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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-08-29 - Orange Coast Pilot• Kids Take BooZe Woman Slliin; J In lr'7ine;, .Ree MONDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 29, 1977 VOL. 7t, NO. 141, J S•CTIC*S, JI f'A041S Elvis' Body TheftThwmted MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP> - Four men Who police say were plotting to steal Elvis Presley's body and bold it for ransom were arrested early today outside the cemetery where the rock •n• roll singer ls entombed. Tbe Memphis Commercial Ap· peal reported that the men were carryina explosives with which they planned to blast open the mausoleum containing the body. But Police Dtreetor E . Winslow Chapmap diamiased reports of explosives. \ Lt. S.T. McCochren of the 'homicide squad said police re- ceived confidential information several days ago that a group of persons planned to break into Presley's mausoleum at Forest HillS cemetery, take the body and bold it for ransom. omcen fropi the department's taCU'tal unit stalced out the sub· urtian Me~phls 1raveyard. On Saturday, )fcCochrel'\ said, sus· ~Ct.a were seeo in the area, ap- "raiUy making a trial run. (fhapJnan 1ald that this morn- Tightly packed but spreading out, the junior division in~ Fourth Annual Costa Mesa Bicycle Grand Prix whizzes away from starting line on Placentia A venue near Estancia High SchoOl Sunday. Greg . s LeMond, 20, of Carson City, Nev., pedaled to. victory in this event for men aged 15 to 20 which drew 40 competitor from th~oughout the United States. ... • • OAlLY PILOT $ ) Monc!ay. Lance Ta1ks ~udget · Director Urges Empl,oye P.ay .Rike' eotlltrrtd wllh th Pruldent t. e White House about a ncom· m tJoa to buda t a 1 pereent ralae ID clvtl aervlt• 1aJ1n.. One edvlaer. Chairman Alan Campbell of tho Civil Service CommJqlon, said Carter wu lh· cUned to approv• th NCOmmtD· claUon. Tho Pr•ldm~ lu1& unttl ' Wednesday to declde whetMr to reject tt and 1 nd MD alteraalive Wllo'S Dtat? Honoree'1 Identity Pmzle SA'\ DIEGO <AP > IC Juan Bautista de Anza ~ants to be honored, he'll have to tell the San Diego Community College Board just exactly who be Is. reeommCndaUon to Conaresa. The meetina, also attended by Labor Secretary Ray Manhall, fol)owed a Cabanet meeUna. Lance was present for the Cabinet session aa well. Ambassador Robert Strauss, who au.ouded, •a4d probes of \he budgot dlroctor'1 private fil'ancet did not come up. Atked whether he tbought Laace we>uld 1urvive the in· veatlgations, belna conducted-by Con,reu and tbe Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, strauss said: "I certainly do." "In the fiNJt place, I think be has respect . . . in this •· ministration." Strauss said. "There is confidence in him stanlng with \he President and ' going right on down the members of the Cabinet." Strauss was chairman of \he Democratic National Committee The trustees are balking at approval of a-plaque nammg the new conference center at San Diego City College for de Anza, one of California's explorers. a Spanish soldier who searched what today are the San Francisco and San Gabriel areas. · before becoming the U.S. special trade representative. In 1776, before he traveled 1,000 miles across the then-uncharted Southwest desert, he visited San Diego. The 200th anni versary plaq~e commemorating de Anza's visit awaits a pproval or rejection after a meet· ing at which a trustee remarked ; •· 1 have a need to know what or who Juan Bautista de Ania was or is. or represents. ··vou know. he could be El Bandido as far as 1 k~ow. I'm S\are that he is a very honorable and ap- propriate individual I just need to know who I am vot· mg for .. Girl Driver CM Sports Store Robbed of Pistols A team or burglars, using a girl getaway car driver (who pre· tended to be out of gasoline ) for a lookout, is being sought today in ihe $4,837 looting of a downtown Costa Mesa gun shop. Investigators said the lightning raid on the Grant Boys' firearms department at 1750 Newport Blvd., was witnessed by a young couple who happened to be driv· ing by about dawn Sunday. They sped away, fearibg harm fl'om the four suspects involved in the break·in. The couple ob- tained a good description of at least one black male with a mut· tonchop beard. Police were already on their way to the sporting goods outlet at Newport Boulevard and Rochester Street when the wit· nesses called and notified \hem of the burglary. Patrolman Craig Rozean answered the dispatcher's call when a silent burglar alarm was triggered at the shop. simply ripped the front door right off its hinges barehanded with such force the padlock and hasp flew some distance to the paverbent. Once in.side, they used a heavy object to shatter a glass showcase containing 37 Rwger brand weapons or various calibers. snatched them and ran. Police Officer Mark Pesanti said only pistols and revolvers were stolen. He said all were of blue steel finish and included .22, .44, .t:>, .357 and .367 caliber weapons, plus several .357 Magnum guns. The young couple who wit· nessed UJe thieves In action said their atte!ltion was first attracted by ~ womah sitting sJouched in an old green station wagon with the hood up. They then noticed \he man with the gasoline can and thoueht lt was a $.hame to be stranded witbom fuel at that early hour. He said the two men who raided the premises, while the female and another male ac· complice carrying a gasoline can waited m and beside the getaway car. must be exceedingly strong Investigation showed they F,....P~AJ Suddenly, they told police, \he other t.wo men sprang from \he rear door of the car, raced to the gun shop and tore off th~ rroot door, at which time they reall.t:ed what was happenln1 and sped · OFFICER. • That is when Clark and bis fellow investigator, Joe Esther. reported seeing Garza crouched beside a car \hat had a broken windwing. It was when the two police of· ficers attempted to question him, they say, that Garza suddenly whiwed out his gun and fired it at point blank range into Clark's stomach. The wounded officer was able to radio for help as his partner exdlanged gunfire wltb the flee- ing suspect. Pana was apprehended \n an alley b$ind a nearby apartment complex after being alnlck by two bullets. 1>9lice aald. away. Investigators said the four burelars were all in their early 20s, atcording to the two wit· nesses. ·,...., P.,,e AJ BOOKS. • • 10 years, stopped vlsitin1 \he apartment about a year aco but paid bis rent until -the past two months. Arias said he did not know where D' Aurelio was. ~ The meeting came one day after Sen. William Proxmire, who cast the lone vote against confirm1nc Lance as budget director, aald he would like to see Lance replaced -but that Lance shout not resign at this time. Proxmire spoke Sunday on CBS-TV's "Face the Nation." On \he other hand, Rep. Henry Reuss, chalrman of the House Currency and Banking Commit· tee, said Lance should continue his job. Reuss, a Wisconsin Democrat. said during a visit to Salt Lalce .City \hat Lance broke no laws -- although there should be laws against some of the things he did. ''I wouldn't say he should re· sign1 but of coura~ if I bad my way he wouldn't be bead of \he Office of Mana gement and Budget," said Proxmire, also a Wi sconsin Democrat and head of the Senate banking committee. Noting the current controversy over Lance's financial dealing as a Georiia banker. Proxmire said: "If Mr. Lance should leave now, there might be a feeling he was drummed out for a lack of in- tepity, and he•s a man of t\(gh in· tegrity. But I do hope there misht be a time when Mr. Lance can step aside." H...,,• Tlaat 6rafJ ¥ou1 Amateur diver J oe DiBebo of Wilmington, Del.. displays a live 23-'po und lobster he captured 10 miles off Barnegat Light, N.J . "I'd hate like heck to kill it," he said. He's thinking of donating it to the University of Delaware's marine lab. .. . . Experts Reprogram . , Stubborn Voy~~r,,.~ 2 PASADENA <AP) -Plagued by computer problems since the start of Voyager 2's space mis· sion, scientists today repro· grammed the stubborn onboard guidance computer as a. prelude to a second try at deploylng a boom. It was hoped tbe repro· grammed computer would ac· cept the command, rejected last week, to turn the spacecraft around and trigger tiny ex· plosioos to blow a dust cover. The cover is on an instrument platform at the end of the 71h·foot boom loaded with experiments for Voyager's Journey to deep space. The motion or turning the ship and firing the rockets, likened to cracking a whip, was designed to snap the hinged boom 's lock lnto place, assumina it isn't alreadr in place Scientist. aren't sure because the computer never told lbem the boom had locked. The craft is 4.9 million miles Crom earth, said Jet Propulsion Laboratory spokesman Alan Wood. The computer was repro· grammed because or a series of problems that began with the shaky launch and separation of Cbe spacecraft from its launch vehicle Aug. 20. At that Ume, for reasons still not fully W>dentood, Wood said, the maln computer switched over to its twin on board guidance system just as the command to · extend the zoom was iiven . Women let· Piiots The computer apparently followed tu own directive not to attempt any maneuver during a cQmputer swltcbovel', said JPL spokesman Don Bane. What scientists can't explain ls why the cbanieover took place. Capt. Connie Engel <right> of Lompoc. and 2nd Lt. Kathleen Rambo of Arlington, Va., attend briefing at Williams Air Force Base, Ariz .. as two of the first 10 women graduating from 1jet pilot t~ail}ing for the Air Force. ~. Because of the uncertainty over ttte space probe1s problems, sciei:lt1sts have indefinitely 1><>5tponed a trajectory correc· tlon Schedaled Sunday. 'two Dal arm tb shotgun and plstol too $150 credit cards from 5e\l'etal Ll Auies' Taverll patfOM, at l Beach Bl d .• Huntington Beact~ at 10:35 .to .• Swutay befor•. speeding aw*' an an auto. ·• PoUce found dJ'OP• of blood on a pool table from t.b• cut ritbf; wrtstol one of the holdup men. Wttneases sald the inju;ed pistol-clltrY1n1 ba,ndil wu a ll&ht skinned, male black, abOul 30 yeen old and five feet 11 in- ches t-11. wetibine about .215 pourub. The otber thief, also a black male. who leveled a 20 1auie pump shotgun at the patrons be was about the sadle aie as bis-partPer and she reet two inches tall and 190 pounds. The bandits ordered the bar patrons to turn over their wallets and the customers complied, poUcesaid. The two men fled in a 1967 black Mustang. Police Lt. John Foster said the injured th.lei apparently slashed his wrist when he atruek patrol Donald Glynn Nutt, 29, of Hunt- ington Beach, on the side of bis race. Nutt had asked the armed man what was golni on, Fos~r said. Nutt was not hospitalized. Foster said bar patrons,· who had been ordered to lie on the floor by the thieves, were not sure of their monetary losses when questioned by police later. Foster said there are "strong indicaUona" that the bandits may b4! the same thie\ltS who robbed Happy Jack's bar patrons of $&)0 last Wednesday. Police s*1d the We<Jnmtay rob- bery, at 18760 Beach Blvd., was carried out by two armed black people, one with a shotgun and one With a olstol.. -.. ' . ) ~ . tn aast week's robbery. me two ltlleves also ordered lbeir vie· ti ms to Ue on the n~r wftile their wallets and valuable~ were con· fiscated, police reported. ' Kids 'UP8e~' l Over Waiting For Carnival ESTHERVILLE, Iowa CAP> - The younpters of Esthuville have been waiting for the carni"al for foul' dafs. "We don't know where it is," said Dan Bubb, a member of the Estherville Cham.bet Qf Com- merce ... We ,inow St left Marshall, Minn .• Sunday but we haven't been able to locate it since then," • • Bubb, chairman oh tb'ree-day Harvest of Value Days chamber promotion that began Thursday, said be made arrangements for the project. ,, Bubb said be called .the carnival's home base in ·Alma, Kan., but the telephone company has no listinC for lt there. "I'm not going to tell you what they've said.'' Bubb .said of the disappointed children. "But l think they're ready to tar and featfter me.·: Trio Arrested OD Porno Rap Bwglars Get Guns In Mesa A teamdbaraJM'I. uiftl • tirl cetaway car driver (wbo pre- tende4tobeoutof1'841ine > for• lookout. is bein8 aou1bt today in the $&.831 loot1ni ol • downtown Costa Mesa gun sbop. lnvestlgatora aaid the llptnlng raid on the Grant Boys• firearms department at 1750 Newport Blvd., was witnessed by a young couple who happened to be driv- ing by about dawn Sunday. They aped away, feartne harm from the four suspects involved in the break-ln. Tbe couple ob- tained a good description of at least one black male with a mut- toncbop beard. PoUce were already OQ their way to the sportina goods ouUet at Newport Boulevard and Rochester Strfft when the wit- nesses called and notified them of the burglary. Patrolman Craig Rozean answered the dispatcher's call when a silent burglar alarm wu triggered at the shop. He said the two men who ·raided the premises, while the female and another male ac- complice carrying a gasoline can waited in and beSide the getaway car. must be exceedingly strong. Investigation showed they simply ripped the front door right off its hinges barehanded witb such force the padlock and hasp new some distance to the pavement. Once tmlde. '11~1 Pied a heevy object to dialler · a flus showcue cantainine 37 Rupr braad w.apoaa ot •artou.a call~, auitebed tMm and ran. Police Officer Marie Pe:santi said only pistol.a ud revolvers were stolen. He said all were of blue steel finish and included .22, .44, ,4;;, .3S7 and .38T caliber weapons, plus several .m Magnum IUDS· The young couple wbo wit- nessed the thieves ln •ction said their attention wu first attracted by the woman 1ltt1n1 sloucb«l lo an ~reen s\atlon wagon witn the up. They then noUced the man With the gaa<mne can and thought it wai • shame to be .stranded (See GUNS. Pale A2> ms AD BROUCHr QUICK RESUL~ A CarODadel Mar man couldn't believe the o•erwbelmlng • response he aot to this classified ad lb the Dally Pilot: .,...., .... ,..... "" ""'"'* O'o-11 JUNIOR DIVISION CYCLISTS AT COSTA MESA'S FOURTH ANNUAL BICYCLE GRAND PRIX GET OFF AND PEDALING .Nevada Youth Retains Champlonahlp In Event. Which Drew 40 Competitors From Acroaa the Natlon.(RelatedPhotoA3) Nevadan :Wins Grand Prix Defending national champions in three events of the Fourtll An- nual Costa Mesa Bicycle Grand Prix streaked to racing wins SUn- day, flashing past some 4,~ spe~tators along the two-mile Cout'le. Violations bicfcllst, whtcb put him a Uttle more than a mile ahead of the pack," says Rip Ribble, of the sponsoring Costa Mesa Depart- ment of Leisure Services. Ribble estimated about 4,000 people lined the course alone Allaway Re~ned Definite~y ITUane· a1TOM BARLEY Oftllt Delly f'llltll.aff A psychiatrist wbo e~amined convicted killer Edwar~ Charles Allaway on the day of h\a arrest testified today that the defendant was Wldoubtedly U:\S~e when he shot nine people on the Cal State Fullerton campus. Dr. Setwyn Rose told an Orange County Superior Court jury that Allaway, 38, told ~ in the Fullerton JaU on July 12, 1976, that he could not recall much of what had happened earlier in the day. 3'he defense witness said the interview and subsequent in- terviews led him to diagnase Al· 1awa1 as a p.aranoid schizophrenic, the conclusion reached by other defense psycblatrlstl during tbe sanity phiiseof~Uial. Jt~e said he is convinced that Allaway't mental <:ortdilion had been d~orating for seVeral ,nonlhl prlor to ttle day he killed seven ~ple and wounded two others tn'e ~und tht caQ>pus llb.rary. Rose said Allaway's separa- tion from his wile. Bon.hie, and the belief that ahe was being forced by university personnel to p~cipate in sexual rel4ltions and pornographic films shot on campus contributed lo bis in· sanity. Allaway'a belief that the mov· ies screened privately to un· iversity employes in the media center were produced on campus was refuted today by campws police chief Jerry 0 'Keefe. O'Keele t.estifled that he has personally examined and viewed the 10 pornographic movies found at the media center and has· determined that they were commercially produced. IdenUfying, "Tbe GenUeman Caller," "Love-in," "Skin Series" and "Wet Dream," as being among the confiscated films, O'Ketfe said the movJes specialiie4 i• unnatural sex acts performed by multi·racial casts. An obviously di.a,Uatecl,1pros- ecutdt James Enright· 1sstenec1 <SeeALLAWAY. Pa .. .U> Estancia Drive for the six.race event sanctioned by the Southern California Cycling Association. He said Sunday's race was by far the best staged yet in the event's four.year history. A total of 31% cyclists compet- ed, from you.npters to emr ts in thesenior aiecateaoey. Winners by event included: SENIOB m: Bruce Hattley of Sierra Madre. Brooks McKinney. of Del Mar and Steve Floyd, of Reseda. VE'J.'EMN: Phil Guamaccia (defending 1976 champion), of Brea. Gilbert Hatton, of Whittler. and Rlcbf.rd Stein, of Laauna Beach. WOMEN•s: Eileen ,Brennan. of Glendora, Hannah Nortb. oC La Jolla and Mardi Murray, of Rancho Palos Verdes. MIDGETS: Grant Foster <de- fend.in& 1976 champion and U.S. division title holdet > of San Diego, Glenn Driver, of San Diego and Jimmy Georgieu, of San Diego. IUNIOllS: Greg beMoad, Cde- fendlnc champion) of Carsen Ci- ty, Nev., Phil Buhl, of Los Anaeles and Scott Hembree, of Upland. SENIORS: Larry Shields, of Goleta, Rory O'Reilly, of Santa Barbara and Jerry Masterpool, of Carlsbad. The senior competition featured a 38-lap race, which me&Q$ OC?D~tants pedaled fOJ' 76 miles. The shortest race was 1J\ the Midae& category for boys aged 9 to 12 with four laps of the two- (See CYCUSTS, Pate Al) f t t t MEMPms. Tenn. <AP) -• Four men who police say were plottinl to steal Elvis Presley'' body and hold it for ransom were arrested early today outside the cemetery where the rock -ii· roll singer is entombed. The Merpphis Commercial Ap· peal reported that the men were carrying explosives with which they planned to blast open the mausoleum contalnlng the body. But Police Director E . W'mslow Chapman dismissed reports of explosives. Lt. S.T. McCocbren of the homicide squad said police re- cel ved confidential information several days ago that a group of ,eeraons planned to break into Presley's mausoleum at Forest Hills cemetery, take the body and bold it for ransom. Officers from the department's tacUcal UIUt staked out the sub- urban Memphis graveyard. On Saturday, McCochren said, sus· peels were seen in the area, ap- parenUy makine a trial run. Chapman said that this mom- i n g three men entered the cemetery over a back wall and made their way toward the white marble mausoleum where Presley is entombed. He said the men app•rently became sus· piclous and turned to leave. They were then 81Tested. Tbe fourtb man, who police said was at the wheel of a getaway car, was arrested after a ahortchaSe. No cbarses had been filed aeatmt Oie men by mid-day, i.nd police ref09ed to identify Uaem. • 0.put)' Cb.let John Moln-.r said · earlier the men were arrested for investigation of attempted burglary. POUce said as far as they know no extortion threat was made. "Tbere were no explosives found," Olapmm said. "'The Oil• ly place I've beard reports of ex· plosives la in the media. I dOb 't . know where they got that in· formation," • Chf pm an said police suspect the men lntended to use con'len- tionat burglllfy toob to break in· to the mat.tsoleum, but said no such tools were found ln tht!l <See ELVIS, PageA2) Renee to Wed Actor Backu8 l -- Policeman Wounded By Suspect · A Saota A~a policeman wounded evly &mday morning in a shootout with a car lbeft SUS· peel was reported in stable con· dltion today alter uader1oing sur;ery at a local hospital. Gail Clark, 32, a nine-year veteran on the Santa Ana police force, was shot once in the stomach by the suspect who car· ried a snub-nosed revolver ln the waistband of his trousers, police said. They identified the suspect as Jesus Manual Garza, 19, whose place of residence remained un· known today. That's because Garza was wounded in the shootout and re· fused to furnish information about himself before being taken to UCI Medical Center for treat· ment of his wounds, police said. He was listed in good condition in the prison ward or the hospital today. But Gana will be charged wUh attempted murder as a result or the exchange of gunfire in the 1200 block or South Standard · Street. Santa Ana, s)tortly after 2 a.m. Sunday. That is when Clark and his fellow investigator, Joe Esther. reported seeing Garza crouched beside a car that had a broken wlndwing.~ It was when the two police of· ficers attempted to question him. they say, that Gar.za suddenly whipped out his gun and fired it at point blank range into Clark's stomach. The wounded officer was able 19 radio for help as his partner exchanged gunfire with the fiee· .ing suspect. G~ WU apprehended in an alleY1)ebind1a nearby apartment. complex after being struck by two bullets, police said. -,....__P,..eAJ AI,LAWAY. • to O'Keefe's account of the plot m one rum and then asked the wit· ness: . "Wouldn't. you say that these films make just as much sense if you nm them backw arda instead . or forward?'. "I agree, I agree,'' O'~eefe responded while the JUry chuckled. The jury has found Allaway &uilty ot seven count.a of murder abd two of assault with a deadly weapon. It wrn 1>e uked by Judce Robert P. Kneeland when the sanity bearing is concluded to rule on Allaway'& mental condi· lion at the time of the sbootincs. Exxon Takes Over Offshore Oil Well ·~ SAN DIEGO (AP> -Exxon Corp. ls drllling an exploratory oil and cas well ln covemm~t· leaHcJ depth.I 110 miles west or San Diego after such work was abandoned by Texaco, Shell and Gulf oU comp9lea. ' The work IS described as hallway f umhed 00 • wen 13, 700 feet deep in the Tanner Balnk. Shallower dept.h:i were dug tllere by th' Other companies then but tame up dry. Experts Repair Voy~er? PASADENt\ <AP> -P&acu.t by computer problems al.Dee the at.art of Vo,aier 2'• Qaco mis· ston. •cl tlata today repro· •ranuMd the stubborn ~ S~iduce t»mputer u a~e to. a aeeoad try at clepfoJinl a boom. It was hoped the repro· grammed computer would ac· cept the command, Hjected ta.st week, to turn the spacecraft around and lrigser Uny es· plosioos to blow a dust cover. The cover is on an itutrument platlonn at the end ol the T~·foot boom loaded w.ilb experimeota for Voyager'• journey to deep apace. The motlon of tumint the ship and llriq the rocket.I, likened to crackl.nc •whip. wasdeatped to snap the blnted bOom ·a JoQ Into place, asswnfog It isn't &lready an place. Scientbb aren't sure beeause the eomputer never told them the boom bad locked, The craft is 4.9 mUlioo miles from earth. said .Jet Propulsioa Laboratory spokesman Alan Wood. The computer was repro· grammed because of a series ol problems that began with the shaky launch and aeparaUon ol the spacetraft from it.a launch vehicle Aug. 20. .. ...,,. That GralJ ¥ou1 At that Ume. for reasons st1ll not fully ~nt.ood, Wood said, the main computer switched over to it.a twin onboard l\llduce system just u the command to extend tbezoom wu .iven. Amateur diver Joe DiBebo of Wilmington, Del .. displays a live 23-pound lobster he captured 10 miles off Barnegat Light, N.J. ''I'd hate like heck to kill it," he said. He's thinking of donating it to the University of Delaware's marine lab. Tbe compute~. apparently followed ita own dlrecUve Mt to attempt aoy maneuver durtn.r a computer switchover. aald JPL spokesman Don Bane. I .ance Talks Over Budget With Cilrter W ASIUNGTON <AP) Bert Lance, accused by a U.S. senator of lacking the qualifications to be budget director, met with Presi- dent Carter today to aiscuss a budget matter: how much the government can afford to pay employes. . :Lance, direciO'r.or the Office of • M an~fement and Budget, .and two top administration advisers conttrt"ed with the President at the \1tlute House aboat a r~m· • mendation to bt.ldget a 7 percent raise in civil service salaries. One adviser, Chairman Alan Campbell of the Civil Service ·commission, said Carter was in· clined to approve the recommen- dation. The President has until Wednesday lo decide whether to reject it and send an alternative recommendation to Congress. The meeting, also attended by Labor Secretary Ray Marshall, followed a t:abinet. meeting. Lance was present for the Cabinet session as well. Ambassador Robert Strauss, who attended, said probes of the budget director's private finances did not come up. Fro. Page Al CYCLISTS. • mile course. Ribble said each race was re· duced by three lo five laps when they began taking too long due to a computer error in calculating the length of each race. Police blocked off Estancia Drive throughout the day for the races, but set 4:30 p.m. as the deadline for its reopening, necessitating shortening ol the race events. What scientists can't explain is why the chani.teover took place. Because of the uncertainty over the space probe's problems, scientists have indefinitely postponed a trajectory correc- tion scheduled Sunday. Irvine Party • I>ry QJI KiAU s,,eal Booze . -. Irvine police w~ l.nvestif•t· ing complaints today that a U: ~-'UrDJU>., ~' weekend part'-at Unlr~ity .11&(..13 ~ Park was spoUed by cnudren who allegedly stole $74 worth of Over Waitin.u ~~:~~~r~~ d ea ca Ped on .. 9-e Police said workers were un- E' C . l loading the liquor al the com-r or anuva, munity clubhouse, adjacent to the skateboard course, when the . ESTHERVILLE, Iowa <AP> -theftoccurred. The youngsters or Estherville 6 The Orange Coast chapter of have been wailing for the Parents Without Partners was carnival for four days. holding an adult dlscQ dance par- "We don't know where it is," ~ty. Someoltbeproceedsfromlhe said Dan Bubb, a member of the event were. to go into programs Estherville Chamber of Com-for children. merce. "We know it left Taken were two quarts of Marshall, Minn .• Sunday but we scotch, a quart of rum. three haven't been able to locate it quarts ot whlskey, six quuta of si'rtcethen." 1vodka and tbreesix packs of beer. Bubb, chairman oC a three-day Harvest of Value Days chamber promotion that began Thursday, !\aid he made arTangements for the project. ChinaBraa , ' • FOR~T HILLS, N. V. t~\. '-Th~ er top man on UC Irvine's tennis team tcked u~ .~ to· day after hitting a blazing 13Sm· e per hour serve to win the National Fast.serve C l~h t the (. West Side Tennis Club here. • · · · Scott Carnahan, 23, a touring tennis pro from Fullerton. beal out Christ Greendale, a New Zealander now 'living In Ann )\rbor, Mich. Carnahan 's winning serv was a tournament record, supass- ing the 130 pmh shot by Colin Dibley ol Australia, winner t~ lasttwo years. Dibley did not def end his title because of asholilder aUment. The best women's effort was 102 mpb by Beth J assoy ot Milwaukee, a.25-year·old leaching pro 18,800 Fe .. d Naw Afiout ThDse OverdiJe Books. • • . NElV YORK tAP) -A Queens building superintendent.. himself a former librarian. discovered up to 10,000 boob. some ol them borrowed ,a Iona ago as 1952 from public libraries, in the apartment of a tenant who ap . oarenUy has taken off. Tile boob, whose oridnal cmt was estimated at sioo.ooo. were found by Armando Ariu, who en· tend the three-room apartment to serve an eviction notice. He-re- ported the caebe Sund•Y. Arias said liWe was known Burglars Too Greedy; Loot Breakii Truck G·arden Grove police blame greed for the undoing of two burglary suspects wbo allegedly 'piled $17,000"worth of loot so high that their stolen getaway truck broke doh just two blocks from the scene ol the crime. ~. -It was when-. passiq police or· ficer ltapped td inquire about the stricken truck that the two SUS· pects couldn't explain why they bappeaed to have such a heavy load of tools and garage equip- ment on the truck. So, because of a broken axle caused by the overload. CUrtis SommervilJe, 47, and John George Brown, 29, were arrested and charged with suspicion of burglary, auto theft and possession of stolen property. r , , In sate keepina in police bands sborUy before sunrise today was all the tools and garage equip.. ment at Frank's Automotive, 12000 Harbor Blvd., Garden Giove, the two suspects alleged- ly ~d))l!eon&otheit.olen tiuct. about the tenant other than bis name, A. D'Aurello, and that be was an architect The books, mostly 4!cbnical volumes on construction. elec· trorucs and architecture in Euro- pean countries, were borrowed from Queensboroueh and New York public libraries. Arias, a former librarian i.rl Louisiana. said it too'k two dayS' of cleanin1 before be reacbied the noorthroU,cb the litter. The only furniture ln the apart. ment was four tables,-& bed-and a few chairs. The book.s, along with manuals and newspapers, were stacked against. every ~u. sbo~er high and crammed in -the kitchen cabjnets. . Aria$ and residents of the building said D'Aurello used the apartment. only as a place lo work and study. Arias and tenants said D 'Aurelio, a tenant for oiore than 10 years. stepped visiting the apartment about a year a10 t.at paid his rent unW the pm two moatbs. Ariu ·said he did ·not 'know Wbere D' Aurelio was. • • ELVIS. • • men's car. ''We are searchtng the grounds around the cemetery for tools," hesaich Chapman said police were checking to see whether the flee. ing driver mtaht have tArown tools away. The homicide department is handling the case becl!use tbe in· vestiealion has to do wit.4 the a~ . tempted removat-or a l?odY. McCochren said. Presley was entombed Aug. 18, two days after be died at age 42 of ' a heart attack at bis home. Graceland Mansion. - Asked whether be thought Lance would survive the in· vestigations, being conducted by Congress and the Office of the Comptroller or the Currency, Strauss said: ''I certainly do.·· ''In the first place. l ·think he has respect . . . in this ad- ministration," Strauss said. "There is confidence ln him starting with the President and going right on down the members of the Cabinet." Bubb said he called tne carnival's home base in Alma, Kan .• but the teh~phone company has no listing for it there. "I'm not going to te11 you what they've said," Bubb said of the d1sappolnted children. "But I think they're ready to tar and featherme " 'Confident' OCTD· Route to Ge'tl Government lfelp? Straus,; was chaltman or· the Democratic National Committee before becoming the U.S. special trade representative. ,. Two Slain In Pomona LOS ANGELES (AP> :_ Two men were abot to death in· Pomona by Intruders wbo 'de-. manded narcotics, poltce..sald. P(>lice ldentifted the victims as Andrew Hall, 46, and ~-G. Floyd, 28, of Compton. The men had served terms for armed rob- bery in a federal prison, poUce said. Tbe federal government ma.y help the Oran1e County Transit District <OCTD > buy a seven· l \ Be's Way lJp There Scott Andersen of Temple City showed up for the fo~rth annual Costa Mesa Bicycle Grand Prix Sunday on t his old-fangled boneshaker bicycle. Once you hit a b~mp on this baby, you know where and why it got its nickname. Main event featured top racing bicyclists from throughout A men ca Slaying of HB Girls Remains a Mystery One year later, Orange County Sheriff's Office homicide in vestigators say they are no nearer a solution to the savage knife murders of two teen-aged Hunt· ington Beach girls Candace Ready and Sheryl Peterson. each U. were dis· covered the morning of Aug. 24. 1976, their bodies sprawled on beach/root rock& and riddled with Sheriff's investigators handled the case because they maintain Jurisdiction on Bolsa Chica State Beach. The two surf-washed corpses were found just about five feet across the line -Oividing the city beach and state beach. • stabwounds. A team ofsix to eight men at one point was assigned to the gruesome ease, running .down po ten ti al le(ldS. ti.PS and clues. t Investigators who examined the victims discovered by a stroll· ing beach visitor near Pacific Coast Highway at the foot of Goldenwest Street spent hun· dreds or man-hours on the case. JP'sAide CaughtNiuh NEW YORK <AP> ·An aide to Vice President Wal~r Mondale has been arrested on a charge of sunbathh~g in the nude.on a r emote Southam pt on beach, the New York Post reported today Deborah Sale, 29, who works as an advance person on Mondale's staff, was arrested nine days ago as part of the resort com· munity's crack down on skinnydlpping. Miss Sales, due to ap- pear in Southampton town court Tuesday, faces a $50 fine if convicted or public nudity Scores of indh1dual~ were in terviewed in the teeming downtown Huntington Beach area where the Ready and Peterson girls were last seen. They frequented the city pier area and were leaving a group ot associates to visit the LYNN <Love Your Neighbor Now > Center a rew blocks away on Fifth St reel when they vanished. "We talked to a lot of people, but we never did establish any as possible suspects in the case, .. says Sgt. Bill J.Hller, or the homicide detail. Investig~tors theorize the girls were trying to clamber up the rocky oceanfront bluff to escape their slayer or slayers when they were hacked and stabbed re· peatedly with a broad· blade buck knife. No motive was ever determined and there was no evidence of sex· ual assault. mve5tigators said Time of death was placed as late the previous evening and overnight high tides washed away any clues possibly left at the murder scene The Ready and Pet~rson girls would have been sophomores this y'ar at Huntington Beach 's Edison High School. LOS ANGELES (AP) -When a 37·year-old avowed bomosex· ual and bls roommate were ar· restecl two month.s aeo. police in everaJ Southern California counties llnked them to u many · aa 43 slayln&rs and called it possibly the nation's largest mass murder. Police led dramatic expedi· lions to remote areas seeking bodies In what quickly became known as the ''trash bag murders .. But in recent week~. largely due to a Judge's ''' order, authorities have been quiet about the Patrick Kearney case. Kearney pleaded innocent at hls July 28 arraignment to three counts of murder in connection with the trash bag killings, a str· ing of homosexual murders that authorities say spanned 10 years and five counties. The Riverside County Superior Court trial is scheduled Oct. 5. Police have said tbe former $20 ,000 -a-year engineer for Hughes Aircraft Company told them about a series of deaths in which he was involved, furnishing information that led authorities to shallow graves in several coupt1es. from which a dozen bodies were recovered. David Hill, :W, who surren· dered with Kearney and lived with him in Redondo Beach. was freed July 14 after the Riverside County grand jury refused to in· did him. There are no charges pending a.gainst him and Hill has slipped from public view. Officials 111 the five counties had previously said they had "workable" evidence linking· 15 deaths to the trash bag murders, so named because four of the vie· tims were found in large plastic trash bags. Police had earlier speculated that another 28 killings could be involved. bringing the total lo43 But since Hi1l's release and after the gag was imposed s everal weeks ago, police declined to talk. The suggestion that Kearney may have been responsible for the largest mass murder in U.S. history has been dropped. With few exceptions. the known trash bag victims were young, single and rooUess males. Most died ol gunshot wounds to t.he head. Bullets recovered from at leasi slx bodies were ap· parentl>' from a .22-caliber ri/le and )>ore similar ballistics mark· in gs. Also, most of the victims were round nude lo isolated areas along major highways, apparent· ly dumped or buried in shallow graves. In Los Angeles County. which has the most cases still under in· vest~ation, authorities decuDed to discuss their current work because of a court order prohibit· ing questioning of Kearney until after his Riverside County trial. ''This gag ruJe has caused us to hold back on discussing certain details that might affect the case In Riverside County," Lt David Hagthrop of the Los Angeles sheriff's office said last week "The cases are sort of in· tertwined and we don't want to do anything that would int)ibit the cases out there " But Hagthrop did say: •·we feel that there's evHtence of a prosecutable case against Mr Kearney." Orange County authorities are continuing work on two cases. but sheriff's Lt. Ricic Drake said • check 1s beint made into whet.her they can be included in the Los Angeles cases. Drake said lhere is also some confusion abo\lt which county should prosecute in instances where vicUma were apparently killed In one county and the bodies discovered ln another. • uwi....- BARBARA THE E~PHANT CEADS CIRCUS WORKERS, TOWNSPEOPLE ON CHASE An Exciting Afternoon for Resld•nt• of Nuralng Home In WlaQC>naln SAUK CITY, Wis. <AP) -Seventy.one· year-old Tillie Nolden was having lunch in bed when she saw Barbara breeze by. "I thought I was surely going mad," she said. "Did I really see an elephant?" She did. AND SO DID MANY OF the 90 other resi· dents of the Maplewood Nurslllg Home, most or them 7S or ~Ider. "Nothing muctt ever happens around here, but this was real excitement," said nurse Marjorie Krause. 1l began when six-ton Barbara, who creat· ed a sensation in Fond du Lac on Aug. 8 when she ran loose for several hours, bolted as she and other elephants helped raise the main tent at the Carson and Barnes Circus for a one- night st.and Sunday at this central Wisconsin community. DESPITE CHAIN SHACKLES ON her forelegs, Barbara, 38, which is late middle· age for an elephant, out.distanced dozens of purs\.ling spectators who had been watching the tent raising. "Everyone was chasing her. It made it worse," circus manager D. R. MUJer said. Barbara roamed four miles to Maplewood. There. she crashed through a CARACAS, Venezuela (AP> Despite .a prediction popularly attributed to a Martian visitor. rour·foot·bigh plate glass window and the sur· rounding wall into an elderly woman's room. "SHE'S VSUALL Y RIGHT IN front of that window. hut it was lunchtime so the rooms and the halls were empty," said Mrs. Krause. The 10·foot-t1dl Barbara wasn't content to stay put in the room. She smashed out of it. through a door and into the hall. Tiles and light fixtures from the nine-foot ceilinC went with her. Then she raced down a ball past nurses who were so astonished they ''couldn't say anything," Mrs. Krause said. Barbara left the same way sbe came in - smashing. SHE WENT TllR.OUGH A HALL door and paused in a nearby field. . Behind her was what Mrs. Krause estimated to be "at least" several thousand dollars damage. Sauk City policeman Roger Moon said authorities caught up with Barbara in the field and coaxed her into a truck with the help of one or the circus' other elephants. Spectators cheered as circus hand John Carroll led the elephant out or lhe field to the truck. this Venezuelan capital bad to wait to find out that it was still there. They were the ones ~o left town temporarily -just 'ln case -and there were quite a few oft.hem. I ·'There are many who have left Caracas," former Venezuelan Presldeot • Romulo Betan<:ourt told reporters. BOYNTON BEACA, Fla. (AP> -His mother says it '11 "a miracle by God" tbat 13-year-old Andrew Odom survived being pierced by a four· foot. barbed fishing spear. atop a tree trunk extending Into the water. But as she walked toward Andrew, tbe girl slipped and tossed the gun at the same time, police said. J ndeed, only a handful of automobOes could be seen on me- j or city streets. normally crowded even on weekends. But Betancourt said, "I beli~ve that they only are trying to 1et away from the noise of motorcycles and pollution in the city," and added jocularly, "I. don't believe in beings ftom outer Odom was in fair and stable condition at Bethesda Memorial Hospital after surgeons removed the spear from bis midsection tn a four-bouroperatlon. "God guided that spear th.rough him,·· sald Malveretta Odom, An· drew's mother. who is a re· gtstered nurse. •·It could have hit nve major organs ... Andrew and his family bad gone for an outing Saturday evening on Beer Can Island. just south of Boynton Inlet on tbe Intracoastal Waterway in southesastern Florida. Andrew bad gone into the water about 10 feet from sbore1 police say. when he spotted a fish and asked a yolUlger stater on ~bore to toss over his spear gun. She picked up the weapon and stood The heavy elastic trigger mechanism went off and the spear Oew into Andrew's midsec· tion. with the point runntnc elear through his body. resting In an areajustbelowtheribcage. Mrs. Odom. bearing cries olthe terrified sister. found AQdrew still in the water leanine against tbelog. • He cried: "Mother, the spear has gone clear tbroueh me." the mother relates. "He keptsaying, ·Mommy, am I going to die?' "said the mother "He wanted to pull the spear out." she said, "but as a re· gistered nurse I know it was the worst thing I could possibly have done." Th~ youngster was rushed to Bethesda with the spear still m him space." · The rumor of destruction by water had spread for three mont.m in this city of 2.6 million persons. despite its locaUoo 10 miles from the Caribbean Sea behind a range ot 8,000-foot mountains. Police, who warned the pubUc that the spreading of rumors In· catuigunrestwas a punishable of- fense, prepared continge~y plans to protect vacant bon1es from thieves in case of a mass es· odus. MAYBE IT'S lUST as well. Some wtion forces, for example, would seem to have little to celebrate this year. Consider the fire department of Dayton, Ohio. Dayton firefighters are in a un · ' ion and they recently went out on strike. It is alleged that these strikinJt fireman stood by and watched while more than 20 homes burned during their 59· hour walkout. The Dayton performance has been greeted across the country with enormous expression or pubbc disgust and outrage and numerous calls to make strikes illegal for employes in public safety service. The Dayton ex· perience can hardly be viewed as a forward step for the union movement this Labor Day. Additionally. it has just been ~ported that the former chief or lifeguards al Wildwood, New Jersey. has JUSt flung in his re· signation at age 51. The former chief, one John Capacio, spent 34 years on the New Jersey shoreline guarding the lives of vacationing citizens. HE DID NOi' pitch in the towel because of old ace . It was because bis lellow guards got in a wage dispute and walked off the job. You can readily see what kind of chaos this kind of action could cause along a beach resort coastline. Trouble with far too many of the labor unions is after they've secured high wages for the workers, then they have to go on and find other issues in order to justify their existence. Can you just see how 1t could go with lifeguard services? After the wage issue is settled. then the labor bosses would start in with fringe benefit demands The city or county would be pushed to provide all the towels and suntan lotion. There would be a call for air cushions on each lifeguard tower seat. Then the Great Potty Issue might loom large. The lifeguard union could ·demand that no guard .be placed on duty more than 100 feet away from a restroom. On our coastline, that would put most lifeguard towers right out or business. ADDmONALLY, you could have seniority issues. Like no guard with more than two year's seniority could be asked to row a dory.· He gets to ride. Rookie guards do the rowing. And don't forget extra pay for paddleboard rescues. Girier to Ttifce. C~gn to Reopk NGTON <AP) -Tbe mlalltraUon, "41DPll~ t11k·for • clrlve for raUft of HW Paaama Canal treaty. aaya opPontnt eo 1-aueacet would W very . Hftfe UtMUUl)' le r.)tdtd. 4NNOVNCS•SNT of the nfftldt ~CUM U Haallltcm Jordan, the Pre1tdent•a to polltJcal aldt, mounted Ill all•O\St drive ror raWlcatlon. JoidlD put aQIJtant Joe An&on to work <n tbt e«ort and en11Sted hdp from vlrtually evuy 1ector. Carter'ettoiu In tbe past..,. be- inl IUD\moned to brlefin11 and dlspatcMd back to stat.ea wilb wa•..tnl Hbaton. d a.a.an b• raised ct. bate to ••a more productlv• l••tl '' bJ focu1ln1 on alt.mat.Iv• to \he trHtY now in tote Oatt« predict• the Senate wlll ratify 11 lrealy and HY• M will uae a ftruid• cbal to take his c ampa11n fOI' the pact to the Amorican people Ht a&ld the JOl'clan bead.I a tuk force to wln the 81 Senate votes needed far approval. Political and busi· neM leaden who bavt helped Government Plans Laetrile Studi~s WASHINGTON (AP> -Federal officials are mappin& plans this week for conductin1 case studies of several hundred cancer pa- tients who claim the controversial substance Laetrile helped them. The officials believe the patients' experiences will confirm their diagnosis that the purported cancer cure is worthless. They said, however. that if the review does not conclusively sup· port their stand, the government would consider testing Laetrile for the first time on volunteer cancer patients. . · THE DIRECTOR of the National Cancer Institute, Dr. Arthur C. Upton. said Sunday the government will decide bow to ~ick the cases it will review in a meetin1 among representatives ot bis agen· cy, the Food and Drug Administration and the Center for Disease Control. He did not say when the meeting will be beld. Warning that the government still sees no evtdeM:e of Laetrile 's usefulness, Upton said, "the only bu ls on which one would decide to do a trial comes from anecdotal information about patients who have received the drug" -in other words. the patients• own stories .. Upton was questioned on NBC's "Meet the J>Nu." • IAETIULE IS BANNED from shipment across state lines by federal law. A dozen states have le1allzed its sale, however. ~ Upton's deputy, Dr. Guy R. Newell, said public pressure played a part in the decision to study human cases. In a telephone interview Sunday ni&ht, Newell said the planned review hopes to "collect cases of people who have been treated with Laetrile to collect objective information, so we can determine whether lbere are some bona fide remissions." THE GOVERNMENT has said its reviews of Laetrile sup- porters' claims show the prop<>nents "do not provide the kinds of adequate and self-controlled studies needed to show the effective· ness of a drug .... " Newell said the government may study X·rays, slides and charts of several hundred patients wbo used Laetrile. Capt11red F-14 Costs Sink Navy's Combat Fleet WASHINGTON <AP> -The Navy's huge expenditures on Fl4 Tomcat jet fiibters have pre- vented it from procudn& enough aircraft to maintain desirable force levels, according to a secret government memoran· dum. The "Washington Post said. in today's editions that the memo, prepared by lbe staff of Defense Secretary Harold Brown. also col\lends that the Marine Corps ls tryfng to move ahead too rapidly with purchase of a surplus or airplanes that can take oil and land vertically. known as VSTOIA. ~ Meanwhile, a study by Rep. Les A.spin <D· Wis.>, shows that contrary to repeated predictions by the NavY, the size of the naval combat neet continues to declirie and probably will do so at least until 198>, The New York Times said today. WJlh'E VSB ott1clala He Reaaan'a call for "alternative cow-.. of action" that would ••recosniJe the uplraUons ot the PenaManian people" as an end to ht• demanCS that the United States' present treaty wlth Panama be maintained intact. "Even Gov. Rea1on ts sayini the status quo ls not a rea1 alternative," one admln!JtraUon official uld Sunday. "That leaves the question: Are we bet· ter ott raUf)'inl ou.r new treaty or tearlnl up the put 13 years or necotl.t.Lnl and starlin& the pro- cess anew?" THE OFFlaAL. who declined to be identlned. said be wu re--, portlna the views of Cart.et and his top foreign policy adv lien. "Reagan bu elevated the de· bate to a higher and more pro- ductive level," the offiptal said. ''Now we'll deliberate alternatives to the terms ln the treaty. It won't be a matter of dreams, like keeping the status quo, versus reality, which says we can't." Dola't Trg Tiiis This feat reserved for a well-padded skateboard pro· f ~ssional as he zips through an obstacle course during a demonstration in Chicago. Three skateboard champions displayed their skills and then held a safety clinic for youngsters. -LBJ Vote Fraud Told -1975 .T<iped\JRl,eroiew Reveah Poll Padding ' .. HOUSTON (AP) -Geocee B. PalT, the late "Duke of Duval," denied in a tape-recorded in· terview sbortly before his death that be bad anytbi~ to do with the Box U vote fraud in Jim Wells County that sent Lyndon B. Johnson into the U.S. Senate. · In the interview, taped in San Diego, Tex., in February 1975, just weeks before he committed suicide, Parr accused Luis Salu, the Box 13 election judge, of ad· ding 200 fraudulent names to the poll llstt. s.ALAS: RECENTL y admitted that he had. certified 202 frudulent vote9 for Johnson in the Aug. 28,°1948, Democratic runoff election, but said Parr himself had ordered It be done. Salas said Johnsoo met with Parr three days after the electioa and asked for more votes, and PUT ar· ranced to provide them. . ---Parr's taped comments on Box 13 are believed to be the only statements be ever made on the episode. The recording was made available to The Assoclat· ed Press by Meta-Phllm As· sociates Inc., of Beverly Hills, a research firm producing a documentary film on the Box 13 vole scandal. I SALAS LAUGHED out loud when the Parr t.ape was played for him at bis suburban Houston home. --"It's been a long time since I've beard that voice," Salas said. "I knew it was George. I re~bisvoice. "He was under pressure. He ·knew be was going to jail on in· come tax charge4. He al~ was a sick man at tliat time. To avoid more implications, he dis· chargedbisgWlton me. I am a bigger Newseaster than Barbara Walters "It's OK with me. {don't care. You can believe him or m~." Salas repeated his story that Lyndon Johnson had personally asked Parr for extra votes and Parr arranged for them. SALAS INSISTED that he and Parr were present when the 202 ficticious votes were added to the poll lists. "I'm willing to take a lie detec- tor test or a voice all81ysis test, whatever you want,'· Salas said. In his interview, Parr men- tioned that he turned away from Coke Stevenson after Stevenson failed to appoint "my man" to the Webb County district at· lorney's oCfice. • ''That's how come I row with Coke," Parr said in his gravelly voice. "1hat's how cQOle Lyndon Jobnsoo became governor ... uh, president or the \Jpjted States.·· Carried Car enouah. nobody woulcj ever be watchina the ocean. They'd all be neeotiiling. Frank Patrick Creley, 38, is in Torrance County Jail today. following his capture by police Saturday night. The escaped mental patient held an 84·year-old man hostage at a farm near Moriarity, ·New Mex . for 24 hours and kept police at bay another six hours before police flushed him out with tear gas. The secret government memo is amona a number of papers be· ing prepared for Brown aa part of a Pentagon effort to force the military services to get more weapons for their money and to operate wtth fewer people, the Post said. It's Wet Back ·There . , . . I • • ~ ..., --" ~, " , .. -· . ~ . - -- ~ ll Ml•• Gobert resiltl returnina to t'IXA8 411TBOalTll8 ALLEGE the Calllria woman tranapOrted ~ti•ta trom her Vu~ reet bome, Chateau GOMrt. to a filthy, roactt:lntetted home ln Sl>'nl1h Camp, Tex .• and coUtded thelr penaloos. The FBI aald lt la invati11t.1n1 to determine if paUiliti' rlahta wen violated. · Mlis Gobert'• attom~ald abe bu copies of It~ from paUen\I • bow mucb tbey ap. predated the care 1tven em. ftlltVIC'l'DU aB-.uNED la Tuu hospitals, · ~ awaltlP1 return to Calllornla. Offtclala said red tape delayed transfer unW later ln the week. A co-defendant, Elmer'hcnpklm, wu arrested earlier ln Texu, where be w• bel4 on •.ooo bond. A tbJid person, Lee Etta Bndsbaw, a. WU also cbarsed witb 1J counts ()f f alae impriacmnent and beld on '80.000 bond. E~plosion. :-Hits ·Utility Blast Kayos Power in SF Bay Area City 11dJ Fall ot Brielcs SAUSALITO <AP) -Police said they are lnvesttcaUng the cause ol pre.dawn explosions at a Paclftc Gas & El~trlc Co. aub· ataticll that knocked out power in almost all ol this small San Fran· daeo Bay Area city. Sausalito Police spokesman .Jlm Shepard s aid tbe "series of explosions" at the unmanned 111b9tltion at about 2:02 LDl. to- da)' resalted in DO injuries. He said there WU DO damap out· aide tbe PG6.£ lite. I ne bluts, which shoot a nearby police aabstaUon In Marin and startled · residents from as far awQ as Tiburon, toacbed off a small fire. Sausalito fU"e officials said tbe blue WU quickly uUngu1sbed. Olfe•••• Pretest LOS ANGELES (AP> -More tban 500 marchers -including members of Chicano groups and activist organizations -de· momtrated in the streets of the East Los Angeles barrio to pro- test the Carter Administration's illegal alien program. ( Sl'.4TE J Another part of Sunday's pro- test was to commemorate a march Mid seven years 110 which led to a major rlot and tbe death of newsman Ruben s-1na•. · a. -r. eeer 9tle • L06 ANGEI.m <AP> -Two feda'al prisons in Callforn.la tbat bome inmates ol both sexes will be b'ced to revert to ''OQe-aex'' laatitutions becauae of over- aowdinc, tbe Los Angeles Times repal1.ed today. Pl.am have been, in the works for sewral weeks to chanee the Terminal laland facility near San Pedro to an all-male prison and · the Pleuanton facility near Oakland to an all-female status, the paper said. Water~•e 1ae.,.11 SACRAMENTO (AP) -The· Sacramento Bee says the chairman of the Calllornia Board of Food and Araiculturo is one of hundreds of farmers reeelvinl ir· rigation water to which tbey aren't eotitled. The SUnday story from The Bee's Washiqton, D.C., bureau said LioGel Steinberg annually violates federal r.c:lamatkm law by dlverttna Colorado River water to part ol bis table crape farm about 100 miles east of Los Anaeae.. Sn•r481• .. ,.•••e SAN QUENTIN <AP> -A loc:kdown at racially troubled San Quentin prbon la belq eased in tbe wab ol tbe fatal sboott~ of an inmate by a prison gu and a separate knifin1 incident, prison officials repc>rt. Peter Savas, 24, wbo was serv- ing time for an Orange County robbery conviction, was killed,by a aingle rifle ahot Saturday as he held down black inmate James Williams in an upper yard and repeatedly stabbed Williams with a prison-made knife, prison off iclals said. ·~POiice Sniash· lnVaSion Plan T~~~t &.'ea in South Afrka Wiped Out . JOHANNESBURG., South Africa (AP> -South African police have smashed a plan for black guenillas to llrnde tbe cOGDtry and Join forces with urban terrorist.a, the Rand Dally Mall~today. -Quoting security police, tbe Ii berat. antigovernment newspaper said . armed police wlped out several terrorist bases, some ol tbem near Johan- nesburg aDd Durban, and cap.. tured a number ol tnrutraton. Bria. John Coetle, tbe deputy beM ol the security police, was quoted ~ aaylng tbat in addltion to thole c~. tbe organlstng riDI wUbln tbe country WU alao am abed. Wulm• Pt lat• •K' (·iNSH~RT J unprecedented effort by the world's two foremost nuclear pbwen to dluuo South Africa from eateriDa tbe atom.le arms race, it baa been rePorted. · The Rusliana, wit.bout specify. int tbe IOUl'CeS ol tbelr lnlorina- tlon, notlfied tbe Carter ad- mlniatratioa on Aq. 6 tbat South Africa was ~retly prepartna to detcute an atomic explosion to the K;alabari Deaert, The Wub.inston Post said in Sun-· day'• editions. . .. ........ c. ...... • ._ .... ••cl•&ed Presa SYDNEY, Australia <AP> -WDdaltltrlkesbyt.bouaandaof Tbe General Synod of tbe coal mlDers c:oatlnued lnto a 10tb Australian Ancllcan Cbureb to-wa • natfmal unloa leaders day 8IJlllOYed in prlnclple the or-lebedaled yet .other meetiq to dinatlon ~women u prietaa and try to end tbecUVlaive walkout. coaaecration ol women Nahops. The Ullitecl llbte Worker's In· But the measure ii not ~ tenaldlJnal Exec:utl.e Board la to · to be put ill effect for at leut meet wiib local laden today in ellbt years. . lndllN. PL, to diaeusa tbe cuts All tbree branches of the m pewi.on ad medical benefits ~ 11nod, the Houses of Lalty, t.battrta~~strike. • · • Clero and Blabopa, voUld .in • t .. favorolw0men'sordinaticlli. 'BM' • ..,..._...,. •• _. votes werd '4·33 by tbe laity. S10CIDIOLll Sweden tAP> 5o.33 by the clergy and l.s:t bY tbO Tbe Sridiah soveroment d; • bla~. valued tbe Uon& about 10 pet.. . .,,.,..._.A.we . :::t.=::~::::~f.!: WASHINGTON CAP> -n& p~ tu on lnduatry wu Soviet Unloa and the United lc*•ed to ~ apona, and a States temporarlly put ulde F.81'111106 treese. wu or· atrateclc compettttveneu bl '° 6dl" ~Oct. 31. in an attempt to bold tbe inflation rate down. To accomplish tbe devaluation and reduce the influence ol the West German mark on the krona, Sweden left the seven-nation European currency alliance called the "snake" but said it would try to maintain a stable rate ol exchange in relation to a larger, 15-natioa group of curren- cies .. • .. ._.. ........... FERNDALE, Wuh. <AP> - Procesalng Alaskan crude oil at Waablngton atate'a larcestoU re- finery Js down by 30 percent following a fire, Atlantic Rlcbfteld Co. otnclals say . An ARCO spokesman said after tbe fire Sunday tbat pro- cessing of Nortb Slope cntde would drol> from an average of about 100,000 barrels a day to about 70,000 barrels for several days. Nfitm•le.ilec•nu LIMA, Petja CAP> -Peru"s military goven.iment ~ Ufting the state of emefgency in for.ce for the past 13 mon~ and restor· Ing conatituttonal -guarantees, President Francisco Morales Bermuda announced Sunday. Gen. Morales said ln a speech tn Tacn.a that the acUoa was taken in responae to •'peniatent demands by the clllzens and the country's labor organlzatloaa." Tbe mlllt.ft re1lme put the country under a state of emqeney lo Jtilj 1171. • ,Volunteers Kathy Klausner, left , J o Sum- mers and Robert Klausner shovel ruins from a bathtub of a residence. that was leveled by Santa Barbara's Sycamore fire last month. The blaze destroyed 200 ex- pensive homes. Mond1y through S.wrday ANTIQUE VICTORIAN SILVERPLATEO HOLLOWARE COLLECTION. LAYKIN ET CIE TREASURY OF ESTAT~ JEWELS. ANTIQUE ORIENTAL ART ANO PORC ELAIN COLLECTION. Mond1y ind ~ue1d1y ANORE DUBBS presents the complote JANE ANDRE FALL COLLECTION. Tuesd1y DAVID EVINS Shoeman Extraordinaire. presents his NEWSHOES FOR FALL as well as styles for the HOLIDAYS AND R eso RTS·I N·TH E.SUN. Wtdnesdey California dtsigner PHYLISS SUES presents her COMPLETE FALL COLLECTION. Thursd1y FRIEORICKS SPORT FALL COLLECTION designed by Bill HAIRE and shown by a special representative . . .., Thursday ind Frid1r JULIO FALL COLLECTION · contemporary luxury tonight. A8 Road to Stanton Where's Stanton? • E~ Ana. tt'I theoounty Mat, a If 111. Quid( now. wher9'1 Stlntof\? I ... ,. a M .. uno.tlln, don't WOff'f ·Not many f°'I CM ,,..,..1y pinpoint Ute locatfon ot thta Met Orange County oily Md 23.000 rwics.ita. &.nton'• In the news beoeuee It Nppent to have one end ot 1n 8bandoned P.alflc Eleotrlo light of way tn I city lif'l'IA The ~d PE Aed c... Uled to run through town on their waytrom Loe~ to8entaAnL The Oreng• County Transit Ofttrfct propo991 that the fecMrll gowmment lend 110 mllllon to buy thla ~mlle atr1pot land. The tr8Mit folka think It would be groat for hauling ~ f pie on • rmH>ua SYttem °'· If that'• too expensive, as a bu5W11Y. OCTO otficlala dream of tying the link to Lpa Ang.._ but LA YOCer'I have shown no lncllnatlon for such a project. Which me-the Orange County people are talking about butldlng a transit syst.m just t>ecau. a MVelHTllte strl p of land happens to be there. not becaute of commuter demand. Moving people economically always has an appealing ring. but we do have to wonder how many people really want to goto Stanton. Booze and Youth Alcoholism 1s a baleful disease. but teenage alcoholism is all the more insidious because some parents are actually thankful their kids are "only" drinking and not taking "drugs" and because alcohol is an ever available, some would say ever present, commodity. Alcohol is a drug. Its abuse whether by an adult or by a child is drug-abuse. While adults may slide Into alcohol de- pendency over several years of heavier and heavier social drinking. teenagers jump Into it as a "cure" for other problems. There is a way out for the alcoholics Including the teenagers. The Orange County Mental Health Department of- • ters specialized treatment to ease withdrawal and counseling : to relieve dependence plus continued therapy to resolve the : problems whrch led to alcoholism. : Help 1s available. For information, Huntington Beach. • Costa Mesa. Newport Beach and Irvine residents may call 642-9240. South Coast and Saddleback Valley residents may call 494-1781 Boon for Cmnpers Here's good news for owners of . properly equipped camper vehicles. Overnight camping will be permitted at Huntington State Beach under a test proposal just announced by the State Parks and Recreation Department. _ All that's needed is a $25 annual permit and a camper with bathrooms, kitchen facilities and holdlng tanks. You'll be able to park overnight at Huntington. Half Moon Bay, , Carlsbad and Torrey Pines and enjoy the ocean at your doorstep. . Facilities are tight -only 35 at Huntington -and June, July and August are exempted. But if the experiment works the program undoubtedly would be expanded. Ifs a good idea. Why not let people enjoy the beach dur- ing a period when it's otherwise used only by gulls? • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Piiot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is Invited. Yes, your Dally Pilot editorial page has changed In appearance. The new typographical design Is Intended to make it easier to distinguish our opinions from others that appear on the pages. It also should provide more flexibility for presenting columns and features In an at- tractive manner. Thomas Keevil. Editor Tlwughts I Sydney Harris I believe the truism that it takes all sorts to make a world· -but do the propor- tiom have to be so absurdly lopsided? It is your secret opinion of yourself that truly sustains you or betrays you ; and lf it ls , low, the more you try to win the good opinion of others, the more you are ultimately bound to !ail. The number ot people who don't take advantage of their talents is more than made up for by the number who take advantage o/ talents they scarcely bave. Complaininc about old qe is always a matter of fallin& to consider the alternative. Young persona are so • cynical preclaely becauae they are 10 ldeaUaUc: when • they learn that a lcict b• c!Q feet they do not merely de- mote him. they designate him as the devil incarnate. Marriage is the only course in which the exams are liven, and usually graded, before the lessoos are taught. Some people lmasllie they never praise themselves, not recognizing that to speak ill of others is a dishonest way of p-rai&ing oneself. The beSt capsule definlUon of parental attitudes I've ever heard was made by Robert Frost, the J>Otl, when be said: .. The father is always. a 'Republican toward his aon, and bis mother's always a Democrat." lnsani~ comes from a re. fusal to 9diust; It alto comet. more alowiJ abd subUy, from adjuatin1 mot• than ooe lhoWd. ~obert N. WMd/PubUatwr Thoma~ K•vll/!dl1or 8etblra KNlblCl't/l!dlb'lal hgt l!dttor Rowland E anejRObeJ:t Novak Mrs. Carter Still Has ms Ear A BINGTON -The t•1~e Wt t.vm Rosal;nn C ar(•r to La 8 tl le wawAtc.10 •••n•llei • dramatic Wblte Houo cha.nfe of cllmateln tbe Lanee atralr, eahyla1 Im· plleatklm for the duration of the Carter admWitraUon co-· in1 far~ Bert Lance. · From that momeJit, Prelldent Carter's support of buqet direc· tor Lance mlraculou1ly ex- panded. Wblte House aides \1Jbo •ere predict.mi Lance's doom •uddenly began foreeutlq h1I resurrection days before the Presldmt'a public endorsement on Au1. 18. Explaining tbe 1wltcll, they privately told each other the pnss crusade against Lance could hap~ to any of them -perhaps including Jim- my Carter. ALTHOUGH Lance may yet faU, the fact remains the Presi- dent did not abandon bis Uiend as was widely expected. Mr. Carter thereby changed hls presidency. sacrificing its sanctimonious aura for a more mundane creed of loyalty to subordinates that will be beUer appreciated by polltlcians than by Common Cause. Although bis precise motivation remains unclear, there is no doubt the President supported his fellO"N Georgian at great risk of anger from the liberal establishment. Similar anaer ... abo clearlJ evident at tbe President'• Tues- day press conference, with Mr. carter hlmMlf tbe tarcet. The decisi(Jll to take that risk is symbolized by the First' Lady's call to Mrs. Lance. "I would say that was an extremely signifi- cant development," a presiden· ti al ai~e told us. That ls certainly an un· Jack Anderson dentatell\ent. Mn. Caner 11 often her b~ba.od'• mott 1ntlueo· tlahdYlter; beJ' call marked the nd ol Chlllbij pr•ldenUal llola· tJon tor tanee. The 1tan4.afd White House ex· pla~atlon for tbe chanced climate la advance knowledle that the report by John G. Hetmann, Comptroller of the Currency, would charge no crlmJnal vlolatlona. • SENATE OFFl<E 8LP6. 1N(INE YET Rosalydn'1 telephone call came days before Hehnann'• fhldines could bave been mown and w1lert it wu 1till presumed bia report would be aetrt to the . Juatlce Department tor J*lible proeecutJon. "I Jb1ak that a lot of us Just began to think, .,,.ere but tor the araee ot God go I.• " eontlded one member al tb• Carter Inner cir-cle. 0 lt the pnu eoilld do w. to Bert. tMJ eould do I~ to ~ here." St!nlor afde Hamilton Jard.al\. suspected by t0me of J..anee•a friends (tJtouah deflnltely bOt by Labce blmaell> of abedd.b:ll few tears over ~o fall of a rival power aource, Increased Ida~ po.rt of Lance. It wu Jorda whb ftrat encouraged Mn. eart.r'8 symbolic telepbane call. · pAJITIAu.y ~ible for tbe change WU the ghost ol Ted Soremen, butily abandcoed in January by Mr. Carter u b1a CIA director. AccorcUng to White House Insiders, lt WU decided the President uJtlmatel,y eould not survive if be failed to defend 1enlorollldals under attack. But a more slnlater formula· tloo ol that priacJple, IUUested on the trtnsea of the adm.bUatra- tJoo, Is that the Carter blib com- m and also worried that the President's intimacy with Lance, · parUcularly with DOlltlcal financ- ina, aJmoet made him an ac. cessory before the fact. Carter's use of Lance's bank plane. ap. parently without reimburse- ment, ia cited by friends of Lance as merely one of innumerable financial links between two spen. The President's aides were shaken by the press reactlon.. When reporters went on the •t: tack at the Aug. 18 press con- f e.rezu:e, the White House was genuinely upset. Key aides were disappointed when the Los Aneeles Times called for Lance's resignation and J amea aesfon wrote a critical column. What worries the White House even more are the ·Republicans .. There are ominous overtanes to the warning by Sen. Charita H. Percy, senior Republican oo the Governmental Al!airs Commit· 'tee, that Lance cannot perform bis duties if the investigation stretches on for weeks. Conse- quently, Lance is being urged to shed his original problem by sell- ing his bank stock with the ut- most haste. . Mexican Natural Gas Wm Arrive -Maiiana WASHINGTON -In the Gulf of Mexico, a hundred miles off the Texas coast., a balf·billlon- doJlar natural gas pipeline is UD· der coostruction. But thanks to some dubJous backstage deal- in1s. It could be a long time before the huge conduit tranaporla anyt.binc more com· bustiblethao air. The. Federal Power Com- mission <FPC>, faced with the prospect of dwindllni eas "Supplies, of- ficially ap- proved the ptpellne proj- ect last year. Normally , pipeline builders must have c «>n -tracts with natural gas producers in hand befOl'e construdion can beein. IN THIS CASE, however, permiasion to build was granted even though the pipeline com- panies had no auarantees from eas producers. Thia, of course, bu left the producers in the cat.- bird's seat. They have sjmply de- cided to ait on their gas until prices are bia.h enough to assure hefty pl'Oftta. . The pipeline project. kno'1V11 as the High Island Offshore System (RIOS), is actually a con- glomerat.e of three competing en- terprises. The competition banded together and hired a po- tent Washington law firm - Gallagher, Conner and Boland - to argue their case before the FPC. CbriStopher Boland, the prin· cipal mos attorney, just hap· pens to be a close personal friend of Robert Perdue, the FPC depu· ty general counsel at the time. Even before the matter actually came before the commission, ac- cording to our sources, Boland was huddling in private with the then-chairman, Richard Dunham. Dunham then ordered his general c0unsel to tnake sure the project was approved even though HIOS had no written promises from produCC!frs that gas would be provided for the pipeline. THE CASE was taken away from veteran FPC attorney& who were \Dl•»lmous\y opposed to the mos plan. They were replaced with a staff lawyer. just one year out of law school, wbo recom· mended a go-ahead. The com- misslop $\lbs,,quenUy approved the project. Meanwhile, the natural gas producers are still waiting for prices to rise before they sign contracts with HIOS. FPC sources told us there is little they can do to rectify the situation because the conduit bas already been certified. The commission, incidentally, now specifically requires prior contracts for all pipeline proJ- ects. The pipeline companies, or course, won't lose a penny, no matter bow long their titanic tube lles empty. Natural eas con- sumers will absorb the construe· tion costs and the maintenance expenses, which may reach $120 million a year. Footnote: Perdue, now the FPC's acting general counsel, told our associate Marc Smolomky that be never dis- cussed the project with any mos lawyers, includlbg Boland. We were unable to reach Dunham; HIOS attorney Boland did no& re- turn our calls. • BOuaNE A"GAIN: President Cartee' is fervently trytn1 to trlm some of the bureaucratic un- derbrush tbat keeps ll'Owinl in Washington. But every swtnc of his reorgani.zatiooal u seema to be blocked by aome con- gressional sponsor or special in· terestgroup. For example, a confrootation ls now shaping up between Carter and House Speaker Thomas "Tip" O'Neill over tbe White House Office of Drui Abuse Policy. Congress created the dnig abuse office last year, but Ptesi- d en t Ford i1nored the lawmakers and refused to ac- tivate it. When Cartertook over, however, he opened the qffice and was so enthusiastic at first that be named one of bis favorite advisers, Peter Bourne, to nm it. BUT THE While House re- oreanization team bas now l"ee- ommended that the office be abolished, the IO-member staff and most of the $1.1-mllllon budget eliminated and Boume demoted to a special drug aide to Carter. O'Neill, at present, bas the up- per hand in the drug dispute because Coongress must approve the scuttllng of the office. The burly speaker bu received com- plaint& from nearly 100 con- gressmen, lncludin1 Rep. Lester Wolff, D-N.Y., chairman of the House Select Committee on Narcotics. o·Nem bu promised to discuu the issue with the president next month. ·Mailbox/Not 'Grandstanding,' Superyisor Maintains pleted many worthwhile prei· Jects. • . " Please, . u a public service brQ11 them forward and document them. The commission itself wQ unable to do 10 Clurinc the hearlnis. lfy suecestlon to the commlsslon that they expand their miss.ion to encompau the ..status of the family" wu re• Jected by the commJssion mom· ben. · My fellow upervh1ors, tnclUd· tne tlldH who ¥Olecl '° fuJMl comtnJsalon bud1et. re 'luffi. ciently concetned about the mature ot the comml11lon'a ac- Uvitles that they directed th& !oOmmi on bencef ortli to con· fine it&eU to advlllna tho Board of S~rs on matters llfect.-_ in& the statut ot women ln Orange Count1, and to retr&ln • trom canytng on aoy lobbY'lnl or lndoctrlnaUoat actlvlt\ 1 on lta 0*1\ behalf. New Era Carries Promises 'W'e are~ a re•arlcahle eap•Mllt" faspaee.' ing ejected from the back of a Boeing 1.a1 over F.dwards Air Force Base. The two astronauts aboard. Fred Haise Jr. and C. Gordon Fullerton. skillfully guided their 75-ton craft from a height of five miles in a long glide to a perfect land~ oo the bard surface ol a dry desert late, duplicat- ing maneuvers to be performed when later sbuWes return to an earth land· ing strip from orbit. "This ship's going to revolutionize the way we do business in space,'' s aid moonwalker John Young, a veteran of four space missions, after the brief test. MUCH REMAINS TO be done before that prophecy comes true - and the nation sends a fleet of these Buck Rogers-style vehicles shuttlin& between earth and orbit. More drop tests from the Boeing jumbo jet are scheduled to check various flying characteristics ol tbe 1 sbuWe. But barrinl mltjor dUllculty, l John F. Yardley, NASA associate ad· m1nistrat.or for space flilbt. said the first abuWe should be OD a C8pe • Cana~ Fla., launcbiQe pad in Marcb1119. That probably will be anly a two- day Oigbt, with two astronauts aboard. It would be the first of six or- bital test flights planned for the craft that year. To perfect landing techni· ques, the fa.rst four are to land on the desert expanses near Edwards. Aft.er that, landinas will be on a 15,000-foot runway that has been built near the launch site at Cape Canaveral. AFl'Ell A FUGHT. a sbutUe will be refurbished fo.r another launchln1. an operation e~ted to take two weeks or less. NASA says each of the projected five shuttles should be able to mate 100 or more round trips into orbit. Yardley said be sees no nuon Man Sentenced ln~eTheft FRF.SNO CAP> -A Bakersfield man baa been sentenced to four years in prtsoo for a coo- vi ctlon lnvolvln1 the then· of an interstate shipment of wbialt)' worth MO.GOO. M'ichael William Rouw, 32, pleaded pllty to COillJIU'aC7 to polleU stolen pcqut, from an interstate ablpment. A cbarce of poaaeaaln1 stolen Pl~ then WU dlamtaed wb1 tb can'\ fty u mw u Um•. Tho tbutdll .. t.o beltn ~ for real la 1* -cfoln1 tbhlja m...S tptlOI cl• baM Dfttr tried beCON. They will be uaed to position •atdlltel to wblt for communloa· tlOlll, nawt1at.aan. hatbw fancalt· tn1. military ~annal11ance and actnunc research. The crwm - up to seven on a mtlalon -wtl.l be able to repair an •UiDI aatelllte or bt- inl lt back for maintenance, cutUns coatt and coosiderably extend1q the Jives ol many payloads. wrre THE CAPACITY of hauling up to 85,000 pounds, these spaceplanes, once 1n orbit, also wW launch probes bound for other planets. And they will carry up a small station called Spacelab, beinl . developed b7 a consortium of 11 Wea tern Euro,eaa countries. Spacelab also will be capable ol re- peated nuMl triPS Into orbit. perhaps as many as 50. . Eventually, the shuttle fleet may ferry people and parts' for the con· struction of solar space stations. space factories. moo.n bases and habitats for colonies far beyond earth. A recent NASA-sponsored study concluded that a space settlement for 10,000 people could be a reality 20 years after a decision to build lt. Y ABDLEY SAID a go-ahead for such a colony would be based not on technology. but on social and political reasoning. He said the project is already feasible. "Before we make that commit- ment, we would have to bave a better understanding of why we want to col· onize space." said NASA Ad· ministratcr Robert A. Frosch. · Yardley said that during an early shuttle flight, NASA hopes to orbit a 25-kilowatt, &Olar-powered generator. to which the spaceplanes could dock. drawing electricity to extend their or- bital lifetime to 60 to 90 days. For later, there is a plan to orbit a 200· kilowatt unit to permit attachment of Spacelabs or sbutUes for missions that could last six months or more. YA.ROLEY SAID THE longer stays would enable construction crews to build space platforms, which could be the foundations for laree space sta· tions. NASA is forecastin1 580 separate shuttle m.issiom \>etween ll80 and 1991, averaatae about 80 umuall)' -or men than one a week. By tbeD. the types ~ rockets DOW uaed to launch satellites noloqer will be bullL Tbe apace a1enc1. whicb bas alread1 booked all ltt fU&hta far the shuWe'• ftl'll two years once reauJar trips begin,~ to generate more buaiDNS as potential customen lain confidence. WESTERN UNION. Teleaat Canada, Intelsat and Satellite Busl· ness Systettls, are expected to sien contracts for the launching of com· mercial communications satellites. Geosat Committee Inc., a ll"OUP of nearly 100 U.S. corporations, lnclud- ing EuoD and Kerr-McGee Oil, bas been formed to work closely with NAM oo industry needs, aucb as 1eologlcal surveys. Pbarmaceufleal and blgb teclmoloa ftrms hope to take advan- . ~ .......... ARTIST DEPICTS SPACE SHUTTLE IN ORTH ORBfT WITH TELESCOPE The Spece Shcde Ort>lt9' ta Scheduled for Uunch In Earty 1978 tace cl wetCbtless orbiting lab condl- tlons to slmplifY the manufacture of many items, from exoUc ena.ymes to perfect ball bearlnes· and ainale- crystal semiconductors. Large space factories could evolve from this early research and perhaps open up the next industrial revolution, according to some business analysts. THE DEFENSE Department has indicated it will use 109 of the project- ed 5a> flights -to carry up milltazy payloads designed for surveillance, missile attack al~ navigation and communications plus conductin1 manned reconnaissance. It plans to construct a separate shuttle launch base at Vandenberg Air Force Base, to be used by both NASA and the Pentaaon for~ south polar orbits covmq the &lobe. Most cl tbe lanncMngs, ~.will be e<mdueted at Cape Canveral. NASA BAS SET an lnitlal rate scbedule bued on what tt expects each 1buttle Oiaht to cost ..-S19 inUllOG to $20 rnllUon fQ11 commercial and forelp users: $16 nPWon to $18 mllllon for federal goven1ment users, and $12.2 million for the Defense Department. By coJnparison, the Titan 3, the largest U.S. space rocket now in use, costs customers $46 million a launch and can't carry half the payload of the shuWe. The space qency also is offering standby apace-available fares and "a~w~a~ials_. .. Several unlvft81ty Iabol'alories and other lnstitutioos have put down $500 down payments on the latter. which eiitltlea them far a total cl $3.000 lo place scientific or reeearcll packages of up to 200 pounds and five cubic feet <SeeU.S.SPACE,PageAI) llG SAYINGS OH • HOMEOWM S • AUTO lnaawmc• " TOU OUAUPY • INSURANCE a.ca 1654 1114 HAR80R ILVD. COSTAMllA DAILY PLOT ALLERGY? (2131 214-%116 1714114J..t624 Receried • MaSSage AllUCY CIN?IOL fDll8ATIOll lu 15~ ..,. Cl 12111 Wri .. fer fir..,. .............. . Compare our prices ••• See why so many residents in Costa Mesa are having au their dental care performed by Or. Alan Miller, Family Dentist. Dr. Alan Miller 2979 Fairview Costa Mesa, 979-3970 Let Us Help . . ... A father discovers his ~dolescent daughter is experimenting with drugs. He doesn•t know what to do. 1 ••• A lon~ly wife sobs· into aj)illow~ Her marr~ge is· breaking up. Her elderly parents have become a burden. She can't cgpe. · ' ••• A middle-aged man with .a good job ·shakes uncontrollably as he reacties for a bottle'"o!. booze. He tried to stop drinkmg. but failed. · · · - ~ .. ( • •• These scenes are common everyday.expiien·ces. All of us have problems and we search for their solutions. Sometimes we succeed. Other times we can't. Then we need professional help. Where to find this help can become a problem. PROBLEM TALKSHOP helps people find answers to their pro blems. PROBLEM TALK SHOPS are free counseling and referral services located in Orange Co unty. PROBLEM TALK SHOPS are here to offer you help through counseling and referral. There is no charge for our service to you. We refer to both public and private agencies in Orange County. Facili- lties to care for individuals are available on a 24-hour basis. That means we can help you whenever you 'need help. Apppintmeots are not necessary. If you prefer to make an appointment. day and evening thours~re available. (Office hours: 8:30 a.m. -5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday. In extreme emerg~cies, a counselor can be reached after 5:00 p.m., and on weekends.) . . • . " Cb1tf o.Hola dled 1n at Jtft•1 &C., onJan. IO, 1111. l 01 OClt lqriDle 1tQr1. TM bontblt lt«1 be wu capt undtl' a z:u ol t.r*9 a m a I.bat w11 to be a ,.,.. ,.,.aey. And tbt boni ltorJ '"'"-II t.bu '11 death. the atttiDdln• P"'*'-Dr. l'Mdeltck w~ cut olf the I IMe4 .ml*med lL n... When tbe ocw•a tbrw 11oa1 aci.d out ot llu, ta. •DUllllDllCI bJ banatns tn. lildlua"a head 00 t.belr Wpait OVenUJbt. No letlbaDder 1bou.ld for1et tbat a lot ol e:u...Un1t1 famous peopl• llkewiee bave been aoulhpawa. Llke Jack the RJeper and the Bolton stnnoer, for uamples. Women are more SUS· eeptible to sunburn durtnt that time when they're ex· pectant mothers. The female fly ls stronier than the male. SLOT Q. "Why do the stores always sell atuff fol" odd sums, Uke98 cents or $1.49!" A. today it's a paycbological practice, but that's bat bow lt got started. A department store owner in New York City about 1880 found his clerks were pocketing some ol the sales money without reportJne it. So be aet up a cen- tral change-making caee, and repriced all the merchandise to odd figures, thus making it necessary for ..,the clerks to reveal almoat every sale when eettlng exact change. - Q. "How many newspapers printed the comic st.rip 'Peanuts• when it first began? .. A. Nine. That was on Oct. 2, 1950. • 0 u ii ~Y lm1>9rtam to Pfeil. ~eat CaiteP to balan the ~et by 1911, lad MY ttiria to that will be bard to ~vt. It will be •NY to tell Unleu a very penuUlve wru· ment can be mlde for It. ' Caner ~ently told a crc>uP ot re· porters lt lt Unlikely the u.·s. will ln· iUate aD,J major new apace effGrt unW the shuttle bu been used to lts fU1l pot.ntlal. He ruled out manned plAiietary fllabta in the near future mid IDdlcated be would not support develoPmtat anytime IOCXl of a apace station to orbit the earth unattached Eleanor Burg of fromashuttle. Corona del Mar has C~ WHO RAS taken sub-assumed the 1977·18 stantially more interest In the apace P r e s i d e n c Y o f procramthandidtheNixonandFord Women's Division admi.a1stratlona, has ureed expanded J ewish Federation of use of 1pacecraft tecbnolo17 in O range County . foreign policy, particularly com· Located in Costa munlcations satellltea and Landsat, Mesa, the council tlieeartbft50Ul'cesaurveyaatelllte. serves the county's Speaking tbJa year before the Jewish community Permanent Councll of the Oreanlza· tionofA.merfcanStates, Carter Hid: as the coordinating, ••0ur own science and t.ec:bno101ry planning, financing can be ~ to many of your coun-and community rela-trte1. We are ready to train your tions body for the ar-· ieclmicians .to use more information ray of agencies. · gathered by our own satellites, so that • ~,-,,-- you' can make better Judllnenta on I eldwJnd:i~ ~~ ~anqemen~ of your resources and l Pianos. ~iiilllllii yourenvironment." I • AS THE TIME nears for Carter to and . submit his 'first complete federal Organs budget. the administration bas asked Fecrory FlntMcllr• NASA to submit a aeries d "option LESSONS. INSTRUMENTS budgets" in keeping with Carter's ••11 ~~. IC 8 "WE BA VE A VEBY t~hnlcally , ~ero-based budgeting concept, under 1 ll ..,....., , ~ minded president, and a bard cue which every item is Justified from ; , ....... tllend ....._. AlicffcMt Wll ttti ...C. w .. ,,c1oy, ... t31 at f P.M. View Day of ~tio'9 at MEWPOITER INN I •07 :J........,'IOod Newport~ ,.,.. c••Cl9edl CAT~UIS AYH •Kl AT AUCTIOM . Am advised that the Federal Commission "' for the Standardization of Screw Threads has been underwritten by the U.S. Government for 59 years. will bave to be made for it." be said. 'BCTatcb. · .,., •-.,... ~ r.-~~·~.:.:.::==-~~~~~-=--'~~~=======!;L...-.....:...:-----=--........:=--:.__~======-:..;_-- LANGUAGE MAN Minor matters of private pride: Our Language man has never comdoualy written "gal" to mean "girl." Has never used "via- ble" t.m.bumOl"OUSly. And bas never typed out "whopping" as a syn nym for "big." "Why do you wa t to be a flight atten- dant?" That's a ques n that's asked by all airlines of all flight at ndant applicants. A young lady some time ba k at the TWA Trabl- ing School filled in that bl on her question· naire as follows: •'There e many other jobs where you can meet nice m , but this la the only job I know in which you stra.1!-A'n""u""' down." Seniors· Invited To Fair Senior citizens from tbrouehout the county are invited to the Third Annual Senior Health Fair at La Palma Park in Anaheim on Sunday, · Sept. 18. for a day of fun and instruction. The 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. eatbering will feature a county fa1r-atyle theme and include booths by a ChQose h111 different membership programs. Including our two week · intrOductory offer. Please note, the woman who remarries after a divorce waits four and a half years before doing so, if typical. But the averase man who remarries after a divorce is more likely to do so within about two and a half years. variety of health . or· ,_.,,, .... ,,, Uoyd's of London declined 100 years ago to in.sure any ship that set out to sea on a Fri- day. Addreu mail to L.M. BOJld, P.O. Boz 1Sti0, Co1ta M~aa 92626. Deatlu Elsewhere . ganizations, agencies and clubs promoUne well-beine. Doctora and dentista will be among those pre· sent to advise seniors at- tendine the annual event co-sponsored by the Parts, Recreation and Arta Department and Anaheim Memorial Hospital. Admission to the part and fair at La ' Palma Avenue and Harbor "Boulevard ia free. SACRAMENTO (P) - Services were beld today for Albert Lawrence lleae, 71, a pilot for the state Fish and Game Department wbo pioneered wildlife pres- ervation techniques. Reese died Thursday in a Sacramento hospital. other women from San Fr anclsco joined four women from Chicago aa the first stewardesses in · a trial program May 15, . 1930, by Boeina Transport Co. 'Dimes' DeacJi N••ttt• · SANDIEGO CAP )-A funeral Mass was con- duct~ today for I.au Keller Frtte, 71, one of the first ll"OUP of airline , stewardesses to fiy 47 years aeo. She and three M&COINICJ( MOllTUA .. IS . Laguna S.ach 494-9416 Laguna Hiiia 788-0933 Sen Juen C&plstrano 49~1778 Benefit Scheduled Join the dub and join the fun. Tnm down and firin up. Enjoy the radiant gOod health that oomes wtlh physical fitness. With steam, sauna and whirlpoo}. Heated swimming pools at key locations. Even Jarmastics for women. Fun group exercises 8one to up-~ music. DOn't fe.el alone. And don't wait any longer. Just join the fun. - ~ U quartet t FOunuln Valley ptOduct Jack Babuhotf, Boltom, Rick Ddloat and James ont1omer1 turned tho 400 Me\11'1 &a • • :ai.u. t· terlill form rid m rk set by Am<-rtcana lD CaJJ, Colombia, tn 1en, by more tban three aocODda BabUboft went out ~o 31. BoUom flnllhtd the ae 00 ror a coUoc:Uvt Ume of 1:40. e, DeMont waa homo Wtttr 300 •t 2: n ltl. All three were around the IO ·aecond 'mark, wlth Monta:om ry then 10Jn1under50 aeconda oo the anchor le1. Abo Sunday, Goodell of Mla· lon Viejo eaaed to a wiM.loi 15:27.98, in the 1.500 freestyle. edtina tummate Ed Ryder, who wtnt 1.5:29.13. East German women, favored to dominate the Amerlcan • wom , had fallen back Satw-· day wben tbe American &lrl1 craahed through for vlctoriM in the a freeltyle and the 400 in· dlv1dual modl y. Al it t'li'nod out, thoeo 10 pol.nu Just abo1*t mlde the dltterenc:e. But Slmday the Eut Germans came up wlth a great performance of their own when 15-year·old Christiane Knacke of Bertin became the first woman ever to so under one minute ln the 100 butterfly, wltb a $9. 78. "I don't go into a race looking to swim a certain time," she said later. "But l knew after the European championships I would be cloee to a minute.·' The East German girls got a second world ~rd when Ulrike Tauber lowered ber own mark in Garvey Ends Hit Sltimp On 3 Doubles, 2 Homers LOS ANGELES (AP) -Los Angeles Dodgers first b~eman Steve Garvey ended his long period of frustration Sunday. Garvey thundered out of· his \wo-monlh batting slpmp with Tension Builds two home runs, one a grand slam. and three doubles in lead· ing the Dodgers to an 11..0 victory over the St. Louis · Cardinals behind Don Sutton's 47th career shutout. Brock Thrown Out -By Ump, That Is LOS ANGELES (AP> -The tension of trying to break Ty Cobb's 49-year-old career stolen base record is apparently begin- ning to get to St. Louis' Lou Brock, who ended a frustrating three-game series against the Dodgers Sunday without stealing a single base. Brock went hitless in three at- bats against Los Angeles' Don Sutton, and was thrown out of the game following a heated argu. ment with home plate unpire Ed Mont.ague in the eighth inning.· Brock, kpowo for his mild de· meanor, was particularly upset over a called first strike. Brock, who entered the series against the Dodgers wi~l81 stolea bases -just one sbort of Cobb's record -was uncharac- teristically curt with report.en following Sunday's 11·0 Los Angeles victory. ••N'o comment, I just don't want to comtllent," Brock said wben asked about the exchanae with Montague. Asked if he were getting frustrated aboot the record, the 38-year-old lefUielder replied, "No, I've 1ot aU y'ar to do it. I said I'd like to aei lt here. but I didn't say I must get lt here. ' 1I'm just not in the mood to talk, .. Brock added as be walked away from reporters gathered at his locker. Brock had moved to within one of Cobb's record when he stole two bases against San Francisco Thursday night. But during the three games at Dodgers Stadium, he reached base only once. And that time, there was a man on second when be drew a walk in the opening game Friday night. Brock· was O.for·ll during the series. Sutton, asked about Brock be· ing thrown out of the game, replied, ''That's not Lou Brock. I think chasing the record, getting asked so many questions, prob· ably having drHms about at, may be affecting lnm. ''It's got to put a little strain on 'him. I don't think be would 1'ave argued if he weren't feeling it." Brock bolds most of the m8jor league base-stealing records, in· eluding bb single season mark of 118 thefts in 1974. But be bas bad some difficulty topping the stan· dard set by Cobb from 1905-28. Brock bad predicted he would smash the record during a recent St. Louis homestand but d.ld not do so. The Cardinals now move on to San Diego, where they open a • three-game set .tonight. Reaching base is something Garvey was having trouble do· Ing th.rough what he termed "the rnost frustrating period of my career." Since July 3, when his average peaked at .316, Garvey had batted only .211. Until his rbi Saturday night, which produced the winning run in a 4.3 Los Angeles victory, he had gone 25 days witboutdrlving in a nm. . Sunday be drove home five runs and also scored five, an all· time Dodgers .record. Cookie Lavagetto, In 1939, had scored four runs for the Brooklyn Dodgers. His 14 total bases were second only in Los Angeles Dodgers his· tory to Dave Lopes' 15, in 19T4. "It's nice to be back after my two week trip," said a relieved Garvey Sutton reached a milestone when he recorded bis 3,000th in- ning pitched after retiring St. Louis in the first inning. He also posted the 188th victory of his career, most by any Los Angeles Dodgers piteher. Tonight's 7: 30 tilt with Chicago will be broadcast on KABC radio (790). ST.LOUii T~u 4010 Broclc If 3 o O o lloMttltf • 1 0 •• Mum,...,ct 4 t J 0 l( . ......,.,...1b4 0. 0 ,,..... • eo • H.Ctvt rl' 4 0 0 t Aadtrc 4 o I o Aeflllb 2 0 1 0 lor1 If I 0 t 0 Tvsena 1 o o o Plllllll)sa 1 0 t 0 U-P 0000 A F«ldlp 2 0 0 0 C.CMftll p 0 0 0 0 o.r•a 1000 * LOS ANOl!LES •r•lll s 1 2 J Otto 4 1 I t S1~ ... 4101 s s s s '0 1 0 11 I 1 4110 0000 4 1 2 0 300• T.nilt SI 0 6 O Tot•lt 19 11 f7 9 !JSl. l.AMh 000 000 .... 0 Lo•"'-'tJ OIO 110 1111-fl E-T""f'll40ll1, IC.Htl'Mfldei. OP--Q. l.olllsl. LOa~. L.AKot. 7, Los AnOMH 10. 28-4t.-r, Aelu. GMvey). 38-l.Alpes.. HA-G«wy 2 1211. 58~2.~.S-Qy. IP H It lit H SO lt.FO<'ldl 11..1"'4) I I ~ $ 4 l C.C41m>fl ~ 3 4 4 0 I u.,....,._., 1~ ' 2 2 1 o O.Sutton(W,IWI ,9 6 0 O 0 S WP-0.Suttoll A.Foncll. Pl-ltMef'. HBP-6y 0,"""" nv-1. T ~:• A~MI. . ., , ... "' ' .. Vin:nie Is TOps -O'Malley Scully: ~'m a Repo~, Not an Expert Editor'• nott: Southtrn CaUfomia'• Jeodi1lg radio .and u~ aportaco.stn• art the subject of a aerie• of articles. To-do11, Ho. 15 of the 17-pan series, tpat~ Vin ScuU11. the 200 lndlvldual medle1 Crom 2: is.95 to a: is.ss. ~ Fourteen.year-old American Tracy Cawkinl was ·~ in 3:18.~. Sbe won tbe 200 bUtttrflY on Saturday and came tn aecoad ln tho«IOindlvtdu-1 medley. .... .. ~IU9' ,_.1.-t.DeMont CU.$.J, 1:51.61,; t . ~ cv.s.~ 1;$1.1t1 a. Pt..U. CIO>, 1:5U71t. .. ~Cf0),t:foU1 1,MO l'ft•I -t. CloMell CU S t. U:V,•; t. A1tdef' CU.S.), tJ tt.U; J. lltjtllHcft C•OI, U:40.1'3; 4. PflMltmt llGI, 1•.0S SJ. 100 ~CK -t, J.c--CU.I.), 17 .7';1. Wt1tlt ceo1. a14: a. HWrtwn w.u. st.n:" r..-. (£0),tUJ, 200 a"IAST -1. A•t'llc-• Clo•. 1:11 ... ; i. Want~ IEOI, 2lUOS; I. U111 CW.I.I, t:U.41;" Ul9fld CU.$. I, 2!1U? 109 rLY -1, 9t11Nt' IU.S.J, t:OO.OJ; 2. c;..,_ IU.S.), 1:00.tl, ,. ~ 11!0), t: ..... ; C. ...._.. CEOllt:~tS. lOO NO.Ml!,PU(Y-1 $p911ftlU.6.l,.; ..... ;t. WtlW Ct?Gl, 1; ... 1t; a. 'ltuatlf CU.S.), 1:1Ul; '-Kt.lwl ~Gl,1:1UJ. 400 Fftlll! A•LAY -I· U.S. l ........... J • ._. ~. OeMonl, ~90'M'YI. J:tl.11 ._. tnll Al'Ml'l<aol _,., eld IMftl, I : 14.IS, U.S, NittltNI tell!'ll, tf1Sl; 2. lest 09"Nlly CW.c ......... i. ~.Of'abs.~l.J:#.$7. Giveaway In Detroit:· , I ... Halos Do It DETROIT (AP) -It wO.:·a giveaway day at Tiger Stadll Not T-shirts, helmets, jackets ar caps. Rather. , runs, homers, waits and enlOft were banded out. · The Detroit Ti1ers w= with most cl the gitb and - ed the California Aqels J.2..9 day. .. We rully didn't play Yery good, did we?" asked Callforllia manager Dave Garcia: • No. it waan 't the kind of game parents would want their Little A ..... S .. te i·! a11~•IOllPC1t.-.tntl • Auo. i.~toloml•tl &.lllllNlf"9 4 Auo. IOt.lllotfll•tt ~IUmore •: 1-u9. II Ctllforl\l•tl 8.itlmor9 •: Leaguers to watcb-fo le1al'llllif.,. to play baseball correctly: -Detroit scored five nms ill the fifth tnnine with the a1tl of fourwalJas. • , -Calllornia scored three In the stltth with the benefit; !f three walks. . • -A throwing error fate Detroit a run in the rirst. ~ gave the Tigers the winnlnf ln the sixth and an error It them still another run in seventh. -A balk and throwing led to an Angela' nm 1n the and they scored once in tbetd.ilh' on a wild pitch. · • "We're making fundam.W mistakes on routine pla11. ":' Garciasaid. -..... Detroit won Saturday's ~ 7~, with the aid of a eolliaiOll'llty two Angels outfielder$ tbd •· lowed two runs to score. · •4' Sunday, Bobby ~d.s --had bit a pair of two-l'U..Q ho~ -threw wild to the infield 4)ica double by Jason Tbompion bllli sixth allowing Rtl!ty Staub· to • .. Hero~¥e been two World Series score from third to break • 9-9 Wider the new, expanded format ti an,d l'v• bad to qualify three. ~elder GU Flores bobbled tlhl~ •• ... ~ a ball the next inning, letting 1tia t4••••l"IWll\SSO.OOO •UWMf-tM LeFlore fn from third. tile~ ~~$11,... ......,...._... Jef'l~st1.7• · n*4W1-m Thompson put the game on lee LouGnNlll.$11.000 ~...:=:: with his 26th homer to lead oft title ~~::'w "*~s . eighth off Dyar Miller, 5-6. st"e ~=::.':.us :!!fi:::: Foucau.lt.5-S. was the winner,. T°"'w--. .. J s ~n........,. Tbe Angels play at B~ ~.:=..,~ !~~?t:: tonight. with Nolan Ryan. l~ • .Mh.......,JS,-jOO ~ pitching agalnst the Ori~ =~~s =-~ Ru~=,p·12. DnllOIT · ; • v~~.surs ....._,,.,~ •, 11111 • rri ,..lu.::\g,';o· •7t-~ ~--If 6 1 t O t..F._d S J~)-1 :::-.. f,:• ::.:::::.:: .. _.,. ~ 121 .. --..211 s •a• _ _,,_ Ronctsrt S 11' 14aftell J 21_. Celvt11""'"•·U.7JD 11.-12~ 1to.J.--1a Jo, o Kemplf s, J2'. JolWI llttlroedlr, w• 6Mt-~n--ao StlaltAI ,. o 1 o o, ~ta 3 t t ~ HoWiltd'Twtt\)',st,6W 7NI .... _, Bevlorell "0 11 0911\llerf • t I 1 A1Gelllerllw,\U50 •1*71-7>-411 ClltlUll 4 0 I 0 M.IMyc 4 It~ lt.Y,,.,_,AMD e.n*n-m o--o• so Jo "·"~• •, .. MllCMcl.AiliM,$1,010 ~~S*-11171___, A.T...,..d 1 I 0 0 Y"""1Wa t ••JI• 0.V.An:twr,$2,010 ,,_,.... •• -... llr'lo9Sd 1000 c:on:or.... 0 •• ,. J~ 0...,$2,110 71·10*11--411 MulllllHl:lcf t • • t Seri-a 2 t H AF~~~'f: ~== H~CI •tit ·--..-..-.,.,..,. GoedW!ft!lfl 1 0 0 0 Offr'gtlUrM,$1-"0 6NH1.n-ta lltc....._CI • O O t .. ... L'fll'l,otUt,1" ... 11,10-n-ea lolle'f• tot o ~Woa.wtlU!t,11.StO 7t-JW•n-92 Tttel1 17 9 11 1 Tltll1 rt ti,/ tf 0.1'11'1rttt.-$!.'9t ._.,.....,~ ' tuu.-•• oa1t."..ffD 11*,.n-ta c.ilfefftle ~n>Sl~•t-"' "*J'W~ Detr11t OM.YPILOT __ ...._., '!')1 mo t Im runalnC ln tM • •ts, but ltle rookie fro ...,. he •on 't be at>l to re· ail Loi Anitl • made. fM Uke I've been playinl 1," •aid Tyler. ·~ llDilbld u UCLA <Bnalna') all·tlme top l'Ulbet wlUa t,Jll y....S.. • about atttln& cut a me ten•• up lntld~ are el&ht Cood baekl on club. and moat bave more nM!l'iil!!!-lhan 1 do." Ser bu gaiJMd .188 yards on arri• durinl .Lo9 An&elel' preHuon 1•m•, lncludlna t can1e1 ror u yards In the • 2'1·19 loss to Kauu City ay. 111 an earlier same aeamst the P~ladelphia Eagles, Tyler tutned m the longest run lrom st?imma&e recorded by any Ram in the put few years when he raced 59 yards. "That run. that game gave me a IGt or confidence in myself," s.;ct Tyler. ''I felt I could make it In pro ball since a collple of my frJ,nds who are players con· vibced me I could. But I 1uess it."jnormal to feel a llttle nervous atiout it sometimes.·· ~Je he may have moments of ·self-doubt, the soft-spoken Tyler ~ears to have ample con· r~nce in his ability. :!!I feel that l_'m the type of run· oO who can give a team the big ~y." he said. ''I try to go all the \f Jly all the time." :tryler said playing pro football -.tun't as tough as he'd lmaalned it.to be, but added that one big dJlf erence was the quality or de· (~ive backs in the National i:ootball League. :~'It's diHicult to make long rlfls for touchdowns," he said, ·~cause the de£ensive backs qic so fast." :lje added. however. fast de· Itltiive pursuit can sometimes WOrk to a runner's advantage. !,.'When they do come so quick· ~-it gives you an opportunity to di{ back on them.'' he said. ''I've I• ed at a lot of films, and I k there's a good c:bance to cut k on most plays once you get ~the lipe of scrimmage. :!'l think I have really good P.!O'ipheral vision, can see thin&s ~pening around me, and that ~ a lot when you gel past the i defensive wall. ve been working bard on t I think I need to improve Tyler continued. "I've been g weights to build myself up, ~king on my blocking, and ~king on catching the ball. .. ••• .,.. ~Baseball • ,. $tandings •• ~~ A1'1ERICAN LEAGUE : East Dlv~loa • W L Pct. GB l(ew York 77 52 .597 ;lt°~ore ~; ~ :: ! ; roil 61 67 .477 lS'h : veland 60 69 .465 17 : waukee 57 78 .422 23 : onto 45 82 .354 31 ! .. : West Dlvulon =ifansas City 75 52 .591 :~cago 72 55 .561 3 !as 72 57 .558 4 • nnesota 73 58 .557 4 • ,. 61 65 .484 1312 ·~land 50 77 .394 25 ' • ' tUe 52 81 391 26 ~··a.­Oetl'llll U,C61lloml•' , e·· TOt'OMo 2 ~10,S..lll .. • City S, klllmoreo \ t(f'WYCWlll,TUHO ~6.MIMHCIWS • jfhw-.. .. 10. °"'...,' • T ... , •• .__, ~: ~11$H Clly (Spllltor11 11 .. 1 •t N-V- 0 tN!lfttw .. 7) ·~ ....... o (~111 .. U>eftdJefftUOll .. IJ)etMI~ : CZ""" 11·10.lld Rtdftm ~O. 2, I-fl " jfWfM IAyet1 17-121 •t 11•111'"°'9 1A.-f . '·" !alto CM-1).0 •1 CltvelM\d !Wllb Ml, 1t ltllld 4~ HI •I Do.ton (Wl• .. S>. n ,..,..uclltd\llect TWMllY'IO-. •NC1ll\k9 .... 0.-..lend," l!OfN•et .. ",,,_,," in .. .._,. " ......... .,..,.," l'llt.tMl!wMtllM." ,,..._,,_ ..... K.-Clly, n ..-.ldlellUI .. ZANDVOORT, The Netherlands -Nlkt Laveta ot Austria won the Dutch Grand Prix ln a Ferrari Sunday after two leadin1 rivals -BriUah world cham~on Jamea Hunt and Arpertca'a a.rto AndretU -col· Ud'td Orl the lap. Hunt's McLaren was forced out of the race. Soon after, An· drettt in a JPS-Lotus also quit with engine trouble. The two cars collided while cornering on the fifth of '1S laps or the twisting three-mile circuit Later the two driven blamed each other. With two major threats out or the race, Lauda took over the lead in the 21.st lap and cruised to his third Grand Prix victory of the season. He was timed in 1 hour, 41 minutes and 45.93 1ecoods at an average speed of 116 miles an hour. Jacques Lalflte of France bl a Ligier-Matra was second and South Af.ricals Jody Scheckter in a Wolf-Ford placed third. Emerson Fittlpaldi finished the race fourth in his Copersucar SMielde \"erdlct Crenshaw of Texas as they beaded for the Jut green on 1hts 7,093-yard par·'ra course. Then he hit a JM-yard four-Iron 11hot that put the ball only six feet from the hole. Re sank the putt easily tor a three to clinch a 70. That save him a five-under·par 213. That was one stroke better than Crenshaw. 7~ ler KeChlelc RIETI. Italy -World record holder rubert Bayl of Tanianla won a 1,500-meter race in 3:37.4 Sunday at the City of Rlet.l track and field meet. A bl• 1UrJ>rlae ln the meet was th' victory in the hi&b jump by Rory Kotlnek, wboSe 7-6~ beat former world record holder and fellow American Dwight St.ones. Stones finished second with a ells· ap.P01Dtin17·.2~. the 110-meter hurdles was won by Charles Foster of the United Slates ln 13.69, Nenad Stekick oC Yugoslavia won the long jump at 26·3~. and Earl Bell of the Unit· ed States won the pole vault al 18-0'Aa. l'•rleiir, J3·JO P!LE AND COSMOS FANS CEL~ SUNDAV'~ ffRo SOCCER CHAMPIONSHIP. ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. -An Erie County medical examiner said today he has given a verdict or suicide in the death of Lorraine Saban, wife of former Buffalo Bills coach Lou Saban, who now is coach at the University of FOXBORO, Mass. -Steve GroaAA's toudtdown'pass with 14 seconds remaining ln regulation pulled New England into a tie. then John Smith's 32-yard field goal in overtime ~ave the Patriots a 13·10 victory over the Pittsburgh Steelers Sunday in a National Football League exhibi· Uongame. COSMOS ACE PEl.E BA TTl.ES FOR THE BALL. Cosmos Triumph It's a Race ·Between LA, New York NEW YORK <AP> -The bat· Ue for the 1984 Olympics site is now a game of one·on·one between New York and Los Angeles. With four weeks until the showdown, the chairman of the U.S. Olympic Committee's site selection committee, In town for a two-day tour of proposed Olym- pic sites, refused to compare the two bids. Newbold Black told a news conference Sunday that he was impressed by the city's plan. Citing uncertainty over financ- ing, New Orleans withdrew from consideration over the weekend, leaving just two contenders for the committee's nod, now thought to be tllntamouot to win· ning the rtgbt td"stage the games. Officials from both cities wlll present proposalr. to the commit· tee's executive board Sept. 25 in Colorado Springs. Black cited as positive £actors New York's transportatlon system; the proximity of housing and competition sites; and the ci\y's tourist and cultural cen· ters. He declined to reveal any shortc()mlngs 1n the proposal. Concerning the financially· strapped city's abiltty to aff<1rd the estimated $224 mUllon eap between expenses and revenues. Van IJnge, Glasgow Wm Doubles Crown Miami. · Police said Mrs. Saban, ss. was found banging Friday night in the basement of her suburban Buffalo home after her son telephoned a neicbbor asking him to check oq bis mother. Raeet-KIUM BRANDS HATCH, England 1!... Australian race car driver Brian McGuire. 30. was kllled here ur day when his Formula I car plunged off the track and struck a marshal's post during a prac- tice lap. Early reports indi~ated three volunteer race marshals prepar· ing for Tuesday afternoon's Shellport International event were injured in the crash. No de· tails of their conditions were im· mediately available. McGuire was dead at the scene, officials said. MW StlU Bet HARRISON, N .Y. - Guillermo Vilas, continuing his reO'larka~le summer spree. crushed John McEnroe, 6-1, 6-2 and gained the nn.i of the $25,000 Telli_\is Week Open rouod-robln tennis toornament Sunday at the Westchester Country Club. It was the 38th consecutive vie· tory on cl~ for Vilu, who wlll race llie Nastase tonight for the $10,000top prize. 1. "" Ricardo C•no, Vilas' Davis Cup partner on the Arg~Uqa team, scored a 1·6, 6-4, 6·4 triumph over Zeljko rranulovic. Cano and McEnroe, each with 2·1 records, will meet for third place. Greea .. r.,, PORTMARNOCK, Ireland - Hubert Greert, of. Birmingham, Ala., snatched the $11.200 top Jerry Van Llnge and Gall prize in the Irish Open Golf Glasgow teamed to capture the chaaipionship bere SundQ with open championship of the anl8thbolebirdie. Wimbledon West tennis cbam· Then be thanked an unlden· plonships at Newport Beach"s tified 12·year-oldfemale admirer John Wayne Tennis CIUb Sunday among the crowds for "briqtng In mixed doubles competition. me a little bitof lrlsb luck." The Patriots trailed through most ol the game unttl, with 14 seconds ten to play, Grogan rolled,.tohis right and lofted a six· yard !;coring pus to tight end llusa Francis. The touchdown and conversi4)n by Smith tied the score 10-10, forcing the overtime. Eagln,D-24 PHILADELPHIA -Rookie Wilbert Montgomery's 90-yard kickoff return and two scoring passes by quarterback Ron Jaworski rallied the Philadelphia Eagles to a 28-24 victory over the Denver Broncos Sunday night in a National Foot· ball League preseason game. The Broncos, unbeaten in three previous exhibitions, took a 10-0 first period lead on a 216-yard - field JOal by Jim Turner and Ron Perrin 'a two.yard touchdown run. .,,.,...d Jlaee •lv@ltSIOE !AP) -•twltsof$unde'('traes In tM Of111-' SCO•I! Olf.RHcl ~0.­~Plllt .,...,.,,. ,llltmet1-1 ll-r. .. l1 lk4' r!IOdlflN W("41nS-I, BIN....,_., $yUfttr, 19M VW ~. 2, Bruce krenelt, $811 -'-· ,., vw ......... '*' • ...._. $-. OttQO. 1•1 VW Mden, Wl!Wl«'I -·· .....,, 3U71mllelPH hour. T-Mlt 1100 CC t1111 llllt9!H -t, •kll MMrl. l>tloenhc, l'unco vw.1 ........ ..,...,c;....., "41n- (0 vw.,, --e Gtn'ltot. Hli\lmll8• vw.wi....n-_.'9.ttm.1t.f\. M~ycltt-«._I, J.ck~,l.ts veoee. \ffl HU1411~ t. JIM l'ISllNCll. f'OIUM, YetlMfla. J. OM4Gtf'lt, Sol-9tldl, ~. Motorcyclet 11'-250 cc -t, Jiff . .,......,..,. Nor-Ill, Sutull~ I, T1try Clartl, Gold Hiii, KtWMlltl.J,eobtMttn,SlllOl!Mt,H8rWy. ~'/'Cle undef' US cc -t, Onld T.,....., El ~'·· ...,..., __ 2. llOlll:r( Jollft, ""'-· ... ell. J. Ntel Snltr, Sin"-• V-he. Two ~··iw utlllty Vltftlellt -'· .... E"11n1. 1u .. rt1c1e, Ford pick~. 2, Frllllk Yeulf-. LOS Al_,,,.._ Ford F-100. 3, Miu ...... V.,. N UYI. Ferd F-2.50. ,,_..._. drlw Pf'Od*tlool wMctet -t. ~ ... e11. P'PtlMM, Scout. 2. J.M. er-. Vllll"' Jfep G/1. a, 9lOd Hell, "-• OOllill lllck-. ,,_ ..... drlw "*"""' WflkltS -'· °"' 81rl-. f'lllmore, Ford 8r•n<o. 2, Alltn H~. 81~111, ,,.._.,-.., R"'5efl, Tllllfot. ''"Cl'. Slf'll•-t IHllllftltM ¥Whl<IH -I, AoOtr MNrs. .... ,,,....d, HI-Jumper VW. t. MMcAlltn 5'11111•, •'-'*. """'° vw. J, Honn """'-'· :,":"'"·.....,_vw, wi-w···~..s _. Greea, the U.S. Open cham· .,.,,.,,, .. 1.1,..o.M0t ........ wwn.°"'" pion, explaln.td: "A policeman On TV Tonight 111~ ... Y"M_-~~ handed me a UtU& cot• cross ---- 0.., ~'-' aryWtt *'AA·~ wbicbbesaidtheUttlelirlwant· 8:30 (7) -BASEBALL -Tbe s..-evOoy"1eM.w.•DM.._ ed metohari. Oakland A's meet Uie Red Sox (n RISflMI "-'TlfTY cwv..-""...,..., .... . .. I'm not superstitious, but I Boston's Fenway Park. Taped. , a-.,w..._w. made sure it wu ln my.golf bag. 10 (21) -TENNIS -Final fhe Sounders, continually Jolll\ ... o.~::":ldl.-oi-0.. ' It wu nlee knowing someone iound matches in the U.S. pro NY GOes Hunting And Bags a Title rresaln~ their aggresslve'1i,\taCk 7-S,M. • "" Wal tblnklng about tne." championships, taped at the n\o ew York terrn.ory .. J_.,.. .._..:~-=...,, ...:, ......,.. Tbe 31).ye~d .\mertcan wu J.,oo•~ood Cricket Cl&ib 1n tbro~tthefttatbaU,Uedthe f . e11 .. Sr11111\7'4.l"t'"i. nect~•nd-ne~k wltb Ben .• nrookline.MUS. • .' score -&arely four minutes later .. i~~~-.--"':""':::--"""¥::.---.;.....--~-~--_..; -~~,-• ..._ ........._ • £ - . . ' You . ant· ·.TIM. I? ajl; ·~an.ces Are • . . ·W e~ll Have · it· · ~ . . For You Ne~t ~prillg . · . . . . . . . . ,,. -' . But .·Do Check The .Fall Class Schedhles of : ' j;) I " Orange Coast College, Golden .. West>College, ' . I • ' ' I • • • • & -Coastline Community. COU~ge, . • t I ~ 'veProbably Goi What .You Wani ·! . • ' .. ... ii .. ' I ' •.. 1 , . llOND. A LAND developer who l J alJDoat saw his 1177 chalJeqe fa.al for 1-ck ol money until closing a bie land eal early this year, 1s a soort, squat -man in tus 405, who bas been referred \0 as "the pugnacious. former sign painter from Australta " PRUI'ISI.' GO. TO COllll4CEOVS NEWPORT IU. (AP) -The New York Yacht Club ptot~•t committee bat upheld a protest lodJed by CO\lta&eoua •~awt Enterprise two daya 110 and had cU \lowed the coun· \tr·pr«em ol £nt.crwtH al\er their America'• Cup Cleftnse ~•ndldate ract. 1'ba ~ doet not atfecl th• r• corda ol ~ two boats, however, since Courqeoua won her race a1ainst En- terprtu on Thursday. cupfinalbelinninaSept.13. TOE &ACE BETWEEN Courageous and Enterprise Sunday in the final defense series waa;eanceled after a toUle al the base of En- terprise's headstay broh. Courageous, skippered by Ted Turner, and Ted Hood's Indepen- dence were to race today. Turner leads the Americans with an 8-1 re· cord. Enterpr1se ls 4· 7 and lndepen· dence3-7. --., .. , C... I Site 011 Rales1 • • DEA ATc MJ dentlat lnal1t.1 on tatina x·ra1s when 1 have my periOdic examlnaUons. DO I b.ave U.. rieht. to retule? I'd alao like to ktW>w where one can complaJn about den· lists? M. M .• Costa Mesa The Orange County tat Socletj advises you to Hk for • 0 reltue form" fn>m >'°"' d atlll tf you relate it•raya. Your de t•• ln1l1te1ce probabq ls bUed $&fad that ll· rays are "recomm at aetepted procedure" tiy the American Oetttal A110ClaUoa as part of ant ~ntal H · amlllaUonor treatment -lltboMpro- blebLS tou.ld have been made apparent by X·rays. Sabmlt complaints about dental treatment to: OCDA Couaael- 101 Committee, Z95S. Flowet, Oraqe, CAtzlll8. lld-cllle4raHtl DEAR PAT: I returned a dress to Brownstone Studio, Inc. in New York City on July l, requesting a S65.2S re- fund. I did get a postcard saying the dress was received July 13, and as- surance that a full refund would be is- sued. So far it hasn't. and my f.ug. 2 I etter or lnqut ry has not been Pnt Pab IMoled 02ARPAT l'dne flnd0ulb0w to eciatac:t the 0 Pen Pali'' paper that •uPl>Ue. names aod addresses ot peo.; pie hitereated In C<>n"eapondence. The Chamber of Commerce suuested I ask you. • G.B .. Costa Men A Y8 could.D'l locate this .~~W pubUca~bai a DU•Mr o1 ~ "9l paJ ._.t-ee an listed lll 1our Ub~ry cop,y fll ••£aeyelooedla ol A.Qoda. Cloat -Volame I~ •ftJatloaal Ort¥tb•· Ilona ol &be U.S.," by Gala. Cdbaalt Section 13 ~r Hobby and AtOCa· UoaaJ 0..,anba&Jou. Anocber ~att I• A YS flln I• tbe lntena&lonal / Fdetadalalp l.l'ape, 40 Moant Vel"AOft St., llOAoa. MA tZIM. a.c~8U%1t'aap• DEAR PAT: What kind of chemical pesticide lbould be used to get rid of wasps? I'm concerned about the danger of pesticides, and I'd like to use one that ia effective but not poten, ti ally harmful. · W.E.~ Huntington ~ach Toni~t's TV Highlights I NBC G) 8:00 Life Goes to the Mov- ies. The motion picture industry. from 1936 to 1972, is the subject of this three-· hour documentary hosted by Henry FOn· da, Shirley Mac Laine and Liza Minnelli. KHJ 0 8:00 --"Written on the Wind." Rock Hudson. Lauren Bacall and Robert Stack head the cast of this 1956 movie drama which won Dorothy Malone her Oscar. CBS fJ 11:30 -''Little }fouse on the Prairie.·· The pilot film for the current TV series stars Michael Landon. Karen Grassleand Patricia Neal. But m the syndicate, he has an alter eao Noel Robins, critically tnJured and nearly paralyzed in an auto acci- dent several years ago ~lmost fully recovered, the skipper of Australia is a cool head who has guided the aluminum·hulled yacht through lhe August series with only one loss. ''The boat speed of these two boats is very similar," Robina said or · Australia and Sverige. Hewever, Robins said he feels Australia has an edge in heads ails, and. perhaps, crew. answered. H.W.,Irvin A YS contacted Brownstone, and your refund bas ,been malled with apologies from the firm for the delay. The leaat daa1erous cbemJcal .. pesticides. ,known as "bota~aJs•• ,;.------------------~ because they are derived from plants, are enectlve for wasp conttol. Botanicals Include pyretbrins and The boat was to resume its best-of. i seven final challenge series against Sweden 's Sverige today Australia I h~ld a 2-0 lead and was a heavy favonte to challenge one of the three American boats m the best·of-seven "The crew seems to be up to stan· dard," he said. "We're certainly not givini anything awa·y. Hearing ., Aids Laws Toughen t· _____ _ razilian {New Snipe ' ~Champion Boris Ocstergren or raz1l won the world bampionsh1p or the nipe Cla s s at , openbagen. Denmark unday in a close series ith Tom Nute or Mis- ! sion Bay, San Diel(o. ~ J e ff Lenhart of t Newport Beach finished '1n seventh place. Nute and Lenhart are veteran Snipe sailors who have finished close in a number of international champions hip regattas throughout the world. The Snipe is one of the olde s t and mo s t numerous one-design • classes in the world. Carls8on Wins Star crown Sune Carlsson o f Sweden won the first • race of the Star Class • world championship at Kiel, Germany Sunday Runner·up was Mogens Nielson, Denmark and third was Alessandro Pascolato, Brazil. The top American finisher was Barton Beek of Newport Beach with an eighth place .finish. Dennis Conner, the North American champion, finished l ltb and Ding Schoonmaker f Miami finist\Cld;14th . Norther Takes Bal 66 Race ~ Blue l"lorther, a Peterson·desiined sloop sailed by Bill Sullivao or the Los Angeles Yacht Club, was the overall and Class A wi.uer Saturday in the rlfth race of the Balboa Yacht Club's 66 Senes. It was a slow, light-wind race starting at Balboa Bier and going to Dana Point and finishing off Aliso Pier, Laguna Beach. Second overall was NewsBoy skippered by Jack Baillie, BYC. and thfrd was Dog Patch, Don Ayres, Newport Harbor Yacht Club. CI.A~ A -l, Blue Norther; 2, NewsBoy: 3, Dog Patch. CLASS B -1, Showdown, Tim Cannon, DPYC. 2 Antares, Alan Andrews, BYC; 3, Ruffian, Earl Dexter, VYC. CLASS C -1. Pizzaz, Don DuBose, VYC ~ 2, Preamble, Saint and Terry Cicero, BYC MORA -l , Sequoyah, Jim Moore, BYC: 2, Hawkeye, Mike Schachter, BYC; 3, Sunkist, Scott Schock. BYC. MORF --1, Vivacious, Bill von KleinSmid, BYC; 2. Giant Killer, Ron Stedek. SSYC Virginia Captures Bahia Buoy Race Virginia, a renewed 1913 vintage sloop skip· pered by Dennis Burnett of the South Shore Yacht CJub, was the Class A winner Sunday in the Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club's 20·Fathom Buor race, the fifth (eature of the Angelman Serles for Performance Handicap Racing Fleet yachts. Class B winner was Thrillseeker, sailed by Bill Filsinger, BCYC, and the Class C winner was Wind Runner, Paul Timon, Capistrano Bay .Yacht Club. Summary: CLASS A -1, Virginia; 2, Matangi, Ed Carpener, BYC ; 3, Shannon, Don McKibbin, NHYC. CLASS B -1. Thrillseeker; 2, Pranc, Richard Newbre, BCYC; 3, Giant Killer, Stender /Foster, SSYC. CLASS C -1, Wind Runner; 2, Cats Pajamas, Ron Woods, VYC : 31 Whimsey, Jack Larson, BCYC. Oceanside Race Won by Livermore WASIDNGTON <AP> -The federal govern- ment bas moved to make sure that tbe millions of people who bey bearing aids actually need them and will benefit from them. A food and Drug Ad- ministration regulation, which went into effeet ( CONStlMER J last week, requires a doctor's examination before a hearing aid can be purchased. Previous- ly, hearing aids could be bought rreely over the counter. THE FDA estimated that only -about one-third of the IS million Americans who suffer from hearing impair- ments have had medical examinations. The ad- ministration says about three million persons use one or the more than 1,200 types and models of hearing aids available. "This regulation ia de- signed to protect con· sumers ftom being sold hearing aids that won't help them and to assure lhal people see a doctor if there is a medical reason for their hearing loss," said Sherwin Gardner, deputy FDA ad· ministrator. GARDNER SAID hearing loss can result from a number of condi- tions that a hearing aid will not help. Among them are too much ear wax, dirty auditory canals and allergies. The new regulation allows adulta to ·volun- tarily waive Ute doctor's examination, but it pro- Smokin ·, skippered br Jim Livermore of the hi bi ta bearin1 aid sellers host club was the over al and Class A winner or from encouraging people' Capistrano Bay Yacht Club's Oceanside One.Way from foregoing the ex- race Saturday. aminations. Records, in· Second overall was Contagious Ken Kuhn and eluding a copy of the third was Sea Shift, Eileen Fitsgertlld, both or Capo medical examination, B\'C. mttst be kept by tile CLASS A -l, Smoldn•; 2, Conta1loua; 3, H .. · seller fot three yeara. Knots, Elnier Davis, Capo BYC. ALTHOUGH THERE ~ B -1, Sea Sb1llt 2, Claire de Lune, Paul is no criminal penalty for Frauer, Capo BYC; 3, Funny Feelin ·• Pete Meade, violators of the regula· Capo BYC. · tion, the Federal Trade NO SPINNAKER -1, El Gato Gordo, Bill Mur· Commission could take rey, Capo»YC; 2, ffal!elveo.. Allan Rawland, Capo civtl action, inclucllng a BYC; 81 Obleslion, Bo; Gates, Capo BYC. tine of Up of tlp:JO per •l-ol•tion, a~if\s( deakecs. T efftctive date of the fule Wad been de- layed by 10 days because of a c~ action prompt- ed by the Amefican Speech and Hearin1 A · soclation. rotenone. QUEENIE By Phil lnterl~ndi ,. • SF Meet UFO Craze .Astronomical SA.N FRANCISCO (AP) -At one table, "UFO Magazine" and "Flying Sa\lcer Digest" were sell· ing next to "The Zeta Reticulln Incident." Sales o! "UFOs -Myth and Mystery" wel'~. well~ astronomical. A few feet away, a man named Alpha hawked "UFO kits" stuffed with star maps between snatches of conversation with a man wearing a, moon pendant and a lightning.bolt T-shirt. · THE GATHERING OF ZANIES and seriou~ students or the extraterrestrial was the 14th annual National UFO -UnidentUied Flyin' Object -Con· ference. It came complete with bniny-looking kids behind inch·tbick glasses, young mothel'S bouncing . babies on their IQJea and tweedy sclentlfictypes. About 500 fans of the far~t packed the botel ballroom to hear speeches, trade UFO stories anc( speculate about why more and more little green men seem to be toucblng down on Planet Eirth. THE CONFE&ENCE WAS keynoted by Stan· ton Friedman, a self-described "Ralph Nad~ of the UFO world" and nuclear pbya.icist who bad made a career of contradlctlnc government rePortl de- bunking UEOs. "The g'5vemment's Investigation of UFOs has been completely inadequate," he said. "Sightings by mllitary people, like pilots, are rePorted to the Air Force's Air Defense Comrnand, where they slap an immediate security damp on the information.·· After years of worktq for 1overna1• -.pace contracton and Qlellljt wbat secrets Dae eovern· ment kee()S. Fttddntan came. to believe flying saucers are real and the 1overnment knows it -but is keepi111 lts mouth shut. I 10:00 . D ((11) (I)) Cl) S.., I Oler S.... Ku Berry and fftp W'i1$on luesl ..... (]) lilMM: "Meat tr zw-(9CI ,, , '66-M!d Mims. Ak1r1 Tabradl. SlbtcsNIJ (£)() ...... -10:30-m l&tDlllllS fa ~ rria Tt11nls s.i.. tM "US ProlessionJI Tennis Qlamplon ships" · ' 1 . • ) l I "°"ay, YoUI Visiting houra are over! .. FUNKY WINKERBEAN I'M A UT1\.£ c.ooR~EO ~ 'IHI& &JGl~G BUSINES&,FREO! TANK McNAMARA '. MOON MULLINS I 11 t u u ll .. ~, .. TIDAT'S CIDSSIDiD HIZLI ACROSS 1 Mrs. C"aplln #1 5 Makear• cording 9 .., ___ _ personality 14 Chopping tools 15 Symbol 16 Track 17 Facial adorn-DOWN men ts 19 Parts 20 etiurch Struc· 1 9uddhlat nn monks 21 lmlta1or1 2 BeJublllllt ate coet UNITED Feature Syndicate 23 =tof 3 Ou erlffd 2S Fl Ing nit 4 OanOlf·8Clor 2t SUdcltn Fred h,+,j~ ~!itnt ~M+;.t..., poHceln· ------...-...~ L:..L.:J~ i.;.;.a.;;.i~~ vask>n 5 A twitching 24 Remalna In. 46 Food II• 28 Reporter's e Sufi., a dull active 47 DNd tnd bOM pailn 27 Dellblrattw 49 Sp111llh 32 Heavtnly 7 Compoal· auembly trtlcle 37 ~aly legleu Uone In vtl'st 29 Plumbing !2 Ille of ;"' jlle 9 Atlult ltem1 -----38 ~pttte · 9 Aunauhlp 30 Texlaan'1 53 Mortpailnful 39 Sllt:Prtlht ' UO'°"'d nelghbof 65 Onew!W> A1 Trwfl~ 10 Ute~" 31 Sevtf guldet 42 Wlthlir. Prefix nectalky 32 Coconut fiber et ~wgtna 45 a~t 11 EdOUlld 33 Al* to eon. aradut!IY 4 N1n1teeoaln ""----: alll8-Y 11 Tllecommon 60 Neat Fr. · 34 Rloanattw people 51 fll'l'l\ltn-oompow 35 ··---rou 58 ftnelUlt"'"' 1>1ement1 ta Celcedtco-rel!dyt" 1eno = Hit llghlly rator 36 kaoOv tune ea ~· Pr"*Y n Htrd1 40 SIJrifhlno: eo u011oopic· AttfM ""°'"' 81anQ tlAl!Prtfi. 13 Poem 1Utt-11 ..Seti lap•· '3 IUPP'tflt t1 Cognomen butldto try « M ... ,. ea Ntgattw Horner: 22 Atcll 111 f*""'OI word IOOM R . ' 1 J I MISS PEACH --- I I I ~ .. ~ by Tom Batfuk HI I ~N ~RUN& MERE,ltl' CJ.E51\JIEW H16H WiOOl WHERE 1"E &111.lATION AilHE MOMENT 15 LIKE A eoMS / REAtx.> 10 GO <ff/ by Ferd and Tom Joh"son \ll~TUI~~ .. ~IS ~~M AA~ ~>-¥~FUl.10~H•A~:~·-~ GORDO by Wm. F. Brown and Mtl Casson t-------~ft>C"t' C.1f{$ A F'OJJ~v' ACCoc.WrNh' ! by Mell b Gus Arriola ''BUT '<OU KNOW WHAT HAPPENEO?THE M'i WE GOT MERE 10 ~S SHE LEFT ME AAD RAN OFF WITH A CO'IOTE! " by Roger Briclflelcl. J THE GIRLS t OU~!_~!t~,':'~t· LV ........ '•'h-11 ..... 1111• = '"' GOUlO .,, .. MOHTI WW [g} EASY USTENING SOtJLSJNOLES 1.FLOATON-Jt'loaters<ABC> J 2. t.A.· SVNSHlNE -War (Blue NotAt> 3. STRAWBERRY LE'ITER 23 - Brouier. Jobnsan (A & M> · 4. LET~SCLEANUPTHEGH'.ETI'O -Phlladelphla International AU Stars <PhUac:telpbla lntemaUonal > ~. I BEUEVE YOU -Dorothy Moore <MaJaco) COVNTllY SIN GELS 1. DON'T IT MAKE MY BROWN EY~ BLtJE -Crystal Gayle <Unit· eel Art1Jt.s> !.RAMBLIN' FEVER·WHEN MY BLUE MOON TURNS TO GOLD AGAIN -Merle&Jard (llCA> 3. l'VtALREADYLOVEDYOUIN MY MIND-Conway Twitty <MCA> 4. SUNFLOWER -Gl«l Campbell (Capitol) . s. WAY DOWN-PLEDGING MY LOVE-Elvis Presley (RCA ) ~ Cotten Cast 1. HANDY MAN -James. Taylor <Columbia) 2. DONT WORRY BABY -B.J. LOSANGELES (AP> -AlanArkin stars as a former mental patient in NBC's "Tbe Nel(t Howling W'lDd," based on the experiences ot a man who spent nine years in an iutltution. Jasepb Cotten bas been cut as an attorney in Unlversal's miniseries ..Aspen" for NBC. Thomas <MCA> ntEATREl-ORANQE co . 11111 attmlS 11.51 SO. COAST PLAZA 'THE SPY WHO LOVED MF" IPGt -.ulTll ....... ..,.."""'" S . COAST P~ZA >4111nll .. Slil4"Jtt ......... "LOVE & DIA TH"' ..... "~,.._ ..... Oa'BeeBaw' TRANSACTIONS .. .. By SYLVIA JIOl.TD r i Steven and Linda .::'iii•;::/;1ato 405, childless, weu .. ~·1 educated, living well. Steven earns $60,000 a year, drives •· :t company car and baa lull lnauranc• aDd bealtb benefits. ~ They support the arts, traveUrequeot.b, entertain often. .. I Steven's golf club and in·town membenhlpa cast Sl,200. · . a year, paid by bis company untll be reUres. They sDend I about $100 a month eotertainlnc and two yearly vacaitOIJS" coat about $$,000. , STEVEN'S SAVINGS ACO>UNT balance is only ts.ooo and he bold.I only *10,000 ln blah·Y1eldina atock. Following early retirement. he expects to earn tzo.ooo fn the flnt year as a company consultant, a post that will be phued out after five ye ant. Here ls what Merrill Lynch experts advise 1n cases like this: , -Restructure th" portfolio to stress more growth. ~ the $10,000 conservative ltoe~ holdinp and reinvest $$,~ in s tock that should · srow in value for resale at a profit at retirement. Mone:u's -To cut annY.al ·~ cash outl~ for taxes. In· Worth vest the remaining • $5,000 in such tax-\ r sheltered investments ' as high-grade munlci,pal bonds, htgb•grade mu.nlcipel bon~ unit trusts or a mutual fUnd with at least 50 percent of its U 4 sets in tax-free investments. · , '• ALSO TO INCREASE NON·TAXABLE income. begin saving $2,000 a yeu for investme'1t in other tax~ sheltered markets. -Upon retirement, cboo$e a lump sum distribution o( accumulated retirement benefits for an lndividu-1 Retire{ ment Account <IRA). Presumably, Steven wlll notl withdraw funds until his comµlting role ls ended. ! -After retirement, con.aider sheltering part of the con1 sultancy income by setting up a Keogh plan on sell .. employed earnings. Pension benefits can be in an IRA; tht\ Keogh can be used for freelance eam1ngs to reduce current tax liabilities. For a free Merrill Lynch booklet on '1n~ dividual Retlrement Accounts," call (toll free> 800-2'3·5000. · The message underlining Merrill Lynch's advice to thi~ couple is that they won't be able to continue their lifestyle during retirement unless they begin realistic planning now. An .. executive'' lifestyle requires a generous nestegg, in· eluding an inllaUon cushion to protect purchasing pow~ and savings for emergencies. :· '"i . Nut: Widows : • -·,~ Merier Nixed GO'fEBORG, Sweden <AP> -The proposed merger of Sweden's two auto manufacturers, Volvo and Saab, has been called off. The merger would have been the biggest in Swedish his· tory and have c~ated one or Europe's largest auto manufacturing fmns. A Volvo executive announced after a closed meeting of the Volvo board of directors in Oslo, Norway, on Sunday that the company decided to break off merger .ta1b with SAAB-Scandia. ·s~ks J!alt $lllk, .But Volume Light = ., .. :t. t :.\~ • • . . • I NEWYORK CAP> -Tbestock.markettalliedtoday in:' • a steady but slow-paced advance after its slide of the pasC five weeks. :·'. Tbe Dow Jones average of 30 Industrials, which hatt , fallen 68 points from mld·J\lly to the end of last week, waS-· j up8.67pointsto8&4.09. ; ''f Gainers outnumbered losers by more than a 2·1 sprea~ • ; amona New Y ~Stock Exchaqe-llated issues. , • i • Analysts said the slow pace ot the sesston Indicated~~ the market was benefitting more from a letup in selling pre-:_ : I ssure rather than aD1 atron.g buyin&. • ..-: • . Wall Streeters were looking ahead cautiously tot.~· Tuesday's report on the government index of leadinf:~! economic indicators for JUiy. "::~ .. --. . , '• 1t'laa• sr~b Did :-:::: -~ ......... ~ Jr:-~= . "° ,., ' ., :ti ~ . .,, u ti .. 2' ., • NEW YORI( <API .. &JA!..U • • NIW ~I( ~p) .fllY SIOdl U. ': ~ """ ............. , ...... _. . . ~Clly.................... -• We9'I ego ....................... ' ~-• ~ •••••• 11. ................ ,,,.... .. Ji J110 •••••••••••• , ....... _. H,140..-~ ,..,.. ............. , ......... :..:.::.~ ..f fttllltli ................. J~---.. · 1'71to•• ................. ~.-·' t'7S lo .. , ........... • .... a.na. '•.G79-.1 ~ .. .,_.kotO N IW VO-IC Wt) M DAILY f'tLOT ·~ -,,. ---.. A • -' -0 --• ! • • ~ • • Art .Go·es Really S(>~t The desert scene is very beautiful. Warm sunny tones, spiny cactus, a majestic panorama. Pull up one of the cliffs and sit down, won't you? You can enjoy the view much better that • way. . . For the cliffs are a portable part ot a soft sculpture environment for a contemporary bedroon\, created by tJie t.aughing C.t Deslgn Company. Basecl in San Francisco, 1the company recenUy displayed its work In the ~ are.a. ' Laughing Cat. a compan)' which specializes in "art. wit11~·· will make ' whatever a customer' wants.oui Or fabric and or whip up one of the designs in the catalogue. The possibilities are endlms: plants, trees, flowers, people, animals, rainbows, clouds, mountains SMWdrifts. All of i'iie 1~ms· are·meant to be used, 1f • desired. father thall jtist looked at. "It puts pleuu"' in livtns," commeoted Andrea $peer, one ol tbe partners. "'l'hlnp needll't tie so iun_cijonal, · •1wr.y aot lean back to watch TV on a rabbit or peacock?" ·• Soft sculpture ts something to pick up and touch. It's an art form that is crying out to be squeezed and held, appreciated for lb tacUle qualities as will as its shape. 118. SPEE&'tf own home bas lots of soft clouds and tapestries, which she find.I very relaxing a{ler a day at work. "When going back to the cit)' I can feel wh~ I've been and where I'm going," she said. "The home i.t very important -w~at db you want after a Jong day at work?" A soft ~pture miabt be Just the tleket if the otftce fa a coatemporary a"1&cture with lob of metal, cement, ptasttca a•d geometrics. • . Ml. Speer believes soft sculpture ls growing in popularity because people are tutninc to cloth u a reaction againlt chrome and atass. "Man ts aeekin& to ~tructure his way ol livin& with soft, natural th.lop," abe auert.s.. Soft sculpture, accordln& to Ms. 5P'.ffr, is .. a medium of art wblch deals wtth 1J)terpreting ideu wJthin material and a soft. realm ... Terry Malone ls a dashlna world traveler. A member of the 1nternatlotial racinl circuit, a pilot. • mountain climber. A self-described adVellturer, · explorer and world citlze11. Re ls, at 37. the sort of man •Vied by those from a orld Of house payments. children, bUIJ and kids' braces. He bas trtl\teled a lot of roads. But even Terry Malone has doubts about bis lifestyle. An<intellectual, considered by some an aulhori· ty oo stone tool tecbnoloa. he bu no material . '"possessim.s other than a beat· up, old Volkswagen with a cooler on the passenger seat. He's the kind of guy who drives to Cabo San Lucas for a drink. "l'm just an adventurer. tf there's anything stableaboutme-tt'smywistableness."hesays. ''l keep gdting this odd urge. I'm like the old fire b<ne wb.oh~ the bell and still wantatorun." . ClJaBENTLY ''hanging out" in thiJ area, wortina as a contract arcbeolOlist, Muse sittin& and atayi.ng on friends' boata, he says be llkes to sail. blck pack, •'drink a little beet and chase the gtrb." When be can't find a home or a boat to stay at, he sleeps in bls car, •'Sometimes I ask mY$elf, where do I live? I mean," be paUHS. "wbel'e do I Uve? "I'm rootless. I'm a gypsy va1abond -but I bavefrlends. Ttult's wbatfrieods are for ... lsn'tiU Actually, I'm extremely stable when I have an objec- tive." Before bis divorce from a college professor, be says, "I med to be locked 1ntd material things and it • justdidn'tsatisfy m)'.Deeds." .. "I've been exposed to the finer thinp. you know, the structured, cultural things. We used to spend summers in Europe and we went to the museums and did all that.'' Then he adds wltb a miach(evous &rin. "But I wanted to go to the discotheques.•• SERV11"1G AS A SENIO& mechanic for famous drivers lllce Nik! Lauda, Joe-Mua and BObby Unser and working with names like Mario Andretti and Dan Gurney, Malone says he's one of the oldeat · mecbanic:S on the circuit. He.bas ~non .thl' c~ut Jiln~ 1S6'7-aod J'Ust l~ Team Lotus after ~tf LQQC ~acb Grand Prb in April · · . 1n 1975, his team won the Indianapolis .:ioo. He decided to go to Europe to travel the Grand Prix racing circuit. He came back to the United Stat.es because ol financial dlfficulUes. "' Jtopes to ret1lm aoo.o &l\d ls rputtin&' t.ogethei' so~e tbJ;DCs." "I'm not really ln a very enviable PoSltion at lb~ moment. but at least k teepa me fn>m putUftC down roots that keep me from doing what I want. I don't always want to be rootless. I've got my eye on Ulla Island ... Raised In Lona Beach, Malcme became in· terested in archeology as a leen8'er and learned about stone tool technolQgy as a hobby. "l'M A llAllDW ARE.ORIENTED sort of guy. I'm a product of the ~·s -you know, bot rod.a and stulr. Everything I've e\'er doae bas .omethlna to do wltb tools. Early man used tools." • , ••• • • v MandlY. AUOuSt 29, 1877. f ' • , • The bearded young man jOined ·the US: Au Force and new as a flight engineer for the Americ.n State Department in South America from 1958to 1963. DURING TBAT PERIOD. Malone trew to love Central and South America -a love .rtatr drawing hbn back repeatedly over the years. "There are places in P~ama where you can sit on a mountain· top .and see the Atlantic and the Pacific at the same time." He participated in a scieotilic lll&rine Hpedi- tion in Panama searching for the remains of Sir Francis Drake and bis ship, The Golden Hind. t .... ...-.. Above, Terry ,.,..J;i~~! Malone works as archeologist · ~~· with Bonnie Bucknam; Malone at left with Bobby Unser and crew. He's driven his car, he says, down the peninsula six times to visit "every sipificant arcbeoloalcal ruin in Central and South America.•• ~ be adds. with another grin. he bun 't been therein the last six months because be hasn't found "an adventw'OUI enoup )'OUDI lady who wanta to 10 aloag with me .• , After the A1r Force, be worked for a time in the aercspace induatry as a test fii&ht mechanic and then returned to school for a de1ree in an-, thropoloa. . "Instead of' picklll8 an occupation that was · marketa~ l picked w1'at I liked. I have a dearee • in a vocatfoa I don't make any money at. and I don't know bow loag I can continue playin& around with . ---ractng cars. • . . . .. I want adventure. I want travel. But I •.ant an academic bactCground to do it far me." He bGPes to obtain an advanced decree. en•t>Uq him to ~ach college courses ud to ~Po' lead expedltkllll. . He became involved with contract arcbeolOgy for the moneJ, and airees with soine ~ellional.a who call theoccup&tion a sellout.·. BIS .JOB CONSISTS ol cbeclda1 o¢ llew bome and business sites before ~cavaUOll ~ ascertain whether any evidence ol past clvllinUont is present. · "There ar& ethical quesUons involved in archeology for profit, but at least people have .. (SeeWAYS,PageCZ) l q DAILY Pl OT Mondtx• AUQuat 21, 1977 ~ If You Quit School, P.lan F·uture J -• I -Coastal Groups To Meet OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS: A new Westminster office of the group has opened at 7~A Westminster Ave., one block west of Beach Boulevard. Re~ar office hours are from 10 a.m. to 2 p .m . Monday through Friday. Overeaten Anonymous is a fellowship of men and women who meet to share their experience, strenith and hope with each other, that they may find a solution to compulsive over-eating. For in-, formation, call 898-1302. The are no dues or fees. LAGUNA NIGUEL WOMEN'S CLUB: The group is holding its second tennis tourna- ment. Everyone is invited and there will be· three divisions of play. The tournament begins Sept. 19 and runs 10 to lS weeks.· Deadline for entry is Sept. 1. The fee is $10 per person and proceeds go to a philanthropic project. For information, contact cCH:hairmen Judy Portillo, 831-0633, or Joyce Pingatore, 831·9365. CHRISTIAN WOMEN'S CLUB: the monthly luncheon of the Huntington Beach group will be held at noon Aug. 31, at the Hunt- ington Beach Inn, 2721 17th St., Huntington Beach. Mrs. Null and Mrs. Houska will present bandcnfted gifts. Cost ls M and reserYations should bemacle with Juanita atMZ-7673. YWCA: The YWCA Employment Pro- &ram for Mature Women is offeriq a tree "lntervlewina Techniques Seminar" from 10 a.m. to 12:~ p.m. on A\11. 31 at the YWCA, 1411 N. Broadway, Santa Ana. Speakers will include Jo Barnes and Roel Olsen. Topics to be discussed are interview t echniques, mock interviews and dos and don 'ts in job seeking. Weddings~ and Engagements To avoid disappointment, prospective brides are reminded to have their weddine storlea with bJack and white glossy 1>Mtographs to the Daily Pilot People Department one week before the wedding. Pictures recei\'ed after that time will not be used. For eaiagement announcements it ls imperative that the stonr. also accom- panied by a black and wblte clossy pie· ture, be submitted six weeks or more before the weddine date: otherwise lt will not be published. To help fill requirements on both wed· • dine and en1a1emeiil stories, I~ are available in •U Dail)' Pilot Offices. Fur· • ther questions wm be answered by People Department staff members at Ma-4321. TUESDAY. AUGUST 31 By SYDNEY OMAU money in retatl°'1 to eomeone verr dose to you. ARIES CMareb 21·Aprtl 19): Emphula on independen~e. originality -cycle hlgb and now is time to invest in your own capabillties. There is conflict, but you ealn valuable attention, pUbliClty. UBaA (Sept. ~t. 22): Question c1' where fOU ataDd in connection with partnerabtp, maniage · 11 pill-amount. Ym, home conditi<Jm will ehaage • t:Jndlnga No, forcinM issu• ii not tlfe answer. Two De&ativa ·~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~st) TAURUS (April 20-May 20)1 Cbeet bacUtaie "inside" information. Accent on bo1plta1: inatltutlon, area tllat encloeed boots. apeelal atudiea. You're able to throw D&ht on areas previousty dark. GEMINI <May 2l·June 20): Empbasls on desire. friendsblp. emcitQW ft.SPODH, lntuition, learnln1 tbroup process of teac.blD1. Your emotloaal security la on the liDe. one wbo mN1JS · much to Y'O'I feels plenty for YoQ.. CANCEll (June 21.July 22>: Career caaflicts may be present. You're at:rcager than you miebt think. One who CID aid )'OU is 1riUlnl to do IO-but W8Dta to be asked. Tbe choice Is JOU?'OWD. LEO (July 23-Aq. 22>: Good moon. aspect coincide• now wltb Journeys, publications, long-distance communication. You will overturn sometraditlona. Check fine points, detalla.· VIRGO <Aug. 23-Seot. 22): Dlveralfy. Give full play t? intellectual curfoslty. Aak questlom, make inquiries. Accent on mystery. the occult. tax bllla, here-think, aaal)'ze. r S(X)BPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21>: Define terms coadltlOllS. You're overcomine problems even wblle cJ'1ina the blues. Get IOlJd base under 108 -have your leCUl'Uy uaared in sense that YoU are as self·rellant u possible. • SAGl'JTA&WS <Nov. 22-Dec. %1): Good lunar aspect coinclda DOW witb speculation, quick cbange. creativity, lnten.stfted relationship, Stress is CID money. melDiD&ful commitJDeaL If plaJiag ca mes, start movin& -fast! CAPIUCOllN <Dee. 22-..Jan. lt): If you tnaist on doini tbinp the "old way,'• you ult for difficulties and ilMtatioG ia accepted. Key now is to take eold P1un&e-into future. You're challenged. AQVAaWS (Jan. 20-Feb. 11>: New coacepts rec.ive fHonble reception. Travel, change versatility, dealings with relatives, close neigbbon dominate. Avoid Uftinl heavy object.a. Pl8CF.S (Feb. 11-llareh 20): You recain what had been misplaced or Jolt. Valuable dl5covery is on acead• Money picture ii brtgbt. Hunch pays divideada. Be confident. )_ " I. )f •.' f:! Ways . ·are_ Many From C1 • • • . .\ ... .,. I begun to look at the archeological impact of new de-. velopment. .. A lot of us are conadeDUous. UD.fortunately, most of us have to put meat oo the table.•• Then: "I still have unfulfilled dreams. I want everything to be free. But a py IP7 aae doeaD't go . around crashine for a place to sleep. "I mean, I can't even take a girl bome because I don't have one. I feel~ iobibl&ed bere. I "et bored.'' . • WatcbfDC summer rain frdm tbe covered steps in front of a local restaurant. the man who has He says his wanderinp were reepoosible fw destroying hls marrtace and have aliepated bi~ from bia family. .,I'm often en•ied by young people and sometimes I bave to sit dowD and ask my&elf at a cut level, "'Would I do what I do, lf DObod,y knew aboutit?' Yes, I would. "I'm probablJ leadlng the vanpard ot pecaple wbo don't know where they're 1olbf. 0 1.IUlll ID)' llfe ta Just one more year -one mon adventure-one more Grand Prix.•• At any age you tan leatn the secrets that haw! made the Powers gJns wortd famous for over 50 years. In~ a few short weeks, bemrtlfuJ things can~ to you. Call or come in today for a complimentaiy anal~ & Pf09ratn diJc;ussloo. JohnRobertPOUVers , The Schools for Yow PenonaJ Oc!Yelopment. • ORANGE COONTY 3 Town & Country• 547-8228 traveled around the world three times says: "I have thil aluttonoua deske to ue. to ex-;;;:~~~~§§~ffi-::::===============:;~~~~~=-H Derlenee. I'll) not really in a cYiUle po1Won Ir SOtml COAST · because the sacrifices --· bave to make are ACn>RS co .... i-~ .a .1-· •OP . eom~ '-Lear.•• ca11 H2-&111. In the Put a few word• to work for ou. DA ILY PILOT ls always SHrchlng for new or 4'XPtrJenced talent for fllms TV ~&commer:cfels. ' <114) '57-0212. 8)'U8 GANG N YORK (AP> When t.bo ll&bt.a went outaU over 1-(ew York Ct· l.J 1 July, tM 81.11h•lck ot 8rookl1n 1\idddb' '°'an unac· cus'°"1ed sneuore of attenUoo -u one of U.e a.reu •ant blt by ancmll&a ad loolen. Bal for wtct, th• lllhtl had ion• out yun before at. And \hla eommunlty ot m .ooo often • ; J aludJ ln t.be collapee of an urbat1 [ nel.lhborbood by proc •tt• al NEWS .4N/4Ll'SIS •Ofll el ewhere In Amerlu. _ tbo\IP I B hwick they moved -----------al eer1equlclutep. I• borln1 population. Jn Buabwick • heyday, Its IN nrsT A DECADE and a vaudeville bouae1 rivaled half, a thriving, well-kept. larae--Manhattan's Palace Tbeater. ly D11ddle-clus area bad become John "Red Mib .. Hylan, New tbe pJ~11round or vandals, York City mayor in the Ur2QI, fireb6Ca and other predators beld court on Buabwlck Avenue. Tbe affluent, both wh1te and By 1960, cha.nae waa creepl.nc black, have long since ned m. What was an aU-wbite enclave Some real estate operators in 19.'50 now bad about 15 percent waxed fat on Bushw1ck's declllle blacks and Puerto Ricans. Mid- and did all they could to hasten it. dle-class blacks saw &oo4 values City and federal eovernmenb in the neat but aging wooc\.frame largely ienored it. A rapidly houses. 'Ibe newest houses ln changing populat.1on w1thout Bushwick a1'e ~years old ai'ld 45 roots in the community didh't percent of the houslnr atoct wa have enough will, means or built before 1900. political clout to prevent it. Hous· ing projects reached the drawing boards but were never built. Schools were bu ill but weren't used. THEN ON JULY 13, the out· ·side world finally took notice .of Busbwick. During the citywide 2S-bour blackout, 88 Bu.shwick stores were looted, 48 were burned, and most of the damaged shops wtll never open again. Police arrested 150 persons. Sanitation men picked up 60 tons or debris. ll was a terrible night for Bushwick, but this is a neigbborhoQd where five or six fires a day are commonplace. In this area where 80 percent are black and Puerto Rican and the rest mostly Italian-Americans, there have been 4,000 fires since 1975, according to ·city figures, 900 probably arson. It sounds like a case of civic suicide, but a look at the history or Bushwick's rapid decline sug-· gests that powerful outside forces greased the slide. SANDWICHED BETWEEN Broadway and Central Avenue, commercial streets that now lie in ruins, is Bushwlck Avenue. For the first half of the century its mansions housed German beer barons whose breweries - long since shut down -once pro- vided employment for the white ONCE MOVEMENT of minori· ty groups began, change oc- curred in a flood. .. It was a beautiful area," re- calls James B. Carroll, who set- tled in Bushwick in 1960. "There were one or two families living tn three-family houses. When I moved in, there was only one other black family on the block. I moved on a Thursday. By the end of the next week, I'd say two- tbirds of the whites had left." Starting in 1960, Carroll and others say, real estate operators began to make fortunes from the destruction of Busbwtck. At least six real estate brokers and. speculators known for such prac- tices as "blockbusting" are still in operation. ELLIOTT Y ABLONS, the local director of the city's Neighborhood Preservation Of. rice, says it's hard .. to get the goods on those gangsters.'' Carroll, active in community afCairs for yeJrs, says the real estate operators first aeared whites from th'ir homes. In late- night phone calls, whites were asked if their daughters were home yet, and weren't they afraid they might be raped? This was usually enough to send white families fleeinc block after block. The speculator could then buy their homes for aa little as $8,000 "!~ ....... 'NEIGHBOR STANDS AMID THE WRECKAGE OF BUSHWICK BUILDING AFTER BLACKOUT This Scene la Typical of Many Block• of Once-thriving Brooklyn Community each, and resell them to black families for over $20,000. REAL ESTATE DEALERS looted Busbwick in other ways in· the 1960s. Some divided Ulree- family homes into crowded, 12- family dwellings. They attracted tbe Southern blacks, Puerto Ricans and Dominicans wbo were migrating to New York in the '60s, often with larger families. Aa conditions became intolera- ble, many houses wer~ simply , abandoned. Those•houses became the playground of young vandals and arsonists, some paid by landlords to "torch" vacant buildings to collect insurance money. In this way, whole blocks fell like dominoes. In the late '60s and early '70S, Bushwick real estate speculators found an ally: the Federal Hous- in& Administration. YABLONS EXPLAINS the process: A real estate broker buys a building for $12,000, usual- ly from a white-family. He sells the house to a black family for $20,000. To get the house ap- praised at $20,000. the broker· bribes an FHA inspector, usually with about $1,000. The FHA then guarantees the property for $20,000 and a bank, which had nothing to Jose, purchases the mortgage. The broker gets bia $12,000 back from the bank, plus $6,000 or fT,000 profit. The FHA scandals, which af. fected many American cities, were exposed in the 1970s, but the results remain in Bushwick: pro- fits for some real ·estate operators, and about 400 FHA foreclosures since 1974 as low- income owl)era were unable to meet. mortgage and home main- tenance costs. FINALLY, THE RESULT was hundreds more vacant houses, left to vandals and arsonists. Roy Pincel of the City Plan- ning Department estimates there are 1.000 abandoned buildings in Bushwick. While th1s went on, the federal and city governments have done virtually nothing to help the area, says Luis Olmeda, the pre- sent Busbwick representative on the New York City Council. "THEY DID NOT care about Bushwiclc. Every week we com- plained about Bushwick but Mayor Beame closed his eyes to this community," he told com· munity leaders in the aftermath of the July 13 blackout. A few days after the blackout. Beame made his maiden ap- pearance in Bushwick after 3V-a yeans in office. Perhaps the biggest gov- ernmental bfow came in 1966 when Bushwick was denied selection to the city-federal Model Cities program. This ef- fectively shut the federal money pipeline to the area. ONE REASON BUSHWICK lost Model Cities status was that the 1960 census showed the area to be mostly white and middle class. · But that situation bad changed drastically by 1966, and some long-time residents suspect that the remaining whites who dominated the local Democratic party apparatus feared that Model Cities status would destroy their property •alues. The Brooklyn Democratic maehlne, meanwhilo, helptd m e Busbwtck blacks poUticaJ- 1y volceleae by drawl_lli local rep..-enf.Mlve dbtrlcta IO as to mate B bwlck a mlnorU7 i11 eacbcllstrtd • LOCAf., BLACK LEADERS made matters worse, Carroll HY•t by equabbllnl over the few available aovernment dollars and jobs. AD this meut that in its his- tory, Busbwlck bu gained just one publicly backed housing pro- ject, called Palmetto-Everireen. Jt has just been completed and is almost ready for occupan\S. U the 1960s "G~at Society" puaed Bushwick by. the com- munity has fared no better under 1910s eovemment programs. TOE TBaEE· YEAa·OL& Community Development Block Grant J>J'QC?am la deslcned to tar1et federal aid to blipted urban neighborhoods. In 1915 and 19'76, the f1nrt two yeara of the pro- aram when ~ mllllon in "CD" mone.y came into New York City, Buabwick got S300,000; $S0,000for a small part which is now a shambles, and $250,000 for a fll'e prevention program that hasn't begun yet. The city expects $150 million in 1977 from the program, and so far Busbwick is down for only $50,000 for a follow-up study of tbeflreprogram. ONE REASON Ll'ITLE Com· munlty Development money bas reached Bushwiok, Pingel says, is that parts of the program re· quire participation by local banks. and most New York banks want no part of Busbwick. The only substantial govern- ment ald for Busbwick bas been new schools. In tbe 1960s, BU5hwick schools were among the oldest and most overcrowded in the city. Three-quarters of its elementary schools were built before 1910. Bushwick High School had 3,000 students in the 19605, 1,000 more than it was built for. BUT BY THE TIME money came for new schools in the late -'60s and early '70s, Bushwick's school population had dropped sharply and now the new schools are under-enrolled. Most recenUy, In the aftermath of the July fires and looting, Busbwick has received govern- ment money to demolish some of its crumbling structures. Mayor Beame reportedly was on hand Joly 29 to witness the first such demolition. Pt1BUC NO'l'ICE UCI Seeks Consume.-Affairs Efforts :R.evealed For the .Record ptCTlnOUSMm•llU NAlllll ITATSMtlNT Tiie tllltlwlftl ,.,_ II ~ IMill- -• M : • ,.Rt!CISION l'OOL Sl!RVICE, IJ4IO ... adt, WntmlMl.lr, CA f2'a ...._. Niii Slnc,_J, 1UOO hi· .,._,Wlstwu• ..... ,CA .... /darrlqe Llcnua '"vton 8Ndl, boy JtllJ•,tm Mr. end Mn. l.Mry ~-. Foun!M.11 v .. 1.,,blly Mr. •I'd Mrs. Dale &.e Masten. l.IQUM Hiii .. boy J11ty•.1m Mr.andMrs.GlrvC.ln, IMllM,boY Mr. alld Mn. RlcNret Pltctl. ,...,,,,., olrl J•y1t,1m Mr. llftd Mn. Hunt Vuen, Mlulon VleJo,boy a..-n.1m Mr. •net Mn. 64warct l.yena, WHtmlNMr,boy ......... "" Mr and""'-9'DNldHllt,lrv1ne,"'Y Mr. and Mrs. Cll.,llS Pllllll'"• WestmlnSt•, boy ~l,tm Mr. anct Mr&. MlcllMI 10,,..,. eosi. Mesa,11111 Allllll"4,1'7' Mr. end Mn. R«ltr1 1..911d~, Wettml,...,,..., M!lllll 7, 1'71 Mr. "" Mn. Are Sulllvan, Hwit- lnoton 8Mdl.Ol11 Mr. and Mn. JeM l..tH;Nftl, t!I T-. boy ... A1111111t1s.1m Mr ..... Mn. OW1stAlpMr SI-. w. ........... ,, Mr. •net Mrs. 'loMr1 St-1'1, w .. 1mt1sw, 00¥ ' , ByKATBYCIANCY THE OFFICE bas a Melendez said oftee Temporary and 01•DllfllPf11t1U1t $308,000 budget for the problems are lbe result permanent housing ls Orange County resi-l.917·78ft.s.calyear. of a misunderstanding or needed near the UC dents may be about $2 Melendez said returns personality conflict. Irvine campus for ap-million richer thanks to to consumers have far ex· Tbatis wby cooaumer af- proximately so interna-efforts the past fl ve ceeded the ftve-year cost f1drs representatives are tional students attending years by the county Of· oftheofficeoperatlon. ablt'tooperat.e as a third UCiforthefirsttime. ficeofConsumerAlfaln, Marvin Stark, chief party anCl mediate solu- Barbara Polambi, as-office spokesmen said consumer represen-lions. sistant dean of students Tburgctay. taUve, aald the office is TBE ~GENCY also at UCI, said many The$2millionfigureis nowhandlingabout6,000 produces frequent con· foreign students need the value Consumer Af. complaints each year sumer bulletins, rancln& only temporary locltin& fairs Director Ron and receives about. 200 from auch topics u car while they seek perma· Kelende% places on the pbonecalls a day. re=to f\meral cost.! nent bousinl in the area. goods, services and cash . to a watcrbed. Other international stu· firm& have returned to IN ADDmON to its of. B etim are printed In dents prefer to live with county consumers flees in downtown Santa both En&ll•h and families while attending. through efforts of his de-Ana, the qency also bu Spamah. UCI and are lOotlna for · partment. · 13 br8nch offices operat-In addition, the ottlce rooms to reit pt homes .....,.. c-~Ez SAID the ing one day each wee!'d·ed recently completed a conwnlent t.o the cam· ~,.., Services are provi survey of prescription pus. Mostofthestudents. office, created by county •without cost, and in· prices at druptores to seeking bomes are male, su~rs in 1972, has formation may be ob· let citizens know they Miss Polambisaid. recetved nearly u.ooo tat n e d b Y c a 111 n I could aave money by Information about complaints in the past 834-6100. comparison ahopplna b -'-1 t ·•i I ftn ye.an. M ,_.. ai .. · • OUDaug n ern-ona HI s off l c e, s 10 eM:UUez& u. . student• may be ob· Sentenced tained by calling ¥iss representaUvea attempt· Polambl or Vlcki to mediate sotuUons to LOS ANGELES <AP> Weatherhead in the UCI • complaint& between the -A 29-year-old Santa Fe Dean OI. Students Office conaumer and tbe busi· Spring$ man has been at 833-7253 ness, resUl(ina in either sentenced to from one to · caah settlements, or 15 years in prison for .replaced coods and burlllarilinl the home of services. a Jluntln1ton Park ----------accountant in a ..... _ _...blackmail plot. Larry -----Davidlidn pleaded :auilty to aecond-deg~ee burglary. TMI MIAnl I• <tnctudad IW .. In· . ..... -..,J.s.nc:MI Tiii• 11«""'"' w• tiled wltti tt11 c.untv o.r. °' Orenoe C-y Cl'I AUoUMt.1m •11111 ....,, ...... Or ... ONs1 o.ir.-P~lot.. A14. IS,,22. 2t, Sept. S, "71 un.n PVBUC NOTICE PUBUC NO'l'IC& ! . • ft1Jll.a'.: NOTICJC nen.,..._ --ITAT&*Wf ,,.. ........ --..... ~ --~-VIWVL COMf'~NV, ttUt ~-Cll'OI. --°""'-c:.. "64. ~IUtlST ews, t1• N. ,,.._ It .• ~ AN. CL mo.. Ttllt Ml-• I•~ b't ett I• .. ~: F«rnllllll TN• •i.1-wes flltO wltll tlM Ceuftty Otll1I d 0r""9 C-fv Oft Ayt. t.1m. •! :--~~~~~~~~~~ PUBLIC NOTICE .. ICTITIOUS 8USINHS NAM• STATSM•NT The !oliowlnt Pt''°" 11 dOlno butl· ,..""' SANT A ANA oaAlt I. MACHI NI!, 2'°' S. KlllOll Drive, Se"-\' ...... c:.e If. '2107 Jeck A1'1ton, 2'20 CHff Drive, "'ew-1 Beecll, c.llf. '2'60 Tllll bllllntH It Uflduct.cl by •n '"° OMOllel. Jeck Alllton Tl\IJ Sllbl'ntflt WH flttd Wltll Vie COlll'lty Ot.tl tll 0reft99 Cour>ty M ~11."'1. f'l*ltNd 0r.-. 0-t o.11= -..n.it.~J,1i,1m ~ D A I L Y· ·~..-s · BUY, NOW Sl74.900 torttture•cln'aluein· YOUOWNTHELAND ereueJ 1 and I ltOrf and there'• Iota or ltl Newport Sbot9I homes. Ouutandln1 awo-atory Walk to btttb, tenn.ia PortoHoo wltb a and POOi· Artre•& area bedroom• and a Hp. ~~2!!!NT AND tlatsbed bOnws room that l.4'U:•U-c.MUI could be a teenaaer ot 400tlrfl •Ill motber·ln·law 1ulte. CJl. a.AS Formal dlnln& room and ~~ -. ramily room lookln1 Fm tm t&ward your own or· chard. hoada or naom for )'OU1' own prtvate pool with plenty of yard letl over. Terrlrtc locaUo and per(ect fOl' t.be lar1e (amlly. WXUIY UVI .. 3 Huce _BR. a tUe BA. den. dlalDI room. a st.Y w/2S' open beam cell· lnp, We entrj', frple, wet bat, laundry room. 0 ...... allled doub&o pr, IOOO eq. ft. ot.,..., u.QlQue u.m1 apace. 1151,&00 In Ccll'oDa delllar. JACOIS UALTY 67M670 . SPACIOUS MISAVRDI 2STOIY Just reduced '9,0001 This lvly 2 st.ry on btft tree lined &t, is waiting for YoW' famlb'. o•tr 2200 sq. A. wl• bdrma. frml •din rm + hup pl11"MD1 fmlY rm. Pleoty of 1Pace ror boat or camper. Hw· l'Y·it won't last. UWOl ~ Walker 1; lr.c 2STOIY 4IDIM+POOL Walk to beach from this beautiful decorator prden home. Huge llv. rm with fireplace, formal dlnlo1. sliding glass door to patio and aundeck. Priced for P Q\!,clc sale at $72,9:50. Call ~'1 ... -OPfN Ill 9• 11 S fVH rOIJf N!Cf • I · STEPS TO IEACH ~ Fa.iclnating older beach tJli.~ property in an ideal loca·1 i~i."i'i"'i·i~ iiiiiiiiiiii lion. 2-1 Bdrm units on •II L · HOUSI OP GLASS• 2Sx95 foot lot. Stepe, to BEAUTIFUL Seel~ oci qlliet . tree· b e a c h • w a l k t o BA YFRONT llaed, cul-de·sac irtreet. restaurants. Call now for ... ,_ OOO Thia 4 bdrm bottwbu detal1s.646-n71 . ~. 0 b~en coinplet:-ely """"'"""''~11JNro11HtCE' South Bayfroot Duplex customised Ulrou,lbe>Ut. ~~-I with fabuloua Pavillon 't ~~ =~~a.:i ·~ · llVftlljt ~~in 5to:i~1c:d ~ · 9634787 u•..._._.,_ appt. T i.\ mile from beach. Call __ , -:::::i•-••••m.., bedroolJl unlL SbowD by • vrfN 1119• II s flJNtolfHtCf' """"'-""' ~ali!1hnr!J I . -11~1111 ~~;.r::~ ~~~!!!5!•!S1'~1 Tree lined entry. Huae RALROA ISLAfliD ~ liv. rm. witb craclrUns • 67Wt00 • fireplace & wall or al ass"!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!! . -. cars•bikes• •skateboards* tr ucks•t>aby carrtages•tea carts•trikes rol lerSl<ates • walkers•toys • *waoons•U• r scooters•hot rOds•coupes• traJlers•hard .top5'convert-lb1es•motor homes•tawn n\Owe~· nmos •corporate hetctquarters •gardencarts '-\OdelA's•••• •tyPtngtables wheelbarrow,s• recreational vehicles•oolf ca r.ts•rnocte r Pains"bikes . •pfanos•cars refrigerators •skates••0 •• vhtw of &rounct.. Larae~ country ldkhen. Dlnina rm. Separate wing for secluded 1ueat auites. Sweepina stairs to hideaway muter auite & cblldren's quarters. Hurry! Justllaled. Won't laaUODI 1963-7881 Ol'fN fll 9• 11'$ ll.Jfl 108/MCE• VATllMSI IN MESA vaDE? Walk to sebools & shop· ping from this bright & cheerful fresblY painted & papered 3 bdrm bome. Has rreat floor plan w I screeDed patio. Present owner hes been transferred. Make •n of· ler. A1ldo1 $79,900. ~1 ~ Walkm f; L1:e People wtiO oeecl People That'• what I.be DAILY PILOT SERVICltDillECrORY lnll aboutt · between a 1o.:cerit cut and a '4ken amount desiped to throw a bone to thetupayera," abetald. Belsito, however, bu rffOm· mended that the tax rate cut be held to tlve centl in order to put money lDtO a reserve fund to cov- er tho city a,a.inat a potential ad· , verse cOurt nilliil. The cit.)' lost a court case this year involvine . a r~al estate transfer tu and it mJy have to • Delt¥ ........... "'- EDISON ART T~ACHER STRESSES TECHNIQUE \s All-IMPORTANT IN PAINTING Jerry Nlchol~n·• CIHn• Are Well Repre•ented at Laguna fe9tlval ot Arts . By ABntUR R. VINSEL OftM Delly .......... Art instructor JelT)' Nicholson often asks his students at Hunt· ington Beach's Edison-Hith School to start over and 10 the ex· tra 16 by 20 inches with a. new · drawing or paintinf, if the last one iso 't just rieht. And bef~re you know it, they've gone the exlra mile. "They'll improve it and get that extra touch. I want my stu- dents to have a UtUe more quali· ty. There is •a certain look' to high school artwork," SaJS the teacher whose students dom.inate the Junior Exhibit at the Laauna Beach Festival of tbe Arla. • "I don't want 'hi&h school artwork' t" Nicholson adds. His students have the majority· or space in the exhibit of the best ma~al submitted among 57 eligible county high schools at the festival, which d<>1es Tues· daynl&ht. And virtually every year, they sweep honors in competition for con test prizes and full scholarshipS to schools· such as Pasadena's Art Center College ol Design. "This one b by Catherynne Ann Leari," he says, displaYtni a pen and Ink ak-etcb of oro- (SeeUTJSTS, Pac• .U) going right on down the members of the Cabinet." 5\raus. was chairman of the Democratic NaUonal Committee before becosninl the U.S. special trade repreeentati•e. The meeting came one day artet' Sh. William Proxmire. who cast the lone vet• aclinst confirmins Lance aa budset director, said ho would Uke to aee Lance replaced -b'lt that Lance sbouJ not resign at this time. Proxmire spoke Sunday on CBS-TV's ''Face the Nation.'' On the other hand, Rep. HetU"Y Reuss, chairman of the Hause Currency and Banking Commit· tee, said Ledee lbQuld coatlnue . hisJOb. Reuss, a Wisconsin De~at, said during a vis1t to Salt Laite City that Lance broke k'>o laws - al~ there should be taws against some of the thln1ts he did. "I wouldn't say he should re· sign, bUt of course If I had my way he wouldn't be heicl ol the Otnce of Mana1ement and .Bu(iiet," said ~uitre, also a WiSConsin D.e.{nocrat and head oC the.sea.te~~commtttee. · Foster said bar patrons., who hacl beetl ordered to Ue OQ the noor b the thieves, w~e not sure tbelr monetary losses when questioned by police}ater. Foster said there are • strong indic!_ijons" that tbe bandits may lie the same thieves who robbed Happy Jack's bar1)atrons of Sldlast Wednesday. .... ' .. It ' .\ Police said the Wednesday rob<- bery, at 18780 Beach Blvd., was carried out by two armed black people, one with a shotgun and one with a pistol. In last week's robbery, the two thieves also ordered their vic- tlma to ll•on tb4 noor while their wallets and valuables were con· riscated. police "PC>rted. . LOS ANG~LES (AP) -It WU the lut June of Elvis : Presley's Uf e, and as tie walked on state before adorint CQDCert ~ audienees, TV cameras were rolllrie. • " • "He wu perf ormlnl extremely weU," rememben producer: Gary Siiilth. " ..•• He was linglog th splrituats With ao mucb more convtcuon than he was any otber kind of mdSic. 1 woQder now in retr05pect whether be had gome sense of S>Uception abOUt ll!" r ,..._ ______________ ..... __ .;;._ ______________ .,... ______ "'!"' I ~TD Route t~ Get I 'Govern~ent Help? ; The federal government may • help the Orange County Transit District <OCTD > bl.\Y a seven· mile lr8Ntt route from Santa 1 Ana to Stanton, OCTD General 1 Manager Ed Lor1tz predicted to- day. Loritz, who along with Board Chairman Ralph Clark met with t federal officials in Wasblnaton last week. said they also received i permission to use a $150,000 I federal grant to study what type of transit system to install on the seven-mile route. In addition, Richard Page, chief adm,lnistrator of the federal ' Urban Mass Tr~nsportation Ad- mmistrati«>G endorsed in con· cept a roughly $10 million loan to I buy the route. The abandoned Pacific- ; Elettric right-of-way would become the first ·link in what : OCTD officials hope eveotually , will be an Orange County·to- 1 downtown-Los Angeles rapid rail 1 line or bus corridor. 1 The Interstate Commerce ' Voyager2 'Given New Programming PASADENA (AP) -Plagued by computer problems since the start of Voyager 2's space mis· sion, scientists today repro- 11rammed the stubb<>rn onboJrd guidance computer as a prelude • to a second try at deploying a boom. I_t was hoped the repro- gramrped computer would ac- cept the command, rejected last 'week, to turn the spacecraft aro!'nd and trigger tiny ex- plosions to blow a dust cover. The cover is on an instrument ·platform at the end of the 7'h-foot boom loaded with experiments -for Voyager's journey to deep space. J .. The motion or lurning the ship and firing the rockets, likened to cracking a whip, was designed to ~snap the hinged boom's lock into place, assuming it isn't already ·tn place. Scientists aren't sure because the computer never told them the boom had locked. The craft is 4.9 million miles Jrom earth, said Jet Propulsion ..Laboratory spokesman Alan ·Wood. · The computer was repro- grammed because of a series of problems tbat befan wltb the shaky launch and separatfon of the spacecraft Crom its launch vehicle Aug. 20. • At that time, for reasons sun Mt fully understood, Wood said, Jtbe main computer switched over tolls twin onboaTd guidance system just as the command to extend the zoom was Riven. The computer apparently followed its own directive not to attempt any maneuver during a computer awtt.cbover, aald IPL spokesman Don Bane. What scienUsts can't explain is why tbe chan.ceover took place. a se of the --.qcertpinty ov space probe '11>roblems. s sta have indetialtely postponed a lr&Jectocy correc- tloo scheduled SUnday. Comnussion has giv~n OCTD 120 days to negotiate purchase ot tbe right-Of-way. It was abandoned by the railroad ear Ii tr th.ls maDlh upon commission approval. ocro officials hope later to ob- tain another six miles of rieht-of· way stretching to the Los Angeles County line wller• ,lt could link with f\lture tran1i\ routes stretching into downtown Los Angeles. Loritz explained the $150,000 study will show whether tbe right-Of-way should be used for a rail or monorail transit system or be planned as a ro~te for buses or vans. Driver, 82, 'Suspenikd' BATHURST. Australia (l\.P )-An 82-yea\(.old deaf man has been fined $10 and barred from drivina f~r 12 months after police discovered he'd been driv- ing without a license for nearly 40 years. William Whittaker, who !Ives on an old-age pension in a country shack near Bathurst, 100 miles west of Sydney. told poUce he bad been driving "off-and-on" since 1940 and never caused an accident A policeman stopped the man as be was driving In BathW"St and arrested him when be couldn't· answer questions because of fll$ deafll!SS · ,..,.... P9fle AJ ELVIS. • • Deputy Chief John Molnar said earlier the men were arrested for investigation of attempted burglary Poli-ce said as far as l.hey know no extortion threat was made ''There were no expl<>Slves fouod," Chapman satd "Tfte on- ly place I've heard reports or ex· plosives is in the media. l don't know where they fot that in- formation." Chapman said police suspect tbe men intended to 'IJH conven- tional burglary tools to break In· io the mausoleum, but said no such tools were found in the men's car. •·we are searching the grounds around the cemetery for tools," be said. Chapman said police were cbecldng tO see whether the flee- ing driver might have thrown tools away. The holnicide department is handling the case because the in· vestlgatioo bas to do with the at· . tempted removal of a body, M cCocbfen said. • · Presley was entombed Aug. 18, two day~ aft¢ be died at 8'* 42 of a heart attack at hia home, Graceland Mansion. • "I don't believe in absolutes. Art Is for fUn .-nd we have to keep it for tun There ls no one certain way to do somet.hina. I Just tey to share with the kids wba~ I know about t.ecbnlque " · Nicholson the teachet 14, it1so Nicholson the stu~ent and says he will be learnlna art as long as be lives. .. I've studied with Rex Brandt and Robert Woods," be says, mentioning two of America's best watercolor painters. "They're great. But I'm Jerry Nicholson. I'm not them." aJao Wllllt p larcer chUbk than !lve cent3 tQ go for tax redi.tct1on. 1'1\e clt)''&' tJx tate has re· malned at $1.62 ~$100 assessed valuauonsince 19'2. . ,. ~ NB (Be ach E r.osioD ' .. : ( . ..- ' . Work Will Resume By JOANNE REYNOLDS OI -o.lly l"llet StAlff The U.S. Army Corps• of Engineers ha~ spent more than $6 million on the sborellne from Sunset Beach to NewpOrt Beach since 1964 in trying to prevent be itch erolloo. And, according to a report is- sued last week by the Newport Beach Public Wortts Depart- ment, the engineers plan to spend another $4 million doing more of the same next year. The report was prepared for the Newport Beach cit}' council by Public Works Director Joseph T . Devlin, whb explained U\e his- tory of the prpblem and what the council couJd anticipate in terms of future projects. Devlin said that the source of the problem lies in the fact that the ri¥el'S which naturally supply silld t.o the beaches have been datnmed and channelized. Thai means there ls no way of replacing beacll sand that is scoured away by the seasonal changes in tbt currents. . " Reunion Planned The M"1ina Rifh School class or 1967 is planning a 10-year reu- nion Saturda)' from 9 •.m. to 9 p . m. at Doheny State Beach in Dana Point. Further lntormation can be obtained by calling R. • Bowen 751·2829 or Michele Urbaniak (213) 438-1*. According to Devlin, lhe strands where homes are tnallt on the beaches ~ve been placuect by beach erosion sinte the 1930s. Tbe problem became acute in the last decado wbicb Jed to a series ol projects by Ule Corps that cost a~ of $6:059.00Q. The projects involved either dumping sand on the beaches or building rock and steel groins runni.Qg from the hemes into the surf to slow the natural scour- ing process. The upcoming proJect described in Devlin's report calls for the creation of a ''feeder beaob" in Sunstlt which will serve as a source of sand for beaches 1.0 the sou.th. The project, which is scbeciuled for the fall of 1978. en- tails dumping 1.5 million c1Jbic y ants of '•acceptable beach material'' just downcoast from the Anaheim Bay jetty to make a feeder beaeh a little mare than a mtle long and 250 feet wide. Xbe engineers, who have ·an ongoing project to monitor the erosion-prone beaches, ap- parently don't believe the eostly project will be the la.st for the area. ''They've made it clear they haven't achieved a permanent solution to tbe beacb erosion problem yet,·· said.Dev Un 's assis- tant, Ben Nolan. G~en Grove police arrested a 48-year·old man tooa)' amt saidt they plan to cbar1e bim with the Sunday nlght strangulation mtn"der ol a 34-year-old woman. BUt a ip()ke.man for the cor- oner'• .office ta.Id it bas .not )'et been deterrolned l.f tbe unldert- tilied woman was a murder vic- tim. · According to police. the woman was found slumped over the steering wheel of a car parked in a carport in the apart- ment complex at 12591 Sunswept Street. - Police said the~ woman bad been ilnngled to .death and withJn a few hO\lrs of the dis- covery ·or her body al'}"~ted JoseptiJf. Lewandows~·48, who lives in unit six in the apartment complex. Police llso said It was anottJer resident in the compl~x who dis-cov~ the woman's body at 11130p.m. · However, as far u ·the cot· oner's office is conurned, the cause of the >Noni an'• death~ won't be known until an autopsy is completed later today. .. PiUOne.-~Beape8 CIUNO (APl -A St • .ye,.r-otd prisoner al the men's institution eacaped by climbing O'VU a waJt and lleetnc in a car driven by a woman, • prlson spokeaman said. , , f ' f l BY'l'OM Mat -.•. ..., ........ A psych.la coqvicted kill Edward (.'bar Allawa.y <lft lbe d&1 ot vrt1t lifted toclU tbat the d eodant wu ullilblbtedly wane wbeD be abot nine people oo the cal State Fulla1on campus. Dr. Selwyn RoH told aa Or . • COcmty Superior Court J 1 tba1 Alla rq. 31. told him In Pay Hike Approval Weighed WASl:llNGTON (AP) -Bert Lance, accused by a U.S. senator of lacking the qualifications to be budget director, met with Presi· dent Carter today to discuss a budget matter: how much the government can afford to pay employes. Lance, director of the Office of Management and Budget, and two top administration advisers conferred with1 the President at the White House about a recom- mendation to budaet a 7 percent raise in civil service salaries. One adviser, Chairman Alan Campbell of the Civil Service Commission, said Carter was in· clined to approve the rec:ommesa· datioo. The President has until Wednesday to decide whether to . reject it end send an alternative recommendatioa t.o c.areu. 1be meeting, also ~by Labor SeeretarJ Ru II ID. followed a c;a1>1net meettn•· Lanee was present for the Cabinet session as well. Ambassador Robert Strauss. who attended, said probes of the budget director's private finances dld not come up. Asked whether be thought Lance would survive the in· vestigations, being conducted by Congress and the Office of the Comptroller of the Curnncy, Strauss said: ''I certainly do." "In the first place, I think be has respect . . . in this ad· miQistration, .. Stnuss .said. "There Is confidence in him starting with the President and going right'* down the members of the Cabinet." . . _ . Strauss was chairman of the Demotratic National Committee before becominS tl!,e U.S. special trade represeatative. . The meeting came one day • after Sen .• William Proxmire, who cast the lone vote acalns.t confiTmlng Lance as budaet director, said he would like to see Lance replaced -but that Lance shout not resitn at this time. Proxmire spoke Sunday on CBS.TV's "Face the Nation.•• On the other band, Rep. Henry Reuss, chairman of the House 'Currency and BankiD.1 Commit· tee, said· Lance should contiilue Ms job. Reuss, a Wts~nsln :l>emocl"at, said dwinc a •!sit to Sal\ Lake City that Lance tiroke no Jan - aJtbougb there should be awa a~ someOf thethlnts be did. lertob jaU on July 12. 1076, that bo cou.td not recall n:auch of what bid ha~ earlier tn ~ day., The def witness said the Jntervl and subsequent in· · t :rv1ewa led him to diaanose Al· laway as a paranoid acbtzophrenic, the conclusion reached by other defense psycbtatrists durln& the sanity pb&se of the t.riil •. ROie said be is convinced that :AUaway'a mental coodJUon bad been deterioratine for. several months prior to the day he killed seven people and wounded two others in-and around the campus library. ' Rose said Altaway's separa- Uon from bis wife, Bonnie, and the belief that she was being forced by university personnel to participate in sexual relaUons Tightly packed but spreading out. the junior division in Fourth Annqal Costa Mesa Bicycle Grand Prix whizzes away from starting line on Placentia Avenue near Estancia High School Sunday. -Greg LeMor\d, 20, of and pc>mographic film• abot cm campus contributed to hls in· sanity. Allaway's belief that the mQv· ies screened privately to un- iversity employes ln the media center were produced on campus was ref\ited today by campus J>Qlice chief Jerry O'K.eef e. O'Keef e tesWled that he has personally examined and viewed the 10 pornographic movie's f ouJJd at the media ~enter and bas detennlned' that :\bey were c6nunerci'1.ly prOduced. ldeb.Ufying, "The Gentleman Caller," "Love-in," "Sk~n Serles" and "Wet Dream,.. as being amon1 the confiscated films, O'Keefe said the movies spetjallzed in unnatural sex acts performed by multi-racial casts. An obviously disausted pros· Carson City, Ne~ . pedaled to victory in this event for men age<J lS to 20, wruch drew 40 competitors from throughouttti~l'mtedStates <RelatedpicturePageA3. > 5 FBI Agents ~edW~~ Violations Now· About 1'/Wse WAsmNGTON (AP>.-:-FBI Director Clarence M. Kelle~ placed five Las Vegas a&en~ on probation today for violationf bureau rules .. but said he found "no evidence of crimiMllty or serious misconduct" in the Las · Vegasoffice. Neither tbe n~mes of the agents nor the rules they violated • were made public. . • An FBI spokesman said GO ac- tion •as ta.ken against Jack Keith, tbe special aaent in charged the Las Vegas office. "As a result of Violations of bureau rules and procedures, six spec:lal agents of the Las Vegas office have been censured. Of the six, flve were placid on proba· lion," Kelley said. Kelley made the decision ~r revle..tihC :a ~ trorn a heaii· quarteraJ.nSpection team se11t to (See FBI, Pa1e A%) .OverdUe Boob.' BELGRADE, Yugoslavia CAP> -Presidents Josip Broz Tito of Yuaoslavia and Kim ll· sung of North Korea endect talkii in PyonQant tOaay with a joint statement calli.ng for the withdrawal of iU.S. t.tOops from South KOl"e the Yugoslav news agency T~njug reported. Tito leaves tUesday ~a nine-diy vis· il to Peking, wllere he is expect«I to receive a rousing welcome. . eeu.wr Jaroes Enrlcht llstesMd to O'Keefe's account of the ploU11 one film and tben uked tbe wit- ness: • r-"Wouldn't you say that tblle filsns make Just as much sesise tf you run them backwards instead offorwllrd?" 1 "I agree, I agree," O'Keefo responded while the J.tfy Cb'1Ckled. . (Seet\UAWA'Y, Pa1eAJ) .. Memphis Police Tipped MEMPIUS, Tenn. <AP) - Four men who police say were plotting to steal Elvis Presley's bodf and bold.it for ransom wete . arrested earb',today outside the cemetery where the rock 'n' roll singer is entombed. The Memphis Commercial Ap- peal reported th.at the men were carrying explosives witb wtdc~ U.y planned to blast open tJle mausoleum containing the body. But Police Director E. Winslow Chapman dismissed reports of explosives. Lt. S.T. McCochren of tbe hofnicide squad said police re- ceived confidential infonnattqn several days ago that a group of persons planned to break into Presley's mausoleum at Forest Hills c:emetery, take t.be l)ody and bOld it for .ransom . Officers from the department·~ • i.ctical unit stake4 out tM aw..: utb.n Memphla gravey&id, Oil SatUrday, McCochfen ·~ SUS·, p'ctt were ~n lri the area, •P- par:ently makin• a trial run. Chapman said that thls mom· in& three men entered the cemetery over a back wall and made their way toward tbe white marble mausoleum where Presley is entombed. He said tbe men apparently bec•me ISUS- picious and turned to leave. TheT were then arrested. • The fourth man, who Police said was at the wheel of a getaway car, was arrested after a short chase. No cbarees half been . fild against the men by mid-day, anel police refused to identify them. Deputy Chi~ John Molnar a.tel earlier the men were arrested for invesUgatlon of attempted. burlC}ary. 1 • Police s-1d as far i.s tbey knOw no extortian tb'.reat was made. "There 'were no explostv• found,'' Chapman said. "Tbeon• l~ place I've heard report.a ot a- plosive8 ia in the aSedla. I don't know where ttiey eot that bl• formation.·: . · Cbapmips said police suspeiet the men tntended \o use convm• tional buraJary tools to breat m. to tbe mausoleum. but said no such toots were found tn the men'sc*1" .. ••we are searchinj the~ around the cemetert for ~' hesaid. • ~ UHle EL¥JS. Pa1e A!) l A ~ t percolaun1 in tht dty ~ Jrvi OY r whelh r tht five-member tnlor cltl1ena cotnmiltee to Id lD ala\Us t.o • c:onaml l . Ai a committee, mefbber1 · worked lhre>u«h the Community rvlcea Department. A com· m WGuld report directly to • atJ Council. Jaadore Schnelder. chairman of the commllt~. claim.a that Jrvlbe'a 3.• •~tor cJtlJens are poorl1 ~ented throu1h the ~mimed.ion with the Communi· t.y Services Department. Tbe department's director, Jesse Wuhincton. says there is no Deed ror another city com· mission <the others are the plan· ning, community services and transportation commissi~> To make matters the more con· tu.sine, neither Washington nor Schnelder ls willing to explain the apparent friction between the department and the committee. tl\nd, members of the commit- tee itself appear, if not divided over whether to become a com· mission, not stronely comrn.itted to it. The committee meets at 9:30 11.m. Thursday to discuss the ls· sue. Meanwhile, the City Counctl has at least temporarily taken th e committee from under Washington's jurisdiction. Councilwoman GabrieJle Pryor, noting the heat between Schneider and Washington, said it was "no longer appropriate" (or the committee t.o be under commUNlY• rv1ce1. The co II ordered ltl dty man r'a office to act as aatc for tb eommttt.t, and Mn Pl')'Ol'JI to bo oouncll Uata.on. At a council meetlna lut w Jc, Schneider aald that tbe needs ol ttnlor clli-•n• wer,n '& ~,.,, rornrnW\1cated by Wubl '1 department. ... "We were Ju.st a bunch of durn. mlet." he complaJned. "Wt H · fuse to be dummies anymore.·· Schnelder said today that the Community Services Depart· ment has "sidetracked" hJ1 com. mittee Ott l!sues, but ht refused to explain. "I do not want the senior citizens to be made a political football. I don't want the politi- cians to take sides whether they're for or asatnst senior citizens." In previous meettots of senior citizens, however, major: JYm· · pathJes have been for hfrinr a_. seniors advocate to lobby for senior citizen concerns, rather than create a commission. Three members of the current senior citizen committee have said an advocate would have more impact. As though to empba.slte the confusion among oommlttee members, one or them, Cecil Hoffman, addressed the council at thesametimeSchneiderdid. Hoffman said, ''There 15 no ex- treme urgency for (the commJt. tee) to be a commission." But be added "We're for establhbi!\I, as quickly as possible, a senior citizens commission." OCTD ROute .to Get. Government .Help? The federal government may help the Orange County Transit District <OCTD) buy a seven- rn.He transit route from Saota Ana to Stanton, OCTD General Manager Ed Loritz predicted to· day. · Loritz, who along with Board Chairro~ Ralph Clark met with federal officials in Washington last week. said they also received permission to use a $150,000 federal erant to study what type · of lr¥Sit system to In.stall on the se.ven-rnlleroute. In addltlon, Richard Page, chief administrator of the federal Urban Mass Transportation Ad· ministration, endorsed lo con· cept a roughly $10 million loan to buy the route. The abandon~d Pacific· Eleetrtc righl·Of·way would become the first ltnk In what OCTD officials hope eventually will be an Orange County.to· dQwntown-Los Angeles rapid rail line or bus corridor. · lHIHSlated ·For Reletue? MINNEAPOLIS (AP> -Sen. Hubert Humphrey, recuperating after sursery t.hat showed be bas terminal cancer of the pelvis, said today he will leave the University of MiMesota hospital sometime thia week. "I'm fn.lihg 1tron1er every day. I'm sure this week I 'U be out and back home," the Mlnnelota Democrat sald ln an early morn. in' telephone call t.o radio ataUon wcco. Bowman Promoted lUchard M. Bowman of Mis· sion Viejo bu been promoted to ser1eant in the Irvine Pc>lice Depa.J'tmetit. Bowman, 33, will be a patrol supervisor for north· central Irvine. lie Joined the de- partment. when It waa create4 in July, 1&'75. He la married afld hu one daullhter. The Interstate Commerce Commission has given OCTD la> days to negotiate purchase ot the right-of-way. ll was ·abandoned by the railroad earner this month upon commission approval. OCTDofficials hope later to ob- tain another six miles ot rtabt-of. way stretching to tbe Loa Angeles County line where lt could lint with future transit routes stretcbln& into downtown Los Angeles. Loritz explained the $150,000 study will show whether the right-of·way should be used for a rail or monorail transit system or be planned as a route for buses or vans. Dance Class Scheduled In Irvine The Itvine recreation de~.art· ment is offering a cla11 in aerobic: dancing, a new form of exercise 'that combines danclni with jogging. A demonstration is scheduled at 8 p.m. Sept. 1 at Harvat'd Corn· munity Athletic Park, 14701 Harvard Ave .• ib the multipurpose room. Admlsskln ta free. Hour-long classes will be held Mondays and Wednesdays, Sept. 19 through Dec. u. at 9 a.m., 10:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m., aod a,. Tuesdays and Thursdays, Sept. 20 through Dec. 8, at the same times. Registration is 6 to to p.m. Sept. 8, and 9 a.m. t6 4:30 p.m. Sept. 9, at the lrvlne Civtc Center, 17200 Jamboree Road, Fee for the ctau is S'!. All clasises are at Hatva l'ark. .. Water· Boanl¥ .. Hopefuls ·, Get Papers · A dozen potential candidates for the board of directors ot the Irvine Ranch Water Dtstrict have taken out nomination papers lor the No-t. 8 election. Only one, bowevu, his filed so · tar for the five o~n dll'ect()( ~ seats: schoolteacher Jaetie BO~d 14*Gotden Glen St. Mn: Boynton filed for the Dhision No. 1 position, one Of the two divisions in which directors are elected by popular vote. The other is Division No. 2. around UC Irvine. , Divili.otl No. 1 encompasses parts of the area around El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. DeadJIJM for candidates to file ia 5 p.m. Sept. 2. • • IRWD directors establish policy for the water district. set water ·rates and hire manage- ment staff. They are paid S50 per meeting, with a maximum payment of $300in any or'le month. Board seats are being contest- ed in Division Nos. 1, 2, 4, sand 7. The three latter •is.ion direc· lors are elected by landowner Yote, with ~es weighted by tbe assessed value of property. Division No. 4 encompasses the footbiJI, unbrnorporated area above the El Toro air statkln i No. 5 ia the Irvine lodustrlu Compl'et-Weat; No. 7 Is cba&tal area in the a<>utbeast portioD of the district: L 8YTOll 8AILSY .... .., ......... A ~.utst wbo o Md vk1Alil tll M•ard Chart Alla•tt on the dJY ol hll arrat tntin.ct &oday tha the def eftdani • u undoiu"*ed11 •ben he a1ne pea.pie oa lite Cal St.ate hllertciea campus. Dr. Selwya Rose told an o~ Coult Supmor Court Jtlr'Y that Allaway, 31, told him 1Q th NI Jill on lulr U, ltTI, tbat he could not rec:al much of wbat bad ned earlier In the day. The deleue wltnesa Hid the lnt.,-vlew and subaequeot in- tervJewa led hlm to dla1noae Al· Jaway •• a paranoid acbi&opbrenie, the conclusion reached by other def enae psycblatiiSta dUrin& the sanity pbueQf!bet.nal. BotD's That Grafl Ye•1 Am!lteur diver Joe DiBebo of Wilmington, Del., displays a hve 28-J?ound lob~t~r he captured 10 miles off B~rnega~ Li&ht, . N .J . 'I d h~te like heck to kill it," he said. He ~ thJn~mg ol donating it to the University of Delaware s rnarme Jab. Comptroller of the Currency, Strauss said; "I certainly do." '4ln the first place, I think he bas respect . • . ln this ad- ministration," Strauss said. ' "There is confidence in him tarting With the President and going right on down the members ot the Cabinet. .. Strauss was chairman ol the Demo<!'r&Uc National Committff before becomin1 the U.S. special trade representative. The meeting came one day attet Sen. WilUam Proxmire, who -cast ttte 16'ie vote acainst conflrmlbg· ·Lance as bud1et direct.or, said he would Ulletosee . Lance replaced -but thil!t ahoul raot resiio at um u Proxmire spoke Su on CBS-TV's"FacetheNatton.'' <S. IANCE, Pase Al> ROM •aid he ls eonv1nced tbat Allaway'• mentl.I eonditiOo bad been deterioratlna tor aeveral monlhl prior to the day be killed H•en peoi>Je and wounded two others In aDd around \Ile carnpwi library. ' Rose said Allaway's separa· Uon from bls wlfe, Bonnie, and the belief that she was being forced by university personnel to participate in . ~ex1;1~ relations and ~at>lllc film• shot oil\ CalJlPUI COOtrfbtited to hia ID.· sanity. • Allaway'• bellef that the mov· lei acreened privately to un. tveraity employea in the media center were produced on campus was !Jfutod today by campus poltce chief Jerry O'Keefe. O'Keef e testified that he bu personally examined and viewed the 10 pornocraphtc movies ~vW' 1'ody foUDd at th& medla centtr. and ~has detel'tlllried that they weN commercially produced. Identifying. '"The GenUeman Caller/' "Love-in,•• "Sirin 5eries" and "Wet Dream,•• as bein1 amooc the confiscated films; O'Keefe said the movies specialized in W\D&tural sex act.s performed by mulU·racial caa\a. An obviously disgusted pros· nesa: "WOUidn't ,OU say that these films make juat u much sense if you nm them backw&rds lostead oUorward?" "I ..,ee, 1 air~... O'Keefe responded while the jury chuckled. (See ALLAWAY. Pace .U) Four Men Arrested in Ransom Schenw MEMPHIS, Tenn. CAP> - Four men who police say were plotttna to steal Elvis Presley's body and hold it for ransom were anested early today outside the cemetery wbftre the rock 'n · roll sinter ii entombed. The Mempb!s Commercial Ap- peal reported lhat the men were carrytnc explosives with which they plannei! to blast open the mausoa.uai containing the l>ody. But Police Director E. Winslow Chapman dismissed reports of explosives. Polkeman Shot by Suspect A Santa Ana ... policeman wo ed early SUDday morntnc lh a s Mth a eu tJttft sus-~ pec,t was reported lo stable COil• dition tod y aft.er u4ergalo sur1ery • e loc bccP t Gau Clark, 32. a nine-year veteran on the Santa Ana police force, was sbot once in the atomacb by the suspect who car- ried a snub-nostd revolver ln the waistband of his trousers, police said. They ldenUfled the suspect u Jesus Manqal Gana, 19, whose place of residence remained un· known today. . That's because Gana was wounded in the shootout and re- fused to rurnlsb intormation about hltnself before be.irig taken to UCI 14edice1 Center for treat· mentotllls wounds, P911ceaaid. · He was listed in tood cond.itioo in the prtson wud of the hospital today. But Gana will be cbaraed with atwniQd murder u a rtsult ol the exchange of l\lftflre in the 1200 block of South Standard Street. Santa Ana, shortly after 2 a .m. SundaT. Lt. S.T. McCochren of the homicide squad said police re· ceived confidential information several d~ aeo that a ll"OUP of persoas planned to break into Pres)ey's mausoleum at Forest Hills cemetery, take the body and hold llfor ransom. Officers from the department's tactical unit staJced out the aut>- urban Memphis graveyard. On Saturday, McCochren said. sus- pects were seen in the area, ap- parenUy maldn1 a trial run. Chapman said that this mom- ing three men entered the cemetery over a back wall and made their way towatd the white marble mausoleum where Presley is entombed. He said the men apparently became sus- picious and turned to leave. They were the:q arrested. The fourth man. who police said was at the wheel of a getaway car, was arrested after a short chase. No charges had been filed ·against the men by mid-aay. and police refused to identity them. Ta~BateSet become the fittt Mnk in what OCTD -Olficiala hope evenlJ,lally wlU be tn Orange County·to· downtown-Los An&eles rapid rail line or bua ci>rridor. The lnterstat.e Commerce Commission bas given OCTl> 120 days to negotiate purchase of the right.of-way. It wu abandoned by the railroad tarUer this month upon comirilssion approval. OCl'D officials hope lat.a'"to ob- tain another $b mUes of ri.ibt-of- w ay stretcbinc to the Los Angeles county line where it could link with future transit l'Outes stretching into doWnt.own LosMgeles. Lont.J uplatne« the mo,ooo study will show whether U(e right-of-way shoUld be uieil ror a rajl or monorail transit ~\em °'" He planned as a route for bU.Sea or vans. Deputy Chief John MOlnar said earlier the men were arrested for investigation of attempted burglary. • Police said as far as tbeY bow DO extortioo threat was made. ''There were ~o explosives found," Chapman said. "The OD· ly place I've beard reports~ ex- plosives ls in the media. I don~ know wbent they cot that in-• formaticlll." Chapman said police suspect the men intended to use cooven· <See ELVIS, Paie AJ) Capo Boys (. Blamed in' ; 14Blazes -''I'Wo Capistrano Buell boys, 8 and tyears old, are bein.c bl~ for 14recent nres, inclQ41•. lac t~ 1tructw:e fires, in San: Clemen\e .JDd adjacent soutb: ' county area. · San Clemente Fire Marshal· Don Hodison said today be locat· ed the boys Sunday, after a wit· ness told him he had seen a driver pick up a child near the scene oi a fire. • Two of tbe fires the boys re-- portedly set bUmed grass at the Camino de Estrella intenectiOQ. with the San Diego Freeway lste Sunday afternoon. The southbound Camino de Estrella offramp of the freeway · wasthesceneWednesdayofthftlO' slmUar grus ftrea, also being blamedo.nthetwoyoung boys. Two trash fU'es were also re1 ported set at commercial .establishments Sunday eve:ni.DI• in tbe same Camino de Estrella areaofJk>rtbSan Clemente. 'Firemen said all four ~ SUri· day's fires were quickly e~­ lineuished and caused no iefil damage. Hodp:io 1ald the boys told hlin they had set two garqe fuea bi Capistrano Beach. but be bad pe further details. '"Ibey told me aboUt some fiteS I didri 't even knOw ~bout fuySe14'• the fl.re manbaleai(!. "Sometimes aomeo1ie WW al)Clt a amall ftre Qd put lt out With a . eardf,il hole and never bother to reportlttothentedepartment ... ~~ Jl~wd he will beWci'kinl whh tbe county are departinenttO identify •bat county-area ftriiS tt. boyl may have •n lriVot~ , (&fii BLAZES, ••• .U> ' Daetf're 011 aad •-•lag Taghll; packed but ::ipreading out, the Junior cl11:1s1on in Fourth Annual Costa Mesa B1c;cle Grand Prix whizzes away from starllllg line on Placentia Avenue near Estancia High School Sunday. Greg LeMond, 20, of Carson Cit¥, Nev., pedaled to victory in this event for men aged 15 to 20, which drew 40 competitors fr.om throughout the Unlted States. <Related Pio- ture Page A3. ) By WILLIAM HODGE ..................... Tbouiti no oa. knowt eueUy wben or bOw much, Sadclleback Valley and Juao Captstrano water oqlc s air.. that water I coat ~ proposed by the • Metropol tan Water District <MWD) eventually will mean higher a.ru. water bills. MWD officials have approved rate Increases to S9G and • an ac~ foot be&iMtnc July 1, 1978 and 1.979respectlvely. 1 An a~ foc>t or water cover.s one acre of land one foot deep. That's equal to 325,900 gallons of water. MWD's current acre foot ratets$14. The 13 percent increase next July will ultimately be felt by area-water users. .. Out rates would be increased proportionately," said Bill Wilson. Moulton·Ni1uel Water District assistant seneral ·manager. "If we bave a water ,_ ' cost increue neat year, we would havetoconaider aratelncre lo OUr\&lel'S." ' Wilson slid bis dlatrlct tiad forecast a rate increue to •t an' acre foot. !1W• wen1i·i planntDa on tbt much of an ln~e f~ ntxt yeu, but \te do anUclpate the rate will 10 all the way \l&> to at least ~ an acre foot over tbe nut five years," Wllaon ea· plained. He 1a1d Moultoll·Nlgud Water Dilt.rict rates probably would be increaHCS a year from now but deellned to predict what the in· crease would~ Santa Margarita Water Dis· trict. Rossmoor Water Company and San Juan Caplstrano 'a Water Works Number Four otncials Ill said their rates would 10 up eveotuaJly due to the MWD eoat b.ike1. . MwD ol:ftcials said today the rat.et 1,re ~utni dramaUcll· Cable TV Employ es Arrested rCanyon Crash H~r~Stt 4 p ,....p-.eAJ BJAZES ••• Three S torer Cable TV employes are free on $.500 bonds today after they assertedl~~ere caught last week leaving the company warehouse with two pay television decoder boxes. "We observed the individuals entering the warehouse and stealing the two units,'' Storer Manager Douglas Rook said last wuk. --Rook , who had suspected employes were involved in re· cent disappearances of the TV boxes, was hidde n in the warehouse. with another Storer official. Free on bond pending a Sept. 6 a rra ignment on petty theft charges are Dana Point resi· dents Timothy Lapis, 33972 Sliver Lantern, Steven Wombolt and J-Oseph deCarlo, all 19. Wombolt and "eCarlo listed their address as the Copter Lan- tern Motel. ~ Rook valued the decoder boxes at $S0 to • apiece but said the loss could go higher if the units 'f ere ~tailed illegally allowing people to receive pay television without paying monthly fees for the service. He estimated about 2S of the decoder units had been taken over the past month. ·Marine Hurt In Fall From .SC Balcony A Camp Pendleton Marine fell from a second story San Clemente bakony Friday nlght, aooarentlv strikinl( his head on the pavement below. A citizen called city firemen, who said they found Bob Hein, 21, lying unconscious in Coronado Lane, with cuts and bruises on his race, hands and WTists. The Marine was reported to have been playini cards with friends when he pluneed from the tialcony, but firemen did not have details. ' Hein was transported by city ambulance to San Clemente General Hospital, where he was «iven emergency medical treat· ment and bransrerred to Camp P~ndleton's military hospital. . Beef Probe canea CANBERRA. Awstralla <AP> -The Australian aoverrur)ent ordered a thorough investigation into the allegation that A\lstrallan beer may have been rea~ible tor an outbreak ot ailmonella food poisoning in the northeastern United States. Marine Boo~d for Drunken Driving with,· usina information volun· leered by the children. The witness who aaw the child picked up Supday near the scene of one ol. the four tires described the "drive.away•• vehicle to Hodgson, who spotted it later at a neighborhood pi.IQ parlor. Four people were injured in a three-car traffic ac<:ident. today on Laguna Canyon Road three· tenths of a mile north of its in· tersection with El Toro Road in Laguna Beach. A 21-year·old El Toro Marine has been booked for felony drunk driving in connection with the ac- cident. Nicholas C. Kane, 42 .• of Min· nesota received a head injury in the accidenL He was admitted to Saddleback Community Hospital and was reported in good condi· tion today. f Kane wu a passenger in a car driven by bil wife, Margaret s. Kane, '3. Mrs. Kane was re· leased after treatment in the Truck B reaks . n·oWn; .. Getawa y FOiled Garden Grove police blame greed for the undoing of two burglary suspects who allegedly piled $17,000 worth of loot so high that their stolen getawaJ truck broke down just two blocks from the scene Of the crime. It was when a passing police of· ficer stopped to inquire about the stricken truek that the two SUI· pects C!Ouldn't explain wny they happened to have such a heavy load of tools and car..ac uip- ment on UJe trud:. So, beeawse of a broken axle caused by the overload, Curtis Sommerville, 47, and John F,.._PageAJ ALLAWAY. • The jury has found Allaway guiliy of seve~ coun.., of murder and two of assault with a deadly weapon. It will be asked by Judge Robert P. Kneeland when the sanity hearing is concluded to rule on Allaway's mental condi· tion at the time or th~ shootings. San Juan Set~ GoHToDrney A sixth annual San Juan Golf Tournament will take place Sept. 9 at the San Juan Hllls Country Club, 32120 San Juan Creek Road in San Juan CapistraDQ. The chamber of commerc~­'ponsor~czit, wblch ls public, will beginit9:30a.m. The $19.50 entry fee includes a round of golf and a bar~ue din· ner ilnmedlately foUowtni the tournament. For more lnforma. tion or reservations, call 493·4700. George Brown, 29, were arrested and charged with suspicion of burglary, auto theft and possession of stolen property. In sate keeping in police hands shortly before sunrise today was all the tools and garage equip· ment at Frank's Automotive, 12000 Harbor Blvd., Garden Grove, the two suspects alleged· ly coUldpU6ootothe stolen truck. . Ari F eativals EndTue1day Ir you 've been putting orr going to tbe Laiuna Beach art Cestivals, don't put it off another day or you 'Ube put out. Tuesday is lhe last day, and that's two days after the festival season was supposed to end. Two dayaofralnforced the exttbsjon. The Festival of Arts is to end at 11:30 p.m.; the Sawdust Festival ends at midnight and Art·A-Fair ends at 10 p.Jn. Tuesday. -,.._P-AJ LANCE ••• On the other hand, Rep. Henry Reuss, chairman of the House. Currency and Banking Commit· lee, said Lance should continue Ms job. Reuss. a Wi~consln Democrat, said dwinl a •iait. to Salt Lake City that Lance broke no laws - altt~gh there shQuld be laws against s0rpe ot the things he did. "I wouldn't aay be should re- sign, but of course it I had my w a)' he wouldn't tie bead of the · Office or Manacemtmt aod Bud1et," said Proxmire, also a Wisconsin De°'ocrat and bead of the Seru•te banking committee. hospital emergency room. Treated and then booked into Prange County Jail was Gregory L . Haralson, 21, of El Toro Marine Air StaUon. A paueftler in Haralson'• vehJcle, Gary D. Dingler, age not known, wu treated at the scene. He refused further care. Police said the accident oc· curred as Haralson'• car, west· bowld on Lal\llla Canyon Road, collided witJi.the rdr of the Kane vehicle, also westbound. The Im· pact sent the Kane car into a ditch wher~ it upended. . Haralson's car stanced off Kane's and <:aree~ fnto the op- p08ing traffic lant where It col· lided with a vebH le driven by Pace A: Burleson, 28, of Orange. Haralson 's car tf\en i:ebounded across·the west bourld lanes and· ·, ran into\l.he ditch where It too up- ended. The accident occurred at 12:303.JTi. The driver told lloditon be bad picked up a boy ,be recogntZed from the neighborhood. Ustns tbb additional information, Hodgson sald be ,.... able to find the boy's bo~e. The fire manbal aaid he met with "'8 boys and their parents Sunday and atran1ed for the younpteratohMecounselln.r. •• "We have been very, very"suc· cessrui with tbe counseling of youngfirest~ers. .. Because or tbe parents' cooperative attitude, we have opt· ed not to hold them financially lia· ble for the ttfes tbe boys started," be said. • -·WhO's That! • I Honoree'• Identity PILzzk ' SAN DIEGO CAP) -·If Juan Bautista de Anza wants to be honored, he'll have to {ell the San Diego Community College Board just exactly who he is. The trustees are balking at approval of a plaque nammg the new conference center a{ San Diego City College for de Anza, one of California's explorers, a Spanish soldier who searched what today are the San Francisco and San Gabriel areas. In 1776, before he 'traveled 1,000 miles across the then-uncharted Southwest desert, he visited San Diego. ~ The 200tJl anniversary plaque commemorating de Anza 's visit awaits approval or rejection• after a meet· at which a trustee remarked:· · -"I have a need to know what or who Juan Bautista de Anza was qr is, or represents. \ "You knf)w, he could be El Bandido as fat as I know. I'm sure that he is a very honorable and ap- propriate-individual. I just need to know who I am vot· ing for.'' Gun ShOp Burgled A team of buralars, usln& a girl getaway car driver (who pre- tended to be qut or 1asollne > for a lookout, is beina aou1ht today ln the $4,8S7 looting ot a downtown Costa Me5a IUD abOp. lnve.stjgators aa!d the Uab~ raid on t6e Grant Boya• firearms department at 1150 New~rt Blvd., We.$ witoe!sed b~ a younc couple who bappe~ed to~ dri'I- ~ by about,dawn $W)day. The)' sped away. fearhii harm from the four suspect.a Involved in the break-in. 1be cou»lt o~ tained a good deacriptlon fl at least one black male with a mut· toncboP beard. Police were already an their way t.o the aportina aoods outlet at Newport Boulevard and a~ su.et when the 1rit· nttMB called and nptifled them •of the tiUrglary. + I ly -.use the d.ittrlrt is s to Pl mare ot the ope eotla on UM water ..,. than the taxpayer. The<Ustrlct lJytaxar~ Jdenti 12 centi r tlOO assess valuadoft. :n:at tbe own ot an '90,000 flomt" JaY• $240 pet year In p~rty tues to MWD tn addition to bis monthly water bills. While MWD It tryinC" '° place the operaUng c~t burden on the user. dlstrict offit•all are besi· tant to predict a redu~Uotl Ju UM 12-ce:nt tax rate. ''Xbat'• •wful difficult lo PJ"O- Ject," a di.strict apokesman sai~ "Uthe disLrict's Ufflsed valua- tion continues tO crow and there is additiooal NVenue then it's <a tax rate reduetlon> certainly a pouibillty ... MWD's six·county service area increased 12.2 percent ~to $51.3 biWoo>in valuethiayear. District ofticiaJ1 said next year's water cost increase wlll go to pay MWD facility co11Structioo costs and debts trom prior COO· struct.lan and water faclllty .lm· provements. Actually, MWD officials ad· mitted, water U$er& pay for the day to day district operation and 45 percent of the construction costs. • Tbe so-called "burden shift· inc" program means water users will be coverina at least 50 per- cent ol the district ·s building pro- gram. i111inS Party ~aa ~ St,eal, llooze Irvine police were investigat- in& complaints today that a weekend party at University Park wu spoiled by children who allegedly· stole $74 worth of l~q~o~ and escaped on ~skateboards.• PoUce aald workers were un· loading the liquor at ~ com· munity clubhouse, adjacent to the skateboard course, when the theft occurred. The Orange Coast chapter of Parents Without Partners was bbl~ an adult disco dance par-ty. Some of tbe proceeds from the event were to go into programs ~ for children. • e Taken 'were two quart&' of 1cotch, a quart of rum, three quarts or whiskey. six quarts of vodka and three six packs of beer. · Beach Crowds DwUulling; Surf Likewise· . Puny weekend crowds at South Coast beaches indicate the onset of · 'back·to-school-itis.. San Clemente Lifeguard Capt. Sheridan Byerly opined today. And, those missing the beaches aren't missing much, he said. Surf, while building slidJtly to- day 1 was fiat and uninteresUne over qie weekend. Byerly and La1una Beach µtecuard Chief Bruce Baird agreed. Bai~ said Laguna's beaellH attracted about 22,000 each day over (be, weekend. Laa,n1a gµards puUect.elsht people from the _.ater Saturday and 1f SUti-day. Capt. Byerly'1t.toc>ps.p\illed18 lrorn the water Saturday and eight SUnday. City beaches at. tracted abOut 8,$00 and UrOOO SaturdaJ and Sunday '~; Uvely. I 17 .. N.ewport and llarcutrlt• avenu•• in C01'0Da d Mar. Jn tbe two-bour Protram, the aenlon were siven toW'I ot the wln1 their ea.ter will occupy and wer• mtroduced to a few of the clauet, such u sardebllll. 1olf and cqan leuons that are being ottered.. Proerams offered throU&h the eeater, aJ.LboU&h overseen by the elty'1 Parka, Beaches ud the preview, brln•lDif mem· Recreation Department, are or· bersbiptonearly soo. lulled by • IJ'OUP of aenlors who l{owaJ:'d, obvloualy pleued c•ll themselves the Friends of with Saturday's turnout pointed OASISCenter. out that peo\)le Jolnlna the OASIS Center stands for Older Friends locluaed three YOWlC Adults Social, hiformatJooal aDd c9\lples who llve near the center ServiceCenter. who told him their parents and ' grandparents live out of the area Frlenda President Grant and they wanted to be able to U· Howard said 61 new members sociate witluenior cit.tuns. jolncid tho or1aniiaUon during Councilman LucWe Kuehn, the center's most ardent supporter on the city council, attended and 1ave a brief speech ·tn which ahe told the seniors "I bad tears when I aaw yoo all here." Mayor Pro Tem Pete Barrett was 81lo at the preview Ind be told the semora that he is looki.Dg forward to bavtn1 a center with a lar1e and active group of partici· pants. The seniors attending the pre. Four Men Arrested . . . . . . . . . view clearly enjoyed Uiem.sel~, • Joinlna In a slni·alooa procram , and llstea1nl to an or1an recltal. Or1aniien at the Friends said 6S doaten cookies were consumed ' and uncounted 1aUons of punch andcolfee. ' • Howald said later he was ap-· proacbed by a man at tbe eod ~ · the prosram who told bim "I'm · having such a good time, I don't want to leave." ~e~ of Presley's ~ody Blot Foiled. This unidentified teenager found it nearly impossible to face this morning as he snoozed soundly on the beach near the Newport Pier. Unfortunately for the beach. visitor. there's a city law against sleeping on the sand. To find out what happened to this sleeping beauty see Page A2. tenter'"" produced on campus was refuted today br campus police chief Jerry O'Keefe. O'Keefe testified that he has personally examined and viewed the 10 pornographic movies found at the media center and0 bas, determined that they were commercially produced. Identifying, "The GenUeman Caller," "Love·in ," "Skin Series" and "Wet Dream," as being among the confiscated films, O'Keefe said the movies speclallied in unnatural sex acts performed by mulU-racial casts. .. An obviously disgusted pros· ecutoc James Enright listened to O'Keefe's account of the plot ln one fa.Im and then asked the wit- ness: , "Wouldn't you say that these films make just as much sense it you nm them backwards lnstud of rorward?" "l ap-ee, I· •ll'ee," O'Keefe responded while the jury chuckled. Tbe jury has found Allaway guilty ol seven counts of 10urder and. two of assault with a deadly weapan. r . • -It V(jll be asked by Judce Robert P. Kneeland when the sanity bearing is concluded to rule on Allaway's mental condl·. tlon at the time of the shootift&S. Burglars Too . Greedy; LOot ·--BreOh 'rrrirek · · ..... ._. Garden Orovt police btanie '. ereid for the undolne of two bur~ary aus~ who alle,edlY piled $17,000 worth of loot so high that their stolen 1etaway truck broke doym just two blocks !tom the scene of the crime. It was when a passing police or· ricer stopped to inQuire about the stricken truck that the two sus· pects couldn't explain why they happened to have such a heavy load of tools and earage equip- ment on the truck. So, because of a broken axle caused by the overload, Curtis Sommervllle, 47, and John Ge0rge Brown, 29, were arrested and charged 'with suspicion of burglary, auto theft and possession of stolen property. In safe keeping in police hands shortly before sunrise ~Y was all the tools arid garage equip- ment at Frahk's Automotive, 12000 Harbor Blvd., Garden Grove, the two auseecta alleeed· ly couldpUeontothestolen truck. .. NAIROBI., Kenya (AP>' - Somalt President Mobam Mohamed said Barre fiew to the ' Soviet Uli.lon, the m~or supplier of arms to both the Somalians and tbelr nelshboring Ethiopian rlvaJ1 at the invitation of the Sov· iet aovernment, Mogadishu Radio reported today. MEMPHIS, Tenn. <AP> - Four men who police say were plotting to steal Elvia Presley's body and hold it for ransom were arrested early today outlide the cemetery where the rock 'n' roll singer is entombed. carrjring explosiv~ \nth which they planned to blast open the mausoleum contain.int the body. But Police Director E. Winslow Chapman dismissed reports of explosives. Lt. S. T. McCocbren of the homicide squad said police re· ceived confidential information The Memphis Commercial Ap- peal reported that the men were SwUtServer &UCI Netter Willa . $3,000 FOREST ffiLl.S, N.Y. <AP> -The former top " man on UC Irvine's tennis team picked up $3,000 to- ' d~y after hitting a blazing 135 mile per hour serve to win the National Fast·Serve Championship at the West Side Tennis Club here. . $cott Carnahan, 23, a touring • tennis pro from Fullerton. beat , 'ou\ Chris~ Greendale, a New • Zealander now llvln& in Ann - · Arbor, Mich. Carnahan 's winning serve was a toumament!record, supass- ing. the 130 pmH shot by Colin Dibley of Australia, winner the last two years., . · Dibley did not def end his title , because of a shoulder ailment. . a•••u• The best women's effort was lO'l mph by Beth Jassoy <?f ¥i~wauk.ee; ~ 25-year-old teaching pro. '-~ . . ' . . . Ne:wPOrt's TOp C~p . . several days ago that a group Of persons planned to break int.o Presley's mausoleum at Forest Hills cemetery, take the bod,y and bold Jt for ransom. omcers from the department's tactical unit staked out the sub- urban Memphis araveyard. On Saturday, McCocbren said, sus- pects were seen in the area, ap- parenUy making a trial ndi.. Chapman aaicl that this motn· · Ing three men entered tbe cemetery over a back wall an4 made their way toward the white marble mausoleum where Presley b entombed. He said the men apparently became su~·. picious and turned to leave. They were then &l'fested. The fourth man, who· poUce said was at tbe wheel of a getaway car, was arrested alter a short chase. No charges bad been filed against U>e men by mid-day, and police refused to ldentifnbem. • -Deputy Osief lohn MOinar said ·earlier tbe men were arrested for ln•estigatlon .pf ... at~mpted buretary. ._ ... Police aald as far as they mow no extortion threat was made •• • 'There were no explosives found," Chapman said. "The CJD• ly place I've beard report. ~ex·· ~losives ta in the media. I don't ~ow where they tot that ln- ormatfon." . · Chapman said police suspect the men intended to use conven- tional burgJuj tools to J>ttak in· to the mausoleum, but said no such tools were found in the men's car. · "We are sea'rching the grounds · around the ~emetery for tooll, .. • Mak.es Comparisons heaald. . Chapman said police were checking to see whether the flee· ing driver might have thrown tools away. BJ JOANNE REYNOLDS Ofa.o.llJ ......... One of the flnt tblnp Pete Gross will tell you b that be bas a penoa.allty about as oppoe.tte hJs predecessor's u there can be. • cess," be said during an in· terview last •eek. 0 l'm great on faces but poor on names.'' But the man who ts Newport Beach's new police chief ls quick to add that when lt comes to law enforcemen~ be and the previous chief, B. James Glavas, are cut from the same mold. Gross, 49, toot over u chief law enforcement officer for the city oo Au1. 15 and. he is still In the~ or getting to know the department and its city. "It's •olnf to be a Jone pro- Gross said be has not taken the job with any plans for immediate changes. He said there will be .some made eventually because his manaaement style ls goina to be different from Glavu'. •un:ae empbasb is coin.I to be on the same results. lt'a just a matter of arriving at them by a 1llghUy different path," Gross a aid. There are a number of obvious aimllartties between Glavas and Gross. Both had lengthy careers (SeeCBJEF, Pase AZ> The homicide department is band.Ung the case because the in· vestigalion bas to do with the at· tempted removal of a body, McCocbreo said. Presley WU entombed Aq.18, two dayS after be died at -.e 42 of. a heart attack at hia home, : Graceland Mansion. -. .., .... "-- AERIAL VIEW SHOWS WAVE ACTION IN WEST NEWPORT Thia Was Beach Pattern In Erosion Battle of Auguat, 1988 NB Beach Erosion f" . Work Will Resume Hy JOANNE REYNOLDS OI tM DAii, Pllet SUH The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has spent more than $6 million on the shoreline from Sunset Beach to Newport Beach since 1.964 in trying to prevent beach erosion And, according to a report is- sued last week by the Newport Beach Public Works Depart- ment, the engineers plan to spend another $4 million dolne more or the same next year. The report was prepared for the Newport Beach city council by Public Works Director Joseph T . Devlin, who explained the his- tory or the problem and what the council could anticipate in terms or future projects. Devlln said that the source of the problem lies in the fact that the rivers which naturally supply sand to the beaches have been dammed and channelized. Thal means there is no way of replacing beach sand that is scoured away by the seasonal changes in the currents. According to Devlin, the strands where homes are built on the beaches have been plagued by beach erosion since tty? 1930s. The problem became acute in the la.st decade which led to a series of projects by the Corps that cost a total of $16,059,000. The projects involved either dumplng sand on the beaches or building rock and steel groing running from the beaches into the surf to slow the natural scour- ing process. Th~ upcoming project described in Devlin's report calJs for the creation of a "feeder beach" in Sunaet whic)l will serve as a sourc~ of sand for beaches to the south. The project , which ls scheduled !or the fall of 1978, en- tails dumping 1.5 million cubic yards of "acceptable beach material" just downooast from the Anaheim Bay Jetty to make a feeder beach· a little more than a mile long and 250 feet wide. The. engineers, who have an ongoing project to monitor the erosion-prone beac:hes, ap- parently don't believe the co.Uy project will be the last for the area. ·'They've made it clear they haven't achieved a permanent solution to the beach erosion problem yet," said Devlin's assis- tant, Ben Nolan. Iroine Party Drytu Kitb St,ea/, Booze Irvine police were inveaU1at- ing complaints today that a weekend party at University Park was spoiled by children who allegedly stole $74 worth of liquor and escaped on skateboards.~ Police said workers were un- loading the liquor at the com- m unity clubhouse, adjacent to the skateboard course, when the theft occurred. The Orange Coast chapter or Parents Without Partners wu holding an adWt disco dance par- ty. Some ot the proceeds from the event were to eo into proiranu for children. Taken were two quarts of scotch, a quart of rum, three quart.a of whiskef, si.x quarts of vodka and three IP packs of beer. Exxon Takes OVer . Offshore Oil Well SAN DIEGO CAP> -Exxon Corp. b drilling an exploratory oil aJM,J aaa well in government. · leased depths 110' miles west pt San Diego after such work wu abandoned by Texaco, Shell and Gulf oil companies. The wort is deacrl~d llS balf wa, ftniahed on a well u; 100 feet deep in the Tanner Bank. ShaUowec depths wer~ du1 tbtre by the other companies there but t came up Ctr)'. WASJllNGTON <~P> -Bert Lance. accused by a U.S. aenatcr of IKldnl tbe qullificaUoas to be bUdiet director. met with Preal· dent Carter today to dlleuu a budc matter: how mQch the 10\'emment can afford to pay emplo)'ea. · Laace, director of the Offtce of llan.,ement and Budlet. and &wo top admlnlatraUon adVlaera colifeiTed with tbe President at tbe 'White Houae abcM.lt a recom- mendation to budaet a 7 percent ralM ln elvU aervtce salaries. One adviser, Chairman AlM Campbell ot the Civil Serviee Commllslon. said carter was in· clined to approve the recom1llen- dailoo. Tbe President bu unW Wednesday to decide whether to reject it and send an alternative · recommendation to Congress. The meet.ins. also attended by Labor Secretary Ray Marshall. followed a <.:al>lnet meeting. Lance was present !or tbe Cabinet session as well. Ambassador Robert Strauss, who attended, said probes of the budaet director's private finances did not come up. Asked whether he thought Lance would survive the in- vestigations, being conducted by Conareas and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Strausa said: "J certainly do." "In the first place, I think he has respect . . . in this ad- ministration," Strauss said. ''There is confidence in him starting with the President and goiJll ritht oo down the members of the Cabinet.'· Strauss was chairman oC the Democratic National Committee before becoming the U.S. special trade representative. m 4 .. ,....PageAJ } CIDEF ••• with the Los Aneeles Police Department where they were erving in upper management efore taking their jobs in N'a,unnrt. ears work- ing in PD's juvenile dlvlaion an both carry a special concern for troubled youngsters into their work in Newport. In fact, Gross worked under Glavas before the former chief came to work in Newport Beach in 1961. Gross says there are a number of things he would like to try in Newport after he gets to know the city and its residents a little bet- ter. The basic idea, he explained, is lo get the community to take an active part in setting acceptable standards of behavior. Generally, he a aid what he has in mind Is based on the philosophy that residents have to partic1pate in setting the stan dards, in enforcing them on a minor basis. Grosa feels that if this enforce- ment comes exclusively from police, there is a vacuum created in which it appears that violation of th.t laws is violaUon ot the police depvtmeot'a rule, and not a violation or the community's standarcb. He saya,Jhat what be has in mind ~ simple things like getting bori\eowner associations to Intercede when there are minor problems such as disturb- ing the peace or sleeping oo the beach, rather than calling police to do it. Gross emphasizes thouah that he is not advocating vieilante committees, nor ls he $Uggesting citi&ena involve themselves in dangerous aituaUona. "BU\ what I think is important ls to establish "d atmosphere that lets people know that it's not ' Just the pollc. dep.,-tment that will react to u11aQceptable behavior," be said. The new chief said he mo has •ome ideu about wa1s of dealing 9.lfth tbe two problem be sees as foremost to beach-area reai- denta~a on the beach and pa.rk:inf. • He e lt rUdoln pattera in· tensive patrol and be says it wtll be an irictive l)rosraa1 for ~iliftil With potastlal violatiOoi before • they become problem.a. IT MAY SEEM OK TO SURFERS, BUT POLICE OFFICER ARRIVES TO WAKEN YOUTH l - L - tht l"uUerton jatl on July U, 197$, that he coul4 not recall much of hat had happened earlier in the Clay. Tb def wlt.n s 1aid the hilerview and 1uti equent in· terviewa led him to diapose AJ. laway as a paranoid •chlt"opbrellie, tbe co•tluaion 1eached by other defense psycbittiists during the sanity pbueofthe~. lloto's 'naat GrafJ Yot11 Am~teur diver Joe DiBebo of Wilmington, Del.. displays a hve 23-I?ound lobst~r he captured IO miles off Barnega~ Light,. N.J. ''Id h~te l~ke beck to kill it.·· he Hid. He~ thinkmg of donatmg it to the University of Delaware s marine lab. Lanee Meets Carter . ·On Emp.lbye &mes Commission. said Carter was in· clined to approve the recommen· datioo. 'J'be l>re$iden\ has until )Yednesday to decide whether to reject it and send an alternative recommendation to Conaress. The meeting, also a\tended by Labor Secretary Ray Marsball, followed a Cabinet meet10g. Lance was present for the Cabinet session as wen. Ambusador RobWt Strauss, who attended, said probe$il the budget director's private finllrtces did not come up. Asked whether he thoueht Lance would survive tbe in· vestigations, being conduc~~ by Congress and t)'le Office of Ute 'Comptroller of the Currency. Strauss said: .. I cerUinlY 4o." "In the lint place, I think he tias respect . . . in this ad· CSee LANCE, Pase .u> Roee said he ls convinced that AUaway•a mental condiUon bad been deterioraUna for several months prior to thf: day be killed aeveo people and wounded two others in and around the campus library. Role said Allaway's separa· tlon from his wife, Bon.Ue, and the belief that abe was being forced by University personnel to pattlcipate in . ~ex~al relations and pomoaraphtc films ahol on campws contributed to h1I in· sanity. Allaway's belief that the mov· iu. screened privately to un· ivbrsity employes in the inedia center were produced on campus was refuted today by campus police chief Jerry O'Keefe. O'Keefe testified that he bas · personally examined and viewed the 10 pornoarapbic movies found at the media center and has determined tbat they were commercially produce4. Identtlytng, "The Gentleman Caller," "Love-In," "Skin series" and "Wet Dream," as -beiq 'mqni ~ confiscated films, O'Keete slid the movies apeelalized 1n unnatural sex acts pedormed by tnulU.-racial casts. Ai} obvtou.sly dis1U1ted pros· Four Men Arrested in Ransom Sc~me MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP> - Four men who police say were plotline to steal Elvis Presley's body ll'ld hold it for ransom were arrested early today outside the cemetery where the rock 'n' nm singer~ entombed. The Memphis Comme?'dal Ap. peal reported that the men weTe carl')'ina expl01ives with wbicb . they pl&DIJed to .blasi open the maUIOleum containing the ~y. But Police Director E. Winslow Chapman dismissed reports Qf explosives. Policeman Wounded By·Suspect They identified the sus~t as Jesus Manual Garza, 19, whose place of residence remained un· known today. That's because Garia was wounded in the shootout and re- fused to furnish information about himself before betna take.Q to tJCI Medical Center for treat· mentofhia wounds, pollce said. Lt. S.T. McCocbren of the homicide squad said police re- ceived confidential information several days agQ that a troUP of persons planned to break into Presley's mausoleum at Forest HiUs cemetery, take the body and bold it for ransom. Officen from the department's tactical unit staked out the sub- urban Memphis fraveyard. On Saturday, McCochien said, SUS· pects were seen in the area, ap- parently making a trial run. Chapman said that this mom· ing three m~n entered the ceruetery over a back wall and . made their way toward the white marble mausoleum where Presley is entottibed. He said \he men apparenUy became sus- picious and turned to lean. They were then 8.ITested. The fourth man, wh<>' police said was at the wheel of a eetaway car, was arrested after a short chase. No charges-bad been filed against the men by mid·d!l¥, and police ref used to identify thedl. Tax Rate set Tranait BOanl, Cui. LeDy A 1977-78 property tax rate of 3."P'l cents per $100 of as- sessed valuation was set today by directors of the Orange County Transit D!,trict <OCTD ). · . The rate represents a 13 percent cut from the past year's 4.26 cents per $100 ol asaesaed valuation. The OCTD by1aw can levy a rate no.hilher-thanlive cents. The 3.71-<~enl rate means that the owner of a home as· sessed at ,000 will PaJi IJ.42 UU. yeu to support OC1t> bus services. Pt'Clperty taxes wm ra!Se tbiciut $3.3 mWion of oCrO'• .. ~.3 inUllon budget for the year. ADotlMri '300,000 'Will come from state revenues. which D'lake up for taxes lost becaUJe of homeowners• and business inventory exemptions. 'J\e bulk of OCI'D's bud&et is financed by state and federaJ subsidies. OCTD Route to Get --.. , -- Government Help? The federal aovernment may help the Orange County Transit · Distri~t <OCTD) buy a seven· rojle transit route from Santa ~Ana to Stanton, OCTD General Mana,er Ed Lorit.s prldlcted to· day. . , Commission has.given ocrb 120 days to negotiate purchase of the right-of-way. It was abandoned by the railroad earlier this month upon commission appronl. OCTD ollicial.S hope later to ob· lain another six mtles of right-of· way stretching to the Los Angeles County line where it could link with future transit routes atretchin& into downtown . Los~eles. • LOtiti explained the $150,000 ·study will show Whether be rig.ht-of-way should be usea for a rail or:~ail transit system or be p\annid as a r~ for bUSes or vans. ~Y Chief John Molnar said earlier the men were arrested for lnvesttcatlon of attempted burglary. Police said as far i..s lbey know no extortlon threat waa made. •'There were no ex,l?.losives found," Chapman eaid. 'The on· l~ place I've bend reports of ex· ploslv~i in the media. I don't' know re they got. that in· loon ·on." . Chapman 'said police suspect the men intended to use conven· <See ELVIS, Page AZ> ·Water Bill Increase . c ' Certain SI K <.AP> -A Ou n1 nt den\, hlmaelf an, dl eov red P. to to, , omt ol U\ern bOm>wed I a•o M HD from pub Ubi'arln, tn t~ ap 1 cl l l ,.ho IP pa bu taken oil. Tbe boob, wboH orl11n&1 cost .... .... t •100,000, ... ,. IOGnd~A.rmaadoAn ... wboen· ttrtd UaNe-room aparttn nt to aerv. an tvlctlon not.Jee. He re· ported the cache Sund1y. Art• d UtUe WU known about t.be &4DaAt other tJaan hts name. A. D'AureUo, and that he .... uchltect The booka, mo.Uy tecluUcaJ "olumes on construction. eJec. tronicl and architecture in Euro pean countries, were borrowed from Queensborough and New York public libraries. Arias, a former librarian m Louisiana, said it took two days of cltanlni before he reached the noor through the Utter. The only furniture in the apart· ment was four tables, a bed and a few chairs. The books, along with manuals and newspapers, were stacked against every waJI, shoulder high and crammed In the kltchen cabinets. Arias and residents ol the building said D'Aurelio used the apartment only as a place to work and study. Arias and tenants said D'Aurelio, a tenant for more than 10 years, stopped visiting the apartment about a year aio but paid his rent until the past two months. Arias said he did not know where D' Aurelio was Driver, 82, 'Swpended' BATHURST. Australia CAP > An 82 -year-old dear man has been fined $10 and barred rrom driving for 12 months after police discovered he'd been driv· ing without a license for nearly 40 years. William Whittaker, who lives on an old-age pension in a country shack near Bathurst, 100 miles west of Sydney, told police he had been driving "off.and-on " since 1940 and never caused an accident. A policeman stopped the man as he was drivinc in Bathurst and arrested him when he couldn't answer questions becauae or his dearness. l',...Paee.41 LANCE ••• ministration," Strauss said. •'There is confldence in him starting with the President. IJftd $oing right on down the meml1ers of the Cablnet." Strauss was chairman of the Democratic NaUonaJ Co01mlttee before becoming the u.~ special trade representative. The meeting came one day after Sen. William Proxmire, who cast the lone vote aiatnsi conflrmlng Lance as budget director. said he would Ute to see Lance replaced -but that Lance shoul not resisn at tbts Umt. Proxmire spoke Sunday on CBS.TV's. "Face the Nation." On the other hand Rep. ffMry Reuss, thaitman ~ the House Currency and Banklnc Commit- tee, said Lance should ~Unue f\iajob. Reuss, a Wi1C9J)sin DernQCtat. aajd durina ~ vlait to Salli Lake CltY that Lance brokf no laws - altbQugh there .tbould .be laws •Salnat ~e of UJe thb:iga be dld. , "l wouldn't say he aboWd ~ .. slan, bul ol tours~ lt l bad mr way ho wouldn't be heed ot the Plfice of lhn•1ement and Bud~." said Proxmire, also a WiaCQnSln Democrat ~d bead of the Senate banldn committee . . ~bOMT addlebactc Colle•~ trustee Frank Greinke is expected toni&bt to resign as a member of the college board to move out ol the county. The Tustln oU man confirm~ las~ week that he would "have an annouoeement to make" at tonight'• board session, •hlth beairw at '1:30 p m.1n room 212 of the college library. It Is likely Grienke'a reslgna· tlon will eotne e,arly In the meet- San Oiio'fre ~ngineerto Head. F aeility A .Mieslon Viejo man who helped o'enee construction of the first phase of tbe San Onofre Nuclear Generattna Station .12 yean aao bu been named to head the entire operation of the northern San Otego Coun'ty facllity, Jarlath M. Cutran, 38, · bad served t0t aix yeara a1 plant engineer at San Onofre prior to his prontotfon. accorclint to a ';E;;;t;~ -Southern California Edison com• Ill! pany spokesman. illlllllllllll~~~ The spokesmam said Curran, a mechanical en,ctnetr with ex- tensive backgrOund in nuclear work, will be responsible for operation, maintenance and. engineering of the station's ex.lB~ tnareactor. v When tbe two additional uOJta. now under con.strucUop, are 'Put into operation, CUrtan will al.So be ln cbarfe of tbem, the spokesman said. The new manager served u the coordinator of deslga and ln· itlal startup of the first reactor at San Onofre back in lMS and ls familiar with every aspect of the IJ!lt'!liiJ:ll'J!.f! ... plant's operation, the Edison spokesman added. ' ~ 1.'f MAY SEEM OK TO SURFERS, BUT POLICE OFFICER ARRIVES TO WAKEN YOUTH . Viejo School Registration Under Way New student.a may register now for the fall semester at Mis- sion Viejo High School. School officials said counselors are on duty and scbedulina ap- pointments between 8 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. Counseling appoint· ments may be made by callin& 837-7722. All new students and freshmen are in\"tted to an ;ol'ientaUon as· sembly at 9 a.m. Wednesday. Sept. '1. int.be school gymnasium. Parents also are welcome to at- tend this meeting. School begins on Sept. 12 when all studetita a.:re expected to re- port directly to their first ctaaa. Grove ·Mao~ 41, Arieeted ' Garden Grove poltee arrested a '8·)'ear-old man tC)Clay and Hid tbeilan to charl• blm with the Sun ay nisht 1tranaulation mu er .ol a 34.year-old YtOman. a •Pokesman for the cor-~br'a ofllce uid lt ba6 not yet been determined ti the uniden- tJfled woman wu a murder vie· ~m. . Aecordang to pollce. the, woman was found slumped aver the aleertng wheel ot a car parked 1n a carport in the apart- ment complex at 12591 Sunswept Street. PoJJce Hid the woman bad been stranaled to death and witbil\ • few boars of the dis- covery ot her body arrested Joaepa H. Lewandowski,•· wbo lh1• iri Uriit ali 1n the aptartment complri. Polite a.tao aaJd It was another realdent tn the complex wh(> dis- covctt'ld the wom(fll'f bQdy at U ;30p.m. · • However, a~ far as the cor- oner'• olfice ls concerned, the cause or the womap'a death won't be known until an autopsy is completed lat.er today. . ,.,.... rflfle AJ . ELVIS. • • tJonal burglary tools to break in- 1to the .mausoleum, b\ll 1ald DO" i •uch tools were found in the l'ben'• car. .. We ate searching the grounds around the cemetery for tools," he said. Chapman said pollce were checking to see whether the flee- ing driver might ba\le thrown tools away. The homicide department is handlin~ the case because the in- vestigatton has lo do w~ the at-. tempted remova! or a body. M cCochren s• . Prealey was entombed Aug. 18. two days after he died at age.Uor a heart attack at his home, Graceland Mansion. * * * ·Presley ·TV Special . . . Offers 'Last Looli~ 1 . . Oli-the-S&·Years Can Yielil PF.ofi BJ SYLVIA POaTEt ~....... ' Steven and Linde are in tbelr late 40s, cb.Udleas. well· '! educated, llvinl well. Steven eama l'0,000 a year, drives•· company car and bu full mauranee and health boneftta. 1i They support tbe arts, travel.frequently, entettalo often. .!1l1 Steven'• 1olf club and in-town memberships cost $1,2C)O • a yearLpald by his cotnpany unW he reijres. They apendhi about '100 a ~onth entertaiJWlc and two yearly vac.atl<>U coat about $5,000. S'l'BVZN'8 SA VINOS ACCOUNT balance la only •••• and be bold4 onJy $10,000 in hlgb-yteldlng stock. Following earl)' retirement, he expeet.t to earn $20,0001 ln the first year as a comJ>UY consultant.. a JQt tbat wID1bo \ phased out aflerfive yean. .. Here ls what Merrlll l$>cb experts advise ~asea 1~• this: . -Restruc:ture the portfolio to stress more growth. Sell the $10,000 conservative stock holdings and reinvftt ~.000 . tn stock that should · •; i •row in value for resalo ' 1 at a profit at retirement. MoneiV'S -To cut annual ·1 cash ouUay tor tues, ln-Worth . vest. tbe remaining j $5,000 in such tax-' sheltered inveatmenta _ _.Mill._ _____ , as high-grade municipal boo.ds, high-grade municipal bond I unit trusts or a mutual fund with at least 50 percent of its at.· sets in tax-free investments. ' -ALSO TO INCREASE NON-TAXABLE income, begin saving $2,000 a year for investment in other tu- sbeltered markets. -Upon retirement. chc)ose a lump sum distribution of accumulated retirement benefits for an Individual Retire· ment Account URA>. Presumably. Steven will not withdraw funds until his cansulting role ls ended. -Aflu retirement, consider sheltering part of the·co11· sultaney income by setting up a Keogh plan on self· employed earnmgs. Pension benefits can be ln an IRA: tbe Keogh can be used for freelance earnings to reduce current tax liabilities. For a free Merrill Lynch booklet on "19· dlvidual Retirement Accounts.'' call Ct.oil free> 800-243-SOOO. , The message underlining Merrill Lynch's advice to this couplets'·that they won't be able to continue their lilestyfe during retlremelit unless they begin realistic planning now.= An "ex~utive" lifestyle requires a gen~rous nes\egg, l.nr eluding an lnDaUcm cushion to protect purchasing power' and savings for emergencies. I Nut: Widows kest of Couni-ry . Undergoes Boo .... 1be housing boom is spreading. Tbe rest of the count.rt: is catdllng up to California. • 1n·a list Of major markets that will have record aingl family production this year, the Midwest, South, mountalf>~ regicin and Paclfic Northwest joln Cali!ornia. HOUSING • . OM. v "'-OT • ;i !(I • . ~ . : . i.• t· I -· .. , . ,; : ......