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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-08-03 - Orange Coast Pilot--·•~.::..=!.___...._ ..... ·-·. --~~=----~---·_:-::":~~--. .. r _Bo • DAILY PILOT Supervisor's Aide * * * 10' * * * Cleared of Charges WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 3, 1977 YOL 1'1, lllO 111, 4 HCTIOltl, • ...... • • • • • CIAD ..._..s, Hypnosis, Shock Told Boyfriend Cleared Police Hllnt CdM Killer By ARTHUR R. VINSEL OI U• 0.llf "*' llett A manhunt continued today for the killer who slipped into a young woman's Corona del Mar llpartment as she slept before dawn Tuesday and bllldgeoned her to death in her bed for no apparent reason. The victim's ex-boyfriend was picked up by Newport Beach * * ... Bank SW1pect Fint Cleared On Death Rap police for questioning later in the day and cleared, but was then ar· rested on suspicion or a Southland bank robbery spree in a novel twist to the case. Jane Ellen Bennington, 29, or 322 Marguerite Ave., was slain apparenUy by a severe blow to the bead with a heavy blunt in· strument, said N«:wport Beach Police Detective Sgt. Ken Thompson. No murder weapon has been located. She was discovued about 1: 30 p.m. by her roommate who went to awaken the unemployed former social worker with whom she bad gone out nightclubbing Monday, investigators said. Miss Bennington was killed d she lay in bed, retired for the night and apparently already asleep, Sgt. Thompson said to· day. Investigators said there was no indication of any struggle with the attacker at all. The victim was partially clothed but Sgt. Thompson declined to reveal whether she had been sexually molested. •'She was last seen by her roommate about 2 a .m., in the parking lot at Morio 's Restaurant," Sgt. Thompson "added. · "They'd been to Bobby McGee's," he explained. Miss Bennington had already given ber parking check to the lot attendant and •as waiting for de· livery of her car, so her room· mate left with a friend, Ser1eant Thompson explained. lte said the women •ent to the Paclftc Coast ~way nl1ht club fairlY olten Ud the vtcttm's roommate said it wu common <See~YING, Pate Al> I Conte Right On In 1 ·Director To Acts Marshall Thompson. sweeps up after neighbor's car plowed into garage at his Costa Mesa home about 4 p.m. Tuesday. Thompson, of 272 Albert Place, told Police he was eating' a banana in his house when he heard the crash. When he opened the garage door. he found neighbor Ellen 1 Dead, 8 Hurt Ul?f11611 ...... 9'~1C.-W McDonatd•s car parked inside. The woman, 274 Albert Place, told officers she accidentally hit the accelerator instead of the brake while parking her auto in her garage. Car sped through back of her garage and into Thompson's. She wasn't ·hurt, police said. W ASIIlNGTON (AP) -CIA Director Stanlfield Turner• testified today that newly di&. covered documents disclosed the CIA apon.soi-ed 149 projects in- volvinl druJJ, hypnosis. sboct harassment and even malicians as It experimented with control· lng the &uman mind. Turner told a joint hearing of the Senate Intellifence Commit· tee and the Health subcommittee that the project, known ultimate- ly as MK-ULTRA, took place from 12 to 25 years ago. "I assure you that the CIA ls in no way engaied in either witlinf or unwitting testing of drugs to-day," be said. Turner told the committee the documents, hitherto vnreported to Congress, Y'ere found in seven boxes alonGwith financial re- cords in w records center near Washington. 'l'be documents, tn the rorm ol fiscal records, do not include status reports or progress analyses ol the various parts ol theprojecL But be said the agency ls "now in possession of the names of 185 nongovemment researchers and assistant.a who are identified in the recovered material dealinl with the 149subprojects. .. The names or 80 institutions where work was done or wiUl which these people affiUated are also mentiooed." be continued. <SeeCIA. Paae A2> Coast ) DAILY ,.,LOT s w.an..Oa , A u•t 3, 11n BB "Ble••lng' ,.,..,._,.J Teens to Stage Anti-drug Rally SLAYING ••• • for the attendant.a to part her car ln Morto'a loL Bobby McGee's is one ot the Harbor Area's bot spots for slnalea to congr~1ale and the lot la often full, so the Morio's lot is UHd when the cafe la closed. l~fllti&at.ors said there is no evidence anyone accom~anied lrfiss Bennington to her shared apartment on the tree-shaded street coutward ol Pacific Cout Hlihway. A ~hi1ous ~nll drua tTUHd• has received lht Hunlin1toa Beach Cit> CQUnrll '1 bl•ttnJ for a planned Sunday afternoon downtown area t.,mp~111n wbJch includes U'>t• of a moblll' louds~aJter to spread the word Th~ councat voted 6 to 1 Mon d •y lo allow Don Vena, an ,.,....r~AJ AIDE ••• And polare said 22·year-old Mae Katberme Ferrell, also of tbe 20th Street address, bad broken all the windows m the Hill apartment. battered all the doors and was throwinl whatever she could lay her hands on a(llinst the apartment walls. Mi.ss Ferrell and a 17-year-old Juvenile, purportedly her brother, were taken into custody a nd charged with receiving stolen property and possession of marijuana for sale. ..And a few hours later when mu telephoned police, he was invited to come down to the station for a chat. He declined. By Monday police were so con· cerned about ll!ll's failure lo ap- pear that they announced they would seek an arrest warrant. Later in the day, Anthony an- nounced the suspension of his aade until "everything is cleared up .. The clearing up apparently hegan when police rechecked their computeraicd stolen prop· crty last and discovered the s us· pect stereo equipment had been s tolen, receovered and then purchased by HHI at a police auc- tion Apparently the other atcms taken from Hill 's apartment 1''ri- d a y evening could not be matcht>d on the stolen property list. Moreover, whale an estimated 15 ounces of marijuana was al · lcgcdly found an the apartment, it could not be tanked to Hiii. As a result, the Anthony aide is no longer being sought by the pohce or, for that matter, sus- pected of committing any crimes. But Miss Ferrell as on her way lo court, no longer charged with receiving stolen property, but stall facing charges related to the IS ounces of marijuana. Orana., County Tffn Ohalltn1• otncta.I, to UH the loudspeaker mounted on a van to call out to youth while drlvina around, en· c·ouratglnf them to stay away from druib and •lcOhol. Councilman Ron Shenkman voted a&alnat the one·day catn- palan becauae ol a po11lble viola- tion between church and state und potential precedent set for future requests. "Some people will be of· fended," Shenkman said. "Good luck," he told Vena. But Councilwoman Harriet Wieder disagrttd. "They should not be deprived o( tbear right to free speech," said Mrs. Wieder. Vena said Huntln&ton Beach was the first Orange County city to be chosen for this type ol cam- " paign because if ita hi&h drug abu.se rate. The Teen Challenge official, who speaks ln schools about drug abuse, said the campaign would last only from 1to4 p.m . The van with the loudspeaker would only travel in the area bounded by Pacific Coas t Highway, Palm Avenue and Main and 17th Streets. City Attorney Don Bonfa said the loudspeaker uae is leaal if done within "reasonable limits." Shenkman said be was "totally opposed" to the idea. "We'll be inn undated by other requests." But Councilwoman Wieder and Mayor Ron Pattinson pointed out the political candidates have used mobile loudspeakers in the past. Vena's challenge lo the council Monday did not bring all the re· suits he hoped it would. A former drug addict. Vena hoped the downtown venture would culminate in a meetine un- der the municipal pier "We've had rocks and bottles thrown at people preaching at t.he beach on weekends."" said Mayor Pattinson. The mayor urged Vena to find another place for his anll-drue rally. Pattinson referred to a Ju- ly 24 incident at the pier in which a Placentia minister and his wife had to be escorted after their sermon which caused a oear·riot An angry crowd of juveniles threw bottles at the evan1elist.s, police said. Vena said he would seek relu1e at a private residence or church for the rally. Fro.Pi.geAJ CIA PLOTS BARED. • • "The inst1tul1ons include 44 colleges or universitJes, 15 re- search foundations or chemical and pharmaceutical Companies and the like, 12 hospitals or clinics ... and three penal in- stitutions." Adm. Turner did not name any or the individuals or institutions in his prepared testimony. ··Most of the people and institu- tions involved are not aware of agency sporisorship," he said. Turner hid one contribution of $375,00Q to a private medical in- st\tution 's building fund was made through an intermediary to make it appear as a private donation. He said the institution was not told the true source of the gift. Turner said the CIA has in- formation lbat some unwitting drug testing was carried on in San Francisco and New York Ci- ty. involving three individuals. "We also know now that some unwitting testing took place on criminal sexual psycopaths con· fined at a state hospital and that, additionally, research was done on a knockout or 'k' drug in parallel with research to develop pain killers for cancer patients. Tu.mer s aid he ls working with Attorney General Griffin Bell to make available whatever materials Bell may need for any d°f'ANGICOAIT s DAILY PILOT investigation he may decide to begin. He said be is working with both the attorney general and Joseph A. Califano Jr., the secretary of health, education and welfare, to determine whether it ls practical to attempt to identify any of the persons~ whom drugs may have been administered unwittingly. "No such names are part of these records," be said. "but we are working to determine It there are adequate clues to lead to thelr identification: and U so, how to go about fuUUlinJ the 1ov- emment's respon.sibUittes in the matter." On Tuesday, the CIA released documents showing the agency conducted a secret 2S-year proj- ect in which· mind-alterinl d.nais were tested on humans to 1auge the drugs' ability to ditturb memory. change sex patterns a nd c reate aberrational responses. Those documents revealed a. drug experimentation prosram far more extensive than the agency has admitted publicly and one which may have been discontinued only recently. The documenta, released un· der the federal Freedom ot Jn. formation Act, depict various aspects of druf testlne and behavior reseattb and bad been cited lb a July IS staten'UJtt by TUmer to Coasres•. The documents ahow the CJA decision to embark on a drua t~ Pl'Oll'am bl !NJ l1'8W out of concern about tbe ''bbarre conduct of Jo11ef Cardinal Minds&enty .. who COnfeaed to treason whil~ on trial lll Bud~ Detective Serseant Thompson aald she had apparently left. a slldina &Jass door open for ven- tilation Tu the muggy heat and this ts believed to have been the point ol entry. He said a window screen at tbe front of the apartment was smashed out and found bent on the lawn, adding that this is believed to be the poJnt where the intruder fled the premises. Miss Bennington's green and black 1970 Camaro sport coupe was found routinely parked. I nveatigators declined to s peculate on the obvious possibility someone attracted to the victim followed her borne from the night club and waited until she bad retired to eain en- try. He said the victim and her ex- boyfriend, James Steven Gano, 28, a resident of the Ambassador Motel in Santa Ana, broke up on- ly several days ago and so he became a losical suspect. "Police had information to auneat he might have violent tendencies,·• Sgt Thompson said, noting a search was im- mediately initiated for Gano, an auto financing executive Investigators said his car was spotted and pulled over about 5:30 p.m. and Gano willingly ac- companied investigators to the station where questioning and a polygraph examination cleared him Orange County coroner's in- vestigators anticipated comple- tion or an autop!ly today to dis- cover the exact cause o( death. No mortuary had been selected to handle the remains yet today. No motive has been developed at all at this stage, Sergeant Thompson said this morning. "She just came home, un- dressed , neatly folded her clothes and went to bed. And someone whomped her on the head ... he said erimly. * * * rro..PageAl SUSPECT ••• lng booked and their eyes popped when he produced a bankroll ot about 100 crisp, new $10 bilJs from hia pocket. "One ot our IUYS, Detective Gary Black, said to himsell 'Gee, he shouldn't ~ carryin«i that much money'," said Detective Capt. Rich Hamilton. Investigators began grilling Gano about the origin of the sus· plclous cash and further ex· amtnalion allegedly revealed a California First NaUonal Bank stamp. The suspect also closely re. aembled the so-called Baseball Cap Bandit who has struck re· peatedly in the past two months, making off with thousands of dollars. AuthoriUes said Gano also closely resembles the description· ' of the bandit who struck the Hun- tington Beach bank at 17122 Beach Blvd., within the hour before Gano was deWnecl. • Teller Kathy Vorwerk told police a tall, husky man with freckles and carrot-orange hair slicked down presented her with a note that explained be was rob- bing the bank. No gun bas been seen or ap. parently utilited in tbe string ol holdups by the redhead wearing a baseball cap1 authorities aaid. The Baseball Cap Bandit is believed responsible for the rob- be r y of both the United California Bank at 3141 E. Coast Highway in Corona el Mar on Ju. ly 21 anct the Manufacturer's Banlt holdup at 1201 Dove st .• July 29, pollcesald. He hai also struck two bank.a in Costa Mesa durin6 the apree in· volvlna stickups occurrin1 sometimes twice in one da)'. •"No maney linked to any other robberi• bu been recovered," Detec!Uve s,t. Tbompsoa 8lid t.o- daJ. . IBSoicide Contract. Cancels Strike Dry .. .u bancera In Onns• and IM Anfd• cou.ntlea 1'Gted ovuwbelmbiab' TuOlday to ac- cept a new three-year c:antnct. •Vert.Ina a potentJal strike. ••'l'bey r~Ulied tho new con· trtct bf about 3 to I," Jim JCllMll. • 1pcke1man ror tb• banpn at Carpenter'• Unloa LOeal aai. aa.tdtoday. Jones did not have \'CM r«aru tor nll>e Mil(bbodU .. southern c.llfomla counties wbkb wen also involved in the new tbree- year aereement. Be said, bQwever, 75 petc•nt of the workers involved are locat.ed in Or~e and Loe An&elea coun· Ues. The new aareement, developed ln last·r.llnute ne&otlationa, takes eftect retroactt ve to A\ll. 1. Homer Bartles, Southern Calllomia Dry Wall Contracton Association exeeutl•e director, said today the new contract would mean an lncreue lb bous· tng COits to the consumer. "Every home will rise in cost about 10. 7 percent to every sub- contractor," Bartles eQlai.oed. He said a 10-callecl "deiree of difficulty" work clause in the new agreement would mean an additi()(lal Z.3 percent increase in cost to the subcObtractor, total- ing about a 13 percent cast in· crease overall. o.lty"'"9t ...... 0My_ DET. SAM AMBURGEY lNSPECTS BROKEN.SCREEN The clause provides a slllfitly higher rate per square foot for difficult work done on a home. Is This How Kiiier Left Murdered Woman's Home? F,....PageAJ Meanwhile, s triking dry wall finishers have returned to work through the use of interim agree- ments with dry wall contractors. The agreements are temporary and become invalid once a final a1reement is reached in the weeks-old labor dispute. BOMBS WTNY ••• M anbattan streets, and police roped off many of them for vehicular and pedestrian midday traffic. Officials said at least three suspicious devices were found in their searches, including a bomb found on the 10th floor of an American Brands office build· ing on Park A venue. The first blast went orr in a Department of Defense office on the 21st floor of a building at 43rd Street and Madison Avenue about 9:35 a.m. About an hour tater, the second explosion hit the first floor of the Mobil building. No irtjurles were reported in IF the Defense Department ex· plosion, but police said one man died and at least six people were injured at the Mobil offices. Another person was reported lo have suffered a heart attack at the Mobil offices. Police declined to identify the dead man. They said at least three of the injured were in serious condition. The tens of thousands of workers evacuated from the Chase Manhattan, Mobil Oil and World Trade Center buildings were told by loudspeaker to go home. . . I ( Dry wall contract.ors associa- tion attorneys in San Diego Tues- day were denied a restraining or· der to halt use o( the temporary agreements. Negotiations between the dry wall contractors and finishers were held Monday but failed to result in progress towards a new agreement. A federal mediator bas been called into the ne&otiation.s. you haven't seen it, see it today! Save up to """ 40% Liter It too fate. to .-e •antqa of thlt oppotb nityl Only hours left. 'to corY'9 ... whit tl'le ~ of dlstinc:ftye home flltnlshlnp II alf about at sat. pr-. Tatc. l<Mntap of ~ ~ on cunwit a dltccntlnued lines ~ our entire stor. encS M¥e ftom JO to~ You'lt,.. fOOITI •fttt room of ~ hcmef~-~ dec:cm"9 erid ~ Yes. e ~ to .... &tOf9 COuld a. tha atllt of • ..,.. ,,.. ... .,,.. for "" ) ·~-z ... -•_•I _ -----_ ---_ ------_--=.--.......a._...a__1iifir,.:~ .. Orange Ceast EDITION VOL. 70, NO. 215, • SECTIONS, '8 PAGES ' To••Y'• Closlag N.Y.Stoeks G TEN CEN CIA ~Driigs, Hypnosi.S, Hagie Rev.ealed W UNGTON CAP> -Ct.A DlrtcM>r StanafleJd Turntr t.ati&d tOday Lb&l newly dl.s · covcnid cloc\lmenta dbclOMd tbe CIA IPQID'JI ed t projectt \ft. votftns d:rup. b.1Pnolls. •bock baraaman and even maitdans as ll eXperimarted with control· ma Uie lt.&mAD a:ll.ad. ~ toad a Joint be'1'ina of the Senate tDt.eW1ence Commit· tee mw:l the Health aubcommtUee that the project, known ultlmale- ly as MK·ULTRA, took place trom 12 to~ yeara aco. "I uau.re you that Ult CIA ls ln oo way encaced in ell.her wttUn1 Ot' unwtt.Unl testln' ot drua• to-day." bt 1af4. Tu.mer told the committee the document.I, hitherto unreported to Congress, were found in seven boxes a1ona with financial re· cords in a records ceoter near W ashlnit.on. The documents, in the form of fiscal records, do not in~lude status reports or procress anal)'ffl ol lhe various parts of the project. But he aald the aaency ia "now ln pouessloa o( the names of 185 nonaovenuneol researchers and a11lstanta who are idenUfled in the recovered material dealing f"Wlth tb&l49subprojects. ''The names of 80 instilutlons where work was done or with which these people affiliated are also mentioned," be continued. "The institutions include 44 colleees or universities, 15 re· . sear.ch foundatlOJlJ or chemical and pharmaceutical Companies and Ole Ilk•. 13 hospitals or clinle1 •.. and three penal ln· atituUons." Adm. Turner did not name any of the J.Ddividuala or lnatituUons in bis prepared testimony. ••Most of the people and tnstitu· lions involved are not aware ol agency aponaorahlp, • • he sald. Turner said one contrib\ltioo Qf $375,000 to a private medlcal In· stituUon's bulldlag Nild was made through an intermediary to make it appear as a private donation. He 1aid the lnstitutlon was not told the true source of the Sift. · Turner u.1d the CIA bas in· formation that so,me unwitting _drue testin& was carried on in San Francbco and Ne• York Cl· ty, In vol Ying three individuals. ::~ know now that some qnwi testing took place OI') er sexual ps)'copat.bs con· flned at a state hospital and that. add1Uooally, research was done on a knockout or 'k' dru& in parallel wtth research to develop pain ldllen for cancer patients. Turner said he Ls working with Attorney General Griffin Bell to make available whatever materials Bell may need for any investiaatloo he may decide to belin. He said be ls working with both the attorney general and Joseph A. Calltano Jr., the secretary ot health. educatloo and welfare. Police Hunt-W olllan's Killer Marshall Thompson, sweeps up after neighbor's car plowed into garage at his Costa Mesa home about 4 p.m. Tuesday. Thompson, of 272 Albert Place, told police he was eating a banana in his house when he heard the ct'~. When he opened the garage door. he found neighbor Ellen McOonald's car perked inside. The woman, 274 Albert Place. told officers sne accidentally hit the ac:celerator instead of the brake while parking her auto in her garage. Car sped through back of her garage and into Thompson's. She wasn 'l hurt, police said. Witness Says Suspect Hired Her ro Torture Police ·Won't File On ~thony's Aide By PHlUP ROSMARIN °'"" o.lty ~ ... , ..... A witness testified today that Fred Berre Dou1las, 54, ol Costa Mesa. hired her to torture and dismember five actresses durine the filming of a porno "snuff" movie in th& San Bernardino desert. "He said he wanted torture scenes, dismemberment, that it would lake a strong stomach, and did I think I could do lt," said Pamela Sue Williams, a petite brunette who alleeedly was to star in the film. Miss Williams. who described · herself as a prostitute and heroin user, 1'8S the first witness ID the preUmloary bearlo1 into at· <SeeTO&T1JRE. Pap Al) broken all the windows in the Hill apartment, battered all the doors and was throwing whatever she could lay her bands on a&ainst the apartment walls. Miss Ferrell and a 11.year-old juvenile, purportedly her brother, were taken into custody and charged with receiving stolen property and possession of marijuana for sale. , · And a few hours later when Hill telephoned police. he was invited to come down to the station for a (See AIDE, Pase AZ> Firemen Quell Canyon Bl4ze, Oranie CO\lnty firefighter& aJ. tacked end quickly extingtlisbed a small brush tlre shortly after.it broke out In Black Star Can)'(lb Just before noon today. The. blue located about three mUes up Black Star Canyop Road from Santlaco Can)'on Roacl blatkeaed only about two to th""8 acres. J'ire Capt. Bruce Turbeville •&id I CIUM WU expected to be dettriiUMd later t.Oday. Friend Queried, Released By AllTHUR &. VINSEL oeu. o.11,,..... ,~ A manhunt continued today for the killer who slipped into a young woman's Corona del Mar apartment as she slept before dawn Tuesday and bludgeoned her to death in her bed for no apparent reason. The victim 'a U ·boyfrlend was picked up by Newport Beach police for quesUonln1 later ln the day and cleared, but wu then ar· rested on su1plolon ot a Southland bank robbery spree in a novel twist to the cue. Jane Ellen Bennington, 29, of al2 Marguerite Ave .. wu slain apparestly by a Mvere blow to the bead with a heavy blunt ln· strument. said Newport Beach P'olice Detective S1t. Ken Thompson. No marda' weapon bu been located. Shew• discovered about 1:30 p.m . by her roommate who went to awaken tbe unemployed former IOciaJ worker with wtM>m she bad gooe out nl1htclubblng Monday, lnveatJgaton said. Miu Bennineton WU killed U she lay ln bed, retired for tbe niibt and apparently alteady asleep, set. Thompson said to-day. lnveeutators said there was no lndlHUon of any strucgle with the attacker at all. The victim was partially ctotbed but Sgt. Thompson dedtned to reY4'al whether she had been sexually molested. "Sh& was last seen by ber roommate about 2 a.m., in the parking lot at Marlo 's Restaurant," Sgt. Thompson added. "They'd been to Bobby McGee's," be explained. Miss Bennington bad already given her parking e!heck to the lot attendant and was walUn1 for de· livery of bu car, so her room· mate Left with a rrtend, Ser1eant Thompson uptained. H~ uJd ~ women went to the Paclftc Cout ~hway ni&ht club fairly often and the vlcUm's roommate 1aid lt was common for the attendants to park her car iD.Marlo'alot. Bobby McGff's ls one of the Harbor Ar •'• bot apots lor ainal• to COftll'e&ate and tl\e lot is often ~1 ao the Mario's J~ is used when U\e cafe ls closed. Investi&aton said there ii no eviderMe anyone accompaliled Mi.sl Bennincton to her shared apartment on the tree·abaded atreet coanward of Pacific Coast Highway. Deteetive Ser1•ant TbOlnPlon aald . .,,_ had. appareaUy left a ~ tNt&IAYING,PaaeAI) • Oel~_.....~..,Wy ...... . ' 'Otr.1 S.AM AMBURGEY INSPECTS BROKEN SCREEN fa 'Th'• How Kiiier Left Murdered Wo"'en'a Home? Cleared· of Murder, Held in Robberies A tall, burly Santa Ana man, cleared minutes before ol the murder of his girlfriend in Corona Ciel Mar, was abruptly jailed by Newport Beach police Tuesday n1lht on allegatic:ms that be ii the notorious Baseball Cap Bandit. ./ ~-·---·,. -• t ---~-- c Lightning Bla~ed Hundreds of Eire1 in Sierra Range •1 n. A.lut'lal4Mt PNM Hundred• of flru ra1ed tbrou1b alalt aod natlonal partJud today all•r • ucond lbt of U1btnln1 bolt. Ouhed down on land dried by Call!onu.a '1 two-year dl'O\llbt. Weary flrefltbtua •Ot"Jltd double ~blfta a1 funUe .u~ tried t.o ~t crews lo Uw IMfcal blua. Otnclala HJ4 CDaQ)' a,.. had lo be left UD• cbeek.ed State ror"te.r G • ry hnlnJ uad h1bta1n1 In th• Sierra ,,. -TONIGlrl' COAST COMMUNITY CO~EGE BOARD -Re&War meeting, 1370Adams, 8p.m. "MACK AND MABEL"' - OCC Summer Mu s ical Auditorium, Aug. 3·~ 8.30 pm'. $2. MUSIC OF AMERICA -Free toncert, Showtunes with Jim Christensen and Pacific Pops Orchestra, South Coas~ Village, 7:30p.m. THURSDAY, AUGUST 4 "WITNESS FOR THE PROSECUTJON" Newport- M es a Summer Drama Workshop, Costa Mesa High Lyceum, Aug. 4-6, 8 p. m. $2. Red-haired Lady Bandit Sought in CM A woman with rrizzy red hair hidden under a bandana held up a Costa Mesa drive-in photo store Tuesday. escaping with $40. The clerk at the FotomatStore, 201 E. 17th St., said a woman wearing a red plaid blouse and levis approached the drive-in window at about 6:30 p.m. and stared at the clerk inside. When the Fotomat employe opened the window and asked if she could help the woman, the red-haired suspect simulated a weapon in her purse and de· manded money from the cub drawer. Arter checking to see no money was underneath the till, the woman walked of( toward the Safeway store and then broke in- to a run. The clerk said as the woman ran. she puUed ore the bandana from atop her head, revealing frizzy red shoulder length hair underneath. The woman is described as standing five feet six inches tall, weighing 135 J>()Wlds and between 25 and 26 yel\rs of age. Woman Eyed In Cash Theft 1' woman who entered a Costa Mesa beauty salon Tuesday and asked two beauticians bow to find · the rest room, is being sought by police today after the women reported that '680 was taken from their purses. · Ruth Ann Hood. 35, of 20252 Morristown Lane, HunUnaton Beach. and Shiela D. Garcus. 28, of 20871 Queens Lane, Huntinaton Beach, told officers they dJs- covered the losa at about 3 p.m. Tuesct.y. 'the two women work •t Nalls lt la Beauty Shop, 1801 Newport Blvd. They said they believe the woman took their wall.ti while alJegedly looktn1 for the powder roona. DAILY PILOT Nevada cnGUDlall\ ran1• st~ an •Umat.ed 400 ftr• ""*4a1 nJ&bt and earl)' toda1. "Fort)' t.o at r,reent ol t!Mm are unmanned,' he aaJd~ "Our tnanpower II committed. We Juat dOCl't baH ~more people. Ke slnudod ao.ooo to ao,ooo acra ol CDF'1 33·mJllloo •ere terr,tory were burntn1 thta momlna. we" namlna ln 261 aeparate nres, moetofthem small. Jn the Loe Padres National Foreat, flreflshtera equipped with chalnaawa hacked tbelr way tbroulh »year-old Umbel' and underbrUah trying lo reach one flr• 1pr .. dln1 through tbt mld· dlo ol • natlonal wilderness ana. Debble Gold, U.S . Forest Service flre lnlormatlt>n offtce,., " 8lU Pow era ot the U.S. Forest ,· Service esUmated 10.000 acre1 ot LAOUNANS VIEW S.BARBARA DAMAGE-A3 It.a ~ mlllloo acres in California F,....r~AJ SLAYING ••• sliding glass door open for ven· tilation in the mugn beat and this is believed to have been the point of entry. He said a window screen at the front of the apartment was smashed out and found bent on the lawn, addlne that this is believed t.o be the point where the intruder fled the premises. Miss Bennington's green and black 1970 Camaro sport coupe was found routinely parked. Investigators declined to s peculate on the obvious possibility someone attracted to the victim followed her home from the night dub and waited until stie bad retlred to gain en- try. He said the victim and her ex- boyCriend. Jam es Steven Gano, 28, a resident ot the Ambassador Motel in Santa Ana, broke up pn· ly several days ago and so he became a logical suspect. .. Police had information to suggest be might have violent tendencies,•• Sgt. Thompson said, noting a search was Im· mediately initiated for Gano, an auto fmaoclng executive. Investigators said bb car was spotted and pulled over about 5 :30 p.m. and Gano willingly ac- companied investigatora to the station where questioning and a polygraph examination cleared him. Orange County coroner's in- vestigators anticipated comple- tion or an autopsy today to dJs- cover the exact cause of death. No mortuary bad been selected lo handle the remains yet today. No motive has been developed at ail at this stqe. Serceant Thompson said this monUn&. .. She just came bome, un· dressed. neatly foldecl her clothes and went to bed. And someone wbomped her on the head,"hesaidgrimly. * * * r ..... r.,,eAl SUSPECT ••• freckles and carrot-orange hair slicked down praented her with a note tha.,t explained be wu rob- bing the bank. No gun 'bas been seen or ap.. P2'rently utlliied 1n the atrtn1 of holdups by the redhead wearlni a baseball cap, authorities aaid. The Baseball Cap Bandit ii believed ~Ible for the rob- b er y of both the United California Bank at 3141 E. Coast Highway in Corona del Mar on July 21 and the Maou!acturer"s Bank holdup at 1201 Dove St .. July 29, police said. Be hu also struck two banb in Costa Mesa during the spree in· volving stlckul)a occurrinf sometimes twice in one day. "No money linked to 1D.J other robberies baa been recovered." Detective Sgt. Thompson aald to- day. said the fire had grown to 2,300 acres. Another fire on the southeast edge of the Ventana Wilderness had *'°"'° to more tban 5,000 acres by Uiliww>ming, she said. Crews were able to reach at least one aide of the blue and begin dJggtng out firelines. Information officer lrl Everest said Forest Service restrictions barred men from takin1 equip- ment other than chainsaws into the wilderness area. "Because it is a wilderness area. the theory is to have no im· prl]lt of man," he said. · ft'r09I Page A J TORTURE ••• tempted murder charges against DouglaJS. The manacled Douglas sat in P~ison jeans and sweatshirt with his attorney, Pat Magers, in Judge Ragnar Engebretaon's West Orange County Municipal court. Douglas was arrested last month following a alx-week in· veatigation that ended when two undercover policeworne,p arrest- ed Douglas at his Yucca Valley film site. Deputy District Attorney James Brooks revealed through his questions that Garden Grove police and the district attorney's offlce secretly recorded several conversations between Douglas and Miss Williams, who turned informant. Mlss Williams, wearing Levi's and a shirt, testified that she met Douglas while hitchhiking along 17th Street in Santa Ana. She said they went to a bar and be told her that he was a maker ot lesbian bondage movies and told her he needed an accomplice to torture and dismember ac- tresses. She said Dou&las offered her $1,000 each for each of five vic- tims. t.o be pa.id after all the mov- ies were completed. Miss Williams said Douglas had told her that be had filmed such movies before and bad murdered actresses. She said be had "dis~mbered them, then buried the pieces a couple of feel underground," in scattered places. "He said he bad done five" ac· tre&H6. Douglas told her, she said, to be prepared for a long day. He aaid the victlma "would be inlike four or five boura of torture." she •aid. San Bernardino sberifra dep. utiea aearcbin1 the Yucca Valley area where the prior inurden were to have occurred have found no evidence ol thetn. Hiss Williama testified that abe convinced Douelas t.o let her &uppty two or the prospectbe ac- tress victims. By that Ume, she bad ime to Garden Grove police, and told them the story of the alle1ed pornoeraphic Jdllin1s. . Two undercover policewomen were eollst.ed to play the part of the lesbian ad.resaes. On July 20, Dou1laa, Hiss Williams and the poU~women drove to the Yucca Valley lite wbere the aUJcera arrested Dol.lllaa. • Purex Co-founder Succumbs ait 7 5 ~ MbieTmpa 150People JOHANNESBURG , South Africa (AP) -About lSO mlnera were trapped and feared dead today after an explosion in a coal mine in central Mo:iam t bique, and nine foreigners were killed in 1ubsequ9flt rioting at the mlne, Radio Mozambique reported. The •radio, monitored here. said rescue opera· tion.s were under W&.¥ and troops were sent to rtsto~ ordef at the Chlpanaa mine. The radio gave no details •or how the forelpera were killed, but said they died ln "grave disturbances" after the explosion. It id6n- tifled them only as being of "dlfferenl natlonallties." Ii',.... rage Al FUNDS ••• Republican assemblyman Robert Burke. Burke also received $15 worth of flowers from lhe Man1ers committee, according to its re-port. And the Balboa Bay Club bill for a Mangers fund raiser was $1 ,828, the report said. Assemblyman Ron Cordova (D-El Toro) received only $2,330 in monetary campaign contribu- tions in the first six months o( 1977. Cordova's major expense item was $1,179 covering "air travel for campaign." But Cordova also repaid $4.~ worth ot loana left over from 1976 and another $600 loan was foraiven: .accordln~ to the Cordova for As.aembly commit- teereport. One or the few DOD · officeholders to file a report with the Registrar ot Voters in Santa Ana was Marian Bergeson, an announced Cordova foe in 1978. Mni. Bergeson, who was Dar· rowly defeated in the 74th Dill· trict RepobUcan primary In 1976 and who polled more than 30,000 votes as a wrlte·in candidate In the general election, showed campalp receipts of $225. She also reported incurring campaisn debi. of ~74, most of it a retainer due Mrs. J.D. Turner for conaultlna. IF 1 Dead, 7 Burt Bombs Explode .. \ "' In NY Offices NEW YORK (AP) -Bombe exploded in two midtown M anbattan office bulld.lncs to- day, killine <Sati ~oo and.inJur- ing aoo.tt aeven others. Pol.lee began aearchlna other bW1Jlln1• after wamtnp from a tdibrtat ba.nd that more explosions would follow to dramatise demands for • Puerto Rican independence. Communications to police and news oreanlzaUons from a IJ'OUP called FALN said bombs were planted in as many u rive other buildings. Police evacuated the two 110. story lowers of. the World Trade Center and the first floor and basement or the world-famous Empire State Building. The World Trade Center, with 35,000 workers, is the world's largest office complex. Tbe evacuation there halted futures trading at rour commodity ex- changes -New York Mercantile Exchange, New York Cotton Ex· change, Commodity Exchange Inc. andtheN~ York Coffee and Sugar Exchange. A Park Avenue building hous- ing the Chase Manhattan B&nk and National Football League headquarters were also evaucat· ed. Among evacuees was NFL Commissioner Pete Roselle. Explosions went off at the Mobil OU Co. building on busy 42nd Street near Lexington A venue and at Defense Depart. ment offices on the 21.at floor ol a nearby building at 43rd Street and Madison Avenue. A Pentagon spokesman in WHEELS WHEEL Olff Wlm AD Yoo might call this Daily Pilot clasaified ad a classic story. An El Toro woman sold ber wheels on the second call with th~elines: 66 Rambler, classic $60 Ladles Schwinn 5 speed bike ~111Xlc-JOCXX lf you want to wheel and deal along the Orange Coast, do It in the Daily Pilot classified ads. Call 642-5678 for fast and friend· ly service. w~ 1.w' t\e New York otfl~. tho om~ ol Secretary ot Defense Securit.y Dlnaicln.l"idd Office, la ~titted by "ln- veatt1ators ,rho perform aecuri· ty <luUes tn~tloD ~th back· l"JUlld investtiaUoa cbeeb" for clearaJ¥:es. No lrUuries w~ reported at that building, but one man died and at least aeve:o others were ln-ju.red In the Mobil blast. Th dead man wu idenUfled u Charles StetoberJ, 18, of Manhat.- tan, a partner In a compu1ca1Jed Viva Temporary Serflces, an employment qency lQC.ated on the lfQUDdnoorottbe bulldlq. Bellevue Hospital offlclals said ~StelnberJ dJed of bead injuries suffered Jn the explOlian. 1:11.s partner. Ira Genten. was In-jured. Other evacuations were or- dered on the basis of communica· tiona from FALN, a Puerto Rican independence ll'OOP about which police have learned little and which authorities have been una· ble lo penetrate. fi',....P,,.lAl • j AIDE ••• "'tchat. He declined. · By Monday police were so COO· cerned about Hill's failure to ap- pear that they announced they would seek en arrest warrant. Later in the day, Antholly an- nounced the suspension ol his aide unW "everythlnl ia cleared up." The cleartne up apparently began when police rechecked their computerhed stolen prop. erty llat and cllatovend the sus- pect lter'eo equipment bad been stolen, recovered and then purchased by Hill at a polJce auc· tlon. Apparently tbe other items taken from Hill's apartment Fri- day eventn1 could not be matched oo the stolen property list. Moreover, while an esUmated 15 ounces of marijuana was al· legedly found ln the apartment. It could not be linked to Hill. As a result, the Anthony aide Is no longer being soueht by the police or, for that matter, aus· pected or committine any crimes. you haven't seen it, see it today! Save up to 40% J • ·- Allaway Jurors Screened Jury aelection conUnued today in the second Oran«ie County Superior Court trial of aeev.aecl campus killer Edward Charles Allaway while arranaementa were belntr 'IDade to take the selected jury oo a tour of tbe Cal State Fullerton campus. , Judge Robert P. Kneeland, hlJ court staff and lawyers for both sides will lead the way when the sworn in jury ia taken on a tour of the area where seven poople died an two were wounded on July 12, 1976. lt is alleged that Allaway, 37, ol Anaheim, used a rifle to kill and maim those victim~ in a sbooUna spree that left l>odles strewn in and around the campus library. v.dl!!!d!y. Auguat 3, 1977 OAIL y PILOT . Af ............. LAWMEN TAKE PROTESTER INTO CUSTODY 1Construct1on Begin• o~ Dlsputed Martna Dellyl'li.t-....,JM-~11 LAGUNA BEACH MAYOR JON BR.AND INSPECTS FIRE DAMAGE IN SANTA BARBARA Leamlng Lenon• That Might Prevent • Similar Holocauat on South Coast Deputy Public Defender Ron Butler made it clear Tuesday during the questioning of pro- :,pective JUrors that he does not dispute the question of Allaway's guilt. Bulldozers In Protesters Out in StiuMJl,ito Fire 'Lessons' Viewed l-hs defense effort will be cen· tered on the plea of not guilty by reason of insanity and Butler i.aid he intends to place a number of psychiatrists on the witness -;land SAUSAUTO (AP> -Construction has started on a marina here despite a last-ditch attempt by a group or bou.seboaten to block the project. Laguna Mayor, Fire Chief J/uit Santa Barbara That testimony would come during the sanity phase of the trial which will be ordered by Judge Kneeland if the jury finds Allaway guilty of any or all of seven counts of murder and two of assault with a deadly weapon. About 100 people opposed to development o( a harbor at Waldo Point massed at the construction site Tuesday. blocking the path of bulldozers with old cars. By JACK CRAP Pt: LL Of tm o.i1, ~lleC Slaff Chimneys stood aboye black corpses of the homes. "l don't think anyone can re· alize what a fire like Uus can do unless they see it for themselves," Laguna Beach Mayor Jon Brand said as he stepped through the rubble of a burned-out Santa Barbara home. one of 385 destroyed or damaged. Brand and Fire Chief Charley Kuhn were vis iting Santa Barbara to see if the $58 million fire there would provide lessons for Laguna Beach. After the in spection, the mayor and Ch1ef Kuhn said "yes" the lessons _ were there. As a result or his inspection tour, Mayor Brand said be would push vigorously for the con· troversial Laguna fire road link- ing Top of the World with Arch Beach Heights in the Art Colony hills. The fickle nature of the fire. which leapfrogged from how.es Famed Pair Severed Alfred Lunt, Noted i Stage Actor, Dies 'CHICAGO (AP> -Alfred Lunt, for decades one of the great stars ot the American stage, died early today at84. He had undergone surgery for • cancer of the bladder at Northwestern Memorial Hospital onJuly21. Actress Lynne Fontanne, • Lunt's wife and stage partner of more than SO years, was not at }1{s bedside when he died at 4 :05 a.m. Now 90, she visited him ·after he entered the hospital July 20. but rema1ned most of the time :it the couple's lon~me home at Genesee Depot west of Milwaukee. Wis. A family spokesman said private services will be held Fri- day at 2:30 p.m., with burial at Forest Home in Milwaukee. The Lunt·Fontanne team tnade token appearances on the scrttn and television. Their sole film was "The Guardsman." Lunt · said be found films boring. "We can be bo11ght. but we can't be bored," he remarked. In 1970 the Lunts received special Tony awards in recogni- tion or their many stage triumphs. One of their rare public appearances since then was in 1975, when they attended a ceremony at which they present- ed 20 acres of their wooded land to the town of Genesee for a park Early last year they came to Milwaukee for a-retrospective performance from the works of the late playwright Noel <;oward. Lunt. burn Auf. 19, 1892, made his Broadway debut as a bit playet in the October 191T pro- ducUoa of ••Romance and Arat;,!lla. 0 1t had taken him almost four yeara ~ reach Broadway from his tlfSt Job at the Castle Square The.._, in Bolton. The future stir attended Mllwaukee acbools uotll be turned is. when be entered Car· roll OoUece et Waukesha. He moft4 to Bolton three years later tofUl'tba h1a educaUon. Tbe nen·fbUf ,.ears were spent ln ~ anruou1 .eJ>J>renticeahip typical of eJ"a-4ocludini a A,.Wl ...... IO SEPARATED BY DEATH Lunt and Fontanne along the perimeter of the brush into interior areas, indicated a need for the city of Laguna Beach to expand its "fire zone 4" n•stnctions to areas not covered, the mayor said The fire zone standards re quire noncombustible roofs and brush clearance from homes .. After hearini:: how two Santa Barbara firefighters saved their lives by wrapping themselves in heat-reflecting "puptents" when the fire turned on them and their engine, Chief Kuhn said the tents would be purchased for the Laguna force. Santa Barbara City Fire Department Battalion Chief Barney Gallagher briefed the Laguna Beach officials and a Daily Pilot reporter and took them around the fire scene. The single most impress1vt' feature of the fire was what ap- peared to be the tapricJous nature of the destruction. Chief Gallagher said there were reasons why some home~ Allaway's first trial last June ended in a mistrial after four days of jury selection when the defense learned that the alleged showing of pornographic films at the campus library may have played a part in the defendant's alleged shooting rampage. Buller. who said at the time that such evidence would have affected his questioning of pro- spective jurors, made no ref- . erence to the issue Tuesday dur· ing the interrogation of jurors. Judge Denies Damages in Death Suit were standing, while those next An Orange County Superior SIX PEOPLE WERE REPORTED 81Tested, one for in· veaUgaUon of felony assault on a police officer. Others lVete booked ror investigation or vandalism or unlawful assembly. The demonstrators have campaigned against the marina, saying it would destroy their casual lifestyle and boost rents so high they would have to move. ABOUT 30 MARIN COUNTY sheriff's deputies Tuesday herded protesters about 400 yards away from the work site while tow trucks were called to remove the old cars. Protesters and news media representatives were told they would be arrested if they remained on the scene after an unlawful assembly was declared. Grading and dirt haullng for a puking lot to serve the marin1' got under way after the cars were removed. : Countg Land Supervisors Adopt Expansion Guides ~ door were not Court J\lry refused to award Nine guidelines that could de· One reason was the wind. Chief damages Tuesday in the trial of a termine if and when about half of ervation of important natural resources. Gallagher said 1l was blowing so lawsuit filed after two women unincorporated Orange Counly h a rd at on c po 1 n l , l h al died six years ago in an explosion land I.a opened for development firefighters cou ld hardly stand at a Santa Ana factory. were adopted unanimously Tues· up. The panel in Judge Kenneth E. day by count superv·s rs TopoaraJSby also played a big Lae's courtroom ruled for the de· Y • ~. 0 • part. Fire sweeps "p the "cbim fendant DuPont Company and In au. uie IUideUnes cover neys" formed bf converging against the fami!Us of victims lM,838 al!l'ts of land, or about rav1n~ and houses built at the Linda Dyer. 19, and Margaret two-thJrds ol the unincorporated top are in extreme peril. Delfine, 41. area in the county. However, Home construction played a Both women died following an 57,285 acres are witbin the large part A. Santa Barbara explosiop 'which occurred when publlcly owned Cleveland Na· study showed that tn cases where b I a ck powder used In the tional Forest and not subject to brush was cleared from 100 feet manufacturing of model airplane development. county oUicials In addition they call fa. Im· proving bousine opportunities for low aod moderate income families as well as provtdlnc home and work centers close togetber to minimize auto travel, Another guideline u ameQded by superviaors calla for eUorta to avoid increasing pollution by employing energy1avin6 de· vices and incorporating green:. belts and open space. around the homes. one house engmes Ignited at the LM Cox said. with 8 noncombusl1ble roof was Company plant on Warner Other portions of tbe land are Did He Get lost for every 14 houses with Avenue. within 1arge agricultural pre· shake shingle roofs. where brush The explosion blew out metal serves, presently not proposed was cleared 75 feet Crom the doors andtheroofofthefinishing rordevelopment.andotherareas Th ft d? home, the ratio was two noncom-room, injuring eight other are ln steep terrain which may e ecor bustable roof homes to every 10 workers and baiting production never be suitable for urban me. TOKYO (AP> _A Japanese combusuble roof homes: 50 feet for several weeks. they explained. youth held a waitress at knife. or clearance, one noncombusti-Lawyers for the plaintiffs un-The guidelines include nine point for nearly 22 hours IQ a ble roof home for every rive com· successfully sought more than criteria that must be addressed Tokyo coffee shop, then Nleased bustible roof home, and where $500,000 in damages with the before what ls now a reserve her today and stabbed bl"'9Ptf there was no clearance, the ratio argument that workers were not status can be lifted from those critically in the abdomen, police was one to 1.4. made fully aware of the danger acres. reported. "This tells me that we need to in theuseofblackpowder. Butareporttoaupervlsorssaid They aald the~ ab.. look very hard at our building or-Defense lawyers successfully all nine criteria are not expected ductor claimed be YU aofn« to dinances and make the areuedthatsafetyreaulationsat tobemet. 'lrytosetaJapanesereeQrct•'for- necessary changes," Mayor the plant were ignored by Instead. county officials will be keeping abostaieforthelcmiest Brand said. employes. looking for the best mix of solu· period of time." · • Currently the Laguna Beach Mrs. Delfine died in a local tions. The waitress. •3·YeaNld brush clearance ordinance ls ho!lpital two days after the ex-The criteria call for adequate Mari k 0 As a z um a. w a 5 "toothless." according to fire of-plosion. Miss Dyer succumbed to public services, utilities and traf· hospitalized with~ in.Juries fic1als. The mayor said he would her injuries a week later. nc access in addition to pres· and exhaustion. be inve s tigating ways of ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~------....:._.. ___ strengthening it The similarities between the topography, residential develop· ment and road systems of tbe Santa Barbara and Laguna Beach were strlking Most striking of all was the re· aliiation that what happened In Santa Barbara could happen again and it.· could happel} ill Laeuna Beach. Three Homes . I Okayed for .Alcoholics ES Gem Talk GOLD ISOLD Bur ITS BEAUUTY IS AGE:USS Gold wu probably the ftnt metal discovered by man. Tbete is no preclae data on its diJ~ery. 'but there are recordll of it.s use far back into antlqufty. A papY?'\1S map from the 14th century B.C. abowa that Eayptian.s were mln1n1 told ~ Nu and Arabia. The anicent EOPtJus a.re, of coune, fam0qs for their un Of 1ok1 ID ~a\ decct•U•• pie( ... / Pansy Rings (* ~ ,. . I ~f . for.the FL0WEB. OF YOtJB heart aao~ : Whal ••need hue Alona th1 bnt of all pc>HJ· bit' ~o•sh 1i. an hone•l tu coodnen S~111 Mun1ter We ha\'en't really had a IUt.ld ont' '" • t"ttCDt )'e•n If we could 1et ooe. be m11ht M>fve M>me of our prob lem:i.. JI )'OU could hav~ ., \'hou:t' un Sea onsten. J'd takt' ont lh1tl 11rU about 19 feel Iona With clow an& purpll' 5km. lar&t' yellow «ya., a lorig hf'itd and small mouth Ke would surbce from the depths and roar '* lot Beyond that I would prefer that our Sea Monster suii.taan ham~ on sea weed aod old rub • ber ures He would have no ap- petite at all for 10 year old boys v1s1ung from fo'ullerton THE NOTION OF getting our very own JOiiy sea creature fares the 1mag1nauon and I am indig · nant that other placc5 get one and we don't huve any -son of S ana' Pursued Katht-nne Grahum and officer John Tuttle work specwl hotlml' m Ne"' 't'ork Cit)• s Flushing area. where police .ire con<·entratmg efforts lo get mformul1011 about a killer of ~oung women who tails himself "Son of Sam ·· Deput~ Polan· Comm1ssionc1 Francis :\frl.oujilhhn satd other <·ouples were parked tn lflt area where a young "om an \\as :.lain over the weekend lk hu-. urg<·d them to Jss1sl in pro\'ldtng additional 1nformatton NICOSIA. Cyprus (AP> Archbishop Makanos, president ol this Mediterranean island since it aained independence 17 years age, died early today or a heart attack, leaving a dan&erous power vacuum in a nation seethinl( with tension between Greek and Turkish Cypriots. A spokesman at the presidential palace said the Greek Orthodox prelate suffered the attack Tues- day night and died at 5.15 a.m local time, 10 duys before his 64tt\ birthday. The powerful 1i1rchb1shop sym bolized the strength of the Greek Cypriot maJorit.y in 1ts centuries old conflict with the Turkish minority. and he cemented together Greek Cypriots or many political tendencies His death 1mmed1ately aroused fears oC new turmoil .. ONLY GOD CAN protect ui. now." said one or 2.000 moumtrs who gathered outside the archbishop's residence. many or them weeping openly "He was our father Now that he as dead the dangers arc too big for us · Greece went into off1c1al mourning In Ankara. the Turk11>h govern ment maintained omcaal silence on Archbishop Makarios' death. but many citizens reacted with relief. TURKEY INVADED Cyprus in July 1974 after Makarios wa:. briefly ousted m a coup by Greek Cypriot rightists and the mlitary Junta that then controlled Greece. Some 25,000 Turkish troops remain on Cyprus. There 1s also a United Nations peacekeeping force on the island "God has finally answered our prayers.·· a civil servant said. ··Perhaps the Cyprus problem can be solved now," said a shopkeeper . Makarios was regarded in Turkey as the maan obstacle against a Cyprus settlement. IN BRITAIN, WHICH once e>. 1led Archbishop Makarios to Lht' I nd1 an Ocean's Seychelle~ Islands while Cyprus struggled for independence. flags were or de red nown at hair staff. AO _...,... CYPRIOT LEADER DIES Archbishop Makarios, 63 Coru.1der the Scots, for exam pie Over there in Scotland they have th11> Loch Nesi. Monster. known with arrcctaon around the world as "Nessie " They've been making hay witll Nessie for decades now. The famc of Loch. Ness has spread like the wand Nessie keeps getting sighted every now and then and teams or newspaper people and sc1ent1stii. have rushed lo Loch Ness. and lolled around for weeks waiting for a glimpse or the beast .Car Makers ~Defeated':; ' Lord Ca radon. British governor during Cyprus' independence drive. said : "No one could now ~lcp into the shoes of the archbishop .... He did his duty m advancing independence. and he never went back on his agree· mentwilhus. Heke.pthis wocd " Man Convicted 0/·11 Deatlu Gets New Trial J Oean Air Compromise Tougher Than Hoped U S. Secretary or State Cyrus R Vance. an Lebanon on a Mid· die East peace lour , said Makarios ·was clearly a strong leader. · CINCINNATI (AP > Thecon· Starr writer Tom Barley or our 'cry own sterling Journal has told that when he wa'> newspapering in England. one or ha~ best assignments was chas anJ! Nl'SS1e lie dad 1L mostly rrom a veranda on l.och N<'Ss whilst \1pp"1g te<1 \:o\\. lo add 1n-.ult to IOJUr) in us not hav1n~ our own mon~Ler or the rteeµ, lht• Japunese even ('amt.' up with one off or a place • 1· a 11 t• d Ch r 11> t c h u r c h . N e w Zealand /\ J apancse trawler named the 7.uayo Maru nelll'd th1· hc•ast and hauled 1l aboard But the caplmn ordered al thrown hal'k for fear it would con laminate the re1>l or the fi sh catch ; I THERE IS SOLAC.:t: in the tact that the Japanese monster was d ead . Dead se<• monsters a re of tattle value I· If we got our own Sea MOl\$ler, Ii we could name al Gualfo. GU&tle could do all kinds of good thfn'gs for us. For starters. Gugg1e would probably keep a lot Of beacb VIS· 1tors out of the water. thus lessen· mg the workload on our lifeguard ... erv1c~ There would. however. be the µroblem of tourists commg to our region in droves with the notion of gettmg a peek at Guggie while 1t was al play. eating seaweed off Huntington Beach Pier and roar· mg a lot. or maybe tossing old rubber tares in the air while frolicking an Upper Newport Bay. TWS COULD PUT even more pressure on our coastal parking problems what with Huntington Beach and Newport already Jammed solid and Laguna trying • to operate three arts shows and a , gaggle of beach volleyball tournaments at the same tim1>. Therefore this would caJI for careful planning so that Gugg1e would surface at places like Sall Creek Beach in Laguna Niguel where there as already plenty of par~ What a boon We could divert aJI the crowds to placeswherewehavemoreroom It's just not fair being without our own Sea Monster. WASHINGTON IAP 1 A House·Senate conference com mattee ended the threat of a shut down by American car makers today. reaching agreement on d major revision of federal air rollut100 laws Mcmbt?rs of the comm1ttcc negotiated for nearly seven hour' before finally settling on a formula that will ease federal re quarements on auto em1ss1on '>landards for new Amen<•an cars begannang m 1980 "TIDS IS A reasonable com promi§e." said the chairman or the conference committee, Sen. Edmund S. Muskie CD· Maine> The committee member!. reached agreement at the end of their eighth session as they worked to resolve difference1> Exhibitor Held between Senate and House amendments to the 1970 federal Clean Air Act A vote on the compromise was likely m the House as early as to· day It must then go to the Senate for a final vole before delivery to the White House for President Carter·-. 1m:nature Lillie re- sistance was expected in either hnu'ie of Congre\1> THJ.: AUTO INDUSTRY had -.upportcd the Housc version of t ht• ant1pollut1on ball With the .,upporl of the Carter Ad m1nistrul1on. the Senate voted tou~hcr air pollution standard~ thnn the llouse, although both loosened requirements 111 the present law Mnlrollmg ta1lp1pc pollutant1> Over all. thf' cnmm1ltcl' com .. ~' .'Ghoulish' Babies SholVD at Carnival WAUKEGAN. Ill (AP> The corpses of 20 babies and fetuses round floating in glass Jar& beanng namecards such as ··cyclops:· ·Elephant Nose Baby." and "Frog Girl" are being held an a morgue while the coroner determines how they became a 75·cent·a -ticket carnavaJ attraction. The corpses were confiscated last week. said Lake County Coroner Robert Babcox, who termed the exhibit "Rbsolutely Jthoulish." _ The exhibitor called it a "non· profit educational show.·· "THEY ARE ALL IN our coun· ty morgue, and wiJI be given a decent burial." Babcox said Tuesday. "Everybody is enUlled to a burial or some kind.·· Babcox said that when he and has mvestigators saw the tiny corpses in'the Wondercade Ex hibits show al the Cake County Fair at Grayslake ... We thought they were plastic or rubber, bul our pathologist, Dr. Vernon Zeeb. examined them and found them to be human monstrosities '' The exhibitor. Chris Michael Christ, 29. of G1bsonlon, Fla .. was charged with the illegal dis· position of bodies and illegal possession of human remains. He was released on $2,000 bot)d and ordered to appear Aug. 15 in Circuit Court. BABCOX SAID HE was al· tempting to find out where Christ obtained the dead infants and fetuses and how he managed to transport them across state lines without death certificates. ··we lt\.ink the show came from Indiana," he said, "and we're looking into that " Zech said the bodies. billed as · The World's Strangest Babtes, ·· were those or "malformed babies, rangtn1 from gestation beyond live blrtb." ". ~ ! , ~ . Rains Wash Southeast Sunny in Weit, COoler in Upper Mitluleat . ,. ....... llrml,._ .... e.Moll •-11111. '"" ... Cllk ... CIMl-tl c..,,.._ 0.11 ... ,. Wertll 0.11- 0..MllllU = .... .....,...., ~ M~N 9(...-0t'I u.,,,._ l.ltti.""11 • ~ ~ ~.;.it.~ ,..on-. New Yen 0.1 ..... <~1¥ Om-. on.. """ ...... Q •1 ., 11 ., 11 . .. lOI I• . ., 11 ., 1.11 ., ,. . ,. .. 1t . ., ... •S . " " " • 1• .. . .. 14 ., ., tu H .... . " 7S ., 11 u ,. ,, 11 11 ... .. " promise on hydrocarbon. carbon monoxide and nitrogen oxide pollutants as closer to the Senate version and stands as a defeat for the auto industry For three years. through 1977 the industry had been granted de lay~ an complying wath tough <Jn tapollut1on standards m the 1970 law Both the !louse and Senate agreed to further postponement:-. for 1978 and 1979, but the con ferencc commattcc had not com µleled its work and the Congress 1s scheduled to begin a month· long recess Friday SO AUTO INDUSTR V leader' "'ere· faced with an approach mg August deadline for begmoang 1978 production and under exist ing law they arc prevented from 1>hippmg can. across state Imes 1f the vehicles fail to meet the stringent standards set an the 1970 law In Detroit today . Elhott M t:stes. General Motors president said he was reheved the con rerence rommltt.e~ had made a dec1s1on IN NICOSIA, A spokesman satd the Greek Cypriot national guard and police were placed on alert The national council J{roupmg all important Cypnot leaders. scheduled a m eeting for th•~ mornmg. the Greek Cypriot radio said. A prc s 1df.'ntial palace ~pokt.·~man said Spiro -. Kyprianou. head or the all·Greek parliament. would serve as act· mg president until a successor to Makarios as elected an 45 days. The Greek Cypriot radio 11n· nounced 40 days of mourning and µlayed funeral music. but in the northern third of Cyprus, the sec· Lor occupied by 25.000 Turlosh troops. Turkish Cypriot radio 1'0ntinued normal programl'Bmg. THE RADIO TOOK notice of the death after seven hours when a statement was broadcasl from NeJal Konuk, prime muu.st.er of the self·ptoclairoed Turkish Cypnol federated state T hey help you put v1ct1on of James Ruppert, ac- c·used or kallmg 11 members of his family al has mother's home on Easter Sunda~ m 1975, was overtumerl today by a state ap· peals court The Isl Distract Ohio Court of Appcab returned the case lo the Butler County Common Pleas Court for a new trial Rup(.>(.•rt was convicted or 11 t•ou nts or aggravated murder in the k1ll1nJ{s or his mother. brother, ~1slcr in law. and eight nieces and nephew:. at his mother's llam1lton home. The appellate court said Rup- µert ·~ waiver or a JUry lnal was not "knowing. voluntary and in- telligent'' s ince he had been in- formed by counsel and the pre· sadang Judge that .a three.judge panel '~ verdict. must be unarumous. Instead of a uoanamous de-- c1s1on, Ruppert waii. conv1cled by a 2·1 mD,Jority by a BuUer County Common Pleas Cour\. panel of Judges. fl f I ' ., • /' I r .-': ~1 ) ' I ~:· .. your world in fo cus I ·' Viewpoints of colwnnasrs appearing regularly on the f'<:iaronal pages of the Daily Pilot help you !!harpcn your perspective of the events ~llaptng your world. Here's rhe lineup of IAily Paloc columnasrs: their r~. E ARL WATERS has spent 30 ytars rcpor6ng with unique insight on California srare government. pokes EV ANS AND NOVAK -. Rowland Evans and Robert Novak team to elCam ine the nation. I' ,/' ,. >J.: . , ., I {) . (• '\ . ~ • •• ,. la Custodg David Boyce, 16, has been charged with the slaying of his sister . .Julia Ann, and two of he r friends, all 15, with a .22 c:.ihber ri· flc. Police said a family squabble over a yo.yo touched off the shooting spree. It il) not known whether he will be tried as a juvenHt or an adult. las Vegas Casino 'Owned by Mob' LOS ANGELES CAPJ Organned crime fi gures are hidden owners of the Aladdin tiotel- casano in Las Vecaa...accordJng to a lengthy FBI af· hdavit filed in a Detroit court, the Los Angeles Times reported today According lo the 47·page affidavit filed in U.S. District Court. based on quotes from FBI inform· ants and underworld sources in Detroit, the casino's affairs are directed from Detroit through an ·'intricate web of mob financial interests." Dat,f• Rap• Carf.er Propo•al LOS ANGELES (AP) -Police Chief Edward M. Davis -denouncin' President Carter's pro-posed marijuana decriminalization -suggested in- stead that officials tell citizens, "Pot is bad ... there is nothing good or STATE Davis' remarks were ( J beneficial about it." made Tuesday in '---------response to the Presi· dent's earlier seven-page message to Congress proi>05ing to decri mlnalize the use of small amounts of marijuana. Carter also or- dered a study to determine how barbiturates flld other sedatives could be used safely. Long BefN!la Ter.l•al •Lflcelfl' LOS ANGELES CAP)-proposed Sohio Alaskan oil terminal In Long Beach is "somewhat more likely now, "said state Air Resources Board Chairman Tom Quinn after meeting with Carter Administration officials in Washington. Quinn said Tuesday that •'California and the Carter Administration will be working closely to see that environmental and other problems are re· solved" and that the path will be cleared for the Sohio project. Voter• Rejeet Repeal Elf ort SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -San Francisco roter1 .hl'ft rejected efforts to repeal the election this fall of the city's powerful 11-member Board of Supervisors by separate dlslricLc;, signaling a new era in city politics and vindicating Mayor George' Moscone Not since the tum of the century have San Fran· cisions chosen the leelslative body by individual dis· tricl elections Supervisors previously were re· quired to run citywide EdUon lt'orlc•an El~C!t~at~ SANTA FE SPRINGS <kP > -A Southern Cali.fqmia Edison workman was electrocuted while installing equip~en in a newly·built home in 5anta Fe Sprinrs. abo 20 miles southeast or Los Anfeles. Sheriff's deputies said Peter K. Lewis, 27. of Rowland Helehts, was ktlled Tuesday after ·touching two llve wires together. lAwlli apparenUy was unaware power had already been turned on at the home when the mishap ocaurred. -~-------~ ~~ . -.... ·- Western LNG Seekipg Site LOS ANGELF.s (AP) An apphcalion to build a Ugutfied natural 1u termmal has been filed by W4!tt4m\ t.NG TermlnaJ Associates, which would prefer that lt be In Loi Angeles harbor or Oxnard. The nllnl Tuesday came one day before Western LNG beaded ror a le1lalatJve heartn1 lo Op· pose a bill It 1aya would require a site at Polnt Conception of an off· 1horHlle Tlllr. FIRM SA VS that In this c&.11e, the termmul would be too late lo stem the severe natural gas shortqe the utilities pre d.Jctfortheearly 19805 Western LNG 1s a partnership of SU b· sldiaries or Pacifi c Lightinl Corp., parent of Southern California Gas Co • and PacWc Gas & Electric Co. If the markel is delayed t,11() lone. the Indonesians might change their minds and sell to Japan Instead. WF.STERN LNG holds that there's already a r<as shortage ln Southern California, and by the early 1980s it will reach cr1s 1s proportions without new, longterm supplies Goggin's bill is described by legislative committee staff mem- bers as restrictive for safety reasons. Western LNG says it would be so slow on permit matters it would kill any LNG pro- posal now planned. Al' Wire,... .. \'Indicated? Robert Mendelsohn of San .Francis co. Carter's choic e a~ a ssis tant Intenor secretary, said Tues· day there i s no evidence to support charges against him of receiving im- proper campaign contributions while running {or slate controlle r in 1974. THE APPLICATION was filed with the California Coastal Com- mission, which would have the most siting authority under AB 220 by Assemblyman Terry Goggin, CD -San Bernardino>. Reporter Loses Another Appeal LOS ANGELES <AP> -Los Angeles reporter. SACRAMENTO <AP> -Slata le1la1ators have been told they will have tb make cuts in property tu re-- Ufjf and 1cbool finance propo5al& - MOO mlllloq in five years; by cae. eat.I mate. And the DJembers or two Senat&- Altembly conference commltlffa were elven only two alternatives Tuelda,y: Rt!ducUons Jn state pro- tr"ID!', mostly he•lt.h and welfare benefits for the poor, or a tax in- ctease. LEGISLATIVE ANALYST A. Alan Pott and Roy Bell, Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. 's finance dlrect.or, agreed that the property tu-school finance package would have to be cut or the stale would run out of money within several years. Neither said how much of a cut was needed. Thal would depend on how Cast other programs and revenues grow, aod the provisions that wind up. in the final l>ills. BUT ACCORDING to figures pro- vided by Pa.t and Bell, a deficit would occur under a package backed by the Democratic governor by 1980·81. when it would be ~Ilion. That figure wou(d· Increase lo $404 million the next year and drop to $120 million the following year. POSJ' SAID the likely deficit would be much higher. however. He said the fl1ures were based on an unrealistic assumption that stale spending could be held to 10 percent growth a year. It has av4ira1e<1 19 percent over the last. five years. Bell said earlier the atlministration was proposing to Ii mit state spending to 8 _percent growth a year, a figure Post called even more unrealistic. DAILY PILOT ,45. Btrr BEU. aireed thal the proper. ty tax-school rtnance pactace needed to be cuL He 11ald the areu ol reduc:· tion were up to the lepla1ure. al leut. for lhe moment. The contereoce comml~ ma4e up of three members trom eaeh house, are consldertn1 rlval mulUbUUon·dollar propoaala ror homeowner·renler relief and school finance reform that could det.ermine future slate apeodinc pattemL BROWN JS BACKING a property tax proposal that would coat about $4.5 bUllon over five ~ears and a school finance measure of about $5 . billion. Other measures on property taxes would spend more money, primarily for low·mcome persons, and include some tax reform plans. Tbe compet- ing school finance propocal would be less expensive by deletina some r&- form programs Brown fa~ POST RECOMMENDS redaclnc the proposed property tu relief. which would take the form of rebal.e checks to homeowners and renters. P061. told reporters, ''I think proper- ty tax relief eoes tho wrong way. Instead, we should be taJdng pro- grams off the property tax base and payingofflhemattheshtelevel." HE SAID SOME of the property tax relief money should be shifted to the school finance bill to reduce funding inequities among school diatricq, as required by the state Supreme Court's Serrano decision. But pressure for property tax relief is expected to preserve some form of dire<:t state subsidies to homeowners in t.be final version of Lbe bW. While opposing Gog gin's bill at today's hear ing, Western LNG favors one by Sen. Alfred Al· quist. CD-San Jos e ), which would give the most siting authority to the state PUC. WESTERN LNG 1s proposing one plant on Terminal Island m Los Angeles harbor to re- ceive LNG from south Alaska. and another at Oxnard to receive it from Indonesia. Willa$m F;p-r has lost an appe"1 tl\at would have re· leased him from a court order to name his sources --.....:--------------------------for a 1970 story on the Charles Manson trial. But Farr, a reporter for the Los Angeles Times, said Tuesday he would --------- appe3;1 the ruling by the FARR, WHO spent 46 2nd District Court of Ap· days in jail in 1972 and peal to the California 1973 for failing to reveal Supreme Court. his sources was ordered .. Regar,dless or the last New Year's Eve to consequences. even disclose the names or at- bankruptcy, l simply torneys who allegedly cann?t a.~swer thos e gave him information in questions, Farr said. . defiance of a gag order. Keith McKinney, pres· ident of Western LNG. s aid in a statement that Water Love Cupid Aids SeaDri/ten LONG BEACH CAP> -Twenty days water-logged and stranded at sea in a 20-foot fishing boat did not dampen the love of two survivors who have touched land for lhe first lime since J ul.y 10. Robert Campbell, Sandra Corea and Joe Almond arrived.in 14\g Beach Tuesday afte~ being rescued July 30 by the cargo ship American Lancer about. 100 miles off the southern tip of Mexico. "We had a budd~i romance golne for sometime before the fishing trip," sa.id Campbell, 37. of New York City. "Our ap- preciation of each other incre~ed a lot while we were· drifting al s,a," he said of Miss Corea, 27,of ltjanagua, Nlc;araiua. • . . Farr used the informa- tion in a 1970 story he wrote while workln& for • the Los Angeles Herald· Examiner about an al· leged Manson family plot to kill Hollywood • celebrities. ALTHOUGH absolved of criminal liability in the case, Farr and the Times now face a $24 million libel suit filed by two jlltorney\:twho ha~~ d~.artlocl arr mate ll tlkl' cti• •Y were not the sources for lhestory. I( Farr loses ft.Cttber appeals and contlnues withholding his sources, . he could be jailed again under civil contempt" charges. CHILDREN'S SHOES I FINAL·: ·MARKDO••s~ I · THURSDAY, FRIDAY,· SATURD~-y\ . 4 • IUSTER BROWN • KIDS • CHILD •LIFE SANbALS ~ AOIDAS • STEPMAmR . . • DRES~ & SCH.00~ SHO~S • J • • ., ' OUTSTANDING SB.IC~OM OF Sl"YLIS Ir stZIS In Yoar est . J aleresl. Higher interest than commercial banks pay plus the assurancB that your savings are safe, insured by a Federal Agency. A deposit of $1000 or more in a 6 year Investment Certificate yields 8.06% annually. Or, a ${000 Certificate of Deposit Account for only one year yields 6.72%. Of course, interest is compounded daily at Los Angeles Federal Savings. Investment Certificate and Certificate of Deposit savers qualify for a safe deposit box, ji.lst one of over 20 most wanted services available. It's in your best interest to start your savings account today. One minute and one signature is all it takes. mt®m (IDcQ]cQ]@ 1. • . (ill~ • All rtlterest Compounded Deify Annual Yield Annual Rate 8.96%. $1000 .ioi 1 t~ 2 years 6Y2% &.72o/o 5.S9% • ~ __._ ------------- • . DAIL ·pfLOT EDITORIAL PAGE Haste Omits Public Tt: n d<Jy ~ a1to. ~tun an Ht•qceiaon tiled her reingnu- tiun from the Ne\\ port·Meiua Untried School 01!ilncl bo rd oC truslet•s. Sh~· 11 qu1ttmai W5 of Aug. 31 to de- Hite h rtimt tu her pohticw cumpai"n. A w~k UJ(u, lt Ublccii uvprovcd u schedule for lhu 4'Ppt>Ullmcnt ol h"•r rcplac:t-menl Mthtn 13 days on \\I~ » \\'c rt•fo,.:na1c that ~ornc hash' ,., needed because u( a ~tutc l<Aw whtt'h g1v~ tru5lCeloi JO days m which to makt> the .-ppvtntment or call a 1:1pcd<&l election. Oh\ 1ou~I). tr u~tt•cii. ~oulu hkt· to ~u vc money by a11 1te1antina:. hut tht• h:1st1· \\Ith \\hll'h they are going 6'boul It 't."t'tn~ 1mnct•t•M,ary. Partll'Ul~rh '11..,turlJlng I' the lat'l that the top (i\ c t·andu1att·-. v.111 ht• 't•lt-t:led from the field of appll c-ants ovt>t a "cekcnd. mll'r\ aewed in public on Mon- day. \\llh tht· flniil selcc:llon tu l<Jll.l' place the follow- '"~ rught . t •ndt•r lhc~E' rnndlliuns. 1l 1s unlikcl} the public ta~paH•,-.. .t'> "l'll a:-. school emplo}es is going to ha\ e the upportunit) to find out "ho the prospective h<>ard member.., are and po~s1bly offer appropnatt! t·omment on the appointment. Smt'~ the board has until Aug. 24. more lime '>hould be spent on the c.tpi>01ntment process ' Roadwork Glut It looks ;.i-; 1f ther'c's going to come a tame in the next ft•\\ month!-.\\ ht·n residents of I tunlington Beach. :'\e\\ 1><>11 Be.ich und Costa '.\lt•sa Just won't be able to get thcrt· from lH.·re Tran•! hl'l\\ ccn tht' c:itil-s not to mention trym~ to gel around ms1clc the c1l} ltm1ts -is going to be a ... tow process dut· to un cxtraordinan series of road pro1t·ch thul an· g111ng to bc undertaken s1multaneousl) From the -.chcdulc a\·ailable from the state. coun- ty and citics, at appears road workers will be found on nine miles of Pacllic Coast Highway. five miles of Newport Boulevar! and assorted pieces of Superior Avenue, Adoms Avenue and Hamilton Avenue. busily tearing ur or laying down roadway. Loca res idents are also going to be getting the missing link connecting the Corona del Mar Freewa~· to the new MacArthur Boulevard, and preliminary work on the new Coast Highway bridge over Upper Newport Bay is moving ahead. All of these projects are going to do wonders for traffic circulation when they're complete. but they do seem to come all at once. .1 Brochure Barrage r For the M.•con<l year in a row. residents in the Coast Community College District are being deluged with rall semester class schedule booklets from all three colleges an the 88-squarc mile district The total lull for printing and mailing the schedules 1s expected to hit S90.000 this time around 01stnct olflc1ab defend the multt·muihngs. say ing the dislritt has an obligation to the tax pa~ ers to let,1hem know what 1s available in.fall classes at all three colleges. They abo say each c:ollege offers different pro- J?rams. sul·h as auto mechanics. offered only at Golden West Colll•gc. or data protess1n~. ava1labh· onl~ al Orange, C'oa!.t There is an altc:rnatln•. Co.istlim• Commumt~ <·otlt•gL' the district'!-. third collegl'. which ml•cts an more than JOO 1·lassroom.., 1n thl' distnct n1uld "t•nd s<"hedulcs to all households And each c1f those Coastline c· at a logs could t·on lam information and a telephone number for intcrt•st f•d parties to r equest OCC or Golden \\'e:,l brol'hUrl's By publbhing these telephone numbers lfor in- formation 1 and places where the brochures could bt.> picked up. the district could ~ave a nice handful ol money. ••• ten::: ·- c Bitterness No Solution Pressure Offends Dt>ar Gloon1y Gus Abortion: Convictio-ns Differ Carter ( EV ANS-NOV AK ) WASJllNGTON -The warning from Prc'!dcnl Carler to his rahrnc•t was pc•rfeC'tly clear· \fler I han• made a dec1s1nn. don •t pressure· me to reverse 1l Mr. Carter 's ire was aroused -hy the mam rebellion on July 15 .iga1ni,t h1" abortion pohC'ICli by his "" n hali(h · le\ <·I tbut i,ub t' a h 1 net 1 ft>male ap- p u 1 n tees. ht>aded by Madge Co •.tJnza. a top Wh1tl' I louse ,11<lt' Abruptly intl!rruptlng the di!.· cuss1on on a d1st:inllv related -.uhJt'Cl dunnl( has July ·18 cabinet meetan~. Jimmy Carter suddenly l'X pressed amazement that his own appointees had used has Ex· <'Culave Office Building for their meetanf( lo pressure him on the abortion issue Fulher. he said. iC the 40-plus complainants had listened to his ca mpaagn statements. they "'ould not be surprised at his pro- posals to deny federal fundme or abortions ONE OF THOSE who heard ~ r Carter on July 18 got the strong impression he was tellin& cabinet members that ir ever they felt impelled to battle against maJor Carter poltcies they should first resign The President's blue eyes were chilly when he descnbed his re- sen tment , an emotion lhat The Costa Mesa County Water Distract wants me to shut my lap to conserve water while it lets millions of gallons run into Upper Newport Bay from a leaky pipeline. Phooey! M.W.D. seemed odd cons1der1ng the background. Ms. Costanza dis t'reetly sent her boss a memoran- <lu m well ~fore the meelmg In the EOB. explaining the revolt. The very next morning, suppressing his true feelings, Mr. Carter told Miss Constanza he had read her memo and had dictated some new thoughts for her but made no objection to the meeting Given Mr. Carter's insistence that hts is "an open administra· lion,·· his resentment has puzzled the protesters. As Pat Derian. the State Department's human rights coordinator, who attended the July 15 session. told us: •·No one had any interest In embar· rassing the President." LIKEWISE, Miss Costanza said lo us: "Our me.itlng was a· normal, simple procedure in an open administration to get a message lD a man we work for and respect." Mr. Carter did not see it that way, but Miss Costanza can be ex~used if she still does not un- derstand. Her first encounter with the President after the cabinet meeting came at the state dinner for Italian Pnme Minister Giulio Andreotti Tues- day evening. The President was overheard to say only this to her: "Hi, you beautiful woman ... ABT HOPPE "The Bible clearly con- demns adultery as an abomina· tion;• says Miss Brian. "And no aood Christian would want theae kind ot people servtni as role models in our schools and con- vertin& ~r little children lnto vlcious adwterert •· ... To the Edilor I would like to address myself to the highly controversial issue of abortion My position is pro· choice and I have been silent for the past four years because or over·confldence and the belief that the progress we have made thus far an making safe, simple abortion available to the max- imum number of women would not be reversed. Now I sec lh~1t the anti- abortion people will not !>top their fight. ever I have come to the ~ad real1zat1on that the two forces wall always be working ai:iamst one another . Many different positions may be taken against abortion. The most common are those dealing with religious and moral conv1c· lions. As a pro·cho1ce person l support those feelings complele- 1). H a woman does not feel she would want an abortion no mat- ter how serious the consequences of an unwanted child would be. I totally support her right to choose not to terminate her pregnancy I feel 1t is important for each of us to realize that everyone has different convictions and though they are just as strong, are not the same. For many women the idea of brineing an unwanted ct)ild Into the world and not being able to provide the love and sup- port It needs ls a less m oral thing than having an abortion. WHO CAN say which is ri&ht? We are all human beings, after all. Judging each other by our own standards is senseless and futile. I repeat, who is right? My plea is: Please do not be my keeper! l must stay true to my o..-n feellnes and if you force me todosomething I feei terrible about, il would be u unfair as if I forced you to have an abortion. I realize right-to-lifers want a better worJd-iWbO doem't? But i~ start.a one ~on at a time. ( MAILBOX ) uttvs from readers are welcome The nght to condense letters to /ll space or eliminate h~I i8 reseT'VN utters of JOO wor<U or less will ~ given preference. All letters must in- clude aignature and mailing address but names may be withheld on re· quest 1/ sufficient re<Uon u apparent Poetry Wtll not be published And af I want an abortion, and <.'an 't get one because you have taken my right away. what have ~ ou accomplished" I still want fine and wall do everything in my power to get one. · There are many sad things we :.ee in the world. but hghting with all the ballcrncss and hate we have an us does n 't change anything Surrender to the fact that for many women 1t is more 1 m port ant to lead a happy. fulr1lled hfe than to please right· to-lifers RACHELLE D. STRAUSS Traffic Conc.-rn To the Editor: The July 26 Pilot article by Steve Mitchell Indicated Mayor Norma Hertzog's remarks as Vista Del La&o not having an ap- preciable effect on local traffic. Vista Del Lago has contributed to a heavy acceleration of traffic. We Mesa Verde residents are seriously concerned with the potential consequences for children walking and riding as well as vehicle safety. MIKE CHJT JIAN BCM>klasla To the F.ditor; Thank you for brtnclnf to our att.entlon the "crude self- cente·red notes" pertalnlngtoour sign ordinance (Dally Pilot, July 14). This ordinance was made available to equalize the seelne ablUty of all buslauses and is in · fact belne used and corrected whel\ deemed necessary. Many folks have had thought.II of what makes a strong council. I personally feel we are now suf- fering from a delayed backlash o! leadership 1ulded by those who were aomewhal~pathetlc. The ori&lnal ho~eownen as- soclatfoc\s were founded_ to open communication between th~ local city Slaff. the people and council persons. Has that ideal changed to power rn which to control leadership and perhapi, use mob rule? l would suggest that we jointly look to the real purpose of ideals and concerns of people in a total manner. DARRILYN J . OLIVER Back Bcay Fan To the Editor: I would hke you to help me in a fight to save one of m y favorite places. It is the Back Bay. I am 12 years old and am dis- gusted by the way the water looks because of the amount or sewage and other pollutants be- mg poured into it daily and tf that is not the case. I would lake to know what all the sludge is do- ing there and how 1t got there-I am only one or many people who would like to know what is going on lo help clean it up. IT IS NOT only the water that 1s polluted, it is the banks: they are filled with litter. Why I can remember when just a few months ago kids and dogs were · swimming there. I want to know what's happening and a few answers like: Why all of a sudden all that sludge? lsn·t it a health hazard? Please if nothing more write back and tell me who to write to. JANET STEPHENSON The care of the Upper Bay 1s en· trusted to the state Department of f'1sh and Gome, and tM Long Beach office couJd probably~ mmty of your questions. As to the source of the sl~. that i.! the sub1ect of a gov~ 1tudy to fmd out where at comes from and how to conlrol d . The ltvdl/ ii btmg done f>y a group ~alltd NIWA fNewport·lroine WO$te- Ma1togement Planning Agney>. 6"-11311. -Editor Airport Platt noise reduction goai is achieved. more fl1 ghUi could be permitted. with the proviso that each an· ' cremt'ntal increase an th<: number or flights must be ac- companied by an incremental decrease in the. noise exposure. This provides an incentive for the airlines to acquire quiet. jets as quickly as possible. and to take ~a 11 other possible steps to minimize the noise. SUCH A PLAN was supposed to have been analyzed an the ;urport EI R, and its absence from that document should have been the subJect of the Pilot editorial. The three points enum- e rated above are reason- able. yet. the county, up until now. has refused to adopt any 9f them as pohcy. Nor, for that matter. has the county taken any sub· stanllve step towards a long. range resolution of the airport problem hy finding another airport Without such policy ac· lion, what factual basis 1s there for the Palot 's contention that m· creased terminal capacity won 't lead to more noise? DANIEL W. F.MORY Big BrotltPr To the Editor: Middle America Is calling on Big Brother lo help them again. This time they want him to freeze their rents and lower their transportation and medical cosLc; Jt is a sadistic cry. Their bills are so high now because or their past demands that he lake care or them. His fees for his care are more than what he returns, an opUcal il- lusion or what he gives ror what he taJces away. . THE PEOPLE have become so used to asking, without consider· ing the consequences. because they have abdicated their own responsibilities. And until they take them back, Ble Brother will grow bigger In his role of caretaker. costing more and giv· ing less, as he gathers ln even more or the people's money lhrou1h new and more op- pressive taxes. J nstead of asking for more care they should be demanding less and Include in the demand the re- ducUoo ~ taxes on their homes so they could aflord to keep th m. - UFOs or 'Space Junk? Earth Soaring Through Stream of Meteors . NEW YORK l API -The plantl r.arth, on ill Journey around the aun, la plowln1 throuah a •warm ul lta\<t'I and otb« apac JW\k Jdl bth!nd by a com· t'd. ~ r•ult b abc1ut to be aecn by urthlln1s -"~'....__ lbe _.. 11 call id a ·meteQr ahower, but omewill uro. aOJIANTICI WILL E "fWOOTING atar.s" la ~ Utt l1'UISl beautiful Ull\1 Cowl nature h11 to otfer. Astronomers and J)la)' Jciall wUI obterve the 1ce, lf•"el and d t \ht bum before they can touch lbeplanel .. Ifs Just Uk Old Faltbf"1," aaya Dr M:nneth t'rankJln, u tronomer of ( J the lhyden Planetarium SCIENCE be~eTh~ rain or flt!r y '--------~:-debris known as the Perae1d Meteor Show~r becomes m06t vuuble the aame lime each year, rrom alter m1d1ught until Just before dawn on Aug. 11, LZ and 13. .,.., ....... lT IS CALLED PERSEID ·BECAUSE the meteors, about so evel"Y hour, seem to be streammg rrom the constellation Persem. Tb~ space debris rldes alone this orbit of the Temple·Swift Comet, which last passed the earth in 1961. WHEN HEAVENLY BODIES CROSS PATHS Meteor Shower Creates Shooting Star• ' The comet beaded around the sun and then back into the far reaches ol our solar system. If it returns at all, Temple.Swift won't be back until 2072. There will be no moon, which means the light from the meteors wdl have little competition. FOR THOSE' WHO STAY UP to watch the whole show, there will be an added attraction near dawn. The brl1htest planet, Venus, and the brightest star, Sirius, will be shtning in the sky with two lesser but still impressive bodies -Jupiter and Mars "Jt's a fau-ly defunct comet," says Franklin. ·'It might never return '' lltrr IN PREVIOUS TRIPS AROUND the sun , Temple-Swift ten chunks of lee and gravel in its or- bital path, which crosses the orbit of the earth. Other comets have done the same thing, crealina several meteor showers each year. Some are re· membered for their irregular but spectacular shows of light. Others, like the Perseid, are known more for their rtlgularity. Franklin says that some scientists will be watching the meteor shower to collect data on the atmosphere. They also might do spectroscopic analyses to monitor the chemical composition or the debris. None of it 1s likely to reach the earth because the gravel and ice are 10 small chunks that 1 burn or melt in the upper atmosphere. Franklin says observatories and planetariums frequelitly receive calls about UFO's directly after meteor showers. "TO THE PERSON WHO DOESN'T expect the meteor shower, it might seem scary," says Sten Odenwald, a graduate student worker a1 the Harvard College Observatory in Massachusetts. " ... you'll see some lights flanng up and then dL,I f>LUMllMG HIATIHG AllCOMD. ,., ..... ..... ing like stars exploding." · .. " ..... . Sftrv+<f' ti'\ Vour Ar~• -C•tl MISSION VIEJO But Odenwald also observes, "ll will be great for romanllcs, Just lovely. I plan to watch the shower from Yosemite National Park." He says the best place to watch the shower as outside any city limits. ?l'ln CA"""° C•Pl\lr.tno ISdn Ole<OIO FtWy •I AYOry Pkw~ l 495-0401 CO!>T"' MES"' 1526 Nowl)Or1 81 Vd 642-1753 This year's Perseid promises to be a good show. St Lk. ::2t1UI I So, Maybe You Need Another Bill Like you need a hole in the head? But you've got a hole in your head. and it's not going to go away by itself. Surprise -you might be able to get all your dental wark taken care of at no cost to yoa. Your union. employer's or personal dental insurance plan might very well cover the ..... ,... cost at Or. Arnold H. Flanzer's. That's a whole lot better Dr. Arnold H. Flanzer 370 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa 642-0112 A P9lice monitored alann system.. For: poUce, tire, mecllcal emergencd•. · $18.00 per month on a 1ubacn'tp"1on bu1I.. .. Ex1.Bt1ng &la.rm 1nst&llat1ons oa.n be connected to our computerized system-or :you oa.n ohooae trom ~e simplest low cost to the }nO&t sophistioated. alarm 1nat&ll&t1ons. No matter what-~ monthl.Y fee 1B the s&mel CASOO'S :S m 1 alarm system• uses computers to d.1splay ala.rm di.ta &nd vital personal 1nforro.a.t1on on a. TV soretn at ~e Newport Beach pollce/!lre <11.sp&toh center. OABCO helps the poUoe speed ru,ip to~uJ l'OJ> mol'e inform.at.ton please call '11..,e&u:.aaao. Nixon . Talks of Tapes NEW YORK (AP> In a fifth interview with British broadcaster David Frost, former President Nixon dis· cusses the White House taping system that led to hb resipation. Tbe program, drawn from the same 28 hours of interviews that Frost conducted last April near Nixon's home in San Clemepte1 is ~ for sale to teJeVislon stations that agree to broadcast lt in prime time sometime between Sept. 5 and 16. A special television networJr will not be cr,ated·for this program as was the case witb tbe first tour interview shows. Instead, the pro- gram. entitled, "Nixon: For the Record," will be sold on a station·lo· station basis. Each sta· tion tllll be allowed to sell 12 minutes of com· mercial time during the 90-minuteshow. In discussing the tap· ing system, Nixon also talks about tbe mysterious 181t'.l·mim,1te gap in one of the tapes and his reasons for not destroying the tapes when their existence became public knowledge. Wldnelidex. A1:1Qu11 3. 1977 DAILY PILOT A Z Death Ends Sttidy 1 FRESNO (AP) -Mildred Ruby GenC9'• diploma from Fresno State arrived tn the mail, but she never re- ceived it. Mrs. Genco, 57. died of cancer hours earlier at a local hospital. semester. she was 1ust three units short ol '1"aduation. Mrs. Genco signed up tor a poliUcal science class in summer school but became loo weak to finish the COW"lle. She began working toward a degr~ 10 years ago when her dauahter began colle&e. By the end of last 1prioi'11 University officia.ls, told by her husband John that Mrs. Genco was about to die, nuade out a 1raduation certificate last week and mailed tt to her. SUTl'H11S ROCKSI'A.R MEMPHIS, Tenn. <AP> -A former member of singer Jerry Lee Lewis' band tued a $400,000 federal lawsuit against Lewia, seeking damages in a shooting last year at the sineer's hotAe. The ~ult, filed by Norman "Butch" Owens and bis wile Jacqueline, asks $150,000 In com· pensatory damaees and $250,000 in p'Unitive damages. Owens was wounded in the chest Sept. 28 at Lewis' Collierville home. Police said Lewis told of· ficers be and Owens, now of Clarkaton, Ga., were playing with a .357· magnum pistol when It discharged. Lewis told officers he didn't know tbe gun was loaded. SELL ldle Items with a I>aiJ.y Pilot Claaslfied Ad. 8'2..'5878. --------- WC.IURI SPECIAU ......... • .1-clM!ln .z ...... WHU TMl'UAIT •• , s 11000 $200 OFFONOUR WICKER MIRRORS BURI SETEES s499s WHIU THFf LAm · WE • -. ) WICKER. ETC. M I~ . , 1ssz w-: :.-:: t l ~~ -··· LwillA.tiluuao 847 ·4140 __ , ... "'' .... -. u .. Ever have a smile a mile wide? You will when you walk into Perpetual Savings. It's the only place in town where you get, not red, but Green Carpet Treatment. Like waltzing through the Green light Express no-wait· ing line. Like the Action J Desk where top professional people jump into action to help you. Like our time-sav· Ing Preferred Service -just call and reserve a time to come in and do business at your con· venience. And our higher·than· any· bank interest that makes you smile all the way to Perpetual. Come in and let our people give you a free sample of Green Carpet Treatment and the widest smile in the West. You'll feel good all over. -- ' Do\ll. y PfLOT Wiid A ust ' 1m . • • Students, Teachers, PareniS --' Agree on Agreenien OAltLAND <Al• i P•rtn~ l!ll'ft1n1-to provld• Ubrary·llke quiilt tcw two hou,.. •v«-ry tchool ahho lhetr chddr n can tludy TIM dUJdren wm prOm lH to do r bolnoworic and ~have an acbool. And teacher• will make , aurc the 1tud•n t1 r~rea\~ .cacs.mc andJob-reJated t luU.11 DOWNY FABRIC SOFTENER R1d11cts Static Clint It's ull part nr • le111ly non bhHllnM uiircemcnt lhut atudent.s. t"uchera und parenti wm be 1u1kt"I to 1111n this fall in an at- h·mpl to huve lhem put forth the ir best effort.a toward aood educaUonat pracUces "'l'ho contnct leu everyone know what. the)' are 11upl)Oled to do," b:Ud Ruth lJOve, supermten· de nt of the ~O.OOO ·stude nt 011kland School Otslrict. She said continual buck passing by parents, teachers and students sparked the Idea to aet firm commitments toward good educational prac:tJces on the dotted line. Sillninl the pact Is JOHNSON'S not mandatory . however . "The teachers say the paren~ aren't. doin1 tbe1 r share," Ms Love said. "The parents s ay the t eachers uren't doing their share. And the students say thl' parents a nd the teachers aren L doing their share.·· Ms. Love said details of the pact sUll n~ to be completed by a committee of parents, teacb~rs and students A dratt was pre- ~l·nled last week to the school board, whtch reacted favorably. The committee already bas eliminat ed a proposal which would have required parents to reed their children breakfast before sendmc th•m to sc~ Ms. Lovesaid. } Call 142•5171. c Put • few words In the i-to work for you. DAILY PILOT RUIESIM BABY SHAMPOO FOR TII MIUONS WHO SHOULD NOT TAKE ASPIRIN TYLENOL CEPACOL MOUTHWASH & GARGLE No Moie lear:. leaves hatr soft mi F• Dai!y Care ot tlte Mottft. 9&tL faaldyS121 2.29 100 TABLETS CARNATION MIGHTY DOG Amrt'd Flmrs FABERGE BRUT 33 ANTI · PERSPIRANT STICK DEODORANT 2J~ oz. sac REVLON Milk Plus 6 24 HOUR MOISTURIZER , lln11p1P tnrmul.i wllh r .iturnl 1n;:u•d1r11l!> .ti....... ,:,.;.o .i'.:.i!!:ii!u:!.u:.rJl STAMDtMG i' , Hibachi ~; With 16~ Chrome legs '.i!, J4"x l 4"x3 "1 " trr Approx gull srn ::: 7 88 ~ •ITO~·llllB • i'.' For BEQ BATH and BUDGET. .. Allln WO{]O~~-ILEI DESITIN ~ ~ SKIN CARE I ~ llJltal lU I- 1 ~<>:J WHITE SHEETS BED PILLOWS Puron polyester fibers, non· allergenic •wr STAYFREE "MONTICELLO" NO -IRON Bl~ded cotton & DEODORANT polyester for a smooth & even lex ltJTed weave. Tape CONTADINA TOMATO .. SAUCE. 15 oz. CANS 23c BAND-AID IRANO PLASTIC STRIPS All One Size 60 ; BANO·AID BAICOAGES ~· "MINI-PADS" selvages for remforcement .... \ MEDICATED Absorbent Clxpi~~ ~.\ HAND LOTION ~ U&. '1llOWCASCS TWiil nttt4 er Flit fUll fitted ti' flat · DtSJTll; > r::::lf&~ 2.50 2.99a 3.99 El !»<IN CAf<C 99c ---..,. 10 Ol. CLAIROl Condition BEAUTY PACK TREATMENT The beaut~ pre~ripllon for troubled hair 2 11. Tott t~ 19 "SINUTAB" . r~;:2-·-· . .·....... I . . . 6 "Santa Cruz" I ~~~· WID TOWllS llTIC TOWELS 2 roa 2 roa 3.994.99 ··seunade., L~<>;;;] SOll9 Jli:GUUO Shred Foam fdl WlSKCLOTM_S 199 HOR • . MANI TOWUS IATK TOWUS . ·:.,.,oa 2 FDR . . :· 3.99 4.99 ~. ~ .. MATtRESS PAD "SHY" FtMININE SYRINGE PetitP. l!a sy. modern 3.77 "THE STRAP" LU5WCU.STIAP For lu&gage • books~. de. 1109 • > " ~ \ ,, ~ . 2.99 \ "No. Pest Strip" from SHfll 59c ~-----11 SA V-ON IRAll> Disposable Diapers l t t f I & ~ \'?@QJ][{ ~©lfWD©@ • ~'f'll• l I Q i 4 •w~.....-.... ....----~- Ersatz Ice ~· Augu1t 3, 1917 . DAIL V PILOT :'f Cream Yet?' Congressional Skeptics Berate FDA Proposal ... WASHINGTON <AP) "But "'Cof a prvbl•m" fhon unlf' 111 l'ul l>linn l'ol wall cul rN tu,w. frilaJIO flw Clf\IWr" cmd "'lwn 11uv nfltd to aolve mcq~hH '" fOOll'FIW..., and bu61N'u Mml uc11ir qw,twna to Pot Du11n. Al Your s.rv.c.. ~ Cw.ti lJ<ialv 1"11'11 f> (} Hu:t ljlj(), Co11a M''°· C.4 _. M morq, l•llr.r• 01 ponabtt> wtll be on1w.rcd. but phoned ... what will th1s do to spumoni'>'' asked Rep. Leon Panetta. nickel a gallon on the ice cream they buy. KENNEDY'S STATEMENTS were disputed by members ol two agric"1ture subcommittees hold· ing ajointhearingon the Issue and by consumer witnesses and nutri· tionists. Nutritionist Peg McCon- nell. also opposing the regula- tion, said. "We don't have enough informati(}p to know that a formulated foocntas the same nutritional content or a natural food." ,., °' ktln1 Mil 1r1rludl"fl llw ''<Mkr'~ full nomi:, Qddrtu and tn.:1 .. wu hour•' plwnr numwr ('IJllllilt tH· nm11den~d Th~ <'tilumn •Pf*Utdml11trttf'f Saturda11•" ' .... ,.., .... ,,.,. ~,., .. " .... _,, DEAR .. Al . I remomb4:r rndanl( !lomeUunJC ubout ·Who's Who Amoni Amenun lfhrh St·hool Studt•nh. but I t•un't rec1dl whitl Is this book • npoff• H I' llunUnglon Ueach lt'1 not• rlpfllff, but it h. • ~anity publJuUon. You wlll note the a~h~ nt H)', your namt' will be Included free, but It costs S3 to Mn ,.ar pkturt' publbbfod. Tht' book Itself cosll S20.95, includ la& r'•&e utd •Hdlla1. Thb book. published by Educational C••lllllllkatioll», lat'., Aiwt.bbrook, Ill., hu no coMection with the ortpi.al lluqllb "Wltcfl Wbo ln Ute U.S." The ripoff "Who's Who" Mell ye. ·~ be lkbllda1 aboat ••• published in more than ZO st•Ws. Cua.la aad Mexico. It wu sold by Gold Lear Publlshlag Co. aJMI N-111 America• Re"arcb and Denlopment Corp. until 1 court laj.actlm IUppe4 them ln 1175. C•~.,. It'•••• Filn ~k DEAR PAT I am conservator for an elderly fnend On l>e\eral occasions, when i.he was still laving alone. J rescued her social secunly check from the waste basket or fireplace I think there's 11 chance some of her checks were never deposited. but I have no de finite tnformataon about th1'> Can I ii'>k the Social Secunt\ Ad ministra tion to check., · C D Huntington Be11ch Somellmei. there'i. nu way to avoid a little red tape, and this i11 one of them. Vou wlll have to visit a social security omce end sign certain forms before a records check can be.done. Obtaining a re- cord ol her social security account, which would show up any un· cashed chttkB, Is no problem. Be sure to bring proof of your con- servalorshJp and your frlt>nd's social securfty number. Fix-it !fan May /'Wot Sa"~ DEAR PAT· I purchal>ed a Konica Auto S camera in Japan It needs electric eye repairs Can I get a parts manual '>O I can trv to fix it myself., The local repaar shopschargetoomuch J W .. Huntangton Bec.<:h "Do·it-yourseJr repair'> ma.) end up costing you more In the Ion~ run," warns Larry Larsen of Cats Camera. Inc. In Costa Mesa. Larsen, aJso a photography Instructor at Orange Coast College. ex plains that some camera parts have Increased more than so percent Ill price lately and unless yoj>'know exactly how to make the repair. you'd be wiser to let an ~rt handle it. He add~ that camera re· pair persons also a1e in s hort supply, accounting for the StO to s12 per hour labor cost. Jf you i.tiU want lo go ahead dh your own, ~rile to Berkey Markf'ting. llH I Chestnut Ave., Glendale. CA 91502, for a manaal. NAMED TO BOARD Forest Dickason Water Board Names Viejo 4r Man Member Forest Dickason of Mission VteJo hus been named to the seven-member Moulton Niguel Wal er Distract hoard of direc- tors, succeeding Robert Aldrich. who res1g'led an March D1ckai;o) 1s planning director ror a Newport Beach architec· lural and planning firm. He was fornierly plannang director for the Orange County Planning Oepartmcnt Marrk'CI and the father of two children, Dickason has hved in \llssaon VieJO since 1969 and has worked an the 'planning field , !'>ancc has graduation from UCLA an 1953 He as a meJTlber of the \mcracan Institute of Planners 1 A IP l and past president of the t\ IP Cahfornaa chapter The Moulton Niguel Water Dis- trict '>enes Laguna Niguel and part of Mission V1eJo ~I \ You 're invited! )I"<' .. • • ~' I •• Our Chessa Davis showing is Friday "Not a thing," Food and Drug Commissioner Donald Kennedy r eplied Tuesday to a packed House hearing room THE HEARING, WHICH melt· ed into laughter at the California Democrat's question"' concerned the serious subject of what manufacturers will be allowed fu put in the 800 million gallons of ice cream they provide annually to the American public The FDA has proposed a reg- ulation that would allow dairy products such as non fat di)' milk to be replaced by milk-derived ingredients, including a cheap imported substance called caseinpte. "This wilt guarantee product quality just as well as the old re cipe," Kennedy told skeptical legislators BUT REP. CHARLES Rose < D-N .C. >. evoked stories of ersatz products given the public in Nazi Germany because of wartime shortages "The American pubhc wants the real thing." he said. Rep. Fred Richmond < D N. Y >. said the proposed new rules "represent a bold de· parture from the use of natural unaduJterated ingredients and represent another step towards chemicalized. artificial. high. technology food .. Kennedy insisted that "the new standard will produce ice cream that has the nutr1t1onal equivalent and the equivalent tn taste and texture of what we are used to " HE ADDED THAT 1t abo wouJd "permit a lower-priced ace cream for consumers " It has been esllm a led the change rn federal regulations could save consum ers about a Rod Leonard. represenllng the Co n s umer Federation of America. uid the regulation could lead to ··ruture debasement of an already questionable pro- duct." Royal Yawn Several congressmen ex - pressed skepticism that ice cream m anufacturers would pass along to consumers their savings in using the caseinate. Richmond called it "a $100 million windfall for the ice cream industry " Pnnce::.~ \'1cton~1. l\\O-\\eek·old add1t1on to the $\\edish rn~ al lamal~ ~a'' ns a., hl'r mother Quel'n S1lna hands lwr to Kmg C1rl <;ust<.11 Th<.' famal~ poM•d Im p1cturC' ... .11 their ... umtnl'I l'l'sHlem·t.• at Oelancl hit• Cut loose: come to our fabulous Jones N.Y showing! • ' On Aµgust 5, we've got their special representoti'{e. Boots Corson, coming to celebrate! From Meet Barbato Alexander at Newport. Friday, August 5, to present the latest and greatest of the llnel See r 11 o .m.-3 p .m. In Better Sportswear. .. And if you like wha~ou see here, wol 'tll the entire colle tlon is befo~e you! We can't think of anything that won't be Ideal for Newport. Come see for yourself. These two pieces of block magic? In challis. of polyester/wool. The peasant blouse. S.M-L, $40. Double-pleat skirt, sand border. One size. $80. Moll/phone. Better Sportswear. 25. it modeled, Informally. 12-3 pm. We stJ<>w just two ports of a super total. It's ~hlng that's happening for Ill Twin printed. Loosely ~~-t..:\~~ s ped. Green rayon challis. '8~(fj~:J P sont tOpt $39. Dirndl with tie: $43. Sizes 6-14. Mol/pQ.one. Updated SportsWeor. 3. Meet Alan Jon and see the 1928 jewelry collection! Jewet,Y just like Grandma' used to wear! trs a great new Idea from the 1928 Jewelry Company. Alon Jon. coordinate designer for 1928, will be here to show you this fabulous collection of antique reproductions. S~rdoy, August 6, 11 o .m.-5 p .m. Fashion Accessories, 16. • \ Coaoat114'all lnaaate Drugs Caused Death Br TOM BARLEY Ot .. Oelly """'tt-. Vo you.have rtre aod tbefl Jnaun.oce BEISNER CONi'IRMED that oa your personal belon11ftaa? dominal area although lt was not Tuck A Pelt Rabbill What a corooer'a lnves\.iaator described H a "fantastically hl&h level of ~ ln h1.s blood . 1tream" cauaed the death of Timothy Guy Hawkins in the Oran1e Oowity Jall Jcaly 5, an uutopey hu determined. how Hawkins, 28, Garden Grove, obtained the d.ruJ. He sa1d the answer to that question may be known when an tnvestJcaUon be· inc conducted by the district at· tomey'a office is completed. Hawkins was arrested July 4 on the beach 1n the Newport Beach area. He was booked lnto the jail on charees of uslne and beine under the influence ol drugs. ~~~c!utgf'Ynj~er~!~~ ':':e ~~ -Our ZOth Year Phone 548~5554· possible during the autopaytode-__ l9H Barbor Blv~: coa•-M•s termine the cause of thole in-------.--.-------~~--;;-;..::.:;~.:,:~ jurim. He emphasized that the in· juries did not contribute to Hawkins' death." tnveetlaator Jhn Belaner tden· titted the dru1 a.s pbencyclldlne, btttt.er known to the medical pro· feaslon aa PCP and initially in· tended for use by veterinarians performin1 surgery on animals. BEISNEB SAID it ls not known Hawkins died in hls jail bed durinc the followlnc ni1bt after an attack of vomiting brou.eht on after ingest.ion of PCP. coroners s aid. , The final ruling on wheuier Hawk:lna' death can be listed as accidental, suicide or murder will oot be made until the district attorney haa completed his t. vesUgatlon. For the Record Schools Cited ByFFA Dta.lld.._. 01 M•rrl .. ~ \_ ~-y· t lfta_,, A anO OoNl<I E . WOLD. SANTANGI LO. M Tllerew •nd L11>0a -R--..R. s.muel T.; VAltAGNE. O•.,.. D •nd SCHATZ. Sfndr• J..,.'""" Le• An H•rwild A • 0111ANI, ,._,., c and lhofty NINO. JoNt CHrv •nd I.Ori Oe-<11\ 0 SILVA, c,. .. ,,.. va1..,. Lt•. WR09EL, OonM Jun •nd Fred <I• V1toa• 11\d Pedro; STEELE, frllt Mission Viejo Hl1h School pla~ed second and Costa Mesa High School was judged the most improved school in an annual Future Farmers of Amer ica awards ceremony at the OranieCounty Fair. ~rl•Y A. -Hal F : J ACKSO ... ~111•Y -ltoti.,, E ; llVltNETT Deborah L, and 1-U•b•rt M . 8 c SCHAEFl'ER, 0 .. 1<1 W -YvontW oast A ; ECKHOLOT. Carol Joan ""° Wllll•m Eo ... ooo, WHITfll!LO, Marie Gt9'e Mid H.>rry ArlhUr PH•LL1PS.J••n •nc1s1ewn e :Mc Students 0 1\NIEL, Bewrly June _. ..iamo H1rrll; TAYLOR, K1tol LOll!M and Edo•r Paul; LOHRE Y, Ken"''" E--llonn•• L ... 1 ORTEGll, G ftortnc lo a nd E r ika E • rad t d NICKEltSON, Donald Rou and ua e The awards were given to the FFA chap· ters for outstanding farm sanitation. Com· Attt M Klll)erlM ROTHSCHILD, •Fr•r><le Ind Jerry. R('THSCHILO, Jtrrv -Fr..,.,. MAJOAL'f, W1jdl e nd Mar H• I . WOOD, Ki ron E•u•t»I" otnd Hotrry Joe, WARD. Edward J M>d Gtorla J PORTER Velma S.w and RltM•d Edward KELLY tC•I"" M •nd ~or~ W Jr c WALLMEIER Helftl Poler -MMo..,~llnd4t RIEGER Conn•t L .,,,, H1r. y P • JOHNSON K•,,.n C -"Id Moire H•rcwr L•ne Al l e N P•,.,..•• J ,...., r'""''"Y L SPURR Ewtyn M ·"'<I R-r1 E PATRIC.II. C.rot JOY'·• and Gereld Lynn H4VCS. P•1•1<•• Ann and Lon-• a.11 Kollh WAL TON Rlt M rd It W end K•r..n ICee GllllERT. 9'>bbv L Jr -Marv E BORICMAN ,,_.,,.,,..'! L •nd C"••to E OOUGlAS, lt1 IDll M•1i1r t<• •nd ti•tr••H L•vern1 ~ NA POLE!.. Anll• San< ..... ,.., H•nrv Fr1n<.IK0, l'ERGUSON. Slllrlty Anti '"" CtilQ 1.ewr9"te, VOGEL, Lynn Rot>eri •n<I Con\l<tl'lt~ Etl<1Deln; MATHISON P•1rlcl• llnn •n<I O.rald Porlty· BONWELL, Cynlnle L. Ind , ... ,,, •• M WING. Bobby JHn end Joyce El•IM; HERRERA, Jor~ G, t nd El~l'l/llene lll FLEUR, CllllOf'd Lowell end ll•llv Rea HILTNER, K•lny Ann •l\d S1rven; RROWN, Anti• "nd Dale It M C 00.,ALO, Jn,.•pntne S. and Marvin E . JOHNSON. Holen RM •nd Wttber Hrrman, SAGt. Paull A. end AIOMO Jr, l'lleclJu1v 1t Eight Orange Coast petition was baaed on s tudents were among monthly inspections of 2.000 UC Davis stu· the county's n high dents named to spring schools which offer in· dean's honors lists. They ~ruction in agricultural are: iences. From D11oa"9l"':B•<r .. 10 s1.... The schools were n1nq Ul01 T""'41 OtlW -...1 ,....,.. Dool _, e111o11 croo'e Orqu on student effort tto• H•rDMv; .. woriw; Mona ~o...,1 to reduce or ehminate ~·Q. Jl4 0..~h•d ..... J imtt ltcttl '\ b d l ~Hc.1-, ... 0r•w ;-1orie :....: ree ng sources for -~~:...~=":-: Jotin M41nro flies, mosquitoes and 1•111 Vie El Socorro • rats. 2~:·~..! .. ~i ... C/1<'1100_. Sl>e•. The awards were joint- ,.,~~~· Mes•: JO.. N1111e1. * •w• ly presented by the Orange County Vector Control District and the SevenMake ~~:fu~ county Farm D , Li New Editor ean 8 St History-journalism A Balboa woman and m!!Jor Tim Hogan, 22• of M l'l'.lf'ay City has been six Newport Beach stu· named executive editor dents have been named f to UC Davis deans ' o t he Golden West College student honors lists for spring newspaper, the Brand· ~~ester ~ork. They ing Iron. ORANGE COUNTY 12Named To County Park Panel · Twelve cltizeni-were appointed by Orange County supervisors T uesday to an advisory panel studying future re· gional park needs in the county. The group is to work with county staff mem· bers and a consultant during the next 18 moo.lbs to review exist· mg park facilities and making recommenda- tions on what may be needed to meet future recreational needs. The group appointed Tuesday includes r epresentatives from civic and environmental groups, recreation coun· cils, the League of California Cities, the County ValUe Appeals Down Despite this year's 19.7 pereent countywide in- ~rease in assessed v~luation, assessment appeal fil. mgs so far are runnmg about 50 percent less than during a similar period last year, Howard Whitcomb, manager of quality as· · surance in the assessor's department said today 61 people had filed appeals on 78 pieces ~f property as of July 25. They contend the assessed value placed on their property was higher than il should be. * ~at compares wit.h 112 people filing appeals on * 191 pieces of property during a similar 12-day • period last year. he said. * AT THE SA.ME TIME. 1,222 applications had been issued as of July 25 compared with 2 433 for a similar 13-day span a year earlier, Whlteomb re- ported. • Whitcomb said it is still too early to know if the trend will cootlnuo and result in fewer appeals this year. "But I thln1c,people are becoming aware that we follow the market, and they know what is hap- pening to their property values";" he said. PROPERTY OWNERS BA VE until Sept. 15 to contest the vaiue Assessor Bradley J acobs has placed on their property. They may obtain appeals applications by dialing 834·2791. Last year, faced with an 18.7 percent COUD· tywide increase in assessed valuation, a total of property owners filed 5,147 appeals. Of those, Jacobs' staff either made corrections . e:commended relief at assessment appeal hear-ings lD about 33 percent or the cases. About 11 percent of the appeals still remain un- resolved. The only basis for an appeal ls a property owner's contention the value placed on his property was in error, Whitcomb explained. co unt y H arbors, ,--------------------Beaches and Parks Com· mission and the LeagYe of Women Voters.. Cattle orcondomlnlum, find your dream home Newport Center Animal Has,ml .... .. u.f...atrPwl~t' •Rll ....... w..,...,._._. ... .,. ... Announces the Association of --1-._ Anita M·. Henness, tWM NACTtCI LM'llDTO CA.MC• eta9tlnt Ot ..... l.,._,..., Tumonl ol Dogt. Cits. Hori-. By Appointment~ 1333 Avocado-Newport Center Newport Beach MCNULTY, Ger•ld D and P11rlcl• ". TAlOM.S..lly A •noM1c11 .. 1L; WILLIAMS. NICOle11e l oUIH IM Mersl\lll ~ni\; MOWE ~. Helen end Wllllem T ; PAWLVttr CVn1111• W •nd St~ M.. ADAMS. Elve L. And Clltto rd E., CARROW, O onald Ltr •v end Hene y .Ann ; MAO eltS, Evelyn 1. -Fr...cl• 0.-Jr.; O'LEARY, "•lrlci. J. llld .,_,... O.; RIBOT"- Evet.,.._ Ind Ellft I .; MURRAY, Allee L ilftd l.ewr...ce L. 111. Elizabeth Paige, 1700 Food Sam·tatto· n E. Ocean Blvd., Balboa; Nancy Van Sinden, 1942 Port Laurent; Douglas· Roreoer. 125 Via Counc·l £'. ated .. U14Tl Sundays Jn the DAILY PILOT • • •************************. TRAVIS, Moneque •nd llotlerl: Venezia; Greg Dawson. Z '-..JTe 1346 HamP6hire Circle; Ji 11 Johnson. 1339 Hampshire; Michael Millikan , 538 Vista Grande: and David Warner, 122 Via Koron. A food sanitation council to adTI&e the Orange County Health Department on market and restaurant hyeiene i.saues was created by county supervisors Tuesday. CAPUTO. 1>1111.,.,.,,. ll(ltd Anth<lny AIDert: CORNWELi., JUdy A and Oon1ld P , MAllTIN, Jer11<11 O. and ftmer J OULGERIAN, Herry '""" Lou•\I' C"ll•erlne; tc:ING, Donna G. and o ...... E NOWLIN. R1ymond Oouqt•\ •nd M•ro•rtt Lou•i•. &AKONI\, V1ot1 •nd Wall•r W • WELCH TllOm.n W Jr and Jlmm•• N RATTI S1t-nM ..,dLOul\•C T Stud OVCRSTREET, MotrtM "••nto WO ents The council la to be composed ol food industry re~resentatives, a report to supervisors said, and is to identify problems, review county health policies and perhaps sugeest new techniques. •nd Ben HAPP. William tc:lrk •nd Sus•n Anne; DELGADO, Gr•o A Mid J"Mi F : SASS. C•ndlc• E and Da vid E . JOHNSON, Elln'I H - Jqhn Brue• GR II Y, O..,ny Gen• I nd c:.1 .. 1 .... Rene•; GILPATRIC. Tr..da ~d CllltO<'d E : MOERllE, J enice Gey •nd Jerry Joe; PfLTZ, Death Notlf!es Earn Honors ory student David rown of Seal Beach, · d Gloria Rowland, a psychology major from Fountain Valley, have been elected to Phi Beta Kappa, a national Supervisor Ralph Diedrich, after questionini the need for a restaurant writer on the panel, alao asked that supervisors be pei:mitted to approve all persoos named to the paneL ALLERGY? 1tOS1 scholastic honor society. 014) 543-9624 Re carded Message ALl>l!N T. ROSS. rnldt!M"' South They attend UCLA. Latune. O llfornte. P .. Md• •w•y --..-------..--AUOust 2, 1'n. SurvlY9d ll'tl Mt Wife Franc." Rois, ton. O..rie. ltou, S.1111 Al>•. c. •nd ~°" JIM Al-lton . Ven HUY!', C.. Me,,_l•l Mrvlc" wtll be lwld on Fri.,, Al>O sat 2 OOPM. l•llr llero-ron O>loel, Co<ona <Mt M•r lnurnment at ~•<lf•c View Memortat Park 8at11 ller9•ron, c;or.,... dtl Mir dlr9'1on SMm4 TVn4IU LAMI WUTCU.. CHAPB. 427 E. 17th Sl Costa Meu • tMM888 Santa Ana Chapet 6 t8 N. Broadway Santa Ana• 547-4131 PIRCI taOTNDS SMmfS' MCMITUAH 627 Main St. Huntington Beach 538-e639 ,_PAW.LY COLOMAL FUtoUAL NOMI 7801 Boise Ave. W.tminster 893-3625 PM:llfCYllW telMIUPAa CfmetetY Mottuw °'"* 3500 Pllclfic View DriY9 Newport. c.l11omla 144-2700 . Neptune Society CJlll!MAT10H 9Ult1ALAT·S8A 646-7431 V-.ttelal.cWlty ........... , .... , <I __ ,_,._..,.... C41f11wl ........... le I ,. -CaM.,/911r. 546-5528 2640 ...... .... c.... ... .o,..,., PRP.SENTS A~UCY CONTROL Fm!TIOM 111 1513, hp Ca 92661 .,,,. ................ .. A NEW LUNCHEON MENU PLUS AN INSPIRING BUFFET: $l.95 11:30 to 2:30 $2.95 Offering. . BARON OF BEEF ·Carved -Buffet Style• Daily . WEDNESDAY: Mex.lean Dai aallf R.11 Endallad ... Riet II Retried Beans. AlboDdla• SiWP $9.95 PLUS PAR'l'S Reg~arly 12.95 OHLY•BUMI HOOYQ..P. sm HOOVER, .. SliVICE CLI IC PUT NEW LIFE IN YOUR HooVER .QEANER -" 48 HOUR SERVICli• FREE PICK IF& DBJYERY! With oar a~ ractua 1 s. "" r • .. vere Weigh.t ·Loss Triggers Danger slg;'a1. 8J K. l"l"CINC&OllN Frten<b who bawn 't 1e.n blm tor lielp u much aa they can. • ttw montha are 1boeked by b11 ooc~oR IN What I have been saying, Mrs. appearuee. They aak him ltbe bu · · I ' H .. ii that the lint, most important be n 1lck. Ho fuat itn°"8 their THE HQl!ISE step your lather can take is in the 1t1tameot.1. U direcUon of the doctor's office. My mother 11 al b·J wl\'a end 11\d Loss of weight ts as much a danier As I've been aaytnc. all I can do Is hope I can convince your father to see your doctor. Show him this column. Maybe be will realize be owes soinetbin& to the farni.b' as well as to hJmselt. '° are the chltd.Nn'7 Can you tell signal a.s sudden pain or hemor· whaat -1-bl be wroni? ...... Mn. H. by not~' diqnosls and treat· rhace. It's aboormal to lose while MEDICALETTES ..... ment. sWl bavin& a good appetite. Dear Dr. ~l.ncrohn: Can a doc- WllAT MIGHI' BE wrone? ,You tor tell if a child has strep throat qnderatand that eueaslnc•wiU real· without a lab test? My husband ly eet u.s nowhere. Whenever I see says the doctor can only guess at it.. a paUeot who bas lost much wel1ht Is tbls true! -Mn. D. ONL y PU.OT A J • . C.'OIUtJ!NT: It may~ brutal to ·~ it, but IOmt !*>Pl• are quite aelflab in thtlr lllnua. TbJa ta npcclallr ltue about \b()ff who a~ putnt y 10 about tiJlln1 th•msel" by refusln1 mtdical at· t..ntioo. IN MANY INSTANCES J ha1ve told tbis t.o the paUent. Oft.en, jolted by the realisatioo thtt the slclt cue owes aometh1n1 to the family too. the patient becomes cooperative. Not only doet be or she paw have a better chance for aurvival; the patient automatically removes th~ burden ol doubt and concern from \be family members who want to for no apparent reason, I lm· COMMENT: True. Some angry, soedlat.eb' think about the posslblll-. inflamed throats that look to be ------- ~ ln your father'• cue, tbey are lnaensiUve to. the deapalr and con· cem they came tbelr oWQ family MEN'S SIZES 6V2to12 BOYS' SIZES 2V2 to 6 . MEN'S WOVEH OR DflT.Sfflm OR LADIES' ICNIT SHtm L.., ..... ,..... ....... '"" .... Clfffs, ... !e4 C9llr ........ '-'bit & -· .... ' ... .............................. , ...... SAVI Ys .... ·~~ ~:.333 3" u .ta to . MEN'S & lADltS' mu FASHION SUNGI mn ...... , ..... ._ ......... ,~ . ............. """''""' . "" ....... EffERDENT DENTURE QUHSll t y t b a t d i a b e t e s o r suspicious may turn out to be hyperthyroidism may be the cause. negative. Others. aeemingly in- Cancer, of course, is always a fac· nocuous, may be strep throats. tor to be cooaidered. There may be When in doubl. doc\ors ask fOl' help one ol many other reasons. from the lab. LOOl fOR llt£ Y£LLOW & BLACI CllARAMCl TAGS ON HUNDREDS Of UNAOVlR - tlSED SPECIAlSl S£LEC1IONS '#ARY FROM STORE TO STOil MURRY fOR BEST SlUcllOMS AMO SAV£ $$$ ,....~,,..,..., ........ ....... -.. ~·lilllil-­--............ , ALKA SELTZER ANTACID fABlm Call 642-5171. Put • few WOfda to WOtk for ou. HORMEL TAMALES ·u39c oz. 1¥ fVU.MOON &RINGS our TH!: "'101..f IN M f! I • --- BylAY UV'IT Oap aod dames worth tl&btint •or." . LOS ANGELES CAP> -TV •' producer Andrew J. l'tnldy ,.... HJs card reld.s: "'Sam Marlow. cently publlabed hla tlnt boot, Private lnveati•tilor, I Don't "The Man With ~arl'a F .'' Sleep." Jt '• a hard·bolled privac. e~ In abort, Fenady, now making novel Ht In the 19'10I, but la not • CBS movJe called "The your usual iumaboe aqa, Hostqe Heart." hu written an Ill hero hu a pluUc aur(eOn • affectionate spoof of d~ve re do hla face, make him look worb by auch creata as Dublell ltk• Humphrey Bolan. He then Hammitt and Raymond ch 1n1ea hla name to Sam Chandler, ll.Qd aucb top iumshoe Marlow. buys a 1939 Plymouth fllckl u ''Tbe Maltese l'ilCQCl." and 1oes Jnto the b&rd·bolled prl v ate ey' bualneaa. HE IDftES A BVSTY blonde »ecretary he caJt. Duch.., and commencea operatin1 u Botart mlJht have in the old days, "when there were causes aod IT ALL B"EG.\N ABOUT three yeus aao, be said, when he wrote the followinc paracrlPh: "Alter the bandaces were re-- mo\l'ed, the man witb tbe Hum· pbley Boaart face slipped into a trench coat and a CJ'•Y felt. haL ••r put It in a drawer and almost forgot about it,'' said Feoady, '9, who arew up im-mersed in detective classics in book and film form. "Bu,tltkeptanawinl at me. . ·~fomN'T KNOW what to do wllh it. But oue day It akuck me ,-I want to do a Valentine, an al- fectlonate Valeptlne, not a parody, on all the (teat prtvate eye novela and ioovJes ever made. "So that day I aat down and •tarted wriUns,.. cnnned the author.• l!lort. intenae man wbo, clad In wblte eblrt, blue pants In need ol pressinf and bcnr~ shoes, didn't resemble ~our average cashmet9-Ucued TV prod~. "'It went on night and day. My secretary quit on me ah times, my wile would come down at S e.m. and &IY. 'Andy, tbe bmnan body cannot endure tbls, yoq'ro eonna die, 1etaome aleep.' .. IN ZS DA~ the novel was finished, lie •dded. The next step was to get a book agent, which be did, and then to coovlDce a publisher a detective novel needn't be. well, li.ka all tbe otbera. · Ha conceded tome publlahen told bJm they wut their private ey_elnf done ltralght, With no. • ~~ , · ···v--. tbQ'W tol4 me Ua1t,•• he I d. ·~··· Hid. •Loo«, Fen.id)'. detdvo lt\&ff, it it's funqy, thee'• no m.-•t for lt.9 And m1Ybe OOC. except t.bse wu a marbllfortldsaae.'• BE S&ID JIE'S DAD Mtwrk quedes about •t1Jbe Miil With Boeut's Face.• but b•-... to produce lt b1maelf as a theitittal movle. He alao aalcl bis publisher, Henry Repeey Co. of C ... c.,o, Wants a sequel. .,,_,.fact. they went a series of aeqUels to lt." Feaady lausbed, considerlq the prospect ol more boius Balart. .. Butt don't blow if I can aurvift 8Q1 more al tbose 23-day aessiooa .. . "I know my wile caa'L •• . . I I ! • • I I r l A1'""9to THE YANKEES' REGGIE JACKSON SIGNS AUTOGRAPHS AT ANGELS STADIUM TUESDAY. Angels Take a Mugging Chambliss S tars for NY in 9-3 Triumph There were no rep<>rts or fights in the Yankees' dugout, no talk or an impendmg dismissal of New York manager Billy Martin or dissension in the club house between Reggie Jackson and Thurman Munson Just a mugging New York beat the California Angels sens-eless Tuesday night. 9·3, al Anaheim Stadium The ~apons were a 19·h1t at tack the Yankees' most dev astaling since July 12, 1975 and the bats of Mickey Rivers. Chris Chambliss. Thurman Munson and Reggie Jackson They left four California S20,000 Has sle pitc hers badly beaten Rivers, the ex-Angel. had three hits and scored twice Munson drove in three runs with an tn· A ngel• S late All G•rn•i on K MPC A •d.o t, •O I J\ '1 " 'I/II V'r-..,..lo., (' 1 '.r1rr p ,.., I\ .1 I "'""""""fl'1·•t (,11>lurl"t , i " A..,,, 1 Rrin '""'''" ,,, c flh''"' 1 ,. ,... C1eld out. a smgle and a double Cha mbliss had u single and two run homer. One of Juckson's three s ingles drove in two rum, M 1ke Torrez recorded his 10th vi ctory for New York by shutttng out California between Bobby Toronto or TWins To Pay Singer? TORONTO +AP > Pitcher Bill Singer 1s not only the biggest disapp<>intment for the Toronto Blue Jays he's the mo.'lt ex pensive. And that may boa mat ter for American League pres1 dent Lee MacPhail to settle Singer, the highest priced player drafted by the new major league baseball club last fall. has beeit hampered by arm trouble and'i~ in Santa Ana for an opera· Lion on a ruptured dist in his back. What Blue Jays eeneral manager Peter Bavasf didn 't know when he drafted Singer was that the 33-year-old right bander had signed a new contract with the Minnesota Twlns guarantee· ing him $100,000 a year through 1979 whether be pitches or not Singer ,had an $8(l,000 contract with the Texas Rangers tor 1976 "What apparently happened was that aft.el' Texas traded him to Minnesota •year ago June the Twins signed him lOthis new con· tract for 1977 through '79, .. Bavasi says. "I suppose Minn~ota took one look at it and decided tbey'd get what the:t could out of him that year and then dump blll1 into the expansion dratl.' · Bavasl adds that he dldrf t know about the ne\V Urree-ye.ar pact when Sineer was dralted. All be bad been shown WU the one· year a(l"eemcnt with Texas. "So We'Nt arsuing that the Minnesota club Is obliged to pay part ot Singer .. aalary," Bavast • said. "We•ve been m t.o4ch with Lee MacPbail as wen bec4use-we think th-e lea1ue bu $Omf . responsibility an th1<; ea~e "I'm satisfied the whole thing will be ironed out at the ad ministralive level without legal action ··But, or course. lhe perfect solul.lon would be 1f when 8111 comes to camp next spnng. he coul<1 pitch well enough to be a bargaln attheprice." Singer, who has a record of 118 wins and 127 lo91;es since coming up to the majors with the Lo~ Angeles Dodgers In 1964, is 2·8 with the Blue Jay;. Ile WWI 13·1() with Texas and Minnesota last year His best season was 1969 with the Dodgers when be was 20·12 with an earned run average of 2.J-1 Whate\er happens. Singer will get his money. "We s tand behind that regardless.· sayl'I Bavasi .. But we feel we s hould get help with it. His contract was rrus· represented to us by the Mln· nesota Twins · · • Ex-Mt. SAC . Coach Dies Bonds two run homer 1/i the first inning and Don Baylor's lSth in the ninth The '1ctory was New York's seventh 1n the last nine gam~. leading Chambliss to s ay Th1nJ(s are starting to click of. fcns1vely for us This should help our p1tch1ng and defens e relax.·· The Ang(•ls s houldn 't have permitted New York to tak«! bat: ting practice "I discovered a lil· lie thing when we were hit tine t.o· duy,'' said Chambliss "I wai pulltn~ out and Jerking my head I started u1>ing my head and kept 1t straight " Going i n to the game. Chambliss had only one hit in his last 16 al bats HEWYOllK Rtv1·'''' q Wn1h u Mu"'"" He4fy c Cl\A,..bio\\ Ill q • J.-te..\.Of\rf N•tth .. Jr't Ranoo•M 111 Al\fOftdh O.t11 .. , el.' "tM ' 0 • 1 1 t S 1 I I 1000 4 I 1 ~ •0 1~ 4 0 I 0 I 0 I 0 > I 1 I ) ) ) I CALll'Olli• n .. ,;,.~, 1'i''i": A•"'·~ 4 0 I 0 B0<1d<rf • • • 1 , ~..... •• '0 0 0 Bayfaflt • I I l °'61a..1' 4 t I 0 o.odW!n dlo ) 0 0 0 Ao J•<-\Onll> • 0 I 0 H""'l>ll'•·Y' t 0 0 0 (;uen....,.,,, I 6 0 0 rotoh 0 '... TOI•• JI J T) N•* YO.. 100 JO) 00J "°" ( •1t•o•n•• 1'IO 000 otl l E Torr11 01' ---H,.,. YO<~ t L09--Yor• ti C~hlornt•) lD ,....,_.,.. O.nl A•-~ lB R•"9f\ H~ ......S\ rz11. Cnambli.• •?I ll••IO< 11~1 5• "• J•o-'"''"" f'l- l Otf'I I tW 10 101 Hortrell IL • I I ICul\.Uhu O•rtow 0 Mltl~r T-Z 1'14 707'11 11' H II alee SO t 1 I l 1 , • ., • • ;I , 11 I S J t 1 t 1 0 I t I l 0 II 2 Stars Rally To Edge Foe The Oranee County Sta.rs won the six-point. ti~breaker to annex a five-game m•tch from the Denver Comets Tuesday night at Univehity High School in Irvine before 1. 790 fans Orange County won the match. 12-3. S.12, 12..&, 9·12, 8-l, but had to come from behlnd a 3--1 deftcn in the tiebreaker With five straight points to win. It was one of the most exciting matches of the season and could be a preview of the IV A playoffs . The Star1 are 14·11 and hold a J 1-,.game lead over Santa Barbara. Denver is 14·7 and four m front of two teams in the East. Two hilting mistakes by Denver tied the tiebreaker at three. Then Jon Roberu made a block, Miles Pab!I\ hed ~er and Dodge PQrker ended it with a service ace. ----- Wldl...tay, Auguat 3, tt77 DAILY PtLOT 8 f ;Jolµl's Top Goal: LA's No. I Winner NEW YORK (AP> -The Los Angeles Dodgers have found some competition after all themselves. Runaway leaders in the Na· Uonal Lea1ue West, the Dodgers are playing a (tame of one UP· manshlp' on andividual ac· compllshments. The garne goes like this. Steve Garvey tries to hit more home runs than Ron Cey. Cey tnes lo drive in more runs than Garvey. And Tommy John tries to .win more games than, say, Doug Rau, Rick Rhoden, Don Sutton or Burt Hooton "It's nice to have competition like that on our club. It makes us more aggressive," says Cey, who had a two-run homer in Tuesday night's 7-2 victory over the New York Mets. Cey's homer was hts 22nd of the season and kept him within driving range or Garvey, who had his 26th Tuesday night. Cey's rbi gave him 90 for the year and Garvey's solo blast boosted his rbi total to87. Dodgers manager Tom Lasorda is enjoying the game the Dodgers arc playing, to say nothing of the team 'l'I 14-game lead over the Cincinnati Reds. "This ball club is really com- petitive with itself,." said Lasorda, celebrating the Dodgers' 67th victory of the season with a slice of ham and a fried cbtcken leg. "They all want to be the best at what they do." / The intra-squad competition bas reached such a pitch that the pitchers are even trying to decide who is the best hitter among them. John made some Points with two singles against the Mets. including a run producing base hit in the sixth thitt tied the l:tme at2 "We've all been working as a unit on our hitting," said John "I guess it shows, doesn't. it! I've only struck out seven times tbis season." It goes without saying that John would like lo be the Dodgers' big winner this year. He took a step toward that goaJ by gaining his 12th victory with an eight·hitler. That tied the left hander with Rau and Rhoden for team leadership in that depart ment .. He has been pitching strong Dodfll!r• llai~ All o. ..... en IU.BC 11'01 it.,. l LM ....... •UtH-YCl'I< •"°· ~ l.O'\ •nof'fei•l Pft1t.O. IP"t• •1><1. • lotl4-l&Hl l'Nl-t0ft/ .. "• m So m • JOo "'· games like that for us all season," said Lasorda ... He got bombed in Atlanta once early in the season and that's the last time that's happened." John, 12·4, forced 10 ground balls from the Mets Garvey, who discovered new found power with a shorter. firmer swing in spring training, hit one or Jerry Koosman's pitches out of the park to give the Dodgers a l·O lead in the fourth inning. Tbe Mets went ahead.2·1 in the fifth on a two run single by Lenny Randle. But the rest of the game belonged solely to the muscular Dodgers. After John tied 1t with his sixth inning single, Lo5 Angeles put the game away with a three-run seventh. A bases loaded wa.Ut to Dusty Baker for~ed in the tie· breaking run and Steve Yeager delivered a two-run single for the crusher. Cey later blasted his two-run homer off Bob Myrick io the ninth lo add some whipped cream. Th~ Cups• Ivan DeJesus <right> is tagged out at the 1>late by Cinc:innati pitcher Mario Soto Tuesday in Cin- cinnati. The Cubs wol'\, 5-2. to put the Reds 14 games behind the Dodgcrfi. l.~AMOaL9'S l.-'"' Runelfi6 5ml"'r1 "m-rf Ol'fJIJ o_..,., ·-~II 8urkect YM-C Jottft p •rll., '0'. •010 3120 0000 ~' r' • I I 1 •I I I 5020 • 0 1 ' • 0 11 •WWVOttK ...... ., ...... I.lb •• 2 l Mltltft1b • 0 0 o ....,....,,, If •• 1 0 Steamsc 1000 ,,.,,,,...* • •ov Vlll'1 •120 Y OUfl9llloDd '' 3 0 I 0 ..,_. • 110 1(-.. 2090 BObclllrPI' 1 O • 6-Myrltllp 0 0 0 0 Grote.,._ 100 o Tot.i> JI J ll I Totllf .M J I 7 lo• l4"991a 000 'IOI »t...:t -Yor\ oeo OIO 00.-2 E -Smllh OP L•• An.-l•t Z. l09~ A,..._'· ,._ Yor\ 1 t 8-llllrb , Cay, "'-· H R-G<wwy IMI, C.y 1n1 ~uu.41 ... Joltn IW 17 41 ot oo,,,_ IL.I ti) Myrk \ ... " ••• •• 1ct • 1?2 2 10 n J s a 7 2 I 2 2 1 0 T-Z 11 14 2• 10 Hitchhiker·· m· . •JDJnates Ramirez NORT..u" CONWAY, N.H . ..'... Unkn~n_ Greg Halder, wflq hitchhiked lo play in this tennis tournament .in New Hampshlre:s White Mountains, eliminated Raul Ramirez, 6-4, 2-6, 6-C, in the second round or the $1.25,000 event here Tuesday. Jn o&her matches, Arthur Ashe beat Tim Gullik.son, 6·4,.S.7, 6-2; Brian GotUried won over Jan Yuill, 6·3, 7-0; Ken Rosewall eliminated Ismail El Sbafei, 6-1. 6-3; Zan Guerry beat Victor Pec- ci, 3·6, 6-3, 6·2; and Steve Krulevitz upset Kim Warwick, 0·6, s-4, 6-3. • ftbak VJHe t SOUTH ORANGE, N.J . Larry Gottfried staged the big- gest upset in early round action when he defeated third seeded Woitek Fibak. 6·4. 7-5, in flrst round play , in the $85,000 day court tennis open here Tuesday. In other action, John McEnroe defeated Bruce Nichols, 6-3, 6'8: Jaime Fillo! eliminated Paul Gerken. 6-3, 7~; Bernie Mitton upset Balazs Taroczy, 6-3, 7~; Zeljko Franulovic stopped La~a Niguel's Byron Bertram. 6-1, 6-l; and Peter Fleming beat } David Schneider. Hi. 6-3. Leon•rd Ad .,a11ee• SEATTLE Tom Leonard of Laguna Niguel defeated Bhanu Nunna, 7·5, 6·3, in opening~ action or a SlS,000 pro· fessional tennis toumamenthece Tuesday. In other first round matches. Nick Saviano stopped David Cecker. 7·5, 6-1 ; Rick Fisher beat Jim Greenberg, 4·6, 7-6, 6-1; Diclt Knight stopped Al Stultz, 7...S, 6-3; and Doug Verdieck toppled Jim Yarbrough, 6-1, 6-0. OI'• l'blon Blurr~d NIAGARA FALLS, N.Y. Running back O.J. Simpson vis- its an eye doctor today, hoping t.o learn the cause of "occasional blurred vision" in his left eye. The Buffalo Bills' star was ex- cused from the National Football League team's mid-afternoon practice Tuesday because of the blur. He worked in the morning drill and afterward told a reporter be was "in great shape." "l got p<>pped over the eye last year." Simpgon said ln the alter~ noon. "Once In a while the sigb_t. in it is blurred. I just thoudt\ It. was a good lime to have it checked. l '11 be back on the field Wednesday afternoon " ........ ..,,,.. .. , .. ATLANTA -Jeff Bunvuibs blt a home run In hla fifth COi\· secutlve game Tuesday night, but his team, the Atlanta Bravts. were defeated by St. I.pols, M , Jn National League play. Burroughs, who has blt in 16 straight 1ames, ls Ulree sames behind the record ot Dale ~. who hol1)ered in elaht con:: secutive games ror the PiUS.. burgh Pirates m 19S6. - BWTOUlhs bas 27 homers this seuon. • --~ Y PILOT W!dn!!d!X, Aupiat !. tt'T1' r SPORTS BRIEFS. q; I ••real Yl :Id to any lltortJon wllempu Slat Cnrrwtluna Dt•parl.mc11l nnlT"ll••• have c·unftrrnrd r~vnl l'1lpQfU lh•t th par nt• of aome wmi.. are Ml vreuur9d for __,.to tbdr aooa from M~Clll-MllUal •buH. . Darn b .. rl'Porll'dly INlld $1..500 ov r tbu P•.\l two rooathl w an f•J(\Of'Uonuat. whu t.bratened to lull httr Mm Stall· police u1d they learned ot then ~ ene:ral WHb •ao from Kn. Bar1lel but could not ptU"IU•· lhe'eocn»&tUnt beUUlit! ahe 'WU ftlnctant l011YC deta!Jt>. ,. ••leeSIWd Fll..sNO -f'ormt·r Oakland R.alden quartf•rb1u;.k Darylt• i..mc.uca has be-en sued for S2 "> lm>Hon dollars by former bw11 beD partnen who contend he J'&ikd k> tell t.bt'm be planned lo ~tartacompetluve r1rm. ?4iammoth oC AJask•. Inc. ;wd Vammoth o( CaWorruiil, Jnc . both tructmg out.fits with office~ here. f1led tbe ~ull Tuesd11y ~ainst Lamoruca und D&ryle- l•monica f't'e.igbUmes, Inc. Tbe plaintilfa claim that Lamonica is a former shareholder <tnd d1rector or Jlfammotb, and that in a Jwy 1973 meeting he announced he • would sell bis stock bul ~ave hts word he would not compete against Mammoth. lt'lae to llilcin9• :MANKATO, 'Minn. · The Mm-. nesota Vikings Tuesday acquired strong safety Phil Wise, a seven year National Football League 'vet~. from the New York J eh . Wise, 28, who was drafted sixth by the J ets m 1971. was acquired ·:for future draft cho1ces't"IJld a), coinpensation for runmog back Ed Mannaro, who signed with New York in 1976 after playing out bis option year, a spokesman said. The Vikings also announced that starting guard Ed While left camp Tuesday and could face a One of $500 a day. .Kings Ink Si111•~r LOS ANGELES The Los ~j\ngeles Kings have' signed free ttgent lert wanKer Ch11rlte Stm mer. formerly with the l.'lcveland Baron'> • Simmer, 6-3, 195, "1s a good, heavy checker who ·~ rough in the corners," said Kings• generul manager George Maguire. Beneefn Court I. NEW YORK --llr. Rent>e • Richards, a transsexuaJ, bas • ~one to court to keep from bemg ..,, disqualified from the women'!> · 'division of the U.S. Open Tennt!> t. tournament later tb1s month. · Richards, who turned tennis · · .pro aft.er a sex change operation. obtained an order in slate ~IJl>reme Court rcqumng toum11- ment officials to show ca use whv !'he should be barred. · • • 1'hu act.ion pave.a the Wt&Y for a precedent uni declslon 00 the .i.l~lu:c w ltaruaexuals In •poiU .and the le1allty or teeta on OAthlcta lo determine trend r. Richards c:lalrned abe wu be· ina compelled to take a 1peetal •enetk teeit to determloe tender. .. vcn thou&h tibo had played tn maJur US. tournament.a without twin& nqwred to take 1ucb a leaL ......... Ultefll 1,Afi'AYg'l'TE, La . Soutbwcatcm Loulllana. w.h.icb ('limbed to dlzzy hel1hta tn col· ll'lfl basketball and fell from ~r•c~ bec1uA1e It pald it.a pla,yen, ha11 rejolned tbo rank ol aa.nc- uoned NCAA achoola. Tlw rcln.lutemcot c:oame Tues- day When the NOAA lifted the four-year probation against all or Southwest.em's SPOrll. Jn add1- t1on to lberrobaUon, lbe school's basketbal procrarn bad been disbanded .tor two seasons beeallSe of its violaUon of NCAA policy. Tbe Southwestern penalties, imposed in 1973, were the sWfest ever~ down by the NCAA. It was the-fint time a school's program bad been S\Upended and the probation meant Southwestern Louisiana wu in· eligible for poat season tourn•· ments and could not appear m any lelevised contests. The ""1iversity was accused or violating NCAA recrultin1 rules to get players to the school and or · paying them to play once they enrolled. Team T""'b Re.Nit• .... Y-M,Cl•WIM41tl W--Klftv IHVI 11 .. t MICMI • J, 1<"'9· WMllt t"'Vl-IMklWl-Sl_u .. I. M9n -MA-IHYlt1 .. 18«9-Glll .... ,,._, 8ot9·R-_., IC.Pl ... t Me.,.,_llvtl•h(t.I. MIMCI -R~Sl~ (C-f') ... 1t .. 1. l•••·W-(t.1. 0"9f'U,.,. -RtC>-.Bo<ll IC·I') ""'" IMY«· "utfels2 t. A -13,07S. McCutcheon Is Doubtful If Rams running back Lawrence McCutcheon has his way, he'll be running less and en Joying it more this year. Mccutcheon. who has gamed 1,000 yards in three of the last four seasons. said Tuesday at Cal State (Fullerton) he doesn't ex peel to carry the ball 291 times twhichbedld last year). .. But I'll get my 1,000 yards this year because I have a great blocking line in front of me.·' Mccutcheon 's 291 carries established an all-time Rams record, as did the 1,168 yards he gained. In practice sessions so rar. however, McCutcbeon bas been a spectator, sjdellned by a pulled hamstring muscle. Rams of· Cicials said Mccutcheon is a doubtful starter in the pre-seuon opener with the Minnesota Vi· kings Saturday night. • <A>ast Area Swimmers ' 41.ookAhead Mark Schubert, coach of the Mlssioo Viejo Nadadores swim team, ts ~ strict dlsclpllnarian and encourages his swimmers to put forth t.hat little extra effort that separat~ them from the run-of·lhe-mill performers. "1 11Ull belleve they can't be easy on themselves," Schubert suld at the recently completed Mlsslon Viejo Invitational cbam- p1onshtp8. Fishing Picks Up . In Area Fia b erm•D are catch.lni fish alou the Ora.nae Coast with llmtts and near-limits of bus belne taken alODS "1th Sood barracuda catches and some yellowtall and white sea bus, aceord- inC to spokesmen for the three area landinp. ·'They have lo-work long hoots prepurmg for Jtn important meet and then taper down to get the beat results. l think they should go in as many events as possible tn a meet such as this one to pre· 1 pare for lhc national AA U meet." "We've been taking 1,500 or more fl.sh each day with an avera1e passenger total ot 350 ... a spokesman for Dana Wharf SporUlahina-.ys. "We're hariq a Cood bass blte with barpeuda up and dcnni. lt wq nal· ly good on·barri• a fftW days qo. We are allO getting • few bonito. some ball)>ut and a oc- casJonal 'ellowtall wUb a lot of mackerel... • Even world record bolder Brian Goodell fell into this category and missed out in quali- fying for the 100-meler freestyle finals. He set meet records in the 200, 400 and 1500 and placed third .io the400 individual medley. Goodell holds the world record HOWARD HANDY \ ~~ for the 400 and 1500 and, accord· mg to hts coach, ts ahead of hts preparation for the Olympic 'Tr1als a year agQ al the same time ··Brian dtd 4 01 in April before the trials a year ago and be'sfour seconds ahead or that right now in the 400," Schubert says. Wh.ile Goodell is the blue chip. per in the Nadadores stable, Sc hubert will have olher performers seek.mg one or the top two spots tn the AAU Jong course meet at Marguerite Recreation Center in Mission V1e10 Aug. 1821 The lop two f1m:;hers will be picked for the American team to compete m East Germany Jater 1n the summer. Goodell. a young man of 18. says be will get better with age in the spnnts and Schubert concurs. "The older you get, the faster you get," Goodell says. ··You need the strength you get with maturity in the sprints, .. Schubert says SCHUBERT PROFILE-The coach presents a low-key, quiet front m most appearances but when he has a swimmer in con- tention or one that jsn 't eoing as fast as he thmks he or she should. he IS yelling at the top of his voice on the sidelines ... Go, go, go." Bfg Can11on Claaiap Mark Ferdi <right> accepts the winner's trophy from Big Canyon Country Club assistant pro John Ebersberger after defeatinJ! Mike Bueche on the secon<t hole of a sudden death playoff for the 1977 Big Canyon junior cl'lampionshlp recentl}'. Ferdi. 16. is a Corona del Mar High golf team member. Alamitos Race Results l'erT-'f l'lllST ltAU •'410 y1ml< J Y9K o"'' &l.IP.CUolmlnv Pu~UlllO. Mr Tiger Roci.t (o.tombl) "A4 ,, .... tuwellen hie (CMttoaa) '29 '10 JoM"• Rocket l"llllOll) 1 tO Ti--Aho ..... -t.at..i.., ltOV.1 Go F,_t. Kni9f'C Fl.W, On tlw H-. WHlllll\tr Sr;r•<lle<I -Leo'• llelly, llod Red Wine, OnUm Tai-. Re1'fll" u ·-.._ n,_, lloeut & .. "··-···'°" ...... saeoteo 111Aa -iJO .-r•1. 2 yur ~, .. ctwd ··SMmw Saftdl~. Miu Tff>t>y ,.....,.,,-,,.. .. LArry, Slw"* "'""' uaao.U11cn1tiey•&~ ..... -. ..... ...,.... ol~ O•Hnl"!I l'utw$7D. P'll'Ttf •Aet: -«lO yer<M. ! l'fff' -•n-•IU .... ml olds,..,,,,_, Pu,,.ntOO. •IO l IO 1 70 ttellies Poo (C..""1111 Muell Adu IC.Ill t JO \00 SOO HO , .. J•I • erw .. 1c:n-1 •IO A""rwds Fl"! • .._,,, 1 .0 7 40 ,,.,,. 11.04 At'iO ".. MT Al•m•to• Good BtiJ.-Whtt•, vu,,no Ef'fto'"'' Al•k1urn ,.O\CrMctw\. THlllO llACI l!O Y11rd1 ? YNf , INt Ol.w fTl"N•Ut9 I ' 60 Tll\'le-llOJO AltoR .. -lll9MTrv9o .... o. Trul'll Gell le. Alw•.,. TlllnlUnt, 1! .. y CIWrM "'OKratches. H l!uc:t. 1-MNwey ltwltr A J.. c..lf'• ""-. ,.io ..... 1UO HO 360 CrlMll's ..._ CLl....,.l .. ,. P...-.Mr.J9tMoan (Cot-•> '10 Tlmo-11.10 .-.it0 It., -.Ht £~. A...,., .• "ov ... C.•' 5"rlllt. Wh•-•" c-. i>el11ft HoK181d!U. alOM'TH rtACa -'70 v•ro< l yNir olds&wi.Oalmlnv Pllo01:lOO ~-l'ICQd IW••dl 10.0 • .0 3 IO llp'l\Go ll!Tool.•I J 10 1111> ~rl . .oafCrew.ILl.,.,..ml no ,,,.,._._u Al>o R., -,,,..., "'•""" Ju~1·s -·Ml .. 9.w•ed 1.1m11, Ee9lt l•lld· ln9.Grede HoKr•td'IH u Eucu a.!Ulod P'k-911 a t ZI''" 0.,f>lll•P4·'°· Art's Landlnf In Newpor:t Beach repcM:ts good bus and barracuda catches with ahallow water rock f1sh. aculpln. s heepsbead and halibut also amoat the catches. Bonito and mackerel are also making forays. Davey'i; Locker out of the Balboa Pavilion re· porls lots of big bass wlth ~ood barracuda and bonito bites. Some wbite sea bass have also been caught on the ~.<fay boat and on the twilight nm of the ball-day boaL "1Wf'Olt1' m.w,.'• "9ceolr)-HJ al>Qltn:. ~" _. ... 201 ...... * roc:ll <Cid, ! halllllll. 11> macko,..1. tA,,., ......, ... -n •119'-"' • '-'"!.... lJ2 .,... * .... rec...._ • _....... J MllM, 1 nae• ''"'· . OAMA-Ufl-129~ .. bo•. ts barracuda, " lloftllo, t .,.,__,,, 9J ~" "° ftth, IOwtwl9-bea.. HA1. •m.0t -no .....,..~ ,,. •«><' 11.n. m,........, 20cMtco ...,., 304 rn.<k•rel. ..... -11Miiien:1 berrec-. ti bonl\O, 'OS ._hr••• , ..... ""'· 1.-NMt. f>OllT HU .. ftlMa -Q ._...,.: llO <•I ice llleft, II» rods fl-.. AVILA 8AY ("-1 S.. Ufl)-.t ~01~ ••lbecore.21lll\fl<od,•ow cocr, 1.121 rocll<W. OCl4HSIOa -106 ~: .f5~ ... t>eu, t borre<ud9, 1 llO<ll\O, lll coUco IMu,u.-11.u. old• Clalrn1nci. For MA•clen•. Pur-.. S2100 Ali<ff~~llV ICMOO<•l SIXT'H lllACI -HJ Y .. IH. 3 Yffl" 0101 Cl•lmor.o ""'"* UIOO "41dwey AUi« 10.lotnbal SANTA MOtllCA -• ~: t •ttllfTM ltAC:I -J~ V•r<K. 3 yNll' b4rrec:udll, I lloltaut,•Wlllle--. •40 .HO llO lo-.. You So IWercl\ H.ol\ClyWeldl CIJllNMI TlrN-llA1 '" l 711 '00 Aho R.., -Btlgllt ~len l!WI" 8ellff, Bomadoo, Fancy P'en•ll•, Waw -Ori, Jellll 11« a., p..,.,., Time uo 411) 300 Cu1110•, """'1 fll~m I l to 7 IO Sonny Said lc:.nloH I 4 .0 TIMe -ll.0. Alto A.., -Ul\clrcul•l9Cf p,_, C:OUl'll, flllllilft Roehl, Some Klfldo S.Uor, SlrNkl"O ~. Gr.,, Son, Millt>OlyWllly Scr.ic1tac1--.11ff'fftt ........ Ohh. Cloiml"ll Purr.. USO!>. 11 ,.,,., IMIH• 1t Calleo ..... ttJ Dl41Y'IGo (QIU macterel, 60 ..... tins. ...... _,. 640 400 , .. T,.t Moon ITrN""' I 11 .0 ·UO LomlaMln fCoroorel 2 ti) T1me-11.'5 "''° Ren· Mr .i.1 _..Jr. WI"' dy llocl!ltl, Allh"'°'e• Mid ADChl1t, I ,.... KIOIY Too Noscr•ctw\. ...,.1.,,, 40 ,,_._,, 11 r«ll fl\fl IMH, SIWllbll,2c811collH~ VIHTUllA -IOJ a"glent ltt 011<0 boM,, ms rock 1111\ 35 und llln•. 30 mock•,.•. 1S t94I _.,.,, " hat1CM11, 1--.s..,.ceo, 1inti. 5HllllS.. Alamitos Entries IS llucte ._OIKly't 0. & 1 Tr ... ~ ...... ""-• All.-.C. -1,W. UHOll!OO~"-"-tt! •"91to: 1.432 •I~ t yol'-'1• :14 111uet1" tun•~ cu Mlpt1l11, lt ,.11ow1 II\ llNio. LOMG 8IACM ,.._ ,.._, -» ""''~•: 1 w•-1e11. na calico bllu, l"IW"-itM _....,,,., l'lllST ttACI! -UI var.ts , .,..,. 01~ ~ ..., c1aim1nv rv.... u1oa. c1•"""' P¥1<• $2009. tteclllteo.<1 !Honl n1 Prow It,.,_,, HtO..lllW<lllf~I Oii -Rlryt-ITr..-d H11StN119 -IAfU~I l•t• Lunctl (Myl"I ll9MTrv~f~-..1 SoiMll'IQ...., l lCl\l9MI llf Kelly S<ftllll,. IMyt .. I c ... meOrotY IC..dot.tl M_,SUl_e tBr-\I t 1-ttocl!ett• Tll\y 1w .. 01 •• tn 811..__.. ICMdotel ,,, a• s ,.111 ... blln, IUl'l\eCltitrel.lrockCOd. 121 .:JIOl'IUnA et 10.-..·s lllMrl> -n Mgle"• ,,, 1.. -e--r'Y ullcobH•, l'-116.414rodtllsl\,7ft !~ Final lignups for the ... :9 .. '::'o.s• COft -121 .,91on: m Ainertcan Youth Soccer uerocti:cOd >l\otlt11ut,,,.c.atkoi-•• ::; Organization (A YSO) for 17~="!~ :;..-:;,~~"".!..,~ m the toming season will be Wirt'•......,...,.,-»~ rn,. Baseball Standings One of the busiest coaches around. he 1s talking with tb<n-e who have just completed their races, yel ling encouragement and utilizmg a stopwatch in bis hand lo record Limes or those in the water. Mr a ... c.1<11 fPeullftOI 819 lll~f eo. I Hartl l•nd'(s ~ ll.l!lfleml Cll•I'*' Rocll-1 IW .. dl l ... 1110 lllloer!"l 1n 1n 1n 111 in 1n H VINT'M ltACll -«Ill yetds l ~·· eld\ ~ VO. Al-enct. ""''" MOOG heldSaturday from rnto 1 'O:•~.,s~=-_,......,..,.,. """ at Ens1gn School in cod,4'1roc11coe1. Newport Beach MA1t1NA 011, 1t1v-" -"'"'' Llltle Fenc1 ttOM fKnlQflt) Or. Twt-ITrNWl'el Smoatll Kitty IAllltonl Mr.~o.cll(~I. Chert• Party (CMdozel 0.1 ..... 9er llloutfll Alo-IClfftitrl 117 • ,..,..,.,IKVde. :ltllcrlolO. ttcllllot ba\\. 11• The league for boy$ 1wN1a ... boH,2troc1111an.1tJroc1e 111 and girts, 6 through JS "'"· :~ years of age, is for West ti s•COND RACll ..,., Y•Nlc 7 NATIONAL LEAGUE East Dlvllltoo AMERICAN LEAGUE Eaat Division y.ar oid .......,., c1alrnh'll• -..e n100.Cl&lmlnv Price S'lllOO. m Newport Beach rest· ,J ~:: dents. Ensign School 1s Pro Soccer locat¥ at 2000 Clirrl. W l. Pel. GB Chicago til 42 .592 Phlladelphia 59 44 .573 2 Pittsburgh 60 45 .571 2 St. Lows 58 48 .547 41 ~ Montreal 49 55 .471 12~.c NewYork 44 59 .427 11 We5t Divlslon Dodgers 67 39 . 632 Cincinnati 52 52 .500 14 Houston 49 58 .458 181-.c San Francisco 48 59 .449 191 :1 San Diego 46 G2 .426 22 Atlanta 37 67 .356 29 T-.Oy1k .... • Mon4rMt IO,S.,Fr•nc1uo1 ~n0ttQ04. Ptwl-tlll'l•2 ~ loul• .. Al .... le 4 ClllU,O S. Clnclnneli 1 LMA-4~7.-YOl~7 r11~•.-1. 10'"""''1' 1 ... , •• 0. .... , lot A_." IR.., 1111 et"'''" Yot• fM.oll..-~ (t.17) S... FrM!Ch<o ,..,,,o 11 "1 Monl,.•I u. "'-" 711,f\ Sa" Olecio (llllrt•' • Ill et r11•led4>t,..,1e CCMl ... 1 ... 1,,, • SI. LOUI• 1111.,,._JM I 101 et All.,.1• (~ ;>-7>,n Chlugo 1111. ftevtcllol ts U et Cll\Cll\nall f~keuNl,n f'tt1SIJUrVI' CKllO'I 6'0 at "'°"''°" U. "'ltt.ro •l>,n Bost.on Baltimore New York Detroit Cleveland Milwaukee ·roronto W L Pct. GB 59 43 .578 60 44 .578 59 46 .582 1~ 46 SS .455 12~ <46 56 .451 13 46 60 .434 15 36 66 .353 23 West Dlvlllon Chicago Minnesota Kansas City Texas Aageb SeatUe Oakland 62 40 .608 61 46 .5'70 31-. 56 •s .554 s•":i 56 45 .554 51 ~ 48 s.c .4n 14 46 61 .430 18l~ 42 61 .408 2()\, FISIDNG NOTE -Salmon ~fishing in the Pacific Ocean out· side the mouth of the Columbia River (boats out of Ilwaco. Wash.) is on the fair side. 'l'he limit is three fish per day and a recent outing found four silver salmon being taken by this writer aodsoo Howard J. The fish weighed in the neighborhood or 10 pounds and were taken with dead herring on a line with two hooks. No license is r~ulred and t.he trip cost S26 per person. r.-.,·,Sc-Salmon hit the bait first. ap-~=~~~:;: • pareoUy to kill 1t, then make a T•ust. Oii<-• second swipe to eat \t. Care must 'ftwVorllt,Celltemlal be tak ot t "'l • ._ '--!. 8oslonl.!ltelt1•1. IOIMI~ en n 0 Pw uae INUOL oul 0r>1y,.,.~ua*"'4ec1 of the mouth before the fL!lh sets TMIYtO-. •t d · TOI-ca.ntn Mil at K._ city tScotmr11 t an sWJms away. ~;; lllocut ~ lllllllern) Le Oonoa I .. •f1> 5"0• "IOll9 lc.nlotel Mll\CI MHtlfl COINofnlle) Tlllnl ttouM llrOOllll .Jells larrf (Lftl!llMI MIHTIP1tYTarnmy (~· Red Men Slltllt IMY!al Olw'MWWIC ..... 111'191 M•r11el AwlO C<:arl> H.tloGf'_, IT,_,,l 1n 1tt 1tt n• 07 1tl 1n 1\lt TMlltO •Am -«>O YI'°"" J '"" Ollft.. Ollk'l\l,.-.talCID.Cloll!o .... Price.,_, .JoMily ,,._ (H.wf• nt tiurry How Cl>MernMl t17 TI1a WllM'll of 1e1 cw-1 122 T•IP'• eo.n llll'Nml 1n 01_..ierec-CM"'"I '" Daddy Nloere CCalH 172 Gf'•~ De ITl'w-el 1n Ml e.-e IAlll-1 IU l!IWnM Ard ltuby f~clo,.I 117 Fa~ 8ov 1"'-11\el 1n l'OUllTM •A.Ca -1'0 YMlh. l YNt Oid\. All-a. l'll<w UOllO -•Jett ITrwsuritl tit MltlTM 9UIC9 -a•,..,.., t .,._ ...... °"""""' """° SllOO. Glalm,. PNe uooo.. ,.. ..... OoOd Orr ( Delomlle) KallfGold UC~> O..Cne,.. l<:arll ~~IWor•• Al*IWO..rge (L,,,_.,) 0.... Tlf?r !Alli-) ,..,...,. l"'-IMy!HI ,,.., """ ~, llrool<>l L.M Pri-f<'M*>••I """'° °'°" IC..._I ~ .... °' IMAcMlll ltt , Vl"119At-. COt-1Nl , .. HOt Six ILk!Mrn> 11t Husti.... llllKfl 18'-•I ln FadKMl•IC-WOI lit Area Scores ·~;:.,1a111tw>•ow.e.e•~...,11_.1,,. There isn't as much fight as MSHTUU. Cl--cBlllO\t "71etMllwM>~"~1 n, with albacore or yellowtall but 1t "'"" uca -., ~cit,•,..,. ~ ~~~~-• AllCl't Bux (ISonlrtl 117 n O .. ralt l~yo "9) at M-el• '~ Is sUll a thrill to reel one in. or ::,:;::~::..:=.: ... · " ... s1." the eight fish taken by the writer. O!'opQllon11•-di<lt1t111• 11• f'CAtJt,OIACI_,..,., llostcnfPaldol\:Nle1SOatt"91WNe10C11J.e>,,. only 1wo were more than the "-yMalriWn> "' ~:::!:--""" 94'111fnor•(Fle....-nMle\OOl•n4(\Allcl!OO'd mint •u. h i ed f Fallt9'1 ..... ,,..,., I~ Mllrflw .......... ,,v ..... ,, 'MO.,, mum..,.. inc es requ r or a,11.,--..1".,..' , 1 Hun1'-'-11MC11si,LMAm'-4' Ntw Von; (G4;1dry ~S) .. OMlfon.io CAY9" Jc:ee.......... 1 TGC>8•EeflolOl!omblll 122 ",,,_.(MN-) ._.. 1410/ n r-v MlwSMe_,1c-u1 m . . .,,...., .• oa-. CanniDJ or the fish is available 'Mitt Go Utlfll (lel\bl ltt tltMCll•. VIII• ....... Tuout Ollcavo." BoMOll.., Oll<IW, n OD an excban1e basis Ot they may ........... WilltwtlMter 29 =~~~··.;.:"-°"'-Y_....,.. __ $C.lloolu __ 1ect ___ be_b_rou_.;;g_b_tho_m_e_r_ro_ie_n_. _____ ot0s._1_1_~'"-•_°"_-= __ . ~_-_lnoo_ .... _._._,_,,._•'.""r __ or_t1111t_ .... _-C:-_u_n_~_u_...-.w_~ __ .. _.--1 ·: (;ornplaint filed Against l.ackson ·MOVE THE RAPERWORK ourr! . . . . Drive. .._ T:=~~::C-....... --.... ~., ' , .,..~' , IUUU'T ' ,~ -', # SHOESAll , ./SAVE UP\ I os I ;Ji 10.00J IPAIR on discontinued and limitec:t edition styles I •• ,. ' ! l , , -·----------- ; L l.iJmelin Returns to Tijuana TlJUANA Ji reah from • triumph In blt t \ 1'Ju n• •PPt-•r anc•. \nlooio L11niel111, th• popul•r, ~•bh .. ,.)'ed Ma•ador from A<' 1puko beaclUn.-Sunda1 bultllJht cud tn 1lJor l.opu Hurtado'• Bull r•n1by~Se• " II• wtll a11-raat• Vo'tlh th• u1tin1 UWt Gsaol, Eloy Cavazoa. and lhe .Uon of lhe at> • 18-year~d Crux norw 11'4! trio Will fat'e • ~ °' rl&hllDJ bull• Crom_~ RtJ4-lluerb r nch In the 4 o'clock en rounte1r Lorn ho, w1'o haa been 1trunlln1 to return to form Cullowln1 a near t•t•l 1orlna In Meitlco City, auddtnly turned ll o n July 17 111 lht! downtown 'rlJU&n• rln1 H~ w 1u1 awarded two ear» ro1 • muterful ~rfot"munce Ca\'U09. unly 5_., haa 1alrudy Hrformtd ln \hrft' T\Juana corrlcla11 thb 11ummer IUld baa rorudstenUy thrJlled \he crowd.I w1~ h.la t'CIW'Ue und naamboyunl lllylt' or bullfiJhUna. And, Flores, the baby· fatod ~th who I• i.n bis ucond year as a full ~htador, has been the revdaUon of \.he aeaaon, r•clltC?ru\I lnumpns In ntiarly evf'r y ap ~~uranc~. Ticket,$ arti on.sale in Tijuana 11t the main ticket office, 921 RevolU· cton, between Fifth and Sb lh streets In Los Angel&, tickets ar~ oo sale throu1h Mur rays Tlekets <2 13 1 SPECIAL VALUES FOR TODAY THRU SUNDAY COSTA MESA 2946 BRISTOL ST. SO. OF SAN DIEGO FWY. PHONE: 549-1533 . -.__.... ..,. t Calendar FULLERTON 1530 S. HARBOR BLVD. PHONE: 870.0700 '!1d'-S.X· AUQu•t 3. 1•n DAil y ~LOT ., •' JC Football Schednles-·; OOU>•NwttfT S•t S.1tt l -S<rln\l.,. .. t fel CllnA. IOa-m I Set , 5'111 10-.i S.lltt Aftl 1Jl3DI Set • Sepe 11-or,... C...t. -11 lOI Set , S.0C 14 ... , f.Ht l..A I) JOI !.11 , Oct I l'"lllrt•~ P\OMf 11 lOI s.1.0<1. i..,. S.t . Otl tS-.1 I.A ~lllw .. t• ISlerraH'O" 0.'*MI 11 )0) Fri Oct 21-cy.,..eu• 11•m• "301 S.t Ott ?'t-LJI Ha,,_.. PIOMf 0 ·•1 Ftl., Ntov. 4 .. , IUo HOftW' IW?ill tier COit-i !T 301 S.I., .....,, 11-1..o• A-IH CCC _,.O;JO). Stl .• Nov tt .... 1 S.nta Mente•• f1 JOI • --'-""""' C.llfOtlll• c..... .... "'·-· OtllAMG• COA$T Sal , Sept. J -Scrlmmae• tMlr.CO.IA MI.JO. 1'IO Hondo .i 11 "°-· hi, S.pt It al Cv1><•U 11..e ,.., .... 1.11 ~· kt , Sep(. 11 Golffn W•>I l•I OCCI, 11·3Dl Sal. 5"C·2• -s.oclleb9<~ It.\•• •""' VlelOWlllll r7 lOI "''" s.tit. )0 I. .... k•CI• CC _11,»I. S.t • Oct f ... 0...H-' IS." Oltoo 5t .. el 11 »> '>•t., Oct I}-bV9 .._, Oct n s.n o--.. · ~C1:illl ~•I .. Oct 2'-•I """••lo"' IA"<tllel"'!!lMlllf"'I 11 JOI GoU Results ClOITAlfa\AOC VI Tlleiu-• clrl-to M:CW• • hol•·I..._ en lh<t M•·tlvff, 1SO-yMd l ... rth ~el "'91.os ~ CAlurM II Cost•Mna Gofl-C°""lry Clvt1r• onuv Slia llnlstled hoir '°""" wllll • K«•af& UI .... ) ..... ,. AIW' ,_m. If JOI S..I ....,.,, 11-..rl 0t...i1M• 11 301 S.t N<w ~SM-...... "°""'II•> • _... S-11 CoMI C...t.<-..ce 9ltf"'t U.001.&aAC. Set s.c>t 1-k•lrnM1~ tl..O'\o 8"-f"CCl,hotne Up m I S.1 • ~ !0-<.91._ el ltw 0. .... 1 -11ltl S.t , 51otll. ,,_, CYPftl6 tw .. t.,.., H~ ANhitlml 11tl01. S..t, $otllC 21-ot~ C.0.~I ........ " )01 w1.,0ct 1-0-,.. • wt , Oct I .e s.,, S.•IW•o-· ,, :Ill • s.1 , Oct. IS-111 .. rlide' 11 JOI S•I 0<1 21-l'•lo,,.•r'. "Om• 11 JOI S.t • Oct ,.,_, '-n 01•90 cc• , ... _S...0_) ,, ., 5-1 -~· .... ·-11301 ' -itol Ml51.ioft Con'9r-.e 91mt All '-w ..,_ Pl•V'td et Min'°" Vi.je ..... SANTAANA WESTMINSTER 120 E. FIRST ST. AT CYPRESS PHONE: M7·74n 15221 BEACH BLVD. PHONE: 893-8544 Se hablo 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. CORNELL "300' DOUBLE BELTED $ "71·)] PIUS SI >J 'CT $ RAISED WHITE LETTERS 110 WIDE -TUBELESS 30 MONTH LIMITED WARRANTY • NO TRADE-IN REQUlllD FREE Tl kf MO IJ NTING C78 ' E78· I 4 F78" G78·1 t G7815 ciNLY .. ·279 l.lMIT • GAL IASY TO UH ll•>IOftt r.91' ' pewet. H•lp• hep ••g ""' cl•o•. rrolong• •"9•"4 .,. 170Z. 69C SIZE FAN aaT SHAY I ADOS Oii" ANO f'VltlNG rowu • stors StltS 99 SO\JtAI(' 50llfAI~ UOL ... • lo~ ble~d of P"""¥"' wOal> aowlttit<- 1 11\>ote<tt Clg0ift1t «M, dtt1 aowl .... o-"' ~ X-100 Muttigrade . · Motof ()14 10W..iow .. •o O<leOuetl . • i . . • ' .. Tonight's TV mghJights KTLA • tt.oo --··~awre From the Black t.a1oon." A classic horror nick from 1954 with Richard Carlaoo. Julie Adams and Richard Denmng ballhna a 6trante "gill man .. CBS fJ 9:00 --··The Deadly Trackers.·· A peace-lov1na sheriff <Richard Harris> becomes a brutal avenger when his wile and son are murdered in this 1973 western with Rod Taylor and Neville Brand. NBC 1J 9 :30 --The KaUikaks. , Newport Beach's Bonrue Ebsen has a starring role in this five-part summer. series about a southern family running a gas station in California. (TV DAILY LOG) ·.--------.. I WEDNESDAY I •ViNIA6 e:oo 9Cl)(~(J))QI) ..... GOCI>9f!I"'-• ..,... .. 11111ett9111 If tile Su Cl)lmw,.,.. • CJ)<• Cl)) ... ac..... , m Pwl1Wlt F..., .... s.1111 ' --• ..., .. ~rt =~~~ .. Dl'alllllc SefMI CDMllillllltc-t ' -6:30-.llM: CC> (90) '11rtt .., Ille llll" (dra) '69-Chrislopher CtOflt. Dun J~er1 Tlpp1 Heclrtn. {() ID~ 5riftltti QI Men Crifllll Slllllr (Q}') CJ)) l1lt Ult bllltr SOid v .. l>J" fDZ'lm ( 121 ())) lewltdlM CllCD.._ -............ Dnf"'9 \ ,,,,. A.ii-lines Pkad for Cuts Competition -Not Desire -Spurs Requests WAlDllNOTON <AP> -Four m aJor atrllo••· facln1 a cbaD~bJaprlYate 8rtt1ab a1r carrl•r, are aaklnl for permll1klD to otter cut-rate air f&NI on transaUantlc fii1bu that oflsr • inlnlmum ot frll11. Tbe ... pJdly etcalaUnc com- l*JUC!n f OC' thoutandl of poten- ilal oveneu airline J>Neensen betlD wttb approvar of a low· i:!£.Go·frlll1 New York·to· fU&bt achedwe for Latv Atrwaya, a privately owned BrlUlb eompaoy. TRB IASER AIRWAYS pro· 10tai wu accepted by the QvU AefCIGaUUct Board ln June and four U.S. -bued carriers. con-cerned over tbe competition. have requested authority to adopt aimllar budset passenger rates. Trau lnternatlcmal Alrllnea. tbe worid'a lar&ett charter Car• rier, and Trana World Alrw&)'8 are the lat.t to auecumb to the La.k• Alrwa71 prcuure. Both uted the CAB this week to ap- prove low-coat transatlantic fares s1mllar to those sanctlcmed tor Laker. Trans IntemaUonaJ, based in Oakland. and TWA thus joined Pan American and Nationwide Lelaure, anCthe> charter carrier. in bidding for transatlantic economy-rate paesencer busi- ness. ( CONSUMER J Bruuets. Belitum. Fares would bo .... than half the tolt or economy tickets on esistln1 ecbeduled Oighta. For Instance. one-way f area would be $139 from New York and 1229 from Callfonda. TBESE toMPARE with re-IU)ar one-way coach fares ot $'11 between New York and Bruasels and '58' between Loa Aqeles and Brussels. The cheapest fares currenUy available. the so-called Apex fares that require roundtrip booking 60 days in advance, are $477 for New York-Brussels and '637 ror Los Anieles-Brusam. TWA ii trytni to match two low·fare New York-to-London services proposed Jut week by Pan American. wbJcb filed lta rate request after Laker Airways won approval tor its Skytraio aervice. DONALD M. CASEY, a TWA vice pre.Jdent, uJd h1a company wu reluctant to compete fOC' the low·coet ov•raeu travel bu.si- nen. "While we feel tbe Pan American fare la Ul·conceived and wtll result 1n lower revenues rather than generate new pauenaers. we are matchlnc It for purely compeUUve reuou." beaaid. TWA and Pan American pro. pose roundtrip standby ru1hts at 1251. or S20 more than the ao- frllls service provided by Later Alrwaya. British Alrwaya. the government-owned air carrier. la offerina a~ roundtrip Oiaht. LAKER AIRWA vs• no-hills ntgbt.will not offer rree meala or free tn-rucht entertainm~l Althoulb the TWA and Pan Am Jow-co1t fuw would be •lilbtl1 hl1her than those of Laker Airways, Pauenaers would 1et free meals and ln·flilbt enter· talnment. aaid offidala of tbetwo airlines. Coors tO Add Two Distribution Areas Atna.:ing c11....- THERE WAS NO immediate indication when the board would act on the rate acbedules pro- posed by the four U.S. carriers. Bealnnlnt in September. GOLDEM. Colo. (AP> -The Adolph Coors ComJ)Jny plana to Larue C<>leman of Houston, Tex .• might be expand its beer sales in tbe state of Wasbin1ton and wi\l belin sell-caught in a spider's Web. Instead. he 's ingbeerlnMissouri. = washing the 360-foot high window and its • The nation's fifth-largest brewery now markets its in the maze of mobile sculpture in the atrium or eastern part of Waahlnitoo by a company-owned diatrib torsbJp in the Hyatt House Regenc)· Hotel in N~w • Spokane. Coors beer is notyetdiatributed 1n Missouri bJtbdlrm. Orleans. The cliff·banger job must be Laker Airways will orter a daily. no-frill•. nonreservation "1ky train" •ervlce between New York and London at roundtrip prices ol $236. That compares with a '631 roundtrip price for a refular 14-to 21-day summer ex- cunloo. Joseph Coors, president ot the company, said Pf(lductlon done once 8 vear. capabilities and market conditions would permit tbe expension. -~.::.;:;-==..:....o.:..:::.;;...---------­ Trans International wants a no-frills "Sky bus,. service between 14 U.S. cities and Sales in'Missou.ri and all of Wa.shlnitoo could start by mid·~ be said. While the exact number of distributors for each state ~not hffn determined, Coors omcials esUmale about 1.3 to us diatrib tors will be selected in Missouri, includina one company-owned et. and that 10lo12 distributors wUI be named in Washineton. Jn May. the firm announced plans to add Iowa u its 15th ma.1'cet state next year. Webb Pays Dividend Ditectors or the Del E . Webb C«p., which manaies tfle Newporter Inn. Newport ~acb, have declared a dividend of S cents a share on common stock, payable Sept. 23 to stockholders of record at thecloseo!busiQessSept. 8. Over T~ Counter MASO~ • Juco. Inc., Newport Beach, bu announced the lollowin1 personnel appointments: -Tack Coop bu been named vice president, marketing. He is bued at the headquarters facility in Newport Beach and Is responsible ror sales plans and coordination of sales representatives. -Al Doheny bolds the newly created position of dJrect.or of operatiom. He operates from Illinois and is reapooJible ror over·all runcUoning or shop facilities. He bas been shop manager at Newport Beach. -GU'J MacMeellD has been named shop manager at Newport Beach. He started as shop mechanic in 1972. • John C. Harcar, HunUngton Beach, bas been promoted to assistant manqer ol the Newport Beach branch office of Occldmal Ufe luarance Compuy of California. He had been an agent In this Transamerica company's Newport Beach branch since 19'15. • Mlclaael McCa&cbeoa. Newport Beach. has be~a named Johnstown Properties Area Manacer of Southern California. He la responsible for the operations at Johnstown's 14 Southern Califomla apartment communiUes. Re joined the firm l \1a years qo and l• former area mana1er of the Seat- Ue tracoma areL • Stuley Newlloff. Irvine. bas been promoted to vice prealdent/creaUve director at Bauo/Boal· maa. IDe •• Newport Beach. He ii f«mer principle and co-creaUYe director of Lemer-Newhorf Ad· vertlllnc in Loe Aqelea. ~ Chevrolet ,. ,., Tiie A.laod•ted PreM New·ear ".llstrallon. nrures lbow Cb8\ll"()let baa overtaken Ford Motm" Compan1 u sales leader lo Lot Ancelea · an4 Orance counues fot the nm HVen months ot the tm model year. Jn the Imported fttld, To1ota'1 ahare of tbe ntw-c&r D1aibt shot UP 81 ~over la.tyeat. pu~ tt leu than two pe~eJM)ln\I behind CbeYrolet.. • , \ ) ___________ --==----:::c --~ --- - -• NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS ..... ~~uf cwfi-· ':? i: :· '~~-.. I .. ·"'-... .. ''"'--•... " . ,,._ ... tlM • 16 I -tli !1'"1fj=: ::to,. .J ~ ~I g :;.~u~.-·~' h1'::: ~ i. ·:i ..... v. 'f.r:r, 's J .. -; ~ , .. ;: i. • rlH .. ~ .,.... ",, 1: 1J-. . 4. . ., ,,_ I lk 1 ~. ~ '-ta ,. • .. ...... "" 1tlllr j It ~-,,.. ,.,.. I .. 1 ,. '7.Wf ~ " -11!1 I I) 21• ,..,. ... ,_. _, I •11 U2 40 .. loo '"'-'" tt u " ,,... • •• '"'"-"'.. • " :M.. .. fm!IO« I »IO 1 16•• fMlllC)llll tt IJOO II' 1 • .. '$' "° ... , .... e 1 :io • m ,,.. ... fMI » • IO • • '• fllt'Cll 1 IO I 11' JO.. '• Elllea 1}0 1 1' l1"' 1. '"""* 8011 •1 ,. £qu1fa)l la • 10 17\. ... E~-• • .. ""'• '• E.-itO. ,_., 6 JI JI'~• •, Ecltlf UO II !J U-. ~ f1n1t" 1 76 I U 31 Ewwire .05e " I 11"-IEIMJIOt A 7 lt IJ'. .... Et.trim .» I I 1"' '"' '""" t.10 • .,. ..... Etll'fl .. t.-40 1 51 .... ,.,_,. Ill , 10 ., .... E"•Ol 1.40 .. 13 1~+ ... E•C.IO 1.40 I 1t1 ,,...._ 11o Eact" \.71* 2 21° • -·~ Eu°" 3 • 110 s1•• • • • _,._,. FMC 1 6 110 ?Jl; '• FMCOI US st Jr ~:~ra.. ·: 1~ I!; I~~ : : FeCMIE,,1 16 l3 "°' '• FelfGln .IO II 10 U • -. Fe1r1ric1 30 n :M4 14" '• F•l,.mtF 1• ~ 1? lt'11f • •• ~ FelCOft!> 17 106 l7"t • • FrW1tFn \ '3 "· t 1 • '• F•rahMt n 14-• • • • Ff!oOcfil!'' U) j •_. FMC.0 'IO I 11 11'• • ~ .. ~::N°Zlt l ~ ~ 4~~ m~ 1 '• • F•dP8 ~ ~ S6 ·~ I • t FP-c>pl 110 • tt-• ,_. • FdSlO"I .tO ' S t~ 1' FodOSI 1 *11 1lO :JI '- • F•"O 1 6.t 1 11 lO'"> "- 1 4 Fibr9'tld St '""-•_. FldFln 30 S 3' I .. • .... FKIVftl 1 «I I I :12-. Fide"'! t «> • 10 H\t '• Flltrol • .. 14 t \o Fl11S.n8 "8 • Ml 1' '• Flnl Fed SO S 1l3 JJ~ .. Flrttt" I 10 II II! ll'n FtClw1 .JJr 6 l3S ~-'• FSIClll< 1 I ttt t '• Fl811Tu 1 t JS Flln8" 17010 U •Hu .. 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UnTecl1 1 ID 1 4U 311.'J-l'i v,,Tc11p17.•.. 1 mYJ-..., U,,ITtf 1.21 t 755 2IM'-14 UfllT t llll.!O.. 1 2511J-1- u111i:ro. .to 1 n •~-"" U11lver .:i. 1 t .-i-1' UnlYl'd 1.12 t 2S 21\oo ••• u,,u., 1• 1 10 30'• + -... UplOlll\ 1 1011 ... ~ ~ U5lll'E .e 1 IS1 1n.. l't v.ttdlieeday.Auqust~ t917 OAILYPfLOT 'Inner f:irele' Diversity VJSits U .5. Boardrooms B1SYLV1A~ .._ ......... Diversity is accelerat.11'1 in U1e earporate boardrooms of lbe nation. Acadernlcla.DS alt Oil •7 pereent of lM boanb, 'IP 11.$ percent in three years. Tbe J>QWer ol board members wllb backgrounds in economics, eclue&Uon aDd ~la government la risinl steadily. Women are sitUn1 on the boardl of 21 ~ of tM country's corporaUons, up t.8 perc:alt. lntematlooal execuUv• AN broldlldDiUMlthold. aur LAWYERS WHO PROVIDI ..... Mr'9tct1 to the company, commercial banten and lnYMtlnmt bukers ve losing power. So far, only o.s percent have emplo1• repreaentativei on their boards. These are the find.Ines ol Kom/Fel'f'1 International, tht world's largest executive search firm, lD tta copyrtehi.d fourth annual study of 310 boards. Olber characteristics of COl"PQralAt bo&rdl todQ include \be dominance of the older director, particularly on boards of companies with an· nual sales exceedio1 $500 million. On these Money's Worth · big company boards, ac· ' cording to a report by _____ .,, Women's Fon1m, Inc., there were nodl~under .,eao and ooly 1 percent between 30 and 40. . • PRESSURE FROM WOME~ G&OVPS, ton:aumer activists, and government baa opened dlrectonhis-lo a wider specµ-um. In the words of Louis W. Cabot of Cabot Corp., ln lbe Conference Board Record, "the easy·1olnl and 1entlet:nan- ly conduct of the traditional board ol dfrecton mun be replaced by serious·mlnded, posiUve-ortem.d, erltlcal in- teraction between tht board and manqel!Mllt. lt la all too easy to bang on to old·fashioned board prodecures, b\lt ii the corporauon runs into troubles -and mOlt do rrom tlme to time -this will eventually catcb up witJl ~ rictlma." Why do people accept directorabl111? TO MAKE PE&SONAL FUEND8lllPS, to Caln U· perience in and tnowleclce d bow otber PIODle rm their- businesses, to enhance the pretttce d the CompallJ' In- volved, to boost the persm•s eio, to make eztra m..., (rarely enough to be worthwhile, II.YI Cabot>. to aeeept a challenge (and this, Cabot warn.a can turn out to be mere than the new director bar1ains for). Just as lbere la no dJspUting lbe openint ol direetanblps to a wider spectrum or society, so there ls no di.JputJq the change in lbe boards f~m lbe relatively pualve roles ol bygone years to active (if oot qp-essive) putlclpaUoli. Speeding the change is the fact that in 10me eompanles ... many as 60 percent of current board members wW leave In the next two years under mandatory retirement policies. This turnover alone will create opportuniUes for one ol. the greatest corporate Inflows in American bualneu hla· tory. ADDING TO THE SPEED will be the fact tbat qualifled women selected for boards usually have noa·tndltlonal backgrounds. The definition of the ideal board is slated for a m~ overhaul in the next few years. Nnt · Tb board at ~osn()Q(lt Market Beset Again By Interest Worries _ NEW YORK CAP) -Amidst t.ettoriat bomb stares tUt disrupted New York Clly, it was busblest as usual Oil th New York Stock Excbance wbere prices drlfted lower. • \ • ·! -. The Dow Jones averaie or 30 induat.rtal&. wbicb bid been down more than seven points earner In the aaelQQ. fell 1.39 points to888.00. · 1 But the downturn was more evident in tbe broader 1 figures, where declines outnumbered advances by l+l ~ among NYSE-listed issues. 1 Big Board volume cameto21, 170,000abares. ! Do..,lone•A.,~rap• What Sforla Dflf ~ ' S~otk(API 1'1191 0-..J-ewr..-. Ocien Hklft law Clote O'll 30 • ..., lls.31 -.6 171.ts •.oo-I.lit 10 Tfll m.ot m.50 inn m.~ 1.as u vu "'"n t11 01 10.n 11&.12-o.iz 6S Sill laUS -..ss lllCl.Je JDl.7._ US 11\dln .. • • •• • • .. . .. • • • • • • • • • 2. 11'..000 Tr.,, ' ...• " • .. . . .. • • 50tAOO UUl1 ...................... m.-6S SI~ , .............. , • , ),01 .. .. N~W V'Ol'IC l.4P) c;.,...,pnn 1 ---. c;.Pw pt? 7S lt 30'•-'• V'llltl' " M It -\;, t--------------.&.. ... Ga,..., pf7 n 11210 .. ~. "• Got-I .OtJ 11) ,,, I . '• Gotny 1 10t 11 11• '"''. •, Gotlly P' I 10. I II • GoollltlPC .. U t I Gillr11',, 10r S 11' I~ •• Godlaw 50 • •1 ""' GllldHlll .10 1 t U». Glllftt• 1 so11 no '"' '• GrollM '1 .. ,.,_. • ,._ GINIW JJ t t I~ OIC*Mr " .._ aoc.v 1 . .0 s n 11 ·~ GldWF,, 14 4 Jl II •~ Go«r#pl .71. ,. " ... ~ 1.J2 • 1'7 ~ '• ~ uo • 1121 21 • \lo c;;;o• ,;: * ,,: ~ :: Gollld pf US . , S ,._ _ V+ ~ .. ;' ts "' 11V.-"' ""' .. ._ M Miii-Vt '2 U'-+ lo\ .. H'l'l+ ""' ti 21~ .... " tt"-'I • 10"11 ..... to 111111+ v. , .. 11 " Vlel!P\. II I• 21111-_, VIPlpl 71D. 2 :IJ'o _.,_., - Vl'QJ 1 10 t ,. tN •• VSIC:O.. A I t 'U'\ . v .......... .Oh " 1 ... -"' Vetl.,. .» 11 .. l1-. + "-V•n>l..C 100 S n 19'o-1'1 ,,_ • S'-• V ... lc• 111n J ,.,._I\ Vft!Se I tie 11 ""' Veta> .Jiit 1t ?Ill 1 ... + ''I VI.aim 7013 110 1••• • ... Va1Pw1l4t e1 '""--• Vaf!PllllUO • r200 lO +2 VaE.... S .. l10t tt ... , • LebaJWn OJ/ered Anny Aid BDRUT, Lebanon CAr , --Suretaty or Stale Cyru1 R Vaace ofJ...S Lebanon 1100 mil.Don m eaa1 \J.S t'redlts ov r lb,... Jean to rebuild tu army. v._.. m9d t.ht offer to Pr .. 1. d t !liu Satltia today on lhe ~ stop ol his Middle East '*'" ml.Uklin Ht1 also IOW\dod out 0.. ~bmeu leader on st» \1onta1 a U N ob1ener or ··mer1eocy force .,tong Lllbuion'$ southern border with 1 ... r•el to reduce ~ns1ons bet wt:en ( IN SHORT ) Moslem and Cltnst1ao forces there. The secrelary of state was lo travel to Syna later today as he set out t.o. win Arab and Israeli approval fOf' a plan to move pre- lunlnary Midu.st peace negot.Ja- t1ons t.o the Uruted States in the form of "working groups" of foreign miniBters Cllt"go Ship Bunt• HOUSTON <AP l One crewman was badly burned when a cargo ship exploded and l'au&ht fmi 1n Lhe Houston Ship Channel, and . an investigator l>a1d he suspected arson AuJhorat1es said •ll 4l crewmen on the Ph1hppUle Cor reg1dor were accounted for short· ly after the incident Tuesday nigbL Some had been ashore at the time of the blast. The anJure<l crewman's identity was not available. Mille BUI Slgtt~d WASlflNGTON CA P > -Presi· dt>nt Carter signed a :.trip m1mng ball today wtuch he said 1sn 't ~.trlcl enough despite having the tl'eth t.o rorce coal comparue'> to restore virtually all the new land they ravage to pay for repuirs of damage they've done in the past. ·•rm not completely sat1sfie<l with this legislation." he dctlared during a Hose Garden signing ceremony climaxing -;even years of legislative strug- • 1tles ~mong members or Congress and battles between the ' mlning industry and environ- mental interest!> Vlllagn Retalcen SANGAE. Thailand <AP! Thai troops today entered ~angae and another burned-out border \ 1llage where at least 28 persons. including 11 ctuldren. were kalled by Cambodian i.old1ers in cro<,s border raid~ mihtary authorities said. No fighting was reported along the tense frontier 1!50 miles east of Bangkok Thal military of· facials said most of the 350 raiders who attacked Sangae ancf. nearbv Chalor Changan on Tues day had l>hpped back into Cam b<>dia Piiot · } ' Logbook There's Nothing I ,ike ·sure Thing By WIUIAM HODGE OI n. .._ty l'lleil ltlft ll looked Uke a con ri&bt trom the start. ··1•ve cot a aolld Del Martr1ple. Yes. that's riaht. Three Julc:y JWUnaa 100~1 on Saturday, July 30th," touted the let- ter from a beverl~ UIUs handicapper. "Th.111 Trl'ple Wtn bas been planned to look as though rat'h runner ls an ·accidental• win, the type of situation '4 h<'re u non picked horse gets lucky ' THAT WAS ENOUGH to entice my occ1:1sional hon;e 1 .. 11.:1n~ af1c1onado mother to plunk down her 10 s1moleons •md take her chance:. It was also enough to lure me into a trap to Del Mar al the expense of 11 Saturday to watch these "three horses blow up' lo tote board with a highly profitable score ror those (US) fortunate enough to know ahead o( time." Saturday morning came and after a short call to L.A., my mother emerged from the phone booth clutching a llst of three horses guaranteed to gallop in with windfall profits. A sure bet. A SHORT WHILE later we were standing in the upper clubhouse bar alternately eyeing 1:1 racang program and J elosed-c1rcuit television screen pro- pounding the odds of the next race. The second race was the first test HOOOI We moved do'4 n to the paddock are1t to obsen e our potcntJal fortune being l~d around before the attentive ra<: ml'( patrons JUi.t prior to the secOJld race. 'Billy Club" moved around the paddock as though he had oLher thing!> to do Nol exactly the picture of stamina nece:;sary to outrun the field of seven horses BUT WE WERE undaunted, figuring we had the inside info to walk away with a pot or gold. At the close of the race our para-mutuel tickets joane<l the others scattered on the clubhouse bar's floor Something had f(one wrong. My mother was certain the race had been fixed Someone tampered with our horse. We settled down to regroup and await the fourth race. "Triple Scorpio" was the second horse in our mail tapper's turf tnumv1rale lie had everything going for him Wallie Shoemaker "'a:. riding him He ran well on a farm track. And my molht•r had $18 on h1-. no:.c lie :.pent the la\l two furlonf(S galloping after fourth place Another non picked horse bites the dust • THAT LEFT ONE horse an the seventh race on which lo acquire a \\-andfall. And "Bold Talent" turned out to be the odds·on ravorate to take home the purse an the seventh We placed our bets and huddled around the closed <'1rcuit screen. The· horses lined up al the starting (tale and were off "Bold Talent held a ~ohd third place at the f1r!.t turn and appeare<l to be 1tccelerating toward victory. He held h1l> Rrnundthrough Lhe back stretch butseemedtobetinng ALL o•· A SUDDEN, a:. though he'd been hit by :.t ~treaJunl( lapse of interest , "Bold Talent" succumbed to the thundering hooves of bis fellow entries None of the three golden pack!> bothered to !1111-.h in 1h1· lop three' an an) nf the races. We ncd the lr.ick soothing our wounded walleti. AS WE APPROACHED the traffic barncades ouls1de the track, my mother, a San Diego County Jail information dcrk, spotted a deputy she knew. "Boy, did we Rel taken," she confessed to the sheriH'~ officer. "We had these great tips and none of them came off•· "You're leaving loo early," the uniformed deputy in· formed us 'Steal A March' is a dead cinch in the ninth race." Activities Offered AtUCI The followlng schedule or activiues open to the public bas been an- nounced by the UC lrvlne Extension pro- gram:_.. TODAY "O...tlno end Vlgll..,tl•m '" Ul9 w .. t." o.vld Wllll...,•. I'll O. II'• tenor ol Hl'1ory, C.111-1• Stale UftlYe~lty ~ 9oec:h LHt 9' • UC trylne l!Jrtell\lon le<I-_.._, "T"9 AmorlU<i W.\t," I 10 pm • "m U'•, Hvm61111t" "-" UC ,,,,.,,,. (.,.,._ Slft9I~ 4'ClmfUIOn el llw door II --~rmitt.. fS !O THUIUOAV c~aettno Emptov.n Wo•··Hd WU\on, ort,lcJtnt Actm1n1\V"f11,, ... Rt\l,tfCh A.HO<tat•t tnc •UC lntt~ £ •t•nslof't on•·O•Y \•m•n•r • 10 • m ' JO pm HOllCIOV Inn )l]t 8r1•tot, Coot• MeH "" \Sil. '" elude\ <l•H m•t1rt•h lu"'" "n• .,.ri.tno TUESDAY -THU•SOAV, A-t4 •• II,"· 11 _. U ••t Don t W•"' to M•rrv •o••"· 8ut •. , •• Robert I.. Kev•n•ugh. l"h D , COUMtll!lll D•1'Cl'lol091tl. UC !Mon 01-. A UC ,,...,,,. E•l•MIOn cour .. , • 0 -tO IS pm. llm tO•. Phy•l<al Scl-H 81<19. UC lry1ne uml)US. FM ~recllt. UI, Cre<llt, '"· l'lllOAV ... clSATU•OAY .. T ... P ... no,,,.M of Mind Owr M•lll"," M¥ll G Sc:Nfl". MS ,CIO<· tor•• c-CS.•• '" P•y<hOI09v. UC Irvine A UC IN~E11:tentloncourM. Fri. 1·10 om . I.• •m •11 noo11 and t \pm .. It 1 .... So<l•I S<l•nc• l•"· UC 1tv1rw <AmOUl-~••-Non Cre<lll US Cr..iot \40 ' ~lllOAV-SATUROAY. ,,.....,..u ...... ,. ... u T~ RKOytrlnQ AlcohoUc ,. Mary l JU\I MSW, P'\'l(ttlaVtl \0(1•1 v.ora.~r Long Beach Gt1nf"r~t HO\O•••I A.tcOhot Tr••ltnttt\I Pro qr•m A UC lfylr.{I E 111ftn•f0n •wo tllftf'okend coun·• Fri 1 10 p.m S,111 ., ,. m 11 noon ~ l 'I " m Rm tlO Computtr Sc1N"K• 8109 UC ''"'""' (•mpu-. F-,,. \\l.tft<fudttcwo.•"9 ~· IDAY SATURDAY and SU NOA Y A-I S,t , 7;8'140. U, I• Huma" Pottf\hAhtitt ·• Aotwrt O.tw, Ed 0 . e>tt1\I01tn• ln\t•lvttl' lo, lf'ltl' O•velooment of "um•" A•MMKC..H A UC trvlne ExtensiOI'\ lwO·-\t"" •ork$110p, Fri , 1· 10 p m , Sat ...0 SUI\ , 8 lO a m ·\ P m • Am uo. So<I•• Selene• L•I>, UC Irvine umpu\. Fee· US, tnc:tuclo °"' kt"Q SATURDAY •tmprovlnq \VMf'..,i\orv 'Sli\.•11' •• HOwAf'O w 11wn, pretldent. Ad~ m1n1ttr•tlvf" Af>1.Nrch A'\OCt•hn '"' A. UC tf'Y'"" £•'""''°" ~ d1y .. m•oar Cf \0 • rn • \0 pm 4.i~·r•ton MMor Mol•I 10U W 8"'11 Md An•M•m ,. • l' \)(') '"' IUOt \ t 1a\ .. ~t,.,.1e1'<I turn:h•ncJP-''"-'"q · SfoUifliQ H \nc:lltno Ob111c hOI'\\ ~n'1 f 10,11\Q \•h· Jul•' A M~'"'' LL 8 A UC 1rv1nt' E•IM"-IO"' o~ 4.,.., '"'"'"""' • lO• m • lOP M A:m no \()( ••• Sc•""nt• Towft UC f•v•¥ cam OU\ f~,. \~0 1ntludf' .. Clot., ,.,,.1""'1•t\ 1vnr,, iltld ~,._1no l'•tOAY ...,dSATUROAY -A""u\l 11 ~f'WI tl u~'""""411f\oG ano HfltP•l'ttl ""' l .-.,n109 Ot'\fP)1l1'v Chltd J,,,, .. , 4 Arol•\co ~ 0 proh•\\O' ot Manet~ '""',,' •nd thtlrJ P\VC-h••lt1\t "•" fHttQO St~f' UnlWt'\•tY ..,0 \l•H A UC Irvin• E •tf"fll\•Of\ w•••f'nt1 ,.m1n..r Jn 7 tOpm S.t •o:1 m 11 noon tt"tJ t \ om "m t~) Ptiv\•t•I \< 1enc:M Bldq UC Ir YI"-c•mc:KI' f.. ,. ... \AO •f'CluOI"\ o.erlilln9 WEOHISOAY oftd THU"SDAY . .....,,,,_ .. •01 Pr•r tlt•I CIA\\r..,om Allrr~~tl-."y.'lltleml\ Paq<".&\ f """'"Ant. The frrf•\lwlll• u.,.,.,. c ""'"' OH•t,.. Of Gr....,v.t• l~t~o,. ''"'lie)""""' NA tw•Uto lf'~'t\~ A P( 1rv1or f •\f"n~·on t•O·dA¥ 1 m•Nt " A m 6 pm Rm 100 .,.,,,. .• , x1 .. n(f' Halt UC IN1nf" ,.,n l)U\ F~ \\I l"'-IUdl .. Ollrtll"'I THURSDAY. llc ... vtt ti Emo4DYNt Tf'alnlnq ~ ~y,.100 mrnt ., How4rd W1hon out''"fl"'' A,taun1\t,8UY1 R4t'\ttarcn Anoe •·tt•\ '"' A UC INI.,. E•t•n\k>n O"I•· d+4V Jf"m•N' • lO • m ~• lO pm Hoh0.'4 tnn. 3tl1 8rl\'Q4 Co"t-Mf'A f. ... UO fftClwdlt• chin m•1er111 tufY ~ ·~a -••nci PRIDAY -SATURDAY ""'"" 1' .... JI ............. S~Di.,orr~ Actor Rory Calhoun has filed for d1vot<'E' trom his "ife of :.1x 'e&.1rs, Susan kathll'cn. I le has of fered her custody of their daughter and monthly child sup· port. Potential Shuttle 'Crew Set HOUSTON IAP 1 The Nal1onal Aeronautics and Space AdmirustratJon has an nounced selection of the Ctrst 20 polentl1tl space shuttle astronauts A Johnson Space center spokesman said about 200 or the 8,079 ap- plicants will be selected ror interviews •nd physical exammatlonp:. The spokesman JJld NASA will select 40 c•n· d1dates. pilots and mls· s1on spec1allsL'i, Lo report to the space center an December. None of the first 20 wa& a woman although the space agency has said lt plans to seek them and members of minority races The spokesman :.aid he did not have the races of the selections because the application form did not include that question. NASA said the.first 20 applicants selected, age, affilat1on, high schoQl and hometown included· Mat C<trdkl IC II•"""· U Air J.'>n" ~,,.,.Oh l .. MllM Mo , Au rvird E AAt•1'•rf lO N•vv Hrvr1n. ~10 Wti1u'"'O" Ohio M.tl JOl"ln E-911M ).9 Alt roru. ,.ortoltll "' Sdn Allton.,, Cept G•'" 0 Ao"n 1) Air fOftf H•l\lft&CI K•n HilJt'iitP-td t<al'\ C•n• Cl&u,._.. M Botton Jr )1 ~r ~OH .. Stlt.ll;h \tl)u1; (•t¥ N~b Sioux (.tty Iowa l t Cl'tr O•n,,.t C 8r&nOtn,t••n l ' N•YY .,.,., •• ,.own Wl\t Watf't'OW"' W IM. M•t Aoy 0 8r•d9"'' Jr 1• A" florrt G.11¥1v1ttt 0• Atlan•A ' ... t khed By THOMAS D. EUAS Cltlllorn.la taxpayers last ye.ar !inane~ a sur- vey showing their transportation prlontie.s are radically diffetenl from the aoal.s the state bas been pushlng for several years. The survey w•s so thorou1b\y squelched, however. that even some top officials at t.be atale Department of Transportation now say they never heardofit. • I INTERESTINGLY, nlE POLL -TAKEN by the highly respected Field Institute was mad• at the time Caltrans was pushing a statewide transportation plan containing a stron1 push toward getting drivers out of their cars and into buses and carpools SO ERN CALIFORNIA The survey reveals why that transportation OCUS plan was quickly shot 1 down by publlc indignation, with transport officials like Caltrans Director Addana Gianturco baclrtraclung somewhat on theit opposition to new freeway building. · 1 For the Field fit\ding$, base<J-on intervlews with 1,033 randomly selected adult.a in thelC homes. de- monstrate that Californians want better freeways, not fewer freeways FUNDING FOR NEW PUBLIC transportallon lake buses and rapid transit came in a distant fifth among the preferred uses of Rasoline tax money in the poll. Maintl'nance of existing roads, safety 1mprove- ment.s, replacement!> or worn-out freeways and im· provemenl of tramc flow aJl rate<! higher than mass transit. Yet, mass transit was to be a priority item jn the now-dead transportation plan. Interestingly, Caltrans still has not released the Field poll; it came lo light only when an employe spirited a copy out of the department's offices. BY CONTRAST. CALTRANS HAS strongly promoted another poll taken by its own staffers in s ax Southern Cahfomia counties al the time the Field surveyors were at work. The in-house sue. vcy showed somewhat more fa\ orable responses to questions on mass transit. Caltrans officials have not answered queries as to why the Field poll was nol released. A possible reas'on may be that at conmcted so markedly 01ANTu•co "'1th desired policy, making re- lease a poht1<.'ally M!lf-defealing move. The survey showed some other interesting re· • :.ults aside from its poor rating for mass transit. ONE WAS TllAT PERSONS LJXELY to have ..... driven on lhe one freeway where existing Ian~ were turned over for exclusive bus and ~arpool use during rush hours frown on the idea. . Only 35 percent or those surveyed in Los Angeles and Orange counties liked the idea • Elsewhere, the notion brings a significantly higher ,,ting. For instance. 71 percent of Norlhem Ca!Hor· owns lil<~ the idea or preferential lanes. called Qiamond Lanes when they were tried on the Santa Monie~ Freeway SJNCf: GJANTURCO AND OTHER Caltrans of- r1c1als have said they intend to try again elsewhere • with lhe concept, releasing these poll results could h3ve bei!n embarrassing Murder Trial SuppOrted , E•tr•\tl'\\nrv P~r •OIH)ft ''"' IJA~ Psvtf'hC\ • Mtr• G S<f"l•t"'r M S. doctoral f•nd•d•ff' '" P\VlhOIOQ'Y'. UC ff"V•nf• "' U( 1fyln-> [ xt.,\IM WP~liltnd (OUt\oott. Fri 1 10 o m • Solt • • m . n "°°" •hd ' \ o m Am llA PhY' •cal Sc...,,< .. lldq UC lfvl"" c~\ -=•• "'ton (r9'd1I., 1"1) Crotd•l.MO SATUllOAY, ,,..,.,,.. 111 'lftlltrt"q Ttmt f.ll•Cllvely Mow•rt Wit '\on pr111o~nt Act m•ntstr•·t1~ Aft,._rch A\\O<:i•t~ Inc A UC,,.,,,.. EtteMIOn -.d•• ""''""'·•JO• rn -4 >Op rn .. Rm. >10 So<lel Sci.nu Tower. UC '"''M <•"' M•1 Fr,.dtitrtt l ,.-Brv•n U Mar,.,., W•ttrtown M"'' ~lro.._. ,....,., Cll!llo4 Johr' C.it~Oftr 1• ~1r F"•r<• 0-.m.t>"N: G1 vr-.nvll't S,C ll cmo MIC ..... L C1>o1h I• N~vy RtYtor\• C111• Sacr,11n-.""10 Colll M.11 Stewsr1 E C,.n\lon Jl Atr F'o,<•. '-orklf'dQ• ''• Wflirtown SD LI Cm<I John 0 (r~•qMO't l4 Hevy S.•U'• Wl\f'I Ora"9", Ttw Lt Cm<I Withe"' C'1K\ 11 JI, Navv, W~thlnolon 0 C Om•h•. Noll · CAPI Edwsrd l 01nl.t 32. Air Force. A••••n4f,.,• Vo Eaol•P• .. r .. C•c>t Mlcllaet Dur111ri. n "" l'or<•, 0.11••. 0.11•< Lt J•~ O. Ellh. JO. Nan Marlett•. Ge ~porlitnl>urQ, \ C J amn 0 E •IC''°" 35. <••"'•"· Ve,,dtlt WHh ~. WA\lt, U Cl"Cl ltPnl H £ .. Ing ~ Nevy. Coll- Par,, l"a , St<! AllQelo, T.,. . Ceof, Guy s Ga-.,.., ,,.,, Fo"•· AIU• aftOrla V•. Atto .. ta, V• , CerJI T"°"'" I! AbCNllflO 12. AUrl11h. Ma•ne• CllY u Wtftl--, .. ,. So could the finding that 70 percent or all Californians oppose building separate roadways for bus and carpool use, another pet Call rans notion. Existence of the Field survey was kept secret even thouf(h its findings hardly merited such treat- ment. Sacco-Vanzetti Proclamation Called Shameful From AP Dispatches / Republicans in the MassachU&etts Senate are trying to get that body to repudiate Gov Michael OokaJds' proclamation that anarchists Niebla Sac· cl> and Bartolomeo Van1etu did nol receive a fair murder trial. Sen David Locke said that the July 19 proc· clamation overrode the findings of the judicial system and its signing was "the most shameful ~enano m l\t assachusetts history ... Dukak1s' proclamation set aside Aug. 23 as a memorial day for Sacco and V41niettl, who were ex· eeuted Aug. 23, 1927, arter being found guilty an a 1~ payroll robbery and murder .. Actor Frank Ccmwerse, accused of d.ama1ina an airline ticket counter after beirtl .. bumped" from a flight al Bradley International Airport, asked a Connecticut court for accelera~ rehabilitation status. Accelerated re· ( J habilitaUon mean• • PEOPLE person does not plead _ ~ either iMocent or guilt)' .. --------- If 1ranted the status. Con- verse would have to report lo • probation officer aiicl, after a period desllt\aled by the court. the ar rest record would be erased. • Roy A. Anderson will succeed Robert Haack as chatrman and chtef extcuUveofLockheed Aircraft Corp .• th-e comp.any•• board of directors announced. Anderson. a. bas been with the aerospace firm ai years arid ll vtce chalrman and chief financial ond admlnlstratlve ottlcer. H•ack. the former• New York Stock hchan1e president who took uver ,.. lioc~beed chalrmM on an interim b.,ls ln t'tbruary 19Tt. 1ild he would ,.. main In that tapacJty uoUI lhe firm •a annual m eettna. cbedule4 '°' St$)~ 29. He wUI al.lo lc\d f Ol' N-cleCUOD as • aitector at the rneeuna. dreds of United Airline pilots out oC up to $12 ml!Uon entrusted to him for Investments. • • 1rs smart to be thrifty. and Henry Heins II -of the family that gave America 57 varieties -knows that even millionaires tend lo be bargain bunters. So he and bis wife, eager lo sell, have slashed -$115,000 from the ssoo.ooo asking price for their 21· room, triplex co-operative apartment overlookine the river at East 52nd Street in New York City. . This brlnas at down to $385,000, which "'"latlt be con· sidered cheap. However. Sotheby Parke B~met International Realtors notes that malntenance char&et run to $3,915 a month and the tax dodacUon Is only 23 percent. • Mllfll Assemblyman WIOJe Brewa <D·San Fran· cisco>. says be will visit mainland China next month as part of a two-week Far East tour. Browia u.ld he wlll leave Se$>l. 10 and joln 15 Jeai1latora rrom various states. He will •lso make brld stops tn Japan and Hong J(ong. • The tr1p ts sponsored by the N at\onal Conference of State Legl.$latu.res. He said he will pay hlati,~bW. 1 put. ~e• iSO tnctvoo """ mal«i•ls h,.,.hand par111119 ' "Settino EllKOY• Pr-o~ellOM an<! Time "'-""'nt " Julet• A Mui,,., LL f\ A UC 1"11,,. E!<tentl<>n O<le.O.y ,..,..,,..,,, • JO• m • JO" "' Rm l ... So<lat Scle••CI Lal> UC lrYIM C-~ l'H UO. lnctl><tr• clantncllenelt •~~andperi.1'19 WEONllOAY, THU•SOAY aftll l'•IOAY. A....,.,.14,U-H ..:J M·• •or Ttac:.,.•• Mat.,•••• MollnllO<I •nd M-11 -K •• "ot>ort O•w. Ed D , pru•dtnt •n•tltute tor II•• Development of Hu,.,.., RHourcn A UC I NIM I!• ttnslon courw. Wed , 1·10 Pm Thurs encl Fri.•• m 11_,., one! t \ p m .• llm. 140. Sod .. Sci-• IAI>. UC trvlM caml'U•· C..Urw may be tell"n IM 1 urnll ~ Crtdlt IWtd llftd Tllurt rneetlnvs ..,,,,or for 7 unlbof credi1 <Wed Thuri allCI Fri ,,_tl~I FM· t...Ul MO,lunlh-SSl •tUOAY .... IATU .. DAY • A"'11.tlt-t7 ··rr..,~nut M..,ttallon and t ... Sci.nee ol 0..tl"" l!lt .. M99f'<P ".., J....,.nq. 1111.0 .. cllntcal lft\truc: 1or Of Mtdl<IM. UC INI,,. -teal Center A UC 1 rvlne E wientlo" wffllefld ~w. Prl f.10 om 5.tl • • m ·11 - -l·S • m Am , ... Socia! S<i...ct UI> UC INtne um IMI'· Fet· Cr9dll Ml N ... ·c""'" llt lfl<l-Nr1UnQ, WIOHllOAY .... T'HUlllDAY, ~a1M41-__ , "CIMll-'"9 "'9 GI""-" Ed,.ard C. Fr1"4'ton, ""'.D., .,.Kull• 01~ tor, The Ne.,,..llle l..Hfftlf\11 (eftl~•, N .. lt•lllt, T.--A UC ltlll,,. l•t.,<ton -•Y ,_.., I • m 4 'm , ""' *· lk'• k it«• H•ll. UC ,,.,,,,. Ull'lllU\ F• UI, IMI~ Mflll119 , tr there was any reason other than politics for htding the survey results, Caltrans officials have been unw1llinl'( to provide 1t Sal ety Improves Builders Get High • Dear Joyce:. To do coastrucl10n work. do you aJwa11 ban to work up bl Ch? H.W., Hammond, Ind Often enough that you'd better have 1ood balance and not rear beiaht, • although some kinds ot if'9nworken., such as those who do ornarnerital or rein!orcin& t..sks. usually work op the ground. While the dancers ln structural tronworkin& -faWng, beina conked by falllna objects. and eetti'r\1 burned --have been reduced by sar~ educa· tion and the wide~ use of protecUve ' equlprnent ltlce safely beli, and net.. hard bats and inl\llate<t aloves, lronworklni ts amona the riskiest ot the construction crafts. ( ( <AREERS -~ --~---oc =------~ 'Two Superstan ___ k Sparks 'Glad Y 0u Asked That' ltyMeraP•Hy ....... hard on bis chair, smuhed it and screamed, "Get me an ambulance and a lawy•r!" Toots ambled over to his friend's table, looked over the damage and said to lhe waiter, "Okay -tell this creep we won't put the broken chair on his bill!" Q: Isn't Peter Sellers' new wlfe youn1 enough lo be bis daughter! -Mr. and Mn. A. Hamilton, Minneapolla. A: Yes. "But, .. says 22.year·old actress Lynne Frederick, "I don't mmd the 30-year difference in our ages. 1 think I feel a great deal older than I am." Miss F'rederlck <now appearing in "Voyage of the Damned") insists: "Peter is the closest I've come to my ideal, ii there is such a thin&. He is yery funny and yet can be very quiet." Q: Is that Debra Tate, a model pot.1n1 ID ber bittJtday suJt for no less tban 10 color paces ID the March "Oat," any relaUon to tbe munlend Sbaroa Tate?-RexBandow,Jamalca,N.Y. A: Yes. She's her kid slster. Q: Did tbe late Andy Devine, who played the iovable "Jingles" when I was growing ap, ever ex· plain bow be got that 1ravel voice! -Tommy Grif· fin, lndianapolls. A: Yes "l answer that question 10 times a day," he told us. "The only thing I worried about was iC it suddenly cleared up. Then I'd be out of work. Every time l made a movie I'd cet letters sending me sore throat cures. Finally a doctor said the trouble was just nodes. So I never went to another doctor with it because I knew the real reason. It was my falling on a stick playing with other kids and puncturing the roof of my mouth. It turned outto be the luckiest accldenll ever cot in! · · 1 Send uour queati<m& to Hu Cardnn. "Glad You ,taked That," care of thi& n.w,,pa~. P.O. Box 15611, COfG Meao g2626. Marilyn IJ1ld 1111 GardMr will auioer. cu man11 que.., tions aa they can m their column, but tM volume of mail maku J)ltrlO!lal replies amposnble. Lltl. Boyd ., Muggers Hit Main Streets Twice as many women as men sleep most ly on their stomachs while four times u man) men as women sleep mostly on their backs. Ot so the sleep researchers report. That, t,tle) say, may explain why more men than womer: s nore and snore more, than back·sleeping. A meeting of lbe Greater Los An1el9s Earthquake Investigation Committee, ac· cording to ill minutes, "was adjourned by a motion from the floor." Police records show, surprisingly, that more muggings happen on main streets than on the darker side streets. ln New Zealand Uves a species of lilard with three eyes. NO WHITE GENES Q. "Whal percentage of thla country's black population is completely fne of white genes?" A. Nobody lcnows. Some estimators think maybe 10 percent. Some say muchtess. Q. "What's It mean to •probate' a ww1·· A. To declare it's cenuine, that'a aJI. Iteni No. 9140 In our Love and War man'a file ia the aad observatloD of Frank Wedekind: "When oUT lives become woman· leas, then every Utbt la spent. FQr that whlcb is lef\ to me, I would not 1ive oneeent." 1t•1 a matter of record tnat Cbatles Dickens, durtni much of tbe Umt as be wrote his renowned stories, kept hia tbumblo bis mouth. Four out of nve baby turtles in. the wild never~wup. --.. -....-~· Big 'Batt~k~l·;~'~:..::...!.!!~ 'i,!_B.....:;__s -o-==-==;,~·7---=' ----;::-t f 1bey fouaht the Battle ol Wa1er1oo aU over acatn last weekend at tbe RoUywood Bowl but tbe wlnnen tbll time •ere the clell&bled onlooken · who watched t.be mtflee that inspired Beethoven's score. TOM .BARLEY~ Music Box '1~ The tableau that included autbenUcally cos- tumed French and British IOlclien was tremen· doual)' lmprealve with La~ Foster and his Los An&eles Pbllbarmooic Orchestra in floe sup· porting rorm. livered final movement that was a joy to bear and witness. . ~ Bur WHAT BROUGtrr A capacity audience to its feet in sheer joy wu the beat fireworks dis- A magnificent PUth, a &lorious .. Emperor" V and a "Battle ol Waterloo" tbat broucht us to our 1 feet in awe ud astoftisb.ment. • • • · We had a ball at UM Bowl. play this writer bu ever aeen at the Bowl. We were treated to ev_, conceivable form of pyrotechnics in a breathtaJdn1 display while tbe wavers of the Union Jack and tbe Tricolor battled Cor supremacy and cannons boomed lo the back· SOl"Tll CO.\ST ~~~ fJll A f WI . . -· ground. ....._.w.-1:.41 .............. Dcdl" Planet? rr WAS " FJ'M'ING FINALE indeed for an ntlATa .NIE all·Beetboven concert that brouaht us nawlesa ''A I\. I performances or the two earlier works: the ~ 'I Reporters Lois Lane I Margot Kidder 1 ·~nd Clark Kent cChristopher Reeve 1 take a break in the filming or the mo\'ie .. Superman" at the ='lew York Dally ~ews. "hich hao; become the Daily Planet for the duration. master's immortal Filth Sympbany and lhe "Em· "(N) HA I I " peror" piano concerto. /'"'\l_L Fostec ll one of the finest interpreters of, Wiit W;1 Miil Beethoven In the concert world today and he amp. "::':111 1-.. -- ty proved that point with a superbly directed, pr• ......, NW clJety delivered P'lftb. THE rvr It wu the Fifth delivered lD the frand Euro-~•~ pean manner under a baton that brou&bt from an nr 111 TIK9"'1') inspired LAPO every moment ol majesty and W ,,.. • It's Albert Fmney On Record Alhmn every ounce ol (erv« la that splendid score. ~ CONCEaT PIANIST ALRED Brendel does not take aecond place to Foster when it comes to WRAlF" exeeptlonal lnterpretaUon ol Beethoven and be '-_,.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.,... .... iiiiiiiii..__,W showed us exactly why wlth a &lltterint rendition LOSANGELES <AP>-What'sthis? AJbertFin· ney singing on the Johnny Carson and Merv Griffin shows and hustling his album around to radio sta· lions like a rock star on the rise? or the "Emperor'' concerto. 'lbe ebulllent Austrian was at the eeak of hi.s form and never more so than in a tlorioualy de· ' His loyal followers in the Ertgllsh theatuh might give a sniff al such mundane activity. Finney, a classical actor of wide reputation.~eems uncon· cerned. He has launched an ll·clty American tour which he hopes will sell more than a few copies of his Motownrelease, "AlbertFlnney'sAlbum." New MoVie Role AS HE BEG~ HIS TRAVELS, he reflected. "Thia kind of promotion Is II very different ex· perience for me. Throughout my actln& career, 1 have tried to maintain a deeree of anonymity. My reasoning was that if you established too strong an image personally, it would outweigh whatever character you are playina." Earlier In hla career he put that theory Into practice. In 1963 he became an instant star with 1'1H111v his raucous portrayal of "Tom Jones"..!.. Academy Award nomination and all lhat. He followed with his electrifying ~rformance in "Luther" on Broadway. Thenhevarushed. "I had been a profeaalonal actor for eight years, with no break. no vacation," he recalled. "Not know· ing what I wanted to do, 1 took a year off to travel. I went to Fiji, Tahiti, Australia, Japan, Hong Kong, Bangkok. Alone? Well, from time to time." Direetor Honored• . . Stars F ete CWrence Br~ 87 ByBOBTIIOMAS LOS ANGELES CAP> -"He bad the art," said James Stewart of bis onetime director, Clarence Brown. "He realized that in lellln& a story of the screen words were oot u lmpor· tant as looks and movemenl" Stewart wu one or the coworken who paid tribute to the 87-year-old Brown before a recent capacity au· dience at the theater or the Directors Guild of America. The Guild, perhaps aware of ftow D.W. Grirnth ended his years unnoticed and un· honored, has been retina its senior achievers. John Cromwell wu the lastooe. "You're the real tblnf, Clarence - no bunk!•• declared tb voice of Katharine Hepburn, recorded on tape. She starred ln bU .. Son, or· Love,'' 1947. ··you AaE TIMELESS,t' Hid Elizabeth Taylor In a tele1ram. "Everytb.lna you bave done stands ror future 1eneraUona to see." He directed her tint important film, "National Velvet," 1M4. Brown bad a knack of 1ettlnt the beat ~ or child acton, and three of • them spoke at the tribute: Gene Reynolds, .. Of Human Hearts," im: Roddy McDoWa.U "The Whlte Cllfra or Dover, 1M4; Claude Jarman Jr .• "TbeYearllu,'"" ~8". Jarman'• pannta of "The Year· ling,'' ou,orr Peck and .Jane Wyman, allo appeared. AN EXPEllT en(tneer, be 11ve up a car dealenbip to Jolri tbe movies at Fort Lee, N.J. After lnltructln1 ruera in World War I, be returned to rums, replacln1 Maurice Toura~ur as dlrector of •'The Laat of the Mohicans•• ln 1921. Brown demonstrated bll ability to handle stars with J\Udolpb Valem.lno in "The EaJI•" aad Norma Talmadge in ••Kttl.., MOM, wtth "more st.an then then are ln the heavens,'' naturally •lined him up. I His last rum waa tb 1ll·dated Mayflower aafa, "The Plymouth Ad· venture.•· Di1aati1fted With bow the movie buslneN wu thanatot • .,. ro- tired to aupervile b1s many bual.Deu lriteres\4. "'FOil THE LOVE OFIB4Jl'• 1Gt Fllm1 Th Hier Dance Televl1lon In the S1r111e11 anc1 The fyeoftbe toJ Titer 0 •~fNHIT...,.._ ... ~ I .... IS."U.>n.•1t - l f \ ·----------- J -OM. Y PILOT 'Angels' Top Show, Rut CBS in First Nll.-W YORK CAP> -A nJrun of "Charlie's .1A.l~ftn" wu lul Wrfflt'• lop rated l>Mme time 1r1m. •t(ordl1>1 lo A.C. Nlelaen H&llableTu 1. &Uona l NI n av~11 put CBS ln flrat plK"efor lhe "eek dtn1 July Jl, •lt.h. 14.3 rauna lllat re,. •enta 10 1 tnUUm houatholda. AOC had a 14 r « t I ~lion. l&nd NBC bad 1 13.3, or 9 4 .mu : lncinkr, lhetop ioor•rated 1how1 w~rt "Chart •'• An1el1," ABC, 22.$, or 1S milllon jbontet: "llanote Caaldeir," CBS'• Sunday movie. .20.t, or 14.9 mUUcin~ "Laven. fl Shirley," ABC. ~20..l. ar lt.3 million; "S..-," NBC'a Monday BURT LANCASTERMICHAEL YORK "'"'"9., '1HE ISLAND OF Dl MOREAU" oho ""'''"9 NIGEL DAVENPORT • SAHARA CARRERA / llCHUD IASEHART .. ~ o1 ""low ~'eowd by A.,,.,"on "''""°''°"°' P!clu«• httulow Prod..:trs SAMO(\ Z. A•KOH ond SANOY HOl\ARO llo* on '"" nOvtl "" HG Welts Set-plop ... JOHH HIRMAll Sl!AN(~ and Al RA1t1•U$ • ~ bot LAUtlN{( ROSlH IHAl Prodllcfd bot 1()11< l(.Mlll Sltll!H ond ~IP SlllOll • 0.<«•l'd bot OOH IAY\OR Clonc (d•h.., by l(MPO 1001(5 1 1 -----1 Popt<bot~ by K.l IOOKS PG rGl11T1tC9AGSKCUTO Colo< ~·A Ci-"''"" _ IL -:ft •1 •• ~.. • ~f( "~,j!tj1t_ ......... ,,..., "'L...... I leA h .. ,,_., .. c. .. b .... A ....... r.i•S19J1Jt ................ "--'·~ I 1m..,,IEIS movi.e, 19 O. or 14.2 mllhon; "Happy Da)'s," ABC. \f,I, or 13.2 milllon; "Jdfersons," and "Shields & Vtrndl," bolh CBS, bolh 18 4, or 13 1 million. "Tut Th• Boy Kina." NBC. ll.6, or 12 s million. "M.A SH , "CBS, 17 4, or 12 4 ms I hon . "One Day at a Time," CBS, 17 2, or 12 2 mllhon The next ~a hows were Agjfferent kind of ... "Barney MdJer" and "Barella,•• both ABC, tied; "Maude," CBS; "Eltht on tho Lam.'' NBC's Thursday movie, ''The Wreckinl Crew.'' ABC's Tuesday movie, and a Barbara Walters s pecial, ABC, all tled: "What's Happenlnc," ABC: ··Barnaby Jones," ABC , "All's F11r," CBS, and .. Fish," ABC. A long time ago in a galaxy far, fei 6WCJY. .. .... , ' I . A BRIDGE TOO FAR" PG No P "NEW YORK. NEW YORK " (PG) "THE SPY WHO LOVED ME" (PG) "ANNIE HALL' (PG) "YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN" "ONE ON ONE" (PG) "SMOKEY & THE BANDIT" "MOONSHINE COUNTY EXPRESS" (PG} "THE LAST REMAKE OF BEAU GESTE" "SITE THE BULLET" (PG) ''ANNIE HALL'· "YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN" (PG) "THE SPY WHO LOVED ME" · "VIGILANTE FORCE" (PG) "OTHER SIDE OF MIDNIGHT" "EXORCIST ll:THE HERETIC" (R) SATUFl·DAY 642-5678 ' is a good day to advertise in the Daily Pilot Classified Section . • "SILVEI mull" "VANISHING POtMT" IN I ''Two years ago I said Benji was the most entertaining family picture of our time. THE BAD NEWS 118ARE•YEAR11181111 • YUR WILDER Maybe of all time. I was wron~. .... This one is better!' LIZ SMITH· COSMOPOLITAN ••What we have here Is a total lack of reaped tor the law!" . . llurtlle.PM,_11 ''Smokeywnm Banclll" IP Sally Field . .Jerry lleed..s .Jackie Gleason 1~,.,.. ... iJOj.r Ml<•I Screenplay by JAMES LEE BAARE TT and CHARLES SHYER .~ALAN MANOH S101y bV HAL Nf fOfiAM & ROBi:RJ l ltVV MUSI( llV Btl L .llSl •s .w! JI RAY RH 0 011e tect H NFFOHAM P1oou~ed bv MOHT lNGlLl\EHI A HAS TAR P1011urn1m -.. Nell llOOI• -· THI SPY WMO 1~1 LOVID Ml "l1f' SYOH Of A ........ ONION OHi ~ ""THI SPY WHO LOV M CNl D.U.Y~ llU.>.J .. ._~41-10:00 SOICOP" 04,..Y 1141-•JO.tO:OO -"IOCICY" 1:1~001'01 • .,.,.UEIP" CPG) WlaOAU 7·JO.t;41 IAT/IUM-l:JO.J;Jl-5:4~00.10:11 No one will be admitted until the last 10 minutes 'Rocky' Direcror · Gets New Movie 'Fhat~s 10·~ LOS ANGELES <AP) Look who gets arrest- ed by the California I.OS ANGEL ES ! AP> John Al vlldsen. Highway Patrol in a new Acudemy Award w1nnane director of "Rocky," has ·TV series Broderick been named to direct "Slow Da.ncin1 in the Big Crawford City " Paul Sorvtno stars in the film, written by Barra Crawford, who starred G1 ant, whJch tella of a newspaper columnlat and the in ''Highway Patrol'' lead dancer or a modern dance company. from 1956-59, eets ,&i;i;i~i:i;l-~;;;;;;.;.;..&.miiiiii;;;;;;;;;i;;&;;;;i;;m .... __ .. stopped lor speeding in Its th8 llGGESt Its the IESI Its BOND. And B+Y.CHHJ. SOUTH COAST PLAZA CINEDOME STADIUM DRIVE-IN HI-WAY 39 DRIVE-IN U.A. WESTMINSTER 546-%711 634-255) 639-7860 534-6282 893-0546 -, .. .. . . · ........ • .... • f_,.. - "Crups,'' a new NBC ac· lion drama premiering in the fall. The series Is centered on two young motorcycle officers for the CHP. Crawford, who won an Academy Award as best act.or in 1949 for ··All the King's Men,·· most re- cenUy played the title role in "The Life of J . Edgar Hoover " ' THE ~ILLEA WHALE! OACA-TMI C*LY ANIMAL WNO IUUS '°" RlrVllNQL T .. ' ................... -· ..... Wll'<lt 11.~lt<llldO.,~ ,...,., .....,,.,O"',. ... l~Otftc)l\•••"'••r"•~u.., •. , o-. ~"'·­-='°"' tM\ krot-• l""f fll. f'(Jal _.. OCllf.0." 041l Y M4TIN£ES 4T ME A !l"i---~ Th PLUS .. Sinbad and e (G) I Eye of the Ti~er 1JDBD.1'G sTAAA•Na edwards MESA CINEMA · PATRICK WAYNE NlWron llLVO. 4T ltTH ST. TARYN POWEA COSTA MESA 1141-5025 SHOW TIMES ''AOLLERCOASTEA" DAILY-8:40 SAT.-SUN. -1:15 · 5:10·9:15 SHOW TIMES "ORCA" DAILY -7:00.10:55 SAT.·SUN. -3:30·7:30 11 :25 OAK. Y PlLOT •9 '1 • Olynipic Talent Sought Big Question: Who'll Sail for U.S.?. 1'be U.:». Olympic YK I Com ttee ol lh U.S. Yac t c I U has mbarked OG an w.tau. talent d • \Cklpmenl &M"OCf&JD d •lined to lnaur• top Ammc'1' rerformanc• lit the llTt Pan Amult'an G1mH In Pu t\O Rico, and the llllO Olympic GamH lo BOATING NEWPORT, R I !AP> Selecting the 12 meur yacht that will defend the America's Cup for tht 23rd Um may be the most difficult decision the New York Yacht Club's America's Cup committee has ever bald to make. That waa the evuluallon of Robert W. MeCulloup, commodore ot the New York Yacht Club, alter bls review or the t.nal races between the American 12-mcler yachts Courageous, the 1974 de render, .nterprlao ond Independence. "Wo'vo aot three aood boats. Either lbat or Boat Tax Cut Urged Tallinn. USSR . 6o;at Ownert Assoc1•ted ToseLher But &o achieve ~ re· CBOAT> a noa·profit corporation or rt AB·l30 passes, suys ArneU, it would require that the .majority or taxes collected be used ror boating safety, boat law enforcement and aid an constructing new boating facilJlies ults. aays Sam Merrick, 1anl%ed and supported by California de rector of the U .S boat owners, ls asking boat owners to Olympic Yacbtln& Com· get behind Assembly Bill 130 that mattee, requi,,_ money would reduce personal property taxes Hence, ~ commlUee lS on boats and bring them m hne with out to rmse about a half· the levya> aircraft AB·l.30 1s scheduled for hearing an early August before the Assembly Committee on Revenue and Taxation In Sacromento mllli<>n doUars through The bill would also require that tax· \Oluntary tax·deductJble ea collected from boat owners be used contributaons to the forboltingpUrposes BOAT IS URGING all boat owners L'SOYC • to write their respectrve senators and ~EllBLYMAN DIXON Arnett, aHemblymen. along with members of ·-nn: COST of gettme author ol the bill, points out that boat the Assembly Revenue and Taxation to P 0 I Y m Pi c ·class owners in most counties are taxed on Committee, urging them to vote sailors to International the tuU value of their craft while ravorably on the bill. regattas outside the privale aircraft are taxed at only 1.5 Assemblyman Willie{. Brown Jr. North American conti· percent of their market value. <D·San Francisco> is chairman of the nent 1s high," says Mer· FurthermtJre. says Arnett, the boat committee. Ronald Cordova <D· rick, "yet competing taxes go into a general fWld and are Newport Beach) Is also a member of three turke)i.," McCullough said. "But I think they're good ' REFLECTING ON THE records the three American _yachts compiled throu~h .June and July trials McCullough said "l don t think the race records mean very much at all." Courageous hus the best record against the other two contenders ror defense honors at 14·7. En· terprlse. newest of the American 12s, is 11·12, whlle Independence, Couraeeous' King's Point Syndicate stablemate, is 7·13. "What we (the Ac1umca 's Cup committee> need to know is whlch boat Is best sailed, has the fewest breakdowns, and Ideally Is the ra11ter, too," McCullough said. HE SAID HE BELIEVF.S it's too early to tell which bojt will be selected, and added · "We'vestlU got time. We haven't gotten near a decision. but nobody's betn eliminated." The commodore recalled the summer of 1962 when Weatherly, Columbia and Nefertiti were close during trial races "Nefertiti looked good early," he said, "but Columbia was the Cavonte, having defended the cup m 1958, and Weatherly came on strong later and ..... as eventually selected '· Weatherly went on to defeat Australia's Gretel after l~mg the second race of the best-of-seven series THE 197'1 SENTIMENTAL favorite to defend yachtin~'s supreme trophy was Intrepid. the suc· cessful defender oC the cup in 1967 and 1970. There were two new aluminum 12-meter yacht$ also vying then for defense honors Courageous and Mariner. against the best sailors not used for boat related projects. the committee from other nations is the r--------------------------....,.----only way U.S sailors can Mariner was a rad1ce._tt<meter designed by measure their I performance at the world class level." This is who we are and what we do at Ceneral Motors. Britton Chance Jr. But before tbe fhlal lrial series beean ln Auaust. 1974, the underbody ol the yacht was chanced to a more convenUooal destcn. Mariner was defeated soundly by Courateo&U. and lntttpld and was never consldem a serious contender to defend the cup. Intrepid and Coural{eous raced down to the wire, and it wu a touch decision for the New Yort Y1lcbt Club to pick a boat to defend aga1nst Australia's Southern Cross. Courageous was picked and skippered by Ted flood. now of Independence, and beat the challenger ln four races. ''THE AMERICA'S CUP committee coutdn 't be more delighted," McCullough said. "Ahd beeaua~ we've got this closeness now, we'll ~better off ln September." There are four foreign challenges -Gretel II and the new Australia, both from the land down un- der; one oftwo French challengers owned by Baron Marcel Blcb, andSverigeofSweden. The foreign boats begln elimination races Aug. 4. American trials resume Aug. 16 • Cup Raced Shelved COWES. Isle of Wight <AP> -The Admirlll'a Cup Inshore race, already postponed twice because of lack of wind, was finally abandoned durtn& tbe third attempt ror the same reason Tuesday. The 25'h mile race, the third in the f1ve race ln- ternationnl series, was initially to start Monday. The start was switched to Tuesday morning and then postponed for four hours. It is now up to the International jury of this 19 na· tional series to decide whether to stage the race to· day and hold today's Ins bore on Thursday. Funds are needed to organiz~ ~P racing an<1 clinics for top sailors. Some help will be provided by the USOYC, but the re· m ainder must come from individuals, families or firms in· 'terested in seeing U.S sailors do well at the Games, according to Merrick. . "Weie considering new use in producing more ftle IN THE PAST, the U.S. International Sail. ing Association has at· lracted gifts for the Olympic yachting effort, And it will continue to do so But plans envisioned by the USOYC require a s pecial fund -raising campaip, according to Mernck. The drive will be spearheaded by a chairman of the Gold Medal Jo'und and will need the assistance of volunteers throughout the country. Volunteers are asked to contact Sam Merrick, director USOYC. 401 N. St. SW, Washington. D.C 20024. Tax deductible contributions to the U.S. Olympic Yachting Com m1ttee should be sent to 820 Davis St .. Evanston, Ill. 60201 V.S. Team 420 Cl03s Champion BAYONA, Spain <AP> -The United States' team of skipper SLeve Taylor and J. Massey won the world '420 class sailing c;hamJi,'Onshlp in competition with 75 other entrants from 20 coun· tries. I' Israel's s kipper Shimsbon Brodkman and J. Frid lender won the sixth and last race of the competition held at this AUanlic bay Satur· day The American team amassed a total or 32 penalty points ln six races to capture the overall title. Brothers Pierre Souben and Daniel Souben of France finished second overall wllh 49. 7 penalty pqlnts, followed by O\lver Arnold and Michel Woodward, Australia, 70 penalty polnta. Steve Babcock, Department Head, Materials Engineering "Increased fuel economy can be obtained through ~ several techniques. including the use of more efficient engines. better dynamic design and lighter weight. The work with new materials that we're doing in this department in planning for the future is almost totally aimed at weight reduction. "One of the first materials that we're gaining experi · ence with is what we call high·stNllgth steel. Other materials we're considering are aluminum and advanced or 'composite' plastics. "Right off the bat, a lot of people think that the new materials are weaker than conventional steel. That certainly isn't the case. With certain plastics, for example, we can get strength increases up to 6 to 7 times the strength of common body sheet steel. "Our objective is also to produce a vehicle equal to or better than the quality we have now. For instance , it's conceiv~that using plastics as an alterna- tive to steel will improve corrosion resistance. That will be a benefit added on to the fact that we're going after weight reduction . "Present costs of the new materials are higher. The tendency is that we end up having to pay more money to reduc~ the weight of the car. Of course, our goal is to produce a vehicle that the average citizen can afford. "We don't have all the answers yet. That's why we're being deliberate and cautious in introducing the use of new materials. We go through exhaustive tests, both in the laboratory and at the proving grounds. "Here, the name of the game is innovation and creativity. Innovation to me represents satisfying a need for the future, a way to design and build cars that are more fuel-efficient." General Motors People building transportation to serve people , . . .. ·~ I ---~ --=--~ ~ • Cooking: A Si le Art 97 llAJICIA FOUBEaG ........ -.... U tbe tbaaeht al a aJmplt tuk like pnpartna a bouquet 1arn.t aenda J'OCI Der"fOUlly runn1q out of tbe kitchen, you may be a vie· tam ol the Frmc.b cooklna IQYSU· que. Tbe same 1oea for 1ettial cold feet wbeo faced with somethlnl to be pureed or nambeed. 11 you think all the forelsn term.s are synonymous with difficulty. then it's tune to remove the old hang- ups and replace them with coo fide.nca. Nancy Denmark Warmer of Lacuna Beach is a French chef wbo&e ioaI is t.o make lbe cwsine approachable for the average cook. "I want t.o get rid of that mysti· que," she says. "I want lo en· courage people that they can c<'>me up with 11ometh1n1 ele1ant, buteuy," A former advertislni manaaer for the Coronado Journal, Ms. Warmer abandoned the job In 1969 "whe.n 1 decided lo aet into BOmething that I really loved." The love was food and food pre· paration, and after operaUn1 ~r own catering service in Coronado sbe went to Europe for an ap· prentices hip for French chef statua at the Hotel Vieux Moulin m Meeeve. France. She has the d1st"inction of being the first American woman to serve an apprenticeship in the kitchen of the famous restaurant. lo her effort to improve public consciousness of food as an art form, Ms. Warmer bas blended new aspects of culinary presen- tation. She takes what is commonly French potage is creamy. known u a food demonstration and turns it into a t.otal culinary experience. Her ori&inal recipes are the basis for her showings which combine light. breezy explana· tlons, a visual interpretation ol how to prepare each dish and the opportunity to taste her absolute- ly French concoctions. In a program at a Laguna Beach culinary supply shop, Ms. Warmer's tasty summertime menu unfolded quickly and effl. ciently as she chopped, pureed and mixed ingredients. Her original country garden potage <soup) combines zucchini and yellow squash with fresh spices. When cooking soups, "use sweet butter. Regular butter bas salt in 1t,'' she said. She added that "soups are the most creative things we do in the kitchen. They give us a chance to experiment and a chance to work on chopping techniques." Ms. Warmer explained the classic French method of making soups. "There is no thickening - the vegetables are the natural thickening." It is pureed in the blender then put through a sieve. She revealed the easiest way to peel garlic -"Crush it with lhe back of a knife. So many peo. pie shy away from garlic, but if you crush it between a paper towel, 1t takes out the oil so there isn't an after bite.'' Use a length of knife that's comfortable. she advised. She pointed out that some people pre· fer a carbon steel knife for the fine edge, while others prefer ;) stainless steel since it doesn't v discolor. When chopping vegetables for soups and salads, she saves car· rot tops, lettuce leaves, ends of zucchtni ond squash, "every· thing'' that can't be used in the recipe. "Put them in the soup bee." she said, waving a plastic, see· through bag full of greens. When preparing a salad for a light summer meal, use romaine, red lettuce, parsley. spinach, she advised. "lceburg doesn't make it because it's low in nutrition. The higher the color, the higher the nutrition coont.1' Makiq sure that the 8l'MM are properly dried is an impor· tant step, she said. When mixinf a vlnal1retle sauce for lea y greens, Ma. Warmer suggeata using a wooden whllk rather than a metal one. "The acldlty in lemon and vinegar causes a metallic flavor in the sauce," she said. A pastry ba1 ls a must, especially In the summertime when cooks fix deviled or stutred eggs, she noted. By gingerly squeezing the ba1, she filled a dozen eggs in about~ seconds. "Buy a pastry bac and it will change your whole way of cook· in& as far as the decorating goes." Ms. Warmer's £ollowin1 salad recipe is ideal for picnics, a din· nertime first course or a sunny lunch. WALNUTSALADE 8 leaves, red lettuce 8 leaves, romaine lettuce 8 leaves, leaf lettuce 112 cup finely chopped walnuts 6 sprigs parsley 15·20 cherry tomatoes Freshly grated Parmesan cheese Wash all vegetables thoroughly. Remove the white portion of the red, romaine and leaf lettuce. Break (do not cut) greens into bile size pieces. <Save white center portions for soups.) Mlnce parsley and slice cherry tomatoes. Mince walnut& and grate cheese. Place all lettuce in a salad drier, tea towel or French string bag and dry thoroughly. ll is im· portant to remove all waler from the leaves. Wrap all greens in a clean, dry tea tow e'I and p I ace in refrigerator until ready to serve. Place all ingredients In a salad bowl.'Po9r Mustard Vlnalgretle over salad, toss and aerve. Serves ti to 8. MUSTARD VINAJGRETl'E 'h to 1 clove garlic (put t.hrougb garlic press> "4 teaspoon salt Ftesbly frOUDd pepper Nancy Denmark Warmer 6 tablespoons olive oil 1 tablespoon red wine vinegar or rice vinegar 1 tablespoon lemon juice 'h teaspoon Pommary mustard an teaspoon Dijon mustard In a glass or wooden bowl, combine garlic, salt, pepper, vinegar and lemon juice. With a wooden whisk, mix in the olive oil When mixed thoroughly, add tbetwo mustards. This mix· ture may be held in the refngerat.or. Yield: 4ounces. BEA ANDERSON. Editor Wldueeday, August 3, 1977 C1 ' ' Sunny Fruit Cool Half the batUe ol keeping cool on long summer days Is eating ··coot ... We suggest two nectarine salads: Nectarine Seafood Bowl and Minted Nectarine Salad. The fruit is tana:v enough to . heighten th~fiavorof a salad, yet sweet enocllh tO satisfy a sum· mer appetite without adding a lot of extra calories. Even the larcest of the late variety contains only about ~ calories, so a dieter, golnc U,bt on the dresalng, can eat hearty and feel virtuous. !'fECl'AlllNE ~EAFOOD BOWL CUcudber 1oaurt Dresalni 2 cu~"';fresh or canoed shrimp Lettuce 4 larae-fresh nectarines Prtpare Cucumber Yoaurt Dresslnl. Toss 1hrlmp with Y.a cup dressing, cover and chill. Core, rinse, dr&1"D and cblll let· tuce. When ready to serve. line salad bowl wlth a few large let· ( tuce leaves. Halve nectarines. slice 2 halves and toss with 3 cups shredded lettuce. Pile into salad bowl. · Spoon shrimp in center and surround with remaining nee· tarine h~ves. Serve with re· malntng dressing. Makes 4 serv- ings. CUeumber Yogurt Dressing Pare, seed and finely dice cucumber to measure 1 cup. Combine with 1 container (8 ounce) plain yogurt, Y.a cup mayonnaise, 1 tablespoon lemon juice, 1 teaspoon sugar, Y.a teas· poon salt and ~ teaspoon dried dillweed. ·Makes about 2 cups dressing. MINT~D NECTARINE SA.LAD 1 pack.age (3 ounce> lemon fla\lor gelatin l~ cups boiling water '!.s cup fresh mint teaves, tom ~cup white table wine "4 cup granulated sugar 2 tablespoons lemon juice ~teaspoon salt 1 drop green food coloring 2 medium fresh California nectarines •n. cup halved seedless grapes Dissolve aelatio . in boilint water. Add mint leavesr.cov4'f and steep 15 minutes. Stram, pressing out liquid. SUr in wine, sugat, lemon juice, salt and food coloring. Cool until mixture beglnatothicten and jell. Dice one nectarine to. measure 1 cup. Fold diced nee- tarine and erapes int.o gelatin Spoon gelatin into oiled l.quai\ mold. Chill until firm, at least ... hours. At servlng Ume, unmold aDa garnish witb remaining nec· tarine, sliced. Makes 4 to 6 serv· in gs. For addiUonal recipes and serving auigestions for this and other sumroer fruits, send a stamped, self-addressed, legal size envelope to ''The Fruits cl .Summer", P. 0. Box 25538;J. Sacramento, 95825: --~ ..=.....__ - ------...... -~I!--~ ~ ' :: Weather at Fault ~~~~~~~~~~~~ '.i Prices :· .. ·: . ... :· Climbing .. .. -: The extremely hot w~atber m most of lhe U S. U\ recent days is causini a decline in many crops ~. Sance there 1s a great demand from the East, i.• much of the Cahfomaa produce is being shipped :· there Hlgher prices in general, and especially in ) fru1~ and vegetables sensallve to weather condi- , • lions can be expected •. FRUIT f: gooln~~~; pfh~s ea.'"r~i~~ r:~~ll~~l s~:rfJYt:i~~ : larger than in previous years • • Plum~ will remain a good value. Several dtf· • fercnt var1ct1es will be coming an to the markets Peaches and nectarines are in short demand This will cause prices to go up slightly. Apricots and Northwest chernes are almost over for the season. Chernes may last another two weeks at most. Melons are 10 plentiful supply and are of ex- cellent quality. Watermelon prices may see a decline this week Seedless grape supplies are practically non- existent compared to the same period last year. This will be for the next week, after that, Thompsons should start coming in good quan· t1t1cs wa..,hington and Oregon blueberries are in pl entiful supplies, but the season 1s short~s with all frwt. we are at the whim of the weather and th 1s as an unusual season for that reason. Tropical fruit are having a good season with plentiful supplies of mangoes, pineapple and papayas. VEGETABLES Tomat~ will be going up in price this week as they arc especially subject to heat damage. Potatoes ar~ still in short supply and will re- main high. Celery. carrots and lettuce will be in good supply and prices may go down slighUy. Green leary vegetables are also suffenng Crom the heat and will be either expensive or of poor quality • Eggplant 1s fast reaching the end of its season and will be gone by next week Squash 1s still plentiful and remains a best "egctable valuc Broccoli prices should go down somewhat. Corn prices should see a slight decline this week SPECIALTY ITEMS The f1r!\t, apple pears and figs of the season will be ur.r~ing this we.ck. Both brown and white C1gs are 1 ood supply Ruta agas also will began to appear in the markeLc; Personal Approach Gpod Work • 1n By Sl'EPHEN ··ox ... ""' ........ ff VERNON CAP> If tho bottom fall!l out or your 1rocory bag nut time you 'r e at the checkout 1tand, take 1t up with Llllle Mayes If Lillie's nome isn't on 1t, perhaps your beef as walh T~nnae Love or Eileen Weinn Mrs Maye:., Miss Love and Mrs Weinn work at the St Regis paper baa munufactur me plant here and they put their name on every ba& lh<'Y send out. Tho plant, which supplies supermarket chains m 11 Western state&, turns out eight or nine m11l1on bags a day. As might be imagined. it's not hard to let a bad bag shp by. At least. at used to be, until the workers here came up with the idea of "signature bags" about 18 months ago "We were havi'ng u quality:control problem -as uch as six per- cent the total pro duct1on was bad.·• says Bert Upson, spoke1>man for New York based St Regis 'The cmployl'S camt:! up with the ldC'u that 1f they were rc!'tpons1ble for their production ll would cut down on the re Jection rate. Then some genius hit on the idea of makmg a plate with each employe's signature en- graved on at. And guess what happened pro- duct1v1ty 1s higher and PURE Just peanuts and salt ••• \ Old Faiihioned J ' PEANUT BUTTER employe morale is up." Switching lo ":.1gnature bags," wh1l'h are s tamped with the tn· .scr1pl1on "personally 111 spec led by .. , " has cut the plant '.s reJection ri.lte to less llrnn half of one percent and workers agree that per:.onal pride 1s the reason "It seems to make you want to have better quality and do better work," explains Miss Love. a 14-year St. Regis eilrploye who checks supermarkets in her Compton neighborhood to make sure her bag!> '13re holding up on the front line. Mrs We1nn, a 10 year employe who cst1mutes her daily production at 150.000 ba~s. says thl' nameplate idea has made all lRO operators more careful "You def1n1tel.\ got to watch what goes oul." s he says. "JC anything went out bud. 1t would come back with your nameon1t " Workers s ltp thc1r nameplates into 25·foot long machines that manufacture bags and spits them out 1n 25 or 50-bag batches The m- creased car e of the workers, who riffle each batch through their hands. has saved St. Regis almost $500.000 on returns so far. says plant production manager Jim Fric1001. And Lillie Mayes, who will ha\'e been with St. Regis for 10 years in November, 1s finding it t:!asy to strike up a con-ver~allon with checkout clerks these days. "lf l see mv name on a bag in the store. I make sure they know it's me," she says "I'm pretty proud of the bags I send out -they're special - \\Ith my name on it." at home in a sandwich, a salad or at a banquet! A gourmet will tell you "what goes" in a real Thuringer sau)age. Strictly the finest meats and spices .. that's what mak~s this Teutonic templer so del1c1ous. Here's a tangy blend of pure beef and spices, hid.ory smoked and cured naturally for extra fl.i'vor Ju.,t -.11<.e and serve for party-ti mt.' or '>andw1ch-t1me. ......... ...__loo~ lor the little Sch1rmer's Sausare Mahr on the paclcaee in your m1rket. ~~~SchirmtrS® the Sociable Sausage Anil.lble in lhe Deli \e<lion of: Best Idea Since Shopping Carts TAl<E THIS COUPON TO YOUR STORE Save1<r G) ~ow you can do a week's shopping (.'] ~~ without forgetting a single item! Use pre-printed ~~~~ shopping lists ~ ~ prepared for you by ~ .. \~a-' PILOT PRINTING. 'A' ~<A." 140 MPlf•t• pttntff lteme, '-6. c.~ .O*; plue eddltlonel 1pece1 you U cj$-.,,..-.~ can flll In youraett. 9'~\\.\ .. '( ~ c.o"~_....\ .. 9' c.\'P'" ..p. ~ '6"~#~· atflo"fl..~ 9'.~.~ '6 '\' ~o~ Q~~..v~ a~~# i'"~~ i,o..,. ~~'((t ~ 34 SUplH 21 Vegeteblee 14 Fruit. I hkery lt•m• 5 Bever•ve• 19 M .. t encl flltt entttH 11 D•lry Item• 20 Ml~lleneou1 You can't beat Crest for fighting cavities. I llcl!i09e I ,~ 12 I""", I I when you buy any size Crest: i .. l DAILY PILOT ()a BBQ Time: Get Fired Up Over Lamb· l Lamb chops are ideal for outdoor 1rilllni Brush lamb chops with sauce and place \-.teaspoon IJ'OUDd black pepper btcauH ol lhelr natural tenderneu and they're a chope 00 lrill over medlum bot coala. GrlU s to 8 Preheat oven lo S$O fflrees F. Cut potatoes rcfreahlnt cba.n1e of pace rrom more commonly minutes, turn, baste with sauce and pill an addi-crosswise into '4-lnch slices. Heat oll in an oven- barbecued meata tlonal s to 6 minutes, pr until done. Makes 8 serv-proor skillet over medlwn bl&b beat. Add oni Another •~laity, Buque Potatoea 1oes ings. · andcookunWaoft. beautifully wt th Ul• lamb. Tbt d1lb la tradlUooal· BASQUE POTATOES Layer potato slices ln akillet on top ol onion ly cookod ln a atlllet. A unique Mrbed eel 6 medium boilln& potatoes, peeled and and continue to cook until 1olden brown. Turn cu.atard bak• around the potaloel durin& the cooked Potatoes over browned side up and cook other lut few mlnut. in th• oven. · 1~ cup vegetable oil aide until browned. Complete the meal with a Cae1ar 1alad and a ~cup chopped onion In a bowl beat together, eas, parsley, flavor batch ot but.na powder blaculta. For deuert. 1 teaspoon minced parsley enhancer, thyme and pepper. Pour over potato balle a peacb or apPlt cobbler. • ~ teupoon flavor enhancer mixture: bake in preheated oven 10 to 15 minutes Ga&AT WESTEBN IAD CROPS ~ teupooo clrled lwtbyme until etll ar~_µt. Makes 8 servtnp. l 1 can <louncea) tomatoaauce • 2 tablespoona tomatopute ' v .. cup ve1etable oil 14 cup walnut pieces 2 tablespoon• red wine vineaar I teupoon brown suiar 1 clove garUc, cut ln quarters l teaspoon crushed red pepper '~ t~aspoon flavor enhancer 6 shGulder lamb chops, '-lnch thick In a blender container combine tomato sauce, tomato pule, veaetable on. walnuts, vlne1ar. sugar, garlic, red pepper and navor enhancer. Bleocl unW nuta are finely chopped. Lamb chops are quick to cook on outdoor grill. 1160 SUHR.OW'B. COSTA MISA SUM11.0WaATflAllYll'W54~ "637 DAW..Y 114N.-7P.N. OPOV FLANK STEAKS S 139 LL GROUND IEEF WHOLE FILLET s219 Diet Foods Expensive · FRESH • WHOLE TOP SIRLOIN WHOLES s21' la. ByS\'LVIA PORTER Our eagerness to pay extra for the built·tn maid 1>ervice that comes wtlh convenience foods has been for years a widely' acknowledged factor in our swelling food budgets. But not so well recopiaed, or even ad- mitted, has been our growing willingness to pay substantial ad- ditional amounts for "packaged" will power. Anxious a bout our overweight, we are spending close to $300 million a year'on special diet pro- ducts, featuring fewer calon es but often providing smaller por- tions and less food value. "Paying more for less" is just another signal of our spreading nutritional 1lhter acy and suscep· t1 b1lity to inv iting a ds and supermarket displ ays. Whatever the explanations. the result 1-; costly A recent check at a local superm:irket found canned diet ·plums priced at the equivalent of 85 cents a pound. f''resh plums were 79 cenL-;. -Diet canned green beans were priced at 85 cents. agumst 421h cents a pound for regul ar • canned green beans. 73 cents for frozen and 69 cents a pound for fresh. . . . -Diet applesauce sold for 59.4 cents a pound in the special die~ section. . The appealing grouping of low- cal items in one aisle caused me to overlook the jar of un· sweetened applesauce for sale among the regular canned fruits at a nickel less. There's a diet counterpart thc>se days for just about every food you can think of fruits, 'egctables, Jellies. salad dress· rng, TV dinners, sour cream, cooki es, eggs, etc. Yet, you can easily convert many of these items into diet specials yourself at far Jess cost. 1'o illustrate, a package of low- c a I, fru1t-flavored gelatine dessert costs about 45 cents. It makes four servings of 10 calories each for a coet of 11 cents per portion. But you can claim a saving of more than 300 percent merely by buying un· flavored gelatine at 3 cents a M•rving and navoring it yourself w 1th leftover' coffee, fruit juice, diet soda or whatever . Then there ere many foods which are both low in calories and in price, which should form the basics of your diet. Consider low-fat milk pro duct~. While fluid skim milk usually costs a few cents pe r quart less than whole mtlk, the real saver m money and weight 1s non.fat dry milk. · It cuts calories in half, reduces cholesterol Intake. is usually priced at roughly half what you pay for fluid skim or whole milk. Or consider the simple apple. If bought lr11b by the pound, these cost hair as much as the price for the equivalent in foil· wrapped dried apple slices. Low-income consumers have been the target or the Agriculture Department for most of its nutrl· ltonal information until now. But the unspoken assumption that only these consumers are. m alnourisbed and in need of education is unrealistic! Obesity is as much a symptom ot malnutrition as starvation. M lddle and upper-Income families need to be educated oo a balanced diet aa much •• anyone. A stepped-up nutritional ln· formation drive is under eon· s lderation by the A1rtculture Department to convince and in· struct consumers on the benefits of a good diet. If the pl'OIJ'arn gets off the ground -which won't be before fiscal '19 at the earliest -sales of high priced as well as highly processed diet foods could be hurt. "We're going to &o on a pro- gram of informing conaumers about what they are buylng from a nutritional point of view," aald Agriculture Secretary Bob Bergland ln response to ques- tions recently. "That's loins to hurt.' There are some thinfs now ort the market which wU prob- ably goaway." Meanwbll~ you can get semi· ble, If not inspiring nutritional aids from the USDA. "Food and Your Weight." Home & Garden BQUetin No. 14, costs SO centa. "Calories & Wetpt." a USDA calorie ,Wde <AIB 385) costs Sl., but lt would help you compare calories ln resular foods with those listed on the label& ot their diet counterparts. Both publlcaUom are a•allablt from ~Superintendent d Docu· ments, U.S. Prlntin1 Office, Washington D.C. 20402. save on.the Cyc.lf that'S right fOji . ~ yourdOg. SJ 38 LI. REGULAR, ELECTRIC•PERK ·~ AND DRIP If you love the great tast.e of freshly brewed coffee but are bothered by caffein, you'll love SANKA •Brand Ground Deadfeinat.ed Coffee. Brew a pot of SANKA •Brand and discover you don't need caffein t.o enjoy the delicious flavor and hearty aroma of fresh-perked coffee. SANKA • Brand- the cofieeyou can feel good about. ~ Use the~ coupon below t.o try SANKA• Brand ~ Ground Decaffeinat:ed O>ffee-a good deal on a gre.at ground coffee. -.- I i J • . •• , • eueryday ••• you~ll find hundreds of SPECIALS at Safeway! Here are just a few! Pepsi Cola Regular ~6 16-oz. or Light ::_,.,_SPECIAL Bottles --(Pill$ Deposit) Potato Chips Party Pride ~ ~ 8-oz. Pkg. Palmolive Liquid Detergent For Dishes 32-oz. Bottle Cottage Cheese Lucerne QualJ:y Pint Carton Bel-air Donuts Frozen F<SJ ! Coupon Good For ( 1) One 4-Roll Pkg. MARIGOLD TISSUE 4-non (Bathroom) Pkg. DC I I . . §): Good For (1) :~: . ~· one. 12·oz. Can f-~ 1 <-I Good For (1) :{:i I One 16-oz. loaf ~ ' MRS. WRIGHT'S ~ SCOTCH TREAT '~ ! ORANGE JUICE ~: 39 0 = ;: • 1;.: ,~.~! I UMM OM '-Pw ,_.,, I I ......... M 11n 8t Ally ...... ,,, Ill ....... Cllillnla I ! __ .,!'!~-~~!.I!---~-~!_ __ , I tS BREAD With ~ I?:; 1 o~ This (~ : :· WHOLE Y Coupon l-~ I ~ WHEAT. (limit 1) ~ I . "1.-llM C-,_ ·~· . , I I a. A11f. M , 1177 at AAJ. lei.war Ill '°""""" callf4ll'llla I ! __ _11~~~~~~-~L __ , .... Large "AA" , Eggs Cheddar Random s1 a 9 Cheese weights Safeway Longhorn Style ........... lb. Lucerne aec Fresh Q . :<"' 1-dozen D ~ Carton ;~~~~~···· ............ Gallon 6 s~ . HONEYDEWS or PEARS Your Choice of Fresh, Juicy Melons or U.S. No . 1 Bartlett Pears. s1°~ ·OFF s (ltftttt ,, Towards The Purchase of One (1) Pkg. SAFEWAY CORNED, Good For (1)0ne ~ · l CJ.oz. P~age ~ :C ::~ BEL-AIR . ~ ~ GREEN PEAS Wltft ~ ' ~ ]BC ™' ~: ~ FROZEN ,:r;J ~ : t ......... ~ ':'.., ..... :Tit. • Cllllrtllll l I~~ .......... ........ ·---------~---------· • r ~ ....... ~l,, Good For (1) On8~ f 49-oz. Package iE ,. ,.. I ~· WHITE MAGIC ~: · DETERGENT, ~ l 690 = ·~;: : _ =I t L~~;~t~~M~---~j ...-.--- Wldn!!d!y. August 3. 1W7 DAILY PILOT ClJ Taco Leftovers Beware: No Chiles in Ireland West90rt &a a •mall, r.c~111c t~n of S.000 Pf'O pte locat«t on the Up ot Cltw B'v tn C~au1hl. tht-Wf'St m provtno of lrelaod. ;.&bout mllea ~orth o< Gal"•V. lhl' tuv.n I& 1o11ctur ~.A"fllfh '>tluc1led at the 1001 nf < rn,1gh Patrick . a Yogurt Parlor At Home llyCECJLY BllOWNSTONE .,_..._ ......... odl!4'1l .. DEAR CECILY: I notice that your readers think you h3ve the answer to everything culinary and wntc you for advice So why shouldn't 1'' What 1 w1mt LS a recipe for a good frozen yogurt. Do you have one? -Your sister. Rowena. Z,$11U tout 1>yr»m1d ahaped muunt111n from which St. P1ttrkk freed lrtland ot 1n1kr11 In 432 A D Thl• Carrowb~a Rlvt'r hu bt-t-n dlvt:rted lO flow throul(h th•' Ct'nlt"t of town The! rlv"r 11 c:rouoo by threl' ,arched atone brldKcit . 11nd nankt'd by a trt'c lined mall. There are three main street.a In Westport, e.ch <'rowded with •mall atoree and ahopa run by the local town11people The only bus1ne~es that uc rudily dltlln1u11ha· bit are the bank1, the w1uhelerla <laun· dromat), and the two c•h•mlat s hop s <pharmaclet). Upon clOler examln•· tlon. the one lhln1 which Is ubvloutl)"'mluln• is a 1upermarke~. Thero are Instead vatloua ahopa aim.liar to a small, cor· l t ta necessary to go from store to store to do one'• abopplng. One shop wlll have produce and can ned eoods and another will have paper aooda and baked goods nnd m= a few frozen loodJ. en foods are not pl Utul and are qulte expenalv~. ner crocer tn California. Produce in this part of no wider than 18 feet, Ireland appears lo be each ot which carries a scarce. Potatoes are few of lbe items normal· r plentltul enough but l y found 1 n most fresh green supermarket.a vegetables are limited. The Irish are not salad eaters so lettuce. cucum bers, and celery are not common items on J grocery shelf, nor are fres h green beans, squash, corn, or brussel sprouts. Actually, the best way to have these items on one's dinner table Is to grow a garden. Oranges, apples, and bananas are easily located but quite expenalve. Green apples cost 10 Pence or 18 cents each. Meat 1s bought al a lucky was the lowett priced non-memberthlp tupermerket the week of July 21, 1977. In fact, Lucky haa bHn towett priced for 18 of the patt 20 weekt, •• well. We're proud of this tact, because Vector 1s the most extensive indepen- dent survey of supermarket prices. They reviewed 156 items: meat. produce. dry groceries, health and beauty alds ... a whole spectrum of things you're likely to include in your shopping list. But don't take our word for It. Compare for yourself. Afte e've never claimed to be the lowest priced on each and every Item. That's ause we butcher ahop and Clsh at a fish shop Quarters or bqef, l.tmb and pork are on display "'\the window. as well as a selection of the cuts available. In the butcher shop the meat is not covered or refrigerated. Fish is perhaps the best buy because of Westport's seacoast location . Among the staple items chicken is reasonably priced, but hamburger costs about two dollars a pound' Generally. these local shops supply most of one's need~ Cert1un Items are scare~ OI' can not be found -T. V. din· ners. large sizes of canned and packaged goods, and of course, taco sauce! One ahop had six varieties of canned soups, but only one can of each. Store brands are not available, and discounts are un· heard of. The three favorite brands of beer. Harp, Sm ithw1cks and or course Guinness, are available bottled. but cost about $2.SO per sax pack The tugh cost ob- viously discourage:. drinklne at home and as one would expect. pub:. are both pleoU!ul and crowded. Here a "pint" can be purchased for about 10 cents. All in all, however. Westport and the people are full ot charm and character. The remote location and our adjust· ments to it are com- pensated by the quality or rural life LL!* DEAR ROWENA: I e'njoyed your note! When I haven't the answer to a quesUon I'm pretty good at finding out who does. do not run below-cost "loss leaders" just to get you into r stores. Besides, we know that no llst, not even Vector's Is exactly llke urs. Only ·vector Ctlnsumer Reports of July 21st shows you could have spent up to comparison shopping Will show you the difference discount ma es for you '°' 7% more by shopping at one of the other five major supermarket chains in at the cash register. And from then on, it'll be Luck .. .for you the Los Angeles and Orange County area. ' J •" In the case or frozen yogurt. a young American h'bme "1 economist who ~as studi~d. at the Cordon Ble;. m Paris helped me out. She devC'lopcd a re· c1pe for rrozen strawberry yogurt that was delectable when I tried it in mr test . ~'1 ... : .. t: .. : • --. ~J-...... ·.A.,,.,.e.;.-'·-• ,, .. \ ~--~. \'1 . . ,, ~ kitchen --------------- She told me 1t was GRADE A FRYING cheaper to make at home than lo buy and. after CHICKENS trying two brands, she ""'°'•"°°"SOO'l-Ill .43 found her version had ---------------·~ 1• the truest n3vor C B T·BONE STEAK / f .-.......u5-.t• L()t• MARCIA'S FROZEN SHANK PORTION OF HAM I .89 CROSS RIB ROAST ~lf.\S80N0m-C><UCIC LARGE END RIB STEAK • ~ Obllf PORTERHOUSE STEAK ~~OKOl.00< ,, 121 ,, 138 ---:2- l l4Y!N·o !-.VC.C.l~11b,., GROUND BEEF ----· \9 BONELESS RUMP ROAST 7·BONE CHUCK ROAST llOOCllD &l, .49 TOP.SIRLOIN STEAK SLICED BEEF LIVER -i~lt , FRESH FILLET OF PERCH " 19' •• l ... 68 ·1· l .. • ' Sl'RAWBERRY .69 RIB EYE FtLET ·~ 25' • ~ •• t •H 1SP'lHl..lk. YOGURT BLADE CUT CHUCK STEAK l · p' n t bas k et • "'•0.,." ARMOUR SLICED BACON •.·-OJ""'°' 11t -SMALL END RIB ROAS'P I .89 strawbernes, rinsed and 7-BONE CHUCK STEAK hulled L • utlf I ·~cup sugar • BONELESS TIP ROAST 11 141 . •·fl•--GROUND BEEF PATTIES ........ " .. oj_c~~,'9!~!~R SLICED BAC~!!--151 .. • • 12 cup light corn ~yrup Enjoy savings at tl1e register ••• no gimmicks, no gamesr no giveaw¥· • 1 f f r 2 cups I lfi ounces> plain yogurt . Into an e ~ectr1c - blender turn the strawberries, sugar and c:oro syrup. Blend at medium speed until h · q uefied -about 30 seconds. Add yoaurt. ~lend at medium speed until well mixed about 10 seconds. Pour into a 9 by S by 3-inch metal loaf pan Produce Freeze until firm FRESH 59 about 3 hours. Whirl in PINEAPPLE blender al m edium speed until Liquefied -........... t•c." • .about 1 minute Return --------------- to loaf pan. Cover and HONEYDEW 19 freeze until firm -about 3 hours. Before serving, MELONS • allow to sland at room ..-.u • '' • temper at u re for 1 o --------------1-0 minutes. Makes about FRESH LOOSE CARROTS ..a • 1 ~ ptnls IOl'$On FJtESH ITAUAN SQUASH 19 lt • 'Sandwich' !~~PEARS •• .29 7 AFJtlCAN V10LETS o,:'~~io~~o~ ~==~~~.:'.~~ llO~A .. tt •. llUHT!lfe•Ote M hreadless I ch' Try WMITTllJlolll'M .. w11m•11 el.VO. ihis trick wltb al,ced .._1::-_.,, __ _ M ozzarella cheese. ~ <Leave the cbeeae at tp0m temperature about 15 minutes ao it's plla· ble.> In a small bowl, com-bine 1 can deviled bam or rout beef 1preld, 2 tabl espoons chopped ~ion and about I stalled olives, sliced . Spread r:oixture on I 1Uca of eheete, leavin1 marll.a al tides. wrap up JellJ· toll fablon and •tore, toverect. In Mfritc.rator uolUaened. ~H .98 --. .....a.'°1 2" Frozen • Dairy Packaged. canned Household. Pet .; LADY LEE YOGURT , • • • • .W-OL CU• b HARVEST DAY ICE CREAM .. ... ··-· • .. .. .... ·..GM. er" .; MEDIUM AA EGGS LADY ~ OOll.H GI H pBANQUET 621~~~ L OH BOY CH~SE ~ LADY LEE ORANGE JUICE .79 .79 .45 .45 Healtha~Aicls WIUONSON U BLADES 117 .. .. ........ _ ... . ....... --· .. -.. -°'' WILKJNSON II RAZOft SET ~ coNiAcc4PS'ULas· .. ·-·-. -·---...... 1°' ........... --.--.......... .. .......... ·-·------.... .-.~ lO FM!DAYDEODORANT 1• ->$ iOllCa. ••·---............ _ .................. .. MIL llZI! =~!~.~-~~~.--0" .37 -. ••.. , L HARVEST DAY PO.TAT~ B~EAue •49 L ~..!!A~BEARY PRE~~VES '2-0l -"11' L ~~~RONI & SALA·~-~~~.~-.27 _t ROS~RIT~. REFRIE~ .. ~~~!,_CAH .56 _t~ff!~A .!.~CO S~~~~ ......... M2en. .39 L P~NTEA'S coc_!cr.~L ~~~c.! 1• A ~~~~.~l~E VANl~.!.~~A<n .55 LADY LEE PEANUT BUTTER "197 ~Oll-Y -·--··-,,,.4.Ql.JM L ~~88LE~P BEVERAGE le-OL Bl\. .25 L ~~LEE SPAGH~~A~~e..,_ .89 L HA'!_VEST~AY SP~GHETll, NI • 73 AGLORIETTA STEWED TOM~~!33 L~DV LEE m,tANGE DAI~-~~~ -121 A~~?_AUAN PUNCH FRUIT'?!!!~ .51 r DEL MONTE PICKLE HALVES 57 6 RC°"-'llOLI. Oii KQllPOU n-ol JAii • !DIAMOND A CUT GREEN BEANS 32 .. ... • • • ~CAN e !~.~~~.~CHIU BEA~!""' .26 I~~~_!!~R~ALES IS-0/ tNI .43 !~.~~.~.!~ ...... ~~~CHEON ~~t,. .79 £LADY LEE PARMESAN CHEESE 121 &;it~~~ RIC~ ,,..IXES .:_ON;.38 L~!INZ c~~.~NEGAA ~.(M Bil .59 I~~~~!'~El.!8,~-.45 A~!NNA.8~AGE-c-~88 ............. ,.,..--C'i ... ----... , ... .._.. I 1srr L ~NE~~ UQUID C~ER >Ol.91\. "P ' b ~~~~EX GLASS CLEANER n« 11"-.83 ! l ~~ ~~~!2!~J-~ .... tt&90" IO.l .55 L ~~~~·~FR.E~HENER~--.37 !~WASHER DETERGE~!IOCZ .. 1• . L KAL KAN ~PS DOG FOO~ l40Z.CM .29 . L FINAL TOUCH LIQUID RIN~im.. • 75 LUCkJ Discount Celtter 1111,1-,ano"' •~•oat •• OlllCOUH' cr:"'t1tt•OH\• j SUMMER GOODS CLEARANCE TIMEJI Take adVantage of Lucky's fab!Aous SUITlmel' deeranoe on everything fOf YoUr summer pleeMe From barbecueS and chaise '°'Jn08S to petJO ltiermometers and baby floats But hurry. because good ttllngS h&Ye a way al gong fast. ASSORTED PL:ASTIC POTS \'QI! OOCl,,, COLo. tlClUDO ~ Al90llllll.. -.26 • ~ q DAllV ~IL.OT 'N9clne.day.Auqu.t3. 1t77 Oriental Touch Soy Tops Chicken • (' tll.t' a&OWNn'ON•:,. h_.....,.,,._ ...... ' Outdoor took1, bored •Hh charcoal·1r1IUna c-hkken 1111ath the u1ual lomat.o baaed bartMicut' sauce. may bl> anternt~ "' lhla rttlpt' to1 So1 Smoked Clucken Both eplc:~a.rt ilnd rhlldrt'n en1oy 1t The m .. r1n11t.ll' 1• ~ona • .., 1f you w<int lo 'W!rve 1l with aoml' net', H we dad be sure tu d1h&l• 1l For » vett!li.blt! lo •~company the chick and rac• Wt' of· ftted edible green P'-'• pods cooked an a wok m the kitchen walh " fl'"' table1poons of 011 and " >mashed rlo\ l' of earhc If you skip the Pu Pods and decide lo orfer only a salad. you might like lo make 1t of blanched fresh mung bean sprouts drcssl'd with 011 and vinegar For dessert. a fresh fruit compote I'> an excellent rho1ce SMOKIWSO\' CHICKEN 4-pound roa~l1ng <'h1cken I cup soy sau<'<' I cup water •;cup firmly packed light brown sugar •, cup dry sherry 2 teaspoons anise i.eeds. crushed I tablespoon minced fresh giner or 1 teaspoon J;round ginger Rinse chicken with cold water. removing any extraneous bits clinging to the inside or lhl' body rav1ty. Drain and dr~ with paper towel 1ng Turn wings back akimbo fashion ; tie dru mstil'k ends together In a bowl or casserole JUSl large enough to hold the ch i cke n and l'hl('kt•n fo• the chun·oMI lflll I Ci r1lhnll wlll l11kt! 11bout I ''t hour• and part~ oflht' <'hltkt•n wtll look but not 1Hl4' ovt'r ('ht1rr~ • Nolt' If Ullllli U c harcoal watt'r 1moker 1tr1ll follow lht• manufacturer• <hrec· lion• ror uddlng wat~r lo the w11ttt paan 1md for the Groceries Vlaalc Pickl•• <'001101 tame Do not U1»l' the marinade instew:t of water in the waler pan ~md do not. bruah wltb lhe murinude durlnt the cookln1 because llft1n1 lhe cover prolon1s the cooklna time. A lltUe or the diluted, beat~ marinade can be spooned over the chicken 1&1it1111erved. Groceries ~ ~ Polea1 <>oor•• ep..,, Ot 7nc NO~ a.-a .. 0r s.,. . .. . .. u~ ~o~•.u:,;-,.:.. ~ ........ 29c ·r ... Vienna S•uuge "°' ...... Or r.eri • • • • Fruit Cocktail Del Monte 17 oz CAI' Heritage House " 0 WHOLE TOMATOES No. 303 3~s1 Cans ~ 0 ~!8!:~!!·~~ ..... 99° Aaaorted Napkin• H9<1tege House eo Count P1tg @ZEE PAPER ~ed"!~~t RoM •••••••• 54 c 0 Salad Oil Hent1ge H-24 Oz 811 93c ...... 39c .... 83c 0 Muatard ~1Q41 H~ 24 Oz Jar • ~ Salad Dre11lng ~ 7 -S-Vlw llahan-16 Oz 911 ® ® Heritage House LO-CAL BEVERAGES ~.~-5~79c \... Take the heat off your budget with •.. ......... 0 0 0 <) Go English On Muffins For a qwck break(ast treat. go En1Ush. Spread spilt toasted mufCtns with any of tht> followme enerey m.ixtur~. · Buttencotc:b Muffins: Oraqe Topped Mui· flo1: Stir 2 tablespooM melted margarine, V. cup sugar and l tables-' p000 irated orange rind. Spread on 6 toasted muf· fin halves. Broil lltbUy. Groceries Clorox LIQUID BEEACH <&:~~~ 79c Stir 2 tablespoons marearine, '4 cup brown sugar. v. cup chopped nuts and 'Al teaspoon cm- n am on. Spread on 6 toasted muffin halves Broil Ui,htly. Sesame Mulftn.a: Mix 1.. cup marcarlne. 2 tableipoona honey and l tabl espoon toasted sesame seed. Spread on' toasted muffin halves. l Broil lightly. Frozen Foods @ 2.n!~~ 0zR~~~~ ........... 3&c: ~French Frie• *133 \tv w~ Cton1111 c...1 5 lb Pkg • . O FROZEN LEMONADE Hent199 HouM 12 Oz. Can ... 3iS1 Sara Lee Chee .. Cake *141 AeglMr 17 Oz. 0t Str...,t>erry 1t Or •••• ~·9 '!:'!'~~:'!~~ .. 58--~!~1"Z ~~~! ~l~UJ~ ...... 81 C r Asst. Flavors ., Cheer Detergent Ind. 10c Off lal*-<411 Oz. Pkg 0 WESTWOOD ~.1 12~~~!!~~ O~P~g .•.•.. , $1 22 ICE CREAM ~TOMATO \l!Y JUICE .. 48c Half Gallon 99c I ) ( Del Monte 46 Oz clfl ........ 53c .... 0 0 BANQUET 0 lliced tUlltey wlgovy, beet stew, dliclc9n dumphngt, !>eel enchllad•. ul••bury atMlc or ,,... Pw~a • 2 lb Pkg. ~ • marinade. stir together soy sauce, waler. sugar. ~herry. anise and ginger Taste the marinade and ti it's too salty <the sally flavor of soy sauce varies from brand to brand, add a little more water. I Add the chicken, breast side up: turn 1t so the breast c;1de 1s down Cover the bowl tightlv. Refrigerate overnight Remove the ch1cKen. pour the marinade into a ~aucepan. Place the t•h1cken on the rack of grill over a foil drip pan. about 6 inches above medium.low coals Mr.Btzio .-.--r.---)'OU toW prices )'OU cati count on, Cover loosely with a foll tent Grill lhe chicken. brushing oe- cas1onally with heated marinade , and ir 11 necessar). c1dd more coals to the grill (Lell over marinade may be stored in a lightly cov ered Jar in the refrigerator to use in ;. m arinaling another ~Sippers ;a/ended . For mornm~ meals on <\ lhl' run, learn some • blender basics Combine for ont• sen·1ng :i, cup milk. ,, ~ banana, '2 peach, dash • vanilla and a raw egg or t <'ommerc1al soy based protein powder Whir Deli-Dairy @ ~~!'~ ~.~~~nk~. 99c 0 ~~-f.h .. ~=·~·~8:.~~b.'1 89 @ ~t!!!: ~~"!~~~.~. 84c or Butter.cotc:ll • Pkg. or •·• '/\ Oz. cuoe @ ~~~ ~1:." Pk~·.~~-.~~~! ... 72c 0 ~d~~h~~.~. 59c 0 ~~,~·~~~ -~~~~h . 7gc 0 Cotto or Beef Salami &9c Heritage ~ I Oz. Ptlg. • • Wines and Spirits ALMADEN Q wlNES ~-:::·.;~ ... Magnum s31s • until smooth and Pour. ' Combine 2; cup orangt> @ Sangria Wine ~gc • juice, \2 banana. l egg Hertt-ee HouM · .... · · · ••· .... Filth ~ _ coptional> and ''"l cup ~ Kamchatka Vodka $911 C plJln or vanilla-flavored ~ UOllt & Mlublt .............. 175 Lnre low-fat yogurt. Whir· a:,. W•lkera Ten High s5• until blended and PoUr ~ Bourbon ~.., ................ Ouert !::i~~~-A s unny ® ~.='-~·Oz.~ ............... 138 ~· A berry different Q Luck Le Bee I s i pp er . For one . 12Pd!11 Oz.gN~~ 8Qtttee.~.... . .. *1" ~::::: ':a~~fa~~k~u~ • He•lth & Beauty Aids plain low.fat yogurt and a teaspoon or boy11enberry preserves. Use your favorite navor ketlr (a llquifled yo1wt producl sold at 011)• dairy stora• and bealtb food counlen): combine with ~banana OC' a cup ol fresh, hulled atl'awberrlea, some ice cubn, and whiz'. smooth. You ret tho beneflJ,.e ()( yo«urt in a llus .. ~)'OU can count up. Groceries Pitted Ripe Olives IJndMy Ell"• Large-6 oz c.n 0 YELLOW CLING . PEACHES =· 2 ~ 59c ® 0 ~ Heritage "--No. 303·~ R tu1~~~ ~~~~~~~-~~ . lb 1SC Bell Pepper• 3ftc Trsy otl .. . .. . ..... ........... :;,-., Flavorful ® FRESH PINEAPPLES .... -39~· ·-' ~ LARGE @TOMATOES 39c Slltlno &lie ..................... Lal. • Ii () u 0 0 0 0 0 Groceries Popcorn -· ... ,.... Herfl-oe HWM • 2 Lb. Pllg Chocolate Syrup ~ 18oz.can .... ...... 57c ..... 53c H•rahey lnatant Drink s188 Jult Add Milk e 32 Oz. Container , .. . f!.C::.~~~~~~~~.~~ ....... &Sc Meats .o Value Trimmed Beef Meats 0 ~~~~~!~~~~-·-···lb 1111 1 _) ~·l...~~-~-~.~ .. ~~~~~~lb. 1149 . 0 ~~.~~.!.'.~.~··~.~.~.lb. •1• 0 ~~~~~~ ...... ~ $148 ~:.!~~ .. ~~~-~-.~~~!.•Lb. •1• ~~~-~ .. ~.~!.~~~~~ .... Lb, •1• ~~:·.~~ ~~.·~ .. ~~~~ ... ll>. •1• ® !.~r!:L~~~!~ ........ lb.11• r--i Drumatlcka or Wing• 4'2ftc \....:.) USO.A. ln199Cted Tutloey IA ~- 0 Whole CHICKEN LEGS U.S.D.A. Inspected Fryers 68~ . • Cost Hike Brews r._. I LOM>01' (AP> -When coffee prlcea liOartd tut 1prln1. bouacwl vc. ilarted hoardln& the ''brown aold" ¥4 • hodl• tl&iNt even h11ht-r vm:H. No# th~y 1rc dlpptn1 Into th 1r •toc:k.a and are partly the cause of • austaJnt'd idlde In coffee pn~. uy International ")(J)Clrta. Whllt h•ppcned, I.ho nperts H)', w 6la that durtn1 tho price 1plnl <'Vt'rybody from Importer to hou1ew1fe ru1hod lo 1lock more coffH than wu n~ed lhia yc~r bt:cauao thtiy ftlail*S 1UU hl1her prlce11. The re1ult wH that 8 mllllon 132 pound baacB oC areen coCfee weru flxported over the esUmat· ed need thla yt!ar of 5' million bllll"· Importers and roa1tera. seeing tht<y t'OUld not tell their coffee because of hlsh prices, decided lo lower prices to free their capttaJ that was locked-up in cof· fee stocks. Housewives, seeinc that the nt-w prices were peUed below lhote tbey had to pay new months ago, daclded It was time to dli Into their stocks World creen coffee prices la.st 1prln1 reached an average or S3.30 a pound at Port or entry in New York. Ftcures released by the International Coffee Or1anlaaUoo <ICO > put the latest price at $1.M a pound. Amttlcan routers lnlUated the 'Price tilde a few weeks ago when they lowered prtces several times In an effort to spur flagging cotree consumption. lCO figures in March showed 8.6 million bags ot coffee held In s ••• consumer countries. Experts and traders, scanning t!xporl and am port customs r eturns. sa id another 1.s million bags were un- accounted ror. They said this coffee probably was hoarded by housewives and small traders who came into the markets to muke a rast buck orr high prices. This gives u total of 10.1 million bags. But because of high pnc~. housewives stopped buying fresh coffee, and it Is es timated that consumer r esis tance added another million bags or so to the stockpile. Traders report that because of this great stockpile little or no fresh co(fee ls being Imported or bought. Until this reserve is tnmmed to what the expert.a call normal v.dneeday. August 3, 1977 levels and the hoarded coffee ronsumed, large roasters and multinational food giants are ex- pected to stay away from the market But experts warn that the world colfee shortage 1s not over and when buying picks up again this faJI, prices will head higher a' importers find corree st.Ill tn short :.upply. But they predict prices \\Ill not reach previous re- cord hi~hs. Brazil, the world's largest cof· fee-grower, produces in normal times 2S million bags or more and accounts for 37 percent of the world's traded coffee. But this year it is expected to produce only 13.S million to 14 million bags. Political uncertainties cloud the co((ee picture in Angola, - D~L y PILOT C7 Africa's largest producer ·1rs not known whether the Mariust government will sell most or 1ti. crop to the Soviet bloc or lo the West Bad "eather on the Ivory Coast. the cont1o~nl's ~econd largCl>t producer, is expected to wipe out a fif\h or its crop. Uganda i s hampered by transport problems in getting coffee out, and the Ma.ftlgasy Republic, formerly Madagascar. is est.amat.ed several hundreds of thousands ol baas short this year. ln other words, Africa, which bas no stock of creen corree left. is not going to plug the 1ap left by Braz.ti, which needs 6 million baas for its own domestic con- s umption besides exporting. in normal times, around 18 million bags One • t supercou .. No Slip Seen WASHING TON <AP> -Coffee. cocoa, tea and sugar 1n recent years have received attention as major impe>rts which have helped drive up consumer food prices. But bananas also are important an computing over-all food coslb. ac· cording t o th e Agriculture Depart ment The national aver age who l esale pri ce or bananas In 1976 was $4.67 per 40-pound carton. up about four percent from 1975. But for the 12 monthe ending last Ma y, the wh o lesale pri ce o r bananas rose 13.8 per cent, going from $5.08 a carton to $5.78. That translates to about 14.5 cents a pound, compared with 12 7 cen~ a year earlier Last year 's imports totaled 2.1 million metric tons, up 10 percent from 1975 (A metric ton 1s 2.205 pounds > Imports 10 the first four months of this year, at 676,300 ton~. were down slightly from the same period a year earlier ··with smallt•r am ports. prices for banana!> during tht• summer are expected to remain rel· ativcly high." the dt• partment sa1cl in ,1 nt-w fru 1 t situation report "However. adcqual1• supplies or summ H fruits could moderate any further price in· creases for bananas " Plan Ahead Summery idea When you ·re making sand wiches to tote to work. make a few more and freeze them That way, when the time comes for , an impromptu picnic an the park with a friend. 1 you can bring them along to thaw as you walk. ~ey'll be ready to eat lo ~f!88 than Z hours. l Hint: Avoid fillin gs J with mayonnaise. , leltUJ:e, tomatoes or hard-'COC>ked eggs . Instead, fre eze together meat and cheese combinaLions. sliced turkey with sail and pepper on butlered bread. rout bfff with shced pickle.' Relish It All Ralphs Stores Open 8 A.M. Monday thru lalurclay. a..-,_ ......... Fcw ..... yllows Beel·Blade Cul Chuck Steak per II lb. Beel Round· Tip Cut Rotisserie Style Beef Roast per lb. 48 Super Meat Markel 'U~ IHI Chuc• 119 li•0•r1 Swiss Steak ~( lb ...llloulld 1a9 ~NWt~ Beef Tip Steak I>'" lb '-;)Inf Ch..c:k -.99 ,PHWtt Flanken Ribs lb ~ IHICh11c-·IOntl"1 159 (~ Clod Roast pn lb ~ ,~IHI Ch110 (~•so?ct 7-Bone Steak :· .89 ~ Gr~;;d-vchuck ,,., 121 ob =r•oh " Lamb Shoulder ltoast ':' 109 D C;lf Liver 111 ptr lb 119• 149 '" 1 to 2·1b. Averege Fresh Rainbow Trout 99 · IHfCfluc:k RoundBone Roast A .. orted Fl1vor1 Ral~ Ice Milk Whole or Point Cut Fresh per lb. Beef Brisket per lb. Pantry Fillers ~ s~"Pe;"·-- ~C~Flakes ~ R'i(;;Mi~~c•pl WI~ el•nda D sbf.P~ ~P;;r~~ ~*~ D F~ltc0cldai1 ~ Nie. M Sofl.Aueft .. Colon Toilet Tissue 19 hL 22 pt.9 .• , .. ~ 65 l*t· I ~· .39 2101. 49 can • ··~· 55 t1u1ell I •601 49 c.an I 190• 59 c•n • ••ol 83 pt,g,. I ~per • ~lb •• Com·PICk of 12 Ralphs Tortlllas 11 oz.. II pkg. Super Deli ["A ll•lplle .... c ..... ~Jack Cheese !;?] R7iih Franks Super Bakery 0~"1111...,.....,.. ~ Hamluger .Buns D ~Oe4kicM Lemon Tea Cakes !:~ .93 :..~ .99 ~ 111 -111 111. ·~·.59 .,.,, 49 .... ..... 89 "'" gal. MtdlumSln Rad Pbns lb. =-~29 II Super Produce ~ l'!ftl'C.,T• Carroll ,... lb ~ J.,TNftlll ... Lemons .. c .. ~Mlld.SWMt • Brown Onions .,.. lb D '"""' l'i.-twl Cauba Melons ,... •• Super Floral .10 .. .10 .10 .12 ~ i:q Stem Roses --·99 0" .......... ,91 ~Foliage Plants .. c" 399 Wines & Spirits ·"~.· .57 ~c;c;k. ,:.~~.99 ~s;h°'vodka !!It 289 to ct. 2•• 0 11 ..... o.lkleue pllf. 69 L)I Old lllOlll•..,.,..,... or l 118 p11,_ ~Corn Mullins ., • • ~Pink Chablis Wine Ide< No additional purchase required to save with these coupons at Ralphs fiitiiiiiiii~~-·P•iiii~~ Sawe 1.00 wtttl Coupon 1~ Any llrtnd-5-lb. or LMger canned Ham ·~ Wlttt Coupon . Uni One "'"' ... One Cowpon Plr cu.eon.. CC114*1 l!llc:IMt A10 • hu -10. 1m. SUPER COUPON r···«D·--., r--·~Ho·---. I a .... .2S.ltllCMIPO" I I a-.21_,...c,,..._ ios I I (;;;-• .25 I ·I ;;r.,;~ .20 I I ~ '*'" ,.!»!!._ I I Cheddar ::;. on I .. __ I I WlthC""'"'" I I Po!IO.. ____ ... __ , ______ ... _ c-~.,.,_.,.,.,,.,,. <-•--•••-...... "" L COUPON .I L C O UPON .I ---------------- WW.•·· I .,.. .......... . -I .. . , .. 261.tlOO .. ·--....... ~ """-Y!'!LOT n l W1'1 ro out to eat when au cu lftjoy lhe crttp)'. cru.nchy tut• ot your • vorlle detp·rrled eata rt&ht •t home" f' rood cllaiiu bav• hair ••1etret coaUn1 .. tclpa: now you caa a\lt)'OW'S. too. Then a.ro two ba•lc ~ ol popular ceat· ~11: the •I& batter bkh ts u.ht and puffy cause It conl.alns U q uld, and the crumb <'<'•line which Is more crl!!p and 1olden brown Start with a few basic incl"fdieolS and then let your imaimataon 10. Ex· Ptriment. Soon you 'll have a recipe that your famtly will love and eHryoneel1ew11l en•y. Suecessfut deep fryanc also depends upon the correct temperature control of the 011 AU.. PURPOSE SEASONED COATING 2 slices dry bread, hncty crumbed 4 tablespoons grated 1 Parmesan cheese l teaspoon seasoned sail 2 sli ghtly beaten eggs I tablespoon rold water Preheat vegetable 011 for frying. Combine fine b r ead crumbs, Par- mesan cheese and 1 :i teaspoon seasoned salt in a shallow pan. In small mixing bowl combine eggs, water and remaining salt. Dip food to be deep fried into egg mixture, then into crumbs. Repeat dipping process before dee p frying . Hcmove and drain on Jlapcr toweling. l'~eror: iucchml sli ces Eggplant slices Carrot slices Mushrooms Cauhnower Fash < 1pound1 Cheese cubes I•,. rnch cubes I Shrimp Onions Par-cooked chicken . < ;1112 pounds) ( -1 CRISPY FRIED CIDCKEN 1; cup stale beer l egg 2 tablespoons vegetable 0 11 '2 cup all-purpose flour 1 2 teaspoon baking powder ••teaspoon salt I c h 1 c k e n < 3 '-2 pounds 1 par-cooked, cul in pieces J cups vegetable 011 for frying Preheat oi l at 375 degrees. Put all ingre dients into s mall mixing bowl and mix on a low s peed until thoroughly combined. Roll chicken in flour, then dip in bat· ter. Fry 2 pieces at a time. Drain on paper toweling. Lessen Calories The need for fewer calories as we grow older is g r aphically expressed by the well-known phrase ' "middle-aged bulge:· This unwelcom e weleht doesn't happen just by accident, but is the rMult or contlnuint to consume calories at the same rate as we did when we were younger a nd rpore active. Less physical activitiy in combination with' s lower m etabolis m ~duces our oaloric needs. In fact, we need about 20 percent fewer calories at age 65 than at 25 years of a1e. Age1ess Wena~r,? ~n~y.Auqu1t3. 1917 • ti t' e r m .,. y b c repl•c•-d bv wutcr 1md 1 I t'U 2 tabl~poons saJad teaapoon 11u1Cur 1111 •:i CUl> all-purpose flour Not• ll•~ butlrr Mii ¥ ('o .. tmir ror onion rin11. t'llPl1U1t 11tr1pi. und other favonto VC1'•t.ablc,. Dip Vt'i4"l1tble11 In ftuur bftore co.una with bat· tt!r f!'ry a.t 400 dcgr~..-~ until 1<olden brown. M it kt• i t.o ~ •~ltij11. HERR P'ISH BATTElt • 2 toa.poon bakma powder i,~ teaspoon i;alt '• teaspoon dill weed, crushed ~. teaspoon dry cbervll, crushed 2 pounds fish fillets i 3 cups veaetable oil for fryma Preheat oi l to 375 degrees Put all ingredients ex- cept fi sh fill ets into bltinder container m or der listed. Cover and process at PUREE until blended. Pour batter into a shallow pan. Dip fish Into flour and then into herbed batter. Fry 2-3 pieces of fish until golden brown and fish flake!. Makes 6·8 servings. YOU ALWAYS· S-Vll WIFH srArER BROS. LOW-LOW PRICES ILICD LUNCHEON MIATS STATER BROS.• 10 VAR. s•~ a1u • ST A TIR •ROI. MONIY BACK GUARANTR ON QUALITY MIAH fVllY PlfCI Of MIATIS UHCOHolTIONAll Y CiU.UANTllD ' • •• CHUCK ROAST TOPl.lAH YOU Oii YOUI MONIY BL ADE.CUT WILL 11 Q4lUfUlL Y lffUNOlO WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LjMIT OR REFUSE SALES TO COMMERCIAL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS I LB. •ONILISS $IOI BllF ROUND STEAK ........ La 39~· 59~ ..... I(('• 11.AO<.CUl ~ ~ CHUCK STIAK =\(" ~ f SUQD BOLOGNA IUPICQ ••• IA. 5 94 "--- deli~ 9 '"U>i'llOHN POLISH SAUSAGE 10-01 P~o u 9 4 WHITING aiii il1Sl°if0 LI $ J 2 • ruiiOr F11u1 "licED BACON IU ~:c 0 s 13 7 er msir ··i Eia;Tiitu11 JUICE 86c PERFORM :=:c:~yy ... ! .. ~L 64c · S J:LcH~RAP9',IRED M-Oz TOILET BOWL CLEANER n1«!•M>L 54c PEACHES ·~-··_-..::.-" ,... GRAPE JUICE .... ... . ... i~z. 69c SNO·BOL ~=IOWl~UH(ll ! •M>z. 47c lM~·OTllMMCY ?.~ .. ~/Pl I IRIAKl'A&TDllJNK s21 • STEP SAVER -. . e J2-0Z $1.&3 SWUT·Y£LlOWMUT •• : • . IANI ········· ········ ··· ···· ........... &O.M>Z. FURNITURE POLISH • 74c 3 3c · . ._ 11.ALKAN•MPSCHUHll.llTYLf 33 lll.IDIOUMIO .,. IM>Z. .:f ., ~'l,.q&'F .......................... ,..,, c (laUBBLE·UP 2ac). UJ. ' ... .. I PUPPY , ..................... 8-L& s 146 RElURNABLES ..... ~ AVOCADOS / PIUCE<IHCLtMOff'l.A9EL 91 LADY scoTT e 46c LMm·'A*YA~ ,, ~~JJ:IGllD ...... l. ...... · · ••· "'"$ ~ TRASH CAN Liii:. f .~:l.19 . 2Y~ \_ I f.t!.lll~ SOFTENER . .-1 CONFID~~-:-..::~ .. t .• ~ s 1.29 -··-·-··-. • 9 TOILEI JISSUE .... .. . ....... a 29c DIAPERS ,~(ll•Oft~ •••••••• •i<T 1.27 !!!!2!5_ . .-o.;..~;··. ,.J 5 4 -'5ASST(. 0mES 53c JUBILEE ggc ~~~~!!~.~-.. ······•Lf ~4 ...... . • • • ••.•.••.••.••••••••.•.. 200-CT. ICE CREAM ~~~Oii. •. ""°"l. POTATOES .. t& VIVA • AUT., DECOflAT°"-Ofl DESIG_,. I PAPER J,OWELS ......... mc.57c ·~ ·!·DRESS.ING JACK CHEESE ~~:u ! •M>Z. $2.69 MOZZARELLA :i-=s ~•NII M>z. Sl.85 MDZZARRtA err·U-Ol $1.44 M>Z. sto1 MOUAREltA -a®•••NO ..... •M>Z sl.87 RICOTTA =~~.Ma $1.08 ............ M)Z.&r BEEF CHUNKS AL'O ..... ~ .. 49• \bndeKampa . "•••v 979c ..... ". .... _ .... wk._ ....... --~~:·'· ... ,.. ...... 6 .. ;q ~ Powed 9~ ci ...... 79~ Call• SPECIALS ..... u •• . ....... '"'·'tll'-'6i.t ·~· ,.. .... ....... ! • / ~\ ..... ::A £ z1~.>" PINEAPPLE OOll•f ...... •IMJf•M•Y~ 59cu. I ) f t .. ... .... w ...... Dr. Robert Taylor experiments with raising shrimp in desert. Shrimp Farming New Angle RENO <AP > -It's et ways from here to your nearest ocean but a local experiment plans on ra1s1ng some fresh local seafood shrimp Fresh pr awns from desert ponds 1s the project pllmned by University of Nevada-Reno pro- fessor Robert Taylor The idea 1s to grow prawns commerr1ally m ponds fed with warm water from a Sierra Pac1f1c Power Co generating planl near Fort Church11l 1n cen- LrJI Nevada a couple or hun- dred miles from the Pac1f1c Ocean Or Taylor. head of Lhe school of veterinary medicine, said no m:irketing stud1 (•s have been done. But if his brainchild proves ... uccessful someone may be able to make money harvesting the .,hnmp. now consumed by the bucketfuls in northern Nevada t"as ino resl aurants which pay clearly for frozen prnwns at least $.5 a pound Taylor said ra1s1ng shnmp 10 the desert 1s no real problem, as long as there is warm water and controlled conditions, and tbe Fort Churchill site offers both. "There ~as all this hot water ou L there goine to was te Somelhmg hke 240 acres 10 reet dc<'p," he said "l know Sierra Pacific wanted somelhmg done with 1t too. So I came up with the idea of raJsing prawm, ll's reall y an ideal loca· Lion wtth an unlimited source of hot waler" With some slud1es m hand and some lab work behind him, Dr Taylor approached the power company with his idea and found the utility had some research funds available From there, two small ponds and a waterway were construct· ed al the site. The idea is lo mix 100 degree· plus waler from the cooling ponds with cotder water to bring 1t down to the 83 deuee habitat for the shrimp. The creatures. known as Malaysian Shrimp, naturally s pend part of their lives m salt water and part in fresh water. In Lhe proJecL they are hatched in Lhe laboralory and moved to salt water for a short time, then moved mlo the fresh ponds They will be fed brine shrimp at f1rsl, then other things hke cal· fish chow or olher proteins The research funding has gone from Lhe power company to the university. If the project proves successful as Dr. Taylor thinks it will. the ulilily may lease Lhe water and land to a contractor who would in turn raise and sell the prawns. "Sierra Pacific made it clear 1t doesn't want to get into the shrimp business. so I would think this could be a good opportunity for someone. -. "I know some fish outlets cer- tainly have expressed some in· teresl 10 the plan," he said, ad- ding there IS plenly Of water for a n operation expanded well beyond the present test facilities Taylor says he has no real idea how much the shrimp, sized at about six Lo the pound. will sell for except 1t will be less than the frozen imports. Raising them to the medium· size range he fi gures growers should be able to come up w1Lh two shrimp crops a year. even if the shrimp boats are far away The Nuttiest Two nutt y id eas ror m1crocooks: Snacklng·s made easy with pantry staples SNACKING NUTS 2 tups walnut or pecan halves • .. cup brown sugar 1 teaspoon cinnamon r 2 tablespoons butter , Com~ne sugar and cinnamon. 1 In glua casserole beat butter 30 ~econds; add nuts and tou to ~ coat. Cook 4·5 minutes, stirring ~ every minute. c ! ~ Add augar mixture lo nuts and ·toss again. Spread on piece of \¥ax paper to cool. Serve warm. ' or store In refrigerator for snack· I JnC out of hand. Makes 2 cups. l I • CLASSIC OAT-NUT MIX 6 cups puffed brown rice cereal 4 cups pretzel s tic.ks 1 can salted mixed nuts '~ cup butter 2 teaspoons Worcestershire sauce 1 teaspoon dry mustard 1 teaspoon each onion salt and garlic powder ln Jarge glass bowl, combine cereal. pretzel sticks, and nuts. Jn a 2-cup glass measure, com· bine butter. Worcestershire sauce, mustard, onion salt and garlic powder. Cook l ·l Y.i minutes until butter ls complete· ly melted: stir to l>lend. Pour butter mixture over dry lngredients and toss to coat even- ly. Cook 5·6 minutes, stirring every 2 mintates. Cool s)lghUy before serving; store In airtight container. Makes about 5 quarts. - '4 ' . ' ' ,.. ·1 ·' . i . BED PIZZA DOUGH 1 envelope act.ave dry yeast l cup warm beer 1 teaspoon salt 2 tableapoona olive oll 314 cups all-purpose flour Dissolve yeast in beer. Stir in salt ud olive oil. GrMtually add flour. Beat unW amooth. Knead dough on hghUy floured board until dough is elastic. Brush top with oUve 011, cover li&htly, leL rise, in warm place until doubled in buUt. Alter dough rises -divide m halt, roll each Into a ball. With fingel"S press to flt two 12' • gre&ied pizza pans or two 13x9' • greased baking pans, making Ima Seems everywhere you look, prices are up. So avocado lovers, prepare to go wild with Joy. Thls year, California Avocados ar~ore than a delicious and nutritious 't'tllldneedl!)'.Augu.tS, 1917 edges Uucker and slightJy higher than center. Brush with addi· tional olive oil. Add filling. BEElt PIZZA nLUNG 1, pound Italian sausage 1 tablespoon olive 011 1'l cup beer 1 (15 oz.> can tomato sauce 1 garhc clove. minced 1 :i teaspoon oregano ~2 teaspoonthyrne h teaspoon salt 1 (3 oz.> can sliced mushrOQms. drained 'rt pound Mouarella, sliced lhin or shredded Cut sausage in small pieces and brown well; drain. Add olive oil, beer, tomato sauce. garlic, -~·~~~OAtL~_Y_.fltl~OT----Q._. • ore1ano, thyme. ulf and muabrooma. Simmer lS mhluta. Yield: approzlmately 2 cups sauce. Divide aauce between two piuu Cl cup each). Cover each pina with Mouarella. Bake in preheated .SO decree oven Z0.2S minutes or unW crust is 1otden. Yield: twopiuas. • Your A D.UyPtlot can b4t Recycled. Ora~ Coast College Is the offlclel recycling center for Costa Mesa. ~ r. SO PUT THE BITE ON us. avocados than ever-which means they're going to cost less than last year. So, if you've yet to indulge yourself In a luscious avocado, the time is ripe. It's perhaps the •. food. Nature has blessed us with more fine year's best food value. , • THE CAUFORNIA AVOCADO « st fr dJ cc bi OI SI a1 to w UI a sl ir r• p c \I c s: I l t I J . . Cit OAI\. '( PILOl Wheat ·wives Gather B)' l>ON KENDALL ,.,.,,_.wft_ WASHINGTO'll <AP> Wh,,1 bqan a fraan11mh'il 11111v1• meat by •mall 1rou!)1 of harm ""oml'n wht' watchetl prli'1•"' or ~heat anrl oth1•r <:om mu~hl1t'' plommt•l ,., l1loom1111: Hilo a C'oord1n,1t.•1I nation.ii .. 11orl :a1m1•d al 1·11n\11Hma: !ht· Ca1t1·r .1i1m1ni-trut1t>n i.trlll Con~rt:s'4 lhal mnrt.> nt't"<h lo lw donl' tu lwlp th~ nal111n., l11<1d producer ... For months. w<.1v1·' of farm ~t\eS ha\c descended on w asbu1iton from OkJaboma. Kansas. Colorado. ~hmeton. Nebraska and other• tes. Their m ...... sage 1s that thci family en- tt•rpn:-.~ arc b<'ing U\reatened by t1nanl tjl disaster. \ nother eroop. representrni a hudd1ng natJooal orianiLati.en. Aml'ncan Agricultural Women. has been 111 Washington try- 1ni.: to rJ1s1· lh<' consciousness of a!lm1n1,trdt1on and l't>n grl',s11mal farm lt•adi'r' lo lhl·1r )llighl Hut .,o tar 1.ome ot lht• women ;:icl m 1 t. tlwy have m ct sy m - palhct1r ears and understanding but I 1t.1.W at·llon to support lhc1r c·aust . .Has1call\. tht:\ w:.int a new fJrm bill . \\tlh ·higher fi:dcral prtc<' support ~uardnlC'Cs for kc\" aops than Congre.,., appC'ars rl' ady lo approve or Prcs1clenl CJ rt er to acet•pt Julrn ll1ntht•r. \\ho larms with ht'r hu:.band. Lian. near Buffalo. Okla., said that 61 women are VJS- 1ting government farm leade,.., urban members of Congre11; labor organizations and othert &o seek help in getting more fediwll help W!On!!day. Augll9t S. ttrr ment nationally is just getting off the ground. but said an estimated 30.000 members currently are enrolled in 36 states, with mem- bership growing a1ma.t daily. One ol the main t.argets is the wheat portion of lbe new farm leg islation. The Senate has passed a bill calling for $2.25 a bushel loan rate tor 1977. and lhe House agriculture committee has approved a ll•W't of the sam e level. which It aJJO In .tfect tor lh1s year'• whtlt crop under the A~riculturt D1partment'1 price support proaram .'1 .. , lllNTHE& Hid 1ht and many othtn w4nt a hllhtr .. tar1et" price 1L1pport rat. for wheat Utll y11r. Tht lenate bill eall• for • tar11c or a .to a buthel. Th• HouH conualUtt vertloa ~It at l:UI and tbe actmlnllttiiloa Wll\tl It It IUT a btllhef. Undtr tlM 1y1e.nt. If matket prlett ol •httt art btlow tbt tar,_ level arowera 1et JtdtraJ paymtnta to bridl• Ult 1ap. Mrt. Hlnther Md otfttr pr0po. ntnt• ol hither whtat tar11t prlcn 111 the coite ot producJa, wheat "' more than • • buth1l and the t.ct.ral pro1ram Medi to pr0¥1ct. f armtn with tnou1h or a 1uarantee 10 they can break eVfft, THE l.ATEST delegaUon fn Washington represented 11 :.tales; Alabama. California, Colorado, llhno1s, Indiana, lbwa, Kansas, Michigan. tfJ11ourl, 'Nebraska, New York', Otd.aboma, . Pennsylvun1a, Tex11, Wtlt Virginia and Wisconsin. ··rarmeri haven't qlctd for a profit,·· Mn. Hlnther uld . . · · P'arm..., mainly have bffn Qk· in1 1trtctJy on the batla of thtlr t'Oltl ... . . . I \I rs. llmtht"r ~aid the mov•· Simply Divine Melba Peaches Keen Peach-lovers will be glad to know that frtlb Ollllarma peaches will be in abundant supply right through mld·lnitember. And there are so many unbeatable peachy-creamy comblnaUOIU. Fresh Peach Cream Puff Melba is a surprisi.ncly simple but elegant deuert. Easy-to-make cream puffs are filled wltb a mound ol whipped creun-peacb mixture and topped wilb a raspberry·strawberry sauce. A spectacular dessert that la both compaqy and famlly·special. For more exclUn1t ways to use and serve fresh Calllomla fruits tb1s summer, write for a free, beauti!UJly illu1trated 48- page nictpe booklet. Send a stamped. aelf-addn!lled btlllness• size envelope to "Fruits of Summer," P .O. Box isaau. Sacramento, 95825. PEACH CREAM PUFF MELBA Paff• Store ours: 9 to 9 Dally,-Sunday 9 to 8 ................ Thurs., Aug. 4 thru Wed.. Aug. I 0 ~~ .. She'-.... W• GM.I)' ~c .... FMd St-.ps We • ....,..... Tiie tigllt To LI-" Q-HtlH . .... .... s• To D••" .... WMIMll ...... LOW·ER PRICES I FRESH LOCAL SNAPPY KENTUCKY EXTRA FANCY ITALIAN SQUASH · 19~. YOUNG llEF LIVER llllSH ··sue• 59~. GREEN BEANS 29~. MAlllOS 3 51 EASTERN CENTER RIB EASTERN FARMER STYLE PORK ·CHO.PS SPARE RIBS 1.49L8. M~~ 1. 19LB. IARMIUU< SUCID EASTalH LARGE LOIN 119 Pork Chops LI. IACM OSCAR MA YER PUR.l LITil.E PORK FRIERS 89~ EASTERN WHOLE PORK · LOINS FRESH GROUND BEEF 49~. 1• M ... SHIUCID IOLMIA 9C IARMIUU< LI. WIENERS IHJ.::.u CRACKERS ~i "J4.!~ JUICE WlSIC LAUMDaY 46 0%. CAN ~:;:;s BBQ SMOKE ~~ 29c HEINZ KETCHUP ~t 79c GIEIHGIAMT Y'6C..PAX Miii.iT MA$TRS CHOtCI DELMONTE CUT GREEN29 BEANS , .. ' Wlldneeday August3, 1977 DAIL V PILOT £ J J Crock Chock-full of Fancy Fresh Fruit THE SLIM GOURMET B1a&UAAA v.a.DUuN HC"T •• an Id a that,. u colorful u a Uawallan aUAMt and J\&ll P ap ,.al : • crocllful ur cll'11e4 rruh fruit , mann.led 1n panupplc and their uwo Jute ... Aplkc·d with rum, iJyou bke! You can ke!e1> ll an tho ref and UM It al J'OU -.. appeUur or n. oe aal ad1, ~Up ~. 101urt. 1 or apaocecake. Calarie-Wl&e and COOVC· meat! W~ like lo laC .i b1£ lwo-q rt clear elu• apolbecary Jar bttauw the melanee b ~o pr~u ,. to see. bu1 a crock or co\ ered coot1e Jar or a big glass pickle bolUe walldo•wdl. Stmply fill It With bile· siz.e chunks ol npe raw f rwl, then pour OD UD· diluted pineapple juice concentrate. The Jwces blend deliciously. Rum or rum flavoring 1s a spirited addit106, fl>r adult audiences. '-- You can vary the fruits to suit your wb1m and what\s available. < lf used, bananas, which are very perishable, :.hould be added at serv ing time, not to the refrigerator jar.) POLYNESIAN CROCKED FRUIT 2 eating oranges. peeled, seeded, sliced in chunks S cups mixed fresh fruit, for example. 1 cup fresh or canned unsweetened pineapple chunks · 1 medium mango. peeled and diced Cor 2 fres h peaches. or 3 ne<' lannes> 1 papaya or small cantaloupe, diced '2 cup dark sweet cherries, pitted 1 ~cup seedless green grapes (or unpeeled ap pie or pear, diced> 1 cup blueberries 6-ounce can undilul ccf unsweetened pineup No Salt: ·Sub It You don't have to give up all egg noodle dishes just because you are on a low cholesterol salt-free diet. Delicious casseroles can be made with the new cholesterol free egg n"Oodle substitutes with no salt added now on the market. A Noodle Surprise 1s a palate pleasing dish for lunch or supper. If you serve it to the whole family, those not on special diets simply udd salt to taste when the casserole is served. NOODLE SURPRISE 1 6 ounce package egg noodle substitute 2 salt free beef bouillon cubes 1 8 ounce can salt free sweet peas •, cup <'rushed low sodium salt free <'Orn flakes 2cupswaler Bring waler to a boil. Drop m bouillon cubes. When dissolved, add noodles. Cover and sim· mer until liquid is absorbed and noodles are tender, about 12 minutes. Place in oiled 1 quart casserole. Add sweet peas: toss well. Sprinkle with crushed corn flakes. Keep warm in oven until ready to serve. Vineyard Tour Set pl Cor pin••PPl•· or un1t1 l Juice t•oncen· lrule, d lroel~ opt a on 1tl • l wo thl rd s t' u p " h 1 lo r u m or l tablt~pocJll rum flavor In Pe•el thl• rina rrom orl.U\lt,. on " vl•tr tlo catch the Jutl·o > cul th., ur&n1 1nl,(, ahCl'll, thlln &nlo bltt• 11aie c hunkll. H~move llllY •~with u 11h•rP knife. Put the oranae chunk• aand any rc1t1rved j uice Into 1a t'rock or lw-ae &las• Jar. Next. prepare uny lrult. lbal t..tda lo darken · strvini. Use u desired. or tum brown <peaches. wm keep several day.a nectarlnn, apples, rdrlaerated. Makes pears, tor example.> about 18 half·cup serv· Add l.hls l<> the Jar and ln&s. approximately 60 sllr well wlth the oran1e calories each (fruit only cbunk1. <The ascorbic or with rum flavoring ). acid ln the orance Juice With rum, 80 calories wlll penetrate the fruit each. und keep ll fresh · Trader'• Sborteake - lookln1. > Prepare and Top small sln&le-servinf add remalnln1 fruit. sponeecake dessert Combine defrosted shell• (or thin slices of pineapple juice with rum sponaecake) with one· or rum fiavorlna and half cup mixed fruit, in· pour into the jar. Cover cludln& juice. 180 and chill in the calories per serving. relrlcentor. Stir before (For an Interesting lop. ping, fold plain yogurt In· to equal parts prepared wblpped t.oppin&. about 15 calories per tables- poon.> Soutb Seas Sundae Top a scoop of 99 percent fat·free vanilla icemilk with one-half cup fruit, including juice. Sprinkle with 1 teaspoon toasted coconut nakes. l! de· sired. About 135 calories w Ith coconut: 130 without. Polyuedan San1rla - Combine one-quarter cup ic~ dry red wine w1tb one-quarter cup mixed fruit <including juice> in a tall glass. Fill with dulled club soda. llOcalones Surfside Salad Lunch -Put two scoops of chilled 99 percent fat· free collage cheese in a bowl. Top with one-hall cup mixed fruits. 16S calories. Yogurt Shake -Jn a covered blender com· bine three-quarters cup of mixed fruit {including juice) with one-half cup plain low-fat yocurt aod Freah Grein Fed S or 6 ice cubes. Blend on hiah speed unlll ice is dissolved. Serve im· mediately. lSOcalorios. Banana Compote Slice a ripe banana into two dessert dishes. Top each with ooe-half cup mixed fruit, including juice. Sprinkle with cin· namon or apple pie ~pice and serve immedfitely. Serves two, 100 calories each. Yogurt Stra& Parfal& - Into each tall parfait glass, layer one-hall cup plain or vanilla or fruit· flavored low-fat yogurt. with ooe-bal! cup mixed fruit. 120 calories with plain or vanilla yogurt, about 180 calories with fruit-flavored yogurt. Clip ll Save si.33 Pjcnic Roast ~ :\: Pork • ··Shoulder Cue Of 24 $20.98 • 28-oz. Rtn. Btl. For Kraft Miracle Whip 0 c '""' Miracle Whip • U«•• 32-oz. Jar Marina Bath Tissue • c 4·Roll Pack Crisp Had Lettuce· • Frnh Grain Fed Quarter Pork Loin Contain• $ 18 Centera & Ends · • lb. f Morrell ieners c 1-lb. Pkg. Fynt9x Tissue Factal .. 200-ct. Box Prices Effective Aug. 3-9, 1977 fliiill ~ ,,. Cl2 DAtL y PILOT Meal's Melted llON'l'EaEY MUSRaOOM SANDWICH '~poun d mushrooms, nn!t'd ond :ahctod Butll'r 4 oum·e:. Montt"rev J .trk rh~, s liced Uun ur grated :? En&li.Jh rnumos. spht 1 amall tomato, diced '2 teaspoon eacb ba sll. oreeaoo and thyme French-style mustard Dash Worces- tersh1re-:.auce Salt and pepper Mell 2 tablespoons but- t c r in saucepan and saute mushrooms about 2 minutes, until liquid begins to ooze. Toast English muffins. Butler one half and spread other with mixture of mustard and Worcestershire sauce. (Use both s paringly>. Cover half spread with mustard with mushrooms, lifted with slotted spoon onto bread. Top with tomato chunks ... ' ...... ,.. ..... Baked beans are a friend of the cook on any campsite. Camp CoOking's Easy Threeeasywa}s tocn whole kt.>rnel corn, JOY baked bean-; on thu drained trail : Two ways are 1 can (8 ounces) a d a p t a b I e t o a whole tomatoes. drained campstove skillet. The 3 tablespoons 1mita· other is for hikers who'd tion bacon bits rather do without pots 1 tablespoon inst.ant and pans. Simply heat minced onion the beans in foil packets. lo a ski 11 et mix Use light-to-carry de· together baked beans. hydrated apple slices, corn. tomatoes, bacon pineapple rings. soy-bits and minced onion. bacon bits. corn chips or Cover and heat over 1ust a sprinkltng of onion medium heat on grill or JI akes for garn1:.h . t·a mpstove until bubbly. (',\ \t PGROU'lilO t 'lllU B EAl'liS OS Clll PS 1 JX>Und ~round beef 1 cJn <28 ounces) baked beaos 1 ... cup catsup 3 tab I e'S po o o s chopped onion 2 teaspoons chlli po\\ der Dash black pepper l bag (ll ounces) corn chaps ln a ski llet over med1utn heat on grill or 1-.1 m µstO\ e. nmh. ~ rou ntl hl·<'f until brownt-d Stir 1n bah.l·ll hl•ans. t'Jbup. onion. chili powder and pepper. Cook, sl1rran~ m·t·as1onallv. until ht•at l'Ll throu1o:hOltl. aboul 10 m1 nu Les Sl'r\'t' m ··r t'Orn C'hlpS. :vf,Jkl"> I to Ii ~Prv 111~'>. BAKED RF.AN SKILLET 1 can (28 .ounces> baked beans 1 can <8 ounces > st1rrin~ occasionally. \f ,Jkes 6scrvm~s. TRAILSIDE BAKED llEi\N PACKETS J can (2g ounces> baked beans • 6 frankfurters. sliced l medium onion. <:hopped l can (8 ounces> crushed pineapple. dratned 1 1h cup barbecue saure Cut heavy duly foil into six 32·tnch by 16-inch rt•t•tan~l(•s. Fold an half lt·n~thw1sc to make 16· inch squares. Spoon equul amounts of baked beans into centers of t•ach square. Top with s liced frankfurters. chopped onion. pineap· pie and barbecue s auce. Bring corners of fotl together and twist to t-nclose ingredients. Cook over medium heal on grill or campstove 15 minutes or unl.11 piping hot. Makes 6 servines. HIGH PROTEIN ,,.-.. ......_ ~ .... ~ W '=·~ hether you're ieezlng, CW\nlng or preparing a fresh fruit Abd, A·C· M E~ presen11 and~ thx Just-pidced loci( and tl:lte. I And it's eoanomlal, too. One 4 Yl-ounoe bottle procecu a-m 65 pounds cl fruit. So loci( for A·C·H mr.fresh In the~ aectJon d your market. HCP ...... -.. P.O. lu l6ll, Anaheim, CA tllOJ and herbs, salt aod pep--:.. per to taste; cover with~~~------~--~~~~--~----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~--~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~--.-. cheese. Broil sandwich halves ~---------••••••1111i. 5 inches from beat unbl1 cheese melts, about 3 minutes. Makes 2 dinner sandwiches. Tip Saves Energies When a recipe calls for I cooked cluckcn, turn lo your microwave oven. A pound of chicken can be tender and juicy in 12 minutes or less. Start with 12 ounces of • chicken breasts, skin and bones intaet. Place in a 2-quart cauerole and add l tablespoon water. Coolt, covered, at IDGH for 6 to 8 minutes, turning chicken over after 4 minutes. Cool and cube, if desired. Makes l cup cooked chicken. Flavor with a sprinkle of mixed Jterbs before cooking; add sail and pepper before serving. Cook 16 oz. chicken breasts for 9 to 12 minutes for 11h cups cooked meat. Great for children and dieters. RISH SALMON s42s LI. ALBACORE FILLET s I 89 LI. FRESH RED SNAPPER S 169 LI. AND FRESH SWORDFISH ! t:Jda«Uf g1iioa. Sea ?~ 4~ I 30ttt Strfft .. ..,.... ..... Pli.67).1116 HAMS --SO Good .•• It Wll ,._.: Y w 'tll Ifs Goat•• ~ twn-7 GeMt ...... Art ...... .., SBYI A 9utCK LUtfCH w DN4B OF HONEY BAKED HAM ............. Qwlc .. ...., to .-.el • • A.-dY to Serve wltt\Honey'n Sploe Glue • Sptrtl Sliced Ffom Top to Bottom • We P~ and Ship from Coat to coeet • Full Servloe Oellcatessd\ • lmporuid Che .... ~~ ~o..rp llAMCE ,......._ ..... 4ttHt.,_. .... 014)991$ ,_.e~ IW S..14 ul lwttt , ....... 4.1 (114) &JS.2461 CORONA DEL MU 1700 I. c:-i "*Y· (114) 673-9000 PllM SPllNCS 7i'Oo Hwy. 111 "'~Mkf. WCCHO MIRAGE 014) 345-3194 ....... c• .,.,. ... t•t.• MIMUtUlAID ~63C ~ FIUIY DllNICS . --. ~ ~' ~~g •U•"""1.-..,__... •trAUNtlatMt•tOI ttw.••<...,tCW• ,.ICU lfflCTIVI WID., AUG. J TNIU lUIS., AUO. t , lt77. (,SAYE ~ s2so tMlNt :;;~ ICILLOH'S ~c 59c tt':' CHN FLAKES ••••• ,,,... -.en ~ =::.~~~~.·~ ... $~ $ J 85 .... ..,,.. . DILMOllTICUI ~c 32c ft! GRHll 8'AllS •••• ~ .... 'm • ._,,. LIQUID lll.Mc 52c ~ SIMU.AC ••••••••• ~ ........ .-. if ~l::o:.'~~~. s)ct s 1 st __ .. ~CtlllAC ~ttc ~C .. CAPSIUS ••• ~ :=::=:. ... ~12c iJt SIMILA( ••••••••• ~ ~ -.......... -....... -- ~.August3,1977 OAILY PILOT CJ3 Table Utensils Lethal Weapon? Ann Landers D RANN LANDERS Tbn 11 a leuer from ad "'oman I knuw I em dyln& beu~e I am lulllat m>wll Wtlh food, that la . I IUl'tod my autcldaJ kJck whtn l was about 10 yeara old Tbey ullod It "baby fal'' ln lboH day•. When I marrtt!d J w &hod 12.S pound.I but waa li&hllnl t•Hr)' lnrh or the way Whal a bol tle! 1 1o1111e::d only l!I 11oundii with rny flr11t pre&nan<') b«-C'aun• I (1 ll rntlt:n Alter my third ~htld wu born, it hit m~ like: 11 l.un ol hrack•. I w .. to pounds hHVll'r Tbe•re wt'rt' lot 11f f''HU'-'"' ..ii llw tlmt! 1nd I U ed them aJI. l WMa ohJtor, my rn11lubolt•m had ~hanattd Cann11 for thrr-e kid\ w .. ~ c>.hClUlitlna and I netdod food for cnt•rf(y I 11. "' u mtdloc:rc C:OOk Md had tu dt'Ptf'ld Oii fa11t loo<.!\ drld M lot Of Junk. I wu11 a Inn" v. av frorn h11rnt-und lonely for m)' parent. &11 J friend' 1''ood cuni.•1lt·cJ rnf' I v.t•nt on (•\ t"ry 1hct that <'ilO'W along I also bous:ht •JI t.h~ t1011l.:s l'h<') wnc 11.11rthlc!>S Tht" wet'1'rt came right bar" ''° 'l,011. I m :15 )c11rs old and we11th 200 l">und~ 11 ·rn ~ J 1 c.nJ lithevc me tb<i11 ·s d) in& I du.' t'\ tr) t1mP I look in lhl' mirror I die •orw when I go lc1 hu} d dn..~'i iind look in '3- ~ ay mirror I die when I lr) -t.o exerus~ and can I bend do~n bt:t·au:.e I m so fat 1t ~ e:<haustmg I Shawn Clark, Mark Smith -don·i bow bow Iona my beart can stand lbe strain. Wouldn't )'OU lhlnk au this would be enouah lO keep mt away from the retrt1erator? Well, it !sn'L I am addlcted to food. You've wntlen a lot about alcohollam and dru1 addicts. Please say bomethln1 about Foodaholics. We are just as bad II not worse I NEED A MIRACLE DEAR FRIEND: Don't wait for a miracle or )'Oil WILL eat younell ln&o an early 1rave. DO 1omethln1. I have two au11e1Uons an~ I hope you will try either ont1 -or better yet both: Get some tounkllnl( and flnd out why you are trying to kill youniell with a fork and spoon. There IS a reaaoa. A 1oo4 theraplat will help you get to the heartofthe~roblem. Nt-d give Weight Watchers or Overeaters Anonymoua a chance. Many people have had «ireat success with these groups. <Look In the phone book.> There ls "omethlng extraordinarily effttllve about the fellowsbJp and encourage· meot of otheri. who !>hare the problem. CSame ap. proach u AA and Recovery, In<'.) Drop me a line after you have gone into therapy and/or attended your first meeting. I'd love to hear from you. DEAR ANN LANDERS. 1ama17-year·old auy. A bot.at three montJu a10 m)' beat friend told me he was gay I accepted it and nothine changed -until last week when be told me he is 1n love wtth me and wants a sexual relationship. He stues at me all lbe time and makes me uncomfortable. 1 don't want to lose his friendship but I just can't go that route How dot get him to cool 1l., STRAIGHT AND WANT TO STAY THAT WAY DEAR S.: Your gay friend Is not going to cool It -so It's up to you to deal with tbe problem -and lt IS a pro.,lem, mue oo ml.stake about It. See your friend only when others are present. Eventually he'll establish a love relatlonahlp with someoae else. You wlll then be on the book without feellne you 've abaadooed bJm. Discover how to be date bail without falling hook, ltne and sinker Ann Lander:. 's booklet, Dating Do's and Don'ts." will help you be more poised and sure or yoursell on dates. Send 50 cents 1n coin aJong with a long, stamped. self· addressed envelope with your request to Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11995, Chicago, Ill. 60611. Coast Couples Engaged Clark-Sm 1th :\lark Jeffrt:y Smith of Costa Mesa ""111 clu1m ~ha11.n Kathle('n C'lark as his bride dursng Scpl. 3 ('.C'remonres In.the garden of her parents' home. Miss Clark. dau~hter of Mr. and Mr'> John M Clar;k or Ne11.port Beach, gra~uated from Corona del Mar High School and is a student at Orange Coast College. Smith. son of '\1 r and :\l rs Donnse Lee Smith of Tustin, graduated from Tustin ll1gh School and OCC and attends UCI La Haye-Miles Mr and Mrs. Judson A La I !aye of Newport Beach have announced the engagement of their d J ughter. Elisabeth Marie La lla ye, to Wilham Craig Miles, son of Mr and Mrs Wilham Carl ~hies of Van Nuyb Miss La Haye 1s a g raduate of Ramona Convent High School in Alhambra and attended R 10 llondo CoJlej!e lier fin.nee 1s an alum· South Western Louisiana. Tht•y plan to be mar. ned Nov. 19 1n Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Church, Newport Hcach • * • Maple-Lay Mr. and Mrs. Earl Ma pie or BaJboa have an nounced the engagement of their daughter, Melanie F. Maple. anrl Keith.~ Lay, son of lhe Olt vcr Lays or Phoenix They plan to marry next April in St .. /\n drew's Prcsb~ terian Church. Newport Beach. Miss Maple graduated from La Serna High Sc·hool, Whittier, and now 1s studying at Arizona Stale University where !>he 1s affiliated \\1th Pi Beta Phi. lier fiance, a graduate of Moon Valley High School, Phoenix, is a stu- dent at ASU 11. here he 1s a member of Sigma Chi. nus of Thousand Oaks ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..~~~~~~_..;::;::======:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_ ll1gh School and al- tcndt'<l the Unsvers1ty of CHRISTMAS CARDS 20°/o OFF Scorpio: Get O'rganized t1RANCI0-0RR TllURSDAY. Al'Gl'ST 4 By SYDNE\' 0~1ARR ARIES IM:irt•h 21 April 191 You overcome ohstacles. t·rt•utc new paths. TAl'Rl1S <April 20 · May 20> Fight tcndenr) to vacillate Set rnurse _ • si~hts then pn><·1:ctl 111 determined manner GE~UNI IMJy 21 June 20) Romance and lovl' DENMIS ROSEME 410 Wesr Const Hwy NewPort 6Pach 645-6470 command attention. CANCER <June 21· .Jul~ 22> Pracl1cal af· fo1rs clnmtnalc> Do your ho mt.'\~ 111 k B «!come familiar w1lh hasic is· 'oU('S LEO c.Juh 23-Au~. 221 f'le analyttl'al -rind reasons for hJppenings VIKGO 1 Aug 23-Sept 22 Be cl1pl11m<il1r. re tept1\1: Dumes t1c l'hangt.• JdJuslm1:nt oc l llrs LIBR.\ rScpl 23·0ct 22> Lie 1011. plant seeds for future rather than scl•kmg 1mmed1ate action SCORPIO !Oct 23 Nov 21.1 Ke) 1s or ganization Accept as· c,1gnment. respons1b11tty You make wonderful C'Onl acts S . .\GITTARIUS <Nov. 22 DeC'. 21 I: Persons with· mnucnce" tend to side with you. Be ronfi. <ll'nl Pl·rsonalltv sparkll's CAPRICORN <Dec 22·Jan. 19! Emphas is on property rights, taxes. ability to cul throu#:h red tape ar.d get to heart of special care sn traffic Those around you seem 1mpuls1vc, anxious Lo ex press some form of hostility Masnla1n your own balance PISCES c Feb 19· March 201· Questions <irtSl' concerning mvesl· m cnl. rentals. le<ises. hudgcl and income potential. Be flexible Funds in Store Doors Open The Junior League of Newport Harbor will be on hand to help launch the new I Magnin store at South Coast Plaza at 7 p m Fnday. Aug 19 A fall Cashion sho"" revue will be presented along wit.h music from the 1940s Proceeds from the event will be donated by the store to the Junior League's Communsty Trust Fund, wh1<'h supports the group's com· muruty projects. They include Alcoholism Advocacy, an educalionaJ and volunteer training program co- sponsored with the Alcoholism Council of Orange County, and Delhi Center, a Mex1<"an·Amencan com munlty center in Santa Ana. Other projects ~re a music enrichment pro- gram for fifth graders, the establishment or a 25-bed half.way house and counseling center for women alcoholics and developmental screenings for children between the al.!es of 3 and S. Mr and Mrs. Henry Segerstrom are honorary chairmen for the charity event. Chairman is Mrs. Stephen Nutt C1nd co chairman is Mrs. Kae Ew· ing I 11le stationery corooa del niar FOR THE SHAPE OF YOUR FUTURE JOAN DASfflELL CATHERINE BOWDOIN USE WHAT YOU HAVE NATURALLY .. NO MACHINES ONLY llOOY I MINO INOIU OCY1 Cf'ITI'1E.0 INIJMUCTOll& YOGA and CONTOURING EXERCISES no• HAA80A ·~VO ~OSTA ~UA IUlll~ I s4s-s3oo I Dear Customers. We're ciosing-1h~outlque to tor our ·CQS ·lfe:--Ttl,e n .wilf pr~m1e . IV'"'Septertjbe.r feature -our, o 1 ~of e,. new cosmetics SO fttt ~U IS OM .•. • Al Jew.try S~o '* 1.,.rtyltift9 ° ·- BAOIAOBBt s.a.i--et-,_ tlae Mclteuppot't ,_ ..... , ...... _,ort,_--1. (, .. IU I IM ltlflp' ft''w~ .... _i:. •• L 11-1""''"" t•' tibt'·il the N "•"''' • 1!h1•• Wlh• f pt•Hk•f\ t t lit lf"U _. \lhl "'' hOutWfo•..-.• ,,...,,\ ol ~· h. "'MM-' to 10" ''"' .. ~.., 1\11 \ "'J\*''I 4 f't.• 1111 II•• •t You can only feel• good u your beck doe.I.. CM,C•rty's, 1976 F>As:::IK L...100 MEDICAL MART 351 HOS'PITAL ROAD, NO 112 NEWPORT BEACH, CA 92663 1714) 642·9102 A1.ross lrom Hoag Hosp·t~• new .. MAI•.~'" CMI ~IUO<O • I t I .... , .... j ...... ,, "'•">f r.,. ....... ' .•. , .•. •'""'. ll'f•• •• It •It new ............ ti ....... .. •• NUClllC MAI• co10•1Ht ............. ·-"'• ........................... Wf HAVE • c••-.. t•tw NIW ~., .. ,. .. ,,., . .,,, .. ,._ .... ,,,., .,., "··~·--· wow b••wtt4ul' flt(( ••. ce-.oltotle-. I o"oly"• Coll for o ·~ •ittvte •P,•fllltfll•At HOWi ~L ... ,., 714/673-6650 3•3• YI• 1100. LIDO v1u•c.1. J., ,. .... 141 .. ,.0., llACN "See me for car home, life, health and business insurance!' matters Individual who More information regarding the benefit 1, •••• .,,_'"""<I ior ,,.. .. or•• can pull stnngs is in-opening 1s available from the president of the ot1r1.,.c•e1 ,.,...,, ior •••m• rv SOl'Tll ('0 .\ST \CTORS co.or I ed t k f J ' ~ r N t H bo M R d II "~ 'commerclall CAU ... llOft c in o ma e room or unsor .,.,ague o ev.por ar r,, rs. on e AovERT1S1NG AG£NC1<f1 you B Hanson, 640 1450 ~~~1~~~~<~~ ;::..,,";;.. :~ ~· A Q l' ,\ R I US < J a n ( 4) 957 0282 20·Feb l81 1-"orces tend ____________ _:~----~=~7==1~~=-=~== lo be scattered take Hemphill' s Sum"r SH·OE SAlE ,,.,. ..... IN\UI .,..., I• JJkugood neighbor, State~r1nisthctt. S••1r r.-1111 '-' •• • • " .... ~fl(fto .......... .-.,., -P-ER-so-NA-L __,Cl!J? ~~~k~f1 f~~. ~IJ nou~~?h~!i~.~~!uor rl~ U" I ~~~-e'1er1>tew...rlnon<irw«l<•llOo ~ Cell 8••~•d•lt Seti E•t.,m P"09'"lf''" 751-1334 The Total Club fer tbe T ital Woman DON'T IE LEFT OUT! LIMITED MIMIHSHIPS! • ,_,, ~ Mt_.nM,. i..tll ~\ _ _/, _ _. • ( ... ,\..,,.. ctHWle . ... .,""""1bdlll"T'""-""'" • f a'\f'\tl'n ....,,tf1U9 jl . .. __., •l1 ...... i--- LAST 3 DAYS. Broken Sizes ' •• '• • I AURORA 39c TISSUE Colon. or ""hite-111.0 n>ll perk Grape Juice • ,_ •• 89c Welch' -four~· / ounl·e canb Mint Jelly • • • • • • 39c Merv Ellen-JO ot-l(rt.'R~ with lamb C • $189 rlSCO HI. CM • · •••• , t'n.·11nl\ while nnd d1i:r~11hh·' · SOUR 59c CREAM 8pringf1eld'h dairy goodnet.ti 1 Pint . : Soft Drinks ... 6t89e Soups CUP·O·NOODUS • • • 49e • Choi~ of fi l111v11r' 1 2 01 1•up Ritz Crackers . . 79c ;>.'nl11~ro\ 1ri~p nnd hulu·ry~ 11; 111 :-------------------. APPLE : JUICE • Drmk n 1o:lni.s of hrnhh! Mo1t 'i. ~2 nz Tomato Sauce . 25e , H1ch, thick Spring!irld! No 300 can : Apple Sauce . . . &9c "' Mntt's. ju!.I longy cnoui:h! :15 01 jar , Sauce sraCHEm ••••• 59c Roi:u olfrr .. \'OU 4 kincl\1 lfi ' i 01 Jllr ; Del Monte $1 : CORN 3 for • . . .. Colden-C'rrn m, \\'hnll' I< Prrwl' No. :-10:' ~ Noodles CHOW MUN • • • 49c ; · Chun l\ing mnkri1 them cri11p! ;, 01. c11n Plastic Cups • • • 93c Sol11 l'('fi 1111 7 01. pkg_ nf fl() Joy FOii DISllS • • • • • • • gge For a nice renection! 32 oz (20o •ff) Cheer ommr ••••• s 129 Salad Dressing Hernslein's lt11lian-79# delil(hlful navor! " 16 ounce btle ,,_, ___ .... --,_ --;..~._.,.,_ ;' •• Add to the joy. of summer with a cook-out that takes a page out of history! SMALL LOIN ur.nESS LOIN LARGE LOIN · CHoPs $29! Ci:oPs . $29! CiioPS $2 5! I' , J<'reah! Weetern' U.S.D.A. Choice FRESH! WESTERN RAISED! Planninc a cook·out7 We'U llt ple11e4 to "butter· fly" your lee of lamb purdlast-the ••Y to IS· sure blrbecue succtss . . . 1t no dlarce, of course. Saratoga cut fresh U.S.D.A. Choice Fmhl Western! tJ.S.D.A. Choice lt 'a in tM book! .•• in fact, it'a in mony books! Hi.3tory records for us that, from the earliest days, man ha.<; celebrated momoroble euenb with a fea8t of lamb-roa.'ted ouer an. open (ire! Make your dtzys more memorable with a lamb cook·out! \ Ground Lamb • • 79i Freeh! .... nnd it's U.S.0.A. Choice, too! leg n1a•b ......... a ......... 1l5ll Flavor they'll appreciate. whet her you offer il from the oven or siz1ding fmm I he barbecue g-rill! Here's real pleaaure! Sausage ITALWI sTYU •• s 12! We make it the "homr-macle" wo\' LAMB ROAST Small loin \\'r>-t!•rn ll.S.l>.A. ('hoi1•e . WE FEATURE MILK-FED VEAL Tht• relll 1h111J:·-~o v1111 can he sure SPLIT 69 BROILER ~ J.nrJ(e C :rnde "A" lrvcr. wil h 1<ihlet~ Sliced Bacon ••• 512! El Unncho's thirker ''rnnch style .. LAMBr~~i-$299 ROAST ·~ Lori:<> loin-Weslern-U.8.D.A. ('hoicl.' •1rn1rarJlratwl' u.s.o.A. choice •111 . u~ r l II~ Uli I LEAN BRISKET ••••••••••••••• ·~ It Our own cure--and our selc.>ct ion of I he fil')es( lJ .S.I > A Choitt h<'<'I • .,,, ht> "llt<' you .crt the mo~l voluc an cl aatisfaction 7 Bone Roast •• 89i C'Huck cut U.S.J>.A. Choice bref 0 Bone Roast .. 99~ Chuck l'Ul l '.S. l>.A C'hoit'c heel Beef Rib 69c BONES • l l.S.D.A. C'hnicc menty' B11kc or h· h·q Ground Beef ~~~~1~ s1°~ l.<>nn ... does not exceed 22'f fol Ground Beef ~Ts 12! l>nt-11 not rxcecd Iii', lnl .. ICllOPPlD STWS'. too ... 3 lltf Ill) STUFFED RANK STEAK .$189 ·~ Oven rcndv! C'h11ice Heel' Ornwent Dre11sinic · Super Fresh Produce! Bratwurst •••••• s 12! Pork, milk-fed veal, fine seasoning! Beef Roast =s: s 14! Sh@ldrr cln<l-U.S.D.A. Choice chuck CHUCK 69c STEAK ... t'onter cut U.S.D.A. Choice beef! Pin18ppl1 FRESH FRO~ HAWAII! .••••••••• :. Mal1,1rity r~lt •.. picked to offer you the f\111 navorful goodnesa or luacioua Hawaiian fruit! Fresh 2 29c Carrots for Tender! Sweel! I lb. pllofilm bal( AVOCADOS Large site! 39# CaHrontla's own .. "· "Haas" variety l'm·c·• i11 c>f/<'ct 'J'hur11dtt,'Y II u11u~1 1 tltroulfh W<1d11<'>1dtt.Y A llJ:U11t /0 Om•n dail,\• 9 Ill 9 #oltmda,Y JO to '! N{' .~a/C'i. Ill dc•(l/rr.~ ' Sweet, juicy large California pluma .... ~ - FRESH runs! s:.;., s1•! Freah! They'll be gnat pan-fried Rex Sole. • • • • • • s2•t Fresh! They'll be arut pan-fried. Scallops ••••••• '35! Large al&e ••• from Alaakan waters Ocean-fresh goodness, filleted Cooked Shrimp s31t The right aize for coclctaila Halibut Steak •• '351 Center cut from Northern fish CRAB LEGS Deliciously meat} 1 Alaskan crab. Frozen Food GREEN BEANS C & W French or Ref{. Cut-9 oz Fiiiet o'Fish =.~ .. 69c With Potatoes or Rice-11 'h oz Waffles MT mu ••• ssc Buttermilk °' Original ..• 10 en pkg Sole Dinner •••• s 1 s~ Weight Wotchers-bil( 17 ounce pkg ·FROZEN 69C YOGURT Dolly Madison-Jive flavors-pi J • p· S139 un1or 1zza •••• Gino's Pepperoni, Sausage! pkg of 6 T aquitos U£S ••• ggc Your choice-Heer or Chicken-11 'h oz Cheese Cake ••• s 139 Sara Lee with Cre4m Cheese-17 oz Potatf)es •·IDA • • • 59c Ho!lh HrownR (2 lb) O'Brien ( J •,, lb) Buitoni 39c ENT REES l.&aagne, Monicot,ti, Ri~ Plane. or Meal. R.violi •.• ~" 01 ph. " )' .. I,, • --..., - -• ' -!I. -..... .., ~-·-·,.....--.. --............. ...,_ ..--~ ... ---...,, __ ....,.. ..,._ ---.. --... ---·~-.-CIOV4 -....,, • .,. ·--:::::.1--I .................. =-1111' ................ -... ................... , ....... __ _.., _ '" ••Jl:IOt ........ UST t1UCI ••••••.•••..••••.•••...••.•• $7417. SAYI ................................... SI ltl. OUR . PRICE 4 speed transm1s.s1on. front disc brakes. rack & pinion steering. bucket seats. ·cut pile carpeting, m1n1 console. electric rear window defroster. steel belted radial ply tires. wheel covers. 2.3 liter 2V engine. front & rear bumper guards. Stk. #1060 Ser. #187325 GAS SAYER! MEW 1977. F.O.RD S.. .-:1"'-f't (llJIWO ,,_h OGwei' hOf'\I d•IW p,,.-.. IJ(Jw9r ,...,""4 dl,ect ... -..hf ... '"''"' ~' 00 V .. enQ•,...1V ..,,,. reid'·ti t.,. C*uu•• ~°"' 9'0\ICJ AM 1..-0.. !onled q< _ _,,_ s .. 112•• s.. 111209 LIST rRICE ••...•...........•.•••..••.• $5866. SAVE .•••..••.•.•••••..••.•.•.•.••••..• $ 731. MUSIANG II OUR PRICE 55135 HEW '77 FORD GiHGfADA J DOOI SIDAM W'\"4 004'"t tw'1)M .,,,, O'f mold•"t:f' OOH• ~ ootar~..,. O* ~ ..... WOOdtO"lll .,., ~ tC'OllC1"9 7"tO C•O I. lllf'tlQtne-tV •ect•ftlflt Cl'~IC' WSW ,.,._, t1rM ~ tt~nq O')W9t ftt'W'tt d"K btek• oetu•• ~ gr_, ttmtd ,, .. oo: ••t11 Stk '1•2• """ t 2't'°7 LIST PRICE ............................ $4991. OUR PRICE 53tl9 SAVE ................................... $ 451. · Cloth and vinyl seat trim -Color-keyed cut pile carpeting -Lockable gfoye box -Flipper rear quarter windows -Bright wheellip moldings -Limited edition p1okage -Speclal ~e ai.ertng wheel -Bodyslde paint accent strlpet -4.styled a\eel wheels w/tnm rings -Narrow vinyl 1nwt bodyalde moldings -bright window and belt moldings -302 CID V~ engine -Select-shift cruise-0-matlc -PC>Wef steering -oower front disc brakes.- Front and rea< bumper guards -tinted glass -Complete Stk. 111111Ser.1150157 OUR PRICE .a.t.NADA Z DR. V-8. auto tranL. factory aif conditioning. oower steering, Power disc brakes. radio. heater 111ny1 roof. Ucense l~tMWO Stock l3028 '75 FORD LTD 4 DR. VS. auto. trans • factory air. oower steering a brakes. heater. (135t<t2l Stk. 12e~ ... Hardtop • speed transmission contourPd bucket seats cut pile Ca'1>et1nQ sound 1nsula11on oackage.· qauges. wheel covers. wlslW tires Poweir rack & 01nlon steering oower front disc brakes tinted glass front & rear bumper guardS Stk =0929 Ser =1131428 '77 FORD DEAL DIRECT ~ND SAYE"' .... 4 CUSTOM STYUSIDE PICKUP ' 300 CID engine chrome lront bumper full foam Hat, folding seat back. dome tamp. seat-knitted v1nyi. ammeter1e>11 pressure gauges. pawer steering dual brlgl\l swing lock mirrors cigar ll91'1ter e1Ctra cooling radiator 8 OOX16 5 D 8PR. spare wheel 16 5 X6 0 wtcarner S • #T1483 Ser. •205553 OUR PRICE COURIERS READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY EXAMPLE SA VIMGS: EO'UIPPEO WITH· , 106 9 Inch wheel baH 1800 cq engine vanable ratio manual steerlny oower trol'lt disc brakes bright front bumper 6-lt pickup box 4·spd manual trans wsw tires. Sii< IH212. Ser #U07882 OUR PRICE b " ... TIO -' " • .. ..... ..... .,.. " ' ...... ..J I J • 4 • A 7t A A 7 r : . A n A "' A A ,. " A A A ,. J I 7 1 ~ > I 7 . 7 ') 1 ' ' ' ; _,.,... ................ . YOU AREN'T INVITED!" :.&1• ,. WKY WINKERBEAN .,,, .. TANtc McNAMARA ~TA~ K»l rM OOTA ~66.Mf.fC'p? ™I? ~ Mr'°"" JM FIGUTI . I ptcL,ARi: ,.i<'AYo •. you1Re <SETTING MORS 1..11<e YouR L>NCt..E: w11.1.1c: EVERY [:1AY ! ~~~:TODAY'S CIDISIDID PUZZLI UNITED Feature Syndicate GORDO ..... .... . ,. by Tom htiuk by Ftrd and Tom JOhnson we'~~lH~ ~ECOTMi iyP57 MAM1e ·· Wfi DBI.EGA,.~ ReiPONSl'1LlTf. ,, -. -· _..,.. -bY Wm. F. Brown and Mtl Cla.on 1~jf Al51 ~ § ~6 '7AY' OlJtz I cHt~1MA6 f 8tLLS CO/AD'~ J I DR.SMOCK SORRY', MRS. ASPfAMS, e u ,. MSc>ICARe .JUS~ wout..PN'1"" I NCt..uc>e "T"He! COS'T" OF PAVING l'T" oveR ! MOTLEY'S CREW !ML, WU N5.M< '44MP wttt~ 1 ~D 1H6 CAt.t.p6~. . PEANUTS ~ ~ . by Chirles M. Schulz by Roger Bradfield by George Lemont by Templeton and Forman -------...,. MIS \\ON'1 t..C1' W:. FtNlf)H/ THE GIRLS A ·90881 A-90862 A-90893 A-90826 A-91047 A-91048 A·91089 77"'3-021 Pll8U N011C~ •• •1mnoweaut1NM .......... Al '" ,,..,al_•,.,._.,.., ....... f OUNfY w•o ,.,., ,,,,, o ...... ·-an&. .EJ ~= ... o!L: 1-.5·77 1-12·77 1-5-77 t-7-77 1-11·77 1-5-77 1·H7 1-21·77 1.17.77 1-21-77 1· 13-77 1·2S·77 1·25-77 1·25-77 1·27·77 1·25·77 1·28·77 l-21·77 2·2·77 2·7·77 2·7·77 2·7·77 . 1· 3.77 1· 5-77 7.15.77 2·16·77 2·17-77 2· 9.77 2·28-77 2-28-77 2-28-77 2-28-77 3· 2·77 3. 3.77 3·11 ·77 3· 8·77 3.1().77 J.17-77 3-16-77 J.22·77 3·23-77 3-17-77 3-28·77 3-79-77 J.2'-77 J.18·77 J.18·77 4. 1-77 J.18-77 J.18-77 3· 11-77 •· 7.77 4·11·77 4-13-77 4·12·77 4-'Zo-77 4·12·77 .C-25-77 '·25-77 4-25-77 4-'Zs-77 4·22·77 •·22·77 s-3.77 5-6-77 5-5-77 f.2S·77 s-2·77 s-.. 77 S-17-77 S.1 .. 77 S.12-77 S-19-77 s.1a.n S-1 .. 77 S-10-77 s-1t-n .S.19-17 ~s1.n 6-2-77 6-6-77 .. 6-77 Hl-11 S.26-11 ""3-17 5-25-77 .. .. 77 6-14-77 1-11·11 s-31·77 .. ,,.77 .. 11.n I UI H $60,0IO.OO 3Q4.S4 23,673.69 746.S. 622.12 131.67 286.00 587.60 49 . .C4 1.086.50 1,260.27 1, 151.61 S.1q11.oo 3,687.48 15,000.00 2.982.86 1 JS0.00 18,621.00 69b.89 797.75 1291. l9 .55 412.00 150.03 1,561.15 1,983.00 665.98 14,752.00 386.91 276.51 211.38 187.79 29.87 988.00 440.82 4,70t.SO 1,764.21 2,034.43 4,4%.01 889.07 1.257.56 18'.14 1,541.00 190.60 507.02 1,274.00 2,186.83 38,966.81 933.59 628.C)() 11,357.00 20,478.69 163.00 24,442.38 2,095.84 190.54 1.085.31 9,843.S. 7,571.00 6,'69.91 26.234.00 U9 s.ss 1,630,.U 1.00 4,064.00 1,075.00 329.13 564.26 304.11 296,00 14,52Ut 175.6' 696.2' ~:= .C,100.00 1•u1 } 1 e• jl! ~I! ">-c u•-S11,5S5.93 lCM.54 :3.673.69 746.S' 672.12 131.67 276.00 587.60 49 . .C.C 1,086.50 1,260.27 1, 151.61 5,799.00 3.687.48 578.53 2.982.86 -0· 14,714.10 6%.~ 797.75 1291.19 55 52.SO 150.03 ~no60 -0- 665.98 386.91 276.51 211 .38 187.79 29 87 988.00 440.82 614.08 1.288.71 2.034.43 4,496.01 889.07 1.257 56 188.14 ..(). 190.60 507.02 1, 111.29 2,186.83 38.966.81 1~.59 6 ,90 868.50 20,478.69 163.00 -1lt,.4),.,96 2,095.84 190.54 1,085.31 S,852.51 6,021.94 5,632.413 10,441.00 4.89 s.ss 1,630.42 -0- 2,452.93 S'4.SS 329.13 564.26 304.11 296.00 2,017.'6 122.16 IS 9.20 *-51 203.21 68U6 2,23t.• 1,124.9' 64.12 1,131.40 8.66 -0- ·O· 810.28 10.56 2.921 .50 1,709.07 434.03 1 794.86 .(). 3,138.53 285 68 490.01 459.66 -0· 6.06 -0· -0· -0· 49.62 885.30 386.91 -0· 20.19 ·O· O· O· 299.99 19.46 848.62 781.SO 764.30 800.00 364 00 170.08 -0· 1. 16 17.89 76.09 13?.93 35.00 7.SO 37.0 117.30 95.90 18.90 797.26 175.13 16.53 8.29 ' 615,?S 360.06 2.020.08 2.540.35 •• ·0-ttt.6' ~ .()· -0- -0- 11.70 2.26 .a. 111.30 7 . .50 "°" -0-1s._: ,.. 9'.30 56,56 SUS I00.00 .0- 355.00 Ii -se '1i $S,AS2.S7 30"'54 22,633.27 .(). 383.•7 131.67 276.00 578.9.C ~ .... 1.('86.SO 4'9.99 1, 1'1 .OS 2,877.SO 1,978.41 1'4.SO 1.188.00 .().. 11.MS.57 411.21 ~7.74 831.53 .SS "·" 150.03 970.60 .().. 616.36 13,'84.37 ·O· 276.Sl 191.19 187,79 29.87 988.00 140.83 59.C.62 '4009 1,252.93 3,731.71 89 07 893.56 18.06 ..(). 189 4.C '89.13 1,035.20 fiGS3.90 31,931.81 131.09 591.77 751.20 20,382.79 1'4.20 13, 177.70 1,'20.7' 174.01 1,077.01 5,237.26 5,661.88, 3.612.8S 7,902.65 4.81 S.58 l,510.71 ..(). 2,452."3 5'4.5S 329,i 54.S. 302. • 296.CJI 1,9'f0.6' 1106 3'S.7t 33.20 1at.3' t .2C) 184.51 tOUt 627.70 ~117.2) 324.9' 6411 713.60 578.94 49.~ 1,086.50 4'9.99 1, 141.05 2,877.SO 1.;z8.41 14, S.97 1, 188.00 1.350.00 1S,'89.47 411.'21 307.7' 831.53 .SS 405.94 150.03 1,561.1S 1,983.00 616.36 13.866.70 .().. 276.51 191.19 187.79 29.87 988.00 140.83 4,682.04 91S.S9 1,2SV13 3,731.71 89.07 893.56 18.06 1,S41.00 189.44 '89.13 1,197.91 2,053.90 38,931.81 926.09 591.17 11,239.Jt 20.382.79 144.~ 23 .... 5.17 u20.n 174.0t 1,077.ot 9,128.29 7,210.CM 4J.49.a 23,493.65 5.81 5.58 1,510.7' 1.00 4,064.00 1,075.ot m.tt S4S ... I02..SS 296.00 1CAQI." 161.14 ~ 4 .20 111.00 ~;-·00 1au1 3,199.9' 627.70 2,171.22 32A.96 641.11 814.9' PUBLIC NOTICE OttOINANCE lfO. I COSTA Iii.SA !:NTY •ATWai>ltTalCT OMIANC• PllOMl•tTI ... WAi ~WATRll BE tT04tOAINEO IV THE 90All0 OF OlltECT'O~ OF COSTA MESA COUNTY WATElt OISTlttCT AS FO~LOWS: S&CTION 1. '1MOINOI. Tiii ... ,d ot Directors ot C..la -Couflly Weter Ol*kl ...,..., flt* _. • "'""ret9>111: 4. '* OIWICI. It•..,._....., -~'"' ... CGfttltllr ..... •111...i -.,...,. ._....._ eutal4lt OI• ltlcl~;- • Mefty _., "' ............ ., ••VllV-IM.._ tllWCft llllt Ofs-tr>ct ,..,lft_; _ C. .,...,..,, lor "-~ wet.r v••• hM -\Utnleftllelly bet- __. '" IN •--.ff WPOIY"" ,...._ ..... ._.,, • ..n_ ;..eutM •lllcll '' cev•lltf ••le• _,,..., '" ,_, (_ ........ ,_ -.. _""_ ....... -.. -O. 11-t ~ wll\ UU. NI Oltll't(t, th ..... Wftfi. IMN,...IH -"'*9~ tt ~ -ty M<eUW m tMrt .... '" ao<1t1>1t.-Ind '"' duttrl .. ft*IUCIS .,.., e«• '"utllr'IQ !ft .. ....., .,., -m unemotoy • mtftt ....... _ ... K_,.lc K • 11v1•1a1 mw•re11 •'""•Ide""'· .. • C ... te<tl*l(e, ... KllV9 Wtler COfl• wn1•ll"" 0<09'•"' It ...... 11.1 10 oro. IKI ~tdnluQl'it, -lletoettavl•te ,,., .... dt-••=-E. kif"" ..-1111>,.H<HI I" 11111 Section. Ille 8""11 of Olrec:lort flflft ,.,. will•.-orOhlbli.d -rettrtcl· ed t>v Olis °'din.nee'° lie _,.u.,.llet -, ......... """ 11••1 fll(" e>rOhlblllon •nd rtttrlcllOflt ••• • ru•o.,el)fa ,,,_Of tmo.......,.'"9 • wi\er c- "'""""" --•• eUllle<lrtd 11'1 Section JIQlj of ,,. C.llfornla w.1., C-lhr""'I'> rutes elld •9fJut•lloM ffrmHtM 11'1 5-<tlon JIOU of Ille ce111-.. w.i .. ~ secnoe. t. ot!PINITIONI """ .... OU~d !fllJ~ •• Ille IOllOW- lr>q ........ Ofl•--tfl -their .. ,,,,,._ ,,..., ...... .,,. 'M..,lftt ~-..... , ... -""''"'°"''''"'' """ , ... COfll•llt.-eJUMCl lntlWDl'_,,I.._ 1...:1..-the lutuoe. _.., '" .... °'"' .. ~ lllCtudt h M"'Jul"' ~. el>d -* In the """""' rtutnll_, i. cha ttie o1.ir11 """'*". n.. _... "t!MlllH Js .... ..,, ~ - -"-"""__,,· A. "Ol'1rltr h tlla CIHtt ,... Couftty ., ..... °'"'let. ···~,-·..----. _.,..,,...,.,_. .. ...,,c "'"'· ~l9fl « OOW•"'"•"ltl .. --· ..... --~ . , PU111JC NOTICE dey lllV lll01a110ft 1111 Wt Onllnenee It commlll.S ~ .. m1llted lo contl,_ \l\ellCDMi!Me•--'·-· "'" 0'111.....a '"'" .. 9'lforcM In tM 1o1iowmo-: PUBUC NOl'ICB .. .., --................ "' I. FOi ,._ flrtt ¥f•llfon bY - CUI._ Of .... ,rovltlont of , .... ()rdlN11tt, Clot Gtflerll ~ NII IHut i. tlll CW'-r I Wftlle<i llOtke llMl"t tllf f«U COl't~ vloi«lefl encl weml111U. ~IOOKlsl. t.,.. totGOfld ~lq<\ 11'1---~~~~~-""'.'---· cu•1-ot tlle ~SI-of ""' •ICT'l1.IOUS9UllQU Onfl-9 wftlllll • -"-Utl ~ fer mo11tll oerloct, tlll Oe11er• ~--11 IJ-· w'4n.<t .. ~ .. NOna•aUUC'ntAMIN• ... , .... .,u.c.e.> TOWMOMITM.llVCONCl"Nt NOTl(9 IS ..... .., OIVll ... .,_ OMlllB .. ~ <n•N•I, IMC., A q.t~ ~ .... '""'''-• ..................... 0 ........ _.,..._,~~CIMIMY-~ .. i ... Q!t ................ " .... " ..... _ .. ltoecMI •HTAU~ &NC., Ii c.1 ..... a Clll ......... ,.......,.., :::'u .... .... "'*"~---.....,. .... Me.to. ..... -..: .. or.. • . "'1·11 PUBLIC NO'l'I~ Nirics h•Vln~ aaos ..... IQtlt ..... 11'1~-"*'"'...,., If l"*-..... c. .. ~ .. ~11 ... OOll•kt " o....,. Coloflt-t. ''"""' ...... ,..,.,. _...,"""' ... I• W• t M' Tll\rrW9f, •-t 1'. ..n;,, 1119 "'"~ ~-.... --....,, Mcjlllff at I~·--- ,. tor., A IOCi• Saelud!•• ~ta tab· aJ, aocto1o11c:aJ and op c:al &ljJtt \I. .W '-Clfrend atOraqe e..t Coll • Utlt ,.u. Tovla co be eo DC'i the joy of 1port. wtnn!u and loliq. tb• ~ 1an. tbo radkal ln m. 'Sport.I structure, tba .,ltn:k athlete, women es, the a ·athlote motl•aUoo of lh• et.. • 1'lie alx-unit COUJ'H la • ually two ctaH ... ltiJb 100 will meet ~ 1 ;31)..lO a.m. llon- ,IY. Wednesday and P'ri· ••1. followed by "tbjsical Education 283 fioln lG-11 a.m. Students must enroll in both courses, accordin1 f6 loatnactor Herb Uney. RegistraUoo for fall closes runs Au1. 24· Sept. 18 at the OCC ad- milaion office. Cluaes ~in Sept. 12. FOr ree·. l§fration information, P.1>ohe 5:'i6·5735. l'IJBUC Heme• PUBUC Nones • PUBLIC NOTICE 0 a eww• PUBUC NOJICB 11"/Hlt P\lblllhtcl Or..,.,. CO.st 0.lly PtlOl, July u, 20. 27 •nd •uv111t l, 1911 JO?l-17 PUBLIC NOTICE Coast Women Eitrn Degrees flCTITIOUI ausu1111 H~·STATIMIHT lM "'''-1119 _. •r•dol"ll IMill· -----------1·--...,-CT-.-Tl-OU-,-.-u.-.-.. -.-IS--... "r:; TllAVEL Pt.ANNEllS lb) puaL1c NOTICE llAMllT•T•MHT Two Oranee Coast TAA'llEL PU111111eAsOFN&wP01n -----------... ~ .. ~'-'no.,...~•r•llolftl- d aEACH. \400 O..lt Str.et. $411te 110, SUP'IRIOllCOURT women have earne NewpMlleecll,c.lllomlaHMO O,CAU .. 0.fUA SUHSMINU4AIRC0 •• 12m ...... degrees at the Untversl· ~ 1111111 ,.,___.Mee..-... ~...,..,o,ou1101 •1.,. .C1Mte11MM.CAtft11 J7 .. Viste~ • .....,_. le.cfl, *CICClllWO.W.Wfft Mrtl• Wllll-ed, t:t• AttMta lY or Mi.saouri. C.11""'""'*' .......... ~ IL ............... 8Nctl,CAm. T"'-~fl ceMUcW..., .. ~ c.u. NU,_. •• 0.1~ c...!..--.. ,.e.;..~'"· 5* V'ffr. w..,. f\nne Campbell 33112 aiv1-• 5U~11MAa••A•11 ·-~ --• ,.~.._~C«lll• ... , ... ~ ........ 1115-: Tiii• -1 ..... ,, <MW<ted ., • 'Marina Vista. Dana ™• net-·,;,as ·-·..;11.ft·e. Lou.-111E •·Lawis -s "-...,., .. ...,.....""',.. Point, received a muter c.-1yo.rt1•0r-~unJ111y Wflt:VALOIHl!l1w1s ,_,.,...WN_ JS, ltn. NOTlall v ..... ,.. ... _., Tiie llllt ti.et-wet fll.S wlflt tl>e or science degree, and l'1'3M _,.,. -.y ~ ...._. ,.. ......,. c-tv o.n., 0r-. ~ 90\ ""'' fyplhla S. Silverman, Put>lkhll 0r.,. eo." oe11y P1191. ..,.. ....,. .._... -,.. ,.....,. "· "n ill Yorktown Lane, 1_J_u_1Y_,_,._.,.._...._ __ ~_._1•_._17_·'-"_7_~ __ n_1w1t11111 ••ya. ...... i...A M»• .....,......., °'-eoett o.i.,,"::: Costa Mesa, earned a PUBLIC NOTICE ._~~io1 u.w11e.._.__,_·'' A119 >.t0,11.t4,"77 11•n bachelor of science ........... ~ fM'* ~"· u•. '"' -----------...._,.. - -u-. ·--deeree in education. ,.crmoui '"'"Hu& .. "',.. • • ..._ LN a. ~'"' HANlaSTATIMINT _ ..... . tl TM lo•-•"9 ~r-I• 00•"9 DUSI• 1. To ....... ,..,,.,., lk• leol• ,..H•• note•>: If> ... ~ee wr0.~ SUNDOWN SERI/ICE CENTEA, a. ThepeUlloMrlle1!11ffapetlllot1 • ~ " 1 -1'7tl BN<ll lltYd , H""llft91on Be1c11. cOMemi"9 yow ,.,.,,,_. vou fNY CA92.... 1111ewrll•"'f*'Nwll1'111• .. .-. .. C'r'• I lynt\e Koehler. IS11 Mul.,.rry. INCIMetlwltllla-..1•--.,. C.' 1 :,Peborah Lorr a ne· v111end.CA Woll· tuce, dauehter of Mr. ,,, .. .,...1ne .. 1s condu<t..s by.,."" 11. 11 veu 1a11 io ,, .... ,,.,..., d M R b t M •1v1•1111. ,._wtthlftM1Cllllme,vourclef ... 11 an rS. 0 er •• lYnlleKoelller meylleemend-li.(-lmay- ' Rice, 33941 Nautlcus Tiiis ····-· •• , llflld wlfh tlW • ,.,...._ contalAI"' fnj....ctl ... or Isle, L""''"a Niguel, baa County Cltr11 of Or~ COIJnty on July ...... ~CAWIC••AlntdlvisMriet ... . _ _. 4, ltll. perty, _.. 9UPPOrt, dlild C\lllOll'(, D eraduated from "11m <lllki ~ ........... '"S. '""· Coll with Pvtlllsllef Ora"91 CoHt Dally PllOI, .... ~relief •• ,..., ... .,_ 008 ege, 8 JUlyU,20,27.-&upust3.1t17 bylfw-1.WIW<llcouldrnulllnh ee in theater arts. ----------~-'"'-n-1 ..,,.,.....,. • ._., 1•1.,.eo1 _., _.,.. _________ , «pr-1y,or-rellef, laUBLIC NOTICE __ P_UBU ____ c_N_an __ c_E __ I ... ~::.·.=..~:.:.: -----------.... ,,...uy ..... .,.. _._ ,.CTITIOUlaUSllllU '1CTIT10USIUSIHHS -... -• ....., ........ ....... NAMl$TAUMINT llAAllllTATINIENT ~F*-YU,tm ~fOl-119peooftU•tclcMftlMIJ>· ~":s~lftg ~Is CIOlt19 b<N-Wlll,l~IE.STJOHW. "'":::.-re11 OAVS,)IOOW .. tWer..., STEVENS AHO ASSOCIATES 3:!r-·. ,..,,._.s.ni.AN.CAflllM ~~!~~!\~~t Ce11ter Or~ DejlMty ~. ,J J l " w. If>< • • C•llltwftl• Ale herd Harrr Steve•u. us CSeAU ~etloft, tn Min-o ..... co.t• ,..,,.... •• Pl •• eo.1a ,....,., u. t1'27 ...:,:; :':: ,:'!,';.'::; !:":'~': WM,C•lllornletM». Tlll1 buliM$S I•~ lly Ml lft. twrn~..,hc.llforftla ..,._. Thi\ -lneM b c-.CIM .., a Cor· dMOOMI. of c.wt. TNy .... f!W IA Wt por.lloft flkNrd H1,,y ste-1 rt w1 ,_..., JJl&W.IHC. Tiii• AttMw11 -llled witll IN HU Ill tlle ..,_, lll!Re fee - , Jovu HllQNa OOUnly Oen. d OraAga County on Jiiiy ,,_.. ef Mnllcltef •a.,irof MdtM ,.ii. Sec.....,., U. lffl. ~. n.t .... llfllffta-1•• T ~ ·~-I w .. ~11.S woltl ,,_ ""'4 etTlff ....... ell a "*1Y _, 'HfY ... ... Clln al Or CM#ll ,....., .... en Ille ......... ef •rvlu. F., C o.i11,, ~ Yon Jiiiy P\llllltllld Or...-GMlt Delly PllOI. ,_.,..._C~l'41 ltUlr ....... 41S.._ l l.lltl1 J\llyl1,alldAuou1U, t0, 11, "11 .IUDITitA.• .. • l"l•Jt ,.,.,.71 ,jl'lflllNd Ora"91 CeHI Delly ... lot. 11M•.~A- 1•f.20, 11, and AU9l,10, lt71 30,.,.17 PUBLICNOTIC& =:_CA..,. ',; Ttl: C1MlllJMM1 .. : PUBUC NOTICE A...,_,"",_...... v f'ulllllNcl Or ... Cot1t Oetty PMet, PUBUC NOTICE "CTITIOUS aUSINIM llAMS&TATIMSlfT Tiie follow! .. ,.._., ....... _, . ....... :. MATROHICS MANU,AC· TUlllHO, IMOE.e...,.SulleC.Set'I· teAN.~'110S -Cl ,,,._. ...... c.ri> ••• Celllomla ,_.,.,.. .. , .... IUI e. Id· ....... lameAr>e. U.'1105 • Tf111 lluliMla II Ci9MUCled by e <Of· poretloft. MAT..o!llCS INTERHATIOMALO)AP. _.,,Olin.pr" ...... Thl1 stM-•• flttd --c-1y 09'1! o10r-~ MJwr n ,1n1. l'"'1J "'*' .... ar-Cent Oeily ...... a.,.. I. IO, 17. 24, 1977 n.2-n PUBUC NOTICE •• ., • l'ICTITIOUS IUllNHI v ' NAMISTATINllHT Jvtytr.-.....,.. •• 1t, 11, 1tn ano-n 1-...------------i '(ttAe to110w1no ~''°"' '" fOlf\O bu1I· ,..ues; P0RSCHI! PAllTS OllSOll!Tf, ,~r1 ,.PUBLIC NOTICE o~, !., ,.a1n&ii au1111n1 &I.,~,• NAM&nATIMaNT ... _.,. ........ •r• ..ine !lull· ISi t • ... ~ANCAITIA S H•AO· OOAATEltS, MN IMcft lllHI~ HUii!- PUBUC NO'nCE PUBUC NOTICE • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y · p I L 0 T CONVENIENCE! This beautiful horne wlth S bclrms .. 3 baths. dining rm. & an all new kitchen. ts in Newport Beach. but its conventence is out orthls world! Easy walk to Catholic & public grade s~hoots. CdM High School. Boy's Club. shopping, swimming pool & tennis courts. & a view too. S1't4.000 833-9781 Hester-Brown REALTORS HAllOll VllW -S 17' ,500 Beautiful near-new "Palermo" model with 4 bdrms. lge family rm w/wet bar & formal dining. Complete new landscaping being installed in rear yd. Near shopping, pool & tennis cts. A great family home. You own the land! 2~ PORT LERWICK Thurs. 1-S NEW EXCLUSIYI -UDO ISLE Beamed ceilings & warm earth tones enhance the beauty or this lovely 2- story home! 3 Bedrooms. family rm. • •• ,r If ... GeMr.. 1002 & 3 baths. Lge south patio + north mc>RS: AclYertfMf'I •••··~··•••••.......... patio. Prof. decorated, lush near-new cptng. Van Luit papers. S27Q.OOO ....., cMck Mr ods IALIQA ISLAND 521 VIA LIDO NORD Open Thurs 1-S daly md report ..,. · 1411 OPPORTUHfTY 2 I 11 SC11t J~ tmt lCNld · rwt ._clahty. The Leue wtt.b opUoo, 2 aep. NEWPORT CINTY, M.1. "44-49 I 0 DAILY PILOT CtuUIMt bousea for the price 0111•---------------l.wlty forthe flrtt In-one. Lease 3 4 den G9Mf'Cll 1002 GetMf'OI 100% « -.----& 1uerffott Oftly ch41'mer, 2 story, oew • , ~ • kitchen, then option both ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••, .• --------1 foronly~25,000. SolarHeateod,ool GREAT ;, P\tbllahtr'1 Notice: All real eatnte advertised In thla newspaper la sub· Ject to the Federal 1-~a1r Houain& Act of 1968 which O\akes it lUegal t advettlae "any pre· fe~ce, llmitatLon, o diacrimlnaUon based race, color, religion, aex or. oatlobal orisln, or a lntentlon to make an auch preference, llm1ta ·tlon. or discri mia.Uon.'' 1bil newspaper will no knowlnilY accept an advertising for rea estate which ia 1n viola Uonofthe law. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Gwral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •TRJ..PLEXIS •FOUR-PWES Available. Sunse Hei1hta and downtown Huntinaton Beach. Good tax shelters le apprecia· · tlon. Priced Hom 1165,000 to $24.5,000. Call for details. REALTY INC. 714/146-1371 BALIOA ISLAND Large 2 story COlta Mesa STARTER HOME! . · 4 bedroom home. Heavy Thia 3 bdrm charmer 11' LEASE shake roof, custom brick perfect for the yoW>g $4SO Month winter. Mov· and tile work. Gas BBQ couple atan.lni out. Huie e-ln before school starts Low maintenance yard encl'd back yard for the Hurry, owner moved to hltle onea Tt'/lemon & Canada and mual aell! oranie trees. Bicycle Priced only $82.500. Sub dutaoce to the beach • mil your terms. Call ~7711 ., · IACKIAY Fantaatic custom home for a large family. 4 Bedroom, 3 bath+ rum· ~~+den+ fa.ml· .. UFFS FINEST JUST REDUCED Great family home, huge playroom or 5th bedroom. Fa ntaJtic greenbelt view. Enclosed patio with firepit. The Bl uf Ca finest. NEWPORT SHORES Two hard to find, side by side bomes. Take your 546-SIB>. [r:~=,J•'", 'm"••1"H•g•1•a111•4•1u1· Real &It.ate ' ;~~HERITAGE • • REALTORS WESTCLIFF IAYROMT Sltl,000 pick. Pri~ ba)'(root location on Balboa. Gorgeo\11 z Lovely trad1t1 o nal story. Parquet. entry. home-perfect setting Huee Jlvln1 room. for your antiques and/or RaJsed hearth fireplace. fine furnishings. Tiled View kitchen. Ciaot entry, custom stained boousroomw1lbwetbar • glass win41ows, shutters. Circular iron staln:ase to perfectly manicured master ault.o" magnlfi· yard large enough for cent bay view. Large pool. 3 Bedroom home front pallo. Steps to with formal dining beach. Amuattosee.lm• room-move in condt· mediate occupancy. Call , __ tloo-just the home for a 752·1700oowi 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, • .., ,...,;olfamUy, $19',000. """" •." ""' ooa ..,, l ~~g~ru ~l:~:rr ltlJljlJI . . . . . .,,, Cozy le comfy 3 bedroom ,,,,.._,.._......,,,.._........_.,,,......, W ALI( TO cf & den with additional IEACH! ~ ~1,!S. ~ ~ m: CORONA DB. MAR From~ c bdrm 2 beth• 0 DUPLU w/dlnlnarm.Laraefam~ Lovely duplex. each un1l room w /coovel"lalion pit having 2 bedroolllll each. & fireplace. ~ mile~~ Walk. to beach. Pnced to ocean on quiet eol-de+. · -~-~ ,, . sell. sac. Profeufonally ------i-:":-1 l). ..--landscaped. Real pride LUXURY "' ••• ll I of ownership homo.· ::~l:.02 ~~1 _BaJboa __ .. _6..,:~_r_":_,_ ... 1_0-_~ __ 'Y-·-----.. --, ~ih111Na•afat · w/26' open beam ceil· SIMP'Lf Real Estate l n I 1, tl 1 e entry • IUGAHCI tlnplace, wet ba.r, laun· ~THEILU...,.S. VETEttAM drJ room, overalsed dou· ,.. "' HOUSING SERVICE ble 1ar, 3000 aq. ft. of New exclusive offerin1 Call your local Veteran wry unique llvln1 space. features tile entry I total· Counselot for Info. on VA $158,600. ly remodeled kltctien, home loans. call: J.a.COIS Rll!&LTY goP11ous view and Bkr ...... 7777 "•HRS ~ ~ hl1bly upgraded tbisi--···.,_.--···""--•· 111 675-6670 homelaspoUessllleveey ----- $1.61Jler DAY That's ALL JOU 1191 fora 30da7acl in the DAILY PILOT SERVICE DIRECTORY DO rr JilOWI detail and is truly a de· llgbt &o view. This won't Don't drop the ball! Get a Wt. C.11today67841550. job with a low-cost Dally --------- Ol'fN Ill 9 • ll'S tUN ro• Nicf• Pilot Classified Ad. f1Dd what 10d want iq Phone 642-5678 Dall.1 Pilot Clualfieds. MBA DB. MAR Lure 4 bedroom with secluded muter suite separated from tbe chlldrens area of this apacioua home. Thia one haa it all. Gourmet kitchen & adfolntn1 faD1ily room. Electric 1ara1e opener, double oven & built·inl. Brick fireplace & its all o•er· looklnf Costa Mesa's lu1ea p~rk. JU.aOO. CALL~2660. C:SELECT' -ye' PROPERTIES .. .. . -.--' - v -............ ·s.. tto.s..ForW. • .._ • ..._ ...__ , •••• .. •••••• .... ,....,.,, ...... _ ........... -'.W!ct......,.AapQ!t?. ""1 * DAll.YPl.O'f M .._. -.._.,.,... a ~ I 00 u_...;.11t..:.-• ' • -............................ _ .. _ ..... ,. 1 ...... 1 , .... 1001 ._..,_..s. .......... s. ..................... . ...... ···········-······· ............ .. . -M ao:n•.. 1002 •-111 ••-•••••••••••••••••-' "'11 • ·~-"'''"1••••• .... ,. ••• , 111111 •• ........... •-•••• -··••••-• .. •••!~2 ... u--....IYOF llACHSllCW. C:-.W.. 1124 C...Mllle • 1014 IWI al•tMa I ··~~~ .... 111119 ..... ________ • ,, --.,AD ~1:1~·y;.~=!: ....... m_;;t;"•-•• ~" ;·;;; .. ~··; . . ••&MT ... •OOC 411AMADA S.llnu River. Pountain Valley St.29.800 Esquistte 5 bedroom 2~ bath prcstlse bomev-n-: lD hlthly desirable P'o.untaln _, loeaUoo. Community pool. end of cul-de·J&c features private sun dec'!t off master bedroom. formal dlninc. ~nd huge family room. ~rofeas aona ll y decorated & l•ndseaped. Please call 963-8311 · SIA5W.S & SIAWllD 81'1 l'Gt Hall Dr. Huntingtoo Beach P • 161.900 nee just red uced on this 3 bedroom. l 'f.a batb. s urfside townhouse. Homeowner and investor ·financing available. Walk to the beach. schools. and shopping. This i!; a~ sq:ft.. home. double garage and bnck patio. 963-831 L LOOK HBll ~Cornwall Huntington Beach Ch . $56.950 armmg 3 bedroom. 1 lh bath condo Features fresh paint & tasteful wallpaper. Warmly paneled living r oom and dining room new selC-cleaning double oven in kitchen. Handy to .all shopping and public transportation. For more information call 963-8311 IALIOA PIHIMSUl.4 DUPUX S~SeasboreDr. Newport Beach $189.900 Buy something that pay" it's own wav • for a cbang~. Summer rental 2 & 4 bedroom units at the most popular beach on the Orange Coast. Live at th& beach or pul your money to work for you by the blue Pacific. Please call 963-831 t 18055 MOCJftolla st. Fo.Mtoln v~ 963-1311 CE . 111111 ILlllS CD . oveR ~ V!~RS OF SERVICE • ' 2 STOIY TOWNHOUSE MIWIR ILUFFS 1'&111\mOCIC CUAMPWF ardlf lived In durtne the last ..3 cars 4 bedroom townhouse with'~ tortes, 2 flreptoces. 2"' baths and 100 1q.ft. ot luaclous Uvina! Location ll~L~Cl and schools. Now va- U~IC>UI: liVMt:S REAL TOR~ f57!5-6000 2443 Eatt Coast H1ghW11y. Coron• del Mer •IM> In Mes.l Verde, at 646·5990 AN AMAZING HOME!!. pprox. 4900 s q. Ct. ot beauty & luxury aits the fastidious buyer ... on a doµ• e lot. j.ust a few steps from the ac~ •. with some ocean view. The emtles are too numerous to detail re, but call us for details; shown by p't. Only $350.000 759-0811 7f>9-0811 Gteral I 002IG1Mrel I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ENtNS~A home 4 Or~ BR. J ba. 11 amenities. Lovely neighborhood. a ·w steps from the beach SI95.000 THER prestige waterfront homes. From S39S.OOO -Up ULLGRUNDY, REALTOR 1.i I Hciy\1d1• Orov1-. N B o7~ 6161 associated ' ' ' I f• ~ I I "'I I , loo' f .... ~ 'I • ' -~and )OU doo't need to combmatioft ol loc., de-Older d'8Jln fixer· S JR. blem c*llnr UY· QdS a.i. elllu'P be a bachdoc' becauae •llD" I.he best value oo qpsw. rm. It•~ COW'IUJ Landmark. conMf I . this eharp ~m.lnlum Balboa Pen. XANAJ>O WebblOtt l3J·21TO klli:tlelalltbu balan" 0.-Jllllle mW • hi. Tbo Bluffa bu 3 RICALISTATE. '1»4711 W/D&t.Un to lndlade &ea· Oa1l m.lGI& fw d.lnc· bdrma. " ~ batha •• a-1J!Ulllq &a um tfall,: ~~ lll1,000. Ho• does that 2::~ 2.Jrth ~ton ~IM TbrodeUrbtful 1""•a.lana. ... .... T "i p-abfCIU" ,. flW, ....... a a· COSTA MESA w napoasibWt1 oat ,. • 6 7M400 ble loc. many xtru "on •11.tSO lbe wlDdoW • to make it ,Blomlll• •101• to11tn•• ly $1"2,llOO. Super value • JIOllSible. call %.\NAOO ..,.. or H.B. Oua$:4Jll H•R80R for ri1hl bl.l.)'er. Call P~ect •tart.er S Bdnn k.Z.~ bdJt. I br Doll ~ ageattoupPt.'75'18 ::T-:r ~ f.amUy. A J'amll:yabldllD.Cou.n~ C..... .. M• 1022 ex~:!~ ~~'i! SWiil IUY ldt., .-aa a ptn ~itk ....................... atop reatJAs anc1 •tan ' Bedroom. I bl.th PLtts ~ dec:Gr. suon u; A l>ivlaJon or DUP\.IX buib~~ld!DS~..U..,.., &bown t:!rJl~ .. ~tC~ ::1' patio~/~= Harbor lnveetmenl Co. ' • locllllaDt BKJUU·MU. I~~~~~~~~ Primearea.2·ZBRuntts, W,. ONTllO)IES o rpet. Won't ast at ____ ,.;._...;....;.;;;;:;;;;:-. i---------I locaied· on unuaually ~-1400 ~40.3666 ' •i,•, large lot. Call today. •=:-104~ HOME + VAWY 64e>-t900 .. patt..lers .......... -....... _.,.. S Bednn & family rm. C.t•Wll•fr_,;,. BUSINESS CDM Charmer. Lota of Jl1repjace. Elec saraie • 4 !Wrm, Jbe. buaW\al~ wuod6stained1l .... R.J ~opener. Jbny Qice dee D ~ W-" Large automotive lot.$13l,l50Aat~. ~~o;:.erp J::1=. ::?~=!!cs ·~·We: bUI•.~ gara1e located o n 11 ••11•oo._c ..... Astbt -•· toSM,&'!O.Cua.aaaabut. Roomfor4i boat.OWC. Newport Blvd. + re· i J ..a. I ._...,._., -.uf1~ '811,000. Call w.,. ...odT la\erior Exclualvo llatb.• aldence m lhe rear. c.2 Completely remodeled !} .. 21,.!lerll•I· All'. ~·~· ..... P,!&_~.'l, !12'•1 lot.112~bJ9l. Owner may on an oversl~ed t~. A _...,,.,.. __ """'.._....,__ help fin~. FUii price amuhing 4 BR plu. den S 135,000. plus tor 1 ~~. dlnin1 plus JbBB. 42 Ba, ~-rm. al G~~ \::.aid o~ 1~ huge au.....,-room witll1~~~~~~~~ tyr In Halecreal -·-lliloca, ~ li~1ANYTIME•· open beatna, naturat1• sn.soo ,,._ Pernheat.h aq. ft. ol luxw:f. RE~ wood textures and ocean SIXCOST"' uH.t. La,-Ut7 · ESTATE by McV,\Yt and Jelly vlew from A~,. BEACll,IO.mL master auite & sundeck, HOUSIS RARE £uWde find. be& , JI.lit ates-to Ocean Blvd. FOR LISS THAN atreet in town. J BR. b ·',a $235.<*». $64,000 Ba. dJD.ana, on tie ....... I t., C:C.644-7211 w/alley.Cloeotoschoob. -•••••••••••••• .. ,~? Some now plu.mbiof, Owner outlJ'OWD Is au OHTOlllM . •lee 1ar door opnra, lous to eell. $f!t,tl00. Aa THl .. G ........... ~.· RELAX "1n N!(1f.I 01\IL[Y ~ ASSUCll\T[S bloc.It waU.. Try VA, le>'l' b ~"""* dwn, some vacant. suma le 1~ loan. Cal Brand new Turtleroc~ Easy living. beautiful landscaping & patio. Lovely 3 bedrm, 2 bath ---~===== home. Must see to ap· CHARMING Duplex, 3 Owner's motivated. for appt.. 145-'1'1~ m,hlands home with :a _, panoramic view of th- prec. Br, 2Ba,4'1Br.2 Patioe 646'3928 eves673-4s77 Cloee to tennis. $1.62,0ci'd - Owner64~7030 • • • CORO MA · • HIGHLANDS ~ideal combiJlaUop of PR~Q[ i-------...i a new h ome lo an Wll e s t a b I 1 s h c d Mesa Woods VlllCI WOODIRIDGI Sycamore model, 4 bedrm, (am rm. cust drps. elec ear door opener, extra lge back yard. cov patio . sprlnkJers. Just listed. hurry, won•t last. CaJJ ~5880 .,~~ HERITAGE REALTORS Snef ~ t>rfmt I br condo. AC, DW, 2 c., lat', b'plc. pool, ba1~ FHA loan. SSl.500. ~ neiibborbood. featuring Auu.ntic Spaalah styJ. aJI the latest appoint lnl to thls 4 year old me o ts . 0 v erai zed home. 4 bedroom., fami· ganage. Jara• rooma, 3 lY room. bif full abed l:\lltb, aiei> down w-.bar. dinlnc. Birch wood, 101 mini oceu view, all fully &ired ru:eplace. Central landscaped, waJking dis air CODdlUOnlJ\I. Sunken tance to private beach. Uvtnc room, $112,toO. $195,000. fee. B.ICRMl>-1'120. CAU.644-7211 "1n r~IG[L Ul\ll.EY & l\55Lill I\ I [5 t-U~t:ST C OLSON -oW 1026 valley below. 3 Bdrm,s,4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• formal diQlrl1. Act &00~ HOTB. SITE you may l>ldc your o•ff Three acres on Coast c&Jl)el colon. $149,900 Hl1bway near Dau Point llarfna. Coutal SSZ lO~O -; . ; Commlaaion permit la· • 1ued for eomtructlon of •• l25room hotel . .Excellent THE · . · ·.: term• av a i lable. VILLAGE · · · Subordination or iolnl ' · venture poaalf>le .. REALTORS · Largest commercial •.t.BR 0~1 ... ~. parcel in Dana Point --rT5R "• available. Call for brochure. broken pro· teded. Alt let Joe Lov· ullo. red hill -552-7500 .... . . , .. ' ... -.. •• I 'nle c::.1ortJ t 'BR. Z 8 fH .. tJ 112,IOt S• ....... • thee aet l eMr y.·u blol1 ". YALUY 64M90 GIAMADA b tile name or tb ,.JM.!l•r 4 bedr~o 1lleMI la the JlA.NCH beautil\&I Irvine. Su ct.a and 1howw like inodel. A comrort8bl ~ ,.Uo for the clclol'S llrin& of Um UeJ Ccnvenlenl to a<:booll r.ark, 1bopplnc an reeway acceaan. Call lo aee. 11 • • f~~ACAlft'.~OILOBN AND NBAAJ.Y 'OR001"?Ert; lhat11 tM llot'Y • l.bll •"eiou 4 ID'llli •• 1 lSAT)I HOii&. LI•· Uv. rm. -~~.aAll· MidaC Jl..,ad&1Ha ·11u. Mll&l • '1~up''. OU& d foww OW1ltf" ••YI •••JIJl,L Al II .. fo P,000 .8.Y OWner-Custom 1>ulll wood le llau new home w/fa.ntat.ic ocean le ca- nyon view. abr, 2ba, 1tud1, 2 lar1e decka, open beam ceilings. Tiied entry K1t. & din. crpt thruout. $219,50 7W-4N·sn9 EASY •• . ~~·HERITAGE • REALTORS . Abo 3 bdr~ 2 b• beach home, ...... at 182.500. ail 4 ~bucb llouse QI\ ccrner lot, 5115,000 • Property House, "2-aSO 13118 W. Coast Hwy-, N,a. ,'t' •·· r . . I •' ·. .. I •' t •• ... , . , ·- .... ; ,. ---• ----I ~ ---- red hill .- • ,.,,. i'SOO ....................... Z Bdnm. Never ttved tn . 1 mt to beach. Alsq de· luxe oew t9Wlibouse. Open, 12·5 daily. 1401 Delaware. HunUoflotf &acb. aa.-ii Ma-l.8211 •Att. BANBURY CROSS 2 Bedroom from $270. ··42·6604 1501 WHtclff Dr. Newport Filianclal Ctr i...-. Office S,... Call•6'.t. llau= , <n•> 842..aw at DKUXI OFFICES ~ • fodstl 1pacM, ..'Dl to 2000 sq. ft.. Aalfow aaSS-aq. n. La1Nlg11tJa: ldluloo Viejo ar .... lfHdy to S .D. P'rwy. ~11:'31·1400 AlrDOrt Officft • .. 1 i()NTff'FRE.E l'ull service. No le.Se re- q'd. ~ 1q. ft. PJnty of patt.in1. 20U S. E. BrJ1tol St. Newport llieac:b..SSJ.7010 -~-· .. DIRECTORY .... •-.a. r-t~ C...../C ...te lledrtcal Gtr•it&-HouMc....... Lmi1upla9 P .... /P ... rt.t a.-..aa.,. •.. .......--............. .. ... . .......................................................................................... . ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• Add uo. sa.;u.-ta c.pu .... •UUay""" MJ> Coou.te. All pba.aea Hll"'b d BKtrk c 1 1 d Want a REALLY CL£AN hrs. eit*. free .at. hint1n1. Loeal-Eatab 6 fJ -oos, if:ld 6 eo 1 ur ml••· Repairs • --t•, b'A-'-•. br1"'-v • om pk a 0 1 1 c• pea· JtOUS£? Call GloJham l1odacp'c m•&eri1l Insured. Tons of rela. fPl"I. ~··T. ··"' · C'•---•-i•-t G• ..... w ........ ~--0 v ,_,. • ~ .. U!!l2'1U8 $U.4874 •Prin lers. c eu-ups, Clrl Freee1U4S-~123 1va1l Jay a.1-40'3 or Frleodly /drlclent fr •t ta~ MIA·~~ ,.....,, ...., _. -· ...tr. FY .... ~. Lie .le tree tttm. • yn expc-in · · ~ .~, It bl'fet H•htp ll'rtt bondedf7~ Vf30 O.•.U.1 O.C. Rd1. Comm'I Maio· Wlndows/Housec:teaninf 9111.Wls.5 m.4981 9 _,._, ~ Mt 145 _.. --••••••••••••••••••••••• teS>llnC054ll Mll It~ t n.....0-1 ~~ I I I _._,, -' --CEMENT WORK All • • uuuun et·""""•-• 14••Y J;oow ta Pa •t 111 .................... . klc 1 I T• mpoo 4r tl4J1m ti••"-.. ,_ ... _ o---~ bl ...... R.ellibleEaprdJap•nese. G d~-lc C.Ull.r.Lynn538-T111 "•••••••••••••••••••••• Jn&/!a& co mmer cial ' • •tr P n a a b ..... ..._ . .__.a e "'" lardener & l•odlc•pe wrw ..,...-,, •I ,,,.. I Pl Len apt ealdeoUa l 6 Rtopaln. Uc 6 Jnt. ,~II Str•lr• llulln•• C4'or bttf t ... n : ... nt •thnat.t'7~WS JleHonable, free eel.•••••.•••••••••••••••••• IMMACULATE CLEAN· P ~~ ... an ' moai%i• ~ 131-UIO l)'t>et. rr.. .. t. Wijf 0.. uh.aat SPt"..-1aU t"'Ot»lOmlnbltitch a .. n ~-S230MJkft336732 nom.&Apvtmea~ INO. You DF.SERVEthe Bnck ........,rete PaUo e ea. Oall 11n,Ume,Ml-5nt -ll -•II • n .. pro.11 th>, dln rm, h•ll 116 A•1 ONt-11.\N Crew ~yrs ex _ - _ Repeit4s remo.telins. B!ST. 169.0371 BJock Walls BBQ Pita YOUNG Mu. 1 yrs upr __ ......;.. _____ _ . C..Ulor a5'11t. rm fl.60, rourh SlO, chr pr pourln~ & flnlahtna WEEDlNO-CLEANUPS IU-6'18S llefa, Eats. tMt~ to wallcoverlnt Free ~ "i R.flinda,567-aOu e Oiur eUm P4t odOr. iM>"H'rownforma,uve WeeklyJhlatenance The Mop~ts Ole.anlna hMlli.t/P~ .u.~atte.'Ancty .................. , ~ 1._._•=..;.;;;..;...__..;.;.._ Cpt ,,.,,.,r, 15 yrs expr montl· Ml 24ZJ l'\'eeest 642·9907 HANDYMAN: Carpentry, Servtte. Call wr If you ........................ CERAMIC n L£.q ._....----Do work tn~•~lf R•fa .-....... C --electrical, plumblna & need a aood )ob done. Quality Palntln1 ln.t/ex&. ~model. l"tee ~. -. .... ••••••••••••• )JJ UIOJ -_.. VERY LOW PRJCESI noo,..646-6851 847·2787 RefeJ"nll 5"-2391 PETER$PAINTINC J\ealdent or comm'I Jobi wek:omt *"'VtZJCT YC>Ur llome, ....................... on 1ardenln1 m•lo· ' ' Exp r'd: Re•• Rnes. Loeal r •f Stat• II~ alli ' • "" he~ rat• c.twlMj !a&er to nrc for 3 :'> yr wnance GeorgeS.9-2015 HANDYMAN.1\euraJ,ea. Ro9e0tarie'a llomecin1. Free Est. Call Gene tts.1t950 Pet~S38·58Sl. rrtt ul rail Jim ••••••••••••••••••••••• old child, 1o·,1· 1n my AvailanyUme.Callat\12 Xlatwork,ref1,1d rate1, ~ · n..s..ke ' tmoa for your P•r1iH. WoocU,rldae hm Cull h'of1 ~crdener oooo.646-5Ul7 ___ owntramlU-1403 PA.tN'TlNG lnt/~ ga. l'AlNTElt wlll trade ••••••••••••••••••••• .,ed4ln11 ~~ Rcaa, re· ~ Act now for cornp Groclltg HOUSEQ.EANING a'd., bomlt, DealL aua. pa!nt.lnl for a van or Removloa, trlmm~ =.-1 ref •· a.2-720'1 • C1•ectcw ~:~~ tf:S~l' ~;:, ....................... Decent work. Rellable . Uc'd.. Dave...,UMI Pickup truck. 642-0llMI ~· ~ 4;t. U= fltam.lna. f uuu. ,..coodel. -•••••• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • McWHneY, 845-5124 Sldploader, dump truck. Free est 913-40a7 ...._ /lt.,.W >' • OGY r.paan, Lac Qu1c11 C.a p.A,wffa HOUSE OE'M'ING TOO ---baullnc,t.reeworlc,grad· , ... Yo.i-C .... ••••••••••••••••••••••• uhMilMJ , Mrva c~ Wrll 1uar ••••••••••••••••••••••• SMALL! ADD A ROOM MOWlNG·EDGING iJll,demo,etcT51·530 Ja'l::: Wrnan :!:ctll AverageEur1Stry$39S VEJlYNEATPATCH ••• .. •••••••••••••#u i . tc?~4 ~ A.cooaUca. Qua I OR REM ODELi QuaUty Tri mm Ing. Cleanups. to · e c ean 1 2Slory IMS. lntr $4Srm JO~" TEXTURE ~ p,_.cri~ ---1pu1~ celllng1, r~· constrw:lloll with-re H•ulln1. etc. Reu. HmiliacJ t:rana."5-3$40 Priceslnclmatr'l-labot' ~est. 893-143' remedlaUon of r......,. ~:~htn•·•t<w• .. r ab1net1 p11ra, 1uu-. Llc • ~~. asonable price Have ~$2 ....................... Allee'illouseclealWll Cuar/IDSl'd. Free est. ..__...s.... dlS , by a readina spec. rorrarAutJlmu.Bltt freetstSJ&.1900 m•ny local rer . -llAuJj . l o--Ii ble ~ 0 TedMZ-OtMor631-70IS r-""'J us·-~-ordtt.~7154 Licensed insured & GardenincSenl« tlea.n"'" ng.mov1ng,ceanup ~.rea ·~·· wn ....................... I"·._._ ~3. . c-.t/C..uete Booded. Free eat Ken up & hauling, weekly S'7/up. T""1WOl'k. ReH, transMMl1l/M2 7201 -PRO.P'ESS!ONAL Pab>t· HOMESAVERS. Plumb lsYourProlesaJocr' ROOM ADDITIONS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ned y .5 a Iv in Ii A 1 mainten•nce. R~asona· Cul, fl'ff est8'2-459'7 L...-c~ Ing. Inter/Eder. Reas, ini Cc HeaUn& fl atr con· HOME REPAlllS ' Fram1n1Spec1abats .Phillipa Cement co. aoclU.es. 7141545-8664 blerates. freeestJmates. RAULINO. Odd Jobs.••••••••••••••••••••••• workauarl42-038e ditiooinf. Free est. $10 Dfd you toow )"OG nst ~e 494 3154 Pat10e. room addltioos. ---Alter 4.30 ask for Ron. Law istudent needl work Fnleealhnat.e a.od Llo. AU Floe work. &ale lie & lll· hr. Honest " reliable S>Uce • duaifttd adltb Coocre\.e wOl'k 751-5651. a-......J _. 64S05Uor548-tll87 Jlm.,._SiM phuea •ho rard mt Exterior •Pffi•lllt lt'f'Vl~.,DnfA, M/C OK. lbe Dallr Piklt Se1*e ' GARAGE SALE •da ID Call 10 AM lo 9PM he/-........-.c. cJe&n"" ~ .,._; --~-~ U ,.,.. uu ' 7S1·31SO Directory for a wlloQ 'Ule Duly Pi.lot bnna hap-bond/ins ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cl1ulrled ads sell bill OCC student. Big ~ T ...... .,, ....,_a co_._ month for a• liltl..__, l'J. results To place Y -ELECTRICAL SERVICE Items. small items or truck. Truh, tree trim, LandscapJna. 30 yn exJ). WORK GUARANTEED DRAINSO.EARED $1.62 per day? For~ auwing card. phone SELL idle hems wrth a CALLS$1Shr,&SMALL any item Just call etc. Randy 642·6103, b'ee est. Licensed . Interior/E:xtr. Free eat. FROM.SS.SO inlormatioo,caJI i ~today DallyPilotCl.auifledAd. J OBSMZ-8233 ~8--549-3666 66-&lU,C.2'1·10'72 ISYTtellp.600295 C111751.e94.2 142·5'78 lusiMssll8ftfd 4450 MoMytoLoan 5025 Lost&Fomtd 5300 HetpWeted 7100 H'tfpW•ted 7100 tt.lpWa..ted 710 HetpW•ted 7100 HelpW..tecl 7100 HefpW..t.d 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• ·············~········· ................... !lllMlt•• P'OR LEASE, choice 11bop or mf1ce spa<'c, 1; blk (r;om San Juan Mtasion. El Centro Mlulofl ~~ 1;...trfal R..-tol 4500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SWING LOAMS 2nd&3rdT.D 'S l DAY APPROVAL Credlt·No Problem Construction Loans LOST· Great Pyrenees. lg. he11vy coated wht dof. -Vic Beach & G1rfield , HB. 7 /29 562-4192 REWARD' CALLANN873·1166 LOST: Siamese altered ~W..t.4 SOJO m•le cat Reward ' Accounting TEMPORARY llecjiater Today WorilTomorrow ClouToHCMM 1--------• Bkkpr/AsS1itant, Full Civil Englneerlng Desirn COOK ASSEMILY UAD nme. M1ture. fm.7MO, Draft.Ins. C.A. ReynoldJ. BrMJdut. cook for hmit· A.uembly of small elec· Mrs Van Ho~ CI v 11 En a I n ee r In & ed menu Omelet Sbop in tro mechanical devices. ••BOOKKEEPlNG _m-__ sl9S _______ Missjon Viejo. Cill aft Req uires ex per . 10 Cdu all nd .. _ , _. ..... £a 2PM.581-363t directing work of up to 10 '° re Y 1 ..... ve,or.· -llUU'IOll'i assemblen. l>ayahln. ment firm need.I exp d Ani m a l hoapllal in COOK&DISHWASHER STACOSWfTCH IMC ilrl Fr1d1y, exec/aecy Irvine. ~ll or p/lime. P/time.Stavro'1,5930W . type. Mast have con· Spin. speakine ok "--u NB lndllstriol Uftth WITH OFFICE 1400 to 3800 11q ft Im med occupancy Leasing of· rke open 9-$ Mon-Fri 71l W 17thSL lfC .for call ••••••••••••••••••••••• Laguna B c h are11 Sl.2..500 needed 1mmed foF 4.94-344J prime R.E. Opply . White male poodle. beljite 12$,000 relllnl within 90 co II ar . See n v' c T • Account•ts *~"IM" •A/Pc:Mrb 1139 BUe-rCosta Mesa strucllon bkkpc u p ~ 1..:;."""""".;....;_•_"Y~· -· -·---1 549-3041 Communication 11dlls ff· · K-expenenced. App-•-------~- Equal Oppor Employer aentla l. Salary opeo. Cleulng lady. Mature, 642-4461 IU\AND NEW Light & -,ght ofc suite .., UJOO ·,.q fl r ectory or warehouse Drps. epti;. 111r cond., lge truck door Ideal loc :w per llQ rt U:I s pr will improve to swt Art Gnffm Ownr 3.\41 Storoc)e 4550 •.••.•.•..........•.... 'lf "\I Storage Oran~c .~unl} Int e r n I ltaceway 75t-J>('r ft per ·mo. Complete -;er v1cc dept. 7lf.6'75 1290 iso SQ.FT. Un1li., 20'. ~.ft 217 Avocado. CM 64$-1234 .54()..8299 d.lyw. 540-7~ Robins Ford in CM Call Malt~&. Tnatt -/ -548-nSO DMcll 5035 LOST· 8 11 111 . V1r ••••••••••••••••••••••• Warner Dnve Inn HB LOANS 9% AllO hd TD loaas Fairest Terms 1mce 1g.c9 Blk M. Germ Shep, 5 mos., white i.pot on chest. Reward' 64'1 ·4'147 7-S:30; aft 8, S36-7674 * A /R Clertts •Payroll Clertu •Mach BldcpN *Stat Typists Sattler tiittg. Co. ROll99T MAUI'S 642-2111 us.o" ' ~~~ ......... ~!.~~ accounleRWJS Retired ~p&e has money · ., c l · toloano 1 t&2ndTo· Drinkm~probklm PLEASE AL , ugent .• :~ s. ~l~~l~-o:~~~i;::: 714/835-4103 For Sale lst TD on Npt PREGNANT., ~~~~~~~~~! Weltoo•Co.6'7~. for Dinner Playhouse. 1---------1 9'19-7SSO, Mn Van Horn llCKnS 12) SI 050 RE Ii Med Supplies Employen Pay AU Fees Ua Reinders Agency 4020 Birch St, Ste 104 Newport Beach 833-8190 Call for appt/est•b '85 ASSEMILBS Assemblers, precision, male or rem. ' )'TS. min exper. Good manual dex· terily, food eyesight. soldering • mlcl'Olcope ex~r. Small compo· nents. Hard work1J1g, de· dlcated individuals needed. Smal l co. w/good benefits. gd. op· Bookkeeper T to $'7800 pe>r. advancemenL Call Asll1tant ,..._ Carol; 581·9830. MV Stable firm otfen adv1n· Bch duplex by Ownr. Caring conCide nl1 o l $42,000, 9% Due date 3 couruseUng & referral .!...~ 646·7Gl6 or~ Abortion, adoption & cement potential to As5lsl Chef & Pantry security minded person • Person. See Cher, San call Vicki, 9d·l288, Den· C I e me n t e I n n , 12 S nis & Dennis PertOMel "'CCOutfTIMG CU( SAanveCnliedm•. Espl1ndlan, Service of Huntington "' Beach, 16168 Beach Blvd, AnnouitctfMtlf1/ Pef'SOfMllt/ Lott&FMd .....•...•....... ~ ..... keeping. APCARE ~7 2563 Mort1a1e b11okln& flrpt ---. Ste 121 tltntalJWanttd 4600 AMouftcet'Mftb 5100 LINDA •VICKI Out~all Mcnsocie For the'-"' of tt! b>Orao1eCo.h.aan lm· Auto M~hao1c! rol"eigni----·------ med. opening Coran •c· and/or domestic. Clean BOOKK !!:EPER Body ctng clerk 111/expcr. io shop, steady job~646-8310 shop up. 1 pe.rson ofc. b1n1' recooc11i11tlons. Aut.omot.ive All dull• up to PaL. Pleue c•ll Ca~hy New Detail Shop needs 768·8311, Bill Car mer . -r-.ompaon at Untc•I help Mlsllon Vlejo ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••• ••• Serving all Oran11e ~ COOK&me expenence. Apply in 'Pft'IOl'I. Derby Restaurant, 12112 So F..ul Bristol, C.M. ~~~a&e. 7!4 !963-7173. Top wages pald. Engine IOOKIJEPElt F/C r -Stumers, eog painters, w/respomlble exper. ror Coun&a-Woman. f/l1me A.CCOUMTIHG btlrers 4' polW>en. up· Public Accountants ofc ·--------899 W. 19th St, Costa -=-_..;.----~-- Small 2Br bou.se or d&>lx Art Auction Aug. Slh. ~7313 S275. maximum, on or 7pm. F.V. Community --- bef Au& 30th C all Center. 10200 Slater SpirihtQI-~ 642-2533 Hosts F V. Jaycees IBlSSo. EJ Camino Real Ex p1nd ang mortg•ge holslery s~ampooera, Salopen.648-4332 CLERICAL _Mes__._•_. _______ 1 Wanted l bedrm unr apt 1---------1 1r1 Old Hunt. Bch Under 1be New Sandpiper Tea· ~ Quiet. with xlnt o.aa Club offers Umiled _r~s. 536-8280 Joanne mcmbershipa No inilla· i.. 1 1 '· tloo fee Low monthly Smg)e man '!VOii d 1 .. c lo Clll 673.a120 2101 rent a quiet room or rates. • small bachelor unit. E.CoutHwy.CDM. San Clemente Fully be For appt 492-7296 banking firm in Orange c;beck out. pack·UP fl de· ,......._ rotmo. COUNTER GlRL, p/Ume Co has an immed open· livery. Apply it IOOl(ICUPBF/C Ver satile olflce gal Capt. Mike's Fish Fry, --------·~r,_I.,... in11 for an 1ndlv w /ex-2059 H.,~~030r Bl, CM MulU books for prop needed to rouod out our .... w 1 .. h St, CM Ml,..ull!.I 1 ir.•5 per 1n corporate acctnc _..,. memt.Callltl)-OW. office atarf. Willing to 0 -• "' * ........,~ * Must h!lve pnor ex~r. 10 1_ .. __ pitch In and uslat where COUNTE R G J R L • OulcallMaasage mortgal(~ lJanking ..,_ .. gg-~ needed. LoCs of nrlCl&Y. S•ndwlche1, Mon-Fri. 10AM·2AM 131 "462 Please Contact C:alhy AVON Full char(9. l"!rt UIXle. Should be exper'd in 11:30.ut to 3:30 PM, c11l Thompson al UnlCal lG-3 Moo-Jl'rj, Pleasant *KAREN'S* Mortgaac. 714 963-7873 HHO ExntA CASH7 1urro1&ndlng1, toe. 1n worttngwtthftgures OUTC/\LL MASSAC E Equal Oppor Employer FuhlOn 1.slaod. Able to AT IASE 5300 6PM·2PM 973·0893 . F.amings are good.hours post bllliog1, b1lance Fcnlll• 1-•--' Accounting are fle:llible when Y0'1're ""'JlPfUl)' a"coun• work -t BR house. partly furn. ••••••••••••••••••••••• *SH ... RO .... 'S* A/RECllVAILE ao AVON represeo· ~t>udageett. ~ .... p~l & Call MU.MllJer ~-l1601mp Call John ___ _ m-6292 _ Lost & Fowtd .... ,·ren~e. Nv. pl 11reu SSO Reward! Bob·ta1l A n f&U c JI l<Al\71\A1 or 64~5070 ,.. .. Los srzs i 0'""' .... UASSAC E Interesting pol. reroocil· ... ve. a .,...,. .,. lala &t.at.emenl, lnd do .. w1view. Yrly 675 6604 U~er cal. t v c. v•vn::;:l'!...' ln,g A/Rec. accounts. Zenlth1-J.3S9 cer&alo matbematlc•l •--------1 $:30-Uamor$-10:30pm. ~~~·CM. _ .... _ _. ____ J.J<;. Ii related G.1. re· cal c ul a tl o o 1 tor i--C-ll-C-~--.-Tl-O-M--1..:..: ________ 1 Qpall. clean. unfum. apt. EXOTIC GIRLS !M!arch & anal)'al1 Lite Babysitter to care for our starltlaUc~ld repofrt. Ed•· . a1 responsible youna Lost: 3 Tame CockaUels, Massige &Modellng typing & 10 key e.ic.per. H\yro&d twins F /tlme pe encc pre erre . kadult.642-0865 aiume ~Ii Moon Purot.. OUtcallM2·alSJJ543-32SO Good workin• cooda • Room . brd + $60 wk· Call Terrt Lonc,M4·7'5cO ~ --WU.On St. CM. IC found benefita. ,\ppty. NaUonal • · }\'anted: Two 1 Br houses. caJINi-5431 DAH~EOF FUH System• Corp • t3f1 49U05I IUSIOY , partly fun\lshed. w/fncd UNO Iii 1 S t 1 ...... ut. nude girls. d•n"e Bird> S\, N.B <Near OC Babysitter. s days wk. ' ..,A_. ........ r bch or Nwpt FO : a e co l e. """ ~ "''-rt> P.:OE Vl" ..1 So "--st Pl••• •';';.·714·67'·6804, Ma1tnolla .le Garfle.ld, lcr1pseulona. lOAM to""'""' · """' ·..,.,. - i:»11AM,S·l0·30PM HB.983-39'76 2AM. Mon thru Sal. 92S ------~-----------• N. Euclid,An.t\etm ---------.. 1U1mMous FOUND: Sm Benji look •----------• t...tut1 4650 alike. nr Jamboree & AUIRGY COHTitOL ·;;,-.... ••••• •••••••• •• •• East Bluff. t7~ IMIORMA TIOH • • '"t·"'M:"'!"""::!"'U'"....,...,.~i;.-.·n1,..,.,.m"'m::~~~~~ ... -.. I .._ ...... ,. ..... ..., ........ ,., ....... ...... ......, .. tl••o111tretetl ... "hory lkJllt to ............ ,~ s ...... ~ ....... , ~.22. ......... ~ The Reuben · .. llee . (. ' NowTakin& . I AppllcaUona For: ••• ' ' . * uat 1977 Jlrwllllry I070 Mlnl•tl n • IOIO • I J ....................... ....................... . -~ 1oos ~...... 1oso w A.MTED lOlllll' AWJllNUll A,,... ........ s.cc'•,, J.P ... ,400 ~~~:rt-0 Auto s.ni~. ,_.. .-,. ·S::.:~m· 0 ..-~ ...... .,.--...... _ .......... -........ TOP CAIU DOLLAR SacwtUl"~IPOll&•ll&-~11 nn • 94 0 faAccet1on. 9400 _. a.-~=·= trrOREWIDESALS, PAJD POR YOUR ter. -..r· . .,.- ....... -•••• "-••••••••-.. •••• .......... ~ .. ·~··•••-• ............ !~··~l ••• a........ New fa UMd r~ •PPI 1• JEWELRY. WA'ICBES. ~SU~P~E~B~ll;A;TT;r'iiaiBUSUS;l~~~aiz1!ll~=t1::1~=m~~~~ mllc. Wlbon. Baraal.D ART OBJECTS. GOLD. SA.LE 1010 Hook. 5'S Ir 114 W. lttlt, SILVER S~RVJCS, S. 20-4"r Bn~ CM. fa....UU FINE FURN " AN· s;n,air, ·Sett •• twin TlQUES. W-2200 aeb $11. F\IU ... Queens * Earrinp 21 doa.. Hlfb Q . Kinp $149. '"Tbe <load Uled rumuuro Ir q_ualllJ, 9 1tud1 In· Llme'a Yattreaa APl>llaoc•--OR l wlll cJQdod, Mu.ataell 750-ZZSl Warebocase., 11'5 Baker ..UorS&U.forVou. 1075 st. <nr Fairriew). C.11. 191dal •' MAJTaS AUCTION U¥atock 5tNa78 • 4•lrabl• .... t ' r~T DAMt.OE ....... , ... 3l-t6JI ............ ·-········ _....;~~------· :.--. ..-..1 .. ar• n"1rvJ'NT IALI:. _ __ ~ Het.MC>rll•nmare.broke FoulW98tberlear: boot.a, Ea..Oilla.u•um. W. •a,::rr:~arbor, CALLNowrorcr.elt.oa to ride ~ drho, blk parkaetc.Xlntcond.$50. 1 ,_..._ ' Upbol1tery. Special l)jll"llde Morgan 1eldl.o1, ....;6*-....;.;;...U.;;__7 ______ 1 •••• Perao•••• CAIUPAW prl~o OD Hid••·bed.a. J;n1. Weal•~" (11') !OOOB'lVal ditlon S.-. ~ o( :.':~:On l'cr W /J)ryrt/ReMa ..!!!!!' ___ _ 131-1011 Penncre1t.~ike a:!: m. ~-~·'14.U CASIIPAIJ> TKISWEEKSSPECIAL Kakeoffer.MM339 ~rtSt ....a.It, .. , 2' =-:~~C!':~J!· :=. idd~~·!::'T .. ~:· :~ f't,~~b"c?t~· fe·!j U~~hl~th..;.,~ Club • 19dl. tne ·~ a. SIOO _..,. --2372 Newport Blvd CM • • . .cW,_• c:uctt. Yo.r • -· -5\lmilure, tu&t:hld 11oods, MWe88. OPEN SUN. ~ -------------------h ""-· fG4llJ1 ..... All' sto••· as. ea, misc. Maku llD orrer OD ~-----1010 Weddinc dress $$4) II 10. Clcaa. tllO. fur ull. MJlY or all llAlma. Cull --Duncan Pb f ch-opteaf Tt'PtST JllCll'T ~. llD-2105 536-M3. Comu " 114't' ....................... thl $100 ~~ nr a.-ttrm. Mac nnt -. Now! WANTED -...;.....,..-· -----4 41MliliNI 'IM ..... 11 UpeT' prf'f'd . llu1t I , 20' atoves, $45.e;a .• ---TOP CASH DOLLAR _,..,m;;;;;:;;;. lllrftilatatllll. ll'/\UDe. Cleaa.$300. for all. MUSTLl"-'UIO"TE PAJD f'OR YOUR Mbcelcmeou Newport Ctr Loe .• ~SJmor~ ,. • JEWELRY, WATCHES. Wcmt.d 1011 ~ Contt!m.,orary sofaa. & ART OBJECTS, GOLD, -••••••••••••••••••••• W ASHEll DRYER loveseab at t'ost. lllde a s I v ER v VOCATIONAL SUperdehueml&ltJ-cycle beds SW. All wood cof· Fl~E FU~~R & 1~~: SCASH FORS ~~:for modd. Loob llruoa Wte fee tbls, 3 pc $150. Wall TIQUES 64S-2200 Good used furn/refriga new. S'USaet. ~S748. \Slit $175. Lg lamps S20 --· Freezers le atoves ment occupat•ona, •-• ..... _, __ , Games sels & bdrm WGGAGETAGS 546-0768 laab:lan merchanc:tatne. o ....... nu.u.ouou SUll.es.SAVENOW' ---------· " ac:row clerk tn1oee refngerator. $60. THE f'URNITURE from your busmesa card. WANTED any Barbell an· Eir.per'd in tbe field Gti-~17 CONNECTION Send ooe card for eacb d/or weight set. OaU aft. ~~~ycr::i c-;;ldspot Refrigerator, 135l.He~~~t4L.H.B. ~~if;~ ;~!':!!·0~~ 6PM.M0-&16S Capst.nao Lagi.ma ROP bottom freezer. Ex· sealed attractive tag & ...,cGI 411fr!ll.8forfurt.beTiolo. cellent condition. strap, meeting airline IMhwants 1013 ~ Dbl bed comp. $50, cusl 1.0 . requirements. Pre· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wartresees & Caab1era, Joveseal $200 wshr & vent I06S & theft! For a Conn Min-0-Malic elec. day ~ mebt sblfts. Exp Wed1ewood Oven. xlnt dryr, si5o, B/W TV, ndti personaJu:ed tag enclose organ. excellent condl· SA. VE $80. OH A. Reg. $279, installed Now $199. installed offer expires 8·15-77 I YPORT SUNROOF Fits all Sportscars, Domtlstlc can Trucks, Vans, etc. only,NewYorkerResl& cond.,$1.2S. work,$25.00-4317 wallpaper , fabric or tloo.,$11100,P.P.532-1259 • Dell 428 E 17 St CM 68H33S ---"Day Glo" paper & we C _..T_..U ..... _.. SU.., ROOFS 631·2&2o ' · ' , --2 Wingback chairs $25 will back & tnm your Y ~A G-55 " "' A ""' " _,_ -Very )arge free:1.er/· each. One high back 1,; Id J 6 1646 <--ior Costa Mesa WAITRESS, Over 20. Ap· r cfr~gerator, com~ chair, need,s upholster· tags. Or try two cards 1 !r year o , ay on · ~· ply before 2pm. Dr. ~rcaal.$35. Works well. ing $20. call !179-8123 of' backto~a~~CES. ~;:t~~~~~~~: 642-4040 Bag~'s 17752 Beach ~~ ~~~ ~eaM~~ tlon . Askiqg $45. ~~~--~----~~~-~--~---~~~~----~~~~~~~• "Slvd. HB E.lec. Dryer, xlnt t.'Ond. RACING CAR BED, red 4/5 ta~ $1 60 ea Stepba.nle, 646-3818 arter --.. • 90'"0 lo-. ~ -ia 9060 loats. SpHd & Auto Semce, ,..,. •--------•I Kenmore bvy dty 1 b Gd G/9ta"sS\..50ea. 6pm. -irOWet" .. --Sid 9010 • •----1-9400 • i erglas~. cond. ,,0 Sl •" ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .-..cea--• wJwnnltle gWltd $12S. Holds twn mall &. bit " or more ...,eu Guild 12 tri g bvy case •••••••••••• ... •••••••• ••••••••••••••••••--• 631·3287 spgs. S<!OO 644_2917 Sales Tax Included 8 n • · 30•cHRIS COMMIE 67 CAL 20 im lB foot Formula. 190 SAVEWITB _ ---NOCARO? SSOO . Yamaha 160 F1ybr1dge, twin screws, Draw your own or send w/cae. S&O. 540-0631 canvas rm, briltol, C7l•l Pvt Ply~ OMC. 45 hours. Must USED It REBUILT : We need 50 people who are • at least 10 lbs over· : weight. Call Ms. Stone ot. : '751·9175. W~ can tall you • .how lo lose poundR & : earn mone.v at the same : tune. :YNG MEN Wanted to , Gd. waee. : 49H6Zl . . • : Mwc.haMI• ------eves. : ....................... Two purebreed maJe -. -------:~ 1005 miniature poodles, 9 Solid Oak desk-not '•••••••••••••--•••••• wks. Apricot lo good ve.~~r:. natural C1nlsh, • home. Shots nopapert 26 x60 7 drawer, Cor : Wonderland 64HTd • · home or office use $150 • • --t -Oirome & glJlas coffNl Of Antiques! Blk Lab, mate would llie lbl, 20"x60" malch1n& RUGE ware b o u s e beaut. female to mate end this, good cond. S8S • CT'llJDmed with over with. Exch foe ~ll Jitter. Cberrywood coffee lbl mualc boxu, n1cketo-5311-1233. w t inlaid lthr top, deoa piaOOI. clrcw; Of'· 20"x40" matching encl dd ho & sell! $'1995. Call 831HB78. _,.REIGN"'" n D & -name. a ress, P ne DRUM SET ~.Owner Hobie Cat 14' w/trailer ;Ea.,;n. '-AA4<"n,u.&U' we'll make one card per WFL·Druma, bass & s uper traveler, good 20 Fl. CigllRtte, Soeded. l'l'Nnsmisliom tag. Add 25" each. tenor, Sull4n cymbal & PELICAM cood, suoo. 511.7919 $15,000 or trade for .-Rear Enda Send check or money or· h1gJt bat. orig John Grey-30' Fantail Monterey Porsche 9llS. ~or ...nr.. derto Loodoo anare w/stand & style trawler-die8el·fully Sailboat, Coronado 23. 642-44112.Jeny. IFcndera PILOT PRIMTING accessories, ideal for equlp'd. for cruising. radio, 3 sails. new paint. , ./Doon P 0 Box 1560 begin 0 er 0 r in . Auto pilot·VIJF· + +. $7000 881·9'49 18 Jet, 454 Chev. Ttailer, ./Bumpen 0.~ Jdesa,Ca. 92626 termediate, complete $20,000. or reali1t1c Laser, 1974 Drk blue hull, rv· $4500. Ca!_.~~'M.28l IMPORT ea.XJntcond.642-4097 Conference table 31·'.l 'xJO'. S60 552-8571 1091 • •••••••••••••••••••••• HOMeVIDEO SANYOV.CORDU 2 hr. home Yideo re- corders • ADVENT VideoBeam JarJte screen TV'• DOW in stock. Call lot ow low prices. Sats 10·4. Pacific Video J,»rodacta, 714-547-1834 trade. Call Howard xJolcond. $700. ays,e\'.ea548-...rn. AUfOSUPPLY MS-41101 & leave number ~14 17• Fantasy lMHP, r /0 , 101 N. Mucbester. N l 30 I/B F 11 xlnt cot)d. Xtras. $3,900. Anaheim 7764900 ewpor . . • u 213-865-1849• 714 m .2000 race/cruise. 7 sails. Like ' '64-'77 Used llu.iaog new cond. $22,000. Parts. 980 No. Parter. IOAT WAKTED 714"967·1666 <>ranie. Call 119'7·3000 ur to 24' Fiberglass in 16' sloop, fbrgl. New cov· !:~!.!';'.~ ......... '59 VW aunroor aedaa for er. sails & trlr. Gd fam AJrc:raft 9110 parts. lbve pink alip. _ ___ boat. $1400. !>48·1617 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 531'88811 eves. *WOW!!! 1977 (~~~1!. JUltarrived. Boas aaym "Sell them at CtOle-Out prices'•! .., ..ew & SCSY•! Subltantial priQ& SolCatl8. Custom trailer. $J.500. Dave 8216-3003 im Catalina 30. 2 mos. new. Call 1168-1396 wkdya, ·PM. LID014 Trailer. Extras $85 64U706 %8'MORGOM 9520 tncreue 900ll. • 4 wt.el Drfyes tSSO Trallera.C.G.1earincld. 27' Erlckaon/73, sharp, •••••••••••••••••-•••• Wat.ef rudy·We are de SU,900/0ffer (11') '75SozutiTSl00.2500mi. alioC. 6'2-Jawlmds/eftS Kat sell. $300. Brad. HAIRISOM'S Hobie 16, w/trlr, dbl _m4114 __ . _____ , SEA RAYS trapea~baruea.wbiLe im 11onc1a sso. &>per 31 O I Pacific: Coo& bulls. 6'13-2934, Yery fut cood. $1100 or trade for Hwy ZS' Coronado. Hanf ft· car+cubor? M2--0514 MwptWa 631·254 traa. See lo apprect.te. "m8ooda850 AMc.JllP t t lltC.-f. WE Otn'SELLALL .JEEP DEAum& INTll.EST ATE HUGllMVIHTOfY All Modeb New• Used Leulnl Available ForaalecolotT.V., needs 18' Bernboff Squad $6800. Call 4.H-.5826 & -AflerS:OO ~ MS-074.1 ' eo...Me..• gan s wall clock a, Dobermau, lge red male. tbl, Baroque s lyle·$85. grandfatber clockl, AKC. ve11,.v geqtle, 18 PP. ~3()9'1 Fted --~------ lasciDatiQI anUque.. moa, boua~broten. $100. work. make ofln. 4141 Yacht . diesel Ba Bei.l. f2S.ILB~ Launch. Aat. &15·7 ev. '7• llul:taco 250 PursaDt, gilcoad.MO. AMC .... 2511 HABBOB y.VD. a:.ta lfela to2I <>ver~oqo.ooOWort,b Pb8$5085orMS-3846 Sola French Prov, newly 9070 :ill-2"141 .. ••••••••• .. •-•••• l:looda CBSSO, '500 ml, WAMl'ID! Fairing, LUJgage rk. Newport Beach ~atelJp. 9B3$.19'11model.962·8172 M~ 14 foot. P.ie.e1...;..---......;---1 eallMMISll. 1975 Yamaha Rl>a, low .--~---~... ,, ....... · . _ __,___ ----------- • , ~Tradeiiman 100 S1cle ~I back windowed, air. P S, l? /B. Jo\ally loaded S\1100 • ~ cond Call 4!H 2018 95tO i~·t··················· • WE • HEED 1 CLEAN I,, USED CARS 'I.. HOW •'' CALLPAPPY 540-5630 .i1.i1w1r • (l.\l'llH~ 8 J I I I I '• 4 'I ' I I '• WEIUY a.UHCAll laftUCll SADDLEIACIC Y AUEY IMPIORTS 831-2040 495.4949 CREVIER ClOSlD SUNDAYS Pi\QK Li\i\J~ Motor Gir Co. 9905 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1972 Matador, auto. alr, PS. PB. xlnt cond. SUOO . . ~3 Nabers Cadillac 26110 H.11 oor Blvd, c'''\" t.k •• 1 ~-10.v 100 • --PHIL LONG FORD 1971 Ford P .U .• radio, healer, a cyl. stick. new paint, 56.000 ml, new clut.ch.auembly. 837-4156 afl4 wkdays. '74 Ford. Gran Torino Sta Wag. <Brougb•m). PS/PB, AM/FM conv. ll"P· Alr. xlnt cond. 11 Put. 12'750. or bst fr. ~.'46-3710 . * DAILY PLOT • J 3 vw C:O.+et ..... to cllooM ........ '70 .. c--t. 4 ... rt4. ,___ #JOO SHU "70 ... C..eri. 4 .. ytlew. #7061 •••.•• SHH 74 .. c. .... 4., ,..., non ....... un . ~ , 'Karm11nn GNH from 12895 .,i w ...... ow.•10•• ................ saen "71 K.,_ OW. •IO:U ................ SUts "7Jl-°"'9#70H ....•.•.......•• SUH .,, "--CMN #7044 • .. ........... HHS .,! ~:.~s1;,c.~.~~:::ts ·1s tet •504> ........................ "-Its '75 ._ltlSMWM .................... $4,"S '74 If_.. e. tl2'KTI>I ................ S4,4t5 '741-. ..... lltllAI ................ s.tMs '1J llwlMl .. JM ...................... Sl.195 '7) lal671J.llO ...................... U ,tt5 ?O e.111""4U ...................... SZ.'91 '" c_,...1TWTll61 •...........••.•• u.1n ' 25 IU9i frOlll SSfL •74 .. 16ML9d •••• , ................. Slt7t1 •14 .., mi• ...... >If •••••• /. ........ si.1t.-'" ... .,_ ........... ..oei!~~ ......... Sltl .,z ... "1021 ...•••.••••••••.••• ·······''"' '6f 91!irr'fllD •• , , •••••••••• ·•••·•··••• .t11;1 20Meir.lillhldl . . f" .. • . ----. __ _. .. DEMONSTRATOR SALE!!! Huge Selecti on of 1977 Demonstrators On Sale How at Year End CloH Out Savlncp! GREAT VALUES ON FINE .USED CARS 7 4 SAAI 4 cyl engrne. automatic tranSt111ssion. radio. heeter. bucket seats. vinyl roof & Power brakes (473KLY) 52495 6 cyt. engine. automatic traMmtssion radio. heater. bucket seats, console. vinyl top. wlS/W tires & 1rr conditioning (281FUP) '7 6 PLYMOUTH VOLARE •74 PLYMOUTH SURING WAGON · V~. autorretrc. air conditioning. power 6 cylinder autom1tlc. air cond1tion1n9 steenng. power brakea. radio, heater oower steering. rldlo helter. whllewefl whltew.11 tires. vinyt roof. (770lPG) tires. luggage rack. (HL45C6B32?910 s3995 76 MEltCUllY COMET 6 cyl engme. automatic. radio. heater. Power steering PoWer brakes. w/stw trres custom lntenor + extenor & atf cond11t~ng. (9~NOt<) 52895 . · SAVl!HOW WITH CUSTOM C.AR LEASIHG • ..- LEASE THE Au: HEW CORDOIA .AMD VOLAU OR ANY HEW MAKE CAR, TRUCK OR VAN DIRlCT AMO SAVE! LOW COMPETITIVE RA TES-FOR IHFORMATIOM AND PRICES CALL PAUL DEFAlllS. •. 546-1934 DIPEHDAILE SERVICE YOU CAM COUNT OM WHal YOU MEED IT! ATLAS CHRYSlER/PL YMOUTH SERVICE HOURS: MOMDA Y THRU FRIDAY, 7:00 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M. SATURDAY 8:00 A,M. TO 5:00 P.M. •74 AMC AMIASSADOll V-8. automatic. air conditioning, power steering, power brakes. ~ Windows. AM radt0 with tJ!Pe. heater. whltrNall tire•. vinyl roof. lilt wheel. cruilt control. (980JSI) ). ·s2395 •71 c .. vsa.a MEWPOIT ~. ~de. alt conditioning. power lt9*ing, paWeJ brakes. r1dlo. heater. whlteWall tit ... (1380LF) ?l C .. YSLIR HOUGHAM V-8. automatic. air condlt1on1ng oower steering. PQW9f bnlces. Power windows. power seats. AMl=M stereo red•o hNter whltewall tires. crulMControt bucket seats. electric door locks. tilt wheel. "'"''"51995 •77 PLYMOUTH FUllY V-8. automatic. air cond111on1ng power- steerrng POW9f" brakes. radio. heater. wMewall lrres. vrnyt roof (790REGJ • Huntington Beach • ount ID ~aUe!J EDITION VOL. 70, NO. 21S, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES •1aoanTuun ........ ,...,. ...... MUD~ Beach city omria1s bee• lecal aC'UOO toda1 &o close lhadowlan Al'"n after a plane er at c:be aite -.tured t.b.ree peopie Monday ru1bt Auiatanl City Attorney Wllllam Amsbary said the city's le1eJ department bas becun to take affidavits and to compUe a statement ol racts before seeking an ~undkln to shut down the 31-year-old airport as a public * * * Aircraft Accident Probed Federal Aviation officials searched today for the cause of a Monday night plane crash al Huntington Beach's Meadowlark Airport which critically injured a IO-year-old boy and also left his parents hospitalized with less serious injuries. Huntington Beach police con- firmed that a small quantity of marijuana was found in the wreckage or the single-engine plane out of Parker, Ariz. The Cessna ISO piloted by Ronald Bybee. 29, smashed head- on Into a vacant quonset hut about9:1Sp.m. Monday. Ronald Bybee Jr., 10, re- mained in critical condition to- day at Hoag Memorial Hoepital in Newport Beach. He underwent sur1ery today after receiving massive head Injuries in the crash. His father and stepmother. Monica Bybee, 21, were reported in fair conditioa today at Hoag. FAA investigator Neal Savoy said the plane hid "some fuel, ' but very little." Police officers al the scene d~­ covered a plastic container In the plane with less than one ounce or marijuana In it. Narcotics in- vestigator Carl Vldano said no citations are pending at this time, but a report has been rorwarded to FAA officials. FAA Investigator Savoy said It is impossible to tell if the marijuana had a bearin1 on the collision. Savoy was at the scene Tues- \ day as workmen removed the ' wreckage of the light plane and placed It in a nearby hangar. He said an investigation into the possibility or mechanical failure should be completed by the end or the week. Bomb-making Aids Hunted SACRAMENTO CAP) -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. is callln1 for a congressional investigaUon of unaccounted -for nuclear materials of bomb-making quality. But federal officials call the unaccounted-for materials "in· ventoey differences," and say lbey're confident that ' 'no slcnili· cant amounts" of U23$ and pJutcoium have ever been divert- ed or stolen. They also define "significant amounts" as five kllo1rams (11 pounds) of U23S and two kUo- grama (4.4 pounds) of plutonium. nuiJance. Amsbary aa1d the petition is upected to be tued In Onmre CouM.7. S.Wior Court next w aed Jrill be followed by bearin1s. The decision to aeek the airport's closure waa m• un- animoualy by city council mem- bers Monday nlaht. Council member& were considering a ban on banner-towing operations at the airport wben they received news ol the crash. Mayor Ron Pattinaon said to- day that the time bu now come to close tM a.lrport. . "I used to be ill f1vor of kees>-: Ing lt. bUt J atn not -.iy fonier. ·~ be said. ":..- "Times have ebanaed and there is a potenU.i for • bil ii•· aster," be saJd. ''One life ifn't worth it," Pattinson said that tt the ~tty falls to succeed lD abUUine the facility that hOUHJ abo\.lt .100 ..................... _ DET. SAM AMBURGEY INSPECTS BROKEN SCREEN fa Thia How Kiiier Left Murdered Woman'• Horne? I Dead, 8 Burt Terrorists Bomb New York Offices No injurtes were reported in the Defense Department ex- plosion, but police aaid one man died and at lea.st stx people were injured al the Mobil omces. Another person was reported to have suffered a heart attack at the Mobllomces. Police decllned to identify the dead man. They aaid al least three of the iQjured were in serious CODd.ltlon. Tbe tens of thousasids of workers evacua&ed !tom the Chase Manhattan. lllooll OU and World Trade Center bulldin&s wer& told by loudspeaker to 10 bom~ The pollq bomb squad wu rushed to the American BriDCb bulldln1 to remove the device • found thete.; plasae1, it abould at least be in posltloo to implement some st~ sat~ nilt11. ''lbe nmway1 should be ln:s· p~ved Pd utendett and Di1ht ru1hts abould be discontinued," be said. Earl Tucker, area chief ol the State Division or AeronauUcs which issues a permit ror ltf eadowlark, takes a different· view, however. He said today that his depa.r· ment will do everythlnc It can legally to lrMSJ lt opeft. ·"Meadowlark -.Net u -.tat •eed f« 8enerW aviation la the area amt there ls nothlrii at Ute airport that makes it unaate for the people who use it." Tuck.er said. Tucker said his department has Identified pl'C)blema 1n the past and they have been qulcklf remedied by airport co-owner and manager.Art Nerio. Afteraoea N.Y.SIOeks TEN CEN,l I Hu:ntinitoo Beach otnclals for a numberof yean have trtecl to control act.Mtles al tbe airport but they HY tbeli' hands bave beenu.d. It sought last year to halt nlaht m111ts but backed off when told that the decision could be tecally cballenaed. The faclllty is privately owned I and la under the jurisdiction of state and !eden.I agencies. Killer SOught €oast WoDIBD Slain By A&THUR R. VINSEL °'"" .,. .. , "'" Meft A manhunt continueq today for the killer who slipped into a young woman's Corona del Mar apartment as she slept before dawn Tuesday a.nd bludgeoned her to death in her bed ror no apparent reason. The victim's ex-b'>yfrh:nd was picked up by Newport Beach police ror questlonlng later in the day and cleared. but was then ar- r e 1 te d on suspicion of a Southland bank robbery spree In a novel twist to the cue. Jane Ellen Bennington, 29, of 32% Mareuertte Ave., was slain apparenUy by a severe blow to the head with a heavy blunt in- stncment saJd Newport Bqcb Pollce hetecUve Set. Ken Tbompsan. No m~ weapon bas been toe a~. She ... diacovered •bout 1:30 p.Ut. by tM:rfooQ\fnat.e wbo went to a"ak,en the unemployecl forroer *laJ worker with whom sbe had aone out nlahtclubblne Mond~. lnvesti1ators said. Miss BennlnltGn WU killed as she lay In bed. reUred for the 11l1ht and apparently already asleep, set. Thompson said to- day . lnvesUeatora said there was no Indication ol any stntute with the attacker at aU. The vlctlm was patttally clotbed but Sgt. Thompson decllned to ffiteal ..,helher sbe had been sex\l&lly molested. · "Sbe was last seen by her roommate ebout a a.m .• In the parkina lot at Modo's Resuuranl,,. Sat. Thompson added. I "They'd been to Bobby McGee's," he explained. Miss Bennlnat~ had already givewber patktna cbeelt to the Jot attenct.nt and was walttn& for de- livery of her car, so her room- mate le(l with a friend. Sereeant 1bom.PIOD explained. He said the women went to Use Paclftc Coutln,hway niaht clob fairly often and the vlcUm'• roommate said 1t wu qommon for the attendanQ.tO park bet tar in Morio'a lot. Bobby McGee's la one of the Harbor Are•'s hot spots for stngles to concrqate a.pd the lot la often full, so the Morto's lot ta used when the cate is closed. Investigators said lbere ls no evJdence anyone accompanied Miss Benn.iqton to her shared apartment on tbe tree·ihacled street coastward of Pacific Coast IUgbw_,. Detiec:tlve Serceant Tbompeoo * * * said she bad apparently left a slldlnc &lees door open for ven- tilation in Oie mu11y heat and this ls believed to have been the point ol entry. He aaid a window screen at the front of tbe apartment was smashed out and round bent on the lawn, addln& that this is believed tobe the point where the intruder fled tbe premises. (See SLAYING. Pa1e AZ> * * * Cleared of Murder, Hel,d in Robberies I ..,, A tall, buti1 &anta An man, cleared minutes before ol the l'JlUrder of bla &irlfr~nd in Corona del Mar. YIU ·~y Jailed tw Newport a~·• police h•q Dl&h•. allett~ &.bat he t.~ ~ aa.e.,an C.p Bind.it.. JaUtes Steven Gano. a la al· teaed by DOlfce to be responalble ror 38 Southland bank ribberies occum.n, since 4uPe 10, the molt recent one 1... lban ODe hour before poUce picked him up. Hell suspected of holdlna up the Call!ornta Ftrat NtUOftal Bank in Hunttoiton Be1cb •and laking $1,300 In a robbery report· ed al4:5' p.Dl., pollceaJJd. (;ano'a cu was stopped by Newport Beach poUce at 5:30 p.m., and be "#aa e1con.ct to headquarten for questlonlrtt in • the blUdgeoc murder of »year· old Jane Ellen Beftnlneton. ,Questioning and a polylf'apb test ~d~inistued by Detective • Sat. K• Tbom~n absolved· Oam ol the predawn bomlclde. Pollcoh'd. ff ow ever. in the course ot routlne lnvestlaatlon It was established that Gano had three minor traffic citation arrest war. rants unpaid. totalin1 less than $iOO plus court costs. Jnvestiptors said he •creed to pay them off in order to avoid be· in& booted and their eyes popped when be produced a bankroll ot about 100 crisp. new $10 bills from b1s pocket. "One ot our ~a, l>etective Gary Bladt. saict tohimself"Gee. be shouldn't be carrying tbat (See SUSPECT. Pa1eAZ> Police Won't File On.Anthony's Aide ( .I QM. Y Pll OT HJF Wecln•SO• • A Ult'· tin • G Marines' Mile Square Plans Draw he. Ira.A ND A .,_.,._. ......... IL a coft:1 l•ndht1 pad ln lb• ut of COWJ\1-owned puti. Capt. John lbotw•11. A EJ A lJ S Marine Corp• plan to Toro Maria•Corrc Air IUOll ln· build many •• 1,300 mllJtary formatloo ort cer, aald the ~mtnll In lht middle of Mlle Squa.r• Park "an Jl'uunt.11' Valley mlllUiry t• heed wltb a aevere hu dra"'O Ore from a ho!ltof clly hot ... lns problem for lu enlisted ulrldaJ• per10M~I. Att.houah the Mlle &quve 1ite lllWWY epokamm aald today 11 ono ot thTmtlble loeatlona the pl woul lnvo1v11 Uie d.•· for the propos mllltaey houslnc •eto1tmeat o( • 180-aere project, Hid hotwell, it Ls thft trlan&UJar iart~• form~rly u.'lt'd u first choice Starting Over Fire Victinu to Rebuild SA:\'T·\ BARBARA tAP> --Lettie Serena, whose photogrnph "as u~cd in the Dally Pilot and other ne~paper~ around the world to s um up the tragedy or the Sanla Barbara fire wh1l'h burned 256 homes. s a\s "ht· and he r hui.band will rebuild their Rh·iera d1;tncl home on the sit<.· "We arc gomg lo s tart building again I don't know "hl·n. hut \H' "e want to get the blueprints to- du) ":.ht• ~;.11d Tut" .. day night · Mr:-. Serena, 68, said her husbund. a carpent~r. built the hous e 18) ear:-. ago for $35,000. Last January the couple were offered $150,000. "But our insun .ince ls only $37,000.'' she said. adding. "I think w<.• could build it back for 575,000. ·· "It "as such a lovely view. ju:-.t bC"Jutiful. It wu:-. up on '' hill. Wl' t ould see all the ocean. the mountains We \\'C.'n ' so huppy. The house wa!> paid Cor .ind we were getting where we could relax and s ave money ... dtdn 't owe nobody a nickel," she said Diablo Flareups Recall Fireinen ClJAYTON (AP> -Weary firefighters, their rest interrupt- ed early today when a full crew was called back on the Jines at nearby Ml Diablo to battle flareups at unburned "islands," app11rently have saved radio County Suing For Recovery Of Overcharge Orange County supervisors agreed Tuesday to Ille a lawsuit to recover $327,246 county auditors allege was improperly charged the county under a men- tal health contract with a Hunt- ing ton Beach convalescent home. The suit will be filed agains t G arlield Convalescent Hospital, Inc . and related firms or Con- valescent and Rehabilitation En· terprises, Inc., Care Enterprises, Winn Enterprises, principa1s of the firms and Garfield's accoun- tant, Neil H. Wineiar, according to a report to supervisors. The hospital reported the ex- penses from March of 1974 until its contract to care for mental pa- tients was terminated in June or 1976. But county auditors claim the t'harges were excessive and went to purchase services from busi- nesses in which the hospital owners held an interest. The auditors also contend the hospital accountant, Wlne1ar, was a business partner with one of the ~p1tal proprietof'9. Deputy County Counsel Vic Bellan.ie said the hospital is al- lowed to purchase services from Cir ms hospital officials also own But, he said, the charee to the county for those purchased services should be no are.ter t.bAn lhe cost of comparable services in the open market._ Ron Durand ol the county Men- tal Health Department said the audit was ordered af\er llome hospital employea made alleea· \tons concerning the hospital operaUon during a labor dispute mare than a )'ear aao. Hoepltal officials could not be reached for comment. O"ANot COAIT "'" DAILY PILOT equipment threatened by the two-day-old blaze. Communications equipment and towers on top or Mt. Diablo, s aved when the lightning· i.parked fire swept through the area late Monday, had be~n in danger when winds whipped the top of the mountain, according to Richard Hoover of the California Department of Forestry. No equipment was reported damaged, said a spokesman. but several electrical lines burned down. Military, police and various other agencies have equipment on the 3,850-Coot summit of Mt. Dlablo, one of the hlehest polnts in the San Francisco area. Fro.PageAJ SUSPECT ••• much money'." said Detecti_y~ Capt. Rich Hamilton. _,,., Investigators began erilling Gano about the ori&ln of the sus· picious cash and furlh'jr ex· amination allegedly revealed a California First National Bank stamp. The suspect also closely re- s embled the so-called Baseball Cap Bandit who has struck re- peatedly in the pa.st two months, making off with thousand.I of dollars. Authorities said Gano also closely resembles~he escriplion of the bandit who s ck the Run· tingtoo Beach nit at 17122 Beach Bll'd.. within the hour befOTe Gano was detained. . Teller Kathy Vorwerk told police a tall, husky man with lreekJes and carrot-orance hair slicked down presented her with a note that explained he was rob- bing the bank. No gwi has been seen or ap- parenUy utilized in the string of holdups by the redhead wearing a baseball cap, authorities said. The Baseball Cap Bandit Is believed responsible for the rob- bery of both the United California Bank at a10 E . Coast Hiabway in Corona del Mu on July 21 and the Manufacturer's Bank holdup at 1201 Doff St .• J u•y 29, polic:e sa.ld. If e has also struck two banb in Costa Mesa dutt.nc the apree in· volvlng itlckvps oceurrln1 sorneUme.s twice in one day. "No JQQntY linked to An1 other robbet'Mll bas ~ recovered." Detectlve Sit. nomoeon said co. day. ConaresalonaJ approval or the Mayor Pro Tern Ber;nlo .. MGlt ot tbi famlU.. would Howard Seel~, ald• to clan would mean aboul 200 of the Svai.ted la.Id, "It doeAn't make make between eight and nine Concreaman Ro rt Badbam ou•lna unit.I would be under let\M," N pl.,n would moao a trips per day." said Holllndeo. <R·Nowport Beacla>, said tlle CODJtruttloo by lt'ft, aceordin1 drain on the clty'a resources and •'To me the whole Idea is plen ls only in "taltin& stqes a\ to Orange County Supervisor could create a "1hetto sur. reprehensible," he added. this t.lmo." Philip Anthony. -rounded by '150,000 homes" ii ll Stantoo said the plan would Fountain Valley city officials ls built, hesatd. have a heaft;. Impact tho cl\y'a Seelye said It currenUy calls police and e departments as for apartments for low-ranking met with rnUltary spokesmen Councilman Al Holllnden, al110 well as school&. lbiUtary personnet with no ntore June 16 and were aurprised by an Oran~ Counly Transit DI•· City, county and mlUtary of· than two dependent.. s..lyeMld tho propoaed plan, Hid Mayor trlct Offk • aald one of tM blost flciala will meet la Foont.aln the first 200 un1ta would be in· Roser Stanton. serious problems with the plan Valley~· 8 t.o hear the Marine eluded in a • miWon a.ppropria· "It'is totally ridiculous," said would be the traffic It would Corps clals present their pro-tloas blU to be introduced in the Stant.on. generate. posal. House before the end ot UM year. CIA Drugs, Hypnosis Told WASHINGTON tAP> -CIA Director Stansfield Turner testified today that newl)! dis- covered documents disclosed the CIA sponsored 149 projects in· volvine drugs, hypnosis, shock harassment and even magicians as it experimented with control· ing the human mind. Turner told a joint bearing or the Senate lnteJllaence Commit· tee and the Health subcommittee that the project, known ultimate· ly as MK-ULTRA, took place from 12 to 25 years aco. "I assure you that the CIA ls in no way engaged In either witting or unwittina testinc of druas to- day," he said. Turner told the committee the documents, hitherto unreported to Concress. were found In seven boxes along with financial re- cords in a records center near Washington. The documents, in the form or fiscaJ records, do not include status reports or progress analyses of the various parts of the project. Campaign Funds Spent lnc11mbents Using Collections Quickly By GAllY GRANVILLE Of ... D.tlly "*"tuft Campaign finance disclosure s tatements filed by Orange Coon· ty officeholders indicate that most incumbents are spending their 1977 campaign dollars almost as fast as they come in. Non-election year campaign expenditures by officeholders in· elude everything from com- puterized birthday greetings to their constituents to flowers for their defeated 1976 election rivals. County Supervisor Laurence Schmit, for example, raised $23,lSS ln the fint six months or 1977, according to his campaign s tatement. · But Schmit spent $24,627, most of it to wish his constituents $10.000 worth of computerized birthday greetings and $7 ,600 for a survey lo find out what's on his constituents' collective minds. Schmit also shelled out $2,000 through his Supervisor Larry Schmit Dmner Committee for the services of political consultants Arnold Forde and Wllliam Butcher. And, the dinner committee re· port shows, be ran up an added $3,000 ln unpaid Forde-Butcher consultations Jeadlni to his 1978 re-elecUon bid. According to a report filed by the Committee to Re-Eleet Den- nis Mangers, the 73rd Assembly District assemblyman spent $1,706 of the $11,898 he look in the past six months on air fare to and from Sacramento. Mancers' campaign commit· tee also was active in helping to finance its candidate's ap- pearances at local events. For instance, It paid $19 COr a Fr.. Pflffe Al SLAYING ••• ticket to Huntington Beach City Councilman Ted BarUett's re· cent testimonial dinner. The committee also paid $20 for tickets lo the Huf'lington Beach Citizen of the Year ban- quet. $22 for tickets to a dinner for Hunllnit<>n Beach City Coon· cilwoman Harriet Wieder and $6.50 for a Huntinaton Bef.'h His- torical Society lunch. The Mangers committee also paid $100 for tickets to the Mardan Award Dinner, $18 for a Joe al "meet your .mayor dinner" and $11 for a "police recognf. lion" lunch. Recipient of $100 Maniers' campaign dollars was a commit· tee put together to honor the man Mangers defeated ln 197ti, former Republican auemblyman Robert Burke. Burke also received $1S worth of flowers Crom the M anaers committee, •ccordlne to its re· port. And the Balboa Bay Club bill for a Mangers fund raiser was Sl.82.8. the repart said. IF Auemblyman Ron Cordova <D·EI Toro) received only $2,330 in monetary campaign conlribu· lions ln the first six months of 1977. Cordova's major expense item was Sl.179 coverlnc "air travel for campaign." But Cordova also repaid $4,050 worth of loans left ov'er from 1976 and another $600 loan was forgiven, accordln~ to the Cordova for Assembly commit· tee report. One oC tbe few non· officeholders to file a report with the Registrar or Voters In Santa Ana waa Marian Bergellon, an announced Cordova foe in 1978. Mrs. Bergeson, who was nar· rowly defeated ln the 74lh Dis· lrlct Republican primary in 1976 and who polled more than 30,000 votes as a write-In candidate In the general election, showed campatcn receipts of $22S. She also reported lncurrtng campaign debts of $5'14, most of It a retainer due Mrs. J .D. Turner for conaultina. you haven't seen it, see it today! S.wc up to 40% But be aald the qeocy is "now In pouessloo of the names ol 115 noncovemment raearcbers and aulstanta who are ldentmed in the recovered material deallni withthe149subprojects. "The names of 80 institutions where work was done or with which these people affiliated are also meoUoned, ''he conUnued. ·'The lnstituUona include 44 colleges or universiUes, 15 re- search foundations or chemical and pharmaceutical Competes and the like, 12 hospitals or . clinics ... and three penal in- stitutions." Adm. Turn'r did not name any of the lndivlduala or in.Ututlons in his prepared tesUmony. · "Moel of the people and institu- tions Involved are not aware of agency spons<rnhip," he aaid. Turner aaid one contribuUoa of $37S,OOO t.o a private medical in· atituUon's building fund was made through an intermediary t.o make it appear;J. private donation. He said the institut waa not told the true sourc the &if\. Turner said the CIA bas in- formation that some unwitting drlfg testing was carried on in San Francisco and New York Ci- ty, lnvoJ vtng three-Individuals. "We also know now that some unwitting testing took place on criminal sexual psycopaths con· fined at a state hoepital and that, additionally, research was done on a knockout or 'k' drug ln parallel with research t.o develop pain killers for cancer patients. Turner uid he is working with Attorney General Griffin Bell to make available whatever materials Bell may need for uy investi1ation be may decide to begin. 1 ------~ -- -~·-~----.. VOL 70, NO. 21S, 4 SECTIONS, 4 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 3, 1977 TEN CENTS1 ' CIA Drugs, Hypµosis, Magic Revealed. WASBINGTON <AP> -CIA Direetor Staaafleld Turner tatined today t1lat uwly dil· cov-wed document.a dbcloeed the CIA spomored Ht projeeta iD· ..,&vtq dnlp, bypnoai1, ahock baraament and even mqiciana as it aperimented with cootrol· ins t.bebumaa mtnd. ~ toW a )(>Uat beariQ& ol the Seu.le lntelliceoce Comm.it· tee ad tbe ffealtb IUbcommitaee that tbe project, lmoWD ultimate- ly u MK-ULTRA. look place Charges Dropped For Aide After recheckine their com· puter-Ued stolen property lists, Santa Ana P.Olice said today they will not file receiving stolen property charges against Nathan HlU. 2S, an aide to Oranee County Supervisor Philip Anthony. Police said they also are aban· doning plans to charge Hill with suspicion of possessing mari· juana for sale. Jt was Monday that police they said they would seek an arrest warrant and charge Hill with suspicion or the two crimes, charges stemming frol1} a Friday evening incident at the Anthony aide's Santa Ana apartment. Among other things, police said stereo equipment and weapons taken from the apart· ment at 209 E. 20th St., Santa Ana, matched descriptions of property stolen In local burglaries. It was also said that a large quantity of marijuana "in full view" of oCficers was found ln the apartment where police hlld pe in response to a dlsturbing the • peacecall Hill wasn't home at the time. But bia girlfriend WU. And police aald 22-year.old Mae Katherine Ferrell, also of the 20th Street address, bad broken all the windows in the Hill apartment, battered all the doors and was throwtn1 whatever she could lay her bands on against the apartment walls. Miss Ferrell and a 17·year.old juvenile, purportedly her . brother, were taken mto custody and charged with receiving stolen property and possession or marijuana for sale. And a few hours later when Hill telephoned police, he was invited to come down to the station for a chat. He declined. <SeeAIDE, Pa1eAZ) lrotn Ut.o25yean 110. anal)'HI of the various parts of ''I lllUN ~that the CIA ls ln tb prOject. no •IY .,td ln either wlUJ.nc But he aaid the 11ency ls "now or wttt1D1 te1Un1 of dn.taa to-ln pouesaloo ol the names of 185 day," be said. noacovernment researchers and Turner told tbo committee the aasiltanta who are identlfled ln documents, hitherto unreported the recovered material dealing to Coqreas, wer. found tn seven wlththe149subprojects. boxes alone wttla financial re-.. Tbe names of 80 institutions cords ln a records center near where work wu done or with W ubingtoa. • which these people affll.lated are The documents, in the form of also mentioned," he continued. • fi1cal record.a, do not include "The institutions Include 44 status report~ or pro1ress colleges or universities, 15 re- YoungRa~er Glenn Pavlovsky. 7, practices on the new bicycle motocross course in Irvine in preparation for this weekend. The bicycle Motocross League is sponsoring a clinic for young motocross enthusiasts <ages 6 to 16 > Saturday and races will be held Saturday and Sunday. New York Bombs Kill I Te11oria1JJ Threaten Five More Explosiom NEW YORK (AP> -Bombl exploded In two midtown Maohattan olflce bulldinp to- day, kllllng one person and IJUur· lnl about seven olbf!rs. Police be1an aearcllin1 other bulldlnas after waminp from a terrwi1t band that more explosions would follow to dramathe demands for Puerto Rican independence. ed. Among evacuees was NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle. Explosions went off at the Mobil Oil Co. buildine on busy 42"d Street near Lexlneton A venue and al Defense Depart· ment offices on the 21st floor of a nearby build.inc at 43rd Street and Madison Avenue. A Pentagon spokesman Jn Waabiniton said. the New York office, the Office of Secret.ary of Defense Sec\lrity Dtvislon·Jl'i•id Off lee, ia staffed by • 'ln· veaUgatort who perform sec\Ui· ty dull .. in ~ection with bac:k· Cround investigation checks" for dearan'Cel. No liituiies were report.eC! at . that balldine, but 011e man ~ ~it a..t s.ven others were ln· Jq"'4 ID the Mobil blast. The dead man was identified as CSM80MB8, Pa•• Al) • search foundations or chemical and pharmaceutical Companies and the like, 12 hospitals or clln1C5 ... and three penal in· stllutions." Adm. Turner did not name any of the individuals or institutions In his prepared testimony. "Most of the people and lnstitu· lions involved are not aware of agency sponsorship,'' he said. Turner said one contribution of $375,000.lo a private medical in· stitutio~·s building fund was made throulh an lntermed1ary to make it appear as a private donation. He said the lnsUtuUon was not told the true source of the gift. Turner said the CIA bas in· formation that some unwiltint drug testing was carried on ln San Francisco and New York Ci· ty, in vol vlng three individuals. "We also know now that some unwitting testlne took pla,ce on criminal sexual psycopaths con· ftned at a stale hospital and that, addiUaaally, research was done on a knockout. or 'k' dn&c ir) parallel with research to develop pain killers for cancer paUenta. Turner aaid be is workinC with Attorney General Griffin Bell to make available what.ever materials Bell may need for any investlgatiop be may decide to begin. He said he is working with both the attorney eeneral and JOHpb A. Califano Jr., tbe secretary ot health, education and welfare. Killer Sought l Coast Womari Slain In Own Apm·tmen~ By ARTHUR R. VINSEL OllM D•llY ~1 ... st.tf A manhunt continued today for the killer who slipped mto a young woman's Corona del Mar apartment as she l>lept before dawn Tuesday and bludgeoned het to death in her bed for no apparent reason. The victim's ex-boyfriend was picked up by Newport Beach poliee for questioning later in the day and cleared, but was then ar· res ted on suspicion of a Southland bank robbery spree in a novel twist to the case. Jane Ellen Bennington, 29, of 322 Marguerite Ave., was slain apparenUy by a severe blow to the bead with a heavy blunt in· strument, said Newport Beach Police Detective Sgt. Ken Thompson. No mwtler weapon has been localed. She was discovered about 1:30 p.m. by her roommate who went to awaken the unemployed former social •oTker with whom she bad IOl'le out nicbtclubblng Mond~, investigators said. Miu Bennington was killed as she lay in bed, retired for the night ~d apparently already asl~. Sgt. Thompson said to-day. lgvestigators said there was no indJcation of any struggle with th-r attacker at all. The victim was partially clothed but Sgt. Thompson d~cllned to reveal whether she had been sexually molested. "She was last seen by her roommate about 2 a .m .• ln the parking lot at Mario 's Restaurant," Sgt. Thompson added. "They'd been lo Bobby McGee's," he explained. Miss Bennington had already given her parking check to the lot attendant and was waiting for de· livery of ber car, so her room· mate left with a friend, Sergeant Thompson explained. He said the women went to the Pacific Coast Highway ni&ht club fairly often and the victim's roommate said it was common for the attendants to park her car in Mario's lot. Bobby ~cGee's is one of the Harbor Area's bot spots for sin&les to con1re1ate and the lot is often full, so the Mario's lot is used when the cafe is closed. Iovestiaators said there ii no evidence anyone accompanied Miss Bennington to her shared apartment on .the tree-shaded street coastward of Pacific Coast Hi1bway. Detec:tlve Sergeant TholN*>n Hid lhe had apparenUy len a sllc:liq •la11 doot open for ven· &ilatioa in the muuy beat and thia la believed to have ~ the point ol entry. o.llY ........... .., ...... ...,_ DET. SAM A,..BURGEY INSPECTS BROKEN SCREEN Is Thia How Kiiier Lett Murdered Woman'• Home? Cleared of Mur.der, · Held in Robberies A tall, burly Santa Ana man, cleared minutes before of the tnurder of bis girlfriend In Corona del Mar. w•• abnq>t1y Jatled by Newport Beach police 'ruesd~ nleht on alleeattons that be ls the notorious Baseball Cap Bandit. Jam SteVea Gano, 28. ii al· leged by police to be res~ble for 38 ~ buk robberles occurii!\j &inc-. June 10, the mOlt recent <!')e leu than one hOur before pot.lee pick" bim up.: He ls IUJ~ted ot bOldfiiS up tbe Callforrila Flrat Nadooal Bank ln Huntineton Beach and taking $1,300 in a robbery report- ed aU:S)p.m., poliee said. M DAIL v ftll.OT Mine 1iupa 150People JOHA N&i8U 0, Mrica (4P•-About l• m.1nen w e trapped aftd feared dt1d t~ly after &I\ explc.lon In a coal mll'e in central Moa.am b1 .w. and nine for l1ner1 we,.. killed ln •ubtequent r1otma at t.be mine, R 1dlo Mou1mblque rtpcir1td. The radio, monitored h'fft, I d NU'UI upef'A• UOM w under way aDd troope were 1ent to restore order •t the Cblpan1a mine. Th~ r*"° 1ave no detall1 'of how the fon11nen were killed, but uJd they dled In "•n•e dlaturbancu" afttt the uplosloo fl Iden· tilled them only as be1n1 ot 'different nationalibea." Driver Hurt In Irvine Auto Crash An Anaheim woman who ran her car into a ditch just outside the Irvine city boundary this morrung was listed in serious condition in the intensive care unit at T~n Community Hospital. Hospital aides refused to elaborate on the injuries suffered by Petronele Valentine, 52. But Orange County Fire Paramedics who assisted at the scene said the woman received numerous cuta and bruises, In addlUon to poa1i· ble internal injuries and broken ribs. Paramedics said they found the woman pinned Inside her car in a ditch that hes beyond the north end of Culver Dcive. The ditch is on Irvine Company ..property and none of the officials involved could explain how or why Mrs. Valentine was on private property. A paramedic spokesman said it appeared she ran her car over a culvert and Into the ditch and that she had probably been inside the car for an hour before being spotted by farm workers. Firemen Quell Canyon Blaze Orange County fireli1ht~ at· lacked and quickly extinguished a small brush fire shortJy after It broke out in Black Star Canyon just before noon today. • The blaze located about three miles up Black Star Canyon Road from Sant1a10 Canyon Road blackened only about two to three acres. Fire Capt. Bruce Turbeville said a cause was expect~ to be determined later Loday. Energy Fund Eyed MOUNTAIN VIEW (AP> - Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. aays the country is • 'losinc ita political and economic nerve" 1n the area of experimental hi1h·technoloo energy development, and be bu called for more spendlnc ln the area. You mlaht call this Dally Pilot clusif\ed ad a cl~ic story. An El Toro woman sold her wheels on the second call with these lines: &6 Rambler. closslc S60 Ladiec Schwinn 5 speed bike 125. xn·•xxx U you want t.o wheel and deal alone the Orance Coast, do It ln tbe Dally Pilot classified ada. Call 142-5878 for fast and friend· l.)lservice. DAILY PILOT Water 1t'a•ters 75 Reported ~ To District More t.bn 7$ reporU Of people w&1Un1 water have come Into the Irvine Ranch Water Dlltrict •Ince • new aet of re&ulaUona went lnto effect one month aso. But to tar, only verbal warn· Ina• have been l11ued to v1olat.ora. No written warnin1a have beat .unt out yet and no w•IM HrVice hu bffn dlacon· nectA!d u a result or the olfenaes. The J RWD board of dlrectora ado~ the new set of rule1 ln an attempt. to make resident& more •ware of the water sbort11e. Some ol the ruJea include not 00.· lng down cars, driveways or sidewalks, not watenn1 lawna between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m., and not flooding gutters from excess waterinc. When the rules were first adopted, water district officials s aid they would fir$t issue writ· Fro.a rag~ A J FUNDS ••. Republican assemblyman Robert Burke. Burke also received $15 worth of flowers from the Mangers committee, according to its re· port. And the Balboa Bay Club bill for a Mangers fund raiser waa $1 ,828, the report said. Assemblyman Ron Cordova <D·El Toro) received only $2,m in monetary campaign conlribu· tiona in the first six months of 1977. Cordova's major expense item was $1.179 covering "air travel for campaign." But Cordova also repaid $4,0SO worth of loans left over from 1976 and another $600 loan was forgiven , accordlni to the Cordova for Assembly commit· tee report. One or the few non · officeholders to file a report with the Registrar of Voters in Santa Ana waa Marian Bergeson, an announced Cordova foe in 1978. Mrs. Bergeson, who was nar· rowly defeated ln the 74th Dis· trlct Republic4n primary in 1976 and who polled more than 30,000 votes as a write-in candidate in the general election, showed campaign receipta of $225. She also reported incurring campaign debts of $574. most ol it a retainer due Mni. J .D. Turner for consulting. I",.._ Page Al AIDE ••• By Monday police were so con· cerned about Hlfl 's failure to ap-pear that they announced they would seek an arrest warrant. Later in the day, Anthony an· nounced the suspension of his aide until "everything Is cleared up." The clearing up apparently began when police rechecked their computerized stolen prop· erty list and discovered the sus· pect stereo equipment had been stolen, recovered and then ~urchased by Hill at a police auc· Uon. Apparently the other, items taken from Hlll's apartment Fri· day evening could not be '!latch~ on the stolen property list. Moreover. while an estimated 15 ounces ol marijuana was aJ. legedly found in the apartment. it could not be linked to Hlll. As a result, the Anthony aide is no longer beiJW sought by the police or, for that matter, su•· P«:cted of commltllng any crimes. ten warnings and then cut on service If the violaUon conUnues. Jt would cost '7.50 to reconnect Hrvlcet. A spokeswoman for tho dla· , trlct, Edie Van Lehn, said thwe has been no need for written com· plaints, slnce verbal warnings aeem to be servin1 their pUJ'p08e. "We've had no repeat com· phalnta from people who bad ob- served violations, so we haven't sent written warnings yet," said M l..ss Van Lehn. Moel of the calls that the dis· trlct ha• fielded concern nei&hbon reporting violations of other neighbors. community as· soclaUons or large businesses and public agencies. She said one call came in several days alter the rules were adopted, when someone com· plained that the sprinklers at Town Center, where the water dlstrict offices are located, were running at midday. Miss Van Lehn said they im· mediately phoned the property owner, the lrVine Company, and had the sprinklers shut off until after4 p.m. • Residents seem most con· cerned about excess watering of greenbelts by community as· soclation.s, excess waterinc by cities and by some businesses in the industrial complex. she said. This week district aides sent out letters to all public agencies and large organizations within the city notifying them directly of the new rules. .. We're notifying all local in· dustnes and commercial institu· lions, cities (Irvine, Tustin, San· ta Ana and Newport Beach>. UC Irvine and the Marine Corps air stations," said Miss Van Lehn. Between eight and 10 different groups have requested variances from the regulations and Ms Van Lehn said each has been granted. Most have been from com· munity associations explaining that their management com· panies sometimes test the green· belt sprinkler lines during the middle of the day and that it would be a violation without a variance. Another was from the com~ pany building a church on Irvine Cent.er Drive. The firm asked for special permission to do cement work, which requires repeated hosine, on several Saturdays. FroaPflfleAl BOMBS ••• Charles Steinberg, 26. of Manhat· tan, a partner in a company called Viva Temporary Services, an · employment agency located on the ground floor of the building. Bellevue Hospital officials said Steinberg died of head injuries suffered in the explosion. Hls partner, Ira Gersten, was in· ju red. Other evacuations were or· dered on the basis of communlca-llons from FALN, a Puerto Rican Independence group about which police have learned UWe and which authorities have been \Dia· bleto penetrate. Today's blasts bring to SO the number of bombinga connected to the group in three years. "A telephone call has been re- ceived claiming that the FALN did it," said Police Com- missioner Michael Codd, who said later that authorities bad "no specific leads" in locating the persons who planted the bombs. Sirens wailed on coftgested Manhattan streets, and police roped off many of them from vehicuJar and pedestrian midday traffic. Officials said at least three suspicious devices were Cound ln their searches. Purex Co~f 011nder Succ11mbs at 7 5 King Brandi Winner of the All·Amen can "glamor kitty" compett tion in Hollywood, Fla .. is Brandi Alexander. a 3-year· old male with semi-long hair in white. tan and orange. The 12·pound feline belongs to Linda Northrup, 14, of Rome. N.Y .. and wins the right to the title "King Cat" for the next year. Lightning-torched Fires Peril Parks By Tbe Auoclated Press Hundreds of fires raeed throu1h state and national parkland today al~r a second night of Hchming bolta nasl)ed down on land dried by California's two-year drought. Weary firefighters worked double shifts as frantic supervisors tried to direct crews to the largest blazes. Officials said many fires had to be left un -checked. State forester Gary Buzzlni said lightnin1 in the Sierra Nevada mountain ranee started an estimated 400 fires Tuesday night and early today. ''Forty lo 50 percent of them are unmanned," he said. "Our manpower is committed. We just don't have any more people. He esUmatcd 20,000 to 30,000 acres of CDF's 33-million acre territory were burning this morning. IF Bill Powers of the U.S. Forest Service estimated 10,000 acres of its 25 million acres in California were naming in 261 separate fires, most of them small. In the Los Padres National Forest, firefighters equipped with chainsaws backed their way LAGUNANS VIEW S.BARBARA DAMAGE-A3 through 30-year·old timber and underbrush trying to reach one fire spreading through the mid· die of a national wilderness area. Debbie Gold, U.S. Forest Service fire information officer, said the fire had grown to 2,300 acres. Another fire on the southeast edge of the Ventana Wilderness had grown to more than S,000 acres by this mornlnr. sbe said you haven't seen it, see it today! ~.we uplo 40% ,.,....P ... .4.1 SUSPECT ••• Calllomle First National Bank stamp. Tbe ausped also clOlSt!y re- sembled the sc>-called Baseball Cap Bandit who bu struck re- peatedly.in the past two months, makln1 off with thousands of dollars. Authorities said Gano also closely resembles the dacrlptjon oC the bandit who at.ruck tbe NW\· tintton Beach bank at· 1'1122 Beach Blvd., wlthhl the hour before Gano wu detained. Teller Kathy Vorwerk tt>ld police a tall, husky man with freckles and carrot-orange hair aUcked down presented her with a note that explained be was rob- btnc the bank. No IWl has been seen or ap- parenUy uUlized ln the •trinc of holdups by the redhead ftartn1 a baseball cap, autboritiu u.ld. The Baseball Cap Bandll is believed responsible for the~ bery of both the UnUed Califorma Bank at 3141 E. Cout ID1hway in Corona del Mar Gil J'11y 21 ,aad the Manulactvcr'1 Danit holdup at 1201 Dove St.. July 29, police said. He has also struck two banb in Costa Mesa du.ring the spree ln· volvlr1g atickups occurring sometimes twice in one day. "No money linked lo any otber robberies has been recovered." Detective Sgt. Thompson said to-day. Attic Blaze Causes $1,500 loss in Irvine A fire that beaan on the rool of a house In the Colle1e Park ana of Irvine burned a bole throu&h the attic and caused about Sl,SOO damage, fire officials said today. The blue at 14861 Sumac Ave. broke out shortl,y before 5 p.m. Tuesday and apparently bad been burning for about 10 minutes before it was noticed by nei1hbors. The flames burned the shingled lwo-atory roof and then extended down into the aUic. No one was home at the time of the fire. Firemen said the origln of the fire is still under investigation, but the preliminary theory Is that possibly children threw sparklers onto the roof or the house. L una/ After•eo•. N.Y.Stoe VOL. 70, NO. 21.5, 4 SECTIONS •& PAGES TEN CEN .. CIA Drugs, Hypnosis, Magic Revealed ASIUNOTON IAP> -CIA Oareetor Stanaf1eld Turner teclllled tod111 that newly d11- ~ eted documents diseloeed the CIA sponsored 149 proJttt.a \n- ~olvinl dnap, bypnosUI, tbock barusmmt and even mq1clans a& it expenmented with coot.rol- lnt lbe lwman awtd. Turner told a joint bearin& ol the Senate lnteJllsenc• Commit· tee and the Health subcommittee that the project, known ultimate- ly as MK-ULTllA, took place from12to25yea.nqo. ·' l UIW'e you lb.wt the CIA la in no way ~aaed in eltber wttllQI or unwiltlnt LeaUn& of drup to- day," he •aid. TW"lleT told the committee the documenu, hitbert.o unreported to Congress, were found in seven boxes a1oq w1lb financial re- cords in a records center near w asbincton- The documents. in the form of fiscal records, do not include status reports or pro1ress Cl'Ullclaed in Laguna analyses of the varloua parts of the project. But be said the aaency ls "now ln pouessiou of the names of 185 no~ovemment researchers and a.utstaDts who are identified in the recovered material dealine wilhtbe149subprojecll. ·'The names or 80 lnstltutions where work wu done or with which these people affiliated are also mentimed," he continued. •'The institutions include 44 colleges or univeraltiea, 1S re- \ Porsche driver Patricia A. Snyder, 48, of 933 Quivera SL, Laguna Beach, was iq· jured Tuesday morning in this two-car collisiao at Cliff Drive and North Coast · Hi~hway. She was listed in satisfa~tory condition today at South Coast Community Hospital. Polle-. identifled the driver of the other car as Daniel F. »eneff'. '29, or 213 Wake Forest Road, Costa Mesa. Acd· dent occurred about 7:30 a.m. Lighming Torches DroughJ,.parched Land By The AsAOClated Presa Hundreds of fires raged through stale and national parkland today after a secGnd night or lightning bolts nashed down on land dried by California's two-year drought. Weary firelighters worked double shifts as franti c supervisors tried lo direct crews ' to the largest blazes. Orticials said many fires bad to be left un- checked. State forester Gary Buzzini said lightning in the Sierra LAGUNANS VIEW $.BARBARA DAMAGE-A3 Nevada mountain range started an estimated 400 fires Tuesday night and early today. "Forty to SO percent of them are unmanned," be said. "Our Dana Point Man Held in Burglary Laguna Beach Police arrested a 28-year-old Dana Point man Tuesday after a silent burglar ,f &Jann at Bushard's Pharmacy. • 244 ForestAvenue, wassetoff. Pptrict W. Kenealy of 3'122 El Enc!anto Ave., was taken into cu1t.od)' when officers cbeclced tb~ roof of the downtown Coast Fair Uuw&h Thursday. pa\chy low clouds and foe near coast lo late Diabt to m'4 ~ boun. H1aM from mld-!lOI on beacb to low IOI ialaild. manpower is committed. We just don't have any more people. He estimated 20,000 to 30,000 acres of CDF's 33-mlllioo acre territory were burning this mornina. BUI Powers of the U.S. Forest Service estimated lQ,000 acres of its 25 milllon acrea ln California were naming ln 261 separate fires, mostoftbemsmall. In the Los Padres National Forest, fireflabters equipped with chainsaws backed their,.._,. through »year-old timber and underbrush trying to reach one fire apreadina through the mid· dle of a national wilderness area. Debbie Gold, U.S. Forest Service fire information officer, said the fire bad irown to 2.300 acres. Aaother fire on the southeast edee ol lhe Ventana Wilderness bad arown to more tban s.ooo acres by th1.I mornin.t, she said. Cre\VI were able to reach at least one side of the blue and becin dlJainl out f'lrelilles. Information officer lr1 Everest eald Forest Service restrictions barnd men from taking equip- ment «her' than cbaiDlawa lnt.o Uie Wtldeli\eu area. .. Because tt l• a Wilderness erea. tlte lheor)' I.to have no Im· prtnt OI m.a." be said. "AS loaa u there la 1 _possibility cl con- troWnc by other meana t.ban roads and fi_Obll aor:aeUiliil to dis· harb the natural order-. ,,... WW cljO<ie.1'~~·: Q::Jly_;·r;e•t ••Um ated 500 ~ .... blttllni bOth ... bl tM ~. l'OCQ t.ri'atn Dllllr lli:Sur. aeak'ch foundations or cihemlcal and pbannaceutlcaJ Computes and the like, 12 hospitals or cllnles • . . aQd three penal ln· stltutlon.s." Adm. Turner dld not name any of the lndlvtdual.s or institutions in his prepared testimogy. •'Most ol the people and institu- tions involved are not aware ol agency sponsorship," he said. Turner said one contribution ol $375,000 to a private medical in- stitution's bulldinc fund was made throu&b an Intermediary to inake it appear as a prtvatei donation. He said the Institution wu not told the true source or the gift. Turner said the CIA bu in· formation that some UAwittinc druJ tesUnc wu carried on in San Francisco and New York Cl· ty. involving three lndlvtduals. "We also know now that some unwitting testing toot place oo criminal sexual psycopaths COD· fined at a state hospital and that. oddlUonatly, NSearcb wu done on a knockout or ·t• dru.t in parallel with research to develop pain klllers for cancer patlents. Turner ..Sd be ii working with Attorney General Griffin Bell to make available whatever materials Bell may need for any tnvesttcatloo be may decide to belin. lle said he ls workinc with both the attorney 1ener1J and Joseph A. Califano Jr., the secretary of health. educaUoo and welfare Killer Sought Coast Woman Slain By ARTIIUR B. VINSEL Of tllt Delly .-.i.e Staff A manhunt Continued today for the killer who slipped into a young woman's Corona del Mar apartment as she slept before dawn Tuesday and bludgeoned her to death in her bed for no apparent reason. The victim's ex-boyfriend was picked up by NeWJ)Ort Beach police for questionlnc later in the day and cleared, but was then ar- rested on suspicion of a Southland bank robbery spree in a novel twist to the case. Jane Ellen BeMington, 29, or 322 Marguerite Ave., was slain apparently by a severe blow to the head with a heavy blunt in- strument, said Newport Beach Poltee Detoctlvo Sgt. Kon Thompson. No murder weapon bu been located. She was discovered about 1:30 p.1D. b1 her roon:amat• who '"'1t to awaken the upe~ployed rormer eoctal worktt with whom she had ton~ out alghtclubbln1 Monday, investigators said. Miss Benniniton WU killed as she lay in bed, retired for the night and apparently already asleep, Sgt. Thompson said to-day. Investigators said there was no indication of any strueale with the attacker at all. The victim was· partially clotb~d but Sgt. Thompson decllned to reveal whether ahe had been sexually molested. •'She was last seen by her roommate about 2 a.m., in lhe parking lot at Morlo's Restaurant,•• Sgt. Thompson added. • .. They'd been to Bobby McGee'a," he explained. Miss Bennincton bad already &iven her parking check to the lot HI Suicide leaves Note For Coroner "I was Harold Deer· In,. • .aorry to have caused trouble for lbd coroner's office." So nad a note near where a a.year-old La ¥lrada man was found after apparently lumlini hlmselt ln a Lapna Beach motel room Tdesday, pollceaald. Tbe body was found at about 11:15 a.m. b1 Thomas Linn, manager ol the Beach Motor Ion, 965 N. COUt. Hwy. Deerlnt ls belleved to have brou,abt an eye bolt Yiblcb be 1crewed lnto the ceUint of,Uae room and l'OP.9 with blna ·Wbeci be chetlCed 1n. l'be cwww•a Offtco bal llated tMdeatbUlh~atent.IW de. attendant and was walUni for de- livery or ber car, so bet room· mate left with a friend, Scqeant Thompson explained. He said the women went to the Pacific Coast Highway night club fairly often and the victim's roommate said it was common for the attendants to park her car in Morio's lot. * * * Bobby McGee's is one of the Harbor Area 'a bot a pots for singles to cooerepte and the lot ia often tu'n, so the Morio's lot is used wbe:D the cafe is closed. Investl&aton said there is no evidence anyone accompanied Miss Bennincton to her sbared apartment on tbe tree-shaded street coastward of Pacific Coast Hiebway. * * * Cleared of Murder, Held in Robberies A tall, burly Santa Ana man, cleared minutes belore ot the m•rder of hlt 1trlfrl•ll4 I• corona del llar, wu abruptly jailed by Newport B~acb police TuadQ aiCb1 oa allentions that be ls the not.orious Baseball Cap Bandit. Coast Panel Okays Laguna Parking Lot The city or Laguna Beach re- ceived permission of the State coastal commission Tueaday to proceed with creation of a 600-car parking lot in Laguna Canyon near El Toro Road. The commission, acUnc on an appeal by the Environmental Coalition ~ ~e Lquna Green- belt, aald nostate-wide lasuewas involved ln the creation of the lot., deaigned to alleviate traffic .COO· gest.Ioo durtnc the art festival seasoo. The city council tonight will be presented with a proposal to erade and f90e the area on Irvine Ranch land just west of the El Toro Road intersection aJona Laguna Canyon Road. and to hire additlooal buses to brtnt motorists from the lot downtown. Estimated coast for the project is $5,000 and wbile the work could be done quickly to mak,e tbe lot react,y. the festival seUOQ ends Aua.2&. James Steven Gano, 28, ls aJ. le1ed by police to be responsible for II Southland bank robberies ocCUl'liaa lhM:e June 10, the most recent ooe 1ess than one bour before police pl eked him up. He ls suspected ol holding up the CalUornla First National But In Huntiniton Beach and llldnltt.300 In a robbery ftPGrt· eel al4:53p.m., poUcesafd. Gano'a car wu stopped b1 Newport Beach police at 5:30 p.m .. and be was escorted to headquarters for questioning ln the bludgeon murder or 29-year- old Jane Ellen Benninaton. Questioning and a polyuaph test administered by Detectlve Sgt. Ken Thompson absolved Gano or the predawn homicide, police said. However, lo tbe course of routine lnvestication it was establlabed that Gano bad three minor traffic citation arrest war- rant8 UDpald, totallnt less t.ban $200 plus eourt costs. lnvestlcatora said he agreed t.o pay them of! ln order to avoid be- int booked and their eyes popped when be ~uced a bankroll of about 100 criap, new $10 bills ~om bis pocket. "One or our pys, Detective Gary Black, said to himself 'Gee, he shouldn't be carrying that much mooey'." said DetAlctive Capt. Rieb Hamilton. Jnvestfeators be1an Crilllng Gano about the ori&in of the asus- plcloua cub and further ex- amination allqedly revealed a Calltornia Fint. Natioul Bank at.amp. 1'outla Repertory E'cerpb from \IJddin and llis Won- derful Lamp" l.H'rlormed h) Laguna ~loulton Communit} Pla;how•l' s TraH•l- ang Youth Thl'Jtcr·s Repertor} Company \H•re phologr;.iphed al lll-1!.ler Park to bl· s hown on KO<.: E-TV Channel 50 at 7 30 p m Thur!:lday and al 2 p m Saturd:n-. Bunky Jonl's 1s .. Tht• Mus1c1an" ubove. Below Heather l'"'ras1er. 'Genie,·· watches o.i1, "11et -,,_ F:d Graney as Aladdin. During August. 20 \ outhful actors. und<'r 1ht.> direction of Lisa Surette and promotion of Ruth S<'hry\'t>r, are presentmg a repertory of four plays on 12 dales throughout Los Angeles and Orang<' Counties. including 2 p m Sunday performances al Los Angeles County Art l\Jus('Um. Bomb Blasts • m 1 Killed, 8 Injured in Exploswru NEW YORK CAP) -Bombs exploded in two midtown Manhattan office buUdlnp to- day, killing one person and htjur. lng at least eight othen, and police be&an searching other bulldinp after wam.IQIS from a terrorist band that more ex· ploslons would follow. The two 110-story towen of the World Trade Center ln downtown M anhaltan were amon1 build· ings evacuated while autborllles searched them. With 35,000 worken, the center la the world's largest office complex. The 45-story Mobil Oil Com· pany building on 42nd Street near Lexington Avenue and the Chase Manhattan Banlt bulldln1 on Park Avenue also were evacuat· ed after authorities and news or· ganlzallons received com· munlcations from a Puerto Rican independence group called FALN. "A telephone call has been re· ceived claiming that the FALN did It," said Police Com · missioner Michael Codd. The communlcatlon1 from FALN. about which pollce have learned little and which authorities have been unable to penetrate, indicated that bombs were planted ln as man.)' as five other buildin1s, includlnc lbe World Trade Q:nter, police said. Sirens wailed on con1ested Manhattan streets, and police roped oft muy of tbem for vehicular and pedestrian midday traffic. Offlctala said at leut three auspicious devices were round in theiMearches, lncludln& a bomb found on the toth Ooor of an American Brands office build· in& on Parlr Avenue .. The first blast went otf In a Department of Defense office on the 21st noor of a building at '3rd Street afrd Madison Avenue about 9:35 a.m. About an hour later, the second explosion hit the first Ooor of the Mobil building. No injuries were reported in the Defense Department ex- Pio.ioa. but police uld oae man. died and &1. leut m DeODl• were injured at the Mobll -olflcea. ADotbe.r penoa wu reported to have suffered a bean attack at the llobil offices. Police declined to Identify the dt1ad man. The1 tald 8' least. three of the Injured were in serious condlUon. . . Tbe tena of thouHnda of workers evacuated from Ute Chue Manhattan, Mobil 00 and World Trade Ceoter buildlqa were told by loudapeaker to 10 home. The poll~ bomb squad was rushed to the American Bnnda building to remove the device found there. Briggs Seeks Vote On Homosexuals CUSD Trustees Adopt Big Budget LOS ANGELES (AP> -A campaign to allow local school districts to fire or refuse to hire avowed homosexuals began to- day with the filing of an Initiative measure for the June 1978 baUot. State Sen. John Brig&s <R· Fullerton), a Republican can· dldate for governor, said the ln· ltlative la needed to "make sure our children are not recruited in· lo an Immoral life by these fl•· eranl, avowed bomos~xual teachers." teachin&," Brt11s said. ..Thia law ls to allow us to tet lid of those who want to use the classroom for recruitin1 our children." Mine'Tmpa 150Peopl,e T'WO Restaurants Eyed for Clemente A pubhc hearing on two pro· posed fast food restaurants at the extreme south end of San Clemente Is scheduled at tonight's San Clemente City Council meeting. The meeting is to begin at 7:30 p.m. in council chambers al city hall, 100 Ave. Presidio. At 7 p.m. councilmen are to in·. terview applicants for appoint· ment to the city's planning com· mission The person selected will !lucceed Commissioner Timothy Unger, who resigned in July. The two restaurants which have apphe-d to locate along El Camino Real from A venida San- HOP Board Slates Hearing on Budget The Capistrano·Laeuna Regional Occupation Program ( ROP) board is scheduled to hold a public hearing tonight on the program's $787,883 budget for 1977·78. The meetine is scheduled for 6 p.m. in the Capistrano Unified School District board room, located tn district offtces, 32972 Celle Perfecto in San Juan Capistrano. DAILY PILOT ta Margarita south to the county hne are Carl's Jr. and Taco de Carlos, both operated by Carl Karcher Enterprises. Councilmen are also scheduled to hold a public hearing on lot cleaning charges and will con· sider revising weed abatement charges. Alden Ross Dead at 75; Rites Planned Memorial service for Alden T Ross of South Laguna will be held a t 2 pm. Friday at Balli· Bergeron Chapel in Corona del Mar. Mr. Ross died Tuesday. He was7S. Mr. Ro5s had been a resident of South Laguna for about nine years. He was a retired In· s urance adjustor, having worked for 40 years with Harman and Company. Mr. Ross was a member of t.he Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity. Dr. F . Kenton Beshore of the Harbor Fellowship Church ln NeWpOrt Beach will otnell\tt. In· terment ts at Pacific View Memorial Park. Mr. Ross is survived by his wlfe, Fr-ances, son, Charles Ross of Santa Ana; and &tandson John Alden Ross of Van Nuya. Froa Page AJ PUREX ••• Capistrano Unified School Dis· tncl trustees have adopted the district's $29.4 million final 1977-78 budget, $S 3 million over 1976·77 expenditures. The district's tax rate wu set at $4.12 per $100 assessed value, a reduction of 28 cents from last year's rate. Total assessed valuation m the district this year, however, increased 28.1 percent. The vote was 6·0 with San Clemente Trustee Sarah Lipp absent. Res1denllal property values fluctuate between 5 percent and 20 percent or more higher this year , accordin g lo district finance offlciats. The owner of a home appraised this year at $80,000 would pay $824 in school district taxes Trus tees adopted the final budget over the vigorous protest of San Clemente resident George Jenkins. Jcnkll\S told the school board no attempt is being made to make school finances lntelli&lble fi'ro91 Page A J FUNDS ••• Republican assemblyman Robert Burke Burke also received $15 worth of flowers Crom the Mangers committee, according to its re· port. And the Balboa Bay Club bill for a Mangers fund raiser was Sl.828, the report said. Assemblyman Ron Cordova <D·El Toro) received only $2,330 In monetary campalen contribu· lions in the first six months of 1977. Cordova's major expense Item was Sl,179 covering "air travel for campaign." But Cordova also repaid $4,050 worth of loans left over from 1976 and another $800 loan was for~iven, accord1ni to the Cordova for Assembly commit· teereport One or the few DOD · officeholders lo file a report with the Registrar of Voters ln Santa Ana was Marian Bergeson, an announced Cordova foe in 1918. Mrs. Bergeson, who was nar· rowly defeated in the 14th Dis· trlct Republican primary ln 1976 and who polled more than 30,000 votes as a wrtte·ln candidate in the general election, showed campaign recelptaofS225. She also reported tncurring campalen debt.a of $574, mott of it a retainer due Mn. J.D. Turner fQr consulUn1. Fee Bike Nixed W A.SfflNGTON (AP> -The Senate Human Resources Oom· mtttee on Tuesday approved President Carter's baste plaa to put a ccillnt on botpltal fee ln· erea.HI. The bill, modJ.Red by the committee and passed 10 to 2, now 1oea to the Senate Finance Committee before beini --tO Ute tun Senaw for•~. ·to the voting public. "I'm a retired accountant, and it would take me six months' study to understand thla budget, which wasn't available to me un· til late last week," he said. "I'm a t.axpayer. I've seen my taxes go up 23 percent last year, probably just as much th~ year. I ask that you cut this bud1et to the bare bones." ·'Everybody walls until the last bell has rune ... said board president Ted Kopp of Capistrano Beach. "Then they come in here and make all kinds of noise, after we've spent hun· dreds of hours working on all this." "What you haven't said," Jenkins responded, "Is that you haven't 11aved us a darn thing (by cutting the tax rate>. Assessed valuation is up so much, you are working with bigger dol)ars." IF Brl111 call~ his ln}tlaUve campaign the "Callformla Save Our Children Campaip," pat- terned after sloeer Anlta Bryant's program in Florida to allow employment and bousin1 discrimination aaalnat homosex· uals. Briggs' lnitiaUve, filed with the state attorney general's office In Sacramento today, sets up a pro· cedure for local school boards to remove teachers who are proved unfit because of their public homosexual statemenl6 or acli. ·'I'm sure there are many com· passionate, profeslllooal bom01U.ual teachen who don't mix their sexual life and you haven't seen it, see it today! S>clVt' uplo 40'fo ..\ JOHANNESBURG. South Africa (AP)-About 150 miners were trapped and feared dead tOday after an exploslon tn a coal mlne In central Moum bique, and nine loreipera were killed in subsequent rtotlng at the mine, Radio Mozambique reported. The radio, monitored here, said rescue opera· tlon.s were under way and troops were sent to restore order at the Cblpanga mine. The radio gave no details 'of how the foreigners were killed. but said they died in "grave disturbances" after the explosion. It Iden· Wied them onty u being of .. different nationalities." ·' .Two Supentan Struck Sparks Q: at'a W1 •'*'l Let •IJora pjaclat •• a• "'• 1WJ1W00111 uw., ... ,. .,.aechs.1 .. 1a1a •lf•. • arrd hwmtT -T• rTJ P., Su'--• Cal. A: It h p~ned durlnt • Ov•1•ar "lrtal mar· r 1i11 "-for« lh.:y lecally wed thrM yean aao. 01 .. a ~lnl U\t'I their lhoWbla t'.,....., I.be COUple l'e- Portfdly ~f'P&r ate~ fur • apell. 11\en Lff, hla torcb hurrunac lmf(htly apolo1lzed to Farrah In a nl'w1paf)l r ad •nd th•y &.ed. ''lie'• arro1ant and d1Uat l.llt. · · bubble.' t.bo b .. uurw act.rat, "but ..... CA 4 -# PP l/SC DAILY Pf\.OT ., Big 'Battle' at .Bowl .. .. They fought the Battle ot Waterloo all over a1ain last 'Weekend at the Hollywood Bowl but the winners this time were the deli&hted onlookers who watched the melee that lnaplred Beethoven's score The tableau that included authentically cos- tumed French and British soldiers was tremen- dously impressive with Lawrence Foster and bis Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra in tine sup- porting form. Bur WllAT BROUGHT A cppa~lty audience to its feel in sheer joy wu the best fireworks dis- TOM.BARLEY Music Box Ii vered final movement that was a joy to bear and witness. A magnificent Fifth. a (florious .,Emperor•• and a "Battle of Waterloo" that brought us to our feet in awe and astonishment. We bad a ball at the Bowl. "'h~H·r h• loob at me, 1 Just meJt. Ht'• 10 '"''~ "And''" relorta "SomcUmea I'd Uke to .,, ug her. but to look at hM as to love her.'• play this writer haa ever seen at the ~wl. We were treated to every conceivable form or ----------r=:;~5~~g~~fi pyrotechnics in a breathtakln& dlaplay wbile the wavers of the Union Jack and the Tricolor battled for supremacy and cannons boomed in the back- SOl'Tll CO.\ST Q : Wf' mtt U.. la&e ratauralftr Toot.a Shor oue ud tw wu ewf.tly ake. Wu M really u lnault.- ln& INIW'!-Mr. altd Mn. En>Ht l'taU, llUwHkee. A Only to the people he Weed. And they con- ''dt·red 1t a great &how of afrecUon Lo be "inaulted" b' the pub:. propnetor. An inctd•nl shortly before llt• died lll typical or Toots. Warner Brothers pubht·1~t Errue Grossman suddenly sat down too 'Glad You Asked That' by M•itya .ad Hy G..-... hard on hlS chair. sma!>hed 1t and screamed. "Get me an ambulance and a lawyer!" Toots ambled over to his fnend's table. looked over the damage Jnd said to the waiter , "Okay -tell this creep we won't put lhe broken cha1r on his bill! .. Q : Isn't Peter Sellers' new wife yowac enough to be hls daughter? -Mr. and Mrs. A. HamUton, Minneapolis. . A: Yes. "But," says 22·year-old actress Lynne Frederick, "I don 't mind the 30·year difference in' our ages. I think I feel a gr eat deal older than I . am." Miss Frederick (now appeanng In "Voyage of the Damned") insists· .. Peter as the closest l 've come to my ideal, if there 1s such a thmg. He is very funny and yet can be very quiet." .,..,,.,... .. Dcdlg Pl~net'! R eporters Lois Lane (l\largot Kidder 1 ··nd Clark Kent <C hristopher Reeve 1 take u break 10 the filming of the m ovi<.> "Superman" at the New York Daily News. '' h1ch ha-; become the Daily Planet for the dural1on It's Albert Finney On Record AU:>mn LOS ANGELES (AP)-What'slhis? Alberl Fin· ney singing on the Johnny Carson and Merv Griffin shows and hustling his album UJ'Ound to radio sta· lions hke a rock star on the rise'! llis loyal rollowers in the Englhh thcatuh might give a sniff at such mundane act1v1ty. Jo'inney, a classical actor of wade rl'pulal.Jon, i.l!ems uncon· ccrncd He has launched an 11 div American tour which he hopes Will sell more Uian a few copies of his Motown releaSl'. "Albl'l'l l"snncy's Aluum " ground. IT WAS A Fl1TING nNALE indeed for an all-Beethoven concert that brought us flawless 'Performances of the two earlier works: the , master's immortal Fifth Symphony and the "Em· peror" piano concerto. . Foster is one of the finest interpreters of, Beethoven in the concert world today and he amp-: ly proved that point with a superbly directed, pre- cisely delivered Fifth. It was the Fifth delivered in the irand Euro· · pean manner under a baton that brou1ht from an inspired LAPO every moment of majesty and 'tt( "'"' '••.1),.A HI At" •• , I• • . , ......... ...........w.-s...1:41 ·~'NIE f'G) HALL: w...w..-, ... 1"1A1UH-- . ~NBAD AND THE EYE Of THE TIGEl"(G) · every ounce of fervor in that splendld score. COMtMG soOHt CONCERT PIANIST ALFRED Brendel does ' "GICA TH[ not take second place to Foster when it comes to IJlUI WHAL£" exceptional interpretation of Beethoven and be L.;_::::::=::==~ .... Jll t•ii!iifiliiil!i . showed us exactly why with a 1Utterin1 rendiUon -::===:------ of the "Emperor" concerto. The ebullient Austrian was at the {>eak of his form and never more so than in a .iortous.ly de-.. New Movie Role For Sam Elliot Fiims Theater Dence Tetevl1lon In the 8U1Nd and The Eye of the ~ Tl~er Q IJ ........... ,. .... u ··~' OtlHl'f .......... n.lllSCUDIS I ... , II IJ .. H .. • 11 Q: Is that Debra Tate, a model posing in her birthday suJt for no less than JO color pages In the March "Oul.'' any relation to the murdered Sbaroa Tate?-Rex Bando•. J am aica, N.Y. AS HE BEGA;\I HIS TRAVEL"i, hl' rdlected, LOS ANGELES <AP> -Sam Elliot stars as ·--------miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiil flamboyant Tim Keatmc in "Aspen," a six-hour PENS TOMORROW THRU A Yes She's her kid sister. Q: Did the late Andy Devloe, who played the lovable "Jingles" when I was growing up, ever ex- plain how he got that gravel volce?-Tommy Grif- fin, Indianapolis. "This kind of promotion is a very darferent ex- perience for me Throughout my act ing career. I have tried to maintain a degree of anonymity. My reasoning was that if you established too strong an image personally, it would oulwCJgh whatever character you are playing." NBC novel for television about a 1984 murder trial MON. AUG. 15 ': in the olorado ski resort. AN AH E I M Elliot, a taciturn career Army officer in NBC's "Once An Eagle," portrays an ambitious, ruthless CONVENT ION CENTER A: Yes "I answer that question 10 times a day," he told us. "The only thing I worried about was if 1t suddenly cleared up. Then I'd be out of work. Every tame I made a movie I'd get letters sending me ~ore throat cures. F10ally a doctor said the trouble was JU!>l nodes. So J never went to anotht>r doctor with 1t because I knew the real 1 <'ason It was my falling on a stick playing with 1Jther kids and puncturmg the roof of my mouth. It turned out lo be the luckiest acc1dentl ever gotin ! .. attorney whose career get.s a boost from the shock· ing murder trial. Earlier in his career he put that theory into praC'llce In 1963 he became an 111:;tant ~tar \\llh The film Is based on two books, ••The Ad- versary," by Bart Spicer and "Aspen" by Burt Hirschfield. FtNNtY his raucous portrayal of "Tom Send your questioru to llJJ Gardner, "Glod You Asked Tf1at." care of th1& new&paper, P.O. Bor 15"', Cosa Me&a 92626 Manlyn and fly Gardner will~ cu many ques- tions as they con in their column, but the volume of mo!l make& penonoJ replies 1mpo&&1ble. J ones" -Academy Award nomination and all that lie followed with his electrifying performance in "Luther" on Broadway. Then hevanashl•d . ··1 had been a professional actor for eight years. with no break, novacation."herccalled "Not know· ing what I wanted to do, I took a yt'ar off to travel. l went to Fij i, Tahiti, Australia, J apan. Hong Kong, Bangkok. Alone? Well, from timctotimc " You aln1ost missed it! SHOWTIME® To celebrate the arrival or the hottest show on cable. Showtlme, we ran a Sttedal .. uodlldorv Offer. Complete la...U.doa for $19.95 instead or the usual $29 95. lllere's only one catch. 1lle offer is up August 5th. So, if you're going to catch it, you'd better get a move on. And even if you don't catch our special deal, Showtime is worth every peMy. Because ,it's got everything you want in a premium entertainment service or fresh movies and exciting specials. It's a bright new alternative to orcinary 1V. A unique way to avoid the hi!ji cost and hassle (babysitters, parking, etc.) ol going out for entertainment. You JUSt stay home, relax, tum on Storer Cable 1V aJ)d get: 1. HOLLYWOOD'S BEST MonON PICTURES. Shown just the way they were made. Uncensored. No edits. No commercials. No interruptions. I . FOORTEEN kON'it.alAINING A'ITllACftONS EACH MON111. las Vegas revieWs, childmi's specials, nightd.Jb acts ... the kind of entertairunent you've had to leave the house for . S. SHOWINGS WHEN YOU WAHl'TO WATCH. 3 or 4 showings a night. Movies are scheduled at different times on different days. No conllicts with your favorite programs on ordinary lV. '· 9U119 YOOll iNTERESTS. Showtime's schedule ol mcMel and specials is ~so that half are suitablcl for the whole famibf '100 half for adults. Movia are G. PG, and R. 5. YOU GET A FUU....COLOR GUIDE. Showtime provides a l&page all-color guide each month containing timetables, reviews, feature ar1icles. subscnber letters, and an explanation or why each film earned its rating. ' Most of the movies presented on Showtime will never be seen on network 1V, but ir they are, the key dramatic scenes will probably be cut and replaced by commercials. So, if you don't want to miss anything, including our special "JntroductOfY" Offer, act now. Spedal "Introductory" Offer $19.95 FOR COMPLETE INSTALLATION. <regularly $29.95). Offer 9ood oalv tmo••ll A••· St.la. Act now. SIORFB CABLE 1V 831-3880 In Laguna Beach, Dana Point. South Laguna, and Laguna Niguel · .. FOR THE LOVE OFl&UI .. lGI A ... AD •THI A .. AHEIM PERFORMANCE SC>iEOULE V IYI Of TI4I no•• l•J e TOMOllllOW (Tllun.) • , •••••• • • • • • • • • • _., ........ e ~IU. (A ... II ...•......•.. t iff PM• • l 1M "'9 A '1SLAMD Ofl o .. MORl.t.11' • SAT. (Alll. II ••••••• 11 AM•. 2100 ...... 1100 "'"' Vf' "OttCA THI e IUN. (Ave. 7) ••••••••••••• llJO PM • l :ff PM Ku. WHAU• "GI •MON. (Aut-I) •.•••.••••••••••• ..., '9rform11te .. 1--.;.;.;:nini:r.=r-'""'"1t1• e TUIS. tllru ~Ill. (A..,. 1·12) •••. J :OO l'M• • 1100 l'M• I : e SAT. (Atll. U).. . • . . II AM•, J:GO l'M • 1100 l'M e SUN, (Au .. 14). • • • • . . ...•• I :JO l'M • 1100 l'M >YAM ~mt.off e MON. (A .... ti). • . . . . . • , • , • a100 l'M• • 1100 PM• OFTRI"' •CHILDREN UNDER 12 -'2.00 i.ath.tn.ctultproc.1 IADMIWSHAU '" .,~, "IUA•IMG TlAIHIMG" Find what you want in Daily Pilot Classifieds. !AH IHll llllffrv .. t •.IO • 15.50 • 96.10 • 17.!IO Tu Incl.I TICKETS NOW ON SALE AT: All Tlck•ffOll Our/f11 lnclud1111 S..n, ~ & TM Bro#wey • All Mllfu•I ~In lncllld/111 he/fie SONeO (531 ~ Hiii, LA.I e Cotl*lrlon ~Bo• Off'" e U. BMkAmlrfcMd (VISA/ or Mamr CllM'fll by mail or« box offh» e FOR TICKET INFORMATION CALL (114} 635-5000 A~ The Long Beach Arena WEDNESDAY AUG. 17 thru SUNDAY AUG. 21 The~ STARTING WEDNESDAY ~CONVENTION CENTER HOTEL announces the OPENING of dJ(3aJ(B~P0 (S(3(b(E(B(B~ 110C!Jl](](3 Dancing to the music of Hi-Life 8:30p.m:-1:30am. 00 COVER No MINIMUM • • ,, I I I .. ~Y'1tLOT ~ 'Angels' Top Show, Hitt ~BS in First e NEW YOltK tAP> A rerun of • <.:hurlle·, D.& l ·• waa ha l w ek'a lnp raatt:(I prtml' lrme t.elevl ion pro1r11n1. 11crnrdJn1 to ·AC. Nteli.f'n Gs ma.d •vaU1bl•Tue&eh•)'. N lJOn1d Nlelaen v ra1 put <.:RS In ftr!>t place few th•· w~C'k ndJna July Jl. with • 14 l rallnH tba\ npr tnta 10 I mUhon households AlJC had J U r llnJt, or II 9 m1lhon. imd N RC: h•d 11 13 3 or 9 1 mUUon tn nrdN, thl' lo1110 ur ~ nhld •huw .. wer .. Charlie:'• AnJdS," AIW. 22 ~. ur lb ma Ilion hum ... Hannie Cauld r," C8S'e. Sunch1y movie. • 20.S, or 14 9 mtlll<1n , ''Uivunc & Sh1rlt:y," AB<.:. ~ 20.1, or 14 3 malhon . "S...111111," NBC'• Monday BURT LANCASTERMICHAEL YORK ,, """9" "THE ISLAND OF DR MOREAU",, '"''""I HIGH DAVENPORT • BARBARA CARRERA RICHARD U SE HART" ,, .. ot '"' 1 ... klf'ru fl'd ~.A",.' ,. IMt' 1 r-.11 Po<tuf't\ '"""'"" ProdJ<"' 'AMUI. I A~<l)fl ·Vld \ANO' H.)N.O.~[\ &o\.f'd on 1ht MMI try H '• w.11, ~ ,,_,, o7 .-, K hN HFQ\.-Jt.l• t--.• v.11. oNI Al RAMRUS • AA "o< t, Lt.U~I~ I • ~t,.IHAl Pr:><l .., 1, IO•·~ 11,,.Pt[ ,,. IH und 'K.P SlftCfl ·I) •-.! t, ll(,!'. IA>IC• ''°'' 1 •·• ,,, t., 111.1?(1 ex• --"-<t.o<• 1-y A<! aoon PG "1u1&1"'9Ua ~~s!u Color"" M<IY·•"'~. Al....,..,,, I .. • -... L ..-...,. MISSION ~ ORIVE ·IN Mm8dlEWS movie, 19.9, or 14 2 mil hon: "Happy Days," ABC, II ti, or 13.2 m1lhon . "Jertersons," and "Shields & Y uocll," both CBS. both 18 4, or 13 1 m 1lllon . "Tut ·rht-Boy King," NBC. 17 6, or 12 s million. "M A.S II ,"CBS, 17 4,or12.4mllhon. "One Day at ;i Time," COS, 17 :.!, or 12 2 milhon The next 10 shows were A different kind of ... N~l'ft" Hto..rh • 644 OlbO "Barney Miller"' and "Baretta." both ABC, tied~ "Maude," CBS. "Ei1ht on the Lam," NBC's Thursd~ movie, "The Wrecldnc Crew," ABC's Tuesday movie, and a Barbara WaJters special, ABC. all tied. "What's Happening," ABC. Barnaby Jones," ABC, "All's Fau." CBS, and 1'·1sh," ABC A long time ago in a galaxy . far, fri CNVCtf. .. "A BRIDGE TOO FAR" PG No P~~u .. 'NEW YORK NEW YORK " (PG) . THE SPY WHO LOVED ME" (PG ) 'ANNIE HALL' (PG) "YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN 'ONE ON ONE" (PG J "SMOKEY & THE BANDIT" "MOONSHINE COUNTY EXPRESS" (PG ) "THE LAST REMAKE OF BEAU GESTE" "BITE THE BULLET" (PG) "ANNIE HALL" "YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN" (PG ) "THE SPY WHO LOVED ME" "VIGILANTE FORCE" (PG) "OTHER SIDE OF MIDNIGHT" "EXORCIST lf·THE HERETIC" (R) SATURDAY 642-5678 is a good day to advertise in the Daily Pilot Classified Section. • "SILVER STIU.K" "VAHISHIHG ..c>1Mr· 1~1 ''Two years ago I said Benji was the most e ntertaining family picture of our time. THE BAD NEWS BEARS ARE ONE YEAR OLDER ANO ONE YEAR WILDER Maybe of all time. I was wronjl. This one is better!'' LIZ SMITH· COSMOPOLITAN .. JAUNTY FUN" I ....... , "41111 .......... "''""'"' .. ~~ a HJ.._, ..,111,_.., "'" .._, uu.; UUJ .... '"' n.au. UUJ ~ ", .. "' ~ __ ....._~ .... -.- "What we have het'e 1s a total lack of respect for the law!" ' Burt HeVDDllllSll "Smokey ... "" Bandtt" IPGJ Sally Field· -Jerry Reedn Jackie Gleason §,,"•a.al ,M• .. 1 Sc1eenotay by JAME.SLEE BARRE TT iill<l CHARLlS SHYER & ALAN MANOCl · Story by HAL NEl OHAM & ROBERT L. Ll VY MuSICbyBILL JJ'jlt5 .incJ JLHRY nuo 011H:t b HA NE OHAM p, oouted by MOH 1 ( NGll l.l( Hli A RASTAR Prouucflon. ' ..... .__., ............ f'U•o¥H"o fil'9(t .. ~-.. ..... lA •Ill.HA 4 • LAUWOOO 4 WAI.II IOI IAllOAIN PlllC( II M -DAY ..... IAT\lllOAY 1'"--rel U JO,.•• lA MlltADA • OllL y MIND•YI' MOllDAfl u JO .. no 10HO IS llAC•t ROOU M00411 nu SPY WHO '"° LOVED ME ' '"l HOO Of A W-t•• ONE ON ONE ''°' ' -· ....... jA(~ In M DH11"91 '"" /UN~. effu\./ANll"I --~r-~,---..... "" GRl•nn Of AU AllV1HtURIU·· 11;~ SINUD I IYE 101 OF THE TIGEI UIA MIHflll e Iott Of Hl•O NIW YO .. <, NfW YO•K111Gl IJ lD • l IJ e .. '00 e I 0 S090 HO f.UUI '"' non Of • w1-u•" ONE ON ONE 110G1 ----- ' Oran Coast VOL 70, NO. 215 ~SECTIONS, 48 PAGES . . . . . . Tod•y's Clo lag N.Y.Stoeks I WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 3, 19n N TEN CENTJ CIA Drugs, Hypnosis, Magic Revealed 'WASHINGTON <AP) -CIA Director Sllnlfltld Turner laWkd tod11 that newly dlJ. covered documents dl1clmed I.be CIA ~ 149 project. ln· volV1nl drup, bypnos11, shock bar meat and even maalcians as lt aperlmented Wlth conU"ol· U1I the &wn1n mind. Turner told a joint heario& ol the Sen.ate lat.eW1ence Commll· tee and the Health subcomm.lttee that the proJttt. known ultimate- ly as MK-ULTRA, took place from 12 CO 2S yea.n a10. .. , Nl\U"t you tbal th• CIA ls In no w11 eai11ed In either wttUn1 or unwtttlri1 te:St1.oc Df dtulJ to-day,' 1 bt1ald. TurDer told the committee the documeota, hitherto unreported to Coogreu, were found In seven boxes aJooc with Onancial re· cords in a records center near Wuhinlt.on. The dOcwnalta. in the rorm of fiscal recorda, do not include status reports or proaress analyses of the nrtous parl!I of the project . Put be said tbe arency ls "now in poeseuion ot the names of 185 noncovemment researchers and assistants who are identlfied in the recovered material deal.Ing with the 149 aubprojects. "The names of 80 Institutions where work wu done or with which these people affiliated are aho mentioned," be continued. "Th• institutions include '4 colleaes or universities. lS re· seitrch foundations or chemical and pharmaceutical Companies and tbe like, 12 hospitals or clinics ... and three pen~ lo· stilu\ions." Adm. Turner did not name any of the individuals or institutions in his prepared testimony. '•Moat ol the people and instltu· lions involved are not aware of agency sponsorship," he said. Turner said one contribution of $375,000 to a private medical In- stitution's bulldinc fund was made through an intermediary to make It appear as a private donatloo. He said the institution was not told the true source of the gift. Turner said the CIA bas in- formation that some unwitting drug testing was carried on in San Francisco and New York Ci- ty. in vol vtng three individuals. "We also know now that some unwitting testing took place on crimi.nAl sexual psycopatbs con- fined at a state hospital and that.. additionally, research was done on a knockout or 'k' drue in parallel with research to develop pain killers for cancer patients. Tu.mer said he is worklnc with Attorney General Griffin Bell to make available whatever materials Bell may need for any invesUcation be may declde to begin. He said he is working with both the attorney general and Joseph A. Califano Jr., the secretary of health. education and welfare. POiice Hunt Woman's Killer I ... Charges Dropped For Aide After rechecking thelr com· puterized stolen property lists, Santa Ana P.Ollce said today they will not file receivlnc stolen property charges against Nathan Hill, 23, an aide to Orance County Supervisor Philip Anthony. Police said they also are aban· doning plans to charge Hill with suspicion or possesslnc mati· juana for sale. It was Monday that police they said they would ~eek an arrest warrant and charce Hill with suspicion of the two crimes, charges stemming rrom a Friday evening incident at the Anthony aide's Santa Ana apartment. Arnone other thins•. pollce said stereo equipment and weapoos taken from th• apart- ment at 209 E. ~ St., Santa Ana, matched descrtpUons of property stolen in local burglaries. It was also said that a lar1e quantity of marijuana "ln full view" of olficers was found In the apartment where police had cone in response to a disturbing the peace call. Hill wasn't home at the time. But h.i.s girlfriend was. And police said 22-year·old Mae Katherine Ferrell, also of the 20th Street addresa, had broken all the windows in the Hill apartment, battered all the doors and was lhrowiD.I whatever she could lay her hands on aealnst the apartment walls. Miss Ferrell and a 17·year-old juvenile, purportedly her brother, were taken into c.patody <See AIDE, Paie A!) Federal Funds Eyed for Library A proposal to allocate federal revenue sharing funds for the Newport Center Library ls scheduled for public bearini at 2:30 p.m. Friday In Newport Beach City Council chamberl. Construction coats for the library are estimated at SID>,000. About $330,000 of that would come out of revenue sharinl funds under a proposal by city of- ficials. ~ KfngBra~i Wiruler of the All-American "llamor kitty•• competi· tion lb. Ho.llywood, Fla., is Brandl Alexander, a 3·year· old male with semi-long hair in white, tan a,t\(f orange. The 12·pound feline belongs to Linda Northrup, 14 , of ~ Rome, N.Y., and wins the right to the title "King Cat" for the next year . Purex Co-f 011nder Succumbs at 7 5 the company from 1929 on and was chairman of the board of the inteniatlonal corporation from 1955to1968. Officials at the firm's cor· porat• headquarters ln Lakewood said Mr. Pelletier ac- tually strengthened the firm dut-· Inc the Depression when many firms went under. A ieneroua man and heavily active in the Catholic Church, Mr. Pelletier was conferred the Pontifical Order of St. Gregory the Great by Pope Paul VI 10 (See PUREX, Pa1e AZ> Firemen Quell Canyon Blaze Friend Queried, Released By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 0ttll9 0.ll1 ~ ... s .... A manhunt continued today for the killer who slipped into a young woman's Corona del Mar apartment as she slept before dawn Tuesday and bludgeoned her lo death in h er bed for no apparent reason. The victim's ex-boyfriend was picked up by Newport Beach police for questioning later in the day a.ad cleared, but was then ar· rested on auspition of a Southland bank robbery spree in a novel twist to the case, Jane Ellen a.nntngton, 29, of 322 Jllrperita Ave., wp •lain appattntJY by a severe blow to the head with a heavy blunt In· strument. said 'Newport Be.eh Police Detecttve S1t. Ken Tho1npton. No tnurder weapon hu been located. She was discovered about 1:30 p.m. by her roommate who went to awaken the unemployed former social worker with whom sbe bad 1one out nightclubbing Monday, investigators said. Mias Ben.ninJton was killed as sbe lay in bed, retired for the nlaht and apparently already asleep, Sgt. Thompson said to- day. lftvest4ators aalc1 there was no lndicatibn of any struaile with the auac•er at all. The victim was partially clothed but Sgt. Thompson declined to reveal whether she bad been sexually molested. "She was last seen by her roommate about 2 a.m., in the parking Jot at Marlo's Restaurant," S1t. Thompson added. •'They'd been to Bobby McGee's," be explained. Miss Benningtoa bad already giYen bet Park.inl check tot.be lot atttndant and was waiting fOt' de· llnry ol ber car, so her room· mate left with a friend, Sergeant Tbomp$0n explained. • He said the women went to the Pacific Coast Hi1bway night club fairly often aad the victim's roommate said it was common for the attendants to park her car;. in Marlo's lot. Bobby McGee's is one of the HJrbor Area'& hot spots for '1•11• 19 ~1re1ate and tho. lot ia ~ rup,, ao ~e Mu\o'a lot ii µa~ wbeli ~ cale la cl0ted. lnvestisatOra aald Uwre if no evidence anyone aj:compJl\fW fill.a Beruµnaton to her lhtwed apartment on the ~•haded at(• ~tward of Pactnc ~t Highway, I DeteCUve Seraeant T~ sald Iba had apppenUy l~ a (&MSIAYING,.Pa••A!> ~ • • Diiiy -...... .., Gery,....._ .DE'k SAM AMBURGEY INSPECTS BROKEN SCREEN la :thfa How Kiiier Left Murdered Woman'• Home? Cleared of Murder, Held in Robberies A tall, burly Santa Ana man. cleared minute. before of the murder or his girlfriend in Corona 1fel Mar1 was abruptly jailed by Newport Beach police Tuesday nlpt Ob allegations that he is the notorious Baseball Cap Bandit. James Steven Gano, 28, is al· l~&ed by police to be respoasible for 36 Southland bank robberies occ~ since-June 10, U..mOtSt recent ooe l• than OCJe hour before PQHce pl~ted him ap, He ts •"81*ted of bolc:Una up the Callfornl• Firs~ National Bank ln Huntmcton Beath and taking $1,300 tn a robberJ' report· ed aU:5.1 p.m.! police said. Colla Mesa cleteCtl•• believe Gano miibt be rellpOftSitite for •t leaatooe ol two bank ~et in theli Cit)' iD the put three weea. ' DAILY PllOf N 1877 llired for Tort11re? Witneas Claims Snuff Film Offer •>pt UP a ftlA&IN ._ ... ,,~...,. A wt"'--t.uned toch•y t.bat Fred Bern Dou1lu, 54, ol Cost.a Mtu. ~ r lo tort.un and '1 membw flu act,.....• dunn& l-'e filaun& ol a Pol'DO "anuff" mom lo lhe San Beroardloo '*-t. "U. ~d he wanted tonur,. ~ena. cbamemberment, lh11l 1t •ouJd take 11 alrooa atomach. and did I tb.tAk I could do U," laid Pamela Soc Williama, a petite ~ wbo aUe1edJy wu to •tar tn the rum . M.tu Williama, wbo de.en bed lltenelf aa a proaUtut.e: and heroin uaer. v.-u tho ftnt wl\DMI In tha preliminary bearln" Into al· tempted mW"der chars• qalnal O.ouitu The manaacled Dou1laa eat In prtaon Juna Md 1weatahirt with hla attorney, Pat Ma1er1, In Jud1ci fta1nar En1ebretaon'1 West Oran1• County Municipal cuurt 1>oua1111 woa arrested last month followin1 a alx-week In· veaU1ation that ended when two undercover policewomen UTeSt. f'd Doutlas at hia Yucca Valley film tile. Oeputy District Attorney J;ames Broolul revealed throulh lightning-torched Fires Peril Parks 4" By The Auoda&ed Press Hundreds or fire1 raged through atate and national parkland today after a second night ol li&htning bolls flashed down on land dried b y California's two year drought. Weary firefighters worked double shirts as frantic supervisors tried to direct crews to the largest blazes. Officials said many fires had lo be left un- checked. State forester Gary Buulni said lightning In the Sierra Nevada mountain range started an estimated 400 rircs Tuesday night and early today New Contract Ends Threat Of OC Strike ..,, Dry wall hangers in Orange and Los Angeles counties voted overwhelmingly Tuesday to ac· cept a new three-year contract, .. averting a potential strike. · "They ratified the new con· tract by about 3 to 1." Jim Jones, a spokesman for the han1ers at Carpenter's Union Local 2631. said today. Jones did not have vote returns for nine ne1$thborinJC southern California counties which were • also involved In the new three· year agreement. He said, however. 75 percent or the workers involved are localed In Orange and Los An1eles coun- ties. The new agreement, developed m Last-minute ne10UaUons, takes efCect retroactive lo Aug. 1. Homer Bartles. Southern California Dry Wall Contractors Association executive director, s aid today the new contract would mean an increase In hous- ing c06ts to the consumer. ··Every home will rise ln cost _ about 10.7 percent lo every sub- conlTactor, ••Bartles explained. He sald a so-called "deiree or difficulty" work clause In the new aareement would mean an additional 2.3 percent increase in cost to the subcontractor, totaJ. ing about a 13 percent cost in· crease overall The clause provides a sU1hUy higher rate per square foot for difficult work done on a bome. Meanwhile, striking dry wall finishers have returned lo work through the use of interim agree- m ents with dry wall contractors. The arreements are temporary and become invalid once a final agreement is reached In the weeks-old labor dispute. Dry wall contractors assocla· lion attorneys in San Dieeo Tues· day were denied a restrainlnl or- der to halt use of the temporary a1reemmt.s. Neaotlatloos between the dry wall contracton and finishers were held Monday but failed lo result in progress towards a new •1reement. A federal medJator hu been called into the nq~attons. H DAILY PILOT '·Forty to 50 percent of them are unmanned," be said. "Our manpower is committed. We just don't have any more people. He estimated 20,000 lo 30,000 acres of CDF's 33-mlllion acre t e rritory were burning this morning. LAGUNANS VIEW S.BARBARA DAMAGE-Al Bill Powers or the U.S. Forest Service estimated 10,000 acres of its 25 million acres in California were flaming in 261 aeparale fires, most or them small. In the Los Padres National Forest, firefighters equipped with chainsaws backed their way through 30-year-old Umber and underbrush trying to reach one fire spreading through the mid· die o( a national wilderness area. Debbie Gold, U.S. Forest Service fire information orncer. said the fire bad rrown lo 2,300 acres. Another fire on the southeast edge or the Venlana Wilderness had grown to more than ~.000 acres by this morning, she said. E',.._ Pase AJ SLAYING ••• sliding glass door open for ven· tilation in the muggy heat and ' this is believed to have been the point or entry. He said a window screen at the front of the apartment was smashed out and found bent on the lawn, adding that this ls believed to be the point where the intruder fled the premlaes. Miss Bennington's green and black 1970 Camaro sport coupe was found routinely parked. Investigators declined to s peculate on the obvious possibility someone attracted to the victim followed her bome from the night club and waited until she bad retired to lain en- try. He said the victim and ber ex- boyfriend, James Steven Gano, 28, a resident of the Ambualdor Motel in Santa Ana, broke up on- ly several days ago and so be became a logical suspect. "Police had information to suggest he might have violent tendencies," Sgt. Thompson said, noting a search wu lm- mediately initiated for Gano, an auto financing executive. Investigators said his car was spotted and pulled over about 5:30 p.m. and Gano willlnsl.Y ac- companied investigators to the station where questioning and a polYIP'aPh examination cleared him. Orange county coroner's in· vestigators anticipated comple· tion of an autopsy today to dis· cover the exact cause of death. No mortuary bad been selected tohandletheremainsyettoday. No motive baa been developed at all at thia staae. Serteant Thompson said this morntni. •'She just came home, un- d reaaed, neatly folded ber clothes and went to bed. And someone whomped ber on the IM!ad," he said trimly. * * * ~P-AJ SUSPECT ••. bll qlMlttonl that Garden Grove police and lhe district attorney's ofttc. aecretly recorded aeveral conversations between Dou&las and Miu Wllliams, who turned lnfotmaDt. Ml.as WUUams, wearina Levi's and a ahllt, testified that abe met Douatu while bitcb.bildna a1ont J Tth 'Street in Santa Ana. She said they went to a bar and he told her that he was a maker of lesbian booda1e movies and told her be needed an accomplice lo torture and dismember ac· tresae.. She said Doug.las offered ·her Sl,000 each for each of five vic- tims, to be paid after all the mov- ies were completed. Miss WUUams said Douglas had told her that be had filmed such movies before and bad murdered actresses. She said be had "dismembered them, then buried the pieces a couple ol feet underground," in scattered places. "He said he bad done five" ac· tresses. J>outlu told her, sbe said, to be prepared for a long ff)'. He said the victims "would be in like four or five hours of torture," she said. San Bernardino sherifrs dep- u ties searching the Yucca Valley area where the prior murders were lo have occurred have found no evidence of them. Miaa Williams testified that she convinced Douglas lo Jet ber s upply two of the prospective ac· tress victims. By that time, she bad gone to Garden Grove pollce. and told them the story of the alleged pomograpblc killings. Two undercover pqlicewomen were enlisted to play the part or the lesbian actresses. On July 20, Douglas, Miss Williams and the policewomen drove to the Yucca Valley site where the officers arrested Douglas. Briggs Files Bill to Halt School Gays LOS ANGELES <AP> -A campaign to allow local school districts to fire or refuse to hire avowed homosexuals beean to- day with the filing or an lniUative measure for the June 1978 ballot. State Sen. John Briggs <R· Fullerton>. a Republican can· didate for eovemor. said the in· itiative ii needed to "make sure our cblldren are not recruited in· lo an immoral life by these fla. grant, avowed homosexual teac:bet'a." Bri&P called bis initiative campaign the "Califorrnia Save Our Children Campaign," pat. terned after singer Anita Bryant'• program in Florida to allow employment and boualng discrimination a4alnat bomotex· uala. · Briua' lnitiatlve, filed with the state attorney 1en~ral 's of1lce In Sacramento today. aeta up a pro- cedure fOf' local acbool boarc:b to remove teachers wbo are proved ooflt becauae of thelr public bpmOIGUal 1tatementa Of' acts. "I'm sure there are many com- p a aat on ate, profeulon al homosexual teachers wbo don't mix their aexual life and teachlo1.' • Bri1p aald. "This law is to allow us lo 1et rtd of those who want to use the claasroom for recruiting our children.'' Freud Gee. A New Cap VIENNA. Austria (AP> - SotDebody took QcmUnd """8ci'a oap from • boot In the Pr'flUd muMUm 8ftd left Ills own tn tta place, pc_illee111d today. A police apokeaman said ''then wu a CJ'OUP of American youtbl ID tJie mueum at t!!e ~ time. f)Ut we don't know for sure if oneotthem took the ClJ>. 0 Tbe cap wu one ot t!!e ltems in the mtaaun In tM bouae at 19 BerftllM wMN the founder ol psy~ bad hlloffic:e and aputm l Freud died in LondoG inl8.19. Hne Trap. 150People JOHANNESBURG, South Africa CAP) -About UO minen were trapped and feared dead today after an up)01ion in a coal mine In central Moum bique. and nine foreigners were killed in subsequent rioting at the mlne, Rad.Jo Mozambique reported. The radio, monitored here, said rescue ope.ra- tiOl)S ... ere under way and lroopa were seat to nNltore order at the Cblpao1a mine. The radio gave no details .. of bow the foreigners were kllled, bUl said they died in "1rave disturbances" afler the explosion. It iden- tified them only u being ol "different nationaUUes." E',.....PageAJ FUNDS ••• Republican assemblyman Robert Burke. Burke also received $1.S worth of flowers from the Mangers committee, accordln1 to its re- port. And the Balboa Bay Club bill for a Mangers fUnd raiser was $1.~, lhe report said. AS&emblyman Ron Cordova <D·El Toro) received only $2,330 in monetary campaign contribu- tions in the first six months of 1977. Cord.ova's major expense item was $1,119 covering "ail' travel for campalp." But Cordova also repaid $t,050 worth ol loans left over from 1978 and another $600 loan was forgiven, .accordin• to the Cordova for Assembly commll· teereport. One of the few non - offlcebolders to file a report with lbe Registrar of Voters in Santa Ana was Marian Beraeson. an announced Cordova foe in 1978. Mrs. Bergeson, wbo wu nar- rowly defeated In the T41h Dla- trict Repybllcan primary in 1978 and who polied, more than 30,000 votes as a write·in candidate in the general election, showed campaign recelpta of $225. She also reported incurring campaign debts of $S74, most of it a retainer due Mra. J.D. Turner· for consulting. -I Dead, 7 Hurt Bombs ~xplo~e In NY Offices NEW YORK (AP) -Bombs exploded in two midtown Manhattan office buil~to­day, kllllng one person and ur· Ing about seven others. ee began searchin& other bulMHfttl after warnings from a terrorlst band that more explosions wOu.14 follow to dramaU..49 demands ror Puerto Rican lndepeoclence. Communications to police and news oreanizaUons from a group called FALN said bomm were planted in as many as five other buildings. Police evacuated the two 110- story towers of the World Trade Center and the first Ooor and basement oC the world-famous Empire State BuUdine. The Wocld Trade Center, with 35,000 workers. is the world's largest office complex. The evacuation there halted Mo.res trading at four commodity ex· changes -New York Mercantile Exchange, New 'York Cotton Ex· change, Commodity Exchange Inc. and the New York Coffee and Sugar Excbanae. A Park Avenue building bous· ing the Chase Manhattan Bank and National Football League headquarters were also evaucat· ed. A.moog evacuees wu NFL Commisaioner Pete Rozelle. Explosions went off at the Mobil Oil Co. building on busy 42nd Street near Lexin1ton A venue and at Defense Depart· mentoffices on the 21st floor or a nearby building at .Srd Street and Madiaoo Avenue. A Pentagon spokesman in Waahlngtoo said the New York office, the Office of Secretary or Defense Security Dlvlaioo-Fleld Office, la staffed by "i~­ vestigatora who perform secun· ty duties in connection with back- E'roaPageAJ PUREX ••• years ago for bis devoted service. He was involved in many charities and philanthropic ven· be was a strong supporter of South Coast Community Hospital and many educational institutions. Survivors Include Mr. Pelletier's widow; a daughter Renee; four grandchildren, and a brother Leona.rd. Jround lDvestilaUoa cbecb'' f« ~INranHI. No injuries we,.. reported at tbat buUdlnr. but ooe mm died and at least seven otben wenin-j~ m the Mobll blut. Tho dead man was lduWled aa Cbarte.t Stefnberf, •. of Maab.at- tan, a partner in a compa.QY c:alled Viva Temporary Servlc-. an employment ••ency located oa the ll"0'1Dd floor of the bWldlnl. Bellevue Hoepltal ottlclals aald Stelnber1 died ol bead Wurtes suffered in the exploUoc. Ills partner, Ira Gersten, wu hr Jured. Other evacuations were or· dered on the basis of commtmlc• lions from FALN, a Puerto Rican independeace group about which police have learned liWe and which authorities have been una· ble to penetrate. F,....P_,,e.4J AIDE ••• and charged with recelvinc stolen property and posses&ioo of marijuana for sale. And a few hours later when Hill telephoned p<>lice, he was invited to come down to the staUoo for a chat. He declined. By Monday police were so con- cerned about Hlll 's failure lo ap. pear that they announced they would seek an arrest warraot. Later In tbe day, Anthony an· nounced the suspensloa of bis aide unW "everythln1 is cleared up." The clearing up apparenUy began whe.n police rechecked their computerized stolen prop- erty list and discovered the SUB· i>ect stereo equlpment bad been stolen, recovered and then purchased by Hlll at a poUce auc- tion. Apparently the other ilems taken from .Hill's apartment Fri· day evening could not be matched on the tilolen property list. Moreover, while an estimated 15 ounces of marijuana wu al· legedly found in the apartment, it could not be linked lo Hlll. As a result, the Anthony aide is no longer being aougbt by the police or, for that matter, sus- pected of committln1 any crimes. you haven't ~n it, see it today! Save up to 40% J VOL. 70, NO. ns, • SECTIONS, 4 PAGES Aftenoo• N.Y.Stoeks WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 3, 1977 TEN CENTJ CIA Drugs, Bypno~is, Magic Revealed WASRJNGTON <AP) -CIA Director Stanafleld Turner t ...sa, that newl7 dia- co+• ... docwwwts dbdoMd \be CL\ spoMOred HI projeda In· vol dnap, bypnolt., ahoclc ll....-ment llOd eTm ma,Sciam as It~ wit.b coatrol- lnl bmnllt mind. Tu(Del' told a Joint burina d the senate IJat.elllceace c.mmit-tee and the Health subcommittee that tbe project, known uWmate- ly as MK.ULTRA. took place Charges Dropped For Aide After reehef:klng their com· puteriud stolen property lists, Santa Ana police said today they will not file receiving stolen property charces against Nathan Hill, 23. an aide to Oran1e County Supervisor Philip Anthony. Police said they also are aban- doning plans to charge Hill with suspicion of possessing mari- juana ror sale. It was Monday that police they said they would seek an arrest warrant and charge Hill with suspicion of the two crimes, charges stemmlng from a Friday evening incident at the Anthony aide's Santa Ana apartment. Among other lhingg, police s aid stereo equipment and weapons taken from the apart- ment at 209 E. 20th St., Santa Ana, matched descriptions of property stolen in local burglaries. Jt was also said that a large quantity of marijuana "In full view" d olficel'S wu found in the apartment where police bad ione in response to a disturbing the peace call. )fftt ,,,..,, bomt at the time. But his girlfriend wu. (See AIDE, Pace AU Cella Lawyer Says Eviderree Now Stronger By TOM BARLEY Ol•Oel'Y~M.n A defense lawyer argued t.oday in Orange County Superior Court that he and his colleaaues have offered "much atronaer evidence" than they were able to offer in the federal court trial of Dr. Louis J. Cella Jr. and a co- defendant. Attorney Jam•• Riddel, representing fortb«" boapltal ad- ministrator Stephen Robert · Evll\S, 32, ur1ed Judie William C. Speirs to reject evidence that he clahns was UlegalJy obtained by the prosecution. Riddel and attorney Keith Monroe, representing Cella, repeat.edly ur1ed Jud&• Speirs to recognize that t.be District At- torney's Office sanctioned acts ol buralary when they eocourqed a printer employed by Oella to smuggle document.I out of a Costa Mesa prlnUna plant. Cd.la, 52, and Evans race trl al (See CEUA, Pase AJ> ftom 12 to 2S Ytart lfo. .. I aaure )'OU that th• CIA la In oo w11 en1qtd ln either wtWna ot' unwttt.tna t•lln1 of drup to- da,y," hea1fd. Turner told the committee the cloeumenta, hitherto unreported to c:onsr-a. wert round ln seven box• aJoaa with financial re· cordl tn a records center near Wuhincton. The document.I, in lbe form of fiscal records, do not Include ata.tua reports or progress anaJnea d Ure various parta of tbeproJect. • But he Hid tbe a1ency la "now ln pouellioo of the n~,s of 1as nontovemmeni teaearcbers and uststanta who are identified in the ~ered material deailng with the lt91ubprojecta. ''The names of ao inaututtons where work was done or wjtb which these people arrtllated are aho mmtioned, '' be c:Ontinu.t. "1be ill.stitutlona include 44 colleges or universities, 1$ re- Fireman battles three.acre brushfire that broke out about 2:45 p.m. Tuesday in a field alone Rockfield Boulevard in Lake Forest. The blaze. just south of Lake Forest Drive. came within yards of an apartment com- plex, but never really endangered the dwellings. county firefighters said. They blamed the fire, which burned for about two hours. on children playln' with matches. Lightning-tprched Fires ·Peril Parks By The Associated Press Hundreds or fires raged tbrou1h state and national parkland t.oday after a second night ol ligbtnin& bolt.I flashed down on land drled by California's two-ye~ drouahL Weary rirefl1bters worked double shifts as fra=t c supervison tried to direct c s to t.be largest blues. Of 1cials said many fires had to be left un· LAQUNANS VIEW $,BARBARA DAMAOE-A3 were naming in 261 separate fires, mostofthetn small. In the Los Padres National Forest, firefighters equipped with chainsaws ha cited their way throulh 30-year..old limber and underbrush trylng to reach one rtre spreading through the mid- dle ol a national wild'"1ess area. Debbie ·cold. U.S. Forest Servic@ fire information officer, <See nilES, Pa1e A2) Firemen Quell Canyon Bltuse search found1Uon1 or chemical and pharmlCeUt.leat Companies and the like, 12 hospit1ls or clinics ..• and thrH penJl In· stitutlons.0 Adm. Turner dJd not neme any or the lndlviduall or inatituUons in bl& prepared testimony. •'Most of the people and institu- tions Involved a.re not awar. of arency sponsonstlip," be said. Turner said. one contribuUoo of $375,000 to a private medical ln- stltution 's building fund was made through an intermediary to make it appear aa a printe don1Uon. He sa.id the institution wu not told the true aource or the gift. Turner said the CIA bas In- formation that some unwlttlq dru1 testin& was carried CID ln San Francisco and New York Ci· ty, lnvolving three lndlvtduals. "We also know now tbat aome unwitting testtn1 took place on criminal sexual psycopaths con- fined at a state hospital and that.. additionally. research was done on a knockout or •t• dnaJ in parallel wlth research to develop pain killers ror cancer paUenta. Tumet said be lS worldna with Attorney Ge'leral Grtffin Bell to make aYallable whatever materials Bell may need for &J\.Y lnvesU,aUoo be may decide to beetn. Re said be is working with both the attorney general and Joseph A. Califano Jr .• the secretary ol health, education and welfare Killer Sought Coast Wolllmi Slain In Own Apm~tnient By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of ... D.tlly ...... Staff A manhunt continued today for the killer who slipped into a young woman's Corona del Mar apartment as she slept before dawn Tuesday and bludgeoned her to death in her bed for no apparent reason. The victim's ex·boyfriend was picked up by Newport Beach police for questioninr later ln the day and cleared, but was then ar- rested on suspicion of a Southland bank robbery spree ln a novel twist to the case. Jane Ellen Bennington, 29, of 322 Marguerite Ave., was slain apparently by a severe blow to the bead with a heavy blunt In- strument, said Newport Beach Police Detective Sgt. Ken Thompson. No rn~er we-.s>0n hu been located. She was diicovered about 1:30 p.m. by her roommate wbo went to awaken the unemployed fol.'mer sooial worker with whom sbe bid cone oUt D11ht.olubbln1 Monday, lnvdtigators sald. Miss Bennington was killed u she lay in bed, retired for the night and apparenUy already asleep, Sgt. Thompson said to- d1y. lnvestlgaton said there was no lndicatloa of any struggle wilb the attacker at all. • The vlctim w11 partially clothed but Sgt. Thompson declined to reveal whether she bad been sexually molested. "She was lut aeen by her roommate about 2 a.m .• in the parking lot at Marlo's Restaurant," S1t. Tbt>mpson added. •'They'd been to Bobby McGee's," he explained. Mias Bennlngto.n had already aiven her parking check to lbe lot attendant and was waltine for de· livery d her car, 10 her room· mate left with a friend. Serreant Thompson explained. He said the women went to lbe Pacific Coast Highway night club fairly oftell and the victim's roommate said it was common for. the attendants to park her car in Mario's lot. Bobby McGee's is one or the Harbor Area's bot spotl for ain-1• to coagre1ate and the lot ia often fta1l. IO the Mario'a lot is used whet) the Uf e is clo&ed. JaYestilalon laid theta ii DO evidence anyone accompanied Mila Benn1niton to her Shared •partmeot on the trff-th1ded street coastwl.fd of Pacific Cout llitbw.v. ............... .,...,, ...... DET. SAM AMBURGEY INSPECTS BROKEN SCREEN I• Thi• How KUl•r t.eft Murdered Women'• Home? OAllYPllOT SB Contract Cancels • Strike OrJ ·••II ban1•n ln Oran1e 1..-Ml t counU• voced OffrWbclm&l\ll)' TueadaJ to at'· ....-• rw:w ...,. ... 1 .. r contract, m.-anT• a pot.CUA) atrib. • ....,._, r•Ufted the MW can· trtcl b1 about J to 1. •' .J l m .Jone1 a pok•man tor the hanf en at Carpcttr's UnJon Loca 3131. MidtodaJ. .,_ did eot ha" vote relun\11 rcw al.De Mla,bbori11• IOUtlMm California coanl.aa which weu a1ao inolYed in Ute new lhree- 1ear •1reemenl. H t aald, laowever, lS perunl of the ~en'°._,.,.* an louted tn Oraqe and Loa Anselm c:ou.n· ties. The new qreement, developed in last-minute oeaouauons, takes dfect ret.roacl.ave to Au1. 1. Homer Bartlet, Soutbern Callfomia Dry Wall Contractors Association executive dtrector. said today the new contract would mean an ancreaae an hous- ang costs to the consumer '·Every home wlll ra&e in cost about 10.7 percent to every sub- eorrtn.ctor," Bartles explained. · Ho said a so-called "degree or dlfftculty" work clause in the new agreement would mean an additional 2.3 percent increase m cost to the subcontractor, total· ing about a 13 percent cost in- crease overall. The clause provides a sliahtly higher rate per square root for difficult work done on a home. Meanwhile, striking dry wall finishers have returned to work through the use of Interim acree- ments with dry wall contractors. The acreements are temporary and become invalid once a final agreement is reached in tbe weeks-old labor dbpute. Dry wall contractors usocia- tJon attorneys in San Die10 Tues- day were denJed a restrainin1 or- der to halt use of the temporary aireements. Negotiations between the dry wall contractors and finishers were held Monday but faUed to result In progress towards a new agreement. A federal mediator has been called into the negotiations. Froat Page Al SUSPECT ••• • peatedly in the past two months, making off with thousands of doll an. Authorities said Gano also closely resembles the deacriptlon o( the bandit who atruck the lfun- Un gton Beach bank at 17122 Beach Blvd., within the hour before Gano was detained. Teller Kathy Vorwerk told police a tall, husky man with freckles and carrot-orange hair slicked down presented her with a note that explained he was rob- bine the bank. No gun has been seen or ap- parently utilized in the string of holdups by the redhead wearin1 a baseball cap, authorities said. The Baseball Cap Bandit is believed responsible for the rob- b e.r y of both the United California Bank at 3141 E. Cout Hlf hway in Corona del Mar on Ju y 21 and the Manufacturer's Bank holdup at 1201 Dove St., July29,pollcesald. He has alAo struck two banks in Cosla Mesa durins the spre-i in- vo I vin1 stickups occurring sometimes twice ln one day. "No money hnked to any other robberies has been recovered." Detective Sat. Thompson said to- day. 'Ihief Gets TV Set A color television set valued by the victim al $400 has been stolen from an El Toto home by a bur1lar who entered via the un- locked door. Oraoce County aberiff'a officers said lhe theft 1'a& reported by Marfaret Retina Simpkins, 69. of 23012 Ditz St. She ... away rrom borne at the time. C>MNOaCOMT H l•fdtpQtu11 =~ .. \===~= c.Ml =--"hAT,,.'t"...!.:..~:r"-.. ......... ...... _ ..... ~ MMtlW·C.lol .... ":::r· ... 11 ... _ .............. 1--. .... . . ..., .... ~-.... ~=~·;rw=i;:; ........ ,.... ......... , ....... ,. ...... , ....... Oolle-;C:.111---. King Brandi Winner of the All·Amencan "glamor kitty" compell t ion m Hollywood. Fla , is Brandl Alexander, a 3-year- flld male with semi long hair in white. tan and orange The 12-pound feline belongs to Lmda Northrup, 14. ol Home, N.Y., and wins the right to thc> title ··King Cat" for the next year. CUSD Trustees Adopt '78 Budget Capistrano Unified School Dis· trlct trustees have adopted the district's $29.4 million fin al 1977-78 budget, SS.3 million over 1976-77 expenditures. The district's tax rate was set at $4.12 per $100 assessed value a reduction or 28 cents from l~t year 's rate. Total assessed valuation in the district this year. however, increased 28.1 percent. The vote was 6-0 with San Clemente Trustee Sar ah Lipp absent. Residential property values fluctuate between 5 percent and 20 percent or more higher this year , according to distnct finance officials. The owner of a home appraised this year at $80,000 would pay $824 in school district taxes. Trus tees adopted the final budget over the vigorous protest of San Clemente resident George Jenkins. Jenkins told the school board FIRES ••• saJd the fire had 1rown to 2,300 acres. Another fire on the southeast edge of the Venlaoa Wilderness had grown lo more than 5,000 acres by this morning, she said. Crews were able to teach at least one side of the blaze and begin dleging out fireUnes. Information officer lrl Everest said Forest Service restrictions barred men from takin1 equJp. ment other than chainsaws Into the wilderness area. "Because It is a wildemess area, the theory Is to have no Im- print of man.'' he said. ''As long as there is a possibility o( con- trolling by other means than roads and doing something lo dis- turb the naturaJ order, we will cb005e to honor that." I Dead, 8 Bart no attempt is being made to make ~chool finances intelligible lo the voting publi c. "I'm a retired accountant, and 1t would take me six months' s tudy to understand this budget, which wasn't available to me un- til late last week," he said. "I'm a taxpayer. I've seen my taxes go up 23 percent last year, probably Just as much this year. I ask that you cut this budget to the bare bones.'' "Everybody waits until the last bell has rung," said board pre s ident Ted Kopp of Capistrano Beach. "Then they come in here and make all kinds of noise. after we've spent hun- dred:\ of hours working on all thss" "What you haven't said," Jenkins responded. "is that you haven't saved us a darn thing (by cutting the tax rate). Assessed valuation is up so much you are working with bigger dollars." f'ro91PageAJ FUNDS ••• Republican assemblyman Robert Burke. Burke aJso received $15 worth or Oowers from the Mangers committee, according to its re-port. And the Balboa Bay Club bill for a Mangers fund raiser was Sl.828, the report said. Assemblyman Ron Cordova .<D·EI Toro> received only $2,330 m monet.ary campaign contribu- tions in the first six months or 1977. Cordova's major expense item was Sl,179 covering "air travel for campaign." But Cordova also repaid $4,050 worth of loans left over from l!r16 and another $600 loan was (or~iven, accordin« to the Cordova for Assembly commit- tee report. Terrorists Bomb New York O/fiices B.Ollles In Park FV Opposes ·Marine Plan By RAYMOND ESTRADA Jt. • Of ... o.I ............. A U.S. 'Marine Corps plan lo bylld u many as 1,300 mUltvY tQ>artn\ent.a ln the middle o( MU• SQuare Park ln Fountain Valley has drawn fire from • bOlt ot city officials. Military apokesmen aald lcday the plan would lnvolv• the de- v e I op men t o( a 180·aere trian,War area formerly used aa a helicopter landln1 pad in the ,..._ P.,,e AJ CELLA ••• on multiple felony counts con- tained in a Grand Jury indict- ment. Those cbar1es stem from the basic a lle&ations that Cella muterminded investment tac- tlcs which siphoned an eaUmated $2 million from two county hospltall into hia political cam- paign fund coffers. Both men were found aullty oo related charaes in Loa Anteles Federal Court. Cella la free on appeal from a five-year prison term, while Evans Is appealing a one-year sentence. Both Riddel and Monroe lcday questioned the legality o( the prosecution usln1 printer Dooald Albert Ray to s muggle out docu· menls that are considered vital to the prosecution's case. Those documents alleeedly In· clude stationery bearlna the let- terheads of 10 boeus companies who billed Mission Community Hospital, Mission Vi ejo, and Mercy General Hospital. Santa Ana, for supplies that were never received. The defense araues that Ray was used as an informant because he faced prosecution on charges. of soliciting murder when the District Attorney's of- fice learned that he was employed by Cella. And ll is further argued that search warrants authorized by a Superior Court judae durin& the investigation of Cella would never been Issued had the judge been made aware of the true nature of the proseeullon'11 probe and the manner In which Ray was compelled to cooperate with the District Attorney's office. IF heart of ihe county-owned park. Capt. John Shotwell, an El 'foro Marine Corps ,\Jr Station in· tormaUoo officer, atld tbe mlUtary ia faced with a severe housin& problem for its enlisted personnel. Althou11) the Mlle Square site is one ot three possible locaUons for the propoaed military housin& project, said Shotwell, lt ls tbe first choice. Congressional approval al the plan would mean about 200 of the houain1 units would be uPder construction by 1979, according to Oranae County Supervisor Philip Anthony. Fountain Valley city officials met with mllltary spokesmen June UI and were surprised by the proposed plan, said Mayor Roger Stanton. "It's totally ridiculous," said Stanton. Mayor Pro Tem Bernie Svalstad said, "It doesn't make sense." The plan would mean a drain on the city's resources and could create a "ghetto aur-rou~ed by,$150,000 homes" lf It ls buUt, he said. Councilman Al Holllnden, also an Oranae County Transit Dia· trlct official, said one of the most serious problems with the plan would be the traffic it would generate. "Most of the families would make between eight and nine trips per day," said Holllnden. ''To me the whole idea is reprehensible," be added. Stanton said the plan would have a heavy impact the city's police and fire departments as well as schools. Toro Youth Held On Pot Farm Rap A.n El Toro youth was jailed on char1ea of cultivating marijuana when 1S pots contalnln1 the plants alle1edly were found on his pro- perty. Orange County sheriff's of- floers said. Deputies arrested Timothy Michael Kirkpatrick, 20, o( 23151 Los All&os Blvd., after the7 al· le1edly found the marijuana planta in the rear yard of the apartment complex. { you hdven't s~n it, see it today! Save up to 40% • • ·~ Mine Tl'Uff 150People JOHANMSSauao. Soutb Attica <AP) -AbOat 150 IUinen ... tra.pped and feared dud today after an u;plc:.lon ln • coal mine In c..,vat Mo••m b"l.,.. Mil nlDe toNt...,.. were 1d1W ID aubMquent .. riot.lni at ~ min • Radio Mozambique tel. The radio, mooltoJ]14 •ere, saJd resca oPtN· Uons were~ Wa¥·.ad troope were aent to l'eltoN order at the Cblpao1a mine. The radio pve no detalhl •ot bow the forellMrt ••• kill-9, but aakl th1 died In • '1rave dlat-.rbaDeea•• aft.et tbe explOllon. Jt lden· t.i.fied lhe1ft _., .. be1q Rl "dilferent nationaliU.. ... fi'reta p_,,. AJ AIDE ••• - And police said 22-year-old Mae Katherine Ferrell, also ol the 20th Street addrep, bad broken all the wlndowe In the HUI apartment, battered an the doora and was lhrowina whatever abe could 1-y her band.a on qainst the apartment wall1. Mlss FerreU aocl a IT·)'ear.old juvenile, purportedly her brother, were taken Into c..tody and charted with rtceJvlng stolen property and poaaesslon ol marijuana for sale. And a few houn later when HUI telephafted police, be wu ln:rlt.ed to come down to the station for a cbat. He declined. By Monday pollce were IO~· cemed about Hill 'a failure to ap. pear that they announced they would seek an arrest WUT'aDt. Later in the day, Antboay an· nounced the suspension ol his aide until "everyt.bln1 is cleared up." Tbe clearin1 up apparently befan when police rechecked their computeriied stolen prop. erty liat and diaeovered the SUS· oect stereo equipment bad been s tolen, recovered and tben purchaaed by Hill at a police auc- tion. Apparently the other items taken from Hill'• apartment Fri· day evening could not be f!lalched on the stolen property hst. 1 Moreover, while an esUmated 15 ounces of marijuana w• al· le1edly found in the apartment, it could not be linlred to Hill. s ooaaoas: What•• a.ed h ,.. lhla bal of •U pout. ble coHh 11 ao hooeU·lO· SOodDHI Sea Monater We havm•t really had • 1ood QM ln recmr. ~ If •e could 1a one. he michl loOlw aome of our prob le au If )OU could have it chutce on Sea Mansten. J 'd take one that was about lt feet 1001 wtlh &low· 1n1 pun>le slun, l11r1e yellow eyes. a long head and small mouth He would surface from lhe depths and roar a lot Beyond that I would prefer that our Seil! 'donster sustain tumself on sea weed and old rub tH!r bres He woold have no ap petite at aJJ tor lO-year·old boys v1i.1tmg from Fullerton THE NOTION Of getllng our very own Jolly sea creature fires the 1magmat1on and I um ind1g · nanl that other places get one and we don't have any Consider the Scots, for exum pie Over there 1n Scotland they have ttus Loch Ness Monster. known with arfecl1on around the world ai; .. Ne~s1e." They've been making hay with Nessie for decades now The fame of Loch Ness has spread like the wind. Ness1l' keep:. ~etlin& sighted every now and then and teams of newspaper people and scientist~ have rui1hed to Loch Ness. and lolled around for weeks waiting for a glimpse or the beast Staff wnter Tom Barley or our very own sterling Journal has told thel when he was newspapering m England, one of his hest assignments was chas- ing Nessie He did 1t mostly from a veranda on Loch Ness. whilst .... 1ppmg tea No~. to add insult to 1n1ury m u:. not having our own monster or •he deep, the .Japanese even <·amc up with <>nt> off of u place call<·d Christchurch, New Zealand A Japanei.e trawler named the Zuiyo Maru netted the heast and hauled 1t aboard. But Lhc captain ordered It thrown back for fe11r tl would con- taminate the .rest of the fish I catch T HERE IS SOLACE in the tact that the Japanese monster was dead. Dead sea monsters are oC huJe value t If we &ot our own Sea Monster. we could name 1t Gugg1e. Guggle could do all kinds of good things for us. For starters. Gueg1e would probably kei!p a lot Of beach ViS· 1tors out ol the water. thus lessen· mg the workload on our life1uard services There would, however. be the problem of tourists coming to our region in droves with the notion of getting a peek at Guagie while 1t was at play; eating seaweed off Huntington Beach Pier and roar· mg a lot, or mayM tossing old rubber Urea in the air while frolickin1 in Upper Newport Bay TIUS COULD PVT even more pressure on our coastal parking problems what with Huntiniton Beach ~ Newport already 1ammechand and Laguna trying to operate tbree arts shows and a gagale of beach volltyball tournaments at lhe aame lime Therefore this wouJcl call for careful plannin& so that G~g1e would surface at places like Salt Creek Beach in Lacuna Niauel wbere there is already plenty or parking. What a boon. We could divert all the crowds to • placeswherewehavemoreroom. It's just not Ca.ir bein& without ourownSeaMonster. •s on of Sain' Pursued .,, .. t. .............. Katherine Gr:.iham and ofhccr John Tuttle \\.Ork !)pl'ctal hotline in '.'Jl'\\ York Cal~·., Flus hing an>a. where polK'l' are cunccntraltnJ.! efforts to get information about a killer of ~oung women who <:alb himself ··son of Sam Deput.\ t>ol1cc Comm1ssioncr Frant1s :\okLoughlin sa1ct olh<.•r t'ouplcs wer~ parked in lhL' area when• a ~ oung "om an \\as slain over lhe weekend He has urged them to <1ss1sl in providing acldilaonal mformal1on . (:~priot President · 1 Maka.rios, 63, Dies ~ NICOSIA. Cyprus CAP> Ardlbitbop M•k•rios. pres \tent or this Mediterranean island slnce ll IUned in~pen4ence 11 YtU'$ a10. died early today of a heart attack, leav1na • d•Heroua pow., vacuum in a nation seetblne wllh tension between Greek and TurltiSh Cypriots. A spokesman at the pre:tJdentlal pal•ce Hid ihe Gtfflt Orthodox prelate S\lffered the attack Tue · d~y night and died at 5:1J a.m. 1'VRK£V INVADED Cyprus local time, 10 days before his 64th ln July 197( after Makarios was birthday. br1tfly ousted in a coup by Greek 'f'.he powerful archbishop sym Cypriot rightists and the mlitary bohzed the stren1th of the Greek Junta that then controlled Cypriot majority in lts centuries· Greece. Some zs.ooo Turlu~h old conflict with the Turkish troop& remain on Cyprus. There m1nor1ty, and he cemented 1s also a United Nation~ toge~er Greek C~priot.s of many peacekeepmg force on the island pohllca~ tendencies His death "God has finally answered our 1 m mediately aroused rears or prayers," a civil servant said. new turmoil ·•Perhaps the Cyprus problem "ONLY GOD CAN protect us can be solved now," said a now." said one of 2,000 mourners shopkeeper . who gathered outside the Maltarios was regarded 1n archb1shop's residence, many of Turkey as the main obstacle them weeping openly ··He was against a Cyprus seulement. our rather Now that he IS dead the dancers are too big for us · · Greece went into 0U1c1al mourning In Ankara. the Turk1!ih aovern· ment maintained official silence on Archbishop Makarios' death. but many citizen& reacted with relief. IN BRJTAIN, WUICH once ex iled Archbishop Makarios to the Indian Ocean 's Seychelles Islands whiJe Cyprus struggled for independence. nags were or- dered flown at half staff AOWI....,.._ CYPRIOT LEADER DIES Archbishop Makarios, 63 Car Makers 'Defeated' Lord Caradon,\British go\-·ernor during Cyprus' independence drive, said: ''No one could now step into the s hoes of the archbishop .... He did his duty m advan~ing independence. and he never went back on his agree· ment with us. He kept his word ·· Man Cotwicted Of 11 Deatlu Geu New Trial O e an Air Compromise Tougher Than Hoped WASHINGTO!ll I AP > A I louse-Senate conference com m1ttee ended the threat of a shut down by American car maker~ today reaching agreement on a major rev1s1on or federal air pollution laws. Members of the committee negotiated for nearly seven hours before finally settling on a formula that will ease federal re <Ju1rements on auto emission standards for new American t'llrS beginning m 1980 "Tins IS A reasonable com promise," said the ch11irman of the conference committee, Sen Edmunds. Muskiem Maine1 The committ .. e members reached agreemenf at the end or their eighth session as they worked to resolve differences E:tlailritor Held helwecn SL•nale and House amendment:. lo the 1970 federal Clean Air Act A vote on the compromise was likely m the Hoose as early as to day It must then go to the Senate for a final vote before delivery to the White House for President Carter·~ ~1gnature Little re ... 1stance was expected in either hou!-e of Congress TH~ AUTO INDUSTRY had supportl'd the House version of the Jntipollullon bill With the support of the Carter Ad ministration. the Senate voted toughl'r air pollution standards thun thl• llouse. allhou&h both loosened requirements 1n the present law rontrollmg la1lp1pe pollutants Over-all, the romm1ttee· cum· 'Ghoulish' Babies Shown· at Carnival ... WAUKEGAN. Ill (AP > The corpses of 20 babies and fetuses found floating in glass Jars beano& namecards such as ··cyclops,·· .. Elephant Nose Baby." and "Fro& Girl" are being held in a morgue while the coroner determines how they became a 7~cent·a·ticket carnr1aJ attraction. Thi! corpses were confiscated The exhibitor. Chris MicHael last week, said Lake County Christ. 29, of Gibsonlon, Fla .. Coroner Robert Babcox, who was charged with the illegal dls- termed the exhlbit .. 11bsolutely position or bodies and illegal ghoulish .. possession of human remains. He The exhibitor called 1t a "non· was released on $2,000 bond and prom educational show." ordered to ap~ar Aug. 15 in Circuit Court . 'THEY AR E ALL IN our COUn· ty morgue, and will be given a decent burial." Babcox said Tuesday "Everybody Is entitled to a burial or some kind " BABCOX SAID HE was at- tempting to find out where Christ obtained the dead infants and fetuses and how he managed to transport them across state lines without death certificates "We think the show came from Indiana." he said. "and we're looking into ttlat." promise on hydrocarbon carbon monc1x1dt• and nitrogen oxide pollutants 1s closer to the Senate version and stands as a defeat for tf'ie auto industry For three years, through 1977 lhe industry had been granted de lays in complym& with tough an lipollut1on standards m the 1970 law Both the House and Senate agreed to further postponements for 1978 and 1979. but the con ference committee had not com plctcd 1Ls work and the Congress 1s scheduled to begin a month· long recess Friday SO AllTO INDUSTRY leaders were raced with an approllchlng August de11dllne for beginning 1978 production and under exist ing law they are prevented from 'ihipping cars across state lines If the vehicl~s fall to meet the stringent standards set m the 1970 law In Detroit today, Elliott M. Estes. Gener.al Motors president. said he was relieved the con- ference romm1ttee had made a dec1s1on U S Secretary or State Cyru~ R Vance, in Lebanon on a Mid die East peace lour. !.aid Makarios .. was clearly a strong leader ' IN NICOSIA, A spokesman said the ~k Cypriot national ~uard and police were placed on alert The national council grouping all important Cypnol leaders. scheduled a meeting for this morning. the Greek Cypnot radio said A prcs1denl1al palace spokes man said S p1ros Kypnanou. head of the all ·Greek parliament. would serve as act ang president unlit a successor to Makarios is elected in 45 days. The Greek Cypriot radio an nounced 40 d;iys of mourning and played funeral music. but In the northern third of Cyprus, the sec tor oecupied by 25,000 Turkish troops. Turkish Cypriot radio continued normal programming. THE RADIO TOOK nOllce or the death after seven hours. when a slateQtenl was broadcast f rom Nejat Konuk, prime minister or tbe seU-procWmed Turkish Cypriot federated state < CINCINNATI 1AP1 The con \ 1ct1on or James Ruppert, ac- t used or killing II members of h•'> fam1lv at his mother's home on Easte"r Sunda} 1n 1975. was overturned loda) by a state ap- peals court The 1st 01.,trict Ohio Court of Appeuls n.•lurned the case lo lhe Buller County Common Pleas Court for a new trial Ruppert wa., conv1cte<I ,,r 1 I <·ounls of a~gravated murder an the killings of his mother, brother, s1sler 1n law, and eight nieces and nephew'> at his motht.·r·s Hamilton home The appellate court said Rup· p1.•rt 's waiver or a Jury tnal was not • know1111t. voluntary and in· telhgent" since he had been in- formed by counsel and the pre- s1d mg Judge that a three.judge panel '., verdict mus t be unanimous. ln!'>tead of a unanimous de· • c1s1on. Ruppert was convicted by a 2 l maJority by a Butler County Common Pleas Court panel of Judges u "' x J u < H&IL ,t.vl[NV r; 0 ,.... ............... 1--~~~~'"'1~ ........ ....... z • "' J 0 • c ~ ... Babcox said that when he and his investigators saw the tiny corpses in the Wondercade Ex- hibits show at the Lake County Fair at Grayslake. "We thought they were plastic or rubber. but our pathologis.t, Dr Vernon Zech. examined them and found them to be human monstrosities." Zech said the Oc><hes. billed as "The World's Strangest Babies." were those or "malformed babies, ranging from gestation beyond live birth • HUNTINGTON HARBOUR SHOPPING GUIDE REAL ESTATE Cheer Realty Rains Wash Southeast BANK Security P11etftc National Bank Full Service Bonk 84tl-1341 BARBER The Hair Care Co. S 11Ung and Cutti"'1 8C8·9'7M FLORIST Huntington Beach Flotlst Arti141'11 ill F'tortlculture 148-0801 GIFTS HuntlngtOn Harbour H•llmatk C<&U Chttt IAoder fot a Horbour Home {714) 141-5111 (213) 592·5040 Huntington Harbour Realty s~· II\ New Sole• & Re-Sole• (714) 846-CMM1 (2~J.) 592·2816 ~ . . Cardi, Stat~. Toga, Part11 Goodl 84&-0110 du day' NYSE 2 ~m. (EDT) Price1 TRANSACTIONS s 'Inner Clrele' . • DiveE"sity: V;isits U.S. BoaEdro BJ SYLVIA P0&1'D .............. Dwer:si\y is acceleraUna in~ corporate ~ of the nadoo. Academicians sit on 41 ~ of UM boerdl.. .. U.$ percent ln thrc:e years. The poWtr ol board membeni ~ backerounds In economJcs, edClcaUon ed espertenee ln aovemment is rislna steadll)'. Women are sittinf on the boa.rcb ol n percent ol tbc country's corporationa, up9.8~t. International executives are broade.nlq their bold. BUT LA WYERS WHO PROVIDS le&al let\'l~ to tM company, commercial bankers aQd investment bankers ar. losing power. So far, only o.s percent have employe repreHlltathel on their boards. These are the findings ot Kora /Ferry l11ternatioDal, tile world's largest ex~utive search firm, ln Its eqpyriOt.d fourth annual study of 370 boards. .. Other characteristics ol corporate boards today lftdqde .. the dominance or the older director, particularly on boards of companies with an- nual sales exceeding $500 million. On these big company boards. ac cording to a report by Money's Worth Women's Forum, Inc., there were no cllreet.on under ace 30 and only 1 percent between 30 and 40. PRESSURE FROM WOMEN'S G&OUPS, tWllDlet activists, and government bas opened d.irect.orQ.lpe to a wider spectrum. ln the words of Loub W. Cabot ol CUot Corp., lD tbe Conference Board Record, "the euy.IOiq and lellthmb· Jy conduct ot the traditional board of directors mat be replaced by serious-minded. posltive-orieated, critical bl· teraction between the board aDd manacement. It IJ all too easy lo bang on lo old-fashioned board prodftures, but if tht corporallon runs into troubles -and most do from tlm• to ti me this will eventually catch up wttb the YicttmJ." Why do people accept direct.orshl~? TO MAKE PERSONAL FaI.ENDSlllPS, to lain U· perience m and knowledge ol bow other people nm tbelr businesses, to enhance the prestiae ol the eompuy la- vol ved. to boost the person's ego, to make extra mane1 <rarely enough to be worthwhile, says Cabot>, to acetpt a challenge <and this, Cabot warns can tum out t.o be more than the new director bargains for>. Just as there is no disputing the openiot of dlrectorahlps to a wider spectrum of society, so there is no disputina the change in the boards from the relatively passive rolel ol bygone years to active (if not agaressive) partidHtloo. Speeding the change is the tact that In some companies, u many as 60 percent of current board memben will leave.in the next two years under mandatory retlrementpollcies. nus turnover alone will create opport\UdUes for oae of the greatest corporate inflows in Artlerican bualnesa hll-tory ADDING TC) THE SPEED will be lbe fact that qa.allfled women selected for boards usually have oon·tradltloaal backgrounds. The derlnition of the ideal board is slated for a m-.lor overhaul in the next few years. Nm The board at crouroocb Cas Utility Looks For New .Business OLYMPIA, Wash. CAP> -Even as every pubUcf)f'fldal from the president to the doecatcber pleads for eneray coa- servalion, Cascade Natural Gas Corp. is mattnc a frank, hardsell pitch for more buslness. "There is plenty of gas for new residential and com· mercial customers," says a spluhy ad runnlnc thb week in St news papers in Washington and Oregon. "We have au to sell. Count on at. May we serve you?" THE CHAIRMAN OF THE Washington tJUliUea and Transportation Commission says the state will ~ tbe Seatlle-based utility's decision to advertise for addlUODal customers. Washington state's No. 1 energy official, Larry Bradley, says the ads strike hJm j\lst flne. "If it dis pl aces any elect.riclty use, I say more power to 'em," he said in an interview. "l bopetbey aell the bell OQ\ of it " THE SHARPEST CRmClSM 11.4.S come frora tbe OU Heat Institute, wblcb represents a rival industry. Tbe in- stitute calls the ad campaign "irresJ>Ol)lible and detrhnen·~ tal." In the ad, a shlrt·sleeved, benl111ly smUlng Cascade President 0 . Marshall Jones notes that wben there were fears of gas shortages several years aao, be promlsed that gas would nol run out. "The record wUI show that promtse was kept." be la)'t. ··Not a single residential or commercial Cascade Gu customer has sufrered any lack ol service. "ALL RIGHT. IF I KNEW whal I wu dotnl ~n, why don't I know what I'm doing now? The truth ii, friends, I do know " His firm's supplier. Northwest Pipeline Cocp., bu re- ceived assurances of an extra 2Q«> million cubic fe.t ot su per day from Alberta, Canad•, he wrlt.es ln a breezy ad headlined "Yes, we have gas for you." Developer Sell8 r Y"1.0T Lebanon ·.Qffered .t4miY A.id ban CAP> - n•tU'J of Stat• C1ru1 n attend Lebanon 11 m Ill e.ay U er ll.I oHr • Ne JMn to rebWld ll• ann)i Vmce "'* lh4t offer lo Presi· s.,..a. toda1 Oll1 the lttCIDd stop or bla Middle muc ~ m ion. Rt alao eounde<I wat \he Lebantte lead r on It.al· t1oatn1 a U. N . obaerYer or •••••ency fo~c• alon1 J,ebaoon'• f.OUthem border with J~nd to reduce tens.Ions be\~ffn ( INSHORT ) Moslem and Chr1st1an force~ U.ere. · The secretar)' o! state was to ttavel to Syria later today u he $~l out to win Arab and uraeh approval tor a plan lo move pre- llmmary Midea!>t peace negolta lions to the United States in the rorm or "working groups" or f9re1gn mm1sters 6trflo Sllip B•rtt• HOUSTON CAP> -One crewman was badly burned When a cargo ship exploded and ciaughl fire in the Houston Ship Channel, and .an investigator s:llid he suspected arson , · Authori ties said all 42 crewmen on lhe.PhlUppjne Cor· regidor were accounted for short· ly arter the mc1dent Tuesday night. Some had been ashore at the time or the blast The injured crewman's 1dent1ly was not available itliwe Biii Signed ~WASIIlNGTON (AP> -Presi· <knt Carter signed a stnp mining b1U today which he said 1sn 't sirict enough despite having the lfelh to force coal companies to restore virtually all the new land tfiey ravage to pay for repairs or damage they've done in the past : "I'm not completely sallsfled 'filh this legis lation." he <:Wclared during a Rose Garden 9(gn\ng ceremony climaxing "ven years or legislative strug Iles amdng members of Congress and battles between the .pining industry and environ rpenta.I interesls. ~Dage• Retaken :sANGAE, Thailand <APJ "Chai troops today entered !S;lngae and another burned-out IJ>rder village where at least 28 •rsons, Including 11 children. were killed b y Cambodian ~ldiers in cross-border raids, rflJlitary authorilles said. : No fighting was reported along t~e tense frontier 150 miles east of Bangkok. Thai mihtary of. ffclals said most of the 350 raiders who attacked Sangae and rOtarby Chalor Changan on Tues- ¢;1y had slipped back into Cam- tpfia. • . . Pilot · J LogbOok There's Nothing l,ike Sure Thing By Will.JAM HODGE OI n11 o.lly "'""-Iliff It looked like a con r11ht from theatart. "I've 1ot • llolid Del Mar triple. Yea, that's rlaht. Three Juicy kllllnp 1olng on Saturday, July 30th," Louted the let· ter from a Beverly Hllls handicapper. "Tl\ls Triple Win has been planned to look as though each runner 18 lln 'accidental' win, the type of situation whereanon-plcked horse aets lucky." \ ntAT WAS ENOtJGR to entice my occasional.horse racing aficionado mother to plunk down her 10 simoleons and lake her chances. · It was also eoough lo lure me into a trip to Del Mar at lhe expense of a Saturday to watch these '"three horses 'blow up' to tole board with a hlahly profitable score for those (us) fortunate enough to know ahead or lime .. Saturday morning came and after a short call to L.A . my mother emerged from the phone boolh clutching a list of three horses guaranteed to ollop In with windfall profits A sure bet. A SHORT WHILE later we were standing ln the upper clubhouse bar alternately eyeing a racing program and a closed-circuit television screen pro- pounding the odds of the next race. The second race was the first test. HODGE We moved down lo the paddock area to observe our potential fortune being led around before the attentive rac· ing patrons just prior lo the second race. "Billy Club" moved around lhe paddock as though he had other things to do Nol exactly the picture of stamina necessary to outrun the field of seven horses BUT WE WERE undaunted, flgur1ng we had the inside info to walk away with a pot of gold At the close or the race our para-mutuel tickets Joined the others scattered on the cl ubhouse bar's noor. Sometl'tlng had gone wrong. My mother was certain the race had been faxed Someone tumpered with our horse. We setlled down to regroup and await the fourth race "Triple Scorpio" was the second horse 1n our mail· tapper's turf triumvirate. He had everything going for him. Wallie Shoemaker was nding him He ran well on a firm track. And my mother had $18 on ha~ nose He spent the last two furlongs galloping after fourth placl' Another non picked horse hill's the dust THAT LEFT ONE horse an the seventh ruce on which to acqwre a windfall. And "Bold Talent" turned out to be the odds-on favorite lo take home the purse in the seventh We placed our bets and huddled around the dosed c1rcwl screen. The horses lined up at the starting gale and were off. "Bold Talent" held a :-.ohd third place at the f1rsl turn and appeared to be accelerating toward victory. lie held hi!> ground through the back stretch but seemed to be t1r1 ng ALL OF A SUDDEN, a!> though he'd been hit by a streaking h1psc of interest, "Bold Talent .. succumbed to the thundering hooves or his fellow entries None of the three golden picks bothered lo finish 1n lhl.' top three in any or the races. We fled the track soothing our wounded wallets AS WE APPROACHED the traffic barricades outside the track. my mother, a San Diego County Jall 1nformalion c I erk. spotted a deputy she knew .. Boy. did we gel taken." she confessed to the sherirf"s officer "We had these great tips and non• of them came off" "You're leaving too early, .. the uniformed deputy in- formed us. 'Steal A March' is a dead CUlch in the ninth race." ~urder Trial SuppOrted $acco-Vanzetti Proclamation Called Shameful .• :: From AP Dllpatcbes ·~ Republicans in the Musachusetls Senate are b-ying lo get that body lo repudiate Gov. Mlehael f>ukakls' proclamation tbal anarchists Nicola Sac- co and Bartolomeo Van.1eW did not receive a fair jiurder trial. :' ~-Davld Locke sai~ that the July 19 proc- t:lamation overrode the Cmdings of the judicial kystem and its signing was "the most shameful J;cenario in Massachusetts history." : Dukakis' proclamation set aside Aug. 23 as a JnemoriaJ day tor Sacco and Vanzetti, who were ex- •cuted Aug. 23, 1927, after being found gullly in a ~920 payroll robbery and murder PEOPLE dreds of United Airline pilots out of up to Sl2 million entrusted to hlm for investments. Activities Offered AtUCI The following schedule of acUv1Ues opeo to the public has been an- nounced by lbe UC Irvine Extension pro gram· TOOAY "O..llno •ncl v11111.mhm 1,. llM Wul." 0.vlll Wllll-s. Pll o .. P•• tenor of Hl•lorv. C•lllOf'lll• Stale Ul\l•tt"tV. L-th.Ch L .. I of e UC lrvl,.. E•IM•lllKlech1tt ttrlh, "Tiie Amef'k•n Wftt/' J.to p,.,., ltm. 0 1, HU'llanlUK ... 11. UC ,,,..,,. c•mput. Single AdmlUIOn •I , .... door II ~ permll\.U lO THUllSOAY "C-llno Emc>IOVff•.'" M-•rd Wll•o,., proldenl AClmlnltlr•ll•• 111 .. •rcn •~-••IH, In< •UC Irvine E•ltn"O" OfM•dO Hmln•r. • )0 • m.•4;30 pm. Holld•v Inn, JUI llrl\lol. OXIAI ""'-~ ""' J!O, II\ eludes ""'' ""'lerl•I•, lunch •nd ""'"'no TUHOAY-THUllSOAV, A_.u.•, 11, 16. 11-U .. , °"" I W•M lo M•rrv AQtln. llul • :· Robert E ICaven•u~ 1>11 0 , c->ehnq IUVCl\OIOQl\I. UC !>en 01-A UC lr•lne lalefl\00" caurM 6 •S.10 U pm, Rm IC)I Pny1icel Xl•n<H 111119 UC lr•I,,_ <•mpu\ f-ff Non·Creo•t. IJI Cr•d1t. IU l>lllOAY•ndSATUllOAY r ... P .... ,,., .... ,,. Of MllW Ovtr M•ll~' Merk G !KIWI•• M ~ doc IOr•I C-ICMle I" P>'tCllOIOQY UC lrvtne A UC ININ !•ttn\k>n (C>\1"4, ""· ••Opm S.t ••m·•lnoo" •nd l·S 0 m Rm , .. Soc••I Sc•-· Lab. UC lrVine OMPV\. F•• N on- C•tdll n 1. c...i11. MO l'lllOAY-SATUllDAY, A-U-6;fteOMIU ..Ti. Roco..,rlno AlcOllollc;• Muv L. J~I. Ms w . owcnlalrlC •OCl•I wortu1r . LOf'IQ 8e•ct't Gt1'er•t MOIPU•I, Al(of\of Tr•a1mtn• Pro~ or•m A UC lrvlM E•ltn,ton lwo wHhnd courw, Fri .• I· 10 p m , 5411 • ~ • m t? ,_ .no I Sp m . Rm. Ito. Computer Science 81119. UC lr•lne <•mPV\ F•f' SS3. tnc.•VO.\Pfllri.:4"0 P'lllOAY,SATUllOAY •ndSUNOAY. a_.11.6, 1;•ndU. u . u ''Hum•n Poten11111Ue\. qotM-rt 01w Ed 0 . pt"e\tck!nt, ln\tltut• for tne Otvtloom .. nt or Hum•" R•\OUrCe"\ A UC lr-.trw E•ten,t0n 1wO·INH>tl•M work1t\oo F ,4 I 10 p m • S.I. An<I Sun I lO • m ~ p m Rm uo !.oc••• Sc•enct Lab UC trvfM <.mc>ul F•• Y 5. 1n<IU$\ P•r•1"9 SATVllDAV fmOf'OV•nQ Sue»rvl\Of'Y Skltl\ .. HO•l'O WH,on 0't'•Hl•nt AO m1n1str•t1v1 AeSf'-•r<h A\\ocl•l•t, l"C A VC I NIN E•l.,,•IO" .,...,.., '-•mln•r • 10 • m .; JO p "' S~ral°" Motor HOIM. IOIS W 8all qd A"4f'w">tf'TI f P#' 1)0 tf'Kfud(>\ tt•\\l"PWtflf'•ll• '""""•ndSMt"-JnQ •·Sfotttnq H~tino OOtf'<t~' ttnel Clo\1"q Ml~\ Jul~\ A Miu 1rw Ll 8 A UC lt"YtM E.•ff'f'\\.,ft °'"' d•• '""""'"""'''JO•m•.71om sa"'no ~•41i \.rl..nc• fl')Wf'• UC ln.•Mt Am PU\ ~,.,. \SO 1nt lvd~" t t•'' m•lf"r• .. \ furt<f\ and t»r1l"'<I l'lllOAY A110S4TUllOAY A-1tlleMIJ Unc>H'~fdndU\Q ""° H•loi"Q ,,,,_. t ' ~'n""'l O•~n••1ty Child J•m.,..-. Ht ldVO Ph 0 ,..,.nr .. '"'' o• M•n•QI' "" "' ,,nd ctot1ld oiv<nl•lrl\t ~•n 01 .. 01.1 ~tah· Un•v•""" otf\d \l4ft A UC 1rv1n1• E"hf'l1"on wr•~tnd vrn1n;.r r;, • I IGp m S.,t Q" m 11 "00" ''"'" ' s D m Rm ,,, P,,y\IC ... Sr.1ttnc1~ 81dQ UC trv1M c•mP"'" f,._. SAO ln<ludt\PM"inO WlONE~DAY and THUllSDAY, AllQllSI 11 lllld II 101 Practlc1t Cla,\rttom Ail,..rnJtt •yp\_' Wtlll1m" Pe" 8 S 1 t>"IWltM\l f~ Ncuhville l••rnt.nQ ,,.,..,,.., ()ft•ce °' Gr~u.ate !"Ov<WUon Ptuqr lm\ ...,.11\fWIUe, TttWMUH. A U' ''"'""t-E •t*'ns1on two d•• .... '",,,,,.' • .. m 6 Q m Rm 100 ~1a1 ~'"'Ke Hall VC ,.,,,,.. •-~ ""' "' 1"'1-pan.~ TNUllSDAY, All9Vll II Emol-Tra1n11>4 -O.•••oo f'ft~nt How•rd WU\OPI pr•\ld~nt Al'tnln41tt4'11¥9 RftMI<" AU0(11le\ Inc A UC lrvlne IE"1.,.•lon -••1 -..eml~ • JO• M .... )0 0 m • MOll(tity Inn. JIJI 8rl\lol Colla Meu "•• ''° 1ncludiH tl•t~ m•t•f'•fh '""'" 4'WS0¥1ttfW1 "lllOAY MlfSATUllOA\' "'-"''-" ' E •"-''•nsor~ P•r<•t>tlon Al\d F•mOUI ~Y<l>I<• .• _,, 0 !><'1•far MS doctor•• <otl'ldltt••• '" PSycl'toloqv. UC '""'"" A UC. trv1,,.. E•ltn\tof'I ~e-nd rourw Ff"1 110 u m Soll •a m ., ._ afld I ~I> "' Rm ' •• Pllv•icaf S<o~ft( .. BIOQ • UC lr•IM C~ F•• "'°" Crod•I UI Crtdll S«I. SATUltOAY, A,,..,., ?O .. u1111r1,,o Time EH•r11 .. 1. Mow•rd Wit 'on, pr•Sldtnt .-d mtnJstratlw-Re\t!arc.h Auorl•tfl\, Inc, A UC lrvl,,. Exlt11\Kln ~ "•• "'ml,,,.r, • JO• m.-4·JOu m., Rm 1'0, Socl•I S<i."Ce Tower. UC I rvlne om 1 out. Fee; 'so. lnc•ud•' cl•'• • m•lerl•••, 1uncnM1dH•~lno ' "Sellll'Q IEllKll•• Prosenl•tlo"• end n..,. M..._mont. Jul•• A Marl,,.,, lL.8 A UC INIM E•ltnllon ~H•ysern1nar, 9 JO• m ·• JOp m . Rm. , ... So<lll Scltll<• Lei> UC lrvlrw <•mou,. FM: SSO, IM:IU .. , class rne1H1els, lurocll eold PA•""9 WIONISOAY. THUltlOA¥ uol l>ltlDAY, A-114,UNM "'J M's 1...-Tuc,.rs· Mllttl•lt Molhrat lOll and M..S.1• -W.·• Ro•trt 01•. Ed 0 • president lnslll11te for 1111 O.velopm•"I el liu,,, ... R-CH. "UC lrvlM E• tentlott <ours., W•d.,. 7·10 p m Tllurs.-l'rl .te tl\.·12--M • m., llm 140. SodAI Sci-• L•b, UC Irvine -CellrM may IJlf I"'-" lar I """of Credit IWed -Titur. ,,,..u.,.. only) Of' for' Ufllts Of er••• 1w.., •• 1hlln. .,.. Fn. -11rwr11. FH 1111111-J.IO. ?unllJ-•U l'ltlOAY-S.UUltOAY, ~·lt-11 "Trfll,.;-lel MHll•tlOll .,,., 1111 Scltnca of c ... 111,.. 1n1t111.,.,,.~ • """ Jt'Vlll"I l'tt 0, clll\l<M ,.,,,,.,. IOf' Of ~lne, UC lrvlM M<>c!ICll ~nter, A UC lrvlnt lxltMIOf' ---(.OllfW. Fri .• MO p,m ; Sal • t I m ·It,,_, ....i l•S 0 m , ""' 1• So<lal SC~t IAO. UC lrvlM um pUS. "'"' c...cl1t, S40; N_C....,11, no. 11>etud9'.,.rt.lno WIDttatOAY•'OtUltlOAY. "-"1t111141~Mr I '"a..11-'llO lHe Otl1!141," ICl'llftnl C. l'rltr-. ~ O., .,.e<\111.,. dlNC:· let. ,.,.. ... .,..... .. , i..ernin. ~"""' 1(1111.,llHt. T ltflillti"8t. A UC I rvl~ e1t1Mllif'I ._...., c:awv. ' •"' ... p,m,. ~ 1t9. S«ltl '!ki-.Ht!l, UC 1r.111e ~ ..... w . l1>eUldoll ........... A .. WI ..... S~Dl.,o~ Actor Rory Calhoun h~s filed for divorce from his wife or six years, Susan Kathleen. He has of. fcred her l'Ustody of their daughter and monthly child sup port. Potential Shuttle Crew Set HOUSTON (AP> The National Aeronautics and Space Admmlstration has an- nounced selection of the first 20 potent1al space s huttle astronauts A Johnson Space cent.er spokesman said about 200 of the 8,079 ap- plicants will be selected for 1nterv1ews and physical examinations. The spokesman said NASA will select 40 can- didates, pilots and mas· s1on specialists, to report to the space center m December None or the first 20 was a woman althoueh the space agency has said it plans to seek them and members of minority races The spokesman said he did not have the races or the selections because the application form did not include that question NASA said the firsl 20 appllcanLci selected. age, affilation. high school and hometown included. Mal C.-r••d oc 8•nku,. J•. Air F-ore,. f\o.,,.,., Clh la Mllen,. Mo • I I RICl\Ard [ •••dod 10 Nevv. 9,,.., C>n>o Wall'.-,0\ Olllo -1. Jom I! ltla!w ~-"''' ~<1rtf, ~OI-. Va • S... AO\IOlllll C'1" D•t• O. A,.,.,_n l) Air For<• M•Otf"IO t(.•n Htt;l\1•'°'1 9ltl" Clot ClluO~ M . Rotton Jr ll Air ror-<• \ouO'I S'ova Cit•, -!>oou• C.111, •-• LI Cd•. O•nlttf (. 8r""°"n\tfllf\ J.t N A..,- Wlttftown Wf1'(. W•tflr10Wft W1i.c Mii Ao• 0 .,.~, Jr ,. Air P'o•c•. C..1,.wtflr C.. Atle11!4 '•hi l'roder10 1 8n1n si M•r1nn w.1.,.1..-_,. --~'' C.01 JoM CMotr". ,.. Al• l'ar<e CNmblH G• G•H11v1llp SC , LI Cmo MIC ... •I L CMh JI N1vy llttw"iOt C.ltf S.Cr•lft•nto C•h' ~• \tt'WArt E c,.,,.,,., n ~Ir Fore• Rot ktt'dQ• ~'• w.,.,,_ !> o LI CMd JaM o CrtlQMan. '4 N••Y. ~•lift. Wt~'> • O•••Ot. Tu LI Crnd Wllllam Cro°" 11 )1 N••V W•"•lnQIOft. 0 C • Omalla. Htb ; Ctpf EdwtrCI L. O•nl.. ,, Air "°"''· Al•-·""''•· V• El191t I'•\\, T .. C•PI MICllHI Durbin, l!. Air ~1>rtt, O&lln. 0.11.. LI J.,,.., 0 Elli. JO. Na•v. M1tl•ll•. G•. Spor1en1>uro, l.C.: J•mn Q, E rlck\O,,, 3S. C1vlll•n. Ver1d1t~. Wt•n . i.oo..-. W•tll ; Lt Crnd , IC~"I Ii £wlnq. )<. H•vv. Collt9t Por-Pt S.... Arlqelo, Tu Caitl Guv S Gar,,_. 7'. Air l'orce. Alt• •nd•I•. V• . All••lllt, Ve . C•ol Th-E l'ltllMll•lc~. )1. M•rlM\. HtlnelCll1 L• W1nl..,..,..,.,, Fl• Squeiehed Poll Supports More Freeways . By THOMAS D. EUAS Callfornia taxpayers last year financed a sur- vey showing their transportation pnorlties are radically dilferent from the goals the state has been pushin& for several years. The survey was so thoroughly aquelched, however, that even so'tne top officials al the state Department of Transportation now say they never beard of it. INTERESTINGLY. THE POLL -TAKEN by the highly respected Field Institute -was made at the time Caltrans was pushing a statewide transportation plan containing a strong push toward getting drivers out ol their cars and into SOlITH ERN buses and carpools. CALIFORNIA The survey reveals F"OCU S why that transportation '"-----~--'---J plan was quickly shot down by public indignation. with transport officials lake Caltrans Director Adriana Gianlurco backtracking somewhat on their opposition to new freeway bwlding. For the Field findings, based on interviews with 1,033 randomly selected adults in their homes, de- monstrate that Caltfornians want better freeways, not fewer freeways. FUNDING FOR NEW PUBLIC transportation like buses and rapid transit came in a distant fifth among the pref~rred uses or gasoline tax money in the poll. Maintenance of exist.mg roads, sarety Improve· ments, replacements of worn-out freeways and im- provement of traffic flow all rated higher lhan mass transit. Yet, mass transit was to be a priority item in the now-dead transportation plan. Interestingly, Caltransstill has not released the Field poll; it came to hght only when an employe spirited a copy out of the department's omces. BY CONTRAST, CALTRANS HAS strongly promoted another poll taken by its owl'}..staffers m six Southern California counties at the time the Field surveyors ' were at work. The in-house sur- vey showed somewhat more favorable re:.ponses to questions on mass transit. Caltrans officials have not answered queries as to why the Field poll was not released. A possible reason may be that it conflicted so markedly 01ANTu11co with desired poltcy, making re- lease a politically self·dereatlng move. The survey showed some other interesting re- sults aside from its poor raU~ for mass transit. ONE WAS THAT PERSONS UKELY to have driven on the one freeway where existing lanes • were turned over for exclusive bus and carpool use during rush hours frown on the idea. Only 3S pettent of those surveyed in Los Angeles and Orange counties liked the idea Els_ewhere, the notion brings a significantly hJiher raling'. For instance. 71 percent of Northern Ca.bfor nians Lik'e the idea of preferential lanes, called Diamond Lanes when they were tried on the Santa Monica Fr~way SINCE GIANTtJRCO AND OTHER Caltrans of· facials have said they mtend to try agam elsewhere wath the concept, releas ing these poll resu.Jts could have been embarrassing So could the finding that 70 percent of all Californians oppose building separate roadways for bus and carpool use. another pet Caltrans notion. Existence of the Field survey was kept secret even though iL'> findings hardly mented sqch treat· ment. IC there was any reason other than politics for hiding the survey results. Caltrans ofCicJals have been unwilling lo provide 1l. Safety Improves · Builders Get High Dear Joyce: To do CGUtn&dloa work, do you always have to work ap · hl1h? -H. w .. Hammond, Ind. Often enouah,that you'd bfitter !'lave good balance and not fear height, althouab some kinds of ironworkers. such as those who do ornamental or reinrorcine tasks, usually wo~ on the eround. Whtie the dangers in atructural ironwork1nf .-railing, belne conked by falU"I( objecta, and getUni burned -f\avt boet\ reduced by' safety educa· tlon end the Wfder use of P~ti•e equipmtn&. llk• •e!ety belt.a Jnd nets, bard bats and insulated tloves, \ronw«kiril is •tnonc the rla1de$ of tb~ conatruction crtft.S''. ( C4.REERS J Ironworkers and Employers Tralning Program CNIETP) This nonprofit. labor·mana1ement group requires applicants to be at least 31, physically fit, and be able to read and write tJ>e English language. The three-ytar program can be cut lo 18 to~ months if you show you can do the work. This year tho program will train at least 750 disadvantaaed men and women in about 35 atates. Of tho 1.soo people who al~ady have finished lhe program and achieved journeyman union.member status, 70 ptrcent are black, U percent Hispanic, and 10 percent American lndJan. (IV \'OtJ'Rf; A POOa white man and not a Vietnam ut, lt WIU be very d.ifticwtiet lnto the proaram; push hard.) Trtin ' pay alarU at GO-~ 'ZS per· centPlj 11~w11e1.~ on you.doc and you get"""1far 11'1· creale." eYery Ilic monthJ. U you •ant to appJy, doil'ldelay. Chec:kwtLhJOUr local ltoftwonm.. uruo.n otttce, or ~bite employment ervfce. U you can't f1nd M.Ylhin1 Jocali,, )'OU can write for liifvtre to: National Ad· mlnlatrator, NJETf. 901 N. Wuhln.,um St., Alexandria. Va. 22114. Var PJ*'al career Utltllure on lfvnWoriccn. Hnd $1.05 fot ''StlVC· tua'al l~wott«t. Number •·" a four.....,.oecape~ tM1tf IYlllll• ble :from· kltnee .Raaearcti Al· •• .._ • E. Site St.. Cbla!P, m. "'" ..