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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-05-02 - Orange Coast PilotMONDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 2, 19n VOL. 11, NO. 1U. J SICTIONS, 1' ~AOH .. • " an·· ' ' Weakened "lly lfunger, _____ ...... __ _ • • • ~0111·t Denies \V8t~rgate Reversal . lrmne COt11p aa9 New Mobil Bid 7 Tqps Ford Try 81 TOM BARLEY The new bid could mean that 0t1 .. o .. 1,~ne.1t-" Mobil is again the favorite in A bid that tops a recent S:JO'l.9 what bas been a bitter blddlng million offer for the Irvine Com-battle with an East Coast con- : pany was submitted to the James sortium headed by Detroit de- +. I[vine Foundaf~-~..u ... tu'J.b~-'~opu Aµred Tau m , 411.,. ~ ==::==~~ -~~ -d • . . ... Mobil executlv4f Robert art autO billionaire Henry Ford Schlesier. general •manaser or II. . the corporation's real estate and But if~ offer is acceptable to development division, comment-Foundation directon, who are ed from hla New York office that expected to meet later today to the offer was submitted In discuss the.new bid, it must then California three houn before the be fl!ed tn Orange County noon deadline 11ven Mobil l.ast Supenor Court ror scrutiny by week expired Judge James F. Judge. "I' cannot 'ethically comment Judge Judge will have the lut op the amount of our bid until the word oa whether the Irvine Com- Foundation directors have had pany ii to be sold to the hlehest a chance to examine it " bidder. Schlesier said. "But I can auu're A court determination became you that It exceeds the offer neceasary two years aeo when madebythoTaubmaniroup." Irvine heir~ Joan Irvine Smith f al~ a lawswt and halted what &in Gabriel Man Drou:ru _Jn Riptide would have been the ~ million sale of the Irvine Company to Mobil. Mn. Smith arped that the sale waa unfair to mlaority stock.holden in the Irvine Com- pany and did not represent the fair market value or the com- p a.A.)' f o u D d e..d .h )' har frandfather. Mn. Smith owns 22.4 percent of the stock and the Found&UOn hold• a controlllna sc.s percent of the Irvine Company.boldlnp. Mn. Smith ta k~n to favor the Taubman-Allen· Irvine bid f« the company since •he baa been aaaured by the cotnbfne tbat abi wlll be allowed to retilD her • dlrectorahfp in ~ new corpora· llon. Mobil bas .clvilid •n. Scriith" thalU the corporaUon tak•ovu the f rvine Company she can ex· pect to loee all connectiOdl with the company founded by James Jrvtoe II. Found.aion attotney Howard PriveU was not •vallable for comment today. But it was learned that he re- ceived the new bid from Mobil at <SeeMOBIL, PageA.2) Bathtub-boat bay crossing contestant Ron Portalski foundered midway through Sun· day's race in Newport Hart)or, but be kept his cool and held onto his suds. Eight bathtub boats were mteredJIUne second New s Aeeoaats DMl'r ~ ...... .-, alc:llml IC.._ annual race from the Balboa Pavilion to Balboa Island and back. Winner was Los Angeles fireman Leo Dempsey, a Balboa resident: H11n ger Foils 'Desperation' Robbery Try A robbery attempt Newport Beach police aafd wa1 born of deaperatJon ended unauc,.casful· ly thls weekend because the would-be bandit was weak from bunler. Judith Ann Be•chler, 36, a tramlent from Iowa wu booked lnto Orange Count)(. _Jail on a ctiar1e ol armed robbery Friday evenlnJ after lhe alle1~1Y tried t0 tue a purse from a customer at J .C,; Penney'• at kJii!epo~ Lawyers' Filings Ref Used WMMINGTON (AP> -TM u.s, Sul>l'.CJX'e court todax turned. down a request by convlcteCI W ateraate cover-up defendants to araue that a news report about the court requJres the Justices to revene the convictions, ,.,.._ ~ ~SCl!lf ... '\":r..' - , ...... .;it. Atty. Gen. John itchell and ex:" While' Houae aide• H.R. Ha Idem an and .rohn D. Ehrlichman rue a supplemental memorandum ouutnlng the im· pact on their clienta of a rare oew1 leak about the JusUcet' secret discussions of the case. The denial was not accom· panied by an explanation or by any recorded dissents. It said that JusUce Wllllam H. Rehn- quist took no part ln considering or turning down the request. The attonieys had not spelled out what argument. they in· tended to make about the news re-port. The report aired by NaUonal Public Radio two weeks a10 said the court voted once to deny the appeals of all three officials of former President Nixon's ad· mlnlatraUon. The report aald the vote bid been 5·3 to turn down the Watergate cover-up appeals but that Chief Justice Waren E. Bureer was delaylo1 any an· nouncement of the vote ln hopes or ob\ainin1 at least one other vote to review the case. In auch appe•lat the ~otes of four Ju1Uces are neeaed to lf&nt review. There wu no word today from the cO\.tl't on the three def end ant.a• inoUona lor courtrevlewof tbelr convlcUons. Bur1ec and other JuaUcet have refused to comment on the r~ DOrt'a accuracy, but The New <Bee ()()VER-UP, P••• .\2) MOBIL •••. 'Unlikely,' But Believes He'd Win 9 a.m. and lmmedlately contact· ed Foundation director• to schedule a meetlna at which tbe new offer will be daacuued. :fhe 1chedulln1 of rurther court action will depe!nd on the declalon reached by the Foundation board. CAIRO (AP> -Former Vice Pretldent Splto A1new says 1t l• "very unlikely" that he would aeek public office aaain, but bellevea he could win if be cban1eia hla mind and decldet to make a tomeback. · Aenew said ln an lolervlew Sunday he 11 worklnt on a political memoir which wlll pro- vide "a Jot at surprises" w~n it ii com,pleted In tho next year or IO. ~ A1nnt who in 1171 pubU.bed • novel, "'lbe CanllelcJ DeclJlon" about a crllis involvlnr a fie · Uonal vlce president, said, "I:m very aaU.fted with what I 'm do- tn1. While I remain Interested ln political affain, I have no desire' to see.k ottlce.acaln." · OnC'I m tlnlshes his poJ\tical memoin, be aald, he would t;e in· terested ln writing a poUUcal col- umn or dOtna televlsJon com men· tary. He aald he bad been mllquoted in a Tecent Greet newspaper article that he planned to resume nil lfaillittl career" add th•' he was under contract with two television networks to do political commentary. He did not entirely rule QUt a political comeback, however. and said~ "There are no blacks and whites. Everyth1na has 1ray shades. But rltht now lbe chances ar._..10 that 1-will nc>'- Cairo on hil way from Athena to Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Agciew aaid he had business tn tho Saudi capital but declined to go into cle· taUJ. A1new real1oed as vlce preai· dent ln October 1973 before plead· tog no contest to a charae of ln· come tax evasion. He was fined $10,000 and placed on throe years probation. Alked if h1I memoirs would re- habilitate his name, he said, "I don't think my name needs re· habUitaUon. l did nothlna moral· ly wrona ln rny eyea. I never ac· cepted paymenta for my own personal UM ••• f made some errors in the way political money wos collected and used. The er- ror was drifted into because of the way tbe 1y1t.em worked.•• But lt wu ••reed at the last court iOn thJt the Taubman· Allen-INlD lrduP will have at le11t ono more opportunity to outbid Mobil in the race ror con· trol of the Irvine Company. News that the ne· 1 MobU bid had ~ filed appeared to glve new heart today to trvlne COm· panr employet who make no tecret 'Of Ulelt aupport for M~bll ln the blddbt1 baUle. "Terrific." commnented a senior company official who declin~ to be ldenUfied. "My job ls one of many oa the line ln th1J lawsuit and l only hope that Mobil can pu1{ it otr. · · F,....PafleAJ COVER-UP •• York Times and NBC News have iiiri--.----r--~-""::::;_;-• ..;:..AJ"'91~ re~rt witl\ offier sources. , If the justices eventually do turn down the appeals, Mitchell and Haldeman probably would be imprisoned soon thereafter. They have '°emained rree pend· ing appeal since their convictions in 1975. , • • hl1 caf and iW1 ltlor him. Tbe mustachioed bandit ti.en told the customer to set out Of Ute car, whereupon ho jumped 18 and left the park~ lot, drivtns north on Newport .BoWevard. The car was dilt'ovtred •hoet Un>• later oe £Iden Sll'fft !n 111 apartmtftt complex. The Cauc11lan 1u1~ct ~·• ~etctibed ' standlnl 1lX loet all. wet1hJn1 180' PoUDU and tweeh 28 anCI 3$ years old. The market manacer 11.ld the auaped wu well drnaed in a sport.I coat. 1porta ablrt and dark trousers. -'!'he gunman. apparently Cotta Mesa delectlves aald to- starUed by Lhe tt°shot, told day tl)tre art 1ome llmllarlUes CMaysehrs1·nt.otos~~!_.abad, the;;,~~ between Sun~ay momlD8'1 rob- ul'l;I • berf f,nd a f9bbel'Y at tbt storo store employe to thdront door· two yean aso ln which two aus. The bandit ctrdered the pects took $600 from market manager to hand over hla car clerks. • , keys, and Myers told hlm he rode In that case. a customer. a car his bicycle to worl(. The l\Ulm&n w11 commandeered and abaJi, erah~ ~~~~ ~~~~~ _.~~ !:~~ • .:::e:::=•~~W: store and ordered him to iet int<> as In Sunday s lncldent. ' f',...P ... AJ ,, NIXON IN'FER¥1EW. • -seek office ..• Ehrllc.bman.llke lhe other lwo Ni~o9 aides sentenced to 30 -montl\s to elght years ln prison, chose to begin serving Ume. la.st October while appealing his con· viction. account of the nearly 29 houre •'what ls out coll(lterattack? P.R. Nixon ans•ered Frost's ques-oJtenstveto top 11Js.~~ont0Jir tlona, Jauoles -1ha loaner prdl· Frost mueh the tame thing. He dent a11aying his intmecUate ac· Uld he told hit ctuef of stat! to tk>ns after the burglary June-11, laun~h "'a publtC! relations ot- 1972, at the Watergate offices of renslve on what the other side is the Democratic party were de-dolng." "I'm ln posseaalon of some ln· formation; which I won't dis- close.,..Ula&.-Jeads me to--beUeve- that I would be elected to office, if I choose lo seek it." Agnew, 58, added. however. "With the advent or the television age, voters have become more receptive to young, attracllve candidates." Interviewed while stopping in The three were convicted or conspiracy, obstruction of justice and giving false testimony under oath in what prosecutors said was an attempt to conceal gov- ernmental misconduct in Ure Watergate scandal. signed "not to try to cover up a Also to Fro.t, Nixon admitted criminal action" but to contain he lied when be made his oft- lhe scandal for political reasons. stated claim that he derailed the "We weren't going to allow FBI inveaUeation into Watergate people in the While House, people for fear ol upsetting CIA opeta- in the re-election committee at lions, Timesald. the highest levels who were not "It was a .erievoua mistake i, involved to be smeared by the have soften the CIA Involved in whole thing/' Nixon is quoted. thls thlnl,'' N(xon ls quoted. Vandals Rip Irvine Coast Golf Course 3 Men Killed Time concedes "some brief But be lnalated lt was not a crucial moments of this taping crltnlnal act; that ~e dld not have been kept 1n strictest know at the time that his aides In ShootlD• g secrecy by Frost." Jndeed, one and hi• re·elecUon committee question surely asked -why were etnbroiled in Lhe burglary. FRESNO (AP> _Three men Nixon didn't destroy those Frost pur1ued the matter, say· were shot to death early today damaging tapes -is mentioned ina "you knew that. in fact, durlnl 8 barroom disturbance at nqwhere in the magazine's ac· criml.nala would be protected.•• the small community of Friant count. Nixon protested: "Now, jusl a --. Weekend golfers were forced to restrict their activities at Irvine Coa.t Country Club In Newport Beach this weekend after vandals destroyed most of the club's golf carts and in the process tore up some ot the .eolf course. Accordine to po.lice reports, damaae inflicted by the vandals could ec1t the golf club aa tnUCh as $10,000. Tqll Tandem Car pooling has become popular, but bicycle pooling is a new idea. Rick Snell, 14, of Tempe, Ariz., put some old parts together and invented a different kind of bicycle built for two. Bob Hamill, 13, pedals while Ricke steers. east or here, sheriff's officers re-The interview, first of four to moment ... · · be a\red 1n succeeding weeks, is "Period.'' Ftostr~plled. ported. sure to regenerate some It was Frost's quoting of the Details were sketchy, but de-Watergate passions. Newsweek, transcripts or Feb. 13 and 14 pulies said shot.II were f\red by a which ft1ft~ devoted this week's tapes that surprised Nixon. who cou~le of cmtomen at the Rlver <WtV I cover story to Nixon· Frost -but later told aides "I'm sure never Brt ge IM and the bartender, bel " d who wu wounded. apparently not with the same ac-heard that tape ore, accor • Detectives were It.ill try~ to cess to the taping sessions as inl to Time. 1 determine what caused the 1 Tlme -announced former On that tape. Nixon is heard .....__.,_ b ' ld ..a:_ Watergate pro•ecutor Leon t 11-Col "th · · a.m. auuuuu11 u H a wo· Jaworski has agreed to write a e mg son e cover-up lS, 1s Cinco de Mayo 'Riot' turbance.att.n.aamebarabouta ·~r t 1.. .. . t the main ingredient .•. that's week ago involved some o( the ac ua response in nex where we 1otta cut our losses. same people,. Killed in today's week's lssue. My losses are to be cut. The iunpJay were!. Vance L . Amerson, The newly published tapes President's losses irot to be cut on Officers said the carte were in hil mid 50I •. of Fri ant: David were pre.pared -by the W•tergate the cover-up deal. ,y llnked..J.naroupt oheven by bars ~· ds t 7 A t Lee Catlin, 45, of Fresno; and prosecution team . tor _the ·1974 . strung between them. They said ~a 0 . rres S RandyTutUe, 21, of Friallt. cover·up trial o( Nixon mtimat~ __ Th,aJ tJ°IU'lCfJ{>! •• ,'E ,o t 44:-t . the~!~~~;,.,~. ~""tll\ltfilft~flt~~r.J ' :ti _.... ~, ~.lllllu.l:'•~-:-•~:4: .," ~ff\> ~ :; • '°. I. ~i·;~ i:Jtl~ig'ifi~~·ct!"~~p'w11 ubder \ e ~Mfi~~ oriT6 tfie "· !:\i '·i ~fcan cons n .!.os DO S ht' Ehrllchman. They were rout.inc-way a monlh before counael John course, with the ~ars 1ou1in1 Op As many as 200 people ap· Anaeles, F~mando Fernandez .r I ur qu~ ly supplied to defense lawyers, Dean's "cancer on the presiden· turf. parenUy got carried away at a Farlna, and Or. Rlcardo Blanco but not used at trial because cy'' speech March 21. Nixon has The carts. whlch were damoaed In the process, were driven across four of the course's greens. Can U.S. Tax I Lunch Money? WASHINGTON <A P> -The U .S . Supreme Court \od•Y aereed to decide whether the government can collect tues on money an employer reimburses a worker for lunch e"penses. The Justices uld they will re· view an appeal from the Central llllnol1 Public Service Co.. a public utility which claims it shoutd not have been required lo pay over $36,000 In alle1ed back taxes ltl employu owed ror 19'3. Ju1Uce Department attorneys told the court there are 295 cues pendlna ln varloua courtl seek· Ing a ctarirtcaUon of tho word "wages'' In federal tax la"•· An e1tlmated $10.3 million 11 at siake In thote case•, the 1ov1m- ment 1ald. ORANOI COAST I DAILY PILOT Cinco de Mayo celebration in Rodrleuez of Mexico City. U.S. In _. -sault similar material was found In maintained he learned or the cov· AJusa. turning the festivity into Con1re11man Edward Roybal ~ other tapes. Frost's people and er-up al that time. what police called a '·'small·scale <D·Loe An1eles>. alao attended Newport Beach police today lhe current Watergate pro- riot." as the orrlcial representative of are seeking the four black sus-secutor deny making them The Nixon· Frost exchange Police said seven people were President Carter. ed ped public. ends with the former president arrested following the dis· Cinco de Mayo celebrations r:~y~a~~d rWa~en~a r~elg~ One tape is of a conversation saying: "You could state your turbance in the ea1l San Gabriel continue ln Southern California woman ln NewPort Beach early Nixon had with top aide Charles conclusions and I've stated my Valley community. throughout the week. Saturday mornlne. w. Colson on June 20, 1972, three view. So now we go on to lhe rest Authorities aaid officers rrom . Accordlni to police ·reports, days after the Watergate oflt." Azusa and 11" neighboring cities IF/. p • .-ot the young wQman was walkJng on burglary. were attacked when they tried t.o ,,, OrrleR ro~ the beach near Balboa'• Wedie "It doesrft sound like a sklUlul d break up fi1hts followtn1 the at about 3:15 a.m. when she was Job," Nixon told Colson. "Jf we Driver Rescue block party· 'D Threat' forced at knUepolnt Into a car OC· didn't know better, I would have Nine police officer• suffered TOm cupled by the rnen. thought it was deliberately mild Injuries and alx police can She told officers she was botched." were damaeed ln the fracu, ac-R ll r th d th t cordln1 to U . Roy Roth. He said During Q y driven to L Street, dragged rom That was on e same ay a the car onto the ocean beach and Nixon talked about Watergate no one r«1ulred hospitallzatJon. raped by each of the four men with Haldeman - a conversation The annual May 5 celebration SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Car-wtio abandoned her there. lost because of an 18~·mlnute marks Muico'a vtctory over an rylna sl1na sayina ''Porn Is a Police were called by a resi· u 1 nv adiog French army at Threat to Our Lives," a aroup of dent whoheardtheyouna woman er~'afdiman's notea of that Puebla. d h h6 .1 'd Meanwhile, the celebration women marche up raunc 't crytne hysterically. vanlahed conversation ~ sa1 contiAued m Lo&-Angeles today. Broadway and then held 8.Jlanll- Thousands of Mexican · pornographyrally. Americana and other well "ltistlmethemedia,advert.is· In g a nd entertainment in· wishers attended a fieala ln the duatries. which teach people Los Angeles Civic Center area d I f th 1 Su"'day. The event featured folk their expecte ro es, ace •• !.5 •· .. reapor11ibillty for perpetuaw.l¥ dancers, mariachi music and the myth that women expect to spicy Meidcan dishes. be vlcllmlzed," Elliott Mllnnlng The widely heralded holiday told the Sunday rally. mark& the t 15th anniversary of h l' the Battle of Puebla on May 5, T e demonslro ,on was or· ganized by Women Aaalnat 1862. Then outnumbered and Violence In Pomo1rapl\y and the poorly equipped Mexican Media. soldiers defeated arr invading Tbey llluatnted their aUeaa· Fr::0c~:n1%~lebrated event _ lion• with a tent·show exhibit of adult llUllBZlne pbotot 1howtni Me)(lcan Independence Day -ls women models enea1ed lo Sept. 16. bestial and 1ado-ma1ochlstlc Representlna the Mexican aov-poaH, f ealurJn1 to.r:turt and ernment at Sunday's fiesta were rape. BB Cops Mull Voodoo Threat A Crilly voodoo-like tableau or a baby doll, It's head pierced by a crhmon·palnted spear and lt.ld amid cu.t nowera ln a shoebox coffio, ls beiq atud\ed by Hunt.. initon Beach police today. ln\'e.Ugaton were called Sun· day by tbe worried f amUy of a 18-year-old •lrl after the mutilat- ed doll wu ditcovered placod on thtlr doorstep. PoU(c Hid tbo f amlly f OUnd a aoribbled note ln tht bOx wllh the doll contalnlne a threat to th te,n·•aer. Htr fath r, p0Uce aald, has prtVlOUll)' CCPC>tted ... RrtOUI of annoyis\& tel~P• c a11a to tbe faaaU, home, althOUCb lbe pbone numbtt ii abt lilted. ''There 11 a dlrecl relation between the acceptance of these altitudes u normal and crimes again.st women,'' aaJd Ms. El· llott. Cmah .Killa Ex-GM Head WHITE PlOEON. Mlch. <AP> -Former General Motors Corp. pre1fdent d*ml e.oae_,.u kUled \n a plane cr11h near here to- day, st.te police uJd. Cole, ..,L 'Wal OD. nt1ht frotn Yonllac to KaJama.aoo wMf't hit twin· entlM plane cratHd lnto • field ID MtndCICl Township near t.he Ka\amasoo Alrport, polite 1ald. r (\t t>A ,,l .,.\fr.,. D' "'II 1J'I""<• '" > rQl•Ht·.r. 1'"4 • ' ....... "" ( ,, .. ' ,, , t , ••. MALIBU (AP) -Rescuers have freed Darrell Stepp, 20, of Van Nuys from the ~reckage of his car, in which he w'" trapped at the boltom or a 300-foot cull near Malibu Lake since Friday niaht. He was listed In serrous condlUoti in a Panorama Cit)' hospital. ..i I B'IB'RVBJOTCHEIL Of-DlllYl"l""Sl•lf One house overloold111 a 1olf ~ourae i• oii the market for '330,000. Ancl'lewral bom.e. lnthe 1•m• ar~a IO'e priced ln the '200,000.plua range, realtora'COO-flrm. • them m~ thlUl lO:Ye•rs old. and. at Jeut one of them aUU under eonatruetloo. Hoiftel for $200,000-in Costa Mesa? , They aren't rererrtng to Bil Can)'OD. or bUcblront p-ro~y to Balboa. They're talking abOUt . flomea in ea.ta.Mesa -•o « ''Th~~ are mon, of th•m around than you think, 'says t"eal estate W'QlftaD Betty Berkshire, w,bo recently sold a new borne ln Mesa Verde for$195,000. And not all of Ule blah pqced hoaia:Jine-the-fatnray1 ot the Men Verde Country Club, the re-al' estate folks say. The home M..., Berkshire solft for Victor Bal•AJ'zlz a UWe more than a nfonth •Co ii two bloob .. from the golf course and doan't bawavtew. , Ben-AJtz accepted $195,000 ror the home. wb1ch he built hfmself, but clalmsbe cc)\lld have aold ltfor much more. .. It took 10 days to un it," the TIRE COLLECTOR NOT TOO TIRED TO OET RICH Cectl Heidelberger Sfta Among What Could Be Gold Mine Bac~yai-d Milli~ns U1ed Tire Collection Finally Pay1 Off . ANDOVER, Minn. (AP> -Cecil BeJdelberpr bu a back)'atd full of t1rts - between a million and U milllon of them. He. bun 't counted yet, · Heidelberger, who hU been Jn the used tire bualoesa for 30 ye an, HYI he'• always known that some day, somebody would want those tires . later this week to begin separating the tires ln· to flve grades, Heidelbereeraaid. The tire·sb.red.d.ina ma.chine, bulltJn..1920. ts being dismantled ancJ will be ahfpped to JdiQnelota on three railroad flatcars. .. lt'D take another month to reassemble the machine here, so it will probably be the last of July before we at~ shredding," Heidelberger sald. • AND NOW THAT mus of black rubber, "I knew what rubber meant in 1940," he j, Ml' ~9AQJ~ bJih...e<>'l"dor-'• t~ -.--.ifid ... t-t( ~~l>a(!f ~-BMW., • .,, ... ~ ~L--~ Ida -,.raam'1'61t,'"ft:iaf)h'de-~--ln~ ~ ~e iO a -~"¥OW&;.~-;:.:-:- r him a mllboftalJe. . • • could.recycle every used tire there ls." I An Oklahoma City man· haa ·offered · ' · Hei.delbereer salsl •ft!I' Bivens and his · I Heidelberger about 39 centa each ror the car crew cleaned u_p Oklahoma they were lookinl 1 Urea and up to $5 for the bi&eer ones, and will for a bleaier p~ of Ures to 1et •tarted on. I set up a huaie tire-shreddinl machine on Heidelber~er'a land to recycle the rubber. "AND I GUESS I've sot the bJggeit pUe of "We dispose of these tires for tuel," said tires in the United States now." ho said. And Teddy Jo Bivens, who runs a tlrt salvage bus1-the t1rel keep coming. nesa and claims to have cleaned up Tire dealers pay Heldelberaer to dump Oklahoma's us~ Urea singlehandedly. their used tires on hil land. and he &eta "Everybody's aot enern problems -the between three and four truckloads a day. whole count,cy. Tbere'a more fire Jn the tires Heidelberaer said hil wife and children - than coal. It help& the coal burn better." three of the 11 are still at home _._ are taldq A Tl&E.SORTING crew from Oklahoma City arrived SWlday and Blvena wu expected the busi.Dea success 1D stride. • "We're all still worldna. We hnen't stopped dolnt the dilhea or raltln• the yard." • Mesa Market Robbed Delly 1"1114 St.lllf llMW'ff VICTOR IE~AZIZ STANDS OUTSIDE $195,000 HOME t Hl•_Two-atory Coate MMa Home Sold In Just 10 Daya \ ,f I . ,I . . DAIL V "LOT -BoStgg"""""_ Relea.sed, One Held Ex-CM Head • WHITE PIGEON, Mich. (AP) -P'o1'mft" General · Motol'1 Corp. president Edward Cole wu kllltd ln l piano cruh near her•~ day, 1Uite policeaatd. DOWNEY <AP> -A lOIM ba- d it demandina • 1etaway helicopter, a ritle and ammunl· tlon releued on of two Baaak ol America esecuUv• held~ today. • , ' Bank manaaer Marshall Altaoa walked out of the Bank a'boctly after noon telllnt bow tbe bandit. armed with a plltol, eur· prbed htm and hla optratlou m•J1•1er, Rlchard Torrt1, uound:• -.m. before th• baDlt wu aebed\11«1 to~· Tome te-malAed a bOlltqt. Downey. Polle. Ca~ Jlm Shea tentaUvely ldentlfted t.be b&ndlt · u Albert Powms, • 22-JNr-old Downey maat whole motlier COO• "tactefl• l>aDk oltlciall Jut eet worr1b11· that be mllbt try to withdraw 'her money and nm away from bome. rowen' lister, Unda G~~r • said bet' brother obtalnocl a~ Suaday night. · POlttive identl.fkallon ot the baodlt waa not immediately poetlble, however, becau.ae be w°"' a stocldna muk, -A1N9n · satd. She• .said that when be wu told tta.t Mrs. Powera wu on the ·scene, d'8 man repU,c!: 4 '1f,1he comH up here l'Jl blow bet aw.ay." Memorial Set . For Harbor Resident Memorial 1ervic~1 were held · today in NeWJ>(>rt Beach ror Mn. Pauline Baakln, 49, a Jon&Ume Harbor Area tesldent , and real estate womart wbo dled Satur· day. . Mr1. Baskin came to Newport Beach 20 years a10 with her husband and entered the real estate buslneu with Vogel Realtors of Corona del Mar. She later was employed with Cole of Newport Realtors. P.rior to her busineaa career Mrs. Baskin was a singer and dancer for Me tro·Goldwyn- Mayer Inc., appearing in films during the 1950s. She was active in numerous charity drives, rai1ing funds for peraons atnlcted with CJncer, mu1cular dystrophy and heart ailments. Mn. Baskin Is survived by her husband of 33 years, Cot. WUUam Basktn of Newport Beach; son, Timothy Baskin of Lake Forest; daughter , Penelope Baskin of Newport Be ach; brother, • 1 ~~d. Att:Q'ea Of ~ Beach; mother. ifazel Th6mu f>r COata Mesa~ slaters, Juanlce Reed of Morris, Ala., and Betty Capurao of San JO$e, and three grandchildren. TONIO RT COSTA MESA CITY COUNCIL -Re1ular meeUn1. City Hall. 6:30p..i.m· OC(.; LECTURE -"CoQYefll• hon with Ma1ter l11rinen," FlneArtall9, T:aop.m . TUESDAY. •AY I SENIOR CITIZENS CLUB - Community Recreation Center,· Tuea., Wed., Thun.12·3p.m. "BEHIND THE HEAJ;>LINES" -Dr. GU• T. Brown lecturer, OCC l'onam, 7:30p.m. OCC LECTURE -.. Cycle and Sphere of Womanhood,"· Women'1Centlr, 7:10p.fD. '!EQUUS" -South CoHt Repertory ThHttr, Tue1da)'· Sunday throu1h June 11, IP• m. Of'ANOI COMT c TOll!f's DoU.ie Tony Alcala, 6, a kindereartner at Sonora School in Costa Mesa, plays football with his look alike partner. Tony and other students of teacher Marcia Lisle made cut out figures of them.selves as a class project to see how th'y see themselve$. ·RossmiJor Lottery &ts Sales Record BY TOM BAaLEY '1:11.,..,.., .,.......,. . A btd that tops a recent $303.t million offer !OJ' the Irvine Com- pany wu submitted to the James Irvine Foundation today by the MobU OorporaUon. Mobil u;ecutlve Robert Scbletler, aeneral manaier of t.he c~aUon's real estate and devetopre~t division, comment-~from IWI New York office that the offer was aubmiUed In Calllonlia three hours be/ore the noon dedine alveia Mobil last week expired. "I cannot ethically comment on the llDOWlt of our bid until the Foundation directors have had a chance to examine it, .. Schiesler said. "But I can uaure you that it exceed• the otter made by the Taubman gro&p." Tbe MW bld could mean that Mobil is aaatn ,.the favortt. in what bu been a bitter blddlnt battle with an E11t Coast ·con· sorti~ he•ded by Detroit de- veloper ~red Taubnaan, Wall Street financier Charles Allen and auto billionaire Henry Ford II . • • But tf the orfer:-ta acceptable to Foundation dlrectora, who are expected to meet later today to discuss th'e ne,. bid, it mqat then be fUed ln Oranae County Superior Court for 1crutlny by JudaeJama F. Judie. Judtf Judge will have the Jut word en whethtt the Irvine Com· pany is to be aold to the hl1helt bidder. A court detef'J'l\fnatlon became neceaury two ~ears •Co when Irvine heiresa Joan Irvine Smitb filed a lawtstlt and halted what would have been the $200. mm~ sale of the tr.du Com~y to ~obil 1:41• ~ artued that the sale wa$ "4fA°l1' to m lnorttf stoc.flfldtra in f.he Irvine Com· oaav Bad tSk1 POf reoresent the 6,-ota Page AJ ralr manet value or tho com· pany founded by her srandf ather. Mn. SDilth OWlll 22.4 percent of tbe a~ .and the Foundation ho Ida a eon_ffolllq 5'.5 percent Of the Irvine Comp&IU' holdinp. Mn. Srnlth ta knowp to favar · the Taubman-Allen·ln'lne bld for the company since •he bu been auured by the combine that aho will be allowed to retain bet directonblp 1n the uew corp«•· tion. Colo, 61, wu oo a IUtht from Pontiac to Kalamazoo wb bit twin· en1lne planecruhed into a field ln Mendon Towmhlp near the Kalamuoo Airport, poUce ta.Id. Cole often /Uoted hi• own piano an wu alone 'When be crashed nose ·down Into th• freshly .. plowed tleld, state poµ~ said. A heavy rain wu fall· tn1. . . ... ... NEW YO~K (AP) -One .. couultltheretor~ ... thousand days ~ hta MslCDa· a.. I tton, &lcbard M. Nfxon, 'RID• lid~~~· .. to• eqtby Wateriate ud tecret ta.,_ _.6 aoeount 6f ·\fte 1te_.r11 ae 1*lra before the .Amerlen ·public NlJ" -.wertd 'J'roat'• ques, a1~ f« a nvlval of ,_twd1711 (IGns, ~ the form,r pre.1.:- acanctala. . deot.N~' hll lmmtidlate ac TtaQe.rlpt:a of qnnubUshed' 11001· after dio bur&Jary June 11,. tapa, •howSN 'NfxOll'S lnvol.v.t· lflZ.at.the Wateriate-olftea-oto- ment tn the acand-1 and 1n huah Ole. .DolnocraUc PW were "de• moaey ,pa1menta earlier tban :~:,~;. ~ctt':ntr.>' b~ ~v:,_,':t:' wH Jmowa b'efore, bt01aom.ed __ ,.. s u.n.d a "I in t w.4 · I•• d In 1 . the •c~al for poUUcal reuona. t new1paperJ and two weekly "Wp weren't .aotn• to alloWl- new1 mqutn.-. peopl+ ln ""e While Houte, peopl~ The new aeeountl added Onl1 • In tbe re-eleetton commlftee a 1matl pebbles to th• Water1ate the-hl*1Mrst levels who were noes rocksUde that forced.Nixon'• re-Jqvolved to be '5mtared by th~ 1l101Uon ln Aucuat 1974. But wholethtnr," Nixon is quoted. they terVed to focu interest 1n hi• ~ televlllon lntefvlew on the IUbfeot slnce then. The jnteMdew,. P'1d for and conduct•d b~ televltion per1onaltty David Frost. alra Wednesday over 145 stations. Nixon reportedly received S600,000 plua a shar~ of the proflta Lor his participation. Ttme concedtt "aom• brief .ervclal momef\ll of thla tal>lnl have b11en hpt ln 1tricte1t... secrecy by Frost" Indeed, one question surely asked -why Nt~on dldn 't d estroy those damaging tapes -ts mentioned nowhere in the magazine's ac- count. 1Roumodr Leisure World of· tery was the last for .Leisure ficiaU today are claiming World. He said a ·•new, more .REWARD they've made an all·llme, · dl1nlfled'' system for sales wlV • • • The same tape transcripts that surraced •n The New Yori( Times. the Washington Post, Time and Newsweek magazines were used by Frost when the in- terviews were taped last month 1n California. Nixon expressed su!"p,rise that Frost had them. TM 1n~lew. first of four to be 4lred.bl succeeding weeks, la. sure to regenera t e some Watergate passions. Newsweek, which also devoted this week's cover story to Nixon· 1',rost -but apparently not with the same ac-,, 1 ceas to the taping sessions as Time -announced former Watergate prosecutor Leon · one· day, world record for lot· be used when additional homes teriea. are available In the private re· Mo1'e than 1,200 potential lirementcommunlty. homeowners participated Satur· All new homes in the communi· day in a rune·hour lottery in ty have now been sold, according which 240 homee, priced from lo a spokearoan for the company. $73,400 to $134,900, were ava1la-A 58-a~e tract west of the ex- ble. isllne comP"unity Is now bein& Bv 8 p.m .• 222 r••idences had planned. The developer hopes to , ~ build from 543 to 629 homes on bee~ sold for more than S21 this land. the only vacant area Witnesses said they could not d escribe the driver or the automobile. which s ped north· bound on the Newport Freeway following the shootlne. · M eixsell told police· he could think or no motive for the shoot· ing. which left him with severe spinal injuries. · It haan 't been published ) et? • Nixon a,sked when Frost quoted from one t:.ped convena- tion. "'io " Froet re lies. "I thlnk It's avalli1ile to anyl>oay wno * * * J awocski has agreed to wrlte a "factual" response" in next. weel< •s Issue. * * * m~lhon. The average selling left in Leisure World. -pnce waa $96,314. The homes are The homes sold over the Watergate P"fea expected to be r::::._ •for oc: weekend :,t.e !~~l!t-J:l!.!!!!-d t -:·· -.-.-~ . : • .e, . · ~:;: ~~D, senfo_r rcfi ~~mu~ty '·s-newgolf_J)-.~ --~~,.. p·lp.. e• ii 1~ "~eJ·ec e"'' . president, satd Saturday s lot· course: .1. 1 J...l. ~ J2!j .I\.~ '-1,. . * * * * * * .• ' From Page AJ WASHINGTON (AP ) -The ortumingdownlherequest. th~courtonthethreedefendants' U.S. Supreme Court today turned The attorneys bad not spelled motlona for court review of their HOMES IN MESA down a request by convicted out what arguments they In· convictions. · • • • Watergate cover·up defendants tendedtomakeabouttheneware· Burger and other juaUcea have compute.rizecfr.ani:e. and a water faucet that provides lnatant boil· in1water. b th t n l A to argue that a news report about port. refused to comment on the re-w~ngr~~hHdr~n. rep aces an ... 8 the court requires the justices lo The report aired by National oort's accuracy, but The New Mrs. Berkahlre aald ah• Is 1bowtngal4--year-oldhomeonthe golf coune, for whicb ownera O~e and Mary Slnger are uk-ln& mo,ooo. Th• Sln1er1 bou1ht the 2,900- aquaN!(oot home 11 years aeo for .,,000. Mary Singer saJd ahe lhlnka the value of the home bas riHo dramatically because theN ar-e nomorevacantlotaonthe coune. "We railed our four kids here when there weren't any other houses around," ahe aaid. "It was "There's been a lot ofinterestln It, and It will be another month before it'• even completed," Mrs. Berkshire 11id. She said brqkera are cbecklnt the noor plana for buyers looking In that price range, addln1 that some neighbors are concerned the $212,000 fl1Ure will mean an increue ln their taxes. ··I don't think they realize what their own homes are worth now," 1be laushed. Hite living ln 1 park with the 1olf Real eatate woman Jackie c:ouneoutthebackdooT." Handleman would not reveal the Do the Slnlen think they 'II get name or the owner of a Meaa thetr uklnl price for tbe fou~'-VerdehomeUltedfor$330,000. bedroom home? 'W "Su.re," Geor1e Singer said. "He's a builder and want.I to ..lt'tworthlt." keep hla privacy ln this matter," Another Mesa Verde home l o· she said. But she said the four· inl for '212,-000 tan't finished yet. year·old home includes a marble but Mn. Berkshire 1ay1 lt •houtd entry, rour bedroom•. 1olf course aeJl fut. "Jt will be one of the INt view and 4,300 square feet of cu1tom built hom.ea in the area," 1p1ce. ah• oblerved. • , The builder pll.M to otter the . Mn. Betlrahlrea•ldtheS330,000 homtfWlydeeorated.ltwlllbave f.NC ta1 doeln't 1urprtH her. reverse the convictions. Public Radio two weeks ago said York Thnd .and NBC Ne\\'.Lbave Without comment, the court re· the court votect·once to deny the aald they confirmed the report fused to let lawyers for former appeals of all three oftlcia.la of with oth~SO\ll'Ces. Atty. Gen. John 'M itchell and ex· former President Nixon'• ad· tr the juatlcee eventually do Whlte House aldea H.R. mlnlatratroft. · turn down tho appeals, Mitche,1¥ H a 1 de m an and J oh n D . The report said the vote had and Haldeman probably would EhrUchman file a sul>plemental been 5.3 to· turn down the be imprisoned .oon thereafter. memorandum outlining the Im· Watergate cover-up appeal• but They have remained free pend- pact on their clients of a rare that Chief Justice Warren E . ing appealalncethelrconvlctlons news leak about the justices' Burger was delaying any an-in 1975. secret dlscu.saiona of the cue. nouncemqt ot tb4t vote in hopes .Et}rlldlman, Uke the other two The denial was not accom· or obtalninl at teat on' other Ntxcus aidea 1entenced to 30 panied by an explanation or by vote to Mview the cue. Jn IUCh ml>nt.hs to dlbt years ln' prison. any recorded dissent.a. It said appeala. the votes otrour JusUces chQse to be&rn 1ervin1 tlmv lut that JUltlce William H. Rehn· are needed to irant review. • OctDber whll• appe1lin1 hla con• qulst took no part lb conaldertn1 Thert wu no word today from vlctlon. DAILY PILOT four bedrooN, a formal dlAlni 'But thlt'• the hi&hett aellblC . room, muter bedroom with a price I've heard of ln Costa Mesa jacu.ul batb and sauna Jn the yet... · ' CCll•JA fllM'> f,, 'I •!•·"""' ,,.,i PAIN1 ,,.,., ,,... 11' •1 ,, ., Ou' '' t l ., .. , dmpjg 1Jte In preparation for an expected 800 cam pen. "W•" bad about 100 to 200 hookUPI lmtalled by the end of ~weekend," 11Jd fair &eneral maaaser K Pulk. · Oraoge COunty Pair Board cUreeton found out about the Dls· neyland tamuy rallY Oill1 two weekl aao. Fulk aplabaed, when they received brochur• deserib---rslflu · J,~cores 3rd For_ Survival LOS ANGELES <AP) - Milwaukee resld~ts scored the hi1best in the televised National Dlsuter Survival Test amoni participants in four cities Sun- day. WurtSays 'For Sale' Sign Legal WASIUNGTON (AP) -Com· munlties may not prohibit dis· play of "for sale" signs on private property, a unanimous U.S. Supreme Court ruled today. The court said that such a ban violates the free-speech protec- tions provided in the First Amendment. · The decision struck down a ruJ. ing by the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in favor of a no-sign , ~aired in Nortlaaeood o.1i, ,.. .. S4aft,..... ordinance in the township of Will - ingboro, N.J . Orange trees in Northwood, the newest village to be de. veloped in Irvine, are looking mighty bare these days. .. Some trees have a lready been hauled a'Way and bulldozers are already grading. But others still stand- ing, such as the ones above, are stark reminders of the former groves. With branches and fruit stripped away, these trunks and limbs will be sold for firewood when the sites are cleared. Linmark Associates, Inc., a Oamden-based company which owns property in the township that borders Ft. l>ix, N.J ., flled suit challenging the ordinance. The company claimed the sign ban violated Its free·speech rights and deprived it of property riehts without due process. The court's decision, written by Justice ThurgOod Marshall, ,. said the ordinance Impairs "the flow of truthful and legitimate Diggers' Collnty commercial information," and __ _ therefore Ls unconstitutional. Township officials denied that ,, ., the purpose ol the ordinance was Audiences ID four: citles COID· peted In the 1urvfval test broad· cast by'NBC. The J>!Oftam wu produced by' Warren V. Bush with ~aid of the NaUonal Saf• ty Council. Mpcb of it was filmed in Huntineton Beach. The MUwaukee audience finisbed with a score of 74. New York •as second with 67, Los Angeles dlitd with tl8 and New Orleans fourth with 59. The parUclpents ln the four cities lated their judgmen.t1 know~. 41ertness, stress ~ le~dershlp iri survlvine sµcb dis-asters as rae, earthquakes and floods. Vl~ers at home were also able to participate, marking their answers and keeping score on te.t forms printed la newspapers and mqazlnes. Participants bad to 1ubtract from their test scores If they did not bold home fire drills, keep flashlights at bedside, post fire department numbers or Jmow first aid. Prior to this speciat scoring the Milwaukee audience had a score of 76. Los Angeles bad 71, New York had 70 and New Orleans bad 63. The highest individual score was 91, posted by a 35-year- old man in Los Angeles who bad had some fll11t aid training. Men scored an average of n . Persons with a college education scored an average of 74. High School graduates averaged 71 and those with a grade school education averaged 69. Persons with first aid training scored eight points better than thc»e without. By age, persons from 30 to so years old did best, w1th 11n average score of 74. Those 18 to 30 averaged 73, under 18 averaged 70, and Ptirsona over SO trailed with 81. Coffee c ... tort Ag W Call to keep out nop·white families. ency ants They said that', due to the com- . munity's closeness to the The high price of coffee throughout the world seems to mean little to Misae Kawai. 21.year-old Tokyo offree worker. all but buried in a 12-ton "bath" of coffee powder. The bath house owner says this newest luxury is good for people who are overweight or who suffer from stomach disorders, neuralgia or rheumatism. Tbe powder is heated to more than 100 degrees and changed every Uiree to six months. A "bath" costs $5. .· ~~-~-~~-------~-~~~~~----. military baie, Willingboro had a If you 'rl' planning lo dig in the tton about locations of costly history of a transient population. C'D-r £';...an :round somev. here m Orange lines. Community officials said the LM::, ..,.,~ ~ount~ and want to avoid damag-,.,,,. 1J..JJUU•~{q},t5._j~~.Jro~!!~ ~ '}' -·~r_or sale" and f;;;:~:.11~· ~· ~~_,~,.;~~-........ MIQT~ililll~.,...~-· -• -1-::!:::;;;;-,--....~;, "'1D-d-'r~ ....... tr.:=::-~...,...~ ~r~·ir.t.'DC) w have joined the aervice. presslUll tnlll many ~1'were -:i F'".rtJllSJfr' 1e.u Crom you. . -leaving the community, resulting .. ,\ \foclcrground Service Alert of Officer !~ager I:-arry Kizer in a "fear psychology" among BENTO~ HA.RBOll. >oulhNn Calirprnla, head-said excav&Uoo proJects cal~ed many homeowners aboutpl'()l>er-Mich. <AP) -A young • • 1uartl'red in Garden Grove, pro-into the center affected agencies ty values. man bas been.sentenced to GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. <AP> and an exeeuttve for a t.ruclc re· 11d~s a one· call notification are contacted. And they, in turn, "In invalidatinJ this law, we 60 days in Jail and ordered -A mii1ister bas resigned after pail' firm. ·ei\ter that offers contractors. advise the excavator of the loca-by 11<> means leave WUUneboro to tum in bis Citizens Band beme chareed with soliciting fM The charge of soliciting is a :overnment agencies and do·it· lion of their facilities under· defenselesa in Its effort to pro-radio set for two years proatitutlon. His congregation. is mt.demeanor carrying a max- ·oarself homeowners lnforma· ground. mote inteerated housing," because of threats broad-inanuproar. lmum&O-dayjatltermanda$100 Maraball'soplnionaaJd. castoverthealrwavea. The Rev. Robert But, 41,.was fine. He said the township could give James A. Cantrell, 19, of arrested by two policewomen Mr. Bast's deeis~ to quit trig· w i de 1 pre ad p u b 11 city -Benton Township pleaded posing as prostltQtes. His ar-gered an outcry among the ooa- "throup 'not for 11le' signs and no contest in Berrien Dls· ralgnment was delayed tanUl areg•tion at the conservative other methods" -to the number lrict Court to a charge of Tuesday at b1a attorney's re-Garfield Park Reform Cbureb. of whites remaining in Will-simple aa1ault stemming quest. ..He bas never done anything 1n1boro. from the incident. Mr. Bast's Sunday school class like this in 'the put." said Har· M .... ball aald town1bJp of c ..... trell w'"• ordered to held a special prayer meeting for rison Viucher. a cburcb elder. ficlala could try to create induc.: sur::nder his CB radio as a him Friday night. and several "Apparently, he was Jl&G-eaa- meoll to keep families there who condition of being. placed dozen letters of support were sent vening with this woman ud was were eomldering selling their ob probation for two years. to his home, friends said. just led down the primrose homes. He also was ordered not to Tbe miniater was one of 22 path," be added. "It does -not The court'• decision said that use a CB radio durin1 bis persons &l'l'ested on soliciting take too much lmaelnatloo by asa the ordinance restricted a probationary period. charges on Division Street. The honest person to realiUt that method' of communication that others ~luded an assistant1lllh that's not too difficult to bap- w a1 le11 co1tly and mor6 ,..-------------•-c_h_oo_l~p_rlnc_l.;;.p_al_.,_a_sch,oo __ l teacbet_..._,_ _ _;pe_n_.'_' ----------autonomous than other methods, 1uch u new1paper advertise· menll or liltinas with realtors. The court'• vote· was 8·0. Jottice William ff. Rehnquist took no part in conaiderin& or de- cld1D1 the cue. MIAMI <AP>-''1 really1oved ber, lhe'1 the only woman I ever really loved,'' ex·convict James N. Kron •aid today when he aur· rendered in Mlaml to face • cbarge of killing hb clrlfrleQd in LOI Ancelet. K~·43, of Panorama Qty, walltid into the oltli:e Of the Mlfml News before dawn and an- DOaDeed be wu wanted for the ,_uider ot Francae DvorldD, 29. Jted~ bUt cum, Kroo Cle- llled he'd kllkd Mn. Dvorkin, UI• wife ol a well·~o boutique os--. He Hid be'd found ber in bit a,artmeot with her throat cut. a Week aco, and that be Oecl a(rou the country. classic welking shoe l1j 11111 of newengland * son broWn grain upper with P,lan- te.tiori cr.e.~ end leatha tip for lon~rweer ·. -' .. BLACK GOLD Talk to oilmen thele cla>'• about Uae1r wUdcat nplOrallon eftortt and YOU can saa· Just oae word tnto the eoavmatlon that wW make them vtalbl)' CJ'lap. Aa they 191ak ot PC>UlbWUNol sU1ktq oU "It a parUcUlar Joca. tiOfl, )'OU mJiJit uk,."Dou tbat mean r,o-. txpeet to hit a ausbv?: That word IUlber wtll do it evwrytlme. After hll hand.I atop abak1n1 and he recovers h1I aplomb, the oUmu ta llkely to caretlally n· plaln to )'OU that 1uah1rs are ob-sotet.. When they •trike oU, they don't allow it to cuah anymore. That only bappem In old movi" 1tar- rin1 Clark Gable and Spencer Tracy ... ·.. · YOU ARE THEN likely to eet Lecture l·A on the oU tnduatry'1 effortl to prevent 1uabtr1 and atop ao-called blowoutl In drilling operatlom. Oilmen are aena1t1ve to talk ol gushers or blowout.I in our area becauae in the preaent fuel crtals, they would Uke the opportunity to accelerate exploration and drtll- ina off bb beat of all poulble couta. · Cleanup Continues STAVANGER, Norway (AP) -The Norwe&lan covvumll.lt sent more cleamap •hlPI out to the Elrofi•k Bravo oll 1pll11n the North Sea today 81 the effort CQD• tlnued to prevent damaae to macUnl apawnla1 to tbe aru later tb1I month. De1plte demand• from ea. Ylron.anentalllta U..t the Ekotlak fleld 110 mllH .outbwut of Norwl)' be cloMd, EAVironmtDt MinllterOroHarltm BrundUand 11ld upertl believe tbe .Uck from the elpWI)' blowout Will diaappear ln •few claYa. UJN ova BAD luck, we've had Sood luck.'' U. aa.ld, .Uudinc to the relative Uibt weight of the oll, which ii evaporat.tq and d.11- perslnJ, and weather eondlt.lona that have kept u,. 4llck clrcll.Ds the area of the oU field. The ~erta bellev~ the ecolo,Scirdama1e wlllbe uumJt. ed •• and the blowout that 1pllltd an eaUmated 8.8 mllllon 1Jllonl of oil into the North Sea bilore lt waa capped Saturday wu "not the diluter we were envt111ln1 a week qo," Mra. BrundUand •atld. But ahe 1tres1ed the aovern. nient wu determined to mop up all the oO it could, a plecl1e already slven. by PbUllpa Petroleum, operator of the field. MECHANICAL RECOVERY • .. Man and 8t1per•an The infant Superman, before being rocketed to Earth from the doomed planet Krypton, shares 1t moment with his 1cienti.st papa, Jor·El. The 7·month-old child who will grow up to be mild·mannered Clark Kent ts really Lee Quieley. Jor·El 11 Marlon Brando, filming the movie "Superman•' in London. SEABROOK, N.H. (lfP) -An •tlmated l,IOO d•tnodatr•tcn ..... held ln Jalll and armoBW In New Hampehlre'a 1eaeo1Jt artJa tode.y after being arrested for l't!fulln1 to end a peactf\11 .U·lo at tbe Seabrook nuclear PO\f•t plantalte. There waa no violence duriftS the arrtltl on tHlpaulDa cb...,.. It took authorttlea at leut 1' hoUn • to clear the alt·in alt• of de-two wanhoUlu are locat*5. mon1trataq. But by SUnday aftemooa. Col. ARRAIGNMENTS contlnuecl ~aul Doyon, bead of the atate into the late momtq with up to ~let, Hid the pl'OUI~ had.a four Judges proce11lna tbe ~ tatr amount of Ume to de- re1t.11. Court authorttlea Nld they moutrate and tbe deo~~lon to.,.. would try to bold bearin&1 tor rnt t!Mm wu made ~ put Ill those arrested u aoon u tbey end tothtlew bnaJdni •. could be arr&n1ed. UDder a court lnJuacUOD lllued More than ~ eonatruoUOo 10 monthl qo aDd r9deftMd lllt work en relUrneCf to WOl'li at tbe WMlr, tht demopat:ratorl were S2 billion project today art..r tbe • bject to unit at DY Ume on sitewucleuedofproterttrt. aQ1"1t ot tbe,'fOO.UN Public Gov. Metddln Tbomeon ~ l•"''lo• Compu1 property .. lo the lite at 7 a.m. and dll· HO'ffftl', to avoid• Violent eoG· gratulated tho moto than aoo fro.tataon. pollff alJOwed tbe d• state troopers ataUoned at the ~ to•s ~on site durifta thlt weekend. .,. Ult pl'Open¥ • u tbey dkt Offtctall used armOrftt u jalla not arou iDtO tbe .-ctid-ott a after moat of thoae ar.ruted aero. declined to post ball, wbloh POUCS 1.JaGZD TllB dem- rao1ed trom *100to t:IOO. on1t.reton to Jeiv• tbelr THOMSON WBO TOOK eaai&-.l .. JINt to tbe feneed·tn trol ot tho ~ice opentton. l:l ..,. .. , but the warntnp wore ,. aald lnitlal[y there would be no Jtcted. arreata unleaJ the demon1tratol'I At 1:85 p.m. Sundar the police, breached 8 •O·acre follced·•-dreeaed In tt0rma uaUorm1 • "" rather thin riot sear, moved into compound where ~utpment ~ tb• peaceful CfOWd of about a.ooo Gunshots Alert Police· protHtera and 1lowl1 and methodlcally be•an maluq ar. ftltl. ,. . They will speak eameaUy and Ions about the tpdu1try11 elaborate blowout prevention techniques. ls poulble in an area of lesa than • two square miles, she reported1 because that 11 the only part or the slick that I.a thick enouah. Over a much lar1er area of scat·· tered allcks, about 35 by 20 miles. the oil filma were only a fraction Some of the proterten, many weartna backpaeka contalnina bed l'Qlia and eamplns equlp- 3 Held in Attempt to Rob Suspected 'Houae' :~nr~::!sU:t.:::~=.tec1 Trovatore•• at tbe Cleveland AEVBB,\L aEPOaTEBS 011 people COJUider the 1ate oil spill up Santa Barbara way u bein1 a freak occurrence. Addi· tionally, they 1u1geat that blowout prevention tecJ1nJques have advanced vaaUy since the Santa Barbara spill. of an inch thick. Two U.S. Coast Guard expertl estimated moat of the 1pU1 would be cleaned up or dispersed by wave acUon within the next few days. WASHINGTON <AP> -Three men intent on robbin1 a suspect- ed house or pro1litution inad- vertently tipped off an officer with 1unflre designed to in· ttmldate would·be vlctlm11, then were taken into custody today. IN SHORT Sympboll)'Center. rested. Doyon bad aald earlier ( J and Photosraphers alto were ar· that no Joum.u.ta would be ex-2 Gamp• E•e.,,. em))t from the treapau except The last thJnJ in the world oilmen needed now wu any kind of a blowout of significant pro· portions anywhere in the world. PhlWpa hu 24 abip1 Jn the area skimmmg, collecUnc th• oil in booms !or ptimplnl back into the Ekoft1k etoraae .tanks or &Ivins lo&iltlc aid to the cleanup. The three, who shared a shotguo and a rlfle, were arrest· ed after barrtcadln1 themselves inside the building, Wublneton poltce offlclala aaid. Tbey were not ldentilled. Auditorium Commluloner Frank' Duman said Sunday that the elevator was scheduled to be taken out of 1ervlce and replaced after the opera company's Salur· day night performance of "II Alu, they sot one. PoUcfaaidmanywomeninthe T •a1 S l THt NAME BRAVO 14 will PRODUCTION FROM the buildlna, aome wearing only n e now probably make them cringe field resumed Saturday nltht -scanty clothine. fled throu1h just 81 badly 88 the word after being shut down because of open window• at the sound of the In Double "gusher" does. the threat of fire. But environ· early morning gunfire. In event that you are Uh· mental and filhina 1roup1 called 11.U• Aide Fo-d familiar with the namo, Bravo 14 for a temporary bait to produc· Murders Uon -and exploration of Norway w•~ is an oil well located In the until Improved safety meaures ~.ruNGTON <AP> -Doc· Ekoflak fleld In the North Sea. It are taken and more and better tora have made a major step CHICAGO <A p) _ blew It. top on April 22. toward reducln1 the destruction For the next eight days Bravo cleanup equipment. la on hand. of bone marrow a primary aide Police 18Y Miguel Valdes hed ·1 h rtb' Se ff c h • l 1 told them he decapitated 14 gWJ 01 into t e No a. These crttJcs charsed that the e ect o c em ~a cancer Alicia Aiaaao because It dumped an estlmate.d . 8.8 blowout proved the government therapy, by removina. marrow hi• father told him never million gaJJons or crude od into was not enforcing it.I safety at.an. before tre~tment, freezmi it and to reneae on a promiae the ocean, creating a slick that dard.a. later puWnt it back, it was re-and he mailed her toes covered about 170 aqua re mllea. ported Jodi¥· d th Id II Paul "Red"~ arul.hls er~• -N attonal k~ Jn,JJltu~ aroun e wor to ca '~ • -~ '.I c:::: ~ c.r;.. ... --. ---~~ _, -.... - --~lltb --L. ...u..~ .~~~-~tntt EVANSTON, Ill. <AP) -Eric Marx of Illinois State and Carol Challis ·or Minnesota have won a competition billed by its sponsors as the first Intercollealate Frisbee Champio~hip1. for two news service report.en. The arreatl came aa a •W'PriH to lbany demonstrators, who earlier tn the day were debatin1 whether to block the entrance to the enclosed compound, forcing a direct confrontation. . . -.. , ·· .. ~ wererushed tote :cene .. oi t~j-.... ~.-~,. ... -10;~larger,rnor!;r:tlve ()~l~ao\!ifaystem .. runaway well. Four Um" they . chemical doses, redufea side ef· Valdes, 38, goes on ~~:::::::::::_-:_-~.:_-_:_-__ """':""'-------------., tried to cap the blowout. Four C''-aver p:nd recta and appears to Increase trial today for the limestheyfallcd. le ~ chancesoflona·termsurvlval. murders o f Mi ss The fifth try prov~~ to be the . l.Aletrlle Olca...,d Agaaaoy, as, end Dr. charm and Red Adair 11crew1ot VANCOUVEl\, B.C. <AP> ..... Jesus Lim, 40. He sur- Bravo 141hut down. Former Black Panther party lNDtANAPOLlS CAP) -The rendered to authorities The unanawered question re· leader Eldrldae Cteuver w111 Indiana Legislature haa voted last month and Mdmltted mains u to why, abruptly. Bravo smacked in the r~ce b1 1t ple overwhelmln1ly to override ~v. shooting Lim, then led 14 got out oC control and began thrown u he wa11 addre11in1 a OUa R. Bowen'• veto or• blli th1lt officers to M ls s blowtnt oil. There ia aome tal'k d rellaioua froup here wo"ld le1alize the u1e of Laetrile Agasaoy's d11membered human error. There ta a report Cleaver. former Information a1 a cancer treatment and body in the back of hia that a blowout prevention device minister for the Black Pant.hen, legalize the minufacture, 1ale record shop police re· got bOltod to the well upside was dl1cusalnc his tonver1lon to and UH of the artificial ported. ' down. Chrllti1nity when he was hit by sweetener, ucchartn. You can ootlctpale the 'n· the pte Saturday ni1ht. When the bill takes effect June vest11allon wtll continue for Frank Lee, 25, Vancouver, 11Jd 1, It would make Indiana the Cirst some time. he threw the ple becauH he 1tate ln tM country to le&allze "HE SAID he told her that he would cut oft her head if she didn't stop 1eeina Lim," homicide Sgt. John Serafini said "He said hi1 c,ther had tauaht him to never re· nege on a ..aroml1e. So when she k~pt 1eelna Lim, Valdes saJd, he was just k;ep1n1 hla promlae to her. MEANWlllLE, U.S. Coaat Guard U . Cdr. Frank Bqenma, who wu called to th• 1cene to tn- spect the oil .-Uet. declared, "I don't conaider It poae1 altnlficant ccolo1tcat probll'ms '' Mny~not But 8.8 million gallons of crude oil noating an the ocean certainly sounds slgnlllcant, somehow believes Cleaver hu betrayed the manulacture, o. well a• use, the radical movement which he of Laetrile. h•ls>ed spearhead in the 1980s. Ho Deeaier 'Jfarlled' aatd lhe cream pie waa black on the outside and whJte on the ln· side "That's ju.t like Etdrldse Cleaver and h.1s partJcipation In the white man's ... shell game.·· he said. Cleaver was UD· av ail able for comment. CLEVELAND (AP) -The back1t.a&• elevator that clOHd on th• cape of Metropolitan Opera chorus singer Betty Stone, drag· &Ing her to her death, bad been scheduled to be pulled out or service the nighl ol lhe accident. Ram Douses Colorado "He told Ut hu then went home to his wife and children for the nl1ht, and came back the next day and decapitated her and cut oCt the toea of her left foot,.. Seratlnl aald. "He told us he Jnalled her head to her brother in The Phlllp· pines and her toes to un· lveultlH around the world." Twisters Touch Dawn in Mi81i11ippi Mlflt Uw .-U. " n ,. .. ., " 1\ .SI 0 .. ~' .. . .. IA SJ 11 ,~ 14 ~ 14 .. 11 5' 71 u ,. " " ~ ·~ 60 01 llA Cll 01 n1 1t 10 41 n ,. s. 11 IO 02 ,, u .. 11 a ,. ,. " ., 5' " ,, IO \t lewtlltnl Clll"'91141 -INf wilt tit ~-•1.cloMYt'-"" T11ffCN11 Her head haa been w1111 • ''""' Cf\aiire .. •kah• .,_..,. found ID tho malls bound ""te,•ltelleflltlll t~e4Ut'e. flle NMIMtl WMl!i.r ... .;1c. ,.,. for th• Phillppin•. One "'' ll'tfl '" ...,,.._ '-" 11•1... too bu been received by ::':,.,~.!c..~"· "'"1 .. In tho British Alaoclatlon ''"""'"·~wnt .,. '" 111t -for the Advancement of .., ... .,_ 111<-' .. lllodll!ltfMI 1!!-i lnLond "'''i.,.. lft 1M .,. •• ...., ios 1n '_. enct on. _.,,."' ........... ti•"' ---111tt1e ....... rr-~ .... , l~~~-~-~ .. ) J Ii ................... __ ... __ " \l , ,.,..1 ......... Stdng T V Net.,o r la. : Benjamin Williams, former bartender who was shot twice during a holdup four years ago· in Sacramento, has flied suit against the three major networks and four local television stations to have a portion of their profits compensate crime victims. Williams contends thousands of persons are motivated to crimes of sex and violence by television viewing, stating his assailant was an avtd television ran. SAN DIEGO <AP) -Ti. Natlon.al Councll oza Alcoholism continued lta att.ck oa the atlccna of alcohoHllm, and two doml proJD.inent ex-drlokeq . -lncludla1 actor Rod Cecneron and former Democratic Ben. J)&D11l Brenter of M117lud - tpolle out to help. Council pn11deqt Tbomu J. SWatrord tersntl the weekend actloa part of a ••mue attack on the needleta, rnlndleu 1t11ma attached to alcoholiam." Allo comlnc out ot the clOlet to dlacuas tbelr malady were actora Pat.rick O'Neal, Richard Webb and MitcheU Ryan; former New York Giant.a quarterback Lee Grot1cup, author Bulan B. An· thony and John W. Stevens, chief of the Passama. quoddy tribe ud Milne'• commtaJoner of Indlaii affairs. Slllp .. •rd 11i.eu p,.. .. ,, LOS ANGELES (AP>-Med.lcal eJCpertl today were examinlnt 1blpboard cul1lne and otbv material which may have turned a luxury cna!M for many ot the S.S. Falnea'1 850 pauenpra into a week ol mltery. Puaen1er'1 atrtcken ( on the Falrsea'a Mexico S J cruise last week suffered la le an aa yet undet.rmlned -------~· illness which produced o abdominal cramps, diarrhea and vomiUn1. "J\lthough an .. umated 2SO Plllftllent were treated at the sh1p'1 slck bay -md another 2SO auf. fered 1ymptoms requlrint personal treatment - none of the victims were reported in danger of death, said John Bland, president of Sitmar Cruilea which operates the 1blp. c.1J1e tan Otlt ol Order SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -For u long as two weeks, tourlata will find lumbering city buses in place of San Francisco'• picturesque cable cars whlle '+'Orkera fix the cable machinery. A spokesman said the cable cars on the Powell· Hyde lln4J, which carrtes hundreds of tourist.a dallr. from downtown hotels to Fisherman's Whar , would be 11)M.it down while a cracked aheave ia re· paired. The work could take u long as two wuks. The spokesman said the 1heave, a pully·Uke de- vice throu1h which th• cable rurui, broke early Saturday morning . $2.2 Milli on L awsuit Fi led lily T o mlin to Explain Use of Star's Name f'roan AP Dllpatchea Comedienne Liiy Tom Un muat appear In court In New'York Wednesday to explain why she Is listing the name of former opera star Zlnka MUanov as un· derstudy for her hit one·woman Broadway 11how. Miss Mllanov. who starred for many years at the Metropolitan Opera, filed a '2.2 million damage suit in 1tate Supreme Court, 1ayin• the unauthori1ed use of her name caused her ''shock, hum1liat1on and em- St. John wu given a 35-year pin and a citation by Police Commissioner James Flak. St. John, a hom icide investi1ator for 28 years, earned his nickname after aolvlng a case in 19'73 ln· volvlng lhedlsmembercd eoi-pseo( a girl. The victim was identified after the body wu reassembled with much difficulty. • barraasment." Movie star Claud la Cardinale'• boyfriend. Geor1e Boyd, 11tnae manaaer for Miss Tomlin. director Pa1quale Squitieri. hu been convicted In said Miaf Milanov'a name waa rncluded in the Rome of pe>11esaine weapons 11- playblU alon1 with the numet of other well-known lee ally and usaultin1 two photo- pereonaorpersonaadm1red by Mla1Tomlln. ~raphera who attempted to • pboto1r1ph her w)llle she sun- The second wire of movie producer Rlc:hard balhedatherv11la onRome'1out· ?anuck,42, aued him for divorce. skirtJ. Linda Zaauck, 31, filed the petition in Los Squitieri. Miu Cardlnale'a Angeles. ask Ina that the court declare as community rompanJon for some years, was ~~wiu-Ju LhA~IM~ ..... _..~ , ' -~.,~1-.i.o.J..UL---: · """'Bl'!~Tfitt>lrr~~an°\il{olh~~~~~s ~no ·;m . '":""-· ~m"'tntft~tt'1'n •tet;e.st>1 in Zanuck Drown portray violeru:.e, said he thou1ht Prod~ons. L ). ~1101,.11ta the photo1raphet1 were . 'the Zanucks were PEOPLE bur1lara.,They tatlfltd that he rited at them and marrted In 1969 and have chaaedthemawayfromthevilla. two sons, Harrison, 6. anti ---------• Deao,4. • Wendy Vothlmara, facln1 a prison term for sse11ll'll 1lle al weapons and explosives, made her theatrical debut with o mime dance 1roup that specializes In polltlcahallre. Min Yoshimura . .i onl'llme fualllve companion or Palrtcla )leant, performed In a nott- dancY,g role bc·for<' .ibout 90 perton.t on Apttl 19 in the San Franci1co1uburb of San Bruno The tNXi~. known aa thl' A1ian D11nce Collective and .,. headed by Sadalko Nakamura of San ranc11co. la scheduled to perform Junl' -4 at a benefit for the Multicultural Arts Council of Red wood City. • Elvta Presley haa been put on the market by his long·tlme mana1er, col. Torn Parker, the Nuhvllle Banner reported. The Banner quoted sources close to Pfflley In Nashville, Memphl1 and Loa An1tele1 aa uylnf health and flnanclal problems ere promptin« Parker to end hll 22·year relatlonahlp with the "kln1 of rock and roll.·· Tho Banner uid heavy lot1es by Parker at the Laa Vega11 Hilton camblln, tables waa the im· mediate cau.e. Parker denied the reports. . -A one-eyed lnve1U1ator whoee exploits provided a ba1l1 for the televlalon aeriet ''Jigsaw John" has been honored by the Lot Ancel cs Pol Ice Com ml111lon ror meritorious service. Deacrlbcd oe a "le•cnd In hi• own Um1.'' .Jobn Seven members of the Hunt family ot TtXH oil ma1natea have been charged In a suit by the federal government with llleaal 1oyb .. n futurn tradlna on the Chicago Board ofTrade. The autt. flied by the Commodltlee Future• Tradlne ())mmlss1on In U.S. J>i1tr1ct Court In Chlca10. char1ed that the Hunts and Hunt l{oldln11 Inc .. of Dallas have been In violation of the Com· modltiea ExchanAc Act slnceJan. lT. Under the act. no one may hold aoybeana ruturea totallnc more than three million buahel1. CFTC Chairman Wllllam 8111&.y aald the Hunt ramtly ha1 purt'haaed contn ctl'i on 22 million btUhel oraoybeana worth more than t!OO million. • A Birmingham CAla > couple filed a S2Ao.OOO damaae 1u1t a1a1ru;t the FBI for alle&edly lnterfer· m1 In lhelr marrla1e becauaethe husband waa a suspected member of the Ku Klux Klan. Uriel MUea and hit wire, Laara, namf'd at defendant.a FBI Director Clarence Kelley, any FBl or Cl A aienta Involved In the incident and ai:enc1es Involved In the Internal Security Disruption o f Hate Groups Counterin- t .-111 ge n c e Pro1ram ICOINTELPRO> from 1985 ..oovu th rough 1967. Mllea claimed that on Au1. 25, 1986 the FBI'• Blrmln1ham office sent a memo to FBI btrector J1 Ed1ar Hoo~er aaytn1 that an informant report.ea lt1ilea wu havtn1 an extramarital atf1lr.,w11 drlnk· Int heavily and wasn't caring for his famUy. kOWlll ,.,. .. 00 .............. ·---~ POiOO - ,.,.eooos l lllOM ~•-•r OUeo~n C.qN Search for the mot.her, Euirna Qt.ly.11 waa to ,.. 1ume today, after acuba dlva comMG ~ wa*'8 LONG BEACH (AP)-Pollc .. ay aJOHenun· forsevcralhow'SSunday. · • nfn1 oa the beach b .. dllcOYer.d the body of a man WIW&lftl tdentltled the thrM vlcWn1 -all of whowasebottodeatb. Clarkaburs -u Emma 'Chavu, 11, Lorena Tbt body of the unJdenutltd man 'YU dls-Cbaves.15 land Llnda Obav ... 4. covved early SuDday oear 10th place and Ocean r==:::::::::;:::::::::::;:=====:==:=:~ Blvd. 'l'he one·le11ed man wu 1hot once, pallce Hid. He appeared to be tn hll late 30I. ,. ...... ,. ...... ".,.... COURTLAND (AP) -Three •t•tens were killed and their mother teared dead after their oar skidded oU a ralo·•lick levee road into a.root wat.ets of the Sacramento Rlver, authorttlea ..... P<>rted. Only Marrisa Chavez was known to &ave 11ur, vived lhe accident Sunday afternoon when she jumped out of a rear window of the 1ta1'-n wagon as it bjt the water, 11ld !Jiveati•atort Robwt Williama. allege Pharmac y I :•1 ! /\Ill r11, ' '" .,, \ I•',_ ' " j --------Maltrea t m ent! Mari~ Facing . $10,000 for only $155.26 Court Martial SAN DIEGO <AP) -recruit ln lhe -cheat and Marine Sgt. Joeeph A. stomach wtth hle llat and Fragua of Albuquerque, In the race with a broom N. M., faces a special and strking lour other court martial Thursday men. on char1e1 of maltreat· The Marine ~rps di•· ing recruit.a. closed 88 allegations of Fragua, 27, is the recruit maltreatment 1 second drill Beraeant in took place at the San the Marine Recruit Die10 bue last year, in· Depot to face such cludin1theheadlnjuries charges within a week. suffered by Pvt. Lynn Another 1peclal court McClure ot Lufkin. Tex., martial is set May 12 for who died later of hie In-s. Sgt. John R. Bradley. Juries. 24, of Granite City, Ill a month. · Whether you need $3.500 or $10,000 get it from the people who lend millions. Commercial Credit. Monthly payment based on a $10.000 HomeOwrwr loan, for 120 mQJlths. at an annu&I percentage mte of 14%. Total payment $18.631.20. NO POINTS. NO PREPAYMENT PENALTY. We find ways to help. COMME~IAL C~DIT CO"PORATION G) Homeou..ier lnans w.oc• A S.,.., <>I i.., OllCI And .,.... "'"" 1w -ur..i by • <nmh,..llWI of r~al ....t iwranrwl "°'"""' FRAGUA WAS ac· c used o f makln1 a recruit do excessive re· petitions of physical ex· ercise, hittinat another IN THE McClure case, three offlcera and a aeraeant were 1lven let· ten of reprimand and thru other aerceant1 were court mart.lated. Costa Meu • 370 E. 17th Slrfft • 8'5-8700 0 _,,_ • 1111 Town 4' Counby Rd. ~· 6'?.61S1l ~--Suat.e 26 Crodlt Lit• Juvre11 .. AnllaW. to 1:11.ii.1t nvn--•t niw,. R.tW. ~ weather Forecast METEOR SKOWERS DAll11Pl.ANEI;~. l)\sn~y~gnu® weath METEOI MORNIMGf TWO PARTS-PART ONE VOl XI ·.jdattir~i&-~-~~~.· ra tor poten~lal ·astro._autsl ~ roMOAA OWLANO- OUlclals o{ the .space Mountain launching itro1ram. whlch ends lts countdown today• d revealed plane to sen t Orange C<>unlY r~si~n s into orbit immediate y. According to dir~c r ol Flight Oocrataons, Ludwig Von Drake, the ruidents of Orange Co~ntY are fir&t to have been chosen tn be la~ncbed lnto unknown ga\ax1e&. When asked to descrlbe k the Space Flight, Von ~a e ll d u It' 8 vunderbar · rep e , With meteor ahowers, . l\ galaxles, and swir ng . t blackest ahootinl atit.~ '~J° ts epace. Piercing P d c~plode all around you al blltul\ng orange beams o Ught itrlke at your thlt 81 \t plunges throu1 ~hole in the universe. Boy, \a lt fun!" . CO Dlaneyland Ml• aon n· l Colftmander, ~t 'Mouac t~~\cated that m1ht• have I Orange county , ~:::n:~tl who are an~\ous to blast ofl b'."tf ore reP ar Spate Mountain filgMht l 27 acheclul begln on aJ • Mounta\n \a\\nctili\g pad ln ORLDI Mission Control OUT OF THISM~ l<•Y and Astronaut Goofy commander, c• Mountain Blattofl. prepar• f ar·Spac Tomorrow\ and open da~y between 1000 and 1900 ours tlO a.m.·7 p.m.) weekday•, ana 0900 and 1900 houri (O a.m.·7 p.m.) we ktnds. lnterp\anetflTY. and oater ipace experience not necettar)'t ILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE ._. r~ If Orange County supervisors wont to 1 pve much of the county's dwindling supply ·01 farmland, they most likely will have to place the question and the financing in the hands of voters. · Supervisor Ralph Clark last week said ije believes the time is right for people to •te. He asked supervisors to consider plac- ijlg a $100 n)illion bond iasuc on the ballot ,.ithin the next year. If passed, the issue would help preserve at least 10,000 acres of JSrimeland, Clark said. Farms once covered nearly one·third'of die county's 780 square miles but by last rear had dropped to only about 68 square ~lies or 43,381 acres. Even if 10,000 acres •re maintained, resident.a may as well get "5ed to the idea that development eventua.l-\V.wUl consume much of what remains. • 8\Jpervlsors are wise to proceed ;autiouslj before acting on a farmland pre- Cervation plan. If they decide some should 'Qe preserved, the question will boil down lo 4ne of money. • While residents might be hard-pressed tt> vote f avorabl)I' on a bond issue and ac- • mpanying tax increase, they will have to ide bow much f armlandt open space and rural are~ of the county are worth to m. :! Accident Invitation t:' Officials of CalTrans tell us they can't much about the array of highway messes ey've created in Orange County because ere isn't enough money. ! There's one thing CalTrans could do, at *actically no cost -get that ridiculous Lttguna Canyon Freeway sign off the San Dtego Free\\lay at the Laguna Canyon Road olframp. 'j Long ago there were plans for a Laguna * anyon Freeway. They were dropped, ong with the Pacif tc Coast route, but mehow the sign stays on. ,. So drivers unfamiliar with the area ~me barreling off the San Diego, only to Qnd the "Lagun.a Canyon Freeway" ~nishes about a mile down the way and qirns into six miles of narrow, winding roadway. lt'a one of the most aceruc stretches in the county-and it accounts for about 48 ac- cldenta a month in midsummer and 23 a month in tho rest of the yeU'. ./.· _ The d atb and injury :to11 Is high, because most of the accidents U'e head-ons, involving drivers who can't handle tbo tricky clU'Ves at freeway speeds. People living in the area approach the Canyon with caution, but they still can be on the receiving end of the crashes. For drivers from other communities it's a real trap. .. It's past time for CalTran& to replace that misleading sign with an appropriate warning. A Bad Idea Atty. General Evelle Younger bas come up with a hot potato he'd be wise to drop if he wants to convince anyone or his un- derstanding of the U.S. Constitution. Younger says he has his staff checldng the feasibility of setting up checkPoints to screen vehicles leaviog the United States for Mexico. The idea, he says, would be to reduce the flow of stolen goods -appliances, autos and other saleable items -across the border. Younger ·says he doesn't think U.S. motorists would Object to the "minor incorr venienca!' of having their cars searched before they cross the border. The problem of stolen goods being moved into Mexico. undoubtedly is real. But far more real are the American's basic rights of freedom of movement and freedom from search and seizure. We bitterly criticize nations that restrict their citizens' right to travel freely and leave their country when they choose. This is one control that never has been placed on Americans, and never should be. And if Mr. Younger thinks the average traveler is going to sit still While his car is searched !or possible stolen goods, his un- derstanding of his fell ow citizens is limited indeed. ffhe Young RepubliCanS ~ . . t 'Dirty Tricks' to National, ~adenmp THAT tcafcely tbe point. The qQeSUtla II •bet.her these re- mem bnncel of bitter limes put 1boald be added to manifold Republican miseries. A few par- ty leaders have tried covertly to atop Stone -national commit· teewoman Elate Hillman.of Pen· n1ylvani1 and atate cbali'man Rlcbard Rosenbaum ef New York (stopptn1 biJ state'• YR chaJ.nnan from Joinlna SlODo). But no conaertaUve hu moved lieutenant. 'J."htis. to •&saultatone·. mtaht provoke DOt only Vi~ but the Reaaan inner circle. • BLACK WAS replaced .u t.0p • man at NCPAC by Terry Dolan. ,, a YR ally ot St(lM who tn um at- tacked the Ford adrnihiat.rlllloD and cheered pl'()Spectl of a ~ aerva.Uve~ patty. Since tt.-~ the Vlauerie •trate1y bu awltebed from creating a tblnl part1 to takin1 over tbe Republican party. Thia puts ln context a Karch 28 campa1p letter trim Stone pro. poslua '400,000 to $500 000 annual direct-mall fund·raiainc that 9t'OUld m~ke the ~OUDC RepubUeam independent ()I tbe national commlttft. Republican politic.ians see in thil the f°U>e hand d Richard Vleum• leQ· tna to build a party wUhln a pu- ty, with the child eventually d vourtn1 tbe parent. Even Republicans too lnaens!Uve tc> worry about the Im.pact of JtOaer Stone'• put are 1ettlng frtahtened bJ Roser Stone'• future. WASHINGTON -Chief juaUce Warren Burger is deeply indebt- ed to bis old friend, ex·Att.omey General John Mit.(?bell, for bis Supreme Court job. Yet Burier bas refused to disqualify bim-s elf from Mitchell's ap- peal of bis Watergate cover-up con- viction, now pending be fore the high court. The white- m a n e d Burger has been tryini to persuade reluctant fellow justices to hear the ap. peals of Mitchell and ex-Wh1te Dear Glo~y Gw; Stanley Karnow's April 25 reporl on Soviet minorities show~ there's no more ~guallty in white Com· d\unllt Russia than 1n blacl( and white Rhodesia. D.R. . (JACK ANDERSON) House aides H. 8 . Haldemen and John Ebrlic..hman, National Public Radio reported last week. The report, which our sources confirmed, said that Justice WUlla.m Rehnquist voluntarily stepped down from tbe case because of his past frieodsb.ap with Mi~bell. But Burger and Mitchell also were personally close, high ex- Justice Department sources told us. In fact, they said, it was the pipe-smoking attorney general who recommended Burger to President Nixon In 1989. This charge was bolstered by no less than Mitchell's wife. the htte loquacious Mart.ha. She told friends that ber husband had tapped Burger fof the nation's highest judicial post. At a May, 1970, gatlterlng in New York at. tended by both Burger and Martha, free.lance photoarapher Fred Ward casually asked Martha whether she knew Burger. "WHO DO you think put him where he is?" Martha said. Ward, then on assignment for Look maga%ine. relayed the inci- dent to Wtnzola McLendon, a close friend of Martha and a wrUer for Look. Mcl.endoa. alone with Martha in the powder room, asked: "What did you mean by that re-mf.. "to Fred? !cl.lCl~Ut'~' in there?" A~tothellotes McLeodoo made at (be time. Martha reg.":': .. Je>bnJs the one who pt¢ OD U. S~me Court.n Martha later told KcLendoo that the two men often 1abbed 04 the telephone uoW Mitchell left the Justice Department to nm Nixon's 1972 campaign. But a Supreme Court spokesman said Burger spoke only infrequenUy with Mitchell from 1968 to 1972. and then only on official busi- ness. Only ooce did Bureer talk 'by phone with Mitcbdl at home, the spokesman said. THE WATERGATE cover-up trial la not the only one in which Burger's participation bu been questioned. Burger'a voice re- portedly appears briefly on the suppreued White House tapes in a conversation with Nixon. Although Burger ordered Nixon to releaM certain other tapes in 1974, be bas not removed himself from the continuing battle over "whether Nixon or the govern- men1 abould get custody of all the tapes. Footnote; Both McLendon and Ward confirm their portions of the May, 1970, conversation. Although the Justice Department -could ask Burger to di$quall(y himself, a department spokesman said such questions are always left up to tbe justices. A spokesman for Burier said he ~ had no intention of diaqualifytng himself. Mitchell could not be rw~~~cp-~~e~~~~~-- S~pi-eme Court Balance· Tbe ~t lasting 1mpact which any P.relldent makes on history 1s the resuJt of his choices for the U.S. Supreme Court. We 81'6stillaffected in our dai- ly llvini-and our children, too. POt'h•P• for all their livet •m be -bf tbe appoint· menta of Franklin RoosevelL Not in eenerations baa the Supreme Court been so evenly balanced, left and right. aanow. . President Cart.er may tip that balance eithe.,r way. Which way? Jn late March tbe U.S. Supreme Court banded down a . decision of RHO atpllticance, bot ( PAUL HARVEY J the infighting within the court over that decision was indeed significant. Here's the background. A little girl disappeared in Iowa in 1968. Two days later an escaped mental patient confessed -and led police to where be bad buried the body. tt is difficult to imagine a more open-and-shut case. Yet the guilty verdict was ap- pealed on a technicality. POUCE who picked up tbe confessed killer -while driving hlm toward the jallbouse - "talked to him about the crime" without a lawyer pre.ent. difficult to convict. An Iowa at- torney called it "a bitter pill." Bur REAR this: The Supreme Court was divided 5-to-4. Bitterly divided. The four dl11~n.ters ca lied the decision ••weird," "bizarre," "irrational, .. "sense- Jeu.." ,. Chief Justice Warren Burger dlasent.ecJ out loud t He accused the court majority of "punlablnl the public." . , A confeued lddna~klller bad 1 led poUcetothe body and yet con- ceivably could go free! Justice Thurgood Manball justified his nullifying vote by sayine, .. Every American must · be protected rrom 'the awesome, powerdthestate." But who is eolni to protect Americans from the awesome ' cruelty of chronic kiUeTs? No Place to En.jay a -·BoQk Wbi.tthe arresting officer said wu that the little girl's parents were el)titled to a Christian burial for their child 10 he hoped the body would be found. The Htgb Court, eapeclally I since Earl Watren wu chief I justice, t~ded to bend over I backwa .. in protecdn1 the 1 1 rtghtl of wrongdoel'8. Thal prejudice remains. : ( ART HOPPE . ) And it was then that the con· leased kldnap-klller led the police to tbe body wbere be had left it in• roac:lalde ditch. On that technlcalit.1 -talkina to the accuaed about th~ crime without a lawyer present -the auJlty verdict wu set uide. Tbe defmdant will have to be retrt.ed -with the aUpulation that h1' bavtng directed police to tbe body m t not be mentioned to the next jury. Tbe compleXJ.ty ol the dat'ree diluted ib newawortbmeaa. In ti· feet; h Will iiiile thta killer more ' But lt ii now supported by a 1 hairline marlin ot 5-to.4. Ptestdent Carter wlll likely I make th• nex.t •Ppolntment to the J court. Tbere ll no way to exa(· I gerate the •lsnlflcance of that next choice. f OftANOa COAST r DAILY PILOT BJ aC. 8W'l'ING8 . .. ...., ....... . . · ~ Jf1fr7 P~ (l).Suta Ana> hu in~ tiochae-. • bW Uui\ would doutM the pranU, al~ lowed llimua1 quota ot lmmJcraqta from Kexk:o. _ • Tbe meuu.re would UDIDd tbit e;:ea.t wual gaota ot J0,000 and could bftlll lt.. e to the mt i.vel ot 40,toO. • Pneideat l'ord 1lptd • bW lut October Uta~ hived Mexleo'1 quotL The new law became elfec·. UvtJan.L . • •"Jbere ta enoqb hotWlty qalnlt undocument- ed w~ rlaht now without 1ntemttytq tbe lltua- Uon With Jellalatlon that could encour11e •few .tbbuld more to enter th• cow:atry We11111 ... Pat. terlODNSd. . ••• 'l'RB 8TATE SENATB hu paued, for the HeODd year 1n a row, a bW to ouUaw pretrial •en· taee barsl1Din1 a.mons Judla, pr01ecutor1 and.. def eue &ttonle)rl. QUEENIE ~ By Phil lnterlandi The 25-13 vote NDt the m...ure by Sen. 0e0 Carpenttr (Jl.Nwport Beach) to the Aatembly ~ wberelaat1ear'1 bill waa killed tn committee.. · But CArpiDt.v aatd be'a more opUmlatlo tb1I year. · H1i llilU wOU1d ban pretrial eonferenc• tnvolv· lnCJuae. proeeeutor. and deltDH ln which the de- fen anf acre-to plead qutlt.J for the paraatee of a 1pecl11c Mlltence. Carpenter said th1s demeam the Judtetal pro-ce11 by allow1n1 Juctiea to put!clpat. ln a form ot .. Let'a make a deal.'' ••• AISEllBLYJl~N Delinl1 Manfera <D· Hantiqton Beach) hu introduced le.tilatlon he aaya wOl don a "loophole" in tbe PoUtfcal Reform Acl Qt 1'74 by ~ufrlnf the ldentUtcaUon of thoee. who make loana to poUUcal campallftl. · Mancen 1ald the Pair PoUUcal PracUeea Com· mltaion bu interpreted the law to mean tbat Joans oiuat be l'epOrted u campala coatrlbutlona. "But the wo.-dln1 <( the law it.aeff ii aubjeet to mt.in· teJ1)retation or abUA• .. he 1ald. · A«ordin1 to M=en, WI legtslation will clarify the llaue and 1 out exactly what mu.t be reported u a cemp •n eontrtbu&e ... It will re- move a reportin&Joopbole which Jeana to auapicion and diatruat of the entire poUUcal process," heaaJd. ••• A BILL THAT WOULD allow tax credit& for de- pendants attending private schooll wu Introduced by Assemblyman Wllliam Dannemeyer <R-Pullerton). DaMemeyer•a measure would allow taxpayera with dependant children in priv~ 1rade achoola and hi&h achoola a tax credit ot •. A credit of~ would be allowed for dependants attendinl private colleges on a full-time baala. "It ia blatanUy unfair to tax people for public school monies when those aame taxpayers do not benefit from the taxes paid," Dannemeyer said. ••• A POLITICAL workahop organized by the 74th Assembly District Council of Democratic Clubs and the United Democrata of tJCC Irvine enUUed ~degree I ·-.. ' "Wa~tbe Oran Boota .. Wl11bebi:e;Y7. ~will be five wor~ bet at noon .t,o e p,m. at tbe ScJence i..ture Hall room 100 at. UCI. · . • • Amolll the apqkerw at U\e Jl'OfU~ will be Carmela Lae&10. Vic• Chalnoap ot the NaUoDal DemocraUc ·Partyi. Bert Coffey, State Chair. 'CalUomla Democrauc P~; AUco TravtJ, Sta1' · Woinen'• Chair;. Bruce eorwtD. SoutbuD Chall'; .and· Frank Barbaro, Cbalr. Oranse Count1 Democratic Central Committee. . . .... • VrtlAN RALL, ccmireutortaJ cudldate, N.. eemblyman Dennl1 Man1er1 (D·Huntln1ton Be~cb). ~thy Bodo, campaJp manqer for Den.· ...,. ______________ ..,.._. TOILAPUX• , .. ._. ~,..,..._ Wllfl Telllfl••· m .. •Y ..... •nd C-p1e1Md •Ir C..M OI epl11h ~mcll. T"-full ~rueure plow• ~'::i~11!:•11 CJ::~. "9 IOH end tUI AT HARDWAlll ITOMI Haw 10methin1 you want to Mil? Clualfied ads do . it well -Call NOW, ea.a7I. ~ WE NOW HAVE .COMPLETE . ·MORTUARY & CEMETERY SERVICES. . ~ u. opening of our NEW MORTUARY, .. .,. now • ., .. to ofter contPI• ~ Ind Otmt'9rJ ..vtoee, •I Wlthk'I our t1Mutttu1. MCl\lded 9f'oundl,; Thti ~the r...s IOt • fuiw9 pre Cllllon thtOUQh crowded olty ......... ,....._.,NI C.,.,.._, MaulOleum, CofumbMum, Oll'dtn Crypta and a etematofy, .., to fu~fln the ll*lflc Mede off arnill• W. qgllC &hit a *It to~ Memorill Park a MonUlfY btf0t'9 the ''dn of '*Cl" la wlN edvanot pltn'""g. Logic.I •ftd pr91etto.I dtclliona ... ,,. ..aey· "9de priOf' fo tl'9 tlm1 of actual need. Should you dean further lnfom11tlon con-°""'"9 CK.If tervtca. pleae call. fftirhovm ftemorial pork. MORTUARY -CEMETERY 714-13$1442 1702 E. FllrhMn AV9. • BetWMn Tustin Aw. a Grind Ave. • Santa ~ -------------------~Munier Rap "Start a search for• Jook-alike and aend him over to the •tockholden' meeUnc for me." For Wonaan We're J For the Record .•. .,., ... : ,.,_ CL.btaNTI MM~HOl,ITAL "-'lllf.tm . Mr. elld Mn. A.__ J, De \Ire, Defte ,OI,.., Olfl .._.,, .... " Mr. •"d Mrs. R•f .. I Tefta, '-" Cl-llM."" ' •"'·"" Mr. •"" Mn. J-• Huflmen, Sell C'-ellW.~ .....,,.,,m Mr. elld Mrt. Wllllem 8 Jun~. I I Twe,lley Mr. •M Mr'I. Demit Ollldreu, Mii · '*'v1ei.,-, ~1tt,1m Mr. elld Mrs. ltendy TMrN, ~" a-...e1n IT. JOH~H HoS~ITAL AfrH1 Mr . ...S Mn. Edwin lolwl, Hunt• lllfloft heell. __, Mr • ...., ~,. Jeflft 10 1, Coste Mete,9lr1 ~It Mr. eftd Mra. 0.VVIH Gifford, ,,..,,,..,,,rt Mr. elld Mr-. ltOlltrt OoiufM1. 1!1 Toro,91rt Mr. ellf Mr1. D...,ld Mete .. , West mlftSter. boy A woman who ended. a quarrel with her buaband by 1hootin1 bJm in the cheat with a .22· caliber rtn~ haa been found 1uilty of second degree murder by an Oranae County Superior Court]ury . Judie Robert A . Banyard bu scheduled May 13 u the date be will aentence Mary Jeanene Brown, 40, of Santa Ana. to what could be a at.ate priaon term of 10 years to life. Deatlu Ehewhere Mr._."""-::_:_""'°"'.,· BADGER (AP) _ Police aaid Mra. S...Jva11Ca11114=·:111 pr Iv ate m, m 0 rla1 Brown called them to her Mr . .,,. Mn. s...... c:.wey, s... aervicet bavt been held home last Oct. 2" to re· ,_,ee.i,•r-.;:,. at Synanon communlUa port~ •hoot.in& of her M• ..... Ml\, "''•Y ~· ~ thrpy~mnt~ n'4t~H\{~~.1ua~.;r~m;~~ .• --~..:)~\:t"lf'....{"'\ •.• ,.,.~~-of"f~ d .. __ _. b---- Mr. ......... ~-,..,...., ~ t'b e 0 r 1 anhati0 n , 1 10\ID uemu att e•cene. c ...... ,,. •• ~eour founder. Inurn.mmt was Mrs. Brown tealllled c~M•TY "°''""L al Synanon headquarters th a t s be ab o t her M ir • .,.. MfJ. "':::,. c:-.... ..,. here Friday for Mrs. buaband becauae be re· J 11e11 c ep11tr-• ..., Dederich, M, who died p e ate d l y beat and Mr. .,.. M~1t'•111ert ••""'· Thunday of lune cancet abuaed her. L9fVM"'"'·"" after a four·month 111· Mr • .,,."""' "*" .... ~ ..... "· neas. MIHIOfl \llej•,..., "'"'' Mr. ef\4 Mr1. JHtllll ICUlllCl'I, LetVN N1tu'4,..., Mr, ltlld Mrl. Jollll ~·'''· MIH ..... Vltjt,lley Atlrtlt Mr, _,,. Mrs. C\1111 NtUYOft, ''"' ....... c.wr-. """'" Mr,"'*" JW ......._, Lefune he<ll,f4rt t -.,.11 Mr • .._. Mu. Mk he•I c.1 .. r1. O.,..~lley ~It Mr, tftf Mn. ICMfy ~ .... "'-"11 U.-• • .., ~ .... Mn. .,.,. ~. !Mil· lfttWll ~ f4rl . """" Mr. Md Mn.. WMlt.ft o. ..... , .. ····"" A~tLa Mr. •llf Mn. n..-tr--.r. s.. .Ille" C#lttr-, tin """., Mr. 9M Mn. _,... Meltt,., t.fl .,...,. Ceelatr-. ''" KEY BISCA YNZ, Fla. (AP) -.Jolla L. Ka.be, 74. a retired film pro- ducer for 20th Century Fox Movielone Newa • died of cancer at his home here Saturday. STOCKTON <AP) - TUlle Lewtl, 75, founder of a larae t.Omato pro- c• U l n r and cannln& bualneaa In StockloD, dJed Saturday nJ&ht. She introduced the Italian pear-ahaped tomato Into CaUf ornla while build.inc bu empire. SAN FRANCISCO ~-la.mt--MMU---LA•MI-.... : (AP ) -P kUlp D. WISTCU.. CMAPIL SproHe, 71, one·tlme 427 E. 11th st am baaaabor to Cam· Cotta Meta• 946-4188 bodl1, who aerved in the 8ant1An1~ Am erlcan Foret en 618 N. B~av · Service 29 yeara, dled 81nt1Ana • 547-4131 Thursday. .... Cl llOTMlll ~'MOITUARY 8a7Maln St. Hunt=:eeach -· .. JAMI., CWALN•A&. NOMI 7'801 8otea Avt. WlltmlMttr 1934525 -PA.CR:YllW t•tCWA&PA.m e.Metety~ ChlDtl 3500 Padftc va.w Ol'fyt Newport, Cell'°""• MW700 -...COMCK WOINAal ~~ "==~ Ian Juan Ceotstrano I 4.M-11tl Graduate Student Honored Gerald Delahunty of Dub1ln, Ireland, a rraduu atudent in the UC Irvine School af Social Sciences. ii the re· clpient ol a Sl.000 Phl Beta Kappa Alumnl Award for lntemaUonal Studenia. • Different n•mb8rshlp r.~rains available ncludlng our 2~eek liitrOductory offer. Let us change your figure for the better. Now's the time to shed winter'• Old shape. Slip Into a trim, firm new body and a summer filled with fun and excitement. We'll help you get your body back 11 top condition with a personalized program of body Improvement, which Includes exercise programs, steam, sauna and whirlpool at all locations plus heated swimming pools at key locations. And there's Jazznastlcs for the gals. (Fun group exercises done to up-temPo musfc.) And, yoo'll find our unlQue combination of exercise programs, facilities and 88t'Vlce give yOU one of the finelt valuea anywhere. So. figure It OOt for; ~rMff* If Y9tl want to enjoy summer fun and excitement.Join the Holiday.Spa Health Clum. CWhefe summere h8Ve a new ~Inning.) \ > .... 1 .. .,. . . .. .. ~ . ; . FOUNTAIN VALLEY • /l • I I/ // I / 11:/ ./ I ! I I I: , I I . I I I I I I ' ·' • I ; I I ., UI I; I~ 1 .. 3 1' 4 . ·I HUNTl,OTON IEACH ., a > J • I ~ lhat is .... between the Corona del Mar sign and the Long Beach sign on the newly opened Corona del Mar Freeway You'll find it more convenient ' . ,, ~ Cl •• LOS.ANGELES (AP)-1.nlim, when Rick Hon.day played for the Oakland A'•, ·the mana1er was Dick Willlams. ''.Ldidn'tlike..hlm then," Mon- day Hid Sunday, "and what hap. pened today dtdn't totally SW'- prise me." J.s tbe Mon.treal Expos, manared by WU1iam11 ended Los An1elea' Winninl streak at eight. 6·2, Monc1ay and Williams ex- changed words ln a brief fifth· innln1 flare-up that brought players atreamlhl from botb du1outs. Asked what touched oft the ahouUnf, Monday 1nafped, "Go ask Mr. Williams. He s the guy with the big mouth. That'a somethinfheandlwillsetUe." · Willlams denied aaylnf anythl.ng, only that be was yellillg at his catcher, Gary Carter of Fullerton. · Monday had Just grounded out, but fell in the batter's box when hiJ spokescaughtln thedlrt.Aahe eof to his feet, he suddenly gestured toward the Montreal dugout. "I'll tell you what hesald," said Loa Angeles' Tom Lasorda. "He yelled. 'Get.that SOB off the field.' He's not going to talk to one of my play era like that.•• MOH1'9'•AL Cu112b SptltrH Cremtr1trf Ptrll lb P•rrl\llllb UM.,CI Jo.Moreffllllt Mellas cl Cerlerc OeWIO'llf "°""p ltlrltM sooo 4 ' 3 0 4 0 1 0 , ' , 0 4000 2 I I 4 1 0 0 0 0000 4 t 2 2 • 0 1 0 40 I 0 LOIAHO•Lll .. , "" Lopet21> • 0 1 0 lllunellu • o 1 o Hol!llerl 2 0 0 0 Smllllllft 0 0 0 0 Merllneror O o 0 O O.rmenp o O 0 0 C•vJll 4000 O..ve'I' IO 4 I 1 0 M9Meyd 3. 0 0 .... ,., • 1 '' v....," .. ot I 0 lvllOftP I 0 0 t ~ ... 10•• SMtlp 0010 .,...._, ... , • 0. 0 Lecy l'f -' 0 t t Totll~ :M 6 10 6 Totelt b 1 1 1 MotllrHI llO fH .,_. LO\ Aft9tl~ .. f10 __ , OP-i..s -'"91'"' >, LOa-MelltreM 4, L.M ·~'" 1. a~ •. o • .,.,.., ..... ~. v-• Ja-SoeW HR-<er"te• 2 111. UnMt' (II, sa- ......l't•JJJ.S-U- io-w IL. •n l)ewftf!lq ... c;.rm"" I T-2 lS. A-JS,3Sl. By aoGE& Ci\atsOH OflllttOl!ff ......... -....i ...... ~~ · With two 1ean a bead 'oaCh of the UQlvenlty Ol Orecoa. duty .. an~ for tbo s~ J'ran- ctaco 49er1 and Southern Callfol1ila Sun and 11.x y...,.. a. bead eoach of Gardena Hleb. h1a credential' tend Opportunity toward llm.llar high level poata. But for Diek Enrl&ht. 42t home ,,_, 1olni te> be lntbe Orµse Coaat area where be's tikiDl"UJ> r.. atdence two ble>cka (rom Caplat.rano Vallef bitb •bma he'll be aervtna as an uaistaDt football coach. Eo.rilhL'1-move from the J>l1I& to preps mi&ht be consttued u akin to an ex-go'{emor accept.inl a Job uacourtclerk. Enrl1bt acknowled•es he'• makln.J lb• change and the fact some might misinterpret bia de· clalon. It la not a bailout, be 11ya. "I've been fortunate to see all lev~ls of coacbin1.'' says Enriahl "And you're bapplest in life whete you feel like you're do· ing the most good.•' "It's at. the high school level where you e'1joy· yourself the most, where there is the OP· portuntty to help people. Youngaten are at Ute croarroads at that level. "And a an aaaista.l)t. there are a lot of things other than coaching that I won't be bocaed downwitb. • "It's a chance to be "a place where I know .I'm dolna the most aood. And It meen& 10 much more time with my family, ln ad· ' ditionto living in the are•. "Too, working with Cunerty ancti Patton, who share the deep interest In kids, meana more than Just an ego trip. "Starting from scratch at Oreaon and with the Sun, there were tjmes where you didn't have pl()re than a dilY or two off in ueven-monlhstretch. '' Cunerty says Enright's major responsibill*J'-will be with the of· fensi\le line, with perhaps de· fensive duty, too. •'I've known Dick as a super human being," says Cunerty. "I'm sure we can all beoefit(l'OO) his expenence and he 1!hould be ' BALTIMORE CAP> -Ross •ball," said Grimsley, now 2-1. "I Grimsley followed the p1tchlna pitched them away, came lnstde book -.nd Pat Kelly wu in.spired occasionally, and changed by the Good Book as both defied speeds. Next tlme they may get the odds Sunday while leading 10 runs, but it worked today." the Baltimore Orioles to a a.2 vie· Kelly, a newborn Christian tory. who quotes the Bible frequently .The feft-banded Grimsley, and on Sunday c 1 o a ed rocked for 1a .303 average last Baltimore'• preaame chapel aeaaon by rilh1'banded batters, service with a prayer, was bard· hurled all etgbt·hiU.r and held Iv as muodane as Grimsley with Cellfomia'a four strongest rtaht-his postgamecomrnents. handen blUeaa in 15 trips to the "I tald a_.Prayer on my way to · paa&e. . , the plate ln the 10th," Kelly re- . Kelly, Who entered the 1ame called. "I said, 'God, It wollld be -~ with oa.ly two homers lo 119 pre· nice if I coul? win It with a dinger vlou1 at bats in Memorial (home run). I didn't have to, but Stadium, clouted two for the first I did." Um• ever lo one game, including Kelly, who usually gets off to a tlie tle-bi'eaker as the JeadofC bat-quick start, had gone 2-for-23 ln • ter in the 10th lnnlnS. his debut with Baltimore after 0 1 jUit did what the book said,.. bein& obtained In a trade with the Gr!maley commented on bis Chicago White Sox. blanklnl of Bobby Grieb, .Bobby "In the put, that probably Bonda, Oon Baylor and Joe Rudi. would have bot.be red me,'• he ri1ht handed sluggers who have •tld. "But now I'm more patient cqmbined lor 19 of California's and don't worry about a thing. I -_...~loea111e-leadln'2 ~~~~1 of ·28·,.L.s~µ l~ame,~!>Ji.tt:v~found ~--'a'·--r ~ -"?'~ .,:;:;.r• • .... ~ X-J -· ':Uit tMl7i)OWer~ihe-:reny s t .li"?iiler '"came1>Nf"' .:...' ·r11ht Ade, the Anael,bave an o.s Gary Rois abd the second was f Gdtlag a Kiele OWt Of It t Alex Skotarack <left> of the Chicaeo Sting battles John Mason of the Loi Anaeles Aztecs during Sunday'• North American Soccer League game at the Coliseum~ A crow(l of 5,982 saw the Aztecs bag their fourth loop victory, 2· 1 io overtime. record this aeuon agalnat 1~· aiven up tiy Paul ·aartzell, 1·3, 1 handed pitchers. who took over in the sixth with I "1'.be>' were tryine to-pull the tb .. core tied 2-2. I The Baltimore rfgbUielder' also j £~nnors Tops Mexican Star LAS VEGAS CAP) -Jfmmy Q>anora captured the Laa Vegas Tennl1 Cht .. ic title and the SS0,000 .ft.rat prize makes Connors tbt flnt ~1~1ayer ever tc> re· acb the S2 on mark ln earn· lnp. ~ Connon bad to beat back a f el•tv &.w R.ami.rH Sunday to defend "11 Ve1a1tiUe,6-4, r.-7, 6-2. The match WU played in CoOd.J. tton1 marked by wlncb of up to 40 mUesperhour. In doublet play, the second· 1eeded team of Stan Smlth and Saa Clemente'• Bob Luta defeat.. ed top.seeded Ramire& and Bob Hewttt N, M. 6-4. The wtnnen 1plit $15,000, the loffn •hared te.ooo. Th• prize money raised Con- nors ovw the S2 mutton mark in llf eUme earnln1•. Nearb' .. aU that UWlw':lt -'810,000 -ltaa been ea.med tn two years at Cattar'I Palace Hotel, wbere ht ii tO\artni pro along wlt.h Pancho Gonwa. Ramtri!I 11ld 'ot Connon on SUnd~, 0 He la Jutt too tough a pla1ei-. be'• sot all tbe aOod •hots.•• TM snatch wu worth szs.ooototbe lOler. Raliifff J)l~ed aatllllvtly at J.1 la UM HOoDd Mt W chars· lilt tbe Mt afairdt CcUorl. CGO· non lMld Hn• Mtl Ui• tactic wort~ for aamlru at •·5, ~ Ooilnor'I f« the set. It WU ODIY~the MCOnd Ht COMOri JW lailtm the Jut twocluatca. contributed a ainale when· the Orioles for1ed the deadlock in f the fifth. After loading the bases on twayalka and Kelly's hit. the . Orioles scored as Rick Dempsey grounded Into a do~ble play. J CALl~ltNIA • aALTIM09'• ArllM .. rllM Remv7b a 1 Io aumbrtYll 'o 1 o Grlcllu l O O O IC O•rcieu o O O O Btnt:tt rt s o o 1 .. ,..,oer u J o o o "llCll 11 I o o o S111e11tton Oh o o o o (ll•lk :lb ' 0 , 0 kt911C 0 0 0 0 llo.J•OIOlldll I O t O I 5n!lth2b • o 1 • hcJlted • 1 1 t L. MllY di 4 0 0 0 Hem11te11c • 0 t 0 Murrey lb 4 O O t ' OtCIMHJb t 1 0 0 ·~•.1<•11'1''1 • t '.i ii Herl-Cl t 0 t 0 Dernpsyc 1 0 0 t Mu\trpl\ It 1 O si.-11 0 0 0 c T .. elt 34 t t t Tottlt '1 J 1 1 N-out"""" wlMlnt rwt Kerld. Cllttot'nle IGO tit 000 0-t 9eltl""'9 001 OIO 000 1-a l!-Murrtf, Otme>tey. O~-Celllernte I, .. ,ti_' l.09-<.ttll«lll• 7, •••llmort.' 19-Clltfll. ISn\111' H"...Celly UI, hlllf m. H-11-y 1. ~.,.,.,. "°'' HlfUtll (L, HI OrlmtltylW,MI T-t:t•,A-t,otl, I~ It II Cll H IO '·~21t • , ' ' ' t to •22•> . 1 t I ( J f • • J 1 , ] ] < ~ J l f ~ ' I I ,. the but·of·ttven .. * * Fuh ., • ~port , b6t~d4tte Jtit~ng tremel)dously. "Euly ln the aeuon we were putting teams away in the first threeln· nln11 and it'1 -muofi euler to pitch wh.n you're 10-12 l'Unl ahead. But what's really made OUl' pltcbtng l(f good iJ" our catcher. Huppert takes awe)' the oppoai· \ion's running iame. l th(nk he'• the best JC catoher there is," aays Hoov.er. Golden West wlll lose nearly all of lts hilting Spike Prelirru Set M l11ion Viejo High, undefeated in six dual meets, will host the South Coast League track and Cield prelims Tuelday afternoon, and th• eubHquent finals on P'rlday .. SW\fd 1Aa1ue prellpat and flnal1 are set £or HunUniton Beact\ Hl1h, alff oq -1'uU<Say and ..-r1. d!lY· On those aame days. El Modena High of Onitt• will atafe' the Centwy Leacue prellms •nd tlnala, while St. Paul Hllh (Santa Fe Sprint•> l)lltf on the .Angelus 4rea C~ews ·SIUDe ' By CRAIG R£rP Ol .. 0.11,,11 .. ,..,. .--.--A Y•ar a10 St•v• Wyatt dldo't want anythlnl to do with awtmmtni. TOday ho ii one of the top JC thOrt • tree1l.)'lerw 1n tho 1late. ffe had tom ted four years at Eatancla Rilh fn Coat• Meao and had pll)'~ wat r pqlo in th• fall of 19'75 for Orance Coalt Coll•C•· "l w'u Just burned out wtth 1w1mmln1, my head wu't really In it. So I decided~ take aornetimeoff,''aaya Wyatt. • The year otr helped qulte a bit -upectal· ly ln hit mattal outlook to 1wtmmln1, •m Wyatt. . 0 Tho team concept didn't really mean anythlOg t,o. me in hl1h school, but It )\H been •n enU~r different atmosphere at Coast It's -. much bi11er team and evel')'one ia pUlllng fottheother guy." aaya Wyatt. A lt-year-old. 175-pounder, Wyatt bu the bat tHne In the state In the 50-yard tree (21.3) and ls third best in the 100 me (47.4). "1 had •aid before the awlmanlni season started that I wanted to wln the ,50 f,..e 1n the state m"' and that'f ttlll my No. 1 coal," ·~YI Wy•tt. And he figures to be right there at the llnlah ThurJday at West Valley Collete ln Campbell. Hls ~•v• wun stiffest teeta probably wlll come from Dl1blo Valley'• Steve Henog (21.3) and DeMla Bruni · (21.4), alona with PaHdena'1 Tom Maddock• (21.G). Wyatt would al10 like tQ break 21.0 in the • so-almost assurine him of a acholarshlp to a maJor mllege. . And OCC coach J act Fullerton believes Wyatt can dolt. .. If he doesn't break 21.0 I wlll be thocked," says Fullerton. "He really hasn't been pushed this year ln the :SO or the 100, but he will be ln the state meet ." ' J'ullerton says Wyatt ia the belt short free1tyler he's had at OCC. "We've bad some pretty tood ones bere, but Steve Is probably the belt of the bunch. "He'• improved quite a bit, not only ln the 50, but the 100 and 200 freestyles as well. He did only •9.0 In the 100 in high school, but he can pop 47 any lime he wants to now. I'll be 1urpri1ed If he doesn't break 46 in the state meet," 1ay1 Fullerton. Wyatt ll still learning to swim the 290, tays Fullerton. "H 't swim the 200 in hfgh school, but h~ rea es he'll be much more valuable to u ~olle e team lf he can •wlm that event.'' 150~1 Fut rton. ''But fthe thin~ that re Uy ·helps him is the fact he's a superior compeUtor. He's very jndhtduallstlc in some respecll, but he'~ very team-oriented, also," says the OCC coach. • "'A"A0411 Cll>Yl -u1 ~'"" O l' a n II e C o a s t throalh<>\lt tharaoe. R :.~b , '·:;;!::t:,~~~11 ~1.,,:., Colle1~·1 freshman In the Junioc varelty e8ua18 ~Pir· . c • Snn ... _. Calendar . ... Ml~ •Miii• •l•9111Cod et1ht1 crew won aealn el1ht1 O,rent• Coast ates err1tos .. - r~.--~ JO.J~!t~ .. UHAU -,, ...... ,., Sunday ln the Newport Colleee W81)t0ut faat •Jld ~=~=nri:t:'ft~ , ' , v111.,.1,.1.,,.,, m. H~D0 -11111191e" 11c111<, Reaatta, boosUni Its re· led untU 600 meter•. but 11-n..,ra..-. .. 1e1,-uc• m _..,. ... _ _ T•"-'Y 1MH1 • Mn n tiut1e11t1 "' ttw 1>eu. "' cord to 19·1, •nd VC Cal mov~ ahead at '"at ''"" ""' .. 11 '"''·~>. Jn {] · ' ........ -Marf ..... ...,, ...... ,n"•· o···· ''""~~"Lt .... rK ... _ .. cu .,. M-'l -Gtt\11 .. ,,. llllleftOot'M... ·a1 T day>: CJ '''· Y•ll• ~ti&•'"' .. fJ,ISI, 1t<tll1•11 .. MIUMl't v .. ,. 12 • "'·'·' MALlf".ll•f .. -'" -•'": H Irvin•'• varsity elshta po\nt and ed1ed occ by IS·"'· ... : 54-·0«ul•HI• m ... , ,..UCI ues uc •·~•,,. 11 \JC "1 ... "1 .. "'"°"''' Cantutv v..,. ~fl'M at est.net• 1t.t•11Mtt.au1"'11n1 t •"""•• •~ •nd f"'9hman fo1.1n allo four If condt at the Oof"'IM<l'I D•ll• IS-Pl ... >. .L-! , •I ~lftl<ll c.11 .... ()el ... 'W ' 14tqll n."' I, lO, II C90 r rded •-t l fla1 •"' Ml•tll -9t•l-DKl!ertY ,,.,.,, • Coll 11•1o ........ «;ert1to•C.tt... Gl~lt 9ymt1nU"-.trll\t ti " • reCO VK Or el. NI• ,. • lltalf(l°"""""•••ttlll,7 .. $-1 • ~ • 110~0t~l•tt •tt•JOI '94itMl"ll !"""· Foun••'" V•rtu •t MA•t11Ao11.•1v .... 11~ T PA ft l 0 Coat~•,....&.. 0¥ I '" ••ttlll~tt· '• ~:l'~~e~~12ft Calllort1•• <:.llt0t el :ti' ?[a Wt:~;.r-· M~ VMIO M lrYIN JIS ~· UI~ ~ • • J' 8 • ,\lt~f 8 :""¥~ -..._ • 1111 -'9!!~ -'i , • ~ ... ~ • " .. -----~-~ ..... _">. ·-·~-·~" ·-.-;• ~-.• --...~ -. ....., Vt4if\.g ~ •"r'W ~ < -~.,~ ... r:f:=~ s.ut'> Gr:,:-~-~..-;~~ · · ret a'; eam ch • lourt and tJC Irvine had ........... , ... ~••u'' ~o leae'sbueballteam. Coastis20·9·1. . \ c ~ ' 4 , 1 l l j ... ,.. """"' ... "'' .. ..., v .... l•tt we"<"l9'"· '•" 01100 _ w anp..,.,: m pf~ir,'WAI elven to lJCLA .• a •~condln Ute freshman c:'...°;":!~.-1:l~":.~~ ~~~ .. ::~! Coach Mike Mayne's · Jn other JC $ames 1upm1 c;""~' ....... "''°''•'"~ ... ,..,., .. , 1tt-.,,K1>1J•·''"""'" Tre ~ertul UnlvertiW eithtl. M1vre111 .... 111 but Morom•· Plrat.etftu:eSouthCoast Tud day, Gotden West """" fdlttnll '-•ti• v.itn 11 "' •• "' '*" .. · 'c.ucit Doi" '"'"'*"·' o Clllfomia CBerkelev) "''"'•w '~t''-"'•'!!·.,..,'·111 ~., ... 1,_,, Conference leader Ccr· travels to Rio Hondo in.a . M•••••I Ht•M• •I M11ntl11elol\ .. ,_ , .. _.""' I , ".. ...." --.... -~ .. "" w .. ,,,.,,. ... , •• -.v•1n1. lJ<:I Tennis , ... ,.10 .. 0 1u. s.. i..r:..,' _ crew was dlaquallfled NIWP'OHHo•n• ' 1s1, '"'' 1..-11CM1·1toc111 111 "'' rito• at OCC (2:30) need· key Southern California E~!~,'~:~~~::.,••=1~1!: 11 -.... ,-.. ",. : ':3k:,':':t:.i01 ."::'':;'! from 011e e.vent and v.,~r.~-::-;:.7~~:r:,., .. ,. "~r~~d~N::i!1\·1~~~·&"tt•o iat ill" a win to iet back in Conference tilt 8Tld Sad· ror•,o-wu1 .. 1 1111~ JCu c'O";,;••~cecH•M· '-'·'"'°'•cM dldn 't enter anotl)•r, •t11.1:2 uc ·,, ... ,,..,u.2;1 ucLA 11 .. 1M•t•• ... 11•Moroiove111..... theclrcu'itacramble. dleback heels Palomarr11 u~•h•\lly 11 '°''• "M•• ,,. ........ -•OHSHll>S ~ =· ... ":r.' th«1reby takln° itself out •:!$.SJ 4. UClenl• •••krUi!0.11 I. A-1.lOO•llllf\tllilftllQll,N.V. occ tr•ll• Cerritos by in Mission cl.rcuit action.)' a .. ,., •• Min i.., Vt•\• ,,,,.,.,.. LOllfO I ? I • .. • -D "' C•t $1••• ILq •uc111 •·t• •1 • ... ..Tl .... 11 G Id W d R' H•r1Htr .. M1111t11191on• .. <111111epr, lat~,, ... ~.,.,...., 11~1.,. .-.....e m "''•· o( tht runnina for t~.e L.oyoi .. :p ,t. . · · · wo .. ~~:iVi;.;,.,."" 1\11 games. The Bucs o e!' est an 10-1 c1nv"' 11 li•t-'•· '"'lfln •• ~ "'•"• ,J:~:r•: ... ...i 1~cn " lce~•w•Mtut . ..,,,:'u~ trihy. Ju"'°'"''"' •1"91•-t c1111or111• w L ,., ... 01 have three conference Ho11do tied (8·8) ln 13 ln· 11111v111ev1111>1 .. 1111. io ,_ co(f ... _, ,.,.. • al -on the •• ~lty •:20.•1 i . et•"9t coe1t "2• 1: '· •01•0• ' o i.ooo -1ame1 left while f1've· ninga earlier this year Otrl1 twlmml"9~ C .. _...... .., ... ,,, ='· .. _,,..,..~ •"91•'' tn cettco twn 21 b0ft!"9, 1• '!!"' "~ UCLA 6:tf 6; '· Ctl ''tit (Lon9 lndla•t 1 1 ,7to \If U••v•""' .. COtl• Mew. CM-... '°"°'"' nd •vClldtf °""'-... Wl'OllT 11~··)-l)l 4'1\Qltrtl f • • , ltlfttn '°"" I Or Co I I.A ed fr be( El Tor• MIH"" vi.10 II o-"'" .... ""~lo!d• n•hl• ln S:ll.7, •d1ina lt1<fll•1 ... 01 s. UC trvlne6:UO H• .. York I I ·*' 11.t time defending South and that fame is cxpect,r M•ral Lt91iNlt1Cll w.,1m1n,1.,.t ~lt<lll'9il-•uc;n , .... , ....... ,.... .. ... , ...... "bol\110 }, ~· ... .,..,, .. c Irv lru. w h ch •11Jt ' II~ .... ;:.;· •. ~ 11!',. ~:':~~~:~· ~ : :: :.., Coast ctiamp Cerritos ed to""° p ay 0 orer F""''''" v.u.,, ~· ,..,.., • Arrellu<i• .iu.cr 1 11 • 1 0 "'"'' k•tt 1>9u.1 rtc:1""· ",,..c•tr•• 1 fnlahOd In 6:15,5. UCl l1tbtrU:911 ~.uc1.~o·s1S.s cir w .. 1or.111M bas two. Thus if OCC can the regular-iScheduled• Hunl~Ofl IMKll, ...... ti~·"'"· ....... 'f') lU\ \l ~INll)ytlol.. .,.,_, ... , <a.....-.1.-,,, _,,.... chalfenPed for the lead sc'.',,',o'rnl11Lo,dln9-u•-~·,,c,~l.~ .~,,~:.,!. ~~.'" ... no,Glll • ,• ~ I 000 ,.. sweet\ Ute thrh ee <Mt. Sadn conteat. I l d Etlt n<te11v111,,.or111t1111 I tJI • • • • ,__.,, ... " "01Nrta<11111,•Mft11t,.,ut1<t .. u . • ......... -~ ...,, .... ,,. • • '4Q ,. //" GWC' D GI•••_,_ 1MI c .. ,,.. .. " to\•tt•1~110 rue• 1 ,., he1i.wi.11 at 1,000 meter!, but Cal 11nu1. "'*fl• • 1 1 '.set ,..., Antonio T urad~y an • 4.ust era ea ~ e• hr•. MIMten Yttl• •• ~ "'11.. ,..,.,..., •·~ 1vc11• 11.. •••1. HA<M -•• .,..,,,. 'ut opened up shortly af · Y•'''"' 1ou.,_, UCLA 7111 •: 2 s.n D•• • t .in , Grossmont Saturday) LA Harbor by ~ust a half Ctftftl dltl Mal ti Ltt,_ -...Cll ....,.. -\.UClrmie,. ,... c.-. 4 ,.., , .. t •-"" d d . Or•ntt Coltl 7·tt II J Ctlltornlt Lot4""'" O 2 000 11'1 , l b ld' b , d h it WttlMll\\lttllPtulllt•"V•ll•1. 1~'t;;.~twl•IM..W1-..1 .. ,...._,P ... trl.20 ... llllUlllO lerwar I an main· 7•311 4LoYG'•1lU,IUC'7;.00. S....IY'IMflellft Mayqes cu WOU eame, u .. cou pus. H•••••• 14••h• •1 " 111111 •• 1•11 "c,,,i · 1L.M•,....,.1. • -·•• ,..,.,tc.... t a I n e d I t s I e a d ,.,.,...,.." •our.-1. uc• 1 '"' 2. .. .. 11111, 1""'"'.,, share the loop title and to 114 with a sweep of R10: auclt,Math• .. u.._, ,,..,.,,.~ 11 ' • ?~;:i~:~ ~1:. !: .!~:11,~'1~~ ~.!.":::Utt~;;:,~\2:, force a playolt. Hondo. Harbor ia ldlel M.. . ~· L · s nd• s ucL•"'H o•rott1o.t12'.titi01.oti•.01 But OCC baa dropped Sad d I e back, a~o .. e~ ta .. ng.·11 L, .... ~·'-'"-' c.,.,,. •. , ....... .,.."'"'"" , i·· • t th h 11 ' COSTA MESA AMC,& JEEP LAIGIST JEEP . ... Ullwauk" lift York JJplthnore Bc>tt.on ,Toron&o Detro l ,;. ., _., ucL••••:1s.n111c•••Htt•.•· 11W11""o•.S.•Permor twoo -as reecon· meanw e, aceJf 1.ovot .. ·».• ••••011>1. '""'-•"" ference 1ame1 and hu another DlUll·wln situ.._. 1 2~ 3 3~ 31,i9 1 ~;·~· ;'7::,-~.:; .. ,v~~. •,~ cr • .,..,.1tt:ti!~':;~" not defeated Cerritos lion. The Gauchos host '"'e11~e.o-u1 • "•""W••~· · T-41(•"*" 1lnce wn-a span or 18 Palomu (2:30>, needlna • ••1;&.1t0d~rt9'11tu. , Lo•••••ut11111..,. 1amea. The Falcona 1 victory to move them Pro Soccer Stan~s AYL.ANTl(QON,. .. lllCI .......,..Ohlltlell w &..,., .... TorOfltt t I 6 t • II St 1.t\111 I 1 ) 1 4 I, COMtetlClll 0 t ' • ' I AO<llHltr 0 1 I t I I Cfllc•9' 0 J I 1 I I 1"1~• Olvlt~ ,..,,........... 4 0 .. ' • u T ,,,.,. • .., t • t t t I " Ntw Yo•ll t I 1 1 1 tt Watftl~f'I I I J 4 J • fl .. CIPICCOllllUUICI ._.,..,1DMt1t11 Lo\ Al\tlllft ' 0 U t IO H Ollltl I I t t t ., ' for have knocked off the Into a Ue with the Comets · Pirates by 12·Q and 8·1 ror second place. In the set>rt1thllseason. M lulon 's Soutberit· Cen1toc comea lnto the Dlvi1lon. 1.11 Tak~ a~Angal :! to I nett . 0" Thund1y1 M•y 111, ··, 0411Jlfornfl Aftt•I• • M1tn~er Notnt lherry " wm tpelll ... lunoheon at th• M.mott Hotel In NtwportCfnt.,. 1 tForty three Lldo·l4s In three vlalor1a turneH out Saturday and nday foe Ba~boa Yacht Club's JP'l7 renewal of the Harry Wood Ipvitatiorud Regatta. 1 The regatta conslsted of five rf'Ce& sailed inside lhe bay. .J Winner in the 3l·boat Class A oeet was BUI McCckd, Balboa 'facht Club; Bob Wheeler, BYC, \lf&S the eight·boat Class 8 win· ner, and Arden Ferris, Wlndjao\· mer Yacht Club topped four boats d Cius C. Trophy winners: ~U'SS 4 -1. 9111 McC..., 9YC; 1 Jl"I ry1.,. 9 C" 1. Jeff UnllM'I. MllYC ~ Lou 8'-\ YC. f. Owh ct .. ._, HWYC 6. G•b Mlw_,..11, :JYC lAU8 I ..,._,., llYC.1 Pt! O..W-. 1 c t.J•mK..,••.AIVC fl.4\SC I A•dal'I F•frlf, WY( I I UCJ sailor Rick Kem rou1M a down·to-the·wlre baWe with former Newport Harbor sailor Hugo Schmidt of San Dle10 to win the Pacific Coast lntercollegiate Yacht Racing Association •lnglehanded championship In an ei1ht-race aeries on Lake Cachuma near Santa Barbara Saturday aAd Sunday. "kem won tbe regatta with flnlabea ot 4·~3.1-1-l+U for 29 points. Schmidt had finlshet of 2·1·$-3"'-8-T·H ror 291h polnta. Schmidt's 3lh. points ln the rourth ra'te wu the result ol a dead Cooper•• Elleet lltdal••• heat with Tom Burton or UCI in which the points were splll. DEAR PAT: A &ood friend of mine claims that Third in tlle scoring was Mark Fo"'man, UCLA,. with 40 points; wearing a copper bracelet helps her arthritis. I'm· fourth was Burton, UCI. 441h, and fiftb was Pat McCormick, Cai belns bothered by arthritic painl in rny bands, and State Long Beach, 49. wonder lf there ls any sclenUfic proof that wearln1 The top two skippers io the Paciflc Cout championship copper belpe to reduce the palnotthla affliction. qualified for the Intercollegiate Yacht Racina A1socl1tioo of North P.S., Lepna HWa America championship at Kinpton, Ontario, Canada, later in the Tbe valae of ropper ud .a.er metals u • s ummer. mya&erfoal catt·atl Ila• aever beell preved or .S:U. UCf has already qualified for the North American team rmcin1 prond .. Moa medical eirpet'U believe U.at aa lm· championships at the Coast Guard Academy, New London, Conn., provemea& ta Jaeallll aad lite weam1 of ~ June 11·17. jewelry II pvely o..tilddH.t& SaClt elalma f• CGP· Next weekend UCI wUI also attempt to quality 1a.Uora for the Pfl' a1'd otber met.II da&e baek Ce BaJamla dinghy championships in a regatta to be sailed orr Treuur~Jsland Fra•klla'a Ume ud early eq>ettmema wlU. dee· in San Francisco Bay. The dint}ly champl<m1hlp will be aaded in trlclty. Some medleaJ pradlu.en la U.. la&e 11 ... Flying Juniors. • believed &bat pa11la1 metal ,.. ever Ule bedy Cmioe Race wo•ld draw elec&rldty and dileue CllM of &Jae body. a • Tltat belJef penlatt &oday to die rtaudal Mina· l s • p • NeuwBoy tace ol peddlen of "•trade ewe" m-.t Jewelry • .f Jle1nw' prmg o· mt The U.S. Postal St!rvlte bu flied aamereas to•· jAl.&i ---.1 plal•t. •1ata1t c•mpules tbat make medleal I • Ove .. -'l claim• for copper Jetrelry. Noae Of tMae eases ever i4 "*-* • CU react1ed trtd became tbe ftrnu lavolved 1lped ~ ... 'tJC .. IOR Won by Smyth IF~ .... ar :::;:::-:mr:.a1reea.1 to..., malt1ili.1pedllc ·i' P RJNCETON, N .J . ,,..,...,.~ AP) -Why don't they NewsBoy, sklpper~d 'Option' Sale P.lo•'• IAfl'll ink? Dart. a C Clas• catamaran skippered by Bandy by Jack Baillie, Balboa DEAR PAT: I've read wamin11 recardin& I Ask the bunch of Smyth., Cabrlllo·Beach Yac?ht Club, woo the CBYC Yacht Club, was the ne1aUve option 1ale1. ExacUy what does thia term e li1ineerin1 1tude1\t1 Club Cbampioosh.ip Perpetual U'ophy for the lint overall and Clan A wln· mean? who came up with the boat to finish In the SptiJa1 Point Ptnnin rac Sun· ner of the second leg of R.B.,Huntlntioa Beach Idea of a cement canoe day. the Tri-Port race from 1' aecattve optloa aale refers to "°9e mall or.. race. T~ion JI, taUed by Bill Carmicb~el. CBYC. Oceanside to Newport der plus wltere tile teller offua lite COllAllter u The Princeton lnvita· won the Greer Perpetual for the first boat under 20 Sunday 09portalty to puebue a• be111 wWI &lie eoeclW.. tional Concrete Can~ feet, and the Honeymoon Trophy Cortbefint Cal·20 he 0'fri+hrt ·~ fcn-tbat Ube doeS DOC refue Uaeofter, Ute 10M1wlU lte R ace all r acted 9 O to lin&sh. Performance Handicap maUed t.Dd eouldered IOld. 6tat4! bw ~ dl•t participants rro m 18 Other perpetual trophy winners were Specula· Racln1 Fleet yachts re· go0d1 maJ "' tie "9t I.II Uda maimer ale8I die schools recenUy . taon ,iofl Horrman Long Beaeb Yubt~lu .th l u !Qt!\ I ill" ~ Y •' -' -~.·.., ~~=1=~~Ptn11M11...-:~ _ _,,,iju~al.....c..u.c10~ .:..~~-..!.-., U _..~..... =;:~-~?. ' . ~toll.· ..,..::-·~ff.tlffwnr'·',,1~--~.~ f.<teLoad, Bill Boyd.Atamlt~ Bay Yacht ub, -wa1no~portonthewln· aamM.1111 • m11aatae Htiatrlptlo~ witl• a shores of Lake C1ttnegie the Ken Dam Trophy for'th first boat over 2& 8nd nera of the Orst lee (rom partleal~ comp~, It 11 fetal for ~at eompHy to 11 Th~ 1f''*::1 vosse~ undtr40feet. and Dart, lhe'MultibuU P rpet.uaJ. San ,Diego to Oceanside ofter u addJtloll&l ,~C!ll11e mder a •taClve op. b oa e ralh •rtudwe The Point Fermin race mes the ~rever ·on Saturday. Sunday r,.. ti• pin, •Id tie ~nmer bu u ob_HCatlOia *-ecause. as cs enta . lo ,_,.bo .wts: ellber..Wytbe~•~•JaotC.o..U~aocMlt or nplalned, thP ctmcol startU\&systtm..W.itbtbe weat.ra..,. at1atarttn1 CL•n A -1. N••••o i. to aytbeeoaH1ftbeltemte111&.UtMcoua•frtu with whacf\ ihey were rlral. =~~...:f::,~~J"~~vc; 1' no'eoatract wttll tit• 1lllpper, he 11., 80 .w&J•tloe mudtt wu matM wtth o Rtu~etesultl· cL•li• 1,eo11H1,M•UM10Mw· J:.oaldanttembes.-t••cler•a-atlYe=plM. St , t l · I tr lllfOll. L9''C: 1. Tlot• ••Y. J•'!"• ~,... -•' ... L yro.oam· ypepta eria uN00101<cu-1 r...,1..,11.2.11-1-.v.c-....-~1"', 1(•11• 1vc; ,, a.us1m. 11. trtvor emay~del'themere~•••• taae ineteadofsand CIYC , Llllu LMl¥ftrc>W\•l.C9YC Mui.• Sl9'i'C. • . p 0111111 '° PC•T -'·Wide l.Oad; 1. """'-· lloCI YOt.1<>9, 1.AYC, ), Mur Cl.•~· c -'·~tell Mitt. Ooft ..... DO •ctloia wba&ever •. n t~am from at · ric•,,.Outi:t> St·•• ...-1 cttvc ~,.011. ave; 1. htndrllt. s .. v. ' t'bUr dh •• Carn eale MUI TIMUllAlltt?llAllY-t o..n l "4\Ufl"'V HffVtY•NIM"lfW• lltt<!'.lSll ..... n--for. a..-"' • C.l'l'C t. T ... ulll \.•Of-CIVC:. -... _, ....., Mellon University cap· If"-.!. G ed' DEAR PAT• I wu thrilled when I reffived a lured top· honora. cover '711.9 ' ozzl doien long.1ttmmed roaet recently, but they 1tart. inl the..00.m t«>r course T Un, M id J'FJ:• SACRAMENTO <AP) edtodiewith1nacoupleofday1. Iathereanywayto In I e Iii l h u n l h re e ... ay r fJ W '1118 -'Californians used a re· help cut J'9Sel Uve longer? I'd like to know Just in m~u*. cord 121 o1l1Uon aatlons case I'm fortunate enoueb to receive more roees in BOjiDgles of 1uollne durlrr1 thefuture. TaylorMaJdl1.1kipperedbyChuclcTaylor.Llt· P'~bruary. the state A.J .• ColtaMeaa tit ShlPI Flut of Lone Beaeh.. won tho Cla A Board of Equallzatlon 11or11&1 •dvhe reeaWnc de• nda wtUi a division ln the fint race ot Hu.nttnitOD Harbour rted • sharp lalfe rid eoadJt•ta1 .-.. bl a eleaa. deep Yacht Clubs three-race Nu11ates de BolH Chica ,_r_e..,eo_--.,..·.....,....,-,...._~---• oeowJaer nJ1H wttb warm water a.ad ROrml ·pre· Ser1e1 Sunday The event drew 11 bOatl ln four PUBLIC NOTICE 1enatlve. lemon au foUa1e below tbe water Uae, claaaes. •=;;...,--------but dOD't ea& or 11erape tbe Item bark. Pbce la a ~-,, .. ,.,.,_, 1.ro ... ,. ... ,.~..,_., .. 11Mt11r """' ,.001 ....,, 10r ,_0 •• ,oar'"--. M-&. .. •·-~·-· l'HIU'tllll-'-9' a.tell,(M...,. l~l l18Y t ¥-•• ~ -,....•' .,. w uv.111"• -... •• ,_ ~Mac~'-vc., 1 .. --. ~MeWa,HHYc talner yoa uae baa ample water eapaclt1 ad4 • .:,",~~c••1 ·' ~·· F .. , •• 11"" .....-. ceYci 2 e.w .. • .....-warm wa&erdaOy. Dbplay tbe 1t1et 18 • eool loea· '"'" • 111-1. a.,,,.,, ....... """''-t11vci1. ~. O..Mlc!!Hf••· Hoa Ollll of dlreet aalltbt aad ••11 lro• Wair w ••vc ' cold drafta. Never place rOlel Oii a televllloa Mt or PlJBUC NOTICE • otlaer wuuce t•at becomet llOt ... la .... I( yoa re1nq1e tlte rotea, reeat a&ern tDdj ud reflU a cleu vue with warm wa&er aad flonl ,.... aervatlve-. I w I TRB .. WHO BtlNS AMllUCA'' rotter is tompUed b'1 uklnl a crou 1tction of le•dln1 Americana to Hat. In ordtr. the '"' lndivtduall "who e~ercrs. th• me>1t tnnunce In n"' tlonal d9o1'ion mak.ln1." Polnts aM then tab\llltld on · dt1""4ln1 aeale. from 6 polou for flnt plac• to ·~ 1 point for •beth. 1~ Preaidtnt Carter naturaJtr. headl "'-llat, and he 1 followed by Federal Reurve Board Chairman Arthur Bums. Supreftle Court. Chlef Juat.lc• Warren BurJer aQd AFL-CIO Prealdent Qeorae Meany. Watier Croftldte the CBS-TV new• correspondentr C"anlced nintb ln the 1t.i;dtnp. He wu one of th• top 10 1u\: year, too. Not a single bu.s[neas exeeuUve made the top 10 although W. Mtehael Blumenthal ranked No. 10. He ii Ute aecrtt.ar)' of tho treuury. Lut JUI' he wa• runntn• BenclUI(. Corp. ~ THE FtR8T BVSINESSMANTOIHOW Up on tht1 ll1t ta David ftoc:ktfelltr. He received enouah votes to rank 11th, down one pe1 froJtl hls 1871 poaltlon. Rockefeller i., cbalrman of Ne-. York's Ch.,. Manbattap Bank, but hie. seleeUon obvlo\llly renects more than that power base •Jn•, there are banken heading up bt11er ftnancllJ ln1t1tull•, (Walter Wrllton Of Citibank, TOm Clauaen of lank of America). tut year WWl1m Paley, chalnnan of CBS, was namecf" tbe 20th nat lrlfluenUal AmWAD. l'hla year he dldn 't eves(, make the atandlnll, which nm to IO'P~ta. Jn 20th place this year wu conaumv 1dvoc1te Ralpt.r Nader. Tl\at11 a victory of sorta for the bullnt11 communit)' .... L11t 1ear heraaked lotb. " nm.J'UIUSUEBS Q manYbUiineu people as uenemln., ma e • roster. Katharine Graham, publisher of the Waahln&too Pqst, WUi ranked 15th and ArUiur 0 . Suliberger. publl11'er of the Ntvt . York Times, la.oded in 25th place, right behind former.. President Fore!. Ii Finally, there waa one lonecorporatech1ef idntJfled II one of the 30 most tnfiuential Americana: Tbomat ~A • Murph)'. Wbo ls be?.Chai.rn:um of a liWe company call General Motors. He finished lo the 30th slot, down two rro . the po1ltion he held last year. The heeds of AT&T, ITT, IBM. GE and Exxon' 'l'herr. may run hu~e corporate emp~ but tbe~ are perctlved ISl leH Influential than RoaalflUt Carter, the Rev. lltlly Graham, H~W Secretary Jotepb Califano and Commont cause founder Joltn Garaner. "' ~ TRERe ARE TWO WAYS OF lookins at thete survey reautta. Bualne11 people ma,y be dlHppointed that their In; • nuence eountl for ao Uttle-. On the other ltand, 1tven th\ wideapread feeling that bualneu ta contribuUn1 to tho ruination of the country, corpora~ leaders can take s~m• comfort ~ n.Uiln1 that at least nobody knows the iM dlviduala who are runnlnt our large companlea. r. Corporate mana1emenll rema~acelesa. , :i SIOek Market~Posu­ Only Modest Gains '" -·· 1;' ,.t •!· -NEW YORK (AP) -Stock prltes manaaed a 1mlll Jain today, but the market, ptagued by lntlatiog woma. lacked 1upport for a 1uata1Md" rally. Tradlo1 wu ll1bt. · Invest.on. worried about the uncertainUe1w Prelldent Cart.er'• energy proiram. the Feder-11\eierv•'• monetar;: pollcey and inflatloo, bave been ata.ylq awv ffQm tht marlcet. ''Tbtr'1"1 no convtct1011t ·~ P~ Monte Gorcto11 Qt:-Dre)'fus Corp. "The market moved \IP because it ftl{j forward. Th1B 11 really only a techntcaJ raJJy.~· Lalt week th• market hJt. a 1$-month low and •P,t.!lt reatoltheweek recovertn1. · ~ The Dow I ones avera1e of ao 1tockJ c.inect 4.32 points to 931.22. Due to late transmission todaV'• fisting wllt not app111r In tht D•flV Pllof. Mal. llOUDYSHELL SAID ANOTHER mother told her that htr )'OUlll ion who wu tobech&Jtd for 1urt9!'Y read the book unW It wu do1·eared. He called lt hia "broken knee book." "I wrote the book in hopes that children could bt btJPld to '" doctor1 and other h01pltel penon. nel not 11 people to be teared, but. u people who are there to help them," aald Mn. Roudf'hell. "Worldnl hotpltals u I do, I have teen that U cl\lldnnrelax, lt'a euler to treat them. t-·--·~· ~U~.:;:W~lrl wu afraid to lo to the doctor -81 many c trren are -cause 1 e UiOCllt.MlU with abota,'' Mn. Houdyabell aa!d. • 'Whtn he uked her to open her mooth, -she acreamed lD terror - sht fully expected a ahol in lb.€ mouth.'' .. MIEN YOV GO TO TRE Hoapltal" la av&Ua· blJ for fil from HtaJth Aides Publlcation.a, P.O. Box •· 8oUth Lapn• tae77. Som• bolpital 1Ut •hops alto have the book for aale. · Ml'I. Houd)-thell paid for the pubUcaUon of this, her ftnt book, which ahe said took her about four months to prepare. • "lt'a a project, I'd had ln mlDd for eomt tldle," she .. id. ''When I hear back from enthutluUc partntl Wee the mother of the Uttlt "broken knee book 11 fello~, l feel it'• bttn a worthwhile effort." tflFTH AVENUE 1 . FLORIST .............. lt'W:o696 She ~t Wait :UDtil Win\~ FLOREHCE~~. (AP) -Mary flclal H14 there wu Pfibable ea\IH · MUDJ bu woo lMr county Job u U>ai Kn. Mum bid been d!lertmlaat-a snow plow operator Just tn \Im• to be .ed qaJnst because •Ill "u t woma. laid off with the rest ol the town'• roed crew. Mn. Muu complained of dl•· crimhlaUoa wheo the town board tlilDtnated btr PQtltlOI) OD tho town's 1nowplow lilt January. IN Pa011!3l', THE town'• b11hway 1uperln~ re1lped, then thouiht better ol lt and 1ta,yed on tbe Jot>. >. 1tate Human Rl1ht1 .Dl~loa of· 581-7030 HARIOUR RORAL 11111 ............. ~To'MllACH SO, 11IE TOWN board, w1ille ""11· lnl to admit it waa wrons. •creed to off er her Ute old job and PU be:r back Wll ... Tbt board's decision meam Mn. Muna now joins Utt n11t at the town'• I CLARK KINNIDY. PLORllT 840-8181' Diff eralitla Florist at tmll rAUJY Pm. auu ·=- BROADWAY ·FLOWIR SHO~~ INC. VC>Ufi' FULL 8EAVICE Ft..oAllT . • CALL 546·8214 Bar Open~ Ban of Women Ufted .. . . .. RARTrORD, Conn. 'Tbt ..cu. OD women <AP> -Women ta Coo-bunotbllllaorcldfor VALLEY OF FLOWER& Mot~~ut 9,.,;:.-25 111n·•••'• '" ~.-.. ..... . .., • J s-r. NANCY --• ...__..._uNffEO Feature Syndie1te 51 Ed•ble 1 ~1191 tun9u1 • unev.nly 52 E~cllanged ,g~::1011101 650~"".! ... .. peop .. 1,,.. •••• 69 The ''8" of 14 Meeeured "SE c • lend area 81 5e90 ury 15 Kind of soil Stet• 16Culture 92TtM····in medklM lftt OCflll I 7 On th• bl'1ny 93 CotllO(if 18 ReluM to 84 !dlb IGCIOI .. roolllOCk true 86 AitYO!'itJI 20Wind1torm1 Sllt!i 22 -·-cell ee ..••• cio-11 23 Man's name M\llld 24 Small clOg 97 Robt .... lnl0tmal NOled 25 0.blll \lirgin11n 2801Momand Poo DOWtol 32 Ttwll • 1 ul*lOr Ouel!CM 2 F11rtherlll0ft 33 AutllOr Er1cl'I 3 lndlfll wlt!I •hell• 42 FoocJ con- .... • theater ~5 Ha•!nll let• '""' 35 PllYQfound 4 o,..· 1 lol 10t 44 Sttlllet ll>Plrtlu• •motiOn•I 26 Make • 7 Cruel I*.· 38 Setfly1 amtudt g!Mf\11 aon one 1 5 Made •ntrt 21 SI..., kit 49 Fame • C:Olftfldtl 8 RtOIOlllf . one 51 Tt11n l19ht 38Scolltd11 IDHQh 29Wl'llft1119 l1b11C dl119tr 7 GrMn plenl Louvre It 52 Ruuien 40 Flrat mort.I. 8 ~Ide 291<1.nd ol ruler Ver Hindu 9 Mort crown • 1 Place where profound 30 Allow lo troopa 10 Genii• enter c1mp 11 Ancient 31 Bound• 53Rtdec:Ofete 43 Av11telou1 t 2 Oo~ 34 Ofymplc 54 Sour pertan 13 Ptovoktd IO -·· ·19 56 -•• Ctrlo 45 St>ht pleo. lng91 MOf\11111 Menoth 48 FrMt lrom 19 Huron and event 58 Wt11 WOtcS• bOftdl9" Er• 3TPl'NUC:llOn 5TH11dtof1nd 48 Jewti.ta' 21 Alack ' inc:~ 58 Puino, fol • units petlner 39 Deacf'pe<·! one 50 Greek 24 POlnted IOfl ec>Ewtf\ • ¥ar. Serious Stuff • Actor George Kennedy is on the recdvinl ~ end· of knife wielded by fellow actor c Mansoor Najee-Ullah in a scene from a Japanese film, "Proof of the Man," shot in downtown Manhattan. A STAI II IOIN .., ""' IOllNIMAllAN ·······~ •fl IJr;\'t •I IJtf •' '• ... ........ 1 .OGPM & 1 40AAI ftle 0-.. • 00& 11 •llPM ei.t .. ~ , ........ ....,.......,_ IOSIPM .,._,.,, .. ... ""' ..• • .. ' HA•MON IS SO excited about. lt that he'd Ulce to redo the whole c:lt.y of Newport Beach and rabe tbe ou ... t.eem of each citizen. -~·~Ii tho only hope we have for chan,1n1 our society," atmon explained. "It's a ,... voluUOllary procram." $elf·11teem he aald, ii' utbe dttt .. to wbtcb you actual· ))' teeJ warm and lovtna toward )'O\U'ltlf.'' ~d "Self-esteem ls '''9Dulne love of self.•• .,Lack of sound aelf-eatMm .la TBE ~N' roa low • esteem, he IMldfid, JI that society bu ~it 1'ith achievement. frien ud material cOods when actu it should mean "how warm' and lovine I feel toward myself." A key to Uklnc oneself better ts realizinc that ''you are not lea than or unworthy because you dldn 't do what you abotild have," Harmoa asserted. There are no •11hoald bn·•" ln sound adf-esteem All decisions er-. made on Pf• vaJUne awareness, Harmon aald, which is a procNct of heredity and total lite experience. Desires and needs have to be Ht.lifted ·because ten.loft forces a de· cislon. ,Action follows and a penoa ac- ceJ)tl the COD.1e4Uel\CU of the de· claion. whether the1 be coOd or .bad. 1bese consequences then ~ome part of fh• total Ute tx· pertence and tht cycle bellnl a1aln. · If a deciaion ii bad, a :pie.non should not tbide himaelt Bel 1ft b.Ja Hll ... teem drop. HarJDOQ TOE OltST TDIE 11\e saw the Jee Capades wu three yean aco. "Jlmewl'dbttheresomeday,"sherecalled, "JJustdldn'tex· pdctl t lo be Ulla soon." • Sbe..reported ror ,..bearsal1 last lune la New:Jlav~Conn.:~--------­That included \bree weeks working with the choreoarapher, followed.l>y1breemoieweeAotrehearsals in A.UaoUc Cit.Y. "Jwauc~todeathtoaayaword,"sbesaldofberflntdaya. "J aawtbepla-Uley were~ul. inlideand out.'' She also waa In awe of the cboreoJl'apher. "I was very Im· pressed with the time and effort and spirltinvolved." But a new skater quickly gets to know tho otbers and learn the found myself." It 1eem.1 so almple to Harmon. "It'• all locfc.'' he aald. -'All )'OU have to do ls 1et your awareness ln Jlne with reality and practice what that reality la. "I'd~ to chanie the world,'' · Harmon asserted in a cruaadlna f . :!.: you and your .9ue8ut ~: are Invited to an .. ·~· .. ART SHOW .· •t presented by . ·.~ PARK VIEW SCHOOL ·pyo . . ( _lffH TllJsl• a...~__,......--:-. ............. t2'47 fiRIDAY, MAY 6 -;--'77 fREVIEW: 7 P .M. tlri 8 P .M. . •UCTION: 8;30 P.M. ' ,• DiE~HU a l30l4 w.un:n (The perfect gift for Mother's Day) '""1Cll TOC .. OtTOltl SU ..... IOtt CIOU•IT 01' THC IT Aft OP CAU l'OIU•IA flOtt TMCCIOUNTYCWOtlANO• .......... J ~ Walkt!r & lr!e lfHal fr,t11IP. --;_:~HERITAGE REALrOHS .. ~:,-HERITAGE . • REALTORS T--~•17 flUIC.I MOYl IM Villa-Park ~acre. Room Prlq ot ownership 11 for Unlnil court, pool and reOected throulhoUt this boraea. Quiet country bea\rtifU}ly uparaded • Mllinl witll bam, corral, bedroom, 1~ baths ridin& rln1. fruit trees. home. 18000 BTU A/C triple caraae, workabop. . • .. . . ' . ~ . . • will keep )'OU cool thll 2 Story 2500 sq.ft. old • !-- snnnner throulh-Walk• Colonial styJe hmJH. 3 • inl dla&.aeee to 1boppln1 Bedrm. 2 bath. ba1e fam cmt«a and parU. Two rm, formal dine, country ~ an4 ltitcben ldtdml " 2 fireplaces. Ue{ves plote. Call col· Call for details. 5M-5880. lat ('IU) lf.2-2535 • . Cl'fN rj{ 9 ." SI~ rO• IWICI' ---- •I \\LI.I-.' 1:1 :\LI\ '.S ft) J•"'' ' ' ' '•• I '"I t, associdtcd r· ~ • . . ' JUST:USTID .,....,...... In Corona del Mar. i.o.er lid J bedrooma. 3 baths, fireplace, patio. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Open 1125 Lanai Dr. aBr, xlnt country clb loc, Many xtraa 54Mfl4 /M0-20ll -! ... HERITAGE REAi r<m•, ~ Walkt:r 1; l t!t! Real l!;tale ~ Witlhm I: lt:t! lfo.tl l!.lilh~ ~ Wa!k1!11: 111: 11'.ul h lu'' ~ ~\ :: ,· .. I t' "'' I , ~ Walkt:r t; I ::c Rt:.al It IU lll -.-r 'J ~·· ··.~1 . ' I IASTILUH vrrw noac e l\OOMS 5 bdrm. II fem rm, Iba Scar pr, xtr• clOMta 16441.a $1'0.000 PRlllf: WA'J'£BP'RONT PROl'BRTY Jean D~•· Ast l40-5MO ·- red hill _ S52 -7500 l J ' T I l ""M!y tlloufd ,.,.Oftty ... tlfht? ,.., toon N .. -,., •nv. ·-------twe l'\IM of -. N 0 c....,i.-. .. dl.oclte ......,. _,..,, .............. ~ ........ _ ..... ____ __, ,.., ~ ............ 1·r..i... associated t• ' . ~ . . ' A Comp/ffallprL..!Jve·ln. SelPvtr•.k n.CdM . .,. ....... .....,. Apt. M1at. Haady rnaUara 'o~ple to Im.,. It •f'W· MHl30 aft8PiQ. • lsfiMS llVISION ncm Ven Karman • Santa Asta, Calif. All Equal Opportunity Empk>yer M IF ASIEMBLEJUI ltnMIH ASSEMBLERS - We Wll T.-. • I t \ lnduatri • BLUEJEAN JOBS WOMIH-MIM TUIMllS -•MASSAGE TECH·rEah Comm-Ouar man. f\&1.1. P. T. work. Le.iJt. EUTSSPA WNlM MASSAHTICH 1984486 . MCHAU. COOIDtMATOI Xlllt oppor. tor illdlv. w /min 3 yn purcbuiDI CODltruetka aper .... be familiar w /plana • deallo1 w 11ubeont11ic· &Cid. Some i~ Ci teb•l acctn1 boWlecfce nee. XIDteo. beneflta. C•644-J31f 9All'tUNOON THI aava .. co. s:so Newport ctr Dr Newport Beach Eq\MJ Oppoc' EmpJoyw SALFS SAFIT.Y SHOP & COMTIACTOI '==' Western !:X~:".J ".! :r;.;:::: · . . •' •, VOLT ,, ,,,.., ..... ,. ····· .... TellMoDI You Love Her This Mother's Day send Mom a ~rc:<:tin~ all the world can share on Sunday, May 8. Express your love in a Daily Pilot Moth~r·, D.iy ~rt-cting.· Ads come in thrt>c sizt"S: 58, SI '5 ;1nc.J S2 for the SJX'Cial child's size carJ. (You muse be under 12 ro <.Jualify for the lictlc:st ~recring). ~-· Ir's c:a sy. Wrirt.· your mcssa~c: to fit th<: borJc:r shown hc:r<:. BrinJ.: ir to uny D.1ily Pilot office prior co noon May 6 . Or, you may muil a dippin~ of the: horJc:r with your mcssa~c: unJ pay- ment to Daily Pilot, .HO W. Bay St.. Box 1560, Cosca Me~ CA 92626. WE BUY C&.UMCAaS lrtaUCkl .TOP DOtlAR PAID FOR CLEAN ~~:1 !HA 1•, ttt 1,1 t1 h. \! £1 Jt'iPJ .. '"' ,l1 ,t.,. t1J A' >I ,. l, / ~I ' lf• 11 l t/ CRE VI E R •US91MW't• "Tl aDla JDtWT "f4UCpeS/Jl1&'flB "71 llOOtlpd MOll&J '11JCICl3 4fpd *!UM ~Oa•••• m 1r.-1C!t· n 1.1zdt1 I, ,... ..., 9711 "Jlc.pri. \tt,tapd, air, DU brb. bat&, ~ a.t ...... 103I PORSCHE 924s W• have an HC.ll•Q& Nlect&oa pliaa I.bl ~pr.41.Uoa. HOWIU llLLYATU VW..ftOllCHI ·. S.OluataC.platrano "... 111.-.00 491-4111 ' I . . " • ./'.t(,, ~. ' ,. ' •.• ~~.)~ ........... .. • J . . ·-.•. ,. ~ "1 ?~' .... • o ru , .. '16-~DeV-. . Beautiful Olenerfleld Brown cabriolet top, full leather lnterl~~1 stereo, tilt wheel. AU the Deluxe xtraa. (217NIK) s9495- ' rn appreciation of your ffnt ~ during our M ywa In the •utomott¥t bl4lnt11 {2Srd YN1' In tht blldl ••) wt'rt going to of fer you aut11t1ntlll avlngs on nearly tvtl'f •we hM an ltodl. • Thi• ill• tvtnt wlll run Oftfy Unuglt the end of Uli month IO wt tuggllt ~ Vialt U1 IOOn&I~. Loolllng Forward to Greeting Vou. BB Riptide San Gabrkl • ': Man ·DroWns · A 2i-year·old Sooth San Gabriel man drowned Sunday after he was a cau1ht in a ' powerful riptide at Huntington Stale Beach ofC Mainolla Street. 1layMarina I -!Oil Spill /Investigated Tbe victim wu · identified as Rene Molinar, 21. Llfeeuants said they rescued two companions of the victim but were loo late to save Molinar and emergency, treatment pro. ved to be fuWe. -wlilnlTle,uaiC!s al'riveO, Molinar was found noaling face down in the water. Lifeguard Steve Lone said two guards rac4!1(1 to the scene and im· mediately beean resuscitation. The victim was then picked up by a lifeguard boat and taken to Newport Pier where lite saving techniquet were continued. He was pronounced dead on ar- ' U.S. Coast Guard lnvestieators rival at Hoag Memoir al Hospital today were still seeking the in Newport. cause of an oil spill late Saturday Long said that Sunday's Jip- night in the Chrl1Uana Bay tides were very unpredict.ble )lari.Da ol Hundncton ffarbatlr in nr.U.-.:ont ol tbe n.. Runtiniton S.acb. ff• •aid about 15 persons 1tere Ora~e County Harbor Patrol rHcuiddwinltheday.-~ficid tecelYtd the ftnt report TJie MatJl 1'U the ttflt CCO• ofthespillat11:15p.m.Saturday firmed diOWnloa at the state lrom a resident on Harbour beach this year. I Lane. Capt. Dou1 D' AnWJ of the Hwalington Beach Harbors and Coast Guard lnveatl1ator Beaches Department. said there l 1:;n;ey L. Prince said about A20 were a number of severe riptides ~~JVSl~,«o..t.~ .. ,..$~-... ~~~~ ---~~ • i cranuP"o1e'i-aUons .Je ~ ..,.:b:'ut 20 ~::pie ddrina the· der way. danteroua condittou. Prine• aald the oil apparently He 1ald many beach1oer1 came Crom a storm draln which fortunately stayed out of the emptied into the marina. water because it was cbnty and "We have 1tron1 lead• as to they were further dlacouraaed by who dumped the on into the wltnesaina • numbel' of reacues. rm drain/' aald Prince. "But we're not releulna inlormatloo althta ttme." Oran1e County Supervlaor L.aurence Schmit waa on the sc:ene Sunday u Coast Guard o(. liclalt began cleanup operaUon in the dock area of the m Irina. I I if wo Hostages Held in Bank John De Jl.w final, Ritea On Wedneaday AND NOW 1'11AT mass oC black nabber', up to 40 feet hleh. coveriQI 10 acres behind hls '· Musket Raneb and 'J'Hdlof Poet, may ~Ike . him a millionaire. · . 'An Oktahollla Clty ntan bis off eted Heldelbtir1er aboUt 39 cents each for the. car Urea ilnd up to $5 for the bll_Ser ones, and Will set up a but• ttre-ahredcUna machine on Heldelber1er'1 land to recnle the rubber. ••we dbpase of these tires for fuel,., said Teddy Jo Bivtna, who runs a tire aaJvaae bust· ne11 and claims to have cleaned up Otlaboma'1 uHd Uru 1la1lebudedly. .. Eveeybodj'1 got enera probtema -the -bole countrY. There'• more fire In the tires than coal. Jt belpe tJie coal burn betUr'. •• A 11U.SOllTING crew from Oklabotna Clty amved Sunday and Bivens wu expected "AND I GUESS I've aot the bluest pile of tires ln i,be United States now," he said~ And the Ures keep comln1. Tire dealers pay Heldelberpr to dump their used Urea OD hit land, and he Itta between three and four truclloads a day, Hetdelber1er •aid b1I wife and (hUdren - three °' the u are 1Wl at home -are takinc the bwlDeu success In 1tride. "We're all aUll working. We haven't stopped doln.I the dilhes or rakin« the 1ard." I . . WASHINGTON (,\P) -1be U.S. Supreme Court today turned do1r11 a request by con'ricted Waterpte cover-up defendants1 to araue that a siew.s report about ~ the court requifta the Justices to t reverse the coovietions. WIU1outeomment, the court re-• f\lled to let Jaw~ers for. former j Atty. Gen.""Jbba Mit.cfien ana ex-,--- White House aides H.R. Haldeman and John D . Ebrllchman file a supplement.al · memorandum ouUinin1 the lm· , pact on tMl.r clients of a m• · news Jeak about the JusUces• secret d1scuu1oDI of the cue. l The denial was not accom'· 1 panled by an explan~tlon or by ~ any recorded dlslenta. It said that Ji.wUce Wllllam H. ft.eha. l q,uiat took no part 1n comJdertDC l • or tu.ndna down the requeiit. · ~ The ~ had not 1i>elled out what •rcumenta tbey in. teadidtomata.abouttheneqr~ rt . poTbe riPOrt atted If Natloaal .. Public Radio two weeks ago 11id the court voted once to deny the appeals of all three offlciala of I former President Nixon'• ad ... mlnlttraUon. 4e .~•*--ib.lt~· -> _-.... .......... c~·~__,_·~TIJ'G'.--.--... Watergate OOTer-up appeall but thiFCbMf Tutice Warren E. Burger wu delaying any an· nounoement of the vote in hopes of obtalninc at leut one other vote to reView the cue. In such appeals, t&e votes of .tour JustJces . are needed to erant review. There was no word today from the court on the three def end art ti' motion1 for courtreviewof their convlcUOna. Burler ADt1 other JuaUcea have refused to comment on the re-oort '1 accuracy, but The New (8ee00VER·t.IP, Pase AJ) • . Tendered For Firm 87 TOM BABEY OI tt1t Dtllf lll!tl M.U A btd U\at tops a recent '3Q'l.J million off er for the Jrvln• .Q,cn. pan,y )ll'aa aubml~ t.o th• )etnell Irvln• FoundaUon today by tbe Mobil CorporaUon. Mobil executive Robert Schlesier, 1eneral manacer of the corporation's real estate and development division, comment· eel (rom his New York office that the'\t»ffer waa aubmlttt:d. in Cautomia three hours before the nC>OQ deadllne eiven MobU 18¥ week expired. ''I cannot etJtlcaJJy comment on th• maount or our-bid unW the Foundation dlrecton have had a chance to examine it," Schlesier said. "But J can assure you that it exceed& tbe offer made bY tbe Ta'f bmao aroup." The new btd could mean that Mobil I& aeain the favorite lo what has been a bitter bidding battle with an East Coest con· sorUum headed by Detroit de· veloper Alfred Ta11bman, Wall Street financier Charles Allen and auto billionaire Henry Ford II. , But it the offer ls acceptable to Foundation directors, who are expected to meet later today to ·discuss the new bid, it must then be Ciled in Orange County Superior. Court tor scrutiny by Judge-James F. Judge. Judge.Judge wW have the last word on whether the Irvine Com· pany ia to be sold to the highest bidder. A court determination became necessary two years ago when Irvine heiress Joan Irvjne Smith filed a lawsuit and halted what woUld have been the $200 million sale ot the Irvine Company to Mobil. Home Blaze • Blame d on I;ghtbulh .. TV PROGRAM f'IGUA!S TALK IN INTERVIEW AT LAGUNA BEACH HOME ______ F __ or_me_. _,_,....;._ .. _ldent Rlch~d Nixon (left) C1tata With David Froat Women Proteat 'Porn Threat' During Rally SANFRANCISCO CAP>-c..-. rying signs saying "Porn Ia a Threat to Our Lives," a tl'OUP of women marched up raunchy Broadway and then held an aqti· pomoaraphy rally. "rt is Ume the media, advertls· in& and ente,tainment In· dustries, which teach people their expected roles, lace their responsfbillty for perpetuating the myth that women expect to be victimized," Elliott Manning told the Sunday rally. 'the ,demonstration wa.a. or· ganized by Women Against Violence in Pornography and the Media. They illustrated their allega. lions with a teat-show exhibit of adult magazine photos sbowin1 women models enga1ed in bestial and sado·masochlstlc poses, featuring torture and rape. F,.._P flfleAJ NIXON INT ERVIEW. • • erasure. Haldeman's notes of that vanished coove ... atlon bad said "what ia ourcounterattack? P.R. offemive to top this." Nlxon told * * *· ........... 1 • COVER~UP.-. York Times and NBC News have said they confirmed the report with other sources. If the Justices eventually do tum down the appeala, Mit.chell and Haldeman probably would be Imprisoned soon thereafter. They have remained free pend· in1 appeal since Their eonVicfloos in 1975. Ehrlichman, like the other two Nixon aides 1entenced to 30 months to eleht years Jn prison. chose to begin servlng time last October while appealing hls con· vlction. . · Frost much the same thing. He said be told his chief ot staff to launch "a public relations of· tensive on what the other side is doing." Also to Frost, Nixon admitted be lled when he m11de hla oft· stated clalfii that he derailed the FBI lnvesti1atlon into W atersate tor fear ot upsett.lnf CIA opera· tions, 'lime said. •'It wu a frievous ml.stake to have 1otten Uie CIA Involved in thh thihe," Nixon la quoted. But he I.milted It wu not a criminal act; that he dld not know at the time tftat his aides and his re·electlon committee were einon>i1ed in the burglary. Frost pursued the matter, say. ing "you knew that, in fact, criminals would be protected." Nixon protested: "Now, just a moment ... ·· "Period." Frost replied. CAIRO <AP> -Former Vice Pre1ldent Spiro Acnew says tt ls "very willkely" that he would seek public office again, but believes he could win H he changes his mind and decides fo make a comeback. Agnew said ln an interview Sunday he Is working on a political memoir which will pro- vide "a Jot of surprises" when it ls completed in the next year or so. Agnew, who in 1978 publ11hed a novel, ''The Canfield Decision" about a crisis involving a fie· tional vice president, said, "l'm very satisfied wiUl what t'm do- ing. While I remain i11tereated in poUtlcal affllnl, I bave no deslre to seek office again." once he finishes tl1$ "'PQUtlcti memoirs, he said, be would be ln- te.ruted in writin1 a political col- umo-or do~ision comft\ea-~ tally He said he had been ml11quoted in a recent Greek newspaper article that be planned to resume his political career and that .he was under contract with two television nelworks to do political commentary. He clid not entirely rule out a polilical~omeback, howev~r, and said: "There are no blacks and whites. Everythlne bu gay shades. But. rteht aow the chance9 are 90-10 tblt J ~11 not. seekoffice .•. "I'm in possession of some in· formation, which I won't dis- close, that leads me· to believe that I would be elec'ed lo offi~e. it I choose to s~kit." A1aew, SS, added, however, "Wlth the advent of the television age, voters have become more recepfive to yout\g;-auracttve- candidates.·· Interviewed while stopping in Cairo on his way from Athens to Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Agnew said he had business in the Saudi capital but declined to go into de· tails. · Agnew resigned as v1'e pres1· dent in October 1973 before plead· ing no contest to a charge ot in· come tax evulon. He wu f'lned tl0,000 and placed on three years probaUon. Asked tthls memotrt wOClld re· habilltate his name, he said, "I don't think my n'lme needl re- habllltaUon. I Clld nothina moral· ly wron1 in my ey79il never ac· cepted payments r my OWll personal use . . . I ade aomo erron in the way poll~t .snooey was collected and u.s nae er· ror was drifted into be ~use of the way the system worked," WHITE 'PIGEON, Mich. tAP) -i'orcwr General lrf oto.n ~orp-. president .E<\wdd Cole -was killed ln 1l l>laoe Ct'4Sh near here to-. day. It.ate police aald. Cole. 67, was on a OJght fr o'tn Po n \ 1 a c t o Kalamazoo when his 'twin· engine plane craahedJnto a field ln Mendon T°'nshlp near the Kalamazoo ... A-lrport: !Sollce said. ______ ....._ _____ , €ontaminate~ W ASalNGTON (AP) -Detec.;a table l~ell of three peaticld• compounda were found in thei< mlllt of a majority of nurstn..J mothers tested by the Environ") mental Protection Agency, But health experu say the low levels· pose no lmme<Jiate health hazard' to either mothers or their newborn children. "However. the possible long term consequences of these minute amounts are uncertain,'• the EPA satd in a statement ac· companying the study released Sunday. A hot lightbulb fixture that ig· nited papers on a garage workbench is suspected of start- ing a $40,000 flre that damaged two Huntineton Beach homes Saturday. Investieaton 1aid today the blaie at the Victor Belan"ger re· sidenee. 8511 Glen Drtve, bas been pinpointed as originatinc in ·'There is a direct relation between the acceptance of these attitudes as normal and crimes against women," said Ms. El· liott. The three were convicted ot cone piracy, obstruction of justice and giving false teaUmony under oath in what prosecutors said wu an attempt to conceal gov· ernmental misconduct in the Watergate scandal. It was Frost's quoting of the transcripts of Feb. 13 and 14 tapes that surprised Nixon. wi10 later told aides 'Tm sure I never heard that tape before,·· accord· ing to Time. Sea Lion Saved ' ' ' . • r ... ,,.,., ' ,...,...""" ~·, the garage. ··u completely took the garaee WATER CONSERVATION SEEN ••• I.i/egua'rd Tending Mammal ByRAYMONDESTRADAJR. transferred to Stauffer's Laguna home for convalescence. . and burned through part of the ~outh from Ute stat~ Waler ~-Ellser said his district waste roofofthe house." Fire Jnspector 1ectontheFeatherRiver-wasshut water reclamation plant is --~ ~ ~ ~ ~·--!A'~ .......... g -.. -u ,..._:,.~ ... • • • -..... &•~ 1.~·ra ,.,. '•M_._. _____ ,.#Jf8Y.<~• -~ • -o , .. -~ ... ~:1:31)~~ e oama11e occurr""" U\, , ""' ,._ ~J"lt-~ v ~ _ _ t . some portions or the two-story aq~ope~~l) . Huntlniton ~ anc;J~ountain ·house, Inspector Merrln add~. Problems began here wt\en the Valley, he said, the districlis able and hot eaaes pourine from un-M WO, c)J>eratine its-aqueduct at to maint.a.in the important barrier dere the eaves sent a shower of full capacity, began to serve more that keeps salt water from inlrud· embers aloft. w~ter lQ customers than it could inelntotheunderground basin. Some of these drifte~ onto the bringmlromtheri•er "It's goin1 to save the basin " • rooC of a home Just to the east of That's when the 10 percent con· he said of the water reclamaUon the Belangera' and ignited 1t, servationorder went out. project. "l\'s paying for itself but damage was minor there, he Th~ order went into effect on rlghtnow." said. April 1. There are thr~e agencies Alon1 the Orange Coast there The Belangers and their son in the county that deal direcUy are a t.olal of 13 agencies that sup· Steve, 20, escaped the inferno: with MWD affected by it. ply individual users with water. evacuating the residence when The Orange County Water Di.a· Ofriclala representinC most ot the names were discovered and trict buys water to maintain the these agencies say it's too early to saving their pet dog and aopher county's iround water s upply by tell how conservation la gotne, but snake. letting the water percolate into there does aeem to be a trend Joe Belanger, 16. wa1 a block the underground reservoir towardreduction down the street when he lea med through the porous sand bottom of The officials contacted cau- of the blaze. firemen aald lheSantaAnaRlver. tloned in many cases that com- "Hey .. It looks llke your The other two acencies, the parlaons are difficult and pro- house 1s on fire . . . '' hl1 fnend, Orange County Municipal Water bably not valid due to variables Tim Hennee. remarked. District aod the Coutal auch as weather changes and Municipal Water Dlstrlct, are population 1rowth Crom one Clothes, Jewels Taken by Thief A bur~ar who invaded a hc>me on Huntmston Beach'• northwest side Sunday made off with more than SUOO ln valuables. moet or It wardrobe and jewelry Items. lnve1llgatora uld Mu. PatTicla Marshon, o( 17162 Treehaven Lane. rer>0rted the loH of at suitcase Into which . jewelry, ·~rfume and other ap- p~rel apparently were packed. The thief also stole a woman's hat. "'' DAILY PILOT wholesalers who buy from the periodtotbenext. MWD and sell piped water to Generally, the trend aeems to water agencies. be that the most slgnlficantreduc· Gordon EI her of the Uon1, of 10 percent or more com· groundwater-supplying acency pared to last year at the same says the basin is down, althouah Umeperiod,havebeenseenindls· he believes they have enough to tricts whCl'e pubUc education on keep the wells fed by the under-the subject of conservation haa groundr~~rvoirsupply. been pracUced since before the ''Some~ the wells may have to M Wi> rate tnereaae. be do.~ down and othen de-For a dlatrict·bY·dlatrlcl look, epened and in some cases new hereareso~dlaures : ones will need to be due," he said. (An acre foot Is the amount of The underground supply ls used water contained on an acreofland by water acencies in the half or to a depth of one foot -or what a the county from N~wport-Irvine famllyoffiveuaealnoneyear.) north. -Hu n U n gt on B e a ch : February, 1176 resitter~ 1,669 acre feel or W•ter consumed eom· perecl to February, 1m when 1,730 acre feet were eoDJumed. But offidala also note tbat the ap- parent trend toward increue refiected in a.hole ficurea Is offset by tb compartaon.s of January o< lecture Se t On Nucle ar Situations 1976 iu which 2.100 acre feet were consumed with Jcurtrary, 1977 m · ... ,.rucbl"7l4attt!feet were usedJ · :...... ~taln Valley: No figur~s -were available although water · department spokesmeq said there had been some reduction during the first three months of the year, prompted In part by a Ci· ty cutback of 50 percent in irriga- tion of parks and parkways. -Costa Mesa County Water District: General Manaeer Ed Schnabel said he foresees a reduc- tion of nearly 13 percent between laat April and this April in his dis- tr l ct which serves 19,000 customet'f with an average mon· tbly now of about 1,200 acre feet. -Newport Beach: Where the city's63,000 pe<>ple use about2,300 acre feet in an average 60-day period, the trend at thestartoCthe year showed more than 11 percent increase, but that has started to decline by al moat 2. 5 percent. -Irvine R~nch Water District: Officials attribute a nearly 15 percent reduction since the start of the year to an ongoing public educaUon procram for the dis· trlct 1113,000customers. OI *-01Uy ~llet S!Mff A Laguna Beach lifeguard is car.ing Cor a,n ftill9i C4lif9JDia ~4fill JI~· who ~ tbet aid oC Harbor iratrol deputies in Hant• ington Beach last Wednesday. Lifeguard Jim Stauffer sajd this moruing the sickly' 30-pound sea lion is suffering from pneumonia and parasites in its lungs. Stauffer said Oran1e County Animal Control oHiciaTs re· moved a hook Crom the sea lion's mouth over the weekend. · Harbor Patrol deputies at Sunset Aquatic Park first noticed the ailing mammal Wednesday aftern0011 when it leaped onto a fireboat swim step. Deputies Bob M.ennes and Richard Lara threw a blanket over the animal. Mennes said the sea lion seemed to be seeking help. He and Lara removed the fishing Une from its snout. Deputlea called animal control officials who transported lhe eea lion to the Oranee shelter tor treatment. After an operation for rethd\lal of the hook, ~e animal ~as r 01 0 11 ftl M\ f,,, OP(: r,"••G .. ~<! l'•tN rtt.Jf. , ,.. • ' ' a ... 0 IJ r • ' • '(1 p ... Stauffer and ttl11 wife, Coll~ ~JMd4.,..~~f.i.OUa~~~~-1 ..,2J{~\Wywar'diq\ilttcM&til..- mals. Since the Orange County Animal Shelter has no facilities for sea lions, the Stauffers plan to care for their Hungtlngton Beach patient for the next three or four weeks, the Ule1uard said. , The Stauffers • patients have their own wading pool and are fed what.could be termed a "fish smoothie" for their daily meals. "Jim puts a tube in the sea lion's stomach and shoots ground up herring with medicine into it with a 1rease gun,'1 said Mrs> Stauffer. The animal must be force-led because "he's used to catching his own food," said Mrs. Stauf· fer. ' The Stouffers said the Hunt· in1ton Beach sea lion has I~ about 30 pounda but still mana1es to tight with the other animals lo their homemade shelter. .. H•'• really doln1 well," aald Mr1.stautfu. . Elderly SAN FMNCISCO (AP) -A tpecial trlbuna! today ordered the retirement of 112·year-old ~ aociate Justice lhnball F. 1 McComb from the Calllomia Supreme Cou.rt. the ftrat such ac· tlon In California .h11tory. The seven-member panel of atate Court of Appeal juaUces 1atd It concurred with the Com- m ls s ion on Judicial Performance's finding. It said · that Justice McComb is suffering from senile dementia "that seriouly interferes with the performance of hla jud1cial dutln and. that the dllabtuty ii, or la likely to become. perma- nent." f(owever, the trlbunal saJd the commlPion's findings of willful and persistent failure to perform judlclal duties were not support· ed by the record and "that no cause for discipline exists through conduct prejudicial to the 8diDln1straUoo ofJaUce whlcb brtnp the jucllcl dike llito dlirepute." By be.lDI retired Instead ol re- moved from Uae beDcb, McComb let.I to keep IQ ~ioa. McOOmbclfaJed all alle1auona by the CommlJaioo on Judiclal Performance, whlcb Included cbargej ol falliDI uleq on the bencb, dolnJ exercllil ID cowt and beJ,ng absenl The JWi•t also claimed that the eommlMSoo bed no juriadlctJon aod that tbe proctedlnp we.re UDecmtitutional. :• The tribunal answered ·McComb'• cballen1es aeeUon by aectJon, Fjnt. It rejected bl• claim that the 1peclaJ tribund had no authority to determine h1I future. • lt aaid the constitutional amendment •r.proved by California voten ut November which provided for setting up to -Retme. . aucb a tribunal was merety a pro-~edural change u dl1tingulabed from a substantive law cbanae which would adversely affect McCornb's rights. It alao rejected his contention that impeachment was the only constitutional way be could be re- moved from hit post. McComb'• attacks on pounds of lack of due process and equal protection also were struck down. He ls enUUed to a peiliioo or over $.11,000 a year. The Sacramento' Bee hu re· Ported that Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. plan.a to atppolnt Cruz Reynoso to replace McComb. Re)'nOIO, a Sacramento Juell•. would be the tint CbJcano to serve oo the Calltontla Supreme Court. A veteran ot 20 years on the hlth tribunal. McComb was aias- (8eeJt1STICE. P11e A2) ;:Mobil . J~ps _ Bid . . - ·:;FOr e Coe I' 'By TOM BARLEY Of tilt' o.r1, ~,,_Steff A bid that tops c recent $302.9 mlllion offer for the Irvine Com· ipany wa) submitted to the I am es 1 Irvine Foundation today ~ the • Mobil Corporation. Mobil executive Robert Schiesler, general manager or the corporation's real estate and development division. comment- ed from rus New York office that tbe offer was submitted in ,Ealifomia three hours before the 1 noon deadline given Mobil last week npired. "I cannot ~thlcally-comment on the amount of our bid until the Foundation directors have had a chance to examine it," Sehiealer said. "But I can assure you that it exceeds the offer made by the Taubman group." The new bid could mean that Mobil is again the favorite in what has been a bitter bidding battle with an East. Coast con· sorUum headed by Detroit de- veloper Alfred Taubman, Wall Street n.naocier Charles Allen and auto billionaire Henry Ford II. But if the offer Is acceptable to Foµndatlon directors, wno are Jazzy Lunch White llouae Staff Picnics W ASfDNC7rON (AJ» -First Lady Rosalynn Carter gave a box lunch today on the south lawn of the White House for President Carter's staff. · The President attended, put his foot up on a piano bench al)(!llistenedto Dixtdand Jan. "It's a rare occasion," Carter said, and thanked members of the "Jau Minors" band from Oreaon for the music. · L 1 Members of the staff. mostly secretaries ate I rc;>ast beef and h~m sandwiches and drank soda; pro- . ~ v1ded by the White House social office for $.1. Presi- expected to meet later tod~.,.to. discuss the new bid, it must then be flied in Orange County . Superior Court for scrutiny by Judge James F. Judge. Judge Judee will have the last word on whether the Irvine Com- pany is to be sold to the highest bidder. A court determination became necessary two yean ago when Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith filed a lawsuit aM halted what would have been the $200 million sale of the Irvine Company to Mobil. ~MOBIL, Pap ,\2) Man ·Holds BofAExec In Downey • BVLLETIN DOWIOEY <AP> -A Ion baa. •h dt•tadlac a cetnray laelk.,._, a rlOe ... •••al· tlM releued oee of two Bok of America exeeatlves leld .bolta14' today. Bott ..... (]p Bathtub-boat bay crossing contestant Ron Portalski foundered midway through Sun- day's race in Newport Harbor, but he kept his cool and held onto his suds Eight bathtub boats were entered in the second News Aeeoants • annual racer-from the Balboa Pavilion to Balboa Island and back. Winner was Los Angeles fireman Leo Dempsey, a Balboa resident. . Nixon Transcripts Marines to Go To Classes in ,...., .,._ Qe.rµ. aruLMr.s .C~er ~·~~~-, < ~~J\a\ed\hr°'1 'H''th~crowa.tfl~hnas: ~---­ They were accompanied by actor George Pep-. pard. •• -~--~ ~· ......... ~ ...... ·--.... ~ ....... ~--..... • )..r -·· ,.~~,. . :t;j4'e 0Qt;tp~.---~ --.:-. ..c: .• helicopter, a rifie and ammi.tnl-· · , 111 ~u• M..UA-'1 · · Marines at the El Toro and lion held two Bank of America ex· · Santa Ana Afr Corps Stations 'I ;Westgate Trustees I iSeek Stock Boost Trustees ot tin anclally- ~foubled Westgate California Corp. wtll recommend May 13 that the price of stock for Orange County-baaed Atr California elrllne be 1et at S15 a share. The hearin1 on the stock price. for Air Cal, a subsidiary or .~1tgate. wlll be held before the Jtate Department or Corpora- llons. Two court-appointed trustees. Curvin Trone Jr. and Herbert unztl, announced they will ake tho recommendation du.t· I a heorln1 on the pendlna trier of Air Cal and a wholly· ned 1ubaJdJar7 of W i,ate llltomla. and Kuniel , the-Air Cal shareholden would receive a Weat1ate common equivalent certlncate worth $15 a share for each share ol Air Cal stock held. ThoSe certificates can then be converted to cub or to common stock ln West~at.e Callfornia, the rlrm once controlled by financier C. Arnholt Smith. In addition to approval or the state Department of Corpora· Uons, the deal .UU needs the ap- proval of the bankruptcy court in San Die10 which appointed Trone and Kwuel. Tbe mercer bu alread1 been approved by the board of cltr'eC· tors and alureholdera of Air Ctllfoi'nJa. ecutives host-.e today after a NEW YORK CAP)_ One agalnttrarevivaJofyesterday's maybe~taklnglr,vineUnified robbery attempt was foiled by thousand days after his resigna· scandals. School District classes at their another bank employe, police ti on' Richard M. Nlxof\, Transcripts of unpublished bases this week. . Hid.. . Watergate and secret tapes are tapes. showing Nixon's involve· The school distract and the omcen Identified the alleced before the American public ment In the scandal and in hush Marine Corps signed an agree- bandit. u Albert Powera, 22, of money payments earlier than ment last week that takes effect Downey,aLosAngeleuuburb. was known before. blossomed Wednesday and is scheduled to Hia mother and sister were at C s u n d a y i n t w 0 1 e ad i n g run for thrt;e years. . the scene .helpin' officers tr)'in& IYlllh Kills ne wspapers and two weekly The Manne Corps wall pay all totalktobim,pohcesald. news magazines of the costs of the classes, with The bandit. armed with a piltol, The new acco~nts added only .help from the state, and the buraL into the b~nk, taking &GM Dead small pebbles to the Watergate .school dlltrlct will operate the hostage the banks manarr, ll1 rockslide that forced Nixon's re· classes. , Marshall Al1aon, and operat ons WHITE PIGEON, Mich. signatlon In August 1974• But Marines will be able to si&n up manager, Richard Torr~ said <AP) _ Former General they served to focus interest in for cla.saes Jeadlna to a hJ.gh Downey Police Chlef oren Motors Corp. president his first television interview on school diploma, reading cl.auea, Morl!lft· Ed d Col k.lled I thesub'ectsincethen. pre-secondary school prep Police were able to surround war e was 1 n The :1interview, paid ror and classes and pre-hlgh school the bank before the r~bbery ended a plane crash near here to· conduc ted b Y le 1 e vision refresher classes. became the ~ank • aHlstant dat~~:.·~~~~e ~~i:· night personality David Frost. airs District Administrator Jerry operaUOft!I olflcer, Roberta Hun· we1nesday over 145 stations. Rayl said the new program will t~n. Oa11~ down a pa11lng of· ~~J~~az!·~~e~ihlsctw~~ Nix on reportedly received operate In a similar manner to facer. Shesaadlhesteppe<t into the en&ine plane crashed into a $600 000 plus 8 share of the profits one being run at the Orange bank, saw the robbery 1n progress field in Mendon Township for his participation. County Honor Farm, where in- and eteaped. 1 The same tape transcripta t.hat structors under the direction of The robbery attempt becan near the Ka amuoo surfaced In The New York theschooldlstrictteachinmat.es. around 8 a.m., before the bank Airport, pollcesaid. Times the Washington Post Rayl said there would be no waucMdutedtoopen. Cole often piloted his Time ~d Newsweek magazln~ direct cost to Irvine taxpayers The bandit at nnt Tt!U.sed to own plane and was alone were used by Frost when the in· throu1h the school district, ex· talk to anyone unW after Junlet. when he crashed nose terviewa were taped last month cept for the time he plana to but then bit demand.I were re· down into the freshly in California. Nixon expressed apend admlnl1terln1 the pr~- layed by one olthe hosta1ea. The)' plowed field, state police surprise that Frost had them. gram u part or the dlatrlct a The exchanie rate for the Air I 1tock had orltlnally been aet )It a ah~ in tho proposed d•· 'by W•t1ate to acquire the out· included a helicopter and pilot, a aald. A heavy rain )Vll fall-•• It hasn't been publlahed adult education department. 'A cowt heiring on the merger .ac>-30 rlOt ond ammunition and ln11, yet?" Nixon asked when Froet hu ~ 1cheduled for June '1. tomedth)tdratedfood. quoted from one taped conversa-~19 percent of tho alrlino ~k. iii Under the propoaal by Trone Coat tion. ••No," Frost replies. "I think it's available to anybody who consults the recordJ." Clemente · Hires New· Police Boss· l Time magadne, In a Jenathy account of the nearly 29 hours Nixon answered Frost'• ques· lions, quot.es the former presi· dent as sayin1 his immediate ac· (See NIXON, P11e A%) South Pasadena PoU!e Chlef • Gary Brown Wlll be San Clemente'• new chief of poll~ ' .BEETLE SOLD IN 3 HOURS Irvine Harvest Festival or. 1a11lzen have decided to remain at the old location at Culver Drive and New Barranca in Irvine this year instead ot switchina to a new lite ln Uon Country Satarl. Or1an1zerasald the now 1iteof· rered more problems than answers and was more expensive than the lrvlne alte. They had hoped to caln use ot the wild antmal park tent, the park1pg areas, rest rooms and otJter f acWUes as part of the de· al. but learned they would have to rent their own tent anyway and that the other (aclUties would be added charees. Last week. the Irvine City Council approved the old site, which proved successful at last year's three-day fall feaUval. The council alao authoriled about $1,600 worth or paid staff time to assist the festival or· ganlzera. In addltion to the 210 paid hours, numerous city employes have volunteered their own free time, either after work or on weekends, to work on the festival preparations and operations. The council also &«reed to waive business and butldinc permits for betweel\ 80 and 100· organlJatlons who will have booth.a at the festival, to be held Sept. ao, Oct. 1 and 2. this will be the third harvest festival held lo Irvine. Most of the funds are donated by com· munity aroups, with a small pro- portion of money comin1 from the city. Crash Victims' ~ond.ition Still Critical Two victims o( ~arate traffic accidents last weei In Newport Beach remain in critical condl· lion today at Hoag Memorial Hospital. A hospital spokesman said Robin Eddy, 10, of Irvine is still listed in critical condition after she was struck by a car Thursday eve ning . Police said the youngster dashed onto the Pacific Coast Highway, and was hit when the driver of a car was unable to stop It or avoid her Marilyn Hansen, 21, of Midway City is also In critical condition from inJur1es she received m a two-car crclsh Friday night near the Newporter Inn. TIRE COLLECTOR NOT TOO TIRED TO GET RICH Cecil Heidelberger Sita Among What Could .. Be Gold Mine Baekyard .MiJJiQns ,-I Used Tire Colleclian FiniJlly Pays Off ANDOVER, "Minn. (AP) -Cecil lleidelberger has a backyard full of tires - betweeo_8 million and 12 million of them. He basn 't counted yet. · Heidelberger, who baa been in the UJed tire business for 30 years, says he's always known that some day, somebody would want those tires. AND NOW THAT mass of black rubber, up to 40 feet'iligh, coverinj 10 acres behind hls Musket Ranch and Trading Post, may make him a millionaire. An Oklahoma City man has · offered Heidelbereer about 39 cents each for the car tires and up to $S for the bigger ooea, and wUI set up a huge tire·shredding machine on Heidelberger's land to recycle the rubber. "We dispose of these tires for fuel," said Teddy Jo Bivens, who runs a Ure salva1e busl· ness and claims to have cieaded up Oklah6ma's used tires aingl~handedly. "Everybody's got enerlY problems -the whole country. There's more flr~ in the fires than coal. It helps the coal bum better." A 11RE·SORTING crew from Oklahoma City arrived Sun.day and Bivens was expected liter this Week to begin separating the tires io· to five 1?'8d~. Heidel berger said, . The tire-shredding ma chine, built '" 1920, is bein& dlunantled and will be tblpped to Minne9ota on three railroad ftatcars. "It'll tale another month to reassemble the machine here, so it will probably be the last or July before we start shredding," Heidelberger said. "1 knew what rubber meant in UMO," he said. "I used to sell it back then. But I waited, and knew once we 1ot a market eoin&, we • could recycle every used tire there la.'' Heidelberger said after Bivens and his crew cleaned up Oklahoma they were looking for a bigger pile or tires to get started on. "AND I GUESS I've got the bigeesl pile of tires in the United Slates now," he saJd. And the Urea keep coming. Tire dealers pay Heidelberger to dump their used tires on his land, and he gets between three and four truckloads a day. Heidelberger said his wife and children - three of the 11 are still at home -are taking the business success In stride. "We're all still worldng. We haven't stopped doing the dishes or rakin~ the YfNf. '' FromtPflfleAI WATER CONSERVATION SEEN. • • CAIRO (AP> -Former Vice Presid• ~iro Aanew saya it ii "very iinlikety" that he would seek public office aaaln, but bellevea he could win if he changes b1.s mind and decides ro make a comeback. Aanew said in an Interview Sunday he ls working on a political memoir which wUl pro- vide "a lot of aurprlsea" when it la complet.cl In the next year or so. Asnew, who In 1976 published a novel, ''Tbe Canfield DectJlon" about a crisis lnvolvtn1 a fie· tional vice president, uid1 "I'm very isat1afled with what l m do· Inc. While I remain interested ln political affairs. I have no desire to seek office again." Once he finishes bis political memoirs, he said, he would be in· tereated in writing a political col· umn ~ dom. ietevisioo commen· tary. He sald be had been misquoted hr a recent Greek newspaper article tbat he plan,ped to resume h4rs political career and that he was under contract with two television networks to do political commeptary. He did not enUrely rule out a F,....PageAI NIXON ••• lions alter the burelary June 17, 1972, at the Watergate otfices of the Democratic part,y were de· slaned "not to try to cover up a criminal action" but to contain the scandal for political reasons. "We weren't going to 4'-1low people in the White House, people in the re·eltttion committee at the hiahest levels who were not involved to be smeared by the whole thing,'' Nixon is quoted. Time concedes "some brief crucial moment& of this taping have been kept in strictest secrecy by Frost." Indeed, one question surely asked -why Nixon didn't dutroy those damaging tapes -is mentioned nowhere in the magazine's ac- count. political comeback, how•ver~ and said: "There are no blacks aod whltea. Eveeythhll baa ll'•Y ahad11. B'-'t rlJht now the chancee are 80·10 that I wlll not seek office . . . "I'm in possession of some in· formation, wh\ct\ I won't dis· cloaei that leads me to beUeve that would be elected to office, If I choose to seek It.'' A1new, 58, a~decJ. how•vtr, "With the advent of th• televillon a1e, voters have become D>ore receptive to youna, attracUve candldates." Interviewed while 1toppin1 ht Cairo on hia way trom Athens to Riyadh. Saudi Arabia, Apew said he had business in the Saudi capital but declined to 10 into de- tails. Agnew resigned u vice preti· dent in October 1973 before plead· ine no contest to a. cb.6rte of In· coibe tax evulon. He W» fined $10,000 and placed on three years Pto&>aUon. Asked If his memoirs would re- habilitate his name, he aaid. "I don't think my name needs re- habilitation, I did nothins ~al­ ly wrong In my eye~. I at'ver ac- cepted payments for my QWJ\ personal use .•• l made-some errors in the way po\itical money was collected and used.,l'he er• ror.lraa ~fled into j>ecause of the way the system worked." ,..,.... Page Al MOBIL •.• Mrs. Smith argued that th4' sale was unfair to minority stockholders in the Irvine Com· pany and did not represent the fair market value of the com. pany founded by her grandfather. Mrs. Smith owns 22.4 percent or the stock and the Foundation holds a controlling 54.5 percent of the Irvine Company holdings. Mrs. Smith is known to favor the Taubman-Allen-lrvlne bid for the company since she has been assured by the combine that she will be allowed to retain her The Interview, first of four to directorship in the new corpora· be aired in succeeding weeks, is lion. sure to regenerate some Mobil has advised Mrs. Smith Watergate passions. Newsweek, that if the corporation takes over county's ground water supply by were available although water Water District. No other figures which also devoted this week's the Irvine Company she can ex· letting the water per~olate into department spokesmen said wereavailablefortheSouthCoast cover story to Nixon-Frost -but peel to lose au eonnectlons with the underground rese rvoir there had' been some reducUon Diatrict. apparently not with the same ac· t.be COJJlP.aJl.)' founded by Jam ...... -~ through the porous sand bottom of during the first three mor\ths of -San Clemente: No clear cess to the taping seutons as Irvine II. the Santa Ana River. the year, prompted In part by a ci· trend has been set, officials aay, Time -announced former Foundation attorney Howard The other two agencies, the ty cutback of 50 percent In irriga· In apite·of the reduction or water Watergate prosecutor Leon Privett was not available for Ora nee County Municipal Water lion of parks and parkways. use from at lltUe leas than 400 acre Jaworski has agreed to write a com menttoday. District and the Coastal -Calta Mesa County Water feet In March 1976 to about 376 "factual" response" in next But It was ~arned th.at be re· That crash claimed the hfe oC Municipal Water District, are District: General Manager Ed;. acre feet in.March 1977. week's issue. ceived the new bid from Mobil at 17-year-old Corina G.arcla of wholesalers who buy rrom the Schnabelsa1dheforeseesareduc-San Clemente water omclals he newly published tapes 9 a.m. and im_mediately contact-ti~~.)Y~ier ~~!(1't\'.W9:.f.,~WD ... ~~ stll ~d ~~ta •. \.itm o!_]~Y 1:~zc.t.~~w~~-~~#fl~llljy_.~s~t8}lt~,47~~~~!1i-'lfi.•~f" ~ A.d fl'DJUW~ ~~ 1 ' ~_Lo.!...;-~ ~ • >-,.,-'>~-..<1 "' ""-' -' * ·~ ~~~ ....,, --~ -.t. pHr.t~,.\.l~ t~ J.;;1°'4 --. • • -· ~....-..._-::.=::: .. .:,,i'fi! Gordon r. 1 s er o ( the tr' '°l wh c serves 19, uoo pared to"cal the dlference In Ule covel"-up trial of Nixon intimates new offer will~ discussed. The dr1v~r or the c_ar In which groundwater-supplying agency customers with an average mon-two tl1ures conservation. They J 0 h n N . Mitch e I I, H . R . ~he scheduhng of further court the dead girl was .a passenier, a says the basin is down. although thly flow of about 1,200 acre feet. would rather wait until a trend Ha Idem 3 n and J 0 h n 0 . action will depend on the decis_lon 17-year·old Whittier boy, faces he believes they have enough to Newport Beach: Where the' has been set over a period of Ehrllchman. They were routine· reached by the Foundation charges of manslaughter an the keep the wells fed by the Wider· city•s63,000people use about2,300 months after they've begun their ly supplied to defense lawyers, board-, mishap. groundreservoirsupply. acre feet in an average 69-day upcoming public education pro-but not used al trial because But it ~as agreed at the last None of the other people in Mrs. Hansen's car were serious- ly injured an the collision. f",....PogeAJ JUSTICE ••• pended m January atttr the rune· member Commission on Judicial Performance recommended he be removed or reured from the bench. McComb'• 67 year-old wife. Margaret, who was appointed his permanent conservator Feb. 28, asked that he be sracefully re· tired from the court lnttead of re- moved. At a hearing before the special tribunal In Murch, the Com· mlaalon on Judicial Performance sided with Mrs. McComb in ura· ing that the Jurist be retired. O"ANGI COAST DAILY PILOT .... ,, .. _ t>-n ___ _ ,._., ...... U flw O.tlnM U.. ............. AtlOltftl llllt-•"l &:•ton "Some of the wells may have to period, the trend atthestartofthe gram. • similar material was found In court session that the. Taubman· be closed down and others de· year showed more than 11 percent _Orange County Water Works other tapes. Frost's people and Allen-Irvine group will h~ve at epened and in some cases new increase, but that has started to No . 4 : Serving San Juan the current Watergate pro· leas~ one more opportunity to ones will need to be dug." he said. decline by almost 2.5 percent. • Capistrano, the district's use has sec utor deny ma king them outbid Mobil In the race for con- The underground supply Is used Irv~ Ranch Water District: risen 2n percent between the two public trol ot the Irvine Company. by water agencies in the hall of Officials attribute a nearly 15 Marches 8 substantial gain even · News that the· new Mobil bid the county from Newport-Irvine percent reduction since the start in llght ~f the 12 percent growth One tape is of a conversation had been filed appeared to 1ive north. or the year to an on1olng public rate. Nixon had with top aide Charles new heart today to Irvine Com- Ellur said his district waste education program for the dis· The district has an average W. Colson, on June 20, 1972. three pany employes who make no wate-r reclamation plant la trict'sl3,000customera. monthly flow of about 22.5 acre days after the Watergate secret of their support for Mobil operating now and by pumpin1 -La1una Beach County Water feet. burglary. m the biddlna battle. treated water underground In District· After showlnl an 18per· -Rossmoor Water Company: "Terrific, .. commnented a Huntington Beach and Fountain cent decrease from March of 1976 The only private water company ''It doesn't sound like a akllllul senior company official who Valley, he said, thedistrictlseble to March of 1977. ditltrlct use, In the Oran1e Coast area serves Job," Nixon told Colson. "If we declines to be Identified. ")fy job to maintain the important banier which averages 52 acre feet a 35,000 people tn1 Leisure World didn't know better, I would have is one of many on the Une in~ that keepssaJt water from 1ntrud-week, skyrocketed up 10 percent area with an averaee of 680 acre thought It was dell berately lawsuit and I only hope that. ing into the underground basln ror the month of April, due feet of water a month. botched." Mobil can pull It off." "It's roing to save the bum," primarily. officials say, to the hot he said of the water reclamaUon weather and the lnfiux of tourists. project. "It's paying for Itself Figures Indicate that tourist· rltht~." oriented Laguna Beach ex· Alona the Orange Coast there penenced a rise In use over the are a total of 13 acencles that sup-warm weather week of April 18-. ply individual users with water, an Increase not shown In the Officials representing most or neighborln1 South Coast County these a1encies say It's loo early to tell howconaervatlon l11oln1. but there does seem to be a trend toward reduction. The ofllclai. contacted cau· tioned In many cases that com· parlsons are difticult and pro· bably not valid due to variables such as weather chan1es and population growth from one period to the next. Generally. the trend seems to be that the most sianmcantreduc· tlons, or 10 percent or more com· pared to lut year at the same time period, have been seen In dis· trlcts where public education on the subject of conservation hu been practiced since before the MW Orate increase. For a disUict-by-4i1trict look, here areaomefiguru: <An acre foot ls the amount of >wateroontained on an acre of land to a depth or one foot -or what a famllyofflveuseslnoneyear.) -Hunt1n1ton .Beach :, February, 1978 registered 1,81!e acre reet of water consumed com· pared to Febnaary. 1977 wbm 1, 730 acre feet were consumtid. But offlclala also note that the ap. parent trend toward increase renected tn lholo fl1uru ts offset by the compariaons of January ot 19'78 in which 2, 100 1cre reet were consumed with January. um ln whlch 1,774 acre feet wer1 UJed. -Fountain VallAY ; No n~es 3-2 Bike Fee Vote Retain.a Irvine Policy Bicycle reglatraUon fees W)1I continue In lrvtne despite obJec· lions by Mayor Dave Sills and Councllman John Burton. Sills and Burton both voted last week to adopt a voluntary bJke re- glstration pro1ram, but were· voted down by the other three councll memben who wanted to continue mandatory llcen1ln1. With a 3·2 vote the council con· Unue<f the fee schedule of $3 for a three-year license, With a $1' fff for lranarer or ownerahlp. Fund• obtained from tbe licenses will be u1ed to oPeJ'ate and improve blk• llcenslnf and 11fetyproaram1 tn lrvtne. 8urton 11td he opposed tho m'1ndatory tlcen4tna proctaro becauu he does not believe In comP.ulaory Ucenna. • '.l d be happy with volwttary uc,nstnc; o..t•• not to much to aak," Burton auuested. However the mlljoritJ Of tho council bftle~ed It wo too much to aak and aaid th01'd rathtr 1 a maftdatoey PM1J"'9.m ID lrYtne. ''q,· r f1 1..,',f • Ot ·•t1JP01r. , i F'llh T ltJt, I"-' ft Y 1 1 .. ( J lfT "'" \ 1 't I, I'• f / .. . . By PIDUP aOSMlllN oe .. o.lly l'llet Se.ff Lagtllla Beach may escalate its .. cold war against the Heisler Park ~uirrels, whose tunnels are erodtng the oceanfront bluffs, into what some hope will be total and final warfare. Recently the Planning Com· mission voted to put $8,000 lnto the warchest !or what was listed on ill agenda as the "Heisler Park Rodent Final Solution.'' ·san Cle1nente Hires . .. .. , ,South Pasadena ~ 1 frl'ine c ... p••fl New Mobil Bid Tops Ford Try By TOM BARLEY ou .. °'"" l'~st•lf A bid that tops a recent $302.9 I milUon offer for the Irvine Com- 1 pany was submitted to the James lrvine Foundation today by the I ftf obil Corporation. Mobil executive Robert · Schiesler. general manager of the corporation's real estate and development division, comment- ed lrom his New York office that the offer was submitted in California three hours before the noon deadline given MobU lut .._eek expired. "I cap.not eUUtaJb' oomment on the amount at our'btd until the Foundation directors have bad a chance to examine it," Schlesier said. "Bu! I can assure l you that it exceeds the ofler ,.1 made by the Taubman group." • The new bid could mean that Foundation attorney Howard Privett was not avatlable for comment today. But It was learned that he re· celved the new bid from Mobil at 9 a.m. and immediately contact· ed Foundation directors to schedule a meeUne at which the new oiler will be discussed. The schedullng oC further court action will depend on the decision reached by the FoundaUon board. <See llOBIL, P•&• &2) , ~~~~~~~~..-...·~~~ 'f'•t t ·• \\' mi ;~1.~=~;, aortlum headed by Detroit de- 1 veloper Alfred T•\lbman, Wall Street financier Charles Allen and auto billionaire Henry Ford u. · But lf the offer ls acceptable to I .Foundation directors, who are expected to meet later today to 4iscuss the new bid, It must then be filed in Orange County Superior Court. for scrutiny by Judge James F. Judge. Judge Judge will have the laat word on whether the Irvine Com- pany is to be sold to the highest bidder. A court determination became Wi ceasary two years ago when vine heiress Joan Irvine Smith nled a lawsuit and tl•lted what 1would have been the COO million ~ale ol the Irvine Company to Mobil. Mra. Smith araued that the fale was unfair to minority •4tociholders In the lrvlne Com· 1pany Ind did not reprntnt the f alr tnatket value of tht com· '.pany founded by her ;arandrather. ~ Mrs. Smith owit. 22.4 perum 'd the 1tock and the FoUadaUon f\old• a controllina 5':5 percenl ot tht Jr.vine Company hOl.dJnet. ' Mn. Smith u know• co ravor ;uie Taubman-All n·lrvme btd for ;Q>• corn~ alnCe ebe hu been .f.l•ur.d bY· the tomblne that ahe ~lll be allowtd to etain her i«Slrectorlbtp ln the new corpoi:a- . llon. Mobll has ad•l.aecl Mn. SIUJth at If the corporation taka over • Irvine Comp8.!l.f;1he can ex· l)ecl to lote all C<>*CtioDJ with .tht company foundel by Jamea ..lnlnell. ~ • ,.~ C1UJ1h Kills &GM Head WHlTE PIGEON, Mich. ' (AP) -Former General Motors Corp. president Edward Cole was killed in a plane crash near here to· day, state police said. Cole, 67, was on a flight from Pontiac to Kalamazoo when his twin· engine plane crashed into a field in Mendon Township near the Kalamazoo Airport, police said. Cole often /iloted his own plane an was alone when he crashed nose down lnto tbe freshly plowed field, state police said. A b&avy rain wa.s fall· ing. - 0.llY ...... Steff' "'9l• Replaces Portner May 23· WHAT DOES THE FUTURE HOLD FOR FURRY FELLOW? There'a Talk of 'Final Solution• for Squlrrel Woea South Puadena Police Chier News Aeeoants Gary Brown wtJl be San flemeote's new chief of police. City Manager Gerald Weeks N • T; • announced today that the 37. •xon rianscnpts year-old police executive will · 11 begin his duties May 23. His salary will be $24,528 annually. • He replaces Chltf Mel Portner Rev;ve Sea-J -l 11 who retired Sunday. II IUUA, The new San Clemente rollce I c hieldhaa helaided d the tout~ NEW YORK CAP) -One The new accounts added only : Paaa ena po ce epar men thousand days after his resigna-small pebbles to the Watergate ' since August. Previoualy, he was ti on. Rl chard M . Nixon, rockslide that forced Nixon'• re.-~::~~hilla police chief for four Watergate and secret tapes are signaUon ln August 1974. But · Weeks aaid Brown hQ a broad before the American public they served to focus interest ln background ln law enforcement acalo for a tevival o( yesterday'• his first t.elevlsion intervlew on t 17 d' scandJl}s. ·the sUbjectsince.then. sJ)'anning yean. ne was-Tranactlpta or unpubliabed The interview, paid for and eraduat•d from Cal State University ln Sacramento and bpes, sbowtng Nixon's involv~ conduc.ted b~ television holds 8 master's degree from the ment in the scandal an~ in bush personality David Frost,. airs u n i v er sit y 0 f s 0 u the r n money payments ear her than W ~dnesday over 145 stations. Callfomia was known before, blossomed Nixon reporte dly received Brown' has served as a Sunday in two leading $600,000pl~ashareoftheprofits criminal justice ~tant for newspapers and two weekly · tor hls P8ft!.~l~a!1on. • ..._ __ . ,., ~ '"*' ---. Ae ~~ , --, ~ ~-• " .,.. •• • • • ~ 101u J-a.c~ml.dlll ana y$t lor'\be' -1r • ·• • ~."' -.... ~,.·~'i:'1fu)'l'llctrnt .,.,.~~~- CaUfornia j~tlce department, ~ T~mes, the Washington ~ost. week.a said. •6! -hap ff Time and Newsweek magaz:mes As a special aeent tor U.S. lf.l.J.,3 8 .. Ur.I were used by Frost when the In· Naval Intelligence, Brown ~ tervlews _were t a.ped last month orked out of Camp Pendleton 2 ~ , . in Califoi'nla. Nixon expressed w -•u i ( 0 •~n..-nn surprise that Frost had them. so he ls fa1uuaar with the c ty o ~··~ "It hasn't been published San Clementeisaid WeelcJ. • t'" Nix ked b ~ The new pol ce chief ls married l T,. tll"9 • .,.111 ye · on as w en "'""'t and the lather of three boys. • n ~ '"..... tl~~~ed from one taped conversa· Man Collapses In Pursuit of Theft Suspect An elderly San Clemente· man collapsed early Sunday when he jolned nelehbors on AvenJda San Fernando in pursuit or a man they suspected ol buralari:dng a car. Two La"1Jla Beach police of- f I cers injured in separate weekend accident.a were patched up by medical teams and went to work again the same day_ Both accidents occurred Satur- d•Y. · In the ftrat, a car driven by Robert O. Barton, 20, ol Whittier, went off the road at Park Avenue and Tahiti Avenue and tumbled halfway-Oown a 600-foot embank· ment. The Austin-Healy converUble, with top down, ended upslde down. Bartbn and his passenger. Thomas F. Reardon Jr., 20, of Lakewood, J<ode with the car un· til It turned over, throwing them "No,'' Frost replies. "I think it's available to anybody who consults the record!f." Time maga.Zlne, In a lengthy account ol the nearly 29 hours Nix6n answered Frost's ques• lions, quotes the formef prtal· dent as saying his immediate ac· tions after the burglary June 17, 1972, at the Wateriate offices ot the Democratic part.y were de· signed "not to try to cover up a crimlnal action" but to contain the scandal for political reascna. "We wererft going to allow people ln the White House, people in the re-election committee at the highest level.a who were not Involved to be smeared by tho whole thing." Nixon 11 quoted. John Och, 76, was sittine on a curb when firemen anived at the scene. He said he wu feeling all . rl1ht, but u they helped him to his feet, ht fell to th• 1round un- conacloua a second Ume. Och waa transported to San Clemente General Hoapltal, where ht wu treated and reltued. San Cle•ente police orncen arrested Kenneth Willey, 2'l. a C•mp Pendleton marine, on charges of ti\irtlarblni •n automobile. Lt. Ray Hartman aala the 1 a.m. chue began after a man tried to take a tape 4eclt froth an automoblle wtilch belonaed to an Avenlda San clear. . Police and firemen called to the scene hacked throu1h un· derbrush up the steep slope and •trapped the men to stretchera. whlch ·they lowered to am· bulancea walUng below. Ofllcer Paul Workman wu ln- jufed when he f eD whllo-leldinl one of the atretcber parties down thf htll ln the dark. He aultered 1cratche$ end brillHI but wu othefwlM Unharmed • Time concedes ''some brief crucial mornents of thi• taplnf have been kept ln strictest secrecy by Frost." Indeed, one queaUon surely asked -why ' Nixon didn't deatroy those damaging tapes -b menUoned • nowhere in the m&1ulne'1 ac· 1 count P'emando resident. The Interview, first of four to be aired ln IUCC"4ln• w..U. ii <See NIXON, hi• Al) I l Barton a11d Reardon were taken to South Coast Community Hotpltal, where Barton wu Lreated for a l,Pra,loed 1nlde, cuts and bndl~ JWi?dOD tt&ff'irid a brolltn ler. H• lotu waa tranaferred to the Loa Altos (lee JNIVUD, P•~ AZ) ~ ' ) '· A.2 DAll Y PfLOT BJ JOANNE REYNOLDS Ot•Oell,~IMHJaft It's too early to tell whether Orange Cout realdeot.t are mlk· ing a concerted and united effort to save water, but local water of- ficials s~ they think they aee the atart ol a trtmd toward con.serva· ti on. That trend haa been mandated by the Metropolitan Water Dls- tfict, Southern California's water supplier, which decreed there would be a 10 percent conserva- tion by slappln& a 100 percent su.r • charae on amounta consumed overthatflgure. Add MWD officlala say they won't hesitate to ralae that con- servation fi1ure to 20 percent 1f the desired results are not achieved. U that doesn't work. there'• always rationlna. Water people point to sewqe volume as a better overall in· dicator of waler conservatfoo than a patchwork diatrlcl·by- distri~accounUngofwatel' l.lSe. According to a spokesman for the Orange County SariltaUon District, their now has dropped about four percent since the.first of the year at a lime that normally registers an increase. year, the water that came to the · tooth from tbe atate Water Pro- j~ton the Feather lllver wushut otf. leavins Southem Ca1lt0fnla•1 only •UJ>PIY tbe Colorado River aqueduct operated by tbe MWD. Problems began here when the MWD, opeutlnJ lta aqu.duct at • Cull capacity, be1an toaerve mor. ' water to customers than it could brln1ln from thertver. That'• when the 10 pucent COD· servatloaorderwentout. The order went lilto effect CD April L There are three qeDclell in the county that .deal d1*tijt with MWD affecteclby le; The Orange County Wat#;J>lio trlct buys water to mahitam the county'a ll'O\&Dd water svpPlJ by lettlnc the water pereolate lnt.o the undereround reaervoh· throuib the porous a and bottom of tbeSantaAna River. The other two a1eneJe., the Oranae County Municlpa.1 w~ • District and tbe Coa1tal 1tlunlclpal Water l>latnct. are wbolesalen wbo buy from Ute MWD and sell piped water to wateugencles. f • TV PROORAM FIGURES TALK IN INT£"VIEW AT LAGUNA BEACH HOME Fonner President Richard Nixon (left)Chatted Recently With Oevld Frcm Sickly Sea Lion Saved Lifeguard Tenda Ailing Aquatic Mammal ~ 1ure to re1enerate 1om• Wa at. PNtloos: Newaweek. which alao devoted thlJ wee1t•1 cover 1tory to Nhcon-Frost -but apparenUy not wlth the same ac· cess to the taplng aeaalooa u Time -announced former Waterfate prosecutor Leoll Jaworakl has agreed to write a "factual" response" in next week'tluue. The newly publlthed t.pea were prepared by the Wateraate prosecution team t or the 1974 cover-up trial of Nixon loUmates John N . Mitchell, H .R. Halde man and John D. Ebrllchman. They were rouUne· ly supplied to derense lawyers, but not used at trial because simllar material was found in other tapes. Frost's people ~d • the current Watergate pro- secutor deny maktn1 them public. One tape ii of a conversaUOn Nlxon bad with top aide Charles W. Colson, on June 20, 11m. three days after the Watergate burglary. "ll doesn't sound like a sklll!ul job, .. Nixon told Colaon. "U we dldn •t know better, I would bave • thought it waa deliberately botched." That was on the same day that Nixon talked about Water&ate with Haldeman -a conversaUon r lost becauae ot an 181!.i·mlnute etaaure. Haldeman'a notes of that vanished conversallcm had said "what is ourcounterattack? P.R. Dennis McLain of the Oran_ge County Municipal Water DlstJict says that sewage figure probably represents a countywide drop of six to eight percent in water used Gordon Ellser of the groundwater-suppl}in& a1eney saya tbe basin 11 down. altbough he bellev~ they have enough to keep the wells fed by th• Wlder- &round reservoir supply. ByRAYMONDESTRADAJR. Harbor Patrol deputies at fed what could be termed a "fish ofCensive t.Q top thi.J." Nixon told Sunset Aquatic Park first noticed smoothie" for their daily meals. Frost much the same thing. He Ol IM o.llr ~119' S~fl "Some of the wells may have to be closed down ancl othen de- epened and in some cases new ones will need to be dug,•• he said. The underground supply ia used by water agencies in the half or the county from Newport-Irvine north. A Laguna Beach uteeuard is caring for an amng Calitornia sea lion WhO SOU(ht the aid or Harbor Patrol deputies in Hunt- ington Beach last Wednesday the ailing mammal Wednesday . ''Jim pots a tube in the sea said he told h1s chief of staff to afternoon when jt leaped onto a lion's stomach and shoots ground launch "a public relations of. inthehome. · "It's outside waler uae that we're concerned about now, with the hot weather coming on," he said. fireboatJwiin step. up herring with medicine into it rensive on what the other side is Deputies Bob Mennes and with a irease gun," said Mrs. doing." Lifeguard Jim Stautfer said this morning the sickly 30-pound sea lion is suffering from pneumonia and parasites in its lungs Ri~i\~ Lara threw a blanket Stauffer. • Also to Fr06l, Nixon admitted over the animal. Mennes sald the The ammal must be force-fed h& lied when he made hia oft· To appreciate water conserva- tion in Orange County, it is helpful to understand the agencies that supply it. sea lioo seemed to be s~ing because "he's used to catching stated claim that he deralled the help. He and Lara removed the his own food ," said Mrs. Stauf-FBI investigation into Watergate ; Ellser said his district waste waler reclamation plant is operating now and by pumping treated water underground in Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley, he said, the district is able to maintain the important barrier that keeps salt water from intrud- ing into the underground baa in. fishing line from its snout. fer. for fear of upsetting CIA opera- Deputies called animal control The St.aulfers said the Hunt-tions, Time said. The MWD 1s the only supplier to Southern Callfornia. Since Northern California began suffer- mg the effects of the drought last Stauffer said Orange County Animal Control officials re- moved a hook from the sea lion's mouth over the weekend officials who transported the sea ington Beach sea lion bas lost "ll was a grievous mistake to lion to the Orange shelter for about 30 pounds but s llll have ~Olten the CIA involved in treatment. manqes to fight with the other this thing," Nixon is quoted. After an operation for removal animals in their homemade But he insisted it was not a of the-hook. the animal was shelter. criminal act; that be did not transferred to Stauffer's Laguna "He's really doing well," said know at the time that his aides Sc Boosters home for convalescence. Mrs. Stauffer. -.. and his re-election committee p,....pflfleAJ Stauffer and his wife, Colleen, were embroiled ln the burglary. "It's going to save the basin.'· have made a hobby of caring for ' Women Voters Frost pursued the matter, say-SQUIRRELS he said or the water reclamation Plan Benefi•t s ick and wayward aquatic mam-ing "you &cnew that, in fact, mats. criminals would be protected." ~[g0~~w'.:!t's paytng tor itself ~ince the Orange County Meetina Set 'Nixon protested: "Now, Just a The city tried just once -to The Saq Clemente> High School Animal Shelter bas no facilities ~ auument. .. ·· !.mother the squirrels in their Triton Booster Ch~ will hold a for sea lions, the Stauffers plan to ''Period." Frost replied. holes. Non·toxic gas cartridges Along the Orange Coast there "Laa Vegas Niaht" fund raising care for their Hungtington Beach The Capistrano Bay Area It was Frost's quoting or the v. ere bought. They worked on the are a total ofl.3 agencies that sup-event at 8 p.m May 14 at the Mis-patient for the next t-hree or four League of Women Voters will transcripts of Feb. 13 and 14 principle of filling holes with ply Individual users with waler. sion Viejo Recreation Center, weeks, the lifeguard sakl . hold its annual meeting from 9 tapes that surprised Nixon, w,10 smoke to displace oxygen. 25800 Montanoso Drive, Mission The Stauffers' patients have a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Wednesday at later told aldes "I'm sure I never Hut, after five cartridges were Officials representing most of Viejo. their own wading pool and are Capistrano Depot Restaurant. heard that tape before," accord- lighted and smoke backfired lheseagenciessayil'stooearlyto The purpose of the event is to Betty Sherman, P re.tiled hlltoTjme. from the holes mto the air, rorm· tellhowconservationlsgolo1,but raite rul\dS for academic. meml>eronJie ~.eVlt4Dt"a. -on tbat tape, Nixon is heard 1ng a cloud over Heisler Park, it there does seem to be a trend athletic and extra curricular ac--,,..,;. Pflfle AJ tioo Fund Latin American board telling Colson "the cover-up ii, is was quickly abandoned. Gas lowardreduction. tivities or the student body sup-who has lived 25 years in Latin the main ingredient. •. that's douds O\<'r Heisler would never portedbytheclub. INJURED America, will be the guest where we gotta cut our losses. be popular, admmistraton1 de· The officials contacted cau-The event is public and tickets • • • speaker. My losses are lo be cut. The rHled .• ind 1t w<1s never tned tio"j1 in m:1~J,f~t tbadt com-are $7.SO per ~rson. Buffet din· Mrs. Sherman will sp«:ak abo~t President's losses got lo be cut on .1i;:a in pbar 1sons ar c an pro-ner and imitation money will be Hospital in Long Beach, where the fund and her expenences m the cover-up deal .. Tht.' n<'xt. pfon was to trap the ab Y not valid due to vartaWes provided. Further Wormallon he was reported today In good Costa Rica, Paraguay, Colom-· • ~-~~'\fi.JJt-->).-•-;~ UI('~ ~ ~P'Uf:I~--· 4 -. ·-~.(~~ ~ ~,,...->~,· ., ~ ~ .(; fi _..."-'\~~r-,. .. -_..._ __ ,.~<t ..... • ...__._.,.....,,.,...,.,..~ ·~ > • ~ ~ .... ~.~-... lhN~.;,;;...,.~..;,. --~~ ..~ ... ~ 4rllr1\'~ltl>o{ 1tEfl~ om~·~ !Rote "'Brl aln· ... "C*"loraurnm~lf\ftlf'N$1f.~·:r~ti'"'~ ~,<J .. ...,~. \lhl·n 1t'be<'ame' loo mueh work J>t!fiodtotbenex · · 492-416Sor492-5242. scary dOWDhill rfde could have and reservations may be made nC 1"8 OllU Jnd ,\.hen ml and areas hke El · ended ln tragedy had the men not by calling 496-5131or495-0627. I oro L..iguna Hills ..ind Leisure been thrown clear or the car. He W1>rld begJn wondering where said the car was smashed. lhE>i rn<'wsqu1rrelproblemswere Ja'-zy Lt•nck ''They were both very'lucky enm mgfrom l6JI ___ they weren 't injured more MODI Then c..imP. b1 r lh control. seriousty,'' said Briggs, L. • • Problems with obtaining Food Briggs said Barton reported he un<l Drug Administration ap· Whi D S •-'-' p • • was wlfamillar with the road and But lt was agreed at the last provul lo :Jdmin111tcr tht> drug te nOUJJe ta,, IC1UCIJ thathisbrakeswerefaulty. court session that the Taubman- were never resolved. so the idea In another accident , Police Allen-Irvine group will have at ft!ll throu~h WASIIlNGTON CAP) -First Lady Rosaly nn motorcycle officer Mark Miiier least one more opportunity to l\nd are lhl• squirrels sllll lhat Carter gave a box lunch today on the south lawn of the was knocked to the sround on outbid Mobil in the race for con· much of a probh·m today" White House for President Carter's staff. Broadway by a car turning to the trol of the Irvine Company. "Are you k1ddin51 ?" suad Ed The President attended, put his1foot up on a piano rightin front of him, according to News that the new Mobil bid Wadleigh, pJrk maintenance benchandlistenedtoDixielandjazz. policereports. had been filed appeared to give supervisor, "They're tearlna the "It's a rare occasion," Carter said, and thanked Miller was taken to South new heart today to Irvine Com· JOint apart'" be f th J CoastCommunltyHospilal,treat· pany employes who make no Wadleigh said, how<'\'Cr, that ~~~usk~ e .. au Minors" band from O~egon for ed for cuts and bru1ae1 and n -secret of their SUJ>port for Mobil to be fair. squirrels are only one Members o( the staff, mostly secretari·es, at"-leased. A sore and aching Miller in the btddtng battle. of Hetsler Park ·s erosion pro· ""' reported back on duty. ''Terrltlc, ·~ co~mnented a hlems Ther<' ..ire wind, birds rc:»ast beet and ham sandwiches and drank sodas pro-The driver of the car, J;)ana c. senior comsSany otncial who and people vided by the White House social office for $3. Presi-Mager, 24, ot Garden Grovi!. was decline.'*'> be identified. "My job llow do people erode the dentandMrs.Carterdidnotstaylongenoughtoeat, uninju('ed. The California isoneOfman)'ontbenneinthia hluff11? "They do this little but circulated through the crowd and shook hands. Highwa1 Patrol was inveatisat-lawtult ~ l ootr, hope that FromP.,.eAJ Gay Vote Figh! SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -A leading San Francisco gay ac- tivist has been recruited to add his poUtical expertise to the fight to scutUe a Miami antigay ballot measure. Jim Foster, rounder of the pre- dominantly gay Alice B. Toklas Democratic Club and an offlcer o( the Democratic State Central Committee, said he had been hired by the Dade County <Miami) Coalition for Human Rights. Foat.er, who has helped tum out the vote for a variety or politi· clans including President Cart.er and Gov. F.dmund G. Brown Jr., wll1 head voter registraUon and get-out-Ole-vote activities ror the June 1 elec:tJon ln Mlaml. cl..ince," Wadleigh said "There's They were accompanied by actor George Pep-lng theacddent. Mobllcanpul.Htoff.' this thing they do They move pard. _::__:.;__....:..~---------~~':""T-----:::-:::::-::~:--'"------------ the1r fe<>t back and forth, without lifting them. It demolishes the plants that hold the soil " What ure these people doing? "They're feeding the 11qulrrels. Yeah, fe<'ding the squirrels. They shufne their feel, lo coax the squirrels out to take the food. You've got to see lt to believe it.'' The porks people call it, "The Squirrel Shurne." O~ANOlCOAIT 1AC DAILY PILOT :==.i:.;·:-;:.~·ir. ===~=. 0M~""llll\11•"9C..-""Y ~ ...... _ ... ="='.=.~~(~"~::71,::-i,~,~· , •• ,. V•Uty ""'n.f l.IHt...,\ V•O•y •f'Mf ~ !:'.~~~f;~~.~="'~~;:, .... "f •Ml ~·hV111·tt ,,.,... •• .t lJI WI u a.y ....... c..i.. ""''•' C.111••"'•...,., -. "-1'11-.... , ................. _ JKll C-Ykt-. ..... 1-0.-11,,.._ ,.._ ... -" U I ... T-.&.M .......... ~ ............ .. CM"'"M LM\ ......... , NII •1.i•••~'~"'a-. Latr11n1 •Heh ome. "" o ..... , .. ''"" Miiii .......... '0 ......... u OftlCH -~··= .. ~.m'~~·=--... ~ .. V•ll•f >Utt ....... 111 ... • 1...,01 ... ,~ T"PM"' (T14)~1 CleHtfttd Actwertl .... IQ."1t LllOUl\a 8 .. ctl ~II Olt*f,,.ACI: l•l•pfla"• ........ 1'..-W!Ot-4 ...... Westgate Trustees Seek Stock Boost firm once conlrolled byfinancler C. Arnholt Smltb. Jp 9dd.1Uon to apptoval of the state Department ot Corpora· tlanr, U\e deJl 1Ull needs the ap- pl'e>val 'ol the bankruptcy court in San Dle10 wbtcb appointed Trone lnd K~l. Tbe mer1er haa already been approved by the board of direc- tort and abarebolders or Air CaUfomla. A coo.rt burln.I oa the me.rater bu bceri scheduled for June 7, wltb mer1er to follow lm- m4Kllateb' upon tho court's •P-· pro\fal, Final Thie Pool Tour S8t Sunday The Martn Studies lnaUtuto in Dana Polnt wtll conduct the tl~al tldepoO& tCJUrt of the 1e.uoa a t • •. °'·Sunday. Reta"V.Uc d ftn'\flft In= f ormaUon may be obtaillect b1 con~• the Manne Studies ln1m"'te at 413.9190 Monday lhrou h P'rtday lrom 8 a.m. to i p.m. (f.. . .d.\' f•t <111\ f.,, ')( r. r •·. , . ,.,,. .. ,.t.• IP• f" 'f ) , _., r) 11 f ft I • 7 By TOii BARLEY Of Ull Dally~ Swt A bid that tops a recent $302.9 million ofler for the Irvine Com- pany was submitted to the James Irvine Foundation today by the Mobil Corporation. Mobil executive Robert Schlesier, eeneral manaeer ot the corporation'• real estate and .development division, commenl· ecj from hl.s Ne-. Yerk ornce that the offer was sut>mltted in California three hours before the noon deadline given Mobil last week eqired. "I cannot ethlcally comment on the amount of our bid until the Foundation directors have had a chance to examine lt.." Schlesier said ... But I can uaure you that lt exceed.a the offer made by the Taubman froup." The new bid could meo that Mobil 11 again the favorite in what has been a bitter blddlni battle with an East Cout con· aortlum headed by Detroit de· veloper Alfred TaubmaJt, Wall Street financier Charles Allen and auto billionaire •Henry Ford II. But ii the offer is acceptable to Foundation directors, who are espeeted t.o meet later today to dlacusa the new bid, it must then be flied In Orange County · Superior Court for scrutiny by JudeeJames F. Judfe. Judce Judee will have the last word on whether the Irvine Com· pany 11 to be sold to tho blehest bidder. A court determination became neceinry two years ago when Irvine heiress Joan Irvine Smith filed a laW1ult and halted what. would have been the $200 million 1-16 of the Irvine Company to Mobil. <See 1'10BIL, Page A2) ' TIRE COLLECTOR NOT TOO TIRED TO OET RICH Cecil Heidelberger Sita Among What Could Be Gold Mine ]iatice ~ Ordered Attempt Fails Baekyard Millions Used Tire Collection Finally Pays Off To Quit Woman Too Weak to Rob A robbery attempt Newport Beach police said was born or desperation ended unsuccessful- ly this weekend because the would-be bandit was weak from hunger. but the would-be victim fought back and in the struggle dis· armed the weakened woman. ANDOVER, Minn. <AP) -Cecil Heidelberger has a backyard full of tires - between 8 million and 12 million of them. He hasn't counted yet Heidelberger, who has been in the used tire busmess for 30 years. says he's always known that some day, somebody woula want those tires. AND NOW THAT mass of black rubber, up to 40 feet high, covering 10 acres behind his Musket Ranch and Trading Post, may make him a millionaire. An Oklahoma City man has offered Heidelberger about 39 cents each for the car tires and up lo S5 for the bigger ones, and will set up a huge tire-shredding machine on Heidelberger's land to recycle the rubbtt. "We dispose of these tires for fuel," said Teddy Jo Bivens, who runs a tire salvaie bu.si· ness and claims to have cieaaed up Oklahoma's used tires s1ngleha.odedly "Everybody's got energy problemJ -the whole country. There's more fare in the tires than coa.l. It helps the coal bum ~r." A TIRE-SORTING crew from Oklahoma City arrived Sunday and Bivens was expected later this week to begin separating the tires in- to five grades, Heidelberger said. the tire-shredding machine, built in 1920, is being dismantled and will be shipped to Minnesota on three railroad flatcars. "It'll take another month to reassemble the machine here, so it will probably be the last of July before we start shredding," Heidelberger said. ''I knew what rubber meant ln 1940," he said. "I w;ed to sell It back then. But I wailed, and knew once we got a market going, we could recycle every used tire there is." Heidelberger said after Bivens and his crew cleaned up Oklahoma they were looking for a bigger pile of tires to get started on. SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -A special tribunal today ordered the retirement or 82-year-0ld As- sociate Justice Marshall F. McComb from the California Supreme Court, the first such ac- tion in California history. The seven-member panel or state Court of Appeal justices said it concurred with the Com- m ls s lo n on Judicial Performance's finding. It said that Justice McComb is surrertni from senile dementia "that uAND I GUESS I've got the biggest pile of. seriously interferes with the tires in the United States now," he said And performance of his judicial th~tires keep comioa · ~eis and that the cUaab!1'tY is, Tin dealers pay Heidelberger to dump or is likely to become. perma· Judith Ann Beachler, 36, a transient from Iowa was booked into Orange County Jail on a charge of armed robbery Friday evening after she allegedly tried to take a purse from a customer at J .C. Penney's at knlfepoint. Police said Miss Beachler ap. proached the unidentified woman in the women's restroom, Miu Beachler ran into the store, pursued by the other woman who summoned store employes to detain the would-be robber. "She's getting regular meals courtesy of county jail," ob· served Del. Sg\. Ken Thompson today. · Miss Beachler remains in custody in lieu of the mandatory $25,000 bail on the armed robbery' charge. Rossmoor Lqttery Sets Sales· Record their used tires on hls land, and he gets nent." Detween three and four truckloads a day However, the tribunal said the Rossmoor Leisure World of. homeowners participated Satur-Heidelberger sai~ has wlfe and children -commission's findings of wlWul ficials today are claimln" three ol the 11 are still at home-are ta.ting and persistent failure to perform they've made an all·time• !~c.!11 ~ :i:·~~u~J~~e7ro~ the ~~=·~llc~ftir' !~~~g We haven't judicial duties were not ~upport-on~-day. world ~ord for lot: $73,400 to $134,900, were availa-., ed by the record and ' that no ter1es. ble stoppeddomgthedtshesorTaJdnJCtheyV(I. cause !Qr discipline exists More tban I 200 t ti 1 B. 8 222 Id b d t . • . . , po en a y p.m., res eoces a <,~~~-~-~---.~------~-~-~-~-.-.~-~~~~~-,~~-~-~.~~---~-~--.---1-.-.. -~--.-,-.-)-.-.--~-.-.. -.--~---------~· -~~~~~~1 ·~~~~ -···~~~~·~~t~Mm ·l • .. ;~,. -~ ~ ' ~"r~.-. ~ ~ ~ t ·~~,.,....,,::>-~·t.., -..-h " t.~ ,~,.,... ----,_.,__.~T'. "'; •eJt9li:a ·t.rei~~·~' l\t~.,. • T -"i"\:>" 1~ ~ ~~ • l,..-; 1d\'Hti)o. TDC ••vc!t'a·ge seilljg , • Dlat~g· a 'te p•-a which bririp e Judicial o Ice .l .. A.1Jle Da11Q1,t price waa $96,314. The homes'l.re • n• ~· ae intodisrepute." expected to be ready for oc-By being retired instead or re-cupancy tn about a year .. F • A . ls R • d moved from the bench, McComb Nabs Recein•o Elm Welngarden senior vice IrSt Ppea eJecte getstokeephispenaion. r"" president said Saturday's lot. McComb denied all allegaf:ions tery was' the last for Leisure by the Commission on. Judicial A Jone bandit surprised 8 World. He said a "new, more Performance, which 10cluded Newport Beach restaurant dianlfled" system for sales WJ'll WASHINGTON <APl The U.S. Supreme Court today turned down a request by convicted Watergate cover·up defendants to areue that a news report about the court requires the justices to reverse the convJctions Without comment, the court re- fused to let lawyers for former Atty. Gen. John Mitchell and ex- W b lle House aides H.R. Haldeman and John D . Ehrlichman file a supplemental memorandum outlining the im· pact on their clients of a rare news leak about tbe justices' secret f lscuss1ons or the case. The denial was not accom· panted by an explanallon or by any recorded dissents. It sa.id that Justice William H. ~hn· qui.at took no part In consldt.rin1 or tu~down the request. The attorneys had not spelled out what arauments they tn· tended to make about the nowa re- port. Ttie report aired by NaUooal Public Radio two woeka aao saJd the court voted once lo deny the appeall or all thr offlclala of former President Nixon's ad- Coat Weather Chance of rain increas- i n1 to 20 percent late tonlsht and Tuesday. Lows tonlaht 50 to H . Hlebs Tuesday in upper 60s lo near10. INSIDE TODAY ministration. The reporl said the vote had been 5-3 to turn down the Watergate cover-up appeals but that Chief Justice Warren E. Burger was delaying any an· nouncement of the vote In hopes or obtaurlng at least one other vole to review the case. In such appeals, the votes of four just!ca are nttdedto1rantrevlew. There was no word today from the court on the three defendants' motions for court review of their convictions. Burger and other justices have refused to comment on the re- * * * News Aeeo .. ts . oort's accuracy, but The New York Tlmes and NBC News have said they confirmed the report with other sources. If the justices eventually do turn down the appeall, Mitchell and Haldeman probably would be imprisoned soon thereafter. They have remained free pend- in1 appeal since their convictions in 1975. Ehrllchman, like the other two Nixon aides sentenced to 30 months to eight years in prison, chose lo begin serving time last October while appealing bts con- viction. * * * Nixon Xramcripts Revive :SCaridal h r fallJ 1 th employe this morning and took a • c arges o ng as eep on e bag containing the weekend's re-be used when additional homes bench, doing exercises in court ceipts at gunpoint, police re-are avallable ln the private re· <µtd being absent. . rted tiremenl community. · The Jurist also cla1me~ th.at the po • · All new homes ln the communi- commllslon had no J~r1sdictlon ld:;t~:-n~~~ff~!!\~~:d ty have now been sold, accordinC and that the proceedings were about 11 :30 a. mdn the parking lot to a spokesman for the company. unc..onstitutlonal. A 58-acre tract west of the ex-T h e tribunal answered of the Ancient Mariner~ isling community is now being McComb's challenges section by restaurant, 2607 West Coast planned. The developer hopes to iection. First, lt rejected his ~i!::':if. as she was on her way to build from 543 to 629 homes Oil claim that the special tribunal Preliminary reports Indicated this land, the only vacdnt area had no authority to determine his the gunman aimed a small left in Leisure World. • future. . handgun at the woman and de-The homes sold over the McComb's attacks on grounds manded the money which she weekend are located around· of lack of due process and equal turnedovertohimbeforehefled. Rosamoor Towers and overlook protection also were struck Thetotalamountofmoneyloat the community's new eolt down. was not immediately available. course. - Agiiew Claims Try 'Unlikely' Ch:Uh Kil& &GM Head WHITE PIGEON, Mich. <AP> -Former General Molor1 Corp. prt1ldtnt Edward Cole WU 1'Uled ln a plane cruh near htre to- day, 1taw pollcuald. , Colt, 87, wu on a fi11ht Crom Pon t(ac to Kalamazoo when hlt twin· enf,lno plane crubed into a fie din Me.adoD Township neat the K a lamuoo Alrport, pol lee aald. Happiness ls ••• To this unidentified young man, happinefs is a warm s idewalk, a comfortab e blanket and a thumb. To his mom, happi- ness probably is uninterrupted browsing through the shops of McFadden Square near the Newport Pier. With everyone so satisfied, passersby scarcely gave the pro- ne young man a moment's thought. Memorial Set For Harbor Resident F,....Pa,,eAl MOBIL ••• Crash Victims' Condition Still Critical Mrs. Smith argued that the sale was unfair to m inority stockholders in the Irvine Com· pany and did not represent the Memorial services were held fair market value of the com-Two victims or separate traffic today in Newport Beach for Mrs. p a n y f 0 u n d e d b y her accrdents last week In Newport Pauline Baskin, 49, a longtime grandfather. Beach remain in critical condi· Harbor Area resident and real Mrs. Smith owns 22.4 percent lion today at Hoag Memorial estate woman who died Sutur-of the stock and the Foundation Hospital. day. holds a controlling 54.S percent of A hospital spokesman said Mrs Baskin came to Newport the Irvine Company holdings. Robin Eddy, 10, of Irvine is still Beach 20 years ago with her Mrs. Smith is known to favor listed in-critical condition after husband and entered the re.ii the Taubman-Allen-Irvine bid for she was struck by a car Thunday estate business with Vogel the company since she has been evening. Police said the Realtors or Corona del Mar. She assured by the combine that she youngster dashed onto the later was employed with Cole of will be allowed lo retain her Pacific Coast Highway, and was Newport Realtors directorship in the new corpora-hit when the driver of a car was CAIRO (AP> :...._ Former Vlee Pre1tdent Spiro t\1new aay1 lt lJ .. very unlikely" that be would •eek publlt omce apln, but bellevea he could win lf ht chanJ• hls mind aod deeldes to m ak• a comeback. Aanew aa!d Jn an interview Sunday be 11 workln1 on a poUUcal memoir which wlll pro- vtde "a lot of 1urpriles" when lt 1a completed in the next year or so. A&new, who in 1978 publilbed a hwtil PflflC! AJ NIXON.· •• it's available to anybody who consult.I the records. " Time maeaitne. in a leneth,y account of the nearly 29 houn Nixon answered Fro1t'1 ques· lions, quotes the form er preai· dent as saying his immediate ac· lions after'the burelary June 17, 1972, at the Watercate offices of the Democratic party were de· signed "not to try to cover up a erimlnal action'' but t.o contain the scandal for political r easons. "We weren't golng to allow people 1n the White House, people in the re-election commlttff at the highest levels who were not involved to be smeared by the whole thing," Nixon is quoted. Time concedes "aome brief crucial moments of this taping have been kept in strictest secrecy by Frost." Indeed, one question surely asked -why Nixon didn 't destroy those damaging tapes -is mentioned nowhere in the magazine's ac· count. The interview, first of four to be aired in succeeding weeks. is sure to regenerate som e Watergate passions. Newsweek which also devoted this week's cover story to Nixon-Frost but apparently not with the same ac- cess to the taping sessions as Time -announced former Watergate prosecutor Leon Jaworski has agreed to write a "factual" response" in next week's issue. The newly published tapes were prepared by the Watergate prosecution team for the 1974 cover-up trial of Nixon intimates John N. Mitch el l. H .R . Haldemhn and John D . Ehrlichman. Prior to her business career tion. unable to atop it or a\'old her. Mrs Baskin was a singer and Mobil has ad 'sed M s Ith Marilyn Hansen, 21. of Midway V dais Ri dancer for Metro-Goldwyn-that If the corpo~1ation t~'es ~ver City is also in critical condition an p Mayer Inc .• appearing 10 films the Irvine Company she can ex· from lnjw-ies she received in a · during the 1950s peel to lose all connect.Jons with lwo-car crash Friday night near Irvin C t novel, "The Canfield Declllon" about a crtata. tnvolvina a ftc- tlonal vlcej>realdent. Hid, ''I'm very aatlaffed wtth what l'm do· ln•. While I remain lotereated tn political attain, I have no dealrt to 1eek office qaln. •• Once he flnlahet hi.a poUtJcal memoln. he 1aid, he would be ln· teretttd ln wrtUni a·poUUcal col· umn or doinc television commen· tary. He said he had been mlaquoted in a recent Greek newapaper article \bat he planned to resume his polJtlcal c~t and that he WH under contract with two television networks to do political commentary. Cole often plloted bl• own plane and Wfl alone when he craahed. noH down into the fr&~ly plowed field. state po co Hld. A heavy ram WU f l· 1n1. OReBofA He did not entlttly rule out a • pollttcat comeback. however, UO,otnHie and aald: "There are no blackl il4 '7 -e · and whites. Everythlnc baJ er&Y . • •hades. But ricbt now the .D--le d chances are eo-10 that"t'wm ooc -iw a,se seek office ... "I'm in ~esil~ df""'°lJ'le In·' · formation, whkh f' <WOn'l dlJ· close, that leads me to believe that 1 would be elected to office, it I choose to seek it.•• • Aenew, M. added, however, "With the advent of the televlalon age, voters have become n\ore receptive to young, attractive candidates." · · Interviewed w~·~inf in Cairo on his way from Athens to Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Agnew said he had business in the Saudi capital but declined to go into de· tails. Agnew resigned as vice presi· dent in October 1973 before plead· ing no contest to a charge of in· come tax evasion. He was fined $10,000 and placed on three years probation. Asked if his memoirs would re· hab!Ulate his name, he said, "I don t think my name needs re- habilitation. I did nothlnf moral- ly wrong in my eyes. I never ac- cepted payments for my own personal use . . . I made some errors in the way political money was collected and used. The er- ror was drifted into because of the way the system worked." BULLETIN DOWNEY <AP) -A loiae ba1h dlt demandln1 a 1etaway bellcopter, a rtn-and aaugunl· lion releued one et two auk of A111erlca executives held bOltace today. DOWNEY <AP) -A lone ban- d it demanding a getaway helicopter, a rifle and ammuni· lion held two Bank of America ex· ecutives hostase today 'after a robbery attempt w1s foiled by another bank employe, police .. said. Officers identified the alleged bandit as Albert Powers, 22, of Downey, a Los Angeles suburb. His mother and sister were at the scene helping officers trying to talk to him. police said. .. The bandit, armed with a pistol, burst into the bank, taking hostage the bank's manager, Marshall Alsson, and operations manager, Richard Torres, said Downey Police Chief Loren Morgan. Police were able to surround the bank before the robbery ended because the bank's assistant operations ofCicer. Roberta Hun- toon, nagged down a passing of- ficer. She said she stepped lntothe bank, saw the robbery in progress and escaped. The robbery attempt began around 8 a.m., before the bank was scheduled to open. The bandit at first refused to talk to anyone until after sunset, but then his demands were re- layed by one of the hostages. They included a helicopter and pilot, a .30·30 rifle and ammunition and some dehydrated food. rdUr ·s~ught~-, She was active IO numerous the company founded by James the Newporter Inn. e oas --~~"\~~ir~~~{~c'W1~~at~orJ \~~; .. i&atJ-\ ~/%1:--;: ~~~ ~: ~~~~<. .. ~ -:: ~--~1~1"~1fiiilZ~iiii~~~ muscular dystrophy and heart Privett was not ·~vJlilable for Whittier who was on her way to a t;.Op \;OUrSe ailments. corhmenttoday promatthehotel. . . Weekend golfers were forced Mr~ Baskin 1s survived by her But 1t was learned that he re· The driver of the car ID which to restrict their activities al trusband of 33 years. Col. William re1Ved the n_ew bid from Mobil at the dead girl was a passenger, a Irviae Coast Country Club in Baskin of Newport Reach ; son, 9 a.m and 1mmed1ately contact· 17-year·old Whittier boy, faces Newport Beach this weekend In Assault Timothy Baskin of Lake Forest, ed Foundatio~ directors to ch.areea of manslaughter 1n the after vandals destroyed most of daughter. Penelope Baskin of schedule a meeting at which the mishap. the club's golf carts and in the Newport Beach police today are seeking the four black sus- pects who reportedly raped a 19-year ·old Hacienda Heights woman in Newport Beach early Saturday morning. Newport Boa ch. brother, newofferwillbed1scuued. None or the other people in process tore up some of the golf Leonard McGee or Huntington The sr.heduling or further court Mrs: Hansen's car were serious-course. Beach. mother. Hazel Thomas of action will depend on the decision ly lnJuredlnthecolllslon. According to police reports' Costa Mesa , sisters, Juanlt'e reached by the Foundation damage inflkted by the vandal~ Reed of Morris, Ala .. clnd Betty board. 2 Burglar' 1·es could cost the golf club as much According to police re~rts, Capurso of San Jose, 1tnd three But 1t was agreed at the la.st as $10 ooo .._, ,., h grandchildren court session that the Taubman-om~e~ said the carts were ~• • .,,. ~h: Y~':t ~~~rai~,a~:.~·~~:: IRS Proves Kidco Taxes SAN DIEGO <Ar> The Jn lernal Revenue Service says 1t 1~ looking into a corporation run by c·hlldren to sec 1f the firm owes federal taxes Kidco Inc . owned by Richard Cessna Jr. and his three young sisters, sells horse manure and exterminates eophers for $1 each . Pat Sund, an IRS taxpayer s~rvlce 1peclall1t, aald callers w-ere concerned over report• Kldco does not have to pay taxes b•cause lt Is Incorporated in the • Brlt11h Wnt lndlea. °"ANOICOAIT N DAILY PILOT Jtt•" ~"'"" Vic•~"""'"' .... 0.-............. Tilollltt It-... , .. T'lllt<Nt .... ......... -Mt· ... ··-·~ .. "J~-~.:. .... Allen-Irvine group Will have al Probed m· NB linked in groups of seven by bars Bill Darrell Jr., a 20.year-at about 3: 15 a.m. when she was least one more opportunity to strung between them. They said old Golden West College stu-forced at knifepolnt Into a car oc- outbid Mobil rn the race for con-Newport Beach police today the vandals cut a chain locking dent, is the Newport Beach cupied by the men. tro~ of the Irvine Company . are lnvesUcalinc a pair of the cart 1torage shed then drove Police Department's "Ex-She told officers she was News th~t the new Mobil bid weekend buralaries in which the trains of carts onto the plorer of the Year." He was driven to L Street, draued from had been filed appeared to eive \'aluables worth nearly ~.ooo course wtth the bars gouging up cited for helping to save an the car onto the ocean beach and new heart today to Irvine Com· were taken. turf. ' raped by each or the four men Pany employes who m k inJ·ury victim and for his al-. a e no The first break·in re~rted The carts which were who,abandonedherthere. 'lecrel of their support for Mobil S t d ed t th d'll damaged in the process were !·around performance in the Police were called by a r-i· •n ~~e btdding.~attle. T~au:ela~~~~~ 25~ ;aS:bl~~ driven across four or the c~urse's police Explorer Scout pro· dent who heard the youn1 wom-an Terrific. commnented • Drive. Police uid thieves re-greens. gram. cryinl hysterically. senior company 0U1c1al who ----------------------------------------declines to be identified. "My job moved a pane of glass to get ln· 1s one or many on the hne In this aide the agency where they took I t d two calculators and cash. awsu1 an l only hope that In the a-d cue, Balboa re· Mobil can pull It off." _.,., Jet Avoids Cruh WARWICK. R.I. <AP>.-An Eastern Airlines Jetliner with 125 aboard had w climb rapidly to mias a small airplane on the G.[een Airport runway. aidenta Max Feuerber1er, Brett McCulloch and Danny McLau1.hlin told poltct the)' loet 1portln1 equipment, cash, a coin collecUon and camera equip. ment to thieves who broke lnto lhelr retldence at 320 Anade Ave. early Sunday momlnc. Westgate 'frustees Seek Stock Bobst Tru1tee1 of Clnanclall)'· troubled Weat1ate CaUfornla Corp. will recommend Nay 13 that the price of atock for Or&n1e County-baaed Air Ca1lfornl1 airline be aet at *15 a 1hare. The heartn1 on U\e atock price for Air Cal, a 1ub1ldlary or Weataate. will be held before the 1tate Department of Corpora- tions. Two court..appoiotect tnaatM8, Curvill Trone Jr. and Herbert Kunitl. announced tht)' wlll male the recommendaUon dlll'- inc a hearJn1 on the pe.ndin1 merger of Air Cal and a wbolly· owned 1ublidlary of Weatcate CaUfomla. Th exchanp rate tor. the A1r Cal &tock had onalnallJ bffn aet at SU a aha.re In the proPoled d al by W 1ate1o acquit• theOl.lt• ' atandlns ll '"'1'ctnt or lb• 11.rllne •tock. Under the propoul by Trone and Kunzel , tht Air Cal ahaHboldtra would receive a Wt1t11te common equivalent certtrlcate worth ns • •hare f~ eachahareof Air Cal 1tock held . ThGM ctttlllcata can then be converted t6 cuh or to coinmon stock In W•t••t. Callfonua. tb• n rm once eontroUed by ClnaDder c.~Smlth. In" addlUcQ to approval ot the at•t• Department of Corpora- Uona, the deJI 1Ull need• the •P. pronl Ol lbe bankruptcy court ln San Dl•so wblcb appointed Tron and Kun1el. The metier hU AltHdy been approvtd bf the bOnd ot dtrec- tora and 1har•hofdw1 of Alf CaUlorma. Reci. '13500 Now Only C<llOA f1&"4 \ '·· l.'l •tlfJ P"" •• <l'H' rll14ftt-4 • ,.1•4 llT .•.o"' ~>Ill l,Y..,1 · ..... Now you don't have to be an exl*'t to take great. full frame 3~mm pictures. This compact little camera has a apeclal etectronfo 1hutter that automatically 1et1 both speed and lent opening. An automatic flash oontrol thet doM au the oalc"latlng for you. An extrHUV-to-ute vlew-<enoeflnder. Speoall faiMlfe film 1dvane4l. and film loadlno Indicators. Ouallty fruJlnon lent. And more. .. ' Bt TOM BARLEY I OW .. OMty l'li,4 ttfff A bid th;t tops a recent $302.9 villllon ol(er (or the Irvine Com· pany was sublJllttecf to th• James Irvine Founc"tlon today b.Y \he Mobil Corporation. MobU executive Robert Schlesier, general manager of the corporation'• real estate and development division, comment· ed from hit New York office that tbe offer WH IObmltted lo Califamla three hours before-the noon deadUne itven MoblJ la.at Wt?~ expJred. ''I cannot ethtcaU.Y c:Omment on lb• amowtl of our bid until the FouodaUon direeton have had a ctfance to examine it," Schlesier said ... Bufl ctn assure you that it exceed• the offer made by ~Taubman group." Th.e n~ ftid could mean lbat 1 School Grote• in Billa Mobll la aaaln Ute favorite bl what baa..• been a blUer blddlna battle wtlh an taat Cout can· sortlum headed by Detroit de· veloper Allred Teubman, WaJJ Street financier ChaTles Allen and auto billionaire Henry Jt'ord Jl. But II the offer is acceptable to Foundation directors, who are expected to meet tater today to dlacuu the now bid, It must then Men and their machines have erected huge cement and steel columns lo support the future Laguna Hllts High School near the deadend of Alicia Parkway on Paseo de Valencia. This first 'phase of the school. which Is expected to open in September 1978, is. expected lo cost about $8 mi]lion. The construction alone is costing about $6.57 million. This first phase will include an administration building, library, gym· nasium and classrooms. - .. MONDAY, MAY 2, 1977 for sate of the Irvine Cornpany to ~obtl. ' Mrs. 'Smith ar,ued that the ... ~ was unratr to minority stockholders in the lrvlne Com· pJny and did pQt represent the f-1r market value of the e<>m· pany founded by her 1raodfather. Mris. Smith owns 22.4 percent of the stock and the Foundation holdJ a coot.rOllJng 54.5 pei:cent of ~ I I ... TEN CENTS • the Irvine Company holdtol•· . .Mn. SmlUl la known to favor the Taubman.Allen· Irvine btd tor. the company alnce the has been~ assured by the combine that lbe will be allowed to retain Mr 4 directonhip In the new corpora. lion. Mobil hu advised Mn. Smith• that it the corporation takes over the Irvlne Company 1he can ex·\ · <See MOBIL. Pa&e A2) • 1~~~-ic.; .. -..PUnipetl~ }' , .. •.-·\ ;:, . -~~l lJtders· McCemb to -Quit ~ . . ' SAN·Ff\ANClSCO <AP> ...,.... A special tribunal 1today orde.i;ed the retiremegt of. 82.-ye.ar-old Al!.· sociate. Juatt~e Marahall F. McComb Jrom· the California Supreme Court: the nrst s uch ac:; Uon in California history. The seven·member panel of state CoWt of , 4'ppeal justices said it copcurred with tM Com· mission qn Judicial .Performance's rinding. It S'lid that Jl¥lice McComb is suffenng fron) senile dementia "that seriously inlerf eres wilh the Tettcher Pay Talks·· I I COnimue · p&rrormance of his judicial duties and that the disability is, or is likely to become. perma· nent." However. the tribunal said the commission's· findings of willful and persi.$tent failure to perform judicial duties were not support. ed by the record and ·'that no c<t'u~e for discipUne exists lhrouch cooduet prejudicial to the adminlstration dr justice whlct\ brines the judicial office Into disrepute." By being retired instead of re· moved from the bench, McComb gets to keep hls peosioJ1, McComb denied all alleglllions by the Commission on Judicial Performance, which included charges of falliJll asleep on the. bench, doing e~ercises in cQUrt and betna ablent. The jurist alao claimed that the commiaaion had no jurisdiction and that the proceedinp were unconaUt.utional. The tribunal answered McComb'a chaUenaea section by <See JUSTICE, Page A.%) JazzyLuneh White HoWJe Staff Picnics WASIDNGTON (AP) -First Lady Rosalynn Carter gave a box lunch today on the south lawn of the White House for President Carter~s staff. Representatives of Saddleback The President attended, put his foot up on a piano Valley Unified School District bench and listened to Dlxieland jazz. teacben and frustees were "It's a rare occasion," Carter said, and thanked scheduled to meet aaain this al· ihembei-s of the "Jazz Minors" band from Oregon for ternoon in negotiation~ ai"led at the music. · •; avert.i:Qa an ~ed ltrtk*' vote i Members of the staff, mostly secretaries, ate MAC 'G · Ti · · h' by teac6en Wedt\flday. 1..~r d h . h ' t t Leaders of the Saddleback roast~ an am sa.ndw1c es and drank sodas pro-0 e . ong Valley Educators Aasociation vided by the White House .social ofrice for $3. Presi- -<SV~A> -which Tep senb dent'and MN. Carter did not stay long enough to eat, teac.ben -and attorneys from but circulated through the crowd and;Jttook hands. l I · • • the law firm of Qibaon, Dunn and They were accompanied by act.or George Pep- ' . ~-ion Vie ·o De1111n1 Review Strea1inil . ~:tetie~ ;; rep~eae~:'ro~ pard. . _L ._...,.~ ~.-·I'". ~ ....... ~~--•1'¥;--:4~·----· .,-~ ~-~ ~.;t~•1. --~·...... .,. . --7 --~ . p ~-~--· . ~~t~ -·,wmd-. oibrrtwu~~~ned~ ·c0~PT1~iht~ay. ~ Spok~mailO~Oneaoa;:,,_, ..,.e~s A=-----••• --t~~...... ..... ....... ~~~-~ ... I oi111eo111•"""lt-'' community. Qodge said tMre have been a lion teams could not be reached 1~1 ..., • "" ~8 I The Mission Viejo Municipal Dodge contended t.bat. because number of commercial and in· for con1ment on the meetlne this ------------"---- Advisory Council may be asked the present review procedure is duslrial projects built recently morntng, 1 to pressure the Mission Viejo an "in·bouse'' company process, that viotate the comm\lllity's de· J.,oa YMn.g, president of the I Company Into puUina teeth int.o there could be a tendency to sign standerds. school board, &aid there is no I lts architectural design review avoid blocking proposed develop. He alllO rk>t.ed a profusion of word. yet on th~ proaress bf these : prm~e la" enforcement of ments ror fear of jeopardizing diverse aigris, many of which s~siona'. However. she said, • 1 .. llhetic ataodards , MAC lu<.'rativesales . <EfeeRRV1EW.PapA2) ' "We'reoptimlstic.;• \ "' He saJd the company shouJd The teilchc:rs baYe 1c}leaul~ a •member Jim Dodae uid i<'riday rind a wa~ to delegate the ff d meeting on Wednesday. Blh he l;>eheves the MAC should ibtl" f d 1 ft'TOm&n el Id ' stress to the company a need lo respof\$ ' or es1gn rev ew "~ Mecham, SVEA pre.sjdeht, sa ' toughen lta policiea. to another entity -such as the he expects there wlll be a strike The councll will meet with its MAC. On Pot Count vote tal<.en at that time. He aaid t "The company w1I~ eventually the result of that vote probably planning committee Wednesday wind down and divest itselr ol the will be determined by what hap· 1 ;!p~~:nf~~;e!° e~pef :in cf.:PP~ respaos1bifily of enforcing the Border potrol agents at the San pens in negotiations. st.ndarda ." Dodge said . Onofre checkpoint arrested a · Mecham refaHd to comment 1 t~H th•Y use in approvln1 the de· .. But b)' then. it will be too late to Frenso woman and her 17 ·year-on L Sunday's sess\on, however, · •1-n of new bulldln1a. 1t1ns aiftd do anything about it." old tister Sunday aner a routine because he fJ not a member ot Marty Russo, a company stopoftheircar. ttienegotiaUngteam. . Cnuh Kill.a &GM Head spokttman. sald Friday 1l would Aeents said they aakett the Dlatrtct offictals say they are be damcuJt If not impossible for driver, Nancy J Atkinson, 19, to at odd.I over four major issues: the company to delegate such open the trunk of he r 1H3 aaency shop, bindlhi arbitration, authority.over deed restrictions C1tdlllac and found 13 kilo bricks, a grievance procedure and com· to another body. or 28.6 pounds, of marijuana. pactionof the salary schedule. He conceded that it is hard lo The women were turned over However, the teachers' leaders control all abulc!S of lbe deslp to omcen or the federal Dn.11 contend there are over 90 Issues standards 1od said lt 11 Un· Enforoement Admlnlatralion on which need tD be resolved before rea1l1.Uc to expect 100 per ent l"?_Ulltllna ch1r1ea. they can sign a con tr act. Nixon Tramcripts . . Revive Scandal " whole thing,·' Nixon is quoted. Time concedes "some brier, crucial moment.a of this tapinl • have been kt pl In strictest secrecy by Frost." Indeed, one question surely asked -why• Nixon didn 't destroy those damaging tapes -ls mentioned· nowhere In the magazine's ac.- count. The interview, first of four to be aired in succeeding weeks, ls sure lo rosenerate aome Watergate passlOQs . Newsweek, which also devot,td thia week'• cover story to Nixon· Frost -but apparently not with the same ac, ceas to the tapln1 sesalons as • Tin)e -al\nounced-former Watergate prosecutor Leon Jaworsld has aareed to wr1te a "factual" response" In next: week'a luue. ~ The newly p1.1blt1hed tapH , were prepared by the W ater1ate ·, prosecution team for the 1974 l cover·up trtal of NIJ(on lntlmate11. J o h n N , M tt c he 11. H • R . ·~ (See NIXON, Pa1e Afl :l Coat Weat er • Chance of ram lncreu· , •lni to 20 percent late tonl1ht and TUOlday. Lowa tonl1ht 50 to N . Hlaha Tuesdaj ln upper fJOI to ne1r"IO. IN IDE TOD"Y Dtatrict representation an a child day care center study com. mittee and approval of •umma- scbool and recreatloa proirama will be conaldered tonl1bt by CapllU'ano Unltt.d School ~ trict trustees. 222 Houses . Sell Dm;ng Single Day R-OSSmoor Leisure World ol- !i c I a ls today are clalmln& they've made an all-Ume, one-day, world record for lot- tert.e;. More than 1,200 potential homeowner• pa.rUcipa~d Satur- dv In a nlne·hour lottery tn which -240 homes, prlc4!d from $73,400 to $134,900, were availa- ble. By 8 p.m., 222 resldences bad bee.11 sold for more than $21 million. The average sellin& price was $96,314. The homes are expected to be ready for oc- cupancy in about a year. Elm Wetngarden, tentor vice president, Taid SatdPday's lot- tery was the last for Leisure World. He uid a "new, more dignified" system for sales will be used when addlUonal homes are available lo the private re- til'ement community. All new homes ln the commwtl· ty have now been sold, according to a sPOkesman for the company. A 58-acre tract west of thtl ex- isting community is now being planned. The developer hopes to build from 543 to 629 homes on this land, the only vacant area left in Leisure World. The homes sofd over the weekend are located around Rossmoor Towers and overlook th e community's new golf course. The company spokesman said precautions were taken to pre- vent speculation. All persona buying the homes were required to sign a pledge that they plan to move into the homes they purchased. About 19,000 people, aged 52 or older, now li ve in the 12,000 re· sidences in the 14·year-old wailed community. F,..,. Pflfl" A J The board meeun• u acheduled for 7:30 p.m. ln diltrict offices, 32972 cane Perle((o in San Juan C1plstnmp. Supt. JeromeTbomaley ha re. comusended that truateea authorize a letter of schOQI db· trict support to the Oranie Coun· tr Human Relations Comp mlallon's erto,ns to eatabllJb day care cei&en in the ao&atb county area. • Re hu also recommended autborisaUon tor a dlatrict ad· mlnlatrator to pattJclpate ln a local child day care ce11ter study committee. Committe~ chairman Lee Steelman said the committee ii plannini a non-profit taclllty to provide high·l~el care to young children Uring In the Capistrano and SaddJeback Valley Unllled SchoolDi5trlcta. Sbe Hid the '!Or»mlttee will probably start with a centralty- located facility, but the group's goal is to locate neiehborhood day care cent.en througbout. Lbe .serYlce area. Tbe 31J.member committee ln- cl ud es representatives from many community or1anizat.ion.s, including the San Clemente Boys Club, the Community Counselln& Center in San Juan, the Capiitrano Unified Council of PTSAJ and the United Way. as wen a.s school district commit· tees and county agencies. In his recommendation to Thomsley that the .school dist.r;ict work with the local study com· mittee, Philip Griinon, assistant superintendent for instructional services, said Oran1e and Fullerton school districts have both operated child care centers. He recommended (hat the Capistrano school district work with the local committee "to studt the economic feasibility, the educational advjsabllity and the legal responsibility of such a program. Proposed change! from last year's summer school program include eliminating swimming for youngsters in kindergarten through sixth grades and adding a "Bible and Llterature" course and pep squad training for hlgh school students. The recommended $40 ,148 summer recreation proeram would include expanded joint powers agreements with lhe city of San Juan Capistrano and the Capistrano Bay Parks and Recreation District. '• TV PROGRAM FIGURES TALK IN INTERVIEW AT LAGUNA BEACH HOME Former PrHldent RJchard Nl~on (left) Ch•tted R ecentty With David Fro1t F,....P.,,eAJ WATER CONSERVATION SEEN. • • • • • • Kald•mao end John D. EhrUchman. They were routtno:. ly supplied to def enae lawyen, b\lt not used at. trtal beea\lle almll r material waa found .in other tapes. Frost's people and t.he current Watersate pro-1 aecutor deny maklAI lb•~ public. On tape 1' of a convuHUon' Nixon had with top aide CUrl 11 W. Co&aon, on June 30, ltn, thrile' .days after t.be Water1ate burelary. ''It doesn't eound Uke a 1k.Ullul Job." Nixon told ColJOn. "I! we . dldn 't know better' r would have . thought it was deliberately . botched.'1 That was on the same day that Nixon talked about Watersate wlth Haldeman -a convera lost becau,,e ot an 18~-mi.oute • erasure. Haldeman'• nott1 of tba vanished conversation bad aald; "what ls ourcounterattack? P.R. o(f enslve to top thls.'' Nixon told. Frost much the same thlnf. He; aald he told h!s chief of 1tatf to Jauneh "a public reJaUons of- fensive on what the other aide ii dOlbf." Afso to Frost. Nixon admitted he lied when be made hll aft~ •tated claim that. be derailed U... • FBI in-ioUgaUon into Wateraate for fear of upsetting CIA opera- w a ter reclamation plant Is -Hunt\ngto11 Beach': montbsafterthey'vebeeunthelr tions,Tt.aieaaid. operating now and by pumping February, 19t6 registered s.eet upcoming public education pro-·~t waa a grievous DJlatake to treated water underground in acre feet of water consumed com-gram. have gotten the CIA involved in Huntington Beach and Fountain pared to February, 1977 when -Orange CountyWatel' Works ~his thing," Nixon la quoted. Valley,hesaid,thedlstrlctisable 1,730 acre feet wet'e cons\lmed., No. 4: Serving San Juan But he inalaled it wu not a. to maintain the important barrier But officials al.80.oote thaHhe ap-Capistrano, the district's use has criminal •ct; that he did not that keeps salt water from intrud· parent trend toward increase risen 3> percent between the two know at the time that hll aides mg into the underground basin. reflecte.d in those fi1ures is offset M archet, a substantial galn even and rus re-election committee .. It's 1oing to save the basin," by the comparisons of January of in light f>f the 12 percent erowth were cmbralled in the bur1lary. ~ he said of the water reclamation 1976 ln which 2,100 acre feet were rate. ..F.J'OSt pursued the malter, IQ· project. "It's paying for itself conaumed with January, 1m in The district has an averqe Ing ''you knew that, in fact., rlghtnow." whicbl,T74acrefeetwereused. monthly now of about 22S acre crimlnalswouldbeprot.ected.0 Along the Orange Coast ther~ -Fountaiil Valley No ftg\U'e$ feet. Nixon proteMed: "Now )uit •• are a total or 13 agencies that sup-were available althouirb -water -Rossml>Ot> Water Company: moment. •. ·· ' - ply Individual users with water department spokesmen said The only private water company "Period." Frostreolied. - omc1als representing most or there .had been aome reduction ln the Orange Coast area serves Jt was Frolt's quotln1 of tbe these agencies say it's too early to during the first three months o? 3S,000 people in Lei.sure World transcripts of Feb. 13 and 1'' tell how conservation is going, but the year.,Prompted in part by a ci-area with an averaie of 680 acre tapes that surpriled Nixon, who there does seem to be a trend ty cutback of 50 percent in1rriga-feetofwateramonth. later told al.det "I'm sure J never ' toward reduction ti on of parksand parkways. There has been a slight declln.e. beard tbat tape before," accord· The officials con.tacted cau -C-Osta Mesa County Water though district officials were not lng to nme. lioned in many cases that com-District General Manager Ed preparedtoreleaseanydata. On that tape, Nixon is heard• parisons are difficplt and pt<>-Schnabel said)1e foresees a reduc- -Santa Margarita Water Dis-lei ling Colson "the cover.up ls, ia bably not valid due to variables tion of nearlY 13 ~rcent between trict: Officials credit an ongoing the main ingredient .•. that's such as weather changes and last ~ril and this April In his dis-public education program with an where we gotta cut our IONes. population ero..,,.th Crom one trict which serv e s 19,000 8.6 percent decrease in use since My losses are to be cut. The period to the next customers with an average mon· the first of the year. President's losses got to be cut oa Generally, the trend seems to thly nowofaboutl,200 acrefeel. The district serves 3,800 the cover-up deal." be thatthe mostslgnlficant reduc· -.Newport Beach: Where the customers in Mission Viejo and That transcript, Frost. re· tions. of 10 percent or more com- city 's63,000pcople use about 2,300 Rancho Mission Viejo with an peatedly tells Nixon, shows Nlx· pared to last year at the same acre feet in an average 60-day average400acrefeetofwaterper on knew a cover-up was UDder time period, have been seen 1.'"'9. period, the trend at the start of the month. way a month before counsel John tricts where public education on year showed more than 11 percent Dean's "cancer on the presiden· the SYbject oC conservation has increase, but that has started to ,.,.... P-A J cy" speech March 21. Nlxon b~ been practiced since before the dee line by almost 2.5 percent. -s-maintained he learned of the cov· • MWDratelncrease. -Irvine Ranch Water District: er.up at that time. ' For a district-by-district look, Officials attribute a nearly 15 MOBIL The Nixon-Frost exchange hereares6me fi1urea: percent reduction since the start • • • ends with the former president (An acre foot Is the amount of of the year to an ongoil1g public peel to lose aJl connections with saying: "You could 1tate your waterront.alnedonanacreofland education program for the dis-the company founded by James conclusions and I've stated my to a depth of one foot -or wttat a trict's 13,000customers. Irvine II. view. So now we go on to the.rest ... famUyolfiveuses in one year.) -Laguna Beach County Water ~oundatlon attorney Howard of it... . District· Aftershowlng an18ptr-Privett was not available ror U REVIEW . cent decrease from Marchofl976 commenttoday. :i1Jj. • • • 2· M · JLt.J to March of •1977, district use, ~ut it was learned that he re-E'.! __ 1 T.!J_ D l also rail to meet •h• r~rJ?-· n..,.. 0 llf'.~.PQ . which averages 52 acre fee( a ce1v~ the new bid (tom Mobil at r UU.U I. Ule rOO _.., ~c,...• ~-~-. ··-~ ~~.al!:-~·'(· · ·-~<~---~4'-~ .:~~~-~~~~ •;.,. · .... · · ,.._....,~''5\f~· ~t~icho-;;;-furn·;~;ld~ · ~----• • ~ - ---.... ·~"'4"-• .. ' 't-' lor 't~~~ tfi3~t~'Ml\Vfil,-'lfuh ~611ttuiltl'olf 1r1'rec~1-S'rtr'"rour'seT~y • ' -- uses. H -b B · • prlmanly, off1c1al:; say, to the hot sched,ule a meeti~g at which the Russo u~reed that there has ostage y dit weather and the lntlux ortourists. new offer will ~e discussed. The Marine Studies Institute in been a problem with "boollec an Figures Indicate that tourist-T,he sc~edulu\g of further co~rt Dana Point will conduct the final signs .. ln Mission Viejo but he ori~nted La_gu~a Beach ex-action WJU depend on the decls.1on tidepool tour of the season at 9 said Dodge and others expect DOWNEY CAP) -A lone ban-M d h perienced a rise muse ov~r the bore ached by the Foundation a.m. SWlday . • 'quicker reac.lions to these orean sai about a alf-dozen warm weather week o{ Apnl 18-ard. Reservations and fufther in· things than w e are able to dit who saJd he wouldn't membersofaspecialteamfrom an. increase not shown in the But It was agreed at the last formation may be obtained by achieve in some caaee... negotiate until alter dark held the Downey police force, similar neighbor.Ing South Coast County court ses~ion that the. Taubman· contacting the Marine Studies Dodl(e said he would like to aee two Bank of America execUUves to a SWAT team, were at the Water District. No other figures Allen-Irvine group wlll h~ve at Institute at 493·9890 Monday an "outside member" named to hostage today after a robbery wt· scene. w~re availablefortheSouthCout least one ~<_>re opportunity to through Friday from 9 a.m. to 2 the <?ompany's duien review tempt was foiled by an alert District. outbid Mob1l .m the race tor con· p.m. panel a concept Russo said has byetander,polkesaid. -San Clemente· No clear trolorthelrvmeCompany. been discussed In the put but re-The robbery attempt be1an p,.... P_,,e Al trend has been set, oCffcials say, News that. the new Mobil bid jected 81 Impractical. around 8 a.m., before the bank in spite of the reduction of water had been fUed appeare~ to 1ive w'oman Stabbed waa scheduled to open, when the JUSTIC use rrom a llUle less than 400 acre new heart today to lrv1ae Com· W 1 --- No decision la likely g come bandit bunt into lhe bank, takinl E feet in. Marett 1976 to aMut 376 pany employes who make no out or Wednesday'• aenlon but hottage the bank's m a.na1er. • • • acre feet.in March 1977. secret ol their support for MQbil Dodge aald the council a.nd ita Marshall Alsson. and operatloN section. t·1rst, It rejected his San Clemente water officials in the bidding battle. plannine committee will have • manaeer, Richard Torree, said claim that the special tribunal say there are usually substaoUal "Terrific," 'commnented a better idea of the desl1n review Downey Police Chief Loren had no authority to determine his fluctuations and they're not pre-senior company official who process. Mor1an. future. pared to calJ the dirf erence ln the declines to be identified. "My job .. 1 think If th M •c i , Offlcera identified lhe alleced It said the constitutional two figures conservatlon. They is one of many on the line in this . e " s so in· bandit as Albert Pow en, 22, of am end men t approved by would rather w._it untU a trend law1Uit and I only hope that cllned, it could make a strong Downey. His sister, Linda, wu California voters last November has been set over a period ot Mobil can pull it off." suuesl1on lo the company to at the scene helpin1 officers try-whlch provided for setting up police thln1s better," he eaid. ln1 to talk to him, police said. such a tribunal was merely a pro- 3 Inmates Stabbed BAKERSFIELD CAP) - Three Kern County Jell lnmatH, Sttl\'e Morrow, JC)ICph K•ll.v and Frank Mesa, were 1tabbed ln ap· parently unrelated incld nta, de- puttes reported today. ' O~ANQICOAIT ti DAILY PILOT =:~:-~~.,r.:=j=:i~::.= ca,.. _,.,. .... c-... , ............. _.,. "*""°" MotMI•• ""....., -,., twa MtW ..._, .. M ... H•IOI• ........... ,. .. _ 1811> Y•l .. f ltf lfle, ...,.....,_ Ytlllf t f\O .............. ft~ftC.eM • ..,..._,..,. ·~ " -·-, ............. ,._..., .. , ... ;,-:.:.~~:.!.~~ .. :DI Wt .... , ... _ .. ~ flr9'*'>t• ... --*'"·cwi.. W.ll'f ............... _ .. __ _ ~ll-lt&IW ~ .... _,... ~···"' CMNtM"-II.._.~ ... AMl\lt°"MI,,_.,,., ...... leddllMCll Yetlft Offtee ruttlAhtMWlll._~,- OUlc .. """'~':~"~~~'!...~ ~-.... ~ ... Mr· f...,..H('M4)~ Cl1....._,M\4ftt .. ..,,..,. ') .......... "•''" ..... °"t(lt Sl1 .. 1'9 ,~ .... ,-...... \ Police were able to Interrupt cedural chanee as distinguished the robbery because a woman from a substanUve law change bystander naued down a pus· which would adversely afC,e~t Ing officer and alerted him. McComb'• rights. . There were no immedlaie de· It also rejected his contention " mands made by the bandit, who that Impeachment was the only said he wouldn't talk to anybody constitutionaJ way he could be re-· about anythiq until alter sunset. moved from his post. Westgate Trqstees Seek Stock Boost Trustees of ftnanclally· troubled Westcate CallCornla Corp. will r~mmend MQ' 13 that the price of •tock fol' Oranae County-baaed Air Callfornla airline be Ht at SlS a ahare. The heariq on the 1toek price for Air Cal, a sub1ldJ1ry or Westcat.e, wtU be held before-the •late Department of Corpora· tiom. Two court-appointed truatees Curvtn Trone Jr. and Herb;{ Kunzel. anno"nc'4 they will make the teeommendatlon dur-ln• a heartn1 on tbo pendJoi m•raet of Atr Cal and a wh0ll1· owned 1UbildlaiY of W•tc•i.e Ca\lfonlla. 'the exebUJ• rate Cor the AJ.r Cal stbck bad Offilnal~ .~Mt ~at f1J a thar• bi the 9ro~ d• el bJ. Wtltlat. to ~ulre tbif •· 1tddlftj U pm:eat Of tM IIffiD atoek. ~I Uoder the proposal by Trone and Kunzel. the Air Cal , shareholders would receive a Westgate common equivalent certllicat. worth $1$ a share for each abare ot AJr Cal stock held. Tbc)M cenlllcatel can then be convenad to cash or to common atock ln Wataate Callfornl, the firm once controHod by financ1er C. Arnholt Smith. In addlUon to •rprovat ot the state Deparllnen of Corpora· tlon1, the deal •till neecb tbe •P· prov al ol the bankntptcy court In San Dle10 wblcb appointed Trone and Kunzel. Th• macer hu already been approved by the board of dlrec:· tor• and ahareholden of Air CaU!ornJa. • A c:oun •&rin.i cm the mera hu been aeheduled for J 'I wltb meraer \o follow Jm! mtdl.c.l7 upon court'• ap. prov al. · ' r n\ '' R , 11 M •, t,.1 Lt , r l ,,...., r · . r. ., t ,. A 1•' r ·~ . ,,, • ' ,· ., ~' , ''·I ,. , I ' " ) BURBANK (AP) -Charlotta Rpdrlguez, '1:1, of Burbank waa fatally slabbed, apparently In the presence of her 3-year-old daughter, durlng a domestic ells· lurbaoc:e, authorities said • Robett Lee, 38, was booked for investieation of murder. Its Influelice .. By MJLTON MOS&owm .Every year the ma1HiM U.S. Ntw1 6 World Report doet a aurvey to Ond out "who nw America" and lht,... 1ulta m\llt be very comfort.int for buslneH people -os:. maybe they're not. It dependa on how you look at thtle ,...,. 1ulta. > The 1ll"Udns feature of tbll 1urvey, from the 1landpot~ or the bulltteu world, i•lh•t corporal.: eitecuttve1 don't ra"°' at all. '.fbeY AN conaplcuoua by their abaence. •<1 TllB .. WHO Rl1NS AMERICA" ro1tec.l1 com_plled b)tt 11ktn1 a croes 1ecUon of leadJna Amerk1n1 to Ust, In order,1 lht •l~ lndivi4ula "who exercise the mott Influence In Dlof1 Uonal deelalon makln1." Polnta are then tabulated on • de1cendin1 1oale from 6 polnta for llrat place to 1 point for 1lxlh. President Cuter naturaUr. Mad.a the lt.t, and be 1 followed by Federal Reserve Board Ch•lrman Arthur Money Tree ... .. Duma, Su~:,me Court Chief Justice Warren Burier and. AFL-CIO ident Georee Meany. .. Walter Cronkite, the CBS-TV news correspondent. • ranked ninth ln the 1tandlnp. He wu one of the top 10 lu\l year, too. Nol a ain1le buslnesa executive made the top 10 althc>u1h W. Michael Blumenthal ranked No.--10. He lJ the secretary of the treasury. Last year ht was runnlnc BendllCl Corp. n U'I THE FIRST BUSINESSMAN TO SHOW up on thla llat lu David Rockefeller. He received enou1h vow to rank 17th, down one pee from his 1918 position. Rockefeller l11' C'1alrman of New York's Chue Manhattan Bank, but h~) Hlect.ion obviouaJy reflects more than that power base 1lncen there are bankers heading up blHer financial ln1Utullom·1 <WalW' Wriston of Cltlbat\k, 'fom Clausen of Bank of America). Lut year William Paley, chairman of CBS, wu Dim_.,. the 20th moat influential American. Thi. year ht didn't eve1P make the standinp, which run to 309Jacea. '' In 20tb ~ce thla year wu conaumer advocate RalJ)h Nader. That• a victory of sorta for the bualneaa community. f Lut year he ranked 10th. •• TWO PUBWHERS OF NEWSPAPERS re1arded by many business people as "enemies" made the roster .. Katharine Graham, publisher of the Washington Poet, wu ranked 15th and Arthur 0 . Sulzber1er, publisher of the New.• York Times. landed in 2Sth place, right behind former• Preaident Ford. ,. Finally, there was one lone corporate chief identified d lt one ol the 30 mogt influential Americans: Thomaa A. Murphy. Who is be? Chairman of a UtUe company called General Motors. He finished in the 30th slot, down two froml• the position he held last year. l' The heads Of AT&n, I'M', IBM, GE and EXXOftf "l'beyh may nm huae corporate emplrea but they are perceived u less influential than Roaalynn Carter, the Rev. BllJt>i Graham. BEW Secretary Joseph Cali!ano and Common"' Cause founder John Gardner, --.. ,,, mERE ARE TWO WAYS OP looklne at these surveti' results. Busmeu people may be disappointed that their In" fluence counts for -o Uttle. On the other hand, aiven the wldesJ)read feellnt that bualness ls contrtbutln1 to th~ nriltaUon of the country, corporate leaders can take some. comfort in. reall1ln1 that at least nobody knows the in· dlv!duals wbo are rwminl our Jar1e companlet. · Corporate mana1ementa remalD faceless. • Optimis~ R~igns; ~~~~y--n.~p8PtS· ···_-:,· ~ . I In spite or persistent pesalml1m about inflation, mos~ Californians remain confident about their personal flnan'· cial well·belng, accordine to a conaumer altitude sur\I• conducted for 8ank of America. or 918 Californians queried in the survey, 44 percent said they are betlef off now than they were a year ago, 22 percent said they \ltere worse off and 31 percent aald their status hadn 't chang'ed. THE INDEX OF CONSUMEll8' perception of the~ personal rananclal well·b•lne, the bank reported, moved.. ahead six points to 122 In March from 116 last Decembeo The index is formed by 1ubtracUnJ the percentage ( ne1ative responses from the percentaae of po1itl reapoMes and adding 100. The personal rinanch\I outlook of consumers fell 1U1ht· ly, from an index or 138 to 135. When asked what they 1ee fir the fut~. '6 percent said they wlll be better off next yeat 11 percent indicated they wlll be worae off and 34 perctnl. Hid they could foresee no chanee ln thelr 1ltuat1on. -Conndence lhat inflation can be controlled h11 laUen off al,nlftcantly. The lndex 1tand1 at 74, repreaentln1 a lf. ' pount drop from the January reading, the bank said. It wa1 an all·Ume low for the Indicator 1lnce bl·monlhly 1urv were beaun two yeara a,o. • · ONLY I PEit CENT OF THE people surveyed were cdr.'~ fldent lhat tnfiaUoh can be controlled. Forty percent tJr.' dlcated U\ey wetcn 't very confident and 20 S>ercent were rft>t confident at all. ''Recent etcalatlon of food coata and the proapec~o a dry summer for Callfornla have had 1lanmcant lmpac " utd Kerry Curtis, head of lhe bank's markeUn1 rt1 department. If'.' ..._ . Bank Goes Strong ·~:' SAN 01100 <AP> -The year.Old Women'• Ban.JcJl; 61n Dit1011y1 tt ii maklnt money "and h•t clone much W. i.r than other women'• b1nka1' ln tM United Stata. - Rlta Milli McCoy.~pr .. ldenl, 11ld dtpotltl excct·CJU-4 ..... mllllon but a&Hta u of March~l totaled '8,418,000. "lndeprndenl banka comparabte ln tlJ• to th• Women'• Jllt\k .,.. not normalb1 "~ted to bntalt evtn untll an. tbt thtnt year of operation, • '1Mt at.Id. I'. "Al the cloM of the first yur of buatncn of tht '* women'• bank ln th Wcat1 the Women'• Bank co~ f avorabl)'. wilh all Independent blllkl ln the 11me area IAd tiu doM muC!b better ltian other womtn '• ballkl ln t.h• uy,•• abiaatd. , .. There are t,600 acoountl tn th• Sin Die.co bank.t 01 wblab ti perceni were placed by m . . '