HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-08-23 - Orange Coast PilotI
,
•
I
..
lnsura:Dee Woes
On Skate Parks
f u e
..
TUESDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 23r 1977 OSM
YOL. 11, NO.. DI, I HCTloNS, a f'AOU
I ~Skates
Premi11m
DifficUlt .
Said 'Jl~~en·ge'
~
By TOM BARLEY
OftMD9flr"'*Maft
Convicted killer Edward
Charles Allaway was seeking re-
venge when he took his rifle to
the Cal State Fullerton campus
Divorce Act
\
t ••
·• "'
, . ran1nm i
..
~o~
For 10
~-bombs
I
• •
WASHINGTON (AP> -'lbe
Enero Reseucb and DevelQP-
m ent AdmlniatraUon has re.-
vealed that enough urapium foi:
at leut 10 nuclear weapons Wast
"lost" in the early 1960s, thct
W asblngton Star said today. •
The Star •aid documents ~
leased by ERDA showed that tu: .
vestlgators -of what was thm
ERDA'S predecessor, the Atomic"
Enera Commission -suspect;
ed al.nee 1960 serious losses ot enriched urantum being proc:; ,
essed for. ttie U.S. government;
by the Nuclear MateHals anct
Eqwph1ent Corp. -NUMEC ~
at Apollo, Pa. ;
But memos from the mes ' Howard C. Brown Jr., then~
tant aeneral manaaer of the
AEC, aho\ved the agency did not
press Uae company aboUt tht;
losses unW 19SS, a year ~
China exploded a nuclear
wea~.
The company was known tG
have bualnesa dealinas with
several' French firms and watl
dhcritied as .. sales agent for the
government of I1rael."
-t Thl! doeuments indicated tha .
NUMEC's owner, Zalman If.
(S&i NVCLEAa. Pa1e Al)
J DAil Y PIL01' s
NP YORK <AP> -At an un·
'Uual arraacrun t . a Bl'ooklyn
Q" pital on.an ward, lft attorney ·• t.ered lnnoceni pl as tod11 to
murder and 11uull cbar1ea
.: hich Davtd R. Berkowit.a, the
man attUHd ol beln1 Lhe Son of
&Im killer, faces in vw11C11is
la a proceedblC at U.. Kin
Coouly Hospital prlaoo ward.
State Supreme Court iuauce
Leo Brown presided over a
Partg Time
TUffda Au u.t n , 19n
41ulet lf·U'linuto !lltllion that._
1barply contrasted wltb 1
week'• arral1nmeot In a
Brooklyn ourtroom on c I
in a alxtb attack -that one 1n
Brooklyn.
.Berkowitz ii cbar1ed with be·
tn1 the ni&ht 1t1lker ,,-ho ~d
fire lnto parked can ln w cb
youna men and women aat, moet
often in lovere' lanes. There were
aix attacks in all, and j.bey mado
Actress c;torw Swanson and Rob Cohen. producer of
.. The \Viz ... talk <ll a New York party at which Misi,
S" anson made LI s peci<.11 presentation of an Emm'
:.J\\ ard. · 'h ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-... ·. .F,....PageAJ
·~ •. ALLAWAY. •
. rorkers jokingly told Allay.ray
:. ihal tbey were bavin& sexual re·
latioos with his wlf e the night
• ~· before and that several accused
.. him or being homosexual.
· Mrs. Allaway tesWied that she
• left her husband on Memorial
Day weekend in 1976 when bis in·
•. creasing agitation frightened
her.
-She testified that he had recur·
: ring dreams about her having
•. se~ with other men and told her
. Jhit he hitd been told of the parts
1 'she played in pornographic mov·
ies. 'f •· And she testified that Allaway
· ... tel.ephot\ed her on the morning of
the shootiqgs and told her that he
-c.::..~elieved he was going to be killed
-mat day and would never see her
again.
Butler told the jury that Al·
laway can only recall that be
took a rifle to the campus, heard
shots while he was walking in
and around the library and saw
people fall to the ground.
Butler told the jury that Al·
laway has no recollection of pull·
ing the trigger and is mentally in·
capable or understanding the
nalure ol his crimes.
Both sides intend to put
psycbiatriill on the witness
stand in what is expected to be a
'wo.week hearine before Judge
Robert P. Kneeland.
Iseue on Ballot
SAC1lilf~ <AP> -A pro-
posal lo require all Call(ornia
counties to continue to hold elecj
tioos for sheriff was put on 1he
June 1m etate ballot by the M·
Convertible
Rolls; HB
Man Critical ·
A Huntington Beach man. driv-
ing a convertible sports car with
the top down, is in critical condi·
tion today at. Long Beach Veteran's Hospital after the car
rolled several times and came \o
rest upside down Oil Beach
Boulevard· in Westminster Mon·
day night, police said.
Westminster Police said
Ronald Edward Melthratter, 21,
of l~ Pacific Coast Highway,
Huntington Beach, apparently
lost control of his small convertl·
ble while trying to exit the
Oarden ·Grove Freeway onto
Beach Boulevard.
Officer Earle Graham said the
car rolled several times, flipped
over a center di~lder, and came
to rest in a northbound lane of
Beach Boulevard.
Meltbratter suffered severe
head injwies and was taken to
Westminster Hospital before be-
ing transferred lo the Intensive
care unit at Loni Beach
Veteran's Hospital.
sembly Monda)'. The \tote was l ,..,,.. ... ,, .. ~
54·22, the exact two-thirds ma·
Jori.4' Deeded.
youne people ln the cl\.Y
air d of beln& alone t cigfit
tbadat•. otftclaJa decided t))at arraltn~
ment ln the Queens cases would
be more orderly at the bospttal,
where Berkowitz ls undergolna
psychiatric teat.I.
In today•s proceedings.
Berkowitz was ac;.cuffd of two
murders, five assault.a, aeven
attempted murders and five
weapons charges st•m'1'1ng from
the Queens assault.. In the
Brooklyn attack, BerJtowttz is ac-
c uaed of murdetlng ayquns
woman and injuring a youhg
man.
The plea in the Queens cases
, was entered for BerkowiU by Ira
Jultak. h1a attorney.
Berkowitz, dressed in green
pajama bottov\S, blue pajama
top, blue and white terry-cloth1
bathrobe and white slippers, was
expressionless throughout the
proceedings .
. Jultak said afterward that
the onJy word Berkowitz spoke
d14rtng the proceeding was lo
an1Jwer "Okay" when the at·
torney asked bhn how he was
feeU111.
About 30 reporters were seated
in the rear of the makeshift sixth·
floor courtroom. Seven artists
were allowed lo sketch the SUS·
pect, seated otliY five feet away.
There were at least 17 officers in
the cowtrooq), caned the incom-
petency room of the prison ward.
Brown ordered that Berkowitz
be remanded to the hospital at
leat until Sept, 1, "for the
purpose of medical examina· lion to determine his competen·
cy." The judge said be would
hold a competency bearing or set
a trial date Sept. 1. ·
SKATE •••
Laguna Beach firemen and paramedics
aid Steven Nish. 9, who fell from his
skateboard Monday gashed his right hand
and bumped his head. The lad had walked
about two blocks from the scene of the ac-
cident near Laguna Beach High School lo
the intersection of Wendt Terrace and
Griffith Way when he collapsed. After
emergency care, tbe boy was taken hy an
awnt with whom he is staying to a doctor. I
.
F,....PegeAJ
NUCLEAR. •
ShapirO, told the AEC most or all
or the missing uranium was mis·
takenly buried as waste material
at the plant site in 1963.
But when the AEC r~wred
him lo dig up tl}e burial pit m the
fall of 1965, the files showed,
Shapiro could locate only about
10 percent of the uranium he was
looking ror.
.. rn Novembe,r 1965. atl'} AEC sur·
vey sell.!'ched the plant and re· .
ported 382 pounds of enriched
uranium missing, of which 206
pounds· could not be accounted
For througti normal plant opera·
lions. . : ..
The Star said NUMEC even·
tually paid the AEC $1 ,344,000 for
the lost uranium. • ·
Its report said, "Although 1t
cannot be stated with certainty
that theft or diversion did not
take place, the survey team
found no evidence to suggest
those possibilities."
In explaining why the AEC
waited five years to investigate
the suspected uranium losses. a
roemo by Brown sa1d, "It ap·
pears that responsible personnel
apparently tielieved that they
had less authority and power to force improvement than in
retrospect. it appears they ac·
tuallydld."
Aerial reconnaissance showed
that t.he Chinese had built their
own uranium enrichment plant.
Patty Frowned
Robbery Trilli 'No Lark'
.(t p I, H ".\EW YORK (AP' utr1cta ears t never
smiled before the cameras during her 1976 bank rob~
bery trial because her attorney said such pictures
would make the public ''think she was frivolous" and ·
look at her trial as "a lark," writes Janey Jiminez.
The former U.S. marshal who spet1t 350 hours
with the newspaper heiress has writtenl a book .. M)·
Prisoner," which is condensed in the September issue
of Ladies Home Journal. ..
She' wrote. "The Patty HeaNlt I ca'me to know is a
far cry from either the devil ·caricature perpetrated
by the SLA or the demure angel rashioned by her
lawyers ··
·The account also ·claims Miss Hearst was upset
about a book written by s·te,·e Weed. her fiance until·
s he was abducted by the S) mbionese Liberation
Army.
Weed said he told the SLA members during the
abduction; ·"Take anything ~ ou "ant hut lea\'e us
alone.·•
He~stwas quoted as saying "Weed's \\ords \\ere
' .. and lea\·e me alone.' If you really love someone.
how can you say. ·Take e\'erything but leave me •.
alone'! ..
Camping Fatal
CARSONC.tTY (AP> -Amen·
tally retarded 21.year-old Reno
woman died early Sunday while
on a camping trip with other re·
tarded persons and foster
parents at an Eldorado County
campsite.
F,....PageAJ
ELVIS... ,
Smith II.
The will was recorded and filed
during a 2.0-minute session before
Judge.Evans. The elder Presley,
Mr. and Mrs. Smitb and Hodge
were present at the filing.
In his will, tru, singer directed
that the net income of his estate
go to his father; bia 9-year-old
daueMer, Lisa .Made; bis
gr and mother, Minnie Mae
Presley; and "such other rel-
atives of mine livin& at the Ume
of my death who. • .are in need
THOUSANDS FLOCKING
TO PRESLEY TOMB, A3
VOL. 70,, NO. 235, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, ·1977 C. TEN C MTSf
Huge U.S. Told .
. ~
WASHINGTON CAP) -The
Enert:Y Research and Devdop-
meat Adminiatr•tion baa ~
vealed that enoutb unnium for
at least 10 nvtlear weapons wu
••tost" in tbe early lMOI. th•
W ashinft.on Star aeid today.
Material Enough/or ll)Atomic Weapons In erplaiDlnf wby the A.EC
wait.eel five years to investigate
the suspected uranium l05SeS,'
memo by Brown said. "It a~
pears that responsible personnel
apparenUy believed that they
bad less authority and power to
force improvement than ln
retrnspcct it appears thq ac.
tualtydid."
The Star said documents re-
leased by ERDA sbowed that iJl...
vestigat.ors -of what wu then
ERDA's predecessor, the Atomic
Ene'ro Commiasion -suspeet-
ed sin~ 1960 serious Josses of enriched ·.ura nium beln1 proc-
essed for the U.S. governmen~
* * * Nuclear
Devices
'Nixed'
WASlUNGTON CAP> -Presi-
dent Carter said today South
Africa has assured the United
States that it does not have and
d oes not intend t o develop
nuclear explosive devices.
Carter made that statement at
a nationally televised news con-
f e r ence. s aying the South
Africans informed the ad-
ministration that they will not de-
v e I op nuc l e ar wea pons or
peaceful nuclear devices.
The report that South Africa
planned a nuclear explosion had
come from France.
The President s aid he ap-
preciated the South African
response, adding "We will of
course continue to monitor the
situation very closely.''
Carter also said he will give the
American people all the facts on
a new Panama Canal treaty, and
believes they will then support
th~pact. '
"My belief ts that as the
• American people become ac·
quaint~ wlth t he every good
terms of the treatf, they Will shift
their support to the treaty Itself,"
the President said.
Girding for his ettort to gain
Senate ratification of the new
treaty, Carter sa.id he believes
some or the opposition it now
faces stems from misconcep-
tions.
Carter also:
· -Said U.N. Ambassador An-
drew Young would re1tresenl the
United States al a meeting of five
"front line" African presidents
in Zambia on Friday to discuss
efforts to reach a settlement in
war-tom Rhodesia.
-Reiterated tb41 U.S. position
that the seUlements of Israeli
citizens on the West Bank of
(See NUCLEAR. Pa1e A2>
Teen Robbers ·
Shot to Death
LOS ANGELtS (AP>·-Two
alleged leen·age robbers were
shot to death by a customer dur.
ing an attempted holdup ol a
restaurant, officials said.
Police said Monday that
Patrick James Wiley, 17, and
Clarence Frederick WUUama, 18.
both of South Los Anaete:s. at·
rived at the res~aurant on
bic~cles. With Wiler hotdlns a
owed·off shotgun, Willl4ms
began taklng the ~ustOIJ\ers; waneta, olftcer$ aald.
by the Nuclear Materials and
EquJpment Corp. -NUMEC -
at Apollo, Pa.
But mem06 from the files of
Howard C. Brown Jr., then assis-
tant general manager of the
AEC, showed the agency did not
press the company about the
losses until 1965, a year after
China exploded a nuclear
weapon.
JustCruiang
The company was known to
have business dealings with
several French firms and was
described as .. sales agent for the
government of Israel."
The documents indicated that
NUMEC's owner. Zalman M.
Shapiro. told the AEC most or all
of the missing uranium was mis·
takenly burled as waste material
at the plant site in 1963.
But when the AEC required
him to dig up the burial pit in the
fall of 1965, the files showed,.
Shapiro could locate only about
10 percent of the uranium be was
looking for.
In November 1965, an AECsur-
vey searched the plant and re-
ported 382 pounds of enriched
uranium missing, of which 206
pounds could not be accounted
Sailing ships that rounded the Horn "'ith
exoti<! cargo bound for faraway places
carried a female form as a figurehead.
This Hobie Cat cruising lazily in ~ewport
Harbor was doing twice as well but the
young women up front doubtless consider
themselves more than fi gureheads.
CM Interest
Conflict
lawOK'd
Costa Mesa councilmen have
approved a conflict of interest or-
dinance which will mean many
cii.y employes must disclose their
financial .interests.
The Costa Mesa law was pat·
terned after the Fair Political
Practices Commission law which
resulted ftom the 1914 Political
Reform Act.
City Manaaer Fred Sorsabal
said the, city ordinance takes in
all employes who have what be
terms significant pubHc ex-
posure.
"It's for those who make de-
cisions that mJgbt have an effect.
on their personal financial deal·
in gs," Sorsabal said.
The.designated employes have
30 days alter final approval ol lhe
ordinance to file statements
declaring their interest in real
estate property, investments and
income.
The ordin&l'lce inclucrea au ae-
partroent beads, division tfeads,
police captains, fire battalion
chiefs, buildln& inspectors,
finance officets as well 'BS the cl
ty manager and city council
members.
3 Held in County
Counterfeiting Ring
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Ol "'9 o.ity ll'tlet Staff
U.S. Secret Service a&enls,
striking early today, claim they
have smashed a Los Alamitos-
based counterfeiting ring in the
midst of producUon of S1 million
worth of phony $20 and SSO bills.
Robert Polis, special agent in
charge of the service's Los
A~les office said three men
. have been taken into custody in
connection with the ring which
was operating out of Vanguard
Automated Graphics, 10013
Bloomfield St.
But Polls noted that the shop
owner was not involved with the
bogus money operation. He said
the owner rented the business to
two of the arrestees, Elvin
Baker, 60 and Steven Blash Sr ..
53, both of San Diego
The third man arrested was
Roben Samuel Lewis, 54. of
Panorama City who was taken
·into custody at 2:30 a.m. today as
. he arrived at the print shop.
Polis said the m0'1th-long in·
vestieation was laUMhed when
Blash, who had a prev101,As coun-
terfeiting conviction in 1971, ap-
proached an unidentified Los
Angeles resident in an attempt to
buy paper and mk.
He said all three ring members
were kept under surveillance for
the month which ended at mid-
night when agents raided the
print shop and cor.fiscated
$150,000 worth of half printed $20
and $S0 bills.
Baker was arrested at that
time. Blash was taken into
custody at 3 a.m.
Polis said no bills have ever
been passed but he alleged the
group intended to print $'1 million
worth and t.o pass the money in
Mexico.
Air Races Off
MERCED <AP> -Air races
that bad been tentatively
planned here Labor Day
weekend have been canceled, a
city official says.
for throuab normal plant opera. tiona.
The Star said NUMEC even-
tually paid the AEC Sl,3«,000 for
tbe lost uranium.
Its report said, ''Although it
cannot be stated with certainty
that theft or diversion did not
take place, the survey team
found no evidence to sugeest
those possibilities."
There was no way, the in·
vesligation found. to detect ex·
cess shipments of nuclear
material out of the country by a
U :S· company.
Allatear• Fears f
Killer's Motive.
Sai~ 'Revenge~
Bandit. Hits •-?
Restaurant
' In Costa Mesa .
A man with a crew flalrcut
slapped SO cents down on tbe · ·
counter of a Jack-in-the-Box
takeout stand in Costa :&Jesa·ear-
ly Monday, then demanded all
the cash from the till.
Two of the four employes at the
fast food stand at 2285 Barbo~
Blvd. told Costa Mesa poJicethey
did not see the fast-moving ban-
dit who fied with $1.a3 b'oo;t Ule.
store.
A COWlter attendant said the
man. sporting s~ hair and a
two-week growth of beard. or-
dered a chocolate shake and
then, simulating a weapon fn .bis
jicket pocket, demanded ~aah.
The clerk then went to the back
of tbe store and informed th•
manaie.r be bad been "°bbed. The. two employea observln•
tbe robbery described the bandit
as standing five Jeet 10 inche
tan, weiChi.na 175 pounds and
betwem251o30 yeaa 9f aie..
. '
VOL. 70, NO. 235, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES i ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN Cl!NTSf
W~NGTON lAP) -1be
Enero Research and Develop-
ment Administration baa re-
vealed that enoush uranium for
at lea.st 10 nucleu weapons was
.. lost" in the early 1960s, the
W ashincton Star aald today.
The Star said documents re-
leased by ERDA showed that in-
vesUcators -of what was then
ERDA's predecessor, the Atomk
Energy Commission -suspect-
ed sinee 1960 serious losses or
enriched ··uranium being proc-
essed for the U.S. government
* * * Nuclear
Devices
.,
'Nixed'
WASJUNGTON <AP) -Presi·
dent Carter said today South
Africa has assured the United
States that It does not have and
does not intend to develop
nuclear explosive devices.
Carter made that statement at
a nationally televised news con·
ference. saying the South
Africans informed the ad-
ministration that they will not de-
ve lop nuclear weapons or
peaceful nuclear devices.
The report that South Africa
planned a nuclear explosion had
come from France.
The President said he ap·
preciated the South African
response, adding "We will of
course continue to momt.or the
situation very closely."
Carter also said he will give the
American people all the facts on
a new Panama Canal treaty, and
believes they will then support
th~ pact.
"My belief is that as the
• American people become ac·
quainted witb the very 1ood
terms or the treaty' they will shift
their support to the treaty itself,'•
the President said.
Girding for bis effort to gain
Senate ratification of the new
treaty, Carter said he believes
some of the opposition 1t now
faces stems from misconcep·
lions.
Carter also:
· -Said U.N. Ambassador An-
drew Young would re):tresent the
United States at a meeting or five
"front line" African presidents
in Zambia on Friday to discuss
effort!i to reach a settlement in
war-tom Rhodesia.
-Reiterated thQ U.S. position
that the settlements or Israeli
citJzen.s on the West Bank of
<See NlJCLEAR, Paae A2>
Teen Robbers ·
Shot to Death
LOS ANGELES CAP> -Two
allesed teen-age robbers were
shot \o death by a customer dur.
ing an attempted holdup of a
restaurant, officials said.
Police said Monday that
Patrick James Wiley, 17, and
Clarence Fk'ederick Williama, 18,
both or South Los Angeles, ar·
rived at the restaurant on
bicycles. With W11ey holdinf a
sawed-off shotgun, Williams
began tak,ng the cuatoll\ers'
walleta, officers said.
Mate~al EnDugh for 10 A.tomW w~apons In explalninl why the AEC
waited flve years to investlaate
the suspected uranium losses. •
memo b1. Brown aald.!_~~~ pears Uiat responsible pcnuuuc&
apparenUy believed that the7
had less authority and power to
force improvement than in
retrospect it appears tbq ac-
tually did ...
by the Nuclear Materials and
Equipment Corp. -NUMEC -
al Apollo, Pa.
But memos from the mes of
Howard C. Brown Jr .. then assis·
tant general manager of the
AEC, showed the agency did not
press the company about the
losses until 196.5, a year after
China exploded a nuclear
weapon.
Just Cruising
The company was known to
have business dealings with
several Fk'encb firms and was
described as "sales agent for the
government or Israel. ..
The documents indicated that
NUMEC's owner, Zalman M.
Shapiro, told the AEC most or all
of the missing uranium was mis·
takenly buried as waste material
at the plant site in 1963.
But when the AEC required
him to dig up the burial pit ln the
fall or 196.5, the files showed,
Shapiro could locate only about
10 percent of the uranium he was
looking for.
In November 196.5, an AEC sur-
vey searched the plant and re·
ported 382 pounds of enriched
uranium missing, of which 206
pounds could not be accounted
Sailing ships that rounded the Horn \\ ith
exotic carge bound for faraway places
carried a female form as a figurehead.
This Hobie Cat cruising lazily in ~ewport
Harbor was doing twice as well but the
young women up fTont doubtlesl' consid~r
themselves more than figureheads . -...--
CM Interest
Conflict
LawOK'd
Costa Mesa councilmen have
approved a conflict of interest or-
dinance which will mean many
city employes must disclose their
financial interests.
The Costa Mesa law was pat-
terned after the Fair Political
Practices Commission law which
resulted from the 1974 Political
Reform Act.
City Manager Fred Sor'sabal
said the city ordinance takes in
all emp(oyes who have what he
terms significant public ex-
posure.
"It's for those who make de-
cisions that might have an effect
on their personal finan<:ial deal-
ings,•• Sorsabal said.
The.designated employes have
30 days after final approval of the
ordinance to file a'atements
declaring their interest in real
estate property, investments and
income.
•
3 Held in County
Counter{ eiting Ring
By .JOANNE REYNOLDS
OUllle 0.llf ... loUeatt
U.S. ~ecret Service agents,
striking early today, claim they
have smashed a Los Alamitos-
based counterfeiting rmg ln the
midst of production of $7 million
worth of phony $20 and $50 bills.
R.obert Polls, special agent in
charge of the service's Los
An$eles office said three men
ba ve been taken into custody in
connection with the ring which
waa operaUng out of Vanguard
Automated Graphics, 10013
Bloomfield St.
But Polls noted that the shop
owner was not involved with the
bog\IS money operation. He said
the owner rented the business to
two of the arrestees, Elvin
Baker, 60 and Steven Blash Sr ..
53, both of San Diego.
The UUrd man arrested was
Roben Samuel Lewis, 54, of
, Panorama City who wa& taken
into custody at 2:30 a.m. today as
. he arrived ~t the print shop.
Polis sald tbe moptt,-long in-
vestigation was launched when
Blash. who had a previous coun·
terfeiting conviction in 1971, ap·
proached an unidentified Los
Angeles resident in an attempt lo
buy paper and mk.
He said all three ring members
were kept under surveillance for
the month which ended at mid-
night when agents raided the
print shop and cor.fiscated
$150,000 worth of half printed $20
and $50 bills.
Baker was arrested at that
time. Blash was taken into
custody at 3 a.m.
Polis said no bills have ever
been passed but he alleged the
group intended to print $7 milllon
worth and to pass the money in
Mexico
Air Races Off
MERCED <AP) -Air races
that had been tentatively
planned here Labor Day
weekend have been canceled, a
city official says.
for through normal plant opera·
tiona. #
The Star said NUMEC even·
tually paid the AEC $1,344,000 for
the lost uranium.
Its report said, "Although it
cannot be stated with certainty
that theft or diversion did not
take place, the survey team
found no evidence to suggest
those possibilities."
There was no way, the in·
vestigatioo found, to detect ex·
c:esa shipments of nuclear
material out of the country by a
U:S. company.
Alla8"af1'• Fears
Killer's Motive.
Saia 'Revenge~
By TOM BARLEY
Oft• o.tty ""9t Slaff
Convicted killer Edward
Charles Allaway was seeking re-
venge when be took his rifle to
the Cal State Fullerton campus
on July 12, 1976 and shot nine peo-
ple t.o death, an Orange County
Superior Court jury was told
Monday.
Both Allaway's former wife
and his lawyer told the panel as
the defendant's sanity hearing
got under way that he believed
she was being forced to
participate in pornot:raphic mov-
ies.
Mrs. Allaway, 29, quoted her
husband as telling her im·
mediately after the campus
shootings: "I just shot seven peo-
ple for what they've done to
you."
Deputy P\lbllo defender Rem
Butler told the jury iD bis opeaing
statemeni that Allaway. 38,•wu
conrinced th.at h1I wife 1tU beinC
tortizred by university emp&cwes.
Butler said Allaway, whom be
described as a paranoid
schizophrenic, was convinced
that his wife was linked in some
way with pornographic films that
were being p~vately shown to
employes at the campus media
center. .
The jury has already de-
t_!!rmined that Allaway is guilty.
or six e.ounts _.of -first deiree
pturder, one of second degree
and two counts of assaillt with a
deadly weapon.
The jury must now rule on his
mental condition at the time of
the campus shootings.
Butler said the shoolin&s were
the climax -to a Jong history ot
psychiatric problems that were
aggravated by the temarks of
fellow employes on the Fullerton
campus.
He told the jury tbat co·
workers joldng{t told Allaway
that they were having sexual re-
lations with his wife the night
before and that sneral ac:c:used
him of being bQID.06exual.
Mrs. Allaway testified that she
left her husband on Memorial
Day weekend inl976 when bis ip-
creaslng agitation frightened
her.
She testified that he bad recur-
rinc dreams about her having
sex with other men and told her
that he had been told ot the parts
she played in pornographic mov·
les. ·
Bandit.Hits ·~
Rest8urant
' In €osta Mesa ..
A man with a crew haircut
slapped 50 cents down on the ..
counter of a Jack-in-the·Box
takeoill. stand· ih Costa ¥e5a·ear-
ly Monday, then demanded all
the cuh from the till.
Two of the four employes at the
fast food stand at 223S Harbor
Blvd. told Cos.ta Mesa police t.bey
did not see the fast-moving ban·
dit who fled with $133 trom.~e store.
A ~ter attendant said the·
man, sporting sbort bair and a
two-week growth of beard, or·
dered a chocolate shake and
then, simulaCina a w.apo11. tn bis
jacket pocket, demanded cash.
1be clerk. then went to the bade
of the store and informed the
manaaer be baet been robbed.
The two employes observm.
the robbery described the bandit
u standing five ~eet 10 incbM
tan, wel1tu.ni 1'15 ~ and
betwe:en25 to~ ye us ~t ~~. ~ ~ .. The ordinance includes all ae-
partment heads, divlsioo tteads,
police captains, fire battalion
chiefs, buildin& inape~torf,
finance officers as \tell ai, the cl· ly manager and city council
-------~----.....;..._..__..__~_-.......,...,.,..iii-...,,.. · And she testified that Allaway
telephoned her on the morning Of
the sho()tings and told ber that he
believed be was goma to be !tUJtd
that d_, and would never Ml Mr members. again.
Butler.~ the~Jurtc:1.Uaal'W·
laflt"'1 tan ~ ~ ::-tMt llii!
took a rtne to tbe campus. heard ahOtS while he was wa~ iD
and arodDCI the tibrarY a aw ~ r.u to'theground. .
fSM~WAY,P ... ~>
••
I
MEMPHIS, Tenn. tAP> -
Elvis Presley, who 8'ave
diamonds to cirlfriends and
Cadillacs to strangers, left his
• fortune to his family and ex-
cluded his former wife and his
fiant·eein his will
The will. filed for probate Mon -
day. likely will be "the biggest
ever filed in the state or Ten-
nessee." s aid Probate Court
Judge Joseph Evans.
Presley, 42. was found un-
t'O nscious a\ his Graceland
fessklnaJ career."
The dO(ument gave the elder
Presley .,complete freedom and
distrftlon as to disposal of any
and aJI such property 10 long as
he shall act in good raith and in
the best Interest of my estate.··
The will said that upon the
deaths of Minnie Mae Presley and
Vernon Presle~. a trust will be
created for Usa Marie Presley,
which will be turned over to her
whenshereachesage25.
Dri"~ Walked Away o.11y ...... Staff...,... THOUSANDS FLOCKING
TO PRESLEY TOMB, A3
Besides excluding his former
wife and his fiancee, the will
named no charitable organiza.
tion as a beneficiary.
~J otonsl Felipe Barrer a. 27. of 802 Knox-
\ tile An· . Huntin~ton Bt.'ach. was only
slight!) hurt '.\tonda~ in this 2 p.m. acci-
dent on San Diego Freewa~ at Bnstol
Street 1n Costa '.\ksa Caltfor111a lligh\\ ·"
J>utrol ..,,11d H.11 n ·r.1 d1ppt·d big trutk .111d
trailer rig drt\ en by Greg Tonkmson. of
Tustin. wh1IC' passing it, rt cochC'tmg off
rc<tr tire and rolling over Barrt.>ru \\as
treated at ;\krcy Gcncnll l lospital, Santu
Ana and released
Catalina Bicycle Grand Prix
Plane Crash Scheduled in Mesa
Kills Pair
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
OftMOallY ~llttStaff
Searchers, picking their way
over treacherous terrain today,
found the wreckage Qf a missing
twin-engine cargo plane that
s lammed in"to Santa Catalina
Island on a routine flight, killing
both men aboard.
The victims were identified as
Robert G. Graves of Cerritos and
Charles C. Clifford of Long
Beach, employes of Air Fast
Freight of Long Beach.
Federal Aviation Admmistra·
lion spokesmen said today the
Beechcraft operated by Air Fast
Freight out of Long Beach Airport
was reported overdue by the firm.
Investigators with the Los
Angeles County Sheriff's Office at
Avalon said the plane crashed
four miles west of Avalon, near
Long's Point, smashing into the
steep hillsides.
"They went in lour miles west
or Avalon," s aid an FAA
spokesman.
There was no radio contact
from the plane which new from
Long Beach to the Island's moun-
taintop airport with a load of
cargo late Monday night.
Alan Crawford , Los Angeles
<Jistrict chief for the National
transportation Safety Board,
said today the plane landed and
unloaded before the crash. ,
''They were due back al a cer·
lain time and they never re·
turned," he said.
Investigators for the NTSB,
which investigates all crashes in-
volving commercial aviation or
civilian aircraft accidents involv-
ing fatalities, were flying to
Catalina today.
A sheriff's office spokesman in
Avalon said ground searchers
were just reaching the crash site
shortly before noon, adding that
he had little details yet.
The wreckage was apparently
dlscovereashortly 'after daylight,
although after a period of time.it
was evident to sdrcbers that the
aircraft bad crashed.
I
Store Loses Cash
A clerk at T. Edwards, a
women's clothing store at South
Coast Plaza, told Costa Mesa
police Monday someone broke in·
to a locked desk stora1e com·
partment over the weekend, tak· me $2,l~ in caab and tbeclca.
The money wai> locattcl in a
storage and office area at the
rear of the store al 3333 Bri&tol
SL
DAILY PILOT
The fourth annual Costa Mesa
Bicycle Grand Prix, pitting top
amateur racers against each
other and the clock, will be held
Sunday on city streets in north
Costa Mesa.
Buf .recreation department of·
fi c ials have added a n e w
challenge to the annual races -a
steep hill included in the grueling
two-mile race course.
The Costa Mesa race is one of
10 sanctioned bv the National
Classics Committee which gives
riders the opportunity to ac·
cumulate points toward the Na-
tional Best All-Around Rider
award.
The local race also provides
racers with a chance to garner
points for the United States Olym-
pic team.
It won 't all be serious racing at
Sunday's day-long festivities
There will be bot air balloons, a
big wheel race, cable car, unicy-
cle ride rs, a live band and
refreshments. ·
Sile of this year's races will be
on Estancia Drive between
Wilson Street and Adams Avenue
with the start and finish lines at
E stancia High School.
Racers will charge up Estan-
cia Drive, swing around Swan
Circle, then up Cardinal Drive to
Oriole. back down Estancia to
the finish line.
There will be six races during
the day, beginning at 7:30 a.m
and ending around 4 p.m. Races
range from five laps (20 miles) to
41 laps (82 miles.>
A pre-school big wheel race Is
scheduled for 10:30 a.m .. For
more information, call the
Department of Leisure Services
at 556-5300.
TONIGHT
SENIOR CITIZENS CLUB
Comm\.D\ity Recreation Center.
Tues., Wed., Thurs. 12·3 p.m.
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST!4
COAST COMMUNITY
COLLEGE BOARD -Re&U}ar
meeting, 1370 Adams, 8 p. m.
MUSIC OF AMERICA -
Mu.sic oUhe.O's wttb Ansell Hill,
South Coast Village free concert,
7:80p.m.
' ,
BIKE GRAND PRIX ROUTE
Mesa Fete Set Sunday
Fro• Page AJ
ALLAWAY. •
Butler told the Jury that Al·
laway has no recollection of pull-
ing the trigger and 1s mentally In·
capable of understanding the
nature of his crimes.
Both sides intend to put
psychiatrists on the witness
stand in what Is expected to be a
two-week hearing before Judge
Robert P. Kneeland.
The new jury Is comprised of
six men and six women.
Judge Kneeland ordered the
replacement of a woman juror
with an alternate juror Monday
when she reported that she had
bee n hospitalized during the
weekend.
Liddy Moved
To New Jail
mansion last Tuesday and pro-
nouncoo dead of a heart att.tck at
Baptist Hospital.
An inventory of Presley's
wealth. expected to be several
m 1llton dollars. 1~ being prepared
and court oHicials said i\ may be
longer than the usual two months
before it can be filed.
·'The size and complexity of it
may cause them to run into dif. ficulty in filing it in 60 days, ..
Probate Court Clerk Bobby
Dunavant said.
The rock 'n • roll superstar's
62-year-old father. Vern.on
Presley, once a Mississippi
sharecropper. was named ex-
ecutor of the will.
The 13-page document was
drawn up at Presley's Graceland
mansion and dated March 3. It
was witnessed by Charles Hodge,
Presley's ~uitarist; Ginger
Alden, bis fiancee; and Ann
Dewey Smith, wife of Vernon
Presley's attorney, Beecher
Smith II.
The will was recorded and filed
during a 20-mlnute session before
Judge Evans. The elder Presley,
Mr. and Mrs. Smith and Hodge
were present at the filing.
In his will, the sincer direc~
that the net income of his estate
go to his father; his 9-year-old
daughter. Lisa Marie; his
grandmother, Minnie ){ae
Presley: and "such other rel·
atives or mine Jiving at the time
of ,my death who are in need
of assistance for health. educa·
tion, support, comfortable main·
tenance and welfare.'·
The will directs \hat Vernon
Pre~ley r eceive his son 's
personal property. "includiug
trophies and other items ac·
cumulated by me durin& my pro·
Compressor Stolen
Operators of J and H Paint
Contractors s aid thieves walked
orr with a $2,000 paint sprayer
compressor from a s torage
garage sometime Monday. The
costly compressor was stolen
from a storage room used by the
company at 2944 Randolph Ave .•
Costa Mesa.
IJUWcence
Pleaded
.By 'Sani'
N.EW YORK CAP > -Al an un·
usual arr3.ignmeni in a Brooklyn
hospital prison ward, an attorney
entered innocent pleas today to
murder and assault charges
which David R. Berkowitz, the
man accused of being the Son or
Sam killer, faces in Queens.
lD a proceeding at the Kings
County Hospital prison ward,
State Supreme Court Justice
Leon Brown presided over a
quiet 16-mlnute session that
sharply contrasted with last
week's arraignment in a
Brooldvn courtroom on charges
m a sixth attack -that one in
Brooklyn.
Berkowitz is charged with be·
lng the night stalker who would
fire into parked cars in which
young men and women sat, most
often in lovers• lanes. There were
six attacks in all, and they made
many young people in the city
afraid ol being alone at night
withadate.
Officials decided that arraign·
ment in the Queens cases would
be more orderly at the hospital.
where Berkowitz is undergoing
psychiatric tests.
In t.oday's proceedings,
Berkowiti waa accused of two
murders, five assaults, seven
attempted murders and five
weapons charges stemming from
the Queens assaults. In the
Brooklyn attack, Berkowitz is ac·
cused of murdering ayoung
woman and injuring a young
man.
The plea in the Queens cases
was entered for Berkowitz by Ira
Jultak. his attorney.
Berkowitz, dressed m green
pajama bottoms, blue pajama
top, blue and white terry-cloth1
bathrobe and white slippers, was
expressionless throughout the
proceedings.
~atty Frowned
Robbery Trial 'No Lark'
:\EW YORK <AP> Patricia Hearst ne,·er
smiled before the cameras during her 1976 bank rob·
bery trial because her attorney said such pictures
would make the public ''think she was frivolous" and
look at her trial as "a lark, .. writes Janey Jiminez.
The former U.S. marshal who spent 350 hours
with the newspaper heiress has written a book "My
Prisoner,·· which ls condensed in the September issue
of Ladies Home Journal.
She wrote, "The Patty Hearst l came to know is a
far cry from either the devil caricature perpetrated
by the SLA or the demure angel fashioned b~· her
lawytJts."
The aceount also claims Miss Hearst was upset
about a book written by Steve Weed, her fiance until·
she was abduc~ by the S)·mbionese Liberation
Army.
Weed said he told the SLA membe~ durina the
abduction. ·•Take anything you want but leave us
alone."
Hearst was quoted as sa);ng "Weed's words were
•. . . nd leave me alone.' If you really love someone.
how can ~u say, 'Take everything but te~\'e me
alone'!··
Foiled'!
Whal comes after en
garde? Frank De Jong
know s as d o h is
classmates taking fenc-
ing at Golden West
College. T o find out
why they are attracted
to the sport, see Page
BJ
Fro.Page Al
NUCLEAR. •
Jordan River are "ln violation or
the Geneva decisions and
therefore illegal.··
But the President went on to
say that be believes that the set·
Uements do no\ ''show that Israel
intends to occupy these ter-
ritories permanently." Fo,r now.
he said, the U.S. will go no
further on the issue than to point
out to Israel t.hat the settlements
are illegal.
-Once again defended Bert
Lance, his budget director.
whose private banking practices
have come under investigation
Carter said he knows of
nothing illegal or unethical that
Lance has done.
Mesa Thieves Get
Cash, Cigare~tes
Thieves kicked out boards
securing a baUiroom window at a
Costa Mesa pool haU Monday,
police said, lb~n took cash and
cigarettes valued at $250 before
fleeing the tame way they came
in.
Operators o r Surfside
Bllliards, 841 Wl 19th Street, re-
ported the break-in to police
Monday mominc. They said the
burglars rifled cigarette and
other vending machinei before
leaving.
f
St11nmit Due
PRETORIA. South Africa
(AP) -Rhodesian Prime
Minister Ian Smith will meet
with Sout.,h .African Prime
Mini1ter .Jolan Vorster here
Satlll"day, offitials announced t.Q-
day. The meeting coincides with
a swnmit of lbe five "front·Une ..
Afritan l)restdents in Zambia,
and raised speculation about new
diplomatic efforts to teach a
peaceful settl.,ment in war-tom
Rhodesia .•
ftlel cs Decide Atnenea's Cup
for Ute America 'f aiv C!Oll• . ..,.. on a au. trt~rar eoune,
1olq around the trlan1l1 once
and then batk fOll"Ul from lbe
•tartlnl buOy to U.. wlDdwaat
Is
Presley
Crowds
Banned
MEii.PiUS, Tenn. CAP>-'l'he
1atea to the cemetery w .. re
ElYl:s Presley ta entombed ,_e
closed to the public br•dly
because the thousands of PflPle
fiocldng to hia maU$0leum •ere
disrupting other funerals.
·'We had to close the gatt' to
the general public from 9:3Qll.m.
until 1 p.m .. " Roberta Sela), of.
fice manager of the Fores~Hills
Cemetery, said Monday. "We
still have to conduct OUf own
business. We had two funen,Js to-
day and several burials aid we
have to be able to conduet that
business for our ~ther customers."
The gates reopened for three
hours in the afternoon,~ Mrs.
Selah said no policy was "Setfor future access.
Visitors to the cemtery, •re
the 42-year-old Presley 'fas
brought two days after his dettth
from a heart attack last T!Jesdpy,
have been numbering in 'he
thousands daily. Forest Hills of-
ficials estimated Sunday at
200,000 people strolled lhro h
the grounds to the white mar le
mausoleum where Presley lies
Cemetery employes rep
many visitors have been ca
ing overnight outside t
cemetery to make sure they
inside.
OfCicials said the crowds ha
been orderly, but private sec
ty guards were assigned to patr
the mausoleum around the cloc
Mrs. Selah said she did not kno
how long the guards would b
stationed at the crypt.
Police said sightseers and
tourists are also gathering at the
two front gates leading lo
Presley's Graceland Mansion.
Both the cemetery and the late
entertainer's mansion are on
Elvis Presley Boulevard, a
heavily traveled street wtuch has
become even more congested
with the influx of out-of-town vis-
itors.
Memphis officials estimated it
cost the city $50,000 to pay more
than 300 city employes, including
250 policemen, wbo controlled
crowds and traffic. treated the ill
and cleared the debris left by
Chousands or mourners Wednes·
day and Thursday.
Anaheim Man
Arrested in
Fatal tabh_. -R
man t6ree u •· "M.ttb 1' ii probably U.. malt Wllble 1pon thwe 11, •• Hlct
Oary Jobloo, tacUclan aboard i..,, defender eovq-. ••u
one C\IY. (cNWman) tOlall vp.
eveiybocl)'autt ... We'll10l4t," Jca.. a two.time •a.W.oa AD· Amerteao at tb• New York Marttl~ Academy, bu been
The battleship t:SS Missouri, the .. Mighty Mo, .. lies
mothballed at dockside in Bremerton, Wash. Thousands•
of tourists visit the ship. the site of the signing of the
treaty ending the war between the l:nited States and J a pan.
.-'ft Pastor Gets Okay -:i
For .Mining Project
A Fullerton pastor who wants
to mine sand and gravel in a
niral canyon north of El Toro
should be liyen two years to get
his operation under way, Or~e
County Planning CommiJ&ioners
agreed Monday.
The commission was asked to
RmnExtends
Laguna's Art
Feau 2 ·Daya
study the two-year time limit by
county supervisors before they
take final action later on a plan
covering 32,000 acres and five
canyons in the Silverado-. Modjes~p. area.
Fullerton pastor William
Grady contends the 64S acres he
owns in Williams Canyon abouf
five miles north of El Toro con-
tains 91 million tons of sand and gravel.
He wants development. that
would mterfere with the mining,
restricted for two years until he
can prove the deposits exist and
can 1et necessary mining
permits.
The mining operation has been
opposed by a number of canyon
landowners.
.
next two lep ol the trtanai.. the
objective then Is for the traW.ni
yacht to take tbe wSnd from .the ont lntnln~
"Ulie In football. )'OU can eee
au YoUI' mistakes and ao can
everyboc17 die ... Jobson 1ald.
.. That's wbi tt•a a very Vlalble
sport.'" -
At the atJftt match l'aoera ottea reeemble a pair of baxers,
bobblni and sw~, looldq tor
an opening to get an advu~e when the gun is fired.
••Jt'a llke a ,box1Dg bout, .. eaid
Atlanta Braves' oWQer Ted
Turner, atipper of Courqeous.
.. Yau blik tor tba other IU.Y a.
1lve Yol1 an open1nc and then yo.
nail b1llL 'l'hat'~ w~~ we dO;"
Courageous• anercoard, of
wbtah 'l\anJel' and Jobtoa are the ~ mu.. the tactical de--
·~1 feet our. opponents don't
bow bow to attack." Jobson
aald. ·~eous ls &ettlnf bet--ter and ln about a week wo should
be ataur V«7 beat.''
Conrad Hearing
DA Wiretapping
• J ~ -
Probe to ReS111De·
By'roM BAKLEY oc-. DellW .,.... .....
A bearing into allegations that
the Orange County District At·
torney's office resorted to illegal
wire tapping in an investigation
of indicted political financier
Gene Conrad was scheduled to
resume today in Los Aneeles
Federal Court.
Judee Robert Firth is being
asked by lawyers for the former
Irvine lOllll broker to rule that telephone conversations taped by
district attorney's employes
were illegally obtained.
Conrad, 44, was indicted by a
federal grand jury after in·
vestigation of charges that he
billced six companies out of an
estimated $1.2 million.
It is alleged by the p"°"ecution
that be used b1a Irvine company.
Pension Fund.I of America, to
collect the $1.2 mlllion in return
for $55.7 million in f\anding that
was never supplied by him.
Conrad faces trial Oct. 11 in
·federal court and Orange County
Superior Court action SeJft. 12 in
connecUon with a local grand
jury indictment which accuses
him ot violating the state cam-
paign funds reporting law.
An indictment Js a formal
charge made aaain.st a person by
a grand jury. It does not establish
guilt or innocence.
County supervisors Philip An··
tbony and Ralph Diedriob are
amoag Conrad's co-defendants in
the Orange County cue.
Conrad, w}lo has frequently
served as an informant for the
district attorney's office, loaned
School Board Hit
an estimated $.'50,000 to Anthony
· when the supervisor was running
for office.
Assistant District Attorney
Michael c.i>izzi admitted during
the hearing Monday that bis of.
fice does possess taped record-
ings of telephone conversations
involving Conrad.
But Capizzi told Judge Firth
that consent to the recordini was
given by the party who talked to
Conrad and that such consent
made the tapings legal.
Jad1e Firth r~rlmanded
lawyers for both &idea·during the
hearing tor what he said was
their !allure to clearly state the
issues lnvol ved in writing.
And be warned them that h~ wanted clear written ariumen
on the legal issues on his benc
before the hearing resumes to-
day.
Four members of the distriQt
attorney's investigative staff
have bem subpoenaed by Conrad
and are expected to testily today.
'100,000 Dam~es
Potato Chip Heir
Sues 2 Kidnapen
Two men who drew long prison
terms for the kidnaping of potato
chip heir John Haas Scudder
have been sued by the Balboa
residentfor $100,000 in damaees. •
Scudder, 64, names William
Rudy W~ 45, and Ri~ld Dale
Son Re,,;,vea
'Dead' Mom
BRAWLEY (AP) -Virginia
Klicka was face down in a s:>uddJe
of water, apparently dead after a
220-volt of electricity when her
14-year.Ud son found her.
Although Rick Klicka was jolt·
ed when he touched bis mother,
he pulled her to a dry spot. He
cleared mud from her throat and
resumed ber heart-beat witn
mouth-to-'mouth resuscitation.
Sellers, 21, as defendants In his
Orange County Superior Court lawsuit.
Both men were sentenced to
lite in J>riaon last February after belDJ lound pilty ot abducting
Scudder as be left bis dentist's of-
• fice in Huntin&ton Beach on Aug.
19, 1978.
Scudder points out in bis action
u he did in the trial that he sut-
fered a number of injuries while
be was belq bundled into a
motor home.
Named u eo-defendant with
the convicted pair is Steven M.
Bur1ett, owner of the motot
.home used by Wesson and Sellers
in tbethwarted kfdnaping.
No criminal action was Ulcen
or considered against Burgett.
Laguna Beach's three art
festivals and the Paaeant of the
Masters will extend their sum·
mer run by two days due to the
rains last week which wubed out
Pageant performances and
forced closure of the aroundl.
The shows will continue
through Aug. 30 opening and clos·
ing at the regular weekday
scheduled -Festival of
A~1 noon to 11: 30 p.m.; Sawdust
Fesuval, 10 a.m. to midnieht;
and Art· A· Fair, 10 a.m. to lOp.m.
Canyon resident Mary Ann
Brown 1aid Monday the mine
already has been pending 12
years and one more year should \
be P.Mple Ume (qr Grady to1 get
needed approvals. .
LOSANGELES (AP) -Theci·
ty Board of EducaUon has been
sharply criticized for allotting
more than $400,000 of Its $35
million integraticm budget to
the Rev. Jase Jackson's "Push
for Excellence" program in 12
high scbool11. ....
Mrs. Klicka, 3S, was home to-
day "in great shape," despite
sore legs and lip burns.
Scudder escaped from the
motor home in Fountain Valley
wbJle bis wife was being warned
by telephone at her Balboa home
that be would be tUled ii she did
not produce $250,000 in cash for
the son of Laura Scudder of
potato chip and peanut butter
fame.
If sometlq like this
has hsnv,,aned to Y.OU rece~
City Planning Director ~
Scbmita authorlZeci the extension
or the Art·A·Falr and Sawdust
Festival permits to allow the ad-
ditional l\yo days, needed to
make up for the gate losses sul·
fered with the rtinouts.
Tickets tor tbe •xt~A
pertormanees of the i>aieant of
the Masters WUI CO OJ) Ille
Thursday at the Festl'val ot Arts
box office. The box office js open
from noon to 9:30 p.m,
People holding tic.els for the
rained out dates may mail them
in with a self addreased stamped
envelope for a retund, or they
may trade thetn ln tor tickets Of
equal value for one of the twO ad·
dltional dates. Adnnce rtaerva·
Uona D\ay be ma4e bf callioc
494·1.US from noon to t:30 p.m.
daUy.
She also contended be is yet to
prove any deposits actually ex·
isl. ·
"We think the county is bend·
ing over backwards to give Mr.
Grady what he wants and we
want to know why,•• she said.
Commissioners, who earlier
agreed to a one-year time limit,
voted 3.() to recommend it be ex·
tended to tft'o years.
But they rejected a suggestion
from supervisors that a 600-foot.
wide bufrer zone be created along
a road leadJng to Grady's land
after numerous landowners pro-
tested.
Grad)' says he plans lo use pro-
ceeds from the minJni for church:
.-.nd mlasionary work. ·
Mu.ck Men
-r'ignore tliis ad.
I Here's how you find j out. Just call Fem at
••
OAJlYPI OT
MDIOaY LANE: ScaJ\lllftC
the •ports pqea just the other
day, I camo ~ th1t P'*°Cr•Ph of two pnu D&hten! One prme.
one 1tandm1 over him. You
ponder this. wonderlnc what
drl ves men to the Rocky syn.
drome. fi1bunc wilb their fists
for a paycheck.
Ule is toueh enough, after all,
w1tboutsufferin1 •flattened nose
ur having your braincella acat· tered. .
But the sports photo did cause
my mind to drift back, remem-
bering fondly how my own late
father tried to school me in the
Manly Art ol Self-Defense.
Now in ~ality, Dad had an in·
'tellectual approach to life. He ex-
plained that men should solve
their differences by talking
things out with logic and in-
telligence.
SOMETIMES, HOWEVER, he
noted that this approach fails
when you are conrronted by
dolts, dullards, braggarts,
drunks or just plain bullies'.
In these instances, he believed
in turning to what be charac-
terized as "First Principles."
First Principles to him meant
a stiff left jab followed by a hard
right cross.
· ''When you know you can't get
out of it, never wait for him to
throw the first punch," he ad-
vised. "Hit him first. Hit him
hard. Preferably on the nose."
Alas, I must admit there have
been times long past when his ad-
vice proved sound.
But early on in life, Dad start-
ed training me for those rare in-
stances when First Principles
would have to prevail.
Soon after I began toddling
about, I found myself m boxing
gloves. Now you may be a non·
violent type, but ·let me tell you
there are some advantages to
having a young kid wearing box·
ingglovcs.
FOR ONE TWNG, he can't
pick his nose. He won't try to fid-
dle with your best china. He can-
not make mud pies and track
them into the house while wear-
ing the blamed things.
Fight training consisted of Dad
• sitting in his big easy chair in the
living room with me standing
between his legs. I would throw
wild punches; roundhouse rights
and lefts. He would block them
while advising, "Punch straight,
punch straight, snap it in ... "
It was exasperating. I could
never hit him. All my blows
bounced harmlessly off his
forearms, hands or elbows.
But one rare night, Dad
became disgusted with my w1ld-
swinging efforts. He dropped his
hands to give some advice.
And there it was. Wide open.
His nose.
Now Father didn't have an
overly large proboscis. But in
that one rare flash or an instant,
it loomed as large as Mount
Everest, a single peak or Kilman-
j aro or K2 jutting out Crom
Kashmir
IJDTIT.
It was a hard, stnugbt left jab.
Mother, seated nearby, cheered.
Dad's eyes watered. There was
no other visible damage
Lesser fathers might hav.e
taken instant retaliation. But he
just wiped his eyes, smiled, and
advised, "Son, you shouldn't do
that when I'm not ready."
He was quite a guy.
l~n•teDreaa
President Carter 'performs' for Richard Kiley, center.
and other cast members of "The Man ot La Mancha"
backstage at the :'\ationa1 Theatre iA Washington Mondav
night. Carter \'iewed the performance with Fil'6t Ladv
Rosalynn Carter. ·
Carter Reaffirms
'Support of ERA'
WASHINGTON (AP) -President Carter will reaffirm b1$'person;U
support of the proposed Equal Rights Amendment by meetlrif with the
leaders or more than 70 groups planning to march Friday in support of
the ERA, the White House says.
The President also will proclaim Friday as Women's Equality Day: -
''The President is not only
sensitive to Women's Equality . tant Margaret Costanza said Day, but is taldng the opportuni-M oday
ty to reaffirm his absolute belie.£ 0 ~
in the ERA," presidential ass is-
.Teanuters
Face Fraud
On Pensions
CHICAGO <AP> -In a case that may apply to 30 million
workers, a federal appeals court
ruled Monday that a local
Teamsters pension fund is sub·
ject to the anti-fraud provisions
of the Federal Securities Act.
The ruling upheld a lower court
decision increasing the federal
government'S power to monitor
those entrusted with h8fdling
pensions
THE WIDTE HOUSE at first
indicated that Carter had re·
buffed appeals from two con·
gresswomen to issue a Women's
Equality Day proclamation. The
day commemorates the 19th
Amendment to the Constitution,
which gave women the right to
vote.
Ret Margaret Heckler <R -
M ass .), who heads the
Congresswoman's Caucus with
Rep. Elizabeth Holtzman <D-
N. Y.J, received a letter Monday
from presidential counsel .
William Nichols saying that
Carter had decided not to issue
the proclamation.
NICHOLS SAID the President
gets thousands of requests for
proclamation.5 and ''there simply
al'e not enouiJb days, weeks and
months in the years" to accom-
modate them. He said they usual·
•
J
BALTIMORE <AP>._
Maryland .Gov. Marvin Maftdol
• WU eoavtcted by a U.S. District
Cowt jury today ot 11 counts of
mail fraud and one ot racketeer-iaa. etemaliltg from an tnlluence
• tradlna scheme involvinc horse
racing.
Five coderendants were also
found euilty on the same 17 counts.
The jury delivered the verdict
after being deadlocked durt.ng 13
days of deliberations.
THE TRIAL WAS tbe second
for the governor and bis five
codefendants. The earlier trial
was declared a miatrlal after the
jury found out about a jwy tam. perm, effort. Mandel waa never
linked to the charje.
The seven man, five .oman
jul'y bad not ftlponded to an-et-
fort by U.S. Dlst.rict Court Judge
Robert L. Taylor to end the
deadlock.
Taylor had of!ered on Monday
to repeat the instructions he had
given tbejwy.
UNDER MARYLAND law.
Mandel must give up his office
when he is sentenced.
da.Qta. Kovens disputes a claim
he owned 60 percent of MarJboFo .
TAYLOR SET Oct. 1 for sen-
tencing. After the verdict was an-
nounced, Taylor sent the jury
back into its windowless room to
decide what business lnteN!sts
should be confiscated under the
antiracketeering stetute.
Suit Filed
Over Tots'
~leepwear
WASJUNGTON <AP> -The Consumer Product Safety Com -
mission fil~ suit Monday to stop
a discount store chain from sell-
ing children's sleepwear treated
witb Tris, a suspected cancer-
causing chemical.
The commission said the suit
was filed against the Zayre Corp.
by the U.S. attorney in Boston.
Sond• aedld Fort!e•
WASIDNGTON CAP> -Dur-
ing the past year the Soviet Union
has continued to improve its
military forces, but at increasing
...
On trial with the 57-year-old
Mandel were bis best friend.
Irvin Kovens; W. Dale Hess,
former majority leader of the
House of Delee ates; attorney
Ernest N. Cory Jr .• and Hess' ( J busine,&s-partners, brothers· JN SHORT WttTiam A. and Harry W.
Rod1ers Ill. 'Each man was accused of 20 ___________ ..,.
eacher Held
Sex Abuse
Soll, 16
RBORN, Mich. (AP> -A •
teacher who was the first I
ried man to be permitted
pt a child in Michigan has mail fraud counts. Theywereac-expense, the Defense Jn-
quitted or three o( those counts. telligence Agency estimates. been harged with criminal sex-
ual c duct with one of his adopt-
ed SOljS.
· THERE WAS NO visible reac·
tion from any of the defendants
as the verdjcts were announced.
Each charge carries a top
penalty of five years in jail and a
$1,000 fJ.ne. Mandel, Cory and
Kovens each were convicted of
one racketeering count, the
others two apiece. The max-
imum sentence for racketeering
is 20 years and $125,000.
MANDEL WAS charged with
accepting between $300,000 and
$400,000 in business interests,
cash, bonds, Florida vacations,
clothlng and jewelry from the
others.
Prosecutors contend the items
were in exchange for his efforts
to get the 1972 General Assembly
to legislate benefits for Marlboro
Race Track, then secretly owned
by at least four of his codefen-
·'The improvements cover the
entire spectrum of weapons
systems -from nuclear
strategic forces to conventional
general purpose forces," Lt.
Gen. Samuel V. Wilson, DIA
director, said ~onday.
Allan Kerr, 53, a teacher at
S..uth Redford's Thurston High
Sthool was arraigned in District ~urt qn charges arising from a
mplaint filed by his 16-year-old
n, Stuart. Another hearing was
ftgttra thentated'! !sf~ !iu~o~~~~rr was re-
WASlilNGTON (AP> --The Stuart told police he ran away
chairman of an agency that over-tom home last month because
sees government contracts ad-tis father sexually abused him,
milted Monday that be made qolicesaid
mistakes in calculating the The boy was found about two
amount that Lockheed Aircraft iles from home Saturday by a
Corp. may have overcharged the olice officer patrolling tbe
govermnent for its Navy ship-lgonquin Park area. .
building contracts. Kerr adopted Stuart in 1971
Goodwin Chase, chairman of · fter winning the right to adopt
the renegotiation board, did not another boy, Robin, now 19, who
say his allegation was wrong. • no longer lives at'home.
But he-said if Lockheed's figures · ~e~ began trying to adopt a
are correct "all my figures for child m the early 1950s. but was
the amount of unaccounted for denied by several adoption agen-
steeJ are overstated." cl es because he was not married. IT WAS PROMPTED by a suit
by a retired Teamster who was
denied a pension because he was
laid off for several months in the
midst of his 22 years as an
employe.
ly are issued only on the request --------------------------~-----------.... of Congress or for such issues of
If the ruling by the 7th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals stands,
it would permit the Securities
and Exchange Commission to
file a complaint charging fraud
against the Teamsters.
THE THREE-JUDGE panel
said any other finding would give
trustees of private pension plans
freedom to mislead their
beneficiaries
The judges said their ruling
covers funds for 30 millton
wotlcers.
THE SUIT WAS bro'Wbt by
John Daniel, a retired memberof
Local 705 in Chicago. He com-
plained that denyinc him a
pension was fraud and mis-
representation.
The local responded that
Daniel was ineligible for benefits
because he had a break in
service. Daniel claimed the local
failed to make clear that a
"break in service" would
jeopardize bis benefits.
national importance as the
Bicentennial.
Mrs. Hedder called Carter's
rejection "a most insensitive and
unnecessary slight." She noted
that Carter already had pro-
claimed World Trade Week,
Armed Services Day, Pan
American Day and Pan
American Week without a con-
gressional reque£t.
BUT MS. COSTANZA and
presidential Ptess secretary
Jody Powell said Nichols wa& in
error.
Powell said the letter "was just
wrong. We announced last Fri·
day that the President was gotns
to issue such a communication."
POWELL SAID he didn'~ kno\1r
how the signals got cros~ed.
Ms. Costanza. Carter's
specialist on women's isaues,
said she has been working on tbe ·
proclamation and the detallS of
Friday's ceremony with the '
marchers.
..
A.ner ....
..\ctor Sebastian Cabot who
played the bearded butler In
the televi s ion series ,
··Family Aira1r," died early
Tuesday at his home in Vic-
· toria, Canada . He was 59
Hone Detder
Found Slain
LODI CAP> -The bullet-
ridden body of a man found late
last week on a rural road north of
here has been identified as
George Douglas Stone, 33, a na-
tionally known horse dealer from
California, Mo.
Stone was here to attend an Ap·
paloos a auction in nearby
Herald, and was reported miss-
ing by his fiancee and business
partner, Dixie Knipker, when he
failed to return to Kansas City after the auction.
Bill Bits
'Uouble
Dipp.ng'
SACRAM NTO <AP> -Ltllll Uon aimed at endlnt
''double dlppln1" by retlrtd
teachera and achool ad·
mlniatraton hu been 1l1ned into law by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr ,
hit ottlceaald.
A semblywoman Carol Hallett
<R·Ataacadero>. authored AB
1002, wtrleb t11htens a 1tate law
that bana such pertons from re·
celvlna over SS.000 a year in
school district consulUnc fees.
WHILE THAT ban is on the
books, at least 35 people in the
state have been breakint lt and
earning more than ~.ooo a year
in conswting fees on top of their
retirement benefits, state of·
ficialssay.
During bearings on the bill.
Mrs. Hallett would cite, without
naming her, the case of Marjorie
Tobiwi, a retired administrator
from Daly City's Jefferson
ElementarySchool District.
State records show she draws
$20,094 in retirement funds a
year, and newspaper accounts
say she received $19,450 in educ a·
tion consultant fees.
I N EARLIER hearings. Mrs.
Hallett said her bill was targeted
at such cases. The bill attempts
to plug loopholes which make it
possible for a person to skirt the $5,000lid.
Coffee Costly
2 Sent to F edera/, PriJJon
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -T)vo men drew federal prison
terms Monday for their part in the theft of 500 cases of coffee
12.000 pounds -which was being offered for sale at bargain prices over citizens' band radio.
The coffee, destined for Denver, was worth an estimated
$36,000. It was stolen Feb. 18 from a trailer parked at a Hayward trucking terminal.
Clifford Ortiz, 39, Hayward, a tire worker who pleaded tullty to
one coWtt of theft from an interstate shipment, was sentenced to three years.
The sentence·is to run concurrenUy with a three-year state
sentence which Ortiz is now serving at Folsom prison.
Nickolas Rizzo, 51, Castro V8Iley, a dock foreman of 11·-
linois-California Express Co .. was sentenced to two years 1n
federal prison.
Daniel Fernandez Basque, 38, Dublin, also an employe of the
hauling company, had his sentencing continued for three weeks.
Frank Plada, 59, Newark truck mechanic, pleaded guilty
. earlier and was sentenced last week to one-year probation and a
$1,000 fine.
Jackie Haney, Miss Los
Angeles County, beams
arter being named the 197i
Maid of California at the
State Fair. She will reign
O\'er activities at the annual
Sacramento event.
FREE ICE·MAKER
ASHER-DRYE
T~. A'iuat 23, 1977 CWLYPILOT A
• SACRAMENTO (AP> -CriUcsoCnuoroo1no
aeroeot spn)Js have dropped their efforti to ret California to ban them before the federal 1overn~ mentacts.
Some scientific 1tudles lndlcate th• aerosols in-crease akin cancer by ihinninf the atmosphere's
otone l~r that protect. the ea.rtb from ultraviolet
r1yaoftbtlllft.
TBE CllANGB IN A'ft'l'ft1DE came Monday wh~n Assemblym._.,. John Vasc®cellos, D·San . Jose, amen~ ~ aerospl bill so that the proposed
,timetable £n Cautornia would coincide with a federal proposal. .
Theblll, SB m by Sen. John Dunlap, D·Napa,
still contains one provision not included in proposed
federal ret\&11Uons : A ban on the sale of the
aeroeola in April 1979.
But an ASlembly staff analysis of the measure
says the p~ed federal ban on the introduction of
aerQIOls into interstate commerce in April tm will
have much Ute same effect as ban.nini sale.
As amended, the Dunlap blll would ban
manufacture of nuorocarbon aeroeob in California
on Oct. lS, 1978, and prohibit companies ff9m malt·
iog cans desiped to '11• tbole 1.Praya on. Dec. u. 1978.
THE UNAMENDED BILL would have banned
manufacture and Hie tn July 1978.
Vasconcellos said be,prefe~ the earlier dates
but was Wlable to overcome industry opposition.
The bill is on the Assembly noor.
~··. a· g collection A most outsdn ~que jeWelrv
of estate an anl Ma~nin. tthenew · a South Coast P aia
. Costa Mesa. i~. Uection features
This magnificent .c~ond necklace
a fancy··colo~hlon .. cut diamond.
with a ?.22ct. . ht 44.?Scts.
Total we1g. ...,e..r.f.-a .. kind . 'ting Ou -v ManY other. exa off~red for sale
l'ieces2w0ill;eough September 3. August t r o-1'\aia ~ ~;;d~
ai :ff. ~9>1-1s\1 ;.m ~ Stteel.
A8
·~DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PA'GE
Here Conie the Rigs
that ono ol the biaaest oU drUUna pJatf orms
{ CUlltnlcted In the United Stat la about to loom
. up otr tbe Orange Coa t was 1reeted with something
I tban ~ht ln coastal communlll~:
t 'I\e OU Co. plaUorm, with a cap city for
drllllna up to 82 wells, wUI be vi&lble from Huntin1ton
Beach to Laauna Beach und lt could ho ln operation
'trfithin 11 ~ths.
Located six or seven mllet from Huntington
Beach, Jt wtll be the fll"lt platform built on federal
lease weters slnce the 1969 Santa Barbara oil spill.
Shell has been drilling exploratory offshore wells
since October. Coastal officials have expressed concern about
the possibility of oil spills and view impairment when
the giantplatfonn goes up.
In a way it's a sad sort or finale to the efforts of
M>me -40 coastal cities to halt the oil leases in federal
waters, an effort that crumbled when the city of Los
r Angeles pulled out.
I New Interior Secretary Cecil Andrus recently re-
versed the policy of previous administrations by
postponing new sales of offshore leases and promised
to work closely Wlth coastal states on lease decisions.
· But the camel '15 head is well into the tent.
l A Switch on Laetrile
l Arguments over Laetrile, the apricot pit de-
rivative considered b y some to be a cancer cure. con·
tinuetorage. Recognitcd m edical experts arc unanimous 111 ~ declaring the drug as useless m the treatment of .. .. cancer. Laetrile supporters think otherwise and ~ argue further that even if it is ineffectual it really is
up to the caricer victim--not the federal govern-
• ment-to determine if il should be taken as a last-
Um. alter all, should have the freedom of choice if it is
. his ure on the llne. .
We h ve reconsidered that position.
Testimony and expert anal)·sia of the dn1g have
overwhelmingly concluded that Laetrile 1lmply does
not and cannot ha\'e any effect on cancer. That
.. hope" we bad seen previously bu beencllsproved by
a masalve and impresalve array ol reports and
studies by every slnale medical oq8nlzatlon of
stature in the country.
So if Laetrile is approved for use-a It has been
in 11 states-it may satisfy the sticky inue of a
citizen's right of choice. But in the proceas, the
le&Lslative approval says to the cancer vicUm: Well.
maybe it does work.
It doesn't. After more detailed studying-ranging
from the Food and Drug Administration com-
missioner to the nation's top cancer researchers, and
even to our loeal, hometown doetors -we have
found the scientific conclusion is unanimous: Laetrile
will not prevent, control or cure cancer.
The Pure Food and Drugs Act or 1906 says the
FDA must protect the consumer ln the medical
marketplace. U the law says the consumer must be
protected ln the medical marketplac~ Laetrile has no
place on any legal drug shelves.
Peddling false hope has another name. It is fraud. ·
Meddling Issue
The California Senate has wisely decided that a
married couple ought to be able to decide some things
about their lives-incl~ding family planning .
I'm not an unreasonable man, Mr. President. ~ hope treatment. .
~ Some weeks ago, we editorially backed the l Laetrile advocates. We concluded that the cancer vie·
By rejectini a biJl requiring the state to distribute
booklets on matrimony and parenthood to marriage
license applicants, the senators were acute enough to
recognize that some items are beyond governmental
purview.
••Asinine," snapped Orange County Sen. Dennis
Carpenter. Agreed.senator • Come on over and w~'ll discuss your Panama Canal sellout!
.. " 1 1 ,
.: ~ ..
' .~ .,
I .
~ I
d
,I .• ·I ,I
'.i
' ~
Dissident Poet Tells of Life as Soviet Prisoner
WASHINGTON -Another
Alebandr Solzhenitsyn is crying
out to us from deep within the
Soviet prison system. He is
Yosyp Terelya, a 34-year-old dis·
sident poet, who has spent 14
years in Soviet prisons and
psychiatric hospitals for refusing
to renounce hls beliefs.
He was finally turned 1006e late
last year, then rearrested in
June. He is
now back in a
grim Soviet institution.
But during hls
brief months
of freedom,
he wrote mov-
ingly about
his long or-
deal. His
story, written
in longhand, has been smuggled
out to us.
Some Soviet prisons, writes the
determined poet, "would have
been the envy of Dante for
characters and descriptions of
scenes from hell."
The KGB secret police first
began ~arassing Terelya when
he was 19. He was guilty of two
offenses against the Kremlin.
First, he is a Ukrainian, a proud
breed ot 50 million people who re-
fuse to abandon their ancient
culture.
Second, be is a devout member
of the Ukrainian Unlate Church.
which places God ahead of the
state. But it was probably
Terelya's eloquence, b1a ability
to express his independent views
in stirrlng language, that most
alarmed the Soviet establish·
ment.
Terelya was rirst railroaded in-
to prison in -1962. But he was
young aocl Btrob.I iD thole days;
he mcaped and ll•.S for months under assumed 11aaies. Even.-'
tually, he was recaptured and
jailed in the village or
Ladysbyno.
"MY POEMS, notes and even
my thoughts -all this became
evidence of criminai actiTitles
aimed at creating a so-<:alled in-
dependent Ukraine," he writes.
What was a day like in the life
of Yosyp Terelya? .. We were
Jl:Ulde to pick up and stack
.. . ...
How Many Elmer
Toads Are ·v otin~?.
( PAUL HARVEY)
(JACK ANDERSON J
granite slabs ... We were liven
three twip to clean the cells of
water sloehed on the noor. We
were forced to stand for days on
one spot." recalla the poet.
Beatines became routine.
••Religious., prisoners were
lashed to their chairs by
telephone wires and made ob-
jecta d hwnillat.ing ridicule.
In the winter, the snow and
rain soaked Terelya's summer
uniform. Yet "tor inaertlnt
towels underneath our shirts and thµs violating the uniform dress
code, we were severely
beaten. _ .I did not know that
'cruel' treatment could alao b6
official, that is, sanctioned by
law."
For the following two years,
Terelya was tortured by the
KGB, which demanded that he
admit to memberthip in a
Ukrainian nationalilt eroup that
was disbanded when he waa three
years old.
"'1.'bey placed me in a penal
cell for 15 days. The temperature
of the cell was changed every
hour -one hour hot, one hour
cold. Here I got bypertonia and
hemorrhoids."
KGB OFFICERS told Terelya
that if be cooperated, "They
would free me in a year, give me
a woman and good food." But the
continuous physical abuse took
ita tcU: bis spine was struck by
panlysb; be began to hemor-
rhaee Dl'CtUael.Y from the nose,
mouth and -ear. He was
tramferred to a psychiatric
hoepltal, where bis fingers 9'ere
broken for trying to write with
pencll and paper.
One night. after the stubborn
poet refused to renounce bis re-
ligious beliefs, be was tied to a
crosa. his mouth eaeged, and
was beaten-J:>y the guards. He
was later made to drink wtter
from a tnilet bowl.
Terelya 's bars best treatment
came at Sycbovka, another
paychiatrlc bospit.al where be
was imprisoned in 1972. Soon
after be arrived. "Some ten
persam -guards and orderlies
-burst into the section, jumped
on me, beat me and tied me to
my bed, all the time demanding to know who l planned to kill.
"I remained tied to my bed for
a full two months, receiving a
nightly 'kulazin treatment' from
t~e guards and orderlies, who
beat me with their boots and
keys."
He recalls that the prison ad·
ministration sanctioned the ex·
tra abuse of Jewish prisoners.
"For laughs, they would force
the sick to eat live froes. They
raped the sick and thus satisfied
their own sexual needs -and all
for laughs! "
ONE PATIENT was kllled
"with a hammer because be bad
asked for pemrlssion to go to the
lavatory," Terelya testifies. A
Georgian Jew, pronounced men-tally ill for seeking to emigrate to
Israel. was Sortured to death.
Still another patient was beat.en
nightly bY. orderlies for two
months until be died.
One mentally dlsturbtd
prisooer was shot in cold b1oocl
alter an escape aUeJpt.. "Tell
.
me," be asks, "in what other ·
country do they shoot the mental-
ly ill?"
Terelya charges that a total of
475 inmates at Sychovka "were
killed or tortured to death"
between 1963 and 1973. They are
listed in the hospital records as
having "died ...
The anguished Terelya, now an
invalid, speaks to the world from
his prism cell. "What kind of at·
titude can one have towards
murderers?" be as.Jes ... Can a
mentally ill person shake the
foundations of the Soviet state?
How unsure ol itself must this
state be when it considers all who
have theirowojdeas either 'men-,
tally ill' or enemies Of the state?"
Footnote: Terelya's account
was translated for us from hls
native Ukrainian. U .s. officials
verified the authenticity of the
sources who brought his letter to
us. A Soviet embassy
spokesman, however. told us he
had never heard of Terelya. He
dismissed the letters of jailed
dissident& as ''just personal in-
sinuations" that do not reflect the
true facts of Soviet prisonlife..
Fed~:cPI · Fun~g Drawbacks • m
Am.Id the ireat aclamaUoas [ ]
of Joy ..tdcb 8reeted the announ.· EARL WA RS eement of fundln1 for $545 mllllon TE in public works proJeda .,.. _________ __,
\hroqhout the state there la
some aneulsh among state
legislators.
The elation will be found
amoog the 13,500 conatructlon
workers to be
directly
employed and
another ~.ooo workers wbo
will fiJ'.l(l jobs
as an indirect
result of the
program, ac-
cord l n g to
Martin ft.
0 llck, the
state's department of employ-
ment dlrectOr. Also cl•t>Pltii
ha:nda vdtb ~~ over the p,.
peett ot receiving windfall proJ·
eeta. whleb mi&ht otherwise nev• have been undertaken, are
tbe· Mada ot various state and
COUii\)' acencies. Attoaet.ber some 90 proJect.s
have-·bffn recommended for
flnuclne under the Federal
Public Wora Employment Act
of 1m. Seemln1Jy because of the fundlna they were selected more on tbe ba&ll of the numbers
Whld\ eooid be employed than OD
the pdorU.y ol the projects over
other needt.
It la tb.it fact which caUMS \be
CODCIS'D a.mona t.be leplaton.
Ha•ln1 Ju1t concluded 1001
moatbl ~ budlet.ary ~ews.
which included screening nearly
$100 million in capltf.l outlay
projects, they are now be1nJ COft>'
fronted with seelng aome which
they rt\iected being undertaken
anyway. Alsoaome projects have
been recommended b)' Glick
which were never e\teo sub·
milted to the Le~atur•.
WIBLE IT la trUe tbe money
for the proJetts will come from
(
Co_mpamtive
TelBvUion~
AdsDoomsd?
ftSINDl18'DYWOUID~THArrtd Ex· tra 1>r7 dalml to keep~ di7 IOD&er than IUPl Gaard. the pabllc wUI nmember Rlibt
Ounl •well a Ardd. dlfe It• tbt parpoeeottbe
ad.
Oil!~. VatJw Jae., ... Wartd'• ftftW.luiest .. 'ftltiltn& ai~ enMUDC.ct llmday that K la
admtnl Cl;leita DOt to ~ ID ~atiYe
te.levillaa CGallWdala beelllle lta IUI M1 lbOws
,_------.-~~etlce often
( CONSUMER_) preslf: !,~~v:1': .
Mather, sald two tuneys
ol about aoo eamumera
showed ''there .._'t •eein to be any .clYantqe to
usinc comparative advertlaina that names names"
in TV commercials.
GENERAL 'MOTOIJS RECENTLY con-
ducted a test of ecenomy cars in which its Buick
Opel finished second in a 1ro-,.p of five.
Volkswagen's Rabbit f1nUbed first, but GM ran ads
about the test anyway, empbuizinl the parts of the
test in which the Opel did well.
Volbwacen has dell~ m.ite use of the
GK 11111. and la nmninl a campatp that 11~.
"General MotQC-s names llabblt l>est of flve
ecGDOmJ can t.ted. ••
Ms. Featina Hid TV viewers often can't tell
which brand is betu& advertised m.a comparative
ad, and feel that .. compatattve comtnerclals on the
wbole seemed to be less believable.'' . . .. TBB aBVJEW BOAJU>, AN industry grwp
that rules oo the truth and accuracy of advert.l.ae-
ment.s, issued a report Monday which said "im·
proper comparative advertising, which misleads or
decetW11, is not acceptable even though offered un·
der the umbrella of 'free competition.'"
However, lt also said "truthful and siirullcan\
diflermees in com~e products should be made
known to the public. an'B comparative advertiaing is
a propertedmiqueto aceompllah th1.s purpose."
Without naming names, the ""'°rt gne as an
example ol impn>per advertising a eampaip that
. C)llimed a certain credit catd was honored in more
stores ell restauraota tbaJl a competitor. An in-.......,at'on showed that the advertiser was com par-a.. fta ncenUy updated directory to an outdated
direebr,t for its competitor.
TV G1JID£ MAGAZINE'S CUUENT edition
' carries an editorial that says "naming the competi·
lion, however9eOl'Of\11Jy, just seems to help the com·
petition. which is fine.'•
Comparative advertising was rare until 1972,
when tbe -..i ol tbe Federal Trade Com~ion
persuaded the American Broadcasting Co. and the
CQltUDbia BrO-S~astma System to discontinue bans
on the ads. 'lbe National Broadcasting Co. never
bad mch a ban.
The. FTC said tbe then·prevalent practice of
"' idmW)Jnr eompetaa brands as "Br8"d X"' could
mlileac1 -tSOme coruumers into tbJnking Brand X
might be one competitor when actually it was
another. ·
Olmparatl•e WlvertWng oo prime time TV in-creaaecifr:Qln 3 pereent of all ads In 1873 to 8 percent
in ms. the last year'for Wblcb figures are avail-
able. Such eds have also increased in newspapers and mapzines.
•.
•
"Daddy. tell BiUy fo stop collin' it the 'Umpire '
State Building.' H •
nu.11• ............ ·-
Ifs evmythlng
femlrttne ••• soft, lacy.
sweet, sheef, In a
maNelous ~wtth
the luster of Ille.
Soft sash top wtth
lacy see-through yo1ce:
Bone, 5-M-l: bt.
-Mon-front dlmc:lf.
Bone, 5-11. $33.;
From Barbara Barbara.
Mall/ phone.
)bung Callfomlan
Sportswear. 98.
t
-
.. It was e &real trip. My w1re loved the French, the !!n&tish and the Italians. t didn't like anybody.''
PAClllCYllW
MIWOllALPAU
Cemetery MortuatY
Chll)el
3500 Plciflc View OriV. Newport,
California ~2700 · -likCOIMldr
MOIRAlllS Laguna Beech
494-9415
Laouna Hilla
788-0933
S.ltt JUan C.platrano
'495-1778
M,AJN OFFICE
At the Plaza in downtown Orange
COS'O\ MESA; Mesa Verde & Adams
IRVINE: UhtwrsftV Dr. & Michelson Dr.
~Hill$: Alicia Par~y &San Diego ~~
.. ' ..
WlGE BOAT DISC.OUHTS
EXT8IJED ..
. WOllO WIDE ~ISING
. .
,., .. ,,..... ,,,...,.,. ...
Le o T1 ndeman s .
prime m inister of
Ul'lgium and pr i·
dent of the European
Community, will visit
w 1th P res id ent
Carter m Washington
£mMlleftl llelues W.Ce•tiH
DEAR PAT; I recently rented • 1econd-noor
eputment, and now the landlord tells me that he wUl
not allow me to uae my waterbed *•use it's too
b vy.C.nhedotl\11! J.E., Costa Mesa
llf' cu, aod be'• not a.toae, accordlal to Ute
C1Uforo.l1 Bureau of Home Fura.lahlDI•· Tbe bureau
lllu eever l"ffelvtd a complalat abMi a fWed ••&erbecl cralblnt tllrou1h uyone'1 c:eJUn1, bu& It
1a71 •UY ludlercla rdue to allow wat.rbeda
beea-.e ol •tltllt 1tr..,, and becnae of the
PNllbW&)' ol leakaae. Remember tbat a filled
........ wa&er'*I welpa approuma&eb 1,tM
poaacl.I, 110Uncludin1 frame.
• .., t• ..... •••e. rw
•
"Got a probltm'! Then wnte to Pat Dunn Pat will
cul red loPf. ~""'fl lhe an8WC'r& ond ochon J10V netd Co IOlvt inequihet in government and bwfntu Mojl
51our questions to l'at Dunn, At Your Sennce, Orange
CO<Ut l>Qtl11 Pilot, P.O Bo:t 1560, Ccuta Muo, CA
t2nf Aa n.ion51 letln1 OJ pombfi WfU be onawered,
but plloMd J"'IUfri•• or leUera not including the
ttoder'a../t.lll ftGmct. oddrtH. otld bUrintn hours' philne
numl>ncomsot be comiMrfd. 7'hfiColutMQpJ>tOr•dai-
IJ/ ezctpt Saturdays."
A v*rlnattan contacted by AYS reeommeocb
PbeJl1fmsearlc aalve to Mal ..,. to.pa you
doi'•food pada. Cooled peita&opMl ••ter' <• fludtal of peela bollecl In a q•"rhll water few 11 m1D ~)
~ IGl'e pacb, aa cloea ba~1. mbteral ot cuior on ~.t=. at ...Ot. If poulble, '~ aomf! tdacl ol ' ,. on your do1•1 paws after applytac die
night treatment.
l'a1dHa E~tract Clear• tlH! Air
DEAR PAT: Do you or your readert know of
any inexpenaive, homemade air freshener? The
commercial J>roduct.s are just too expensive.
B. l{.1 Fountain VJlley
Try Ma.ldnl cotton balls wttb vu.llla extract
and pUda& Uaem daroulbcNt your house. Cltattoal
also ls reputed &e be good for removing unpleasant
oden In ~t&ond Rems UU.• areu.
S t 8 DEAR PAT: I've heard that there's a music • ep . ---------book designed Cor people who wish to play tunes on ., .
theirt.oucbtonepbones. WhaUslU 1'olrmes 1'erll• 1'ialS' l'.i.e
2C6&8tMen
Earn Degrees
Southern llllnois
Univers ity at Carbon·
• dale has graduated two
Oranie Coast men. one
w 1 lh a B ac he lor of
Science degree and one
with a Master of Science
degree.
They are David Jacks,
of 900 Sea Lane, Corona
del Mar, who earned his
B.S. degree, and David
Quinn J ackson, of Irvine,
who obtained bis M.S.
degree.
P.!:.,SanClemente
Ma Bell 1tron&IY dbeoara1es fooling around
wtlb tbe telephone and stresses that tills lnstrameat
abould be ued ;;fy for "re(Ql•r'' eommuJcalJon.
Tile masJc book you wot ls titled, ''The Pwslt Button-
Telepllone Soni Book, Volume I." hbUsbed by
Price. Stern, Sloan Publlshlaf Co., Inc., 410 N. La
Cieoeia Blvd., Los An1eles, ask your book store or
novelty shop to help you obtain a copy if it ls o«K ln
a&ock.
Soaldrlfl Soot~ Sere Pate•
DEAR PAT: We've just returned from a two.
week, family vacation. We enjoyed cam pine in fair'ly
rough territory, but our doe didn't. His paws are raw
and sore. Whatcanwedotohelphim?
A.J ., Costa Mesa
D5PAT: Who buys Avon bottles? thavetwo,
which dentand are quite vaJ~able, but I don't
know e to sell them or even h~v~ therp ap·
praised.
T .D., Costa fl(esa
Avon's Los AngeJea beadq111rten advL!Jet you to
check two boob to determine value: "Avon Bo&Ues
EneydopaedJa," by Bud Hastin, Box 9"8, Kansas
City. MO M134, and "Wes&em World," 511 Harrison
St., San Franelsco, CA MtOS: Yapr best bet for ar-
ranging to sell bottles ls to contact the Antique
Trader, Box tt5t, Dubaque, IA 5Zttl. A.T. oUen a
weekly sales publlca&lon, aloog wltb a llstlllg ol bot·
Ue club' •aJers throagbout &he eoutry. Tbe A •oa
spokesman emplaasizH tllat dle wortll ol beUles de·
peada OI) wbetber they are full and lf tbe carton II
avan.ble.
GIVE YOUR APPLIANCES . '
THE AFTERNOON OFF.
L1ghtwtight lu xe
in doublt·faced wool.
Remarkably soft,
beautifully simpla. Slip
it on and wrap it
over all, all the time.
By Lou is Goldstein. in
robin 's egg blue; 6 to 14
sizes 465.00. South Coast
Plaza and Santa Ana.
Fine Coat Salon
'\
1 •. magmn
11th Clst -~8
beautu ~~on
A sleek, shining environment.
And experts who understand the
sophisticated ease of hair
today. THE place for the latest
cuts, the most innovative
$tyling techniques. And easy,
individualized hair mainttnance
. programs for both men and
woman. Drop by, meet the staff_.
and prepare to bt tnthuledl
Jot down the number 957-1511.
Beauty Salon
the J,magmn
hos1eru sampler
10.00 .
' I
. .
'1
Alt DAILY PILOT Tuelday, Auiauet 13, 11n
B eatlemania
CJUCAGO (AP> -Sblrltt W lnb9r1 • .e. wu ou die moVle
l"OOm at U.. Pal "' Houatffotel ll t ns to th• IQ1,J~ allnt t t t · mt
from uw . wbere "A Hard Day'• Nllbt" wu belnl 1cr u
partof" Uel t 'Tf."
••J bfoucht my dauchter t ," Mn. WelDbetl tald. " . w I'm
wal . ~ boun 1he'1 bell\ tn th rt. How QJdt I'm uhana9d to
trtl )GU bow old. Nin een yea.rt old. Sb• pl1y1 BHtl 1 recordl Oh
the stereo dQ aDd alabt." ·
WEI &•o AND BEa dauabter, Lori, wer. am.-, tho • s,ooo who came totheornatAI boteJ tor hatltmanJa.
aU• dlabanded elabt yean aao. but old recorct1, po1ten
and fan ma1ulnel were &napped u.p, many by chlldrtn unborn when
&hey brok up.
DOwn tM ball rrom .. A Hard Day'• Ni,bt,''UM1H wua a..u ..
---. •---~
to · Inf est ·United Stales·
so~nd•allkt. contest. featurln1 · teen·aae l\altar players with elther w vacation or don't wLnt to. Tbe)'.'re not an)1h1tra Uke u
UvtrPOol acc ntl aCQulred ln front of the family hl·fl. fanatical as I am. So I cot my mom tO brini me:: · · •
"Look, Mom," Lori Welnberl aaid afte e10ercin1 from the
theater. "Iaot aBeatlnl963p1tch." SHE WENT OFl"TO TUE STANDS wbere re<:ordS and posters
wereoosale.
.. ALL RIGHT, YOU GOT n. WHAT aM you tolnl tO do with
it?" .. Wear it on my jeau ...
"Wlaat'a that you've aot there?" Mrs. Weinber1 asked.
\Driheldap a .sr.p.m. record.
"It'• French," she said. "It on11 cost me~."
"You paid~ for that?"
"It •1 French. See the writlnl? Some day it wW be valuable."
"All right," Mn. Welnbera •aid. "Fine. I know not.hint·"
"l tried to come here with my friends," Lori aald. "But they'r!
Mark LapidOI of New York City. who calls btmself "America·•
No. 1· Beatles fan," wu there with his wlte Carol. They have been a~g "BeaUefests" alnce 1974. This waa tb•lr seventh.
"Our BeaUei sound-alike aroup, AbM:Y Rhode, ls ao 1o0d tbat
they're cettin their YM tans," Carol Lapldoe 1ald.; '!'J'bey 1et th glrb squealing ind ceyinl tlld then, Tilth lean lj tM1i eyes, they 10
up and beg t.Mm, touch me •.• touch me ••• touch myT..ahirt. •
Back in the lobby, Mn. Weinbere aald of her daµahler, ''When
that girl gets married, if she ever lets married. she•u wilt d<iwn th
aisle in jeans with a translator radio pressed \lp. a1alnst her ear."
a ow-
j1JStpic
..
. • 1
. • 'l j .
l j
'
Bit Slu01p
Paizzling
To Dalton
What good does lt do for a
ba•et>•U club to change man-.ers? ~much if you are judcina by
the Calif omla An1ela.
When Norm Sherry was fired
as manager of the AnJels oo July
10 the team was fifth in the
American League West, 9•2
games behind Minnesota.
Third base coach Dave Garcia replaced Sherry.
After a 5·1 loss to Detroit Mon-
day nJght, t.ne Angels are s till
fifth in their division -but now
Atlfle&81ate
AllGames OftlCMPCWldle 11101
A119. 23 O.tro41 •I C•llton-1• 7 'Sp m.
AU9-1H:i.ww.o•t C.iif0tnla 4 Up m.
A119-UOtwf~•IC.llfOrnl• 12'.SJp.m.
10~ games behind leading
Kansas City.
Detroit makes its final visit to
Anaheim tonight when Wayne
Simpson, 6-9, faces the Tigers'
Bob Sykes, 3-4,
"I can't explain it," admits
.ieneral manager Harry Dalton,
.the man who fired Sherry and
promoted Garcia. "We're just
no\ hllUng."
The Angels aren't hitting
·against pitchers with some of the
worst records Jn baseball. They
collected only five hits last night
off Fernando Arroyo, who had
won only one of 13 atarts since
JunelS.
• They collected .only three hits
off Toronto's Jerry Garvin last
Friday night. Garvba had lost 10
.games in succession.
Arroyo's task was made easy
.by d491l1n•ted hltter Rusty
• ·SCa\fb, who hit a t.hre~run homer
,off loser Paul Hartzefl. Hartzell
•now has a 6-8 record. Arroyo is
• 1-ll.
. · Detroit took a 1·0 'lead in the second inning.
* * * HTlliHT
•Pi•W U''-d 4 t to F~nts?b 4 1 2 O
$1•'*11t • 1 1 l l(~M 4110 T~lt> JOIO
OellV!erf • 1 11 M.~< • )0 !O ......... .... v.,.,,.,u· •oot
CAU flOttff I A ......
4000
)000
•I I 0 •••• • 0 '0 1000
lOtO
~::: .
0000 1000 I , 1 I
"fotllll • is s • ~ ToUls JI I s I
Dffroft 010 001 ..__. CaUJl:lnU ... ... ,.....,
E-H•rtiell. 'Tllo'"tson. Df'-O.trtll 2. C•IOoml• 1. 1.0e-ot1roll t, Callllln'N 4. Mll-
$1 ... ml. s.i..ii. Cull ,_,._,. .. ....,. .. se-
llotlch. '" ..... " .. to • AfrO)'O CW.MJ) .. J 1 • t 1 o
H•ru.ll 11...4-fl 6"ll t S S l I
Ullodle ~ 0 0 t t I
D.Milltr t 0 0 0 2 1 WP-0.Mll!tr, T-4:tt.A-24,JIM,
lt w .. allo t.f\at nl1ht that
televl•lo anDOLtncer Keith
JackaOn d &-ott, nd th• na·
tlon. wbal hlt parenta had kept lrom him sine• hf• dlaeue wu
dtasnosed tbrff years 110: He
wud)'ln1.
"His parent.a Juat felt lt was
bat not to t.11 hlrn," aald Un·
da Cnlll. the wife of Scott'•
brother, 'Kenneth. ••That'
'dat you're supposed to do wUJa children. That way they
can look forward to l•Uinc bet· let, ..
A Cuba apokeaman said
Murcer was "very saddened" .
by Scott'• death and did not
want to tallt about it. ••We're
thankful we were able to pro-
vlde Scott wlth a little happl·
ne111 near tbe end.
· Altbou1h th• hlry tale
crumbled Into • nt1htmate, Kenneth Crull aald ''Bobb}'-
Murcer did a wondtrM thlng
for Scotty. Wbat Bobby
Mutter dld for Scot~ ls tho
hlgbllchtcfhil whole Ufe.'• "He was absolutely thrUJed
about tt, .. aald lJnda. ·~
whole f•mlly is very srateful to Bobgy )lurcer and thinks it
wu super of him to do It.
OARREU. GRIFFITH SCORES OVER SOVIET FOE.
That'• the only bri1htapot that. ott•a ad for Jona tlme."
CrWl added! ·~at Bobby
Murcer did wa• 1reat. But
wllat happened afterward I'd
Just as soon fol'cet about.••
StOtl wu an avid Cubs fan
wbo spftrt hours watcbin1 the
baseball team on. t&tevlllon.
Tbat'a what he JlfU doina tho
h11ht ~Aue. 8.
After. Seo~ aaw Murcer's
second homer. Jackaon told a
national ~lence what bad
!>HD ttleed to him by a Cubs
ofllcial.
'1ackson said Murcer. at the •
r.e~ueat of a Crull f amlly ,
f rl~. bad telephoned Scotl before tho 1ame. He f.l.o a 4
that Scott was dying.
Family membera &aid
Scott's conditton bad bt61l
wona::A in recent montha.
Tbey they dlcln '& bow
whether death was hastened
by Scoti'll knowledge-that he
had terminal c.ncer.
''He never said too much.He
pretty muc._ kept to him.sell
about the whole thing. tie was a lad that the man called, •0 11aid
Crull . .,He was further up the
line, b01 we dJdn't UJ>eet it to
beUUSaooa."
Lilt week, &otl'a pain in· tenalfled. Tburadn, be en·
tered a boSoltal .
Frtdiu-or Saturday, Scott
saw the Cubs beat tho Lot
Anttl Oiid&ens o teleViiion.
a ,d Crull. Sunday SCot\ was in grNt pa.la Gd at abOUt 6 a.m.
Monday he died, minute•
belore bis parenta reached tbe
hoSpital. r
Nearly 10 hours later,
Murcer hit another homer f
the Osbl for the winnlna run in
a 3-2v1ctoryQvertheSan Fran·
cl.sCQ Glmts. ~
Area Products Ba.tile
For St~ning QB ·Role .
By BOGER CARLSON Of tit Ody "9t SWf
W~D -Neither ex· pects word from UCLA football
coach Terry Donahue until near-
. ly eametime at the Houston
Astrodo.Qle SepL 12 as to who will
get the starting nod at
quarterback for the Bruins.
But Donahue bas other ideas
regarding quarlerback can-
didates Steve Buldch and Rick
Bashore. "Maybe we can come
up with our starter durini two-a.
days," says Donahue. "But there
is no guarantee."
The Bruins began two-a-day
practices today on the Westwood
campus and battllng for the No. 1
berth at quarterback are B\lkicb,
the former Newport Harbor High
star who red·s~ one year
and is entering his l<Xlrth year at
UCLA as a junior, and Bashore,
the sophomore who was so im·
pressive as a freshman, once
engineering a 100-yard
touchdown march .
Bashore prepped al Edison
<Huntington Beach> High and
both earned All·CIF honors as
seniors in high school.
Despite the fact they have been
considered tos5ups as to who Is
No. 1, the two contrast ill several
aspects.
Bukich, slower out of the veer
but with a reputation for excel·
ing with the deep pass, appears
confident the \)ertb will be bis.
Bashore, still a relativ e
newcomer wUh more fiuid run· ning ability, says: "I'll just give
it my best shot and work on all
phases al the came. At tbis time
ttiings appear u1t ln the air and
I'm jUst looking forward to our
first game at Houston."
BUkich wants to trim another
MANKATO, Minn. <AP>
.. He was a man's man, a gqy you
could always depend on
whenever you needed bim."
Former Minnesota Vikings
tackle Grady Alderman used
those words to de$cribe a-team·
mate, guard Jim Vellonei. who died Sunday night tTom
Hodgkin •s dlaea.se.
VeJJon~ a regular auard on
Minnesota's first Super Bowl
team in 1970, died at the UCLA
Medical Center one day a!terhiS
Mrd birthday.
"I saw him at the Super Bowl
• thJs year and he told me then that
l~e disease had spread to some
Vital orcans;'' Alderman sald.
• Vellone's parents informed
some of his frlerds In Mln·
neapolis that be bad aone into the
hoaS>ital for n·eatment of a
respiratory problem and that be
died suddenly.
Veteran center Mick
Tlnten;off, who played on the
other side of Vellone, called bis
former teammate's death,
''tragic."
"l1's Just tough to lose a good
Crien.d,'' ..said Ttnaetboff. "He
wa1 an ncielltn\ football player
and a iOod trtend." The d.lH.uo was dlscovered by
team doc:tort In the summer of
lt71 lltler Vellone experienced a
tsadden wellht IO&s.
Vellone WU not dr•fled by any
National Football l.eaiue team
bec&p1e or two 1tnee qperatlooa lri ~Ueae. He ca mo to Minnesota as
a free qei>l •nd made the wam
in 1996 -Konn ~an Brotklin's final aeuan al coaeh or the Vt ·
kings.
RICK BASHORE
10 pounds off bis 210.pound, 6·11h
frame and says he enjoys "1le competition provided by Bashore
alter three years of grooming at
UCLA while John Sciarra and
Jeff Dank worth held the No. l
spots.
"I feel like I deserve the start-
ing berth," says Bukich, "but not
without earning it. If I don't earn
it, the best man will play.
"Regardless who starts
against Houston, I think we'll
both see action. But after
Houston I would think the start·
ing berth would be settled.''
Buk.icb missed ahftost all .of
s pring practice wltb a gb
cartilage injury, but he sa.ys f)e's
100 percent healthy now.
"Jluk:lcb and Bashore are very
STEVE BUKICH • !~ ~
comparable,•· says Donahue
.. Bukicb may be better witJl tb•·
deep pass. but he •snot necessati
ly a betterpas:;er than Bashore:-.
.. I've waited my turn,·· say~
Bukich. It's been a long llm<
coming and I want to take advan
tage of it. Right now I feel rea.
good and it's a ereat feeling .••
Bashore, meanwhile, smallei·
al 6-0, 185 pounds, says a lot less.
''Things are a J<>t differenf
here," says Bashore. ••rm bO'
the big wheel anymore like a·
Edison. It's like beinc ;.
fresh111an in hith school.•' !
While nothinf bas been setUet!
yet who will start, one thing is fOI~
sure -if UCLA 1$ to return t•
Rose Bowl stature. it's Butich
and Bashore who hold tbekey •
DOdgers Blow It
Mom'S lmpirCition
·~a w Freed's Rtqi·
ST. LOUIS <AP> --A chunky
Roger Freed knew more than tJie
eyes of 35,000 Busch Stadium
faithful were fixed on hUn Mon·
day night.
While the pit.ches or Qlarlie
Hough commanded ~ii hn·
mediate attention,-'Freed's
motlva\ion for a winning home
run against the Los Angeles
Dodgers camUrom afar
•'I knew my mother was
watching on TV in California, ..
said Freed after smacking a
AllO."'" .. ICUC:11'tl
.llU0. 2Jl°'Al'OflH•I SI. LOUii S,JOp "" AUQ.14 UK A,_l~•I Plll'°"m •!lOp.m.
A~ u ~-·i.-i•ut PlftiOV~OI> •1JOa.~.
·.Southland Ga:I
S~a~ Record .
LOS ANOl:LIS -llUJ a.th
Dlpo, a 1tron1 lt·)'Hr-old.
• botb tbe womfn'• aad en'• recct'dl MandaJ ln 1wtrn-
sqlna lhe 11-mUe Catlllna Chan·
Oel In 8 hours, 41 mlnut and 16
• conda.
Colpo, from B utlower, &hat·
Hred the women'• rttord of 10:49
tt by Gma Andenco In ltSI and
tso the 8:'9 clockinr ~ John
York and David Cox last Ytar.
Colpo •tarted from Doctors
Cove on Catalina Jaland and
IU\hbcld at Marineland.
The dlltance ii 21 miles oa a
direct line but Colpo swam at
leut2'.I mil• beca e of tides.
Today, Syadi GoJderson ii d-.
to make the aame swim in a
benefit. ............
Center Jl1cb S.W, who earlier
bad announced bis lntendon to t"elil"e and WU placed OD the re-tired reserve Ult by the Rama,
bat chanted hla m.lnd ..... will re-
Port to the L9s Angeles tralntng
canip, a apokeaman for the Na-
tional FOQtball Leaaue team aaid
.Pt1onday.
•. Saul, who aaid he'll report to-
¢!Y, becomes the last of Rams
beldouts to come to camp. Tiabt ~d Bob Kleln, who also an-~~nced his retirement, did not
reach contract accord with the
ieam, but was traded to San
..DJego fcSr future draft choices.
Saul did not sian a new con·
tJ:act since he wu already bound
to the club under an existing
pact. the spokeaman said.
&lglaRoU
PHILADELPHIA -Rookie
quarterback Mike Cordova, who
ls not even listed on the three-
deep depth chart, led two second·
half touchdown drives as the
PbUadelphla Eagles upset the
New England Patriots 21-10 Mon-
day night in ~ National Football
League preseason game.
Cordova, from Stanford
University, threw a 14·yard
touchdown pass to Vince Papale
in the third period. elvina the
Eagles a 14·10 lead.
'ln 'the final quarter,
.Philadelphia rookie Herman
l':dwards returned an intercept· ~ pass 2S yards .to the Patriots
M, Cordova then directed the
J:aales to a touchdown. scor~ on
a three-yard run by rookie Jlm
Betterson.
The Patriots had taken a 10-0
lead on a one·,ard touchdown
nm by Andy Johnson in the firSt
quarter and John Smith's 35-yard
State Playoff
aocood·period fteld 1011.
The Eaal• 1tl!Ud tb Ir come-back ln tho tecon.S QUJrttr Oft a
two-yarcs touebdowl\ phi from
Ron Jawortltl ~o K11lth K~e.
u ....... , ....
WtW~MSPORT, Pa. -The
Llttle Leaaue World Series,
which started ln Williamsport
wltb '15 worth of equipment and
three teama. bolds Its annual re·
newaltbbweek.
The ll·and J2.year-old slug.
eers are expected to draw over
Q,000 fans during the five-day
tourney. A crowd of 2S,OOO
penons is aatlcipated at Howard
J. La made Memorial Stadiwn
tor the flnal came Saturd•y.
Today's schedule pitted South
American representatlvea from
Cocqulcacoa, Veoeiuela, qainst
the European entry. TornJon Air
Force Base of Madrid, Spain. El
Cajon, Calif., representlna the
western U.S., meets Hattlesbura.
Miu .. the southern U.S. i.am.
Spelleel-Led
VERO BEACH, Fla. -
Cornerback Maurice Spencer
hu suffered a broken neck and
will be lost to New Orleans for
the season, the National Football
League team reported Monday.
Spencer was injured Saturday
in the Saints game with the Buf.
faloBills.
Saints doctor Ken Saer said
that Spencer will be in traction
for two weeks and that a declalon
will be made then whether aur·
1ery la necessary.
Clarence Chapman. a second· year player from Eastern
Michigan, will replace Spencer,
Stram said.
Spencer had intercepted three
passes In the Saints three exhlbi·
lion victories this season. He
started all 14 regular seuon
games last year.
TellllU Re.tdt•
BROOKUNE, Mass.-Jimmy
Connors, plagued by a hand in·
jury, batUed back to defeat Mar-
ty Riessen 3-43, 6-1, 6-4 In an open-
ing round match of the :soth U.S.
pro tennis championships Mon-
day at Longwood.
In other matches, John
M.cEnroe d1sposed of Chris
Jloger-Vasselin 8-3, 6-0; Brian
Gottfried defeated Brlan
Teactler4-6, 6-4, 8-3; Eddie Dibbs
stopped Zeijko Franalovlc 4-6,
6·2, 6-4; Ivan M'oUna upset Mark
Cox 7-6, 6-1; and Manuel Orantes
rallied to win over John Uoyd,
4-6, 8-2. 6-3.
Mater· Dei Rallies
For DiMq;ggio Title
....
Jl)'H2~~s1fJl!fDV .
Tbe UCM s bull a
dynUty' In butet~ '1Jl~er
coachJobn Wqoden. · But tbt aeuon veterm ,-adlo
announcer Fred He,ltsler
of KMPC recalls as the most ex-
citlna, was one in which the
Bruins lost in the tlCAA
aemiflnall to Cincinnati, '12· 70.
"The"1962 seasoq and the
rame wlth Cincy was the most
exciting because that UCLA
team wasn't sup~ed to do
that well," Hessler says in re-
calllng h.is lll _ _years of broad-
c•sting all UCLA football and
basketball eames.
Hessler talks in terms of be·
If}& .a Bruin and says: .. When
you broadcast for a national
audience. you are hnpartial.
"But as the UCLA an-
nouncer, I'm with the team all
year and have developed
friend!hlps. Certainly. I iden-
tify with and root for the
Bruins. The fine llne is-do you ·
deprecate the other team?
"No. I build up the other
team's players and their
coaches receive due credit. I
hope I don't root for UCLA to
the extent that I can't present
an accurate picture of the
game.
"However, I don't think I
have to saUsfy the USC people
When I do the USC·UCLA
games."
Referring back to the Cincin-
nati came In 1962.. Hessler
says: "We fell behind, 12·0 and
18·2 at the beginning of the
game. Gary Cunningham's
<the current Bruins coach J
shooting got us in there at the
half and the second half was a
see-saw battle all the way."
Racquets Even
Playoff Series
SAN DIEGO (AP> -Butch
Waltz and Chris Evert swept the
singles e:vents lo power the
Pt\oenix Racquets to a 27·20 vie·
tory over the San Diego Friars
Monday night llnd square their
World Team Tennis Western
Division UUe series at one match
apiece.
The series will be decided
tonight in Phoenix with the win-
ner meetinfvi?r New York Ap·
pies rorthe cbampionsbip.
The Racquets, who lost the
series opener 29-26, recel ved
their customary boost from
Evert, who easily disposed of
Kerry Reid, 6·2. Phqeni~ gQt a ·
less expected triumph from
Walts, who turned back Cliff
Drysdjl)e, 6-3.
The single• decisions were
sandwich(fd aroun4 a s.4Ph<>el\ix
victory in mixed doubles as Ross
Case aod Kristien Shaw defeated
Rod Laver 111d Mona Guerrant.
* * * ..... lhf1 ... ~11 Mttl-Wllb (,,) ..... ~ .... ;~
IP) 11Mt ........ r.cm. M .
Wtmen -1"'1 (,,) tit.t "eld .. 2; Gllwr_,.·
ltekS ISO! beet lflew•awrt6-2
MIJttCI -C..Sl'wlw II') llett LA"'ll'-Goffr ....
M . A-S ..... lltSMI~
FRED HESSLER
One of the m°"t rewardlna
parts of bia years with the
Bruins has been his assoclatlon
with Wooden.
"Just being associated wlth
John Wooden over the years
has to be one of the real
highllehts of my llf etlme,"
Hessler says. "He is a tremen·
dous person and beine there to
watch and record his reachlni
the pinnacle of success bas to
be one of my biggest thrills.''
Hessler recalls an incident
that occurred before hls days
with KMPC as one of his most
embarrassing. He was doing
Compton College football
games for a Long Beach sta·
tion at the time and coach Tay
Brown's Tartars were ahead at
halftime. 66-0, eventually win-
ning the game. 98--0.
"You (this writer) were do-
ing the halftime part of the
broadcast ln Compton·s
Ramsaur Stadium when the
sponsor, a local television
store, came to me and aaid I
had to make the game more ex-
cltm..
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Dlvliloo
Boston
New York
Baltimore
Detroit
Cfeveland
Milwaukee
Toronto
W L Pd. GB
71 49 .592
72 51 .SSS 1,:?
70 51 .579 1"'2
S8 64 .475 lf
57 67 .460 16
55 74 .426 20~
42 79 .34'7 2911'2
West Division
Kansas City 70 51 .519
Chicago 69 52 .570. 1
Minnesota 71 54 .568 1
Texas 69 53 .566 11."2
Angell 59 61 .492 101~
SeatUe 51 77 .398 22"'2
Oakland 45 76 .312 25
MeN!rf'•lcwn Clllc900 s. Hew Yor~ >
Mll'WlffOttS, lloston•
K•-Cltvl, Btltlrnore 1 Tt11as I, Mlfwtllk" 1 CleYelald IH, $e4tttlt H Otlt'*'° S, T_,. 7
Oetro!I S, c.lllomlt I
T-.y•1 .. n\t1
M-Yorll CTor,.i l .. tOl et ChltllVO <Weod6-SI,
n •
BOiton Ull!llclnt 10.71 el MlnneS441 CGolta IHI. •
" 8tllllll0ft (P'ftl\lftl\ •·f l et KlltMt Ol'r cco1i. .. 1•121."
Mll"WMff ((tlchMfl .. 1 llt TH•1 1111111-91." Dltftlll ICrtwf .... f.SI et C.flfomla 1Sf"*4tl '"'"" -. . Tonlllo (Cltner H) et Olllltlld (~
1-41." OllfytemeStdlH(iled ....,....., •• Oatft ..
T.,.tUI Boston. 2. ,..,.
Cl!lc900al Ballf'l'IOl't, n Ml""HO!a at Ntw YeA, n
Cl-land at California f , t " K•llSISOtralMlfw ... ltft,n O~rottetOtltltnd, l, n T °"'"'Ht $1tttlt, 2. I n
"'I'm p~a1 ror th1a broad·
cast and yoli liave to make It
more excltlne' be told me.
What could I do to make a Jl\11·
match excitinlf They had 22
players and Compton had et
and Tay was do\na everyt.hJni
possible to keep the aco.re
down."
Alter that broadcut, Heuler
had a letter from someone wbo
listened all the way and aaid he
had the ball on the 60-ya"d line.· Jate In the game.
Do these mistakes come
often on the air wbere there Is
no chance for retraction al the
time they areuid?
"It's almost an everyday oc-currence and Uley are embar-
ra.saina," Hessler admits.
Another time be wu dolna
televisioa of the Orange County
Rhinos and the crew, along
with the sponsor, was on asmall
1tandaloogthealdellnes.
1'We would hana a towel over the Side of the stand to signal to
the f1~d that we wanted tlm' out for a commercial,•
Hessler ,ays.
"Thflf these guys would do
commercials that 1111ted from
three to five minutes while the
players atood around glaring at us.
"It was billed as pro football,
quote, unquote, and with little
or no live audience, television
had the say,"
Hessler is one of many
Southern California announ·
cers who hails from the
mid west and gained his start In
the Southland with the Armed
Forcea radio group.
He has done all types of
sp<>rts on the air, ln radio and
television inel~g the Rama.
minor league bateball and
other sports. But he la known
best for bis UCLA broadcasta
and bia SPorts at Six news
broadcast that has won a
Golden Mike award four of the
last six years.
Fish Report
....
"' It hu been a moil UBw.u.a
1euon tor Bobby Bondi. HU lep
don't throb wh~n be run.a. Pain·
doesn't •ho« throu.lh his light
hand when he 1wtn1s •bat. The
California Angell star ii health>: tor a chanae. . -:
••After belnt hurt for the pad
three yean, it's gotten to the
point I almost wait for aometbint •
bad to happen," said Bonds.
who's catapulted Into the
American League Most Valuabl~
Player picture with one ot t,b4l
best seasons ol h1a Dine-J'ear ma: jor lQIUe caiwr. ~
"It's fu,nny, I remember ml'
only goal ~yeu wu to make It
past June wtµ\out 1etttn1 hurt. I
was t.b1nldn1 about that in sprtqr.
trahUog, and, sure enou411, I
sprained my ~e."
Tbat WUt however. a miaoi"
and temporary ailment. Lut
year, he broke a bone in his rigbt
hand sliding in a spring pme
and fmally had an operation ht
August to repair the fracture.
The two prevloUJ years, While he
was with the Giants and
Yankees, Bonds waa hobbled by
tom cartilage In both knees.
This campalan. though. il•
healthy BobbY Bonds ia tied for..
the league lead with 30 homers__-,
ranks near the top with 91 rbi.
has scored M runs and wlU prob-,
ably wind up with around 40>.
stolen bases...Tbe Anaets hope b,:
can become their lirst·ever.
American League leadet' inbome
runs and rbi.
Bonds said bis batting
average, .278, ls the only aspect
of his aame he's been diaappoint-
ed in.
"Everythlnt con1lderocf, it•s
been a fine year ror me, .. the'.
Angels outfielder remarked. "I
know in the past, I thought I was
going to have some fantastic.
seasons. But every time I got
hurt, it became a struglle f M
me. It's great to be feeling good
this time and able to play up to
my capability."
Bonds, recalllni his lnJW'les.
lauihed and spoke of how
strange they were. .:
"Dumb thlnp happened. Uk~
stepping on a low wall going~
a ball 8ftd hurting my kn~. or;.
like slldlni ltead·first and having·
my rmger otcb on Ule Webblnft~
of the eatcher'1 mitt., . • '
"l'..Ptnot a craiy,' wtld Olayer •
who tuet cbances; 'won'\ ~rash
into • brick wall trying to catch.:-
ari obfiOUI home run ball. But··
I've always prided myself that(.
give it all J'Ve got when I'm play .. :·
lng. _ . . :·
• 'Tm not afraid of the wall and
I'm not shy when I play the
game."
Unfortunately for Bonds, his
outstanding play this season has
not been matched by the Aftcels,
wbo had picked up some htgh
priced talent in the free uent
<!rafj and were expected to 6e a :
contender. • • •
"We've bad great pitching this
year, and I .really don't thlnk
we've played all that poorly, ..
Bonds aald. "But we've lacked
'htttina. •
· ''Joe Rudi, Bobby Grieb, Jerry
Remy and aJmo.rt everybodyels-e
on the team bas been hurt.•• be
Sa.id.
1 "Everybody but me."
. '
.
"
(
~trategy
;Unmasked . .
St~ •nd Photos by RICHARD KOEHLER
Of the Dally Piiot Staff
Attaekf Parry. Repose.
·Attack! Parry. Repose.
Beginning fencing students at
Golden West College were follow-
ing in the footsteps of their movie heroes.
· "MELVYN DOUGLAS and Er-
rol Flynn were the swashbucklers
of my day, back before most of
theae people can remember,"
said0Bil1Crane.
''Grace Kelly was my
inspiration,'' said "Anne
Angermaier.
"I was hooked after 'Star
Wars•," added Carl Johmon.
But the .. most sophisticated
form of human contact" isn't as
easy as it appears on the screen.
"These outfits may not look
like much," Johnson explained.
"But they're quilted. So theexer·
tion is the same as if you played
football with a sleeping bag
.·
OPPoNENT WOULD HAVE THIS VIEW THROUGH MASK OF JOHNNY LAMONTIA'S POsmoN IN FENCING CLASS. .. . . ..
wrapped around you."
A CLASSMATE agreed, noting that she bad lost 12 pounds, one
contact lens aod one eMring at
the Tuesday and Thursday night sessioos.
Plus the intriguing strategy
m akea fencing known as the
chess of sports. ·
''It's a battle or minds as well
aa bodies," Crane said.
"The thrust and parry com·
bination relates to the birth of
ideas," Mrs. Angermaier inter-jected.
"You're always thinkingr even •
if you're just reminding yourself
io keep your trailing arm re· · laxed."
TIUS 18 THE arm that is held
1 aloft for balance for five to 10
minutes at a stretch. tI the band
tenses,_ an opponent will sense that you are tiring.
Instructor Marvin Torrez.·who . bu bis masters degree in theater
arts, took up fencing because "it
develops the body which is the actor's only tool.
• • Plua the sport often total con-
dJtioning for a lifetime ...
And the more yoa learn. the taster you have to move.
INSTRUCI'ION starts with the spindle-like foil, tipped with a
blunt potilt to prevent Utjury. The
tar1et aria la the central white
part of the fencer's earment.
Torra described the two more
advanced weapons. The
tril.JllU}ar blade Of the epee is
used for puncture hits over the
entire body. The double-edged
$&her with Its band cover is de-
stined for sUcinf motions aimed
above the w.tst.. ·' •
There are tlve men per~weapo,n on the colle1iate team T<>rrez
coaches. His female competitors· •
use onlY the foils. · ·
TOUmF.S ABE a~ by four judges and a match director or
by an electrical system. 1'he U·
pensive lights and buzzers. seen
at regional tournaments and
Olympic events, require back-up
weapons in case of equipment
m alfWlction.
Na matter bow dashing and d~g f~dng can be, it's mostly
fun, agreed two students. They
are top notch table ~player&
and wanted evenmore agility.
And Mn. Aneennmer said her
husband wanted to learn bot
couldn't attend the class so She's
. teachina him •t home. "We're at a dlsaavantage, though, With
only one foil!'
Instructor Marvin
. ro;,ez demonstrates
full body extension
that will give fencer
best attack and
recovery flexibility.
He recommends the
sporrs conditioning
'for actors or athletes.
l
., : , . . ~ ~ ... ,,
~ ... 1: ~ ,.
0 .~
"I 1: f. tl ~ $ ...
• •!·
• 'T
. .
Tonight's TV
Highlights ,··
CBSfJB;OO -JackBennySho\\. Jack
takes h violin le on with Mel Blanc
guesting as his t~ cber, Profe!>sor
LeBlanc.
ABC fJ 9:00 -.. Smashup on In·
terstate 5." This repeated TV movie
features Robert Conrad. Buddy Ebsen.
Vera Miles. David Grob, Harriet Nelson
and Sue Lyon as strangers brou&bt
togetherbyafreewaytragedy.
NBC GJ 10:00 -PoliceStory. Gabriel
Kaplan <of Welcome Back Kotter> plays
an eccentric narcotics officer who travels
with a female mannikin and drives his
!>uperiors up the wall.
TV DAILY LOG
,.. ... , .. ~~ .
1171
.Jessel ·Sh11eks Ci~
110UTLAW
BLUES ..
2:M-J:ll-l.of01Nt
7~5-9:40
"HIWYORK
·NEW YORK ..
I .r
' '• l • !· '· •!
,,
' • -·
r
I ! ' I • J
' l ....
h1 I •
•
' 'Musical' al ffarkquin lntermiask>n
Tom J'itus
playhouae, ~ s. Harbor Blvd., Juat norlh of Costa
M•a. aUOftl 8'79-6511.
we..-.Mt.
TM DIW arrl•als wUJ Mt up ahop at the Harlt· q•la Dlaaer Pla)'bouH1 where .. Back1ta1•1
--~Not.id actor Burseu-Meredith ii dlnctln~ "J1mt1 Joyce'• Women'' l9r. Soutb Co11t
Repertory wllh EmmY, winnclr 1'onnula Flanatan
<who WrOte the pJece) ID tbe 1tarrtna rol1. lnttrDret-
ln1 •from aucb worts u "~''and •rJ'ln. 1
Frank Sinatra
\\.ill rm in as
guest hoat on
the Johnny
Carson show
:\°O\'. 14. It'll be
his first time
behind the desk.
'' Clptna a fiv•w .. t'nl., ent Wtdn111 day. and at Sout.b Coaat llttpeirtory, where "Jam•
Jo1ce'a Women•· play• a rour·d•)', flvt·
pe.rfarmanc-e nm Thuraday throu1hSunday.
Harl"uin proprietor Barbara Hampton
d11crlbu "The GrHt American Baelrlt11e
Muakal" as a new, Cul·movlnc lhow remlnl1cenl ot the old Betty Grable moviei. It Cuturea a 1mall
cast chhc ~rformen
TBB snow ai\N EIGIJT month• in l.o6
Ancel• and ii now bein1 stated in SU\ F'ranctsco.
Bob Talmad1e. cftTeetor or th• orlsinal produ~
ia 1tqtq the Harlequin venion, which plays nltbt·
ly exrept Monday at 1·30. preceded by dinner at the
n aan'aWue."
Pmarinanco1 wlll be stveo Tbunday tb.roueh
Satulday at 8 p.in. with a S p.m. Swl4ay matinee at
the SCR theater, tUT Newport Blvd,, Coata Meu ..
R rvaUona6*1363
•••
SOVTH COAST RF;PERTOBV la $80.000 closer
to itJJ new theater In Costa Mesa 'f South Coast Town
Center, thanks to a challenge •.ant from the Na·
• • • ti on al Endowment for the Arta. ·
LAUNCHING THE NEW season tor the The er ant was awarded to SOR·to help meet the
Weatminlter Conmnmity 11'aeater on-S.pt 2 will be • theater's annual o_perattn.i fncomt sap, to ct'eate a
the Orantt County premiere of the new. comedy cash reserve fuod and to help meet increased ex-
''Kia or Make Up." Dlrectinc ls John Williams. · penaes res\llting from the pr~ee\ed move.
whose production of ''My Daughter's Rated X'' just It's called a cballenee 1rant bfcause SCR must
opened at the Huntln1ton Beach Playhouse -atv· raile triple that amount -seo,ooo -throuah fund
in& him Just two weekends between OPfnin& nlghta. ' sollcllatlons by the t!nd of 1979. ~e repertory com-
Head.lnt the cast are Sheri Goldstein u a au.c-· pqy.Jilans to break ground ln November and open
ceasful architect and Bunny Goodmansen u the tbe ~theater by October, 1971. JOIN ART LINKLUTlR• WITH SPECIAL GUEIT6.
TV Networ~ Warring Over'War~ .PrOj~c~s
JUllE ANOAEWS. VltiCENT PRICE. STEVE ALLEN. JAVHI MEADOWS
ANO f. HOST ~.OTHERwtLL· KNOWN AMERJC.(NS FOR THIS OUTSTANDING TV SPECIAL ON
WORLO HUNGER.
ITAtil MOC>tlf Y HAM. p<tsldlllt of \\btld
Vision 1111e1na1JOnal. I• host. By JAY SllAllBUTI
LOS ANGELES <AP> -On Sept. 18, not Oct. 23
as orUinally planned, NBC will air a lwo-hour
special it currenUy calls "Hollywood Goes to War ..
NBC originally called it "Lile Goes to War."
The change came after ABC ordered a similar
project. "The Movies Go to War." which may air
next month or in October. This kind of speclal-
warrine has mildly annoyed at least one producer
"It's terrible the business has come to that,"
groused Jack Haley Jr .. who's been putting
together NBC's special for more than a year. "It's
like children fighting al recess "
JIE SAYS HE THINKS lhe show ·s latest lltle is
"Life Goes to War: Hollywood and the Home
Front.•· Which is closer to lhe program's basic
theme of life in these United States during World
War II.
"I'm trying to show what l't was like to be a non-
combatant on the home front then ," said Haley,
who since January has been editing down some
500,000 feet of film assembled for his wartime
project.
"The movies, of course, and the radio were the
two most tnnuential or the media in terms of
enlightening people -and also shaping their at·
titudes."
To show life back then. he added, his special
will be a mix of home and battlefront newsreels.
photographs, chps of Hollywood 's wartime movies
Burt Reynolds
''Snlokey .... Bandit''
Sally Field· Jerry Reed.n'.
(PG) Jackie Gleason l•,5'wlo'•..,.,•, ~tul
A RASl.\R ProMtoon • A UNIVERSAL PICl11e • Tedlnoedol•
and still-preserved radio newscasts of that era.
AND, HE SA.JD, THE show will include seg·
ments on wartime blackouts, the hysteria that
swept the West Coast after Japan's attack on Pearr
Harbor, home-front rationing and tell of Hollywood
stars who cictually fought ln the war, such as lhe
late Wayne Morris, a Navy fi&hter Jee.
"There'll also be vivid glimpses of the war, but
in the context of the Hollywood technicians who
went overseas," Haley said.
He referred to clips of combat footage from
such documentaries as John Huston's "Battle or
San Pietro" and Wiiliam Wyler's classic of World
War II combat avl,tlon, "The Memphis Belle."
HALEY SAID HE also bad planned a segment
on the unhappy fact some Hollywood war movies
referred to Japanese in racially abusive terms, but
had to delete It for lack of apace in the strow.
"I'd selected a lot of material on that to lead ln· ·
to a Nisei slory"-about the Japanese·Americans
who served in combat ln Italy with the U.S. Army --
. ·but I just dtdn 't have time for it. _
"It was a long war and I only have a two·hour show."
Haley, 46. who began making documentaries in
1959 for Dctv1d1L Wolper Productions, was asked if
TV ever will get a comparable network documen-
tary about home· front life during the Vietnam war
Tomlin Will Play
'Shrinking Woman'
LOS ANGELES <AP) -Lily Tomlin will pro-
duce and star in Universal's "The Incredible
Shrinking WQman," based on "The Inc~edible
Shrinking Man" released in 1952. Stephanie Zim·
balist, daughter of Efrem ZimbaUst Jr .• wW star in
'1Fprevet" for'CBS. ·
Pn>ducer·dJrector Irwin Allen has signed
Academy Award winner Lee Grant for his new
movie about klller bees, "The Swarm." Robin
Cook, author °'" the beat-selling novel "Coma," will
make a brief appearance in the tum version as a ·
wheel-chair patient.
Ed Lauter will play a shertff bent on revenge in
ABC's "How the West Wu WOD." Richard Deacon,
who was Mel on "The Dick Van Dyke Show," will
appeal' as a hith sohoot principal in NBC's
"CIUPs."
Autbor·historian Andrew Sinclair wiU adapt
Nathaniel Hawthorne's "The Scarlett Letter" for
producer Robert B. Radniti' movie series for NBC.
Will Sampson, the stoic Indian inmate in •'One Flew
Over the Cuckoo's Nest," will play a revered Indian
leader In the TV "Susan." Robert Reed will appear
in "Susan" as a doctor wtio gives up a lucrative
pr actlce to open a (llinlc on the Indian reservation.
..
"I DON'T KNOW," HE mused. "It's a question
of how paintul ls it.•' He said were he given the
chance to do such a documentary tomorrow, he'd pass on it. Why?
"Well, 1 had too many friends involved in it <the
Vietnam war>." he said. "It's still a touchy subject
to a lot of people. It's not a pleasant subject. Not
that World War II ·was, but it's seasoned with
nostalgia now. and that helps a lot.'·
The cry of a buritn1world ••
I'M BDlfGBYI
Tbe Jlati.onal !11ni.toa l,.mloa Wof14 ~ Pl'9l«ISW..,.,,.. V1IJoti ~.
TUES., AUG. 23 • 7:00 PM-12:00 • KHJ, CH. 9
Joins Burt
LOS ANGELES <AP>
· · Burt Reynolds and
Norman Felt, laat
together in the TV series
.. Dan August," will star
in "The End,·· a black
comedy that Reynolds is
also directing. Kristy
McNtchol. Buddy on the
THllll II OHl Y OM TtllATM IN OllA-
COUHTY -llf YOU CAN D-fHCf ITAll WA.Ill ON A GIANT 75 R>0T 8CMIH.
I H PUU l'llllllM AHO D0\.8Y t TllACIC
STlllfO AHQ Ill THE COMFOllT CW OHt
OI' OUll 12$2 I "•U-104 IS -0WAa.. TIC l'OMll 11 Mnt YOU AT IOW..-.~CIMQIA.
h .,,
.NEWPORT:
·. ~"I!":'... ..
series "Family," wlll ---------------------.:-..~~--::i------play the daughter of
Reynolds and Joanne
Woodward in lhe film
cSlllz1;=f
clMlr1:1=..JN
Call 642-5671.
Put a few words
to work for ou.
llOY 1CMllGllll IOICWI~
PU• SWASHIUCJCLri 1,..1
THE ULTIMATE BPERIENCE !l!!!&&SE~fil
IN FUll S1BIEOP.HONI: SOUND
•
QJlll a'i. )-=E-.-=·
., ~:is I Nm ~::i.WJ:--:-·
• C.oast Offers
Fall ClaJ.sses
.
ADDl'l'IOM TO CHASTING predictions or
ll&)em. Panldpanll will learn bow to uee time-series &ulJall to improve th r busineat operation.
-4\ coane 1n telllna by mall that ext>laina how Jk:k • proOuct: aeate a marketlna plan; write , ba:t ~or Um ln m.aau:IMI, newspapers. and TV: u.iprecords; andatart a bullness is UUed.. . by Jl&U."
'lbe clus meets Wednesdays from T to 10 p.m. Ud ls listed ln the scbedule as Marketinc 142.
"\ -"Humu Relations in Supervision," a new m~ courae tauaht by Richard M . Greene
3Z'., au&.bor ot •'Tbe Jlanacement Game .. and con-
sultant CJO human relations, will be offered on Mon-aay evenlnp.
TBE~ WILL COVEil MOTIVATION pro-
ductivity, creativity, salesperson evaluation,
~wealthy and getting ahead in business.
-The CPA review clua, first offered last
s~. will be repeated to assist thole who want a re-~~lasa before takina the CPA examination.
Tbe ~ listed u Account.lng 220 in the class
schedule. meets Saturdays from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
-Computer programming will be taught in a
one-tmlt course titled .. APL Programming,'' to be
altered oo Tuesdays and Thursdays at 1 p.m., and
oh Mondays from 7to10 p .m.
'!be course teaches applications of APL. a com-
puter programming lanpage.
-''OFnCE SERVICES AND DATA Process-
fng" will illustrate 11uu1y of the ways the computer c~ be used in the modern office and bow certain
secretarial tasks can be computerbed and assessed
Uli-ough computer terminals. The class, listed as
Secretarial Science 101, will meet. on Mondays,
\Vedneldays and Fridays allO Lm.
-An executive seminar for s~r executives, ~osiness owners and those in staff J>OSf tions seeking
td'p line responsibility is listed as Management
300. It will meet on Tuesdays from 7to10 p.m.
Course topics will inclQde new cQncepts in
emploYe motivation, increasing productivity, im-
proving profits, and planninc and controlling ex-
ecutive evaluation. It will also look at top manage-
ment problems and techniques.
. Registration for fall classes runs Wednesday
tJ'irough Sept. 16 in the OCC admissions office. Fall
erasses begin Sept. 12. For registration information,
'!hone 556-5735.
•
-~......-
Di«!kenS Era Recalled
Chimney sweeps Maurice Francoeur, left.
and John Esmond recall the past in their
tradHional garb as they go about their
work in Cumberland, Maine. The two are
firemen who operate the sweep service
during their off-duty hours.
Irvine CBer
Named in Suit
..
SEATI'LE (AP> -A California-based citizen
band radio manufacturer and a local dislributOr
have been named in a suit charging restraint of
trade. ~
Named in the suit are President Electronics
Inc., of Irvine, and ABC Record and Tape Sales
Inc., Seattle, also known as Western Appliance Dis·
tributors. •
The complaint for injunction and relief under
the state's Unfair Business Practlces-Cons\Jmer
. Protection Act was filed by the state of Washington Building D"fte Soon in KingCoun~y Superior court.
AMONG THE CHARGES ABE THAT Presi-
Tbe new 5,225-square-foot Irvine office building dent and A'BC "refuse to deal with individual re-
of California First Bank was to be completed in tailers who do not agree to. . .eliminate competi-
August. The building was designed by Ficker & tion in the distribution and sale of President-brand
Ruffing, Newport Beach. CB radio equipment.''
The· new building is at 17951 MacArthur The effect of restraining trade, the suit says, is
Boulevard. The bank has been operating in a tem· to maintain the retail price of President-brand
oorary office since June 1975. • equipment at artificial Md non-competitive levels, -::================~::::; and to require customers to pay hiaber prices for .. President radios.
ROBERT R. WASHER
Hos foined the fltm as
Executive Vke PrMkllnt
The state is asking $25,000 for each violation.
~ptcyCases
Filed in Court
' •
~esinger: Firms Want More; Won't Fight · 1
"'t WASHINGTON <AP> -No matt•~ bow much profit petroleum. Ce>Glpanl•• make,·
•a>'•~ Secn:tary James Sc~er, they alwaya want
mo~ and tbeJ don't really Deed
it. . •
llut Schleslni(l1' say a he thinks tbe eoml)aates wUl accept the
enero bill 1>uaecl by tbe Rouse,
even with ita price controls and
tues, rather than fltht it to a
sta.ndsti.11 in the Senate and be
stuck iode:finitely with ulatlnf
re(Qladcps.
JN ms FDBT on·the-record
int.ervlew aince tUl.ng office on
Aug. 5. Schlesinger aald tbe
pries allowed by tbe bill olfer petroleum companies adequate
incentives to produce more oil
and gas, and higher prices would
risk generating excess profita for
~ company stoc lders
.. Greed, ot COW'Se.11 an willat-
terlng term,'' Schlesln&er 1ald in
answer to a question about the
companies' intentions.
"But if ooe employs it, one
must recognize that areed is the
virtue that drives the kee en-
terprise system, the de&ire to ac-
quire substantial profila."
AS TBE NATION'S first
secretary of enern, Schlesinger
also said he will take a close look
at the jacking up of world
uranium prices by an intern•·
tional cartel, and the possible in-
volvement of U.S. energy com-
panies.
On another subject. he said the
Carter ad.mim,,tralicn may tawr
an o-vei'land pipeline throu1h
Canada for Alaskan natural gas
if it would be cheaper for U.S.
consumers than a pipeline
through Alaska that would re-
quire C()Sl}y tanker shipments to
the West Coast. U.S. and Cana-
dian representatives are discuss-
ing the pipeline question.
Schlesinger said be may enter
negotiations with Canada in Ume
to permit a policy recommenda-
'
...........
LIMITS 'ADEQUATE'
James Schlealnger
Uon by President Carter soon
after Congress reconvenes next
Sept. 7.
IN TBE INTERVIEW. Schles·
ingeralso~
-Left the door open for ad-
ministr•lioo consideration of a
proposal to allow petroleum com-
panies some higher profits to be
"plowed back" into further
eneray development.
-Said the Carter administra-
tion 'Will not try to keep ail and
gas companies from moving into
coal. uranium and otber energy
resources, at least for the
present.
-SAID PRESIDENT Carter's
effort to d.i.sc<>urage the sp~d of
nuclear fuel technology that
could be used for nuclear
weapons has bad "partial suc-
cess... achieving international
agreement to work on the
problem.
Jn dlteusst11 petioleum in· ! ·1 duatry hopes for the enera:bUl .1'
peDdlq 1Jl the ~;" Sdllea•AJ
ioger aakl: :
.. Wbate"V"et we had prot>osed, I ~
think one mlaht ao\letpite that.
industry would have uhd tor I
m~. ,. ·1 .. Even iC \Ye had 1one Im·
mediately to world oil prices for
all oil, there ptol>Jbly 'fould bave · ,
been a desire for-aubltdy ol IGIDe t 1 sort or another. '
SCBLESINGEa SAID warld ..
oil productlon eventually will hit .. I
its Umit.s and desnend will pmh : :
up the price ol cil. Meanwblle. he : :
said. •"Jbe prices are behtc set · :
by a cartel. and the prices.-by
the cartel bave no necesaaq re.
latiootocosts. • . • ;
"We think the world price now! .
is a aood laeentive Jlrice tor new ~ :
exploraUoq ancl new develop. : 1
m~u be said. ~lit be added · 1
that oU companies .. would like to:••
have the world prlce for~": 1·
inventories as well." · •
If they Sot their wish, he Hid, • !
"an undue share of nation~ in· ' •
come and wealth would co to the
producers without brinatnl on
that substantial additional pro--• t
' duction that reduces. prices · .
somewhere close to cost. with an . i
appropriate rate of return.'' · l
Cars Go on Display· t
Four classic cars, courtesy or l
James Edwards, owner of·
Edwar.ds Cinemas in Oranae 1
County, are on display through ,
Sept. 10 at Great Westem Sav· ~
ings and Loan AssoclaUon'1'
Newport Beach office, 450 ~
Newport Center Drive. ,
They include a 193t' British ,
Austin Phaeton; 1911 French -1
Renault, the only one of its kind;
1960 Austin Healey and 1907 Max·
well, the oldest in the collection.
The display is open during
regular business hours: 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Mondays through
Fridays and 9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Saturdays.
In charge of flnandal Operations
The following have filed bankruptcy petttionis
ln federal court ln Santa Ana~ ----~~~~~~~
230 Newpott c.nt... Drive
Suite 200 * 759-1511
Newport Beadt, Calif.
JUNE1'7
-P&tty S"" Hie~•. 21~ AYOC.tdO,
Cost" M~'"· 11,u """' lllblllll•• of
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By JORNC\1NNIPF ,.,. ............
Suddenly, the cbJef dlsc:uu.ton in financial clrcles ~
whether the glus lJ half full or ball empty, and whether we.
should keep our •Y• on the doualmut or oP the bole. · ~ · 1'bat ls to llY, bow are we to Ned~ economic reports
that paint to a slower rated expamlon In the second half of'
tbe year and into 1'71? la the dlftct1oil ominous? Or la it·
healthy?
M06T OF THE BAN&S AND OTHER forecast~
around New York seem acreed that there ls no cause for
alarm. ~ even they cannot tsnore tbe soft areu of tb6
ecOQOl!\Y that the more pess1mlstic are emphuW.01.
"The half-empty theorists -wbo of late seem to have
an unusually persuasive Im-pact on the stock market -
stress the softness in consumer spending," notes Morgan
Guaranty, which tilts toward a degree of optiml.sm. ·
"U.S. economic 1rowth is slowing down,•· says Chase
ManbattM, but adds: "This isn't cause for alarm: Wbat'>
develoPinl ls a shltt from an exceptional rapid pace to ono
that'• still substantJal and also more sustainable."
And CiUbank, speaking of the stock
m &$et. COllHIU!IDtl. "Wall Street might
be accused ~ payb1f more attention to
tbe bole than to the douabnut -or of re·
actiq to dedlnea in profits by a few
laree eorporaUon1 and ignoring the
gains by the vut majority ol firms."
But when an economy begins to shuf-
fle a bit, with some indicators up and
others down or sideways, it seems that
forecasters of gloom come out of
hibernation. Some even use the word
''recession." Some say, "Buy gold."
SUCH A1TITUDES AKE S11LL IN the minority, it ap· pears, but they are having their impact, especially on the
stock market, where the Dow Jones industrial average ~
down to its lowest in more than a year and a half.
ls the stock market a good forecaster of events to come?
You can argue It either way, depending on whose statistics
you use, but there is one thing you must respect: There b a
reality amoni those who play for money. . •
The next consideration is whether those who play for
money are smarter than others or whether they are routed'•'
by neurotic fears, such as the ever-present threat of rismi interest rates. • ·
A LOT OF THE BIG INSTITUTIONS haven't de-
monstrated an expert's ability in playing the money game
over the past few years, a good deal because they seem to~
responding more lo fears than hopes. The doughnut and the.
hole.
Citibank thinks investors should be more aware ot the
sharp rise in corporate profits during the second quarter of
the year -"the best news for the most firms in a lorlg
lime.''•
But those disposed to worry will, of course, ask, "What ·
about the next quarter and the quarter after that?" And
they have plenty more to worry about too, if they are so in-
clined, such as the imbalance of trade. • M
WHATEVER, WE ARE AT ONE of those critical points~
in economic lime when a change seems to be taking place.
not necessarily in dir~lion but almost certainly in pace.
· At such a juncture we question. It is a time when relia-
ble forecasters are badly needed. but unfortunately it is a .
time also when almost any tale can be given the appearanc&
of objectivity.
And so we have the bulls and the bears and the gold .
bugs and the groundhogs and the cbatterine birds sayin&
"listen to me," just as a year from now they'll be crooning
"I told you so."
Under such conditions it seems the only thing a person
can do is listen to bis or her own inner voice, and keep an eye
on the doughnut. with an occulonal glance at the hole.
Sti,ck Rally Ends,
Dow Loses Ground
NEW YORK CAP> -The stock market backed away·
from an early gain today, failing to sustain the rally that.
began Monday.
They noted'that the market was still confronted with
fears of an economic slowdown.
1be Dow Jones average of 30 stocks lost 1.73 points to.
865.56. Volume waa 20,290,000 shares.
DowonnArier•,,e• H'hat St~lu Did
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NEW YORK (AP) ........ Today O.v "3 11t 111 61'2
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Ahshgara (Sharon Doherty), in the pose that
decorates April of the 1977 Belly Dance Calendar
They're Real . Gems
By JUDITH OLSON
Of Tiie O.lly ..... ,~
To Esther and Russ Hind,
teaching Sunday school isn't
much different from their re-
gular work.
They're in the business of cut-
ting and polishing gems, and
what are children but Jewels in
the rough?
The Hinds, long-time Laguna
Beach residents, have had plenty
of experience in both lines of en-
deavor. In the jewelry business
since the early '50s, they also
have been active in the Christian ·
Education department of the
Community Presbyterian
Church of Laguna Beach for 50
years.
To celebrate their golden
jubilee on the church staff, they
were awarded a handmade pla-
que mounted on a section of the
• original Laguna Beach
boardwalk.
The inscription says, "Jesus
said, 'Let the little children come
to me, because the Kingdom of
Heaven belongs to such as
these,"' and "In gratitude to
Russ and Esther Hind for 50
years of sharing your faith and
the love of God with the children
of Community Presbyterian
Church of Laguna Beach."
Some of their early students,
now parents with children of
their own, were on hand for the ·
presentation ceremony.
MRS. JUND, in particular, is
beloved as a Sunday school
teacher. She has had the kin·
dergarten class for five decades.
Hind praised his wife's abilities ·
during an interview in their
South Coast Highway shop.
"She puts it on a level they can
understand. She loves them," he
said.
Hind delights in tellinc bow a
committee from the synod once
visited Mn. Hind 's class and was
so happy with her wort tbat
the members wrote a letter to the
church to praise hel'.
Hind himself bas an envia~e
record as a teacher of lap1dary.
His classes at the church, iD ~
extremely well-equipped 1h0p, an~ those at Lelaul'e WOrl~
Laiuna lWls., }lave turned t
Esther and
Russ Hind
polish all kinds
of gems in
the rough.
several prize winners and at
least one person who has gone on
to enter the profession.
"OUR CHURCH classes $tart-
ed in a little place we had to dig
out under the church," the
jeweler said. "We take children
in the fourth grade and up, but
the adults almost push out the
children."
His curriculum at Leisure
World includes intarsia, or the
making of pictures with stone.
"This is done In Italy, ln
Florence and Venice. I revived it
at Leisure World," Hind ex·
plained.
The costly pictures are "paint-
ed" with inlaid stones held
together without grout, and it is a
parnstaking process to put them
together.
Though be bas been a
gemologist and jeweler for many
years, Hind entered the field
after working for some time in
other areas.
He graduated from Tustin
High School, where he met his.
wife, attended Santa Ana College
and went on to the University of
Redlands to earn a decree in
chemical engineering.
His first jQbs included helping
with construction of the Pacific
Coast Highway both north and
south of LQuna, and one of his
early employers was making the
first aynth~c fibers in the U.S.
WHEN TBE COMPA~ asked
him to move to Chicago he
declined and quit to work with bis
father in the building construc-
tion ~iness.
"My hobby was cuttina ahd pol~ rocks while I worked in
building," Hind said. "l finally
declded I wanted to do what I en-
joyed the rest of my life. ,.,~. • ••we didn 'Hntend to eo wto the
jewelry business, It Just :cle·
veloped;" be edded.
Hind said his wife joined him in
the designine and making of the
first jewelry and bas been work·
ing with him ever since.
They have sold their wares to
many personalities. George Kel·
ly, an uncle of Grace Kelly,.
boueht all his wedding gifts from
the Hinds when hla niece marriedi
the prince.
One of their customers was
photographed greeting the Queen
of England wearing a Hind-
designed "picture pin."
The Hinds credit part of their
success in the Jewelty business to
their faith, which they share
liberally with their cwstomers.
"OUR FAITH is the most im·
portant thing. It's 1iven us happi-
ness, blessed our love and busi-
ness. It's something you can pass
along," Mrs. Hind said.
Their prize-winning window
displays bint at their faith and
Mrs. Hind said many customers
have brought friends from out of
town to look.
One of the most spectacular
windows featured a hand-cast
nativity scene of gol~ which
Hind said probably will end up in
a museumsomeday-
Some of their other gems will
be donated to museums too, they
noted, because they have some
very unusual things tucked in
their vault. ·
"We have some that are so un-
usual that the Smithsonian sent a
man to look at them," Hind said.
•'They took pictures for six
hours."
He said he has simply "been in
the right place at the right time"
to find the treasures.
Hlnd's favorite stone ls the
opal, though he wears not a one in
a ring or tie tllp.
"I wear them for him!" Mrs.
Jlindaald with a laugh.
The Jeweler said he finds gems
f aaclnatlng because of bis
curiosity about their atomic
structure. and the cutting and
poll.shin& J>rocess intriaues him as he sees beauty emerge from
the~ess.
Hind loves to flnd unusual
plece1 to cut· and aet. .,Let so-
.meone e1ae do the ordinary,'' be
said.
By DENNIS McLELIAN
Of ... DellyPl ... SIMf
There she is: Seemlngly
plucked out of the Arabian niaht
sky. Swathed in veils, bangles
and sequins, she reclines on U)e noot d a desert tent. Sbt\ baa full, sensual Ups and
dark.. mystatous eyes (eyM only
for some hot-blooded sheik or
wealthy eamel driver?).
She's Atmhgara, one of 12 belly
dancers adorning the paees of a
San Diego calendar.
Not bad for a San Juau
Capistrano mother of two who
learned to roll her belly and
shimmy her shoulders at the Y.
Known off stage u Sharon
Doherty, Abshgara actually
began taking belly dance lessons
at the San Diego YMCA "for
something to do and to lose some
inches.
"After three or four lessons I
decided this ls what I WU 10.i.ng
to do unW I died," says Mrs.
Doherty, who, underneath the
head wrap pictured in the calen·
dar, bas short blonde balr?
Tueeday, August 23. 1977
A blonde iJQy dancer!
BEil FAtll RAIB ana illin col-
oring -a marked contra.st to the
traditional image of the lliddle
East dancers -bas had tti ad·
vantaaes and dlaadvantaaes. It's been a cal.l.1:q eard of IOrts
and, ln fact. inspired an Arabian
musician to name her Ahshaar•
("The Blonde One").
But, she adds; •1•ve had a very
-~
Ct
difficult time with my blonde
hair. American buslnessmeo
don't want to see a blonde. They
want someone with dark skin and
long, dark hair."
She b.un't bad any trouble
fiodinl audiences tbouah· ... .She's appeared at private
partieis and club functions and
tauaht belly dance semtna'rs,
(SeeSldmmJiaiPaleCI>
\
Kidney Fo11ndation
poster boy Scott
Bolin, Fountain Valley,
Vlith singer Helen
Reddy.
Stride
DEAR ANN LANDERS Yes, lt'a true. Hitler·
like exttrmloation la n only immOl'al but criminal. v t, problern1 with the •led art ao difficult. I am
1lck arid tired ol •ril1D1 that cMc:-evecy month tor
my h\llb nd't 90·Yt•r·old mother who doesn'tknow
anybody ond can't even comb her own hair. She la a
terrltlc burden to the famlly yet the doctor says her
heart II better than mtne and abo may ouWve all of
U6. My children need ftnanclal help badly. We are
not rich -barely maklnl it, tn fact. It aripu rne to aee all this money beina spent to keep • uaeless
woman alive. Where does the point of justice lie! -
ANONYMOUS, OF COURSE -WHAT ELSE
COULD I BE?
DEAR ANONYM0\18: What eJM could you beT
Well -compaaalonate, for ooe tb1D1."
Troe, It la &ra1Jc wben tbe body outllvea the
mind, but nobody 1ett a contract wblcll guaraatee1
lb• len&th of time eltber will Jut -or wblcb wUJ 10
fin&. the body or &he mlnd. .
Tbere'a a law •l•iaat aboot.ln& people because
tbey are no longer "useful." A.ad lf there were DO law
-would you do U? I tblnk D°'-So qalt eatlD&
yourself up -and accept witb 1r~ that wblcb you
cannot cbance.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I always fell that .some
day I would be compelled to write to/ou. Tbla letter
la concemtni an answer fer the "Sa Mother." who
wrote about her crll>pled son who bad the allptllmp.
I wu the uualy atrl" no one danced with
because ot a concenital deformity. People wonder tr
I am a "crippled dwarf." I went all throuch high
school and colleae without a •loll• date and never
wu lnvlted to the treat senior prom of life -mar-
riage.
Tell that mother for me to 1et her son to 10 to ac-
UvlUes that do not involve couples. He should stay
away from dances and vi.sit art aalleries. boat
sbows. concerts, st.ace plays and movies. He could
join a club pertainlna to h1a favorite hobby.
EventuaUy, one of bl5 men friends will in-
troduce him to hQ (the friend'a) sister wbo will be
interested. in the boy because be bu a beavtlful
spirit and she won •t even noUce the Ump. -I KNOW
BECAUSE I'VE BEEN THERE.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: H '1 a new 'one f«
you. rve never read anl'thin1 Ute It. Clinton IDd I
bou.iht li\to a lovely condomtnlum a few months qo.
Our n~t~r nelthbor b a widow. The first time
1be met CllntOo ah• couldn't take her eyes off hlfll.
Soon aft.er, she told us be IOOb exactly like her de-
ceased huabancl.
Now 1he bu Wormed us bOth ~at she 11 tn Jove
with him. At first I tbou~t It wu Just a pualnc thine. but now stle watches f Of Clinton every tlme be
leaves the apartment and rttup• -Just to have a
few words with him. ·
He ii ftatlered by ber attea~ and I believe he
is beginnina to enjoy tt. Wl\it an l do about it? -
AN OLDSl'ORY WITH A NEWWJUNkl.E
DEABN.W.: 1>oa•t makeuluaeolU•JOG•U
create a pfoblem where DODe emta. h trte1ully. laap aboat It -ln &be meaaUmet Dz liter Q Wttb a
nice widower or dJvorced mu wao looks u ••ck
like Ola&. u poalble.
Grandma's a Baby Sitting Sit-in
O•llyPllet ...... llyLH .. ..,M
Bud Esler is a real Marathon
Man. He played ping pong for
122 hours straight.
Ping Pong
Marathon
Bud Esler, maralhon player for the
Easler Seal Ping Pong Tournathon. set a
,. probable Guinness World Record in a
' gruelling 122 hours of continuous ping pong
pla)ing.
The Bcllflo\\ er man surpassed the
original record of 110 hours and five
minutes for single play to establish his own
\\ orld record.
By ERMA BOMBECK
When plump, apple-cheeked grandmothers
were passed out (who insisted on baby-sitting while
you were still carrying the child), my mother was
out getting an unlisted phone.
Don 't get me wrong . She loves her
grandchildren. As she puts it, "I ,also love Smokey
the Bear and Harry Reasoner, but I wouldn't want to
sit with them on a regular basis."
She considers grandchildren a special bonus for
having outlived her own children. "When you're a
sitting sit· in," she declares, "you lose your role as a
grandparent. Of course," she said, "lf you get
desperate you can call me at this number ala candy
store. They know wbere to reach me."
I called the number last week. "MQJD, I haven't
bad a vacation away from the kids since my honey-
moon."
"What kind o( crack lsthat?"abe asked.
"I told you I was desperate. Do you suppose you
could sit with the kids for a few d~? ''
"They hurt me the last time,• sbe said.
"That's my fault," I replied. "I abould have told
you that when you stand the bat?1 up on your lap, he
Horoscope: Virgo
Nothing
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 2'
By SYDNEY OMARR
• IS
AIUF..S (March 2l·Aprll 19): Accent on civic du·
ty. public relations, corporate structure, where you
stand and how to elevate position. You may learn of
travel plans. , .. The event, held at the Quality Inn in
Anaheim Aug 9 to 13. helped raise funds for
the Rehabilitation Jnslitute of Orange Coun·
ty. \\ h1ch pro\ ides serdces to the han·
dicapped
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Good Moon aspect
for you coincides with journey, enlightenment.
You're able to locate missing article. Research pays
dividends.
I
r
The Tournalhon. a fund raiser for the
E<Jster Seal-operated institute. raised about
Sl0.000. Thal was a Sl,000 increase over
mone~ ra1M.•d m last year 's Tournathon.
Buel himself raised about Sl.500 in pledges
m this year·s event. He has played all five
vears the Tournathon has been held.
· :\umerous celebrities and local citizens
GEMINI CMav 2l·June 20): Emphasis on
finances Ln connection with partner or mate. Be
ready for quick changes, decisions which alfect basic
security. Be thorough.
CANCER (June 21.July 22>: Neglect of legal
matters could be expensive. Check rights,
permissions. Accent on family member who wants
to make a move. Key is to be lenient, diplomatic.
LEO <July 23·A~. 22>: What you are seeking
could be closer than you imagine. One who cares
about you wants you to succeed and to be happy -
will provide key material.
participated in the e\ ent.
From C1
.. Shim m·yi ng Ahshgara
workshops and classes In San
Diego. She currently teaches al
Caroll Stasney's School of Dance
in San Juan Capistrano.
And every Saturday night for
the last year and a half she's
been performing at Miramar
Na val Air Station in San Diego.
WIDLE THE MEN are recruit·
ed from the audience -tor I laughs, of course -only about
, • two out of more than 100 belly
I dancers are men, abe says.
I "It still does not draw men to it
· • because they feel it is not
something a man should be dO-
dna. But you can be lfl•scullne
and still be graceful.••
While the world may not be
ready for the mile version of the r shimmy or belly roll, there •P.
I parently Is no end to the demand
for the fem ale version.
In fact, Mrs. Doherty has ta~ht everyone from 4·~Hl'ri
olds t.o a 74-yeaN>ld. "It's really
for women at all aces.''
There are only a few basic
moves to the andenl danc~ ahe •
says, but each move can De
modified in countless ways.
The whole idea is to isolate Se<:·
lions of the body, a process that
admittedly is not for everyone.
While learning to do that, stu-
dents usually find muscles they
never knew they hfld.
THE RESULT IS mastery ol
the classic "stomach flutter ..
and the famed ''rolling of the bel·
ly," which Mrs. Dobercy Uk~ to
waves: "You separate lhem so
one goes in while the other ls 10-
ing out."
And, if you 're really goo4. abe
adds, "you can roll them from
side to slde. • ·
That's all second natur, to
Ahshgara, a self·describ«l klutz
before she took up belly dancing.
She has even mastered the dif·
ficult wt or pouring wine into an
empty glass -all with hef
stomach muscles. •
<She places the emp~y 11'55 on
the tOp part or her stomach arid
the full glus on the bottom. '1
lifting the bottom portion and
dropping the top muscle, she
manages to transfer the liquid.>
It was her mastery of the belly-
danclQg art that prOIDpted San
Diego dancer Deliah -Belly
Dancer USA for 1977 -to ask her
to appear in the calendar she was 'produci~. (Absbgara is the
montbol April.)
s AT
WIT'S
END
pushes bis head against your chin and cuts your
tongue in ball. Besides the kids are teenagers now.
It'll be easter .t1
"Than what?" she asked.
"The problems of teenagers are over-
dramatized," I told mother. "Actually, there is
nothing to sitting with them.
"First. I have hidden the distributor from the
car in the floqr canister. This will give you a warm,
secure feeling when the announcer comes on TV and
says, 'It's 10 o'clock. Do you know where your
children are?' They'll be tearing the house apart
looking for the distnbutor.
"Second, don't worry about meals. They'll eat
anything as long as it is in a carry-out bag.
"Third. keep a supply of dimes. You'll need
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22>: Relati<ptships, other
activities intensify -nothing Is lukewarm. It is all
or nothing, financial and emotional involvement.
Sweeoin~ chan~es occur. Creativity pays off.
LIBRA Sept. 23·0ct. 22): Conclusions are
reached, deals solidified -get appraisals, be rid of
"white elephant." Accent oo home, properly, one ot
parents, agreement to strive for better~lay, pro.
· duction, distri bu lion.
SCOllPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Movement,
journeys, relatives, messages and visits help make
this a busy lime. Stress confidence, independence,
originality and creativity. Stand tall.
SAGITl'ARIUS CNov. 22·Dec. 21): Spotlight on
what you can earn, taxes, deductions, a greater un-
them when you have to make a phone call at the gas
station on the corner.
"Fourth, if you want them to wear something
clean, put it in the dirty clothes hamper. It's sneaky,
but it's the only way you can get them to rotate their
clothes.
"Fifth. you'll get used to the records, especially
if you spend your evenings crouched in the utUtty
closet next to the hot water heater.
"Sixth, don't ever say you undentand them. It
breaks down the hostile relationship between you
that it takes to understand one another. Now you
know all there is lo know about teenagers. lam off to
the city."
"Hold it!•• shouted mother. "In case I need you
where can I get in touch with yiou? ..
"Here's the number of a candy store." I said.
"I'll check in from time to lime."
Weddings~
and Engagement~·
To avoid disappolntmenl, prospective
brides are reminded lo have their wedding
stories with black and white glossy
photographs to the Daily Pilot People
Department one week before the wedding.
· Pictures re~;ived after that lime will.
not be used:
For engagement announcements it ls
imperative that the story. also accom·
panied by a black and white glossy pio-
ture. be submitted six weeks or more
before the wedding date; otherwise it will
not be published.
To help fill Tequirements on lwth wed -
ding and engafernent stories, forms are
available in at Daily Pilot offices. Fur·
ther questions will be answered by People
Department staff members at 642·4321.
derstanding or personal financial situation. No one
intends to give you something (or nothing. Huntsberger-Franchi
CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Move ahead,
to marry June 24, 1978, in
Christ Church by tbe
Sea, Newport Beach. spread influence, be confident, socialize, follow
through on hunch. Lady luck takes a liking to you.
Highlight the way you look, your personality.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 18): You gain rare in·
sights. You are taken into confidence by persons
who. themselves, are searchers, seekers, who usual·
ly find what they need. Be thorough.
PISC~ (Feb. 19·March 20>: Accent on roman·
tic interests, money from business enterprise.
standing in community, career. Some friends aid In
fulfillment of hopes and wt.hes. Yes, do accept
changes.
U Aqu,st 24th la yoar blrtbday, you have un·
usual voice. a "sweet tooth," sense of destiny, of
personal worthiness.
'
CALENDAR
During a family dinner
party in the Newport
Beach home or Mr. and
Mrs. R. J. Huntsberger,
they announced the
engagement of their
daughter, Pamela Sl4e
Huntsberger, and Daniel
Allan Franchi.
ldl11 Huntsberger, a
graduate of Corona del
Mar mah School. at·
tends Cal P-oly at San
Luil Obispo.
Her fiance, son of the
J . O. Franchis ·oe Ven·
tura, aJs0 ls a student It
Cal·tiOlY and·gfaduated
from ~t. Bonaventure
HigbScbool, Ventur~
No wedding date bas
been seJecteet. •••
News of their -engage·
ment and forthcoming
marriage has been an-
nounced by her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. John Scap·
ple, Balboa. His parents·
are the Marvin
Kravitzes of Costa Mesa.
Both araduated from
Newport Harbor High
School. ....
Vogel-Cole
Mr. &nd Mrs. Milton C.
Vogel of Huntln.ton
Beach have announced
the cngagecoent of thelr
daughter, Christine
Susan Vogel, and Donald
Leslie Cole. son of the
Elmore Cotes of Whtt·
tier
Tb• betrothed.
graduate• of UO San .
Otego, are pllllUlinl a '
wedding in Huntington
Beach next July.
•
I 'i
.. "Mom's looking for her car keys!"
. FUNKYWINKERBEAN
AS PART OF~ Pl.A~ WE'RE A561Gt.ll~ CXXJ PARE~T5 10
VARIOO& ~RT5 OF lHE.
I saw.. BUILDING!
' • I •
. ~,,,~ .
I ~EU'/
~tAi~
~--.~ •
.,
by Tom Batiuk •
. . .
.
by Ferd and Tom Johnson
..----~~------........ ~
I
t I
t
I "
t .
TODAY'S CIDSSRID fVZZLI
UNITED feature Syndicate
WHEN THE:
'SOPRANO HIT
HIGH C, EMMA'S
EN<&AGEMENT RING
SHAiTER__ED ...
•
LIT'# IA¥ rM
INTa~T~ININ~
TMI~ Wtl..OMCPri.•.• •
. . .
wHe"" YOU s,.ec.1P1ei::>
"SPRl"°'6 Cl-i1CK8N,~\ "1"'1-H!! MACl-tlNE! ReAP 1-r' OU'T" AS MY' A<5&!
~· \
YPlt.OT
•
.\ B\'tlya-Ja e Davi.. wtw lost MUUtOUAHo
• Iler sjeht as a teen-ager, bas become the first
!."'Oman to WU\ the Toastmasters International Speech contest.
She told the audience in Toronto that she
believe. that when God takes away a person's sight, ''He loosens their tongue."
Miss Davis, 39, of Spnngfield, Ya . is a lawyer
and bas worked for eight )
years as a tax law(
lnco a crowd at.,t f(u we IOan tall)' In Platn., Ga .• in.July. wu indict bY • coun~ •rand Jury At Americus, Ga ., on llbt counta ot ·aiaravattd u-11wt wtth an automobllt.
Twenty.;un• J)el'IQM were Injured in t.be Incl·
dent In Pratd & Carter'• hometown, lncludlns
ball a doitn who were .boapltallzed.
Cochran, 2$, ot Americus, remained in tb•
Sumtq County JaH on bond ot '-'>0,000.
* Ftve of President fdJ ~min'• estJmated S2
children had thelr tonaUs removedl t est nre oCCice announced.
The five were Hated as
Motes, Mao, ltaelaomln11,
Gertca and Adam. Thelt ages
werenot&lven.
Amin was present in the
operating room throuahout the
procedure, an official statement
said. .,, .
Clashes with a Phoenix bank
and a.New York pvtner will not AMIH
interfere with a world backgammon tourn~ent
scbedUled In Las Vegas 1n December, says a
Phoenix promoter.
PUBLIC NOTICE
"CT1nous auso•1u
NAMI STATIMIHT
T1-IOll4'Wt119 --It doflto b<nl-nHt n ·
11 DISCO LIOO 11 AUOIQ.()l,tNI.
"'o 1~11119 INlne.CAttl U
Roberl M Seillus. • 2 s..-rllnq
lrvtrw.CA'2714
Tlltj ~ .. ~llY•l'l ln dlvrdual
Rolle<1 "4. 5ol>ut
Thll \tat-I wn llltd with the
County Cler1t Of 0rat1Qt Coollty Ofl JUiy 1' 1•n. " .. ,, P ublf&Nd 0r"Ot COHI O.lly PlloC
•119ustt •," n 1•n
specialist with the 1!'· PEOPLE
ternaJ Revenue Service m ...__ ----------Washington.
* Former Sen. J. William Fulbright tD·Ark. ),
Jule. H. Klar, 42, said the t_ournament ,
scheduled for Las Vegas Ott. 18·23 wtll award $1 m illlon in first-place prize money.
Klar aald more ~han 1,000 players .rrom • 1-___ _;_ __ ""'-'--
throughout the country and elsewhere have signed PUBLIC NOTICE
has joined the board of directors of the Little Rock
investments firm of Stephens, Inc.
Fulbright has practiced law .with the
Washington firm of Hogan and Hartson smce short-
up for the tournament.
· The promoter said he tried to obtain an escrow·
account to hold entry money from First National
Bank of Arizona in.Phoenix, but was turned down.
So he s aid he set up a separate account for the
tourney at a branch bank ot F~t National.
ly after he was defeated in a re--
election bid by Dale Bumpets in 1974.
Fulbright, former cflairman
ot: the Foreign Relations Com-
mittee, told the Arkansas
Gar.ette's Washineton bureau he
rejected other overtures for cor-
J>Orate d.Jrectorshipa because his
law firm had a policy agairull
partners accepting s uch ap-
J>Ointment..s "UL.AIU GMT
'Ir
The chef was Ronald Reagan, and the guests in·
eluded prominent players in the 1976 presidential
campaigns for Reagan and lhen·Pr~ident Gerald Ford.
But the event was stricUy looking ahead to
1978, not back to 1976, s aid longtime Reagan aide
Michael Deaver.
Deaver said Reagan hos ted a barbecue at his
Tanch near Santa Barbara for a group called "The
Eagles," who are prominent, major contributors to
the Republican National Committee.
* Entertainer lobn Davldaon, who was the star
. attraction of the night of the Beverly Hills Supper
Club fire on Memorial Day
. weekend in Southgate, Ky., will ~ headline a benefit concert for
'the 164 victims' ramilies next
month in Cincinnati.
"There is no way to bring
back lives, but you can help the
· living. And in that sense l can
help,'' Davilbon said.
Davidson's friend and music
arranger was one of the victims
in the May 28 blaze, which he 1s
reluctant to discuss.
*
DAVIDSON
Buddy Cochran, charged with driving his car
For the Record
Db•ohd.lons
dtM•rrlqe
* . .Pope Paul· VI named Msgr, Tboma1 Fee, the
head or an Irish Catholic college, to be archbishop ot Armagh and Roman Catholic primate or All Ireland, the Vatican announced.
Msgr. Fee succeeds Wiiliam CardJnal Conway,
wbo died 1n April after nearly 14 years as the lead~r
of the Roman Catholic Church in the Irish Republic
and Northern Ireland. . . Mur. Fee, who wlU be 54 Nov. 3, is chairynen of
St. Patrick's College at Maynoolh, near Dublin.
* Country-western singer JobllQY Paycheck
performed for a screaming, cheerin,g audience of
more than 400 women at the federal Correctional
Center for Women at Alderson, W L Va.
Paycheck asked !or a chance to &ivt a..hee oo~·
cert at the prison alter st.naer lo!IDny C.,.~ wbo is known for his P,rison concerts,
was unable to make an ap-
pearance. .
"l served two years m a
federal penitentiary when I was
19, so I know what it's like,"
Paych~k said . • Fundamentalist radio preacher Dr. Carl Mcintire
was charged with obstructing
traffic and.using a
s ound truck without
permiss1on alter he defied city officials and led 375
followers on a peaceful march to protest his local lans 1D Cape May, flt.J.
City officials claim Mcintire <>wes '723,000 in
back taxes on 12 properties, including three hotels,
and they threaten foreclosure. Mcintire maintains
the properties are tax·exempt because they are
.ISed for religious acu viUes.
Controversial
·11eallli Bill OK'd
SACRAMENTO (AP> -A bill critics call a
multimWioh-doUar t hlft in insurance costs fot Job.
related Ulnmes and Injuries has been signed by
Go\1': F.dmund Brown Jr .• Brown's office announced Monday. .,
The measure affects -....;;..--..,,·----~) the source or benefits for (
workers whose c:obdl· _
llons. known as '-------~:""'"-....,
cuntulative trauma. de·
velop over a long period of time because or Job con· ditlon.t.
lJg,der the old law. a worker·s employers for tbe
five Ye.lts before an Injury or illness split tbe cost ~f
beneflta. A worker who had one employer durfn&
that lime would be covered by all of the employet•s insurers.
The bill, AB 155 by Assemblyman Terq G~,. gfn, D·Sal\ Bernardino, cuts the tim. period to'Ofte year by 1981.
MOTICIO"'"*-ltl&l'OHllllLITY Notke I• hvfl>V 9lven 111411 the un·
der)l!ll*I •Ill not be '"-'Ible tor eny Otllts Of' llltllltlllu contr~ed by any-other tlW<I myself, on or _,11er
1111•0.le.
Oatte1th!• l1d•vo1AugUst.1m.
IC•nneth P Olymplus
1'1Sllr1w I.JI.,
Huntlnoton lluch, CA t2M7
Publtlhed Or~ C:O.st O•lly ""°'· A\lilllSI 1', 11, 23, 1'11
PtJBUC NOTICE;
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTlCE •
• • q
I
·1
~NOTICE ...... .,N••counw nt9 STAT•OPCMJ ... •Uti ll'Oll TMCOUMTY W 04lAllMJe ........... 0
.. OTICa 011' H•A•t•• 011' Nl'lTION llOll ....,..TS Of' WIU.
AlfD l'CMt LaTT••• nnAM•N-T&.U MIO f'04l AJITHOlllJATIOM TO ADMINISTaR UMDall TMa
1Mea.9N1MINT AOlliUNIWllATIOlt Oll'HTATUACT
bl* o4 MAY O. llAltMMO, llM
'"'IOWft M MAV DOSCHD llARllANO,
Oe'--ned NOTICE IS HEREllY GIVEN tNt
.., WEI.LS ll'AltGO llANIC ITllUST
DIVISION), hes llled llet'elf\ • petltloft tor P,.,.._ o4 Wiii end tor l•w.nte ol Lette" Ttst•mef\llr y •nd for
AutllO<tutlon to Administer Uftder the tndependitftt Admtnlstrellon of E11.tt ..
Act, ref.....a to which ts m..i. for
further pertlculen, end IMt IN time
•nd P4ec. Of h .. rlng the ume hes been
w ttor$eptam0er•, 1tn ,et 10:CIO•.m .. tn lhe tour'!,_.,, Of Deperlmenl No. I Of
~Id c.o<WI, et 700 Civic Genier Ori,,. West, In the City ol S•nte An•,
C.llloml•. 0-AUOl.dt II. 1'77
Wtu..IAlio\ •• StJOMN#
County Cler11
MAMNAHDHAMN
S41tte• ,., .. ~ ......
"• ....... CAt11" WllW-S.,,.....,.,Jr. •• ....,, ... ,Pet....,.
Put>ltslled Or11n99 Co.tsl 0.11'1' Piiot.
AUQ"512J,U,30, 1'71 374t·17
PUBUC NOTICE
c~
SUl"l!lllOlll COURT Oii' n41!
STATE Oii' CAl.ll'OltNtA l'Olt
TMECOUMt'YOll'OltANO•
Ne.A~
NOTICI 011' MIARINO 011'
"ETITIOH l'04t "ltOllATI! Of WILL AND CIOOICIL n411111!TO ANO ll'Olt
LITTl!llS TEST.t.MENTAltY A'fD
AUTHORIZATION TO ADMINISTlll UNDElt TMI INOl! .. aNOENT AO.
MtNISTllATIONOll' ESTATES ACT. Es .. te ol ARCHIE A. MKOONALD.
Deceewd. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN IMI
ELLEN M MKOONALD, RAYMOND
J . MecDONA LO e 11d MAR K
P. A081NSON lleve filed hentln e pell·
lion for ,,_te Of Wiii •llCI Codkll thereto e<ld for luu.nce of Letters
Teslement.,.,. lo the Pellll-ra efld •ull'IOrlutlon lo edmlnlster the e1i.te
under tM l~t Admlnlstrelloft of Estlllls Act, ,.,._. to wttlch Is
mlHM IOr furthlt' pertk vt.,.., end tlMlt
the ttme ..i 114-Of llMrlno the....,.
... , biMfl Mt for Seolember 1', 1'11, •I
10:00 •·""•In the courtr_,,., Deperl·
-ment Ne. l Of ulcl court, et 700 Clvk Center 0rtw W.M, In the City o4 Sent. AM, c.tllomle
De led Au1vS11t "77 WIWAM&.MiOHN,
County Clerk
NOROAN AND ltOlltlUOtl . .,.,~, .... .._ . ..,. ..... ...... ...,.......,c.-.r
Tel: CtUl4&1"'
Aft.....,. ... : f'eetti..1
Publlstled 0r-. Cout Oelly Piiot,
Au9tnttt, 24,:11, tm 31•n
PUBUC NOTICE
l
' 4
2
•
5
6
7
8
D
A
I·
L y
p
I
L
0
T
~ \\',1lkcr t; lt:l!
---
IACICIAY
I
Houses For StM HousH Fors• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• IOOZ 11w-•
ltATa I. IM THI~ Rare R plan ondominit11n ·in the-
fabuJoua Bluffsl· .... Split level on the..
greenbelt, With 3 bedrooms (or 2 and a
den) all in immaculate condition and
taateful appe•rance. Very oustomt
' Top of the line security system, Now
vacant & ready for new owner.
. $159,500.
·I
· ~ IC)UJ: tiV,..l:S
REAL TORSO: 675-6000
2443 Ean Coast Highway, Corona del Mar
also in Mesa Verde, at 546-5990
..
UflllilC)UI: liV1'tl:S
REAL TORS'. 546·5990
1526 MMt Verde· Drlv6, E1st, Costa Mesa
also in Corona del Mar, at 675·6000
Jo Newport H rbor tti&
School di1trlc\, on a
CORNER LOT wit
room for camper AN boat In your fenced
bllc.kyard, )'Oll'll find a maulve 2 stery, 4
bedroom <two ~Ult
donn.size bedrooms UP·
5talrl, each w/fllll batll> · a bath falllllY bome with
family IWllD and fonnal
dining room. Se MUCH forSl.U,000. GtMr.a • IOOZIGJMNI 1001 r
·~R e••••e••••e•e•:···•ee•• ·······••••e••·····~··· G •• ,.. 1002~ 1002
ail...,.lllluPIC=-GOOD AS THI SW9STAllS ·-···---··• ... i;.;.--;;;;; ••• e,•ee-••e••
~.~ .•. to fmd this LUCKY buy, they
MOOOUAlln UACM could price it higher, but they want to
5oW Heated Pool
Large 2 story Costa Mesa 4 bedroom home. Heavy
shake roof. c1JSt.om bock
and tile work. Oas BBQ.
Low maintenance yard.
Hurry, needs TLC! Save
SSS. Priced only $82.500.
Submit your terms. Call
546-5880.
~~~HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
LUXUR.Y
UVIMG
3 l{u.ge BR, 3 tile BA,
den, dining room, 2 sty
w/26' open beam• ceil·
ings, tile entry. frplc, wel
bar, laundry room, over·
sized double ear, 30001q. n. oC very unique living
space. 1159,500 in Corona
delMar.
JACOBS REAL TY
675-6670
.PEOPLf ..
f>LEASERS!
sell FAST. A 3 bdrm·.,.2 bath con-
dominium in The Bluffs, going for
$117,000. Open Wed. & Thurs .• 1 to 5.
2323 V~ta Hogar.
673-4400
DMsloll of Hclw .. ,..._..Co.. ..
PROMONTORY
IAY
M..,.tleoch
Waterfront home, pier fr slip for 50' boat. Spacious
4 bedroom home wilh un·
Ullual game room with
cozy fU"eplace overlook·
inl the water. Beaut1ru1. lY decorated -iihow& like
a model home .
COLE OF
MEWPORT
675-551 I
1002 .......................
COM COTTAGE
Total charm. detigbtlully
decorated. 2 9drm. fam.
rm. top locatioo. First
ttmeoffettd. 646-7171
Ol'fN flt O • H S FUN 10 8f H1Cf 1
THE REAU
ESTATERS I ---~ ____)
LOOK THEM OVER •
IMqUIRE AIOUT OUR
I YR. W ARRAMTY
PROTECTION P~M.
EX9U1Sn1
MESA VEADE
H.8. IE.AIJTIES
3 BR + enclosed film.
rm., frplc. new cpts &
drl>S1 freshly painted in·
side k out. V ACNfi & re.ady to ao.
3 BR, lovely kitchen,
llG CAMYOH-4350,000
On 18th tee of Big Cyn golf course! s
Bdrm custom home w /rough sawn
wood exterior. Unusual architectl.¢e,
huge comf!r site. Lge recreation rm &
study, parkllke yard. exotic entrance
to home w /fish pool & waterfall. In-
formal home. Private community.
22 t.."YPRESS POINT Daily 1·5
Houses for Sde . • • •••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 ••
• . . ... •
.
'LIDO ISLE nome. 3 BR .• 2 ba., street
to stl'eet lot. Brick patio. $196,000
PEl~SULA home, l bdrms, 3 ba .•
all amenities. Lovely neiehborhOod. a
few steps from the beach. $195.000
BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR
3·l 1 Boy)1 <l1· Q,,..,,. N B ol':: t.lol
G........ 1002 GeMral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
South of HiahwQ
Qf.M DUPLEX ,.bedrm
& 1 bedrm. Preferred location. Oversized lot
with room for a large ad·
ditfonal unit. SJ..SS,000.
6'4-1Z10
IT
IS
a buyer's market! Now
is the time to buy! VA
terms! Low down! 3
Bedroom, 2 bath home in
Culverdale reduced to
only $86,900! Owner
motivated! Call oow!
RED CARPET, 754-1202
HUNTlHGTOM
BEACH
UH.DER $70,000
i -t
~
Three large bedrooms ' and den. Super priced at
569,500. Don't delay, call '
us today at 962.. 7788.
•. KE:Y . ~.
I 1\€.ALTORS •.
~
I I ·"-C F I \I I\
"I ',I'',..., ::'',_,,,\tr "''
..
• . •
'
'.
A 4 fLUS •n ram nn. nd lbrouPlJ
n1ded-fMaUid oa •
quiet cul dHac atr.e\.
Thia la &ruly '1P'l8&T
CABIN" ~~modalloo (Ol'thit "8 W DECK" . ol
pr\4:9 $79.900
J-LJll( ">TC
OLS O N . . . ARCH HACH HEIGHfS
_...,. .......... ~ ..... wlllli I ''*'"' 0 2 .... -........ o,.. MISA VERDI ..cl .., ,.,_.. ,... wtftl ._... ..._
REDUCED fl11,1u .. Q9m _. ._ .. ,_. SIH .tOo.
$4600 '1"E LANDINCi . 497·24"
Beautltully appotnted PL.AM 400 CUSTOM AREA ,
NIWPOIT t::;:c,:!~h 2 .. b!:J!cl:: Bea\1t11Ulb' nialntained 4 =A. ~g~t = ' BR, 2 BA, redwood PRIVACJ • .
HEIGHTS
luxurloua Ule entry. =~i:a:a.:t.'b '9MSS1. dS-1128 "9M812. e~:·0u:~ abed Jot. Quallb•, tustom buift, 3 ~; NOMI SITE Priced to rcrlect tocla)'1 UTeeotrY. traihco~pac• ,... ,....... btdrDl home. With
/Jn ~l[,[I
lil\ll l I bo
/\~1':JULll\I f.S
·~
--------~-... _ w/amall -n· R .. 2 market at '89,900. CALL tor " large covered I-MO ... .&. •cH beamed ceill:nllbin Udvtng . ~HI JUAN CAP ""._ ......... '"' Cute z bedroom home '7Sl~ patio.$14',900. I"'-_ t04• """' and master e rm. ~ t.M*eoUqeforintenm wi th f1'replace and .SELECT · SUMMIT formal dtnlo' rm. hMloloo. SlJ2,.500. ....................... ....................... bre&fut no. lanai, in·
TMllllHOUSE HALPtMCHIM French doou. patios PROPERTIES POPULARASPBI WOODIRIDGE z BR, den, apac. au1u.d ud air eondi· unn R•.t.•"'ORS lar&e fenced backyard~------'---NewBroadmoor courtyard, 2 car ear., ..--. B'• ~acrelot. ln For cme wbo cu afford ~~ t with trailer acceet off al· WESTSID& . with 3 beclroom.s, • fami· Laurelwood pool, clbhse, jacu:ui. cuff Ha':en. Beautiful
approz. 1100 sq.ft., 67-l 2 ley. Zoned R·2 and only . lJroom.dlnl.ncroocn and 4 br, 3 ba, 3 car ear. Cul· $98,000. Ii .w..i
bed:nn. Muican tile H · I&. undec~ 2tf~/Jr· $12,000. Family home. 3 BR. 2 · REALTYU4C. ~:,~~'C:!:v~~:.: de-sac. tMln. t.~.w~. aOMDIEALTY ~~.:,~• .,.,.,.. ~':!s~!w~at. kit:h. So.oi~~-~n~ II. jGuall l BA. huae lot. S69,SOO. 71~/146-1371 to pools. apa. parks and ~mt.45~q~ 131·9411 loyMcC_.. ,.,
pert.iq area. A must finance. Prin. only. Plcic9 ~:;;!~ding l Yr. war· ~~~~~~~~ shoppln&. Alao cable er.Sl ' · 1---------t IHltOr lllOMewport ••
see!! Aakinc S125,000. SH0,000. 648-4319 for Pra111•rU.. V.&~·l!V £.4"-·990Q S&SSPAMSH T.V. for very pleasant Logmalffda 1041 MOMARTERRACHCllAY conMaas-.112, ;; ~pt.call. appt. nt-19t0 •-• .., "" _.,tri I el '"" "''LBa en&ertalJunent. ••••••••••••••H••••~•• '
MOOOU&ILR NCWl'OltTllA04 I..,..;..;;...,........,~!!!! iiiiiiili~ OWJ • ev • -.al',"" • lm18i4EMT .• , 400£.IJ'l"'RMtlll · · --l&li•rm.formald.inrm, I Lilcenew,3bed.room, 2~ HCAHYON CJl • alfAS Euytoow~llveinone lots Of ~~~ · 5paciou& tam rm, HA.YIM bath, paneled family f!~-~ ol these 2 uruts & lot the ~\ lU~ w/frplc • wet bar, Bri&bt & alry O·Y·O room, tiled kitchen & TWMHS , tt::-=L other help pay tbe rent. Pride baside ·~~~~~~~~ custom drpe & ~graded apartment. 2 Bdrlhs. & 2 baths. Sunken llvlnC GOLFCOUISE VU
.. ..,
- -You can make the 3 Original owner home, 31! cpta tbruout. Thia bom' baths. A abort walk to room with massive brick 'lbis very exclusive 2 BR
Bdrm 2 Ba oc the 2 Bdrm bedrooms, den, ea tin& LARGE. is clean. Price just re· . downtown & the ocean. fireplace. Professionally b om e w / a a p~ c l .
--------111 1 Ba cottage your home. area. separate family ITFL COHDO duced for quick sale. Ex· Newly redecorated. landscaped. Beautiful panoramic view.ls only l " JUSTLIST!Dl 1159,500. room, brick fireplace to Great location near So. ceptional value at RANCH REALTY Great for weekends or custom home. Call on yr.yo@l,ldooksllkene>· DUPLU DOLPHIN R.E. ~arm your .toes. Handy Coast Plua & all frwys. SU8,800. Bol.sa Chica to retirement. Owner will this for real value. one ever lived in it. •
4
Bd rn &
2
bd Call 494-8181 kitchen bwlt-lns, only 3 bdrms 2~ baths loads Duncannon off Milan. 1 ___ S_S_f_.2_0_00 ___ 1 finance .•• soo. SJ.49,900. Priced at $165,000. Good. '
across e 6 ree rom u n 1120 ~ ac:H ~ 49.. •o 1#\._ 7 Of a8 6 IU ,1, ""78 r th. t t ,rm., $75,000. BKR. Call of storage & btfliy ufi· 5352 Clark Oircle. 2000+ •q FT HORIMS REALTY ~ teniis avail. Call TOM ·
the ocean! Good rental VIEW HOME. Jasmine _,. araded. Near tenn 1 _..,...._,......;._ _______ will make you comforta-, __ * __ ....., __ 5_7_*_ ~~ '-¥'.: ·~ ,........., • ..,,
area. $153,000. Creek. 2br, den. $190,000. TARDB.L court & ~ol. Better ffuqtlngton Land.mark ble m this spacious 4 673-3663 675-llW Eves Owner 644-1764 hurry as this one I.a only Coodo 2 Br 2 Ba. aduJta. bedroom bome plus a 411·3 IATHS "'THE PAUAMO .. · S79,950!545-N91 Country Club Uvin&, up· DEN In beautiful Vlewl Lee. Uv. rm. bu Elepntoome41poonds COROMA .. #I In Cdifonla•• graded lower. •.soo. GREENTREE of Irvine. beam cell .• frpl, walls of in prestigious HARBOR HIGHLANDS · _53".;.. __ 863______ eoovent~nt to parlcs pool I.lass lead to paUo & lath•-__;:~-----VIEW area. ' Bdrms ....
11leldealcombinationof v.6' E.&.STSIDE . 110"-------. and shopp(n(. Good bouse; ram. rm.; bltn. F.utNlne.3Br,2baCon· famlly rm .• f~ din·: a new home in an "'5"' RealEstate .._.. ........ _._ treewayaccesses. ldtc:h., la\Dlchy area. A do. Loft, beam cell, 1nCna.~.ts0 •
eat ab 1 is be d WouJdyouloveaDENa.s 1Wfs.4000141ff buy,$126,500 woodsy. Waab/dryer. LtDOllALTY •
associated
BA O l<ER S AflllTO PS
1<11' "' ...... J • '. t 1
all the latest appoint· nu,, one is 28xl51 PLUS Larae s Bdrm, 2 ba. huie with view of city light.a Trade luse/
neighborhood. featuring big aa a coey CABIN? NEAR MALL Sprawllnc custom home I Mission Realty 49C-o'131 Extras. $99,250. 4iM-3320 673-7300 ,
men ts . o v er s i zed spaciousness galore-4 lot. great carpets, fresh and our eoutline. 19x2'1 tioo. ~m'::! 3 yr old oi>; Niguel Shores
A ~~:t~~:!n~~&r~ ~~hu~~f~re~~a~~ :~~~ ~!~~P~r!~0ci [p~::i!>'ahllli~c~~i~ . ~Je2g!\~:'Q"~~; ~~m~=tblnv~ Sp~!'!!.a::;: re--
mlniocean view, alHuJly in lovely Eastslde .loea· below market. call i.ng rm w/fplc, sk.yUftlts. Jing. In Lag Hills $85.000 home In private com· novated ''H' plan In
landscaped, walking dis· lion. $74,500. HADLEY AEAL TY Chef kitchen bas micro, --500 --uity + cub unit r lude r mlly C'1ime Early .Bluffs. New lance to private beach. 96'11 •t'Jl'JI food lamps, BBQ inter· • ... ~H 1t• ... LTY _., ""' m y. nc s 8
.... "ltcb D u -i/li/I p ~~ ~ forLag.Bchproperty. room, 2 fir eplaces. u ... " en. rama c
NEW Slc~i~6·4f8:·72ll ,. 1Q•1Ril ~~ .. : .. }.~~43_ ..... oBoKRl. 551-2000 Zagrodzk)',Rltr. jacuzzi In master bath. UJeent.ry,.new ciJ>t'J& ,,_. ... Village Creek Townhae. .ncuuo;o::u um w-. 494-Mll Over 2600 square feet of mini-blinds tbru·out.,~ Plactr 3br. 2ba, pool, jacuui. 962-SSU UMIYERSITY PARK --------• twcW")'. 1325,000 (483> Cal.becl.ral cei.l.inaa. view~ • Prap...tM courts. l'\Jrther Info Call $94.tSO EXC&l.ENT ~ paUoon lovely ereenbelt.;
3 Bedroom, 2 bath Condo 1400 ~SJ.•1920 . T H ACH LeeAnnat957-1372 HOT TO TROT! Excitini Ed In burg MOTEL ri"tJ .--~ :ri ~ 8;·i\~~~a~oa~·:
in East.side Costa Mesa BY OWNER Cozy 3 bedroom bome model townho me w/3 Heart of Laguna loca· t;/fUlf, Own /bkr Curt t with pool & J·acuzzi! Costa Mesa 1024 wi b i i h d I bdrms, family rm. 2~ lion; itlnt condition, bkrser •• ..., .. v· '•ota Cesaueydalo. '
B ul Ide r • s s e 11 0 u t ! ••••••••••••••••••••••• OUPLEX--EISU)E Sharp 2 sty, 5Br, l:V.Ba, t t f~~.1 ore ar 1 n baths. Hu&e backyard laree pool " recreation """' .., m .500. RED CARPET,' MESA DaMAR COSTA MESA home w/new paint, cpts grea a.nu Y area, c ose w/brick patlo&fireplt. area. Short walk to 840-2821.. & drps, auto gar opnr, to schools & shopping. Wat.erfrontHomes beach. Foe infot'mation 754-1202 $76,000 Drive by 190·192 Albert ma other xtras onlY This sharp house is 631 ll" IDO ·ST to ST 48r.
HORSE RANCH
Approx. 1900 sq.ft. home on 2.19 acres. Completely
.fenced, 9 corrals.Owner
1 ' selling t>eca1a1e of illness.
Ranch style home with Pl. Please do not disturb $82~. 1122 Cbari'eston, priced to sell at sa.ooo. ·1400 ca RlvlwN R......._ tAllw ForH,t I 055 ~,.. ~ Den, rec rm. 1
heavy s hake roof, the tennanls. 3Br & 2Br. 557-4387 Hurry!! 540-lJSl Nu'l'urtlerockHigblaods ..... , ••••••••••••••••••••••• t"N'• Jacuui, 4 yra new, '
shrouded in luscious S84,Enl. Call Ken <2131 Plan 3 w/4 Bdrms,.fam 494-5671 499·ZIOO Woodside, bu&• jacuizi 4._owner __ 67_3-_77_67 ___ _ Q!~ ~~~l~::fi~.p~~i ~~c Coast Realty M~R~Rf.~3 rm~~~ rm. Avail Aµ&. SlS5,000. Rud,y by mid Sept 3br & :a. 2~ Ba. }c'' fm, a~~ DUPLEX, 3 Br eacb. •
In air conditioning, 12.13)433-4968 canL$89,950.TI1·2386 CaU?s.2-4>6l70wn/Ast. study, 2ba. Oce.,; & ca· d'~b.r~: Ho:eoiat/ Stepatobea.cb,S185,000. ~
hardwoodfloorsandnew---------• 1026 DHRFlaO nyon vu. '219,500. Sun l·Spm Vanlan Co. PropertyHouse~·3850
carpet. We have an anx· DmMI "ohtt • • &KWOOD PL.AM f.94..ST29 fi63~1~.0000~~-----t---::::::~~-.
' $130~000. i l~m,,&•tg•: •ftr.1-.• ,.. ... ,., .. ,
::::1~er, so call now. • e Tbe ······.·;·.;;&.u······· Prestige NH S&}. story s br. 2 ba, fam. FOUYB VlEW ..: V1efo I 067 PIRFECTIOM .;,
C
l!ai.JTURY Z I GoodUfe! Quality livlni close to rm. atrium, 2 frplca., 3 Bdrm, 2~ BA. 1045 •••••••••••••••••••••• UKEHEW! · -~ , In tbis Monticello in excellent gana Point beach and park. You p~o. N.r. y:ot• short Balboa, Lag Deb. SIZ0.000 WntdiffRfflty townbome. 2 Storv witb location.1·2 R, l·l BR, mu&taeethisexce5'l:ioo&I w to sch • " park. Sl32,SOO. By owner. MADRID671 Btautllully ce>Ol"Clinsted ,,. .. , one of our best. only 3 bedrm, 1:114 baU. home $87,500. Shown by appt. 49!M68Sor613-9978 B1 owner. 4 br Casa decor "Spic •n' SPJn" •
S'AVE Thousands of oewcarpets,3bedrooms $119,900: neslledooNewEngl.aruJ Occupy 9/15. Owner Sarra. Spect., un· coadlUon.S.u>ercurb ap·.
1006 Dollars. 3 BR house & ~~4:1 ~~&;,~.::rt WE.5TCOASTPACU'IC type street. Formal din· m.aweve.. 3 Fireplaces obstructed mountain " peal. 2 Stqry Buccola , owner w / c arry h C 1 REAL ESTATE inl rm, family rm, dis· Woodbr1d ... golf course vu. Walk to bu ll• home wlth 4 ,. morte age. To s e e. kite en. omm. poo • ~ 131-2800 tioctive pea and groove ae uY owner, Stroll through peaceful golf course, lake. rec • 1.JTfLE JSLAND. 2 St_y 648-3490. smallpatioarea.$81,500. noon plusbcpt.huielot new a Bd, 2ba, frplc. aa.rdenslntoanotherera. center. Prof. lndscpd, beclrootnofamilyroom& •
charm.er. aMd.I worll, cos• ... MES... BKRst0-1720 R2 ''OT with bearina !ndt-trees. $118,.SOO.M2·~afU :30 Stained glass, antiq~ beaut. decor w/all UP• ~ectJ lands.capini.St.epsk ·-
super loc. 30:d0 lot. ''"' "' i.. 19 w , 1 t 1 and ocean vistas sur· d Aft 1 kd .. o o ve Y par • SU'l .SOO T all Bill $51.000 R·2 Joe D •Luci a I A at on t •• • owner s New Woodbridl• 4 BR, 3 round you 1 n th is gra es. "' •Y• achool.This bl a pride of 67S-a8S(ta.:~ms, c Ch arm in I fa mi I y 496-5101 motivated. Call CenUtr')' Ba, 2 stY detached, cul· •uperlatlve Wood's Cove 837-8260 owners hip hoine. It -
lcAooPeninsula
1007
nelgbborhqod. Hand)' , sguoo Charming 2 br 2lSurf538-1'74· de-sac . .OWner_,iST·8440 estate. St.and in hont of Til.HSt 11\ows.OpenSaVSonlB
••••••••••••••••••••••• gourmet kitchen. 3 '#-1 In Ccitffontia home. Ocean view. t ~ lheoJde rnanUepieee and TllHSI -
•..... 0 ... 0U.LEX Spacious bd~ms. Huge Ml!A':SA YJ!atUt: uWN~K Beam ceU'gs. & lg. frpl.W~ ·v b CtMC CICJ"'U•J.HJ eazethroughtreesoutto TR&SI ~ "' r-R-2 1(>t. Don t hesitate. 174700 MOTJVATED -.Aaaum. VA loan. Better Hairtliw' I 4Z oo a· sh eer bud"et. the magnificen\ Invest in an old stan· 752-1700 • Ho RI ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11 panorama of a restless The only trees In M,V, dard. Duplex on Balboa OPfN m Y •" s nJN ro If NICf ' 3b E :b D 1 NG-k~ ~ RJ Tb H mea t)I, 4"-0748 • Br 3 Ba end condo on H l g h ly u P g r ad e d sea. HC)lt your weekend 'at fl & ex c I u s 1 v e '• r~nsuJa, 0"8 block to t · 32~·2 r~c.::t St •cfrEa~ C.I LOT· ·• poWsurround,ed bywlde =-~a:1~:.J:i;u:~ guests with a11 Intimate TIMBER LINE. A eood , ,
u., beach. 2 Bdnns. up-< HOUSE 11•6 v A OK Near Dana Pofttt Marina channels. 55 aide tte wine racK & plush crptg. tb:!:'t~::v~a: =me;t & \,.~ta,stic ..,
~a li ~1h u rtt
' • I
petJ r. atudl~ lower. Still ~ WILLHAGGLES57-.5443 on busy Coast ltlP,way. doclt. $289,900 make ob'. 2 Lar1e bed r m & let t em ent er tain rm, dir.4..:;;,~ommun'l~y•-_..;.---------....
mo lO et\JOY this I Um· ,., Adjacent lots also Hall&· A.gt 840-1.879. OWC 2nd. clo\11 undeck i 11
merlnNewport.$124,500. AFTERNOON ble. Askin& $45,000 r• 'I>!.~ • or on· the~lves in their own swimmln1 pool. The .n
MOIUHSRIALTY •ZSTORY• DELIGHT t.erma. lnlM v44 1yd.eve19U-772S apartment. or lilt's not ~o~ec:t\:!O::!r;e~~~Y * 494-10.17 * This lovely 4 BR home ... ~HO .... M ••••••••••••••._• .. •••• l.t'tllMttwortr rented, tn the separate owner. (2.1Jl393-4518 w/bonua needs T.L.C, You're going to lo•e ~ -PRIClc• .6'SHED guest house with iis own ...;;..~_..:.~---_..:.-• -...,...,,;;.....,.;;._----::.----1 Cl So Co t Pl spend.l.ng leisurely after· MISTMIMTS ~ cozy fireplace. open OceasftOfttDllDleJC onoeepril?,a: • .:. cuasl·de-A>aazca. noons danglins your toes Super 2 sty SliS home. 4 TU--EROCK beamed celli nga, Balbo i.Y ofe '" .. ... in this lovely pool. No f714t 496..7711 br, 2~ ba. Hlahly UP· '"• bard wood floor.a and a. Prinonb' p ease. F.P. SU,SOO soft. Aat. money down to qualified graded thruout. Nr. park Plan 4. P re1U1loua view decks. See this
Call6'15-5944 '7»4St4, askforTOM. veterans. CaJltod&Y! ~-Villiy I 034 & comm~ poot. Best bu1 Tw11~t Hill.I home landmark of ambience
54"3666 •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• atonl1~tq<IO.Jlurryon wtth REYER VIEW! tod.1.1. (49()) .,.. thisone.Qllnow!, Quiet cul de sac loc., ..---..-.-........ -W1 It.I. NefWoi'k walk to elem. " hi&h
tltfllelc111
U.t.L l ~lllll
963-0191 scboOI&; 4 BR, facn. rm .•
2 ba .• EXECUTIVE
HOME. Fine constrUc·
Uon. A very SPECIAL
bOme for very SPECI
•
..
llYPflOT "" .........
th ...... ... )"···· ..... D*lftllt/ ........ -•. -.... .._... •••••••••••• .......iWft.-1100 • PROILIMS7 ••••••• .. •••• .. •••••••• •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• ··-••• .. •••·--······ ~·11 • 0 321& .......... 9019 ............. 106t .... , ... , .... , ... ._ .... ~ .... bUrapetlalty. I Br ocean View bouae, Cbr' Nucrpa•n,.., Cbolce Re:ntal·lvy.,tov· Lid 1 le' N I ....................... .
.. ;.;;:;;..;_, •• _ ..... , ......................... , •..WDUPLIXIS• Cl'eatlv.11 'llancUed bJ la• Fam Rn). ltdnt.Mll· dn • Cul Ko;~. we4 kb~·· Dr. 11 a .: 2br 6 ~:'n.Y'H~:e Lonb' • br. z ba, ~c.
Soua.b Cont Pl aa artt, tral ff counttlore. IQIJUC>mo.m.-ia llHSDt.IOaTT lot.148Smo.; :-9302 patlo. Jdeal for 2 g:_. c~~~~=~
llrldeot CNnenblp.1 • • tr1~~., a Br J Ba, la• am am, er, 2N. ,tsJs mo. lit • ~..,.... 3252 met,kutoua adult.I. No ID-4.561 Aceat.aofee. br unle.. Jl\oca SIM • • Mt . : yard, 1ar, elllldra • ~ Wtr pd. ldda/pea ........ ••••••••••••u• cb.Udteft; no s-u. S'TOO. ' Call .111.en 1HICM.l.llOHCO petltOK.$425.75\""11 &~am••v• Kew uec. toWnhom~ ta 225 Via J..ldo Nord. s.t.AN 3210
Ri:ALTOU MoGUc.b Swnmll. 2 BB. m4Z:M ' •••••••••••••• .. ••••-:••
llllN Blvd, N.B. •Br. 2 ba M .. del •ar. H~~,!lltZBon .!:.__ ndmd·~~ +deb. 2 ba. '475 llObtb u_ • ......_ rn..;-4 • 8· 5 BR, 2 BA. raairrn, fplt •
"'50. "4·'1040, exi.. 15 """""" r, ·-• w ... Multl.-.-r ...... uur ·-r • a, DW, dr&•• crpts. dQ8orMO.OOOI Coiantr1 OJub Uvln1. fpJc, all amen1U... Avl. ktdl/pett K. Nice a.tea
Leuet«IO/mo. .. tM1 COMDO Sept. 11. 751·1111 or de»e to .Fnt Vlt)t 41 111
2900 ~If!nABZ:.to •Br. Iba ltulll' lm I BR, J~ Ba, w/bltb -...oinevt/wtn41. Square Prk. ·uis:
_ .... •••-••••·-·~ parklbch. ~ino. Own ma~ msiil, up1d. Mutt O/R. D/W fc alr cond•· s 8r z 1t1' twnble. pvt 9IM5e7 Aa"ent, no fee.
ROM• plut I •alta, w-.. lo aehaqe 40 ~or54UIOCSA&t. Setl"50mo.i.U1Laat. tionel'.Fullycrptd,drpd. patio. •n1c1 iar, comm $350.4Br!Ba.f I bit ~· han41nua. mot«' Miler tetclt for s:ioo 0'8. Bkr. Alk for ~to~•ln~:tfO· l'f!C. 1425. 557-5710 x5$, fncdyard 10U:.:'cbi°:ci
&l!RTHAHENl\Y t.w°:r=~J::. ~'F::f ::c~ i':a1~~~orMMI08 ~. c:'arL"L. s.fl. cbl;~~•/wttnda lrpetaOK.Nr.Htiard&
REALTORS ~y.Calls:ta-8564 yd. N~et1. Waaher· • • Frwy. Call Mr, J>aD\lco, Mn-rt•~.. 3269 ~~·atae.ti.Ylul~!:f.; 215DelMar ~ ..._ ·UP g•• -..a GreaUbr 2ba fpl,. er;: <n•~• .-.... r--__. _....... an --..-... ,f!tt • -· -· ood • kid.a • • ..................... .
,..,...,
IXCLUSIVI ....... 979-83'1Bor~ drils,goo area, pet '3BR,2ba.Clbhae W. ...-. Wet...... JUI •• ..,..._.. 1069 s.t.A89 1010 ....................... OK.S386.88J.4.51'1 Aaent. pool&newcpt.' • ~TllPllOr .. • ..................... ..
··-•••••-• .. •••••••• ....................... A.aoc.SoulhCoutBkn .._..,,_..tt.cl 38R.2BATownboule, aofee. • .,,5 Me-a't<& a BR. frplc. bl• avail SBr :ma ram home blg • PNMnta eleaant ' unit · vaeant.lmmed.occupy, .,., • ~~Yearlylta1e. b • ...... -·1 t ul ... ' Mmtyof hlnelDeoO tHldenllal bldii with •••••••••••••-••-•••• Goodcood.'315/mo. Realnlcelbr,Zba,cpta, 77•·•394 ' tT5·6189 ac..., ... "' ... e 0 -ue-aac, l ~S. Z....,. wilt townboun. For aale 1rulou• owners unit. ........... 3106 CaUL&rry.$tUBllO. drpa, a car 1ar., fenced 3 Br, 2 ba Condo, loft, ev/wtild Ideal for childNca. '375
To• .. ••• .. ...... by ow.-. L Br 1~ Ba, Plne land1captn1 ha ....................... yard, 100C1 loc. $875. ~ea~/dell, $';4°5~day · ,_mo_.'45-_U07 _____ _
hatW.tf. Cl••• te Wiq-.ooo. 711.a708 prtmearea.~. Beaut. furn. 4 bdnm .. 2 »EiA1Verd1•3 hrs, ~ .. ba. ~.A&CJJt,oofee. ~ ry mo. C'barmlllll BR, a B" as• BRJGHTflCLEAN •
___. 0.. of.._.... bat.U Bef'a.. required. poo • x nt. ..s. •lip._ 2 Sty. " yrs '"'"· 4br zt.• all . t .--S BR. 1" Ba, new crpt, .... UNITS un ..... ..:..leue.-mo. 0"1lr/Bkr MS.USS I& *LOOK... 3 -~ ba Coodo oo cbildJ'eD..0K."'1LJ:'r75. • .._ nu pam • ...,. _._-Wt. bltna, VA or FHA. T.'"'ll•voURPICK ~'=.,RE -875-3S3l &'J3.1'11' "" ........... • v•orv" Xlnt area. Near aebool.. .,, lit Sl IS,000. Try U7,t00.0waer.~~ _.. • .... _. · · 5boulleafornmt.3b"'4br Nliuel golf courae. $47~ BLUFFSCONDOS KJds, peta OK'. $46S.
IO%do In Nol'tb CO.ta Meu • .._,, 'n r'a 3107 Rent/Sale, two 2 BR + fam rm + din rm. mo.Ph41MS79 Leaael atarttn1 at $500 Joan,141-1371,MS-2S9T
wa. HO DOWtil-¥ A Xlnl rema1 an.a. Drive ............... ,....... houses, 2192 Mlnel' St $390-$S90 per mo. For MlulcM Viejo 3267 MOl\tb. AaentW.113S To•a••
WcwtdWW. lroken 4 br, A·l Bradford ~9:.u~~la, 4br, Zba. Bltn,, w1br 1325 mo er $84,.500 FP more lnlo call II.Ure or ....................... U.fwllhlled 3525
. 67M54S ~· "9,ISO. Alt-eot. dryr, • dabwahr. Sepl: 837.-S RoDM1.«)10Act. C.ASTADaSOL UDOIAYROMT ...................... .
I UMl'Ts.IALIOA June.~l2 3 BR 2 ba + fam rm. Nlc:e!br,2babom .. Frplc 2 Br, 2 Ba eondo. Spec· Brand new ipacious 2 3 Bedroom, 2 balh •
..wP'ORT caesy .. duplexes, atl 2br, Zba, eoro.. cW M• 3122 FiiCd. yard. No cbildren dabwr, Wahr & J>rn, Pvt tacular view. AtWr tpm bdrm. & den or 3 bdrm .. 3 carpets, drapes, dish·
_ T_.. I 090 4 .car encl. 1ara1e. Bu ••••••••••••••••••••••• or pets, avl 9/1. $400 mo. end or Cul-de·eac.• $M wkdya.13T.al0 ba. condo. Security blda. w a a b e r • · p o o I •
Beautifully uparaded 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• VJew.SlB0,000/dplx SBR,lce)'l'd.l\.iiblksto Callaft6PllS48-D87'1 mo.Callaea-137'7 CASTAD&SOL Leue'880Mo.,yearly. S435/moQlb. CA!.L
BR t~me w/ocean LA U R E L W 0 0 D Tom Lee. Rltr, 642-1603 bch or abop'a. 1/626-086'1 8 Br 2 ba College Park, 11191 SUD Harbor aBr 2 Br 2 B ~-A-ci..... IAY & IEACH ID·3191.
'Hew. Priced thousand• TWNHSE, 2 Br l\.ii Ba, 2 orl/fi28.G72 ea.: . ...UA ... 2 B ' l • l • -1 a ... .,,,.....,........... Blr..6.l'W'V 759·"11 I .SELECT belowmarket.1 Yr.war· paUoe, pool, tennil. etc. _..,,mo. 844-• .,..,, ext MO a . rp c, D ce tacwar view. After lpml~-~~··~ ·~~~-~~I ranty. &U-9611Aat.. Dbtreu,,......,! 1"'"9 3144 daysorMO--OOOS aellhborbood. SW mo. wkdya.837.aeG 1• PROPERTIES
VAWY· · 640.9900 lcanflndltforyou. •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• J Br 2 ba, prime area. M7.:Mllor846-U7l · .. ---------
Beach areupeclaliat. 4 BR, xlnt. cond.' $550. Frpic, dbl gar, pdnr, New 3 Br cuat, loft t...,.. leac:il 3269 Sbotedlff1, quallt)' 2 Br .. ~55 11111 r. .a~d ~~~ fflMlnilw 1091 Probates.Foreclosures, (Unfurn $460.) mo. Avl refa.$4i25.615-18'9 akyll1bta, fplc, 2 blka •••••••••••••-•••••••• + fam rm bome. L• •••••••••··~··••••••••• ~· Bankruptcies,Dlvorce. 91 ...... ~.... 7..,,..6461 W"'-o.._ " -o;;{i\ Esi~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• lnveatmentproperties. 1.-..._.Ql' _.. ~IOUS bcb. Dwntwn. $850. * .... -.FR "'* paUo & back yard, Pvt lcAoal.a.d 1706 ~ Below market price. LagllllClleach 3141 -.. • -.1 ..... ., ~ 3 BR. frplc, bltnl, avail bcba.$700/moleue. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 0Mv$60,900. WorklWldelrot&tn •••••••H•••••H•H•••• c~ r-Dix 5 B 3 B 22102 Sept.1st. Yearly lease. Udo hle, 2 br, den & Yearly lease; 1 bdrm .•
--------• Sharp 3 bedroom home. Call873""54S Priv. area. 3 Bdrm• .. 3 3Br,2Ba, bl.lgeenclo.ed Rock~ HB f8oo <oU 77'-08'; 675-8169 View$800/mol1e. S350rno, util.included DOVER SHOllS Comc&lete with new pain\~~~~~~~~. ba.; pool.SIOO/Month patio. $450/mo. ~ Barmlni nr BfookhmU. ev/wlmd Lido Isle 1 Br & den, Winton R.E. 675-3331
BEAUTIFULLY ap· ~~ag:.n~::~.~~d Dooriie49Mstl cr~Agt. 875-5'64. Uno am., callQianntngaBR,2~35· $000/molse. CostaMesa 3724
point.cl 4 bednn. 2 family rm. Wet bar. SSMaker-1.rwood Clnda'94-11T1 Eutalde fJ'ont duplex 2 982·7'188 ~Sty. 4 yra new, Udo late. 2 Br & den ••••••••••••• .. •• .. ••••
bath homt. s.p. cllnlltCJ Fireplace. Cathedral ~~! a~120i::O Mewpcrileodl 3169 ~.Living ~mth. Dinlllg, Supenharp3br,2ba.Llke OK.8'75-6775-=~ONT ROMES $40.00WHI •UP
rM formal llY rm ceilings. Hurry, won't Waldorf Dr. Mo i~come •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• Kit~ "s.ba 2~ new. W/W Clptl, drpa. BLUFPSCONDOS •Studlo&llB&A.Ptii brick fplc, 2 ca; ~·..Sent 't.· Call 546·5880, Sl500 net.a MOO OWner Fabulous 4 Bd on beach, ~· pt. l, • Lrg llv rm w/frplc. Leases startbtc at S500 Gl-1400 *TVfiMaldSer\IAvaU
na 642-882Seves co mpletely furn. Bright kit. w/dabwahr. Moath.Aseat&M·US3 •PboMServ,Htctpool garag•, landapd & •-------•1-..:.=:..=:=..:~:........:..__ $850/ mo, winter lse. 3 Br 1 Ba, iae yard, NlcelJ lndicpl Jrd. Well Harbor View Bomea, 2tl6Newport BlYd, CM
spriMlef'ed. lest buy Agent631·1400 Westaide.$375.J..aUd.ut, ~~~CW.el•-------Monaco Model, 2 Br + 543-9755or&45-3987 in this exclHIYe $59,900AMYOMI? TRIPLEX Ex 1 . IJdoT·• E damage. 64$·9219 or to .Ma-N2'7 UDOl4YFROMT deo. New cpt9, drpa, --,_-ll!...----2-1--1 h b JI d c us1ve. • ... e Xff 645-f,579 Brand new. spacious 2 palnL Gardener lac'd. -r,...... r "• 9 ° r 0 o • Arr&Dietennst.ofityour HEAR OCEAN home. 3br, 2\.iiba, F.R. 2 2 Bed.rm, l bath c.oado. bdrm.&deoor3bdrm.,3 4M480or840-8029 Pool, Mature adults, no
S 146,500. OWMr win needs. Seller absolutely All 2 bedroom unita. 3 fr pl cs corner Io t, MESA VERDE, clean J All blioa, nr all lbopg Is ba. ccndo. Security bkf&, THI ILUFFS pets. $2.50. 645-3971
hefpfinance. motivatr1h°" this strikj ~ rrom 1and. Good courtyd. Newly bullt. Br2Ba,FamRm,fplc,3 ~aoomo.88S-7888 LeaaeS990Ko~.)·earty. SBr 2~Bacoodo frplc Logmtaleoch 3748 WoridWidelrolctrs ~,!ot, :ie "''r:i rental adea.lu'O:lylt $1.500.673-2332 blbfromlboppl.ng.148$. 4Br2Bahoaie,cloHto . 14Y&IEACH ntw',c~-......... ·,.._.._.:. •••••••••••••••••••••••
673-4545 paneling~ uae':5b~ick ~000~ tra e. STEPSTOBEACH M5-7XS«557.e242 1cbool1 fl 1boppin1. REALTY 75t.011 I panell~ ~~I~ Whilewat.ervu.Hu.&e2Br. ·
frpl. Big back yd. for 3Brdplx,yrly~ ' Bdrm s • 2 b •' Great famU1 home. amt•--------scboola. Avail S•pl 1. 2ba. frplc, ''tns. extras.
kids, does or additional * * * * 8'1MT17 carpts/drt>s, bltn-tns, pet OK. sm. Aat· CaU UH/ mo. uo.aoae SSOO/mo. 836-7300 dys,
units <R 2property> SU .... SET Crplc, fncd inyd. gardn'I CU!t1a.863-088'7;980-58e ~ ...... ~.. 497..as75eves WANTED West.&i~ HWTy ! " 2 BR, 1 ba, xtra s~er in tncL $ 450. ~18 Btwn: SborecW&. quallty 2 Br ·----·
: 848-2323 HEIGHTS 1ar. Comp. furn d. Lots H Hw I"-+ fam rm home. Lg Forlse.3Br,2baoaaTOft 1200. Furn. Charming
llOM E ON WATER ~storage. Avl. 9/1 thru 1 '!"'W'-nao••-& back yard. Pvt Jot.Uk F •-• ba b be ch Util pd .w,40' ·plus, boat dock.~~~~~~~~~ FOUR.PLEX 6/30. Nr. pvt. beach. New luxury twnbse, 2br, ...._.. 3242 bd;.S"IOO/molease. calr J,':wBe~k':ib~~':; R~pe:pld~L49M200
Linda Isle, Dover Shores R-_. e............ Best buy in area across Eves: 5411·8056, Ofc. 2ba. prof decor, air coad, .. ••••••• .. ••••••••-•• Lido hie, 2 t>r, den & 87$-1900
or?? Private party only. .. m;annw from proposed park. 3 714-981·2981 attached 2-car 'gac. · WATl\'lFROMT vlewSllOO/molse. · leadl 3769
tioW-1452. Bedroom owner's unit+ OCEAN VIEW-Corona w/opener, quiet College 35' Doc:t..,Z br, 2'4 ba, Lido Jale 1 Br & den, Immac.2Br,2Baw/F.P . ••••••••••••••••••••h•
--------Mobile Hontn ForSale
2:2 Bedroom, & 1·1 del Mar. 3 bdrm, 2._., ba. Park loca. Adults only, c.ondo.teas.Mo.M&-2708 S&OO/molae. Beaut patio. ·Walk to WATERFROMT P~U~ f~~~l:b!u.~~: ram rm, pool & jacuui. no pets. S450 lse. Call Lje2 br, 2 ba rondo. Kint Lido Isle. Z Br & den Weetcllff Shopping. And water view luxury 1100 Gorgeous! For lease at ~now. • · Cond. 14 mi bch. $850. ll.200/mo t 425t mo. 844·,lH or apts. l·BR, $12JJO mo., 2
SZlO,OOO. S950/mo IA Harbor View Avail. Jmmed. 4 Br, 2 Ba. 842-9820 call between 5-7 WATERFRONTHOUES '152·1'799 • BR.. S1SOO Mo.
Hi 11 s. Un i q u e SC25/mo. M&-28'5 f« lA· p.m.. 631·1400 Ocean view Newport BlLLGRUNDY P . . ...•.•....•••.....••.. rice Keyweat '73, 24x6S', fa mi· ~ · ly paik, ~ts. 3Br, 2Ba.
Slashed! i:;:~=:·2Br2 Homes-67~. . formation. ,,.._ • • 32~ ~ _ a-est 2 & den. office, 2~ REALTOR 67"161 •
• -bat.ha, frplc, all rec. UDO ISLE, 2 Br 2 Ba, 4 br, X·lg 1ar/fDcd )'cl •H•••••••••••••••••••• arbor View Homes, facll. Dlx. $850/mo.•--------
on 4 bedroom and pool in Ba ultra CH park va·
Harboc Highlands with cant. Must sell! szt,000 REAL TY INC.·
all new camel carpet. SC 930ZXX·U. American 71~146-13~1
New price $134,950. Ideal Moblle Home~~~~~~~~~ ~. 540-1151. Services. 636-Qioo J:
.. ,~~ HERITAGE
• • REALTORS
~------~ LAGUNA Beach-l mL of
pvt. beach. Cottage style trlr. house. $8200. PP
~~~~~~~,_'99-__ W2 ___________ 1
BLUFFS Sahara !72, 12 wide, 43
• long, Npt TeTr Trlr Park.
J BR, 2 ba .. single story; 548-0348 aft Spm.
completely redec9r.
SllS,000, Or lease/option Bx31 l Br Columbia in C &
Sept. lhru Dec. SOOO.mo. Cpt/drps, new atove. MOWAITIMG, Monaco Model, 2 Br + m.2332 • STIPSTOllACH .
213-79J.OU7 After6&wlmds5'8-"61 JBR . ASS/mo deQ. New cpt9, ctrpe, 3BR,2ba t4a11'1Y
Bu ..a-AJC _ ....... -• paint. Gardener lac'cL &LEOANT Jlr"and NU, 2J3r, den, 2ba ._ 10 mo rental, 3br. newty 3 Br2 Ba, Eastslde, IDllde ~BRUClll • ., .... : 04-4880ort40-802:9 xln1area.2 atJ house nr J..BrYearty $400
furn'd. Bayabores. completely repainted, A _.. b b bd 3 b $ SPECIAL RATES
848-CSS cpt'd. Lge back yard ~=·denA/C = · THllLUffS ~ioi a 550• • For1Ummernmtals
wfabade trees. $425. •BRA/C .-c 1Br,2~Baeopdo,frplc, a BR. 3 ba. pvt. area. Avl MS-1528 4 BRA/C • i500 D/W, crpta, drps. ~ 3Br. 2Ba, yearly, 7311
--------Westside, front duplex. 3 •BR S600 =~~· l':il = ~ ~~:'75 mo. Or
associated
llPO• r 11-; Pr \L T ·p-;
10:• t'V lnjL··•' !161 ~~~lmo. U0·2039 BLUFFS WAT.ER VIEW
S BR + fam. Beaut. gat..1----------
ed cou.rtyd. Act. ~-1133 1 Bedroom with fireplace. 1se:3 Bl', 2baon a10ft
Jot, like new. For infonn.
call Jim Berksblre,
675-7900
UDO 'SLI Garat•· S450/mo. Call Apt. Gl-1400 Newly decor., 3 BR, 2 ba. al $550 per mo. M Adult park. S2300 or
A9ENT · 640-5560 best orrer. 548-6173 -_;;...-------1
SJ> 11 ~ lr Trl·Plex C.M. 3·~Br, -RANCH ltEAL TY mmac. 2 Br, 2Ba w/F.P.
Beau\ patio. Walk to
Westcliff Shopping. S425/ mo. 6.U-8184 or
home. Sou.th patio; steps OCEANl"RONT, winter
to beach, tennla 4J club. ftrltal. 2 ]Jr 2 Ba. Indry _
••WESTCLIFF3br,2ba, J..~ava · ot.hr'~·x30tr · lt,.~Baea.n2S,OOO.
F .R ., patio. Walk to yormon OJ· Ownr/agt870-0717
shops/schools. Sl49,000. 548-6173
Owner 646-01001e.ce.6z19 .u,.. for scrfe 1200 TRIPLEXES
••••••••••••••••••••••• s1'f.000Eacb
WATERFRONT , • All2BR1~Bath Newport ShQrea, 3 Br, AnenlOM •
. den 3 Ba,~f lc's, comm DEYaOPEIS Projectedannu.allncome Sl0,140-M6-1351 pool & t • $139,500, Riverside County IA Sun· Real F.ltatellart By owner. 675-6917 nymead, approx. 490
aCJW. Perfect for minJ.
S-Cle•1d• I 07 6 ranches. s Miles from
••••• •• • ••• • ••••• •• • • • • l,,ake Perris. R.C. TAYLOR CO.
tSS.OlfO CHARMING
$73,000
Will c:Oo.slder VA terms v,_. ... _ CO•~y
on this 2 bedroom beauty •-"'"'"" wllh everything. Cozy 5 Acres. fantastic view.
IirepJace, heavy abate Over 200 avocado trees &
roof, 2 car garage, room two year~ house. Xlnt.
for RV. You'll love~. terms. BKR.
BERTHA HENRY <714)17$.m7
REALTORS OR522·2080
21S Del Mar 492-4121
SUPERB Waterfront estate. 4500 1q. ft. w/apectacular 180 deg. ocean. GQJ'Oll view. 21~ down. OWO, balaJice.
S3f5,000. 412.99
FOURPLEX, Coata
Mesa. nr. Hoa.iHoeJ>ltal, all 2 br, Sl35,000. A&ent
M9-IM92
THREEUMITS
EA$,TSIDI
COSTA.MESA
Owlien unlt in reu hu )arge family room witl fireplace atld unlta are, .... .__ ______ _
551-2000
RINTALS
$850. Agt. 644·90eo , rm, avlSc!pt. 7. 6'6-2830
MEWPOlT CltlST 2 BR, 2 Ba, at.ciae frplc,
4 Br, 2 Ba, te.nnls, pool. lum or unlurn. Y~arly.
view Newport ~med. 675-87411 ---------
ELEGANT Braod NU,
xlnl area. 2 g{y bouae nr
bcb. 3 bd. 3 ba ssso.
646-103$
3Br. ~Ba, yearly, 7311
Seashore. $475 mo. Or
Call IG-0891
om 2 Br, 2 ba hm.
I Jlllr'tM, N-1 livH la.
1 ml to boeh. At. de· lu'lle n•w townbouH.
• ()plD "11·$ dally, 1401
' • Dtlaware. Huotlnston a.ch. MJ.tllOl ... lDll
• otAat. .
.'JI <.., , , I 11 '. ' t I" ;
'· : 11
.. -----
UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK
Warner &Kain OUice
Zt01S.llainSt.
Santa.Ana
"'
..
MBDH!LP1
Belp yoUtaelf to.
Beapln&selecdon ol
Qualified HOPefuls in Uie DAILY PlLOT
HELP WANTED ADS
BOOFSIOR. LESS
All t;nef. • J.ooeN FiDanc-inc. Free E1t. Lie. Bcladecl. Juurecl. Call
WOULmrTYOl1
l'ather be Salli.QI!
See clasaificaUoo 9CM50
It can be a reality!
MURSES AIDES
Exper'd.J..11& 11·7 Good salary. C.M. are~.
~l
6~
T(MPfJRll~Y HU P
•
al'SEAGOER YAWL Hcoolwu veteran cUesel aux. radio, &Ddr.
$16,000. AYIW6-9000
CAL-25 llUST SELL 1..:........:.;__;.;.._ ____ --t New boat comm., pride
of ownership, well
equipped, must see.
(114) 532·3879
ado 15' Like new.
78 Roble 16' w/trlr &: :
xtrM. XJnt cond. $1700.
Dys~, ask tor Ted,
Eves5S8·1138 ·
6' Tornado sail boat. rn-
cld'Jt.rlr. S900. • 646-2744
Santana21. Jmmac.
'
VPI Of
a· C&lDPft' ~ cabour.
-.love,. sl.nk. lee box.. 110 " 11 \!olt. heh • \le domu.tc.~
ttelwt....... 9140 ... ~ ................ .
lJm hx1 GT Del~e. Xint
c-cmd. Only 13JDI, "350
O.U ~7913 or 815-1401.
MUil sell by 112.8.
T
AMc...lllP
#l a.Cllf.
WE OUTSEl.L AU.
JEEP DEALERS
lNTJlt:STATE
HUCH tMVIMTORY
All Vodel• New la Uaed
Leaain& Available c ........
AMCJffP
2.534 HARBOR BLVD.
Calta Mesa 549 8023
• •
liARWICM 04 f\UN
I I!' ti••'• 1
l!JI 117!>1911315
WE BUY
CLIAHCAaS
&TltUCKS
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
2828HIU'b<>r Blvd •
COSTA MESA
546-1100
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP USED CARS
FOREIGN, DOMESTIC
or CLASSICS If your car is extra clean
---------1·75 Toyota Landcruiser see us first. t•Sctc:L.~/ 9150 Wgn, very clean. CB + IAUER IUICK
FOXI DELUXE MOPED,
llke new '77 w/many
xtru M50. 545-1774
radio. runs great, S4700. 2925 Harbor Blvd. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 675-2170
1973 Yamaha 80. Dirt ----------i Costa Mesa 979.2500
~
962·5056 .... ks 9 560 ••••••••••••••••••••••• "76 Hon~a Elsinore 125. 1960 vw crew cab
Low ~ties, good cond. (truck). '72 duel port
· $500... ta CZ 250, nee.<I& engine. Xlnt cond. St-995.
work. $17 S. Aft S °'" See at 179 E. 18th St., anytime on wkends. CM orcaUS48-l487 675-21662 I •
'75 Honda 550·4. Xlnt
cond. Must sell fast. Best
offer. 642·0514
73 DODGE 'Ii TON
ADVENTURER
Automatic, VS, pwr.
TOP
DOLLAR
PAID
FOi\ CLEAN
~
188'35 BEACH BL VO
HUNTINGTON BEACH
842 7781 -540-0442
SADDLEBACK
BMW
COMEIMltSH
THIAU.MIW
6JOC51 MOWUt -COMPLITI
IODYSHOP •
MOWOHtoe
SADDLllAC:I
VALUYIMrOtttS
131·2040 4tMt4f
ORAMfii COUMTY'S
OLDEST
&
Sales-Service· Leasing
Roy Caner,lnc.
Rolls koyce . BMW
1540 Jamboree
Newport Beach 64().6444
Capri 9715 •••••••••••••••••••••••
74 Silver VG, AT. AMi FM
brks.S2900.615~az _
•••••••••••••••••••••••
'73 FM. Auto, Xlnt cond.
'71 MIZ DIESS.
In showroom condition I
For the economy of
d1esel & the luxuor of a
Mercedes. US7NRN).
.~
9957 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'71 Pint.o. mags, new tires,
A/C,rJcilo.
640-0972
--------1 steering, air cond. & IMPORT CARS Yamaha '75 400 Enduro, more! (69918P). EZ
xlnt cond. 1600 mi, xtras. terms-0.A.C. l yr. parts ALL MODELS S7,500
(213)963-7255
'74 Squire, air cond, new
Other fine MercedeS in '75 Super Beetle, eoverti· tires. Call Mon. Fri. aft.
bJe. Xlnt CQQd .. AM /FM l .. •h•••1t•n-°"'9",,..... 6, Sat, Sun anytime, $900 or bst ofr. 546·3382, & labor service policy ---------
548-5920. avail. Auto Center's WE
Y-am-ah_a_'-76_1_25_Y_Z_m_on-o-.1 priceOis .... LY
53499
NEED
xlnt condition $450. "
673·8173 MAIERS CLEAN
AUTO CENTER USED CARS
Div.-Nabers Cadillac MOW
1425BakerSt.,C.M. CALL PAPPY
112 blk east of Harbor Bl
Motor Homes, Sale/ 540.9109 540-5630
Rent/Storage 9160
•••••••••••••••••••••••Clean '72~2 Datsun P.U. Must sell. See to apprec.
1970 Honda 50, runs good.
SM firm.
,545.0332 •
IOll~SO~ & so~
• LINCOLN· MERCURY
540-7058 Mike. 2626 HARBOR BLVD. SO.CALIF'S
LARGEST . 7 2 DAT s u N p . u . __ c._o_s_T_A_M_ES_A--'--
fleet of "New" Motor
Home Rentals. Over 140
1977 models to choose
from ; 18' to32'.
Insurance included
Dale's RV Rentals, Inc.
(7111559-4446
w /cmpr. Mags <Tiger
Paws), stereo, cheap!
675-8228
'73 EL CAMINO
Auto-air $2750.
552-0528 898·4022
---------111 Datsun Pkup, AMil<~M
RENT Fireball M.ll 23· cassette, air, shell, good
self-cont, plus stereo & cond. S1300. 675-8258
CB. Sips 6. 645·2283 1973CHEVY
'73 DODGE Pride & Joy, 'hTOMLOMGIED
20· motor home. imm8:c PICKUP TRUCK & loaded. 35.500 m1, $9 000 548.6896 or VS, automatic, custom
675:2000 · cab & many more extras. · (39040N). EZ terms·
'77 Diplomat 13.000 ml. All 0 .A.C. 1 yr. parts & labor
xtras. Beautiful cond. service policy avail.
Sl8,500. P/P963·1242 Auto Center's price is
ONLYS2999
MAIEltS
AUTOCEHTER
Div.-Nabers Cadillac
1425 Baker St., C.M.
\.Ii blk east of Harbor Bl
• Let · us r ent your' late
model motor home. It
makes S sense. 549·3605
Auto Senrice, Parts & Acc:nsories 9400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 540-9109
WE PAY
TOP DOLLAR
FOR NIFTY
IMPORTS
MAR9UIS MOTORS
28802 Marguerite Pkwy.
MlSSION VIEJO
831-2880 495-1210
WE BUY
USED CARS!
We're the new Chevrolet
dealership in the Irvine
Auto Center. We need
your used car!
JOE
MACPHERSON
CHEVROLET
21AutoCenler Drive
lRVINE
768-7222
~. Imported
Datsun 9720 •••••••••••••••••••••••
*DRIVE A* * LITILE ••• *
SAVE A LOT
SHOP &COMPARE
BARWICK DATSUN
'.'-\.111 111.JI) (. qtt•,f f .lf1•1
831 ·137S 493.3375
NEWPORT DAT SUN
FORTHEIEST
FLEET PRICES
Ccall Jine Needhdln
TODAY!
888 DOVE STREET
Near MacArthur
& Jamboree Roads
833-1300
BEAT THE r1t1ce
IHCR~SEI!!
89NEWCARS
.. ·~ .... :..:t.'t • u
MISSION VIEJO I MPORT;
• • I ' •
~ ..
831 174~ .J9S 170.J
AT THE OLD PRICES :.
All models now availa· -------""--
ble. Call or see us before ·72 Mercedes Benz 280SE
you buy! ! ! cognac white: Int, super
COSTA MESA
DATSUN
284SHARBOR BLVD.
540-6410 540-0213
••··~··•••••••••••••••• 'SI 4-dr Datsun. Rblt eng.
4ud1 9707 ~ or best offer. Call
•75 Toyota J.andcn.lieer, 4
• Wheel drive, Xlnt cond.
12,000 orig. mi. Call
838.TI.30
••••••••••••••••••••••• ~9560.
CREVIER
&f ST • lllOAOWAY
SAMTA A"A
835·3•7•
THI UU'IMA Tl ON'llt*O MACHltll
'74 260Z. Loaded.
radio: '4100. 5'3"'257 ' •• -...... c...... ,_ 552-82(6
Co&Uac 991 S -========--I=:-==-:::-.:-=--:::=:--:-::-=-; F\ln '75 Sclrocc0. 4 spc!, ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• 1959 Eds 1 R 6 c l '75 Wht Pint.o Wgn, lo mi,
air cond •. AM.JFM-8 trk. v · Mll5 552e5275a=Dod~e auto. R&H, radials, lug Many xtr~, xlQ~ cpnd Moo'aco: air: pwr. $650. rack, nice cond S2u.s. tbruout. $.1500 ot best of· 494 5546 Gd coods 642--~ fer. May lfacle (Qr .MBZ. · Plymouth 9960
D4)'S le ~ves. 6'4r or ~ Comty•s 1973 Gran Torino, 3 seater •••• .. •••••••••• •••••• • ;e~pys.:A~t.tiooy SeJ•cent ... , ::.s:Jn w/air. S2500 .• 70 SATELl'J'l!: ~d.
!! I • transport. Needs minor •66 f'W, ~ cOftd, 1 1''76 SIVIW '62 Ford Falcon $~85. work. 1275 or best. otr.
$750. 6TS.5858 Full power, split. power Aft.er .5:00 or anytame1_548-8000 _______ _
'75 7·p8'Sed&~' ius, low seat. AMI.FM stereo wknds. 67j·2662. '70 Duster. Runs good.
lnil&a.,.·Bhltpunkt w/ta~crwaecontrol4' 1976FORQ r usty brn w/blk int.
AM/P'M casll'ette. Ex· ~iiules. CQm?58>. GllAMADA Great transportation •
cellerit eond. Must sell. $9988 , Automatic. pwr. steering $1000646-3818
$4999. Call 831·3149 or • ·, • & brakes. air cond .• con·i.---------6;.&1 ;2134 eve an d 1'...T-L.:-venienc• paokage &
weeluind. 1~1S 20.000 actual muea.
Cad•11a (4l•PP0). EZ terms·
I C O.A.~. l yr. p~rts & la~r
service po hey av ail.
, 2600 H.1rhor Blvt.I. Auto Center's price ls
Cost,1 Mlis.1 540·9 I 00 ' OML Y $3999
MAIERS
'70 Duster
Rusty brown with black
interior. Comfortable
traveling oar. Good
trana. $1000. Stephanie 646-3818 .
AUTO CENTER PonHoc 9965
Div.·NabersCadillac ••••••••••• .. ••••··~··· 1425 .Paker St.., C.M · '73 Formula 400 nr.blrd
"blk east of Harbor Bl w/'74 eng, 30,000 ml, de-
___ 5_4_0._9_1_0_9 __ ...,. ep dlsh Cragers, i mmac.
'ti> Ford Torino Wgn. Air. pin stripe job, S4000ibst
P /S. P/B, radials, ofr.640·59S4orS36·l925
'71 Sedan ·de Ville, xlnt, AMi FM. S750. 644-0669 '68 Firebird 400 eng rblt
fuu ....,.. 1 -..ner *"""" . 7 WAGON p 'S p ·s body. ad cond. ena, nds .. ~. • .,.. '_....... 6 . / • / • little .:ork. $600/l*lt ofr • 67J.2461 aut.o. A1 c. recently over· 498-0W morns
70 COUPE DE VILLE hauled. Gd cond. $700. ---------
963-1095 llutcletitird 9970
Sharp-$1600/0ffer Good ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~· '68 T·Bird. All pwr. . '60T BIRD'"A"""' i. 1----------Transportation. S800. • 11000.....,.,.,m
equipped. Xhai eond. 64&:27« 675-7"2o ,_u:_..-__ .ea_n_49,...l-_7~---MaYerick 9941 v.-9974
'16 El Dorado Convert. •••••••••••••••••• ••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
VEGA •76
HATCHl4CK GT
--------.....-,DEMO.· 5 speed trans .•
air cond., etc.
(6505/3532). WasS3795.
ONLY DUI..
HOWARD Chevrolet
Dove & Qoail Sts.
NEWPO.RT BEACH
Sia
Presley ·Will . . . . . .
Names F•illilY
MEMPHIS, Tenn~ CAP> -
El vis-Pr&stey, w.bo c.av.e
diamonds to &irlfriends and
Cadillacs to strangerf, left his
fortWle to his family and ~x·
eluded his· former wife and his
fianceein his will.
The will, filed !or probate 1'fon·
day, likely will be "the biggest
ever filed in the state of Te.ti·
nessee," said Probate Court
Judge Josepla Evauia.
Presley, 42, was .found un·
conscious at bi's Graceland
· mansion last Tu~day and pro.
nounced dead of a heart attack at Baptist Hospital.
An inventory of Presley's
wealth. expected to be several milllm dollars, is being prepared
and court officials said it may be
longer UWi the usual two months
before lt can be filed.
· "The size and complexity ot it
Bed• laid that the alrpOrt
·came into the city as a nqn.
~onlormlna use when it was an·
n~ed in 1984.
''Tbe airport doesn't· have the
absOlute rilht to continue as a
non~Qf ormlng 11Se indefinite-
ly, .. Bonfa said.
.. It is our opinion that the eity
.can reculate land uses within its
borders ln a hon-arbitrary and
uncapriclous manner while at
the same time allowing a proper·
ty owner an adequate opportuni-
ty to reco\.U) bis investment.''
Bonfasaid. Council members directed the
attorney to take leaal steps to
close the airport after a lleb.t
airplane crashed into a building
at the aiiport Aug. 1, iQJurtni
three pei:sons. -
The ~ ·has come under stea~y criticsm from nearby
NSldents who protested VI at
they called low fll&bts', aa!ety
hazvds and no).1e. ·
Airport critics iay they bave
circulated a petition with .tb6
names of 200 residents who wish
to jOlb tbe city's efforla to dose
the facility.
AirpOrt co-owner and manager
Art Nerio has vowed to f!gbt the
city in its attempt to cloee the
~which first came into.ex-
TEN CENl'Sj
. . .
btence in 19'9 ln what wu tha:
count)' territory at Bolsa Chica·
Street and WunerA-.enue. · :
Nerio maintains tha.t aircraft:
do not constitute a baaard. He
SIJf.S complaints comdrom a f e.w
residents who have let their emo-
tions nm unrestrained.
The Oranie County Pllotl AS·. ~iatiOll is planning. a fly-in at . the airpOrt Sept. 17 to protest the:
<SeeAIBPORT,PageAl) • ·
.,
Mlaway's:
EX-wife .
rr:estifies
By TOM BARLEY Of • ...., .........
Convicted killer Edwa~d
Charles Allaway was seek.int r•
venge when be took bts rifle to
the Cal State Fullerton campus
on July 12, 1976 and shot nine-pep.
pie to death, an Orange County
Superior Court jury wu told
·Monday.
Both Allaway's former wife
and his lawyer told the panel as
the defendant's sanity bearing
got under way that he believed
she was belna forced to
participate in pol'DQ'1'~blc mov-·
ies.
Mrs. Allaway. 29 .... quotect bet husband aa telling her im-
mediately after the campus
shootings: '•1 just shot seven peo.
ple for. what tber've dOaie to you ...
~~ ~c defendw ·Ron'
BU1Jer told the lury ill.bis openiilat 11ta1-em that Allaway, 38. wu convtne:ed that his Wife wu belq
t.ortUred bJ university employea.
Butler said Allaway. whom Mi
described aa a paranoia
schiZOpb.fenic, was convinced
that bis Wife was linked in aoine
ay Withpomographic films tba~
were being privately shewn to
employes at the campus media
center.
The. jury bas already de·
term.ined that Allaway is ctilltY.
of six counts of first dear" murder, -orie of second cteeree
and two counts of assault with a
q.;adl)'_!!eflP.9P· . _ ·-·--. .. -~ (SeeALIAWAY, Page.U)
DAILY PILOT H /F
HEADING FOR A THREE-POINT LANDING IN IRVINE PARK
Skateboarder Kevin Gel11 Attempt• Maneuver
Skate Parks Face
Insurance Woe-s
By PIO JP ROSMARIN
.. IM o.llY ~ ... St.ft Insurance companies, talcing a
close look at public skateboard
parks and rising liability claims,
soon may leave cities like Irvine
skating on mushy concrete.
Brokera and consultants in the
industry say it ls already im·
possible to find insurance com·
panies willing to insure com·
merclal skateboard parks.
Irvine, and other cities with
municipal courses, so far have
obtained lnsuranc~ under
blanket policies covering overall
city llabUlty. '
Such policies lump the hazards
ot skateboarding with such seem-
ingly tamer activities as climb·
ihg the jungle gym and walking
down a public sidewalk.
But by next year. and probably
befoTe, industry insiders say, not
even the public agencies will be
able to find a domesti~ insurance
CiJrrJer to cover Uabillty claims
a~ainst skateboard parks.
'You'd have to go to London,"
says Tom Moon, an insurance
broker and assesaor who is presi·
dent of one of Orange County's
lar1est consultant firms, Ad·
vanced Insurance Markelin& io
Garden Grove.
And. Moon says he'd be sur·
prised if Lloyds of London would
charge less than $20,0QO a year
premium for covering a
skateboard park alone. "if you
could even aet it for that."
That's a quarter of the pre-
mium now paid by· the clty of
Irvine for a UabUlty policy that
includes the University Com-
munity Park skateboard ~urse,
public sidewalks' and eveorthln~
else in town.
The skateboard course was
built laat September for $3(),000.
The Citv Counc:ll ia meetlnit t.oni~t to decide whether the
course ought to be rel~ated. for
another $40,000, becauae of ~
plaint.a from nearby residents.
The city liablllty policy la due
tot renewal tn December. Tile
New York-based tnsuruce car·
rier for Irvine wlll probably U ·
elude tM akatebaard ccun~ from
the new policy. accordint to local
brokers. ·
Moon is even more certain of
that. ''I'd be willing to bet they
wlll eXClude It even before it
comes up for renewal," heaaya.
The r•ason la the companies
fear outlandiab injury awardl.
"11lere was the saJOe •ltuatlon
wlth trampolines," Moon says.
•·The sehooll had to aet rl<l of
them."
He said last vear be tried to iet
insurance to cover a 15-minute
football half·Ume performance
on a trampoline at a local school.
Cost for the insuranc&: $1,400.
The school canceled the event.
Insurance companies also fear
-justifiably -that skateboard
operators won't enforce aaletv
rules to prevent injuries.
The city of Irvine not only does
not enforce safety rules but, ac·
cording to city r4;Creatton peraon·
nel, the City Councll speclfically
has directed park supervisors to
ignore vtolatlohs.
Object la to avoid reeo1nlzln1
any specta.J b•iarda in a
skateboard park. ot t\o more than
other park equipment. Such
acknQwledgement mi1ht be uaed
agai"'t the city in a liability
lawsult.
At the University Park course.
three signs advise skateboarders
lo use \he CO\U'H at their own
risk, and wear elovea, helmet,
shoes and knee and elbOw pads.
A recent inspection of the
course. when about 20 cllildren
were usin& it, showed that while
some wore knee pads, none wore
helmets, gloves or elbow pads.
Since February, when the
parks department began keepln1
skateboard injury records, only
five have been reportea: a cut
knee, two broken wrists. a
broken ankle and a guhed
forehead.
A 11ingle skateboard lawsuit
over injuries la pending against
the city. It asks $5,000 and
medical costs. ,
Moat injuries, though, 10 un·
reported. The children are afraid
the city would close down the
skateboard coara•.
Therein ts perhaps the greatest
paradox in the skateboard liabll· .
typroblem.
It Imne ls forced into 1 aelf·
inaural'ce proaram for its
' skateboard course, or to pay
astronomical premium a, the con·
crete dips aft4 runs probably
would be filled in.
· Asl<ed where he'd skate lf tb11t
happened, on• boy at Univenlty
Park a aid, ''Oh, I'd 10 over to tbe.
Flower Street hill. That•a the
neat one. It's off the Santa J\na
Freeway. Yoµ know. that one
where that kiil cot kUJed ...
B130ANNB BEYNOLtJS
Of .. hlty ....... ""
U.S. Seer Service agent.a.
atrlldn& early today. claim they
have •mashed a Lot Alamitos·
based countcrleitlng ring in the
midst of production of f7 million
worth ot phony $20 and $S0 biUs.
Robert Polls, special agent in
charge or the service's Los
An1etes office said thr'e men
have been ta.ken fnto custody in
connection with the ring which
was operating out of Vanguard
Automated Gl'aphics, 10013
Bloomfield St.
But Polls noted that the shop
owner was not involved with the
bogus money operation. He said
the owner rent~ the-business to
two ot the arrestees. Elvin
Baker. 60 and Steven Blash Sr ..
53, both of San Dle10.
The th1td man arrested was
Robert $amuel Lewis, 54, of
Panorama City who was taker\
int.o custody at2:30 a .m . today as
he irrl ved at the print shop.
Polis said the month-long in·
vestigation was launched when
Blash, who had a previous coun-
terfeitini convicti9n in 1971, ap-
proached •n unidentified Los
Angeles resident in an attempt to
buy paper and l~.
He said all three ring members
were k~ under surve!Uance for
the month which end~ at mid·
night when agent& raided tbe
print shop and confiscated
$l!50,000 worth ot half printed S20
and$50billa. .
Baker was arrested at that
time. Blash wft taken lnto
custody at 3 a.m. at bis home in
San Diego. .
Polls said no bills have ever
been passed but he alle1ed the
1roup ln\ended to print f7 million
worth and to pus the money Jn
Mexico.
I P,....PageAJ
AIRPORT •••
city1s acUo~
A spokesman. aald the pUott
will eive Nerio a plaque for bis
aervic• to Orange County avia·
Uon and contrlbut~ money forbia
te1al fi&ht with the city,
Bonla ·said that evidenee pre·
sentecl at various public heJrtnp
could lead to the conclUAiott that
there are excessive numbers of
planes permanently based at the
airport.
In a report prepared for Clty
Admlnistrator Bud Belsito, Bon·
fa alaosaldt
-NIGHT TAKEOFFS and
landings are most disturbing to
nearby residents.
-THE AIRPORT hu no full·
time resident manager. -nm 1J8'; OF the premises ii
on a catch·as-catch can·basis.
He said there is no 'f'adio con-
trol, radar or other navigational
ald1 prden~ eJCcept for u ll·
Juminated wind sock and some
runway liahts.
Meanwhlle-, Tom WhalJng, an
attorney who will run , it&ainst
'Qohfa in next April's 1 elections,
rlaya he questions Bonfa's etfec· liven~. He says he will-ask the
clty council to take tbe rnatt~r
out ol Boni a 'a hands. ·
Bonfa saya his office is capable
of handling the~itµatlon.
Mvor Ron Pattin5on aald be
doesn't want to meddle lnto ••a
pollt.icatthini" between the two
men.
''Bonfa has a staff of nve at·
torneys. I am sure that one of the
five, if not Bonfa, cab handle it,"
Pattinson said.
Drleer Wallced AK'f111.
"
Motorist Felipe Barrera. 27. of 802 Knox·
ville Ave .. Huntington Beach. was only
slightly hurt Monday in this 2 p . m. cteci~
dent on Sah Diego Freew.as-at Bristol
Street in Costa Mesa. California Highway
P.atrdl said Barrera clipped big truck and
trailer rig driven by Greg Tonkinson. of
Tustin. while p assing it, ricocheting off
rear tire and rolling ovtt. Barrera ••as
treated at 1\tercy General Hospital. Santa
Ana,. and' released.
'Sam' Pleads Innocent
Suapect Arraigned in New York Hoapital
l"EW YORK <AP> -At an un·
usual arraianmeni tn a Brooklyn
hospital prilon ward. an attomey
entered innocent plea, to4aY to
murder and assault char1es .
which David R. Berkowits, the
rp an accused of beinl the Son of
Sam killer, faces la Queens.
In a pr~eed.lng at the Kings
County Hospital prison ward,
State Supreme Court ,Justice
Leon Brown presided over a
quiet 16-minute session that
sharply contrasted wltb last
week's arralcnment in a
Brooklvn courtroom on ctiaraes
in a elxth attack -thai one in
Brooklyn.
Berkowitz ie charc~ with be·
ing the nleht stalker wbo ·would
fire into parked cars In which
yo~ men and women Ht. m06t
often m \Oven' lanes. Tbei-e wer~
elx attack,s ln all, and th~y,made
many youn1 peOple tn the dty
afraid of belna alone at tll..lht
with a date.
orn~lals decided that arraign·
mmt ln tile Quetns ~••es would
be ntore orderly at the hospital.
where Berkowiti la undetcoing
peychlatrio teeu.
ln today's prooeedings.
Berkowiu was accuted ol two
murders, five assaults, seven
attempted murders and five
wea~ charges stemming from
ttie Queens asaaults. JI) the
Brooklyn attack, Bukowltzis ac·
oused of murderln1 ayoung
woman and injurln1 a young
man. .
The plea in th~ Que.ens cases
was erlttred fot &er owita by Ira
Julta.k, his attorne)'.
Berkowitz, <lreastd In Jreen
J>ajiuna bottomal blue pajama
top. blue and wb;itt terry.cloth,
bathrobe and white altpper ... wa~
expreaslonlesa throughout the
proceedlnp.
.Ju1'ak said afterward that
the onJy word Berltowtti apoke
during the pr~ee41n• wu to
answer "Okay•• when· the at,
toroey asked blm bow he was
feeUni.
About 30 reporters were seated
in the rear of the makesbinsixth·
floor .courtroom. ~ven artists
were allowed to sketch the SUI· pect. suWd OJ1l1 fln feet away.
Th~ were at least 17 ottlcers in
the courtroom, called the incom·
petency room of the prison ward.
Brown ordered that Berkowitz
be remanded to t.be hospital at
least until Sept. l, "for the
puTJ>OSe of medieal exaJllina· Uon to detennble bis cotQpeten·
cy... The Judie said be would
bold a competency hearing or set
a trial date Sept. 1.
Patty Frowned
Robbery Trial 'No Lark'
~EW YORK <AP) · Patricia Hearst ne\·er
smiled before the cameras during her 1976 bank rob·
bery trial because her attorney said such pictures
would make the public "thlqk she was frivolous" and
look at her trial as .. a lark." writes Janey Jiminez.
· The Cortner {f .S. marshal who spent 350 hours
with the newspaper heiress has written a ·book ••My
Prisoner.'· which is condensed in the September issue
of Ladies Home Journal.
She wrote ... The Patty Hearst I came to know ts ~
·far cry from either the devU caricature perpetrated
by the SLA or the demure anpJ fuhloned b~· her
lawyers.''
The account also claims Miss Hearst was upset
about a book written by Steve Wee, tier fiance until·
she was abducted by the S)·mblonese Liberation
Army.
Weed said he told the SLA members during the
abduction. "Ta~~ anything you want but lea\·e us
alone." .
Hearst was quoted as saying "Weed's words were
• ... and lea\·e me alone.· If you really love someone.
· how can you say, ·Take ever~·thl.ng but leave me
alone·~ ..
The Jury must now rule ()I\ his mental condition at the Ume of
th• campus shootines.
•
, .. ...........
Insurance companiea, lPinj •
close look at public skateboard
parks and rislnc habillty cl mt,
soon may leave clUei llke Jrviae
skat.in& on mushy concrete.
Brokers and consultants in the
industry say It is already lm·
possible to find insurance com-
panies willine to In.sure com-
mercial skateboard parka.
even the pubUc aeeneies will be
able tb flnd a domestic insurance . urrter to cover liability claims
uainstskateboard parks.
"''You'd have to 10 to London,"
says Tom MQOn, an Insurance
broker and assessor who is presi·
dent ol one or Orange County's
larsest consultant firms, Ad-
vanced Insurance Marketing in
Garden Grove.
And, Moon says he'd be sur-
prised if Lloyu of London would
char,., less than $20,000 a year
premium for coverina a
skateboard park alone, "if you
could even get lt for that."
That's a quarter of the pre·
mium now paid by the city of
Irvine lor a liability pollcy that
includes the University Com-
munlty Park skateboard course,
public sidewalks and everything
CSeeSKATE,PateA!).
away Belie~ed Wife
'Forced'. Into Porno
--Yamily t,o Benefit
Harbor was doing twice as •·ell but the
voung women up front doubtless consider
themselves more than (igureheads.
Revenge
Killing
Motive?
HEADtNG FOR A THREE·POINT LANDING IN IRVINE PARK
Skateboarder Kevin Geiss Attempt• Maneuver -----
Suit Settlement
The Jrvtne Company is "en·
co~a&lnc" a tentative pro~al
to ;"bUi14 VP to l,400 low and
mOderate incomt apartments on
l.:nclnowapartQfUCirvine.
The proposal was outliried in a
memo to lrvine city councilmen.
privately han<kd te> them by
Rayl'Dond Wat.son, former Irvine
Company president, who is now a
compm7 cOrlsultant.
It is an attempt to setUe out or
court a lawsUi.Uiled in 1915 which
has slowed development of the
Irvine lnd\Jstrial CPIJ\plex. It would require the mutual
arreement of the Irvine Com-
pany, t~e cit)' of Irvine, UC
Irvine, and the plaintiffs in the
lawsuit -the Otange County
Fair lloUsirtg Council and seven
Irvine residents. Wesley· Mah, a spo1<~J"man
'fc>r: tM Plaintiffs, said the lawsuit
.. cballenge1 the policy bf the city
aad the lnirie Company to
recndt industry on a massive
scale and then not make ede-
q uate provision for bousine
oeedSoUbeworkecs.'! _
Marx aatd the new pro~als of
Watson'• memorand.um "are
certainly wort.by ol serious con·
sideration ..• tbe numbers ol
unit.I in lved bear a meaningf:ul
relatibbshJp to the maanitude OI
the need.a they've created.''
The memorandum actually
outlines two proposals. Marx said
be would favor a propo1tHbat up
to 1,400 low and moderate rent
apartments be built on land in
tt1e southeast Irvine carppus
bordering Bonita Canyon Road.
Up to 700 of the units would be
reserved for UCI students, facul·
ty and staff members~ The re.st
would be available to members
of the general 1tubllc with low or
moder,te incomes.
The second proposal, more
· llmtted;-waut<hetllstde'·some32
acres lor as long as 12 years for
the dnelopment of '100 aP.art·
ments for small budget farrulies,
subsidized by federal sources.
To qualify for th• .ubsidy pro-
gr ams, the Irvine Company
would sell the acrea,e lor only a
saiafi sum, oi even afve-lt away
free.
Irvine Company officials
would not comment further on
the Watson-delivered memo,
saying "We don't do any
negotiatlna througl(the press."
However, 1-rvine Compny
President Peter C. Kremer is-iued a t~rse statement: "We ate
encauraalnc it u a prelimlaaey
propceal, on4! that IS subj~t, ob-
viously, to further refinements
by vanous pait.les of concern."
Untver$ity of Californf a ot-
fklals rei:>OtUdiy plao .. ro· meet
with tho lritne Company aides to
diseuas the proposal.
............. ,_,.8_
Luci Baines !'\u ge nt .
d a ughter of the late presi -
dent Lyndon Johnson. holdi:.
on to her hat at St. Croix in
the Virgin Islands. She and
her mother. Lady J3ird. are
\·acationing.
Autopsy Says
Heart Attack
Killed Diver
An autopsy performed on a
Tustin man, stricken Sunday in
the water of South Laguna's
Three Arch Ba y, confirmed
earlier reports that he died of a
heart attack, coroner's deputies
said today.
Richard Caley, 30, an Orange
County district attorney's in·
vestigntor, was pronounced dead
on arrival at Mission Community
Hospital, where he was airlifted
by Marine helicopter.
Lifeguards said Caley had
complained to a scuba diving
partner that he was having dif-
ficulty breathing. His friend
towed him through the water to
some rocks, but by that time
Caley was uncons'cious.
A sailboat's occupants saw the
two men on the rocks and notified
;J • lifeguards, who worked with
other emergency peraonnel. to
try to revive Caley.
During the rescue, more than
Sl0,000 worth of paramedic
equipment was soaked by waves.
"Fortunately. the radio is
waterproof, so we were able to
maintain contact with the
hospita l,·· a South Laguna
parame<Hc said.
Caley joined the family sup-
port division of the county dis-
trict attorney 's office about four
months ago. Previously, he was a
decorated member or the Tustin
police department, where he
worked six years.
F.-..Page·AJ
ELVIS •••
"There was no discussion. All I
did was sign It."
Miss Alden s aid In an Interview
after Presley's death that they
planned to announce their
engagement Aug. 27 at a concert
in Memphia.
Summit Due
PRETORIA, South Africa
<AP> -Rhodulan Ptlme
Minister Ian Smith wlll meet
with South African Prime
· Mtniater John Vorster here
Saturday, officials announ.ced to-
day. The iueeUng coincides with
a 15ummlt ol the flve .. 'front-Ur,e"
African pres.dents in Zambl~
and raised apeculation about QeW
diplomatic etf orts to reach a
peaceful aettlemw in· war.torn
Rhodesia.
DAILY PILOT
WASHINGTON <AP ) -The
Eneray Reeearcb und Develop-
ment Admlnlatratlon haa rt·
vealed that enough uranium for
at least 10 nuclear weapons waa
"loat'' ln the early 19llOI, tht
W uhlncton Star said today.
The Star said documenta re-
leased by ERDA 1howed that in·
vt'stieators of what wu then
ERDA's predecessor, the Atomic
Energy Commission -suspect·
ed since 1960 serious losses of e nriched uranium beln1 proc-
essed for the U.S. government
by the Nuclear Materials and
Equipment Corp. -NUMEC
at Apollo, Pa.
uranium mlsaina, ol wbicb 208
pounds could not be accounted
for lhfou1h normal plant opera·
Uons. ·
The Stir said JfUMEC even-
tually paid the AEC $1,344,000 for
the l08t uranium.
lta report sal~, "Althou&b it
cannot be stated with certainty
that theft or diversion did not
lake place, the survey team
found no evidence lo suggest
those posslblllUes."
Jn explainlnl why the AEC
waited five years to investigate
the suspected uranium losses, a
memo by Brown said, ·"It ap-
pears that responsible personnel
apparenUy believed that they
had less. authority and power to
force Improvement than In
retrospect lt appears they ac-
tually dld." ~
The ex,ploelon of the Chinese
nudear w,apon In 1984, raial.Qe
the question of where the Cblneae
got their bomb-1rade uranium,
prompted a re·examlnatlon of ·
U.S. policies which revealed a
gap in procedures for keepln1
track of nuclear materlall.
There was no way, the ln-
vesti1alion found, to detect ex-
cess shipment• of nuclear .
material out 6f the country by a
U.S. company, in "colluaion"
with a foreign customer.
Aerial recoMalssance abowed
that the Cbillese bad built their
own uranium enrichment plant.
,
But memos from the mes of
Howard C. Brown Jr., then assis-
tant general mana1er of the
A EC. showed the agency did not
press the company about the
losses until 196S, a yeat after
China exploded a nuclear
weapon.
The company was known to
have business dealin1s w(th
several French firms and was
described as "sales agent for the
government of Israel.'·
Irvine HlUl Six in Surplru
The documents indicated that
NUMEC's owner, Zalman M.
Shapiro, told the AEC most or all
of the missing uranium was mis·
takenly buried as waste material
at the plant site in 1963.
But when the AEC required
him to dig up the burial pit in the
fall or 1965, the files showed,
Shapiro could locale only about
10 percent or the uranjum he was
looking for.
In November 196S, an AEC sur-
vey searched the plant and re-
ported 382 pounds of enriched
If you've been looking for the
ideal vehicle to take you and 83 of
your closest friends and familf to the countrys ide, the Irvine
Unified School District may have
a deal for you shortly.
Trustees meet at 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday to decide whether to
sell off six district-owned school
bu s e s. Two buses hold 84
passengers;. the rest are for
s m alter groups of only 66.
The district. which maintains a
fleet of 13 buses. contracts for 25
more to transport students. Only
seven district-owne.d buses are
used on daily runs.
The six for sale are surplus,
district officials said. ·
Also on Wednesday's agenda is
the naming or two schools In the
North and Northwest Wood-
bridge areas.
. By popular ballot choice of
Woodbridge residents, the likely
new names trustees will select
are Woodbrld1e Elementary
School and Woodbrid1e Middle
School.
District trustees also will con-
sider a self-funding workers
compensation lnaurance pro·
gram, to cut costs.
'Sam' Pleads ·Innocent
Suspect Arraigned in .New York Ho1pita/,
NEW YORK <AP > -Al an un-
usual arr3.ignmeni in a Brooklyn
hospital prison ward, an attorney
entered innocent pleas today to
murder and assault charges
which David R. Berkowitz, the
m an accused of being the Son of
Sam killer, faces in Queens.
In a proceedinc at the Kings
County Hospital prison ward,
State Supreme Court Justice
Leon Brown presided over a
quiet 16-minute session that
sharply contrasted with last
wee k 's arraignment in a
Brooklvn courtroom on charges
in a sixth attack -that one m
Brooklyn.
Berkowitz is charged with be·
ing the night stalker who would
Cire into parked cars in which
young men and women sat, most
often in lovers' lanes. There were
six attacks in all, and they made
many young people in the city
afraid or being alone at night
with a date.
Officials decided that arraign-
ment In the Queens cases would
be more orderly at the hospital,
where Berkowitz ls undergoing
psychiatric tests.
In today 's proceedings,
Berkowitz was accused of two
murders, Cive assaults, seven
attempted murders and five
Appointment Eyed
For School Post
Saddleback College Board
President. Larry Taylor said
Monday he will press for an ap-
pointment rather than an elec-
lion to fill the seat expected to be
vacated next week by Tustin
Trustee Frank Greinke.
The Tustin board member has
confirmed bis plans to "make an
announcement" concerning hls
resignation at next week's
trustee nteeting. He is planning
to move to Santa Barbara County
in the near future.
however, the appointed trustee
could not be seated for 30 days.
During that time, Tustin resi-
denta dissatisfied with the choice
can petition for an electi~.
Taylor said he would push for
an appointment soon atter
Gtelnke submits bis formal.
reslanatlon. -
"I would hope the board would
call for letters and resumes Crom
everyone in that area who is in·
terested and not necessarily
anyone who fits a particular
political persuulon," Taylor
edded. I
Grelnke's term of office is not
due to expire until February of
1979.
weapons charges stemming Crom
the Queens assaults. In the
Brooklyn att~ck, Berkowlu is ac-
cused of murderln1 ayounc
woman and injurln1 a youne
man. · .
· 'l'be plea in the Queens cases
waa entered for Berk0wlu by lra
Jultak, his attorney.
Berkowl~, dressed ln ~
pajama bottoms, blue PtJama
top, blue and Jt'hlte tenoy-:elothi
bathrobe and white 1Uppe.n, WU
' expresaionle11 tbroufhout tbe
proceed.ln1s.
.Jultalt said afterward that
the only word Berkowitz spoke
during the proceeding was to
answer "Okay" when the at·
torney asked him how he wu
feeling.
About 30 reportera were seated
in the rear or the makeshift sixth-
floor courtroom. Seven artists
were allowed to sketch the sus -
pect, seated only five teet away.
There were at least 17 officers tn
the courtroom, called the incom-
petency room of the prison ward.
Brown ordered that Berkowitz
be remanded to the hospital at
least unUI Sept. 1. ..for ttie
purpos') of medical examina-
tion to uetermlu bis competen·
cy." 1be Judie aaid he would
hold a competency hearinc or set
a trill date Sept.1.
•.; • Canal Talk
WASHINGTON (AP) -Tbe
chief White Houae apok•man
said MonCSay the Carter ad-m lnl1traUon la c"ountlnf on
senators to vote "ln tilt belt ln·
.terett.S of Ute counU')''' on tbe
Panama Canu lt'eaty.
D811yPlllCIUff .......
\.JO
OVER THE RIM, LOOK OUT STOMACH, HERE I COME
Mike Zalt of Irvine Showa How to Do tt Right
F ... PageAJ
SKATEBOARD PARKS. • •
else in town.
The skateboard ~ourse was
built last September for $30.000.
The Clty Council is meetlntr
toniibt to decide whether the
course ouebt to be relocated, for
• another $40,000, because ol com-
plainta from nearby residents.
The city liability policy ia due
for renewal in December. The
New York-based lruaurance car·
rier for Irvine will probably ex-
clude the skateboard course from
the new policy, accord In& to local
brokers.
Moon ls even 111ore certain ol
that. "I'd be .Ulin1 to bet they
will exclude ·it even before lt
eomes up for ren~. '' ~ 81)'8• n. reason ls the companJ•
fear outliJi4lah lilJ~ *'!~·l' · '"'Jbere WU~ •&.ent ~
with trampolines •• Moon says.
''Tbe scboola had to &et rid ol
them."
He said last vear he tried to iet
insurance to covet' a IS.minute
football half-time performance
on a trampoline at a local school.
COil for the insurance: $1,400.
The school canceled the event. .
Insurance companies also (ear
-justifiably -that 1kateboard
operators won't enforce saletv
rules to prevent injuries.
The city of Irvine not only does
not enforce safety rules but, ac·
cording to clty recreation person·
nel, the City Council specifically
has dlretted park supervisors to
i1nore violations.
Object la to avoid reeosnilinl
any special hazard• in a
skateboard park, or no inore than
other park equtpment. Such
acknowledgement mlebt be used
again.It the city -in a llabWty lawsuit. . ·
· At the University Part course,
three signs ad me skateboardel'S
to use the course at their own
rltk, and wear 1toves, helmet,
•hoet and knee and elbow pada.
A recent inspection of the
course. when about 20 children
were ustni it. showed that while
llQtne wore knee pads, nOC'e wore
btlmeta, gloves or elbow pads.
• Since febnaary, wlien the
para department beran teePtns
skateboard Injury reeordl, onlY
llve bave been repol:MillS: a cut llnee, two broken wrtat1, «
~roken ankle and a •aahed
for$ead. .. • ,
• A aln&l• akatebOUd lanUlt •
over JnJUrtes ti ~CUD' q&iDit
the cit)l. It asks SS,000 and
medical costs.
Most injuries, though, go un-
reported. The children are afraid
the city would close down the
skateboard course,
Therein is perhaps the greatest
paradox ln the skateboard liabiU-
ty probiem.
If Irvine is forced into a self·
insurance program for its
skateboard course, or to pay
astronomical premiums, the con-
crete dips and runs probably
would belUled in.
Asked where he'd skate if that
happened, one boy at University
Park said, "Ob, I '<J go over to the
Flower Str~t hill. That's the
, neat one. It'• off, the Santa Ana t;reewa,y. You know, that one · Wher.e that kid 80t killed, I•
F~PageAJ
SUPPORT. • •
' •
l
.
Revenge
BJro•BAllUY ... ...., ........
Convltted kilter· Edward
Charles Allaway was 1eekiftC re-
venae when be toot bi.I riO to
the Cal State FulJ rt.on cam
on July 12, 1'71 and ot nine peo.
pie to death, an Orance County
Superior Court jury wu told
Monday.
Both Allaway•s forcner wife
and his lawyer told the penel as
the defendtnt'• sanity heartnc
1ot undeT way that lle believed
1he was beinC forc41d to
participate 1n pomoaraphlc mov-
• tn.
Mrs. Allaway, 29, quoted her
husband as tel1ln1 ber im-
mediately after tbe campus
1hootin1s: "I ju.st shot seven peo-
ple for what they've done to
you."
Deputy ptJblic def ender Ron
Buller told the W'y in bia opening
statement that Allaway, 38, we.s ·
convinced that his wife was beilli
to.rtured by university employes.
Butler said Allaway, whom be
de1crlbed as a paranoid
schizophrenic, was convinced
that hla wife was linked in some
way with pornographic m.., that
were beinC privately shown to-
employes at the campus media
cent.er.
The jury bu a1ready de·
termlned that Allaway la ,UUty
of six counts of nrst degree
murder, one of secobCI desree
and two counts of assau.lt With a
deadly weapon.
The jury mu.st now rule on bis
mental condition at tbe time of
the campus shootlnrs. •
Butler said the shoottnp were
the climax to a lone hlst.Qry of
psychiatric problem~ that were
I
aggravated by the remarks of
fellow employes on the FWlerton
campus.
"He told the jury that co-
workers jokingly told Allaway
that they were having sexual re-
lations "ith bis wife the night
befote and that several accused
him of being homosexual. Mrs: Allalt'ay testtned that she
left. her husband on Memorial
Day weekend in 1976 when his in·
i CUSD A.gaifUt. t;ays?
.Just Crtddtag
SaiJing ships that rounded the Horn· with
exotic car10 bound for faraway places
.carried a female form as a figurehead.
·This Robie Cat cru1smg lazily in Newp0rt·
Harbor was doing twice as well but the
young women up front doubtless consider
themselves more than figureheads.
By JOANNE REYNOLDS proached an anlde fied Los °' ..... .., ...... ..., Angeles resident in an attempt to
U.S. Secret Service agents, buy paper and ink.
striking early today. claim they He said all three riqg m~mbers
have smashed • Los Alamitos· wereltept under~uneill~or
based counterfelting ring in the the month which ~nded at mid·
midst of production of $1 million night when qents raided the
worth of phony $20 and $50 billa. i>rint shop "nd confiscated
Robert Polis, special agent in $1~.ooo worth of half printed $20
charge of the service'a Loa and $50 bills.
Angeles office said three men aaker was arrested at that
have been taken lnto custody in time. Blash was taken into
connection .wltll .the....rili& 'lllfhi.cb ·ct1stOOy..e\.3·a111\, a' Mf.home iR
was operaUr?I out or Van1uard, Son Dleio. _ ~
Graphics, 10013 ... Polls said no bills have ever
been pa!l.sed but be alle,ed the
croup intended to print $7 mUUon
• w~rth and to pass the ~one, in
Metlco. •
RENO, Nev. <AP> -It is
tough enough for a rodeo
rider to ~t through the
gates ()f'l a Wild bronco, but
even tougher if he's com-
in1 out of the eloset at the
same time.
Such was the case at the
Gay Rod~ here, a town
th at· s J> r o u d· of its ·mucullne, rough 'n' tum·
bl~. shoo< 'em up image.
There were rumors that
gangs of rednecks planned
to disrupt the two-day
event at the Wuhoe Coun-·'\y FajrfroUnds, but apart
from a Jnint.ster dlstribut·
ing anti-gay literature. the
moaUy gay <:rowd of 1,000
was undisturbed. •
.~
By ANNE COOPER Bachelor said he e>tpects
. oi•o.~f'l ... 1teff • Capistrano trustees to vote on
Capistrano Unified School DLS· whether to send a support letter
trict trustee Robert Bachelor has at the board's Sept. 19 meeting.
asked the school board to send a The item is on the ROP board's
letter to State Sen. John B.rig's Sept. 14 agenda.
(R-Fullerton), supporting his bill Briggs received national to pr.event homosexuals from pubUcity when be campai&ned in
teaching. Florida with Singer Anita Bryant
Bachelor bas made the same against a Jay rights ordinance
request of . the Capistrano-He has said his bill would let
Laguna Reetonal Occupational local scl)ool hoards refuse to hire
Program CROP> board, on which "known homosexuals." be serves.
"I haven't read the bill, but I
don't think homosexual living is
right," Bachelor said. "I don't
believe homosexuals should take
an active role before children,
for them to grow up and
emulate.'' ·
CUSD Supt. Jerome Thornaley
and ROY Chief Administrator
Jerold Simons have said they will
make copies of the Briggs bill
available to board members. ·
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -
Elvis Presley. who cave
diamonds to girlfriends and
Cadillacs to =stran1ers, left his
fortune to hla family and ex-
cluded ms' former wife iind bis
fian.:ee in bis will.
The Will, filed for probate M~
day, likely will be "the btaeat
ever flied in ·the state of Ten-
nessee,'' said Probate Court
Judge Josepb Evans. ·
Presley, 42, was round un·
conscious at bis Graceland ..
It also would allow a school
board to fire a teacher for
homosexual conduct, whether or
not it involved a child.
"Teachers should be the finest
people the school district can
find, because they set an ima1e
for the children they teach," said
Bacbelor.
."Personally, I think tt's a
aha me teachers don't have to
(SeeSUPPOBT, Page Al)
duiirij a 20-mmute se1sion Defore
.Judge Evau. The elder Presley,
Mr. and Mrs.. Smith and Hodge
were 'present at the fillDg.
In bis will, the singer directed
that the net income of bis estat.e go to his father; his 9-year-old
daughter, Lisa Mar-le.; hls
grandmother. Minnie Mae
Presley; and "such other rel-. .
,.
t'
creaslnf acitatlon fripten~
her .
She testified that he 'tlad·recur .. rtna dreams about her hav~
sex witb other men and told h4W
that be bad been told of the parts
she played in pornographic mov·
ies.
And she testified that Allaway
teleptloiied her on the mornin.8 f1I.
the shOOtints and told her that be
(SeeAUAWAY, P.aieAZ)
ranyPI ... ....,,.....
SUPPORTS BRIGGS BILL :-
Trustee Bachelor · .-
atives or mine living at the tim«
of ipy death who. • .are in need
or assistance for health, edoca·
· lion, suppo~ c:.mfortable main•.
tenance and welfare."
Ttie will directs that Vernon·
Presley .receive his _son's. personal property, .. including
trophies and other items ac-
cumulated by me during my pro.
fessional Cl\l'eer."
•
,
•
ll1C
Saddlebad: Colle,. Board
PreaicMnt Larry T•)'l01' uld
llondQ he will pra1 for an ap-
fCMD.lrMm rather tbu an tkc·
lioo to nu Ow Mat u~ to be
vacated next w et by Tustin
Tn&Jlee Frank GAlnke.
TIM Tuatin board member bas
conftrmtd h1a plan to "make llll
announcement·· concern.ins h.is
reslanalion at next week '•
trustee meetlna. He ls plannln&
to move to Suta Barbara County
UJ the near f\ature.
Taylor said in an interview
that Grea.nke's plans to quit had
been known amooc board mem·
hers for several months but that
no formal discussion or a
replacement bad taken place.
"I feel certain the board would
appoint rather than call special
election," Taylor said, noting
that recent studies by the colleae
staff have shown such an election
would cost district taxpayers
about $100,000.
The board chief said cost is not
the only factor that leads him to
believe appointment as the best
. course of action.
"By the time an election taJces
place and the new trustee is seat-
ed, Tustin will have been without
representation for three or lour
months," Taylor said.
Jn the case of an appointment,
trustees must select a replace-
ment within 10 days of the res-
Ianation.
Under a new state law.
Couple Suing
I .agw1na Over
Home Project
A Laguna Beach couple who
claim the value or their home kas
been diminished by construction
of a nearby residence sued the cl·
ty Monday for damages to be de-
termined in trial court.
James and Katherine Nemeth,
995 Summit Drive, state in thefr
Orange County Superior Court
lawsuit that the home in question
might never have been built had
they been given adequate notice
()f a public hearing before the
city's design review board.
The Nemeths, who seek not
less than $5,000 in damages, state
they received a notice of public
bearing on June 11, 1976 -five
days after lhe hearing was held.
Board Filing
Deadline Set
Three seats on the Emerald
Bay Community Services Dis-
trict board or directors will be de-
cided by election Nov . 8.
Deadline for filing as a candidate
is 5 p.m. Sept. 2.
To qualify as a direct.or, the
candidate must be a registered
elector living within the district.
Filing 1s al the office of the
Registrar of Voters, 1300 S.
GtandAve ,SantaAna.
Further information is availa·
ble by calling the registrar's of·
fice at 834·2244 and asking for the
candidate filing section.
SC Man B~ Costly
Belt Bilclde Stolen
A Sarl Cl~mente man told city
police Monday someone stole a S7~ belt buckle from his proper-
\y, while he was in the proceas ol
mpvlng.
Leonard L. Davis, of 153 Ave.
Miramar, uid the b~ckle di..,._
peared sometime betwc!en Satur·
day and Motlday. He described 1i
as sil~. encrusted witb Blsbie
blue turq~oise .stones nd bear
claws.
however, the appointed tnlltee
could not be 1e1ted for 30 days.
Durlu". that tlm•• Tustin All·
d \ti aiuallsfled wttb th• Choice
can pet.IUon for an electfon.
Taylor aald he would puah for
an appointment aoon after
Greinke submits bis formal
reatcnaUon.
"I would hope the board Would
call for letters and ruum• from
everyone in that area who ls in·
terested and not neceaHrUy
anyone who lits a particular
political persuasion," Taylor
added.
Greinke's term of office ls not
due to expire until February ol
1979.
E,....PageAI
SUPPORT. • •
sign a loyalty oath anymore.
That's how we wind up with
teachers like Angela Davis, a
practicing Communist.''
Bachelor said the report Qf a
district teacher sighted on a
"gay beach" would not be sum-
cient grounds for dismissal, in
his opinion.
"If a teacher is observed riding
a float in a homosexual parade,
though -that's different," he
said.
Bachelor, 29, defeated Bob
Hurst in March to represent in-
J and Laguna Niguel on the
Capistrano board. He lives In
Laguna Niguel with bis wire and
3-year-old son.
Both he and his wife teach in
Saddleback ValJey Unified
elementary schools.
Bachelor said he doubts fellow
school board members will sup-
port his suggestion on the Briags
letter.
"One of them made some
crack, when I brought it up,
about Briggs being as nuUy as
Anita Bryant,•' he said.
"I believe in representing the
people who elected me," he said.
"I've heard substantial com-
munity support for the Briggs
bill.
"But if the majority of people
m Laguna Niguel said bavinc
homosexual teachers is the thina
to do, I'd vote that way -even
though it would mesn voting con-
trary to my conscience.·•
F,....PageAJ
ALLAWAY. •
believed he was going to be killed
that day and would never see her
again.
Butler told the jury that Al·
laway can only recall that be
took a rifle to the campus, heard
shots while he was walking in
and around the library and saw
people fall to the ground.
Butler told the jury that Al-
laway has no recollection of pull·
ing the trigger and ls mentalJy In·
capable ol understanding the
nature of his crimes.
Both sides Intend to pul
psychiatrists on the witness
stand in what is expected to be a
two-week hearing before Judge
Robert P. Kneeland.
The new jury is comprised of
six men and she women.
... ,, ,,... ...... ., ...... ._ ..
WASfflNGTON (AP> -The
Energy Research and Develop-
ment 4drninistration has re-
ve•led that enough ur•nium for '
ot least 10 nuclear weqons wu
"l<>St" In the early 19805. the
Washington Star said today.
'the Star said documents re·
leased by ERDA sl\owed thot in·
vesUgators -ot wttat was then
ERDA's predecessor, the Atomic
Energy Commission -suspect·
ed since 1900 serio\&S losses of
enrlcbbd uranium belnt proc-
essed for the U.S. covemment
by the Nuclear Materials and
Equipment Corp. -NUMEC -
at Apollo, Pa.
But memos from the files of
Rowanl C. Brown Jr., then assis·
tant general manager of the
AEC, showed the aaency did not
press the company •bout the
losses Wltil 19851 a year after
China exploded a nuclear
weapon.
HEADING FOR A THREE-POINT LANDING IN IRVINE PARK
Skateboarder Kevin Gelaa Attempt• Maneuver
The company was known to
have business dealln&s with
several French firms and was
described as "sales agent for the
government of Israel.••
The documents indicated that
NUMEC's owner, Zalman M.
Shapiro, told the AEC most or all
of the missing uranium was mis-
takenly buried as waste material
at the plant site in 1963. Skate Parks Face
Insurance Woes·.
But when the AEC required
him to di.I up the burial pit in the
fall pf 1965, the files showed,
Shapiro could locate only about
10 percent of the uranium he was
looking tor. By PRr.UP llOSMAIUN Of .. .,.., .. , ... ,-..,
Insurance companies, taking a
close look at public skateboard
parks and rising liability claims,
soon may leave cities like Irvi,ne
skating on mushy concrete.
Brokers and consultants in lhe
industry say it is aJready im-
possible to find insurance com-
panies wlllirig to insure com·
mercial skateboard parks.
Irvine, and other cities with
municipal courses, -so tar have
obtained insurance under
blanket policies covering overall
city liability.
Such policies Jump the hazards
of skateboarding with such seem·
ingly tamer activities as climb-
ing the jWlgle IYm and walking
down a public sidewalk.
But by next year, and probably
before, industry insiders say, not
even the puilic agencies will be
able to find a dom~ic insurance
earner to cover liabh.lty claims
a4ainstskateboard parks.
'You'd have to eo to London,"
says Tom Moon, an insurance
broker and assessor who is oresi-
Mae McLean
Dead at 52
Mae McLean, a Huot.in1ton
Beach resident and former
employe of the city attorney's of·
fice, died Saturday in La Jolla
after a lenathy illness. She was
52.
Mrs. McLean, who was also
employed as a legal secretary for
the ffWltlngton Beach law firm of
Bush. Bush and Larsen, is sur-
vived by her busband. Donald
McLean, a Daily PiJot printer.
She re&ided at 15412 Shasta
Lane, Huntington Beach.
The f am Uy has announced
there will be no funeral services.
dent ol Me ~t Oranae eoUnty'a
largest consult1,nt firms, Ad·
vanced Insurance Marketina in
Garden Grove. •
And, Moon says he'd be ,U,..
prised it lJoyds of London would
charge less thaa $20;000 a year
premJum for coverine a
slcate~ard park alone, "if you
could even get it for that."
That's a quarter of the pre·
mium now paid by tbe city ol
Irvine for a liability policy that
Includes the University Com-
munity Park skateboard course,
t public sidewalks and evervthln«
else in town
The skateboard course was
built last September for $30,000.
The Citv Council is meetinsz
toollht to decide whether the
course ought to be relocated, for
another $40,000, because of com·
plaints from nearby residents.
The clty llabUlty pbUcy is due
for renewal in Decembtr. The
New York-based insurance car·
raer for Irvine will probably ex·
elude the skateboard course from
the new policy, according to local
brokers.
Moon is even more certain of
that. "I'd be willina to bet they
will exclude it even btfore it
comes up for renewal," he says.
The reason is the coml)aJlies
fear outlandish injury awards.
"There was the aame situation
with trampolines." Moon says.
"The schools had to get rid of
them."
Jn November J.96S, an AECsur-
vey searched the plant and re·
1>0rtecf .182 pounds of enriched
oraniUJll missing, of wbJch 208
pounds could not be accounted
!or through norrQal plant opera·
lions. .
The Star said NUMEC even-
Mrs. Carroll,
I agt1na Ar.ts
Worker, Dies
Mrs. Gertrude Carroll of South
Laguna, former president or the
South Coast Community Hospital
Auxiliary al)d volunt~r with the
Laguna Beach Fesli val of Arts,
is dead.
Mrs. Carroll bad been a South
Laguna es\dent for 13 years
moving re from Tehachapi.
She ~as president or the
hosR1tal •uxiliary from 1967 to
1969. She .helped organize the
Silver and Gold chapter of the
auxtUary in 1967. In 1971, Mrs.
Carroll was chairman of the aux-
iliary's Valentine Ball.
Sh& wa~ active with the
.Laguna .Beach Festival of Arts
for several years. Mrs. Carroll
traveled extensively Including
joufoeys .to Afrlca and New
Zealand,
The deceased is survived by a
He s,Ud last vear be tried t.o iet sister, Marjorie Rabe of Fresno;
insurance to cover a l!i-mlnute daughters, Karen Hrock <:A Santa
football balf·UIJle performance Barbara and Connie Sullivah of
on a trampoline at a local school. Tebac~pi: four grandchildren
Cost for the insurance: Sl.400. andthreegr~at•grlindchildren.
The school canceled the event. Mrs. Cartoll died July 24. At
Insurance companies also fear her direction. no service was held.
justifiably -that skateboard Memorial donaUons may be
ooerators won't enforce saletv ma-de to the Am~ricao Cancer
rules to prevent tnJuries. ,. Sc>eiety for Leukemia Research.
tually paid the AEC $1,344,000 tor
the lost uranium.
Its ttJ>Ort sald, 0 Althoutih it cannot be stated Wllh certainty
that theft or dJventon did not
take place, the survey team
tound no evidence to suggest
those possibilities.•·
The explosion of the Chinese
nuclear weapon in 1964, raising
the quettion of where the Chinese
got their bomt>-arade uranium,
prompted a re-examination of
U.S. policies which revealed a
sap in 1>rC>ce,l\lreS for keeping
track of nuclear materials. T~ere was no way, the in·
vesU,aUon found, t(> detect ex-
cess s-ipments of nucle•r
material out of t.be country by a
U .S. company, in "collusion"
with a foreien customer.
Aerial ~nnaissance showed
that the Chinese bad built their
own uranium enrichment plant.
Fro.P~AJ
SUIT •..
might be a duplication of effort,
trying the case twice or trying
the same issue twice," Poflack
said. .
A ruling on the ''incon-~istancy" action could h,ave an
Jmpact or the later trial, Pollack
agreed.
"It became pretty apparent
that whoever was goini to make
a ruling ought to ma1te lt on the
basts ol all the evidence, all the
deposit.lpns and we haven't got·
ten that far yet.
, .. Furthermore, we want t.o try
it before a jury." Pollack said.
Logan offered another new.
however.
Nothig that tbe city had ~
posed the oontinuance, he said,
.. We are convinced the <general>
plan and the zone are in con·
formance and we're ready to
prove it."
Logan said Rancho Palos
Verdes had been "complaining
all aloog" that they needed the
conformance ruling to clarify
legal relation.ships for t.be Jan. 2A
trial. ·
The legal snarls began in 1973
when the City Council declared
"inadequate" an environmental
impact report done lor the pro-
poaed development of 2,000 t~wnhouses OD the 522-acre ·
propefiy.
Rancho Palos Verdes launched
a broad leaal attack on the city at
one poJnt namlns ln a federal suit
more than two &core past and
present cit>' officials and civic
lenders as members of a "con-
spiracy" to deny the developer
his civil rights.
That action was dismissed but
.jurisdiction retained by the
lederal court which said Bt.ate
litigation had to be resolved
befot'e federal action was ap·
propriate.
'11lief Gets Loot
Stereo equipment and a
camera with .a total value of
$l, 7J0 were t$m by a butglar
who smashed J window to tain
entry to a t>ana Point home.
Oranse County stf eriU's of.
ficers said the loss was reported
by Susan Arleen Boudstun, 29, ol
33185 se~ Britht Lane, who was
away at work it the time.
-----
ORANGE COUNTY, CAt:IF.ORNIA
Newport Polic~, City Ok&y CoDtraet· 1
'· After nurly five months ot
bactltn1. memb'ra of tbt
Newport Beach PolJce ErnpJotet
AS$0dation and t.M city council
came to terms M a:y on a corr
tractforthe lm·ll ftstal 1ear.
Tbe cme-year tract. asreed
to ao a ' to 3 vote th ~ cilnten Trudi aoae.rs, Ray
Williams and Pabl Byctolf dis-
senting, calls for no pay raises
~or-policemen ~d a fift pert'eftt
boost for clerlctl and other non·
poltce penonnel wttJftn tho de·
partment.
On the lut day of the contract,
policemen will be tiven a ch~ t
1n retireai t plan.a from -the ex· 1 li hblic Employ aetlre·
ment System <PERS> to the so.
called California Highway Patrol
<CHP>plan.
Cit1 officials estima\ed tile
total cost of the packas• to be
about $23:1,790.
Last month, because they bad
been unable to come to terms
with the 191-member usoclaUon.
councilmen imposed a unilateral
five percent pay raise on police.
But ottlcers came back and
asked that negotiations be re-
opened.
Councilmen were told Mooday
tbe police asscSciation 's final of·
fer was the one.year contract, in
opposition to the city'~ final ollef'
a two-year .contract whlcb car·
ried a total four percent pay .raise
for 9'e two years phu the retire-
ment system change.
The PERS system now Uied by
the city pays reUrement benefits
at age SS based on 50 percent of
the average of the final three
years' salaries. • .
The CHP system pa}>I benefits
at age 50, based on a formula
figured by multiplying the
number of years served by two
percent That yields the percen·
tage then applied to the average
of the last three years' salaries.
The Fire Fighters Association
still reoaains at odds with the ci~
over a contract, but association
prHident Jack Hamilton
said today be is going to try to re-
open negotiations with the city
seeking the same offer granted to
police.
The change of heart on the part
of the four councilmen who voted
in favor of the one-year contrat!t
was discussed Monday by Coun-
cilman Don Mcinnis, who said h
was motivated by the "pr~
fessional manner" under which
the poijce emptoyes had conduc~
ed tbetr negotiations.
He noted that neither the fire
<See OONTllACI', Page AZ>
Cuts Tax,.hut BillS to Go
Sailing ships that rbunded the Horn with
exotic cargo bound for f arawny places
carried a female form as a figurehead.
This Hobie Cat cruising lazily in Newport
Harbdr was doing twice as well but the
young \\:omen up front doub ess consider
themselves more than figure eads.
Girl Shoot.
Father Over
Divorce Act
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -A
15-=year;citd ·-girt·· upset' -over her
parents' divorce says she shot
and killed h~r father in the
hallway of their modest home
here, police said.
Georee Paw Finerty. 44, a we~ io~truct.or, died Monday
afternoon of bullet wounds in lhe
dlest and head. Police. believe •
the shots were fired from hil"
.38·caliber pistol.
The girl's 9-year-old brother
an~ 10.year·old sister were ti\ a
b act bedrv.prn w alchln1
· television when the sbooUng ~
curted, office~ said. Nooe ol t.he
children 'sname1 was released.
«;argo Plane ~ound
60-j\val()n; 2 Dead-
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Frelgbt out j Long Beach Airport
-· -c.-rt-.r~lreYs~~~-Rrfi~fl° .. · .. .., -.. wa1rep0~overduebytbefinn. ~~· • ., ~ . eir ..,, Jnvestigqtors with the Los
over treacherous terrain tod~y. Angeles County Sheriff's Office at fo~nd the. wreckage of a missing Av a Ion said the plane crashed
twin·engme cargo plane that lour rnile$ west of Avalon near
sla111med in\o Santa Catalina Long's Point, smashing into the
Island on-a rt>utine 'flight, kUHng steep hillsides. both men aboard.
'the victims were identilled IS··-"Tbey wentjn four miles west
Robert G. Graves of Cerritos and of Aval~n." said an FAA
Charles C. Clifford of Loni spokesman. .
Beach, employes of Air Fast The.re was no radio contact
Pre.igbt of Long Beach. from the plane which Oew from
Federal Aviation Administra· Long Be ch tothe Island's moun-
tion spokesmen said today the talntop airport with a load of
Beedlcraft operat~ by Air Fut (Ste PIANE, Pa1e A2>
8 Cents
City Bate
Trim J)ue
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of U. o.11, "'-tl*Mf
Newport Beach city coun-
cilmen shaved eight cents off the
city tax rate Monday night, set-
ting the levy at $1.03 per $100 as.
sessed valuation for. the 1977·78
fiscal year.
City property owners, however,
will still be faced with bigher tax
bills despite the tax rate
decrease. In order to completely
offset the assessed valuation in·
crease, the city tax rate would
have to be dropped to 93 cents, ac-
cording to county Auditor Vic
Heim.
The rate reduction was· based
on a 19.2 percent increas.e in the
assessed value of property in the city.
Councilman Paul Ryckoff, who
opposed settlnJ the rate at $1.02,
noted that "the tQ rate-arises
from spendin1. In light ol 0\11'
budget, I don't want to see futids
reduced.''
The owner of a home in Newport
Beach that was valued at $100,000
in the 1976-77 fiscal year, paid
$277.SOincltytaxeslastyear.
Thia year, that same home is
valued at $119,200 and even with
the eight-cent drop fl) the tax raw.
that homeowner wiU pay $306.M
.in.c!U taxe~ an increase 6f lQ.Per· cent in that property ownerla city
tax bill.
In a memo to city council.oien,
City Mmager Robert Wynn noted
that the city's tax rate has been
dropping steadily since 19'13·74
when it was $1.20 per $100 as-
sessed valuation. The city's ex-
penditures which have been in·
creasing at the aame time bave
been flJUlDCed in part b1 a con-
tinuing increase in thee assessed
value of property.
About one-third of the city's $24
million budeet is financed
throuah property taxes wblcb are
(SeieTAX, Pa1eA2)
OlllYPf ....... "-9
JIM KELLEHER GOT A LAUGH FROM IRRELEVANT WEEK
Aleo-Got·Cut by the Minnesota VlkJngs
. (
'lrralevent'
J'ikinga Cut 1VB ·BanDree·--· -·
--.J •• --'. . .
\ Council ACtiOn
In action Monday ni&ht, the Newport Beach City Coun-
cil took actioa on these topics;
PAllKING STVDY: Agreed to spend $18,900 to have a
study made of parking problems and solutions in central
New,ort. ... PEaFORMING ARTS: Delayed decision on spendine
125,000 to tum the former church at Ensign View Park into
perfonnln& arts center unW finances can be reviewed by Ci·
ty staff.
POlJCE PAY: Reached agreement with police
employes on one-year contract calling for no pay raises, buL
a change in retirement plans. . .
NEWPORT CENTER UBRABY: Approved plana for a
14,000-square root library and set Oc~. 14 as deadline for
blda.
TAX RATE: Set the 197'J.78 clty tax rate at $1.03, down
eight cents from the 1976-n rate of $1.11.
~up Race . . .
·Shortened
By Fog
NEWPORT, R.I. CAP> -The
America's Cup race between
Courageous and Enterpris, ln
the final defender trials was
abandoned today in thick fog and
extremely light, shifting winds.
<Related story, A3)
Racing lo windward, the two
12-meter yachts took more than
an hour to reach the first mark.
as spectator craft and even one of
the Coast Guard's vessels, the
Cape Horn, got onto the course
and into the way of the two
yachts. Length of the first leg of
• the course wa.a 3.5 miles.
At one point, approacbini the
first mark, several spectator
craft got in front of Enterprise,
skippered by Lowell North, ln
vlslbillty that was limited at
times to almost nothlnJ.
. Both boall apparently had
trouble finding the marks, and a
ship-to•shore broadcast from the
Coast Guard vessel Cape Cross
said: "We almost had a very
serious situation here with En·
terprise." ·
Minutes later, Courageous
tacked toward the weather
mark, and several s pectator
boats and the Cape Horn were in
her line lo the buoy. Both 12
meters, however, were able to
gel around the mark without inci·
dent.
Shortly after the two yachts
disappeared Into the foe. headini
for the second mark, the New
York Yacht Club Race Commit-
tee radioed the Coast Guard that
they had abandoned racing for
the day with little chance that the
fog would lift.
Courageous, skippered by
Atlanta Braves owner Ted
Tu mer, hu a s.1 record in the
final elimination aeries for
American boats. Enterprise la
2·5 while Independence, skip·
pered by Ted Hood.1' 3-4.
Thl1 seriu wUJ determine
which American boat will defend
the Cup for lhe 23rd time. The
Cup final serips begins Sept. 13.
The forelan ya~hts, Australia
and Sverige of Sweden. begin
their best·of·seven challenger
final on Tburada)'.
F,....P.,,eAJ
AILA WAY. •
BuUer said the sbootinp were
the climax to a lone history or
psychiatric problems that were
aggravated by the remarks ol
fellow employes on the Fullerton
campus ..
He told the jury that co-
workers jokingly told Allaway
that they were havine sexual re-
lations with his wife the nl&ht
before and that several accused
him of being homosexual,
Mrs. Allaway testified that shf
left her husband on Memori:J
Day weekend in 1978 when his in·
creasing agitation friehtened
her. '
She testified that he had recur-
ring dreams about her havinJ
sex with other men and told bet
that he bad been told of the parts
she played in porno1raphlc mov·
ies.
And she testified that Allaway
telephOPed her on the momin1 of
the shootings and told her that he
believed he wu 1oln1 to be killed
that day and would never see her
again.
Butler told the }ury that Al·
!away can only recall that he
took a rtne to the campus, heard
shots while he was walking in
and around the library and saw
people fall to the ground. ·.
BuUer £old the jury that AJ.
la way bas no recollection of pult·
ing the trigger and js mentally in·
capable of understanding the
nature of his crimes.
Both sides Intend to put
psychiatrists on . the witness
stand in what is expeeted to be a
two-week hearing before Judge
Robert P. Kneeland.
The new jury is comprised of
six men and six women.
Jud&e Kneeland ordered the .
replacement of a woman juror
with an alternate juror Mooday
when she reported that she had
been hospltalued during the
weekend.
MaeMeLean -
Dead at 52
fA the li)l•lq uHJUimi WU mla-
ktGl)t bqiied u wast. 9'aterlal at the p&aiiUlUUn 1113.
Wbtil the AEC reqWNd
Dl to d1I up tb8 bUrlal pll lil the rau " 1.ISS, the ruet i.bc)wed, Shapiro could ~ocate only about
10 percent of the uranlmn h6 wu
lookinl for.
Jo November 1965, an AEC aur-
vey Matched the plant and re·
'POrted 382 pounds or enriched
Unnlu1n mllsJn1. of which 206 PoUnds COllld not be aceountecl lot through normal plant opera-
tions.
The Star said NUMEC ev~
* * *
tuatly paid t.U UC '1.144.CJOO f<ll:'
the lost uranl~ ~~~~.~·~~~~
that \.beft or Cll~enloo dl4 not take· place, the eurny team
found no evidence to B\lllest
thote poutbillu .....
In explalnlng why the AEC
waited five years to lnv•tla•te
the suspected uranium 1 .... , a
memo by Brown 11ld. ..It ap-
pears that responalble personnel
apparently believed that tbey
had less authority and 119Wer to
force improvement than in
retrospect it 'appears tbq ac-
* '* *
No A-Weapon PlaD1ted
Carter Saya S. Africa Give. Auurance to U.S.
WASfllNGTON CAP> -Presi·
dent Carter said today South
Africa bu assured the United
States that it does not have and
does not intend to develop
nuclear explosive devices.
Carter made that statement at
a nationally televised oews con·
!erence, saying the South
Africans informed the ad·
min~stration that they will not de·
velop nuclear weapons or
peaceful nuclear devices.
The report that South Africa
planned a nuclear explosii>n had
come ff'QJl'l France.
The President said he ap-
preciated the South African
response, adding •'.We wm of
course continue to monitor the
situation very closely."
Carter also said he will give the
American -people all the facts on
a new Panama Canal treaty, and
believes they will then support
th(! pact.
''My belief is that as the
American people become ac·
quainted with the very good
terms of the treaty. they will shift
their support to the treaty itself,"
the President said.
Girding tor bis effort to gain
Senate ratification of the new
treaty, Carter said he believes
some of the opposition it now
faces stems from misconcep-
tions.
Carter also:
Said U.N. Ambassador An·
drew Young would represent lhe
United States at a meeting of five
"front line" African presidents
in Zambia on Frijlay to discuss
efforts to reach a settlement in
war·tom Rhodesia.
-Reiterated the U.S. position
that the settlements oC Israeli
citizens on the West Bank of
Jordan River are "in violation of
the Geneva dec is ions and
therefore illegal. ..
F,.._PageAJ
PLANE •••
cargo late Monday night.
Alan Crawford, Los Angeles
dlaU1ct chief for the National
Transportation Safety Board,
aald today lbe plane landed and
unloaded before the crash.
"They were due back at a cer·
taln time and they never re·
turned," he said.
lnvestlgatora for the NTSB,
which invesUgates all crashes in-
volving commercial aviation or
civilian aircraft accidents involv·
in& fatalities, were flying to
Catalina today.
A ahertn's office spokesman in
Avalon said grol.l.Dd sea~hers
were just reaching the era.sh site
shortly before noon. adding that
he had liWe details yet.
The wreckage was apparently
diacovered shortly aftef daJ'Ul'ht.
although after a period of tlme it
was evident to searchers that the
aircraft had crashed.
ti ..... P~:AI
TA.X •••
But the President went on to
say that be believes that the set-
tlementa do not "show that Israel
intends to occupy these ter·
ritorits permanently." FOCI now.
he said, the U.S. wlll 10 no
further on the issue than to point
out to Israel that the settlements
areWffal. ~ again defended Bert Lane~, his budget director,
whose l)rivate bankiq pracUcel
have come under tnveatl1auon.
Carter sald he know1 or
notbtng illegal or unethical that
Lance bas done.
Fianeee Exeluded .
Presley Fafn:ily
Inherits It All
MEMPHIS, Tenn. CAP> ·-
Elvis Presley, who eave
di a moods to &irlfrlends and
CadHlacs to straneers, left his
fortune to his family and ex-
cluded his former wife and his
fianceeinbiswlll.
The wlll, filed for probate Mon·
day, likely will be ''the btHe$t
ever filed in the state of Ten·
nessee," said Probate Court
Judge Joseph Evans.
Presley, 4i. was found un-
conscious at hla Graceland
THOUSA~S FLOCKING
TO PRESl£V TOMB, A3
mansion last Tuesday and pro-
nounced dead of a ~eart attack at
Baptist Hospital.
An inventory of Presley's
wealth, expected to be several
million dollars. Is being prepared
and court officials said it may be
longer than the usual two months
before it can be tiled.
"The s12e and complexity of it
may cause them to run into dif·
f1culty in filin& it in 60 days,"
Probate Court Clerk Bobby
Dunavant said.
The rock 'n · roll superstar's
,2.year-old father, Vernon
Presley, once a Mississippi
s harecropper, was named ex-
ecutor of the wlJl. •
The 13-page document was
drawn up at Praley'• (iraceland
mansion .and dated March 3. It
was witnessed by Charles Hod1e.
Presley's guitarist; Gln1er
Alden, hJs flancee; and Ann
Dewey Smith, wife of VerJ'O'l
Presley's attorney, Beeater
Smlthll ..
The. will WU recorded and filed durlni a 20-mlnute 1es1ion before
Judae Evans. The elder Presley.
Mr. and Mn. Smith and Hodge
were pretent at the fllln1.
In his wlll, tbe sinaer directed
that the net incoma ot hl1 t1tate
10 to bis father: his a.year-old
daughter, Llu .Marle: his
grandmother. Minnie Mae
Presley; and "such other rel·
atlves ol mine Uvini at the tlme
of my death who. • .ire ln need
of assistance for health, educa·
lion support. comfortable main· ten~ce and welfare.•·
The will directs that Vernon
Presley receive hi& son'a
personal properly, "including
trophies and other ltem1 ac-
cumulated by me during rny pro-
fessional career."
Tbe document cave the elder
Presley "complete freedom and
discretion as to disposal of any
and all such property so Ion& as
he shall act in &ood faith and in
the bell Interest of my es ta~.·~
Son Of Sam Suspect
I
Pleads Innocence
What comes flfler en
garde? Frank De Jong
'knows as do bis
classmates taking f enc·
ing at Golden West
College. To find out
why they are attracted
to the sport, see Page B3. . .
Apartments
U:rged ·at
·,uc·Irvine
The Irvine Company is ''en·
courqina" a tenlaUve PJ'OPOla1
to build up to 1,400 low and
mod~ate Income apartments on
land now 1partoruc Irvine.
The proposal was outlined in a
memo to Irvine city councilmen.
privately handed to them by
Raymond Watson, former Irvine
Company president, who is now a
company consultant.
It is an attempt to settle out of
court a lawsuit filed in 1975 which
has slowed development of the
Irvine Industrial Complex.
It would' require the mutual
agreement of the -Irvine C.om·
pany. the city of Irvine, UC
Irvine, and the plaintiffs in the
lawsuit -the Orange County
Fair Housing Council and seven
Irvine residents.
........ . ,
I "' BY'roM BAaLBY ... ...., ........
_,, Convicted killer Edward
A....,. Charles Alla ay was seeklna re-£=t vence wbeft bo took bis rifi to ~.e;ti the Cal State Fullerton campus
~""" on July 12. lt'll and shot nine peo-ieii pie to death. an Oruc• County t,~, Superior Court jury was told I~,.. Monday.
~ Both Allaway'a former wife
: and his lawyer told the pauel u
"'""'"' Ale• AllllS. ·-· =i1
the defendant'• 1anlty llevln.r sot under .way that he believed
ahe was bein1 forced to
participate in pomotraphlc mov-
-ies.
Mrs. Allaway, 29, quoted her
husband u tellinc her lm·
mediately after the campus
shootings: "I Just sbot seven pea..
ple for what they've done to
you."
Deputy public ~efender Ron
BuUer told the juey in flls opening
statement that Allaway, 38, was
convinced that his wife was being
tortured by universJty employes.
Butler said Allaway, whom he
desert bed as a paranoid
schizophrenic, was convinced
that his wife was linked in some
way with pornographic films that
were being privately shown to
employes at the campus media
center.
JustC.-ubinf1
Sailing ships that rounded the Horn· with
exotic cargo bound for faraway places
carried a female form as a figurehead.
This Hobie Cat cruising la_zily in ~ewport
Harbor was doing twice as well but the
young women up front doubtless consider
themselves more than figureheads.
r
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER
Of .. °"" """' .....
The Saddleback Valley
Chamber of Commerce has
asked Orange County govern-
ment's help in bringing more m•·
jor industry to the south county to.
bolster the region's economy and
tax base'.
Robert N. Figelra, chamber
Jfr'hia-e·nt, Jias Wfilftn to
Supervisors Thomas Riley and
Ralph Diedrich stating •'it has
become painfully evident that
this valley is in dire need of in·
· dustry."
The chamber's request ror aid
has been referred by the
supervisors_ to the county'g •
Economic Development
Corporation foe further study and
p0ssible a.clion.
tn his Jett rs, Fiaeira noted
that so perceqt or his chamber's
membership b "mom and pop
t ype businesses."
"It t. lnconceivable for any
group in th\1 communiiy to even
consider S"'i,Ch things as ln· . .
corporation until industry can be
brought into our area to help
stimulate the economy, broaden
the ~ base and create more
local employment," he said.
Figeira said that only 30 per.
cent of the "heads of household"
llvtn1 In the Saddleback Valley also worlt here.
l\ccording to Figeira, county
·government is· '!capable d help.
Ing us find-a solution to 0\41'
otherwlSe. bleak future."
He said the county could be as-
sisted ~Y key community <see 1Nov5Tav, P•1e Aa) .,
RenoBol!b ~~·
RENO, N~v. CAP> -Ilis
tough enouch for a rodeo
rtder to bust through the
gates on a wild bronco, but
even tougher if he's com-
ing out or the clO!et at the
same time.
Such was the case at the
Gay Rodeo here, a town
that's proud' of it&
ma~ullne, rough 'n • tum·
bl,, shoot 'em up lmaf.e.
'Phere-were rumo'5-that
gangs or redn~cks planned
to disrupt the two-day
..event at the Washoe Coun-
ty Fairgrounds, but apart.
ttom a mmt•ter dlstribul·
ing anti-gay Uter.at.ure, the
mosUy gay crowd of 1,000
was undisturbed. '
Appointment Eyed
For School Post'~
The jury has already de-
termined that Allaway b autlty
of six counts of flrst de1ree
murder, one of second deiree
and two counts of assault with a
deadly weapon.
The jury must now rule on h.b
mental condition at the time or
the campus shootings.
Butler said the shootings were
the climax to a long history of
psycbi!ltric problems that were
aieravated by the remarks or
fellow emplo.yes4)n the Fullerton
campus.
He told the jury that co-
workers jokingly told Allaway
that they were having sexual re·
lalioos with his wife the night
before and that several accused
him or being homosexual.
Mrs. Allaway testified that she
Jeft hu husband on Memorial
Day weekend in 1976 when his in·
TENCENT!
creasing agitation
her.
I '
She testified that he had re<:ur·
rin& dreams about her haviaJ
sex with other men and told her
that he had been told of the parts
she played in pornographic mov·
ies.
And she testified that Allaway
telephoned her on the morning ot
the shootings and told her that be
<See ALIA WAY• Page AZ>
Bri~gs Backed
CUSD .A/iaimt Gays?
By ANNE COOPER
Of Ille Dettr ~li.t l\ltt
Capistrano Unified School Dis-
trict trustee Robert Bachelor has
asked the. school board to sef\d a
letter to Stai. Seo. John Brius
CR-Fullerton), supporting his bill
to prevent homosexuals from
teaching.
Bachelor bas made the same
request of the Capistrano·
Laguna Re&ional Occupational
Program <ROP) board, on which
he serves.
"I haven't read the bill, but I
don't think homosexual Uvin& ls
right," Bachelor said. "I don 'l
believe homosexuals should take
.an active role before children,
for them to grow .UP and
emulate."
CUSD Supt. Jerome Thomsley
and ROP Chief Administrator
Jerold Simons have said they will
make copies ol the Briggs bUl
available to board member's.
MEMPHIS, Tenn. <AP> -
Elvis Presley , w.ho gave
diamonds to girlfrfends and
Cadillacs t.o at.ranaen, left his
fortune to his family and ex-
cluded his former wife and bis
fianceein his will.
The will, filed for probate Mon•
day, likely will be "the biHest
ever tiled ln the state ot Ten·
nessee," Uld Probate Court
Judge-Joseph-r!;van"S.
Presler, 42, was found un-
conscious at bis Graceland
THOUSANDS FLOCKING
TO PRESLEY ifOMB, A3 ...... .
Bachelor said he expects
Capistrano trustees to vote on
whether to send a support letter
at the bo~d's Sept. 19 meeting.
The Item is on the ROP board's
Sept. 14 agenda.
Briggs received national
publicity when he campaigned if\
Florida with singer Anita Bryant
against a gay rights ordinance
He bas said his bill would let
local school boards refuse to hire ''known homosexuals ...
It also would allow a school
board to fire a teacher for
homosexual conduct, whether or
not it involved a child.
•'Teachers should be the finest
people tbe school district can
find, because they set an image
for the children they teach,'• said
Bachelor.
"Persoqally, I ~hink it's a
$ipame teachers don't have to
<See SUPPORT, Page A2)
.
go to bis father; his 9-year-old
daughter, Lisa Marie; his
grandmother. Minn le Mae
Presley; and usuch other rel·
atives or mine living at tbe time
Of Jtiy death who. . .are in Deed
or aa&istance for health, educa-
tion, support. comfortable main·
tenance llnd welfare."
The will directs that Vernon
Presle~ ~ei ve his so.n's
• ...,, ........... Pi.e.
SUPPORTS BRIGGS BILL • ·•
Trustee Bachelor
. " ..
personal property, "includint
trophies and other items ac-
cumulated by me durina my pro-
fessional career."
The document gave the elder
Presley "complete freedom and
discretion as to disposal of any
and au such property so IOll3 as
he shall act in good faith and. in
the taeslintere&tof my~tat.e-. ••
....... 8_
Luci Paines Nugent.
daughter of the late presi-
dent Lyndon Johnson, holds
on to her hat at St. Croix in
the Virgin Islands. She and
her mother, Lady Bird, are
\·acatloning.
'Sam'
lJEW YORK CAP) -Al an un-
·uaual arraJenment In a Brooklyn
hoapllal prison ward, an attorney entered IMocent pleas today to
murder and assault charcea
which David R. Berkowitz, the
man accused of beln& the Son of
Sam killer, faces In Queens.
In a proceeding at the Kings
County Hospital prison ward,
State Supreme Court JusUce
Leon Brown presided over a
WA&HlNGTON (AP> -• of the miNlnC uranium wu ml•·
Enerp Research and Develop. takenly bUried u waste material
ment Ad1ntni1trallon has rt· at tMpiJDtalte inlt63.
vealed ~h uranium for • But when tbo AEC required
at 1..-10 nuclear "''°"' wu him tO ct11 up the burial pit ln the ••te>A'' lJI the early lteOI; the · faU of 1985 the tiles showed,
Waihlniton Star aald today. Shaptro•c;ufd locate only about
The Star aaid document. re-10 percent of the uranium he was
leued by Jl;ROA showed that tn· looklM for.
veaU,atora -of what wu then In November 1965, an AEC sur-
ERDA '1 predeceaaor, tbe Atomic vey tearched the plant and re-
Enerv Commllllon -suspect· ported 382 pounds of enriched
ed atnce 1980 aerlou1 lossee of uranium missin&. of which 206
enriched uranium belnc proc· pounds could not be accounted
ened for the U .s. covernment for tbrouih normal plant opera-
by the Nuclear Materials and tlona.
Equipment Corp. -NUMEC -The Star aaJd NUMEC even·
at APo)lo, Pa. tually paid the AEC $1,344,000 for
But memos from the ftle1 of
Howard C. Brown Jr., then uala-S •t Ann ---' tant general mana1er of the 11mm1 oun~
AEC, showed the agency did not
press th4t company about the
losses witil 1965, a year aft.er
Chana exploded a ouelear
weapon.
The company was known to
have business dealings wlUt
several French firms and was
described as "sales agent for the
eovernment of Iarael. ..
The document. indicated that
NUMEC'a owner, Zalman !4.
Shapiro, told the AEC most or all
PRETORIA, South Africa
. CAP> -Rhodesian Prime
Minister Ian Smith will meet
with South African Prime
Minister John Vorater here
Saturday, officials announced to-
day. The meeting coincides with
a 1ummlt of the five "front-line"
African presidents in Zambia,
and raised speculation about new
diplomatic efforts to reach a
peacetul settlement in war-tom
Rhodesia.
Enters Innocent
quiet 18-minute seasion that
sharply contrasted with last
week's arratenment in a
Brooklvn courtroom on charees
in a sixth attack -that one in
Brooklyn.
Berkowitz is char1ed with be·
ing the niaht 1taJker who would
fire into parked cars in which
young men and women aat, moet
often in lovers' lanes. There were
six attacks in all, and they made
mao,Y young people in the city
afraJd of beio« alone at night
with a date.
Otrieiall decided that arraip-
ment in the Queens casea would
be more orderly at the hospital.
where Berkowiu is undergoing
psychiatric teats.
In today's proceedings,
Berkowitz was accused of two
murders, five assaults, seven
attemple~ murders and five
Airport Dem~e Nears
By ROBERT BARKER
Ol IN Dally ...... Slaff
Lawyers in the Huntineton
Beach city attorney's office are
drafting an ordinance that they
aay could close embattled
• Meadowlark Airport. ln 18
month.a. . City Attorney Don Bonla said
-that a pha.;eoul of operations
could occur within a year or 18
months at most in order to insure
an orderly transition and reloca-
tion of airplanes.
The proposed ordinance as
well aa other documents to find
the airport an alleged public
nusiance are scheduled to 10 to
the City Council for action Sept.
6.
The city attorney's offloe has
been studying how to close the
airport since receivine directions
from the councll Aua. 1.
Bonfa said that the airport
came into the city as a non-
conformine uee when it was an·
nexed in 1964.
"The airport doesn 'l have the
absolute right to continue as a
non-conforming use indefinite-
ly," Bonfa said.
''It. is our opinion that the city
can regulate land uses within its
borders in a non-arbitrary and
uncaprtclous manner while at
the same time allowin1 a proper-
ty owner an adequate opportuni·
ty lo recoup hls lnveatment,"
Bonfasald.
Council members directed the
attorney to take leaal stepe to
clote lhe airport after a U11\t
airplane cruhed into a buUdini
at the airport Aug . 1, injurin1
three persons.
The: all'P.Ort has come lUlder stead_y crltlcsm from .,earby
residents who protested what
t.he)I called low nlghts, aafet)'
hazards and noise.
Airport critics say \hey have
circulated a peUUon with th•
DAILY PIL'lT
names of 200 residents who with
to join the city's efforts to clOle
the facility.
Airport co-owner and manaeer
Art Nerio has vowed to fl1ht Ute
cit,y in lb attempt to clote the
airport which lint came into ex·
iatence in 1949 in wbat was then
county territory at Bolsa Chica
Street and Warner Avenue.
Autopsy Says
Heart Attack
Killed Diver
An autopsy performed on a
Tustin man, stricken Sunday in
the water of South La1una1s
Three Arch Bay, confirmed
earlier reports that he died of a
heart attack', coronet'• deputies
said today.
Richard Caley, 30, an Oran&e
County district attorney's ln·
vestigator •. was pronounced dead
on arrival at Mwlon Communt\y
Hospttal, where he was airlllted
by Marine helicopter.
Lifeguards said Caley had
complained to • acuba diving
partner that he was havinc dif-
ficulty breathin1. His friend
towed him throulh the waw to
aome rocks, but by that time
Caley was unronsdoua.
A 1ailboat'1 oooupantJ aaw the
two men on tht rockl and noUned
lif e1uards, who werked With
othet emergen~ personnel, to
try to r.vtve caley. .
Durtna th• r.1cu., mor• th~
'10.000 worth of paramedic
equJpment wu aoaktd by waves.
"Fortunately, tht ·radio I•
waterproof, so We were able to
maintain contact with the
hoapitat, • • a South Lacuna
paramedic 1aid_11 Caley joiMcl~ the f erntly 1up.
Port dlviston or th• coqnty di•·
trict •ltomey'a Otflce i.aW. rour
· months aeo. Pl'tvloualy, he •u a
decorated member of t e Tullio
pollce depart.nent. 'w eT'9 he
worked abr yean.
Nerio maintain& that aircraft
do not conatitule a huard. He
aay11 complaints come from a few
residents who have Jet their emo-
liona run unrest.rain~.
The Orange County Pllota As-
sociation la planning a flY·in at
the airport Sept. 17 to protest the
city's action.
Watergate
Role Backed
MANILA <AP> -Any at·
tempt by former Prei;ident
Nixon lo defy the U-.S.
Supreme Court's order to
turn over tape recording•
and papen would have
been futile, Chief Justice
Thurcood Mal'1h,an said to·
day.
Marshall defended the
role of lhe courts in the
Water1ate Investigation in
a speech prepared tor de·
livery here at the Eighth
Conference on the Law of
the World. .
M arsball s ald the
Watereate episode ",was,
ln many wars, a triumph
of law over lawleas
behavior; a tri\lmph of the • democraU~ process over .
those who sou1hl to iu.,.
vert lt to serve their seUlsh
hunaer for powtr. • ·
p,....p~AJ ...
the leet UMnlum.
Its report Hid, "Althoucb It
cannot be staled with cen.tnty
that theft or diversion did";inot
take plate, the •unor tHm
round no evidence &o IU8'ut
those posalbllltles."
In eJCplainine why the AEC
waited five year• to lnvutlaat.e
the suspected uranJurn laaaes, a
memo by Brown aaid, "It ap-pean that retpooslble penoonel
apparenUy belitved that they
bad less authority and PQWer ro
force improvement \han n
retrospect lt appears t.M1 ac·
tually did."
The explosion of the Chi.ne$e
nuclear weapon ln 1964, raiaine
the question ot where tbe Chinese
got their bomb-trade uranium.
prompted a re-examination of
U.S. policies which revealed a
gap in procedures for keeplni
track ol nuclear materials.
There waa no way, tho In·
veaUsation found, to detect ex·
cess shipments or nuclear
material out of the country by a
U.S. company, in "collu.lon"
with a forelen customer.
Aerial reconnai111nc• showed
that the ChJneae had built their
own uranium enrichment plant.
Pleas
weapona char1e1 atemmlftl rrc>m
the Queens a111ult1. JI\ fhc '
Brooklyn etta,:k, Berkowlttlf &C'·
cu•ed ot ·murdertn1 ·~I.
woman and '-Jurlns a YC>U.Dt
-man. . .
The plea In tbe Queens , ..
w aa enter.t for Berkowlta b)' Ira
Julta.k, his attorney.
Berkowtts, dressed ln l1'ftD
pajama bottoms, blue .,_,ama
top, blue and white terry-clothi
bathrobe and wbite 1lippe1'1, was
expressionless throu1hout the
proceedincs.
.Jultak said afterward that the ot¥y word Berkowitz spoke
during the proceedlnl waa to
answer "Okay" when the at-
torney asked him how be was
feeling.
About 30 reporter1 were seated
in the rear of the makeshtn sixth·
floor courtrotm. Seven artists
were allowed to sketch the sus-
pect. se,ted only five feet away.
There wtre at l~st 17 officers in
the cowfroom, called th• incom·
petency room of the prlaon ward.
Brown ordered that Berkowita
be remanded to the hospital at
least until Sept. 1, ·•tor the
purpose of medical examlna.
tion to determine his competen-
cy." The Judge said he would
bold a competency hearln1 or set
a trial date Sept. 1.
Hl!ADINO FOR A THREE·POINT LANDING IN IRVINE PARK
Sktlt•bo•rder kevln GelH Attempt• Maneuver
Skate Parks Face
lnsUrauce Woes
81 PRl'UP aosMABJN • °' .. .,...,,... .....
. Insurance companies, taklnf a
clou look •t public lkateboard •
parka and riaint UabWt)' clJlma, ·aoon may leave oltlea like trvine
1katln1 on muahy concrete.
Broken and c:onsultantS ln the
tnduatry HY lt ls already Im·
Possible to find mluranee com.
panles wilUne to tnsu11e com-
mercial 1katebo¥dfark1.
Irvine, and othe clUee with
municipal courses, 10 tar have
obtained insurance under
blanket policies covering overaJl
city liability. .
Such pollcles lump the hazards
of skateboarding with such seem·
ingly tamer activities .., climb:
ing lhe jungle gym and walklne
down a public sidewalk.
But by next year, and probably
before, industry insiders say, not
even the public Agencies will be
able to ftncl a doniefttic inaura.no•
carrier to cover liability claims
against skateboard parks.
"l'·you'd have to go to London,"
says Tom Moon, an insurance
broker and usesaor who ia pral·
dent of ooe of Oranee County's
largest consultant firms, Ad·
vanced Insurance MarketJni in
Garden Grove.
And, Moon says he'd be sur-
prised lf Uoyds of London would
charse less than $20,000 a year
premium for coverln1 a
1kateboard park alone, "If you
could •ven aet it for that."
That'a a qwarter of the pre-
miwn now pald by t.be city of
Irvlt'te for a UabUlty policy that
includes the University Com-
munity Park skateboard course.
public sidewalks and everythinJl
elaelntown.
The skateboard course was
built last September for $30,000.
The City Council ts meetlne
tonl1Cht to decide whether the
cour;se ought to be relocated, for
another $60,000, because of com-
plaints from nearby resident&.
The city liability policy is due
for renewal in December. The
New York•based insurance car-
rier for Irvine will probably ex-
clude the skateboard course from
the new POI.icy, accordini to locaJ
brokers. Moon tB even rnore certain or that. "I'd be willing to bet they
will exclude it even before it
comes up for renewal," he says.
The reason Is the companies
fear outlandJ9b Injury awards.
"There was the same situation
with trampolines," MOOft says.
·'The school• had to get rid of
them."
Ca~p .ExperimeD.t
Set in R11ntington
Mae McLean
Dead at 52
Mae McLean, a Huntington
Beach resident and former
employe ol the city attorney's of-
fice, died Saturday in La Jolla
after a lengthy illness. She was
52. Overnight campln1 for "self·
contained'' recreational vehicles
will beglnon a trial basis Sept.1 at
Huntington State Beach in Hunt-
in•ton Beach.
CaP1Plnc -ftom an hourbtlore
sunset to 9 a.m. the followtnc day
F,....PapAJ
INDUSTRY ••
?.fJ'I$, McLean. who was also
employed as a le&al secretary for
the Huntlngtoo Beach law firm of
Bush Bush and Lu'sen, is sur-
vived by her husband, Donald
McLean, a DaJly Pilot prlnter.
She resided at 15412 Shasta
Lant, lfUl'IUncton Beach.
The f amity has announced
tbtrft will be no funeral services.
SUPPORT ••.
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SUddenly, tht cblef dilcu~lon In flnanelll cttrclea ts ..
whether the &lass la half f\.111 or ball empty. end whether we '•
should keep our eye on the douebnut or on th• hole.
That la to aay. how are w• to nad the econona.lc NJ(>ltl • that polnt to 1 1low.r rate ti -.pau1on ln the ~ec:ond ball of.·
tbe year end into 19181 Ia the d.Jrtct10ll ominous? Or is ti ·
btalth)t? ~·
MOST OF TBB BAND AND <n'RER forecasters :
aro\Uld New York tffm ~ that tbore ia no cause for :. alarm, but even tbty oannct l~or• th soft areu of the '
economy that the mort pesalmlaUo are tmpbaslJinl. . .. '
0 Tbe half·empty tbeoristl -wbo of late seem to bave • an unusually perauulve impact on the stock market -.;
stress the softness in con.sumer spendln1," notes Mor&an
Guaranty, which tilts toward adel)'eeof optimism. •" "U.S. economic arowth is slowing down," says Chase
Manhattan. but adda: ''Thia 1m •t cause for alarm: What's
developlnl ls a abl.ft trom an exceptional rapid p~ce to one
th1t'11tul 1ubltanUal and also more sustainable."
And Citibank, apealdng of the stock
mark«t commenta, "Wall Street mlebt
be 1ccuaed of paytn1 more attention to
tht bole than to tht dou1hnut -or of re-acttna to declln• ln pro.tits by a few 1arae corporations end ignorin& the
falna by the va1t majority of firms."
But when an economy begins to shuf-
fle a bit, with some indicators up and
ot.bera down or sideways, it seema that 1
torecaaters of gloom come out of
hibernation. Some even use the word
"receuton." Some say. "Buy gold."
8VCR A1TITUDES ARE mLL IN the minority, it ap·
pears, but they are having their impact. especially on the
atock market, where the Dow Jones industrial averaie is
down to lta lowest in more than a year and a half.
II the stock market a good forecaster of events to come? , .
You can argue it either way, depending on whose statistics
you uae, but there is one thing you must respect: There is a
reality among those who play for money.
The next consideration is whether those who play for
money are smarter than others or whether they are rout-ed
by neurotic fears, such as the ever-present threat of rising
interest rates.
A LOT OF THE BIG INSTITUTIONS haven't de-
monstrated an expert's ability ln playing the money game "
over the past few years, a good deal because they seem to be
responding more to fears than hopes. The doughnut and the '
bole. ·
Citibank thinks investors should be more aware of the
sharp rise in corporate profits during the second quarter of .,
the year -"the best news for the most firms in a long ·
time." ~.
But those disposed to worry will, of course, ask, "What·~:
about the next quarter and the quarter after that?" And ....
they have plenty more to worry about too, if they are so in-
clined, such as the imbalance of trade.
WHATEVER, WE ABE AT ONE of those critical points
in economic time when a change seems to be taking place, , . •
not necessarily in direction but almost certainly in pace.
· At such a juncture we question. It is a time when relia-(,~
ble forecasters are badly needed, but unfortunately it ls a ·i . ,
time also when almost any tale can be given the appearance :
of objectivity. " And so we have the bulls and the bears and the gold
bugs and the groundhogs and the chattering birds saying
•'listen to me," just as a year from now they'll be croorlinc
"I told you so." .
Under such conditions it seems the only tblng a person · I can do is listen to his or her own inner voice, and keep an eye I
on the doughnut, with an occasional glance at the hole.
.. . • 1 Panel Mfl,y Again
Weigh Sluuleseit · :
I
SACRAMENTO (AP> -An Assembly committee may .
vote Thursday on a bill that would exempt the Sundesert ·
nuclear power plant proposal from nuclear safety lawa, the-_',
bill's author says. _
Assemblyman Alister McAlister (D-Santa Clara> said
be baa gained the neceS$al')' Assembly Rules Commlttee ap·
proval ~ schedule the blll for another hearing before the
Resources, Land Use and Enerty Committee.
THE COMMITTEE HAD refused to vote on the
measure last week at its last~gular meeting of the year.
Legislative rules bad to be walv49d to allow the bill, AB 1852,
to 1M be&rd a,ain.
An .wa ineettna '11.ready ls scheduled by the commit·
tee-to vote an a bill deattna wi~ the siting of a liquefied
natural DI termlna1.
San J;>le10 Gu &c Eltctrlc Comp&ny wut.s to build tbe
nuclear plant on the duert n•ar ~lytbe. The company says
lt hu al~}' ·~nt '100 snuuon od the project.
The UUllb' say• there ta a de fa_cto moratot1um on new
nuclear ~er. plaota in ~allfornta because of the law that
requlree the federal 1ovvnment to tome up with a tuel
reproceaalria metbOd.
T8£ CA TD:AOMINllTaA'nON hu halt~ work i.n ~ that d.lrectton. •
McAllster't bUl would authOnze the state Eneru Com-
mt.uioD to ~prove SUhd .. ett It tt finds that llf elttb1clty la o.eideCI and ftO alt""11Uv aou.rc• ot power could be built in Ual• to meet Uiat nMd.
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