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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1976-08-02 - Orange Coast PilotI ( 17 Flood '.t . . Mystery Deaths Follow Meeting ~r: . Of Legion Group MONDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 2, 1976 YOL 6t, ..0. llS.1Sl!OIOHS,14 ~ACES S11~f Champ Terry Torrcmeo of 1 luntinA"lon BC'ach shows the form that won the 18·24 a~e group title for her Sunday in surf· ing contest for women at Huntington Bcuch. That's 011 is land "Emmv" in the background. For details. see Sports . Pag<.? A12. Continuing Rains Plague Flood Area LOVELAND, Co.lo. (.APJ - Survf\lors or u W<'Ckend n ash l flood huddled on mountainsides and in isolated homes today as • rains and winds forced a delay in air rescue attemplS. Officials said the flood killed about 60 peo- ple, and they said "dozens" more bodies may be round. ofbeart trouble. Authorities said recovery or the dead from tne Big 1bompson River rtood, reported strewn along the walls of the Big 11\ompson Canyon, was thelr last priority. Dave Feldman, chief of investigative services f<W police (See FLOOD, PapA2) RepOried HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP> - Eleven persons who attended a state American Legion conven· lion in Philadelphia \July 21-24 have died of similar aymp'\oms, a legion orficial said today. Edward T. Hoak. the legion's state adjutant, said, "We don't know what.it is bu Lit 's all over lbe state." He said 10,000 people attended the convention. A state heal th official said an in· · vesligation was begun today. He said he had no indication as to the causes or the deaths. Hoak said many persons at the conve ntion have been admitted lo hospitals around lbestate, includ- ing seven in Williamsport and three at Wilkes-Barre. He said all have thesamesymptoms. "They have a pain in their chest . They get a high tem- perature." Hoak said. He said some symptoms resem- ble a chest cold. and the tern· peralures range from 104 to 107 degrees. Hoak identified the dead as Elmer HaCer. Lewisburg; Jimmy Dolan· a nd J .P. Ralph, Williamstown: William Byrd, Bloomsburg; Louts Byerly, Jean· nette; Frank Harvey, McKeesport; Frank Aveni, Clear,ield; Julius Gaggiania, Republic; Charles Chamberlain, Chambersburg; Abe Ruben, Donora, and Aridy Warnek, Fayette County. •·we were just informed of it. this morning." said Dr. William Parkin, chief oftbe Pennsylvania Health Department 's epidemiology section. "We're trying to set spec~men.s collected , • • so we can try to identify an etiologic (causing) a.-,"Parldnsaid. (8eeJIAIADY, Page A%) \ ___.tranded • 1 Aged Spinster s..-fers Rape, Tort11re; Death I • ' ' Anahei01 Man Held· A~Wl'""""" RIOT POLICE a.OSE IN ON BERSERK HARLEM MAN Five New York Policemen Nearly Blinded In Incident Fast Action Saves Policemen's Sight NEW YORK CAPJ -Doctors say five city policemen whose eyes were seared by a berserk man's mixture or lye, gasoline .and ammonia will see again. But how well they will sec is uncer· lain. · Physicians warned that tho policemen may never return lo active duty. In Death A 19-year ·old Santa Ana man who reportedly hurled a shop- ping cart at new sports cars parked in a Stanton shopping center Saturday night was bayonetted t o death a fe w minutes later, according to Stan- ton police. Killed when a military bayonet wa s plun ge d into h is chest at least five limes was David Ray Goodman of Santa Ana. Arrested at a Stanton apart- m ent complex shortly after Goodman colla.psed, mortally wounded. on a busy thoroughfare and charged with his murder was Robert Esparza, 42, or Anaheim. Police said E sparza is a friend of the owner of a new Datsun ~Z sports car , the car that was dent- ed when the murder victim aJ- legedly threw a shopping cart on to its hood. Immediately after the parking lot incident. Goodman and a companion drove from the shop- ping center with the Datsun and another car in pursuit. During what police described as a four or fi ve mile chase, the offended Datsun -owner dcopped out of the race. But the cur containing three of his friends, including .Esparza, did not. Goodman abandoned his nt· <See BAYONET, Page A2) Coast Weather Night and morning low clouds give way to sun Tuesday: Low 70s along the coast with lows drop- pl o g to about 60 over· nJght. 'Ille National Weather Sen;ce said it appeared there would be no break in the weather for at. leasttwodays. Capt. Rich Hovey, the Larimer County s heriU 's press spokesman, said it was thought most of the cricically lll « in- jured survivors were evacuated. Sunday from the Big Thompgoo Canyon. WoIDan Tort11red, Slain The .men wer e not completely blinded Saturday. the doctors said. because quick aid was of- fered by nearby Harlem resi- dents. They doused the officers' faces and eyes with buckets or water and stopped what would have been irreversible damage INSIDE TODAY Conaumer .adwcote-Rolph Nader Ml token pot shots.at the U.S. marketplace.and the government. ogenciea tbol re· gulote it /or yeora. b he olWOJJ• right? b he usually right? A cloN loolc.at Notkr atom on P.age A1 j11 Jodatl'• Dail~ Pilot. ''At this stage, except ror three coronaries we have up there, everybody is the same," Hovey said. "To the best or bur knowledge. everybody who had some major problem was not in there last niaht. · · He said the persons with cardiac conditions were reported by rescued rrtends or relatives. wbo aaid the thr,e laad hbtories NEW ORLEANS (AP) -A 74-yor-old spinster was raped, tortured with more than 200 wouncb from an ice pick, and then killed. Police arrested three peo- ple. two of them teen-agers. The body of ~ary DiGiovanni was found lied to a bedpost in the bedroom of her home. She was nude from the waist down. Coroner Frank Minyard sJid her skull had been fractured by a blow thattoreoff an ear. Dr • .Minyard said the ice pick woands were "not deeip.tDOUCh to causedeatb bat pain." He said in addition to the ice pick wounds, Miss DiGiovanni also bad been stabbed 15 to 20 times, apparenUy with a kitchen knife, and that several oC her ribs were fractured. Police said a television set. believed stolen from the apirt- ment was recovered from one of the three people arr~. Booked on chargesoCburglary, rape and murder were Er.nest )Jrown, 18; Albert Lewis, 17; and l{ennetb Smith, 21. They were arrested at their homei, a few block1 from the victim's house. Miss DiOiovanni lived alone in a rear apartment. Her landlady, who lives ln the front apartment. called poll ce when M las DiGlovanni failed lo answer a knock on her dooi:' · A slater said the color television set was the only thing or substan- tial value in the apartme1.t. to thelr sight. • The man who went berserk and tossed the solution burned 18 other policemen with the mlxture and then barricaded himself in an apartment. He hetd orr more than 100 heavil y armed policemen for more than an hour before he was finally kille<l._~ a policeman ·s shotgun blast. The 18 other officers were treated for minor burns at (See LYE, ra~ Al) l••ex A7 AMU.... •2 .. MllltyTrft At Al,_,... .. As Nel-.ilWws A4 •MJ Or_,.CMll4r Al I J....... 1 1·1 II Stiertt At•n Al Sl.c-l!Mn.tt At A4 TtlftlllM 14 ··~ II .. -...-... IJ -.n...... /14 I ' iit2 OAILYPILOT s . . Monday. August 2. 1975 lJ111-y ·TaJks to Halt? Delay of Harris Trial Likely ' l..OS ANG ELES <AP)-Jurors in the Wilham and t.:m1ly Hirru; trial resumed their deliberations today unaware of a contro\'ersy s wirling around their role jn the stormv trial. Their talks could be slopped within hours. The prosecution fiald 1t was consldering u move lo l1all the <lehbcrution.s until the is- :>ue invol vin~ possible Jury pre- JUdice and possible Judicial m1s- conductis resolved. The jurors, who deliberated nC>arly nine hours last week, re- ~umed to their task earlier than scheduled . arriving a t tbc s ourthousl' at 8 20 a.m. They spent the weekend se- quest~red at the hotel, insula~d from pu bit ci ty, surrounding emergency hoarmgs out.side their preJ>ence. Chiet De puty Dist. Atty. Stephen Trott, who entered the Harris case after explosive r e- \·clation.s s urfaced lust week, said Sunday he might ask toduy for im- mediate suspension oC Jury de- liberations. "We want a fair trial," said Trott, "and we will take whatever steps arc necessary to guarantee that.'' As ked whether he thought the ., ........ MOTOR VEHICLES BACKED UP. STRANDED IN COLORADO Slice Knocked by Flood Fl't>m Road Through C.nyon • Fro• Page Al FLOOD TOLL in nearby Fort Collins. saiJ it 1·ould lake weeks to locale the de- Jd. and some never may be found . Near I y 1 5 O N a t"i on a l <;uardsmcn, law enforcement or- licers untl volunlc<'rs waited for orders as search leaders mapped their stratcl}y. llelicopt~rs were to be used to-J day lo ferry the survivors, many of whom were tra1mccl on in- access1 bl e patc he s of high ~round . to safety. But the rain that began a1tain Su nday night c·onlinucd today. grounding air rescue equipment. "llclicoplt•rs will be grounded 11nt1l they can get in, perhaps by I noon," said John Englebert, chief of operations for the Larimer County Sheriff's Department. "We'' c i.:ot steady rains into t::.tt•s Park :incl some winds." Thcr<' was no immediate 1•c;\1matc on lhc number stranded. <;ov. H1chard Lammsa1d250peo· plc.> \\ t•rt• rc.>1>ortcd injured <1nd • 1nother 40m1ssing. I President Ford today dcclar{'(f I a major disoster in Colorado; th<' ~1chon will i>crmit the use of ·O RANGE COAST s DAILY PILOT '""' o'"''O"' ( .,." 0.1tv ,.iHM. •''" wt'l+l" ho fftn Mtwd , ..... Ni.-\,,.,_ "f'Utlit!,,...fJ tv fhft I '""V (fl• f • _,1141~1t10 C t~n, tf•y '-t ,,, h ·~"'""' .,., , •• , .. '•' IW'd Mi¥td,tt' ,,,.,°"""' '"' ~ t , Lo· l 1 A/1 tt Nflw(l(I• \ tW>-• ~. tt1111tn .. ,11 n ,.,.,,,,. • allf\t"'" y,_flt'i, hv·t'lf. ~htl•t· \. 'w'•li. .. ""'' l •\l•HM f.!f'•f i'l~t\,ff\('-t\t A '"•t, ''""4' ri.tl t•OH~ I\ f)WtAt'•M'f1 '-'1Vt"c:Ml'f'\ #WI'' • fl•• ,.,,.. l tit I IC4l C)tlt"lh,.t'llf'I vfttr1f ~ ti t.IC) \'\• ,, t-...y~ht11"1, (.MIA.,..,..,, (AklOfl" ••/ft..'ti. Robert N . Wef'd ,. .. '""'"' •ftd rvt-4••"', Jack R. Curley V$ t-rt• 1dlft\t •f'C;t (rfN'f_. MltNy r Thomas Kecvll (dtlOf' Thoma ... A. 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A 10-inch rainfall running clown from nearby Rocky MountainNa- t ional Perle Saturday niebt churned the Big Thompson River into a wall of water 12 feel hili!h and sent it on a 15-minute frenzy. It tore through campsites and trailers, motels and bridges, rak· ing a path of destruction 30 miles long. There were varying reports about whether warning was given; everyone agreed there wasn •t much. Some 500 survivors were fer- ried to a horse pasture-turned- helicopter pad Sunday. Another 1.000 had to stay in the area for a second night. Officials n ew over the canyon, dropping leaflets that asked sur- \'lvors to signal their immediate needs: blankets stretched on the . £round rn the form of an "F" meant food ... W" meant water. .. A .. mean'\ medical ai d. . Larimer County Sheriff Robert Wat.son said 43 bodies were in a makeshift mor gue and JS to 20 bodies had been spotted and num- bered throughout the canyon. The Big Thompson River runs down from the heights of Rocky Mountain National Park through Estes Park, some 60 miles northwest of Denver: The RIJ.! Thompson Canyon. which runs cast from Estes Park toward Lov- t'land. was tho site of the worst dl'strucllon. Walson said six orsevl'n people d1l'd in the same area in a 1962 nooct. The water ran off the mountain as rain also pelted the canyon itself. It funneled Into the canyon, 150 vatds wide at the most, between bluffs hundreds o( r~t high. Nuclear Foes Rounded Up SEABROOK. N.H. CAP) - Eighteen opponents of an ocean- front nuclear power plant have been arrested when they tried to occupy lhe construction site and plant seeds and sapUngs. When the protesters refused to move Seabrook p0Uce and Rock- \ngham County sheriff's deputies arrested them on Sunday. Polic~ said only one of the 18 arrested chose to leave in his own rustody and the rest declined to be released and spent the night at the Hampton police station. I jury should st.op deJlberallng, Trott said, "We are considering asking the Judge for that." Superior Court Judge Mark Brandler has indicated he wants jurors to continue deliberating until they reach a verdict on 11 charges or kidnaping, robbery and assault against the Harrlses. But bolh prosecution and de- fense have expressed (ears that a mistrial might be required now because of the Judge's alleged· failure lo notify attorneys or possible prejudice. The defense suggested that a neutraJ judge arbitrate &be mat- ter. Deeisfons~ Decisions Body in Bin Identified AsNBMan Concentrating on his game, international gra nd m aster Walter Browne of the United States. one of the world's top chess players. displays a mixture of emotions.duri'?g t~e Canadaian Open chess champ1onsh1ps m Toronto. Police have identi!ed the body of a 22-year·old mason's helper. found Saturday night stuffed into a trash bin. The body of" J effrey Lynn Daugherty. 112 Pacific Coast Highway, Newport Beach. was found tied with rope to a dis- c ardcd cardboard washing machine box in the trash bin al 1996 Ma pie St. Mrs. Bernice Hillgren. « the Maple Street address, told of- ficers she spotted the partly visi- ble body at about 7 p.m. as she emptied her trash into the large container. . Police Sgt. Tom Laur said police have all but dJscounted murder in the case, saying th~ victim had needle marks on his arm and "is a known drug user ." Results of an autopsy, conduct- ed Sunday morning, have. not been released, Lazar said, and a toxicologist's report is due later this week t.o determine cause or death. .. At this poin.t, we do not Sus· pect a murder," he said. "It ap- pears that Daugherty's friends just dumped him in the trash bin after he overdosed on some drug." · Officers said they would know more about the case after they receive a report on the autopsy from the county coroner's office. Softball Over; Carter Works PLAINS, Ga. (AP> -Jimmy Carter switches his attention from weekend softball to the fall campaign today, meeting wilh top advisers to plot strategy and decide how he will aUot his time between now and the November elect.Ion. Scheduled to participate were campaign ma nager Hamilton Jordan, preH secretary Jody Powell. issues adviser Stuart Elze n s t a t . sc h edv ling coordinator Vicky Rogers and • Jack Watson, In charge of transl· tion plans £or a Carter ad· mlnlstralion. The Democrau' presidential nominee flies to New Hampshire Tuesday. He had promised dur· ing the February primary cam- paign to return there. Carter meets with the Democratic Na· tlonal Committee in Washington Wednesday. then returns home. Bomb Kills Youth SEWICKLEY (AP) -A sub- urban Pittsburgh youth, curious obout a package left for his brother. was killed when the con· tainer exploded in his hands. Irvine En1.bezzling Suspect Sought Irvine police said today they are looking for a man accused or embezzling nearly S9.000 over a three-month period from a n -lrv~Jandscap.iag firm. Police said a warrant has b<ocn issued for lhe arrest or Carl Witherspoon, 28. PoUce believe the man has moved to the Sun Francisco Bay area. Witherspoon was hired at Rock and Waterscape Systems. Inc., 2021 BusJness Cent.er Dri ve, in June. Company President Edward 0 . Lewis told police he believes Witherspoon embeuled $8,758 from t he firm's payroll and general accounts. He cited checks written ~Y Witherspoon for $417 BAYONET • • tempt to elude his pursuers at the point where the chase began, the s hopping center at Magnolia Avenue and Cerritos Street, police said. They reported witnesses said a fight then broke 011L and that dur· ing the fracas Goodman was fatally wounded when the bayonet brought into pl ay was plunged re· peaLedJy into bis chest. and two for $220, plus a cashler's checkfor$5.900. - The president told police he fired Witherspoon last month arter he. caugb.Lhim wti.ting_.o.ne check against the company. He s aid he discovered the rest of the embezzlement after Witherspoon had left the area. Witherspoon was employed as offi ce m anager a nd ad· ministrative assistant at the com· pany and Lewis referred to him as the firm's "number two man." Wave-swept Pooch Saved LOS ANGELES CA P> Chano, an Australian sheep dog. is likely to be a bit more careful in the future when dawdling on' the beach to watch his master surf. The dog, owned by 17-year-old Steve Hart of Westchester, was rescued Sunday after spending 32 hours in a rocky cavern orr Playa Del Rey where he was swept by a freak current. Chano was pacing the beach's jetty Saturday, watching Hart . surf, when a wave washed him away and the current swept him through a hole underthejelty. 19 'Targets' FBI Tactics Hurt Them WASHINGTON CAP> -The Justice Department says it has found 19 people who suffered actual harm because they ~ere the targets of an FBI harassment campaign in thei900s and early 1970s.. · , One person was fired fr9m a job and others suf · fered from invasions of their privacy. Some lost face with colleagues because they were falsely branded police informers. Department officials reported those fi ndings as they discussed their four-month eff.ort to locate the victims and te ll the m what the FBI did to them. , Federal marshals delivered messages informing the 19 people that they ha9 been targets of the FBI counter\ntelligence programs, known as Cointelpro, to harass a nd disrupt militant political groups on the right and left. . Cointelpro. which operated from 1956 to 1971 , an , volved s uch tactics as sending a nonymous derogatory letters to the parents and employers of politi~al ~c­ tivists a nct distributing phony leaflel.S to stir dis- sension within political or,l!ani7.ations . Home for Quake Vi~tim APWlrtphoto An unidentified girl makes her home in a drainpipe after earthquakes shook ~c Pek- ing area last week. Many left the CJlY. but others st ayC'd despite warnings or more quakes to com e. Story, Page /\4. Three Dead In Slaying by Victim's Mate FRESNOCAP>-1llreewomeru were shot to death and a fourthl ·was wounded by the husband of'f one who the n s hot himselr,11 authotlUe.! said. _ T The wome n had just returned to the home of Kazue llolley, 31, also known as Kazue Canterbury . when they were gunned down with a pistol on the front porch about 3:30 a .m. Sunday, s heriff's of. !icerssaid. Killed were Mrs. Holley, who was shot first: Donna Eleanor Warlock, 3l ; and Linda Lee Sisk, 19, also known as Linda Lee Terry. All were from Fresno. A Taft woman, Gale Scott, 32, also known as Gale· Melinda Wolff, was hospltalize<fin serious condition but was reported im- proved to satisfactory today at Valley Medical Center. Deputies said Mrs. Holley's husband, Clyde Holl ey, 35, also shot and killed his Boxer dog before wounding himself in the head. Holley was reportedly in good cond ition after treatment and was I booked for investigation of three counts of murder and one count of •1 attempted murder. Officer4J said the other~omen's husbands, all members of a motorcycle group, had gone to the coast for the weekend, but Holley had r emained home then and when the women went out for the evening. .Fro• Page Al LYE ••• nearby hospitals and released. Police said the siege began when two qfficers went lo the apartment of Calvin Haywood, 38, to arrest him for the stabbing Wednesday night of John McCoy. 00, who is in intensive care. Finding the door barricaded. the police called for reinforce- ments. They used a battering ram to smash into the two-room apartment, and when they en- tered Haywood allegedly rushed them with a salad bowl full of his ·caustic brew and threw it into theirfaces. "We never saw him.when the door opened." said Sgt. Clarence Reichman, 52, who is recuperat- ing In St. Luke's Hospital. "He just came out or nowhere and threw this sticky solution at us." Doctors later said the lye. gasoline and am monia solution was mi xed with petroleum jelly to make It slick lo whatever it hit. ·:1 can still see only shadows." said Reichman, "but the doctors say thut will paas a nd Improve." Police say·30 shot.CJ were fired into the upartmcnt ot Haywood. who VC>wed ho would not be token l)j V(', Fina ll y, ortlcer Douglas nusscll. across a rear nllcy on a fire e scape. uot a hc:id on llnywood with n 11hot~ll'1. lie fired and Jlay w<><>d spun and col- lapsed. Poli<'e s aid t hat in.,idc the apartment they found the carv- ing knife used to stab McCoy, and a eache of flrebomhl'I. · Fra• P•geAl MALADY, •• ·. "We are trying t.o get Informa- tion on people wbo )lave been re. Ported to have beeaalckandthose who have beeh reported to have died to find out the characteristics o£lheir disease," he said. Parkin said , "We don't have a good lend right now. We're going after both viruses und bacteria • ..We haven't been abtq.to find out e\'cn when the peopl•t sick (or-sure yet. We just haven't tx.><>n able to document anything," Parkin said. I ~---· -, ... . A,.WI,.... .. STREAKER DOES HIS NUMBER AT CLOSING OLYMPIC BALLET IN MONTREAL Unlvited Dancer Captured, Beaten by Pollce After Performence Before 72,000 People SJ Millio11 Damages SJ C Equestrians Sue for Trail Use Two San Juan Capistrano rc:.1 They seek a court order that dents who claim tht?y are illegal· would prevent the ran<'h from ly being denied access to nearb~· fencing oCf their access to board· equestrian fac1!ittes they haH· ing and stable facilities that arc suing the Mission I l1lls Ranch ha\'e. the a<'tion states. always for more than St million in been :wail able since 1968. damages. Alta<'hed to the lawsuit ar~ 1-'r ederick l\f. Fox or 30162 copies of registered letters in Branding Iron Road and Arnott which Mission Hills Ranch last M. Rogers of 30131 Branding Iron Julv 23 barred the local ease· Road <'laim in their Orange ments to the plaintiffs on three County Superior Court la\\SU1t days notice. that the derendunts arc retaliat· Also cancelled was the defcn. ing because of a <lisputf' with th(• rlunts' lease v.1th the Mission High Fliers Chicken Out PITTSFIELD, Maine CAP> -Bird fancie r s hoped for a record-setting 4'1Jght but-some of lhe ex>m petitors turned chicken. The best Walter Har· riman 's brown leghorn could do was eight feet. more than 15S feet short of the world record. But the rooster 's flight was tOJlS among IS chickens sent aJort in the park during the Maine Egg Festival. The world r ecord of 163 feet. two inches was set by an Ohio pullet named Lois 'Laid. "Didn't anyoflhemsecm to want to fly too much," said I larri man. S~n Juan Capistrnlllf, 1,;11.)· COl,IJl_.,_ • .JJUJ~~.6..l!lsh Association, t he r1l. local homeo,~rs>gn1U1'. -• .... ·------------- Man Pleads .Guilty in 1\11:.sion llills Ranch has sued the city of an .Juan Capistrano for more th~in SlOO million in damages in federal and Superior Court lawsuits accusing the city of unl::iwfully reducin~ the densi· ty of its l>lanned development. Model Studio Operators Sue Anaheim . Bar Slaying The lawsuits atta<'k a city de· cision to cut the housing density on the planned development to I A man who admilt(•d he shot and killed a fellow patron in :i Placentia bar durini;: a dispute about the C\'entual outcom<' of the Muh ammad /\Ii -Richart! Dunn fight April JO has plC'adt'cl guilty to m<1nsl au~htcr rharl!<'S 1n Or ange County Supl•r1 or Court. Judge J nm<'s II Wals worth sentenced Alfonzo Quirl't. Negrete. 32. to one tot!> years in state prison for th<' killing of Bl•hn· jamin Rodriguez Luna, 34, w o died secon.cl s a ftt>r Negrete pumpt>d three-bullet~ into him. Judge Walsworth dismlss<'rl kidnap chnrges filed with the mu rder count when pol i<'l' !corned that 1'egrNC forc<'d another 1w tron to drin• him a" ay from thl' bar. l~ units from 370 units. FBI Nabs Man On Heist Rap ORANGE -FBC agents said thcv arrt>sled a 27-year-old man f'r idav in <'onnection with the robbery of a Michigan bank. Ransom Bean Owens, 27, was arrested for in\'estigation of the April 29 robbery of the Manufac- turers' National Banlc in Farm- ington Hills, Mic h., agents ~aid. Two other men already ha\'e been char~ed in conne<'tion with the robbery. officials saicl. S111ash~ Crash~ Cr11n~h! Neigh bors survey dnmaJ.!c urter l•nr hurtled into home of 411 Ann~ ltarmel. 113() \·1ctorit1 . l.. Costa ~le. a . ~trs. llarmel. 85 was in bed in another part of hc.•r home and wasn·t hurt in' the C'rash. which occurred t>arly Snturd:ry m orning. Police sald the occupants of the C'ar. \\'illiam Fischer. 23. and Wa lter Grove II . 22. bolh of SJnta Ana. were s haken but unhurt. Da mages lo be determined in trial court are be ing demanded by the operators of two Anaheim modeling studios now subject to regulations set out in a recently approved city ordinance. Named as defendants in the Orange County Superior Court laws uit filed by the sunshine Compan y a r e the ci t y o f Anaheim, Police Chief Harold Bastrup a nd Mayor W.J . "Bill " Thom. ll ls alleged that the ordinance, which bars mo<tellng activities on regulated premises between the hours of lO p.m. and8a.m., is unconstitutional and will mean a substantial loss of income to operators of modeUng studios if police continue to enforce it. The two affected studios are identified as Modern Modeling and P h o tography and the Pussycat Modeling Studios. Police Seek Rapist irJ. Dana P6int An intruder who apparently waited until the victim's room· mate had left the apartment and then forced his way into the pre· mises ra1>ed a waitress Sunday in her Dana Point home. Orang<' County Sheriff's or· ficer s said th e youn" man described to them by the 19-year· old victim as "well built and ex· tremcly strong'' used physical force 'and threats of violence to acromplish his ad of sexual in· tercourse. Officers called to the scene by the victim and her tof>mmate searched the area surrounding Street of the Copper Lantern with no success. They said the victim told them that she Is convinced she met her attacker on a previous occasion. The lnv~tigatlon continues t<>- day. Benefit Denied? REDWOOD Ct.TY <AP I -Blue Cross or Nothefn California ~s been s ued for a llegedly denying insurance benefits to some pa· tients who were admitted lo Se· quia llospital for dia~nostic purposes or for treatment of alcoholism. &\S W@llil(? ®®[(WO©® The colamn appears loda)' OD Page AT • MONT R EAL (AP > -A bearded young Moot.real man stripped and cavorted amooa soo costumed young women in Ute 01ymp1c Sladiu m during the opening moments or the dosing ceremony or the XXl Olympiad SUnday night. The streaker was led away, kneed ond beaten by police, ac· cording to a witness. Then the ceremony turned into a joyous. colorful romp ror thousands or ~thletes, entertainers and ex- uberantyoung people. The youUt, MlchaeJ Leduc, was charged with indecent exposure after he raced onto the stadium turf, s&rlpped ore his denim clothes and. leaped joyMly into \he air to a cheer from many of the 72,000 people. Leduc goes down in the record books as the Olympic and world Monday.Auguat2. 1976 re<'ord holder In streakJng, a fad which developed in the United States and Canada in the last two years. . . lie was picked up by television cameras which were beaming the <'losing ceremony to more than a billion people worldwide: Olympic oqtanlzers. apparent· ly worried about security, did not go throutth with plans to turn the stadium lights all thewaydown ut one point in the program. Each ticket holder hud bccu handed nn elght-lndt li~tst!,ck containing phosphorescent nuld and, after the Olympic name wus extinguished. they opened the de· vices and waved them in a scene thatlooked like 72,000 fireOies. An hour after the ceremony · ended, thousands of people still milled about the n ooi: of lhC' futuristic new stadium; waving DAIL v PILOT A I Sight~_-~~!. c:>n Full Lah Dana Marine Sciences Proposal, Expanded An effort to establlsh a marine scien<'es center at Dana Point Harbor has grown into a proposal for construction of full-scale in- strucUonal Jaboratory. Saddleback College t.(Ustees will be asked tonight to join the county's other community col.° Jege districts and · the county Department of Education in a financial pact to develop the va- cant Marine Studies lnstitule (MSIJ site at the harbor. The new plan. drafted by Fullerton Cottege PTesi!tellt J oh:n Casey, calls for an initial expen- diture or $600,000 on lab buHdlngs a nd docks. It also calls for restructuring of the present MSI board and development pro- gram. The move is aimed at revitaliz· ing ~e MSI, a nonprofit eorpora· lion comprised of county school djstricts and several four.year coltei;(es. The present institute board h as been unable to generate the• capit al required to develop the laboratorv. been docking their lab vessels in the request (or county fu.ndt high-rent slips normally used by would be realis tic. · private pleasure boats. : "By giving the money, the Under the current proposal, board would be priming the each member college district pump (or even more interest in would be required to put up the ha rbor and more revenue in $50,000 over a-two-year -period, the future.'' Peterson· said. "lt raising $200,000. Then the new in-would be a small investment lot stitute would ask the county a big return." SUpervisors for a $400,000 grant Peterson said the neW propoql to cover the rest or Initial de-is the best hope for saving-MSt velopmentcosts. because it orfers the financial Dr. Robert Peterson, county contributors solid control over superin tendent of schools, said the program. Man Burned Chasing Bird EL MONTE CAP) -A man was in cr itical condition with severe burns after falling across hig)l voltage lines while chasing an explic bird. Witnesses s aid they saw Junior Esson, 22, or Arcadia chasing a cockaliel afte r the rare bird escaped from his car while he was stopped a l a gas station. -The-new-instlt-ute.would-beifo .. erned by a 15-me mber board, u is the present MSI structure and there would be a full time i9- stitute director. · The board or trustees would be comprised of two appointees from each m ember of the C()O- sortium. plus five by the county Board of Supervisors -one Crom each district . · Peterson said the thrust of the harbor's educational program will shift from the primary end secondary school level to the community college level but there will still be programs for the lowe r grades and the com· munity a t large. A 3.76-acre parcel o·r land at the north end of Dana Harbor de- signated for the MSJ facilities has r emained vacant. Through the years. it has been used for overnow parking a nd temporary camping. The bird fl ew over a fence into a Southern California Edison substation and when Esson stood on a platform and attempted to reach it, he brushed a 16,000-vo\t line and ren , plunging into four other power lines, uuthorities safd. Ile noted that it could take three years or mor e to build the 1 new facilities. County schools and colleges h ave been ope r ating t h eir oceanography programs out or makeshift qua rters and have OURS. SAVE$50 INTRODUCTORY OFFER NOW 189.95 GOES TO 239 9!> AFTER SALE STYLIST· FREE ARM MACHINE LO\W5t price ever on n Singct free arm rnteihinel Converts from fllt bed to free arm ttwing fOf cuffs, sleeves, pantlegs. •mhole1, 111 hlrd· t<>-get·in10 pllces. Includes exclusive push bUtton $tlllp·in cloth plate, built·in ziitzag, stretch, blind hem stitches .•• more. Carrying case or c:ablntt utra. _I,~, NON ·_A sssREG ,,,... :' PRICE 99.95 FASHION MATE. exmAWIOE ZIG-ZAG MACHINE With front drop.in bobbin •.. HSY to see and replace. Carrying QM Of ubinet extra. S.. C ,._., c .... MIN ...................... 54~2UJ JIJl"A c.-.. c.,i.-. S. ,,._ e.pltfr-..•... 4'6-7172 JRll...,,. a4.. • T-.......................... st6-IUI 2)tl ........... c-.w... .......................... , tti J098C ..... attl. S.O... .................... 4fl·l719 MZft c..-Hlw.,, L..-lffdl ................. ,, .4'7·2'14 Ill) W, 17• St .. s.Mil AM .............. ·~· .••••.• IJMJM 2tl6 H. ,_.. ..... 0....., ........................ H .. SUS 11 ,._.Int. Qr_,, ............................ S41·J94S Jn the m eantime, he, said, it fs possible that temporary build· ings can be installed on the MSl site at relatively low cost. If you wtint to sew !J'Cal looking clothes and want a great looking body to h.1n9 them on, come to the Singer Smaller Figvro Sale. Where smaller Slices make it easier to get the Singer vou'\IO always w1med. And our Smaller figure Shape Up Plan makes it easy to get tht: figure you've always wanted. You sec. when you buy a Singer Sale machine at our inaedlbly small price5, you get. an en1i1c diet and exercise program free. What's more, just fOf coming in, you'll get a free poster-size . ..:..::... Singer Smaller Figure Incentive Plan ·--· 1•~2a. 10 get you started. (no put· chase necessary) The Sln1P?C Smaller Figure Sale. We've made leu of our figurn. ' So you can make .less of • yours. SINGER Sewing Centers and particlpati~g approved dealers 'A trldlrftlrli of THE SINGER OOWANY ' t t A4 OAILYP ILOT Monday A~ust 2. 1978 110 Atter•"•e'" : Foreigners Flee Peking TOK YO (AP I -Foreign residents left Pekin1 and Tientsln today for places or safety u the ChiMN eovernment reported 110 aflenhocks - a n average of nearly five 1tnhour-ln thedevastated T•ngshan area. The aftershocks Saturday nl11bt and Sunday, combined with such other indications as nervous behavior or animals in the Pekjng Zoo, pro· mpted new warnings from Chinese seismologists that a new major quake was imminent. It was the third such warning since Friday. David Dean, dep~ty chief of the l\J.S. Liaison Office in PekJng, said l8wives and eight children of members of the American staff we1e leaving today, but there w• no plans yet lo evacuate any · 1ofthe3lstaff me m bers. ~ THE BRITISH EltlBASSV sent :iC> dependents oH Sunday. Planes leaving the Chinese capital were booked to capacity for the next few days with families of diplomats bound for Canton, Hong Kong or Tokyo. The diplomats themselves and other foreigners joined millions of Chinese camping outside. away from big buildings. Japanese correspondnent.s in Peking said the Foreign Ministry's information bureau re- ported 100 aftershocks between 6 p.m. Saturday and6p.m.Sunday. It said all registered at least four -On the Richter Scale, and 15 re- gistered more than five. THE FIRST QUAKE-ea rly Wednesday registered 8.2 on the Richter Scale, the highest read· ingrecorded in the world since the Alaska quake in 1964, Itdevast.at· e d the h eavi ly populated Tangshan area 100 miles east- southe ast or Peking, caused widespread d amage in Tientsln, China's third largestcily40 miles south of Tangshan. and did lesser damage in the capital. ble damage. a.o can be severe. A reading or 7.0 is a major earth· quake, capable of widespread, hea\•y damage; 8.0 is a "great" earthquake, capable ol tremen· dous damage. The San f"tanclsco earthquake or 1906 re1istered 8.3 on the Richter Scale. 11IOUGH THE CIDNESE have not reported the number of casualties, tens of lhousunds ar e be lieved to h ave died in Tangshan, a coal mining and in· dustrial city of 1.8 mUt ion. There was speculation that thousands of miners might have been trapped. But Hslnhua. theof. ficial Chinese news agency, said ··an overwhelming majority of the miners who were under- ground when the earthquake struck returned to the surface safely.'' lt added, "Ma ny people int.he city are now out of danger.·· A "MIGHTY CONTINGENT" of rescue workers converged on the Tangshan area from all parts ofChina,Hslnbuareported. '"Some workers and poor and lower-midd le-c lass peasants havela1d <town U\e1r lives lo rescue their brothers." saJd on editorial in the Peking People's Daily. ·'Some comrades, though they themselves had been injured , plunged into the batUe as soon as they were rescued. Some medicaJ . workers, regardless of their own ser ious wounds , have worked with perseverance to rescue the injured." Four Feared Droaened Diver s today looked ror clues to the col· lapse or the 1,500-root central span or Vienna's Empire Bridge into the n anube River. A bus and car were on the bridge when it fell at 5 a.m. Sunday. The driver. alone in the bus. escaped, but authorities rear four young persons 10 the car have drowned. The bridge i!\ nea r buildings to be used by the United Nations in the future. Other city bridges have been placed under guard. 1 More Olympians De~ect Soviet Diver Rejects Chance to Return OTTAWA <AP1 Two Olym- pic athletes from Romania de· fected to Canada Sunday, bring. ing the total of Eust European Communist bloc defectors to five. while Soviet diver Sergei Nemtsanov r ebuffed a Russian attempt to bring bim home, im- migration officials reported. Officials a nnounc.ing the de· cision of the Rom anians to seek refugee status declined lo specify their sport or sex. dian immigration official. A SOVIET EMBASSY spokesman In Ottawa confirmed the meeting and said Nemtsanov "appeared In a depressed state." r\ second quake a bout IS hoors later registered 7 .9 on the Richter Scalf'. The Richter scale is a measure or ground motion as recorded on seismographs . In populated arf'3S. an earthquake of 4.0 on the Ri c hter Scale can ca u se moderate damage, 5.0 considern· 20 Americans Still AN IMMIGRATION depart· ment spokesman reported that Nemtsanov told So\.·iet officials at a meeting that he wanted lo re· majn In Canacl?P': Ile was subse· quenUy issued a document allow· ing him to stay on until he makes a request for status as a landed immigrant. the spokesman said. Nemtsanov's departure from the village had triggered a Soviet threat to pull out of the games un· less h e w as returned Im· mediately. The meeting Sunday seemed to resolve the Nemt.sanov case. but more defections were expected, immigr ation sources indiceltd. Remain in Vietnam? BANGKOK, Thailand (APJ. -About 20 Americans and Viet- namese with American passports are believed still in Vietnam following the arrival in Bangkok of 49 Americans and dependents of Americans from Saigon. The defections announced Sun- day broug ht to four the number of Romanian Olympic athletes seeking politi<'al asylum in Canada. The two other refugees are a rower and a canoeist. THERE WERE 119 defectors to West Germany arter the Munich Olympics in 1972 -most of them tourists -and about JOO after th e 1956 Games ln Melbour ne. AustraJia, which coincided with the Hungarian Revolution. . . . . . . .. Girl Die~ In Disco Gunplay , DETROIT (AP) -ftolallnd .J Brown. 15, waa aitUnc with her boyfriend in a west aide dla~ , que when ahe died, the victim of• burst of apparently random ., l\&Mholl tired i.nlO the crowded . buildla1 by a sane ot armed youths. lbree other persona. lacludlng the ~·a atturit)' tuard • .-ere I wounded early Sunday when several men burat throulb the front door, without warnJnc, and sprayed shots into the crowd ol,200 to300people. FRIENDS OF 111E dead lirl aaid the 1h0Qling may have been done by sev~al people who had earlier been dancing and brag- 1inc that they were members of a local C•RI· Neither pollc. nor the wounded security guard, 51-year- old WUUam Jones of Detroit, ~Id coaf"trm that. . The gunmen ned in t.he con· fusion. Police said Sunday they are seeking two men, one about 18 years old and the other 16 or 17, but that no arrests had been made. · ' Police said the shooting began just aner Jones refused to admit several men. J ones said he thought the icnman were "some troublemakers" he had earlier kept from entering the disco without tlckP ts. . "I RECOGNIZED SOME or them when they tried to bu_st in. They've come down here before on Friday night and tried the same thing," Jones said. "I told them they couldn't come In and slammed the door and walked away. "Then the door opened again and they shot at me directly . There was no holdup or anything, they just went berserk and sl.4rt· edshootlng. "It was just like World Warn. I caught the first bullet, then the crowd panicked and knocl.ed me down. They "'ere screaming and hollering. knocking over chairs and tables and jumping out a window somebody had broken with a chair.'' Al so wounded were Willa Taylor. 28, of Highland Park, and 16-year-old Janice Perkins ; of Detroit. Victim No. 200 Dip Rights Take Dive BOSTON <A P > -A federal appeals court says the nghls ttuaranteed by the U.S. Constitution ''do not encompass the right to bathe in the nude at the Cape Cod Seashore Na- tional Park." One of the arrivals, Frederick Gu)den, S4, an architect from Chicago, reported that Vietnamese who were moved out of the cities to new agricultural areas being opened up are "dying like flies" from disease and lack of medical care. Several ., the evacueea (~----------] The immlj(ralion spokesman said Nemtsanov. 17. who left the Olympic Village Thursday. met for about a n hour al an un· disclosed location with the Soviet consul general in Montreal, the diver's coach and D senior Cana- The Soviets originally claimed Nemtsanov was lcidnaped and then threatened to pull out oft.he Games unless he was r eturned immediately. Canada rejected the kidnaping charge. BELFAST (AP) -A man found shot on a Bel!ast street ear- ly today died soon after being taken to a hospital. He was the ~ person to die In the conflict this year . -I I The Natural Park Service ordered a ban on skinny dipping within its Cape Cod domain in 1975, saying growing traffic from nude swimmers and onlookers had damaged the fragile environment of t.he sand dunes. The bathers went to cou rt , contending that Brush Hollow Beach had been used for nude swim· mini! for 40 years or more, ~iving them a traditional right to a beach set aside for sw1mm1ng in the buff. But Lhl' l st U.S. Circuit Court or Appeal& upheld the ban. ··The ruling misses the point,.whlch is that skinny dippers h ave rights, too. We contend that there is considerable community sentiment for a posted and managed nude beach on the outer Cape." said a member or the Free Bench Committee of Truro. s&id the Communlat Co".,.. IN SHORT ment wants to get rid of all the several hundred _ foreigners still in Vietnam. -.--------.---. ..- Mo.tor them are French or Vietnamese with French c1Uzensh1p. (J.S. Wf!•pea s.ie• •IJaco•tr.aled'? WASllJNGTON CAP) -The United States has had "no con- trol" over its sales ol billions or dollan' worth of sophisticated · weapons to Iran since 1972. says a study by the ~nate Forei&n Relations Committee. Iran got a green lilhl to buy "virtually any. conventional weapons it wanted" in May, 1912. when formtt President Rlchard M. Nixon and Secretary ol Slate Henry A. Kissinger met wtth the Shah of Iran In Tehran. accordin&tot.he study released Sundal" . In response. the State Department said today tha Nixon believed It was In the U.S. national interest lo have Iran turn t.o the United Stales as the principal source of i~ military purchases. T••al.r• Drl.,er Foaad Dftld TOKYO <AP) -A driver (Of' jailed former Prime . Minister Kakuei Tanaka was found dead in bis car today. an apparent suicide, police said. Investigators of the Lockheed Aircraft payoffs in Japan said they had questioned the dead man -Masanori Kasahara. 42 -Saturday and Sunday. S11rl•• Preadf!r Rnlg•• DAMASCUS, Syria CAP> -Syrian Premier Mahmoud Ayoubi has reslcned and President Hafei Assad has asked an army general to form a new cabinet, Damascus Radio announced. No re· ason wu given. • Gen. Abdul Rahman Khatifawi, the army omcer who was asked Sunday lo replace Ayoub!, tias headed three previous gov- ernments since Assad ca~e to power in November, 1970. Heb In his mid-50s. Showers Hit Northwest Plaim, South Aho F, eel Sting of Rain T'•peraau~• ... ,._"'""""'-"""'"'-·"'"' .......,, den lwt<etl '"'""Oii r_, I """"' ... """ """"'•110 '"''""'• """''...., fto\IOft e--"''" .. """•lo C1'1t•9D C•"Cl...,.tV ciw.1- 0o1rao l'or1Wot11t Honotuh• ~''°" J«il'IOftVll .. ICensuClly LA1V ... t uni. "oc" ~mi M11 ......... Minn •SI Peul Ntw0rlffM ... W'!'Ofli 04li..-c11w Om.lie ,..imwt"91 Hl9ll "-"" ..................... ... IS 60 r-::\"-~"'r;~~ •l •2 .. ii 'O " 1) Ill) .u •l 1t 71 S4 16 ,, ,. s• 1.) SA ,. .. 1.lt IOI n ., ,, .. ,. •J '' ... 63 101 " ., .. • 1S ·" IS S1 •1 u ._, IS .01 .. .. 101 n '° ,. IOJ n Pllll-tllflhl IJ ,. ~· 10.) " Pl~ '1 ., "-"'.,.._Or.. 1l •1 ltM9Mt u .. Sec•......... .. '° 5'.LNI tt M SMIU.•Cfly e1 .. ~ Fr.nc.l~o 4t ,. 5ffttle '~ 1• TloeNNI 104 H WWl!f'9\on _. .. · 11.s.s .... ,.. St .. l•rtel l!lundersl'lt-s Clll • ..,.. '"'"" ecreu ,,,. ,...Ion '-• "-""' ,4Klfl< ~111 ... >I tllr°""' llw llloc•lt• iftlo 11"4 .,... ..... -1111•.S Of ,.,. -lllt'1\ end cr"4••• ""'""' ...... lf\t GWI C..\I 144 ,,_Flor• -MwC-.. c;.or •• er .. -., •. "'"' wtrt ......,,, 10 N rlly c.l ... dy, "'''" lt"'IH"tllWt< ~ ..... , ... ,~ti.~ GrMI Wlr"· Ciffl'•.t. llW l;<lof CMft 11.tt•'I. Ille \OllllW"' l'f.tl• ... -IM P.clft( SltlH. t•ceCM tor -tow t louds In monMno .............. -•l•tl ..... .W_ Winch QU\11"9 wp lo JO mp II. In tom• ••Hf 54'""•'1' ll•PI 1«•1 llf~rck bun ""'""" TM re""" trom riot..,.., t"CI "''I ot • 10 10 IHI '""ll'l'O ••onq t,.. <CHOI. Aftdo.t•~~·~lrom 11 ~t\..ml<ll lo..-r•d •I Lono ft<!ecll """ S&n Pedro l1trbflrt •tr• ruc .. ed b• htrllOt ptr$0nnl' I HlOlll •t oo-town lo• Ano-•~•. -<I\ rtK~ IS, 11\0Uld ~l•Y •OOul '""' ttmt TuHdty. rhln11 to tht ""d·105. Etwwtle•t, tht -rc11rv wltt climb lotMmld·~or tow IOI In IMc-111 -'tellty tfH\, 4"\d to IM llPO"r '°' to mlct·tOo In ~ mOllftt•h11 HlO"\ '" tllt-tt 'llrill reflte lrom •to'°" ~tow <IOUdl trilll ~ """'" tlilet Tw'°9J' lll!f\l •.trlellle "'"lldl T~ ...... nlOl'lf. Hill"~ TWWlff IMl .... nM9ftd1S. Go••t•t 11~r•1uru wlfl "'"°' blolwte" •• eftd JO, tnlend ''"' p"'.tluru will ••~ _._ 6J fnd 1S. Tl'• w•ltrtt'Nltr•lure ••II Of ... A Great Place-for Kid~ on ·Saturdays . In hundreds of home• along ttle Or•nte Co•at, • S•turd•y morning tradition begfna with •turn to Uncle &.ren•a Corner. Thi• regular feature of the D•lly Piiot young people'• page. of. fer• a weekly art challenge to young reader•. Uncle Len provides lnt•Hllng art a1algnmenta and Invitee youngsters to submit their work to the ICtutlny of Judge• of his weekty contest. J'"") Winners are rewarded and their art appe•r• th• following week -1potltghted with the wlnne~·· n•m• In Uncle Len's Corner. look for Uncle Len'• Comer and other epeclal f•aturea for young readers -.. Letters from Ellle", "The Quiz" and .. A•k Andy'" -In Saturday'• DAILY PILOT 642'-4321 I I I l Monday.Augu1t2, 197& OAILVPILOT AS ~~ ....... --~---~~~~~~~~~----~~~--.==. Mars: Signs of L .ife? ·i I ' ' ' i bead ot VlkJnr blololistS. 1&ld wiUeat. ; SclenUsts found an abundance 1· Judge Didn't ~,ike It! PASADENA (AP> -Inlorma· lion that mlsht mean Uleoa llera conUnues to pour In from \'Udnil while 1deotists try C.O decide if ibe)' are teelllf acta ol We or Just tbemkal reactions. While Viking project scientists uld Sunday that non·livin£. chemical processes could be causin1 the reactlo~ they are re· eelvfn& from Viking's life· Nattb.ioc probes, they aay an un- expected abundance of oxygen and other data could be alps ot Martian life. "BtJT IT would just be silly of UI to HY we know what the data meem," said Dr. Gerald Solfen, cbielVUdng scientisL What excited seientistlovm-U\e weekend was the dilcowry in one of the experimeota ot LS times the amount of oxygen they had ex· pected. They said the oxyeen caa.ld mean livinf systems but that any number o chemical pro. cesses could also explain ita pre- sence. • ..They (the biologists) are wracking their bralm trflng to ' decipher tbe information." said one mission spokesman. tb.ere wete "man,y. very, very 1be nutrienta are dosed with a of the tracer material in gases in. mUQ'.'' radloacth•e tracer material -the cell -morc. in faC'l, than was Tbelabeledreleneexperiment carbon 14. lf there are any given off by earth micro- ii baled OD the assumption U.at· creatures in the sou. and it they orsanlsms when the expcrim~t whatever Martian life tbue" eat the nutrients. a U.ny Geller wurunasatest. ml&bl be, lt would probably eat. counter in U\e probe would tell digest and release wastes -or .sdenlistsoftbeprocessbyreporl· IF THERE are Martian f,r. m etabolize -\lo aome way ing the radloactive tracer ganisms, lflid Dr. Harold Klein, similar to living , creatures on carbon·l4 in the at.mos-ibere of U\ey are "more hlghJydeveloped, earth. the testcell. more intense thttn microbial IN THE experiment. the VJktnt robot places a amall bit of Mar· Uan sou into a tesl cell, where it is mot.teaed wttb a bit ol "chicken aoup"-uarrayofnutrlentslh•t ldeDUsts bope any Martian life <life) Jiving systems too small to IJ' THE supposed rreatures be seen by the nuked eye on behave a nything like earth earth." . creatures, including humans. the But any number Qr chemical ac· tracer matqri'nl would be given ore lions. including some like a fizz. as gaseous *ast.e products. 1ng antacid table\ dropped into a Therein lies the hitch.. glass of water may be cuusing that high level of gases. Parched Area Not .Dry Yet ]udg~ Cuts M~sage Case Short PT. RltYJl!S STATION (AP)-The dryest Northern caJifornia rainy season in 127 years hu turned this tiny beach town a parched brown and cauaed a aerioua water shortage. Lectures on the perils of income t ax evasion were Marvin C. White's punis hment in lieu of a l ·year j ail term. But, the Castro Valley man told listeners that jail's ok because tax- men stop harassing you. The judge didn't care for tbe spirit of his comments. so White now r esides at Terminal l sland Prison where he says he'll study t ax law. ANOTHER experiment -the labeled release -also hinted that il had discovered Martian micr~ organisms. but scientists were trying to investigate every con· ceivable non-living source of ' data, of which Dr. HA(Old Klein, But merchants say they are facing a drought of their own that could be felt long alter the rains come again. ~-~~----~----~~ 111E SUMMER tourist trade, the lifeblood or many businesses along the beach north of San Francisco, is down sharply this year, apparently because of tbe area's water shortage. But merchants say the situation is not as bad as it seems c.o be -at ty coast. "Since July 4 there's been a definJte decline in bus i- ness,'' says owner car10 Rocca. "THIS IS identical to the izas crisis." added another merchant, John Vertigan, a tavern owner in nearby Marshall. "People aren't coming because they think they can't get a glass of water or go to the toilet." LOS ANGELES CAP> -The operator of the International House or Massage has lost the first round in a battle against city ordinances governing massage parlors. Superior Court Judge Norman R. Dowds has ruled that plain- tiffs in the class uction suit had not.yet finalized the issues. Alex Wyszomirskl, who said h e r epresents 240 "massai-:c busi-, nesses" and 200,000'patrons. and "massage technicians" Nancy Ann Shields and Doris Dielman, who said they represent 1,300 persons who give massages, filed the-action. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ........ ~- Canneries D least not everywhere. , .. They've got the Idea that there just isn't any water here, and Wt just not true," said Pat Healy as she sat in an empty cale here. toHet." Workers Accept Wage: Boosts ·tbe story ts the same at-the Palace Food Market. the largest grocery store on the M arin Coun- . t DOWDS REFUSED to grnnt a preliminary inJunction halting arrests for n olat.Jon of the re-- SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -Frujts and vegetables are moving down production Imes in increasing quantities today as canneries continue to reopen after workers voted to accept a substan- t ia 1 wage boos t and end an 11 -day waJkout. ( ) !rjany of lhC! 76 can-S tate neries shut down by the walkout r eopened just --------hours arter the contract ratification vote was completed Friday night. The Teamsters Union strike came at th<' peak of the harvest. for tomatoes. apricots. pears and e3rly peaches .• and many growers surrered crippling losses or were wiped out as unpicked ripe produce rotted in the fields. '1'011Cll• Crushed NIPOMO CAP> -Two boys sleeping under a 13.000-gal,lol\ )Yater tank wer.e 'killl'<I after one ap- parenllx. tHS.Cd the al.laado11ed'tank to fill and col-. lapse. crushing the boys. San Luis Obispo County sh~rirr's deputies iden- tified Ute victims as UaJt• H. \'udwtll.12, of Nipomo and Wayne A. GesUng.J2,o!Downey. Authorities said Gesling and his fa mily were vis· iting the ranch norlh of Santa M ;ma when the acci- dent occurred early Sunday. Lie!ense Under A Uark WS ANGELES CAP> -State Attorney General Evelle J. Younger has said a Riverside plastic s ur- geon's medical ljcensc should be revoked for \ negligence io performingfiveoperatjons. ''IT'S A distressing situation. Buff Beach gulations. The jud~e pointed out Younger sa1i1 -Dr. Ben B. Thompson· practiced Tourists in the summer are what that a state appellute decision in medicine while under suspension and allowed un-'gets towns like this through the another case prevents the grant- licensed persons to perform plastic aurgery in bis of· winter. when nothing happens. I . Protest set ing of a preliminary injunction in nee. . • While nearby t owns like any class action suit until the A hearing on the allegations ls slated for San Stinson Beach and Bollnas may LOS ANGELES (AP) -Local class issues have ~n agreed Diegoin45days be serious ly short on water. organizers for National Nude upon. · • Beach Day say they want Wyszomirski and the others that's not the slory iD Pt. Reyes Co•eerts Be f'••e Slatin, which gets water from the citizens to attend the event even claim the regulations adopted in Russian River, she says. if they are clothed: Marc h uncon s t itut ion ally SAN DIEGO (AP> -The city says no more rock National Jlfude Beach Day will deprive them of the right to earn concerts in San Diego Stadium after one scheduled be celebrated a l s ites in' a livin g and to l'urry on u legal Aug. 9. Washington, Oregon, and several business. · Attorneys for the city's Sports Arena maintain ·~HE PEOPLE who don't MidwestandEasternstalcs. TREY ALSO said that requir- bookint concerts into the stadium could mean a loss have the water are the ranchers. • Organbers said they expect ing custom ers to give their of such events to the arena.. But people here are getting calls 10,000 enthusiasts to appear at names and addresses when they Rock concerts have usually been held at Balboa from friends who say they are not the south end or the city's Zuma want n massage is an unconstitu- Sladium·, but the city decided to move the concerts coming because they don't have Beach on Aug. 8 to support tional invasion of the patrons' to the main stadium earlier U\ls monU\ after a dis· any water." clothing.optional sunbathing. privacy. turba nce at Balboa Stadium in wbi(b 90 pelsona ---=;._----------------------------------- were arr ested. ' Gfrl••Betl9F•••d LANCASTER (AP) -The decomposed body or a young girl has been fou nd in a shallow grave in a ca- nyon about 15 miles south of here. Authorities said a woman hiking in the area Sun· day noticed a clump of hair protruding from the ~ itround and alerted townsmen. who \lrtcovered the body of a girl 1n her early teens, with long auburn hair. Authorities as Y<'l have not been able to identify the body. which they estimated has been buried five or six months. 666-ST. e.11).COSTA-.. --..-.·--.. _c_,_ Bicentennial Summer Fitness Special. Holiday.Spa Health Clubs proudly announce their fantastic tree Summer Invitational Special. We invite you to rPceivc • Free lrtness tesl. • Free body fat analysis and •Free nutritional guide book. All Free to any adult who llns not yel been introduced to Holiday Spa. just for vis1t1ng one of our clubs. Plus we·re ollering a fantastic membership bonus! l{N.• 1v•' 111re" •xtra months of me. bershi at no extra ( ~ 1u'·I for onrol.!!£lg~gular m mbership program• What bPll•'r lime is there to start shaping up than now? What bellcr place? We offer everything you need to f""' firm. trim ;lnd lit again. 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(Example assumes you pay Federal Income Tax in the 25% bracket : deposit in a 7Y.% ccrt1ftca1c earning 8.06% annually: min. term, 6 yrs .. early w1th- Clrawal entails substantial penalties.) Let us help you plan for tomorrow. There is no cost or obligation . Simply send in this coupon, or com e to your nearqy office of Mutual Savings for additional information. . -------------·-· I Please send me inlorma11on rcgard1np,: I O Individual Retirement Accounts I O Retirement Accounts for Self·~mploycd I I I I CiiY" I <o•toae 01tn11 l oo I .. I I I I I I I I ·-------· -------~ 0 ~ ~ , l' ~ ~ i TH[ BIG M ;. MUTUAL SAVINGS C1pl t-...s.na...n.· 570 Cemlno di Elb'lllal~5651 COf'OMdll .. 2967 East Coast ~!pS-6010 ~v..., 17900 Magriol• 6treeVll6J.8396 ..... AM 631. Nof1tl Matl\/547·97• 1 '()pen SllUtdlVI 10 NA to 2 PM I .. . M ' . l t A8 D"ILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE • i Road Money Follntl. State lllghwoy Commissioners agreed last week , to put up the SS.3 million needed to provide--·some roads to subs titute for the missing Unk of the finao· cially plagued C<>rona del Mar Freeway so the work can be started much sooner than anticipated. • •· Two paralle l frontage roads will be built on'eithe r ,tilde of tho freeway excavation along Bristol Street .,between Red Hill Avenue and the Bristol-Jamboree· . MacArthur triangle, linking the triangle with the new ~,,San Diego-Newport Freeway interchange , The commission found itself wlth some funds left over from this year's budget and. in response to •· strong pressure from local officials, approved an •augmented 1976· 77 budget, including the frontage ·1roads. 11 • 9range Co.unt~ cities had advanced the state $4.5 million of their highway fund allocation to get the now-defunct freeway project s tarted. But the money, given to the state as a good faith gesture, was spent on other state projects earlier this · •year and the frontage road project apparently was a bandoned. This led city and county officials to a con- fronta tion with the highway commissioner s in Sacramento in June. ,, . It's a limited but very important victory that will off er some relief from traffic congestion in the area until the freeway can be completed. Too Much to Promise The interest of South Coast Community Hospital would have been better served recently if the Orange County Board of Supervis0rs had agreed to let it issue r lax exempt bonds. However , such an agreement would have meant • placing_.the board onxecm:d as wilting to actept title ' to the hospital ~n 25 years when the bonds are retired. There w as'n 'tone among the four super visors who was willing to suggest county government 2S years from now will wat_nt to own a hospital in South Laguna or, for that matter. anywhere else. Yet. Supervisor Thomas Riley supported the hospital's re<tuest . Riley said lt dJdn't matt.r that thls Board of Supervisors wouldn't want title to the hospital. What matters, Riley sajd, is what the board 25 years from now wlll want. That's a strained blt of reasoning. Riley's f cUow supervisors were right when the:y said the board shouldn't enter Into any kind of an agreement it doesn't in good f llilh intepd to keep. A ·useful Program Two Anaheim attorneys last week filed a suit that seeks to stop detention release officers from lowering bail or freeing persons from jail on nothing more t,han their promise to make scheduled court appearances. The attorneys claimed the practice is illegal because only a judge can set bail, a power that can't be delegated to another person . Tholle who have dealt with the program on an un· biased b asis. however, have praised it for saving tax· payer money, jail space and persons unn~cessary time in jail. ' They also point out that less than one percent of those freed on the detention release officers' say-so fail to appear in court at the apPointed hour. And most of those released are minor, first-lime misde meanor violators whose transgressions are usually punished by payment of a nne rather than jail time. About the only persons who haven't been pleased with the detention release program in Orange County are bail bondsmenan<l lawyers. Analhe r easons-COF their displeasure are obviously based on economics. ,, .. . . .... "Your ~c~lpins krrrfeJ s;r?'' Reagan Choice May Result in Disaster Dear Gloomy Gus Report Blasts BIA lndif f erence WASHlNGTON -The chilling evidence of disaster in Ronald Reagan·s unveilins oC an uJtra· liberal running mate come not lrom public denunciations on Capitol Hill but from private angui s h of Republican state chairman Clarke Reed of Mis· sissippi. Ha\'lng just sta\'ed off a raid by President Ford's agents at· 1 tempting to capture a ll 30 Mississippi i delegates un- der the unil 1rule . Reed was suddenl.Y disillusioned and sickened by the selec· lion of Sen. {'Ri c hard ~ Schweiker or Pennsylvania. Without any guarantee of de· ' legates from the Northeast. the Schweiker gamble had nearly done what months of ardent courtship from the While House had fajled lo do: tum Reed into a Ford booster. · · Th e i m mi n e n t .l oss or Reed seems to have collapsed the str ategy inherent in picking Schweiker. Believing that Reagan's conser vaUves would grumble but not defect, campaign manager John Sears hoped the balanced ticket would finally pry l oose delegates i n th e Northeastern states. It. was an act not or folly but or dellperaUon In the losing quest for those de· legates. CONTRARY to claims by Sears or some 40 delegates salted away mt~ Northeastern st.ates, theris· , mg sense of an ln"1\able Ford nominotion had stymied the Rea~an delegate hunl. While re· eo~niiing Intense dangers. the Rea({tm high command decided that the Reagon-Schweiker ticket WOii the only hope (Or ti brcukthrough . To keep Reagan's strong right Oonk intact. his n~ents began placing calls to supporters around 1thc country to give \hem lhc un· welcome news. To 11oflen the blow, they neglected to mention Schweiker'11 lOO percent AFL·ClO ( EV ANS.NOV AK ) voting record and lncreasingly soft line in national 11ecurity policy and. instead, declared him a blood brother of Reagan oppos· ing gun controls and abortion. Some important Reaganites in still contested Southern delega. lions gamely accepted the stup1e ticket. Gov. James Edwards of South Carolina grimaced but went along. So did Blcbard O~ain, the Vlrpnia conservative leader. Roger Milliken, South Carolina textile millionaire and ardent Reagan supporter, was even a JltUe en· thusiutic: ''What l've found cut about Schweiker makes me feel this was a very good move." MOST IMPORTANT was Sen. Jesse Helms. an uncompromislng conservative wbOM aapport for Reagan in North carolina pre- vented Mr. Ford from dinehiog the nomination Jut March. Reagan personally telephoned H e lm s at 8:05 p.m . Sunday. Helrna noted the hour because: "I wanted to , record for posterity the 8'Caet time I received the ahock of my life." Shocked t.houch he wu Helms went alon1 and 1tc;d beside Schweiker at Moadat'• news conference. But in M ississippl, Reed proved Jess cooperative. Long eoul1ed by the White Rouse (foe exampl•L as one of the few poliUciam invlUd to the Q\feen Elizabeth state din· ner', Reed resisted the hnpul1e to leap on the Ford buchra1oa. While doubtful of Reacan's pro- spects. Reed decided he "ould not be the conservative wbo finally cUd in Ronald Reagan. Thanks to Reed, the Jo~ord delegate raid on Mississippi was turned back. When Reed was told about Schweiker he was so outraged that he nearly endorsed Mr. Ford then a nd there. On seconcl thought. he a rranged con· ferences with fellow Misalsslppl conservatives, all in a similar stateohhock. Reed's intense emotlonal re· . In.«Ua~ Land Rip-offs The way to make a muscle stronger is to ex~clse and u&e it. The way to make government s tronge r , more massive and more powerful Is to use it, ex· ercise it and depend on it. N.M.C. WASHINGTON -The Bureau of IndJan Alfairs has treated the Indians so sbam~ully that it ought to be abolished. Thia is the secret conclusion of the American Indian Policy Review Commission, which was established by Congress a year ago to inveafJgate the federal =::::::.:::;.-:;:,;-,.:.::.: government's mismanacement ..._. ~ •• ~''"'· ..-_... of Indian affairs. l ..._ .... ____ ... _....,, __ ,...., ___ . .;,·~ ~ The hl•~ltU~ grew out of a • series of drama~ta. which act.ion suggests an immense mis· calculation in the Schweiker play. The Reagan campaign has been a struggle against the seedy Rep®\ican establishment by apiritied outsiders. nourished by belief in their more elevated devotion to principle. Their in· dispensable morale was shat· tered when Reagan broke his pro- mise to name a like-minded vice president. A cue in point was Rep. Steve Symms or Idaho, a doctrinaire YOUllC conservative and one of the few Reagan delegates In Congress. For months, Symms has braved Republican cloakroom taunts by Jerry Ford's old buddies. What he could ,not brave was the notlco aboat Schweiker. <"I thought it was aome kind of practJcal Joice.") Lamenting that "I'm sick,'' Symma is atiJJ for Reagan but now without enthusiasm or hope. 'IHE ONLY possible antktote to tuch disillusionment would h,ave been a visible delefate bq from Pennsylvania and elsewhere in the Northeast. But tbe es'IJ re• actJoa ther e w u tes*f. While Reagna agents talked privately d 30 or even 80 del~.tel result· lng from Schweiker, only a tiny fraction of thatseemedpOllllble. However, fhe priority tuk rot the Reagaq campalp thJs week "" not pulling del~ates away from the Pr~sident la Pen· nl,1tvania but lleepinl them in Mlulsaippi. Consldering the depth or dislllusionment by Clark~ Reed and his colleagues, that m ade tho oddl Gil Reagan's :rate gamble v~ long in- began in Nov- ember, 1972. As the voters were going to the polls. a coaJiUon of In· dian groups arrived i n Washington to protest in· numerable and timeless grievances. They flnt occupied, then van· dalized, then looted the building bouaiDC the llA. They had dis· covered tiuadreds of file eabla"et•. wble)J contained document&17 evidence of the bun&Unc, Deelect .and betrayal that have cbaractertzed the white man~peatmaat d the In· dian. Ana~·-they 8pirited the evidence out of W ashlnaU*l. · THEY LATER smuggled the evidence to us, and we wrote a aeries of coJumns. 1ben we pre- sented the evidence to Congress, testJf)'iac bo\lf the Indians bad been systematically robbed of tbetr land, Umber, water and mineral rights. Now the Review Commission baa conOrmed the sordid facts. It is not ldleduled to issue a final report for several months, but Its interim findings are detailed in a confidenUal memorandum. The memo, written by the com· mission'• d irector, E rnest Stevens, to its chairman. Sen. James Abourezk, D.·S.O., oc· cused tJce BIA of mishandling In· dian mone7, neglecting their safety and f.W.g to protect their J>!Operty rltb... Tbe BlA l lood (JACK ANDERSON) by indifferently. the commission charges, even while known mobsters ripped off Indian land. Here are the details: The Corn m is~ion collected evidence thal subcontracts to de· velop land pn Indian reservations in New Mexico and Arizona were granted to firms controlled by "known underworld figures.•• Jn one case,, a de.velopme~ cor· poration ar>proved 6y the BlA banded out subcontracta to "one of the major figures in organh.ed crime land fraud operations in the entire Southw~t." according to sworn testimony. · YET INCREDIBLY, Indian Affairs Commissioner Morris Thompson was unperturbed. He wrote that the transaction had occuJTed over three years ago and, therefore, that "the ques· tion is now apparently moot." The Review Commission called for an investigation of \he BIA's role as land ~tee and "the BIA i>enonnel responsible for approval of property leases." Even mote incredibly, the commission could find "no federal agency or authority in possession of an accurate assess· ment of the total fedel'al budget for Indians." The COll\mission pointed out, for example, that the BlA's budget "is not reconcilable" with the amount of money allotted by the White House'• budget office. The BIA bureaucrats thought their budget for the current fiscal year was $918 million. But at \he White House, the figure wu list,.. cd rus $937.7mlllion. "II $20 million is Jost In negotiations at the top," declares the memo, "there is no telling what gets lost on the way down," TIIE MEMO also cites the case oC the industrial park that was supposed to be constructed oo rn- dian land. ·Ton ycan ago, the Papago-Tucson Developm~nt Corporation leased IK> acres ·ror the d e velopment. Although •·sever al hundred thousand dollars" were invested in the pro· ject. the secret memo reveals. "today t he 80-acre tract ii; nothing but weeds and dust." : The Papago Indians have also lost "bilJions or dollars in copf J>S!l' leases," charges the docu~ ment. In addition, "massivd amounts of federal funds" havo been wasted in other meaningl Jess and lraudulent projects. ~ , · The memo accuses the BIA of indirference t oward lndla11 a buse. The Stat.e of Oklahoma1 for example. allegedly is "a ho' bed of violence and harassment '' against lndians. The r e por t c ites thq dramatic incident or an Indian boy who w as a rrested las~. February on breaking.a nd· entering charges. A state mental hospital e)(amination r evealed thal the boy displayed no suicidal tendencies. Yet a month later, he was found d ead in his jail cell, hanging by a belt which was not bis own. ON BEHALF or the family, the BIA reluctantly asked the FBI for help. The youth's parents have yet to hear another word from either the BIA or FBI. The Review Commission, com· posed of five Indians and six members of' Congress, will sub· mil its final report to Congress in January. Director-Stevens told our associate Terry Repak that the report will call for the estabUshment of a new Indian agency that would be indepcn· dent or the Interior Department, which now oversees the BIA. Footnote: W c have also ob· talned copies of an internal BIA study, coml)il<!d at the order of the Indian Policy .Review Com· mission. This report charges that the federal government hu In. tentionaJly seized Indian wat-0r right.a. ,Another Big ~Year for 'Clothl!spin Votes' "If' not curbed ," the study declares, the pracUc• will even· tuaJly "result in denytnc \ho In· dians the right of survivaJ :&11 dis· Unct and independent groupS . • • The report alflo recommends that a new agency be organized to handle J ndlan &ffain. lt's hard to remember the last 1tlme Americans got a President they really wanted. A large percentage or us vote against our bad guy with greater enthusiasm than we· endorse our good guy. It will be recalled that Richard I Nixon won a huge victory in 1972. 1He got 47,170.000 votes and car· ried 49 states. 'Yet only 55 percent or the r egis..tered voters turned 1oul t or t he ,contest. The estimat~ re· sldent popula· ,lion of voling age i n 1972 ,was approx · imately 140 million; • Very close to half of those r e- 'glstered voter~ ch~ not Lo vote -1for tither Nixon or Georgf' McGovern. A large number of l thoae who failed to turn out were si mply voting noagairultbothcan- dldates: but they weren't getting a chance to register that No. THESE non-voters wanted neither McGovern nor Nixon. They would have been happier if the whole election had been called off, •a nd another on e scheduled. A political phrase, the clothespin vote. has been invent· ed for a vote reluctantly cast for the less objectionable of two or more undesirable candidates. There are going to be a lot or clothespin votes In this here bicentennial election. This year the situation is even more conducive to apathy. A Jot or us want neither Jimmy Carter nor whoever the Republkans put up. The situation ls so bad lh•t Carter's chief strength lies in the shambles the Republicans have made of their party. which will result in hundreds of thousands or defections t.o Carter b y Republicans . These Republicans I CHARLES McCABE wm be voting against either P t esident For d or Ronald Reagan. PERHAPS it is Ume we take seriously the s uggestion of Gaald A. Petersen of San Mateo that we should amend lhe voting laws in such a way that we would have the possibility of voting NO. "Few times in my long life," sayg Petersen, "have l found it possible to vote FOR a can- didate: only to vote against the oc.kr one. This time we have lo Vote against both or them." I do not know the ltchnical pro- blems that would be lnvolvtd, but it does not seem too dillfcult lo face voters wltb the option of \'oting ror or agalnst both can· .. did ates for the presidency ( l would not exttltd.lbe idn, beyond that office). U a certain percen- tage of double No's re~ or exceeded the Yes and No votes. the election •ould be held in· valid, and a new one held. , IF I CAN Judge by the people I talk to, there are a huge Jot of • Americans who do not care particularly to be governed by any of the candidates fortbe 1976 race. Som e care pasaiooately NOT to be governed by any or them. This ls a rough situation. I've alwa~ maintained that running for the Presidency of the Onited States is a form of neurosis. Anybody who Is willing lo go through the awful process must be spiritually s tarved. The days when flrst-rate men ran for our blpest otnce ended at ~ the · time of Wilson aod tho flnst Roosevelt, Now the very condl· tlons ol lhc Job, and especially of the camp~gn to ,get the Job, virtually guarantee that only the thoroughly domesticated, or the completely cowed, &l'e up to con- testing for it. THAT BEING said, th()se or us who wish to express our disap- proval of BOTH candldates for the ornco s hould ha·ve some legitimate m eans ot doing so. To vote f<>r a Carter because he is slightly less awful Ulan a Reagan ls a ridiculous and humiliating choice to place before~ voter. Once the medwdsm ls agreed on, there wlll haye· to be a NO party, or course. r would be Jlad to act as one of the oraanlt.ers or same. With the mechanism and the party In motj()ft, we mjght end up without any President at all, roe some t>e,riodoCtime. I am trying to figure oat aome way in which 1 can figure um u • loss, con1idertng •ome ~ tbe turkeys who have recently in('*led Pe._,,. sylvanla A venue • ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Wttd, Pu~~ TllOWIOI Kttflll. t 'dlt(Jr Barbara Krcrlbtch, E:dltorlal 'Page E:ditor The edlt.orl1l 1>•1e or the DaJly Pilot seeks to lnform and 3tJmul1tc readers b.)I. presentln' on this pa1e diverse commcntery • on topics of Interest by syndWaf.,. ed t'Olumnlsll ind urtoonlsu, by providing • rorum ror readen' views and by presenting lhls newapaper'a oplqlona and Ideas on current topics. The edttortal oplnlan1 ol the Dally Pilot ~ar only In the edltoc1 •I columft at tho top ol the paae. Ophliom e•· preued by lhe roiulMl.u ud c•l'WCINIU aod leu. wm.a.. their own and no~ ot \heir v\ews by the DllUy Piiat should be Inferred. Monday, Augustz 1976' .. ,... I ·-&tS W@Mlf I • ~©l?WO©© Got a problem? Then write to Pal Dunn. Pat will cut red tape, getting the answers and action you need to solve inequities in government and t>usi· ness. Mciil your questions to Pat Dunn At Your Service. Orange Coast Daily Pilot, P.O. Bor JS«J, Costa Mesa , CA 92626. Include your telephoM number. Th"' column appears daily ercept Saturdays. Bftlellt• •••leer -~-...... WORK EYED Ralph N8CNr • • Monday. August 2. 1976 DAIL V PILOT A 7 ' . Nader: Wrong at Any Speed?: ~ . . By LOUISEO>OK ( J former staff m embers concede that thti ~ . ._ ........... For more than a decMe, Ralph Nader ~E rr/S ~ N ~ , " I congressional profiles were poorly don e I baa beep telliD& America what's wrooe / • w , .-. .-. L •, partJy because the task was enormous, wttb It. · the time ot study wu short and part- He bas produced almost 50 major time researchers were responsible for studies of the u .s. market place and the with conaresslonal testimony on autos much of the work. 1overnment agencies that regulate It. and with the disclosure that GM hired a "Some of the reports were not or the HJ• rnearch croups have followed up private detecUve to investigate his hlghe1t quality.·• said John Esposito. with -*'U 11 suits --.a 1 bb 1.... per90nal life. "'ho formerly worked at the Center for ~ OU, aw ..... 0 y....,. Study of Re-sponsh·e Law. Ile cited tho NADIR'S NOST SWEEPING stlldies THE BATTLE ENDED In a draw. The 1972 Congress Project as one example haft also be.en the ones most vulnerable automobile .is no l0fl8er on the market and said it was "unmanageable within to attack. There have been factual er· and Nader said ors as a whole are safer the given length of time." ron, araumenta overconclusloasu.nsup-today. But neither side ever backed MARK GREEN, ON leave as director ported b)' the facts, an uneven level oC down. or Nader's Corporate Accwntabillt~ aM:cutaey. About h alf a dozen of Nader's reports Research Group, wor.ked on the The follow-up effort& ha\.e a better re· have stirred particularly serious Congress Project, which resulted in a ccrd ol success, with numerous court criticism: his P.romes of Individual book. "Who Runs Congress?" as well as vlctorie1 and government actions to members of Congress, a report on Du-the profiles. lie described it as "a n their credit. Pont and Delaware, a study or land u.se enormou.s bite •... It was a great sue· Nader 1land1 by aU the reports, most tn California, a finding that the cess and a great failure because it too.k ol which have been produced by re-• Volkswagen was "the most dangerous on so much." searchers and lawyer~ at his Center for car" on the highway; a look at consumer Another source. who decllnctt to be DEAR PAT: My father has retired from the Norfolk and Western railroad because o( an or- thopedic disability, bul he receives only ~1 a month to support himself and my two younger brothers who still live at home. The money is not t>neugh to live on. My father worked for the railroad 23 years before he retired. Ill~ case worker keeps insisting he fill out more forms before he can be considered for higher benefits to co•er my brothers. lie has done so, but there's been 110 in- crease. Stlldy ol Responalve Law. complalnts an~ how they are handled. identified, said t.he individual profiles ----------The Asaoc:ialed Press made a detailed contained many errors. Jle said Nader •'WE BA VE THE highest accuracy study of several Nader reports in 1972 , always promised to correct the errors in F.A .. Costa Mesa The Railroad Reti.rement .,Board rePo.rts that yom-father's relinment "has been iacreued uader aapeclal provision" that includes bis cbUdrea la &he cak.iau. of benents. Your father now ls receiving approdm•tely $181 more each month. A further ~x· plan•tloo ol benefil'I is contained in "Railroad Retirement and Survival Benefits". available from tlae U.S. Railroad Retirement Board, Chicago, IL ... JI. GtdR Dog• StHI •~l••fl to Se ... I D~AR PAT: How can 1 look into raising a German Shepherd puppy to be trained as a guide dog by a school'! I'd also ltke to know who owns a guide dog once it's trained -the blind person or the school? . W.S., Costa Mesa International Guiding Eyes, Inc., wllJ explain its ."puppy program" to yoo and tell yoa when a · youn1 German Shepherd becomes available for pretralning care. Visit the guide dog training school t at 5431 Denny Ave .. North Hollywood, or plaoae 1 (ZJ3> 877-UU. A trained Kidde clog beloa.gs to the UceaN4J &ehool that provides it. Any 1uide dog Her is respoaslltle for the damage dOM by the dog lie uses, ud all bllad persms ancl trainers carry u ideDtlflcation card. DEAR PAT: I returned a pair of slacks by in· s~red m~il to ~ulma·s Fashion Bazaar In Laguna Hills. This was 10 March 1975, und l 'm still trying to get a Sl2.72 credit or rerund due me. Zulma·s first said that the slacks had not been received and that I had been paid the insurance amount by the post of· flee. I have enclosc<I proof from the U.S. Postal Ser vice that the slacks were accepted by the store a nd thatl was not paid any insur:mceclaim. Zulma·s now says that the merchandise was replaced. This is not the case. 11.0 .,SoulhLaJi(\Ul,a Tempers havP become frayed with the passage ol time and continuing-disaireement betwttn yoa and the Store. Jlather U.anelaborale OD eftlter side or the story -and there a.re two -A YS wlll just pass aion.-the information that Zulma's will be happy to provide you with a~hcr pair or slacks tr you will come to the Laguna llillsstore.Zulma's continues to maintain that re placement slacks were maUed to you 80me time ago. .. Bridge for Super-no1~ic~ DEAR PAT: I'm interested in taking beginning ·bridge lessons. and I do mean beginning! Several years ago 1 began lessons through the Fountain Valley Parks and Recreation Department, but in a class of 30 persons, 28 already played the game and it was In no sense a learning situation for someone brand new al the game. Can you help me? A. w ., Fountain Valley . The Fountain Valley Patka and Recreation Department hopes you'll give their program another try. Classes and novice bridge games are In ' session now and startlng a1ain this fall. You have been put In touch with Helen Creed, who Is in charge I of the dly's bridge fut.ruction program. If our re- aders know or other more lndlviduaJ11ed bridge cla111es, you'll be contacted. 1-------· ·QUEENIE . -"Look at it this way. If you hate It, It's junk. II you Jove , it, It's an antique." Bi, Clouds SAN DIEGO (AP) - TouriSt advertisements won't say it, but July was the cloudiest July here in r ecent memory. The U.S . Weather Bureau said only 39 per- cent ol the possible san- shi.oe broke through. 'lbe old record of 47 percent was setin 1905. rat.e lD modern hist.ory."' He says it is In including the ones on DuPont and later printings. Since the makeup of hia own interest to be right. "If you real-California. DuPont cited 43 errors; the ·Congress changed and many or those ~:i°:fu:;:~. • • ~ • you start loslng your AP round sUghUy more than one·third · profiled no tonger held public omce. the constituted clear.cut mistakes while the corrections -and subsequent printings One early Nader r eport, on the rest were open lo debate. _became moot. , Federal Trade Commission, was echoed Nader says he issues his 11epo'1'ts in later by an Americaq Bar Assoca·ati·on THE "'P "'LSO found '-l ti · d p 1 1 " " suuro an ve mis· draft form. He gives them to the news stu Y • roposa s n several of his ao· takes in the California land-use rei>ort in· media for release five days later. At the titrust studies have become law or are eluding an erroneous statement . th<1l · h i th pendin'fnc-gress. same ume. e g ves the reports to ose1 "" Rep. John E . Moss <R·Callf. I hosted a riti · ed Th t t ad t' h al Nad-'I first m alor L.-tUe -as Wt'th ti e CIZ • a e 1me, e says, ·• .... ~ .,. ... mee ng of lobbyists trying lo block a l t t r th port t d Ge· .. --• ....... -~, 0 .. er the safety ol the l ows arge s o c re • s o r espon .-.auwu-. • state and use bill. Nader apologized in a d all th ed' t h k Corvair. Nacler gained public attention letter to Moss. an ows e news m ta o c ec with his book, "Unsafe at any Speed," Some of Nader's own staff members or <See NADER PROFILED, Page BS) Unleashing a new night mood. The dress IHI~~fiT~ with dr~. P)unging ne~kline.. flowing .JJdA\i.ll~ · sleeves, dipping hem that makes legs look so pretty. It's a look that's all woman. All new. Both in s~es 6 to 14. Left: Romantic print rayon crepe de chino with black ground, touches of run , blue, rose, pink. By L.M. Clyde, SSO Right: The all -out aUure of a chiff o n·sleeved po lyester in black with rimming of white ribbon. By Party Dresses, 64 Shcrwyn Dresses .. . . . .. 0 Bullock's South Coast Plan, Sa n Diego Freeway at Bristol, Costa Mesa, S56-061 l , - Al OAJL. y PIL.OT Monday, August 2. 1976 mE F~ILY CIRCUS'" By Bil Keane L /fl. Boyd Worst Killer B1 IAlJ&IE KASPEa OtMo.ttf .... Mttt Summer's In and aehool's out but that doesn't mean all teachen have lbelved lhelr boob and leuoo plau UDW s.,c.mber. Some Saddleback Valley Unified School Dis· trlct teachen are using this time oul from clasJeS to develop better eounes. They either have or will be meeting with Asnes Meck . the diatrlct's director ol curriculum, to plot areu in Enalish, a.ome ecQDOmlcs, social science, science, mathem atics. busl,ness and art which lhou.ld be taught at each grade level. IF TEACHERS follow lhete outllnes for kin· dergarten through bigb school, the lessons taught ln one crade abould now throucb to the next, explained Miss Meck. · Youngsters won't repeat lessons already learned oc be taught someth.iq for which they ha· ven't been prepared, she explalned. This has hap- pened even in the seemingly well-established su}). Ject of English, s.he added. Contusion on the part of students and teachers alike bas resulted from changing theories and philosophies of teaching. While some teachers have been followTng ooe ol tbe ne~r theories. otbera have stuck to the tradition. said Miss Meck. 111EB E HAVE even been differences in the words used. What some teachers referred to u artfcles, others labeled asljectives, Miss Meck ex· To help the teachers, the commallce hue also plainedT •. h h ad ... _ ... i =~t~ a glossary ol ll'rms nnd a dct6llcd eac ers ave re "'"" retwts 1n poorly writ· With alJ the basic r<'sonrch <·omploh.'<i. Miss ten student compo1itlons. The public hH lt•rned or Mttlt Hid. teachers should be "hie to uxp»nd on the the problem through reports on the lar~e number or tJI dd be J b' 1 state univenJt.y studtnts being requlred to take re· ou fte an o a tler o m c ass. medial Eotllab. Qesald. · TEACHERS HAVE bc<'n humpcrl'd b<'cuust' The dJatrict't te.men believe thelr atudenta there wu no over~I plnn and m atl'rlnls availul>I<·. are well above the average but they admit there's said Puuline Jordon, u I.OS Ahsos lntl'rnwdtat<• room foe improvement. School teacher . "Now, we hopt>, that wall be done for them.·• sht' .. AS WITH MODERN math, we're back re._s_aJ_'d_·----------------- grouplns from the sixties," Miu Meck said. They decided to correct the situation rather lban wait .---------and hope it improves. The committee ot seven English te.~bers ud the district administrator focused oo P'lmmar and usage for two weeks this summer. Their goal ls to make the students better "tune· tional writers," explained Mission Viejo High School's Bob Minier. The teacher• went throu&h wll a vallable text· books lo add sample activities and references to an outline of objectives foe each grade level. • THI: '1.UMll ... HIATIMG All COHO. ........... ---· Ser\OICle In YO..• A--C...f "''~Sl()N Vil.I() :tt'nl C:."'tAO ~p..ir•"" ~Hl'l"·•t > t. ,1 ••• 4tM401 COSTA MI S" UH N-•1 ti•••• TOILAFLIX· For Irvine 111£Y•VE PLANNED competency tests for students in the third, fifth. eighth and hl&h school grades. These wW measure students' growth in the subject. Minier explained, and demoostrate how well teachers are reachinljtbeobjectives. 641·1753 llTCHIH A IA TH llMOOIUHG ... ISTIMATES ... °"'°' ... , ••. ANA><EIM•MAIN 0' FtCE 1!131 w I.;"' '" Tota.t (tl' -1 l Plunger With To•l&llcx. meny water end comprened alt caMot apt1111 bot<' The full f'•Hsur• plows t~ru "'" c1090111g man end aw1tt'lot JI down In History Again the query arises as to who was the worst mau murderer of all time. Not Adolf Hitler, as commonly believed. Nor any Russian,· Roman « plundering hun. That huge discredit eoes lo . a Chinese war lord named Chang Hsle n·Chung. e worked his way up through the bandit ranks to become absolute boss or China's l arge s t provinc e , SzechualJ. In 1643, that was. In getting there, he'd 3lready killed 1.4 million people. Immediately after he took over, he ordered the execution of 600,000, all the residents in the province capital of Chengtu. Then he went from crazy to crazier. He executed every wife, daughter or sister or each his soldjers. more than a miUion women all told. No. it dido 'tend there. In the next two years, his executioners put to death another 38 million, all the remaining · citizens in the province. Finally, the Manchu emperor sent in an army to do him in. But he'd ruled for fi ve years, murdering an estimated 40 million people. TEAOIEKS , . The co~ege girls who wanted to be teachers 10 years ago outnumber thole wbo feel likewise today by atleast three lo one. Some doctors now estimate bow much pain a patient can endure by notinl bow fre- quently said patient blinU the eyes, NGrmal rate is maybe one blink every 2S seconds. Tbe subject who blinks more frequently is said lo be more sensitive. and less frequently, less ao. MISSISSIPPI QUEEN Among the greatest riverboats of all time w3s the renowned Mississippi Queen which push-paddled its way between Memphis and New Orleans in the early 1870s. But in the week or Apri 117, 1873, after leaving Memphis, it just up and dJsappeared. It was seen downstream, r epeatedly. But it never showed up in New Orleans. Nobody to this day knows what happened to it. Addreu mail to L.M. Boyd, P .O. Boz JSfO. Co.ia M na91'216 Adult Class Program Okayed An adult education program with more than 10 classes scheduled for the coming school year bas been •pproved by the Irvine school board. According lo program director Gerald R ayl, the district spends about $4SO per average daily at· tendance-<ADA> 1n the~ulLeduc~ prQ&rnm. • · OF THAT amount, $125 is r eceived from the state and the rest is funded through focal taxpayer money, he said. The program has expanded each year since it was begun in 1973. That year, there were 39 cl uses and 1,416 students enrolled in the courses. The following year. the program jumped to 56 classes and 2,522 students. Last year, more than 3,000 students were enrolled in &5 classes. RAYL SAID 70 classes are planned for the com· Ing year, but that more will be offered if 15 or more Irvine residents indicate an inrerest tn any-giv subject. ""' lor Eat f I •· , .. 77J.J470 •1•tll' I SZ.H AT HAAOWAAE JTOllH Starts Sept. 7 KINDERGARTEN THROUGH EIGHTH GRADE IN FOUNTAIN VALLEY: ~&ookhurstSt...(N.ol W.iallll) ~962·3312 •Teaching the 4 Rs with pho111cs • Door·to·Door Bus Service •Before and Alter School Care • lntfNdenom1nationat •Reasonable Tuftion Pup's Safe Pookie Finds Ho"me Classes are now planned in the areas or busi· ness education, En1lisb. fine a rts , foreign language , social science, home economics, mathematics, s cience, physical education and technical education. 1;~;;;~============= P UBLIC NO'l1CE PUBLIC NO'l1CE PICTITIOUSaUSUIDI ™' buslMU I• <oncllicWd OyMI I,,. NAMIE STATKMUO' ...,._IK-llW. Hiits ~~oll-•1'19 person h dalnO -· T11h ii•-,.. wH Ht.d '"''" the MA.RINA PLVMBIMO. P.O. 8oa ~~t Cl-o4 Of'-County on July IQ11, MewPOrt 8e<t<ll, C<1tlf. ~; te1•1 • . f'S- "Pook" " all ht'le poodl f nd h t nd u •I-""'""·C.Olll.'11IS P110tl"'-'! 0r'""9t c .. sl o.it Pllol ae, a sm w e ou ur a K•nr,.111 w. Hflh, "'" .,,_ 1 , ,. 21 .. ,. YJ?••i~ wandering in Laguna Hills last week, has been i..:u:::; .. :.:;hl~~:.=::;:...;•.:...::•w~1n,,.. .. ..::c.:.:••.:.:.lf~1i.t--_.._....,._._._._ .. _·-------J saved. M reported in the July 15 Daily Pilot, "Pookle'• was taken in by Dolores Shay and Sue Mid· dlebroucb, HiJltop Place neighbors. Tbe two women saw surgical stitches on the dog's belly and called veterlnarians until 'they located Dr. Roter Levoy, of the Laguna Hilla Animal Hoapltal, who identified the pup. ,. DR. LEVOY removed "Pookle's" stitches and told her rescuers that the poodle would need fwtber surgery. · 'Jlhe vet then located the dog's original owners. The people who originally brought "Pookie" in for surgery had m oved. When Dr. Levoy finally re· ached them, they said they bad given the dog lo a friend. It turned out "Pookie" had had five owners in four weeks. The most recent said she couldn't ar. ford the necessary sur gery and would have lo take ''Poolde" to the pound. fNSTBAD. MRS. Shay said she would adopt .. Poollie, ••although she had two other dogs. II.rs. Sbay said she took "Pookie" to Dr. Enn· que, ~etti in Tustin, her usual vet, who operated t• a reduced fee. 'CJ'Re ~uarfer ~c THE NEWEST IUT MOT JUST ANOTHER STEAKHOUSE You personally pick your own steak lrom our gourmet showcase. Choose the cut & thtdmess ypu desire from our Choice Eastern Corn-Fed Beel: salad and Potato always rnciuded. GRANO OPENING SPECIAL! W IH A Fiii OIHHH IF YOU UfSS THI EXACT 5111 IAHYTHIMG OVU 6 OLI Of YOIM STUI( Litllc!M.401t,.fri.-l l·Z:JO ...,,., Ho.-0~ D-..,...0.ily-+ I I COMI JOIM OUI MY~NlllM --...... flM 'IUR.-Uf, CM--· MOM. 9:00 '.M.-1 :JO A.N. SCHICK HAS A BETTER WAY! lot's of people are ~ Many happy Schick discouraced with #'# customers are quick weight "" ~ ~ ' reporting that they lou plans that t . ~ not only lost sek!°'" produce ; -.._ the pounds fastmc results. " but are having no Schick Center's difficulty new Weight MAINTAINING loss Program doesn't ' use pills, shots ~ or fad diets! dieting or unusual willpower. for information or free Weight Analysis, call 558•8404 , ~e who read of the dog's plight sent con· 'trlbudODS otup to $25. The C90tributiom went to~ lac 1paytnc lln. Sba,y's new pet pooch, "Pook1e." 2531 •• Cost ""'·· .. ,.rt .... 541-1177 ......... .. .. v ...... c • ., •• -1 JACI( MACARTNEY, ,....... .. Pamela A•ll 0.MoH -s..- LaouN e.ac11. c.. o.te of -JUiy --· WO\ef w• v..-, .....,..: a•. 1•1 .. !.urvh••d..., ,,., ..... .._,,., ~. Mn. JoMtllll ... -.. -¥'"" •< .. ,_ .. K.,-. ••••••• C< .. , C•,, ..... e .. ,..., MK.MtMy.,. ~ ,...., ..,....ici.i._ .._1a1 -- -9'-l>lldren. Vl9ilelioft ,_.,-. MN ....,, -..... ""'°* 2 et $:lD .-,, -·· A ..... s.l 2 1.-t:• ..... PM, 91 • .JMdlllft c:.u.llc °""II. wllll t :OO PM, l llefler L•llHll e.ac:ll prl••• ~Ill lieu Of f~ ~ry.Sef•lcftwlllbrlwld•si.et-t1*rU1o•ll-_,, N MHe to TM t9t Lao~ a.ac11 Olepel TlltSdrey, OllNNfl'• Ho1111U11 of Ore .... CAlultl. ~IJrd, lt1'al 10<00AMwlt11"-' 9111.,..._.,MarNw.,..,._., -'" Wtlcldl••n MoMOt1 .. P..-, •uSMMAN °"""""" Ct. SllGfft r \.a..,. a..11 l l MJAMIN "· 8Ult4MAN,,....,.,. MoflllMJdlre<IOf'l. ..IMllLAIUl'a. Ca. 0.ltef-111.lvly M°'-lllUUX It m., Sunol-11¥ -~ ~ C"RIYTON J. MOOREAUX.r.-il°'"' ,..,,,... •Ml one niece. oo .. M<le Of NeWllOf1 8'1"<". C.. O.t• OI _,. ur•l<ft wlll be lleld Wednesci.y July '9, 1'16. ~ur•IWd 11'1 1"'9 -""'9U1I 4, 10.00 AM, O'ltetlo C-1...; fl'tltr J, -·~· of H-Or!MI\\, Auo<lallo~ O"l•rlo, Ca . 8•11 Lout>ltl\a~~rt Mounai•Of ,._. •-yMortv11ryd1rKI~. ML TZ·llEAG!M>N FUNERAL HOME Corona del Mar 673·9450 Costa Mesa 646·2424 ·BELL BlltOADWAY MORTUARY 11 0 Broadway Costa Mesa 642·9150 LAGUNA HILLS MORTUARY 25301 Alicia Parkway Laguna Hills, Ca. 581-4300 lllcCORMICIC M09'TUARY Laguna Beach 494-9415 San Juan Capistrano 495·1776 PACIFIC VIEW •MORIAL PARK Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pacific View Drive Newport, "Cahfornla 644·2700 N.EK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNUAL HOME 7801 Bolsa Ave. Westminster 893-3525 .~'MORTUMY 627 Main SL Huntington Beach 53&-6539 f111UT"0'' MIOfAl!L R. Ml THOl'P, PFC. U.S. Ar,,.y, eqe It. •IMI Ha ,.,..,II OI an .OUIO M<lcl<>ftl al ,.,., 0.d, C•. ~ Mtendl!d Cdlson Ht9ft S<'-1, S..rwl-D¥ llb MOl,,.r, !.ondr" L. Mllllelf; "'""· uvra Ju 11 M llllofl of H...,11\tlOft lltoKl'll 1•11\0r, ,._,, w.111 .... ,,..._ ... Monlttt'I', C•.; •claptfd 14111\f r, AIC l\~rd M ltholf ol Co"• MtH ; 0'41-1\, M r. l!o "'"-Mtlvtn I.. H¥r1' Of E••I UworllOOf, ONo; _... or_,..,, "" M•rrl• et .......,, Olllo: ount, Ca tl\y L•N-ot PH .. • IJb\lr'QI\, P1.; A""\. Mat., t.oe.._l"!lof MU11tl"910fl ll•<l(ll, C••I UIOCI~ 00..- lilltlwtn ""'"'Of £•i.I LlwtrPMf, ONo; ,. .. , .. l\MPCI• -""""-· VIVllll~ 1oc1n. -•'I'· Auou•t 7 ,,.,,. •:oo AM to f 00 PM, OllA'f llrot'-' ~ OP .. ., 8'et11t-. CM!ler. SeNlce ,_ ... , 1 00 Pllll\, OllCNy 8 rollwo 0-t wllll PHIOf L.V, Tornow of CIWhl ~_.. C~ll Of Cott8 Mt• olll· <lent. lnter,,..nl with lull l'llllllMV -~at Pa<llk Vt ... IN--1 .. PMll. *-1 IMa<I\, Cl. clt•,<INl>y Oll!M' 8"41\e•~ Morlul!ry, 11'1 1 9tatll llNU •• H!Nlfttlon kMI\. C•. MN171 YAll•LA J.,.11 Veltre, fetlctent Of ~I· ~ llHCI\ Co. PassHt•11YJIJA1)1). ,.,, lfl WIHf'111Mter, Ce. eor.. Nov· ...._,.,, • .,.,,...1co.~111 five sons; l our d•YOlll•rs; 19 9fMCkl'llldr"1., 701Vl'•l11r.,n«nllOren. 110-V 7t00 PM, Molld•Y Auousl '· .. ,. el Smfll• Mort..,ry. M.!ln 10.00 ~ T ... ~.,. Au911~t J, l•lt et St.~­ turt Cl\WCll In HunUnqton lleMl'I, c.t. lnlt•-11111 0-Sl\ePl\<ltd Ctf'l\&le<y tn Huntln91011 8 01<11, C1. $Mith ..,._.,dt..O~. MARV•Y CMAALES C. HARVEY, rt!Cetl41y Of ,,,,,,,.,ca. "°'" Janu1r., 1&. 1«12. O.te of dtffh Augn1 I, 1'1 ... *v""°" lly his wile, Rew Merle M1r.,.y; llW' .. """" OIMWJ T. MVwty, Mv.tll Harwrt - CAmet'on Hv ... y; Clauohftr, Ju!I• All> --; tour .,....xlllldreft. SWvlcft -lftl•tl1)tll1 Witt ............ Inf .... . li.tn_,.r._I <Ofllrlllolt....,.....,.• -to The Clllldren'a Holiplt., Of Or eo....1.,. ·After al, we're Qnly lunan ... £yeryone has problems. We worry and become afraid of what's happening in our lives. Sometimes we feel threatened and pt uptight or feel guilty about our thoughts or actions. .There's nothing wrong with that. We're only human. Most of m can handle our day-to-day problems. Some of us c.an't. We let our problems get the best of us. And then we need help. Sometimes\ talking it out with a friend can be the answer. At other time's we may need profeaional help. And realizing that we need prof es- lional help ls a sian of strenath. You probably know of someone who needs help ••• ••• eomeone wh9 must leam how to cope with his emotions before they destroy him. , •• someone who ~n·t cOrnina'nlcate with others and ls becoming isolated from his funily and frteftds. ' , • ••• someone who 'a poshing himself too hard, expectina perfection from himself and others. ••• 101MOne who can•t relax and o~ in ewry sltuatiot:t facing him. There Whelp for people with thae and other problems. At South Coast Community Hospital the Mental Health Unit ofl'en a comprehemive thort-tenn rehabilitation program which II ctaWned to •1ae1p people help thetnleJva.•• 11te propmn at South Collt Commu"lty Hospital strems 1 one-t~ne contact with the patient •. so that he can deftlOp a darer undentandJna of himself and his responsibilities and perform at the hiJhest Mel Wh9!' he returns to his community. While in the hospital the patient learns to identity bis needt and anxieties and to examine his personal feelings, ya)ues • &oals. After discharge, he and his family participate in an onaoina outpatient pioanm to beli> th09e doee to him undentmd hil cliff'1CUUies • It youorsameoneyoulowe ~ fletJ or lnlonnation, cal us. (714) 499-1311 Mental Health Unit South Coast Qnnmunity Hospital 31872 Pacific Coast Highway, South Laguna,·ea. 92677 Fully •cawJ.ittJd by 1Jte lolttl Commlsllon °" Acmrdit•tlo11 of Hospita/J. Mtdlcore -Mtdl-OIJ -Private llllUnlt« Acapttd li I I I I I I I I . I I I I i I I . I l ' 'J I I I ' ' I 1, I f' I Monday'• Aftenaoon Pricet ' NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS Some Miners Return BJ Tiie AtNdalM Prell Rovln1 pickets blocked miners from retumtn1 to their joba aCf"Ola moet of Weit Vlrllnla today, but a back·to-work movement wu in the maldnc In the state'• northern panhandle and In Ohio. Jobn Guzek, PIWtdent of United Mine Workers biatrict 8, reported that about 2,000 of hlJ d1-trict'1 16,000 coal miners remained on strike ro11owtn1\be8 a.m. shUl chanae. "l Predict everybody wUl be back to ~k by midnight,'' Guzek said today. They pulled lhem oft the mldnf Sht shift but the day ahlndid so back." Steel Plate Price Cut PJTTSBURGH (APJ -Allegheny Ludlum Steel Corp. announced a she petefllt HclueUoe iJa &be price of some ol its ttalnlne steel plates. The compan~ said the new price reflec:tt tile current market prices of plate9. AJJepen)' Ludlum Hid record lll\pelrU of ttalnJtu plates In a sharp- ly d•cllnlnc market have led to widetpread d*°"DClac by domaUc mllll. "'4ot'lday Au9ust 2. t976 s OAILYPll.O f Jt9 ' ' 'How to' Tomes Sprout Never In the hiltary ol bookM!linc bat tbtr• been a phenomenon to match the growth ol ''ho*·lo" books In rtcent months. Never have so many how·to book• bffn avallabl~ on virtually every aspect ol Uvina. ran1ln1 rrom raisin& coo· aclousneas to enjoylnl( • aelC to r e p a i r ing · 1 watches. As recently as two )'UJ'I 810, h OW•lO in· formation was llmlted - o chupter or le11s ln a book, one or two books on a given subject, much ot the 1nr0tm1Uon wrllten for pro· feu ionars and not intended for theconsumer 'at all. · NOW. AOAINSTthi1dt1mal recordol a mere twoyei" aio and the fact that In lbe early lNOs, bow·to books hardly existed, the how·to accounts ror 30 ptreent ot HJe1 ot trade boolca, estlmatea Barnes ar Noble, the 10t·1ear.old laraest boolcaeller in the w«ld. HeadquuUred I• New York City, Barnes" Noble has branches scattered throuahout the East and long has had the enviable reputallon of being the store other booksellers recommend Cor hard·te>-flnd books. Why? How did tbl1 \rend develop? Whal cypes ot bo0k1 areleadingt.he moveownt? - •'I think people have reacted 11tr0ngly to the pressures ot financial ~ardship and thedrl \•et or selr·lmprovement," ••.vs Len Riggio, preatdent ol Ba"le.s It Noble. "Tbe quality and eo1lot1erviceahavedisillU1iohedlheaverageperaon. · ','SO THE CONSUMER HAS looked fw, and the publishers ha ve or provided In book form inexpensive dO·il· yourself techniques on almost every subject including home repair, health care, financial respoosibWty, law, self· awareness and personal growth." I think tbe r easons are more prof ou~an he 1u11ests. I submit t~al peQple became dllgusted with Wall Street's leadership after the stock market disasters of the late UI~• and early 1910s virtually wiped out their neste11s. I believe the revelations of Watergate compounded resentment and distrust of Washington. And I contend people recognized bow much of a jungle the American marketplace was foe the inno- cent buyer. Out of these responses grew a determlnaUOft to do-1\·on·your·own, and out of that ca me the demand for the how· to book tn which ulertpubllJher.s and bc>Qk5e1Jers re•ct·. ed with delight. As for the areas of' greatest growth. here they are: -PERSONAL FrNANCE. ''The growth In this category is perhap~ the most dramatic of all over lbe past decade,'' say• Ri1110. There were perhaps 10 tiUes coverin1 hook1.on • personal rinance 10 years aeo Jn the store, but llOW Barnes & Noble stocks more than 200 ot Uie ~ tiUea,in prtnt, with sub- ject matter ranging rrom bowtoabop for food to how toopep a Swiss bank account and hide your asset.s. . -Olild pay~ology and childbirth. 11'eae categories ar4=J close to the top in popularity amon1 the ho•:.._, sections. Sales •, of books ln these categories are about20tlruw'S wbat they were ' 10 years ago, nnd some classics have emerged. · -Cookbooks. This was the original how.to category ond alwoys has sold well, but Barnes & Noble notes th al in recent • years the books have become much more skill oriented and specialized. -HEALTH CARE. Your interest has expanded from bask medical encyclopedias lo a whole range or books de vol- ed to understanding o( many ailments, health problems diet and nutrition -up an estimated 500 percent over 10 year~ .. -Home building and repairs. The do·lt·yourselr trend has been around a long time, but even so. the esli mate is that d o-ll·yourself books about the home have soared 600 percent just in the past fi ve years. "And no doubt about it "says Rig· gio, ".ooe factor ls that do-it.yourselfers can reiy on an In. creasing number of excellent guides for home repairs and hobbies." -Human sexuality. In the 1940s, it was all but impossi- ~e to buy .a.book on this topic without a physician's preacrip· tion. Now1t s a popular. as well as respectable. category. -Personal awareness and personal growth. Even the most c omplicated philosophic al ideas have been transf'l>rmed into a how·loformula. Witness: TM, relaxation. response, etc. Pipeline Delay Possibility Cited . ANCHORAGE. Alaska (AP> -Uthe Ford Administra· lion clamps ~ny more watchdog requirements on trans- Alaska p1pehne construction. "additional work ~ould seriously jeopardize" the project's U1ht timetable, builders have warned. Alyes ka Pipeline Service Co., made its statement In al el· - ter to Interior Department Undersecretary Kent Frizzell The letter also notHied Frizzell tne company will comply with a recent federal order requiring Alyeska t.o improve welding qualJty control record·keeping on future pipe installaliona. FRIZZELL SAYS '111E NEW weld ldenliricat1on pro· cedures must be in effect by Tuesday. He crdered the ex~a ateps two weeks ago. Alyeska, c ailing the new procedures "redundant and un· neceaaary." t.old Frizzell it wUl paint a weld number in leaded paint on the inside and outside of each pipe section The ~umber will be JNllnted with a cardboard 1tencil. Th~ stencil then wlJI be destroyed and lhe weld completed. An Alyeska quality control enctneer muat vouch fOf' the ac- curacy of the numbers. "It Is hoped that before any such future proposals are· adopted, the necessity for their lmplementatJon be carefully wel~ and the im~ on the scheduled compleUon of the prof eel be considered,'' Alye1ka told Frizzell. THE PIPELINE NOW IS scheduled lo 1)4) completed by July of next year. The Interior Department wanta a photocraphlc cow·or every new weld X·rlY Ind a written ccruncate to verify the quality control engtneer's Inspection. !vet)' radlosrapb on the project '1has alwaya been. and will always be available t.o the autborJicd federal olflc• at hllrequeat," Alyesltaaaid. ALV£8KA llBTA.LUJRGISTS AaE 1n1pectlnti a 31/\ nille Hetion ot burttd pl~ 10 mUes north ot Valdez th11' weetr to determine lt I ptpe ·rupture oar lier thla n\onlh wlll f0tce Its en"re replace~t. A feven-foot portion ~ pipe burled beneath Canyon Sloush •pill during waler prasaw:e tests July 9. The break did not involve welds and was located In the middle or a 40.foot pipeaecllon. Tbataect.lonhubeenreplaced. Since the break, Alyeska bu altered l\aprellrnlnary IU'tn· ~re test procedures. DeMay H1d rutun tests will Involve independent connection <i t.be pipe to presaure·meaaurtna gauges. Prevlou•IY the pipe hid a llnlle connection to the gauges. Further, Alyetke has assigned m«o quautr coatrol ln" spedorstoobaervelhe~ · ... A I 0 DAIL y PILOT ... Monday Au9ust 2 1976 - . . for World Athletes Bf. CLENN WIDTE ()t ·-· 0 ••1\t ~ ....• ,." MON'fR EAl,.-There is o new t}'pe of Olympic Oames on the drawing board :ind the urchltC('tit are Larry ond Billie Jean Kang of tenn1s renown. They see a need for the world's leading athletea to be ~ble to do what they do best and enjoy, und be able to make money whale they do It. · Tbc Kings· roncept would permit thul. wilh a )>ossil>le f' Sl0.000 going to each event "in ner. Athletes could decline money. however . iC they chose to keep amutcur s tatus. The present Olympic Games prohibit professional athletes from participating. The on·paper Olympie's would be held biennially. in1Ually. wilh a possibility they would beconw annual if/J'ucccssfut. Tht•(d ht• c:illi"d th Open Olympics or World Op a mes. 1'arget datt's for the ti st games art· 1!.179 or 1981 and the s ate m ay be somewh ere In Greece. Com~titlons would be held' in most lnd1vidu J Sv<>rt.s and Larry King s ays there Is e"en a possibility tha t team sports such as basketball and sa«er would be included. However. all ~rformers would be u~r in· dividual s ponsorship. thc na· taonal concept would not exi11t. Larry. King believes the open games <'Ould bring SlO miUion for distribution amon$: the particl· pants. He soy~ two t~cvision networks han already indicated mterest In showing the game . Kin15 says he has talked to about 200 athletes represenUnc all sports and ob<>ut half of them are awed by the open games idea. Wh.y would' the athletes come to such games? ·'The reason they are· athletes Is thut ts what the)' are good at, nnd that Is what they like to do. lo our ~a mes they'd be exh1bilin~ their skills against the ' Al'Wl,. ..... lo IT'S ALL OVER --Fount um \'alley·s Shirley Babashoff <center) and ca ~roup of U.S. athletes parade around t he track in Closing Ceremonies for the :XXI Olympic Games Sunday al Montreal. Related stori es. page A3·4. 1 AthleteS' Robot System Not for U.S.--Krumm ~IONTR EAI . IAPJ The L'nit •cd States took an in\'cntor~· of 1t!. Olympic medals today. al l 9-.1 or them. then beJ?an pondcranj! thl· 1 ne\'ila ble ques t aon. Can a nation operatinJ? as~· frcc societv continue to match athlt:'l11· skills with h11,?hly rcgamented and totally s ubsidized teams from countries such a!l the~\i1et nion a net East Germ any. Thal question ... spawned other questions: Should the U.S. ~overnment Oly tppie Seen e step in and b:ul out our Olympic l'ffort '! Must r\merir a rr!'Ort to tht' ··r.it'lory system ... glorified by the East Germans. andst<irl turn an~ out Olympic medalis ts tlw \\a y Dl'lr o il prodUC(':o. automobiles'! One of the people responsible for answering SU<'h questions is Philip 0 . Kr umm, president oft ht-U.S. Olympic Committee. "Our society wouldJM:?\'Cr stand for a !!lctory system or e\'en a na· • t1onal team." Krumm insists. "We need govcrnment money for cle\'elopment and faciJilies. We do not want J?Overnmentdircction." The grandratherly retired busi· ness exccuti\'c. from Kenosha , \\'is .. s aid he had no apologies to make for the Americans· O\'crall performa nce in the Montreal Games. .. Better than Munich." he said, "ancl against s tronger competi· lion." ,. . The U.S. m edal•total equaled the count four yea rs ago but there was one additional gold, 34 to 33. and improvem ent in a number of the more obscure sports. On the other hand. the Soviet llnion e nl a r ged its ove rall! superiority. increasing its total medal count from 99 to 125, and ~ast Germany. with a population lcss than one·tenth that of the t:nited St ates. climbed over Un· Age No Barrier For These Stars ,. cle Sam 'R back into second place in the standings based on golds. The Russians won 47. East C.crmany 40 and the United States 34 . MONTREAL-I can not help : 'be amaicd by the number of 1976 Oly mpi c tra c k and rield performers who have crossed 30 :ind 40.yea r barriers but yet are still producinJ( qutility marks in their specialties . Take Swedish 1,SOO·mctcr run· . ner Anclers Garden.id. who hos recorded a 3 : 38 <equal to u 3: SS • mile) this ycar. Hr's 30. Or Cana· dlan 400 -m e t or nee Dom Oomans ky ... hc 'll bc36 Aul!. llth tmd hus run a 45.fl lhisi;cason. Ludvik Danek. Czech discus I· boasted the eldest or Olympians in track a nd rield. Alan Oakley of Canadn was 4$1 . three months a~o. And he placed 35th in his e vent here. AJso in that event. was Vladimir Goludnichy, 40, of Russia who won the gold medal in 1960 and '68. lie was· seventh here. At the London Olympics of 1948 there-was a 39·year-0ld British high .hurdler who had a shot ut medaling but fell over a hurdle In the finals . He was · a former Royal Air Force pilot <whose name escapes me) and he 11lso took the athletes' oath at OpenlnJ( Ceremonies of those Games. Sovie t h a mme r thrower Anatoliy Bonda r chuk J(Ot a bronie medal here. tossing 247·7. He'll be 37 in January. So while age does have its bar .• riers in athletics. they aren't --.-.....--~,.· always insurmountable. Going the other direction. a • O'-INN W>!IT( mark that really impresses me belongs to a Kenyan who had to depart because of the African na· tions • withdraw a 1. This s ubordinate position to Communist rivals is certain to rrovoke f r csh howls from the traditional "Viewers With l\Jarm," who think the pow('rful linitect States s hould never losC' :-.pol'lHootests. The Na t io na l Collegaall' J\lhlct1c Association will say it il\. ull th(' fault of the Amateur Athletic linlon. The AAU will blame lhl' NCI\/\. And the Prcsi· df'nt moy name another com- mis11lon to look intoitaU. \'et. America isn't ready to set up a robot school such as the East German!! have al Leipzig. with its teams or while-cooled doctors. test tubes, wi res and treadmills to produce world ·class althJetcs. Nor does America lle(!m Inclined to turn all of its top athletics into students and t eachers on a permanent payroll with special bonus e s for e xtra athle tic achjevemeot, as in Russia . Halos' Goal . -...... --Ge t Out Of Cellar Even in the wake of defeat there is one thing positive about the California Angels .. Their attitude. Despite a 2·1 loss to Rich Gossage a nd the Chicago While Sox Sunday a t Anaheim Stadium. California manager Norm Sherry was talking about escap· ing the cellar in the American League West a nd pitcher Frank A 11geb S lah• · AllGa"'"OflKMl'C:l7IOI Aug. 3CAl1tornla11t Teu• ~pm. 6p,m. 6Pm. A119. 4 G1llfornla al h •U AuQ. SCallfornl,,at Te~u Tanana. Gossage's unwilling vie· t im Sunday, was"dlscussing his chances of 20 wins. "I think our chances are very ~ood of getting ou~or the base- ment.·· S herry observed after Gossage's four -hiller prevented his team from a three-gam e series sweep. Thal would have moved the Angels to within one·half game of the fifth place Sox but instead CalKQrnia slipped 2~ games behind. "Our first goat is to get out or the cellar a nd then think about moving higher ." said Sherry. ··w e don't want lo look too fJlr ahead but if we keep playing the way we have we won't have to. Things will just happen." Sherry has won iiix of his firiit nine games since tuking over as the California manager from Dick Williams. C"tcAOO lemon cf G<lrr rt °'1A(ln LJOM\On lb 8itMl\lor II W Sl('•l\1!> I( 8'!11 Jb --nrl J-"""''" ~,..,, .. EnlM r Go<\<MI' 0 •II r i. Ill \ 0 I 0 \ I I 0 • I I 0 • 0 I t 0 0 0 0 • 0' 0 1000 •00 0 00 00 •ooo l 0 0 0 0 II 0 0 CALtl'OltNIA •II r i.w CotliMCf • 0 0 0 R...,¥1!> • 0 t 0 llonc!HI .l 0 t 0 Sol"ll• It> J 0 0 0 Ml!ltOll~ l ftlO O • .i-.(lh I 0 0 0 le<l\1,.1 J I I 0 M (;uorr••• •• J 0 O O· "Sl-onPI' t o o n llOJ 410-.J!> J 0 I I C.ICM,,..rrt~' J 0 0 0 l.,..,,,,., 0 0 0 0 best in the world and it would be on TV," Kingsays. ''We'll train our O't\~n judges and they'll be paid.·· Cost or officials will not be pro- hibitive, K ln&s says. "We c an take four pro· fesaion&Uy ttained. efnclent rncn and they will do the job il takf's 60 am ateur officials to perform ." King adds. What about some of lh\• tOfl flight world athletes who mlJ:ht like to participate bul who. --wnnout financial support. couht no\ produce trnvcl funds? .. If they were a top level athlete with that lclnd or proble m \Mre would be nothing to prevent us from putUng up expense mont•y and thtn deducting it Crom any \\'ill· nln~s." Kin~ ~nytt. "We aren't trying to compete with the present Olympic Gnmes. tn fact, tr lh<'Y went to open competition. thut wouh1 be wonderful. We reel com1>ellcd tn See •·ormat, Page All Siooep Giants Dodgers' Hopes Get New Life I SAN FRANCISCO <AP> Charlie Hough 's knuckleball breathed life back into the Los Angeles Dodgers• pennant hopes Sunday. 'tthat knuckleball danced around us all day." said San f)'ancisco manager Bill Rigney, whose Giants were in position to deli ver a doubleheader knockout punch to the Dodgers ·and virtually insure the Cincinnati Reds another National League West nag. Instead, the Dodgen; swept the Dodpr•Sl•t~ At•GaMH ... ICAIC:ll'tOI Aug. 'Hou"°" •• "°' An~"'· I 7Spm, 7:1Sp.m. /;U p on. A\19. l Hou\lonal LO>A~lf'S AU9 •Ho.,.,lon•t'-OSAn~le'\ Giants, 4-1 and 4-3. Hough re. lieved Don Sutton, 12-8, in the ninth inning of the opener, earn· ine his ninth save. and worked the final 1 ~ innings or the nightcap lo gel b.is ninth victory on the strength of Bill Russell's lQth inning sacrifice fly which scored Stev~ Garvey. Bill Buckner coUected seven hits. four in the second game, against Giants pitching. Gary Thomasson had five hits for San f)'ancisco, but the Giants left 24 runners on base and Rigney * * * l'lllSTOAME LOS ANG Et.IS SAN l'llANCISC:O ...... ~ •11•11111 .__"\,b BIKl<Mrll R.Stnlth r1 Bei..errf O.-Wylb Q>y3b R11u~11u l.K¥~f y,~,.C Suttonp Houghp 4 0 0 0 'TMtn.asont l S 0 4 1' A 3 3 0 M."-r•LJb 4 0 I 0 4 0 1 0 IMIU..wslf 4 0 1 0 • 0 0 0 #r.lrc.••rf 5 0 t 0 4 0 0 0 O.Ev-fb A 0 0 0 3 0 1 I Reitdb A 0 0 0 •O l1 ·Soflens A010 " 1 , o o..•-c " 1 1 o •OOO 11.wrp :1 0 00 4 0 I I 0.llw<OSpll I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 MOll1ltl) 0 0 0 0 G.Adams pll I 0 0 0 HUWrlop 0 0 0 0 TotAIS J) A 9 3 Tot•ll 38 I 10 I LOSA"911ltt 000 111 010 ~ 5'tn FtM(•\CO 000 100 000-1 E -llub ell, (ey, ThomaW>''I, So<;~r. OP -Lo\ ~""I, !Mn Fr .. ncl~to I. lOO -U..At>gol~I. Sen F••nclKO IJ, 1b -T~-. 0.0. R-r. euuner. se-uty. I~ H II Ell II SO Sutton IW,12 .. ) 8 10 I I 3 S HouGll I 0 0 00 1 Bitn IL,"71 6 II 3 3 I 3 Moffitt • 2 1 1 0 1 0 Hea...,rlo • 1 o o o 1 o »tt-HO\!Qll (9l.WP -Sutton. T -2.33. SECONOOAME LOSANGELU SANl'RA.NC1$CO •llri.M •llrftbl t.ojx,~ 1b &ucllnf!f'lr Ulcyrf (;MV()y tb Cl!ylb Rus'>4!11ss Ba-ertf E. Aod•lquetc RhOCINlp • ~I) S O I O lllom115scn<I 4 1 l 0 s 1 • o M.~rez 1b S o I 1 • 0 l O Matthews If 3 0 I I • 1 2 2 MurC<!r rl ~ 0 1 0 ~ o o o O.Evan• lb 4 o o o 3 0 O I Re1lt lt> S 0 I 0 S O OO SIJl'l.,..H 41 20 " 1 o o °"·Rawe • o 2 o A I I 0 l>rnsSl<!f'P l 0 0 0 o O o o G.Ad.lm•pll 1 o o O L"""llep 0 0 O 0 C.Wllllam1p 0 0 0 0 Orltivero• Pf> I 0 0 O 11<>1-'0P 0 0 0 0 Tot.is n • 10 3 TotAts 38 l 9 J Lo!. Anq11H 001 OOll .100 I -4 San Fr•ncls<O 100 000 002 0-J E -Oresvflf', L•Wff8, M. PNeL "OB -Lin An90JH 10, S... Ft.tn<IKO II. 18 -Tho--n. Da. A&Cltr, M, Pflf'"t.. SB -~ Garvt>y, SF -~ll••S. G.nref , Runell. R-Hou91'fW,•O Otn\t•r uve•'<' C W1lhuns Hu.,..ir•o ll ,l·l l r -2. SI. A -36,:tol • IP M 82.\ 9 , •• 0 6 "" " ' , .... ., l II Ell 11 50 3 J l 6 0 0 , 0 I I t l ' 1 ' 0 0 0 0 I f I 0 0 OLYMPIC PAIR ARRIJ'E TONIGHT INGLEWOOD-It.s's welcome home toni_gh t for Olympic Games swim stars Brian Goodell of Ml11 11lon Viejo and Shirley Babashoff or Fountain Valley. The pair arrive al Los Angeles Inte r nation al on Wes t e rn Airlines night 765 al 7:25 toni(!hl and a l(ala reception is planned. AwalUng their arrival will be lheir Nadadorcs swim coach. Mark Schubert, fellow Olympian teammates, the Mi5Sion Viejo High band and pep squad and various d ignilaties. summed up the day as ''\'~ry frustrating.'· . "\Ve had to win two games. That's all there was to it,'' said Hough. "Now we have four games coming up against ~o 1Reds and we mlt:ht h ave. to sweep that S<'ries." Hough. 9·4, workl'<I in all four games of the GI ants series and allowed no hits in 6tfJ innings. But the Dodgers los t the first two games, falling 91'!.l games bacl~ of Cincinnati. "We're a better team than.the Dodgers . O ur season series shows that," J ohn Montefusco said after p1tchang tne 1..r1ants to a 6·3 victory Saturday. He ex- plained the \.iants' last 1'13<'<' spot, despite Ulcir ~dgc <now 8·51 O\'er the Dodgers by suying, "We just have trouble beating the weaker teams." The Giants have a 5.3 rccrd against the Reds. here fo a three·game series open,ng tonight. The Dodgers are horn~ to face Houston before the Reds, now nine gam es up, arrive Thursday. · Pressure 1 No.Obstacle For Allin '~ SUTTON, Mass. <APJ -Brian "Bud" Allin,· who .· collect~ a fistful of decorations as an Ar1n>' artilleryman in Vietnam, now1sa bundle of nerves on the pro golf tour. Aodhelikes itthatway. "It's nice to be nervous, that's what this game is aJJ about," the 31·year-old Allin said Sunday after collectin~ $40.000 with a pressure -packed, one-stroke vie· tory in thQ S200,000 Pleas~nt Valley Classic. "I was nervous, kind or shaky out there," Allin said. "It's been so long since I 've won, since 1974, I really wanted this one. I was ~o ner vous J quit looking at the scoreboard. "I didn't know I was a head. I didn't look at the lender board from the 10th hole unti l the 18th. Then I looked up al the board when 1 was on that last green. l knew I needed just two pulls to win and 1 we nt out and got them." While admitting to a case of nerves, he gave the jillcrs. to rivals as the 72-hole tournament turned into a horse race in tho final r ound: interrupted by a thunderstorm for l 1h hours In lnte morning. tJoMllno \Coro\ .nd earnlllQ'l Ill l~ Ptf>a\Mlt V.ol .. y C.oll CM\\IC: Ori.of\ Allln, IA0,000 l\<>n (f<·~"6w, \11 ,IOO I onnv W.o<Jkln\, \10,Ml'I lt~fl~r,SIO,fh') ~nManM, \10,6'>0 1 ...... Mlrr. \1,)7~ Don Wynn, U, U• AM•-H•y~\, U , lf~ ""' C•ldNt ll. u. ,,. CAO<OC llurn\, H. \/H rom J .. nkl~. H , \I~ flruct• LH-l t>.C, \l, \IH Al(;<tl.,,.r04)r, \l,JOll Miko Hill, U ,JOO 111)(1 Cur I, ~.JOO llnbb¥ Wtll~I. \J . .1011 l•IM">Chlff,\J,)()11 MM M<un(lon, n ,>OO JohnJ•O\Ol'I, )1,\llO Jn., lnrTWtn Jr., \7, \00 A•>. M#\.,.nOMI', U ,OIA ll<U!• Onlll\, '1,0/& o ..... sroo•on. 0 .111• N•l•Sl••k ... '1,)1• flol>E. Smith, \l,\/A Cr...ron C•!ll•,\UI~ ._..,o T•llly, "·\I• l)ob [r'l<h '"'• \1,)I• °"'"' AOO<IOll"I, ',,,,.'/ Jot Pnrhlr, U,110 g:.~..:::.~:, ~.·1:&0 OollC.llder, \1,170 thrower wbo won the gold medal at Munich in 1972, will be 40 in January. Yet he has thrown 209·3 this year. Forty-year -old Lucien Rault of France has tun the 10.000 meters in 28:33.4 this season and Roma· He's Silver Ayoo. tflc 400-meter hurdler. who at a11t-15 ha ii alrea?y run 50.01. * * * LaQda Remains on Critieal List · nian Nicolae Marosescu. who will be 39 in November. can sllll long juml> 25·8. Swedish sprinter Sy Barka has clocked 10.2 for lhe HlO meters and 20.8 in the 200. Not bad for a man33. An<I 42·year-old 'Shotputter Gergely Kulcsar of Hungary has a 66-2~ .. toss this year. llermes Rlveri of Cuba has thrown the }la mmer 226-91'2 at age.ts. Or bow a bout 33-year·old American high hurdler · Willie Davftlport. wbo bronze medaled here in 13.38. 1, But the 20·kilometcr walk HAPPY DEPT.-The father or French 4H·m e ter freestyler Jean Boiteux. the gold ,medalist in 1'52 (that coaatry's finl·ever gold lo Olympics aquatics), was ao happy when bis son won that he bolted Crom the stands and ·Jumped fully clothed Into the pool. QUOTE DEPT.-Swimmer Casey Converse of Mission Viejo. regarding his MV Nadadores coach . Mark Schubert: "lfe's like Vince Lombardi. He whips you into shape. But he's a great guy.'' MANNHEIM, West Germany CAPi -World champton driver Niki Lauda remained ln critical condition today from ipjuries r~· celved In a fla ming three-car c rash Sunda y during the Formula I German Grand PriJc. Doctors in the intensive-care unit at M annhelm Medical Hospital fought to keep Lauda's breathing passages open and ad· ministered oxygen because ol the limited capacity of his scalded lungs, said Prof. Dr. Horst Lutz.\ · Lauda was still in "mort.tl danger because his lung capacity I\. • • • . . . .. • was reduced by his l.DhaUng or hot steam, poiaon gas and smoke," Lulzsaid. The 27·year·old Austria n driver also suffer ed first, sec-ond . and third-degree facial burns before he could be removed from his wrecked Ferrari 312 T2. Lutz said It would be another three or four days before the doc· ton could aped to 1ee any pro. lft$S. The poison steam 8lld gas that dam11ed L1uda's lun11!' and broacbial , .. ..,.. wwe pro- 4\aced bJ the bu~ of th• plastic seat, the steering wheel Dr. Rudolr Zellner, head ~ andoU in his car, Lut.uaid. the plastic s urgery department Today, the bospit.e.1 began lssu· at anothe r clihic In nearby ing twice·dally medical bulletins Ludwtgshafen. 1 on Lauda's condition. The race, which was won later The hospital spoketimen said by Briton James Hunt in a doctors were waiting for Lauda's McLaren Ford M23, was inlet~ condition to improve bef~ they MJpted for l~ hours by the wrecJt performed any operations and 1bout 6~ miles rrom the that it. might be 14 daYs before '1'andltand at the Nuerburgring sureetY could be undel'taken. track. Hunt ia second to Laud a if\ Other tQjurtes Lndl received lbecbatnplon&hipatandings. in the ~lrd·Jap wretk In~ Laoda's car lost a rear w~l less 1er1ou1 burns lo bis wnsts in~ third lap and swerved intb and arau, a broken collar~ a suud fence on the s harp loCt and ether mla« ff~. aa1d -turn known as Berwerk Cornet. IMll~l'I ... .._ Monday. Augusr 2. 1978 OAIL v PILOT A J I Happy Dile mma SoutlJ, Grid Camp Boasts Top QBs • • 8y HOWAR D L. llANDY than playing on a high achool °'.,.. 0.11~ ~ ... M•tt team? A happy dilemma exists '41ilh •'There are n lot more beltt-r the South All-stur football team players on both teams a.nd it ns it prepares for the unnunl will tako a good offensive gatno Orange Coun ty prep battle at for us to wln." Orange Coast CoUege Saturday Bashore enjoys running with ni~ht. the ball and sayrtie definitely Coach Bruce Pickford and was recruited a s a quarterback staff must choose between a by UCLA and not us a de- pair of t alented quarterbacks fensive back. He feels the Veer . although it is possible both ofrense wHI be s uited to his could play a major portion or style of play. the game. \Vhlll' the dilemma remains. Piclcford, head coach al Foun-Pickford is confident of ono lain Valley High School, has the l h in g -both young boy who played three years for quarterbacks will see con· his Barons, the last two as the siderable a<'tion. starting stgoaJ-caJJer, m t:bns ''E vt>rybody suited up for the I>Ove <S·9, 170). game will gel a chance to The other is Edison High's play," Pickford says. "I'm not JHck Bashore (6·1, 175> who sure nbout the quarterback play~d most. of the Shrine situation. We may alternate Nortb-South game as a de· them each time we get the ball fenslve star. • and JL may be each quarter." Dove ls h eaded for Golden West CoUege while Bashore has * * * a scholarship to play football as a quarterback at UCLA. "Both or them are real good passers," Pickford says. ''They throw the football weJJ with Bashore probably a stronger runner. Dove knows what we are doing after playing here for three years." SOUTH RUNNING THREATS-Four of the South's major weapons are Dennis Boswell (40 ) of Westminster High, Steve Foley (20> of Newport Harbor, Greg Speicher (34J of Foothill and Brian Wood of San Clemente. They'll be in action Saturday at OCC in the 17th annual Orange County All-star football game. "l 've always looked up to the guys who have played in this game in the past," Dove says. "lt has been an ambition or mine to play in it for a long Fata Top linebacker 'For .North By LAURENE KEYS 04 "'-Oall~ Pllel SUit timJ!."_ _ _ _ _ _ FORMAT ••• · CoQtinued from Page AlO organize our games, but we aren't enthusiastic to do it. I don't need. to pioneer anything. 1 MV's Vassallo Sparkles When he attends Golden West, Dove will be studying police science a nd hopes lo gain a schol arship t o a s maller lour-year college "to p1ay footbaJl and conUnuehis education. Mark Fata was the first one CJtl from is Pop Yf arn..er toot· ball team. Saturday he'll be a starting linebacker for the Van1cees1 when they take to the field for Or anee County's 17th annua~ North-South All-star-batUe at. Or ange Coast College . have plenty to do as it is." ...... King is an attorney, president of World Team Tennis and helps his wife Billie Jean publish a Young Puerto Rican Wins T.iro Events .. This ls r eally a good game for the children's hos pital," Bashore says. ''We visited the hospital and I was impressed by what 1 saw and the good the money does for the children." "This game is a great op- portinuty for me to show ev· eryone that l 'm not too small;• says Fata. magazine. . "We hope we won't have to do the games,.. but instead, amateur sports will go open. One nlce thing about the world is that it changes.·· King says. "Right now the amateurs aren't in touch with reality. They are more concerned with control I and power because of their rules. "Realistically, our first games won't be a full-blown s pec- tacular. Then. if we have the ~right thing at the right time ~ athletes will come to us. "We expect S,000 applican6 for t he first games . We'll have ~eremoni'es. too. Y.oo have to have a spectacle aod tradition Cor spectator appeal. "The games will adjust each time to conditions of those particular times. Everything will b e operated like a major American business." By ROGER CARLSON 01 tlM 0•111 Pllel ShlH Jesse Vassallo, a 14-year-old sophomore at Mission Viejo High School, captured male athlete of the meet honors Sunday as the fourth annual Mission Viejo ln- vitationaJ swimfest concluded. The swift Puerto Rican led a 1-2 punch in the 1.500 freestyle for his Mission Viejo Nadadores teammates with a 15:55.06, then came back a few minutes later to capture the 200-meter backstroke in 2: 10. 71 as brother Victor pushed him with a secood place effort or 2: 10.89. .. Jesse Is a pretty unique kid," said an elated Nadadores coach Mark Schubert. .. He's just begin- ning to scratch the surface. At this point distance is his forte, but we're not really sure where his future lies." Jesse Vassallo and Bill ' Babashoff mirrored each other for l,000 m eters before Vassallo spurted away to win the 1,500 handily at the International Swim Complex. In women'• competition the on· ly Orange Coast area athlete to win was Hu ntin«ton Beach's Leissa Gilbert, the 16-year-old HB High student under the Cypress Aquatics banner. She won the 1,500 freestyle with a lifetime best of 17:09.38, paring her previous mark by over 11' aeconds. "I didn't know if I could go 17:09,'' said Gilbert, "butl knew it would take that to win. I'd like to go under '17 at Philadelphia in tbeAAU Nationals." Gilbert edged into the lead at 500 meten and was in command at 1,000 mete rs with five body lengths separating her from her nearest rival. · Denmark's Susanne Nielsson was the female athlete of the' meet, adding a second in the 200 breast lo her earlier efforts to Final Medal Standings King believes the primary ob- stacles at the moment are finan- cial, finding a site and convinc- ing the athletes to parLicipate "n nd stage a successful event. F.,..io11m111ttn1tci.1s1•r'ldl•: =:.--~ : "If you look at the problems. Natioft oe10 si1-.,,,..,. Te1M --r 1 1 7 0 0 0 2 I 0 • 2 r ~·ou 'll ne\ier do 1't. You have to So•1e1u"'°" •1 '3 JS us ~"IC-• • ,. J E•}I Germw •O u . JS 'O Dl'WNtk ' 0 lbok at probable results and ac· u .. 111ohl1u ,. n u .. •••co ' o "'omplis hme nts to kee" going win tO.t1n.n1 •0 n 11 ,. 1r1..w..t t o ' I' JIKMll\ 9 • • t0 1j c.n.s. 0 .lo forward," King s_ays. ""'..,.. • & 11 n .. ,~um .o a 8u•9Ml<t 7 I • 7• --.-s 0 2 ·,_ c.-6 .t l IJ ~"911 0 I W'rI' Result~· ~=~·: : ; :; ~: !:'~ .. 1. ~ ~ S.... F•a11<il<eJO, l..-i-U l'lnl-" 1 0 • Ir..., 0 1 I ._ S-n • I 0 S lltllelU..I• • 0 1 women"• ooublO -SIO•e·O..rr ISF .... a1 O"'"b1 ... 1n ' s s IJ • ~119 0 I Klwomur• Gutrrenl, .. , women u11191e<-Ou<r '"''' 7 1 4 11 lt•ttl o o 1\Ft llo'•I llM~.• J. YulJl>tl•••a 1 J 1 ~ ""''''" 0 0 _,' OOUOI~ -MCMlll.,.-Okket (~rl lll'el Clfl<ho\lnve-1<1 ' 1 e I -tfoRlco 0 0 • 3 , 0 0 .. 1 0 0 , ' , :) 2 ' " • s 2 2 s , I ' 7 I gain the honor. Mission Viejo distalf aces Sun- day included: Valerie Lee in the 1,500 <seventh in 17:38.07), Stephanie Hopper and Maura Campion in the 100 free (4th at 59.99 and 5th at.J :00.07). Dawn Rodighiero and Joy Brumm in the 200 breast (3rd al 2:46.25' and ,6th at 2:48.83 ). and Margaret Browne in the 200 back (4th at 2:27.87). WOMIH 1,SOO fru-1. 011Mr1 ICy,.nis ..... lnl 1'.tt.• t. 81«.I< IEI MOftltl 11.11 ll l. Ht<\, ...... IOeAA,.) 11:74.U •• Nolll• IUke-1 11·11 J7 ~ ~'" IFull~flOftl o.a.'13 .. EOW41<0l (El Maftlel "1'.17. 100 l•ff-1. Hlnde•O•• IEI Montel 59.?S 7 • AloM• lo.AA••> St.IA l. Ho09 (QMC!a l S9 .. 4.. ~ lMIUI ... Vl•lol )t.M S. ~ I~ ._ Vlolel 11 ... tr .. WOOdlllaO IR1•trs!Oel 1.00-10. 200 bklt -I. H099 IC•n.oAI 7;11 '7 t. Btrd ll.onQ Bocnl 2 ,. u l. MCUWlfY (l.onO Buehl '·"· ... J.M. •r•wM "'"" .... V11jol J:V.lll s. Weltr\ ISe lll• Clar., 7:11.1) •· Oood••d IF11llerl0ftl 2.lO.SJ. 200 IYHSl-1. Monl\ IS.Illa Clarml 7••7.!IO l. Nlelnon IDenma•l<I 7:•• 7J l. It......,. IMI$. "'" Vi.le> t :46.1S •. Nltr.,c:n (Reno! 7 41 40 S. JeMhon IP•lo Alto~ 2:41.S. ._ .,_ llWHllft vi.,.I J:U.P • .oo Ire. relay-1. El Monie •.otM 2. MlUIOn 'l/1cjo •.CM.SI l. DeAnlA •"1».0 . MIN u~i!'.: ''"•;~.~11"~:,:.~ ·~~~·\.~~.':,> J. Mll'*rio.Anal 16· 11.s • . ...,,.,., IA1.t1>o1mal i. 11 JO s. M«ley IL•O.•• O.ks> •: n l> ._ o . H-n INbOlon llltJol I•: U.21. 100 l•H-1. Sim• !Oerdeft Otowl $3 3' 7. O.vls I Tutson I ».U J. Yanlis l~I 5l.$t •. 1111* (Milli.. Yl1Jol Sl ... S. ~IMlll l~la Cl~:.:::~\~?v=~::r.::~!.11:1Ut i. V. V•uallo IMlulon Vl•Jol 7 10 at J. OeMont 1S.n Ratmell 2.11.0. •. h llt Y l lakt si.r11 f :ll.St s. Oordin (l'u41«1onl 7. 11.41 &. PalltrlOI\ IE•SI LOS An(lelHl 1.1).•1. 700 b<USI -1. Howtll (Mlclllganl l 77 19 7. Etwf\Pero .Ea•t L°' ... ,.91Jlt•I 1 31,JS > !>ntlll"ll 1Sa.,1a Cl•r•l 7:37.21 •· P91>1r IFullorlQ"I 1.;1.0 5. KrHhCll IP•Hwnt Hiii) , JJ .. 0. ~ IMiMlff Vltftl J: >4.U. •00 ,,.., ••l•Y-1. S•nla Clara 3 31 II 1. Mi ... ..... Viele J :l&.Jl J, UkU-f J.41.0f. Is this game any di!ferent Mexican Team To Compete The Orange Coast area swim- ming scene takes on an interna- tional flavor in the near future with S5 swimmers and water polo players scheduled to arrive from Mexico City Tuesday, A group of 10 water polo players and 45 age-group swim· blers (boys and girls, ages 10-18> will be competing against area contingents from Newport Aquatics, Costa Mesa Aquatics, Mesa Verde Country Club and the Mission Viejo Nadadores. The Mexican team arrives Tuesday, with coordinator help from the Daily Pilot, and the athletes will be staying at the homes of aquatics parents in· volved In the various Orange Coast afea swim clubs. The swimmers are from Club Cuauhtemoc and afternoon meets are scheduled at Mission .Viejo Thursday, Mesa Verde Saturday, Costa Mesa Aug. 10 and Newport Aug.11. The water polo team will meet. various AAU 18-and-under teams in the area. The 5-10, 220-pounder from Garden Grove High checks into Cal State CLong Beach> in the fall. Fata. a Samoan, had some feelers from Northern Arizona, but he heard through the ~rapevme il thought he was not larite enough to play linebacker. .. That really made me angry and 1 signed my letter or intent. with Long Beach," says the All· county selection. ··u·s a good school and they are in a good league <PCAA>. And U1ey have lhr'ce other Samoans there." Fata came to the United States with his family in 1911. could speak no English and weighed barely 100 pounds. "In Samoa 1 never thought l'd be an athlete, but il's been good for me," he says. "l'lJ have a full scholarship at Long Beach. My parenl'i aren't rich and they couldn't have paid for me." says Fata, the eldest or seven children. 'Tm glad to be going to Long 'Beach. I think I can help them and I'll be close to home also,'" he says. Jlome in Samoa was a village or about 200 people, so things have c h ang£d for the de· termined athlete. Rut he's still got the beaches. right? Wrong.• · ·. "I don't AO very often," he savs. "I don't hove time and C don't need a tan." I ' I '>Ion-Bell, 11-e. Men'~ ,1nqlt\ -()Her ISFI llUI ~ ... Z••I""° 1 1 • l""•IAll<I 0 o 51.,...., I. • Fritnc• 1 ~ ' ~rmuda 0 0 ~:::~.,~-·~ .. ,_,, .... ,M ... : .. ·· L. · · 'Sta d: ' · HB's Soper 13th; MAZDA ~~~~NLEA~~ Nn•oN~LEA:::~ SolomanAdvances 19 7 5 ~~~;~~,t·T1 ~fa ~.: :::w.:::~:;:·· r·~ ~: .:8 Cleveland 50 50 .SOO 11 New York 62 5'1 .49l 19 'h Detroit 48 52 .480 13 Chicago 44 5' .421 26 CLOSE-OUT ~~~kee :~ ~ :~ !;~ ~~~=·. 1~ ~ :~ ~~ I. WAS •••••••• $5127 West Dlvlskm West Division Kansas City 61 40 .004 Cincinnati 67 38 .638 Minnesota 53 50 .515 9 Dodger1 57 46 .553 9 . . . DISCOUNTED s350 CASH IACIC .•• $4~ N.OW $4377 ...., .f~' a..,~n U.t~\ • ..,,~ ,_.. ,.,,.,,ft' \S..' "10 J,.,,, IMMEDIATE CREDIT Ot4HIATIFOI DOW.. r ATMIMT 0. CASH BACK! Oakland 53 51 .510 91!.i Houston 55 52 .514 13 Texas 49 52 .485 12 San Diego 49 57 .462 181h Chira~o 46 56 .451 151.2 AUanta . 46 51 .447 20 Angels 45 oo .429 18 San Francisco 46 m .434 ·211h Sundar'•Oa-. h~n·10- Ml,,.,.wl• .. OAkl""d fl. h1~me ll11••0ftCI\ ""''.otlfllll• 1·7, H•w Yott.•• Cltl 9&.,... 11 '"" "'"'" ::~:~~~~~~1/ /lllOfll1t•12,PltH~•9"0 • h•Ht.1(•11"" (llr. CN<-7. $1. Lwf~ 1 llOIMl""l Cl .... l•r>d '· Mllw•uU•), IOl!Wllnq'i OMIM.tll 5, SMt DltOO. "°"'""•·""•"l•O O.oce90 7, c:.111;:;1 1.s 0 1"'" \M ..._'" •-'· '-" rrtlltftto 1-1 f2"CI90m1P 10 91llllflO•t Ill. Mllf 1·1 •rtd PaoMI l-41 i!ll .,_,.., .,...,, •• o-Mnw•uke• IColbotn • lhnQ f'lod(l9"1'1 J.71 ~on I Wh o' II II Clf ... ,_ (~ ll·•l Otlroil C"OOf'" 10 101.tl ~-YO<'k lllleqndef S.11 0.klfftd llot>f'r • ~I .ol M·-~ IL-• 1-2) On•1u.a,...ut.,.ouh J ""''•d•lplll• IL611Dott U•ll •I Clllo90 (~Ml Sen Olt9e ',.,,1, .. .,.., ... -Soll"'"' "111 .. All .... al_,.,,1 .. -L~Ml.t SC. IAOOI• 1r•1c-.. 111-' Pit~ IMedkl\ s.•I MonlreAI tFrym~ t ll •I -York ISHWf' .... d. 0n(IMl ll (l,t(~y 9>11 •I !>et> Fr.tn(IKO (O'A<· • qui~ -~°" l•"°"Jat .. 11 .1 Le Anplts (.JOM .. 71 Miracle Mazda 2150 Harbor Boulevard Costa Mesa• 645-5700 .. DAVENPORT. Iowa-6·1, in a semifinal match Butch Soper of Hunt· Sunday In the $125,000• SJ845 ington Beach was In 13th Louisville International position after four TennisCl:isslc. rounds of the $60 000 Solom on moved into Limited Quad Cities open bowling toni~ht's final against time· tour nament here Sunday Wojtek Fibak of Po· only. night. land, a 4·6, 6·1. 6·2 victor Leading •the pack is overStanSmlth. lt!lke Berlin with 6.~ Cart er In L e ad pms. Soper had S,657 pins al the same time. FinaJs TERRE HAUTE, l nd., are set Tuesday night -G':'ry Be~tenhausen with the winner getting repa1red his crash · $6 000 damaged car in less than · · an hour Sunday and wenl SolOMon 1t'l11• on to win the 40·lop Unit· ed States Auto Club LOUISVILLE. Ky. ~sprint car feature on the Harold Solomon, doW!' a 'h-mUe dirt. track here. set and at brNk point, Joe Saldana came in rolled off nine straight second and Pancho games a n d d e feated Carter, rrcah off a vie· Dick Stockton,. 3-6, 6-'3, tory at Indian apolis Saturday n ight. was . J. third. Tommy Astone FV Legion Nine was fourth and Chuck ~ ...... Gurney fifth in the 28-cor H mhl 'd 22 3 field. U e~, • Carter's 624 points now leads the USAC sprint The season cn\ied o division, while Larry! sour note for to.'intaln Dickson Is second with Va 11 e y ' s A m Vi can 540 Legion team in tourna-• men t actio n at , .. t Whu ,,.,,,. Anaheim's La Palma COLLEGE STATION, p~~~cb. Joe Berua's Tex. -Tesan A.J . Foyt, Fountain Valley team, baWlng sweltering heat ,,-. •and bumJdlty, fought off needing to win twice all challengers Sunday to against the Fullerton win both Indy and stock Dodgers. could not get car halves of the Twin past the first game, as 1505 ror his third straight Fullerton trampled ....ad Fountain Valley to the victory at Texas w.,.' tune of 22·3 to clinch the Speedway· 2 quarts: $2f0 lf2 gallon: ]845 ~OU save S2.55 tourney championship. • Foyt literally blew the ;' ·See Briefs.Page~ -------------------ii l 2 DAIL. Y PILOT Tennis, Soccer WO•l.OTIAMTetoos ... ,,..,,,,,,, C~l•IWI Pm-911 llo\lon Inell.,.. l•1t O.v11i.. W L l'(t G• ,. 10 .m " ,. jot • I. 10 4f4 • " 11 "°° " ' I• 71 AO!!" ... WetlOhl\i.11 ~. ~Otr• lotA•IC't *l>IC'99 .... .ii " 10 .114 -U11t1'1 " , .. ~ .. , ,, ,. ·"''" 10 H *IS ~., .. ,.,._.,(!Mt Ptll~QI> 1'. '""••M 11 Iott°" J 1. Clewl•no l I Hh>Yor-2'. "'••~h II , .... ,., ...,,(,. Ooldt&G•i.JO. l"<l••n• IS .............. ,( ... , ~-G•te •I lo•~~ New V011'.i H•w•u ....... , .. ...,,,,.., . lot 4JW)Oleul IM••n• (;oldM Gel• •I P114MnO. NO•TKA ... U•ICAN socca• u :Aou• llfenll9r• D1v1.S.. Oii<• 1t«•1., """1I010 T-10 &Mto. •'"""'"" U I 50 • 114 11 10 lO,. lO .. 10 11 )I j4 11 '1 II t 7S i. U It 1 •• 7t so 11 .. fUltrflOl•l\lell ""•Von IS 7 S. lO q Ill T-8•Y I• S SJ 7) <0 I~ w.-lll"IJIOf\ u • •O n ll llS ""'Mldttph•• • u 28 0 " ,. ""'-'"""'""-I Wetle•• OIYltlen M-\01• 11 I 44 1' fl II) V•nc.ouve1 IJ • 3S 11 l3 Ill s. .. ne 1Z t J4 H ll IOS "°'Hall<! t ll JO '1 70 .. SI . .......,,. • 11 JS j4 U At S.,.1...,., D••ltle11 SMIJowi I) I 44 74 J4 114 0..114) 11 t l7 JS '3 IOS l0'.1An9flH 11 10 36 JS lO 96 5<>n Anl.,,.io 10 17 >l lO JO 't SMI OlelJO e ll U 42 2S 1' • ,.,~.·· o ...... V•nc.ou•er s. St, loul• O 5.&nJOWl.Ml•tnlO ar Race Results ~---·· c-...... ICl....,11 (P•llUl'I n--111. J20 HtKretcllte$, ~ 11.,. -lltll<M<\ C.ol• ,.,_ ,.... •• Htttl<• Scta4<"" -Htr W•-· o.itr .._ -, ...... ,,,,...... ""*"" la<liM, "•i. unK. TMt•O •ACI One ,,., ... ) - )Id ,,.,.,." co4h & ee1d1"9). Pwtv ........ -,..,, .... , u....... llGOO. T ....... udr. Mtotl• \ Ch .. , V-• ~ IPlf<C•I JS 10 II «I .... Wc199,c;.1<~AC-1•0.0ta110tw. ~Gotr\01c,.,,..,.,, UO Uo kf•1tr1H-Tlllrt.r•1U1tH...,... \.r Ar.1~10.nltOl•I '°'° Tinot I )U S "''° .... .... ;<onor SIO•C." , ..... , "'~Y. S'yC""ll"'• TY S-\1.,, 8f04\tt roo111. Maf"I•< lew, e.i.w eoo Ho '"_.. $1fCONO•A(I -•Jur•0rt41 i_. >•<t l•lli.• Cl••m•"• P11,...\1000. S..C•ME•tu .. Ma110rr101 t ) 40 O\i~IV ~lllil llltTQ.or•I 100 ,,10 A-M. C. MllltrlO trol~delllrr. For Area Golf Results · WOM•N Mlll SOUA•I GC E<i.<lic fo..r......,.nt. A Fll.,C-1. W rllyn H•rt • .,. 2. CMOI Loll, •s. 8 Fl191u-f. 84rt Holl, 64, f DH DH M<QellMO, ... CFtiq"l-1 _,,,.,,,. H•l<•l•ll. •l. 1. AN1 Ford. U 0 Fli9ht., t 1111•• 8owoe11, 60. 1. -It• ~. •• ""'-' ~ Ille t.-to-J...,Cfltor. St ,,.,... l •U•r 8•11• of FOUrtOmll ,_,.......,1-1. B•vt rly M••-.Ce.t J•~o•r. 1 011110 ., ..... '"· 1. """"'°'Sm.ti\. l.•no•• t""bt"'-8*t tr ~oe111<n. J""t 0Uft<af\. toO. l. 86tb;lre Sl••><l. l.or•ll• P<K-o. Er•tnt Ano•l.01. Ohnd Or•w. 10J, • .. 11 ... 1 Ann fOICI JUll (a\lor. He~ Ollur. M•rd yn Hut . Cerot Fr•tOtr&dort, "'•'••f'ln• H•lcif•~. J~ ... l(Ullfl. llulll AM Gfl'/•11•, 20j MIUVll•o•cc CdU Crou To11•11•m•nt: A Ftiq/11-t t.011 ROO•rt•Ofl, tt1·1, L ""'I ~11 9'0Wfl, Eol<r•n V•rfurll\ Vonol ""''•'""'· J1 8 fllgM-t. E•ma len<H>t. ?'t'ht 2. Pnyllf\ l.•~•n. JO. 3. ""'"'' u. .. wrt, 31; • Ml<~• Uom~tsu, ltl>. C Fl1Qhl -t $uP K•,Plon, 11, t, SoPhl• (Ult, 2'11, J. Ill•> P•t PiU. e.11, Ciollu, ». lfU,,.tNGT'Otj U AClt FF CC .....TM •ac• -• ·~ l __ _.... ......... _'1_ LlllleW l~I ~W<•ff-1 1..i-~11C"tt 10M1,.,9tl rl1111tt -ttt•'$ ........ -... , ........... "· ..... f>VI(, llr..:i..,. '··· .. ....., .. ~ ~O••,C.O., 111"'1._..,t~ ''•"""""' ... ·· Ht\cr•l<IWI. "'"" •&el -"""Of\"' J -)l<B& 11D Atlow•n<ti. P11TMSl\OOll. 0....,.-..... IP111oyl •.lO 1 t0 2 «I fittlllMlllOrt !Plt<ul UO J..0 un1lormlh•IM<H•r,...1 Uo ,,,,,._,Gel•). AIH llall -Alllfl't " l'ffnt1, S.wtootr.. ltlw Hltfl, C. Crlfl-. Sc•fl<"41d -Selt<tlrt9. Slwri.y•, tftfn\PIOll, ChlH. U fakl• -t•Qlfffy ••-a I· fll .... ""'"-• 11'.i. \U . II. llGlfnt •ACI -Allclul 11$ milet tO~bY COUr\411. 3 'l'H ' oldt & ljp, Hand•Ut>. Puru IH.000 •ddl!d, C.b<tllo H""dlup. Bass Tops Coast Area Fishing Fishing along the Orange Coast is fair to good with baas continu· in& to hold tbe apoUi.,_t. Art's Land.ins reports that sand bau are biting well with squid bitting at night. Barracuda and bonito have slacked ~t. Davey's Locker r e· ports that all-day boats a re hitting barracuda around San Onofre with some bonito and p~nty of bass. Dana Wharf indicates that bass are bitting well with some barncudaz bonito and an occasional yeUowtall. .,,,,.forOCOUTI HEW"°"' (Art's LH4111"tl -116 IC•rnt>ttl lt.fO 11.70 1.80 ~: n -Ito, t6 ullco -.~• Oooo llepart Plfltcttl 6 . ..0 UO i...tacliCN, tt rocll. cod, J elbacore, 1 c-r Mel IP1nc.ey ~ UO bluefln '"""· ll>Ht'J't l.•-1 -1111 Shaw Not Relying On Father's Name By HOWARD L. HA.NOY 09.,.o;r, ....... llil" Por Wilbur Shaw. a tllrN·time winner, tht Indianapolis 500 was "not onl1 Memorial Day, but my birthday. Chrlstmu, and all 'ood daya rolled intoone.' Yet his advice to hlson· ly son. BUI Shaw, was that he'd break his back if he ever cau~ht him bthind the wheel of a race car . BILL SHAW Wilbur Shaw is one ol the •11·\ime greats oltbe Indianapolis Motor Speedway and was Its president from 1945 uptil hia untimely death in a plane crash in 1954. He is a legend in the sport. He won Indy in 1937 ·39-40 and was national driving ernmentchauffeurs. The · · 37 d latter we teach anti· champion in 19 an assassination and kidnap againin1939. His son Bill, now 30, preventiontechniques. wasn't around when the "We ha ve another elder Shaw was in his school in Virginia on the Primeasadrtver.Andhe border of Washington, D.C." doesn't plan on living off Shaw. 1•5 the· chi"et in· the name of his famed pai:ent. stn.actor for the school And he is alao getting and trains all of the othet' ctosertodisre1ardinghis instructors. A course is father's command for conde nsed into three staying away from a race days and Shaw is also car. respons ible for the quaJi . final race In 1941 . four yurs t>cf ore 8111 w~l'I born. But h" knew wh~n to can lt quits. 6 reportot his final race re>Wows: ; In 1941 he wus rloe~ lo winninll hi• fourth lod,y 500, a feat no driver hus accompllehed to this dale. One wheel on his cnr had been round to be de· tec li ve a nd it was marked with chaJk so it would not be Ufed. On the mornlng ol the race, a fire raged through "1uollne alley'' and a fireman's hose washed the markinl's off the de· feclive wheel. In the race it was used. Shaw dueled Rex Mays and Mauri Rose for half the r::ict>, pulled away, and was two minutes ahead of the field with 125 miles lo go when the spokes of the wheel tore loose and caused him to slide out, spin and wh'lck the wall twice with tremendous force. S.... O. l. S.n 4n10fllo l --SH11r.1,L~A ..... ~ nme -1 sn1s. ~": t N""'""'· • bolll10. 3U A" 0 II • n -Ad¥ Is e d,.,. cali<o bHS, .. roca <oO. s "•"""'· Qun,bw•Jt•r, Slblrrl, Pr111c~r Song. , OANA WMA ... -,,. •"91ers: 00 ~'*'"'""""" ___ ,..,~~-•«WO., ll lleNte, ~ "I 've dr.i ven ~ports lyoftheentireoperntion. cars in road r aces and In His latent interest in the 2f liours of Daytona f't.lcin~pFettded by ( 1974 >." the Orange participation in rodeo County resident says. competition and in play· Luckily, although tho fuel tanks burst, there was no fire. However, Shaw was paralyzed from the waist<Mwnfrom a blow he had received on the $pine. ll was weeks before he began to re- ~ovcr aTid hc-itevenaced- again. s..-.,·so•-CNc•ooJ. SI lOllil I Aoc!W\ter 7, Wn"lft1110ft I MNIMtOl.t 7, Portl•lld 0 Sc••l<lleO -E~eo<11e1 II, Mlibul. t7'rocll.coO. I l.OttG •lAClf 10...."t Wlurll - IJI ilflqitrs. It .. rra<udt. J l>Ortlto, tie(.ollco ... ,., IOMndti.n, IMllM an rock u o, 111 o•u• .. u . no T &rnpe lay•, Bo~ton 1 __ .,.,.,G_ Cl\loqo•ITo,...io p.,,jl-•1 Ml ..... \01.t .,..,uoro •• S4ani. ......... 0 .. -1 TorOftlOal P"41-111111• HMllorO•IV•n<OU"'t' s.1w .. •'•O•"'n lt«"Hltt •I Bolton W•""4"'JIO" ti M••ml M-1'1Wt0t•t1 T•mNl•Y ~Allie •I Po<llt"O LO\A"91PIH•ISI l.OU•I 0.11"'" !..l" A111on•o ,..., YorlC•I S.n Jo.,. s .... u,-.o .... n Satl 0•~•1 D•ll•S Newport Woman· Nabs Surf Crown Newport Bcuch 's Marv Lou Drummy cap· tund the 2S-and-over ti· Ue Sunday at the Hunt· ,fogton Beach women's surfing session at Hunt- ·•ington Beach. Sponsored by the In· te rnat ionai W omen's Surfing Association. the competition inc luded three classirlcalions, 'Baseball's Top IO 8'tadOn2SOtl 8'11 NATIONAi. 1.l:AOUI! Pia,., Chill 0 AA • H Pct A.011¥1!r Pqh •l 3'7 SI ,,. . .MO M<Bt1<1e SIL 70 UI 1' t0 ,l)I (if11terC1n .. 3.0 a. 111 ,,. I G.Fo.ter C1n •S 317 .,, 11S 331 Aow (In IOS .,. tJ I~ .m w C• ••lord SIL IJ ,.. •O 'I? :tn w Ro1>1n•"" Pon 1a "o u "° :rn JoM\t-Pf'I 1' HOH IO .JXI c;.ranlmo C•n tJ JtO •·' '" 319 G ~-Pr\I 'I.I J1t •• 10\ lf'• H-ll111u ICl-n. Nt w VO•~. 31. Sc.hrn.GI Phll•llfllr>lli•, 11 G r<>•l~r. O"'•" NII, U, W. ROOl(l\on. PllHl>o.WlllJ., ta, _...,., CJIKl,,...11, 11 • •-i••n.•t• G. Fo\ler, G1nclNMtt, tt; _..,,, QflC1-h, 7'; 1(1"9"'•"· ..... ., .. " >1: Sc1tml01, Pllll•O•IP"I•, 11; I '""""'"'· Phll-lpl\1•, 70 "*llfflf ltOtcl.,.., ........ l •• _ ........ , .. : • 'Hormt11, C•nclnn•tl. 10 r. an. II. • ......... !.on 0.tQO, II\, lll AIC.tl;t, I C•"''",..''· 10 >. It•. l~cll••· C1nc1,,. '"''· • 1. no cu11 ..... P"ll ""411111•. 11.J. 1l J Cen""'• • '"· p, m"""", 10 •,.Ill, LOolborQ, P~1IAdtlphit, U $, •• 4Ml•tC•N ll!AOUI fll•W Ch"' 0 Aa • It !'ti C 6rtll It( 101 -'1 ttl .llO McllH ICC ~ 3" )) 1,0 .:Mt ·~lo(ll Miii '• JIO 41 tl .J4• ,..,.0,. °'' •. ~~ ., 127 .llJ ,.,.,,,,._ H'I' " lllO )l 11• .J1J C....w Min 100 Mt t4 1'4 ,J>O i<,Mly Cle '1 J)O .. llO .JI• '()Mr ("I 86 346 •I 109 .JU • L'YM 9,,, Ill J•• 4t 10. .JOI •llwb Ott 100 ~10 .. I~ .JOS "-·-., tl&n!lo, OUl•11d. JOI L. ~ ..... Jl••t•more, 1'; lie. ,l .. lllon, Galllmore, 11; M~nctr lcl1, C.lfW'l•lllJ. II, V•t'1tm\~I. 80)10111,1>. I , 11 ...... ., ..... 1, ,,...,.~. ""'" ro·-· •I; Mt,lltfrv, tt.""'' C•IY. •I. 1111•~'· Tt•ll\. .,. Cll.ombtlh, Ho• YOi k, ••; Y.tr.rerns-1. 8oS,Ort,..,. .. 11c111,..1t Ot<lllMll c;.,1-. 8•111 ....... 12 t • ..,~ w. C.ompbell, Ml,,,,f!IOI•. U•J, •Jlt Ii"""<"· Ottroll, l t.J, .1 .. ; "-d• ~ Cllr, IN, .11IO; I!. ,..,.,.., H•• vor ......... roo; 111>1>.,, Qt>ie,_, 1..J, .>tO; 8 1r0, ICMwt Cl• IY ...... m; 0. Kiiis. Htw Yor-. ll·S. Ml. plus a special body surf- ing event. Oc.he r Orangt> Coast area performers to do we ll in cluded Te rry Torromeo a nd Lis a Toomb of Huntington Beach and·J ennlJer Van Swae of San Jua n Capistrano. Torromeo won the 18-24 age group bracket t o n ose out Debby Meh·ille of La Jolla. while Toomb was the winner in the 17-and· under competition. Van Swae won the body surfing competition. Two othe r Newport Beach surfers scored as Missy Prior a nd Paris Bordier went 3-4 in the 11·and-under compeli· lion. u ........ ., 1 -•¥ lou 0r11mmy INrw-1 Ooc111 1 L•nO• Wtottatt 11.al<l' El•lnnrol J Cynth•• Froos IC..rcl1tll • °"''"''Lt_, IS\'ftl 8o<M 1. lll6rtn Mc.C•v ,H~rrnow Beacn•. lf.14 1. ft•tr Torromto (Hunllftlllc>n llHcllli 0.DllyMtMllt lt..lJollatl. llr•ftOI B•lm•'fllt 11."'t O.ec:hl 4 °"°°'" Pl«• ..... '"'°"' &Mc"' s. t.inl!AWll•ll•ll l l•ll• e•s'-•1. "···~ t UM Toomo Ohoftll/1910ft lle«Jll 1. ~ ,, ..... 1--.11 .... 11..-~.tchl l. ~Ir P•lor .H .. woorl 8r«lll .. PMiS florlkr oN .... po'I B•-4:"1. 1.0,SWilft• I Jt-1" V•" s ..... I~ J""n CH•\lt-1 1. 1;•11~ Tr..-My ~· ""'~"It' ltfH HOLE ' o,.a4"Hlt Count¥ QOflfr~ Wfff h.1~ an -tun•IY loc0rttrlbute 10 '"" W rch ot Ofmu •nd h tl'le ••~ hme l)jl'11Cil)jlf• In e -flt QOll tourrw ""'"' •t A""M!lm Hills GOii C--wi "419. 1G. TM t ntrr '" It '1S wlll'I l"'OC~ fOl"O to Ille M•lt" -n< Y --~I ;, P<trtntlOOI •"" l••atm,.nt ot blrlll dtlteh, llW .,.,_.,No. I <"lldllfftl/t ~-. lftt .. esled ootlt'" may obltl<n addl· llOIWll lnforn.•t101und enlry '°""' bt , .. 11"9 '" 1770, JC Grid Schedules NINTNllACe -111tmltttonlurr.J year olOs if, .._ SIJlr-." ••-nces. l'urvSI0.000. Fo•vGr_,,. 'M<HtrlJWI Mof"r'°" tV~ro.er•t EMlyllelHW TOIOI T•me-1 SOI S. tOOO 00 l.60 a.20 1.00 • OI) Al\O lltrt -Humero UM It, GollfW. S.r V1val Arrlv•I, G•l""'t Uf!lb. HOScr•l<~i.. Alamitos Entries FwT.,.ltlll "'11 "••ll•'cl•<lr 111•ST •4CE -JSO v•rd'-2 'fff' >Id fMlden\. Cl•lmlnq, Purw Sl9CIO. C.l•lm1no prlu UOOO. llts-tt Oe<lt I Hartl; Funny Q.Jy IM•ICUn•dol ; Ancestor IKrtl9!11t; LU<~• v GO ITreec•I; O••t It IBrooklltldl; You" For Kops IAo.tlr l. Vl1•0 ... ,,. .eterinirl; Syrup "H Oii>Dll1 IO'••terl; Tl-TCll)jltt l(t ,d o1•I: 4'11CClll<•'s Cull• IT•••-tl. . SICONO•ACI -JS0'1'trg1.,.., OldS. Cl•lml119-Pllrw UOOQ. 0 •fmi"9 PrlCt '10,0Cla. Ftrl"9 0.1c11.tt1e IACUfrt; ....,., El· 'tl>o IMllchttl t: ll••ou Boogie 11./plt•ml; I 'm A Tom llO'I' ll••twrtl; Sii•-Yl~lon (Harl); t.ull.e"•Joll.,. Mylest, TKl•D •ACE -JSO Y•rds. 2 - >10 maiden\. C"lmln9. PUl'M S,900. Cl~lmtno prJU SSOOO H1llv11o11yWilly IMltctwttl; Smoby P•rteCllOll '""••di. ,, H' ~ ... "'•'"· Mt9 Tl>,~e Cardo)al; Cord•q• ·s Pet • llouonll: Jo t41 (Trt•surel. D11011n·s Darter 1Cte<1sw l; Jollln, Joe 18r-sl; I.uh• l.OlllPOP ICrttaQH I; Mucho Go IU.,,,.ml, H VlltTlf •ac• -~so .,.,"' ? ,.., OIOi, Ctelml110. P11•w U500.. Otir•llotO Price USOO. · F11n Pat tt..relful; ~ .... Foot IW••-·· lllMr'• e ........ ll(fttfl!ll; At ..,, IH•t11; ...... tt•••• IWirdt; w.e H-1("' "'•-•ti; Or, K*ll tCrH91rl, •HMntt•ac:• _ .. ., .... ,.,.., ~ t. ~. c1a1m1,... ,._ ueoo. Cl.tM1119 wlce S1SOO. Jv9' Jim Oelldy lltMllU; ~ Limit 1Treu11re1; .__ FJytr llrOOl!tl; M9wl a.. fW•dl; Utt .. Tiiiy Oo IWehortl; w,,.., w.,,.., 1e.t4D1•l1 Slil•• sani. 1Ct..,.,1: Y~ llllltlt\11.uJelll. ......._ MOPEDS ..... "II ml 3635 I.COAST HWY. this sale' c ...... dil .... •67M271 THE PUCH MAXI Now's the time to save. Marquis is offering the best deals ever -during this sale. Don't mi$$ it I ~UIS TOYOTA/VOLVO Avery Exit. Mission Viejo (714) 831·2880 U1> to 150 m p.g. on Reoul.,..Gas. Come In for FREE teat ride and edd•tlOnal Information. FACTOIY A'1THQ«f 1• SBVICI PHJC>tie OUI SHOP "*-... . llf.:OONOO -2S6 •11tltrl: 414 c.iko 118\!i, 11• bonito. J llthbUI, 311 llllft 0.U • ..,.. -JU 8nQMf'S! ,.., -ilo, IS -'-11, nS rock <00. I """''"'· SAM ll'IDllO In. St. ~I - 701 8ftQMn: S barra<..CS., 414 Wllal t.n. 2 M tllllft. J bofttlo, au roo coa. 10 -NH. (5"f'tfill!Mtl -1 .. ~: 1 0.rrK\IM, SJ bortllO. 4,U UIKO .. U, I blU.tln '""'• » """' bttU. 4SI roe~ <OCI,. "•llllllt, $.Alt OllGO -"' ~: 1,Mot illbacor•, 4 b111tlln lilna. VllllTU•A -u o •no•ers: no Ullto N U.. JIO r«ll 11&11, J1 bOnllo. I nnoc0<t.•c-coc1,JS,,..oeret. ..O•T KUEMIEME -U -l<tr.: '9Sc•ll<o "-ts, 1'b011l10, IJOroO.cod. Then with a twinkle in ingpolo. his eyes and a vision of ''I did some calf roping the future. he adds : and bareback riding in "I've developed an in· high school for about lerest In sprint car racing three years. then left the and l ma y try it roping team for the polo sometime. t 've always squad." he recalls . fell that here dity has lie still plays polo"and nothing to do with driv· gets In a round of golf or a ·ing. t~nnjs match to keep Jn "But Phil Hill thinks t physical shape. am W..ong a nd I have "The driving school since changed my mind " has a tremendous pot.en· Shaw says . ' ·ti al," ~e says. "lt has But rtght now he is in· been tried by a lot of peo· volved in a different type pie b';lt none of them have RIEFS ot driving with p range h~ld in th~re. We hope It B • • .county Inte rnational wdl g.~nallonal beforetoo R a c e w a y a s h e ad. long. ContlauedFromPageA·ll quarters. !'bout his ~eliance on numbers otr his Coyote· "Bob Bondurant and J Wllb~r Shaw s n.ame for Ford lndy car and sur-went into b usi n ess J>0.ss1bJe p~omollon as a vivedajackrabbitontbe togethe r t o d evelop ":river or tn his current backstretch to capture drivers and since wesplit field, hesayst: b . k f the Indy car firil race. up, I have been operating ''I . can ' t 1 n o He Jed from start. to a defens ive .driving anyth1'!glh-v\!ever~~~ finish schoolfor PO lice. that relied on the stre"6"' Tb~ veteran Texas "We train police and ofD~d 's name. ~.wantto driver then hopped into em e r gen cy v e hide keep1tthatway. . bis 1976 Chevelle and operators along with gov· Wilbur Shaw drove his won the United States Auto Club USAC sanc- tioned stock car event. P t!tlfl Rell• MO UNT POCONO, Pa. -Richard Petty won his first Grand Na· tional s tock car race since February, edging Buddy Baker by so yards in Su nday's $135,000 SOO·miler here. . David Pearson had a five.car advantage over Petty until a rear tire on his Mercury s tarted coming apart with two laps to go. OCC Tickets on Sale Season tic ke ts for Orange Coast College's 1976 footba ll schedule are now available by mall order. The tickers, which are good tor aJI six OCC home football games, are on sale for $6. That's a savings of $3 of( the re· gular gate price. OCC, the defending na· tional JC champion, will play home contests Hainst Cypress, Golden West, Saddl e back , Fullerton. Cerritos and Gross moot. Checks should be made payable io OCC Football Tickets and mailed to Orange. Coast College, Public lnforma- t ion Ofrice, 2701 Fairview Road. Costa Mesa, 92626. A self· addressed, stamped en- yelope s hould be in- cluded. After World War II and three years of inactivity. the track at Indianapolis was on the verge of clos- ing when Eddie Ricken· backer asked Sba w to buy the Speedway lo save it forracine. Shaw, in turn, pre· vailed on businessman To n y Hulm a n t o purchase the track, then ser ved as president until his death. : Does the Speedway have any fascination to young Bill Shaw? · "I would like to be in- v o I v <' d w i t h t.h e Speedway." he says in a convincing manner. Has he had any dis· cussion with Hulman about such a possibility? · 'lbue ha. bffn 10rne discussion with Uncle Tony. But l re.WJy tJoo't • know his plaQ.S. He is :i very close family friend but I don't know bis thoughts and I haven't talked with him since May. And that's not a good month to talk to him about anything but the race." Young Bill Shaw could be a guiding force at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in the future but he Isn't going to use the name o( his legendary father, Wilbur Shaw, lo gethlm to that point. · He wants to do: It him.self and he has pro- ven his ability to ac· complish such a purpose on his own through his own accomplishments. We find ·ways .to help. And here are tWo of them. We've reduced the annual ~centage rate on Homeowner loMI to ' A Homeowner loan can be a sound way to ~ need lot a slzablc sum of money. Your ~ nous,, as collateral, can hq> you get It Just caU us. ........ -..... .. a..w ... .... ......... ~ ..... ., .!:' ....... ..... ,__ • &Ml 60 Sll6.34 S 6,9IOAO ...... SUM .. 1149.91 S12.st:UI ...... ,, SJO.GGO •• ... suwuo ..... S15.0IX> 120 Im.JR. 'Sl794UO ...... A ... flW9' ... -N....i~a oo It tflFRfll_. ......... .....,. And we're offering this valuable money• saving book-free 'n. dear, sensible, lda·fllled book on how to increaM lhe value of yaur home Is avallable-ftec-at ""' ~ Credit of9ct. Come Oil ln. a COMME~CIAL c~orr COPJ>Q~TION Co.ta X~ 870 E. 17th St. • 6"-8700 Orange • TOWTt 6 Countrr East 1111 Town A Outq Bd. • 547..srll - Top Fuel Drag Racing The . Thrill o·f ·it All- By DENNIS McLELLAN Of Ille Oalty Pl'-C SlaH July 21, 1973, at approximately 3:30 p.m .• is a time and date ----Herm Peter.aen will never forgeL It is etched permanently on his mind. The winne r o r the 1972 Professional Dragsters Associa- tion Race at the Orange County International Raceway had re· turned lo defend his title. But he w aan 'l 300 feet from the starting line when, as he says, all bell broke loose. His right rear axle broke, caus-ine a wbeel and tire to fly off. The dragster flipped over three times, landing upside down. It slid to a halt, but not before the fuel tank behind the driver's back ruptured and burst Into a ball offire. ··1 was actually on fire 55 seconds." Petersen calmly re- members today. "The only re· ason I'm probably alive is because I sensed the heat and a reflex action made me hold my breath." The 33-year-old father or thref' suffered third degree burns over S) percent of his body. DIDN'TGIVE UP He spent the next lhtte and a half months in the hospital. But his death-<tefying accident didn't slop him from ordering a new dragster. "l didn't give up," he said. By January of the next year Petersen was back on the racing circuit. It was painful, he admits, but he didn't t'Omplam. ''Once you've bought the farm, it's just nice to be all ve. "My wife's a pretty c>utstand- ing girl. She stayed at the hospital every day and helped me with my hand therapy. She never once-ttmplained about me- going back." Petersen didn't consider quit- ting untU last fall when his wife, who stays home in Washington while be is traveling, told him that every lime he left home she wondered i£ she would ever see him again. To allay his family's fears, he decided to quit driving this year. A,rlother accident in June made rkirement come sooner than be expected. SECOND TIME "That was the second time around -somebody must be try- ing lo tell me something," he conceded. Petersen Is not out or the rac- ing game altogether, ~owever. He continues traveling the circuit with his car <now driven by Rob Bruins.) He was in Orange County last week for the final race of the Olympia PDA Champio~hip series. 1 Petersen's unwUlinaness to stay out of the-driver's seat after his accident ls typical or the breed of men <a nd women > who race for a living. Tota) love of the sport and the thrill of driving al speeds of more than 200 mph in six seconds keeps them going. It's a IO\'e that begins at an early age .. ''I've been tinkering with cars since l was 13," said Petersen who drove top fuel dragsters nine ·women· Cadets . I 'Doing Super WEST POINT. N.Y. <AP > -The first wome~ cadets at ~he U.S. Military Academy labored through the dust in competlt1~e races and trudged along with full packs as they began their rourth week of trainlnft. Their day had begun at dawn and ended 16"2 hours later. With three weeks ot training behind the!'1 , they toiled sl~e­ by-side with the men, adding the high pitches of feminine cheering for the first time In 174 years or the bass tones of men urgtnic each other on. "They're doing super," Col. Arvid E. West Jr., com- mander of cadet basic training, commented as the women went through the ordeal that the cadet corps calls "beast bar- racks" of the 119 women who entered the U.S. M llitary Aca.demy on July 7, 107 remain. Of the 1.366 men, l ,290 h~ve stuck 1t out. Officials say proportions of attrition are about right. "They're very determined," West said, adding tha~ some of them won't heed warnings.to skip some or the acllvllles for their health -tor example, because of blisters, pulled muscles or the heal exhaustion that affects cadets ol both sexes. "Their attitude is such that we have to be up to date on what they're excused from doing,'' he sajd. "We have lo pro- tect them from themselves." . The women's enthusiasm was evident from the v~gor with which they threw lbelMClves Into rel.ay races carrying other cadets over their shoulders, a combat1ve obstacle course, run- ning in cadence and digging into. ollve-gret!n cans of the Army's infamous. cold, greasy C-rat1ons. • "(love it here," said Cadet Kath~rlne Goodlan~. of Ames. Iowa after nne practice. "ll's so different, and I m always busy' and J feel secure. There are so many people ar°'!nd, and I feei like we're all a team ... I just feel better than I ve ever felt In my life." . "It's a rough road to travel, but evU?:bodY here can do tl. and we're out to show the world we can, added Joy Tre.nl of naptarr. ,_."' One cadet who found it tough going was Kathy McC., w.•Y ol North Andover. Mass. . "Overall the training has been a htUe harder than I ex- perted, but I can see that a lot of good is going to be co~g out of It," she said, adding that the hardest part was running and doing push·ups. · ti · Maj. Alfred Rushat, director of physical educa on tra10- ing, said the main problem for the women was getting used to new activities and equipment like com~at boots. . .. , ") think the women are doin1 fine, Rusbat said. They re exceeding the expectations." . But a number ol males think they're doin& fine at the ex· pense of a tr a<Utlon ol physical punisllment ud emotJonal pre- ' ssur~-That pressure Is West Point," Cadet Steven ~!and of J...onaview, Tex .. rem1rked. "And I wanttbatpressure. .. years. "It's in my blood, H ever I had an' opportunity to quit it was in 1973. .il've quit driving now, but more forthe peace of-mind of m famUy." f'UNNVCARS Russell Long or Mission Viejo at 24, is one of the youngest "fun- ny ur" drivers in the business. 'Funny car is the nickname for dragsters with s tock car fiberglass bodies. He drove his "Chi Town Hustler " at the raceway over the weekend. He saw his rirst funny car race when he was 14 . "Ever since that •day I loved them." He was a driver at 19. Lo~. like other full -time raafs, travels seven months out o( the year. hitting 70 races and logging nearly 100,000 miles. Traveling with a mechanic and two helpers, they usually drive day and night to reach their destinations,, "It ·s a rough li£e," he said, "There 's a lot of work, miles and effort put Into it. 'TIMEOFF ·•Bul we get time olf. We get to play." When he's borne, he said, he just rests and tri~ to rlg\rl'e out why he does it. "I'm not real- ly sure. I keep asking myself." He thought for a moment. "It's the thrill of driving the car. It's the excitement. It would be hard to go rrom doing something like that t.o being a gardener. Mainly we're modern day gypsies. You have to like to travel or you couldn't do it." Long's mother, Marjorie, said she notit'ed her son's love of speed and excitement when he was eight. "I tried to pull him away from that. element.'· $he. said. "l had my own opinion of what racing was. But I knew it was inevita- ble." When the day came for her to sign for his li<'ense. she signed. She feels a woman should "never prevent the men in her life from doing what they feel they need to so." Because o( her son's im'Olve· ment in racing, she felt it was necessary for her to become a part of it too. PIT EXCITEMENT "I met the people. They're some of the finest people I have ever known .'' S he added , "There's the greatest excitement in the pits. ··when It's time ror the race I'm terrified. After, I'm proud and excited. 'There is a thrill about it you can't deny. I guess. in a capsule, I feel pride and fear." More than fear, Long said, he feels buttermes in ·his stomach be~ara.ce.... "It's the excitement, not being sure exactly what's going to hap- pen. When your car does well you feel you did well. When it does poorly you work harder next week to make it run better." While the average driver may earn $15,20.000 a year and a top driver will make more than $100,000, it is becoming extreme- ly more difficult for someone to get started. Two of West Point's new women cadets participate in gruelling field exercises. Afterward one said, 'Everybody here can do it.' J • • ,• BEA ANDERSON, !dttor Monday, August 2, 1976 , r 81 .... • Three years ago Herm Petersen's dragster burst into flames, left, after his rear axle broke. Fifty percent of his body was burned. But Petersen was back in the driver's seat six months later. Herm Petersen Petersen said when he began in 1968 it cost $8,000 for bis car. To- day ll may-t'!lke $25,000. - Despite the hard work <it can take ~ hours of engine work for 36 seconds of u eing->. living out ol a suJtcase and the possibili ty of disfiguring injuries and death, it is a way of life that few who are in it are willing to give up. . ''Not many people can have the t ype of Jlfe we Jive," said Petersen. "A lot of people pro- Title IX Survey i, I bably would like to travel aroundl the country, but never will be1 able to.'' J • When Long Is racing in Orange County some or his former high school pals come by to watch. Many are settled down with jobs, wives and families. While they-might envy his life ot excitement and travel, both Long and Petersen agreed dra~­ ing .a weekly pay ~heck arli working an 8-5 Job as oot C&- them. I "I Schools Pass By JO OLSON Off .. o.11,Pl•SUtt No person .•. shall, on the f>aN of au, be ttclu.ded from participation tn. be denied th~ ~· of, "' be tubjttted to diactimblatioft under <ml/ tducation program or.activity receiving F~dttal financial .as- 11atcnce. Title IX of the' Education Amendments of 1972, with thesE provisions, has been in effect for a year now and school districts throughout Orange County are scurrying to comply with all the requlremenll. To see how far educational in- slltutlona in the county have come. the Commission on the Status of Women conducted a survey of all local schools. The poll was carried out in con· junction wllh the State Com- mission on the Status of Women and findings for the whole stale will be tabulated. The three-member committee checkln1 county schools f~nd some surprises Jn Ill invesu1a· tion.&. I • At one school in Fullerton, ror example, boys had priority \lie of both their own and the Jirls' aym before TiUe IX. Now, the girls have rint choice at their faeUlty. In ID An1heim district., I IJ'OUP o( mothers was worried that rest rooms would become coed under the new reaulltions. According to the survey chairman, Lynn Osen, almost all the Title IX coordinalon in the county ll'e male. "One possible explanation may be the em· pllu'ls given TIUe IX's Impact on pbalcal education," she said. IPO&TS PROGRAMS "Actually this is only a minor part of the bill. but some distriC!ls seem more worried about aporta prosrams than about acldemlc chan1es." 'nae basic principles d TlUe lX cover admission and recruitment for vouUonal scbocil, aln&le·llft scMcJls, treatment c:A prepant students, student servtcee, ex- \ tracurrlcular activities, codes of conduct, honors and awards, employ men~ practices, let· tbooks and other areas. Schools are required to appoldt a coordinator and publiclJ.e \Qt penon's name, notlfy all Stu· dents and employees that ~t does not discriminate OQ the buls of sex, develop a grleva~ procedure for resolving pro· blems 1nd conduct a self· evaluation or all cWTent policies, practices and programs. •. The reaulaUons also speelfy th1t schools mu1t make speelftc: plans to modify any policies nOt meeting the requirement.I, pre.' pare a report which outlines steps taken or a timetable for future changes and me the report with the Office or Civil Rights of the Department or Heattn. Education ind Welfare. In the local survey, two un. lverallles, six community col- le1ea and 29 school district.a were contacted. • M) COORDINATOll ' Only one 1chool dlstrlc~. Cypreu, did not have • coordinator but was in the~ cesa ot fllllnl the poalt.lon. Jn all schools, penonnel btd been not.lrled, a grievance cedure established, a sel evaluation conducted and pl reported. : Only four or the communit coUecea and Ute two unheralti had rued reports with the Dep ment of He1lth, EduutJon Welf1re, however . The committee allO compar the number of men and women teach.Ina po11uJons 1n the coa•·•a and univenlUea and found th ·men outnumbered women by · IUlh •• SI percent on BOme :t pUMI. • "We found that a lot c:A IC had complied to the lett.r of ~ law but not the 1plrlt.'' Ms. OM6 nkl. "We ••e, on tbe wbal1 very pleased with what 1t 1ound." ,. (8eeTITLE,Pa1eBZ) I I o , DAILY PILOT Monday.August 2. 1976 ~Ann Landers ~ 11 Excuse Blasted , l DEAR ANN LANDERS : I'd like to say something to tbe llrl who is e.-gaged to the French Jbcm player. She was unhappy 1becaun he reru.aed to kiss her ;tald it would damage his lips and I llae needed to take care of them I because that was his only means makin{C a living. The guy ls pulling a fast one. 1t doesn't want to kiss his gi rl +there's got to be another reason. i know because I'm a French horn player who has played with a great symphony orchestra and l,'ve als<? done a Jot of kissing. J\ty lips are m great shape. What's more I 've been married over a year lo a wonderful gal who plays the tuba. Neither one '!us worries about our lips -we ,Just love each other like crazy •nd have one heckofagoodtime. The only way kissing could J>OSSibly hurt the guy's career is if he spends so much time kiss· ing it interferes with his practice. ~PUCKE RED UP IN ILUNOlS DEAR P UCK: Hlllldreds or musicJus wrote to clobber that Preach hora player. Each oae Hid the fellow was ran ot hot air -so blow U out YOW' French horn, Buster. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I desperately need your advice on insomnia. It it bothered me only 11 couple of times a week I wouldn't com pl air\, but in the last four years J haven't had more than five good nights' sleep. Usually, I dore-ott;rt hr.m. and l'm up to watch the sun rise through the curtains. The trouble is we live in a v.·orld where most work begins in the morning. In my case I'm .a s tudent whose classes generally slurt at 9 a.m . J Horoscope I've had thjs problem for six yea.rs. It started when my father died. I have no energy and always letl run do••n. My career In athletics <high school and col- lege> bas been ruined. I 've tried everything J can think of -prescription drugs <sometimes they work a nd sometimes they don't, other times they work too well> a psychologist. selr-hypnosis, ~nd enough home remedies to fill a book. I'm so desperate I'm will· ing to try anything. P1ease help me. -SLEEPLESS DEAR SLEEPLESS: Your problem woa 't be foaDCI la a dntgl&ore or a home remedy. YOll mast leua WHY yoa cauot sleep. Tbe ~lue Is your father's death. \'ou aeed a better psychologist or a Oterapls& who will hefp you get to tile root of the problem. losomn.Ja ls only the symptom. DEAR ANN LANDERS : Please forgive this cnammy note P!lper but I can't wrut until l buy rucer stuff to thank you for that Confidential that appeared at the bottom of your column. Although it wasn't a personal reply t.o me I had the same pro- blem and sent my husband out that same day to buy the book you recommended for people· Who are afraid to leave their homes and mingle with crowds. "Peace From Nervous Surfer· ing" by Dr. Claire Weekes changed my life. I feel like a new pel'1Ql)Jt ~d for me what no doc· tor could do, and I went to several. Please, Ann. recom· mend it again. -ELATED IN EVANSTON DEAR E.: Already I've re· celved at least st letters raving about that book. Thanks to aJI who wrote. 1 Leo.: More Joy TVESDAV,AUGUST3 1 By SYDNEY OMA.RR ARIES (March 21-April 19): Money. emotional involvements. the locating of lost objects -- ·these form part or a meaningful monta~e. Older individual lends benefit or financial expe'rience. .T~URlJS <April »May 20 1: F1rus'1 rather than initiate pro- 1ect. Concentrate on better com· munications, display and dis· trlbution. · GEMINI CMay 21-June 20>: New approach to work. health, recreation, basic drives is essen- tial. Som eooe comes into your life with sunshine, brightness. Key is to a ccept, to throw off dark depression. From 81 . . . Title -r:,t• sur\'ey. which was con- ducted in rooperation with the county department of education, also revealed that many teachers ore not aware of the provisions of Tille IX J>ut Indicated an interest in having workshops explaining It. The picture will be different next year , Ms. Osen added. because of hiring done ln the spr· Ing which was not reflected In the poll. "\Ve were very unhappy with the balance of sexes on the col· , lege staffs." she said. "But this is the important year. By this lime n<?xt ycnr there will be more women." Committee members assistin~ i were Minn a Van TU burg and l . Pauline Rangel. . . ·Calendar CANCER (June 21-July 22>: You feel, perceive -you learn who cares, who has your best in- terests at heart. Some surprises are in store -but truth is better and will make you stronE?. LEO <July 23·Aug. 22J: More joy occurs at home er within family circle. Activity, com-munication and travel are featured. ' VlllGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22>: Ac- cent on relatives, neighbors. Ideas become viable concepts. Means don't nit from one subject to another -get thoughts on paper. LIBRA <Sept. 23·0ct. 22): Em· phasis on income, valuables, col· lections and payments. If percep- tive, you gain. JI careless, you pay a price. The choice is your own. SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21 >: Lunar cycle is such that you get results: more authonty and addi· tional compensation. Highlight self-interest and esteem. SAGITFARIVS <Nov. 22-Dec, 21 J: Activity indicated in connec· lion with group, organization, hospital. You gain by being quiet within -and by betng discreet. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 19 I: You get what you want-but there is a price. Know It and pr~ pare accordingly. Older in- dividual is involved. Your posi· tJon is enhanced. AQUARIUS <Jan. 2Q.fo'eb. 18): Accent on advancement, ability to visualize, lo graph.ically il- lustrate m eanings, intentions. Professional superior is on your side and proves it. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20J : You are able to see beyond the immediate. Trust your own reel· lngs. Insist on independence - you have right to create, to ex· Press, to get to ~eartotmatte~ Awards Presented LIBRAR\' AWARD: The Santiago Sys tem <a cooperati"t' t'ffort of nine county public libraries> : bas received a John Cot· ton Dana Award ror its program of captioned films for the deaf. •• It was one o f six ·Southern California CALIFORNIA PRESS WOMEN: Linda Kuhn of Newport Beach has pre· sented the Barbara Richards Memorial Schol arshlp for 1976. She is n graduate of Newport Harbor Hi~h School, served as editor· in·chief of the school new s paper. was a member or Quill and Scroll and the California Scholastic Press Associa· tion a nd was president ol the Journalism Club. Mrs. Peggy Cotton wiJJ head the organization's Orange County District. I libraries cited for stimulating community interest. ~;;;;;;;;;;;o;;o;;;t;;;c;~;;;;;;;;;;oo;oo;;oo;09 The award will be pre· f sented during a luncheon , Wednesday, Aug. 4. in 1 Marmac's r estaurant, , Garden Grove. . During the luncheon : representatives from the • award-winning librates : will discuss their prO. i trams and services, with ~ , Ora n ge Co unt y ~ Librarian Harry M. Rowe Jr. as moderatot. Entrtes for the 31st {<fontest were received Crom aJI over the W<X'ld and winners included Tf;RRA AWARD WINNING HAIR DESIGNER H;wr:uts Include • ac11n1tfic hoir 1m•tysi1 • propttr conditioner • precision haircut • blowdry NEWPdRTER INN NEWPO RT BEACH Australian and Korean libraries. 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I I IOOMER by W& F. •owa md Mel CasS011 ~.ou> IUOPt. ~ ~"'"".....­ ~t. fet05. aJ1' ~ ~ ftAt.b' ~ 1\L f 11' iiJ alfT~ ~ Llft6M.tt AJA,lr » 60 OH A s.>tNG· ING ~Wt·CI( OJU(eNO a>mt NC-7 RIMILEWEEDS FUMkY WINIEUEAM ~ 101lE5E ROCK ~5 I& ~AlLQG€mNG 10 BE A ~ wrrn ~E5E 1E£NC.>SOPPER5 CRA<.t.lU~ AU. OOER 1HE PLACE! ·!TANK McNAMARA ~ !'M ~IN eA%5A1.L FllR M{ i.\f.AL.rn WJIC A ~,A~ 1Jiy ~ .. NANCY TDDAT'S CllSSRID PVllLI UNITED Feature Syndicate S1tu•c1ay·1 Puuit Sol~•d I~ JQ '" Jt > ,S TIA I& I~ rq IA lb 0 R f ~ ",.It I• Ill\ .. ' .. .. 1M IT 1g IT 1.a :: Ill.IL ~ R I '" LI m ' " ,, ,. ·"I',. ~ c ~ ~ A t -~•£111 l ~ ll , .. "I~ ll>l>-•1l. R ' R I S T ,1y 1r1n-) u I' 1•1l> ..... Q u ,, ll ,. --1111 '~ • s S T ( ( ll -• s , l I ~ . l 0 alPIOll " I 0 IS I ~ l I 'rnro1c ll R U S •I a7tr S II!( If l A " £ ID I --- ACROSS 45 Spread abroad t Omit 481nna 6 Bano111der 50 Me<chand1s ····Fields 1ng event 9 • •••• In the 5 1 Quebec dark genlnaul11 t" Army clus· 5• Seu Ille 1llcahon 58 P81'1nsylva· T 5 Inner n11• 2 HIOll~s wOlds laland 62 N1t11111l gill 16 Bytentlne 63 Brulet Emo 6• R1H1no 2 d1v111on words 11 "In1119 beat 66 "C.troll • nem 35 Cla". at11tf ol ••• ·-····· ch1r1ct111 .. ' t9M1n ··-· 67 Sorlol 9Corrobol convetsion combat tr19hlllfl1t1g 11es 36 Flt0 • C:Olll 20 Bil>ltell 88 FOlmll tO Malle 40 Ou11rel b,,efer 43 Ignore dlMrt ooem 1 1 Hall Prell• 44 Spectacles rnhng 89 l r111 runs I<' Arabian sea 46 Escaoe lror11 Place 70 Loauld gull • 7 Sornd new 2 1 Cne11sllng sediment '3 Acrid taste seed 23lUfelnlo 7104ePrlUIOll ISCh•Cl""!l •9Super,et dll\Qel .. -died 25 Banauel OOWN 11irp0tl 52 Hin 22 Owns rudely 26 Auto race , Oull hn1sh 24 FOlmll 53 Upper 1,1 28 01u111t: 2 Oea Mo111e1 agreement 55 Heavy bloW 32 ~~0.,,, 2 resident 27 Prod 56 FlfSI us S.R 3 (Quine 20 Lerge p<tl'Ner WOtd• n011• amounls: 57 S1111dwlo • l ' l i f byTomK.Rycm by T °"' latiuk PAUL! IT'S ME A\ULf by Ernie Bushmiler ,· ~.:~::..:.~r: Tl-IE LAST ilME I WAS C»I THIS DOCK '(OIJ Pl9lED ME INTO THE ~TEil SECAl.ISE I CALLED '<OO"LAMSCAKE" 37 Tri pping 4 "···{!· / Informal 58 Outer delliee F'oll : 30 Can ado· c~er1110 38 Aclreu ••• Ala , t u 5 11119 59 Wintoo look 39 ~a°"n 0':" 5 ••• Winslon 3 1 convtyB!lce 60 Scleotiflc MISS PEACH Churchill dOCumenl sullll! brHS! 8 Kind ol OAk Jl' Meal dtSll 61 Clay p1pe Myth. 7 The ··· 33 On 100 ot land "PHUWl'f ine road 4 2 Ovtfchar-: 34 Reo1111en1 c. 6S Omllillg mug "" 8 Ar!il;c1ot division of old sceno Monday. August 2, 1976 DOOLEY'S WORLD MMMM •• JJJJ U(r ' GORDO MOONMUWNS by Ferd Johnson ·. .,,,. .... ,.. ...... M-- ALL Rl~~T !.' WMoiH~EW MY C>OG AWAY?? rr-..-- ANIMAL CRACKERS I CAt-.1 Pt.AN ACTIUITIES ~C~ Tt-EMOOT AT A NICE,~~D, NO- ~~e.. THE GIRLS ,, { ' ---· ... &2. "Bui. Ra.lph, you're not !IUPP<>!led 10 ertjoy museumb, you're )m supposed 10 get them out oflhe way," by Mel DEMMIS THE MENACE ' .. .'IV Bigbllghts NBC e 1:00-Comedy Theater. Two pilot rums for proposed lfties are shown -"'The Cheerlnden" about three high · achool fdrl1 in tbe19* and "Full House" about the pana. ol middle-a8ed divorce. ~ 9 8.:00 -"llow to Save a Mar-riqe. Dean Martin and Stella Stevens are paired in this 1988 comedy. CBS .• 11 ::.> -"Father's Little Dividend.'' This 1951 sequel to the bit · movie .. Father ot' the tsn<Se" reatures Spencl er Tracy, Elizabeth Taylor, Don 't"aylcr and Joan BeMctt. . \ I ) l • •I' • I TV. DAILY -LOG I ~..._-------------------------------') 1 1 MONDAY I (If) Glooa's 7C llou<·a d'Y job as a -moll1rr dotslt t lure m11Ch ltmt IOI llhkt. wllo s teehnr thr p.Jrt ot tile r-"""!!!~~ ...... ----ntitectrd and unlo~rd h~nd. I •VUING G 0 G lte ftfrester ··Tiit Promised Lind" (ll) A rovnc COllple 8:00 • <Ill (I). (f) Cit .... e ow••1tws . .....,, (l)f..ii,Nteir ....... -~,...., ...... ll Qt)flltlllllMen •z..t jll~'"' QI lliOt ... NII Coftt'd ftOlll SJ .:.~· . ~ ...... ._. -5:30- • 01 .. .i Dinah's &uuls art Chiles NtlJon Rt1lly, Rrcha rd Tllolll~ hwy!I ThOllllS. "•laht Cole alld Siiiy KtlltrNn. (I) .... Criffia . (ltMerwWfiltSlll!f .,..., .... .... m (!1J CJ) ..... S*ln •Ollnllrr ............. 7:00 ••o oo .... .......... """ Cl) ...... ft Tel tilt Trwtll Bc..c.tfltiee •ILM llcy •tMFll lfll CD 121~ •e111t•r...., ...... kleil..,.,. (ill ())) .....,, • .,....Seritt ...... ,,.,, -7:l0- ........... hndoft111 QfliA•"C hrtlt" MriA Ptr•1ns •nd Jim fa-Irr t •Jlloft Ille Oketfeno•tt jllft(le SWJmps HI CtofCI'. • Diel ,. °"' ...... ~ {~ en....,.,., l ,,Ol l'r1ct ........ . .,.,._. Q~ c .. ..,. ........ ID Cll....i 21 TlllisM A ntw s.entt• l rJ -. 1114 Pilbllc 1ftm PloCfl m· t IMC-"OM• Soctttits'' IS 101111hl's f prtstftljflOll-a dotumtntar, on ho• illtlal dlup eet hOlll Meuco into the I · Untltd Slates. 8:00 • (flJ Q) ..... (A) Rhoda and Jiit decode Ille Oftfy •• , '"''CIA ~nd m«e l1111t lottllttr Is to b1.1· 11t1de llltmseM1 In the11 1p1rtmtnl and not admit ·any vts1I01S. 8 IZ.SI (() Cll1 • C-4t Tiit•· ltf: Mfllt C.t1tl4t11" Kathlten Cody, Debbie l1pp and hreu Mcdaris portray 1 1110 ot cheerludtls-tflt best of f11ends- wllo 11111St undtreo ' M11ts of uny and tlllbltmlll& tplSOdu when they are llitdltll to tll• most "1n" 111rs club al 111111 111111 school. "hll *-" llttl MMS and l11111 D.11111 star Ill llltl donltslic ~ Ht at lht hN of a couple's 40lll 111111Vt1S· ary d!lllltf ctltbrahOll wlltn, •nt•· ptclt'11. l~•r 111110111<e to lh ~vtltd lalll!ly tlltlf plfllS to dwofce. • Mt* (C) (JIW) ........ (Kl• 111 '61-MdMI Go.&11. Mllcv Jollns. ,., ... (C) ......... " lJt" (cka) 'f>9-lt11a '"'"'·.loll• c.. .... e (8 ) OI Yiu W1l411 • M1m1 Ooet11'r <~ ~ V"6tt IOfS Oii slllh lot ~Ml r~s 9llt11 lltt llusballd 1tl11Sn ..to '"''"' a WONR'S ltb lftttlltll ill ti.Ir home. e-.. cm (llw) .,._ti SM A llltrietl" (cot11) 'A-0.111 M11· '"'· Sltlll stMllS. • "" ..... & lln. .. .,..,,, ... fllP MIN: (lllt) "'-"'•It tf A ......_, .. (dra) '61-Vic Mo11ow. l tsltt Ptrrislt .... '"', ....... ,.., "first Nallonaf runls Ct1u"" Covt1111 al Ille INl1fs ol t~t J1n1Jn Ind doullles Mlltllts from lou1sv111t. Kttlhdy. ..... , .... .... 1.lllplct ,,..,,.. -1:»-• 0 (]) ()) PtlJtllt Phytlls ...... Nldioll .. Mdowllood ..... ""'al--Natlt ... 1114 CMtS .. ~ *" !fie ..... IHJ~,_.., ...... , ..... witll lltt ........ • (9 CJ)) • ......, ..... ..... ec...• ............... ... (C) (Nlw) """ ... tier" (dr1J '61-Pol 11ew1u11. ladle Cl'"°' l'ljler Lwit. 9t00 e <Ill CJ) (I). II .. ,_.. atttmpts to fi~d Ille solutlo!I to thett hnafl(llf piolltems in 1 hie ol mmt Janet M1reo1tn. Jofln lawftr and Ptter OeAl!d.t euest Clt llllM: CC) (ll!f) Mliilt -IN '911t11t" (dra) '61-Rod Ste1aer. V1'"1 Lisi .... ,.,;ntfM .. •lMVW&*tR • ClM UtlMllll ID Mlly AcrMK14t -9!30- • @ CJ) (j) ..... (II) Htnrv r onda ma-ts • rare televtS10n llH!SI IPPHrlnte. as h1mult. when ~udt c1«1dts ht is an odut candid1te for PteSidut ol the United SUtes and starl$ the ta'"Pltt" w1tflout ~'"'· m "''" • hlmttra . 10:00 8 <m IWlal Ctllttt (RJ A Sall flancrsco dinrc wt11ch eusls mostly tllroutft lht dtdiatoon ot its cb1ef nurse tS •n doubt ol cont111ua· llOll alttr I ttntefut polite offrGer plates 11 off·hm1ts fol ambulan« -·· D ltll (I) •Jieuw 1'1111 "fol low Ille Yellow 8'1C~ llCNd' (fl) A 11tterv al fllmt1nd losers and tht Pf1son1111r al lllt 1'1Gl1m herself 11e p~ts ol the puute which SJ John arid Oonntr Irr to pme toeelhtr alter the s11,1n1 of an asp111n1 ICflUS DD~ l'M Lott AllltriuR Style -10:30- (t ) *'...., Sllow ........ 11:00 •••a 1tws • Cl) (ifj 111' ()) ,._ •'-...... St,te (l )...,_.°""9 • illl9lllr. CC> M'*-It lirce" (com) 'Sl-011k 8o&arde. Mu11ef Pavlow • Miry Kltl!llH, Miry MINNR ew*'t (llJ ...,., {)t lesltl~ ., ... ,, .. ( 2:11 Cl)) Tr.ttl tr Celtstili11t11tu GJC....l4 -11:30- • Uli Oti CIS Lale .... : "flllllf's Ultle ·~ .. (cOl'I) 'Sl-$ptfl(tr ftacy, lhzabttll hyfol G H (l)Cl)D--.,c.... m m.a. • (cit) (IJ) ().!) ..... ,., llitllt . s,tcill "Doe$, ~fs & Othc1 fmpor• !ant People .. . """ .., Mcttlle'& ""' 12:00 • Int ti CrMllo m l:lrl '""' UflClE m llltN: CC) "A Wt17 rritatt Al· f1lr" (d11) '62-Nuullo MIS· t101ann1. 811dt1ll• Blrdot. -12:30-....... sa.: M.laliu," ·A .... CellM "*-·" ..,..... .. ...... DtMttAlftot 1:00 • 12~ m C\ll r-D Tllf ma.. 2100 e Mttft : CC> "Ahfu , Tun /ll'ftt" C•llw} '61-Hutll O'Bt;,n. -l:JO- -~ 4:00 ........ ..,, 4:30 ., ..... u, ....,, ........ ,.., ~ • .,. tlM ., ........ t:ll e "Stcreh tf Sct.lluf Td' (mys) 'U-lt0nel Atwill. "Tiit ....._." (ad'I) '48- llod CllMIOll, r orrtst r uthr 11:00. a:>"'"" (dr•) 'Sl-C.· ft Sit Y1111tll, llollefl Wil\tr Jr • n• •"Ste",.,,.. C«•) ·•2-'"* ,.,_, Ctllt Tierney • J:OI • "a.it " lMrt" (lff) '59-~ llooft a .... ,. •• • ....... ~,. Dtfftw (illrl) '56-0ana An drrws, ..... fOllfllllf . 2:3' • (1:) M... ltttill4 tllf Ct•" (•tS) '52-Randofpll Scott. '•lntt Wrtr«t. J:H "M11illtw Ower l'"'"" (sup) '68-J1111u franclSC'IS, Sltlllty k•itht J:•. (C) ..,.... "Nt" (XI It) '66-Ste,tleft 8ofd, KOCE Television (50) I • ---w "SWASH 1uc1ua•1PCJ1 , ....... ,. ... ATOI" "CHtNO" l,GJ • "ftGKTIMG MAD" Ill "KYltDHS" "SUIYIYI" Ill "aOllUO lllLL" THE CITY SHOHINC CENTRE OllAM•l ll'-1911 · 1'-' CITY CfHTlf CIMfMA\ ._ $.A fRWY !MANCHESTER £X.I G.G. ,_AWV CCITY OR. (X I "SUaYIYI" Ill "CHfNO• "A SMALL TOWN .. TUAS" "&4HYO"CNI 8)' Tiie Auoclated Preas · Wings (Capitol) The followinc are 5. YOU SHOULD BE BUlboard's hot r~d DANCING -Bee Gees hit.I for the weelc e nding t,.RSO, Auauat 7 as t.hey appear In ne"l week's Issue ol BUJboard maoline. HOT81NGLES TOPLPa 1. GEORGE BENSON -Breezl n • < W arnt-r Bros.J ' 4 · JEFFERSON' E~VLlSTENING STARSHIP -Spit.lire \. LET ·EM I N - (Gru.nt> Wings <Capitol > 5. NEIL DIAMOND -2. ANOTHER RAINY Beauliful Noise (Colum-DAY IN NEW. YORK - bia> Cbicago<Columbla> COUNTRY INGLES 3. I'D RtALLY LOVE 1. GOLDEN RING -TO SEE YOU TONlCllT George Jones & Tammy -Eneland Dan & John Wynette (Epic} Ford Coley < Big Tree) 2. SAY JT AGAIN -4. YOU'LL N EVER Don Williams t ABC·DotJ FIND ANOTHER LOVE 3. THE LETTER -L o u R M w I a Loretta Lynn & Conway IPbiladelphla lntcrna· Twitty lMCA> tionalJ 4. ·BRING IT ON 5. l'M EASY Keith Movi~ Pac& Loe Anaeles (AP> Unlvt'rsal Pictures bis signed a nve·pict .. recon- \racl with youn1 rilm makers Tobe Hoos>Wand Kim Henkel, who mode the aucceasrul "Texas Chain-sa w lihrden." llooper directed u.e rum and co·prodW'ed and co. wrote with Henkel. 'lbe youn1 Tex ans have a CGn· tract to write, pr~ an() direct. 1. DON 'T GO BREAKING MY HEART -Elton John & KUd Dee 2 . PE TER FRAMPTON - Frampton Comea Alive <A&M J HOME TOME -Mickey Carradine <ABC> Gilley c Playboy i --------------------5. ONE 01'' THESE CRocket> 2. LOVE IS ALIVE - Gary Wrig ht <Warner Bros.) 3 . MOONLIGHT FEELS RI GHT - Starbuck <PrlvateStockJ 4. LET ·EM IN THUTRES-ORANQE CO -GnZBISS1JI 50 COAST PLAZA SO COAST PLAZA "MYSTHtOUS MONsras·· ~, .... ., .. SO COAST PLAZ A MtUe .... --U.191 ....... .. MYSTRIOUS MONSTHS" hJf.llt .. -... .•• .. , ...... CINE MALAND , .. ., ................. , ... _.. . "Ut ...... .. llU>J, .... _,.,., .... . ....... , •• 1 ... .... --00 .......,_ ,..., '009001100 3:CHICAGO X <Colum· blaJ DAYS -Emmylou Harris (Reprise i Slf-•f to. COUT IU.IA -.. ~ .. , .... ,., .. --)-~ .. ._,,.....,.,,, WMJ' DISNEY . PAODUCT'ION5 -GUS [ SHOWM AT CR•r 'ALAMD COtn'. DAA.Y • l:JO.l:Ot .. .... t:OO r tlae IYSTERIOUS IOISTERS @ ........................ .._ SPECIAL LIMITED ENGAGEMENT NOW SHOWING! HURRY! LAST 2 DAYSI OltLY SUN COM!tllMENTARY 'AllEI ACCE,TID IW. CtstJ Mm 5415SZ fY. ~ H. 9&2-2411 st ~r PWA. C.M. 546·2711 m. F*t111 52S..747 ~ c~ 121-1• ,_ sa. ~n. LI Naei. &nall .. Ull, llf1111 137.-caau., wn 535-7681 ..._ Sal Cllllntt 492• Al-ClnitlS 924-5232 TISTll SIUI(, TISIM 544-1• .. , ........ rn 5f'H816 llSSlllOI, Seal leac• 4J8.1419 lfff'f. 39 lrht.fll. West. 5344212 ANAHEIM Drlve·ln Anal!M 525-3526 PUSSYCAT THEATRES PRESENT Al!o on the S11me Prr1gr1tm The Devil in Miss Jones Adults~ NoOM Und9r 11 AdlnMad r . ....._..._ ....... ~-·-.. _,,...._ ... , ·---·-clml ;lf.; f = =::::: ~-----..... -...... ~ .... -.,. .. _, .... ,._ .. , c&lluffwf ~; _, ... -.... .,.~, _,... __ ........ #llllWAY '"' --·-· IOOl1U COOIUIN 1N1 -----a.M'I -.......... lOIM'l IUH '"' OtOllN IUIYIYOll 1Nt QMllU- OUTLAW .tOllT WIUI l'lt c.Mll- NAID flMIS.., .-r .. ,_..._... °"'°''"' ---MOONIUNMPS "t ................ fMMmNO MAD flJ -· DtlTY MAIY CUIY lAllY .-1 -...c-•-tCAM """I Wllllf It It*", .. "I ,AUlZ-N YIUN •I I I • I ' 'I 'I : l . , ' ' I .. Trio Faced F ed eral Stock Fraud Charges PUBU C NOTICE ,ICflllOlllaUSINllU N4M« IT4TCMl'.NT "'"!':!"I0-'119 "'-••• oeil'O lllN· IC •11• IC It E N TA LS ~tS 1!<'9tw•l•t, 0411 .... , C.elll ~ .. I ' IC•-111 It. MIHIOf.t, ~I J-Cwwo,.. C.111 ""° • ".,...,.. I! "'""ft•. 4)11 J-CVWt11, Celll ~ • ' ltettll S. M wn9t" 011 Jt .. c.,.,"",c.111 *lO ' '"" ...,.i,..u " (-\Ktf<I l>'r • -·•I """"""'0 " ......... "· """"09' lhl1 " ... .,,., ...... 111..S ... , .. 1'• C.OU..1, "-rll ti OtMI~ COWftly on Jiiiy '9, ,., ... .. ,... Pullllf"-d o,.,,.., Cffsl Otlly ""IOC, Au9 1, t, 16, U , "" 1101-lt PUBLIC N011C£ "CTITIOUS aUSIHl'.SS NAMI'. UATl'.Ml'.lfT Tht IOl-•"9 por'°" fl dOlfl9 lloM ..,.~.,. Ml.MCLEAHING SEl\\lttt 1153 0.<1~0 SI , Coste Mot, Ct1lll0t1u916'6 lll<ll•rO Wt\lloy Lu•~ Jr. 7nl Dr•'• Ml, c.Jlt Mt,., Cefffomie9141' Thi• ~i...u h c,onc!IKIA!d by.., '" Cll\lidlttl. ltlc"WdW. Lusk Jr, 'T!li\ \lel-t\I WH Ille.I tlftU'I 11\11 COU<lly ""°• tf Ottn,. c_.,"" July "· ,., .. l'MUI Pu4111JllH OrM1911 Co•tl °"'" l'llOI, ""'· >. '· It., u. "" ~11 •ICTITIOUI I USINESS "AM& •T&Tl'.Ml'.MT TN ...... 1 .. ptrson I~ clOlf\9 Mj, ... UH: • lt054!V'S •vro eoov. m '" -lri .. W•Y, C°'le Mne .,.V. ROMll• T Snowllt~r, 107' -"II A,,. .c.tuoMtw9'~•. • Thi\ lllf>ln•n I\ <Olld..C led l>y Ml lft dM.-..i, R-11• l . Sllow•lter Thi\ 1111tmt nt w•• llh!d wllll lht Co\H\I• Clerk ol Or.•ne-C°""'y °" Jiiiy u ,1•1 .. ,._ Put>ll\110<1 Or~ C.0.\1 o.11~ Pllo4. J iiiy "·a.. •llCI 4'"9\Kll, t , lt1' JW0.1• P UBLIC NOTICE t'r~m AP Obpakbtt Three associates of the late Howard Hushet have received 11 reprie\·e from lmmedh1lc pr06ecu· tion on federal stock r.-aud charges. The U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals said there will be no turtbtr action on the case pending a review by the U.S. SuprernL>Court. Hughes, Cbes&tt Davia, Jlobtrt Maheu and David Charaay were charged 1l\ 1974 with stock manlpulatlon tn tbc purchase by Huche11 of A.ir West. ln 1968. • Someone s tole a gold necklace from the Chicago hotel room of actress EUeea ll~kart while s he was appearing in the one-woman play, "Eleanor," based onthelifeof EleaDOr Roo.-eYelt. MlSs Heck1nt said \he necklace "would ha\'e no \'alue to anyone else. IC you melt~ it down the gold , wOQJdn'l be worth more than $300." She said It contained some 40 to 50 charms commemorating every play s he has appeared in since her first appearance Broadway more than 20 years ago. 'Miss Heckart said h er husband, Juk Yankee, a New Canaan, Conn.. insurance ex- t1rcu1tT • • ecutive, gave her the necklace. • Columnist Earl WUsoo moved in court to dis· miss the SJ-million damage s uit brought against t\im by Frank Sinatra. Sinatra's suit filed in May is the singer 's r esponse to Wilson's book -"Sinatra: an Unauthorized Biography.'' Although the best-selling book is described in the suit as "favorable and complimen· tary" to Sinatra, the singer al- leges the book represented un- fair competition_ lQ.Ju)_autobio- graphy he Intends to write. Wilson's affidavit said the singer 's <'laim to exclusi\'e use of facts about himself 1s counter to the constitutional right of freedom of the press. • WIL$0N U.S. Supre me Court Jus t ice Thur good ~larsball, who suffered a heart attack last m onth. plans to be back at work full time when the court reconvenes Oct. 4 after its summer recess, a ~spokesman said. Marshall expects to return to work in bis chambers part· ~CTJt1ounus.Ness time in the'm iddle of August and MA11111uru•11111uT full time in mid-September. ,..;~:0110·• .. r>v """''"'•re CIOi"9 °"'' M a rs h a 11 . 6 8. was a I OVlAN APARTMENTS, Jlt hospitalized July 4 after what H•m•11.,.., Go•••"""'"· c.•1110m1• was des<'ri bed as a mild heart M•1• Lemlle•t. )J'1 r1t\lln A••nw, N''""°'' nu'"· c.11101n« attack. lie rc•turncd home re-~..o MAltSMALL I • L-n· ,,. L<>mo.r1. 1"'1 n1111,, cent y to continue recuperation. A11tn~. ""''"°'' 8ucll, C<llilonll• ~-----------~ '"'' ..,,,,,._. " con<N<t•d bv .., 1.,. .,......... 1-----------PUBLIC NOTICE "J don't think the boys are going to t'are what we're doing iso long as we'rt' there." says Miss Georgia, ~eva CelHte Day, u she prtpued for the 10th an· nual Ml~s Amerlco·l SO show tour. Miss D D)'. n ve other 11tnte pageant que e n11 und l\ti ss America. 20-yr -old Tawny GocUn of Yonkers. N. Y .• lcuvl' today on the month l<>ni; tour to American military bases tn Germany, Crete. <;n .. ~ec, ltnly, 0001.. "' Turkey and Ethiopia. 'They'lfreturn to AUantic City in rime to do a bit on the final nigh\ ol the N.i11s America Pageant. Sept. 11. • Ronald Coaway is resigning his 1)ost on the Quiet Waters Atherton City Council, complaining he can'\ afford lolivethere any more. Joseph Campugnola of Seal Beach is man a t the oars in this Conway. 25, told the councU he wants to gel Pageant of The Mas ters r ecreation of watercolor "Adironark married and he andhisfinancec can't afford housing Guide" by Winslow Homer. Famed s how is held nightly in Irvine in Atherton, a wealthy community 3Smlles south of Bowl amphitheater during six-week run of ft~cstival of Arts in } San Francisco. Conway lives in his mother's house. ile said he Lagun a Beach. It continues through Aug. 29 w1lb feslivaJ grounds and Gayle Bersaclieri will move to a t.ownhouse in open daily from noon to 11: ~ p. m . l neighboring Menlo Park after they marry Aug. 14. -----------------------------• The race for sheriff of Mari('opu County. Arl1., N s s has spread to San Diego, where Barket Hickox 0 oap, ays spent $1, 700 for a billboard. Hickox said the ad is designed to <'alch the at· tention of Phoenix resi· dents returning home(r---------) R d• w •1 rrom vacations in San PEOPLE 3 10 rl er Diego on Interstate 8. _ .. "I thought it was· a • - good way for people re- turning to Arizona to focus on the problems we have in the sheriff's oHice," Hickox sajd. The Most Rev. Joseplt L. Bernadln, archbishop of Cincinnati, will receive the Frunc1sran Peare Award Friday during a special liturgy at the 41st In- ternational Eucharistic Congress in Philadelphia. The archbishop is the president of the National Conference or Catholic Bishops a nd lhc U.S. Catholic Conference. Previous award winners include Pope Paul VI; M~r Tereu of Calcutta, India, and the Most Rev. Dom Helder Camara, archbishop of Olinda- Receife, Brazil. • Dunsmuir in Northern California los t its serond-largest payroll because or the s tate's old an- ti-sweatshop r egulations, says the owner of a leather garments business. Bill Morgan's firm. the Dunsmuir Lcuther Works. used to farm out piecework that went into fancy leather clot.hes worn by such entertainers as Elvis Presley, Gle-n Campbell :ind Rlcky Nelson. SAN FRANCISCO CAPI -The name Carllon K. Morse never was a hou.sehold word, but his brainchild, ··one Man's Family." once poured from radLos and televisions into millions or Ame~ican homes across thrt?(' decades. lle also wrote the popular "l Love a M>•stery" series. AJthough Morse, 75. concedes that the populor •·0ne Man's t'umily" may ha\'e been the forE>ru11 ner of the soap opera, he bristles when the tl'rm is used to describe his show. "THE l"IRST THING YOU must learn is lhat 'One Man's Family' was not a soap opera." he said during an interview at his home in Woodside, south or San Francisoco. "It was a dramatic family show . Soop operas are written by hack writers." he said derisively. ··Ttiey havt-no characterization or plot. "Until 'One man's family' there was no such thinJ.! as a family s how." Morst• s:ud. Arter we came on. e\•erybody had to have ont" That·s \\hen 'he soap operas rame about." "One Man's f'omil~" ·· which ran on radio from l:J32 to 1959 -the 1 ast five years also on television was the longest running serial drama in America n radio. Cops S a y -, ..J Cle mente Crime Off ~-1· •• !l ) Serious crill'le in San ,l< Clemente the first six months or th is year deer.eased 13 pe rcent compared to the same period l:ist year. ti<'<:Or(I m~ to 1>0l1ce records. By far the g reat('St dtf· ,., fcre nce was in tht• nu mber or burglaries down 30.3 percent with 188 com milte d January through June u compared t o 270 last •• year. Bur ~lar~ took home a reported $119,585 , worth of loot less thon the previous year . ., POLIC E CH I EF l Ml'lvin A. Portner nt · tributed the difference lo , a n experimcntul burglary prevention pro-n gram In which a n orricer speaks lo civic organiza- tions and private citiiens about anti -burglary W•-l•mb<'rl l'ICTITIOVS 8USINESS Tl\I\ "•ltnwn1 '"" 111"1 Wll!I '"" NAME STA TIMI NT Fro• Pa.-AJ OC Fair Winners Named It told th<' s tory or San F'ran· cis<'o s tockhroker He nry Barbour. his wife llaicl and five children -PauJ, Hazel, Claudia, CUffandJack. methods. l The progrnm goes full -( Covn1• Clt•k Of 9ftn99 CA<Hlly on JUiy '"°' ,.,'°'"'"9 "'"'°" t> -0 NII· '· "' ....... "'-OlBRA \ NEWPORT "1Lt>GI! """'1tMct °'"""' Co;nl ~Ir"''°'· INT £RIOR~. ••0• N~ .. po•I 81\td., I Jvly 11.1•.1•.•nd 4uo 1, 191t ~It c.o•t~ Mf'••· c• •1•11, r.1: nu1 ~)Oil'} O..bt I ( Alll'n 1011 W1111~ Selll P UBLIC NOTICE W•Y C.OraM Otl ""''· '-"· '11"1S, hi ___________ , .,, ...... ·:~· S·2Ull "'" ti.."""" " c""OU( led DY •n ,,,. ltOTICI TO CltlOITOllS <IMOV{OI Ho. A·e71M 1>1'11• 'f' All~n ~u,.e111011cou1tTol'TMI thll "'"""'''"' "'"' '''"" ..,.,h 1"" HATI 01' CAL.,OltNIAFOll Cou"t" Clor~ 01 0'""<1~ Countv on Jwlv T Ml CCW,.T V 01' OllANGI ~. m._ In'"° Motl•• ol the E•l•l•OI OA\110 f'~tt OCl<OA OVAOERRAMA, Oe<N""'-Pltbfl•ll.-d °'*"1W Co~~I O,,ltv Plfol, N11ltt• I\ lll:r•l>Y olvon 10 (100.IOO AilO 1, •. ·~. :J. "" Jl'OO I• l\.••lnQ ""',,., ~031n\I tlle wk! lk'<t """'lo ht• Wei •1•Jmt In llNt off>ct Of PUBLIC NOTICE INI cl .. ~ ol I,.. ••ottWhl court °' to P't~ !MM to I~ v-r\l_.t •I'"" ----------- Ofll(I ol BEN WAlll'•"'"• Allomey •I u ... U2JJ\ltnlllfl 81•4 .. In UWC.•Yol 5Mr""'110.k1, 1n Lo•.A,...i.s. c:.vntr, -o(tl l~ltr Oflt(t b IM Pl«•ol -· ~• of IM ....aeul-4 In &If """'" .,.. .. , ... 1)9 10 ~Id •llotl. Suell ~!elm\ Wtth UW nec•~~•ry voucNn ""&At W Mod ot "'tttnlttd l l l lOrfui<I will>ln IOU• _, ....... , ,,,. flr\I publlullotl Of lhi\ llOI•<•. O.t~ Julv 10. 1•7'. Oo•o•H Ot•oodllto E •t<vlrl• ol I"" wril 01\<'ld CltOd•ttt alNWAICMAM Atl-•IL.aw 1 HI» 'ftllh••I a1 .... I --~~~~~·~4!!,1 o.11, P1to1, Jul•tt.-~11.•,••.•n• )tUlt PUBLIC N011CE l'ICTI TIOUS IUSINISS llAMI'. SlAl&MEtlT Tiit IOlfow•no °"'"'" " ~ "'31· ..,.,., 11JI (6NlVllV HAIR, l6IJ lrv1 .... 81vd , z H, C.0•1• ""'-~•. C.Jllot/111 eiu1 f(..,or• (i. Otrdro<, ltd S/Wr!n91tn :G-110. Ntwoor1 6oc11, C.lilorlll• Wtt.l Thll buWlfU It CondUC!td Dy tin ln-dlvlelll•I. IC••Otll Otll•O< '"h 51•tt mtnt w•' 111,d wUh '"" Counl• Cltt~ ol Ortnl!'I, CC>\11\IV on JUiy ,._,.,.. ~ ,,,_ "'1111/""d Oranoe Col\I O..tv Pitot. AUQ 1. • .... ll, "" Jll0.7' PUBLIC NOTICE NADER ••• potential errors. Mistakes, he says, ate eorrected in later ,·ers1ons. LOWELL DODGE, FORMER director of the Center for Auto Safety, with whkh Nader worked closely, said, "When~er there was an error, Ralph would go out ol his way lo correct il. He would do It quietly. without pubUcity. but he would do 11:· Dodge hi msetr was at odds with Nader ~ over a report involving the satety of the Volkswagen. One of the center's most recent re- ports. on customer satisfaction, was a joint project. of Nader and Call for Ac· tion. Inc .. a 40-clty network or vol un- teers, supported by broadcasters , who try to help consumers resolve their pro- blems. ELLEN SULZBERGER Straus . founder of Call for Action, said she and Arthur Best, a center lawyer, argued over the report. She said Call for Action insisted that an "exewtive summary" be included with the report. "Without the executive summary," she said, "it Is somewhat distorted." One problem centered over the dlsllnc· tion between people who had a specific eomplaint with a product and people who had no actual complaint, bul felt. tho Item could have been better. The sun\· mary stresses the distinction; the rcr ort putJI both groups to.:cther. Nader said the arguments were not serious. "I think they CCall ror Action) wcro more concerned about industry reaction than we were." BEST. WHO JS LEAVING the center to become a law school teacher, also said the disajlreementa were "extremely minor.'' Ile said the ex~utlve summary was "essentially a recap." It ls dlrficult to draw a cnu11e-a n<i- effrct churt on Nader's campaigns. Mo!ll of his study repol'ts spotllJthled problem!! rather than sugiesUng solutions. Green, asked to cite concr~te ac- compllshmenu as a result of tho Nader reports, bid: "It's a Jong list. One pro- blem though. A report is issued. In the next four years, an enormous perccn· tage o( It becomes policy, either by legislation or regulation. It's slightly pr~umptuous to claim Cardin: caauol or causal connections." NADER SAID TIJERE have been <'hong~. "Cars are definitely saler. across the board. Most oC the drug companies are more careful in lhetrtesting. Toys on the whole ar~ safer ." ~ ln recent yeusrN.cter has l)l'oduced fewtr reports, concentrating on re- search groups to provide (ollow·up ac· lion. Coast Man an Officer Timothr D. Gann. son of Ml'. and Mrs. Harry S. Ga nn J r . of 21662 Bahama t.ane, Hunt· ington Beach. has been commls~loned a sttOnd lieutenant throu.51h the Air Forc-e Reserve Of. ficers Training Corps program. He wu awarded a B.S. dcgtet by USC. Cann la a 1972 rrad\11~ of Edison High School. Many Orange Coast re- sidents were u mong the winners in the llome Liv- ing and Design ('Ompeli· lion at tile Orange County Fair. They include : From ••IHI: Emm• Torian, Sft/rlO P•O ltd. ,,.... c.i•t•-.. •ell: Jtnnie El- lison. From c., ... hi M.tr: 'Ktrttt l.o<k-. <-k• ~,,.,..,. From C•SI• M•••: Mt•Y Hott•ll••OI~, Cerroll Ill<....._ a.II ROQe<s. Lil MIMr, JoM Gnlff, Jttt a.t;, luPt' JDIWl>Ofl, ~Illy ~"'0. Ol-Wllllomi, SuMn worcs. -k•nq, llonnfe l'orrttler, J._., ~. Son1e Har-In, Kori KM1tlo, Joy J•n,,.n, GU K•ttr•, Mur.il ~w. R~e SS>rnclt', JHll Mouow, ltuby -•rd Also, J11t1tlt• Wettlotl•. M/Jrv LIOtl, Oorolhy M<FMl•nd. June CO<IH, -tt••I Wunt11<111, Jtall EMl9", W•Metl•O...lvn, o.1e 1we.._J~,.. .. , Mlli.<, Vlol• Tt"'I'· Cerollftt 1(1- jows•ll, Fren«I wm'"''°"' -..,.. MltllalH, \litgl11le Wt1ci.s-1te<, ,,,.,.,Ht<ry OedY. Also, Al,,.. Wll-... J, l'rftdt Ford Voris. Rulll H•I,,, Pam SU1c11, Ei.-lt.._Mlt. Kelllltt<I _,k. El,...r RoH s.iocw, 81"'°1> ~er. SU\An Sltlmllng, Co""'" 51111'°"· Grtto llnnelll, OOmnll 0-W!bOro, lwlil•fOrl& Pvee, C<lro1 "°''"'. T ....,,., .. Chrh tolfe•50fl, Shtt•Y Herne>'""· IC•llly LY"" 81nOIQlllil1 Jl(kltJ Ho<lll<t•. Alto, Atmira llf•~e. Mil••"''• v~ Rioe<. Oalw Kill\. (6'011(111\. Su~· ~• Oenlo"• 0 1')1\•ltt Alth~rd\0"• Paull"~ Rlc l\•rO•on. KO Sm.oil, Kami ......,,., Se...i1 l•n.,.111, Owl• 1...,netll, TMlm• S""llMll, Kim C:..al), CArol Orotl, Kert n ti••"-•• c,.i1 Andt •H11. 61olH Cu11nln911a m, M.lw....., #11.t:Mr,. f"rwrt 11 T-I IU S<llf<IM'o Fro"' l'•,.•tal• \latter: ~·• Sll""'tt, Dt .. r~ LllC.,O, ~ -· •llWy, s.A. Rellm, SllAnnOn ~. '41•otyn 5et1trla110. LIH ,,,.,H, Oavld Sell•rtand, OoM• LW1"9, W"""I• M(l(IMO". Ha"I (OUttM>K. !"tom 1r\rl .. : lull Whil•, PtwllH Ph1mer. Petty Wln(l\t\lt r. lllllty StevtM, S""il Wllil•, CIMk• sio ... n(, J rom M""""'''" 8 u cl\: lO<'I Olc,111•011, 8•11• Scott, Tno.roo Ayer,, ""'°" Oalley, loll.r1fY """"II. Jl)jlt\ 0.0.tH, Ly..Oa Htil• ~. Mlory ~ •• Merv ""'"'· o~wn Olat. f.M\. or• OIOtltl!I. f(atlt Cole, Mloroo>ntt He1111e, (arol ltttU, Mtorv A\l<fOMl'tl. Leo M<Ce1111m. 0t11nl\ Movllon, El•-v .. m111101;. C.rol lt<tbtt. &tt• ly J-Wl<flttr-. C"'''""" N..Ct, ._-, u.ca.. 0.llOfeh Mo•oen AIJO. Oorel"" T•ylOt, J•m llolltwm, Und• AM llou, Itel,.,, Al""'-C..11111' ~. 0.MV OICktllHn. ROOlll eoi., Sillerl L«Ul•• I. K., .. , l.oOhMt, JHll $("'91, l(lml)etly l( .. Of'f, ft.IM Cole, Ml<,..1141 Gr01.•m•n, Wendy w.,,,.1, CM'Ollyn Ht wk ... JoLrM S!OO<l.Hll, '-llU If.Iller, 8onnlt nroo~ ._ l<•rtft Oflt""'tl• l!!ltfl\Of Alltll, PtWY U.. Sllne<t. Fr om l.••t11t• at at II k•Y Pet1orlut, Oorh Sh .. tlurll, UJlllN MORSE SA VS RE llAD NO idea the show would be<.'<>me the suc<'ess it did. Jn fact, the first man who saw the proposal told hjm he was throug h in radio. MOllS£ "l wrote three episodes of the Barbours, and gave the scripts to an executive al NBC radio In San Francisco," Morse said. "He read them and said 'Morse, you're through! You're all written out. Go a way. and if you get :my new ideas, send them in."' But Morse persisted. and finally NBC gener al manager Don Gillman said Morse could put his show on the air for six weeks. "We went on two or three stations." Morse re. members. "In one month. we were Of\ all NBC's Western network and after a year we went na- tionwide." '111E BAR BOURS FACED PROBLEMS like those most families must muddle through. In one episode. Henry Barbour 's youngest son Jack ls sent off to fight. in Korea. . "When I wrote it, I was very much in favor or the flag." Morse said. "But r couldn't have written about Jack goin~ off to Vietnam. That was a purely contrived thing by some bad leaders." Morse s ays he isn't religious, aod so the Barbours weren't either -"They didn't go to church much, except for weddings and funerals.'' But morals are something els~ -Morse sees the current wave of sexuality as a sad and shocking thing. HE RECALLED ONE EPISODE when Claudia eloped to Reno. "That was a shocking thing to her father. He said she was advertising herself -that she couldn't concrol her emotions. "Why is it that teen-age sexual activity Is so. . rampant now?" he a'lked. "No one's protesting against It. But a few adults get mixed up In Washin~on, D.C. and the whole country Is shocked. "I think California has the most parental lndlf· ference," he said. ''The Midwc~t. is still pretty conser vative. Rut the cities of America hnvc gone to hell . Uome there is no lof\Ser o pl ace to hong out. "WHEN I WR()TF. 'ONE Mun·s Family,"' [ was trying to tell whut was happening In this coun· try a t the time. There were plenty of warnlnRic oil around us about \he destruction or the> American r~mlly." said Mor11c. "But J never , never told anybody what to do, hOwt.htyshould llveor whot was rigbtorwrong." Mor~ says he doesn't watch much television, but he praised one show he ditJ sec -Alistair Cooke's "America." "Cooke didn't preach," Morse said. "He simply told what he saw, ~nd in so doln1,. warmed people. "And thal is all I ever Wtlllted to accomplish with 'One Man's Fnmlly'." bore beginning Sunday, J t after its statistical vote or confidence, he said. -I JN ALL. three of tho i most serious c rimU J : <murder. forcible rape, robbery, assau l t.' burglary, theft and car .; theft> declined . Thoi>e were the latter three, all crimes of property. Crimes of personal at· t ack; however , all in · creased &li ghtly. The nine forcible rapes or at· tempts were three mote than the last period. • THOUGH TH E rob· , bery record. 22, equalled last year's r obbers were ,j taking home 71 percent. more valuable loot. Nearly S9,000 in losses was reported. However. Lhe recovery record lagged. Last year police r ecovered :n per- cent of robbery losses. this year the rate has been 2 percent. VALUE OF recov~ has bee n higher in ' burglary <lit percentl and car the ft C70 per. cent). llowevcr it hasn't - been u good year tor burglau. who've houlccl away onJy about S72,400 in goods, 62 percent. less 4 than last year. • But it's been a vlnwgc • year (or cnr thieves.'' They drove oft with only !'iJ cars, three down from lust year, but lhcy'vo t~cn more dlscriminat-~ inl(. Total valu<: of the Rlolen cars wm; S83,540, or 46 parcent grcoter , than lastyenr. , •• Rotary Exec Newport Beach re'Sl· denl John Wottl, 2339 Arbutus Street, has IM!t!n Jnstalled a11 prcJ ldent.ot the Rotary Club of So.r\to Ana-North. ,; :> I t tout•, Lt •h Melt1l~11. '*"'llO M('''""'"Ml·"1<"''IM''V""W Sa .. rame nto Demoerats F•Ol'I\ u.-. Mill) """ Oo""r .,;; t ,. Ft '. Mildred Toooood, M llll(•n1 J~ctfrt. FMm ............ 1, ... 1: Pai,11,,. , ... ,,.,,..U\ l'rom MOMIN vi.i.1 Ell'r 'lvlltr Oonv• Scltrt<lt, P•f'ft~ll Mhtt: IC.ttlli.tft lterlift, r.uc•I• 111111.\o ...,. $olttH,~•Mlt<N:ll. Write-in Race Seen • I Frott1 "••IN•I •••ell: Koritft Cl-'U . $ .... tell Matllltil, Cr-y °"""°"•Rick Clerh , Mlk• M8"1'111, """' Mt l'IN U, R•fllll Cut\"'~ Elll•bltlh Olllwotlh, l:lt•-C- rill'QMm, Mart Pltllft, Eld• Cun- ntntlltm, Roo tr Hen• 1. K•vln 8row11t, 11.ttrlll• tlrtwftt, Ol•n~ W""l•lftfl. Fr-ifll 0.-.... : l.IM.t l\;oVr, R.t"""'t ~11111\9. ,..,.,,. K•r S.11<1 '""" ... ,_ c.tN•tr-: ""'" Fncw. From w .. IMl<Ul•r: SltarOln Stftaltllt, Y•-Cr•,, Otta Eltllol, SACRAMENTO <Al»-Sacramen- to County Supervisor Ted Sheedy says be may r un IS a write-In candidate against fellow Democrat Robert Leg· gett for Congres11. Sheedy, 33, said he fears the nllegn. lions concerning Leggett's sexual af- faira mlgbt make hlm vulnerable to defeat by a Republican. Deni•• Sll•llOtt, "'""' DIYOrl•t. sa•ooy SAID ....... ~-.t.a UH Prleiltr C41rtl Siio J-1 .VO n.:. WUUIU announce 11~111.:01n1eM,,..it.W.111-a decision In JO days. TheSacramento ::•:-UhlflM 11'-... Jetl "91-. .~ 5a\d he ba.'J alj but decided \Orun. Lenett allegedly fOl'ged hls wlfe's'I name on a deed for a suburban bouae for hi!! former mistress an" hel' t wo children. He has denied any wrongdo· 1 ing. SHEEDY SAID llE spoke lo lA!gett and ''he wished me well ond said it • need not i nterfere w 1th our J friendship.•• The district cov~ Solano, Sutter and Yuba 'Counties and put or ' Sacramento County. . ~ ...... . . ' •• r-- Monday. August 2, 1978 H11rricane Tops "79uu Yacht Racing Union Cndae . . Morrte Kirk's 40-foot sJoop Hur- ttc:ane Detk from Balboa Yacht Cluh wu the overall winner or the rour tac:es or the Yacht Racing Union Crvlte. Ten boats competed ln the IOI\ division and 11 in PHRF. Th~rd ro.ce res ults: lOR -1. Hurricane Deck; z. Wlldr!re. Ralph Mack, 8YC; 3, NewsBoy, Jack Ballllt, BYC. Hurricane Deck wa.' the winner or the third race from t!mcruld Buy to Cat Harbor on Frldoy and the fourth ra« from Cat llurbor to Arrow Point oo Sunday. She pine~ second In the fint race and third lo the second rucc. Al overall cru111e wln.ner. llurric:in(.I Deck takes the Wyman 'froph)•. She alt0 won the West Trophy for the fourth race. PHRF -1. Debra: 2. Eur Passag~. Charles Sparkuhl. BYC: 3, Pursuit. Frank Radford, SDYC. Fourth r ace results: IOR -l. Hurricane Deck; 2, NewsBoy: 3, Wildfire. PHJU' -1, Debu; 2, Pursuit: 3, Easy Pasaage. Overall winner in the Performance Handicap R:acing l-1eet W'1.S Debri , sklpper<'d b )' Bob Wieg .. nd ~th Sore Yacht Club. Debra wa~ ulso th~ PllRF winner orthe third und fourth races. Final standlnRs : lOR -1. Hurricane Deck; 2, W1ldflre; 3, News Boy. PHRF -1. De bra: z, Sunjammer, Reinhart/Koll, NHYC: 3, Pantera, Jack Frost , CBYC. BOATING Audacious Scores in Dana Race Audacious, s kippered by Mike Kenne dy, Dana Point Yacht Club, was the winner in the In· te rna t ional Offs hore class in DPYC's Seal Beach to Dana Point race Saturday. . Trophy winners in other classes: PHRF -1\ 1 . Teacher 's Pel, C.A. Derius, Sl BYC: 2, Karma. Bob E ggcrt:s, DPYC ; 3, T y phoon , John Olson. LBYC. PHRF-8 -I , See Adler, Jim Oi;tilb'.'', ABYC; 2, Fortun(', I-'. Ste v e n s , L A Y C; :1 • Velero, G. H a rris . 1 LBYC. I PHRF·C -l, Balea. f Joe Phelps, LBYC; 2, Peggy Lynne, Chet ~ierce, OPYC. ORCA -1, Sagit· ta rius. Raloh Morris . PVYC: 2. Erin. W. B. Houghton, ·r.avc : Wild One, Trend Win Trend, skippered by George McClellan was the winner or the first race in Voyagers Yacht Club's family race from Newport to Alamitos Bay and return. Winner of the return r are was Wild One, s ailed by l..t'o Vortouni. Newvorl to Alamitos Ba:v fS:iturda:v > t. Trend ; 2. Wild Ont>: 3. Bebo Ill, Bob Darnell: 4, Redline. Vern Mathison, 5, Gyp!'I~'. Allen Bro\\11. Alamitos Day to Ne~'J)Ort (Su nrl ay > -J. Wild One: 2. Lumaran. Rill Rohrs : 3. Niki It. John Kinkel ; 4. Howlin~. l\llcnSt~wurt: 5, <:ypsr Boy, 14, Wins Jr. Sabot Title Carl Hultgre n. 14, ot Mission Bny Yacht Club became the second youngest skipper to win the Junior Sabot N alional championship Sunday by out· scoring 29 rivals in the championship flight at San Diego. Hultgren tied in points with Mike Pinckney of Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club. Newport Beach, but was awarded the title because he beat Pinckney in three of the fi\'e races. Hultgren bad finishes of 2·25·2-4-1 and Pinckney recorded finishes of 3·23-4-1-3. Each had 33~ points. THERE WERE t• BOATS entered -in the championships hosted by Coronado Cays Yacht Club. Elimination races were held Friday and the fleet was divided into four flights. Championship Flight -1. Carl Hultgren, MBY C, 33:i4: 2, Mike Pinckney, BCYC, 33:i4: 3. Chuck Jensen. SDYC, 37; 4, Brad Wheeler . BYC. 49:1 .. ; 5. l\like McCune. l\IBYC. 52: 6. Dan North <defending champion' SOYC. 53; 7, Mark Golison. l.SC. 53: 8, Greg Lowe, LSC, ss~~; 9, John Shadden, LBYC, 631,a_; 10. Kevin McMenomy, S DYC, 6So/.i . COM MODORE'S FLIGHT -1. David Ryan, SDYC. 8~-z: 2, Joan Maudlin. Cor YC, 53~: 3, Steve Huster. MBYC. 54; 4, Charlie Smith, LBYC, 60; 5. Greg Brown. ABYC. 62. VICE COM MODOR E'S FLIGHT -1. Gary Moon. BCYC. 103~: 2, Jay Golison, LSC, 19"'-i: 3, John Gr~sham. OYC. 233 1: 4. Susan Krebs, MBYC, 24:1~: 5. Don Bedford, MBYC. 37. STAFF COMMODORE'S FLIGHT -l, Dean Palmer . MBYC. 22: 2. Larry Ryan. SDYC. 23: 3, Rick Merrill, ABYC. 34 : 4, Mury Jo Tyler, BYC, 35; S.Ste\'cAdklnson. NHVC,43. In 14 Class Race Alan Lanln anq his crew Russ Taylor rrom St. Francis Yacht Club survived the blustery wlnd and sea conditions orr Long Beach Harbor Sunday to take a shaky lead in the first two races of lhe ln· ternational-14 Class West Coast championships be· ing sailed out of Afamitos Bay Yacht Club. LaOin and Taylor finished third and first in the two races for a score of 3~~ points. a quarter ot a point better than Steve Toschi and Dave KJipfel, also from Sl. FYC, who had two second place finishes. Tied for third place are Dick Rose and Burke Thomas. Corinthian Yacht Club, Seattle, and Doug and Al Harvey, Royal Canadian Yacht Club, Vic· toria, B.C. I JACK WILLS AND ms son Jack Jr. are hold· ing down fifth place despite a capsizing in the second race after winning the first. The races were marked by numerous capslz· ings as the westerly wind whistled up to 18·25 knots nnd' piicd up heavy seas that battered the 14·foot lllll!;lllCS. The West Coast championship will continue to. day "'Ith two more races and wind up with a dis· tnncc race on Tuesday. AFTER A COUPLE days rest. the neet will start the national championship regatta which wlll continue Thursday throuf{h Saturday. The North AmeriC'an championshlJ) will be based on the best ll<'Ores from the West Coa!tt and nationals. Chod Twichell of the h ost C'lub was the Lldc»l4A winner In Udo tsle Yacht Club's Bicen· tennlal Regatta Satur- day and Sund a)'.. Win· ner In the L1do·l4B division was Gary Thorne, Balboa Yacht Club. 1'rophy winners 1n all classes: LID0·14A -1 , Chad Twichell. LIYC; 2. Don Webb, BYC; 3. Dana Morris. SFVSC; 4, Al Perez. BYC. LU)().148 -1, Gary Thorne, BYC: 2, Don Palmquist. LIYC; 3, Roy Woolsey, LIYC; t , Scoll Lohman, BYC. Now for a Smina LA.5 ER A & B -1. tie between J ett ~t. LIYC. and Dave Clark, NHYC. Erik Hansen or Denmark gel!\ an in\'otun- 't.ar y dunking after he and hi s crew ~lebrated their gold med al in the oling Class at the y achting Olympics in Kingston. l Ontario. At dghl is mnnagcr Einar Christensen. I SABOT A & B -1, Ned Shelton. LlYC. SABOT C -1. Jim Mackel. NHYC; 2, Ui Virtue, NHYC; 3, Heather Nlblo, U YC: 4. Mike Manlock , BCYC. ' PUBUCNoncE PUllUC NOTICE PUBUC N011CE PUBLIC NO'l1CE PVBUC NOTICE ) --~ .......... _ ... Hotlus For' S-. .. . Hotdff ~ S-. ~ondat. Augusl 2, 1978 DAIL y PILOT BTl ·····················-······················· . ,., ~ . .... ,.. 1002 1002 ........ Fors. ~Fors. ~-··············· 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••• 1002 Ge•• ti I 002 Cit Ms.. I 002 9tMral ••• •••••••••••••••••• WIST MIWPOIT OCEAHNONT ····;;~~;;;;;····· ••••••••••••••••••••••• •• I 1 fw Sele • • • • ~ .':":'. ~ •••••• •• ~ .':":'. .5:'!':. ••••••• •aou: ·;;;; .......... iooz .....,.., 1002 G, .. ,,.. 1002 ...... clltecla tt.e&r ocl1 •••••••••••••••••••••' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• deity ..cl ...,.,. ""' COIOHA DIL MAil WESTCLtFF AREA "°" ........ efy. T1'e FORIVIR VllW Cll•un 4 BD. 2 U,\ honw tn DAILY rlLOT ••IUnlt• M a11nmcl'nt ol'l.!1£11 ''l(•w. populur E•1 ~b1dr t'lo,1.· 11.....,fwft.efintht-Onuotukmd s1)('cl~cl1l11r to WI.' tl.'l1 rf :<hi>ii~. .....,.., .._... five <~• lK'<lroom home flc hool!!\, & u luko:-1 icl1: 11 cOf'Nd °" ..... ,. "'Ith that mode rn wWdy UI!' beach S1luuh -.I ore ---------•I fee ling. llu~e plllln~ed 1>IH1dy $Cl'ludi:d ?Strct'l floor in Ii\ ing room m•cr· S00.000. :>15 i4!11 W1Mr'1 Hoffee: lookmg the oceon plus ..---,. Allreal eslalead,·ertiscd 1pac1ous dining room and modern k1t l'hl'n. All in thls newspaper 1s sul» this with Cl\'\' f.tmil)' Walker & Lue Rtt1l lst1te Ject to the l"edcral F'oir bedrooms plus bilh.arll Housing Acl of 1968 room with v.ct ba r plus J wh.icb ll!akes. ~l Illegal to Sludy for d;id etc. Prin.<J 4 IEOROOM advertise anr pre l S21S 000 Call Ub (JUICk RANCHO f~re'!ce_. h~ltat1on. or jy 673 SssO. f d1scnminat1on b ased on ,;,,.,,11.,.11 ,,._,.,,0 ,,, ,. LA CU STA ~~c~~~~~;i ~~:~i~~no:ea~ [ H!:i5 lii1iai·1J1 ~~~~ t~~,~~i!-~~::;~~b:~. ~~ehnt~~~re1~n~e~kl~m~:1! 'O'Ji@iJ}f ~~~~; 1 :l::ro ~an~h ~~> ~ lion,or discnminallon. _ ~ home. l.J r,&;l' (a mtl} NEW,ORT IEACH room \l.ttb 'l~"' ol ll'J t Ranch Style Home 2400 Sq.II fk11I l.l11rn W/luft, lu11jll' 'WUJl•1th1>V: :iot:ir he,;tah·d vool. llltJ frootoi c. l>\:uut1ful \n'l':), lliwn & l!~rdl'O u n ·a Muny, m J 11)' ulhcr .:i. tr;111. Sl lS,OOQ. Ul•:.t ol term" Roy Mc Cordle R..etor I I I 0 Newport Costa ~so 548·7729 Horth lock lay S Lk drm!>, 1·h ar m in~ fam ily ho m l'. for mul drn l'. l!Uu r m e t k 11 Oov.n!>lau:. i:ul'i.I lx>llrm & 1 1!~' mu:.tci-!-.Ut le Net..Js paint ria1><·r. What un investment' b-15 OOOJ Newly ottered duple'IC : 3 bdrms eoch RANCH BAY & BEACU REALTY l"'t!rge ~pJit·lcvcl ; pnm rental loc. 'Ii ACRI ll $165,000. ,\ l on 11 1•011nt ry 111nr IYTHEIAYSHOllSIAY 2471 MARINO R umbling 3 bdr1ll. & den. in parklike settinJ.l & YOU OWN THE LANO! L~e .. trrcgutur, tr'ff s hadt!d lot.; extensiv~ redwood decking.' OPEN SUN. 1-S. $145,000. GET A CC>llNa OM UDO Architectun11ly <.'XCltin~. tl~scribes this v~ry special 3 bdrm home on 60 ft. corner lot. Catht>drul betlmcd Jiving rm .. formal dinio~ rm. & party si~t.>d kitchen & family rm. ull open onto lu~hly pl a nted South patio with bwlt-ln BBQ! Cull~ to sec ~ DUMA TIC MEW HOME Under construct ion; 3 bdrms .. m tr. bdrm. feature. cJClravagant bath with jacuzzi; prestiS?e area. s teps to bay. $139.SOO. Ready mif)-September. DAVIDSON !EALTY :>801 W (Ju•' •1w, •; B 645·7575 ll 16 Nl-wp•><' blvd N ts 6 73 · 9060 :.l\udl-d bcnl'alh a n um br •llu of towunnl( trt.-.!. l rud~ to th11' r u;,ti h d{'"' a). tJll( wooden bt.'droom ranch :.it!> on \'riormo\l:S 1' u rrt> ! Ex l'<'Ull\-1..' t'fltry lo MH!l'IJ 1nai lidn.: r oo m . Go urmet klteht'n . :<epurull• Mom l n·l,11w fAuurlcrs . So11r1ni.: "t,ur(·iii.u to hl•droom l' o m 1> l l• x l A r u" ti l' ~>aru1li~l' Ill hor:w roun try . \' J~ant . e)\'llcr <1e11p.•ratl'. Cu II for <1u1ck showtn¥. 8"7·f;()JO (~ ~'~•>l •U'\•tJ"• t•"-I' [®lltl Mict Starter Home Good Ga rd en Gro\'I' urea J Ucdroo1ns. I •, reram1c b~th. Cpk . <'m ) ered pnllo. larKe >ant $14 ,900 Hc d <.:ari>c l Realtun~. ~-8836. JIEDROOM LAST LARGE EST A TE Luxurious "01<.J <.:ahforniu Chur~": over 4,000 sq. ft. comfortabk llvm~ space. on trct! studded, TWO THIRDS A C H£ HI L LTOP . Marvc.lou" • panoramic \'l~w of ocean & (•1ty or · Corona dcl M ur. 5 lldrms., 7 bathi;, i;parklln~ pool & h~e view derk for ~rucious cntettulnln~. Let us mak~ an 1 , appt to show this lovely home to you. $255,000 INCJ,, THE LAND. RENT Alo DEPARTMENT II lf you have ~1 home or npt. for r<:nt. please call for ou1· rental spechtltst. Barbara Ankcnc. • 11 This newspaper will not knowin1py accept an> advert1s1n3 for r eal estate which is in viola· lion oflhe law. 'a rd, <.:uvl.'rt•d va\11> · .$79.500 Fee ... Locall'd oh <•urlwr lo Beaut 3~H. ram rm. 2b~. '4 ith roo m for l)o;it Ju~• lots of brick & 1>\onc\l.Ork, h$led . \I.on"! lai.I l"Jll FOREST OLSON IMC GeMral 10021GHeral 1002 PLUS DEN Atrium entry to this G.s.ero1 1002 GtMral 1002 on b1.1: cor lot\\, { sprmkJ· 003-6i67 SOUTH COAST tnA syi.km. etc. Heavy -~"· '• ,,. ,,, ., .•.. 544 fOO shake roof, Cireplc. plush[ ~ t SHORES J huge bds. 2 baths on lrg c~~~~~s1~E~L\v'. ~ lt~ftHJll ', a kt-tlroon), 2 balh. with lot. Be lter s~e lod:.ly. 675.6670 . ~ ......., .. =-•-=··-. shake !'oof, l'harm , and &lll·T711 ---------------lonizh:.l of c'Clras l.oeat· Walker & lee Real fstate UrGRADED MlSADELMAR.- Prest1dge area. Lots of c:ustom features 111 this -I bed r oom ··c llEA)l l'UF'I-'". Would ~·ou behe\·e a 1s· Juun<ln room~ + party lime FAl\llLY ROOM Wllh WET BAR. Custom hRht· ing. Built In speakers arc 4 BEDROOM cd neur the lukt> com. PLUS 'OOL l'ttESTtGIOUS munit.v pool and Jnc11u 1, I m m a 1: u I a t l' th1~ twu story h11mv •~ Sharp 4 bedroom home WATERFRONT CON· ll·ss lha1\ two }car.., old completcbh' redecor~ed 00 -f"ln~t ctu111tty & up. :ind priced LO s ell al l h r o u i; o u t . .~ C"' . \\" II , !>72 000 trpets. Show:. like a grudm~ a t tH l't ini;s. • . ~odd. C1>rner 101 ll<·at d rapc!io & ~a,rpl'l i_n~. 3 t= SELECT ed und Clltcr cd pool B~·dt:nl:>, 2 ' ba t h,,. T'PROPERTIES f.'amaly un.'.i. P riced fo f1rt'plal'I! _shv. tha~ "''II __ _ qwt·k s:ile. S&;,000. Cul !~klw ..1 "'~-• bo1 at. ~h~~~ 963 6"67 " l' a muue . ::-cc u a,.. ,.,,..,.' l • • "•, •, 1 p n.·t ta\C. SlJS.000. C.111 [ ~ Uilltl """'" ,·;.::.~· VA Assumable some of the muny de· ----------i• tails. llow about ll'n ~~~~~~~~~ REALTORS OR NO or LO DOWN on a new VA loan, on lh1s lm maculatu 3 bedroo m. 2 bath horn~ with lmck nreplaCl', double ~araj!C and fresh 11a111t 111 und OU\. h 0 u 5 c + g 0 Id r i s h ff .ints Beauty ~ s trum !! !Curry to sec "''" call 546·2313 with pool! O'fNrn 11·n H11•>HOPt N""I' ~asblvc ma:stc r suite. [ I Remo dele d kit chen. _i&J lflftiJI] ~!~~·t~r ~~aukpeg /ao~>:s _.,~:.-.a-•••-t hruout. .Easy t o sec. Owner unx1ous . S89.WO. --------•I Cill G.15-7221 SLEEPER CUSSIAIO HOUIS Advt>ru~r .. mnv rh1rr ~r ad~ bv ''l•phonc a.ooa.m.toi> JOp.m. Mofld»)' thru Prrday • 8\onoonS1Lurday LACUNA BF.ACll 11• Glfllneyre ... ,.,,. s .. c11 •k ·IMM 5AOOl.f:RAC'"K 2l20 La Pai Roal! Lag1111a llllla 5111-41310 NOHTJICOUNTV d1t11 lrtt~l220 CUSSIRID DIADUHIS Dl'lldhlle IOT t'f>flV II It Ill• '' S•30 pm lhl' llav lriCJl"P pubh<'all()n. ,.,.. ~ lflt Nlndt v II Mt>ll· div P.dl\10n' whrn dtoltl.ll~ Ill'. $31ur1fay, IZ noon *UDO ISLE* $39,000 4 Bedrooms Modern 2 buth !ll'par:ilc home with bltn kitchen & <Ible g arn1o1e. 180' Oct>p lot.. VA. FIJI\ & Convcn. l e rm 5 a vol labl c HURRY. 962-7-77"""11 __ •• .............................................. * NEWPORT SHORES * Dramatic 2·stv. /\·Frame. 3 Bdrms .. 2 ba . bit-ins .· open beam .ceilings. sundeck : 2 bl ks . to ocean. Roomv 4 bdrm., 21:! ba .. bit-ms . 2 car garag·e. Street to street, large lot. Immaculate! Near ocean. $78,500 CAYWOOD REALTY 548-1290 "SPKialists Sinct I tU" ~!'! .......... ~~~~!~~ ....... : .. !~~ Promonlor'.I Ba'I Decorator coor dinated, l1ke new! 4 Bdrms .. family rm .. den. dini ng rm. Curved cantilevered deck. Slip for two 60 fl. boats . S279.000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR ].I\ 81 v,,.J, o .. ,, N B f>l'> t.lt>I S£Lt INCOME PROPERTY SAVE SSS$ ASSUME VA! for1nt•r m odel hontc ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• New l'a rpcls a nd ell" cor ali\C w a llpapl•r Cuunlry kitch~n w11h formal d int'. Huge dl'll with Ix-am cc1hni;. Shll ing J?lnss door to covert•d putio Lot•att-<I on cul·d1• sac i;trect. Prit•ed at only $54.900. 91:>3·6767 O"lN Ill Q • II \ It"" 1(1 •I >. I ' [~lft• A Place itt the Sun Ruy this t •~ acre in nice- 1 > de \•eloped Apple \'alll'Y area and build la1£•r . Only $S800. and Q\l.nl'r w1ll lmance . tr )Oii have $!'>00. to get > uu 011 your way. call u~ nuw Superb llomes ltcalt~ 5-19·865!> we'll arr3n~11 lhl! relit PRIME '. ' I 'j WATERFRONT HOME. $129,500 Single fa m ily. detached waterfront f home with pier and s lip for only Sl29,500. It has 2 bdrms. a big game room fe~ land and ;:i lot of room for your 1improvemcnts. This is the 1976 price, at the 1967 value. U~l{)UI: ti()MI:§ REAL TORS , 675·6000 2443 Ea5l Coast Highway. Corona del Mar I , I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! II wuoRom I Sl16,S001 d 1 !:~~~~ .......... !~~~ ~~~ .......... !~~~ Ideally ::. \uut e( a u t •• ------------------cnndn ne vN O<'<'up1ed 1:.\ level um\ dll'ecl ac· t'l'S~ to pool .and putio- t• n joy bJ y vi e w + c ar('(rl'l' 1trest y le- chnn~l' your life ond call nov. ! 546-2313. Ol"tNJUV • 11 \ r,JN 'OM Nt'"t ' [~1111 WATBFtlOMT FOR $125,000? Duplex zoned lot with pier & float + small 2 bdrm .• 1 bath home. Xlnt location, only 2 blks. lo ocean beaches. Owner wi ll carry loan. 673-4400 Charming anti de· lighlfully decorated Con temporary California 3 bedroom beuut y . Decorator sharp lhruout Country peaceful n •ar lawn with mature lush landsca p inJ,!. Bric k fire place. ne.w d rape !> and s hutter s . ncwl) painted 10s 1de anct o u\ Comfort.able an<I coty- really a treat!! $57 .500. If you're alrca<.ty sul.' r---------•I S46·4 I 4 I ~ COATS&WALLACE REAL ESTATE , INC. SHORECLtFFS C"e!>Sful al sellin11 hou~es. or are a salesman, hus1· nessmun or clubwoman new to real 1.')olale. learn to se ll h11:h S tn\l'slmenl propcnics with lhc pro:. We will train 1r you·re a w1hnt•r . Our s a l es 'I u a d r u p I t• d f r o m SSm 1lhon the l 1 r~t ~·ear to S20milhon lo~t ye:tr. 6S'f to 100·~ commission splil. Prcsllgiou!> oHiccs n ~u r Or u ng e Count y Airport. Call or write Don Berman. QU/\I L PLACE PROl'EllTIES INC. for an appointment (714 1 7~2-1920. 1400 Quail Slrcct, Newport Beurh, ~a. !J2G60. ____ _ 180 DeCJ View I MAGHtFtCEMT Sf.lt!cla<'ulur 6 lkd. hom1• WATERFRONT in prc1>l1gious ar!'U Y.":1n 175.000 ta:.\l t' '.\1 a s t e r Su 1Lc, 5 Ar hmc l\las:.ivc living w pvl balcony. WC'I bar&. room ::.urroundcd b) v111\\, A rare oH~rm~I waler. Nestled among with b<.'<lrooms. to :.uit the tree!. &. beaut. lndscpd J ar~e famil y .+ a garden w fcovered brick scparule mo\hcr ·tn·law patio & dl'ck lcadini:: t !1Wle Flexible ::.cller will )'OUr own pvt dock. Real· tailor the _financing ~o ly special one of u kind. meel quaM1ed buyer s Private beach &. tennl nKodo; Call and d1sc~'\s club. Luke ~·orcsl b) the van"u::. ways you can ownl·r 581 IH77 buv Uus home. $25!1,C ----1 m~ludcs l3nd LIVE GREAT 2 Duplexes $36,000 Each Vista arc·a. 2 Bedrooms ea c h . A II I a r ~ e p la y !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! vards and S detached g:1ragcs. t.ong te rm le· I nants m occupancy. No GeMr.. I 002 G11ier,t I 00. l•art", no bookk~ev~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• mg/property m anage mcntc1ocs it a ll. Very low down OK. Seller will bel.P ~ ~ rinancc.' Ca II us on th rs mone maker. ~UPERB HOMES 1555 W. Beker, C.M. NHI lo Merllel 8atllel S49 ·865S MAG.,.IFICEMT VIEW ESTATE Oceon & Lights S7S,OOO Fanlas\ic 180 degree view or while caps and glimmering lights or OLD CORONA Da MAR-VIEW! Oeean front! f'abulotis 180" view from 1 most rooms of this custom 4 bedroom split level. Lgc guest rm & bath. Wet bar. open beam ed ceilings, indirect li ghting. Your own pri vate steps lo Big Corona Beach. Really s pectacular! $345,000-Call for appointment. 2111 s.J..,..t11s1toed NEWPORT CENTER, M.L 644-49 I 0 Laguna and P or lo n no. '"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ Dramatic multi-level '! wl\h artistic wood and glas s cons truc tion . Ge .. r.. 1002 a ... ,.. 1002 towcnng vaulted ceihn,:t!\ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• CLASSIFtlD 3 Xlnt rtonl:il l'lou .. coe ror HOM~ COST A MESA - WATflU"RONT MAKE SSS 'IUlt :1 & :i llll, all p riced REAL ESTATE DUPLEX and view from every ll'r· race. Gourmet's delight pub k1tchcn and dine t:ntcrtainc r 's living room with c rac klinl( flrcpl11ct'. Hideaway ~mg s lied mus ter suite. Owners bouAhl another. Hurry! 003-7881. llM.¥...ATIOMS f.RHOtcS. Alfvt•r11,.l'n1 ahoold C'hHk th1Hr 11d' ct.oltv fl pj1pnrt l'rror~ 1mmtdta1t11. T 11 F: l>AILY rll.oT l'!oum1•s ltallllltv fnr lhl' nr~I In• l'Ol'm.-i 1nt1el'\mt1 01111 . ('AJllCf,l,1,ATIONS • wt..n kllhnJ! nn oil !\<' ,.l.,~ 10 m•kf' 11 ri>rnrrt nr thC' KILi. NUM 1n :n 11h,-n yoo by ynur nd talcC't 1111 f'('t"('ljl( (1( \'(/Ur t11nttll11tlon. Th" kill numbft' mu•l IMI proui>n· tm by IM 11<1"'"''''"' 1n rAHof • d1spu1,. CANCf.Ll,ATION OR CORRF.CTION O f' NEW AO DE•'OR E RUNNING: · £\'\'".effort Is rnlllff to lllll or~ a llf'W Ad lhat hllS bttn Ord('~. but •'t' n11not Juaran• ,,.. tG "° M 11111 ii the iid hi!' 111pe,1rt'<J 1 n the l)apl'f'. DCME.M JNEA0!-1· ~ ad are trlt llv ff!.h 11'1 adv on~ bv mnll "' al any Qn(' of our ()I· rl<'t'!l. NO p"6ne orders. Dudll!'c : 3 p . m. "1da)', Co&lt MtH of f~ • 12 noo11 al •II lnndloffl~s. THE DAI LY P ltOT '"'°"es thc rl•M lO defslty. 4'C'hl. ceMor or r•fu&e •11y 11.t ver· t~ and lo rh1n11a It.' rates • "'"wl•CIOnit -'lhoul pr\« not I«. C:USSWtlO MAll ... ADOllH p 0 . Ito' lM'O. ea.ta Me1111 S&K&,INlt AtABMA S S R E D S T 0 N E A R S E H A l T A O 8 L A C E N I P H R E H T U 0 S Y I U H T S T U N P " 0 8 l L H E R R T R B L A C X A R E C U l G E 8 E 1 X I D f 0 T H H H L H W H H T R E D S T 0 Y " B 0 A R A T 0 O L H L A C C E S N I A E l U H " 8 E R l H l T H G G R D l 0 T T E E 8 A J 0 B N A A 0 R C A S G S M L H K R V l E M H J C W H C G 0 A A O S 0 C M S M L 8 X A E 0 E E Y M D l C B O R A E T M T I R L L A C N E E B I K I N R l C H A £ T l E U 1 R R R H C 8 0 l S P B A U C E I L R B B Y M O N T G 0 E R Y Y E H H A Y T D M R ll'lftructiOlll: Hidden words bet-•t>Pe• Cln' • beck· -d, up, down o< dillfO"lrlltv. Find •Ith end bO• it In. ;e A. Lucy Huntsville Heart Of Dixie ~ Black Belt G. Wallace Bl nninqham u Camellt4 Montogomery Ye1lowha11111er ~ Mobile Southern Pine Red~tone Arsenal Tomorrow : Pi nes m ~(f!I. ltl•al !>harp New 6 31·1400 Two . 2 bedroom units paint. Good n rcas . Eai.t sldu C:os l a Mesa PILOT REAi. ES1'/\TE, JJ +++ Ocxible flnnocinu 540 05.~ + + + garu1tes ror cal' unit. t:ozy 1lou11c plu nl•wer apartm1•nt. f<:ac has i.ccludNI yord fo ---•• 1,riv11rY. J\11 ror SMS.000 OI"' 1119. 11) 11.)t• IOI<! 1J.t/ • ie,11111 HEW fH HAUOR VllW .. 1 Bdrm.' Montcgo w /attractive yard. Near park, pools, 2 blocks to Anderson Sch ool. Dcautlfully decorated &. upgraded. $118,500 lncludlng land. ATTF:N'rlON: Coli· of Call for mor1· lnformu Nl·wport 1~ 1-:.x.p A·N t1onG46 7171 [) f N r. We arc inlt'rl'~t c~~Nt1t Y •11Hun 1onh<I' 4 ACRES ed In thrre 11ddlt1onol [ I + sale~ repn•SC1tl11lt\1Cll e 1•iiflilfil! two fnr res1dent1al s al1:s lt;r:\ 1:11 ~Oft leach & one for a new com 1 South or Adam11 ncnr mctt'1ul d1\•islon. Plea e ----Beach , w ned R-5 le C-<I rpll ror appointment EASTSIDE STEAL Owner will consider joint Jean Cole Thii. home ls in pnm venture, 11ubordlnaUon 675-5511 locnllon or c.M. It ofh.ir. or carrying large Fir11\ A COl.DWIU IANIM CO. 644-1766 T.O. 962·7788 K EY ' W 38DS. 2 RA. FR , rrplc RLTRS. ...__ tooia ... , .. WANTED a shoke roor on u JJQO·,_...;;...________ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• snoo lot. All for n lo 5 Be d room home in pnccolSS8.500. $45-9491 COSTA MlSA ' lhml 'g. Bet1rh, f'tn VJy, CHARMER b We s tmns ler o r Ccr 3 llDROOM macna I Irvine ntos .. To S75.000. for San 2 IA TH It Is a good day to acfvertlse in the Deity Pilot Clessified Section. Jlll<l' fam1h . $25,000 Ncsllcd urnon)( trees in f88 y c :ish down. Possesiuon -beauurul homey area of Ocl. I. Bkr. offering:. .950 lo SG7,500 Back Costa Mesa. Plush up· wrlcomc. Bay -·3 .1lnglc fa m ily i;n•dcd Comlly home. MIWONUMDAtSLI HAL PtNCHlM homes. Agent 6-10-4950 complete with centr11I air RF.At.Tons ~dilioning. ~mpl \.ely Rich wood paneling accents the 2721 £.Coast Hwy, new wife.saver kllchen. beautiful family rm. w /conversation 67S.4l92 PINl.,SULA "· Massive family r oom pjt, 4 Bedroom-4 bath home on tbc --------1 2-Story, 3 bdrm .. 2 l>oth with skylight. Buill·in l agoon. Lg f' m ai;ter bedroo.m ACK IAY VIEW home; wet b11r in l11r11c Bar·B·Q surrounded by 8 Comity room. SurtUeck decking Cot those fao, w /fireplace. J acuizJ in patio. ra.w;ga.tUl)ht• over 3cnri:tarage. 11ummer nil(hts. A lot of S,Z95,000. Jeanne Batnctl 644-6200 Jo'ront row Trina model. Priced at Sl25,000 hou.se rou111\Ue S · 65.500 (W72) 3 bdrms, 212 haths ; nil-t:· 673 3663 G73·80fl6eves full price.:. Call tod1Jy ly dct>oratcd in itold 8*7171 200 tone thruout. with 11un· ~N r•1 9. ,, , '""' ro ti .,c, • '42·1235 644 .. I t IQ52llJ hinc yellow kitdwn. [ '°' Dover Drive H•r110r View Center aUT~J~s~~i~J. . 9111111 •n• .... <rsr.r.r:·~· c.. ... --1 ~ COATS&WALLACE REAL ESTATE , INC . ..... ,.... .... , .... '""'~ l.h\1111: h 111:1· 111111 1111• 1111 \I Ith :1 f11•tlr IMtfH. ""'" hnm1• "''' h 111·11 ' f"1r1•t1l.tl'l' ,11111 Ill 1' n ll••lll h1t·.1tu111 PETE BARRETT -REALTY- .JU'71 h"lt•fl ' ht llnH' :111 \ t"rlt!.t'il \ .... 11. ( rii.11 :I hedmom l! l1ath h11ml' Shall' & dt•an •·u11 111 Im•,• \\'1·11 11·r11l1·d 1.114' 'r1ct1" nl ,,,,·nt"r:.111 ~1·1ghh1111101111 Slnw lr:1f t>t Sll'l'l'I .111,.1 one mile lo 11111111111:11111 Uo u l'h .... hop1)111 i.: n•11t1•r and ~;1iltl1•11 '' , ... 1 t'11ll1·ne-. It \\Un'l l:i '>I ' !'.1 11 IU:.! 253.S •1 •I I • I •; Pllf t fn,f ~lijllld I -- MES4VHDE J u:.t lii.kll' 3 Udrm~. ~ fa 1nll> r m .. 2 bw. t>elii:htlulh dl'~Or:ucd. .'.•l'i' hndi 1·nt ry. up· i:r.1•l1•ll 1·arµl'I !>. 562,$00! Balboa Boy Prop. RHlltOH RH &: den •or u:w a,, UH 1 + fam rm w ·rc·al fp big s pru~ t1n1: r :11H· i1tyle in Nnrlh l'ut.11 M<'!la. Only ~:S.:>oo. Ill'. On. to quail f1cd tiu~ l'f l'IUYr HE1\L EST.\Tf !><kl ~ .ASTS IOF. Cthl<>m f Hr Ua. qH,., ti rp:-, db g ar 31! e . L i: e '"' t 1 u Sli7 .~ISO. Ov. ner .\1:1 6.ll-2711 Br 2 lla. ne"' µaint, "''"' lndsepd. I fir ·'l'l. o<r i:nr. SS7,500. Ownl'r A~l 631·Z71\ Our lest ltly!! U ... D'"'R M "'ll<ET1 Ju.~t n'CllJC'ed $2000 l.o\'C " E " • ly 3 IK'<lroom fam;h. and SGS,000! Near Atlanta • 675-7060 * Jlning roo~. All-hilt Be ach. -l Bd r. earth ---------1111 p11t10 kitc-hen fircpla<'<' tones. 2 story, Go"' st!Mkc roof h~ge co\'ert · yards. no wu floor.1. 8albo.P"'9twlo 1007 patio. mu~h mor1.>. Jo;'I l'rival_e . A.ssum t1bll' •••••••••••••••••• ••••• t'Clh.'nt ltk· .. 1tion. Own,~r Loan. 968-4456 :1 Ur. 3 ha 11 spN1<icular lea\'tnf.! stalc. :-;0w onl 1976 HOUSE h:iy 1'1t'". so yds to' S63.SOO.Call540-11s1 FORECAST hl'ar h <I Yrs old. lt1 BUY NOW; ChL't'rful 3 ll'fl'lllO. Wl'l har, Sllll bdrm. Stt.'ps to ix>IH'h . il\•1•k. unx1uu11. Val'ant.I Carpets, drapes. parquet . •l t!l.SOO. Open datl)•. :135 noonn~. palm -+ Cover. Lindt> ,\ vc 67 J·OO!llf or I~. Master 1;.11; 2725 --------------· Redut•t.•d : 5 llr , 3 h.1 , nr hay & Ol"l':tn. SI 6 1.500 Mar¥hall Rlt) ~ _ 1'1•niruula l'omt 3 Bdrm hy 010nl'r. $109,500. Pb ti73-784G ------ 11,\1tH01l \'l l::W l~.l.S ('Ub l II m h 0 'C l'aoor.1n11C' 1 '"''. "l'l'<tll hay . :itir . :.!••l1u. lh 11 " 11 l' r . ) I Ii I , 0 0 0 ' 7 1 4 1 •• 4 ,, . " n 1 s u , <iltC 11;.1:: SI 11: • • I 111.t:X . ..,11 2RR. IBA uniti. S111wr twu :1 ton h 1111\I 1111!. n c ar ~t'Wf)Jlrl ll~·•i:ht ... Full 1>1 ll"I' Sl20.000 0\\nl'I "'" fllr ry 2nd. 1:1s b4>.lli Hy Own1•r, :.! Hit, l ll.1. S110tll'<1" S1•t• to .111pn'<' ~.!iOCI .\(ltl.l,1!!ml11e UIO IHIO FANTASTIC OCEAMVllW :ibr.411,1. Bllllurll llm. Pnv11t\•~h. 0 1"'" l'uncl:iy 14. ~l~.000 ft••'. Ow111•r 1 \j!I <I ill l>l•S<llil T t·n'lll'l' 1'7~111!!_11 645-6646 J OO N. Newport, H~. WESTSIDE red hill .A 552-7500 UMDER 40 lriC)llt Ir ClllHrlul · Wcll louted 2 bdrm "D'' 11h1l m Walnut Square. Call 644-7211 PLAM4 VIEW! Pict_..: THURS. & FRI. 1·4 P.M. 2602 WEST OCiAMNOHT SWEEPING Panoromlli. SAMO & SEA llAL.TY 675-1100 of ocean. surf, eoastlinc. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ lree11, and surrounding • mtns. Cozy 4 br. 2 ba home with many l':<trai.. Newport hach I 069 Newport hach I 069 $86.500. • •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• CENTURY 21 TNJISE & :w· DOCI\ s:n -2640or495·4121 3hr, 21ibu. ''" 2 rnr .::ir Turtlerock 4 DDR:'tl., Fam. rm .. 2~.1---------1 ~m.ooo Ownr SJ S· 7ti4S ha .. w11n form al dinin room. Bright polios. Va rant, quick pos11ession . Slf7.500 ~Ian REAL EHATE QOO 1,,,.,,nt'r" >t .l'>J >.:"YI ' 1•; Cl J 10 LIDO ISLE VILLA 9 Rms·55' lol·courtyartl & fountain . Com1> furnishl-d $189,SOO .. br + den. 2ba, frplc, bllns, n r Halecreal Club. S38S. itardcner. wtr lncl. 979-4886 or 919· 7836. house_s. H-2 lot. l 10'x25S' n ENTAl.S: Do yourself u' Easts1dc, CM. SI 2S.OOO. ravor. Jo'incst Coronn def 548-9673Eves.ownr /agt. Mar urea-Jas mine •ALIOA ISLAMD RESTAURANT Land, bldg., business $290,000 Jo'ull Price Owner Finonc<'d HEALONOM ICS BROKERS 675·67 (;reek lremcmher I live there tool ; New lwo bedroom & den home~ with privilege oC use ot pool. Jacunf I& tcnnb <'!>Ur15 COLE OF HIWPOIT l!ALTOIS 675-HI I . J , I t , I Exec Span. 4 br, 3 ba, FR, den, OR. 3· car itar, sq n. ssso 9418-~•s /'\JE:"U.JE'LL I A s s o c1atEs l A(io.UMA ltAC H "4 ·~·4 lOANS 9% . AbO %iiid 10-i.o.s-- F1drt!11t Tt•rms since 1949 S....-Mft.Co. 642-Z 171 145-0611 2MD T.D. MONEY I Terms bt•low miarkct, pYl Cunds, p~rson a l scrv1ec1 "' your home or ok. 67S-4494 Bkr. 24 hr.1 FOUNU Cocker S!'anlel, mole lit Unl\'oralty, Pk. Shoppll'lg anJa. ~l·S!>ll8 or I" l'11M·15LZ' ! IT'S. i-·ouNO; Dicyclu. Wii:. Hrookhunt " Ad11m11. DO.'S WORLD H.B. Identify & clohn. DO. ICIMMR. D6tM444 w / Z21,..... ,_. .. &J-Jl-F'-OU_N_D_; -.ry-/w_hl_11-tri_ped_ .,,.,,..tft 1ltep • rem. ldUAHa. Ver~ Ceialy. V• office. 21r, I Vic. Jl11tbor View llms. NEW 2 Br t Ba, blln11 1---------1 ........ '12 KN ef prt N.8. &44.-S cal"IJOrt. GIO. 1401 cur Office...... -=-, ,...,. a. M FOUND: Bcautlr1.11 malo Dr. Nwpt Hau. 642·5elt ••••••••••••••••••••••• M • r k • t P t • c • Shepherd. Blk le whl. WATllNOMT •UfOFREERENT• Slll,000. OWC·h Vic. of Ht1rbor 4r Balcer. A few new l'lllury unit 1·2·3 Rm. olrices from T.O. 67J·7601. PtcasccallMG-0891. 1llll avall.Sllp renull $135 per ao. AdJ . LOST,Smlbl•ck•whlto tenantJ. The Ne wPor Ailport.wffottl.Jfol llAUTY SHC>r female cat "Sassy•·, Mlrln1,9l9 S.y1ldeOr, req.9'1-3Ua'l'ih oon 5 Stations, long e1L1b. Mortuerite " S111 Joa· 113·8414 t.O• Pll SO FT Gron excess $50,000. 11u1n Hills Rd. CdM. PAllC MIW,ORT 1'17WIS'l'CL\FF·N8 ;:!~:ys 642-0'l12: Reward.644·'1705 , APAITMa.TS ACT.54l·$032 REWARD·Woman'a gold .8.tt'Mlor l or2 W srottTIMG GOODS walch JO diamonds , Dedroomund 1501 ntclff Dr. NlssJonVlejoArea •rO\fKI the lace. Vic So. Townhouses _NewporU 'lnuclal Ctr Partoera1'1p brea k11p. Coul Pina 13'l·43'73 •Fn>m SMUO ~ OHie. S,.. Loca~ nafddl,e ot buay,•---------()pen M Dally C.UonSkeManalfr cen t et. o r o ••i Youn1 male Schnauzer Spa·Pooll-Tenn\s (714)1424lllu t 24t 11a.0001mo &c arowlna. with Llc.836 found vie. Acrou from FHhlo Terms to q~llf~ buyer Oold~rod le E. Cat Hwy Island •l Jamboree on .B. lulluryad pvt ofrlce. Agt.837-4200. · inCdM.CaUMCM992 Sat\f~;:ru~~11t\od. :::s~~:O. I · Re.._. MA IL or d e r d la· ,.,.... 5350 tri~n1hlp a\•allable l ! •••••••••tt••~···0•••• s.c1 .... ,, Jl7 •••••••••••••••••••••• OCEAN Vl£W DUPLEX New from $29S. Cal Diane, 498·0232 o •-toSO D&uXI OHfCIS Earn oulstandlna "re· CHRIST IS the answer! Comml • ~t& •~ces. oo•t" prollla, mamo1 Sml aroup dlscun lon 200 to-..... ft.. M lo our test ed broctuarel Tbuu eves, 1: 30 in 1 1130t1q.t :CagNiruet ev.rr.thln19upplled, tr" Speckled Bird Health Mluloo Viejo ar•u deta,tls I& umpJe1. Write t'ood Store. Li2S Mesa Jbftdy to S. D. J'rwr. P.l>.C., Box 2'154·DP Vt.rde Dr. East. Coata CaUUt-1480 t.asuna Hllla. ~ Mela. • • j'9 .. .,. OAJLY PILOT Monoay AuooM 2 t976 f'idd i t ... Build it... Diaper it ... Hammer tt ... Carpet SERVICE DI REC'FORY Plumb 1t. .. Patch 1t ... P 1pe i t. .. ~!moae 1 1r ... J, 1t...Cement lt...Wire it ... Hoe it ... Clean it .•. M ove Root it... Landscape t...Tile i~Trim it ... Sew it... , •t. .. Press it ... Pa1nt it ... Nail lt...Plaster i t ... Fix it... • Haul it... Add it ... Pl~nt it... Alter It... Learn It ... , • ... mc~epelr ~-r-Ser•lc.e . ~---:. __ :or 1~ _ _: __ .:.._ ]....... Mo•W) PaWinc)/PQfMri'"J Potios -· ·• # ' ........... . ........ , ~······················ ................................ ·: ........................................................................................................... ,. ................... , APPLlA~('I-. ~I,' IR ~llitnJ>?«> It •lciam Ck.lo ~1o1rk St.oMm:1n. Quullt> Qllfd,•nm& LJtnlbupe Sonl\Y 4c Jf'r 1-'rt' hfU.ll· t•JWf MO\'l~G IA>\\t'•I Wi\l,t.l>t\PF.H PATIO CoH·ri.. R\'\l\\oW tO •,off "' lld ',\nv r.•.umK IO St-ni ·<:~II in~. Color bthlhtt'nl'rs, v.'OtkatuJ111lrrric\'.Lu; ct.-onup 't'ou t· .. n ufford ina. cleanup. ltl'\' v.ork rates u of A. Lu• & In~ na-=M OYi\I. d\tci... Qu.1lll v.ork. r\' in.:. v.tt i\I .. eu~z 171ll5<1!l2'12'4 wtH eu rplll 10 m1u ~.54t.f1S6,S4!1·8710 u For ei.t . c ull Ron rorusublt•1h•n1:..l-'1•n1•1•:. C:u1·WuH 831-1700 11 HeMpons iblC' Ill Schoo a?.pnrl'' L1r31~ l'h ~ltlh~.,~~do~urc ~· l>lt>uch Clean JI\ rm,d1n • -17t4IS.41H987aJt•pm & bide' r\·mon·d da>i.I ~tu;li•nt. ,.,11~ ~~l '*' 616i72t orti.t.Soo:11 eos ·• -r•iffllMJ tan 4t hull Sl~. i\vtt rm I.El!. M. JARVIS --M7·200S ltr t°Jll t'rt> • 91>3 7"11l •1f\ J Peol Set'•lct ••••••••• •• •• •• •• • • •• • • $7..50, roU('h $HI, choir ~ Addlllons & t<emodclina ~ I e u 11 • up & co I o r --llO\'ING? 1.,., 2 l':\fll 'd 5 pnl • "· · • • Pio'"t"' /Rtpo r ••••••• •• •• •• •• ••. Mother ~ill bub)''' )Our : Cuar cla m IX'l odor. <:r111 002 5573 J.1c 3171151l l'll>C'<'lllh~t. >\I o. mowln1.-Moving· 1eanu1l" l"l 111 nwn mu',. ) ou lh•a"', ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~·~i~('•d "''Jllh 11,1.,._ .. ·n ·i· to S yr old TLC:. t•i. lepwlr 15 Hi> <'Xpr. l)(l -. ~ -..... 1nmm lnl:. C\C. C:dm·NB bc-d \rock lfot!'Jl11h111t. lt\•h.WKK:JWorSl:'lKst\3 P ... rtPalntlfMJ llomci. .\d tl1t 1011s h t t'ull b~lnrc 91.ini l'1Jr1111on .. llarvt•r 1whoo• v.od. 111 y1q•lf. k d~ \1~11\lt\VIE~&S!'i~r onl)' tlT~3176. Sr. <.:1l t11 K~asonable7SIS2~ -......_.'--,. -.i 1-:xpr, n•us ruh•i.. frt•i· RQslucc? OH•r hlo1•k ~ill~.fHiO!l2!l lill'U 1u2:11i02Jlt61>m l\al OIOt 1 1 t oln\sc '-'1·/1~::! .. •nit rllll·~. tlaul1n"Od·' J1•"• l Q..,,.._....,,, • .,.""9 ~.''>t (.'11ll(;,.11t>5S:IU'l511 w111li.. t'tt•I' c11t. lo" - -----• o "" .,..., --,,. " '".,.. '" ... •••••••••••••••1••••••• rah.•-t ~ 4ti~~:l. RoofllMJ t;~v.1·h1lil <·1111· NtmrSo \~\·l'11rd.:unJt1t C:le111wl'll ~92110 __ ~73fha1ic;.....r•s ... vJces 1>tu~1·~t 1111•·d" "11rk Pu1n!Ht•pa1r :JS yric In 1\CIW l.ll'HONIH'O,\'l' • , "' -~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• CQ111ot 1•10,u rtd~ av111I Stt·u n) d,•11n or !!h11mpoo • •••••• ••••••••••••••••• lloq• I U J 11u lfl I :'.851 ·1 ri• u w 11 r k 1111111,, h II• off "r" w "r Hondt•!I I A1' H t'Li\.c; I 1-.RUll(, 1, L~1, \I I'"' "I l T\'PL'...: "'jj . \I lJ h (I J\11 .L ll U I' f'MA N & SCJ N YM N II & • • . ' ~ ••ALL TYl'l-'S•• rn I '"'' •' ""' .,.,7 6S4.l _ •Ml "o~trY· wor. Rcm Hi l'I rnhin 1 'llANU A · Ol1'l'll. 11uur Tukt·tulvunt olm) tiuartrnt,•t' t:nllmlle<l I-• " 111 neuJlvnohlu l'n•1·c~\ hi\ gullr. !il'(glJ\I C. fr1•c t•:.t. r . ,1. 6'u'.1s9li 5'111 ~s"i A11tll Con.~t;t('ntlo\J/I Houtecl•Min9 l''(fll'r ;\&J 7Mll l'ulori-& \'0111illllln1L 'rt•t• l'.NI li lO, i:. Wultl.!30·M>2ounyt11nt Carpeftttr ,ll~a~.r11t1•1o1115.::n10_ oim~a • ~ cr111l1omon6l5·6.Mll. _••••••••••••••••••••••• 'l\·rm:.. l'nn·11 w11h1n \'F'Jl Nto:i\T l'1'T<;ll .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• C...tftt/C t G_..._-t-.. 'N1'1'V • I •llOUSECLEANINC • Paiftt Your Ca.He 10' • on 11ho1w. 638·53~ JOll . & Tt-'XTllftt-· T•le•lslon lepolr {• l A Id I OAcr• e _._,....,, Ci\ltP... ' • 1 aanl nu " "'I bl I ,. I A1l'I \'o\I l·'jl\, S2~5 \)II i,1• • " ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~rJ>l'O I')' ' ons o \IJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••• ....... , & rn•nor rrp .. u1 !-'rec vY r._ a:l e roup (' vUU{ '.'st• S:"'.• lnl -,., .. 1·1n . ,11 I --Jo'rl't' Jo.:. 1193 U3~ • . • ('0 ' (onHlll'll'ltll l.1c free l L''' 'I ·· . . .. . . • rrforcnt·c~ S3tlT1tt• -J '"" ...,.., , , , • • (,\NOPYT\ISVC . \•:o.l.li15l-l:IH ·~~vN~1 "; c,o::u.~fl.Ert.YA~D,.'\.<1 1\1(,\( .... t!)llll\Utl'l-.5l5 1 .. 0t<.__ --Pn\•t•i.lnclmlr'llJbor \\;\l.l.I AIJo,Hl:-.IC •. PtumbllMJ htllutt•S1•r\'h1\' I --Sr A I 1 1 IN(, (.;ob CLt:~NU l S I.Ill' houl· G . • • S h , ... . Guur. in~r. frcl'l':.l. 1\JI kind~. wvrk ~u11r ••••••••••••••••••••••• ut 1-'ttlr l'JiC\''l9tiO·l6:1:1i .. blc,,.to1w, brick & lit( 1nn.Frel·~i.t Gl6 4671l .ro~"1 Y: opp an a:L coptttq T ~ti34!70l!S 55 131 t-'n•c l'!!h ('all Norm •.• , , --. REMOD .. L. pauo~.l'l<.'l.}l!lol~l!t -Scr\'l('l' We ~hot> h11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• c~ _or 2U _ 1:135.37~·r.7.,.1140 IJ()M Mif\\l-.llS Tiie ltl!p;u r:. & Add1t1uns, 1·c ---JAPAN~t: !o~XPt-:llT ~our holl~(.'l°IOl!I &: ptir\) Land:1caJ>l'. :.prlnkh•r:., l.ocsa Pn d,• 1-'uir l'ncc:. '-'' ·• ,._ ---P~u~1b111~ ~ lll'all~i: , ••••••••••••••••••••••• mt.'nl v.ork. ''1tl11net.;, OOB'SCON!=RETESVS l.andi.~a1><:&<.ur<fonmg n:t!di.. Cal!, f~r rutei.. cc>ment &, mu:.onr). Uc In:.. Calleo l'ulntmg 1•t-:TERS l'\INTING t'rt~ c!-hn~.1tt~',h11.nl:ot ".' Cf:llA:\1IC Tile. New k h.inl( (toor.; (}u:.illl) P atio:-. S1d."v.alk:. ___ Lall;,\8·SJ~ !>.51 ~I &~·1720 patio~ ~o<l. SS? 9180 & t;~tr o n ly Refs. In.tr i-:_.,11 fli•Ji.. Ratt'S reh.1hh• :.1r"'" :1!0 h1. midi. "'r ci.Lt Sml .)Obs work l'.Jlumbo l'on:.lr Ori1 l'\111) s , I-re,• t'l>h L' • J --, .•• " ,.1 \INT""'' \''CL' 968·l2:10 ~11 0222 tall t.1•1w nl S52·1»58 1147.u:ig;J, llol.\" Ml w•·l"o ou• Slli· "Hll & MrnbrUUll l'h!>t.;!11:114 l'AtiKJ.ll .,:1:pr . apane sf r->••• "'''·' r. --_ ___ --------'.. · - ---Gardener. Comp. )U Complete Thrifty l':iantinl?. 25 ,ri. \'i.p.tl'amt'i: Int&~;,, Paper Plumber ll«1lu1r.lfrp11>c ~ti193 • If YOU CGfttrodor mi.rnl. ~hubl~ry. trcb, Cunvcnient. ~humpoo~Moso. r ueouslll'al n·ihti:,,. m 11 ung1 n g •\co u,., t t <' ln;1oallat1u11 &.Sl'~'."'~". T Sff-•-lc_e ____ _ h 'r ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fr t~I :;.ig lt;JO ;.ift; pm s h•am l'llf'lk'l~ Complet ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 "· 1 .. 91 t'"""' Apra,· <;Iii Hutt'~·64S·i"~ G. u11.lll'Y li-t.!·931 l'ff J\ <' u 'er' I( t' to u er or .. cnor w .:' enur o JoNll('lv.. ... • ~ • -"' __ •••••••••••••••••••• ••. J!OO(hto ... l'll 11lat('i11\.Jdln •1'0~1 JO'.\:l::S• -.--1>aint1n1: & cleanrng F1rt-place:.-Pl::tnters ao 61'M --H-"-,, .. _ .... ll\0 1,'. I 1•'1 tl'I r d Patao co1er,. rcuwoodSprioklers t-;((1 .. 1e 111 900-1855. BrickConcrete Pallo :j l'rofcss1onal Pamtm~ In· uttcmcM -•rHJ R\•movul$. tr11nm ln&. at >' 1 0 .i:.:.i le · • · ' · Bloc t I L' • • L' 11 ·bl "-I' I ·bl prun11"' free 'l>l l lc'd :-,..•c.1ion l'hont•til''S!iill dcek,, ~:itcboe:>. C.,JI ec•onom1t'al ubtall As~ k\Vulls B8QP1tsF1m v.hot )OU wJ nt n en~r ... xterior r rct t'uMma , • ..., \l'••• e .,... c ·' · -640 11171> ror Rich Wt':.t &10 1880 w.:1nt ad r~ulls 642·S~n. Ref. Ests 64G·o.&&l Oat I) l'l~Ol Cl.'._Al:ol>lf1c1l:. -l'Sllmatc~ tilll-~IS 24 hr S\'S . 640·9307 fully 11\:IU~. 642·2G2.t I ~~:~.'!': ......... ~!.s.~ ~~~ ..... ?!~ ~~~ ..... ?!.~ ~~~ ..... ?!~ ~~~ ..... ?!.~~ ~!'!~ ..... ?!!!~~.~~ ..... ?!.~~ ~!~~ ..... ?!.~~ ~~~::! ..... ?!.~~ l ll11nloni.t problem" Babysitter hsk~pr. lin" CASHIERS WANTf.O Dttltal Assistant ·--------Groom er. t:xp c r. All ~IANAC F:MENT t'Jll ,\lcohol llclphne ,\cc:ountini: in. salary + pvt upt Ca!>hltrs nccucd in our 1':.ngin~r brt'ells . Shop. Downtown LEG AL AsslJt , Manogen :!I hr!> a day 1!3.5·3830 Project C0ttfrol l~f'~. 673~153. C~~-1 __ self-ser~·ire gas i.talions. Ex pr. c hu irside. 4 1'lr Mf·G ENGINEER 11.n ~-4\66. G Womcn'i, Contcm111>rul'y .. ,,. ,.. ~ Cl le "'" 18 Id bo days. Salar~· open. f:I - -ADVERTISIN Clotl111l" ~5'4GE . •r. . . Baby iltcr wanted · must uc! yr.1° · 0· Toro La~ Hills/area/ n --· · OpcmnJ; for 1nd1\'1dual ·~Jature lady wnntetl le dub le & n1.·t1\ in up 830•1130 lo tukc smull ~lcurn GUYS & GALS CLERK We h a\'t' 2-3~ hr per week FIGURE MODELS exp0<>.r10c n.1·~.d & . c:o ~-sit 3 days per wk 111 my peuruncc. must ha vt< mechnlcal asi.cmbhl'~ Mission V1c·10. 1-;1 Tore • _ jolls npl'n for 1w rNon:1 ESCORTS , 1>ulH1tcJ aLtounts pa) a· II arbor Vil.'w Ho m e . Cahr dnvl•rs lw .. upen DIREGTOR of NURSt;S. from design enl(incNinu 11rt1a. t1n1·ork •• fow hours look1nl( fur n cun:cr In hie. <·usl a n·ounting. 644.0750 ings in C.M. & 11.U. HN. !-'/time 7.:1, LVN toprodue!lon.Jo:xper'd1n aday.Jo'unJoh Earn s:!S Position now availabk IJuul l Qu O sa l es & OUTCALLONLY Cun1>l r uc t1 o n back· Pleasel'all 12 13)925·~31 11·7.CountryClubConv. docum ent;1t1on ,' work to SSO pe r wel'k . 1"01 for pur1limcas:1ibtuntt11 n1a11ugcmc11t. t Year 631-3811 groundprdcrrcd. Babysitte r m y homc.C. 1 . llome.Cull549·3001. station sN-up. tool de more 1nformalronphonE 1..A•11alAdvcrt1sml(01n•r pr1ur expc r1 c n C'e Call 644-3258 Ll\'e·in out. 2·11 PM . Rcr. •rc:u ators --sign & production hnc l!J0·09l3. tor. 25 houri-per Wt•ek nl'CeSlllary. t'oll for in· ABORTION , req.C~t.642·1-ltiO HELP! Drr\'er Ind. uniform tro uble s h oot1 ni;:. EqualOporlunity mm1mum Noon to 5:00 tcrvi\•w11p1><>lnlmcnl. Coun.1'clan" k· Jlclcrra.l ._ ___ 1•5_1·.~.1 ~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;...;._;;;;;;;;;;;;~ route. SGOO·S\000 p e r Meehaniral or indus triu 1-:mployer PM. Moll. lo Fn. 1o:x THE LOOK ,.__ I Wtnd IOOpcrsons tohclll mnnth.547-4418. d"" eee~s nll I n••ri,•nce nut n•11 u1rcd l'r1·i:. ll'!>I av:11I v.knds Banking gather Sii:n a{ures fl» ,,,.. 1~"' ... r 5n49e 30a4·1 A-bili-ty HI le arn nc~ 540-4500 :!lllr l frlphnc517·!l lll~. AccOURtsPayeble TELLERS Nov ballot. SMlO k:Z. DRIVERS WANTED • I Health Club skllb und a :numt1---... -s-s-... -G-E_T_R_"'_E_ Pl'rson prereor eon!>t exp. Must be UI+. lntn•lcv.s Men or Woml•n Equal Oppor t:mp oyt•r respon~1h1llt y u mui.t M,... "' " l'lll-~GNA~T ·• but wait l r:11n !lharp Full & part tame open· held Tues (1/3: G&8pm I~ ~lu~tht·25oroH•r Genera.I urfiN! ;ind h~hl Yount:: lady 118·25) for t'ar1n,: conl1lf(.!11l1al person . itd "' f11:url''>· m is ro r cxperacnl'ed Red Rm. lloliday Inn. Appl" In Pcr:.on L~''"1nenr1n" Instructor l.vpmi: t3.'> 10 v.nm> n• l1•1t1t1matc ru11 lime Poe-• 1uun'l•l1111: & rd .. rral TY"" & IU lw_,. Se1td r• .. tell"rs 1'n thu ''u"'port & :n...,. \\' Ch o ' r_ ,. ~ ,. "' 11on 1n •'os t~ •t<" 1 ' .• ~ ' ~ ~·~~-· J' ;ipman. rni; YellowCab qwn-d\\llh1·m1>h11:.1i.011 .... · ~" ~. ,\h11rt 1un. udopt Ion & sume to 1x•rsonnel di rel'-Huntington Ueuch are:.is. !lio phone calls please 11251 Slater,\ \'t'nut• INDUSTRIAL Immediate 0~111ng for an:ui·a(') Tl plllA tt!:-I 1111 llcnlth ~pll No Clip. ll('\' kt<t•p1n1: ~ tor. 21 ii l':.a m pu:. Dr.. Xlnt grm' t h polt!nt1a I. 1 1 n cl i \' i d u a I \\' 1 l h 1 B :\I ~ ,. 1 r r 1 r 1 t: w,. M•nd ll• sc•hool. i-:arn ~l'l' \IH: 5 17 ~Sti:!f:l'r\lnl'. !t:!il5 ___ salary & bt•n\'f1tl>. Call Clerk, liooks lor1>, pJl'I Fowllai~~-·--ENGINEER m1111mum I .1,. t·xµer. typcv.rlli•rs ~·all tw ad "hilc )Ou learn. Apply or *SONYA'S* OlTt'ALl.·)I ASSAC 1-; ISJIJ· 17110 ,\ o s " <' r 1 11 1: S 1· r 1· H· <.'. td('phOnl' operatur. 3-11 !thiCt 2211 ~·orci.l .\H! .. La11un1.1 Rc:h l'er:.onnl'I Oept. 17 t ll tame. ~Ju,t be cxc1t111A B.ECTRONICS BSlt:: or cqu" alenl with 11chcduhng & oq~an11111j! mm"tcrt--d to ;rll appll 1·all :.any an. or C\'l' 211.? SJS.2606 to thsru~s bud• dynamk. 675 9595 1 3 year:. 1:cnl'ra I an health r luh octan t 1e11 :.ind <'an 1 i. ,\ u tom 11 h1 h II arbor HI. Costa Me:>a i;roun~I. • Cl.1.:KK . ORl)l.;it 01-:sl\ ENGINEER ctuiitnal experience-/\11 fl'l'rcauon prosiram for: ncct:s.~.1ry for orrusiona 6-15 :itJ:J - Cahfonua I ~t lank Dulies are order prol'l'=>!> S m a I I I! r o w 1 n i: p I 1c·a11 l s h u u I u It,. :11 11 aJ,!l!S. Ph1ysac:il fat~c:;s local f!rt \'ing. f-:xrcllcnl .Mi\ Tu RE w 0 ~I ,, ;-.; Equal Oppor I: m lo ' p r1rn·1 lo· l''d ram1l1:.1r "Ith nlll!I, t••r I' :lS!\\'" nm sv.immmJ,! .... Cit c 11 ' ----• P )er mi:. \~p1ni;. rolluv. \Ill&: ... eros acl' ,·a ~· pl .. 11r1,1r1"~ • r··1·1l1t\ l\nowlt>dllr ol Ulll\C'rsal ~-o.m~any .ue1~e s. a P lime l o w e l com" INSTANT FOTO DATE \pt )lonaj!cr. couple 01·er :\I f (·u~tomcr eon( act. 302' •n ~ewporl Hl'a(·h ri. y ., '" u J h 1 W, d 642·~321. t:Xl Z76 for ap ncwl·omN·s & contat'I L ....... (' I 0 • h ---~-L'ilson Or .. "A.S.1\._ lookln" ror Elec:t ron•"S !··~·outs .. C"lll pml'nl WCI~ t m ;H' llnl'. SI e t r ..,,, .roo\an >Y t\IO. 3 . ,.pl + p one + ~ ,..., " ,,., _ " ' u ., ,..1 pc>11llnH'n . nwrchants . J-'hti.iblc hi'>. ('all f.:\'1-: i 52 613:!. 2 ti !>lrlnn· 67 units, c.; :\I --'f:nAinccr w/:ll lca~t i Sl!l1·l'li11n analys1~. C'o'l ~•ra"c'~,1644 3319 Nl•t•il r;ar, lik typini.t. Pm. ~K s:JjN• IA.MK CLERK ) r:< ,•xix•r. in llll art<a rt• r\'duclion 1olullw,;. ma111 ut • DAILY PILOT 0 ~--Off' I I ,. I I I u \'1 •t'l N ~ ••• :nmi. perunvnS ICtr >all'C I O t' l•mc q ll'OJllCl' ")!oll'lll'" t' .-nl " I • oon ----,\n~Onlc' \\lllh''l>lllJ.: thl' th' \pl \l,.:r ~c·m1rc1irt•d Au.ist/OprOffictr l11i;trumcntat10111\IW 711ui.t h~l\l' altl11ty I•: THEIRVINECO. 330W.loySt .• :\la\urcil baker ) rilll'nt 1n\\11\ ini: .1 lu1ly rv11plt• :<>;; 11111b Salary Bank expem•nrt>ll <'.di RECEPTIONIST has the c<1pu1J1llty 11( Ill· m~•k" µrl.'srn1111w11 1111111. 550 Newport Ctr Dr Costa Mesa i.:ih·sladv. l':xp prcl. All ndlni: a bu·)t'lc & a ~apt Call i:n:11llli~·:$85l John ~-lll·l2J I. ht1•al'tl· 1,h I) 1 1, 1 rl 1tiutmi: & sust:ainin.: u mnnai.:l'me•ll St·nd r1· .... rtl h .,. I() Pl.i in pt•r:11Jn. !J.12. 1170 \"•11111" \'\\' t .... 11 l'lul I I' I I I t• 111 y I ot 111'1'. s ;1 Otl l 1· sunl~· & !>al.·11·)• l'~"IUll" ..... twpo eoc .qua pportun1ty I k . • :\t • ~ • II 'c r.. ..... ... , ... n•vin "•t·· "· .. nk. ll11nt 111 t1 I k l I Pl'O"r"m or pr U" IO" ' ~ • \V I 'I "l'"'t t11~1·1 n••1 " v ' "' -. • ou e l'r r,·C'l~l>l1on1s or nur " " ' ' in"iit• to E•111nl Oppor 1'.mptny1•r Em1>l11yt:r • ~ -~ · ·' ' · ..::.:" · BIHi 11r tlw l'oa't llw) Sn<ldll•l)ark oflln'. :\Im;\ in eonJu11C'lio11 w 1 /~rol'id· " ~ 1•1'11)..""J.: 111 i':""Port lkh.~\l~f ;\H;H l.u\l•I~ I:! uml. 111\H:\IAIUS bi• ablt• 111 l,VJW. hnnclll· ins: .. engl.nrerln 1.t support Prorcs:11onul Stull1ni:: _ _ _ 71\ntun· w11m1•n l•/T few "" Su ta •• Jul~ Ill. l!J71i at Ideal lor Ill'! I\,. relln•ll. F un·w & p linw. 0\'l'I' jlhlll)\·~ & lronl COllllll'r. 101 eidslin~. ','ro~~n~. Custrni.: orr1n: 111:-;1.1" w ;\NT EU M, ... l. I J.( h l I n i.: j I\ t ll r e (•lean1n_i: :>\'I'\ 11'1.' •• <.:~· r a111110' ti :rn t• m ' Ref'i11t•f1 '\l tllllt>l21l 21 .,ppJy Sir ll ul>1n:. ~:xrl'l l«r\l i·o mv uny St'nd,resPo~:sc l>ad-?2~. DISMEYLAMD Cook:-i\pply m 111•rson. :>howrnorn nils lll$1rlc r~1;1· . .,.c11n1:h um G11·1 11~~·~·~~·~~~~~1l·k llurn11 al;t\l"'l' 711(;1(. l'•Jupl<• o1er Tavl'rn. l7i I·: 171h St., bl.'ncllls. Wrille n 1111~1hc 0. a1ly ~llol. l,._c> 131 l Har ... -r llwd. Kt•11t11«ky 1-'l'll'd Chkkl•n sul!'sp1•r son. lh't•ur:alllr M» ~'-'------ 11 :~1. Apt ,. uail + i.ulary. C.:\I _ -----plu:atron:. only. Wrtte 1\d x 1560, Costu Me:w. .. _ _..._,_ Cvuo. 92103 ltt1i:u11a lt•·•11·h l'Xp h1•lpf11I li o t not ~1t-:1>1c,\I, 1.o'l' 11e1t1 hl with Xl'V. t:!O unrts .11 u1H1n~ton~AR :\!AID Full Pl lll'llc. =ill. OUllY 1'1loL. l'.0. ·~· --. -necessary. A1111ly at :W:lt '-'!>SISTAN'( ~h.llH' Tuhl('I :ind ReJch,S<lll-~.100 n i..:hts. f:i mrlr li:ir. l~ox 1560, Costa M,•:,:y. t:qualOp1lOrt-:mploycr llousl'keeP\•r.muylivr·i.n S.!:. Muln !it. Irvine, No i>>cfK!rfcnce needed. -1 llytlr<'x Wakr 1'111, .1t•---------Salary +. c.!\I. Dorothy, QI. 92ti26 or you may £<11 £Jectromc ---Urn·c. h~ht l'ookini.t. 2 !>Uj.2!XJI. _ We Lram. Pay !!tarts S361 t 'oll•·i:•· Ph,, rm a1•' & IH6·55-t 1 out applicot1on ol lhc chrlcln•n 494.:11:111 mooth. Mc.'<lical. de nt.i i, ASSEMBLER ''"""\U 'l"sn om"". 330 W. DOCUMENTOR t:ngml'Crin~ ----Liquor Store Cltrk I d t 1 ·o ... t.1 )k-..1 l'h.11 Illa•·~. -----'-.,.., "" '" JR ENGINEERING llou1>ew1ves iir malu r~ M !I housm1:. mca s prov1 ed. D .11.y SHIFT Be-..6.. o-rator Ba~ St. II d . a•ur•'. "'P<'rtrnc:e . Sdr-rulr.llmenl, matun· Ttt. GMtte Touch ~ ~o roii;~·~n" ~;" SIOO wk Equal Op1>0rtunity i.s a d1v1sion of Addresi;o. t:o •'.I!<' :.tu l'nti. w eur bondable. fo'ull ti ml'. ll9S 1 ~ . s k a b 0 u t 0 u r f11r thl.' httl,• 1•\l1 ;i' WILL TRAIN i:uar. IHS·to°54• t-:mploytr graph Multigraph Corp DRAFTSMAN for l''tahbh 'J routei> W. l!llh St C:\I. Appl} l>.:lnyeJ t:;ntry Prw~ram. 1nUutl'Jll\la, ... J.:1· GOOD COMPANY ---· ------Ir you are attracted b) fl 15 1:! t5 cl:ul> Mu,.l ll\ f\.M_. _ ArmyOp1>0rtunitics Ofr. ( '.1 II i~I :l'J.Jt IKKPR /GEM'L SECY t'0:\1.H I~\' TV PIST' A R the ext·1t rng cnvironml'nl A mmimum or 2 yr-. ,., iwat & 11t·r~1111ahll' SI I l\rmy Opportuml1e1o ~ IEHEFITS ~ I '<I 1 c 1 ~I Cl.1-.HK Mu:.l be fai.t. ot J sm all company. but pen('n('1-. prderahl~· 111 I:"·' r il.i ah Lori '. Co:.ta Mesa s-t0-10~ \l,\S~.\ta: CO.\l l'U· l.ITE C'OHI' s;:: {·ac~~ 711;7g~ 's~·~~ an•ur. ~ r~n~ w, typ1.ni: :;tlll4'l'Sirc the stability & small 1:-: M l.ll'\'ln '' lk K1td1t•'!_ !l7!J 07ti --LOAH lluntmi.:ton Uch 962·8321 Boll.l.1m1•, l.1t·:\l."'1•ur i ll\\' 17thSt. lllcli: f-'.12 r"'sumt' & i.aluiy ha:.tory &;uhlm1o: r'.u ...... m. <'0• (,11 bcnel1t:o. of :i mujor <'or q u 1 rt''' "11rk111 i: PROCESSOR Santa Aun 5-12·4\lO flu l c .1 II •1 ,, in !Iµ 111 'l'or ll l' r 17th S l & lo Sparcrarl I' o. Box ~ner1ti1 K,1m ;,pm . .t>y porntlon. then c-1111s1dc•r knowlt>dl(t• 11r 111ut.•n.1b. Downey S:i\'inus & t.oan J flin lhl" people 1!11.\1 11 1'11m11n.1 t'o .. ta .\l es u 925 Co 1 ·M .J Ca wk. l\pply 111 Nl·~port t h l• opportu111t1l's finish,•, & t11ll'r:inc•1• n• INJECTION DEPT. hasanopcnin"anOran"I' who'\tcjmn<'dthei\rmy --t>.LS·ISOI g2627 i. '1 · e::. ' Manne En.:mccnnu. 11!17 dl':o.cril>t'd below l:1l1,,. to smull n1Jnufot· 7 \':en Hom mac-hrnl'.~ Co. ror indi;.rdual. c';c · EXl't-;.~~~~~1t/,~~N KING •--------_•_-_•_•_•I · · W.16\hSt.N.11.645·31;32 •r\SSl-:MBLERS. ti mo's turinglnduslry M u~t know \'ar1ou~ pcrienced 111 processini: MEDICALRECIEPT ... • t lo kk IOAT BUILDERS cxperil:'n~e In l'C t'X· STACOSWITCH INC matl'nllls & bl' t11Jlc lu ·conveiitional loans. s·,,1v. Medlen I expcr. req 'd. \\'ant to Stop" "'"" O ttper COOK• Exp · h ' • o~:ToXffll"\TIO~& l't•rmancnt.irnrttimc.3 Exp. journey m e n . • pe ricnn., apprcnttcP. lllll Bakcr<:ustaMe:.a runm;ic tnl'S. IO!!S&loanormorl!!:agc Ty11e S5wpm. /\ble to n EIL\Jlll.IT1\ T ION cl.v'> f>\'r wk. must have carpente rs for 47'-106' Howards R~tuuranl c:onncctor or soldt•r a:.· 549-3041 CAMIRO hanking b;;icki.:round r>rC· work under preuur~ 8 c ustom fish boats & 673·7750 Mter 3PM. scmblv. Color «Ode not E Oppo E 1 MortUfacturift9 Co. rcrrcd. Typirli.: rcQu•rcd . T ake own lnlllallve & t'all u;. i!I llr:.11 fl uy .~.n~trucuon exp. lwn 9 h A I I . ----------rcquir.cd qual r mp oytr XI I "· ..... r handles responslhilil•· Sonch <'oni.t & llam. :'>.~·7017, ask for yac ts. PP Y nterna· CO'OK •I NS I' ECTOR ~; / M 760 I Clay Ave, HB nl sa ary o.t ·~nr its . • ('onHn11111ty 110~1>ltol I' n I. T hl' Woodward tional Offs hore i\turlnc. M • n i mu m 6 m o , s ---IW<'st or Death & C.:a II pe rscrnn!'I I 71'4 > well. Cull for appt. (714 > So l.ai.:11m1 H fl\J t:ll t Companie:.. N.B. 2500So. Smrnn, S.J\. JOLLY ROGER mec·haniclll insiu.•cl ion Escrow Secre tary South of Garficlll 1 549·0902 for further Info. _G4_0._0_140 _______ • Empl t & -\ssbl M1tr-n l'eclc_d _1_n_So_ B. '! 0 k k c c " c r LAGUNA •EACH .t•Mpcricncc 1)0 units & Al least l rear 1•xpcr. Equal Oppor Employer Equal Oppor ~.:mploycr Mtd. Technoloqist Pr:py:4'a':io" l'sl l'lu 111 y n ~ a pprl F_c.1Secrl'la ry. Heer! Expcrlcnct.'<I, good pay & sub·systcm s, tJtilizinK .r.:~ lYJ?lst. Salar~ b~~t'~ __ -.....-__ Prefer() yrs cxpcr. Calif. sho1> t::xpn•r(1lin scll f.stut e Uoc um l'nt. bcru•rlts Appl y in upplic:ahle spcciflculion on .1b1hty. All hc11d1ts. INSU HA NCF S"Y lic.E xpcr"din ullphasei; J•••b•••W••••t••d••• •••7••0•7•S• ~ng 'cu ii :\l~r for ~Pfl~ s hort h n d • l Y Pin (L person. 400So. Cst llwy. & toolin!!. Wiii pf•rform ('all Morion Johni.on. for • ·1 ·: p.: MACHINIST o ( 1 h ,. m e d I c u I 0 1 °" • • S.15·:16&! i:cncral orr .. t:onstr11c· elct'lrkal verification &. UJ>pt. 1 iAJNJ-,f. la boratory . <:all ror appt. ••••••••••••••••••••••• tuin. Expcr only. Santa Counter Clerk visual insJ>(lction 11l all lay Escrow i\lu~l bo . bright . rnst Rcqum.·~ l(OO<I ~t·nrnr l 1714>640·0140. lknlth\',>1trnni.:.1·1t .. an cutASSOC'IATt-:1n:l' Ana.83S·803Scxl27. for Seorood Market. lc\•tl~ up to sysll.!m in· 673·62.~~ leuinc~ ~llh xl.nt skall.s. bntk)!round with ahality,._ ____ ;;;;;;;.-.-.-.-. tt;\<'.tr'nlcl ~1111l!'lll nl'('•I\ NOW HIRING 18 + ---Must like fi sh & people speclion. Most r ead _ .. , . <;>~a~~c ~· 7\i pt o~ea. losl•Luii&opcratevarle·'" "Ill" ul uny kmd. odd •---------. fi45·5223or63l·ll55. bhwprints, no('olorcode. F._xccull\t need ... Supt>r Sal.try c11mcnsur .ll~ ly nl eqwpment such w1. 1oll'\, ('11,H1 Mt·'lu nre.1 Xlot flll'l1t111n'I i~·n for BUSBOYS --C-OUNTERHF.t.P knowlcdl{e nr gauite:.. Secrl'lary with l op ~/:ihiht!,252_::'1323 ___ m ills. lathe!>. & 1>ccond r.~ l.l.'ll·'l & 11"k for llorr nw n & "omrn to work lt"stt-N & tools shorthand & typin~ skill~ I 1111eration llurclinnc used out or lot-.11 oHll'C or nu· coo11s l\pply Del T:iro 25252 •RECF.IVING TECll. 2 and al)ihly ~o hondle nsu'J~~lrnWR ITER m fob. of 11mall p;cr1i.1on MEN'S CLOTHING t:wt·1· l:ulu•o; drt·•~ fat· lnr~ ... upM·1 '"or, r nll :.15 :t'i!l5 '11unA 1na11. I ) 1" 1·~ 1wrll'n<'C p.11nlm1:. nt'r1I~ perm :11\('tll Jnh (.'..a ll r.rcit. !1'7t• •tf.21 I\ Lu Pai Rd.J.af(unu lltlls. To 4 years darl'cl <'X· personnd R. t;. Dt'velo11· "' • . h S 11 t1onv.1d1' 1·nrporotlon No , . . . . menl oHit•c lll'Ur oc: r.xp comm lines Lo work sw1tc parts .• ma ~hop, SulesSperiulisl l''fl\'tll'lll'\' \'1111 "111 ht-Cwitod1an J>(!nc'!ce '" testmi;: & m· Al t XI l· y B for ra p1dtly i:rowlng i:ood bcner1111. day s hirt. Must he experienced In trJ1m•d throui:hly. If you Apply In Pcr11on H.-...U .. Custodillft spccl1on or c lectron1c rpor . 83;1i!r~ at . > ui;tenrv m Npt Reh Sal ST AC OS WITCH INC n il phase!' or mt'n·i. \l,anl 11 ~IN1d y !>e1•11rc ll<'tw,•cn2:00&4.00PM 1 .;7·~xp rf'Q 'd . romf)Oncnls . . appoml · ope n: C.:omensurale 1139 Baker Co::.la Mcso c lothin)I. Oulslandln)( fulu1 l' & 1·an start em Jh R b 3-\ \ •JOpm. Snn Clemcntt• 1;XCELl.~.:"J! if; x p ll a r t l i m c wtupcr. l'l•nn General 549-304 I com pan)' brm•f1ts with m1•1hah'I) .1·ull -e IU en (; (• n 'I II OS p . 1714 ) ,c~~ A~Y ~~·~~r!~ 4'3lei.per:.on ror Jr. Wea1 i\11cnr1r11 of ·u. (714 I !'.:qua I Op1>0r l•:mploycr l'X!'('ll(.!nl pay plan. App· E. Lee .tYU-1!22. 1!' ~c1 s 6 w ~ 11v · ·1 noutiqur Apply U:11s~ 113.122iil .. _ ------r~~~~~~~~~ ly in pcrson ..... J .c. rt--:N. 5J9·118l ion 11• er mos.. pnu Shop. Sou!h Co;1st Pla1u --N~;v, r.Ml UNJ\ lllL~'\ R1·t1r1•1l ~1ar.,.1· 11\.111, ror ---tSI E.C tH C1t1t0tnDr.,.riH ho llda)'s. Jo(ruup an · ---INTERVIEWERS MAl,l •. 5Hl·7700 part llm1• t•om µ.1n 1on,.\.,~t m Ar :1pl + 11111 OK oas "''f surlinre starts day o( Gcncr~I Ofrlce P11rt ttmc • name your MACHINIST f.qual OpJ>Or 1-:mplnycr poicl11nn ~·nmj)('lf•nt W/ forhu11hand to work.120 H•wportleach oo.i i22tl. hirc&many morc. Mui.t huntlle hl"3\') hrs. Work in vrcsllJo(IOU!I tcfl'rcncci-t'rlll 6~7 lfl8.1. unll.11 11untln1tlon U...ach. 0 .. .,_ & Stock Apply In l'crsonncl 11honl's. (lutn prot·('ss. brun('h of L.A. St or<'. We ore 11rowtn)l & hnv«? a -..... c.,IV\ EqualOppnr t-:mrloyer -·' lntc•rvwwinit A/R l'Xl)('r. helpful. Call Guurianl"cd ral" + opcninn for 11cncr a l1•-----lll'!,_. __ ~~-ted 7100 ;>"'."""''------t'/timc. Over 18. Ncnt • 1, ~ ~ hi t 11 1 th •· .... 11!.ua· ,_,,.. n-· ll·l11\J\•&2-<I M (.'.urolfo_rapp1_1n_2_.JJ!J1_. Acmcmais lnct•ntl\·c Call mac n1s . w1 1 a c .... ,.. .,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• AT'rltACT.1VF. ttlrl -nppcnranrt'. Mut1t hr DOCUMENTOR l>1 unr Urc~ky, 1714) mill cxJK'riencc Muhido P•rMNtelA9tftC"j •AAAl'OSITIONS i\IOl'M-llo tcu tvrw ror CAMVASMAH/l1pr. ublctoworkwknds.App· GOLF COURSE 64'1-172.'> i.wt1 1!l'l·ups &work with FceP11ld , SICY'S & r<'1·1•ptlonl"t & 11Uhhr ~·e· la cu~tom ly In person, n11k for STARTIR mlnirnum sup1•rvi~iun . lh1s Qiwnlng11 rnr: Gl ... L OfC l11tlon<1 po~1tlon with In• BOAT & SAIL COVf:RS. lhm>,ltlll:T1'm" L'1n uor DIVISION ---------i Short run cnmmorclul F.xt-cullvl• Secretary, t " t I 1-\Jll tlmc " ., for Nl'wpnrl ltr nch Gnlr J'ob ghop with wide vnr11" • > I • Vl'S trnt·nt t',IC(l('U vc. . 49d "' 16th St C •t A<ld ,.o 0" "ll C 3100 I I A KEYPUNCH ~klllM S11n Cl"""•'nt" bmtllOyor l uyJ\I h•<'!I Sllm1•nfflc\•!\kllls 1kslrn l\alboaYncht S4lrvlce. .,..,, • ·" · " rp!I ,.ra,, .our"" rv Ill' \'t' 1y ur work. l"rl n1H' · • • """' ~· 111. l<t•1n<tl'f'll i\j1\'ncy 1 1 h 1 5'111 JI;()() Mulli((rnph N u. AJJply 111 2 1\lnn fo'ri lwnrrils lnf'lullr mcclll'HI. S"cr11lory. pcrm11ncm. 'o2o n \'f\S s 1 1 c u o p pcnranC'e, _ ~ -------10cnt:ll r et'l'Plionlsl·CX· 2921 S .Dalml•r 1 1rn r t l l m \', J.11J;un11 •t ar~, l •• 11• to. pcl'!lot'lulity & nml11t11111 t•Culivt' secretary. In· OPERATOR hf{' & pult h11lltloy1<. At>t• N11tuf'I. N~WJl(ll'\ I ll'h • 11-1:1.~100 a l'e mo~ t i m 1rnn n nt' Car Lot Man tcllijlcnl, creative pcrl)on SANT A AMA f.lon 'I u1v(• up the Rh1p r ly In 111•rim11 lo: ~II for Av1ll/F.!ltl1h & M11~t ht' happy. )1\3 bh'. & Clean new r 11r11. 1\1 usl l>E needed r or dy n nm I c 546-JSS I "l.11.l '' al In clai.i.lfl(-11 t 'l.ipl\lll M nchlnt• Co. Other PO"llloM ov111l11· ----------sophl~tlcotcd. Write de» experienced & rcllablu. Tustin om ce. Mu!!t been• f;qual Oppor t:mployrr Ship lo i.horc_• r<'!1u lt11' l&t2 l•:. Jo:ilml(tr,SA hit•; ()Hir(' l\'tn nAIJU tailed lctler dl'SCribtn.: Cood job. AOOd hours thu!liostlc, energetic & ~~~~~~~~~t_~M~2·5678 M S I D I\ T J\ 1-; 0 .1': Mcdlcol, ll<'<'CPtlnnlst. AccOUftflng youl'lft>I( & backgro1.1nd to Pat<! ''acatlons. Apply In have ublhly to Q.t1tanl«! ---------1 CORPOltATION has nn ----------5.'I LI h !lo k C .. ..a. Ch1sslf1t-d Ad No.691, pcrsononly.Mr.Nielsen oHlre procedure$. immr<Jlsteo1wnln11fora Mwald'11Su1wrvl11or lYl>I' wpm, ~ l o • .-. I> 1 p 1 1 I' o ""' Nophone.calls 11cccptcd. 1 1 c{l~ //,£~ Keypunch 0"-'ratur. Top ng~! ! The Inn Al krcplni:. F~x pcrlcnced MI n I in um I yr c x . 111 Y 1 0 • • • '"'" 1-\iture uni m ted. Salary C./1'0a \\ Q. • ~ Lai.:una. 211 No. Coallt Tellur11. Pcrlcnu .,nn"rll l nc· 1500.Costu l\lcsa92f12(; THTJWCll opcn.Corporatebcnerlts P\!o -;, II I u h 2700ll''nrl)(!s n -:>,Stc4" "" "'" ' 5th & W.e..t $337 Background must In· wy .. "a11unn ncoc · '"'-' " counting In ~ manufac-:Auto Mechanic ex per. CALL 544· T"'11 fn#ri9t1in9 Won/ Gom• wi#lt o Cltudfe elude 8 minimom or one /\Bk Cor Mrll. (;ohlcl (3 t1a1111 Ulnter> luring «?nv1 ro nml•nl. U.S.&forelitn.own lools. lllMlting\OnUtarh .,_. .. Aiiist.t .._.,cu•• • ....,.-----yea r k ey lo dl llC Caftll1·1477 Prclcrnbly ln the clec clc11n.wellcqu1p.11hop.5,_ ________ ~0rthodontl c orticc. -·~·:,t~.......!:: ::::::::::.....-expcrienC'e. Meill.tgDept. l~ununaNIRurl lron•c Industry: 10 Key & ouvic. l.arrv llunl Auto ---H you ure intcrcst<'d In Po'lln1te maehinu 01><'r .. 1·---------hlety~lr,I(! r:cqu1rcd. Ct'ntcr. 1825 l.aiuna t'a· CAlllrT SALES N cw po r l l.l eac h . ._ •......, ._ ...,. .. _.. 't~i. Joln1na n pro"rcsi.iv(.! Some hc11vy llftm a, ('X· -t.XCEl.LENT n"on lld LR r:-~I Orthodontic: cxpcr re f I I o ,. ,. per. hr lp (ul but noL nee.-NURSP. COMPANY J SPECIALIST quired.642·20.10. H I 8 y 0 S Orlln)!e County corpora· /\pply North Am\•rm1n LVH'S-4tM'S BENF.PITS OL'"""'"' r I I I r ) l ion oCfcn~,~ Cr'<Cl'llcn.~ S<'rv1Cl' Center. 1339 E. P/tirnr & P'/timc. 3·11 &. Includes l week's vnrn· AVON Mullt bc eicperlen c«?d. "''~ ''"" . compuny ~ne '18 :inu WamQrSt. Santd J\na. 11 7, We have o common tl0f1 arter6 mo .. l l paid TWJ_......rffflcoot Full time. Xlnt incom e .,.?._rlhod~tu:?'crMi:r. ...1_:-'"._: ... ~ ... T~'f 41 Uooer~ workinf i•omh -------lnllll'<'tl"CARING."Vou holida ys. 1t r o 11p in· Outstanding benefits .xuotp,a rac .o cmitr. ' . 1 f OM,pcoscconact. ~!aintcn11ncc m:infor upt mnkcthecareot ourpu- s uranc s tarts day of Earn money. tncet Jk.>o· /\pply In person ... J .C w/top ~ecret.anal s kllls I J1 f I · hldg. ~·m1 rN1rcd OK . t1 nls poslllblc &r we core hire & m nny morr. pie, ~oln confidcnrc . Call p f:NN F. V . LAG UN'' ncedt"d for fast 11:rowln11 . . - -MSI /\ppt. call 548 1008. After for you by offerin g :Jn lntcrvlcwlnJ? 540.70UorZenllh7·1359. HlLLSMALL.581-7700. ort.ho.orc.Mustbeout&o· f •f " -4:30PM. JClnl oonclltspackagc. 9· 111\M & 2-4 Pl\1 ~ual Oppor Employer Ing&: job orientated. Call l F A R E T • Poflllclem 1,.111te old soll.d Plcosc apply. Bcvcrty DOCUMENTOR Uabyt1itter. Responsible.~~~~~~~~~~1-MZ-·7_900_. _____ I r I I r I !'..--~fheyonlyc-clfffl co1.:~:!r10N Man:~o';!t"iP .. ;RSON Ma nor, 244.$2 Via llhlh School sen ior Cai•wash help. 18 .... f'ff'. DENTAL ASSISTANT. "' ~ "' Estrada. C.o!Nnn lllll!i. DIVISION nced('dtocarcfor 2boys Side Joe. Me tro Cai Ptrimc 4 days. cxper. I 11 uRLA 5 j [tx!c~ l~k~~it"[~rt:Orr Eq_ualOppor.l.:mploycr. • ogrs 7 & 1.1 oner school Wash 2950 Harbor 81 enlhuslairn. salary open. t'lf,.....l.._,l......,"'l'~J--.1,....... 8 C....-"" , ......... --' 340 FftclMr Av~. wholesolesupphcs. F'ull•,J·---------Addrc'"oaraph f2pm l bcgmlng Sept 13. CM •· ' 7$2-6733 . • . . . _ .., ''""",.. ..._ ..... ., _dt Coit. M.sa, Co. 1 11 d ·J Mulll1trAph M y ho1no, own trnns. ' ' ---------1 _..__.___._.._.4--..,,... ....... ,,__Ne.>....... 92627 ~a ze . 673-22~ 1-'orClosslfit'dAd 2u1s.o.-.... $1.SOhr.Call968.-6.5203'l CASHIER Denta l r ('ceptl<1 nls t. • r r r r r r r r J 1714)54,·6127 ACTION S.11.uy ... u . .u 6pm. • -plea11a nt ofrice. xlnt op :l:'t'i.r:"-~u You don't ne«?d a 1111n tr Coli n "'" ... '""""'"" F /time. C rowth Co. 5 portunlty In i;ro'4·1na --· ·--·· - - - -• "drow (nst " whe n )'CHI Dnjly Pllot a.· .. ual~~~sn:ploycr ~~~~~st~~ d~!f./"ptto~ =~~~t~g J:/'w~~~, r;-:.~.tis~·('~~J~"l~~~t!: • ~ '°1 I I • I I I I I ~~~?~':..'~~~!>' f!~~~\V~n~~,~~.l~~N::!! i\U.V(~I\ ""' v,....., C1ass1r1cdt\d.642·5678. 2950Harb0r Bl . C.M. m-4711 ICaAlllM.ITS.....,_iRClenlflc.tloftlOIO -6.12-56i8. 642·~78 . . . Polltlcal rleld "o rk I SEAMSTRESS AITRESS wanted, 21 & Voter regi~tration. Boal cu~shio'!s & boat O\'er. full·l1me . day or $2 30 P -Hou 1 CO\'C'r~. f,xpcr d only. mghl. Apply in person. o ttd hlnc. Walch doi:. • """ r · sails by Schock btwn 10.2. or afl 6P:\t. 1::1 We 1 m n ran e r , n o Shifts: Mon-Fri, 5-9, ij75.1823 Mat ad 0 r ( M ex . ) children. 847·6405 Snt 10·3. J\11 a\'ail. 1-----------1 Restaurant 1768 Newport Puppies. 9 wks old , T<!r· 40 Opetthtcp Blvd. C.M. rler mixed, rree lo good ,Apply Aug 3, 4, 5: 9 to 3. SECRETARY WAITRESSES home,M'7·7977 1509So. Grant. S. A. F.xper'd. Full or p/t . ~~~~~~~~~I Immediate opening for Good hrs. Neat appear. furRiture 8050 sc<:retary w /min 3 yrs of· Over 21 ••••••••••••••••••••••• rice exper. & ability to Surf &Sirloin Cofftt & lamp tbl!\, green work indep ende ntly . S9·30W.Coast Hwy, Nil w/slat.c tops, also king Mus\ bo pkasunl, well No Phone Call.!1 I!! mallrcss. box s vring & groomed. Type 70. sh ll01-----_;_----1 Crume. Beautyresl, new .PIT paste up In print shop urd1ctuphonc. AlTRESS • For lunch. rond. 499·2630. 9·l :30pm Call644·3389 l'OCktails, relier dinners.---------·• ~XPF.RlENCE ON LY 9AM 'lll Noon Apply in person. Thl' **I BUY** P /timc Sal u. S40·S70 wk/up. Men. lodlei1 , slu· d c n I s . i-: v e 11 / S 11 l H68-837R. S.'16· 110<1. --- •1· · v j w ll THI llVl ... I CO. Quarter Deck Rest. 2~ s> iss1on ic o orea. a " W Co~~t llwy N 8 Good used t\Jrniturc & on custome rs, Mon. lhru 550 Newport Clr Ur. · u~ • • f'r1' '9"17"1 Ne~port o~ach ·------''-------· /\pplianccs-OR t Wiii • .. ,,. " w ..., anted: Exp seamstress "ll orsE•Lfo YAu .--i;::fi::::;;;~.~~Eq~~ ~u:;:a~I ~O~p;po;r~E~m~p~l;oy~e~r~I w 1 Iii n g to le a rn ru r "MASTHS Auc"rloM Real &ht• alteration. l'e rm posi· 646-1686 Ii 113-9625 --.POITU ... ITY ~-------•1 tion, exquisite .!lhop. ""'" " Fashion l!ltpnd. 644-4661. Aft 6 CALL 554-729) Opt>nlng for 2 /\ssocml~S. s.c ... t.-y Pool --------New or e x pt<rl~n rcd. Excell('nt opportunities Va nled, part t1m~ com pa· SAVEi New & used furn, Llrcn11ed renl l'st a le for Individuals who de· nion &driver. Prer 20.25. oppl'3, misc. W1lson'1< ,,,1cs1lcople wekomc , 1 re wh e n eve r f·or m:ile honcJicappP<'d Har1?01n Nook . Now 2 \'ou h11vc y our own OCCC!>!tOry. llrs 8·S. 'f yp ~llc~e studc~. Ca ll or Stores -545 & 1114 w pn,·atr desk ond phone. inR 10 wvm. i.h 90 or die· ternoons 642 2963. 19\h. C.M. G42·7930 & S:ame IOC'alloll 111 years. laptwll". 548·3262 t:xcclll'nl romm1ssio n Call 644·1119 MHc~H Beautlfu_l _G_o_ld_9_'_S_o_f_a , ~pll t . r.ood wa lk·ins 111\M 'tll Noun •••••••••••••••••••••• Jooac ttpn.•red cushion~ <iood reforr:.11.s. Cull ror THI llVIHE "'....&l 1005 .. ~ " _.....-on aeats & back. Qu11•....1 lntt'f"v11•w, /\isk ror 8111 COMP•MY ,,---'"" •LacMnmyer. ownt'r. ,.. •••••••••••••••••••• •• velvet . Perfect cond $125. • 860 N Bl d CM 550 Newport Ctr Dr JOMA THAM'S i\lso t>' Green. white & • ~.~~:~~;6'7\13·45~ Mtwporthoch •f;UMMf.R blue noral 1111fa, gd col)d Equal Oppor t;mployer CL EARANCE• $6.S. M1·604_2 _____ 1 Lachenmyer """ 11o1 EV~Y~'!~~G0~.~,ES! King sh:e Bdrm set. 5 pc 'ECRETARV for Real 4223l~lSt. N8673·6001 + maltre~ii "· frame Eslotc co .. In f'a~lilon ----: ----Pecan finish, hkc new. Mund. Musl have 4 yr11 1896 Chais e $100. 18 ~·---t• ~ ,~, ,,,,~,~"' ~bhY(o ~, a ereptioni11lffypl1t. Part ex,~r. type 6lViO wpm. COOCh "' IO\'U ftl\ SJWO. 4 ..... Stool• CJOOd '"' t~ll ""'' ti Ml\ 1 time w/~slbillty of rull iih 80·90 wpm . Ca ll WoodbumlnK stove $500. CMMltlow. i•~-ll • 1 I""" r 111,~11 rm ~"" 11 me. M llS\ h 11 v~ ~ft 1mecn. 640-0123. Ph642·7131 c .-••ny L. ""· .,·. _ .ffT(,~~-01111 \Utt~,, "~~I• P.•om•'"' ll'lcphon(' person11llty & -seota. wel••t bocks. "'1 "'""" ~ lll'-'>1~ f!c"~" Knit"' \Vnth•f! Sh•' gd lyping akillll. Apply ul ·cc rel 11 r y /Ii ~ ht book· Antique Ba~I ~ Claw buJ $40. for ol. 146•99 ll 1~n11 1yp, v••rt w1111 • l r, n, •• i)U.I South 8 St Tualln keepe r pos 1t Ion for Cel. $300. Solid oak. Pe ~. & t-.L. "'" "'' 1?'J· 011e<t•t111'. •onr 832 :>4 7 3. · ' ca r eer minded. s e lf cond wilhC1u\ hutch. 8"'11'1" pM w-.. '"°'' urd•l•"· Hl-16 u1c1. • st arling lndlv. w/xlnt 640-!Ml3 Must sell!! Antq. buffl:l C.\chlht brttnsin•~llaPll Sl.00 '"' t4(h Nlltrn Ade R. I. SALIS typing skllli Cor busy U·I---------~ 1175• chino cnl>lnct s175. ly sundien w1lh comfOflt blt J$• et<" 0• 11 t 111 tor ftr\t<ln t Uc'd • u.llc'd porting co. In NpBch. ANTIQUING IN T UST IN walnut aq. tbl no chr!> ~•de · to· l>IC~ wJist sct111•n&' • 11 "" 11 ' 114 hMldltl':. Sol "' ........_ 14 ct.y Ss I e ry $600. + x In I Do k ... xlnl SJ"", dork unit rurn Pretty 111 or 11t, ~Itek in st110ts Allee Brooks ......_ ....... _#Its "··ti ( t )'OU now lnc~ ore 1 il4I or sunshine solios. ..._.., .... ,.11 ...... pt. to• unt<C"• • "" or •Pl> . fl A l' . Sho I Old (7 p1 ....... s) .... u.. Med1l· ,__,"" """ ., Traiftlflt Co.ne 640-629l me n 1que ps n . ~~v .,_ P11nltd P~1te1n 'J2&9· Hilt Daily p,101 •----· ------• Town Tustin? For quali teranu n tbl w /$ ch rs Sites 10' J. 12'~. 14'" 161 2 Box 163. Old Chelsea Sia 1 SF.CRETARV · ty & selection, visit all o wrghl Iron b:-ise U O 18h. 20~2. S11e 14' z lbvst New V0tk. NY 10011. Prtnl ..rrersonal instruct on R~CEPTtONlST us. Located at lsl~..E Plea se call afl 6pm . Jn tlkes 1~11 11rds 6().i""'. Name. Addreu. Zi p I :::-cf~:!'~~~~:.11f'S 1 woman 0C(1ce seeking Camino Ru ! & Main. 845-7857. Stftd SLOO lot tatll Oltttrn. Pattern Numt>er U 'd t al . 2 ks skilled person for lm· 9• Brown striped JlertuJon ~dd 35,. IOf .etell ~ttern. lor MORE lhln t vtl' belortl 20C ;IM~es :ta~i!mwed. moo. placement ln grow· Couch Like new sell rst-cl•.ss "'""''· h1nd1tn1 dtsiCJ'S otus 3 "" prlllttd In- Ing architectural Cl.rm. p AR LOR p u Mp ER. $100 11.llo end table S3S SttMI ''· ''de N(W 1976 "CEDLLCRAr 11ou1es, Skim & Sweaters Drastically Reduced SOME MARKED AS AS. 40% Off '73 HONDA Cl.100, 316 Miles. ?l:l'ar new. S3SO. 552·0298 or 540·624 l loah,Power •••••••••••••••••••••• Suzuki TS400 3,700 m1. *ZODIAC XJnlcond. 5850 Port·A·Marine 540.2011.11-----•96_·37~50,;;._ __ Lobster Skiff 18'6" trlr '72 Husky, 450 CR e ng. 327 Inboard w /sO hrs: strong. c·om11lctcly rblt . You finish wet dec k. SGSO/ufr. 543.97115 Sl~. Bctw 4 & 6 PM cal '68 Hondo 350 CL. $100. '71 496-8786 Honda JOO SI. Sl75. Call °:e~ ~~!/f ~t:~~~ l~c 1:;e1~~:~ ~:-;s-,c-<K--a-v.-·u-. trlr. Make fer . Wkdy i;uk i) t75CC. uoo mt . _a_rt_s_._548_·7_2 __ 4_8, ____ 5295. A Pvt.!~· 6'12·0345 19' Wriedt Spoile r, 45 '71llonda175. Vry Olds jet & cust.om trailer lo mileage. Gd cond. S2995. at Mes a Uoat $350.642·3<196. Center . 1595 Ncw1>0r11----Blvd.C. M.646·0539 '69 Ka was aki 500, '75 :W' Cstm bll Crsr. T /Chry V8s, fly brg, /\/P, hid lank. VHF, 2 onao. Sa 517,500. P ay haul OUl survey. SJJ.261& NB 13' ME1'CAl~F w/trlr, xln C'Ond. 2 l>l'l S !11.&lh., $35(). 644-1100 -------- Sl4,500. Seoc:roft 2il!'\I-' 1975, twin 1500 Mllrrii, x lnl cond w /trlr. s: radio, depth rlnd1>r. F.v1• & wknds, 548·4041 , du,vs. &12·1121. COCKTAIL OOAT 18' Lyman Bay l.ouni·h Chrys pwr, c ln. full t'ov. $1450. A Yt14R Ill __, _ .. Yamaha 250 llO. Best of· rer. &StJ.702'1 '74 HON DA CR·l2~ Super lru·k rocket, FM F race cqu1 1)1>ed. must see lo apprcc1a lc. Tot ally new lhroui.:h out. SS85 S:lfr4758 '71 IMW 160 /5 1500 on111nal nult•!I. nor In g 'It Iver • M INT • IGA2'J77) S.ADDLllACK V .ALLEY IMPOITS u 1-2040 495.4949 '73 1 londu Cit 125. Run!' 11rut. <;ood beglnncr1' bl~)nly S3tl5. 545-48''4 SUPF.R SUAltt•: '70 Vc1muhu 250CC strecl 27' l'roJun "~xp. Cruiser or 1hrl. Xln\ rond. S32!> ! Twn V·8'1, plnkd. J'lp:1 4 l!J(l.l)G1S ' S7500 A V61fH)OOI XTRA SiiARP · l yr old. ~7.r:.::'· 9160 outr1~ld 20' elec. yellow ••••••••••••••••••••••• reno py ltlOOO f i rm .. . , , 673-7670. 11;30·S. 67$·2922 'r.I Koadllner 28 . fully aft 5 PM & wknds eqpd Incl 2 olr cond & 1----------1 1tencn tor. 1a.ooo m l • ll•rco Classic. Ueaul Snc. 194.2 llarbnr ntvrl. decorated, t ls>t s. twin C.M. Chrys t~emlcs. lot3 or t-:o_r _R_e_n_l _' 1-,-1 M 1n 1 ~~~·900· fl75-6877 or Molorhumc (22') Self ------*' conlaincd. $150/wk, 7• '62. as· Chns crart W/233 ml. 492-4599 eves/wknds· Ctwv mtr. now. Boat In 551H3l3 doys. top Bristol cond. SG500. ----.---OAys only 8 \O 5.30 Laty Uuy 17 cabover. S43-068l · ' '75, Oodae chaise, very nice S7 ,000, MS.2456 I :t~~el~b~tn~\';,~·s lnleresUntC variod at· Reed Organ w/Oak case. 963.8738 an. SP M wkd • M1Man Maritn AfAlOO' Hat tverylh1ns. 7Sc. ,, ..... tlvities. Top aec:reta.rilal Complelely rt'st ored . ..._....0 ys · Pattern Dept. u 2 Crwclltt .wltll s.-m $1.00 No license nee to apply ,kills + desire to Join, a bcautirul tone MSO. Ph w"'""' any me Dally Pilot r~et • ""*'" -t"°' 19CAIPET happy a(fgressive-team. 64S--153Q,days 2 Striped velvet Medit.. 232 West 18th St. Now ~FlftJD.UU -t.00 '15$klpJack.24 '.F/D.245 UALTOIS Hl·tltl Sal•ry commensurate h · ... • d Co t York NY 100 1 t Print Cttellet • ·---t,IX! OMC, 1/0. Loaded. .....,_..~H . WHOLIS•LI ........,LY c airs . ...,au. con . s , NaMe' ... DDRess' • ZIP, Se•-.· lllllt hell .. SU5 $14 000 557 6100 -CHM For details call Lind• with exper. Call for 1n· ,.. "" S27S. ea. Sell S1M. ea. " " ..-. 1 t .... st oo ' · R--"_.· , Fashion Boutilue -------------1 formation & submit re· FRENCH•~NGL1Sll 21.3/S92·153l. S I ZBEE and STY L E,;,'.~~r:c.e1 i.. . s1:00 333 E 17th Sf ..,., .. RESTAURANT s um e l 0: M i c h a e I '40 Ft. CQ.f'Uiners ---------1 NUM f'. llalr,t• Craclltt htk . Sl.OO • • loah, Seit 906 (6) Now 28' Diplomats M0tnin1 rood pre parn· Tro ,... t A • • Arrivln•'•' .... kly Brown Sora. Xtn• ""nd. ••••••••••••••••••••••• (2) Ne w 30' Ex•"lorers t wer , .-e er • ...,n. · .. "~"' • ... v o. ,.. kMW "'• It -1 1 l111tallt Crtellet '"' _ Sl.00 C f M "' ,Ion, full·tlme. Appl)' Del d A 1601 n--1.YMAN DRAKE SlOO •• I__. .. _ h • •t 00 OS G •SG HOBIE t• (2) New 25' South winds 1 rum ~. ..,.,.,,.. · "'1Jr• tree! S.lld 111• '" ... ._, _,... '" •. • • '" (•) N 2' F TACO 2$252 La PH Rd. Sl c:-.. : l"'S N B 9"".... ANTIQUES Ph 646-7001 ... ,,. ,_ ...... .... ...... SI 00 w/lrlr, $920. without ... .,,., .. CW 2 ourslar11 -w • Hiil • ,.....le " ' . <JV<N, l'""'" CONDO VE •• ""' •• . 1t1ter ... ttft ••-• _..., -' .,...v ' -ded I ll I l' ,_guna s 7 sz. 9164 • ..-.. RA • cau1et-cll• ct•,.•''"'" fer c..,tttt lltt.... Sl.00 673-~9 LUil w op ons nc g , -----------L...:.=...::;:::::_ _____ Fountain Valley 979·2811 Complete king slt'c '"" ,.tttni ef ytllt cMlt ... c..,ie._ ~fpau :14 $1.0I Clew.di....,._...._. ---------1 color TV, Microwave.• lest_... Mgr. ccretar~/Bookkeeper. 1010 Waterhcid . he a ter, t1 lr , ... lh MWl t2 Prin MJMU .:12. ~Oc Heett of Pmc. .... , Hobie 16 w /trlr. Xlnt du9l rO<>f 11lr1. Avail. as \ Youn&. aggreuive exper F'C, Ru l Estate t>ocu· n aurrounded & pedestal. 4 s.. -llllit IM' • SUS IMk ef 11 Dinn .:1 50< cond . 2 !lctll or sails. of July 29. Tbc11c ore new mar. '50.000 mo gross. ment. shonhnd, typing,••••••••••••••••••••••• Mo's old. $1$0. 53l.Ol33 lntllt ....., Craft• SUO "'"" Dlllt ~ U 50c $1595. 493-7260. liddltlol\ll lQ our ncet of C311 9am·Gpm.673·9»3. general ofc: .. con11lruc· Frcictil Dam11e Hotpoln\ Riviera SOCa Bed, 4 mo's """"' , ...... llell •St.• tS b1fts ftr TMly .:a _soc Opell M-, I ,. Sit. 15'6" Snl"" w-/-tr-a-llc-r-ln- 194 · Oon. Exper only. Sant.a Sale.3308W.Warner. old. ll2$. Oth~r furn ai hlltllt Sewiltt ._ SUO ""'111Jfffyhlt -We to&& .,... ·~ Oales RVRcntllls lnc I Stllidlt ltems &i2·561 Ana. 83S·8035 e'<t 21 near Harbor, S3nla Ana nu~. 53l-<llU ................... llllllli..1•1111 ... •I • excellent cond. Mu1t u lt of Irvine. S5io4446 -~.83&$tl • I MIM. ... irW • ......_..,,,... ......... ,,w ....._U"4 ....._U-.4 UM4 · -.............................................. ······················· .............................................. ······················ .,, DAILY PILOT Mon<tay,Auou.st 2. 1m ............. ( .. ... lea '74 .,.._ 9761 v........ . t77 dl tt I Co~• HU W.e.4 tit ~ .......... •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••-•-•••• LNM 1975 TOYOTA VW C .&MPERS 76 Opel lsutu. Br•n W.jaM ,,,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. ................... WEPAVTOPOOLLAR '720 ... llMd CaJCA • A new, "0AOfljlamc 6how tl•/a .. JI' fORTOP USEOCAl\S o•••••u•••••••••••••• O~M IOO 4tf)Hd. t3S$.'llRM>. 6' P~ lf744S ~-~ prh-e ~000. Nale 75 COU•Al XR·7 Funr.~11-contaleed FOR:i~a~t;STJC '74 DATSUN ~60% 0NL y $)551 ntph1ha !lfr 813-2'112. ' ~=~!~ .. R.:._~ II your <'It 14 •xtra ctea Factory air ~cht100111(1, MEICIDIS ~S M010IS '71 p..._ #7'61 ..,_ --9-9-l-S R ... :O"'NCY :;--OT01R' ......... n-.· 1tuto tadao, rna...... OM DISPLAY ,,.., \'IL'JO \ve,;'tphah:t r. L "' ...,. -••• •" .,,. "' '71 Atlt t9p 609CMP •••••••••••••••••••••• 92$ ~~:~:o~~T~'i.A. ::~~~v~. c,o.;; look SHOO ~TH~R~l~rfj ,_l_J_l .... ·Z_llO 495• I Z IO Lilll1 new. lo m1lt-t .. Ml·250.1 •• CoitdCesa 979. Hll-SPric. SUH MERCEDF.S DEAi.ER "14TOYOTACEl.1CA •11 P ...... #2312 --------__..._ ------1 Gll62 Mint'hC'11lt-r, 4 Speed, faetor)' alt eon -Shup WANTED! fttnt 211' GMC. Pvt ply. TOP IUYH r:•~-Bu(•na Purk dlOon1n6;. TatUo, hl'1'tl'r. '72 Plot Top 211JNY c.11 &13·2616 or 6(z.4()fl'f. ~ Ul!i flr1t. & lai.t! To S2).7J50 C~KPJ'I, Sundhll 1969 or 1970 Cadillac ConYertibl• CA.SHIUYlll Newport Reach. Calif. doll..-paid for imports. _On lhc S1&nl.a Anll ·~ Kelly"-loell SHSO Wl't'k t'nd Spcl'llt l '73 f.scopadc. l .. oadl.'<l ! ? COSTA MISA IKl"S Price SZltt •11 Poptop 416,0G ......... , Weelcly rental. Sleepil 1 DATSUN '71 ZIOC Cpt. Wl·slJ)haliu, 111r • • ~117~-28U lfar•·~r Blvd IOO.llGY' '74 t•Wetop ft4550 •••••••••••••••••••••• '71 QI.OS C'lfl,ASS SUPUMI j "" $8 450 "Sunct1ul".trl.i &11Lo\•~ T,..,..,... Tre•el ti 70 Colta Mesa 540·641 ~~'"°' c M "~" 11301 ' i.b1k. w111l'rta11k "'ull •547-9709• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wj; 8UY · '75 280Z. Am /fm. 1il11r~. Jllft SI..._. tUm!>"r~quipl>\.'tl. '76 J.5' Park Model. Jo'ac •USED CARS ft air, m11i; whls. :.alvcr /hlk .... orb Mu l be i.ec-n • Slttl tory air, alldlng glass dr, TRUCKS• int. A!ISume lse or blO' 611·1176 1111 CUilom made. FuUy Comelncw Ciall Aft6pmcall496.7167. llas alr t'Oodl&lonln& und (t). 19'6 Hofbof, t M &46 9303 dehi.xe, a mos old. Must flU .,,....... '68 ~. ruu i>wr .. G \'YI. selllorcash.99S·7199 •--c--•....... '74 2160Z. auto, air, t ape bstoffer. Day3,998.7300 '75ToyoteCorolo GARDEN WfST VW .. • ,...... -... ~ deck. et<'. Loaded. llrgh ~-&_wkn~536·51163. 4 l!peed, vinyl top & only Sharp 13' 1974 Ca rdinal. 18211 8eac" 81\'d. blue bk <'ond. mu t sell at .72 18 '>u.I" , ~nd"u 11.000 mil~. (2toCH. l:hO' ~ .. ,\ f'or comp.i ct cars. Hun~ngton8ea('h 1 book ~900 ~..... .. orleuse. gas/elcc. refri~ .. ba", 147-6087 * 549·llll ~w . P\l ply stereo.tupedet'k,. S"'DDLEl"'CI( ,\ ' ' I ~· ' :.lderm. Sl800. Call ----t>-lS·2233 Tob~IC.'l'Obrn.833 13UJ "' "' '68 Sqbk. am fm tuPO. ltd 673-8617. I TOP DOLLAR '74 Dots. 260% VALLEY IMPORTS tires &t painl. bed '" Nabers Cadillac 2626 HAHOI llVD. .. PAID 't Ctouic Mere~ ll 1·2040 495.4949 back. Very cleut\ Sll07 '70Cordmul l>lx. la -J.\UJEDlATEL y 2 To ChooM frCNll 300SE c-~ 675 3329 CO~TAMf~ S850or twst offer. F·oR ALL Both are fully t-quipJ>\.'<l .\I int 1968 c;;d°·c ion Tl CQron:> Mark 11, 4 dr. - Xlnl cond 493-4168. FOREIGN c "RS I automatic, the other J I • 1 air. wuto. xlot cond. $1 •74 SU P t:R IJ F.ETI. t: Quality and Price 1tm Coug.ir XIU. 111r 1914 OLDS Po"et, Landau St8SO HINITY HHT . CALLORCOM.EIN s peed . (Zl3J S D >& Cu:.tom .s11;('r lacque rrrm.GeQrge.673·6833 XLN1' CONU A~l/t-'M Guaranteed '67 Sears SOO tent trlr. $100 TO SEE US <mt.KC>. Buy or leal;e. finish, n•n') leather m ---CASSETTF;, 22M Ji.11. l . 6'14·5742or5-l!l 8~ -------l•etCY ' cash. 847-1~-1~2 Ket· SAOOLHACK tenor. ~unroof .. AM /Fl\ Tri...... 9 767 PP, S2600. 673-8886 c.htnll Spccia/isu Uer Ln, HB. N~RT IMPORTS V"'U .. Y IMPORT"' !~~rheo11& caSs10sc000tte, Cnc,.11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Prclcrrcd Rates Dodge '93 HAIDTOPSIDAH ~ •••••••••• •• •• • ••• •• •• 40/50 power au ts cruise '68 Dodge Dart, run:. cont"°', auto temp ail' good. manual t rans cooct.LoacMd.'tTSXl65)• ---------1 3hNW.CslHwy,NB "' '" ;;a • ..,c e ns, · · 8 ... , TR vlnt d' · 1971 VW Lar~~l Sclcc:tion '4•9405 8111040495 4949 644-9 130 for appt ' 6· :'" con. illon. of ew& U•ed Allto Senice • 6 " • • • -.•eekdays only. 38,000 mi. new tires & Rot Top COMper • Pwh 9400 I BUY JUNK CARS '70 iiO'l. Cherry cond & --clutch. Best offer. Call Very· Clean ! Priced Cadillacs in S600/bsl orr. 979,8768 af\ $4491 • ·;.;;~~~~~;;;•5•• USED AUTO PARTS color. AM/Fl\1 stereo 8· CUSSIC USED Tom833·~7 Ri ght! <.284KZI>. Orange County S40-Sl2S 847-9637 track, mags, SUOO or bst M.rcect.1 Die1el1 71 Triumph Spitfire. good llLL•Y ATES Open Sun1.1.ly s. . Maiten 1- '74 DODGE DART Coclllec . SWAP MEET. don't miss ofr. 963·2706. luy or Leote con<!. s1soo. VW-PORSCHI!. CJdr.llac th.is one. Aug. 7. 1530 E. CASll FOR YOUR CA R! 5 7 I:;' Edinger, Santa Ana. Call We Need More Co rs. i4~~ 2tiUZ. lti.000 m1. brn, Great Selection S<it>· 7 7 San Juan Capistrano Master Dealer $299 5 • 2000 llarbOr Blvd. : 4 ~<;10r s~dun. PS. tur con. C.M. 540·9 I 00 rormorelnro.547·S.'69 CALLORCOME lN: blk int. Am i1''m, tape, Trade·ms Wckome PrivateParty 111·4100491·4511 2600 HdrborBlvd. •THE CAR PL.ACE• rac. air. mugs. l.140-l7GO HcM.tH of IMportt '72 TR-6 Rdster. MINT , ----.---Costil Mesa 540-9100 drlaonini;. auto trans . Lie. 621KJ 1'.: Into "51 .... ...._ ... __ ~...... j' 2100Hurbor Blvd.CM d --. -714/523-7250 l'Ondition, AMH'M, 70VWP01>-Top empr,nu Nabe ~·---2510,2 r.4spd. radials. ------radiuls, new top, plu:i c n g &c ,new rud1ali;. rs •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• 611·2620 very clean. Must sell/b.st 1969 MIZ 220D more , s3 .soo. ( H<t) $2.950. Firm. 831-tOOO. ~::Us 95'20 ofr.&14-1008 Automatic with air con· 646-9732 1972 VW ___ Cadi•llac _ 540-5630 ••••••••••••••••••••••• tt73PIMTO 4 spct.'<l with stereo radio. 30,0-00 original m iles: '75 8210 Coupt'. 4 Speed, d1t1on1ng! SUPERB! • 2626HARIORllVD. •••••••••••••••••••••••.Autos, IMported Coco Brown. <JOOMDM > Volk1WOCJeft 9770 FASnACIC ~~~~~~~~ COSTA MfSA 1948 FO•D ueuuuuunnuue 673·677l SAi>DlHACIC u•n•uuuouuiou 4 ~ with air t'ond. -1--------'~--1 1/lTON,,CIUP Alldi 970 VALUYIMrORTS NEW.76RAlllT t997GNP). '70 Cad. Uev1lfe coupe. '7100Kt CDBM831 ). SADDLHACK V AUIY IMPORTS ., I ·2040 495-494'--4 speed, longbed "90'::-•••••••••••••••••••••• 1Rot 9725 lll-2040 495.4949 Model 1701-4 speed $1995 Sharp, Cully equip'd, air CHARGlR reslored.C49974)(). '71.AUDI ••••••••••••••••••••••• (250933). llLLYA.TES cond .. power seats, 51995 '74P\ntoStatlonwagon S 1950 Auto. tran11 .. factory aii ·11 Mercedes 250. Xlnt $3499 telest'Ope steerinit wh~el .i Speed. XJnl coll(j. Orig d lt · I ..... l//T;95'i# d l S7SO b VW.PORSCHE One owner. S2.0S-Oor best Air cond1t1on1ng, PS, owner. S239S~36·1848 MARQUIS MOTORS ~~dJo.<~'k;},'. s tere .... ~ :r~494~~~r. .or st Plus Tax&Licensc SanJuan Cap1strano ofrer Tel.S2G-4!*2-I power brakes. rad io. --- MlSSJON VIEJO ...... .._look $1950 -. . ----llLL YATES 137-4800 493.4511 - --\'lnyl roor Lie. 822MZT ·72 Run. Air. now clutch. lll·ZllO 4'5·1210 11-1r"S .-: 13399 IUY OR LEASE 73220 Mercedes VW..PORSCHE '74 Cad El Dorado. Blue 540 • 5630 tiTc-s, SH9~ or bst. ----r-nC~ Clean. Xlnt condition Vol•o 9 172 ~/white cabriolet top & 1 _4_!}._1·_5868 ______ _ OVER 50 CARS 1" SANT A ANA S6900. Ph 646·8105 1517.~o"oc::~.t45ni°1 •••••• 5 • 0 ··UT···H·:::..······ l~~1~~4r'S:.~~cd. ·14 r 1nto w aaoo. Nr nu IN INVENTORY MGI 974 . _,.. tiles & brb, rr rack. ••••••••••••••••••••••• m VW Cmpr , Pop-Top, OR4HG! COUNTY'S '74 Ca~. 4 dr sed Deville. 2626 HAltlOlt ILVD. automaU,c •• 45,000, tunli az FAIGO & co. 830S. Main Street 1'66 Hofbof C M 6'6 9303 I 1972 MGI GT like new. new tires, VOLUME wht vmyl top, ovr gold. COSTA MlSA g r eat. J II 1~1f for clulcnlbrlts. 536·8428. Loaded. 39,000 mi.~ anythln'g near $1800, Anextra,extran1eecar! VOLVODl4Lltl <714l498-1343 SC. Ford 994 make orrer.r Pvt pty, tzfos:JOG ). '71 Super Beetle, Cd cond. • C -•-••••••••••••••••••••••• 548·8778 SANTAANA 10lo6, MonAial. Closed Sundayii • 547-9709. 120W.Warner .a Main 9712 Santa Ana 557·2132 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $2997 new paint, FM tape. Tryus,you'lllikeus! he•._t 992 'OO FordCtySq. Wi:n. 1--------- M.ARQUIS MOTORS $1600. S40·06J 1or646· I 189 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call a rt 6. 645·3423 '7 4 PIMTO MISSIONVIEJO ·oo vw bu~. Must sell. '74HOVA __ S97~ust scll RUMAIOUT 'SJ l\IG·TD Cl:issic. Rblt. Almost pcrrect. Tools, car cvr, xlras. 14000, b'75-7264 '56 T·BIRD, real beauty! Call Jack. dAys 642·0212; eves 546-2277 ·~ Ford 8 PU tool raclc bed. Clean. runs good, tires. $1200. 548·7160 9530 •••••••••••••••••••••••• OFF ROAD SADDLEBACK BMW BUY OR LEASE NOW IMW TIADl-tN•s '722002·/\. U21FTQ). '73 2002·Snrf. t6SOS > '73 Bavarla-(031KDN) '7S s.101A·Lther. ( P£4.416) ll 1·2040 495.4949 Parts. Accessoriu. OttANGICOUNTY'S Service " Sales. VW, OLDEST Mini-Trucks . Vans, & 1 4x4 's·C u s t o m bit vehicles. MODlltM MOTORS Sales-Servke-Leasioc Off •OAD CIHTllt RoY Cener 1K. Glendale, <213)240-8800 .. Rous 'koyce • BMW . l540Jamboree 4 WIMel Dri•H '550 Newport Beach &40·64-44 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ·73 Toyota Landcrulser HT. 52,000 mi., Warn hubs, ro.11 bar, 548·5735 - CREVIER days. &•Jr a HOA0.'1' •74 FIOO 4x4. Shell, tires & SAt<HA AMA , rim!ll, heuders, lo miles. 835·3171 BcJit o{(er. Call 645·3753 fH1UlTI111"T1-.it0111Ac-t or64~-~an.1pm :1tUSID IMW11• SS.300. '74 Dodite. Rmchr-. 71 ~· (103EBU> gr. tS~> 360 V-8, air. '71 Bav!'rla· (983HNV) truck tires & wllls hvy "14 2002Tll (08'7KXV > lll-2880 495·1210 Good runnmsi condition. CUSTOM '70 LTD Country !\q. 9 $1995 1970 fo'i<1l 12'1 Spart. :n,ooo ·-- - - -Very ~lea~. SllOO or or. . HATCHIACK pass, ale. auto. nr· nu Just look at Ol,lr prlcc, A mi,prtmo cond. l970MGIGT fer.642·4622or549·0723 Air cond .. auto., bucke Mlch.SJ.000673 2l3ti. really Cin e cur ror 646·59'10 4 speed & mag .. XLNT! ,74 VW BU'-scotii. mugs, Am /Fm ----economy and savings. t----------1 tl9SUI N>. " stereotape.Supersharp. '71 LTD Sl .250. Auto. p/s, U c.007·LJll '75 SPYDER , s s pd, SADDLHACll< 4 Speed, stereo radio. t:&KBZ> p/w.p/b,tape,xlnt cond. 540 563 (). AM/FM 8 track, 2Smpg, VALLIYIMPORTS <SS6LKW). ORAMGICOUNTY $3195 640-9019. lrf'tlft'l!'lllli"· .... ..., .. ~t.:r, ~~~ '""'' 01·1040 4f5-4'4t :.:'$~'°:'$~~: EXCLU~~r~VOLVO ,!;-.:!!;,".. '"rn. ~'-:::.!:ri~~~;.\"s.:I~ . 974 Xt9, lo mi, Cocoa lie Laricest Volvo Dealer 645-l,61 pwr seats. l ownr, excep ~-VD. mats, Anza exhaust, orig •••••••••••••••••••••• inBUOryan01reLC6E~tyl 197 ... C·HIVY J~~.!?!Yl· id cond. SZISO. c 'GOS..,..,_, . OWftl'. Xlnt cond. See 67, 912. white, mint cond, ,_g .., ...... ,.., apprec. 644-()804 SS.300. All service re· · DIRECT MONTI CARLO _ ''8 Ford Cortina . Xln tHO con:ls. 64~5538. LANDAU. Automatic Lransp. Clean, Askin •••••••••-.. •••••••• 9727 '66 Porsche 912. Good air cond. & pwr. sleeT $550/bsl ofr . Aft 6 1972PLYMolrnt COnd • .,,.,.,, lnl(. Priced t o sell! 497-2197 ~H.T.C-.. lrwtd New '7 6 HONDA Cars OVER 100 . ....,.,.,.,. (003LOTJ. A--f-, 1 --r- Ca 11842-3670 S "'DDUI "'CIC 1.,AoGrHoWn t). I n e c a r ! 2025 S. Manchester "' "' '72 Galaxie 500, 2 dr 11.T .,... To Choose FroM! UNIViRSITY OW&.-. .__ Ccn • GMC Trt1eb Po~chc spoken here PORSCHES 5 to Choose From 1972-1976 911 models Mercedes Beoz Trade-ins Ho.Hof I.,..... 714f52J-7JSO 2850 Harbor Blvd. '64 C, must sell! Costa Mesa 540-964 SUOO/best orrer. 675-8772 • 7 3 ff on d a Ci v I Cl--------- Hatchback. XJnt cond, I Roh Royce t756 ml. $2345. Ph 831·9145 a ••••••••••••••••••••••• Spm. 4 ~~~VER ROllS·IOYC( ; 4 vw. lo mi. AMJlo'M . A-..... -:-7S0-201l VALLEYIMPORTS Gold w/brn v top, J>/S. $1555 . I l I · """"""'" 811 2040 49r ""949 P/8, AIC. auto, R&H, x n • eaving country· • ~ new radials. 36,000. Xln MAIQUIS MOTO•S sac. best ofr by Mo 1974 VOLVO USC Is# I cond. !i81·9382 MISSION VJf;JO . 8'2· 76. 673-3397 /673-7848 STA TIOMW AGON CHEVY it ~I U..Collt ll 1 ·2110 4T$-I 2 f O '66 V•"",run•oood. Nicest one In t own! 9945•1-----..:;...;.---_, "• (003LFX>. HELP ME IE# I ••••••••••••••••••••••• A MAR9UIS MOTOIS Paul Reed (Class of "75 '70 UMCOLH A JLAS MlSSlON VIEJO Kappa Sigma) COUPE th. '72 vw 4ll WAG ON 831-2110 495-1110 CONNELL $2195 ~JPlvM•• Deluxe extras! Sharp! ()pen Dall)'• s'Uo.. 'lil 10 $2200. 640-5560/644-0505 Exceptional value, full PM CHEVROLET pawer, leather Interior, 2929 Harbor 81vd., AM /FM stereo, vinyl Costa Mesa top. Llc. ISOACC 546 1934 540.5'30 • 540 5630 67 Fury Sta. Wg" 4dr. • Running gd. $700/make ofr. 673·4083, leave No. NEW 'TII Honda Deluxe spd Hatchback w/alr & rack. Less than 4000 mi. S3800. firm. Pvt. ply. 642·7156 ,,..,,......,.. '70 VW Squareback ..._. ... "' Xlnlrunning cond. •SA.US •SERVICE •LIEASIHC. O•enea1 •73 Chny Malibu Nabers Cadillac Co. Car Only 26,093 miles. Many xtru. S2195 Nabers 65 Barracuda radials, V-8 2626HAllOR llVD. auto. Runs great $450; \'----' ._.... $1350/bst ofr. 968..s-OOJ COSTA MESA 548-1691 ClOSIO SUNDAYS ,. _...u11_ 73 Lln<". Cont. Cpe. 32, dt)' bumpr. Eves at '743.0CS-1347Lt-'ttt) wknds. 5'8·404 \; days, CloMd 0.. S•d1y1 'QJ Ku mann Glliu IH2·1l2l. '72 BMW 2002 Tel, mint Good c::·,~ns xlnl. ---------1 "74 Dasher. 18,000 mi. Toyota. 9765 Yr/50M warr, 2 Dr., sun· ••••••••••••••••••••••• rl, sler~. 536-7711. Dell•ery , ... ,.. ....... c l ·owner miles. Beaut. 2600Harbor Dlvd. bronze m e tallic w '70 Barracuda Gran Cpe l ow:nr, xtra clean '73·3899. Tn1eb 9HO t'Ofld. Alll/FM cass·tape.1---------1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lhru-out. $4995. 673·76192 e4-s le 974 '60 Foret ;i ton, tnany ~ 9715 ••••••••••••!~•••••••• ~as,7.Xlnt cond, 51200. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1960 Mt!rccdes 220, 4 apd 64 1974 CAPRl.2000 A~/FM ~ndio. new m '71 CHEVY '/J TOM 4 speed with mctolllc tenor & tares. 25 m1 pc rtCKUP point. Buy o r loase . gal. Rest or<er or t rad Excepllonially c lean. (568KBT>-for pickup or pun~I 34,000 Orlilnat mllct1. 67.>0070 days or 673-967 (11200L). 197' CAP•t II ~6.-.pm_. -----• 1111• p...t $1699 4 s peed. air t'ond. & " ~ nc• . lllc.'rl'() CIHt'ltC. Ruy or ,__.1 lenc. <tl3MWI':>. 1'66 Hotbot CM 6'6 fJOJ •CHIV. 76 Mew• Two Ton HD C+.C, 12' CA. 2 spd. ule • TM frt. ( 145738/0102). Only -.as. II 0 W A R 0 CHEVROLET. Dove It Quall Sta .. Ne..,orl Beach, IJ).OHI SADDLHACIC VALLIY IMPOITS u 1·2040 495.4949 '7Z CANI S26t5 VG wtU\ 4 speed trans., decor group and only 40.000mltes. U c. 581PBF 540·51630 3626HARIOl11.VD. COSTAMHA j 19'15 Chevy ~' ton Pickup. '72 Capn 2000. 4 spd, air. s1• u.ooo miles. automatic. tract. Xlnt eODd. $209S. pwr. ateering, Alll/P'rn Ptl 751.a.1 alereo w/Lape deck 1r•---------1 mag wheels. In ex~lleal condition. $4600 firm ......... 972 830-'630 I FORD 7 4. 1 ~ T. LN·Soo. j 15 Van w/UR•ate. SIQOO. 1 492·11.$3 Ext 84or131·2164 SAii to 4 PM, Mon thru Fri. w..a.....,.. TOP Dollar Paid On ALL Tr~-ins MIWPOttT DATSUN lllDonS....., Near M•CArtt\ur le J amboree Roads IJJ.IJOO ~ --~~ ·---- SOUTHUM OttAH•I COUMTY"S VOLUME TOYOTA DIALH Ml\RQ UJS MOT OR S •••o1 I J I 1 • • j ' ... ' ' ~.· ~ 4 • 1 . '73 CcliNt ST . 31,SClO mi, lmma c . Vinyl root. m ugs. auto trans. AM/FM. '/\/<:., hlr. PP $2995, P'1638·3l72 --- VWBUSES '71 5-1111 oof #7927 Opeed. Hard to find. Ike •IKE• Service " parts now ope on Sat's 8 to 4 for you convenience. C.M. 540.9 I 0 matching Jealhel' Ir wht t-------------------1 top. Xlnt mech. cond. Barracuda Fastback, 7l MONTE CARLO Dealer serviced. Pri Pty. good cond. Lo ml. S'12S. Bucket seats, sunroof 673-7876or774·1433 536·6464. 75 1 PllNJ" I 55MXO 4 tpetd, air cond. 70 7 ,...., 411191 stereo radio, power win •ericlc 9947 69 Roadrunner. Supe~ dows, power door locks ••••••••••••••••••••••• cond. New tires, mags. ,,__.. <018J £X) '7! f<>ID bnttery, 8·lraclt stcrcd; $1575 M•va•ac 383 auto, air, call Wayne, Supernlcci! 71 7 r.,.. 649GVD Alr,4speed 717Psngr 711DDD -~ Lo miles. extra clean! NalNrs "' ,_ K 837-274'. CCldfflac $2295 •-....,-ec--~--,-H-1 2600 Harbor Hlvd 4 door sc.-dan with auto •••••••••• .. •••••••••• . trans., economy 3U2 V8 73 Orand Prix SJ IOt C.M. 540·9 I 0 ensl','e, factory air, rs, vinyl A/C many xtraii 19 ..... " ho CM ~.~nlOJ -radio, h ealer. Lie ' • ' 1 __ .,., __ 111_' __ "_0_ .. __ 1 '66 Cnpncc, 4 dr, full pwr, 06SELR P.P . Sac. 11195. 641·93'6 oar. "Int body & int. Nd! s4 o 563 973 Pontiac Le Mans G~RDEN WEST VW I .. ~'. I 1 I I I • ,\, I I ' ~\ , r , • .,. , , , I Aldos,Uted e_ni: w~6S. Mll-4967 • 0 apol"lll cpe, Landau &op, • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • l280b/offer. eea.1eoo GtMral 990 I Chryslff •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• rd ft70 '68 TC Wgn. A/O, PS, rs 2626HAHOl llVD. radlols-+-extras. 14mp~ • COSJA MfSA •SUMMll• •SPECIALS• FROM Tew.e&C...try Auto Saled1 Leuln1 '&t Chevy·028CQS-$4t9 ·ss Oodite-3881''t~K·S499 '67 Bulck·TZY616·$.$99 't.8 Chevy·G f'8711 l-$009 '00 Pont.·'l56NOO·M9 ''1J Mere ·~42K·IM9 '65 Chev y·N N 1..386-5899 811 Old · YWK949-S799 'MDodge-WYK2:84-$799 '10 Chevy-377 AST·S989 "II Dodge-120JIRD·Sl$99 Easy Flnanclnic on re~. $800. :>40·8696 1-=-----'---- Well maintained 1 owner Mftocwy 995 lo ml, fully loacll.-d. 7~ •••••••••••••••••••••• Nt'Wf>Ort Brougham 72 MERCURY 963-3.m M.AltQUIS eo.111 ....... 9930 SZl95 •••••• •• • • • •••••• • • •••• Brougham coupe, load '74MA•KIV S7395 with luxur)' equipmen including comror lounge. 6 way powc seats. Lit'. lGlFYV 540·5630 '12 TMUMDMlllD $3475 - One local owner. air cm\· dltlonln•. run power •• bfautlrully ~ul'ped car. Hab1 blve uterior with dark blue lnLe,lor. Lie 809FVY I 540•5630 ... Ca.TA MW ; FUii power, leatMr in· terior, vlnyl top, AM /1-~M s tereo. s teel belted radlal Ures. factory air condltlon lna. Li e:. STSLOB 540-5630 2'26HARIOl llVD. ~T~1~-~,low ml~, . COSTA MESA ~. ....... 9'5 ... •ff7' ' •···••··•······•····•• .......•.............. ••••••••••••••••••!.'. ~~ao.Ml~'..lVD. '$'1 299 Vinyl t op, new 74 Hatchback. Xlnt cond., tt7J IUICK 1-----"'------t paint, brakes. 8·Trk Silvtr w/blk vlnrl 1t1: It--" S_... C CorTttt. 991 11te~ w/4 spkrs. $950. AM/FM radio, A/T, A/B, V' ~to~t ·i otipe ...................... 631·1S31 new tires. aooo. Mutt . au m11 c. pwr. -1---------1 sac. 213/5U·S07~ or ateetin11, crfr cond., vinyl Hard to Pfltd Model '66 Mu1lang restored. 589·'1941. top le pwr. windows. VlnlS 74 Supercond. Sl800. 1-------- (M"IJPA> ~-1-974 Chev' V•1• or • Merc:ecka Btna ____ ._.._._'-....;.;...---1 H.akh .. -ck. 4 spd, tar. $2699 Trade· ins -MAJl"'UIS uoTOIS l t. Clloow '""91 J:Jave ~ethlng YoU wan ~C?J~. ~}!!!'le brake • ..,. "' &o ~II? Classlfled adl .,.._ .,...,._., MISSIONVIEJO Hweof ... ort• it well -Call NOwiDI, """""------- ll1·21104fS.lll0 7'4/513·7250 642-$678. Ctasstrled Ads ·auntington Be.aeh Fountain Vlf.l!~Y VOL. 69, NO. 215, 2 SECTIONS, 2~ PAGES " , Afternoon N.Y.Steeks TEN CENTS Council Edgy Over Parade's Cost . By ROBERT BA1tk£a OllMO"'l.,,.IMIUlt The Huntington Beach Fourth <f July Farade was put squarely I the apot lOday by a report that ted total expenses for this ar's event at slightly more ansso.ooo. l,.~ity officials had budgeted ~.ooo in lasl year's budget. t)ey also agreed to pick up costs Flash . ' floo~ > Kill 60 . ? LOVELAND. Coto. (AP> - ~vivors or a weekend nash flqod-huddled on mountai~id~ alJ.d ip isolated homes today as rams and winds forced a delay in air rescue · attempts. Officials s;lid the flood kj)Jed about liO peo- ple, and they said "dozens" moce bodies may be found. The Nat.ional Weather Ser vice said it appeared there wouJd be no break In the weather for ·at leasttwodays: Capt. Rich Ho\•ey, the Larimer Co u n t y s h e r-i H ' s p r e s s spokesman, said it was thought most of the cricically ill oc in- jured survi\'ors were evacuated Sunday from the Big Thompson Canyon. "Al thjs stage. except for three cqronaries we-ha\'e up there. e\•.erybody is the same," Hovey s aid. "To the bes t of our knowledge. everybody who had . some major problem was not In there last night." He said the persons wllh cardiac conditions were reported by rescued friends or relaUves, • who said the three bad hislorh:s of heartlrou ble; ;, Authorities said recovery of the dead from tne Big Thompson River flood. reported strewn a long the walls or the Big Thompson Canyon, was their last priority. Dave Feldman. chief or investigative services for police in nearby Fort Collins, said it could take weeks to locate the de· ad, and some never may be found. Nearl y 1 50 Natio n a l Guardsmen. law enforcement of· ficers and volunteers waited for ocders as search leaders mapped their strategy. . Helicopters were to be used to- day to ferry the survivors, many of whom were trapoed on . in- aecessi bl e patches of h1gh ground, to safety. But the rain tnat began again Sunda~ nig~t continued today. grounding air rescue equipment. .. Hell copters wilt be grounded until they can get in, perhaps by noon," said John Englebert, chief of o~ration~ for the Larimer County Sheriffs Department. "We've got steady r ains into E&tes Park and some winds." There was no Immediate cstim3te on the numbcrUranded. Oov. Richard Lammsaid2SOpc<>· pie were reported ir\)ured und aqother40 missing. President Ford today dcclnred a major disaster in Colorado; the action wlll permit the use or federal funds in relier and re- covery efforts. A 10-lnch rainfall running down from nearby Rocky Mountain Na- ttona l Park Saturday night churned the Big Thompson River into a wall of water 12 feel hl11h 4ndsenUtona15-mlnutefrenzy. • : It tore through campsites and ttallen, motels and bridges, rak· (See FLOOD, Pate A.Z) 'WYOMING '"•• ,, ... • .coloretle '-'i"t'. ~----so~ Mil 1 . Nfl. .,. ........ .,.. FLASH FLOOD AREA Mmp Locete• Scene or overtime lncurred by police and public works personnel. "The parade was nice, but this is a little ridiculous," Mayor Pro Tem Ron Pattinson said today. "Taxpayers shouldn't have to carry this kind or a burden and, alter all. that's. where the money comes from," Patlinsoosaid. Pattinson a dded that the parade has not been approved ln the current budget "and I can't see spend Ina another $50,000." He s.ald be hope• that perhaps a large corporation can aponaor the event in future years. A complete analysis of t.be parade including all tabor ex· pensea had never ~ made un· til Darrel Cohoon ol the city ad·· mlnistrator's office undertook the talk this year. He saJd half of the ~.000 ii at· trlbutable to the costa of services and materi~ ud the other ball to city employe expen1e1. The costs of services and materials came to $25,601.11, Cohoon aaid, more than $10,000 over the $15,000 that wu alloc•l· ed In the 1915·78 budcet- He said that only a modest· overrun in the ne~borhood ol $1,000 to $3,000 WM anticipated la June. · Su.bsequeotly tbe total swelled and indudet Sl,000 men in band travel expenses than expected: rz • .a more for trOpbies, plaques and awards and $1,0Zl for' tele- irams notJtylq parade partlci· pants on July 1 that the parade was aUll on alter it was allegedly threatened by lack of police pro- .~ion. Cohoon said that other ex· penaes have also accrued on un· paid telephone bills. rental of a public address system and ~ay ror cleri calsupport. • Cohoon saicl one ot the pro· blema was that the city received lea money than expected In con- tributions as a r esult or fund raisers. , "It was antJclpated earlier:• Cohoon said, "that some addi- tional expenses would be offset by Jatcee fund raising eUorlsf' (See PARADE, Page A!) 'Windfall' Nixed 1 ~Bus Execs Eye Cut ill Tab ":'inning Form Terry Torremeo oC Huntington Beach shows the Corm that won the 18·24 age group title ror her Sunday in surf· ing contest (.or women at 1 luntington Beach. That's oil island "Emmy" in the background. For details, see Sports, Page A12. Filing Date Set For Trustee Post .. Candidate filing for a vacant. Huntington Beach Uruon High School District Board of Trustees seal opens Thursday, accordlng to the Orange County Registrar olVoters. A Nov. 2 election has been called to fill the seat vacated ~ former Trustee Bob Knox, who was appointed to a West Orange County judgeship in May. • District trustees tried to ap· point a Huntington Beach resi· dent, James HamUton, to the board but the District Educators Association gathered e nouf{h petition signatures to force the apecjal election. The teacher gToup, largest Of Its kind in the flve-campus dis- trict. challenged Hamilton's ap· pointment, contendlng he was appointed under an aacnda Item thal mentioned a board vacancy but did ~ say the action would be taken at that rneeUng. A superior court judge upheld the board's action. The teacher 1roup gathered 1,019 si1natures. three more than needed to force the election which will cos t the district $17.000, officials said. The victor in the November special election will have to run for re-electi~ in March if the seal is to be retained. Bingo Moiled In HJJDtington Huntington Beach Cit1 Council members will consider an or· dlnance permitting bingo games tonight. The meeting begins at 7 o'~lock in City Council chambers. Officials say that under pro· visions of Proposition Nl8e that was passed by 1&ate voters In Ju- ly, cities may approve bin10 games by certain aroups for charitable purposes. ,Tonl1ht 's meetJng wm ·be chaired by Mayor Pro Tem Ron Pattinson. Mayor Harriett Wieder ii in Waahinaton alt.end· in1 conaressioJJal hearinp on Oood •tro\ legislation. By GA&Y GRANYILLE Ol-o.lt·~ .... Directors of the Orange County Transit Dtstrtct i OCl'D>-nid to- day they will cul the district's property tax rate r ather than look upon sn unexpectedly high climb in assessed value in Orange County as a tax windfall. In late June, the directon ten· tatively agreed to leave OCTD's tax rate at ita current JeveJ, •.S cents for each $100 WOl'lh of as· sessed value. Thal rate, directors were told, Crashes Kill Tu:o From Huntington Trame amdem eat qf the area haYe claimed the lives of two Huatincton Beadl resJdents -a U.S. Anny IOldlel' and a YOUlll boalewtfe. Funeral serviees for both are scheduled Tuesda1. Loylou Winterbottoln,. 29, of 18)82 Ballantine Lane, was l•tal· ly uyured Saturday when the car in which she was a passenger careened into a street lllht pole ·in north Westminster. Army PFC· Michael R . Mithoff, 19, auatained fatal in· juries Thursday when be was struck by a vehicle oo Blanco Road on the Fort Ord rnil1t.ary re- servation in MontereyCoWlty. Callfonua Hiihway Patrol of. Ileen said Mn. Winterbottom was riding with Christopher WU son, 21, of 11011 7Ut St., Sunset Beach, when tlleir car slid o(f eastbound lanes of Westmiuta' Avenue at Studebaker Road at 6:45p.m . Saturday • lnveall1ators said ahe waa crushed when the car jumi>ed the curb and sla'mmed into a street llght 1tandard then careened on Jeveltn1 MYeral roedway signs. WUIOD, believed to be a re- JatJve, was ir..ated for bll in· juries at Long Beach Comtnuoity Hospital and releued fO(' quae tioning by iJlveaUgat«s. Funeral rites are scheduled Tuesday at 2:30 p.m. for' Mra. Winterbottom at Peek Family Colonial Funeral Home In Midway City. She ls IUrVived by her husband, Kenneth. F ull military honors are scheduled for MlthotfTueaday at a 1 p.rq. funeral service at Dilday Brothen Mortuary ln Huntington Beach, with burial to follow at Pacific View Memcrill Park lo Newport Beach. He was a araduate of Edilon High School and • member of Company A 2311t l.nlaDtry Bat- talion, Tth lnfant17 Dlrilkln ata• Uoned at Ft. Ord. Details of tbe accldlnt that claimed Out youn1 Mldfer'• ute were notlmmediately avall ... e. Conventlon-goers Die M'Y'terr Malady Strikea ·nmm 12 Persona HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP> - Twel\'e people who attended a s&ate American ~ conven· Uoe ln Pbiladelpbla July 21·3' have died ol slmllar symptoms, a Jetioaoftlcial said today. · Edward T . Hoak, the lelion's state adjutant, said, ''We don't know whatilis but il's all over the aute." He said 10,000 people attended the convention. AstatebeaJth officialsaidanio· 'vest11ation was begun today. He aakHte had no Indication as to the · c:aUHSofthedeaths. , Hoak said many persons al the c:onvenUon have been admitted to bos»itals around the state, lnclad~ ing seven in Williamsport and three al Wilkes-Barre. He MW Ill bavPthe same s7mpUlms. "'Ibey have a pain ta tbelr . chest. They cet . a fal.. tdl· perabare, •• Hoataakl lie said some a)'llllltoml resem- ble a cheat cold, and the tem- peratures ranee from 104 to 10'1 degrees. Hoak identified the dead • Elmer Haler, Lewisburg; Jlmll\1 Dolan and J .P . Ralph, Williamstown; Willlanr Byrd, B1oomalturg; Louis Byerly, Jeen- nett e; Frank Harvey, McKeesp~rt.; Fr-an Avelllj. . ctearfleld: Jallu G•f!,ul•, BepUlie; Qart .. <JI• llln. CbalDMrsb•r1: Ai. Bub9a, Donora. aad ADdJ Waraek, F.,.U.CauatJ • "We were~ Wllawl ~ft thll mond.u, • Hhl Dr. WIWam Putin, ebid al the ~vanla Health Departm1at'a epfdem6ololyMCUoa. . ....... .,, ........... _ coOftted • • • IO _. CD try to ideDtitJ .an eUolO&te (c:aualq) a1ent..'' ParltlaaaJd. Parkla 1a1d, "We._, have a 1ood lead l'laht now. w.~re ..... lfter both Tiru~ .... ~ ·would produce ~tween $3.S whatever the higher asss~~ed million and $3.8 nilllion' worth or values will produce In tax re- ux revenue. venue over the $3.8 million Late.r, it was learned Orange needed lo support OCTD's 1976-77 County's assessml!nt ro"tr-budget. - - climbed a hefty 18.7 percent last Clark's proposal won quick .en· year, a climb Assessor Bradley dorsement from the other three Jacobs blamed cbidly on infla· directors al today's meet.in( in lioc\. Santa Ana. • Board of Directors Chairman They instructed transit disttict Ralph Clark told his fellow dlrec-general manager to calculaij! a •ton today OCTD shouldn't look new tax rate based on Clark's on the steep rise in assessed proposal and present it to the· value as a tax windfall. board when it officially sets lhe Instead, Clark said, the district rate al a meeting later this should cut its tax r ate by month. Suspeet Arrested Y o~th Bayonetted To Death in OC A U·year-old Sant.a Ana man who reportedJy burled a abop- plnf cart at new sports cars parked tn a Stut.oo sboPPlftg center Saturday night was tiayonetted to death a few mimates la~r. accordlng to Stan· too police. Immediately after the parking lot incident, Goodman a nd a companion drove from the sl\Or>-1 ping center with the Datsun +nc1 1 another car in pursuit. • Killed when a military bayonet was plunged into his chest at least five times was David Ray Goodman of Santa Ana. Arrested at a Stanton apart- ment complex shortly alter Goodman collapsed, mortally wounded, oa a busy tborougblare and claarted witb bis murder was Robert Espana, 4.2, of Anaheim. Police said Espana is a friend ol the owner of a new Dataun 280Z sports car, the car that wu dent· ed when the murder victim al--- legedly threw a aboppiDg cart on toiubood. . During what police descrii>ed as a four or five mile chase, Ple offended Datsun owner dropped out of the race . I But the car containing lhr~ of his .. friends. including Espuza, dld not. Goodman abandoned his !at· ' tempt to elude his pursuers at lhe pomt •here the chase began, the shopping center at Magnolia Avenue and Cerritos Str~et, police said. They reported witnesses said a fight then broke out and that dur· inar the fracas Goodman was fatally wounded when the bayonet brought into play was plunged re- peatedly into his c~est. , • Fast Action Saves· . Policemen's Sight NEW YORK CAP>-:-Doctors aa,y fi•e city policemen whose eyes were aeared by a berserk man's mixture of lye, gasoline and ammonia will see agaln. But how well they will see la unter• lain. PhysicJani warned that the policemen. may never return to active duty. 1be men were not completely blinded Saturday, the dodor1 aaid, because quick aid was of· fered by nearby Harlem resi· dmtl. Tbey doused the officers• faces and qes With buckets of vtatll' and stopped wbat would lulw been lrrevenlble d&DlQe tolblitaJC)lt. . Tbemu wbo wmlblnerk and toued th• aolutloo burned 18 other POl1cemen With lhe mixture and then barricaded hhneeff in an aputmeat. He held ol.f more tb•n 100 beaYUy armed POiicemen for more than an hour befcn be wu liaa.U.r killed by a ~eeman'1 •botl\Ul blast. 'l)e 11 other offteen were treated for. minor barns at. ~ Jloepltal1 udreleaaed. .~ Aki tbe liel• bepn wlllll two offl.cen weat ta the apm1meDt ol Cal'fin HQwood, 31. ~ .,....t tdm far tbe 1tabbial w....,., Dllbt of lobn llc:CoJ, •· wbo 11 lD lDtenst'We care. Pladlq de door barricaded, the PGUee ~alled far retalorM· menb. They used a battering ram to 1muh into the two-room ~ ud wben they ft• ..... Haywood allececDy r"8lled them with a salad bowl full of hil · c..Uc brew and threw it lato tbetrfaces. !'We never saw him.when the door opned, .. aald set. aannce Relebm-. 52, ~·t· lJnc ill St. Luke'• • "Re just came out or nowhere and threw tbiasticky solution at US}" Doctors later said lhe l~e. g,asollne and ammonia solutl~n .. wu mixed with petroleum Jqlly to make it stick to whatever 1t bit. "I can sWI see only shadowi," said Reichman, "but the doctors aay that wlll pass and lmprov~" Police say· 00 shota were fired I Into the apartment at Haywood. who vowed he would not be tatccn · a)jye. I Coast • Weather Night and morning low clouds give way to s un Tuesday. Low 70s along the coast wllh lows drop· ping to about 60 over· nipt. . INSIDE TODAY COftlUmn • odoocate RalJJh, Ndr hat toMn pot lhoCl.m1 Che U.S. morketp4ace.ond the ~.agncf~• tld re-• plat« ft /or 1eort. I• he ..,_. right? •• ,.. uuolly· ~old? A clote look.at NOISn' "'1rll on P.age A7 irt today'• Daily J>tloC. •••ex I au·---. •• ,_.........., •• .! ....... .,_,T~ IH L....... ......... •4 ~ AJ--.iHtwl A4 .~ aM1 O....c..ey Al C..Ct • eJ ,...... at•I ~ •• .,.... • .. ... tl .... ..-en "' ll«llMt"4>t1 "' ....... p ..... ,........... .. ........... .. ,........ .. .... ··--,.. ........ . ............. . .._ ___________ .... ___ _,, .. .. .Al DAILYPILOT H/f' Monday. ~ugust 2. 1976 .J111-y Talks t~ H&lt? f. Delay of Harris Trial Likely LOS ANGELES <AP> -Jurors ln &be Willham and Emily Harris trial resumed their deliberations today unaware of a controveri.y 11wirling around their role in the .iormv trial. Their talks could be atopped w1thin hours. The prOHculion aaid il was eonsidering a move to halt tfie deliberations until the Ii.· sue involving possible jury pre· judke and poeslble judicial mis· conduct is relfOlv ed. Tbe jurors, who delibc:f'ated nearly nine hours last wt.-ek, re· turned to their task earlier than scheduled. arriving at the courthouseat8:20 a.m. They spent the W«kend se· questered at the hotel, insulated 19 'Targets' r FBI Tactics Hurt Them WASHINGTON (APJ -The Justice Department says it has found 19 people ~ho suffered actual harm because they were the ta rgets of an FBI harassment campaign in the 19005 and early 1970s. One person was fired from a job and others suf · fered from invasions of their privacy. Some lost face with colleagues because they were falsely branded police informers. Department officials reported those findings as they discussed their four·month effort lo locate the victims and tell them what the FBI did to them . from publicity. s urroundin1 emergenty hearingsoutaidet.helr presence. Chief Deputy Di st. Atty. Stephen Trott, who enteN!d the Harri• case after1ex.ploalve re- velatlons surf teed last we.Ir. said Sunday he mlghtasktodayforim· mediate suspension of jury de· liberations. "We want a fair trial." said Trott, "and we will lakewhale\•tt stepe are necessary to guarantee that.'' Asked whether he thought the jury should stop deliberating, Trott said, "W• are ronsiderinc askingthejudgeforthat." Superior Court Judge Mark Brandler has Indicated he wants jurors to continue deliberating unUI they reach a verdict on 11 eharges o( kidnaplng, robbery and assault againsttheHarrises. But both prosecution and de-. lense have ex.Pressed fean tbat a mistrial milll'l be required now because of the Judge'• alleged fallere to~ noUfy attorneys of possible prejudice. The defense suggested. that a neutral judge arbitrate tbe mat- ter. I Federal marshals delivered messages informing the 19 people that they had been targets of the FBI counterintelligence programs. known as Cointelpro, to harass and disrupt militant political groups on the right and left. . Cointelpro. which operated Crom 1956 lo 1971, m· -volved such taclics.assending~nonymous derogatory letters to the parents and employers of politi~al ~c­ tivists and distributing phony leaflets to stir dis· sension within political organizations. • ' Wo~,74, Tortured, Murdered Edison Students NEW ORLEANS CAP) - A 74-year-old spinster. was raped. tortured with more than 200 wounds from an ice pick, and then killed. Police arrested three peo- ple. twoofthem Leen·a•ers. '.Pic.k Up Programs The body of Mary Di Giovanni was found tied to a bedpost in the bedroom of her home. She was nude from the waist down. Coroner Frank Minyard said her skull had been fractured by a blow that tore off an ear. t Edison Hikh School students will begin picking up their class programs Tuesday unde r a system dirrerent from the one used during last year's reglstra· tion, school offlcialssa1d. Last year s tudents stood in line in August and chose classes and teachers for the coming year. However. s tudents this year <:hose their classes lastsprin(! and will receive their schedules on the followingd8:ys: _..c... -Seniors. Aui.'3-4, I -JunJors: Aug.5-6; -Sophomores: Aug.9·10 ; • -Freshme n: Aug.11-12. • Progra!'ls may be picked up Long List Of Suspects -:~!!o~?P!ff's officers didn't have to travel very far Sunday to investigate the complaint filed by William JI. Williams of Santa Ana. For Williams. 46, Is a de· puty sheriff who works out of the sheriff's central facility on fo'lower Street in Santa Ana. And the lhert occurred right In t.he build· ing. In vest iga tors said Williams' .44 magnum service r~vol ver was stolerr by someone who ap· parcntly knew the com· bination to the victim's locker . The weapon is valued al $500. "Certainly we have a list or s uspects .·' an in· vesUgator commented to- day. ·•t t starts with tho sheriff and goes all the way down our roster o( employes.'' ORANGE COAST ""' DAILY PILOT Tel-.>llefte (7H)Ml-4n1 Qa11ffled Adver111U"I .. t-5611 rr--•~Ot-~·~·~ ' . 541-1110 °""""· tttt On .... C..M ~'"""' c;.n. ::r .• :-.,"' .. ~·.::r.:~~"::-.:~ ;:..':": ,,..,_ ... wU~eul ,.,.Cl•• .. ,.,.,.,_ et ,_.,._. ... _ ct•n ,.., ... t•kl "' c .. ,. 11110 ... CM-• ~·--~ '' H ttlf' UH -...., ... -1.UJ_....., • ........., .... , __ \1'5-""¥• any time or the assigned day between 8 a .m . and 5 p.m. upon presentation of the completed forms mailed to each student this summer. achool officials said. I(. there are any discrepancies in the program, students may re· tum to the school Aug. 24·27 to straighten them out. For more in· formation, call Edison High School, 962·1356. -- Dr. Minyard said the Ice plck wounds were "not deep enough to cause death but pain." He said In addition to the ice pick wounds, Mias DtGiO\lannl also had been stabbed 15 to 20 times, apparenUy witb a kilcben knife. and that sev.-al olber riba werefractured. · Fro• Page A J PARADE •• A statement submitted by the Jaycees. according to Cohoon, shows a net loss to the organlta· lion of $493.42. Police said a television set believed stolen from the apart· •. menl was recovered from one of the three people arrested. Booked on char1es ol bur-1ary, rape and murder were Ernest l}rown. 16; Albert Lewis, 11; and Kenneth Smjtb, 21. 'nley were arrested at their homes, a few blocks from the victlm'sboule. "Since the additional parade expenses were Incurred in the name of the city. the obligation to pay the bills also fell on the city," Cohoon said. I n addition, parade coordinator Steve Pressley was paid approximately SS,000 lo direct the parade but his salary was paid by federal funds. His salary would boolt the total costs to more than $55,000. ·Cohoon said that if future Fourth of July parades are seheduted. he would make the following recommendations: -The entire parade should be budgeted as to type or expense and source or revenue. -sufficient money should be budgeted to support the type or parade desired without counUng o n contributions and fund raisers. -A city employe should be as- signed to monitor parade expen· dltures from the very beginning or the parade planning process. -If the Jaycees °" other or- g anizations are Involved in parade, a written agreement should be entered into delineat· I n g ob l igations and responsibiliUes for aJI aspects of parade funding and duties. Clwrchnwn Foil Bandits MIAMI <AP> -Two armed men broke into a church and de· manded the day•., offerin1. but one churchman slammed shut the door to the money-counting room and another rushed the money out the back door. Police said Sunday the masked me n -one toting an M18 automatic rine, the other a shotgun -e ntered the New Testament Baptist OIW'Ch dur· ingservicesfor 1.ooowcnhipers. When the ski-masked men finally broke the lock they lound the room empty and nec1 out the Croat door, police said. The men then sped ort in a car that was later tound abandoned nearby. 'lbe two were still atlarge. . . . Law Student Held ' SAN DIEGO (AP>-Police8"' rested a woman law student on a _.arrant charging her with con· spiracy to kill her husband Of' a camping trip near CrangeVille, Idaho, last week. Glenda Dale Btutker, 29, was taken Into custody when ahe and her husband, Terry, returned r~m the trtp.. MIN DIGiovanni lived alone in a rear apartment. Her landlady, who Uvea ln the front apartment, called police when •Has DiGiovannt (ailed to answer a knockonherdoor. A sitter said the color television set was the on!y thing of aubltan- tial value in the apartmeDt. Sunset Beach House Burns; Loss 852,000 County fire olncials have set the property loss ln a Sunset Beach house fire early Saturday morn1ng at $S2,000. They reported It took 22 firemen 30 minutes to bring the blaze at 16400 N. Paclfic St. un· der control. The cause of the fire is under Investigation. The tenant resident in the two- story Sunset Beach home, Sam Kennedy, 21, was cut about his face and suffered from smoke in· hnlaUon as he fled from the burn·. lng house, according to the coun· ty fire report. Kennedy was treated for h\s in· Juries at the 1cene and was not hospitalized, a spokesmttn said. Jt was reported the dama,ged house ls owned by Donald Clark, 220 Felder St., Orange. Bomb Kills Youth SEWICKLEY (AP) -A sub· urban Pittsburgh )'Olllh, curious nbout a package left for his brother, was kllled when the cen· tainer exploded in his bands. REFRIGEIU.TOR MOJIED QUICKLY .. Responae to the ad was very good. We sold it." That's the sales IUC!ceu story told by the Costa Mesa couple who placed thjs ad ln the Daily Pilot: Side by side coppertone refrloerator ,xtnt cond. $315/1()()(.)()()()( I( you have a home appliance you want to convert to eaah, call 642-5678. It only takea a lew words tn the right place to attract a buyer.· Along the Orange Cout, the rt1ht place to adYertistl ii in the Dallt Pilot. 1or Wl,..,...,. MOTOR VEHICLES BACKED UP, STRANDED IN COLORADQ Siie• Knocked by Flood From Road Through Canyon Overdose Studied In Mesa Bin Death Police have identlfed the body of a 22-year-old mason's helper , found Satutday night stuffed Into atruhbin. The body of Jeffrey X.nn Daugherty, 112 Pacific Coast High~ay, Newport Beach, was found tied with rope to a dis· carded cardboard washing machine box in the trash bin at 1996 Maple St. Mn. Bernice Hillgren, of the Maple Street address, told of. ficen the spotted the eartly visi· ble body at about 1 p.m. as she Nuclear Foes R~unded Up SEABROOK, N.H. <AP> - Eighteen oppQnent.a of an ocean· · front nuclear power plant have been arrested when they tried to occupy the construction sjte and pl'anl seeds and saplings. When the protesters refused to move, Seabrook police and Rock· ingbam County sheriff's depuUes arrested them on Sunday .. Police said only one of the 18 arrested chose to leave In his own custody and the rest declined to be released and spent tbe night at the Hampton police station. • Jumper Dies In Rush HouD IRWINDALE (AP> -A man plunged to bis death from a freeway overpass today, the highway patrol said. Officers aaid the man jumped from the Irwindale Av~nue over· pass onto the westbound Foot.hill Freeway and delayed morning traffic for more than a half hour until coroner's deputies could ar· rive at the scene. emptied her trash into the large container. Police Sgt. Tom Lazar said police have all but discounted murder in the case, saying the victim had needle marks on his arm and "is a known drug user.'' Results or an autopsy, conduct- ed Sunday morning, have not been released, Lazar said, and a toxicologist's rePort is due later this week to determine cause of death. "At this point, we do not sus- pect a murder," he said. "It ap· pears that Daugherty's friends just dumped him in the trash bin after h e overdosed on some drug." · Officers s aid they would know more about the case after they receive a report on the autopsy. from the county coroner's office. 6.9~ke Hits Area Near Fiji GOLDEN. Colo. <AP) -A strong earthquake shook the New Hebrides Islands in the South Pacific early today. a spokesman al the National Earth· quake Information Center saJd. Marvin Carlson, a staff geophysil'ist . said the quake registered 6.9 on the open-ended Richter scaJe. The earthquake could have caused widespread damage if It struck a populated area, Carlson said. There were no r e· ports 2f sever e damage fn t~~Hebrldes. The New Hebrides are aboutSOO miles westoCFiji. Dome for Quake \'i«!tlna l'ro• P.•ge Al FLOOD ••• ~ Intl a path or deatrucU~ 30 mile loog. There were v•yU\I report.a· about whether wtrfllng was gh·en: e \•eryone agrffd th~rc wasn't much. 1 Some 500 sur\'lvors were (f'r· rl~ to a horse pasture-tur~· helleoptt'r pad Sundny. A~er 1.000 had to stuy In the urea !Of u SC('Ond night. OHkinla n ew over the co°"n, dropping leafiets that flked Hr· vivors to alttnal thelr lmmedltaw nC\."'<is : blankets stretched on .- around In the rorm of an •· " meant food. "W" meant wiAter. ··A .. meant med le al llld. Larimer County Sheriff Hobert Watson said 43 bodle.s were in a makeshift morgue and IS to ,20 bodies had been spotted and nu111· bered throutthout lhecanyon. The Big Thompson Ri ver runs down from the heights or Rocky Mountain National Park through E stes Park, some 80 miles northwest of Denver. The Big Thompson Canyon. which runs east from Estes Park toward Lov· eland. was the site of the w~st destruction. . · Watson said six or seven peoplt> died in the same area in a 1962 flood. The water ran orr the moun4in as rain also pelted the canyon itself. It funneled intothecanyon. 150 yards wide at the most, ' between bluffs hundreds of r1ct high. Three Dead In Slaying by-+'--';-' Victim's Ma~. FRESNO {AP>-Threewomen were shot to deatt\ and a lourth was wounded by· the husbancl of one who the n shot himself, • authorities said. · The women had just returned to the home of Kaiue Holley. 31, also known as Kazue Canterbury, when they were gunned down with a pistol on the front porch ab9ut 3:30 a.m . Sunday, sherifrs tof· ricers said. Killed .were Mrs. Holley, ~o was s hot first ; Donna Elea or Warlock, 31: and Linda Lee Si k, 19, also known as Linda e Terry. All were from Fresno. A Taft woman, Gale Scott, 132, also known as Gale Melinda Wolff. was hospltalizectln seri~ condition but was reported m· proved to satisfactory today at Valley Medical Center. Deputies said Mrs. Rollely's • husband, Clyde Rolley, 35, also shot and killed his Boxer dog btfore wounding himself in the head. Holley w3s reportedly in g~ condition after treatment and \fas booked for investigation of three counts of murder and one count of attempted murder. 1 Officers said the other women's husbands, all members 0£ a motorcycle group, had gone to~e coast for the weekend, but Hol ey had remained home then nd when the women went out for e evening. Few Rescues I In Huntington Despite exceptionally strong rip tides, Huntington State Beach and city lifeguards reported re· lati vely few surf rescues during the weekend . · Most rescues occurred on stale beaches with 25 Friday. SOSat.ur· day and 3S Sunday, lifeguards saJd. Crowds were moderaate con· s idering ·the exceptional weather, they said. Huntin gton Beach cily lifeguards reported 18 rescues Friday. 32 Saturday and only six Sunday. Small crowds enjoyed good !\urC throughout lhc Wf'Pkend , they added. .,.1,.,.... Art unldenttried girl makes her ho*"e In ~ drainplpe after earthquakes shook the Pek· ing /Alea lut' week. ltjany left the city. but . others stayed despite warnings or more quakes l? come. St<.rY, Page A4 • ... Irvhie· EDITION I OL. 69, NO. 215, 2 SECTIONS, 2' PAGES fHit Man' By TOM BARLEY 01 Ille O•lly .. ,._ "-" i Hit man Anthony Scalise testified today that Or. Wayne Lester Robinson of Irvine as· lumed he w,.as a member or the Jtafla whe n the physician al- tegedly hired him to kill his fstranged wire at her Newport ,'Beach home. S lirk S l i d e But Scalise. 29, assured an Oran~e County Superior Court jury as he responded to intense defense questioning that he has never been linked to the Mafia in any way and that Scalise Is not his true name. The parolee from federal and state prisons testified that he act· ed alone under the name or John t'oste r when he agreed to eliminate Mrs. Janice Robinson. 38, in return for a $10.000 down payment and a Sl0,000 bonus when the Job was done. He told defense attorney Al Ramsey today that his participa· tion in the plot ended when he took Mrs. Robinson to lunch at. the Velvet Turtle in Newi>0rt With oil island "Emmy" in the back· g round , Newport Bcach·s Mary Lou the 25·and-ovcr titl e in women's surfing competition Sunday at Huntington Beach. For deta ils , see Sports, Page Al2. •. • ()rummy displays the style that won her Trmtees Cut $344,000 From Budget Saddleback C'olle~c finance ex· perts have shar1w ncd their r>en- cils and trl m med another $344,000 j out or lhelr proposed budget for 1 · next year enou.:h lo brin~ illnto Qle range of a tax rule figure l'n· dorsed by lrustee:s twowC\!ks URO. The re\'lscd budi.tel of $18. 77 "'llllon will comt-before the board for adoption tonight al about 7:45 In the l'Ollcttc library meeting room . · · Roy Barlcttn. dislricl business :"fnan:1gcr. s aid two weeks OJ<O it I would be "vt-ry d i£ficult'" toshavc :.-hough from his proposed $19.1 mllllon spendin~ plan lo fil the 95·cenl-pcr·Sl00 or assessed value , tax rntuoughtby lhe board. '. He warned that it could harm Irvine Elllhezzling Susp ec~ Sought Irvine police said today they are looking for a man occuscd or embezzling nearly $9,000 over a three·month period from an Irvine landscaping firm. Police said a w&rranl has be<?n issued for the arrest of Carl Witherspoon, 28. Police bclie\'C the man has moved to the San 1-l"ancisco Bay area. Witherspoon was hired al Rock and Waterscope Systems, Inc .• 2021 Business Center Drive, in .June. Victim Id entified 0 C E AN S I D'E ( A P > - Oceanside police say they hove Identifi ed tbe v iclim or a motorcycle accident as a recent- Company Presidenl Edward D. Lewis told police he believes Withers poon e mbezzled SS.758 from the firm ·~ payroll and gener al accounts. J le cited checks written by Witherspoon for $417 and two tor $220, plus a cashier's checkfor SS.900. · The president told police he fired Witherspoon l ast month after he caught him writing one check against the company. Ile said he discovered the rest of the embeulement after Witherspoon had left the area. Witherspoon was employed as o ffice ma n a ger and ad· mlnistratlve assistant at the com· pany and Lewis referred to him as the firm's "number two man." Beach last t'eb. 21 and told her while they i&te or her btUband's alleged plans. Scalise agree<\ with Ramaey that Or. Robinson, 42, had a pent'hant for pluying ••cops an.a robbers" a nd that many of the circumstances surrounding the alleged murder conspiracy had taken on what Ramsey described T oday's Closin g a. • Stoeks ' TEN CENTS ~ I Connections J today"ft "a fairyland setting.•· But Scalise insisted that he was hired by the doctor to ldll Mrs. Robinson becau,se the physician believed that his estranged spouse was cheating on their commnunity property and steal- iDC from their joint business \•en- ture. And be told Ramsey that omonli the Items handed him by the doctor when the pfot was 1 hatched was a garrote, a devko 1 used by killers who prefer to In· • fllct death by strangulation. 1 Scalise aald he gav~e gar· 1 rote to Mrs. Robinson cm they ; went to her Newport Bea home after lunch. <See HIT MAN, Page AU 'Windfall~ ·Naed ~-. Bus Execs Eye Cut in Tab By GARV GRANVILLE Ol lhe D•ilY .. lle4 5'alf Directors of the Orange County Trans it District (OCTD> said to· day they will cut the district's property Lax rate rather than loo""K up<>n a-n unexpectedly hiSh climb in assessed value in Orange County as a tax wi ndfall. In late June, the directors ten- tatively agreed to leave OCTO's lax rate at its current level, 4.S cents for each SlOO worth of as· sessed value . That rate, directors were told, Pre sle y Se ttle1ne nt Reached . By JOANNE R EYNOLDS Of lfl• D•lly ...... Stall In 4l settlement. reached with the Securities and Exchanae Commission, The Presley Com· panies of Newport Beach ap-eed today to a series of regulations regarding the company's rote with the hydrogen converter. Dick Gordon, spokesman for the SEC's enforcement division in Los Angeles, s aid the selUe- ment calls for the t'ompany to re· me several or the documents it gave to the SEC earlier this year ··to correct. deficiencies" In in- formation contained in those documents. He also said the company has agreed to a procedure for issuing press releases a bout the device known as the SLX Hydrogen Generator . According to Gordon, all press releases will have to have the prior approval of Presley's scien- tific consultant as well as an ad· visory board from the American Stock Exchange where Presley shares are traded. The settlement, Gordon said, is the result of an offer made to the company by the commission following a four-day heru-ing held in June. Tha l hearing was called by the SEC to investigate allegedly mis· Leading statements the company made regarding the converter. The Presley Companies has made a $2.S million commitment to buy the residential application rights to the machine which is supposed to c r eate usa ble hydrogen gas from lap water. At the June hearings, the de· vice's reclusi ve inventor. Sam Leach, testified that his machine makes the conversion In a two· step "self sustalnlng" process. Tha~ claim wai1 chaJlenged by e~perts from UC Irvine and UCLA who said t~ machine can operate for only 3bort periods ()f time. Dr. Donald BunkerorUClsald based on his review of Leach's · CSee PRESLEY, P .. eA2) would produce between $3.S million and $3.8 million worth or tax revenue. . Later, it was learned Orange County• s assessment r oll climbed a hefty 18.7 percent last _year. a climb Assessor Bradley J a coos o amedcmenro-n-tnfhr- lion. Board of Directors Chairman ·Ralph Clark told his fellow dircc- •tors today OCTD shouldn't look on the steep rise in assessed value as a tax windfall. Instead, Clark said , the di11trict 1hould. cut its tax rate b)' whatever the higher asssessed v '.ues will produce in lax re- venue over the $3.$ million needed to support OCT D's 1976.'17 budget. Clark's proposal won quick en~ dorsement from the other three dtrectors -al l"Od•y 's meeting in Santa Ana. They instructed transit district general manager to calculate a new tax rate based on Clark's proposal and present it to the board when it officially sets the rate at a meeting later this month. 19 'Targets' FBI Tactics Hurt Them WASHINGTON (AP) -The Justice Deparlment says it has found 19 people who suffered actual harm because they were the targets of an FBI harassment campaign in the 1900s and early 1970s. One person was fired from a job and others suf. fered.Jrom invasions of their privacy. Some lost face with colleagues because they were falsely branded police informers. Departme nt officials reported those findings as they discussed their four-month effort to locate the victims llnd tell them what the FBr did to them. Federal marshaJs delivered messages informing the.19 people that they had been targets of the FBI counterintelli gence programs, known as Cointelpro, to harass and disrupt militant politi cal groups on the right and left. . Cointelpro. which operated from 1956 to 1971, in· volved sueh tactics as sending anonymous derogatory letters to the parents and empl oyers of political ac. tivists and distributing phony leaflets to stir dis· sension within politicaJ organi zations. Youth Bay·Oneted··· To Death in OC A 19·year·old Santa Ana man who reportedly hurled a shop· ping cart at new sports cars parked in a Stanton shopping center Saturday night was bayonetted to · death a few minutes later , according to Stan· ton police. Killed when a military bayonet was p lun ged in lo hi s chest at least five times was David Ray Goodman of Santa Ana. Arrested al a Stanton apart· menl complex shortly after Goodman collapsed, mortally wounded, on a busy thoroughfare and charged with his murder was Robert Esparza, -42, of Anaheim. Police said Esparza is a friend of the owner of a aew Dauun 2IOZ sporu car, the c8( that W'M dent· ed when the m-"der victim al· Je1edly threw a shopping cart on toJtthood. Immediately after the parklng lot incident, Goodman ud a companion drove from the-shop- ping center with the Datsun and another car in pursuit. During what police described as a four or five mile chase, the . offended Datsun owner dropped out of the race. But the car containing three of hi s friends, Including Esparza, did not. Goodman abandoned his at· 1 tempt to elude his pursuers -.t. the point where lhe chase began, the s hopping center at Magnolia Avenue and Cerritos Street,· police said. They r <.'1>0rted witnesses said a . fif(hl then broke out and thatdur-! ing the . fraca1t Goodman wa!; j f ntaJly wounded when the bayonet . brought. into play was plunged re· . peat<..'<'.lly lnto his c hest. 1 Co ast I ;the district's so·c:dlcd "pay as :you go" method of capital im· 'provemenl fundlnl(. ( Bui h e s aid today that manipulation of the proposed r•pilal outlay and contingency ly d111charg.?d M arlne. · Timothy Delano Hadden, 21. of Harpers Ferry, W. Va .• was dis· charged July 17 from Camp PendJeton. Estimate lJp 86,000 Weath er portions of the budget were ;enough to come up with the addl· , tlonalsa'vi nf!S . ,. The r evised district budget calls for a general fund tax r ate of '1UlO!lt 91 cents -about six cents :higher lhon last year's general fund rate. Another four cents is tdded to the rate to rover bond in· 1terest. bringing the total to· 95 centsperSlOO. · Barletta 's original budget pro- :posal would h a\'e required a loud I tax rate of 98 cents per $100 of as· ( 9"Sed value. As It will be presented to trustees tonight, the bud~et shows • Sll.96 mlUlon ror general opera· tlons expenses. SS.17 million for capital outlay. $225.000 In cont· lftgency and Sl.4 million to cover •·seat taxes'' and tWUoo for dis· (See TRIM, P•ge AZ) REFRIGERATOR MOVED QUICKLY "Response to the ad was very good. We sold it." That's the sales success story told by the Costa Mesa couple who placed this ad in the DailY Pilot: Side by side coppertooe refrigerator, xlntcond. S315/>C )()(-)()()( x tr you have a home appliance you want to convert to cash, can 642·~8. It only takes a few words In the right place to -attract a buyer . Along the Orange Coast. the right place to advertise js in the Daily Pilot. . Berm WoFli Cost Soars A memo sent to Irvine city councilmen today said the cost of relocating the fence on the University Community P ark berm would run about $1-4.089 -a fisure $5,000 hllher than •Jlae amount. authorized by the <:oUDcil -·-·--, ---.) and cotllpftt the holes dug there. And it would cost another S8.4a& to place the fence on the ln· aide of the berm. Ulllversity Park resla.ats whole homes face the berm aMed tile c'1Uncil last Walk to move the fence. They said it was •CIY on the out.side and didn't · terve the purpose Of keeping the younpers inside the Adventure pl•yground on the other side. of the berm. They said the stockade (eace didn't stop no~ either. Coundl members-agreed the ~nee was in the wrong "Spot and authorized an '8,000 expenditure to put the fence inside. But they Hid II the estimate was over that (See BERM, Page AZ) Night and morning low clouds give way to sun Tuesday. Low 70s along tl'le coast with lows drop- ping to about." 60 over. night. · I NSIDE T ODA l:' Con.Nmer .advocate Rolph 1 Nodtt IJaa fok.n pot fhotl.at the U.S. marketplace.and the QOOmamt?lt.ogmcfea tbot-Te- gulate it for year1. 11 he al&00ys Tightr 11 he uually ~ riOllt? A close look.at Nader atart1onP.ageA7. •••ex MY-s.rvke A1 AllllUIMttt a ....... •• ::-i:.r-... ~ ~~............. ::~ O...lflef aJ.12 0r..,.. c..itr "' c-ik1 8J ~· a H ' er---as """ A1•1t 0...11,...._ Al lile<llMllfbtt At ll .. eri_. ..... M T ..... lllM I• ._........... ··~ .. ,,,.... ......... ... ...,...,... a1WwN.._ •• , Al DAIL y PILOT l>oUce have idenUfed the body of a 22·year·old mason's helper. found Saturday night stuffed lJlto '4lraah bln. The body of J effrey Lynn J>augherty. 112 Paciri ~ Coasl Jli~way, Newport Beach, was found tied with rope to a dis· carde d c a rdboard w ashing machine box in the trash bin at 1996 Maple St. Mrs. Bernice Hillgren, of the Maple Street address, told or- ficers sbe spotted the partly visi· ble body at a bout 7 p.m. as she e mptl.ed l\er trash int.o the large (ontamer ."- Police Sgt. Tom Lazar said police have all but discounted murder in the case. sayinc the victim h ad needle marks on his arm and "is a known dnlg user." Results of an autopsy, conduct· ed Sunday mor ning, have not Long List Of Suspe~ts or1.!!0~~l!~rf's' om cers didn 't have to U:a\lel very far Sunday to investigate the complal'nt f i l e d by W i l li am 11. Williams of Santa Ana. . For WilLi ams, 46, is a de· puty sheriff who works out of the sheriU's central faciUty on Flower Street in Santa Ana. And the theft occurred right in the bwld· ing. ·t I n vest igator s said Williams' .44 magnum serdce r <>vo l \'C r was stolen by someone who ap· par.ently knew the com· bination to the \ictim's locker . · The weapon is valued al $500. .. Certainly we have u list o f s us pects.'' ;1n in· \'estigator commented lo· day. "It starts with the sheriff and goes all lht' way dow n o ur r ost c•r o f employes." Irvine Man, Former SBA Chief, Dead Pri\·ate funer al services ha\'e bee n scheduled for Charles C. Harvey of Irvine. a former re· ~ional adm ini slrut~r for the f ederal S mall Business Ad· 1 ministration, whodiedSundav. · Mr. llan·ey. 74 at th<' tim'c of his death, was for soveraJ years prior to his r etir ement the. chief administrator of the SBA in the ~western United States. l He w~1s a graduate of UC J Ilerkcley and laun<'hed his public • administration career with U1e ~City of Pasade na. I After joining the S BA, he mo\•ed to Corona del Mar. wh<>re , he lived from 1964 tol972 when he \ moved to Irvine. Mr. Han ·ey lc:1,·es his willow. Roso Ma rie of Irvin<': three sons. harles T .. Bevan and Cam<>ron. a ll of Ncw 1>or t Rea ch; u daughter , Juhu Ander son of Thousand O a ks, an d four jlrandchildn•n. The family h ns sujtJ.teSt(•d memo ria l contributions to Childrcn"s Hospital o( Orange County. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Tlwl0.""«C""'' o..1ty P11<>1,w1111-<hh<o .... bt"C'd tf\ie Nt'W\ J't•\\, ltOUbtl""'°b' tMO•~ , ..... """'""' ... ,.,,,,.,.,,y ~-"'·..,~-.,. pw. fl\1'*d ~fto(f11ty ll'ltOVQI\ I ttdfY fi>f C•\titi )Ii. ""'· N'"1ilflJOr\ r\•dC h:, HunOnQl\11" 0.M .... °""' '"''" VAll•Y~ hwlf'll•. S•<kJhltiti' 'w' .. ll\f 1•"° l.AQVf\lltli'411M"~f"C .. \t,Adnqtft••Q~lnJ• ''°" ., tNbftY"'fd ~'"'Cf•W'\ ""' ~~'"'-" tM> prw-c:~t pvtMl\hh'O ola.nt I\ •t JlO v.iin t lwot Sii .... C.l<t ""'"'' (lfl!Otf>f• .-. Robert N. Weed l'f-ftl -P\11111- Jack R. Curley Vtct,.,...,..,,.ltd ~ .. ~ Thomas KeevU Lekto< Thomas A. Murphlne __ .... ( ...... O\at'les H. Loos Richard P. Nall AUKIM'I ,...N91"9 l!dl!OrS Offices ~YI ~n: »OW." 6rrSlf'Mt \.llquN .. .t<ll: lllllG_.,..~,eof Hu111•.,-8t"tll: "'''8"<"-·•td -l<lllM~ Ven..: UlVI l.t .... llo.ld •t~o .. ..,,,_. Mond•y. Augus1 2 1976 Mystery Deaths Reported been released . Lu2ar said. and a toxicologist's reµort 1s due later th.ls week to determine c1u1sc of death. "Al this point, we do not sus· peel a murder," he said. "Jl aJ>- pears that Daugher ty's friends just dumped him in the trruih bin after be over dosed on some drug." Officers said the.v would know more about the case after .they receh·e a report on the autops)' from the county coroner's office. Fresno Man Slays Three W 01nen, Self FRESNO (AP 1 -Thr~women were s hot to death and a fourth was wounded by the husband or one who t he n shot hims elf. a uthorities s aid. The women had just returned to the home of K azue I lolley. 31, also known as Kazue Canterbury, when they were gunned down with a pistol on the front porch about 3:30 a.m. Sunday, sheriff's of· ficerssafd. Killed were M r s. llolley. "ho was shot first ; Donna Eleanor Warlock, 31: and Linda Lee Sisk. 19. also known as Linda ~e Terry. AJI were from l'Tesno. A Taft woman, Gale Scott. 32. also known as Gale Melipda WoUf. was hospit;d1zed in serious condition but was reported im- proved to s atisfactory today al Valley Medical Center. Deputies said M rs. Holley's husband. Clyde Holley. 35. also shol and killed his Boxer do..: bt>fore wounding hjmsclf in the head. Holley was reportedly in good condition after treatment and was booked fo r investigation of thrc<.' counts of murder and one count of attempted murder. Officers said the other women's hus bands. a ll members or a motorcycle group. had gone to lhc coast for the weekend, but I lollcy had remained home then and when the women went out for the evening. f'ro111 Pagr A I HIT MAN. • • I le said they told her teenagcd daughter . K a·thy. of the alleged death plot and then left the home to go into hiding. . Scalise and Mrs. Robinson staved in motels in Hunti ngton Beach and Ventura County until she decided to contact police and the district attorney's omce aft~r Scalise collected SI0,400 in cash from the physician. Or. Robinson was arrested at a Santa Ana service s tation after h e allegedly h anded over a rurU1er Sl ,000 lo Scalise in the belle( that. his wire had licen killed. Jumper Dies In Rush Hour JRWINDALE (AP> -A man plunged to his death from a freeway overpass today, t he highway patr?l said. . Officers said the man 1umped from the Irwindale Avenue over· pass onto the w.-stbound Foo~lll F'reew:.iy and dclayt>d mornin~ traffic for more than a half hour until coroner 's deputies could ar· rive al the scene. . .~ ........... PROPANE T ANK:SHATIERED WOOD All THAT REMAINS OF COLORADO HOME AFTER FLOOD Dozens Oead, Hundreds of People Stranded After Devaatatlng Weekend Dlsaater Flood Toll May Mount Continuing Rain Hampers Rescue Attempts LO VELAND, Colo. <AP >· - Survivors of a weekend O:.ish ft'ood huddled on mountajnsides and in isolated homes today as r ains and winds forc~d a delay in air rescue attempts. Orricials said the flood kill ed about 75 peo- ple. and they said "dozens" more bodies may be round. The National Weather Service said it appeared there would be no bre&k in the weather for at leastl .... odays. Capt. Rich Hovey. the Lari mer Count y s h e r iff's 1>r ess spokesman, said it was thought most or lhe cricicaJly ill or in· jured survl\·ors were evacuated Sunday from the Dii.: Thompson Canyon. .. At this sta~r. ex('{>pt for three coronar ies we ha\le up there, everybody is the same." Ho,•ey sa id . "To th e best of our knowled itc. e\'crybody who h~d some major problem was not m there last night.'' li e s a id t he persons with cardiac conditions were reported by rescued friend!> or re!ativ~s. who said the· three had histories of heart trouble. Authorities said recovery of the ·dead from tne Big Thompson River fl ood, reported st rewn along the w a lls of the Big Thompson Ca nyor1. was their last priority. Dave Fel~man, chie~ or mvesligati ,.e services for pohce in nearby F ort Collins. said it could take weeks to locate the de· ad. and some never may be round. Ne arl y 1 5 0 Nati o n a l Guardsmen. law enforcement of· ficers and volunteers waited for orders as s earch leaders mapped their strategy. Helicopters wer e to be used f.o.. day to fe rry the sur vivors, ma:ny of whom were trnooed on . in· acces sibl e patches of ht~h ground . to safely. But the ~am that began again Sunday mght continued today. grounding air rescue equipment. ''Heiicoplers will be grounded until they can get in, perhaps by noon." said John Englebert. chief or operations for the Larimer County Sberiff"s Department. f 'ro• Page A l BERM •.•• . amount they would have to look a l the matter again. The <>ounril Is ex1x>cted to con· sider a~ain thl• qul'stion of mov· in~ the fence nt the next regul ar meeting, Aug. 24. "We'\'e J?Ol s teady rains into Estes Park a nd some winds." The r e w as no immediate estimate on t he number stranded. Gov. Richard Lammsaid 250peo· pie were reported il\)urcd and a nother 40 missin~. President Ford today declared a major disaster in Colorado; the action will permit the use of federal funds in relict an<t r~ covery effor ts. A 10-inch r ainfall running down from nearby Rocky Mountain Na· lton al P a r k Saturday night churned the Big Thompson River into a wall of water 12 f eet hil!h and sent it on a 15-minute frenty. It tore through campsites and trailers. motels and bridges, rak· mg a path or destruction JO mites long. There were varying reports a bout whethe r warning was gi,·en; everyone agreed there wasn'tmuch. Some 500 s urvivors were fer· ried to a horse pasture.turned· helicopter pad Sunday. AnoU1er 1.000 had to st ay in the ar ea for u second night. Officials n ew over the canyon. dropping leanets th.at.asked ~Ur· vi\'ors to s ignal their 1mmcd1ate needs : blankets stretched on the 1 ground in the form of an "F" meant food. ''W" meant waler. "A" meant m edical aid. Larimer County Sheriff Robert Watson said 43 bodies were in a makeshift morgue and 15 to 20 bodies had been spotted and num· bered throughout the canyon. · The Big Thompson River runs down from the heights of Rocky Mountain National Park through E stes Park, some 60 miles northwest of Denver. The Big Thompson Canyon, whicn runs east from E stes Park toward Lov- eland, was the site of the worst. destruction. Watson said six or seven people died in Uie s ame area in a 1962 flood. The water r an off the mountain as rain also pelted the canyon itself. It funneled into the canyon, 150 yards wide at the most, between bluffs hundreds of feet. high. According to company of. ficials. Langworthy, who r eplaces company Executive Vice President Robert Phillips, holds degr ees in physics and chemkal engineering. WYOMING Cheyenne• NEB. COLORADO ,; .. , '•"' + • Coloroclo Sprin91 .,_0 ____ 5_0 ... Mil.a • Irvine C·ouncilrnen Eye Coastal Stand Trvinc City Cou ncil members will try to decide Tuesday ni ght if thcv want thei r city to have a coa0stline. The council will me<'l al 6:30 p.m. at city hall to reconsider its position on about 10.000 acres of undeveloped Irvine Ranchland between Newport Beach and Laguna Beach. The Irvine position will be forwarded to the county's Local Agency Formation Commiss.ion CLAFC> and will be considered \\•hen the LJ\ FC reviews the fate or the coastal sector later thi~ month. Up until now, the Irvine City Council has taken a back seat on the coastal area and has not asked that it be con.~idercd part of lrvine·s sphere of ihlluence •. A city's s phere of influence in· eludes territory that does not lie within city boundaries but which might be annexed to that city at a future dale. F,.._PageAl TRIM ••• trict students . pllending other community colleges. Lnst year's total budget wnK $15.l mllllon. The most notable reducUon ln nexl year 's budget compared to the J975·76 pla n is in the tuition and seat tax cate~ory. 1.ast ¥ear, Saddleback patd other community colleges a total of $2.1 l million to cover the cost of educating local stud.?nts who at· tended else wher e. Several months ago, Sad· dleback tl'U1te.es decided their pr ograms a re aow adequate enough that most local atudents could find what they wante~ without going to CoutCommuru· tyCollege DistrictorRanch<>San· tiagoColJege Dlstrictcampu.aes. They pused a tesoludooorder· ing \hat an)' Saddleback district student wishing to attend college In another district bad to obtain a special permit from the ad· ministration. Decisions, Decisions To ge t the permit, the student must present evidence that the cour se or s tudy he wishes to pursue cannot be fulfilled al the Mission Viejo college. Concentrating on his game, international grand master Walter Browne or the United Stales, one of the world·s top chess players, ·;'"-=------. displays a mixture of e motions. durir:tg t~c Canadaian O pen chess champ1onsh1ps in Toronto. Banking on that new policy, the adminis t r ation has budgeted $700.000 Jess for tuition and seat taxes next year. HARRISBURG. Pa. <AP> - Twelve people who 1i1llcndl'd u state America n Legion conven· lion in Philadelphia July 2144 have ditd of simU ar symptoms, a leaionofficial Hid today. Edward T. Hoak. the leaion's state adjuta nt, s ;iid. ··we don't know wha t It ls but. It's all over the state.'" He said J0,000 people attended the ~onvenllon. A state health oWclaJ said an In· vesUgalion was beeun today. He said he had no lndicaUon as to the causes of the deaths. Hoak said m any persons at the convention have been admitted to hospitals around the state, includ. ing seven in Williamsport and three at WiJkes·Barre. He said all have the same sy mptoms. .. They have a pain In their cheaL 'Ihey g et a high tem- perature," Hoak laid. He sald some sy mptoms resem· ble a chest cold, and the tem· peraturea r ange from 104 to 107 de&rees. Hoak ide ntified the dead' as Elmer Hafer, Lewisburg; Jimm.y Dolan a nd J .P . Ralph, Williamstown; William Byrd, Bloomsburg: Louis Byerly, Jean- nette ; Fr a nk H a r+e y. McKe es port; Frank Aveni, Clearfield; Julius Cagglanla, Republic; Charles Chamberlain, Chambersburg ; Abe Ruben, Do119ra_. and Andy_ Warnek Fayette County. "We were just informed of it this morning," aaid Dr. William Parkin, chief of the Pennsylvania H e alth D e partme nt 's epidemiology section. "We're try\ne to get specimens collected . • • so we can try to Jdentify an etiologic <call51nu aient." Parkin said. A 12th victim was reported by John Damiano, a funeral home proprietor in McAdoo. He said C h a rl es M . (D a ni s h) Danishefsky, 49, or McAdoo died Sunday at a hospital in nearby Hatleton. "We haven't been able to find out even when the people gol alck lor 5ure yet. We Just ha ven't been able to docume nt anything," P arkin said. Parkin said, .. We don't have a good lead right now. We're gol~g after both vJruses and bactena • ~·we are trying to get informs· 1 tlon on people who have been re· ported to have been sick and those who have been r 4!eorte<f to have died to find out the 9 8J'acleriaUcs of their disease," hesaid. Fro• Page Al PRESLEY • • p atent a pplication and the test data from two brier test.'I run in March, he believes the machine produces hydrogen in a nearly direct trade·ofr with electricity. The tests of the device were the focus of testimony at the hearing as Randall Presley of Lido Isle, president of the firm, testified that he was 3'f\Xious for com- prehensive, long.run tests to be conducted. Accor ding to company of- ficials, preparations are being m ade for those tests to be run at a machine shop in Burbank. 111 a pr ess r elease dated July 2>, company offlcials aaJd °!· Horace Mann, the company s consultant. has been overseeing ..effo rts t o i nte rface the hy drogen converter with a testbed to determine whether the instrumentation for the testing was adequate. "Dr. Mann r eported that the exercise w as not concluded and additional changes in the test equipment may have to be ae· compllshed before meaningful testing can be undertaken.'' I The agreement betw~ The Presley Companies and the SEC also s tipula tes that, if the com· pany issues any llt a te m e nt without prlOI' approval o( the re· view board and Dr. Mann, the 1 press release must clearly state , the information Is unvertned. Gordon a nd SEC attorne y J ames Mercer contended at the June hearlnaa ttlat all Presley re- leases about lhe converter oul· side it5 development were laued •it.bout any acientific verlfica· tJon. Those press r eleuq were widely reeo1nlied u the IGUrte o( a spectacular rise in the price of Pre•ley stock that lhot lrom $S to szo at the fint of the YMr. It hu hovered betweesa $10 Md '1a tiDce the hearings , h Addition.Uy, the coml)U)' u added J amea LanaworthY •an e» ecuttve vie• president of American TelecommunlcaUons Cl'op., to its board of directors. r The SEC w as critical or the fact that all members of lbe board of directors at the time of the purchase of rights to the con· verter were officers of th~ C:Ol'l_l· pany and none bad a scaenUfac background. Langworthy's addlUon to the board Is seen as a reponse to that criticism . ' . • j Monday',· Cloeing Prices NYSE COMPOSHE •. TRANSACTIONS I Some Miners Return 811'19e MllOd•aed Press Roving pickets blocked miners Crom returning to ~Ir jobs across m~t or West Virginia today. but a back-to-work m ovement. was in the makina in the 8late'a northern panhandle and In Ohio. DAIL 'f fllLOT ,,, Book Boom 'How lo' Tomes prout Never in the history o( bookisetlini hus there been . phenomenon tom ntcb lhe ~l'<>Wth ot "how.to" books in rectn· months. Nevcr have so many how· lo b<X>ks bel'n avallttble 0 11 Virtually every usl>C('t of llvlnll. ranging from rabing t>on sclousness to enjoylna seit to r cpalrln~ "'atches. As recently as two years atto. how.to in formation was llmlted a chapter-or INus in u bO<>k, one or two books on Money's Worth a given subject. much of the lnformntlon written for pro fessionals ~nd ndt intcncJedror th1.•eonisumcr ul ull. NOW. AGAIN~'Tthis dismnl record or a mer.-two yeur ago and the fat>t thcu tn the corly 1900s. how-to books hardl~ uialed. the how· to ac~nts for~ percent of !Hiles or trad1 books. estimates Barnes & Noble, the lOO·yeu·old large" bookseller in the world. llcudquartered in New York City Barnes&. Noble bas brant>hes :scattered lhrou.:hout. the Eus· and tong hes had the envtahlc r~vutalion or being the s tor1 other booksellers recomm<'nd for hard·to·flnd books. Why? How did .Lhls trend.develop? Whut types of book: are leading the movement? "l think peoplt! have reacted strongly to the pressures o' financial hardship and t.hedri ve for self·i mprovement," say• Len Riggio. president of Barnes & Noble. "The quality anc: ~lo( ser vices have disillusioned the average person . .. SO THE CONSUMER llAS looked for , and th(• publishers have or provided in book form inexpensive do·it yOllrself techniques on almost every subject including homl repair, health care, financial responsibility, law, self· awareness and personal growth." I think the reasoos are more profound than he suggests. I submit that people became disgusted with Wall Street's leader.ship after the stock market disasters or the late 1960s and early 1970s virtually wiped out their nesteggs. I believc the re,,elations of Watergate t>ompounded resentment and distrust of Washington. And I contend people recogni:zed how much of a jungle the American marketplace was for the in no· cent buyer. Out ot these responses grew a determination to do-it-on-your·own, and out of that came the demand for the how·to book to which alert publishers and booksellers react· ed with delight. As for tlie areaS'of greatest growth, her e they are: -P ERSONAL FINANCE. "The growth in this category is perhaps the most dramatic of all over the past decade.'' says Riggio. There were perhaps 10 titles covering books on personal finance 10 years ago in the store, but now Barnes & Noble stocks more than 200 ol the 550 titles in print, with sub- ject matter ranging rromhowtoshop for food to how lo open a Swiss bank account and hide your assets. -Child psychology and childbirth. 1'hese categories are close to the top in popularity among the hov··•osections. Sales of books in these categories are about20 tlr •• .!s what they were lOyears ago, ;ind some classics have emer~ed. -Cookbooks. Th111 was the origmul how·to catc~ory und always has sold well. hut Barnes & Noble notes thul in recent years the books have become much niore skill nricntl.!d ant.I !\l)ecialized. -HEALTH CARE. Your interest has expanded from basic medical encyclopedias lo a whole rnnge of books devol· ed to understandlnst or many ailments, health problems. dicl and nutrition -up anestimated500r11.'rt>entover 10 years. -Home buildinA and repairs. The do-it-yourself trend has been around n lonj! lime. but even so. the estimate is that cto-it-yourself books about lhe home have soared 600 percent Justin the past Ci ve years "And no doubt :iboulil." says Rig· g10, "one factor is that do-it-yourselfers can rely on an in- creasing number of excellent guides for home r epairs und hobbies." -Human scxunlity. ln the 1940s. it was all but impossi- ble to buy a book on this topic without u physici:m 's prescrip· lion. Now it's a popular. as well as respectable, category. -Personal awareness and personal growtb. Even the most compli cated philosophical Ideas have been transformed into a how-to formula. Witness: TM. relaxation, response. etc. Pipeline Delay Possibility Cited ANCHORAGE; Alaska (AP> -Uthe Ford Adminislra· tion damps any more watchdog r equirements on trans· Alaska pipeline construction. "additional work could ·seriously Jeopardize" the proJect ·s tight timetable, builders have warned. Alyeska PipelineServiceCo., made its statementin a let· ter to Interior Department Undersecretary Kent Frizzell. The letter also notified Friuell tne company will comply with a recent federal order requiring Alyeska to improve welding quality control record·keepingon future pipe installations. FRIZZELL SAYS THE NEW weld ldenllf1cation pro- cedures must be In effect by Tuesday. lie ordered the extra steps two weeks ago. Alyeska, calling the new proeedures ''redundant and un· necessary." told Frizu>ll it will paint a weld ~r in leaded paint on the inside and outside of each ~e section. The number will be painted with 11 cardboard stencil. The .stenci1 then will be destroyed and the weld completed. An Alyeska quality control engineer must vouch for the uc·· <'Uracy orthe nu m bcrs. "It is hoped that before any sur h future proposals ure adopted, the necessity for their irnplcmc·ntolion be caretully weighed and the Impact on the scheduled compleUon or tho prOJect be considered." AJycska tol<t F'ri ucll. THE PIPF.LINE M>W IS scheduled to be completed hy Julyofnextyear. The lntertor Department want" a photoicraphic copy or tvery new weld X-ray and u written ccrt1flcatu to verlfy tht· quality control engineer's inspection. Every rudiograph on thc 1lrOjf'Ct "has always tM!en, i.nd will always be nvullable to UH' nuthorlicd federal officer nl hlsrequest." Alycskl-.-said. 0 ALV£SKA METALJ~VRGISTS ARF: ini;p<'rt lnic u 3 1 ~ mile section ot burll'd pipe 10 miles north or Valde~ th1~ week to determine If o pipe rupture earlier thi11 month wlll force its entire replacemC'nt. A !!even-root pOttion of pipe burh:d beneath Canyon Slough split during water pressure tests July u. The breaJc did not Involve welds and was located In the middle of a 40-foot pipe section. Thal section has been replaced Since the break. Alyeska has altered il.8 ~rell mi nary press· gure test procedur~. DeMay said future tests will involve Independent connedion of the pipe to fJressure-mea11uring gauges. Previously Lhc J)lpe hacJ a sin1ele connection to the aauges. Further, Alyeska has assigned mor • Q\1all\y control In· 11pectors lo observe lhotesL'I. Power Plant Planned SAN DIEGO CAP1 -San Diego Gu & Electric says ll hopes to start construction on ooe or three i~othermal de· m001lraUon power plantsinthelmperiul Valley by 1978. The utility says it. will ask the Imperial Irrigation Db· trlct. t.o participate ln building o 50-megawatt plaol near J{eber al a cost or $4\.8 million. SDG&E also said It hopes tooblainforuis from thefederaJ Energy Research Md Development Administration t.oward lheplant. . > \ . . . • .. . ... .. ,. "• .:· .. ., .. . :-, . • . · ' • . .. A 10 DAILY PILOT Monday Augusf2 1978 "!II ... Pro for World Athlet~ By Ct£NN WHITE 04 ltlt O•llY ,. ... "-" MONTREAl~-Thcrt~ ii> a new type of Olympic Games on the drawing board a net t.h ;1rchilects are Larry and Dillie Jeon King or tennis renown. They 1ee a need for the world's leading athletes tu be able to do what they do best and enjoy. ••nd be able to muke money while they do it The Kings ' concept wouhJ permit lhal, with •• 110Mi1blc $10.000 going to each C\'ent "1n ncr. Athletes could d •clinc money, bow ever. if they chose to keep amateur status. The present Olymmc Games prohibit professionuJ athletes from participating. The on·papt>r Olympics would . be held biennially, lnillally. with a possibility thl'Y would become annual if sucrcssful. Th1.•y'd be c·alled the OJlcn Olympics or World 0J>('n Ga mes. Tar.:ct dates for tht first gumes oi.re 1979 or ITS All OVER -Fountc.1in Valley's Shirley Babashoff I center t and a group of C.S. athletes parade around the 1981 and the site may b~ SOl\'lewhere In Greece. ComPtllllons -.ould be held in most Individual sports uod Larrv Kint u ys there is c \•en 8 posiib11lty that team sports sucn as basketball and soccer would be mcluded. However, all perfor mers would be under in· <lh'Jdual sponsorship, the na· lion al concept would not exist. LDrry King belirves the OJ>Cn . games could brlnit $10 million tor distribution a mon,,e lhe parlici· pants . He says two tele' 1s100 networks have alr~ady indicated interest In showing the games Kines says he has Lalked to about 200 athletes represcnUng ·all sports and about hair of them are awtd by the open games idea. Why would lh~ athletes come to such g:ames? "Th• rcuson the) are·uthletes is that 111 whnt the)' are goorl 1.11. and thul 1:1 w)\at t1'1('y like to do. In our ABmes th1.•y'd lX' exhl b1tmA their s kills :iga1nst the A,. Wltt"'°IO trc.1ck in Closing Ceremonies for the XXI Olympic Games Sunday at Montreal. Related stories, page A3·4. Athletes' Robot System: ·Halos' Goal --Get Out Of Cellar Not for U .S.--Krumm :\IONTREAL IAPt -Thel'nit· •t.'d States look a n '"'"entor'" or its Olympic m('dals today. ail 94 or them, then began pond('nng the ine\•itable question: Can a na tion operating as-a rree society continue to match athlN1r skills with highly regimented and t otally s u bsidized teams from eountries suc h as the !)ov1et u nion I andEastGer many. I That question s p;:iwned other quesupns : . Should the U.S. government. Oly 1ppie Seene st<.'p in and bail out our Olympic effort: )lust America resort to th<.' "factory system." ~lor1flcd by the F:ast Germans. and start turn- '°~ out Olympic mMaJists the \\3Y Detroit pr od u ct's automobiles'! One of the people responsible for answering such questions is Philip 0 . Krumm, president of the U.S. Olympic Committee. "Our so<yjety would ne,·er stand for a ~~ctory system or even a na· Age No Barrier For These Stars MONTREAL-I can not help : "ht> ama1ed by the number of 1976 O ly m pic t ra c k and fi e l d performers who have crossed 30 and 40-year barriers bul yet arc s till producing quality m arks in their speclalt ies. I Take Swedish l ,500-mel<.'l" r un· .ner Anden G ardc.-rud. who has. recorded a 3:38 <cquaJ lo a 3:55 ·mile) this year . He's JO. Or Cana· dia n 400·m c l <'r ace Dom Domansky ... he'll be 36 Aug. llth .and has run a 45.9 this seoson. I 1. Ludvik Danek, Czech '11scu:s WHITE WASH boasted the eldest or Olymp1uns in track and field. AJan Oakley of Canada was 48 three months ago. And he placed 3Sth in his event here. Also in th:it event was Vladim ir Goludnlchy, 40, of Russia who won the gold medaJ in l960 and '68. lie wa), seventh here. At the London Olympics or 19411 there-was a 39-ycar-old British high .hurdler who had a s hot al medaling but M l over a hurdle in the finals. lfe was a rormer Royal Air Force pilot <whose name escapes me' and he a lso took the athletes· oath at OpcnlnA Ceremonies of those Games. Sovie t h a mmer thr o"cr Anatoliy Bondar chu k Ji?Ot ii bronze medal her e, tossing 247· 7. He'll be 37 in J anuary. So while age docs have its bar riers in attiletlcs. they aren't always insurmountable. Going the other direction. <• mark that really impresses me belongs to a Kenyan who ha~o depart because of the African na tions' withdrawal. tionat team." Krumm insists. '"We need government money for de\"elopment and I acilities. We do not want go"ernment direction." The grandfatherly retired busi- ness executi \'C from Kenosha. \\.·as .. said he had no apologies to make for the Americans· O\"erall performance in the Montreal Games. "Belt.er than Munich," he said. "and against s tronger competi· lion.'' The U.S. medal total equaled the count rour years ago but there was one additional gold, 34 to 33. and Improvement in a number of the more obscure sports. On the other hand, the So\iet Union e nla r ged its over a ll superiority, increasing its total medal count from 99 to 125, and East Germany, with a population lt'ss than one·tenth that of the l'n1ted Stales, climbed over Un·"' cle Sam ·s back into second place inthest:inctings basedongolds. The II uss1ans won 47. East ( ;ermany 40 and the L:nited States J.i. This subordinntl• pol>itiun to Communist ri\'als 1s certain to p r ovoke fr es h howl s from the trad1tionul "View<.'rs With Alar m.·· who think thl' 11owerful L"nitcd Stale), ),hould neq;•r lo " spor.ts contesl s. The Nalion u l ColleR1ute Athletic Association will say it is a ll the fault of the Amateur Athletic t,;nion. The AAU will blame ttw NCAA. And the Presi· dent. may na me another com- mi!\sion to look into it all . Yet, America lsn·t rcudy to set. up a robot school such as the East Ger mam1 have a t Leip7.i~. with its teams or whlt.c·coaled doctors. test lubes. wires and treadmills to produce world-class althleles. Nor does America seem inclined to turn all or its top athletics into students and teacher s on a permanent payroll with special bonuses fo r extra athletic achievement, as in Russia . Even in the wake of dereat there is one thing posith·e about the California Angels. Their attitude . Despite a 2 ·1 loss to Rich Gossage and the Chicago \\'hate Sox Sunday al Anaheim Stadium, California manager Norm Sherry was talking about escaP- ing the cellar in the American League West and pitcher F'rank A ngeb Sia••• AllG<tmHOfl l(MPC lltO) A119-lC•l1lornl••• h•O Al.Kl. 4 C4'11f0f'n1• at T•••O Aug, S C.tlilornl• .al T t U\ Tanana, Gossage's unwilling vic- tim Sunday, was discussing his chances of 20 wins. "I think our chances are very good of getting out or the base· ment," Sherry observed after Gossage's four·hitter prevented his team from a three.game series sweep. That would have moved the Angels lo within one·half game of the fifth place Sox hut inst.cad California shppc<I 2'2 games behind. >'Our first ~oal 1!' to get out of the cellar a nd then think about mo\'in~ higher ." sa1<1 Sherry. "We don'l want to look too far ahead but if "c keep playini? the \\ay we have we won't hav1• t11 Thin~s will just hap11cn." Sher ry hus "on MX or ht:c fir~t nine gamC'S since h1ktnR 11rrr a., the California m a na~er from Dick Williams . CHICAGO l. ... tnont;I c,...,, tt 0•1•<1n I. JOhn\00 In A"tf'W'f\'''" W StOln7b IC 8"11 ln NordnQnrl J !.c>M><~f 11) °""' ·~ El•IM!( Go\WO' 0 ... , ...... ' n t n I 1 I n 4 I I 0 4 11 I I n ~on • n , o I 0 /J f) •000 I) no o 4 n 0 D 1 11 n n II II 0 fl CALll'OltoclA •b, It., (ofltflo\'f R..,,..,,h llond\f I '\ol•ll• ll> M<llton nn ll Jl)l\o• llh 8orM•tl Moui-i,,rr-o" '-s1nn1nnph Ro J~>to&n )It Et<-hfi.Mtt,.n .,_ ra,.....n • n n 11 • n 1 n .,, 1 0 1 11 n n I t1 I 0 I 0 0 0 I I I II >OOO 10011 1 n I I Jn no 11 on o best in the world und it wouJd be on TV," King :says. • "We'll train ou r own Judges and they'll be paid." Cost of officlaJs will not be pro. h1biUve, Kings soys. "We can take four p ro- fesslonwly trained. efficient men und they will do the job it lakes 60 amateur officials to perform." King.adds. Whot ubout some or the top night world :1thletes who ml~ht likl' lo purtlcipate but who. --wn nout financial support, could not product! tr1n· J fUnd!S'! •"If they wt>re a top level alhJcte with that kind or problem there would be nothing to i>revent us from putUnR up t'x~n e money and then deducting it from nny win· nln(tS," K ing Si•)"S. "We aren't lr)•inl< to compete wllh Lill' preseJH OJy m plc Games. In fuct . tr they w~n\ to e>pen competition. that would be wonderful. We fcl'I com1.>ellecl to Set> Fornl at, Page AU Siooep Giants Dodgers' Hopes Get New Life SAN FRANCISCO (AP > - Charli e Houg h 's knuckleball breathed life back into the Los Angeles Dodgers' pennant hopes Sunday. , "Thal kn uckle ball danced arou nd us all day." said San Francisco m anager Bill Rigney, whose Giants were in position to deliver a doubleheader knockout punc h to th e Dodgers a nd virtually insure lhe,Cincinnati Reds another NationaJ League West fl ag. Instead, the Dodgers swept the DodP.-.S late AllO~m .. MKAaCfNO) AUQ , Houslon •• l.os Angel6 11§pm. 11\p m 7;Upm AUQ l Hou~•on '" '-''' "'"~""' AUQ • Ho ... 1o.1 •1 Lo• ,.nQtle• Giants, 4·1 and 4-3. Hough re· Ueved Don Sutton. 12.S, in the ninth inning of the opener, earn· ine his ninth save. and worked lhe final 14' innings o r t he nightcap to get his ninth v1rtory on the strength of Bill Russell's 10th inning sacrifice fl y which scored Steve Garvey. Bill Buckner collected seven hits. four in the second game, against Giants pitching. Gary Thomasson had fi\re hits for San f'ranc1sco. but the Giants left 24 runners on base and Rigney * * * FllllSTGAMIE l.OSANG!l ES UH ~ltANCISCO •II r II Ill •• r 11 111 l.oc>e\ 711 &Onl'fll R Snlith rf e.~ ... r1 Gtrvev111 Ceylb Ru"•llu l.t<1CI Ye•9"tC S...tonp liouQ~p 4 0 0 0 Thotna""'cl S 0 4 I· •330 t•U'•rer111 40 1 0 • 0 1 0 M111htWS It • 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 Murce< ti S 0 I 0 • 0 0 0 O.Ev-111 • O 0 O 3 0 1 1 lteltt)b • 0 0 0 • o 1 1 ·Wie•u • o 1 o • I 2 o O..A.otrc • 1 1 o • o o o 8arrp 1 o o o • 0 I I Ontiv.rospl\ I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Mollillp 0 0 0 O G.l<dt~ph I 0 0 0 HH"8<1o p 0 0 0 0 Tol•h 3S 4 t J TGl•IS JI I 10 I l°'An<>:I~ 000 111 010-4 !.en Ft•f\Ci\CO 000 100 000-1 E -Ru~'4'11, Cty, Tllom,usor., Spei.,.. OP -LO< ,.,..._ 1, !Ml• Fr•n<l><-o 1. L06 _.....,,.nQ"lt<.1. ~ Fr•n<•'KO 1J 111 -TI>o<N~. DI. R-r. 8ut•ne•. SB -Lacy. I P H It Elll aa SO S..110f1 (W,17~> 8 10 I I 3 S Houglt I OOOOT S..r lt...f.1) t> 8 3 ) I 3 Molfl11 '1 I I 0 I 0 ..... AWrlo 1 0 0 0 I 0 S..••-Hou911 !'I. 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IP H • IElll aa SO ••;tl3J" ••• 0 0 0 , 0 It 6 I I I I '• 1 1 ' , 0 ,,., 1 0 ' 0 0 ' I I I I 0 0 OLYMPIC PAIR ARRWE TONIGHT ING LEWOOD -It.s's welcome home t onight for Oly mpic Games swim stars Brian Goodell of Mission Viejo and Shirley BabashoH oC Fountain Valley. The pair a rrive at Los AnReles Int ernation a l on West e r n Airlines night 765 at 7:25 tonighl and a 111ala reception is planned. Awaiting their arrival will be "' their Nadadores swim coach. Mark Schubert. fellow Olympian leammateR, the Mission Viejo lli~h band and pep !!quad and '"arious dignitaries. summed up the day as "\"t?ry frustrating." . "We had to win two games. That's all there was to it," said Hough. ··Now wo have four gam·es coming up against fl!e 'Reds and we m ight have. tct swce1> that series." Hough, 9·4, worked in all four games of the Giants series and allowed no hits in 6'13 innings. But the Dodge rs lost the first two I games. falling 9'·~ i,;ames bactt or Cincinnati. "We're a better team than the Dodgers. Our season series sh~ws that-," J ohn. Montefuaeo said after ptlchmg tne li1ants to a 6-3 victory Saturday. He ex· plained the Giants' lasl placo spot, deapite their edge (now 8·5) over the Dodger s by saying, "W~ just have trouble beating the weaker teams." The Giants have a S-3 re~rd against the Reds, here fog a three.game series opening tonight . The Dodgers are home to face Houston before the Re,:ls, now n in e games up, arrive Thursday. Pressure No Obstacle For Allin SUTTON, Mass. <AP' -Br1an ' ''Bud" AJlln. · who.· rollected a fistful or decoraUons as an Arkny artilleryman in Vietnam, now ls a bundle or nerves on \he pro golf tour. And he llkesitthatway. ''It's nice to be nervous, that's what this game is all about," the 31·year·old Allin said Sund ay after collecting S40.000 witti ,.u pressure.packed, one·stroke ~·c­ tory in the $200,000 PleasJnt Valley Classic. ••1 was ner vous, kind of sh4ky out there, .. Allin said. "It's Wen so long since I've won, since 1974, I really wanted this one. I was so ner vous 1 quit looking at j.he score board. l "I didn't know I was ahead. ( didn't look a t the leader boird from the 10th hole until the l8lh1 Then I looked up al the board when I was on that last green. I knew I needed just two putts lo win and I went out and go' them." While admitting to a case f/f nerves, he gave the jitters , lib rivals as the 72-hole tournameil turned ~nto a horse r ace in ~ final round, interrupted by a thunder storm for l~ hours late morning. I v.~:'C:1~=1~1<~d .. ,Nft;I "'ti.. ~t B"MIAllU,, M0,000 n .. 1 ... 7o-.1P, a.<> Grtn\""w· s».tOO 7~1·11·7o-tf8 Unny W.Oklfl\, \ 10,.00 61-1....._.fl: '-""'Eide•, ''0.600 &1·n-14 ' BollMt-. ll0,.00 " 71 .~,, Jotw\tl\lt<,JS.U8 tl-IJ711:.! (lob WYM, U, IH 6tl4 .. l· 1c>-Ma.t H•Yl!\, U, 119 &~~,,. 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Forty·year-old Lucien Rault or France has tun the 10.000 meters • in 28:33.4 this season and Roma· He's Sil\"er Ayoo, lhe400-meter hurdler. who at age IS has already run 50.01 * * * Landa Remains on (;ritieal Lis. · nian Nicolae Marasescu. who will be 39 in Novemher. can still long j ump 25·8 Swedish sprinter Sy Barka has clocked 10.2 for the \00 mcter11 and 20.8 m the 200. Not bad Cora man33. And 42·year·old s hotputter Gergely Kulcsar of Hungary has a 66-2~• toss this year. Hermes Riveri of Cuba has thrown the hammcT 226·9'~ at age45. Or how a bout 33.year·old American hi,:h hurdler Willie Davenpor t, "ho bronze medaled bere in 13.38. t· Bul the 20-kllometer walk HAPPY DE PT.-'lbe fatbtt of Fre nch 400·me ter rreestyler Jean Botteu ll', the gold medalist in 1952 <tbat country's first.ever gold in Olympics aquaUu), was so happy when bis son won that he bolled from the 5tands and jumped fully clothed Into tht pool. QUOTE DEPT.-Swlmmer Casey Converse of Mission Viejo. regarding his MV Nadadores coach, Mark Schubert: "He's like Vi nce Lombnrdi. lte whl~ you into s hape. But he's a great guy:· MANNHE IM, West Germany <Arf -World champion driver Niki Laude remained In critical condition today from i,njuries r~ celved In a fla m ing three-car cras h S unday d uring the Formula I German Grand Prix. Doctors in lhe intensive.care unit at Ma nnheim Medical Hospita l fo ught to keep Lauda's breathing passages open and ad· mJnlstered oxygen because of the limited capacity of his scalded lungs, said Prof. Dr. Horst Lutz. Lauda was still in "mortal danger ~eca~s.e hl.s.l~ c~paci~ was reduced by his inhaling or hot s team, poison gas and smoke," Lu ti said. The 27-year·old Austrian driver also suffered first, second and t hird-degr ee facial burns before be could be removed from his wrecked Ferrari 312T2. Lutt said It would be another three or four days before t.he doc· 'tors could expect to see any pro· gress. The poison steam and gas that d•m aged Lauda's lungs and bronchial passaaes wer~ pro. duced by the burni ng ot the .. ' plasUc seat. lhe steering wheel and oU in hb car, Luu s aid. Today, the hospital began lssu· Ing twice·da ily medical bulletins on Lauda's condition. The hospital sl)Okesmen said doctors wer e w altlng foe Lauda 's condition to impr ove before they performed any operations and that Jt might be 14~~ before surgery could be undertaken. O\her injuries Laude received tn \he lhird·la p wreck Included less serious bu.ms to hls wrist. and arms, a broken collar bone and other minor fr~, aa.ld '· II Dr. Rudolf Zellner, bead~ the plastic surgery departm t. at another clinic .Jn near Ludwigahalen. The race, which was won latir by Briton J a mes Hunt in a McLaren Ford M23, was inwr· rupted for l IAa hours by the wre,at a bout 6Y• miles from t"e lll"andatand at the Nuerburgrtqg track. Hunt Is s econd to Lauda l,n t.hecbamplonship sta.ndlngs. Lauda's car lost a rear wh•t In the third tap and swer ved 1• a auard fence on the aharp lift. lur1l known aa Berwtrk Contlt. J , ........... Lag11na/South Coast EDITION OL 69, NO. 21S, 2 SECTIONS, 2' PAGES Afternoon .Y. Stoek!; TEN CENTS ~ End Idea Pfoduces Dislllay ... By JACK CHAPPELL Ofl ... O.llyl"I ........ ? Leaders or Laguna Beach's art ltstivals have reacted with a •mbinalion of pique and dismay )t planning commission. pro- )aOSals designed to limit the city's ptreme traffic congestion dur- jng lheaummer. 1 Among the suggestions were Uae shutting down ol the art Jestivals. forcing compliance . , •\ with city orr-street parking re- quirements, levying assessments against the festivals to pay for park and ride system: removing parking from city thoroughfares and relocating the festivals to the Sycamore Hills area. Jimmy Schmitz, president. of the Festival of Arts, said the city's action caught the festival unawares. "We're surprised that anybody from the city would come back against the festi\•al or festivals lake that," Schmitz said. Tom Leslie. president of the Sawdust F estival, said the festivals are the mainstay of the city's artists, and or the annual ttonomy of Laguna Beach. ··1 don't see how lhe city can deny artists and craftsmen their right to show their work. This is the way Laguna Beach started.'' Leslie s.ild. Jean Spiry. Art.A-Fair uresi· dent, could not be reached for comment. Miss Spiry bas been active in the foundinc and operation of ACT-!5, a consortium ol the three festivals. the city and the busi- ness community, wblch ha• worked to relieve tramc conies· tioo by increasing tram and bus ~rvke and providing a free 300 car parking lot in Laguna Ca· oyon. The Planni.-g Commission touched off a tempest in the city's art festival community when it declared las t Tuesday that Lagunans were being held prisoner lo their own homes because or the weekend traffic congestJoo. Commissioner Belinda Blacketer drafted a memo call· \ ing for a public hearing Aug. 10 on five options. The most con· troverslal was the closing down ' or the festivals. • Both Schmit& and Leslie sold ~ their organizations ~'OQJd make presentations at the hearing. "We're goln~ to have a board meeting on the 9th and at that time we'll determine what dlrec. lion the festival will take in • <See FESTIVAL, Page AZ> 'wr· df 'II' N. ' d "·illl. a ixe Bus Execs -Eye Cut in Tab By GARY GRANVILLE Of ... O.lty Pllel llaft -Diredorsof theOraoge_County · Transit District <OCTD) said lo· day they will cut the district's property tax rate rather than look upon an unexpectedly high climb in assessed value in Orange County as a tax windfall. Jn late June, the directors ten· tatively agreed to leeve OCI'D's tax rate at its current level, 4.5 cents for each $100 worth of as· sessed value. That rate, directors were told, Death Toll Nears 60 InEloods • LOVELAND, Colo. (AP) SurYiftrl of a weelltebd flub flood huddled on mountai~ and in Isolated homes today a ralm and winds forced a delay in air rescue attempts. Officials said the flood killed about m peo. ple~ and they said "dozens" more bodies may be found. The National Weather Service said it appeared there would be no bre"ak in the weather for at least twodays. Capt. Rieb Hovey, the Larimer County' sheriff's press spoke9man. said it was thought most of the cricically ill or in- jured survivors were evacuated Sunday from the Big tbompson Canyon. Sli~k Slide Wi~h il isl and "Emmy" in the back- gro d . Newpo rt Beuch 's Mary Lou Dr m y displays the style that won her the 25-and-o,·er ti~ in women's surfing competition Sunday~ntington Beach. For details, sec Sports, Page Al2. '.'At this stage, except for three coronaries we have up there, everybody Is the same," Hovey said. "To the best of our knowledge, everybody who haJt some major problem was not ln there last night." Anaheim Man Laguna Motorists Held in oc 'Park It' in Town Bayonet Death Fo~ the third weekend in a row. Road. It was u chain-reaction He said the persons with cardiac conditions were reported by rescued friends or relatives, who said the three had histories of hearllrou ble. Authorities said recovery of the dead rrom tne Big Thompson River flood, reported strewn along the walls of the Big Thompson Canyon, was their last priority. Dave Feldman, chief of investigative services for police in nearby Fort Collins, said it could take weeks to locate the de· ad, and some never may be found. A 19-ycpr'-old Santa Ana mun sigalerts were declared for the type incident where one accident who reportedly hurled a stiop· <'ity of Laguna Beach warning of leads to gawking which in tum ping cart ut new sports cars traffic conditions so congested leads to rear ender-type col- . parked In a Stanton shopping that motorists arc advised to Jisions caused by inattention, center Saturday night was avoid lhearea. Police said. bayonetted to death a few But they didn't -and the town To make matters worse for Nearly 150 National Guardsmen, law enforcement ol· ficers and volunteers waited for orders as search leaders mapped their strategy. minutes later. according to Stan-was bumper-to-bumper both harassed police and fire person· tonpollce. days. nel. five bomb threats were Killed when a military bayonet A flurry of accidents occurred called in from 2: 15 to 3:15 p.m. wa s . p l u n g c d I n t 0 h 1 s within minutes of each other Saturday for scattered areas of ·chest al least five times was Saturday on Laguna Canyon thecily. .David Ray Goodman of Santa Traffic conditions have been ffeUcopters were to be used to- day to ferry the survt\'drs, mahy of whom were traDDed on I"· <See FLOOD, P11e AZ> Ana. .,...---decried by the Laguna Beach . Arrested at a Stanton apart-Couple Sum· g <SeePARKING,PageAZ) ment comple:; shortly iafter ,------------------------. Goodman collapsed. mortally ·=~~1:::1':b':isu:=~~: Neighbors in 19 '~ar.,ets' )lobert Esparza. 42, of Anaheim. f!!t . Police said Esparza I• a friend Ivy 01·spute 'of the owner or a new Datsun 280Z sports car. the car that was dent- ,ed wllen the murder victim al- •egedly threw a shopping cart on . \o its hood. i. lmmedJately after the parking ;lot Incident, Goodman and a rompanion drove from the shop- ping ttnter with the Datsun and ~tt car In pursuit. ~ Durtnr what police described as a four or five mile chase, the ~ended Datsun own« dropped vutoftherace. fl But tb• car containing three or ,his friends, Including Esparza, .!did not. : Goodman abandoned his al· ~tempt to elude his pursuers al the, 1 point where the chase began. tbe shoppln1 center at Mapolla • Avenue and Cerritos Street, poltcesald. They reported witnesses said a fight then broke out and that dur- ing the fracas Goodman was fatally wounded. · ._ ' The ivy growing on the walls or the Mcsweeney home at 26652 Paseo Enseneda, San Juan Capistrano, appears to have poisoned the couple's rela· tionship with Uae Capistrano Garden Homes Homeowners As· sociation No.1. Naming Jamerson Burtram McSweeney and bis wife, Unda Mary, as defendants, the as- sociation demanded Friday in an Orange County Superior Court lawsuit that the ivy be removed. The actioA authorized by as- so,ciatlon president Henry Olsen further demands $2 ,000 in dama1es a~nd $1,000 to cover lepl coetslr: e defendants. ltis alle•ed th t the defendants have refused to remove the of· fonding foliage. It is further al- leged that. such growt.K violates the l5'10ciation agreement .re- cogniUjd by all members. , FBI Ttretica Hurt Them WASHINGTON <APJ-Tbe Justice Department says it has found 19 people who suffered act_. al harm because they were the targets of an FBI harassment cantt>aign in the 19a>sandearly l.9'10I. , One person was fired from a job and others suf· fered from invasions of their privacy. Some JOit face with colleagueti because they were f $llely branded police informers. J . Department otnci• reported thole findings u they discussed their r•lllOlllth effort to locate the victims and tell tbem whet the Flfl dill to them. Federal marshals delit1ered mes,agm iJafarming the 19 people that die)' bad been tar1ets ol the FIU count.erintelUaence prolfams·, lmowa as Cointelpr.o, to harass and disrupt mlltant political groops on the right and left. Cointelpro, wbleh ..-ated from 1958to1971, in· volved such tactics 1lS sending anonymous derogataty' letters to the parents and employers of SM>UtJcal ac- tivists and distributing phony leaflets to stir dis· sension within 1'olit.ical organizations. would produce between $3.S million and $3.8 million worth of tax revenue. bter, i~-was learned--Orange-Cou o ty 's ·assessment roll climbed a hefty 18.7 percent last year, a climb-Assessor Bradley Jacobs blamed chiefly on infla· tion. Board of Directors Chairman 'Ralph Clark told his fellow dJrec- •tors today OCTD shouldn't look on the steep rise In ·assessed value as a tax windfall. Instead, Clark said, the district should cut its tax rate by Four Meter.s Ripped Off Lacuna Beach police ace · investl1atin1 the case or the mluinl meters today. ll'our parking meters, valued at $420, were re- moved -posts •nd all - fnam the froataae street. aloa1 LIJUDa Canyon Road near tbe Sawdust F-Uval. 1be theft was discovered when a meter money col-lection man went by and found no meters to collect· from. Riptides Hit South Coast; Rescues High Strong riptides forced an un· usually high number of r escues al~ South Coast beaches this weekend, including a mass rescue and a save of three small children that was literally a clil· Changer. San Clemente lifeguards, who patrol all the way from that city to South Laguna, were busiest, with 1S9 rescues Sunday and 152 Saturday. On Sqnday, about a dozen swimmers got caught in a south swell rip and couldn't get back in to shore. Six lifeguards came from North Beach towers to br· Ing them in. The operation took about 20 minutes. All oC them were saved. Also on Sunday, three children who swam through a subterra· nean cave were stranded at the base or a clirr at the bottom of Sea Cliff Drive In South Laguna. Lifeguards said the children were bombarded by the heavy wave action and at least one suf'· fered cuts on bis race from slip. ping among the rocks. None, however, waa seriously injured. Names were not immediately available. Weguardl hopped rrom ledge to ledge to 1et lo the children. County firemen sent down lad," den to brin.c them up. Crowds were fairly heavy all alone the atrucl. San aemente 1Uard9 reported weetend mobs ol 19,,. ·on tity beaches, with another 32,000 basking and swim· l'IUnl north up the coast to South Lacuna. ' Jn Lapaa Beac:b, eJ"OWdl •ftl! estimated at •.CllO for Saturday and Sunday combined • .Riptide8 there broupt 117 retcues. Wat.er temperatures were 89 delnft witb onan swells to four reetand'8ort. Today. and for tlle next touple ol cla)'I, surf WU t~ to be poor, atserototwofeet. Heavy rnornin1 clouds were expected to last throughout the day. • whatever the higher asssessed values will produce In tax re· venue over the $3.8 million needed lo-support.OCI'D'.s 1911,_ll budget. Clark's proposal won quick en- dorsement from the other three directors at today's meeting in Santa Ana. They instructed transit district general manager to calculate a 'new tax rate based on Clark's proposal and present it to the board when it orricially sets the rate at a meeting later this month. Saddleback Scissors Budget Bid Saddleback College finance ex· perts have sharpened their pen- cils and trimmed another $344,000 out of their proposed budget for nextyear-enoughtobringitinto the range of a tax rate figure en- dorsed by trustees two weeks ago. The revised budget of $18. 77 million will come before the board for adoption Lonight at about 7:45 in the college library meeU ngroom. Roy Barletta, district business manager, said two weeks ago it would be "very difficult" to shave enough from his proposed $19.1 million spending plan to fit the 9S-cent-per-S100 of assessed value tax rate sought by the board. ~ He warned that It could harm the district's so-called "pay as . you go" method or capital Im· provementrunding. I But he said today that manipulation of the proposed capltal ouUay and contingency portions of the budget were enough to come up with the addi· lional sa vlngs. The revised district budget calls for a generalfund tax rate of almost 91 cents -about six cents • higher than last year's general ' fund rate. Another four cents is added to the rate to cover bond in· terest, bringing the tot.al to· 95 . cents per $100. , • Barletta's original budget pro-. posal would have required a total tax rate or 98 cents per $100 or as· ' seaed value. As it will be presented to . trustees tonight, the budget shows $11.96 million for general opera· Uons expenses, $!5.17 mllllon ror: capital ouUay, $225,000 in cont·· lngency and $1.4 million to cover "seat. luf•" and tu1Uon for dis· <See TRIM, PagoA%1 ~ Weather Nllht and morning low • clouCls 11ve way lo sun Tuesday. Low 70s along the cbast with lows droP· ping to about eo over· msbt. l~SIDE TODA~ COUUmn • adoocaU Rolph Nada ha.et~ pot rhota.at IM U.S. morketpJoce,and the ~.agenctea tbai-~ ~ if /or yeara. la M oi..,. rig,U? It he U1GU11 ~ rillat? A cloN loo1c.cd Nod«'. .tam orr P.oge A 7. l•tlex AIV..~ 11.•AM~ ........ ..-.YT- L.M....,.. "'' ........ ~ ............... _ Cl-"'-.,.., or .... c.wty CMllc• ., ....... ••·l ~ a2 5'ertl A1•n • DNlllllMlal • Al._...._. At ............. MhMI.... at ~at~ IM ...... ......... .. ......... aaWwN..... M A'22 DAILY PILOT l/SC Mood•y. August 2 1976 San Juan Protest I Refunds Due • • For 2 Services Homeowner1> in southwest-San Juan Car>istrano. taxed twice for sanitary and rcc-reauon :.ervices, will be fully reimbursed by the city. ' 6.9Quake Hi.ts Area Near Fiji GOLDEN. Colo. CAP> -A s trong earthquake shook the New Hebrides Islands in the South Pacific early today, a spokesman at the National Earth· quake Information Certter said. Man·in Carlson. a staff geoph ys1c1st. said the quake registered 6.9 on the open-ended Richter scale. The earthquake could ha' e caused widespread cl.image 1f it struck a popul::ited area. Carlson said. There were no .re· ports of severe damage in the New Hebrides. The New Hebrides are about500 miles west of Fiji. Fro•PageAJ FESTIVAL • • answering the planning com· mission." Schmitz s aid. Schmitz is a former planning commissioner himselr. His son. Do ug. is the city's planning <Ii rector. "We create traffic but so docs thC' ~l am Beach Park and I didn't hear a ny thlllJ? about closin~ down the Muin Beach Park. We're not the only cause, there's a lot of thinJ?S in Laguna durinit the summer . like the Pacirlc Ocean, for gosh sakes." Schmitz s aid . Leslie said he fdt some posi· tion could be reasoned out but he noted : ' "When people buy houses here. they know alrrady that six weeks during the sum mer traffic is bad. ·o why urc they complaining now?" Laguna Music Group Elects New Officers Bobbie Minkin or Laguna Beach has been named president of the Laguna Beach Chamber Music Societ y for its 1976-77 season. Serving with Mrs. Minkin as of- ficers will be: vice president Rose Moldavc, Newport Beach; recording s ecr etary Marilyn Wotraber g, Newport Beach; treasure r Helen Spessard, .Jrvine: corresponding secretary Anne Campbell, South Laguna and membership secretary Anne Tasjian, Laguna Beach. t Boarct m e mbe r s include: .Johanna J ordan, Emerald Bay; I Carol Mahnke and Tim Standish, Laguna Beach: George Wain, 'Laguna Hills a nd Al a n Nicholson , Newport Beach. The organization will offer five concerts in the coming season, all at the Laguna Deach High School. Opening the season will be the Prague String Quartet in a concert scheduled for 8:15 p.m., Nov.2. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed P•~-·-p-­Jack R. Curlev Vic• Pt••IClltfll •fld ~~ti~ ThOmas KHVlt £Gil« ThomH A. Mur1)hl~ w,.....,.,_ Charles H. Loos Richard P. Niii "i.lol•I .... flM""tl .. Uil~ u..a ... d10fffee -··~c1 ....... ~,·-· MolltlfttA-Ul P.0. ___ _ Offkel COl .. IMw; JJOWt•l...,"""4 M~i:..4!':.~~!:w:.~~.:- •l ~ O .... ~rMw-. T1 .. llllfl•M (714) MM!rt ClaUiflM An.t'tlt"" .. 2>5611 u1una .. acfl All o..rtrMftts: T11e ..... 4M-t4t6 , ,,...,s.~ci.-w 4tW6JI ~<Olll. 1'1\ 0.-CN\I """''"""° °""' =:r1.:"., .. :":~r~'m~~::''= =r: roo•-<ff wll~••I .... ,,.1 PtrftllUlefl •I C-19N-, *-cleu Mtltet pe!il •I (MU MO•e, ~· Mt(t ... IOft ... (¥,_ ",, -· ................... ,._,N\'. _..,,,, ... __ un-"'•· "' ·--~--··-· San Juan Councilman Kenneth Friess says the city bas verified tax bills from the county assessor to assure that rcrunds are made to the proper doubie·l axed pro- perty owners. Ile said refund checks will be mailed soon llfter Aug. 31. ' Residents of the Mission Bell Ranch and M uriners -\'iltage tracts had protc led paying taxes both to the City of San Juan and to the Capistrano ~ach Sanitary and the Capistrano Bay Park and Recreation Districts. Whe n the territory was an· nexed to the city lo 1973, it was uninhabited. At the time, the county Local Agency Formation Commission < LAFCI sUpuJated that the city must lake steps lo detach the land from the two service districts. Friess said 1976·77 tax rates must be established by Aug. 31. The city will mail one check to ' each double·taxed homeowner to cover both ser nce districts, for both tax years. he said. The sanit a r y dis trict has agreed to reimburse the city, but Capistrano Bay Par k and Recreation District spokesmen have argued residents should pay taxes to the distrlct because they use district programs and faciUties. "We may not get our money back from the recreation dis- trict." said Friess. "The city may have lo absorb the expense, which comes to a total of about $2,800." In the meantime, a petition campaign continues amon1 Mis· sion Bell residents, who claim they want to deannex from San Juan. Petitioner Jody Walker said that more than 120 of the 148 Mission Be l I ho m es ~r e represented by signatures on the petition. Summer Class Load Doubles AtSaddleback A dramatic surge in summer school e nrollments at Sad· dleback College this. year hu so encouraged the administradon that it Is planning to mol'e than double the size of the protram next summer. Robert G. Bosanko, ussociate dean or admissions. aaid a total or more than 6,500 students at· tended summer classes during two fi ve-week sessions this year. The fi&ure r epresents an ill· crease o{ almost 28 J)ercent over the 1975 summer session. This year's summer program cost the district s:rn,ooo and trustees have endorsed an expen· diture or $881,000 (or next sum- mer . Trustees have been told that the growing success of summer school can be attributed to major improvements and addllions to the program and increased com· munlty awareness throuah brochures and other advert.Wng done by tbe college. Two Injured In Clemente Auto Crash A two-car coJllsion Sunday af- ternoon ~~lb Ola Vista and Avenld avlota in San Clemente jured two people. They were tre ated at San Clemente General Hospital and released. Witnesses said Ann-Marie Puma, 19, of New York, was un· conscious tor a time beroro fi remen arrived. They found her lying on the s idewalk. Jn the other car was Ronald Jorgensen, 22, of 33731 Calle Fortuna. Capistrano Beach. Miss Puma waa tretted for a large bruise and bump on her forehead : Jorgensen suflered multiple scrapes, police saJd. REFRIGER.4TOR MOJ'ED QUICKLY "Response to the ad was very good. We sold lt." That's the u les success st«y told by the Costa Mesa ~le who placed this ad in the Daily Pilot: Side by side coppertont refrigerator, xlnt cond. SJ t Si x xx·xx xx IC you have a bome appliance you want to convert to cuh, call 642·5678. IL only taktS a few words in the rlght place to attract a buyer. Along the Oraqe Coast. the right place to advertile is tn -the Daily Pilot. ' Su1n1nerii1ne, and. ~ •• Casting their cares away under the warm sun at Laguna Niguel Regional Park are <a bove, left to righll: Ory Gaul. Studio City: Thomas Gaul. Westminster: and Paul Gauls Studio City. Toting the es·. sentials for a successful fish outing, are i be)ow, left to rightJ: Eric Fischer. 7; Steve Wa rren. 9: and Daryl Fischer , 9, all of Laguna Niguel. , Rites Set For Victi01 Of Desert Fuoe r al ser vices for Long Beach steel worker Masayuki Tanaka. ~former San Juan Capistrano resident. who died io the Baja CalUorma desert last week. have been scheduled ror 8 p.m. Tuesday in Los Angeles. The rites, open to friends and family, will take place al the Zen Shuji Temple, 123 E . Hewitt St.. Mr. Tanaka, 33. and William G. Kastorrr. 39, of Dana Point.. r ode in to Mex ico o n their motorcycles July 17 and railed to return as planned the foUowing evenin~. Mr .. Kastorff's body was found by search teams close to his motorcycle. which wasout oUuel. Mr. Tanaka apprenUy trled to keep aoing, but bad to abandon bis useless cycle ~ miles from M.r. Kastorrr·s. Sear chers s aid Mr. Tanaka" walked another 2S miles through sand dunes and searing heat and. -at .veral point.a, waa close to towns or roads where help might have been obtained. HJs body was found in a dry lake bed. Mr. Tanaka is survived by three brothers, Thomas, Junior and Shigeru: and three sisters. Oban, Malrina. Ayako Yakamoto and Tomiko O~awa. He was not married. The funeral services will be followed by burial at Rose Hilla Cemetery. Under Fire Budget Talks Due WASHINGTON <AP> -The State Department denied cbatges the U .S . ambas!\Jl_dor to Yugoslavia, Laurence H . Silberman, ia engaged in an anU- Yu101la v campai1n. Silberman has come underlire for his stronr defense or an American citizen, Laszlo Toth. who served ll months in a Yugoslav jail. Laguna Beach Unified School District trustees are expected to give final approval to a $6.4 million 1976·77 budget after a public hearing at 7::.J p.m. Tues· day, at district headquarters, 550 BlumontSt. The s pending plan is based on a t ax rate or $2.695 per $100 3 S· sessed valuation. Trustees pruned a half-cent off the rate Fre•PageAI FLOOD TOLL ••• accessible patches of h igh ground, to safety. But the rain that began again Sunday night continued today, IJ'OUnding air rescue equipment. "HeUcopters will be grounded until they can cet in, perhaps by noon," uld John Enilebert, chief of operations for the Larimer County Sheriff's Department. "We've got steady rains Into Estes Park andaomewinda." The re waa no immediate estimateontl)enumberslranded. Gov. Richard Lommsald2SOpeo- ple were reported 11\furcd and another 40 missing. President Ford today declared n major disaster In Colorado; the action will permit the use of federal funds in relief and re- covery efforta. A lO·lnch rainfall running down from nearby Rocky Mountain Na- tional Park Saturday nlgM churned the Bil Thompson River Into a wall of water 12 feet bilth aDd smUton a ll·mimate frenzy. It tore through campsites and trailers. motels and bridges, rak- mg a path 01 destrucuon JU rrwes long. There were varyin1 repona. about whethe r warnin1 was given: everyone agreed there wasn'tmuch. Some 500 survivors were Cer- rled to a horse pasture-turned· helicopter pad Sunday. Anolher 1,000 had to stay ln the area for a aecondnight. ground in the form or an "F'' meant food. "W" meant water. "A" meant medical aid. Larimer County Sheriff Robert Wat5<>n s aid 43 bodies were in a makeshift morgue and 15 to 20 bodies had been spotted and num· bered Lhrou•hout the canyon. two weeks ago. The t ax rate is almost wholly governed by state school financ· ing legislation. The bud~et is 15 percent over last year's . Also on Tuesday's agenda are: -Final approval of a conflict of interest code that includes limited financial disclosure. -First reading of an environ· mental control policy, which in· volves r egulat ing constructjon · activities within the district pro- perty so that major cons1deration 1s given to preventing environ· mental damage. -Acceptance or a challen1te by the Laguna Reach City Coun- cil to a softball game. Robert Sanch is, s uperintende nt or s chools. recommends that the board accept the challenge and ''beat the socks off" lhe City Council . ~· Mystery Deaths Reported HARRISBURG. Pa. (AP> - Twt>ln· people· who attcndc.'t'I o s tate American U>gion convtn- tion Jn Philadelphia. July 21·24 have died of slmllar1ymptoms, a lea:lonotrkialsald today. Edward T. Hoak. lhe lef!ion's st:.te adjutant. snid. "We don't know what It is but 1t 's all over the state." He said 10.000 people attended the convention. A state health official said an in· vestigatlon wua begun today. Ile said he had no indication as to the causes of the deaths. Hoak said many persons al the convention have been admitted to hospitals arodnd the state. includ· ing seven In Wllllamsport and three at Wilkes· Barre. He aatd all havethesamesymptoms. ''They have a pain in their chest. They cet a high tem· perature," Hoak s aid. Hes aid some symptoms resem· ble a chest cold, and the tem· peratures r ange rrom 104 to 107 degrees. • Hoak identified the dead as Elmer Hafer. Lewisburg; Jimmy Dolan a nd J .P . R a lph. Williamstown; Wllliam Byrd, Bloomsburg; Louis Byerly. Jean· nette ; Frank Har vey, McKeesport: Frank Aveni, I Clearfield ; Julius Gagglan.ia,; Republic; Charles Chamberlain,, Chamberaburi; A~ Buben, Donora, and Andy Warnek, Fayette County. A 12th victim was reported by John Damiano, a funeral home proprietor in Mc Adoo. He said Charles M . (Dani s h > Darushefsky, 49, of McAdoo died Sunday at a hospital in nearby Hazleton. Fre• Pflfle A I TRIM.;. trict students attending other community colleges. Last year's total budget was $15.1 million. The most notable reduction in next year's budget compared to the 1975-76 plan ls in the tuition and seat tax cate•ory. Last year , Saddleback paid other community colleges a total of $2.11 million to cover the c;ostof educatinc local students who at· tended elsewhere. Several m onths ago, Sad· dleback trustees decided their programs are now adequate enough that mos t local students could find what they wanted without going to CoastCommun.i- •tyCollege DistrictorRanchoSan· tiagoCollege Diatrtctcampuses. They passed a resolution order· ing that any SaddJeback district student wishing to attend college in another district bad to obtain a special permit from the ad· ministration. To get the permit, the student must present evidence that the course or study he wishes to pursue cannot be fulfilled at the ¥1ission Viejo college. Banking on that new policy, the administration has budgeted $700,000 less for tuition and seat taxesnextyear. Fro•PageAI PARKING. • Planning Commission which charged the congestion has made Lagunans virtual "prisoners in their own h o mes" over the weekends. . The commission. in response, declared ll would hold 3 hearing Aug. 10 on whether or not to shut down the three festivals, or lake four other actions all of which would levy heavy burdelll on lhe exhibitions to solve the city's parking and traffic woes. Official• new over the canyon, droppinc leaflet.I that Mked tuJ'· vivors to 1i1nal tbelr lmlMdiat. needs : ~ankets stretcbed OD I.be ..... """"'" PROPANE TANK, SHATTERED WOOD ALL THAT REMAINI OF COLORADO HOME AFTER FLOOD Dozen• Delld, Hundred• ot People ltrended After Devaatetlng Weekend DlHater ' -. ·)Orange Coast ED ITI ON .. . ! ~Today's Clos ing ~ N.Y .St oeks J TEN CENTS ~ I ' Senior llousing Propose~] BySTEVEMITCUELL Ot•O.lly ......... • Costa Mesa orficials ar" study· tans for a 75-unit housing pro· ror senior citizens and the icap~d that could be located Far the city's so-called Super ock downtown. Members or the council- jlppointed Downtown Rede\lelop- Jllent Agency have been meeting with the projecl 's architect, Robert Cotes oC Robert and Since Coles, lnc., Costa Mesa. Agency members have ex· pressed concern over the effect or the low-cost housing plan on the downtown area. The Costa M esa architecl,""ho has built several housing projects in the state under the 1974 Housing and Community Developmenl Act <HCDA>. said the proposed project would be beneficial to downtown businesses. He said a mix of low·income re· sidents and others who can afford the rents, ranging from S235 lo 5240 a month, would benefit the development ilseJC and the downtown area. · · Low income tenuntS would pay a perce~tage of their income for rent with the re mainder paid by the federal Housing and Urban Development Department. The redevelopment agency is working with the city on plans to acquire land for the project. IC ap· pro~ed. the city would grant Coles a partlaJ subsidy from HCDA funds, renting him the land for $1 a year. Coles would then be under eon· tract to r ent the 75 unils for 20 yean under the HUD program. He would pay architectural costs and the cost of building the 56,250 square foot facility. Senior citizens must be 62 years of age or older and be considered in the low-income bracket to qualify !or tbe rent subsidy pro- gram. The project. estimated to cost between $90,000 to Sl million to· build, will be looked at again by ; the redevelopment agency and ~ the city council in the next few 1 weeks before pla.ns are sent. to 1 HUD for final approval. ; Coles said HUD-approved pro- jects are d ifficult to obtain, say-· ing only one Orange County city . received HUD fundiiv: for a.low· cost housing projecllast year. 'Windfall' Nixed: Bus Execs Eye Cut in Tab \ ~lick Slide B y GARY GRANVILLE Ot , ... 0•11~ ~ SUtl Di.rectors of the Orange County Transit District <OCTD> s aid to· da they-will ut the district's property tax rate rather than look upon an unexpectedly high dimb i n assessed value in Orange County as a ta.-< windfall. In late June; Che directors ten· tatively ~reed to leave OCTD's tax rate al its current level, 4.S cents for each $100 worth of as· sessed value. Thal rate, directors were told, :fresley Settlement R e ached By JOANNE R EYNOLDS Ot .. o.i,.,.... ... In a setUement reached• with the Securities and Exchance Commission, The Presley Com· pan.ies of Newport Beach agreed today to a series ol regulations regarding the company's role with the hydrogen converter . Dick Gordon, spokesman for the SEC's enforcement division in Los Angeles, said the settle- ment calls for the company to re- file several of the documents it gave to the SEC earlier this year "to correct deficiencies" in in· formation contained in those documents. With oil is land "Emmy" in the back· ground , Newport Beach's Mary Lou 1 Drummy displays the style that won her the 25-and-over title in women's surfing competition Sunday at Huntington Bea~h. For d etails, see Sports, Page A12. He also said the company has agreed to a procedure for issuing press releases about the device known as the SLX Hydrogen Generator. According lo Gordon, all press r eleases will have to have the prior approval of Presley'sscien· lific consultant as well as an ad· visory board from the American Stock Exchange where Presley shares are traded. ·~Killer Role a Pretense The settlement, Got'don said, is the result of an offer made to the company by the commission following a four-day hearing held in June. Witness: MD Tlwught 'Hit M(ln' Was in Mafia That hearing was called by the By TOM BARLEY Ot I"• O•llY ,not S~K Hit m a n Anthony Scalis e testlfle<l today that Or. Wayne Lester Robinson oC Irvine as· ... urned he was a member of the Mafia when the physician al- \e3edly hired him to kill has ntranRed wife al her Newport Beach home. But S<.'alise, 29. assured a n Oran"c County Superior Court jury as he responded to Intense ,&efense quesUonlng that he hns aever been linked to the Mafia In 1any way ond lhal Scalise is not 'bis true name. The parolee Crom ft>derul ond state prisons tesli(ied that he act· 'ed alone under the name or John }'oater when h e agr eed to ~mlnate Mrs. J anice Robinson. 38. In return for a Sl0.000 down ayment. and a $10.000 bonus hen the Job was done. !imFRIGER4TOR ~ tMOJ'.ED QUICKLY ~ . : "Response to the ad was ver)' ~·We sold it." ' That"s Ute sales success story )old by the Costa Mesa couple 'Who placed this ad in the Daily ,Pilot: <:-Side by side coppertone ~ r.trigerator. •Int cond. ' . S.11S/JOOC·XX)(ll . lr you ha\·e a home appliance you want to convert to cash, caJl &12·5678. • It oftly takes a few words in the right place to attract o buyer. Along lhe Orange Coast the right place to advertise is In lite Daily Pilot. II Id d r AJ But Scal1"se 1"ns1"sted that he was SEC to investigate allegedly mis· r1e to c ense attorney leading stateme nts the company Ramsey today that has parlicipa· hired by the doctor to kill Mrs. made regarding the converter. tion in the plot ended when he Robinson because the physician The Presley Companies have took Mrs. Robinson to lunch al believed that his estranged made a S2.S million CQmmltment the Velvet Turtle in Newport spouse was cheating on their to buy the residential application Beach Inst Feb. 21 Md told her commnunlty property and steal· rights to the machine '1hich is while they ate of her husband's ing from their joint business ven· s upposed t o create usablo aJSlegcdll plans. n turAen"d he told Ramsey that hydrogen gas Crom tapwaU?r. ca so agreed with n amsey At the June hearings, the de· that Dr. Robinson, 42, had a among the items handed him by vice's reclusive inventor, Sam penchant for playing "cops and the doctor . when the plot was Leach, testified that his machine robbers" and thal many or the hatched was'a garrote, a device makes the conversion in a two- circumstances surrounding the used by killers who prefer to in· step "self sustaining" process. all eged murder conspiracy hnd Olctdeath by strangulation. Thal claim was challengeci'by taken on what Ramsey described Scalise sala he ~ave the gar-experts from uc Irvine and t_od_a_y_a_s_·_·a_f_a_if).;..'_la_nd_s_et_ll_n.;.;.g._" ____ <~See=-H:;.;:JT;;..:....:;;";..;.A;;.;;N......:'...;.P...;.•;:.:A~e_A2_>;..__ ___ .:..;:CSee:..:: PRES.LEY, Pace AZ> Diiiy ~-~"' ltl( ..... 1(..-r COSTA MESA DETECTIVES COMB DEATH SCENE FOA CLUES AFTER SATURDAY FIND Woman Emptyl"(I Trash Find• Grtaly Rematnt of Newport Beach Man would produce between $3.5 million and $3.8 million worth of ta x revenue. Later , it was learned Orange County's assessment r oll climbed a hefly 18.7 percentlast year, a climb Assessor Bradley Jacobs blamed chiefly on infla· tion. Board of Directors Chairman 'Ralph Clark told bis fellow direc· •tors today OCTD sbouldn'l look on the steep rise in assessed value as a tax windfall. . Instead, Clark said, the district should cut its tax rate by Toll· ....... whatever the higher asssessed v '.ues will produce in tax re· venue over the $3.8 million needed to support OCTD's 1976-77 budget. -ctarlc~s proposal won quick en· dorsement from the other three dfrectors at today's meeting in Santa Ana. They instructed transit dis\rict general manager to calculate a new tax r ate based on Clark's proposal and present it to the board when lt officially sets the rate at a meeting later this month. ~ontinuing Raills ..., ·-Plague Flood Area WYOMING Nf8. COLORADO ,; •.. '•olr + ·.coforodo Spring• .,_ ____ _ 0 so M ile1 • ... Wl ....... ""- FLASH FLOOD AREA Map Locate• Scene Body in Bin Identified as Newp~rtMan Police have Identified the body of a 22·year-old mason's helper, found Satur4-Y night stuf'fed into atruh bin. • The body of Jeffrey Lynn Daugherty, ll2 PaciCic Coast Hishway, Newport Beach, was found tied with rope \o a dls· carded cardboard wash ing machine box in the trash bin at 1996 Maple St. # Mn. Bernice HilllJ'en, of the Maple Street address, told of. flcers she spotted the partly vlsl· ble body at about 7 p.m. as she emptied her trash into the large container. · Police Sgt. Tom Lazar said police have all but discounted murder in the case, saying the vldJm had needle marks on his arm and "is a known drug user." •Results of an autopsy, emduct- ed Sunday morning, have not been released, Luar •aid. and a todcoloelst.'s report ii due later tbll week to deter mine cause ol death. "At this point, we do not.SUS· pect a murder,'' he said. .. It ap. pears that Daugherty's friends JUll dumped him in the trash bin alter he overdosed on some drug." • Officers said they would know more about the cue after they receive a report on the autopsy from the county coroner's office. LOVELAND. Colo. CAP) - Survivors of a weekend flash flood huddled on mountainsides and in isolated homes today as rains and wJods forced a delay in air rescue atte mpts. OCCicials said the flood killed about 75 peo. pie, and they said "dozens" more bodies may be found. nfe National Weather Service said lt appeared there would be , no break in the weather for at' leasltwodays. Larimer County Sheriff Robert i Watson indicated the death toll will rise even higher, but said · more specific estimates could cause public ••panic and' hysteria." Capt. Rich Hovey, the Larimer· County s her Hf's pres s1 spokesman. said it was thought most of the cricically ill or in-/ jured survivors were evacuated· Sunday from the Big Thompson; Canyon. "At this stage. except for threo coronaries we have up there. everybody is the. same," Hovey said. "To the best of our knowledge, everybody who had: some major problem was not in there last nighL" He said the persons with cardiac conditions were reported 1 by rescued friends or relatives: who said the three had histories of hearttrouble. Authorities said recoveryotthc ·dead Crom tne Big Thompson~ River flood, r eported strewn along the walls of the Big• Thompson Canyon, was their last+- priority. Dave Feldman, chJer ot: invesUgative services for police in nearby F ort Collins, said I~ could take weeks lo locate the de; ad, and some never may be found. I Near l y 150 Nation a ~ Guardsmen, law enforcement or~· <See FLOOD, Page AZ> Coas t Weathe r Ntght aud morning low ' clouds glve way to sun Tuesday. Low 705 along the coast with lows drop· ping to abou t 60 over• nflht: I NSIDE TODAY CO!llllm~ .advocate Ralph Nader hal tolun pot lhoU. at tM U.S. morlcetplace.and the QOOtmmmt.agencies lbat·re· gulote 't for yea.rs. I• M allOOY• right? I• he tuUally s riaht? A close look.at NoMr .iartsonP.ageA7. \'l •••ex MY-s.ntq 141 Allll~ ~ ::=:/'" QIHenU ., ............... ~ .,.,2 ~c:-., °"'*' 8J....... •1-1 ~ ea~ A1 .. 1' o..191Nlfiftt .... llKllMllrtiett "' ~..... .A•T9"wl... at ~_....._... .. .,.....,,. .. l""-Ce "'.......... ... . ,..._.,. ., -....... . . .. . _.........._ ___ -------· --- AZ DAILY PILOT C Monday. August 2. 1976 I,.. Bi%arre, Cllfllinfl' Satanic Cult· • . Link to Kidriap? I CJI OWClll l.1.A (A P J -Previous published reports I Satanic rc!en·n~cs up1wur in th\.' ha,·e said the ransom note was rough draft or u $5 million discovered by officers at the San ransom note Jn the ChowcbUla Francisco PeninsuJa home ot kidn~plng caso and one deten. Frederick N. Woods. one ol three dant in the m u.'111 abduction was m~n accused Jn tht: kidnaping of ''into the ot.·cult." published re. 26 children and their bus driver ports said today. from this small farm com· Th e F r e s 11 o B e e an cl munity. Sacramento Hee quoted sources Authorities had no comment on close to the investigation as say-the newspaper report. A gag or· jng the note wa~ signed, .. We are der covering the search of the .Beelzebub." The news papers Woods estate has been extended called thl· rclcrence "bizarre and until Aug. 9. l chilling." Two other men are in custody in the mass abduction -James Schoenfeld , 24. and his 22·year-Fro• Pa~ Al old brother. Richard. Bail was set at St million for each of the PRESLEY defendants. l • • The Bee papers quoted an un-. 1 uCLA who said the machine can name~ friend of the older brother f ._ , as saying James Schoenfeld was operate for onJy short periods or "lnto the occulf 'oot did not tu~. Do Id B k CUCl .1 thinkhewas"intodeeilworship." . na . un. er o sat~ worship ... based on his r~view of Leach s The friend said Schoenfeld had vat~nt appltcat10~ and the te~t seen the mo\"ie "The Exorcist .. data from tw~ brief tesL'> run. in about IO months ago and told rum ..March. h .believes tpe machine it was-·~a really-heavy emoUonal produces hydrogen in a nearly · .. th t I fl h" Ith direct trad;·ofC with ~lectricity. :~;~:~cr~ams ~or ! lon~'::m~. The tests ~C the device were ~he Woods was turned over to state focus of testimony at the hearing authorities today after appeartng as ~andall Presley of Lido ~~le, before u.s. Magistrale Esther president of the ~irm, test1f1ed .Mix in Sacramento. _ that he . "."as anxious for com-The session was strictly a le~al 1 prehensive, long-run tests to be teclmicah y Assl-:-U:S At .. conducted. · · · · ~Y-According to company or-Bru~e Bab~oc~ Jr. asked for and · · . received dtS m1ssaJ or the federal f1c1als. preparations are being char ges 00 which Woods was ar- made.for those: tests lo be run at a rested last week, unlawful flight machine shop in a.urbank. to avoid prosecution. and im-I In a press relea~e dat~ July mediately turned Woods over to 20, company officials said Dr. ·tate authorities Horace Mann, the compaor·s s Sheriff Ed B~tes of Madera ~?nsuJlant, has been overseeing County and a deputy sheriff from efforts t o interfa ct; the Alameda County crowded into hydrogen conv~rter with a the small hearing room with ~estbed to det.ermtne whether ~he about 15 reporters and artists instrumentation for the testing and several U.S. marshals. w~~ adequate. Woods. dressed in a sports , D~. l\lann r eported that .the shirt and brown trousers. was ue~~1se was not co~(.')uded and silent . throu~hout the hearing. add.1t1onal ch~nges '" the t~sl There was no attorney present to cqu1p'!'ent may have t~ ~ ac· t'Cpresent him . so after a brief de· co~phshed before .mea~~ngful lay, U.S. Public Defender Clif- t esting can be undertaken. ford Tedman appeared to The agree~c~t between The represent Woods while federal ~rcsle~ Compan1~s a!"1 thc SEC charges were dismissed. also stipulates that, 1f the com· Authorities were expected to p~ny 1ss~es a ny stateme nt take Woods to Alameda County. ~1thout prior approval of the re· where two other men arc being \'1ew board. a nd Dr. Mann. ijle held on kidnap and robbery I vre~s releas~ m.ust cle~r!y state hargcs in the bizarre kidnapini?. the information 1s unvenf1ed. c Gordon and S EC attorney J ames Mercer contended at the Fro• Page A I June hearings that all Presley r e- leases about the con\"erter out· FLOOD side its development were issued • • • without any scientific verifica- tion. Those press r eleases were widely recognized as the source or a spectacular rise in the price of Presley stock that shot from S3 to S20 at the first of the year . It has hovered between $10 and St2 since the hearings. Additionally, the company has ;1dded James Langworthy, an ex· t•cutivc vic·e president of I American Telecommunications Crop., to its board of directors. The SEC was critical of the fact that all members of the hoard of directors at the time of the purchase of rights to the con· verter were oCficers of the com· pany and none had a scientific background. Lan~worthy's addition lo the board i!' seen us a rcponsc to that t•rit1ci sm. I Suspects Booked FATRFI El.D <AP I -Two 1cC'n·ai:crs have been booked for I investigation of murder in the ri· I 11c slaying of Anne Lou Barnes. f.6, of VnJ lcjo, and the wounding 11fher fishing companion. Solano County deputies said fhc suspects arc Robert Tun11tall, 18, and u 17·year·old, both of Fairfield. ORANGE COAST c DAILY PILOT t,_ o,-~ C°""t Oe11y P1W>t. -'"' wr.•f'h '' lc.imt>11'\tCI t .. Nitlllt\ Pf•"''• 1,. ""11tthld • ., Ow • °'-OO•u r·vell\111"11 c-v .,.,..,.,, NM~ ..-u OWbil\"4d MMCNIY ~evan f ,..,_.., ~ (9'1,. -..Vw. HtWOof't 8fll#Plo, t·••M'll"'4tl"tl fl•Af h J OUf't•1" Va Ht,. h'ltf'lll', ~Odh f'\ .. 1' v"n ... ,,.,..Lt\Q\r'\ehHfli~f\~I ""'f\Qtt H Qt-of\61 ..0.1t~ i\ ptajf:)tl\f'WH $iltvrdiey\ .ncf ~ di'r' , ... .,-1~•0•I c:Mibl&\I'\~ .. AN t\ llt ~'W' \'n '' 1'-t StrHt, Cott. MtM. C..Moov• t1t.:t> Robert N. Weed r rtM<JoM •nd .....,.._, Jack R. Curley \llf P PY•.ior"t •nd O.lloul ,..._ Thomas Keevll 1!11 ... Thomas A. Murptllne IH .... , ..... Charles .... Loos Richard P. Nall A>•lt._ ~ .... "" E.- Cos~ Mtu Offke loMlll"O 1:.~: =~.~MO,·~ ficers and volunteers wailed for orders as search leaders mapped their strategy. Helicopters were to be used to- day to ferry the survivors, many of whom were trapped on in· accessible patches of hig h ground. to safely. ·But the rain that began again Sunday night continued today, grounding air rescue equipment. . "Helicopters will be grounded until they can get in. perhaps by noon," said John Englebert. chief of operations for the Larimer C.:ounty Sheriff's Department. ''We've got steady rains into Estes Park and some winds." There 1was no immediate estlmateonlhenumberstranded. Gov. Richard Lamm said 250peo· pie wfre reported lnJured anll another 40 missing. President Ford today declared a major disaster in Color ado: the action will permit the use of fed eral funds in relic( and rc- <'O\'ery e£forts. A 10-inch rain£ all running down Crom near by Rocky Mountain Na· t1 onal Park Saturday niithl churned the Big Thompson ltl\·er into a wall of water 12 feet hlfh and sent it on a 15-minute rrcniy. Hello, llp There 1 Mystery Deaths ·Reported HARRlSBURG. Po. (APJ - 1'wel' t> people who attended u state Amertcen Lt-&lon t-on~n­ llon in Philadelphia July 21.34 have died of similar •ymptoma, a 1 l~gionolficlalUld&ohy. , Edward' T. Hoak, the legion's state adjutant, sald, "Wo don't know what lt Is but it's all over th1: slate.'' . lie said 10.000 people attended theco1wenllon. A state health official said an ln- vestigatlon was besun today. He said he had no indication as to the cauaes of the deaths. Capt. Lacy Veach, in top aircraft, creeps u1> on an inverted Capt. Jim Simons as both jets travel about 370 miles an hour during a demonstration by the Air Force Thun- clerb i rd s ove r Springfi el d , Ill. The maneuver, called a Calypso Pass, requires the two pl an es to fly belly to belly, hopefully' without scratch ing the bicentennial palnt ·jobs. Hoak said many ~ at the convention have been admitted to hospitals around the state, iodud· ing seven In WllUamsport and three at Wilkes· Barre. He said all ha,·ethesame symptoms. Harris Mistrial Refused BULLETIN LOS ANGELES <AP > WUllam and Emily Harris' judge refused to grant mistrial today. suigestlng that a woman who complained or juror mlsconduc& ml&ht have been "imagining •.• or magnlfylag ~·bat sbe beard." LOS ANG ELES CAPJ - William and Emily Harris' at- torneys moved today for "a mis trial with prejudice," asking that the Harris case be dismissed and the defendants never tried again on the same charges. However, chief prosecutor Sam Mayerson refused to join in the motion and suggested instead that jurors be permitted to con- tinue deliberations until a verdict is reached. I le said after a verdict is ren- dered. the jury could be ques· lioned on whether prejudice af- fected their decision. Superior Court Judge Mark Brandler, personally under at· tack and cited for misconduct in the defense motion, refused an initial request that he disqualify himself from the case. Briandler didn't immediately rule on the mistrial motion and asked for further legal argu· ments Crom attorneys. Defense attorney Mark Rosen· baum. asking the judge to dis· qualify himself for prejudice, said, "The result of this bearing will move in whole or in part on this court's co.nduct in protecting the rights of these defendants. We do not feel th at justlce .•• would warrant this court to sit further end judge evidence regarding its own con- duct." Brandler, without comment. declared: "The motion to have the court disqualify itself is de- nied." While attorneys argued before Brandler. the jury continued its deliberations in a nearby room, unaware of the controversy.· Costa Mesa Rapist Hunted by ~olice Detectives are seeking a man who raped a Costa Mesa woman 1n her apartment early Sundar morning. The woman 11aid she was asleep about 3:30 a .m. when the attacker entered her home and assaulted her. Police arc seeking a man 25 to 30 years old anct s tanding a bout five feet seven in· ches tau. TONIGHT COSTA MESA CITY COUNCIL -Regular meeting, City Hall, 6!30p.m-. T UESDAY, AUG. 3• SENIOR CITIZENS CLUB - Community Recreatipn Center, Tues .. Wed .• Thurs .. 12·3 p.m. NEWPORT·M ESA SCHOOL BOA RD -Regular meeting, Costa Mesa City Council cham- bers, 7:30 p.m . "I N FASHION" -South Coast Repertory T heater , Tuesday-Sunday. through Aug. 8, 8p.m.Sunday, 3p.m. Baby Slayer Sentenced to 15-Year Term Baby killer Patrick Randall Hebert of Huntington Beach was sentenced to a slate prison term of up to 15 years today for bis infliction of fatal injuries on 2-year-old Delta Dawn Davidson. Orange County Superior Court Judge William S. Lee made it clear in his comments from the bench that defense pleas for pro- bation for Hebert, 24, are not re· alistic in view or the defendant's record and the nature of the of· fense. Judge Lee found Hebert guilty of involuntary manslaughler last July 7 after the prosecution de· marlded during the non.jury trial a verdict of first degree murder for the unemployed painter. It was alleged In I lebert's trial that he abused the young victim while her mother wa s absent. from the home she shared with the defendant at 1744J Koledo Lane and then put the chJld lo bed and went to bed himself. Mrs. Delly Davidson testified that she was made aware or the child's inj uries when s ne. heard moaning cominJ? from the \ictim's room. Delta Dawn was rushed to a local hospital and died on the cmer~ency room la· Ne. Hebert's I awyer arl{Uro that the multiple injuries may have been inn1cled when the ehild, ac- cording to Hebert, fell in lh<' bathroom t.hat night and struck her head on the toilet bowl. Prosecutor f'rank Briseno con· demoed the defens<' version of the injuries as "utter non· sense::· SA Youth Killed in "They have a pain ln their chest. They get a hiCh tem-1 peratw'e," HoaktJald. ·f1 He said some sym'ptoms resem- ble a cheat cold, and the tem· peratures range from 104 to 107 de gees. Auto Lot A 19·year-old Santa Ana man who reportedly hurled a ahop· ping cart at new sports cars parked ht a Stanton. -Shopplng center Saturday night was bayonetted to death a tew minutes later. according to Stan- ton police. Killed when a military bayonet was plunged into his chest at least five times was David Ray Goodman ol Santa Ana. Arrested at a Stanton apart· m ent complex shortly after Goodman collapse,d, mortally wounded, on a busy tborou1hlare and charged with bis murder was Robert Esparia, 42, of Anaheim. Police said Esparza is a friend or the owner of a new Datsun 280Z sports car. the car that was dent- ed when the murder victim al- legedly threw a shopping cart on to its hood. Immediately after the parking lot incident, Goodman and a companion drove from the shop- ping center with the Datsun and another car in pursuit. During what police described as a four or five mile cbase. the offended Datsun owner dropped out of the race. But the car containin.~three oC his friends, including Esparza, did not. Mesa Youth Injured in Blast, Fire A Costa Mesa teenager who lit a match in a gas-filled room Saturday was reported in stable condition today, following a flash fire which burned him and caused an estimated $10,000 damage to his apartment. Norman Charles Duff, 19, of 128 Broadway, was rushed to the UCI Medical Center's bum unit, following the 2: 40 p.m. explosion, with burns to his face. arms and legs. The explosion ripped out several walls and a false celling m the apartment. sending flying Jtla~s over a wide aru, firemen said. Firefighters quickly turned off an open gas jet in the hotne and cxUnguJshed the blaze. Family Bound LINCOLN <AP> -'lllree In· truders tied up a five-member famUy and stole a key Wt\!ch was used to break into a local pharmacy. Harold Nfcklo, hls wile and three chlldre n were at home when intruders entered. Hoak identified the dead as Elmer Hafer. Lewlaburg; Jimmy Dolan and J .P . Ralph , Williamstown; William Byrd, Bloom1bur1; Louis Byerly, Jean· · nette ; Frank Harvey, 1 McKeesport ; Frank Aveni, • Clearlield; Julius Oagglania, 1 Republic; Charles Chamberlain, I Ch-ambersburg; Abe Ruben, l Donora, and Andy Warnek, 1 Fayette County. "We were just Wormed or it this mornln1," said Dr. William Parkin, chief of the Pennsylvania Health Department's epidemiology section. "We're tryln1 to cetspecimens collected ••• so we can try to idenWy an eUolo&ic (causing> agent," Parldnaald. Fro•PageAl HIT MAN ••• rote to Mrs. Robinson when they went to her Newport Beach home after lunch. I He said they told her teenaged daughter, Kathy, ot the alleged death plot and then left the home to go into hiding. ScaUse and Mrs. Robinson • .stayed in motels in Huntington Beach and Ventura O>unty until she decided to contact police and th.,e d1strict attorney's office aft.er Scalise collected $10,400 ln casbfrom tbe pbysldan. Dr. Robinson wu arrested at a Santa Ana aervice station after he allegedly handed over a further $1,000 to Scalise in the belief that. hb wife had been killed. Mesa Council Weighs Civic Center Study Councilmen will meet tonight. to discuss topica ranging frdm the updated Costa Mesa Civic Center study to • atreamlined re- zone petition process. The council will meet at 6:30 p .m. in council chambers to set a public bearfn1e date IOI' the Civic Center study and to consider w n· ing options on alx vacant parcels in the study area. Councilmen al'o will mull a re· s olution on zone exception pttmUs which would aive the planninc commluion more authority in approvtna or deDY· lna the permita. The council also will bear a propo1al from the clty'1 Public Services Department. reeom· mending that a couultant be hired to conduct a downtoq traC· fJcstudy. 19'Targets'·1 FBI Tactics Hurt Them WASHINGTON (AP1 -The Justice Department says it bu found 19 people who auff ered actual barm because they were the tarRets of .n FBI baruameat campalp ln the,_.,. ad early 19'IOS, One person WM fired from a Job and othsl IUf • fered from invukJDI of their privacy. SoJM loetJace with collequa blew they were fal.sel1 branded police informers. . Department officials reported those flndlnp as they discussed their four·month effort to locate the vlcti ms and teU them what the FBI did to th•m. Federal marshals delivered messages informing the 19 people that they had been targets of the FBI counterintelUgence programs, known as Colntelpro. to harass and disrupt. militant political groups on the right and left. . Hmne tor Quake l'ictina Cointelpro, which operated from 1956 to 1971, m· volved such tactics u sending anonymous derogatory letters to the parents and employers of political ac- tivists and distributing phony leaflets to stir dis- sension within political organizations. Ari unidenUficd girl makes her home in a drainpipe after earthquakes shook the Pek- ing area last week. Many left the city, but others stayed despite warnings oC more quakes to come. Story, Page A4. Orang~ Coast • EDITION I 'VOL. 69, NO. 21S, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, cA ... IFOANIA . ~Hit Man' Denies By TOM BA&LEY 0t111eo.11,~ ........ Hit man Anthony Scalise tilled today that Dr. W•yne ter Robinson ol Irvine as· med be was a member or the afia when Lb.e physician al· gedly hired him to kUI his tranced wire al her Newport acbhome. But Scalise, 29, assured an Orange County Superior Cou'rl jury as he responded to intense defense questioning that he has never been linked to the Mafia in any way and that Scalise is not his true name'.' The parolee from federal and state prisons testified that he act· ed alone under the name of John Jo'oster when h e agreed t o eliminate Mrs. Jani~ Robinson, 38, in return for a $10,000 down payment and a $10,000 bonus when the job was done. He told derense attorney Al Ramsey today that bis participa- tion in the plot ended when he took Mrs. Robinson to lunch at the Velvet Turtle in Newport Mafia . Beach last Feb. 21 and told her ••hUe they ate of her husband's allese<f plan.s. &aliae aareed with Ramsey that Dr. Robinson, 42, had a penchant ror playing "cops and robbers" and that many of the circumstances surrounding the alleged murder conspiracy had taJten on what Ramsey described today as "a falryland setting." But Scalise Insisted that he was hired by the doctor to kill Mrs. Robinson because the physician believed that his estranged spause was cheating on their cocnmnunity property and steal- inJ frorp their Joint business ven· lure. And he told Ramsey that Today's Closing N.Y.Stoeks N among the Items handed him by the doctor when the plot was hatched was a 1arrote, a device used by killers who ~fer to In- flict death by stranguJaUon. Scalise said he gave the gar-1 role to Mrs. Robinson when they went to her Newport Beach home after lunch. (See WT MAN, Pqe A!> 'W~dfall' Nixed Bus Execs Eye Cut in Tab . . SlickSl~de With oil island "Emmy" in the back- ground, Newport,'Beach's Mary Lou Drummy displays the style that won her the 25-and-over title in women's surfing competition Sunday at Huntington Bea<!h. For details, see Spor ts, Page Al2. Convention-goers Die I )' ( My1tery Malady Strikes Doun 12 Persons ,HARRISBURG. Pa. (AP> - Twelve people who attended tt 9'ate Ame rican Legion conven· Uon in Philadelphia July 21·24 ~vedled or similar symptoms, a j WlionoCfldalsaldtoday. Edward T. Hoak, the legion's -sate adjutant, said, "We don'l lgaow what lt-ls but it's all over tho • le." . •He said 10,000 people attended Ule con ventlon. . '. A state health official said an in· "t1HU1ation was begun t.oday. He lfald he had DO Indication ls lo tho c2use11oflhedeaths. ' Hoak said many persons at the cf,sOventlon tiave been admitted to i pitals arouna the state, includ· seven in Williamsport and ee al WUkes·Barre. He said all vethesamesymptoms. "They have a pain in tlteir dtest. They get a high tem· J>frature," Hoak said. die said some symptoms resem· ble a chest cold. and the tem- peratures r ange from 104 to 107 degrees. Hoak identified the dead as Elmer Hafer, Lewisburg: Jimmy Dolan a nd J .P . Ralph , Williamstown;· William Byrd, Bloomsburg; LouisBy'1'1Y. Jean· n e t t e ; F r a n k H a r '\T e y , Mc Keesport; Frank Aveni, Clearfield; Julius Gaggiania, Republic; Charles Chamberlain, ·,Chambersburg: Abe Rubeo, Donora, and Andy Warnek, Fayette County. "We were just informed of It this morning." said Dr. William Parkin, chief or the Pennsylvania Health D epa rtm e nt 's epidemiology section. "We're trying to get specimens collected . • . so we can try to identify an etiologic CcausangJ agent," Parkin said. A 12th victim was r eported by John Da miano. a funeral home proprietor in McAdoo. lie said C h a rl es M. <Dani s h > Danishefsky, 49, or McAdoo died Sunday at a hospital in nearby Hazleton . • "We haven't been able to find out even when the people got sick forsureyet. Wejusthaven'tbeen able to document anything," Parkin said. "We are trying to gel lnforma· tioo on people who have been re· Ported to have been sick and those who have been reported to have died to find out the characteristics oftbelrdlsease," hesald. Relatio•slaip to Converter By GARV GRANVILLE o+ llM O•rl' Pilel S.." Directors of the Orange County Transit District <OCTD> said to- day they will cut the district's property-ta rate-rather tha look upon an unexpectedly high climb In assessed value In Orange County as a tax windfall. In late June,'Che directors ten· tatively agreed to leave OCTD's tax rate at its current level, 4.5 cents for each $100 worth ot as· sessed value. That rate, directors were told. Harris Mistrial Refused BIJLLE11N LOS ANGELES <APi WUllam aad Emllr Barris' Jad1e mused to 1raat .wrt.al &oday. -Uffll•I &Ital • ,.... .. who complained of jarw ..-....Ct mlp& have been ''lmqlaia1 ..• or •a1nlf1la1 wlllat she heard." LOS A NGELES CAP1 - William and Emily Harris' at· torneys moved today for "a mis· trial with prejudice." asldng that the Harris case be djsmissed and the defendants never tried again on the same charges. However , chief prosecutor Sam Mayerson refused to join in the motion and suggested instead that jurors be permitted lo con· tinue deliberations until a,.verdict is reached. He said after a verdict is r en· dered. the jury could be ques- tioned on whether prejudice af· reel ed their decision. Superior Court Judge Mark Brandler, personally under at· tack and cited for misconduc~ in the defense moUon, refl\sed an initial request lhal he disqualify himself from the case. Brandler didn't immediately rule on the mistrial motion and asked for further legal argu- ments from attorneys. Defense attorney Mark Rosen· baum. asking the judge to dis· qualify himself tor prejudice, said, "The result of this hearing will move in whole or in part on this court's conduct ln protecting the rights of these defendants. W e d o n ot fe e l that justice ... wou Id warrant this court to sit further and judge evide_nce regarding its o,m con· duct." Brandler, without comment, declared: ''The motion to have the court disquaUly itself Is de· nied." Whil e attorneys argued before Brandler, the jury continued its deliberations In a nearby room, unaware of the controversy. .... "lll:FRIGER.4TaR ! fl(WED QUICKLY Presley Accepts Rules Response to the ad was very . Weaold It." · That's the sales success story tpld by the Costa Mesa cotU>le ~ placed this ad in the Dally ~ot: • Side by side coppertone 1 refrlgeretor,xlntcond. f t-S31S/XXX•XXXX ! If you have a home appliance )ou want to convert to cash, call ~.w78. Jt only takes a few words in ~-!-right place to attract a ·INYer. Along the Orange Cout, ilhe right pt ace to ach-ertise'ls in tbe Daily Pilot. By 10.\NNE 1lh'M>LDS Ol l!M Delly ........ In a settlement reached with the Securities and Excbange Commission, The Presley Com· parues or Newport Beach agreed today to a'seriee or recuJatJons re1ardift1 the company's role with the hydrogen converter. Dick Gordon, spokesman for the SEC's enforcement division in Los Angeles, said the set.Ue- ment calls ror the company to re· me sevttal or the documents it gave to the SEC earlier tbis year •·to cOl'l'ftt deClciencies• In ln- formatlon contained in those documents. He 3Jso said the company bas I agreed to a procedure for issuing press releases about the device known as the SLX Hydrogen Generator. According to Gordon, all press releases will have to have the prior approval or Presley's sclen· tific consultant as well as an ad· vitlOr)' board from the American Stock Excllange where Presley shares are traded. The setUement, Gordon said, ts the result of an offer made to the company by the commission following a four-day bearilll held inJune. • That hearing wu called by the SEC to investigate allqf'dly mis- leading statemen.ll the company -~ - made regarding the converter. The Presley Companies llu made a $2.5 million commitment to buy the residential application rights to the machine which la supposed to create usable h>'*olea gu from qp water. Al lbe .lune burtap, tbe de- vice's reelusive iDwn&or, Sam Le•ch, tdtified that bis machine makes the conwnioD in• two. step "lelf sastatallll" proceu. 1bat daim wa dlllleafed b1 expertt ~rrem UC hlM aad Ua.A wbe aakl th•• ti.,,. ean ~ tw..., *-'l pertoda., time. Dr. Donald Bunker of UCI Mid <See PRESLEY, Pa11eAZ) ' would produce between $3.S miJlion and $3.8 million worth or tax revenue. Later, it was learned Orange County's assessment r oll climbed a hefty 18.7 percent last year. a c mb Assessor 'BradreY Jacobs blamed chiefly on lnfla· tion. Board of Directors Chairman ·Ralph Clark told his fellow direc- •ton today OCTD shouldn't look on the steep rise in assessed value as a tax windfall. Instead, Clark said, the district s hould c ul its tax rate by TollRldllfl whatever the higher asssessed v '.ues will produce in tax r.e· venue over the $3.8 millio" needed lo support OCTD's 1976-77 budget. Clark's proposal won quick en- dOl'Rnrenrtrom t:lm"other ~ • directors at today's meeting in Santa An a. They instructed transit di.strict general manager to calculate a new tax rate based on Clark's proposal and present It to the board when it officially sets the rate a t a m eeting later this month. C·ontinuing Rains Plague _Flood Area WYOMING NEI. COLORADO ,;,,., , ... + eColorodo Sprints -----.. 0 so Mile1 • l#Wl ........ MAlll FLASH FLOOD AREA Map Locates Scene Baby Slayer Sentenced to 15-Year Tenn Baby killer Patrick Randall Hebert of Huntington Beach was sentenced to a state prison term of up to 15 years today for his infliction or fatal injuries on 2·year-old Delta Dawn Davidson. Orange Cbunty Superior Court Judge Wlllia m S. Lee made it clear in his commenl'l from the bench that defense plens for pro· bation tor Hebert, 24, are not re• alislic in view or the defendant's record and the nature or the of· fense. Judge Lee round Hebert guilty or involuntary manslaughter last JuJY. 7 after the prosecution de- manded durlna the non-jury trial a verdict of first degree murder for the unemployed paint.er. It wu alleged in Hebert's trial that be abused the young·victlm while her mother was absent from the home she shared with the derendant at 17441 Koledo Lane and then put the child to bed and went to bed himself. Mrs. Betty Davidson leltined that she was made aware of the child's injuries when s he. heard moaning coming from the victim's rooan. Delta Dawn was rwbed to a local hospital and died on the emergency room la· ble Hebert's lawyer argued that the multiple injuries may have been lnfllcted wlten the cblld, ac· ccrdinl to Hebert, fell lo the bathroom that Dllht aad struck ber bead on the toll« llowl. ' Prosecutor Frank Briseno COD• demoed the defense version of the injuries as ''utter non · aenie ...... LOVELAND, Colo. <APJ - Survivors of a weekend fluh flood huddled on mountainsides and in isolated homes today as rains and wtnds forced a delay in · air rescue attempts. o mcials said the flood killed about 75 peo- ple, and they said "dozens" more bodies may be found. The National Weather Service said it appeared there would be no break in the weather for at leasttwo days. •, Capt. R ich Hovey, the Larimer ·• C ounty s h e riff's press spokesman, said it was thought most of the cricically ill or in· jured survivors were evacua~ Sunday from the Big Thompson ;, Canyon. "At this stage, except for three coronaries we have up there, everybody is the same," Hovey , s aid. "To the best of our knowledge, everybody who had some major pr,oblem was not in there last nfght." 1 He said the persons with eardlac conditions were reported by rescued friends or relatives, , who said the three had histories or heart trouble. Authorities said recovery of the 'dead from tne Big Thompson River flood, reported s trewn along the walls of the Big Thompson Canyon, was their last priority. Dave Feldman. chJef of investigative ser vices ror police ' in nearby Fort Collins, said it could take weeks lo locate the de- ad, and some ne ver may be found. Nearly 150 National Guardsmen, Jaw enforcement of· ficers and volunteers waited ror orders as search leaders mapped their strategy. Helicopters wcro to be used to. · day to ferry the survivors, many of whom wero trapped on ln· accessible patches of hlgh ll'OUnd, to safety. But the r~ln <See FLOOD, PafeA2) Coast Weather Night and morning low clouds give way to sun Tuesday. Low 701 along the cout with lows drop- ping to about 60 over· rugbt. • 1.NSIDE TODAY eon.mer • advocate Ralph Hoder baa taUn pot altoU.at tlw U.S. marutplace,and tlw govmam~.ogenciea UJat·re· gulate ft for 11ear1. I• he olwap right? II he utually rlQ#lt1 A cloae look.at Noda' at art 1 "11 P.oge A 7. •••ex At'\'-"""• · A7 -~ •1 INllllt •• MIMy ,,.. ., LM...,. Al Mlorift •• CllHWwia Al ............. M =-.,~: =c-tt .: er..--aJ ..... At•tt .......... _ .... , ... ,..... .. .......... .,. .. ~... .. R........_... I•,__, .. ......_. .,....._. M -._,. •a_,.....,.. -· • • ' ~ I ( I •A I DAIL V PILOT N • I based on his r('vaew or Leach's P•t~nt apphcauon and lhl' le t dala from two brlt f leata run ln Marth. he b lltvrs the machlnc-)>roduces hydrogen In :i nearly direct lr<1de-off with l'h.•ctnc1ty. The teat.a Of the dev1co "<'re lh(· focus ot h::stimony ut th<" hl•u.ring '1-8 Randall rr<'!ll<'Y of Lido Isl\', J>rcsldent or th\' firm, M1tirlt•rl that ht wall anxlou:l for com· prehcnsive. Jong nm tests to !).• C'onducl1·d. According to compunv or. ficials. prcpar11tions are ~·ill~ mode for those tt>!ils to b<' run nt a 'machine shop 11\ Uurbank. In a pre11:s rcleus<' elated July 20, company ofl'1cials s uid Dr Horace M"no. the comp1my·s consultunt, hus been overseeing '··c 11 orts to inlcrfacc the , hydrogen con\ertc r with u : tt'stbed to det('1·mln~ ''hethcr the ) 10strumentatlon for the testing 1 was adequatl'. "Dr. Mann r(•portcd that th e> '"<ercase wus not 1·oncluded and additional Ch UOJtCS IO the lE.'St equipment m uy ha\'e to be ac- complished before meanangrul t esting can be undertaken." The agreement between The Presley Companics and the SF:C also !\ltpulatcs that. 1f the com. pany issue s any slatl'mcn• without pnor approval of the re. \'iew bourd and Dr. ~lann, the press release must clearly state • the informallon 1s un\'erifwd. Cordon and SEC uttorncy • .James Mercer contended at the 1 June hearings that all Presley re-~ leases about the converter out- side its development were Jssued. , without any scientmc verifica- -..._ tion. f Those press r eleases were ' widely recognized as the source of a spectacular rise in the price of Presley stock that shot from SJ to $20 at"the first of the year. It has hovered between $10 and $12 s ince the hearings. Additionally, the company has added James Langworthy, an ex· ecu tive \'ice president of American Telecommunications Crop., to its board of directors. The SEC was critical of the fact that all members or the board of directors at the lime or the purchase of rights to the con· verter were oCflceliS of the com· pany and none had a scientific , background. Langworthy's :ldclilion to the board is seen as a rcponse to that criticism. 'High Waves · Skip Newport High surr th<Jt pounded swim- mers on many Oranse Coast beaches did not materialize along the Newport Beach s horeline this weekend. The Newport Beach Marine Depart· ment reported three to four-foot waves that occasionally swelled to six !eet at the Wedge. Lifeguard s r e ported 100 rescues, the most serious occur- ring Saturday when a diver col· • lapsed after being rescued. He : was treated al Hoag Memorial ' Hospital and released. ! More than 160,000 beachgoers ,. were on Newport strands through I the weekend, lifeguar~ said. I Tiro Women I ! 8::o':l!!::E~~ ~?- ! Helicopters, bont.s and shore patrollers continued a search for two wome n ~wept into the ocean arter a boat capsized orr the I ~horeor Playo del Hey. Lifeguard officials uid Sunday ! that scuba divers would be used • 1n the sear ch if rough seas • l><'come calm enoul(h. : Information on the missing women was sketchy, but officials said one was identUied as Loret· ta Dobbs or Culv«'r City and the , other only a s .. Sylvla from j ~aryland." · ·• ORANG& COAST DAILY PILOT Jack R. Curley Vott ,..._*1\l_Ge_el~ Ttlom as l(eevll , ..... Thomas A. Murph!Nt IM .... 1119&•1« H Char~ H. Loos Rkt\llrd P. Nall A>AIJIMl~ ....... I!~ Oftkes <.'e\141 Mow: JJO "'*'' e.,, S-1 , l-11t~11,11 .. 01..._1,..w"' ~· .. =..'7~':":!~ .. ;~:~~~~8:":.:."' t •Ii..,. 01499 F!ft-y • M0t1CSrt .t.ugvst 2. 1916 o.lly "* -.., .... 0'0.-11 SKATEBOAADfNG PROS WHIZ DANGEROUSLY DOWNHILL IN HUNTINGTON BEACH Mike Apperson (left), Don Randall Do rtt.lr Stuff Wherever They Can Wheeling and Dealing Skateboard 'Pros' Practice on t~ Sly on Coast By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Oltfte O•lly Pllto!Sl.lff Like saxophonist Cannonball Adderley. Huntington Beach's Ca nnonban ppe rson ls a virtuoso. But when it comes to sounds, Apperson's audiences thrill to the rattle, roar and swoosh or tiny wheels hurWng downhill. Cannonball Apperson plays on a skateboard. Sometimes the sound or the wh('els of one of the fru.test men in the world on a s kateboard are drowned out by the thunder or " p.m. commuter traffic and lhe shrieks of bis admirers. Michael Appe rson. 20, and his buddies, Don Randall, 17, and his brother Mike Randall. 18, prac. lice daring downhill skateboard races on the only slopes suitable and available: publicstreets. TIY~y norm a lly ride th-e- E dwards Street Hill in Hunt- ington Beach around midnight, when traffic is minimal, aJthough they practiced twice in broad daylight last week for an upcoming exhi bition in Mon-terey. "Su re. we know il"s illegal," s::ays Apperson. woo lives with the Randalls at 19322 Worcester Lane. Huntington Beach. "But we have nowhere else to prac-tice." lie' and the Randalls are pro· f e ss 1o n a l s k ateboa rd performers. Apperson claims a 58 1JlPh clocking down Te nnessee's Lookout Mountain. He is hungry to pass the world record ot 58.4 mph set by Loni! Beach'~ Sam Puccio on a run down Signal Hill. The problem is that rew of- fstreet faciliti es exist for skateboarders. "We 'r e professionals. We make our living skateboarding," says Apperson, who admits it's a modest living. S1cspect Arrested His two skateboards. helmet, protective leather suit, tools . spare parts and s pace.a ge polymer skate board wheels which cost $40 apiece to make and balance aren't bought in a dime store. Try nearly S2.000 for his working e quipment. Ex· penses are almost covered by sponsors. Apperson, a Florida transplant who went pro a year al(o, and the younger Randall brother are warming up for an aUempt to hit 75 mph on a long, downhill speed run. Youth Bayoneted ·To Death in OC· A 19-year-old Santa Ana mart· ";'ho r ePortedly hurled a sho1>- p1og cart a t new sports cars parked in a Stanton shopping cente r Saturday night was bayonetted t o dea th a few minutes lattt, according to Stan· ton police. Killed when a military bayonet was plunged into hi s chest at least five times was David Ray Goodman oC Santa Ana. Arrested at a Stanton apart· ment complex shortly after Goodman collapsed, mortally wounded, on a busy thoroughfare and charged with his murder was Robert Esparza. 42, of Anaheim. Police said Esparza is a friend or the owner of a new Datsun 280Z sports car, the car that was dent. ed when the murder victim al- legedly threw a shopping cart on tolls hood. Immediately after the parking Jot incident. G.oodman and a <'Ompanion drove from the shop- ping center with the Datsun and another car in-pursuiL GoOdman abandoned his at. tempt to elude his pursuers at the point where the chase began, the shopping center at Magnolia Avenue and Cerritos Street, poUcesaid. They reported witnesses said a fight then broke out and that dur- ing the fracas Poodman was fatally wounded when the bayonet brought lnto play was plunged re. peatedly into his chest. 20Boys Win Basketball CampGranu Twenty boys from the Boys Club of the Harbor Area havei been awarded scholarships to the UCI Basketball Camp, taught by' college baske.tball coaches. California law forbids their downhill racing oa a pubUc street or highway, but sources Within the Huntington Bead• Police Department concede that police tend to look the other way. "They are professionals, after all." says one sergeant. "They have helmets, protective body clothing and at midnight there's hardly any trarnr." He is sympathetic, perhaps. berause. when he was a youth in the days before drag-racing gained respectability, he raced hotrods on city streets. "We Cee l professiona l skateboarding has a bad name · and we're trying to clean up the image." says Apperson, a barrcl- chested youth who accents his multi-colored leather suit with a puka shell necklace. He and the Randall brothers h ave v a rious approachcs planned, including skateboard· ing safety clinics through local public schools beginning this fall. Apperson says skateboarding is not the bone-breaking peril to American youth many motherR believe il to be -if all who take it up know and respect the limits of their ex111'ri "·ncc and capabilities. 'Bizarre, Chilling' ~ Satanic Cult Link to KiWtap? CHOW CHILLA CAP> - Sat"nlc rt'ferences lij>l)e.,. in the rou~h draft or a S5 million ranaom note in the (1t()wch1Ua kldnaplng case and one defen- dant In the moss ubduction w1ls "Into the occult. 1• publlsbed re- ports said today. Tbe Fresno Bee and Sacram«'nto Bee. quoted sources d ose to the investigatJoo as say· Ing the note was sianed, "We are Bt>elzebob. · · The newspapers called the reference ''biaarre and dulling." Previous published reports have said the ransom note was discovered ~ oUiccrs at the San Francisco r eninsuJa home 01. Frederick N. Woods, one ol three men accused in the kidnaplng or 26 children and their bus driver fro m this small farm com· munJty . Authorities had no comment on the ne wspaper report. A gag or- der covering the search or the Woods estate has been extended until Aug. 9. Two other men are in custody in the mass abduction -James Schoenfeld, 24, and his 22-year- old brother. Richard. Bail was set at $1 million for eacb or the defendants. The Bee papers quoted an un- named rriend of the older brother as sayi11g James Schoenfeld was "into the occult" butc lla not think he was "intodeeil worship." worship." The friend said Schoenfeld had seen the movie "The Exorcist" about 10 months ago and told him it was "a really hea\'y emotional experience" that left him with strange dreams for a Jong time. Woods was turned over to state authorities today after appearing before U.S. Magistrate Esther Mix In Sacramento. · The session was strictly a le~al Fro• Page AJ t echnleallty. Asst. U.S.~ Atty. Bruce Babcock Jr. aakedfor and rec.ivtd dl"ml•Hl o( the t•ral chargt11 <>n which Woodl wu or· rested last week , \lnhawtul niRht to a\'oJd prosecution. and lm· mcdlattly t\lrncd Woods over to state authorities. Sherlrf Ed Bates of Mndt'ra County and a deputy sheriff from Alameda County crowded into the small hearing room with about 1$ reporters and •rUst.s and several U.S. marshals. Woods, dressed In u sports shirt and brown trousers, was silent throughout the hearing. There was no attorney present to nprnent him, so after a brier de-- Jay, U.S. Public Def~ QJ.r. ford Tedma n appeared to represent Woods while federal ~barges were dismissed. Authorities were expected to take Woods to Alameda County. where two other men are being held on .kidnap and robbery charges in the bizarre kidnapi~. NB Police ' lrwestigate Accidents Newport ~acb police are ln· vesUgaUng a aeries ot weekend tramc mishaps lncludine one spectacular crash involving five vehicles and no injuries. Thal craah occurred at about 10:30 p .m . Friday at Balboa Boulevard and 35lh Street wben a truck driven by Ronald Crawford, 19, of Anaheim, ~l· llded with four parked cars. Police said one of the cars caught fire and exploded, but Crawford and hisJassencer, Steve Briggs, 19. F\tllerton walked away from the wreckage apparenUy unharmect. Four Los Angeles area men that began again SUnday night. were not as fortunate Saturday. continued today, gr0unding air police said, when their two rescueequipment. motorcycles colllded on Balboa Boulevard at 18th Street. . FLOOD ••• "Helicopters will be grounded Officers said one motorcycle unW they can get in, perhaps by dri b noon," said John Englebert,cbieC ven Y Roland Olibo, 17, of or operations ror the~Larlmer San Gabriel was stopped for a • County Shet'ifr's Department. rv~an when it was apparent· ' "We've got steady raJns into Y uck by the motorcycle EstesParkandsomewind<J" · driven by Anthony Ramirez. 21, · d La Puente. There was no immediate Olibo and Ramirez and their estimate on the number stranded. )'OUQCer brothers Robert Ollbo Gov. Richard Lamms~d2SOpeo. and Robert Ramirez. both 15, pie were r-:ported injured and were treated at the scene bv another 40 mtssmg. firemen and paramedics. Pr~ident Ford_ today declared The OUbo brothers were taken a ~aJord!saster in.Colorado; the to Hoag Memorial Hospital achoo will perm~t the use of where they were treated and re· federal funds in relJef and re· leased .. covery effarts. Sunday evening a 4-year-old A IO-Inch rainfall running down Balboa Island boy was injured f~om nearby Rocky Mountain Na· when he apparently darted into t1 onal Park. Saturday night the path or a car from between churned the Big Thompson River parked cars. into a w~ll of water 12 feet hhzb Officers said they are still in· andsenhtona15-minute~reniy. ~estigaUng the Incident tn whJcb ll tore through caD>:ps1tes and the car drlven by Harry traj.lers, mot.els and brid~es, rak· Hartman, 27, of 22 Sanderling. mg a path or destrucU~ ;j() m11cs Irvine, struck J eremy SawteU ot long. There were varymgreports 308Coral Ave • a~out whe ther warning was The c hild i0s listed in serious gave~; everyone agreed there condltfort at Hoag Memorial j wasn tmucb. bospttaltoday. Some SOO survivors were fer· ried to a horse pasture-turned· helicopter pad Sunday. Another More MO-~°' l ,000 had to stay in the area for a ~u.a second night. During what poUce described as a four or five mile rhase. the offended Datsun owner dropped out of the race. Half the boys attended the <'amp's fi rs t session. which ended Friday. Th(' other half will begin camp Sunday and fini~h AuR.6. Overdose Studied Mean Puzzles, NB Cops Say ' But the car containing three or his friends, includuig Esparza, did not. Irvine Man, Former SBA Chief, Dead 0Priv~te funeral services have been scheduled for ChMles C. Harvey of Irvine, a former re· ~ional administrator for the federal Small BuslneH Ad .. ministration, who died Sunday. Mr. Harny, 14 at the time or his death, was for siveral )'ears prior to his r etirement the chief administrator or the SBA 1n the western United States. He was a graduate• 6' UC Berkeley and launched bis publtt ... administration career with the Ci~ of Pasa9ena. After joining the SBA, he moved to Corona del Mar, where he Jived h-om 1964to1972 when he _moved to lrvine. Mr. Harvey leaves his widow, Rose Marie of Irvine: three son • Charles T., Bevan and cameroo. all or Newport Be ach : a daughter, Julia Anderson or Thousand O'ks , and four · grandchildren. The family has suggested memorial contributions to O.Udru'a HOJpital of Orange Cou.at)'. Winners from the Upper Bay branch include Greg Selby, Greg Field, Jeff Field, Joe Bass, Jim Wolfe and Kenny Bardsley. Eastbluff winners were St.eve Harney, Poul Harney, Dan Harney, ,Jim Murphy, Tom. Murphy, Mike Hess, and Dan Hess. Boys from the central branch nre Mike Markel, Jim McCahill, Steve Kraiss ond Brad Elligood. One youth, Tim Dugan of the Upper Bay "Branch, received a one week scholarship to the pro- fessional basebaJl ca.mp at Star Sport.s Sc hoot. Dog Owners Set Meeting Newport Beach dog owners are being invited to Thursday's meetJng of SCOOP, Society - Concerned Owners Of Pets. which will be held It 1:30 p.m. at ·the city ball conference room. Accordlnc to Babe Housh, spokesman for the group, SCOOP is worklng to solve the problems of dog owners ln the city. She sa.id that ln addition to educating animal O>men to their resPonsiblliUes tor controlling their pets, the group wants to hell> prevent cruelcy to animals and works witb the city council on matters related to keeping Newport Beach clean while not discrlmlnatlnai a,gi.ln.at dog -OW1'1U'· f . •' In Mesa Bin Death As the uae ot motorized bleycl•, or mo-peds l.Dcreases, say Newport Beach police, so too does the contusion over where Police have idenWed the body of a 22-year-old mason's helper, found Saturday night stuffed into .a trubbin. The body of J effrey Lynn Daugherty, 112 Pacific Coast Highway, Newport Beach, was found tied with rope to a dis· carded cardboard washing machine box in the trash bin at 1996 Maple St. Mrs. Bernice Jllllgren, ot the Maple Street address, told of- ficers she spotted the parUy vlsl· ble body at about 7 p.m. as she emptied her trash into the large corttaioer . Police Sgt. Tom Lazar said police have all but d.lacounled murder in the cue. aaylnl the \'ictlm had needle marks on his arm and "is a known drug user:• Jumper Dies In Rush Hour IRWINDALE ~AP> -A man plunged to his death from a freewny overpass today, tho highway patrol sald. omcers said the man jumped from the Irwindale Avenue over· pass onto tbe westbound Foothill Freeway and delayed morning traffic tor more than a half hour until coroner'• deputies coold ar· rive at the s~ene. Results of an autopsy, conduct-~ven how the vehlc.lel ID81 be ro Sunday morning, have not u, WWI am Blae tJ1 tM depat-bee,n releas~, Lasar said, and• • ment'e traltlc dlvfalan 1111 he tolUcologlat a report is due later hu been ••swamped'" wltb calla this week to determine caute of from new mo-ped ~ who death. want to know If UMy 1bould .. At this point we do not au1· operate 11 • blcyclecr ••car. pert a murder,',.he said. "It ap-Actually. he 11)'1.tt-1 a little of pears that Daugherty's friends both. just dumped him In the trash bin Blue aays the Callfornla Vehl· after he overdosed on some cle Code defines a motorized drug." bicycle as one which wel«ha Jesti Ofllcers said lhey 'WOUJd know lhan 1,:500 pounds and 1ener~tes more about the cue after they uptotwohorsepow•.lnaddlUon receive a report on the autopsy it must not. be able to 10 fut.er from the county coroner•a office. than 30 mph. He taid motorized blqd• do l'N•P-A.1 not have to have a,... llcmse, but Uk• all bleydel, ...... -laaYe a cJty bllce lJeeme. HIT MAN la order to drin -. tile • • • oper.tor mult ha" a nlldt driver•• Jlceue or learDH'•' permit. In otber wm11. ... 11Jd. l He said th., told her--.... dauchttt. Kathy, of the .Ueaecl death plot and tbealeft tbe bcpe to&olntob.ldlq. I • Scalise and Kn. Robluon .stayed in inotela in lJunUncton Beach and Ventura County untll she decided to contact police and the district attorney's office after Scalise collected $10,400 in cash !tom the phyaiclan. Dr. Robinson was arrested at a Santa Ana service station after he allegedly banded over a further $1i000 lO Scalise in the belier that bla wife had been kWed. no one under tbe .,. atts'6 caa; ~1 ~~~ to how , ther are ridden are thi same u ~ those for blcyclea except that mo. peds may not go on bike path$ or trails tbat are aepara~ from a public street. Mo·peds also may not be driven on sidewalks, even When the sidewalk ls a bike trail, Blue said. "The beat rule of thumb," ho added, ''i• to remember that because it's got a motGr, lt'l -to al.a)' OI). the atrect." • ·-· .. \ Moaday'a Clo1ing Prices msE COMPOSITE • TRANSACTIONS Some Miners Return By Tiie AaMCJaied Prtta Rovin g pickets blocked miners lrom rt turnjng to their Jobs acro11s most or West Virginia today, but a back·to-work m ovemtnt was in the makin1 In the s tate'8 northern panhandle and In Ohio • ~ay.August2. 19TII N DAIL V PILOT A 9 Book Boom 'How to' Tomes Sprout Never in the hllltocy or boolc11ellln~ has there been 11 phenomenon to m otch the growth of • 'how·t~" books In recent months. Never have M mun..v how-to books been avaUablo on \VtuaJly ~vt-ry aspect of living. rant:inl( from nalslnf e<>n· clousness to en10)'lng s ~x to repa lrln.: watche£. As recently n• two yurs ago. how-to in· formation wm; llm1tcd- a <'ha pter or less in o book, one or two l>0<>k11on Money's Worth <• (HVl'n subJcct. mud\ of th(• lnformutaon written tor pro fcssionals .ind not mll'lldl•d for thccon:.urnt•r ut i•ll. NO \\', AGAINST this d1smaJ record or a mere two )'tu ago and the fact \hut in the <':trly 1960s. how-to book.I hvd~ exist~. the how· to :iccoun1s ror 30 pcr('ent ot sale. ol trad books, estimal('S Barnes & Noblt-. the lOO·yCl)r ·old Jara~• bookseller an lhe world lle:.idquartcrt'<l an New York Cit) Blll'nes & Noble has branches S('utlcrcd throughout the Eat and long has had the enviable reputation of b;.!lng the 1tor other bookseUersrecommcnd Cor hard-to-find books. Why'! How did this trend develop? Whal lypes of book are leading the movement? "J think people have reacted strongly to the pressures c financial hardship and thcdri vefor sell·improvement," &a) U n RlggJo. president ol Barnes & Noble. "The quaHl)' an C06tol1er vu:esbavedisdlustooedtheavera1eperson. "SO TOE CONSUMER HAS looked for, and t}I publishers have or provided m book form inexpensive do-I yourself techniques oo aJmost every subject fncludmg bom repair, health care, financial responsibility, law, sel: awareness and personal growth · · I think the reasons are more profound than he suggests submit that people became d1si:ust{'d with Wall Street leadership after the 15tock murket disasters of the late 19& and earl~ 1970s virtually wiped out their nest1:1ggs I belle' the revelations of WatctAatc <·ompoundecJ resentment ut dastrust of W ash1ngton. And l contend people recogna ied ho much of a Jungle the American marketplace was for the Inn <>ent buyer. Out of these responses grew a determiiiatton do-lt-on·your-own. and out or that came the demand fOC" U how·to book-k> wbkh aJert publishers and booksellers rue ed with delight. Aafor the areas or great.est growth, here they are: -PERSONAL FINANCE. "The growth in this categ°' is perh aps the most dramatJc ot all over the past decade saya Riggio. There were perhaps 10 tiUes covering books t pertonaJ finance 10 years ago in the store, but now Barnes Noble stocks more than 200 of the 550 tiUes In print with su ject matter r anging from how to shop for food lo bo~ to open Swiss bank account and hide your assets. -Chlld psychology and childbirth. These categories a• close to the top m popularity among the hO\ .. ·tosections SaJ• of l:>o<*s m these categories arc about20 t1r •. .?s what they we IO year s ngo. and somcclassacs ha\'<.'cmcr~ed Cookbooks ·nus was the orig 1n,1l how·to c ategory ru :llwa~ s has solcl well. hut Barnes & Noble notes that In re<'e years the books ho\'c becomt-much more skill oriented :u spcc1ahzed -HEALTH Ci\RK Your interest has expanded fro bas 1<.' medical encyclc>ped1as to u whole range or books devc ed to understanding of many ailments, health problems. di• and nutri lion -up an estimated 500 percent over 10 years. -Home building and repairs. The do-1t·yourself tre1 hos been around a long time. but even so, the esumatc Is th do-it-yourself books about the home have soared 600 perce JUSt m the past five years." And no doubt about 1t." says RI gio. "one ractor 1s that do-it·yourselfers can rely on an i crensmg number or excellent guides for home repairs ar !lobbies ·· -Human sexunhly. In the 1940s, it was all but impos~ ble to buy a book on this topic without a phys1c1an 's prcscri t1 on Now1t's apopuJar. as well asrcspectab~,category. -Personal awareness and per sonal g wlh. Even U mos t complicated ph1losoph1 c al id ea have bee transformed into a how· lo formul u Witness: T , relaxatlo1 response, etc Trading Reniains Off Stocks Drift Again NEW YORK CAP> -The stock market posted a sligh ·loss m another slack session today. Trading re ma ined ltghL The market s howed a slight gain at the outset in a car ryovcr of Fr iday s modest rally. Numerous banks across tho country joined m 1 decrease in the prime lendfog rate. from 7•.4 to 7 percent begun a week ago by the First National Bank of Chicago. But the cuts in the basic rate on large loans, which hat been expected, proved not enough to sustain the market': forward momentum, and prices drifted aimlessly. The Dow Jones average of 30 stocks lost 2 38 points t1 982 26 llp• attd Do1D1t• Hl!W VORI( IAl'I -r11e lol-1111 II.I """"• Chit Hew Vo•-Sloe-fW(l'IMilf =\ I~ ftt.:.rM~~~M I:" ::!•nl r,I (llA•>QO' f~fdlt» OI .Olun ·~ -"'· 111:m.~':' ~!~:~·~ C,,.":T:~~:-.,.:~ r,r1ui "oo 1ot.1e1'1 lttl P•I«. u,.s 141 1A I 10 1 160 100 ~ J . ' "' ,~ n /) )A Stocks In Tiie Spodfgllt NEW YORI( (API· S•I•'·. p.m prlo 4!10 nf I "''"'~"' ol lh~ lift""" MO'lt M llw N•w Yt>r\ Sl<><ll. C.1,M<lgo II""' tr~OI~ Mll~Mlly, Nat SWnlu• ...... MIT~lft•I . Chry"tlt41 Tl'""Y CO<p., ... Dow Ot .. DoMrli.y .... TrlH"t••M (Q ••• E•ton •• """NJ COIO .... ""'' ()0 • • • AM Tt1i.Te1 ...... ,. F•ICJ>1 Cl> •••• Tetl4KO In< ....... . ~ln•Ll~C ....... . JttrO• Cl' ....... •• 2:1\'t I lO"O• I rt •• :11111~. 0 1') ,. 11 • ' 1tf, •• »t....•• to ••• ,.,._. 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Oft •l l'l(W VQRI( tAP) .,,... ~i ... , ~ IOC \ .,, ~· ·~·' lf1 Alt : '2 I WHAT AM(lt 010 NEW V'OAK IAPI , .. ~ }: : ~ ~. , ______________ _ *Off H -1 Oii SS -~Olf U AIO DAILY PILOT Monday Auousi2 1976 ~ • I I for World Athlet~· t ByGLE NWHlTE 04 ll't O~IY l"tl•Uc.tll MON'l'REAl..-Thcre 1s a new type or Olympic Games on th<' drawing board nnd the urch1tt'ch are Larry und tlllhc J ean Kini: or tennis renown They se-0 a need for lh~ world'b Jeadin~ athletes to be able to do what tht•y do best and enjoy, t1nd be able to m;.ikt.> mon('y whllc> they do It. The KI ng~ · {'Onc<>pl would permit th~t. With a POM.1bl(• $10.000 going to each event "in· ner. Athletes could decline n'IOftcy, however. if they chose to keep amateur statu!I. The present Olympic c;3mc~ prohibit professional <•thletei. from partic1patln,; The on P:J1>cr Olympic!\ would be held biennially. ll\ltlallv. "'Ith a JX>551billty \ht'y would bt-<'ome annual 1f successful Thl'v'cl I><' rolled the Opt>n 01> mpic or World Open dames.1'ar~t't dutes for the first gume are 1979 or IT'S ALL OVER Founluin \'alley's Shirley Babashoff !center 1 and a ~roup of u.S. athletes parade around the 1981 and the sHe may be somewheTe io Greece. Competitions would be held in most lndivldual aports And Lucy Kin g says tht<re Is even a possibiltty that teu.m sports .sutn as basketball and soccer would be included. llowever. All performers would be under In· dlvidual sponsorship. the na· tional concept would ootexlst. Larry King belit>ves th(' o~n itames could hrlog SlO million for di~tr1but1on amon1t Uw pi:artl<:i· pants. He says h'O telC\'ls1on networks have alrudy indJcatt'd interest in abowlng the gam~. King~ says he bas talked to about 200 othlttl'S represenhnR au spol'ts and about half of them are awed by the open games idea Why would tht" athletes t'Ome to surh i!ll mes" "The reuson they are· athlete. Ill that h1 whAt they are good ut, :>nd that 1s whul lh\•y like to do. In our J;ames they'd bl' exhlb1Un1t their ~kills a1u11nst Lhc "'" w ... ..,... .. track in Closing Ceremonies for the XXI Olympic Gaml·S Sunday al l\le>ntreal. Related stories. pagt' A3·4, Athletes' Robot System Halos' Goal --Get Out Of Cellar Not for U.S.--Krumm J ~I O;'l;TREAI. IAP1 -The l'n1t· •ed States took a n ioventon· of 11s Olympic medals today. ail 94 or them. then bc~nn ponderm){ thl• inevitable question: Can a nation operallnJ! as a frcf' society continue to match <lthlNic skills with highly regimented and totally subsidized teams from eountries such a s theSov1et u nion and East Germany. That ques tion spawned other quc>sti9ns: Should the U.S. i:ovcrnment Oly1ppie Scene step in and bail out our Oly mpic effort? Must America resort to th<.' "factory system ." glorified b~ the East Germans, and start turn. in~ out Olympic medalists thc way Detroi t produces automobiles? One of the people re6ponsible for a nswerinit such questions is Philip 0 . Krumm, president of the U.S. Oly mpic Committee. ··our society would never stand for a !;.tcl.or y system or even a na· A.ge No Barrier For These Stars MONTREAL-I cnn not help I 'be amazed by the number or 1976 Olympic trac k and fie ld performers who have crossed 30 and 40·year barric r5 but yet ate still producln~ quality marks in their specialties. Take Swc.-dish 1,SOO-meter run· l.ner Anders GardenJd. who hos. recorded a 3:38 (equal to a 3:55 • mlle> Utls year. He's:.>. Or Cana· dlan 400·mete r ace Dom I· ·I Domansky ... hc'll be 36 Aug. lllh and has r un a 45.9 this season. Ludvik Danek, Czech discus -WHITE WASH ~ .. . t>oasted the e ldest of Olympians iJl track and field. Alan Oakley of Canada was 48 three months ago. And he placed 35th in his event her e. Also in that event was Vladimir Goludnichy. 40. of Russia who won the itold medal in 1960 a nd '68. lie was· seventh here. ·· Al lhe London Olympics of 1948 there-was a 39·year-0ld British high J\urdle r who had a t1hot' at medJillng but fell over a hurdle In the finals. He w as a former Royal Air Force pilot. <whose name escapes me) and he also took the athletes' oath at Opening Ceremonies of those Games. Soviet hamm er thrower Anatoliy Bondarchuk Rot n bronze medal here. tossing 247·7. He 'll be37 in January. So while age does have Its bar· riers in athletics. they aren't always insurmountable. Going the other direction. a mark that really impresses me belongs to a Kenyan who bad to depart because of the African na· lions' withdrawal. tional te~ Krumm insists. "We need gov~nment money for development and facilities. We do not want governmentdirection." The grandfatherly retired busi· ness executive. from Kenosha. \\'is .. said he had no apologies lo make for the Americans' overall performance in the Montreal Games. ' "Better than Munich:' he said. .. and ag ainst stronger competi- tion." The U.S. medal total equaled the count four years ago but there was one additional gold, 34 to 33. and improvement in a number of t he more obscure sports. On the other hand. the Soviet Union e nlarged its over all superiority. increasing its total medal count from 99 lo 125, and East Germa ny, with a Population less than one·tenth that of the lfnited States, climbed over Un· cle Sam's back into second place in the standings based on golds. The Russians won 47. East Germany 40 and the United Slates 34. This 1>ubordinutc position to Communist rivals is certain to provoke fres h howls Crom the traditional "Viewers With Alarm." who think the powerful United "States should never lose spools contesL'I: . . The National Collegiate Athletic Association will say it is a ll the fault of the Amateur Alhletlc Un ion. The AAU will blame lhe NCAA. And the Presi· dent may name another com· mission to look Into it all. Yet , America Isn't ready to set up a robot school such as the East Germans have at L<'lpzi~. with lt.s teams or white·coated doctors. test tul>C!s. wires and trcudmills to produce world·class allhletes Nor does America seem inclined to turn all of its top athlelics into !'ltudents and teachers on a ~rmanent payroll with special bonuses for extr a athleti r achievement. as in Russia . Even in the wake of defeat there is one thing positive about the California Angels. Their attitude. Despite a 2·1 loss to Rich Gossage and the Chicago White Sox Sunday at Anaheim Stadium. California m a nager Norm Sherry was talking at>Out escap- ing the cellar in the Am erican League West and pitcher Frank An,,.111 Sla1..-· AllC..-..,ICM,.(1110) A119. 3 c.111 ..... ieet Tt•U Aug. 4Gelll0rnleel hU\ IWQ. S Gelllorftle •t h••• 6p "'· •Dm. 6 p "'· Tanana. Gossage's unwUling vie· tim Sunday, was discussing his chances or 20 wins. "J think our chances ar e very good of getting out of the base· ment," Sherry observed after Gossage's four-hitter prevented his team from a three-game series sweep. That would h3ve moved lh<' Angels to within one-half game of the fifth place Sox bul instead California s lipped 2~2 s:a mc~ behind. .. Our first goal is to itet out of the cellar a nd then think about monng higher." said Sherry. "We don't want lo look too far ahead but 1f we keep playi nl{ the way we have we won't have to . Things will just happen." Sherry has won six of his first nine games since taking over as the California m anager Crom Dick Williams. CHICAOO ~(! Wtrrt Or1e'1ft L .JoM'°" 111 6~1\t.-rlf w ~···" )b ~ !Mii )b No<tlhQn" J 'lo"ll<•• "' f),m" ... , .. "' ~ 0 , ., 5 I I 0 A I I 0 A 0 I I on o., • o > n 111 I) 0 • n 0 D on I) o • n no 1 n n., 0 I) 0 I) CALl~l!NIA ell , ""' CoOtn\rl ,,_01> • 4 0 0 0 9'wh•• Woll411> Mtltontln AJ.,..,,.<t~ floclll•" M Gul!lrf"tttn '' L.Slfnt/l<IO~ 1>0 J"'<h<>n 11) El•Nob..-•#n c T<Wliln•p • 0 I 0 I 0 I n I 0 II 0 I 0 I ft I 0 0 0 I I In .1 o o n I 0 (I II J 0 I I 1 000 II I) O O btst In the world and it would be on TV," King says. • "We'll tralo our 0-.11 JU<lge5 and th~y·n ~ patd. •• Cost or oCflchds will not be pro- hibitive. Klnguays. . "We can take four pro· f<>ssionally trained. elflclent men and they will do the job it tnkt's 60 umateur offlC'ials to perform." King adds. What about silme of the to1> Oil!hl world athletes who mi.iht like lo purlicipate but who. -. WIU'IOUt floancial suppOrt, could not produce tra\•el tund ? "IC they wtrfl a top level athlete with that. kind-Of problem \hrrfl would be nothlnl( to prcveo\ u~· from putting up expense money and then deducllrig It from nny win· nings." King ny . "We aren't tl')1lng tt> comix•te with th<' pres<'nl Oly mplr (;aml's, In fta cl . If they went to open competition. lhul would ht' wonderful. We ft>t'l <'omiwlle<t lo 8~e.rormat, r ue t\l t Siooep Giarrls Dodgers' Hopes Get New Life SAN FRANCISCO CAP) - Char lie Hough's knuckleball breathed life back into the Los Angeles Dodgers' pennant hopes Sunday. "That knuc kleba ll danced around us all day." said San Francisco manager Dill Ri~ney. whose Giants were in Position to deli\'er a doubleheader knockout punch t o th e Dodgers a nd virtually Insure the Cincinnati Reds another National Leai;ue West nag. Instead. the Dodgers swept the Dodilf-r• Slat~ Al'Ge"l••..,ICAKIJWI AUii 1 HOU•IOfl411 l°' A,_.l+s ~ lip"'· 1 H om 1·n o"' AUii J "40U>l0fl 41 Los "fl991e« AUG 4 -.ton •I Los A"9fl~ Giants. 4·1 a nd 4·3. Hough re. lieved Don Sulton. 12-8. in the ninth inning or the opener. earn· ine his ninth save. and worked the final 1 i.:i innings of the nightcap to g et his ninth nctory on the strength of Bill Russell 's JOth Inning sacrifice fl y which scored Steve Garvey. Bill Buckner colleded seven hits, four in the second game. a~ains t Giants pitching. Gary Thomasson had fi ve hits for San Francisco. but the Giants It-ft 24 runners on base and Rigney * * * flt"STGAME LOSAHGILU SANflltANCISCO .. , "... .. , .... L-21> llll<kl\fflt II SmlllHI 8.11&.H rt C..•vey lb <:#Ob llU\Wll>l Leo<t v ... ,c Suttonp HoUllhD • 0 0 0 'TllomMotlcl S 0 c I· • l 3 0 M.Pffe• lb • 0 1 0 A 0 1 0 Mtll""W'> If 4 0 I 0 0000 ~trrl )0 10 • 0 O 0 0.En"' lb c 0 O O J 0 r I ltellt 3b • 0 O 0 4 0 I 1 ·Sc»~H 4 0 I 0 4 1 2 0 0..1\-H 4 I l 0 •ooo B¥rp 20 0 0 • 0 t I Oriti""'°'"" I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Moflittp 0 0 0 0 O~spll I 000 He•-top 0 0 0 0 ,.Ol•IS JS 4 ' 3 Totals ii I 10 I L<KAncp!i.s 000 Ill 010-4 !>en Fr,.nch<o 000 100 OGG-I E -llus.,.,tl, C~Y. Tl\Omasson. ~.OP -u.. Anoot._ I.!>.-" Fr•"<i>£o I l 08 -LOS A.n9Pln 1, S.n Fr•,.Cl\<o 13. 2b -Tl!Oma~ 0., R-, Buckller. Sii -Lee y. IP H II Ell aa SO SutloftlW,12 .. 1 8 10 I I J S HollGllt 1 0 0 0 0 I BArr IL,'-ll I> 8 3 J 1 3 Molll!I 2 I I 0 1 0 Hr•V9' lo I 0 0 0 l 0 S.ve-HOllQh (9). WP -Sulton. T-1:lJ. SECOND GAME 1.0SAHGILES SAN l'UHCISCO ae r llM ••r ltlll L_.71» 811<•-" le<Y11 · s o 1 o nio.n.uonct • 1 t o GMwylb ~"" Runelln Bliler cl E. Rodrique re Rllocl<!f>p • HouQllp S 1 4 0 M ..... ttl2b S 0 I 2 4 0 2 0 /IMtlheWS It J 0 1 I • '' 2 Muturrf s 0 ' 0 S 0 O o O.Eve11S lb " O o O 3 0 0 l ~!call S 0 I 0 ~ 0 0 0 S41eler ss 4 I 2 O c 1 0 0 0.. R~C 4 0 t 0 ' t 1 o Of'Hs!erp 'O O o O 0 0 0 G.Ad.Mtsl* I 0 0 0 Ul"'911ep 0 0 0 0 C.Wlllle-p 0 0 0 0 OntiWl•~Ph I 0 0 0 ._ ... ,lop o o • o Toti!~ -" I 10 J TolM' :II J • J '-"'"""" .. ' 001 000 100 l-4 M" F"n<l'<O 100 000 001 0-J E -Oreltl~r. L~lltt, M. Pe<eL L08 -L~ ~-''" 10, ~ Fr•"<"<o II. 78 -T-•...on. °"· R•do•. M. Pe•u SB -Thomit\J001. Garvey. ')F -Matt MW\, C.e,.,_y, Aus.e1t A,_n -IW.••I o,.~,,., l•w-••~ ( W1lh,.l'ft\ Hl'•-10 IL,)·)) T-7.Sl.A~21JI. ,,. H II E" Ba SO l ">fJlJ6 I'' 0 0 0 7 0 & e I I I l '> 1 1 1 1 ~ '~ 0 0 0 t I I f 0 0 OLYMPIC PAIR ARRIVE TONIGHT INGLEWOOD -Jts's weJcomc home tonl$hl for Olym pic Games llwlrn 11tars Brian Goodell or Mission Viejo and Shirley Daba11hoff or F'ounlain Valley. The pair arrive at Los Ani.tclcs International o n Western Airlines flight 765 al 7:25 tonight and a gala reception is pla.nned. Awaiting their arrival wiU be their Nadadores swim coach. Mark Schubert. fellow Olympian teammates, the Mission Viejo High band and pep squad and various dignitaries. summed up the day as "very frustrating." "We had to win two games. That's all there was to it." said Hough . "Now we have four games coming up a~ainst the 'Reds and W<' might have to sweep that series." Hough. 9·4. worked in all four games of the C.lants series and allowed no hits in 61~ innings. But the Dodgers lost the first two games. falling 9 1r.1 games back. or . Cincinnati. "We're a better team than the Dodgers . Our season s crlcs shows that,·· John. Montcfu~co saJd after p1tctung the u1ants to a 6·3 victory Saturday. He ex· plained the Glant.s' last place spot. despite their edge Cnow 8-5) over the Dodgers by saying. "We just ha\•e trouble beating the weaker teams." The Giants have a 5-3 rect>rd agairust the Reds. here for a three.game series opening tonight. The Dodgers are horn~ to ·face Houston before the Rt'ds. now nine games up, nrrlve Thursday. Pressure No Obstacle For Allin SUTTON, Mass. <AP1 -Brian "Bud'' AJUn, wbo .-coUect~a fisUul of decor ations as an Ar y artilleryman In Vietnam, now s a bundle or ner ves on the pro golf tour. And he likes it that way. "It's n ice to be nervous, that's what this game is all about," the 31.year-old Allin said Sunday after coUecling S40,000 with a pressure.packed. one-stroke ~ic· tory in the S200,000 Pleas;int Valley Classic. "I was nervous, kind of sh:iky out there," Allin said. "It's been so long since l 've won, since 1974, I really wanted this one. I was so nervous I quit looking at the scoreboard. ••1 didn't know I was ahead. I · didn't look at the leader board from the 10th hole until the 18th. Then I looked up at the board when J was on that last green. l knew I needed Just two putts to win and 1 went out a nd 1ot them." While admitting to a case of nerves. he gave the jitters, to rivals as the 72·hole tournamen~ turned into a horse race Jn the final r ound. interrupted by a thunderstorm for 1 '12 hours io late morning. LHtl0"9 "'°""' end U rf\1119J It\ the Ple-9' V•119yGolf Cl•\\I< 8rlM> Allln, ~.­ Bon Ct-"41•. \n .IOO c.&My W<ldtll,,., \ 10,.00 l..ee Eidt<, \10,.00 8o0111ttnne, \10,600 J-ll•lff.U,S>t llMWVIWl,U,'71 -• He.,n, U,))t ~M C.._11, U,)1~ C.....,. llllNll, U. S78 T""'J-IM, U,)11 Drue~ l..letllo.•, U.171 ,,, "-'"" .. '· \l,.JOO Mike Hill, ».>00 l>od Cll"I, U,JOo 001»1We1t~t. U ,IOO Jnlwl!>(lllM.U .JOO ~ Mtl~f\f!Ofl, 0 ,300 J-JAC~Mll>. \1.SOO JO'! lnfl'll" Jr .. \),~ Rik M•\ .. l\Q.ll•, 0 ,01• '""'-• o.~11 ... '7,07' °""" ~lo<kton. \7.07• ,... .... ,..,. ,, • 'I ~It\ Bob E $mllll. \t, 11• c..otO"CMll• \1,\1• .__,d Tw111~. \t \/~ Al!4) Ert{k\Ot\, U 11• c"'°'' ,._,.,.,,.,, ,,,," ) ... Pon .... \l,'10 B.trtyJ~-.•, '1,1111 ()w,p!l!Ntvll. \l.110 ~Gll~f,\1,110 thrower who won the gold medal nl Munich in 1972, wUI be '4() in January. Yet he has thrown 209-3 this year. Forty·year-0ld Lucien Rault of France has tun the 10.000 meters ~ in 28:33.4 this season and Roma· • nian Nicolae Marasescu. who will be 39 in November, can still long Jump 25-8. .He's Silver Ayoo. the 400·meler hurdler. who at age 15 has already run 50.01. * * * Landa Remains on Critieal Lis Swedish sprinter Sy Barka has clocked 10.2 fol' the 100 meters and 20.8 in the 200. Not bad for a man33. And 42·year ·old sholputter Oet'gely Kulcsar of Hungary has a 66-2A.a toss this year. Hermes Riveri or Cuba has thrown the hammer 226·9~ at lge 4S. Or bow a bo u t 33-year -o hi American high hurdler Willie Davenport; who bronie medaled he.re in 13.38. ,, BuL lbe 20-kllometer w•lk HAPPY DEPT.-The fltbtt of Freacb 4tt·m eter freestyler Jeu Bolteax. U.e gold medalllt in ltS! <that counb'y'a first-ever gold la Olympics aqaadca), was 90 llappy when bis 90CI woa tllat he bolttd from the stands and jumped fully dothed Into the pool. QUOTE DEPT.-Swimmer Casey Converse of Mission Viejo, regarding h is MV Nadadores coach. Mark Schubert: ··n e·s like Vince Lombardi. He whips )'OU Into shape. But ~·s a great ~.·· MANNHEIM, West Gertnll\Y CAP; -World champion driver Niki Lauda remained in critical condition today from ln.iwies re· ceived in a naming tl\ree-car crash Sund ay during the Formula I German Grand Prix. Doctors in the intensive-care unit at M anoh eim Medical Hospit.aJ fought to keep Lauda's breathing passages open and ad- ministered oxygen because or the limJted capacity of his scalded lungs, said Prof. Or. HorstLut.z. Lauda was still Jn "mortal danter beea!Js_e hi_s lw:ai_ c~paei~ was r educed by his mhallng of hot &team. poison gas and smoke," Lutz said. The 27·year-old Austrian drivel' also s ufrered first, secon<I and-lhlrd·d egree facial burns before he could be removed from bis wrecked Ferrari 312 T2. Lutz said it would be another three or four days before the doc· tors could expect to see any pro· ~· The poison steam and gas that da.ma1ed Lauda's lungs and bronchial passages were pro. duced by tho burning of the plutic seat., the s~g wheel and oil ln bis car. Lutuald. Today, the hospital began issu· ing twice·daily medical bulletins on Laud a 's condition. The hospital spokesmen said doctors were waiting for Lauda'a condJUon to improve before they performed an y operations and that It might be ,14 days before surgery could be undertaken. Other injuries Laucla reeeived in the tbltd·lap wreck Included less serious burns t.o bia wrists and arms. a broken collar boot aJ¥1 othel' m inor h'a~. said Dr. Rudolf Zellner, head~ the plastic surgery departme at another clinic in near Ludwigabafen. The race, which was won la by Briton James Hunt i n McLaren Ford M23, wu in rupted for l 'i'11 hours by the wr about 6\4 miles from th grandatand at the Nuerburgri track. Hunt ls second to Lauda the championship standings. ~ LIUda's car loat a rear wh in the third lap a nd swerved ln • 1uard fence on Ute aharp le turn known as Benverk Coma. .• ·Saddlebaek EDITION VOL. 69, NO. 215, 2 SECTIONS, 2~ PAGES More Bodi~ EXpecteil iii ' ; LOVELAND. Colo. <AP) - E urvlvors or a weekend nash ood huddled on mountainsides nd In isolated home. today as ains Hd winds forced a delay in "' .)air rescue attempts. OHiciaJs .said the Oood killed about 60 peo. 1Ple. and they said "dozens" more ~ies may be round. The National Weather Service l.aid It appeared there would be r break in the weather for al leasttwodays. Capt. Rich Hovey, the Larimer County sheriff 's press spokesman, said it was thought most or the cricically ill or in- jured survivors were eva~uated Sunday Crom the Big Thompson Canyon. "Al this stage, except for three coronaries we have up there. everybody is the same," Hovey s aid. "To the best of our knowledge. everybody who had some major problem was not in \here last night." He said the persons w ith cardiac conditions were reported by rescued rrien ... or relatives, who said the three had histories of heart trouble. Authori Ues said recovery or the dead from tne Big Thompson Ri ver flood. reported strewn along the walls or the Big Thompson Canyon, was their last priority. Dave Feldman, '!hief of investigative services for police in nearby Fort Collins, said it could take week a to locate the de. ad, and some never may be found. Nearly ISO National Guardsmen, law enforcement of- ficers and volunteers waited for orders as search leaders mapped their strategy. Helicopters were to be used to- day to rerry the survivors, many of whom were trapped on i.n- a c cess i bl e patches of high grwnd, to safety. But the rain that began again Sunday night continued today. grounding air · rescue equipment. "lleiicopters will be grounded unUI they can gel in. ~rhaps by noon." said John Englebert, chief of operations. for the Larimer County Sheriff's Department. Afternoon • Stoeks "We've ftOl steady rains Into Estes Pork and some winds." i There was no Immediate esllmnte on the numberstranded. i Gov. Richard Lammsald250 peo-: pie were reported injured and ~ another40 missing. President Ford today declared · a major disaster in Colorado; the action will permit the use of federal funds In relief and re· · <See FLOOD, PageA2l 'Windfall' Nixed. Bus Execs Eye Cut in Tab • By GARV GRANVILLE Of•• o.11y rue1 sc.fl ~"~,..,,..;--9irector~·oUhejkange. County Transit District <OCTD> said to.- day they will cut the district's property tllX rate rather than look upon an unexpectedly high climb in assessed value in Orange County as a tax windfall. In late June. the directors ten- tatively agreed to leave OCTD's tax rate al its current level. 4.S cents for each $100 worth of as- sessed value. That rate, directors were told, •rwtre-IO$ PROPANE TANK, SHATI'ERED WOOD All THAT REMAINS OF COLORADO HOME AFTER FLOOD Saddleback Scissors Dozens De8d, Hundreds of People Stranded After Devastating Weekend Disaster 1 : Pay' Free Thr t d Budget Bid t ze ea ene ~:~:~~ie:.n:..:~: Sclwol Workers Fai·l to OK Del,ay Pact . :::rth~:1:'ro~·= nextyear-enoulhtobrinaitlnt.o the range of a tax rate figure en· doned by trustees two weeks ago. Most S addleback Valley Unified School District employes face a salary frecie unlil agr~­ ment is reached on a contract. 1t appeared today. Groups representing teachers. classified employes. counselors. speec h th e r api s t s and psychologl•ls refused lo sign a temporary pact co\'erlng the ('Omlng year. Trus tees have said salaries would be frozen unless the agre<>· ment was sijlncd by Aug. J. In the past. before a new employc rclu- lions law went into effect in July. employes received automatic an- nual raises for units of additional education a nd years of ex· perience. John· Cooper . the district's c hier negotiator, s aid th e employes· refusal to si((n the agreement "doesn't do the dis· tricl any harm.·· Ile said the agreement was of· fered to ease financial problems of employes who were planning on r eceiving the a utomatic raises. Converter Controversy Presley Corrects SE€ Deficiencies Ry JOANNE RF.\'NOLDS Ol ltl• OIHlr ru .. SMM Jn a settle ment reached with the Sccuritie~ and Exchange Commission. The Presley Com- panies or Newport Beacb ogreed today to a $Cries of regulations regarding the company 's roJc with the hydrogen converter. Dick Gordon, spokesman for the· SEC's enforcement division ln Los Angeles. said the setUe- mcnt calls for the company to re·. file several of the documents it ·gave to the SEC curlier this year "to correct. deficiencies'' in In· Coa8t Weat•er Night and morntng low clouds give way to sun ~sday. Low 70s along the coast with Iowa drop- ping to about. 60 over· night. • INSIDE TOD~~ rormalion contained in those documents. He also said the company has agreed lo a procedure for issuing press releases about the device known as the SLX Hydrogen Generator. According to Gordon, all press releases will have 'to have the prior approval of Presley's scien- tific consultant. as well as an ad· visory board froo:i the American Stock Exchange where Presley shares are traded. The settlement. Gordon said. is the result ol an offer made to the company by the commlsslorl (ollowtng a four·day hearing held in June. Thal hearing was caUed by the SEC to Investigate alle&edJY mis- leading sfatements the company made regardin1 the converter. The Presley Conapanles has made a S2.5 million commitment to buy the residential application ri,ghts to the machine which is supposed lo create usable hydrogen gas from tap water. At the June bearings, the de· vice's re.dusive inventor, Sam Leach, testified that his machine makes the ~onversion in a two. step· 'self sGst.ainiog" process. Thal claim was challenged by experts from UC Irvine and UCLA who said the machine can operate for only short periods of time. . Dr. Donald Bunker or UCI saJd based on his review of Leach's patent application and the lest data from two brief tests run in March. be believes the machine produces hydrogen in a nearly direct trade-oft with electricity. The tests or the device were the rocus of te.timony at the ~aring as Randall Presley of Lido' Isle. ptttldent or the Cirm, testified (Sff PRESLEY, Pa•e AZ> Now, he said, they will have to wait until a contract is· negotiated. Re prese ntatives for the classified employes. counselors, s p ee c h therapists and pyschologists could not be re- ached for com menl this morning. Teachers. however, are hoping that the trustees' demand for the agreement is overturned by the state's Educaliol1'81 Employment Relations Board which ad· ministers the MW law. Mysterious Malady Kills 12at Confab HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP> - Twelve people who attended a state American Legion conven- tion in Philadelphia July 21·24 have died or similar symptoms, a legion official said today. Edward T. Hoak, the legion's state adjutant, said. "We don't know whatllls bullt's all over the st•te." He said 10,000 people attended the convention. A state health orrlcial said an in· vesUgatlon was begun today. llo said he had no indication as lo the causeso(thedeatha. Hoak said many persons at the convention have been admitted to hospitals around the state. includ- ing seven In Williamsport and three at Wllkes·Barre. He said all havet.hesamesymptoms. "The)' have a pain In their cheat. They get a high tem- perature," Hoaksald. He said some symptoms resem· ble a chest cold, aod the tem- peratures range from UM to 107 (See MALADY, Pa1e .U> REFRIGERATOR The revised budget or $18. 77 million will come before the board for adoption tonight at about 7:45 in the college library met'!ling room. Roy Barletta, district bus\ness manager, sa\d two weeks ago it would be "very dlfficuJt''toshave enough from his proposed $19.l million spending plan to fit the 95-cent-per-SlOO of assessed value tax rate sought by the board. He waroed that it could harm the district's so-called "pay as you go" method of capital im- provement funding. But he said today that manipulation of the proposed capital ouUay and contingency portions of the budget were e.nough to. come up with the addi· uonalsavtngs. -. The revised district bUdget calls ror a g-eneral fund tax rate or almost 91 cents -about six cents higher than last year's general fund rate. Another four cents is added to the rate to cover bond in· terest, bringing the total lo 95 cents per $100. Barlett.a's original budget pr()- posal would have required a lotil tax rate of 98 cents per $100 or as- sessed value. As it will be presented to trust.tta tonight, the budget shows $11.96 million for general opera- tions expenses, $.5.17 mUlion for capital ouU ay, $225,000 In cont- ingency and $1.4 million to cover "seat taxes'' and tuiUon for dis· trict st14dent1 attending other community colleges. Laa~ year's total budget was $15.1 mJllion. The most notable reducUon In next year's budget compared to the 1975-76 plan 11 in the tuJUon and teat tax cateJCory. Last year, Saddleback paid other communlty colleges a total of $2.U million to cover the cost of educalin1 local s tudent& who al· leRdedelsewhere. Several months• ago, Sad· dleback trustees decided their pro1ram1 are now adequate enoqb that most locaJ students u~D QfllCKLY could find what they wanted mvr EJ ·without goin1 to Cout Communl· "Response to the ad was very good, We sold it." That's the sales success story told by the Costa Mesa couple who placed this ad in the Daily Pilot: Side ~ side CoPpertone refrigerator, xlntcond. S315/UJMUUlJC If yoa have a home appliance you want to convert to cub, call M2-S671. lt only tak• a rn ...-tn the rilhl plate to ettrad • buyer. Along the Orance Coast. the right place to advertise Is tn the Daily Pilot. ty Colle1e Distriflor RancboSan· tiqoCoUep DlltrittcaJnpmel. 'l'her pUled • redltioa Ol'der· ial Uatlt Q1 Sllddlebaclt Alil&rtd studeat wtshiag to attend ...... in dOtber dl1tritt had to otUlll • ~cial permit from tbe ad· mlniatraUon. To f!" the perm1'. the student mun ,,.ent ev~ daat the CCNne of 1tudy he wllhea to =cannot be f.UUled at the ---1111VleJo~leae. Mnkln,oetb•l new pulley, tile administration hu bud1eted $'100,000 less ror tulUon and seat t.axesnextyear. f would produce between $3.5 million and $3.8 million worth of tax revenue. bale • il w as-leaf'ned !i~ Cou nty's assess me nt r oll climbed a hefty 18.7 percent last year, a climb Assessor Bradley Jacobs blamed chiefly on infla· tion. Board of Directors Chairman ·Ralph Clark told his fellow direc- •ton today OCTD shouldn't look on the steep rise in assessed value as a lax windfall. Instead. Clark s aid, the district should cut its tak rate by 'tvhatever the higher assscssed v 'ues · will produce in tax re· venue over the $3.8 million ru:e.ded to support ocro·s 1976·77 budget. ·c1ark's proposal won quick en- dorsement from the other three directors at today's meeting in Santa Ana. They instructed transit district. general manager to calculate a new tax rate based on Clark's proposal and present it to the board when it officially sets the rate al a meeting later this month. Best Foot Forward? The recreation program at Del Cerro Elementary School in Aegean Hills last week seemed a hit. crazy. But then, it was Crazy Weck. Shown here, from left to right, Tracy LQth, 6, Susan O'Brien. 10, and Sheri Loth, 9. match into Friday's culminating activity, Backwards Day. Youth ·Bayonetted . TO Death in OC . .! A 19-year-old Santa Ana man who reportedly burled a shop· ping .earl at new' sports cars parked in a Stanton shopping center Saturday night waa bayooeUed to death a few minutes later, according to Stan· too police. Killed wheu a military bayonet was plunged into hi s cbMt at least five times was David Ray Goodman of Santa Aaa. I An,.... at a Stanaon ap..-t. meat complex. shortly after Goodman collapsed, mortally wounded, on • busy thorau1hfare and charpd with his nnR'der was Robert Esparaa, 42, el Anahejm. Poliff said Espana it a friend ol tbe owner of a new Datsun 211JZ lport8 car, the cM: tllat wu dent·· efl ...._'"murder vidim aJ- )qedly •r .. a •hoppinc cart on toltahood. lmmediately alter Jbe parking \ lot incident, Goodman and a' contpanlon drove from the shop) ping center with the Datsun an~ another car in pursuit. . ' During what. police descrl~ as a rour or Cive mUe chase. th offended Dataun owner drop out of the race. . . ~ But the car conlainin1 three of\ his friends, Including Esparza,• did not. ~ · Goodman aband~ his 1 tempt to elude hls pursuers at Uie point where the cttue-began, l~ stloppln1 center at Magnolia Avenue and Cerritos Street.& pollceaaid. • They reported witnesses said a.. fight then broke out and tbat dur·, int the fracas Goodman wu fatally wounded when lhe bayonet brought intof>lay was plunged re- peatedly into hi.• cheat. , • I • DAILY PILOT SB M011day Auguat 2. 1916 izarre Attack Five NY Cops . L I To See Again NEW YORK <AP> -Doctors soy five city pollc('men whose eyes were seared by a berserk man's mixture of lye, easoline and ammonia will 11ee agaln. But how well they will Se.! is unccr· tain. , Physicians warned thot the policemen may never return to active duty. The men wert! not completely blinded Saturday. the doctors 6ajd, ~cause quick aid was of- fered by nearby Harlem res1- J dents. "J'hey doused the officers' faces and eyes with buckets or water :ind stopped what would : have been. irreversibl e damage i to their sight. i The man who went berserk and • • • 'Potential ()/Brush Fires Told Although thl• south count.r's brush-covered hills could be ig- nited easily. county firemen say lhere.-is no great dang.er that a wildlands fire would spread quickly into neighboring rt>slden· t1al areas. Asked about the potential threat this morning. fire officials said conditions in the SaddJeback Valley are much better than those which caused a brush fire to swe~p tbrough a San Clemente neighborhood earlier this yeax:. Brush in the San Clemente fire had been growing for about 20 year s so it made a good fuel source. a fir e department spokesman explained. The vegetation around Mission VieJo. El Toro and Laguna Hills homes is not as thick, he said. Developers and landowners in the area are "pretty well aware" of the potential problems nnd have taken preventive measures. he said. Jn addition. the hills are not as s teep as those further south and the predominate wind is in the (ire lighters' favor.explaincdanothcr firemen. tossed t~ solullon burned 18 other policemen with the mixture and then barricaded himself Ju an apartment. lie held o(f more than 100 h eav ily armed policemen for more than an hour before he was finally killed by n policeman's shotgun blast. The 18 o ther officers were treated for m inor burnt at nearby hospitals and released. Police said the siege began when two officers went to lbe apartment of Calvin Haywood. 38. to arrest him for the stabbing · Wednesday night of John McCoy. 60, who is in intensh-e care. Finding the door barricaded, the police called for reinforce- ments. Thev used a battering ram to smash into the two-room apartment. and when they en· tered Haywood allegedly rushed them with a salad bowl ful l of his caustic brew a nd threw it into their races. "We ne\'er saw him when the door opened," said Sgt. Clnrence Reichman. 52-. who is recuperat - ing in St. Luke 's Hospital. "lie just came out of nowhere and threw this sticky solution at us." Doctors I ater said the lye. gasoline and _ammonia sol~tion was mixed with petroleum Jelly to make it stick to whatever it hit. "l u n sWLsee_ollly shadow~" said Reichmaa. "but the doct«s say that wlll pass aod improve." Police say 30 shots were fired into the apartment at Haywood. who vowed he would not be taken alive. FLOOD TOLL WYOMING NEI. 0..h ... ~ """' .., .... 0'0.-11 SKATEBOARDING PROS WHIZ DANGEROUSLY DOWNHILL IN HUNTINGTON BEACH Mike Apperson (le~). Don R•nd•t Do Their Stuff Wherever They Can Wheeling and De~ling Skateboard 'Pros' Practice on the Sly on COa8t By ARTHUR R . VINSEL tiny wheels hurtling downhill. Ol tM o.o, Pl191 su11 Cannonball Apperson plays on Like saxophonist Cannonball a skateboard. Adderley. llllntineton ~~·s Sometimes the sound or the Cannonball Apper son is a wheels or one or the fastest men virtuoso. -in the world on a skateboard are · ~owned out by the thunder of • But wben il comes to sounds. p:m. commuter traffic and the Apperson 's audiences thrilJ to shrieks of bis admirers. the ratUe, roar and s w005b of Michael Apperson. 20. and his buddies, Don Randall.17, and bis brother Mike Randall. 18, prac- tice daring downhill skateboard • • • covery efforts. A lO·inch rainfall n.mn.ing down from nearby Rocky Mountain Na- tional Park Saturday nflht churned the Big Thompson River into a wall of water 12 feet hiilb andsentilonalS-mlnut.efrenzy. It tore through campsites and trailers. m otels and bridges, rak· mg a path of destruction 30 mu es long. 'There were varying reports about whether warning was given; everyone agreed Uiere wasn't much. r aces on the only slopes suitable and available: public streets. They normally ride the Edwarlls Street Hill in Hunt· ingtoo Beach around midnight, when traffic is m inimal. although they practiced twice in broad daylight last week for an upcoming exhibition in Mon- terey. "Sure, we know it's illegal." says Apperson, wno Ji ves with the R~odalls at 19322 Worcester Lane, Huntington Beach. "But we have nowhere else to prac- tice." • , spare parts and space-age polymer skat~board wtleels which cost $4-0 apiece to make and balance aren't bought in a dime store. Try nearly $2.ocxrror his working equipment. Ex· penses are almost covered by sponsors. Apperson. a Florida transplant who went pro a year ago, and the younger Ra ndall brother are warming up for an attempt to hit 75 mph on a long, downhill speed run. _ California law forbids their downhill racing on a public street or hi,ghway, but sour<:es wi!.ttin the Huntington Beach Pohce Department concede that police tend to look the other way. "They are professionals, after all." says one sergeant. "They have helmets, protective body clothing and at midnight there's hardly any traffic." He is sympathetic, perhaps. because. when he was a youth in the days before' drag-racin~ gained respectability. he raced hotrods on city streets. Fre• P.,.e Al PRESLEY • • that ht waa anxious fOI' com- prthenslve, lOnJ •run teats to be conducWd. Aeeordln1 to company of- tkUIJ. preparations are beln1: ma6e for tho1e test.I to be run at • machl~ shop In Burbank. In a press release dated July 20, company officials Hid Dr. Horace Mann. the company's consultant. has bfen ovttseoinc "efforts to interface the hydroaen converter with o tfftbed to determine whether tho instrumentation for the teetini was adequate. "OT. Mann reported that the exercise was not concluded and odditional changes In the test equipment may have to be ac. compllshed ~rore meanlnaful testing can be undertaken." The agreement between The Presley Companies and the SEC also stipulates that, ii the com- pany issue!! any statement without prior approval of the re· \'iew board and Dr. M aM, the press release must clear\y at.ate the Information ls unverified. Gordon and SEC attorney James Mercer contended at the June beartn1s that all Presley re- leases about the converter out- side its development were Issued without any aclenunc verifica- tion. Those press releases were widely recognized as the source of a spectacular rise In the price or Presley stock that shot from $3 to $20 at the first of the year. It has hovered bet.ween $10 and $12 since the beuinss. I AddJUonally. the company has 1 added James Langworthy, anex- ecttUve vice prHidenl of 1 American Telecommunications Crop .• to its board or directors. The SEC was critical or the fact that aJI members of the board or directors at the time or the purchase of rights to the con-~rter were officers of the com· pany and none had a scientific background. Langworthy's addiUon to the board is seen as a reponse to &hat criticism. ,Long List OfSWJpects -;;1,!!ou~~l!u·s , Although several brush fires ·this year have come close to valley residences, no area homes have been destroyed by them. He' and the Randalls are pro-re s s ion al skateboard performers. Apperson claims a 58 mph clocking down Tennessee's Lookout Mountain. He is hungry to pass the world record of Sll.4 mph set by Lontt Be~ch's &am Puccio on a run down Signal Hill. "We feel professional skateboarding has a bad n"me and we're trying to clean up the image." says Apperson, a barrel· chested youth who accents his multi-colored leather suit with a omcers didn't have to travel very far Sunday to inve1tigate the complaint filed by W illlam H. Wllliams of Santa Ana. . "It's not as bad as it could be." <'oncludcd one of the firemen. Summer Class Load Doubles At Smklle.back A dramatic surge in summer H hool e nrollments at Sad· clleback College this year has so c>ncouragcd the udmlnistratlon that it is planning to more than hlouble the size or the program 'ne~summer. t Robert G. Bosanko. associate • \clean or admissioos. said a total of more than 6.500 students nt- ttended summer classes during lt~o fh·c-week sessions this year. JThc flgure represents an ln- ,c rease of almost 2a percent over the 1975 sum mer session. This year's summer program t'Ol\t thf' district S371 .000 and trustees h3\ t' t'nt1orscd an expcn- dalurc or S881 ,000 for nt'xt sum- mer. Trus h.'\.'!' ha' c bc>t'n told that t ht' i:row1n.: :.u('cl'"'" or summcr school can be attrabulC'<I to maJor i mprovements and additions to the program a nd lncreMcd com- munity awareness throui:h brochures nnd other advertising done by the college. ORANGI! COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed Pt f\Hit"t AM ~tW-t Jack R. Curley VMt Ptl'-edtfl\•...O~'tiff .. ~ Thomas Keevil l 01t« Thomas A. Murphine ,........,"( ..... so Charles H. Loos Rlchard P.NAlf ... .,, ... , ,....~.""' [-~ Sall_,..N<k ValleyOttlc• JJ.)01 IA"•~ lt••tl '-0...Hf'f'••f Offlus t.,t• """'4 JWVur\l "-•'-•fH• M""l.-Qt ... ~•<• 11'1'l"' ... h ...... •-'-"-lltftl\ 11 .. c-vro\1~1 Tt ........ (714) ~Z~1 O.ntlf._. Ad•ertlsl .. '42-5671 \.Mlolf~O V•tlo Hr#\ Ol•k• ,., ... ,,. ''°"'""''""'"""' 4'5·0630 G!My•19'11. 1111• 0r ... o-Ce.11 ~'"''"" C."" ""''· "" ,.,., ,,.,, • ., m....,-., ...... rin•h•f' ., .... , 0'4''"•"0 ,...,.," "'•• .. re.,Oftcff wttaowt ... tl41t pttMfofen •f ~~-·· Joo(-c••n ""•" ••"' •• C.Ot• ...,...,, Cll-• _ .. ,..,. •v <.••It• N U ,_. llllY. tFINll ~ U-lll'Y. ""'''""'*''--U:n-,, COLORADO ,; .. , ,... ,,,. . ___ _._ ...... ,_ Stt•"-•• ~o-----so--. Mile a APWl ........ M-. FLASH FLOOD AREA Map Locate• Scene Wave-swept Pooch Saved LOS ANGELES CAP> Chano. an Australian 1heep doe • is likely to be a bit more careful Jn the future when dawdling on the beach to watch his master surf. The dog. owned by 17·year-otd Steve Hart of Westchester, was rescued Sunday after spending 32 hours in a rocky cavern off Ptaya Del Rey where he was swepl by a freak current. Ch:ino was pacing the beach's jetty Saturday. watching II art surr. when a wave washed him away a nd the cur rent swept him through a hoteundertbcjcUy. Some SOO survivon were fer"· 11ed to a bone pasture-tumecf. helieopter pad Sunday. Another 1,000 had to stay in the area for a second nJgh~. Officials new over the canyon. drapplng leaflets that asked sur· vivors to signal their Immediate needs: blankets stretched on the ground in the form ol an °F" meant food. "W" meant water. "'A" meant medical aid. Larimer County Sheriff Robert Watson said <ta bodies were in a makeshift morgue and 15 to 20 bodJes had been spotted and rwm· bered throu"hout theeanyon. The Big Thompson River runs down from the heights of Rocky Mountain National Park through Estea Park, some 60 miles northwest of Denver. The Big Thompson Canyon, which runs eastrrom Estes Park toward Lov· eland, was the site of the wott!t destruction. Watson said six or seven people died In the same area in a 1962 flood. The water ran off the mountain as rain also pelted the unyon itstlf. lt funneled Into the canyon, 150 yards wide al the most, between bluff• hundreds or feet high. Woman Tortured, Killed; Trio Held NEW ORLEANS <AP) -A a rear apartment. Her landlady. 74-year-old spinster was raped, who lives in the front apartment. tortured with more than 200 called police when Miss woundsfromanlcepick,andthen DiGlovannl failed to answer' a kilted. Police arrested tbree peo-knockonherdoor. pie. two of them teen-agers. A alster said the colortete\lfsion The ltody of Mary DiGiovannJ set wd the only thing or substan· was found tied to a bedpost tn the . tial value in the apartment. bedroom oC her home. She was. nude from the waist down. Coroner Frank Minyard said her !kull had been fractured by• blow thatloreoffanear. Dr. Minyard said the,tce pick wounds were ·'not deep enou&h to • cautedeath but pain." He said in addition to the lee pick wounds, Miss DiGlovanni also had been stabbed lS to 20 · times, apparenUy with a kitchm knlfe, and that several ol her ribs w.re fractured. Police said a CeJevision set believed stolen Crom the apart- ment wn recovered from one of the three people arrested. Booked on charges ol burglary. rape aJ1d murder were ErMst l.)rown. 16: Albe.rt Lewia.17: and Kenneth Smith. 2l. They wtte arrested at their bomes, • few block.I from tl'lc victlm'shouM. Miss OIGio\•anni lived alooe ln ' Women Held In Shoplifting Two lllHion Viejo women have been d\ed by Ormp Cou• ty abertfra ofn~ en cbarges of petty theft an. alleged lhoptift- ing lncldeau al Lacuna Hills Mall stores. Deputies said Karen Dell Whit- tingham, 29, or 22'79'1 La Quinta, was charged after s he took a pair of f12 sun glasses from the J .C. Penney store and left the pre- 0\iles without paylng for them. They Hid Arua Marie Micb.J. 26, of 229SS Via Cereza. ••cited alter s be took a beach dr~ valued at sn .9' from the Broadway •tor• &ad left~ ~lna for tbe iarlDlllL ' The problem is that few of. (street facilities exist for skateboarders. "We're professionals. We make our living skateboarding,·· says Apperson, who admit.a It's a modest living. His two skateboards, helmet, protective ~eather suit, tools, puka shell necklace. · He and the Randall brothers have various approaches planned, including skateboard- ing safety clinics through local public schools beginning this rau. Apperson says skateboarding is not the bone-breaking peril to American youth many mothers believe it to be-;r all who take it up know and respect the limits of their experience and capabilities. For Williams , 46, is a de· puty sheriff who works out ·of the sheriff's central facUity on Flower Street in Santa Ana. And the theft occurred right in the build· ing. Investigators said Williams' .44 magnum service revolver was stolen by someone who ap. parently knew the com- bination to the victim's locker. Overdose Studied In Mesa Bin Death The weapon is valued at $500. "Certainly we have a list or s u spects''. a n in- vestigator commented to- day. "It starts with the sheriff and goes all the way down our roste r ol employes." Police have ldenUfed the body of a 22-year-old mason'• helper, found Saturday nlght stuUed into et trash bin. The body or J erCrey Lynn Daugherty, 112 PaciCic Coast Highway, Newport Beach, was found tied with rope to a dis· carded cardboard washing machine bolt in the trash bin al 1996 Ma pie St. Mrs. Bernice Hillgren, or the Maple Street address, told of- ficers she spotted the parUy vtsi· ble body at about 1 p.m. u she Fr••PageAJ MALADY ••• degrees. Hoak identified the dead as Elmer Hafer, Lewis burg; Jimmy Dolan and J .P . Ralph . Williamstown: Wllllam Byrd. Bloomsburg: fJ()tliS Byerly, Jean- nett e ; Frank Harvey. McKeesport; Frank Aveni, Clearfield; Julius Gaggianla, Republic: Charles Chamberlain, Chambersburg; Abe Ruben, Donora, a nd Andy Warnek, Fayette County. "We were Juat lnf onned ol lt this IDCJl'lling," 1ald Dr. William Parkin, chief of the Penmylv..pa Health Departmeat•a epAclemJology ltttion. . "Wfte tryiag to 1et~mens tolleded • • • so we can try t.o identify an tUolo&)c (cnslnc> agent." Parkin said. A 12th victim wu reported by John Damiano, a funeral home proprietor in McAdoo. He said c h a r I e s M • < D a n I s h ,. Danishefsky, •9. or McAdoo died SUnday at a hospital in nearby Hazleton. • "We bav~n'l been able to find .out even when th• peopae 1ot 'sick for sure yet. Wejuatbaven'l been able to d~umeal &D.)'th11l1." P•tinuJd. emptied her trash into the large container. PoUce Sgt. Tom Lazar said police have all but discounted murder in the case, saying the victim had needle marks on his arm and "is a known drug user." Results of an autopsy, conduct· ed Sunday morning, have not been released, Lazar said, and a toxlcologi11t's report is due later this week to determine cause of death. "At this point, we do not su .. pect a murder.'' be said. "It ap· pears that Daugherty's friend• just dumped him in the trub bln alter be overdo•ed on some drug" ofilcers aatd they would ltnow rpore a bout the cue after they receive a report on the autopsy lrom the county coroner'tofflce. Nuclear Foes Rounded Up SEABROOK. N .H. (AP> - Eighteen opponents of an ocean- front nuclear power plant ha ve been arres\,ed when &hey tried to occupy the construction site and plant Medi and aapUngs. When the protest.en refuted to move, Seabrook police and Rock .. incham County 1herlff'1 deputies arrested them on Sundq. Police 1atd only one at the 18 a.rreated ehoH to leave la hla own cuatody and the rest declined to be released and ipent the nl8ht 1t. ' the Hampton police station. 19 'Targets' FBI T~tks Hurt Them WASHING TON (APJ -The Justice Department says lt bas found 19 people who l\lffered actual harm because they were the tar~ets d an FBI baruament campaignlnthel98>1andearly19'109. One person wu fired from a job and otben tuf • fered from tnvasioas ol their prtYaey. SonMt JOit face wtth colleagues beeause they were falHly bruded police lnf ormers. Der.>artment offlclals reported thole ftndlnp as they discussed their four-month effort to locate tbe victims and tell them what the FBI did to them. Federal marshals delivered ,messages informing the 19 people that they had been targets of the FBI counterintelligence programs, known as Colntelpro, to harass and disrupt militant political groups on the rlght and le ft. • Cointelpro, which operated Crom 1956 to 19n, m- volved such tactics as sending anonymous der~gatory letters to the parents and employers of polila~al ac• tlvists and distributing phony leaflets to stir dla· sension within political organliaUons. '