Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-08-04 - Orange Coast Pilot- _orona -as DAILY PILOT * * * 10< * * * THURSDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST,, 1977 VOi.. 7t, NO. 116, 4 SICTIC*S, M ,AOH Trooper 1 l).ies for. I •110 Cents I I MIAMI CAP> - A Ftorlda Hl1hway Patrol t.rooper was shot and killed early today when he stopped a motorist for JumplnJ a lO·cent toll booth, ~lice said. "For a dime -a lou11 dlme," one Miaml pollce officer said. Hours later, pollce found tbe car and followed a trail of blood at least three blocks to a Miami apartment complex where an un- 1dent1fied man was taken into cu1tody. Police said the person in custody was a witness, not the 1uoman wanted In the slaytn1 of Trooper Bradley Steve n . Glascock. They would not elaborate. The shooting occurred about 3 a.m. on Miami's East-West Ex· pressway when Glascock aaw a Cadillac Eldbrado sideswipe a toll booth and speed throu1h without payina the 10.cent fee, • police1aid. He stopped the car about 100 yards.away fr9m the toll plaaa. '"l'be suspect. suddenly puJled out a handaun and shot Glucock at least two Umes at point-blank ran1e." Miami police spokesman Angelo Bltals said. He said Glascock got out of hls . car and "there was a brief ex· ch.an&e ol words. The suspect pulled eut a b dgun and shot the trooper." An obse~ver riding in the trooper'• car pulle d out <See TltOOP~ll. Pa1e A.2) Fleet'•'" ., .......... Eight Na vy c ru isers. frigates and d estroyers stea m into Elliott B;iy in Seattle as part of the city's annual Seaf air festivities. ' el ar oman. ' Police Ca ~Tenailts • Froill Doomed HOtel ' BJ 'OANNB REYNOLDS OfU.De4ty,......, Corona det Mar murder victim J ane Ellen Bennincton was raped by her st.ill·unidenti!ied as- sailant who choked her to death. Newport Beach police disclosed today. Detective Sam Ambureey said result.a of the autopsy conducted on the29-yea.r·old woman showed that she had been sexually m olested and that she was manually stran1ted rather than beaten to death. Initially, lnvutlaatou theorized 1he dled of a blow to her head because of a scalp laceration they spotted an.er bet body was discovered by her roommate Tuesday afternoon. But Ambureey said the blow that produced tbe laceration ap- parently did no other dam&1e. "It didn't produce a fracture. It couldn't have kHled her," he Said. I Asked If there were any SUS· pects In the case, Ambur1ey s aid, "No, not yet." Miss Bennington was last seen alive by her roommate with lwhom she had gone to Bobby 'McGee'• nightspot Monday night. Amburgey aatd the two women left the popular club in aeparate cars after cloebig at 2 a.m. The lnvestl1e-tor aald the murder vlcUm drove home and becauae lhe was unable to find a parking apace near ber Mar1Uerite Avenue apartment, <See &APE, Pa1e A.2> Stars R eun ited Pat O'Brien and Myrna Loy, who last appeared together in the 1931 movie "Consolation Marriage," pose in front of a picture from that flick at a HolJywood news con· ference where it was announced that they will appear together in a new movie, "The End, playing the parents or Burt Reynolds. Sex-d~ath Attempt ~rial Set for M~san cache. But that, the officer testified, plus a 45-mlnute interview at the Twentynine Palms San Bernardino sheriff'• atation, took plac. after Dou1lu refused to walve constitutional r_tahta and demanded an attorney. <See PO&NO, Pal• A!) Bay ~rea_ Elderly Evicted SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Elderly tenants of a hotel scheduled to be tont down were carried out of the bulldina early today as more than 1,QOO pro- testers gave way to some ~ police and sheriff's deputies \ armed with evlct1oo notices. Belore giving way. to police, foes of the eviction withstood an attempt by mounted police to ram throu1b a human barricade of people standing five deep and linked arm in arm. The m ass eviction was coordinated by Police Chief Charles Gain and Sheriff Rlcbard Hoqisto, who went to Jail for five days this year f~ contempt of court when he re- fused to serve the original evic· tion notices. Hongisto said then he lacked the manpower to carry out the evictions without bloodahed, although he reportedly sym. pathtzed with the protesters. Today, aa police on ladders scaled the bulldl.ni to Cain en· trance, ffonlisto said "my COD· cern about housing for the low in- come is sUll the same." Hongisto said b1.I office would find temporary housln1 for any evicted tenant.a •eekina abel~. Belon the demonstrators ,ave way, police scaled the Iatenaa· tlonaJ HOtel, OD the ed1e of Chinatown, by fire truck ladder while othm broU throulh win· dowa on the flnt floor ct the tbree-IUry bulldinf. Theo, the demonstrators backed away from the doOr abOut 4:30 a.m. as police be1an comlna from the buildin1. cal'J'Yinc 9'e 65 passive tenant.a f.n.<1 leavma them in the atrtet. Undenheriff Jam• Denman. aaid ei&'bt demomtrawn lDJUftid, but none of the lDJUrtes <SM EVJcr, .... AJ) .. I •' pc Radio Apologizes . Swiss Report PhOny Neutron War W.-donoay nl'ht '1 proJr•ID followed lhf!' re1uJar even1n1 ntnHC l and blended pop muslc with liJb.l·veined commoDt.art on tor I tt>plu fnttrspersed U1rou1h much ul lhie ~·minute 1'Radlo Cabaret" were reah•lJc $<>Undu11 nt:W~ Oashe5 Tiw phony ne•• bullettns re· porud heavy flihtJ01 MIOIJI lhe bord belWttO Eut Ind West G rmany and then •aid that two neutroo bo bt weH aet orr. lt'lnally, there was • ,.,,.ttul an· noune ~nl.ofthodeath toll. ''Cll>,000 people kllled but no de t.ructJon and IOOd h&ok for the autvlvon," en editor recalled. "Th t.wmuon wu to11Urbe the concept ol the hcutron bomb u a clean bomb. Wo thou1ht lt would b4t ckar t.o evtrybocb that U.. new• nuhes were fiction." The neutron bomb baa been ch~rac~riied by aome commen- tators as a bomb that dettroys A~WI,.... PROTESTER HELPED AWAY FROM HOTEL MELEE In San Francisco, a Violent Clash of Wiiis Frona P age A I EVICT ..• was believed serious. Police said 19 arrests were made, and one demonstrator wu booked for re· :;isting arrest. ·'You have five minutes to vacate," a policeman announced -over a buUhorn. The demonstrators chanted "Noev1ct1ons, we'1on't move." l Nearly 2,000 foes of the eviction began grouping at the low.rent. . residential hotel Wednesday ~ night. • Pohce, carrying billy clubs and w e aring riot gear, began marchmg in small groups toward , the hotel about 3 a.m. Th~/ blocked-off area rocked wlth lhe chant "We won't move" a!ler caravans of police cars were seen driving into a nearby under· ground earal{c. , Owners of the hotel. the Four l Seas Corp .• have been alt.empt· t' ing to evict the tenants and tear I down the hotel to make way ror new constructl0n. l A lengthy legal battle to halt the eviction ended last week when the st.ate Supreme Court turned down petitions seeking to block the evictions l l'r oa Page A J I l RAPE ••• • she parked In the nearby lot ot Marlo's restaurant, where her car was found by Investigators. Amburgey aald they believe the suspect may have ahpped in·. to the apartment through an open 1Udlng llau door. Alter rapine and tnutdtttnr ! the former social worter1 ~ , ~out a window 1cteen and ' ped from the aecond story I . m where the c:rtme took OAANOI COAST '- DAILY PILOT 3 Acquitted, I Convicted In Party Fight One of four male roommates arrested in a Huntineton Beach party melee la!t April hu been convicted of assault and battery by a jury, wtule two codeteo· dants were acquitted of the Qlis· demeanor charges. Ricky Russell, 21, of 8042 Taylor Drive, where the incident occurred, now faces a probation and referral hearing Aua. 81 in West Oranee County Judicial District Court. His brother Kevin, 23, and Roy Donovan, 20, al.Jo of the Taylor Drive address. were acquitted of the same charee. A fourth ar• restee, Thomas JohnJon, 20, wu released without ever betna charged two days later. The tour were orlalnally booked by police on char1es of assault with a deadly weapon, at· tempted rape and robbery, alonJ with a 17-year-oldjuvenlle &lrl. They were taken into custody at the residence on April 29, based on complaints by a 15- year-old girl who agreed to at- tend an impromptu party when approached by a vanload of youths. The young woman, wbotn de· rense attorney Thomas Crosby alleted was probably Intoxicated and was never subjected to a rape attempt, rtqutred hospltaJ treatment after Uu! episode. The cue was conchaded. ex· cept for the he1rln1 on probaUon for Rtcty Russell, berort Judie Wllliam Mock last week. During the \)roeoedJnes, de· !eftle attorney Cto1by pointed out the 1'7-year-old elrl adtnltted to juvenUe hall was. also never charged in the case. _Singer's Son Shot in Side people but Jeavet property un· damaaed. Actually, the warhead produca twice tho deadly rad.la· 1 Uon ol a conventional nuclear bomb but Jeu than a tenth u m\lch bla1t power, beat and, fallout. Thus destruction t.o buUd· in&• and other inanimate objecta would be tu lots. The Swlts radio Incident re- called the 1938 "War of the Worlds" broadcast by Orson Welle. abou\ a fictitious inv•iQn or New 1ersey by Martian monsters. That broadcast touched off panic and a mass ex· odwi by thousands of New York area residents. NatiollUJide Telephone Strike Set? WASHINGTON CAP> -Ana- tionwide strike by 700,000 telephone workers Saturday Is Ml most inevitable, the chief union negotiator in contntct talks with the Bell System said today. President Gienn E. Watts or the Communtcatlom Workera ot America said that bargaining has come to a standstill. He said that time tor the negotiations, re· cesaed since Tuesday, is running out. "I can see no way to avoid a strike unJess there Is a dramatic breakthrough in the next few hours, which I candidly cannot foresee," Walts told a news con- ference. Current contracts with the BelJ System expire at midnicht Satur. day and the unions involved In the negotiations have threatened a strike at 9:01 a.m. PDT Satur- day. In addition to the CWA with its 500,000 members, the unions in- volved are the I nternatlonal Brotherhood of Electrical Worlters, representlna 120,000 workers, and the Telecom- munJcaUons International Un.ion with about 70,000 members. The unions rejected the com· plny's orrer July 21 of a three- year contr,c:t witb a 10 percent wa1e lncreue, plua cost-of-living adJU1tmen&a over the life ot the aereement. The proposal would have ralaed tbe avera1e salat"y or a top.paid craft worker earning $183.SO by 3 .,.tcent over three y•an. Watts said tbe proposal was far below recent aettlements in lhe auto and it.eel industries and declared that his members would not accept anythinJ substantially below those agreementJ. Police Squad SmtUha Car In Emergency A polJce car 6n an emeratency call crashed beadon Into a bi& luxury car lnjurinf the 78-year- old woman driver Wednesday on Tblrd Street at the top of lhe steepest hill in La1una Beach. Ettubeth Saaer of 551 Blumont St. and Oftlcer Bradley Smith, 25, were taken to South Coast Community Hospital. Both were released alter emeraency treat· ment. Smith, tespondinl to an emergency report or an assault at Crescent Bay Beach, pulled ar:oond a vehicle which bad stopped in his path and i&lto the lane carryln1 traffic lhe opposite direction, up the hill. The steep . angle of the hill obscures vblon of driven ln either lane at the Cl'elt u they atutmpt to •ee what ll comln1 the other way. Smith bad acUvated hit patrol car'• nuhtnl red and blue...ll&hts and h•adlllbtl, accordJn1 to a re· port fl)ecJ by the C•lllor nla ff llthway PattoJ whlcb Is t n· veaUgatlna the mllhap be<!aust a city POUce Wllt waa lnYolv.l. A1 Smith pulled into the oppot· bl• tratllc Jane. the coUOllGft OC· curred wttb Ml"I. S.CW's vehicle. A IPOkC!llDaD f« the CHP laid U. ·~ bO one waa at fault ln the acddGnt. that lt wu t auted Pr a tll ol occurrencea which Of thetolehw were not •lolat.lobs of law. To aft the tieadnl • prOMCUt<r Jam• 8tookl""lild the lntUV1ew wu lnfonnll llbd lnf orm1Uoo 1il.Dt<t ln it would not be Used a1ainat Douclu at trial. ' Brooks conceded tbat ii Engebretsen n1le1 aiatnst 1d- m ltting the evidence Oouilu helped police nnd, "It WOUid weaken our ca1e, psychologically." He added, "But It won't CQSt \I.I the case.'' Engebretsen, dec:J1rln1 "'Thls type or crime 11 ttelnoua even to . think of it," raised Doualaa' bail from $1.:50,000 to $2!50,000. .11.,.... wbo.applled for nduc- tlon c:l bail, argued that Douelas had eood character references and oo prior C!nmlnal record. Engebretsen retorted that he had considerecl an even hi1her beU. En1ebretsen 's d eclalons followed• day of testimQny from the woman aJlefedJ.y recndted by Douilaa u his accomplice: (rom a teen·aie &lrl who posed for nude photos at the desert shack, and from the two un· dercover pollcewomen. The "accomplice," Pamela Sue Williams, testified that she, had turned informer for pollce arter Douglas told her the models were actually to be dismembered and killed. JuUe McGetlrick, 19, tesUfled that she worked for then·bar owner Douglas In 1978, as a barmaid, when he asked her to go to the desert shack to pose for pornographic pictures. She said Douglas told her then that he was compiling the photos for Malla-distributed bondage books. Miss McGettrlck said Dou11a.s tried to recruit her to lure victims to the shack "He said there were a couple of bodies there already, that he put them there," she testified. She said she was scared to death and never returned to the shack. Otflcer Mary P1trlcia Reynolds, a former Huntlnston Beach reserve policewoman now with Santa Monica department, and Orange County Sheriff's Deputy Dawn Baucom, testified they were hired by Douglas as models. B1 MICH4'EL PASQ\'ICB OIU.OMIJ ........ A Seal Beach motel·apartGient complex, dubbed the "Hot L Baltimore" becaws of its less thin Wustriowi put, once qa.ln has been "saved" ey coastal commlssionen from Ila owners, wbo want to tear ft~ '' lt may become a real Hot L Baltimore," remarked co.owner Al BenUey upon learning that the state Coastal Commiasion voted 9-2 Tuesday .,alnat allowinl the deatrucUoo ot the Roa Mariner Motel at 201 Seal Beach Boulevard. "The Hot L BaJtlmore" was a play by Lanford Wilson about a decaying hotel with the ''E" in the word "Hotel" burned out in its alp. It lat.er became a short· lived television series. The owners, Califia Properties of Laeuna Beach, had hoped to Youth Held In Death Try NEW FLORENCE. Mo. (AP) -A lJ.year-old Callfo('QJa youth was charged with assault with in· tent to kill after a youn1 Call!ornia womaa companion was struck lo the bead and tied to a tree, Mont1ornery Couoty Prosecutor IWY Richter aald. Teresa Knox, 19, ot Rldtecrest. wu treated at MedkaJ Center in Mexico, Mo., andreleased, Her alleted attackel', Richard H. Urtoo, 19, of C1etro Valley, was arrested Wedhesctay 10 miles east of Hays, Kans., by a Kansas highway patrolman. Miss Knox was moving to Fort Madison, Iowa. to U ve with her grandmother. 17" dl1gon11 . color portable build e:l~t tlnile tamtly homes on the elte the Dloltl bu occupied for .0 years. ••1 don't know what their (coast a l commlasloneris' > purpose ls other than to control people's property,·• said BenUe~ BeDUeJ flrll appeared _,ore regional coast.i commt.uloners· in Huntington Beach ln late June, claiming lhe motel WM often oc- cupied by "vacrants, drunks aod fugitives.'' However. recional com· missioners reasoned that the motel serves a much-needed public service, especially to lower-income families who can't otherwise afford a vacation at. the beach. Motel man~er Jack Roe said summer rates at the Ross Mariner recently were increased to $75 a weekend for a single room without a kitchenette. Kitchen-equipped rooms cost $2215 per month. All of those cur- rently are occupied, Roe said. Bentley and associates decided lo appeal the regional com· mission's reasoning to the state Coastal Commllslon. Armed with a petition signed by more than 500 neighbors who • a1ree the motel should 10, architect George Alvarez pleaded the cue before the com- mtsslon Tuesday in Burlingame. But once acain commissioners aaid the motel is an important visitor facility, adding that the proposed new development would have inadequate off-street parldnf and mtiht cut into poten. Ual C!ity plans to set up its own coast.al permit process. Callfla Propertlea, a s ub- sidiary of the Irvine-based Janes Company, now has she months in which to lodge another appeal. Bentle¥ says current plans are to let the place limp along without any upgrading. l Totlay9 9 £lo lllU& N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 70, NO. 216, 'SECTIONS, 36 PAG S ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A THURSDAY, AUGUST~. 1977 c TEN CENTl Mesan Faces Trial Sy PlllUP aolJIAJUN .................. Pftd BcrT• 0ou,1 .. ol C.0.la Ill • wtll stand trial on attempt· ed mu.rd« cbar1n all.,int be h1ttd two women to tbe deMrt to be badtod to death by an 1c rompUce whale be took ot.ceo.e aaapshoes ol the murder•. ~ta. wu arrested at the Yucca Valley site July 20 by two wutercove,r poUcewomeo wbo Murder Victim Raped By JOANNE REYNOLDS Oft•D.ity~ ... 11.atf Corona del Mar murder victim Jane Ellen Bennington was raped by her still-unidentified as- sailant who choked her to death. Newport Beach police disclosed today. Detective Sam Amburgey said results oC the autopsy conducted oo the 2t-year-old woman showed that she had been sexually molested and that she was manually strangled rather than beaten to death. Initially, investi1ators theorized she died of a blow to her head because of a scalp laceration they spotted after her body was discovered by her roommate Tuesday afternoon. But Amburgey said the blow that produced the laceration ap- parently did no other damage. "It didn't produce a fracture. It couldn't have kllled her," he aaid. Asked if there were any sus- pects in the case, Amburaey •aid, ''No, ootyet.'' · Miu Bennlncton waa lut nen I alin by her roommate with • whom abe bad aone t.o Bobby McGee'• nl1btapot Monday night. Ambur1ey said the two women lert. the popular club ln separate can after cloeln1at2 a.m. The investl1ator said the murder victim drove home and because she was unable to find a parking apace near her Marauerl~ Avenue apartment, she parked ln the nearby lot of Mario's restaurant, where her car was found by inve1tl1ators. Ambur&ey said they believe the suspect mu have slipped in- to the apartment throu1h·an open slldlq pus dOor. After rapln1 and m1~ertn1 the former social ~ r. he broke out a window scr and jumped from the secono story bedroom where the crime took place. House Nixes Sc .a Gallon Gasoline Tax l>Oled u tbe ~la. Polle. al· le1e they were to tMa tortu:r.d, dll· membenld .nd kl1Jt4 After a day-Iona prollmlnary hearint at Wat Orance County Municipal C.OUrt. J&ldte Rqnar EneebretHo ordered the 49· year-<>ld furniture reflniaber ar· nlaned In Superior Court Au1. 18 But Juctce EncebretNn also •treed to atudy a mot.Ion by de- I f tn1e ettomey Pat Maaen to 1uppren much of the physical evld•nce -a meat cleaver, kolva, 11w1, lcepicb, ruon - a1alnat Doqlu. Garden Grove Detective Ronald Shave teaUned the l~ms were due up near a Yucca Valley aback DouCJu used u hi.I porno- rraphlc tum headquarters. Shave 1alcl J>oublaa led officers to the •pot and himself dug with Murder. Weapon't PlctW'ed are front and s de views Of mahoeany fertility symbol statue believed used ln Laguna Beach murder of Albert Willard, 69, of 861 Coastview Drive on July 26. Statue was apparently carried from the scene by murderer. Police asked today that anyone with inCorma· lion call D,etectlve Gene Brooks at 497-3311, extens1on 267. Two Fires Merge In .Big ·S~ Area By The Auoclated Preu Two raging fires in the ru11ed wilderness east of Big Sur have mersed into one mammoth blue while other Ughtnin1·tri11ered fires erupted in the east and northeast parts of the state, the U.S. Forest Service said today. BlaseRuim Warehorue, · lmttumen:u More than 1,000 exhauated flrefilhten, backed by seasoned crewe from the Southwest and Idaho, were battlin1 the Ventana flret which have blackened more than ao,ooo acres of timber and b""'h at the Lot Padres National Forest, said BUI Powers, fOl'eSt atrvicelnformatlooofficer. More than 400 blues, most sparked by ll1btnln1, have scorched t.bouaandl of acres in Northern Caltrornia in four days. Flrtfilbtera bave been abuffled from flre to fire, but a 1bortace of manpower hu meant that tome bl ans are burninl unchecked. Powers delcribed tbe Ventana. bl&Mll -the South COne and Mar- ble Pak ftrea -aa potenUally more dan&erou Jhan t.be Mt. Dtablo flre JS miles eut of San Franclaco. That blue, which has burned IDC)te than ~.ooo acres. wueont.l.ned early today. • Ill Sex-death Try hl1 hands to help uncover the cache. But that, the officer teaWled, plus a 45-mlnute interview at the Twentynine Palma San Bernardino sheriff's station. took place alter Dou1las refused to waive corutllutlonal rights and demanded an attorney To reporters alter the hearine. prosecutor James Brooks said the interview was informal and ~ information gained in it would not be used against Douglas at trial. Brooks conceded that if Engebretsen rules against ad- milhng the evidence Douatas helped police find, "It would weake.p our-case, psycbo- logicaOy." . He added, "But it won't cost us the case." En1ebretsen, declarin1 "This Carpenter Plan type ol crime la heinous even to think of ll," raised Dou1las' bell from SlS>,000 to $250,000. ' Masers. who applied for reduc- tion of bail. araued that DcKclas had &ood character referenees and no prior criminal record. En1ebretsen retorted tbal be bed considered an even hiaher bail. The "accomplice," Pamela Sue WUliams,i.!~stifled that ahe, CSee POanO. Pait AZ) - 3~% State lncollle· . TaX CU.ts Proposed SACRAMENTO CAP> -State Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter CR· Newport Beach> was one of two legislators who today proposed giving Cahfornaans state income tax cuts next year up to a max- imum of $150 for sin1le tax· payers and S300 for joint returns. Carpenter, who made the pro- posal with Slate Sen. Georee Deukmejian CR-Lone Beach), said the ~ percent cut would re· turn about $782 million of the slate sucplus to the people who paid it. The state surplus has been estimated at $2.7 billion at the end of this fiscal year. For u family of four earning .$10,492 the Republican pro- posal would reduce the income * * * Wlleges' Tax Rate Increases By &TEVE MITCHELL Of .. Olllty ,,. ........ Coast Community College Dltlrict t.ru.st.ees slapf.ed another 9.6 cents onto the d atrict's tax ra~ Wednes~ay nJghl, despite a two-hour plea by a Costa Mesa taxpayer that cuts be made in the $76.5 million document. The increase in the tax rale comes on top of an estimated 20 percent hike in assessed valua- tions on properties in the 88- square mile college distMct. Those increases wUJ mean a 34 percent increase in district taxes for the owner of a home aueaaed at $80,000 last year. Property owners will pay 89.6 cents per $100 useased valuation to aupport pro1rams in the 344· page bud&et document approved W ednelday ni1ht. And it was that document to which retired Navy Capi.tn Ler- terus "Lefty" Lavral£as ad- dressed himself from 10:10 p.m. to midni1ht, comparine line Items throuehoul bis copy of the preliminary budget. Lavraltas wu an unsuccessful candidate Jut year for the coast. board stat held by Trustee (SeeTAXIDKE, Pa1eA2> Mesa Coverage Ot!ler Costa Meta atones and pbotOI appear today on Pate C7. . . tax to $2"4 from $63, a 62 percent cut. For a family earning $19,495, it would cut the tax to S241 from $372, a JS percent reduction. Because of the $150-$300 limit, the percentage cuts would drop rapidly io higher brackets. Deukmejian and Carpenter con- ceded at a news conference there was little chance of gettin1 such a bill through the Democratic· controlled legislature. t ''But isn't there room for one orieinal idea that is fair and con- cise and more easily understood than the others?" Carpenter asked. Brown administration pro- posals to rebate some property taxes to homeowners and renters and give more stale money to 0.11, ................. INITIATIVE 'MANAGER' M•••'• Mike Mclaughlin Nonh Mesan AabSignen To Nix Plan schools would cost abouL 19.S billion over five years. Carpenter, who 1s a member of a two-house co1nmlttee trying to work out the property tax bill, said the committee is stalemated. "The 1overnor is horrified by some oC the prospects being dis· cussed in that committee. We're not only talking about tax changes, but social changes t.hat come down very heavy on busi- ness." he said. Carpenter said that not only a re the committee members stalemated, but beblnd-the-scenes negotlatlons with other In- terested parties are getting nowhere. * * * 118 M11lls ~~Tax Rebates By &OBEaT BAaKER Olllleo.IJ\' .. ._IWff A plan to return up to $1 million to city taxpayers ls under serious conaideratlon in Huntlntlon Beach today. If the plan is adopted, the re· bates would take the place of a proposed cut in the city tax rate. The plan la modeled alter the in· nation assi1tance program in· slltuted by Garden Grove. Mayor Pro Tern Ron Shenkman, who is spearheading the rebate efforts, said 4he money would be returned to owners who occupy aintle-family residences. Shenkman said that the re- bates would probably ran1e fl'Om S20 to $50, depending oo the es· seued valuation of the re· sidences. He said tbe total rebate amOWJt la expected to be from $750,000to$1 million. Shenkman aald that under hi• plan, rebates could not appl31 to commercial, industrial or In· come properties. He said that he will work out detalll ol the profl'am with staff members Friday and that the cl· ty council will hold a study seaaion on the matter Aua. 15. Shenkman de~lared that the ln-flatlm asslltance plan will bdp reduce the burden to taxp~en in a meanlnsful way. 1 Jailed • , • • I m • ; i By AllTHll& &. VIN t.:L .................. • • , Jamn Steven Oano, 1U•JK~tC'd u lit• BaHball Cap fhndll r.-pon•lblt ror H Southland hn robberles spannln1 54 dayt, remal:Ded jailed today tolluwlnc bl• UT t by Newport Beach pioUce who detaJned him for quel lion.Ina in ~ murder of an ex ,U-Uncnd • f • • , i ! ; I l I The unemployed automobile R.nand.ni uttUU ve w u cleared di lnvoh~ment In tht slaytn1 ear· \)I Tueeday. but wu held after btlQI linked bv oure chance to a I Unwanted !Hotel OC 'Rescued { By MICHAEL PABKEVICH 0t t• o.i1y ,.._ Statt A SeaJ Beach motel·apartment ' complex, dubbed the "Hot L , Baltimore" because or its less • than illustrious past. once again haa been "saved" by coastal commissioners from Its owners, wt\o want to tear It down. "ll may become a real Hot L • Balli more." remarked co-owner Al Bentley upon lear'nlng that the ' state CoaJta.1 Commission voted ' 9·2 Tuesday against allowint: the • destruction of the Ross Mariner : Motel at 201 Seal Beach : Boulevard. "The Hot L Baltimore" was a play by Lanford Walson about a decaying hotel walh the "E" in the word "Hotel" burned oul In als sien. It later became a short· lived television series. 'fhe owners, Callrta Properties of Laguna Beach, had hoped to build eight !>angle family homes on the site the motel has occupied •. for 40 years "l don't know what their (coas tal commissioners' l purpose is other than to control people's property," said Bentley. Bentley far&t appeared before r~gional coastal commlasioners m Huntintton Beach in late June, claiming the motel wu on.en OC· ! cupied by "vagrants, drunks and • fugitives." However, reaional com· missioners reasQOed that the motel serves a much-needed ~ pu blac s ervice, especially to lower-income famllles who can't otherwise afford a vacation at : lhe beach Motel manager Jack Roe said : summer rates at the Ross ; Mariner re<:ently were Increased · to $75 a weekend for a single • room without a kitchene~. · Kitchen.equipped rooms cost • $225 per month. All of those cur· • rently ue occupied, Roe said. : Bentley and associates decided ~ to appeal the regional com- : mist1ion'11 reasoning lo the stale Coastal Commission. Armed with a petition sl&ned by more than 500 nelahbors who agree the ·motel should co. I. architect Geor1e Alvarez pleaded the case before the COin· mission Tuesday ln Burlln1ame. f',....P.,,.AJ ·TAX HIKE ••. • Geor1e Rodda Jr. of Corona del • Mar. Trustees llttened paUenUy u he revtewtd what be admitted were hla own Jud1ment1 for plac• where the bud1et eouht be cut. Dlstrtct 1tatf membtn ooun· tered many of hl• ar1umen\a. Boa.rd member Worth Keene ) told Lavraku: "Y<* have ln· dlcated these are your Jud1hienla ~ on how we can reduce the budtet, J aod we are temn1 ~o~ w• bave f:, .~ Jud,men\I on \he mat· MANOI OOMT c DAILY PI LOT HunUnaton lJe•c:h biank robbery Gano. 28, who lived •t Uu: Am baaaadot lM ln Santa Ana ap· perflf'lll' und an allH he used to rt11 ~r -all•&tdly t.rled to pay ball for three okl trartlc tkkct.a with marked bank loot. He hatd been picked up by Newport S.ach police deteetlva for an Interview re1ardln1 the kUJina ol Jane Ellen Bennlnston, 29. ln her Corooia del Mar llQart ment. GWM> wu arra.l1ned late Wed· nelday before U.S. Ma1i1trate Arthur Bradley in Santa Ana on a •l11cl• count ol b•nk robbery. Gano ua chareed with holding up the California Firat NaUonul Banlt, 17122 Beach Blvd., Hunt· lnct.on Beach. leas than one hour before police took him anto custody in the murder probe. Ball was raised from S25,000 to $50,000 when Magistrate Bradley formally read the charges against him at Wednesday's ar· raignment proceedin1. al the re· quest ol authorities. Deputy U.S. marshals were ex· peeled to take Gano from Orange County Jail to Los Angeles Coun· ty Jail within a week to await hls Aue. 12 preliminary bearana. Spokesmen !or the FBI . however, said today that Gano can anticipate a nurry of legal paperwork in the next re~ da~s, including federal grand Jury an· dictments charging him. Investigators are still taJly1ng up the estimated $40,000 loss su~ lained by a total or 36 Southland banks allegedly robbed by the brazen. red·haired ban'dit who often wore a baseball cap. "I'm sure the total figure would be right around that. $40 ,000," explained one FBI agent. He said the Baseball Cap Ban- dit generally took between $800 lo $1,700 from one lone teller heap· proached without ever showing a weapon. simply handin1 her a note. He never; displayed a gun. althougt) the note warned he as sertedly had one, FBI aients said. None of the estimated $40,000 m loot has been recovered to date. except for lhe 100 cris p, new $10 bills seized by Newport Beacb1>olice when Gano started to pay off his traffic tickets. 1n vesUgators said. The banks robbed by the Baseball Cap Bandit over has 54-day spree ranged throu1bout Southern California, with several in the Harbor Area. namely in Newport Beach, Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach. Sometimes, he would hit two within one hour A spokesman for the Santa Ana motel where police say Gano lived today said he could find no record of a resident by thal name. Ke couldh't flt the descrlp· Uon to anyone either. 3 Acquitted, I Convicted In Party Fight SERVICES PLANNED Adrien Pelletier Service Slated For Pelletier, Pru-ex Founder Jo'uneral rates for Adrien C Pelletier, rounder, former preSI· dent and chairman of the board of Purex Corporation. a com· munity leader and philanthropist wt•rc scheduled today and Friday an Newport Beach. Visitation until 9 tonight was scheduled al the Paclric View Mortuary Chapel in Newport Beach. · Funeral mass wall be celebrat· cd al 10 a m Friday at Our Lady Queen of Angels Church, 2046 Marva~tn Drive. Newport Beach Graveside service will follow at Pacific View Mr Pelletier died Tuesday 111 has i.leep al his Emerald Bay home where he resided with his wire, Donalda. Mr. Pelletier. 75, was active in many charitable causes and was confirmed by Po~ Paul VI to the ponUflca.I order or St. Gregory the Great an 1967. His humanitarian causes an eluded support for s uch organiza· lions as the Freedoms Founda· lion at Valley Forge, South Coast Community Hospital, Laguna Moulton Playhouse, Children's Hospital of Orange County. and others He was a re~ent of Loyola University in Los Angeles and was acuve watn tne tnaepen<Jenl Colleges of Southern California. Mr. Pelletier served a s Purex's first president from 1927 and was chairman of the board of directors from 1.955 to 1968. He conunued to serve as a director until 1971 when he retired ,.,..,.. Page AJ COMPLEX. • signatures " The Newport Beach attorney points to a "war map" in his liv· Ing room. dividing the city Into voting precincts. "We've got volunteers In 36 precmcl'> right now talklng to about 18,000 voters," he said. But city coucil m embers. spokesmen for the Arne! Development Company. whkh is constructing the S20 to $30 million proje<:l, and city staff members do not know what effect the in· itiaUvc drive wUl have on the project. Newport.Mesa achool olfioiala said today seven people have taken out applleatlons ror the trustee seat beln1 vacated by M arlan Berceson • _. Those with applications are: Ann Beaupre, 2361 Aaure Ave., Santa Ana H~lahta; 8 .J. SkilU01 • 2124 Windward Lane, Newport Beach, Stanley E. Le1um, 335 Relms Lane, Costa Mesa; DennJs Johnson. 2138 Bayfarm Place, Santa Ana Htl1hts; Tlm Salyer. 2043 Weslcliff Drive. NeWJ)Ort Beach; Oliver AsmuodJ. 22S Bowlln1 Green Drive, \;OSta Mesa. and E .S. DeMoc1konyl. 345 Cherry Tree Lane. Newport Beach The seven residents of the third trustee district, which llea on the west side of the Upper Newport Bay, have until 4:30 p .m. Friday to me their applications at dls· trict offices, 1801 Uth St .• Newport Beach. Mrs. Berceson announced her resignaUon July 25. She said she was endln1 her l~ years of service on the school board to pursue the Republican nomina- tion for the 74th Assembly Dis· lncl. In a special meeting two days later, trustees decided to appoint a replacement al their meeting next Tuet1day . Dis trict spokesman Jean Harmon said none of the people who have taken the applications out have nted them, Once filed , the applications will be screened by board mem· bers who will then conduct public 1nlerv1ews or the top five can· dldates at a special meeting Monday nteht. Final selection will follow at the regular meetina on Tuesday Soviets Concede BELGRADE, Yu1oslavia <AP) -Soviet concessions on procedure have apparently cleared the way for this fall's conference reviewing the results of the 1975 Helsinki acc:ords. TONIGtrr "MACK AND MABEL" occ Summer Mualcal. Auditorium, Aua. a.e, 8:30 p.m. $2. "WITNESS FOR THE P ROSEC\1TION" -NtWJ>Qrt· . Mesa Sutnme1' Drama Workshop, Co1t1 Mesa Rl8h Lyceum. Aua. 4·6. 8 p.m. l'RIDAY, A1JGUn 5' MOTORCYCLE SPJ!EDWAY RACING -FldrlJ'O\&ftdl, Ip. m. . P,....P..,e~J PORNO ••• had lurn«I inlonner for pollce after Doullas told ber the models were actu&lly to be dismembered and killed. Julie McGeurlclc, 19, testlfted that abe worked for then·bar owner Doualas tn 1978, as a barmaid. when be asked her to go t.o the desert shack to pose for po~no&raphlc pictures. She said Douglas told her then that be wu compiling the photos for Matfa.distributed bondage books. Miss McGettrlck sald Douglas tried to recrult her to lure victims to the shack. ··He said there were a couple of bodies there already. that he pul them there," she testified. She said she was scared to death and never returned to lhe shack. Orficer Mary Patricia Reynolds. a former Huntington Beach reserve policewoman now with Santa Monica department. and Orange County Sheriff's Deputy Dawn Baucom. testified they were hired by Douclu as models. Miss Reynolds, a small blonde, arrested Douglas at the July 20 photo session in the desert. She said that Douglas had made no threatening motions or statements to either officer before the arrest. Trooper Dies for . IO Cents MIAMI (AP) . A Florida Hl&hway Patrol trooper was shot nd k1Ued early toda)'. when he stopped a motorist for Jumping a tO~tnt toll booth. police sald. "Fw a dime -a l~ay dlme," one Miami police orttcer aaid. Hours later, pollce found the car and followed a trail <>f blood al least three blocks to a Miami apartment complex where an un· tdenUfied man wu taken into cwitody. Police uid the person in euat.ody wae· • watneas, not the 1unman wanted in the slaying or Trooper Bradley Steven Glascock. They would not elaborate. The abooUn1 occurred about 3 am. on Miami's East·West Ex· pressway when Glascock saw a Cadillac Eldorado sideswipe a toll booth and speed through without paytn1 the 10-cent fee. pohcesaid. He stopped the car about 100 yards away rrom the toll plna. "The soi.peel suddenly pulled out a handgun and &hot Glascock at least two times at point·bhank range,'! Mlaml poUce spokesman Angelo Bltsis said. He said Glascock 1ot out of his car and "there was a brief ex· change of words. The suspect pulled out a handgun and shot the troos>er.·· An observer riding in the trooper ·!> car pulled out Glascock's shotgun and rlred three rounds, striking the Cadillac's rear window as the suspect sped away, Bltsis said. The Identify of the observer was not released. Police said they had a descrip· lion of the gunman. Glascock's parents, who live in Maitland, isaid he was to have been married in three months. police said. Some council members say cltlzen action in the rorm of the lnltlative process as not proper for rezone actions Bul McLaughlin disagrees ''There's no politician down ther. today who got eleeted not wonUne to serve the people," he said. 17" diagonal color portable "And now their reaction to lhls Is, '\'ou elected me to rule tor four years and unless you can prove we committed a crime, get offourbac:ka.'" The ~rporate attorney said he thinks the California Constitution provides for the initiative and re- ferendum process. "It says that all power of gov- ernment ultimately resides with the people." He said the right of lhe people to zone or rezone by the initiative process "overrides any le1lslative law, overrides any city ordh)&nc:e wbtcb would frustrate t.lie people'• ri&ht to ex. erclse t.hla Initiative ... Y• let .. eelleat eoler ,...,.,..•Kt aad XL-lot rella•111&1 witlt Qit co•,.et. ....... rae.. ,.nar.a. .... , .... au ..... ftalW"-J IM ,,..Ct•t MIW IW&e ellHlll. Att1allae blaek matrls Jle&•re t11••· A•t•matle f'lH Ttl•l•I· A1Uo•etle Qt.rom• Coottol. Ctl•rc.oal btoatt metallic ucl walall& eallilHt. DeffJnse: DA. 'Out For Cella hTO•BAaLEY -... ..., ......... L.a-fear Or. Louil J. Cella Jr. eccused dlatrlct Attorney Codl J C*art We&.day o1...-. a pWICIM) y~ •• • dM8CCUMdpby chm. Omta .... ataarMJ Geot•• Ctlala teld OrtDI• County Sqperior' Out Judie William C. • that polllJcal moCtv• l•ad to lM pt'OMC'UUoll and IUbM• q u tz:adlctmml ot bi• c Uent. Qui.a told .Jud1• 6petl"'I 4lV'IDC ftnal arpmenLt ln • PN· trial that be1u a year aeo that he has asked the state attomey s-eral's office to take over the cue from Hlckl' ataff bee ... ol. Hlcb' "extreme pr.-J'ldice.•• Olu1a a.aid two Mlssloa Com· m ty lapital. lllulon Viejo, otticlall wen hut.Uy P'anted Im· m uolty from p101ecut1on bee Hieb wu easer to ob- tain \be indictment of Cella. He identified the ofllciala as former hospital controller Robert Zun1cli and his assistant Robert Oullet, both or whom testified belore the er and JW'Y. CdJa, 52, and former Mercy General Holpital Administrator Stephen Robert Evans, 32, race trial on multJple felony counts. The cbar1es contained in a grand jury indictment stem from their alleged roles in the defraud· in& of Mission Community and Mercy General Hospitals. 1t is alleged that Cella, secretary.treasurer at both hospitals, diverted $2 million in hospital fUnds and uaed some of the proceeds to finance the cam· paigns of political favorius. The Santa Ana physician was tried on related charges in Los Angeles Federal Court last year and was sentenced to five years in prison. Evans, also convicted, drew a one year term. Judge Spelts Is being asked by the defense to bar rrom the trial documents that were uaertedly illegally obtained the prosecu· lion from a Costa Mesa printing plant. The prosecution Is expected tcj open It's final argument on the bearin& today. . Badham Sets Talk to Coast Aseociation ;.; Coqrl!Sstnen ~ Badham <ft..N.-..pott BeachJ and Mark Hannaford <D·Lakntood> will speak to members of \he Orange County Coast Alaociatlon Aua. 11. Coast Association President Jack Feehan said the two legislators are expected to pro- vide an update on auch issuet u the B·l bomber, human ri1hts an4ener&Y policy. ReservaUoaa for the luncheon at the Balboa Bay Club at Newport Beub may be sent by 1Dail to l85M Beach Blvd., Suite 224, Huntinaton Beach. Colt of the luncheon that begins at 11:45 a.m. is 118.SO per person. Drought Wonens WASRlNG1'0N <AP) -The droueltt Utht.Dtd it.a lriP on the Sou&bd.lt Jn July with water nows in IOl'll• rivers and streams rH I ~ord low levels in pa of North Carolina and Florida, tbe U.S. Geoloclcal Survey reported W edneeday. SACR.AMENTO (AP) ...! Four Republican contenders fot'. So"'· emor bave raised nearly $1 mlllion for the 19'11 cam~ wttb Allemblyman Ken II~ 0t FresJ10 Jeadlnc. o.lly ,.... ,... ..... Mlecllitll ANYONE AROUND HERE SEEN A TURKEY LIKE THIS ONE? Bird Man Andy Mayo Cfutch .. Hl1 Other Appalachlan Wild Wlw's the Turkey Wlw Took His Bird? By STEVE MITCHELL OI ... o.ii, "llet StMI Some turkey took Andy Mayo's prize.winning Appalachian Wild, and the 76-year-old bird breeder is kicking himself today for not writing down the guy's license number. Andy operates a bird !arm on about an acre of county Jand between Costa Mesa and Newport Beach. Last Friday afternoon a well· dreRscd young couple appeared at his door asking to see him. "They were on their way to a party aboard a yacht, probably in Newport Harbor, and they saJd they wanted to borrow a turkey and a cage as a PJ." the bespec· lacled bird man safcl. "So.I g&v• them my beat breede(, a bl\M ribbon wiMer in last year's tAlr." Andy said, awfplnf It Alonl 4ftoll '1l IJ'll)' hair on bls f6rehe•d' ... He said the big bird comes from Georlla. · As die young c stood bYl Andy Md bli ,.. Ile Ws'estlecf with the 35-pound 1obbler. finally getting lt in an expenalve folding cage the breeder keeps in his backyard. .. .. Richard Ja Cavanaulb tit Huntington Beat as been con· victed of robbing the Rodeway Inn in Costa Mesa of $310. Orange County St1pe.c:lor Court Judce J«To\4 s. ou'11h ordered Cavanaugh returned to his courtroom Aug. 19 for sentencln1' after the Jury found him guilty of armed robbery and assult with a deadly weapon. Costa Mesa police said Cavanauah was one of two men• who held up tbe mot.el at 1400 S. Briatot St., Sept 6 and forced the clerk to )land over $370 at the point of •shotsun. It was testified at the trlal that one of the two men leaned from the car as they fled Crom \he motel and tired a blast from the deadlln:~lllai the Hl;Dl· annual tor all atate of. fiffa. But t ll nortaaJ tor reporta properJ1 po1tmarked to aritve twototbree~)ate. Jhddy, lawye1 .. ""o b~1 raJSed twtce fwada Of allot h1I "We had tq tie the cage to the back oC <Mir car," be said. "And then they were orr. promising to brin& the bird right back." He hasn't seen hide nor feather ol bia bird or the borrowers since. and Andy's beglnn.lnc to worry a bit. "Thal bird's worth $100 and the cage is another $BS," be said an· grUy. ''If they don't treat him right, the turkey could dle. "I figure maybe they all 1ot drunk on the yacht and lost track or the turkey," Andy surmised, rubbinJ a two·day growth or bearer with his roueh fingers. ''Either that or they let him 10 and he knocjced everybody in the water," he lausl)ed. "Tb1t'1 a tough old bird." Andy aaid be bopea a newspaper itory about~ tnls•· illi .,JPbbler )Vlli Joi the bo,.. ..,....,. memade& and-tbey•n re- tum bis bird. He doesn't want to haY. to eall tlle ofO•. . · Wtt!\bllthe)-saidtome wtid ~left waa "what are we tolrll to do wtth a ftant turkey?' •• That's wh~t Andy Mayo would like to know. shotgun at a punuln2 ,\do oc· cupled by a couple wbo witness«! the robbery. ,,. , Ca~ana1ub. 24, ot sos C.JUoril.la :st;: lac• a pcaible ata&a Prilcin term of U1> to 13 yean on the dual conVSction and the added allegation of po11eUi<Ja ot a weapon. POUce have'° far been imable to locata bla companion ln the rO'b1-ry. Policy Condemned LOS ANGELF.S <AP> -The City Council a!ined a motiOd con· demnini the racial aecrecaied pollcy of apartheid In South Africa. LaWJert f « both aides eecept-td a Jury lat. Wednesday tortbe • Oruse County SUpertor Court mUJder trial ot Jtctnrd Cbarlea .W.w~. ~Tbe P*D4l DI m men and 1b: women wu aworn In before ~aq& Robert P. Kneeland after Dtputy Public Def ender Ron Butlll' anc1 Chief Depufe Dtstrtct ~ James Enrl t lireed ontheeompo1ltlooof eJuey. Judp Kneeland ordeted both lawyen to delJver the.lt openlnc statements Monday. Tbe trial of Allaway, 37, of Anaheim, la ex· pected to lut eieht weeks. The former Cal State Fullerton janltor is accused ol klU1111 seven people and woundlnc two others on July 12, 1976, ln a ahc>c>tiq rampage that left bodlea strewn ln and around tbe campus library. . He has pleaded innocent and innocent by reuon of insanity. But Butler bas made it clear that he will not dispute Allaway's responsibility for the ldlllnga. If the Jury finds Allaway guilty of any or all of the multiple court.a, It will be asked to rule on hia sanity at the time of the kill· inp. Both Enright and Butler aaJd they wlll put a number of psychiatrists on tbe witness stand in the expected sanity pbaseofthe trial. Butler wu asked afteT the Jury was seated if he intended to have Allaway testify. The public de· fender saJd be will make that de· clslon durin& the trial. Boat Stolen ·From Yard Oraace County aberitf'a of. !leers are 1DveeU1aUn1 the theft from a Sunset S.acb boat repair yard ol a cabin cruiser valued by the vlctiml atM0,000. Deputies said tbe vea1e1, owned by Jermon Industries ~ Gardena, was taken from a m artoe repair yard at 18722 Pacific Cout HJa,bway. Of.lle«1 ldentiflecl tbe mluiq ubln cruiser a1 the JI.foot "Chlmera." Summer sae sae S·ummer sae -~·-~--~--# ...... ••we're aeI1inl tb1' Bl· Jar l'QI flom Penta.•• •all Sube. ,Svhtl a rw:uWil commentary on every. ~be touched ... ( w goina to ask • couple ~ huncfred for it until an an~ que dealer offered u1 $1,SOO. niere•s a Saroot rus from Persia tbat•s 1oln1, aa well aa Nia from Alghanlstab, Paklstan and India.•• So are a number of oil palntius, mostly f)ower an"aftltmenA and still-lites, done by his wife, Do1ly. She caressed a aet of hand~arved teak screens Inlaid wit.ti bone and braas. "They've sot to 10 ... she said wtt.b reluctance. ,, 4 I "WE'VE BEEN BUYING TIDS stuff for years and decidM we just had to do somethinc witb Lt,., she aaJd. "It takes up GO mucbspace:• ·• "You can't enjoy it because it's lD dead 1tor11e:· Su~ added. , Saxbe. 81, now practicel Jaw in t.bla rural communltyamll west d Columbus. He became attorney 1eneral in tm Qd ln waa named ambassador to India by Presldent Ford. He to the united Stat.es last January with tbe chanae ot admlnlatr • tiona inW aah.lngton. .Teen Injured Body smm.g·. A a.year-old JUvenlde youth suffered severe oeck =urlea Wednelldaywbllebodya m Hunt.inatoa Beach. A 1pokeaper1on at Paclflc Hoapltal said the Yict.im. Btuce Groves. su.Kerecl a cent~ frac· ture but Ii In atable condltlon to- r ! Drexel ' and Heritage Summer daJ. 1 I Lifeguard Capt. Dou D• Arriall said the 70'alh atruck bl.a bead on the ocean noor ln lballow wat«. Tbe boy, Wbo WU lb edniqJt_ »aiQ. •as treated by Ut__. before 1>etn1 taken t.o the bqtpUal. '\ ,_ '" , .. , There's temptation everyWhere you turn • .. • at sale prices ·11 •I . .. •="' " ,, CITIZENS FINALLY 1ot ex- erciaed about all tbe new freeways and lntercban1es mar· , rtne the land.scape and filllna the ait with •JDOC. For a Ume, the hi1hway people tried to counter with a campaip insisting that "Freeway• Are Good For You." But eventually they backed down. They chaneed their name to CalTrans, perhaps to shake the ima1e of the ! buUdozerofyesteryear. . Now, critics of CalTran.s alle1e , ~·the outfit la Just u radical as it : f ever was. Except now. under the : i n.w leaderablp of a lady named • , A~ Glanturco, the alle1•· • ~ :tloua are that CalTrana bu 1one : ' off the other end of thescale. I ~ It used to be Bulldoze and , , :Build, the critics say. Now, it's ~ ; Bulldoze and Quit. ' ,. . ,. t ~· TIDS POINT DRAWS some · ~ ctedeoce from the fact that f CalTrans due a huee ditch 1n the 1 middle of Costa Mesa, rlvaJin& , the Panama Canal, and since baa just let it sit there. : CalTrans ls also bulldln& the · Corona del Mar Freeway, .. maybe, if they ever aet it done. • ~ But nobody can tell where lt's 10- : : ing. Surely not to Corona del '• Mar. : ~ But I'm here to defend , CalTrans a1alnst charaes of ~ radlcallsm. CalTrans Ila& not · gone to the Radical Right or -: Radical Left. • : CalTrans is rilht JJi the middle • • of the road. : • As a matter of fut, the1 were : right in the middle of the road to-! day. They've been there for several days. Smack 1n the mid· die or Pacific Coalt Highway. Lbatis. · The CalTrans crews have • selected the good old sum· mertime to do a few repair jobs on our coastal artery. 1'hey ap. • pear to be doln1 tb1J du.rlnl com· • • muter rush houra and, u repott- l} ed, rl&bt outin the middle. ! i This mornlna they were ln the : : middle or the Newport Bay Bridge. Earlier, they wer. lti \be l' ;: mlddleofCoronadel ¥ar ... IT'S FUN WHEN the worlC~ f :: crews are out tbere. SuCldei41. J you l'1IOU' up OQ a Ht Of eont\lllDI f • orange coaes, planted ou\ ln ~ 1 •• ravorite tratflc pattern. ·Ana i then, auprlqt ¥ou've pt a'llo I ' UD ahead. '•wn. CklMd A.bead~· • it warns. Abrup\ly, U'a Sr everybody 14l\Mae toaetber. We all &et toplay,J>eltructlon DerbJ. ~ I' So don't wony about carrra.m· I 1oioe radical' on you. Tbey'M rt1ht ~ taaen ln tb' middle. I Ju.at bOpe they don't atart • paintln1 diamonds In your I, favoritetr&fflc1an•. t' J I '. n 't ' t ' . '. I ., H· ( .. ! ,. l ' I ASHJ'NOTON "(A.Pl -Pnll· dnt CaaUr With ftoUrlihlrit pen and ab1.1adaaL pralae, today 1t1aod tnto baUil a Dtpartlntn.t of Enerp. the fl11t JllW C&b Qet •I ncy ln 11 yeart. Id~ Cart.ernomlnai.ct Jam• B. &clai lJll r, hla top eqetU ldvller. to be tbt naUon'• nrat HCtetarr ot ea.ray. IN AHl'IQPATION of that. tbt nate enero eommtttet had alr•adl held coallrm1Uail .,.. tnp "° 8cbl•l"N:. U4 It .. proved bhn by a vote .St.bcAA debate, 1 .. than an bow' after Cart•"• formal nomlnaUOn. Tbl DOID1oattoo COii to tbe Staat. floor. l• a cere:mcmy in brllbt IUD· 1b1M ID the Wbit. llou.a• Garden. Carter al1neci le1hl1Uon 11tabll1hln• the departmtnt, whlch ablofba M&rl,y aU of the federal •ovem,IDtD\'I enoray prosrams. 'nley number about ao. Ho called It "extremely com· pllcated" lealllatloo. Carter tafd It will btlp hlm to cuthlon ''the tmpendlnt critia of cnercy abortaaes. •• Born ln ooe of the blaeat 1ov· ernmeot ahuf11es ever. the new enefn qenoy raise• tbe number of CAblDet department. to an •ven dolic:n. TUE NEW DEPAaTllENT wUl have 30,000 employes and a bud1et of $10.8 bUUoo. "The hnpendln1 crl1ls or ener1y 1borta1es 6a& brou&ht abOul UflPl"t!Cldented ~ ac· tloa br· "Colar .... ., uld Lb• P...S~ He no&M tbat"lit._ 1urmabrs Only five montba to approve tbe departmenC Carter aald Jt wW ti.Ip him al- leviate the Impact "of inevitable short.a•• ol oil aJid au Ucl otbv eaerl)' auppUea... He ptalsed memben ot Canares1 for .. ex. traordlnary Cood woru In Mzlf· Ina tb1.I lellllatJon to ~AIPI• tion." TBE PRESIDENT Hid hJ1 new department will h lp la· crt81e ener&}' producUon and make IUN eneru pricet an falr toc~e:n. "I'm very proud of th1t ac. Johnson DenWd .Fraud IBJ Library Search Yields Unsigned Note AUSTIN. Tex. <AP> -A mimeocrapbed statement found amon~ the papers of rormer President Johnson quotes him u denytna any knowledge of an al· letedlY stuffed ballot box In south Texas that a save him the victory ln a UM8 Senate primary runoft "I am without knowled&e con- cerning the ballots ln either Duval, Jim Weill or Zapata COUD· Uet or any of the other counties in Texas, except what I have 1een In the press," said al "'·pqe, typed document found among papers released by the LBJ Ubrary. THE UNDATED, uosl1ned document added: "I have not been to any of those counties and have not conferred with the of· ficlala in the count1es." More than a dozen news re- porters pored over tbe voluminous papers in eight bright red manuscript boxes Wed.neaday at Ole invitation of the LBJ Library. The inspection was prompted by alle1ationa earlier thls week by a former Jlm Wells County elections official, Lula Salas, that "Johnson did not win the elec- tion, it was stolen for him." BAI.AS, IN AN lntfl!'view with The Associated Pren, said be lnfluenre Prohe House Will Get. Korean Pay List certlfted 200 fraudulent ballots in the Aue. 28, lNI, runoff that Johnaoa won by 81 votea. Johnson won the Senate aeat ln the Nov· ember ceneral election. Salas sald the deal for the 200 extra votes was made at a late night meet.ins in San Diego, Tex., attended by Jobuoa, south Tex- as political bou Geors• Parr, Salas and other Jim Wells Coun· ty Democratic officials. IOllNSON, IN THE text of a victory 1peech made Sept. 6, 1948, said: "There were substantial re- visions and correctiona -100 away from Jobn1on ln a northeast county; 22S more for my oppooenta in a west central county; 113added1n a Gulf Coast county and 100 1n anothw Gulf Coast county; 400 tranafernd to his column 1n a deep eut Texas county and 23 ln a nellhbortne county; 30 ln a West Texu coun- ty. 1be Dallas County retums were corrected after their certlllcation to take 2,000 votes from my total." compHllUbilat by tbe CoQa'rw," can. Wlared. ' He Wuaed the enerty DOllcy bl• n ... :raepartment wlll,"ad· mlnllW. ••we•ve cot a lons way to CQ. .. hO u.ldt In 1h p t.rdhl1 tbe DOl.lc1 ~ Ccmareu. He thwtd membert for tbe1r ef. fortaaofv. WllEN THE DBPA&111SNT of Enso beClns operatlq tbls tall, Carter said. "'" Will bave a.n -.a f.OUc:r to make our na· Uon Jll"C)Ud. • • He ribbed Schteslftler before flbally PQtt1na his name to the advtMr'•nomlnauon. Tbe Prell· den~ Who bu aaJd all al~ that be Would apPotnt Schleslnaer. Joked that be bad decided to eetabllm a committee to and a noDll.Dee. .. At b1IJ requ .. t:• CVt 1alct. Mddtn1 toward Scblealn1er, ·'the membenblp of tbe commJt· tee wlll be Umlttd to one person... Then the Prealdent prataed Scblealnaer H ••a J\atural leader .. and declared: ••WITllOtJT WAmNG for his recommendatloa, 1 would Ukt to ut him 1f he would serve 11 the secretary ot the Department ol Enera and alp h1s nom•aa· tion." Schlealnter 1aid he bopea tdl put the department lato apera. lion by Oct. 1. the atart of the new fiscal year. Daughter Buried Friends help Jerome Moskowitz, right. and his wite. Neysa, from a New Jersey cemetery after the burial of their daughter Stacy. the sixth victim of New York City killer "Son of Sam." Police meanwhile released a new description of the suspect and announced that 300 policemen had volunteered to work without pay to track him down. WASHINGTON <AP> -House lnvat111tors will 1oon know what the Justice Department knows about conaresamen and other officials who m!l_~ implicated tn the South Korean lnfluence·buylng scandal. The n.uuae ethics coznmtttee announced late Wednesday that lt soon wW get access to the Jultice Department'• lilt of JO penom wbo were to receive cub payments from theSouthKoreans. and the Ju1tice Department South Coast Plaza Boat Show Spokesmen for House In-reacbedarreement "with respect vMti«Mora .. id the committee to a number of pertinent mal- ters.' • Theydld not elaborate. Fihd Femini.ata ~?Take That, You ,ig_ NEW YORK (AP) -A helpful male who coueated to belna · burled to the O'OWld ud kicked in the eroln aa part of a femln11t demODltratfon on aell·defenae fou'nd·blmselttn trouble when he said femlnlst.J should en11ge In "leas boring talk" and more ac· tlon. The man, Robert Sarra, had taken J>art ln the self-defense show before a Women's Walle Asatmt Rape throu1h Central Part 1n Manhattan Wedn~ nl&bt. · After the workout. Sarra men· tloned that women lbOWd learn to protecttbemMl..a and enaa1• 14 ..... bortDI talk ... That re. mart toucbed off e arrument Jritb aome of the women. WhO -~Sarr~ A8 tbi Y.nel blows new. some Of the women chall•ted him to a fta!fl# Police came to Sarra 's reacueUd~blmaway. Btfl' CAPITOL BILL sources said that meant the Justice Department bad aareed to tum over the ll.st, which the commit· tee had been aeekinc ror more than a month. The list reportedly was pro- vided to the Justice Department · by a former business associate of Korean rice dealer and WHblncton 1oclety fleure Ton,aun Park. Park, the central fisuro ln tbe lntluence-buyine probe, left the country betore the inveat11ation' 1ot under way and ls reported to be in London. ,..: The ll.st reportedly names 2(.1 • consresamen and other federal omctala who were to receive campalan contributions and other money. NONE OF THE names baa been dlscloaed and the lilt is said to prove only that Park wanted to mate tbe contrtbuUona, not that the oftldal.I actually accepted them. A number of congressmen, however. have aclmowledied ac· ceptiiia cootiibuUons from Park. They aay they knew him only u a forel1n bualneuman and WNblDitcil party·siver and that they ll'W no le1at l>arrler to ac· ceptin& hi.a contributions. ' res• and Strain Tony Orlando In Hospital LOS ANO.tLES IAPl T°"1 Orlando. eonhlled and emotional l1 1ballcred, '' beln1 treated at 1 pr1vat.c laoapltal for alru1 'TOQOt on by tb• deal.ha ot alatet and hla pail rr.ddte ~. aa1• a frieodotOrludo. "I was fortunate ~ to &et. h!m where ~ la DOW wit.bout uyone knowin1," aaid Orlan· do's pr_, aaent, Frank Llebermc, oo Wedne&· day. "He lS ph)'sically and emotionally e.x · llau:sted. He'a under a doctor'• care an aa boapltal outside Los ADcdf:s. His wlle 1s with bJtn." Orlando surpnsed the entertainment world last mooth by announcine he was quitUnc. Lieberman said many pressures led to the decisioo. "It'• like a balloon." he said. "You can fill 1t up and fUl it up and rtnal· ly ltpop.." Union Probed In Fund Loss LOS ANGELES CAP> The alleaed embeule- ment d $200,000 In federal job-training funds by a Long Beach·bused local of the Teamsters Union is being lnvesllgated by a federal &rand JUry here Asst. U.S. Atty. Douglas W. Lofgren would only confirm Wednesday that records of the union's Local 911 had been subpoenaed. But sources said the invest1gation centers on possible fraud in operating a union-sponsored program funded by the Department of Labor's Comprehensive Employ· ment and Training Administration. LocluloU'n Lifted SAN QUENTIN (AP) -San Quentin Prison has eased a mass lockup of prisoners which had been in effect since three convicts died m racial fighting three weeks ago. Warden George Sumner ordered about two·· tblr~ the prison's 2,200 l.llmates released from their cella Wednesday after he took a tour of the priaon. Sumner said most in- mates would be allowed ( J to resume normal prison ST ATE life while 600 others re-_______ mained locked up in the racially troubled eas\ block of cells. SU-ht PlaRRed LOS ANGELES CAP> -Two attorneys have claimed a cost-conscious proposal by sut.e Superln· tendent of Public Instrucllon Wilson Riles will keep some 4,000 handicapped children out of school for another year. Representing Rally for Education Assistance to California Handicapped <REACH), the attorneys said Wednesday they would launch a sit-in de· monstratlon Monday in Sacramento at the offices of Riles and Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. Ball 8't-jected SAN DIEGO <AP> -Former congressional candidate Walter..,encke has been Jailed for con· tempt of court for refusing to answer questions ln a Securities & Exchanae Commission probe of an al· leged $10 mlUlon investor fraud 3 Mera Arralfpted SAN PEDRO CAP)._ Three Lona Beach men were arraigned In San Pedro on federal weapons chareea foJlowina a 21.-'t·month investlaatlon of a Lons Beach second-hand store. Arraianed Wednesday were Rodney Souther, 53, owner of Tbe Tbirft Shop, who was char&ed wlth deallfll Jn unlicensed bandguna. ahotewis and rtnes; aod Rob«?rt Charlea Wall, sa, and an uniden· •lflNf 4.'>-vear-old man. both of whom were cbaraed wllb dealin1 in unlicensed auns and being felons. in possesston of firearms. Arson /tlurders? Housewife Held In Four· Deaths , r Clwmical Workers 'Sterfle' they started to work at the plant, be said. Accordina to William Steffan, bead of the OccupaUonal Health Branch ot the California Department ot Health, the prime au.sped In the balfllnc sterility la a aoll fumlaant called DBCP (dlbromo and chloro-propane>. STEFFAN DECLINED to pin definite blame on the chemical but said that cur· rent medical evidence "focuses strong ausptclon that ... DBCP ls implicated ln the induced sterility.•' He said there ia no federal or state standard which set.a safe amount.a for DBCP bandlina ... It was never thouahL to be particularly toxic,'' steffan sald. • A UNION STEWARD at the plant. Jack Hod1es, said he first suspected the malacly durinR "lunchroom talk.'· "I started looking around and Lhere weren' eny children being born." he said. The union. the Oil Cheotical and Atomic Workers International, began ef. forts to persuade the men to 1et tested for sperm counts about a year aao. but Hodges said it was a "delicate matter." nNAU.Y, LAST MONTH, the lptn submitted to the lestl. Results ~ ed last week conftrmed the lterill\1. chemical produc:Uon at the plalit halted lut Thunct.y. On TU..ct.y ed product.loo n1umed tM St9 ahort Um• later at the request Ot aute. Steff an aald the farm chemical n will remain c:loeed unW the atat. in· veaUaates turt.ber. Watcblna for results with speelal interest, of course, wlU be the wortens. "Tbe atertllf.>.' 11 a pntty well-known fact," said woriter Ted Bricker, 31. ••1t w aa a theory among the IU)'S for at leut three or four years." Added fellow employe aod father of one, Mike Trout, JC: "My wife and I bave- been trylnl to bave another child. It lot me a UWe aepresaed." ( M~ILBOX ) STIMULATES In the "Have a very Brown Day" Famous Amos the cookie jar star, comes to Robinson's Newport Saturday, August 6from11-4 p.m. Meet Woltv Ar9os. the soul baker, who gave up show biz to bake and bog the wor1d's #1, crunch- iest, most chock·futl-of·melt·ln- your-mouth-chocolate-chlp cookies vou ever hod the pleasure of munching lntot And now, not ontv do we have his cookies, but we've goto whole boutique devoted to Famous Amos goodies! Blue Famous Amos tee shirt. s.M-L $6.50. And, of course ..• Fomoua Anp Chocolate Chip Cookies 1 lb. bog. $3.50. 1~1b. tin. $7.60. Famous Amos plastic kev ring. $4. Also available: Famous Amos bosebal shirts. S-M-L-XL $7.95. Famous Amo& cookie )Or. $23.60. Candy/Gourmet, 66. ROT EDITORIAL PA.GE Dollars Still Jingle Soper Schoolhouse? Orange County's m06t visible example of things gone wrong is the rponumental Laeuna Niguel struc- ture known as the Ziggurat, a seven·story. million- square-foot building originally designed to house Rockwell lnternational's aerospace program: When the program was cancelled, Rockwell traded the Ziggurat to the federal government. But the government has been hard put to find tenants and the building remains 80 percent unoccupied. Meanwhile southern Orange County's Capistrano Unified School District, already seriously over- crowded and facing double sessions. must provide for e.ooomore student.I by 1982. • And voters just rejected a $39 million school con• atructloo bond laaue. · $o 1cbool board members are mulling the posslblllty of leasing space in the Ziggurat. which they figure could house one h18h school. two Junk>r hllh 1ell0ol1 and nve elementary schools, all Under 9neroof. lt"a ju.st lD the talking stage. and the cost of ln· terfor modtficaUons. plus rent, might be prohibitive. But the idea 11 worth exP1orins. The thought or all that 1p cc aolng to waste while the school district auff era is down.rtaht palntul. Wrong Combination Government apparently hasn't Jost Its talent tor adding two and two and coming up with fl ve. The lat.eat brainstorm addresses itself to two cur- rent probJema: -First, the complaints from senior citizens who object to the practice of making 65 the mandatory age for retirement. --&:cond. the fact that the Social Security pro- gram will be out of money by 1983 if something isn't done to replenish the funds. So Commerce Secretary Juanita Kreps suggests that workers should reach the age of 68 before facing mandatory retirement--and before receiving full Social Security benefits. The first half is not bad. It would glve more active oldsters a chance to continue working if they wished and of co~rse that would intlude continuing to pay in· to the Social Security program. J:lut upping the age for receiving $9cial Security pension could be a grievous hardship for those who do not want. or need, to hang onto their jobs-and who have been paying into the !und for decades. There has to be a better way . 'Don't worry, Mr. President. We're just doing a little repackaging of your energy programf' • .~ . ... 'I' • More Adults Find · Dear Gloomy Gus Begin'• Surprise-Widens B~eacla . Solitude Appealing The Bureau of Cen.ua people told ua several mootba aio that the number of adult. U~ alone had more than doubled 11nce 1970, despite an uncertain economy. Thia la an extraordinary fact. It ia bound to affect the llvea of all I of ua in all kinds ot ways. One tb!na ta for aure. public enter· talnment la eertaln to be a • •oocl lnveat• l ment. Wblle f these youna • people like trvlnc alone, they alao get lonely, and 10 out· aide to patronite reatauranw. coffee bouael. bara and theatsl. . In interviews with 50 ot Ume loners all over the country the New York Timn found the doml· nant reason for llYlnl alone to be freedom and independence. "There wu an almOllt Mii· indulgent snoccupatloa amoni them with wanUn1 the luxury ot comlnl home. turnln1 up the stereo, dropllinl thelr el~ on the floor and lli.htln• &.JP..~ Joint. Or to 10 campina « •kllnl wtth whomever the)' wanted • wbenevertheywanted. I All ALL for W. trend. I"'ve. alw~ found llvtna With Cldier' people uphill wwt. It someone Lt under the aune roof witb me lcq enougb I ceue to retard blm/twr u a companion and bec1D to think oltbem u a suspect. A aimpectt I bardJy bow what th• IUlplcioo II about. It Lt • klDd of 1enerallled lhlDI• like frM. floatina amilt1. J really luspect the other people are up to sometb.lnl rUll1 monatroua. lite kidJl~ my aoul. An,VboW. COD• tlnued 1.Dtercoun• wltb otbw bamam, no matter how atne•· ble, becoma lD the end lntolera· bletome. The queaUoo of wtay I llk• CHARLES MeCABE to live alone la intereatlnl, I am sure. More interesttn1 to me la the questlon: Have I ever llvM otherwtse? I.a Ima u I ca.a re .. ember J have lived ln a private werld. A.I a >'OUDI child I waa estra.Dl"ed· from 1117 parents. an4 fl'OID mJ brotben. When I •aa iD aram· mar aebool ~ clONlt ecmtact with 1n1 peen was flahtlnc with tbem, wtllcb I dJd often· a,sd badly. Tbe fllbts 't'ere caused lar1ely by tbe fact that I wore apeca, and wu called "Fov E.yea!' Lada with thls bandlcap found no trou· bleat all aettiD.I into ftOlta. Teacher• were conatantly reproacbin1 me for a lack cl either "school ap&rtt" or •-team spirit." They could bot baT°t been more ~t. I thou,irt both ideaa were non1en1e. and pur1ued my prtvate dre1m11. Tbll l(lt me into ti'OUble with teachers but did nqt harm me or &D)'GDH)M v. much. d.r: :r,n:. = TbSI •• Wlel7 becauae cl an ~called marriaae. in wblch I bave dabbled. Bein8 Jone!)' while 1D tile mam.d mi. When Is a law not a l•w? When lt'a a leash law. Dots roam at will through my neiibborbood and calls to animal control are useless. • P'.H.M. can tJe tninf cm the pertca you aremai'ried to · • ' t ·aoa•t lino• what ttii cbJet' eauae ot marital breakdowa II. but the determblatlon to be your own man or your own woman muat rmk bith. To be married to a llO' who 11mpl1 I.an 't there most ot the time Aquires a kind of emotional beroiam that not many of us poeaeu. Wb.Y do aucb people set mar· · ried? '!be anawe.r la, happily. that not too many of them do nowadays. TIM 1-dency la to cra1b to1etber· watil the old boredom~-.... end. IN llY younaer ,,c1,ay1 the preuures to get mettled were both \rlltble and In viii bl• and ter• tlbb' 1troni. You W.re ,.mel)ow leN that the rounded mu lf you dld not have• \rife and tldl. The hardened bachelor we• a new-eo 1U1htly, of fun. . Now tbe:re 11 a new wariMll •bout marrlal• amon1 tbe YOUDft and tllll contribUtea to tbe llvtq alone thlDI• The ceMUI p.ople allo tell UI that di'fWCe amoai tbe )'OUDf bu doubled in recent yean,_. Too many kids have seen ouien broken into shards becaute their marrtaies went butt. 1'1le1 want to wait, oo tbe chance that It mt1bt be permanent. Yet I bave never nareued be- inl a i.er. I abould Just bue left the lnltltutke cl matrtmoQY to tboeo who were able to fumdle lt. Since l know no other Wa.J to li'fe than b)' m.ysett. I Just JQU)-well arln ad bear lt. Mitleast POiicy Shaken •·! 'I' WASHINGTON -Prtme Mlnlster Menahem Begin'• brazen decision to "lecallze" three Ulegal Jewtab setUement. on the Arab West Bank, at poten- tially exorbllant polttlcal cost to President Carter's Mideast peace hopes, hJI widened a crack in tbe admtniltraUon'a once-solid Mideast front. That crack, atlll concealed un· der a blanket of unlformtty lm· ~ed by the ~lte House, opetted aa a .re1ult of Kr. Carter's de- ference dur• lna Begln'a state visit. What.ever the President' 1 lonf·range dip omatlc objective in lettlnl Bealn aelze and hold a remarkable fnttlaUve over him durln1 tbe laraell leader'• YlaJt here It trtaered a backfire thtouabout th• ad· mlnlltratlon -ev91'1Wbere ex· cept the President•• own OY-1 Of• flee. Beidn'• rapid decllloa to ex-ploit Mr. Carter'• lodl ~ wtll by "Ie1allllna,. tbOH tbtM MW• menta ("an ablolutely an~ table move." one top•lev•l Cuter advt.w told a> led to ID olftm!State~e=t -b'4 cntY a mlld delll'WT«' 1D wb.lcb r. CvtAr \Ulacc:ountab&J blamed blmMll. . nanD at b1a .,..... fJOll• f ereoce to explal.Q why Beitn bid IO GUicklY Men flt to aet back lM Pr~·• peace elf~ Mr. Carter threw' a proteetln ann around s.,lD and 1ald, ••t did not thl8 about talklnf to blm•' OD the apedftc queattoa of ... .,~ me• the tbrM lettlementl. Y•=· bi b oftlclata who part1d in the talkl betWeen the resident and P.rlme Mtmater told ua Jlr. Cll'W and Seeretary of ~ Cji'ul Vence [ ] Geneva peace conference have 1 • EVANS-NOVAK beenfullyexplored. 1 •• _ _ BVT OTHER diplomats argue l that Beain'• personal political :: "absolutely" covered all con- tingeueles involving the incen- diary Nltlementa qtte1Uon even it the word •.'legalization" had. not beeo Uled. "There was no chance cl mtaundentandlng on Mr. Bealo•a part," one official told ua. 'nle U.S. wanted no .. ,.,al.b1nl .. of extaUna aett1e- ment1. Tbe ~of the ~t, so much aoffet' than the cold anrer privately ezpre11ed elsewhere In bla aovernment. m~now lead to the establlsh-m t <I new sett.lementa <not Just leg atioo of old ooea) in a con· Unuationofwhat may becalled a "policy of pre-emption" by the ·new Jaraell aovemment. ADO,NG WEIGHT to this wamtni ta the fact that Begin lon1 JIO placed G~n. 1$rUt Sbaroo. hero of the Yom Klpput war but a political prtmtuve re- 1arded by aome llraell leaders u unstable, tn overall ehar1e of the 1overnment'a aetUemtnta policy. Tbe r.cllcal relllioua parties (on Which Beatn•a llim in-.Jorib In tbe Kneuet rest.) are deo- man4tai new aettlementa. Sbarco caa point to Mr. cuter•• ttDtJe wr.IA-llap ot Jut week to ar1caelds use that Iaratl wW not be taldnc much risk .Stb Mr. Carter IA aetUnJ up new aeul• mema <a leut 12 are bluefriat.- ed tot JDIUiatoccupadon). It ~~ instead, tbi\ IOUle llideaa omata here.,.~- rectlD ~that Belhlbeeded a '°P.~:the relllfOUI tadlWS. ~ hla camplflit pro- mlH to iel'elte aet.tlementl all over tM flraell-occupled Weat Bank d tM lord.an. Now that tho IOP bM been offered, that abOW4 put a.a ;'e"nd to it until the po11lbllitle1 of a reauJDed history point.a the other way. N Althoulb not a polltlcal 1ambler, Begin is a shrew oddsmaker of unusual courage and conviction. He knows, •• one of his statmcbelt supporters bere told .us, '"lbere's nothlnc mudl left in Washington ot tbe original Carter Middle East pollcy, bard· ~.::;: ~::J. ~ ~ . ·~ 1i67 borders. or &be Palestinian homeland." Begin, the wartime terrorlst shrewd and brave enou&h to calculate correct odd• on blow--, '" ing up Jeruaalem•a Kini David ~ Hotel, may now calculate that ?. Mr. Carter can be pushed a 1ooc1 deal further on the settlements question. As the PrnJdent said ·' last week. new aettlemeqts "pro-1 vlde obltacles for peace." but thoy are "qbltacJes wblcb I tb1nk ;;; we can overcome"' -scarcely a warnfnJ of retrJbutloo for •'1 eatablltbment of new aettle- menta. · Other upeeta of Mr. Carter's 111 evolvinl Middle East policies have caused conlualon here. For example, be cootlded to Italian •rt Prime Minlster Giulio Andteottl '" Jut week that he fully acreed w1th the June 29 Common Market I atatement ~ for a Palest!· nlan boirieland. · - THAT ~·•18£0 elf)>eru , 'Wboknew Mi. Cuter bid wcrked overtim to bead ott that Com· moo Market resolution aqd. fall· Ing that, to tone ttf ar dori 3 Tho 1pUt msJde the atdminlltra· d tlon over proper bandliot of · • llrael'afloutinJoftbe U.S.ootbe 11 aetUeliHiQtl question may onl)' be be11Dnln£ Indeed~ as Vance fUea to the Middle Eut. tome pollti· clana tMii• woadir wbetha' be can eourtt any Jonger OQ the White Rouie aa a home base to j.") Q ' back hllll up. .1 Air Farce lltid Its ·Own James BOn~. .Q.uotes, (JACK ANDERSON] , 0 1'v:J: an awtul lot to Jeam, and 1 that 10U can help me ,., With ft; Md =-c:. 'f9 can Learn ° to1ether.0 t caner, ad· -l! dre11lna the Natioftal GO?emora -? Conf erenff. • GoOd Harvest Fo ... IL\.&UUANA·GaOWJNG P&OPITS are tretneQdol.ia, be nid. "In the Greenup County pateb there,.... a plant.. They were Vf!rY luab, eiabt to 12 feet i.n. and we tblnk t.bla would bave srown In excea ol $100,00 worth of marijuana. "It'• more lucrative erowinl marijuana than lrowinl tobacco (Kentucky's m~or cub crop), .. Bivemu.id.. · · Last year the state earned about SS88 million on its burley tobacco crop, about $1.09 a pound. BIVENS ALSO SAID THAT WREN pot la dls-eov~ police usually can't find out wbo planted it. "Cbances of catchin1 them are very poor. There aN IO many farms in rural areu we can't check them all," he said. ~ Wben a patch la found, he said, "Many Ume• you have nobody who knows bow It eot there. It's ·amazing the deeree of ignorance that evolves amonc farm owners or renters and neighbors. "THEY Allt; SUDDENLY S'l'BJCKEN with an inability to remember, and an ability to say "I don't know bow that coold have eotten there,"' Bivens said. In addition to cultivated patches, be said, ''there are !temp <marijuana> plants erowtn1 wild all oV'er the state of Kentucky, on every river bot- tom ,nd every river bank. It grows wild, especially around the Frankfort and Sbelbyvllle areas, because there was so much grown here during World War 1. They used the hemp for making rope." Uranns Target Of Space Probe WASHINGTON <AP> -Two Voyaeer are about to be launched on deead..tODI, at could take them to u many u 1$ , lncludlna fl ant Jupiter, rinaed lfll~lllWl•uut.l Uranus. TIR~tbiU project betlns Au1. 20 when the r kets away from Cape Canaveral, ' Fla. The 11e1::um1'W1ll follow Sept. 1. .- The Natl al AeronauUcs and Space Ad·· mlnistration s d Wednesday lnfonnaUon and pie· .tures returned 1 the two 1$)lCecrat't could abed light on the o m and eartY hlator')' of the solar system and the history of the earth. They also could provide the first closeup look at Uranus, a giant frozen planet that lies more than 1. 7 billion miles from the aun. It there are no problems, Voyager 1 will fly near Jupiter in March 1979, then soar to an en· counter with Saturn ln late summer 1980. Berkeley Schools Reduce Tax Rate BERKELEY (AP> -The Berkeley Board o( Education has approved a tte mllllon achoo) dlstrtct bucfaet that reduca the tax rate by ll.52 for ea~h $100 aaesaed •alu11tlon -11vtn1 the averaie Berkeley honteownel' as much u $100 a year an pro- perty taxes. The 19'1'1-78 rate will be SUS per $100 ua-.ed valuation, compared to the previous year'• $8.4l. · IN OONTltAST, A TAX llATE cut approvld' earlier by the Clty Council WOUld aimply lOw• the rate of tax lncreue. Under the bud1et, teaebera will be abuffled to avoid layoffs, and clu1room1 wUl be larav by an averqe of two student. per clus. TBE BUDG£T ALSO P&OVID18 for a 2 per· cent increase in teacbett• aaJary, the flnt P1J booet ln three years. ·Th pay· hike. wblcb 'Bwbley Sdiooll Sopt. i.;avai WUaoo •aid Tflll co.t tit cllatrict •.ooo A,1'tat, ii well below the 11.8 ~t hike the~ ii'tMMlti •. Wlaatlslt? An oil field wo~et ln a drill rig? A child in a piece of plaYJround equipment? No, it's a carnival wor~er installin~ lights on an ~usement ride ln Beloit, Was. .. ...., _____ _ ---· -- ---- WASHINGTON (AP>-SllDlllcant level.I of the chemical PBB which bu been 1bown to be baW'dous to bwnan bealU. have been found in cat· flab taken from the Ohlo Ri•er in West Vlr'1nia and other areaa lMludina one in 'CalllOl'Dla are beina cbecked for the aubltance, a federal official re-porta. I. Euaene Wallen, deputy director ot the En· Bowd and g~ bY apciglntment PhoM fof' appolnt.rnent Of .,,.gency -.Meet (714) 87~10!0 . . 3838 E; .. t C099t H ._, ~on• del Mw, c.llforJle 9alS25 1 vtr~mental ProtecUon Atency'1 Office ot Toxic Substtilces, said IJt.bouah the lnlUaJ teats on three troaen eattllb are not absolutely conclusive for the levels of PBB, there 11 an indicauoo the "nu.mbera. ~===~=~===~=;:~:=;:~~r will probably be aJarmlnety." I .. W~N TOLD A HOUSE subcommittee on ovenllbt aiJd inveaU1aUona Wednesday that the Parkonburt, W. Va. 11mpllna site la one of etaht loeaticnt teated beeause of nearby indul1tiaJ plants that had once used PBB or polybromlna1ed ( biphenyl. PBB nad been used ln plastics and texUles u a name retardant. ECOLOCY J rr WAS ALSO INOOaPOBATED into auto up- holstery, polyurethane foam, wire coat1nts and paint. Other altea beinl tested for PBB lo the soil or water are: Bor1-Warner in Ottawa, IU., anti Ox- nard, Calif.; Corry Foam Product Company in Milan, Tenn., and Corry, Pa.; E . A. Burkart Mf1, Company, Cairo, Ill.; ClnclnnaU Chemical Process- ine in Ohlo; and General Tire and Rubber Com- pany, Iona, Mich. · .-..... .,..:....-~-... ··------_-_:.._:·1 ·- THE ICE ·CREA'9' MAN We Meb 011r. owa 1 .. ,c,... Fr0Mft y OCJll" I ht n. Trodltto. of IUD~of S."-dtce °" .... , .... 2609 ... .,,... •"4. MeW\*'flMdt ,,...,70 ..... .,.,..... ........... .... ..... ........._ , '~d b!OT '.,.;t(. IUO J I •1 • . -•• !1~ n.J;; ~' :,;} 11r&' l ,#, J HHJ • . "'• ''lt{J "' • lfl:J ' 0(11 tur, : "' I /LI ''" . .. ~ 2 I . ' I I I • I I I I r YP4LOT • T~ Aul!!!:!. 1f77 £U W@ll11rr ®@lPwn@@ 0 .11., Colt.a .... A 1JJI. T.......,., 11 & I HI Uta& HCb .,1&11' .._ .. an ••· ....._ lcpl ............ ._,. I& a. a replac .. eat !I•· ()e. eu,.1111 • .._a 4 ar Mil ,.,...... t& ti no&,,..,...., 4lita.U.td er ..,. • ..._ 6d eecan. w .... ..i. ha...,, a .w-. It .... &e replM:ie IL,... 1•& Hid ta..._..,.,. ao mare vataable U.u ...-4WW ...... Celfee ,.,_.,. &-e I• P.C D&All PAT: I'd lite to know bow JOU remove coffM 1\alna from adar~ .. ,_wttbout ~abl'aalveclelHl'I? • L.M., Huntlncton Beach .......... ,_ •• , •orL ODe t.volv" mr..1. u.. """mater wtUIM&...-_. .... ,._. ... ..,...o1 w..-c1eter1eat a. ''floet off Ute l&alll. .. WW II to ld4 t,11 cup fll vtae1u &ea half· row ,_ fll ~d wllleT. An... WI lolallea to ltoU few three or four •1811&.a &DdtballettlltudanW cool lfldbcftl N .. ter Tl"• DEAR PAT· I understand that even thouab a person pays extra for an unlisted phone number, It can be given out to certain 1ovem- meot qenClel. Exactly what aaenc1es hue accesa to an unlisted number! J.J .. Lquoa Beach PllCUlc Telepbone nya citJ poUee ud fire departmeata qaallly. as do die e..ty dlatrlet att.oraey,.ftn department, nareoUes •ten· clea ud 11Mrift. State offices able te pt you aamber Include the hl1bway patnl, 1tate poll~ and J..Uee departmeo& <w&aabed crime and criminal lntelU1eace br•cll ud enforcement and In· vest.tcaU-....._II). Tbe federal dnl etlforeemeat admlniltratJon, FBI, U.S. attorney, V.S. manbal and secret service alao have ac· cess &o ua.Usted numbers. Ader eePentini-G.-1._ DEAR PAT: Since I've been divorced and Uld a full·tlm• Job aw111 from bome, one tblnl bu bothered me. What bappena if my child sutr .. a Hrious ~ury at or after acbool and I cannot be Yeacbed to fttJlloriz6 emersmey room treatmeat. I believe &]>&rent 'a a~ ls requlredforaucb treatment. J .!'.,San Clemente .......i CGUerl& la nQlllnd f• tM tna&meat et ........ ID a ...._., emer1enc1 room, bat,_, problem eaa bi aolY .. euUy. Pbcme S.. Oemeat. Geeeral llospltal (-.llJZ) aacl ...... a pre· au41 est for tftaha•& ~t eanl. or Ylatt tM .. er1ency roem _. nu oae oat. c.ome.& earda all9 ue anlJable bJ nqueat rrem .... Mspltala where a dalld probably w..id be t.akeD la a ••ealemer1eac1. . Pwp•rt•T""1e1Neel•Slse DEAR PAT: I've re.ad that pauporta are smaller tb1a year? r T.A., Balboa ,,_ aew p .. port la 4.tZ blcM9 by 3.47 btcbn .. abe. The re· plar »USpo11 aow us U p'ses. U yOll travel a Jot, uJs for the 48· P•I• wsalon wben you apply, u visa •••ea cuaot be added. THE FAMILY CIRCUS .. By Bil Keane Greek LeatU;n Meeting on Cypnu Future NlCOSIA, Cyprus <AP> -The heads of the four major Greek Cypriot political parties met to- day with acting President Splros Kyprianou to discuas the future oC thi.I divided island ln the af. lermath or President Makarios' death. Kyprlanou told newsmen after the meelini the party leaders reached no decisions and will meet again possibly Friday. Other leaders said the discusaion w aa eoofined to procedures for replactna llakarlol. the Greek Orthodox archbllbop wbo wu Cyprus' first and ooly pret1&mt. "OUR MAIN objective ls to avoid tension and to ensure a smooth transition,'' Kyprianou said. ------~ A request by Toro Dtl· posal In~: to l.ncr•&J• lta trash ®UecUon rat.a lD thrH South OrJn1e County comm\lftiU• by 60 ceots a IDOlltb WU t• Jected at least ttm· porartly br 1upervtao..-. County Couoael Adrtui Kuyper 1ald 1upervilors alread)-have authorllld le1al aetlon a1a1ost tlle. ftl'm to hilt 10a1n1 viola· Uons oa the tlrm'• pro- perty at 23201 Cherry Ave.in El Toro. ' K er uld be ta p action to balt th attona and to keep the tlrm from en· croachlna oo a couut1 rigbt.of·Wl.Y. Aa a result. aupervlaora a1reed to await for add1Uonal re- ports from Kuyper before schedulint a hearing on the proposed the rate lncreue. They also said local residents · have protested the ln· crease. The firm serves homes in portions of Mlsalon Viejo, Laauna Niguel and Dana Point. Com· pany officials asked for a rate increue from '2.80 a mootb to ts.40. · Fowl Aided SANTA BARBARA (AP > -The at.ate l"lab and Game Commlaaion bas strenit.beoed relUI• lions for feeding ml· gratory water fowl by ;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:=;:;:====:::===;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;::;;=;;;. declarinl It will dent licenses to people who have previocaaly vtolat.d the rules • An Iranian newspaper. meanwhile, published what it described as MaJcariOI• laat ~ terview, sivtm here Salu.IQy. In it the archbishop was quoted u aaytnc Kyprianou, a moderate and president or the all-Greek Natlcmal Assembly wu •'the on----~-----• ly man who can iead Cypnaa" after Makarios' death. · Advance l0ok at fall. The new vested suit. Now, pre-season priced. From a fresh, just-arrived collection. The Fresco weave suit ol poly- ester /wool is an Ideal year-round weight. Classically styted with two buttons, flap pockets and center vent Decidedly new colorings In YoUt choice of aollds. ttrlpee and plaid&. In September these suits will be 175.00 PRE.SEASON PRICE 149.90 .. Books S;Uqrk Memories QI Hall~ood/s _Hardy 11.AVIUCE ZOIHl'OW DO a fine job of explor •I 1M life, work and ofWtJdet, who h .. DeYer len thl.ll hoatlt wttb felloW Workttl and hllllfflt. Sampl•: "Wlldu Hld Hutn· phrey Bolart WU elffllUall)' I 1&di1t, an nu men, and a pby1leal cowud wbo atvtr dared to back up bla inlUltt wttb Illa ftt1a and ran away from a ftfbt and .bid bebiftd watt.en and police wbel> there wu real trou· ble" ..... -"We • Letend of Gene Fowler," a posthumous blo· fl'apby by H. AUea Smltb <Kor· row, $10), la a warm salute to the new1paperman, screenwriter and blofrapber whole own life rivaled the leeends he wrote about. Smith call• Fowler "a bubbllnl lconoclut." which he demonstrated over and over a1aln. WHEN HE mMSELF was a celebrity as a New York edltor. Fowler was approached !or an ' endonement by a cigarette com- pany. He warmly agreed and Im· mediately typed out: "I would quit smoktna ciearettes if I could, but they are so full of some tind d dope that 1 have become an addict. ... " _ .. Richard and Elizabeth" by Letter David and Jhan Robbjns <Funk and Wapalls, $8.95) of. fera another view of the twice· wed, twice-split Burtons. The authon point out: '•Their !rank· neas was endearing. Most or the time they were open with the public, seemingly unable to dis- semble." AN EXAMPLE IS Burton's reflections on pusine 50: "The Wilder, Burton-Taylor, Hope Fowler, Rascals, Stooges µve Umes '°" sex may be lll1ht1y fewer, ~ wben you do -oh. Joy! It'• mtre excltlnc and f troclOUI t.ban wbtn you were a , callow youth. J've alw1y1 bellevtd HX improves with 110" .•.•. -Bob Hope produced, with a little help, the story of h1I mm career , "The Road to Hollywood" (Doubleday, $10,SO). Hope writes: ~"I didn't &~t to . Hollywood aa earb' u B.C. Bini Cro1by, crooner, father. and member or the Lewis and Clult expedJUon. When ht nrat arrived there waa hardly anfone ln Hollywood but a bunch o Indians walt.l.nc for John Wayne to show up. Cecil B. DeMIUe was a prop boy. George Jessel was golne 1teady with Ramona. . . . Clayton Hoskins -Is 56 and works with the mentally re· tarded 1n Alameda County. -"MOE llOWABD AND the Three Stooae1" by the late Howard hlmaelf (Citadel, $14) tells the enUre history of the Stootea. from their atart in vaudeville, the teamlnc with Ted Healy on Broadway and ln films, the Columbia 1horts, tbe televillon revival. Howard reveals that the trio slaned with Universal after Jeavlne MGM but Columbia boss Hart')' Cobn 1ot the contract can· celled. Liter Abbott and Costello became atars at Universal. and Howard doubted that lt would have happened if the Stooges had been there. He believed that Lou Costello's mannerisms and hl1b· -"OVR GANG, THE Ufe and pitched voice were borrowed Times of the lJWe Rascals" by Crom Curly Howard. Leonard Mal tin and Rlcbard W. -Also Crom citadel are more of Bann (Crown, $12.95) is a splen· • the valuable ··The Films dutly thorough .-ccount of one of or. . .. " series. The latest sub· Hollywood's mo,t endearlna jects: Charlton Heston, James aeries. It contains credits, Mason, Frank Capra, Doris Da)'. synopses and photos of all 221 aborts, dating Crom 1922 to 1944. Fuud vote Due Importantly, .the book elves blographles of all or the Our Gang cast members and tells oJ what has happened to them. This may help suppress the hundreds of imposters who present themselves as the real sp&nky McFarland or Farina. The real SpanJcy la •9 an area manager for Philco-Ford in Fort Worth, Tex. Farlna·Allen SACRAMENTO CAP> Sponsors of the death penalty bill say the final vote to override Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.'s veto will be taken In the Assembly Aug. 11. Assemblyman Alister McAllster, <D·San Jose), sponsor ot the bill. said that "I think we'll probably make lt, but it will betlgbt.'' ~· Aupuat,, 1m DAIL YN.OT 4• I:aw StWlenta Comndtment ~ea Two Newport Btaeh 1tudenla bave earned 'law decr.n at Loyola Law School In Loa Angeles. They art Allen Wallace. aon d Mr. and Mra. Norman Wallace. an~ Constance Mlnnett, daughter of Maxine Ben· Jamin. L()S ANOELJ:S (AP) -A Sepulftda womu bu WOQ '8IO.OOO ln dam .... h'Olll ber form• huaband and a ,.~cbla&rilt nom u. •a.rt foretd ber to ltQ' 11 Cla)'S ID a 111)'Cblatrle bOlplt.al. Aftel' dellberaUoc for four~ • Loi An•tl• Su~ Court :lin awarW 8atbara P. Glnlbw'I, 39, ceneral and puD1Uve damal• fl'om MU'YIA Glmbur'I aDd ~ycbtatrllt Jantn lt. Helmaa. Mn. Glnabura, who wu dlYCfted a year after the lftelden~ aald 1bt Ud Mt bulbud Wel"t baYiq marttal dltflculti• when, OD lfardl 10, tm. M ·"'keel her to io to tbe W•twoOd HOIP!tal in W•t •• Los Anteles. TbeeonftumenttoUowecl. . ESTATE JEWELRY 8t Fine Crystal, POrcelaina, China, Bronzes, Rugs, Furniture, Silver, Oil•, etc. 1!{ Miiiion Dollars Worth ·~ Don't miss this important sale! ~ Friday Lot10f diomond solilllm ind du11"1. Fint j!f: NJght men's and ladies wltchtt, rlnp. llft'iftll, ~~ br1c:et1ts, '*ttaca. etc., •t w1tt1 d1t-Aug. 5 . 8 pm monds, emeralds, rubles. utiphirta. " Stvtrll importllnt 11111 tmtralda INSPECTION: end apphirta. ~ FRIDAY, AUG. &th • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon · I p.m .• 7 • I ,.m. Fine crystal, china setJ, Vi . ".....W ....-. '°' 10tWent.n. European furnlture. _, ... to: bronzes, rugs, oils Newport'Gallerie• ~nd many other Ltd items. , 6 • Hundreds of ~ · 2542wEST coAST HIGHWA~ fflwport Btldl. Cllifomt1 gold ~ AcroSI the mMt frof'll _,_.of tM flneet wfteffnmt ,_...,.nu ln louUlem Cal"omla. chains ,,_ -CoDtlCt UI for info on our ~dly end Sund1Y nifht ... this Meis. ~~:i::'~ulo!:J TU•MS1 lriAm.,lard • Mest...ctt.,._ :~~~ ~ • • Person.I chedc · CMl'I ·Some extended terms can ti. err..,.ed (714) 645-2200 CONSIGNMENTS ACCEPTED UNTIL & p.m. FRIDAY Art levlne • AucllOnfff ' BUO!f• and Girls Together Laguna Beach Lifeguard "Mermaids" Katja Kohler, 9, and Tonya Mickesh, 10, both of El Toro, splash through water with lifeguard rescue buoys as part or their training. The lifeguard program teaches fundamentals of ocean safety to young boys and girls. About 200 a year take part in the city program. : Car Jack Safety Probed WASfllNGTON <AP) -The Department of Transportation has launched an invesli&atlon of safely defects in motor vehicle J8CkS. The probe centers on jack.a pro- vided as original equipment with 197S-76 Chevrolet and GllC C-10, P ·lO, G·3> and K·lO lltbt trucks. ALSO BEING investigated ls . the alleged lailute or the saddle leveling mechanism on the Model 846 Hydraulic Floor Roller . Jack manufactured by Hollywood Acceuories of Compton. Government omclals said they received three complain.ta about r allure of the jacks provided with the Chevrolet and GMC trucks, although no accidents or injuries have been associated with these failures. The screw-type jacks were tested by the National Hl&bway Traffic Safely Administration and officials said they bent and deformed when used on irreaular .surfaces or the shoulder of the rdad. THE JACKS WERE provided on 1,169,050 trucks, omcials said. Department officials said truck owners should avoid Wilna the jacks if possible. U they must be used, seek a level surface, place sturdy wooden blocks un- der the axle as soon as the Jack is extended and atop raainl the jack immedJately if it begins to bend or deform. The department said a pin tn the Hollywood jack can fail il the load is not centered and they or1ed that these jacks not be uaed because they can allow the load to drop suddenly. THESE JACKS AllE normally used by service stations and the number in use 11 not known. Government officials asked owners ~ both types of Jacks who have had problems to report the details to the Office of Defects lnvestlaation, National Highway Traffle Safety Ad· ministration, 400 Seventh St. SW. Washineton, D.C., 20590. Or call ~~-,. No matter how Old you are, there's a kid Inside you who's trylng·to tell you he wants out this summer. He's dying to cut loose and have a good old care- free time like he used to. And not spend all his allowance doing it. You may think those days are far behind you. But we have a surprisingly easy way to get back that free and easy way of life. It's called the bus. That may not sound very exciting right off. But think about it Part of the joy of youth was not having to worry about posses- sions. (Like your car.) Or being responsible for things. (Like remembering to buy gasoline and keep change for the parking meter.) Or putting up with things you didn't like to do. (Like driving in traffic.) Well, that's what the bus Is · all about. Orange County Transit District buses take you to all of the fun places. Disneyland. Knott's Berry Farm. The Fun Zone at • Balboa. The beach. Anyplace. 1 Without the t hassle and responsjbillty of driving. It doesn't take · a pocketful of change to ride the bus, either. Just 25¢ one 'Vay. So you can save all your money to spend when you get there, instead of spending it getting there. Listen to the kid inside you. He's right about a lot of things. For complete information and scheduling on all OCTD routes and services, caJI Orange County Transit District at 547-3311. Call 547•3311 or toll-free ZENITH 7-3311 from 6 AM to 10 PM weekdays, 7 AM to 5 PM Saturday, and 8 AM to 5 PM Sunday and Holidays. /fllal Plea Air Operation Boost Asked omc1 al II Beetbcraft wanL Oun1e Count aupervllOt'I llh ~r to ltt t.htm expend their flud operat .at or .... County Airport or ,,.. U>em lo move eltftfMn. lll.tn-ui'°" bave uked omct.ILI of th• cou.nt.y 0..-al lenlc• A1tn01 and members of the A.lrl*t Laod u .. Commllllon to llud)' tbe firm '• ,..qumt and report back wkhln IO day1. Mluton beecbcratt Vlce Prttldtnt W.D. C:remp.akl lD a &otW bit tlrm had subrnltted •ltbL requesta to upand amce 1t72 na• NOW UAID five acrt1 of aJ!:,pe>rt land for lta aiccraft aal•. m1Jnten1nct ind rucht t.ruc'tion services and wanta lo expand to 1~ acres. Supervi»<>r Thomu lUley uld tht tipanston ll&d hem Mld up pendin1 compleuoo of an eoviroo· m taJ Impact report wbJch wtll help dei.nntne the airport'• Mure. But m bit letter Gremp Hid, "We are aware that there are some lnteresta that will attempt to delay the approval of the airport EJR u lon1 u pouibM." 11£ OFFERED TO PaEPA&E a separate !IR on bis ftrm's expansion propotal. Gremp saJd he also bu been told the county eventually may want to acquire the land the firm now uses for an auport terminal and would not ap- prove the firm's sale lo anotheroperalor. He asked superv111ors lo let him know if they do intend lo acquire the land leased by Mission Beeebcraft, if they will let the firm leue another 10 • , acret or under what clrcumstancea they would permit the disposition of the lease so bls firm could move elsewhere. T.,_.P .. c· Dr . Charles J. Mosm~ of Corona del Mar is the new associate vlce presl· dent for academic planning ut Cal Stale Fullerton. Blood Needed Tbe Red Crosa Blood Center in Santa Ana wtU . be open for donatlona over the Labor Day weekend, from 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Sept. 3 throu1b 5. The center is located at 601 N. Golden Circle Drive. TboH wtJhlna to donate may call W -5381 for an appointment. Air Guard Set For Takeuver . e Culhlona by MARTLEX • QulUc.y Inner Sprina Mattreu <NOT FOAM> Convertible SOFA BED lnca,...frH 100% Herculon Tr•e craft1maad1lp waa •tr ao real • • • not ao evhlea' a• la Ual• Earl1 America• 1oh bed lty . MaaweD·Moore. U""-ord of Value S19999 , flt. SAT. & SUll. Iola Bed · S. County Growth Program Launched FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST, NEWPORT BEACH e Hanlwood P'r1me Board DOUBLE DOWELED ind GLUED. Air com· snlMd with Clamp Machine. Corners IJ!ocbd for Additional Strerwth • Four W Plate Bait Sheohetd Cuten <NOT TWO SPINDLE ~ASTERS> •cu.tom Maci. M1tcht111 Arm C.p1 with Eich Sot• Bed A new program lo make sure development in south Orange County doesn't outpace necessary support services has been launched by county aupervUiors. They voted 3-1 to immediately hire a ataff member to plan the pro1ram and aave Georae Osbcme, director of Ahe county Environmental Management Agency. permission to hire three other •~•ff members for the proaram u soon as they are needed. 8lJPBRVl80R AALPH DIEDRICH cast the lone dlssentlna vote, aayin1 he believed the pro- gr am could be handled without hiring new employea. Supervisor Laurence Schmit waa absent from Wednesday's meetlna. I 11v: development monilorlng program wlll pro- vtde &lmty officials with aemi-annual population estimates, one and five.year population predictions and eatimates of key aervice capabilities for pro· jectecl developmenta. · It will keep tabl on such services u water sup- ply, wastewater dtspoeal, storm dratna1e, flood pro- • tecuoa, eteetnc aupplies, natural 1as, schools, tranaportaUon and parka. A.T THE SUGGESTION of Supervisor Philip Anthony, the board asked alaff members to supply information next sprinl on actual dollars the pro- 1ram saves. Diedrich said he supports the Idea for the pro- gram but opposes hlrin1 new staff members. ''It Is always more bodies," he said. "I think someumes we have lo say no, that's all." Dog Racing Suit .. On Sheriff Dropped LOS ANGELES (AP) -A do1 racing promoter who fUtd a S8 million defainaUon suit a1aln1t Oranct County Sheriff Bredley Gates and two other Southern California offtelala -claimio& they I llnked him with or1anized crtme -has dropped the cue. An attorney tor promoter Oeorae Hardie filed dl1m1atal forms July l, accordlna to court recorda. • No re.llOO wu alven for droppln1 the suit. '!be suit n 5lled Gates, LOs Angeles District At· toryoey John de Kamp and Auemblyman Robert Cline CR· rldae>. The three bad oPPC>Sed Hardie's efforts to win vottr approval of ProposlUon 13, which would have leaaUied parimutuel betting on do1 races In Callfomla. The proposition, whlch Hardie helped write, wu defeated by voltra lut November. Hardie had tiled 1ult ln Loi An1eles Sl.lperior Court three weeks before the elecUon, seelttna S2 ·=llllon 1n damaaea from each official for alleted • d1famaUon. -.. warmly invitet you to 11. ,.,r FREE • Stlll 8Prit11 Sleeper Unit GUARAN TEED llr u Lo~ u YOU Own the t TV. Hudnlt • All Sot• Beda have Self Deck. We m•b Ni• ..a I• 1tl ~H 1l1n: • TWIN • l'UU • OUllN • SUl'I• • OUllN e (ING • 1 SIHOLH ,.;-Chri1tlan Science Lecture: .-.. JJ' e malce 10/ a bedl in all IMU 1iu1: Jt~~we1r-:u;~ .... W .. ,, ............ C.. °"-Y 'Tl• ,Al °'81 IAT ~ M l>t ANAHIUUACTOIY SHOWIOOM 1711 I. ITATI COUIOl llVD. ~-:.:.. (714)634-1322 Save t4.00 1 ..-. y1rd on tht1 extr1 1pect11 Mirony =during o"r ~nnlvertary S.le. Soft. velvet h aurfllCt and dertat pile creai. • touch Of 1teaanc9. T\ahtly twl1i.ct nylon pile hll been heat-eel tor tteVltnoy end texture Ntentlon. A beautHul tlo-Cfy91ng 1y1teln cre1tt1 megntt!Mnt eof«•Uon .... i.ot from Gold Mtclat. C-ordov1n, Iron Olllde~ndy Be~. Meadow Ol'ttn1nd •11ont~ COSTA MESA-FACTOIY SHOWIOOM 3165 M. HAllOll ILVD. :.-~:.. (114) 545-1493 • .... . ... ...... Time Rutuiing OutonBich? NEWPORT, R.I. <AP> -Ht IWnded much Ukt Al '1 whlt4 rabbit who, clad 1n hil wallt and Lop hat, kept H)'illl to hJmHlf: "I'm lele, I'm late, for 1 v~ lmllO'Unt date." 8an:a Marc Blch ol France, oner of tht v.orld'• lat1 t nect of 12 met.tr yaebta, walktd ac the 1hJpyard, dswted tn a whlle, double bre td tropical 1uit and •m•ll, '¥hlt4 c•R· ·'We are lat••" ia. aaJd. •'We art Ja&e. • TWO or POVa U.meter yacbta France I 1Dd \he MW France fl. •N ln NtwPort Harbor. Jt bad bMr1 hoped that Fr II would make tM P'rentb chalJeii tor lhll )'ear'• America'• CUp, but 81cb n.n.Jly had to dectde an Prance I, whlcb UJ\IUC· c~ssfully sous.ht to chaJlense for tM cup lam•, "We have had to abandon France 11. and we ha· v~o't had a chance to properly prepare France I," said Bach. •bO ma~ 1 fort.wM watb hit Blc balJpoJnt pens and di&r>09ablt U1bten and razors. "Now we bavt to prepare both boat.I," •aid Bich. "U Frt.nce I wins the ellmlnaUoaa, we could race France 11 ln the final That la penniuable.'' IN THE FlaST DAY OP the round robin aeries teday, France I, with Pierre Delfour at the helm. wlll meet Gretel U of Auatralla, the unsuccessful 19'70 challeneer. and Australia, the neweat of the Australian 12 meters, will meet Sverigeot$weden. Weather' permlttin1, the Yacht Club D'Hyerea planned to match Sveriae vs. Gretel· II and Australia va. Frcce l ln a second race today. Weather was overcast with leas than a mile via· ibility and wincb odt of the west southwest at about eiaht knots. ·BOATING Hobie Cat Sldppers Seek National Crown Hobie Cat·H saJJors . from throu1hout the cowitry a.rt expected to conver11 on Lake Mlchl1an at the Illinois Beach State Park for the n1Uonal cbamplonsblp re11tta Au1, J.5.20. The McKinnon Wins Cat.25 Regatta Cerie McKJnnoo of Marina del Rey was the win· ntr ot the Ca1·25 naUoftaJ championship reaatta 11iled Saturday and Sund~ out ol lhe Loni Beach Y acbt Club ln extreme~ li&bt alra. c., .... ....__.~ .• ......, • .,.., ~ ........................... _ ... .... Visit Our ~on Studio JmJ .......... Plnft ........ ............ ~~~;.;; .. .,......,. 4tMJOJ ......, .... ....,. Ifs HAWTHORNE CHRISTIAN SCHOOLS for the right start In life l(J11defcarten tjwv 8th Crede • All·day daua Ell!Nlt~- '1bere were 2t entries ln the reaatta, includine two from the Eut Coast, one from Texu ud one from AnnapoU1, lid. T~ AY'>\:ible -o,.a._;, of 71 fO'hl en ............... __ ..ic:O'l'le -~ tct.obltc llO'ldotd -tead1in9 ... 4 ~·,'.~I_. ~l -~ .,,.""'-'c, ~s '1be reaulta were Qiarred by a aeries of protests that kept the race committee ln 1esalon unW a late hour Sunday. MOit of the protesll resulted from col· Uslona at tbe start and roundinl marks in the U&bt, fluky breezes. Relalta: . 1, Gene McKJnnon, 22 % ; 2, Tom Newton, Long Beach,23; 3, Tom Leweek, Marlnadel Rey,24 ~; 4, Len Sheridan, Paclftc Paliaadel, 28 ~; s. Steve Bandy, Anna,PQlJI, Md., 27~. FOUNTAIN VALLEY• 16835 Brookhurst 1u1t not'th ol Warntt 714-982-3312 ..A P11vate School of Oislulcbon founded in 1942" FOR EIGN ELIMINATIONS, which run -;;:::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:=:~;:-----~~----~~~~~~~-.:~~f=::::::::;:;"!'~~~~~~:-::;~~~~~-.-.~ throuah Sept. 8, will determine which of the four challengers, a r~cord number, will meet the American yacht, which will be cbo&en also by Sept. 8. Three American boats -Enterprise, lodepen. dence and Courageous, the 1974 champion -are VY· ing to defend the Cup for the 23rd time. The final series begins Sept. 13. "France I Is very fast in light wmd," said Alan Bond, head of the syndicate which owns Australia. "She is not to be underestimated." At Wednesday's drawin1 to determine the pair· ings for for the foreign races, Bond made it clear, however, that h1a challenae wa.s a serious one. 0 THIS JS NOT FUN; this is deadly serious," said Bond, who Is given probably the best chance of wresting the cup Crom the Americans. "Don't ever get the idea that this is fun." The French helmsman seemed te> concede some speed lo Australia. "Australia is the fastest boat," he said, ··and will end up in the finals . . • if it's not us." Eaoutlv• Otflc .. : 7812 Edl".'Qtr Ave., Huntington S.ec:h, CA 92147 ---·-- Southern Cellforn,. R•olon•I Offla.e: 4140 Long Beach Blvd., Lona Beach, CA 90807 8955 Vall~ Vl•w St., Buena l>ark, CA 90620 ~ 2071lS S. Avalon Blvd., Carson. CA 90748 l!!l 1001 E. lmperlal Hwy .. La Habra, CA 90631 l 10915 lrvlne Blvd., Tuatln, CA 92880 11~0 235 N. Cltrua Ave., WHt Covlna, CA 917~3 untR Western Federal Savings Presents a D efinition of Savingss INTRODUCING SY.LYANIA 1978 MODELS luy llOW M ICWI dllri119 IN1 tr••Ad•• Mltll Prices .-t ttn s-11rrr. "--,, .. nit for prlces1 -. . • • 3 YEAR PICTURE TUBE • I YEAR PARTS & SERVICE I • Datvay AMD SET-UP ..... a UffllJ 1977 MODEL CLOSEOUTS •WCT SC ... 21• DIACIOMAL 3-YIAR PICTURI TUii WAaUMTY " I~· DIAGONAL CLOy.;QUTS . ~ - '.111\lllN lll lilS ,,, 111111 11' • .~ .. , .,,, .:., , SAVI • MOWI 'I ·f9tMS I ---~~ I •,YI \f/lNlll ·,,~ hf n 11uu· .• ! 1·n 11111 CX6171WI W TO CX61~ •·:::.. ,~ s34900 .... YU STOCI U....,. ' I ... '.. ~:~ ·' v. 1--. PHO ME 68-3329 FOi LOW LOW PRICES! lt71MOD .. S FIOM SYLYAMIA 25• DIAGONAL STMAnc . 87 Al H& r ... ~Pilllw..t LUJS OBISPO -U'• aJ 17 1ean •Ince• pin careylna C1l Poly'• footb11l team craabed al Toledo. 0 E•pr Airport killlna ta pla.)'era and aix ot.h Pll"1Clal. Tbe pt.oo, a cn. iot about 1 UO fHl LD ~ atr after ta ot1 In Yery Well toe. ?'Mn an ~ aave out and lb~ plane ume plun1ln1 do D. ~U&Qa tn two when er . I.be front half turned ov• and cauabt fire -and most of lhoM tn lhat Hetion perished Time, ho patallutloo and lawiulta -have Mtped heal the wounds of P\&nY of tho • urvivo -but th memorlee of that Ooto r nJthUnu.>Uniero . ••• Ute bu not cbanatd much' I or 011 tork (oat of the pll)'tf1)1 Roy ffupes (then the Maa coach> and Johnny NeWelhlp CU..·~ editor of t.hie local oew1p1.,.r), but everytlmt a plane eruh" tho memary ot the Toledo di•· aater ia reCallto. • Stork, a ll·Y••r·old •oPbon)Oft catu at the time. waa throwD onto th runway wben tbe plaae cr .. bed while N ettle1btp (Ont of tboae urloualy injured) and Hua wtro rescued from U.. b ck part ot tho plane. What hu been the impact of that crash for Stork. Huaha and NetUesblp the paat 17 yeara? "Initially, the Impact of what t40k place waan 't much at all," uya Stork. "Of co\U'H, the shock of loelne all thoso guys you competed with waa pr.:tty tough. But I was 19 at tho time, and IL really dtdn 't have a deep impact. "But I've bad more deep thouahts about lt the lut 10 yeanJ. Now when I bear of a plane crashine I reflect upon the crash I was ln. I'd like lQ. THE DODGERS' STEVE GARVEY, METS FAN VIE FOR A CATCH IN THE RAIN. Mets Outlast R~in; LA NEWVOR~::. 0~!.~~ :.~:-; t~rre s~d ... , nd a half hours of balks, walks always feel we can win. The felt onco Uiey put lbe tarp on the nd squawks. Lee MazdJU de-playes:s believe ln themselves." field at that point, there was no lded that enoueh was enoueb. It. might have been a little bit way they would continue the "I was determined to 10 up dllficultfor them to believe tn the game. I thoUJht we had a loss." ere and nni~h It," said the New early goin1: thoueh. Much However, Torre's outlook . ork Mets injured center against Torres >Wishes, the um-brightened with the weather pic- 1•elder. plres let the contest atart under a lure. Skies cleared and the teams Maizilll, benched wlth a steadydownpour. ed 1 · th •L 'b r u ls e d tinge r th r o u i h a "I don't tblnk we should have res um P ay in e sevenui. marathon game with the Los · 't "When we started to play ngeles Dod1ers, translated his Ded,,er. 81ate a1ain," Torre said, "I somehow . bought.a into action with a 14th •110•1Mt••1CA1c11M1 felt we could win. I don't know nnlng stngle giving the Mets .Auo s t~¥1M••u• ..,,11_,.111N• • tp,,.. why -aomethinr Just told me we ith a 4-3 victory Wednesday. """' • L.otA .... *at ""11-""111\1• • >Op m • could. II "I was looklne for a futball "119 '~""'41"-u• P1W•-.ip11i. io.>0•"' Then it was Tom Lasorda's nd I eat my pitch,·' said Muallli played under thole condlUOIUI," turn tD complain. .rter punchlng his run scoring Ton-esald. "The umpires took the game smgle through a drawn ln infield He was even unhappier when away from us. they really did, .. o. score Joel Youneblood from the Dodgers built a S.1 lead with said the unhappy Dodgers bard base. . the help of Nino Esplnosa's run manager. "They shouldn't have Muzilli wouldn t have been up producing balk ln the lint LMiftl Jet lt continue after the sixth in· in that crucial sltuaUon, except and a two-run homer by Dave ning. Wbea we had that Jong de- that manager Joe Torre bad Lopes in the tblrd. The Mets lay (one hour and five minutes>. nobody else left after a nooc1 or scored their ruq ln the a1xtb on Doug Rau lost his edge and I had players had crossed the raln· Felix Millan'• sacrifice ny. to take him out ... drenched field. Also If the Torrt let tho umpires know Dodcers relier pltchine wu a lit-about bis diaPleasure when lbey tie bit sharper. 11\e Dodlers let decldecUo halt. t.he 1ame afteulx the Meta tle the came s.:s with a innings. two-out rally ln the ninth ln.nlna. ''Heck, I Oau,red if they could "Thia club has quiet con· start in copdJUonl 11,kt that they ltendla• Mlllan211 ICOllPllf ~If StMllllC Mllnef' lb • reach out and help, J have empathy for what's golng on. I'd Uke to convey some of my tbou1hts to the survivors or the relatives of those that have been killed. But It's dlfncult to do that kind of Utlbg," say1 Stork. Stork suffered a fractured vertebra in his back, a separated sternum, leg and facial cuts and broken 1eeth. He waa knocked uiiconscioua by the crash. "I woke up on the runway and the first thine I saw was thlt llickerln1 U1ht. (the plane on fire>. And then I heard someone yell, 'Here's another one over here.• The next thine he knew be wu in an ambulance. Ho apent 2~ weeks tn the hospital, aat out tho next foot· ball season, but returned to play two more years at Cal Poly. And except for the fllibt home from Toledo, Stork had not J>een in an airplaoe unW last year. "I just didn't have the op- P.Ortunlty to fly. But I've nown quite a bit in the lut year and I have no •P· prebenslon about it," uys Sto.rk. Stork wu awarded Sll,000 in 1964 in a suit qainat Uoyds of London and the Stare of aiatA With Autry Martin in Line For Angels Joh? By DAVE CUNNINGHAM Ol IM Dally l"llee S .. 11 It's becoming a tradition in New York.' When a manaeer leads the Yankees to an American Leaeue pennant, he's rewarded by bein& fired. Billy Martin hasn't gotten the ax yet, but speculation has circulated for several weeks that Martin's job is in danger, and club owner George Steinbrenner hasn't exactly jumped forward to say It U5n't so tr Martin goes. he'll be jolh.lng such select company as Casey Stengel, RaJph Houk and Yoaa Berra. Each was fired the season after winning a pennant for New York. Stengel got it after winning the 1960 nag and Houk was flre4 after winning the 1963 pennant. Berra succeeded Houk, won the 1964 race and promptly joined the others in the unemployed ranks _That was the last pennant the Yanks had won until last year. Perhaps not co Inc I dentally, each lost the World Serles just before getting his release. And Martin lost last year's Wotld Serles in four straight to the Cin. clnnati Reds. He prefers not t.o talk about It, but MartJn does concede that his Job 1s not completely secure. "M anaeers are hired to be fired," besays. Few know that better th-n Martin. He manaaed at Mln· nesota, Detroit and Texts before coming back to the club for which he made his fame aa a player, New York. At each stop he parted company wt\en an •owner showed him to the door. And if Steinbrenner follows suit, It's not unthinkable that Martin could become the next California Angels manager. He and Angels owner Gene Autry are longtime friends. Autry. at the urging of general manager Harry Dalton. tired manager Norm Sherry on July 11 and replaced him wath coach Dave Garcia. But his security isn't. much greater than Sherry's was Prior to Wednesday niaht's game at Anaheim Stadium, Autry visited with Martin behind locked doors in the clubhouse. The meeting lasted only seven minutes, and both men came out smiling. "There's nothing Important to comment on," Martin told the Daily Pilot after the rrreeUng. "Gene Autry is Jl &ood friend or mine and he comes down to say hi every time I come ln ... no matter \(that ballclub I'm with. It was just a friendly chat." Garcia, meanwhile. continues to have bi~ problems with the Angela. Since be took over the club is 10-tt and now alls 1J ea mes out ol fint place. The Yankeu have been hot alnce the All«ar break, helplne take some ¢ the beat off thelr maaaaer's job. N'e,w York 1.12~ 1amesoutQf fi,nt$ DAA.YN.OT •J CaUfomla and nce&vod an addl~al -.ooo MYea years later from a aettlemtnt asatnst the fed al IOVCl'll• m nt. . ··r was v~ fortullate to pltk up w I left "olt after the crash." 1a11 Stork, now tho ualstant dean Of in· atrucUoo at CU~ta Colle10 in San Lull Obispo. • •• Hu1bea• career aa Cal Poly's bead coach ended one year afterthocllauter. He 1a.ya the crash was not the main reaaoo be quit tho bead coach. ''But lt bad a lot to do wlth it," says Hui.bes. MMemerlelPa1em Angels Idle After 5-3 Triumph By a Dally Pllot Wrt&er After winnlna two of three from the defending American Lea1ue champion New York Yankees. the California An&els have today off to contemplate what they've done with th~ Ont 10s eames, and what thej're 10- ln1 to do with the remalnlnl 57. Friday night they'll resume ac- tion against the Baltimore Orioles at Anaheim Stadium, and the Aneets' role in the pennant race is becomin1 more like that of a potential spoiler than a potential contender. They dealt the Yankees a tem- porary setback in New York's close race for the Eastern Division crown, and hope to do the same to Baltimore, which is aJso in the thick ol the race. The Angels, however, are 13 AttgebSlate AllOa ... ftanlCMl"CltN19f11tl .A..o S "•lllmote .ti C.tllfor.,la Avo. • ~ihn'IOf".-..-1 Catlforn1,-. Auo 1 \\~ll•morf' M Clltllornl• r Hp,., ' 7~0"' n \\p m J{ames back ln the West and Wed· nesday night's 5.3 victory WK.s a rare moment for manager Dave Garcia to reflect on whatever re· m a I n s o f t b e s e Itson • s possibilities. "I still believe we've eot a good, 25-man ballclub," Garcia says. "We're not too far out, if 111ome of the brew start eolng our way." Nolan Ryan 1ot the victory • Wedneeday, with rellefbelpfrom Dave LaRoche. Byan went seven 1nnin,s, allowing five hits and one run while atrlklog out just three. He left the game because of fail&Uo with a 3-1 lead. "l eotallttletired and I wasn't throwing that well," Ryan said. •·I thoupt I'd better leave before I cot into trouble. I'd been run- nln'1 a fever yesterday and ln the ai:dh I told the manaeer he'd bet· ter aa somebody ready.'' Bobby Bonds provided most of the evening's excitement In the elahth Inning when he stroked a two.run, inslde·the-park home run. The drive whistled down the left field llne and caromed orr the wall away from Yankees leftllelder Roy White. Jerry Remy scored easily from first and Bonds circled the bases ahead ol the hlth and wlld relay throw to the plate. "When I aaw the ball let past White 1 knew be was 1ot.ni to have to throw me out at the plate because I wun't stoppln1 for anything," Bondi sald. "But 1 was awful tired comtn1 around third." Bonds haa 17 rbi and five home runs ln his last 1S games. He's bit safely in 12 of the 1S 1ames. El Toro resident Graig Nettles provided • meter of hope for ?few York ln tbe ninth when be homered to richt, hi• 2.Stb of the se&J()n. NaWTOttlC .. ~ .... • ' .. 0 "'°' .. "' J t 0. - ......... BWEFS ••• (lowlloaed Fnm Pace a1 reconl Um Of 2'7:I0.5 whJch ht act a few weeke 110. In the blah Jump, former world record bolder Dwl1bt Stones raued tor the second time 1n a month to recapture the NCOrd held by Vladhni.r Ya1bcbenko ot tbe Soviet Union, who did not compote. St.ones took the event with a leap of 7-5, weU below Vasbcbenkm' recordot'1-~. Earl Bell, another former world record holder, won the pole vault at 17-1~. beatlna Dan Ripley. TCUllWr A d1'••eea SOUTH ORANGE, NJ - Ra.roe Tanner scored a tlard· fou1ht victory over Matt Mltc:hell, 6.,., 6-3, and 18-year-old Larry Gottfried had hla bubble popped in the $85,000 tennis open here Wednesday. Gottfried was turned back by Ray Moore, 7-S, 6-2 after upset- Ung WOJtek Fibak in the first round. ~lcl..o•n SEA TILE-Fonner UC Irvine pitching star Gary Wheelock Jost his seventh game agaJnat she vic- tories Wednesday night when the Boston Red Sox scored four Umes against him in the early 1olng and went on to defeat the Setttle Mariners, 12-4, in an American League baseball game here. Neam09le Traded HEMPSTEAD, N .Y . The New York Jets traded veteran defensive end Billy Newsome to the Buffalo Bills Wednesday in exchange for an undisclosed future NaUonal Football Lea1Ue draft choice. ltiddw Bu..Wd ROCKETS STAR CALVIN MURPHY TRIES BATON TWfALINO. EL CENTRO -Funeral services were held today tor Bill ' Riddle, a former Unlvenlty of Southern California football player. He died of cancer Mon- day. Riddle, •'7, played for the Tro- jans in the early 19508, aa center and linebacker. He was also a former mayor of lbJs city. Seeking Title - NBA Star Murphy Top Baton Twirler aa.. Start Miiier LOS ANGELES -Willie Miller, a three year veteran from Colorado State. will· start at tbe wide recelver spot normally oc- cupied by Harold Jackson when the Los Angeles Rams open their NFL pre-season schedule Satur· day night, coach Chuck Knox an- nounced Wednesday. DENVER (AP> Veteran Houston Rockets basketball s tandout Calvin Murphy is shoot· mic to be the best male baton 1 twirlerinthecountry. Yup, baton twirler. The 5-10, 165-pound guard is / competing in the National baton , twirling championship which began Wednesday in Denver. Murphy won the Texas men's championship this year after slaying out or twirling competi· lion since he was a teenager. ··Bat.on twirling Is the much harder sport,·' the ei&ht-year Na- tional Basketball Association veteran says. "ConcentraUon 1s the key word in twirling and you have to be a more complete athlete." The Denver toumamenl will be the last hurrah in Murphy's baton twirlina career. the »- year-old athlete said. And he's likely to win the naUonal cham-pionship before he retires. Murphy said be got into twirl- inJ as a Connecticut five-year- old who didn •t have much choice. Newport Logs Polo Wins NORTH MIAMI BEACH- Jam• Beraeson scored 18 Coals in three iames aa the Newport Beach boys water polo team completely dominated euly ac- tion in the national Junior Olym- pics competition here in early round action. Newport scored tbree lm- preat.e victories. never being cballmc: by any of the three foes it faced and acorina in double flames In all three 1amn. Beraeaon scored three &oals in a 14.S CJPeftlna victory over host North Miaml Beach Tuesday then came back wtt.b eight. in a 27..J ""1t ~Hollywood, Jia. and antn. ln • 21.f triumph over Madllcn, Wlic. ln Wednesday'• 1a1M11. .,, Newport wW play Aon .AtbOt, Mlcb. today and StUto.,s Frid~ to cronelude th• week•lon1 ~ "l was bullied into it," he said with a erin. "If I had to think about starting it today, I wouldn't dolt. Or lf I had been 10 years old l would have i&nored it. All six of my mother's sisters were twirlers and they tboueht It was the thlng tor me to do.•· He competed in three state aae group champi0Mhip1, twirled the baton for the band In junior and senior hieh schools and once performed at halftime for the Buffalo BUia in the National Football League. But isn't bstoo twirlln1 just for sissies? "There wu eome tea1in1 when I wu in junJcr bltb, but I waan't bothered muob because they knew 1 woold punch them out. I had a repuLAUon of bandlln1 myself pretty well." In blab school~ Jet bis basket- ball prowess silence any barua. ment. ''One Ume a new l"Y la town was uldq'wbo the alu'/ wuout there in the white unJform,' · Murphy recallfd. ..B• played butetball for anotber sehool and the nnt time I saw b1m I accnd 45 points atalnat blm. •• Murphy. who hu a'ffl'aae4 more Uwl 15 polnts a 1am• in each ol his eipt NBA MlllODI, aaya be oeculoQalty atta ruted by his Rockets team mat.a. • The Rams will face the Min- nesota Vikings at the Coliseum. Miller was signed by the Rams as a free aaent during the off· season. He played six games with the Cleveland Browns last year before being released. Wlllte So# r ... 111e CHICAGO -Mike Hararove capped a six run upri!ing in the 12th inning with a three-run homer as \he Texas Rancen de-f~ated the Cblcago White Sox 12-10 for the.Ir fifth strai1bt vic- tory. Toby Harrah opened the Texas 12th with • pop fly double to shallow left field oft Don Kirkwood, 2-1. Harrah moved to third on a lfOUDdout and, after olnch bitter Ed Kirkpatrick walked, Bump W1U1 hit a sharp one bopper which went tbrough shortstop Alan Ban- nilter's le11. Jim &mdberi then bounced a slnll• to left, aoorlnt plocb run- nel' Keith Smith and sendlng Willi to third. Harrrove tbeo slammed a tbree ran homer. bis fowtb ol the year. Wlllle Horton hit a sacrifice fiy later ln the in· blnlto flnlah out the acoriq. The Wblte Sox came back with rour runs ln t.he bottom of the 12th. . B~wen Quits at C~ Polo ~h Get,a Cue1ta /ob T«TY Bowen, wbo bu been the wa* Polo coacb at Costa Mesa Hllb far tbe put nine years. ba accepted a position u aquatics direct.or at cu.ta Collqe lD San LUll Obispo. B 11•umtb.llntwdutlesJan. 3. "I'll coatlt\ue at Coit• Meaa t.hrou•h the water polo 1eaaon." say.a Bowen. as. r - 8Qb Shupp, wbo wu recenuy selected to tat• BUI Pauull'• place a. tbe1'\lltllll•' awtm~ coach, will alaO bandit the wa~r polo .-itJ• tri 1978 •• '1'4 llk• to lhe aoedll thl.llD t.o prtncls>al 8ob Pacter ad athletic directer Bib Hunt.er tor thelr Ullatance and a1io atbltUe ~JlmH~~·a•aatd&owc. 'lbM ol BOWen team.a bave ruched tho CIV. quirtel'fhialt tn the put nine~ bUt M ~ thla fear't club to be oae Ol the beat ID t.be aehOOl'a blltoirj. No 8eholarshlp for Yardley • • Newport ReaUlent Faikd io MQke Team EdJCor'• Note. TM mockm ero-IJJOrl• Wto ti pr<Mding fr'. tertaJnm~t. qvoltt11 and oc- cadouolJ11 ~on a ICOle nevn t»/ore . atlaJned m Che world o/ cdhldfc•. Y.t lpOrtl o/ da11• l10'W bl/ olao bad QrfGt mo- mnn and ltor ~""".,.'· To-da11 our look . ot thoH do~• /OCUlllU °" Georo• \'Clf'dUv By BOWARD L. HANDY Of TM o.llV "9t...,, He couldn't make the freshman buketball team at Stanford Unlvenil)' because a 5-10 current Oran1e County newspaperman beat him out of the final place on the roster. But be did 10 on to become the firat player i.n NBA hla· tory to acore more than 2,000 point.a in a 1ln1le HUOD, (2,001). His early ambition was to play on the U.S. Olympic baaketball team in 1"2 and he by-pused three years of Going Back IN SPO-=-Ts profeulonal pJay tO'teek that coal. But he suffered a broken hand Jn a pickup came at Loa Alamltoe Naval AJr StaUon durina the Kortan wat and tt coit blm thla opportunity. He cmce held the Paclftc Coast Conference alnale 1ea1C111 acorin1 record few«> minutes after breaklnc a mark set by an Uluatrlous predecessor at Stanford, Hank Luisetti, but USC'a Bill Sharman eclipsed hil mark the 1ame night. The man in queaUon is Georae Yardley, a araduate of Newport Harbor Hllh School who never had a col- leae basketball scholarablp deaplte bis outatandin1 careeroothe Farm. Perhaps it was the diaap- GEORGI YARDLEY pointment. ol not muin1 the t•m u a freshman that sparked Yardley to areater beJ~ a • aopbomore when he WM named All·American. He repeated aa a Junior but an inJu_rr coat blm a tblrd- atraJCbt 1electJoa u a senior when be w• c1ptaJn of the Stan.ford team. .. As 1 yearlln& al St.anford, John Hall beat blm out ol a place on ~ rmter and be con~ted en hll ••ineer· log major. When be llCOftd 2,001 points to break Oeorae Mlkan'a NBA stn.Se season scorin1 record, 1t waa hla bl11est UtrW In professional basket- ball. People at1ll remember hlm a the ft.rst man to break the barrier. •'If I have any cbarac- teriltlc, I tb1nk it is in not t.ak. Ina an)'thlna too seriously,·· Yardltly aaya by way of ex- pla1n.ioi bll dbappolntment in pot makinl the U.S. Olym- pic team. When he broke the con-, ference KOrinl record. Stan· rord was playtn.1 Cal.llarnla and the •ame finished ahead ol the USC.UCLA rame by about an hour. "l broke LaileW'a record by ftve points," be recalla. ··But BW was c:loee to me and when they cot the ne•• report that I bad brok n tbe r«Ol'd. be wart back ln the 1ame and broke my mark by three poJnt.J (238). .. Yardley played pro basket- ball f« HTID years and was named to the all-star team in six of thole MaaoruJ. "It's nice to get lndivldual honor1, .. he a.ay1. "B\lt when you share them with team- mates by winning team championships, \bey mean much more becWM you can always ahare them.•• His most vivid mtmOC"J of team eomSM!titloa tn the NBA was a pl11oft aer1• between Syracuse and Botton. He w11 with Syracuse at the tJme. ·•we almost won lt," be re- caUI. "We spllt the first alx cames of the playoffs. each team "1nninf by about 20 points on its home court. ··we had them beaten with 30 seconds to play in the final eame ln Boston but we mis- sed a layup and made a cou- ple of effOrl and tbey beat ua by one pomt. Botton defeated Ml.llDapolla lo four atraJlht for the cbamplonsbJp." At present be ls purau.inl tenn1a u a seniors doublea compeUtor. He also plays mixed doubles with wJle Diana and has four ebil~. all interested in tennis. Being a team man all the way, Geor1e Yardley covet.a his doubles play over slnales as he did team accomplish- ments over lndlvidual maru. But he would Uke to face John Hall on the teMil court m singles. He (eels be could atone further for that dlaap- pointlng cut as a freshman at Stanford. MEM;ORIES OF CRASH. ••• O.tl.Dued from Pai• 81 now 70, retired and llvini by himself In San Lula Oblapo. "I never thlnk about it (the crash) until I hear of another crash." says Hughes. who suf- fered deep scalp cuts and lee wounds and was in the hospital 10 days before returning to San Lula Obispo. ·•1 can remember talkina to the pilot before we took off and he aa- s ured me it waa a low ceilina ol fog and there would be no pro- blem. He had done It many timea before, he said. But what be didn't tell me wa& that the co- pilot wu taking the plane up,'' says Huahes. Hushes, who coached at Cal Poly for 11 years and retlred six years ago, WU awarded S80,000 whlle Nettleahlp was 1ranted quite a btt more. "Johnny should haveJotten what he did, he was one three of the aiarvtvora that wu really aerlowtly lojured," aays HaPel. **'*' Nettlesbip, the sportl editor ot the San Luis Oblapo Telearam- Trlbune for the put 27 yean, w.. Jn a Toledo ho1pltaJ alx months. He bad to have eye aursery. be had a brot:Jaw and a broken cheekbone both arms were broken-one ln three places. But lhe wont tnJury came wben bla typewriter pummeled Jnto hls chest when the plane craabed, caving In hi.I cheat. He ltllJ hu problems brnthlna, at times. A sloW·talttna. but efftclent man. Nettleabfp, now a. aaya GILSTOAK JOHNNY NETTLESHIP he'llnevernyaialn. --tine next to him. It could have .. I wasn~t too wild about flying been me," 1aya Nettleahlp. before the accldeot," If.fl Net· The injuries of that to11y Oc- tlesblp. "My life baan't diaqed tober nipt in ueo bave healed, much. but I hate tbeio (planes> but the memories remain. more tban l did before the era.ab." He took a train from Toledo to tbe West Cout and bu not been .in a plane 1lnce that Oc:tober nisht. And be 1911 H could baveeui- ly be4;I> an the death Uat. "Tbe ID&U.181' of the team WU slttlnf iA 1111 Mllped seat. I told him he wu1IWQa In my aut. but he said •there's a sen across from •me, wby don't you alt there?' I trted to talk him out oC the MA, butbewouldn't&etuP. .. I sat rllht uro1s from him. Ho dled and to dld Pete Bachlno (a Cal Poly boolter) 11'bo WU alt• Sports on TV TONIGll'J' 8 p.m. (t> -P80 SOCCER - The Aztecs meet the Whl~ at Vancouver. 9:3)p.m. (22)-PROSOCXEa -~ta of a match between Dula&uri and Braunachwet1. taped in Duilbur1, Weat Germany. . 10 p.m. (22) -BODNG - A lronso Hayman me eta Youncblood Williama in • JuniM mlddlewelabt bout from the Spectrum ln PbUadelphla. Taped. ' -~eball Standi~s Cbicqo Phlladelphta PiU.burlh SLI.ouls OCC Lights Iiuialliid; Gauchos Get Top Cager. Ora CoHt CoJl•r.•'• football ·~~~ Ml ltl new h ta and fool· co dJ Dkk Tue tr 11y1 lho ltnt 1'be li ftl aev I ot the atadJum, at SJOO. • ha• been inc-ttned nJnt fOO\ candlH to 60·toot It me \.bat. tho •~lum wW be · t.un• brlaht.tt Wt comin& aeU!Xl &.b n w ln ma. "We loOlred at t.b oe• llthta ror the finl lime the ot.hrr nl1ht. and at 'WU spectaeu!ar," aaya Tucker. "The n -CRAIG SHEFF ''•r r. " c.u ,.,. hlktt· •aJ m ant ...... h71 Ondloe c adalWll.W,1a. G,.. .. ~1 , .. co•• fro• ~ Brea, Ntw Ya. Bt bd pl..._. to •• '° lllftl .• bal dkb:l't ..... u.. .,. . ....... Pod 1 ... rd II t.Hre la ID U.t c 11 ,,, .... ,. M.W1aa ... H '• reaJ '8k'lr ... lbe Ml1 q...U.able t11ta1 la lal ........ •Motbt1." .M.utau -w a1M let IUft Pal• wr,_ , .. ,) from 8aat1 AD• Co0e1e. ·A-. 1W1tn aklt MeEl11&111 <S.11) .... ,,. ..... , .. ,) ..... .,... Tim Kii~ CM) rec.n. If GrHD IMI to daH, tt'• eoncel•· 1ble tUt lloUl,.1aa woo't be u • rver after lie nrat ..-ad at the tlate toarney lD Fnlilno am year. ¥Ill~ ttre fi eld dauled under the new li1bta " Tucker says occ·. stadium la the best football facility in Oranae County. JC GRID OUTLOOK: Derendinc South Coast Conference football champlon h1J ·no. bu 33 players re· tuminl from lut year·a ~2 t.eam, in· cludinc t.aUback Mike Charles <467 yards, 7 TOI) ••. Cerrltol has 28 let· termm back (10 starters) and figures l~~~- t.o be 1tron1est at quarterback wlth I: sophomores JCevla Hamilton and Mark Qudler, who alternated In '76 ... Eut LA Colle1e will have 27 lettermen returning and Is stronaest in the otrenaive line with OCC STADIUM GETS NEW LIOHTS. "1 don't think there's any que.stion about it. We don't have a track sur· roundln& our field. so the fan.a are on cop ol'the act.ion. The field la one of the beat around, there's plenty of conve· nlent parking and the lighting is ex· cellenL lt'sjust a great place to watch a came,•' says Tucker. four starters back. -------------------- Four steel poles, each containin& a bank ot 24 lights, are located on each 1lde of the 7 ,600-aeat stadium. Former OCC quarterback Dave White had an impressive spring for Oreson State, but injured a knee on the final day of practice and wtll mils the um season. White was a starter for the Beavers at the end or last season. OCC wilJ scrimmage under the Ugbts Sept. 3 (against. Rlo Hondo> wiUt the Pirates playing arch rival Golden West in the first game under the new lights Saturday, Sept. 17. "l went down with the knee i11jury late in the sprint game," say! White. "I had had a very iood game to that point, but waa burl on one of the final plays of the day." Artie Green, rat .. one ol tbe better blab echool •uarda la tbe cOUDtry, wllJ He had knee surgery a short time later. He'll relumforthe '78season. Cheeking Area Greens WOMeN'IGOL" I It Vt Ne COAST CC Ouot O..v Tour,...,,..,t ltwo tow -.m of ....._I 1oross1-1 .. n. CeUtcMl, Mercie Stortr. 11.,.•t• Betty Zimmer,_,, Elal,.. M<Oonn•ll IOld llAn<h CC>.,,., 1 Ethabetll Horner, M•rltyl\ "nthony ,u .. h Rettv Oeuh<ll l~nt• An• .CCI Mell•w Morr" t~n Oi<tQo CC I ,., , J Allee ltofldy, M<tr9 S<llw•rt, II""~" Dorl• 9oyla, W rtOft ,.,.Utewl (Arrowllea4 CCI., .. !Heil 1 ... i.n ••ttanu .... Ku10. Oe vla•, VU"lt Vl,.lnte For'Det, Miu Ee rl Merlin 18111 tanyon CC) 12'; 2. Cite) RUlll ~. """' 01-, Ouetlt ICey ~-!laMe .t.n. CCI, Mat .. WllllM\1 (Meu Verw CCI, Kele Hel"'°"• ._,. ~. 9Ufflt M•r .. Bergllwter IS.Me AM CC>. JHn Y erdt.., IBIO tan'(Oft CC), 121; 4. Sflll'l•'I' ~. o..de "°""· .-Sb Greu Ma"'"" lhnta Ane CC), Barbka ~ I~ Vero. CCI, 116. Crlu crou TournaMent: A '°lltlll I, Lele "r-meft, JI; 2 Hel_. IUlley, lJ, J. Katy G¥c1Nt', tJV,. a ,.11q11t-1. Ar•-ao111 ... 11. n ; t Illa) ,.ran Strldllff, Marve Weed, Jl; • Je ... Tav\ot,U. c "'19111-1 MeriOft "•••a. n• .... t . GeorttM 1.ltttMn, 1••11; J. 111•1 Maro•••• Mc1Cen1le, M•rtere• M.,,....,:ao. D l'ti91'1-1 CINI Slltrtev .. MK!>. a n•HllAI Velotl. ~. l. '°llylllt St""""'• JO'.'\;• Maic1N HUfldley, J1 B•ltfr Nin• Tourn• 1'1tflt ; A I'll.,,.. t. K11Y Gardner, M"'; f. (Ua) Glew YI o.l'lt. Allu ltolldr. lt' t 8 l'llQllC-1. l!Mmlc• No.<ler. ,.Vt; '· Cllrll Wln!Ofl, u . 3. (tie) KIY Ro«lttrti, o..tde Horne. '.16 C 1'1'9111-1 Mlr99r.t M<ICenll•, >•. 1. Tltelme C•rllo" JSl-t, 1. ErM1ttn1 VatdH, 3' C Fl'91\1 I. JNft Metlltll, JJ\lt; t. 111•1 LV" .....,.11, Mlr9erei ~r. E,,..,,,,.. V•lclff, J1 0 l'litflC-1 Softle Kett..,, al"-; t. •t••I Angle P..-11, Sl>lrley Eeneul\, JI $AHJUAHHll.UC:C: ''''' (ro\\ Tovrnernent llr1t Fl10flt I Dott•el.AIFe .. r 61 , 2 lllel E ""' 8-, Donia DeVr1e1," ~cOflCI l'llgltt-1 .-0.le Mani"• .. ; 7 M•rce oarv ... ;, DI,..""'""'" ., '"'"' 1'119'11-1. Dot l'ogeny, •• t Cllrll BtNn, U, I ewnk1 Meftoney, u "'°""" ,.,,.,.,_ ,, e11"" "'-•"· ., ; 1 1.oulte llootl\, M; 3 (tlel Thal me Ward, Vl1'91nl1 llMtr .... COITAMUAOC: Tra-11one1 Meclet Tour11ame111· "'"•11111 An" P1ppH al\cS Jean Pelrldl -llH at 210 and Wiii pl•fOlf fofltll~, 3.J.1 Toutl\ef1'ent: " """" I. M•rv Zlmnwr,,...,,, ~.-.; 7 l'r•nlll• Dunt n ;J Mtlllf'Slllma,H'h B FlltM 1. ,,.,.G~ .. ""'; 1 ~ .... lean .. ....._, 1. w-... An• de'10• .. 3) C l'llglll I. S•ndy Mc"arlend, J0''1; 1. htty 81••-•, II J. ai.....,.~.11Yt D F'lltM -t MMv teem, H\o\; l - C.rnellelC_,,,iJ;1 ... ltY arown, ).I, MHAVl"O• CC Better IAlt f1f ,..,,..._ T-n• ment-1, Pllyltlt '"'""· Mery l'othergjll, Virgin!• I(._,, .. : J. Ml< hi u.rna. .... a.tM ...U. l.OUIM Wit'°"• '1; 2. Ille! J.., 0.Wlrt, O•orol• l'•rmer, Ha1el H1rdl11Q; Chertolte W-. Hofl•M• Cerlln, 01-....,._, ...... •2 $troll~ Play TOOJmement· A ""Ohl (Gron I 1 Pl\vt111 Smith, tO l Shlrlev C:.lleQha<'I, '1 !Hell · 1 Ma9-11•• \m11n, 1S, 2. Pe11y llo!IMtt, a l'fffm.n llrvl,.. c.o.u CCI, in: 1. Be• ...,_....,., t!my lurc'1a !Mt•• Verde CC>. Helan Ptarllan, Sylvia Pr ...... I IMtu Va'* CCI, 1:n; • f:ll•11 8red-ll, ..... Lff<\tv .. rdt ISanra AN CCI. Margaret Oelle<I\, L..clne PetMI'_,, (S.111a Me CCI UJ J •O and Jiii TourM ...... I I Pal -Ootlle Nido, Don -Jwn• Mou, U•; J. llOO I/Id SoObla BarcSU.y, 8111 -,JVlty e'1ksen, 12', , Harry and Cllarftllt. Lowe . .li>M Md •••• a,....._, t•; • 01<:11 -Ll11 Br-•, l'ted and 04erl1 Mc:IS"rlClt, 130; s BOil and MHlhcl Wiibur, Don and Pal'1 Glllenl,UI. Twllltlll Jack and Jiii l'ro111 11ite-1. Ille) II" and I.Ale Collier, lot> ~ 1ettY Coomt!M; J-and lhy 0·~01111or, v1.ca11 .,.., JI"' $9titYle, '3; l . ..,._,. -~n tla111tlt•r • Cra lt a11d lttly Wiii~: "alp!\ el'd Plat Kreft. ltutll-.d How.vd HM(IHll, tJ. 18'11 •-1 ev eftf Jtcl Wagi1r, am• Md Mellrle Scllmlot, t1. t l'•n end eot PhllllPI. J.,. w Da,,. Graf, ... J. Slllrlo e11c1 Dlek Wwtl..-, tCtl\ ..... Deft "-·ti; •. Rlllll _., Jtcll HWllM, Vanfllll\ a,.. 1tarMlll.t1 Whw ..,,, "OHi ln¥1 .. tloflal-" 1111111-low orou-t. Mr•. Jemes it......-18itrmucla OUllHl 11; f Mrl. O.W• llllwdllll IAllNndalel 12 -,,.,_,_-.. " """'-(()elifl'*'lll ... t. Ml'L A. w.111 (Mfu Vef'INI. I '''°"'_,_ lf'Cl'S-l. Mrs. w. CoMO'I • CHllCl.-l '°; 1. Mn Pl .... 11 CS.ma ...... ,.,; tow ""-' Mn. A. ~· (Lot CoyaUotl II; 1. Mn.. Joe 019K CC•l•Dllu)n, Me...-.111o111 IOW oro1s-1. ~THI IS; t. Qelte ir.rt• •. 1-net-1. ,....,..., IM<>l•Y 70; 2 Mlr_,.~10. Los Alamitos Race Results ..... ........ , Tlmt 101S "'RJT ltAU U!! y•rd> 3 yur Aho 11 ... -l'MKy Altair Ir llr old•AUI> Clalml1t9 "'""inoo tlal>Y,TIOBM'E"1e,MIUSH8_., 110 Aoval aoD IH1nl No Kratclln. ... CllarlteG<ey IC:.rdiot•I -51allatarooeu> Tlmt-19.U AIM> Ran I.Ill• 1.uncn, lllg M T ru George, Scl!Mlno a.,., Mr. Be< C•tch, Cllal,,.., 110dl•1 Tull llo $Cr~ Llft11V "1CN11t, c;.or11r Jet, Ollcl>um Min, 1Ctlc""9 u lllllC\I 7 .... "•val ... & •· C:Mrtle°'9Y,l'll4$1MO. saCC*O RAC:a-4CIOY•'<l1. 1 n•r olds. Ollmllll ,.« maiden\. Pur)e \2100. Slla"'AiOnO tCMclOrel : S.O l"IO 190 Hello Gr_,., cTr......,.I UO 1 .. Oarvnan cPeullne)) 2 eo Time 10 tt Aho Ran IA Oonla Mind Mfo'l\ln Third ......,,.., Jell\ Larry Ml .. Tlf)Cly T •mmy Red Men ~~u Ma•l••I Rule S<retclwd Jeh Oeti•~. ••mllv Doe, Rl.aM ..... ,JeUConlm•nd TNIRO aACC -0 y•rd• J y .. r old•. Cla1m•no l'llrM~IOO Ml llldclle ("Ill-I .. .. •OO •to RoOelle TillY IWatOI Tl""' 20.!0 uo 710 uo Al'° Ran-lllocll t~ Cll1n, I'll Prow II, QI\ Whal RhYlllm Hutlllf111 Houw, IC•llv ~IM , • !.er"',,.. -l'IYlll " ... I, o.ncty Frostv, Meoft'tklllclaM<lft U lucta ••tt ~ A )..ff\ DKll Hettll,,-.$1111.M. savutnt "Ace • Y•rdt. 1 y~er Oita & up AllOWMU. PurH \6000 D•I HHI .... (ROU91\I 1.0 •IO HO Smootl\ KlllV IAlllto<ll '60 • 60 Or Tw1e1tws CTr...,lll"tl J.IO Tl,,,. 2021 Alw R.,.-Lil\11 l'er.cy "-· Mr, Cort OKI!, a..nH .. atlY. "1 ... CI0011, Roo • ., L.auncllff Scr•tclled -Two To Go eternal ~ RllDY (CMdol• I • tOHTH • "c• -.oo yard~ J va.v Oeddy W-1 CC.II l Tlmt-JU7 Joo 1 eo olch. Oalmlnv I« lltttet l'llrw $2100. • 10 Cre"'aRCICUt IOtlombal AllO ...., -Jol\nllv tollltar, 11urrv H-. TM Wit.Md ol 14, Tripi• Boom. 01--.:1 araceltt, Gr.Sy De, Fav• Boy krlltCMd-Slreet l'lgllttr, ,.ren'lv TllJ, ..._...., Alll 1'4ar -.WJ Ul»dA1oM.-.a .. a-1 RM ...,,,•10111.M ,CXIWTN•AC:C-uoyardt ,., •• , elcl._.\l_llftU. l'llrw~ v11.1,.....,_ ,.,...,,,.., u .. no •20 '°"'IC.Cle IGenlorel > .0 7 IO Ory P.Cclt (MllCl'lelll S 00 11--11.M Al• lllll -"""*'•.>.ti, Hot SI•. Hutti., IM<ll. AlwJy l<I• Noser~ ... "'" llAC:• -'°° yeru. J vur .... , A uP Clal,...1119-l'or 1111 .. , A ..,.,.,., ....,... uaoo MIHGoUOM (8-SI 700 00 ''° "•"1•11 ,...,ly IRCMQl\I IHO •to Ot""O' HOlitr-ll<nlfl!C) J IO Ml• "'8N9V P ... ICerdotal C>fo Prl.t1 CMv1 .. 1 Tlnw -20.» 1060 SCIO J .. 10• .... uo llttrHI, eunnv•1 llUMY. I,,,. t(""y T-Scr41t~ -Tldv'• Ola'99• '11--. •Cft!N ltecllat & 4-MIM hllltY ...... ,.. .. ,.. ... NINTM RACa -UO yllfds 1 ytlr owt••1111.C11lml119. ""'1it-2100, Kaltf Gofcl lltnlgMI 2UO 1060 4 •• Aoedw0-.. ILi ...... ) U0 ) It ~'I' Sii• ........ (MllclWlll t 4t Ttrrw-IUI · AllO RWI -H1v8 Good Dey, 0.¥1M P•t, °'80e Tiny, '°""*.,. Tllr .. 1, My K 1119 Mtllw, Leo l'rl.,., Tllr" .. 0\¥1 $(ratched -C"alt Ootdq111Jt, 8 Ull'I Ar...a, Mr. Nlp'n Tuck u •ucta l·ICallf ............ c11e,....1Wlduu•. At 19'1dence f, *· D Fl._,. t, Bettv liarewl,,k•I, n: l Jec:~l• Trucluu. J.J, 3 Elffnor H•l'IOrl.~ t!••" Hol•I Tournem1111 A 1'119'11-1. Mel"' Rl1ley ~; 2 tt1•1 Allce ltolldy, K•lllerlM Tu•n.r, >J\lt 8 l't19h1-1. Huelle WrlQllt, JS, 1 Ille) levertv C.r,..,etl, Merllou HooellOolft. u ~ 8 FllQlll IGn!H' I Oo"I• Morrl•, 100. 2. Jan Dowe", 10) IHtll I, Do\ fie J-. 1• l K•llY ....,.,.,,., 7S C FllQM •Gr4>HI I June ...... 103 1 H•I..., hrQet, 106 tNtt) I .. tty G<11w-.12: r ~ 0ev11, n. Alamitos Race Entries Donahue T~ Speak Head football coach Terry Donahue wUJ be a cuest at the UCLA dub of Orange County when tbe &roup &athera OD Sunday. Auc. 14 at the home of past president Tom Thrasher in Villa Part. Donahue ts expected to brin1' a conllnaent or players. on the UCLA 1quad and llvln• ln Oran1e Co\llltY to dla· cu.11 the 19'rt seaaoo wlth alwnnl aQd 1uall. Tlcketa for th• tveat are M and tftcl\ide bot dot.I. peanuts, beer ana aoft.drtQk.t. A D aleland bucl wtl1 PtQvlde mtUlc. Street. lot1Uon 11 at 1l'n2 Patrician Drive In: VW• Pan: R•enatlona aDd IDlwm•UaD. may be ltlid bY c111UG1 cl\ab ~· Cl taf L•• Jh1n1oa (l1NIJT), Mtb J.ynet Cll04trJ ar Sandt Im· .onr.aao (13N14t). "ANo+OSANJOAQUINOC H.J T__.._t A l'llOM-1 Kay Mey. JtVt. a l'llollt-1. Rosa ltol>I,,_., ilf, C l'llglrt-1. (tie) AllNI l.•IMllar,let1vVIU9l\lrl,8' I •en ""'"• feurnamt1tl : A "110111-1 Ja(kle Krell, •o.-.. e "'lgfll-1. l'flll ~r. U; 2 flltl II•-Vrtc<ltlUfn, lllltfl Mc:IUntev, 21v.,, JucfYMenNtn.a . c l'lltflt-1. ltkl ....... $mllfl, Carol.,,.. W•lt••'•· '9. 0 """'4 -1. K•V l.e\llWll«, U. ILNIOU•t..cc Ount O.y «-... ,., N iii of .....,._,, lo.Mil -1, M ldlstA. "" COM Cit C..llero CCJ1 Jan• .. _,._ MalllM Nevl11 (Nlltalen Viele W, t.e; t 1"-~ .._,_. M«tlfl I .... Ve .. 1 CC). MIMI W11--.o, CIJlllY ~ t~lstMll VltJe CCI 1,, (Nttl_, OflWIY BarCIWttl, tltt'f "arley IAMN Vtrff CCI, lfllT Wltti-, .. tty h!M .... ....._. CCI, "1· t. ..... O!Mtr, ... "'"" <1tv111t C.Ut CCI. a111111a !<ell, ~ . twttel.IOllO f'ld1Pl111 tT..-1 BtrtnllY IUpll.tM I Alemli..eot IC.clot.al NeY• •ti IHtrO ...-1 l'eo4lll ICl't•r> ~ .. Gilttt14111 IRtlofll I ,..,, 'lllOffr (tCnfehll Ot. ICCllMy C"M.in Ot1I J•.,. "*' IWl'dl '---m 111 122 111 •n 112 112 ttt 1n OM. Y PU.OT rll.1 PVBUC NOTICE l if 0:¥iif41n• • Fl • .. $ . , .. Boei• Hies on Commeireial Wings tAPt -DJv1r11tru0 waa wattlu•·otd , but ·O>lzip1us1. 1rudlaUMr ot alrllnt flttlt, ra of prOlperJty d a aoaliQI com m -.i,,.1 mark«. 0..p(t. e1rl)' ell v11'1ll1caOon .aoru thal JMl!Jded 1utb pro u "people mov.,..," C'Oftl = ... vie• and bydrotoll1, '1 prwpeoeu rema.tn at to the PQICO&er aJruaft llO !-'9i. " H tra.dlUonat· ly ti• MICl more U.an ball the WUl'ld'1 j liner market. acJll tar naor. comm relaJ planes th1n Lockheed and McDonnell Oou&Jas, I main coml*.!ton. combined. ··o;venlfinlioo hu nol bffn notably successlul for Boe.i.nt." says John L. MacKen&ie, dlrec· tor of reseerch for Fatter & •nhalt, a Seatll•·bued broker11• hou e. 8oeln1•1 at· tltu • 11y1 MaeK nJlo. h .. bffn "let'I lti k lo lh thlnll that WI really know and undvl\and and do w•ll 11t.'' Otht-r brolu1n and Boc&n1 of· Uch•ll a ree. BOEING IN "THE boat pos1· lloned eommerelal aircraft monutacturer with 'h• are.teal amount of operaUnc leverac• In the bus1Ms1." 1ay1 Bear Steam. Cl Company. a N 1w York broil race. And 1p1akln1 recently to lt'CuriU analyst.a in Ntw York, Cbalnnan T.A. Wiison •a.Id the coml)My expect.a II percent ol lt.1 bualoeaa lo Involve alri>lanes durtna th• n.xt 10 years. "'n>e Impact of our other pro- ira•rm la not yet 1reat," says company 1pokesm1m Pete Bush. "But tbeae proarame eet more pubUc1ty for •ales volume than traditional on . " BOEING T1JRNED somewhat away from aircraft proarama early in lhe 1970s when the jet market turned aour and the firm found it.1111 without enouah work ror tu 100,000 employea. Employment plummeted to about 38,000, but Boeinc has come back and now hu more than 00,000 worken. Amoai lhe divenlflcauon el· forta h•ve been Boelnc Computer Services, whlcb bu mo,.. than l, soo cu1tomer1; Boe'ina En1lneerin1 and ConatrucUon. which make& concrete ·inltalla· Uona at nuclear site•. a Boeina research effort into orblUn1 aolar power station.a, and efforts to de- velop the "jetloll," a pusenaer hydroloU. BOEING ALSO OWNS a 15 per· cent share of Peabody Holdina Air Fare Hikes Okayed Five Airlines Win Additional Increases WASHINGTON <AP> The t1ona1 five-tenths of 1 percent for five of the carriers. dates between Aug. 7 and Aue. 22 Civil Aeronautics Board <CABl bu approved fare increases of eiabt·l.entN or 1 percent for all domestic airlines and an addi· But the five carriers are not ex· peeled to change their higher fares until other alrlines also file for that increase, as they are ex· peeled to do in tbe next month or so. In approving the higher rates, the board rejected a complaint rrom the National Passenaer Traffic Assoc1ation, which Con· tended the increases were too hi1h. * * * 'I'W A Requests London Fare Reduction THE APPROVAL Wednesday follows a ralse of seven·lenlhs of 1 percent granted for all airlines laal month. After that approval. the airlines llled for another eight-tenths of J percent raise, with five of them subsequently askmg for 1 3 percent. The board said that without lbe raise, the rurlines would earn 10.2 percent on investment. The eight-tenths of 1 percent raise gives them a return or ll.6 per- cent, and at 1.3 percent, It would be 12.07 percent. The board considers 12 percent return adequate and fair Trans World Airlines has cut its fares between San Francisco and London by offering a $440 roundlrip fare, pending approval by the U.S. and British govern· ments. This is the third airline rate m crease approved this year by the CAB. In January, it granted a 2 percent hike in domestic fares. * * * Cm Soughl The fare will offer travel to London for SS32 leas than the low· season economy roundtrlp fare. Under lhe new eight-tenths of l· ... percent increase, here are some sample one-way economy clus rares from Was hlnaton: San Franclsco, $198, up $1 .57; Boston $.57, up 45 cents; Atlanta. $69, up 54 cents; New Orleans. SlOO, up 80 cents. By American American Airlines plans t.o of· fer a $'99 coach rare and an S89 economy fare between Los Angeles and Chicago, effective Sept. 1. The rate, available only on TWA's direct London flights, will ha vc certain restrictions. Minimum stay ls 22 days, ef fectlve Oct.. l , the minimum 1s re ducecl to 14 days. Ler8t,h of validity of the ticket is 4~ys. Reservations and payment musl be made 4.5 days before the date of the ntghl departure TWA will file with lhe Civil Aeronautics Board for a Sept. 26 -effective dale. THE nvE AIRLINES &etllng the extra hike are Eastern, American. Wes tern , Pan American IUld TWA. For com· petttive purp06es they are ex· peeled to sell tickets at the lower approved rate when the raaes become effective at varying Robert L. Crandall, the airline's senior vice president for marketing, said Wednesday that !!ome seats would be available on' all the airline's nights between the two cities. There are seven nonst.ops dally in each direction. The tares are subject to approval by lhe Civil Aeronautics Board. HOWTOIHJOY YOW YACATIOM Arter you have decided where you wtll go and ror how lonR. rollow these 11ug1utlon11 to insure having a better vacation Visit your physician for a check-up and advtce on which medicines you must bring with you ror any reaular or emer1ency need. At the 111me lime ,.l the Important "Booller Shot.I." to matte certain you are prot«ted ..-lMl the serious catchable disuses A.110. aet a dental check·up. Next, drop In and let u11 help .YOU elect a aood ftrst ald kit, an &ntl·bu1 Jollon aod your othel' peraonal producta which •t• so Important to havt away from home. YOV 01\ YOUJ\ DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you nud a d•llvery. We \fill detlvor pron>ptly wllbollt extra cbarfe. A IH•t many peop e rel1 on ua for thtlr health netd1. We. weJeome reque11tt for 4t11Yerf 1trvice and eharie accounu. PAM UOO PNAIWAC• , ......... ..... ' .... ,.,..., ~ ... 64.J; .... Report Supports Coal To Pump Water South LOS ANCELES <AP) A coal· fired electric power plant may be built to nm the huce State Water Pro- ject, a state official says. Gerald Meral, deputy director of the 1tate Department of Waler Reeouttee. aald no such plant.I have been built so far because It was believed they could not meet Calllomla'1 tough aJr 1uallly slan· darda. BUT A RECENT REPORT by UCLA'• lnaUtute of Geopbyslca and Planetary Physlca for the water a1en· cy and the State Enern Commlsalon eonclUded: ''W1tb a few reservaUona, it la in· deed t«hnlcally and polltically po&si· ble to build a 1,000.me11watt, coal· fired plant In Southern C-1ltornla." The water qehcy must f\Qd major new IOW'ces ol tlectrtc power by U183 to run U,e ,tant pumpa tbat tend Nortbtm Califorftla water to the south lhrouab theCalilornla Aqueduct. THE STATE WATE& Project 1enerata Oftly ebout 25 P,ercent ol lta own power needs by dams, and it la · expected to n.ed aeven btUlon kilowatt boura a year of power b)' 1-• However, one Of the problema wllh a ~·llnid power plan~tbe UCLA 1ludy 1iJd.1a that St would create aub- atUtlal air polluUoa and face 1ensth1 delays if challenged by environmen· tal groups. In addition, it may be difficult to find sufficient water to operate the facllity. theatudy saJff. PIVE SITES IN Callfomla are be· Inc considered for the proposed plant, all in a desert re1ton bounded by Barstow on the w .. t and NNdle1 and Blytbeontheeut, MeralaaJd. It the project were too ttroacIY OJ>- poted by envirocuaeotaJ intA11'11ta in Callf ornla, the study tu"etted that 1t could be built out or state where en· vt.roomentaJ requirements are less 1trtneent. Amon.i tbe out-of·•Ulte alt..,men- lloned ln the report were Emery County. Utah; White Plne. Nev., and Parker Valley, Arla. Accountants Plan Development ~eet The Orant• Count.Y cbapt.tr of the Natlooal A.lioclation of Accountants will bold a profaaionaJ de\telopment meet.lnl Wednetday, Aua. 10. at the A.tiahdm Shera&on. Tb• workshop e>peas at 4:30 p.na. , Speatera will f>e Dr. John Ooeiford · · and Dr. Grant W. N wtao trom Cal State I.e. Anloles. Dinner reservatlQnj 11\l.Y be made lh~Hbward Bland.~. Compan)'. a Jl'OUP that bou1ht Peabody Coal Company -lbe natloo'1 lat1est coal producer - from KennecoU Copper Corp While diveni!lcaUon bas not solved Boelo1'a lon1-torm pro- blems ol cyclical business, the company's performance bu lm· preaaed lnveston. Boelne stock has jumped from 37'AI early in the year to almost eo on the New York Stock Exchanie Eam1n11 per 1bare, wb1cb dip~ 11 tow u •T cents for 1eee. Jumped to 9'.85 ror 1976 from $3.60 the prevlOU5 year. In u.e flrat quart.er or 1977, earnlnas were nearly double what lbey were in the first quarter ol 1976 v ••• ••••• ' SALES APPROACHED S4 billion lut year. and Wl.lsan ex· pecta that tteure to eo even higher th.ls year. And Boeing bu reported that Jetllner sales for 1977 already ex· ceed the totaJ for 1976 Boeing ls developlna two new commerdal planes, the 7N1 and lheTXT. The 7N?, a derlvaUve o( the 727·737 class, would cost $:500 million to develop. the company eatlmatea. and would carry 160 to 180 passengera. The 7X7, sU.htly larger. would cost twice as much to develop because It would feature a new design WILSON HAS SAID Boeing will announce a producUoo pro- aram ,or one or the other wltbln a year. How does Boeing lead its com· petitors ln the com mercia1 market? "We're a little like General Motors," says Bush. "We have four basic models and our planes can be tallormade for almost any need. The 727. of which Boeing has sold nearly 1,500 is, says Bush. ··adaptable to nearly any route." WILSON FIGURES the world commercial airplane markel ln the next 10 years should amount &o $57 biUlon, with Boeing holding more than half of it. ''There Is a growlng require· ment to replace older jet lranaparta," say1 Wllson. "Some of the earlieet Jet.a delivered ln • the late 1950s and early •eo,, have already exceeded th• 14·1ear ltlespan common until now. ··Fuel consumption, noile and emissloo requirement.I are mak· ins it uneconomical to operate the older, leu efficient airer all " BOEING NEVEa RAS been as heavUy dependent on military proarams u Lockheod and other aircraft rnanufaeturers, but mlULary conatructJon dOes flt\lh heavtl~ ln 111 plans. Moll of Boeloa'• eurrent miUtary project.a involvo elec- tronic procrama, s~1 WUaon. D· cludin& the Airborne WarnJ.n1 and Cont.rot System, a proj«t that could brina Boetn1 ts bUlloo worth of. businua. WhUe Boein& b~ Umited In· volvemcnt in the Bl bomber pro- 1ram, the company has a creater stake In ~ aJt.ef'n•tlve erufae mlulle Pf'Olnm. ........... BOEING'S COMMERCIAL AIRLINE BUSINESS SOARS Every Type of Aircraft Made by the Firm fa Shown Ov~r 1,h e Countt'r HASDUsting1 l/p• and Do.., .. .°'i, Upf'd~.J • 1 UP U.O • ._ UP fl.A •\IJUp lt2 • v. Utt t4.) • •4 "" "* + tllll Up 11.t • 14 Up HI • V. Up 11 I • V. Up 10S • '4 Utt 10S • V. U, !OS + _!1 Up !0.0 : ;: ~ :1 + 4 U. I.> • -. Ult 1.0 • \lo Up • 7 • I UP ._. • " Up •> + I~ U. • J + i, U. 6 I + I'll Up i ,t • II. UP Jf • ~...,.. u MUTUAL FUNDS ·· 1 l Thuraday'• Cl Prl ·~ • 4C• •• ti AM' I ... t t.o ~ .. . ~I II 'a ' d .&: , :: II • IW ~ .. •I ._ .... :t.-=. 1'~ It .... ..... :;:J ... ~· ~ ,., ,, . w;; ........ ... ~,,, :" -·-.. . ~,, ......... 1\, ............ " . "' ....... . .. ....... ~-" ,, .,.. ... tt ,, • f ~=== '-: : ~ r. .. ~,. ltl • "' '/ " •"" ... 7 " "'" •11 ...... .J • i'1 m:a~ ... , , , ... "' .. "' ""'• ... ···-... ... 1 ,, •>"•. • -" '1 •• • ..., •• , 1~ »•• , A..... JI ,.., MleOI I • l a ,, .. + .. ... """ .. .. ' '°"' . . ~ 114 •If AoleM \ Ill t ... to•• ' I Aft!IM I • 1 H'• • '• ,,..... 11no .w »·· •1 A-•• I ... ,..,.. ~1•• -,.... AlftCMtl fO 1 .. IJ " I • 4'tftte• 1 ~ 1 s n"" ""'l'Clll 1 llO , ... ""-•' m i.-. ... ·--1'° .. 11 t+ 1"7 AAlrF•lt .~ • 11 -· lo ""'"'' .. t" to• ... • ~:~-; ,. ~ J"" ._ ~: """ ...... ' I • 11 IS'• AE,.. 306 • CllS d"-I .. l"IJlll 110 ., ''"' '• .. " I~ 1.... .. .... "' 481.,.. so • • IJ .... ..,..C.. 1.» I IS '"' • .. • =tlS . S 1l••t '• I 1''0, A .. 1 .. S1'tl ACy_., Ull • UA JS"O ""'01.U . 11 ll9... AOltT.t ... ,0 ,. JS'_._ ;110...IVI II 7'111 • AE..,_ 2.0. t .03' ,,,.. lie • ~=.,1::1: ·~ ~~: ~ • Am,.,.5"' 1 121 t t v. ' """'"pf •• 11*1 12~ "" /\Giid 1 'IM • ,, 7S t \It • A&T:" I J2 1' 11-. "' A 1"8 M t 11 ,,..,_ .... A J1111•. u21""•"' AGl11pf .W. 1 .....,_ ~ AHet'ftU .J6 I I "-, • " ~=\ ~1: i: :..: ~ A.._PI t I lf1Yt .• Anl"°'P ,'611 UA 12'4-\II Al'lllllvtt .20 I 11 Siio+ ... AMMICI .2Aa I 41 "°" " \lo AM_. .IS S Ill I~. * AmMQC.rt 6 234 • 'le A'4.CA UO I 11• 4611),, . ASlll' .tO • ., 1l'·• "' ,.,,. 110 • 111 ,,, ....... ~~:r:' "];s 1~ 'h. • 1 AnlSI" t.10 1 1• M" ATT • 1010 1•72 .,... ATTpt • n .... "" ATTpl lM. • ~ ~ '• ATTPI lit 121 SI" AWel-16 S " 11'1o • '• ~Wet pl 1 Cl 11000 1' ~::~~ 1.1~ I ~ :~ + 'lo ~rnno «> • " ""' Am.t•ll. I 4010 !O ll''> • v, Amiee 110 90 u-. -"" AMIC . IO S ff I•'·• • "' AM .. lllC •II Ill ""' • ... Ampco Ml I I IO't + l'o jl\mpe a \1 101 "' + \, Amt'9PC;p 1t I ', • • t Amtt• tu 1 1•1 n • 1•. ""'"pl .. • ..... '. Amtlod 2 JO 10 40 ,.., t 1 '11 Aini.. .A4 IO IO 9 + '-All('llrH 1.9CI 1 1'1 JI'• ... AndCI.., I • • " :::r.,1~ :~; J: ~~ ;·~ AnwtCo..J31 • . 11 ,,,., -• • Apeclle .70" 11 2•Vt + \..\ AIKDOll 10 tA .016 .... ·~~ .. " 1'111+ "" ,,,._ t..U U.S tHu V, -"'• 12 ,. .. ~ AptclOIO ... 1 • Jl\11 -~ =:t .. ~ ~ 1!~~ Arc:MO 20I> • ld6r It + t\ ArcUcl!l'll 1 z J~-~ Arllter . 1" J'4 • ~ ""''Fi I • ' 1•' -· .. • ._ I I 24 • !O 10 • • • ,_,_ Gl l.IO t 110 Jl"" • ~ ~~.:!" 1 '~ ;,, •• "' llmt<O I IO f J» 21\lo + 111 AN'llpl 110.. , ,. -... Arni< pt ; 15 I IJO SAV.-Ill ""'"'°' 111 ,, 1 ...... A'"'"" 1 • " a-.o-'"' AroOlrp ta 1 • ~-\'f 4ntlfl IO • n 1' Anlll\ll\lll I ., t ...... h AWt<O .IO t 102 17•h l'o Atl!IOll 1 '° • 11 ""' • "" AlclOG t '° 9 41 2•'"t + l'f ::r:;:o '° • ,: •;'• ... : A12EI 1.6210 IA 14 llli ::: i:cr•·•; io .: ~~ ~ ~ AllAq,( 3 IS •• .LAO tlllt . llllAcplt..IO. :rl "141• " All•Co 10 42 12-.0 + '• Allle0f11 .AOl9 Ml 7'"+ '-Aulmln AD 7 an ~+ "' Awe.CO J 14 161.o . AwcoCpwt •• JJ t).Jl-1·11 A«•llf no.. 1 '' ... Awe.Ill 410 , '7 ,.__ " Aver, .M 11 114 11 .... + \<o ,._, .10 ' ," 1~ ... .. .._ l.1014 -., ...... . -----~~, uoii~ ~~;i" Ddle .AOIO If .... \lo ........ 1 "' tCM.-Ill '"'" .Mt1 J7I •7 .... I ~ M 4 4 H • \'f ~ICo I l 4 1.-.+ Ill .,.., 14 ,., 11'--- llGI! t. 16 t 'I07 t7 ... + "" ...... ODO 11 •11'1 A01' a. It .•. .JOlO JS 1• .. • -EflQM t >• "'-• "" ,.p" 1 . ,, -~-... MY 2 lO • tt ~1 .... lkefV• .•u 11 I~ t ;""'t1~ "~ ~.~ .•10 n ~·"' ''°, J ·~-"' ID KllW; I 4 14 1Sl4+ ~ .. t..W ........... .... ''"J1""•"' "' .-11 .ta1 ,. -"" " •• 2S , ..... • l?.'iti , 5~·~ nr ~ii :d "fa ''"' •'II .. .. "' -~ 1. f1 .ti"•"' 1-» , " t! ....... ~ r~ J~~ ... • ,... .. s 'l .... ... ' mt."~ 1• ''H JM !~ U06 •J ~+" ti .. =' ..... "' .. -" .. " .,1, . ,. ,,, .... n ~ . " I~ 1'1 ,• ,.., 1 n • ;wt ;: 1•;. ~ '"' .. ,,, ,._, -I -•.... ...,':" ,: .. : C-NC. b t II (..nl!Oo ..... I 14 Ullr~f< I lO 11 tltl ~ nl• I C:.•-1MU '' C...lo• 161~ ,, (ftl<;oW I t. t ,,. CM\HUO I IO I I ~~~~~~: rlc ClllU!lf 1 U t.00 c,..11PS1a11 .no c.nue 1 «> • •> ~r·':&.: ~~ (M\Tt I "110 11 C...lrO.I 111 II •1 Cr\--10. " ~ ... , 110. 10 °"""'" I 1 141S Cllml pl I 20 10» O..mSo ., 10 ns O..nC.O OI 1 II ()vtHY 1 11 • 119 0..•l'O 70. I) O..\M 210 • or O\AwT • ) OWIM• AO. 1 O..ntl\ 1 )OJO 111 Oll'llNY l I 11 0-.V• 134 I I 0-WPn .... ,, 371 8::r l~: ~ OllfoNw !O Cl'IMlw pl ) Ol1Pn91' , .. CN<~ull ~~ . ~ .. , .. ~J' ~~ii: ':iJf 1M11 :~11~ tytnv IO 6 lyl!WW\ • IYI""' 1 •• Qlytlpl 1.10 •• a.,_., uo 1 o.r-0t1 ~. NYSE COMPOSITE • TRANSACTIONS .. .,... , f \t.0.1 ,._ (llf 1.20 It 1' .... . I! , "° • $1\lt-"9 ,1Qr4)0 40 UVi .• s...., 116 • ,, ui-+ .... 1'clt011 I 101' •t bl Vt+ I .. G ~ • •1 I'•+ "' IJfl.JO. I ,,.,._ t. ]:,: ·? 't'.~! ~ ~~ I• 1 .. '' ..... • JJ , ..... '" \~bn't pn 40 . t 40 + .... ''((Of 10 42 IO'• + I\ w.1ron ' to 1111 .,.. _,_, - TAf Cp .4011 U t~• ~ TRW 1 Ml I ,.0 JA~-.. TAWJlll 4.40.. 10 IO • , . TllWpl •.JO I I~ • .... T•nllrd 1 1 ut 11 • ~. TDl<Mt It I ,,,._"' T .. lfy ,70 • )1 10\'t + \II Ti!lty I . U ll + .... l· 11-121~ ..: m::.:·t; T•:; S l 11•-. ..... T .t411 !19 10" •• Tee .eo t 2sr •l" • , .. T'MCO!f.4022 1' I~ •••• T.c:hrfcn t 14 10 • . ltklrna .1014 U MV• t ~ TtlKO< .JO • 10 • ••••• T • I t d II I •Sll'I > U6 H V.+2 T•lprml ., 1JO • ._ + \11 r.... • u '"'····· r..,nco 2 I 111 u..., • \lo r .... c p1s JO.. 16 114 ••••• T.--o 110 1At 1a -"" T-gf 2 1'.. .. 2514-.... r .. •<-+ J ' ut• ,.,._ -Tta~ 11010 11 ......... Tu Ill 2 1010 5M •• + olo. l•fTof240.. 2 1~ .... Txf"Tpl J 11.. 40 3l • V. TuO.T L40 • t4 ..... t 1'9 r .. 1nc1 lb • 12 11"9 ..... )() + .. Tulnst t.121f 2'1 '°14 +lllo "°"' T .. lnt 11 Jll 1114 + \lo 1)1,., ·. THOO. .'2110 10. 31 -\It u•-. • 4' Tx~ .JS. 14 2 ,,_ \'f "" -" Tt1U I I «I t 40I ti .. -\'f J"-+ " Teld I 1.2016 M 24YS •I 1.-. Iii To lpl J • 2'1 ,..,., + '- •"-T•1 Ind 1J J1" + \.• 2'H• -" Hd•ort I 40 I 341 t7h-'-2•' • -" Tu1rp1 2.0I.. II 321•-~ 2'10\, .. , Tfdr pl I.AO • 1 2416-V, 21 +"' ~t : .~ ~ J:!:: ~ ~~ Thom In •4 8 U 12~ + lo 21 Vt ThOmJW .IO 1 1 11\'f-.. I•'>; 14 TIYlfly< ... t XU l'lt ..... w 1 • Ticor 1.10 • I ff tollt-l't 311'>-V. TldMMr .tO I 111 24-.+ Vt 91~2-TIOWlnt JO 7 Ue ;· •.•• 2S••+ "' Tlmtln l.lOIO u +I 11 ,,,,_ .. Tl,..Mlr .IO II 111 2 + Ill 32 ~-\11 Timlln 2.10 f II S3Yu "" 41 ~-.... TllMVll 21 I le .•.• · 1' •'~•" TOClln'" .I .... 71 ~· V. U 13' • + \lo Toellnll n f ,,_ + l't n 1 • 11o Tol£cl• 1.tt • 100 2m+ v. 2ll 21'11 + "" T'olldplUI.. IS 2•111 + llo • 191.,-\11 TonMCll .4110 1 1-.•.•• Ul 11''' + .. TnlCOf' ,JI 1 " 1Aftl-\t 304 11111 -\<o Tr-1.0l 10 •I •v.-"" s1 11 • "' Tr•nUl'I 1 '2 ' u ,._ .. "' Ul ~ -.. TWA 4 2SA t"+ ~ SJ 11'-+ v. TWAlll 2 •• ttJ Ml,\ .•••. )4 • .... TWAof UO ...... 11"• 16 "'•• .... TrtnHmM' m U""'• \11 eo ...... I Tr9fllrw: I..... 21 ~ \'f ~-\11 Tr•nte0 I I 1'0 1...._ \'f IAI-. Trtfl'KI\ .n 1 ' • -" AO•. >.; TrG t, IO.JJ., tJO ......... , ., I 1"t TrG ofU• .. 110 ......... . 1.-• TrGPpl 2-SO.. 1 27Yt-loll 7J "" Trentol\ ,JI • •S IJ4+ '-18l't, .... Tren.,., 1 tO I .. U~ lo't n~. ... . Trevlrt 1.• t 112 14 + \11 ,.,.., + 11t Tre ... lrof 2 •• 21 40 -..., IS'o V. Tr!Cofll.1 ... , 4 20~" 12'"'· •..• Trlelncl .01,.. S A .•• ,. n•... .. '''•'"« All • n .-.+ h 9'·>..... Tr1ntylfl .IO 4 JI 12._, .... l'•-'" tt't+ \I. 12'•· ••• 1'~+1\lo sv. ..... ., -.... 1~-Yt ~·"' ,~ .... •I -V. llfl> •••.• 3014 + v. 1 • Vo 16V. + "' .......... --"· 13\t+ 'II --. ... . 10~ .... . 5114 +I , ...... +¥1+ \At ~,.. ..... llY> + "' 14 -" »V. + '" Al'> ..... ... \'e n··--- TroplCM •• \I UT ~ + \'f TllC tnO t. It t .. 1.-..... T-.00 ,79 I 15" U +I .. T'l'<DlAll Al I » 1'~ ~ TyltrC:p A 7 2S .._. .. Tymw n SI u + -U-41 -UALlrw: .Ill I S2t 1ni.-Yt UGI~ 1.• 1 IS ~-. UGI US .. rtlO 111'4-_., UM 11\11 I.JO t 1• 16'4 + \'f UM T Tr . , 10 1'1o+ V. UOP .70 t 2' IS¥i+ "' UVlfld I S 211 I"'+ "-UAACO UO 1 I 21* .•.•. u,..rco .'9 4 • 11111 ... , Unllll .1 .. 1 I ~ .... . UftlMV U:St t • JOYt .... , Ul\lftl:• _.. 4 26 ll -llo tl~.C t:1; .: :: !1"' UflCl'lll'CI U 14 • 71111 ..... UftlOftCll ' tl ~-\11 Unl!le< 1,J61t tJO 1~ V. Unllpf 4.50 •• 1100 Sl'A •••• U11t1 pf "-"',. &SIO 1' ,, , • , Unl!I p1 2.n.. " '°*-v. U nOCDI UO 1 t'1 SSV. + l't UOCt IJl'U(I.. S 11'-+ V. UPe<C 1.1012 3Sf S"'+ 41' Unlroy ... IO 1 to7 101' ..... U11lrv111pl I .. UO "111 ••••• Unlr..,. s ., _.. ... UnlrndplA , • • U-\11 Unite. IOt.. t1 11 .. , U1115f1Jtst.12 4 t3 7N • " Ul'lllGll AD 4 tt 1.-. ••••• UllOmty I '1 ~ .. •11 Ulll""' U4 t 10 ~+ "' 8~·,·.~:: ~·,· 0: ~~1~ u' t11W1 .14 .. 1m!. ~ tl,,ff!T 1~tZ:,: J: n.-. i4 Ullll'llMn t JS 1w. ..•.. 8i"=~.I!.~ ft 1m= t: u .. ldO ,... 1 ,. u + "' u w.uon • t•Yr-.,. u .,,,, I.... J ,. ••••• U Hom ,JO• • .._"' USlnd .AO I :Ill 1""• '* uu ....... 1 $2 ,, ..... " ul """ .. " ~" Uet.:106112 JO+_. U t ... UOIO ttn MY.+ -. us o• 1;12 » ~ "-UnT.ut t 1 121 iot + llt Un Tell II( • • 1 no -llt UnT,hpf7.l2.. t 111 .... •1 UftlTtl 1.Jt t 474 211'h ..... UnlT 711fl,SO,. I ~ Yt UnOrod ,IO 4 at t + ~ UNY« .st 7 J N,. ... uni•,.. ua 1 t7 22\'f+ ..-. Ufll.Nf IM 'f •1 -..+ \to u~ uu "' a. + "' U 1 ... M1 » '*····· Utll19" .t6.. Jt 1Nt+ \4i U~PL 1' wt 1111o ... ,, Ul,.Lpl ~V'.-¥ ~ M + "' Vl'C:. 1.j! I 0 t~ '11 Vstcorit ;i 7 S 2l'Ai ..... ~~',::" .• ~ ~ 1m:.::u VMtlnc.-S ti 11 + \lo V.... • I Sll't-V. ....... ~ .. tt 10 t'.<o ..... ~:fee '~10 ~f ~::·.:·" Vlec-.atJ 10t 1' -\'f Vel!"-I I Ml IS ........ , v....... .. dO ,...._1"11 v .... .., •• 110 ~-lit Vt1Pflf1, ,. UGO tof'ofo1\!i va """ •• iuo 102 ..... VD """· ., ':l 107 .... +f VI " •• llV.-'11 1Ve " •• IWH Vt v .... , ....... VllkllM MO 1 ta 22'1r-\1o -w-w-WllCtlW ,54 t 24 fM+ " WKllt!fi.tt.. 2 4541i+ ._, Wtcll •• U ·~· 1 WM •• 1:1 .. 1~• w.-..1.•1 11 ~+ ..,.,i: .... , , ... ==· ""J -W~! ~ l.f ~ ....?! '-1 ::1 .. .,...J::-. ····· wa;;"H .An.. 14 •••• :::r ... -. ~ ···~ w""°"' a • • ~ '-wme11ntt.. 1 iz-::-. llN DAILY PILOT s 'Inner Clrele' l . Force on Boards i Directors ol America ·a corporations, traditionally \Jle bu.sineu count.erparts of elitist eoclal clubll. are u.ad1r mountlni attack from covemment reculat.ory qencl-. stoclcholdms. ecooomiata, educaton and other businesa people. • Board credentials are be1" probed to a d sree that would have been unthinkable a few years aao. standlns Jll but alone in the past to challenae tM anakeu~ ol a company bowd were auch perennial e«pente tadfllts u Lewis Gilbert and Eve1Yq Davis. Tbtllr demands foe fl'eat.r stoclrholder repreeentatloo wu. reeorcled and tb n buritd under avalaneh• ol maoacemea\.apoasored reJectlona. TODAY. TBE e&m<S A&B ,A& from 1adflles -and their demand.a cannot be lpored.. UnW now, the tar1et ol mast complaint.a has been tM inside director. Bee au.se t.b1s lnslcM or manacement director uaually has been a penonal friend of the chlel executive~. fleer, be has been most vulnel'able. Now. the tartet has been broadened to include the 1e><alled outlide director, who .. should t. someone with a dqTee ot lndepeadenee and should be lookin1 an.er the interest ol the corporation ancl of .. all its ahareholders, •• accordinJ to Stanley Sporkin ol the Securities and Exchange Com- mission. Money's Worth Also a target ot criticism has been the pay of the corporate direct.or, which ls seldom publicly revealed. A dlrector might earn u much as $13,000 a year for tenure on Qnc board. Some directors may sit on several "workln& board!'· wilb total fees ranatn1 up to $."50,000.f7S.OOO yearly. A tb1rd area of complaint bu been the old-school-tie board relationship. In place of thJs socially oriented ln- dlvidual, critics are demanding professional directors wbo would provide specialized lmowledle. IN TIDS ERA OF ESCALATING costs at all levels Qf business. criUcs empbuize that ''working lmowledft? boards" can aave substantial consultin& fees on special as· signments. Outaide directors with experience al the pollcymaldng level should be more fully used, aaya Ralph E . Lewis ln the Harvard Business Review. In addition, the out.slde director should accept the role of monitortn& the performance of lhe chief executive of· fleer. ANOTllER ROLE THE BOARD MUST perform is pro· tectioo of the company's fiacal lnte&rlty. the Harvard Busi· ness Review continues. nus includes mak..lng certain that appropriate lnterqJl1 controls have been establlabed and that there are no con- flicts of lnt.ereats. present or potential, wlthln the compaey. The boards of directors of corporaUons are a\ a crossroads, perhaps most. dramatized by the sianlficant number of companies adapt.int written charters of dire(. tors' duUes and responslbllfties. In these pioneering cba.rt.ers may lie the ethical IUides for manqement. labor and stockholders ~e. Retail Sales Spur Advance by Market · 1 NEW YORK (AP) -Some atronc retail sales fi~IU for J\Aly helped tbe stock market acratdl out a amall &aln tc day. . 1be Dow Jones averqe of 30 Industrials, which cl Wednesday at an 18-month low for the second atral'h aesaloo.aboweda2.17polntadvancetb888.11. Gainers outpaced' losers by a 1-5 mar11n among Nf~ York Stock Excb&111e-Usted ieaues. 1 Trading WU quJet. Bia Board volume came to u.a mllllonabares. 1 Several leadinf re.tail issues &alned &l"OUDd as the com, panles poat.ed healthy aales increases for last month. DotelolM'SA l't!rflfle9 .~rt:.""',.,"'-' 0-. ..... .-.... !illllfilR JNva ••••••···••••••••••••••• Ult~ ,.,..,. ·························;D Utltl •·••••• ················•• 6S SC:tt •••••••••••••••••••••••••• What Sl~lu Did Ttdey"';'r I ~n=-~ ·1 ¥:..""::. ,m ,!! ....,, ,,,, ,... tt •1 ""'''".... .., .. So\1.CS l ~=~ .. ~~--~·~-.=i. E=e~.:::::::::::::::::::.~:f:!f i r .#'.:::::::::::::::::::::. lk:=' ,..,. ... ·-······ ........ 11 • I ,,._ ...................... ,~ te ........ ·-···•••••• t~ltf,1'tS,1D to,_ • •... .......... .• :t,mt,744,400 I • I .:..J "You can't nu.s 11. Hilla the cubicle wll.h the plant." DoufJlttafl Due School Hours Set in CUSD Capistrano Unified School District trustees set tame Uus week for the operung and closin& or the school day at the district's 22 schools. with a special provision (.or junior high teachera on double session. Marco· Forster and Shorecllrrs Junior High Schools are lo be on dou- ble session when school 9pens in September. Both schools will be located on the Marco f'orster campus in San Juan Capistrano until <ompletion of the Shorecliffs facltity, ex- pected late this year in San Clemente. a.m. and finish by 12 :14 p.m. Shoredlffs students are scheduled to arrive at school at 12 : 2.S and leave for home at 4:54 p.m . Although the instruc- tional day at the two schools wUI be only 11 minutes shorter thao the 280 minute! called for· in the teachers' contract, the time they are to be on campus will be about an hour and a half shorter ~!111!!!11111!!1111!!!!~~1!!!!1!!~~ than the seven hours the contract specifies. ----------.... .,.. first aid tor transplants Grow ... lfl 8c:oUs' fine 9"'odUct you lhOuld .,.. with tNflfY tranaptlntfng job. COntroll lnteetl, weecs., di ...... Formul• tor vegetables. thruba, ...... Aeg.1.95 111 you scream, I scream we all scream tor Ice cream When Ira home mad• le. cr .. m, It worth maklng a commotion about. And thern no bee* and .....,. way to make It than by ullng a Proctor 811•,c electric 4 quart model that usually coata 19.95, but II now on Mle for only •.• ~1oaa llelps your turf to become tough the quiet one Scotia Turf BUiid.,. fa America'• that cull grall favorite fertl!IZ« tor cHY9toplng thick. Just ttie flldc of.• ...it1Dft D* awo gr.-n lawns 1nd MIP9 g,... mUltlply blecMI runnlf"1 MIOOCNy to cut an 19" ttMlf. 2000 .q. tt. 1ppllcet1on. ~. 5.95 ewlth. Aler b900lno metna eu1er 488 maneuvering .,ound obataclN • '8035. ~ 138.M ........ ft.,...lt.f5 .............. 119'' .... ..._ft.,.._ IS.ts ••••••••• 12.11 ~~~-+-~---------~~~~----------- loll of room · . . for all your mall TNa 90lld wood mall bo• It blG enough to hold paoka;ea and rnagazinM end all th• reet of YoQr malt Stnoottl .anded hatdwood con- ICr'UCCtlon. r.-dy f« )'OU1' ofM>lce of flnlltl. a•• • ERA:· Can Wome' THI OUM. AIGttrl AM NDM!NT a.ct1on 1. l!quaflty of rtg undw U.. law ahaU not •• denied or abrtdged b1 t • Unhed '"cw by any State on ecoounto1 .... Section 2 The eo,..... ..... have th• pow to enforce, by •P- proprtate ~. tM SWcwtllona of tttl• artk:la. Section 3. Th amend. mMt INI tau effect two yeen 8ftw the data of ratlftcatton. · "Equalic, not prot tton," wu th• ph1Joaoph7 at·Attce P1uJ the out1poken turn·of ·tbt·cenluey ''"' t ana author of the Equal Riii Am dm t. AUco Paw dJec:t rec.ntly, but h r cauee canUnues to lcnltt con. lrovOl'ly like a volcano 1pewtn1 molten Java rrom all dlrecUona and 1parldn, blue nama ol dJa. a1reem :nt amons faction• of Amll'lcan wom n. Even tbowlh t.b' Pl"9POled nth Amendment-to tb• COn.stitutJon already hu been raUfled In the St1te of Call!omta, the,. la 1 1rowln1 'movement (with a monc bue tn Oran1• County) to reacind raWlcaUon. To comb.i th.la movement, a coallUoo wu formed In the codn· ty to ralle fund.I to aupport na· tional paaa1e and to educate the public about wbat the 1roup feel.a are milrepresentatlona by anU· ERA forces. The O"OUP. called ERA Oranae County, is chaired by Susanne Ratification: Issue Divides County Women The Equal Riihts Amendment could politely be called a con- troversial iasue amonf Oran1e County residents. For a took at boW leadlng local women view the proposed 27th Amendment to the U.S. CoostJtu- Uon, spokesperaODI from both sides were Interviewed. Susanne Tepper UI chalrperaon of a new coalition of women'• groups aupportlng ERA, called ERA Orange County. Mary Schmlt.z UI the leader of a new 1roup, Eagle Forum, whlcb op. poses ratlncauon of the amend· menl. There II H beeo 1ome talk 1bollt EBA cbqlaf &Jae llrae~ tare of tlae A•ute .. f1mlly. Row do you feel •boat tlallt MRS. TEPPER: ERA wU1 not hurt the family. People wbo tup- port thQ 11nendment are mllnl)' women wbo ar. marrled and do not 1upport the demise ol the American famUy. The 0QJy tb!DI it ..Ul do to a mamaae la to mike tun tt'1 equitable. A h.UbaDd. WbO lJ tnakiq .... D1CIHY. will bfte an oppcrtunlty to reeetve 1upPOtt. ERA wUl mata lt fair for both men ma women; IMlt we doli't expect wom• to so• ana Work unle11 ~ dealre to. ERA wtD Ult help wonin1 wom• make &ft table liW., . Tepper ol Laiuna Bueb. It ls a coalltlon of more tban 20 wom '11roupa and baa been en· doreed by the United Auto Workera and the Democratic Central Committee. In reaponae to this, another women'• 1roup called the Eagle Forwn was or1anJ1ed. Headed by ¥ary Schmits of Corona del Jdar, the main thrust of this anti- E RA aHoclatlon appears to focus on halt.ln1 ratification and resclnd.i.n• rautlcatlon In states where the · amendment has pllffd. Tbe oppoelna forces describe them1elvea as "conservative church people," who charge ERA will take away the tradi- tional rt1ht1 of women, families and lndlvlduals. Today, the E<tu al Rieht11 Amendment ol Allee Paul stands ratified by~ states, needing only the support of thiee more states before Much of 1979 t-0 become the 27th Amendment to the U.S. ConsUtuUon. Proponents say that if the We have paned federal te1l1latloa forblddln' db· crl•laaClea ta tbe areaa ol employm-. credit ud eduea· Uon. ""-1 la BRA aeceaaary! MRS. TEPPER: ERA would leatUmhe the etatus ol women in the Vnlted States. It would be a federal code embracing all pre· vioua leaislatlon. It will just al- low women the opportunil)' to better themselves in the anaa of educatJon and employment and it wlll live them a better sense of equality. ERA will give them a le1al status ln the country they do not have now. MRS. SCHMITZ: Many people who support ERA do so becauae they Identify equal pay for equal· work. All ol us accept that women abouJd receive equal wages ln employment; but ERA doesn't even ~&lo to private industry. amendment b pu will nnally have under the law ... as cibzena in a dem acy. Opponent• ins t ERA ta d&ngerows and w take away many of the pro Uons under the law women n e$y. lf ERA ls pasaed, the aay, women wm be called per lnatead of women under the la • They con- sidu the word pers varue and frightenin1. Aa an outsider iewln1 the calculated lnterpr tatlons of what ERA wUl meaQ women in this country, one ls minded of two attorneys bat ll out in a courtroom. And that's where *uch of the battle will beam. Because it wm b«( up to the courts to determine ~hetMr the movement to resc~ la le1al, both s ides have one their center on the role ot the woman 1n the American famlly, employ. ment, the draft, llY riChts and 1overnment interference IQ privateUves. Opponents lnaiat amplt lealtla· tlon already exists for the protec- tJon ot women's nihts. Prooo- nent.s want more equality and they want lt spelled out. But it all aeems to boil down to one fU.odamentaJ polnt: Wbfiher • woman wants to retalnt the atatus trad10onally presc11bed for her in eve:ryth.lq from U.. Bl· ble to Dostoevsky. • Or whether ahe advocat tbe ri&bt to be consider.cl u an ual peraon in aoclety .•• tn all respects. Strona ariumenta -from t.odl sidee. l • homework and cite olumes of documentation to support tbeJr position. The basic sssuea •ppear to BEA ANDERSON, Editor ThUf'lday. Aug~ •. 1 en Ct And where it does pertain, it will just throw lhinll into court. Discrhnlnation in employment is obsolete because of the Equal Employment Opportunity Act ol 1972. We already have tht Equal Credit Opportunity Act ol 19'14 and the Education Amendments of 1972 and tbe penalties are atringenl against lnatitutiom that discriminate. WW EBA atve tbetfederal IOV• ernmeat more power eo ccatrol ourllveaf I MRS. TEPPER: No. ERA doesn't mean more 1ovemment; tt only means the covemment would provide a Ullil)'lar code ·nationwide -atandard to unity all the rilhts of both men and women. MRS. SCHMITZ: Y11. Jt II a trab for power at the federal. level. It will transfer jurisdiction over things such as marrta1e rt1ht out ol the states and into the hands ol federal bureaucratl and the courts. Wm ERA tecallse bomOMDal mant.,esf · · MRS. TEPPER: It la a Ue that ERA will le1allie homosexual marriages. We ll'\'e 1n a eoclety witb a cert&ln moral ethic. We · bellne every person abould have the rtiht to their aeicual pref-' erence, without society impin&- lnc on thero, aa long as they don't harm others .. ERA does not bring moral ls- aues 1.ato th1a thins. Marriace ls a aoclal cuitract and our IOC!ety Is heterogeneous. The pu.rpou of marrla.ie ia to procreate chlldreft; obviously, homo.ex· uai. can't bear children toaetber. ERA does not deal with the la- Susanne Tepper (left), chair- person of a new coalition of women's groups that support ERA . / Mary Schmitz (right) is the leader of a new group, Eagle FOrum, which opposes ERA ratification: are not eq_taaJ: but the mo.ement (women'al tellli ua we tbould bt. sue ol homosexuality or aboltioo These issues have been thrown v by the opposition to cloud the at mosphere and to pollute the meii tal environment. MRS. SCHMITZ: If ERA paases, even bomosexuala an· I lesbians will have equal ripu Contract• will say, 'betwee penoos' -not between mea an women. Jtm eupportlve ol Anita Brye and her crusade. I feel homosex uala and lesbians are pushing fo more than Just their own thib· and to have our children taugh-- by them brln11 them (tlV children) Into their cause. They <1ay1) Wlillt equal rtahl with married people. They wu to adopt cblldreo. Lifestyle 11 i1 key term which the court· couldn't turn down If ERA l· passed. DAILY Pll.OT ThurlClll . A ust 4 1tn • Scene Stealer Sh ped Up Ann Landers A N N to um waahers for the· fauctltl -Ju.at put thtm ln hi1 pocket. Then ~ BOUOtrr 110m• wuben und paid fur them. I couldn't believe it 1 W n we came home I took rnonoy out of roy Pill)' bank and went to c.·burc:h and put tl tn tho candle box. l 'm 10 afrald my dad will 1et cauchl 1ltaJln1 I don't knuw what to do. PleHe help me. SADOIRL DEA.a GlaL: Hne • q•le& talk wUta your ta&lter. Tell blm you Ulblll lte lllaoaid be tuna· mt~ Uema IM Ibach ID w over t.e tM lost alld load. Eaplabl U.at k bofJlen )'OU Wbea he atrl•&• llaue &blag1 um1. A ... &di llJm fOU HW Ill ab1n&· ml•••dly tllp IOaM dieap l&eaa1 lD· lo bll peek.et wbea yoe WH& &o UM •ardware •&ore &oaelbu .. Glvt ~m a clauce &o co • oel& lootlq dttut. I bet ~o •hP1111P.ct.at. DEAR ANN LANDERS: A lon1 Ume a10 y°" printed a Jetter from a man wbo Uvtd in Oklahoma. He wanted to know lf he could be burled ln his 18319 Dodce. We lau1hed when we read that one and 1 wa1 aure you made ll up becau1e you came lhrou1h with 1uch a clever anawer ell, I want to lo1iu for my lb ta becaUH I read Ju toda.Y that a woman lb Anlelea left a IZ.S ml loo estate and a comml11loner Is to ciectde wMt.ber to honor ber re· . Sb Wanta to be led nut to her h band In a lace nl htcown, ln her Fer· r l . . • wttb the aeat •l nted comtort.bly. ow wbat wu the a wer you 1av1 that n lo Oklahoma? - G D MEMORY BUT S IPPEDACOG EA&COG: IAIJell· that Ille be creaated d pat ba &Ille aalltra). be commlHJoiaer, however. mllM have a little trouble wltb. my .. ,, .. uoa. Tilt L.A. womaa •• aeirt of kla cou1d lane llOIDeUaiaC to taJ about It. DEAR ANN LANDERS: ReceaUy a woman W?Otl to you and complained that whenever her ln·lawa are in her presence they 11>eak their native toraiue and •be feel& very uncomfortable. It 1eem1 her ID·laws btve been ln this country for 15 years. Your advice wu really terrible. You told her that she abould learn 1ome pbruu ln tbelr Jaocu•c• ("Hello - Goodbye -How nice! Ian 't that too bad - thank you ") That w°"ld make them feel more kindly toward her {ac- cording to the maven ot all Ume) and ahe in tum would feel less hostile toward them. Such garba1e! Why dido 't you address youraelt to the real prob: lem? Someth!na ia out of kilter wben people Uve ln a country for 1$ year& and refute to learu the lanauaae. Tell it like it ls or quit telllna it. -ST. LOUIS LULU DEAR LU: Wba& mua you'° •ure the ... law• can't apeak Ea1U1la' tlH)' people wlto were bora aad reared la otba' comstries 1peak laetr aathe &oDpt wit D lb•J att amoac .. tbelr owa•• beeaue lt lJ ea I r ud they are ore eo f rt•· ble wlU. lt. Wlteaever poqtble I try a. Clvt tM uaclerdot Urie benefit of th• doab&. 1''• a 1ood .,. proadL Yoa ouab& t. •11 •• ......ame. There i• a blf dlf· terence beLween cold and cool. Ann Landera ebows you how to play It cool wit.bout !ree1ln1 people out lo her booklet. "Teena1e S.x -Ten Ways to Cool It." ~d ~ centa ln coln and a lon1, seU·addreued, stamped envelope to Ann Lan· den. P .O. Box 11995, Ch1caio,IU.80Sll 9•NM I hcM *' ~ ti.. Hot Rolleri on mt heir qi>'• oft ... , O• t"-v damaljng to tM I-Or? Mtt: \,; c. Swa~c:al. ... """"It~ -~ 't'OoJ -b¥ hot. Ir "°"' "*"' 1•ol•n ,., y co,;ld be v.,y d '"'<>1"? tO "°" •IQllQl<OI\ O"d ~ loYOll hcir. °' .... ~ hg,d ii "'°" "*" heottd. ...... "'4tv ,,. o-4-t ~ to -- and ~ thO.kl ''" cor010.1 to off wt "-tfr9tt heC:il Oft ..._ hc>t. Lectur:e Topics Gain Interest Q••tltllE ,, 0 "''"'1 itO"I "'. i><-"• °' 0\ q>od 0\ 0 req.Jo \to•' M\\ W T ~IO Verd. AMWW: It~ bv 'OfM •iv· J.rl "" ...., 0'1t onv qood s. ~ "'.,1 ... >-<Yd htlo,.•"41• '"her on• ~II '"'"'. •"ft 01J'D , •• d•o.,nd"'1 ~ oiw •llfl"r rloo< YoU m~l,..J11I LECTURE SERIES: Dr. Arthur L. Bietz will conduct his 21st annual lecture series at Orange -Coast College belinnlng at 7:30 p.m., Tuesday, Aug.9. the Coor part series, G uidiog Your Own Growth, will be held ln the auditorium and Is free t.o the public. lVOMEN: The Hunt· ~gton Beach Branch of lhe American Associa- O on or University Women invites prospec- tive members to a coffee ~t 7:30p.m., Wednesday, ,_\ug. 10. Information may be .obtained by calllnt Mary Schultz at 963·904S. Mari, artistic director for the Ballet Montmartre. and a com· pany of ballet dancers will entertain members of the Mesa Harbor Club. The lecture, de· monstration and performance will be held at 10:30 Lm., Thursday, Aue. 11, at the Mesa Verde Country Club. PARENT EFFEC· TlVENESS TRAINING: own dinner, at S p.m. fr=~~::S~~Fiiiii==;j Wednesday, Aug . 11, at SOUTH COA Coronu del Mar State ACTORS CO-OP Beach. '' alwav• M9rc111no 1or -"'••· pulenc-ed talent tor tllma, TV S 0 NG WRITE RS, il"9• ~ c0mnwrctel•. (Allenllon ADVERTISING AOl!NCl€(1 GUILD: The Southern :.~i~n~~c'!!c~1•,::.=,.~·- Callfornia group will (714) 957-0282 meet. at 7:30 p.m. Tues· ~=5!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!:!=!!!:;!!! day, Aur. t, tn Manny's reataurant, Huntln1ton RUffEll'S Beach. · Plans will be made for UPHOLSTIRY C4JvMADo HAIRSTYLIST 2830 Avon. Suite "0" Newport Beech (714} 645-7290 a fall song contest and W... Y• W• for songwriting "'91ett Call 142-5671. workshops lhrouabout ttn ...._, .... Put a few word• NATIONAL COUNCIL Ot JEWISH WOMEN: A new member coffee will brieg area women together in the home of Mrs. Eleanor Burg at 10 a.m .. Wednesday. Aug. 10. INTERNATIONAL TOASTMISTRESS CLUB: A potluck d.lmler will be featured at tbe in· atallallon meetll\g of the Lu Olaa group at 7:30 p.m ., Wednesday, Aug.10. A lecture by psycholo1ist Lee Hackney will be pre· sented at tbe Newoort Harbor Counseling Center at. 7:30 p .m ., Thursday, Auguat 11 . More information is available by calllog the center at833-1610. Orange County. C_.e...._S41.-02M lo work for ou. More Information is ~==~========~~.::::=::;::==~=:::::::... Helping Others 1: Drprogrammcd after being taken from the .Kare Krishna sett by court order. Genny • ~ yen; of .J ucksonville, Fla. :-.aid s he and dthcrs wantNt to leave but held back out of -fear and guilt :\ow sht' •~ helping dcpro ittam oth(•rs From C1 • • • Issue Ir ERA Is defeated, what do you feel the coa· • • sequ~ces wUl be? MRS. TEPPER: I think it will ha-.ie severe !l· ramifications throughout the country. I lhink it will affect judicial and legislative decisions and will hamper the efforts of the women's move- ment tremendously. · We'll have to start all over again because the statute of limitations tor rat.llicatJon runs out in March of 1979. If the amendment doesn't pass. the Supreme Court and Congress may view · women's and minorities issues as unimportant. Speclfically, no one can say exactly what Is· • sues wUl be affected. It will be difficult. MRS. SCHMITZ: If defeated, it will slow down the move that la active 1n thiJ country and is harmful lo the American family. We feel de· , feat will help to keep tbe privile1es tbe American womenbave. We are flgblin1 for the rtghta women have worked years to set. But, even If defeated, we'll still have to watch women's lib groups. R~ervatlon• may be made by calUng 675-7465 or 527·5093. MOTHERS OF TWINS CLUB: The Oran1e Coast group will meet ror a lecture on how to talk lo your children about sex at 7 p.m., Wednes· day, Aug. 10, at Los Castillo• restaurant ip Westminster. Reservations may be made by calllng Mrs. Terry Maiten at 893-1591 More lntormatlon is available from Wennle Wedelat898-1M8. NATIONAL SECllETARJES: Up ls the Only Way to Go will be the topic ot a lecture given by Connie McCauley on Thursday, >.ug.11. Secretaries are invited and reservatlons may be made by calling Mrs. Sherry Stovem evenl.nls at 776--0515. MESA HARBOR U N I V E R S I T Y CLUB: Madame Irene Art Show . Today thru Sunday more l'hao 85 fine art9 will preeent their COiiect or olla. ICfYllca. phot ctatla and sculoturn at the Huntington ~nter mall during thla veer'• Muter Artlats expa. Hundrtda' 01i9lnale nm.rateort Buct\81 • &. Edlng« at the · San Ofego FW'f. Have IOmetbin1 you w•nl to sell? Clualfled •ell do It well. M2·~8. PARENTS WttHOUT PARTNERS: Costa Mesa Country Club will be the setting for the 8 p.m. meeting on Wednes· day, Aug. 10. Speaker will be Arthur W . Chadbornc , astrologer. lecturer, counselor, movie pro· ducer and author. Tb~ chapter will have a ~ach party, with each member supplying his available from Mrs. Philip Bellereullle or Mrs. Carl Canfield, both oC Westminster. Dear Customers. REHABILITATION INSTITUTE OF ORANGE COUNTY: The Easter Seal Ping ·We're closirig-1h~"'Boutlque to om Pong Tournalhon wlll for our.-CQs~i{rg . ....:f.he ne tre besln at 10 a.m. Tues· ~wur-· Prfimier ' rl9""'Septen)ber a will day, Aug. 9, and will run feature' our, o ~JI -.... of e ing new non·stop through Satur-cosmetics V ; · · day, Aug. 13, in the '-~, · v. 1 • Quality lpn, Anaheim. SO ' LI! IS OM : · " The T'ournat.hon will · · • · • help raise funds for the ;' • ' * ewtfry ~00/o / aid of the handicapped of. ' ,'* E•~,Mt 1 • ,. / Orange County. ' More informaUon is .".,. SALON ~OUTIQUl available from RIO, lOOMt~. -~·"'1Hr~ .... 71 633·7400 or 541·8822. . --r FURNITURE Game/ dining five-piece aet In aolld ponderoaa blue pine with use-everywhere chairs. SQperbly designed and cr.ifted to be at use In iMna or dlnlna n>om with corttlnental pme table height. The perlecdymatchecf woods are ponderoN blue be.itte pine, hand rubbed to a warmly elepnt flnlsh. ~r eJCceptlonally smart rOOf11Y chaJra with reversible cushions. The solld top 46" Qble fs Ibo available with spilt top Md two leavet to live .in 8SH length for the faraer roorn. Here's fine design, .,thentic q.gllty, and."" RB price that aJvet you a rut v.iue. ::r::t~~ ;~~~ Additional chairs $159. ~· ----· 1 ·I 'Beppe' Sietske Welc_omed By DENNIS McLELLAN Of ... Dellf rllll tufl It wasn't difficult findini the Will Toeringa• bome in Costa Mesa recenUy. It was the only one in town with a ban- ner stretched between two palm trees in the front yard "Wel.kom In Amerita .Deppe <erandma> Sletake! i ! "it proclaimed. ' The reason for the pomp, which included American and Dutch nags postedJ211 the earaee, was the arrival of Mrs. Toering's 80-year-old mother, Sielske Tol5ma. It was not only the Dutch woman's firat vistl to America, but It also was her ftrtt plane ride. Mrs. Tolsma was accompanied on the nJ&ht by two of ~er daughters, Tma Tolsma from Germany Ot alao was her first trip to America) and Henn,y Arendabont from Holland (she viaited four years ago). Not even a 5:20 a.m. arrival time in Loe Angeles pre- vented the Toerings and All Tolsma or Costa Mesa (she is Mrs. Toerlne'a sls~er>. and assorted children and erandchlldren from being on hand at the airport, 0 WE WERE QUITE emotional " aaJd Mn Toe · describing the reunion several hours earlier . nnc. Mn. Toering, who was worried her m~er might not lik.e the long flight, said. "She enjoyed Jt much to our sur-prise.·· ' ''She suid the food on the plane was real good " added Miss Tolsma, who came to Costa Mesa with her' son two years alter the Toerlngs arrived aa immigranta in 19S7. The families were seated in tbe Toeritlc dining room Mrs. Tolsma, dressed in a green dress, was asked lf ahe was tired from the long flight. Mrs. Toeringserved aainterpreter. "Nay," the woman said, dismissing the tbou1ht with a shake other bead. MRS. TOERING SAID her mother ia not used to the Cahlomia heat, however. She still bad the heater on tn Holland the rainy day she left and even packed a raincoat. coat "My mom s aid that due to the M'oluccana they were frisked twice Cat customs before they left}," aald Mra. Toer- lng. "It's only because they are very much afraid ol the Moluccaos." . • Her mother added that since tbe recent terrorist inca- deot, there aJao is heavy security on the country'• trains. Al~ the families have 'Disneyland and Knott's Berry Farm oo their travel Nenda, the mother wanta co 10 to Las Vegas, a place abe's beard a lot abouL "We also had in mind rentmi a big car and 1omc to the .JtedWCJC?d Forest and San Francisco," said Mrs. Toertn1. wbo lhinb the desert temperature would be too bot for "Beppe Sietake." • - But, she added, "Sbe is the boas. If ahe wanta to 10 to Las Vegas, she will go." .. PRD>A Y, AUGVS't I By SYDNE\' OMAU For Facials. Mak .. Up L.eeeons. Skin Care Analys11. Coerrellce, Mk for INGRIO OAILYPILOT Now, 20 years after they were welcomed to America, the Costa Mesa familles have welcomed their mother and two sisters who will visit for a month. Two Much, Two Soon Tot Terrorizes AT WIT'S END -WallpQper"to go SPECIAL FACTORY By ERMA llOllBECI[ I have written two boob, play a ukelele and can drive a car without lookioa at my feet, but do you know what sin1ular thln1 impresses women when I am ln a 1roup? The fkt that I have sur- vived a two-year old. lo all modesty, I musl.Mmlt I am not the on- ly woman In North America to endure the terri· ble 2a, but 1 am ~slbly one of the few who can talk about it without knottlnc my band.kerchief. One of the reasons I think I was so successful Is that I adjusted earlier than Jbott women. My kids were bom'beint twb yea.rs aid. They seemed to have a full set of teeth for bitiJla, an emergen- cy supply of 1allva for aplttint and lltUe legs that ran the mile under three mlnutes. One evening, l aald to my huaband. ''l cannot eo on like this. I am exhausted." Heuid, "You'rejustalittletiied." "When you ran asleep on an obscene phone call," I said, ''You're exhausted." "Do you mean to tell me a bald baby a yard hith with a amUe that could defrost Mount Everestts 1etting you down?'' "You don't understand," I said. "Between 8:30 a.m. and 12:30 p.m., be put the cat 1il the dryer. eot hia arm caught ln a rake, put hia tra.i.D· we pants in tbe oven, ate a CUPPY, pulled over the Oour cani.ater, aat on my geran1uma, put bis or- thopedic shoes In the bathtub, dropped a \elevialon knob down the rettster, tore up my card for jury duty and talked 15 n:doutes without operator assistance to a houaewif• lll New Mex-ico." "Have you trted napa?" uted myhuabucl. • "I've tr.led but be keeps cra~llill in inr plllYPIQ and al~bertu, •Mama, play. • : " Then, my husband remembered an old Burt Lancaster movie In wbJcb be wa a prilODef ol war. In order to malntai4 bis 1anity, he dis. ciplined bis mind to coneamat.e on tb.lnts other than the pain be WU end~. 'Ibe n~ time my two-year-old oiled his tricycle with my $5.50 Jar ot cream that was to brina everlut.lna youth to mf ehln.s, J 1rnlled and recited the Declaration of Independence. When I looked up from brid1e one Dilbt and saw him sitting on the steps with oothin1 on ex- ~ept a <'5 rpm phonofl'aph tecord SlUllf over one ear, l recited the alphabet backwmis. Come to think of it, I was the only woman on our block who could recite all the vfce preeldents from John Adams be> Alben Barkley. Like -- ·N0W ' ~ ! •. ; , PURCHASE I We have just completed a major purchase of a famous manufacturer's entire stock of discontinued patterns. Over 100 patterns to select from in pre-paated vJn~J-coated paper'.· ALL SALE PAPERS ONE LOW PRICE! SI.II ~~~le roll Quantities ore limited to stock on ho.nd, so shop early'°' best selection.· .. • I . I •• 'MaCk cind Mabel'· Hilarious. at OCC Tonight's TV Highlights CB.S fJ 6 ;30 "Action in the North tlantic." Humphrey Bo1art and aymond Massey head the cast of this seagoing adventure drama from UM3. NBC 9 8:00 -"Guilty or Innocent. The Sam Sheppard Murder Case." George Peppard portrays the Ohio doctor con\1cted of slaying his wife in 1954 in this /- Ll'V movie with Wllllam Windom and Nina Van Pallandt. KTTV 8) 8:00 National Geo· graphic. America's national parks are explored in this documentary. IN ft'8 FIUI' OBANG& County ap~arance, this mualcal tribute to Keyatone Kops creator Mack 5alftftt and h11 aiar-panmour Mabel Normand ls llrat rate teNtnment in all departments. Dtrec· tor John P'enacca deUv.n a rouatn1 production topped by two -u rlaUve pertarmancu in the Utle rotea by OCC vet1ran Robert Ensman ai>d 1'7-year· old Al>ril Winchell -who may well outdlatance her veotrUoqu.lat father Paul in lhow buaine11. Ensman, only a few desreet removed from bla H ory HJ1&ln1 ln OCC'1 "My Fair Lady .. a decade "MACiC AMOMAeeV' • ""'91Wf"' MlcN91 ......... t -~ ... ,, HtnNll, ....,..., ~ '-· WUl"lt W Jtel .... tin ..... ,. .. JCl1-. "*-W#llY W -...CC9 ......... -IUl*«•"-~"""*''·''-'tl"'"J••:::.i-~.::_......, T'*'!t _., 111'.n" w.iter Oit<klw, ~-bwtulh yet •.• O.-..c..NtC..11 ... ,(111~~ M«k ...,,_, ..................... ' ........................ "*" • ...,...,_ .,._. ...,,,..,,. •••••••••••••••••• '' .......................... ..,., Wlllc:Nll 1.Atlle.,,_ ... , .......... , .......................... , ...... lr ..... lcw<I l'renll~ •• ' ••••• ......... , ..................... ~ICM #I#, IC...,_. , , ......................................... WeltOeuliH IN. ,.. • •• •• • • • .. . .. • • •• • • • • .. • • .. ....................... 'II• Mlklle«t: Wltll..,.De\-Teytor ...... , • , ....................... "''"-" "91ylli•'•• ...................................... ~~ 59,.. .... . . . .. . . ......................... ,,...,..., .... ... lr.S.... . .. . . • . ............................... NIC.9llllO l'unic.lle Wetly .,, • ., •••• ,. ............................................. .lifff......_ aeo, creates a compellinS characterl1atlon of the two-reeler director whose only purpose in Ille is to ''make people laup," and ftlaUen of the heart ln· trude at their own risk. His tlrniJtg and delivery are flawless, and hi.I ainfinl voice la finely boned. Mias Winchell 'a Mabel Normand la aiven earthinela and dimension by thia amuinfllr talent· ed fOUDC lady. Her comic prowess is reml.Dlscent of a YOWJ& Barbra Strei.land, and her vocal power in number• such a1 the torch)' "Time Heals Eveeythina" ta outltandtng. Intermission ·Tom Titus screenwriter who ra1aes Mabel'• atandardl, and Pat Bro.nan u the only villain of the plece, th rival director who promises Mabel a better Ute but leaves ber addicted to heroin. Walt Doollu and Flip HltcbcoclNu'e flne eomlc folla for Enaman u Sennett'• backers. Moet notably, however, the Onnn Cout pro. ductlon la an exerclte in bllarttJ u lt f~usea on three pbuee of Sennett'• career -the ple bl the face style of comedy. the batbJ.na beauty paride and, ot coune, the Keystone Kopa. Eacll pro'rides material for a production number that telta the iD· •enulty of Fenacca, cboreol.l'apber Rebecca Sordelet and their troops. Miaa Sordelet bu creat.t some aclntlllallnC dance numbers involvtns an endl ... troupe ot Sirls in lilQOs awlmsulta, each lndivldually styled. Her wall-to.wall tap-dancin• sequence la equally Im· preuive, but the h11hli&bt ot the &bow proves to be the hlgh·steppine paen to ala~tick comedy, .. I Want to Make the World Laueb, •after a 1ucceaslon of pies in the face bas loosened audience members from t.be1r seats. -. Ola,Henrg That actor decked out in a blonde wig in pink tights is none other than Henry Winkler, better known as the Fonz of TV's "Happy Days." In his continuing efforts to • shake the supercool image, Winkler is playing wrestler Gorgeous Georae in the movie, "The One, the Only." SOUD SUPPORT 18 RENDERED by Brandee Scurci as another of Sennett's stars, who leads off a top·notch tap-danclnc number; David Kent as the IRONICALLY, THE SHOW lacks what .Mack Sennett strove tor throuahout hi.I career -a happy endin,. But lt la that abrupt twiat of fate, the cold reality of llfe intervenina on hllarloua make. believe, that UlUrnately 1ivea the 1bow lta depttt, separating tt from such trines as "No, No, Nanette" and others of lta ~e. Jtla the early days of Hollywood recreated with the talent of today. .----------------!"---• Three more performancu of "Mack and I rv DAILY ·toG . • 11 THURSDAY , . ilvENING • ----------------:---Mabel" will be 1lven, tonllht tbrou&h Saturday at •:30 in the auditorium of the Costa Mesa colle1e. If you can get tickets, and by tb1a time it mi1ht be dif-"JAUNTY FUN" -1-.~hllfd $dtlclle4, Tim• liNgHIM (PG) Burt~ "Slnokey ... , .. Bandit" Sally Fleld ·.Jetty Reed..., .. Jackie Gleasan iK ficult, you '11 get a bi& kl ck out of thls one . SOUTH COAST PLAZA CIMEDOME STADIUM DRIVE-IN HI-WAY 39 DRIVE-IN U.A. WESTMINSTER 546-2711 634-2553 6Jt-7160 534-6212 ltJ.0546 ------- woyeanago I said Benji w• the most entertaining family picture of our time. Maybe of all time. I w•wrong. nus one is betterr UZ~T/114 • I ...... • l =-=-M ... a,' &Y IV<.'K -~"" .. ~~ CAP> -'' oou," whlclt t ta11m.iklll l J uary, l•td (or ~ HW &JDm.y. TllB MY AWAaOSwUJ beprtMnted by th• ACJIGelmJ Of T.a..ltlon Art.a ud ldnc" OD NBC Ollda,., pt. 11 , from tht Paaadena Clvle A . The Dftly formed Hollywood·bued acidem1 r8Cdwcl oolltrol ot tbe Emm11 tor ru1bt·tJme ent r · . procram.a ln an .,....ment bealtn• ua dll· P'M Witb the National Acedemy ol Telnllloa Artl and Sd es. The nominatJons cover tbe period from Karcb 11. lt18, to March U , tm Here a.re tbe leadln1 oominaUona. BEST LOUTED SERIES: "The Adam• Cbrulicles." "Captauu and Kinas," "Madame Bovary," "The Moneycbanaers, '· ··Roots.'' Best comedy or drama special: "Eleanor and Ftanllhn." Harry S Truman: Plain Spealc:l.ni,'' "Raid on Entebbe," "Sybil," "21 Hours at Munich." Best variety special: ''The Barry Manllow Special," "Dolli Hennlna's World of Magic," "The Neil Diamond Special, "The Shirley MacLaine MlillliMt • W. -S.. I :41 THIA'[UI 'ANNIE (PG) HALL' WI .. W°""t Allttl ntlATUfl-- "SINBAD AND THE.EYE If THE TIGER,.(G) COMING "UICA Tll llLLEI WHALE" Spedll,0 "SIU. and Bu.rn«t at t.ht M9t ... Beet comedy aerte1: ''All 1'l tll• F..amlly ... "Bame)' Millet," 0 Tbo Bob Newurt Show~ .. "The Mary 'l')'ler MOOfe Show" and "MASH. .. ~ . E8I' D&.UIA 88&1 : .. B&Ntta." "Colum- bo," upamU)'," "Pollet Storr ·• "Upataln, Downlt.aln.'. Belt lead actor ln a drama or cOIQedy tpeelll: Petti' BOyl , "Tall Gunner Joe"; Peter Finch, "Rllcl OD Ent.ebb•"; Ed Planden °Harry S. Truman: Plain Speakln•": Edw~ Herrmann, "ElMDOI' and Franklin" i Georae C. ScoU, ''Beauty and tbo Bee.st." Belt actor in a •ln&lo appearance In a series: John Amot, LeVar Burton, Louil Gouett. Jr\' Ben Vereoo, all "RooU." LEAD ACl'OR IN A comedy aeries: Jack AlbertlOn, ''Chico and the Man": Alan Alda, ''MASH"; Rat Linden, "Barney Mlller"; Carroll O'Connor, "All ln the Family"; Henry Wl.nkler, "Happy Days." Leid actor i.n a drama aerl.,: Robert Blake, "Baretta; Peter Falk, "Columbo"; James Gamer, "Rockford Files"; Jack Kluiman, ''Quincy"; Karl . Malden, "StfeetaofSan Francisco." • · Lead actress in a comedy series: Beatrice Arthur, "Maude"; Valerie Harper, "Rhoda"; Mary Tyler Moore, "Mary Tyler Moore Show"; Suzanne Pleshette. "Bob Newhart Show"; Jean Stapleton, "All in the Family." LEAD ACTRESS IN A drama aeries: AnSie ... ...,.. TOO PAa" IP'GI "FOi THIE LOVIE OF IEHJI" CGI THE CITY ~OPP ING CENT Rt c:.tAHOf • e:M491 I "CITY CtHTU CIHt:MA') ~ .A f .. WY IMANCHllTf .. IX.I G G f .. WV ICITY 0 ... IX.I .,...,,, A "SIHIAD 6 THI V IYI 0. THI Tl ..... t•I A "111.AMD Of DI. MOHAU"' ~ "OaCA THI IU&.&.a WHALI" 11'•1 In the DAILY PILOT . STARTS TOMORROW __ _.,. ........ The Eye of the ·D Titer A He fought wars and won them. He defied Presidents -and might have been one. I . . Bingo Ok:ayed in LA LOS ANGELa (AJ>) -B!nio-p111lq for charity will be leta! in the =lty b Sept.. 1 now that Mayor Tom Bradley ha into law an or· dinance removlnl tbe fO.year on the 1ame. Tbe Department of Social Servic• hu ~ draftinl rules for SS,000 or1anlaatloaa .UCSble for licenses. • SCREEN IN ORANGE COUNTY • MOST AVAILABLE SEATING • FAN· TASY.IC NEW SOUND SYSTEM • 70MM AND 6 TRACK DOLBY STEREO • STAR WARS T-SHIRJS AND POSTERS NOW AVAILABLE •. SHOWTIMES Oally 12:00-2:45-6:15 • 7:45-10:18 Frt • ..s.t.12:00-2:45 S:15-7:45-10:15-Mklnlght . , ... -rhat explains why the bird bath goee drY IO eoont•• UNICYWINKERIEAN ACROSS ' j by Tom BatJuk . . DOOLEY'S WORLD DR .SMOCK r ... ,,.,, ,•,, ... "1tnc.. c.AMlfMI'. g..t/ . I I I PEANUTS by Roger Bradfield by George Lemont , . -... .,. If you have an item like this ... .. ... -· .~ ; , \. .. a.,... • Write an ad like this •.. . Underwood portable typewriter. Pica type. Carrying case. Sturdy. Wide carriage, full keyboard. Perfect for students. $75. Call Q00..0000 after 5 • Minolta SRT 101, single fens reflex camera. Precision F/1.2 lens. Self- timer, built-in light meter. Ca5e plus four filters. $200. Call 000-0000. Wilson clubs, matched set, four woods, ei9ht irons. Lightweight steel shafts. Like-new condition. $160 for clubs and bag. 000.0000. • Rockwell 7-~'' pcwer saw. Heavy duty. Cuts to 2-3/8 at eo0, 1-7/8 at 45°. Excellent condition. Only $40. ,iCall 000-0000. Suzuki X-6 Hustler with 6 speeds. Bright red. 250 CC duel stroke engine. A real goer in lik•new condition. Only $200. Call 000..0000. And get results like this! "Sold the typewriter the second day my ad appearedl Could have sold half a dozen if we'd had them." "Received several calls on my Minolta. Sofd it on the first call." ''Two people are ~ppier today ••• the young man who bought my golf clubs ••• and me ••• I'm $160 richer.'' "Never knew so many peopte were tn the market for saws. SelUng mine was easy.'' "Your Want Ads are "real 'JOIJ~ too. They sold my Suzuki." • 1 i . • ~ .I I zephyi;s Whiz Over S~njl DAMMAM-TO-RJYADH RUN OOQ IMOOTHLY WITH SAND PROBLEM SOLVED famed U.I. Train• Todaf ,,.. Mudl ~'aOnty WOfklng Rellro9d', . NEW YOR1' (AP> -The American <;lvU Liberties Union confirm• that it providedllWTBI with iDtormation about members in the lil60a at the laeiibt ol the Cold w IJ'. On the buu of 1uch lnfonnatiao, the FBI opened douiers on scores ol ACLU members. The • New York Timea and Los Aneelea Times reported PUJILIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE New York nm• aald FBI doeammta it ob- trom tbe ACLU lndlcated. the ortanbatioo wanted to ally ttaelf with the bureau, in part, so it would not be branded a Communiat or1ani.11tlon. . ACLU OFFICIALS AT THE time thought tht: FBI could also be an ally ln the fight for civil liberties, The New York Times said. Furthermore. aome ACLU officials on the na· 1J1a1nouuusi .. 1• 1J1amounu111t1u Uonal level feared that Communist party members T .. ,.,.=:!!.~'::e"!.11t.,..... Tiwio::::!!.~-:;:,"9.,.,ai· were ialning power in stale affiliates, the New .-us _.,, Yorknm•aaid. ciu1~:::!1t'1:~~~~· ""111• ---~~~~1.!.~.~si:::.:.Tc'A uu IN A STAT£MENT WEDNESDAY, the Ar&ttony ~ Ond.,o, 1•1 Cllt Rocu. CNm1>erta1n, 1•o Maui Pi.. ACLU's executive director, Aryeh Neler, and its qulta, L..-BN<h, CA '1.,, Colt•-· CA '761' Mk'-t H. Franc:11. m MM1un11-. Tllll<nU J. Raustt, 1•11 K1.,,,a11t, chairman, Norman Dorsen, confirmed the con-U:;::: =:;:-;',':4!!..wc!Al4 ..., • 0••r,~. T-. m w. AIPh•, tracts with the FBI, but said the practice was wrong 09Mre1•rtne""111. S...••-.t:.4 anddoesnotex.lstnow. ...,,.,_YT.°'*"° J.,.... •· NldlOls, m.1 c..r"" ''Whatever their motives, such contacts with Thi' stel-111 wff 11191! wllll t!M Dr .• VIII• P.,., CA th FBI i bl d d tru ti f eou111, a..• 0r-. eeunt1 enJulr n1a 111111.,.., '• contuci.ct l>'I' • e were wrong, nexcusa e an ea c ve o 2',1'77. oenar11lpertiwntllp. civil liberties principles," the 1tatement said. Pulllt_ Or_ Cotti Dell:= Thia ~.i::C, wltll h '"these lncldenll took place in I dJtferent era &Dd 4 HOFUJ', Saudi Arabia <AP> -B~ Zephyr puaenaer tr aim, f tmoua lot tbe fut rum from allcqo to pointa west: an Wstliq acrOll thedol.at aandl of Saudi Arabia~ d.,.. Completely refurbish.cl by a ltanau ~ Ml· neaman aPd aold to the Saudi Arabian rallioad autborlty tor an estimated '$5 million, the atreamliners s-.rted service ln March between the Persion Gulf port of Dammam and the desert capital, Riyadh. BUI' 111E •SAUDI RAILROAD AT the start, bad to overcome a problem ol tlne desert sand that whipped Into the can and cauaed puaqen to couth and cov• their faces. • I Aa the lleek allver trains whluecl acrou tbe de· aert. indudinl. northem flnCer of tbe VIit HDd sea called the Empty Quarter, t.H1; cre&Ud a vacuum wb1ch aw:ked the ptnktab dust Into tbe can. Riden on the early nma aa!d 1mall dlmes for.med. imldt the can wherever there was a am all openlnc. • aECOGN'IZING THE 0 DUST P&08L£11°. Abul Muhsln Buhawrt, deputy director of the Saudi Arabian Railroad Oraanlzatioa, took the train.a out or service ror three ween in June. Enclneen plugged the floon of the atalnlesa ateel can. By June 2S the zephyrs were wblpplnl acrou the sand.a again at 60 miles an boar. TMlr max- imum speed is 110, but that is unsafe. On the desert railbed temperature cbaqes of as much as 100 degrees between day and night make rail4 expand and contract and Arabian wlnda blow faster than the Zephyr itself. The Rlyadh-Dharan link built by the Arablan· American OU Co. 15 lbe only working railroad in Saudi Arabia. The Hiju Raill'oad, rwmlna north· 1outh along the Red Sea coast wu blown up by Lawrence of Arabia and b1a Arab independence fighters In World War I. FOR A 1JN1QUE DESERT rallroad, lt 15 unique Railroad olflcliall ftoel ArAU, which UmUld St8&M la 111S. wbichbad ... boqbt .... ... a~baDUt. • Biriet pt tM 36 can at a Price · bet.ween te0.000 mid $$2. b after~ tralna were taken out ol service t, ~ He uHcl them for b""-aioeu ptOmotlODI. 'lbe can were built ln 1939 by lbe Ed•trd G. Budd Co. ol Pblladelpb.la and were, u ID American eqi.neer 1'bo accompanied the train hert aald. ••way ahead ol tbe1r Ume." wm1 NAMES LIKE SILVER UNING. Silver Beam, Silm-Herald, Silver Screen, the Zephyrs were the ultimate lD railroad travel in the U.S. West. Divided lnto two 12-car trains, they covered the 1.o:M miles between Denver and Cblcaao la 15 boura with 1S atops. After beinC shipped to Saudi Arabia ID the frei&hter Eastern Wileman along with lt,OOOtooaol rice, the Zepbyn are now nmnin8 ln two five-car trains. one atart1na at each end each day. Tbey ply the 350-mile journey from RlYadh to Dammam. tb.rou&h tbe Saud.I oilfields, .. ch with a rou.nded ob- servation car at the rear. · 81'0P8 ARE AT ABAQAIQ, site or a diaattrous ollflre receotly;·Hotur; Alo Uardeh, and Al Kharj.· The observation car 15 the "family car" where wives, with busbanda or unaccompanied females alt. It la off llmlts to men without wives. . 'lbe atatlon watttn1 rooms at each end are similarly aeareaated, accordlna to the llO$lem rulee applied in Saudi Arabia. \ TUE REGULAS PASSBNGE& CABS are re· fitted with airplane aeata and Dticrowave ovens for snack.a. The haxury coach car seats cost $11 and when the sl~tng cars a.re du.atprooled, two overniabt rum WQ.1 ltart with a berth costina $15. equipment. ••-.4 11 1t u "" :u~n County c1e<11 of °'1"911 County on July are contrary to the way the ACLU o--rates todav." .... . . ' • u. "" L.:::..::....::.==.=..:~:..::~:.:...::..:....::.:.::...:.:.;:;.;;;;.;;;,_;;,:;;. .... ,;;;;.;.:.:.;:,;;;..;,;;.;;;.;;;.:...; _________________________ __,, _________________ _ PUBLIC NOTICE "1tw1 Publl"*' <>-Coa\I Dally Pltol --.. ,-CT-1-Tl_OU_S .-u-,-... -.-u--July 2t -/wg.lil 4 ' "· II, " 11 :nss-11 NAMllST4TIMINT The tol-lno -IOM are dof"9 IMN· MU.i' PUBLIC NOTICE 8 ASHWOWfM'S.aat .. ltUll St., PICT'lneutlUSINHS Colla~CA.m» NAMISTATIMINT -511ept,erd ~ ... 1'7' VI• TM lollowi119 --b do•nv l>ull· You can't knock these doors taC-1,N-18HCh,C4 t2MO -•• Deft S A~h, 1..S No. 1400 I!., It 0 e I N T E C H N I C A L Provo, Ullfl....01 PUBLICATIOHS, 7»1 Murdy Circle, Thi• ~lnau ta conducted l>y • Hunllnvton8ffch,CA'2M7 oener .. ~rtner\hlp ~~ S. ltobln, 1136? Maple "'''"" s ••-h Date LMW. H..,..tlnoton Beach. CA.,.,.. Thi• >wl...,,.nt wa• Ill.cl with llM This .,,,..,._ It condUct.O Dy .., In· County Clerk of 0.•"119 Co<#llY on July dlvldual n, "11. lt'\llr_..tS. lt04Hn .,, ,1"'1 Tlllt ,, .. _, wes flltd with the PubllVled Or•"99 Co<l•t Delly Piiot, County Cterk Gf Or8"Qt County Qfl J- July ll. -Auou•l •, 11, ti, 1'77 tt. 1'11 J7)4 11 ""U4 -------Pubtl"*' Or-Co•nr Dolly Piiot, PUBLIC NOTICE Juty t•.21.n.-Auou•u , 1911 3068-n PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUS IUSINIH NAMI STATIMINT The toltowtno ,_,_ It doln9 1111>1· 1----------114111 H : l'ICTITIOUS IUSIN•SS DON !:INUC> Hltl'UM•"S NAMlllTATllMtNT L TO., 660 Mewpon Cenl9f' Orlw M 21S, TM lolio.1119 PWtont we dOlllQ IMlll· H1wp0rt a.ac11. CA n..o ne11 •• Emlllo FreMIKO, 1412 E Ocean PERFECTLY CLEAR 'N CLEAN, Front, lhlboll, CA "901 W. C:o .. t Hwy , ~t Beac~. Thia bullMI• •• <onclue ll'd Dy .,, In CA '2"3 dlvlduet NIChOI•• J Parter /ICaren L EmtlloFreMllCo Newcomb. 4312 5'Hn<trllt WIY. Newport This stet-I w•• 111.0 wtt" the B••cll.CA"*l • C.-ty Clertl ol Oranoe County on July T"'' IM#slneu •• conducted Dy • 7, 1'71 oet'9f'lll pe,..,,.ttflll). "7 .. U Nl<hol81 J. Pm.,. PuDll!llltd Or-C"'™ 01lly Pl tot, I( • ...., L N...comb JUIY 14, J I, 21. and ~U\14, 1'11 Tiii• \lat-I WM fllld w1lfl IN ________ ..;.,,,;,,;;, .. ;.,;7_1 c_,, Cl«ll ol Or-Coumy on July n ,1tn PUBLIC NOTICE ,ICTITIOUS IUSINIH NAMl.STATIMINT The 1o11-1no -eon Is dOlnt 11u1I· M\J•I '1"'4 Pullll"*' Oranoe Coasl Oally Piiot, July2tl.-~4. 11, 11, ,,,, nst·n PUBUC NOTICE NEWPOltT PUBLISHING CO., ----------l UO Perll ....... ,. .... .... ..... l'ICTITIOUS9USINI• 4 Newpott a .. ch, CA. '16'0 NAMaS'TATllMStn RkNAI A McCormeck. tt• lfl11rll Tiit lollowlnQ perton b dl!Mng s;. Newpott So., Aj)I. 410. Htwport hkh, nastes, CA. t2MO IT'S FANTASTIC!, 1n E. 17th St., Thlt bollneM la cond\Kt.O by an I,,. Cotll MHI, CA t2W dlvlcll>el Rol•nd Jonph LeCoq, 112' H R 4 McCOr"le<k Marina Pecllke, LonQ &each, CA tcll03 This >lltement was llled with tlW Tiiis IMNM1111 ~t.o l>Y •II ln- C:ounly Clt1ll of oranoe County on July dMdUal. n. "77. Rollfld~hl.ICocl ..,.,,., 1'111• 11 .. ll'N!!I wet flled with lllf Publlthlcl 0r•"99 Gout D11hy l'ltot, Cou/l\y C:lef'll ol Orjlnge County on J11ly July2'.tnc1~u.11.i1,tt77 n,1tn. _.._ H»-71 r•n'W P(JBUC NOTICE PubllSlled Or-ONHt Delly Piiot, July 1t,andAllQll514, 11, 11, 1'71 )224-p · PUBUC NOTICE Screen doors let in breeze. So you cool your home naturally, and save on air conditioning. These doors are engineered to give you long-lasting quiet service. Quality const- ruction with no screws or rivets showing. Available in 30", 32" or 36"x8~r. Nom inal extra charge tor special order sizes. A. SKYLARK SCREEN DOOR Model #71-A2. Standard klckplate. ::i-pushbar. Flberglaaa wire, mill finish. Standard alze only. _ Reg. 16 99 11.88 B. MUST ANG SCREEN DOOR Model #71-E. Standard klckplate, -3" pushbar. Decorative grill Flber- glau wire, mill finish Reg. 19 99 14.88 C. COMET SCREEN DOOR MOdel#122-T. Silver painted llnlah IDr protection end beauty. Denae. decor111ve expended metal grill. Fiberglass wire. Reg.27.99 20.88 0. CORONA SC'REEN DOOR Model #122-F. Heavy construction extruded frame, mlll finish. Dec- orative expanded metal grill. Flbergl11s wire. Reg.33.99 26.88 Keepa that cool air moving Now you can 1fflclen1ty cool your 1nllrt home With the Patton High Veloclty air circulator. With the terrific air bleat of 9'68 cu. fl ol air per minute, II plckl up the cool air Inside •Ad doesn't draw In the hot air. PATTON AIR CIRCUU.TING FAN. Mod•l•U2-1272, 12"'. Reg.3UIJ 32.88 . • Where the gentle breeze• blow When the days ltld night• gel hot 1nd sticky. keep your home a place of cool and gentle brHzea with this oaclllating fan With tilt control to direct th• air flow. PATTON 0$CILU.TING FAN. Model #20·AAL. 8"'. 2 1peed. Nol IHuslrettd. Reg. 24.99 f'tCTIT10UUUlllHU Modtl#U2·1472, , .... NAMI naHMINT ' Reg. 41J.&9 19.88 T1't foltowl119 --.. dol119 bvll· 39 88 ...... ,, . . MAltll! CALL•NOl!lt'S #0 deO ~ °""'• ....,.,, IMCll, ~ ., ... Otntltr w. C.1111\dtr, '°2 Onllld, Model #30-AAL. 12"'. 311)ffd. Aeg.39.99 32.88 There'• comfort In the air You'll fMl It. when you tum on thl1 portable fan . .Receaaed handle, •MY·care plutlc gr111e. Full of 8afl1y features. UI. •ppl'Qlled. 2<1' TWO·SPEEO BOX FAN, Aeg.11.19 16.88 D. , .. • $ 79 TOT AL DOWN OHL Y CASH OR TRADE S395 totlll down 48 montntv oavments of $97 79 Deterred pr1C6 15988 92 APR 13 48% On Approved Credit Ser t2C1187U534332 NEW 1977 PONTIAC FIREBIRD Sar #2S87A7N 197903 EQUIPPED WR'H: • • Factory Air Conditioning • 350 C I. VS Engine • Automatic Transmission • Power Steenng 197 4 PONTIAC -$2677 CA.TAUU.CPI.' V I eulo treft1 lec1o•y 11r COl><l-tleri"O -~ - bt-·-·--....._.. ,.,., LM'Clw 100 --._ • (11U7".X1247$3J $ · 1975 BUICX 3377 v.e eul • ~~11cto(Y •'• co"CI!\'°"""' -~ ~ ....... ....., .......... .....,. root t -121s.,,q 55695 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY • Power Oise Brakes • Spart Mirrors •Radio • Ralfye II Wheels .... DAIL y PR.OT D J:u . NEW 1917 NNllAC · ASlllE OllLY l NEW 1977 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX •Sticker Pric• $ 8 4 3 I 60 Ditcomf S 143660 EqUIPPED WR'H: • Factory Air Conditioning' • Two-tone Paint • Landau Top • Cruise Control • Tinted Glass • Electric Rear Window Defroster Ser #2K57R7P405114 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY . • Power Door locks • Power Windows • Power Seat· •Tilt Wheel •Sun Root. •s11cker Qrioe la manufacturers suooeetect retell once olut dealer inltllled acc.aones. If any. . 1"12 PON'11AC $1877 CAT.HO.CPI. :.!iiu::o "•"• ~r;.,.: brllu!e .~nl:":t.. .._ lop. ,.,iy.......,.. (t»IHOCJ • . . . ~ $ 7 1976 PONTIAC 547 V·I. tuto.~~•CIMY .,, ~~io-a. -~ ,.,,..,. 11111• .......... .,,... Wiied ,...... ,...,. ,.,_.., '°""W) '· 1m PUBUC NOO'IC& PtTBUC NOTICE PUllUC NOTICE fl'ICTlnout ....... ftenn_,._.. .... MTt=:.w•ua ITA1'SWNTO•Wf'°"IMlAWAL ..,..,. .. "*.' MMUTAH ... Wf ..... A'f'IU!leNT ---··*' ...... Tlll~--------· ,.,.~ ................. ..... ~...,. ....... ... ...... , . ... ltATJ•UffNlt ... . .. ,. " • -...UTK. lt~ """ 1m Jlth« Aw-• •IC'l1TSOUt IMlll••• ~· 1w.w111••· ~lfM. ""411fOIN .. L #I OJ I ,,.. ... ~.,iol ,... ........ ..,_ ..... ""' ~.....: N<lll. M1l1 ~ iO\.All OIL iUll1 4 DIL tu• llrt L. ~ "CA,,..,..... u • .. 11•r•l ••'1Mr frtM Ill• DIVIL~llllNlt, LIMIT'aD, ·---~~ ..... ....... __. .... ::e "" , .. atr.-IMl:a CA•=.• MtM v... Of'w lat. ""11.e J, ci.. ' JtM 0. ~ ,.._ WllMINt lltl•o 1111tl111" 111 • • & • ...._.., ~u. '""' MHl,CA .... ~.HllMl,...IMcll,CA.,.... OafOlllHIO" GLAU, ti JUt ................ '"' Diii ... .,... ,.,,.....,, ... '"' •• IUeMn I'. ~~' tel Yltlt W.UMI....,, Wttt,,,._.., CA C411Hfltfllil t.,._thtll, 1ut M9tt .,......, ... 0--.. = TM ftcl!flwt ~ -tlMI- ''"''' L•l~I, ... Vwa OrfW J, Cllltl .... lll~Ml'tll'llj1• V11i._ """"'' .., ... I*'---... tll._ fll .......,. ""'"' CA._ • Nf-*w C. "" 111 ._. C-r 4f Tiii•....... ••CM-~=~----°'"'"' .. ' .. it ~.-..i• ., • ...... . ~,.:: ..,. "*. 'illl MINM 11W ......... ot ,,_,_ _..,..,,..._. OlflW ...... Wf~ ... I :::.. ..... ..,_...,LW . .......... ~ . """&:;.' lton lcll11ltc. Htl -" ......... -~111\. ... ,.-. Tlllt ......,.,. .. fl ... wlUI Ill OIMC• , IMll~ 9Hdl, CA °""""' ~ " .... ~ ... ""• ~ . C....ly a.. ff Or .. ~ 911 Jiiiy ti64' """· ~ fltll •• fl* wllfl "' 1,ttn ~•.klwlti '*-"an "or.. c..1ty.,..,,... ..... ....-t• ...... ..... c..nl Oel'l.~ .. "11. ~ .... ==-Dlllty ...... .._ .... er.._ c..11 0.11, "'kit. """ • .... ,,.... 4"" '"'•.,•"""-•· n, 1e. ttn .......... Or-. c:i.if OllllY .. , ... ,,...,, aau.n ..... , ..... -... .. ''·" '"' u»-n "1aUC NOTICE ruauc NOT1cs PV8UC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE ftU8LICADMIHllTRATO• HMl·ANNUAL tt•l"OltT • • TO THE HONOllA•L• ••uc• ~.1u..-N•RN, .. OIAT• JUOG• O~H• tUtt8RIOR COURT . • .OFTHl!STATEOl'CAL ,OfltNIA,I ANO,ORTHECOU YOl'ORANGE: JAMES e. HEIMiP\lbllCAdmlnlstntorof Uld County, rffoectfUlll mlkH this rttu~of 111 est.tffof dtcedentl ....Ueh M..,. come nto his ti.!'ldl tot CM term commencing January • 1977, 1nd endh'9 ant ao. 19n. I • 111 111 I, -gf ... 11-! ~hi "I 1~1 li Ii &:& ti e !:;! i! • ~~UI J~z,, .... % <C : . •.! '1• w.!c l·S.77 560.000.00 111,SSS.'3 $6.103.36 SS,452.57 $53,896.64 1-12·77 304.54 3CM.54 -0-304.54 304.S4 l ·S-77 23,673.69 :£3,673.69 1,040.42 22,633.27 72.633.27 1·7-77 746.54 146.54 746.54 ..().. ..().. 1-11·77 622.12 622.12 231.65 313.47 383.47 1-5-77 131.67 13U7 ..().. 131.67 131.67 l ·S-77 216.00 276.00 ..().. 276.00 286.00 1·21-77 587.60 587.60 8.66 518.94 578.94 1-17·77 49 • .U 49.44 ..().. 49.4' ~ . .u 1-21·77 1,086.50 1,086.~ .O· 1,0l6.5o 1,086.50 1-13·77 1.260.27 1,160.21 110.21 449.99 .U9.99 1-25-77 t,151.61 1, 151.61 10.S6 1, 141.0S 1, 141.05 5,799.00 5,1'9'.00 2,921 .50 2,871.50 2.877.SO 3,617.4 3,687.4 1.709.07 1,971.41 1,9711.41 15,000.00 m.sa 43"'-03 1.-..so 14,565.97 2.982.86 2,982.96 1,794.16 1.1 •. 00 1,188.00 1,JS0.00 ..().. -0--0. 1.350.00 1·21-77 18,621.00 14,7'4.10 3, 138.53 11.645.S7 1S,'89.47 4 -90350 2-2-77 696.99 696.99 215.68 411.21 411 .21 2-7-77 797.75 797.7S 490.01 'J/11 .74 307.74 2·7-77 1291.19 1291.19 4S9.66 831.S3 831.53 2-7-77 .SS .SS ..().. .~s .SS . 1-3-77 412.00 52.50 6.06 46.44 405.94 1-S-77 150.03 150.03 ..().. 150.03 150.03 2-15-77 1,S61 .1S 970.60 .0-970.60 1,561.15 2-16-77 1,983.00 ..().. -0· ..().. 1.983.00 2-17-77 665.98 665.98 49.62 616.36 616.36 2-,.n 14,752.00 l4,369.67 815.30 13,484.37 13,866.70 2-28-77 386.91 384.91 386.tl ..().. -0- 2-28--77 276.51 276.S1 -0· 276.51 216.S1 2-28-77 2'1.38 211 .31 20.19 191.19 191.19 2-28--77 187.79 187.79 -0-187.79 187 .79 3-2-77 29.87 29.17 .(). 29.87 29.87 r 3. 3.77 988.00 988.00 -0· 981.00 988.00 3-11-77 .U0.82 .U0.82 299.99 140.13 140.83 t 3. a..n 4,701 .50 614.08 19.46 594.62 4,682.04 .,, .. ~ •, • r' II ~10.71 1,764.21 t .281)1 .148.62 't-" 4"0.09 91S.59 3-17-17 2,03"f, 2.03U3 781.50 1,252.93 1,2$2.93 3·16-77 •.•96 ' 4,4'6.01 164.30 3,nu1 3,731.71 t 3-22·11 889.07 889.07 aoo.oo 89.07 89.07 3-23-77 1,257.S6 1.257.S6 364.00 8'3.56 89'l.S6 J.17-77 188.14 181.14 170.08 .. 18.06 18.06 f 3-28-77 l,541.00 ..().. .(). I ..().. 1,5.41.00 ( 3-29-77 190.60 190.60 1.16 189.44 199.44 3·29-77 507.02 507.02 17.89 489.13 489.13 3-1 .. 77 1,274,00 t,1t1.29 J6.09 1,035.20 1,197.91 3-11-77 2,116.83 2.186.83 132.93 2,053.90 2,053.90 '" 1-17 38,966.81 31,966.11 3S.OO 38,931.81 38,931.11 >1•77 933.$9 138,St 7.50 131.09 926.09 ~1•17 62''90 628.90 37.63 591.27 591.27 3-11-77 11,3S7f00 868.50 117.30 751 .20 U,239.10 20,418,6' 20,.471.69 95.90 20,382.79 20,382.79 163.00 163.00 18.80 144,» 1.-..20 ... u,.-.2..31 13,974.96 797.26 13,1n.10 . 23,645.13 2,09S.8' 2,0U.14 175.13 1,920.11 1,920.11 190.54 190.54 .16.53 174.01 174.01 1.085.31 1,085.31 e.29 1,017.02 1,0n.O'l 4-25-77 9,8'3.54 5,8$2.51 6f5.2S 5,237.26 ;.m.1' 4-2s-77 7,S7t.OO 6,021.94 360.06 5,661.88 .210 ... 4-2J.'11 6,46t.91 S,632.'3 2.020.oe t,612.15 ....... 83 +2.S.77 26,2'4.00 10M3.00 u~.as · 7,'°2.65 23,693.65 4-22·17 5.19 ~ ... .08 ,,81 s.11 +.22-11 5.SI 5.51 . • + S.51 , .. J. 3.71 1,630..42 1,63CU2 119.M 1.$10.18 1,$10.7* ... 5-.. TT -0--0-• J. ~11 2.•52.93 + .") +25-77 5'4,55 + .s. 2·17 329.1S + .s. 6-77 56U6 18.70 5-11-77 30U1 2.26 5-16-71 29'.00 -0- 5-12·77 2.021.96 117.30 s.1t-n 122.26 7.!0 .t s.1•n 365.79 + 5-16-11 33.20 + S.»17 2'M.U 1J.OO 5-\t-17 9.20 + 5-tt-11 114.51 + 201.21 '6.30 614.26 56.56 2,211.• S..65 1,12A.t6 • I00.00 .a.12 + t,1•.60 ass.oo - 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L .0 T c L A s s I p ,. E D ·- ,...ther't Motlce: ~ COATS&WALLACE REAL ESTATE. INC. AU real estate advertised bi UUa Mwapaper is aul>-Ject to tbe Federal Falr Hou1ln1 Ad Of lMI which snakes ll U111al to adverU1e "101 pr•· ftnl\«1 Umltatlo , or dlscrtnunation based oni--------1 race, color, retiaioo. aex, or nation•I ori11n. or an lntA!DUcm to make any euch preferene., Urolta· Uon, or d1.acrlmlnat1on. '' ••••••••••••••••••••••• IYOWHER BIG CANYON TWNHOME ________ 1 3 br, 3 ba biably up- graded El Dorado mdl. f 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ARTY LIVING Extra lg patio. air cond,. Pool, jacuui & tenrus in Panoramic view. Wind quiet Pl erae. eeWna. \IP pletW'Cllque atreeta <>Nv/Afl., 'l»OOIT t overlookh~I 1tor1eou1 -----------Lquu Beach. 4 Bedrm, EV. .a.. .... DED 8 bath. < Dres1tn1 room ~ """ and triple c101et in FAMILY HOME . CONVENIENCE! This beautiful home with s bdrms .• 3 baths. dining rm. & an all new kitchen. is in Newport Beach. but 1t1 convenience is out of this world! Easy walk to Catholic & public crade schools, CdM HJgh School. Boy's Club. shopping. swimming pool & ten.nts courts. & a view too. $174.000 _ .... ltG CANYON TOWHHOM....ul · You'll enjoy living in this NEW 2·story with 1 bdrm & bath dn and master suite with sitting rm upstairs. Lge din- ing rm, w fireplace with logs. largp patios <front·& rear>. Cptd & draped. Pool & tennis. S695 Mo. 2111 S. Joa4 k tlh ._. H1m::1EW.a.o'POlt.-1T-Can&. M.I. 644"4910 an..-bedrmh LM01 Like new I bedroom, 2 rm•fatnllYhubeamed beth bom• with new Ge•r.. 1002 flf••NI IOOZ ceiling. WorlVot poten· carpetln1, new paint, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••-•••• tlaJ with one wlt.b vision. new country kitchen & Far sale or exchuae for Iara• family room wltbl11 __ ...... _.., __ .. _..,_,__. .. _ .. _,._ .. _ .. _,._ ... __ OCEAN VJIW u:ia., SlU,000. alC)'-Ulb&. Comer lot with THI ILUFfS ALL ova UOtU-6aALL lmhlandlcaDJ.n&•2&lde Laraest Carmel\ta Newport Cr.4' i. the • llt8 yard1. alf for only model-lowest pnce 4 area with 4 bdrna. C.M. 4~ $76,000. CALL 7~1·3191. bedrm, 3 baths, located beautifully uparaded --~ 1Jm !p SELECT coovenlenUy near larae wlt.b sreat ~. Th\s · · ROP pool " clubhouse & on xln1 val~ bu an ocean P ERTIES. wlde 1reenbeU. Bltn v\ew from 3 room.a and storace room in 1ara1e. wall WJ you aee the up-a---------• I Check thJ.a well priced &radel. Hurry! $4f.D13 l.6Ac.ofPrlvocy AHOMEYOF home-owner ha• Ol'f'Nrtt9·11HUHIO•'-''' ••Hiltopl p purchaeed bouae 1--, I !~~~~~i!!r.'! be~=~ ::us'! :::.~~J~~ ~ ·lftl'ltl~ Golf Courae. $195,000. this a~ condominium $145,000. TWO HOMES- ffi4)792·6172 Pri:nc. only. in The Bluffs has 3 PETE BARRETI OH LOT byappt. bdrm1. • 2 baths. ... ~._.;.;::....------1 s111.ooo. How does that -REA• ·:rv-"" L. In a very nice residential 1--------1 pb you;7M400 642·520~ . . area. Ea111 to keep renl- HAR BOR ,..,.......,....,..._,..._......_,,..._....ed. or use oa• for n. Fnlt ,, •• ,., SoltthelriQ! Best buy In College Park, 3 br, 2 ba, fruft trees & more! 8'8-892.8 5'5-M83 A Divl51on of Harbor Investment-Co. 'r~ACRE PLUS HORSES Looking for room to apread out? This unique property baa it alL 5 BR, pool & jacuui. a barn yourself & the other for mother·ln-law. At full prlce of S72.500 that'• on- ly '38.250 eacbl 644-TTU el Walker G l P.e wltb a bonua room Real Eatata above, prof. lndacpg &•--------&aftt Owner orrera 2 br kJta or trlr acceea. IP the WOW SIJ.,tOO condo. AC. DW, 2 car hllla of Yorba Linda. IH COSTAMISA Lachenmyer • H••a1tor ....____ __ _ 1---------• 1ar. frplc. pool, huge •-1J131).l480 FHA loan. $59,500.1_:.:._:.;::;.::...;;:_.,;.. ____ This 3 Bd.rm. l•mily IALIOA ISLAND llAH OPPOaTUMln _!645-54M~~------t--------·I room home 1' loe.1*1 on Lease with option, 2 aep. TRY A DIFFERENT bol-. for the prlce of StJle of LUe-Llve one. LHH S • den wlthtD tbe boundatlet of charmer, 2 •t.ol7. new Clev•land National kitchen. then optlOD both Forest: Jae FamUy hme foroo11 $225,000. m ,,., acrel a 1Plc'1, pull ehahi to let. Iota of natural wood, stained ., ... wtndowa. $150,000. IALIOA ISLAND LEASE SGO lloatb wtater. llov· •ln before 1c.bool 1tar&14 IACKIAY l'aat.Uo cuaom home tot a lar1• facnlly. ' Bed.room, 3 bath + rum- pw room+ deD +land· )1t'OOID.· CANYON Rl:ALTY SUnndo NNlm ~ COATS 0iWALLACE REAL ESTAT E. INC. ~ North lllde of C.11. Near So. Cout Plata and achools. 1t lt the pelf ect fiXtt. WW not lut •call now see UWI or one of our other homes. 548-2311 LUSK GEM ••• amone Jnel1; lge., low maJnt. beclt )'ard. perfect fer 1our potted phnt1. ' Spacious bdnns., Wills comfort&· ble family nn., laundry rm. " more. Call for app't. C. Ft. ColeswerthY UM.lOIS 640-001'0 , I ·~ , I '°'•me ADOICTS Hen'• a hom tor •II you attic freak• I s btdrooms. mu Ive family and llv· tn1 roc>rN. 3 car a.rage, 3 baths, 3000 sq.ft. and. t"all'h thl1. 2 attic•! A ! "nUs eu Verd 8uccolu Home backa to tho Country Club property and fronts on one of M ~a Verde'• finest. Priced at $149.500 aod that's not bid fOf' • with 2 attic'•. U,_,l()UI'. li()~H REAL TORS'. 646·5990 152!) Meu Verde Drive. Ent, COtt1 Mtu 11>0 1f\ Corund del Mai. ill 6 7!) GOO() PENINSULA home 4 Or 5 BR. 3 ba, aU amenities Lovely neighborhood. a few steps from the beac:h 5195.000. OTHER prestige waterfront homes fo'rom tl!IS 000 Up BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR J•11 Hny\l(l•· Or111•• N 8 6/S 6161 G...,-ol Lar&e automotive 1ar11e located on Newport Blvd. + re sldence 1n the rear. C 2 lot.12~~xl91. Owner may help finance. Full price $135,000. ~~ -ANYTIME --~-. HERITAGE • • HEALTORS LUXURY LIVIMC. 3 Huce BR, 3 Ulo BA. den. dlnJn1 room, 2 •tr. w/28' open beam eel . ln11, tilt1. entry , llteplace, wet bar, l&l.lD· dry room, overabed dou· ble II(, :lOOO 1q. ft. of very unique llvlna apace. sisuoo. JACOIS RIAL TY 67&·6670 Solar Hffhd Pool Larae 2 story Coata Meaa 4 bedroom home. He1vy shake root, c1.11tom brick and t.lle wort. c .. BBQ Low maintenance yard. Kirrry, owner moved t Ca~a and muat sell! Pri"9d only "2.500. Sub- 11\I\ )'our \erma. Call MWMO. ·~-";,&. HERITAGE . . REALTORS associated BllOKCI<<, !11 /11 TuR'; lO 'l' "" f 1111 •• I , • ' It, IACK IAY·VllW SH,500" --U~I l~ 11'•--l;f\ll\ •• "'1 ' "'"' 11w, j 1Jr' M11 .... Pltrnt .,..._ 2 a BR Wllt1, l~lled OD UHIUlll)' J.araeJot. cau a.ocs.r. HO.ttoo IOZ4 ·············-·········· NEAR MALL ~·a Bdrm, 2 ba, bu1e lot. ll'Ut urpett, ,,..b pa1Dt, redwood patlo1 mueb more. Prlc:ea llelow marlt.t. Call tw>UYUALTY f6Wfll NEW DUPLEX MODOWHYA News J br, 2 ba, lam. nn1 aeller motl•ated. Wlh comlde.r all otrers. CalJto .... mm. 831.o.801t '88.o500 U.UIOPTION Brand new 2 bedrm plush borne. I Mos. leue optjoa. •.ooo. $675/mo. 8KR983-'1188 •IYOWMB• ~ Down,. priced below market. Choice aua near ~ Huae encl. C(OUJ'fyard w/fouotala, ..._, lilbta a BA, 1 Ba, ttpk, room tor aiddoOM. -.-. C.UAM75T .~ I •!.- ·~ . . ' UHCM alALTY Plan Ill Turtle Rock. 4 5'1·2000 "'" ----------~ BR ~ l•m· rm. on hu11 ....... REDUCED aecluded private lot.. 1 Y'r. home warranty lo· eluded. Lingo lk.tl WIST HINE On 1olt coune: new tbruout, end unit, 2 bdrms., 2 baths. m,500 IACREIAMCH f\xer upper house, 3 car praae, bunt house. out bldp, well water, fenc· tni. lot.ti ol trees. Terma. BK.a. (n4)fiM4191 ORm.-0530 LAND from Barltott to ()ceamlde. Many dlflernt also parcels al different. prtctt. llYIRIM TRJPLD + I Wrm home PU1$ YaC.Ut. lot. AllforllS.000. C_.w t 2 I Sti'l.••-.w• lnv•trncnt l)(vtQon ''J;."'' DfttNs1 Prop9rtyl I can flad lt fort.ft; Beach aru tpee t. Probatee, F'ol'eclosures, S.Dlu'\qjteaDl• e. lavtlltmeat. ... a.aowm etprice. w..wwi. •1111rs Callm"'545 f ' l I I! •3 8r,2b•, den. frplc, dbl aa.r, walk to ahope & bch. !!08 Larlupur. 1-892-2342; M0-7198 .,, .............. .... . .. ... ...... ............ • • • OT SERVICE Fenaale to abare 3 br ....... R.ntal 4450 bcMaae ln CM. S125 mo. ••••••• ••••••• • 9 •• • •• • • Call~WaJ\4 :00. .. -ii .,. ..... COSMITICSAUS ExcelleDt oppor. for qualified coametic IJledattn Sal + comm. ()\Utpndln1 CO. benef&U, Apply lo Penon JCPINHIYS JOO Lacuna Hllll Mall Letuna Hilla F.qua.l Oppor EmploJer . ~ -- ' I ' IMK.Y,..lOT Dr)er. alnl lvnd lh•111ore. lilv1 dty Wlwri a. IU..rd. atld Gl.mf Aactila IO 15 ....................... 2 Tabl ... pec11n (;om mode • Cornering, llulh 1125, Brunswick llhr top ________ .. pokertble, WO. M~- PUBLIC PURHIT\JRE *AIETION• Frw.y 7:l0PM tDe•1W9'cw• Storaie lot com1cnmen and SU>ck JJquldaUoo. MASTEIS AUCTION 207S Newport Blvd. C.M. '7141 llJ.tUS 1714164M6H lkyclft 1020 1 pc DR aet 1ol1d mahoeany. 64 ·' tbl, 4 sidu chairs + uphl hoat ' bolte.1 chairs. Beau. lr11 aideboard 4 12"' leaves 4< tbl pada. $1150. Fr Prov tw BR ut, 6 drawer dreuer & matching mir· ror, S·drawer chest, rueht.l&nd, beadboardJI. springs, & mattresses, 2 velveteen & 2 quilted ~~~~~~~~~ bedspreads. SS7S.5-pc = Din Set. 42" tbl. 1 15" leaf Top pecan parquet. Gold uphl chairs $12~ Prov aora. gold brocade. 1275, 2 l~ gJas.s to matching coffee tbl SlOO 2.5 cu ft Amana side-by- aide re!/fr w11ce maker. avocado 1375. Ludie · dHlr, antique white, 4 drawer S7S. Olympia typewriter, dlx port. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mens 10 spd bike, still un· der warranty $125. 8C2-6ZU eves Ladies 3 speed Schwinn bike, 1 year old. Xlnt cood. sso. 842-8374 ans IW~Mahriefs 1025 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Used Lumber, 4"xl2"xl8' (22). 3"xtO"x16' (41, 2"xlO"xl4 ~)" (432), T bracket.$ (26 I. &44 0878 Cots IOlS C-Ontemporary couch s·. •••••••••••••••••••• ••• bile/beige, gray stn pe utt4, 1t71 KI U en, • 3 Per 11 an . ..:ISO_;_. _8!1_...;,-07_66 ____ _ smokey grey female ITS. Amencan OaJc Antiques, ------ Suz.anne, 751-l~aft.6 Oak table & 6 chairs, & ES:rATF.SALf: 1040 muc. 498-0f-44 Antique Ttffany Ii Sliver DD4JI pieces. <7141 499·328S •••••••••••••••••• ••••• Household furn & a P· -.. A dedicated few devoled pllances reasonable New Cut Of( 11aw, 10 to the premise of a pro make offe~s. 548.7397 ' blade w /Or 11tand, <:011t . ----- SUOO. Ofter, trade, .VW bus. 548_.W, ~ ~~:1 ! ,1. •t I ,\ t ~ f' 1 ~ 1' •• •.11P.41.' I l!'rf 111 A( •• I\\, • h I \11 1.I \ l .. 2626 HAltlOI ILVD. COSTAMfSA TOPIUYEa See U1 nrst, Cr lut ! Top dollar pa\d fO<' lmporta. COSTAMISA DATSUN 2MS Harbor .Blvd. Costa )lep 540-&410 Gwld 12 string, hvy case. $500 . Yamaha 160 wll."ase. S80. 540--0631 1964 27' Tolly craft prw. 17000. '$48-8270 or 64().6008 al' KANTOLA Trimaran, head, ruu l•lley, 0 /8, VHF, Ufe line., moorin1 cov., poly pnt., 1peedo, perl. e»nd. 17500 incl'ds. 4 mos. free slip. PP. (714) 549-2520 197'2Courter, Stm. Xlnt Cond. 5'.000 ml, 83MOJ.a WE PAY TOP DOLL.AR llORMIFTY IMPORTS -MARQUIS MOTORS 19M "'-ton Chevy P /U 2.!BJ2 Jhr1uerlte Pkwy. ORUM SET WFL·Drums, bass & tenor, SUitan cymbal & high hat, ong John Grey. Loodon snare w /stand & accessories. ideal for be"anner or in · termed1ate, complete SlM PP.M0-3081Fred •WOW!!! 1977 w/cabover camper MISSJONVIEJO SlJOO. 03-2188 131.2110 49 S.121 0 9570 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1'72FORD lntporW ••••••••••••••••••••••• IUllLITCW VAN A.ti 9707 Se R A camper 1peclal·fu1Jy ••••••••••••••••••••••. .. ,,.!..~.!. ~:~~ ...... !!?.! .• ._.,, u ........... =~· J~: !.t-i!~~~~ Justarrived. Boas WANTIDI • Part.a. 990 No. Parker, US-87U says "Sell them at Newport Buch boat slip. Oran1e. Call 99'7·2000 I 972 FORD YAN 1_cir.;,;....;.;..:,,,.:~---- c105e-Out.pr1crs'" Minimum Zt foot. PJeue '5i VW aunroot sedan for COMVElf'SIOM '74 AUDI 100 LS. Air. luynowlr Serve! call544-8858. Parta. Have pink illp, V8. sunroof, radio, AM/FM, autotrana, 40M SUbstantlal price WANTED· Two U 1 S3l..a888evea. heater, while spoke ml. Muat sell $3200 or increue1100n. · • Pl or---------• wbeell with special Urea beet olr. 875-4117 after 7 Trailera-C.G. &ear lncld. 27' SaJJboata. Newport, & many more optlona. Pll/wbds Water ready-we are de· Balboa. 875-Uh Aatos for 5-EZ terms O A C 1 yr --------- alma ....................... parta ac J~bo~ iervlce ._...,fftCll•y 9709 . HARRISON•s Small boat " Newport~/ policy avail. (12681K). ••••••••••••••••••••••• mooi1na.~.Phone QGulc.s 9520 AutoCen&er'•priceis lt74AUSTIM 1.8 SEA RAYS ~ 830-SOO?. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ON&. Y Sl695 4 apeed, rad.lo, heater 4c llOl PocJflc Cit Hwy For rent, 20x.SO. Waler & '52 Chevy 4 Dr Dix. 70M MAlllS very low mtleage, Nwptldt 6l1·2547 elect lncl'd. AvallAui is. orig ml. runs great. •UJoc--u <SMWW>. EZ terms- 873.843' Penn. Everything work1, clock, A ""' 0 .A.C. 1 )'r. PUU & labor 18' Herrahoff Squadron radio. $600. Call Ron 1'2$ Baker St., C.M. aervlee policy avail. -----Yacht , diesel Bay I have available 2 allpe, ~-!1811 \.~blkeaalofffarborBt AutoCenter'apricels Launch. Aft. fl7S ·761!5 one 1.n Dover Shores, 540.9109 OMLYSl795 · eves w/occommodale up t.o Sharp '58 Dulek, super w•1-s ---------• ~·. one in Promontory i.dr brd top, PS/PB, ou 1914 DODGE """' - 12' Alum. Bay & Lake Bay, w/11ccommodateup tlres, xlot runnlof cond. SPORTSMAN VAN AUTOCl!HTa ' ----boat.12HPmtr,trlr&all to so·, w/trade for one Good chrome. nso. Automatic, pwr. atcer· lGBalcerSt.,C.11 .... acceaa.AOO/bstofr.2288 llvuboard 11lp in S..1402 Ina, atereo tape & air UbaeutolHarborBl f'ounl.aln Wy West, C.M. Newport Bch. C•ll tlJ 1J , COIJd. Thll vu1 u utra, 540.ftOf Comeaeeaft5:30pm. mldn.11ht 11k tor Jan ~numderbird, one. ln· mracJeanwtthlow,Jow IMW 97 1= .,.74N1 • t1m. Xlnt cond. S4000. -•'--yy n UI' Bay or akl boat. 3 Cov· ao..aa, 1~4-4Sl7, an. 1 ._... (71!1K ). ••••••• .. •••••••••• .,.. era 3 propa. 75 HP IMh.~& . · 0HLYSl695 Johnson. s.ac. suoo Sid toeo 'S CHEV, BEL AIR. On· 673-ll!OO ....................... ~= i.°'ln'?:RF'M~ ••• Sharp 18' Bay boat. 1/8, Im ta foot Formula. UIO oriclnaJ coodlUon. You ---new tuneup Many xtras OllfC. 45 hours. Must must aeel Looka, runa 2MSHARBOR BLV . · · seJllS7885.Ca.Uaa.ma. excellent. h ,ooo or beat 140-6410540.021l. SADDLEBACK BMW • ., COfOftOdo 25. Clean. Lollded tor cruft. ms.te.ooo. · SllS7--0389 751-4'Cf 21'MOl•ON OUTlSLAND Loaded with •ll aew equipment aod 1leeps a adulta ln comfort. Atomic '· Genoa, VHF, ,_caah __ ot_r_er_._-._9308 __ • __ , Hon '116 Chev 1tep.van sn.-11 ' ~~ w/'73 8 eyl. en1., 14 mpg, COMUM&SH THE630CSI NOW OH DISPU Y "' .... _. 9530 everythlnt Bood cond. ROGERS, custom Ski ••••••••••••••••••••••• 14'd' bed, wlndowa, ex· tr as. Call 845·8269; 5000 ml. Stb whir, all 1.eM&-__ 7lll8 ______ _ xtru. Sell together or *'77 DoclQe V•• l---------I ::farllinesa. 873-9408 All •1-IOO• •---------Custom extettor palnt & 9110 m11a custom Interior, ~neUni & carpet101. Pwr 1ieerin1, pwr brakes, 1un roof, AM~Fll stereo caautte w/4 apkra. 10,000 mi. 50,000 mL warranty. Brand new coodillon IMOO lft· vested wm aell for balance owJ01 17800. 5S-Sllllevea. OUR COMPLETE IOOYSHOP ISMOWOf'EN IMWRESALES tf722002tH 4 •peed, air eood., stereo c••••tte It m a1s. <anrGX). -lf74Z002tU 4 1peed, aJr t!Ol>d., aun. rool & steno caueue. <*MCF>. 1'692002 Aqomauc. alr cood. & Aid/Fil radlo. A ono owner car. <ZRVt48). 1972 2001 AaatomaUc 1ri&h air coad. 011e owner car. U21.FJ'Q). • 1971 2002 4 apeed. aanroof Ir AM/FM radio. (e.50:t) .. BARWICK DA T\UN ' . ' 8Jl-1 ll'> ·1'il-ll!I) WEIUY CLIAHC4U &TIUCU . lf7J ....... 4 tpMd, air cond., 1un• ~ metalllc ptlnt le on• Jy ~.ooo odlbW miles. <.lOILWA). '"' nor 4 1peed, sunroof, air ~Odd. '-atereo. (01.SU\'). , 19142GOZ C •peed. AM /I'll ft only 2',ooo ortaloal mllt•. &l*'alwPI (GIO.k'Yl'>. - ' c i , \i f t . t •• J ) " l p 1 I p I 4 I It D •I A*1, a.~ ........ la,.W ........ ..,.... Autoa, Imported Awto., Uaed A.toa, UHd Tinnday, ~ust 4, 1977 ~y PILOT @• ... •••• ••••••••••••••• ••••• •••• • •• .... •••••••• •••••••••tiee-.~•••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... Used ..... UM4 -.w t7fl,.. t7Zl Mlr•••lllis t740 ,...... t110 Cell• 9911 ~ ............. !!.~! ~.~:::t. ............................. -. _ ............ -.. r· -·••••••••M••-•• .. • ................ ,,, .............. ••••••••••••• -•••••••••••••••••••• ........ _ ............... 'T Mawtf9 9947 OW.MOiiie .ttll Piiie ttl7 C RE VI E R '72 SPOIT COUPI "'IS 450 SLC (4 pan) Mot. VW SALEJ 11 ~!:1 ~~·~:{~ ........... ~ ........... "1•••••••u••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• l·apd, m•1 wb••l•i ted, 1un.roof. AM/FM W Ha An E ll• t 83.l-OO "la xWt cood AM/Fii I lt710LDS 'ft Wp. Air. R/H, haf. All/ J'M tadlo dua tape dk, air, apeclal e vt •ce en · ctr 6 11 ...:.. 'ul _.. ........ •••OM ract. Xlnt eond. Ori1. plpm, blk vlpylh~rd·top, wbl1, only lOIOO ml. Selec:tlonOfVW '13 Ford Banchero. PIS. • cy • ,_.,muatse ~v•---. ownr.$1900.Mlo-6'7'5 $"' • llWY UIUll)'yeJIO'#.OOOdcon• T14·16t·lllll eve/wknd, Ouaet-'sCcampe~ 1971CADILLAC P/B, A/C, Mai Wheela. Sll'IOO.~ =4:1~~= ~SqW.-au.to.&lr tA1u& ••• d1Uon. AU.ins tlJSO or .,..... ~/wkdya. llLL Y ATIS COUPE DEVILLES Good cood. 82995. daya uno. 2 dr. 1tick. e cyl. PW?' iteertos brake•· is.IOOIDl.auter co~ U8117t mek•affe;:·":·:!f•Z:!.... 9742 VW-PORSCHI! (11) to chooee h'om. All 753-1570,eve-551·2'1'4 Good cond.. Radio, $UC). window., buoll~ seat.I, SZZ50. ~ • 1•w-Tt--•°"""' ~;-.:. ~~Y le .. ••••••••• .. •••••••••• SanJu•nCaplstrano ~i::~ <;::~'M&~~ s~f~ 1975 FOID •'1'162 Yinyl top, air coad., '1 Brwo Pinto Sedu •UllD IMW's* me or a • HELPI Ou.r t•mlly ti.. 137-4100 493-4511 pricedf LTD WAGON Mercury tHO etuiaeeoot.rot, Ult wheel. 4 PB ood • 'H IAVAllA, A11lu "71 ~ 1:ipyde1'1, 0tver outaiown1lppyll.lllell'14 1 5ro5m988 A t t · d . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Locally dTlven car. ~A~i!t& cond. •YO dth MVU' r111i1tMed. ll<J llld1et. lt~c1n1 '71 VW Sclbk, FM 1tereo. u oma IC, ra lO, ORANGECOUNTY'S (lml.NJQ). - "T41.0CpelfR HILWD Chute.off. Low a11'186. orup, with blart1 coo· red.lat tlree. xJnt cond. ~t:!ck ~w!ir ~~~~~1f.!: NEWEST OHLY S4991 '71 PINTO. Xlnt sh•pe • .,. 411wA1J•40•PDP + 'tl&L ler HOOi, ('lH) V.Uble •top. lo Up.top Slll!O,bltolr.646-71!62 Nabers rnacul&te thruout I LINCOLN·MERCURY MAAOU1S YOLYO new tlrea. $1150. Call w-.411p.Alr.ZKOW _.... __ ~ condlLloa. Lo mllH. _.LOOICIMG FOR (4i1HUF> DealerabiplsnowOPEN 111$10NVIEJO 173-llllleavema& ~a.~rit •Pd 1; a TJ B Bpon, ~ Sood. ' :::' .t:::n i::. ~:. A ClUM RAlllT7 Cad1·11ac ONLY $3695 RA y FLADEIOE 131-1110 4tS.IZ I 0 9960 $l'2JIQlll MiebfUn XAX •·~/bit -...11 l"N cot a '78 Chocolate ____ MARQUIS VOLVO LINCOLN·MERCURY •L ..a ALA-$4IO ••••••••••••••••••••••• a....O. drMHNIPcl.9u~.1 M9a 9744 Rabbit with A /C, MISSIONVIEJO 18-18AutoCenterDr. '"vwu.• ~·~"S Pl& "Tl. J.JIS a dr. •tr, ....................... ~=~:~o:!a~~~U5~PI~ c~~t~M~·~~.bs~~~v,"ci<) 131·2110 4t5-UIO SDFwy·fRkwr~reatexit CallGU-1414 . O&.DIST All/,... UH. Maroon, '711108 '!T.:._~ coodl· 811·199 . '72 Squire Wp LTD. Full 131·7000 1975 OLDS 9965 & ~~l:5~rm~~8D· ~JNiia•tlr• .... Up 1980 vw BUS. '•Coupe'deVWe 6.1,000 ~~:·call~l '70Moia1990SIOO Tb115!~sutully .... i;;;;;;;.;.;~ .... "T4 Flat llt Spydor coo· UMrbltlliOOeng&trans. ml,$885.orti.tOfr.P.P. Ooodcood.t.o•out.Lo equlpped.(SUllXT> MAMIJDI. Hrl 2 lopa, All·ll'M '14M088oedlw.21,ooo Both id cond. uoo, 5t8-8'1&1(9am-Spm> '73GranToriooWp.Lug. ml.55'7·21111/55'7"'511 ~LYSJltS. LI 1 •••a• careful ml, cua c pt, M8-0214after3pm. t rack A/C clean Below•----------t "'" Hardtop. Automatic, ~ l.AMlnJ ~~ 10 m • -"' AM/FM, Fae wire whla, 74 D'Eleaance cbupe, Blue' Book. Trlr ·Pili· 1 "la Monte10 MX. Good MARQUIS VOi.VO pwr. l&eerlnt. air cond • low c.r..r,lllc. ,_.. l':f rack II roll bar. '72 VW Van. XJnt. cond. blue. sunroof, 8 track, owner MHO!l3 coodWon '1400. or 0 rc11r. M.lSSION VIEJO vinYI root. one owner & acoaioyce BllW .._. t7J7 1 or mah oft•r. Rblt e~, steel rad.lats, loaded. 47.000 Mi. $5200. · 983-2BU 131•2aa049s-1210 d&rltaoktwfligbtgoldln· tJtOJambotee ... •••••••••••••••••••• ~71aftetlpm. 1AMbo·F 8·trk, 6 1 1 1nk1d, Days: 675·5728 Eve 1971 Ford P.U., radlo,IMll~-=-lust--:-mg------:9:::-9:::-5:::-2:::-1--=-::....:.....:....:...:....:....:...:..:...;..;:,_;,,_1 terior. 34,002 actual Nt.• rt .. cb M0-41444 ce x, rear seat w o 640-M14 healer 6 cyl stick new 1962 ns mUee. {5NBllA). Alk par • .._..Mew '77 Opel 9746 out dbl bed. 1 owner. paint.' 56,ooO ml.' new ....................... Engine need.a won. torJeny. Call "Tl·BllW 2100 CS Cpe, HO ...... DA C •••••••• ........ ••••••• SUSO. Call 493·2406 169 CONVERTllLE clutch assembly. 6111·41.56 '68 Auto 289. 57,000 orig fUS-1966 13J.1641 auto. AC. A.MI FM. muat " Grl 197.ZOP&GT , Wht. wi red int. ad. cond. a.fltwkdaya. ml. 2 ownrs. XJnt cond. ---------1--------- aell !114> aa:psa1 or MANY 4 1peed, air cond. A ~ Po~lop can~r. 1 Bestolr. 873-0512 $1800. 831-1548 '72 Olds, xlnt cond, full Excep. clean '63 Bon· <1lt)W.7060 ToChooHFrOM! map.LootallbNEWI ., .... ~Yr~.!a'?.~a~ooopm '6SF1eetwoodB.....i. .... r..arn '74FOl'd,GranTorinoSta '70C __.1bl yo A/T power . 1 owner , neviUe, pwr. air, t dr, IVERS Ty UMEOQ>. .. ....... ...,......,._._ · •uue.o• • Wag. (Brougham). onv.., ... e, ... , • 11400/Bet&ofler.a.8397 bestotfer.545-4421 1875 BMW. 58.000 mi. sun UM I 0 ..,1 y SZ,fS 4-dr. full pwr. Xlnt cond. PS/PB, AM /FM conv. P/S, Mlchellns, new aftlP!i& 9 · roof.• spd, AM 1FM. ~mobie. ~ 1974 YWIUG $1495.589-4912 · arp. Air. xlnt cond. 8 trans., bkt. seats, cover. ~ 970 &oodcond,$SOOO.ll60-37l2 Honda C.-. • GMC MAlqlllSSIUOISNTVIOEJYOOTA With radio & heater. '70 Cad Sedan. Full !!!!~..fl'!;2-_o10r bst fr.Ca Exllcl~A"c5682ond. S2ltl007/ofrk. Plllto t917 ..... T.•B•ird••••••~•••••••• BMW 11'76 2002 17900. A/C. T L-H d t ti d m d l power Good cond $1395 ~ • .....,...,, <>'04· a • • •• ••••••••••• ...... •••••• 1985 • • ong owner• many extras Call rue-d 131·2110491-1210 (5~JP:) ~Z te~r:s· . 548-0285. • '75 Granada, 4·dr, AM forSandy 1976FORD lu11 pwr, air cond, xlnt · 2850Harbor Blv . • · cood,$1500.644-7905 1'15-2279or213~1737 ColtaMesa 5'0-9140 '71 ()peJ GT. Xlnt mecb O.A.C.l)'r.parta&dabor ,63 C dlll 79 500 1 radio w/1tereo apku, '66 Muatana V-8. lo mi'a. PINTOM.P.G • ....., ~ uto i d concf. 4 It 8 track atereo aervice policy avail. Cl al •7 8..'].· Gd. md. air, ad cc>ad. S2200. P.P. Good cond. Auto trana. Autom.aUc ·radio beater V• ft74 ·~ -· a . " a r·con • '74 CJVTC Blue Metallic dl 'b · k k Sl 799' Auto Center's price is ass c • ""· con · (714) 536-4778. Call 875-3200. & buck t ' ts 'A eal ••••••••••••••••• .. •••• :f.':'~82't~1!k.!:ia000 Wht V·top, new clutch'. F1!x.iblo~~~. · ONLY $2795 642-4!186, Gregg. Uncoln 9945 beauty e wl~~a l~ss J.an VEGA 176 . . . New Urea & brkes. Best Pi~ ....... IERS 1973 C "DIU. ... C '67 MuslangClaaaic. Auto. 21,000 milea. C524PUQ>. u•TCHl"C" ,,_T elf $2300 752 ......,,. 9750 ",. ,. ,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Must 1ee. Must sell. rtA ,. ft., er over . ..,,,.,,,, ••••••• .. •••• .. •••••••• AUTO CEHTER SEDAM DEVILLE ·es Lincoln ConUnental. Sl 2 o o. Eve I wk n d s This great UtUe milfa1e DEMO. s speed trans • C.,. 9715 74 Honda Civic, xlot 1425BakerSt .• C.M. Fully loaded-extra xtra car. not needed. 675-6868,dys642-6"1 &etterls air cood., etc . ••••••••••••••••••••••• cond.,$2100. PORSCHE924S ~ablkeastofHarborBl sharp! C774SER>. $425.642-4945 ONLYSl295 <ll50IJl•>.Wutrm. '73 2600 cu. in. V6, 4 .. pd. 957·0780 We have .-i excellent 540•91 o9 Hurry; this one wlJI sell ericle 9947 Olckmobfle 9955 ~ Y $3291 AJC. 1nrf, AM/FM tape . .IGCJUCF 9730 seledionph.la tbe llMll vw. Good cond. fast abHLY 53695 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• HOWUD CMYrold Gd cond. P / p •23oo ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cbampionahlp E'dltion. S 1000 846-2548 aft 6. '7Z Maverick 302 V8, AT. '98Cutlus. $375. Dovl6QuallSt.1. ~Hl4M784 '76 JA3UAR XJ6L. 22M. MOW!!! -- ---BILLY A TES PS, 4 dr. radials, $1.500 Good Ensine &gd body. 2845HARBOR BLVD: NEWPORT BEACK Dahm 9720 ml, xlnt cond. $12,000. llU. YATES Leaving Country, rnust VW.PORSCHE Firm. 548·7232, alt Call1148·3713 54M410140.0ZIJ • • 133-0555· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~75 .2100, home _., •oRSCHE sell '71 vw Van. Rblt San Juan Capistrano 5:30/wknds , ...,.........,., ",....,.. eng, oil cooler. radials, 3 4800 ,.93 45 1 '74 Cutlass Supreme 455. 8 '71 Brown Pinto, re•lly '73GT *DRIVE A* San.14anC~p1strano many xtras. $2500. 8 7-"' • I Have somelhinJc to sell? cyl. PS. PB. AC . clean, $1400 or offer. 35000ml $1250 *LITTLE. .. * ·~~~a~~:a:~~c;r.u~~l 137-4100 93-4511 ~.875·9233 '74 Coupe DeVille. Black. assl!ledads oitwell. $1799/bstorr.968·2030 845-5312or5'5-3SC>l. 188-1811 SAVEALOT $3.'iOOtakes.536-7904 '139142.0RedApp&Perf 1974VW Full power. Xlnt cond. Aatos,New flOOAutot.Mew tlOOAutot.New tlOOAldo•~Mew '800 $S500. fW0..0851, 675·06S6, •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• SHOP&COMPARE Jensen 9732 Orps. Mags, FM. Xlnl. W"tphaflaCamper wkdys (213)436-8215 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $4600. 960-3444HB Loaded inckldlng stereo ---'-------- k caHelte. Jn excellent C:-ro 9917 •74•,a J .H .• calla. dee • lt&l Porsche. New red ooodition! (392KLO). ••••••••••••••••••••••• good cood., S5500. Call paint, new int, xtra Mark at 840·5000 or abarp.Runsgreat.$3900. SADDLUACK "75CamaroLT,xlntcond. 559-1874 PP.646-5187 VALLEY IMPORTS 26,000 mi's. V-8. Must .3 1-2040 .. 95-4949 sell.845-2080aft6 Lotus 9737 '71 911E Targa, brlght..1 _____ ... ___ _ BARWICK DA T S U~ ....... 111 Jq.111 t ·'I" .1 1 .111•1 831·1375 49J.JJ75 NEWPORT DATSUN ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• yellow, factory maas, 'ff1 VW Bug, good cond. '73 Camaro, 60,000 mi. , FOR THE IEST 1972 Lotus Europa. Super good cond. 581·7919 Good tires, best offer. Very cle~:;s.~~ ol!er . FLEET PRICES cood. w/new steel belted , Cal1645·7974 CaUJlmHHdham tires on ma& whls. 62 356B, reblt eng, new . Chevrol.t 9920 TOD ~Y•. Special exbauat system ~~m;a~J1lale . Volvo 9772 ..................... .. "" w/Weber carb. 34,000 ac· · 31 w ays. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1973 Caprice. 4·door hd 888DOVESTREE'f tu.al ml. IJurnt orange 'TT PUMA 1800 dual port , ORANGE COUNTY top, alr. AM /FM alereo, NearMacArthur ~l~. Call 635-5092 aft dual carb/4 ,ipd/1ilver VOLVO great cond. $2650. &Jamboree Roads ...-iu /bJA-'-II.A• 3370 "'""' AN>a 133-1300 w ..... .....,. · EX<l.USJVELYVOLVO _...._. _______ _ ---------1Mcnd9 9731 '78 TURBO Blk., Tan Int. Laraeat Volvo Dealer '59 CHEV. BEL AIR. On· '75 280Z, fuel injection. •••••••••••••••••H•••• 12000 ml. Sl200 Berlin in Orange County! Jy 34,000 original miles. air 40,000 mJ .• guar ateel radio. Suntoof. CB, miot. BUY or LEASE Thia car. ls In PERFECT r~. Cauette deck. AaldniSZS..000.trlMlll DIRECT original condition. You caueves. '188-4U9 "159142.0lmmac. AM·FM ~,·~@~~•ffl!~I~ :~~1:::1 uL~s~r rb:a,~ Muat M:ll '75 Dat.IUD 610 tape, nu radiala. 27,000 • f • cash orre;. GJS·9308. Sed. 4 Spd, AM/FM, mi.831J.3'789. -------Mich X tires, 38,000 mL 21 0 ......., I .. & 1973 El Camino. Loaded. Atk for Steve, 6'5-5938; C:O.W...641-1700 74Ponchetl42.0 2026 S. Manchester Xlnt cond . $2650. '151-6lJTO. ...,. __ ......... __ 9740 Air cond. Stereo. Sharp. Anaheim 750-2011 640-0851, 675·0656 ___._... · Lease $137.85 down, ---------'727AOZ, beaut. Air, mags, ••••••••••••••••••••••• $134.85 ror 36moe. Prlc ·72 CllEVELLE Wgn . 350 radials, AM/FM, auto, 7$ Ml% 450511. ~. Buy back $3422. 1975 VOLVO VS Air cond. New tires & S44000( T.O.P. 768-8852. Silver exterior, leather Total lse obllg. $8414.4.S I 64A SIDAH brks. 11150. $S7·8674 IEATTHEPRICE int.erlor.sunroof&st.ereo OAC. CP633A>. 4 DOOR. Leather int., '15 MALIBU Classic, IHCREASE!ll ca11ette. Low miles. COPELAND MTRS automatic, atr cond.. loaded & auperior cond. ·· (679MJN>. Buy or lease. 2001 E lit SA MS-8000 sunroof • .AM/ FM stereo Must 1ell ! $3495. 497.3204 119NEWCARS Other fine MBZ'a io cauetla. (73Hlf PT). ATTHEOLDPRICES st.ocktoielecttrom. Pricedtosellat c:o.tla .. t1tal All modei. now avalla· •73 Ml% 4SOSL Wt loyce 9716 OHL Y $4995 ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• ble. Call or see us before I 11 dlti A has -•••••••••••••• .. ••••• S'ADDLllACK 73 CONTINENTAL YoU buf 1 I I s':':.rc:J:e co":tzot ai #1 DEALER IN U.S.A. VAUIY IMPORTS MAU IV other luxury equipment. ~ ROY 131·2040 495~949 Sliver Edition. Fully COSTA MESA DATSUN Fantastic savings I CARVIR equipped including mag (388KFR>. ROUS·ROYCE .Must sell '74 Volvo 142. wheehl. Only 40 ,ooo 2M5HARBORBLVD. ,,...,.,,,...,.. .PS. PB. Xlnl cond. First miles. Can Lease. ·140.6410 540.0213 '72 Ml%250 ='=' .. 1c11 S3550. 830-7463 (867MPS). ----------1 COUPE. In excellent. SADDLEIACK "72240Z. many xtras. Koni condition. luxury equip· CLOIED~DAn "'15 Volvo 245 wag. SUc. VAu.EY IMPORTS shock1, headers, etc. menl & low miles . AM/FM. air, xlnt & Mint cond. Must aee & (889GWG>. COHCAMMON'S clean. $4800. 673-8195. 131-2040 495-4949 At Hill lnng Ford at the · all .new livine Auto Center Lake Forest exit/San Diego Freeway A Special Sale on ... drive. 830-4IM6or731·3204 •• -.. u--~ HORSILISS _._, _.. '73 MARK JV, loaded. 1 •• .,, 260Z Clean! Air. '71 MIZDIESEL ••••••••••••••••••••••• Xlnt. cond. Priced for AM/FM, maas. cov. In showroom condition. STAILES Gen«.e 990 I sale.M2-9134 '• llie car e\-erybod}' \\31lb +moni. S4900. 552.9213 For the economy of Brokenl ol llne eontem· .. ••••••••••••••••••••• ---------diesel " the luxu.ry of a porary c:or. .... "15 Datsun Jong.bed wllh overhead camper, loaded, xlnt cond. S39SO. 581·6673 Mercedel. (15'1NRN). ROLLS ROYCE * $599 & Up* ••••••••••••••••••••••• BENTLEY 1975 CORVml 1974DATSUN 710COUPE • speed, special alloy wheels, vinyl roor & ma111 other eJCtru I Very abarpl (705LJY). EZ tenm-0.A.C. l yr. P•rb 41 labor ae"lce pollc)' avail. Auto Center'• price ii OMLYS219S MAllRS ' AUTOCIMTll 1425 Bater& .. C.M. ~ blk eut ol Harbor Bl M l\,ION VII J() IMPORf> IJJI I /~IJ JV; '10·1 --- LHM Mew UHCI ova.100 MMCIDIS OM DISPLAY HouseoflM9ortl AVJ'HORtttD'.':. MERCEDES DEALER 8882 Manchette.-1 BuenaP•k IZl-7210 OD the Santa Ana ~f. S..OA ,. , 09 "74 Merced• 2IO Jo ml'•· ___ .. _____ --. lmmJc. -.oo. iSt:JJ&lor ltf3 240Z. xlot eond, -.-1 afU. automobiles. 2 Topa. F1ame red w/tan 2'111 E. Coast Hwy lnt.erior. Automatic, alr (714)676-0930 cond., pwr. st4!erlng, ..._... 97615 AM/FM radio, chrome .. ,.-.. wire wheels. Wholesale ••••••••••••••••••••••• bluebook·$6500 ; re· tail·$8065. <839MVG ). Ourprtceil OMLYS6671 MA.19Ul5 VOLYO Ml~ION VIEJO 131·2110 495-IZIO "78 Corvette, air, AM /Fii TIRJNDERBIRD at discounted prices SPECIAL • IHI •EEK '77 lTOYOTA HILUX ••c:otemOM• Stereo radio. automatic transmission. mirrors. step bumper, ·Demo " R~7992 s424311 • cyl • speed radio heater. whitewall tires tinted gins wheel covers. vinyl intenor Lie t&e&l.PA 173 TOYOTA CORONA DELUXE WA.ON 4WHHLDllVE 177 TOYOT4 LANDCIUISIR ··73 VOLVO 164 4 DI. SEDAN Huntington Beach Fountabt Valley EDITION ~OL. 70, NO. 216, .t SECTIONS, 36 PAGES THURSDAY, AUGUST 4 1977 TEN CENT BB Probes ,. $1 Million Tax Rebate . a,a n•A••n ................... I A pl1a to ntu:na up to 11 million lo city ~yen ls und•r Mriou.a cooslderation In HunU01ton Bead> today. If the plan ls adopted, the re· bates would lake the place ol a propoaed cut ln lb• city lax rate. Tbe plaa b modeled alter the fn. nation assistance procram in· slJtUl.ed by Garden Grove. Ma yor Pro Tem Ron Shenkman., who is spearheading Trial Set In Sex, Death Try By PIOUP ROSMARIN Ol t .. o.11, ..ii. St.tr s .. H Fred Berre Dou1las or Costa Mesa wtll stand trial on attempt· ed murder charees allegme he lured two women to the desert to be hacked to death by an ac- complice while he took obscene snapshots of the murders. Douglas was arrested at the Yucca Valley site July 20 by two undercover policewomen who posed as the models. Police al· lege they were to be tortured, dis· membered and killed. After a day-long preliminary hearing at West Orange County Municipal Court, Judge Ragnar Engebretsen ordered the 49· year-old furniture reflnisher ar· raigned ln Superior Court Aug. 18. But Judge Engebretsen also agreed to study a moUon by de- fense attorney Pat Magers to suppress much oC the physical evidence -a meat cleaver, knives, sawa, icepicks, razors - asaJ.nat Doul)u. I Garden Grove Detective • Ronald Shave testified the items were due up near a Yucca Valley aback Doualu us~ as bil pomo- 1rapbic film headq_uarten. Shave said Doublu led otncers to the spot and himself dug with his hands lo help uncover the cache. But that, the officer testified, plus a 4.5-mlnute Interview at the Twe ntynine Palms San Bernardino sheriff's station. took • place after Dou1laa refused to waive constitutional rights and 1 demanded an attorney. to reporters after the hearin1, prosecutor James Broob said tho in~rview was Informal and Information cained In lt would not be used against Dou1las at trial. Brooks conceded that if En1ebretaen rules against ad· (See PORNO, Pa1e AZ) ' 3 Acqoitt~, I Convicted In Party Fight tbe r•bate erto.rt1, uld th• money would he returned to owner. who occupy 1l41le-famUy rt1ldencee. Sbenkman 1a.id that the re- bates would probably ran1e ftom S20 to '50, dependin1 on tho as· sened valuation of lbe re- sidences. He aald the total rebate amount ls expected to be from $'150,000 to Sl mUUon. Shenkman said that under his plan, rebates could not apply to commercial, industrial or in· come properties. He aald that he will work out details ot the procram with staff members Friday and that the cl· ty council wUI bold a atudy aesaionon the matter Aue. l~. Shenkman declared that the in· nauoo usiltaoce plan Will help reduce the burden to taxpayers ln a meanln1ful way. The assessed valuation of their properties bas arisen SO percent over the last three years while the city's tax rate of $1.62 per ,.~., ......... PROTESTER HELPED AWAY FROM HOTEL MELEE In S•n Francisco, • Vlolent CIHh of Wiii• Protesters Moved From Hotel in SF SAN FRANCISCO (AP> - Elderly tenants of a hotel scheduled to be torn down were carried out of the bulldine early today aa more than l,000 pro- testers gave way to some .cio police and sheriff's deputies armed with eviction notices. Before givin& way to pollce, foes of the eviction withstood an attempt by mounted police to ram through a human barricade of people standing five deep and linked arm in arm. The mass eviction was coordinated by Police Chief Charles Gain and Sheriff Richard Hongisto, who went to jail for five days this year for contempt of court when he re· fused to serve the original evlc· lion notices. Hongisto said then he lacked the manpower to carry out the evictions without bloodshed, although he reportedly sym- pathized with the protesters. Today, as police on ladders scaled the buildin& to &ain en· I.ranee, Hon'isto said "my con· cern about bousin& for the low in· come is still the same." H0081sto said his office would find temporary housin& for any evicted tenants seekln1 shelter. Before the demonstraton 1ave way, police sealed the Intern•· tlonal Rotel, on the ed1e or Chinatown, by fire truck ladder whUe otbm broke throuib win· dows on the first floor of the three-story buUdiq. Then, the demonstrators backed away from the door about C:*> a.m. u poltce be11n eomtq from tho~. clJT)'inl the 65 passive tenants and Jeavinc them in the street. Undenherlff James Denman said eight demonstrato~ were Injured. but none or the injuries was believed serious. PoUce said 19 arrests were made. and one demonstrator was booked for re· slsllnl arrest. "You have five minutu to vacate." a policeman announced over a bullhorn. The demonstrators chanted "No evictions; we won't move." Nearly 2,000 foes ot the eviction began grouping at the low-rent, residential hotel Wednesday nlgbt. . Police, carrytne bUly clubs and weartn1 riot aoar, besan marcblng in small croups toward the hotel about 3 a .m. The blocked-off area rocked with tbe chant "We won't move" a!ter caravans or police cars were seen driving into a nearby under· ground earage. . Ownen of the hotel, the Four Seas Corp., have been attem~ In& to evict the tenants and tear down the hotel lo make way for new construction. A lenctbf le,al battle to bait the eviction ended Jut week when the state Supreme Oourt turned down petlUona aeeklna to block the evlctlont. Other Stories Other Huntlqton Beach and Fountain Valley stories appear today on Paet C7. , $100 asaesaed valuatloo has re· main uncban1ed. Shenkman claims that the re- bates would be to the city's ad- vantanae because a blanket rax rate reduction would alao reduce tax revenues from commercial. industrial and income prop· erties. • He said that under hJs plan. the city would continue to receive tax support from major com· mercial enterprises while lower· ing homeowners' taxes. Shenkman also noted that the area ll rtdina an economic crest with a number ot potenUal sharp nuctuaUons. "By towering the tax rate, future city councils may be ham· perecl lrt their ability to meet public demands when advene economic conditions strike,•• be sald. the present city charter restrict.I the city councU'a abillty to raise revenues by requirina •ix affirmaUve votes. "An lnnatJon aulst.ance plane would provide homeowners im· mediate disposable income which to a lar1e degree would be plowed Into the local economy, lncreaalo1 sales and tax re- venues," he1aid. · The city's im-78 budaet of $31 milllon was approved on the basis of a 3Y.t percent rise In as· aessed valuaUon. Final assessment figures show that Huntington Beach valuation climbed 21.6 percent. Carpenter Plan 30% State hicoille Tax Cuts Proposed SACRAMENTO (AP> -State Sen. Denru5 E. Carpenter <R· Newport Beach> was one of two le11slators who today proposed giving Californlana stale income tax cuu nelltl year up to a max· imum of $150 for single tax· payers and $300 for joint returns. Carpenter, who made the pro- posal with State Sen. Geor1e Deukmejian CR-Long Beach>, said the 30 percent cut would re· turn about $782 million of the state surplus to the people who paid it. The state surplus has been estimated at $2. 7 billion at the end or this flscal year. For a family of four earning $10,492 the Republican pro• posal would reduce the income t>ffic1als DenyOC F1D1d Story 111 KATHY CIANCY OUM Deity l'lltle IUIH Officials of a HuntJn1ton Bea.ch convalescent home that once pro- vided care for Oran1e County mental patient.a, have denied al· legations that the hospital Im· properly obtained money !tom the county. "We feel that the county•• poa{. lion is unaubstantlated In fact and we Intend to pursue lt vigorously," KeMetb Huff, re· glonal administrator for Care Enterprises, said Wednesday, . Cowity supervison authorized a lawsuit Tuesday to recover $327 ,246 oou.oty audlton allete was Improperly charced the county under a mental health contract with Garfield Convales- cent Care Hospital, 7781 Garfield Ave. The IUit ta to be ftJed qalnlt the holpttal and related flrma, ln· eluding Care Enterprbea, prin· ctpala of thoee firms and the hospital's accountant. County alldltora claim tbat froin March D74 unW the ~n· ty'a contract with tbe hotpit-1 wu terminated lut year, the hospital char1es were excealve and bou1ht services from firms ln which hospital owners held an Interest .. Deputy County Counael Vic Bellarue said the boepltal II al· lowed to purchue services from flrms hospital owners have ln- tereata in. However. be aald, the (See 11JND6, Pa•e Al> tax to $24 from $63. a 62 percent cut. For a family earning Sl9,495, it would cut the tax to $241 from $372, a 35 percent reduction. Because of the $150·$300 limit, the percentage cuts would drop rapidly in higher brackets. Deukmejian and Carpenter con· ceded at a news conference there was little chance of getting such a bill through the Democratic· controlled legislature. "But isn't there room for one original idea that Is fair and con· else and more easily understood than the others?" Carpenter asked. · Brown administration pro· posala to rebate some property taxes to homeowners and renters and give more stale money to Or lr.rine Land schools would cost about $'9.S billion over five years. Carpenter, who is a member of a two-house committee trying to work out the property tax blll, said the committee is stalemated. •'The governor ls horrified by some or the prospects being dis· cussed m that comll)itlee. We're not .only tallung about tax changes. but social changes that come down very heavy on busi-ness," he said. Carpenter said that not only are the committee members stalemated, but behind-the· scenes negotiations with other in· tereated parties are gettinc nowhere. Marines Eye·Swap For Valley Park 111 JlA YMOND ES'l'llADA Ill. ... a.tr ........... A Marine Corps spokesman said today the Corps would ccn- 1 Ider swapping the 130·acre federally owned area at Mile Square Parle for county or Irvine Company-owned land &o build as many M 1,.300 bousin1 units for Marines stationed in Oran1e County. "We're certainly not fixed on 3 Huntington, ValleyBoys . Sick at Camp Fountain Valley," said Col. G.L. Fenens•. "We are open to trad- ing the land at MUe Square." Fenenga. who ls In charge of planning base faclliUes at El Toro, said possible trades which could be neeoUated in the future Include county-owned land alone Edinger Avenue adjacent to Mlle Square. 1be Marines also have eyed sites north of eidslilll military houstna at El Toro air station and land near the Santa Ana Marine helicopter bue. Both of these areu are owned by the Irvine Company. The Fountain Valley-Mlle Square site beume the most likely choice for the housi.n. units because it la the only area already federally owned that fa lar1e enou1h to accommodate tbe potmUal 1,300 units and is the closest to El Toro, aald Fenencr. The Marines are faced with a crltJcaJ need for low-cost bousblg in Oraqe County. especially tor enllatedm~ County · t PblWp An· thony uid ednesday be woul4 like to see ll • \rade could be made in lllht of SocaJ oppc:11IUon (8ee8WAP, Pace AZ) Coast OAI\. Y Ptl.OT H/F T RACf ., Wl11 tAPJ brou. •• c u1.ttonul. · ~uuJ lhtt 1i out.sld th audio l"<lUlpmc.'01 ttlUI ,. The 1111:n tnut•n:cJ u hO£ttJo bctwtcn tho N tlonul Oriua.nllo.aUon lur Women <NOW> and store owner Jam • t •umo. r)'l , \\ho de crlbcd hfm!iclf ill "u dirty o ld man." I t'umo sald ht.• <·hun.:t.'d thq wordin" on lh~ porta bh• i1gn oul1'1de h111 J.J Audio Cu1>llol tilorc simply bt·c•u. he cht1nf(<."~ at every two week~ ,•uElll·n Sammon-., JJ. Ra<·ine hom~maker who hP "b lhl· local l\.UW ehaptf'r. t1ent l"umo u "Thump on the Ile~"'" 1ward for bein1 a aexll1t j "l 'm proud o1 al.·· l'"umo :;'dd or the certificate ~h°"'1ng :>man being clubbt.'<I ovt>r the head. Stopped Driver Trof!per Murdered For 10-cent Toll MIAMI IAP ) A. Florida • Highway Patrol trooper was shot imd killed early today when he stopped a motoril)t for Jumping a 10-cent toll booth, police said. "For a dime -a lousy dime," one Miami police otficer uJd. Hours later, police found the 4 car and followed a trail of blood ' at least three blocks to a Miami apartment complex where an un- identified man wa.s tuken into custody Police said lhe person In custody wa.., a witness, not the gunman wanted 1n the slaying of Trooper Bradley Steven Glascock. They would not elaborate. The shootme occurred about 3 a.m. on Miami's East-West Ex· pres.sway when Glascock saw a Cadillac Eldorado s1desw1pe a toll booth and speed through without paying the lO·cent fee, pohcesaid. He stopped the car about 100 yards away from the toll plats. "The suspect suddenly pull~ out a handgun and shot Glascock at least two times at point-blank range,': Miami police spokesman Angelo Bitsis said. He said Glascock got out of his car Mild "there was a brief ex- change or words. The suspect pulled out a handgun and shot the trooper." An observer riding in the __vooper's car pulled out ,-Clascock's shotgun and fired three rounds, s triking the • Cadillac's rear window as the 1 suspect sped aw~, 81ts11 said. The identify of tho observer was not released Pohce said they had a descnp- t1on of the &unman. Fro111 Page Al SUSPECT ..• would be r1aht around that $40,000," explained one FBi agent. He said the Baseball Cap Ban- dit generally took between $800 to Sl,700 from one lone telJer heap- proached without ever ahowinc a weapon, simply h&ndln1 IY• a note. 'V He never displared a aun, although.the note warn~ he U· t sertedly had one, FBI acent.s said. None o< the esttmated '40,000 in loot has bffn recovenct to dale, except for the 100 cr11p, new SlO bUls seized b4,Newport Beach police when Oano l\.arted to pay of( hf1 traffic Ucktta, in· veaU1ators aald. The banks robbed by the Baaeball Cap Bandit ovcr his 54-day 1pree ran1ed lbrouahout Southern Callfornl•. wltb Mvetal ln tho Harbor Area, namely ln ' Newport Beach, Calta Mesa and Huntlrurton Beach. SomeUmea. ho woufd hit two within on• hour. A ~pokesman for the Santa Ana • motel where police say Gano lived today aaid he could ftnd no r ord ol a resident by u,at •. Re couldn't flt lh• aescrlp- lo IU\)'Olle either. DAILY PILOT Glascock 's parents, who Uve in Maitland. said he waa to have been married in three months, police said. Fro. Page Al SWAP ••• to the Marine Corps plan to build housing at MiJe Square. Santa Ana Mayor Vern Evans joined Fountam Valley oCficlals in criticizing the Marine pro-posal The Santa Ana mayor i.aid he rears the move would set a prece dent for the federal government lo some day build military hous, i'!g at his city's planned Centen- nial Park on Fairview Road near Edinger A venue. Evans also claimed traffic generated from the military housing would overload Edin1er Avenue. A helicopter base unW 1974, the triangular area in the heart or Mile Square Park was con- s1dered by many local county and city officials as a future addl· tion to the regional recreation facility. Marine officials said lhe 1,387 military housing units Ill El Toro and Santa Ana are Cull, with a 1,400-famlly waiting list. Enlisted men simply cannot fin~ suitable housini in Oranie County. said Capt. John Shotwell, El Toro information of· ficer. CurrenUy, the Marines hope to have about 200 new houalna uruts under construction by 1979. But 1t may be 1981 before the planned units are actually oc- cupied by servicemen and their families, said Shotwell. Under the Marine proposal, another 200 units should be start· ed in 191M> and 100 more by 1981. No further projections have been made, Shotwell added. Before the proposal to buJld at M Ile Square goes through an as- sortment or congres1lonal com· mitt..ees, a Sept. a meettn1 between city, county and milltary ornclals will be held at Fountain Valley City Hall. Fro. Page Al FUNDS ••• char&e to the county should be no greater than 1f thoae services were purchased on the open market. Huff 1ald Thursday county of. ficlala had full k:nowled1e of all the relationships Involved before they entered into the contract. lo lldcilti.oo, be contended, all item• in the hospital budcet were fully ctilcloeed to county otnctala. "Th• costa that were aub- mitt.ed relative to that contract were •J>proprlat• anct were r«~able," Huff •aid. County ofliciats Hid an audit ._.. or- dered afler tome hospital •anployes made alle11Uons a1alnl" hoepttal opera&tons dw-· lnl a labor dispute more than a yearqo. Xbe d.iaput. ended when the county eootract wu termhult41d and Gerffeld clOlled. Huff Hid. The facWty reopened later u a nu~ center f« tho elderly, rather than as a tacJUt,y tor men- tal patient.. he uplalntd. By T'lle Aaeoclated Preu Thousan<ll of acres of Northern California timber and brush burned today aa flrefJ1hters rou1ht to contend with more than 400 blaus •Parked by Uabtnhll la tbrecday1. More than 3,500 acres of the Vcnta.oa Wilderness at lhe Los Padres National Forest near Bta Sur burned in twoseparatellres. More than 1,000 men were nihUne the blaze. described as "out-of-control," by Rlch Just of the Caltrornla Department of Forestry. A wilderness cabin was the on- ly structure damaaed as the fire swept throuah the desolate area, Justsald. More than 14,000 acres or timber and brush were burning an an area In both Modoc and Sis- k 1you counties, according lo Bernie Bane of the forestry division. The fire forced evacuation or the U.S. Forest Service Happy Camp station. "It's burning hot and fest." said Craii Anthony of the rorestry division. . Numerous other fires raged, ancludJng a 2,200-acre (ire and another l,600·acre fire in Shasta County. After three days, a sweeping fire at Mt. Dlablo, 35 miles east of San Francisco, was "100 per- cent" contained. according to Richard Hoover of the rorestry division. No structures had been damaged in that fire, but some 50 homes were evacuated early Tuesday when the fire lept from state park lands, threatenin& re· sldential developments at Clayton and nearby ranch lands. Firefighters expected to have the fire under control tonight. CdMVictim Said Raped, Then Choked By JOANNE REYNOLDS 0t '"' o.lty Pllet St.ett Corona del Mar murder victim Jane Ellen Bennineton was raped by her stlll-unldentlfted as- sailant who choked her to death Newport Beach police disclosed today. Detective Sam Ambureey said rea'1ft,s or tM autops7 CODdQCttd 011lhe29-year-old womatt showtd that she bad beeo sexually molested and that she was manually strangled rat.her than beaten to death. I nltially, ln vestigators theorized 1he died of a blow to her head because of a scalp laceration they spotted after her body WH discovered by her roommate Tu~day afternoon. But Ambur1ey said the blow that produced tbe laceration ap. parenUy dJd no other damage. ''ll didn't produce a fracture. It couldn't have killed her," he sald. Asked If there were any 1us· pecbl In the cHe, Ambur1~y said, "No, not yet." Miss Bennf nston Wal last teen allve by her roommate with whom she had aone to Bobby McGee's ni1htspot Monday nl&ht. Ambw'1ey 1ald the two women left the popular club ln separate can after clocsln& at a a.m. Tbe investigator said tbe mW'der victim drove home and because •he was unable to flnd a parkinf apace near ber Marguerite Avenue apartment, 1he parked in the nearby lot ot Mario'• restaurant, where her car was found by lnveaUpton. Ambur1ey said tbey believe the suspect may have 11lpped in·. to the ~artment lbrou1b an open alldtna al us door. Alter rapln1 and murdertn1 the former social worker, he broke out a window. actreen and Jumped trom the Hcond •torf . bedraom where the crime took place. ----------- o.&ly NIC Wft ...... THIS IS THE ROSS MARINER MOTEL ON SEAL BEACH BOULEVARD 11 It Orange CoHt'• Hot L BaltJmore, or a Much-needed Facility? Panel . ~saves' Motel 'Hot L Baltimore,' Unloved by Owner, Sta:ntla By MICHAEL PASKEVICH Of tlw Dally ~I ... Statt A Seal Beach motel-apartment complex, dubbed the "Hot L Baltimore" because or its less than illustrious past, once again has been "saved" by coastal commissioners from its owners. who want to tear il down. ''It may become a real Hot L Baltimore," remarked co-owner Al Bentley upon learnlnf that the state Coastal Commission voted 9-2 Tuesday agairuit aUowin1 the destruction of the Ross Mariner Motel at 201 Seal Beach Boulevard. "The Hot L Baltimore" was a play by Lanford Wilson about a decaying hotel with the "E" in the word "Hotel" burned out in its sign. It later became a abort· lived television series. The owners. Calirif Properties of Laguna Beach, had hoped to build eight sinele family homes on the site the motel has occupied for 40 years. "I don't know what their (coastal comm lssioners') purpose is other than to control people's property," said Bentley. Bentley first appeared before regional coastal commissioners in Huntington Beach in late June, claiming the motel was often oc· cupied by "vagrants. drunks and fugitives." However, regional com· m is11ioners reasoned that the motel serves a much·needed pubJtc service, especially to lower-income families who can't :>therwise afford a vacation at the beach Motel manager Jack Roe said s ummer rates at the Ross Mariner recently were increased to $75 a weekend ror a single room without a kitchenette. Kitchen-equipped rooms cost $22!5 per month. All ot those cur- rently are occupied, Roe said. Bentley and associates decided to appeal the regional com- mission's reasoning to the stale Coastal Commission. Armed with a petition signed by more lban SOO neighbors who agree the motel should go, architect George Alvarez pleaded the case before the com- mission Tuesday in Burlinaame. 17" diagonal color portable v .. ,_. es~lletd color ,.r1 ... uce 1Dd XL-toe rellaMllty wlU. &Illa co~,.d. veha..,rtc:ed ,.naba. Utal ... au u.. .. fu&11re1, lot pereH& IOd4 .Ute dl1Na., Accullpe black ••&rl1 pl•l•re t•~•. Altomall~ Ff•• TH•••· A•l•••&le C'llroma Coatrfl, Clilarc .. 1 bl'OPte mesaW. aad walallt ~"'-•· -· : VOL. 10 NO. 216 ~ SECTIONS 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA .Fires Merge, Threaten Big Sur Area ~ S,fteA..-la&-9 Praa I TWo ,..,.,,.. nrea tn tht rui1ecs ·wdm'aell ~r BJ1 Sur h•ve merpd tDto GM mammoth blue while otber u,btnln1 lrlUend ltra e.rupt.t in \he east and ner'llN''-9."1 parta ol lbe slate. the U. s, FU"elt Service aaJd today More than 1,000 exhausted firdiebten. backed by aeuoned c:rews from t.he Southwest and ldaboi. ..... bautma the Vent.an.a fir• •bleb bave blackened mor• than 30.000 aer• ol tJmber and brUJ.b l tho Loi Padrea National l'oreat, 11Jd BUI Powert, forest af'rvlcolnformntlon ottlcer. More lb.an 400 blues, moat sparked by H1h\nln1, have &corched thousand• ot acres In Northern Cantornla ln four days. Flrtllchten have been shuffled rrom fire t.o fire, but a shortaae or man}>CJWer has meant that eome blaz~ are burnln& unchecked. Powen delcrfbed the Verttana blue1 -th• South Cont and lrf ar· ble Peak f1res -u potentially more dan&eroua than the Mt. Dlablo tlre 3S mllea eut ol San Francl.sco. Thal blaze, whlch bu burned more thao 8,000 acrea, was contained early today and w a.a expected t.o be under control by toni1ht, accordin1 to the California Departmenl of Forestry. The South Cone fire grew ftom 6,500 to 12,000 acrM wb.Ue the MarbJePeakblue, Umllestotbe south, •eotthed 18,000 acres aa the twO' ft~ ra1ed uncontrolled tbJJ motntn;, \lbe forest aervlce aatd.· "They are Vtr/ Inaccessible and danferou.s with up to 1'-foot hllb bru1h," uld, Powers. .. There are no road.s and lt's almost lmpoulble to piove tbrou&h the area.11 In Modoc County, two fires 30% State Iricome Tax Cut Sought for 1978 • I r • } Marines To Swap Acreage? By RAYMOND ESTRADA JR. Ol-O•llf~IMMeff A Marine Corps spokesman said today the Corps would con- sider swapping the 130·acre federally owned area at Mile Square Park for county or Irvine C,.Qnn>AflY..:QWJl~ 1~ to buJld as many as 1,300 housma units for Marinea stationed in Oran1e County. "We're certainly not fixed on J'OUDtab> Valley," Hid Col. G.L. Fenqa, "We are open to trad· Int the land at MU• Square." Femnca, who ls in char1e of plannlnc bu• taclUUes at El Toro, old poulble trad• whlch could be ne&ot.lated in the future include county-owned land aJong Edln1er Avenue adjacent to Mile . Square. Th• Marlne1 also have eyed sites north or existing military housing at El Toro air s tation and land near the Santa Ana Marine helicopter base. Both of the.se areu are owned by the Irvine Company. The Fountain Valley-Mlle Square site became the most likely cholce (or the bomtnc unit.a i>ecause it -ts the only-· area already federally owned that Is laree enough t.o accommodate <See SWAP, Pase AZ> Irvine Co. Construction Shed Burgled An Irvine Company conatruc- tl on sh•d in Irvioe waa bu1larized and vandalised either Wednesday nlaht or early • 1 today', with damaee totaling about Sl,000, Jnine poltce said toda1. Woriten ahOwed up at the shed at Walnut and Kaian Avenues, wber. the Irvine CoQipany la bull~ townhomes. and dJs· cOV ' that the shed bad been broken Into With a crowbar. Items reported mluln• IAcludo a motoreycl.. calculaton, mil· Hllaneous construction eqllip. ment and olfke 1uppUe1. Belon the Intruder• li:(t, thiy caUHd extemtv. damac• to the ~. ~ IPl'Vlnl the lllterlor wtdt a ftn utmiuliher tbt Jd\ a :dlle ccwerb\c over tbt ~t.Ml:r-.atfte¢ ......,,. ............ SHARON MARSHALL STANDS IN TARGET OF SUIT Lake ForHt Pool Drawe '200.000 Aattorr. Court Order Neighbors Suing Over -Swim Pool By WILUAM 8CHREIBBJl °' .. .,...., ..... ~ When John and Sharon M arahall decided to install a swlmmln1 pool in the back yard of thelr ne" Lake Forest home .. recently, they f\aHy expected the value of their · property to in· crease. What they did.n 't expect wu a $200,000 lawa\llL from one o( their nelahbors, clalmlnt tbat the pool amidst the e\JCalpytUJ trees will actu•lly reduce tht nellllbotbood '• .Propertf values. That ault. plus a temporary r.,lralnln1 order demab411na a halt to the pool project, wu served on the Marshalla lut Frl· d•Y -two d~• attv tbe baaln wu ~cavated and plumbed with pl&IUc pipln1. Carpenter Joins in Proposal SACRAMENTO (AP) -State Sen. DeMis E. Carpenter CR· Newport Beach> was one or two leeislators who today proposed giving Californians state income tax cuta next year up to a max· imum of $150 tor sln1le tax· pay en and $300 for joint returns. Carpenter, who made the pro- posal with State Sen. George Deukmejlan <R·LOng Beach>. said the 30 percent cut would re· turn. •bout '182 mlJllon ot ih• state S\.u'Plua to the people who paid Ji. The state aorplus has been estimated at a.T billion at the end otlhil fiscal year. For a famlly of four earning Sl0,'92 the Republican pro- posal would reduce the income lax t.o '24 from 183, a 62 percent cut. For a family eamlna Slt,495, it would cut the tax to '241 from S372, a 35 percent reduction. Because of the SIS0-$300 Umll, the percentage cuts would drop rapidly In hi&her brackets. Deukmejlu and Carpenter con· ceded at a news conference there waa Uttle chance of 1ettin1 such a bill throuth the Democratic· conLrolled leaislature. "~ut lan't there room for one origjnal Idea that 11 fair and con- cise and more eully understood than the others?" Carpenter asked. Brown administration pro- posals to rebate some property tPi,es to homeowners and renters and give more state money to 1choOl1 would cost about •.s billion over five years. Carpenter, who ls a member of a two-boule committee try1n1 to work out the property tax bill, sald the committee Is stalemated. ·'The 1ovemor is horrified by aome or the pro1pect1 belnl dla· cuQ«l In that commJtte.. We're not only talkina about tax chances, but social chances that come down very heavy on busl· ne11:• beaald. Carpenter aald that. not only are t.be commlttee members atalemated, but behiod·the· 1cenes ne1otJaUon.s wtth other in· terested partie. ar• settin& nowhere. * . which broke out Wednesday have also mer1ed, bumtna some 1.~ acres. "lt'a burnint like crazy,•• Powers said. He sl.ld the combined rlre could explode into a hush lnterno if the Carol fire • few miles to the west Joined It. A few miles away, the Damon ftte wblcb baa blackened aome 1,000 acres also w u lnovinl tow ardMud Lake, be said. State Yiait For African WASHINGTON <AP) - President Carter in· lensified efforts today to achieve black-white de· tente In 50\lthern Africa as he received Tan1anian President Jullus Nyerere, a long-time foe of white supremacist rule in that region. Nyerere Is the first African leader to be invit· ed by Carter here on a state visit. At a wel co ming ceremony on the While House south grounds, Nyerere set the tone for his two days of m eetings with Carter when he said, "We in Tanzania have greatly welcomed your ad · mlnlstralion's new approach relating to the liberation of my contt· nent from colonialism and racism." Gasoline Tax Hike RejeCted WASmNG'tON <AP} -The Ho~ ovet"Wbelmln1ly rejected today a nJckel·a ·1allon hUce In the federal 1uollne tax which was sought by President Carter to help force enerey conaerva. tlon. / House leaders said -11 alonf that approval of the tax Increase would be an uphill nght and members proved them tl&hl, re· Jecting the measure by 339 t.o 82. Durtna debate on the House floor , backers of the tax described It as a con.ervaUon measure whlcb would at the same time earmark some SS billion annually In revenues for federal mass transit and state road improvement pro1rams. But the opponents said such tax htkes have never di1coura1ed consumption of aasoUne, wblch hH rt.sen some nine percent in two years, despite escalatlne prices. All the hike would do, oppo- nent.I cbar1ed, ts add t.o the woes of surburban and rural Americana who have no alternative to their can for com· mut.lna and ahoppln1. "We can't ro back and remake the world," aatd Rep. William Steicer CR·Wla.>. The nickel bike and other tax provialona on crude oil in Carter's national enetty pro- eram were deslped to ralle the priced a 1allon ot 1u by at leut a dime Jn 1980. ""lllls flre could also be a bluer one than Mt; Dl1blo,.. Powers aald. Heaaida West Paclftc Rallroa~ train bu started pullln1 'Water tankl Into the area where a fire etatlon and a lookout station were beln1 threateaed. Powers said there were also a number of ranches In the vlclnlty and some ranch bulldln11 have been burned. Sclwol Brulget Okayed Grumbling about budget "games" and "flsca1 ir- responslbillly," Irvine school trustees adopted a $23.7 million spending plan for fiscal 197'1-78. Wednesday. It calls for a tax rate or SS.30 per $100 assessed valuation. down 45 cents Crom last year's rate of~-75. Despite the lower rate, m0$t Irvine property owners can e•- pect t.o pay bigger tax bills for schools this year because of larae in creases In assessed values. The budget was adopted 4.0. Trustee Franlt Hurd abstained. He said he was dlssallsfied with the budgeUne process. Once the vote was taken, June Foley accused the adminislra· lion of '"playina games" with lhe budget by starting out with a budget and tax rate much hi&her than necessary. She !rllld that o\\Ce tbe hllb budget was reveaJ~. trustees· spent •'hours ot time and reams or paper, haggling and bargain- ing" to eet the budget down to where it ta today. Mrs. Foley said It was like buy-• in1 a dress al a diacount store and having the sales clerk quote (See BUDGET. Pase ,\2) YouthFimhl Bottled Note Dat,ed 1964 CORONADO (AP) -A bottle cast adrift three years before Randy Bell was born bas bobbed1 ash6re anti inlb" Uh! 10-ytrar.ottl, boy's hands with an old $2 bill in-• side and a note from a Los Anseles man. "I just lhou1ht It waa a bottle with junk in it," said young Bell; who bad been walking with friends along the beacb at1 Coronado Shores when the bottle washed ashore Wednesday. The note, siped Randy G .• Box 174A, Lo. An1eles 44, Calif .. was dated June 12, 1964. It at$k~ the finder t.o "use part of the ~to pay post.aae for reply leUer Lill· me where and 'When found. ·'Keep the cbanae for YOUt' trouble," it added. The bottle appeared to M a small plastic pill container. "I'm &oiof t.o aMwer the QOCe and keep the S! for 1ood luck, .. said Randy, son•of Mr. and 14.rs., Lany G. Bd1 ot Coronado. \ A1wther Irvine Campus Tht• ne~ middle school in Woodbridge, lot•..ikd on I .cmonArass Street. 1s now go· 1ng up. The Irvine Cmfied School District ret·l·1ved a S3.5 million federal grant to build th<.> school Middle school students in the Woodbridge area now attend classes at Rancho San Joaquin lnterm ed~ate School but will attend the new Woodbnd ~e campus when it opens for the 1978-79 school year ~,---1'orkelton, rlM U •man police of. fleer to be hired by the lrvlne Pollce Department.. beaan her new pat.rol duU• lbla week. Miu Tor"elsoo. 28, wu last employed ln ti.o recorda depart- m ent of the Btv•ly Billa Police Department. wu previ°"'5ly a awom police officer with t~ Uni vertlty of Califomla at Santa Barbara and Santa Cruz. Four more experienced of- nc~ra. all male, will bestn work· lne tor the Irvine PoUee Depart- ment on Sept. 1, accord!D& to ChletLeoPe~. All ftve will receive 1t.a11.lna pay of Sl,1G4 per month, which for some of the more experienced offlcen wlll be a cut ln pay. For example, one of the new ol- ficens bu ftve yean experience as an officer with the Beverly Rills Police Department, which means he waa eaM\ing a base salary of $1,598, actordina to Beverly Hills offlciala. Peart said the reason some of I.he new afllcers are wilUQI to boeln with lower aalarles la I.hat they are aUracted by the "pro- g ressi ve and lnnovalive" at- titude of the Irvine Police Department. Irvine Police Lt. Jerry Boyd -Brian John McOl)'n.Jl, 21, a five-year veteran of the Bendy Hilla Potice Department. "' viOU1ly worked' u a counador with tire Callfonfa Youth Authority. -W~e Michael Hwsava. 29, an otficer wlth tbe city ol San Oabriet. He was Pr't\'IOQl).y a de- puty abfr1ff'with the la Anfeles COQDt)' Sherltr1 Department for three years. ed -PblWp Povey. , a five-year veteran of the San Francisco Polico Department. worklne pa&rol ud on \be SW AT Squad. -r>ou&Ju Jay com.nc. 28. a reserve Irvine Police officer. He last operated the lAsvn• JtiJls Gun C!ub, a trap aQd akeet ranae. Pun aald he plans to hire three more offtcera who will be•in Jan. i, um. The dllet Hld the debt new positions were created by the in· creased budcet for the tomtne year, plus the recent reallnation ()f Officer Gary West. CdM ,Woman Raped, Strangled to Death By JOANNE REYNOLDS Oii tllt IPotl" """ .. .,, Coroaa del Mar murder victim Jane Ellen 8 eonlo1too was raped by her sUU-ut\idenUfted as- sailant who choked her to death, Newport Beach police disclosed today. Detective Sam Amburgey said results of the autopsy conducted McGee's ni1bt1pot Monday night. AmburteY saJd tho two women left the popular club ln separate curs after ch>Sinc al 2 a.m. Track Project Reaction Eyed 4 on the 29-year-old woman showed that 1he had been sexually moleated and tha t she was manually strangled rather than beaten to death. Inili all y, In vestigators theorized she dled or a blow to her head because of a scalp la.ceralloo they apotted after ber body was dlacovered by her roomaiate Tuesday afternoon. The investigator said the murder victim drove home and because she was unable lo flnd a parking space near h er Marguerite Avenue apartment. she parked ln the nearby lot or Mario's restaurant, where her car was round by invesUcators. Amburgey said they believe lhe suspect may have slipped in. to the apartment through an open sliding glass door. Irvine city aides are asking homeowners groups m Irvine what they think or a mulU·million dollar plan to lower the railroad tracks in Irvine and build bridges over the tracks at rour locations. Letters have been sent to homeowners associations asking for comments and suggestions prior to a special city council stud;1 session that will probably take place in September .. We're pretty much ready to proceed with the design of the project, but we •want to make ~ure there's no last minute <·1ti7.en opposition," explained , Brent Muchow, the city's public Panel has already spent $200,000 on the works director. The project, to cost between $14 and S20 million depending on how much work is done, would provide grade separations, partiaJ lowering of track& and bridges over the tracks at Culver, Yale. Jeffrey and Sand Canyon. The project ls being considered because 1l would reduce the vis· 1b1hty or the trains and also the noise. Both passenger and freight trains regularly use the tracks that run through Irvine. sou th or the Santa Ana Freeway. According to Muchow, the city 'Saves' design of the project. However. another SM0,000 ts needed before the design is completed. Muchow sald the cost of de- signing the project would be re· paid when the city obtains a grant to pay for the construction work He cited two funding sources that look promlsln&: The city might use the state highway program. which uses state gas taxes to pay 80 percent of projects. The railroad would pay another 10 percent and the county would pay S percent. Thal leaves S percent for the city, or between Sl!00,000 and $1 million, depending on scope or the Motel 'Hot L Baltimore,' Unloved by Owner, Stamlil By MICHAEi, PASKEVICH OftlW Oallf P'li.t Staff A Seal Beach motel·apartmenl complex, dubbed the '"Hot L Baltimore" because of its lei.s than illustrious past, once again has been "saved" tty coastal l0ommlss10ners from its owners, who want lo tear it down · · u may become a real Hot L Ra I ti more,·· remarked co-owner Al Bentley upon learning that the stale Coastal Commission voted 9 2 Tuesday against allowing the destrucuon of the Ross Manner Motel at 201 Seal Beach lloulcvard. "The Hot L Baltimore" was a play by Lanford Wilson about a decaying hotel with the '"E" in the word '"Hotel" burned out in 1Ls s1~n. It later became a short· lived television series. 'fhe owners, Calitla Properties of Laguna Beach, had hoped to build eight single famlty homes on the site the motel has occupied for 40 years. "I don't know what their (coastal commissioners') purpose ls other than to control people's property," said Bentley. Bentley firat appeared before r~gional coastal commissioners in Huntington Beach in late June, claiming the motel was often OC· cupied by "va1rants, drunks and fugitives." However, regional com · rniss1one~ reasoned that the motel serves • much·needed public servlei!, especially to lower·lncome familles who can't otherwise afford a vacation at the beach. Motel mana1er Jack Roe said Ammer rates at tbe aou arlner recently were Increased DAILY PILOT to $75 a weekend for a single room without a kitchenette. Kitchen-equipped rooms cost $225 per month. All of those cur· rently are occupied, Roe seid. Bentley and assoclal~ decided to appeal lhe regional com· mission's reasoning to the state Coastal Commission. Armed with a petition signed by more than 500 neiehbora who agree the motel should ao. architect George Alvarez pleaded the cas~ before the com· mission Tuesday in Burlingame. E'ro• Pag~ A I SWAP OF LAND ..• the potentiaJ 1,300 units and is the closest to El Toro, said Fenenga. The Marines are faced with a ~rillcal need for low-cost hou.sing 1n Orange County, especially for enlisted men. County Supervisor Phillip An· thony said Wednesday he would like to see If a trade could be made in light of local opposition lo the Marine Corps plan to bu.ild housing at Mile Square. Santa Ana Mayor Vern Evans Joined Fountaln Valley officials in criticizing the Marine pro- posal. The Santa Ana mayor said he fears the move would set a prece. dent for the federal aovemment to some day bUild military hous· ing at hls City's planned Centen- nial Parle on Fairview Road near Edinger Avenue Evan& also claimed traffic generated from the mlUtary housin1 would ovwload Edin1er Avenue. A heJlcopter bue until 1974, the trtaniutar area lo the heart of Mlle Square Park was con- aldered by many local COUhty POOL., •• and city otflclals as a ruture addl· lion to the regional recreation faclllty. Marine officials said the l ,387 military housine units at El Toro and Santa Ana are run, wllh a 1,400-family waitln1 list. Enlisted men simpl)" cannot find suitable housing lo Orange County, said Capt. Jobn Shotwell, El Toro information of- ficer. CUrrenUy, the Marines hope to have abou~ 200 ne• housing units under construction by 1979. E'ro. Page A J BUDGET ••• proJecl. -Or, the city could p6ss•bly obtain a federal &rant, which would pay roo percent ot the costs. Muchow said the federal government bas funded "de· monstration" projects tn other parts ~ the country and mJeht consider a railroad lowerlns pro- ject. Muchow said be'a lnletested ln havfnl citiiena contact bia at.Cf prior to the aludf a.esslon, which wlll be announced later. Muchow 1aid bll 1taff will pro- vide more information about the project, or simply accept com- ments from c\tiiens. But Ambur1ey said the blow that produced tbe laceraUm ap- parently did no other dunaae. "It didn't prc:tduce a fracture. 1l couldn't have kllled her," he said. Asked if there were any sus- pect.a in the case. Amburcey aaid, ''No, not yet." Miss Benninilon wu last seen alive by her roommate with whom ahe bad 1one to Bobby 17" diagonal color portable After raping and murdering th~ former social worker, he brolce out a window screen and jumped t.-om the second story bedroom where the crime took place. Arsonist Blamed LOS ANGELES (AP) - Rangers in Griffith Park say an arsonist la lo blame for 21 small llrea that have scorched various mountainous brush areu in \he sprawling 4,200·acre city park since JuJy 7. 7 Lag110~/South Coast ~ • EDITION r VOL. 70 NO. 216, 4 S CTIONS 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA · 30% State Income Tax Cut Sought for 1978 Deity """ ...... ,..... LAGUNA BEACH POLICE CAR INVOLVED IN CRASH ON THIRD STREET HILL Ambul•nce Att•nd•nt1 Help Victim Ellz•beth S•g•r From Her C•r LB Animal Costs Rise, Stiuly Says Lacuna Beach animal aervtcea I and shelter may run lrom '47 .100 • to $254,000, the City Council was advtl*1 w..ctDuday. The council took no action on a repcrtbyPollceCbitf Jon Sparks, but set fUrtbe.r con1ideration of the matter to a meetlne next week to enable council members to re- view Sparks' 13 pa1ea of filW'• and data. Some of the ur1ency of setlini up a new shelter was removed with indlcaliona by the SPCA that thatorganiiaUon would be wUUn1 to work with the city on a tern· > porary buts ll necessary. The city had been 1iven until Oct. 3 to get out of leased private space at Dr. Rose Ekeber1's ken· nela. Jocelyn Cushman addressed the council and ureed that ireater economy and accountability be undertaken ln the city's animal aervtcesproaram. Mrs. C\lsbman not~ thllC. fn U'75-78, the city was payinc the SPCA about $955 a month on a aervfce contract for shelter and enforcement. Later when the city took ovu both functions, the cost jumpedtol't,588amonth. Mrs. CU.sbman said the city should attempt to work with Oranee County Animal Control and investigate cooperative ar- .raneements w1th the cities of Irvine and Newport Beach to lower COit.a. Chief Sparks' ncurea showed that nve ~ altematlv• exiat for the city'• IUlimal control pro. araQ). At the low cost end, the SPCA could provlde enforcement thelterlac, telllnt of Ucenaes and other rela~ 1ervtca for sn.ooo 1ear1y. If tbe elty retained the en· forcemtnt function, the ~Giil would be $54,000, with the SPCA PrOVidlna •helter. If thtcity w to 10 totally with lbe county, the cOlt 'Would be •.ooo Udilietewould be no local ~trol Of enforcement. cs. A1fttLU;, ••• Laguna Police Car Hits Woman's Auto A police car on an emer1ency call cruhed headon Into a bi& luxury car bdwina the 'ti-year· old woman driver Wednesday on Third Street at the top ot tbe steepest hill in Laguna Beach. Elisabeth Sqer of 5$7 Blumoat St. and Officer Bradley Smith, 25, were taken to South Coast Community Hospital. Both were released after emer1ency treat- ment. Smith, respondlog to an emergency report of an usault at Crescent Bay Beach, pulled around a vehicle which bad stopped in h15 path and into the lane carrying traffic the oppotlte direction, up the bill. The steep angle of the hHl obscures vision of driven In either lane at the crest u they attenipt to aee what 18 eOIDiM \ht othel' Wt,)', Sliiith llad actlvated bls patrol car's fiublne red and blue U1hts and headlllhta, aceOl"dm. to a re· port filed by the California Hlthway Patrol which la ln· vestJ1aUn1 tbe mlabap because a city police unit was involved. As Smith pulled into the oppos- lnl traffic lane, the collosion oc- curred with Mrs. Saeer's vehicle. A spokesman for the CHP said It appeared no one wu al fautt In the accident, that it wu caused by a aeries ot occurrences which or themselves were not vtola"°°5 ollaw. Taxis Get Swift , Okay in Clemente San Clemente city councilmen took emergency measures Wed- nesday, votinl 5-0 to allow three taxicab Orms to operate oo a temporary basis in the city. · San Clemente was without taxi service oo Tuesday and Wednes· day, alter the Yellow Cab Com· pany ceased operations Monday al6p.m. City police aald Yellow Cab was not insured u of AU,tust 1 and ClOUld no lon1er operate. The Caplftrano Cab Coll\pany faded from the scene several mcntha a.-o. ctty Clerk Max Bers aald Capistrano almply clitconnecttd its phone. • The City CouncU acUon will al· low three cab companies butd outalde the city to operate u many u three cabl ~r company tor as 1on1 u eo daya, pendlna further City Couocll action a· pected at lt,j next reawar m~ ln1, Aui.11. !tepnsentaUves of the three c-ompanies, AAA Cab Company of San J\len ClJ)lsttano, Checker Cab ColnpaJU> of L11~na Beacb Carpenter Joins in Proposal ' SACRAMENTO CAP) -State Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter CR· Newport Beach) was one of two legislators who today proposed giving Califomlans state income tax cuts next year up to a max- imum of S\50 for single tax- payers and $300 for joint returns. Carpenter, who made the pro- posal with State Sen. George DeuJuneJian CR-Long Beach>. said the 30 percent cut would re- turn about $782 million of the state surplus to the people who paid It. The state surplus has been estimated at ~. 7 billion at the end or this fiscal year. For a family of four earning Sl0,492 the Republican pro- posal would reduce the income tax to $U from S63. a 62 percent cut. For a family earnlne $19,495, it would cut the tax to $241 from $372, a 35 percent reduction. Because of the $150-$300 limit, the percentage cuta would drop rapidly In hllfher brackets. Deukmejlan and Carpenter con- ceded at a news conference there was little chance of getting such a bill throulh the Democratic- controlled te1l1lature. "But lltl't \here room for one original idea that ia fair and con- cise and more easily undM"ltood thao Ute otben?" Carpenter uked. Brown admlnlltratlon pro- posals to rebate some property taxes to bomeownen and renters and give more state money to schools would coat about •.s billion over five years. Carpenter, who la a member of a two-house committee tryinl to work out the property tax bUI, said the committee is stalemated. "The 1ovemor is horrified by some of the prospects being dis· cussed ln that committee. We're not only talkln1 about tax changes, but social changes that come down very heavy on busi- ness,'' be said. Carpenter said that not only are the committee members stalemated, but behlnd·tbe· scenes negotiations with other in· tereated partlea are 1ettln1 nowhere. * * * BB Ponders SI Million Tax Rebates Af&e .... • N.Y. S&oelui THURSDAY, AUGUST~. 1977 Murder Weapon? Pictured are front and side views of mahogany fertility s ymbol statue believed used in Laguna Beach murder of Albert Willard, 69, of 861 Coastview Drive on July 26. Statue was appar:ently carried from the scene by . murderer . Police asked today that anyone with informa· tion call Detective Gene Brooks at 497-3311, extension 267. CdM Woman Rape~ Strangled to Death By JOANNE REYNOLDS .. ..,,, ........... Corona de1 Mar murder victim Jane Ellen Benolnaton was raped bY ber sWJ-unidentlfied as- sailant who c~ed her to death, Newport Beach pollce disclosed today. Det.ective Sam Amburgey said results ol the autopsy conducted on the~year-old woman showed that she bad been aexually Water Waste In San Juan Now a Crime San Juan Capistrano residents who waste water could be fined as much as $.'500 or jailed for up to 30 days under a new ordinance approved Wednesday by local water board members. Oran1e County Waterworks Dlstrlct Four board members, all of whom are also San Juan city councilmen, ordered their at- torney to Include a so-called "ur1ency clause" In the or- dinance. thus maklna if effective immediately. . The new regulations ban landscape waterina bet\ften lO a.m. and4p.m. Allowing water to run off In 1utten and wasblnt cars or boat.a with hotes on hll(d aurf aces (aucb as streets or driveways> are a1ao prohibited under the or-dlnance. Refilling pools or f ountaina la also Ute1a1 under tho new water waste reeutatlons. Enforcement ot tho ordinance will be the OranJ• County Sherllf'• responsibility, but water. board members expect law enforcement officials to act on dtben complainta of water waste. The new ord1Dance 11 tdentkal (lieWAT~PaaeM> molested and that she was,. manually stran1led rather than beaten to death. Initially, investigators theorized she dJed of a blow to her bead because of a scalp laceraUoo they spotted after her body was discovered by her roommate Tuesday afternoon But Amburgey said the blow that produced the laceration ap- parenUy did no other damage. "It didn't produce a fracture. It couldn't have killed her," be said. Asked If there were any S\lS• peels In the case, Amburgey said, "No, not yet." Miss Bennington was lut seen alive by her roommate with . whom she had 1one to Bobby McGee's ni&htspot Monday night. Ambur1ey said the two women left the popular club In separate cars after closing at 2 a .m. • The investigator said the murder victim drove home and because she was unable to find a parkin• space near her Marguerite Avenue apartment, she parked ln the nearby lot ol Mario's restaurant., where her car was found bJ lnvesU1aton. Ambur1ey said they beline the suspect may have slipped m; to the apartment throueh an 9pen.• slldinl elas• door. After rapln1 and murdertot 1 the lormer social worker. be: broke out a window acreen and: Jumpe4 from the second stary. bedroom where the crime took place. -- SERVICES PLANNED Adrien Penetler . Pelletier ! Rites Set I ' f For Today I ' Funeral rites for Adrien C. Pelletier, founder, former presi· dent and chairman of the board of Purex Corporation, a com· l roumty leader and philanthropist ( were scheduled today and Friday i 1n Newport Beach , Visitation until 9 tonight was I i;cheduJed al the Pacific View Mortuary Chapel in Newport Beach Funeral mass will be celebrat- ed at 10 a m Friday at Our Lady Queen of Angels Church. 2046 Marvista Drive. Newport Beach. 1 Graveside service will folJow at Pacific View Mr Pelletier died Tuesday in his sleep at his Emerald Bay home where he resided with h1s wife, Donalda Mr. Pelletier, 75, was active in many charitable causes and was confirmed by Pope Paul VJ to the pontifical order of St Gregory the Great in 1967 His humanitarian causes in· eluded support for such organiza- tions as the Freedoms Founda- tion at Valley For1e, South Coast Community Hospital. La1una Moulton Playhouse, Children's Hospital of Orange County, and others. He was a re~enl of Loyola University ln Los Angeles and -Was acuve wnn tn~ independent I Colleges of Southern California. Mr . Pelletier served as Purex's first president from 1927 and was chairman or the board or directors from 1965 to 1968. He continued to serve as a dll'e(t.or until 1971 when he retired. SC Planners Add Gellatly In 2nd Vote Clifford Gellatly was named to the San Clemen~ Plannint Com· ' mission Wednesday, &tlected on • the second ballot by city COl.ln· cilmen who had lnteTvlewtJd 13 applicants. Gellatly, 33,' was chosen to fill the term ol Tlmothi Uneer, who resigned from the plannlnf com- mission ln July. His term expires June30, 19T8. · The new commlsaloner, an en1lneer wlth the Pacific • Telephone Company, l1 currently vice chaJrman or the clty'a traf- fic and partln1 cornmlufon. Hll appolnlment to lbe plan· nina commlulon means that he can no Joncer serve tra!flc and parkint commissioner, creatln& • a vacancy on lb at paneL l ·'I am moet concerned wlt.h the , city's lmaae and with ~rpetuat· J ins the San Clement. lifestyle," f Gellatly told councllmen. "I • woutd like to see the city rn-.ln· ' lain lta unique, amall·town It· ! m~phere." -Gellatly lives with hla wtre lb4 1.W~ chllclren at 108 Calle Borreso .-San Clemmte. . ~ • • • i • • • DAILY PILOT 81 MICllAP.L PASKEVICH .... ...,,,.....ttaff A Seal Beach mot.til·apartm~nt complex. dubbed the "Hot L BalUmore·• becau1e of It• le11 lbao IUusU1oua put, once a1ain ha• been "aaved" by coutal comm.llaionen h'om lt1 ownen. wbo want to tear lt down. ·'It may become a roai Hot L Baltimore," remarked co-owner Al Bentley upon learnlna that the •late Coastal CommlHlon voted 9 2 Tuelday a1alnat allowtn& the deatructlon of the Ross Mariner Motel at 201 Seal Beach Boulevard . "The Hot L Baltimore" was a play by Lanford Wllson about a decaylq hotel with the .. E .. In the word •·Hotel" burned out in lta sign. It later became a short· Uved television se.rlea. 'the owners, Califia Properties of Laguna Beach, had hoped to build t:ilht single family homes on the site the motel has occupied· for 40 years. "I don't know what their (coastal commissioners') purpose Is other than to control people's property." said Bentley. Bentley first appeared before rl:!gional coastal commissioners in Huntington Beach in late June, claiming the motel was often OC· cupled by "vagrants, drunks and fugitives." However. regio nal com- missioners reasoned that the motel serves a much·needed public service, especially to lower-income families who can't otherwise afford a vacation at the beach. Fro..P~AJ TAXIS ••• volving taxicabs during the lII· terim period that they are operating on temporary permits. All three companies have made formal applications lo operate In the city. Mission Cab has propoged to operate 10 cabs in San Clemente, Checker 15 and AAA3. . The applications are currently under investigation by the city police department. Its 'findings and recommendation are to be presented to city council at a public hearing on taxicab licens· mg scheduled for Aue. 17. Fro..PapAJ ANIMAL ••• If the city were to contlnue en- forcement and the county provide shelter facilities, the cost would be$75,000. First year costs!otcreaUonof a local city run shelter and enforce· ment would be $254,000 of which $187 ,000 would be in capital costs. Second year coat for operation of the shelter and enforcement were projected at *68,000. Mrs., Cushman aaid the matter of a city shelter should ~ put on the ballot for a vote of the cJly resi· den\I. Israelu Nip Arab Attook TEL AVJV, Israel (AP> llr•eli troops c1u1ht an AJ'ab euerrtlla aquad lnfi)tratinl from .Tordan today and crushed what tbe J.sraelb caJf ed a tenonst miaaloe to dianapt Secretary ol Sta~ Cyrus R. Vance's peace ef· forts. T'M> guerriUu were kUled, one waa mtlcally wounded and two were cap(\lred but there were no rsraelf casuallties, the Israeli mlUtary command said. •.at!lell iroopa disco\'&red a break ln ~e border security fence •nd tootprlnt•, Israeli radJo said. The soldJers tracked the penillas and cornered them ln an olive crove near JObbuti Atbclot Yaiu:ov, a colle~Uve tarm three miles south of the Sea ol Galilee . Motel manaaer Jack Roe said summer rates at the Ross Mariner receoUy were mcrea.sed to f15 o weekend for a slnale room wtthout a ldtchonette. Kitchen-equipped rooms cost S225 per month. All of those cur· renUy are occupied, Roe said. BenUey tnd associates decided to appeal the re1lonal com- mission'• reuonin& to Ute state Coutal Comm.laalon. Armed with a petiUon signed by more than 500 neighbors who a1ree the motel should go, architect George Alvaret pleaded the case before the com· m111s100 Tuesday in Burlingame Nationwide Teleplwne Strike Set? WASHINGTON <AP) -A na· t1onwide strike by 700,000 telephone workers Saturday is almost inevitable, the chief unJon negotiator in conlract talks with the Bell System said today. Presitlent Glenn E. Watts or the CommunicaUorui Workers of America said that bargaining has come t.o a standstill. He said that time for the negotiations, re- cesaed since Tuesday, is running out. "1 can see no way to avoid a strike unle~s there \s a dramatic breakthrough tn the next few hours, which I candidty cannot foresee," Watts told a news con. ference. Current contracts with the Bell System expire at midnight Satur- day and the unions Involved in the negohallons have threatened a 11tr1ke at 9:01 a.m. PDT Satur- day. In addition to the CWA with its 500,000 members, the unions in. vol ved are the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, representing 120,000 workers, and the Telecom· munications International Union with about 70,000 members. The union.a rejected the com- pany's offer July 21 of a three. year contract wllb a 10 percent wa1e increqe, plus cos~f·U•ing adjustment.I over the life ol the a1reement. The proposal would have raiud the avera1e salary of a t.op·paid craft. worker earning $333.50 by 18.3 percent over three years. Watts said the proposal was far below recent settlements ia the auto and at.eel industries and declared that hil members would not accept anything substantially below those agreements. 'Characten' AbounJing In Laguna ·'Would it be po11ible for characters like Pluto and Mickey Mouse to walk around Laeuna. Beach?'' wondered Coun- cllwo0>an Phyllis Sweeney in response Wednesday to a request by two young women t.o meander around town weartn1 sandwich board•lem. • Ultimately. 'the council de· termined that sandwich board si•n• would "advertise something not available on the premlaes," and therefore be claaslfled aa "billboards," hence, illegal. The women, however, could wear T shirta and dispense •d· vert.isers' literature, and/or live information t.o tourists. But, back to Cquncllwoman Sweeney's q~ery about cbarac· tera. "We do hHe cbaracten walk· lne around. We have characters walldni around town more weird and strange and exotic Ulan Mickey Mouae and Pluto," Mayor Jon Brand exclaimed. . ...., ............. LAGUNA PARAMEDICS, LIFEGUARDS AOMINllTER FIRST AID TO SCULPIN V1CTIM Sean Du991, 17, of Newport Beach luff.,. All9f9k: Reaction to Polton Fro• Page AJ WATER ••• to model water waste regulations backed by a water conservation study group established hast June by Orange County Supervisors. AUeeed violaters o! the "'I'll•· lions would be given written notice and 24 hours to correct the violation. Repeated v1olatioo1 could re· suit Ul wat.er service restriction or termination as well as court fines and possible imprl&onment in county jail for up t.o 30 days. Judge Files Suit LOS ANGELES (A P) -A class action s uit flied by a retiree Jurist claims a new state law freczmg salary and pension In· creases for the state's judaes Is unconalttutional. Fishing Boat Hand PoisOned by Catch A sl>OJ1fisber deckhand who went Into shock after tan&lln1 with a polaonoua sculpin fish Wednesday wu taken from the Newporter by Laauna Beach llfeauards and landed at Treasure laland in South Lquna where he was treated by paramedics and taken to the hospital. Sean Dugas, 17, of 1544 Miramar Drive, Newport Beach, was released from South Coast Community hospital arter ob- servation and emergency care. Dugas had stabbed bis finger on one of the sharp poisonous spines of the aculpio while re· moving the rock fish from the line of a customer on the sportlisher. The Newporter was fi shing about three quarters of a mile orr Lagwia's Maln Beach when the \ncldent occurred. Art Gronaky of Art'• Landing, the aportflaher's port. said that usually aculpln encounters cause pain and irritation, but that Dugas had suflered a more severe reactton. The boat's captain made the decision l o call the Harbor Department. The Harbor Department In turn radioed the Laguna Beach lifeguards who had a skiff close by. ~ XL-100 I' 17" dl1gonal · color portable !!saa1 ... 1 {. '~ -..__ -........ Y• Id acebe8' c.-pert-.... a114 XL-100 r•U.WU&J wW. thll ... ,.d. ... ..,..tad ........... Ulat .... u u... f ... •ffJ lM,.-c..aMM l&a&etlanll, AcHHae blaclr •aU'S. flct•r• ,._, •• A•te•atle PlH T•-1•1, A.111eaat1c a.re.a c..er.t. Cll&l'CMI r.nu. mec&Qlo ...w•ln•a...._ --~ ---• -~..... • • _ _;..~ .1...---• -_,~...a&=..·...-.. ------ ................... LAGUNA PARAMEDICS, LIFEGUARDS ADMINISTER FIRST AID TO SCULPIN VtCTIM S..n DugH, 17, of Newport Beach Sutten Allergic Reaction to PollOft Sportfisher Poisoned By Sculpin A sportflsher deckhand who went into shock alter tangling with a poisonous 1culpin fi1b Wednelday was taken from the Newporter by La1una Beach lifeguards and landed at Tr~asure Island in South Lquna wbere be wu treated by paramedics and taken to the bOlpital. I St•Q Ducu. n, ot U44 "' Mtraa:aar Drive, Newport Beach, I WU nfeaaed from South Coast. Community hoapltal after ob- aervllttala and emet1ency care. OU,u had atabbed hll lln1er on coe ot the sharp poisonous aplnea ot the aculpin while re- movt.ne the tock flab from the . llne of a customer on the a portllaber. The Newporter w-.s fishing about thr~ quartera of a mile off Lacuna's Main Beach when the lncldent occurred. Art Gronslry of Art's Landing, the 1port(lsher'1 port, said that mually aculpln encounters cauae pain and Irritation. but that Dueu had suffered a more aeverereaction. The boat's captain made the declalon to call the Harbor Department. The Harbor Department In tum radioed the Laauna Beach Ufe1uards who had a aldff close by. Lacuna Beach 1uards took Ducu from the Newporter and went to the cove at Treasure J1tand where they could land the ~aft wltboUt battlin1 heavy surf. There, fire fiahters from the Soutb La1una station and pal'amedlca treated Du1as for an allere.tc reaction to the ICUJpln toxin. No Suspect Yet CdM Woman Raped, Strangled to Death By JOANNE REYNOLDS OIU.O.ltyf'l ... llaff Corona del Mar murder vtcUm Jane Ellen 'Bennington was raped by her aUll-unidenUfled U • sailant who choked her to duth, Newport Beach police dilcloHd today. Detective S,m Amburaey aald results ot the autopsy conducted -...... , ........... llllfwed that abe had been aexa•U7 molested and that she was manually stran1led rather than beaten to death. IntUally. lnve1tl11tora theorized lhe died of a blow ta her head becauae of a acalp laceration they spotted after her body was discovered by ber MukRacing Set/or Fair SACRAMENTO (AP> -Mules are probably betten known for refmtna to budie than runntn1, but villton to the coun- ty fair In Bishop may aooo be able to place parimutuel beta on mule races. The state Senate approved a blll late Wednesday that would authorize the 19th District Agricultural AasoclaUon to coo· duct parimutuel waserlftt on mule races for up to four days a year throuJh 1982. A 27-4 vote sent the measure, . AB 584 by Assemblyman Larry Cblmbole (D-Palmdale), to the Aaaembly for acUon Ob Senate amendments. THURSDAY, AUGUST 4 1977 N TEN CEN CA:rpenter Plan .. 30% State lncOIDQ . :Tax Cuts P~opOsed SACl\AlWl:Nw\ (AP > -State sen. Denn1I E. Carpenter (R-N•~ Beach) was one ot two · Je1lilator1 wbo today proposed elvl_.nl <(allfornian.s state income taX cuta lMxt year up to a max-imum of $150 for aln1le tax- payers and P>O for jolnt returns. Carpenter, who made tbe pro- posal wilh State Sen. Ge0r1e.. DeukmeJlan <R-Lon1 Beach), said the 30 percent cut would re- turn about $782 million of the state surplus to the people who paktlt. Tbe state surplus hu been estimated at $2. 7 bUllon at the end of this fiscal year. For a family ol lour earning .$10,492 the Republican pro- posal would reduce the Income * * * fA>llege~s Tax Rate Increases By STEVE MITCH EU. Of .. Oellf f'I ... ll•ff Coast Community Colleee District trustees slapped another 9.8 cents onto the district's tax rate Wednesday ni1ht, despite a two-hour plea by a COila Mesa taxpayer that cuta be made In the $76.5 million document. The lncreue ln the tax rate comes on top of an eaUmat«I 20 perce11t hJ~e Ip assessed valua· tlona on 'Properties in the 88· MMl'9miM~t tstrlqt. TbON Increases will mean a 34 percent lncreue ln dJ1trlct taxes !or the owner of a home assessed at l80,0001utyear. ~y.ownera will P•Y•·• centt per '100 aaesled valuation to support proeranu In the 344· pace budaet document appt'Oved w ednesday night. And lt was that document to which retired Navy Captain Lef. teru1 "Lefty" Lavrakaa ad- dreaed btmaelf from 10:10 p.m. to midnl1ht, comparlnJ Une items throughoul bis copy of the preUmliaary budeet. Lavraku wu an unsuccessful candidate lut year for the coast board teat held by Trustee Ge«ae 8oclda Jr. of Corona del Kar. Truateel listened J>•tlently u he reviewed what be admitted were his 1wn Judgments for <SeeT.C.XIUKE, PaaeA2> N schools would cost about •.s billioo over-five ye an. Carpenter, who 11 a memberot a two-bollse committee lrYlnC to wort out the pro~ tu bill. said tbe commlthe h stalemated. tax to $U from $63, a 62 percent cut. For a f amlly earnlne $11,495, tt would cut the tax to $241 ft'Om *372, a 35 percent reduction. Because of the $1!50-$300 Umlt, the percentate cuta would drop rapidly in hi1her bracketa. Deukmeilan and Carpenter con· ceded at a news conference there was llWe Chance ol 1etUnc Sllcb a bill throUab the DemocraUc· controlled Jel}slature. "But ltn't there room for one orleinal Idea that ls fair and con- cise and more euily understood than the others?" Carpenter asked. . .. 1be 1ovemor ls borrllted b.)' .aome of the proepects be1na dls· casted in that committee. We're not only talltlne about tax changes, but social chanaea that come down very heavy oa busi· ness." be said. Brown administration pro- posals to rebate some groperty taxes to homeowners an renters and give moce state money to SERVICES PLANNED • Adrien PeUetlet Service Slated For Pelletier, Purex Foumkr Funeral rites for Adrien C. Pelletier, founder, former presi- dent and chairman of the board of Purex CorporaUon, a com· munlty leader and phllanthropiat were scheduled today and Friday in Newport Beach. VisltaUon unW 9 toniaht was scheduled at the Pacific View Mortuary Chapel in Newport Beach. Funeral mass will t>. celebrat- ed at 10 a.m. Friday at Our Lady Queen of Anaels Church· 2046 Marviata Drive, Newport Beach. Graveslde aervtce will follow at Paciftc View. Mr. Pelletier died Tuesday in hl1 aleep at his Emerald Bay home where be raided with bJ1 wife, Donalda. Mr. Pellet1er, 75, waa active 1n many charitable cauaea and wu confirmed by Pope Paul Vl to the ponUfical order of St. Gregory the Great In 1B87. Hil bwnanltarilUl causes ln· eluded support for such or1anl11· lions u the Freedoms Foubda· lion at Valley For1e, South Coast Community Hospital, Lari.ma Moulton Playbouae. Chlldren's Hospital of Oran.a• County, and othfta. He wu a reaent of Loyola Un.iveralty ln Loi An1elea and • WM acuve witll cne mci~pfbdem Colle,es ot Southern California. Mr. Pelletier served u Purex'• fir4t presidtnt from Jl37 and ... cbaltman of the boird 'of directon from li.15 to 1981. He conti.Dued tQ serve u • director unW 1971 wben be retired. Carpenter said that not only are the committee members stalemate~J but behind-the· scenes neaouatlons with other In-terested parties are tetUnt nowhere • * * * HBMulls City Tax Rebates By ltOBERT BAaKER Of• Deity ........... A plan to return up to $1 mlllion to city taxpayers ts under serious consideration in HuntinltQn Beach today. If the plan ta adopted, the re- bates would take the place ol a propond cut in the cttr tax rate. The plan ls modeled aft.er tbe in- flation assistance program 111· etitut.ed by Garden Grove. Mayor Pro Tem Ron Shenkman, who ts 1pearheadlne the rebate effort1, said the' money would be returned to owners who occupy 1lncl•family resJdene•. Sbeakman aald that the ,.. bates would probably ranee from $20 to $50, dependln1 on the u- sessed valuation of the re- sidences. He 1aJd the total rebate amount ls expected to be from S7SO,OOO ta $1 million. Shenkman said that under rm plan, rebates could not apply to commercial, industrial or in· come properties. He said that he will work out detaill ol the proeram with at.ti members Friday and that the cl· ty council will bold a study· session on the matter Aue. 15. Shenkman declared that theln· flatioo uailtance plan will help reduce the burden to taxpsyera in a meanJ.niful way. The UHSsed valuaUon ot their properties bu arben 50 percent over the last th.tee years while the city's tu rate of $1.62 per $100 us4»Hd valuaUon baa r~ main unc.41aneed. l Shenkman claims that the r.fi bates would be to tbe city's ad"! vantanie because • blanket r" rate reducUon would also reduce' tax revenues lrom commercial. induatrla.l and income prop. ertiea. -He ta.Id that under his plan. tb6 clt1 would tootlnue to rittl" ta.x 1upport'-fJtqJn ml!or co.-.; merclal 91terPr1Jel wblJe JoWl!f\o ing boineowneia' tu11. t ' • DAI YPILOT N Fires ·. Can Collecifon Newport Be ach resident Helen Anderson and llarbor Patrolman Pat Glasgow dis- play som e of the cans they·ve collected to raise money for the patrol's athletic team The 17 cents a pound they get for recycl· ing lhc cans pay/'i transportation and en· try fees to the s late Police Olympics. to be held in Eureka next year. Local res i- dents are w<.'lcom e to bring recyclable aluminum c ans t o the patro l head- quarters, 1901 Hay-,idc Drive. Newpo rt Beach. ·.• : 3 Acquitted, :;1 Convicted ~:to Party Fighi One ol four maie roommates arrested in a Huntington Beach party melee Jut April has been convicted oC assault and bauery by a Jury, wh.tle two codelen· dant.s were acqu1~ of the m1a- ; demeanor charget. . ' Ricky Russell, 21, of 80(2 Taylor Drive. where the incident occurred, now faces a probation and referral hearing Aug 31 in West Orange County Judicial District Court. His brother Kevin, 23, and Roy Donovan, 20, also of the Taylor Drive address. were acquitted of the same charge. A fourth at· resttt, Thomat1 Johnson, 20, was released without ever being , chargedtwoday1 later. • The four were originally ·!: booked by police on charees of assault with a deadly weapon, •t· • tempted rape and robbery, along with a 17·year-oldjuvenJle ctrt. Tbey were taken into Cltltody at lhe residence on April 29. based on complaints by a 15- year-old cJrl wbo afi(eed to at· lend an Impromptu JIU'tY when approached by a vanload of youths. The fOWll woman, whotP de· ~ rense aU.Omey Tbomaa Cr01by • alleged was probably tnt9xleat~ and was never aubjttted to a rape attempt, required hospital lreatment after tbt epitocle. The caae wu concluded. ex· cept for the hnrlnc on probatlah for RJcky RuaseU. before Juqe , William Mock Jut Wffk. : , During the proceedlnas, de· ,~ fenae attorney Croabf pointed ~ ~ out the 17-year-old.tirl admitted :=• » Juvenile hall wae also never ; 9bar1ect in the c•••· • I • ! 'i From Page AJ TAX HIKE .•. places where the budget could be cut. District staff members coun- tered many of his areument&. Board member Worth Keene told t.avnkas: "You have in- dicated these are your jud1ments on how we can reduce the budeet, and we are telling you we have our own judgments on the mat· ter." Trustees then thanked the re- tired captain and then shced 2.6 cents from the proposed 92-cent tax rate presented last month in a preliminary budgel. Part of that de~ease Willi due to cutting a $4 million reserve ac· count to $3.8 million, according to Executive Vice Chancellor Cor· rellan Thompson. He said each penny added to the tax rate adds about $270,000 to the bud~et. Last year the owner of an $80,000 home paid $160 in taxes to the district. Seven Apply For.Vacated Trustee Seat Newport-Mesa school officials said today seven people have taken out appJjcations for the trustee seal beina vacated by Marian eer,eson. Tho8e with applications are: AM Beaupre. 2361 AZ\IA! Ave • Santa Ana Heights; 8 .J . SkiJling, 2124 Windward Lane, Newport Beach, Stanley E . Legum, 335 Relms Lane, Costa Mesa; Dennis Johnson, 2138 Bayfarm Place, Santa Ana Heights; Tim Salyer, 2043 Westcllff Drive, Newport Beach: Oliver Asmund, 22S Bowling Green Drive, Costa Mesa, and E.S. DeMocskonyi, 34S Cherry Tree Lane. Newport Beach. The seven residents of the third trustee dlilrlct, which lies on the west aide or the Upper Newport Bay, have unlll 4:30 p.m . ' Ba~ _Heist Suspect Remaim in Custody t and no priOl' crisnlnaJ ~. En1ebretaen Ntorted tbat be had consld~red an even titlher b.lll. The "accompllce," Pamila Sue Williama, teltJfltd that •h•, bad wmed lnlonner for J)Ollce •r* DOUaJu told her tb• ~els ~ere actually to be dlsmembered and killed. • Julie McGettnck. 19, tdtlfted • that 1he worked for tbtft·bll' owner Dou~lat In lt'16. u a • barrnald. when be asked hor to go to th desert sheck to poH ror pornosraphlc plcluru. Sbe aaid Douglas told her then tbal he wu complllne the photol for Marta-dialrjbuted bond-.e books. Mias MeGettrlck aald Douglas tried lo recruit her to Jure vlcUms to tt\eahack. "He aaid there were a couple of . bqdies there already, that he put them there," ahe testified. She uJd ahe wu •cared to death and never returned to the shack. Officer Mary Patricia Reynolds. a former Hunlinlt.on Beach reserve policewoman now with Santa Monica department, and Orange County Sheriff's Deputy Dawn Baucom, testified they were hired by Douglas as models. Miss Reynolds,• small blonde, arrested Douglas at the July 20 photo session in the desert. She said that Doualas had made no threatenlne motions or st ate men ts to either orticer before the arrest. He said the combiDed fire COuld ex}llode tu.to a bulb lnf emo lt the Carol fire a few lrilles to Ut. west Jotnod tt. A few mllea away, th• DamoQ n?e Wblch haa blactefted some 1.000 acrea also was movtna towar4 lludLaJte. b61a1d. fleeted. Jean Hilchey has been e lected president of the Newport Beach Friends of the Library. She has been a member of the group since 1974. Soviets Concede BELGRADE, Yueoslavia (AP) -Soviet concesalons on procedure h ave apparently cleared the way for Uus Cali's conference reviewing the results of lhe 1975 Helsinki accords. The concessions are expected to al· low full debate on human rights issues. Al-ea "Thia fire could also be a blaer one than t Olablo," Powers aald. He said• West PaciOc Railroad train hu 1tarted pullln& water tanks into the area where a fl.re station and a lookout staUoo WtH beinl threateood. Powers aaid tbere were a1ao a llUJDbet of n.nches ln tbe vidbltJ and eome raaeb bqlldllll• h~••• been bumed. -Trooper Shot Dead Over Dime MIAMI (AP> -A Florida m1bway Patrol trooper WU &bot apd killed early today when be stopped a motorlst for jumpina a 10-cent toll booth. police said . ••For a dime -a lousy dime." one Miami police olflcer 1ald. Hours later, police found the car and followed a trail of blood at least tbree blocks to a Miami apartment tomplex wheN! an on- identtned man was taken into custody. i>ollcc said the perso" in custody was -. witness, not the gunman wanted in the slaytne of Trooper Bradley Steven Glascock. They would not elaborate. The shootinl occurred about 3 a.m. on Miami'& Easl·West Ex- pressway when Glascock saw a Cadillac Eldorado sideswipe a toll booth and speed through without paying the 10-cent fee, police said. He stopped the car about 100 yards away from the toll plaza. ''The suspect suddenly pulled out a handgun and shot Glascock al least two times at point-blank range,·; Miami police spokesman Angelo Bitsls said. He saJd Glascock got out of his car and "there was a brief ex- change of words. The suspect pulled oul a handgun and shot the trooper." ~ .XL-100 I 17" diagonal · color portable 11saa1:1 1 L~ ..... -• • J ._, Yoo 1et ac.lllDS c:itW ,.,,_ • ..,. ... XL-100 rellaWUtj wtta. WI a.fl9d. vaJa~ "'1altle that ... au U.eee f .. &carHJ Ht percea& lo&ld .caee dlanll, Mt•llaa ~laell aa&rb 1t4&1re t1•e, A•'-~Hlle FIM 'hat11, Aa&•••Ue Claroma Coo&rol. Cllarcoal ltr•ae metallk aod ••11111& CllMll.C.. , rvoL. 70, NO. 216, 4 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES I THURSDAY, AUGUST 4, 19n TENCEN~ I Fires Merge,. Threaten Big Sur Area ne~e....-r,.. t ,._ racial nres m th ,,,.,,_, willdl!il'B81& eut of ~I Sur have ma-pd tMo marnmot.lt blue w otba' h&btAin1·tnuered n"' enpted 1o ~ east and DOtthealt parts ol the at.ate. the U.S. f"on::st Service said today. More tllu l ,000 exbau•ted firefiebten, bacll:ed by uasooed crews from the Soutbwest and Idaho, were batt.liftl UM Vauana fires which hue blackened more tban I0,000 ac1ea ot Umber and bru hat the Loe Padr" National Forat. 1ald BUI Powers, forest aervlcelnf onnaUoo otncer. More tJ\an 400 bluea, rnott aparked by U1htntn1, have 1corcbed tbouaanda of acrt1 ln Northml Caltforn.la tn four da_ya. Firell&htera have been abutOed from flre to ttre, but a •bortale of manpower bu meant that tome bl ates are burninf unchec:ked. Powers d•cribed the Veotana blan1 -the South Coae and Mar· ble Peak ~ -a• potentially moN danteTOU• than the Mt. Dlablo flre 35 miles eut ~-San Francl.leo. That blue, which has burned more than e.ooo acres, wu coatalned early today and w u expected to be under control by tonilbt, accordJna to the California Department of Foreetry. The South Cone fire crew from s.~ to 12,000 acres while the Marble Peak blue, 12 miles to the south, scorched 18,000 acres u the two fires ra1ed uncoatrolled this mornin1, the foreat aervice said. .. They are very inaccessible and daneerows with up to 14·fool 'high brush," aald, Powers. • "There are no roads and it's almost impossible to move through the area.'• In Modoc County, two fires 30% State Income Tax Cut . Sought for ,1978 Marines To Swap Acreage? By RAYMOND ESTRADA JR. Of ... o.111 ...... ,..., A Marine Corps spokesman , said today the Corps would con- sider swappine the 130-acre 1 rederally owped area at Mlle Square Park for county or Irvine Company-owned land to build u · many u 1,300 houslne units for Marines statloned in Oraoae County. 1 .. We're certalDtY not fixed Oil l Fountalll Valley, .. Hld CoJ. G.L. Fenqa, "We are open to trad· 1 in1tbelandatMUeSquare.'' Fenenca, who ii ill eharle ot planninl b.,. faclllttH •t El Toro, laid po11lble trades which could be DflOliat.ed lo the ruture lncllJde rounty-owned land along Edinaer Avenue adjacent to Mile Squue. The Marines also have eyed sites north of exl1t0\1 military bousina at El Toro air station and land near the Santa Ana Narine helicopter base. Both of these areaa are owned by the Irvine Company. Tbe Fountain Valley-Mile (8ee8WAP, Pa1e.42> Nationwide ·Phone Strike ' 'IDevitable' WASllll'fGTON (AP) -A na- tlonwlde atrlke by '100,000 telflllione workera Saturday ls almost iDevitable, the chief union ne1otlat« in contract tallal with tbe Bell System aald today. President Glenn E. Wattt of tbe Communlcatiabl Workers ol America said that bar1alnint bu c:ome to a stanclsUll. He faid tbat time for the ne1otiatlom, ....,. ceued •Ince Tuesday, ii twmlnf out. Neighbors Suing Over Swim Pool Carpenter Joins in Proposal SACRAMENTO (AP) -Stale Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter <R· Newport Beach) was one of two legislators who today proposed giving Californians state lncome tax cuts next year up to a max· imum of $1~ for sln1le tax· payers and $300 for joint returns. Carpenter, who made the pro- posal with State Sen. Georae PeukmeJlan (R·Looa Beach>, Aald the IO percent eut would re· tum about $782 mutton of the state surplus to the people who paldlt. Tbe state •urplut bu been Ht.imated at S2. '1 blUion at the end oftim fllcal yeat. For a family of four eamln& $10,492 the Republlcan pro· posal would reduce the Income tax to fl-4 from tu. a 62 percent cut. For a family earnln..1 $19,495, lt would cut the tam<> S241 from S3'72, a 35 perce• reduction. Because of the Sl50·$300 limit, the percentage cull would drop rapidly in higher brackets. Deukmejian and Carpenter con· ceded at a news conference there waa little chance of 1ett1na such a bill throuth the Democrallc· controlled leaillature. "But isn't there room for one original idea that ls fair and con- cise and more eully understood thall the others?" Carpenter uked.. Brown administration pro- posals to rebate some property taxes to homeowners and renters and live more state money to schools would coat about se.s billion over five yeara. Carpenter. who is a member of a two-house committee trylnJ to work out the property tax bill. .said the committee is atalema~. •'The 1ovemor is bontfled by some ~ the prospect• betq dis· cussed In that committee. We're not only talkln1 about tax ohances. but aoclaJ chan1e1 that come down veey heavy on busl· neaa," he aald. Cai'l)enter Hid that Dot only ar• th. commlttee members stalemated, but bebind·th•· acena aegotJaUQril wlth other Jn- tereated partlea are 1etttn1 nowhere. * I which broke out Wednesday have also mer1ed. burning some 1,500 acNS. "It's burning like crazy," Pow era said. He said the combined fire could explode into a bugb inferoo lf the Carol fire a few miles to the west joined it. A few miles away, the Damon fire which bas blackened some 1,000 acres also was moving toward Mud Lake, he said . Eight Navy cruisers. frigates and destroyers steam into Eniott Bay in Seattle as part of the city's annual Seafair festivities. •'Tb.ls fire could alaO be a bluer one than Mt. Dlablo,.. Powers said. He sald a West Pacific RallroaCl train bu started pullln1 water tanks into tbe area where a fire statJoa and a lookout at.ation were beinl threatened. Powers said there were also a number of ranches In the viclnJty and some ranch buildin11 have been burned. Murder Victim Raped By JOANNE REYNOLDS OttlllDMIY~••Uutt • Corona del Mar murder victim Jane Ellen Bennin1ton was raped by her still-un\dentified ~ sailant who choked her to death. Newport Beach police disclosed today. Detective Sam Amburgey 1ald results of the autopsy conducted on the 29-year-old woman showed that she bad been sexually moles ted and that she was manually stranaled rather than beat.en to death. Initially, investigators theorized she dled of a blow to her head because of a scalp laceration they spotted after her body was discovered by her roommate Tuesday afternoon. But Amburgey said the blow that produced the Jac:eraUon ap. parenUy did no other damaee. .. It didn't produce a fractµre. It couldn't bave killed her,'• be said. Alked It there were any SUI• peels in the cue. Amburaey aald, "No, not yet.'' Mi.as Benninatoo wu lut seen· aUve by her roommate with whom she had aone lo Bobby McGee's nl1htapot Monday niibL Board. Saves Old 'Hot L Baltimore' By MICHAEL P.UKEVJCB Of ttle Dally ...... ,..., A Seal Beach motel-apartment complex, dubbed the "Hot L Baltimore" because of lts less than illustrious past, once anin hes been "saved" by coa.9\al commissioners from lts owners. who want to tear it down. "It may become a real Hot L Baltimore," remarked c<H>Wner Al BenUey upon learning that tlte state Coastal Commission voted 9·2 Tuesday aeainst allowtna the destruction of the Ross Mariner Motel at 201 Seal Beach Boulevard. "The Hot L Baltimore" was a play by Lanford Wlbon about a decaying hotel with the "E" in the word "Hotel" burned out in U.a a!Jn. It later became a short· lived television aeries. 'rhe owners, Califla Properties of LlllUJla Beach, had hoped to build et1ht •ln&)e family hom~ on the site the motet bas occupied for 4tO years. "J don't know what their (coastal com missioners·> purpose ls other than to control people's property." said BenUey. Bentley first appeared before rtegiooal coastal comm1ssloners in Huntington Beach ln late Jun~ clalmin1 the motel was often OC· cupied by "va1rant.s, drunks and fugitives." However, realonal com· missioners reuoned tbat tile motel serves a much·nffd~d public aervlce, especially to lower·lncome famUies who caQ't otherwise afford a vacatioa at the beach. ~· Motel manaeer Jack Boe aild s ummer rates at the Ro11 Mariner recently were increased to flS a weekend tor a atnate room without a kltcben1tt4t. Kitchen.equipped rooms coat $225 per month. All of thOM cu.r.- rently an occupied, Roe aald. • Bentley And aUoicJates decided C&eie MOTBL; Pase AJ) ' 8 Thu A .. •yDI• ' ·Trooper K:illed • :· Over Toll Jump r MlAJU <A-.,) -A Florida "'1 htlol t.roopa WU Ibo«. rly tod11 w he 1t1c1R111..:i a motart1t for Jumptna • • ~&oil booth. pollc alld. t ••r.r a 41lm• -a y cltme, .. cm• Miami pol tee oftlcer said. • Haun laler, police found the c-ar ..t followed a trtll ol blood al .._ u.n. bloekl to a lllaml •pllltmalt ~mplex wbe,.. un· id1 c Mf\od man wa1 taken ln\O PoUc'c uld tbe penon ln CI t4d'J a W1tDeP, not tbe ...... wanted la the at., ..... ol ~rooper Bradley Steven Gla1eoek. They would not birate. Tbo sbootioC occun9d about 3 a.m. oo Mlaml's Eaat-West Ex· premway when Glascock saw • Cadillac Eldorado s1desw1pe a • toll booth and speed throuah f witbout payilll tbe 10-eent fee. t police said. t Re stopped the car about 100 S yards away from the toll plua. .. 'The 1uspect •uddenly pulled out a handlun and abot. Gla.scoek \; at least two Umes al point-blank , , 1ange, ·~ Miami police spokesman • Aneelo Bitaia said. \ : He &aid Glascock aot out of hJs ~, ··car and "there was a brier ex· • change or words. The swipect ~ , pulled out a band&un and shot the : trooper." An observer riding an the trooper's car pulled out .~ E'romP~AJ . STRIKE ••• 500,000 members, the unions In· volved are the International Brotherhood or Electrical Workers, represenUna 120,000 workers, and the Telecom· municalions International Union with about 70,000 members. The unions rejected the com· pany's offer July 21 of a three· year contract with a 10 percent wage increase, plus cost·of·Uving adjuatmenl8 over the Ufe of the agreement. The proposal would 'r have raised the averaae salary or a top.paid craft worker eamin1 '333.SO by 18.3 percent over three years. Watt.a said the proposal waa far -below recent setUements tn the auto and steel Industries and • deelared that his members would not accept anyth nt substantially s belowtbOle air ents. , • " Cops Step Up Bomber Hunt NEW YORK <AP> Federal , and city police invest11ative , teams stepped up their search for a Puerto Rican terrorist croup t.oday following bombings and bomb threat.a that forced at least 100,000 workers to evacuate skyacrapera in Manhattan's bual· ·' nea1 dlatrlct. • The F ALN, the Puerto Rlc6n independence croup whOM bom· bings have frust.r•tecl autbortUes. for three years, claimed to have 1in&ck a,aln, with two explosions Wednesday in busy office build· mis. More bomb tbreall today emptied two sky1craper1 as numerous threats were telephoned to poU~• bead· quart.en. They appuenU~ were not connected with Wed.netd1,1'1 violence and no boinbS were found. F.@ypt Proteit& CAIRO CAP> -Eppt bu lod.aod • Jrotn' wltb th• Scwtet : I Unkln becau.M ~th• re ~ presence of lhe SoTt• rcr . r carrier MOlcOW near aypt'• : ~ territorial waters durln1 la1t' '. ~ month'• £1ypUan°tJb1an bordtr : ~ clasbtl, a C.tro new•per •ild . 1oday. .. DAILY PILOT Olucooll'• 1bot1un and fired thrH round•, 1trlklna tho Cadtllac'• roar window 11 tho suspect •&*I away. Bltlll sald. TM~ of the oblervcr waa not ...S. Police aald lh•Y had a delcrip· Uon ol tho 1unman. 01-eocll'a parcnll, who Uve ln Maltland, aald he wu to have been marrled tn three mootba, ~llceaald. Saddleback Trustees Okay Pact Saddleback Valley Unified School District tnaaieea have un· anlmoualy approved a three-year employment contract which givea about ~ non-teaching emploY,es a six percent raise this year. The contract with the California School Employees As· socialion <CSEA>. which represents the district's clerical, maintenance, food service and transportation workers, also pro- vides for an additional five per· cent pay boost in 1978-79. It leaves the door open for salary negotiations during the third year. CSEA officials said salaries ttU. year will ranee from •· 720 for a be$inninl food service as· alatanl t.o $16,920 for an ex· perlenced budget analyst. Next year, this range wlft be tr,067 to $17,T7S. · 1n addition to the salary In· creases, these employoa will re· eel ve 19 percent of any money go· ing to the district because of a new slate legislation lo defray the cost of insurance benefits. The contract also covers work ing conditions and hours or employment. Eight County Boys Isolated At Scout Camp Eight Orange County Boy Scouta are amon1 30 Scow who were placed in laolation Wednes· day after an outbreak or a nu-like illness on the opening day of the National Boy Seoul Jamboree, m Moraine State Park, Pa. The 1couta were isolated as a precaution against spread or the virus among the 28,000 boys c amped at the. soµthwestern Pennayl vanla slate park. There are 108 Orange County scouts there. Orange County pediatrician Richard A. Bergstrom, working with the Jamboree medical staff, reported to local scout leaders lo· day that about half the affiicled ¥Outs already have been re- leased. Berestrom reportedly described the Illness as "a mild gastrointestinal upset," accord· Inc to Phil Bevins, Oranae Coun· ty Council direct.or of support services. Dr. Robert L)'nn. medical dlrector at the Jamboree. said the Illness apparently baa peaked, "altlaou&A we are conti· nuln• to mooltor the 1lluaUoo closely." Two d the atrlicted acouta are from Huntinft,On Beach, one from Fountain VaOey, two from Anahelmi tw~ from Or1n1e and one from La Palma. Lynp bid the ICOUll appeared tO .have cont,.cted the virus before a:rrivinl at t.hf Jamboree . by pJane The Oran"e County 5eout1. travelJnl b)' plane from Loa Anaele9 July zs wllb about 200 Loa Anaetes County Scoutl, vlalt· Id Newark, N.J.: New York Cit)', Philadelpb.la, Wuhln•t.oo and GettywbUrf, Pli., before anhtn1 at tlHt .Jamboree Monday, of· ncJ111u1ct /tlurder Weapon? Pictured are front and side V'iews or mahogany fertility symbol statue believed used in Laguna Beach murder of Albert Willard, 69, of 861 Coastvlew Drive on July 26. Statue was apparently carried from the s~ene by murderer. Police asked today that anyone with mforma· lion call Detective Gene Brooks at 497-3311 . extension 267 Fro• P.,,e A J SWAP OF LAND ••• Square site became the most likely choice for the houslne unlts because It is the only area already federally owned that is large enou1h to accommodate the potential 1,300 units and is the closest to El Toro, &aid Fenenga. The Marines are faced with a critical need for low-cost housing In Orange County, especially for enlisted men. County Supervisor Phillip An· thony said Wednesday he would like to see If a trade could be made In light of local opposUlon to the Marine Corps plan to bulla housing at MU• Square. Santa Ana Mayor Vern Evans joined Fountain Valley officials In criticlzin& the Marine pro- posal The Sant.I Ana maror said he fears the move would set a pl'ece· dent ror the federal 1ovcoment to some day build military hous· Ing at his elly'1 planned Centen· nial Park on Fairview Road near Edln1er Avenue. Evans ~so claimed traffic eenerate.,from the military housing wOuld overload Ec:Unter Avenue. A helicopter t>aae untll 1'74, the trian1ular area in the heart of Mlle Square Park was con· aldered l>y many local eouply and city otnclals as a future addl· lion to the re&tonal recre,tJon facility. Marine offlclals Hid the 1,38'7 mllltary houaln& unltl at El Toro and Santa Ana are full. with a 1,400-famlly walUni llat. Enllsted oien a1mpl1 cannot find aultable hoollnl in Oran•• County, 1a.ld Capt. John Shotwell, El Toro information of. ncer. • Currently, the Marines hope \0 have about 200 new houalna unlta under construction by 19'79. B1 PIDUP &OSMAUN Of ................... Fred Serre J>oualas fll C.C.ta Mesa will ltan4 trial on attempt· ed murder chart• •llellnl lie lured two women to th• d..-t to be blthd to dea\b by an ac· compllee while be took obscene 1oapehot.a ol the murdva. J>OuOU wu 8"Uted at the Yucca Valley alte Jvty 21) by two undercover pollcewomea who po1ed as the modell. Police al· teie they were to be~ dis· membered aodkilled. After a daJ·lOOC prellai\nary beaiin& at West Oranae COunty Municipal Court. Judae R•ar Enaebretlen ordtrea ttie 49· year~ furnlture reflnlsber &r· ral&'Md f4 Su~ Court Aue. 18. But Judie En1e'bretaen also all'eed to study a motiQO by de- fense att.omfO' Pat Masers to 1uppre11 DlUCh ot the pllyllcal evidence -a meal cleaver. knlv-., aaa, Icepicks. ruon - against Doui)as. Garden Grove Detective Ronald Shave testified the items were dug up near a Yucca Valley sha~Douglas used as his porno· 1ra c film beadqua.rVrs. S ave said Doublaa led Qfficers to the spot and himself dq with his hands to help uncover the cache. But that, the officer tesWled, plus a 45-minute interview at the • Twentynine Palma San Bernardino 1herilf'1 ataUoo. took place after Douslu refused to waive constitutional ri~ll and demanded an attontey. To~ after tbe hevlng, pl'OleC\.tt.or' James Brookl nld the Interview wu lnfonual and information 1a1oed ln It would not be used a«alnat Dou&Ias at trial. Brooks conceded that iC Enaebret.aen rules aaainst ad· mlttinc the evidence Doualas helped pollce find, "It would weaken our case, psycho· 3 Acquitted, I Convicted In ~arty Fight 17" dlagonal color portable togtcellf.·· He.a4dtd, "But lt won't cost us the case." Enaebretnn declarln& ~'This type ol mmo ls belnoua ~ to think d it." ralud Doualu' ball from ll.80,000 to $35(),000. M-a-:n1.wbo applied for reduc· lion ol DaU. arped that Dou&Ju bad aood Cberacter reterences and no prior crlmlnal reeord. En1el>ret.Mn retorted Lb•t he had con:atdered ail even hJibe11 ball. ,,,_P..,eAJ POOL ••• vacaUon plans. Mrs. Marshall said in an in· terview that the le1al action came u a complete .turprtse in ll&bt ol the fact t.bat the pool pro· ject had .U the required ~rmits and approvals -even down to relocaUon d several trees. She seesned mystified by the awl's contention lhat the pool. deckln1 and landscaping -a 825.000 packaee -could reduce property values. "There were rour trees in the spot where the pool was going," she said. "We transplanted them and plan to put tn even more trees. "We Uke the~. otherwlse we wouldn't have moved here," Mrs. MarahalJ added. The Marshalls came from Irvine • They b.4d a back yard pool there. too. Aceording to Mrs. Marshall, the Lowes btve been seeking slanature on peUUonl a1alnat the pool from other neighbors. She said some ntighbort have re· fused to 1l1n it, arguing that the M arshalls have a right lo build the pool. . - s DAILY Pn..OT Ii Foree on Boards Directorl ot America'• corpocatlcm, trldlUonaJ.11 the butlneas counterpart.a ol elltllt eodal clubl, an under mounting attack trom 1ovemment recutatory qencla, atockbolclen, ecooomlats. educttcn and other bulinua people. Board c:r-5enUtl1 are be1nl probtd to a decree thet would have been unthinkable a (ew yean aio. Stud.lDI all but alcoe in the put to cballenc• tbe makeup ot a company board were 1ucb pennnt.i COl1*'•te 1adruea u Lewis GUbst and Evel.ya Davll. Their clemands for peatar stockholder repraentaUon ,.. .... NC:Or'ded and then buried uoder avalanchea ol manqement..lpomored rejeetlons. '!ODAY, nu; cantC:SAllE Pil from SadfUea -and their demand.a cannot be lpored. UnW now, tbe tar1et ot most eomplalnJa bu boea tht lnaide director. Because um lns1de or manaternent diredor usually baa been a personal Mend ol the cb.W uecutlve of. fleer, be bu been moat vulnerable. Now. tbe tarset has been broadened to include tbe eo-ealled oataid• director, who ''ahould be someone with a decree ol l.odependence l,nd should be looldftl after the intereato(tbe corporation and ot all its shareholders, .. accordin1 to Stanley Spork:in ol the Securities and Exchange Com- miasloo. Also a tar1et or criticism bas been the pay of the cQrporate Money's Worth director, which Is seldom publicly revealed. A director mlgbt earn as much as $13,000 a year for tenure oo one board. Some directors may sit oo aevef!al ''workln1 boards•• wlth total fees ran1tn1 up to $50.~$75,000 yearly. A third area of complaint bas been the old-school-tie board relationship. Jn place ot th1s socially oriented In- dividual, critics are demand.lni professional directors who would provide specialised knowlec:tae . IN TID8 ERA OF ESCALATING costs at all levels of blJsiness, critics emphasize that "working knowled1e boards'" can save subatantlal cooaultlna fees oo special as· slgnments. OUtside dlnctors with experience at the pollcymaltint level should be more fU1ly used, qys Ralph E. Lewil tn the Harvard Business Review. ln addition, the outside director should accept the role or monitoring the performance of the chief execuUve c;>r· fleer. ANOTHER ROLE THE BOA.RD MUST perform ts pro· tection of the company'• fiacal lnt.e1rtty, the Harvard Busl· ness Review continues. This includes maklnc certain that appropriate internal controls have been established and that the.re are no con- ntcta of interests, present or potential, within the company. The boards of directors of corporations are al a crossroads, perhaps most dramatized by the aiplficant number ol companies adoptln1 written charters of dlrec· tors' duties and reaponalbWtiea. In these piooeerlna charters may lie the ethical 1uides for management, labor and stockbolden alike. Vornado, Fed-Mart Prepare to Merge Vornado, Inc., and Tbe Fed·Mart Corp. haYe announced slcnin& of an qrHment for merier that would malce Fed· Mart a wholly owned 1ubsidiary ol Vornado. Shareholders of both mu&t approve tbe merser. Fed· Mart sharehol.S.ra would receive $17 caah for each share of common stock or l!At 1ba.ra ot Vornado common atock plus a abort-term ritbt to purchase an addiUonal h•Jr aha.re at an exercise price of $10 per whole share, for eacb Fed· Mart share. HUGO MANN, TRUSTEE FOil the majority shareholder ol Fed·Mart, would receive Vornado abarl!s and riahta. Aa a rault, he would acquire appl'OXlmateb' 3 ' million abarea of Vornado common stock and become lts lar&est stock.bolder. Be bu stated h1I tntentloa, suhlequent to tbe mer1er. \o make a cub otter tor addWonal Vornado shares to lncreaa. bl• ownership to a majority ot the outatancllnf Vornado 1bares. It I.I expected Vornado'• name would be chaqed to-r.o Guys-Fed Mart, Inc., and that Mann would be cbainnan~f the executive committee. Frederick Zlau would remain u chairman of the board ot directors: HelnJ L. Gundlach,~ chairman of tbe board of l'ed·Mart, would auwne tbat l*l· tlon lo tbe combined company; U1d Allred ZUJott would te· t1tn his present position u prealdtnt and Hans \¥. Scboepllln would remain president of the Fed·Mart sub· •ldlary. : . VOltNADO OPEUTP.812 Rrl'AIL dlacount depatt.. met\t 11tor• under tb• .. No Gu.p" .name 14 New Jency, CalltOl"Dia, ConiiecUcut. MarJ'land, Muaachuett.. New York and ~ylvanla, ad SI home lmproveJDent ce:n• I under tbe "Builders Empiortum" name in Calltdrnta"' New York Nft'.Jene1 and P Y1•Ula. hd·Marl operatea '8 combtnaUon aupenaarkt!t· 1enen1 metchandlae ltoNI lD SOUthem Calif om.la. Tau. AriJona and New MoxJeo. ' l ' 1°• c.a•t miu It. HJa la the cublcM wilh U. plant." DoufJliag D ue School Hours Set in CUSD Capistrano Unified School District trustees -set lime thil week for the opening and closing of the school day at the dlatrlct's 22 schoolis, with a special provision for junior hilh teachers on doUble session. Marco' Forster and Shorecllrts Junior High Schools are to be on dou-a.m. and fmish by 12:14 ble session when school p.m. Shorecllffs studenta opens in September are scheduled to arrive lJoth schools will be at school at 12:25 and located on the Marco leave for home at 4 :54 Forster campus an San · p.m .. Juan Capistrano until Although the instruc- c om pl et ion of the ponal day at the two Shorecllfrs facility, ex-schools will be only 11 pected late this year in minutes ahol'ter than the San Clemente. 280 minutes called for in M a r c 0 F 0 r s t e r the teachers' contract, students are to start theUmetheyaretobeon th i hool d campus will be about an e r sc ay at 1: 45 hour and a half shorter ~1111!!!11~11!!1~~1!!!!!!!!!~.-than the seven hours the contract specifies. I • you scream, I scream we all scream for Ice cream When It'• hOme made lee cr .. m. It worth making • commotion about. And th«•'• no better and eaa6er way to make It than by uaJng a Proctor SI~ electric 4 quart model that uaually COlll 19.85. but la now on NJe for only ... helps your turf to become tough Scotti Turf Bulld., I• America'• favorite e.runz.r for ~ping thick, OrMn lawn• and Mtpe gr ... multlply ltMlf. 2000 eq. ft. appllcetlon. Reg. 5.95 411 -~~ ...... 1US ...... ~ ...... 1S.tS loll of room · tor au rour mall Thie IOfld wood mall bOx la big enough to hold packagH ano magazJMe and all the reat of your mall. 8mooU'I aan<Md hardwood con· ttructtlon, r:Mdy for your choice of flnlatl. the quiet one that cull gnu Juet the Ndc of •• ewttch oeta two btadea running lt'nOOthly to cut an 19" ~ AMI' beOOlno meana ...,.,. mafteuverlng around obataclea. '8035. Reg. 13U5 11981