 bedroom. 2 bath, family r oom. vaulted ceilings, upgraded Warmington Home. Smoke detector~ fireplace. heavy s hake roof, eye-level self clng oven. fu ll y insulated, on oversized lot. Near s hopping, schools & frwys. UIGENT!! SUIMIT!! $60,950 on this 4 bedroom. 134 bath home on quiet tree lined street w /fresh paint Inside & out. covered patio. Oversized garage. ~ear schools. s hopping. Owner anxious. purchased new home. Loan assumable. SURFSIDE IEACH TOWHHOME $69,500 Investor financing available for this jewel on the P acific. 3 bedroom, 1112 ba th, UOO sq. ft .. brick patio. dbl garage. Walk to beach. schools, shopping. Put your money to work for you at the beach like the big guys do! 18055 MaCJ11olla St. Fountain V alt.y 963-8111 Ge-neral I 002 GeMral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Attn: Veterans Must sell this beautiful 3 bedroom, 2 bath Costa Mesa home. Gourmet kit c h en. compl w1butcher block counter Lops, & continuous clean· ing oven. Sculptured :ihag crpls. Heavy shake roof. Large Yard. Hurry priced only $715,900. Call 546.5880 ~HERITAGE • • REALTORS FOOTHILLS FIXER $105,000 Large Family Home. Nestled in the Foothills. Needs some TLC. Bring your tools & paint brushes & make SU . Double door entry. St.ep down forma l living room. Huge separate family room t<>QI Second story hosts master wing. There are three more bedrooms for your pleasure. Fix this into ~~~~~~~~I your dream & save. Only S105.000 for this 2.400 sq. fl . home. Call no w 752·1700. OCEAHVIEW HEAR HI SCHL OPl"I Ill Q •If S fUN 1081 N•(f' Tremendous mtnsidc hm ['.. . .. ·., 11 w/I BR. ram. rm:. dining ·.'· }If· Ulif!,'\I rm., 3 BA. Great view <~ 1.,, ~i:\H:i from both levels. Room u:·~~ .. :~ .. ::~~ ~~~· ~~I for pool. Full grown .:: ... ~r~ccs, lrg. lot. A bargain WAU JO BUCH $255,000 From this 4 bdrm 3 baUt JACOBS REALTY w/dinlng·rm. Large fmly room w/conversatlon pit 6 75-66 70 & Cirepl'ace. ~ mile from -------• ocean on quiet cul·de- ----------; sac. Profess ionally landscaped. Real pride $1.62 per DAY of ownership home. New on Ute market. 646·7711. v•Y MUCH SHOllCUffS Just . listed! 9200 sq. ft. lot with delightful pool. bit·of-a·view, 4 bedrooms and a beautifully remodeled kitchen. Maybe yo~·ve been waiting for th.ls? The 4th bedroom is super large, with beams and a bath. The Shoreclifft address includes access to two private beaches and the beautiful kitchen includes two ovens Cone a microwave> and one fireplace. A fireplace in the kitchen is very Shorecli!fs ! U,_.l()UI: tf()MI:§ REAL TORS"; 675·6000 2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar also in Mesa Verde, at 546·5990 • IOOZ.._..al 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• \V 1-:SI .J·:Y N 1\YLOR CO. Hfo:t\1.TOliS ~1 11n· l !Hli raFICT FAMILY HOMl-$179,500 Beautiful 4 BR "Palermo" with large yard in newest phase of Harbor View Homes. Lge ram room with wet bar & shutters, formal dining, 2 frplcs. Near community swimming pool & tennis cts. Convenient to new shopping ctr. 211 t 5cM Joaquin Hilt Rood MIWPORT CENTER, H.1. 644-4910 G.....-ol 10021Generol , 1002 ···········!··········· ..•......•.••••.•.•..•. PENINSULA home. 4 Or 5 BR, 3 ba, all amenities. Lovely neighborhood, a few steps from the beach. $195,000. OTHER prestige waterfront homes with pier & float from $385,000 up. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Boy~,.J,. Ur•vt• N .B t,75 6 161 RELAXA TIOM FORMULA. . GeMral I 002 IGeMrOl · · I 002 Sauna + pool + outdoor shower · + covered patio equals a great way to unwind at end of day; we have a 4 bdrm .. 2 bath home in Mesa del Mar, Costa Mesa, that offers th.is & more. $84,950 ~~~DO REALTY (~ 3377 Via Udo. Newport lffeh -J 673·7300 GftMMll 1002G ....... 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• WE AU, LIKE COUNTRY FRENCH! Southport Model; 6 bdrms. Spyglass Hill home, unique decor. Asking $3l5,000. Owners anxious to sell! Beautiful l'\18Uc duplex, 2 ... ___ _._ ... _ PlllSTIGIOUS BR. " 1-BR. beam cell., Blults front row location Carden paUo. '1•$1.,SOO In a never to be dupUcat-PAUL MAJlT&N ed aettlna: thi• home Real Eatat• IH•'faN features a llBt of appolnt- mentus att.n<.1.ive aa iu . OCM YU HIDIAWAY price; spaclou1 ms tr. Bachelor or a..u.t'I lBR, suite with aparkllnc 2BA w/old CdM charm. lights of Fashion Island; Huae lot w /room to security system & many, build. Just reduced to many more. $165,0-00. $1.22,SOO Callforapp't. HALPIMCHIM. c. F. ColesWOrtllY ~~~'~ REALTORS 640.0010 -------• OCEANFRONT HOME SPYe&..ASS HILL Splendid 4 BR., family rm.; oc:ean view, pool, jacuazi, 2 frplca., fee la.ad! 1298,000 PAUL MARTIN Real Eltate 144.73113 OCEAN CANYON VIEW m.111. MESA VBRDE - 1pedoal I bedim and famU,y + ..,.. deo and wet bar. Up1raded lhruout. Just U.t.ed at t7?,T1'1. Hurry, call M&.5880 .. ~. HERITAGE -REALTORS TWO WISTSfDI "STAITll• HOMIS Your choice of 2 darllnc 3-bedroom homes wlth fenced yards! One freshly painted in and N · one with near·new carpets! S86,QOO and '53.000. SURFS UP-at lhis 3 bedrm, 2 bath home tn Newport Bea c h . Highlights a double lot. Much remodellJ'lg done to this Cape Cod charmer. Call for appt. to see S260,000. . PETE BARRETT -REALTY- :.':t.":a~."' .. ~:.:o.· r~ Owner will carry. Shown by appt. only, Owner bkr erl -, · 673-5740 7S2•'920 t---------114000UAIU1. luat ., 642-SZOO Na Lan Fees Owner will ca.rry nnanc-1--------·1 Ing on this charming Irvine Terrace home. 3 TOP Of Jll UNE Bedrms, shake roof. P r e s t i g I o u s $135,000. MIS.A VERDE . Very good luck. Custom built home In the Mesa Verde section of Coeta Mesa. 3 Br, fam. rm. & pouible gueat quarters. Asking $185,000 Agl 67W800 n e i g h b or ho Q d i n Roy McCartle Anaheim. B.eauliful 4 ltHllor lllO*wport * 5p•RKLIMG bedroom, 2\.ia bath home 541-772' Coste Mete "' on comer lot with room~~~~~~~~~ LIKE MEW for boat or trailer. Topr: condition. Central air Attractive Duplex, ea. un· 4 lk 4s lam rm on larse conditioner. Original It 2br, 2ba, f'rplc. crpt'g. lot. Home has new ap· BY OWNER builder/owner. SllS,000. Walk to. bc:h, $200,000. pllancea, cpts, paint. 546-4141 640-7463 hardware" much more. $11,500 . D.J.Ften1tre Inc MDT TO llACH j.-;;;m5ji;4;;'·-l l;;';;2 ;;;;;; CDM ~ COATS &WALLACE REAL ESTATE . INC. --------1 This spacious sunny Olanning clean 3 Br, 2 home features 5 larce Ba, dining rm, new cpts HARBOR VIEW bedrooms each with & drpe, covered patio. private. bath. Family dbl car garlge wtwork BEST BUYll room with wet bar & bench. Comef lot, fncd •• euper custom kitchen. back yard. Room for ......................... ..........•............ Newly painted HARBOR ..... _ in · 1 b ,_ •-boat or RV parklna . ' VIEW HILLS 3 bed 2 A•"" pa t 15 res ua • S63,700. 845·7054 or COURTYARD EHTRY THI COLONY rm. out. New carpets, drapes DMslow of Hart.or .. ,..,._. Co. norlC.AL -....... 400 bath home. Even smells " abutters. Spectacular ~8for appt. '"-" #!!.. I G al new. Vacant and ready Ci la •-hiJ d ~~~~~~~~ LAHDSC.APIHG $119,500 wetttra 1002. ....,. 1002 for immediate occupan-trep ces •a o oora.1. C.ATHIDll.AL ENTRY Gorgeous family home i.n ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• cy. Call Also features 4 car car., 1849$ DOWN 1 · d · 2 TLH'COLOMY alrcood .. botwaLer,clrc. 3Br,28a.MesaVerdeby Quiet tree lined .street top ocauon -rall)at1c ,.._ 640·6161 pump & all on double lot owner. Open dally, 2917 with wrought" iron gate story entry. Brick Pl I I rt.AM·• 00 with 3 lighted patios. Royal Palm. 645-1918. that leads past a tropical fireplace. Huge country ease•• $15 500 Home of~ered at $330,000. ffurrv! garden courtyard. Enter ldtchetl. 4 bdrm.a, family . ' Prtn i A... call f r _-__;,·"------dr t. thed 1 1. room _ completely air Charming cul de sac c p "'° may o ama IC ca ra iv-. Bring any reasonable of-street. New plush carpet· appointment. M~ VERDE CONDO Ing & dining room. conditioned. Co111mun1ty Cer on this beautiful 3 Ing. Bric k fireplace. Immac. 2 Br, enc gar It Premium wall treat-pool " tennis courtli bdrm .. 2 bath Mesa Built-in book shelves. 209 MARCISSUS paUo, pool. Great loc. m e nts throug hout· nearby. Fast escrow Verde home. Vacant-Counlry kitchen. Ex-1639 "C" lowa. Asking Warmly paneled faJDilY ":~~~·.4:?~~HIN•W immediate possession tensive use or wood & --------, 873-7130 Byo-ner SS9,500. Ph:154-0241. room with natural wood~~~ possible. Listed at wall pape r . Hu ge ._ _______ .. _.:Ownr.:.:::.:.·------bur~nCgllf962ire7788place . :. 116,000 separate master wing. JUST 3&1.~. a · .. ~!11¥.~Mll Plus 2 more roomy • K€Y :~, . ": bedrooms. Beautiful I I P.€ALTOP.Sft ::.<',::.:· .• :,:-:<~ wood deck & patio cover LISTED r-Hr) sJJ-9781 l Hester~Brown MESA VERDE 3Br, 2Ba, Lowest price in Harbor frplc, din area, pool. View.Hills. 3 BR. fam. $81,900. By owner. rm., needa work. ~-6103 IRVIHE EXECUTl¥E $122,500 Secluded cul-de-sac loca- tion. Italian tile ent,.Y. Step up formal.llv. rm. Din galleria. High soar- ing ceilings. Huge sun· ken familY room. Spec-tacular sunny gourmet kitchen. Second story South of Hiohway CdM DUPLEX.'S°bedrm & 1 bedrm. Preferred locallbn. Oversized lot with room for a large ad- ditionil unit. $155,0-00. 6"-7Z70 holds huge maaler wlng1 .:;::;:;;:;;;;;::;;;:;;: plus 3 more spacious!• bedrooms. Beautifully --.... ,------ manicured grounds, cov-TWO FOR OHi!! ered lattice patio. Don't S7~,bOO -AI AlfORS EXECUTIVE HOME 2 STORY-BEACH Italian tile entry to s un· ken liv. room built·in micro. Country styled kitchen. Formal Dining. Winding stairs to master suite with Roman bath tub. Home fully insulat· ed. Call 963-6767. I Of'CN Ill 9 • JI S JIJN TO 81 NICI ' overlooks manicured g r o und. Call now 752-170(). ()l'fN Ill 9 . "~ fUN 10 sr N!Cf' lflH!!ll $1.54.000 1--------N es tl c d in family Ait644-7SJ640-8351 BY OWNER 3br, l~ba. neighborhood. walk to ,,.__ 02~ 186,500. 1718 Crestmoot. schools. cozy home with ""4nta Mes. I ,. 559-5423 aft 6 daily economy price. Great ••••••••••••••••••••••• -------- OPPORTUNITY if you MISA DEL MAI ' call NOW!! 4 IORMS INCOME 979• I 050 SGL STOIY Good starter units. 2 SUPER DUPLEX cE~TURY 21 I:-vly home on quiet tree Houses on a lot, zoned for $87,500-WHITTIER · " lined street. Best area. another. Income now Really2 sep.hses,beaut. We'reopentil9foryou TIUa is the lge 4 bdrm tslO/mo. Priced to aell. s hining oak firs, bvy l~~~~~~~~~I model. Lota of choice shake roof, FP, in ea. un-1· papers. Matr bdrm ~~McCwch it., 3 car gar., dble bas separate 'from chUdrens -• auto. door opene r . POLYNESIAN wing. This la a bUl ftnly ....... lllOH.wport Everything in these bome.Bettercalloothia 541.n29Cott.Mno homes are Qualit.y, unit LIVING one now before it's sold.jllia ______ _ -=====-'-----• ltl <Owner> Rent S29Smo, 5'S-9C91. ··--......-------Thal ·s ALL you pay for a JO day ad m the wait, call now 752-1700, 2 ch•Rhlng bungalows --------• oPfNlllQ•llS•l(N'0 "'No<i• on R-3 lots! Quiet tree [111111 ;E ,~·:':~l![.~ BREAD & BUTTER wtlt ff2. 28d, lge den. COST A MESA pool nu THE rent $32Smo. See all the home. 3 Bedrms. 2 bath. un goodies and you will buy Large enclosed lanai. .. Golf~ DAILY PILOT SERVICE DIRECTORY · """ shops. Investors choice--ls Your Profession come steal them! 2 for 1 llOME REPAIRS? OCEAMFltOMT·HI low price-$73,000! Call Did you know you can Duplex S'l75,000. 4 + 2 Br. now. 646-7171 place a classified ad in 646-4353 559-4221 OPfN 1119 ·,, s1u"' 1ool "40(f • ~i~e~t~~~ ~~~otaSe:~~~ Try a Daily. Pilot 1:r1~1i1Jla1aJ1 month ror a; little a· Classified Ad to buy, sell f. · :~ JjlJi @ ~.62 per.day . For mor or>renlsomethlna. F>~'l~·,-~,~,.,~~··.-~-~·~-=~·~-~-~:o~ information. call -.::: l~J IT :\OW' 642-5678 642·5678 ,..S~l_,l._.K-&---~--1-N""'"rl~--BE-RR-IE-s -~ GeMrol I 002' Gnerol I 002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• CORONA on MAR DUPLEXES 2 DUPLEXES -located within walk- ing distance to the beach. One unit -2 and a 1. The other unit 2 and a 2. Excellent location. Priced to sell. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• DOVIR SHOR!S- 4 .. ROOMS! L B E S H Y 0 G B A N A G A H ~ 0 G B R 0 H 8 c Ru A ale ERR I EIE 0 y AAGRRAUCERODPSARGRA NABAVSERACURRAHTRER G H C A H P A U R Y B E R R 0 E A G G ANANABGLXTOMAMBYAOO T A V G A E E B W E D E A H 8 l 0 N 0 O AAOWRTRYYPTEM~SRGB H P S N C R 0 C R A 0 S A I E A P R k T T E R ? Y U Z R Y Y G Z B S S E A M A 0 R A 8 R T G E 0 0 S E P 0 Y 0 P 8 N A 0 8 R P E 2 8 L A R M T Y 0 B E H NCAGAHESWYRREB~ARCA P P M R 0 T 0 Z E Y N, A G, S 41 0 G C T AANACCMZDUAVt~NN,TS Ollf: CIW~ Ml'd, 11p, down Of dlepetly. Find eacti ~ be« It I , BanaM tr1nb1rry ; Or•t<>t-',Grape ~ Grape lopnbtrt'Y , JOYst~ittY j Guava Tomato • Rlapb o Currant Dtwbtrr1 6QOsaberry Tomorl'fW: Cancer l>e~10ttal1~fu it. Greatfor creative cple Many gorgeous plants Real Estate 1 or beginning investor. need cutting back Quiet cul de sac. prest ge Ca 11 A g en t . J a ck $79,460. · Price reduced. 1925 Lanai area. 5 bedrooma, de· ~l~-~~~ -3 3 6 s or 400£.Irdt~ • FOR.!'! ~~ ~!~· ~~!Y c~~~~l. ~o fheP ~v~:i la':J C.M--_.,.. J.V.Co.548-86141159-lm family rooms, 2·way JI_ ·, 'illllii... FIXIR UPPll fireplace, rec room or • 1 library. Terrazzo tile, -WITH POOL covered patio, pool. C·2 1194;000, BKR, call Needs paint and carpet. 540-1120 All It takes ia a little lm-$3000 for Duplex! Total rents $47S! Nnmnrt Blvd. Only $$,000! Call Red "!!I"' Carpet, 754-1202 82\~ · F'rontage x 191' --------Depth with mechan1ca1 Redecoratinr aalnatlon & work and -· you11 have a beauUful P<lOI home. Hurry, call ~· _ ~I htCtlfenH" MARINERS garage and 2 rentals on Owner will give cr~it in SCHOOL the rear. Presentincome e&crow. Big S bedrm $830/mo. FIUl price Easlblulf home. Large DISTRICT SIJS,ooo. yard with teahouse. F=O~EST C OLSON '•' ..... backyrd , close to SLS2,000. . •·~-°"'-" Mariners school && park. R McCordl• Ml!S.AVBDI RIDUCIO 4 & ram rm, 98f.OOO. 4 "ram rm, f14.D> crawford & Associates 951-0701 . 3 bdrm beauty With lge -~I • IL Pri ce reduced to New crpt & drps. Juat R--'toroy Ill 0 H port 4br below market, 1198 listed • only S79,9SO. ANYtlME C'UI •w Au1u1ta, CFairview & -=~~::-::::-::----- 646-71ll. 548·7729 Costa Maia Augusta> 5:56-3149 bfr/aft ~ Walker & lee l~~~~~~~~l'~~~~~~~~I 9. 962-0'7'71anyttme C.ondo new East.side Costa Real Estate CojlecJerartc ___ DO_Y_O_U ___ MeH12br,l~'ba. Frptc. --------1 Vacant, ready to move OFFER A SERVICE? dshwnr, trash comJICt. into. a BR, 2 BA, lge back Let the public know with 188,000. 631-2950 yd w /many ftull treea. an ad In ~e Dally Pilot, Have somethln you want m::,-3928orf'0-473'1 Service Directory. lt ca~ to sell? Clau ada do .., ......... cost )'OU as UUle u $1.8: IL well -Call NOW, :1 per day. For more iD· 842-56'1& formaUon and cocnplet4 ---· ----...-1 rates call 642~5618. L -. .. . . . .... . . DAil V PILOT' * Wednetda . July 8. 1971 HouH• f.or Sale .. ~ • HouHs For ~ale . . . H041sH For s• • I ...... .........•.•..•.••......•.••..•.••..........••.••••••••..•.....•.•••• ~:.~.~~ ...... J~!!.~.~ ........ ~::!.~~.~~ ........ ~~ ............ !~.~~ ~~~~~~ ..... !?.~~ ~~~~~,~~~ .... !?.~~ ~!:!!.~~.~ ....... ~~:.~~.~~ ....... ~!la~~.!!!~ •..••• Ctif• MeM I 024 C•t• M.1• 1024 l .. 1tlttCJt0tt hoch I 040 UMIVHSITY p Aki( .... ir.v. DOOR-Mewportleo~h I OH Salt ChtMt\te I 07 6 t.co.t Pro ~ lOOO •• ••• • • • •• • • •• •• • ••• • • • "119.A' IY o~l!..lll> -1 -o •••••• ••• •• •••• •••••• •• •••••••••• •• •• • •• •••••• ~· Af ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Atlracttve VUJ.&it: J . '"'"SR•• .•v ••••••••••••••••••••••• a.aoo. l'ool homo, 2 aty Twnhae. 3 Br 2 Ba. to Emerald Bay! Lo~e-s Yr oW. btll IA1uaa LIDOISU llOD4HJl"ffYlew J OH A LOT Lingo AIAl&m'I HAHDSOMI DUPLIX -la ,,t.. ...... to IC .... ....,. mcf fr ... .,. Oii .................. two ..... 9•r•1•• •"d low ••ca•cy fectw-I 04.000 497-2419 w i5 bedrouma, nice atrium now pJ1.11h cpts ly 2 bdrm .. 2 ba. beach Nlauet Home. prof 4Br. 2~•Ba. pvt bch· Oceanlronfblufltop cust ..._._u_ ..... _ -.000 nc1~. 2~ Mlle» • • home. Loads of charm: d ood d 180 D ~---"""'·-· to burh. owner hu idntcood.Coavto1chool. beamed ceil., frplc . lndscpd. rncd y . w tennis. $225M Agt co~ o. euee YEAG~RREALTY bo\laht n~w homo,. must s hop& ., recreation ~ garqe + Htra pauo. 3Br, 2Bu, lovely 873-0289 whitewater view. Pvt ac• 5Se-ll7l tell. A&t 540.0555 or lmmed occpy. Opn carport. Lae., fully opn beam ce1hnf Uv rru -cesstobcb. Sl'19,SOO. :ill~ Houae Sat 1G-4PM, Sun lndscpd. Jot, completely w/brick frplc, dln rm, ....,._., 4,l-0100 · · 10.2. IM.500. By owner. refurbished wilhcJrptl· ~l lhe k~l, ~~sp•~"!· ~ PACll'lC SANOS Deane '36-4952 mo I.Di. d.raperles & palnt. 5 ws r. • • ov • 60 I LIDO l\mo, iq>.inaded 4 Br 2 Ba, TurtJ k B ad Ready f'or immediate OC· ovens, ran, cplS, lD~ry Water f r on t Con . GO JUMP ~d 1 llllered pool. br, r:ed ~ ':;°:.;x~ cupancy. See today at ~I~~ ~~~~A~eJ~ domlnlum. luxurious 2 into the comm. pool of r ot. $87,SOO. 8172 aousseUer movelnaton· Sl~.000 oil white, plumblnC & BR, avail immed. this lg. S br, 2~ ba. Malloy, Open Silt/Sun l·5 ce. Anytime '152-1860, ceramic tile. baths " S290.000. Open Daily 10-2. Sea view Townbome. ""'·""""" 10.,.ma .. ge. .Wll<>!!Pt!l '"°"'"· Pe'1ect eond. Se<urity bldg.""''"•• Eleaant M•"· '"'" l=e-~ ~-.,,.,.~~ 2S162 La E•tl'ada, 3Ft.oenter.67S-6900. w/frpl & balcony. Up· • - -.&..Nl.illcuuu ~ graded cpts, cust. win· I 042 VA 499 • 2800 < Cr 0 w n V a 11 e Y t 0 VllW /iASTILUFF dow treatments. Ready ••••••••••••••••••••••• lLaPPllatn,llefLt lSEt bllkdVI~: 3br&lgdeoor5br togoforonly$98,SOO. I•• ...... D Ll"I ... ._ 180 DEG "IEW u aza 0 8 8 ra a "' S I I I • • R I _...... " ".., " tum rlghL.) CaU eves for P t eve •many xtru • ~ ea tors •TR.MtLIX* Ptide ol ownersblp, on.IY 2 )'eara,oldl S~cloua 3 bedroom, z bal.b owner 't unit wltb fireplace! Sl.6$,000. 4Dr. 2~ba Waterfront CUSTOM HOME ap'pt. (714)495-0088 By Owner. T5l·l!i08 307 N. El Camino Real 18 ADULTUHfTS \Ot'Tlf 1.A<WNi\ J1ANA home. Concrete deck & TER~S 3Br,3Ba,2paUos,buge SEAVIEW! Thrilling S.C'"9 492-2100 Pride or ownership, t.A<:l''' NIGi' EL POINT 35' boat dock. Why settle deck. Walk to beach. Onr Lah For.st 1055 ocean & valley viewJ. Anaheim, shake roof. !!!!!• .. !!:l!!4:!!~!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!41!!J;,!!1!!7!!211!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.!!!4!!9!!3!!88!!1!!2!11 ~~; ~ w~':n>':U ~~ s Bedroom b me with an wi~OND 'R:Affi. ;.:~J;;;~; ~ ·~;;;~;:~ ~u:; 4 b:~~;' b~.P[ f ~1~!: ,.S-,,.,..Juan.,.,...._... ..... ..._._...._.. ~'!:.' O~~~ ~~.~~ 1034 ~~·Rily-Sunset Bch added family room in 831-9411 Decorator design upgrades. $259,500. ~1trano 1071 St2,600. F. P. 1393,000. ~~~~: ....... !?~4 ~~.!!1!~!. ........ 213 / 5 9 2 . 13 8 1 0 r Irvine's "Culverdale". lhruoul. 2 patios, pvt 548-8614or768·1620 alt.6 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Prine. only642·0758 7141846-2848 Low down for vets' UNl"'UE OCM VU dock. 14• Hobie Cat, 450 Casa Capistrano, 2br, TWO ULEXES ............... 15 ... ""Y"'""'E7 Almost 2700 square feel ,.. sq Ct tlled & cabineted ••sT ILUFF• Ccndo, by own. ssi,ooo. FAMJLYHOMI ,_," ~" "" QUIETCULDESAC or luxurious h vif\g . INMYSTl~HILLS ga.me.orbobbyroom.All Ch '""'1n 3 .__ .. • 499-2756 COSTAMESA 4 Bdrm, family rm PO~lrJACUZZb 1 Calif. Classic. Extra lrg Sl12.900. Red Carpet , Fantasticmtns~dehmw/ in xlnl cond. By owner. arm g uc:urm. ai,; ExceUent corner loca-t lOle to Orenge Coai.t Lge 2 uurm patio ome . I I v r m • b I t n s • 754.12,02 a lam. rm., dinmg rm .. 3 Sl6S,500. Open Sun. 2272.S bath Condo in exclusive l Ml. to ocean. 4 BR. 2Y.i lion. Can b e sold 2 Yni YOUD&. Back yrd & landscaped. cov'd pat10.1---------1 BA & e ,. e n 4 BR · Isla mare. 837·9517 or area. S~edish fireplace, ba. Cam-rm. 2150 sq. fl., separately or together. ('o lleie. ~tor~i. & side pat10. All on one Movein now.Ownerwlll Whitewater view from 675-5949 beautiful e nc losed ,·aew,$110,000.493-S828 Newlyraintedandrom· churches. A gn•at family floor near fr~ys , So. 14891 L--a..-•e Is ,.. courtyard Large 2nd 1 l d d ho ' 2 .. help Cinauce. Shown -"'"JI'"" bothleve . , .. aturetrees · . . c--ho 1 p e e y upgra e • me or S1 .soo {'.()llljt Pina " Male Sq. anyti·me. Open House Sat Just reduced! 4 Bdrm. on lrg. lot. Room enough Mission Vleto I 067 floor master swte w /pnv i:.A.ec me, ocean v ew, 4 SlSO OOOeach. INVESTORS Park. This is more hle a home m Irvine; quiet cul tor """"I. Don't miss your ••••••••••••••••••••••• bath. Owner will help Br 3 Ba. den, Jacuzzi. • Just I.ti.led, R 2 lot with home than a condo. & Sun. 5291 Glenstone de sac street, close to .,.,.,, finance with 20% down. Sl84,000 l o sell. S8SO charming :i bdrm. & :>ou'll love 1t! Call now _Dr_._HB_&&G-_264_1 ____ schools, shopping & cha~SS,OOO CORDOVA s12s.ooo. World Wide lease.493-S6lO I jQMail l lanulyrm.home,ample for more details .1-1-.... 1044 park. Nice patio, S2 Brokers673-4S4S ci.n-2 bd lb l.hho Ill• Pl ood ' ·-J •coas 11: ... I TV LA FAMILIA . . ... _... r, a me. ac• room for 2nd unit;&: ~9tl!L ••••••••••••••••••••••• encloscddogrun&many "' _ .. , 1 San Juan c pistra Prap--L.1-locataon. Call us for ad· extras. Owner leaving This highly upgraded 1---------1 a no. ....-.. ._ d •· , ..... he de•n.t-( I IEAUTIFUL area. Only $73,500 675-6670 38r. 2Ba, home on comer OPPORTUNITY $67,SOO. 66l-Ol95 after 5 7S2•t920 Prires.nsed ... ato"'n1'"y~.500....,.,,,~,1""· f'•"l:.ml.,.. PM ByOwnr .. _.. . _ .. r: 1• ·~:::-!! .::!~ ADAMS BAY & BEACH lot has all tbe xtras, dis-Full time, real estate · · "'°° OUA•rn. NIW.O.J NACM IAY & IEACH Real Estate in the great community REALTY 759-0811 A Bl~ hwasber . upgraded sales as~. ~borequir~s SUN HOLLOW 4 br, Z'hl•-------• REALTY 759 0811 of WOODBRIDGE of BEACH carpel, custom drapes In substantial income, 1s ba. upgraded mdl. A/C. DUPLEX • HuntiftCJIOftleach 1040 Irvine. 4 bedrooms.I~~~~~~~~~! llv-rm & lam·rm, blinds desperately needed by $79,900.492-4337 Perfect 5~ units in ---------1••••••••••••••••••••••• lanllly room and dirung ---------1 HOUSE in kitchen, mstr bdrm long eslablishl!d local Santa•~ r~. l S&S Resale Specialists. 3, room. Also centr al A/0. NEW w /retreat. mirrored broker. Outst anding -1080 Garden Gr ,$44,000. Everyth!!£ 4or5bdrmmodelsavail, Callfordetails. O""THEM•RI(..-. Located a short stroll wanJrobe doors, sliding earnings available on ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4UHITS somew/pools,968·4602 "" ~ l:I from the beach in glass doors, covered generous commission S63.7SO. Sharp 12 yr new Anotherstarterproperty You C Want Pennington Propertles @J 5 BR·21h BATHS "OLDER SECTION OF patio a cross whole back split. A marvelous op-home on quiet cul-de·sac Just a little bigger in I' r 0 f e s s • o n ,. I I Y ~ A super buy for the rami· THE VlLLAG E". Strik· of house. extra walks and port unity for the eager w /x l r a I a r g e yd. 3 Signal Hill, $74,900. landi.ca ped. decorator SEAWlND pool & jacuzzi ty looking for a large i 0 g. con temporary l\11ss1on stone fenl'C in re· professional. bedrooms +2 baths. Try 4 UNITS mirrors, wtil bar m the $107,500. · home. Localed on prime architecture, with de· a r y a rd . .F u I I y Mr. Haslings640-5560 Sl0.000 dwn. Agt S40·0S5S J ust reduced to $117,SOO. family room. "self clean· It E. PROFESSIONALS Jot In University Park. tailed ex te rlo r of landscaped. sprinklers or540.2530. mGarden Grove. 1ni:" kitchen . 4 9638377 963-7653 lnte.dor completely re-CEDAR SHAKES & front & reur. Mountain COTTAGE ---------4UMITS bedrooms.dining.ramitylm _________ .. painted and newly EXTENSIVE USE OF view from front & back MEWl'ORTHEIGHTS A.5SUME81~%VALOAN, room . 2 fireplaces. RAHCHREALTY landscaped. Buyer's GLASS WHICH AF· yard.ByOwner,$76,500. 2BR. Unusual Heights wilbSll,500.0wnerseU· Sl47 ,SOO, BKR, call NEEDS WORK 551-2000 choice of color of new FORDSSCENICOCEAN OpenSundayl·5.831·2SS1 home at SSS,OOO. Call us ingbecauseofDivorce.3 Nace buy in Los Alamitos, Sl49,500. :'H0-1720 carpeting and tile. Near VIEW. Sprawl ing 3 Caft. 6 wkdays) Brokers today! BR. lge lot, new crpt. tile park, pool a nd on a cul· BDRM. & DEN floor invited & paint inside. Gd 4UHITS This one ia a sleeper, way under market, ln Westminster at $121.890. TARBELL IYOWHER THE WILLOWS de-sac slreeL Priced al plan, bill on 2 levels. Thel---------1 neighborhood, xlnt In· $125,000 upper level features vestment or retirement "# I In California .. Plan 105, 4Br, Uv /din rm, Open house Sat/Sun ~5. 14881 Groveview Lane. red hill ~: . .-. 552-7500 ~~~~~~~~ 552S72,~ Pb SS2·5900 or ~~~~~~~~ On tM Fairway ,_ _,.,., _ or Mesa Verde Country Huntinc)tot1 Co•e Cl ub. One of a kind quail· Comer condo; pool. rec.~ FtllST TIME ty built home Shake 2 BR. 1' 2 ba. ssn.!°>00 available for resale!! A roof. i.lone fplc. 4 759-0226 Deerrield Park Home bo.'llrms, ;i balh, family Plan3.0ver2000sq.fl.of and form a I d 1n1 n g. J COADIN ASSOCIATES 1 great living with central 100xl25 Lot. Call for de· ~ ~ A/C and all the facibtles \ails on thi~ beautiful ex· ---------• of the desir able com· ('CUtiq• hnmt• Ca ll MeredithGardens munity. Call to see and !">-1(}.ll!ll 3 Rd by owner. SI 19.SOO details. ~HERITAGE REALTORS 54S·6.'520 . FRESH AS A DAISY Charming & delighlfally decorated 3Br. 2Ba beau· ty. Decorator sharp & sparkling bright. Featur- ing walls or mirrors, plush carpeting, & lush RANCH REALTY SALE OR LEASE Your choice on this 4 bdrm .. 2 ba. separate home. Freshly redone an· side. Lar~e yard. AIR COND. Rent for s120 or buy at $73,500 MESA DEL MAR, Owners I Agents orrer xtra sharp 3 BR home. .\ppt. only. 545-647~ _ ROOM TO GROW 3Ur. 2Ba. lg fncd yd, pnme Joe. $66.000 Owner 00·7072 I ands ca p i D g. 0 n I y 551-2000 us'" 1" .... PU,1\-·lrt"tNE $69,750. Ask to see it•--------• 'T ,.,.,._ ~ "'" NOW ! STEPS TO POOL 6BR, Fam·rm,4 Ba,2sty, just right for sin&les or $98,500. Nr Jeffry Rd. Sh«ecR~t couples. in one of Irvine Center Dr. 5122 ·-·r Irvine's best develop-Skinner. 9SS-22e05S2·9503 :\tesa Verde 3 br home, 846-5573 ~ents :. decorated just 1 -teach I 048 ram rm. bltns. frplc, ----------1 right 10 earth tones. ;z.;:•••••••••••••••• . · Madrid Del Lago brand or first home. $3000. un· s p a c 1 o us l 1 v . r m . . • •u11u'" 1 w/FIREPLACE & LGE new.beauUf~llylndscpd, ~ OPE"ltOUKllULTY der market. Payments ATTACHED DINING covered patio, P!anters. 11630ran99.cowa.._ S3SO. mo. Prine. only. S EC T I 0 N • A L L auto sprnklrs, air, pool 645-9161 752-1038 or 83$-0414 aft. W /EXCELLENT SEA sized yard. Upgraded ---------4pm VIEW Tb k·t h • th r u out. p h d y s. BO .... US °"'== .... --.=---=-.... =es....,.t-.,-....A...--. e . • c en is a 833-1984 . eves 758-1214. " ,._ v .. · culmary delight W /ALL B ~ ' p L ROOM ••••••••••••••••••••••• BILT·INS. T~entire Y 'Iler. nncony. MobileHomts g~ounds are enclosed "'wporlleach 1069 BONUS ForScM 1100 wtlh h1 walled rencang. ••••••••••••••••••••••• GARAGE ••••••••••••••••••••••• This spectacular home is an outstanding value at NEWPORT HGTS. BONUS $220,000 Full Price $124,900 HOME Mobil home 20x43 $20,500. 1 blk from ocean. $135 mo space rent. 963·4676 SHOWN BY Prcs t1g lous Newport Sharp 3 bedrm home, AP P'T. ONLY Hgts. Corner location. near Cherry Lake in the 8x40, 2 Br, S4 Convair. in MISSIOMREALTY C ustom des igned county corridor. adult park, S3400. L charmer. Thick, plush o · d F R 4 548-6173 985$.Cst.Hwy, aguna narpetin g . Glass vers1ze ... car Pho.494 0731 ~ gar. Real pride or•--------• enclosed brick frplc. ownership condition. Do BEACH PAD Step S3\'Cr gourmet you like lots or bonuses? Huntingtonbyl.heSea. FamilvHome Roomy 4 Bk. 2 ba. & den home on a quiet street, is close to elem. & jr. h1 schools. Clean & neat home w /new landscap- ing. (219) Sl24.500 <. --..... ·.-. \ .. -" ,• .. ' ~ ~> .... • .... J .... • J 1 ' , '< .. . . kitchen. Un ique s tep Call Now! 64S-7221 Walle lAa block to beach. down mas ter suite. CENTURY 21 10x60 w /lge e nclosed Deli&btful wood shingled ~ ..... nff 1 _...... porch & w / lge deck and mas ter bath . Huge, __ ,,,,_·•_•n.._, __ .. -_., __ 1 g e c 0 v e red separate family rm ..... ________ porch+patio. Next to too! It will be gone clubhouse & pool. tomorrow. c all now Best of 2 Warllls PRICED TO SELL. 646-7171 c..., 2 (l"f1111t1Q •t1S •u..,11J~r111<f• Charming 4 bedrm _...,.,._11_1_1o_r_ss_1_-604 __ . __ [& I w/den & bonus rm in MOllLEHOME? ·"' ll11Htf ~::.~~E~~i ~~·~: !:~~~~~:62 MAPLES ISL.AHO A real pride of ownership Triplex in a prestiiious area. $2•9,500. MW Ware4tomft These are real moneymakers! Located from West Covina to San Diego. · rro m Barstow to Oceanside. Many different si:i:e parcels at different' prices. Cetttwy 21 Spwow Investment Division 96J.7866 12 UHITS. C.M. Lge 2 br, 114 ba units. 2 yrs old. conv. loc. - $450.000. GSl equals $36,100. Tom Lee, Rltr, 642-1603 BY OWNERS: 19 attrac- tive bacMlor unit.a iJl Costa Mesa. 631·2950 I UMITS-IAUOA 4 duplexes, all 2br. 2ba, 11at10. beaut. yard $125 DOWNTOWN Newly painted & fresh. _rnrt grdnr 830·3640 2 OH 1 Nothing to do but look al clds pools, lighted tennis a dult/pet park (MN UMIQUE LUXURY HARIOR VllW ct, volley ball, sand 00731. Try for S2500 dwn 3 blockf. to Woods Cove ATerracoUa tile parquet beach & cable TV. (0.A.C.) Cord Land M.U. 4 car encl. garaee. Bay view. $180,000/dplx · Separate hom es C3 beacb with excellent canyon & Oce'1\ View.~ entry hall be&ins your Sl«.500 inclds all this Resales. bedrm, 2 bedrm> on de· ocean vie w through Yr wood & glass beauty. tour through this pro-andTHELANDTOO!! 638-8502 6 Fourplexes, 1 triplex, l it. like it & litht in it: 2 bdrms., $12,500 Tom Lee, Rltr, 642-1603 Dana Point 1026 .................•..••• sir:1ble R·3 corner lot ~ mature eucalyptus. Open 38r, 2112 ba w /beams. ressionally decorateii 64S-3474 Walk to beach. 20x57• 2br duplex; top notch units. FIXER UPPEtl with alley. Owner oc· T55H2·E700·0·· . ·.· .. _ noor plan·2 Bdrm .. 2 Pane 1 in g . vi e w 5-bedroom PLUS family •I 2ba.30'screen&glassene Priced n ght! Call June Two older homes on R·2 cupled-calllordetails. bath. Newly r emodeled balconies. Vacant. room "SOMERSET" I f 1 c..,,7955 11 al Performance 847·3584 ocean view lot. Locawei 531·5800. eves968-7725 from 1nsido out. but loads $160,000. Drive by l2.SS h 0 me . New w a 11 • t I 1 I I ~6. rp c. ~ • ca or eves: 842-0lSJ near shopping & Dana WesthonnReattors VILLAGE. . · .. · or add-on potential left. cerritoscorc Temple coverings, extenslvel~~!!!!J!-ee-!-~ Point Manna. Excellent lnt1REMetwCH'lc ' Sunke n tub, stained Hills) Owner/Agt used brick patios, • Acre.forsple 1200 DUPLDES.H.L 1nveslment potential. ---------1 REALTORS g l ass, s kylights, 759-0358 custom wall units & ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 duplexes, block to Sl00,000. CU5rOM HOME, 5 blks to1---------greenhouse windows & 3 Laguna Hiiis I 050 bookcases! In illustrious - - ----• beach, <2) 3br, 2ba. encl. AMCHORAGI :t~~·y·. 2;~~rs~~~~t.4s~:: COO&LSPP~OL dpose~i~~ille~.r~~~a~:~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nmeuwn1Ptyo.rt Beach com · .... EW 0ai..1 THE THREEACRES g~~~~.~ic::'°s4z.1so3 A SUPER SHARP aBr " l("ET Fantastic has this 3 ---------IHVlSTMIEMTS gar. used brick fptc, & go with this great 4 charm ror $149,500. M •R bed 2 b b h Palos Verdes Stone fplc bedroom 2000 sq. ft. ....ORl .... S RE •LTY Duplex, adult area, cen· "' · room, · nt ome 3br hse. 4 snal atry unit& '71414'6-7711 • •· """ " '""" I! • "'-'lyH with beautiful pool & nr completiou. 2·3brs ~========I Huge entry kltch .. too family home of won· • 49,. •057 • tral air, 2 car garage. £1Quall ~ A ~Witt. Poolome J'acuz.zi. Ple1( or room 2-lbr, -.ooo. ' many xtra features to d~..1ui lrvm· e Don't let ..,.. ..., 500 ...,., DETACLIED II \II b' f d "" · ---------• ....... · Place for horses & e c. Terms. 2S22Sant.aAnaAve,CH ,.. st. J t is or un er the summer start 8.J. & A11oc. R.alton ...___..... . 4Br. 2'h Ba, family room BKR. 646-ll92 TOWMHOME Sl20,000. Agt. 714·960-3389 without seeing this super LEASE-7 61-7839 ·830-2046 ..--• -r:;I.~ dlrung. Located on one of (714) 678·5717 3( Bepldroo~,ril~ ba~, BEACH HOME olfering.Calltordetails. OPTIO.._. ,_ ... :-_. 1052 MOOOUA1u1.HIWPOllTllACM the finest cul-de-sac OR522-2080 T1UPLD.C.M. ltt ace ... p~vateyar . Y II d II h ~ " --r--"~ s treets tn Newport.1---------·1 Great location, newer 3 Located a short. dl1tnnce e ow o ouse near New decor, 3 bedroom. ••••••••••••••••••••••• PEHIMSULA PT. Quali" ty construction. UHDER THE { b l •· D be ch Gallev k'lchen br, 2ba. frplc yard. (2) rom sc oo "" ana ~ la;...,e raml'-dlnlng. ~ whitewater view. Walk HIGHL.AHDS PRESTIGE Quality neighbors. OLDOAKTREE 2br, lba, patios, encl. PointMarlna.$'{2•000• C ra~klini...,brick toVictoriaBeacll.Great Investment opport. "Tis the SUMMER Complete privacy. Oak trees Uke you've garages.Sl70,000. AMCHOIAGI fireplace. 3 BR.'s, + ll tenns.$1S9,SOO. Pri ced to sell this SEASON· head for tbe Across from Cherry never seen cover this TomLee,Rltr,6'2·1603 -...-.-....~5 studio/study. Tree ~ weekend, 3 BR, 2 BA, beacl1, you tun &sun lov· Lake. Property will gell gentle rolllnc 5 a cre """..,.'"''""' studded rear lot with ~tO: bouseoCglass.1\9wlyde· ers! Completely re-this week. If you are• parcel on paved roads. TWO OM ONE ""==='=7=1=4=t =4=t='-=7=7=1=1~1 bnck firepat and BBQ. In CH R••t;TV ~ corated. Only SM,950. modeled a year ago-new qualified buyer call all uUl's avail, Terms. Two Eastalde C91ta -theS60's.BKR962·:>511. RAH -''' ;am· "" R.C. TAYLOR CO. carpets, new k itchen. 645•803 1. us9•9oo. BKR. Mesa houses, $48,750 BToro 1032 551-2000 ~ft ~~-1.1.'l' pa.int in and out! Thls Owner/Agt C714)6T7·5691. each-mmt. buy both. 3 •n•••••••••••••••••••• Sate by owner, sharp, JI'~ ,,..1v 9SS-OlSO beautifully located_______ ORS22-0$30 Bedroom. and 2 E NT E RT A 1 NE RS newly decorated Condo Rc.cho S-J• t =+ 1;.\ft ·----------1 home. steps to the Bay, --1--1 -__..~-_-B:-l:-uf-:-f::-1.--...::.::.:.::=..:::.:::--.. -droom. By ap""t' .. t· DEUGIJT 2 BR. H~ Ba. on ex: 28T+den. New sa:J'oa. __ ,_·•-.. ·------1·· stunn• v has a family room. C:etem1oi:t:"'e~3Br; 40 ACRES ~only. r~ .. 3Br 2Ba upJraded cluaive court. assumable quin model. Nr Racquet lnQ U tlreplace AND a huee • s • v u' 1 frpl~ wei bar BBQ• loan. 9Wi& int. 19847 So. Club. Best eoll course This 2 BR, 2 6'a. home guest bedroom PLUS full ~· w/fplc "~en V· !14,950 Full cash price. Own;/A,,,.. S8l·S298 0; Kingswood Ln. 963-3498 view. By owner. $107,000. '* PANORAMIC * has the u It i mate bath over the double ID8 Rm. 432 VI.Sta ~e~ No. CA. 40.80, or 120 IMGual~ 675-«JOO •· or968-2.S43 Pb73H72S 4 Br, 3 bath, lge corner coastline and ocean gara(e!Noneedtowait -Open Dally 1·5, SU• . Acre. pucela. E·Z iii.Iii!' ----~-----1 ------------1 lot. Un obstructable view. Swedish fireplace. must see to fully ap-Agt.645-9950 terms. Sep. 40 ,ecre dt: ...._ rm • FountcM Y•y I 034 SUPER 1CLEAN ocean view. patio and dee~~ ste,p-predate. $1$$,000 IY OWHlilt ;1~~1~~ 0 r I • I' • ,-. -.-:; .. ~• · ....................... 4 bdrm 2 ba home. Up· letter Hofwel Iffy a av In I k ft c: b e n 41 4Br, ram rm. HVH Mon· MOt 01M1Ut."" UACM 1 bdrm ram. 2 ba. cust graded c:ptg., patio. 494-0741 breakfast bar. (220) I& jGuaH ~ i eao. 1139,soo. Open o.1e ... / , ,llOO 11 ·-•f: drps/cpts, sell cln oven Conv. to s-hopplng & 1~~~~~~~~~~·$161,000 • Houae daily 2·6. 1957 CWts.-,,,. _..., .. s~ooth cook t°J., ditb 11ehll.SU6,GOO. -------...,,....,,....~J; Place Weybrldae Pl. or call ••••••••••••••••••••-• J-' ltAtps frO ~-~·1"."':1 ~",~':.'!';ma wasr-Pr-.;:r.';!? ·. ..,_ TS f!!rw1:a~:.=o.~ sprinklers. auto gara10 llALTY IMC MOOOUA•m·~cw.oau1.a. S-Cl.•llh 1076 BEACH UNJ t,y Ml0,000. Xlnt flnanc:· door S89.SOO 80% fanance -• • FfS •••••h•••••••••••••••• We have P'ourp1exe1, ina. avail. O'Wnei-MT-1889. ~,. 141-2323 '* ILU '* MIAI la.tier afartmen\$, eotn• Maloy Jnvemn.t.s. 1~=~~~~~~~l Orllinalarea.4BR.3ba. RIV...U.ttACH mercia. motels. in· l714)1J9.1129 1. ~ Ul\IL Totall>' redec:. Oreat-3 hodr m 2 ~th d111trfal, mobile bome CARLSBAD, Calif. 1 _______ _. KOYe-. 1n 1"Clad1. S\49.SOO home wlbea":iUi oc•n l)alb, etc. As ono ot the .... C .... u.a 11~,5 ... HAm•S•CO. ~ e&Q10a •lcw. Short l~r&est. lnveatment • ~ ••aiL .... Ol.S 64~5160 walk to ona or Sao di.WOOS In OC,,... IMvt We bave U.come ~ Clemente'• molt dcslrt• experienced pro· ~avail. now.~ t>le beaches. On 1~ Lota fmtonals avaUable t.o from 4 to tO to f anbs. i--·-. .r .. ...i dlac\lss 10\ll" tnvatment ..... _ , ....... _ .~ .... ,_ tovauns.,.ewfl"'.vac)'. needa. Hurry before & ....... _. .. --"""'• New llsbq. __ 10 up. break uea. Take 7ocar ..-._ 1lkk. ml)c or mat.ell. A.at. YalW10 =="(;~ ~r:~~ CAT~ 1'19&alpotentW. ~ °'"' ....... 2 .aroom. •2Jloulea 00 •lot. Hlmt-•-------....-1 batll ad.ult eon· ~Beach, cxcebtol '!IU·PLDl;S C'J) tlJ.sM> dornlaal•m. Saue, 2 ~aoss.ooo. -.; PNmabl• llidta ID clecu • l••s>er oc:Hn •r. efthan&• 4 btdtnt, nice ~ _., Clo*D • .. + llchta of tbe cltJ OCHDlrODt. bouH ln ....,. "'°"· can for more Newport Beach, pdced --~-~--..... 1.....-., •12.•·w1nta 11o11.1. B·i·.--..-.. -.. .. ~~ 8BRTRA HQR a •eoaulMftlal. DO YOU a&ALTOR.$ •Cllent Iii• S.t0,001)., OllT'll\ASBavt~t 21.S DelN..-•~ ... .., to bQJ .,. pr do 1At tho pubU~ bOw wlth Ullll4. Pl.-.t•U&.I El· 11D ad ln the Dtltt PUot lit I rou It.a vt. Slrvlce Dti\iet«J' lt eal'I C=-~I t'Clet.1CN •tittle at SUS w da.1! ror .,,.. m-et.iii CI ts f (otm&tfon and ~--1-.:t Ill • rW9t•DfO.llt&: L I Wednesday. July 8 1911 * DAIL V PILOT 85 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • · 0.. '"' •t•h Heuat U•f.......... H.1" Ut1fn.Md Irv._ 3244 ..._wpori Beoch 3269 Aporhntnt1 """'"'-Ap.im•nta Uldw1\. 1 Aparfnt•nh ~ ..,_ ........ Ulifw.. •u ·······~··············· •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ~~!!? .. ~~.~~ :~.!'!'!~ ... !~.2.2. Foi ••• .t..•.•.• •.. v • .-.y••••••••l••Z•3•4• 1'~olkdroom~ 4 Br, Ncwp0rt Short•. 2 CostaMno llZ4 CostoMfto ltJ4 ~~!~' ........ ~~~~ ~~~~ ..... !~!.~ KJncbo San Jo"~ $4M blka to bch. pool & tennis ••••••• •••••. •• •• •• •••. •••••••• •••• •• ••••••••• fMft.O ~Br.n.ennla.ba.rd-Olld Vcrypvt.x~c hmw.w 10· :lWoodbndao 1475 673·2253 SISOHEllENT OCEAN1''RONT APT. 4GM~m i\ptl noor. fplt', ••r. bllnt wall.3 Br2 Ba. F111n Rm. Rancho IUDS/PITS OK 5MflSttlf1(j I ~~~~b~ew s::rto1b~ F'lrK!lt in adult lavioa No .. !lac .... oar ... £.. ~k-'..~TS t'.Lt& •fl •PM hllnl. w JD. air cond • :n Sw1 Jo;iq $46$/49S ~ • "4tt1 "I I " v I 1. .. • ~375 pulease.D~ Bhr, 2hbit. ollta\ Lotulon •o -,,.... ~OSI~ UnPk VIII Ill J45() l'ool.J•~uul,3JieBrs, ~ • ~~ •• •• • I p . 1s w1 r, Do NOl DI.It b NI :t R ft Ii .... _ .. ~ 1e--a.. J"•o l'~~r·11 townhomes ~25 2'' Ba, f P. $400. 842·73t2 <n•~-~ f'rplcs, carport. All I•" &mr ur r" • t a . cut tpo.. -.... .... A w1nn1ng comb1naUon· .... ...a.... •---h 31 .. 0 pa.id. 491·41?8 or loc:ul ............ GID,000 w /111ra1~· •lOv•. No•• .. ••••••••••••••••••• KanchoSanJ011Q ~ Bl.UFFSCONOOS olddullapartmenthomea ·-"....,.°'~ • Anabelm!>llS-1123. MAIJl L W'tllOM v•t•. A"•ll \ua 1, Oeenteld 1375 Leases starting at ~ w1tl'l luicury aooo1ntrnents and •··~•••••••••••••••••• ------- •IALTOI ~711()& •AVAILA.ILI• Three8edrooms Month A&enl644-ll33 ~uoerbrecrea11onataorem1um HAHDHEW! San.Juan •41-Hl1 t 'd\t, 1111 3 Ur hae. 111_, LI\ ..... OW• t nl\ers1ty Park $460 NWPTCREST CONDO location Tennis•gym•therapy 2 Br upts. 1-'rom $310/ptlr C-'-,,___ ----OO Km " 500 aq ft Pam l " University P11rk s.65 4 BR, chltdren OK, Pool. soa•sw1mm1ng•b1thards mo. 1411 Delaware. lltJ ..,...,nmnv 3178 Leh fw S-. 2Z Rm 3 "•· 2 ""r &ar. lou.s••· condom1naum11 Oee"'leld $475 b Jr one Bedroom Open 12·5 DMily l ~ile to ••••••••••••••••••••••• ., ..... ..~.o l .... M th ., tenrus. walk to ch. Yrly One• Two Bodroom~. On° Bath ,.. 6•2 9601 A 2 B l d •a25 D ••••••••••••••••••••••• woodly ~ llT3·120tl wou ownuumt'll. • on Valla&~ Ill Sl75 $650. 640.1751 o ~ ., ,,. ocean • · &t r s u 10 .-. 11, • .UILD to moolh n•nlal1 start1na Chllnoellor Home:. ~ G)F;;:l~·5;°' · ~rk Me~ Vilb~ 536-1808 h w a a b er. I au n d r ~ 1mmucuJ11tc 2 Dr 1 lla at~ to '8C>O Locattid In $1 e Be h M ...-.J -.....,.. "W---- ---fuc:ihlieJ, pool. Katella You. 0-...... ll .... JI bo d Camp~ View ~ 70.1 rat ac ! itny 3 Br 2 Ba. ri~•. 2 Br 2 Ba. ""1·9432 or "93·""72 or "'" lplc.~• .. ·rmn un:LW,ion ur ur an VIII g'lll .,.,,. more avl Small f0 e .,._, "" • "" "' JI · n. h C l a c °""" · " 550 Poulorlno Ave .. Cosro Meso 7S1·8995 $290. Gara"e. Rec area. .,,., aa12. • • oothls rnm. R l lot on •tn ~tt> untmgt.on _,ar · al TR Campus vu S525 FREE/Life Serv. Unt. ...... N.,...,............ 19071 Holly~S48-8311 .....,...,., a cul-dl'-411<' In bHutllul ----wiformorodotalli;. TurtJeRock $575 645-4900 1!._B_r_O_p_l_x_._m_S_a_dd_"'_b_a_rk-, ~ff• Verde Country C.. .. Mfftt lZJ4 RanchoSunJouq. ~95 ••C011sumersGulcte Apcwln•ntifv"'lih•d Aporfmentsu.fwn. Lg 2Br, lBa, enclosed Capistrano, tennis els, I ....... 117.~. ••••••••••••••••••••••• m Turtle Rock $696 """"' 2 t > 4 b 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• gar age, 2 biles to be~.{ $900mo, 496-1730 I! =II ~· l Br. fl>lr, nnae. lar~e i ;ii Four Bedrooms _,, 5 ory new r, CostoMesa 3824 walkt.ostores&bus,~ • I ywrd, pnvate. Adult.I, nr m I Cuh·erdalc $475 ba, 13,000 sq. ft. Cul·dC· Mewpqn hoch 3769 ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo. 960-5131 Santa After 3180 ,_ •• -.uUl..,.64"06.,. _ _ . sat' lot. Nr. YMCA.•••••••••••••••••••••••., B · d' 'd 1 't ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....._~... 0--r~:.,~ .,.._ • ...., Uru,ers1ly Park S600 ( ) 41 1 9 9 w r, an 1v1 ua unt , ~ 4 1 2 bd ..-. ~....-• __,,,_, REALTY INC. Univ Park S525 114 6 '· 1 0 r patio, gar dr opner, fplc, •o P ex, rm. 4 yrs 2 Br H'lt Ba, pvt patio. 7S2•'920 . 12131393-2977 dshwshr, adults, mature ~.!.,d~wntwn area. cpta; d~ bllns. enet ••OO~IUl HtWPOt HM.M 3 BR SUPER SllARf'! 714/846·1371 ._,.__,., .., L' I AM -ES d d I CDM lge 3 Br ~e. lge Liv pref'd. no pets. S325 mo. _ aar • .,. • .-.ar y • LAGU"A llACH aa~ e,F~~e~~ r~r~r Y~ Rm & 500 sq.fl l"am Rm. 1162·111191 Michelle or Clem 2Br, lBa, gJragl', patio, 1 759..:_0117 10 it7 Acres R 1 un Family, pets uk ~2S IROW MARKET J Ba. 2 car gar, woodsy Agt _ child no pets, $215 mo South LOCJIA'KI 3816 1k\'tlopt'dlandw1lhClly, •>165607 ::,hurp 3Br 2Hil . xlnt SS506731206 :!bdrmunrumapt Adults &n6t82 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •Jll)'OflO.Odocean \lew., IQ\:al1on sioo mo A\311 only ---In I il.60.000 V,\CA'liT J b1 .!li;i Cpl:>. now r\:.k ror Oan!\..18 8080 -Ele~ant ll 1 g l:;-11 &. t.-15-8939 1 Br. ~round floor p.1uo. -:~· ~~~ u~u~~UJ>a. ~P~ liC.IODZICY Rftr drps cbh ",h, dbl gar. TUllTLEROCK I Br. fam twnhou:.e. \'lcw. l hr Gl{t:AT RECREATlON gar. or San Diego 1-'wy. · 49....,611 :>167780 3 BH. 112 B..\ Condo 1n rm & din rm. pool & ten· relreat, 2 ba, lorm din Swimming. sauna!.. 2 /loew 1 BR. l Ha. dshwshr. adlts, no pets. S210 mo Elevator to :.ceruc P"' _ __ fanuly area 3 Yr~ old rusfoc. $575 mo 644 4157 rm i:ar. l('nnt:.. pool. health clubs, billiards, gar 2025 Charle St. S205 673-0289 bch. Party&gameroom. U A b 8 Jo'an COMUmeNlewon! Highly uparaded. JdCUZlJ, c1dult:.. no pet:s. night-lighted tennis ~5763,635-47~-------total security. Perfe<'l pper 3. re ay Before you pay some Comm pool. ~25 Bkr WOOOBRlOGETNIISE A\ail. Sil. S795. Lse. .. .... P & h :?BR,lbacondo llvlngorwkndretreatfor tas\Jc view. c1gencie::. for the "run 962-t-171 Br.md new 2 br + den, 2 675.-9891 co ... "' ro pro 5 op, 2 Br apt, nr shopping, $225 Nr. Hunt Hbr the adventurous adult. BY owner, courtesd to around•. cal I --------ba.Prof.decor.$475/mo. gol!dm1ngrange,party mo. Adults. no pets. 313 S28Smo.846-4292 Starting at $Sl5/mo. bkrs. 494·6688 ys, CONSUMERS GUIDE EXEC HOME M287311 SanClemet1tt 3276 room. 17lhPlace,CM.642·Z4&i .... ~ 49Q:2835 l·llOS-f!69-S228eves. Brandnewpatiohome:,2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• FUN ACTIVITIES: si<>OFJ:o~OEP WAD •..-"'!"f'°" ----------Many have and are glad Fullllme director. free · / HarbOur 3142 ~nts ~ "' LARGE LOT, zoned RJ. they did. lOO's of hse's, br. 2 ba. brick fpk. 3br, 2ba, 2 blocks t o Sunday brunch, BBQ's, STUNNING 2 Br 2 Ba ••••••••••••••••••••••• or Unfw-niahed 3900 -~a;~~~~~~. ~~~~so~f plex 's & apt's available ~;~~~d:doo;!r~s~e~ r~t~: ~;c;;;~~:.n ;~~:.\~~j trips, pa rt1es. sport ~~:~.e~6:.~io ~~~~th s~~ HARi OUR LIGHTS ••••••••••••••••••••••• POINT REALTY ~Ol~.:~f~~c~ ~fst;n~~ pout. ~auna, Jacuua, HEALTY COMPA~Y now. S650mo. toum1.1ments&rnorc1 114 B Hamilton lb All Offers elegant adult THEEXECJTIN~ •196·S600for01ana each dav. Small $475.963·786/l FOR AAREALTORS492·2100 BF. AU TI f' UL ' cd · r. apartments. Localed tn PALMM SAA.-15. -foclf'HEE iife !oen·icc. THE EXECUTIVE ------AP ART Mt:: NT S : f ... sto~~~g.~2 lst & exct 00 us1ve Hunl1nJ(ton ~llNUTESTONPT ~County S.15·4900 ATIRACTIVE 3Br. :Iba. Outi.landing 3 BR. :J bulb 4! BR Townhouse, Pre~ Single~. !&:? Lied rooms. _ __ __ Har ur. The Harbour':. BCH. · PrO,.rty 2500 ••Consumers Guide Cvrd patio, nit•t• vard home ut HanC'l10 San .Ina· Hgts .. view, golf & tcnnlH f'urn & unrurn ~lodt•I:. COUNTRY WOODS only apartment l'Oll'lplcx Bach. 1&2 UH. • ••••••••••••••••••••••• W W. hlt1n~. ('pl:. .drp:.. qu111 fralurini.: stained $350. 968-5430 afl 5:30P!\'1 Ol)('ll dally 10 lo 7. Room l':lisL~idt• nt•;ir new. 2 br. Spacious I Br, 2 Br. & :i from $:HU. & up Sp;11:1ou:; deluxe Ii unit :1 llr Lar"t' yd, children _SJ!IS _121:1 J.'i96-!!ii71i 1:lu:.s wet har, C'cntral San J~ -mate st•n ·ice uvatl '\o den. skyltghl. all hllns. Br + den. floor µInn:. Adults, No Pets l·lbr l·lbr·l·2br and pets OK SJti5 mo. 9U-I Sharp 4 bt-drm 2 h.i qlli,., ,, 1 1 d ct u r a tu r Capistrono 3278 least• n•quircd Sorr). ,\dulh. nu pets s:iss from S250. :.ire t·om 15ilt Mesa Dr F're~wayshopptngclo:.c Uogwoodli75-<\912 drps, fresh paint. µalio. wallµapcr~. lg . refng. ••••••••••••••••••••••• adultsonty,noµl!l:. tHti·ll!H or&t5.9543 plcmcntcdbyendwnting (5 Blkst:a);tOfNewporl O"mwilJcarry2.5'\~dwn fent·ed )anl kicl~ & Pf:l ''U!)hcr. c.Jry~r. tra!'th ... -----~ardrns & strl•am~ . .J Blvct > Prlnonly.847-6732 KIDS,t?ETSOK OK ~5 963 \SG? \gent l't>mpat•tor slove IN CHARMING Oa.kwood Sl8S.Xlralrglovelyllach. be<Jut1ful cluhhoU!;t' 548·9860 ---1':1.1st:.idetwnhseS39Smu. Nofee flt•autaful lotat1on SANJUAN Very cln . No pets. w sauna. gym, Jat·uu1, Room5 ----4000 Real Esta+. 1 Dr duplex S275 mo. ---" '1cw ol park & UCl 3 Bdrm., L ~ bath condo Ga.rden ~-57<>.a, 1004 El Camino large pool & best of all, hchanc)e 2800 ll75·8258or646-4848 Condo.111Surf:.1dc,dose~t Cto~c to swimming, r or re n t . Apartments wonderfulpeople.Wean ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• possible location lo Stale J .1 t• u l l I & ten n 1:.. Upstnars/downstairs, 2 We:.ts1de 1 br Sl95. CP,l. vile you to visit Harbour ROOMS $2S wk up with ---------• 4 Br, 2 Ba, pool, close lo beach. 3 Br 1•, Ba. new $25/Mo. (874) car garage. carpeting & drps, Sl\'. l child, ok. Lights. Paciric Coast kitchen. $37.~ wk up '' T d U ? school. S450mo. 645-6528; l'pts. paint. wshrJdryr, IJla llarper?S214H levolors, built-ins & ~~:'°'1trvlnlffcc (a~l~) 5Al·3496 HwytoWarner,loAtgon· apt.s.548-9'155 ra e P· 213·371-4032 r g dsh h 2 I . w . I I oou quin 01' off San Diego . -Webavc listed a number re n • ws r. I poo ::., patio. on t ast ong! 645-0550 l Bdrm Garden Apt Fwy exit Bolsa Chica lo .Room to rent. W/Side CM . of rt' . d'ff t INSTAHTIM! &reccnlr Yrly :.e,$375 Call 646-2158 days; Stove. refng. Adlts. no Warner to Algonquin. SSpermo.+smalldc npropeg1es,tnlo1$2craennd llu«nEosls1deJbr.ovor. mo.Sngls&rh1ldrenOK, ••--..l.t.L·IHo-• 493-0588 evening & ... ,--•--11/S-...... pels.S200.548-6920 16700 S b k L poe.ils lnqat944W 19th • • ,..nceran es. up .,. • nopcis. 536-8752 _....,.... ""' weekends. If no an!>wer. ... --· -,_,.,. ay roo ane. · · S 3 m i I I 1 o n m I n 1 "lled danmg area. over 3 Br. dt.'n. f'am Rm. 2 Ba, please keep trying 1700 16th St 2 Br 2 Ba. bllns. dshwshr. 714·846-3341 _St_. ______ _ warehow.es. Let u11 ta1lor 2000 'q fl Lgc fenced Bt:,\C'llWALK nr park & pool, no pets. ---tl>o,er al ll1th l & d p 1 R I 1 8 3 ,, 3 <'Pl'> rps, alto, enc L-....nBeach 3841 m a\al . ·I m or apt 1 anexchangeforyou. ha1·k )'<Jrd :\lust 't'C to TOWNllU:\tf: L.:.e~lSOmo.551 1266 Santa Ana 280 ~211170 gar. S280 mo. Agt. .~;:•••••••••••••••• acro&S PCH from bch ,.. Century 21 Sporow h~.·lie' e F1rcplart'. n<•w Hard lo find 'Pat'1ou::. end . • . ••••••••••••••••••••••• g:j8 8081 N.B S133 mo. + util .. Jn\le~tmenl Division rug' drapes 1 hruoul Oo u n 1 l 1 n l' "< c I us 1 \' c COLLEGE PAR I\ rorml!r Vacant. 2 br. p, ba Condo -View 0\ crlookang ocean & tiJl·lOM 963 7866 ly ~1.;o. mo Call 1142·0282 HcarhwaJk Pm atc on 3 mdl . 3 br. 2 ha. fam. an family area ~ftthly WATERFRONT Sp;Jt' nt'w tnh~e. 2br. 2ba, \'1llai.1(' LJl:unJ ,\pt. on • fur e1pptlo ,l'l' ::.1dt·'· 2 br. 2 ba. hui:e k1tch. air. bcaullful ept & up~radcd S275 BK H And wuler \ICW lui.urv m.rn) 'tra:. incl f µ, yd, Curr Dr. w 2 .un. 2 Da. noom 1n lo\Cly. q un•t me1~lcr su11l• uvcrlook-. drps. Incl s 3 pool!> &. 962-447l · apt!>. l·BH. $l:xto mo , ·i g.1re1~1:. lntlry rm: .E· den +. lgc terr.ict• home :-Jo drugs. peL' 01 PSSSTI. 2 Hr l Ba . J.:Jr, patto, izorgeous gardrn area C'lbhse.S-150 551-3141 BR .. Sl.'lOOMo. ~1de 0nlyS325 642·1003 Hespan~1ble adults StSO ~mokang. Kitch. prlv~:. blln:., & yard. Super Pools & tennis court::. 8 3Br.2Ba.super::.harpdlx HILLG''U"'l>'t mo4945397bef9pm Fe I SlSO / c·tc;1n, :.mall child OK. no LOCJlllla each 3248 " •• 2 hr. extra lge, S275. _ - -m 3 e · m o· 1·:XCllANG Jo: & IH11ld Steps to beach. S4SO/mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Condo, nr So. Csl Pla1.u. REALTOH 675·1HIH "· d.ulls only, no pets. 2 BR. r 0 0 my a Pl. 963·823.1ht-fore10:30 am your estate. l~CREASF: pcls. Sl2S "'' July 9. 346-2001 Pool, gar . 2 wks free book v a 1 uc bas as & 1).15·~55 -3 Hr 2 Ba. end or qulet rent. $375. 640-4462 OCEANFRONT Dach apt, &IM.1671. 1981 Maple Ave Secluded, qwet. woodsy, S.WW..r Rentals 4200 de pre c 1ali0 n 1 N . -;---- -Very ruce 3 br, 2 bl.I home. street. Ocean view, Arch --k'tch & bath $23S yrly Lge newly decorated 2 br S<IOOAdlts Agt 494-7551 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CR E As L' I eave.rage \ ery nice 2Br unit. Patio. Cpts. drps, nu paint, 2 Beach Heights. $475. Westminster 3298 W1 cd /Thur.· '1 OA M .7 PM. . f C S .. o..a ,.. ~~lbo..ITI!: "" · frplc cp•· drnc: b G TR E T ·• upper m ourplex. pts, View. 3 rms, k1tch, ball•, """-~""""",., Derer Cap gains T "x . · • .s. · ,,.,. eam car gar .. patio. conv. lo RE F.N AL Y ••••••••••••••••••••••• 673·1241 rt Ad Its ' · " · ·e1l adults only no pets rps, garage. u ·no ulils pd , yrly $450. Beach homes, condos, -Phonoforuppl ~ . • , • schls & :.hops. $365. 496·9501.497·3598eves. Lovcly4bedrm,2 ba.rptc, -peLc;.645-7485 Mature adlts. 494·5940 andapts.Reservenow. references. $295 <gas pd) 96.1·4567 Agt No fee DW, cpts, d""", kids & & .. arfntents Unfwft. -------675-496 I 235 l Santa i\na Ave. - . 2 Br l''l Ba. ri:tc, VICW, pet OK. Avai1";;ow. $385. :;. •••••••••••••••••••• SpaC.-3braptoruseilas2 AM BERTHAHENRY lHECALLISO ... CO f.46·2-123 Sl40UtUPd! deck, walk to bch & 963-4S67Agent.nofee ~ 3802 br&den. Frptc. patio & LogunaNiguet 315l 21SDE'ln:~T0~9Z·4tZt 2819 N Bl d • ----Pauo ref many more shops. SlSO yrl:v 4!M 3<!23 ••••••••••••••••••••••• pool. Adults $325. No ---------• ewport v Cw.tom house J Br 2 Ba. ' · . e\ts Condotftiftiwns ~ pets M5-331U or837·9517 ...................... . Newpart Beach. Cu. rptr. end yard, dbl gar ~;"1 a~ beach Small fee · ai......a.-1 h d 3425 -Condo on goU course. 3br, 1&2 bd rms. Newporl ---" l'ler opnr. close lo 19th .~1R5.~900F.t Lafe Serv Unt. :! Dr 3 lla, lge ocean \'U "'"-1 ~ 2 Bdrm~. Nc\'cr hved in 2ba, AiC, avail. Aug. li.t. Bcarh Garage. Steps II• • •· IJarbor S42-m o u-.., dcc.\k Arch Uc:u:h Hr(t. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 mi lo bea<·h Also de Sl.25/mo,640·6843 bch. S'4·689'J, 675·7598 ~ 11.ffttals .~".•'9Sor 63· 1 ... ,,7./ · • •Consunwrs Gulde ~75 mo 1 ·' r lse ·1!19 441" Newport Beach. Jbr. ••••••••••••••••••• •••• '"""" ""--_ ----212ba. green••Alt. Pool & luxe new i,.tudio. Open Nwpt Bth 5lA!nc. to ocean u......-~. • h d 1 "" t 2 . s cl a 1 I :v 1 4 o 1 Dclu.\c 2 bJ apt beaut · .,~ nvonfln1m1s e sm; 2 Br. huge yd, do~ Sl!.0, large l Hr. poo ' :JAr.lbu.Sccludcd.otcun jacuzzi. Lsc, $450 mo local.ton. closet~ bea<'h. lBR or2BR.lurn.St.art ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oh.~'19'i5 E Wallace A\'e. !'1ce area' Small fee . \ICW, "ulk to belt ;\\all ti46·2700 Dela"are llunllngton Pool. rec. room. 1 child 1ng from SlSO. wk. up . ....... __ p I ul 3107 '• licach 642 9601. 846 18:.>G .,,., """° -~ en nt a Open 642 US-1 unt. &1»·-lOOO now S6SO mo l!M-6182 T _ _.____ or Agt ok. $290. up 831·3796 '"""'""' ••••••••••••••••••••••• * •Consurnen Guid• H-I ------0~L..~ 5175. Ulil. paid. Bach. GorJ:l'<>US 4 br, ready to --L09U'"' I It 3250 Unfurna~ 3525,t---------Newport leach 3869 NWPT BCH·2Br. 2Ba, I'~ •'. Duplex. Fee mo-.e 111lo. family s1u>d I BR Condo. cpl:., drp:., ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• lal:M»a Pet'litasula 3807 ••••••••••••••••••••••• blks from bt'h. frplc, wk· llomefinders 557 0822 home. Top locat1~n. refrig. pool, tennis. \·cry sharp 3 br, 2 ba. San Clemente panoram11' ••••••••••••••••••••••• a.---------~i PARI( NEWPORT ly. (21.317631589 -Agent546·4111 clubhse, SJSO mo. 1!-t, cpt.s. drps. OW. freshly ocean view. Frplc. beaut Sl90 Bachelor Apl Resp 1wo of OrongeCounl'(s Bache t 0 r s. 1 Gr 2 DAI,BOA PENINSULA --lCICJll"CI Beach 3148 last& dep. 979-7888 painted, fenced yard. decor, brand new. pool, dlt N · ts ' Bedrooms & Townhouses blk to beach & bay, apl ••••••••••••••••••••••• College Park : 3 bdrm 2 lovely neighborhood. golf course. S425. Katella perm. a 0 pe • on m0Slbeou11ful Opotlment "Emerald nay 2 Br 2 Ba, ba. fen )ard, patio, frpl, Walk"? beach. lhr home. S395.9fl3·4S67 Agt No fee 831·9432, 493·9672 or Pen 106BayA~e communllle$.Arelaxilg Spect!':~tr;:r~~~ total ~~c!:;.5 per wk. •den, summertwlnlef', dblaor.m 5.63l·0208 Sl.96.Fee o..a· 1 3252 \93-86.12. CoronaclelMar 3122 selllngwllflS1reoms, recreation progrum, ---------~n view 9"'7· l""° (714 I ' llomefinders S:i7 0822 Logwla "'CJUf -rt .... d ,L<w>fi NPT BCH p l "'" ·" """ EAST SIOE-3Br. lllu, lg ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 BR. 2 BA. Stanton. \11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WOfe Ou.:>,On maJ.,..,;c socialprogram.8pools.8 . . on cnm ..._...._.. l•och 3169 frplc. 2 cor garage, lg Ocean view. 2br. $285. All 3 Br 2 ba familv horn(' rec· facilities. s::i25 mo !Tees. Feo1Ur1ng pools, tt?nnis courts. At Fashion blk, to ocean or bay. 2 br . ••• :"f.7.: •••• •••••••••• rncd yd. wtr /grdnr pd, ok. Unt. J:o'ee • Ava.ii 7 n 5 Sl75 mo Ca 1j tsl & last. 673-4Si15 Jacuzzi. souno, bUllords. Island. Jamboree & San newly furn 'd .. slps S, wk ,. sm rh1ld OK, ~!la mo. Homefinderlo 5570822 4n5 ..... rS "", ande•cllfngclubhouse JoaquinHiJJsRoad, ly rental $275 June & 646·8545 - -., .. ..-. Duplexff Unfurft 3600 I " 17141644·1900 Sept. .July & Aug. S275. STEPSTOIEACH :i UIJRM . 2 BA S229 tMO Mim Summit new~ br ........................ 'fl.. l':r~s_ wiltlsocloteven!S.Tennls, 645-6.1H2a~kforSandy We have summer rentals UNTILSOLU ck'l'l. otl•;in , u, C'lbhsc, Lgc unfurn dupll>x w / gym, and volleyball ot Steps t.o beach. 4 Br 2 Ba, by week or by month! _ _ <:~~r;.110;; pool. sioo ,\dull:. 111-11 lrpk & poc>I. SJ5(). Lca~c. CORONA DEL MAR The VUtoge. More at fpk. cpts, clrps, S600 yrly ~~~~~~1~,B~~rf~~al~~r'. ,• associated Blll)K IP '> II( Ill !ORS /I'• W fjolh; <t '-1 1 lf'lri I 224 Via Lido Nord. Lido Jsle. ' bdrms. $2.S()O. mo. ! HouMt Unfumlsfwd ~ ....•..•......•........ ...... led 3206 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .., .., c •• Mesa det Mar MOO mo 3br i a.b<t P11m rm • rrptc i\gt. 957-0701 2 BR. 2 ba . . . $410 450 3or2BR. +D.2ba . SS2S 3BR,2Ba $395/575 3 BR, 2\.2 B• .. $450/550 4 BR, 2 Ba..... . S4!>S . CPSTAMESA 3BR, 3&. . .. . . • · .. $650 496·37~ No pets. 640-7030 2 nr Tnwnhou~c. frpk. everyltilng you're lool<lng lse. 642-3443 1 S200 k $ .. "' ___ ___ -JlOO, w or ...., mo. Pool. tennis. Some "rca11 for. FumllUre;s ovolloble. Lovely 2br, 2ba Condo 493.0'736 Apartmenb Fumished & Catalina views. CtosJ One and Two Bedroom w rcust epts, drps & wall --------- •••••••••••••••••• • • ••• to shopping & fine beach. AClul! Ltvlng, papers. All new kitcb, 2 Beaut 4Br home w /bear h lc6oa Island 3706 644·2611 patios +pool, walk to out f~ont. C~mpletely ••••••••••••••••••••••·~~~~~~~~~~' Offices open 9:00to6:00. Westcliff shop'g. $400. rum. hbuJous view. S7SO 2 Br 1 ea yearly. Pat~o. 1•2. & 3 bedroom Apt.a, 101.._N_<H1 __ ren11n_~g.-----1 mo.~-4193&548·7376. ~~~~~~~0~~~~ parkng, $325 + util. super COM location. Agt. •DB.UXE• 631-1400 494-3223eves. 675·2311 Eastblulf 3 br, 2 ba. o..a 1 W rf _ _.. 8al>oct Ptttinsula 3707 1 Bdrm cpts drps :;love Lease. Incl. spac. master B"d· • a,te.r_..f ••••••••••••••••••••••• refria .. sund~ck. g0as pd• suite, d10 rm & dbl 3 rm , ully urn. Wanted. rem roommate Nope"ts SJOO.Ph&4o.7546 garaae. Auto door dWaskherfd1ryer, r1ree0 ~0a,~ ---------for 2br apt on Balboa1-__;.________ ope11er avuil. Pool & oc • 5 eeps · .,. Mewportleach 3269 Perun Point 1162.50.mo. Deluxe 2 Br a Ba. FP, recreaUon area. Adults week. St5 oo month. w yrly lse. Apt has gar. deck. beam rellgs. 7l91"l only. No pets From $367 1144384 or E\les 61'S-6l69 sWldeck & landry room. Ja!fm1ne $420 mo. up SUMMER rentals COM 1 Blk from bch Please 644.2405 865 Amigos Wa~ waJJc to Heh. Sleeps 9 SJSO ull Natalie aft 8 pm on .. ""-3 8-2 b d I Adult ., bedroom beam .Nwpt '' .. ·ores area. J \., perwk wkdys67S-0164 _,., r. 8 up ex.I ~ ' '7'' DlSCOVER Oc -Frplc, gar. patio. laun· ce1hnR. no pet.& 5210. 568 blks ocean. :lbr, lba dplx. ean Jetl)- Small studio. S17S yrly l dry, bltna. Call 642 99111 W Wll~n. anq. Apl F. Yrty lse. 714-9SS-S871 view llYlnf. J Br, 2ba · elegantly furn 1sh ed. Cozy lbr, lba. steps to S.1200. month >\dull 2 bedroom beam beach. Shores area. 8'75·2311 days FllOM SUO celling, no pets sho. 568 <7l4>956·5871 Nwpt Bcb oceanfront. Mature ... dutta only, no W. Wilson. lnq, At>t,F. WATERFRONT on quiet Beaut. 3br. nr. new, arn- pela. Larae 1,2&3 br EASTSIDE dpl~. fplc 2 Newport. Isla.nd, apac: 3 l)leprltf, Aug. tsSO. wlc. apt.a. Dshwhr, gas BBQ. Br 1 Ba, bllns + o'JW. Br 2 .Ba, w /fplc & bllns, TSLMgmtSvca "2·1603 -----------t Oaa pd. 778 Scott. Pl. Jndryhkups.tncdpatio& yrly. Dock ready for . M2·5073 P\1 gar. Child ok $290 your boat. 7'14·9408 <114) A .ftmtic C\Jtie beach COl· • tage, nerfec:t for ,,e pel)• pie. l20Q. p/wk. 'Al mk Xtra nlce 2nd nr lae 2 br, Cram Balboa pavi!Uon. 2 ba, f/p, d /w, Car, .PVl, 873-7772 N b 11 1 t encl. patio, open beam &1.25/mo Jae. Inc um. ew 2br. ll a. u e,tic . ce.tr. Adults, no pell.I. A.It Moturl! adlll' only Newport 1&2 br apt~. Close to bUI & ehopph\1. ~ · s..epa to bch. Ftom $115 wk. Scash pre .R. E . 67S.SIOO 8'48tALD IA Y LaJtl~. • Br houu·. Whit.c1ul4!'1' w . Pvt com· munfti, b '° bcb. ten ail. PoQla, Jae. trplc. July L • ' • P6 l'M v PILUf * Add it ... Build it. .Diaper it. .. Hammer It ... Carpet IL.Cement lt ... Wlre It.. Hoe lt ... Cleal'\ 1t...M ove lt ... Press It .. Paint lt...Nall lt...Plaster lt ... Flx it ... SERVICE DIRECTORY Plumb 1t ... Patch 1t ... P1pe 1t. .. emo e 1 ..• Roof it. .Landscape 1t... Tile it . Trim it.. Sew 1t ..• Haul 1t ... Add it... Plant it. .. Altf.!r 1t .. Learn tt ... ........ ........ c.,,.. Service Cemtflt/COMrete G• .. linog 1 Hon c ... Ser"l" Maonry 'ointlncJ /POfN"lrMJ Ptastet" ;1l~alr Tutorin9 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• APPLIANCEl\t:PAIR CarpetManwlllloyyuun Phlll1p1 c~menl Co . Gan11inlncService:clcan CARPET STEAM Btlck.block,sl11b5,Crplcs, PAINTING lnl•F.xt. r:x VeR'YNl'.\Tl'.\l't'll EHGLISHTUTO R- 11.0 rvlceCall or rnln11. Rupuiu & Pall~. room •ddlUons. up & hauling. weekly CLEANING . stonework. 20 yrs expr. p'd: hone:.l. neut Ht'.u:. JOUS&'l'l~XTUltl'. 1-:J -<tl'rn "'"" Hhu11l CaU <UO Mt·au2 4•learunii tool Ouur work Concf'\!te work 7Sl·5657. maintenance. Reason a· 8W SQ FT. Wl NOOW Reis, ests. S86·o.:158 Lied. Dave 004-l~S 1-'rcc c:.t. H!la. l l~J l•·nt"hl•r F'ormi:r t!t.ht &. .,.,..ad•• ut bia&cr HVtnji.. •·reu Call 10 AM to 8PM. lie/· ble rates, free estimates. washing. Floor waxin" Mo"a..... Rooflnn n•1)orh'r. lnstmctlon 111 ll!lll.~ 3646 bond/Ina. After 4:30 8'5k for Ron. (paste·wwc)64Z•3835, ....., Paint Your Casffe ··7 wr1tin ... rt•ac.lh111. & .... • ee •••• • • e • • • •• e • • •....t.C: 'JC.00 C..tO ~ftA1 •••••• _.. e e •• e. e e e. •.. •• • e e . e e. e e . e e e • • • e e e e •• e f" D&4110N Ir CONSTRUC C.l ln91, AcCMtlc Coittt«tor ....,.. .-.or-... -~ Fitzpatrick Moving. Low ~v:O~~e$4~~rf~~tz5~5 Repairs. Lii' & In~ 1\11 ~~.'~Sl.!~·11~· )~~~r b~i,'1~·,~ TION P .D.l. Corp.•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~Set-YI~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• rates. Ins. Fasl quality Pricesinclmatr'l·labor trpe:;. Frc\' c't Wnlt ~rnrr:\ $10 hr. s.,1.JOQ(). 60T~ , Ecml()my Aeowitlca: Qu&I OF.SIGN & CONSTRUC· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Want a REALLY CLEAN care. S46·0429 Eves. -Guar /Jnsrd Freee:.t. lall anytime. 511 5930 x l<I i\M "c+6 , ........... ...._ aprayod c~lllna1>, re T ION. P .O .!. Corp. HANDYMAN·Homes & HOUSE? Call Glngllam 642-0709days. Ted:'152·0134~r636·708!_ Televisi~-Repair Windo-Cl•anlnq --1 -..... ~lll.111 cu.ar Lw•32009$ &lC>-7020 Apts. Consdentloua Girl.f)oeeest 64S·S123 ,......._jP""--'nq -~ "' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' t • ' ---------" Ph· "~s...n.f')ft'> ......... ., ... ~·· • Comm'l & Residential. No ••••••••••••• •••• •• •• •• ••••••• •••••••••••••••,, , • · """''!I 3-'kS UIOO a...~rf _. cr .... sman. ·'" -,,.,.,.. •~WINDOWS•· HOUSE ••••••••••••••••••••••• (' \"OJ>Y ·r\• SL"lt'"I •L· \ lorm..ica & Geml nr~n -~• C• • "' job too big or too small / ·• ,., v lo:. ~I' \IU-.1.l·:CL~ANlN(; lry. fan111h1n11 Av•ll C.-RtjCottef'fle ••••••••••••••••••••••• GrGdlncJ CLEANING BY GOOD PETERS PAINTING 20 yrs ex pr Room~ ht HATl':SERV1<.:1-; \\indow ... uw SpN'l,tlh wknd•. tr t11t11 M 11rle ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'J,E<..,.RlCAL Sl':RVICE ••••••••••••••••••••••• MAN. * • 536·7711 Expr'd Reas Rato1L SlStup. Fully insrcl & lw \l fair l'l'll'l'lt :itiil lliJ:I frl'e l'St NOW ti-lb 1110:1 7:11·130ol. MT 11272 Orw Mun cr1•w ~ vr11 o CAJ.LS St5 hr, & SMALL Slciploader, dump truck, Housecleaning by reliable fi'ree Est. Call Gene Od<lJObs too. 636-~5 Tile ---- c.,.at• pt>11enn·,11uun111i 4. JOBS842·~=:_ ~aullng.treework,grad· couple. References. Call _552·0<!58 -<:1m111'l&Res1dcnltal Nu ....................... SELL ullc JLl'ms with a •• ... ••••••••• • ••••• ••• ~:;':~~n.ii :.~tl' v~,~~~~~n Hubbard Electric _mg, demo, elc. 751"39~-963-5813or 1·626-6126 Brighten up the House' J~ib too b•K ~r loo :.mall l'EH1\:\lll' Tll.1-: "l'W 111 11 ~·~~.~~llot l 'la~slf wd ,\ti. t arp("nl r y ·• ll) 1 v pt•. 001 2'!:.!:I Ll 327136 645 1>97' Hauling Norm's Paperhangmto: 20 ~ r:. ex pr H 011 ml> remix.kl 1-'r t•st. ~ml Joh-. • -• Panel. duor~. l'lt· i\hw t· · ••••••••••••• •••••••••• XJnt housecleaning. Good All kinds, free est. State sis iup. fo'ully 111srd & ht: w1•komt• 53il 2.i:..'6 all , ---------. Comm'! lk t·~t Alts Ct:MJ-:NT WOltK 1\ll A--'-1_. llilulino,muvmo,cleanup refs. Own tran s, lie 3309116. 835·3705 or OddJobstoo.6:JtHi995 USE THE ...__.... "' 0 RD&emarie. Ph 645-3439 675-6480 Tree Service ~ 2'719 Kinch fleat>onable . FT.:e ••••• ••••••• ••• ••• ••••• S7 /up. Treework. Reas. p l p l ••• •••. •• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • D "'ILY PILOT c f f aan mg. a1n mi:: "" C«petSer,,.lc• t~l 'all 7~ ~~able Expr Japanese ast. reeeslS42·4597 Mcnoniy Pamt& Paperm11. 24 yrs lntenors.Extenor,. H1·m1"rnr.: tr1mm1nr.: "~AST •••••••••••••••• •••• ••• ( ·on<:rele ReJoVtinator:.. G~rden~r Reasonable HAU LI NG. Odd Jobs. ••••••••••••••••••••••• serv'g Harbor areu. SI lltisident1ul or Comm I w11µ111~ Ir t•st hl' 111,. tn RESULT" Sh¥mpoo " steam dean. cleans & restores to a pnces. h ee est. 64.5-5230 Law student needs WOl'k. Fireplaces-Planters lie 18321!1. Refs furn .Spotless & Re;isonable I areu l 1) rs Tunv t;ii~ !'1l:i.t Color bnghteners, wht bn1nd new look, We'll ~hke Jim494-S8S4 Brick Concrete Patio 642·2356 Samlvnn Painters SERVICE cp«slO bl h Cl I l ·1 BlockWalls BBQPlts 673-8300 Hem11va1,... tr1mm1nJ!. man eac · ean c ean ~.ams. ~rease, 01 WEEDING·CLEANUPS Softny & Jer Free haul· Refs, Ests. 646-0464 Know I es Pa 1nt1 n g . --prw11ni:. I rt'l' l'~t. L1\"d. DIRECTORY' llv, dm rm, hall $15. Avg & rust. So don t use a car Weekly Maintenance . • f Int /Ext. commercial . I II " . , .. , F' R l rm ST.SO, couch $10. chr lo cover th~ driveway. Fr-~ut 642.9907 mg, cleanup, etc or us~· apts. res1'denl1'a l & Patios u ) rn~un:ut..1:.-w.-i or esu t 55. GuAr ehm pet odor. Call Con1·rete Re ·-~~~·~ bleltems.Fences,bldgs Free Est: Blockwalls, ••u••••••••••••••••••• Service Call Cpt repair. IS yrs ex pr. JUvenators, 642·8416 VERY LOW PRlCES ! removed. 557·200S ~e~K:~~t·f.0~ea~.ri1f c~: mobile homes. 836·1120· Custom Redwood Patios Tr~· a lJ a ii v I' i I 111 Do work m yself. Rers on gardening main -i.1nd what you want in bon d. Bob 750-9354 Find what you want in Covers·Decks-Fen\:es l'li1ss1fled Atl 111 buy, :..ell 642·5678' 53.1-0101. Want Ad Help? 642·5678 tenance. George S49·2015 Daily Pilot Classifieds. 642·9177 ' Daily Pilot Classifieds. 645-2333 ur n·ut :.onwth1ni.;. ht. l ll Vacation Rentofs 4250 Office Rentol 4400 lusinHsj1nvest/ ••••••••••••••••••~•••• ••••••••••··~··•••••••• Finance Right across from beach ~(1cc Suite, 3 Pvt rms. Lg i:.:i:;;•••••••• ••••• •• at Seashore & s:!rd St iecpl rm. f ormerly used Oppo-"--it 5005 • by ms Co. Avail. Aug l rT.., J Some oceiln \ H!\' Bc:.t Ga ll Jack Saunder:ion al ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~urt1ng & \Ollevh~111 REST•UR .._.T& . area 2 bdrms .\\a.ilable Western .Business A . A" . June thru Aug Weeki YI ~rvic~s : 56~ .w, 1.9th St. Cocktail LOWl«Je rates. &.12·448!1 t l't~. <la)~. li4:t·0212 eves. Coastal area. Nice m I s.t6:2"l77 ' es l men t. S 1 O O. Ou O . 'li~;w 2 br. :t12 ba lu\ury Hcnlorlcasedowntown +range.incl.ABCLic. I urn condo Laguna. H.R. Mcdt(·al ·Lab/Pror Pnnc. only own/agt ~eannew Walk to bch Offices. Ampie parking 759-0768 &14·5987 Sl)OO /wk. Adulls.5-14-68!i9 'S32S . 1 1 ---------Sll5! . : mo. inc. ut1 . Money to Loan 5025 Rentals to Share 4300 963·12'13or 960·3224 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~:~::;·~:~~~·2·;;;,·;;1:~ Pl.aH • I St, 2nd & lrdT.D.'s bltns, career women.I Executin Suetu LO~SA\'.AfLABLE StSO. 714·532·5470 OHice avail. Overlooks Credit not important. airport & mountains. --673·.is8.'l Broker 27~0:"~t41chelson. lrvme. SWIMG LOAMS Need someone w 1apl to "" <...> shrimmed.673-063-1 -----2nd&3rdT.D'S BALBOA ISL. Meed a Roommate? To Professionally Fmd THAT RIGllT PEHSON "TheComplete Otricc" I Or\Y APPROVAL !I Offices + work room. Cred1l·No Problem confer rm. vault, CALLANN673·1166 lounge. Grnd floor. Xlnl prk'g. 45' rt. Top Costa MoneyWanted 5030 · Mesa loc. 2500 sq. ft. or •• •• •• • • • ••• • • • • • • • • • • • .QousE·CJJAru Um.11\UHD le~s. (7)11 )540·2200 or COM DUPLf:X. equity u.::k..;·~·q:~.~U"it'dJelt C7Ul494-4797 over $100,000 Need c...• ,;t~ h .. •u~'"''i -~.000·$30.000. SECOND 832··1l:U Sull'e 1!!7t Business Rental 4450 TD. ~3-1153 :110MESllAR1Nc; .. -.......... ••••;•••••••• MortCJocJes, Trust •Need a roommate·• 4 DELUXE OFC 'S DffdS . 5035 F'ree hslln~ Hderr.ils Conf rm , seat 25. all ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9am-8pm !)30·24~4 paneled. srn. whse 111 re· LOANS 90/ ar I or 2 vr. lease Lake /0 2Braptl0 shrw mature Forest ·.,rea Kt>nl AlsolndTDLoans female. S137 .50 + '• utal. H:.irktn!'> Casa Victona !>48· 161>4 7M·51SJ.!l3i1:i ~~:!.~.~ ...... ~~~~Help Wonted 7100Help Wmded 7100 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ...,.p Wanted 7100 ...,.p Wanted 7100 t-fe4p Wanted 7 I 0 0 .••..•.•.••..••...•.•.. ···••···•••····••·····• ...........•.•.....•... 17th St in C.M .. also Lido bdwk. Sent Viii, rew &15·8953. ACCOUNTING CLERK ---------•I cu~h1er & 1111,.,tl:''"· l''<ll•'r DIRECTOR ----------LO~i': i ·I at Victoria Sta· tion. Nwpt. Man's Sap· ph1re blue dinner nng. HEWARD! t714l 598·8484 LOST: !\Im. male poodle Creamy whl., front bot- tom tooth m1ssan,:?. Sub· ject to strokes Needs m edication Vtc . Mariners Viii .. O.P. Pis call collect 714·324·3072 Lost Reward. l Yr M Tiger striped cat. Blue collar. Univ Prk. 552·3393 LOST: s haggy wht /blk male Dog. "JViggs". Vic. Crown Valley Pkwy. 499·1461 A full -time position is available for ac· curate clerk to assist in busy newspaper office. Duties are varied . Should be a good typist and operate a IO-key adding machine with skill. Previous accounting office experience is desirable. Work in pleasant environ- m ent with good company benefits in- cluding 2 weeks vacation after one year, company paid group insurance. credit union , etc. Apply at: ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mesa Between the hours of 8:00 AM·S:OO PM Call for appointment please 642·4321 , ext. 276 Equal Opportunity Employer AYON NEED EXTRA CASH? t-:arnmgs art· )!o<Kl·huur,. arl' flexible when you ·re ;111 .\VON repre,..cn tall\C <.:all 540·i04t or Zenith 7-135!! fl,lh\'..tlll'f . llELI" Wo1 king motht'r nl'Plh e:qn· cl per~on to ~1t with 6 mo" old boy. my homl'. llB. 3 ur 4 afternoons a Wl'Ck . 536·86<». 9 A!\l to I I P:\l or7PMto!I PM. Lost Joly 3 med . sz fem clog. Golden brn. Vic. ~1st & Santa Ana, C:\l. Jobs Wanted, 7075 ...,.P Want•d 7100 548·&159 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Babysitter, for t> ~ r old girl, f1t1me. live m or out. Irv. area. 955-0877 or S37 · 7777 Lee XJnl haircuuer wants job 1---------•1 Personals 5350 in strictly haircutting Answer. Serv. PBX Babysitter/Housekeeper. ••••••••••••••••••••••• salon. &t6-6300 2 children, 6 mo's & 3 yr:;. Onnk ing problem'! l'all Alcohol Helpline 24 hrs a day 83,5·3830 PREGNANT? Carini( con rident1al <·oun~elin~ & referral Abortion. <1dopt1on & keeping. APCARE HdpWanted 7100 .•....•....•••.••..••.• Wanl to work afternoons ,.1nglC', non-smoker. LI\ c & evenings m N.B. & in, own apl. at bl'11 CdM areas? Work ftllmc lli:l·tl5:l 1---------•l or p/timc & some wkncls Xlr::a pay for cxper'd operator~. EOE Call 640-~12 \ppl~ m 1.ll'rnm. :\lltl;1 O F NURSES ~~·l'~!1,:·~~1'\~~~ a::·;~ 7/, i:~ 17 ~:~.,,'.~' ';n ~~;r ~i~ ",~;rn·~ r ho ~pt . Will lrJtn C HILD C ARE quJl1f1nt nurse lid IJlo~ll'" Inca I m:.ilun· 'Jlary & benl'ftl:>. Apply woma11 to 1·arc lor «h1l<ln:n 1n ffi\ ll,1rli•ir \ u homt» Wktly,.,. !I li llll\\ Sepl l I> pm 1>14 70!!5 t•arl, Superior Cor11 • ll111>pt . t-145 Superior ,\\ 1• • :\J II DIR. OF NURSES SNF 1"q1cr1e111•e pre· CLEANUP MAH k1 n·<I. Apply, Garfield :Ml to 36 hrs wk Good ~up-t' 0 11 v II o s P · • 7 7 ts I plement 111comC' for re· ~;Jrfll'ld, llH. 847:9671. tire.'<! man 5'18·3031, CM. CLEHK for C<1rd & <i1ft Shop. p i'llme. l'>.pcr pre rd. NU area. G40·7:l7:! Drapcry llemm(•r or lahlt•r. exp'•I Top wages. t>-12·1843 Clerk lyp1st S:J hr. s.·nior D.rapen~s: Tabler. e~·r. C1t11.cns Program, :r~· ~ i::ood wages: good "°rk-hour,,. tn~ cond. &12·1435 dy::-.. ___ S:lti 5:1.12 s.iM·690IJcvs_. ____ _ COCKTAIL WAITRESS ( Dressmakers. des1,::ner~. :-amplemakers, altera- tions persun. l 1tl\'r, ~.1lespeson . Darlenf•, 1>12 2721or642 5910 DRIVER SUNDAYOMLY' GUARDS Costa Mesa &Cerritos Permanent. Full & Part· time. Phone & transp re- q 'd. Retired welcome. Call 548-0274, ofc llrs 10·2. Closed Wednesd~s . L • ' . • HtfpWOftted 7100 HelpW..W 7100 HtfpWClfttWcf 7100 Wedne9dav.Julv6.19T7 DAILY PILOT 87 P1 · ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• HelpW..t.4 7100 MMW..t-.1 7100 HtlpWanled 7100 Sal SCJ'V/RECEM'JONIST Dogs 8040 GcropSot. 8055 MitctllaMOGS 8080 ............. •••••••• •••• •'-9'•••••••••••••·•••••• ••••••••••••••••••••• •• es RIAL I I P.n Ume, S daf1! p/Wk Typl&ta/Se.creta,,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• lloaff 6 Cluld Cue, live "'t:WPORTH1.1rborYach1 STAT ~-6 PM. Phone, (ypl.na. Oenera10fflce ENOLI Sll Sprlnaer L t D O I S L I!: Mink · ladlu si lO 12 In . B •a In S "p' t 'lub ha1 • po.1t11.1n ol'(ln RIClrTIONlST SALISPHSOM altorthaod, Newpbrt TY"STS ~el16~ wu .. Cham· BAYFRONT-antiqt.lc:s Autumn lhw:. Strollt·r n.rtlerotlt 111rH. lrv11w tc.rport1h1w11rd.Muinbo IMTUVllWH IMDUSTRIAL Beach.152-1833 SICRITAIUIS hip llnea. Liver & wash«1r /dryer, aoea: knsth.AJmostnew. ssoo • a lar1 n•ao ll 11 lll • u~Jt>r'd; uport1Un11mu1ll w tt n c e d • blah h' OHlce establlsb~d in l hour ot your time may Sl.00. 968·9958 chairs, tots ot 6'oodies, 493·1153 art 6 Glmal\.4pm lw111l•. m111lnt . of •m mol1vat•d Ir career ~~ustlncreatestatr. OJ)erl "new career for AKC 1e•lstered blond t)'i/Sat only 9.4, 900 Via 9-1.2-.T-E.NT--W--d-.--ho•li., 11dmlnl1tc.tr1na mlnedt!d lndlv.towot'lt4,o Exp d .• li ce n sed Secretary you. Your altllls an male C:Crcer u PY· 5 Lido NordN e wport lC • ar Sl'an· HOUSaWll fb,,.-d boat yard 11ip.1 & moor· b\lsy o(flcc of dYnamic, 1aloaperaon. Drawloa 1 needed in many interest· . Ad bl P P tl Beach vaa. I!~ W3 Um~~-N1 rly rida,.L'Muat provldC'oWn lnlS 673·1"1ll0 for In· 1 t h 1 a<'count lftlllNISTUTIVE . . U mo. ora e, aen e, new . .-.. rou..,t ron arane. En&Jlah 11~alnna. wrvlew. irow n1. emp.b e P MARTlN&ASSOC. Nllln '6f com/?!:" a;,h o~er lovescbild~n.6'4·M8'7 &!ovlng Sale. Mony Parrot cage S2S. Parrot IJZS w11, Ref1 lr\'IDf ~~ l'~~:~'L aure•e'lt ~IM71 ' c1sf'Ct YOUt:~Y· t e ek· ••-·--y... belongingsgalheredthru st.and$l5. Ph~ lAt Och "9IW ti-------1 ........ ·~ • SECREJ•ay on,. 0 wor w' •-..-v.-.-'" the years & now must go _eo_~_ta__ -· 4-·-NOW R~cru1lln~ ah"rp, OW' cU•nt. Ir applicants. Sales , M when and w ere you Cute mate-, wtll be Fallo furn., deco bricks: 30C wood lathe w.ith HOUSEK~ltPER 1mb1t1owi man to 11~11 Gre•t opp. to enter the •STAR11NGS3.50HR• IDrllSQNNll) ple&lie. mod l um s i ;c •. Elect. appl. dis hes. ~O!'· gouges SlOO. Gtrh• Nlmnwn> ww-lt, room .. h1.1rdwart. lOOIK & 1hop craonneJ field. Typ1ni s b II r p. I u t I ti m e \rU. . • .+ Mustachioed. Last ot ll~· clothes & much more. 418 20 bake $2S. 543-15419 boerd """30t ~uipawnt tu luduKtnal lplw,notesscnUal. salesperaon needed for We. l_lave a cballenglllg ~OOS'Sm ter.S41·2140 E. 16th St. cu. Frl·Suo 8' Herculon sofa earth ,. •• .. ... ..,, • Npt Bcb pet s tore lnnllitton in our fut mov· . . 1"5 •-~ xt t __ .. 11'50 Ad 8l'd)\U\,., nV,. ....., 1>er .:. . . me personnel depart· AJCC Poodle pupptes, lmy .,. ..,...,.,, 0 Cuuu • .: -••c• wk No e11pN. uec. Call ;'~~14::!~· 96.\.8337or640-0090 ment reparting to the .,. e-I toy,allshots, Hones 1060 mlral B&W TV. 11 f'ire•CuW1lly l11depen 7)1'11134. ·:rTT g' "{;;' personnel manager. The •ttnpOl"•Y .......-• ces 53l).64SS ....................... screen$30.646-3761. da.o.1l1~!!! •Jlt-nry n~t·d11 -· Sales qualified individual must Sanlta"24AnSa. Grand ~~-~;....,1 AKC 2 Irish Setters. Palomino Pinto Gelding. MisceUaneous qua ~ tniuranct' ar N Ad 13 h Tau~. cw..,, Seri•c•s os good com oNO ''"'' Q t h 8 U#....-1......1 8081 cocmt undtTWMIN Ki1 un>es • 1 e, per r. • P 5866 • . • '320CampusSte 130 female, 646·0142 or uar er orse. .yrs. ..._._ prrtnproces•ina 1>ervtt· Mon·Sat. s ·30AM · 4320 ampusSt4'130,NB ~ munlcat1on 11nd 1.n -Ne rtBeacb S49-807l ~280laft.SPM Xlntco~d. Prof trained ... ••••••••••••••••••••• lna A: mkt'd rom~Ctttal 1·30PM. Mull have cu 1424S. Grand Ave.SA :'·.: terpersonal sk!lls with W ~ member of Show Winner. Push but· SC""SH FOR$ ·-" 00 3:W 558-9026 ~,, .. ·.l excellent typing and e a e 8 ton. S1500. Ph67S.3590 "' . ~ ln an •&l'n<'y. Xlnt shorthand capabilities. CATS Fneto Yo. 1045 Good used fum/refngs benellts,top~.aluryopcn. Of'f'lt:to:twtpwontt>d t:n· . 11.1 Mustbeorganized.detail •••••••••••••••••••••••Jewelry · 1070 Freezers & stoves ca1u1n.a.~er.83Jssso 1hu ... i11sur. ('J\Rt-:..:u ~ "BUllOCK'S oriented and able to er-Freetog6odbome.eollie ••••••••••••••••••••••• 546-0768 •-~-mmdoo R•rl ror front ofr. RECEPTIONIST . • ' rectively hand.le heavy $ & black Retriever mix· WA..,.TED ....._-_-tc-_.------- Flre ~~Y. 1n ~~rg~!>'c° .,\~~~n:~.~·~~i -~-,~_J:\\JILSlljRr ~~~~csarandte'~~~r;a~~ ~ TYPIST I t~~!ei:te~~e:c'!if~~t TOP CA~ DOLLAR t:..::... ·eon dependent agency needs 11hoto1traphy <'0 Some Diceon Electronics has . W H t management. Previous SECRETARIES with children, minds PA ID F 0 R Y 0 UR .. ~•·•••••••••••••••••• qualified agency claims l'Ollcs:e pr·d ·d, ofc. exp. an immediate opening 1.os ANGELES experience in personnel well. Call 581·0058 for JEWELRY. WATCHES, Conn Min·O·Matic elet·. person. Xlnt benefits, fnllmlatory. 1\ll promo-for an experienced re· PALM SPAl"IGS is desired J oin the team that offers Alice ART OBJECTS. GOLD, organ. excellent condt· salary open. Exper nee. tions from w1th1n. Pis ceptionist for a Pulse woOOLANOHtLLS ' opportunity, flex. hrs. & • SILVER SERVICE, tion,$600.P.P .532·125!1 Call Mrs. Baker.833-9550 Call liud Ctll for appt. system switchboard. Job NEWPORT BEACl-4 We offer good starting good pay. CALL TODAY FREE KI T_T E ~ S FINE FURN & AN · Large.DAILY P ILOT ~~A _I nt e rnat1onal. duties will include in· salary and benefits pro· &Start Tomorrow. Beautiful White with TlQUES.645-2200 '68 Fet~der .KtingmxlannL roulA! in Newport Beach, BULLOCK'S gram·. or more In· ... ., .... 1 • · Noreas. o!fer refused. In· cond. SlSO. 673-9067 8:l:.180s:J terface with personnel. F · ~O~ off1' ce • blue eyes 6 weeks old acous 1c gu1 ar, sa.l~. purchasing and ac-rormauo call l d ~ Mernoons Monday thru1·---------1 t.'Ounting. Strong clerical • n, : O over oa dian turquoise bracelets, . Friday,MomingsSatur· OFFICE WILSHIRE, 5Kittens,unusualmark· coral necklace, Premier Drum Set day and Sunday. $350.00 background and typing Cathy Ferryma!' 557.0061 ings. 6 wks old. Box pipestone cerpentine . w/Tama snre, 6 Z1ld gross profit per month. IMMEDIATE are reqwred. Please ap. a leadingfashions""cial· <714)54().5000ex.t207 ...,23B' h St NB traioed.Free.496-1705 Pvtpty.968-7597 cymbals, $550. 759·0874, Ideal 1 ply in person ..-.,, 1rc , . . aft6PM supp ement for re· OPENINGS ty store will open its first Loveable Dover Shores Uvntoc:lc 8075 ---------~:is ~'f: v0~ ~ga:e:~ ~~~R~oBE~c:{J ~~ HYLAND community cat. Needs ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pianos & Organs 8090 automobile and $.50.00 For People With DICEON Augu.'lt lst, 1977. We offer LABORATORIES Typist home, neutered male. Reg. Morgan mare, broke ••••••••••••••••··~·••• cash d e p osit. Ca IJ Secretarial, Cl~rical ELECTRONICS an opportunity to join an TECHNICAL TYPIST 645-8999. to ride & drive. blk 5' Baby Grand Piano, 642-4321, ask for circula· Switchboard, Typing, exciting fashion forward 3300 Hyland Ave Typist for technical & parade Morgan gelding, Howard $1300. Npt Bch. tion. K~.,_chor l8522Von Karman organization. Tbelollow· Co5taMesa,Cam26 statistical documents. ~obe~m:~/Sb-e,pherd2 Eng. Western <714) Call759-lnl. • -- Data p~;~s'g Skills Irvine, Ca 92714 ing areas for which we Must type 6S wpm. Will Y~ld ~ale~:.1~':ce. 3J8.1011 lf.2 PRICE SALE LEGAL SECRETARY Ch h d (nearO.C. Airport) are accepting applita Equal Opportunity I train on word processing "-"-h·i--8078 ......... U "L. Needed w/min. 5 yrs. · OO!>e t e ay,,. Wl'l·ks t ul l II Afr· t· At• · f. · · URGENT'M l t ....._ ..•. , "'"" "' & 1 l h 1 ions req res rong se 1rma 1ve c aon equip. Pro 1c1ency in . a amu e ••••••••••••••••••••••• nl exp. Top salary for top w.m?t1 •~on 10 w rel you Equal0pportunity ingbackground: Employer grammar r eq'dc. For 1 ~~untig_fn1e~~~r,!;,~;. male. Rubber tired frami n" 48Hn0 Y =~ry. Call : Marilyn Employer M/F AcceSSOO.IS appt. cont act. ar.o .,.,au u ....... ....,Ml' saw. 12 .. blade. modei Fri/SatJuly8·9th . Sei:retary, pt-time, Lag SmJt.h. Avco Financial 0 d S .1k . 315 Radial Skillsaw. 3hp. AHTl9UE PIANOS LEGAL SECRETARY RECEPT. well groomed. lllandbags) Bch. Gd skills. Flex hrs Services, <714) 644·5800. n e-eye 1 Y mix 49:Hl53 r 6 . 709S. Mam. Santa Ana organized , mature & ~tter Jewelry) Call Shirley, 831·2293 Equal Oppor Ernploye"t female, 7 ,Yrs, spay~. a t 836-8292 Intelligent. Train as f . di shots. Animal Assist Mi _.1 8080 --------- Para-legal. General ncn Y. to serve mem· Intimate Apparel 537.2273 sconGMOUS SportingGoods 8094 skills. 752·1211 . · fi~cz :::::.. ... ">nvra bers in pvt clb. Skills. in Waitress Food/Cocktails. . ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••"•••• .ov\Vlvi-.o answering phones, typ. & f datio *SECRETARY* Apply aft. 4pm. Sid's Beautiful Samoyed dog. WA..,.TED YAMAHA 1 5 Sk ' LEGALSECRETARY, tempomrys~ce ing & handling simple OUR ft$ Unusual opportunity for Blue Beet, l07 21st Pl. altered male to good n Salomon · l ~5: Wells F a r go Bldg, 833-7755 businessmacbines req'd, secretary working with N.B. bome548·5669 TOP CASH DOLLAR bm ings, Newport Beach. General 5 d k w d s Lua113ge t t· Sh rth d PA r D F o R You R castle 185 Skis G EZ 1<; Coldwell Banker Bldg ays w • e -un, /liJ6 op execu ive. o an W I F bindings SSO. Kneissl 205 Coll>Oratework. 6~989 4040 MacArthur Blvd 8:J0.5PM, 833·3110 & accounting skills de· Waitress for Balboa cof· ~ mar~e~ em,l Y~. JEWELRY. WATCHES, wtmarker bindings $50. Ste~ Newport Bch R~ept.ion'ist for Dr. Ofc, Men's Cloth1"ng s1rable. Unlimited op· fee shop. Min. 3 yrs exp. n !' Lome uk~d 0 ART OBJECTS. GOJ..D. Henke boots, sz 7_ ~o. LecJCllSecretary "" portunity for 4uallfied Also.Dishwasher.middle rnovang. oves 1 s . SILVER S ERVICE Business & real property p/time, 5 days, must Spo person w /1niliat1ve. aged woman. Im med. 968·3035 FINE FURN. & AN'. 548·0709eves practice. Litigation CX· p Es T c 0 NT R 0 L t~. exper p~.:r~s3~ut & rtswear -Starting salary $950+ex· openings. Over 18. Call Free to good b.Qme, Norw. TIQUES.645-2200 TV, Rodio; per nee. Mag II. Exec. SERVICE REP wantcd. n necessary. · M"ll" ceptional benefits. Reply aft 7pm531·8008. Elkhound, male l 'h yrs. HiFi, Stetto 8098 Secy Para-legal caliber. So. Oran~e Co. 831·102.t RECEPTIONIST I mery to Ad #963, Daily Pilot. loving &genLle. 963-7719 LUGGAGE TAGS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Upto$1000tostart. Pen· clays,1:!310220eves. Immed.openinginlg. at· (WigStylist exp) Box 1560, Costa Mesa, WAREHOUSEMAN from your businesscard.r---------• thouse Suite, l201 Dove tractive administrative Social t"""IVl'ng CA92626 & WEIGHER Beautiful Lab/Shepherd Send one card ror each New PIONEER Model St, N.B. 752-l313 PLUMBER ofc. Xlnt. opp. for well u151 Mature person to weigh mix needs loving home. tag plus one spare. We CTF9191 Stereo casst"lle LIQUORCLERK Trainee Positions now. groomed. personable in· ~ .. W , SECRETARY & wareho use bulk 962-6138 returh permane ntly deck. list price S44!l. CallownerAMonly. Noexpencnc:e required. di,·idua l w /ex p . in ,,1nu1;$· Omens vitamins. Some lighting. scaled attractive tag & t\tlantic !\1 usic's Si!lc <199·258lSouthLal:"una Age 18·29, must have telephone procedures. to busy property Mustbencat&consc1cn-FumHure •050 strap. meeting airline Price s279• Atlantic - -trut•k. $350. wk. take Many co. benefits includ· Women's Fine ~~~::e;~q1'~~:~~c~~aa\~~ tlous. Apply 8 AM ·9:30 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l.D. requirements. Pre· Music 445 E. 17th SI. LockerRmAttendant home 1n less than 1 mo. ing bonuses, profit shar-M AM. L1nw1lco Labs. 2148 STOREWIDESALE vent loss & theft! For a Cos M C University Athletic Club 5~PAPl!511~c. So. Bristol, ing, vacation. Apply : •pf?!rel ~~~~e~igur~~~ ~ebl~o~~ Newport Blvd. CM . N~w &:Wiused 15 f1;1m8• appl'.s. pers11onalized t1agbe~e~~t~a~e~s~a~·~a~. ~~~ m N.B. seeks mature m· · ·' ·"""" 1660Placentia Ave .. CM. ft rrusc. t on s argam wa paper , a rac or1. dividual for position of We are aso acceptmg work with minimal Weneed50peoplewhoare Nook. M5&814W.19th, "Day Glo .. paper & we RCACOLORTV 25 .. Ear- locker room attend. PRESSMAN a p PI i l' a t ions for ~uperlrision Bas1t com at least 10 lbs over -CM.642-7930&548·3262 will back & trim your ly American 'cabinet. A.B. Ditk 360 w /T-51. To RETAIL BEAUTICIANS in our putcr knowledge a must,~ weight Call Ms. Stone al lags. Or try two cards some work needed. SiS. Pleasant atmosphere S6.50hr.PcartreePress. Beauty Sa l on and GallSusan,547·4159 751·9175.Wecantellyou **IBUY** backtoback. 963-7719 andwork'gconditions. 714/644-7955. TAlLOR/FJ'l'TER for ---how to lose pounds & PRICES: . EqualOppor Employer CLERKS our ften's Alteration 2-SECURITY earn money at the same Good used Furniture & S2 eaor3/S5 Boats & Manne 752-7905 Printer Dept. time. Appliances-OR I will 4/5tag.s Sl.60ea. Equl~nt LYN'S&AIDES Instant Printer UTOTEM GUARDS scllorSELLforYou. 619 tags$1.50ea. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Exper'd. only. ITEK & Convenifttee Markets We offer an excellent Merchan&se MASTERS AUCTION lOor more Sl.40ea. Boats, Morine !'h~h~m:i>:1~~ ~~r~·ie":~ ~80 ~i~k P ~ ?~ra~o~. Positions open ist, 2nd & ~f~fuegn!Ti~~ai~'i~~o~~~ Fashion Island. HB A.;;::;•••••••••9005 646-1616 & 133-9625 SalesN0Tac~IRDnct~ded Equipmen' 9030 Conv. Hosp .. 7781 r w 0 en ia · a · 3 rd s hifts in San • • ••• · ••••••••••••••••••••••• Garfield.HB.84.7.967 1. open-Xlnt. benefits . Clemente & Laguna onstore merchandise. Weekly pay & paid vac. •••••• •••• ••• ••••• lndiant eottLoo Sofa ~1Lo1 V· Draw your own or send *ZODIAC MAID For Motel wanted part time. 545·9471 • M~IDS• The Inn at Laguna 211 N. Cst Hwy, Laguna MAID WANTED Lido Shores Hotel Call 673-8800 MAID Wanted. Ex per. not nee. Seacliff Motel, 1661 S. Coast Hwy, Laguna Beach. 494·4892. MAINTEMAMCE Pos. o pen Mon .Fri. 12AM-8AM MCDONALDS 1~_J3each Bl. H.B. Call for interview (714) 847-9100 Laguna Hrlls/M1ssion Beach. Other areas have Please apply in person Xlnt fringe benefits . Wonderland esea s-oose p1 ow, name. address. phone & V1eJO area. 586·3150 Is N DAlLY 10-12 & 2·4 Above average wages. Choice colors $485 Both we'll make one card per operungs a ·o. o ex per Of Antiques! Pcs ! . Lge select ion tag. Add25P eacb. req'd. Apply at any or 83 FASHION ~.~~i~~~t' c:r Z qp~~~~ 11 U GE ware h ouse lamps. coffee tbis & fine Send ebeclc or money or· PRODUCTION our stores. home !um1srungs at THE der to: 2S88NewportBlvd ,~I HID req'd. Call 1213 1573·9150 crammed wilh over 500 c Costa Mesa 642-7702 AM for local appt. E.O.E. Ol\ISac boxes, nickelo· ~J.'~r:e~?~~E L: PILOT PRIMt'IMG MANAGER Equal Oppor Employer SECY RECPT . deon pianos, circus or· HB oA., ... AA P.O. Box't560 • I ·port time. I I k · ._.. . ....,..., Costa Mua, Ca:92626 I ..... . RN/LVH ,._ ... -_______ , ~~:;.~~P~rpe:~f.~~~~~f· :::;d!~~~r ccl~~lt~:F --u-rn-,-.t-u_r_e_'S-tr_i_p_p_e_d-.-& --------- mmt.'u.late opening for full time, part time,•· ._..... fa.scinating antiques, Refinished by Expe~ $CDIU lfTS the right person with days & ~M, Active SECl\.ETARY Sec'y wanted. Legal .exp. OverSl,000,000Worth 152·5069dys,6ff.-6826eve ..,....,. compounding experience Geriatric Rehab. Hospt. necessary. 6 week sum· American International ANSWERS in silicone rubber. H .. re's """ 2410 5 "'LES King · Wat b d & "" .,..... A mer r ep 1 ace m en t . Galleries; 1802·T Keltet· size er e your chance to move into ---------~r 833-3S22 mg St., I rvine. Tel. heater. like new, $125 Or Hotbed -Bully a management position RN. permanent P /Time & SECRET ARY 754-1777. Open Wed lhru offer. ~0-9126 Glove-Fumble as a proctuction manager On call position avail. All Service Sta. Attendant. Sat. 9AM to4 PM . Visit ! Chord O""'an, end tables, FELL OUT for a new compounding shifts. Call Santa Ana We have 2 immediate e per'd Full or p/time ... I t f h x · · overstuffed sectional, saw our gues · 0 onor facalityinlheSouthwest. Psychiatric H os p . openings for Sales ApplyArcoStat1on. l7th IR.ASSIEO at a party the other Excellent benefits.Rush 543-8481,EOE Secreta r y with a &lrvine.C.M. FACTORY ~1~ .. ~!!_ more misc. night.topless.Hisupper resume and salary re· minimum of 1-2 years ex· .,., ~ I t.e FELL OUT Port·A·M arine Inflatable BoaL-; 2925College. C.M. <il4JS4().2070 VHF/FM 45-channel. SYD· thesized marine radro tele"s, & reg. s:i24.95. 1.alc S389.95. Save to 25',;. on all marme electronic:.. Ber lOam/act 6pm. call SSG-6200 .• Boats, Power 9040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 27' (frojan Cruiser Twin v8's, rad.,soUllder Painted, tuned, ready S7500 AY646·9000 quirements to : Robbie's Raq & Mop perience. Job duties re-Sen•ice Station wanted Lg. select ion of pne P 8 · Women n eeded for II t t · 12, L'ull & p/ti·me. Some BRASS Be ds. Reas. RICH OR POOi? 27' Chris Craft, twin 283 qwre exce en yp10g, r d. Sofa $50, Rocker, Jots of Chevy. Sell /trade . Classific<ladno.900 housecleaning service. assisti n g sa l es exper. Top wages+ prace:i. Buy irect" SAVEMORE wallpaper, Fender· 531.0343,646_1470 C!O Daily Pilot MS-0757 coordinator. and TWX. comm & vac pay after I save! MOHEY HERE Rhodes Bass. 646·~33,1----------PO Box 1560 Shorthand preferred. but Yr· Apply• Ca re Y's THE WAAG BED 646--0935 WELLCRAFT NOVA 250 Costa Mesa.Ca92626 SALES not required. Previous Chevron, 604 S. Coast 23l4NewportBI, IOO'sOFSTYLIS 24', twin Mere. 888 .'s MANY FEE PAID To arrange for SUPPLEMEMT sales experience a plus. Hwy, Lag. Bch. No phone 642-2712 From Fomou Children'& booklet: 10 Fun l{O's, cuddy cabin, ·cov- POSITIOMS a Personallnterview YOUIUHCOME ·G.ood fringe benefits, calls. ~CH 10 UI tttfg's Sawaplw ideas. Send Sl.50:"'!3652 er. tandem· trlr. 675·8280 AJso Fee Positions S$$$ $$$$' salary commensura.te SEWI NG Mach. oper's. •••••••••••••••••••, .. ,., *B d a...a * Verona. L11guna Hills. _o_r_67_S_·7884 _ __, ____ _ '"ine Penonnel an equal PART TIME ~~=~~~~~Apply or Eicpanding mfg. needs Washers. dryers. Cleal'l ran "ew Sears Porta Pout. used 28" OWENS Agency opportunity employer TELEPHOMIWORK up. operators. 1580 late models.• SUMI_. r yr _ /f " once, 4 gallon tml.ding - 488E17th,CostaMesa ~ DICEOH Monrovia.NB,642·3472 guar. Free d~hvery y urn ure tank fifty flusbes S60 ExpttssCruinr ~~ -,.:2-~o S~~ESPEERSTSAOT~S cot4&.~~:tol~S ~22 V~OK9!4tm. ICS smPPING& ~~g. Will au& buy. FOREv.Etl IOOM 840-i.244. . . ~:~ief.C~~v:ttib.t~;f~ ._ ~-=-----" Gufiranleed Hourly '"'"' "" a an RECEIVING , F1'CTOR)'SURPLUS ~ratorltems tabs. new varnish. MATURE WOMAN Opportunity now availa· Wage Plus Bonus. S:JO Jrvlne,ca927i 4 40 Hr week. Apply in F RGHT DAMAGEil ORIGINALCARTONS 416,Ht:lze(.CDM Shower.propane stove& p /tlme to wel come ble for ti censed pm to 8:30 pm. Call <NearOCAlrport) person lOam-12. Costa lf<Yl'POINT SALE.~ _//Used fUm Julytl> \ 1-4 oven. Bait tank. depth newcomers & contact salespersons to join a 64&4223 or come to 250 E . -Mesa St ationers, 270 E. W. Wamer nr Harbor, y y finder. new control!>. merchants. Flexible hrs. · rf· 17thSt C t M Equal Opportunity 17th Sl,C.M. SantaAna.979·2121 Som...ftl'STOMMADE Sofa $50; rocker, lots o( 86SOO. Wlllconsidertrad· progressive o ice. .. 05 a esa., Employer M /F ""u w a II paper. F e nder· · · t I k · ~~~.ar. lite typing. Causey&C0tnp0ny Salesgirl with knowledge Silk screen trainee. Full KENMORE WASHER :.!8it:~'f:~if~~N Rhodes bass. 646-6533; ~ti::; t~f3, ~.~~ l l<W So. Coast Hwy. of art and craft supplies: time Cor small mfg plant. Good condlt ion SlOO. MtDITERRAl"IEAN 6*0935 eves or wkends. MOTOR ROUTE LAGUNA BEACH 40Hr. week. Apply Fri or Htg Bch. 894·53SL 642·9403 $ w II The Daily Pllot has a 497-2457 Sat 2·S PM only. 190 So. • SECRETARY STOCK BOY Kenmore washer & gas PECIALS! 1::~~~~a:i::.t ~. 2~;ui;:..~tt!,~~ s~:e~s~ large route in Mission Coast Hwy, Laguna Long term,/.temparary Part lime. Must be 18 dryer St~. Guaranteed OH ron, clocks, sbelves, loaded, fully naugh ~~~1·;~ff~!~~d~~~ REA.LESTAn Beach. assignment uirou&}\year yrs. 494·0767 Lagu. na "delivered.~2 HOUSEFULS coat racks. spoon racks, enclosed , flybrd gt!, Approx earnings $200 per CAREER SALES·All lines of ins, end for a Personnel Beach • Aaffe(t IOIS Wh\e racks. teak &hips, 84'1<853 or 644tl700 Ext month. Call 642·4321 1tnd Security. independence, c:,~·J!i?·i:~inf~ ~~~~ ~~1 =~~d. ~~ STUDENTS. 11 thru 16, •••.••• u ............ !.. ,::!!o5t51tr5vn510Y... !r.i~:: Jj~~h~'io~: ss1ask ror Larr}' leave name and phone. tap income! One vacan· aram & comp. EOE. w/people, a self at.art.er. Jor newsl>"~r sollclta· Fountalfi ~alley Pohce ,. ..-v "" feature~. All prices 76Cheyaler Valiant, com· M "SALIS cyforlicensee,school!or 752.7990 Call: lions, earn SlO: to SSO. Deot. llllcltlon, JWy 9th, ./e&Q'Elt . sl4shed again! Nora's pl trlr le all eqwpraenl. 1 • unlicensed. See George wkly. 41n·_, to.All to. t 10200Slater 'c1.Hrt,OK 'Horne Accent. 1126 so. $2200. 960-:'124 ~~~~:e:~f:'ia~~ ~!:l~or:e:arfa,r::~ ' off, ice • •STUDENTS* licydn IOJO ./U1·a..REMO\lS. E eoutHwy, Village Fair, • job Ir "" SALES ~O~ Full Qr 01,., ....... to d'as· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,,. "~ • Laruna Beach. 25' Chris Craft Cavalier, U\I• super . you are <::apistrano,831•9955. l d 'f' ... ,.., completely r estored. acgressive & mature RE.AL EST.ATE 0 over oa tribute ZIP code direc· SCHWINN M" airls bl~ . AUit h1t4• St. CuttingTo~h. Bri•tol cond. VHP & Al\t hurry In to 11ee me about 100% Corn m hs1on · 557•0061 t.ories in own aroa. Need SZP.SCllWlNN~" lOapd 5-toAM , • · · Goochond..$45. radio. Depth finder, full \ttta• outstandin.a oppar. REALESTATE Desk-hlepf\one -3'12:t8ittb .. NB access to car, over l6. boys,$30.s-.o?09ev• o,twMOto6 981-3570 canvu.S1800.67!MSS2ur ~~ge:m'i:i~.~~in~ !~ea!~~o~~i~-:Srbr:}~ ~~srr1i42f,:>0::,11>;,":; -s:uo pe,r ltr. <714 > ·11 MOTOBECANt·, ' hlr ~ntsiOrthoSleepSlOO. ss.2-7968 • ' + J% comm. Then pro· •~cialiiing in Cincr Realtor. 495-1870 or eves Secret;aa' ':'ill ,. 83G-0700. • Grand Rec:o~, allver, SUMl)AY'll•S Queen -.i Stylo Hae $75. 9\U't. dinghy, Ackennan mote to manager &: homes & retildentl•l In· 83J•O'l1f D , .... , .. _. TELEPllONlt:SALSS Jl()Odcond.QeG.645-9895. c.154"7·$721 Mlntcocld840-J709 Ack·Wa·Dink. Brtatol • b o u I d m a k e come property . Op· ""'"" ~tudent& 15 & Qvet lo '••.:. ....... cond. Lit\ fittlnp, new, Sl2,00l)<S20000 portunlty to learn ex· Terrific oppor. w/n11t'I ~lp on project tor~ •ycte-EARLY A/fter. Sofa, ed. 1xl0 metol •hod w/Wood cuawm.'oQ&ra & cover J_,Wheaton $40·$()01 c:hangin1 from· uward &ales · <l0il)'Out)'pq60wpm. St\ profit «>rnnlcatlon. ,...,,.., ,, cones., J matcb't. Maple :,;z:soo. You romove. wit.h or "ithout • HP Snelll'.'l'llliSnellln1'or winner. Coll HAL WOMEN 4J MEN Earn la a p\us. You'IJ love Work lrom out oftl~e Calumbla 'hQCkm, )tint t,bla. SJ.eo or best orr. · EvtnrucJe. AU:lna $795. ~ Be.ach A.S~ncy PIMCKl.N, 67.H39l for s.tOOO a w~. iielllng & 11.st• OleMJOllf. SJOC.'8()0. M~ thtu Fri pm • Sa' cond.JllS. MMm la a.t Ml-Olal JltVlffE COAST COUN· "5-5485 ' '· ~ otoC.mpw1Drivo· confldctoUaJ interview. Ina mobile homes. No Jane7Wbe9ton •soo1 am. HoYrly waii• + lorQJl)e.. ~ ,.1. ,.., _,,. 'fRY CLUB F a mlly •• EquoJ Qpport. Realtor: exp. nee., Will train. M.r. Sftelliftl'll&:Mlltlnlof borlus. Call~ af\ 4 , ,.~ Jij4i ~G 'TO ~.....,JUDA membtnlaJp '800 orbett zt.• SEA RAY, '7l Wlmdt • .,...S$$FwS-.:Mr1 --; ... LUT''"'T.. stms.-.e9o4 ri-.... ~a.achA•ency pm ·If' !f,!f ... ot~~~a .. _r. ~~•cs Ba1b~ ll'band O(r ......_2142,.....,7812 loaded/~~1ue.e00 llMltne f'uhklnt has~ -"' • , ,:&;:•'ti 1 _-:,..,.QeOc.tnpuaJ>r. ~~ • .... .,~ ••.. , ~-,.,.-...-e.,..... ~-:_,, ... -p ... l"o. ao aa, e ra, '::::!: _ . ·• -.n Plllm• Ol*llGS•· Ideal SAi.iS SALES ,1~ ,. ·-·· -~-T-~~ ·-t1'4N781.. re •:.-.·: '-'1'~~ btOb. loc.t Of ~VltonO*ia M.nbaU ,,,. .a'CbrisConnlc for women w /srna1t 1~Webaveanopenl.n1~ta ARnMeCO.: i.iW't ... SllOO..._ Jmm~ u~nPJ•t•tl llilWliliMilaWlllZI •tractr~~l 11 1mttmeiita. = ae.U tnV.a'• radlo etc • dlUrtr.. we ~uc•t• tr11•.,lf·motivol•d " •i· need$ di1nlflecl 11101:.''> •~ •'~ for 5h11~. well -lfoomtd •••••••••••••••e••-•• • fOl'~411 '1 '1$.500 • AY~ supply famptt1 at no 1reaahe salupeuon. J*>pJ• to call on local,,, ~ ~ ~ W/irillt!l .,.-. eJCp. U.cd LU~•" ll'~ll' JPnpiq wa•bed ··cont· -'·' Cltlllt.. CU Ii phcine "~· who •ould Ukt to bu&1~ offerlflJ ••ryl~,'EiriPlor-rt PsyAUFeea l~XlQ&A>enefJU &tdl. Call (Ii> 3,.~lO"x:f' C4) p1ee a&lll--.w.nH• t.•dnto~!..tf~~ln1 z4• SIAIA.Y O.U for ~aoQal lll· '' be~roo mo.re Involved \llUF. ·'t~e Office pr0ducta.1w ~~nSlAlfllC!Jr~ 1.,J*'IOIU\-i~ 2''.tO''itt•\i" (43a) T: i)'. *Oe . ...,._.,O!J ~.a~'.~t .~.~"\r-"•,J.O, $un.Santff brand n w aaniiew.m.1410 w/tnvuttnont pro· ul1 or. part.·Ume .f~'l'' -..Bitch .ste~,'lf r;. 8-k<!fn•POr,t brwktu(M) $44>0SJi " "5.it;IS-t••. \'$:· •'·"!:" W/lrb' S2S.000 + lnv t 'r -. -perttts. l>r•~ uan.111s1-94N or ~vesJ~kod•11 NewJOCtDl•l:h 83NU011 ·E4Ual$?PeSmpfoyer • -.111ISIM . .,,,:101Ji0-·on.t Re1•-.iwo0c1 ed BO.tl~ded ~too l"~RTB&r~Yacht l"Jor~ion-1o!c. ..,;1,'45-1080 .-.. "i..1 .... ,n, I CafU()rapl)tMltab,'t.s, .. :,!,, "• .• • 'L•_, , , hja),a1 I • I040 __ ................... ,~lre11ur• Cbtll. tr.!•1 •s.iClffsaet.~to n. C'hib hilt • ~dUon o~n lt.C; TA Yl.Ol CO. I ~~ -:e· .:¢~ ,_, · ~ , lr1).' JMJ• ~Mtt ·/) •••d11•••• ............. Sot.la. Jtdm .. l. ••• .a..11d.I plut•raH )H*3S-2$15 aft 7, days !':'f.r 'A:~u~us.~ ·~ _ t~_M~O _ it tfl YOU ~~ ' :.rJ~. llClll'ill'1~;4? ';_,ci ~"'d~'r-.:1931~ AKC Mtnl b1~ •*1• I}~· f..,' or1~r~~ ~ ~-1• 'j$ for 11. , ,.;U~t'I! u . o o o. J> • boaU, 1aal11t. of am. :J• 11;•,... ' bavu._..~cilktr. ~ ~~~.. , i~ -.*' iSt "l"•r,r '1,k._.. IN. n..-.,iu Hfnr ;JJ ~~!!A r,¥ ,1 ~ • llllzOll~. vf'~,1~ b0111 a4oalalotert•• I,> ""'""'"'"'--,,-..... ~ J11iof,. .. ra,~loo 111,.. a.1. , TIP , --~--~ >' ' !'~·:!I'"~-Ill'· 0 " '" lli w. MWIW"i .. ·~,Wi# boltyard.aUpa•mOOt"4 11 ~"ch.tw111clwckUt• fn•the n,llt Pilot nrm T)pe 7"1tm, •h for ff"PDrt Clf. law O.E.'SalteMol,~pliJI. Niit.. ._ slW ........ .kb 1ltOJ11*5{. l:.o..._il, Nu h111. 171-71i0 fQr I?·:• SctnieeDlrectorrlnllle 1·.tCla.111ed ll«IM • . tO·lH. CalL£1Jen• .~.loll9UIUi ,B; l~MC. ...... ;-.eb_,&IMI. ca~ &./SU/lloa . .,,1116&GbaaH\e.f'a\i. ~·--•. .:• rt1toJ tlr'Wlei#. ..·1 •' .DAlLY .. PllJOT -.t PboitelU5871. ., ,, 'MMm ,, ·~ _, .. i ·\.. • .. ~l ~ '·~:>.~ "te-J.IT);ll0-1110; ~ _ , _ ........ , ,;<\\ 1G1i11L 'f ~-1111J9 .~Im , • f ., • 1 fl "' • ~ • ,., 1 ,,_ -• I .~' ·0 • ~ -I l .,. t "" -· . ~ ,.. L , L ~ " J. _.,, ~ r Lt ... ~·. ' ' • '-9 • OfJL Y PtLOr * weonelda Jut 6 1977 Autot W..t.d 9590 Autot, Imported .\utoa, Imported ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• A*S...tc..,r.... A.doS..01u.r.-t1 ~c~•/ & MU'IMlfM1 9400 I Acc........_ '400 Sc 9110 WIWILLIUY YOU•DATSUM l'AJD FOR OR NOT TOPDOUAI fOITOPCAaS IUWICK DATSUN S.n J uan Caplat.rano lll·IJ714U·U75 IMW '712 Honda 9727 Alrto1, t.pOf'tH Allto1, UHd Autoa. UMd •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Factory installed glass sliding sun Roots adds new dimensions to drlvlng. CATALINA AUTO SUH ROOF I '46 s.p.rior, Cotto~ '42-4040 Honda 380 5700 ml Xl.Qteood. MuatSe.. 6404436 ''7S Yamaha Enduro. perferl cond, 360 ml, never bMa IA dirt. ~ ~o. ------· Moler'~. W. / a...t,IStw... fl60 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WE BUY CLIAMCARS &TlUCKS COMI 1.a &t SH THIAU.HIW '3otSIHOWU! COMPUTI IOOYSMOr MOWOPIH CONND.l SADDLUACK i6 Brwn Civic, Ml FM 8 Trillllmh 9767 Cu•..: tfll ~ tt40 tttt, mat.a. 20.000+ ml, ••• ;-~1.-~••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••"·~·· ••••••••••••••••••••••• xlnl cond $3100/B .. t lt77TRIUMrH -11 COUnb-1 Squire W1n. IN7.aeoTaJ\6PM •• ,...... f\d1 pwr. i pau, AM /FM --'"" stereo. ~.175-U39 .,., Civlt Hatcbback, Xlnt Free 5 )'r/S0.000 ml ext ooo.d. $2100. ;Narranty wltb your 1974 CADU.LAC 18 Ford LTD Country 61M585 pW"C~IO of• now Spit.-c...a-DIVIW Sqlre, red. M•oh. fltt • Oood eelecdon ln vvt"• psrfeet. $\JOO• 417..aaa 1tock. Call tor detalla Exqul1lte Flremhl "TOGal-....1 .,... •-t d J....-4J7l0 about our unique buy-brown with tan Cabriolet a.vt """' 11 ... ton · ••••••••••••••••••••••• l1ke·a·lea•• MAGIC tcp and AM/FM ti.reo. 4 dr, alr coo4. Mklng PLAN. <o:MKBV). llOO. 752-lo.11 Qaulc Beauty. '68 Xlnl 3.&S. Sedan. W\se lnvtwl· merit. 67M ml, 23 rnpJ . 648-1.3SS Jo'OR Rl!:.NT ll 1·2040 495.4949 72 JAGUAR XJ6 f'rom $1~ wk . 770-0644 Z1S2lf Harbor Blvd. Loadt:d. Good condallon, 1 Nabess 111 15 ~~ ..••••.•.. !!.~~ 'U Ptnto. RWlabouL AT, AM/FM stereo, catm lnt. Cadl•JJac New rdl1. xlnt cond. C!QO. CaU&a-1101. MOTOR tlOMES CHMOLET VAWY IMPORTS a COSTA MESA c-a 971 S recent engine, overhaul. fOt' aaJe, 72 Champion, 546·1200 ..,.... 1431oTP) Sacrifice. 2600H.1rll<1rBlvd. alJll 8, xlnt. cQftd., loaded, ---------1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 548 2t96 11460\ITH BRIA110Ul£v•110 • llllliA Cos1.1 M~sJ S40·9 I 00 LIRcolit tt45 air, gen, PP. 58&-1746 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR 1976 CAPRI 11<-.lillOO •2•lM'm• PW!$8 PLUSH PLUSH Rent 23• 1''lflEBALL, S/C, :8:-iJl;~~~~~:i~ HATCHIA.CK '7-1 JAGUAR XJ6L, Cull VoluwCICJff 9770 --------l97t Lincoln Mark IV, loads or wlndowa I& orCLASSJCS V6, automatic. air cond p~r · AM / FM stereo ••••••••••••••••••••••• '7S Cadlllac Coupe de Creamy yellow, DUIJeltic countenpace.645-2283 Ifyourcari.&exlraclean & stereo tape. Finished ~~$7500/0fr. PP. 68 VW, dean, new red Ville. Fully Loaded, low velour int, moon roof, T aeeuafint. I n s I I v e r g r a y paint, xlnt cond. St.000. miles. beautiCul. ~. AM/FM tape, all xtru. Trailers. ,..... 9170 1.AUERIUICK w/matcbing two-tone an· l<anftClnnGhia 9735 Def 12 '5 Aft &PM, Brown w/ beige vinyl U.000mi.640-'9JO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 292SHatborBlvd. terlor. Low miles. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 631·1732 top. Pri. Party.871·7075 Maverick 9947 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!f•!!!!-...A..!!!!!!~!!!! .... !!!!!!!!!!!!!IB!!l!!l~5 ~~r=~~en~c~lrb!lp Cost.a Me1a 979 2500 <S5SNOi..::L>.Y 54395 13 Glua. Xlnt cond. Re-'74 vw coovt. Xlot cond. 1.970 Cad CdV. Vinyl top, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...._Sal 9060 --• 906n llook • ' x. " cent eng work. S2800 or AM /FM t-deck. Super B. factory air, P/S, P /B, '73 MAVERICK, 4 dr. ••••••••••••• •• •• •• •••• •••••• •••••• •• •• •••• ••• ups. SllSO. ~1342 TOP MAR('f>UIS TOY OT A b:.l ofr. 6734281 aft 5pm..:.._ $WOO. 752·0240 ask lor 6-wa y P /Se a ts, gold Sedan, aut.o trana, lo ml., UDO 14 26' PEARSON, Alberg de· 25' TERRY Travel Trlr. DOLLAR MISSION VIEJO MOlda 9731 _m....;g;...r _______ 1 leather anterior. good new Urea. Gd. cond. Trailer.Extras :.JJ:n, Cull keel sloop Sips 8, rerri11. stv, bath, P"'ID 831-2880 495-1210 ••••••••••••••••••••••• radial tires. 72,000 $1,~0. 64&·9076 art. $2,l!li.\ 642·6706 Smll. 49" 7021 ; 639-5724 A/C, access. Xlnl cond, A '68 VW Bug, Runs xlnt, original males. $1800. 3:30PM 32' ERICSON: Launched Columbia 26, Mark ll. ex· $<1200. 963-2135 FOR CLEAN l~i~~l(..\~l~7t9~g~1i ~~. ~~!~~s5··~7~ereo. 870-4564 (Fullerton).Merc ---,..,-----,-,-S-O- late '75; bristol cond. & lraclean,6bagssails,99 Wanted old travel trlr. 6orwknds. ---------•'76 Coupe DeVille ••••••••••••••••••••••• nicely eqwpped. $29,7SO. Evanrude. 2 boat owner Condition not important. '71 VW street legal Dune D'Elegance. Loaded, Im· '70 Mercury Marquis &W-9408eves&wknds. wan l s to s t: I I . PleaseCallS56-0477 Dots.I 9720 Buggy. Xlnt. cond. rblt mac, must sell. $8600. Brougham, 2 door <7141542-3973 or eves ---------1 ....................... 2150HtrlNwlh>'-eng, Must see. $1200. 7144·768-9383. hardtop, belgew/browo Rhodes 19. Sl,200 644~or552·7451 Aaato s.r.lc•, Parts DRIVE • ~7809aft6PM vinyl roor. Driven under 1-'Un 7.one boat in Balboa & AccHsoriH 9400 A COlhi MeM 645-5700 '76 CPE DE VILLE l b r I 673-0240 Naples Sabot, complete, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----------a '71 VW Poplop Cm pr 1 43,000 m Y care u readyt.osaJI. $175. SAVE WITH IMPORT CARS LITILE... Merc•s hnt 9740 61,000 mi, Cully equipped Loma es 64<M>454 owner, air cond. Power VUONG SLOOP 49-t·S<U9 USED•-REBUILT SAVE A LOT ••••••••••••••••••••••• xlnl S27SO. 5S8-9242 •77 SEVILLE brakes. steerin1. win-20-. encl. cabin, new ----.,. ALL MODELS dows, locks, drlver's :.ails. plow anchor. slip Venture 21. sips 4, all op· FOREIGN CAR PARTS SHOP &COMPARE Lean VW RA.lllT 2300ma. 640-6454 seat. Passen1er seat I.. ODA l l I Id M~\I\ /Engines WE •• ~WICK D"'TSU... ...._ u--~ 77 CH"'M .... G ... E reclines. xlnt cond, inc ... 675-8280 or 675-7~ ..i~.0·2· •5ra1 er .anc . ~ ,.........nsmisslons AA "' " .... w • awu "' .-"' " CM•rolff 99 20 ....., " • • •• .._.EED s J c t OVER I 00 original owner. $1525. ·tis CAL 25. Cus tom -/Rear Ends "" . an uan apis rano EDITION ••••••••••••••••••••••• 644·7342 days, 644·6654 ~alley. LPR. GEN . 30· YAWL .'Tires CLEAN Bll·l375 493.3375 MERCEDES 77 SCIROCCOS 1974 CHl!VY eves. SPIN. DinRY ancl'd. Good Aft cabin, new motor. ./Fenders USED CARS OM DISPLAY IH STOCK CAPRICE COUPEMus --.-------,-9-5-2 cond. $7900 /or o Cr . $1,995. I\ Y 646·9000 ./Doors -·'2 496--0817 --.,,Bumpers MOW House of ln1ports Hardtop. Automatic. ••••••••••••••••••••••• --------18oah, S-ed & IMPORT CALL PAPPY AUTHORJZtD pwr. steering-brakes· '66 Auto 289 57 000 orig ~.... ,.-9080 srECIALS door locks & windows. . · xin' Venture 24, many xlras, ~• AUTO SUPPLY ~lERCEDES DEALER air cond .. lilt wheel & nu. 2 ownrs. t cond. :.cc to apprec. Pvt ply,••••••••••••••••••••••• lOlN.Manchester, -540-5630 1976DA.TSUM 6862Manchester. ,1nyl roof. l?20JOS). SlllOO.fJl·l.548 $5100. 714·963·1180 17' Ska boat, 18, V drive. Anaheim 776-9900 710 2 Door Buena Park 70 VW Priced to sell at '68 Mustang; auto, radio, SOUTHWESTERN w lrlr. Needs work, 9IOO Autos kw We Automatic with aar cond 523-7250 S('f>UAREIACK OHLY $3025 heat, air; needs some YACHT SALES _orbstofr. SJG.1044 ••••:•••••••••••••••••• ~26HARIOR ILVD. (359NXM >. On the Santa Ana Fwy. GHlA29. $1300. Sharp! MAIERS work. Offer. 67S-30S7 Aft f'uja 32, 35, 45, 45MKII Glass par Bowr1der. Nr AnN,.-s / COSTA MESA NOW $3895 t972 Mercedes Benz 250 _~_2_196 ______ 1 AUTO CEHTER _7_P_M ______ _ Shark24Sloop $!HOO new, .135 hp Evanr.ude. Clcisslcs 9520 ---------1 888DOVESTREET !lcdan. R.ed w /a1r & BaJ'a Bug. Zenith "arb. 1 • .,<BakerSt cu . M 6 1 t A I k & C "'R OUTLET Near MacArthur ... ~ ·• .iu . 68 ustang, cy • •u o, t:nkson27neat SlS,300 meracan tr r, 5 as ••••••••••••••••••••••• A :.tcreo radio. 6 cyl Ex-swuf. Xlntcond. Best of· 540-9109 $5SO. or make offer . Morgon 28eqwpt $22.5 accei., new ball/canopy. 1956 T·Blrd, P /S, P /B, CashForCan &JamborceRoads ceptJonal cond. 673-6377 rer.548.5282 631•3646 .Ncwport30race $24.400 S2750.640·4380NB auto, both tops. Recond. PaidForOrHot 833-1300 Ryownr -------'63 Chevy Nova, wagon. 1-'uJI 35 hke new $55M 9)950. 675-0204 2145 HARBOR BLVD. TOP BUYER ;--GREAT COND I '70 VW camper, pop· top, Good trans. car. New ·66 Mustang,'good transp. <-~fill World ready S76M Transportation <-.. -1 -_ .. -----• 71250. . · •0 great <:ond. 1 man rblt brakes. 548·4116. $290. Reblt eng & transm. J.'ujl45Cruz $ll8M •••••••••••••••••••••••~Rods·~· _.,., 9540 (Harbor&Vicloria) See us first, & last! Top ml. p S P1B. air. AM· eng. tent inc. 52700. $550.839·11Sl . Charter & Shps ... : aft 91 1 0 COSTA MESA dollar paid for imports. nt. Must sell! S.lt!OO or ~-9377 '74 Malibu Sta. Wgn. A IC --------- ..... rcr ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642 0653 COSTA.MESA bstofr.551·398-1 -Pis P 1B. 2 seater. lug otdsmobia. 9955 2220 Newport Bl. •. •••••••••••••••••••••• '72 AVENGER GT 12B -----·----. \'W Sq b k N 673 9211 :-, 66 uare ac . ew rack. Xlnl cond. Clean. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---· ----7~ 182 Skylane. lake new. 15 0 O cc, V W en g. WE PAY D4 TSUN m Mercedes 280SL; 70 eng & t1re11. Extras. $600. S2000. 548-8618 . '69 Toronado, Ins lhan Lido 14, sails. trailer & 'ellow white 1 Owner Complete $1800. 557-8S88 .,.,.c Harbor Blvd ~'fercedes 2805~· sec lo Call 551-4898 ooo · 1 pp K ., t L w ~ apprec 536 500ti ------•65 Co M 36. ma. owner, . CO\'er, 1976, $2.150 or of· an,. cquapmen · 0 e\•es. TOP DOLLAR Costa :\tesa 5-10 &HO · · · --rvaar onza coupe SHSO. 64~1578 fl·r s,t2 0593 tame Must see. Days, ---------• -'77 VW Pop Top Camper, Comp. restored. Entire ---------------5499803.e,cs 673 6832 4 Whffl ~ri•es 9550 FOR MIFTY '76 8210. 2 Door. AM f'M i2 Mercedes lk~ 280 SE like new, fully eqwpped. car like new! Askmg '74 Olds 98 Luxury Cpe. 11 Layma~;50G .. sailboat. r--. Sol'"'/ ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMPORTS radio. Lo mi. Mint rond white, Low/c"'1ac lintt. ord•ll Sharp! 846·263'7 SHllS. 645-5--165 Like New. 29,000 mi. Lots "' ~,...... ... ~ 197lCHEYY..,.X4 642·6271, 552-7181. ownr m •.. xn con ...1 t $419S P· .. t 673•1 .. n 0 r 673.1320 Rent 9120 , Si9SO 546-8900 527 2297 '77 Westphalia camper. ·75 !\10NZA LIKE NEW "' x ras. · ... Py •• .,..., Automatic, pwr steering MAR('f>UIS MOTORS 542-6166Connie ' · ' · k B h CallAMorevea64J:.3984 M . 0 ~ AM , FM S·lr . oug l Twn cpc, 17,000 mi, xlnl. X: r I cs on 3 5 f u 1 I '67 Dod~e ~., ton camper. & brakes, air cond.. 28802 arguerile Pkwy. 1973 DATSUH 1974 Diesel 240 . ~. new tn Feb. Bst ofr. cond. Bestofr. 751·6892 62 OLDSMOBILE. needs 1 · 11 b custom cab & many MISSION VIEJO 33.000mlles 673-29.14 ---------1 ••• ................... . race c r~ase' a gs· w /stove-sink-bubble top, other extras. Super low 831-2880 495·121 O 240% 645-9502 -------'72 NOVA V .a, Arr. P /B, a mechanic. S2S. loaded, 1mmac. $37 ,000. Sl850. 646 01 l l Call S48 2944 P 'PS73o.i-1<1 -----maleage·only 46,000.---------1 Fmishedinsllvergray,a IBZ 2 8 0 '6.5VWBug.Mags,tires. P /S, A/C. AM/FM.-----·----, · Motorited Bibs 9140 (134480). Wanted Transportation one owner car & •m· :'I 1968· 2 O, · 4 r. AM·FM 8trk. Bsl ofr. aft Sl9.'i0. 645-5512. ·oo Della 88. 1299 or bst HOBIE 14 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOWS3925 Car. Early Mustang or marulate thruoul ! auto. xlnt cond. R7.ooo fi,1198-5709or963-299-I 9930 ofr. Call 642·2995 or vr t d 492 7279 fl"' 11 d E 260 · ... "'IERS similar ear or Pa.ck up.. <39SJKX). ma S3800 Ph 838·0350 or COfttinentaf ,,..,7,,.,.. 'n con . · a " on J xpress. ma. ""' U d 53995 FIRM 193 635i El rne ·72 \'W Adventurer Bub· ••••••••••••••••••••••• _.....,. __ .,.,.._. _____ _ xlnt cond S300 548-2938 "'UTO CENTER n er s1000. 646 ·8346 bl T C r dbl Enc. 2 35 COMMOTION aft 5, 5-18-0671. exl 182 "' eves. e op mpr. re ng: l9i3 Mark IV. All blk. A iO Olds Delta 88. 4 dr, oneofthefaste:;t&best - - -142SBakerSt.CM. MAR('f>UISVOLVO MG 9742 bed.stove.pressun~ed real beauty. Sl950 auto,PS,radfo,faclory cqwpped 35 available Motorcycles/ 540·9 I 09 Autos. Imported MISSION VIEJO ••••••••••••••••••••••• wtr syo;tem · nu M rch 493 1153 aft 6 air. Mu~t sell. bsl ofr. 711-6737760 Scooters 9150 ---------•••••••••••••••••••••••• 831-2880495-1210 ·16 MG Convertible '41lh llrl"-S3SOO 673-8069 --E\'es call55Hl997 ............•.......... Cal 21. loaded, w /Newport .• 0 HD s t t XI 1 moonng. S4200. ' ~r s er. . n 548.6680 cond. Rebwlt eng. trans. -5.emJ·Chop. Sl750or make ll'Cat:ima.ranw;trlr. offer 547·1845 Best offer. ----Call 548·0350 YAMAHA 125 Enduro. 5700 miles. sharp, $250. ~4709evcs AMC-JEEP AHa Romto 9705 h rd Cor¥eHe 9932 · 2ROZ · a top. 54500· Volvo 9772 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pinto 9957 ~ I in Calif. •••••••••••• •••••••• • • • 7 5 · a 1 r · m 3 R' · Call 548-2861 WE OUTSELL ALL ·74 Spider, bought new an ~5.F~.ii~C~; 6~~.~~ MGI ---.-97 44 ••••••1 •9•7•2••~0••L•;•0•••••• 1976 Cdol r1vette&·ln ~e~ut1iful ••••••••••W•••••••••••.•• JEEP DEALERS '76. 15.000ma. Xlnt cond. con l on wit ow i-1 Deluxe gn. Aut.o/aar. INTHESTATE Hood bra , l\M /i''M ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pl800COUPE miles. Pwr. windows. lugrack,xlntcond,$2495 HUGE IMVEMTORY stereo. ~·0863 1975 DATSUN '70 GT. •Lo mi. Stick. 4 speed w/overdrive & maes. stereo, air cond. & Or Best Of/er. 645-7221, 1210 FASTIACK radio, heater, jtir. ~11 AM /FM atereo rad lo. pin striping. (452SWT>, evesS36-6859 All Models New & Used '76 Alfa Romeo Alrelta With air eond .. radio & orfer. 675-39911 eves Immaculate thruout with for sale-ask.Ing S799S. --------- Leasing Available GT. Lo mi, aar. AM /f'M h~ater. Only 28.000 Sh '67 GT .... Oli) ....... lowmlles. (301ETV). CortFoxLeas1ng,Call 1972 Pinto, S99S, AM SAIOT-S1SO 645-1578 ;z,i• Columbia Contender. xlnt cond, must sell Sl9'3S/Ofr. 642·2455 Costa Mesa radio. 9900ml. 675-9599 ~~a~298MXE). Sale ~7/blk int. ?\fl/FM: ONLY $4ZfS 645-3661 radio,g~= .. 14 Honda C8200.' 2524 ~~~:-/L vo SPYDER a.cl"' ~lk top. 1 OHL y Sl225 WOOtbst ,.ofr · -MM709 MARQUIS ~OLYO '75 Orange, T-t.op, assutne C l ~1 549s023 yr. old, 18000 m1. stereo ....... ERS e~·es MIS$JONVIEJO lease or purchase. "72 Pinto automatic . radio. 8 trk tape, St300. 545-0932 Xlntcond(xtraS osa. esa -&cau.Lugg.rack.Oays .... _ 131·2110495-1110 M2·0143 U, JEre.n5 "77" 529-8302eves6i3·6552 AUTO CEHT£R Pantera · 9747 ----------1 N U d ....--•"rBk St CM ••••••••••••••••••••••• 74Co tt h.l Ttp---------1 5 Y2 • 5 ea s p r a 'Y ever se c J . 5 . s . c J . 7 . s . '75Spyder. Llhr lr.t. Ss)>d. ]._, a er .. .• . '74 L. Mutt. While, rarely OlAMGE COUMTY n·e e, w I e . 0 • Econony special 197• Pin- Catamaran w/lrlr. many Cherokees, Wagoneers. Blauplunkl. l3m. 1'1aw. 540·9 I 09 dn'ven. $16.ooo. VOLVO :dnt. 31•500 ml, $7,000 or to Sta. Wgn. 39,000 mi, accessories $1150 962 8437 I ~ offer.IWS-7893 Best orrer over S2000. G:l6-21!63 • • Pick-ups. up to $1.200 d!S · ess. _..,_,. 957·0212 ·73 Datsun 240Z MUST 551-4038 EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO ---------1---------1 counts. 5 yr S0,000 male Audi 9707 SELL MAKF: OFFER. p .. _ 9750 LargestVolvoDealer i6 Corvette, wht. T-bar. Contact Ed Cook, SOL CAT 18, xlnt cond., '71500 Kawasaki Mack 3. warrantys available. 67.,5852 ·ghl S3l 3530 oncnw In Orange County' auto. aa r, P /S, elec _·644_-4_360 ______ _ C..-1-..1 Mtr I ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..-"' s. · ••••••••••••••••••••••• · wndws. Belter than nu, man,y xl.ras. $2000. needs mot.or work S225. ..,.... • ..,.. s nc OOS 1 d days , . BUY or LEASE ·75 Pinto Wag. PS. PB, 963.9355 Or Best offer. 646·9400 2001 E t::.l,SA558,8000 '73 Audi l L. x nl c~n , · S9 356A. Salver & blk, DIRECT only 6400 mi. SS850. I ---------• 6AM • 2PM Mon-Sat. 4 · d r · . m an · • a 1 r • '74 260Z 4 spd., AM /FM, radials bra Tight. eng 499·3493. R&d-1. Aut.o trans. a r . vs. HOBIE CAT 16' full race. Ken. il TOYOTA Landcruiser. panasonac radio. $2500. mag wbls. new eng. $3900. 4S4.2i3o . ~·,·~F[~-f'~i~ 99~3 New stl belted Ures, lo 2 sets or salts, w/trlr. ~ewbrakes,shocks,xtra 552·9377 $4000.840-11123 Cougar ~ ml. Pvt ply. $3.250. $1000/bst ofr. S56·5637 '71HarleySportsler. tmes.SZl00.5863240 '72·914·1.7, Orange . • ....................... 556-4181.6«·2228 btwn8am&lorcometo Justrebll.Mu.slsell. ,72 UDI 1976 Datsun 280Z, air. black, AM/FM radio ---------'68 Cougar. ps, pb. air •• 73 Wagon. reblt ene, 2?lSCoveSt,CdM -Benorrer.548·0350 73Scout 11. 37.000 ml. xlnl A AM/FM stereo cassette, xJnti:ond,673-6230 2025 S. Manchester r/h. vinyl top, 78,000 mi. A.'2 /FM. ad tJres. xlnt . rond. !'lew all rood tares, Auto. 4-dr. Mint. eond. sUver. cust int.. 831·3967 A--~-1-750 2011 $1050. 846 2763 an 6 pm. GetGREENcash '7S ltD Sportster. i.ow best oCr. 645·3007 or Ori.&ioalowner.$189S. Rois Roye• 975 nanmn1 -cond. Sl.900/bsl ofr. for WHITE elephants mileage, xlnt cond. 522.3311 673-7932 260Z. AtC. Xlntcond. •••••••••••••••••••··~ Autos. UMd Dodc)e 9935 Work. 834·0511, hm, with a Classified Ad $2400/ofr. 499-4444 & MJOO. "1 DEALER IN U.S.A. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• _963-0 __ 1_58 _____ _ Call 6<12-5678 962-7275 Truc:ks 9560 W 968-3985 AOY GiMral 990 I '63 J?odee Dart. Good ron· Pontiac 9965 A"'°'-Mew 9100A¥foa,Mew 9100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~•••••••••••••••!?.'.~ 197S 280Z. Xlnt cond. Nu ~CARVER ••••••••••••••••••••••• diUon.SSOOorbest/oCCer. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• '73 Toyota P.U. Locally • tires, auto trans. canvas t>Ol•·S·ROYCE IRICtcLIM 673-8748 art 9 PM . '70 Bonneville C*nvt, AC, owned. A M IF M "OOO/b t orr " " __ .... 994 xlnt cond, SlOO/Ofr. radlo+extras. Gd cond ~if,~~9 aft 5pm s . !t'!"po.,.,rt~•"c11 197S SVl, white w /saddle .._-v SS8·9242 $22()() farm. 499.3105 ~644, """ Interior, AM /FM stereo, ••••••• •••••••••••••••• ---------CREVIER NICE SMALL CARS NICE PRICES LOW w.·,.. ,...w to YW• .......... oM"""'" ._. ..... "7t T~ c.lca •••••••••••••• SIHI •• ,.....,.,16._"""1._ ,,.,,..,._!llfl "75 Lw "'°-................ $2611 Ttj&;l&y lt\Ck ;,,,;,,y--;;Ja .. (15ec>7W) "7J MG I •••••••••••• , ••••••. $24•1 HewNlrll.-lac>.CllMl'l•a~(I~) "ti T9lllele Mk fl S. Wca. ........ $IHI AlllO. tr.wli. f • ., _ _.. /""'9 (&llQ(Yl • ?O fiord Mutaldt •• ,. ••••••••• SI llt A11119o tr-..-.•-llCaHU ..,, ........... : •.•.••••••••••• Sl711 ..... lgip· ....... ~lt1mfCI ?I TlllllMlec...le ,. •••••••••• $1211 .... ,.,.~ • "'-M<• Mwo 114at>.IWI 16 Silverado ~ ton. SSJOO. 32M mi. 9000 on new motor. Xlnt shape. Pvt ply. Call aft 6. Tom 98$.'2680 or John 831-4917. Before 6, ofc 962·6e83 iO DaL'lun Pickup w /pipe 1'1lCk, & tool boxes, $950. 586-0198 ''73 Dat1un P . U. Lo mileaae .. very clean $l61M>. Call 517-8271 11 Shc>rt be<l Chevy. All ttl• u'traa. 15'00 mi, Jd.3120 V11n1 9570 ....................... - 0 I ST 6 lllOADWA'I' SAHfA AMA 835·3171 TMf U\TIMA Tl OlllWIO ... C_I _ •USID IMW11• 1'1• 3.0Cpe S/R 7'8LWB '76200'lupdS!R"'>NLF '762002, upd. 270PHL '75530i Auto, Alys. 1990 1tl9200'l,4sp. Air. ZKG138 '73 3.0 CS O'pe. 4tpd. 220KMT QoMd °" S..ctap OAAH~I COUHTY'S OLOllT & Rat 9725 air. full pwr, o r l11. ~-68 Pontiac Convertible, ••••••••••••••• •••• •• •• ClOSlD SUNDAYS manuals. Must sell, due PH IL new roor. ' apd, mag t.o relocatJQn. S8SOO. or LOOG heel _..,,. 7u. 1609 •7s 12" SPY DER. Xlnt TlA nV LL\Nri bst offer takes this w 5' _,.,. _. cond. 5-spd, AM·FM l--'l ~ fu wk/endM0.1SlSet242. ORD '74 Ventura. P /B. P /S, cass .. xtras. Bst ofr. air, AM/FM. au\o. Xlnt -S48_·7_tSO ____ , Mo'-,, Oar Co. AMC Hos ~-~ · \~ cond. $18SO. Ph:SSz.4999. 72 124 SPORT • •••••••••••••-••••••••• ""' • &Ila Royce & BenUe Pacer X only 13.000 ml. ') ~'-it Ftrebird Esprit, VB. Canary yellow• with sales &service . Auto, air, 1lereo, P /S, '•ao air. stereo, belt. orter. bla1 ck vlf!~I top, 65,000 • '63 CLOUD tu p /B, tit whl, etc. p /P . ••>' 846-1934 m lea, Am/FM stereo, Coovenion.Gd.ccmd. 116.'MJ,13aft5PM . 5-speed, dual pipes, disc sn,500 (733NQK> l•••·'-''"_.._,,._.., brakes.map, xlnt tlres. 7M"A"W.17lhSt,CM Mck 9910 ••h-• ... c-.. ,...._ Mu4t sell. S19SO, Call (714) 631·°'4$ ••••••••••••••••••••••• '7tTHUNDERBIRD Tammy at. 646·3818, 9-12 -----~--1 I f70 IUICK '74 Mustang tl. v.c. auto, Got Every l if l n I. AM.or673-nf4andleavc COMC>.r.oM•s SKYLARK PS/PB. air, radio, PeTfed.I $4995/bat ofr. 1'1M:A81e, HORS SS --·· a1·1--*44156$ VS, ualorn•tic. pwr. ,,,....,..,, ~ ""° .;...;.....-_._ _____ _ '75~ 1M SPYDER s apd.. 5y••LIS atoerln1 at bralcn, tilt .... G d ..... mi Ch V199 '974 AM /FM, J(Jnl. cond. Best A9 lfheel. radio '4 vinyl rooC. '" rana •· 1-· oc ••••••••••••••••••'•••• orrer. se-?l2& Brok~ ol fine eontem (3ll70lU). bm. Loaded. Xlnt.. con<S. YIOA 7 , por~ HOW $1225 l\tusisell.M3.... ... ..... cu."'CKAT 1'74 CM S&iorts Conver\, 2 l\OIJ.$ llOYCE ~ 1 nw"' w toi:11 . Ak/FM stereo, BDrn.£Y HAIRS '71FOADILITI DEMO. 5 s~ ttans., 20,600 m.J, xlnt cond. 91.1\omobil... AUTO CIMTIR\ Avt.omaUc, full power. a I r co n d • • e t. c • ~ nu E. Coaat Hwy 142& O.lter St .• C.M. air cond .. AM /FM stereo {650$/IS33). Wu $3785. ••••••••••••••••••••••• tf 70 ~!~d.":1:0~c~~i.f::/. <7JA>rrs.oAO 540-•1ot ~-~~atd=:1s::t!~ ONLY $J4tl •--------• extr.,, <212MllO>. HOWAD Ctle'frolet ...aow •.4621 DovdsQ11a1tat.. • " -!IJtWPORT BEACH M~aas HJ.OHi AUTOCltn'M 14258alotrSt..C.M . Ll . -\ I f • . .. W9dnetday. July 8. 1977 DAILY PILOT D9 .. • ,.,, .•. &ET THE • F ' CTS .PIJBL1 s,., • IJ... Bt· ED For Example: 1977 ''Sunbircl'' .s. ENV/R PRofEcno~NAilENr "4L "4GENcy OUR 1977 PONTIACS GET AS GOOD MILEAGE City 23 MPG •. Hwy. 33 MPG. AS MANY FOREIGN CARS, Sometimes Better. Test Drive the 1977 Pontiacs Today SELECTED COMP ARI SOM S· City-Hwy. -,, 'Official EPA milea9e estimates for standard shift sub-compact cars. Your milea9e may vary , dependin9 on your drivin9 habits, your car's equipment and state of tune Datsun 8 I 0 • • ~ • . . • . . . . • . • • • I 8 • 2 6 Toyota Celica •.••...••••• -• ~ 20 • 32 BMW 320 I . • • • • . • • . • • • • . • • 19 • 27 Opel .•.....•........•.•... 22 • 33 Fiat Lancia Beta • . . . . . . . . . . . 18 -'27 Mazda Cosmo . . • . . . . . . . . . • . 18 • 30 Renault 12 ••.••••......•..•. 20 • 30 . l~~D 1973 OLDS . 1973 OLDS . 1975 BUICJC $2795 vs •~•., """' 1 •e 1 0 .. "" s2295 ROYALi s 1995 CUT1 .. US s3795 HGAL cortd•t1on.no oower st...,..rto OO'fittf V·8 auto ttlth .• Uctorv air . . V•I. euto~-.~'1""·· fttlory 11' br,... °""'"' •""OOW• ,,.,..,., ~ v.a. •Ula. 1-. -11"'1no, COftdklonlno. oqwer -"9-'""'° , 1 co"'11t..,,,r-o l'>O'oW'< ,..,.""II ~· • radio, vlnVI rool. I CIC« low "'"" hHltU •Mowell ti••• •hHI :::,"~::: p~ 1l= i;°~~ ;~""':.'::~i:9''"'';7' root lk1tt0< Prlc...S Alplll Hurry llCf!llH • co••,.: landeu 100 er9n1..ooc1 l•CM•• 35•Jt F y eo&MCO 8rown, llceNe 2151.PX / -l Ll WE'RE LOADED W / 177 CORDOBAS ... FINEST USED CAR "BUYS~' OF THE WEEKI '73 FORD MUSTAHG V-8. automatic. air conditioning. power steering. power brakes. radio, heater. whitewall tires. vinyl roof. bucket seats. console (062MCE) 4 cylinder. 4 speed. radio. h•ater. 6 cyllndet'S. automatic. radio. heater. bucket seats. (324ETLl whitewall tires. buci<et seats. C201NIN) s2395 75 FORD GRANADA V·B automatic air cond1t1oning. power steer1na power brakes. radio. heater. whltewalf tires (230MVOI. '71 DOOGEftOLARA V-8. automatic. air conditioning. powet' steering. 1X>Mr brlJCes. radio. heater. whitewall tires. (017000) sns ( .. ~ Lease the All Mew COi doba and Vol.-. or ;: · any new make car, truck or van direct and • save! Low compefftlve rahs . . . . for ~''~ lllforntaffon and prices caat P• Defabll1 •• ~546-1934 .. ~~qlllllll l•~D . .. ·• CLOSEOUT SALE NOW! 225 CID 6 oyllnder engine, manual '74 AMC AMIASSAOOI V·8. automatic. air conditioning. pawer steering, POWer brakes. oower windows. AM radfo with tape, heater. Whitewall tires. vinyl roof. tilt wheel. cruiae control. (960JSI) s2395 · '77 PLYMOUTH RllY SM.OM V·8. automatic. air conditioning. steemlg. PoWer brakes. power windows. AM /FM radio heater. Ser •RH41-J7A139543 ~5115 '7' PLYMOUTH RlllY V..S, automatic. air cond1tloni1i9, steering, 90wer brakes, radio, ,heater. vlnVI roof. (34'7PYho1) '73 IUICK CEMTUlY V-8. automatic. air conditioning. pOWer steering. poW9r brakes. radio, heater. whitewall tires. vinyl roof. Jilt wheel. (269HOO) '70 FORD GALAXIE 500 V-8. automatic. a1r conditioning. power steering. QOWer bral<ea. radlO. heal~. Whitewall hres. vuiyl roof (9978FE) s101s '69 PL YMPUTH ROADllUHHEll , V-8. automatic. air conditioning, POWer steering. power brakes. radio. heater. vtnyl roof. bucket seats. con1ol•. (XYC7481 Ll Huntington Beach Fo11ntaln Valley EDITION * * Afteraooa N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 70, NO. 187, ~SECTIONS, 4'8 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WE.PNESDAY,JULV6, 1977 ... Lower Tax Rate Urged in Huritin·gton1 ay ROBERT BARKER Oll-~PtlMSMH • A chaUence was made to the Hunlingtcn Beach City Council Tuesday ~ht to bold the line on p ooperty t axes despite an eapec~ sharp increase in asses· 1ed valuation. Councilwoman Harriett Wieder made the request lo fellow council members in a Airport Boost Pushed By GARY GRANVILLE OI ,,,. O.lly PtloU"lf Facilities at Orange County Airport tOCA> s hould "be expanded lo meet present traffic needs." the 1976-77 county Grand Jury said tcxfay in its year-end report. Expansion s hould include enlarging the airport terminal. adding parkin& lots a nd increasing lie-down s paces for private planes, the Grand Jury said . Also, the jury noted, OCA's m ain runw ay shou ld be "extended m feel northerly ... The g rand j ury r eport conceded the proposed expansion projects cannot go ahead until a recently comple t ed airport environmental impart report is accepted by the county. That acceptance i.uffer ed a setback lust week when the county planning commission sent the environmental report back to staff and the consultants who prepared it for a major overhaul. Nonetheless, the Grand Jury sai4 the expansion proje~t.s are neeaed lo rn~t air traveler and airport user demands. "It was observed by thia grand jury. as it has been by tormer grand Juries that the terminal is inadequate to service the more than 1.8 million passengers who use this facility annuall y." the Grand Jury said. "Public parking in and around the airport is at a premium. "At present all 850 tie-down spaces for general aviation are occupied and there is a long waiting list," the jury said as 1t r ecapped its recommendation I for expansion tO the board Of supervisors . It went on to point out that an extension of the runway will "allow departing alrcrafl to reach a greater altitude before overflying n oise sensitive residential areas south of the airport." However, that finding is I disputed by those individuals and organizations mainly in the Newport Beach area who oppose th e expan sion projects recommended by the Grand Jury. They have assail ed the environmental impact report for failing to come to grips with the environmental effects of specific proposed projeclS. The opponents also have faulted the four-year, $300,000 airport study for representing what they call "a general plan for the airport" rather than a study of specific proposals. T h at opposition not withstanding, \he Grand Jury in lls final mesaage lo the Board·of Supervisors recommeQded that the project& at Issue be appro~ed subject to •pproval of the environmental irnpact report. Unlike other rec•nt grand juries, the 11176-17 jury cUd not advise the Board of Superylaors lo seek a new site for a (ljfneraJ aviation airport to serve Orange County'• air travel needs. memo alludtng lo projections that the countywlde asaeasment wlll rise 19.7 percent this year . She, as well as other orncials. agreed that the valuation might go up as mueh as 23 percent in Huntington Beach. reduced tax rates." she said. ••we nev e r ge t recommendations for a cut ln the budget and I resent it," she said today. "We <the city, county and other taxing agencies) should give the additional costs back to the homeowner in the form of Mrs. Wieder's request was termed premature b y both Mayor Ron Pattinson and City Administrator Bud Belsito. ·'It's still too early to tell exactly what we'll get," \ APWlrepfleto HE TELLS BOYS OF SOLO OCEAN TRIP Pat Quesnel Is Hanging Up Hl1 Oar• Rowing Ended Haimii Trip Spells Finis DUVALL, Wash. (AP> -A 28-year-old man who rowed across the Pacific Ocean from Washi11gt.on stat~ to Hawaii says i\e'll never row again. On July 14, 1976, Pat Quesnel shoved off from L a Push, Wash ., in a..22-foot dory. After 111 lonely days and 2,700 miles or paddling, he reached his destination Nov.3. "l'M THROUGH ROWING," HE said in an interview. ··1 did it for the challenge and the experience. It ·s over. "I was totally surprised at the big reception I received in Hawaii," the 6·1, 16S•pound Quesnel said. "I d idn't think it was such a big thing. 1 couldn't understand why so many people at the dock, especially press, were there to meet me.·· QUESNEL IS WORKJNG ON A BOOK about his exploits, including the abortive voyage he made in 1972, when he got within 850 miles of Honolulu when a freak wave capsized his boat. He hopes to have t he book ready by October. The tentative title of the book is "The Sea Is Mv Enemy." · "The sea tried to kill me ... Ques nel said. "I could never relax, even when 1l was calm. That's when the trouble begins. You can't let the sea lull you to sleep. If you do, you're gone." 3 Countians Learn V aloe of Freedo1n crew -Reidt, Skarte. ~ul H'olthus. 20. of Orange; Terry Kohrs, 20, of Kansas City, Mo .. a nd Susan McCarthy, 16, of Encinitas -was taken off the boat and driven to Havana for questioning that lasted most or Monday. Skafle told hls mother they were driven back to Bahia de Cabanas and allowed to leave at about 1 a.m. Tuesday. ''I never was so alad to be back lo America," he told his mother. "The Communist& there are so terrible." (See CUBA. Page Ai> Pattinson said. "If we give everything back, we might have to sock it to the taxpayers next year if there are hard times," he said. 'Tm in favor of a tax cut but we'll have lo Us ten to the staff." Belsito said the assessed valuation figures are due at any time for Huntington Beach and that a 23 percent hike 1s not unlikely. He said the city will set a tax rate by Aug. 31. · The current city tax rate is $1.62 per $100 assessed valuation and a 10 percent tax rate de- crease already has b een predicted. However, a drop in lbe rate doesn't necesaarily mean a corresp0ndi~ drop in the tax bill a property owner must pay. If tbe assessed value goes up, so can the lax bill, even thouah the rate goes down. Mrs. Wieder stressed that she thlnks the entire amount ·or an assessed valuation increase should go to the homeowner. "If that means cutting the budget, then so be it." she said. Surf Takes Life .Phoenix Youth Dies at HB A 17-year-old Phoenix, Ariz., yo uth drown ed Tu esday afternoon at Huntington City Beach, lifeguards reported. Orange County Coroner's of. ficials said an autopsy will be performed today on Mitchel Leonard Hunter who was found by Huntington Beach lifeguards under about eight feet of water after being submerged for more than an hour. Hunter's cousin, David Van Overschelde. 14, of Mission Viejo. was swimming with the victim at a bout 4:45 p.m. when HB Elder the Arizona youth called for help. Overschelde told lifeguards he was no more than five feet from his cousin when he went under. The two youths grabbed at each other but l<>&t theil' grip. The pair was about 50 yards from shore near lifeguard tower 15, said Lt. Bill Richardson. Overschelde swam to sbor:e and notified lifeguards who quickly began a dive search for Hunter. Richardson said be located the dead youth after a second sweep of the area In which he had disappeared. Efforts to revive the youth were unsuccessful. official!\ said. Richardson said the boy had no vjtal signs at the time he was pulled ashore. Lifeguards noted that small rip currents, known as "finger rips" had been caused by heavy surf· produced trenches in the sand below the water. • Young Overschelde tofd~ lifeguards Hunter had shown not signs of difficulty prior to his cry~ for help. S.. ·l • 16t Stamp Urged \ Freed After For Busines~ Use Hijacking SALT LAKE CITY CAP) -The presldentol a Mormon missioqJn Chile. and hl1 asalstant were released unharmed after the Cht1ean airliner they were travelinc in was hijacked, a church spokesman sa.ys. Jerry Cahill, spokesman for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. said President Berkley A. Spencer and Elder Joel T. Peck, 20, of Huntington Beach, were released Tuesday In Lima, Peru. Cahill said the two had boarded the aircraft in Arica, Chile, lo fiy to Santiago. The plane, a Boe ing 727 operated by Chile's Ladeco air· line, was hijacked shortly after it took ore from Arica by four young leftists who ordered It to Lima, where it landed. None of the plane's 56 passengers and crew members were hurt. The Peruvian government arran$ed temporary asylum for the hi1ackers at the Venezuelan embassy in Lima. Elder Peck, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Peck of Huntington Beach, has been servin1 as a missionary for 18 months. President Spencer. a Logan. Utat\. native. was an associate professor of history al Brigham Young University before going t.o Chile. KIUER R0.4MS NEJP YORK CITY A killer roams the streets of New York Cit.)'. murdering or maiming young women with long hair. A "very c unning. very literate" man. he has eluded police since t)Je ki1Un1a ~san nearly a year ago. Police think he's savln1 the last bullet in his .44 caliber aun for a special use, but they don't know I( lt't for a would-be ~aptor or for himself. "Son1>f Sam" Is examined on PHe AJO. , WASHI NGTON CAP> - Pos tmaster General Benjamin' . F . Bailar asked the Post~l Service board of govern9ra ~ay lo hike fi~clau mai' r.at.ee. lot businesses by three cents while holdin g p ostal rates for individuals at the current 13 cents. Bail1r's tecommendaUon followed a request last week by President Carter to set up a "cltiien's rate"' for first-class maH that would cost less than Man Charg~ ... <J In 'Mystery' Shooting A suspect has been taken into custody in the unexplained shooting of a 19-year-old Garden Grove man In a Westminster apartment June 26. Police reported Tuesday that they arrested Anthony T. Owen, 25. of Santa Ana last weekend as he was driving in Westminster. Oweo was char~ed with attem· pted murder . according to police, and is being held in Orange County JaH with bail set at $25.000. Westmlnst~r police Officer Earle Graham said Tuesday police don't know the reason for the shooting. Graham said the victim appareoUy was AQt kno\fn by his assailant. The victim, Matthew McKeone, was wounded in the abdomen by a blast from a shotgun when he answered a knook on the apartment's door, poUcesaid. . McKeone received 2'1 plftts of bl<>Od ffotn donors lh s11c,essfut efforts LI) save hls li(e. He ls now Ustea in stab~e condition at Fountain Vall,)' Community Hospttal tncJ was trah1ferred. Tuesdl)' ffOm the Intensive care ~t to a suriieal care.room. letters mailed by businesses. Carter did not specify a fee in his request. B ailar did n ot ask tl\e ~o\'ernon t.o endorse the end to Saturday delivery of mall ~ a subject that was expected lo be discussed durinJ the meeting - . but said thal the special citizen rate for letters may win wider public •pproval ror five-day- week delivery if he decides to recommend it. The new rates of 16 cents and 13 cents could not go into effect before next spring because the law requires a 10-month delay for conside ration of Bailar's recommendallons by the board of governors and the Postal Rate Commission. The postage rate for letters has been 13 cents since December 1975. \ "Hopefully, if infl ation can be 1 checked and we are allowed to continue attacking postal costs vigorously, the 13·cent rate for the individual could have a long life," Bailar said . The citizen rate would apply only to firsl-cluss matter mailed by an individual to a point within the United States and would involve specially printed stamp~. To qualify for the rate. Bailar said. ZIP codes must appear Ir\ both the delivery and return ad· dresses, one of which must be handwritten. The letters also must meet standard size ahd shape requirements. "I believe that as a matter of national policy It would be in the public interest to pursue tm, concept of a citizen rate first· c lass pos tage for use by consumers," the Presideft1. Wt"ote. r Bailar s aid several months agd that the nrst·class letter rate probQbly WO\lld 10 to 15 cents if (See STAMP, P•ltAl) · Fl' Parade Route Bit \ [1All 'f Pll (l I ...... ...___ H /F District Says Vi8itors Battle at HB Meet Smog Blamed • They had •n CJld lu11h1oned donnybrook al the-HunUnft.on Beach <:tt)' <.:ou nc1I Tul'Kduy naaht On Home Limit Two <'ounc•lmfn v~1 bully ll(\Oar«f o(f and OOl' H id ht WU ·damMd hut llnd i.ick and Urod of the Jil"S being 11pread" about h11 group's intt•ntann~ Only Uus lime. the combutanU. weren't members of the tlunlington ~ach City Council who in previous years en1a1ed In weekly aklrm1i.hes. On this oc:cas1on. the fireworks were provided by two vu1iling t'<>uncil offlc1als Mayor Frank Marshott of -..tanton was seeking Huntington Beach support for a study of Mtes ror a major airport lie said that 11 locallons were Lo be considered, but h1 i. jdver!>ary, Hank Wedaa or Yorba Linda 1mplted that the study was riJU!ef Wedaa claimed that the study was not legitimate and that a site in Chino Hills in northern Orange County had alrclildy been selected by Marshott's group, the inter-county Airport Authority. Marshott said this wasn't true and claimed that lies were being told. Mayor Ron Pattinson acted as peacemaker and cautioned Marshott before an amused Judience not t o deul 10 personalities. The llunt10gton Beach Caty Council members didn't agree to Marshott's request and instead voted unanimously to support an independent study lo meet the public need for mass transportation, 'including air transportation. Arab Bomb Injures 21 Pl-:TAll TIQVJ\, 1:-.rul'I <J\P > A pipe l>omh apparently 11lanll•ct by Arab terrorists under a vcgclablt• stand rapped through a bustling or>cn·!Ur market in this Tel J\viv suburb today. in.1uring 21 persons, five of them seriously. It waii the worst bombtn~ m Israel smce May 1976. when a booby·trapped motor scooter blew up in Jerusalem. k1ll1ng one person and mJuring 29. Police warncd Israelis to be on the alert for new i.erronsl alt arks Service Held For Veteran Valley Teacher Catholic funeral r ites were conducted this morning for veteran school teacher Hazel Ma r y Cu m mi s key, 64, of fo'o untain Valley. who died Friday after a long illness. Mrs. Cummiskey began her Sft!ltll Croto• Fountain Valley lhgh School ~raduatc Deborah Ann Cbalclini will compete ror the t1lll' of Orangt• QueC'n Sunda~·. Winn~r \\'tll reign O\ ~r Orange C¥>unty Fair. '"h1ch opens a "lO·day run July 15in Costa Mesa. Court Date Slated for OC Activist Politiral activist Loran Norton has been ordered lo face a pretrial hearing July 15 after refusing to plead to charges conlamed in an Orange County Grand Jury indictment. S uperior Court Judge H Warren Knight entered a plea of not guilty Tuesday for Norton, 48, . of Santa Ana. after the former state senate candidate protested through his lawyer that the amended indictment is unlawful Jnd deficient. Judge Richard Beacom will rule on that argument July 15 and then. if he overrules the obJerllon. set a trial dale for the former Santa Ana police man. Norton and Calabasas jeweler Martin Kirschner, 46. were indirtcd on perjury charges du ring a long grand jury probt• lhat later led lo lhe indictment of count y s upervisor Ralph Diedrich and Philip Anthony, among others. Kirschner bas been ordered to face trial Sept. 26 and pretrial action Sept. 2. He has been further accused in the indictment that · nam es Diedrich and Anthony and will be arraigned on those charges today. Kirschner is accused 10 the second indictment or two counts or c on s pirac y a nd a misdemeanor count or violating the state's campaign finance disclosure law. Charges filed against Diedrich, Anthony, Anaheim councilman William Kott. attorney Michael Remangton and political activist Gene Conrad include conspiracy and violation of the state's campaign finance disclos ure law. Kirschner's co·defendant in the second indictment will be arraigned July 21. He and Norton are free on their promise to appear. Orange County planning commwioners were told Tues- day restrictions on home buUdJog in the county's southern reaches may be adding to air polluUon in the area. The building restrictions imposed by the state Water Resources Board last February will be shown to be contributing "lo added aut.o travel in the south county, said Carl Kymla, manager of the Moulton Niguel Water Dlslrlcl. That showing will come in a study to be released later this month, Kym la suid. The udded auto lruvel is the result of making people who work m the south rounty travel more miles to their Jobs because of the dwmdhng supply of new residences, the study is expected to point out. The stale Water Resources Board limits t he amount or sew age that can be rollected by the Ahso Water Management Agency (A WMA) over the next five years. That limitation is expected to reduce the number of n ew residential sewer hookups from an anticipated 13,000 to 8,000. . Jn contradiction lo the study findings, the state agency aimed Woman Hurt By Propeller lmpro~ Authorities in Imperial County said today a young Fountain Valley woman who lost her lower right le~ in a Colorado River resort speedboat accident is· makmg rapid progress. Janice Bedrosian, 22. of 18227 Mutr Woods Court is listed in considerably improved condition at Loma Ltnda University Medical Center following sur~ery. A spokesman for the Imperial County Sh<'riff's OHice said this morning he had just checked on Miss Bedrosian and both her family and hos pital s tarr members are pleased with her fi5'hl to recov.?r . T he s tudent beautic i an endured 10 straight hours of su r gery before do<!tors abandoned efforts to reattach Ute limb severed by a speedboat propellor Fnday. Bridge Clairm 614th Victim SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -J\ 22·year·old man teased authorities for more than an hour as he sat perched on u Golden Gate Bridge railing and then he suddenly plunged to his death. of- ficers said. S~t. Kent Ber~quist of the California 11.aghway Patrol said the man told officers Tuesdav night he was suffer ing from "a terminally broken heart." The victim was not identified pending notification of relatives. teaching career in Minnesota, • before moving to California in· Ga Sl • s t 1950. She.taught in tht: old Costa y ayzng us: nee S Mesa Umon School D1slnct and '.r the Alamitos Elementary School District until 1955. its sewage collection Ii milation at reducing air pollution In the south countv. But Kymla said the study being completed by consultants Phillips, Reddick and Brandt will show that, rather than reducing s mog , the ho mebuilding restriction will add lo the problem. A WMA, a cooperative sewage treatment venture composed of seven south county water districts, seeks to have the residential construction restrictions lifted. As a spokes man ror one of A WM A's major members. Kym la conceded that most south county residents travel north to work in central or northern Orange County. He pointed out, however. that a secondary labor market is building in the south county. Ex-Chapman President, J. Davis, Buried Me morial servic es were conducted Tuesday for John L Duvis. president emeratu~ of Chapman College. who s uffered a fatal heart atluck Saturday al the ageof72. Dr. Davis served as president of Chapman College in Orange for 14 years until his retirement in 1971. Up until two years ago, Dr. Davis did part-lime work on cam pus as president emeritus. Dr. Davis. a recent resident of Tustin and a long.time Santa Ana resident. is survived by his w1(e, Mary Reeder Da vis; two children, Robert Lowell Oa\'1-; and Judy Davis ,\lien. holh Orange County rcsiclcnts; r11w ~tcpson, Michael Heedl·r; se.,,cn g randchildren, and one great· grandchild Prior to hb work at Chapman College, Dr. Davis served as dean al Lynchburg College In Virginia :.and at Haram College an Ohio. When he started at Chapman there were just 300 students. When he left in 1971. the campus had grown to about 1 ,300 students. The John L. Davis Memorial fund ha~ bet•n esl a bhshed al Chapmun College in his honor. A"WltellMle HOLD 13..oCENT RATE Poatal Chief Ballar E'ro• Page Al STAMP ••• Saturday delivery were ehm· analt.>d and 16 cents 1f it were continued. Although rate increases bring the mail agency substantial criticism, the proposed reduction in delivery is gener ating as much controversy in Congress this time. The controversy h eated up when a congressionally created study commission recommended this year tbat del- iveries be reduced from six to five days a week to save $412 mi Ilion a year. The study group commiss1onl'cl a public opinion poll by the A.C Nielsen organization that found that tbe public would rather go without the usual six-day d<.'I· a very than pay more for postuge Key members of Congress disputed the finding and a bill 1!{ pending ih the House to order continued six-day delivery ser vice. E'rom Page Al PARADE •.. from the merchants ... A similar dispute a rose last yea r which res ulted in the parade be10g rerouted Crom Ward Street, west on Warner A venue. north on Brookhurst to the rcrreation center. Me rchants opposed the Brookhurst Street parade and the council agreed to reroute the event. "Why did we scrap the 1970 plan?" asked Kessler. Parade chairman Lemanski said last year's parade route caused di ff iculty for its spectators. Since Brookhurst Street is Fountain Valley 's m ai n thoroughfare. said Lemanski. 1t 1::. most suited for the parade. HB Hires Tiro New Principals Two new elementary scbool principals were hired Tue8d.ay night by the Huntington Beach Caty School District Board of Trustees. Ronald Brown, a principal in the La Mirada school di.strict, was tenatively assigned to Smith School. Dr. Frances Bennie also was • hired as a principal but she has not been assigned a school aa yet. The vacancies were created by a reorganlzaUon of the school : district and elevation of two principals to higher positions. Brown, 44, received bis master's degree from Cal State Long Beach. Or. Bennie. 33, bas been district coordinator of language arts in Plrunedge. New York. She received her doctorate from Hofstra University. Annual salaries for the prmc1pals range rrom S23,402 to $26,425. Trustees also accepted the resignation of Harry Tu.mer who has been principal at Dwyer School for eight years. He has asked t.o be reassigned t.o the classroom next spring. And W i n Tin s l ey, superintendent of maintenance operations for the district the past 15 years, announced his reli r ernent. f'rom Page Al CUBA •.• The former UCI professor said they t.old him they thought the Cuban vessel, which was not nying a flag, might have been a pirate ship when it approached their vessel "1n a menacing manner." Reldt has been on a year.Jong sailing odyssey which has taken ham to the Galapagos Islands. through the Panama Canal and up the Amazon River. His young crew are either former students or chlldrcn of friends "lle's an excellent sailor," Mrs. Skafte added. She said her son mentioned that Reidt had received an offer for the boat from a F lorida resident and was contemplating selling the boat and flying home with his crew. In a press conference Tuesday in Key West, Reidt. a former Laguna Beach resident, said two Florida yachtsmen were also • being held in Havana. They were identified as Ja<1c Hanst and Howard Bradbeer of Orlando, Fla A reading specialist. Mrs. Cummiskey taught at Boos Ele- mentary School in the Westminster School District for Seemed 'Ordinary' REDONDO BEACH CAP> - p atrick Kearney and David Hill. avowed homosexual lovers charged with killing and dismembering two men and suspected in 26 other slayings. seemed ordinary to their neighbors -except for Kearney's fascination for knives. <Relatedslory, Page AJJ . they kept to themselves.·· Kearney and Hall were visited frequently by youn~ men. Julsonnet recalled. until their disappearance about six weeks ago. Authorities said the pair ncd Walls tor all! Lhe pasl22 years. The Boos School Parent· Teacher Association has set up a fund in Mrs. Cummiskey's name for a reading laboratory. Donations may be sent in Mrs. Cummiskey's name to the Boos Sehool l:'l'A. Mrs. Cummiskey is survi\led by her daughter, Mary C. Hasson of Placentia; her son, Thomas V. Cummiskey and sisters. Fern Henryson of Seal Beach. N~ll Simmons and Lenore Hoffman. ORANQI COAST "'" DAILY PILOT "He liked to come in end look at uw butcher knives," grocery $tor~ owner ~erry Stevens said Tuesday, "He'd ask me to take one down arid he'd look at it and handle it and ask me abot1t the s~el. Then he'd put it back. But 1L wouldn't be a week before he was 'ba c~ looking at \hem again."' - Stevens described Kearney as "a loner. with an eerie sense or quiet about him.·' Others in the peaceful residential area where t~e two men tived said there was no b1nt ot their involvement in I the raUIUple st4)'lnct lqt which th•1 •re belril q\ae&!loned. "The)' w te very quiet, very nice,•• recalled Bob LOnpc:ro, who Jived next door to Kearney and HJJl ror more than !our year A. .. It.. ju.st ooe of those th int• that )'O'.I can't believe." Kea.rM)'. 3'7, •bo r•lcned .. 10. enclnH'I'. with Ruahu Aircraft ln El ~do, .,,. dtil- tr1Md b)' hlt 1upervttor d "an Jdta,-.ort.f.1 rnod.t worker.'' K~·1 ~·ti~e dtt'n• f lnot WM:!ttJ1) ~ti'Ut to "ta man nom •nt ~male, ac-f~ P.t quor itore clerk Oeor1e lli1bii\ntt. ''H• (HU.{)' ~Id ~t 1n one dl1 'ii.~. Ma liQ .. I ...... *5 ............. MMIE ... •:.-:• .. _. lM1 ..... , ..... - ROOMMATES LINKED TO 28 SLAYING&-Story, A3 to El Paso. Texas, about a month after investigators questioned them in connection with the s layings of John lJam!lY, 17. o( El Segundo. and Arturo Marquez. 24, o f Oxn ard. They were persuaded by their families to return and surrender, authorities said. Kearney and Hill. 34. have been charged with the Lamay and Marquez s layings. Authorities· say they are questioning them in connection 'Wltta at leaat 28 slnyings. Several of the vicli~. including Lamay. '#ere found wrapped In plastic trash bags and tho case has ~cotne known J!J the "lrasb bac nuard rs." "There't 1lway1 rat lD the bud1et and "' c•n Ot\d wa,ya to chop," ahe declarat. Coun~uman Richard Siebeflt.; . too. hu E concern abo'lt \Jae etc•I tax bllla, fft led a ve .,,.vlously to eut ,000 from the SH million ' ..\fV,t'8~ Siebert •~id that tax 'bllll ~~~ tolnl tlp·Ntnlt ol ~1•aiUllOn ~ l Drexel wall systems to fit every _space and please every taste Repe.11 our sf' Ives? N1war1 W11h so lndivldua~S11c <> selechon of Drexel"' wall sys1ems. e>ach sldrage scheme 1:; cxnclly suited 10 your space hmi1U11ons ... and your lesle Our design slalf will show you crisply &lyled conlem.. porary cases, exotte 1aak-1tn1c;hed pie<:«> bright with chlnotserro. units rich in baroque curves and panel~ng. Funcr1onal touches areGQually var· .. •ed. lrom drcp dask.s ano bors 10 silver drawers.-TV and s1ereo !>{)3CC" and d1~.p1.iy CJ'·CS v...1111 ~Qhlod Shefv9' Well~ for au. WC! ~dJ'. dnd -th.inks lo Dre•t·I -NJ11cr lhl! ~•1mc twic~1 ,.. 7 Laguna/SoutJt Coast EDITION * r ~fteraooa N.Y.Stoeks l . ' . Knives Fascinated Gay KiJler Suspec REDONDO BEACH <AP> - palrlck Kearney and Davld Hill, avowed homoscxulill iovers char1ed with killlne and dismembering two men and suspected 1n 26 other !>laymgs. seemed ordinary lo their nei1hbors -except for Kearney's fascinatJon for kruves. (Related story. Page Al>. "He hked to come in and look Ml the butcher kn1ve!>,'' grocery store owner Jerry Stevens said Tue.day. "He'd ask me to take one down and he'd look al it and handle it and ask me about the steel. Then he'd pu\ it back. But it wouldn't be a week before he was back looking at them again." Stevens described Kearney as "a loner. with an eerie sense of quiet about him." Others in the peaceful r~idential area where . . .. the two men lived said there was no hint of their involvement in the multiple slayings for which ROOMMATES LINKED TO 28 SLAYINGS-Story, A3 they are being questioned. "They were very quiet. very nice," re<:alled Bob Longacre, who lived next door lo Kearney and HUI for more than four years. "It's just one or those thin~ that you can 'l believe." Kearney, 37, who resigned as an engineer with Hughes Aircraft in El Segundo, was des· cribed by his supervisor as ''an ideal worker, a model worker." Kea"\ey's conservative dem· eanor was a sharp contrast to his more flamboyant roommate, ac- cording lo liquor store clerk <See SUSPECl'S, Page A?) Expand OC Airport, Grand Jury Suggests Dog Days .Hit LB Animals By JACK CHAPPELL Of Ille O.t11, "llol Sl~ll 1 The city of Laguna Beach is in \the doghouse over its kennel ,•lease. Dr . R ose Ekeberg, I veterinarian, from whom the city has been leasing kennel space for , ita animal services program. ' marched into city hall Tuesday and canceled· the city's lease. The city has 00 days to Cinda new , pound. 1 Dr. Ekeberg also is president ~.of the Laguna Canyon Property Owners AssoclaUon, and she ~as angered by city plans to put • temporary SOO.car parking IOt. I' neat her kennels. , Dr. Ekeberg said today in an I interview she fell the city's plans would create a "death trap" along the canyon road. 1 1 When the city was considering the temporary lot program, Dr. Ekeberg threatened lo revoke the lease if the program went ' ahead. I "Mayor Jon Brand called me a blackmailer and a coercer, but I they (the city council) have treated the citizens in the canyon 1 very shabbily in this," Dr, Ekeberg said. "My canceling the contract is not eoing to hurt the dogs: The only Wng it is going lo hurt 1s the taxpayers of Laguna Beach." she said estimating thp city would face costs of $100,000 a year to establish its own kennel. Police Chier Jon Sparks said that while the city had heel'\. workingpn alternative plans lo the c\ti'rent leasing of the Ekeberg kennel, the 00 day time frame was unexpected. "Jeez. I almost Cell over yeste- rday when s he came in with that tbing Cthe letter canceling the lease)." Sparks said. • He said the city had been considering buildil"IC its own kennels on the old Laguna Beach durqp ju.rt north of the SPCA. in Laguna Canyon, or contTacune with other private kennels or contracting with the county. Tbe county contract apllt'an to be out because or the eitpense and <See DOG DAY, Pa1e Al) Building Delay Doubling Up set in CUSD By ANNE COOPER Ol lllo Dolly Piiot Sl~I Seventh and eighth graders from San Clemente. Dana Point, Capistrano Beach and San Juan Car Tarred, Feathered ~te 14 J.4ncisay. got a r ude shock when she returned from her holiday weekend vacation Tuesday mornilJg. Mn. Undsay, 54, lert her 1971 Cadillac parked in the driveway of her home at 2950 Perla. Newport Beach when she left last Friday. The car was still there when she returned Tues- day bu~ it had b ee n redecorate d in ber absence. According lo police reports, the car had been completely coated with glue and then covered with multi-colored feathers. Capistrano will be on double sessions in the fall because of another ShorecliCfs Junior High School construction delay. Capistrano Unified School District trustees rejected S·OTue· sday a sole bid of $494,000 to set up district-owned portable classrooms at Shorecliffs, currently. under construction in north San Clemente. The architectural firm of l)al'i1-0Uh&ime ~iociates had estimated a total cost for the portable classroom projHtl&o be ,180,75.5. Ar~tect WiUlem Davls told tru1t .. Tuesday µtat pulling the project out to bld J&ain will delay its completion by at least five months. Because ShoreclHCs is a modular school, it cannot open without the 24 portable cla11rooms. e ven if the permanent buildings are complete, said Jerome Thornsley, district superintendent. The Capistrano school district has adopted the module concept in school design lo accommodate (See DOUBLING, Page A2) Clementeans Help "' Nah Stab Suspect Hearing eries of "Murderer" and "Help," residents of a San Clemente apartme11t house called police to aid a stabbing victim while one of lhetn shelter· ed the man Inside his apartment Tuesday. Police said the resldent, who was not identified, helped wounded and bleeding Gerald Stinson. 46, into his apartment after Stinson banged on his door for help. Pollee ~aid Stinson's assailant had chased hlm from his nearby apart.1TAent at %707 S. E l Camiho Real. The resident pulled Sttnson inside afl(f slamtr\ed the door ln the stlibber'a face. Poltc~ called to the scene cbaud a nannb\I man and arres- ted blm oa a tblrge of asaault w\tb tntent to commit murder. Ar~ wu David Boltoa, 18, of ~awe, Waab., whom pollce d escrlbec;l •• SUnson 's roommate. Bolwn was an-ested early this ' morning after a chase by police. He was later taken lo Orange County Jail. Stinson. who was stabbed in the chest under his left armpit, suffered a pierced left lung. He was lllted ln guarded condition in the intensive ~are ward of San Clemente General Hospital today. Police U . Al Eblow, one of the offlcen who responded to the call, said he was speeding to the reported crime scene when he beard residen\a ~n. '1Up here! Up l\erel He'1 bleeding! Quiet!" , !l'hlow said \he bar~ly conscl°"5 Stinsoq was bleeding heavily. " Ehlow said the stabbing came applll'enUy as the result of 81) argt.nnenl. H~ said SUnson was 1eeh to nan from hi• apartment, then was &tabbed from behind by a man who cbued him, and S\lnson ala11ered across a ucanl Jot to the Calle Del commerclo apartments and safety •. Runway, Ternllnal AP Wl,.,pl>Olo ACCUSED SEX SLAYERS BROUGHT INTO COURT Patrick Kearney (right), David Hiii (rear) LotsEyed Cleniente Woman a,G~'::.?..~!."l~!LLE Helpless Four Days Facili\ies at Orange County Airport <OCA ) should "be expanded to meet present lraCfic needs.'' the 1976-77 county Grand Jury said today in its year-end report. Expansion should includ~ enlarging the airport terminal, adding parking lots and increasing tie-down spacts for private planes, the Grand, Jury said. . 1 Also, the jury no~. ()CA s main runw•y ~boul4 be "extended 737 feet northerly." The 1rand jury report conceded the proposed expansion projects cannot eo ahead UfttiJ a recently completed a(rpo~t environmental impact rel)ort 1s accepted by the county. That acceptance suffered a setback last week when the county planning commission sent the environmental report baek lo staff and the consultants who prepared It for a major overhaul. Nonetheless, the Grand Jury said the expansion projects are needed to meet air traveler and airport user demands. "It was observed by this grand jury. as it has been by form~r grand juries that the termlnal ts inadequate to service the more than l .8 million passengers who use this facility annually," the Grand Jury said. "Public parking in and around the airport Is at a premium. "At present all 850 tie-down spaces for k~neral aviation are occupied and there is a long waiting list," the jury said as It recapped its recommendation for expansion to the board of supervisors. It went on to point out that an extension or· th~ runway will "allow departing aircraft to reach a greater altitude before overflying noise sensitive residential areas south of the airport." However, that finding is disputed by those individuals end organizations mainly Jn the Newport Beach area whb oppose the expansion projects recommended by the· Gr•nd Jury. , ·They t\ave a~sailed the etrvironmehtal Jtnpact ~eport tar £•Ult1g t.o corqe to gri~ with th~ envir<>nmetitlll effects of specltio proposed pro~ts. The opponents abo bave faulted the lour.year , $300,000 airport. 1t.uc11 fol' represenUng wh•l they call "a 1eneral plan for tbe airport" rather than a study of speett'lc propo111s. An elderly San Clemente woman fell in her home and lay helpless without food or water for four days before a worried neighbor alerted police Tuesday. Police forced open the front door of the house, at 229 Via San Andreas, and found 80-year·old Georgia E. McCay still~onscious on the floor just next to thlr bed. Firemen who rendered emerg- e~f m~o-1 t.rea~ment seid she was dehydrated abd had brokeQ a hip. They said Mrs. MeCay told them, ''lfeel au riabt ... She told fjremen she got oul of bed Saturday to go to the bathroom when her Coot turned undtt her aQd She fell to the floor. She was unable to get to the telephone, wa~k or c rawl for help. Marjorie Walls, so , the nejgbbor who called police, said Mrs. McCay had managed lo pull an elec:trii;: blanket over her. Mrs . McCay was reported in salisractory condition today at San Clemente General Hospital. "Do you believe in ESP?'' Mrs. Watts said wonderingly today, r~calling why she became worried for her"neighbor. "I really truly think l have to believe in it now." Mrs.., Watts sa•d she rose early Tuesday, determined to do some work on an oil painting she was doing of the San Juan Capistrano train depot. "But I fell totally uncomfortable." she s aid. ''l cpuldl\'t even p~k up the brushes to start it. '- "The next thing I knew, I'm going out.side, standing in the middle of the-street -for no reason -looking at my lands· caping .... and the newspapers in front of Mrs. McCay's house." County Jail lnmat~ Dies ID 1Bis Cell She srud. "All those papers stacked up -it 1ust shook me up. I das hed into the house. I tried to call her on the phone. I couldn't get her. I tried to call ~.ome neighbors, but nobody was home. Then I called police." Mrs. Watts added, "You f1:.."Ure it out. Why I didn't pa1nl and went outside ~d stQod in the m Id die of the street. I nev~r do that. • . '·What happened -what really happened -l can't explain that." Stolen Auto Set Ablaze; 2 Tots Die OKLAHOMA CITY <AP> Two chUdren burned lo death today arter a car in which they were sleeping was stolen and then apparently deliberately set. on fire in southwest Oklahoma City, police said . Otricers said the children had been lert in the car while their father delivea:ed newspapers at an apartment complex. The two small charred bodies were found about 4 : 50 a.m . s hortly after firefighters extinguished the burning vehicle. The victims were tentatively identified as Melissa Isaac, 6, and her brother, Martin, 3. Officers said the arsonist poss ibly was not aware the children were in the car when it was set afire. After discovery of the bodies. police launched a search of the quiet neighborhood for a youth seen" runnmg from the burning car by a passerby. Police said they were looking for a 19-year·old suspect Cor questlon1ng in the deaths. Lt. Ted Gregory said the victims' father. Melford Isaac, 2S, telephoned poltce about 4 a. m. after a man fled in his car which had been left Idling outside the apartmen• complex. JovesUgators said the compaa vehicle' was takeo from a par!dng lot as the childr~I\ slept 1n a carpeted Mtchback trunk-area. 1 Tb,ey said the falber gave cb,ase ~ on.foot but was unable t<>stop the driver. • ' t Preliminary lnveatlaatioo i indicated the car wa~ dflven f ditecUy to the death site. eight bl~cks away. where a Oammal>li l liquid wu dU''O'ifn on lite •interior . before the c:li was set at~. (See llOl>l.a. •••• A.2) -· DAILY PILOT L/SC SUCCUMBS AT 72 Chapman'• Davia Ex-Chapman President, J. Davis, Buried Memorial servi ces were conducted Tuesday for John L. Davis, president emeritus of Chapman CoUege, who suffered a fatal heart attack Saturday at the age of 72. Dr. Davis served as president of Chapman College in Orange for 14 years until his retirement in 1971. Up until two years ago, Dr. Davis did part-time work on campus as president emeritus. Or. Davis, a r ecent rc:.1dent or Tustin and a long-time Santa Ana residenl. is survived by his wife, Mary Rc.cder Davis ; two children. Robert Lowell Davis and Judy Davis Allen. both Orange County residents; one· stepson. Michael Reeder ; seven grandchildren, and one great- grandch1ld. P rior to his work at Chapman College, Dr. Davis served as dean at Lynchburg College in Virginia and al Hiram College in Ohio. When he started al Chapman there were ju~t 300 students. When he left in 1971, the campus. had grown lo about 1,300 students. The John L. Davis Memorial rund has been established at Chapman College in his honor. Bo~ky Going Wednnaay July 6 1911 Near San "ua• S11spect Admits 2 .OC Slayings, By TOM BARLEY °' ... o ••• , 111194 li.tt One of two men Riverside Counly uuthorltle1 beJlove may be linked lo as m1ny aa 28 homosexual kllllngs l.n Southern California assertedly has confessed to lwo Oranae County alayinp, it w .. learned tocl1y. Oranae County Sheriff's Capt. Robert Griffeth aaid one ot the two suspects held ln Rivenide bas indicated that he and his companion mW'dered two young men whose bodies were found in the Ortega Highway area near San Juan Capistrano. <Related Story,PageA3): Rivers ide authorities have booked Patrick Wayne Kearney, 31, and David Hill, 34, of Redondo Beach on two counts of murder. They were held with bail set at $500,000 each. G rirfelh refused today to identify the suspect who reportedly has confirmed for Riverside and Orange County authorities that he a nd his companion dumped two bodies in the Ortega Highway area. Neither body has been identified. And Griffeth made it clear today that the accused pair may not have been aware or the victims' names at the time they were mutilated and murdered. One of the two victims was found Aug. 22 by a hiker who kicked a trash bag off the road and then discovered that it was stuffed with human remains. The second victim linked to Kearney and Hill was that of a man aged about 21 who had been sexually assaulted and also shot in the head. The body, found Oct. 6, was badly decomposed and was discovered less than a mile from the location of the first corpse. Authorities in four counties have already dubbed Kearney and Hill "the trash bag killers." They believe the pair may have been responsible for as many as 28 murders. Orange County investigators have spent several days working with Riverside authorities on the investigation. I They also have spent some time in Redondo Beach, lbe home town or the lwo suspects. in the belief that one ot the two Ortega victims may have come from that area. "We arc really just waiting for Riverside to pass the ball to us," Griffeth said. today. "Los Anceles County and San Diego County officers also wa"1 to talk to these twe men but we will just have to take our turn.•• * * * From Pagt! Al SUSPECTS. George Julsonnet. • "He CHill) would come in one day as a redhead, one day as a· blond and another time he·d have black hair," Julsonnetsaid. "But they weren't troublemakers - they kept to themselves." Kearney and Hill were visited frequently by young men. Julsonnet recalled, until their disappearance about six weeks ago. Authorities said the pair fled to El Paso, Texas, about a month after investigators questioned them in connection with the slayings of John Lamay, 17, of El Segundo, and Arturo Marquez, 24, of Oxnard. They were persuaded by their families to return and surrender, authorities said. Kearney and Hill. 34. have been charged with the Lamay a nd Marquez s lay in gs. Authorities say they are questioning them in connection with at least 28 slayings. Several of the victims, including Lamay, were found wrapped in plastic tras h bags and the case has become known as the "trash bag· murders." From Page Al DOUBLING Laguna Workers .Settle Pay Dispute large numbers of new students moving into the district, without accumulating permanent school buildings . Such buildings eventually would have to be abandoned as the district's population stabilizes. Core module schools like Shorecliffs include permanent "core" facilities and portable buildings for classrooms. Thomsley said he will bring a plan to lhe school board on July 18 that would put Marco Forster Jumor High School in San Juan on double sessions until Shoreclirfs is ready ror oc- cupancy. Laguna BJach's Municipal Employes Association settled Monday for a 3.5 percent salary adjustment effective July 111, and a nat dollar increase of $34 in January. The· total package including fringe beneflts will cost the city $79,244. Negotiations with the 82· member employes group had endured rocky going. lt was eased Friday with a sudden city offer or an additiohal $7,000 in wages. The employes had set Friday as a deadline after which they would begin informational picketing. The vote to accept the city's offer ends negotiations for all e mploye organizations. The total increase for nonmanagement personnel costs will be about" $180,000. Laguna's 16 management posi- tions are reviewed annually on the anniversary of hiring by City Manager Al Theal. Salary adjustments are based on merit. Current salary range for a clerk t)'Pist is from $638 to $776 monlhly; for an experien~ maintenance man, from $856 to $1040 monthly; for a sewage plant operator, $1,094 to $1,328 and a police lieutenant, •1,473 to $1,790. Michael Townsend, president of the .Municipal Employes Association, said the aettlement has not salistled everyone, particularly some clerical Oi.ANOECOAST UK DAILY PILOT employes who will receive less than the average increase. This is due to a modification in the city personnel classification schedule and is based on a salary survey of other cities. Instead of getting the $34 flat monthly increase as other employes will in January, some clerks will get an increase or $10 to $15. Mechanics will get an ad· ditional 2.5 percent. •'The clerks are not happy with it a nd 1 really can't blame lhem. 1t•s hard for an individual to understand how they're being singled out," Townsend said. Townsend said the employes regretted having lo make a threat of picketing, as they did this year. "It is unfortunate we had to go to the extremes that we did go to to force management to make a move. I think they realized we weren't going to be fooled around with this year," he said. * * * Top Officials' Salaries Told Here are tbe monthly salaries or Laguna Beach's s ix top managem.,ut positions, and its lwo elected full·Ume menagen, the city clerk and city treasurer. City manager, $2,500; Finance director, $2,300; police chief, $2,136; Fire Chief, $21112; a s s i s t ant c i t y m a·n - ager /municipal services director, $1,850; and Ufepard cbJef,~78S. The clt.Y treasurer ncelTes $1,161 and the CU, dert $1,0IS. FromP-Al BODJES ••• pollcesalCL .. It appean some ftammabte· liquld -poulbly guolin:uor an alcobol·bued fiuld -*ft lft aflre lo the int.tor," • bro inapector JObD SOol. They 11Jd tbe b1a10 'WU fed bt. ataeu o( neenpapers whletilH· ac, a motor carrltr for the Ok1aboma ..Journat. wu del· lv•""C at t.be time tbe cu wu 1toleo. He said he expects students to be on double sessions longer than the two and a half months projected by the architect. "Typically, in a situation like this, you would have a complete school staff and student body at the existing school in the morning and the second staff and student body attending in the afternoon," said Thornsley. "Then, when the new school is ready, the one group moves en ma111e to the new facility.'' Shoreclirfs is designed for &>O students, coming from San Cle m e nte and the Alto Capistrano area of San Juan. Marco Forster, designed for 1,000 students, had an enrollment of 1,28.S when school closed in June. From Page Al CUBA ••• Holthus, 20, of Orange: Terry Kohrs, 20, of Kansas City, Mo., and Susan McCarthy, 16, of Encinitas -was taken off the boat and driven to Havana for questioning that lasted most of Monday. Skafte told his mother they were driven back to Bahia de Cabanas and allowed to leave at aboutla.m. Tuesday. ••1 never was s0glad to be back in America;• he told his mother.· "Tbe Communi.ata there are so :terriMe." Tbe former UCI protessor said they told bim tbey thou&ht the CUban TelHl, which \fas not flying a o.,, mlabt bne been a pirate ship when it approached their vessel "in a menacing manner." Reldt has been on a year-long HUlnt od.yqe:y which has taken hlm to the Oalapac0t Islands. tJarOqb tbe P@'_ama Caul and uptbtAmuooRlver. Hla younf crew •r• ~ther former student.a or cbUdrc of lrieftds. ••Jle'• an e1Ctltut ..Uor,'' Mn, Skafte eddl4. SH la.let IM!r fJOft m~ tbai a.wt b.ct r-.eelnd an ofter fol\ Ute bht ftOlll a Plorlda r•ldem mnd •• eontem1>laUni Hlli.nl UM boet Md .flylq home wttll tilt (NW. \ Ia a,.._.~ Tuelld.liy lD ~ Weit, lleldt, • ,.._.. ~ 8'1icb .... 1c1eat. aa&I .WO J'JOrlda :_,,, ......... allo ....... lllllllil IDHavme. After the Foll This large section of pine trees near Phillips, Wis., was flattened by s trong winds during a storm which struck the northern part of the stale. They a r e viewed by a plane flying over the area Tuesday. Airport Curbs FronaPageAl ToBeStudied DOG DAY. • By San Juan The San Juan Capistrano Ctty Council will consider a revised airport ordinance t onight limiting use or the city's controversial flying facility. The meeting will take place at 7 p.m. in city council chambers al 32400 Paseo Adel ante. Council members will also consider an ordinance govemrng cable television in the city. The proposed ordinance allows the city to regulate rates and resolve grievances filed by users. Another ordinance involving development fees charged by the city is also on tap for Wednes-day's meeting. Review Scheduled BERKELEY CAP) -Two University of California-run laboratorie's that design the nation's new atomic weapons will have their status reviewed by a UC committee, University President David Saxon said. because the county kills animals not picked up by owners within seven days. "I can tell you one thing, we·re definitely going to come up with a solution because we don't have any choice," Sparks said. Dr. Eke berg severely criticized the city's parking lot plan saying that cars entering a nd leaving it would create a major traffic hazard because of the high speed traffic along Laguna Canyon Road. She said of city plans to have a parking attendant control traf· fie : "I hope they have a hell of a lot of reserves because they're going to flatten him right intotlle concrete." Sparks said he did not believe the s ituation would b e dangerous. "There's been a lot or research gone into that and I disagree with Rose <Dr. Ekeberg). If I fell it was inherently hazardous. I would have so informed the City Council," the chief said. He srud the city would "watch the situation closely a nd do wh atever we have lo do to keep it sare." Trustees Split on Finances Capistrano Unified School District trustees, united in their determination to provide classrooms for an anUclpated infiux ol new sludeots, split three times Tuesday on how to ralle building funds. With trus tees William Thompson and Sarah Lipp absent from Tuesday's meeting, the five trustees in attendance finally unanimously tabled consideration of a bond elec:Uon after splitting their votes aa follows: -Trustees Ted Kopp and Edward Westberg voted in favor or a November bond election while trustees Robert Bachelor, Jan Overton and George White opposed it. -Bachelor and Mrs. Overton supported a combination bond lease purchase e lection in November. offering voters a choice between the two funding a lternatives, while trustees Kopp, Westberg and White opposed it. -Mrs. Overton and White voted ror a lease purchase e lection in November and truslees Kopp, Bachelor and Westberg voled "no." Superintende nt Jerome Thorn.sley said Tuesday's vote not to plan a lease purchase election in November rules that funding alternative out for that election because of the extensive preparation required for the complex ballot measure. A lease purchase measure must specify an exact tax rate increase and name facilities and sites for which the generated tax revenue would be used. A lease purchase election requires simple majority approval t.o pass, whereas a hood election must win two-thirds voter approval to pass. The Capistrano school district has had two unsuccessful bond elections, one in March, 1976, and the more recent on May 3 of this year. Both received majority voter approval. but failed to win the required two·lhirds vote. Thornsley recommended a le a se purchase election in November Tuesday as the "next best a lternative" to a bond e lection. He has predicted c lassroom overcrowding will reach crisis proportions unless the district takes steps now to provide for incoming students. • The Capistrano seboo! district encompasses about 20 percent of Orange County land, much of it undeveloped. Walls for all ! Drexel wall ~VStems to fit every space and please every taste Repeat OCJTSelves? Never! Woth so individualistic a selection of Orexel•wall systems, eachstoiaga scheme is exactly suited 10 your space fimhalions ... and your taste. Our doslqn staff win show you crisply styled contem- porary ca!es. exotic teak-finished nieces bright wilh chlri01serlo. units rich 1n baroque curves and J?&nelllnq. f uncdonal touclies are eQually var- ied, from drop desks and bars ro silver drawers. TV a'ld stereo spaces and display cases with lighted shelves. WallsfOl'all, we say, and-!hanks to Drexel-never the sane twice! \ Irvine EDITION VOL. 70, NO. 187,' SECTIONS, '8 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FQRNIA Today's Closlag N.Y.Stoeks WEONESOAY, JULY 6, 1977 TEN CEN .~, Water Wasters Face Cutoffs/· Irvine Ranch Water Dl1trict dlreeton adopted new rules Tue· aday prohibitin& Irvine ree~nt.a from waattni water, includlnJ a new reaulaUon outlawing hoemg olf can, boats, sidewalks and driveways. Repeat violators of any of the new rules could have their water service disconnected as a penalty. which would result in tbe payment of a $7 50 reconneeti9n fee. I RWD directors said they adopted the resolution, effective immediately, at the ur1ln1 of the Orange County Board of Supervisors, who recently asked au water'dlstricts lD the county to issue regulations against wasting water. The only people in Irvine who are exempt from the new rules are those involved in commercial agriculture, farming or nursery operations, according to IRWD officials. The seven new rules added to the water dist.rict'a regulations include: -Gutter flooding, meaning allowini water to run into gutters H It can be prevented, is prohibited. -Sidewalks, driveways. walkways, parking lots, or other hard surface, plus cara, boats or trailers may not be washed off withhoees. -Any shrub, tree, lawn, flower or any other plant may not be watered betwet1n the hours of 10 a.m . and 4 p.m. The reasons are that water usage is greatest during that time period and also that water evaporation Is greatest during the heat of the day. ·Expand OC Airport, Grand Jury Suggests 13-cent Stamp To Stay? WASH INGTO N <AP) - Postmaster General BenJam1n 1 F. Bailar as ked the Pos tal , Service board of governors today to bike first-class mail rates for businesses by three cents while holding postal rates for individuals at the current 13 cents. Bailar's recommendation followed a request last week by President Carter to set up a 1 "citizen's rate" for first-class , ·mail that would ~t less than letters mailed by bu$ln~~e~. I Carter did not specify a fMUi his request. Bailar did not ask the governors to endorse the end to Saturday delivery of mail -a subje<:t that was expected to be discussed during the meeting - but said that the special citizen rate for letters may win wider I public approval for five-day- week delivery if he decides to 1 recommend it. The new rates or 16 cents and 13 cents could not go into effe<:t I before next spring because the I law requires a lO·month delay fer consideration of Ballar's recommendations by the board 1 of governors and the Postal Rate f Commission. , The postage rate for IP.lters has been 13 cents since December 1975. "Hopefully, if inflation can be checked and we arc allowed to continue attacking postal costs vigorously, the 13-ceot rate for the individual could have a long life." Bailar said. The citizen rate would apply only to first-class matter mailed by an Individual to a point within the United States and would involvespecialJy printed stamps. To qualily for the rate, Bailar said , ZIP codes must appear in both the delivery and return ad· dresses, one or which must be handwritten. The letters also must meet standard size and ~hape requirements. "I believe that as a matlM of national policy lt would be ln the <See STAMP, P_,e AZ) Coas' AP Wirrllf>OIO ACCUSED SEX SLAYERS BROUGHT INTO COURT Patrick Kearney (rtght), David Hiii (rear) Gay Slaying Suspects ·Seemed 'Ordinary' REDONDO BEACH (AP> - patrick Kearney and David Hill, a\'owed homosexual lovers charged with killing and dismembering two men and suspected in 26 other slayjngs, seemed ordinary to their neighbors -except for Kearney's fascination for knives. <Relatedstory, PageA31. .. He liked to come in and look at the butcher knives," groce.ry ROOMMATES LINKED TO 21 SLAYING$-Sto,./, A3 store owner Jerry Stevens said Tuesday. "He'd ask me to take one down and he'd look at it and handle it and ask me about the steel. Then he'd put it back. But it wouldn't be a week before he was back looking al them again." Stevens described Kearney as "a loner, with an eerie sense or quiet about him." Others in the peacef\ll residential area where the two.men lived sJid there was no hln,ti of \heir . uwolvemet)t Jn tb• n;iwt.iple al'aylngs for which they are being questioned. "They were very quiet, very nice," recalled Bob Longacre, who' lived next door to Kearney and Hill for more than four years. ''It's just one or those things that you can •t believe." Kearney, 37. who resigned as an engineer with Hughes Aircraft in El Segundo. was des· cribed by his supervisor as "an ideal worker, a model worker." Kearney's conservative dem· eanor was a sharp contrast to his more flamboyant roommate. ac· cording to liquor s tore clerk George Julsonnet. ··He <HHI> would come in one day as a redhead. one day as a · blond and another lime he'd have black hair," Julsonnet said. "But they weren't troublemakers - they kepltothemselves. '' Kearney and Hill were visited frequently by young men, Julscmnet recalled, until their disappearance about six weeks ago. Authorities sald the pair fled to El Paso, Texas, about a month aft#r investigator& questioned (See SUSPECTS, Page A!) Runway, Terminal Lots Eyed By GARY GRANVILLE Of, ... D•llJ ,.lleol Swll Facilities at Orange County Airport <OCA) s hould "be expanded to meet present traffic needs," the 1976·77 county Grand Jury said today in its year·end report. Expansion should include enlarging the airport terminal, adding parkil\g lots and increasing tie-Ciown spaces for private planes, the Grand Jury said. Also, the Jury noted, OCA's main runway should be .. extended 737. feet northerly.'' The 1rand jury report concede<fthe proposed expansion projects cannot go ahead until ai recently completed airport environmental impact report is accepted by tbe county. That acceptance suffered a setback last week when the county planning com.mission sent the environmental report back to staff and the consultants who prepared lt for a major overhaul. Nonetheless, the Grand Jury said the expansion projects are needed to meet air traveler and airport user demands. "It was observed by this grand jury, a.s it has been by former grand juries that the terminal is inadequate to service the more than 1.8 million passengers who use this facility annually," the Grand Jury said. .. Public parking in and around the airport is at a premium. .. At present all ~ tie-down spaces for general aviation are occupied and there is a Jong waiting list," the jury said as it recapped its recommendation for expansion to the board or supervisors. It went on to point out that an extension or the runway will "allow departing aircraft to reach a greater altitude before overflying noise sensitive residential areas south of the airport." However, that finding ls disputed by those individuals and organizations mainly in the Newport Beach area who oppose the expan sion projects recommended by the Grand Jury. They have aualled tbe environmental impact report for falling to come to grips With the <See IURY, PaceAJ) -Refilling of ornamental bodlea of water, such as fountains or pools not used for swirqoiing, ls prohibited, -Leaks that can be fixed are prohibited. -Restaurants may not serve waler to eustemers except upon request. - -Any other form of water wasting i.s not allowed. People who believe they need exesnptk>os from any of the rules may contact the general manaeer or the IRWD. Bill Hurst, and attempt to obtain an exemption permit. · The resolution allows Hurst, or his deaipee, to lsaue permits to persons be believes would have a hardship situation if forced to follow all of the regulations. A hardship situation would be <See WATER, Pa1e A.2) A,.WI,...._._ HE TELLS BOYS OF SOLO OCEAN TRIP Pat Quesnel Is Hanging Up His Oars Rowi~g Ends Hatroii Trip Spelu Finis ·DUVALL, Wash. (AP) -A 28-year·old man who rowed across the Pacific Ocean from Washington state to Hawaii says he'll never row again. On July 14, 1976, Pat Quesnel shoved off Crom La Push, Wash., in a 22.f.dory. After 111 lonely days and 2,700 miles of padd[ffig, he reached his destination Nov.3. "rM THROUGH ROWING," HE said in an interview. "I did it for the challenge and the experience. It·s over. "I was totally surprised at the big reception I received in Hawaii," the 6·1, 165-pound Quesnel said. "I didn't think it was such a big thing. I couldn't understand why so many people at the dock, especially press, were there to meet me." QUESNEL IS WORKING ON A BOOK about bis exploits, including the abortive voyage he made in 1972, when he got within 850 miles of Honolulu when a freak wave capsized his boat. He hopes to have the book ready by October. The tentative title of the book is "The Sea ls My Enemy.'' "The sea tried to kill me," Quesnel said. "I could never relax, even when it was calm. That's when the trouble begins. You can·t let the sea lull you to sleep. If you do, you 're gone." • 3 Countians Learn V aloe of Freedo01 crew -Reidt, Skarte, Paul Holthus, 20, of Orange; Terry Kohrs, 20. of Kansas City, Mo., and Susan McCarthy, 16, of Encinitas -was taken off the boat and driven to Havana for queationing that lasted most of Monday. Skafte told his mother they were dttven back to Bahia de Cabanas and allowed to leave at abou~ 1 a. m. Tuesday. ''I never wq so 1\ad to be back In Amenca1" )le told bis mother. "The ~mmdsta there an so :terrible." . (See Cl18A, .... AJ) ,4.1 OAll Y PlLOf Wwd,, .. tlay. July 8, 1971 Da.trlet SGJ1•· Arab Bomb lnjurea 21 PETAH TlQVA, brat! CAP> -A pipe bomb apparently planted by Arab t errorl•b undt•r iA voaelabla 11tand n pped lhrou1b » bullllng (>~n ·uir market in thls Tel AVIV suburb today. lnJurlna: 21 pl'rson11. rn·e or the m seriously. Smog Blamed On Home Limit It wu the wo~t bombin& in Israel alnce May 1976, when a booby-trappe d motor 11cooter blt'w up in Jer usalem. killln~ one peraoo and tnjurfog 29. Police warned larae.hs to be on tbe alert tor new terrorist attacks. O ranae Counly planning commlMlonen were told Tues- day re11 trictions on home building in the county's aout.bem reaches may be addlns to air poUulioo in the area. The building r estrictions imposed by the state Water Resources Board last February will be shown to be contributing to added auto travel in the south co unty, said Carl Kymta, Suspect Admits 2 OC Slayings By TOM BARLEY Oflllt O..lty l'llot SUH One or two men Riverside County authorities believe may be linked to as many as 28 homosexual killings in Southern California a ssertedly has confessed to two Orange County slayings, it was learned today. Orange County Sheriff's Capt. ~6bert Griffeth said one of the two suspects held in Riverside has indicated that he and his companion murdered two young men whose bodies were found in the Ortega Highway area near San Juan Capistrano. <Related Story, PageAa). Riverside authorities have booked Patrick Wayne Kearney, 37, and David Hill, 34, of Redondo Beach on two counts of murder. They were held with bail set at ssoo.oooeach. Griffeth refused today to ide ntify th e s u s p-e ct who reportedly has confirmed fo r Rivers ide and Orange County a uthoritie,..c; that he and hi s companion dumped two bodies in lhe Ortega Highway area N e it her body h a s b cc n identified. And Griffeth made 1t <'lear today that the accused pair may not have been aware of the victims' names at the time they * * * From Page Al SUSPECTS. • them in ~nnection with the slayings of John Lamay, 17, of El Segundo. and Arturo Marquez. 24 . of Oxnard. They were persuaded by their families to return and surrender , authorities s aid. Kearney and Hill. 34, have been charged with the Lamay and Marqu e z s !ayings , Authorities s a y they are queslioning them in connection with at least 28 slayings. Several of the victims, including Lamay, were found wrapped in plastic trash bags and the case has become known as the "trash bag murders." were mutilated and murdered. One of the two victims was found Aug. 22 by a hiker who kicked a trash bag off the road and then discovered that it was stuffed with human remains. The second victim linked to Kearney and Hill was that of a man aged about 21 who had been sexually assaulted and also shot in the head. 'the body, round Oct. 6, was badly decomposed and was dis covered less than a mile from the location of the first corpse. Authorities in four counties have already dubbed Kearney and Hill "the trash bag killers." They believe the pair may have been responsible for as many as 28 murders. Orange County investigators have spent several days working with Riverside authorities on the investigation. They also have spent some lime in Redondo Beach, the home town of the two suspects, in the belief that one of the two Ortega victims may have come rrom that area "We are really jus t wailing for Ri verside to pass the ball to us,' GriHeth said today 'Los Angeles County and San Diego County offi cers also want lo talk lo these two men but we will Just have to take our tum · KIUER ROAMS NEW YORK CITY A killer roams the streets of New York City, murdering or maiming young women with long hair A v ery c u.nnin g, ver) literate" man, he has eluded police since the ICillings began nearly a year ago Police think he's saving the last bullet in his 44 caliber gun for a special use, but they don't know if it's for a would-be captor or for himself "Son of Sam'' is examined on P age Ai'O Phoenix Youth Dies In Huntington Surf A 17-year-old Phoenix, Ariz .. youth drowned Tuesday afternoon at Huntington City Beach, lifeguards reported. Orange County Coroner's Of· ficials said an autopsy will be performed today on Mitchel Leonard Hunter who was found by Huntington Beach lifeguards under about eight feet of water after being submerged for more than an hour. Hunter's cousin, David Van Overschelde, 14, of Mission Viejo, was swimming with the victim at about 4:45 p.m. when the Arizona youth called for help. Overscbelde told lifeguards be was no more than live feet from his cousin when he went under. O"ANGl COAST DAILY PILOT The two youths grabbed at each other but lost their grip. The pair was about SO yards from shore near lifeguard tower 15, said Lt. Bill Richardson. Overschelde swam to shore and notified lifeguards who quickly began a dive search for Hunter. Richardson said be located the dead youth after a second sweep of the area in which he had disappeared. E(forts to revive the youth were unsuccessful, officials said. Richardson said the boy had no vital signs at the time he was pulled ashore. Lifeguards noted that small rip, currents, known as "finger rips ' had been caused by heavy surf· produced trenches ln the sand below the water. Young Overschelde told lifeguards Hunter bad ahO\Vn no sicns of difficulty prior to bis cry for help. Fro• Pqe A J WATER ••• manager of the Moulton Niguel Water District. Tbat showing will come in a aludy to be releaied later this month, KymJa said. The added auto travel is the result of making people who work in the south county travel more miles to their jobs because of the dwindling supply or new residences, the study is expected to point out. The state Water Resources Board limits the amount of sewage that can be collected by the Aliso Water Mana~ment Agency <A WMA> over the next five years. That limitation is expected to reduce the number of new residential sewer hookups from an anticipated 13,000 to 8,000. In contradiction to the study findings, the stale agency aimed its sewage collection limitation at reducing air pollution in the south county. But Kymla said the study being completed by consultants Phillips, Reddick and Brandt will show that, rather than reducing smog, the homebuilding restriction will add to the problem. A WMA. a cooperative sewage treatment venture composed of seven s outh county water dis tricts, seeks to have the residential cons truction restrictions lifted. As a spokesman for one or AWMA's major members, Kymla conceded that most south county residents travel north to work in central or northern Orange County. He pointed out, however, that a secondary labor market is building in the soijth county. Ex-Chapman President, J. Davis, Buried Memorial s ervices were conducted Tuesday for John L Davts, president e meritus of Chapman College, who suffered a fatal heart attack Saturday at the ageof72 Dr DaVts served as president of Chapman College in Orange for 14 years until his retirement in 1971 Up until two years ago, Dr Davis did part-time work on campus as president emeritus Dr Davts, a recent resident of Tustin and a long-time Santa Ana resident, is survived by his wife, Mary Reeder Davis, two children, Robert Lowell Davis and Judy Davis All en, both Orange County residents, one stepson, Michael Reeder, seven grandchildren -and one greai grandchild Prior to his work at Chapman College. Dr Davis served as dean at Lynchburg College in V1rgm1a and at Hlram College in Ohio When he started at Chapman there were just 300 students. When he left in Wl, the campus had grown to about 1,300 students. The Jobn L. Davis Memorial fund has been established at Chapman College in his honor. County Jail Innlate Dies In His Cell Sheriff's and coroner's officers are investigating the death of an Inmate who died Tu~day night in his Orange County Jail cell. Officers said Terry Dean Hawklns, 26. of Garden Grove, appeared to have vomited in his sleep and choked to death. They said there wu no evidence of foul play. Jail supervisors said Hawkin~ was arrested July 4 on the beach at Treasure Cove in the Laguna Beach area. He was booked Into the JaU oo charges ot using and being under the influence of drugs. They said KawJdns appeared to be in normal health during lbe day Tµesday .,P.nd made no compleinta or ltlnose before retlr!q to b1s .f aJJ cell. Offlcera Hid It mey b~ ,ntceasat)I to perlorm an &UloJ>$):'. to dtt«mlne the nut ~"• Of htade•th, TWO-YEAR PROJECT-CalTrans is expected to begin next month a $4.9 million project to realign and widen the Culver Drive interchange al the Santa Ana Freeway in Irvine. Shaded area in the above map shows new construction, while white areas designate existing road- way. Project will widen overpass bridge, realign road- way and increase the number of ramps. CUlver Drive Work To Begin in Month Wol'k is due to begin early next month on the $4.9 milUon project to realign and widen the interchange at Culver Drive and the Santa Ana Freeway in Irvine. The project is being built by the California Department of Transportation and is expected to take two years lo complete. During the construction period, motorists in that area will ftnd several different det- ours, including about a six-month period when traffic will not be permitted on Culver Drive, near the freeway, from 9:30 a .m. to 3 p.m That is the time when the bridge over the freeway will be rebuiU, according to CalTrans of- ficials CalTrans officials could not offer exact dates for the de- tours, but said that motorists, at varying times, will be asked to use Myford Road and Jeffrey Road ramps instead of the Culver Drive ramps. Jncluded in the project are: -Widening the overpass bridge to six laoes. -Building a mile·long road realignment that will eliminate hazardous curves ln the existing road. -Building two clove~leaf loops and four diamond entrances that will total six freeway ramp entrances. The existing design is one diamond with four ramps. The new design wilt permit light hand turns onto the freeway instead of the existing left turns. Front Page Al BODIES ••. "It appears some flammable liquid -possibly gasoline or an alcohol-based fluid -was set afire on the interior," John Soos, a fire inspector, said. Police said the fil'e was fed by stacks of newspapers which Isa· ac. a carrier for the Oklahoma Journal, was delivering at the time the car was stolen. College Park homeowners will ask the Irvine City Council Thursday to maintain the land adjacent to Colony Homes for agricultural purposes. The homeowners say tbey don't want to see any more houses on the property west ol the Colony development between the. Santa Ana Freeway and \ Walnut Avenue. , Tbe reason, they say, ls that helicopters approaching tbe · Marine Corps helicopter base fty over the property on a reeular basis. City planners agyee with the College Park homeowners and have recommended a zone change from medium density residential to agriculture for the Irvine Company land. The council will hold its third public hearing Thursday at 7:30 p.m., at city hall, on the city's,, general plan amendment. Residents may attend the hearing and make comments on any issue related to land use planning except for the issue of the Bonita Canyon Road realignment, which will be discussed at the July 28 public hearing. Numerous bearings already have been held at all city levels, including at the transportation, community s ervices and planning commissions before the two previous city council public he~rings. After the July 28 hearing, the council is expected to settle on " single land use plan to guide all future development in Irvine. Other related issues that may be discussed by the council · Thursday, include: -College Park homeowners are also asking that the extension of Walnut Avenue, between Harvard Avenue and Tustin, be made circuitous, instead or a direct route that might attract a higher level of tractic. City planners dis agree with that request. · -The council needs to det- ermine whether or nor Village 14, between Culvetdale and College Park, should be developed. -The council must decide whether or not to allow the Irvine Company to build a discount center at Jamboree Boulevard and Main Street. City planners • and commissioners have recommended denial and have suggested a half-dozen other sites for the project. Drexel wall systems to fit every space and please every taste Repeat ourselves? Never' W11h so 1nd•v1duahst1c a selection ol Drexel!, wall systems. eac./;l stordge scheme is exaclly suited lo your space limitations ... and your taste. Our design ·staff will show yw crisply styled contem- porary cases. exotic teak-finished pieces bright with chll'IOISerie, units "ch rn baroque curves and panelling. Functional touches are equally var- ied. from drop desl<s and bars 10 silver drawers, lV and stereo spaces and dlSPl•y eases With Ugh led shelves. 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I~ TRANSACTIONS 114 I • H Ul Ul ·~ .,, 13 WodnNday Julye. 19n DAILY PILOT ., Wde,Save Quiet Campaitea Listed By SYLVIA PORTF.R fi'or a vacaUon adventure on a sb~strtng th1b summer, try the little-known areas in America's National Park System. These off·tbe-beateo·path places offer as much of the nation's beauty and as vivid a portrayal of our heritage as at the well-known plll'ks visited by millions each sum mer. There's one difference -no crowc.hl. Where lo go? From the U.S. Department of Interior. thr department responsible for mOl5t nationally owned public lands and natural resources, come these suggestion~: -THE DEEP SOUTH. LOOK INTO Horseshoe Bend National Military Park, Daviston, Ala., 12 miles north u( Dadeville and 18 mlles northeast of Alexander City . Camping facilities are nearby in Wind Creek State Park . Talledega National Forest and Mt. Cheaka State Park. The park ii. the site of the Matth 27. 1814, battle on the Tallapoosa River. when Gen. Andrew Jackson·s forces broke the power Money's Worth or the Creek Indian Confederacy and opened Alabama and other parts of the old South to :.ettlement -The Southwest. Arizona ha.s a host or les~er known parks offering picnicking. campgrounds. :.ccmc dr1vl'~. guided tours. museums , ruins, cam pfire prOJlram~. nsltnr centers, exblbits. lndl an crafts and trading poi.l!. Among them: Canyon De Chelly National Monum1•nt Chinle: Casa Grande Ruins Natwnal Monument. Coolidge', Coronado Natlonal Memorial. Hereford , f"orl Boww National Historical Sile, Bowie; Chincahu<1 National Monument. Wil cox. -Midwest: There are g reat parks in Michigan • Minnesota, Wisconsin and other nearby slate!>. IN 1'11C lllGAN, PICTURED Rock!. N at1onal Lakeshore. Munising, is a superlative scenic area on Lake Superior with multi·colored sandstom' c1im,., brnad beaches. dunes. waterfalls, Inland lakes. pond:.. marshes, hardwood and conlf<-rous forests. numerous birds anii animals. There are prim1t1\'e camping sen•1c<'s und o;tate campgrounds. fishing. hikmg. swimming. hunting. Meals and lodging are avaibblc in Munb ing and Or and M ara1!>. 1n Minnesota, there 1s Voyagt•ur.., National Park. International Falls. A w1ldernl·~s l'XPl'rJt•ncl' can be cnw' ell in an historical setting the world of th(• French·Canad1a11 Voyageurs -in the forested lakt! countrv alun~ lh<' state"°'4 northern border Fishing. boating. bo;1t Jnd canoe lac1ht1c~. excursion and forest service campgrounds all arc there. Resort, mote l and hotel fuc1llt1 c~ are 1n nearby International Falls. In Wisconsin, Apostle Islands 'at1onal Lakeshor<'': Bayfield, offers the dra matic beaut~ of rocky islands in the middle of Lake Superior, largest fresh waler lake in th'~ world. The park is accessibl e b) boat lt•avmg daily lrom Bayfield. Meals and hm1led lodging an· a\ a1labk in Bayfield, while the park offers diarh'r bOdb. f1:.h1ng, limited swimming. sailing, hunting, lra1lt•r and l'amµ~1les. State campgrounds are m nearby Stockton 1:-l and -VIRGINIA AN D NORTll CAROl.l~A. Se\f•ral historic sites provide exhibits. tours , eump1ng and hiking trails from Appomattox Natlonal llistor1cal Park lit Appomattox, Va .. to the Carl Sandburg llomc Nationul Historic Site at Flat Rock. N.C For guides lo off.beat holidays. send SI., lo till' Superintendent or DocumenLs. l" S. Government P rint1nJ! Office. Washington, D.C. 20402 and request "V1o;it a L1:i>i.er Used Park." A!kfor No. 024·005·00589. Market Surrenders Tuesday's Weak Gain NEW YORK <AP > -The stock market headed lower today after giving up Tuesday's weak advance The Dow Jones a verage of JO industnals. up .94 Tues· day. wasoff5.86polntsto9(.!7.73. The downturn came des pite widespread hope.1 ror some favorable news when the governmenl reports thP JunP wholesale price index Friday, Doav.lone•A t•er~ge• s~&c~rlAPl FINI Oow·J...,..,.•-- ~" .. ,<Ill Low Clow CllCI JO Ind 911.loS 91S.37 904,~• 9(11.73·· 5.86 tO Trn 1f7.18 Jl'l I>' 7J6 07 131.19-0 13 15 VII • S.19 II!% •1• SS61H•8• n 19 U Stk Sil.SJ 317.8'> lO'l.IS 310 I< I JO !Mui I 4H, 'IOO fr an llt>.tjQO Ul1I• 47\,JOQ U St• . . .•• • • .•• 1,206.&00 A111erlt!an Leader• M'haf .ftfo<•l.:11 Did N£W vnr>I( 11\PI Advantf'd O•tlln•d Unch•nglld Tot~• '\!AW\ N•w 1911 hiQ"' Ntiw '4H7 low, p,..,. rQ(t~'f dA~ \I I T•IJ ~\() 1,.1\ llJ .,, 11(1() 18/I ~~ Ill lb 11 Due to late transmission today's listing will not appear in the Dally Pilot l#l4AT AMEX 010 NEW Y01tl( tAPI Prf'" fort.v a~• A4••-1 0.<11 ..... ¥~ .... c '&I Jill J•l ~1 JI? 1% -----------------4 M..., 1'71 hi<lt' Mew ltll "''" ~ 8~ 14 I -E• ~At..E~ Due t o late tran sm ission today's listing will not appear In the Dally Pilot. .'itorlu 111 Thf> Spotlfght 17 -.... .. Orange , Coast EDITION .. Today's Ctosbag , N.Y. Stoeks i *' NBe'.~Y;;th Lea;;;;NTYWh~t ;;;;~ TJ;T1 , A crew of five CaJifornlllllS - including three Orange County residents said they learned a oew appreciation for Independen ce Day after spending the Fourth of July u prisoners 1n Cuba "I never thought America was so free," said Robert Skarte. 19, of Newport Beach, following h.Js release Tuesday. Skalte was part or a youthful crew headed by Or. Ronald Reldt, a former proreasor of medical microblolou at the UC Irvine School of Medicine. who were 1alllng Reidt's '6-foot ketch Muslca from Florida to Dana PolnL The voyage was interrupted Sunday night when the boat was boarded by men from a Cuban naval vessel after live planes. includln& some Cuban MIGs, buzzed the yacht. Skafte's mother said today she nrst heard of the incident early Tuesday when her son called her from Key West's Coast Guard station where the crew took the Musica after being released by the Cubans s hortly a fter midnight. She said he told her the Musica was first stopped by a C11ban fishing boat that wasn't flying a flag about 35 miles north and 100 miles west of the island naUoo. When the planes began buuing the boat, one fired seteral shots across the yacht's bow. "Man, was I scared ... the youth told his mother later. - He said the yacht was escorted by a naval vessel to the PO.rt of Bahia de Cabanas where the crew -Reldt, Skafte, Paul Holthus, 20, of Orange; Terry Kohrs, 20, of Kansas City, Mo .• and Susan McCarthy, 16, of Encinitas -was taken off the boat and driven to Havana for questioning that lasted most of Monday. Skane told his mother they J111-y Urges Expansion ~f District Says Smog Blamed On Home Limit Orange County planning commissioners were told Tu~ day r estrictions on home building in the county's southern reaches may be adding to air pollution in the area. 1 The building restrictions imposed by the state Water Resources Board last February will be s.hown to be contributing :J3c Rate ·To Remain For Stamp? WASHINGTON I AP > -=- Postmaster General Benjamin F. Bailar asked the Postal Service board or governors today lo hike first.class mail 1'"'81 tor businesses by three cents while h o lding postal rates for individu als al the current 13 cents. Bailar's recommendation followed a request last week by President Carter to set up a "citizen's rate" for rirst·class m ail that would cost less lhan letters mailed by businesses. Carter d1d not specify a fee in his request. B ailar did not ask the governors to endorse the end to Saturday delivery of mail -a s ubject that was expected lo be discussed during the meeting - but said that the special citizen rate for letters may win wider public approval for Cive·day· week delivery if he decides to recommend it. The new rates or 16 cents and 13 cents could not go into effect before next spring because the law requires a lO·month delay for con sideration o r Bailar 's re<:ommendations by the board of governors and the Postal Rate Commission. 367 Arrested For Weekend In Newport to added auto travel in the south county, said Carl Kym)a, manager of the Moulton Niguel Water District. That showing will come in a study to be releaaed later this month, Kymla said. 1 The added auto travel ls the t-esuJt or making people who , work in the south county travel more miles to their jobs because of the dwindling supply of new residences, the study is expected to pojnt out. The state Water Resources Board limits the amount of sewage that can be collected by the Aliso Water Management Agency (AWMA> over the next. five years. <SeeSMOG, Page AZ> Service Fees Increased In Newport The cost of doing business with the City of Newport Beach has gone up. A whole rang e of administrative fees charged by the city for everything from tennis lessons to ambulance permits to permission to put uP a sign have been hiked by the city. The only fees no~ncreased, ac- cording to city o(ficials, are lhe fees associated with construction permits, such as plan checks, grading permits, building permits and the permits for installation of utilities such as plumbing and eleetricity. Those fees are based on a sliding scale of a percentage of the value of the construction and because the cost of building is going up, those fees rise with the cost. The fee increases we r e approved in June by city councilmen who have made il a practice to revise the fees annually to refle<:t the cost to the city in processing them. The fee increases Include: -Investigation fees charged for 26 city special permita and business licenses went from a range of$18to $110, to $19 to $11S. -The building excise tax wblcb is collected by the city lo <See FEES. Pace AZ) ,~ -· • , ... r.;; ..... i....-... HE TELLS BOYS OF SOLO OCEAN TRIP Pat Quesnel Is Hanging Up His Oars Rowing Ends -Hmmii Trip Sjlelh FiniB DUVALL, Wash. CAP) -A 28-year-old man who rowed across the Pacific Ocean from Washington state to Hawaii says he'll never row again. On JulY 14, 1976, Pat Quesnel shoved off from La Push, Wash., in a 22·foot dory. After 111 lonely days and 2,700 miles of paddling, he reached his destination Nov.3. "l'M THROUGH ROWING," HE said in an interview. "I did it for the cha llenge and the experience. It's over. "I was totally s urprised at the big reception I received in Hawaii," the f>.1, 165-pound Quesnel said. ''I didn't think it was such a big thing I couldn't understand why so many people at the dock, especially press, were there lo meet me '' QUESNEi: IS WORKING ON A BOOK about his exploits, including the abortive voyage he made in 1972, when he got within 850 miles of Honolulu when a Creak wave capsized his boat. He hopes to have the book ready by October. The tentative title of the book is "The Sea Is My Enemy.'' "The sea tried lo kill me," Quesnel said. "I could never relax, even when it was caJm. That's when the trouble begins. You can't let the sea lull you to sleep. If you do, you're gone." Clemente Woman Helpless Four Days train depot. ''But I Celt totally uncomfol1able," she said. "l co"'ldn't evm pick up the btUlbea to start It. "The next thlqa I mew, I'm going outalde, s*anctin1 in tbe middle ol the ttrett -for no reason -lookin1 at my laQds. captni •.•. and tbe newapapen in front of Mn. ~'tboule." She ulcL '"All thote papen stackeclu.p-ltJuthbQok me~ I dashed lDtO the home, I tried to cab her oo tbe J>b9ne. I cOCl)do't get bet. J tried to call tom4I nelcb~t but no~ wu bc>nw. Then 1 caued pollc~. • Runway, Terminal Cited By GARY GRANVILLE OtllleOMly l"lletSl.tf Facilities at Orange County Airport <OCA) should "be expanded to meet present traffic needs," the 1976-77 county Grand Jury said today in its year-end repart. . Expansion should include enlarging the airport terminal, adding parking lots and increasing tie-down spaces for private planes, the Grand Jury said. Also, the jury noted, OCA's main rupway s hould b e "extended 737 feet northerly." The 0 erand jury report conceded lhe proposed expansion projects cannot go ahead unt.ll a recently completed airport environmental impact teport is accepted by the county. Tb~ acceptance suffered a seiback last week when the coa,oty P1Ullial commissionaent rb• en~ma;d.al report Ntk to staff and tbe con.su.ltanta who prepared I\ for a major overhaul. Nonetheless. the Grand Jury aaid tbe expansion projects are needed to meet a1r traveler and airport user demands. 0 1t was observed by this grand jury, as it bas bffn by former grand Juries that the terminal is inadequate to service the more than 1.a million passengers who use lh1.s facility annually," the <~e J'UKY, Page AZ> SroknAuto Set A.blaze; 2Tou Die were driven back to BahJa de Cabanas and allowed to leave at aboutla.m. Tuesday. "I never was so glad to be back in America, .. be told bis mother. "The Communists there are so terrible." . . The former UCI professor said they told him they thought the Cuban vessel, which was not (8ee CUM, Page AZ> ort Car Tarred, Feathered Annette M. Lind.say got a rude shock when s he returned from her holiday weekend vacation. · Mrs. Lindsay, 54, left her 1971 Cadillac parked in the driveway ol her home at 2950 Perla. Newport Beach when she left last Friday. The car was still there when she returned Tues· day but it had b een redecorated in her absence. According to police reports, the car bad been completely coated with glue and then covered with multi-colored feathers. Employ es Stage NB 'Sick-out' By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of .. o.111 P11et Slaff About 50 blue collar employes of the City of Newpart Beach sta1ed a "sick-out" Tuesday in protest over s talled salary negotlatioas. The absent employes, who were all back on the job today, are members of the Employ'!S League which represents lZ1 city workers: The number of absentees varied from 4S reparted by city ofricials to 60 estimated by league President Stan Peterson who said the group's next move will probably be a direct appeal to the city council. He said his organization of gardeners, custodians, trash collectors, sign painters and mechanics has "absolutely no intention" olstri.king. Negotiations with the league broke down last week and Pet.enco said the "blue flu" was staged in protest over the city's refusal to meet the group's dem· ands for retirement system cban~es and pay raises that would total a seven percesit increase. The league is one of three employe or1anlzations still at odds with the city over Hlaries for the fiscal year that began Friday. The other two iJ"OUps are the 191-member Police Employes Asaoclatioo and the US.member Fire Employes Assoclatlon. Spokesmen for both troups say <See SAUBY, Pase AZ> KRi"'eSFO.eitlfd.ed GOy Killer Suspeet REDONDO BEACll CAP> atore owner Jerry Sttveu aa.ld the two men UvechaJd tberewu years. ••1t•1 Ju.st. one of those A uihorllies say they are were found wra ped ln' lastSc. Pat r I~ k K •a r n • y and Tulldl.)'. "He'd .,1r me to take oo blot cl t.belr Involvement ln thinp that you can't beUeve." questioning them in connection tush bags anl the -ca! bu DHld ffW. HOVted bocnmaua! oae dawn aod he'd look at it and the mulUple aJayinCS for which Kearney, :n, who realined u with at least 28 alaylnp. Several become Down u tho ''trail bai' , 1o~ .. dw1ed wUh kUllna and handle it and ut me 'bout the A an en•ineer with Hu1hea ol the victims Jnctudinc Lamav mutdm.. r dl1mem~rln1 two men and •lffl. 1'baD u'd '"'tit back. But OOllUATEI LINKE> Aircraft ln El Secundo, was dr.;s-' · • • · suspec:Wd lo 26 olhor •layln11, IL wouldn't be a week before be TO ala.AVINOS-ltOry,M crlbed by bis 1upiervlaor as "an ••~med ordinary to their wu back lookln1 at tbom ldealwner,amodelworker." n • i' 'bore -ea c • p L r or aaaln." they are beinl questioned. Kearney's cooaervati ve dem- ICeat0«1'• fuclnaUon for k.nlv•. Stevena dosc.rlbed Keam.ey u ''They were very quiet, very eanor was a abarp contrast to bis cRelatelat.ory, Pa,1eA3> "• loner, wlth an eerie aenso of nice," recalled Bob Longacre, mor~ flamboyant roommate, ac- ·•He liked to come in and look qulet about him." Others ID the who l1ved next door to Kearney· <'ordmg to llquor store clerk rBEGIN . • CONSTRUCTION. ·•L lh• butcher kniv•," crocory peaceful reeldeDtlal area where and Hill t~ more than four GeoreeJulsonnet. "He (Hill) would come \n ane ....,~ SUCCUMBS AT 72 • Chapman's Davis Ex-Chapman· President, J. Davis, Buried Memorial services were conducted Tuesday for John L. Davis, president emeritus of Chapman College, who suffered a fatal heart attack Saturday at the ageof72. Dr. Davis served as president of Chapman College in Orange for 14 years until his retirement in 1971. Up until two years ago, Dr. Davis did part-time work on campus as president emeritus. Dr. Davis, a recent resident of Tustin and a long-time Santa Ana resident. is survived by his wffe. Mary Reeder Davis · two children, Robert Lowell 'Davis and Judy Davis Allen, both Orange County residents; one stepson, Michael Reeder· seven grandchildren, and one' great-grandchild. Prior to his work at Chapman College, Dr. Davis served as d4:an. ~t Lynchburg College in V1rg1ma and at Hiram College in Ohio. When he started at Chapman there were just 300 students. Wt;Jen he left in 1971, the campus had grown to about 1,300. students. The 'John L. Davis Memorial fund has been established at Chapman College in his honor. Fro• PalJf! Al CUBA ••• Oying a flag, might have been a pl.rate ship when It approached tneir vessel "in a menacing manner."•· Reidt bu been on a year-long sailing odyssey which bas taken him to the Galapagos Islands,' through the Panama Canal and up tbeAmaz.on River. His youn1 crew are either former students or children of friends. "He's an excellent sailor:• Mrs. Skafte added. Sbe said her son menUoned that Reidt bad received an offer for the boat from a Florida resident and wu contemplating selling the boat and flying home with his crew. . In a press contenmce Tuesday 10 Key West. Rc!ldt, a former Laguna Beach resident. said two Florida yachtsmen •ere also beinJ held in Havana. They were identified as Jack Hanst and Howard Bradbeer o! Orlando, Fla. ORA~COMT DAILY PILOT F,....PageAJ day u a redbeacl. one day as a blond and'anOther time he'dhave black hair," Julsonnetsaid. "But they weren't troublemakers - they kept to themselves ... SALARY HASSLE. • • Kearney and Hill were visited frequently by young men. Julsonnet recalled, unlll thelr disappearance about six weeks ago. Authorities said the pair Oed to El Paso, Texas, about a month after investigators questioneJ them in connection with the slayings of John Lamay, 17, of El Segundo, and Arturo Marquez, 24, of Oxnard. They were persuaded by their families to return and surrender, authorities said. the d.llpute cent.en on changes their members want in the retirement system -changes they say the city b wllllng to erant only in a three-year contract calling for total salary increases of 4.S percent. Spokesmen for the two public safety groups said they will not stage slowdowns Ol' sick outs. The police association repres- entatives have asked to make a presentation to the city councll Monday. The fire association members have asked for mediation to set tie their dispute. City Personnel Director Frank lvens said a mediator from the state Conciliation Service will meet with firemen and city of- ficials next Wednesday. Only one or the six associations which represents the city's 650 employes has signed a contract witb~city. The 56 members of the Professional and Technical Employes Association, which is made up of planners and engineers, agreed to a five percent salary raise which will mean an additional one percent increase in cost of fringe benefits paid by the city. Negotiators for. the Newport Beach City Employes Association. primarily clerical employes, have agreed to a similar contract caJling roe · slightly smaller raises. That contract is slated to be ratified by the association's 85 members Thursday. Ivens said today the Marine Safety Association has agreed tentatively to a two-year contract which is subject to ratification of the association's nine members. The contract calls for a three percent pay raise the first year and no pay raises except a 4.5 percent boost for Marine ~ty Capt. Bud Belshe in the second year. On the last ~ of the second year, the group's retirement plan would be transferred from the existing Pu,)>lic 'Employes Retirement System <PERS> to the California Highway Patrol <CHP) plan. It is the CHP plan that is also being sought by police and fire employes. Ivens said today the settlements agreed to by the engineers and clerical employes will cost the city about $65,000 for each group. _He said the lifeguard package will cost about $10,000 in salaries only. The cost ol the retirement Fro• Page Al system cbanae Is being deferred until the start of the third fiscal year because it does not go into effect until the last day of the second year. Earlier, however. Ivens estimated the cost of the change from one retirement plan to the other would be about 12 percent City councilmen Monday aJe also slated to receive City Manager Ro~rt Wynn's recommendations on raises for the city's department beads who are not represented by the associations. Last month, councilmen granted $2,000 raises lo Wynn and City Attorney Dennis O'Neil and a $1,500 raise to City Clerk Doris George. Frma Page Al JURY ••• Kearney and Hill, 34, have been charged with the Lamay and Marquez slayings. Boys Held In Rash Of TM/ts Grand Jury said. Newport Beach police said "Public parking in and around today they believe two 16-year- TWO.YEAR· P~OJECT-:Cal'l'i-ans is expect~ to begin next month a $4.9 million project to realign and ·widen ~he ~ver Drive interchange at the Santa Ana Freeway m Irvine: Shad~ ~ea in the above map shows new constructi_on, w~le ~hite areas designate existing road· way. Pr<?Ject will wt den overpass bridge, realign road- way and tncrease the number of ramps. the airport is al a premium. old boys arrested over the week-.. At present all 8SO tie-down end may be repsonsible for 16 spaces for general aviation are break-ins in the Park Newport occupied and there is a long apartmentcomplex. waiting list," the jury said as it Detectives say the boys aJleg-Culver nn·ve W.orik recapped its recommendaUon edly committed the series of auto for expansion to the board of burglaries and locker break·ins supervisors. that have plagued the complex It went on· to point otit that an !or the past week. ~ B extension of the runway will According to Det. Michael 0 egi·n ;n Alonth .. allow departing aircraft to McDonough. one of the pair had ., lr .. IJ reach a greater altitude before left home and was trying to rent overflying noise sensitive an apartment in the complex, but Work is due to begin early next ficials. residential areas south of the was told be would have lo wait month oo the $4.9 million project CalTrans officials could r.ot· airport." foronetobecomeavallable. to realign and widen the offer exact dates for the de- However, that finding is The youth apparently spotted interchange at Culver Drive and tours, but said that motorists, at disputed by those Individuals and another vacant aoartment and the Santa Ana Freeway in Irvine. . varying times, will be asked to organizations mainly in the movedin,policesaid. The project is being built by use My(ord Road and Jeffrey Newport Beach area who oppose While the second youth was the CalUornia Department or Road ramps instead of the Culver th e exp ans i 0 n pr 0 j e ct s vi sting him, neighbors alerted Transportation and is expected Drive ramps. recommended by the Grand the security guards to the boys' 1 totaketwoyearstocomplete. Includedintheprojectare: Jury. presence and the guard told the During the construction -Widening the overp..ass They have assailed the teenagers they would bave to period, motorists in that area bridgetosixlanes. environmental impact report for leave. will find several different det--Building a mile-long road failing to come to grips with the While helping the boys vacate ours, including about a six-month reaUgnmeot that will eliminate environmental e.ffects of specific the apartment, the guard said he period when traffic will not be hazardous curves in the existing proposed projects. • spotted a jacket that matched the permittA!d on Culver Drive. near road. The opponents also have description of one taken in an the freeway, from 9:30 a.m. to 3 -BulldlngtwocJOYerleafloops • faulted the four-year, $300,000 auto burglary in tbe complex. p.m. and four diamond entrances that airport study for representing He held the boys for police who That is· the time when the will total six freeway ramp whal they ca11 "a general plan booked one at Juvenile Hall and bridge over the freeway will be entrances. The existing design Is for the airport" rather than a released the other to his parents. rebuilt, according to CalTrans of-one diamond with four ramps. study of specific proposals. _______________ ..;._ __ _:;._.:....:..:..::...;.=::....:..:--=-:.:..:....=::==::=-.:::.:.=:....:.:=.=_!..~E.:. Front Page A I SMOG ••• That limitation is expected to reduce the number or new residential sewer hookups from an anticipated 13,000 to 8 000. · In contradiction to the study findings, the state agency aimed its sewage collection limitation at reducing air pollution in the south county. But · KymJa said the study being completed by consultants Phillips, Reddick and Brandt will show that, rather than reducing smog, the homebuilding restriction will add to the problem. A WMA, a cooperative sewage treatment venture composed of seven south county water districts. seeks to have the residential constructlon restrictions lifted. Joint Usage Plan Adopted After what was described as an affable meeting, members o(two Newport Beach commlsiions aareed Tuesday lo a plan c~ for joint use of a fottner church ln Enslp View Park. M embera of the Parks, Beaches and Recreation Commltalon and the City Arts Commlulon ctectded the church on Cliff Drive at El Modena Avenue could be spllt between thtlt t~ proanuna with PB and a settln1 the lower Ooor whlcb ls divided lnto a Urlet of mWl room• and the Artl CotnmlMlon 1ett.lnf uae oC the Iarce upper lloor l"CIOID tor J>el'forml.QI arta productiom and foctures. . .. Walls for all~ Drexel wall systems to fit every space and please every taste Repeat CXKselves? Nevert Wllh so lndMduartstlc a seleclion of Drexel• wall sys1ems. eacll storage sch~a exaclty suited to your space Nmllatlons ••• and yoyr taste. Our design staff wm show 'JOO crisply styled cootem· poriOy cases, e>collc teak-finished pieces brigtlt with chlnolsatle, units rich in ' baroque CUf\181 and panelllng. Functional touches are equally var- ied, from drop deslt.s and bars to SINer drawers. 1V and stereo spaces arid display cases with lghtedshe!Ves. Warts !Of all .• we say, and -thanks to 0!811181-never lho sametwtcel l Saddlebaek EDITION VOL. 70, NO. 187, 4 SECTIONS, .ta PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 1977 Afternoon N.Y. Stoeks TEN CEN Hotne Limit Hit for South . OC S1nog Oran1e County plannlni commisslonerr. were told Tues· da)' restrictions on home buildinC m the county's southern reaches rnay be adding to air pollution in lhe area. The building restrictions imposed by the slate Water Resources Board last February will be shown to be contributing to added auto travel in the south county. said Carl Kymla, manaaer of the Moulton Niguel Water District. Thal showing will come in a study lo "be released later this month, Kymla said. The added auto travel is the result of making people who work in the south county travel more miles to their jobs because of the dwindling supply of new residences, the study is expected to point out. The state Water Resources Board limits the amount or sewage that can be collected by the Aliso Water Management Agency <AWMA) over the next five years. That limitation is expected to reduce the number of new residential sewer hookups from an anticipated 13,000 to 8,000. In contradiction to the study findings, the state agency a1med its sewage collection limitation at reducing air pollution in the south countv. But Kymla s aid the study Expand OC Airport, Grand Jliry Suggests 13-cent Stamp To Stay? WASHINGTON (AP) - Postmaster !;eneral Benjamin 1 F. Bailar asked the Postal 1 Service board of governors today , to h_ike first-class mail rates for businesses by three cents while holding postal rates for individuals at the current 13 cents. .Bailar·s recomme11dation followed a request last week by Freaident Carter lo set up ;a 1 "citizen's rate'' for flrst-claH m•U lh•t would cost less than I letters mailed by buelne$ses. Carter did not specUy a fee in his request. Bailar did not ask the governors to endorse the end to Saturday delivery of mall -a subject that was expected to be discussed during the meeting - •but said that the special citizen rate for letters may win wider 1 public approval for five-day· week delivery if he decides to recommend it. • The new rates of 16 cents and 1J cents could not go into effect I before next spring because the law requires a 10-month delay lor !consideration of Bailar's I~ recommendations by the board of governors and the Postal Rate ~Commission. [ The postage rate for letters has been 13 cents since December 1975. "Hopefully, if innation can be checked and we ·are allowed to continue attacking postal costs vigorously, the 13-cent rate for the individual could have a long life," Bailar said. The citizen rate would apply 'only to first-class matter malled by an individual to a point withln the United States and would Involve specially printed stamps. To qualify for the rate, ...Ballar said, ZIP codes must appear In both the delivery and return ad· dresses, one of which must be handwritten. The letters also mus' meet standard size and shape requirements. "I believe that as a matter or national policy it would be ln the <See STAMP, Pase AZ» AP W•rolloto ACCUSED SEX SLAYERS BROUGHT INTO COURT Patrick Kearney (right), David Hiii (rear) Cay Slaying Suspects Seemed 'Ordinary' REDONDO BEACH <AP) - patrick Kearney and David Hill, avowed homosexual lovers charged with killing and dismembering two men and suspected in 26 other s layings, seem ed ordinary to their neighbors -except for Kearney's fascination for knives. <Related story, Page AJ>. ''He liked to come in and look at the butcher knives," grocery ROOMMATES LINKED TO 28 SlA YINGS-Story, A3 store owner Jerry Stevens said Tuesday. "He'd ask me to take one down and he'd look at il and handle it and ask me about the steel. Then he'd put it back. But it wouldn't be a week before he \Vas back looking al them igain." Stevens described Kearney as "a Joqer. with an eerie sense of quJet about him." Others in the peaceful residential area where the two men lived said there was no hint of their Involvement in the mulUpl~ alayings for which they are being questioned. "They were very quiet, very nice." recalled Bob Longacre, who lived next door to Kearney and Hill for more than four years. "It's just one of those things that you can't believe." Kearney, 37, who resigned as a n e ngineer with Hughes Aircraft 10 El Segundo. was des· cribed by his supervisor as "an ideal worker, a model worker." Kearney's conservative dem· eanor was a sharp contrast to his more namboyant roommate. ac· cording to liquor store clerk George Julsonnel. "He (Hill> would come in one day as a ·redhead, one day as a · blond and another time he'd have black hair,'' Julsonnet said. "But they weren't troublemakers - they kept to themselves." Kearney and Hill were visited frequently by youn g men, Julaonnet recalled, until their disap~aral'lce about six week$ ago. Authortues said the pair ned to El Paso, Texas, about a month after investigators questioned <See SUSPECTS, P•ge AZ> After discovery of the bodies. police launched a search o( the quiet neipborbood fQr a youth aeen nmnlni from the burning. car by apauerby. Runway, Ternllnal LotsEyed By GARY GRANVILLE 04 IM O•Of Piiot Statt Facilities at Orange County Airport <OCA> s hould "be • expanded to meet present traffic needs,'' the 1976·77 county Grand Jury said today in its year-end report. Expansion s hould include enlarging the airport terminal. adding parking lots and increasing tie-down spaces for private planes, the Grand Jury said. Also, the jury noted, OCA'a main runway should be "extended 737 feet northerly." The grand jury report conceded the proposed expansion projects cannot go ahead utiUl a recently completed airport envlronmenta4 impact report is accepted by the county. That acceptance suffered a setback last week when the county planning commission sent the environmental report back to staff and the consultants who prepared it for a major overhaul. Nonetheless, the Grand Jury said the expansion projects are needed to meet air traveler and airport user demands. "It was observed by this grand jury, as it has been by former grand juries that the terminal is inadequate lo service the more than 1.8 million passengers who use this facility ann'ually," the Grand Jury said. "Public parking In and around the airport is al a premium. "At present all 850 tie-down spa~es for general aviation are occupied and there is a long waiting list,'' the jury said as it <See JURY, Page.U> KIUER ROAMS NEW YORK CITY A killer roams the streets of New York City, murdering or maiming young women with long hair. · A "very cunning, very literate" man, he has eluded police since the killioss began. nearly a year ago. Police think he's savin& the last bullet in his .44 caliber gun for a special use, but they don't know if it's for a would-be captor or for himself. "Son of Sam" is examined on Page AlO. / . . being complet.ed by consultant.8 Phillipa, Reddick an~ Brandt will show that, rather than reducing smoaJ, the homebuilding restriction will add to the problem. A WMA, a cooperative sewage treatment ventu,'e composed of seven south 'county water d1strlct.s, seeks to have the residential construction restrictions lifted. , As a spokesman for one of AWMA's major members, Kym la conceded that most soutb county residents travel north to work in central or northern Orange County. He pointed out, however, that a secondary labor market is buildlng in the south county. All'WI,. ...... HE TELLS BOYS OF SOLO OCEAN YRIP Pat Quesnel Is Hanging Up His Oars Rowing Ends Hmmii Trip Spells Finis DUVALL, Wash. (AP) -A 28-year-old man who rowed across the Pacific Ocean from Washington state to Hawaii says be ·n never row again. On-July 14, 1976. Pat Quesnel shoved off from La Push. Wash., in a 2~foot dory. After ill lonely days and 2,700 miles of paddling, he reached his destination Nov.a. "l'M THROUGH ROWING," HE said in. an ihterview. "I did it for the challenge and the experience. It's over: "I was totally surprised at the big reception I received in Hawaii," the 6·1, 165-pound Quesnel said. "I didn't think it was such a big thing. I couldn't understand why so many people at the dock, especialJy press, were there to meet me.•· QUESNEL IS WORKING ON A BOOK about his exploits, including the abortive voyage he made in 1972, when he got within 850 miles of Honolulu when a freak wave capsized his boat. He hopes to have the book ready by October. The tentative title of the book is "The Sea Is My Enemy..'' F "The sea tried lo kill me," Quesnel said. "I could ~ never relax, even when it was calm. That's when the trouble begins. You can't let the sea lull you to sleep. If you do, you're gone." 3 Countians Learn V aloe of Freedoin crew -Reidt, SkaCle, PalJl ' Holthus, 20, of Orange; Terry Kohrs. 20, of Kansas City, Mo., and Susan McCarthy, 16, of Encinjtas -wa• taken orr the boat and driven to Havana for questioning lhat lasted most of M(>f'lday. Skafte told bis mother they were driven back tO Bahia de Cabanas and allowed to leave at about 1 a.m. Tuesday. ''I never w~ so t lad to be back in Amerlea.••;be told his mother. "The Communllta t.bero are so :terrible." . . <See CUBA. Pase A2) DAILY rtl (lT ......,...,_ __ SB Trustees Split on Finances Caplalrano Unified School Outrkt t~t • unlt..d In &.heir delerm1nat1 on to provide ,·laaliroom• for an anliclpaled •o.flux ol n •w •tudcnb, •PllL Uir~ UmH Tweday on bow to ralgc t>ulldins tu.nch Wlth trus teu Willlam Thomp~on und Sarah Lipp absent from Tuesday's mooting, the five trustees 10 attendance nnally unun1mou1ly tabled conslderahon ol a bond election 4'fter apUttlng their votes as foUoW11 : -Trustees Ted Kopp and Edward Westberg voted in favor of a November bond eled1on while trustees Robert Bachelor. J ao Overton and George White opposed it. -Bachelor and Mrs. Overton supported a combination bond lease purchase election in November, offering voters a cboace between the two funding alternatives. while trustees Kopp. Westberg and White opposed it. -Mrs. Overton and White voted for a lease purchase election in November and trustees Kopp, Bachelor and Westberg voted "no." Supe rintende nt Jerome Thornsley said Tuesday's vote not to plan a lease purchase election in November rules that funding alternative out for that election because of the extensive preparation required for the complex ballot measure. A lease purchase measure must specify an exact tax rate increase and name fac1ltt1es and sites for which the generated tax revenue would be used. A tease purchase election requir es si mple majority approval to pass, whereas a bond election mus t win two·thirds voter approval lo pass. The Capistrano school dastnct has had two unsuccessful bond electaons. one 1n March, 1976, and the more recent on May 3 of this year Both received majority voter approval. but failed to win the required two·thirds vote Thornstey recommended a lease purc hase election in November Tuesday as the "next bes t alternative" to a bond election. He has predicted class room overcrowding will reach crisis proportions unless the district takes steps now to provide for incoming students. The Capistrano school district encompasses about 20 percent of Orange County land, much of it undeveloped. It includes the communities or San Clemente. Capistrano Beach, Dana Point. Laguna Niguel . San Juan Capistrano and part of Mission Viejo District off1c1als have projected an 8,000·sludent enrollment leap in the next five years. Trus tee Overton s aid s he supported a lease punhase election as a "last ditc h measure" but one which might pass because or the simple majority vote required. ·'It's hard lo· believe people would choose the more expensive way to go," said board president Kopp, noting that the lease fi>Urchase aJternalive would raise tbe tax rate, while the bond issue would not. "Still. more and more lease purchase elections are passang in the state," said Tbornsley. "Generally school supporters are school supporters." Freedom Urged SEOUL, South Korea CAPJ - The National Assembly in a move presumably appro\ted In advance by President Park Chung·hee urged him today to free violators or his 1975 decree bannini dissent. OAANQI COAST H DAILY PILOT NearSaa8ua• Suspect Admits 2 OC Slayings By TOM BARLEY Of I• o.u, ...... t ••ll One of two men JUverslde County uuthonUes believe may be llnk~d to as many H 28 homosexual killings in· Southern California a!\scrledly ha s confessed lo two Orange County .slayings, it was learned today. Oranee County Sheriff's Capt. Robert Grlfreth said one of the two suspects held in Riverside has mdi,:ated that he and his l'Ompanion murdered two young men whe>l>e bodies were found in lhe Ortega Highway ar~ near San Juan Capistrano. <Related Story. Page Al). Riverside authorities have booked Patrick Wayne Kearney, 37, and David Hill, 34 , of Redondo Beach on two counts of murder. They were held with bail set at SS00,000 each. f'rorn Page Al SUSPECTS. • them in connection with th<• stayings of John Lamay, 17, or El Segundo, and Arturo Marquez. 24, of Oxnard. They we re persuaded by their families to return and surrender, aulhoril1es said. Kcarnev and Hill. 34. han· been charged with ~e Lamay and Marquez s la y an As Authorit ies say they arc questioning them an connection with at least 28 slayings. Several of the victims. including Lam:iy,.. were found wrapped in plru.hc trash bags and the case has become known as the "tras h bag murders." Griffeth refused tod·ay to 1dentlfy the su•pect who reportedly has confirmed for Riverside aqd Orange County uuthorltles that he and. his companion dumped two bodies in the Ortega fllghway area. Neither body has been identlCied. And Griffeth made it clear today that the accused pair may not have been aware of the victims' names at the time they were mutilated and murdered. One of the two victims was round Aug. 22 by a hiker who kicked a trash bag off the road and then discovered that it was stuffed with human remains. The second victim linked lo Kearney and Hill was that of a man aged about 21 who had been sexually assaulted and also shot in the head. The body. round Oct. 6, was badly decomposed and was discovered less than a mite from the location of the first corpse. Authorities in four counlle:, have already dubbed Kearney and Hill "lhe .trash bag killers." They believe the pair may have been responsible for as many as 4!8 murders. Orange County investigators have spent several days working with Riverside authorities on the in vesligallon. They also have s pent some time m Redondo Beach. the home town of the two s us pects, in the belief that one or the two Ortega victims may ha\'e come 1 rom that area. "We are realty just waiting for R1vers1de to pass the ball to us." Grtffeth said today. "Los Angeies County and San Diego County officers also want lo talk to these two men bul we wilt just have lo take our turn.·· Coast Church Aide Freed After Hijack SALT LAKE CITY (AP> -The president of a Mormon mission in Chile and his assistant were released unharmed after the Chilean airliner lhey were traveling in was hijacked, a church spokesman says. Jerry Cahill. spokesman for the Church of Jesus Chnsl of Latter·day Saints. said President Berkley A. Spencer and Elder Joel T. Peck. 20. of Huntington Beach, were released Tuesday in Lima. Peru. Cahill said the two had boarded the aircraft in Arab Bomb· ... Injures 21 PETAH TIQVA , Israel (AP> -A pipe bomb apparently planted by Arab terrorists under a vegetable s tand ripped through a bustling open·air market in this Tel Aviv suburb today. injuring 21 persons, fi ve of them seriously. It was the worst bombing in Israel since May 1976, when a booby-trapped motor scooter blew up in Jerusalem. killing one person and injuring 29. Police warned Israelis to be on the alert for new terrorist attacks. From Page Al CUBA ••• Tbe former UCI professor said they told him they thought lbe Cuban vessel, which was not flying a flag, might have been a pirate shlp when it approached their vessel "in a menacing manner." Reldt bas been on a year·IOl'll sailing odysaey which has taken him to the Galapagos 181~1 tbroulh the Panama Canal ano up the Amazon Rtver. His youne crew are eltb•r former students or chl!dren of rrtendl. •'ffe•a an cxceUent aallor;• Mrs. Skl.fte added. Arica, Chile. to fly to Santiago. The plane, a Boeinj? 727 operated by Chile's Ladeco air· line, was hijacked shortly arter it took off from Arica by four young· leftists who ordered it to Llma. where it landed. None of the plane's 56 passengers and crew members were hurt. The Peruvian government arran~ed temporary asylum for the hijackers at the Venezuelan embassy in Lima. Elder Peck, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Peck or Huntington Beach, has been serving as a missionary for 18 months. President Spencer, a Logan, Utah, native, was an associate profesgor of history at Brigham Young University before going to Chile. f'rom Pctge Al JURY ••• recapped its recommendation for ex\>ansion. to the board of supervisors. It went on to point out that an extension of the runway will "allow departing aircraft to reach a greater altitude before overflying noise sensitive residentJal areas south of the airport." How-ever, that finding is disputed by those Individuals and organizations mainly In the Newport Beach area who oppose the expanslon projects recommended by the Grand Jury. They have assailed the environmental lmp11ct report for failing to come to &rips with the environmental effeeta of specific proposed projects, The opponents also have r4ulted the four.year, $300,000 lllrport study for representing what they call ••a general plan for the airport" rather than a study or specific proposals. F....-PageAJ STAMP ••• sc;Ai.~: 1 1 .. c11 • eoo tut ~ TWO-YEAR PROJECT--CalTrans is expected to begin next month a $4.9 million:'project to realign and widen the Culver Drive interchange at the Santa Ana Freeway in Irvine. Shaded area in the above map shows new construction, while white areas designate existing roa- dway. Project will widen overpass bridge, realign roa- dway and increase the number of ramps. Clemente Woman Helpless Four Days An elderly San demente woman fell in her home and lay helpless without food or water for four days before a worried neighbor alerted police Tuesday. Police forced open the front door or the house, at 229 Via San Andreas, and found 80-year-old Georgia E. McCay still conscious on the noor just next to her bed. Firemen who rendered emerg. ency medical treatment said she was dehydrated and had broken a hip. They said Mrs. McCay told them. "I feel all right." She told firemen she got out or bed Saturday to go to the bathroom when her root turned under her and she fell to the floor. She was unable to get to the telephone. walk or crawl for help. Marjorie Watts, 50, the neighbor who called police, said Mrs. McCay had managed to pull an electric blanket over her. Mrs. McCay was reported in satisfactory condition today at San Clemente General I lospital. • "Do you believe in ESP?" Mrs. Watts said wonderingly today, recalling why she became worried for her neighbor. ''I really truly think I have to believe In it now." Mrs. Watts said she rose early Tuesday, determined to do some work on an oil painting she was doing of the San Juan Capistrano train depot. "But I f elt totally uncomfortable," she said. "I couldn't even pick up the brushes to start it. "The next thing I knew, I'm going outside, standing in the middle or the street -for no reason -looking at my lands- caping. ... and tbe newspapers in front of Mrs. McCay's house." She said, "All those papers stacked up-it just shook me up. I dashed into the house. I tried to call her on the pbone. I couldn't get her. I tried to call some neighbors, but nobody was home. Then I called police." Probed Sheriff's and coroner's officers are investigating the dealb ol an inmate who died Tuesday nl&ht in his Orange County Jail celt. Officers aald Terry De•n Hawkins, 26, ot Garden Grove, appeared to hav·e vomited ln bis steep and choked to death. They said there was no evidence offoul play. Jail supervisors said Hawkins was arrested July 4 on the beach at Treasure Cove In the L8'UJ'ti 1 Beach area. He was booked lnto the jail on charges or using and being under the Influence of drugs. They said Hawkins appeared to be in normal healtb during the day Tuesday aod made no complaints or illness before relirmg to has Jail cell. Officers s aid it may be necessary to perform an autopsy lo determine the exact cause ol his death. Ex-Chapman President, J. Davis, Buried Memorial services were conducted Tuesday for John L. Davis, president emeritus of Chapman College. who suffered a fatal heart attack Saturday al the ageor72. · Dr. Davis served as president of Chapman College in Orange· for 14 years until has retirement an 1971. Up until two years ago. Or. Davis did part·time work on campus as president emeritus. Dr. Davis, a recent resident of Tustin and a tong·time Santa Ana resident, is survived by his wire. Mary Reede r Davis; two children, Robert Lowell Davis and Judy Davis Allen, both Orange County residents; one stepson. Michael Reeder; seven ~randchildren. and one great- grandchild. Prior to his work at Chapman College, Dr. Davis served as dean at Lynchburg College in Virginia and at Hiram College in Ohio. When he started at Chapman there were just 300 students. Wben he left in 1971, the campus, had grown lo about l,SOO students. The John L. Davis Memorial fund has been established at Chapman College in his honor. Drexel wall systems to fit every space and please every taste Repeat ourselves? Never• W1lh so individualistic a selection ol Orexeic wall systems. each stCfage scheme Is exactly suited 10 your space ~mnatioos. • and yr:Nr taste. Our design stall W111 show you crisply styled conlem· porary cases. e11011c 1eak·l1nished pieces bright with ohinoisfme. un11::. rich in baroque C\Jr\les and panelr1nq l=uncteonal touches are equally var ied. fromdropdes~and bars to silver drawers. TV and steteo spaces and display cas,. wl\h lghted shelv<ls Walls tor an. we say. and-thanks to Drexel-never the 1ametw1cel • '•·cine duy' NYSE COMPOStl'E · TRANSi\CTIONS 2 p.m. (EDT) Price• ... .. -· Wednet.day, Julye 1977 s OAILV PILOT 89 mde,Save Quiet Campsites Luted By SYLVIA PORTER For u vacaUon adventure on a shoestring lh1s :.u mmt•r. try the little-known areas in America':. National Park System. These olf·the·beaten-palh places orter as muctt or the nation's beauty and as vivid a portrayal of our hent~&e as at the well-known parks visited by millions ell"ch summer. There's one difference -no crowds. Where to go? From the U.S. Department or Interior, tf1e department responsible for most nallonnlly owned pub it• lands and natural resources, come theae sueaesllons: -nlE DEEP SOUTH. LOOK INTO Horseshoe liefld National Military Park, Daviston, Ala., 12 miles north':or Oadevllle and 18 miles northeast of Alexander Crt,y. Camping facilities are n~urby In Wind Creek Stult.> Pirk. Talledega National ' Money's Worth Forest and Mt. Chcaka State Park. The park 1~ the site of the March 27. 1814, battle on the Tallapoosa River. when Gen. Andrew Jackson':. forces broke the power of the Creek Indian Confederacy and opened Alabama a'hd other parts of the old Soulh to :.cltlcmcnl -The Southwest. Arizona hns a host of lesser known parks orrering picnicking. campgrounds. scenic drive~. aulded tours. museums. ruins. campfire programs. visitor centers, exhibits. Indian crafts and trading posts. Amon& them: Canyon De Chelly National Monumcu~t. Chinle; Casa Grande Ruins National Monument, Coolitlgl': Coronado National Memorial. llert>ford . Fort Uowk National Historicat Site, Bowie. Chmcuhua N:..itional Monument. Wilcox. -Midwest: There arc great purks in M1ch1Jiii11. Minnesota. Wisconsin and other nearby slate:. IN MICHIGAN. PICTURED ftot:b NallOl\lll Lakeshore, Munising, is a superlative scc1m· 11rcu on La"e Superior with multl·colored sandstonr cliHs. bro,~d beaches. dunes, waterfalls. inland lakes. ponds. marslttls. hardwood and coniferous forests. numerous bmls and animals. There are primitive camping sen ices and stall' campgrounds. fishing. hiking. swimming. hunting. ~fouls and lod&ing are available in Mun1sin1; and (;rand !\lara1:.. In Minnesota, there is Voya~t·urs National Pafk. International Falls. A w1lderne~s cxpl•m•n<•c can be cnJOYed in an historical setting the worlcJ of I hl' f''rcnch Canadian Voyageurs --in the fore:.tcd lake t•ountry along the state:- northern bord<.-r. Fishing. boating. bo.Jl ~ind c.inoe faclllt1c:. excursion and forest service campJ,!ruunds all :in• thc11• Resort. motel und hotel 1aciht11•., <ire• 1n ne;arb' International Falls, In Wisconsin, Apost.le llllund!> '.\<1l10nJI Lukeshon'. Bayfield. orrers the dramatic beaut~ or rocky ISiand~ Ill Uw middle of Lake Superior. largest fn•!>h "'utcr l.1ke 111 tbc• world. The park is accessible hy boat ll-11\ In!( <lally from Bayfield. Meals and lim1lcd lodg1111i< urc a' ullublc m Buy(ield. white the park offers charter bout!>, fishing. limited swlmmmg. sailin~. hunting. lrulll'r und C'amps1lc:- State campgrounds are in nearby Stockton 1::-lund -VIRGINIA AND NOUTll CAROLI N \. Several l11s toric sites provide exhibits. tours. campmg and hiking trails from Appomallox National llislorical Park nt Appomattox. Va .. to the Carl Sandhurg llom1· Nationul Jfostoric Site at Flat Rock. N .C'. For guides to off-beat holltlays, send SI ln lht• Superintendent of 0()('uments. U.S Guvc·rnment Pnnlan~ Office. Washington. D C 20102 and n•qu1·-.l "V1,11 .1 Lt·sst>t Used Park."' Ask for No 024-005·00S89 Countians Report Job Promotions BanJt of America has announced the £ollowing pcrsori- nel appointments: -&aHn Sou1ley, Huntington Beach, has been appointed escrow officer al the Los Altos office m Long Beach. With B6fA since 1973, she is rormer escrow processor at the Paramount branch. -Unde Esbe has been named reul estate loan officer .<1 the Brookhurst-Adams branch In Huntington Beach. Sht- w aa previously on the Orange County Los Angeles coast regional headquarters staff. · ·-Todd Derr, Westminister , hus been appointed corta- m erclal loan officer al the Vernon branch. He joined BofA m 1972 and previously worked in the Pac1fic-Frultlantl ~~~. . -Carla Jesse. Westminster. has been named manager oC the Walnut-Fair Oaks branch In Pasadena . She is form~ Joan officer at the Glendale maln office. --&lrtey Melvin, Westminster. has been named opero· tions oCficer of the City Centre branch in Orange. She•is former ualstant operations officer at the Santa Ana maln office. . -Evelyne Meyers has been named assistant managfol" for loans at the El Toro office. She held the same post at u.:t> San Juan Capistrano office for two years -&eve Pease, San·Juan1Caplstrano. h1ts Joined the bank u a consumer Joan officer at the Anaheim main office. lte 11 former manager of the Costa Mesa office of Dial Finance Company. • • Gene Frhelle has been appointed branch manager for Martners Savlq1 Jn Laguna Belch. He bas more than 16 years' experience ln the banking and savlnas and loan ~­ dustry. • Lawrence A. Farquhar, manager at Wella FarJO Bank's El Toro otnce since il opened in 1972, has been pro- moted to asalatant vice president and manager. A form,r lieutenant commander In the Navy, ht Joined the bank aft.tir hill retirement from the aervl'CO In 1964 . • Enlle McGiil, Fountain ValJey, bas been named mana~er or the two Huntington Beach offices or Ho• Federu Savtap alld .Loan ANoelaUon of San Dle10. An ~· siatant viC!O p,._ldeot, be wu ma1\ recenUy man11er ot tbe usoelaUon•a ~al Beach o/nce. • He ta paai Pt"M!dent ot both lh• Lakewood and st&I Bea ell Olambora ot Commerce and tho Oranco Count.)' Sa'<· lnl• and Loan La.,ue. . . .... -