HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-08-22 - Orange Coast Pilot•
Woman
Crates Stored
..
~sing Nixon
Gifts Hunted ··
WASlllNGTON (AP> -1be
State Department ls going to
court Wednesday to ask
permi&slon to search some 200
pack.i.ai crates left behind by
Richard M. Nixon for valuable
• 1lfts presented to the former
J president aod his family by
f foreign dignitaries.
·The State Department has list·
'Sam' Wanted
To Be Caught,
Tapes Claim
·NEW YORK CAP> -David
Berkowitz, the suspected .«·
caliber killer known as "Son of
Sam," deliberately parked next
to a fa.replug the night of bis last
killing bec;ause be wanted to get
eau&ht. a~cording to tapes quot-
ed by The Daily News today.
" -Quoting a transcript of tapes
'PQJ'POrtedly made at the ho:spital
wlaere the suspect ~...1._~der1oins mental tests, The l'lews report.
that Berkqwitz said, u1 knew that
if I 1ot a ticket, tt would lead
. them tome." •.
Meanwhile, llterary, aaent
Scott Mqedith denied reports
that he ls 'telling 10 hOUrs ol tape-
recorded interviews with·
Berkowiu. ""
ed a number of the cifts. u
"missing," possibly only
because of poor record·keeplna,
and wants to ecamine the pack·
ing crates containing materials
from the Nixon administration to
see if they are there. The crates
are in government 1;torar.,e.
'rbe-Washtngton Post said to-day that U.S. Chief of Protocol
};van S. DobeUe uked to ~
amine the boX'eS after the
newspaper pointed out that no
one knew what they contained.
The Post, in a story by Maxine
Cheshire, said at leut a dozen
gifts from Iran are ln the "miss·
ing_". cat.eeory.
The story said Mrs. Nixon
notifted the Whlte House gift.s WT·
it two days after her husband's
resignation that she intended to
keep one particular gift present· ed bytheSbabof Iran.
.. 'lbe gift was described b1 ttie
gilt unit as •a very fine band·
painted minlature portrait of the
President dOile on ivoey ••• J.8.
karat told oval frame on easel
back IUTl'OUDded with golden leavu and branches, many
. ·blossoms of ~lngle and cl~
turquoise and ••ppblre
stones.' " the newspaper aald;
Aecoiding to the P04t, that
item ts listed as "mli•ln1. "~ Other items so llated lnclQde an
oil t>ainUng from the Soviet
Unloo. en Indian silver bOlC, a
gold necklace and bracelet trom Gf'f'ana, a gold pin Crom
Nlcar:agua, a stlver bOwl .from
Ireland, a bracelet from In-
d one al a, another from
Nicaragua, and two aold bUtet
weave eompacts wi~ dlamoad' clupsfrom WeSt Geririuiy.
DObelle was rial avillable for
commma .bUt tbe Stale ,l>epatt-
ment '~ave tbl• l'eply lb re· portanTJDqUltj.jl:
.. JD criS' to tie Jn. to
elU'Vf Uai"eid+ta ~-eenlbit lbe Cifta
Jrom forel1n t Of·
(SeeNa , ........
•
-. -·
• •
Pier
Revived
, -
A ~19~·01d Anaheim woman ,.. was~ from the water bytwo
citlieni Sunday afternoon after
she appareDtly jumped olf the
end of the Huntington Beach Pier, lifeguards reported.
The fully-clothed woman wu.
not !>tea~ when taken ashore
but lifecqar:ds usin~ mouth-to-
mouth resuscitation were able to revlveher.
After receiving emergency .
tr~~tment at Pacifi~a Hospital in· Hun~ Beach, fbe wu taken
to UCI Medical Center where she
was treated and released,
Olftcials are attempting to :..
establllh whytbewomanju111ped .
from the pier.
It was the.major Incident of-the .
-,:"""tlreell:end~at-. ed 100,000 j>eople to the Hunt·
lngton Beach ahOriline.
Lifeeuards loeged about 50-rescues, none serious, in two to
four-foot surf.
.. . . .. J QAll Y Ptl O"f s ,,.ono y1 ~ugu11ta, 1117
' Oil
Harrison bu been taklnC dep·
9sltions ln Los Aneetes for use
by tho state tn its effort to collect
18 per~t ol Hu1hes' ettate ln tn-
lliiil~:t".:i';')lfffttan
A Jury trial to determine
Hugh~•· legal residence is to
b•tin here Sept. lZ. Hufbu'
cloaat livt.q relatives contend..
he wu a Nevada real4ent, wbUe
Common Interest Cited
Vance Opens :Diplomatic Talks in China
"J> G <AP) retarJ ol
Slate Cyrua R. Vance, here to ex~
plore chances or establishing full
diplomatic relat.loos with China,
opened talka with Chinese
leaders today by emphisit:ing
the two countries· common
politlcal interests in various
parts ol the world. .
In a sitting room in thtt Great
Hall of t!)e People, Vance began
his fll'St meeting with a Chinese
team headed by Foreign
Minister Huang Hua by saying
there are areas where the two
countries have "mutual in-
tl'resta."
Cashing In
-0 I_...... Afrlce,.
where both the United States and
China are eager to blunt Soviet
penetration. They are concerned
about inroads the Russians are
mJJdng in east Africa and with
insurgent movements in
southern Africa.
American officials said the
"international discussion," as
Vance called it, was aimed at
persuading Peking that a closer
relallonsblp can be built with
Washington on the basis or
shared objectives.
This phase of the talks is likely
to occupy the first two days of
•.
Da,·id Clark is one of several vendors who Mave already
set up stands in Memphis. Tenn., to ca!Jh .in on the death ~ of Elvis Presley. Clark sells bumper stickers a'nd otfler
mementos from his pickup truck outside the For~ Hills
cemetery where the rock star was· buried. Others are
selling ~imilar items outside Presley's mansion,
Graceland.
Two Marines
f\eport Shqts
TIJUANA, Mexico (AP) -
Two U.S. Marines say they were
shot in a park wlthout explana-
.tion after their car devaloped
engine trouble here.
The two, who walked to the
1 border gate for help Saturday
nieht' were taken to Naval
Hospital in San Diego and iden·
tllJed as La.nee Cpl. Job.ft Mears
of ljouston. Tex., and Pfc. Daniel
FltlJey of PhUadeipbia.
They were listed in aatisf ac·
toey condition today.
Hlf.l{ ShDWjng
Great Spirit
MINNEAPOLlS CAP> -. Sen.
Hubert Humt>brey is being tieat·
ed like any other patient 81\d ha&
agreed to do exactly wha~ tl\i
doctors tell him-almost.
"We .almost bad to give him a
•J>eedln& tieket,'' sata Dt. Florence Chan about • the Wa)'
Humphrey was briskly walkin,I
about the corridors at the
Universi.tY of ~innesota
Hqs_pltali on Sunday.
¥•11ce:a fOUNtay 'risSt CO the
Chinese capital, serving as a
buildup to the dominant subject
-a mutual desire to move
toward full r~ationS.
Outside Ute Great Hall, and
alon.r the Avenue of Tranquility,
in Tien An Men Square and
elsewhere, tens or thousands ot
Chinese marched ~lnd l>an.oers
proclaiming the coaipleUon of
the 11th Communist party con-
gress. (Related story, A4 >
Vance's arrival was low-
keyed, with Huang Hua, Vice
Forei&n Minister Wang Hai·jung
and Hoang Chen, chief or the
Chinese Liaison Office in .
Washington, heading a modest
welcoming delegation at the
airport.
But ihe festive atmosphere,
with danging cymbals and ex-
ploding firecrackers that had
children covering their ears, lent
a special dimension to this first
high-level U.S.·Chinese contact
in two yeiJrs. •
Chairman Hua-had signaled
Vance beforehand that Chinese
policy has not changed on the
Taiwan question, and that.,the
United States would have tor:n~
all diplomatic aod military ties
with the NaUorrali.st Cblnese 1f it
hopes to establish full relations
with Peking.
Hua's demand was contained
in a speech closing the party con-
gress Thursday and made public
b)'. Hsinhua, .tti~ q!ficial c: newa agency, as Vance tie~
Tokyo to the Chinese capital.
From.Page A J
NIXON •.•
ficiais to Nixon and members or
his family, S. Dobelle bas asked
Joe W. Solomon, administrator
of general services, to conduct an
lnventory of those foreign glfts to
the Nixons which remain in the
possession of the GSA.
"The issues involved will be
discussed at a hearing on Wed·
nesday."
Under U.S. law, any gilt worth
more than $50 belongs to the gov·
emment and is supposed to be
turned over to the chief ol pro-
tncol for disposition as public
property.
Nixoo's betonginis have been
stored by the government while
legal battles were waged over
their custody and control. The
U.S. SUpreme Co\lrt ill June up.
held a law t.bat 1aid the govern-
ment bas custody but that acce,Ss
was *tlbject to regulations.
"
Fill Kill8
change Man
A 20-year-old Orange man rell
200 feet to his death neat the falls
in Black Star Canyon Sunday
evenlng. Orange County
Coroner's deputies reported to-·
day.
The name o( the hiker was
witbbdd pendinf notification ot
relaUves, deputies •aid.
Investigators re~lUd the man
was lookiQe over the edge of the
canyon trail when he fell. He was
eva~ated by helicopter and.Pro-
noullced dead on arthal at UCI
Medlcat Center about one hour
after the 8 p.m. fall, deputies
aald.
Texas Atty. Gen. John Hill
claims be was born and died a
Texan.,
California courts have ordered
......... -~i14M. .. d
Chuck Waldron to answer q
tions about bow drugs were ob-
t ai ned and administered to Huabes, H.an180ll aaid. ' He Hid Texas will petition 1" ..... _Lu ............
'AMBER JIM' FIGHTS BAN ON GIRLS' BOXING
11-year-old Also Must Anawer·Aasault Charge
BanBaUled
Amber Goes to Court
SALT LAKE CITY <P) -"Amber Jim0 Hunt, the ll·year-old
girl boxer befriended by murde~er ~ary Gilmore, ~as her n.exl.
big matchps in the courtroom: fighting a .ban on boxing for girls
and battlfhg a charge of assault on a -ptegnant supermarket
checker.
Her fight to continue boxing is with the National Amateur
Athletic Union's Junior Olympic Committee, which instructed
Salt Lake AAU boxing officials last April to prevent Amber from
fighting.
THE LETl'Elt FROM lEIUlY Dusenberry of Portland, Ore.,
'chairman of the Junior Olympic Committee, cited possible
danger to girls' br~asts or reproductive organs as reasons for the
ban. Am~r, who received nationwide publicity from her cor· res~ence wjtll GijJ.Dore before his execution Jan. 17, will be
tepresented 1n. her atilt ag*1nst the AAU by Gilmore's attorney.
Ronald St.anger.
Stanger said the suit, which asks damages and seeks an in·
junction to stop the AAU from prohibiting girls from boxing.
would be filed today or Tuesd~
AMBER MUST ALSO CONTEND with an appearance in
juvenile court, probably next month, to answer charges of ag-
gravated assault. In a fracas at a supermarket, Amber allegedly
slugged a checkout clerk, breaking her nose and blackening her
eresjack Hunt says the checker struck his daughter in lbe ches~
after Amber vocally objected to something the clerk said t(> her
father. Hunt says Amber's trained fighter refle,res caused berio
hit back. Hunt races a misdemeanor charge of \lSing abusive
laneuage, which he denies.
But the AAU comes first. Says Amber in the manner of her
hero; Muhammad All:
•· AAU at and up and see.
"A girt lcnock out v<>•r boSla in three "
AMBER CHOSE AMBEJl nM AS her rinc name because "it
sounded good." Fighting three-round matches against boys in the
65-pound class. Bhe h&$ a record or 13 victories, 10 to technical
knockout. against four losses. all by decisions. She is scheduled to
fight an exb.ibiUon bout -not sanUoned by the AAU -Saturday
aeainst Danny Montoya.
Her prediction for the Salt Lake City fight:
"I'm a daughtn. not cuon "I:u kMcJc out 0annv in Rovnd ~ ....
Amber says he_r arnition is to wJn the. lSM Olympic
gold medal, then tum professional and earn enough money to
establiall an orphana1e for starving childru from India and
Africa.
i.o • ip Pel~ Petti• tapes
were impounded by the court
after he was reported to be trying
to market them. Mered.ithaaid Peltz was not in·
volved.
The News said Ure authenUelty
of the new tapes bat been ques.
tJoned by Correction Department
officials and other Jaw enfO?'C~
ment authorities and an in·
vestigation is under way into how
the tapes could beve been made
and who infght have a.ad• them.
According to The News,
Berkowitz. accused ot tilling sli
persons and wounding seven with
a .44-callber revolver in little
more than a year, is beard lo say
on the new tapes that be ''tell bacl
that there were so many
wounded!•
"1 wanted them all dead ••••
MY job WU to kill.'' he is quot.ell
a.ssaytnc.
He also reportedly\says.
.. When .1 saw the victims•
families on. TV. I wanted to kill
them, too." r The fire hydrant BerkowitJ:t
parked next to was the key in bis!
capture outside bis Yonkers home
Aug.10. .
His car was ticketed July 31,
the nlgbt be allegedly killed
Stacy Moskowitz, 20, and
wounded her date, Robert
Violante, also 20. A check of the
parkin& summonses given ln the
area that night led police to th
suspect.
Trudeaus Hide
From Camera
OTl'AWA, Canada (AP> -
Prime Minister Pierre Elliott
Trudeau, his wife. Margaret, and
. their three children dodged re-
porters and photographers sur-
.rounding their first public re·
union in almost three months.
Trudeau's . office ~eclliled to
say whether Mrs. Tru eau would
return to the prime m nister's of ..
ficial residence or stay in the
nearby apartment she rented.
WASTE WASTED?
NOT AT CIRCUS
COLUMBUS, ObiQc(AP)-Vu;-
itors to the !24th Ohio State
Fair have been invited to help cut
down~ cleanup costs for the vis·
iting Ringling Bros. and Bamurn
& Bailey Thrill Circus by taking
home animal manure.
Leafieta handed out at the fa1t 1
Sunday offered fairgoers all tho
animal waste they can carry
home. for use in sardens or
ft\fms as a soil enricher.
VOL. 70, NO. 234, a SECTIONS, 26 PAGES
ttiat ~Hid. ••1 know that
11 t cot a Ucket. lt would lea~
them tome."
have net.even a1reed to
repretiu t material~" Scott
Meredith told The Associated
Press oo Sunday. HnwbUe, llteruy aaent
Scott Meredith denied reports
that be is •elllna 10 !lours ol tape.
recorded interviews with
Berkowitz.
Meredith said he bu "beefl ~ proached by people with la)Mlt
and are now examining material
as we examine all material sub-
mitted to us." ''For the record, we are not
close to a deal, have not olf ered
tapes to anyone. have not set a
money valuaUon. and indeed
It wu not immediately clear
whether 'lbe News and Meredith
had copies of the same 10 hours of
Rlinois Twister
'When Gf)d Spread
. ~ ~
The Ocean O}>eii~,
NEOGA, Ill. <AP> --Clark Lowe was
on a boat on the lake when the tornado
struck. 'Tll tell you what it looked like."
he said. ..When God spread the ocean
open, that's what it looked like."
"Things just split.·· he said. "Some
trailers went one way; others the other
way." He said he saw one man hurled 30 ,
feet into the air.
The tornado roared through this
vacation community on the shores Gf
Lake Mattoon on Sunday, tossing bits of
summer cottages and trailer homes
a bout and hurling some of the debris lnto
the taJce. :
It killed five persons and injured 50.
<Related.story, photo page A4. J
THE JSEXT DAV, RESIDENTS AND
officials were pickin~ their way through
the \\Teckage.
Lowe's mother, Mrs. Mary Bian. was
away during the storm. She returned to
find the crumbled remains of her blue.
three-bedroom cottage. The roof w s up
the road and pieces of the cottage were
scattered throuih the area.
"My GOO. t can see my house every-
where," she sald ... Everywhere you se~
blue. it's us ...
Only foundations remained for many
trailer homes. Others were overturned
like match boxes.
BITS OF CHAIRS, MATl'RESSES,
ut~niils and other belongings were burled
hundreds of yards into a nearby com
field.
One trailer. owned by ~ames
Thompson of Gibson City was hur)ed into
the lake. ''That's it in the lal<e~ut there. ·
You can see the wheels sticldni up," he said. · ,
E. Erie Jones, director of Uie state ~ergency Services and Disaster Agen-
cy, said it was unlikely that more bOdies
v. ould be found. He said he was ~onsider·
ing sending divers into the lake lo see tr
there were more bodies, but wa~ moving '
cautiously because of th& debris m the
water.
Officials also said it \\as hard to
count the homes destroyed.
"TJUS IS ONE OF THE toughest
ones I've seen to put together. 1
' said
Jones~ ... These are second homes. and a
lot of these people can't be identified."
Delbert Perry, 49. and bis v•ife.
Shirley, of Philo. were at a state fair auto
race in Springfitld when the storm
•malihed their trat}tt.
P.erry called tl\.e aamission !ee::to the
race .. the best tnone~· e~·et ~nt. •·
!\tan~· residents sala they were ih·
sured and would rebuild.
In a field near wliere his O\'eft\irned
mobile home h&ld stoOd. Harold Kirby. 50.
of Thomasboro, leaned o\'er to pick up a
straw hat. He peered at some of tiis ttf ·
jackets hanging from nearby trees.
.. If anybody finds my shoes. I'd like
to have them ... he said.
lffesa Planners
It looks a mess now , but when two county
projects are completed, motorists will
have six lanes to tra,·erse tbe Adams
A\'enue bridge between Costa Mesa and
Huntington Beach. View lopking east
toward Costa Mesa shows bridge work un-
der way on left-hand side of structure.
Work is to be complete in about '1 year.
County-contracted crews are also lining
the le,·ee running between the Santa Ana
Rh·er and the Green\"Ule-Banning Chan-
nel, shown on the left of the pnoto. That ·
Sl.44 million project is expected to be
completed by November.
Saks Uth Avenue, tbe
. fasbiooeble specialty store, will
open in Costa Mesa'1Sou~ Coast
Plaza io the fall of 1979, accord·
ing to Henry T. Seeerstrom,
managing partner of the 1.6 •
million square-Coot center.
Segerstrom and Saki ex-•
ecutJve Allan Jollnson, slened a
lease wieement last week that
will brine the New Yor1C· ased
specialty stoxe to Costa Mesa.
The 105,000·SQU•te·foot Saks
will be located adjacent to I.
Magnin, whlcb opened this past
weekend. .
South Coast Plaza olffcials
have been negotiatln& witll Saks
for more than a year, with
rumors oC a lease agreement ap.
pearing as recenUy as last June
io Women's Wear Daily.
The Women's Wear D&ilY arti-
cle said Saks and I. Macntn each
ex~t to aChieve gross sales of
$100 ·per-square-toot at south
Coast Plaza.
Johnson cited the plaza's loca·
lion in Orange County as one ol
the reasom U.. store Ht~
South COut Plaza for tta 15th
store.
EDWARD M~BON OJ' RALPHS, AN 82.outlet chain in the Los
Angeles area,safcl tlie stores ran an ad r,cently advert.is ~owtr
coffee prices -$3.49 a pound. 47 percent hlaht1t than the $2.38 level
of January, but 13 perc:ent below the mid-April price of $3.9'
·It was the store's first coffee promoUon this year and Maron
said &ales lncr.eased slightly. ·
"'nlere is still a supply and demand problem, .. he said. ••1 don't=
think it's as aevere as it was six mon •to. but It's still with us:
We'renowJ.nak.i.ndofboldingpattern.''
DAt Y ftlLOT C
'
P...-P.,,..AJ
SAM •••
H• aho reportedly saya,
"Wben t uw the vlctlma'
ramllies on TV, l wanted to kill
\hem.too."
The fire hydrant Berkowil%
parted next to was the key in bi.a
captu.reoutaidebis Yonkers home
Aug.10.
His car was ticketed July 31,
the ni1bt be alle1edly killed
~acy Moskowitz, !O, and
ounded ber date, Robert
iolante, also 20. A check ol ~
parking summonses 1lven in the
area that nilbt led pollce to the
•uspect. .
,.
.. ~ Pl,a.za Manager ~
Resigns; Opem
Newport Firm
Gene Robens, the central
m anaier of South Coast Pl au for
the put 10 years, today an·
no\Nlced he is leavin.1 C. J.
Se&entroni and Sons to form his
own ~ullinl firm. • Robent said his realpatlon
wlll tan effect Sept. 15. lje wllJ open JUI own firm, Gene R.obeni
and Associates, in Newport
Beach.. The company wlU work in
development and management
consu.ltlng on an international
scale, he said.
Robens' post as general
manager will be filled by Skip
Stephenson, a five-year employe
of the Segerstrom firm. For the
past two years, Stephenson bas
worked as director of leasing for
the shopping center.
In addition, Henry T .
Segerstrom, managinl partner
of the land firm, said Ric.bard
l''oster will ~ joining the com-
-pany's staff as the plate•a
manager of operations and ad-
ministration.
Foster hp spent. the lut lJ
months aa eeneral manacu of
the Irvine Company's Fashion
Island.
Robens, who presided over the
opening or South Coast Plaza in
March of 1967, said he is leaving
bis post with mixed emotions.
"I just hope that ln some small
way I have contributed to the
~rowth of this area." he said.
Two Marines
Report Shots'
TIJUANA, Me~dco <AP> -
Two U.S. Marines say they ~ere
shot in a park without expl~na·
tion after their car developed
-engine trouble here.
The two, who walked to the
bord4!r gate for help Saturday
11ilht. were taken to Naval
Hospital in San Diego and iden-
tified as Lance Cpl. John Mears
of Houston, Tex .• and Pfc. Daniel
Finley of Philadelphia
They were listed in satisfac-
tory condition today. Mears was
shot in the chest and Pinley in the
hand.
'IV Coverage Set
NEW YORK <AP) -The na-
tion's three major networb·•ay
th4'Y will broadcast llve on
television and radio President
Carter's news conference ataft, ·
int eU1:30a.m., PDT, TUesday.
Ban Battled· • . .
Amber Goes to Court,
SALT LAKE CITY <P> -"Amber Jim" Hu,nt, the 11-year-0ld
girl boxer bdriended by murderer Gary Gllmore, bas her next
big matches in the courtroom: ficbting a ban on boXinJ for girls ~
and battliJ:ag a charie ol wault on a preenant tUJ>ermarket
~becker. . •
Her figbt to continue box.ins is with the NatiOllal Al:nateur
Athletic Unieo's Junior Olympic Committee, which inslrue\ed
Salt Lake AAU boxing officials lut April to prevent Amber r~m
fightma. •
THE LETl'ER FROM .JERRY Dusenberry of Portland, Ore.,
chairman of tbe Junior Olympic Committee, cited possible
danger to iifls' breasts or reprt>ductive organs as reasons for the
ban.
Amber, who received nationwide publicity from her cor-
respondence with Gilmore before his execution Jan. 17, will be
represented in her suit against the AAU by Gilmore's attorney,
Ronald Stanger.
Stanger said the suit, which asks damages and seeks an in·
junction t-0 stop the AAU from prohibiting eirls from boxing,
would be filed today or Tuesday.
AMBER MUST ALSO CONTEND with an appearance in
juvenile PQurt, probably next month, to answer charges of ag-
gravated ..,ault. In a fracas at a supermarket. Amber allegedly
shagged a~ckout clerk, breaking her nose and blackening her
eyes.
Jack Hunt says the checker str\lclc his dau1bter in the chest, after Amber vocally objeet.ed to something the clerk said to her
fat!H!r,ffun\.1a11 Amber'• trained flebter reflexes caused her to
b1t back. Hwot faces a mildemeanor charie of usinf abusive
lanauaee, wtaicb be denies.
·But the AAU .comes first. Says Amber in the manner or her
hero, Muhammad Ali:
"AAU atand up and aee,
··A girt knock out your boy1 m thrte ...
AMBER CROSE AMBER nM AS her ri_ng name because'"it
sounded good." Fighting three· round matches aaainst boys in the
65-pound clas~. she has a record of 13 victories, 10 to technical
knockout. against four losses, all by decisions. She is scheduled to
fight an exhibition bout -not santioned by the AAU -Saturday
against Danny Montoya. ·
Her prediction for the Salt Lake City fight: .
"I'm a doughtu, not o ion
"l'U knock out DanflJI in Round Ont "
Amber sa:ys her amition is to wha the 198-f Olympic
gold medal, then turn professional and earn en<>Ulh money to
establish an orphanage for starvtn1 children from India and
Africa.
Allaway's Sanity
Hearing Delayed
A hearing that will dotermlne
campus killer Edward Charles
Allaway's mental condition when
he -shot nine people at Cal State
,fullert.on was delayed today by
tbeJllnessof a womanjllJ'Ol".
The sanitY phase of the Oran1e
County S\lpe:rior Court triJl was del~ed until thls afternoon Whlle
Judt(e Bbbert P. Kneeland's aWf
tried to determlne the pos,eiblUty
or Ute bospitallted jur<>r retum·
inc this week.
NewOC
Planner
Named
John F. Cyprien of Orange was
appointed to the Orange County
Planning Commission today by
county Supervisor Ralph Clark.
Cyprien, 43, an educational
consultant, will replace Com-
tn i ssioner Floyd Farano of
Anaheim who resigned earlier
this month citinf an lntreased
workload in bis private Jaw prac-
tice.
Cyprlen is now a vice president
with Educational Research
Marketing Inc. In Santa Ana, a
firm dev~opinJ career educa-
tion programs ror school dis·
tricts.
He formerly was parks and
recreation dir.ector for the city of
Oranee for 14 years and was an
Anaheim recreation supervisor
for eigh\,years.
Cyprien said today he believes
his kncr,vledie of iovemment
will assist with his planning com·
missiou duties. He expects to
spend about 30 hours a week on
commissioo·related
res1>00Sibillties.
"I have the time and I can be of
service." uld Cyprien, a native
of Fullerton.
"De~eiopment is 1oln1 to oc·
cur," continued. "You can't
put a stOp to it but you can plan it
properly."
Cyprien said be has driven
through much of the Southeast
county area and 1enerally has
been Impressed with develop-
ment there.
He said he would oppoee de·
velopment until adequate streets
and utilities were available to
serve it. He also uid there may
be some cases whell government
could reapond faater to de-
velopers' requests rather than
delayins them with red i.pt.
Clark said he believed Cyprien
would brtpg to the commission a
good tfalance between environ·
mental concerns and develop-
ment interests.
Cyprien has been active in
various recreation and civic
groups, serving as president of
the Southern California
Municipal Athletic Federation
and as Chairman of the Plaza
District Council of the Boy Scouts
and Girl Scouts of Aoierica.
Cyprlen was named Man of the
Year and given the Distlnaulshed
Service Award by the Orange
Junior Chamber of Commerce in
1966.
He lives in Oranse wit.b his
wife, Marilyn, and four cblldreo.
\
'Missing~ Gifts
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
State Department is going to
court Wednesday to ask
permlss(on to search come 200
packing crates le4 behind by
Richa,rd M. Nixon ror valuable gifts l)l'esenUd to the former
prMident aqd his f amlly by
foreign dlgnitarlts.
The State Department bas list:
ed a number of the gifts a~
"missing," possibly only
beca\lse of poor record-keeping,
and wants to ecamine the pack·
ing crates coniaiRlna 11\&terials
from the Nixon administration to
see if they are there. The crates
are ln government storage.
The Washington Post said to-
day that U .S. Chief of Protocol
Evan S. Dobelle asked to ex-
amine the boxes after the
newspaper pointed out that no
one khew what they contained.
The P05t. in a story by Maxine
Cheshire, said at least a dozen
gilts frQm Iran are in &be :·miss-
ing" cate1ory.
The story said Mrs. Nixon
notified the White House lifts un-
it tw0 days after her husband's
resignation that she Intended to
teep one. particular gift present·
ed by the Shah of Iran.
•'The gift was described by the
gift unit as 'a very fine hand·
painted miniature portrait of the .
President done on ivory. . .18-
k ar at gold oval frame on easel
back surrounded with golden
leaves and branches, many
blossoms of single and clustered
turquoise and sapphire
stones,' ''the newspaper said.
According to thQ P°'t, that item is listed as .. missing.··
Other items so Us~ed include an
oil paiAlinl froqi the Soviet
Unlon, an Indian aUver box, a
gold ne¢klace and bracelet rrom
TONIGHT
COST-A MESA PLANNING
COMMISSION -Regular meet·
Ing, City Hall, 6:30p.m.
TUESDAY, AUGUST Z3
SENIOR CITIZENS CLUB
Community Recreation Center,
Tues .• Wed .• Ttaun. u..a p.m. ~ ..
G ban a. a &old pin from
Nicaragua, a sil-..r bowl from.
Ireland, a bncelet from ln.1
donesia. anotbel' from
J"licaragua, and two cold basket
weave compacts with diamond
claapsfrom West Germany.
Dobelle was not available for
comment but the State Depart·
ment gave this reply lo re-
porters' inq~rjes :
''In order to be in a position to
clarify unresolved questions con-
cerning the whereabouts or gifts
from foreign government of-
ficials to Nixon and members of
his family, S. Dobelle bas asked
Joe W. Solomon, administrator
of general services, to conduct an
inventory of those foreign gifts to
the Nlxons which remain in the
possession oft.he GSA.
"The issues involved will be
discussed at a heanng on Wed-
nesday." ·
Under U.S. Jaw, any gift worth
more than $50 belongs to the gov-
ernment and is supposed to be
turned over to the chief of pro-
tocol for disposition as public
property.
Nixon's belongings have been
stored by the eovernment while
legal battles were waged over
their custody and control. The
U.S. SUpreme Court in June up-
held a law that said the govern-
me.nt has custody but that access
was subject to regulations.
New Student
Signups Set
At Mesa High
Signups for new student.5 to
Costa Mesa High School will be
held Tuesday from 8 a.m. to 3
p.m. at the counseling office in
the school administration build-
ing.
New students should be accom-
panied by a parent or guardian.
The school is located at 2650
F airview Road.
RegiJtration for returning stu·
dents 1\ take place Sept. 7 and 8
in th., s hool multimedia center.
Seniors will register from 8: 30
a.m. to noon Sept. 7. Junior class
registration will be from 1%:15 to
2:30 plm. the same day and
sophomores will register Sept. 8
from 8:30 a.m. to noon.
A freshman orientation pro-
gram will be held Sept. 8 at 9:30
a. m. in the school lyceum.
FAM'
........... .
LY, FRIENDS ATTEND GROUCHO'S FUNERAL
Andrew Marx, left, Grandson of Grouc:ho,· And Father Arthur
Groucho's Frieruls,
Family Bid Adieu
LOS ANGELES CAP) -About
30 friends and family members
a ttended a private memorial
service for comedian Groucbo
Marx and reminisced about the
man "whose whole life was mak-
ing people laugh."
"I slill ca n't believe that
Groucbo i s gon e , .. s aid
screenwriter Irving Brecber, a
friend of the most famous of the
Marx Brothers !or 39 years. ''I
think he must still be around
somewhere, because I don't think he'd leave without a good
exltllne."
No format s ervices were
planned for Marx. His body was
to be cremated, possibly today.
accord.inc to his son, Arthur. The
private ~ther1.ng was held Sun-
day in the son's Bel Air home.
Groucho, born Julius Marx.
died Friday night. at 86 after laps-
ing into unconsciousness with a
mild form of pneumonia. He bad
been in and out of the eettars-
Sin ai Medical Center all year,
plagued by a broken hip and the
complaints of old age.
Brecber said Groucho, like
many comedians, mlgbt have
been .. crying on the in.side, but
was always laughing on the out-
side." That humor even co'(ered
Groucho's fear, Brecber said.
Prior to Sunday's private
memorial, some of Groucho's
longtime colleagues expressed
surprise over the lack ol arranae-
ments.
.. 1 was closer to him than
anybody,'• said actor and come-
dian George Jessel ... I was the
only person who could make him laugh these last six months. I
haven'tbeardanytblng.••
Comedian Georae Burns
echoed Jessel's confualon, saying
Sunday morning that he was still
"waiting to find out myself."
Arthur Marx said that tho&e at
his house bad been excluded
from close contact with h1s father
since Erin Fleming became
Groucho's comL~on more than five years ago. Fleming and
Arthur Marx bad been involved
in a court battle over who should
be guardian of Groucbo's estate.
Gagwriter Nat Perrin was
awarded charge of the estate for
a brief period until last July,
when Arthur's son Andrew wu
made~anent guardian.
The mourners indluced
Brecher, Harpo Marx' widow
and ~ Perrin, movie producer
Irwin Allen, and screenwriter
Morrie Ryskind. Ryakind wrote
"Animal Crackers" ,and .. A
Nipt at the Opera.••
Newest Home Boys
Averaging $77, 700
By Tbe Associated Presa
The newest houses and ·con-
dominiums in seven Southern
California counties are avera1-
ing $77,700 apiece, aays a recent
study.
The averase price of 33.257
• new houses and eondomlnlwns
completed or under construcUon
is $12,000 more than Jn
December, says the Real .Estat,6
Research Council of So\l~em
Callfoml-. At that Ua.e, M ... T
new units each 1old tor $6S.800.
the council said. lt addtd tbat in
June. 1976, 17,S81 such units COil
an average of $6(),IOO. _
.. The sta~Uca wet& teleesed at
..
SACRA.MENTO (AP) -'l'bo-t ' the !elk\ature ot the
ebatrmau of the California fOfflW have to bite the bullet''
1Jlabw87 Com.inlaaloo aayt th9 to lncreuo hltbwQ revem&l8 tO
le1lal.atUr6 or the covernar mµai UeP up with lncreulnl ~
•'bite the bullet" and fl.rid moN stnictJ(.IG eo1ta. Bl,atJin said.
hl•hwa, ~umey to keep up wtth ~DemocraUc 1ovel'DOI' has lntteast.Q& costs. . con.slSt.eDtly 'refused to -s>1>rove
• Chairman Herman BiStri.n of ~D increase In the auollne tu to
Fortuna commented after the l>OQst blpway tundt, and the ad-
commlasiClll added $18.1 million mlnlltratlon •a $8.•-bllllon
worth ol road projects in 19 coun-hllhW81 plan for the comm, six
tie1 to coostrucUon plans. years I.I tiased on continuation oC
Th• addltlons include $7. 9 that DC). new-taxes philosophy.
mUlion for projects in the San The blaest amount added to
Francisco Bay area and SS the plan&-$7.6 billion to con.Unue
mtuion for projects in Los work on the interchan•e ol the
Angeles and Orange counties. · Highway 101 freeway with In-
Blstrin, an appointee ol Gov. teratate Routes 2.80 and 880 in San
Edmund Brown Jr., voiced con-Jose. No date was set for ad-
cem that Brown administration vertisingfor bids.
plans to budlet approximately Other m.ic>r projects approved
...., .............
ARTIST •DOING HIS OWN THING' • ~oger Folk's Work Popu .. r at ueuna Featfval
the tame amount of money each Friday include $3.CS millloo to in·
year for blpw.,s really mees stall earthquake restrainers on F n' t Art I . a sharp reduction in constiuc-·the Vmcent Thomas Bridle in a asy . ,Jn oers
Uon. . 'Los Angeles and the Santa --"
Barrage
Of IWJults
Tops Win
Monica, Santa Ana and . :=st!,d~~ct~.~;nl!s~~ u~r Ex-D1.$n--ey Ai_.~. Route 3 neu Yreka; and 2.1 _r 1
_ ...:.;·
million for four Kern County
projects.
·smaller projects were ap·
pro~ed in Alameda, Butte, Inyo,
Mendocino, Plumas, Riverside,
Sacramento, San Bernardino,
San Francsco, San Joaquin, San·
ta Barbara, Sonoma, Stanislaus
.and Yoloeounties.
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of llM D•llY Pltet SI.Hf
Can a Nebra.s.ka boy from a
farmtown of 5,000 find happiness
and a good living as an executive
art!St and art directdr of the
Magic Kingdom called Dis·
neyland?
NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) -After Well, yes and no, says Roger
handing Enterpl'iSe skipper Gun Battle Folk. Lowell North bis worst beating of So be quit the Disney organiza-
tbe America •s cup summer. lion. except for occasional con·
Atlanta Braves ' owner Ted I --'7e8 Holdup sultingorfreelanceassignments, Turner'stepped ashore from his ~ • to devote more time to his fine
yacht Courageous and added in-arts career, one where beauty is
sulttoinjury. S l Hurt what a man sees, not what is
"They'll do anything lo win," uspec described ip a memo from the
Turner said Friday after North • FrontOffice.
•protested bis tactics ... We A g1m batUe resulting from the To Folk, beauty is:
already know they (North and aborted robbery of an Anaheim -A geranium growiog out or
down.-ind helmsman John marketSaturdaybasendedwith anoldboot. Marshall> are-liars for not selling the holdup suspect hospitalized -The historic Sunset Beach
us sails, right? with woundatoday. water lower reflected in the win-
"Winners don't protest. Only Ruben N. Monteverde, :n. of dowof an aging apartment house
losers." Another story on the Santa Ana, remained in serious acrossthes.treeL trials lB on Pap B3. conditlon. at Anaheim Memorial · -A gesture of friendship
Turner broke the ice in June H01Pital. Police say the wounds between a man and a dog. whenhepubliclycriticizedNorth are ·a result of the duel at ~Awroughtironranchgate in
for backing out 00 an agreement Zacatecas Market involving the the San Simeon region, sculpted
1
owne5. to resemble a giant, pink, lacy
to supp y Turner with sail& for In·-H ... to aid th ark t brauiere. · Courageous. •~W&a rs s e m e Friday, Turner began anew ~wner, whom they would not Clearly, Folk left Disneyland
with his barrage. ''Their (North 1de_ntify, whipped out a .38 behind, but not his feeling for
and Marshall's) future as cahber revolver from beneath whimsy in the true life world we
sallmakers is at stake. They may . the store counter when '!on-see around us.
not t!at for the next three or four fronted. b These offbeat, folksy Folk sub-years. They are liars. That's .Monteverde stac~ered ack jects are provlnt poJjuhlr at whatl think .. with eunsbot wounds LD the bead, Laguna Beach's Festiv~ of The Coui'~eOO.s wott the start of chat _,.. hgJ dropping bU ..a Arts. where tha 37-year·ol~
Friday's round of the defense calibel; pistol and then fell to the Newport Beach painter is cur-
finals by severt seconds and was jloor himself, Anaheim police al· rently e.¥.hibitiQ6 while workina
holding a 25-second advantage at leg ed. part-time days f<W an ad agency.
the second mark. Enterprise d Tedhe ~~pect who ash sertedJy or-P~,!~got r:fghatspoinandtwweeberk~~~~oasr
slipped past on the next reach er w.ns owner to and o~ his oc:1iw>
1
and was leading by 32 seconds at m~ey, will later be lodged 10.the myself and things were selline so the third mark jail ward at UC Irvine Medical well that I got really hot to do it
However. ~ageouswenlieft Center to await prosecution on full-time:· explains the Art
and Enterprise went right on the ch~r~es of armed robbery. Center graduate.
final windward beat of the four-"But with a wife and two kids
The 1angly, moustached ~ts'
wbo Joolm upon a world of gentl~
humor. as e\ridenced by many or
his works. is philosophical abou~.
miling qnnmercial and fin'ft~
approacti.
He feels it offers the best o[
both po6Slble worlds. · · '1
"I figured when I quit Dis··
neyland that I was going to do my
own . art and ii people like it.
they'll buy it.•• he.explains.
People must like it. "Sales are aoing Just great, ..
he says oC bis Festival ot The
Arts exposure, where one ot his
most popular pieces is a portrait
or a single criPlSOD geraniwn
growing from an old wort boot.
One of his popular Orange
Coast paintings depicts the old
Sunset Beach water tower
reflected in the'upstairs window
of an aged apartrqent house at
Pacific Coast Highway and An-
derson Street, near Turk's tavern
and Sam's Seafood. 1
.. I was going up there to paint a
picture of the tower itseU'1 but
then I saw this wonderfw oot
apartment house,•• says Folk. "I
did a complete 180-degree
turnaround and painted it with
the tower reflected in the win_.
do .. w.
Folk. currenUy preparing a
one-man show for Laaun-•
Beach'a Watercolor Gallery in
~u~c:0~ro~~ PaiR.tln4 ahpost
, .. 1'»1 ~A1td ladt came out whtn"she saw what I was doing
and beg&ed 111e to at least let her
wash the windows first;• be say,s
with a chuckle. ·
··1 told he r : •Please.
Ma·am . ..it's just the way I want it as it is .......
leg race. The wind favored 12 and H~ I can't afford lo Just go
Courageous and pushed her to c~cle Crash do my own thing like some of T -ae· Bandit
th .n-z-blln 'J those in fme art." Folk says or .l..AJ e &U.U.lt e 8: 21 ahead. the mrtctty puri:st painters who
The winning margin was the Pr F aJ often starve while still sneering I"'_..: Lo ·
' most lopsided o( the defender oves at at commercial work. ~UJ ot . . -
competition. J:Ie and his wiie, Judy, and · Skipper Lowell North oC En-A J.9.year-old Anaheim woman Bnan, 12, and Susan, 14, ertjoy !t Idle bandit driving a 1lf.i
terpr15e rm.eel a protest flag on died Saturday of injuries suf-plenty of travel in quest of sub-• m el yellow car robbed a Sama
the second reach after Turner fered in an Aug. 11 motorcycle ject matter for Folk's popular AnaH.elghtabarearlytod.:y.
bailed .. mast abeam" as be accident, Oranae County watercolors. fi Orange County Sheriff's CS.
made ~move to sail past. Coroner's deputies reported to-TheyrecenUymadeali&htnlng acenaaidtbeybavenot1etae.
However, North said Turner was day. trip to Holdreg~ Neb. by auto for ~ tbe full extent Of the
premature in bis ball. .. The rules Unda Barrett of 1342 Augusta the couple's 20th high school reu-S::th:.st e Lall Stop bar, 212%
say 1f you <bail it and dpn't have Drive died at 9:30 a.m. at nion, gathering plenty of subject Bristol st. it, then YoU•re out.,. North said. Westmln1ter Community matter such as old barns and They said the robber •
.. But it's d.lfflculttopro•e. It was Hospital.; depuUes Hid. She bad ramshackle farms alone tbe described as a male bla Of the third time he bailed mast beenbospitalheclalncefallin.loff way. about2Syean~aje.drofttrom
abelD) When he dido •t ba-e 1·t... her motorcycle and crashinl on Seascapes are one of bis fortes the P~ llt high speed aftet ~ Jos .. ,..,.i... Str t G d d th n-to threat•dn& aq em .. ,..,_ wWI a orttis&idTmnerhadshouted ~ ....... e ee near ar en an eyoncu urlheCalifornia d ..-.1-
"maat abeam" jn previous races Grove Boulevard Aq.11. f:!5~~eonyssketcbing and paint-~--emptylnc tile cub
when he did Dot have the right to ----:---..--=-------:::.•i.:vwee::.t::::!:::.Z:.::.·:..--:-----;----------------
do so. He 1ald be entered the pro-test. which was to be decided to-d~. to avoid aii:D1.far pi:qblems in
t1'e!l,lblre. •
11Plll£~ Joan
lrv th ha been d clibfd
n lhe pubbc prints v "tiei f"
• to \he lrvine Ranch o muy
llm that the descripUon hu
virtually beeome her first name.
You don't imply write her
name Joan Irvine. It's eot to be
Hetresl> Jo11n Irvine Smith.
Heiress has become her title.
Like Queen, or Prtncess She will
probably never shake it if she
lives to the century mark.
1. And unless you have been
' abseJtt from this region over the
"last quarter
century, you
probably
I k ft 0 W
' something of
1it he Joan
lrvlne story.
She has spent
that lime bat·
tling the
~Irvine Foun·
I d at 1 on for JOAN An•
control of her granddaddy's
.. spread, the rich and powerful
Irvine Company.
EVEN IN CASUAL talk along
our coast, you don't find too
many folks who are neutral
about Joan Irvine
Some envision her as the
beautiful young princess; bright,
charming and intelligent, rich in
her own right but still battling to
control the ranch empire which
. 1s rightfully hers
Detractors tend to see her as
headstrong and stubborn; a
bully.girl who has manipulated
through intricate routes lo grasp
control of the ranch to gain power
apd more riches.
Few observers view her in a
role anywhere i~ between.
Most people are also aware
.Joan Irvine appears to have won
her fight for a measure of con~ol
of the Irvine Company. She is a
central figure in the new con·
sortium that won a bidding battle
and bought the ranch for $337
million.
H'oW MUCH CONTROL she
will exert in the new ownership is
an open question. Time will tell.
Meanwhile, a news magazme
called New West has just taken a
crack at recounting the Irvine
Company sale s tory com-
plete with a full -page color
cartoon or Joan lrvme.
New West really did a job on
her. The cartoon depicts Mrs.
Smith looming over the
ranchl ands with bony, veined
hands gra.spmg the land. Her
face is virtually chinless; she is
thin-lipped, squinty eyed, with
rope.like hair and a wrinkled
brow
You are left with the im-
pression that w~ have just been
descended upon by the Wicked
' Witc}\ofthe West.
A TWISTER touched down at 1
p m. Sunday, demoliahing dozens
of Mmes on the western aide o(
Lake .Mattoon in east-central n-
linois and splittin& buildings on
the eastern shore.
Summer cottages were flat·
tened, mobile homes blown from
their pedestals and hurled into
tbe lake. About so homes were
destroyed.
Boats were swamped and over-
turned. Trees, telephone poles
and power hoes were smashed.
ALTHOUGH THERE were no
reports of missing persons,
several officials said they
believed it likely that more dead
would be found in the waters of
the lake or under piles of rubble.
·'There could be people still out
in that water," said Fire Chief
Elred Myers. "There was no way
we could be sure if anyone was
there or not."
State troopers and sheriff's
deputies fought their way with
trucks and ambulances past
scores of gawkers who clogged
the t.wo access roads Lo the small
vat:ation community. Some oC
the injured were taken to
hospitals in vans because there
were not enough ambulan~s
available.
•
ONLY RUBBLE REMAINS IN PATH OF TOfJNADO
Je$se Janes Walks Through HI• Living Room
Faiher S≠ Son Loses
SPOKANE. Wash. <A P I -A
millionaire businessman ,
characterized by his son as an ec-
centric who watered the local
cemetery until the tombstones
fell over, w~ mentally compe·
tent when he created a '$700,000
irrevocable trust a year before
his death, a Superior Court Judge
has ruled.
Testimony during a three-
week trial in May tndicated that
Leon Booker, a former oil com-
pany executive, stockpiled food
he didn't eat, clothing be didn't
wear and other supp1ies heiiidn•t-
use.
Other evidence presented by
his son, Miguel "Mike" Booker of
Davenport, showed he once bad
watered a cemetery in nearby
Dayton until graves sank and
tombstones toppled. red, black and white beans as
Judge William Williams. wellasothergoods.
however, cited testimony by the HE ALSO SAID his father had
dead man's doctor and ruJed used a $l6,000 check as a
that, "competence is in the eyes bookmark and failed to cash
or the beholder.'' negotiable iMtruments. Booker
contended this showed his
WILLIAMS RULED an favor of father's accounting procedures
Rainier National Bank, ad· werepoor.
ministrator of a S'Z00.000 trust ac· Leon Booker once was general
count for Columbia County counsel and vice president of
Hospital. and rejected the case Standard Oil Company in
presented by the younger Venezuela. He had amassed
Booker, who was left only a token large oil holdings by buying and
inheritance. selling oil leases for many years,
Mike Booker had contended his according to testimony in the
father's health had deteriorated case.
to the point that he had lost in-Court records showed that
Military Law Eased
terest in eating but stockpiled Booker had given $500,000 to the
food and clothing "beyond the Columbia County Hospital for a
realmofreason." · · geriatnc wing in 1967. He also
Trial exhibits showed lhe elder signed a series of wills, the last in
Cheers Greet Vow of Philippine Elections
MANILA. The Philippines
<AP> --President Ferdinand
Marcos told a conference on
human rights today be will eaae
martial law by granting arnuesty
for subversives. lifting a na·
tionwide curfew and ending a
ban on foreigl),~avel.
He also prolnised to hold focal
elections next year and to set an
election date in 1978 for all other
government po~itions. There
have been no electipns. since
Marcos imposed m-art\al lavt on
Sept. 23, 1972. •
Marcos' aodouncements re-
ceived prolollled applauae from
about 5,000 I•wyers and jud1es
attending the!Manil• World L"w Cooler~ hose tn.nw thia
year is hum rights in Intern•· tional law.
N~ Lellden If•_.
TOKYO <A}>) -The Chinese
Commuitist Part~ bas named . a
new group of18ders col'hmitted
to political and economic ~alum
rather than Mao Tse•tung's
policy of continuous reVOlution.
Three of the five top men are
suumch dl•ciples of the late
moderate Premier Chou ED·lll.
ne 11th Chinese Communist
Party Congress, beld in Pekh\I.
elected 57-year-old Hua Kuo-feng
to the nation's hi&heat ~. the party chairmanship. Four vice·
chairman are Defense Minister
Yeh Chien-Ying, 80; newly re-
habilitated Vice Premier Tent
Hsiao.ping, 73; economic thiefLl
Hsien-nien, 72, and Wang 'l'Urii·
( J
budget by removing state sup-Booker accumulated 50 razors, lS 1969 when he created the trust to port for 30 institutions of higher ed __, h oo f JN SHORT learning. unus ga,uen oses, l pauso give the hospital another long underwear and 100 pounds of $700,000. ---·-'--------hsil\g, a former commander of
.Mao's bodyguards who is the ex·
ecutlve director of the party and
JlbovefiO.
• • I •
IL'\' Cl lb Bil ,
Jerry 'Mills, 36, waa
"friendly, but quiet:•
BriJO Chaffey. 1eneral manaier of Roberts lr-
rtsatton Co. said Sunday.
" SOLANA BEACH MILIS HAD BEEN a
<AP) -"Tb.is was the good plant manager until
la at ind e pendent Th\U'sday, when ''he.sort HAMME& WAI re· military school in the of snapped, sort of went
leased on $1,000 ball late -----=-.._..~_...;..__ South~t. ·• said head-t.o pieces," Chaffey said.
Sunday nlcbt from West master Louis J . Bit· "We were just standing
Lo. An1eles PoUce sta-terlin. Now his San Die10 around talking shop.and
lion. . ... , Military Academy has he looked Uk~ he was go-
"There's the pl,oce we sightsow yesterday." OneaJxJtwasr@Orted· Bonds Sold closed. ioato&tartcrying. Then, -----_:.-=-------------ly fired from a .351· The 19-year-old school hb said, 'I've had it. I'm
Kla•atla Fo~••
5 St&tes Aid
Firefighters
By The Associated Press
A fire that has blackened more than 70 square
miles or California's Klamath National Forest
~umped the control ltnes that had been built around
1t <md spn.·ad lo an add1t1onlll 2,000 acres overnight.
The lntcragency Fire Center in Boise, Idaho,
said the fire, burning tn sleep timberland and cov-
ered by heav) smoke, had blackened 47,380 acres
bv this mornln£ and was still out of control.
Reinforcements from Florida, Kentucky, Penn·
sylvania and North and South Carolina brought
the firefighting force to 5,600 today, according to
C S f<'orest Service spokesman Ernest Weinberg.
The blaze was sparked by lightning Aug. 9
,.,,h1lc 10,000 firefighters were trying to squelch
massive blazes near Big Sur on California's Central
Coast and an Modoc and Lassen Counties in the
state's northeast corner.
THOSE FIRES and hundreds of smaller ones
were started by lightning strikes from an elec-
trical storm which hit the state at the beginning of
\ugust The Klamath fire was ignited by a lightning
strike from an isolated storm
"l think we've finally got as many people as we
need to do the JOb," said Weinberg
Called the Hog ·s Ridge fire, the blaze is located ·
in the northern part or the stale, about so miles
northeast of Eureka.
WEINBERG SAID the Hog's ~1dge fire is the
third in a series or big fires fought by many of the
5,600 firemen assigned to the blaze.
They were brought to the Klamath after con-
taining the 175,000·acre Marble·Cone fire near Big
Sur Before that, many or the crews fought a fire
which burned scores or expensive homes in Santa
Barbara, Weinberg said ,
· They were pretty well worn out after 11 or 15
days at Big Sur," he sa1d,'"but they're standing up
v.ell." • THE .MARBLE·CONE blaze Sunday was bein(
mopped up after being rmged by a giant fireline last
week
· Some 40 firenghters have been injured in the
Klamath fire, the most scnous with a broken leg,
Weinberg said.
Gentle winds Sunday pushed aside a dense cur-
tain of smoke that has hampered controt~fforts for
days, allowing vintage World War II bombers to
dive close to cliffs and dump tons of ch~mical fire
retardant on the blaze, Weinberg said.
Scientists Probe
Voyager Problems
PASADENA <AP> -The Voya,er 2 spacecraft is
speedmf: toward Jupiter, Saturn and beyond while
scientists try to ao~lyze its shaky start and the prob-
lems that threatened the mission: , Scienltsts at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory here"
ordered the spacelab, ---------
equipped with television
cameras, lo turn several
of its instrument.$' on and
off late Sunday niaht t~
test them.
They were to analyze
the results of those ex-
periments today. But the
scientists said the
Voyager 2 appears to
ha ve overcome tu
· earlier troubles and wa~
sailing smoothly t.o the
outer planets and even·
tuaJlY, out of the solar
system.
the sun so it could absorb
solar rays. That com-
mand was obeyed, said
mission controller Jerry
Stilwell, and data fed
back to Earth began
showing the abl!orption
of solar beat.
roainum handlun after SACRAMENTO (AP) was sold to the Christian aonna quit.' "
ff d -'lbe state bu ~ld off Unified Schools of San ammer ar1ue with $30 millim in urbah and Diego and wm reopen •s
Vinceoi West. 24• ol Los coastal park bonds at a a church school next ~~~J::O:•;~a: 4.592' percent interest month. Bitterlin and
jured;beiild. me. state Treasurer other faculty members
JesseUnrubsays. from· Brown Military
THE ABGUMENT The bid by a syndicate Academy founded the
may have been over a headed by Bank of schoolinl958.
debt kanuner la aa,ld to America carried the The on 1 y other·
have owed Wfst. Emery lowest interest rate at military school with high
added. which generalobligation school·level classes left
Hammer's father is bonds have been sold by in the Southwest, he said.
board chairman of Oc-the state in more than is New Mexico Military
cidental Petroleum Co. five years, Unruh said. Institute at R.oswell .
Meanwhile, Escondido
PQllce Sgt. Dale Whaley
c«>nfirmed that officers
bad agreed to visit Mills
after the plant
manaeer•s 19-yeiJr-old
brother, Michael, said he wu "acting strange."
"HE WAS NE}lVOUS
a lot in the l~l Wei!k,"
said the younger Mills,
who shared an apart·
ment with bis brother in
Escondido, about 35
miles north of San Dleao.
"He was afraid to go out.
It seems •they were
threatening his life, but
he wouldn't tell me who
'they' were."
'
r r
•
The threats, he said.
Ribbon, lace, flownces1 tie~s,
fl9wered prints, a little vest~
everything new for F&ll js here!
No matter whose little girl you arer ricwl& ttie s~5')n Jo wear the
prettiest dresses ever! If you're .learning your fashion ~BC's' take note.
Everything on this page, from fabric, to texture, to the tiniest detail,
is headljne metarial. From left, navy-print on bon~ polyester/cotton,
sizes 7-14, from Bow Age, $26 Vest, black cotton velveteen over challis
oorder print in blue, rust on black polyester /rayon~ 6-14, from Jodene, $33
Two jumpers from Youngland, rust cotto~ corduroy, brown 11oral
trim and ties, 7-14, $20 Tie-shouldered mulberry polyester/cotton.
yellow rick-reek, 7 -14, $18 We have the cowls to matcti.
Come to G"ls 1-1~ and Teens
t<tdsf Hurry to Bullock's with your best.water-~~ng
ideas-there'll be no shortage of prize•! •
-
I ..
"could ha~e been in bis'
mind. or they mi&bt not
!lave been.',_.
JBBRY""'MILLS bad
feared for hia parents
and br0tber'11afety. and
had urced them to go live
with another brother, ,Jim, 38, in Kent4cky, &he
younger Milla said.
"Moin and dad were
sha"en up real bad," he said. "It relieved us
when we heard be was in
custody" and not
harmed, he added.
HIS BROTHER told
hia fears t.o San Diego
p<,>lice Saturday, but of.
ficera there said he was
"craey," said Michael
Mills. "I was afraid be would
do something, so I went
to the San D~so Police
after he did. They were
not very helpful.•• said
Mills. who later sought
help from Escondido
police.
San Diego police of-
ficials have said they are
unsure whether Jerry
Mills had contacted
them.
ILY PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE
Costly · Persuasion
r
C I romia ta payt-rs may 1urprlnd to learn
that the,)• hl\'e Dt 10 lllon.Jn th pAi l two
,. ars to innuent'c state go\•ernment d cl1ion ln
cram lo. •
Thi I th t 06t of lobbyin& by achool dir.trlch.
iti • rot.anti and other local governmtml agencies.
But it wa9 n mere drop In the S40 million lobbying
~cket reported last wefk by the Fair Politicol
rructices Commlulon.
• The r port CO\'ers th x~nses of 600 registered
lobbybt2', lhl'U' ~l'l'l'l'lUl'll'l\ llll<I atllll'IH.·~ ~
Prl\:a~c bu~inesM~s spent S14.9 million on lobbyin~
and utllah~ ~pent S4 3 million. Thut of coun,~ 1s ..,
lt-g itlmate bus rne s» expense t u "h1ch \\ t• can
(·ontribute \'iu our bill~
Top bpend ~r "ai, the Cal ifor n1.i :'\ledtcal
.\ssoc1ation ''i lh Sl.3 million. folio'' ed b' Pac1fl<·
Tele phone and Telegraph ttt SI 2 million ·
GWl O\\Tiers and bankers association::, topped th~
h a lf m1lhon m a r k for lobb) ing expenses. \\ ith
Lt•aclwr .... · J""o<.·i.1 lio11!. < lo..,1.· l)(.'hllld
·Is all this really necessary? f'PPC Chairman Dan
Lo\lt~nstein says, "Go\'t>rn ment s imply couldn't
function without the intormat1on these organiial1ons
p rovide ...
He adds that legis lative staf~ also pro\'ide u lot of
infor mation. That·~ nice. since we pay for them too
Mo-ped Rules Confuse
The popular ity of mo-peds is causing heudache~
for parent!) \\ ho~e young::,tcrs suddenl y com e homl'
"1th poli('c.• l'i tatwns for' 1olatmg tht.> rult•!'> for mo-peel
operation
And the rule:, f1Jr the motorized bi<.'\ cl es are
rather unu:,ual ·
They don 't ha\'<.' to be registered with the
Dt•partment of Motor Vehicles. though they may be
.
subject to local bike reaistration la\\ s. But the p non
operaline a mo.ped must hold either \"alid
California driver 's license or a OMV drlvlna
instruction permit. In the latter instance. the operator must be at
least IS 1:? years old and ha\'e successfully completed
driver education and driver training.
Confusion over this r~uirement seems to be
generating many of the citi&tiom; especially when
youngsters borrow a friend ·s mo-ped for a trial run and
can't produce the right documents it' the law catches up
with them.
So if your young mo-ped fan doesn't yet meet the
requirements, see that he or she stays off the public
roadways. But it's okay to practice in the backyard
without a license.
Progressing Backwards
One of the m ore interesting phenomena of our
new improved U.S. Postal Sen·ice is the fact that
each imprp vcm ent seems to add up lo less service.
It used to be that a letter mailed from say, Costa
:\1esa at 3 p. m . on a given date. would be postmarked.
"Cost a Mesa. 3 P '.\I" :'\o arguing with thut.
!'low it probably will be marked, "Santa Ana.
PM." Confusing.
The Postal Ser\'lce is opposing a congressional
effort to have all postmarks include the lime and
place of m ailing.
There are jus t too many small post offices to
bother with indi\'ldual postmarks they explain. And
the new 1mpro\'ed canceling machines are geared to
mark onl) A'.\1 or PM forthe time ofmailing .
'.'iow if they could j ust pers uade the old·f ashioned
tax collectors and mortg age holders .to quit tacking
late charges on bills that aren 't postmarked by S p.m .
on the due date ..
But we mustn't fight progre:-;s
""" .......... .,, ~.-..-...__
... ~.i-
0
H'H 9 ,_.,,,,,,,.
~I ~IM _,,,, ..........
Tribute to Stupidity
Of 'Boohus Humanus'
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
T~agers Were Losers
To the Editor·
The late H.L. Mencken used to
refer to us human beings as
"Boobus Humanus.'' I assume
th e r e will b e .d e dication
ceremonies when the neutron
bomb is tested .. perhaps an in-
vocation followed by cham-
pagne.
Since most of us don't have the
foggiest idea of what "neutron"
means. I suggest that we give it
one of those cute titles, and call it
the "Boobus Bomb" ... as a
tribute to man's stupidity.
Now the mass killing J)OWer or
th ts bomb is no big deal. It would
be hard to top our performance
with that old style atom bomb
which worked quite well on about
200.000 people.
It's the idea or savinjt the build·
ings that concerns me. I have to
assume that it makes sense to
kill all the French, and save the
l..ouvre, or wipe out the English
aJld save Big Ben.
But recent history shows that
~ilhin a couple or years, most
other government.a will have the
same mass killing deal. And
what wilt their targets be in
Southern California?
WHAT SCARES me is that a
person in some distant silo will
P.unch a button which wipes out
'\ll of us ... but saves all of those
old rat infested bulldin.as in
Anaheim , Azuza and
Cucamonga ... plus the ugly
new architectural eye sores in
I,os ADltles ... tbe bars on
Main St.re« and Watta.
Actually, il we cOU.ld only find a
bomb that would wipe out the
buildings and save the people, it
would have a positive we>rld wide
effect.
( MAILBOX J
San Francisco, for example,
owes much of its charm to that
earthquake. Chicago was greatly
improved after the fire. The re-
newal in Japan and Germany
certainly shows that replacing
old buildings has a positive effect
on the nation.
The other POSitives are con-
siderable. It •ould solve un·
employment = ... eliminate
boredom .... reduce stress,
alcoholism ... .and drug abuse.
But, we'll prQbably go with the
Boobus Bomb ... which is prob-
ably designed to kill all of the ·
Boobs .... and save the Boob
Tube.
VANARSDALE FRANCE
E'lea• '9a1t Kiii ..
To the Editor:
One 0£ the hardest jobs a
vet«inarian must face is tellint
his client that he could not save h~ ~. and then explainlnl the
catuse of death.
People can accept the fact
that their animal dled of injuries
surtered by a car, or heart
failure-but fleas? Fleas killed
their dog? It's true, neas can kl11
a dog or cat.
Last week it wea a llttle
black poodle. Sbe came Into the
hospital ve~ close to death. 'The
efforts of the doctor we.re Lil
vain-it was too late. She died.
From fleas.
Hear that "Son of Sam" T-
shi ru are a ll the rage back
in New York City. Guess
somebody else will be
making a killing in the
wormy Big Apple.
R.A.
She only weighed about
eight pounds and a dog or cat that
size doesn't have a lot of blood.
When they become infested with
fleas, the story ts not a nice one.
When enough fleas drain enough
blood out of an animal, the
a nimal can die. Puppies and kit-
tens are most vulnerable. It
doesn't take many fleas to suck a
tablespoon or blood out or a new·
born kitten, and that's about all
they have
Oil Barg~in Rejected
' '
WASHINGTON -The story
can now be told how ex-President
Gerald Ford turned down a
chance to save the taxpayers
billions of dollars on oil
purchases.
He had two golden op -
Portunities to purchase oil direct·
ly from oil-
p rod u c in g
· countries at
s ubstantial
dis counts
This would
have put the
U.S. JOVem-
ment tn com-
petition witb
the big ofl
c ompanies.
So in the name of free enterprise.
Ford rejected both deals.
The deals were generated by
ex-Secretary or State Henry
Kissinger who sent his chief
economic advisor, Cha rles
Robinson, to negotiate the agree-
ments. The idea of the govern-
m_ent going into the oil business,
however, raised the hackles of
then·Treasur~.Secretary
Willlam Simon.
Other dyed.tn·the-wool
conservativet1, dedicated to \he
sacred American right to make a
buck, Joined ln the op~ltion. •
The military brass, who would
have been stuck with the Job of trans~c ~ dlstribuUn1 the
oU, also didn't like the Idea.
President Ford. therefore.
broke off the negotiations after
ptellnunary agreements bad
aJreaat been reached. Thia de·
clalon bas already coc,t~ tbe con-~min1 pUblic bllllons•that could
have beeli saved if the two deals
had been completed.
lions said the deal •vas all set lo
be signed. But Simon raised such
·a holler, backed by Pentagon and
commerce officials, that Presi-
dent Ford scotched it.
Robinson £Jew to Moscow:
meanwhile, lo negotiate a wheat
sale with Soviet Trade Minister
Nickolay Patolichev. An agree·
ment was signed ln October 1975,
tor the s ale of U.S. wheat to the
Soviet {lnion. It \fa& accom
panied by a letter of intent call·
ing for the sale of Soviet oil to the
United Stat.es.
That was the last public word
0£ a Soviet·American oil deal.
But behind the scenes. Robinson
hammered out and initialed an
arrangement with Patolichev
This gave the United States an
option to buy 10 million tons of
Soviet oil annually at a price sub-
stanti!lll.Y below'whal the United
States was paying on the world
market. The tankers used to haul
wheat to Russia, it was agreed,
would be loaded with oil for the
return trip.
BUT SOVIET negotiators, ac·
cording to our sources, insisted
the price . reductions bad tq be
kept secret. They didn't want lt
known they were favortn; tl'te
United States and undercutting
OPEC. A complex fiscal plan
was worked out. iherefore, to
bury the price cu~ wit.bin the
freighting costs.
At the White House, several
complex questions were raised
about the propo6ed deal. But in
the end, Ford was influenced by
the argument that the federal
government had no business
competing with the oil industry.
Thus the oil industry~s profits
were preserved, and the
American people lost another
chance to save oo th~ oil bills.
Footnote~ We pieced together
the story of the backstage oil •
deals froJll &0u,rces c:lose to tht
negotiations. T.beY provided us
wi\h the most intricate details of
the arrangements with both Iran
and the 59viet Union.
Simon, nevertheless. disput.es
that the complex negotiations
would have produced any real
price dtscotmts. ··we thought
Kissinger's proposals were
laupable,·· Simon said ... The
Soviets-weren 'UnWr.,ted in sell-
ing us oll at discount prices. The
idea is looeeheaded. •• '
He conceded that Robinson had
cohducted detailed negotiations
with the Iranians and SOviets for
cheap oil. But Simon snorted:
••All those proposals were the
ideas of those economic nitwits
at the state Departm~t. No one
in his right mind could expect
them to work.'' ·
Kissinger ana Robinson re·
fused lo comment.
Annt#Wr Baby B~om
Thinga I LAoriled En Route to
LookiflQ Up Other T!iing•:
•, •~ I •,,. ..
/
On Tuesday. August 23,
11:30..3:30 p.m. In Newport1 voo•n meet their New '*>rk
respresentattve, here to show
you what's ntNI In those
· hard-to-find 14-1/2 to 22-1/2
·sizes! Here's Just a sampling of
the klr)d of crlsptv tailored,
timeless looks Forever Young Is
famous for. All In blaclq cream
· or salmon/cream.
The 3-plece pantsuit wHh
mandartn-lnfluence Jacket,
short-sleeved striped polntelJe..
border shell and solid pant. $70.
Mall/phone. Women's World, 123.
·.
tlona that be quit or be Afe1· VaUIMD ata,yed. Now Prtlident Carter h11
rallied dram•ticatly to the alde ct Buctllt Dlreetor a.rt Lane.,
,.hOal bl aice dfllci'IHd .. cne
of the cio..t trlenda be bu 1n t.b6world.
Tbe thr" ea•" dUfer, of ·court•. Whll• Vau1hu ancl
Adami deliltd wroni ... in· v~ found lmprQprleti
bi UMilr aftatn. .
TIL\T-llN'T 80 With Lance.
To date, tb,re have been oDly
queit:lonl and ~aauons. and
tbe ace Cftlclal ttncUn.c lD bis
case ao far 1a that of federal banklni investlcators, who re-
ported on Thursday that they
f O\md no ball for pro1e0ution In hit t.ranaactlcma.
Bm In another way. the t.brM
eplacdes.reetautar, for lneacb
c:ue, the target of mGUil'YJud
c:rltld.ID.i was a penolial trtei:td
of the president be •~ In
sucll ctrCUmitane~, prettdtlits •
tend to f!pt back, eftn if tt Is
poU~ally risky.
CARTER JS. 111$ defense of
Lance amounted to a dare to
anyone to challenge the
personal loan and bankinc prac-Ueee that broupt the buqet
f I
FacUJl ~Mask~
Reduces Pain
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP> -Surgeons at the
Medical College ot Georaia say they have de·
veloped a method of reducing the emotional and
physical scars ol patients who had surgery for
facial cancers.
Operations to remove cancers of the mouth or
rsinus cavities can leave ,s;:ents with distorted
features and hamper their ties to speak or eat.
Dr. Barry M. Goldman.directoroftbecollese's
maxillofaclal services divialon, oays about 25 such
cancer patients in Georgia have been fitted in the
last four years with a surgical appliance. called a
prostheses. that looks like part of a mask.
THE MASK IS MADE FROM plastic and
silicone rubber and glued to the (ace after being
tinted to match the patients' complexion. It is de·
signed to be used in cases where so much surface
tissue and bone has been destroyed that ordinary
plastic SUl'lery is useless.
Goldman sald operations for cancers of the face
are "the most psychologically devastating opera·
tions.': Patients who have had such drastic opera:
t.i.ons often "become total recluses and won't even
take off their bandages in front of family members.
They tend not to go out of the houser they won't ao
work, won't go anywhere.•• he said.
But Gold.man said the prostheses be and other
members ol bfs division have applied leave patients
looking virtually as they did before the operation.
Goldman said masks must be removed at least
twice a day and overnight so the skin can rest and
.. come ba,ck to its normal state.••
~
&eedl eu be parcauecl h'eln 'Dompsoa Ii
... ,_, J1a M, SelierdaleLNI ...at. Tbll JUe7, ••all_... tanbi ••t.,.. •is,.,.. Ud .. at 1&a .,_..._baneisW at "babyMlt"IUe, ·~ toumwrt.eaataded bJ AYS •
.. _,_,.._A ..... 'tr.tt..111 .......
DEAR PAT: WW you tell m•tie.~~~ of the
Salvation Army offtee that bancne. IDqu.irl~ about anllliol penons? . · . G. R .• ll'Vine
WrUe to Salvation Army MJaalnl Penou
areaa. Box aMt. ltl V almda st., Su Fraaebeo,
CA MUI. nere u no ~"''" for dtel.r belp, but clondons are welcameCL
C'otu~ Catt Clwele eo. .... i.
DEAR PAX : I've beard that a ~·1 credit
file sometimes includes comments from neilbbon
or others about a person's morals or character. ts
this true? F. J .• Laguna Beach
No. l"bat la called an lnvesttaadve repol't, and It
ls tnfGnaaUon generally used by 181uraaee eom-
paaks fw u.nderwritini pal"PCl98L Credit 1"1.ftau
do DOt eoiplot oaUlde la'ftlUI•...,_ and do not
fuml.lla aa,,t t7Pe of report,.aceonUn& to A&Mdatecl
CredltBmeaus, I.be.
•
"""'""""' ....,~ ......
Linda Johnson of
Fountaintown, Ind.,
won the husband-
calling contest at the
Indiana State Fair in
Indianapolis Sunday.
Her CQStume included
mud-streaked face
and feather-bedecked
hair. Husband Henry
should be pro.ud. .
You eu go to a eredlt bal'eau ud ask to revt.ew
the rue on you, and, after pJ'OPer lclelltlftca~ V aot;t•val you'll be t.old everytblnl that's there ud wbete It r ~
came from. U there are erton you caa ll1ve them Sdieduk. ·
correeted, have anytblng yoa qaestiGG retnvesU,at· / d
ed and, .If an accoant ls ln dispute between you and a
merchant, you can IUe your side of the story Ill the The :American His·
bureau's reeords. Your statement becomes a torical Society of
permanent part of &be record. Germans from Russia
holds its annual picnic So,.,,,, CgcU.i Ba• .. to 'Pa" Aug. 28, in Midway City.
DEAR PAT: I bought a motorcycle sever&l The public festival will
years ago and· then lost my job. The bank re-be held on the grounds of
possessed the bi.le~. They say that they sold it for a the Brothers of St.
lot lesa than I still~ and now they want tbe dlf-Patrick, 7820 BobaAve.,
ference. of nearly $500~ lt..doesn't seem f alr th.at I beginning at noon.
should have to pal this mooey when I no loncer-'l1le aodet.yls an in·
have the bike. • · tema&oal or1aniqt1on
· W. P .• Huntington Beach doina aenealoalcal re·
It may not seem fair, bu& It Js tecaL Defkleee7 search on Germans w~
JuctimeaU of ttda type have beea •U•wecl for •OI& colon1zed Russia before
typee ol....V except motor vehleles, when tbey em~ to the Unlted are tUJI legal. • Stat.es.
Let.Us Help . .
... A father discovers his :--"'.")lescent daughter is experimenting with dru_gs. H~. d9esn.'t know what to do.
••. A .lonely wife sobs into a pillow. Her· marriage is breaking up. Her elderly.p4rents have become a
burden. She can•t cope. · · ·
... A middle-aged man with a good job shakes uncontrollably as he reaches for a bottle of booze. He
tried to stop drinking, but failed.
SAN Dl'EGO (AP) -
Califorttia must find
376,000 new jobs annual-ly "Just to maltttaln our 7
percent unemployment
rate," says a manuf ac-
t\iren, apckeaman.
In recent years 1'9,000
werefoomt annually. _..;....:.;..;..:....w....,.......,--.~..-...;;,;.;-..-....-~-~r---...,..
MEEDHaP? A S.-c1' $5.000 Md -""* liit MCVred bJ • c:oml:iitWltloft "' -a_, ,.,.._a ~. Hele YoQl'lelHo •
Beapiq aele«ion ot
Quall1led Hopefuls
In the DAILY PILOT
HELP WANTED ADS
Cotta Mesa • 370 E. 17th Street • "54'100
• 1111 Town & C0wl:r7 Rd. Suite 26
BV/thisweek
Collections shown fron111 :30 to 3:30 (1.1nless noted) in our
el~nt new. Newport BW
AAR£ JADE JEWURY
Jade ecpert, Don Hobe. and his assistant present
a collectipn of 18th and 19th century jade jewelry
all day Monday through Saturday in fashion lewelry.
A'RlENE OAHt. •
Meet beautiful Arlene Dahl who presents her ftoweting
fragrance .. Dahlia'' Monday and Tuesday in Cosmetics.
from 12:00 until 1:30.
HELCA
A special envoy presents the Helga collection and trunk show
with Informal modeling Friday. Jhe Salon.
CEOFFREY BEENE ANO BEENE BAG
See the-two collections informally modeled Friday
in The Salon and ~gner Sportswear. Place your order
from a trunk ~hoWing of the entire collection.
JULIANELLI ~
Mabel Julianelli personally presents. her sf\oe c:otlection
with informaJ modeling Friday in Salon Shoes.
}OYSTMNS
The designer persofta11y p.retents her coftectton
of dresses with informal tnodellna Saturday In BW N<?W!
• U7-6811
CIOPEMAN OOllOTHY L COPEMAN ,_lcle,.I Of ,eos•• Mew, c.111om1e. Pe~ •••Y
\ ,A119ust 1', 1977 SUrvlve<I II'( her MOC her
!Mrs. EllmJ. Ollnl.C Of Coll• MMe, C.,
;OM son DouolM W. °"*"Ml, Mission
'VleJo, CA. One tfeOlfltff Jet1e M
~opemen, S•nt• AM, C•. Three
tndclllldref\. F-1111 Mrvlcftwlllbe
Id T-y AUOUSI 23, 1tn, 11 OOAM
.-1 Bell 8'~y Chepel ln4er.....,l el
,'1•rl>Or llest Memorlel Perl! Bell .Sroedway Mortuery di rec Ion
~ HOl'l'MAN
MAXINli H HOFFMAN rn1dtfll OI
1vers1 ... C.lllornl• Peued ewev
1191n1 1'. 1'71. SUrvlveCI II'( lier son
It C.mi>bell, Aos.moncl, c.., lier
utnl.,.s Slllrley Gerrebtenl of Tor-
•r>ee, C. , Doris SwAnson of Coste s., Ce., her mother Otlw Ooly Of
lwrslde, C.., slst1<n Ut118Y• Oluon
Om-Nebr all•, Adele SI-line Of l versloe, Ca , Mery Stevenun of
oset>urg. Oreoon, bf'olN<S Clwlrtes ~'f'ol E-. 0r990fl, Cler-Ce Doty
OonalCI Doty Of Omahe, Hebr•t~•
our1een grendcllllelren •net six grHI·
ndellll-. !ie<'vlc.a wlll lie held
!rues.day, AUQ<l11 J3 1'77 ?•OO~M et jB•tlz lleroeron Funeral Home Cllepel,
Coile ~. ServicH concl...-In the ~h•pel lnlerment at Herl>Or Aut
!Memorlal P•rlt. Balli Ber~" Cotta rew MortUrilryd4rect°"'
lllOeESOH
~MAllCiAAET ROBESON. rHICltl\1 of
ouna Hiiis C.llfont•• PMMCI •••Y 011s111.1t71at t11teoeoft1.5urv1we1
Nr '°" Al Robe...,, Of Costa Mase,
FUMral services wlll tie held Weel·
selay AU9USI 2•. 1977, 10 OOAM 81
Ith TVt!VI I IAmb Costa Mau O\ajMI
f 11 Warren E. Howland O.IJllen
5-R-of N-prol 8eecll. Ce
lc.l•llng. Smith Tuthlll Lemb Co$18
ttMort11MydlreclO<S,......_
llloeESON
' LUCILLE Q.AftE ROellSON, rMl-
Inl <>f LA191111e t4111s, C.llfornl•.
UW!d l#lay Allglls;l "· "77 et IM 89e
)4 S..rvlwCI by lier l>rolller Al oboon of Costa Mete, Ce. Funer•t
rvlos wlll l>a held Weelnesde~
t\IQllA 2A, 1'71 at IO:AM tl U. Smlttl
"""" lMM Mllr1ua,., °'8Pel, m E. 111 SI. Coste Mew, with Warren E
~owl-01r•!ill..., Science Re-r Of
ewport Beacll, ea. officiating. Smllll
u111111 .lMnb eos .. MaM ~ ... ••ectan ......_
. "-UIA"1 ~ OAVIO PAUL SLU"'llZ. res'*'M ef ~Ost• ~. Cllllfornl8. l'HHf •1118Y 4uoull It. 1m at Ille "' ff 1t ., .. ,.
"d ~llyhls~Ml'.&Mn. ~Clam 51.-.n. Funeral ~ •r• .. l\dlng." $mllll Tuthill l.tmlt ~
rese Mol11111rYdlrerton. .......
~·
MtCOIMIC~
MOltTUAlllS
l1gurta Beach
494·9416
l11QUna Hills 768-0933
San Juan Caoistrano .f95-1778
IALTZ-lll•llOM
.... Al.HO*
Corona det Mar 97~-9480
Costa Mesa 84&-e424 . -
18.L llOADWAY
MOITVAlY
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
842·9150
Death.
Elaeuiheii
SAN DIEGO (AP> -
Retired Maripe Bric.
Gen. W. Carvel Half. 80,
who won the Navy Cross
for heroism on Guam
and the Legion of Merit
for action on Bougain-
ville during World War
II, died Thursday.
DANVILLE, Va. CAP)
..i... WUllam J . Erwin, 76,
retired chairman and
chief executive officer of
Dan River, Inc., died
Friday at Duke Universi·
ty Hosp1tal in Durham,
N.C.
Bf BOBEJlT9ARKU Of .. .,...., ..........
Work is scheduled to
start witbtn 10 days on a
controversial sewer line
designed to handle over·
burde1lied racilitle11 in
north lluntington Beach.
A critic claims that ci·
ty taxpayers will be sub·
sidizing use of the sewer
by people living outside
the city.
PUBLIC Works Direc·
tor William Hartge said
a contract of $281,201 was
awarded by the city to
Flemming Engineering
Co. of Cerritos.
BERKELEY (AP) _ Construction is expected
D aid C~i.--85 _ to be completed by Nov· 0~ ...,._;y, • as ember, soc1~te direct~r of the Permits for the con·
U n. 1 v ~ ~ s 1 t Y 0 f struction of 81 new California s Lawrence homes have been held up Laborato~ for ~6 yean because the present line b~fore r~tinng m 1959, along Warner Avenue
died Fn~ay. Cooksey from Springdale Street
was the first person the to 800 feet west of
late Erne~t Orlando Graham Street is run·
Lawrence hired when he ning at nearly 100 per·
founded the Jaboratory cent capacity.
m 1936. Residents have report·
BERKELEY CAP) _ e d that sewa&e bas backed up and flooded David W. Loulsell, 63, sidewalks and tennis prof~r of l~w at the courtsoooccasion. U n1v ers1ty of
California's Boalt Hall in TOE PROJECf has Berkele~. died Sunday in engtmdered controversy
a hospital here, four on 8 number of counts
days after tufferin& a but most of it hits been
stroke. Loulsell was the foeuaed on what is
author of. ••?t(ode.~n descrl~asnearlya400
California DlScovery, a perc.tt incrQfe in the
legal text that has UJe ot· the line by the
become .a stan~ard work sumet Beach Sanitation
on pretrial tactics. District.
Herb Chatterton, a TAORMINA, Sictly member 'of the Hunt-
<A P> -Tbomu. M. iqtoa Beach's Environ· Wol1ln, an American mental Council, said his
businessman and an eroup is concerned that
owner of the Baldwin cit.y taxpayers will be
pl a no company. ~as sub1ldizin1 costs tor·
found dead in th~ swun· another jurisdlction. mine pool of blB hotel "It's true that Sanlta-
heu._ autbor.lties said tion District No. u will
Sunday. Wolsm, ~.was paf the city most of the
believed to have died or a c~ for the project but
lleatt attack while vaca-thiadiatrictis made up of
Uoniq here, officials Huntln&ton Beach resi-
s,Ud. dents.
~UC NOTJC~ , '4T11E LOCAL clUzens
wlll pay the costs one
way or Ute other," Chat-
tertan said.
}lartge said that legal
action has been filed
a1a!Mt the Sunset Beach
Di1trict to force the
Sunset Beach District to
pay its fair share of the
dee1do What to dO •bOUt
Potsl!M •otlon to the
part ~btch may be
aauaed by 11H'd an4
•ravel mlnlna to th• aouth.
TM tht"ee development plans cell for 1pendlnt
from $3 mll1.loa to •·' mUUon 8nd range in size
from892to82$acree.
Gtor•• Osborne, di~tor of the county
Envtronmentill Mani•
ment A•ency <EMA),,
laid aw tlrat would em-
ph uh e the p rk's natural ameriltlei.
IT CAU8 for develop-
ment ot 632 acres at a
cost of about $3 million
and includes 180 acres
for picnicldn&, 220 acres
for nature study. 185
cos\I or tO live up to its
commitment of an exist· inc agreement.
Hertge said 1be in-c re as ed use by the
Sunset Beach Di.strict is
attributed to deteriorat-
ing pipes and salt water
intrusion. ·
Huntington Beach
agreed to handle the
Sun$et Beach sewage
acres lot eampln1 and 30 over the next 20 year1
miles for htkloc and but eventually up to 92S
horseback riding trails. acres ol parkland could
Tbe second plan woulcf be devtl@ed at an $8.• eall for deve..opina 782 mlW°'1 prfceta1.
acres at a cost of about Osborne explained
$1. 1 mllllon OabOrne mtnld ~orus Ot the a aid • land WOUid be ~~vetted
n ~d cut hiltlnt and =i= :e~~r:"~~ equ.estrl~ trails back to tton, ho aatd. part ,of t&e
2Z Pillet and provide for development cost would addltiorial cleveloped be o1.f1et by about c.z c;auip~ and picnic mUlion ht mtnlpg areas, as wen u provide 1'oyalt168 which ...,outct
conference and tl0wint.Ocountycoff8".
equestriancenters. That prooosal woUld
WWLB neither the
first or second proposal
would permit sand and
gravel lnb11ng, the third
one would.
Osbome explained the
mlnin& cQuld continue
About ffve years aao,
Hartce said. when its
treatnunt plant at
Warner Av~ue was In•
activated .. because it
was a nuisance and
s melled bad."
The new sewer raeility
will par all el an exl.stlng
line. When completed
the 21·inch line wni
measure 3,400 feet.
eventually. provide fo?'
360 acree ~ camplq, a
late at tbe park's south
end, along with
equestrian and con-
ference centers.
Call us for
lnsuran.ce quotes!
., Auto· Lire· Homeowners
· F1BMERS INSURANCE G.ROtJ
548-5554
RABBITT INSURANCE.
1914 Harbor Blvd., Costa Me
I I
t ,
THE PUBLIC Broadcutinc
Service is banklng tbat the kids
will set the message, too. It has
tapped the year-old public TV
show to lead off thJs sea.son's al·
ter-scbool lineup, (4 p.m., Chan·
nel 2S> Just abeacl of such
heavywe1Mhta a• '1Seasame
Street.. and "Electric Com·
--~ pany."
Fingers all aglitter with sparkling rings,
superstar Liberace reacts with dismay as
he watchei his pick in the third race at
Monmouth Park, N.J .. Racetrack finish
out of the money He was honored at the
track with a race named for him.
LM.Boyd
Seven Stages
Of Dr11riks
An outfit in Beleium offers, for a fee, to
send gifts to your friends and relatives after
you 've died. Say you want your nephew, little
Willie, to get a new T-shirt on his birthday for
the next 10 years beyond your death, that can
be arranged. A card will accompany it, too.
How about: "To little Willie from his late Un·
cle Pete who just can't stand to say goodbye."
A veteran film director contends that ac·
tors who learn their scripts quickly also tend
to remember their lines
longer. The slow study,
who takes all day to
memorize a brief scene, is
likely .to foraet it ritht
.rter it's shot, says he.
U you Drefer some sort
of bird as a pet, you're
-most probably an -in-trovert. Or ao aay the stu-
dents of the mind.
More ridina saddlts
are sold along the East Coast than alone the
West Coast, bear ln mind. ll
MARTIN DaUNK
Q. "What's a 'Martin drunk'?"
A. That's No. 7 ln the seven states of
drunkenness. No. 1, ape drunk, when a man
makes a fool of himself. No. 21 lion drunk,
when a man wants to fight wtth anybody. No.
3, swine drunk, when a man gets knee-
walking, commode-bugging sick. No. 4, sleep
drunk, when a man puses out. No. 5, ioat
drunk, when a man becomes exceedingly
· romantic. No. 8, fox drunk, when a ma.Q thinks
he's crafty. And No. 7, Martin dnmkl when a man drinks himself sober. --
Q. "Isn't a woman with a college de1Tee
statistically less likely to 1et married?"
A. That's rtaht, but once married, she's
statistically more likely to stay that way.
Q. "How many difterett breeds ot dot
have a black tonaue?"
A. Only one, the chow.
TUESDAY'S TOP TV RECOMMENDATION
THE CRY OF A HURTING WORLD .••
"I'M HUNGRY!''
LOS ANOELES-A ~ripph11
tdc:\ 1~111 'P'~iaJ on the ,1Jb.ic:-:111r
r;-world hun11-.:r. which premieres
here: Tlic•J;ay ;at 7:00 p.11 .• on
KHJ·TV.Channtl9.rouldhc'"1he
mn•I ltnpnrl:aot TV 11r_cci1&I u(
1911 :· ~'Ord1n~ lo TV ~rwmil· hy An Lin~lc:ttcr. _
.End ed by the National
Educatie.i As•ociaUqn, "VUla
AJe,re" ls estatiJished as the
model Cot a new )(Ind of show
aimed at an esUmated five
million bllingual Y~&l'ters In
the UnitedSla~~weJI as UWr
monolingu,1 brQtbers and ais·
ten.
The show -its narne means
"Happy VWaae" -uses anima·
tion, Latino music and Spanish
and Engllsb-speaking actors to
teach lessons on subjects such as
energy and human relations.
Another Mildd
Ap~Made
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Richard Mudd ls makln1 9ne
more p~idential -.ppeal ln h1$
effort to re,,erse Ule mtUtary con·
vlction of hb grandfather, the
doctor who U'eatW.the broken leg
of John Wllkes Booth.
Mudd. n, who Jtas appealed to
several praldenti over a 50-year
petiod, wrote President Carter
that Samuef Alex!lnder Mudd
was wrqngJy convicted of Joining a plot to aasasslnate President.---.---.,,.._-..,......,-,--..,...;......--_,..;..;;;::;...;:; __ _
Lincolr\. ·
Mudd waa joined in bi$ appeal
by Rep. Paul Simon <D·Ill. ~. a
Lincoln biographer; and Sen.
Charles McC. Mathias Jr. <R·
Md.), who represents the stale
where the Civil War.era doctor
lived.
Ca1Ue or condominium,
find your dream home
Sundays
llAluun in the DAILY PILOT
....,
World Sw:hn
OerJD ny an . u11\a io tbe
JOO·m ter butterflr. Saturday
nl1ht. ent all out Jn b 1cin-
Ullatln1 performance tb&t hid
tbe ea~tlty erowd of 8.000 Oft
'" feet ehMrtq )) . OD molt d thew.,. n •• a race In which Uie el\•
tlre n 4 .... under ~llta for the Conner world r for
the first 400 met.era. For 900 met.en, all but two were 1Wl
under the 1tandard and when
th• flftal lap be•an, BroWl'l and
Nadadores teammate Jennlfer
Hooker were atlll under the
mark for 1,400 meters. At this
poi!tt. Browne was 7.52 seconds
in front of Hooker.
Browne was In fifth place
Detroit 1 • .;.c1es .
Remy's Fan Club
(A Cirl) Rewarded
It didn't have quite the drama o~ Babe Ruth calling a boepital
and promising to hit a home run
for a sick kid.
But for starry-eyed Ronna Sud-
de rth, Jerry Remy's three
singles, one of them the game-
wioner Sunday, meant as much
as a 500-foot home run.
The Ansels' captain singled
home 1'erry Humphrey in the
A"fleb Slate
AllO-..S011ICMll'C1'-41e l1ltl
Auo 21 Df>lro•l •I C•llfor"I• 7'2SP m.
AU9 U 0.tl'Oll •I Qllff°'"1• 7·?Sp m.
.&Iii!. JACiewl<lnd.tC.lffornl• ''"P.m.
bottom of the seventh ·with the
run that gave Frank Tanana and
the Angels a 3·2 vict-0ry over
Toronto.
It was Camera Day at
Anaheim Stadium Sunday .. Fans
were allowed on the field prior to the game to snap pictures or their
favorite players.
Remy is Ronna's favorke.
"She's the president of your
fan club," a writer informed Remy.
"She can't be," Remy
coutered. "I don 't have a fan
club."
"She may be the only one in the
club and it's her 13th birthday to-
day," said the writer. "How
Phillies .Stay Hot.
PHILADELPHIA-Ste-ye
Carlton improved his record to ~ 18·7 and the Philadelphia Phillies
won their 17th game in the last 18
Sunday by defeating the Houston
Astros at home, 1·3.
• Don Baylol' is. one of those
million dollar Anaels that club
owner Ge.rte Autry 10 1~nerously
and so foolishly. boulllt a few
. monthS ago wtien Ju~ tded to buy'
success fo~ hls floundering
franchise. ,
By what I uw S•nday at
Anaheim Stadium, Baylor la in·
deed worth a lh\llion bucks or-so.
That i1, he is if an ie&cream cone
sells for $2 mllllon.
There hew&$, presumablY ~un
nincbimseltln theoutfielddilrlni
about hitting a couple of home
runs for her? "
"I'll bit her a couple of home
runs ii she <:an wait until 1~.
Will a couple of singles do?"
They did nicely·/
Another Eastetn Division op·
ponent, Detroit, moves into
Anaheim Stadium tonight for a
two-game visit. Paul Harl· zell, 6-7, will pitch for the Angels
against Fernando Arroyo, 6·13.
The Angels had lost the first
two games of the series, includ-
ing an embarrassing S-4 margin Saturday night when they were
charged with five errors.
"We're disappointed about los-
ing the first two games," said
Remy. "We could have picked up
two games and been seven
games out now .
"We can't quit. We have to
keep playing and hoping. The
thing that hurts is we beat them
so badly in Toronto earlier ln the
week (a two-game sweep> and
then have trouble with them
here''
Toi.ONTO CAL.,OANIA
•It r II bl •It r II ltl
J .Scottlf S 0 f 0 Floreill 4 I I O
Slegqs21> ' I I 0 Remy:!b ' I J 1
8•11ortl l 0 l 0 80nd•l1 A 0 I I
8owll119 cf 2 O 0 0 Goodwin d' ' O I O
Veletrf ' 0 0 0 81Ylo<"Cf 2 0 0 0
Rllderdll l 1 1 I R.Torr9'd 0 0 O 0
Ault lb 1 0 0 I Cl\6fk 311 • 0 0 0 Ho-11311 • 0 I 0 Mulll ... kUJ 2 0 0 1
CeroM< • O O O 8rl9011b 2 o o o McK..,ss Ao 1 o Humlllwev< 4 1 1 o
Tot.ls 3' 1 7 1 Tol•ls JO J I J
Toro"to • 100 010 000 1
C.ll!omje 100 OI» IOI -a E -Mcic.vt. ,_ Oll'-Tol"Of'll02. L.09 -
'TM ... toa, c.!Homl• '· 28 -&on<h, ~•v.
M<ICey. HR -l'eder (IOI 58 -8•110f', J .Scoll. .. ., ......
8yrd IL.,2-7)
Murphy
hMMfW,tJ.n
T -t:!t. A.-11.41,
lfl' tf A •1t aa SO
V~6ll'' ti> I 0 0 I I
t IJ2Jt
after the ft'*' 100 meten but pWJed in front at the 200-meter t
mark and n vet looked back.
She. 1ot •• '1\,UCb a& 10.18 aeccndl abead Of the world rec·
orcl pace after eoo met.era &D4
)Jeld co to a mark ot l)etWtban
10 HCODda through the 1,800
mark. .. M.lasing making the team ha
the butterflr helped me
tonJar:bt," Browne said. "l wa.
really UpSet Saturday night." Was she tired at eonclusicm of
t.be raceT
"Mr, arms Gnd legs weren't
tired,' she said. ''But my chest
hurt and l bad some trouble
breathing.
''I thoupt during the race
that I mtaht bavo •on• out toe>
fist but I wun 't 1otn• to llow
down. But I didn't bow I bad
bro\en tho record until the race
wu ov• aOd I looked uP at tbf
board •.
0 Tbere really wasn't 11>uch
presaure on me to break the • world reeont I PU\ pnssur. on
in~ just ~ to 11\ato tbe
U .S. tam.
+'I •u confident ol myself
after tbe ..00 meters •nt!.~~riOi the last 500, 1 aaw ev~body
standinf up and heard them
cbeeting and thjt helped. 0 •
Dld she have a home pool ad·
vantage? ·
.. Knowing the walls and turns
helped a little,•.• abe said. But it
llnusual Tennis Stance
Jeff Borowiak uses an innovative l\\O-
point stance to return a shot from John
Alexander Sunday in the Canadian Open
tennis championships. Borowiak won. 6·4,
3-6. i -6, to advance to tonight's finals
a~ainst Jaime FilloL
Fans Off· Their Backs
Plunkett Rallies 49en Past IA.,. 23-14
SAN FRANCISCO IAP) -Jim
Plu~ turned ofC the boos --at
least those dir~t the San
Franciseo 4~' twtsS\bg attac
-and decf arecl \a~, "This 1ot
Lhe monkey off ouf-l>acJts. · ·
Plunkett threw two tou~wn
pUSei, including a picture·
p~rfect 48·yarJl bomb to Kenny
Harrison. and scoree on a five-
yard run Sunday, leading the
49ers to a 23·14 victory over lhe
Los Angeles Rams for San Fran·
c1sco's first victory of the Na-
tional Football League exhibition
season. lt was Ken Me.)!er's fir:st vie.·
tory as a pro bead coach and the
49ers' first ovet Los Angeles in
eight tries at Oandlestick Park,
U:teir home stadium since 1971.
Both teams are 1-~. three weeks
before the start of the 1S77
season.
""
The 49ei's fans, who were boo-
i111 an ineCfeQtive passing game
and the two missed placekicks by
Steve ~,Mayer in the lirst
half.1 cheerett heartily as t.rle"«>t-
f e reel 171)6\nts de-
fens• nuoba di.ti R s quaft#:back Joe amlth ·
seconi t\illf. "Last year, I would have ex·
peeled. lo be on my back all lhe
time, bUt not with th team,"
sajd Namath, the lormtr New
York Jets star who waa sacked
ftve times and completed just six
or l& passes for 80 yards in his
longest lf'al yet with the Rams.
Toucbdown passes by Pat
Haden and ..rookla.. V.ince Fer·
ragamo gave Los Angeles an ear·
ly 14·0 lead. The 49ers drove 71
yards and scored just before
halftime on Plunkett's one·yard
toss to Jim Obradovich.
Tom Wittum, the punter who
may see double duty lhls season
if Mike-Mayer can't improve bis
kicking, cut lbe LA lead to 14-9
NOrrh Cuts Through
Crazy Way ID Make a Living
with a SO-yard field goal in the
third quarter. J>lunkett's scoring
run sent the 49ers ahead late in
the period. The 49eCS totaled 200 yards
rushing while holding the Rams'
• runners to a>. Haden was sacked
twice, and the seven sacks sul~
fered by the Rams accounted for
73 lost yards. Namath. wbo had several
second-s tringers amohg hts
blockers, called the Gers' pass
rush "perhaps the best in the
game," knowihg it ranked No. l
in the NFL last year with 61
~acki..
•'J feel rusty mentally, learn-
ing a new system," he added.
Ther 34-year-old quarterback,
hoping for a new 8.{ld better foot-
ball li!e with the Rams, twice
bumped i,nto rookie runnint back
Jim Jod•t on handoff attempts
and concluded, "That's absurd."
I IMMltlft 1 7 O 0-1'
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LA -Miiier 1171 Pit• f!Wll ..... IDlm!IMY
lrklr) • LA -H. Ja<lrlllll Ctl) ~.,...,..........,.,.
(L~kldll SF~IOrll<ll OI tN1U '"""' "'11111Utt fl(klc
l•lfedl SF -FGWIUUm UOI
Sl"-"wnlullt lSl twl <Wtt1W11 •k1<)
$ .. -~ C .. ) PllA '""°" "'1Uftllett, Mlb-M•~ ,._....,,
,.,,..~
A11Mlff.y6"1S
PesJlft9 yWCIS
l'•l\lf'ft161'111$
Putet
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. .;
CIDCAGO <AP> -Manager
Tom Lasorda and the Los
Angeles Dodgers have no reason
in particular to be worried, what
with a 9"2 game lead in the-Na-
tional LeagJ.ae West. Still, Lasorda considered Sun·
day's 5·1 victory over lbe
Chicago Cubs a big one since tOe
second-place Cincinnati Reds
had already defeated the New
011rvr .. 1g1at
CMG•llft7•tS:3e
,
York Mets to sweep a four-game
series. "We came in here and we were
in firllt place by 12 games, .. said.
Lasorda. "We lost two games to the Cubs, and suddenly we lost
2"2 games in the standings. J told
the guys that if you win nobody
can gain anything on you unless
they play a doubleheader."
Nobody gained on the Dodgers
Sunday. Rick Rhoden hit a home
run fnd a pair of singles and up-
ped his record to 148 as the
Dodgers repeatedly blunted
would·be Cub rallies by turning
five double plays. . "Five double plays," sboutM
Lasorda in the clubhouse. "JlcY.
give Teddy Martinez credit...J{e
was in on all of them. Wb6~
tame he played.'' -:
Rhoden concurred. "I D~
all the biW.Og and double P.1811:I ~ou)d .;et ,because r didn t bOe . v~ry ~ stuff on the me>uoa;:I
dldn't have a good. fast ball Jl.pd
didn't get the brealcing ball add
change to work until about 1lte
fourth inning. . :r
"l can hit lhe ball if they INf.it
in there," continued Rhoden.
The Dodgers, who have~
limping at a lS.-16 pace since the
All-star break, also got a little
hitting from Ron Cey and Steve
Garvey. ~ey bad a doubTe anCl a
single, scored a run and drove in
another, ancl Garvey singled aPCi
scored a run. "We haveti't been getting any
hittlt\g from our fourth and f1ft.h
men in the lineup," said Lasorda.
"Once thet start hitting, it's ao-
ing lo make a blg difference'.~
pitching has been great.•• ..
LOSAHMLn •rt.Ill M.tr11ms21> u t o
"ustitltss s I 1 t
$1'1111111'1 t 1 1 ' c.t• • 11 t
G•,..,..,tlt • \ 1 O MonMyd , • 0 0
lewlf tot o lwllelt 1 •• 0
0.1 .. ( s 0. t
.. ~. • ti t
..... UNftp •• 0.
-0.J._•
C..r111Nflf
81KMw1b
.le.Mer.-sd
M-rf Ontlwt,..Jb
Trlllo2b
Miii-ide Clines ....
IAINIP
Brolllt'WP
GtOHlll\
Ex-Trojan, Vil.dug
Jim Vellone Dies
Fcrimr Nln Vlklq :.Jim
Vellone died Sunday et St.
'Olellb·• N p1tal iD ~· of Od&tdn•• d!Hale. ottlelala aald. •waal3S.tu:rda1.
V lme lltal'Nd at USC u aan ten.or 1Jne111an fw two )'Un
U\M' be wu Junior Coll All·
Ain ean at Cerritoa Cotlece. He
went an tojoln the 1Mt N&Llonal
ootbaU Lea1ue champion
Vltinp.
H1s nreer came to a halt in
1971 when he entered UCLA
Medical Center for 1ur1ery for
the cancerous diseue.
The disease was diagno~ed J usl
after he reported to traanlng
ump in um, after team physi·
c1ans noted a sudden weight l°" and sent him to a specialist.
Burial is Thursday at Queen of
Heaven Cemetery in Rowland
Heights following a 9:30 a.m.
CooUnued from Page Bl
"Maybe it's because you want
to win so bad you try to force'it.
force the birdies . force
something to happen. You can't
do that. You just have to let it
happen.
• 'li you get close to the lead
enough times, eventually 1t 's go-
ing to happen.
"I don't think I've been as con-
cerned with winning the last two
vears as l was at first," said
North, now 1n his fifth year of
tour activity. "Maybe it's a good
thing it took so loog."
F1NI K-end -y-IM109 5urWy In ll'le
S300,000 W.StcNst•r ~, Ct•ssl< on IN • • .oJ.
vard, lsYr7t) WfllchHte< Country CIUl>c~:
Andy Nortll. W0,000 .._~S.11-1n
Georoe Arc.Nr, ~.100 7~7-27'
Tom Wei"'°"'· u1.l00 11-n-?76,
AMY BMrl. SIUOO 1t_..,11,.._Jn
Geo roe l!lurns. SU..200 "-47·7~177
Tom w.uon, SI0.200 11.....,.11-111
L•-rd """'-• $10,2'00 6,_...70.72-271
Rod Curl,S7.UO • • 61-47·14-7~27'1
Mac MCl.A<ldon, '7,SJO 11-10-n-11<1
Cat.bullc chW'Clh Hrvic• ln Whit·
tier. A rosary i1 1ebeduled
Wedneldaynlchl. .,..., .............
LAS VEGAS -Gravoaide
funeral 1ervJce1 are I.lated here
Tuesday for former Cblca10
Cuba ahortatop William L .
Wortman.
Wortman, 84, dled Friday. He
played with the Cubs in the early
1900s .
After his baseball days,
Wortman was a postal worker.
V.S.D .. l11•tn
NICE, Fl'ance -American
men dominated the aprlnta and
hurdles Sunday night in an in·
tematiooal track and field meet.
Charles Foster, Steve Riddick,
Edwin Moeea and ·Maxie Parks
all won their event& at the Nlkaia
Games.
Riddick, in the 100 meters, was
the hardest pressed. He was
clocked in 10.30 seconds as he
beat Steve Willlama, 10.'8.
Riddick, in 20.38, also beat
Williams, 20.57, in the200.
Moses, the Olympic champion,
easily won the 400-meter hurdles
in49.05.
Foster won the 110 hurdles in
13.83, leading all the way. Parks
was a victor in the 400 tn 45.97.
Another American, Tom
McLean, won one of the meel's
two-lr>O meter races in 1:47.3,
beating Sam K.ipkurgat of Kenya
by three·tenths of a second. The
discus went to U.S. Olympic
champion Mac Wilkins, whose
219-5 beat out John Powell's
203-5.
Co.nlo• Ad.,ance
()On Pooley, S1 ,530 14-n-41-119 •
ROCHESTER, N.Y. -Steve
Hunt look advantage of some de-
fensive confusion to score the
winning goal from 18 yards away
in the Cosmos' 2·1 victory over
the Rochester Lancers Sunday in
the opener of a North American
Soccer League semifinal playoff
gam~.before 20,005.
Cl'lartes Coody, '7,SJO ., • ..,n-12-11'1
J•ck Nickl-. S1,il0 1t.1~11' Howard Twitty, S$,400 .,,.....,76-780
Bill Kratltr1, $5,400 ., .... 71.17 780
R1~ ~It. U,AOO 7141'"7t..,_190
Tom Klte,M,3SO' 11-61·n-1t-111
I.ff Elder,M.350 &•·71Ht·71-181
oan Slk••. M,350 11 .. 1-n-111
Mark Haves. M,3!0 10-11..,..n-111
JOllnnv Miiie<, '3,300 ~74-28'1
Jtm Wtecnen, '3,300 ..,.,.n-1.t-m eruu Uetzke, '3,300 1~10-m
JOlln Mallett..,. Sl.587 1i.1u1.11-m
Mlller8ar11er,SU17 ....,.,,.7S-2'3
Don Bl•, '2,,_7 ~71-71-213
B<>C>Golllbv,$2,"7 11-71-72.......,
Art Wall, '2,220 7"71·11·71-214
TomJenltln1. u .no ..,,._70-11-214
Eddie PMrce, sa.:no ... 74-71·11-214
Do11Jenuwy,SIM3 1......._n-m'
8ob Eutwood, $1,e.J J0.7,....7S-21S
Wayne Uvt, Sl.IU 10.1w.n-m
Gene llorell, st.-> 7J.70*7>-•s
IJC>btlyW-IM,Sl-3 ... , .. n ... -as
Bob 511Mrw, Sl.316 72-7Uf.72-• eener-iw.w.s1.-,,_,,..,_n-•
l. yn Lou. Sl,lM 11*74-71-M
Alan Tallie. St.• 1.-10-11-•
J C. wad. \Ul6 12*74-71-116
Ktrm1t Zarl"Y \1.llll 7S.70.71·70-216
H•le tn.in. '1.... 74 .... 73-70-• "-••Brown. '1.... 10·74-7,..._216
llldlaertord Win•
MILWAUKEE -Johnny
Rutherford inherited a huge lead
when Al Unser dropped out 27
laps from the finish, and the
popular Texan cruised to an easy
vict.ory in Sunday's Tony Bet-
tenhausen 200·mUe race for ln·
dianapolis cars.
Rutherford led the flnal 26 laps
en route to his second vict«y or I
the season at . the-one· mile
<Wisconsin state> Fairgrounds
Speedway. The victory earned
him close to $20,000 and 400 points
toward the national cham·
pionship, in which be is in second
place, more than 500 points
behind Tom Sneva.
Baseball Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
Boston
New York
Baltimore
Detroit
Cleveland
Milwaukee
Toronto
W L Pd GB
71 48 .597
72 50 .590 112
70 50 .583 l lf.z
s1 64 .4n ts
56 66 .459 16lf.z
SS 73 .430 201h
42 78 .350 291h
West Olvlllon
Kansas City 69 51 .575
Chicago 68 52 .567 . 1
Minnesota 70 S4 .565 1
Texas 68 53 .562 l ""-r
Angels 59 60 .496 9"'2
Seattle 50 76 .397 22
Oakland 44 · 76 .367 25
~.,·.1e-. Mlnnt~ t , 11411tlmcwe J
Mllw..,.._ 7-3, OICAt90 I 6
1CanusCltv•. tostan • Celllornld, Toronlo 2
C11Wlenll4.0Mll-t
Oet .... IS, SNtt'94
NIWYork2, Tu .. 1
TellaY'• Gamet 111-yor11 II'~ lHl et Cl\lc~ ta.mos 11-4),n
loalon CJNI• J.J) •I Ml.-..,.• CTllom • ti nl '°"''·~ l•lllrnore (ltetmer ':1-10) at IC.antH CUY CL'°l*'d 1t-10), n
Ml'-*-~Mn._., at TnH !Bl'l'MWft
H·t0 ,11 CIWllllM COerleftll •M 9flCI llllby ,.,., .t
SHtti.!Gel-O·Ufld~S.tO),t,I~
T ....... l~t0-10)41t0HNM~ll W>.111 OWtltt (~ .. ,,, et.C:.lltentl• (H4rtU!f
•1>,fl
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eu&Dtvlalon
W L Pct. GB
Philadelphia 76 45 .628
Pittsburgh 71 S3 .573 6~
Chicago 68 S3 .562 8
St. Louis • 68 SS .553 9
. Montreal :-,7 67 .4«> 20V.
New York 49 73 .402 27~
Wes& Division
Dodgen 74 49 .602
Cincinnati 65 S9 .524 9V.
Houstonr. 57 67 .460 17~
San Francisco 57 68 .456 18
San Diego SS 72 .433 21
Atlanta 43 79 .355 80~
5tMUy'1SC-
S.11 l'ranchGe s, ... ttsbur9'14
Clrcl,._.11 S, -Yortl I -l'HI 1jl, AtlafltaA
\.ft Mftlet S, CNU90 I s.n oi.;. 1, St. Louis O
Pl'lllldtlonl• 7, Houslotl l
TMIY'•--Sllt ,.,_,_ ,..,., •1·10> •• c11iu,. '"·
ReuedWllW) san DleOD <911,,., MS) et Pltt'*""'911 UteoMf' 1•n" · i>IJ1edttlltll1 t~ll.-alatAO.,e • ..__ • .,,
" MOfltNI ~It M) at Ctlltlilfllt C .. 11•
lllt!MfnMI," "-"°" <l'lk"*"9 124'> et Hft v..-ci..ctwy •tt>." Let MDeMe ,......, t-1) at Jt. LAlll• (Dllwl1
7..J),"
........
ALEJANDRO CASANAS (RIGHT FOREGROUND) ON THE WAY TO A 13.21 WORLD RECORD •.
World Records T11mble
To Cuban Spike StiWS
SOFIA, Bulgaria <AP) -
Cuba's Alberto Juantorena and
Alejandro Casanas, who broke
world records in the 800-meter
run and llO-meter hurdles Sun-
day night, say they are ready for
new records at the World Cup
meet in two weeks.
"I never know when I will
break a world record," Juan-
torena sald after he clocked
1:43.4 at the World University
· games, breaking bis old mark by
one-tenth or a second. "But my
first rival at this moment is Mike
Boil of Kenya, and I wlll meet
him al Ure World Cup in
Duesseldorf.''
Casanas led from the first hur-
dle as be rocketed to a 13.21·
second clocking in the 110-meter
event, breaking by
three·hundredtbs of a second
American Rod Mllburn's old
mark set at the 1972 Munich
Olympics.
The Spo~ts Plant
I s Still ProduCing
JONKOPING, Sweden CAP >
-The famous East German
"sports factory .. registered·
another smashing success Sun-
day, emerging as the No. 1 medal
winner at the end of the 14th
European · Championships in
swimming, diving, synchronized
swimming and water polo.
The East Germans, guided by
the broad·shouldered teenage
girls, went home with 16 gold, 11
silver and seven bronze medals
in 37 events and begin tuning up
for a dual meenrgatnst the Unlt-
ed States this weekend.
8ut it will be bard to win at
East Berlin against the Yankees.
The American men are stronger
than the East Germans and have
one more event than the women.
And that could be decisive.
The world's leading aquatic
nations met twice before and the
United States won beth Umee. -
In a meet that saw three world,
seven European, 47 cham-
pionship and 170 records broken,
West German freestyle swiuuner
Follmer 's Late Bid
Geu Second Place,
"In Duesseldorf, there will be
stronger competition and all my
opponents will be good, so ll 's
possible that in such a good race
-the equivalent of an Olympics
final -the world record could be
broken again," Casanas said.
The Sept. 2·4 World Cup com·
petition in the Rhine River city
will match teams representing
five continents and three na·
tional teams in men's and
women•s events.
,: W.--1 T•MI• . ~ .... u..-.. y Mene, Celt• ~ ... bHt la111 ... a • .......,. Austr;i..w. •-3. M .
wen.~ """'' -··-""""" l AlbertoJIMntorena, CUba, 1.0 .43 Cworld r.c·
ordl; 2. MllWM Savic, Yuoosrtvl1, l:0.61 J
Jose MareJo, France, 1.45.t; 4. Alberto
Gulmart"• Brazil. 1:4'.0; s. Or1191111 llvoCI<.
YU90SllYll, 1:4'.t. ... -.-~ I. Allon& 8r1Jdtnbedl ... IOlum, •s.1•: 2. Wjll ..
Smith, Unlondale, N. Y., O .S., J. '-Ytr•rd Podtn. PlolMd, 4S,J6; 4. ev•• JennlllQI, L.cK
l41199la, 4S '5; s. Lotter Krtee. Wett G«'!Mfty.
46.U . ..._.••Meten I. Tolb ,..,_, Woar1 .. l:S7.l; 2. TelylM
Kalt11altlM, SO•l•t UlllOft, l:st.•; J. Svetl•
Koln1. 811lo•rl•. t:st.f; •· ~II• L•"'"· ,__Mia. 1:,..0; s. 1!9-Terlr•. "-'•·
2 •1 ...... 1...-..M ........
t On111M R*tyll, Plolend, tt.16; 2. Tety.w
A111u1"'°"e• Soviet UnlOll. n .a: J, N•t•tt•
t.eb"9,,e, So•let U11lon, U .U ; A •.. iene
Nowa-.W•lt•. ltOINl<I, U,07; s. ltlltly Vin
Wot,.._.., Los~ 11"-___., .~
1 Aoutyn e,-,..nt, Ollceoe. n .10: 1. N•..,I•
Soltotrw•. Sovt« ""*'· st.ts: i. .. 11rtz Clldltte, <;uba. SUS; ._ Olrlst!M OlltmPIMCs, "'-•·
S3 "· s. AutJt ~. er1~. Q..,,
Mft'•Dtttn 1. Nlltotal Vlk11or, soviet union, 21•s· t .
Vladlmir R•v, Soviet UnlOn, 204.f\li; J Wolf9•"0
Werftllml.Wlde, Eflt Germany. 20:S-4; • Antonin ~. aectMllMlll'-:, 11tM1"'; t. Jlllllll
Mo4'rllOll, Q.tNI, -111';. ..... ........... ~
1. Hened St•lc, YU90tie•le, 2' f ... 3 lnc:lltt; 1.
G•Hoon CYbllllkl, ltol•lld.t 16·1; O•Yld
Glr•lt. Giiiie, ~n~: •· PhlllO!le oer'O<N. 1'rance.
2S-•-; S. Altl•l Ptr-•, Soviet Unlln, 2S-ll. . .....v!Mllt
I. Wl-'Y"-Kow•dewla, f>olafld1 ,. ._., 2V. l11<1tn; l. ~ SI-Siii, Potend, .. -.-.: S.
VlldlMlr Troftll'llrio, SOYlllt UnlOfl, t•ll'i; • WOlf!Jlllt RlllllWcR, WfS\ Otrm-nt. 17~; S.
Vlecslmlr kk'*-• Sevt.t Vlllcl\, 11.-, ___..,......._ ......
Al ... ~ OAe. ,, •• -14 _.r.
~Ola,_..._ tt.Ullr ..__ MTIM#tfl, (s.tlf
7.~1:1J.!.Hn lllm, PaMNI, ta.A; L.Yl.ttd!eslw
I( ·~ SIWlet ~ :.~::~Ii •rvt1t ..---"""' ...._,.._ tU4; S. GI auutrl, IQly, U;!!:__
.Men Fail
ln MV
SWinlfest
There were 10 American
women•• records establlahed in
Ute iDdlvidual eompetiUcn of the
NaUonal A.AU tona course awim-
mln• chimiP1onahlpa at Mlaaion
Viejo•• Marsuertte l\ecrea&iOQ
Center thJa weekend.
But the men failed to erase an
American standard, aeWl.nla for three meet marks.
How does this make the up-
comin1 meets with tbe East
Germana and Russia loolc from
an American standpoint?
"I t.binJc the men will be a lot
faster la Europe," Miasion Viejo
Nadadarea coach Mark Sehubert
said. ..Especially against the
Ruaalans. That's where tbe real
competition will come.
"In the heat or International
competltico. aomethln& a little
extra comes out. Those two
meets will show us where we
stand with the world.
"I feel we have a lot of work to
do to surpass the Europeans in
both the men's and women's
competition. And we better not relax between now and 1980
because they are coming ap all
theUme."
Tracy Caulkins set her third
American Tecord ofthe four·day
meet Sunday night by winning
the 200 individual medley in
2: 19.31.
Jack Babashorr of Fountain
Valley, finished second to South
Atrican .1ant;y Skinner's SO.a> vic-
tory in the 100 free to qualify for
the U.S. team that will compete
in East Germany and Russia.
Babasboff bad a Sl.4.5 but. he
wasn'tsatlsfied. ••r didn•t feel really good
tonight," he said ... I didn•t eat
rieht or something. Anyway, my
stomach hurt and my himstrings
weren 'tlooee.
"I swam faster this morning
(51.19) and I had a bad start and
bad turn tonight. But 1 wu able~
gel ijlereln time." .. Babu'hofr and Skinner were
teammates at the University or
Alabama and worked out
together ..
"He's the fastest ever:•
Babashofl said. "We worked out
together many limes. I kept him
honest and he beat me like he did tonight.··
Ao expected close race in the
men's 1,SOO·meter freestyle
didn't materialize. World record
holder Brian Ooodell of the
Nadadores. fell off a world re·
cord pace after 900 meters ud
went on to win by more tJlan 10
seconds.
··1 need someone to nee
against," Goodell said ot his
performance." w-·• 1GI met~• ,,...t, .. -1, Wlfldof 80911041, Oc.Hft. N.J S7.19. t. Sle~ b!M,
Ja<lt-'lte, 1'11. 57.74. a. Gen ~ v ... <e••n•I', 8 C., S7 ... A, Jiii Sterkel, H«lencle
Htltltb. 57. '7
MM'• 100 rnemr f'tfltvl~ -t, .1of<AY Sk,._.,.• Tusca1-. Al• & Sovlh Africa, .5111.AO. ~ Jedt
a1be1llofl, Fountain Valley, Sl.4S. 2, JI.,. M\Nl ... i .. f, 'Mletttl:lin1 Wts;., ,1.90, ••./II» .........
i..1 Mollti, si ••.
w-11·1 UOO '"'tM~ fl"9Htyl• -11 All~
lll'OWIW, ~-Mer, 16:Z..UO,-"',_.._ t.
Jennlter HOOkar, MllllOfl Viejo, 1':S4.6S. a.
Velerl43 1.,ff, 'M!Hlon VtlJo, 161'8.40. Klitt 811d<, Cllull'IOl1'e. 16:4UO. ~·s uoo ntt11tr f~e-1, art .. Olleden.
MIAllln V..Jo, fS;ta.'7, I. l!ci R~, Ml ... Vle-Jo, ISrt.4.24. .. Miki 8Nltr, Lot Altos. tJt1M7. 4.
81110'8'111\...,.,., T...._ tS:M.M. t.
WOMl!t'I *'° lndlvldlMI _..., -Tl'llC¥ Ceullllfll. Hlt.l'Ntllt; 1: tUf, All'W'lall recwd. etd
merit tilt_. 1Ce«11Y ~. S-lt. k..1.197s. 2.. HeflCY .......... .feekaclmJ~ ..............
LIM Oin'f1 Mllr•le, 2tlt.H. *'" • ~lllCMll .-..-'· taret 5-IM. O....,.,Ctt..S.C.J;Ol.,sL t, ..... Ye~Mlnteft
Vlllo.1:111.10, lo Kif flrMlll1clu., N°"'*" Oltla.
2: ....... Ina""'""-. s.,te ~2:ot.M.
..
-
DeMy ................. ~
C CATS PROWL IN QUEST OF LITTLE AMERICA'S CUP TROPHY
AuHlea' Nlchole• II Overhauls U.S. Patient Lady Ill At Stert
Watson Says
He's Quitting
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Citlnl his W heal\h and
the demorallsed atmotphere 1urround.lq h1I office;
ASIOllOI' Phillp Wat8on bu notlfled the ~ty
Board ~ SUperviaon that be will reslp at the end
of Ute year, a newspaper has reported.
After a stormy 15-yearcareer, marted recently
bf several lnvesU1atlons Into assessment prac· tices. Watson releued hla Jetter to the boa.rd and to
the Los Anieles Dally Journal, which published it in
today's edltlona.
"I do not have the physical, mental or em~
tional stamina to cope with tbe office in ita de-
moral1zed state, a condition which results from con-
tinuing and oneolnl investigations which have
created an atmosphere of fear and uncertainty.••
Waboo's letter said.
Prlaetl .._page Ellffed
TRACY <AP> -A five-day rampaie by mem·
, bers ct the Nuestra Famllia priaclD falll protesting
their pl1'ht at Deuel Vocatioml lnatil\lte here has
ended, prilon dflclals said. ·
Duty olflcer Lt. Larry .Hunter said Inmates
broke 0 about 1,000" windows in the cell blocks,
threw bum.Int objeds into the corridors and
P . L d m L d screan:aed and kicked OD cell doors almost nonstop I at1ent a y ea er ( state JfS.f.!i!...!.~:~,
Uttle Cup's Defentkr Beats Aussies bu~a ~~u~!s~sb~~~ · --. ·•. clothing, smashed lights and pulled out wiring dur-
Patient Lady II l , the American defender of the
Lillie America's Cup for C Class catamaran
~premacy, beat the Australian challenger
Nicholas ll by one minute and two seconds Sunday
to lake a 2-0 le1td 1n the best four of seven races for
the coveted kudos
peared to be well on her way to evening the series. ing the disturbance, doing damage ''in the
thousands of dollars." Hunter said Sunday.
The contest was closer than the time split in-
dicated as the lead changed three times during't.be
course of the 19'f:i mile race 1n light winds inside the
Los Angeles Harbor breakwater.
As far as the wmd was concerned, it became a
matter of from too much to too little before the race
got under way two hours and 20 minutes after the
scheduled start.
STRONG WINDS AND CONFUSED seas near
the harbor entrance buoy prompted the race com-
mitt~ to postpone the race for an hour ~ore Dun-c an MacLam, skipper of Patient Lady Ill requested
that the course be moved inside the breakwater.
By the time the marks were set on the alternate
course the wind had dwindled to a modest 10 knots
and further deteriorated to 4.6 knots ~uring the
course of the race.
Skipper Lindsay Cunningham gave his
Australidn rooters something to cheer about briefly
when he maneuvered Nicholas JI into a weather
position on Patient Lady 111 and got away to about a
boat length advantaee at the start.
Things were look in• even brighter for the·
Aussies at the weather mark when Nicholas ll
rounded "'3 seconds ahead of the def~er and ap-
BUT MacLAIN GOT PATIENT LADY moving
better on the reaching leg and overhauled the
challenger, rounding the mark five seconds ahead.
She increased the lead to 32 seconds at the reaching
mark.
Cunningham nursed a few bursts of speed out of
his charge on the ensumg windward lee and
rounded the mark about two seconds ahead.
But again, Patient Lady was able to sail faster
on the reaching lee and overhauled Nicholas II as
the "cats" approached the mark. On the leeward
leg Patient Lady increased the lead to 20 seconds.
CUNNINGHAM AGAIN GOT Nicholas U mov-
ing on the next windward leg and closed the gap to
about seven seconds at the mark. But with another
full lap to go, plus a wlndward-leeward·windward
round to the finish, MacLain managed to keep Pa·
tient Lady out front as the wind dwindled_ to about
five knots.
Patient Lady's elapsed time for the course was
three hours and 10 minutes. Time limit for th' race
was four hours.
Both crews Will have a rest day today and Will
resume compeUtJon Tuesday. The series will be de-
cided on the best four of seven races.
The Americans are determined to "keep the
cup" which they won for the first time last year in
Austraha. The Aussies came here claimine .. the
loan is up" and will try to foreclose between now
and next Spnday.
Aillnial Farm
€lass A VYC
Bogart Win_ner
Swedish Yacht
In Final.s .of Cup
AniqiaJ Farm, coskippere4 by
Mike Byrne and Bruce Hansen.
Voyagers Yacht Club, was the
Class A winner in VYC's Hum-
p b r e y Bogart Series for
P erformance Handicap Racine
Fleet Sunday.
Winner in the Midget Ocean
Raclng Fleet divislon for the
Laughlin Trophy was Andale,
sailed by Gordon Graham. South
Shore Yacht Club.
PHRF-A-1. A.rUmal Farm; 2,
Tbrillaeeker, Bill Filsinger.
BCYC; 3, DlffereQt Drummer,
Lewis Spruance, BCYC.
PHRF-B -1, Pu5sycat, John
Szalay, VYC; 2, Genesis, John Si-
ple, ~C; 3, Tiger Liily, Ron
Deacon, VYC.
MORF l, Andale; 2, Aloha
JI, Gtenn Rffd, SSYC.
NEWPOltT, R.l. (AP> -Sverige. with designer PeUe Pettenon
. at tbe helm. eliminated dlehard veteran Gretel 1J from the
America's CUp challenge SUnday and moved Into the finals against
aaother yacht from down under-the Australia.
Sverige, which· represents the first Swedish cbaltenge in the
cup's 126-year history. took Gretel II out of the challen&e by winninl
the final race In the best four-<>f-seven series by one minute, 58
seconds. 1he two yachts were tied at three victories apiece going intA>
Sund91's match. Skipper Gordoo Inaateof Gfietel U hadhoped tor llabt winds for
the last semifinal race and. partly got his wish. Tbe international
race committee was forced to delay the start for almost two houn
until ashore breeze ptcted up.
11IE !U·MILE RACE GOT under way shortly before 2 p.m.
Sunday in wiodl blowln8 out of the &Guth-southwest at 10 knots. Tbe
velocity lne:reased later 1n the afternoon to 13 knots, 4iminlshint
Gretal 11'1 chances. "Gretel does extremely 1ood in anytbl.nf below 12 bats,"
Ingate bad aaid Saturday. ''But anythlne above that. -we're really
scratcbinf. We feel that our best results will b« in '1mea of U11't
weather."
Gretel 11 cballensed OJlCe before. SOsina to In\re.Pid '·1in1970.
She is wood·Juilled like France I and France 11 while all the other U
met.en m the im ncea are aluminum.
I
•uo1oea ... t•' Studied
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The country's first
center for "holocaust., studies -a term ~sed for
Adolph Hitler's genocide policy -will be
established here at the new Yeshiva University.
The center will be named in honor of Simon
Wiesenthal, whose Jewish Documentation Center in
Vienna bas uncovered more than 1,000 Nazi war
criD)i.D.ala, includin& Adolph Eichmann.
lllGll Sleot t,. Ollleer
LOSANGELES CAP)-A33-year-oldHollywood
man who was killed by a police officer in what
police termed an accidental shooting remains un-
identified today, pending notlflcation of relatives.
A coroner's ofllce spokesman said Sunday that
t hey obtained the victim's identity through
fingerprints from a recent arrest.
SldPft9S KIU Girl, J 7
LOS ANGELES (AP> -A 17-year-old South
Los Angeles girl standln1 in front of a dJacotbeque
was killed by shot.a fired from a pusine car, police
said.
Thelma Stewart was ~tth friends early
Sunday morn1nt •beii the• occurred, police
said. Authorities arrested two men, qed 18 and 20
years, arid held them for questioning.
MENDOTA (AP)-Tbree related Fresno fish·
ermeo wer. swept away by the swift current in
Delta-Mendota Canal near here and drowned.
Fresno County 1berlff'a office reported. 1beJ' were fhhinf from a brtdre Wbtch bad no
rails when one fell into the water rushing by at an
estimilled 15-to 20-mUes per hour. Witnesses said
the other men leaped Into the water tryiq to save
the fint man, but they alsoaant.
The bodies of Georee Thomas Vauehn, 60, and
his son, Thomas Vau1hn. 30, were recovered.
Divers planned to continue searching today for the
body of Dennis Tate, 35, who was George Vaughn's
nephew.
DAILY PILOT
·Tonight's 'frV .
1 Hi~lights I
KHJ G s:oo -•·sacco and V~z\"itU.'
This 1971 movie drama depicts one of the
countrY's most famous murdertrlals.
CBSfJ9:00-.. AttackonTerror: the
FBI Versus the Ku Klux Klan.0 This TV;
movie with Wayne Rogers. Dabney
Coleman <the mayor of Fernwood >.
George Grizzard and Rip Torn is based·
on the slayings of three civil rights·
workers 1n Mississippi 1n 19".
NBC IJ 9:00 -· .. Shamas.·· Burt
Reynolds plays a hard-boiled private eye
in this 1973 movie with Dyann Cannon.
·John Ryan and Kevin Conway.
(TV DAILY LOG)
•en..-. ............. -9:00
.t
0 (d'!I CJ)) Cl) .. CC> (2tir)
"Altl4 • Terrr. "11 fll W ... Ult Ill ala 1119" Part I (drl) 7~
W1y11e Roa•rs. Oabnty Colema«.
Peter Strauss. Ed Fbndtrs. Georio
Grimtd. Rip Tom. Andrew Duw11.
Maity1 Mason. A true siOfY tl~m
lrom 1111 FBI IUu about three YOUftil
civd •itllh woi1.en who were m11r-
dered 111 Mmissippi m 1964. The
FBl's subStquent 1nwestic11Jon let tD
the conv1chon ot Wlell llJansmen.
G Ill> Cl) G 0 DC 111411
fMlt: ~ (21w) ....... (clr1)
'73-Burfl!ey!IOlds. ~an Clnn111t,
John llyln. Joe s.tos. Km11 C.-
Wl'f. A hard-llOSM iiri'Ate eye is
hired lo recowtr a caclle of slollll
diamonds. .. durtftc ais itwestip.
I 11111 he also •llCIMB I CGmPl • lary officer alld 1n 111 .. tloul
btacl 9111\et ttlleale tot fRllii.,
llardwft. • ...,., Grffflll sa..
Cl) TN Y'qiMH •'---.,.... aw.w-....r.._
' fl) Tiie ... tf IJattlWJ G On SdlM Slllw
-9:30-
10:00 .....
CJ) llitfie: '111ey MMe llt A CriU
d' (dfl) '39-John Garfield. a w.w £.,nce11sm ,...._ mo ... -..
-10:30-
CDGJ CDllews fD~MaT .. s-rr_. ~ea111d111 Open tliampioesllps ..
Conti"'tioi al yeshrday's •tdlcl "°'" l•onto, Glllada, wttll the fl1llll Ht sil!ita coaipetdlolt.
11:00 a ro • Cll <!U> CJJl ._ · U GCl><BIGe.._ •fS())) .... ...,.~ ....... caa~2111M
• lllca WMr.11.D. . ......,.....,~
-11!30-D C<I?I CJ>) Cl> IMie: <J:)
l.;M "Th, Good Lock Bomber ..
(t) ..,.... ....., s.. ... """"'
(drl) '73-0..W tlartlMI. U a>(J)•e-.,c.. (() .-: .... OnaW' ~)
'42-Btla lqvsi. JOMI SardlV. • Cl> 9 (8 (ll) Jhlirta ., s. rm 1J1111 lfw-...._.z.......:.;._ ........
STiie lOl<M ma.-au
112:00 .,..._,.,
• lloM: "0.d 1f tk ~
('"13) • •s-Mtlvyn Johns. ma.t11s.-11> llllM: "l Nie Mat" (fl'J) '62-£.Mrd Bitlns.
. -l2S---~ ••C.-...
1100
dOCl>eT-ac...,,..,
-~ • **!'a*' 'I 1•(dla}'!il).;. -.d Oldf, 81\at Dolllewy. •
-3:05-
• ltfle: ...... Olctiili: ... *"'(sci Ii} t~ cm-..
. Arllf9llOI
Leave
lJ1JAY8IWtlnJ1T
LOS ANGELES CAP>-Gary OWeu, the noted "L h-ln .. ~nclng alomoU1, hu hosted tbe
nlehWm• venlon of •'The Gona Show,'" But no
m9re. Ho'• blddin1 it adieu for frail fields ot en· deavor.
Such as a TV comedy pilot caDed "'The Gary
Ow Sex and Violence Family Hour.·• And a col-
l 1• text~ on radio. And a .. Lunatic's Book or World~.··whichbe'snowjustflniahlng.
TBE IA'ITER TOME, '.llE said, notes such
things as ''Hush O'Brian's birthstone is lint .. and
that "a family of mid1ets in San Francisco lived in
Karl Malden's nose for seven months.··
Next September, Owens will be a semiregular
in a new CBS Saturday 1'DOl'D1n& abow, ••wacko,··
which features slapstick skits,
buffonery and persiflase.
Tm not certain what I'm
domg, but I think I walk around
with a banana through my bead
and rebuke people, .. he said. "I -..,;. ______________ ,._;,. ___ think I'm the token rebuker on
A different
kind of ...
lw'~~~Jm~~ MOHDAT-IATIMDAY(fa ... K...,.. 12::10to-
lA MlllADA • ONLY IUNOAYI • HOUOAYI t2:a0 to a:Gll
<N• ~iiol'"'~2:--=~ • °'"" R'OllY OI A_...
ONIONqNl'"9 fWI
o..:;::;;;:;;';;;;..J .,..10 MAmN ~~
the show."
Chris Bearcle, producer of
the show and a veteran Owens
observer, elucidated. He said
Gary will appear in, say, ascene ow_aNS
where Batman and Robin are about to do battle with two bad guys.
THEN, HE. SAID, OWENS will announce that
"because this is the nonviolent network, we can't
show you the fight. But we can~~t you bear it.''
Then viewers will hear sounds C-: biff,. ham and
ouch. •
But they 'JI see a lovely pastoral scene of flying
birds.
lt may seem weird, but Mr. Owens, of Mitchell.
S.D., bas been that way ever since coming here
nearly 16 years ago to write and speak on the old
"Bullwinkle" show and be a disc jockey.
Owens, in radio 20 years, most of it at station
KMPC here, prefers not to think of himself as a disc
jockey. He calls himself a josh dickey. That's the
way his brainpan works.
JDS RADIO WORLD CONTAINS a few un·
usuals -rumored to be him in verbal mufti -such
as Clinton S. Feemisb the Third. Clinton tap dances
to the accompaniment of the daily weather
-forecast.
Another favorite is Earl C. Festoon. Owens
says that worthy currently ••is deputy scapegoat to
the station manager. Earl"s been around since the
early·days of silent radio. . . • ·
Owens, interviewed at Hollywood's famed Grey
Chapeaux because the Brown Derby was being
blocked. said, professorially, he's about a year
away from finishing hls college textbook on radio.
U . F'RWY1MANCHHT'Pf
.. ~ll. fR~~'7, OR, 5XJ
...,,. Dl9"' ....
....... wmt DICI(
.li.INrCNJ
''OUTLAW
BLUESU ....
.z:oo.J:IW:H 7;45-t:4t
"MEW, Yoi.J M!WtYOU ..
aR-.u;?:GI IPCN
9:45 .
87 tbeAaaoelt.Ced p,..
1bo f ollowiilf are Billboard's bot record hits for
the w endlq August %1 as they •ppeu in tbls ·-.~P.P.!if.!11~ week'a luuool Billboard mqulne. • 11
BOT SINGLES
1. BEST OF MY' LOVE -Emotions <Colwn; bla) .---..--.-.,.--=.-....-. ...... -...,..;.;.. ........ ~1p._....::::==:w...,.
ZIJUSTWANTTOBEVOUREVERYTHING
-Andy Glbb CllSO)
3. Your Love Hu Lifted Me BIGBER AND
IDGHER-Rita Coolidge <A&M> ,
4. EASY -Commodores (Motown>
5.HANDYMAN-JtmesTaylor<Columbia>
6. WHATCHA GO~ DO? -Pablo Cruise <A&M)
7. JUsr A SONG BEFORE l GO -crotby;
Stllls & Nash (Atlantic)
&.FLOATON -Floalers (ABC)
9. DONT STOP -Fleetwoocl Mac <Wun.er Bros.)
10. STRAWBERRY LE'ITER 23 -Brothers
Johnsoo <A&M>
TOPLPS
1. FLEETWOOD MAC -Rwnors (Warner Bros.)
2. CROSBY, STILLS & NASH-CSN <Atlantic)
3. Sf AR WAl&S Soundtnck-(20th Centl.lr7>
-4. JAMES TA YLOR-JT (Columbia> 5. BARBRA ST!lEISAND ~ Superman
<Columbia)
~ EASY USTENING
}.SUNFLOWER-GlenCampbell (Capitol>
2. HANDY MAN -James Taylor <Columbia)
. 3:· DON'T WORRY. BABY -B.J. Thomas <MCA). .
4. MY HEART BELONGS TO ME -Barbra ·Streisand (Columbia)
5. JUsr A SONG BEFORE I GO -Crosy. Stills
& Nash (Atlantic>
COUNTRY SINGLES
1. DON'T IT MAKE MY BROWN EYES BLUE
-Crystal Gale <United Artists> ,
2. RAMBLING FEVER -WHEN MY BLUE
MOON TURNS TO GOLD AGAIN -Merle Hag-
gard (MCA>
3. WAY DOWN BASH -PLEDGING MY
LOVE -El vis Presley <RCA>
4. ROLIJNG WITH THE FLOW -Charlie
·Rich (Eplc>
5. S\JNFLOWER-GleoC&tnpbell <Capitol>
SOUL SINGLF.S
l.FLOATON-TbeF1oaters CABC>
2. DEVIL'S GUN -C.J. & Company <West· bound) .
3. STRAWBERRY LETTER -Brothers Johnson (A&M) ,
4. LA SUNSHINE-War <.Uflited Artists) •
5. LET'S CLEAN UP ,.HE GHETTO -
Philadelphia International All Stars ~hiladelpbia
International) •
The Sophistle·Eights
took second place. Mem-
bers of this group a.re
Helen Loomis. Jan Hunt,
.Rosa1 Philpot. Marilyn
Hammers. Jo Ramirez.
Cheryl L11dolph. Pat
Carlson and Jane Sloop.
•NEW YORK, NEW YORK"' (PG)
•--rHE WA. Y WE WERE" (PG)
. ..FANT ASIA" CGJ
.. MARCH OR DIE" (PG) .
-rHE EAGLE HAS LANDED" (PG)
•oNE ON ONE" (PG).
"SMOKEY & THE BANDIT" ,.
~MOONSHINE COUNTY EXPRESS. (PGJ'tl
·rHE LAST REMAKE OF BEAU GEST~ ... '-" . ..61TE THE BULLET" (PG) . 1•1
"THE SPY WHO LOVED ME" ,,,
''VIGILANTE FORCE" (PG)
HHERBIE GOES TO MONTE CARLO·
"'NEVER A DULL MOMENT' (G) INQAL CHILDMH'a l'NCeS
"OTHER SIOEOFMIONIGHT"
"EXORCIST ll:THE HERETIC" (R)
NYSE COMPOSITE
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MolieyMuHed . .
Economy Stin. Debme
87 JORN CUNNIFF AP..._,.....
It eouods so cQld, dull and abstract but lt is really so bot.
and vol tile, and lmntena ly Important to ~veryone. Ulll de.
bateovertbemoney supply.
Every Ume the Fed attempts to •xpand or contract the
amount ol money clrculaUna ln the economy it lives rlse to
the arcument over whether it Js eood or bad for jobs. ht-com • the stock market a.Dd tile 1eneral weUare.
AND 'ftlE D£BATE 8BKMS endless, because the Fed
ls alwQt watching the money stock, and alwan watcblnc
the nte GI inflation, wb1cb it co111iders t.o be the moat danaeroua enemy or proeperity.
But this bn't the whole story. There is the debate also
over tho Independence of the Fed and its chairman, Arthur
F . Bu.ms, and over ill lnterpreta,tion of economic events,
which many~rttlc sayt bu been taulty time and a1ain.
Should the Fed be more responsive ~ ;
to <;oniress , ln theory anyway, more reaponatve to the Amerkan people via
Conereas? Or should It reUaiOu.sly avoid
any tamperln1 by Conaress as an
economic crime a1alnlt tbepeople?
Bums has attempted to keep a lofty
distance between .himself and the •
le1l1laUve body, condescending to
testify each month, 1eemlnr to P•tronlze
members of the House and Senate bank-
ing committees because, well, politics is
part of the Job.
DURING THESE SESSIONS HE HAS the majesty and
mystery or an oracle speaking from the mountain -lectur· ini. jidvising, admonishing -putting forth what be sees to
be self·evldent truths, mainly that infiatlon is Lucifer lurk·
tng.
The often doctrinaire posture in itself appears to goad
some members of the House and Senate banking commit•
tees, who consider themselves just as concerned and
qualified lo deal with inflalior\ as the unflappable. pipe.
smoking Burns.
But there is a larger issue. Congressmen sometimes
wonder how one man can exert such power over the
economy, even to the point of opposing the President. They
worry over what appear to be subjective decisions by the
Fed.
THERE IS ANOTHER APSECI' to the debate, as thtre
always is. Should the Fed lose its degree of independence,
and instead become a vehicle for congressional or presid~
UaJ policy? Would inflation then be a bigser threat?
Conceding the dangers, critics still ask: Who de·
termines whether the Fed Is interpretin& events correctly?
Who disciplines it for wrong decisions? Who, in fact.. really
knows why the Fed acts as it does? .
Now that the Fed is tightening up a bit, forcing up soroe
basic interest rates, the debate ls reheatina. The Fed. say
the critics, has again stepped on the brakes too soon.
"THE FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD bas once again.
as in mid·1975 and mid·1976, premature@ impaired the rate
of economic recovery by raising the cost of credit," claims
one critic. John Wright, of Wright Investors· Service.
Wright isn't alone in that criticism. Numerous informed
critics have argued the Fed is too nervous about inflation.
acting to slow What It feels is an overheated economy even
when millions are jobless and factories are operauonc well
below capacity.
Bums, himself, has indicated Ulat such a mistake might.
have been made in the past couple of years, the cons~
quence being to stall the recovery from recession, and pro-
long unemployment and underacllvity.
Sk>ck Market Nets '
Scattered Gains
NEW YORK (AP> -The stock market showed some
scattered gains today with glamor issues leading the up.
tum.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, which bad
fallen nearly 60 points in four weeks, was up 3.81 at861.29.
Galnets and losers. w.ere about evely balaQCed in the
broad tally of New York Stock Exchange-USlecT1BUes:
~en traced the upswing to internal market forces
rather Ulan any P•rticular news development.
Oow••nArer~•
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The spirit of Marlboro
in a low tar cigarette.
\ •
'
Mondly, August 22, 1tn 61
In the Long
Run, Feat
\
Sets Record
There are world records for
just about everything nowadays
-ice cube tossing, lap sitting,
Monopoly playing.
But this summer nine women
set a record for something so in-
novative that it's probably never
been done before.
They ran, relay fashion, all the
way across the United States.
From coast to coast. Clear from
Long Beach to Philadelphia.
It took 42 days and two hours,
from June 18 to July 30, to run the
3,000 miles.
"We covered e.very singht inch
and we didn't cheat once. We
were really strong about that,"
• said Kristen Uhler, the only
Orange County woman who
participated. The others were
from Long Beach and Santa
Barbara.
The cross-country team, called
the Coast Hers, ranged in aee
froml7to28.
They made the trip to set the
record, to promote women's
sports and to raise money for
muscular dystrophy.
"Muscular dy s trophy
sponsored us, then we went out
and got sponsors on our own.
Friends, relatives, students and
people in the neighborhood
donated money. Our aoal was to
raise $20,000/' explained Ms.
Uhler.
THE CROSS-COUNTRY run
was coordinated by Martie
Louno, a high school track
coach from Long Beach. Sbe ar-
ransed the accommodations and
did the detail work.
The event was a tremendous
experience, Indicated Ms. Uhler,
21· year-old 1974 graduate of
Newport Harbor High School. In
the fall, she will be a senior at the
University of California.' Santa
Barbara.
"Running is a unique way to
travel because you get a feel for
the people. I'd Jove to run
through Europe," she said.
Barefoot, slim and tanned,
clad in blue jogging shorts and
tank top, Ms. Ohler relaxed in
Kristen Uhler ran with women"s relay team from coast to coast.
her parents' Corona del Mar
home and reminisced about the
trip. .
· They did it in relays, she ex-
plained. "In the morning we set
two girls .out together -one run·
ning and another one on a bike.
After lOmiles, they swltched."
Meanwhile, the motor home
they used as living quarters went
20 miles ahead and dropped off
another pair.
"WE KEPT OVERLAPPING
to average about 90 miles a day
Eacil or us ran about 10 miles a
day , so m e tim es mor e,
sometimes less," she said.
At night, they camped out or
slept in some fairly unlikely
places -an old schoolhou.e,
churches, gyms, attics.
"We stayed in some bizarre
places. like lhe psychiatric wine
of a hospital in Kansas." They
By CHERYL ROMO . °' .. Oefty l"fNiC ltd
I
also managed a number of nights
in motels -all at no charge ..-
where they could shOwer after
long, hot days.
"In Missouri, it was un·
believably humid. Th~ tar on the
highway was so hot that it melted
onto our shoes.
"In the d~ert we ~ad to wet a
scarf and put i&on o"'bead, then
wear a visor and sun g\asses. We
looked li~e a buncb of zombies
running down the road," she re·
called.
The biggest danger was the
possibility or getting blown off
the highway by huge gusts of
wind from large semi-trucks.
AND THE llARJ>EST thing
was r..trYing t.O keep nt~e women
toget.h'lr and keep harmony. It
was sometimes an emotional
str.UO."
Ms. Uhler believes that Ions
distance runners "tend to be in·
dividuallstic," and beinf eooped
up ln an 18-foot motor home often
presented problems.
Sbe is quick to add, thoqh,
that "they are a great group of
womeo. We really got to know
our weaknesses and stnngths °" this trip.
"I made some cood life-long
friends because we went through
so many thing!s toeetber."
Each woman kept a journal,
she revealed, producing a do1-
eared yellow !Jpiral notebook. "l
kept everything -how I felt, bow
my runs went, what I saw."
She cited Pennsylvania as the
most beautiful state A!\d she not·
ed that Columbia, o., "(~ a
hiehllgbt. "We CQt the !Ull.ttett· menl at a reception where we
met Uae .tnaydr and Police chlet. :•
AMERICANA'S reactions
'These people were called primitives
when, in fact, they were not,' says
anthropologist Terry Malone.
were "amusing," she said. "Peo.
ple were-always bonkin& and
waving. It gave us encouraae..
ment." '
The women ate a lot of peanut
butter sandwiches.. but many
restaurants proYided f\'-ee meals.
The motor hOme and gasoline
also were dooated tor the cro.sa.
country nm. I
When they reach* Philadelphia, their destinati ,
the women "ran up the steps th t
Rocky ran up in the movie • • •
the art museum." They ~ greeted in the city by dlgnitari •
and were interviewed f
television. I
And so the first women's crosS·
country team to run act'06S the
United states set a world record
they hope. Will be included ill the
Gutnness Book. •
They flew home -any~
wi1liDI to run it both ways? ) ;.
DAILY PILOT
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My
f sband and I recently had our
ird child and sent announce·
ents to relatives and friends out
town. We wanted to inform
! Chinese
Antique
Display
A $500,000 coll~tion of
authentic Chinese antiques
will be on display in
c Costa Mesa beginning
f Friday. In the grouping are
cache pots, beaker vases,
bowls, jars and boxes of
porcelain, metal, bronze
and cloisonne as well as
costumes, jewelry, wood
objects, scrolls and paint·
in gs.
The collection was as-
sembled by business ex·
ecutive Michael Srednick,
who personally worked in
the antique warehouses of
Peking and Shanghai.
Monda , A uat t2, 1171
them ol th• n w addlOon. It wu
notto1 t1ttu. I cl.Id W1 wltb the first two
chlldr and never tbouabt a
thltt1 bout It.
Tho problem: W• havo re·
celv.cl toveral check• for the new
bab1 and don't know what to do.
We ft funny ca1bln• tbem but lf
we dOn't th•y will notice It In
their b atatementi. Also. we
think it would be uncraclous to
return t.be cbecb. , ·
We appreciate their
thouahtfulneu Ud I plan tO aend lhw·vou notes to one aDd all.. You've always aaid it la not prop..
er to print "no ei.ftl pleue" on
an announcement or invuauon.
Please advise. -0 . CITY
DILEMMA
DEAR DIL: MayM I'm some
klnd ol nut bDt I'm opposed to
sendla« anDOQDeemeDb ol any
klnd. To me tbey look Wte ln·
voices. Unleu you C!an invite
friends to aomelhlnJ, skip IL
The relatives knew you were
expecting. Your close friends
also knew -even tboee wbo Uve
oat ol town. (I assume you 1Cay In
touch by phone or maU.)
Anyone who receives checks
,
after tla 111 Milt ~emeata
1houl• aot· b• llll'ptlted, nor
should U..1 ....Ura Chem. U yoca
ban a foilrtb bab1, dear, and you
waat ou.t-ol·tow1a lltenda to koow. u.e Bell Ttlephoae or dNP a line
and avoldfmuredllemmu.
DEAR ANN LANDERS:
Recently my motber·ln·faw
spent the nlgbt with us. The next ~mini •be auetested to me that my husband and I
soundproof our bedroom. She
made no bones about the nt>lses
she heard in the 1uest room,
which is right nexi to our
bedroom.
I was so embarrassed, I "It
like crawlint under the floor. Do
you believe lt was in good taste to
bring the subject up? If she Jell
she should mention it, don't you
think she could have said
something to my husband in·
stead ol me? -AWFULLY E)J·
BARR.AS.5ED
DEAR EM: You should be
1rateful your motber·ln·law had
the courage to broacll the •ub·
Ject. It was probably extremely
dlfflcuU. So please doa't find
fault with her for doing so. Just
~e bet advice.
"The People's Republic:
of China," Srednlck said.
"is a sleepina giant whose
rare antiques and artifacts
have created new aware·
ness of the Chinese culture
here in the United States."'
·'The Chinese employed
ornament in theii: works
not only to please the eye
but to tlevate the rnind. As
a resl,\lt, each of the pieces
Michael Srednick with antiques from
People's Republic of China.
Scorpio:
TVESDAY,AUGU8T!3
By SYDNEY OMA&&
A&IES (March 21·
April 19): If you don't
know in which d.lreet.lon'
to 10· -wait, listen, ob·
serve. Postpone journey,
U possible -and plauai·
ble. Cycle ii aucb that
directions, in.structions
tend to be carbled.
TAURUS <Aprll 20·
Pday · 20): Money p~es-.
sure is temporary.
Good newa ls on hori&on.
i.ow you aenH lt · -
1loom wlll be chased.
.,ey ls to nde witb tld&.
GBllllNI <Ma, 2t-.June io>: Acrtlvlty accented In
on display is to be studied
if one is to solve the mys.
J.ique of the antiquel" he
added.
It's Time
is within reach, but not
quite available. Yeu
need to do more
bome"(ork, additional
checking -be
analytical, ask ques·
tlona, be willing to make
aome significant
changes.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22>:
Your romantic nature ts·
fuUilted. You f"l warm,
loving and loved. Accent
on speculation, children,
entertainment. creative
endeavors. Yo1.1 get ••rave notice1t ••
ivtaGO <Aue. 23--Sept.
22 > : Land, property, 1ecurity -these are em·
pbNlzed, You want to
to
The collection will be on
display at Bullock's, South
Coast Plua, through-s.pt-;-
4.
Streamline
AQUARIUS <Jan.
20· Feb. 18): Friendly
persuasion may be insuf·
ficlent. Mount facts. figures -get presenta·
lion in order. Wish
comes true.
PISCES <Feb. 19·
Marcb20>: You may feel
confident -It~ 1s to re-
inforce plans, renew con·
tacts, 1atn older in-
divi ltl as al} a&-. Ac·
cent on at'tb'<>l"ity.
standing in commpnlty.
If Aqut 28nt Is yoar
blrtbelly, you ue acUve,
attractive, a ntie teacher
.,...., reJ)Ortet -}'OU are
analyUul, creative,
capable of wlnnilai your
way throu&,h the written
word. ~
By DENNIS McLEUAN
Of tllt o.llY l>IMt l\eff
' Coty Award·wlnnlng men's clothing de-
signer Sal Cesaranl sazed at the mannequins
dressed in fall sports coats, vests and trousers
with ab "equestrianfJalr." . ·
"The you.n.ger fOYS are getting back to time-
less clothing," he commented, adding the classic
look m~ longevity, which is a quality men
look-for in clotbea. • .
"Anythlna cl8$Slc bas a tendency to remain
longer than three or four seasoas. · ·
Cesarani. considered one ol the rising stars
tn the men's wear tndustry, was visltina the
men's department at Robinson's Newport, which
is featuring bis fall line.
The line of suits and sport coats features an
array of "pure fabrics:" tweeds, flannels, cor-
duroy and worsteds.
For Cesarani. the son of immlarant Italian
tailors, "clothes are really the greate;lit form of
communication we have. They tell othel°s who we
are by what we wear.'' .
The 37·year-old designer, who launched his
own firm in the summer or 1.976 and receind the
Coty men's award that fall, says his aim is to de·
sign clothes that make men feel good with what
they're wearing.
"Feeling comfortable ls something I really
strive tor," h~ says. "And giving them colors
they can r•late to, which ls very important."
Adds the designer, who bell eves there has
been a resurgence toward Americans dressing
again:" "They <his clothes) make the consumer
feel f.ood and that be can really win the world. Thats what I'm trying to say.··
Untike women1s clothing styles, which
change from season to seaaon, changes in men's
clothing are slight, such as the widening or nar·
rowing of lapels, be says.
And while there are certain things to look for
each season regarding quality, he says, "the con-
cept of men's wear bas never been to talk about
wberethetrend ls goina."
He adds that only about three percent of men
really buy for fashion 'a sake. "The rest bu)' out
of necesaily, which ls sad.·· ·
SENIOR CITIZENS
A navy chalk stripe double
breasted suit by Cesarani, is
·worn with a bow tie.
'
.I • Repairs • Mountings • Chains • Cutlng
~ MacTavish flll· Goldsmith, Inc.
833-3048
833-SOM
4250 Scott Dr., Newport Beach
"W~ Buy 81d Gold ahd Silver"
.•Findings • Remounting •Stones
s!!f!tr •.
A119-18-25
SALUTES THE .
WOMEN
TheyWOllT'lte
IUCJht To Vote bt
A19at2S, 19ZO
SltDlll•'t""'
........... OWll
~, ~ .. ~A·Z·BOY
St ...... -.
\ ,.,_~
WHITE1 S LA·Z·BOY .
NH
DBJVHY
MISSION VIEJO
(off • .,.., Phi , ............ "" tw.Wedl...tli .. Ml"'-... ,...., .... ....,,
495-5902
.......... w.10.5
Fri. 10.7
COSTA MESA
NEWPORT
.J6f L 17th S1net
IWnt..tS.-..1 '--'--•-•law ,_.._..,. ..........
642-8657 ....,,,.,.._IM
flrt. 10.7 W. 10.S
ormon-crolllf om
Ladies Sportswear
31% OFF
t
MAlltMADUK by lraCI Ancltraon
"You have had plenty! Positively no
seconds'"
FUNKY WtNKERBEAN
WE CAu..ED "IHI& NellNG
utTH ~ ~~ 501f!Al WE
COOLD 015C05S ~E &.lGIN&
srruA110~ IN Ra.ATIO~ 10 OOR
E£.HOOL f
TANK McNAMARA
MOON MULLINS
TODAY'S CIDISIDID PVIZLI
5 c 0 0 p p 0 R I( S H IA 11
0 H A RA [ 8 0 N ,. 0 l (
l A T E R II I 0 I tu l [ s
£11 ". s l I T r A R I N A s [ AS • It £ N T
AIS A II £ T " ( N• [ s T 0 P
V A N I S H l 0 S ( • I 0 ,
A R u " • E RA T 0 . " A I l s [ •• T R 0 T A V i R s [
T £ AS c . 0 E s p C R A T E
I S L C II E T S
T R If H T 0 • s C R £• IR [ 0
HA II 'G IA II I T A !l A I ~I E
A l I E A C llR A l 0 II C
N C [ 0 N E " s II I T C II
•
' ' I I •
•
by Tom Batiuk
ANO OF COL.l~E O.E EXPECT
'THE SAA\€ l<JNO Ck 8€HAVI~ F~ nlE 5TUDEN15 f
by Jeff Miiiar and BUI Hinds
DOOLEY'S WORLD
DR.SMOCK
I
;
0
You ReAW...Y SHOUl..P 'f'AKS A VACA"T"ION,
POC"T'OR .I
MOTLEY'S CREW
11'5 NICE TO !<'NOW lHAf
Ml/ BROTHER l&nlP CC»\E
ALL THE WA'/ FRO\\
NEEDLES TO 8E IN ~Ii WEOOlN6
OF COURSE. IF I KNOW I
SPIKE, Mf1) 60 AROUND
THE~LD FORA
Fm ROOT BfER!
,
I
by Roger BrHfield
by George Lemont
by Templeton and Forman
# : ••
p..,.
11ubllllled Oranoe Co.nt Delly Ptlot, A119. u. u, :io. Sept.'· 1t11 u~1
PUBUC NOTICE
PVBUC NOTICE
P11BUC NOTICE
PUBLIC NO'nCS
PU8UC NOTICB ·
I
·PUiiic NOTICE
i9 N INY ....,_,,o unus ~
JHfst 2JA!U
6 VNSC•AMllt AiOVt iHfm j YO GU AN$Wf~ I I I I I I
SCRAM-tETS ANSWERS IN CLASS 5100
Ml~ MotlC:ti
Alt rMl estate advctlMd • mum ~·la .ua.:.
Jed to \be hdenl "•"' l!outhll ~ct of ltll wblcb ~ I& .IJ.MCll to
advertl.1• ••aa1 •re•
lenae.1. llmlt.atlon1 or c!*rimmat.Jon bana oa
....-. color, n1llloCa. an, ·
Cit a.tkmal ortam. OI' ... tntention to make au
tRXb ~erence, Umlta·
UOO, ordtacrimln••toG. ..
niJs DC'JWIJ)lpel' wUI D0t
knowl•f LY accept IDY
advert alna for real
estate which la lo viola·
UonoUbelaw.
tto.MtfWW. . ••••••••••••••••••••••• GtMNI 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
UMUMl'l'IO
POSSlllUTllS
snualJ abaltered on a ~c. tbll4 brbome =utrr:.:1:-:::;
cWp lot provldea HCUN rear yud. ~c 'tree.
front" rear. AD envtron• ment t.al1ored foe your
f&Dll\y. m,900.
AXB .. VA
Low down pa1meist 6
amatt monthly P•Y· menta, provide an ex·
c:ellenl cban~ t.o buY tbls
4 br .home "make $$$on . yo u r 1 n v e a t m e ttt •
Popular nelghborbood,
xlnL scboola. Home va· cant-eeUer a:utoua. v ........ ..,
·s4M'46
LAKIFORIST
LAKIVl&W
$97,500
Panoramic vtew of
aparldl.nl lake and rustle
clubhouae from llvlo1
room and eocktall pat.lo otr mast« auit.e. 4 Twin sbed bedrooms and! full b1tb1. Warm inviting
covered patio boats
private luxury Jacuui.
. Premium &rade flqor
and window coverings
throughout. For appoint·
ment. call!MS:2-'1788.
• KE:Y -
PRICE REDUCm
'1'hia beautiful apaclout Mesa del Mar home haa been reduHd $2200. Features ( bedtc)oms, 2
batbs, brealtfaat bar.
buse family dlnlog, bi&
corner lot. freshly palni-
e d, beautifully l,Mdscapecl & 2 patiol. Aaklni $13,700.
~
COATS o. WALLACE
REAL ESTATE. INC
at•ALD IA Y IXCJTIM8fT
A ·w ll1tln1 In t:xcltln& Em«:rald B~! Altractlvti 3 bf:droom split Jt:vt:l
with 2400 eq ft of UnlquE: Uvlng; naw
carp«:ts. tntt:re:ttin1 wood floors. 2
fl"'1placts. a akyllghl ln tht: sunny
f amUy room and prortisslonal dti·
corat or touche1 t:vt:rywht:rts. Thts
horm: is custom built utilizing lath &
plaster construction and has an at·
tractivt shingltd extenor
And now a word about Emerald Bay:
3 POOls. 6 ttinnis courts. a jacuzzi. lh
mUes ot privatt tM:ach~. 2 park·likE:
p layirounds. an active community as-
sociation and gated entrance.
T~~ E~rald Bay way of life is worth
btlhons; the home is only $325,000!
U~lf)UI: tf()~l:i
REAL TORS'. 675-6000
V Y SCARC TRIPLEX
Thtsre ar• only a few of thes& In
Coronn del Mar, nd rar61Y for sale:
Wb think thla le1al triPlt!x. on R·3 land, South fo lhe bwy., ta a rare find!
Xlnt value at $225,000
759-0811
eoozlG .... rot l002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
LI DO ISLE home. 3 BR., 2 ba., street
to street lot. Brick patio. $196,000
PE~INSULA home. 3 bdrms. 3 ba .•
all amenities. Lovely neighborhood, a
few ~teps from the beach. $195,000 2443 East Coast Highway. Corona del Mar
also tn MPScl Verde, ar 546 5990 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
1002 GeMt'el 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
2STORY·4 IDRM
J.\ l Bciy~1d1• D11v1 · N B 67':J 6161
MESA DELMAR
$79,900
Large 4 bedroom with
beautifully added family t 002 GeMrol room on a quiet street 1n
MAIN Costa Mesa. The owner •••Y•O••U•R••
0
• ·:.;:,;:·:•R•K••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• lsrfa~iousVAto sell ant dh!s
,,... "' ,.. "" LAMD LAMD o enng terms a t 16
Ge.rat
ATTRACTION An active family will •3 Parcela, R·2 lot, low price. CALL quickly have years of enjoyment 751 3191
.... fH~
l t,l\li HI \I l'
. I. •' •.., \ ~1~ ! Coo\I ~·• Ct•OQ kl 1111
PLUS POOL
Winding stairs to maste1
suite. New plush carpels
throughout. Walk to
be~ch from this de
corater garden home
Priced al SH.950 Co•
quick sale. Call 963-6767
In thls attractive East Desert Hot Springs, •. · C XtraSharpSingleStory BluH's condo. Overlook· $7500. SELE T
2 Br Condo with shake ~-~• •R·l, Lake Arrowhead, PROPERTIES -----------1 roof, gas fireplace, patio, rng an exp .. ~ve tree· view, $19,000 ----=------•
Cln.Nl119·11SIUN10Mf• I' [,f1NNll pool •-1·a .. u1~1·. 3 Years lined greenbelt· 2 lovuly 00 A Calif C't "' ~ ... bdrms • a covered dc.~k •l cres. · 'y, TIRED OF THE new. Beautiful park·hke lo view your park $1200 acre.
setting near So. Cst beautiful stepsaver 646-3928.eves673·4577 SAMEOLD
Plala. Call now to see! kitchen. double garage· STORY?
MEWl'ORT HACH
OCEAN VIEW
CONDO
$113,900 $58,900 close to pools & best of all We've got all the e:i.
HEWPOllT HGTS. -~1 IL a vt:ty mode:il price· call elusive listings you could 2 BR + formal dining --------rm. 2~:a b BA, bit~. brick us for details. 646-7171 ever want. From duplex AREA • a-rJ11 rH • 1HUN10 ""· r ---------1 es to 70 units with every
On quiet tree shaded !• IJ11jH ijl --------• type of financing availa ~~~t~~g~~/°i!'~!~ ~ ANYTIME _ .·. ,J\IJ;H;;\t PREFERRED ~~·1Jtas~oo~~ a~~ryo~~~
\railer. BUI area with•--------.· --·-••1:1s~ South ol Hlghwa)" Cdl\t be glad you did. Call to
lots or prl\'acy Ju<;t re· duplex. 3 Bedrms and l day
duced S20.soo! 646-nu bed.rm. Room to build a C•S40-3666
NEWPORT HGHTS
$20,000 PRICE
REDUCTION
13eauUful exec. home. ;ii--------• bdrms. 3 baths pool & COROMA DEL MAR
Jucunl. Was $165.000. Ocean side of hwy., cfe-
now only $145,000 lt ghlfully charming 2
Owners have already BR. house + near new 4
moved and will carry a BR. apt + 4 car garage.
2nd TD. You ca n $185,000!
purchase with less than Balboa lay Prop.
20'l. down. Owner anx-Realtors
ious Call!>46·2313 * 675-7060 *
('lo'HI ~ 9 •ti~ I 14 >II/ f. I
[~1uam1 ---.. AMTUCKET
HACH EST ATE
2 STY · S BR
$86.000
Tree hnod entry. Huge
hv rm. w\lh cnckhnit
fireplace & wall of glass
view of grounds. Large
country kitchen. Dining
rm. Separate wing for
secluded guest Ruites.
sweeping stairs lo
hideaway master suite &
ch ildren's quarters
HWTY! Ju.st listed. Won't
last long! 963· 7881
Of(N 1119 •II S ,UN IOU N><P [•;11111
CHARMING
CDMDUPLEX
SUMMERTIME. ..
... is pool time In this 3
bedroom. llke new horne
with fresh paint. plush
carpetrng and best or all
an l8x36 heated and filtered pool. Located in
College Park Full price
1.& 179,900. CALL 556-2660.
t;:SELECT
I PROPERTIES
BAA
BAA
Sheep. Chickens. Few
Restrictions on this 1'2
Acre Country Home.
REDCARPe"1' 15H202
EASY
lo love th.is charming 3
be<lrm home. one yr new
VETS
••FREE••
VA C0c.wt1elln9 &
Info. Ser•lu
FrH Apprai1al1
Free List of VA
HomninO.C.
Orange co·s. Largest
VA Home Broker
Call 24 Hrs.
675-2626
WORLD REAL EST I\ TE
Upt:raded crpts & --------'--
drapes . Prof.
landscaped. Easy maint.
yard. ~Uer 1s motivat·
ed. $79,500 with VA
large add1t1onal unit
O\'ers1ied lot SlSS,000
64-1 7270 Wltela11
, RlAL E\TATI
associated
fl U .. • {" 1 0 t f\ \ t' W"_,
' • ~' I I :• • ' ,
frplc. & upcraded
carpet1nc & dr p s.
Overs1ied dbl gar w. elec
opener.
Tennis1 Pool;SaunaiJac
J.AC:OIS REAL TY
675-6670
lalaoa Ptttinsula I 007 •••••••••••••••••••••••
--~ -HERITA GE
. Ht: /\I ff'•HS
·.
DANA ,
POINT
493-8812
l
•
,
IAMCH 1141.TY
111·2000
••••••••••••••••••••••• CHARM:rNG fl~OOO
Will contJd~ VA tenn• , , I 4 ACllS'
oa thla 2 bedroom beaut.1 View pareet •n1idence,
.oso with evtt)'thlng. Coay No. S.D. CoubtJ', on
red hill _
~·52·.''JOO ftteplaco. heavy lbak4 p•vemen\ ff water. root,• 2 cat ~an,e, roo~ Zoned ~ ~ a er es.
New WQOClbrl • 'BR. 3 IMMACUL.ATI ~()lie of .. bett forRV. You UlOVeiL aao.ooo.; '2$.000. down.
Ba, z 1t1 detached. cul· a BR. z BA. boree Laauna .... ~ to-BERTHA HENRY ( 'I 1 • ) 1 5 1 • ' 8 z 7 •
-...c.OWDer.M7·3440 Hilla w/lr1 pool, I•• ~: SllS,OOO. T-215 n...~!'"T0~-4l2' _ (714,..300.1eves. I.......,.--~ I 041 B1tQ • nr. rf.a&. 1115,000. • r ~ ~ .& • I :=:=:".......... Real while In escrow. I •4lowa.1 SO.PERB Waterfront rlfl._!.J!'1 1300
al'l1llMIHT ICSO~°ftoDZKY WGrtdwr6tlrOl&tr1 eatat.e. 4500 aq. ft .-••••••••-••••••••••
I 2000+ Sfl)FT
will m.ake you comforta·
ble fn this apaciou.a 4
HAV&e , "'"8111.Rttr. 67MS4S w/apectacul&r 180 deg. Nat Pies. Daiia.Pnt. All 2
B l bt. •-I O y 0 -----------• ooean, canyon view. 294!llt Ir padol fn>lc. S225 000 •---------r C • a ry -. · IUTVllWI down. owe baluce • .., -.!. . ..; ~ --------
.. bedroom home plus a
DEN 1n beautiful
GREENTREE of Irvine.
Ccnvenient to parks. pool
and sboppin&. Good
freeway accesses.
~~Jori~"~ Saddkb&~Valley.adult IASDLUFF S3'1,,000.492-9S3S orMOooo· . ICHAllA8,UNITS UDO ISLE. 2 Br 2 Ba,
downtown 41 t.be ocean. aoJy C'OOdo; 3 bdrms .• 2 FIXER LOV&Y lU. ZIA Cai 1 c'=' So. Redondo sec\lrity ~-~-Dec. SSOO mo.
New', ed • d -·~ ..... •-able 'l'L..,_ B l t t •-• -bid",_. bat--.__._ ~·-• r ecora\e • ~· _..,._ 7--,., r ng your pa o .. ~.sq n .• oceu vle•, Propll'tr 1'00 on1y• ...,.... _... • ., .... --------
Great for weekends or llB,850 . T .L.C. for tbls larae 5 BR Jndspd & rocd yd, f1r to •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• · T.... 3190
retirement. Owner will priced to sell. celling brick rrplc, short W.SI OFFICE HOWLETT REALTY ...................... . nMORi:saiAL TY . 'G·~2~2 R..C. TAYLOR co. w~ to bch & abopplnc. COMMlllCIAL (213) 371-4418 $40-4257 VllW-&.UXUIY * 494-1057. * rc:rnswmm 955-0350 198.S00.498-116Taft5PM IMMJmlAL TRIPUXES LOCATION
\: 1 u FIXER UPPat •Clrft~· SH9,000 Each FOi LIA.SI . u111.11nue -Rl!.&.IEST ..... TE 48edroom.2balb,ocean CostaMesi ....•. 39cft. AU2BR,l~Bath Executiveestatenestled
"..., ~ A & hill view. Centrally From$l0to-2500eq.ft: Projectedannuallncome in lbe hllls of Tustin. Cedar & glass home •--HI_:_. 1052 SADDLEBACKS Creative Ii prof. co wlU located tn quiet raiden-Sl0.140-846-1351 overlooking Newport.
nesUed ln the tr"' on a ~ ,,...... With commanding view 5000 be opening ofc's In ti al are a or S a n •llledlcaJ· Rea.I Estate Mart · Beach & Cat.alina. 1,000 huge lot. Many fruit .. ••••••••••••••••••••• or''"'-beautiful moun· Npt.. Bch & C.M: areaa. Clemente. Pricediorim· Newpo... 7Scft Square Feet, exquisitely b 115162LalL.A--~-.. aa W b l I ,. ........ . FOURPLEX, Cost. f l bed •-d trees, gaze o. 3 .. _.._ tain range in Aegean e ave open ngs or medlatesaleat$89,500. Froin800to900sq.ft. u~a, ..... H,...,H .... pltal, W'll9 ... ecorated RANCH IEALn Bedroom. 2 bath Laguita NICJllll Jlelghta. this z story n e w o r e x p e r • ~ •a.ca -...._ ... fort.be~ cUsoimlnat·
551·2000 hideaway• with many 4'S.OOll former .. model" home salespersons & mgra who AMCHOIAal *'1'wo840aq.ft. at.ores· all 2 br, llSS,000. A1ent inlt.aates. ArchltAktural----------1 eleeant features . 3Br 28 Uv f 1 only 3 years old has 4 are interested in a ~ Cst8wy,Newport55Cfl. _Ml-'_Nn _______ ly destined for both in· UHl~~:•u f:~i:t:~~~v:i~.' din'rm,a1t1t. ::ko.1~ r:r'!!~f°Jf~i;g b:O~!: l::"~fe~~ by calling f714J 4t6-7711 ~~wu teunt lnduat. FOURPUX !~~~
Ex c it in I Ed l n burg $219.SOO. ~r1c:c~!~: 8;sU~'. fireplace & master suite 63 I ·0400 SHOR~• -s 2265 sq.ft. ea ... $4.53/mo: ~cellent rent.al area~ master a ult e • 3
model lownhome '"'/3 • .,,...Hom balcony. Pool + tennis1---------.--.rr ltW.ESTATIRS miles f~ beach. AU 2 Bedrooms. The quiet
bdnna. ramlly rm. 2~ MYSTIC HILLS ...,,.. e. courts.s1zs,ooo. Ocea view, 4 br, 2 ba, INVISTMEMl'DIY bedroom & fenced aeclullonclfyourooebalf
baths. Huge backyard UK>OegreeYiew. Well de-By owner. Beaut. pvt. • kar 1ar, acp dlo'g rm, 75~1705 • badcyard, Gteat bey at acre home/retreat is
w/brick paUo&llreplt. signed 2 bedroom, den, 2 area townhcuue. Ocean •n··-~1 . WANTED· enclpaUo, sus.ooo. Ope Sl34,000. automaUcaltY 'irrigated Waterfront Homes bath home Oil a quiet Cul· view. 3 br, 2 frplcs, pvt • ..... . • Sunday 1·5 2729 Vla Mon c ....... ~Town· and will be maintained
63l·l400 de-sac street. Low main· beach, tennla, pool. PICICIP HOME ON WATER t.eclto,Ageot.648-7414 .._..... 1700 1£1:~ by es per lea ce d
tenanceyard.. Sl99,QOO. $126,000. 834·3333 or f11 anerti-, w/40' plus, boat dock. 591.._ ....................... • gardnera. This home Nu Turtlerock Highlands 494.3320 -r752•1920 Linda Isle, Dover Shores Place needs only lovely china,
Plan 3 w/4 Bdrma, lam IEST IUY MOO OUAl\St. NI UACH or?? Private party only. Capistrano I 071 ILUFFS Pl CO•& tllfa , your personal wardrobe
rm. Avail Aug. $165,000. . L P ,,... TRADE 644-1452. •••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Br ~Ba. with fireplace, r7S2•"20 & nice qualified people.
Call 752--0617 Own/ Agt. in. agune. · res""&J.C?US FOR SMALLER Newport IHdl I 0691--------•1 CASITAS, spacious 4br, end uni& Arilta Plu. Va· 14M GUMUt auat Principals only, Broker. n~Hgbbor~od. quali~y ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2YJba, crpts, cl.rps, blW, cut Ava1L.ble now I -714-731·5161 DEEllFl&D con.atruction. Ceram1c HOME ~ACREHoraeranchw/2 frplc, patio, gar, com· 5107• 900• 432 Vista --------
&KWOODPLAH tll~, Spanish ~e floors, Lovely 4 bedroom, 2~ UDOISUGEM houses, workshop & munity rec racllltles. Suerl8.0peal)aily LehforS• 2200 Homes~
• Sgl. story 3 br, 2 ba, ram. pr1me condition. 4 ba1b North view home. 3Br +mother in law unit bam. Back Bey area on $76,900. Ownr. 493-59~0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....... ••••••••••••••••
rm. atrium, 2 frplcs., ~,lamily~m.3 Larcedenwlthwetbar&r Agtsownhome.673--0289 ~n~0~1a~~~OS!:::~ 493-7790 VACAMTLOT G1111al 3202
1 patio. Nr. pool. s hort ~ • S"per view. 'fireplace. OutstandJna . UDO ISi.e. 833-0119&546-0013 NEARLAJCE CDM ••••••••••••••••••••••• walk to schls. & park. ,GOO. : view. Vacant, move·ln ._ Bed HOMEFIMDEIS S8'1,500. Shown by appt. before school. $142,000. Larae custom bome un· 4 room, H~ balb, ln· !late S~flWS Hiil lot Occupy 9/15. Owner DUPLIX ~ der construction. eludes fruit ttee$, Up. (714)64.5·995Q .... w/maentn~t ocean & caurornla'sl•riest
, 673-2959eve1. Walkinlt' dlatance to ~ 5304,000! offer. Broker DOVER SHORIS gradedcarpeta"drapes, Fubioa bland views. Rent.alService ---------•Shaw's Cove. Well main· ~ cooperation S.5 540-3383 IEAUTIFULLY ap• electric garage door o..ltXH/ ' Perfect for your custom Oi>enSevenDays
UNIVERSITYPAIU( tained 2 bedroom unit ~ · ' · C:'.ttcl 4 b•drm, 2 opener.A..aklngS15,~. CMlhsa 1100 home. $160.PO<>L,saunabeach
Chancellor. 4 Br 2~ Ba, with ocean view. ~(~Q~_.._,,~ BLUFFS AMCHOIA •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• R.C TAYLORCO S315.3 Br,2sty,1)00l lge Fam Rm. walk to Sl75 000 .. :,,., hofm. Sep. dWag .. MEW DUPLUES ' • S175. BALBOA STUDIO shops, pools, tennis, • · Fantastic Greenbelt nn, for•al Uv '"'• IMYISTMINTS ~~Pl • 955-0350 $165.0otta&e,freeutU.
, on.ly,5Sl..Q310peoSun. OtUJawr , ________ schls. & shopping ctr. gorag•, la11d1pd & br uolts. From $134,500. San Clemente. Hseplana patio,2s'lyHB
Sll5,!15o.Byowner.Prlnc ~ 4--. ~~· ~ls~\!~mw:ck1·t~ brick fplc:, 2 car 1714t4tt-7711 prideofowners~=-~rt'J4 ForSaleOceanviewlotln ~:~U:::,~f~lc +pool,
~Woodbridge by owner; ~ Parkside Uvlng you can 2191 Vista Entrada , sprfftldft'tcl. lest buy 5-taAna 1010 CaUBkr.5S7..mO for btfl 2500 sq ft home, $210.ZBr.klds&pets
new 3 Bd, 2ba, frplc. EAL ESTATE easily walk to a private S147,000.64CM369 in tills •xcl•sl•• ••••••••••••••••••··~·· DUPLEXCdM approved by Coastal S180.1Br.utilfree
· S89,500. 642-2978 an 3:30 12$0 S.Cocast Hwy. = park & pool from thls i--------•I a e I 9 h b o r It o o d , SPANtSH 3 IDIM 2nl;l ~ bNDd new, .both ~:J:: ~:!pie~~ $195. $-Pleaser
•M-8536 ~douaAcbeerfu13Br, PRIVACY $146,500. OWMt' wt SH,900 , Ubil.12Br,1Ba,3cargar, Ready for lmmed coo· ~~~erdeE.C~ REDUCED -----~---• zlf'townholJle~,500. hetpflncMce • Red tile roqr. SP.aruah ocean view from.2nd GD-structioD. Only S4S ooo
$7 000 · 41R-31ATHS . -DOLPHINU. Quahty, custom built. 3 Wortc1W14'.lrok flreplace.Surinyk1tcben. it.Calloow,pd~tosell (71'>498-lW7aJUPM • ~.oazz
• Vle'W! Lge. Uv. rm. bas r C:..494-Mll bedrm home. With 673-4545 tn ~0~~:00..!.iV:~r:'. Sll0,000.49'1-351&. o.tofCa•tl'f .._....._. 3206 '·
You must aee this IC)vely beam ceil., frpl, walls of ---------• beamed ceill.ngs in living ~~~~~~~~~! Decor~tor touch th1'uouL RAREOPPOR'l'UNl¥Y ~ 2550 ...................... .
• free~3 bdrm., 2 ~amleadtopalio&lat.b and master bedrm,:: Greenbelts, playcround Duples3yni$1Dl.OOO ...... ••••••••••••••••• 4.BR,2BA.newSpantype,
• t>..1 mbThri e Model ln boua4; lam. rm.; bltn. CUSTOM AREA formal dining rm, HAUOI VU "communit" pool too! Call C .. .,. ... 10 •cRES Ire tp, 5650 7J'l,y. Lora
Vil edl. Ids home la ldtch., laundry area. A 4 BR, 2 BA, redwood brea.lda.st rm, lanai, in· p.a.11911 ..... 0 Onl.,._900 ,.~ ... , •• .....,. MARJORlENIELSEN, ff ~11 -.1 VanceRlti',673-4062. own by a ecorator !& ~.Sl.28,500 patio, P<>Ol sized lot. auiatcd and air condi· ....._... J -. ,,.. ..... -~· Realtor 644-7181 as we ' 5 m nutes to ----------'has been totally redone liJls\looRealty 494·0731 t.ioned. Big 'Al acre lot. In 4Br, 2l~Ba, ram rm, din tacular townhome. CaU shopping & county Corw.,M• 3222
and upgraded. Call today -"---'""----'-----• View. $129,500. • Cliff Haven. Beautiful rm' Prof Ind• c Pd• MW 752-1700 airport. Price reduced ••••••••••••••••••••••• foranappaintment. Rq<tybymld~pt,3~r& treee. R~ for a pool. jacuzzi,. Owner at re· CWN•11t•1rs1UNJOl(HIW MOOO. Now only $21,000
-· . siliiijt. 2ba. Ocean li ca-MONARCH Feelaod. S167,500. ducecl price of $184,900. OQ, ter11)1, can Mr. Frey
l\YOJl vo.-szu,soo. SUMMIT 6H-6221 at~34S6
Gf,6'129_ RoyMcC.... BenHlnkleR.E. --------1 ~ -1tR-;-dtnr; -s-pllc. Redtor flTOM'iiWM~~IVE>TCLIFF3br,2ba OCEANVIEWROM'E courtyard. 2 car ear., CottaMeaoS4I 729 F,R .. pal.lb. Walk to--------'Br 2 Ba, form. din. Lee pool, clbhse, jacuzd.1 ____ ... __ .__ sbopS/sct\oota. $149,000. Plenty of Sunsltlne lo•end
pbtio, comtyard w /Vene· 599,000. Owner 846-01001841-6219 Ullit townhouse. For sale
tlan founta•n, newly IOMD RIALTY LIDO·ST lo ST •Br, WATER FR 0 NT by owner. 3 Br 1~ Ba, lndaepd 6 deconted. ll l·t• I I •~Ba. FR. Den, rec rm, • asldng$86,000. 751·3Tlll> A_v.Il hnmed .. ·owner pool ' w/help i'e!i,oanc~. 2705 ---------• • Jacunl. 'yrs new, ''fS23 ~l>a!IRVllfl ~pie nwa. BY owner O'Wner m.rm ---------..1.~orCM-99154
"·
~dl1~-.ll urq
• t
j; _
Q.OSE TO WATER-In
Old Corona del Mar. 2 Bedroom. QO children, DO
pets. "25/moalb.
t
<'VU. lood .,.. •.
llDSJPITSOI( Kld1 " pet OK. UH.
!:/Side 2 tlr h ... 1ar. S34S ll8J.458T. A1ent, no fee.
mo MMl4I orMG-711GS 2 Br 1 "'i Ba condo. patio,
QUIET AREA pool" tmnll. avl Sept.1. --------•
Quntey feelio1, cae to s:m. 882-0678 3 BR, 2 ba. Clbble.
1>ll'klbdl: .s:w>ln>o. Own1--------m1 poolAoewcpt. -~-__ O.or_SC.S._5005_. _A....:ll-=---' Laree 3 ~ 2 Bath $475. 548G'to& '
Qarm1'1i • ooiy 3 br, 1 Wl1b fenced ya.rd. Close · • Qiarmlnc 2 br, 1~ ba
ba bomt. Front & back to park ft acbool. Mll.,_YlefO 3267 bome, fplc, DW,
Attention college stu·
dents! 3 Br house, with lg
yard, as Js. S300/mo. 1.12
• Del Mar Mon-Fri • !542-5634
3 BR, 2 ba + fam rm.
Fncd.. yard. No children or pets, avl 9/1, $400 mo.
Call aft ePM 548·9877
3 Br, 2 ba, College Park,
grdnr, $500. mo. 844-'nMO,
ext. LS days w 640..ooos
•••••••••••••••••••••••
(Close lb Dana Point
MOO/mo. ••••••••••••••"•••-•• e p t • , d r p a • n 1 c e
STBtS TO IEACH .
IBR.2ba s.uc>yrly
2 Br, den, 2ba $600
... "
___ ...;...;;;...._ ____ 1 l·BrYearly S400
SPECIALRATES ~~_... ........... _..:..;....:....~--~-.:.--~~~~
Foraummer rentals
associated
RP<'• f i», W! -~I fOPS
I' ,,,, t I' I• ii"i,j
. .
1Mil1 ........ 4450 --· .... --··--4 D&UllOFC'S
Od. rm.. Hat 25. an
peneltd, am. wble In re-
ar. 1 or 21f'. leue. Lake ---..;;.;;~~-----" Forest area. Kent• 4000 Haddns.
~
t~u rr Wh1t i: H1'.tlt~r
.•'l{) I Nt'Wi"''' Blvc! N B
r''l ..,,~ 46~(1
4500 .......................
Restaurant
F\tU LIQ. LIC. ·seats 105.
Excel.lent parting • good
lease, large dance floor •
On Pacific CoutUW)'.
I •• • • •
in 1111
SERVICE DIRECTORY ....... . ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
Carpet ahn •llt lay )'0\&11 Specl1tl1tn1·Bulldln1 Oa.rdenln•Servlct: clean Want a REALLY CLEAN I yrs exper, tree eti, alsd WORlCOUARANTJ:ED HOMl!SAVERS. Plumb-C£1lA.MtC TILE. Ntw or
or mln•· aepeln " AR'h o.Jan PJanea for up • h1ultn1. weekly MOUSE? Call Gln~ham l~I material evaU, laterior/'Extr. Free t1t. lid •Hntlnr ai air COi\· remOdel. Ftte .. t.. 1ml
<'louinl &ool Ouar worll Add. ,..ldeoce apt. Xlnt maintenance. Reason•· .Qlrl. ~ett"5-51!3 clean up fr ref'a. J ay exp.~ d.liloaln1. l"'ree eat, $1 Jo .. welcome. SM·utl
at. blU9" 1avtni1. rr.e rell. N, B. 841-1.571 bleratet, rree •Umatea. MMOa or 995-2115 hr. Hon eat " rellable alU t,IU-ll40 .ua..r •:ao aalc for Ron. Wlndow1/Hous~leanJn1 . Knowlu Palntlnlt. aervlce. BofA. M/C OK.1---------....;...;.,_ _______ ,R,J . Huttman •Son, Gen 6'$-0SllorMll-4117 Goodratea -OOO(lret. MMauy Int/!xt , commercial 751·3150 Tn.~
Sh•mJICIO • atum cleao. Coou.Cualon\Alt•Add, Cal1Mr.~yno63S·T711 ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• apte, residential & •••-•••••••••••••••••• JlitlrelM:t Me. II Color brltht en: wbt pallo•t.. oablDetl, BeUable Expr Japanese Brickwork. Small jobs. mobllehomet.831-lUO DRAINSCLEARED Removtn1, trlmmln1 •
.... CM. 'I.Mii ret1, QIU tt mlD bleub. ClHn formic a. New conaL R• Oardefter. Reasonable, IMMACULATE CLEAN· Newport, Cceta Mesa • PROM $3.50 topplQl, ft nt, llc/lM. Jn 1LC.t•ced~J4S.10'1 Uv .. dl.nrm,taaUJU.Av1 Is comm. OU·UH/ tr.eeat.MS-5230Mllto. lNO. You DESERVE the Irvlne.87J.311hves. Quality WorkL. l.nt /ext . Call'l51-6942 areaHyn.ToayMS-5124 _ _....;. __ ~._...._ _ _.rm *".50, couch a10, chr ~lUc Bonded BEST. 759-0377 Ava. rm, 115. Kell. Free ..... Aim• •• ' YARDREJUVENATlON Mo i119 elt.D Ul~ Removal•, ll'liatmJn •• ••••-••••••• .... ••••• &t ~u: ~ ~~: 0.-1•~ Cltan·upa, commercial Allce'sHouaecleanlng. • .. :................... ao. "'"":r:;-~""~'f · irunlnt. rr... elt. IJC'd. • paorr:cr Your Uoroe, Do work myaelf. R•f• ....................... " residential. Call Bob Reas, reUable, refs. Own ENERGY CRISIS? lllt/f!xtdQfftdable, reu.>JHMnt lulb'blluredta4a6 omc., ek. ae.-tatel 611·~101. Sewint le Dealriin at It's MS-92.88M·Falter'5pm. trans.842·720TorM6-41171 One call does lt all. Clty fttJeeetlmate.CallJA¥ .......................... _______ _
for fr eat ull Jt ,.. beat. Abo alteraUons & & state wide movlna MS-7965 Oran•eetyinvProp r m.sa:t Ca• II• ACOUltfC c~ draperie. Cd!d ~ X Pe M JI Pane~ e service X hrs 7 da s ProfMemt/TaxAppeala
---------••••••••••••••••••••••• MO-llD9 · · Gardener. Compl yard WOMAN Woujld lite 213944-'uo·ni~· Painf YowHCMl:H Appralsals,!:d~-«MO C. a h::c Econumy AcouaUca· Qual serv. Cleanup. Frff ett. bous~leapt.n1a 0;-7
1 yrs · • · Free Est. Low Rates. ••~•••••••••••••••••• iprayed cellln1~. re· Electrical 548-!M83af\7pm exp. ID am pr n11 ·~1r--i Shleldsl&Clark646-2986 R~ ... _.<-'r
C t t 1 , ia """"""'" ••••••••••••••••••••••• area. 968·3'58 r_ ... ..., ~· .n9 -.. ,._ arpen ry • an)' :ype, peuw. 1uar • ...,.. -"· Gwral Sertlcn ................... ; ••• caretUl quallty wallpaper ......... •••••••••••••• PwJ.1~ etc. Alt lreeesU3&·1900 ~~·~~ 1E~l_ff ....................... HOUSECLEANING with QUALlTYPAINTING ~.freeestimat-. W.R. Parter Const Co. = · lic/eet. Aft. s. Ca•llt/Cwnte JOBS&J~· HANDYMAN: Carpent1"1. a PERSONAL TOUCH. •Lowest Prices SS1.e896 Spec tn. rm add ft
---------••••••••••••••••••••. •• electrical, ph,1mbing Reliable, refi. 536-3718 •Houaes/ Apt.I. Int/Ext. l'ClllOI l.~re~m~~d~l '~I~· ~L~l c~#~3=0~1:1%:4:,J=;:======~ Framlnt. finish, remodel, ONE-MAN Crew. s yrs ex· Hubbm-d Electric floors 646·6851, 847·2787 CARPET Wt.NDOW •Work Guar. Refs. booded S81•91JO. I u repatu, Lie. Quick pr pounn" & finishin". Llc327136 6(5.8974 FLOORCLEANING •FreeEst.552-0575 ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• . w .. • • Haodyman: Exper, ~Ila· -custom Desi'"' PaUoe ~r~~e. r ... auar. SetyOW'ow.nforms,save G•+Jan ble, paintlnc. cabllletry, Dutch M.alntenance PETERS PAINTING •·· RooffftcJ • lflt'sgot
---·------• mooey.66l 2'123 •••• ::':'::............. etc.962-8046. ServlceS31 l508 Expr'd. Reas Rates. ~~a~vrr:o ••••••••••••••••• .. •••• e handles ·
Carpentry, remodel, re· CEMENT WORK· Patios WEEDJNG·CLEANUPS u.-.a-. llou1eclean. Ing, 2 men Free Ea,. Call Gene DlY own work. Free •ts R<?CJFS Installed factory • YOU'ii grab
pain. Exp'd foundaUon aldewalks. varlou~ Weekly Maintenance ::::::':'•••••••••••••••• honest, reliable lcdepen· 552-04.58 m-8.'583 ~~elclt;Hesrtabld'l 3
0
5uyn •• a sale to root, dect." Plwnb rlatwor .... 661-1979 or d bl DAA .,...,c .._ a 0 DD, l ·T"-«IOI 496-SMS .. Free est 642·9907 Hauling, movlnf, cleanup 8 e . .,.,,..,.~ PROFESSIONAL Paint· 6629$1 faster In .
Get GREEN ~ash
for WHITE elephants
with a Classified Ad
Call 642·5678
Pron Gardener $7/UJ>. Treework. Reas, X1ftt. howsecleanlng done lng. lnter/Exter. Reas, "-hr/I.,... --RO_O_FS_F_O_R_L_ESS __ • Dally Piiot
Selling anything with a Act now! for comp fast, freeest842·4.597 by lady w/exper. l>epen· work guarl42.()388 ••••••••••••••••••••••• All types. 1ooc;:, Financ· • Cl•Ulflecl
DailyPdotCJauifiedAd mamt. of lawns, shrubs CHEAPEST hauling in dable,owntrans847·3637 Finework.Stat.ellc&in· ·vERYNEATPATCH tng. Free Est. Lie. • ~ds.Call
15 a simple matter · · · & trees. Res. " comm. town. Fr ests. CHEAP! SELL idle items with a srd. Exterior specialist. JOBS&TEXTURE Bonded. Insured. Call • 642·5671 justcall642·5678. · Mcweeney, 645·5121 642·2995or645·1390 Daily Pilot Classified Ad. Try me-Callco836-SSS5 .Free est. 89a·l439 anytime. 894-0421 .... ______ _
~/ E11=.t:! ~.!~ ..... ?!~~ ~~!~~-~ .. ~ .. ?!~ ~~!1!~ • .-.. ~?!~~ ~!~ ...... ?!~ ~!~ ..... ?!.~~ ~!~ ..... ?! ... ~!~ ..... ?!.~
Lost & FoiMd ••••••••••••••••••••••• A Pl man ager cou I Dishwasher 3p .a·30p -· · •••••••••••••••••••••••Schools Ir needed for 40 Wtll c%m~ Automotive Part Route Ii.A~ OPERATOR BUSBOYS/DJSHWASHEf COUMTER HELi' 5 Days, S~t/~n lncl.:'. ~ 510 lnstnlcffon 7005 plex In Costa Mesa. Sales, $1000·$1500. 1945 exp. w1:or~~w . 60% StudlP ... en~04PKM,appclyhbtwln •Partorf/UmeD~.Pay MesaVerdeConv.Hosp, GINERALOFACE
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••Husband may workout. Placentia,CM.BldgE .. ~~8 · Y area. n."k'~ .,.Rt• ta~ .. ~~ basedooexper.Apply ln 661CenterSt.CM MARINERSSAVINGS EMBARRASSED By poor AN+ ulary 631.2950 · uic ens es auran: ·...,.. person aft 2pm, Taco Has tmmed. require· __,r:.__ ___ ·----1Aulomotive . E.CoastHwy.CdM Bell, 695 S. Cst Hwy. DISHWASHER mentfora spelling? Send for •RTISTIC •11LITY New Detail Shop needs BEAUTY-Person for LaaunaBeach Exper'd,onPenlnaula PBXRECEPTIONIST booklet to help, Spelling "' "' bel cleaning El Toro beauty BUSBOYS · · 6'15-26SO at ain ol lo N Rules, P .O. Box 10881, and Layout work. tntelg. ... P:d E 1 · salon Ptr. 837-4743. COUNTER GIRL p/time m c ewport Santa Ana, 92711. Encl. outgoing personality a AOP waees P81 • • ng ne Days & nights, apply dai· , ' · Beach. Gen ofc Ir lite tYP-
S2 & your name & ad· must for cust. service. Steamers, eng pamters, B 0 0 K KEEPING ly, 7AM. MICasa. 298 E. Capt. Mike 8 Flab Fry, Ina skilla dMlrable. Xlnt Heiler-Choke-dreff; Mature person pref. Sal buffers & polishers, up· MACHINE OPERATOR l1thSt.C.M. 81SW.19thSt,CM DlstrlbutorTralnee benefits fc wor1dni eon·
Belle-Fiasco-opn Write : Orville holstery shampooers, & llte bookkeeping. • Comiter Girl Needed For • LAl~ENAT'L da. Apply at, lSlS
SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
It .. _..:.. toCObeFFthEaEl we dis OULDREN 3-4, H. B Co· Pokratz 24001 Muir lands check out, plck·up & lie-Insurance Aeency Fred Cafeteria, &rill cook. 5 Drycleanera 11 Or over SUPPLIER OF Westcllff Dr, NB. EOE.
......,.. Op Nursery School. #86,E1ToroCA92630 livery.Applyat James, Ilpguna Bcb. days M·F Company 6'4--0893. • • H••ow•RE• cussed our tr:!WQles ove Grea-t Experience. . . 2059Hat-bor B1.CM contact Mfs. Bradley benefits. Call for appt. AA ~ Girt.Frida~ fOf' crowing
a cup .or colfee. No 968-9481 Artist. pasteup. Mlnlmum · 645·1030 • · 494·1087 or 549·3058 752·7113 Counter hel~, P]T alter· ' TOOLS Ins ur. aiency. N.B. • COFFEElaoneofthem. ---------t-5 Will train t A t M Be t Some Ute life lnaur. ex· yrs exp. o E.O.E., c••~-s noons. pp ya r. I . NOEXPER.NEC. '"A' ul R t)'Piset. .Peartree Press. • """"'""' ~ Cleanert 2931 E Coul per. UClpr esume to LADIES, GIVE YOU JobsW..t.d 7075 644-~ AVON •tBOOKKEEPING Merltabopcontractor,ls Hwy,CdM. • Eant$2.ZSto$42S PO Box 8, Corona dM MAN A BEAUTIFU ••••••••~• .. •••••••••• CdM.realty and develor.· hiring exper tilt· up Perw.ek Mar, Ca 9262$ or caU ~riJltf~iL~~~~!E LJ=GAL SECRETARY1---------1 ment firm needs ex.pd carpenters. Lucrative OOUNTERWOMEN, Frr Co&lonuses _7_52_·1830_..;..'--..----
Lenny Warren Photo .iemporary or part-lime ASSEMBLERS HEED EXTRA CASH1 girl Friday, exec/secy pay, avail for hlib pro-& P/T. Apply at Stax Only ambitious need afj GOO. FRIDAY graphs. P.O.Box 1805 work,bcharea.499-3814 min oodb type. M.u1t have con· ductlonworkera.Submit Burier. 899 W.19th St, ply. Must be we 1 H.B. 92647 for info. & d ?afecbanical 4' Electrical Ea n sbrre f · 0'!" struction bkkpg exp. application to: 17092 C.M. aroomed le neat apl>f.'ar· re needC ':t> sharp chia
Relocating to Orange Assemblers needed Im· are e e ~ en you re Communication skills es· Pullman St., Irvine Ca. "'"UNT .. R PERSOu ing. Xlnt fringe benefits. or our · •ore. Dull•
tails. County from San Fran· med. Soldering exper. an A VON r epresen-sentlal. Salary open. 92714 pvv r. '-l '" Call For Appointment include shlpplllg Ii re-~Los-t_&_l!--.--... ------a cisco area. Female with helpful. taUve. Call 540-7041 or Weltoo&Co 11'75-6900 /Ume, app.,. n person. celving " answering
• · ruunu 14 years experience Call for appointment Zenlth7·1.359. ·r · CASHIER, dependable Diane & Co. Sandwich 891-4415 phones. Typing fc some ...................... ~~~~~~~~~1---------Ck..-891 H bo Bl d u h managing, selllna, de· Industrial Relations _ resp. woman. Full & p/l ~ 1 ar r v , MR. GROVE flllne .• ust ave ofc ex·
Lost: older mlniatur monstrattng sewing 1714149 .. 9 .. 01 Baby•1'tter, RELIABLE. ·BOOKKEEPING eves includ. Apply art eo.tallesaatl9thSt. per. &beseekingfi'f:,. male sliver Poodle, h' 'T" "' " 5 Girt Sh OC MondaythroughFriday m l e t C l I mac mes & vacuums in TROHIC/ ... • T •1R for 2 yr old. My home. . Ail? m • 0 P • COUPLE' t o help with e P oym n • a or w/out medicine will die. retail .store. Xlnt ex ,,_ "' A u l g & Flgu c rport appt&intervw Reward. 54&-2848 perlence with Elna •. LAGUNA IEACH 9-6. $25. wk. 548·4678 aft. 5 Clcc~-n, :~ fig w rk family buslness, part· 644-65·00 "' ua1 Op E l er"3. ~e ure or · CHILDCARE my home 4 Ume 557--0215 Viking including claases. Eq por mp oyer Babysitter, mature to sit use lo key. Top SSS & YT old glrl. ·own trw, · BetwnlOam-6pmdaJ.ly LOST· Burmese cat.
male, "Leroy". CdM area. $600 REWARD. N
que s tions asked.
For more information & ---------• baby & helpful 9 yr old. vacaUonpay. 646-S464or979.2651 THE LOOI(
reference call Nita, *ASSEMILERS* Varied hours. 536-0952 or COURl!R/C&.EIUC Ast ForDeoise
6 4 6. 7 2 1 7 e v e & • o r 'd. PC Id 968-5951 aft. 6 Newport Center office
weekends. ~ assem~~y 'er~~~'. Babysitter wanted Mon needs full tlme peraoo Drivers, Male & Female.l-•GR-O•U-M•D•Sl---·--s•
_ FOUND: St. BernardL.V.N. ~uld like relief OrangeCo.Alrportarea. thru Wed. 7:45 to 6:45, CIYILEHGIMEER ::O~':!'ol~~te':~~ _12_·
50_h_r_._ts__53_5425_
50_h_r_. __ , •
Puppy, fem. Newpo work p/bme. Xlnt rers. 979-1021. g1rl5,boylOmos.Perm., Designer ·Calculator. d · TbelrvlneCompanyll••
759-1218; 759-1222
Peninsula. 645·2529 t Wt 11 do l ive· in.•---------reliable. C.M. area. San· Donald E. Stevena, Inc, respon ence am on a DRIVERS -· 213/8671814 ASSEMIUllS dy,833-8312orS48·7432 1828 FuUerton Ave. CM. local branches •to he lp 1eVeral posltJons Halla· · identify · · First & aecond abllt. Call 540-4455 with eeneral office work. Household furniture tile fot full and paMlme
Lost. white Pers1aa cal, IOY 14 Mllat like detailed work BABYSJ'ITER·MY home, 17802Sky Park f4S.891S. Type SO w.p. m. Non· Tmoving co. locdriated ln El Groundskeepers to worti:
Big Canyon area. Strongasahorse,needs &beabletoworkw1lh Mon·Fri, 7AM-8 :30AM, SuitelOl lrvinecLERK for H .B. smokeronJy.$3.00/hr.& orowants versw/,11 lnoutapartmeotconP' Reward. Ple~e return. after school & Summer fiberglass. 2:30PM·4:30PM,starting EqualOppor'Employer dnigstore, p/Ume. Ex· .1s miles Call Judy yr exper . w /comm plex. Pl•••• app~
640-5770 • work. Cambro Mfg. Sept 12. 548-8348 per. nol ne<i. Min a&e 24. Mon.·FrL from 9 to 2. movln& co. Call 830-4926 ~~~ 9Waedn.m.__:._~
Santa Ana Only '1001 Clay, Hunt. B<:h. BABYSITTER to begin IOOICKEEPER 847·2:il3. 640-2500. DRUG STORE CLERK, .fti";d!y' only .._.y -Lost fem calico Persian N h & w t t (W ol Beach Bl So ol eic perle nce(l. Laeuna • cat. deaf, Newpor ew ope es tlllDs er G rll Id) . . Sept. Mon.Fri 1:45PM· 2 Yrs A/Pay & Gen'I COCKTAIL CUST()J>JAN .. r Heighlsarea.~·7855 . Avenue Area. Nr. a e 3·15PM. Must have own ledger exper. req 'd w•11TB1t1t5 lead; eJemen\aryscbool, Beac ... 4M-75lG · SSONewpoftCenterDr
HU arbor Nardo paperFde· _ E.O.E. M/F lra.nsp, be able to take Phone 673-7730 to ar Learn tn':'!"h-''ilie most S789-1937i monUt. Apply &crowtnstnactor Newport Beach.CA FOUND: Cock·a ·poo veryory worlr.. ac~ •SSEMILEltS children t.o lessons etc. range an appt for m· ...., ''" Dist~' ct ofc Laguna EqualOp~rt.unity · -, Blk/ v· s tory, car wash etc. fine. "' Oc 1 1 f 11 d ·l · exciting, 1lamourous, oa u if&'.> s h 1 5 Yrs exper. in the field E ~~a cc.'~i.76718c.. an· Call 534-7533 & aslr. for W'e will train. Apply cass ona u ay s1 . terv1ew. hidily paid profeu. Day .... a n ~•~ c oo neceas. to qualify for pro· ~,· m yer , ·~ ---------• Na'ck. 7 AM, M a c Gregor _Un_· ..;:;g_64S_·l_l_<n _____ ---------«° •v& aeakMla. Plaee--Distric:t, X.a&wU• Beacb -r ere1lent1a ... Ca.Jl . . _
Y h ""' Pl ' BOOl(t(f!EPING. by8/23/11.~· r~ 'l FOUND; En&-Shap --------ac ta, 1°'"' aC1!ntia, BABYSITTER Wanted. ment assist. Good Job op· _;;.. ____ .....___ Capistrano Laeuna ROP. • GUARDS
Dog, YDI M. & tiny whte Help Wanted 7100 C.M. Mon, Tues, Fri & SaL SERVICE por. cusroul!ft 496-3118 for further info. Oosta Mesa " Cerri~
M poodle type .••••••••••••••••••••••• .A.SST u•u•Ga. SPM·lAM. 675·8228 or Neat & personable C•714/751·9194 ~ EXECUTIVE WOMEN'S 1:\.,n.Lp--"" Pho' HazeJbrook & Buschard r ·-""' -646-3863 person for front desk, So. Calif. Cocktail RE• _.TIA~•5 ... __ lllVA•lOL HB.968-9l08 '~ AC~OUMTIMGCLK Young men's retail telephones, routlneofCice Waitresses, Inc., 17922 ~ V.. COUNCIL Needs 3 & ltanap nq'd. ltetlred
---------• Mortgage banking firm sportswear. to. benefit.I. BABYSl1TER wanted for and general bookkeeping Sky Park Bl, Ste c, trorneop/Ume.673-4786 welcome. Call 5C8-m4..
PtrSOMh • 5350 in Orange .po. bas an lm· Call Mr. Reidy~ 2 achl a1e children. Npt. exp. Western Busineu Irvine, Ca92'71(. PART· TIMI IUCTOI" ~~ 10-2.. CJO&ed Wecl-
····--················· med:-Operuna.for an ac· .-. -He ts . A 11 day Services, Costa Mesa. ---'-------• ~ national or· r• • ._.., .. Drink.lngproblem? ctna clerk w/exper. ln AUTv/C&.'9tK (7:J.5..S:30PM> tll sch! 642-0212 Combo Counier Girl, 1anl&atlonbuopenln1in PACICACHAS HAIRSTYUSTS
CallAlcobolHelphne bank reconciliations. Chevy dealer will add of· starts, aft.noons aft Sept • ..._...,...,,,_,...,__...~.._.._.. ....... Sudwlcb llaker p/t. Coeta Meu tu alert, !~.,· ~tSD.per b~~ Jmm ...... 0 .._1Dll •o• 24hnaday835·3830 Please call Cathy flee clerk for PBX plua U.548:s804afl6PM ... Fut aemce sandwich mat""'atU-.l&penona ........ .a• raises...-. vu. _... •' ..-Thompson at Unical lidrt bookkeeplna. Auto IOOKKHPER abop. Call betwn a le a, ble lndlvt4ual, &o be a Monrovia Ave, N.B talented balr cutter11.
PREGNANT? Yort&.aae, '114JM3-7873. dealership experience Babysitter for teachei-. '\ perm, p I time f 0 r 83.1-8919 ~ at i' new car de-548-5125. PW1 ael'riee salon &oc. iri Carini confidential E.O.E. preftrred.Wllltnt.ln.Op. toddler, CdM. own Exp EB• D . le ---------i &fer. lnterwting Pl1bllc•..;..;.;;..;.;;;...;;__...;..----.-• buaySo.CatPluallalL.
coun5ellng & referral. portunlty for advance-transp, mature' woman, QUALIF'D. Bkpr. w/lite Cook, child care center. relations work. Good FACTORY WOIUClll Call IOI* appt. Reala HalL'
Abortion, adoption & ment.. lnteNellnl work 7:»-4:30 Mon·Frl. Refs. aecretarial akilla. 2·3 Kan. ,thru· FrL, •I to 2. at&rt.lag ulary, rrtnse Manufacturlni plant Salon.540-8888
=E ~T·2S63 ACCOUNTING In pleasant surround· 675-7931evee &wknds. days per wk. for sue· Year nKmd. 50 Chlld benefiU: -'PP11 Tuea., needs factory help. CalJ Han'1 man for nmodel· i.ngs. Apply ln persoo to ceuful ra~y Jrowi:f from 2·7 yrs • .Prepare, A\&I· 23rd at Nu Orm fotinfo.M.8-8244 ~ualhaveowntools.
UuD• av1""ul CLERK Office M"r. HOWARD BANK " "'-al ..!.ta ofc.1n Cd . serve_. cle\n up·, ho Pia .. • •1"4 C Ai*"""rl " ,,.. """ Oievrolet.• Dove & Quail UMttllMCED 67a-2:1u.wkdys. .. !~.!'!!. " ~ an• ck s . i..ooP""ni::. "'~ ii{.;., PAC:TORY
.., Outc•MCIHage .. l"ive'ai; A/Payable " Sta., Newport Beach, PART·TIME -.-.•v trom9A .• -llA.M. Men Is women needed
ForllteF.ofltt Rec. exper. Good gen'l Auto Mechanic or mecli COOK now!t.ot.ofworlcavaill ~llleallOranieeo. acctn1 backirouod. helper Expdr .tr tooi. i'R.LER Exper. onl¥ need •PP DELIVERY Man for L.A. No leel Call or come hl ____ m-_731.3-____ _.. Type 50 wpm. Jleavy Wag ea open. Data~ . \ " ,. in person. ffA{rry'a Ne !1°*B .;.~ .. reiv~ .. ~ today!
work load, 10 key achier. Toyota Volkaa Porsche. . UMITED York Bar " OrUL '~ • WMOa .., vnm. --754-166 7 •MICHELLE'S*· SOmecolleeeaccountlna 6'22434 CALJFORHIAIAHK MartlD•al• Wa7 mo. AJsO man for• dy. PromptT•.,,pf--'-
ou.tc&uMaua1e · • toune$helpful. • · · • • · Nowpoct Jllac:h nr O.C wk.84&-WSor8'73-2Sl.5 2U6So. KainSLSA
lOAK-2.Ul • 731-4462 • C.0 for appointment Atll'OMOTIVE . :. 2 O · · • ... -.. .... 'T&~IC/14.LTAIR WARUMTY • ""~ c.e.t .... ~·h• ___ __;..;_.-_ .......... __..__...~
Splrttuall ... , l714f 494-940l, • PARTSCLEIU(. -
1115SO.EJCamlnoBeal Logmeleodl · ~ Male or female. Ex· 17141494-6546 ~~P .... -~Uc. Equ.aJOppor Employer lleri~ reqlllred. Typ. -::-,.;,;.~~,..~-...~~~1~~~~~~~~ltqe5Se0Ual. ROYCAJlVB
lOLLSlOYCI
64M444
AnEql.laJ
Opportun\ty Employer
FEMALE SIG~
Need u apoaalbl• In
di\ td to rlun mQd apertmellU and
el In •partm n
C'Oa\l)lex. F1l'>Ubl• houn. ---Moecl&31 tbru P'rlday Pleuecali:
~ ..... JJltt•• ..
6 -~
H MPUHAHV Hl l P
540°4455
11802 Sky Park
Ste 101 Irvine
~Equal Oppor Employer
I.AKE PATROL GUARD.
CuU time po:iiitlon. Law
Enforcement , MP .
Harbor Patrol bark
ground rcqusred Call
C.F. Boswe,U, 586-0SiO
L-*"f Woricer
-Wknda only Bayview
Olav. Hosp. 20S5 Thunn Ave, CM 6'2·3505 __
Laundram1t asslstant
Part tlrtte
675-0334 .or 673· Ul90
~(al ~tetary, exper'd, N.a. Salary open. Call
YJidll, 83).()151
NURSES AIDES
1 to 3 le 3 to 11, eq. pre-
f erred. Mesa Verde Oonv. Hoep. 861 Center
St .. Cr.(
tWpW..ted 710 ••••••••••••••••••••••
6-te ,, JO
ft',•t'•i~'J\Hf t•ftP
CCII S40:.44SS
mm&k)tPark
SuitelOl Irvine
Equal Oppot Employer
Sl.75. TwinSOO. 768-8494
LlMKAGE TAC.S
from your business card. Send one card foT each
tAll plus one spare. We ~~----,.----1 relurn permanently
lkydes 1020 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Schwtnn buch erol1ft'
MSflnn
546-1851
sealed attractive tag &
strap. meeting aitllne
I.D. requirements. Pre-
vent losS & theft! For a
person~ tac e11close
wallpaper, fabric or
"DlY Glo'' paptt & we
wtll back • Uim your tap. Or try hfO cards
back to back.
PRICES:
S2uoratS5
4/StapSl.60ea.
6/9 tags 11.50 ea.
10ormoreS1.40ea, ...;.;..;...;....~:....--_.-..:...---i S<s Tu Included
NO CARD?
~·" yow C>WJl or send name. addreu, phone &
we'll lnM• one card per ----'----------1....;..;.;;; __ ~~--:--1 tat.Add2.5teach.
Send cheek or modet or·
<krto:
PILOT PatMflMG
' P ,t>. 'BO 1MO
• I .
Eled.rie Typewriter, Jtln
cond. 1125. 168·143
evea/wknds-
,. . 1017
••!••··················
MAPLE Wurlitzer piano 28' MO~GOM 01
& bench: $800. Call aft. Loaded with all new SPM,842·9585 . equipment. Sleeps 6 _ __.;. _______ ,adults in comfort. Low
Spinet Piano. like new, time on Atomic 4. Genoa,
w,padded bench. S49S. dinghy. VHF. Owner
581-7647 arwous. 673-9211 bkr. ----------1
BARWICK DATSUN
"'.111 I 1J 1t1 ( • l" 11 t fl•
831 -1375 493.3375
WE BUY
CLEAMCAIS
&TRUCKS
CONNELL
Upright Piano, wood CAL 25 Must sell, moving. '73
ruush, xlnt cond. S395. W Newport Slip S8200. Datsun PU, cmpr shell & CHEVROLET
973-1808 642.oo95 boot. Nu tires. pnt, 2828Harbor Blvd.
· clutch. brks, uphol. COSTAMESA SewfncJ MochhlH 1091 SA B 0 T 191 5 R e d Many xtras. S2800 orr.
~·v "'
SADDLEBACD<
BMW
CoMllM&SH
THIALLMlW
HOCSIMOwtll -COMP.LETI IODYSHOP
HO;#OPIH ~
SAOOUIACIC
.........................
* DRIVEA * * Ll1Tt.! ••• *
SAVE A LOT
SHOP&COMPARE
BARWICK DATSUN
'-l il't I ,,t\ t ,(,, 1r-.\o 1
831-1375 493.3375
NEWPORT DATSUN ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fabeq:lass new cond. 536-4470 evs, 675·12171---5_4_6-_1_2_0_0 __ -J
Yamaha G-55 1 yr old, $349.Fsrm.673·9401 leavemessaae WEPAYTOPDOLLAR FORTHEIEST
w/case. 145. Gd for FOR TOP USED CARS KH'ff'll E beg.inning student. 1o...a.. .r•l / 1~ Jeepster. V6, auto, FOREIGN, DOMESTIC C S · 646-3&!8 :-'!.!~Pl . air, cream puff. S2800 or or CLASSIC$ Cil :JiiitfeeAam
_..· 9070 bstofr. 751-6503 II your car ls extra clean y-•'..1.cYJ
st.arr Spinet piano. xlnt ••••••••••••••••••••••• , . ""'~ cond. $550. WANT two 27' Sailboat 75 Toyata Landen.user, 4 sec us8~iUrsERt. IUICK 888 OOVE8TREET
MS-6607 Slips. Newport, Balboa. Wheel drive. Xlnt cond. "" ~ettrMaeArthur ---------1 Mr White 675-1393 12,000 orig. ml. Call 2925 HarborBlvd. &JamboreeJloads
m ;r,1cte
n1,1 z.da , .... .. ..
Sportlnc1Goods 8094 · ' 826-7130 QislaMesa 9W·2SOO 83J.t300
•••••••'••••••••••••••• Boats. Speed & ------------~----I----=-=:..;...~:.:..--_ __..~:_----
WANTED: target pistol Ski · 9080 ''JS Toyota Landcrulscr TOP. • IEATTHlPRlCE
and shotgun. • .. •••••••••••••••••••• Wgn. very clean. CB + DOLLAR IMCRIASI!!! 548-5497 1917 18 foot Formula. 190 radio, runs great. $4'JOO. --'73 91• 1.1. APJ>earance
---------1 OMC. 45 hours. Must _67_5_·2_17_o______ PAID Al ..:..~
U ed S rfbo d II
SINEW CARS grp. r, sten::Q, lo mi,
s u ar · ye ow, sell!S7995.Call838-1878. FOR CLEAN ATTHEOLDPRICES pvt.ply.CaU 6'13·28i3
$25. can 557.7297 aft.er 5 ---------· All models now availa-pm 14' Cbr&ls w /50 HP fl"UCQ 9560 ble.Callorseeusbefore Porsehe9141.8 Ulte.A~ ~ W Sul
Evinrude & lrg whl trlt. ••••••••••••••••••••••• youblly! ! , pear 1roup. IS,000 au.1---------1~ el t, Primo, large, Mustsell.S800ibstofr. Mag whl•. mlnt cond. ---r
SM. Like new. Ski boots, S46-8609 SUMMER
mens 20 ~2. sso. xlnt. ---------• , c• !!!. ... a ....... CE'. 968-7.536 18' CENTURION ~" '77 w1tb ·n Competitive SUPl!:R ~ECTlON TV~~. S~~Ho 1091 tr~ller, '70-426 Chryslet OFGM RUC S "' &1t11 engine. Jaguui jel &VANS •••n•••••••••••••••••• pump. Honest 70MPG . HUGESAVIHGS!
M a ran t z R • c e l v er boat. Sells new tor over
Pioneer turntable, two S12.000-5ellinc 58999.
12" 3-way speaken, plus Ca 11 5~8-8000 as.k for
head phones. Alter 6:00. Gary. 546-5010 ---------· ---------• '12 Century 18' ski boat.
ZEN1nl25" Color,,mdm. Lo hrs. prof. ma\nlained.
cabnt. 3 yrs old $400. 223 hp Chevy OMC, 84&-080 \andem.U,lr-..W-/Gag wbls. ________ 1 s2soo. 540-3383 <8·5 > • ...-r----...;·~-----
NEWHITACH D-3500 640-7822 tafl6> 1"960 VW Crew Ca
'!l81~BEAO•fHV0
t<llN T •NG• O •~ Bf ACH
R.I.' 7·~1 ~.11') oj.JJ~
l~RTCARS
AU.MODELS ::,
Cl:EAM
·USED CARS
MOW
~CAU.rArPY .
540-5630
Ion~ SO:\ & SO\
• LINCOl N ·MERCURY
COSTA MESA
DATSUN
2MSHA1l80R BLVD.
S4M4I0140.0111
76 Datsun B.210, 21.000 ml, S3100ie>n'. Xlnt cond. 1731
Stereo cassette deck, llst 1972 25' WELLCRAF'I (truck 1• 'U duel port
$149. Atlantic Music's Nova w/twln 188 Mere. jmgine. Xln\ cond. Sl995.
Pn·ce.,.,"7. 1/0's. W/trlr. Always In ~ at 179 E . lStb St., ,2626HARIOR BLVD. _.. Cr.t,or ca11548-1487. COSt'a M"'"'a ~ . ATLA?fr!CMUSIC freab wtr. $8,800. PP._...;.,_ ______ ----"--------! 'hMN6.Ail',mags.stec!l
4'5 E.17lhC.M. 673-6789all6PM 73DODGEl/JTOM rads. AM/FM. 9500 nH. ADVEHTUltat WE PAY 461M)0.64()..P.360or 640-1059
Automatic, vs . pwr. TOP DOLLAR ·m 4.<ft Datsun. Rblt eng.
1(eerini, air cond. " FOil Mlm SllOO or best o!fer. Call
morel <&9918P). EZ 1...,_0RTS &t6-9560. '120 terma-0.A.C. 1 yr. P•rta
•••••••••••••••••• ••••• le labor: er vice policy · '742&0Z. Loaded. ----------= 1911 Ford Ca m per. avall. Auto Cente{'S MJJtCi)UISMOTORS Loaded: mags, rer. stv, pdceu 2880'l Marguen tePkwy. I-~.-.;;.. _____ .....; ONLY $)499 Mts.510NV1EJO MAIBS 131·2110 495-12 I 0
•UTOCEMTER
Di\I .-Naben Cad lilac as kerSt .. c ....
. Y.i blk east of Harbor: Bl 54~9109
j
'tS7"
.t96G'
•
... --
.
Buntlng•n Beaeh
Fountant V !.l!'Y ·
VOL. 70, NO. 234, S SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A
'Soft of Sam'
NEW YOJlK (AP) -David
Berkowit1, lhe suspected .••·
eatiber killer known as "Son ot
Sam," delibf'rate1y parked next
to a fireplue the nicht ol his lut.
'kllllna because he wanted to get
cauabt, according to tapes quot-
ed by The Daily News today:
Qooting a transcript of tapes
purportedly made at the bosplt.al
where ~ suspect ia undercotnc
mental tests, The News reports
that Berkowituaid, "J knew ~at
lf l 1ot a ticket, it would lead
lbemtome." "
Meanwhile, literary agent
Scott Meredith denied reports
that he is sellin& 10 houn of tape-
recorded interviews with
Berkowitz.
''For the record, we are not
close to a deal, have not offered
tapes to anyone, have not set a
money valuation, and indeed
have not even ~greed t~
represent material,•• Scott
Meredith told The Associated
Press on Sunday.
Meredith said he has "been ap-
proached by people with tapes
and are now exaQlinin1 material
a.s we examine all material sub-
mlttedtous."
It was not immediately clear
whether The News and Meredith
had copies of the same 10 hours o!
taped cooveraaUona. Meredith
said Uie tapes were made at
Kings County Hoapltal in
Brooklyn when Berkowiu is be·
ing held, but would not say who
gavehlmtbetapea.
The reported 10 hours of tapes
referred to by Meredith and The
News are not the same a.s those
made ~ Berkowit1' first at· torney, Pbllip Peltz. Peltz' tapes
were impounded by the court.
after be was reported to bo ~
to market them.
Meredith said Peltz was not in-
volved. .
T.be News said the authenUcity
of the new tapes has been ques-
Uoned by Correction Department
officlala and other law enforce-
ment authorities and an in-
vestigation is under way into bow
the tapes could have been made
andwbomi&htbavemadetbem.
-.
Af teraoon ·. · .~
.Stoeks. . . .
TeN CENTS'
Atcordlnc to The News.
BerkOWil!, accused of kUllnt six
persons and w~ seven with
a .44-callber revolver in Utile
more than a yeu, ls beard tony
on the new tapes that he .. felt bad
that there were so many
wounded." -
"I wanted them all dead .•••
My job WIS to kill," he is quoted
assaying. •
(See SAM, Pate AU
Crate Search .SQiIMht
SKATECAR COFFIN-SHAPED CREATUFfE
Vehlcl• Built •Y Nick Leonerd
It's Skateoan
HB Man R~e• LQ.telt Crase
By MICHAEL PASKEVICH
Ol 1119 D•lly l"lklC St.If
A crowd of curious teen-agers
quickly gathers around Nick
Leonard·s Huntington Beach
home as be·wheels out. his s1ee1t
lime-green and royal·blue
machine.
.. Hey mister . what the hell is
it:'" blurts a skateboard·toting
youngs ter. When Leonard
replies, •11t·s a skateboard," the
kid·s eyes widen and his jaw
!Jrops faster than a clumsy rider
Qa an oil·slicked track. A friend
guides the daie<f)lounistet a~~
from the scene.
Leonard as the builder and
owner of what is officially
dubbed a "skatecar," surely a
skateboard freak's ultimate fan·
tasy. The sport of i;katecar riding
is so new -the first competition
was held in March at Signal Hill
--that there are fewer than 15 of ...
the coffin-shaped creatures in ex·
istence.
spent $5,000on the project, count· inglabor costs.
Riding prone in a vehicle so
light <32 pounds) and friction-free
that his cal can give it a push
start, Leonard took second place at Signal Hill.
He hit a-top speed of SS mu~
per hour <or 80 feet per second 1
"going sideways" before he
pulled the cord that unleased two
three-foot-square parachutes lo
stop. The car has brakes, but,
like lhe steering mechanism,
Leonard says, \hey don •t offer m\lch control. -
Sponsored by Powerflex. a
company that manufactures
urethane skateboard wh~els,
Leonard moved on to Dayton,
Ohio, where he became the first
winner of the National Skatecar Championship.
He won a $1,500 grant for hit·
· ting just over 48 miles per hour
on a 1,500-foot straiaht track, but
Leonard is confident he can
break the 60 mile per hour bar·
rier noxt time. . -However, Leonard, a part-Ume
Oranie Coast Colle1e student
who has bUilt airplan", raced
lorrpula1cars and Is currently
workin& on a home computer, is
not Jutt another thrillseektr. • "Some people say s at~ars
a.re a super rush, but not for
me!" he says. "Af\u racinC
awhile you. only function on in·
sUnct and all I'm loOkint to do I
set dOwn tho hill efficiently~" be
adds.
Valuable 'Gift,s til Nixon' Missing
WASHINGTON (APJ -The
State Department is going to
court Wednesday to ask
permission to search some 200
packing crates· left behind by
Richard M/ Nixon for valuable gifts presented to the former
president and his family by
foreign dignitaries.
The State Department bas list.'
ed a number or the gifts as
"missing," possibly only
because of poor r~ord·keeping,
and wants to ecamme the pack·
ing crates containing materials
Ernployes
Okay New
OVSD Pact
Nonteaching employes of the
Ocean View School District have accept~ a two.year wage and
friD&e benefit contra« caUiog f~r
a •.1 percent pay hike the first
year and an ~nal s.s percent
l.ncrease ln ~MCOnd year.
The pay •J>atkaa• aw•rdetl to
the dt1trlct•1 4U elerieal.
custodial, ma1ntenance and
transportation personnel, will cost Ole dSatrict an estimated
$267,184 over two years.
Included 1n the settlement is a
$206.30 increase in fringe benefits
for 200 full·time employu over the-two yearperiod:-
The contract is up for review
when new state scbool funds are
granted. '11Us could mean an ad·
ditional 2.4 eercent ln salary
benefits fQf classified employes.
The contract includes a no.
strike cl&UR and mediation in
any post-contract grievances
filed by either aide.
Fall Kills /
Orange Man
A 20-year-otd Oranee man fell
200 feet to bis death near lbe falls
in Blaek. Star Canyon Sw)day
evening. Oranee County
Coroner•s deputies reported to-day. . • ...,
The name of the hiker was
withheld pendlna noUfication of
relative1, deputies said. -
Jnvestlget.on ryported lbe man wa.s loCJkl.rig over U.e edae ol the'
canyon trail when he fell. He was
evacuated by h~pter and pro-
oPnc«l dead on .urtval at UCl
Medical Center'. abOu one hour
after the a p.m. fall, d~es sa:td.
from t.he Nixon admirustraUon to
see if they are there. The crates
are in government storace.
The Washington Post aald to-
day that U.S. Chief ot Protocol
Evan S. Dobelle asked to ex·
amine the boxes after the
newspaper pointed out that no
one knew what they contained.
The Post, in 1l story by Maxine
Cheshire, said at le•st a dozen
gift.a from Iran are in the "miss·
ing" cate1ory.
The story sald Mn. Nixon
tiotifted the White House lifts un·
lt two days after her husband's
resignation that she intended to
keep-one partifllla.. g1ft present-
ed byt.heSbaboflran. •
'"The gift was described by the
gift unit as 'a very fine hand-
painted miniature portrait of the
President done on ivory .•. 18-
kirat eold oval frame on easel
back surrounded with golden
leaves and branches, many
blossoms of single and clustered
turquoise and sapphire
stones,' " the newspaper said.
According to the Post. that
David Clark is one ot se\'eral vendors who have already
set up stands in Memphis, Tenn .• to cash in on the death
of Elvis Presley. Clark sells bumper stickers and other
mementos from his pickup truck outside the Forest Hills ·
cemetery wtiere the rock star was buried. Other~ are
selling similar items ou side Presley's mansion •.
Gracet,ect.
item ls listed as "missing.
Other items so listed include an
oil painting· from the Soviet
Union, an lndian silver box. a
gold necklace and bracelet from
Ghana, a gold pin from
Mcaracua. a sttver bowl from
Ireland, a bracelet from ln-
d ones i a, another from
Nicaraaua. and two goJd basket
weave compacts with diamond
clasps from West Germany.
Dol)elle was not available for
comment but tl\e State Depart~
<See NIXON, Pa•e AZ)
Woma"' 19,
UapsO/f
\ HBPier
~
A 19-)'.ear--old Anaheim woman
was pUlled front the water by two
cltl~ Sunday afternoon" after
sbe ap)arently jumped oft the
end of the Huntlncton Beach
PJer. li(esuprds reported.
1'bO Mlf~«>Uled woman •as
not breathing wt-en taken ashore
bUt ll(HUardS usinc mouth·to-
.mOUth resuscltatloo were able to
revive her.
After receiving emergency
treatment at Paci.flea Hospital in
Huntington Beach, lhe was taken
to UCI .Medical Center where~
\l'aS-treatecland released~
Officials are attemptlbg to
estabtlib why th• woman jumped
from the pier.
It was the major incident of the
weekend which drew an estimat·
ed lfi>,000 people to the Hunt-
ington Beach shoreline.
Liferuards logged about 50
rescues, no-ne· serious, in two to f~footsurf.
C1Clist Hurt
ID Crash in
Costa Mesa·
A Santa Ana motorcyclist was
J'U$hed to Fountain Valley Com·
munity Ha1pttal Sunday after be
collided with a car pul.Unc cxrt ot
a crowded church par-1ng lot in
north Cotta Mesa.
John N. Biccbieri, 27, was
treated for lea injuries and lite!'
released from the hoapltal loUowJ.ni the 10: SO a.m. cruh.
,.
... "' ........ BlglaRider
Stunt <:)Cle rider .John Mulber sends his motorcycle oH'r
the top or a moving car during chase scene in upcomini,;
film C•lllcd "Stmgra). ·• The film. s hot near St. Louis.
:\Jo. 1s a spoof on other cops and robbers stunt-filled
chaSl"> and b due for rclea:-.c in early 19i8.
... Vance Cites Ties
In Talk With China
PEKING (AP) -Secretary of
State Cyrus R. Vance. here to ex-
• plore chances of establishing CuU
diplomatic ~laUon;t with China.
opened talks with Chinese
leaders today by emph11Slzing
the two countries' comm·on
political interests in various
parts of the world.
In a sitting room in the Great
Hall of the People, Vance began
his first meeting with a Chinese
team headed by Foreign
Minister Huang Hua by saying
there are areas where the two
countries have "mutual in·
lerests." .
One or these areas is Africa,
where bolh the United States and
China are eaaer to blunt Soviet
penetration. They are concerned
about inroads the Russians are
making in east Africa and with
insurgent mov ements in
southern Africa.
American officials said the
''international discussion," as
Vance called it, was aimed at
persuading Peking that a closer
relationship can be built with
W ashtngton on the basis of
shared objectives.
This pbue of the talks is likely
to occupy the first two days of
Vance's four-day visit to the
Chinese capital, servin& as a
buildup to the dominant subject
-a mutual desire lo move
toward full relatio01i.
Outside the Great Hall, and
alo111 the Avenue of Ttanqullity,
in Tien An Men Squan and
elaewhere. tens of tbou1ancb of
Son Faces Charges
LOS ANGELES ('.AP> -
MlrOalav KeF\u:1, 2', has been
a11115ted in CODIUlCtlon with the
'f aiiil stabbing of his parents.
Chinese marched behind banners
proclajming the completion 9(
the. !Uh Cornmµnist party COD· •• greu. (Related 1tory, A4) •
Vance's arrival waa low-
keyed, with Huang Hua, Vice
Foreign Minister Wang Hai-jung
and Huang Chen, cblef of the
Chinese Liaison Office in
W asbington, beading a modest
welcoming delegation at the
airport.
But the festive atmosphere,
with clanging cymbals and ex-
ploding_ firecr-ack.er,s that had
children covering \heir ears, lent
a special diJnenslon to this first
high-level U.S.·Chinese contact
in two years.
Chairman Hua bad signaled
Vance beforehand that Chin~e
policy has nt>t cl\anged on the
Taiwan question, and that the
United States would have to end
all diplomaUc and mllitUY ties
with the Nationaliat Chinese if it
hopes to establish full relaUons
with Peking.
Hua's demand was contained
in a speech closinl the party con·
gress Thursday and made public
by Hsinbua. the official Chinese
news agency, as Vance new from
Tokyo to the Chinese capital.
WASTE WASTED?
N(JI' AT CIRCUS
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP> -Vis·
itors ~ the 124th Ohlo State
Fair have been invited to bell> cut
down on cleanup cost.a for the vis·
iting Ringling Bro,s. and Barnum
& BallQ)' Th.rill Circus by ~
home animal mJ.Dute.
Leaflets banded out at the rm Sund~ offered fairgoers all tl\G
animal wa1te they can carey
home. for u Jn cardena or
fa,Tms as a soil enricher.
----
Coffee Priees Dropping
I
BJ Tile Aaodat.ed Prat
Drop by drop, coffee prtces h•v~ atart-4 comln1 down.
SuPermarkt HY sales ol tbe bl'ew are er actually plckin& up &Cl.in.
aithouab c wnen 1tlll 1"m reluctant to buy.
Ao Alaoclated Press sPot survey showed the price or a pound of
coffee is generally about $3.50, down from a blp of $C and more in
aome places in .Match and April. In a few cities, where prices topped
SS a pound, current levels are still arowid $«.
EDWARD MARON Oi' RALPHS, AN 82·ooUet chain in the Los
Angeles area, said the stores ran an ad recently advertising lower
coffee J>rlces -$3.4-9 a pound, •1 percent hl&ller than the $2.38 level
of January, but 13 percent below the mid·Aprll price of $3.99
It was the store's first coffee promotion this year and Maron
said sales increased slightly. "There is still a supply and demand problem." he said. ''I don't
think it's as severe as it was six months ago, but it's atiU with us.
We're now ln a kind of holding pattern."
OOFFEE PRICES STAllTED SOARING after a frost in Brazil
-the world's biuest producer -destroyed part of that country's
197~16 harvest and set off speculation about a possible sbortaae in
future years.
Prices for a pound of green, unroasted beans went from 60 cents
in July 1975 to $3.33 in April 1977. Retail prices went from $1.21 to
around $4 a pound on a natonwide basis.
Increased production and apparent cutbacks 10 consumption
helped start the downward price trend thas year. By the middle of
August, the price for green coffee beans was just above $2 a pound.
Wholesale prices dropped from about $4.25 a pound to the current
$2.~to $3. 79 range. •
THE AGRICULTURE DEPARTMENT SAID in Jone that world
Fro•PageAJ Last 15 Years
coffee aetlOD t.hanttwu
M>stlevet.:
L
A three-city survey by the National Coffee Association showed.
meanwhile, that conaump\ion ft0m March throu&b June this ~ar
was 22 percent below "9'18 levels. And the USDA said the averaie person consumed the equivalent
or three pounds ot green beans ln tM first quart~r of 1911. compared '
toS.6pc>qJlds in thesamepmocllMtyear.
OONSVltlb LEADED IN SOME areas 1ponsor'ed boycotts
and said the campaigns led people to cut back coffee drinking. Store
operators in other cities said there was no real consumpUon.drop -
people stockpiled. then drank what they bad al home instead of buy-
ing fresh.
Either way, the effect was the same -declining sales that left
roasters With large inventories that resulted in price drops.
store spokesmen in Atlanta said sales dropped about 20 to 2!S
percent in the first half of the year. Recent coffee promotions helped
slightly, but sales remain sJugitsh.
"We feel that one reason customers are not buytna ri&bt now is
that they're using up what we call 'pantry stuff' ln anUclpaUon of
lower prices to come," sald Arthur Levitt, coffee b'-'Yel' for
Alterman Brothers. operators of the area's Ble Apple chain.
JOHN FRIESZ, MANAGER OF TUE Main Market at Mandan,
N.D., agreed.
"Customers are just waitine for the price to come down a•aio. ••
said Friesz, who is selling corree at $3.93 a pound, down $1.SO from
the January level. "Now they're just buying what they need and US·
ing up what they have. I think housewives have more coffee than
grocery stores have."
NIXON •••
ment gave this reply lo re-
porters' inquiries:
"In order to be in a positio.n to
clarify unresolved questions con·
ceming the whereabouts of gifts
from foreign government of-
ficials to Nixon and members of
his family, S. Dobelle has 1&sked
Joe W. Solomon, administrator
or general services, to conduct an
inventory of those foreign gifts to
the Nixons which remain in the
possession or the GSA.
Hughes 'Surviv'ed'
On Pain Killers
. Funeral Rites
Pending for
Oscar Smith
Funeral services are pending
today at Forest Lawn Mortuary
in Glendale for Corona del Mar
resident Oscar Smith. Sr., who
di~ SUnday at the age of 92.
"The issues involved will be
discussed at a bearing on Wed-
nesday."
Under U.S. law, any gift worth
more than $50 belongs to the gov-
ernment and is supposed to be
turned over to the chief of pro-
tocol for disposition as public
property.
Nixon's belongings have been
stored by the government while
legal battles were waged over
their custody and control. The
U.S. Supreme Court in June up-
held a law that said the govern·
ment bas custody but that access
was subject to regulations.
_OfigSkip~
RerordFlip
McFARLAND, Wis. <AP> -Glenn Naughton of.
Madison got his cow chip to
sail 174 feet, 4 inches to win
the chow chip throwing
contest at the Frank.
Hlavac farrn.
Sponsors Frank and Mary Jean Hlavac said
N1ughton's thiow fell five
feet abort of the world.
record.
• The couple provide sun·
dried c;hlps from the
pasture of tbelr. Black
Angus herd and "plastlc
gloves ror lbe not 80
hardy," Mrs.!lJavacsaid.
Two Marines
Report Sti.ots
TIJUANA, Mexico (AP> -
Two U.S. Marines 's~ they were
11bot in a park without explana·
tion alter their car developed
engine trouble bere. The two. who walked to the
border gate !or help Saturday
nliht, were taken to Naval
Hospital in San Dieeo and iden-
tif1e(l aa Liirice Cpl. John Melts ot HOUiton, ~.x .• end Pfc, Daniel
Finley Of Philadelphia.
They were listed in satidac-
toi'} cOnditton toda.y. Mears was
•hot in tbe cb._t aiMl Flftley tn the
baa cl.
AUSTIN, Tex. (AP> -Aides to
Howard Hu ghes said the
r eclusive millionaire received
regular and frequent doses of
powerful pain killers in the last
years of his life, according to a
Te"'Casofficlal. .
"We are talking about soluble
codeine, taken by hypodermic,
Empirin Compaund No. 4 and
Valium ... He was laking all
three or th06e frequently and reg-
ularly over the last 10 to lS.
years of his life," Asst. Atty.
Gen. Rick Harrison said Sunday.
Hughes died. at 70 •or kidney
failure April 5, 1976, and is buried
Scuba Diver·
~tricken, Dies
2 Hours Later
A 30-year.old investigator with
the Orange County District At·
torney's office was stricken
while scuba diving near Three·
Arch Bay Sunday and pro·
nounced dead two hours later,
coroner's deputies said today.
Richard Caley, of 14771 Alder
Lane, Tustin, complained of
shortness of breath and ·chest
·pains while he was in the water in
scuba eear aboU,t 11;30 a.m .•
deputies said. .
Companions helped him to a
rocky shore and be was then
taken by an El Toro Marine
helicopter to Mission Community
Hospital. Deputies said he was
pronounced dead in the hospital
emergency room at 1: 30 p. m.
Deputies said they would be de-•
terminlng today lf Caley died as
the result of an accident in the
water or a heart attack.
in Houston. He evidenUy died
aboard his plane as it new from
Acapulco to Houston. Harrisoo has been takmg dep-
esitioos in Los Angeles for use
by the state in its effort to collect
16 percent of Hughes' estate in in-
heritance taxes.
-A jury trial to determine
Hughes' legal residence is to
begin here Sept. 12. Hushes'
closeSt living relatives contend
he was a Nevada resident. while
Texas Atty. Gen. John Hill
claims he was born and died a
Texan.
California courts nave ordered
Hughes aides John Holmes and
Chuck Waldron to answer ques·
tions about how drugs were o}).
. tained and admin.lstered to·
Hughes, Harrison said.
He said Texas will petition Los
Angeles Superior Court today or
Tuesday to order Hutbes' pbyal·
cian, Dr. Norman Crane, to
answs-que.stiou abou\ the same
sebJ~
The aides. Harrisorf said, were
"six male secretaries who lived
with Hughes on a rotating basis,
three on and three off. There
always was an aide with Hughes
to answer the phone, give
messages, and dictate messages
back ...
Dep9sitions obtained ·from
Holmes, Waldron and several
other Hughes aides indicated
Hughes receivid heavy medica-
tion. Harrison said.
One aide also said in ·& sworn
deposition that Hughes' final
move, from the Bahamas to
Acapulco, was llnked to a power
struggle within Hughes' financial
eropir~ Harrison said.
Harri.soo said testimony about a power strunle within Hughes'
holding company. Swnma Corp .•
came fro01 George Francom, one
of the Mormon aides.
Mr. Smith died tn his home at
31000ceanBlvd.
· He was president of the Pacific
Electric Railway whose red cars
brought visitors to Newport
Beach and Balboa for a ball a
century ~ween 1891 anal.Ml.
As president of the Pacific
Electric. which was a subsidiary
of the Southern Pacific Railroad,
Mr. Smith also served as assis·
tant to the president of the SP.
Mr. Smith was the oldest living
past presidmt of the Optimists
International, .having served as
international president of that 1'
service organization from 1926 to
1927.
Pro..PageAJ
SAM ...
' He als-o reportedly says,
••when I saw the vict'ims·
. families on TV, I wanted to kill
them, too.••
The fire . hydrant Berkowitz
parked next to was the key in bis
capture outside his Yonkersbome
Aug.10.
His car was ticketed July 31,
the night he allegedly killed
Stacy Moskowitz, 20, and
wounded her date. Robert
Violante, also 20. A check of the
parking summonses given in the
area that night led police to the
suspect.
Bomb Plan Told
PARIS (AP> -France has
oew. ••more preeJseH iodicatioos
that South Africa is buildln• en
-atom bomb, the Foreign Mlnistl;'
said Monday.
•
lrVIDe
VOL~ 70, NO. Ut, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES
Toil y's Clo big
N.Y. Stoeks
TEN CENTS I
'Son of Sam' Wanted · to Get Caught·
NEW YORK (AP> -David
Berkowita. lhc au..,.cttd .'4·
caU~ klller UOW1l as "Son of
Sam," deliberately parked next
to a fireplq the ni1bt of hiJ last
kUUnc because be wanted to aet
caught, a~rd1n1 to \apes quot·
eel by'I'be Daily Newa lOd'Y. ·
Quotinl a transcript of tapes
purportedly made at the hospital
where the suspect is undereolng
mental tests. The·News reports
that Berkowitz said, ''I knew that
it l aot a ticket, it would lead
them tome."
Meanwhile, literary atent
Scott Meredith denied reports
that he ls selling to hours of tape-
r e co rd ed interviews with
Berkowitz.
"For the record, we are not
close to a deal, have not offered
tapes to anyone, have not set a
money valuation. and indeed
have not even agreed to
represent material." Scott
Meredith told The Associated
Press on Sunday.
Meredith said he bu "been ap.
proached by people with tapes
and are now examitting material
as we examine all material sub.
milted to us."
lt was not immediately clear
whether The News aod Meredith
had copies of the same 10 hours of
taped conversations. Meredith
said the tapes were made at
Kings County Hospital In
Brooklyn where Berkowitz ls be·
Ing hefd1 but would not aay who
eavebim the tapes.
The reported 10 houn of tapes
. refen'ed to by Meredith and 'nle
News are not the same as those
made by Berkowitz' first at·
torney, Philip Peltz. Pelts' tapes
were -impounded by the court
Crate Search Sought
Valuable 'Gifts to Nixon' Missing
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
State Department is going to
eourt Wednesday to ask
permission to search some 200
packing crates Je(t behind by
Richard M . Nixon for valuable
gifts presented to the former
president and his family by
foreign dlgnitaries.
The State Department has list-
ed a number or the gifts as
"missing," possibly only
because of poor record-keeping,
and wants to ecamine the pack·
ing crates containing materials
from the Nixon administration to
see if they are there. The crates .
are in government storage.
The Washington Post said to·
day that U.S. Chief of Protocol
Evan S. Dobelle asked to ex-
amine the boxes after the
newspaper pointed out that no
one knew what they contained.
The Post, in' a story by Maxine
Cheshire, said at least a dozen
gifts from Iran are in the "miss·
ing" category.
The story said Mrs. Nixon
notified the White House gifts un·
it two days '\rter her husband's
resignation that she intended lb
keep one particular gift present·
ed bytbeShahoflran.
Message E%pected
Trustee to Quit
' College Board?
~
frey Road and Irvine Center
Drive.
By WILUAM SCHREIBEll Ofllltoelty .........
Saddleback College Trustee
Frank Greinke next week is ex-
pected to nnounce his reslcna-
tion from the collece board to
move out of the coun\y.
The Tustin oil man conceded In
an interview today that be will
"have an announcement lo
make" at the Aug. 29 board
meeting -the first session or the
new semester.
"I fought as £llbt as I
could and I now completely ac-
cept tbe board decision,"
Greinke.said. •·Now that we have
a campus I have been working
toward healing lhe wounds."
Greinke said be is completely
oppo6ed to a new proposal under
discussion in Tustin to deannex
from Saddleback and join
Rancho Santiago.
Greinke said he will not rec-
ommend anyone to take his
place on the board because he
<See TRUSTEE, Page Al)
''The gift was described by the
gift unit as 'a very fine hand·
painted miniature portrait of the
President -done on ivory ... 18·
karat gold oval frame on easel
back surrounded with golden
leaves and branches, many
blossoms of single and clustered
turquoise and sapphire
stones,' "the newspaper said.
According to the Post, that
item is listed as "missing."
Other items so listed include an
011 painting from the Soviet
Union, an Indian silver box, a
gold neeklace and bracelet from
Ghana. a gold pin from
oa1.Y.Ct.t5Wf"'"9
TO LEAVE POST
Truatee Greinke
Greinke would become the
second Tustin trustee in less than
a year to quit before the end of
his term. Nine months ago, ultra·
conservative board member
Robert Bartholomew resigned to
move his nursery business to
v~.
"We are building a home Jn
'Santa Barbara County and it is' .
nearly completed," Greinke
said. .
"I'm not sure as to eucUy
what the timing will be but J want
to give as much advance.notice
A.llaway'-s Sanity
Hearing Delayed ·
as po6Sible to generate some in-A.biarllig-'that will determine
terest here in Tustin." campus killer Edward Charles
Greinke's term isn't due to ex-.., Allaway's mental condition when
pire until February of .1979, be shot nine people at Cal State
wnich leaves tbe rematnin1 Fullerton w.as delayed today by
trustees with the optJon of ap-the illness of a woman Juror
pointing a replacement or callinc
a s~ial elecUon.
Greinke was elected to the
board in 19'1S when be ran unop-
posed.
~J'9ena Ir/a
Gun Bearer
From Irvine
The sanity .phase-Of the-Or-ange
County Superio?" Court trial was
del•yed until lh1s Uternoon while
Judge Robert P . .Kneeland's staff
tried to determine the possibility
of the hospitalized Juror return·
lng thla week
Lawyers for both aides said
they would be wUUng to replace
her; with an ilternate Juror if the
na(ure of her illness prevents a
speedy return to the courtroom.
Allewa.y. 38, bas been convict-
ed by the Jury of six counts ol
first·dearee murder, one of
aecood degree and two counts of
aanult with a deadly weapon.
The defense contends that he
was insane on Juty 12. 1976 when
1'\e tOok • r10e to the Fullerton campus and ahOt nine people lil
and around the library.
Both sides plan to put
r.sycltiatrilta on the stand 1n what
• ex~ to be a two-week hearlng.
Nicaragua. a sliver bowl from
Ireland, a bracelet Crom ln-
d ones i a, another from
Nicaragua, and two gold basket
weave compacts with diamond
cl as_ps from Wes\ Germ any.
Dobelle was not available for
comment but the Sua\e Depart·
ment gave this reply to re-
porters' inquiries:
· "In order to be in a position to
clarify unresolved questions con·
ceming .the whereabouts of gifts
from foreign government of·
ficials to Nixon and members of
his family, S. DobelJe has asked
(See NIXON, Pase AZ>
Orange Man
ToJoinOC
Plan Group
John F. Cyprien or Orange was
appointed to the Oran1e C9wJty
Plannlnl Cotnmtaston tod*t by
county Sllperviaor Ralph Clark.
Cyprt•, a, •• echacatlonal
consultant, will tepl•ce Com-
m luioner Floyd Farano of
Anaheim who reslped euber
this month citlnf an increased
workload in bi.a private law prac-
tice.
Cyprien Is now a vice president
with Educational Research
Marketinl Inc. ln Santa Ana. a
firm developing career ed11ca·
lion erograms for school dis·
tricts.
He formerly was parks and
recreation dlrector for the city of
Orange for 14 yeart and wu an
Aoabetm 't'ecreatlon supervisor
for eight years.
Cyprlen said today be believes
his knowledge of government
will a.saist with hl111lanning com-
mission duUes. He upectl to
spend about 30 hours a week on
commlsslon-related responslblliU~.
"I have the time and I can be of
service," said Cyprien, a native
of Fullerton.
(See PIANN.ER, Paae AZ)
.DINING ROOM . .
GOODS SELL.
·•we sold the atntn• room
f'urnitw• ;met 1'84 r•ally rood
responsetotheaa."
That's Ul• aalea •ucceu story
told by the El Torq woman who
placed this ~lasalfied ad in tho Daily; PUot1 ·.
after he was reported to be trying to market t.Mm.
Meredith said Peltz was not in·
volved.
The News said the authenticlty
of the new tapes has been ques·
tioned by Correction Department
ornclals and other law enforce-
ment authorities and an ln-
vesUgation is under way into bow
the tapes could have been made
and whomil'ht have made them.
According to The News.
Berkowitz. accused or killing six
persons and wounding seven with
a .4'·ca1Jber revolver in litUe
more than a year, is heard to say
on the new tapes that he "felt bad
that there. were so many wounded.'' w
"I w81}ted them alJ dead ....
My job was to kill," he is quoted
asbying.
(See SAM, Page AZ>
Da\'id Clark is one of several \·endors \\ho ha\ e already .
set up stands in Memphis. Tenn .. to ca~h in on tht' death
of Elvis Presley. Clark sells bumper stickers and other
mementos from his pickup truck outside the Forest lhlls
cemetery where the rock star was buried. Others are
selling similar items outside Presley's m ansion.
Graceland.
~01•ncil to Ponder
Skateboards, ·Tax
SkateboardS and a tax cut are
among 39 issues tbe Irvine City
Council wiUreview ata 7:30p.m.
Tuesday meetin1 at the civic
center.112001amboree Blvd.
The council will be asked to cut
the citoy property tax rate by 8.5
cents.
That'• the recommendation of
James B. Harrington, director of
administrative services.
U adopted, the total tax rate
would drop from 65.5 cents per
'100 assessed valuation to 57
cenC, per $100.
City propeny wes account for
•bout 5 percent of total property
taxes a typical Jrvllte resident
pays ($12.$2 ~ $100) to various
aaencies.
Tb• proposed tax break in-
cludes a •,kent cqt otf tbe
cenerfl /llnd tax, rate of $3~.5 centii'Pet $100 AV. The r~t ls ac·
counted for by a proposed four-ce~t drop in the parks and bicy-cle U-llls bond rate.
Despite the reduction. tax·
payers fill t;e paylftl $Ut1000
more I« mWiidpaJ~•ovemment
services -a projected total.
after the tax cut, of $1,354,000
raised by the general fund tax.
The park bond tax amounts to
an additional $l,.4'2S,000.
The lower tax rates, yet higher
tax bills, are accounted for by m.
creases in assessed valuation.
Last year the owner of an
$80,000 house paid $131 taxes to
the city of Irvine·. In order to pay
the aame tax this year, after get·
ting the tax break, the property
must have been assessed no
higher thari 15 perceat. the
break-even point.
If your assessment was higher
than lS percent. you'll pay more
tax this year: if lower. your tu
will be less. ·
Tbe 15 percent benchmark
hol~ true no matt~r what your·
.Propetty was assessed at lasi
year. .
Total assetsed vi.luatlon in the
city cl lrv\rie increased 29 pet'·
cent this year, but that inclUdeg
aew canstructfon1 and industrial
and commercial usessrAeats.
<SM COUNQ •It A.z)
1
t
I
1
\
' l
,tz DAILY PILOT
Resident
Beaten
In Home
An Irvine •oman wa1 beaten
1 ln btt btd lhl• momtn1 by .n wi
kno""' Ua('kt"r who I ft. no cluea
to his identity, Pollet Hld.
Shannan 8rabec, ao, of~
Jt:mel Wat. aat up ln bC!d after
sbe w awak ntd by nolaes. just
•• • dark clo4hed figure puahcd open ber door
She was struck over her rlihl
eye and bit numerous times tn
the head and leas with a clol.b·
t'overed club
Arter her attacker left, Mrs.
Brubcc ran to a oeigbbor'a
houi.~ The neighbor called
police.
Paramedics treated her at the
scene for a deep gash over her
eye, and cuts and bruise~ on her
legs
She "as taken lo Santa Ana·
Tustm Community Hospital for
further treatment. Doctors later
permitted her to go home.
Police said Mrs. Brabec told
them she was unable lo identify
her attacker, who wore a full skt
mask, gloves and dark clothing.
Lt. Jery Boyd said the as·
sailant apparently came to the
home for the speci(lc reason of
beating Mrs. Brabec. The motive
was not apparent. Nothing was
taken from the house.
Gremuk Kills
lOas Police
Fight Busnap
MEXICO CITY <AP> -Ten persons aboard a hijacked bus
were killed when police stopped
and stormed the bus along a cen-
tral MeXJcan highway and one of
the hijackers exploded a
grenade, omcials reported to-
day.
They said five other persons
were seriously injured in the
violence late Sunday.
One of the two hijackers and
rive other persons were killed in
the. grenade blast, they said, and
the other hijacker was shot and
· wounded by the attacking police.
The hijackers. who reportedly
identified themselves as mem-
bers or the People's Revolu·
t1onary Armed Front, a known
leftist group, had commandeered
the bus eight hours earlier in
Mexico City and demanded the
• release of prisoners he)d in a 1975
k1dnaping, police said.
The bus, carrying about 40
passen~ers, had been headed for
the coastal city of Manzanillo.
300 miles west of the capital.
'Camel Lady'
Crosses Desert
P ERTII, Western Australia
(AP> _, A beautiful woman is
crossing the forbidding central
Australian desert with four
camels and a dog, say rangers,
missionaries and travelers who
claim to have seen her.
But no one knows who the
mysterious "camel lady" is or
why she's there.
The reports indicate the
woman is nearing the end of a
620-mile, two-month trek across
the sand dunes, salt marshes and
scrublands of the Gibson desert
from Ayers Rock in central
Australia to Wlluna ln Western
Australia.
F ro.s Page A J
TRUSTEE •••
hopes a broad choice or can-
didates will help alleviate what be
views as serious apathy toward
Saddleback Colleee in the Tustin area.
He also noted that he would r~
tum to Orange County frequenUy
even if be moves because his
buslneas is based here.
OftANQI COAST
DAILY PILOT
S unamer Girl o.11, ..... ~" Le• ... .,..
Ah yes. it's summertime and the hnn· 1s
. . Well. the water is warm and the tem-
perature is high. Claudia Krcutzberg. 21.
of '.\e\\port Beach. knows ho" to strike a
balance -keeping cool while improving
her sun tan on a Lido Isle beach.
Fro• Page A J
COUNCIL ...
In the matter of skateboarding,
the council will debate whether
to move an existing skateboard
course, located in University
Community Park.
Nearby homeowners,
represented by the Park Crest
Community Association, have
complained that the park is a
noise nuisance.
The quarter-acre concrete
course lies only a few feel from
the backyard fences of several
homes.
The association has filed a
claim against the city, and in·
dividual members of the council,
asserting $350,000 damages.
The claim, which has been
flied as a lawsuit in Harbor
Municipal Court, maintains that
the skateboard course is "inde·
cent and offensive to the senses.··
Jesse Washington, director of
community services. recom-
mends that the council either
move the course to Woodbridge
Community Park, al an estimal·
ed cost of $35,000, or leave it at
University Park.
Other items on the council
agenda include recommenda-
tionsto: ·
-~tablisb a · new develop·
ment fee to offset capital im
provements required by new
building. ·
-Review an archeologicaf re
port on the University Town
Center Planned Community,•con·
si dering preservation and
salvage alternatives.
-Review design of residential
development in Turtle Rock.
Thieves Get
Cash, Loot in
Burglaries
Burglaries of two Irvine hotels
netted thieves $2,SOO in cash and
jewelry Sunday.
In both cases, hotel guests
were suunine themselves at the
pool when their rooms were hit.
Jim Beightol, 32, president of a
Pottersvllle, N .J. plastics
manufacturing plant, told police
$900 cash and a solid gold Chris-tian Dior watch wort.ti $900 were
taken from his room at the
Registry Hotel, 18800 MacArthur
Blvd.
Burglars struck also at the
Airporter Inn, a block .away.
Al Strabic, 37, a West Bloornfleld,
Michigan, construction 700 ex·
ecutive, reported the loss of $700
cash and jewelry, lncludlng two
pocket watches, a weddini ring
and a knife.
lo both burclarles, ~lice said,
their were no ••ins oC forced en-
tr)'. Police said keys possibly
were used.
Vance Cites Ties
In T&Ik With China
PEKJNG CAP ) -Secretary of
State Cyrus R. Vance, here to ex·
plore chances of establishing full
diplomatic relations with China,
opened talks witb, Chinese
leaders today by emphasizing
the two countries· common
political interests in various
parts of the worJd.
In a sitting room m the Great
Hall of the People, Vance began
his first meeting with a Chinese
team h eaded by Foreign
Minister Huang Hua by saying
there are areas where the two
countries have "mutual ID· terests."
One of these areas is Africa.
where both the United States and
China are eager to blunt Soviet
penetration. They are concerned
about inroads the Russians are
making in east Africa and with
in s urg en t mov e ments in
southern Africa. . .
American officials said the
"international discussion,'' as
Vance called it, was aimed at
persuading Peking that a closer
relationship can be built with
Washington on the basis or
shared objectives.
Thi6 phase of the talks is likely
to occupy the first two days of
Vance's four·day visit to the
Chinese capital, serving as a
buildup lo the dominant subject
a mutual desire to move
toward fuJI relations.
Outside the Great Hall, and
along the Avenue of Tranquility.
ID Tien An Men Square and
elsewhere, tens or thousands of
F ro•Page A l
PLANNER. • •
"Development is goine to oc-
cur," he continued. ''You can't
put a stop to it but you can plan lt
properly."
Cyprien said he bas driven
through much of the Southeast
county area and generally bas
been impressed with develop-ment there.
He said he would oppose de-
velopment unW adequate streets
and utilities were available lo
serve iL He also said there may
be some cues when government
could respond faster to de-
velopers' requests rather than
delaying them with red tape.
Clark sald be belleved Cyprien
would bring to the commission a
good balance between environ-
mental concerns and develop-
meni interests.
Cyprien bas been active in
various recreation and civic
grolij)I, servin& as president or
the Sou t h ern California
Municipal Athletic Federation
and as Chairman of the Plaza
District Council Of the Boy Scouu
and GlrJ Scouts or Amtrica.
Cyprien was named Man of t.lte
Yeal' arid etven the Di!U:o,guJshed
Ser vtce Award by the, Oranae
J unior Cbambef of Commerce in 1966:
He U n Oranie with hit wU , arilyn, an4 four chi.lctAi[
Chinese marched bebind banners
proclaiming the completion or
the 11th Communist party con-
gress. (Related story. A4)
Va nce's arrival wa5 low.
keyed, with Huang Hua. Vice
Foreign Minister Wang Hai-jung
and Huang Chen. chief ot the
Ch inese Li a ison Office in
Washington, heading a modest
welcoming delegation at the airport.
But the festive atmosphere,
with clanging cymbals and ex-
ploding firecrackers that had
children covering their ears. lent
a• speciaJ dimension to this first
high-level U .S.-Chinese contact
in two years.
Chairman Hua had signaled
Vance beforehand that Chinese
policy has not changed on the
Taiwan question, and that the
United States would have to end
all diplomatic and military lies
with the Nationalist Chinese if it
hopes to establish full relations
with Peking.
Hua's demand was contained
in a speech closing the party con·
$(ress Thursday and made public
by Hsinhua, the official Chinese
news agency. as Vance flew from
Tokyo to the Chinese capital.
f'roaa Page A J
SAM •••
He also reportedly says,
"When l saw the victims '
famllies on TV. I wanted to kill
· them, too."
The fire hydrant Berkowitz
parked next to was the key in his
capture outside his Yonkers home
Aug .10.
His car was ticketed July 31.
the night he allegedly killed
Stacy Moskowitz. 20. and
wounded her date. Robert
Violante, also 20. A check of the
parking summonses given In the
area that night Jed polJce to the
suspecL
AUSTIN, Tex. (AP> -Aides to
Howard Huches said the
reclus,ve millionaire received
regular and frequent doses ot
powerful pain killers in the last
years of his lite, according to a
Texas official.
"We are talking about soluble
codeine. taken by bypodermlc,
Empirin Compound No. 4 and
Valium ... He was takinl all
three of those frequenUy and rea·
ularly over the last 10 to lS.
years of his life," Asst. Atty.
Geq. Rick Harrison said Sunday.
Hughes died at 70 of kidney
failure Aprils. 1976, and is buried
in Houston. He evidently died
aboard his plane as it flew from
Acapulco to Houston.
Harrison has been taking dep-
ositions in Los Angeles for use
by the state ln its effort to collect
16 percent of Hughes· estate in in-
heritance taxes.
A jury trial to determine
Hughes' legal residence is to
begin here Sept. 12. Hu&hes'
closest living relatives contend
he was a Nevada resident, while
Texas Atty. Gen. John HiJJ
claims he was born and died a
Texan.•
California court.is have ordered
Hughes aides John Holmes and
Chuck Waldron to answer ques.
lions about bow drugs were ob-
tained and administered to
Hughes, Harrison said.
He said Texas will petition Los
Angeles Superior Court today or
Tuesday to order Hughes' physi·
cian, Dr. Norman Crane, to
answer questions about the same
Sex Bias Opposed
NEW YORK CAP) -About500
members of the Coalition for Les-
bian and Gay Rights peacefully
converged on the United Nations
on Saturday, demanding an end
to discrimination on the basis of
sexual orientation.
subject
The aides, Harriaon aatcl. were
"1lx male secretaries who lived
with Hughes on a rotating buis.
three on and three off. There
always was an aide with Huehes
to answer the phone, give
messages, and dictate messages
back."
Depositions obtained from
Holmes, Waldron and several
other Hushes aides lndlcated
Hughes received heavy medica-
tion, Harrison said.
One aide also said in a sworn
deposition that Hughes' final
move, from the Bahamas to
Acapulco, was linked to a power
struggle within Hughes' financial
empire, Harrison said.
Harrison said testimony about
a power struggle within Hughes'
holding company, Summa Corp.,
came from George Francom, one
of the Mormon aides.
F roaaPage AJ
NIXON •.•
Joe W. Solomon, administrator
or general services, to conduct an
inventory ofthose foreign gifts to
the Nixons which remain in the
possession or the GSA.
"The issues involved will be
discussed at a bearing on Wed-
nesday."
Under U.S. law, any gift worth
more than $50 belongs to the gov-
ernment and is supposed to be
turned over to the chief oC pro-
tocol for disposition as public
property.
Nixon's belongings have been
stored by the government while
legal baWes were waged over
their custody and control. The
U.S. Supreme Court in June up-
held a law that said the govern-
ment has custody but that access
was subject to regulations.
Saks Plans Store
·1n Mesa's Center
Saks Fifth Avenue, the
fashionable specialty 1tore, will
open in Costa Mesa's South Coast
Plaza in the fall or 1979, accord-
ing to Henry T. Segerstrom,
managing partner of the 1.6
million square-foot center.
Segerstrom and Saks ex·
ecutive Allan Johnson, signed a
lease agreement last week that
will bring the New York·based
specialty store to Costa Mesa:
The 105,000-square-foot Saks
will be located adjacent to I.
Magyrln, which opened this past
weekend.
South Coast Plaza officials
have been negotiating with Saks
for more than a year, with
rumors of a lease agreement ap-
pearing as recenUy as last June
in Women's We~ Daily.
The Women's Wear Dally arti-
cle said Sales and I. Ma1nln each
expect to achieve grou aalea or
$100 per-square.foot at South
Coast Plaz.a.
Johnson cited the plaza's loca-
tion in Orange County as one ol
the reasons the store selected
South Coast Pl82a for its 3Sth
store.
The New York outlet opened its
first West C.oast store in Beverly
Hills in 1938. Subsequent stores
were established in Palm
Springs in 1959, P.alo Alto and La
Jolla in 1963. Monterey in 1972 and
in Woodland Hills in 1973. ••
Saks opened a store in San
Francisco this year, on the firm's
25th anniversary.
'IV Coverage Set
NEW YORK <AP> -The na-
tion's three major networks say
they will broadcast live on
tek?vision and radio President
Carter's news conference start-
ing atl1:30a.m., PDT. Tuesday.
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OML V PILOT •&
Money Mulled ·1
Ecorwmy Sti,n Debate
By JOHN CUNNIFF · ...~ ....... ,...,.,..
It sounds so cold, dull and abstract but it ls really so hot
and volatile, and lmmensely Jmportant to everyone, this de-
bate over the mooey supply.
Every time the Fed attempts to expand or contract the
amount of money clrcuJatina in tht economy it gives rise to
the araument over whether it is cood or bad for jobs, ln-
come3, the stock market and the ceneral welfare.
AND THE DEBATE S&EllS endless, because the Fed
is always watch.lng the money stock, and always watching
the rate of inflation, whlc:b lt considers to be the most
dangerous enemy of prosperity.
But this isn't the whole story. There is the debate also
over the independence ol the Fed and its chairman. Art.bur
F. Burns, and over lta interpretation of tt0nomic events,
which many a critic says bu been faulty time and again.
Should the Fed be more responsive to Coniress and, in theory anyway, more
responsive to the American people via
Congress? Or should it rell1iously avoid
any tamperlnc by Con1ress as an
economic crime against the people?
Bums has attempted to keep a lofty
distance between himself and the
lealalatlve body, condescending to
testify each month, see mini to patronize
members of the House and Senate bank·
Ing committees because, well, poUUcs is
part of the job.
DURING THESE SE~IONS HE HAS the majesty and
mystery of an oracle speaking from the mountain --lectur-,
ing, advising. admonishing --putting forth what he sees to
be self·evident truths, mainly that inflation is Lucifer lurk·
lng.
The often doctrinaire posture in itself appears to goad
some members of the House and Senate banking commit·
tees, who consider themselves just as concerned and
quallfied to deal with inflation as the unflappable. pipe·
smoking Burns.
But there is a larger issue. Congressmen sometimes
wonder how one man can exert such power over the
economy. even to the point of opposing the President. They
worry over what appear to be subjective dedslons by the
Fed.·
THERE IS ANOTHER APSECT to the debate. as there
always is. Should the Fed lose its degree of independence.
and instead become a vehicle for congressional or presiden-
tial policy? Would inflation then be a bigger threat?
Conceding the dangers, critics still ask: Who de-
termines whether the Fed is interpretine events correctly?
Who disciplines it for wrong decisions? Who, in fact. really
knows why the Fed acts as it does?
Now that the Fed is tightening up a bit. forcing up some
basic mterest rates, the debate is reheating. The Fed. say
the critics, has again stepped on the brakes too soon.
"THE FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD has once again;
as in mid-1975 and mid·l976. prematurely Impaired the ratA:
of economic recovery by raising the cost of credit.·· claims
one critic, John Wright. of Wright Investors' Service.
Wright isn't alone In that criticism. N4merous informed
critics have argued the Fed is too nervo\ls about inflation.
acting lo slow what it feels is an overheated economy even
when millions are jobless and factories are operationg well
below capacity.
Bums, himself, has indicated that such a mistake might
have been made in the past couple of years, the conse-
quence being to stall the recovery from recession. and pro-
long unemployment and underactivity.
Stock Market Neu
Scattered Gains
NEW YORK <AP) -The stock market showed some
scattered gains today with glamor issues leading the up-
turn. The l)ow Jones average of 30 industrials, which ha4
fallennearly60 points in four weeks, was up3.81 at867.29.
Gaindta and losers were about evely balanced in the
broad tall~ of New York Stock Exchanie·listed issues.
Brokers traced the upswing to internal market forces
rather than any particular news development.
Doll'lo,.nA r~ra•• M'haf Sto<>k• Old
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'4EW YORK IAPI
IALH
Due to late transmfss1on
today's listing Wiii not appear In the Daily Pilot.
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in a low tar cigarette.
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EDITION
.
VC VOL. 70, NO 23', J SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY~ AUGUST 22, 1971 . TEN CENTS j
•'Son of SGm' Wanted to Get Caught·
r 8e
cat
Sa
to kU
~
(
~ w' mJ
NEW YORK (AP> -David
Berkowlt1, tho suspected .'4·
calibtt tUln known u "Son of
Sam," deliMrately parked next
to a fireplug the niaht of b15 last tillina becau.e be wanted to eet
uud\t, accordin1 to tapes quot·
ed by The Daily News today.
Quoting a transcript ol tapes
purportedly made at the ho6pital
where the suspect 1s underaoine
mental tests, The News reports
JTrustee
TO Leave
SB Board
By WILUAM SCHREIBER
OI tlie 0.11'1' ~li.t St.tf
Saddleback College Trustee
Frank Greinke next week is ex·
peeled to announce his resigna·
lion from the col1ege board to
move out of the county.
St The Tustin oil man conceded in
c 1 an interview today that be will
pc ''have an announcement to ~~ make" at the Aug. 29 board
gl meeting -the first session of the
new semester.
Pl Greinke would become the
fo second Tustin trustee in less than
a year to quit before the end of ~f his term. Nine months ago, ullra-
conserv atlve board member
Robert Bartholomew resigned to
move his nursery business to . z Ventura County.
"We are building a home in
Santa Barbara County and it is
J nearly completed," Greinke
said.
"I'm 'not sure as to exactly
what the timing wiU be but I w~t
' to give as much advance notice
] as possible to generate some in·
terest here in Tustin."
Greinke'• term isn't due to ex·
•
pire unUl February of 197t,
which leaves the remaining st. trustees with the optJon of ap.
• " pointine a replacement 01' callln&
sl a special election.
e'. Greinke was elected to lbe
board in 197S when he ran unop-
~ posed.
1! The Tustin trustee said there
v was no bitterness involved in bis t decision lo leave the board,
~ despite bis often-bitter and un-
successful fiibt to have a second
d campus located at Myford Road
1 and Bryan A venue near tbe
Tustin city line.
The majority or the board vot-1 ed instead for a campua site
three miles further south at Jef. I ~:l~~~~~~~~ I~vine Center
"I fought ·as good a light as I
I could artd I riQw completely ac-·
t cept the board decision,••
1 Grei.nl<e said. "Now that we have
a campus I have been working
toward healin1 the wounds.'• ~ • Greinke said he is completely
.,. · op~ to a new proposal under
a discussion in Tustin to deannex ~ from Saddleback and join ..
Rancho Santiago. ·
l Greinke said he will not rec--
t ommend anyone to take his
place on the board because be
hopes a broad cboloe of can-
didates will help alle\riatewhatbe
views as aerious apathy toward
Saddleback CoUece in the Tustin
area.
He also noted that he would re-
tum to Oranee Coun~trequentl,y
even if he moves because tils
business is based here. •
.
that Berkowitz sald, "I knew that
11 I cot a ticket, it would lead
them to me.'•
Meanwhile, literary a1ent
Scott Meredith denied reports
that he is selling 10 hours ol tape-
recorded interviews with
Berkowitz.
"For the record, we are not
close to a deal, have not offered
tapes to anyone, have not set a
money valuation. and Indeed
..
b ave not even agreed to·
represent material," Scott
MeredJtb told The Associated
Press oo Sunday.
Meredith said he haa "been ap.
proached by people with tapes
·and are now examining material
as we examine all material sub·
mitted to us."
It was not immediately clear
whet.her The News and Meredith
bad copies oftbe same lOboursof
taped conversations. Meredith
said the tapes were made at
Kings County Hospital in
Brooklyn where Berkowitz l.s be-
ing held, but would not say who
gave him the tapes.
The reported 10 hours of tapes
referred to by Meredith and The
News are not the same as those
made by Berkowitz• first at·
torney, Philip Pelti. Peltz' tapes
were impounded by the court
after he was reported to be trying
to market them.
Meredith said Peltz was not in·
volved. .
The News said the authenticity
or the new ~ bas been ques·
tioned by Correction Department
officials and other law entorce·
menl authorlttes and an In·
vestigation is under way into bow
the tapes could have been made
and who might have made them.
According to The News,
Berkowitz, accused or killing six
persons and wounding seven with
a .44-callber revolver in little
more than a year, is heard to say
on the new tapes that be "felt bad
that there were so many
wounded."
•'I wanted them all dead. . • .
My job was to kill," he is quoted
assaying.
(See SAM, Page .U>
Crate Searcli Sought
. .
Valuable 'Gifts to Nixon' Missing
OMly ~!let Si.ff ,.,...
TO LEA VE l»O!:T'
Trustee Greinke
WASHINGTON CA P > -The
State Department is going to
court Wednesday to ask'
permission to search some 200
packing crates left behind by
Richard M. Nixon for valuable eifts presented to the former
president and his family by
£ore1gn dignitaries.
The State Department has list-
ed a number of the gifts as
''missing," possibly only
because of poor record-keeping,
and wants to ecamine the pack·
mg crates containing materials
from the Nixon administration to
see if they are there. The crates
are in government storage.
The Washington Post said to-
day that U.S. Chief of Protocol
Evan S. Dobelle asked to ex·
amine the boxes after the
newspaper pointed out that no
one knew what lbey contained.
The Post, Jn a story by .Maxine
Cheshire, 'said at least a dozen
gifts from Jran are in the "miss·
ing" category.
The story said Mrs. Nixon
notified the White House gifts un·
it two days after her bus bud's
resignation that she intended to
keep one particular gift present·
· ed by the Shah or Iran.
"The gift was described by the
gift unit as •a very fine hand·
painted miniature portrait ot the
President done on ivory. . .18-
karat gold oval frame on easel
back surrounded with golden
leaves and bl'anches, many
blossoms of single and clustered.
turquoise and sapphire
stones.' ~·the newspaper said.
According t~ the Post, that
item is listed as "missing.··
Other it.ems ao listed include an
oil painting from the Soviet
Union, an Indian silver box, a
gold necklace and bracelet from
Ghana, a gold pin from
Coffee. Prices Dropping
By The Associated Preas
Drop by drop, coffee prices have started coming down.
Supern:iarke~ say sales of the brew are aradually picking up again,
aJthougn consumers stnr seem reluctant to buy.
An Associated Press spot survey showed the price of a pound ol
coffee is generally about $3.SO, down from a high of $4 and more in
some places in Marctl and April. Jn a few cities, where prices topped
$Sa pound, currenrlevels are sun around U .
SDWABD MAllON OF RALP~ AN 82-outlet chain ln the Los
Angeles area, said the stores ran an ad recently advertbi.ng lower
coffee prices -$3.49 a pound, 47 percent higher thal\ the t:l.38 level
of January" but 13 percent oolow the mid-April price of $3.99 ,,., It was the store's fir.rt coffee promotion this year and Maron
said sales increased sliihtly.
"There is still a supply and demand problem,·• he said. "I don't
think it's as severe as it was six months ago, but it's still wilh us.
We 're now in a klnd or holding pattern." ·
COFFEE PRICES STARTED SOARING after a frost in Brazil
-the world'' biggest producer -destroyed part or that .country's
1915-76 harvest and set off speculation about a possible shortage in
future years.
Prices for a pound of green, unroasted ooans went from 60 cents
Tustin Seu'IJa Di1'er Dies
in July 1975 to $3.33 in April 1977. Retail prices went from $1.27 to
around $4 a pound on a nat.onwide basis. ,
lncrea.sed producUon and apparent cutbacks in consumption
helped start the downward price trend this year. By the middle of
August, the price for green coffee beans was just above $2 a pound.
Wholesale prices dropped from about $4.25 a pound to the current
S2.8Qto$3.19ranee.
TllE AGRICULTURE DEPAllTMENT SAID in June that ·world
eoffee production this season is expes:ted to be 14 percent higher
lb an lt was In the 1978· 77 barvest period, but •ill remain below pre-
frost levels.
A three-city survey by the National Coffee Ass~iation showed,
meanwhile, that consumption from March through June this year
was 22 percent below 19'76 levels.
And the USDA said the average person consumed the equivalent
of three pounds of green ooans in the first quarter of 1977, comp.ared
to 3.6 pounds in the same period last year.
OONSUMER LEADER.S IN SOME areas sponsored boycotts
and said the campaigns led people to cut back coffee drinking. Store
operators In other cilles sald tll~re was no real consumption drop ....
<See COFFEE PRICES, Pa1e "2>
.-·154' Rescued on Coast Beaches
One man di~d; four people
were'injared and lS4 rescued by
lifeguards on south coast beaches
this weekend, where crowda.
were described as "lilht" to
"heavy," dependin1 on the beach
location.
Scuba diver Richard Caley, 30,
an Orange County district at-
torney•s lnvestieator from
Tustin, was pronounced dead at
Mission Community Hospital,
where be bad been airlifled by
Marine helicopter.
Caley; reportedly suffered a
heart attack while swimming out
fi'om SOUt.h Laguna's Three Arch
Bay. '
Laiuna Beach lllepards re-
ported crowds lighter than usual
for a summer weekend, while
San Clemente guards said tl\e
beaches there and adjacent coun·
ty beaches were unusually
crowded.
"Laguna attracts mosUy local
people, but San Clemente draws
an out-of-town crowd," said San
Clemente lifeguard Steve
Lashbrook.
"Tourists in a beach town don't
let anythine keep them oil the
beach, but the locals wait for
clear skies."
Lashbrook saJd la.at week's
rain and cloudy skiea on Sunday
.-pparently tept many area resi·
dent• off the beaches tbi:1
weekend.
San Clemente Ufe,ua.rdl re-
ported 74 we.kencl rescues -
none of tbem reqUlrlna hoapltal
transport.
In Laguna, guards bad SS
rescues, with three rescues in·
volving possible back or neck in·
juries.
San Clemente state beach
Uf eguards said they had 7S
weekend rescues, includlng one
man who broke his leg on a lkim·
board.
Weekend beach po~ulaUon
fl.lures were report~ to be:
-50,000 In Latuna Beach.
-24,000 in SU Clemente.
-24,00000 county ooaohes.
-20.000 oo atat.o t>Mchea.
Nicaragua, a silver bowl from
Ireland, a bracelet from In·
donesia, another from
Nicaragua, and two gold basket
weave compacts with diamond
clasps from West Germany.
Dobelle was not available for
comment but the State Depart-
ment 'ave. t~is reply to re-
porters inqwnes: ..
· "ln order to be in a position to
clarify unresoJ ved questions con-
cerning the whereabouts of gifts
from foreign government of-
ficials to Nixon and members of
his Carnlly, S. DobeUe has asked.
(See NIXON, Pale AZ>
San Juan ·
Petition
Hits Snag
A San Juan Capistrano group
seekinc a larger City Council an4
fundamental changes in the
councUmanlc election process lf
encountering problems ci.rcu.lat-
inf a petition on the issue.
.. lt's coi.nt a lot slower than we
anticipated," Bernie Matthey,
Alto Capistrano resident and
spokesman for the rroup, said to-
day.
"We're not getting turned ~own, we're JUSt having a prob-
lem fmding people at home. ..
Mat.they said.
Matthey safd the _1rou.1>...CDD-
cemed Citizens fOr Responsive
Government, has collected 600 to
700 signatures on a petition call-
ing for creation of seven coun·
cilnianlc districts in the city.
Councilmen currenUy are elect-
ed at large.
If 1,232 signatures are ob-
tained, the petition's proposal
wut oo placed before the voters~
Jf approved, tfle measure would
require creation of seven dis~
tricta, each electing its own coun. •
cilman.
The concerned cititens group
be~an the petition drive because.
they contend, electing coun-
cilmen from specific areas will
make Che city eovemment more
respOnsive.
The crouP lists seven members
(See PETITION. Pa1e A!)
Al DAIL y PILOT L/SC -·-
,...,.P-AJ
SAM •••
ff• alao reportedly ur•.
•• ben I saw lht vlcllma'
t'Ulllll4!11 • TV. l w tw too ..
TM rLre bydr•nt 8erkowtt1
parted next to WU th key ln hll
captureouUldehla Yonk r1homo
Aaa.10. r Hts car wu tlcketed July 31
cthe niabl be 1lleaedly kill;I
1SlaeJ Motkowiti. 20, and
wounded ber date, llobttt
Vlolam atso 20. A check ot tho
parking summonaes elven In the
area lbal 1111bt led police to the
auapect.
Brothen Mum
On Earnings
Inna Man Bits Suri
WASHING TON <AP) -
Billy Carter says he has
not discussed the propriety
of his paid public ap-
p ep ran c es with his
brother, Jimmy Carter.
"I don't tell tum how to
be president, and he
doesn't tell me what to
do," said Billy. who
estimated he will earn
from perso nal ap·
pearances this year about
the same amount of
money-$200,000-that his
brother will earn as presi-
dent.
Tough-muscled and glistening. th1~ com
petitor in Firs t Annual Laguna 1'\ig uel
Lifeguard Games staged Friday at Niguel
Beach Park hits the s urf aboard his p ad·
dleboard in second segment of Iron Mun
contest. Competition calls for a partic1
pant to run, dive and swim 250 yards to a
buoy and back, then return \'ia pad-
dleboard. then return in a dory boat. "The
first man to finish --alive is the win-
ner;· said one out-of-shape spectator.
Carter made the com·
ments in an interview in
U.S. News & World Report J
released Sunday.
Hughes Lived on Drugs?
Aides Say Recluse Received Pain Kill~rs
~del.Jury -'Deadlocked' ..
BALTIMORE CAP> -Hoping
to• brea.IC-a jury deadlock, the
judge in the Gov. Marvin Mandel
trial told the panel today that it
could request rereading of
specific portions of testimony
and sections of the charge he
gave them when deliberations
began Aug. 10.
There was n'o indication al
today's brief court. session that
the jury had had any com·
m unication with U.S. District
Court Judge Robert L. Taylor
since last W~nesday. when it re·
ported it wlls deadlocked over
whether $he six defendants had
engaged in a fraudulent scheme.
Jurors left the courtroom after
Taylor told them they could re-
turn to their room to discuss what
material, lf any. they wanted to
review.-
.Burglars Hit
Laguna Home
Property vilued by the victims
at $1,745 was t a ken from a
Laguna Beach area home by
burilars who entered via the
kitchen window.
Orange County sheriff's of·
ficers said the intruders took a
television set, stereo equipment,
jewelry and cash from the home
of truck driver Shannon kathren
Franey, 24, of 2032% Laguna Can·
yon Road. while she was absent
from the home.
AUSTIN, Tex. CAP> -Aides to
Howard Hughes said the
reclusive millionaire received
regular and frequent doses of
powerful pain killers in the last
years or his life. according to a
Texas official .
Chip Skips
Record .Flip'
McFARLAND, Wis .
CAP> -Glenn Naughton of
Madison got his cow chip to
saH 174 feet, 4 inches to win
the chow chip throwing
contest at the Frank
Hlavac farm.
Sponsors Frank and
Mary Jean Hlavac said
Naughton's throw fell five
feet short of the world.
record. ,-
The couple provide sun·
dried chips from_ the
pasture of their ~Black
AngiiS herd and "plastic ""
' ., gloves for the not-so
Hardy," Mrs. Hlavac said.
Sea Otter Statue
Taken in Laguna
A statue of a -mother sea otter
floating on her back with a baby
otter resting on her stomach has
been reported stolen from artist
Rebecca Sylvan, 691 St. Ann's
Drive, Laguna Beach.
The statue valued at $575 was
on exhibit at the Festival or Arts,
650 Laguna Canyon Road.
F ..... PageAl
~OFFEE PRICES~ •.
people stockpiled, then drank what they bad at home Instead of buy-ing tresh. ·
Either way, the effect was the same -declining sales that left
roasters with large inventories that resulted in price drop&.
Store spokesmen in Atlanta said sales dropped about 20 to 25
percent in the first half of the year. Recent coffee promotions helped
slightly, but sales remain sluggish.
"We feel that one reason customers are not buying right now ls
that they're using up what we call 'pantry stuff' in anticipation of
lower prices to coµie;• said Arthur Levitt, coffee buyer for
·Alterman Brothers. operators of the area's Big Apple ebain.
JOHN FRIESZ, MANAGER OF THE Main Martel at Mandan,
N.D., agreed. ' ·~mers are Just wilting for the price to come down aaatn,"
said Friesa. who la selling.coffee at $3.93 a pound, down $1:50 from
the January level. ••Now they're just bUfina what they need and ua-lna up what they have. 1 think housewives have more coffee tbaa ac-ocery stores have... • .
"We are talking about soluble
codeine, taken by hypodermic,
Empirin Compound' No. 4 and
Valium ... He was taJcing all
three or those frequently and reg-
ularly over the last 10 to ts.
years of his life," Asst. Atty.
Gen. Rick Harrison said Sunday.
Hughes died at 70 of kidney
failure Apnl s. 1976, and is buried
in Houston. He evidently died
aboard his plane as it flew from
Acapulco to Houston.
Harrison has been takmg dep·
ositions in Los Angeles for use .
by the state in its effort to collect
16 percent of Hughes' estate in in·
heritance taxes.
A Jury trlal lo determine
Hughes' legal residence is to
begin here Sept. 12. Hughes·
closest living relatives contend
he was a Nevada resident, while
Texas Atty. Gen. John Hill
claims he was born and died a
Texan. #
California courts have ordered
Hughes aides John Holmes aqd
Chuck Waldron to answer ques·
lions about how drugs were ob-
ta i ned and administered to
Hughes, Harrison said.
He said Texas will petition Los
Angeles Superior Court today or
Tuesday to order Hughes' physi·
cian, Dr. Norman Crane, to
From Page AJ
PETITION. •
on papers filed in the City Clerk's
office, but Matthey said the or-
ganization has many backers.
Matthey said the group bas no
plans of abandoning the drive
even though things are moving
slowly.
··we're not giving up on this,··
he said. "We will keep spending
the time necessary to get the
signatures we need."
He said residents wishing to
sisn the petition could reach him
at 493-8208.
Burglar Gets Loot
A buralar whose method of en-
try ia unknown took camera
equipment. a watch and cash
from a Lal\llla Nipel home.
Oranee County sheriff'• of·
ficers said the. loss, valued at
$515, was reported by bus driver
Frances Wilcox, 39, of 24072
Estada Drive. She was away
workin& at the time.
answer questions about the same
subject. •
The aides, Harrison said, were
"six male secretaries who lived
with Hughes on a rotating basis,
three on and three off. There
always was an aide with Hughes
to answer the phone. give
messages. and dictate messages
back.''
Depositions obtained from
Holmes, Waldron and several
other Hughes a.ides indicated
Hughes received heavy medica·
tion, Harrison said.
One aide also said in a sworn
deposition that Hue hes' final
move, from the Bahamas to
Acapulco, was linked to a power
struggle within Hughes' financial
empire. Harrison said.
Harrison said testimony about
a power struggle within Hughes'
holding company, Summa Corp.,
came from George Francom, one
of the Mormon aides.
. Froa Page A J
NIXON •••
Joe W. Solomon, administrator
of general services, to conduct an
inventory of those foreign gifts to
the Nixons which remain in the
possession of the GSA.
"The issues involved will be
discussed at a hearing on Wed-
nesday." •
Under U.S. law, any gift worth
more than $50 belongs to the gov-
ernment and is supposed to be
turned over to the chief of pro·
tocol for disposition as public
property.
Nixon's belonginp have been
stored by the government while
legal baWes were waged over
their custody and control. The
U.S. Supreme Court In June up-
held a law that Hid the govern-
ment bas custody but that access
was subject to regulations.
.
Traffic Reporj:
A review of seven major steps
proposed last year durlna the
heiaht ot the summer Laiuna
Beach traffic congestion finds
four have not been implemented,
two have been partially im·
plemented and only one bas been
successfully pursued.
That's the gist of a staff report
to the Laguna Beach Planning
Commission which will plan for
"Summer Traffic /Parking 1978"
when it meets at 4:30 p.m. Tues·
day at city hall.
Among the failures are:
-Creation of a Laguna Canyon
area parking lot.
-Creation of north and south
parking lots along North and
South Coast Highway.
-Elimination of parking
between Canyon Acres Drive and
the Broadway-Forest intersec-
tion to ease traffic now.
-CoDst.rucUon of a pedestrian
bypass over Laguna Canyon
Road at the Festival ·of Arts
grounds.
The partial successes include
leasing of Orange County Transit
District buses. and creation of a
bus lane from the outlying park-
ing areas. The city did get a
permit for the bus lane. but since
the outlying lots were not de·
veloped, it was not needed. Addi·
ti on ally. the city was told it could
not lease OCTDbuses.
The single action sw:cessfully
concluded was the relocation of
Art-A-FaiJr from its coastal site
last year to the Laguna Canyon
site used this year. By packing
the three" art shows together, it
was fell traffic congestion woutll
be cut because visitors cout
walk to all three fest.iv ala.
The plannln1 eommbslon wil
weigh creation of a ••taalcf~ce._
to "forge ahead .. with a proaram
for the 1978season. •
Planning Director Doua
SchIQit.z bas urced the coan-
mlssion to press for decisions oo
the peripheral Iota u soo= possible to allow Ume for s
inl of necessary approvals and
cope with any appeals. •
Other commiuion business i~
eludes a review of areas the city
will seek for exclusion froq,
Coastal CommJssion permit re-
quirements.
'l:Aunsl Lady'
Crosses Deser(
PERTH. Western Australif
<AP> -A beautiful woi_pan i5
crossing the forblddin& central
Australian desert with fout
camels and a dog, aay range~ ..
missionaries and travelers wh()
claim to have seen her.
But no one knows who the
mysterious "camel· lady". is or
why she's there.
The reports indicate the
woman is nearing the end of a
620-mile, two-month trek across
the sand dunes, salt marshes and
scrublands of the Gibson desert
from Ayers Rock in central
Australia tQ Wiluna in Western
Australia.
Vance Cites Ties
In Talk With China
PEKING CAP> -Secretary of
State Cyrus R. Vance, here to ex·
plore chances,of establishing full
diplomatic relations with China.
opened talks with Chinese
l~aders today by emphasizing
the two countries' common
political interests in various
parts of the world. •
In a silting room in the Great
Hall of the P~ple. Vance beaan bis first meeting with a Chinese
team Jleaded by Foreign
MU;.Uster Huang Hua by saying
there are areas where the two •
countries have "mutual in-
terest.a."
One or these areas is Africa,
where both the United States and
China are eager to blunt Soviet
penetration. They are concerned
· about inroads the Russians are
maklllg in east Africa and with
insu..r-&eut movements in
southern Africa.
American officials said the
"international discussion,·• as
Vance called it, was aimed at
persuading Peking that a closer
relationship can be built with
W asbington on the basis of
shared objeeUves. This phue otthe talks ls h1cely to occupy the fint two days of
Vance's four-day visit to the
Chinese capital, serving as a
buildup to the dominant. subject
a mutual desire to move
toward full relations.
Outside the Great Hall, and
along the A venue of Tranquility.
in Tlen An Men Square and
elsewhere, tens of thousands of
Chinese marched heh.ind banners
proclaiming the completion of
the 11th Communist party con-
gress. <Related story, A4)
Vance's arrival was low·
keyed, with Huang Hua, Vice •
Foreign Minister Wang Hal-jung
and Huang Chen, chlef of the
Chinese Liaison Office in
W ashlngton, heading a modest
welcoming delegation at the
airport.
But the festive atmosphere,
with clanging cymbals and ex·
ploding firecrackers that bad
children covering their ears, lent
a special dimension to this first
high-level U.S.·Chinese contact
in two years.
Chairman Hua had signaled
Vance beforehand that Chinese
policy has not changed on the
Taiwan question, and that the
United States would have to end
all diplomatic and military ties
with the N•tionallst Chinese if it
hopes to establish full relatiom
with PeklDg.
Hua 's demand was contained
in a speech closing the party con·
aress Thursday·
VOL. 70, NO. 23', 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES
'Son
NEW YORK (AP> -David
Berkowth., UI• auapec:t.S .44·
eaUbet killer known H "Son of 5-m." deUbentely parked next
to a flTepluc th• nJ1ht of hit last
killiftl because be wanted to 1et
caught, accocdinC to tapes quot-
ed by Tbe DaiJy News todQ
Quotine a transcript ol tapes
purportedly made at the hospital
where the suspect is under1oin1
mental tests, The News reports
that a.rllowitS aa.ld, •'I knew that
if I cot a Ucbt, lt would lead
tbemtome."
Meanwhile, literary a1ent
Scott Meredith denied reports
that he is selling 10 hours ol tape-
r e corded interviews with
BerkowilJ. ->
"For tbe record, we are not
close to a deal, have not offered
tapes to anyone, have not set a
money valuatiort, and indeed
In 200 Crates
have not even a1reed to
repreaent mater al," Scott
Meredith· told The Associated
Press on SUnday. •
Meredith said be h'as "been ap-
proached by people with tapes
and are now examlnJne material
as we examine all material sub-
mitted to us."
It was not immediately clear
whether The News and Meredith
had copies o( the same 10 hours of
'Missing' 'Nixon
Presents Sought
WASHINGTON CAP) -The
State Department is 1oi111 to
court Wednesday to ask
permission to search some 200
packing crates left behind by
Richard M. Nixon for valuable
gifts presented to the former
president and has family by
foreign dignitaries.
The State Department has list-
ed a number of the gifts as
"missing," possibly only
NB Tax
~toFall
' 9c Tonight?
The tax rate for Newport
Beach property owners will be
set tonieht by city councilmen
• who have indicated they will
shave up to nine cents from the
existinc $1.11 levy.
The decrease in the tax rate Is
anticipated to partially offset the
19.2 percent increase in assessed
valuation on property in the city.
Despite the tax rate cut. city tax
bills are expected to increase.
City Manager Robert Wynn in-
dicated he would recommend the
tax rate be set al $1.03 per $100
assessed valuation, but earlier
this month, city councilman Don
Mcinnis suggested councilmen
c(>nsider lowering the rate to
$1.02 per $100 assessed value.
Pro¥Jert'y taxell in· "N~\Vport ·
Beach are expected to finance
approximately one-third of the
1977. 78 city budget of $24 mUUon.
In order to offset the assessed
value increase, the city lax rate
would have to be dropped to
about 93 cents, according to
figures released in June, by
Orange County Auditor Vic '
Heim.
City councilmen are scheduled
to meet at 7:30p.m. atci\Y ball.
Funer&I Rites
I •
Pending for
Oscar Smith ·
because of poor record-keeping,
and wants to ecamine the pack·
ang crates containing materials
from the Nixon administration to
see if they are there. The crates
are in government storage.
The Washington Post said to-
day that U.S.. Chief of Protocol
Evan S. Ool>elle asked to ex-
amine the boxes lfter the
newspaper pointed out that no
one knew what they contained.
.,..,..,.....
Eleven-ye~r-old prospector
Kathy Hardwick of Modesto
found this IO-ounce gold and
quartz nugget in Calavaras
County rin~rbed when 1t
w~s exposed by low \\ aters
in the drought. It's worth
about s.1.500.
DINING ROOM
GIXJDSSEU
"We sold the dining room
furniture :mfi had really aood
responsetothead."
That's th~ sales succe:ss stoey
told by the El Toro woman who
placed this classified ad In tbe
Daily Pilot:
Antique Dining Tabha & 6 Chairs. very ornate.
S32S. XXX·XXlUt ii you have home furrushirit•
you want to sell, call 642-5678. We
make it easy tor yeu to put a few
words to Work m the Dally PUot.:
The Post, in a story by Maxine
Cheshlre, said at least a dozen
gifts from Iran are in the "miss-ing '' category.
The story said Mrs. Nixon
notified the While House gifts un-
it two days after her husband's
resignation that she intended to
keep one particular gift present-
ed by the Shah ofJran.
"The gift was described by the
gift unit as 'a very fine band-
painted miniature portrait of Ute
President done on ivoey ... 18-
karat eold oval h'ame on easel
back surrounded with golden
leaves and branches, many
blossoms of sinale and clustered
turquoise and sapphire
stones,' "the pewspaper said.
Accordjng lo the Post, that
item is listed as "missing.''
Other items so listed include an
oil painting from the Soviet
Union, an Indian silver box, a
1old necklace and bracelet from
Ghana, a gol~ pin from
Nlcaragu~ a allver bo1'l from
Ireland, a bracelet from In·
donesia, •nother from
Nlcarqua, and two gold basket
weave compacts with diamond
clasps from West Germany.
Dobelle was not available for
comment but the State Depart-
ment aave this reply to re-
porters' inquiries:
"lo order to be in a position to
clarity unresolved questions con-
cerning the wbereabouUt of gifts
from foreign government of·
ficials to Nixon .and members of
his family, S. Dobelle bas asked
Joe W. Solomon, administrator
of general services, to conduct an
In V_f:{ltg,I)' pf Ul~e foreign eifts to
the ~ixons which remain in the
possession of the GSA."
Grenade Kill.a
lOas PolU:e .
.fight I Biariap
MEXICO CITY <Al» -Ten
penons aboard a hijacked bus
were killed when polke stopped
and stormed the bus along a ceo·
tral Mexican h11h•ay and one ol
the hijackers e~ploded a
grenade, olficiaJs rePorted to-
day.
They aid five other persons
were serloualy Injured in the
violence late SUnday.
One OI the two hijackera and
fl ve other persons were killed in
the ,.-enade blast, they said, and
the other hijacker was shot and
wounded by the attacldn1 police.
The bus, taf'.ryina abOut .o passeniers.~ad been headed for
.the coutal city Of Manzi.niUo,
300 mlles welt Of.the capital.
tAped converaa\ions. Meredith
said the tapes were made at
King's County Hospital ln
Brooklyn where Berkowitz la be· ing held, but would not say who
eavebim thedpes.
Tbe reported 10 hours o( tapes
referred to by Meredith and The ·
News are not the same u ~e
made by Berkowitz' first at-
torney, PbiUp Peltz. Peltz' tapes
were iinl>O'U\ded by the court
1·
after .he was rePorted to be tl'Yinl t.o market tbecn.
Meredith said Peltz was not ln·
volved. .
The News .. id the autheqUcltf
of the new tapes has been ques-
tioned by Correction Department
official$ and other law enforce-
ment autborit es and an in·
vestigation is under way into bow
"the tapes could have been made
and who miaht have made them.
TEN CENTSj
Accordlnt to The News,
Berkowitz, accused of killing six
persons and wounding seven with
a ."-Caliber revolver in liWo
rnore than a year, is heard to S"Y
on the new tapes that he "felt bad
th at there were so many
W()unded."
"I wanted them all dead ....
My job waa to kUI," be is quoted
assaying.
(See SAM, Page A?)
rt 's almost impossible to tell paraders
from obser\'ers in the jam or boats creat-
ed dur•ng Saturday's Character Boat
Parade in Newport Harbor. About 20 of-
ficial entries and a host of unofficial ones
participated in the tribute to tele\'ision.
Chamber of commerce officiuls. who
sponsored the annual event. estimated it
attracted more than 30.000 \'iewers on the
beaches and in boats.
"six male secretmes who lived
with Hughes oo a rotatini basis,
three on and three off. There
always was an aide with Hughes
to answer tbe phone, give
messages, and dictate messages
ba~k."
Depositions obtained ·from
Holmes, Waldron · and uveral
other Hughes aides indicated
<See RUGHe8, Page AZ>
Dealership's
Windows-Hit
" . .By Driver
Beaches Offer
Jekylt, Hytk
WeekendF aces
Newport Beach lifeguards to-
day described their weekend as a
Jekyll and Hyde affair, with
100,000 Jamming the shore on
Saturday llhd only 60,000 in aUen-
d•nce on Sunday.
uteiuards, who noted the Sun-
day crowds are usually larger
than Saturda,y'~.saidthe drop in_
beach vialtors was due to the 20
mph wind which began blowing
from the southeast Sunday inorn·
ing and persisted throughout the
day:
But lifeguards said even with
beach temperatures bitting ~ on
Saturday and water tem-
peratures at a warm 67 degrees.
rescues were few due to small
surf.
Sunday's wind cm>pped beach
temperatures to about 70, &U'1'ds
said .
A spokesman for the Newport
Harbor Patrol said they had a
busy weekend because of the ao·
nual aiaracter Boat Parade on
Saturday and tbe wind on Sun-
day, but the spokesman said
there were no major incidents.
,
'AMBfR JIM' FIGHTS BAN ON GIRLS' BOXING
11-year..old Alao Mu•t Anawer AtHult Charge
Ban Battled
Amber Goes to Cowt
SALT LAKE CITY IP> -"Amber Jim" Hunt, the ll·year·old
1irl boxer befriended by murderer Gary Gilmore, bas her next
big matches in the courtroom: fightinc a ban on boxlnc for girls
and battline a charge ot assault on a preanant supermarket
checker. Her fight to continue boxing is with the National Amateur
Athletic Union's Junior Olympic Committee, which Instructed
Salt Lake AAU boxing officials last April to prevent Amber from
fighting.
THE LEITER FROM JERRY Dusenberry of Portland, Ore ..
chairman of the Junior Olympic Committee, cited possible
danger to girls' breasts or reproductive organs as reasons for the
ban. Amber, who received nationwide publicity from her cor·
respondence with Gilmore before his execution Jan. 17, will be
represented in her suit against the AAU by Gilmore's attorney.
Ronald Stanger. Stanger said the suit, which asks damages and seeks an in·
junction to stop the AAU from prohibiting Jlrls from boXina.
would be filed today or Tuesday.
AMBER MUST ALSO CONTEND with an appearance in
juvenile ~ourt, probably next month, to answer charges of ag-
gravated assault. In a fracas at a supermarket, Amber allegedly
slugged a checkout clerk. breaking her nose and blackening her
eyes. Jack Hunt says the checker struck his daughter in the chest,
after Amber vocally objected to something the clerk said lo her
rather. Hunt says Amber's trained fighter reflexes caused her to
hit back. Hunt faces a misdemeanor charge of using abusive
language, which he denies. · But the AAU comes first. Says Amber in the manner of her
hero, Muhammad Ali :
"AAU stand up and &ee,
··A girl knock out your boyt m three "
AMBER CHOSE AMBER JIM AS her ring name because "It
sounded good ." Fighting three-round matches against boys in the
65·pound class, she has a record of 13 victories, 10 to technical
knockout, against four losses, all by decisions. She is scheduled to
fight an exhibition bout -not santioned by the AAU -Saturday
against Danny Montoya.
Her prediction for the Salt Lake City fi&ht :
''I'm a doughtv, not o son
'' /'U knock out Danny in Round On1.''
Amber says her amition 1s to win the 198-4 Olympic
gold medal. then turn professional and earn enough money to
establish an orphanage for starving children from India and
Africa
Saks Plans Store
In Mesa's Center
Saki; Fifth Ave.nue, the
fashionable specially store, will
open in Costa Mesa ·s South Coast
Plaza in the fall of 1979. a~cord·
in& to Henry T. Seeerstrom.
managin& partner or the l.6
mH llon square· foot center.
Segerstrom and Saks ex-
ecutive Allan Johnson. sisned a
lease agreement last week that
will bring the New York-based
1peclalty store to Costa Mesa.
The 105.000-aquare.foot Saks
will be located adjacent to I.
M agnin, which opened this past
weekend. South Cout Plaza ofncials
have been neiotlatlng with Saks
for more than a year, with
rumors of a lease agreement ap-
pearing as recently as last June
in Women's Wear Dally.
The Women's Wear Dally arti-
cle said Sak* ahd I. Magnln each
expect to achieve sroas sales of
$100 peNtquaTe-foot at South
COutPlua. ~ohnson clted the plaza •s loca-
tion In Oran~e County as one ol
the reasons the store selected
South Coast Plaza for lts 35th
store.
The New York ouUet opmted lts
first West Coast store ln Beverly
Hills in 1938. Subsequent st.ores
were utablished ln P•lrn
Springs in 1959, Palo Alto and La
Jolla in 1963, Monterey in 197~and·
In Woodland Hills in 1973.
Saka opened a 1t0Te ln San
Francisco this year, on the ft.rm 's
25th anniversary.
From Page Al
SAM •••
John F. Cyprlen of Oranae wu
appointed to tbe Orange County
Plannin& Commt.\on today by
cqunty SUpervlsor Ralph Clark.
Cyprlen, 43, &'11 echtcaUooal
consultant, will replace Com.
missioner Floyd Farano of
AnaheJm who resigned earlier
this month cltlne an Increased
workload ln his private law prac-
tice.
Cyprien is now a vice preslCSent
wlth Educational Research
M arkeling lnc. in Santa Ana, a
firm developing career educa-
tion programs for school dis·
tr lets.
He formerly was parks and
recreation director for the city of
Orange for 14 years and was an
Anaheim recreation supervisor
Cor eight years.
Cyprlen said today he believes
his knowledge of government
wilt assist with bis plannin& com-
mission duties. He expects· to
spend about 30 hours a week on
commission-related
reaponsibilities.
•'I have the time and t can be or
service," said Cyprlen1 a n•ttve
o( Fullerton. ·
"Oevdopment la &oin' to~·
cur," he conUnu~ ''You can't
put a atop to it but JOU can 11hm 1t
properly." .
Cyprien said he has driven
throueb much of the Southeast
county area and generally has
been impresaed with develop.
mentthere.
He sald he would oppose de·
velopment until adequate streets
and utillUe.s were 41vallable to
serve it. He also said there may
be some cues-when government
could respoJld fa•ler to de-
velopets' requests rather than
delaying them with r-ed tape.
Clark. said he bel\,end Cyprien
would bring to the commission a
good balance between environ-
mental concerns and develop-
ment interests.
Cyprien has been active in
various recreation and civic
groups, serving as president of
the Southern California
Municipal Athletic Federation
and as Chairman ·of the Plaza
District Councjl of the Boy Scouts
ond Girl Scouts of America.
Cyprlen was. named Man of the
Year and given the Distinguished
Service Award by the Oranae
Junior Chamber of Commerce in
1966.
He lives in Orange with his
wife, Marilyn, and four children.
Plaza Manager
Resigns; Opens
Newport Firm
Gerie Robens, the general
manager or South Q)11st Plaza for
the put IO years, today an-
nounced he is leav\nt C. J.
Segerstrom and Sons to form his
own consulting firm.
Robenl a.Pd hla resignation
wUl take eff ecl Sept. 15. He will
open his own firm, Gee Robens
and Auoclates, in Newport
Beach. 'lbe company will work in
development and manaaement
consulting on an internatlooal
scale, be said.
Robens• post u ceneral
manager wUl be filled by Skip
Stephenson. a flve·fear employe
of the Se&eratrom nrm. For the
past two years, Stephenson bas
wotked u director of lea.sine for
the shopping center.
In addition, Henry T.
Seeebtrcun, managing partner
of t}\e land firm, sald Blchard Fost~ wtll be jo)ning the com· p,ny a etaft as the plai~·s
11' anaaer of Ope?aUoD$ arJCl ad·
mintatrattan. Foster bu spent the last 11 mqnthS ~ eeneral mao•ser of the Jmne Company•• Puhlon
Island. 1
Ro~ ~o ~ded over the
opeoln1 or SoUtb Coast Pl~ in
Mitl'Ch ol ttl8t, rild :be ta leavina
hi• POs\ With ml.Keel emotioDS. "t }mt hOpe that in some small
way l haft e«1\Hbuted to tho
...-rli'MiftJl bf Uda llrea,:' be iBcL
Cashing In "" .,,..,._.
David Clark is one of se,·eral H •ndors who han• already
set up stands in :\temphis. Tenn .. l o cash in on the dc;.ith
of Eh·is Presley. Clark ~ells bumper slickers ;rnd other
mementos from his pickup truck outside the Forest Hills
cemetery where the roclJ star \\.US buried. Others are
selling similar ite-ms outs ide Pres re~"s mansion.
Graceland.
Effort to Halt Teen ' .
E,nds, 3 Charged
Three brothers who police al-
lege decided to take the law into
their own hands were scheduled
to face charges of grand theft to-
day in the Harbor Judicial Dis·
trict Court. The three were arrested Fri-
day in Newport Beach on
charges of armed robbery follow-
ing a dispute with a Huntington
Beach youth over a fire ex·
Unguisher.
But police sald today the rob·
bery charges will be reduced to
the lesser theft charge in connec-
tion with the incident that oc·
curred at about 5 p .m . in
NB Hanging
Death Probed
The hanging death of a lS-year-
old Balboa youth is under in-
vesUgaUon today by coroner's
deputles who say lhey have not
determlned the reason for the
boy's death.
The youth was found at 7;4S
p.m. Sunday ln hls bedroom by
family members.
Investigators say their probe is
beiQI conducted to determine
whether the death was acciden-
tal or sulclde.
Newport Center.
The three brothers .. Thomas
James Adams, 22, of Garden
Grove, Wayne .Scott Adams, 20,
of HWltington Beach and their
15-year-old brother who tlves in
Chino, told police they watched
the 17-year·old youth squirting
passersby with a fire ex-
tinguisher.
They said that when he refused
to stQp, the'Y pulled ou\. a bb aim
aiid tooli the extintuisber •way
from the teen-ager.
Police said the gun looked
"just like a .45-caliber
automatic.''
The two older brothers were
held in city jail in lieu of ~.ooo bail each and the teen-age
brother was released to his
parents. Police said no charges would
be filed against the 17-year-old
·•victim" of the incident.
1V Cov~rage Set
NEW YORK <AP> -The na-
tion's three major networks say
they will broadcast live on
television and radio President
Carter's news conference start-
ing at 11 :80 a.m., PDT, Tuesday.
...
PEKING (AP> -Secretary of
State Cyrus R Vance, hereto ex·
plore chances of establilbina full
diplomaUc relaUans wlth Cbina.
opened t IU itb Cbl~efe
leaders Uld~ bJ em,pb •\zinc
th• two countries• common
politlcal lnterest..s in various
parts of the world.
Jn a slttlng room in the Great
Hall oC the People. Vence belan
bla first meeting with a ChlJ\ese
team beaded by Forelcn
Minister Huang Hua by taying
there are areas where the t'wo
countries have "mutual In-
terests.••
One of these areas ls Africa.
where both the United States and
China are eager to blunt SoYiet
penetration. They are concerned
about inroads the Russians are
making in eut Africa and with
!nsurgent 01ovements tn
southern Africa.
American officials said the
··international discussion," as
Vance caJ1e4 it, wu aimed at
persuading f)eking that a cl06er
relalloosbip can be bu.ill with
Washington on tbe basis oC
shared objectives.
This phase of the talks is likely
to occupy the first two days of
Vance's four.day visit to the
Chinese capital, servig as a
buildup to the dominant subject
a mutual desire to move
toward full relations.
Scuba Diver
Stricken, Dies
2 Hours Later ..
A 9().year-old investigator with
the Orange County District At-
torney's office was stricken
while scuba diving near Three
Arch Bay Sunday a,nd pro-
nounced dead two hours later,
coroner's deputies said today.
Richard Caley, of 14771 Alder
Lane, Tustin, complained of
shortness of breath and chest
pains while he was in the water in
scuba gear about 11:30 a.m .•
deputies said.
Companions helped him to a
rocky shore and he was then
taken by an El Toro Marine
helicopter lo Mission Community
Hospital. Deputies said he was
pronounced dead in the bosplW
emergency TOOm at 1 :30 p.m.
Deputies said they would be de·
termining today lf Caley died as
the retiult of an accident in the
water or a heart attack.
Fro• Page.Al ~
HUGHES •••
Hughes received heavy medica·
lion, Harrison said.
One aide al.so said in a sworn
deposltlort that lfughes• final
move, frorn the Bahamas to
Acapulco, was linked to a power
struggle within Hughes' financial
empire, Harrison said.
Harrison said testimony· about
a power atrueale witbJA Hughes•
holding company, Summa Corp .•
came trom Georae Francom, one or the Mormon aides.
.. . ..
Saddlebaek
VOL 10, NO. 23", 3 SECTIONS, 2 PAGES TEN CEN --
Orange Resident Nanied OC Planner:
John F. Cypri~ of Orana• w
appatnted co tbe Oran1e County
PlliNW\I Commlaslon today by
county SUpervisor Ralph Clark.
Cyprien. 43. an educational
consultant. will replace Com·
missioner Floyd Farano or
Anaheim who resi1ned earlier
this month citing an increased
workload m h1s private law prac·
tace.
Cyprien is now a vice president
Trustee
To Leave
SB Board
ByWILI.IAM SCHREIQEB • Of,,_ o.lfy ~llet SIJlff
Saddleback College Trustee
Frank Greinke next week is ex·
peeled to announce his resigna·
lion from the college board to
move out of the county.
The Tustin oil man conceded in
an interview today that he will
"have an announcement to
make" at the Aug . 29 board
meeting -the first session of the
new semester .
Greinke would become the
second Tustin trustee m less than
a year to quit before the end of
his term. Nine months ago, ultra·
conservative board member
Robert Bartholomew resigned to
move his nursery business to
Ventura County.
"We are building a home in
Santa Barbara County and it is
nearly completed," Greinke
said.
••rm not sure as to exactly
what the timing will be but I want
to give as much advance notice
as possible to generate some in·
lerest here in Tustin."
Greinke's term isn't due to ex·
plre until February of 1979,
which leaves the remainine
trustees with the option of ap·
pointing a repJacement or calling
a special election.
Greinke was elected to the
board in 1915 when he un unop-
posed.
The Tustin trustee sald there
was no bitterness involved in his
decision to leave the board,
despite his often-bitter and un-
successrul fight to have a second
campus located at Myford Road
and Bryan Avenue near the
Tustin city line.
The majority of the board vol·
ed' instead for a campus site
three miles further south at Jef·
, fr-ey Road and Irvine Center
wllh EducaUonal Research
Mart£et.lo1 Inc. In Santa Ana, a
firm developing career educa·
lion proerams for school dis·
trict.a.
He formerly was parks and
recreation director for the city of
Oranae for 14 years and was an
Anabem recreation supervisor
for eight years.
Cyprien said today be believes
his knowledge of government
will assist with his planninc com·
mission duties. He expects to
apend about 30 hours a week on
commission-related
responsibilities.
"I have the time and I can be of
service," said Cyprien, a native
of FU.llerton.
"Development is going lo oc:
cur," he continued. "You can't
put a stop to it but you can plan it
properly."
Cyprien said be has driven
through much of the Southeast
county area and generally bas
been impressed with develop-
ment there.
He said he would oppose de·
velopment until adequate streets
and utilities were available to
serve it. He also said there may
be some cases when government
could respond faster to de·
velopen' requests rather than
deJaytngthem with red tape.
Clark said he believed Cyprien
would bring to the commisslon a
good balance between environ-
mental concerns and develop-
ment interests.
Cyprien bas been active in
various recreation and civic
groups. serving as president of
the S.outbern California
Munlcil>al Athletic Federatioti
and as Chairman of the Plaza
District Council of the Boy Scouts
and Girl Scouts of America.
Cyprien was named Man of the
Year and given the Distinguished
Service Award by the Orange
Junior Chamber of Commerce in
1966.
He lives in Orange with his
wife. Marilyn. and four children.
Crate-Search Sought.
Valuable 'Gifts to 'Nixon' Missing
O.Hy "'"" Staff PMte
TO LEAVE POST
Trustee Greinke
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
State Department is going to
court Wednes da y to ask
permission to search some 200
packing crates left behind by
Richard M. Nixon for valuable
gifts presented to the former
president a nd his family by
foreign dignitaries.
The State Department has list.'
ed a number of the gifts as
"missing," possibly only
because of poor record-keeping,
and wants to ecamme the pack·
mg crates containing materials
from the Nixon administration to
see if they are there. The crates
are in government storage.
The Washineton Post said to-
day that U.S. Chief or Protocol
Evan S. DobeJle asked to ex·
amine the boxes after the
newspaper pointed out that no
one knew what they contained. •
The Post, in a story by Maxine
Cheshire, said at least a dozen
gifts from Iran are in the "miss-
ing'' category.
The story sajd Mrs. Nixon
notified the White House gifts un-
it two days after her husband's
resignation that she intended to
keep one particular gilt present-
. ed by the Shah or Iran.
.. The gift was described by the
gift unit as 'a very fine hand·
painted miniature portrait'or the
President 'done on ivory ... 18-
karat gold oval frame on easel
back surrounded with golden
leaves and branches, many
blossoms of single and clustered
turquoise and sapphire
stones,· "the newspaper said.
According to the Post, that
item is listed as "missing."
Other items so listed include an
oil painting from the Soviet
Union, an Indian sil.ver box, a ;-
gold necklace and bracelet from
Ghana,, a gold. pip from
Coffee Prices Dropping
By The Associated Press
Drop by drop, coffee prices have started coming down.
Supermarkets say sales of the brew are gradually picking up again,
although consumers still seem reluctant to buy.
An Associated Press spot survey showed the price of a pound of
coffee is generally about $3.SO, down from a high of $4 and more in
some places in March and April. In a few cities, where prices topped
$.5 a po\.md, current levels are still arounc $4.
EDWARD MARON OF RALPHS, AN 82·ouUel chain in the Los
Angeles area, said the stores ran an ad recently advertising lower
coffee prices -$3.49 a pound, 47 percent higher than the $2.38 level
of January, but 13 percent below the mid-April price of$3.99
1t was the store's first coffee promotion this year and Maron
said sales increased slightly.
"There is still a supply and demand problem," he said. "I don't
think it's as severe as it was six months ago, but it's still with us.
We're now in a kind of holding pattern."
COFFEE PRICES STARTED SOARING after a frost in Brazil
-the world's biggest producer -destroyed part of that country 's
1975-76 harvest and set of( speculation about a pos~ible shortage in
future years.
Prices for a pound of green, unroasted beans went from 60 cents
in July 1975 to $3.33 in April 1977. Retail prices went from $1.27 to
around $4 a pound on a natonwide basis.
Increased productioo and apparent cutbacks in consumption
helped start the downward price trend this year. By the middle of
August, the price for green coffee bearui was just above $2 a pound:
Wholesale prices dropped from about $4.25 a pound to the current.
S2.90 to $3. 79 range.
THE AGRICULTURE DEPARTMENT SAID in June that world
colfee production this se~ is expected to be H percellt h.latter
than it was lo the 1876-77 harvest period, but wm remain below pre.
frost level$.
A three-city survey by the NaUonal Coffee Association showed,
meanwhile, that consumption from March through June this year
was 22 percent below 1976 levels.
And the USDA sajd the average person consumed the equivalent
of three pounds or green beans in the first quarter of 1977, compared
to 3.6 pounds In the same period last year.
CONSUMER LEADERS IN SOME areas sponsored boycotts
and said the campaigns led people to cut back cofree drinking. Store
operators in other cities said there was no real consumption drop -
(See COFFEE PRICES. Pa•t A2)
Nlcaraeua. a silver bowl from
Ireland, a bracelet from In·
donesia, another from
Nicaragua, and two gold basket
weave compacts with diamond
clasps from West Germany.
Dobelle was not available for
comment but the State Depart-
m ent gave this reply to re•
porters· inquiries:
· "In order to be in a position to
clarify unresolved questions con·
ceming the whereabouts or gifts
from foreign government of·
ficials to Nixon and members of
his family, S. Dobelle bas asked
(SeeNIXON, PageA2)
'Smn' Says
Wanted to
Get Caught
NEW YORK CAP> -David
Berkowitz, the suspected .44·
caliber killer known as ''Son of
Sam," deliberately parked next
to a ftreplua the night of his last
killing beeau.se he wanted to get
caught, accwc:Ung to tapes quot.
ed by the Dally News today.
Quoting a transcript or tapes
purportedly made at the 00.,pital
where the suspect is undergoing
mental tests, The News reports
that Berkowitz sald, "I knew that
if I eot a ticket, it would lead
them tome."
Meanwhile, literary agent
Scott Meredith denied reports
that he is selling 10 hours of tape.
recorded interviews with
Berkowitz.
DJ:~~Tougi\Cas gOod a ffg'ht' as ..... •1Jtii1hers Mum
could and I now completely ac· . ··Taxing Switch Sought. "For the record, we are not close to a deal, bave not Offered
tapes to anyone. have not set a
money valuation. and indeed
have not even agreed t~
represent material,•• Scott
Meredith told The AsBoclated
Press on Sunday.
cept the board decision,"
Greinke sald. "Now that we have
a campus 1 have been wwklne
toward healing the wounds.'"
Greinke said he is completely
opposed lb ·a new proposal utfder -
discussion in Tustin to deannex
from Saddleback and join ~
Rancho Santiago.
Greinke said he will not rec.
om mend anyone to take his
place on the board because he
hopes a . broad choice of can·
didates will help allevlatewbatbe
views as serious apathy toward
Saddleback College in the Tustin
area.
He also noted that he would re-
turn to Oranae County frequenUy
even if he moves because bis
business 18 based here.
On Earnings
WASIDNGTON <AP') -
Billy Carter says he has
not discussed the propriety
or his paid public ap-
pearances with his
brother,Jimmy Carter.
"l don't tell hlm bow to
be president. and he
doesn•t 'tell me what to •
do ... •· said Bl llY'. who ....
estimated he will earn._
from personal ap ·
pearances this year abQut
the same amount of
money~.000-that his
brother will earn as ,resl·
dent.
Carter made the com·
ments in an interview in
U.S . News & World Report
rel~ased Sunday.
SJ'lJSD Revenue So:.uce Change Urged
Saddleback Valley Unified
School District Supt. Richard
Welte said be believes schools
should be financed by sales and
income taxes rather than the
present property tax.
The school ofCicial sald bls Idea
ts not new and ls .. pretty
political.·· He admitted Utlle
hope that atate legislators who
are currently wrestling with
school finance bills will pick up
the suggestion.
During a recent school board
meeting'. the superintendent. told
district trustees tbat the property
tax ls "outmoded. dis·
crlminatory. unfair. economlcal-
ly destructive and regressive."
Yet. be complained, the ~
erty tax 1s the largest aou.rce of
revenue tor schools. And this.
Welte said. penaliaes the proper.
tyowner.
He said property owners pay at
least 80 percent of tbe tab for
Saddleback schools and lt would
be fairer ii these people paid only
~percent of the bill.
"Everybody benefits from
public education:• Welle said,
explaining b.ia belief that the
sales tax should be the source of
school revenue. Historically, be
said.. this tax was passed for <See TA.X, Pa1e All
Meredith said he.has ''been ap.
proacbed by people with tapes
and are now examining material
as we examine all material sub-
mitted to us.'•
It was not Immediately clear
whether The News and Meredith
bad copies of the same 10 hours~
(Bee SAM, Page A2)
DAILY PILOT SB
Hughe on Pain-
• tAPl -
ewatd • .. ••• '"• rechutu mtllionaJn Tecelved
rtSuJar and frt"quenl dOI of
powerl1.1I pain killcn In th• lul
ean o( h 1 hrt!, accurd1na to a
UMalficlaJ.
"We an lalkln1 about IOluble
ane, ta~t'n by hypodermic,
mpinn ComlJOUnd No . 4 1111d aJlum . . . I • Yt•t takln1 ~l
Allaway
Hearing
Delayed
A bearmg that will determine
campus kaller Edward Charles
Allaway's mental condition when
he shot mne people al Cw Slate
Fullerton was delayed today by
the tllness of a woman Juror
ThesaniLy phaa~ of the Orange
County SUperlor Court trial was
delayed unt1l th1s afternoon while
JudRe Robert P . Kneeland's staff
t'r1ed to determine the possibility
of the hospitalized juror return·
mg this week
Lawyers for both sides said
they would be willing to replace
her with an alternate juror If the
nature of her illp~ss prevents a
speedy return to ttie courtroom.
Allaway. 38, has been convict-
ed by the jury of six counts of
first-degree murder, one of
second degree and two counts of
assault with a deadly weapon.
The defense contends that he
was insane on July 12, 1976 when
he took a rifle to the Fullerton
campus and shot nine people an
and around the library.
Both sides plan to put
p'5ychiatrists on the stand in what
1s expected to be a two·week
hearing.
Funeral Rites
Pending for
Oscar Smith
Funeral services are pending
today al Forest Lawn Mortuary
in Glendale for Corona del Mar
resident Oscar Smith, Sr , who
died Sunday at the age of 92.
Mr. Smith died In his home at
31000cean Blvd.
He was president of the Pacific
Electric Railway whose red cars
brought visitors to Newport
Beach and Bal boa for a half a
century between 1891 and 1941.
As president of the Pacific
Electric, which was a subsidiary
of the Southern Pacific Railroad,
Mr Smith also served as assis·
tant to the 'president of the SP.
Mr. Smith was the oldest living
past president of the Optimists
Intemat.Jonal, having served as
International president or that
service organliallon from 1926 to
1927.
Mandel Jury
'Deadlocked'
BALTlMORE <AP> -Hoping
to break a jury deadlock, the
Judge ln the Gov. Marv\,n Mandel
t.rlal told the panel today that it
.could request rereadina or
specific portions of testimony
and sections or the cbarae be
aave them when deliberations
began Aug. 10.
There was no indlc•llon at
today's briet court sesslon that
the jury had had any com·
m unication with U.S. District
Court Judge Robert L. taylor
since last Wedn~day, when it rt!•
ported it was deadlocked over
whether the six defendant& had
engapd lrt a fraudulent tebeh\e,
Jurors left the courtroom after Tayfor told them they cotlld re-
turn to lbelt room to diacust what mat~al. if any, they wanted to
Mvlew.
by lh 1l1le Sn ita effort lo collect
11 c l ol Hu1hea' utale in in·
h rltance tax .
A Jury trlll to dettrtnlne
ltu1be.s' legal resldence b to
• beain here Sept. 12. Hughe.'
ClOffal Uvln1 relatives contend
he was a Nevada resident, while
Texas Atty. Gen. John Hlll
claims he was born and died a
Ttxan.
Cahforrua cour hav ofaeied
Hu It aid John Holmes and
Chuck W .. dton to anawer ques-
t ODI abQUt o drugs were ob·
talned an admin1sterfd to
H'1Rhe3, Harrison said
He said Texas wtll petlttan Los
Aneeles Superior Court today or
Tuesday to order Huehes' physi·
cian, Dr. Norman Crane, to
answer questions about the 111me
Ah 'es. it's summe rtime and the h\·in · 1s
.. \\'ell. the ''at er 1s "arm a nd the tern ·
peralure is high. Claudia Kreut1herg. 21
of '.\"e\\ port Beath. knO\\s ho'' to s trike a
balance · keeping cool "hill· 1mpro' mg
her s un tan on a Lido Is le bl!ath.
Common Interest Cited
Vance Opens Diplomatic Talks in China
PEKING (AP> -Secretary of
Slate Cyrus R. Vance, here to ex-
plore chances of establishing full
diplomatic relations with China,
opened talks with Chinese
leaders today by emphasizing
the two countries' common
political interests m various
parts of the world.
In a sitting room in the Great
Hall of the People, Vance began
his first muting with a Chinese
team headed by Foreign
Minister Huang Hua by saying
there are areas where the two
countries have "mutual In -
terests."
One of these areas is Africa,
where both the United States and
China are eager to blunt Soviet
penetration. They are concerned
about inroads the Russians are
making in east Africa and with
insurgent inovements in
southern Africa.
American officials 11aid the
"international discussion," as
Vance called it, was aimed al
persuading Peking that a closer
relationship can be built with
Washington on the bu is of
shared objectives.
F,..,,.P~AJ
TAX •••
Ttus phase of the talks is likely
lo occupy the first two days of
Vance's four-day visit to the
Chinese capital. serving as a
buildup to the dominant subject
a mutual desire to move
toward full relations.
Outside the Great Hall, and
alon,.r the Avenue of Tranquility.
an Tien An Men Square and
elsewhere, tens of thousands of
Chinese marched behind banners
proclaiming the completion of
the nth Communist party con·
gress <Related story, AU
Vance's arrival was low.
keyed, with Huang Hua, Vice
Foreign Minister Wang HaJ-jung.
and Huang Chen, chief or tne
C hinese Liaison Office in
Washington, heading a modest
welcoming delegation at the
airport. .
But the festive atmosphere,
with clan:Jing cymbals and ex·
ploding firecrackers that had
children covering their ears, lent
a special dimension to this first
high-level U.S.·Chinese contact
1n two years.
Chairman Hua had signaled
Vance beforehand that Chinese
policy has not changed on the
Taiwan question, and that the
United States would have to end
all diplomatic and military ties
with the Nationalist Chinese if it
hopes to establish f\.111 relations
Panel Probes
I.once Issues
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
Senate Banking Committee,
. planning public heatings on
bankina practices, will concen·
tl'ata on Issues raised In a federal
repbrt on the personal finances of
8ud1et Director Bert Lance, the
· panel'• ch-.lrman says.
with Peking.
Hua's demand was contained
in a speech closing the party con·
gress Thursday and made public
by Hsinhua. the official Chinese
news agency, as Vance fl ew from
Tokyo to the Chinese capital
Frvtta Page A J •..
·NIXON •••
J oe W Solomon, administrator
or generaJ services. to conduct an
inventory of those foreign gifts to
the Nixons which remain in the
possession of the GSA
"The issues involved will be
discussed at a hearing on Wed-
nesday"
Under U.S. Jaw, any gift worth
more than $50 belongs to the gov·
ernment and is supposed to be
turned over to the chief or pro·
tocol for disposition as public
property.
Nixon's belongings have been
stored by the government while
legal battles were waged over
their custody and control. The
U.S. Supreme Court in June up·
held a law that sa1d the govern·
tnent hu custody but that access
was subject lo regulations.
aul> 9'Cl.
T aides, Harrison sa.ia. were
"six-male retaries who Uv
with Hughes on a rotaUne basis, •
three on and three orr. There
always was an aide With Hushes
to answer the phone. gtve
messages, and dictate messages
back."
Oeposillon1 obtaaned from
Fro• .. .,,eAJ
'SAM' WANTED CAUGHT ••
taped conversations. Meredith
said the tapes were made at
Kings County HoapHal in
Brooklyn where Berkowitz is be·
in& held, but would not &ay who
gave him the tapes.
The reported 10 hours or tapes
referred lo by Meredith and The
News are not the same as those
made by Berkowitz' first al·
CIUpSkips
~rd Flip
McFARLAND, Wis .
<AP> -Glenn Naughton or
Ma di.son go\ his cow chip to
sail rt• feet, 4 inches to win
the chew chlp throwing
contest at the Frank
Hlavac rarm.
Sponsors Frank and
Mary Jean Hlavac said
Naughton's throw felHive
feet short of the world.
record.
The couple provide sun·
dried chips from the
pasture of their Black
Angus herd and "plastic
gloves for the not so
hardy," Mrs. Hlavac said.
Dealership's
Windows Hit
By Driver
Police are looking for a brand·
new sports car with a bashed in
front end after an unidentified
motorist attacked the showroom
of a Newport Beach car
dealership early Sunday Morn-
ing.
Ac~rding to police reports,
the motori~t. who was driving an
expensive-h)olt:ing bard·tot>ped
car, methodically 11mashed In
fc:.ir windows of Newport Im·
ports, 3100 W. Coast Highway, at
a bqut2:20a.m.
Wltneses told pol ice they saw
the driver bash the large plate
glass windows of the showroom
three times, sending four or the
heavy window panes crashing in
on the cars on display.
According to police. none of the
display cars were damaged, but
the loss from the windows was
listed as $1,050.
Bomb Plan Told
PARIS (APJ -France has
new, "more precise" tndicauons
that South Africa is bulldlnf an
atom bomb, the Foreign Ministry
said Monday.
toroey, Philip Pelts. Pett..• tapes
were impounded by the tOUJ1,
after be was reported to be teyinJ
to market them.
Mer«lith aaid Pelt.a WU not i.Q.
volved.
The News said the authenticity
of the new tapes bu beeb qUes·
tioned by Correction Depart.me
officials and other law enfwce-
m ent autbotllies ancl an lrl·
vest1ea0on ia under way lnto now
the tapes could have been made
and who mili!ht have made them.
According to The News,
Berkowit.i. accused or killlna six
persons and wounding s~•en wtth
a .44-caliber revolver in little
more than a year. is heard to say
on the new tapes tbat he "felt bad
th al there were so many
wounded.'' •
"I wanted them all dead. . . .
My job was to kill," be is quoted
as saying.
He also reportedly says,
''When 1 saw the victlm1'
families on TV. I wanted to kill
them, too."
The fire hydrant Berkowitz
parked next to was the key In bis
capture out.side h.ia Yonkers home
Aug.10.
His car was ·ticketed Jµly 31,
the night he allegedly killed
SCacy Moskowitz, 201 and
wounded her date, Robert
Violante, also 20. A check d the
parki.ng summonses given in the
area that night led police to the
SU!lpect.
Skate-a-thon
Scheduled in
Mission Viejo
An all-night skale·a·thon to
benefit the Muscular Dy•tr"oPhy
Association will take place Sept.
4 and 5 in Mission Viejo .
The evertt, spon50red by the
Mission Viejo Skateway, cOUect·
ed more than $6.000 las\ year tor;;
the national fund, wbicb iB a pr.oJ·
ector actor-comic Jerry Lewia.
ProspecUve ska\e•a·tbon
participants can pick up apon.sor
sheets at the Skateway, located
at 25410 Marguerite Parkway,
after paying a $4 re•latrat.ion fee.
After 11ecurina at least five
sponsocs, participanta will begin
skating at 7 p.m. Sept. 4 and
akate for ta boun. Fund pledges
are based on the number ol hOW"6
skated, accordin1 to Skateway
manager Bill Carl&oJ1.
Carlson said be is hopin1 to
have 250 skater11 ln the event.
About 190 participated lut year,
LasL .-ear, m ore than 4JO roller
rinks cont.ttbu*I a total ol $1.S
million Lo t he tJ,ht atainat
Muscular Dystrophy, Cara.on
said.
M lit! tlo ... jlldj,I '--a.
~-!'fl 111 --
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• ... .. t
u •""-"' n ii--le " 11"1-.. II ,,,,__ loo
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Eooiwmy Stirs Dellate
1'1 JOBNCVNNIF M...._....,_
· lt sounds ao cold. dull and abstract b~t lt ls really 10 ho~
• and voJaWe, and immensely inq>ortant to everyone, thb dei
. bate over the money supply •
Every time the Fed attempta to expand or contract tho
amount of money clrculating ln tho economy It gives rilo to
the areument over whether it ls 1ood or bad for jobs, in·
co 11ttlMMockmatt~an4~Pberalwelfare.
AND TBS DEBATS IS'IMS endless, because tl_)e.Fecl
It al~ watchln1 tht aton111tock, and alw~s wat.chinc
tbt rate ot Inflation. wblcb tt coaaiders to bo tho moel
danproua en•mr ot pro.pertt.J. But thll lan' tht whole etOty. There is tho debate also
over the lndtpendtnce or th• "~ and its chairman. Arthur P. Ruma, and ovtr itl lnterpntaUon of economic events,
\fblcb many a criUo 1119 bu beell faulty time and again. .
Should the hd be more responsive
to conirtas and, In theory anyWay, more
NtpoGlive to the American people vla CaJilrtu? Or 1hou.ld lt rellclously avoid
any t1mperln1 by Conar"a as an
.conomlo crimt .,ainlt the S*>Ple?
Bu.ma has attempted b> keep a Jon.y
dl1t1noe belWHD blmstlf and the
le1t1latlve body, concteacendlng to
tt1t11Y each month, 11em.tni to patronize
mtmben of the Houae and 11enatt bank-
tna committees becaU&e. well. politics ts
part of the job. CUNNll'fl
" OURING THESE SESSIONS HE HAS the majesty and
mystery of an oracle speaking from the mountain -lectur-
ing, advising, admonishing -putting rorth what he sees to
be self-evident truths. mainly that inflation is Lucifer lurk ..
log.
The often doctrinaire posture in Itself appears lo goad
some members of the House and Senate banking commit-
tees, who consider themselves just as concerned and
qualified to deal with inflation as the unflappable. pipe.
amoking Burrui.
But there is a larger issue. Congressmen sometimes
wonder bow one man can exert such power over the
economy, even to the point of opposing the President. They
worry over what appear to be subJective decisions by the Fed. .
THERE IS ANOTHER APSECI' to the debate, as ther&
always is. Should the Fed lose its degree of independence ..
and instead become a vehicle for congressional or preslden·
Ua1 policy? Would inflation then be a bigger threat?
Conceding the dangers, critics still ask: Who de-
termines whether the Fed is interpr;eting events correcUy?
Who disciplines it for wrong dee.is.ions? Who. in fact, reall.Y
knows why the Fed acts as it does?
Now that the Fed is tightening up a bit; forcing up some
basic interest rates, the debate is reheating. The Fed, say
the critics, has again stepped on the brakes too soon.
"'THE FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD has once again.
as in mid-1975 and mid-1976, prematurely impaired the rate
of economic recovery by raising the cost of credit.•• claims
one critic, John Wright, of Wright lnvestors· Service.
Wright isn't alone in that criticism. Numerous informed
critics have argued the Fed ls too nervous about inflation,,
acting to slow what it feels is an overheated economy even.
when millions are jobless and factories are operaUOQI well
below capacity. ·
Burns, himself, has indicated Uiat such a mi.stake miabt
have been made in the past couple of years. the conse--
quence being to stall the recovery from recession~ and pr~ ..
long unemployment and underacti vity. · • THE CHAIRMAN BAS MANY, many defenders. even'·
among those who sometimes are opposed to his decisions.
and who would prefer that the Fed be more open to su11es. •
lion and more communicative in regard to its decisions.
And because he bas so m~ deCenders. as well H •
detractors, the debate continues very much the same as it
was 10. five and two years ago -and probably will be a de.-
cade bence.
Valaes Skyroeket
Insurance Rated·
For Homeounen
M DAR. v PILOT -.
•
The spirit of Marlboro
in a ·1ow tar cigarette.
'•