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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-08-14 - Orange Coast Pilotf c { f omeer 1 . Deserilies '101t .Of Earthquake .. Assassination? .. ·--------~---·--------~----~-------- .• j " ~ ' .. ArsoDiSts ____ trike MONDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 14, 1978 Vot.. 71, MO. m, J UCTIOlllS. • ~Ml•I Blast Fear ed I I F umes Empty Orange Area By GARV GRANVILLE Cit-Delly Pl6et ..... A one-squatre·mile area in central Orange was evacuat- ed today when a 12.000-gallon chemical tank overh~ated. Did King Get Wtµning o/ HU Death? WASHINGTON <AP > Martin Luther King Jr. 's chief lieutenant in the civil rights mov e ment said today h e believes King received advance warning of his assassination. "I think be bad re<:eived some word from some sources that he was going to be assassinated," the Rev. RaJpb David Abernatby told the House assas'Sinations committee as the panel opened a week of public bearings on its in- vestigation of King's death. However under questioning, ~bernatby said he bas ·•no inowledge" of any warning de- livered to King. He said that altboap be md Kini were the closest of frteods, Kins had said nothing to him about any <See PltOBE, Pa•e .U) began spewing fumes and threatened to explode . Though chief!¥ a light In· dustria l and m anufacturing center, a trailer park and two schools were included in the evacuation area. Police and fi11efighters beg<tn moving people out of the en- dangered zone shortly after 7 a.m. when the large chemical storage tank at Sterling Plastics Co rp .. 545 W. Struck Ave .. Orange, began spewing its po· tent fumes. Fire officials said those fumes are not deadly unless inhaled "in heavy doses" but warned they are potent enough to cause illness and painful discomfort. Should the tank fire men hosed with water in an attempt to cool the chemical reaction explode, the result "is likely to be dev- astating," one fire official said. The trou~ tank contains :styrene monoer, a chemical sub- ~taoce formed into pellets that a r e u sed to shape such ,, styrofoam products as drinking cups , a company spokesman said. As he talked. the Red Cross was setting up evacuation centers in the area arid dty fire officlala talked ol entar1ina the evacuated area. Ftr•t to arrive at \he Red <See ftJMES, Pa1e A2> CHP Qffice~·.Tells Reaction to Quake TWtNTYNJNE PALMS IAP> -A ftre ~at blackened l,500 aent of bnilh ln ruued Smith Canyon Conttmied to spread ~ day wltb no tontmment or eoa· trol ln •liht. fire amctall aald. No ttructure• wer~ . ' • By STEVE MITCHELL °' tM Oetty ...... MMt The 10th arson in three and one·half months in the Arch Beach Heights of Laguna Beach was extinguished by a neighbor Saturday morning. before a home under construction could be come fully e ngulfed in names. Laguna Beach £1r e m en responded to a fire caU al a two. story home under construction at 798 Miram;ir St. early Satqr· day morning. to find a neighbor had put out the small blaze in- tentionally set on the east side or the unfinished garage. The home. being constructed by realty partners Clark Smith 1and Neil Papp. is a block and a half from the scene of a three· home rire last April 27 which caused S7:i0,000 damage to those structures under construction, and damaged a fourth home. L a guna Be a ch flr-e in· vestlgator Mike Davis said to- day the 4 a.m. fire Saturday was s potted by nei1hbor Casey Vermeullen. of 971 Miramar St .. who quickly extinguished the small blaze. Arson probers found • coffee <See ABSON, Pase .U> Co ast Low doudineu night and morning hours Sunny durin1 atterooons throuah Tuesday. but only partly sunny at the beaches. Sli1htly warmer days. Ht1h near 85. Lows toni1ht eo to 65. INSIDE T9•A 't' The mon dao a"1JftQfd Che tntncwau f*toncing tor •"' ~ of ,,.. 1""1W Rattell ._ C1Ultl ""~ "*" ~p buafntN onalJlrt John Clf"· rtlf f Sff POft IM. ...... ! l " • t • ,.,...,..,.... STRIKING MEMPHIS POLICEMEN SIT ON GROUND AFTIA AAREST FdR DEFYING ORDERS Tenneuee Nadonal ou.rdlmen Round Up Picketing Copa In Fourth OaV ol w,tkout 18 Protesters Arrested Ami-1W£lear Demo11.1trators Block Workers SEABROOK. N tt. IAP> Eighteen anti-nuc lear d em- onstrators were arrested lo· day as hundreds of construction workers returned to their jobs at the Seabrook nuclear powe r plant. The protesters. all memtx>rs or the Clamsht>ll Alliance. stuged the demonstration as more ~n JOO.w~era reklrned to their Jobs at the site after be· Jng laid off for three weeks. The workers. many of them visibly angry at the protesters. were among the first to return to their Job~ after 1.800wereJaidoff. The Nuclear Regulatory Com m1ss1on lust week r-uled work may proceed on the plant Six of those arrested were tuken .into custody after they en· tt-rcd the site through a marsh und owr a fence and chained themselve~ to a crane und al· tCJChi.>d a lurge "No Nukes" sign to the top or the crane Skipper Faces County Charge Of Driqkjng The youthful skipper of the Uno Mas. a 40-foot cabin cruiser. f;J('t:~ drunken boating charges lod ay after officers allege he thrt•w 11 l ife jacke t s at authorities:who bourded his boat in lluntmgton HarbOur Sunduy Storm Bartling, 20. of 16592 Nulu -Circle. Huntington Beach, w a!. booked by Orunge County Sht!rtCf's Harbor Patrol deputies following the 3 p.m. incident. Investigators said they over .tiauled the vessel after report~ of it speeding up the Anaheim BCJy channel through the Seal Bl•ach :>olaval Weapons Station. i;pewing botllei, Two 20·foot Harbor P;.itrol boats hooked lines -to the Uno Mas . Deputy Fred Torromeo bo•1rded the vessel a nd began ~ nttni a speeding ticket. "Ht' proceeded to bombard us iw1th lifejackets." charged Depu· l y Torromeo. who had asked to .see the boat ·s safety equipment. ·'The f1rst one knocked the ticket book out or my 1umd." ·-Ot.'puty Torromeo continued. He alleged Bartling then put the 1>0werluJ <'ruiser in reverse gear. towing the two small Harbor Patrol boats like a pair Qf water skis. •··-Deputies TO'M"Omeo and Barry ~andall finally subdued the SUS· peel and chased him over the s ide into one of their patrol ho a ts DAILY PILOT 4 Six others marched through the plant's main Rate as workers s houted derisively. The Dem· onstrators then confronted a Une of 12 state policemen. who informed them they would be ar- rested if they remained inside the gate When the protesters re- fused to leave. the police began ha uling them into u waiting i:>ehooU~us .- 0 n e woman. who was in a wheel<:hwr. shouted at police as they arrested hrr: "I'm not go.' ing to leave. I will come every lime 1 cun. You will have to take me away by <lmbulunce " S h e then fell fro m he r wheelchair and warned police st • might be seriously hurt if th v moved her. but eventually sht· pulled herself back into the wheelchuir and 11llowed herself to be placed qn the school bus. The 12 who actually entered the property of the Public Service Co. were charsed with criminul trespass. Six more demonstrntors. who c h ained the m selves to the "Seabrook Station" sign outside the fenced-in area. were arrest· ed for disorderly conduct. Spokesmen for the Clamshell Allian~. an umbrella group which haa OQUtnlzed a nurqber Froaa P.,,,,,AJ FUMES ••• Cross centers were elderly peo. pie ordered from a trailer park near Coll.Ins Street und Batavia Avenue. Workers who would normally have been in the small industrial buildings that dot the arP.a were turned away by police bar · ricades before they entered the .area. They sat in curs parked along roads l eading into the en- dangered area waiting for the "all clear" that will let them get to their jobs. Meanwhile. fire and police or. ficlals planned strategy they hope will end the emergency that was first reported al 6 a.m. One fir e department spokesman said the seepege of the wate ry , colorless mass began when workers at Sterling began transfe rring the s ub· stance from uoderground tanks to those above ground. The heat and pressure pro· duced by the chemical combina· tion was potent enough to blow away a vapor release cover and ' to start floating the plastic chemical odor over the area. No count or people evacuated was available. of tiemonstrations at Seabrook since 1976. said today's protest was the beginning or a wllve of demonstrations at the S2.3 bUUon power plant. The protests are intended to recaU the arrests of 18 persons two years ago during the 1ftrst demonstration at the plant site. An estimated 18.000 persons 1tllended a C&Jtm~eU-sponwred weekend protest adjacent to the construction site in late June. No one was arrested. A, year ago. 1.414 ~nti-nuclear demonstrators wt re arrested for criminal trespass at the site . Girl Slain, Teen Injured By A.tt<re~r SAN DIEGO (AP\ -A 17· ycur-old Long Beach boy was listed in serious condition at Scripps Hospital lod1ty after an apparent beuting by un assail1tnt who killed a 16-year-o)d girl on the beach. The nude body or Barbara Nantals of Lakewood was found early Sunday oear Toaey Pin~ State Belich. She suffered head injuries In an apparent strugle. Deputy Coroner Joe Cogen said. Her companion was not iden· tified publicly. but police said it looked as if he was knocked un· conscious while in his sleeping bag. ' The youth told police that the couple went to the beach with another couple Saturday r»gllt but joined a group or males at a nearby beach party before re· turning lo their sleeping bags. No w~apon was found and no arrest m1tde. HE'S DEBlJCGED Wl18 PILUI' AD "Thanks to my ad in the Daily Pilot, t sold my bug ... That 's the sales success story told by t'he Santa Ana freights man who placed thiS clusilled ad : 69 Bug. Auto. rt-bit tong :\l~·ch ·ty xlnt St.000. xxx· xx xx IC you have a car you want lo convert to cash. call 642.5678. A friendly ad-vtser will help you. We m ake it easy to put a few words to work for you. In the Dally Pilot. l',....P~AJ QUAKE RECOUNTED. • • able to get up and get my "lfe and myseU out to the front yard. I TIDNK THE QUAKE LASTED 10 or 15 secondl. tt feU IUte a very strong quake, but outside thinss seemed p~ly muoh ln order. Two stron1 aftershocks followed the bil quab by 10 or 15 mtnutea. 1 wu standtn1 on the ~e or the porch and lt bucked up and down. The aftershock dldn t ha~ the llde·tCHlde move- ment like the first qualte. A tb.lrd aflerabock came about 30 minutea later: \t waa minor. I shut off the 1a1 •upply to the house and lookecl for damafe. We were very lucky. One ot tbe olflcen I work wJth had· bla bouu broken In ball. I lound no problem& on tho outllde ao I went back In. r krae\rt what to expect and, sure enouab, all or my 1tero 1ear was oo thenoor. IN TOE IOTOIBN. WATEI, coffee, dlahet, Jelly and mOk were all over the noor. The r~frigerator door hacl popped open und almost everythln• lntlde wu btoien and sca\ltred. It l*td like u bomb bad 1ono ofl there, I've been throuah tom• tUlnot earthquakes btlore b4lt notbln1 like thls. Back outside •. l beJped calm aome fr\1httnecl and eonf lllfd chtldren. whiff my oel1bb91'1 and l were trylq to calm • ourstl\' . • WE WENT VP THE ITltEET AND 11w wlndOws btOkn In sevMtl lMMtMMta. That•• when I ~1an to r.aun um ••• even • WOl'H than I htd tbOiilht. Tb• earthquake hod one J)leasant ttdt ffrm. t ••• amaaed how nttjtOM w• tf11DC to help .w~ tlM. I wijftfttfd *hY it ~lwa)'I Hms to take tometh6n1 Uh tlal1 to pt peoplt totelh~. :.'fJir,Hlen Join Cops ~ . National Guard Kee~ Memphis Peace • MEMPHIS Tenn <AP> -pickets they were under arrest. Supt"rvilory. ofllcns and ;. Memphis n~efi&hters joioed The strikers . r .. lae~ Uaeir sheriff's deputies .-orkln' .12· polict olfteers toctay in a wildcat bands and 1ubm1tt.ed without a hour abifts bave ~ provtdtng strllte as riot-equipped National struggle. Add1t1onat arr~s~s police patrols durin1 the strike. G u~rdamen used jeeps and w&re made at thr~ of the city s The wage offer called for a arm'ored personnel carriers to four precinct headquartent. three-step wa1e increase round up pickeUnc pollcemeb About l.l~Ueemen have between now and Oct. t, 1979. tt who vlolated duak·lO·d a wn been on strike since 1l ~.m. would raise a Vt'teran curfefl. Thursday when the u$0 reJetl· patrolman's base pay from Memben or the t .400.member ed the city's final wa•e offer. Sl.148 to SUM lmmedlately. firefi&ht.en union , which ls atlll J I / under coUrt injunction as ~ r• suit or a lhree-d ay. ar son-, placued strike if July. voted overwhelmintlY .to reject the city's contract proposal. Police turned down ~ simihtr propos11l Ed·WillDDer by a 9·1 markin July 15. "l explained to them the con· Hubby Haikr Take. Prize sequences or walking out GFI LD 111 AP y 11· 'Ed again.·· s uid Kuhron Hud· SPRfN E · · ' I -e mg · · dleston. president or the union. wtiiiiiiln!" at the top of her .bmg&. S~ar~n Rando~ph Local 1784 of the International took first place and a S75 pnze for wtnnmg the thlrd Firefighters Assodation. "They anRUal husband-calling contest at tbe Illinois Stall' listened and they booed." Fair. · As ked wha t e ff ec t th e As a crowd of 500 looked on Sunday. Mrs. Ran· firefighters' action might have dolph. a 34.year-0ld mother of two from w~verly. on the troubled city. Huddleston 111.. outcalled 12 competitors with threats. words of said. "I asked my family to endearment and a little humor leave town." Women were judged· on a 100-point scale in call· Mayor Wyeth Chandler asked 1 ... g for husbands or husbands-to-be. They were gtVen 1tbout 100 11rmed Tennessee 11 Guardsmert -part of 1.200 up to 50 points ror loudness an~ clarity of a ~all. up soldiers activated In response-to to 25 points for appeal. a maxunum of 15 pomls for the police walkout that entered assurance and up to 10 points for originality. its rourth day today -lo help :\1 rs. Randolph said she won second plact' in the non-striking policemen arrest contest two years ago a nd has practiced duily since picketing officers at precinct then calling her husband for dinne r. . . . ho~~~t 50 .strikers were arrest· Edwin. the object of all the shouting. said his ed by early today and charged wife might want to spend ht"C' prizt> monl'Y on a new with violation or the curlew and "' set of lungs. threatening a breach of peace. '"-------------------------- Nat ion al Guardsmen. lust month fougbl fires during the fire men's walkout. At u televised news conference early today, a hagsard·lookang Ch a ndler said he decided to deploy the g uards men after rocks were thrown through win dows ut Centrnl Police Head· quarters and two precinct sta lions. The soldiers. wearing plastic face m asks and body a rmor and ('arrying automatic rifles . roared down Me mphis' Union A venue in a convoy of trucks and tracked vehicles Gold Rises Mark, Franc Slam U.S. Dollar Again LONDON IAPI -The dollar hit record lows against the West German mark and the Swiss franc today ror the third day in succession. ;.ind the price of gold rose to a record in uft ernoon truding -$213.50 an ounce m London and $214.375 in Zurich.' eluded 826 lire in Milan. down from 830.40 at the cloae of trad· ing Friday. and 2.121.S gu;tders in Amst e rdam. down from 2.1395. ,..,..,. ·Page A J PROBE ••• threats. - When guLJrdsmen arrived <it h eadquarters. police director E .W. Chapman and ch1er or Qperations John Molnar . the de· partment's ranking uniformed officer. led a group or shotgun· ~arrylng supervisors from the liuildklg to lnform about 25 Fro.PogeAJ London ·s five m aJOr gold traders set the mid-morning .. fi xing .. price al $212.25. and the Zurich market set its price <it S21l.75. Gold prices usuall) rist> agains t a declining doll<tr because traders buy tbe pre· cious metal as a hedge against inClation Trading is done on p<.1per with the gold remaining in V<JU)tS Nevertheless. Abema&by re· called that the meht before the _ murder in Me mphis. Tenn .. April 4. 1968. King delivered ..i s peech in which he seemed to foretell his death. ARSON .•• can containing a !Je1mmable Jjq. uld al the site or the l1ttest arson attempt. Davis, who was at the scene of the fire-Saturday morning, said the incident fits in with nine other arsons in the hilltop com· munity s{nce late April. "The bwJdlng was under con· atrucUon. the lime is about right and there were no witnesses." Davis said. "The only difference Is the manner in which the fire was set.'' · Firemen have been unable to determine the method used to set the other arsons in Arch Beach Height$. aod state fire mars hal Investigators are keep. Ing close wraps on their in - veatisatlon. Joe Halasz. chief investigator for the state's Fire Marshal's Arson and Bomb lnvestigalion Unit In Sacramento. s aid today his lnvestll(ators are plagued with a paucity of resources. The dollar was trading on the Zurich exchange at 1.5925 Swiss francs. down from the pre vious low of 1.6460 at the end of bus1· ness Friday In Frankfurt. the dollar was quoted at 1.9532 marks. down from 1.9672 on Friduy. That. too. had been a low In London. the pound sterling was trading :.it Sl.9760. and dealers predicted it might soon go above S2 for the first time sinct> March 5. 1976 The pound closed Friday at $1.9640. Tourists are already h1tving to pay some money changer' more than S2 u pound. The dollar also slid back in Tokyo to a near-record low of 184.82 yen. The low. 184.65 was registered on Aul{. 2. A London foreign exchange deiiiler said tradmg w<1s pretty active although banks and bus1 · nesses in France und Belgium were <'losed for the Assumption Day holiday on Tuesday Other morning dollar rates in· That was a famous speech in which Ring declared. "I havt' been lo the mountaintop and I have seen the promised land." In more than an hour of testimony, Abernathy described his r elation.ship with King from the t ime they met in Atlanta in 1951. He traced the development or King's beJief in nonviolence a~ the most effective way to protest mi s treatment of blaelc -. throughout the South in the 1950s and 1960s. And he told of King 's efforts to s how support for the mostly black sanitation wor~eu of Memphis striking for wage in· cr eases. Sympathy for the strikt· brought King. Abernathy and other strategists of the Southern Christian Leade r s hip Con ference to Memphis to lead J civil rights march March 28. 1968. Wh en the m arch turnl'd violent. King became extremely depressed but concluded later that he would return to lead "' peacerul protest. Abernathy rt' counted ().\ -~-;; 1 ~/:\ J' I -. . . . . .. 'Ne Reeommeod Banded Collars and Vests i AL:SGAFVGE 56 FASHION ~SLANO NEWPORT 8&01 (7'4) 644-70aJ ' . f 17 1 ' I GENSIR1N1' GOLETA <AP) -tt wu like beiq iniidi apalnt M'er. With ftO w&J"Dinc, tii IOilli ed Hakina riohftUy from stde to llde. 1 wu b'lnl on tk Uvtns l"OOIQ floor readb\I Ute SuodJi,Y paper wheD die eertbquake bit.. t Related stories. pbo&o • .u. > IT 880AN WITH A LOt1D l'\llUllni scUrid that waa almOlt deaf eninl. ..:,. • My tlnn.boqbt wu a car bad nm into my boue or that an airplane crashed. 84& then it tept IOi..-ild I knew wbat it wu. Jll)'. ~ !4"'1pmeat OD a shelf Wmbled \o the-floOr M J tried to 1et In ml' fett to 1et outlide. I j.i wanted to 1et out of tbere. .. lkat wlWlin I ttled to tel off tbe floor. I CO\lldn't dolt. ~ft• a few ~. the sbattna e.-d up a bit and r wu Able to 1et UP and 1et my wife and myself out to tht hont yard. • l 'l'lllNK ftlE QtJA&B IABl'ED 10 or 15 seeondl. It felt like a very. *'oaC quake, but out.tide tbinls seemed pfttty much in or•r. Two stroaa aftersbocts followed tbe t.lg quake by 10 or 15 mbiaates. 1 was standina on the ectae "°'the porch and it bucked up amt clown. The aftershock didn't tulve the side-to.aid<. move- ._ent •lib the first quake. A third aftershock came about 30 a.mutes later; it was minor. l abut off the gas supply to the house and looked for damage. We wen very lucky. One of the omcers I work with bad bis house broken in ball. · l (GUiid no problems on the outside so I went back in. I knew wtlat to expect and, suTe enough. all or my stereq aear was on tbe f)oor. ,, Today' ~l .. hlg N.Y. 8'9ek8 IN 'l'lm Ki'i'CREN. WATER. coffee. cllsbes.jelly .and milk were all over the Roor. The refrigerator door h popped open and almost e-verytbi.ne inside was broken and scattered. It looked like a bomb bad gone off there. • I've been tbroueb some Qllnor earthquakes befOl"e but nothlna like this. Sack outside. I helped calm some Mebtened and confused chBdren, wblfe my n•igbbors and I were trylna to calm ourselves.. -... .1 • r.....--: WE WENT UP THE STllEf:I' AND aaw windows broken in several businesses. That's when I beaan to realize tb1a was even worse than I had thought. - The earthquake had one ple;,ant side elfect. I was amazed how eveqone was trying to help everyone else. I wondered why it always seems to take somethina like this to get people together. Firenten Joill Cops • ## ....... FREIGHT TRAIN LIES CRUMPLED AF'l'Bt DERAILMENT IN SANTA BARBARA IARTHQUAKE T,.mor 8ftootc ca, ........, eftd MeaaunMS 5.1 • Richter Scele Suftdey • J • • Cops Hunt 2Freeway 'Snipers' Los Angele s County authorities are hu'nting two men who opened fire on a car carry- ing two Huntington Beach women and a companion on the San Gabriel River Freeway Sun· day. Investigators who took a re- port in Huntington Beach said neither ot the two shots fired at the women's vehicle near the Firestone Boulevard offramp penetrated the aUto. · Nonetheless, they list the inci- dent as one of assault with intent to commit murder. Occupants of the car were identified as Shelagh Lawrence. 26. Karen Wllson, 26, both ot Runtioaton Beach and Julian Medigovicb, also 26, of Santa Ana. The victims told police the car carrylne two Latin men re· peatedly swerved trying. to cut them off in traffic and finally pulled up to the rear. One occupant fired two shot&. probably from • .u caliber weapon. wtalch ri<*beted away due to the anale. Workers Retarn "Nuclear Protest Sparks 18 Arrests SEABROOK, N.H. <AP) ...... Eighteen anti-nuclear dem- onstrators were arrested to- day aa hundreds of construction workers returned to their jobs at the Seabrook nuclear power plant. The protesters. all members of the Clamshell Alliance, staged the demonstr.-uon as more than.300 workers returned \O their jObs at the site after be· ing laid off for three weeks. The workers, tnany of them tisibly angry at the protesten, were among the first to return to their jobs after 1,800were laid off. The Nuclear Regulatory Com· mission last week ruled work may ~ oo the plant. Sis of those arrested 'were taken into c6stody after they en- tered the site through a marsh and over a fence and chained themselves to a crane and at- tached a large "No Nukes" sign to the1op ot. the crane. Sis CJthera marched throuch the i>laat'• main J{ate u workers thoute« derialvel,y. Tbe DelD· onatraton then confronted a line <JI JI ltate policemen. who informed them they would be ar- rested ii they remained inside the gate. When the protesters re· ~used to leave, the poUce began baulins t'hem into a waiting school bus. -One woman, who was in a wheelchair. shouted at police as they a~ted her: "I'm DOt go- ing to leave. I will come every · Ume I can. You will have to taJte me away by ambulance." She then fell from her wheelchair and warned police she might be seriously hurt if they moved her. but eventually she pulled herself backj into the wbeelcf\alr and alloweu herself to be placed on the school bus. The 12 who actually entered the property of the Public Service Co. were charged with criminal trespass. Six mott demonstrators, who chained themselves to \he "Seabrook Station" sign outside the fenced-in area, were arrest· ed for disorderly conduct· The protests are intended to -recall the arrests of 18 persons two 1ean ago dwing the first detnoostration at the plant site Navy Probe Told Football Star BOSTON (AP) -TM Navy ii iDvest11attni events th• led to -~l!_,.e ··n Crasli abe brealdn.r ol a propeDer •aft ~· • · on the auclear submarine 'l'UIUbee while tt ,, .. 1ubmef1ed, the B01tOo Globe report*! Sun· day. National Guard Keeps Memphis Peace MEMPHIS, Tenn. <AP> - Memphis firefighters joined -potfce otttcen today in a wildcat strike as riot-equipped National Guardsmen used jeeps Al\d armored personnel carriers to round up picketing policemen who violated dusk·to-dawn curfew. Members of the l,400-member firefighters union. which ls still under court injunction as the reJ suit of a three-day, arson- plagued strike in July. voted overwhelmingly to reject the city's contract proposal. Police turned down a similar proposal by a 9·1 margin July 15. "I explained to them the con· sequences or walking out again." said Kuhron Hud- dleston, president of the union. Local 1784 of the lntemational Firefighters Association. "They listened and they booed." Asked what effect the fll'eliihters' action might have on tbe troubl~ city, liuddleston said. "I aaked my family to leave &own.'' Mayor Wyeth Chandler asked about 100 armed Tennessee Guardsmen -part of 1.,JeO soldiers actiyated ln response to the police walkout that entered its fourth day today -to help non-striking policemen arrest picketing officers at precinct houses Bakersfield 'Cools Off,' Ties Record By The Associated Press Bakersfield managed to lie Its record of 2S consecu~e days over 100 dearees but Cballdn 't break it. Bakersfield dipped to a 99· degree high Satyrday to break the string. FreslJO also fell below 100 degrees Sat'll'day after 17 straight days over the century mMk. ~ Highs fell clear into the 80s at most valley points Sunday but will begin to climb again slqwly Tuesday, the National Weather Service says. Highs wlll range from the upper 80s to mid 90s. Temperatures ln the state's ~wo hot spots, Needles and Palm Springs, jumped to 105 and 104, respectively. But ip Red Bluff, which made the national news last week because Of its 119 depeea, the mercury dropped further to 90. R1Shs in NOrtbern California ranged from 86 in Stockton tct 64 in Tahoe. . #' • About 50 strikers were arrest· ed by early today and charged itb-violatioo.of.-the curfew...and ;reatening a breach of peace. National Guardsmen. last month f®Sht fires during the firemen's walkout. At a televised news conference early today. a baggard·looking Chandler said M decided to deploy the guardsmen after rocks were thrown through win· dows at Central Police Head- quartea arul.tw9 .Precinct sta· lions. ---- The soldiers. wearing pllstic face masks and body armor and carrying automatic rifles. roared down Mempb1s · UoiOJl A venue in a convoy of trucks and tracked vehicles. MlerDathy Believes Rev. K~~ Warned ~Death Threat? WASHINGTON <APl - Martin Luther King Jr. 's chief Ueuteanr in tbe dvll rights mo•'ement sald today be belle•• KlQ8 ~ved advance warning ol bis usasainadon. "I think be bad received some wMd from som4taources that be was gaiog to be assassinated," the ltev, Ralph David Abernathy told tbe Home. assassinaUons committee as the panel opened a week of public hearings on its in- vestigation of King's death. However und&r questioning. Ahernathy said he has "no knowledge" of any warning de· livered to King. He said that although be and King were the closest oMriends, King had said nothing to him about any threats. Nevertheless, Abernathy re- caUed that the night before the murder in Memphis. Tenn .. April 4, 1968. King delivered a speech in which he seemed to foretell bis death. That was a famous speech in which King declared. "I have been to the mountaintop and t have seen the promised land." In more than an hour of testimony. Abernathy described bis relationship with King from the time they met in Atlanta in 1951. He traced the development of King's belief in nonviolence as the most effective way to protest mistreatment of blacks throughout the South in the 1950s and 1960s. And be told of King's efforts to show support for the mostly Newport Man 'Near Death' From Crash Newpoat Beacb Police Depart. ment T'atnee Gordon Roberts was near death today alter his personal motorcycle cusbed into a parked car on Daisy Avenue in Fountain Vatley1 . Trainee Roberts. 21. a student of the Los Anaelea Poltce Deptll'tment academ1. was Ulted In erttlcal condkklii •l Fountain Valley Com11u1olty Hoepltel wttb lriere bead tn- Jurlea. a tracm.rea pelvis and a broken left lee. Police said be was not weariq a helmet. ~ut.borldee ,Hid Roberta had been at a ._lot pany for bll but friend. 1'ew1>9rt ~each ~ police ome.. Tom Little. wlo , bad persuaded tJae Navy vetef'an to 10 Into poll~ work upon dit· ~batee ffiom IM.aervtoe. • rOUIUln V~ poHce thftlc s,t. ltiabli'd Daqnpon. w• UO· •••Ha'91e W "8.rtber lofOl'9· Uoa .......... oUt mo.t "&W prectawn boun 1Dvetti11~ Ute eruh. .......... 'KING HAO WOAD' Rev. Ralph Abernathy black sanitation workers of Memphis striking for wage in· creases. Sympathy for the strike brought King. Abernathy and other strategists of the Soutbem Christian Leadetship Con- ference to Memphis to lead n civil rights march March 28, 1968. When the march turned violent, King beeame extremely depressed but concluded later that he would return to lead a peaceful protest, Abernathy re- counted. <See PROBE, Pate AZ> Coast Low cloudiness night and morn.mg hours. Sunny durtns afternoons through Tuesday. but only partly sunny at the beaches. SUghtly warmer days. Ht1h near 85. Lows tonight 80 to 65. IN8 .. BTO•"V J ...... ~ I Run, Bun, Run tor F..., F~ Fwn H was a mob scene Sunday morning <JS about 2.200 run- ners took off for 6.2-mile trek around federal ZiggurCtt building in Laguna Niguel. One runner. Ted Cole 1 below) took his headset radio with him Race conduct- East Coast Well Test YMlds Gas NEW YORK IAP> The first discovery or natural gas off the East Coast was announced today by Texaco Inc .. but the company said it doesn't know whether it round enough of the fuel to make it worth extractlng. T exaco said it had gotten "very encouraging" test results from 14,000 feet down Ute · owns with five companies in the Baltimore Canyon 100 miles east of Atlantic City. N J The welt produced natural gas al a rate or 7.S million cubic feet a day. con· sldered a small quantity for an offshore well. Industry analysts said that while a well of this size on land would probably be put into pro- duction, more gas would have to be found at the ocean site to justify building a production platfornt and a pipeline to shore The company said lt would drill additional test wells on the S,693-acre site before deciding to set up a production facility. In- dustry expert.a have said that gas was more likely to be found in Baltimore Canyon than oil. ed by Laguna Niguel. Addidas and Runners Uelilbt wu seen by the sponsoring orgamzat1ons as ev1de11ce or the big strides in popularity running for fun and health has taken along the Orange Coast. F ..... r-.eAJ PRO-BE .... Tbr<>ushout his experiences in Memphis and elsewhere. KiDf{ distrusted law enforcement agencies and felt he could not re- ly 9n them for protecUon AberJ1athy continued. ' "He really <lid not rely on or trust. the police powers in this country." Abernathy said. "Re· knew the' FBI waa against him and could not be trusted. He · knew the Cl~ was aealnst him ' and ~OOld not be tnmed. His hotel rooms had been bugged. The police were looked on u an enemy.~· Newport Cop Altac~din Irvine Fraccu An off-duty Newport Beach police officer wus :.ttitcked and hit in the heud Sunday when be went to investigate an early- morning distorbance near his home. Irvine police reported to- day. They said Sgt. John Simon was not seriously injured in UM: 2:30 a.m. Incident. whleh ended in the arrest or Daniel Aguire Torres. 20, a neighbor of Simon's in tbe Woodbridge area of Irvine. The U.S. Geological Survey estimates there are 1.02 billion barrels of oll and U .5 trillion cubic feet of natural 1as under ctll Baltimore Canyon tracts. in· eluding tracts already leas~ by the government and areas \bat will be bid on ln February. · SnauggHng Cases Torres was booked Into UC Irvine Medical Center for ob- serv atlon. Police said he was to be transferred to Orange County Jail on SlO.OOQ bail lo race charges of assault with a deadJy weapon. There has been intense' speculcttion recently about drill- ing in lbe Baltimore Canyon. pa rlicularly since last month when Texaco announced that it found traces or hydrocarbons . Several other companies are also drilling in the area. Two. Shell 011 Co. and Continental Oil Co .. have reported that their test wells were "dry holes." The company said it will con- duct tests within three weeks to determine whether there Is more gas in the well than the in- itial tests Indicate. Texaco began drilling the well April J6, in partnership with Getty Oil Co., Sun OH Co. of Delaware. Allied Chemical Co .. Transco Exploration 1Co. and Freeport 011 Co. Texaco's 31.S percent stake in the weJI makes it the largest partner. The com- panies paid S16.83 million at auc· tion for the rights to drilJ in the block DAILY PILOT &rder Cops Ask Car Seizure Right WASHINGTON <AP> -Smug- glers bringing lHegal aliens across the border from Mexico often use the same trucks over and oxer because Border Patrol officers cannot sehe the vehicles, a Senate subcommittee was told today. Immigration Commissioner Leonel J. Castillo, a federal pros- ecutor from a border district and representatives of labor and environmental groups urged ap- provaJ of legislatlon to authortie such seizures. Testifying before a Senate Man Stabbed In UCI Fight UC Irvine poUct are lh· vestigating a fight in a campus housing area in Which a Dana Point man was stabbed Sundat. Arthur J. AvUa, 27, requJred 16 stitches in a knlle wound in hll upr: ann followlnc the 8:21> p.m . fiabt, accordtn' to the re-porta. He waa not hospftaUsed. Police did AvU4, who it not a UCl student, wu vialtloi aomeo~ when the lltht, involv· lag about five people, erupt~. No arreata have been made but lnvatlaaUon ta •ontinuln&. poJlc• aald. subcommittee on immigration. CastUlo said a 1967 Chevrolet pickup engaged in smuggling operations was stopped by im- m lg r a tton officers 12 times between April, 1!117, and March, 1978. ·'When we make a smuggling arrest the owner of the vehicle may simply cJaim il fro,m us." Castillo said. "Often the vehicle Is bact ln use for smuggling by the next day." Michael D. Hawkins, U.S. at- torne}' for Arizona,· s&ld the seizure leetslation would make smuggling more costly by sub- jecting the smuyJers to the loss of their veblcles. Hawkins said airplanes, trac- tor trailers and large 'recrea- tional vebic:lq "are lindJna in- creasi.q . ..._. in thi• 80Pdld busl· ness'' l>ecauae they can bold large numbers of people. ~ ooe Cate receoUy, he said, 180 allem were fourid In the back of one tractor-trailer. Ce1tlllo aald smuacling opera- tions "mil)' tn\lolve craJnmlng larae numbei;'I of persona Into tiny apaces, false bottoms or hldden compartments where they mus\ remah'l withwt food, water. proper venttlatlon or sanUaUon lormanybours." Gerda Blkalet, proJr~m as· aoclate for popul-.uon of the ma· tional Parka and ConservatiOh AtsoeiatiQn, aald the le&ltlatlot'I ·•would have a Vfr/ definite, d•· airablt tftec!t ln 1temm1n1 ti\• flow or llle1at entrants into ti. UnttedSta&ea." Pbylli1 EIHn, lmml•r1UQ1 pro1ram (Urector ff>r Z•ro PopYlaUoll G~.J.; Uld lPUal· aratloliGlftcen 11DC1·a\itom0M11i uted by tmUUJer'I U.8' IN Olll1 • ~•ar old and alread1 bave tr1•1t.a m9re tlllD t00,000 ml PeUce said Simon and many other neighbors were awakened by crashing noises and yelllng. They said that Simon went to investigate and allegedly found tbe suspect throwing a metal mailbox around and yelling ob- sceO ltles. When Simon asked what was wrong, Torres re- portedly yelled Incoherently and threw the mailbox at him. hit· ting Simon ln the head. ,. " ( Piiot Logbook J The Man Still Gives U~ Jizz By CHARLES H. LOOS Of• Ollfr"" ..... Every Stan Kenton fan haa personal memories al see· ing the tall, ranJY iconoclast ot bia bend Jau lead bis musicians through a powerful performance somewhere. WAS IT~T some college campus? Or was it at~ opera house in Sa.a Francisco with June Christy and the Four Freshmen? Or maybe, beat or aJI. was it at the old Rensfeivous Ballroom tn Balboa, where it all began in 194.1! If you were at Orange Coast College ht COit.a . Mesa. where Kenton and bis current band played Sunday ntgbt. you coul~'t help feeling lt was aH coming to a close just six miles from wbere that bt1 barn of a allroom on stood on the Balboa Penfnaula. Jt. wasn't the same Stan Kenton who shuffled onto the stage Sunday night. The taU frame. older now. was bent. The speech was slurred, the t"1k ram- bling. He sank heavily onto his seat at the piano. When he stood, he held onto th'-' piano for support. And the gestures. formerly dramatic, sweeping motions of those enormously Iona arms. were more like weak-waves. .. ..,. TBEBE HAD BEEN that fall about a year aeo. Ken-ton explain«I In a rambUna talk Ju.at before the evening's final number -"Concert~ to End All Concertos." . It was in a parkin1 lot somewhere in Pennaylvania and bis bead bad bowl,Ced off the bwnper of a car and when be woke up be didn't even know who be was. . Tbe doctors told bJm not to go back to work for 18 months. B~ be was back at it In atx months and now bis atrenlUt was livin& out and, aside from one mMe concert -ttris--montb in-San-¥nmeittv, -ttns- perlormance in Costa Mesa would be the lastone fol-a while. THE BA.HD WILL scatter and Ken. ton will take a rest. It never has been made clear jusl what happened to him and a cynic "°°' 11Ktht say that was on purpose, pet'baJIS to maintain the Kenton mystique. · But two things Sunday night defied that ~ynical ex- planation. lt was obvious that Stan Kenton, at 68. isn't weH. Then, tbere was the band. l 'EVEN FOR A high-powered Kenton band, it played witb incredible fervor. Kenton bands have always been young. Most of the kids In the current band weren't even born when Kenton unveiled his style of modem jau in Balboa. But Sunday night, they were blowing their guts out. And it was clear they were doing 1t in homage to Stanley Newcomb Keaton. . Though Kenton appeared physically weak. he played quite a lot at this concert. leading lhe band with introduc- tory passages. The. band members watched and listened intently. sometbnes shuffling sheet music furiously when they realized what be wanted them to play. And despite his obvious weakness. his piano playing was strong. The opening arrangement of Johnny Green's ''Body and Soul" was done in a way you've never heard the song. wbieb always has been a jaizman's showpiece. THERE WERE several traditional Kenton numbers. things like "Intermission Riff" and "Peanut Vendor ... There seemed to be more of these than usual. Kenton has never been one \o dwell on the past. preferring to highlight new music, new arrangements. new musicians. But he seemed. for him. aJmost nostalgic Sunday night. "Did you know we started in Balboa?" he asked the audience at one point. At the end there was a long standing ovation. THE OVATION wash 't ror .the band, although many or the 900 or so in 01e audienee wanted to hear more. TbEt band stood. too. joining in the applause. The ovation was a tribute to The Man. 14 Aliens Nabbed Fourteen undocumented Cen- tral American nationals and two men suspected of smug11lng them l,nto the United States were picked up by U.S. Border Patrol agents Saturday in the San Clemente hills. north through undeveloped San Clemente ranchland . Tbey were believed to have gathered al a point near San Clemente High School. where two men were re- portedly picking them up, Wesson said. ' John Wesson, border patrol agent in charge, said the 14 . aliens had apparently walked The two arrested were Julio Medina Gomez. 19, and u 17 -year-old companion. ' \ l I DNlYPllOT A3 . ~ r a~ae Blast Threat Averted Chemical 1)' G.UlY GRANVILLE ... .,..., .......... A one-square-mile area in central Orange was evacuat· ed today when a 12.000.gallon chemical tank overheated. began spewing fumes and threatened to explode. At 11 :27 a.m. today an Orange Cire_ olf'lctal said the emergency that caused the mass evacuatroo "is all but over." The leak in the 12,000-gallon storafe tank "ls all but stopped." the official said. He also reported that the bar- ricades into the area will be lift. ed within the bour except those in the immediate vicinity of the plastics plant. "We expect things to be back to normal by 1 p.m. and all the workers in the area bHk on the Job.-"' the o(flcial reported. Though chiefly a light In· dustrlal and manufacturing center, a trailer park and two schools were included In the evacuation area. Police and firefighters began moving people out of the en· dangered zone shortly aft.er 7 a.m. when the large chemical storage tank at Sterling Plastics Corp .• MS W. Stru~k Ave .• -~-11pemn&.J1s-R9-'. tent fumes. ................ .., ........ STEALING PLASTICS EMPLOYEES LOOK ltr CHEMICAL CLOUD FROM TANK Offtcl•la Ev.cuated One Square ~lie Area After Leak Waa Dlacovered • I La Habra ~ManSlwt lnHi.s Car A 22-year-old La Habra man was reported in guarded ~di­ tion today after being si.ot ohce in the face as he sat in bis parked car Sunday night. La Habra police reported today. Fred Gonzales is being treated · Jn the intensive care unit of La Habra Community Hospital. Police said GomaJes was sit- ting in his parked car in the 500 block of W. 4th Street al 10 p.m. when somoone pulled up beside him. ~sked some questions and then fired one shot from a pistol. Officers said two suspects in the vehicle are still at large and details surrounding the shooting are still under investigation Containment Due . CAZADERO <AP> -A bJue that consumed more than 12,000 actes of timber and brush and destroyed dozens of homes near this tiny town may be cootalned today. fire officials said I Mark, Franc Slam U.S. Dollar Again LONDON <AP> -The dollar bit reconl lows against the West German mark and the Swiss Capistrano Youth Hurt A 15-year-old San Jua n Capistrano boy remains in a Mission COmmunity Hospital in· tensive care ward today after suffering head injuries when he fell from the hood of a car at 2:35 p.m. Saturday. The victim, Robert Skinner of 30151 Silver Spur Road. suffered "major head injuries," accord- ing to California Highway Patrol officers, when he attempted to jump from the hood of a moving car in a parking lot at 27762 Forbes Road, Laguna Hiiis. The driver of the car was Christina Roberts, 19. of 33242 Ocean Hill Drive, Dana Point, patrolmen said. Young Skinner is reporWd in "satisfactory con- dition.". . ' franc today for the third day jn IJuccession, and the prlceiof gold rose to a record in aflemoon trading -$213.50 an ounce in London and 1214.375 in Zurieb. Londen's five major gold traders set the mid-morning "fixing" price at $212.25, and the Zarlch market set its price at "$211. 75. Gold prices usually rise agal'nst a declining doUar because traders buy the pre- cious metal as a hedge against infiation. Trading is done on pAper with the gold remaining in vaults. The dollar was trading on tlae Zurich exchange at 1.5925 Swiss francs. down from the previous low of 1.6460 at the end of busi· ness Friday. In Frankfurt, the dollar was · quoted at 1.9632 marks, down from 1.9872 on Friday. That. too, had been a low. In London, the~ sterJing was tradJng at $1.9760, and dealenJ predicted it ml9btsoongo abqve $2 for the first time •iDCe March 5, 1976. The pound closed Friday atSl.9840. '\ • Fire officials said those fumes are not Cleaaty unless inhaled "in heavy doses" but warned they are potent enough to cause lllness and painful discomfort. Should the tank firemen holed with water in an a~empt to cool the chemical reaction eitplode. the result "is likely to be dev· astating, '' onefireotncialsaid. The troubled tank contains >tyrene monoer, a cbemieal sub- ;tance formed into pellets that are used to shape s uch styrofoam products as drink1n8 cups. a company spokesmaa liaid. As be talked, the Red Cross was setting up evacuation centers in the area and ctty rire officials talked of enlancing the e vacuated area. First to arrive at the Red Cross centers were elderly peo- ple ordered from a trailer park near Collins Street and Batavia Avenue. Workers who would normally have been in the small industrial buildings that dot the area were turned away by police bar- ricades before they entered the area. They sat in cars parked along roads leading into the en- dangered area waiting for the "all clear" that will let them get to "1eir jobs. Meanwhile, fire and police of· fidals planned strategy they hope will end the emergency that was fll'St reported at 6 a.m. One fire department spokesman said the seepe1e of~ the watery. colorless mass began when workers at Sterling began transferring the sub· stance from underground tanks to those above ground. The beat and pressure pro- duced by the chemical combina· tion was potent enough to blow away a vapor release cover and to start noating tbe plastic cllemical odor over the area. / o.llr ............. ..BJll&flGHl]~G Pl,.AN MAPPED DURING EVACUATION Steven Adldfts Of"Sfi'rtrng~Plreman BffM P81• AV t;; In .~ c 1JJ 6 § z ~ ..: t( $ 0 v .,..., .............. ., .... 0- MALTESE CROSS MARKS CHEMICAL LEAK IN ORANGE Aboul 2.900 People Ev.cuated flom Area Earty Today Lagaaa'slthh Neighbor Douses Arson,.caused Fire By STEVE MITCllELL oe a.°""' ,..... "'" The 10th arson in three and oRe·half months in the Arch Beach Heights of Laguna Beach was extinguished by a ne.lgbbor Saturday morning, before a home under construction could becomefully engulf edin names. Laguna Beach firemen ~ponded to a flt'e call at a two- story home under construction at 798 Miramar St. early Satur- day morning, to fmd a neighbor bad put out the small blaze in· tentlonally set on the east side of the unrmished garage. The home. being constructed by realty partners Clark Smith and Neil Papp, is a block and a half from the scene of a three· home fare last April 27 which caused $750,000 damage to those structures under construction. and damaged a fourth home. Laguna Beacb fire in- vestigator Mike Davis said to- day the 4 a.m. fire Saturday was spotted by neighbor Casey Vermeullen. of 971 Miramar St .• who quickly extinguished the small blaze. Arson probers found a coffee can containing a flammable liq- uid at the site of the latest arson attempt. ' from our OOyS ~- for mck-to-acllool. .. . .44 CWL Y PILOT NATION I WORLD ' .. .. ~--... ~ .. ,~Cea tint " . Israelis Delay ~ 5 Settlements TtL AVl.V, Israel CAP> -The llHtll Cabinet, tl1lns to blunt a p0UUeal atorm. abelved plam tod8l to lkalJct five new Jewilh Httle· menta l.n &he occupled Wm Bank ol &be Jordan Rtver until after the Camp David awnmlt neat me.th. , OBIJVIOl19 'IO lllA&D a IKUDDSU: Uader no dttomM.aDeee can '°"' row U&bt ol an eartllquab wblcb d ralll a trel&bt tralD, il\JLD'll aeveral doHn people and knocb a oou.ple ot radio ltatloM otf the air. ftat'a what lurppened Sunday aftemooa ln t.M Santa Barbara area. .. The 1ovemment decided to dilcma the matter after the Camp David meetln1." CabJnet Secretary Arieh Neor told re- porten after t.M Cabinet met tn Jeru1a .. m. lt abould be noted, bowever, wbMe tbe eanb abak• waa 'Pretty abarp ln the Santa Barbara area. Calitomla dld not aUp off lnlo the sea. The Aasoclated Pftsa moved one pbotofra}ah ot a bap. teu store clert. 1urwylnc acauer.d caaned Jooda ln dae aisle of a Goleta market. on the outakiru of Santa Barbara. Thal pbotosrapb will 110 doubt set wtdeapread play ln lhe papen east ol the Mlumlppi. BVT IN.,..VTH, ~tera.n news ~grapben know lbat it cloeen't take much of an earthquake to knock canned goods out lnlo the aisle at a market. After we get one of our Caliloroia shakes. the ~nowledgeable news pboto(l'apber is likely to head for the first bandy grocery outlet, where bis picture is likely awaillnl him: canned corn and green peas all over the place. • Desplte this, most of us in our region were probably 1>Ussfully unaware that Santa Barbara Coun~y had just taken a pretty good shock. I think at about 3:54 p.m. when Easterner's Mental Image of Califomja Af1er Quake the quake hit up there. I was sawing a door in two. Don't ask why. But even if the quake had been closer. I doubt if I would have noticed tr the whole house ~ad fallen down around me and the door. It is true. however. that people from other regions figure all of lhe Golden State has cracked open when one of these quakes strikes. N<n' LONG AFfER the Santa Barbar.a shake, one or our co-workers here at the paper got a call from a distant relative. The anxious voice inquired, "Are you all right? Are you all okay?" At lhe time. lhe family had been languishing around ~heir Costa Mesa swimming pool, oblivious to the fact that Santa Barbara bad just registered S.l on lbe Richlel'SCale. They didn't have the foggiest notion what Ule distant relative was talking about. THE RELATIVE NO DOUBT feat"ed that if Santa Barbara shook. Costa Mesa probablf shuddered at the same time. Preeident Carter will mediate Nazi Hurt In Attack Over Radio KANSAS CITY. Kan. <AP> - Shouts. screams and breaking glass shocked the audience of a H ve radio talk show as they listened to an attack by club· swinging youths on a Nari or- ganizer who was a guest on the program. More than a dozen attackers broke into radio station KCKN and attaeked self·described Nazi Michael Breda. his unidenUfieCt companion. and two station employees just as the show "Community Hot Line" was go- lng on the air, poltce said. BREDA JS. ONE of two or· ganlzers in Kansas City for the -~rican-white People's Pefty;- Breda and bis companion, whom he declined 12 name. Sllf • fered head cuts. Two station workers were injured slightly when. they were struck by clubs. The attack lasted less than a minute. Breda continued with the program and later was treat· ed at a Kansas City hospital. Police said as many as 15 persons. whites and blacks mostly in their early 20s or late teens. broke into a side door of the station and rushed the studio. A caller who said he was a member of the ln,erna•ional Committee Against Racism and the Revolutionary Communlst PrQgressive Labor Party later telephoned The Associated Press and claimed hi.a group had been the attackers. the Sept: 5 meetlnl of Israeli Prlme Mtntater Menacbem Beatn and Eayptlan President . Anwar Sadat at the Maryland mountain ~ ln a bld to re· vitaliae the ftaalna peace drive launched by Sadat last No· vember. BEGIN 18 vacationlna and did not attend today 's Cabinet session. Also absent was Agriculture Minister Ar.f,el Sharon, the Cabinet's chief kd· vocate of new settlements in the occupied territories. Naor said they were informed of the de- ciaion during the meetlng. The session was chaired by O.puty Prime Minister Yilael Yadln. In an interview after the meeting, Yadin told Israeli .radio be obJected to the umtng ol the d§ClllQP to build the new settlements in the Jordan Valley. altboaih bis party -the minority Democratic Movement for Change -favors increasing Jewlsb outposts in the West Bank. ••1 TBOlJGlrr THAT, altbouah we are for such a thing <the &et· tlementa), we don't have to do it euctl)' wbHe.Jhe negottatlam toke place." Yadin said. "My objection was aaalnst the tim· ing.n The Cabinet made the decision on the five new settlements June 28 but ruled that meeting was a aesaior;t of the minlstertal de- fense eommlttee, a de\ice that clamps strlct secrecy and military censorship on the prt). ceedlngs. The secret was kept until a week ago when some Knesset members began complainin& about the. eensonhip and saying the public was being denied es· sen(\al information. NAOR SAii) Y ADIN brought the decision before the Cabinet along with his protest and the Cabinet decided to defer the en· tire matter. Brunner Quhat• French teacher Claude Brunner. 31. and her husband. Jean. 30. hold their quintuplets. Anne. Maud. Luc. Gilles and Marc. They were born June 9 at Nancy. France. and have been pronounced healthy und normal by doc· tors. Mme. Brunner had received hormone treatment. The children are the couple's first. · Pro..Syiians Blameil For Beirut Bombiftg BEIRUT. Lebanon <APl -The leader of a rad.ical Palestintan guerrilla faction supported by Iraq bu accused a pro.Syrian guer· rilla aroup of the bombing of bis Beirut b&adquarten l.n whieb at 1asrtet-Palestioam are reported tlt:8' or miuial· - Abdul Abass. tbe 29-year-old bead of tae pro-Iraqi l'alatint l.JberatlM 1':ron1..uid the bomb- ing, wbieh leveled a nine-story apartment bulldlng early San· day, was the· work of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command. led by a fOl'U\er Syrian army captapi na'med Ahmed Gebril. .. TREY WANTED TO klll me and the 1DOYttment ln order to ud~ reconelliatlon moves tbal wet"e under way. They wanted to keep the inter· Palestinian rift brewing." said A baas. Gebril and bis organisation were silent, and there was no confirmation or A baas· clatm from o&ber sources. But some observers said if Gebril's guer. rillu dld make the attack. they might have been acting for Vasser Arafat. whose Al Fat.a,b euerrUlas have been warring wlth pro-Iraqi guerrillas in Lon· don, Paris and Pakistan for the past month. Arafat. chairman of the Palu&.lne Uberation Organise· Uon. has been holding recon· ciliation talb wilb Abass and other pro·lraql guerrilla leaders. Tbe observers said he probably atill wunts to neutrallJe b1S nvats but cannot pursue factional bloodletting publicly and still claim 1eadenblp of &he entire g~rrilla movement. Well, if Costa Mesa got any aftershocks, it was prob~ ctbly caused by .me sawing a door in two down in Balboa. Rains Hit Plains . You wouldn't say "keep the change" at the supermarket. Why say it where you keep your savings? Eour-Ureh Snow Fal& in Idaho T~~a••~• "' Le "'' AIDu'que ,, .. ·~·" .. " 1• Att..,i. .. .. a.111more P 10 A1 e1.,,..ro ,. .. eo!M SS SI .11 &oston ,. 70 a.-ns•lll• ., ,. 8vff•lo IS .. C-lltnSC '° 17 .03 ClllCA90 • n CJnc:l ..... 11 ..... Clweland ... •l Oii Ft.Wiii 100 11 ~, ., St .OJ OHMol...S " ,. Detroit ,. ., Heltlll ., $2 ·°' .-i..iu '° 7S Houston .i 11 .n JKl!l'Yllle " 72 K1n'1 City o rs LHV49tl " n Little Rock .... LOSA"991• 11 6S Miami .. II MllWeul!M ea .. ~ .. st.~. •S 75 MMl!vllle 17 71 .n ..... 0.1.-fl 70 •• HewY«• 13 70 Oltl•. City IOI 75 °""'"' ~ 16 Orl...00 " n Pllllld'""• • n P'-nl• 1~. Pl-1'911 ., .. ~·11~0n 74 .. ... "-" ,. St. LOVlt " 10 Seit &Ak• a S2 .12 SMl>Mte 7' .,. Sen Fr .. .. . s.eme 74 ,.. Tvl" "' 14 ·~ U 74 UI CM.I ....... ... .,., ... " ., ,,_ • 62 ......... IOI IO OHlllllll n• ""•t11ft i::: SKf~ Seft\I .... 11 • TIWmlll * 11 ~V...t.81 ..... ., .. _ ...... _ _.. .. t ... netlOn et .....,.,. e1M1 4'11111· Mrtt•rtt1• ......-rein .,,., tlle "ecklt .. b :::-t" 111141 ~el Plelnt, •••"'" oler••• •11• llOl"t'-"*"' ...... lt•lft .._,.., Mol'IM'I-llO"lltM et 91t OtlH .. IN•la COM\. Ollftt of tM 1-f' Ml•INl..i Vellt'f, Ille .., .... ......, ......... ~, ...... ,,.,., .. llCll ..... ¥90# .... ., • io."' ""O::.' 0111 -'°"'~~-........... ::::t"~---~-....... .. ..,,. ' "" .... ,..., flO( t .... _..,.. SO<Jtl'lern -<entret Al>Peleclll..,s ene1 ••ono the 90Ulllem 11a11 ot tlle AUantlc Coelt. Cool etr pushed ecross the northern Plllte11 end norVlt.rn Rockln. IM'l19 Ing fileM up'°°"'" Ille 60s and 70s In 110t1lon1 of •~ end ~em Mor.- llln.t, com.,..-.cl with •wl .. r h!Qm In tN IOt end '°'-Snow fell 111 tllt 111011er ete¥tlloM Of ldtllo, wltll four lncllet ,_.., -Selmon, In Ille INtWft oert ot IM stet.. Wllf'mlno trends-. fM pertt « Hew Envt-. with • number of -• AllO'tlno llltllhl In tM llPP9f' 10s 4lftjl low IOI. lerl'f mornlno ttmper1t11res ~ the netlon rlftltd fnm ., In -...,, 0...., '°'°'" PtloenlK, N II. Low doudl-nloM and momll\9 flours, oti.rwlw Mlfll\1 elttrl!eOflt ·~ T\19td9¥. Llollt verlllbl• wlndl nltllt encl mornlno i.n. Hlohs Tllltda'I In tM 70t • Coattel ......,.,.""" .... ,., ... 11etwHn t.I and 71. lnt•M ttl'lt• oeret11rH wlll r4111111 ._ .. tM 79. Tiie • ...,~ ...... "· Menill's Poochea 'Rimi New York'• MERRILL, Wis. <AP> -It's not Now York Ctt1. b.tthlsdtyof9,500sUUbudo1Utterproblema. Taldne • Inf from th Bil Apple, the Men1U CJt)I Council appl'Ovtd ~>' • M vote an ordinance maklnl pet ownen resJ>Onalble for clc.nlna up dropplnp left by their ~ tnJWhere bUt op thelr ownp~. The erdlnance, alroUar to one put lnto ef'f ect in New York City, Ht.I floes r~ from SlO to S200 for vlotaton. $15.48 is the extra amount earned by an average Los Angeles Federal Savings Account. That's $15.48 more than a commercial bank pays. At today's prices. that won't fill your grocery cart. But it's worth adding to the many money-saving services you're entitled to as a Los Angeles Federal Saver . Passbook savlnga accounts pay 51/• % • day in day out, 5.39% a year with daily compounding. A $1,000 or more Certificate pays a higher rate, 'guaranteed, 6V2 % for a one year term. up to 8% for 10 years, 8.33% with daily compounding. There is also a 6-month, $10,000 Money Market Certificate which is based on U.S. Treasury Biii interest rates and pay& V.. % more' than any commercl~I bank.* Why not transfer your savings to the Newport office of Los Angeles Federal Savings today- and ''keep the change" ydursel!I Savings insured to S40.000 lQSANGELES t~EDERAL .SAVINGS NEWPORT BEACH 3ll01 Nt~ aMt. -ecro. from City Hall • l7a.4600 0NN ............. """-tAIM Piii Pit tAIM,. • Premtturety withdrawn Certificate Accouots t1m lntertat at the Passbook rate for the term of Investment. leu 90 daye. t"-- I L I CALlFORNIA Victims Clean Up After Earthqoa\ke 8ANTA BAftBAllA tAPl Rttl· cS.nLI atm rfftlll.I from an urth· q1&&k• dial ~ tNouO Sant.I Banua 1114 ADJurW OM\ tlo J*>Pk are c1...-• ... Hide~ todlO': alaattered wtndl>ws. ~ ltrffb. cnchd lidl'••Y• and a derailed train .. Tbe q,uake ~ a~k al 3·M p.m. PDT. rattled ftve COGDU• Sun· day. k..tdnc ..... to tM ll'OUftd Tlae temblor WU ~Nd ln tM San ta 8&rMra Caul about atJr mHH ICMllb of Mn. In u area I.hot atu atop Cal11ornla'1 mo.t prom1nnt (aul\, ~San ADdl''HI. SPOQ:lll&N fOa TB& Caltedl -W.mollJOJabnr_.Cll')' In~ said the qu.Me musv.ct s 1 an the Richter scale, the wont to Mt Ow area lD more tban 30 years. .. It Jmt acared ua." said Joe Loebaman, 31, wbo laves oo the ocean about two miles rrom the 1 center or town. "As soon as it b4lp- pened. we got outside and there were a lot or very scared people." Structural dama1e was minimal, but many r~idents today bad to clear broke'\ .glus and other debris from their l\omes. Downtown Santa Barbara. hit bard lo a 19'1 .quake, escaped without serious damage t.his time . Goleta. just north of here, absorbed most of the damaee. and many windows shattered by the tremor were covered with plywood. "IT WAS UllE BEING inside a paint shaker." said California Highway Patrol Officer Gene Hunt. who was home in Goleta when the quake bit. "With DO warning. tbe house start· ed sbaJtiq violently from side to side. J was l}'U.J oo t.he living room. noor reading Ute Suftday paper. "My very first thought was a car had run into my house or that an airplane had crashed. But then it kept going and I knew what it was." Most ol the 50 people rushed to Goleta Valley Community Hospital's emergency room were treated for minor cuts and bruises. but Dr. Donald Rink said ooe woman was ad· milled to the Intensive care unit with burns and was listed in good condition. Another person s uffered a broken back, he said. THREE ROOFS COLLAPSED but caused only one slight injury. said Santa Barbara police. · Major roads were blocked by quake-triggered rock slides and one highway developed a wide crack. said Calirorrua Highway Patrol dis· patcher Terrie Tucker. One motorist escaped after debris crushed her car on Highway 154, which connects San- ta Barbara and Santa Ynez. VlbraUons cracked some concrete overi>aases, said Michael Brown or the California Office of EmKgency Services in Sacramento. Water mains snapped throughout Santa ' Barbare. flooding homes and busi· nesses. a sheriff's department spokeswoman said. A few gas leaks triggered smMll fires, whith were quickly extinguished. MINUTES AFrER t.he quake hit. 20 cars and one locomotive of a freight train derailed near Goleta .. said Southern Pacific Transportation -Co. spokesman Tom Buckley. No in· juries were reported. he sajd, and no dangerous materials were aboard the train. Fred Grover of Cam arillo was playing eo!.f about 400 yards from the tracks. He likened the sound or the dtro1lmtnt to "• dc>z~n uutomobllea "hl'n lht'y start p1hn1 up .. Grovet-sald dutt chume-d up by the train COVtrtcJ both lant'I or the nterb,y freeway, ,..hilt Jli hl 1tand· ard• •lon1 tt.e road awayed In a nv ... root arrll "It was a tfrrtble fffl· Ing." he 1akl AT THE lJNIV£&SITY of CaUfo"'11 at Santa Barban, the jolt upent!d cllt't ot snokt:a and tl\tew the reptiles acros5 a classroom. said 1her1rr·s department 1pokeswom1n Darleen Tboms»on Thl'Y were re· covered without lnc1dent. ln another colle&e bulldlng. bolUn of noxlOUI cbtmleala were broken. but rity f:ue offtd tla nld tM fumes dis- sipated without cam1n1 any damaae A trail!!&" park under construction suffered·cJd.ensave damage wben the quake Mt-3' ~cause many of the trailers, propped up on Jacka, toppled to the ground Santa Barbara had its first brush with earthquake disaster in 1926. wben a tremor measuring 6.3 on the Richter scale rocked the area and killed 14 people. The city was hit by anoth er strong earthquake in 1941. A ltbough no one died , property damage was heavy and widespread. THE RJCRTEll SCALE is a measure or the ground motion as re- corded on seismographs. Every in· crease or one number means a ten· fold increase in magnitude . Scientists say a reading or S can mean con· slderable damage and a reading of 7 is considered a major earthquake. An 8 IS a "great" quake. capable or tremendous damage. The San Francisco earthquake of 1906, which occu ,.r ed before the Richter scale was devised. has bei?n es\im ated at 8.3 on the Richter scale. * * * Fear Grips 170 EMerly Peopl,e lnRest Home SANTI\ BARBARA IA P> -When an earthquake JOited Santa Barbara on Sunday. \he 170 rcbidents of New Carrillo Retirement Hotel fell a s pecial kind or rear. They felt the fear of the elderly; of people who eannot move quickly. SO~IE OF THE RESIDENTS, s uch as Suzanne Julian, 64. were able to make it down the stairs of the rest home without panicking. But others had to clamber on their hiJnds and knees, Mrs. Julian said. "We're all old here," she said. "Some of them are 80 and 90 and they were helter off crawling than walking." When the first shock hit. Mrs. Julian was standing at the bathroom sink in her fourth·slorv holl-1 room. The jolt splashed water from the basin all over her and sent her reel· ing into the \lallway, she said. SHE WENT OOWNSTi\IRS to the lobby. She and the other residents sat behind the shattered windows and waited out several strong af - tershocks. There was no need to evaeuatc the place. said Sam Carlson. munoger of the private hotel. "We don't have any earthciualte drill." he said. "This building is, I unde rsta nd. the safest building around." ORANGE COUNTY, BW CONTINUES ITS SALUTE TO YOU, YOUR LIKES, YOUR LIFE. JOIN US FOR THESE EXCITING EVENTS CATiRED ESPECIALLY FOR YOU . There's so much to see and do. Highlights of Orange Cownty's cultural achievements, past and present: fashion shows , special exhibits. designer appearances and trunk showings of the newest collections . Mark your appointment book now. SPECIAL EXHIBITS AND EVENTS Through August 26 Exhibit and sale of 18 kt. gold Italian jswelry and heirloom estate pieces. Fashion Jewefry Indian Pichwals e>ehibit or oriuinal adaptations of miniature paintings depicting court life In tndla. Gift Gatlery iMne Historical Society and artist Anne Davis Johnson present palette knife scenes of historical Newport and Irvine. Gift Gallery wea< THREE, AUGUST 14·19. 11:30 to 3:30 unless noted Mon-Sat -our own Newport children model back·to·school fashions, Chltdren,s Wed-Desfgntf Irene Tsu presents her collection of sUks for the It Co. with 1"tormal niodeUng. The Melange Thurs -Martin fishing seminar sponsored by the Balboa Angling etub wtlh let:ture and film 7:00-8:30. Men's Clothing Thu,.Slt -Desjgner Madame Thi presents her lade collectlon 10:00 to 4:00. Fashton Jewelry ........ --~--...... --.-... ..... --~--------!MM ............ .. I ---, ........... SACRAMENTO <API -In llddition to tlM » called "eatl afeM rapist" blamed ror 3' et· tacks. Sacramento now has the "~ rapwt .. who bas committed bit sixth 1111u.lt, officers rePort. The "wooll)'. raptat." at· tacked • 26·YHf·Old woman ln Sacrameato·s North Area. it wu re· ported Sunday. LEVfTY IN AFTERMATH OF EARTHQUAKE THAT STRUCK GOLETA AREA SUNDAY Sacramento Cou•t)• she rift's officers said.. he enttred the woman's apartment on Marconi Avenue about 3 a .m . Saturday throuih a slid· ine a aJass wioclow after r e movina » screen. They safalleWorrr maak and rabric gloves. Come see the Show of the future ••. ,) ' .... • ~ ... ~~7111!.riw"". ,SW ·'~- at our n8W Allstate Savings Brat K:i1 in Newport Beach ... City of ttie Futuret we·v~ned a Grand O~nina that will trans~ you right into thetZeor 2000 AD. From August 14 to 26 our bea fut new office in ashlon lslOnd wilt ex It a unique COllec · n ot space artifacts.many of which -ore on display tor the first time anywhere! -~-•· You'll see NASA'sJupiterGallery. thesmifhsonianlnsti· tutton·s "Images of Earth from Space:· ond other amaz- ing exhibits from leading space centers, including the Museum ot Science and lndus1ry and the Jet Propulsion LobOratory Free Gift Allstate Savings· exclusive Complete Guide to Orange Coun~ Collfomlo,on all new 98· page reference glikJe o make vour year.round planning easy. exciting and tun. Free Shows Get your tickets now tor the breathtaking "Mankind Steps trom the--OOOle" - o multt·medio space jOumev into the next cen· • ttny. presented by the Museum of Sc~ lndus;g In Los Angeles. DOn'f miss lhb Ing spec ocle and highly educotlOnOI shoN per· formed with music. films. slides and llve action! ---------------------------------------------------------~ ., I ~ f1 -----= -GIFT CERTIFICATE~~ NEWPOllf IEAatOffla '1 COfPO'Qte P1oza (714) 759~1 Newpo!! Beach. CA 92660 Oftlc• Houts: Monday· ihUfSday F~ Sot. (Aug.19 & 26 cnty) 9:00·4-00 9:00·6:00 9:00·400 I I I I ~-------···--------··------·-·----------~--­·-----···" Thofnes K•vlllEdltor 1£' .. 14-,.....~ I .. RoberlN.Weed/PubUlher Or•noeeoat o.uv Poot ~ &U"r•G I7.·'!!fJ.e Monday,~-14, 1m a.~,. K,.11>1<h1Ed1tor1 .. .,... Editor Medi cal Center I Has SpeCial Cas.e Officials at UCI Medical Center in Oranae aay th center needs a computei'ta!d heed acanner well aa a computetbed tull·body ~anner. But the Orance Counl.Y Health Plannln& Oouncll statff soys tbe medical center'• request to spend It.a million to buy ond install the sophlltlcated equipment should be de. hied. The phumint staff pohU out there are already 15 scannen ln county hospll(b .and tttatment centen. The health planning council staff also·~ the continued pro- UferatJon of auch costly equipment drives medica&l costs upward. Tbose are sound arauments. Ho~ver, the need at UCI unique and shouldn't be confused with cost·inflatina rivalries among competln1 hospitalrto have the latest andbest1n equipment. For one thing, UCI Medical Center'&-i>Cltient eensus shows a natural high percentage of indigent persons who do not have a choice where they are hospitalized. As a re- sult, if there is a shortage of equipment they either do without or undergo an unnecessary transportation to an<J from facilities where the equipment is available. Also. UCI Medjcal Center does more·than treut pa· tients. It teaches and trains new doctors as well as pro· vide a settim? for medical research. Those elements. as well as the demonstrated patient need, say the medical center should receive the approval it n~eds for the equipment. The health planning council should disregard the staff recommendation and approve UCI Medical Center's application. Good Financial Shape County ~overnment's ability to repay money it bor· rows was given the highest possible credit rating last week by Moody's Investors Service. That's good news for taxpayers in Orange County. The premium credit rating means county govern· ment can borrow the money it needs to cover dry spells between tax payment days at low interest rates. It also means county government can invest the idle money it has at tax payment time at a higher interest rate than it pays during lean times. Add together low interest rates on money borrowed and high interest yield on money invested for short terms and the significant result is more dollars left in tax· payers' pockets where they belong. That happy situation is largely the result of work done by county government's money managers: Auditor· Controller Vic Heim. Tax Collector-Treasurer Robert Citron, and especially Assistant Tax-Collector-Treasurer Ray Wells. Their capable management of county government's riscal affairs is reflected in the premium credit rating as well as the resulting dollar savings to taxpayers. Endangered Species Friends of Willy the Whale, who wallows on a tether in Westminster's air space, may be wallowing in the Slough of Despond over what will likely be his fate: ex· Unction. • ' After all, his may be the only smiling face among thousands of ct1anky commuters on the San Diego and Garden Grove freeways. The 29-foot-long advertising blimp tethered 90 feet above the Sunset Ford agency is having a real chubasco of it when it comes to stormy times. Many W estminsterites dislike him. Last year, in fact, some 1,200 signed a petition de· manding the city not renew a permit issued when freeway landscape trees grew so tall they obscured the dealership's regular sign. And a Save The Helium-Filled Whale coalition that finds Willy winsome if not so wee campaigned to keep what they have come to regard 'as a Westminster landmark. , Caltrans is now finally trimming freeway trees in the west county and presumably they will soon un-obscure the car agency's original free-standing sign, the reason Willy is up there in the first place. . What really seems silly is Uie enormous nap over Willy the Whale and the lack of action by Caltrans in pay. ing attention to its freeway landscaping responsibilities sooner. There must be a whale of a lot more important issues in Westminster worthy of such '\ttention. • Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is invited. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box t 560, Coeta Mesa. CA 92628. Phone (714) 642-4321. Boyd I Lone Women ' By Lii.BOYD Consider those Joiie unmar. ried ladies a1&1 62 or thereabouts. Our Love and War man baa lon1 been pu11led by bow dllf ereJrtly they're treated, dependiq oa their circumltaDCel. U never wed, they're laUlbed at. lf v.•idowed, pitied. U la:lpelJed to a nunnery, revered. II divorced three or more times. Htretly admlred. Dear ' Gloomy Gus Can you tell me wbat klnd ol eoadltJoal there are woddne lD a Tuaa bank. J 1Mml' t.boul't I'd Ute to biecauae t O,Ure thin woiuJd be t0maQJwtdldraWll. i.c.y. \ Mlddl~aged women who live alone are automatically cateeortzed unfairly. Most never married women choose that role on purposet Many tr not most widows art reUeved that they no longer have to be nursemaids. Nuns of whatever age in fact are no better and no wone than any other women. And the ,elderly muel-11uf"rled divorcees. tbeM more than any otbers, merit more sym· pathy than admiraUon, tor they eeneralb' are the unbap. ple1t of all. End of aermonette. Q. ••Everybody knows Uiat 'Thote Were the DQ1' ls•UM • openlnc tbeme aoa1 o1 ·AU m the Family! But what'• lbe cl01ln1 theme?" A. "Rememberlill You." r ------------------...---.----------------Jack Andenon Alien Welfare Bill Sidetracked WASIUNOTON -Tbe Cartet' admlnlltratlon bu once aiatn 1U1nated key con1re11looal leaden In an effort to deflle 1 pollttcally aenaltlve luue. La1t year tbe White House propoeed and carefully nurtured Tbey declared. ..Thec-e is practlca!J,y no poe1lblUty" that conireu wtll pass the lllegal aUen bU1 this year. Some five mtlllon aliens, therefore, wlll re-, main ln le&al Umbo lodeflnltely. The l~atlon apparently will be burled, alont with a growing ll1t of Carter's domestic pro· pouts, ln the congresslonal eraveyardt nerve gas that could have ex· terminated the populations of Washington. London and Moscow and won World War U. Only the el'rOlleqUS bellef that the Allies poeseS8ed the same gas and would retaliate prevent· ed the Nazi leader from employ· Ing the dread weapon in the clos· ing days of the war. 1 I Borkin reveala that as early as May. 19'3, three of tbe Fuhrer's henchmen urged blm to use the I.G. Farben nerve aas. Tabun, aaalnst Rua.sian troops. A drop of TabWJ on a person's akin re- sulted ln deatb wltbla minutes. Hitler dropped the Idea only after bean, told that the AWes had ac«as to the same chemical formula ror producing the cu. a bill to rrant amnesty to an estimated 1es.ooo mecat allens who came lnto the Uqited States beCore 1970. Bat a IUble· queot push to make these aliens Footnote: An HEW spokesman uld the proposed benefit& would eue the plight of thousands of impoverished aliens who bne been living ln tbJs country for many years. NAZI NERVE GAS: Adolf Hiller came terrifyiQgly close to ordering the use or a lethal This ts but one of a aeries of disclosures outlined lo a new book. '"Jbe Crime and Punish· ment of I.G. Farben, .. by Josepb1 Borkin. It ~ti bow Farben, the m«ISler GennJn chemical combine. helped Hitler's war ef· fort -and-then--es"Caped any serious penalty at the Nurem· burg war crimes trials. In the fall of 1M4, the Idea was again advocated. Once more. Hitler hesitated in the fear that nerve gas would be used aeainst • Germany. But. Borkin writes. "the Allies had Datilail!C-1eoat---~:--=r parable to l.G. 's nerve Jases. It is terrttyt:ng to speculate oil the ell1lbHe for welfare and disabili· ty benefits bas caused the whole plan to backfire. The new scheme. cooked up by overanxious bureaucrats at the Health, Education and Welfare Department. predictably rutned some feathers on Capitol Hill. The powerful Sen. James Eastland, D·Mlss., who bad originally agreed to sponsor the Carter amnesty proposal. joined with Sen. Charles Percy, R·Ill.. in expressing their displeasure. THE SENATORS complained in a private letter to HE'f Secretary Joseph Califano that it is "clear that Congress in· tended to exclude illegal aliens" from taxpayer-supported welfare benefits. "When Congress ls ready to provide . . . benefits to illegal atiens. we will do so." Eastland and Percy added pointedly: "We are especially dismayed that HEW thus ap. pears to be acting in blatant dis· regard of the intent of Congress . . . · Polley decisions such as th is <s hould) be decided bv Congress, not by bureaucratic decree that flies in the face of what Congress bad decided." . Paul Harvey holocaust that would have re- sulted bad HiUer known this. . . " ~· Nuclear Power Safer Than Most Believe Which of all Lbe alternative energy sources now under eon· sideraUon would you guess is the least dangerous? Which poses the least hazard to your safety and your health: wind energy, the tides. geothermal steam, nuclear energy, solar energy? This will su,rprise you: More people are likely to be hurt or kllled by solar energy than by nuclear energy. Shortsighted protesters have been ptcltetini nuclear power projects, assuming these to COD· atitute the greatest danger. Walt'll tbey bear from Dr. ~dney Harris Herbert Inbaber, scienUflc ad· viler to the Atomic Ener1y Con· trol Board of Canada IN THE generation of eJee. triclty by atomic energy -and 10.11 percent of all our nation's electricity is now generated that way -nobody bas been killed. However. the board from a solar panel perched on your roof tor the purpose or collecting sun· light ls considerable. I have ~ays thought it un· fortunate that the atomic age began with an explodln& bomb. I dare say that if we had first been introduced to electricity by an electric chair, we'd be scared to plug anything into that wall socket. Dr. lnbaber says, "We must not Judge the relative risk of an energy system merely by its size or teanome appearance. What we must focus on is the 'relative risk per unit ot energy pro· duced.'" IN TOE m' Annual Review ol Energy, authors Comar and Sagan reported that when they had added up the risk factors and the energy output of each technology, nuclear power has a substantially lower risk factor than either coal or oil. And other studies before and since conn.rm this. Now about the so-called "soft technologies" -solar. wind. ocean thermal, methanol. geothermal and the others - how do they compare? You'll be surprised. When you take the total of man-days lost to workers due to deaths, injuries or disease relat· ed to their jobs. the safest is electricity made from natural gas. The next safest is nuclear energy. Tbe most b.uardous are coal and. oil, 400 times more -dangerous than gas! • AND REA.a this -because of the comparatively immense amount and complexity or materials and labor required to produce the same quantity or energy. the most hazardous of energy occupations include solar and wind. Not from a fiying windmill blade or rrom railing off the roof but because each of these in· volves mining of raw materials and fabricating them. To trust our Intuition in evaluat- ing potential hazards could cause us to ~ck away from systems which appear frightening -into systems which really are. Your Average Person Doesn't Know Averages People talk about ••averaees" and "odds" all the Ume, but lt ls simply amazing how few un· derstand even the basics of a !\latistlcal system. No doJ&bt this ls one reason that professional gamblers do so well: they never "gamble" ln the loose sense of the word, but always go with the odds. I have nm into experienced - but hardly winning -bridle players who cannot solve this simple problem: If the chance of one finesse aucceedlni .... , · ---aa we know, 50 percent. wbat i1 the chance ol one out of two fi· know. about 50 percent of all babies are boys, although the ex· act percentage varies from day to day, sometimes higher, and sometimes lower. Now, for a period ot one year, each hosplt.al recorded the days on which more than 60 percent of the babies born were boys. Wblch bOSPltal do you think re- corded more such days? Exactly 21 students chose the lareer hospital, and euctly 21 chose the smaller hospital, while 53 replied that the number would be about the same, or wltbln five percent of each other. What ls your answer? Anyone who knows anything about "aample size" would im· MailbOx mediately respond "the smaller hospital." Yet most students judged the probability of obtain- ing more than 60 percent boys to be the same in both hospitals because these events are described by the same statistics and thus seem equally tepresen· tative of the general proportion ot births. BUT CONSIDER. You are throwing up a penny 10 times. Then you are throwing up a pen. ny 100 tlmeJ. U you throw lt only 10 tlmes, It may come up beads six or seven or eight tlmea. But wltb 100 tosses, It approaches more closely to »50. And with 10,000 tosses, lt ls almost exadly even. Tbe smaller the sample, the more distorted the result. Ergo, as we used to say at Boy's Latin, the smaller the number ol births, the more like- ly that 80 percent ot boys <or girls> will be born on more days. The larger the sample, the truer to absolute probability <though beyond a certain point,. more numben do not matter>. StatlsUcs take a terrible beat· Ing from people, and, of course, can eaaUy be used to manipulate figures and pervert the facts. But we abould be on guard that our native lntuiUons are not re- liable euldes to "the odds" and start using our heads more lb.an our tails. nessea aucceedlna? Tbe answer la 75 percent, but hardly any can work lt out in a reasonable lef\lth of llmt. A few ye an a10. an under· graduate coune ln 1taUstJca of· fered tbll problem to two el ... totaltn1 t5 1tudenta. About lbree-quartll"I of these coUete atudenll IOt tt wroni. Vitriolic Reporters Are Missing To I.he F.dllor: Where are all thoH sharp, vttriollc reporters who took on Nlxon and crowd 7 t d,ldn 't think party amu.tton had anytblna to A CEaTAIN TOWN 11 Hneid do with their zeal In d111ln1 up by two bOQltall. In the J~ the truth. no matter who lot hospital. about 45 bablu are burl, but I'm be1lnnln1 to born each day, and tn tbe wonder. Aren't you! 1maller holplta,I abOut ts. M we O'Neil -'lbanka. you surely Quote&· "You muat tan It. It II a patrlmOQy for tbe wbole WOtkl. '' -A J1P1111111 ltidtnt IPMkllil Ol Li ... -, ..... moll tamoua fresco, ·~ Lat Sdp. ptr.'' which a. threatened by 1 , ...... ' took care of Jaworski and Koreaaate. Calif.no -. Sven tbOQJh YOU wa•ted over six blllton tu· P1.1tn' dollars In '77. do you Mtd men money ln '11! VOUI -We know you are "nr8proof." Kffp oa pralalol the Cotn1nuftllt world. Jual don't ~ell oa Dtmorrall. Boeme -Not too lood at I. pushln' pills, Doc. and you know no one In the White House amoltt1 pot. l 1uess ~e Soutbern•ra are Just really "rood old boy1." JlM CORCORAN ............... To the Ed.It.or: We are belq toad tbat we are tn trouble because ol oU lmporta. 11te rw problem ls OW' ~ tJCport. Oll lmport ls juat ~. caua ol our moae)' eQOrt. our money II ol ao little value on a roretsn market because we have put to mucb of It on the foret1n market. No one ls meml~ th• import ol fOtttp cub ~~ --. I ORANGE COUNTY I POLmCS . .,,. aeneral atutude la that lhe fnnp bcMflta you promlaed turned out to be 10 pttttnt beodlt and to peTttnlhi .... " Monmy. AugUlt ''· 1978 Spending Controb; Backed • County Democrats Support Gt1vernor's Proposal BJ O.C. HUSTINGS CM .. Oo61Yll't6lllutf O&ANGE COUNTY Democrats flocked to~ 1upport of Gov. Edmund O. 8rown'1 proposed constltutlonal amendm nt lo tle state spendlna in· cre11e1 to peraonal income ,ro\fth. The only· Oran1e Count)' as· aem blyman to frown upon SCA 8l. wbltb pused the Aaaembly last week. was WW!am Oannemeyer, ft-Fullerton. Newport Beach. To make your S\1'>0·&· plate reservations. call m -0061 . Or you mllht want to toss lo your c. en· lury note ror a reception at 7:30 p.111. Aug. 24 for 14th Assembly candlda\'e M arlan Bergeson. It ·u be at Ro1en1 Gardens in Newport Beach. For· reservations, Call Tom Anfinson at 673·3884. ••• ASSEMBLYMAN DENNIS Mangers. 0 -Hunllngton ~ach. was lo for a sur· prise recently when be met his ad· versary on a pollution nap. The attorney for Amlnoll USA Inc. in U.S. CONGRESSMAN Mark' Han· narord. D-Long Beach. wbo represents part or West Orange Co•nty. wlll sponsor a Retirement Fair Au&. 26 from 9 a .m. to 3 p.m. at Long Beach City College. Tbe meetlna will be in the colle&e center building. also referred to as the s tudent union, and will feature , workshops on rinaneial plannlna. post • T de .. retirement lncome. health and nulrl·.,,,. ,.. ' lion. medical care and other topics or Tom Quinn . ·above. interest to retirees. chairmat\_,of the State OptionaJ box lunches can be Air Resources Board. p.urcbased for 12.50. Pre-reglatratlon says At lorn e y m 11y be made by calling (213> *'3381. G e n e r a l Ev e 11 e His collea1ue Bruce Neatande, R· Oranae. voted for the measure. aloog with Democrau Dennis Mancen of Huntlneton Beach. Richard Roblnsoo of Santa Ana, Ron Cordova of El Toro and l======---4H-.!!l!!!~ii0iiiii=-0iiiiiiii0-+~~~~~~~-\--Ch~.U~r:.G.~~Gt.ove a debate Involving the Bolaa Chica wetlands turned °''' to be Lladell Marsh. a man Manaers hadn't seen in , I~ YOU I IKB :0 ~ell deeals aU O\'ef''-1yn1~Hu~nt1gNt'ewr'-fs'l"h'6oilu!t-l ttd---~'"=- the upper"J)irf Of y60r wtndsbiekl, you o g o t rol u · t Logbook • • • Probl~ms THE BEPUBUCAN Central Commit· tee or Orange County will salute state Sen. John Briggs, R-Fullerton, with cocktails at 6 :30 p.m. and dinner at 7:30 Tuesday at Big Canyon Country Club in Yell r s. "We were great adversaries.•• Mangers said. "I beat him for student body presideat at El Camino College 20 yeal's aJlO ... shou, \d be happy With a new bUl that the 5 m c n 5 1 Leals.\ature bQ smiled upon and sent on u g a i n s t ~x x on to Go\Vemor Bnnvn. wblch will allow because of conflict of you to ,io just Utat as long as your vision interests. Younger. isn't ob'tvueted. • R e p u bl i c a n c a n · Ass~r,Oiblyman Dennis Mangers, D· didate for governor. Just Phoney By ARTB\JR a . VINSEL Of_Del.., ........... WE IN THE COMMUNICATIONS busi· ness sometimes have problems communicat· lng among ourselves about problems in communication. Take the recent General Telephone Com· pany disruption that pertodlcally from 9 to 11 a.m., left 25,000 west county customers in· communicado with anyone out of earshot.- One can almost yell to the major can switch! station on Slater Avenue rrom our Huntington Beach office. But one must call Los Angeles to find out what happened. e moos er crea • • • Committee Supports Court Caseload Bill SACRAMENTO <AP> in Superior Court and ·the California Trial -A meaaure targeted the judgement was no• Lawyers Association at cutting Superior better than the one set an d the California Court backlogs in such by the attorney. the par· Judges Association, said populous counties as ty would have to pay for Smith aide Bob Podesta. Orange County has won t h e c o s t o f t h e The counties affected unanimous approval by arbitrator. ordinarily by the bill are Alameda. e Ksse-mbty Ways and paid-fol'bythe count . eontra ()osta, Fresno. Hunti~'Hl Beach, authored the bill. AB says Quinn s hould 2679. \ \ q uit h is state job. ""iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii----~\1iiiiiii;""iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii OM•W,... •Tllil •eowwooit ,_.,....,..;~ BLACKWELL~,s APPLIANCE \ s,u .. · , .. GARBAGE DISPOSAL _.&w.. llllce ltll ........... ........... •C cW •Dw1* HARDWOOD cEMTa ~ 540•1117 by Alexander Graham Bell takes our calls here through the Slater Avenue switching station over to Santa Ana, where it goes to our Costa Mesa Main Office switchboard and Means Committee. Th~ 15·0 committee Orange. Riverside. San SB 1362 by Sen. Jerry vote sent the bill to the Bernardino. Sacramen· I 19 S. Bristol Smith, D-Saratoga, flooroCtbeAssembly. to. San Mateo. San Santa ..__0 1121 I SLATER AVE. . F'OUMTtllM VALLEY. CA 92701 would r equire court· Francisco, Los Angeles. AD supervised arbitration or THE MEASURE is Santa Clar a a nd San 543-5005 t.OCAT&• .... ne•••• .,_,wiw111110.llQ.9,...""..,._.,...,., cases involving Sl5A>OO tb~a:ck~e~d:b~y~th~e~Sl~ate~B~a~r~.~D~i~e~~~o·:..._~~~~~~~!!!~~~~~~!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!_ : thence on back to Los Angeles. or less ln counties that - hav e 10 o r m o r e Superior Court judges. 1 T8ERE, SOMEONE WAS supposed to know what happened al the Slater A venue switching station that lert 25.000 local customers speechless ... UNDER THE bill, which is backed by the Brown administration. court-designated private attorneys would hear the cases. make a de· cislon and report that decision back t o the court. A colleague handed me a note with the telephone number lo call in Los Angeles to get to the 6ottom or this. A gentleman with a droning, well· modulated voice answered my eight calls this wa1: CUCK: "I'm sorreeeee. . .. we have a problem ...... If one party appealed the arbitrator's decision 1,Fif!allY 1 called the Huntington Beach phone Office. They supplied AC (213) 437-0lll as the number to call, whUe I'd been given 43'7·5008 Jn my f10te, although its autbor says even J.bough tl looks Uk•.-.~ h~ wrote "35-8008. -Once, I even •ot a high-pitched. aHghtSy llapy voice aomewbete in the 213 area code, who waa clearly unhappy about the call. Seminars To'Build Bridge' 'Finally, the next d ay. General Telephone 'Company spokesman Hal Compton explained it was a technical problem the firm's troubleshootinJ expert.a believe they have analyzed and solved. This .dispatch would have been 4.elepboned to the News besk instead of sent by dispatch runner . but my olfice phone is on Saddleback College's Interdisciplinary Studies progra m. comprised or rive 4-unit seminars. begins the week or Aug . 28 on the Mlss\on Viejo campus. the fritz aga\n • Deatla Notleei Births Fought THE HOUR-LONG . , LELIA E. ~~~~~~. ;"lft!ot ot HONG K<?NG CAP) - cost• (!'•s.. ea. PHMd •••• on <;hina is trying to cut its Aueu•• 11, '"'"' e.i11~. c. 5119 birth rate to less than 1 •• "'"''-.,.., -tllft Glen Sm11t1 of percent within three COllo MflO, C..., t orlllldcftlld ofld seminars. scheduled for day and evening hours. include: -"Individualism: v ... 1 .. ondd>lldr'eft "'"'·~ •rvk•• years, two Communist oftll cronwtloft w.1111-i tn Seot· • • b The Search For Mean· ing." Ito WHlllntton ••II 8roodw.., neWopaperS ere re· MortuoryCosU.Motodlrectors. ported. -"Exploring Connec· tions: Time, Space and Deities." -.&.llOADWAY MOtnUAIY 11a B<olldway Colt•Meta 642-9150 WlllOTNIRS IMllM"I MOITUAaY e27MaUnSt. Huntington Beactl 53&M39 SIU$ A MOllTUilY 978 So. C.0.t Hwy. LagunaBMch 484-1635 1533 N. E1 c.mlno Rell 5., Clemente 492-0100 -....... , c:o&.OIML ... •Al. MGi9 7801 SoluAve. w.tminttet ea-3525 PVBIJC NOTICE -•'The Sea: Struc· lure and Symvol." ..,, -"The City." ~~~'::-~=A~ -"Planet Earth in TH• couwrr Of'OllANoa Contemporary Time.·· HOT•~• Of'~~°" To sau. Program coordinator HAL ... o .. uTY AT ,.,vua Dr. Jody Hoy said the u:-,~ ••• ot ANGEi.A T. MASSARI program ls designed to NOTO,'*-"· build bridges between Notko •• "°'*' •-· thlt tut1JK• academic disciplines to COllflt'm«IOl'I by IM ollovo1nllli.d • • • SUpot'lor Court on Auoust tA. 1m. °' reconciling the scaentlfac tw .. nor wttllln .,. tJmo ouowoe1 by a n d hum an is t I c a p · ·-· Ille undenlgMd, U OJIOCutor Of u.o win ot M9tl• T. ~Noto,• proacbes to knowledge. CHIOd, wlll Mii ot PtlvAM .... lo Ille =~,:'C:Jo:',,.=*nJ.:n!':. CALIFORNIA resi· ''°""· au ,._.,., uue _, 1ntern1 of dents pay no tuition, but Anett• T. ~ .... dltcffMcl, ot a $5 h Ith i r "'° umo .. lllr deettl.,.. ~1 nQM, mto ea serv ces ee 1n11 tntotost tNt .,. ..,_. hes ac· Is req ulred. :'':! :;..-:,"~!'°.!:;C:-11-::=: More information is ",. .. ,,,.. 19UWct 111 the cc>11111r.:: 11vallable from the ad· ::.=..~" Clllfllrnl•. cteKr missions office. 831·2940 Ut .a fll nac:t m.. rec.onMd 111 r 195·1000. ... tn. ~ 11, ti. " llllO to et ........... ~ rwcor4lll ...... o-tr . ~·~-·-'()on.. trtWa;.~~ Tiie lalo IS tlllltKt to alFl"Wlt W-. al!WNMI. ~ restrk11oM, .... _,, ........ nGMi. l'llMs .. wey, _, -INfttsol.....SlfMY. Tiie ~ II to 1119 tlOlf on 911 .... Is" bnlt, .... a to tltlo. at• or 9"ilf'I -lfwl• fOf tfll• ~ J ., ~ Mt nut 1119 lft wrlttftt allCI 0 ,,... •Ill H r0<elw4 •t tllO office of '441 ~rel, ~· • Ollnda•. •t· .. .,,.., '" • ~. • *° ~ A man ··-""-admit• ..... Slrwl. s.Hte t», ~ 8oKti WUV '-al cat11ont••-.., • ... , '""'.,.. ,.,.., l n 0 r a rt a e County tMlkatton flf t111t ~ • '*-Superior Court that he "'ti.'."';:::·_.., " wlf °" '"' told heroin to an un· to11ow1111tormt;CMllorHr•cet11• dercover Cost a Meta c~;::..:-.:=-!:" <=!t: police officer for *50 hH to the s..r1or c-t~Oi 111o been sentenced to tix :::;n.:C,':.':.,-::'t:::::: months In tbe county C:. °" ~lr!NtlOll " .... .,. 1110 Jall. 6111 .:: !Niia~-:'.~.::. Judie Richard J • .... ,,_ •.....,.. •;•~•••• • Beacom ordered the Jan : ="=9' ,..=.: :=~ tel"m and three year1' IUtt11Mt1e1111....,,...... .. _ probation for Jose ::;-_:. =--.:":. ~ ~ Rlvaa, ~'of Sant.a Ana • .,....,.. -~ Th~ aaeodant. pleaded .. ';:9..,::::.-:.. :::::= = 1ullly to chartet of sell· ., .. ...,_,.,.,,....,...... Ina a controlled sub· 0o'"W:~~. stance last June 2. ~ .... '" .... -...... ~~s11n•• ...... MUii -_ ........... .. N•PI-..... ,. " ............. ~ ..... ..,,,,........, ' ....... IWI ....... • ..... ... Or .. c.111 ~ ....... lillil-----411411!1 .... _.,,,, Alie M, ll,t1,.,,. -·11 ~ A1•t pteoelorldd1. ... Ade ration. 8.99 5t""d Reg. $' !_! Machine wash I dry DuPont Fiberfill 11e with a durablepress polyester I cot - ton coven from Pillowtex. Queen. Rt~. $14, now 10.99 King. ~$17, now 13.99 Pillowtex. 13.99 std rrm Special Soft. i'S % goose f ea th er. 25 % white goose down. Std. Special 24.99 Queen. Special 34.99 King. Special 44.99 Me dium. 90 % goose feather, 10 % white goose do~n. S1d. Special 15.99 Q\Jeen. Special 19.99 Ki'il9· Special 24.99 Firm, goose feather. Std. Special 13.99 Queen. Special 17.99 King .. Special 22.99 Dacron II®. 8.99 gct Reg. $11£. Soft, medium or firm in machine wash/dry DuPont 1 Fiberfill 11e with a polyester I cotton cover from Pillowtex. Queen.~· $14. now 11.99 King. Reg. $19, now 14.99 Eyelet. 15.99 Ski Reg. $18 Machine wash/dry DuPont Daoron 11• with an Interlined eyelet cover . Queen. Reg. $20, now 17.99 King. Reg. $22, now 19.99 ,- Kialoa, Oadine Battling HONOLULU (AP> Tiiie JI.fool ••Hela Klaloa aDd Ondine wen •tParated by jult .,._ llUl"tb of • milt .. tbe7 rounded l.b• laland of NUbau dab weekend· ln U.e ftnal race ol the Clip. per Cup Yadlt Seriee. Kialoa ol Lo. Aq~M and Ondloe of Larcb· moal, N. Y.. l"0'8Mled tM laland Sunday after tbelr start al noon S.tur· dat from Walbki. file IOO-mUe course tJ'OUod tbe ~te b H · peeled to take fovr d . o o were Checkmate of Marlo• del Rey, Calli . Sorttry <>f C a I 1 r o r n 1 a • no 8a1amuff tn o f ~lralla. Monique of Ne• Zealand was tbe leader &b corrected Ume points !n1 lnto the final race. e first four races ""-re a course around yahU Island and three ~-mile Olympic tnangleaofrWalkitl Deaver Leads Etchell's • ~Patch , 1Vmnerin ~Series , .: .Dog Patch, ~kippered ~ Doo-Ayres. 1lole-wporl Uarbor Yacht Qub was By ALMON I .A)CKABEY .,...,,.... ........... There·s an adage 1 Among yadrt raeen that consistency oft.en wins a champlooabip 9eriea as m any or more times t.han bein& tint acrou the finish line. Dick Deaver and 'a is crew set out to prove the validity ol that adag•e in the world cbampk>nsbip Etcbells-22 series oul of tbe Newport Harbor Y acbt Club Sunday by pit>sting their second atra(pt fourth-place fmisb t.o take over flrst place ln the st:endings of the best five of-s~nees. - - itte winner of Class A in . THE WINNE1.t OF THE first race on Saturday jhe Intemat1.o~~I otr-was Rkt Howax.-d, Marblehead, Maas. But a 17th 'Shore Ru.le ctivia1on of place tn the second race Sunday dropped into a '8tboa Yacht Club's 16 third place tie with Richard Haekett. San FHD- Senes No. 5 Saturday. cisco, who wo14 Sunday's race after placing 17th on Class A winner in the Saturday. Perfo.rmance Handicap True. a '&kipper may throw out his worst race R. a c 1 n g F 1 e et wa s in scoring f•or thP final standings, but the throwout l11dalg~. skippered by race in most champio"-'bip series Is not taken lnto Rod Lippold, NHYC considera'.ion until the fourth race. Summary or results: I 1 o R . A _ 1 . D 0 ~ But die way the 39-boat fleet .was scrambled Patch; 2. Raider, Jim Sunday A appeared that Deaver, with his son Doua Linderman, BYC: 3, .and Rr.d Davis as crew could post a number ot Scandalous, Bill Pascoe, fo~ ·place finished and stW win the title without NHYC. winning a race. IOR·B -1, Big Kahuna , Mark Townsend, DPYC; 2, Ruffian, Earl Dexter. VYC; 3, Swift, Jack Mallinckrodt, BYC. IOR-C -1. Eclipse, Dave Stone, NHYC; 2, Stargaier, ffeadden - D ea v er, BYC; 3 , Hawkeye , Mike Schachter, BYC. PH RF · A -,, . Hidalgo: 2, Wiodwag•,m, M. P . Elliott. BCYC ·~ 3. Lumaran, Bill Ro.hrs, VYC. PHRF-B -1. 'figer Lilly, Ron Deacon, VY C ; 2, Wind:swift, George Chalfont .. BYC. 3, Blurocket, Bill Blurock. BYC. A ROI' CONTENDER IN this year's cham- ploushlp series ia David Curtis ol Marblehead, M i.ASS., who placed Seeond OD Sunday to move Into se.eond place after a 10th plaee f1niab on Saturday. Curtis and bis ettw were in 10th position at the first weather mark Sunday, moved into slxtb place at the leeward mart, marking tbe end of the triangle, and toot over third place at the second weather rounding. On the two final legs he over· hauled Don Edler of the Newport Harbor Yacht Club to take over second place and cballeiaae Hackett. . Rich Howard of Marblehead won Saturday's race but collld score no better than 17th in the second race, dropping him into a triple Ue for points with Hackett and Carl Sutter, Seattle. wbo hu a S-6 recont. SO rr IS SHAPING UP into that kind ol series -wbe~ the lint may be last and lut'ftnt wblle tbe coosiltent sailors near the front or mlddie may wind up with the fmal victory. N Bo s~·s race. waa ..Ued ln a 10-14 tnots ewpori; at aouthwesterly breeze wblcb bad tM entire neet fl&bting for position on both ends of the slartlna .. wlD8 Lti)tr Race line and rounding the ftnt weatller pin iq close " quarters. :. El Navi,~ante. skip· j>ered by Don Smttb al Clear, crisp weatba blWlbt out a tarp spec. the Sharl l Island yacht lator fleet to follow the racers M'OtlDd the COW"se. l:tub, Ne•-port Beacb, )von the Marina Cup pre. TBE Pllt8T 19 PINISBBU:. Richard Hack· 121cted 1og race, a SJ. eU. San Ftaneiseo; Z, David euru.. Marblehead; 3 .cnlle e•nnt out of Marina Don Edler, NHYC; 4, Dick Deaver, BYC; S. lobn '.¥acht Club, Marina del Meastneer, Sydney, Australia; e. Carl Sutter, 1tey, Saturday. Smith's Seattle; 7, Peter Godfrey, Marblehead; 8. Dou1las perce ntoferrorovertbe R1111ell, San Francisco; 9, Noel Brooke, ~ur:se was 1.44$. Mefttoarne, Aultr~a; 10, Seymour Beek, NHYC. -:----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.;..,_~~~~~~~~~--.1 Time for Ila d .... Olldl Ulcl dl•lllODda for her time. From our very wide collection of diamond watches for J.adje5, thete exciting ideas from Omega. t A. 18 karat yeDow gold. with diamond~ $3,<XXJ. B. Gold-rolor with 10 diamonds, $460. C. 14 brat yellow gold with dJamond'bez.el, $1, 150: Something Beautiful for EWl)one .. SLAVl.~K'S ,_~&..IYl1 t8~hlt.S. tS••·t.llO &.r_,A>ft led Lapaa Hil. •' • WCSQftimm Standings. two ot alx raee1: 1, Diet Deaver. ts pts: 2, Dave Cortis. -U: 3, tie amona Carl Sutter. Ri~k Howard and Ric.bard Hackett, 23; 6, Peter GOdfrey, Marblebee4, 25.7; 7, Don BdJer. NHYC. 30. 7: 8, tie between Tfm Rotan. NRYC and Noel Brooke, Melbourne, 32: 10, J .I. Hancock. Melbourne, 37. To .... adoCats Newport Pair Win National. Richard Loufek and Ja:, G.._. of Nft'P')rt Beacll won t.be Tornedo catamaran aaUonaJ cbam- pkm:lblp at <::beneJ Lake in W\c:Mta, Kan .• ln a boat tbe, built tllemselvea. Lc.rek IOt bis euly c.tam.ran HiliDI e:I· perieace.in the HobW Catt aDd bas more recently eoncentnated on UHi Tomado Claaa. the only catanu1ran ln tbe Olympic yachtlng. LOUFEK AND GLASER po&ted fin.I.shes of H-2·1-3-3 ln the best ol seven race re1atta. Their throwout race •aa a rourtb. Tbe record gave. tMm 14.4 potnts under the Olym.pic penalty point orin.& system. Runner-up was tJt:e New Jersey team of Henry third was defending champion Keith Notary with uewmu Dave Gamblin of Florida with '3. Other Soutbem C¥:ifomians scortni blab ln the recatta were Randy Smytb·Suzl Bradshaw. Huntinctom Beach. fourth: Bob Kettenbofen-Jlm nm. Newport Beach and El-Cerrito, fallb. and R. Paul Allen-Miles Wood. Newport Beach. sixth. ALLEN, A VETE&AN catamaran sailor ln all cl~es. was eJected president of the U.S. Tornado Catamaran Assoclatifn at the close ol lbe re1alta. Allen said It wul the luaest nat.iooaJ re1atta 1or t.ha Tornados. possibly beuus~ the midwestent locatklD whleb drew beavilY both the east and west coaata as well u lnfand aalllna areas. AU cl the top ftnishers in the national recatta qualify for the world cbampk>nsblp to be held at We1mouth, England, starting Se.pt. 9. _. ...... IJ11\i«t'° ~--l &.AUWOOOCI...,. MAU Ml 0' '9 .,_C!Tr ttOfilHC CIHTU BOATING BOmNG Star Clas~:: Race End8 In Draw ·:: Barton Beek of the Newport Harbor Yacht v j e s tr a rl d o I L t.i.e California Yacht Club wound up in an UQ · breakable tie Sunday in the Star Class in tbe California Yacht Club'• One· Design Invitational Regatta. The event drew fo&U' classes and was sailed in 18-knot winds off M arlna del Rey Results in other clai..es t LIGH'l!ilNG --1.. £or Sall. Myron Lyon. MBYC: 2. Seafever. Mlke Boswell. KHYC .. LASER -1. Flying Bull Yerpel. Gary Schenfinan, DRYC. TORNADO -f, Bob Locke. CBYC. .. ~~ ............ DlftO C.0. I ,l(;"J "9 Mu. ....... "'"" ... ,...... ......... c- ·. ANALYSIS Tax Relief Advocated ' ... Meaaurea Could Aroid Prop. 13 Elaewhsre . . ' 81 WALT a. MSAU , ......... W ASIUNGTON -Sta&e and local J)lllldcal .. eclln wonted about rebellious P"Os>eM.Y tu· p~ers may be abM to take out aome Propoe&doQ l.I la1ra.nce by keel>lnl ratt11 down and level· ln1 wlth t6e voters. There•a no avwantee that &t will work. but a f.,_al advilory panel sUQelte that lltnd ot ae· UOo •ill at .... awumi1e t.M ebance thet ~r states will face tbe drasUc We rollbacks and restrain\ ordered by California voters. Some a ora a taJkina about dolq away with the property tax. CALIFOaNIANS oaDEUD a S7 blWon property tax reduc· t1on when they approved Proposition 13, th.e measure !Spawned by Howard Jarvis and Paul Gann, which also requin!s ·two.thirds majorities ln any future votes to impose new st.ate or local taxes. The Advisory Commission in lntereovernmental Relations aays it ls unlikely that many Other states will take action that drastic. But an analysis published by that panel of congressmen, gov· ernors. mayors and stale legi slators suggests that the r e are likely to be new restrlcllons on state and local tax and spending powe r s because or the shock waves from €alifomla. It also forecasts in· creasTiig supp-ort ror s tatr- supported property tax relief for homeowners, particularly peo.. pie on low or fixed incomes. THE STIJDY BY John Shan· non and Carol S. Weissert, two commiss ion staff members, ca lls for change aimed at male· lng elected officials clearly ac· countable for decisions on truces and spending. "By so doing, expenditure growth rates can be slowed down without doing violence to Ole concepts of representative trovernment. oiajority rule and fiscal Oexibillty," they say. . Jnnauon is pushing many tax· :,Payers into higher income tax ·brackets. In many areas, the Pr.operty owner can't figure out · •. ~ether the 888eSsor, the school :.::(lbarcl, the city council or some • )ltber agency is responsible for . ftlslng his taxes. Congress and . . . .. . . ..... .. . . . . f ::_ r ·== f.· the state leaillatures enact new pro1rama that coat many, but leave It to other levels of 1overn· ment lo p~ the bills. WHILE THE COMMISSION study aclcnowledges the defects and poor repute of the property tax. ll ~ says Lbal as the one major revenue source ror locaJ government, the levy serves as a bulwark against government centralization. Besides. there is no acceptable substitute in slg~t to raise the S65 billion produced by local pro- perty taxes. So the commission suggests that elected orrtcials should adopt measures "designed to re- duce the in;itant content of this levy,'' before taxpayer resent1 ment bolls over to produce ac· lion like that in California. Its suggested insurance steps: -A UNIFORM SYSTEM for appraisals and administration or property taxes. set up so that the individual taxpayer can judge the fairness of his or her assess· ment. - --State laws along the lines of one adopted in Florida so that voters can "fix political responsibility for hieher proper· ty taxes." The Florida I~ calls for acrnual appra isals, but forbids their use to generate ad- ditional revenues. Sin~e lnflation generally raises assessments. the local government must either lower the tax rate or taJce sp~ific and publicly advertised action lo increase property tax revenues. -State-rtnanced systems to protect low and fixed income citizens against property tax loads they can't afford . -A FAIR PIAY system so that when a state mandates pro· perty tax exempllons or addi- tional spending by local govern· ment, it helps to pay the added cost . -Moderate property tax utes, defined by the cotn· mlsalon as no more tban 1.5 per· cent or the market value of tbe property. ··As with any other tax, tbe beovier It bec<.'mes. the loss ob- vloua are Its virtues and the more gliuing are its defects, .. lht: commission study notes. IT SUGGESTS TllAT property taxes should rail between 1 per· cent and 1.5 pen:ent of market value. "Beyond 1.5 percent of the market vaJue, the amber warn· in1 light na.shes on. beyond 2 ercent the red danger light According to the commission. it should be ~Ible to hold pro- perty taxes below 2 percent of market vaJue in stales that pay the run cost of welfare and medical care for the needy. Recount Seen In Cleveland Recall Eff Ort CLEVELAND <AP> -A jubilant Mayor DeDJ)is Kucinich. c linging to a thin 275·vote m argin, joked with hundreds of cheering supporters after ap. parently surviving a bitter recall effort. If he wins by one vote. "it will be good enough, .. Kucinich said Sunaaymgh~CUfarmga Coma· ty election officials took the first steps toward a recount. WITH ALL OF Cleveland"s 645 voting precincts reported. Kucinlch turned back the recall drive by an unomcial vote of 60,308 to 60,035. Cleveland bas been plagued with problems since Kucinlch took office Nov. 14, but the recall drive was triggered when the mayor fired Police Chier Richard · Hongisto during a televised news conference March 24. Contacted after the reeall vote. Hongisto, now bead of New York state's prison system. said he does not expect any chanJ{es for the better. "IT'SHARD TOkill a city. But he'll <Kudnichl do a fair job or trying," Hongisto told a reporter . But Kucinich was exuberant. South of the shoolders, north of the knees lies the waist land.Is your waist ~a wild, vasttenit<l;'? the fjnest professional equipment available. •• Tame ~ vast waist land and •,, turn it intO a waist~ watching at Holiday s~ Heilth Qubi. We'll de8iln an emciae program for Y.OU ~On your own~ . level, endurance arid pei'aonal ~up ps. _,·,:\Ve uaeapqpessive pbyaiea} ~tHoliday Sp;19have even mere! You11 find whirlpool, sauna steam and sun rooms to relax and refresh you aftet your workout. And for women we offer Jaz.znastics- unique group exercises done to ~tnpo music. lillclfOy, August 14. 1m DAILY "LOT A• BUY ONE DINNER RT REGULAR IRICE AND G.ETIHE SECOND ONE fOR JUST •1.0D Thef• the •pedal coupon offer being mad• by SplrH RHtaurants. Mec:Althur at S.D. f wy,. In Irvine and 3'25 Harbor Btvd., In Costa M .... During Auguat. except on Monday!. ttleae coupons enable you to buy one dinner at the regular price an<S the second dinner tor 1us1 S1.C)0 more. It's our wrot of saying "Thank.a'" for being our cuatomer. (.ko':.:tt.;:.eaef \ ---.toupDAl-9 •• Breaded Veal *2.45 =: $1.00 • I I *3.35 := *1.00 I I NfVedwllhaoup ~ I I ,.N..,wllh•°"P ~ I orsatad,veget•bl•. ~:~~. orsalad.vegetabte. ~-;r I potato or rice pllat, ~ I I potato or rice pllal, ~ ; I roll and bu lier roll and butter ~ =--· I Tiie on1y reQUtrtmetlt$ are 11111you1>M9 tnis coupo11 Wl!ltYoU I I Ille OftlY tlQlllremeftts art 111.11 yo. t>nog '"'' COUllO!'"""" you I • Incl bOlh d111nt1s musl bt lilt same Tiie SECONO OINNER FOii llKI both Olilners must bt Ille same The SECOND OINNER f()ft SI 00 oll9t IS good only II Spwts RtsYuralllS. ~ at SI 00 olltt IS good only II Spites RestaullntS. Mac.Artllur II !1 so. Fwy .• 111 lr"Me and 312!> Hart>Or BM! • 1n C4sta Mesa ana I I S 0 Fwy • 1n 1rw1e Ind 312!> Hlfl>OI Blwd • •n Costa Mesa and I .. Allgust 31. 1978 °"" good lllY day ~ MOl\day ends Augu11 J'. 1978. Oller good any Cl'V e>Uj)I MO!ld.ly • CbllpOft lpeclats mus1 bt eaten on 111, premises lllld are WMCI I • Coupo11 'l*•ts l'llllst bt Nltll on Ille ptJllll5eS and are serveo • llll!ft_~ ~· io 10 pm All °''* menu •ems a<e 11 regulat 1r0111 J pm 111 10 pm Ni Oilier menu llemS Me at r8gllW ~----·--"'~· ~----·-···"" # •-•mcoapon• •• .. ~ ~·-••coupon ••••~ ' Liver & Onions 1 1 · Fish & Chips 1 I --•2.45 ~ $i.OO I I . *2.85 ~-= *1.00 I I aerveciwnhaoup ~·· I I serve<lwllhsoup ~ I Of aalllld, vegetlble. or salad. vegetable, • : • · · I poteto Of rie• pllal. · I I potato Of rice pllal, I roH and bvtttr roll and butter ~ 0 ~ • I so fwy . 1n 1rv111t and 312!> Harbor Blvd • •n Cosla Me'8 aoo I ends Augusl 31 1978 Ofter good ai>y <Iii' ei.Uipl Monday COi/poii spee1eis mll5I 111 ~"" on 1114 p1em1SaS ano m 5'!Wll • ttom 3 o m 10 10 p m Al olher menu 11ems ift .JI regular • ~-as·--······" ( . . Longs.mi 4l(lt Atlantic Blvd c:&ner-of Onan (213) 426-8874 Wm l..oe ~ . 1914 So. Bundy (Near Ol}'n)Pic Blvd.) Call 820-7611. t •-c• ••• aa.NPark 510 SoUth Beach Blvd. South of Lismn Avenue (714) 82&0381 Co.tar&.a 2300 Harbor Blvd. HarbcrCemer (714) 549-3368 Huntington Beach 18585 Main Stttet Main St at Beach Blvd. (714) 842-1451 Orange 622 East Katella Ave. West of Tustin Ave. (714) 639-2441 .. ~.;:,~~~:,~ .. in i1iilPe IDd stay that "81~ And joU'll' be woddtW out oo aome of SO take ~e of our two- Week in~ offer and start taming the Wild, wild waist today! 7kO uwll in~offtrand :~~~'!""'*' ............ ....... fff51 W.atnliulter Ave. 'IJatiuiae cmr.. (714) 894-3387 / )U• IW.V N.OT MARMADUKE by lrld Andtnon BOOMER by Wm. F. lrown and Mel Casson ''He heard you complolnlng about the etecmc bt1t1 ..._ --- FUNKY WINKERBEAN SHOE .. GERIATRIX -----Wt-EN PW~ HB'HEW 5\'41TCH ~ OPTOM~ 1'0~ ca..LeGe~ ~-....... - .,.... Cotl" OF ~ 19 GOrNG UP. UP, OP. •• ... t CM'i Aff020101'A~f. A eta 001 1N ~e ~v~N1N6 .. HOW WIL.l. YOU ~cceee>, WOflKIN(i ONL.Y.., ;i MOU~ A DAY !"' by Mell EASV-t c..1.. -S&r TJ.E WORL.D ON Fl~ P,«T • ilME". by Tom Batiuk DOOLEY'S WORLD #~W'l~C'.ft'Oll•""-"'' ~., ..... ..,c'"'"'' by Ferd and Tom Johnson GORDO I FEfL HUNGRY··· DO YOU HAVE A NYTHING TO cAT IN YOUR · REFRIGERATOR 1 by Gus Arriola by Emle Bushmiller TMIS LEFTOVER ICE CAE'AM IS DELICIOUS PEANUTS COMICS I CROSSWORD by Charles M. Schult WOOOSTOCK ~ CON~O! SIU..! OLIV1ER! I SHOOLO NEVE(( CALL 1HF ROLL BEfORf NOON! . .. -.-- by Roge~ Bradfield by George umont TODAY'S CIDSSlllD RllLB ACROSS I fOOd 1151'1 S Assumed I act 10 Su· 1>1ef1x 14 Pu4rU111 Pnnwinoer 15 Re4a1ecf lfW'Ough mom 16 Once mote °"' 11 Fonnullte ' 9Chen'l9 18 Beel Uj) 205ecunMS apnsl IOss 22Adds 13 Qotti..-In· '°'""' 24 Ftmlle llQIM 25 Applies SllVI; 2WO!Us ~Put llj)Wlt\1 l2 •• --Clllu O•y" 33,Gerden ®'· lnOll9e JS Breed of cat de 3S llent.illtes 38 Helieopltr lllelnbly 40 Sllllr: Scot 41 Lets It ltend (JSoh~ 45 M1nt18I sul· hx 46 Oecb 48 Ofllbeflle 50 Sflgma 51 S1udy hard 52 Young selmon 55~ 59 Aene: 2 word$ 6 t Sllntecf • ""' 62 She Fr 6l Weird &t~twife 66 lAgll pepef 88 Piece uc>· ~ ~Trull confl· dlnlly DOWN I CirclUll 2 Arcllc lbode 3 -EMt 4 Afr. ca«s 5'fntrion """ 6 feeds Ille pot 7 S8llors 8N. Mex. In· ... 90one by the rhlfld lGWaofifll. pon 11 T Ulllstt Qin· UNITED FM ture Syndicate S.turday'1 Puale SoNed: C K f $ S • S l a V I PIA I II " . . , ,. , 0 l f I All 0 0 .. ' 0" l • 0, (II f TI T .. ' T ( ". ' u II E • II f IA $ ' -•l illT I p f 0 ,._ II(! HltlA II s. l I • rt• l l .. ~ flllll.'I • v a I r-• 0 .. •:• oir-• 0 ( . ' _,,o . " AIO O•Sll A II I I 111010 I 0 llf Altl••'" "'''"Jill' -· •1•' • ' .,. c " • ·-··· :• s • ! 7 J A 'jl Ill( f I I II A • f r v ( • 1 rlllflll I c u ' I II o i r 'ii s1r1u10 1 ' f 11 ' a ___ ._ era! 12 c.n. "°" Louil - 13 lodging houMI , 19 Pierced 2' H"'""'8f 24 Auto 25 CDC* with dry helt 26 JQin 77 LMI ormite 28 Ce<riH 291(199~ from 30 Rich cake 3' OOOf llgfl )4 ACfdlmll: gowns 11 Wlltld tlowly 39~ 42 ''\fotre -": YOUI heeltll 44 Ftmininl nclnlme 47SWNrS 49 Better If· !qed s1 v*" 52 Ptogeov 53Mncuh 54 Impertinent $(Int 56 Ms. Miles 56 Not eny 57 Cowet. IOOl'll M · llclt 58 W1i.r CUf· 191"4 80UltimN .......... AT YOUR SERVICE I CALIFORNIA Mondlry.Augual14, 1178 DAIL y PILOT A J ,._ . .. ··Got a J>f'e>Ol.-m" T"-n wntt to Pol Dunn. POJ wt.l.l CUI rtd tapw. ~Urnfl t"-an.twtrl and oct&Ofl ~ 1IHd ro IOlw IMQull•H an gou.mmem and bulmul Mau ~' owJHon.t to Pol Dunn. At Your Senne•. ~ Cout Ooil1t PUOl. P 0 Bo.r IS«>. Costa M•ao. CA Reason Unknown THEFAMJLYc1ncLs By Bil Kean~ i 1'9 NI a •••1 JWe l•t•• •••liiil • DEAR PAT: I ~·Ued . .,.. ... id .. mechcal tape .library to· try to 1et 1ome .-.... lntormatlon ·about a fill.rt,)' common u..a I wu told that I had to live the number tA tile ~. aod that no ta~ coWd be plAY9(1 Wllesa I t.aid U.. number. How c6uld I pauibb bow the number W'ben tb1I wd m.y llftl eont.act wit.la Tel· Med, ud bow can UUa be ·called a ··aervlce" when it'• nm IA th1a manner? T.K., Newport S.aeb You c:etapaatat wu Wlilllllll ..... Mt rttee el &a.. Oruae c-tJ •~cal ~adlll. ,, .. ,.,ti Tel·MM.1'1 _. au teMAYStbt IMcwa• .• , ..... laYeld&a&ed, ,.,.. .............. . __. • .ew ... werlae aentee wtll t.e ......_ eyer tH2f Al mon11 ''""'' ~ pouibl1 will t>. cmlWl'rtd. t>M• pltOftfd mqumH or' l•ttff• not mcludinfl tht rtod.tr'1ftlll11arM.odd,.,. and bullntu houri· phoM Hmt.r cormot bf conndfrtd Thu co4umn o,,.,.aradai· lw ucfpl Soturdo111." tlttre 'ave Mel Mveral 1ertou1 acclde•ll tnvolv· ta• datee Um la reeeat weeks la CallfonJa ud a& a.a1toaede1U.. DC4 aUWDeye mM wlUl Ftra&oae omclall twlee Heently, ukl•• tlilem to publlclle dantl.,.._ &M a&a&e &M co1ap-.y•1 •• poUcy re· , • ....., .._. ... aad replacemell&I for &Mae Ura, M& &M reqllel&ed publklty wa1 rejected. DC.\ HJI tit• e11enee or Ftres&one's aew ••ntt. .. r aaUafacUon" policy II tllat dealen llloeN pnv1de free ti.re lnspeetlou aad sllotdd re,aaff ~ f'lrel&one'a new Improved 7%1 Steel Bet&ed b411all uy of tbe M S&eel Belted RadJab .. at an clefeettve or Ul•l have to.& tlle eoa.lldeJlff 0t&11eu--.. Killing Down On Porpoises SAN DJioo <AP l -U.S. tuna fishermen are •1..a1;1.a.J~·~'ffl kallina tar fewer porpoises this year. Nobody knows exactly why. but perhaps the Intelligent mammilb are learning it's just not safe to swim near tuna. The National Marine Fisheries Service estimated that 8.158 porpoises have died ln fishing nets from January through July or this year ln the western Pacific Ocean. That's far below tbi1 year 's quota of 52,000 porpoiseai. LAST YEAR, AN ESTIMATED26,400porpoised were killed by tuna fishermen. according to Dr. Joseph Powers. leader of the Marine Fisheries' marane mammals assessment and monitoring pro . eram As late as 1975. "It ECOLOGY ki~ed by fishermen, be said. ' t • • ' • • • t ' • • i Tel·Med l•fl•lrlH ~~rere 10.1. Tke. OCllA lpM .... M18 &Ml .. ""Jed C,_.•nfenwe cUredOr7 ., die .ort dau lit &..-II Iii -. a& &Ma &Jme. OM •u • bew dae _._,. er elle! ()pera&on are • ....,._ &o elfer &e ad a -'Jed· ~Y·H•W ~tare &o pen.. .... •Ike ... ct•lrlee wlM» ._,.bow lite proper'-" •••Iller. Wiiiem AYS H•taded Tel-Med laltlally, H Dellen ue to allow • credll a1a1.ut the price of .. e aew 7Zl Steel Belted Radla.11 based on Ute u•aed tread on Ute SOI Steel Belted Radials bel8J replaced. A tall two-yeu warunty wW cover all Urea ID &be 7%1 llae sold between now ud Oct. 31. [ ) 134,000 porP.Ols.es w.ue- --------The issue has been ------------------ controversial ror several Particular People Select JOHNSON & SON yea rs, because of the tendency. ror unknown rea· sons. or the friendly mammals to swim among Home of the "Golden Touch" schools or yeelowfin tuna. one of the prime targets of tuna fishermen. In fact. the fishermen often sought porpoise herds. knowing they would find tuna nearby. .broelilue waa offered, but Giie wu •ailed llpOll re· :caan&. Tiie clll'ftllt broebu.re w 1enerallae4 lilead· .~II, Alda u ''Btnll CM&l'OI," followed by 111: ·•••bered &ape allbjee&a. Nl.Deteen •Jeeta ue 'Jlsted by aa.mber under tlile .. Clllldren" beadln1. 1'~• 1atofTel·Med'1 efftdeaey, AYS asked for1JI· to rm atlon .. abo•t lnocal•Uona •dvls'ed for claUdrea" and aboat "smo1 alert" precautions. No :lnformatiae COlld be provided, •ccordl.n& to t.be -opera&or. In fact. 1he uld there wu no l.Aform•· tion available about childhood lnoclll•tlou. A YS polated oat t.bat both subjeds were listed ander ''Oll.lclrell" la Ute brocl:nare, and not U.at dH: ·aclllt to loc•te, bat lite e>pera&or said sbe dlcln't ~"'ea bave a broeb•re. DCA •dda &bat Firestone bas ur1ed dealers to be fleslble on price In order to ensure that cuatomen will be satisfied. Da.ler losses will be coyer~ by Firestone. The department advise• consumers to take ad· vantage of the new Firestone polJcy and to retain all documen&s pertaining to transactions IA wldch they receive the new 721 Steel Belted Radials. DCA also urges all Californians now driving on Firestone 500 Steel Belted Radials to have diem cheeked and, wbt!n appropriate, replaced under Firestone's customer satisfaction policy. When the tuna boats lowered their nets to baul in the catch, porpoises frequently were caught Ln the nets. beca me excited and drowned before they could be freed. MEMBERS OF THE AMERICAN Tunaboat Association. which is headquartered here. say bun· dreds of thousands or porpoises have been seen s wimming a long this year without the usual yellowfin. One tuna boat skipper. Julius Zolezzi. said: "This year is really different." "Neither the fishermen nor scientists know C'alB ... aplafl Classes Close Bfl why. but we're pleased." Powers said. u· Since the porpoises aren't near the tuna. the DEAR PAT: Please let A.P .. Laguna Niguel. "fishermen haven't been fishing on porpoises," and all your other r eaders know that we have one Powers added. -7-----lfelleh~rUQll"'-'9'11-Hlh-.flDRMGia~IMl~Le-~~:he-f'inest-eaH:igr&phy teeehers in tht--~tttt1nr---""'."":".== ch.age l&s Tel-Med auwertng service aacl make right here in Orange County. Her name is Polly ANOO'llER FACTOR CITED BY Powers for &bis taped tnrermatloa readlly available to tlte Hutchins. She bolds small classes .in ber home, and the lower kill total 1s a combination of improved "The concern of the friendly salesman In helplng me get the car of my choice. w11 greatly appreciated". GEORGE EICHER Santa AN, CaHf. ANOTHER SATISIFIEO CUSTOMER .. . . ' I pubUc by subjeet as well u tape aamber Iden· studying with her Is a very rewarding experience. net tectmlques and "special care by the fishermen tHlcatloa. la &be me.atlme, a brodlare ua be re· W.L .. Balboa Island themselves." quested by plloaln& 83S·Z2Zl. U you don't have • Ma. Hu&cblns thanks you for your recommen· 1---------11;;;;;;;~;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ .JOHNSON a SON f· brochure. u lnqalry II a waate of Ume d•tlon and told A YS that she plans'to belfn new Yiou can ,..Lorne TUJISCOEIJAl ATlll classes In Seittember. Phone 673·50!1 for details. '-" • a• OllllTlmJCT ...-~------------------· !ir tl Firestone SN Tra•s Ottem D.S., Costa Mesa, also wrote On beautiful script> DAILY PILOT rn. ~ ~ " that beginning and Intermediate calllgraphy Classified Adi h""Y Wad. 12-& 1,. DEAR READERS: The California Depart· )neat of Consumer Affairs report• tllat the -i'lreatone 11.re Co. has refued &o adequately IA· :"9rm cllltomen aboat Its new Hberallaed trade·ln policy for dealing wltla f•Ua•re-proae 'Tires&oae at Steel Belted Radial Tires." classes are offered at Coastline Community T.M. Ctllhr, College. Baste calllgraphy also ls offered In the 642 • 5671 J 1651 c:...t Hwy. So...,_. Coastline lecture series. For...._ 4"-27Jt , .. l 2626 t:t~rbor Blvd. •Costa Mesa • 540·5630 . The Firestone HO tires · also sold by ·Montgomery Ward H Guppler Radlal •'• and by Sllell OU Co. as Sa.per SbeU Steel Radlab · have ke• laeavtb crttlclaed by several atacUes .ad articles as be.ln• defective and dangerou, aceord· Ja1 &o tlaedep•rtmeat. Mesan Honored Grant R. Gwinup or Costa Mesa has been named to the dean's list for the s pring semester in the College of Liberal Arts al the University of '. , · DCA ~ Rk~a.rd B. Spobn says bis de· •anment llu received more tbaD t• complaints .......... ~--Sceel Belted aadlab, laellldbl• . :'blowo.&a. lffJsfed ~&a. tread separa&tou ud . $.tldewall ~ by &be dozens." lie adds t.bat Arizona. C.11142-1171 . Put • few words to work for ou . ~:-. Tltenew HFC otTtce in .• . . . .. :· .. .· . . Miners Vtllag~ is all ready. Come on in. We're here to make sure that a little money doesn't stand between you and the "things you want . \' Last year we helped over two mil1ion people. We helped them ~~-------1 take vacations, / .• . r· / ."· ~"· buy stereos, add family rooms to their homes, and pay off their big bills. We could help you, too. Come on in to our new office, and tell us about the things you want. We could lend you up to $25,000. Come on in, call 586-4700, or apply by mail. Household Finance ... where people use our money to get the most out of life. BToro ~V~Plaz9 23814 e Toro Ac*. . . . . . . . . . . . ....................... se&-1330 8111 ~ Capleei•IO 32158 C8nino Cic*b•IO. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , .. 49&-0501 s ~?r~r~i~~n?~~di~!~o~~;~ L.olrll oY9f' 16,000 may be l8CUl'ed by a oomblntltlon °' ,..., ancr pe!'IONI poperty. An equ.I opportunity lender. ·---------------------------~ f I HOuMhold Finance Co;·poratlon Mtners Village 27041 ~la Paz Road Mission Viejo, California 92675 I WOULD Lll(E ro APPLY FOR s ~---------------------------~ ., '·'· ., . . .. -.. ;· ': --1 .. . . ' . ~. : -... ":' .. \ , I .. ,~ :...- .,_ ... t ... She's crying for help. Are you listening? She simply can't handle her problems by herself anymore. She needs help before it's too late. And she·s not alone. Every day. people no different than you el{perience an emotional ~risis often provoked by a troubled personal relationship. Someone may become so despondent she grows fearful or nervous for no app~nt reason. She loses sleep over insignificant things. She explodes over trivial matters like the car not starting. She can't carry on with her family. She nee4s help. Professional help. The only real hope for regaining a normal, productive Ufe. The kind of help available at the Problem Talk Shw. A profi lom\lly staffed counseling anCI referral service for people trapped in an emotl<mal crisis. At the Problem Talk Shop we care for I people. Problem Talk -Shop l\ a free service which provides a warm, friendly ~nvfronment wbere skilled counselors help people sort out their own Uves. Here people gain new resources to handle the problems they thought were too big to handle. If you know someone who is experiencing an emotional crisis, call the Problem Talk Shop. A trained counselor will be at the other end of the line. Ready to help. Ready to answer any questions you may have. Please make the call that will show her 50mebody cares enough to listen . (71.f) 997-1831 l l lO Eue C~mu Awaue. Suite lOQ OrJ.Op. California 9seee (714) 768-3831 .4J2 DM.Yfllt.OT . . Faces Focuses 87 lftJGll A. JRILUGAN ~~Cwoiji& 1UDOU'lSLD. COM. -Ow promoeion people bave uW me to auPDlY a new pllotofr'apb ol myeeU -to k"p up wltb tM cbanstns llmel. It Memt the oN . au, .. ·~~ pldur.ii lo.llll tJ amona 1ome 'edlton.1 t .. At SO.." Mkl Geori• Orwd, ' ''•"1'1 mu bu tbe face. M-' 'sen ..... I DON'T KNOW wt.at I cl.kt Lo deHrft UUI oot, •bJda U AMQ1 peyQca&aCW down at tbe draft board one• d••crlb•d •• "9ltta.e~" eaeept be it oa the Hae marted ..... .. looted tbe word up ln tbe die-, Uonary and tbere WH 1 line d:rawtna ol a sltull 1Jinnin8 out ol a lllbtem Jaw over the cap- tJon: "extlnd 1enus ol apelike men of ~ Plelstoceae epocb ol Java.·· I dldn 't find out whether be rated Intellectually ahead of Cro·Magnon Man or Nean- derthal Man, also 1rlnnin1 out from tbe page at me from raw jawbones lull of teeth. because frankly I didn't want to know. THIS TIME I THOUGHT maybe I would have a picture taken of me like the one of Truman Capote on a recent cov· er of the New York ~Times Magazine. 1t ttrtainly was an eye-catching photo. Capote Is standing there ln a flowing white smock, ankle· lengU. with lone sleeves and a V · neck, almost like a wedding ~..__~Yrr11m--mr1¥1M-tris-mlld~CJlf-some kind of mattress covering. Cam· bric. I think they call it, although my expertise in yard goods Is limited to canvas I once boueht for a patio awninl that never got put up and Dacron sails for a boat I sold at the end of the seaaoo. Anyhow, Capote bas his bands folded behind bis back and be is staring out serene and soulfW from beneath the broad brim of a sombrero or maybe a hat be borrowed from Bella Abzug. THE POSE IS ALL THE more striking because he is standing in weeds up to his armpits. I couldn't tell where the picture was taken, but the article said Truman Capote lives i.n United Nations Plaza, a very posh place U.at ~ bee I« the lawn ltt ••• more out ol hand than oun. UDlut, of courae. th• DMto ••• tocllk place on Fire hlaed. w1'•r• Capote often .... the IUDUIMI', or clown on tie M._..lppt Oulf Cout. the Httlnl f« IO mao.y of bl1 early work• and boybeod re · m.lniffeDcea. I eouldn't help placint Truman e..,ote tn the context ol Thomu Hood'• falllOWI li.nea: " ... W..~cmddllwco"'· 6',... fJW ,,.. ooWe• tivld -or "'°"'· LIU Ute Nftthean of u.. tun. W1'o mcDtf a ~ kU1 hod tOO:ft ... O& MAYBE KEATS, com· p1rtna the nigbtin1ale's sad song to the biblical Ruth, homesick, in tears, "amid the alien corn." Except Truman with that auuestion ol a smile or maybe a smirk almost form· iDI on his lips looked more like a recently klssed sweetheart of fhe sun than anyone list in a cornfield. Being in the column·wrltinf business. however. I decided ll might be best to avoid a.ny as· sociatlons with corn. Next. I thought I might have my picture taken brooding out over a typewriter through a thin veil of cigarette smoke, after the manner ol Norman Mailer or Noel Coward on a book jacket. e e is y smo e an occaaioqal cigar on important anniversaries and occasions of state meaning, when someone gives me one, and a cigar always makes you look like a ward ~ politician, or, ii your auit is new, a bank director peeriq down from the board room on another real estate clos· i.ng. SINCE I COVERED QUITE a few wars for The Associated Press in Asia, Africa and the Middle East, the promotion peo. pie suggest~ somethln_g In a jeep or getting off a helicopter. There iS one of me in a jeep, taken in Da Nang, exc~pt there are four or five cborugl. girls in minisldrts from the Bob Hope show allo riding along. on 50 That picture was dlfficult enouah to explain at home the ltrat time around. and I don't care to io Into lt aaaln. siftce few people really a1>1>reclate the aacrificea correspondents have to make ror a stol')I. l could have 1one out and covered the heavy action that day, maybe made a brace of fl"Ol)t pages lf we got in- to aome real bang·bana. Instead of obll1ln1 the editor by lb· terviewt111 those dull show peo- ple. There ls also an action shot ol me land.Ing on the deck of the aircraft carrier Kitty Hawt. somewhere in the South China Sea only I don't look too com- bat.'read . l-'fil airsick on ntebt out through some monsoon rains and that jolting landing on the deck didn't help any. hence the slight greenish hue to my complexion and the dreamy "never-again" look in my eyes. I ALSO HAVE A PICTURE taken of me with the Shah of Iran al that fabulous party he gave for all the crowned heads of Europe to celebrate the 2.500th birthday of the Persian Empire. Just one problem there. a waiter with a tray of eaviar--- 1 golden Caspian. the absolute ~tie Ptlp best> has blocked .out part of my face and the sha~ has turned his Although it looks fierce. this 2-month-old Char Pei. or Chinese he~d momentarily to chat witb fighting dog, is gentle. His name is Shi.Shan and h15 owner. Princess Anne up on a camel Richard Lee of Phoenix. Ariz .. says only 130 such dogs are re~- be neath a parasol that unal· 15· tered in the world He says the breed can be traced to 206 BC fortunately shades her roy · features and the whole thing is a bit out of focus on aceount qt IF~i~e D ,..~ r that glaring desert sunlight. W & ,a~ The same luck held when I hadthatprWate-. .aucli'ence-\lm·h-+--.611mA~LL:~~~.-... .......... ~~~~C!~-:.-...._ ~--~ lbe pope. The light was bad in Be M bmzea-~ue,a:eu the papal apartments, and the 'P 300 other pilgrims at the private .1.'0 0 MOUNT HOU.Y. N.J . audience kept pushing in front of CAP> -A Medford man. me so that my face is partially · tted convi~ ol capina bis obscured by a Swiss guard's WASHINGTON <AP> -'l'be Un estranged wife.hJS been balbred and a lady from Statesia1encl1ngaboot3S.OGOflehtiD8mento sentenced to 4 to 12 Boston's plastic replica of the participate in NATO war •ames this month years in prison. Pieta, which she held up for a and in September. The case marts the blessing. About 10,000 men of the U.S. contingent first lime 1n New Jersey All in all, the old high school will be Marines. underscoring tbe tm· that e1 man bad been portrait has a lot to recommend: Portance given the U.S. Mpine Corps in re· convicted of raplna bis fresh faced, eager. eternally cent years in alliance strategy of bringing ln wire. Daniel W Mor· youthful. Almost in focus. too. hard·hitting reinforcements to repel any at· rlson. a.; received no ad· Turned Down MONTEREY CAP> -The financially secure Monterey Peninsula Airport District has turned down its assigned $75,000 share or local property taxes for 1978-79. tack by Soviet troops ln Europe. ditional sentence on a related kidnapping con. The Marines for more than a ~eration ·ct· ed P ifi m--Vl l&D. . baveconcentrat onthe ac tcreaovu-, Morrison and his (Among th~ U.S. contingent will be selected aviation units from the reserve MAG·46 at MCAS, El Toro. J former wife. Rosita, had been separated for six moo.lbs at ~ lime. NATIONAL • MADISON, Wis. (AP) -Florists will love it. State le1lslator1 have decided to ••&rd merttorious state agen- cy otnetals witb rose&. And to carry the s1m· bollsm one step furtber. thOH department beads wboae performance is · c~naldered below par could ftnd ragweed in thelr mallbous. IBN. DAVID Berter. D·Mllweulcee. and Rep. William Rote'l'a, fl·· neated tbe award to apotllabt staie_.,encia' superior perfot'mances and "just plain si'Uy ideas." ··we intend to periodically send roses to ageney heads qr "m ployees wbo ha~e eon~ above and beyond their normal te9ponsibillties in order to help ta ~ve public complaints or make the bureaucracy more publicly accountable." Bet1er aald. .. HOWEVER . I Jhould add that we have sent a staff member oul with ~ gun· ny sack with instruc- tions lo fill it run of rafweed... Rogers said. · · 1 the past is any in· dacataon of tbe future. it could be a long, hard winier.·· They add~ that they are paying for the ros~ out of their own poetets. As for tb4' ragweed. tbe)l ·'will pay market price.·' they said. Suit Renewed SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -A commercial trout farm's suit for damages from a trailer park because con· taminaup water nowed into a-pond tilling thousands of fish bas been ordered reinstated by the CaJifornia Coun of AppeaJ. J- .N•s-•D-E:-·S_toc_u __ ·B_u_···_s_s _______________________________ S ... Rorts •Movies •Televlslon -..Auglat 14, t878 DAILY PILOT .> .. , •J Allen on Fi1·ing: l'Dl Not Bitter; l'Dl Hu1·t Malavasi Takes Over as Rams Coach ,...._APDlealdee Geo~ A.Un. nonnally an tnlense and nhnated man, loollod and aounded ttred itnd fotlom. "It's an ubeUcvable thins.·· ~ aald. hb voice tralllna off. 'Do you \blnk I tot a fair ebaD.Ce . . two pl"9M!on aamtt?" All~. flnd SWMlay as eoatb <A t.M Loa Aa1elH Rams by team Owi\er C.rroll Rotenbi.om and replaced by u11stant Ray Malavul. said: 0 rm not bttter. I'm .. from 1118 to 18'70. having been fired twice and rehired oacc by Dan Reeves. the Rama' lattegresMtent. AlJen HI he told Rosenbloom 1hat he w11 making a mistake. "I tojd hlm what I have to offer is wbat the llama need." aald AUen. ~. "TMre were several tblnJa be said. that he thoo1bt we wouJdn't wln if I continued as the co,cb. and that I would work better in the framework of an organization where ' and coach, way. In a prepared statement. the Rams ' owner said: .. It ls my feeling that I have made a serious error in Judgment in believing George Allen coul work within our framework. "It has been extremely difficult for him to adjust to a new situation. Unques- tionably he is a fine coach and ad· ministrator. His record speaks for itself. However. I'm certain it's in the best m· terest of aU concerned to make this change al this time." -~-.......... The sudclen and dramatic move came after~ Rams had LOil their first two pre- season contests. the opene r 14·7 to New En1lnnd then 17..0 to San Diego last Satur day "LLEN WAS lllllED just last Fewuary to return to the team that he'd coached "ALL I KNOW is that I did everything in my power. did 1t the way it should be done. dld it my way. We worked hard and were committed to the program we've used suc· cessrully all these years and I could not ~hange that 1f I was to live with myself ... ROSENBLOOM WOULD NOT talk in specifics about the move. but a number of factors apparently were 1nvolved. Some. like the two lackluster exhibition show· in gs, were obvious. others more subtle There had been a certain amount of un· See ALLEN, Page BZ RAMS SWITCH --George Allen I ll•ft 1 wus fired for the third time by the Rams Sunda y. Huntington Beach resa- dent Ray Malavasi replaces him . Allen's "way" was not Rosenbloom·, A~WI ......... SAFE AT SECOND -Seutue·s Craig Re ynolds slides into second base ahead of a throw to Angels second bas<.•man Bobby Grich. Reynolds· double helped the :\1 urii:icrs to a 4·1 victory Sunduy in Seuttl~ · Boston Next 13 Baserunners Produce One Run From AP Dispatches Trailing American League West leader Kansas City by one gam e. the California Ange ls begin preparations for an eight· ga m e homestand against the cream or the American League East. starting Tuesday night with runaway leader Boston. T h e H a los r eturned t o Anaheim following Sunday's 4·1 loss ul SeaUle, a verdict which ke pt California froin pulling into a virtual first place lie with 1l11flfl'b Slat~ AllO_ft ... KMl'Cmtl IClle 8oslOll et Callfonll• 1 ll p.rn. 41Mton •t Calltornl• 1 :25 p.rn. Kansas City in a game which saw the losers waste several Op· portunlties to break it open. Tuesday's duel with Boston is the start of a three-game series with the Red Sox, all 7:30 en- counters. THAT IS FOLLOWED by three eames wJtb the Bal'1more Orioles, then a pair next week against the Yankees tiefore the Halos re-group and take olt for a thrtt~city road trip at Bolton, New York and Toronto. Tuesday's palrln1a on the mound pit Frank Tanana <15-7) for the Angels against Boston's Dennis Eckersley <13-4). fi eld two-run double to s park the Seattle Mariners past the Angels Sunday. "I have to utilize the whole ballfie ld." he said. ''FOR THREE WEEKS there. it was kind of tough, .. Reynolds said. "I was pulling thl• ball too much. Waiting on the ball has been the big di'ferencc over the past couple of weeks ." California collected nint-hits a nd two wa lks o ff R ick Honeycutt. 5-7. but the Angels managed to score only in the first when Lyman Bostock. Don Baylor und Carney Lansford hit cl'.>nsecutlve singles. Although Reynolds and first baseman Dan Meyer. a former Mater Dei High star. m ade er· rors to give the Angels two more base runners, the Seattle de· fense made three double plays to nip budding Angel rallies. REYNOLD S TWICE started twin killings via second ~!l.iseman Julio Cruz. "Julio is s o , s o quick." Reynolds said. "The big thing is quick feet. Julio's really blessed." Reynolds also credite d the coaching of former Nat ional League all-star second baseman Bill Mazeroski with he lping himselr and Cruz. LA on Tre&dmil'.I? By JOHN SEVANO OI IM Delly ~ltet Si.ff It's tough to analyze what th~ Dodgers and Giants proved to each other over the past 12 days. Eight times the two teams met during that stretch. with each side capturing four victories. The Giants earned a split Sun· day a fternoon when they won , 1·6 in 11 innings before 53.096 <51,417 paid> al Dodger Stadium. The win moved the Giants back into sole possession or first place. one game in front of the Dodgers and 1 'h in front of Cin· cinnati What the two clubs actually proved though 1~ neither 1s about to walk away with the Western Division title. "What we did was use up eight games and get nowhere." said pitche r Don Sutton. who started Sunday's game but walked away without a decision. "'It's like running on a treadmill." SUND.\Y'S GA~IE was a de- mora lizing loss of sorts for the DQdgers as twice they fought back from defi cits. only to fall short in the end. T he Giants Jumped to leads of 4·1 and 6-4 and in both cases the Dodgers managed to fight back to tic the contest. Eve n to the bitter end the Dodgers kept their fans on the edge of their scats as trailing by one they got two runners on with one o ut before Ed Halicki came out of the bullpen to snurr the r ally. "THE OUTCOME wasn't what we planned. but from an enter- tainm ent standpo1nt the game deserved a 10," said Sutton. Sutton. who couldn't get past the third inning in San Fran· c1sco. surrendered four runs to the Giants in the second. but that's <1ll. He left the game in the ninth with the score tied at four. Sutton's biggest problem was his control as he walked seven. a career high, and was constantly pitching from the stretch posi· ti on. BUT LEE LACY hit a two-run hom er and Re~Jitie Smith added two others <Nos. 24 and 25 >, to get him off the hook. STINGLEY HAS SOME PAR.4.LYSIS CASTRO VALLEY. Calif. CAP ) -Although gravely in- jured New England P atriots' football player Darryl Stingley 1s in good condition, "There is some degree of paralysis," an Eden hospital spokesman said today. The statem c!nt was in ap- parent cont.radictlon of Sunday's hospital statements that the star wide receiver, hospltaUaed Saturday night after a crusblnC colUsion with another player, was not paralyzed. The statement this mornlnt from Stlngley's sur1eon said, "Darryl Stingley, recoverint from a cervical spine fracture and dblocatioo injury, spent a restful n11bt and remains In good general condJti,m in the In· tensive care unit under close ob· servatton." Both clubs scored twice in the 10th before the Giants pushed across the decider. "We just couldn't contain them." said manager Tommy Lasorda. A major concern to Lasorda Dodflen Slat~ Au GMNt ..-1tAac 11t11 •·JO p.m • JO p.m was the <1ttitude of the Dodgers toward the loss THE WORRYING was pre mature though as the defeat almost took an oppos ite effect on his pl ayers. ''They battled back. You have to give them credit for bouncing back the way they did," said Smith, "but it's just <1 game. that's all. ~·SAN FRANCISCO beat us but they know they·re not the better club." added Lacy. whose home run gave him 10 for the year. the first lime he's reached the double figure plateau in that department ··o eep down they know we're the better club. "A defeat like this will prove to be m otivation a l t o us 1f ..i n y thing ... he adde d . "We played an excellent baseball g ame We played t t mnmgs without an error an<1 we battled the whole game ··E ve r y bo d y contributed See DODGERS. Page 83 A~ ......... CHEERS' FOR SMITH -The Dodgers' Reggie Smith 8l'ls t~ big hand from fans at Dodger Stadium Sunday aft~r belting his second home run of the game ugt1inst the Giants. M eanwhlle, shortstop Craig Reynolds hfll learned the truth of the 11ytn1 that all things come to those who walt. Reynolds &laJ>ped an opposite Fatigue u._n't Stop Mahaffey * * * U.U ...... IA .. ,._. wMAell•,Cf Stoe lletlM,,.llM." , ••• htl.cll. rf • t • 0 .. Ylff,!ll 4010 l.tflll«d, • • 0 2 ' ~t 41 1 0 ~·"·· .... CMlll,M • 0 1 I 0tk11.a >•to -----""I HAftl.8 .. , ..... ,, .. ... , • ••• JOOO A 1 I 1 ,.,. .. ' ' .. ,. • t ' • SUTTON. Mau. <APl - Veteran John Mahaffey was on Cloud Nlne'Wben he arrtved here as the new POA champion. To· day. he's flylng even higher. Aa lf ~ prove his dramatlc come.b•ck for the PGA title was no nuke. Mahaffey made lt two ln o row Sunday, goln1 on a birdie 1pree in the stretch ror a record-amuhlria two-stroke vie· tory ln the S2".ooo meaunt Valle)' C"IOlt Claaalc. •:-ro win two toumamfttU in a row lt Just unbflievab~" the I-foot-I Tnan aald. "I dldill\ t'&ak I bad a cbanct bere beuUM I •• NillJ Und after , wtnnint the PO~ tut week. forcina him to take a double bogey. ''TBE TENDENCY aftu you've won a major cham· .. THAT WAS THE END for plon•hlp Is to have a I tdown, me." the traveUna optomet.rtat and t didn't want that to bap· said. "I Juat let It 1et uway from pen." me on that one hole. Mow ver, l Mehaffey rebound d qultkly bad a lot or opportunltlff. I from the tbree-puu boltY oo bil missed •llht putts for blrdtet ~th hole. Ht ran oft four con· from within l5feet." secutlve birdies, sinklnt putts Of M uhortey w11s saved from one Inch and 12, 2S and f1ve feet. trouble on tho aame bolt when Then, on the next to tut bolt, his folrway~1h0t struck ti speoc Mahaffey cUnc:htd the vletory u tator anct bOUJ'ICCd back Ju t off GU Moraan'1 ftlial hope• were the groen. daahtd. Mor1anl 1t.n1Clc a UM "It saved ml' from a bo1cy. or llmb wltb aa iron 8ho& and &M worae." Mahaffey Hid. "It was ball rOU«I m.o a water Ward, u tremencSQua break ... ) .. I AFTER .LIPPING the cup and taking a bogey on the lGlh 1reen. Mahaffey ~uvcd pur on tbe final t•o boles tor ., four. under 67 and a 72·hole score or 14·under ~70. breuk1n1 the Pleasont Vell y PGA rtcord of. 271 Ht 1ut YHr by R1y PloYd. Morian and Floyd birdied lh lust hole lor a aecond·plact' u, a 272. Mor1an had o closlna 88. Floyd po1ted o 67. bis 13th '°" · aecutlve sub0par round htrt 1lnce his Otst vl•lt In l~. FREE OF INJtJRIE and personul probl ml> which See MAHAff !Y. Pa•e 11 t~ 'I * * * Ouster LOS ANGELES f AP I - R a m s· pla ye r s r eacted in various ways when they learned George Allen had been fired and Ray Malavasi named lo re place him as Los Angeles coach. but they all said it was completely unexpected. "I was really surprised: I was happy with the way things wert" going with George Allen.·· said Los Anjteles quarterback Pal Haden after Ram owner Carroll Rosenbloom .rnnounced the changes Sunday. "We had two bad games. and l feel badly that I didn't play well. l didn't do a good job of directing the offense. maybe that 's why this hap· pened ·'There were probably some things that went on that we don't know about.·· Haden continued. "Coach Allen had more control of his team in Washington smce he was both coach and general m a n<1 ge r . <Jnd I know Mr Rosenbloom believes in .a clear chain of command . maybt' that was the problem.·· "IT W.\S A SHOCK." s a.id of. fe ns1ve tackle Doug Fra nce. ·'The man <Rosenbloom 1 just wants a Super Bowl :tnd we waat . it. too. and if this is the best move. then we're for 1t." , "We pluyed bad in those two · pa m es." France said of the 14·7 loss to New England a week I a go and Inst Saturday ·s 17-0 toss to San Di ego in preseason con· tests . "It wasn't the coach ·s fault. Wt• lost fivt• preseason games last year " Linebacker Isiah Robertson. who had walked out of camp t•urlier and was used s pa ringly by Allen in the two preseason losses. said he thoujthl 1t was a "gre:Jt move." add1ng that he didn't fi~ure to be with the team much longer if Allen stayed. ··1 TIDNK IT SOLVES one or two problems thut we wertt hav- ing." Robert~on smd. ..People wer<' hav1ng troublt-adjusting to the system. and now we'll go back to tbt> system wtt·vt> used for the last five years "Georl!e walked Into an un· comfortable . unfortuna te situa- tion here... Robe rtson added. "Some of tht-players had personal problems. and a new system with a demanding coach did not help the problems · "Ray Malavasl is a gre"t coach. and now we're looking for a greut football season. Ce«gtt Allen had his system thut·s worked other places. und 1 wtsh him a lot of luck. but now I f~l we're a California team again.•· Walton to Be A Warrior? SAN FRANCISCO <AP' -BllJ Walton has decided he wants to play basketball for the Golcien State Warrior!', uccording to u publlahed report. The San Francisco ChronJde said in today's edltlon that tile NBA's Most Va luable Play~r ;: preferred the Warriors over j! other teams because he Hked the , Bay area, Lhe team, it.a rans @cl 11 manaaement 1J Other teums. 1ncludlng tbe • New York Knlcks. ri!portedly ti· a fered Walton more mone1· ¥ , th~ Warrtor~ otc r was lat. ·: cnouah. the Cbronlcle said. : i Thl' newspaper suld W.an19fs exccutt\ttt S~otty Sllrltna tn6\ ! Walton In Ponland Salurd&a.Y night ind confirmed &hat. l)t wanted to play for Golden~- The paper also quoc.ed J•ok ~t. tbt f!Orls acUvltt, aulblw and Wallor\ s friend and advt'a*~ H ftaytna. ··Bill would like .. piny for the Warriors." : • Tlte t-:foot·ll center ltd t,!\e Portlold Trall Blaaera to \fie luau• dlam;lOnihlp ln 1971-'17~ \ JIZ DAILY PILOT ttllere Is It? :\lilw~iukee Bn.•wl•r second baseman Jim Gantner loses his cap. glus!:>t.'S and the ball after falling ~hile going for .1 popup. First basemun D~n Money retneved the. ball th<lt "as htt b~ Boston's Bill Hobson. Boston won m 10 innings. ~-:3. al Ft•nway P<irk. F,....P,..eBJ New Irons Bight Cure For Rankin THAT IS A FAR CRY from tbe Sl!i0,734 she collected in 1976 or the $122,890 earned last year. "I had some changes made in MAHAFFEY WIN~ AGAIN my old irons exactly one year ~ • • • ago.'' explained the s-root-3'h, plagued hlm ror more than two years. Ma harrey. who just turned 30. added $45,000 to the SS0.000 banked for the PGA <'hampionshtp. Just one year ago. he failed to make the half· "'ay cut at Pleasant Va lley. Led by Mahaffey. the pros HO-pounder. "It was right after W h t Cl · this same tournament. head for the estc es er ass1c "Once the work was complet· in Rye . N.Y .• tbts week. ed 1 t ' d ·L 1 A ltho•gh weary. M abaHey · never ~ues tone 1 as- looms as the man to beat. He sumed the clubs were the same. •n to become a nother Ben Things bad fotten so bad. wan.., h however. that had to make a H.ogan,. a .fel~ow T~xan w o h nge and l asked for a new Morgan and Floyd collected $20,812 apiece for their runnerup tie. Mark Hayes, the third-round fE'ader , shot a final-round 74, finishing in a tie for fourth with Bruce Lietzke. Bob Shearer and :\tiller Barber at 276 d1dn 'l wm his first ma,Jor tourna-., c ~ ment until aft.er he was 30. se.:They arrived in time for the F1na11NC11nv_.nolftdmoMyur111nos1n 1i.. pro-am here on \Yednesday. I f.\~:.s.~~~·,~~~ Goll C•m1' •• •1>e P••·11• didn't know what they weighed John Men.tt•v,s.u.ooo 11 .. ~1 .. 1-110 and I didn't want to know. I just Rey Floyd, Ull.812 •1 .... 10-61-111 played." I Gil Moroen. '20.112 70-67~n 1 Miller 8•rbtt. M.775 66-11·1.,..._27, Grossmont Coaches Quit LA MESA I AP 1 G rossmont Hi~h School D1str1cl officials say 42 of 90 fall sparts coaches have res igned m a dispute over in- creased workloa ds and the school board's refusal to re- i ns l at e three coaches who earlter resigned or were fired. Lee Marquand. director or teaching ~rsonncl ror the nine· school district, suid more res· 1~n.1t1ons are expected when other teachers come back from vacations. A pay package involving couching stipends and a n in· creased workday for coaches had been negotiall?d but the talks fell through whe n the school board decided last week against reinstating three former football coaches to their posi- tions. The three had earlier resigned or were fired over the board's decision to require coaches to teach five periods a day instead ur four. The coaches had argued •hat they were being forced to ~arry an mcreased workload w1tbout a corresponding in- crease m pay Bruce Leitzke, Ml,175 "·11-70-67-2n ll;)b Snorer. SI.TH .,.71...,.._27• Mark Heyes, s&.ns •1 ....... 1._21. Mike McCullOuQll, S4,6SO 10..1.n..._211 Bob GllOlf. S.S,62S 70-6s-7~711 Lanny W-lns, '5,615 11·1~10-61-27• Crelil Sracller S.U2S •"'67·71·10-21' Andy 8Hn, M,O'IS ... 70-6'-71-2" Joe 1nmM1, '4.otS n_......10-m Don BIK. $.t,otS ... 10-61·1J-2" O<ahem ~ M,OtS 71-6So*1S-21' Tom ICIM. MPH n .. 61Mf-?1't Oave Stodrton, U , ISO 1H'-61......_ PllllHwocll.U.UO 7) ....... -Jelt Mllcllell,$3,UO 1' ...... 290 a-... c•. u.m n-11-10*-a1 ,..,., ~s. u.m 74*,..._211 AM Curl, u.m 70-70*1>-2tl Ed S.bo, U.223 ll......_1J-211 AOfl strecll. u,m 1~1o..e.n--m 0rv111e ,,,_.,, u,m ,,..._~,,_,., Alan Tec>te. Sl..ff' , .. 11 .... n--212 8111 R_.-s, '1-"' ,...._71.7.,_711 Geor99 Bums, $1,5'96 ... 70-10-1)-212 LH ElcM1. '1.596 1~n.n-212 8e<1 Cr•-· s 1.~ .._13-71·1'-211 Hele Irwin. SUM 71·7~71·10-ttl Jolln Schroedlltr, $1,59& 12 .... 1&-71-217 ~oe Arc:r«, Sl.190 11-6 .. n-.t-2'3 Pat F1tn1~s1.190 1o..t-n-n-m Lou Gr ahem, S1, 190 71.n...,.11-2t3 ~ rewe11. ''·''° 11.1~1~n-w BOblly W-lns, \1,190 70-67·71..,_2«1 Bob Z•nd«. Sl,190 72·12·70...-2tJ Ycaza Will Ride DEL MAR-Manuel Ycaza. a member or horse racinf's hall of fame. will come out o retire- ment to compete Aug. 23 when he rides in Del Ma r's sixth Rocking Ch air Derby. Ycaza, who retired in 1971 after a saddle career during which he pilote d many of America's finest st akes horses to victory. will face six other former star jockeys in the 5"'2- furlong betless exhibition. RANKIN, WINLESS this season aft.er five victories last year . had such horrible show- ings as 53rd in the US Open, 49th in the Orange Blossom Classic at St. PeteTSburg and «th in the Sun Star Classic al Los Angeles. ''The changes I had made with the· old clubs dealt with weight, not the grooves or anything like that." conUnued Rankin, now in her 17th year on the tour. "The clubs never felt bad. but the con- sis tency wasn't there . Something had to be done." "My back is all right." was the reply of the St. Louis native who was regarded as one or the most consistent players on the tour. "I don't have the mobility I once had." 11 .... -,o.n-m 1S-1U1·~J.IS n.11.n.~ .. ,,.~~ 1 .. 1>~ 1 .. 11.~-71.71.n.1._m n-ro.1 ... n-290 7 .. 1., .... 10-2'1 1Hf.1S-10-1'1 n-1w ..._1._,., n.1 .. 1•n-m 73-THS-72-1'2 1 ... 1 .. 11>-n-m '1·1 ... 15-1._2'2 1).~7N-2ft 1 ... n.n.n-m 1 .. 1 .. 103-2'3 11-71·15-1t-194 77-11-J•n-2'4 1 ... ,,.,~ J>.1>1'"15--<2t4 J ..... &s- PUSIMT •.. Baseball Standings "GAS SAVERS" MERCURY ZEPHYR AT YIAI. ... DISCOUNTS +Pl.US+ .............. ., BIKE Wiit..., ~"·--=· .. ·-· \MElllC.\N LEAGUE West Dtvl1lon Kansas City Angels Oakland Texas Minnesota Chicago Seattle W L Pet. GB 63 51 .SS3 65 SS .542 1 s1 60 .504 s~ 57 57 .500 6 St 65 .440 13 47 68 .409 161~ 44 75 .370 211~ East DlvlslOD Boston New York Detroit Milwaukee Baltimore Cleveland Toronto 74 42 .638 65 51 .560 9 63 51 .553 10 62 52 .544 11 63 ~ .543 11 52 63 .452 21"" 46 70 .397 28 ......,-.sc.w S.etll•• ......... , Tuas W. ~end t ·S Toronto), C-OIY 2 Ml~o>tOellltnd 1-1 aa111m-a, IMw Yorio o i. ,,,,., ... ., ••'" ~-:::~ Ml!WellltH S C10 1"""'911 o.trolt 10. Ollc.aet t TMoy'to-t MllwOlikH (SOftn'°" 1Wl al aotlCMI llff 'O:!w" YOt1< ITl4row ~)at 8elllrnore (Pal~ ··~~~ (Holly CMll et Cttvellftd C"'lltOll .. ~.~as CltV IGMt 13'.JI '1 Oetroft CWllC*I M l. n ClllCOOO latr?IOI M l al Tt-CJtnlllM ,.,I." OlllYO--~ N.\TION4'L LEAGUE Wfft Dlvl1lo11 San Francisco Dodgen Clnclnnali San Di~o Houston Atlanta W L Pet. GB 69 49 .585 88 50 .576 1 67 so .S73 1'-2 60 58 .sos 9 54 61 .470 13"'J 54 62 .466 14 East Dhrllloa Phlladelphlll 63 Sl .553 Chicago , 59 56 .513 4L".l Montreal 56 62 .475 9 Pittsburgh 52 61 .460 10'" New York 48 69 .410 16~ Sl. Louis 48 69 .410 16~ ......,..._.. "" ""llldtot?, .,......... (11 lrWllf'IOll Pltbl:lutlllf,"9111 ....... J $1. l.tult 6, MIW Ycwti 1 Cllk ... 2. MDftlnel I NOllSNll a,. At!MllO 0 5.ii D .... >. ~12 T.-r'10- Allanta tM.Wtr..Sl M OllCOOo c•-.m ~,, CIMiftMll (MleM4I >1 .. Pl~ (~ H ),11 .._,.,.. IOI-Ml '1 St. Lou11 I'-" .. m. " Onty~-led Orenge County'• Olde1t Lln.cotn·Mtrcury Oeeltr1hip • Dozens To Choose From • Bike With Every Zephyr DCm SHm ~FROM ROD LAVER 9'j •LUISTIUflO IV /411 JOl'tSON Connors TriUDlphs From AP Dispatches INDIANAPOLIS -Jimmy Connors, a peren· niaJ championship contender. and unknown Dana Gilbert. who hopes to become one, have captured individual honors ln the 68tb U.S. Open Clay Court Tennis Championships. Connon, who bas won 30 of 34 matches in seven tournament appearances here, defeated seventh-seeded Jose Higueras of Spain 7-S, 6-1 in the title match. GUbert. an 18-year-old UCLA student. won the women's crown by defeating ArgenUna's Viviana Gonzale-z, 6-2, 6-3. AMe Defeat• £tdz DUBLIN. Ohio -Bob Lut.a of San Clemente won a semifinal m atch by forcing bis opponent in· to malting errors, but he couldn't repeat the tactic against Arthur Ashe in the finals of a $75,000 pro- fessional tennis tournament Sunday. Ashe, who was third seeded, defeated fifth. seeded Lutz6·3, 6-4 at Muirfleld Village. In doubles finals, Austr'allans Colin Dibley and Bob GUtinan defeated Elliot Teltscher and Mex· ico's Marcelo Lara 6-2, 6·3. Oranges To Face Apples Deep Sea Fish Report MEWPO•T CO•••Y '•I 2518'IOMn! •tlonltlll. ,., -bni, 24 rodt CM, S .... llMl, 01 ~ 2't ......... DA.NA WMAtl" -Jn ..-n: "1 _... ..... flWT9NN .... '°"''°' l Mllflut. 20$ rodl eof.1S1 mec'Um. MAL. e«AOI -1tO M191ert: 1,800 rocll C41C1, to0 lnK~I, IS '•llCO t..n, 1S '*1'1NN, S4 Miid "'._ ..... -Mt ~: 1l tloftlto, l• Mfld Mn. .. lllllM. SS l'OCll CM , 1J mKk-'· LOMG alACM ta•ll'llt•t P i eri -SI •ntl•••: 11 ••nd tltH. " <•llCo bH•. "° me<Mrwl •• °""'" WllMfl -14' a ....... ,, ..0 INl'Hcuda, UI celko NH, 45 Miid bau. I ~llbvl, •S l"OCll cod. so mac11en1. MOaltO MT c.,.._ ........_, - M MOien: II recll CM,. • rH IMP- -, I l>lut IMll&, JO yettow beM. 4 llllt cod. CV"-" L411111111tl 112 411191tn: ,. llftt C*I, ''°'' --Old. GOLF I TENNIS WI ... 7 J DATSUM IJOO 4 speed ttans. (081Ql'Ml 71 HOteA CIV.C Automatic trans.. $tereo. (685MYMl e 12178 'HOME 142-4435 74MAJDA IX4WAeOM 4 speed tr.na.. air cond. roof rack. (111798) 12378 76~ACMC Au to ma tic trans (511PUU) '2478 74 TOYOfA CILICA 5 a peed trans.. AM/FM radio. {421KY0) 12678 .,. POaClll JMC x 1n ·1 condition . Aed wlorlg1nel black intenor lthr. (838PKE) 7t'IWMIS Great shaPe. C835MWHJ 1 4995 76TOYOfA COIOUA DILUXf 4 speed trans .. air cond • AMIFM stereo. mags (078RFM) '2878 PHONE 142-4435 76 DATSUMl.210 4 door. automatic trans (719250) '2978 76DATSUN1-ltO Fastback. 4 speed trans (256POX) '2978 77 DATSUN F-10 5 speed tnlntl .• air cond (279SXI) 13978 74 CMfYY Va-TOH S~PtCXUr Automatic trans., Power stee·ri ng, • ., cond (115521) '3578 76FOID 4•4 fUl1'SIDI PtaW Heavy duty camper equipment (885779) '" CMlllTMAS TIA.I 'ICMN AT .•. HARBOUR VOLKSWAGEN 18711 BEACH BLVD. 10UI ,.,.. DIALm .. H&ICT'MTOM llACM MC.. .... ro ....... • ..... BASEBALL /FOOTBALL A cap.ut• Aepott From the Wortd of lporta ........ _.J DODGERS • • • 1omethlna nnd that's going to be the.• dtfft•rence going down the strt.'lch The stretch hus always bt·~n touah and the G urnb don 'l know whDt lt's llke. "You huve to wunt lo win and bt• excited about winning, and this club la. l would'have to give u:s the edge on our experience 1tlone." said Lucy. Conversely. what advantage the Dodgers may have in ex- perience. the Giants are sub· 1Ulullng with Inspiration. desire trnd confidence. M!>ndmy, Aug1.111t 14, 1918 OAJL Y PILOT 83 Huskies May Be Tougher 18 Starters Retwn for Rose Bmd Champions SEATTLE <AP> -Hey. Don Jam es. what's It going to take to get your Washington Huskies to the ftose Bowl again this season? "No question." says James. college football's national Coach of the Year in 1977, "we've got to get to be a better team early. We can't wall until the fifth game this year." Last rail. the Huskies were wondering what In the name of COUEGE CRJD PREVIEW second-ranked Crimson Tide. "I don 't think e1 thn Washington or UCLA would pre- fer this game for an opener." said James. "The team that wtns it will be ln the driver's seat. They'll be going into a period of three or four weeks of non-conlereoce games that'll be like the pros' exhibitlon season. A victory would put you one ubead of eveeybody once the conference race really begins. "THE GIANTS HAVE to reel confident.·' acknowledged Smatb. "but in the long run l like our position. We just have to go out and do what we're capable or doing ·· ~~.:...:;..~1-~~nutttntmM1~nir~e~e~d~.~~~~--~~~~~-"Tbe Giants are in a fantasy competitive foot a was wrong "THE TEAM THAT loses is going to need some help from the other teams along the way. The danger comes in making it a make-or·break situation. You f--11"JH'1~· ~t and HY· 'Hey. it· s a II or oothing '." .. ~ ........... DIANA NYAD STARTS SWIM FROM CUBA TO FLORIDA. Gruelling I 03-mile Swim Begins for Diana Nyad .£.rom... il. DiJp.1tches ORTEJASO. Cuba -American marathon swimmer Diana Nyad struggled with waves and fatigue today and completed more than one-fourth of her daring 103-mile swim from Cuba to the Florida Keys. "The swimmer 's still in the water and is doing fine." a Coast GuaTd spokesman said at mid-morning. · The spokesman. who asked not to be identified. said the Coast Guard was in radio contact with Nyad's support boat. Follow The Sun, ~nd confirmed she was about 50 miles west of Havana. The spokesman said another boat in the rtolilla , the Proud Mary, was taking on a small amount of water this morning but was in no danger beeause a Coast Guard airplane dropped a large pump to it. "The size of the waves is tbe only thing that could de· feat that girl." Ken Gundersen. the swimmer's operations manager. said Sunday. Three-foot waves greeted Nyad at 2:05 p.m. EDT Sun- day as she peeled down to two swimsuits, told her crew. "I guess I'll see you all in 21Jl days," and stepped into the water about SO miles west of Havana. From there, she faced a 00-hour ordeal of exhaustion. seasickness and hallucination. hoping for landfatl somewhere in the chain of flat islands that curl southwest fTom the tip or Florida. If she sueceeds. she will have made the longest open-water swim on rttord. Triria 1. Of the world records set tn the 1968 Olympics in Mexico City. how m any still stand? 2. What hapJM'ned to the Seattle Pilots of the American Leagu~? QMOI~ ot tlw Dat1 Arter Seattle Slew captured an allowance Tuce at Saratoga . .£0-0wner Dr. James Hill said of the Triple Crown winner: "I think that Slew was as sharp as he's ever been." in fact. he said he was so confident of victory thut ··we installed Slew with a rear view mirror." ~llftre hi Sperl.• ••• MOTOR SPORTS -The Australian Grand Prix was staged in two parts Sunday and Sweden's Ronnie Peterson was the winner. Peterson was leading when he ran off the rain soaked track, causing officials to halt the race for an hour. With rain tires. he started first i and went on to win his loth Grand Prix , event . . . A. J. Foyt survived a col· Jision and intense beat to capture the .U S. Auto Club's stock car race at Milwaukee Sunday over Joe Ruttman, brother ronner Indy or winneT Troy RuUman ... John WllUams, one of Bri· tain's top motorcycle road racers. died in a hospital after a high-speed crash ln the Ulster Grnnd Prix Sunday in Belfast. Northern Ireland. A.J.POYT HORSE RACING -Jockey Lafnt Plncay guided heavily favored Effervescing to a narrow victory in the £ddie Read Handicap Sunday at Del Mar. Rider Darrel McUargue had four victories for the day. BASEBALL -San Diego made It three out of four over the Cincinnati Reds as Dave Winfield and Oscar ~amble eacb bad two bits and both drove iit a run ln the Pa<tres' three-run first inning to pace a 3·2 triumph ... Bob Balley raced home from second base on a forceout in the lot.h inning1to give Toronto a 3-2 victory over the Kansas City Royals . . . The Oakland A 's dropped both ends of a doubleheader agains the Minnesota Twins. CoTona del Mar High product Mall Keoagb was the' losin& pitcher in the opener. 3-1. as he gave up 12 bits and two walks in eigllt innings. Keough struck out six. His record ts now 7-10 _. . . . Dave Parker's three-run homer In the t.blrd iMJne triggered the Pittsburgh Pirates to a 7.3 vle\ory over Philadelphia, snapping a four.game winning strtak for the Phillies . . . Carlton Fisk'• bases-loaded 1r°"nder past third base in the 10th inning scored Jerry &ea1 and gave the Boston Red Sox a 14-3 victory over the Mll~aukee Brewers. It dropped Milwaukee 11 games off di• pace ..• Rain kUled ibe New York Yankees as a bea\)' rainstorm on an already soaked field wiped 011t a five~ New York rally tn the seventh lnnlnc and 1ave the Baltimore Orioles a 3.0 victory . . . Marty Bynrom, 11 20·)'•ar-old rlg,ht·bander for tbe PCl'lnsula Pilots, 11 PhlUdelpbla PtjllUes farm team, pitched a perfect 1ame to ltkd his team to a 3·0 win over Winston.Salem In the Stnal• A Carolina Lea1ue. Bystrom threw 89 pitches, 67 of them 'trikes .... ~ T•lftUie• ailEO: Tonllht -llorse Raclnt -:-Del Mar Featllrt Race. S: • KJEV (810). TV: oni1hl -Baseball -ClDclnntU al Pttt1bur1b. e:JO. 17 Cdf:layed). ~-1Nr•aeTi'teN \\Orld. They're JUSt as surprised with them after losing three of us everyone else as to where their first four games. "We were they are so everything they do 1·3 and we expected to be no less from here on out bas to be a than 3-1." James recalled. plus SU ODEN LY, 841 the pieces "This win won't do anything to fell into place. just in lime for change an attitude they already the Pacijic-8 Conference race. have. They've got nothing to lose Waihing{on won six of its last anymore. they'll just play each seven games to capture the game loose and easy·" Pac-8 title and proceeded to baf- And how will this loss affect rte Big Ten Conference rooters the Dodgers? with a 27·20 upset victory over Washington returns 18 starters from last year's junior dom-· lnated 8·4 team. The most visible of the four jobs left va· cant is quarterback. where War- ren Moon earned co-Paclfic·8 Conference and Rose Bowl Most Valuable Player awards last season. The No. 1 candidate for the job is senior Duane Akina, Moon's backup the past two seasons. Akina Is being pus hed by sophomore redsblrt Tom Flick "On a normal ball club a loss Michigan in their first Rose like this might affect them, but Bowl appearance In 14 years. not ours. You can check us The triumph at Pasadena tomorrow and you won't know earned Washington 10th place- whether "we won or lost. Tbat's kl last season's final Associated DON JAMES and junior college transfer Tom Porras. None of the three. however. has played a complete major college game. just the make-up of our tea~ Press college poll. LOSAM<f:ELl'.S • The Huskies "can't wait until SAN l'llANQSCO •ru1 the fifth game" to get going this ::'!;~'u : : ~ : season for a couple or reasons. of three teams James expects to challenge for the new Pacific-10 Conference championship. The other two are Washington and Southern Cal. SENIOR TOM TENURE is the top candidate to replace second team All-America center BlruT Bush. Non-letterman junios Chris Unnin is in line to fill the gap created by the loss to graduation of All....Coa-s-t de- fensive tack.le Dave Browning. R.Smltll, rf • 2 l 1 M.cllocl< 20 Owyer cl Herndon cf c1..-.,r1 McC.Owy, lb LeMH1er.u Ev•nS, Jb Wlttttle+d ... AMe~,H hMI, lb T•m~c M1n1onp Cur1li p H•ll<kl p MonlefuKo. p Wllll•msp H.Crul pn Lnellep Moltltl P Hille ....... s 1 0 0 4 I 2 J I I I 0 4 0, J '0 1 I I I 0 0 sooo 6 0 I 0 • I 1 0 0 1 0 0 7 I 0 0 0000 0000 0000 I 0 0 0 0000 I 0 I I • 0 0 0 0000 I 0 I 1 ~~~.pr ~ ~ ~: FIRST, THEY OPEN with a cwwy, 1b • l > o nationally-televised game at Secondly. the Huskies fifth game this year •s against Alabama, in SeaUle. '1'bey're definitely-going to be lavored," said James or last season's Uc:y, itt 4 1 1 2 Husky Stadium a0 ainst UCLA. ~_R~~i B o.v.11111 •• .,.. 1 1 1 o The only conference team to ~t HovQI>, P o 0 0 0 Washington last season and one 0.8Me<, pfl I 0 0 0 ~y,11 JOIO 0.lft. c 2 0 0 0 F~n.c 3 000 S~cton. p l 0 0 O Mol•,P" I 0 0 0 Font .... p o O O O A-.,,p 0 000 Del Mar Results Baseball Leaders Lope\ ?ti 1 0 I I , .... II IEll 99 SO 4 • 0 s 0 0 0 0 0 0 I J 0 0 0 0 1 1 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 SAN PllANCISCO MonltfUKO • ..,, • Willl•mi '1 1 Uvelle 3i., 3 MOHlll '1 0 Minion "' J C~IS IW,4-11 ., I H•llcltl i., 0 fl'W....., 11'91efu.My ..... ti1141) F tr•I r•ce -ln\1 d e Oe•I IMCH.,0 .. 1. aeo. JIO, J.00, Aeb'\ PromlH ISr>oeme~erl, J.20, 110, Tr•velln' JKll IPlnc:•yl, l .0 Second •-ICftftY• IOI.ii, 10.40. • oo. >.OO; Mt.-lMcc..rron1, J to. 2 60, Cl•lll of Ari!)• IM<H••ouel, l 40. 52 O•llY Double 11·11 Hid SS 60 Tll l rd r•c e -Uncle J i m 1111\<H•rouel. II 00, • 20, J.IO; lnit•nt Polley ITorol, • oo, loo. u1·, hi~ I P'l"c•yl, l 40. Sl E•.ct. , .. ,. !Miid us so AMaltlCMI UIAOUE BATTING 1275 et Mlll -C..ew. Min, .J30; II. Oii_., Tex, .J26; Alce, Bt.n, .J20; O. llntt, KC. .l .. ; Piiwll•. )10 ltl.IHS -Lel'tore, [)et, '1; Rice, Bwi. 1.s; .. .,._, c.1, n ; Hhle, Mii. 13; Tl>OrntGft, Oe, n. RUNS BATTED IN -Rice, Bin, ~; !il•ub, Oet, .S; Hl$1e, Mii. 83; J Tr>ompM>n, Oet<. ti;~. Cle, "· HITS-Rice. 8sn, IS~; C•rew, Min, 1•; s.-, Oet, 1JT; 1.AFlore, Del, 1Jt; ~.HY, 13'. DOUBLES -G. llrett. KC, ll; FISll, Bt.n, JO; E. Murr•y, a.I, 21. McltH, KC. 2'; OeClncft, e.t. u. Ford, Min. 2S. Clll, 71; S. Henci.non. NY. ••• Fosttr; Cln ... ; G.-1ti.y, O n,"· •· Snlltll, LA,61. RUNS BATTED IN -FM!tt. On. 11; Cl•rll, SF, 13; o-wt. LA, 7': 91. s ... 1111, LA, 14; LwlMlll, Piil. 1S; Wlft-tleld. SO, IS. HITS -Row, Cln, 150; 9-•, Piii, 14J, C.tlell, Hin, 13'; Gflffo, O n. l>t; 0-Y. LA, I .. DOUBLES -ROM, Cln, 11. Sim· mof\\, SIL, lJ; ,.....,, MU, l1; Cl•rk, !iF,ll; H-,Htn,:rt. TIHPLE\ -Rlcll.,lh, SO. •; HerndOn, St<, •; lt•nclle, NY. 1: hmplelOI\, SlL..1. Gr'"-y,Qn, I. PUBLIC NOTICE ....... PICT1Tt0US 9USINl!SS N~ STATl!MllMT Tiie 1011-•no penon1 ••• 001110 blniftftl .s: COURREGES, JJIS F•trvlew Roell,~ Mew, CA.~ COUTURE BOUTIQUES IC•lllornl•I, l31S "•""'•• Ao•d. GoM• MeW. CA. .,.. This -I•~ ti'( e <Of'· por•tlon. COUTURE BOUTIQUES Henrv T. 5eQff'lfrom Pr'ftldeflt .. OWf E..cutlw Officer Thlt I~ WM tiled Wltll tlw c-.tv ci.n d Or-c-1? on Ju- ly "· l'la. ""7US Plltl!llNd Or-. CDnt o.llY PllOI July 14. Jl, ~ '· ••• 19711 LOS AHOl!LIES S..110<1 • 1 • • 1 4 Fourlll r.ce F •lm Ple.n IC,,.p- rn•"I, t 40, 2.40. B•llrln• (Plfl· t •Y I. l .•o, 1 . .0, l't'rr111n L•OY IMcH•rquel, l 40 TRIPLES -Alce, BSf\ I•: Yount. Mii, , • co-it.. KC. , • c.rew. Min, I; 1 Tied Wllll'- HOME RUNS -Lu:dMlll, Ptll, 21; FO'lt«, Clfl, 2': II. ~ LA, IS; O•w-. MU,211; P~. l'tlll. 20. 1-·---------- Fonte< .., 1 1 2 1 o ~~ '> I 0 0 0 0 HOUQll IL.W I 1 1 I I 0 0 S•ve -H•liCkl 111 T-J .. A -Sl.•11 * 0000•• MOTaS-n. Oodlltn ........ off· 0.Y IOdaY IMforw -"" • tt>r_..ame _.,. wltll tM PN~ Pflllllff. ~tor IN Mflft -Da110 Reu 111-71 "' OiCk R\1111...,. 11~1. eoo '#l4dl 1....01 ~ s ..... c.nton 111-111 •lld Bur1 Hooton 112 .. I "'· uny Ol<lst-1 .. 111°"R...oy1.An:ll 1 ... 11 ••• T11rM .. ,_ w111 ~ televlMd on,,...-trip -trom Piii~• on T """6eY, -YOrll on SunclaY ,_., on a..n- "•' 111, ~Mont,...lon-.0.Y ICMnnel 11 •• Tiie lo<lr-o-mt -ies wllll Ille Gl•l'lt• orew <1 w-111911 .nencs.nce of 707.510 few •n ·--of Sl,tn. Wlllcll Is •IM>• l\lilfl In Ille m•ton lll<s yur. For Ille-· llw 0od9ers ••• •ver-ot"9 '1,:»I. .\Vdl Herrera Be Traded To Buffalo? THOUSAND OAKS <AP I The order finally arrived from Dallas Cowboy Coach Tom Lan· dry. Trade Efren Herrera. The field goal specialist was embroiled ln a contract dispute with the Cowboys and failed to r e port to camp with other veterans. "l can't say right now who we are talking with." sald Cowboy personnel director Gil Brandt. "All I can say is that I'm active· ly seeking a trade." Brandt also confirmed that he had increased the club's con- tract offer last week and Her- rera. too, had compromised. However. the kicker ultimately rejected the proposal. Asked about rumors of Her- Flflll rac.-Gr.,. &rlu ICMP- ,,...nl. S 00, J.00, UO " Twlnkh"9 IMcC•rronl, 4 IO, • 60. TellerMr IM<H•r-1, JAG. u e~ IS.11 ~dl7.SO. Sl1tll r.c•-H•w•ll''\ P ride ~~1~~~~t:•11M.'.:!i. >,~2°0, Js ~:; E""IC• Mvllls lc:.mp.\I, 1• 20 S •venl" r•c• -c1111oau1n IMCH.rouel. l '°· 1.40. 1 40. O•D•<1lll•11 I Plnc•v I, > oo. l 00; GnNm HHoneY IMefWll. • 40 U E .. ct• IS.JI CMllOUl.SO E19fll" r..:e-EflervnclnQ IP•"· <•Yl.1 J.40, 7 40, 210; THI ITorol. 3 Ou, 2 .40. 8yw•yotc ll l<•OO tCul41Mde)1,.0 Nini" r•<t' J•nlcn Gotc11 .. I Toro). S.20, l.40, 2 60. OO·MY M1Jry ISlloem•i..rl, UO, 3.~.t SllCS. Moun 1 .. n IPlt>Cl(I. 160 UQ-OIMtU•llfled from 1\1 -Pl•<.cl 21\d. u e .. ct• U-31 P•ld P• 00. AttHIO..nc" n .•10 Physicals Set AtEI Toro Physicals for all boys attendln~ El Toro High School are scheduled for Tuesday at 1 p.m. In the coaches' office on the school campus. A fee of $10 is required for the examination. Anyone missing on Tuesday will have to ob- tain his physical through a private physician. HOME RUNS -Rice. Bt11, ll; G Tl>om•'· Mil, 17; Hl•I•. Mii. 1•; .. ,._,CM, 24: Ttlomlon, Oe, n STOLEN 9ASES -uAore, 0... ~: 01-. a.. '1; J . erw.. s.. .. ••: Wiii•, Tea,•:W~KC,5'. PITOHING Ctl O.cltlonsl-~ldry. NY • ..,_z. 1•; Gun, KC. 10·1, 2.SS: O.le, KC, IJ•J, 1 71, Ecllerstey, 8SA, 13-', J.31; Biii· lnoMm. o.t. 12·.S. 1.63, Torm. asn, 1• ... J.M: A-. SN ..... 3.21; T-u, CM, 1W, ..... J.11. STRIKEOUTS -• .,..._ c.I, I .. ; Guidry, NY, 112; Fl-. a.t, US; L90f'l•rd, ICC. IU, U-...od. Tor, IOI. NATIONAL LJAOUI! 8A TTIHG ltlS •t INISI -Bur· r~lls, All, .Jl7; Rose, Cfn, .Jll, M4M!IO<k, SF •. '1111; eow.. PN, .>OS; Whllfleld, SF, .30S. RUNS -A-, 011, IO; Oe .-WS, STOl.EN BASES ---· PQll, PUBUC NOT,lCE •S. ~LA. JI; Al(M.rctl, SO. 31; a..----------0 5"'11 ... 50, J1; o. MadclOll, Pftl, 2'. PITCHING Ill D•<l•lon•• -..-in, Oft, •z. 2.92; a1 .... SF, t•S. t.1'; MtGf"-. PN. W. 1~. Pern. SO. ti·S, a. 15; MotlMfulco, SF. ~. 1.11; 1tooers, Mu. u .1, 2.u , 0'1n11tey, IWI, 1 ... J,JI, 0 . .._,., Oii. 1-4. l.1L STRIKEOUTS -RIC,..rd. Hiii. 72'; P. Ni.111'" All, 111; S..-, Clft, :~: Mont~. St<. l>t, atw, St<. Pro Soccer N.rftl~S--Y ... A .... rl<M' 0111 .. Af•O"""""" l'I. Le·--•. Oet,,,.I l 100 ....... le« ........ tnclla<!~lsJ. C-tkllC I Ptcnnous •UMNUS ~STATWMaJfT Tiie~--.. -..-, • __ , 1tun1NO ICOllNl!R, ICLOTZ'S, tJ1l9 Otha tit. w..tmtim.r, c.. ~ Dellllls H. KIGU. 10'61 De 0,,... Or .. Wffb•* .. '· Ga...., ™•._..._.Is_.., Dy ... ift- dlvlclUal. De"'*H.l(lab Tith .,...,,..,. -flied Wltil .... Olluntv CMttl d Or-COuflt1I on JUiy 71, 1'11. l'fMJ1I f'WllSl\9d Or.,ge O»st Delly Piiot .My 31, Auo. I, I•. JI, 1'71 2111·11 PUBUC NOTICE . rera going to Buffalo. Brandt added. "I can't deny we wUl trade him to Buffalo. But there :~t!~:~ ~euZ:~':r~~n;:~~~ 1 ~C-O_S_M_E_T_l~C-S_U_R_G_E_R_Y_ ... f,,_O~R....-~M~E~N~' and we are talking to them, too ... Herrera's agent, Bucky Woy or Dallas, said Sunday oo one had contacted him or his client about a possible trade. ··1 think lt would be foolish for a team to accepl a trade unless they t alked to me or Efren first.'' said Woy. "But knowin1 the Cowboys, they would do this. I know that Buffalo has been very interested ln Efren. And I doubt that the Cowboys would trade him to a aood team llk• Los Anaeles or Oakland, who have aJlo t>een interested." Racquetball Event Laree 500 Playen More than 500 players are ex- pected ror the &econd annu.aJ Joust Rllcquetball Tourn•ment planned Aua. 24·27 at Klna•1 Racquelb11JI Co"rt. ln Wfstmlnattr. Prlu mot\f)' of Sl,000 l1 of· (e1'td to the champion pro· le 1lon1I but dlvlstona are optn for 111 lev ot pl1y For entry lnformatlon u11 the dub •t .... ,. Our cosmetic Sorgery Center understands the special needs of the male. If you Me a ITWl who desires to Improve his appearance, we are now offering free private consultations which explarls the surgery & anesthesia for hai' transplam, face & eyelid &f~, rncxtficatiOn of the nose, chin, ears and ~I peel-also leam ~~t the newer scalp reductk>n for haw loss. Cosmetic Surgery Center Mecllcal Group Dr. E,8. Frankel, Director Member of AMefktn Medial A.uocl.ttion A1~)1led loud Cftitflecl/Quallfled $U'ft0nl Anodet.t OtnNtoloP•• r-----··· ..... -------·• • AIM!wOf "Haft Tr~~-leMI C*itt ¥11IOMllt• I Or. PnMAll, I.,,,.,....,__ ... ~"'"(Wit.' • Del'~MjMle.ctl..,... ' .......... ~ -............. EIClll 16&50 Ventura 8'. No 314 (213) 990•4980 1 •' 1184 la .._. 4322 Wllllllrt Boulevard (213) ~31·3787 i g~ ~· ......... 6203 l.lkewood BoultVlrd (2tS) 531·7420 ! oo. tits l611i8'11 '-' a101 Ntwm1n SUit• c (n4) 540-6805 , NAM& .... a. 2700 N. Main No. 902 I (114) 5't-t651 I _..•-".:..-___.-..... ........ __.__ ....... 4295 Geaner St .. Suitt 1E (1t4)~27&.3332 ; cm--..---~-------°"' lnfQnlllhOn bfOClluM. QOlllell\ fOf tilrotfY, ano *"'""""'.,. : ITATl----------c:GnWtte.i 1nlegfll PICU of l~ll u~ent ExpectlttOill Of 1 ~t 1 __ ..._ ___ _, flYlflllit ltMlll Cl'"* "' lleMd IC'l!Ully Oii reMlltl of ,.. pnant I .. .,. .. . • ~ . • I • I ' . . I • : • • • t • ' t • ~ DAILYPl\.OT UN .. ~.Al.lg--14. 1171 NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS !\alto '-' •·I 111d!.• {low t"Q / STOCKS I BUSINESS Sale-If('asehack Spreads BenefitS·i Market Unmoved By Dollar's Demise NEW Y01'K <AP> -The stock market was mixed ia fairly active trading today, showing little reaction to the dollar's poor showing on foreign exchange markets. . The Dow Jones average or 30. industrial stocks wh1db was up nearly rour Points early in lhe session gave up th~. gain. The Dow index was off 2.68 paints to 888.17. But In the tally or all issues traded on the NYSE. gainers outnumbered losers by a 4-3 margin. Analysts said there was some increase in selling pre, ssure as the Dow index approached the 900 levet. which is considered to be a PSychologicaJ barrier for the market. ~~;r1API Flrwt Dow-~.,,.,_ ODefl Hklll L-Clow CllQ JO 1114 ... ZJ l9f 17 lllU7 •• II-1.6" 20 Trn 1•" 749.IS 746.S4 747.7t. • 0.1• IS Ull 101.0. 107.~ 10..Al 10..17-O.«l t.5 Slk l07.a lOt-" JOU6 306.33-0-t> Indus .. •• .. .. .. . . .. • 2,131,200 TrM> 1o:uoo Ulll& •18.IOO tSt!Stk .. .. .. . .. • . . . • . . l,ts•.soo What S tut."k# D id HEW YORK IAPI Uoclle~ Tot•I 1Uue$ New l'llQh) N-IQW\ SALES NEW YORI( IAPI APl)ros '"""' , Pnvlous .._. .... WHll -Moftll't-YNr e90 . Two 'ft•n 41QO JM\ 110-1•11 10 Oel• . ,.,. 10 Olltt Prev lo<lay 0.Y 154 811 • ~s 1qz1 111 l 617 ~ .,, 1'00 12l 1 NY Stoo WlotS J?.310.000 u.uo.ooo J3.,Uctooo ,.,llO,OOC> U,/50,000 16.111.'30 4,;)91,0"'2.IU U •AIQ,OQO l."°2, 12• U) WMAT AMEii 010 MEW Y()fll( IAPI p,.,, lOOeY ~ ]11 7'° .. 1.. 2SI •n .. • 11 I ' . l ' TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS TeleVision • Monday, August 14, 1878 DAILY PILOT .. ''"'l•\1 EVOINO ... , ..... n aaeyaem Al\ elr11ne lllWMct .. I ••lu••• to ello • &*.,.......IO._._ tor a~.,._.. 0 wa.Q. WILD MIT ''TM Nlgflt OI ...... OleltlR W• .,,.. .,,... laka °" I Ml"' ol _....,. ...... ~.-."*Md .... ,.... of ,..... lllld • • .::;:. OOWT t.\T ntl~ • ..,,_,.Oii MN ~ TWo-~--.. ~ °' II\ et1r90- """' waltr-ceuee Pl'Ob-1em11ot Mill• s,_ OifectOt Joh!\ c ........ end llC1reM a.. ,_.. lande ~ "'--fllm, ....,_dlf\O your ~ car.-lnfOI. mation 04inW CAI Cl'i) PICIAl 'Good t.lorn1n' Bluel B 8. KlflG natr-a IOoll at , .... bll.-"°"' the t1Kn ell IM cenlUfY to J'llt .,.., World W# II. wtt1> peraoNll .,._ __ by~ 1>111 .. -n In Intimate MIO'oundlrlgl. Lana Turner stars m the movie "By Love Possessed" with Efrem Zimbalist Jr. tonight at 8 on KTLA. Chunnel 5. w:...o--.. TOMOHT uoeo u....u. ....... 80 much tnOnl\'- thet 119 wants to lellve SdlOOI. C1nc11u1eU fledl •t Pit 't$0Vf'911 Pit.MM < '-de-•o I G) uy THREE SONS RoCooe t•• • perMllNI '°° Mllllig ..... •tale and • MICHAEL JACKSON . Stele Supetlntefldent tor Pul>Mc EOUC.tlOn Wiiton RtlH d ltcv-M:hool lntegretloo. 1he aakke dec:oloon. Iha quality of 4ducltlon, and the .neel• Oaa1111rl Luti119s e KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles -U ~ tl)S' Angettt e KTLA (i nd) Los Angeles • KABC·TV (ABC) Los Ano-le$ Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Outgo D KHJ-TV (Ind ) Los Angeles ttl KCST (ABC)San 01~0 • KTIV (Ind ) Los Angeles • KOOP· TV (Ind) Los Angeles SI KCET·TV (PBS) Los Angeles 6l) KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach .. 41 PLQpalll!O!'.! t3 TOTELL THE TRUTH 7:00 CBS NEWS I N8CHEW8 U4MCLU8 BOWUHOFOA OOUAR8 • ILOV!LUCY A pretly VISllOf 10 a coun- try dub llln jeelouly H\ Ille ne;ghbOrhood G) nEF.8.1. A diamond ttKel retuses 10 r61eue his woman no11age even .,.., llndlng out thet she ifl!And fill MACNEIL/ LEHAEA AEfl'OAT 6J) TFWN& TMCK8 ~O TRE8Tl.E8 "Rallroadlng Opwatlona" i JOKIR'8 WILD 7:30 121.000 PYAAMIO ~IUVUNE I NEWLYWEO GAME JOl<IA'S WILD • TI4I 000 OOUl'\.l Fella It ln""'9d by o.c-·. -~towril•en OllOINI IOllQ lot ...., nigl'lt ctub ICt • •TOMOHT HOit' Qete AoOent. • f'MHQ4 OH9' "LIMOM A U FrllnUIM" ® Cl) t100,000JWMTHAT TUNI MO. (I) 1141 .,..,.. G90fve ,.ca more publlcity "*' he~ whetl he cell PY9lident Cet1ef aa a publcity MUnt (RI 0 urn.I HCM* ON lltl~ "The Racc:oOn" i.-1 II bitten by en adoc>ted rec· coon that Ml become rebtd (RI 8 MOVIE ._._. __ . ·ey__ l ov• P~" (111611 Lana Turner. Etrem Zlmbahst Jr A weeltlly "torney . Mltdllng tor tllmMil, IS drewn Into an etfal< (2 llrs.1 D MOYIE • • ·~ "Th• Tern11hed Angela" ( 11157) Rock Hudton. Rober1 Stack Besed on the novel "Pyton" by Wllltam F&ulll· ner. a newspapermen ~ lrwolVed with 8 ww 1 pllol. 1111 parKhlltino wife end Uleif negleeted aon. (2tva J GJ HOT art DISCO The hottest names 1n the WOl'ld ot dllCO .... 111 tie gueetlng. singing the latest dll!IGo hits while the Hot Ctly DMcers move amid a maze of putaattno lat« bhma. 11aati1no strobes. mirrors and spacial eftec1• 41) !VININOIN BVZAHTIUM A reured movte producer trevel• 10 the Cannos t~m lestlvel to ~ beetler• for a ,_ IMt 1c:t19&-wt11Ch. bv tome colncldenee. outltnes the plan• of an 1ntem1!10n· el tenorillt org1n1utl0n 10 oeatroy both RuSStl end 1M United Stites. (Part t 012) • ID ANNA KARENINA Anna. conlllnoed that sne wt• die In Childbirth. send• for KatWlln. Wl'lo ltl"lves to TUBE TOPPERS KOOP m 8:00 -.. Evening ln Byzan· tlum." A terrorist organization plans to destroy both the United States and Russia in this TV movie. airing in two parts tonight und next Monduy. KCET @ 9:00 -Opera Theater. Grimm's Fairy Tales provided the in· spiratlon for .. Transformations ... a new op«a by Conrad Sq.sa <see story below>. NBC IJ 9 :00 -"Breakout.•• Charles Bronson and Jill Ireland head the cast of tbis 1975 adventure movie about an elaborate escape from a Mexican prison. llnct Vronelly alto lft atten- -:::. l-=:evtn, _~:=:i-11\d-.,...=l(Jtty.,_._~_ ol tO)(R) l:30 8 Cl) GOOO TIMES Wlllone .. ~of being lhe "other WOIMI\" In Boolunen's ltf• (RI Alporter Ell9n WNte .,,... -II the ptol*rne leoecl v •rv wt1er• powtty. victim· IZ.MIOrt end abelldonment Mt a way of llf• lot many ol our Oldar cfflz'"• 9:008(1) M0A0 8•H Cllarlee II 8«tatlc When HllWtteye II temponrlly trantlened to another unit .. unlll he meets HIWtteye's reotec«nent (R) D NBCMOVIE • • "Brelkout" ( 19751 Charles Bronson. Jiii lrelend. An unortl>Odo• pilot IS hof'ld to flow en unjuttly 1111ed Amencan from• Mexican prtaon. (Al • MERVORIFRH <Wetta· Hermione Olngold. Jon Peter•. l<eye e.tlatd. ANlon Wiiiiams. fll) OPERA THEA re. "Trantformatl()ns" Conrad Susa 111terpret1 Pu~tzer Prize-w1nne< Ann Sexton's book of pOMIS 1nvotvino her 1mpre111on1 ot Grimm's tairy taleS '11) D~VIO SUSSIOHO Part I "Mat11 lnlonnert • No Piece To Hide" Pan II "Tod8V'• WOfld Of l'IOctt" 9:308(1) ONEDAYATA TIME Julie decades to moYe out ot het mothllf'• home. (Part 1 ol 2)(R) 8 OLDAOE: 00 NOT OOOENTU! 9 MERVOAlmN Oueett: Hermlolie <Mnoold. JOn Peters. Keye Blllaro. Anton Wlttleros 10:00 8 (I) LOU GRANT Lou begins i!WMtlptlng tM Ha't K,..,_ ~ men1 when Tnbuna edit°' Charlie HucM tMrt lie hu IOet Ills ton to the MCt (RI I D NEWS CAT~ THAT CHANGE M8f8 LIV£8(PAAT I) 10:30. NEWS RENOIR The 11rtl1f1 hie II told througll hi• llltert ro trlenda. his woni. and pnotoe.~> 11:00 I D • Cll 9 NEWS LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE "low And The Pretty Sectetaty" Angie botcllls everv 1elephone cell '"LCM! And Tiie Fortut\lte Coolcte" Miiton and Jec!I lllre-Anna as• NCl'etaty ' 0 MOVI! **"A~ And one Nighlt " (11168) .,_. Cooper, Rel Vallone A beauhtul genie helps e swordsman regain hta poelflon (2 hrt > • THE ODO COUPt.a 0ecar _.. M)ll'NI 1M atory of """ Feb .... "-" btntlH ffolft MtdtOWf' Utmorl4ll Hoapltel • AMEJICA NGKT au.t·Clrt~ • OICKCM9TT au.:~ a.-. llOV· elitl end lhOtt llory M.,.. (Patt I of 21(RI • MACNa. I LStNll MPORr 11:30 8 (I) CM LAT! MO\lll • • • "lollfl" c 1982) ,...,_Melon. Sue LyQI'. 8 TONOKf O.U. llo9t: o.Ad er.ins . Q~et1: .... .,. Gurley Bfown. Kellv Monteith. Sutan Anton. • 1WIUGHT ZONE "Ona Uo<e P~" Waa1t11v Paul R•d•" errangea en tntrleet• ,...,.,. '°' lllOM he"**' hew Wfonged him In his eo 80A, (EOltode 20) a-... and ,,_.. Tate oo to 11'8 jUdgll'I chambers to dte- CUM .Jaulca't upcoming murder trlel fHetwortc edYllea 'Wlewer dilcretlon.I ; HOGAN'S HSa.8 Hogen #\Cl 1111 men kldnep • Getman genetel 10 trade him tor an ,llmerlcan ;-c:rlMAAT 6mM anl\911 _,. l">r • KAOS computer that's 1n1ercept1n~ •II CONTAOl"t~ • CAPn0HrD WC>fU> NEWS TONIGHT fo.(')RNING 12;00 e TWIUGHT ZONE Mltllcent e.rnea thtnllJ .... e pr.,. w11en someona keep9 moYing her IUllcaN eround within • bus tennl· nel. • HIOHHOPU ti) HONEYMOONERS Thtnlltng tf\81 Ila .. 10 ba named 'Raccoon Of The Vear· Ralph retieatMS en 8d kb~ '°' lbe occe- ll()n 12:03 8 @ POLa STORY Counlry 9ov A yOUIW,j man lfOtn •rural oommu- n11y ettamptt to PMS the rtg•d Police Academv COU4'M (RI ~ "91iglft =1=-llWCEM ~ ITaW IDWiUQI Tawsfl••'• Da••l•e M•l'in MORNING 11:30 8) • • ·~ . ..._ Kind 0 1 W~n" I 1115 :J Robe<t Mlicflum • .Hlllw ~ A ,.. OUY bell\g weo 10 6ftrlQ • rX1Ce1-oecir to Ille U.S lrOft\ MelrlOO 0.- CIO'llrl ...... Md ---· 10 ""1 11 {2 tn . 20 min I AFTERNOON 12:«) CJ e e ··Oftc:e lJoorl A Horii'" C 19&11 Derl AowlN'. Olc:ti MerW\. • pelt at rue- ~ llftd "'-' --....,, uu.. eat Morf' tllen l!IWre -"' C I Iv 30 """'' 3:00 at) ••• "14<>481 Pwedi- ao" ct8fill A'9C ~ 0.. l Ollobngida. A Mn- ~ """' --to._ an llflarr wi11t a ~ ~ 111v .30mrn1 3.:ao •••.• Riol lfl &.n8et kip" I 19671 Aldo Ray, t.ll!Ny fer1ft81 voung peo- ple iw the lll•ts too some klCllS and Ille OC*il tty IO pr.._,, • "'°' -.,. Sun- .. Smp ~•bog ~t•l'l•.30mm1 'Offensive' Slaoaes Flaged TV Stations on PTA Hit List .,..,........ New for 'GilHgara' Judith Baldwin, shown signin g autographs in Los Angeles. will take over the role originally played by Tina Louise in the two·hour TV feature "Rescue From Gilligan's Isla nd." Miss Baldwin will be the only newcomer in the cast. CHICAGO <AP> -The Na-tional PTA is threatening to challenge the license renewals of five network-owned television stations if the networks continue to ignore pleas to improve the quality of programming. Grace Baisinger. PTA presi- dent. said the networks haven't lmpro'{ed program quality since the PTA's first ratings last fall. She said the organization wiU survey TV again this fall and, b ased on finding s, ma y challenge license renewals for three stations in Chicago. one in Detroit and one in Cleveland. The Chicago stations are WMAQ-TV, NBC: WLS-TV. ABC: and WBBM-TV, CBS. The others are NBC's WKYC-TV in Cleveland and Detroit's WXYZ· TV. an ABC affiliate. SHE SAID THE PTA's report card was based on the degree of sex a nd violence. offensive language, artistic merit and the s t e r eotyping of women . minorities. ethnic and age groups. The PTA. on the same day that television's Emmy Award nominees were announced. list· cd CBS' "Kojak" on Its "most USC Cancer -Center Examined on KCET Producer /reporter Sebasli an Milito takes KCET cameras in· side the USC Cancer Center to probe the newest research tn the field of cancer detection and treatment on "28 Tonight." air· ing Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. on KCET. Channel 28. USC's Cancer Center Is one of • 18 comprehensive centers In the country. acknowledged by the National Cancer Institute. Dr. Charles Heidelberger , director of basic research. discusses the , cancer-fighting drugs currently available. including the com- monly used "S FU". Dr. Malcolm S. Mitchell. an immunologist and clinician. talks about current evidence leading to the conclusion that the human body is fighting exist- ing cancer cells daily. and that the d isease develops only when the body is no longer resistant. Mitchell also discusses cancer- causing agents. including diet. carcinogens. sun. cigarette s moking. and certain viruses. New Style Opera Airing 'Tmns/ormatiQns' Offen Fairy Ttdes Tonight By KABBEN MILLS ST. PAUL. Minn. tAP> -The beat of sambas, rhumbas and calchy tunes sung in English m ay bave feet tappin& around the country when the Publlc Broadcast.ine System ain an un- us u a I opera tonlgbt at 9 on KCET. Channel 28. With "Transformation,•• an adaptatloo of Grimm '1 Fairy Tales wUb aecompanytn1 music. the Minnesota Opera Company l5 tr.Ylnt to ahow tbal. opera can be a ll•lnt, cha.qlng art form. "Opera bu h.d to make ad· Justmeota in tta focu.s. 1'h1I ts one .,,., to lreep opera alive," uld Phntp BruHltt, mualc director few I.be company and conductor of th• televt1ton product.Jon, part of lb• PBS "()pera'l'beatA!r"s ries. ••AN OPEaA LI E 'TraJi.afottnat1ons• will come as ·a rno&.alon to the atatd, lormaJ °"'a lotr:• Brunellt Hid. ''To tboH wbo ,,. lW1led off by Jndltlonal °""' who find It ltJ tfd. lbey .. ill nnd the COO· temporary nature ol 'TranstormaUons' to be totally unllke what they expected.•• The production ls based on an autobloirapbical book of poeins by the late Anne Sexton. with music composed by Conrad Susa. 1be poet•s daughter, Lin- da Grfl1 Sexton. introduces the work. Amona the f alry tales used ln the work are "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs," "RumpelJtllt&ktn.•• "Hansel and! Grete1:· "Rapunael" and "Sleepln( Beauty." ••SEXTON TOOK. tbe f atry talet that aeemed to apply to her Uf e, but trandorm@od them, tell· tn1 them bl bet own worda. With each tale. abe Wl'Ote a pro..,._ tellinf what It meant to her, the lnvo vement In b•P llfe." Brunelle .-aid. Tbe ~··Mt tn a mental In· atltutlon, beC\lis ln tbe world ot reality, IDCWtll lnto the world ot fantasy and then slowly tra111fonna beck l11to tbe very real worid for the tnd. \ ·•suaa felt be would lib' •ad\ NOW PU\ Y INC; aw-.•••MT•t HtwpOtt _,, 844-0780 cr..awnT•• Whtmlnsttr 892~83 violent" and "most offensive" program lists as well as on its list or having "least overa ll quality." It was the only show so r ated. "Kojak" has ~n canceled for next season. So bave most of the shows mentioned on the PT A list of poor programming. "Maude" was listed among the poorest in overall quality the same day the show's star. Beatrice Arthur. was nominated for the Emmy as best actress on a comedy show. THE PTA GAVE top overall quallly ratings to 10 shows. They were. in order. ABC's "Donny and Marie" CBS' ··so Minutes." NBC's "Gritzly Adams •.. CBS' "Waltons.'' NBC's ·•Little House on the Prairie." ABC's "Young Pioneers." ABC's "Julie Farr M.O .. " NBC's "World of Dis· ney ... ABC's "Happy Days" and ABC's "Eight is Enough." The 10 shows cons idered poorest in overall quality were. in order. NBC's "Chuck Banis Rah -Rah Show." CBS' "Ted Knight." NBC's "Roller Girls." NBC's "Joe and Valerie," ABC'!! "Sugar Time." CBS' "Husbands. Wives and Lovers." NBC's "AES Hudson Street" plus three other CBS shows. "Kojak," ··Another Day" and "Maude." In the most violent show category. CBS bad five. ABC three and NBC two. Thea least violent category was led by ABC and CBS with four each. NBC had two. THE NATIONAL PTA sur· veyed 3.000 of Its member!! last Apnl as a basis for rating the shows. ABC and NBC network ex- ecutives had no immediate com- ment on the lists. CBS vice pres- ident Gene Mater said he had not seen the latest PT A study. but said that last year's PTA ratings were "unscientific and subjective ... The head of a privately funded group that monitors the quaUty of children's television criticized the PTA study as useless. "We (eel a lot of progra mming on the overall quality li st is very si mplistically sweet." said Peggy Charren. president of Ac lion for Children's Television of Newtonville. Mass. "A list like this doesn't really serve much of a purpose. Someone else's most offensive program might be my favorite." MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY "SGT. PEPPER'S LONELY HEARTS CLUB BAND" (PG) "ll1E BUDDY HOUY STORY" "THE SWARM" (PG) "WHO'LL STOP THE RAINr 'WHERE'S POPPAT (R)_ "THE CHEAP DETECTIVE" tPGJ ''MURDER BY DEATH" 0 HEAVEN CAN WA1r· (PG) "FOUL Pt.A Y" CPO) ..FUN WITH DICK & JANE" *'CONVOY" "liA T MY DUST" (PG) "lHE DRIVER .. (R) :-THUNDER AND LIGHTNING" l • , • '· • .. ' - .. , .. I. It. to .. 2 .. - -la. • e . •• IO. • lb. IO. -'° " .. t • D •• • • • •• .. 13 • ~ l, . ~ I D • .. .... t ' \ 'J:• 88 DAILY PILOT ·singer Hit By I .aryngiti8 FUNT. icb. <A Pl -ntW 0.-M~Ra reco rlna from • bout wiUa lana.WI tbat tndedhis ·.wanc1·rtaa••on•ntnl....._. Y MR bad to be helped o0 tM llap ot a Fllnt r twtff clue to the aUIMnt ud lHdJc•· Uon to combat tt, witnesses aald. · The f\rat Ume WU~. aaid••Y thfoulb the openina nwnber in • summer l&ock produetlon of "Paint You/ Wqon." Wlt•1•t1. tnctudbll • newspaptt rftiewer. said MaeRae wu umtMdr. a htwentonatateandsancolf-b1Ud.,.,..lyaud • ble. On WedneicUy be WU believed to be fWJY te• covered and ready to perform. He blamed bit un· ateadineu on too much medication tor the larynattis. altboQab he couldn't remember what the medlcaUon wu . "l don't drink " Mac Rae said. "I waa filbtln1 uryn . . m over 1 v ry or eoeps- lhinkiq he can IO on.·· In 1be middle of his rendition or "Wand 'rin '." the stage went dark and cast members could be, seen helplna· blm toward the wino or the Star Theater · Understudy Ralph Bra un wu summoned. tbe overture was repeated and the musical started over Beambig Up 'Star Trek' Movie Stans LOS ANGELES <AP> -"Star Trek -The Motion Picture" went into production at P ara· mount Studios this week with the original crew or the starship Enterprise <'n band ror anC1tber journey. , Reunited for the major movie are William Sbatner, Leonard Nimoy, De Forest Kelley. James Oooban, Georie Take!. Michelle Nichols. Walter Koenig. Majel Barrett and Grace Lee Whitney. plus new crewmen, Stephen Collins and Persi~ Khambatta. Two-time Oscar winner Robert Wlse is direct· Ing from a script by Harotd Livingston and Gene Roddenberry, who created "Star Trek" as a television series ln the 1960s. · MOVIE RA11NGS FOR PARENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE AU. am NfO Ill 'II.MS MCEl\ll ™E SEAL OF Tl.fl! MOTION "°'1JI!£ CODe OF Sll.1 AEC'ULATIOH. An THU1RD-OlllANGl co SENIOR CITIZENS S2.00 SO COAST PLAZA .... , ...... .,.., ..... eo&a ..... ............... .,.......cAP•eww ............ ......... ,,..... I I It ......... "HEAVEN CAN WAIT" ,.,..,...(PG) ........... SO COAST Pl~ZA MWSI. .... MlllllllD1111 ---.......... eoor••• ......... "'MO D90SIT, MO lll'UIM" ========= ( :tl,\ILH~ ) , I • ~OlJNIAIN ~ VAi l l Y {1t41VI If'' .. •:,11:,111>~ ~ ' ' • t ·~ ~mt:-:'I _ .................. ...... tO-.&Y IOICNt .... fWEoac••-•·•••mUNDtNt LITM--IOU"' Call 642-5878. Put a few word• to work for u. In the STIMULATll DAILY PILOT ENTERTAINMENT i MOVIES I POP MUSIC COtJNTRY SINGLE.s 1. "Talking In Your Sleep" Crystal Gayle <Unit· edArtfsts) 2. "We Belong Together" S usie Allanson <Warner-Curb> 3. "When l Stop Leaving" Charley Pride J «RCA> Byfte Auoelated..,,.. . bitt ~E'i'J:a1?°n't Love Me Anymore" Eddie Rab· The follow~ are Billboard• hot record btts 5. ··Rake And Ramblin' Man" Don Williams for the week ena1n1 Auiust 11 as they appear ln cABC> tbls week's luue of Bnlboard ma1azine. · HOTSINGLE8 Tlmea A Lady" Commodores 1. "Three <Motown> 2. "Grease" Frankie Valli <RSO> Stars AruwlUlCed 3 ... Last Dance" Donna Swn:mer <Casablanca, 4. ''Mm You" Rollln1 Stones <Rolllna(Stones, 5. "HotBlooded"Forelgner<Atlantlc) . For 'Critical Lis~' 6. "Boogie Ooale Oogie" A Taste Of Honey <Capitol> 7. "Love Will Find A Way" Pablo Cruise LOS ANGELES <AP> -Lloyd Bridges. <A&M) Ro~ert Wagner. Louis Gossett Jr. and Buddr, 8. ''Copacabana" BavY ll~ <Arista) Ebsen star in the mini series ·'1'be CritlCal List. 9. "Magnet At\d Steel" Watttt"taan (COlum· wblch airs on NBC Monday and Tuesday. Sept. bla) ~r 1»' 11-12. 10. ••An Evel'las~ Lbve" ADCly Gibb <BSOl ' Tile series. based on the novel by Marshall l • , • .. 1 p LPI Goldber... 'OC""'es on malpractice and~su ici_on 1 " 'Grease' Soundtl'.ack" (BSQL _ e 1' .... 2. "Some Girls" Rollin"' Stones <R.-o"'lll"n_1_"°9,,~....,.rtr1>'""1es~id""e"'nt-of the UnU.ed States °=--::..=;:::==.....,..::... Stones> • volved in a vast health rund fraud scheme. 3. ••Natural High .. Commodores <Motown> Co-starring In the show are Barbara Parkins. 4. "Double Vlsfon" Foreigner <AUantic> ' Melinda Dillon. Ken Howard. Ricbanl Basehart .. •sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band and Pat Harrington. Soundtrack <RSO> ------------------EASY LlSTENING 1. "Three 'rimes .\ Lady" Commodores CMotown> 2. "Fool" Chris Rea <United Artislsl 3. "You" Rita Coolidge <A&M. 4. "My Angel Baby" Toby Beau tRCA > s. "1'alking Jn Your Sleep" Crystal <United Artists) SOUL SINGLES Ir 1. "Tbref! Times A Lady" Commodores <Motbwn) 2. ''&ogie Oogle Oogie" A Taste Of Honey <Capitol> 3. "You And I" Rick J ames <Gordy> 4. ••Get Off" Foxy <Dash I 5. ·Shake And Dance" Con Funk < Mercu .v> -.,._.Y'\OJI • ..... '\ 9v or l\l.tt • nc-.c_Ola-• lDDDOWYSTWMOI 0 ,,,.,_,.,.,.....,.., •• (iii) • "-to l IZ .. - .. .. • ll ._ D ,.n qo today u.t Udl shat*. one-Un• ~ ........ beralded tbe loft•· awattedeectal"orkl War II. . • ..,,._ wu the moet exctUq day of my life.'' •: · As • Maribe Co.,,. aerseant ~C ~ •••· ~ lhlft In Navy headquarters in Wull.baaton ; o .c .. «rs. Quick and bet co-°""en re • • ......._ tbe ftnt to le_arn of the joyOUI MWS. Mn. Quick, who kept the copy at .- souvenir, 1'an across it recently whlle rwnmaa· inl t.bniugb old papen. She hadn't seen it or tbe otber faded World War 11 era papen la 25 • • "I TBOUGllt I HAD thrown Uris all aw.Y:" said Mn. ~ct. wife of Thomas Quiet. Com· cnander, U.S.N .• Ret. "When I went throuab it a lot MlCb. nostalstc feeling ... The former Esther Tarpinian recalled tbat when Pearl Harbor was attacked, ber Armenl•· 1>om father was upset that be had no SODS to --flabt f~eountry ~ MH. Qui It and one sister joined Ue Mmnes. A younger sister~ the women '• a.mbulance corps in Lona Beach. "My dad was IO proud of us," Mn. Qulek spent the war in Wash~ where, as a n IBM ,pro1rammer in the ~uartennaster General's office. sbe wu on 24·1aour call. "We med to work 12 to 1•· bours a day and take six boars rest and then eome back again." . Only seven days before Pres. Tnnnan's an- nouncement that the Japan~ accepted allied surrender terms, another messaJe had eorne over the Te."'otype. Mrs. Quick kept that one too: "GUAM-The first atomic bomb to fall on Japan weot down like a clap of tbunder, Its tremendous impact equivalent to a raid by 2.000 B·29s, and hit Hiroshima which diaappeared in u""-N tt DOBS come, tbe)''re. alt set to tome~ ct>wnt.C>Wn J.gro .the-biaest cdebra· tloa ever. The crowd at Laf~ettil>~.-ierou­the stTeet frOltl "1e White House, bas tblnoed o'" conaiderablJ-. . uu•s eaJm tboUgb and ~·· bo •.ian of the snake danelha or other celebration wblcb marked their activities earlier in the d•y .: "Liquor stQres say they're dolq a n.b business-as ~e btiy ln antlc'-ation of the oflclalsur~~cemeat. .. • ~ AnticipaUotl was also the: "'"'1Jinl mood r-: in the Quartermam!rOenttaJ'i-«fl~beretbr-=-~1'~~ night crew was.J1aving d.llfieult,-eon""1r.Un1 on worlt. . '-OHS 0, US WOVLQ be trottinc down five fiigbt,s ol sta[ra ever:r .~ mine•ee · wben we expected t.be surrender t.,,_," recalll Mrs. Quiet. . . "When the Teletype oper,.... called to say be thoulht it was 1oin1 to conte 900b, about five of us went down, I was standiq ript there. l couldn't watt (or him to 1et tt out of tbe machine." When it did come o~er at 1:oa, she recalled. "we au just screa'* anc1 k1aaed eacb other. lt was Just fantastic. "It was one pf th.~ ~act excitjng IJloments of my life. l will never forget it." By llAJlClA FOllSBE&G Of .. o.ltr ........... Satirical columnist Erma Dombeck ma)' think camptng's the pits, but 20 active partici· 1 panis in the six-month-old Outdoor Wo~en IJ'OUP don't see it that way. For them, c41DplDg, back packing. biking and bicycling are an ex· presaioo ol freedom and a chance for escape from the dally artnd. Dr. William ·M, Thompson: President of the Orange County Medical AS~laaon. The ldosely organized <no officers. no reg· ularly scbedUled meetlnls > ts for women wbo enjoy out.door activities and want to hike or camp with others Who have slmilar interests, says Jann McCord·Ahearn, the group's founder. t lt's also for those women who've "always ' wanted tO do outdoor things, but they just ne ver have, .. adds the Cotvna del Mar resident. Ms. McCord·Ahearo <who, wlth P eggy Richards·BUr1ess of Fullerton, are the group's QnOf(iclal "leaden") learned of the naUonal Outdoor Women organization at an lntema· tlonal Women's Year conference in Los An1eles. Tbe Oraage CoUJlty group is Dot af. ftllated with the national group, however. ••So tar, We've biked to Cupen Part, and '"•ve bad a few bike rides and a beach party.·· •be •*YI· Tbls past weekend, the 8l'OUP took tbe aerial tram to Palm Sprinp \IP to tbe wilder-~ess area for a back pack and campina trip. It " .. l • , • .. .. "' r:. • I ,, l • r ~ I I ..... ' ,. ~ i.- .. 1 •• I . .. to ... o2 .. - j. It. • .. IMI • :a. • •• ... -_,_ • -tb. r IO. - .. • r • ~ ' -IOO 4r ala "' -lb L D DM.YN.OT ••• <From Pase cu was the club's "first blg adventure out into the wilderness anvur first overnight trip," ahe says. "Although not very st.renuous. tbe trip was a good introduction for women t.o find out wbat it's all about."" She says there are no age lim1ts in the club :lhd famllles occasionally go along. But she is quick to point out that it's an out· dated notion that yomen need a husband or a man along wben they venture out into the wilds. "So many women say they want to do things like this. but they won 'l because their husband dosen 't like it or they're afraid to do it alone.·' she says. Ms. McCord-Ahearn believes ll)at the out· door life is good for children because It teaches them to be self-sufficient and sell-reliant. She adds that Ws good for women I.or tbe same reasons. "It seems like there i1 very little cbellenge in a lot <A women's Uv~. so this appeala to them. Gettlt11 together with a bunch of.women and -~ out jJ>to the country -it's a break from the routtne of civilization, and you have t.o use 1our own capability t.o find out Just what ycru can do." she says [ Borosrope' 'ftlltSDA. y AtJGUST15 By SYDNE\' o~a AR1E8 <Mar. 21-Apr. 19>: Accent on ambition, civic dutJee, career, re· lating to auth9rity ) U>1t bMd1te all tort.a of card out or bu band. 1r••ln• card•. L'lt placed tt back on the week • man came In rack and Hld, 1'Tb1t wlUl bta wU•. II• 1mUed wat your blrtbda.r 1lft u •• and aald. ''Tod~ tor Ulla year.·· Ac11n be la my wlfe'a b1'tbd1¥· • 11Q.U~ al me arid they He bt'OWMd • blt. 1411«· b 0 l b l • ' t . -• • very Di'etb card. SPRINGnltLD. MASS. ~Ddtd-lt '-' Iler &bd . wiittd tor btr nacUoO. D&Aa IPalNO: Yoa .. It ••• lb' ••• &be MW. ~ .. all ........ , •• •n.man;lhmtook ~..,.. • Medicine ·Today Wbat is the state of medical practice today! lt's,ln a state of nux. accordtJ)g (o the preal· d.ent of the Orange County Medical AssoclaUon, Huntlntton Beach surgeon Dr. WUijam M ':"bompson. Doctors may be giving better care. he feels, but may also be lackine in the ability to give pa· tient.s and their families the psycbologioal sup- port they often need. Thls may be due In part to specialilation. . when a patient may have several doctors and has lilUe opportunity to get to know a physician. ··we still have family doctors in tJUa county ,,ho practice the old way -and tbil Is where medicine becomes an art." be says. Dr. Thompson feels that most peop18" are basically happy with their ·t0ed1cal cace, but that "people are unhappy vtth the medical field in general." Astronom1cally rising m~ical care ~t1 are the reason for UJe unhapplaea&, he sl)'s. Pre~dent Carter's proposed solution to this problem is a naliooal health care plan. Thompson.' citing tbe problems with soclaljted medicine in Oreal Britain, la skep. tical. He stales most doctors. at one time or another. have bad first-hand experience work· Ing in a veterans admlnlslraUon or county hospital and have seen the inefficiency of a bureaucratically run racWty. Unfortunately, be says, most doct9rs are ln· divldualists who don't lend them.selves to eoat ernclency -preferring to daplicate servlcea a nij eqUipalent rather than share with their col· leaaues .. "They have a built-in paranoia that some· one will come in and tell them bow to prac- tice medicine." he explains. Regarding the current c:ontroveray of whether it is etblcal ror doctors to own tbe hospitals they work out ol. Dr. Thompson states natly It is aaalnst his own personal philosophy, but some doctors feel that by owning the facility they can alve better medical care. But there are, be admits, a lew shady characters ln tbe prole$sioo who be refers to as "bums." Thothpson says consumer aroups who are pushing for socialized medic(Jle are •·not aware" that while organlsed health care may be less costly for society -it ls not beneficial to the \nd{viclual. To combat tbe specter of sociatlzed medicine, Dr. Thompson advises doctors to take a inore aetlve and respe>nslble role lo the health care of their eommunity. "Obvio~ly. there are certain th.incl wbicb wUJ have to be reelotoallzed and planned <to out costs). It can be done. But the main contrlb\4lon df the physician is to be sure the patient tell a fair shake." ANN LANDERS/ HOR08COPE "18UC N011CE , ... t . -~ • P&ft• ··..:.~ ....... ... -~ ... ' .,. .... •.••• , ........ c. "!ii" ' A ffM?*I ... , •••• :'f ...... ~~ •• ,, • • • '90ttea :trte;"• ........ ·515._ =-~--== -~ ................... =~. arr ... •s I ; -.............. 1 ... -.. -·-.--~·'-'• .tlCt. .......... tlllktl .. ·--................... ............. ==-=. ...... ............ -= ' ...... .. : ......... _.....~ ..... ~---~--a. 0-. ....... c... .. --. -..;~ a..~, .. :'\.'= .... ••mac.~ -~--i ~--.ca-I .......... ~GI-. ........... .... ,. ....... "18UC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ' 4 2 .. • 5 ~ 6 1 D _A_ I .... L - p I L 0 T c L· A s s ., ·F I .E ID P;ztll .. 1 ~MeelUt All Nll-..e IMfverUMd lft dale nlWIPll* 19 1ub- .fftl to the "'*'al Felr Ho"''"' Acl of litf "'lcb mak• lt Wesat to edvertiH "any prt-fet•ce li~ttaUon or rue. eolor. NUlion. Mil, ot national ori&ln. or anj ant~llon to make any awh Dreference, iiml\a-bon, 6rdiscrimlnftk>n." TM!I nt'W!.paper wtll not U @Wit'IJIY 8(.'('1!!pt any advf'f'l1;\ln1 for r•al est.au -.lucti Is in ¥lola- lioft of the law. A llT °' 1MI GHAT eATSIY .. in Garden Grove! Six bedroOm mt. circular driveway, dozens of tr~ a Rbaded veranda and every bannister is mahogany! Fal)tastic residential area. Don't overlook this va1ue at ~000. U~l()U~ ti()Ml:I REAL TORS'. 546·5990 t525 Me5a Verde Drive, East, Costa Mesa r - A HIAYlt&Y llTIMT -Waterfront home with speetaeular view of tbe harbor from the •heltered seclusion of your 4 Bdrm retreat. Live in an unforgettable atmos_phere. We think this iS the mast beautiful plaoe in tile WHIM B.517 -Can you fmd a 2 st<iry 4 Bdrm beauty. With formal dining room and mG SWIMMING POOL in Mesa Verde, for $149,500? Why wait? c.I 146-4141 '-;,·r11•11(',,.1,r.1. tlr. • · !i,1:1!1r.qJ :1, b• •. 1 ~I·-.~,,"' :J. ,;1 II .. -.a..-rtl •lso in Corona del Mar, at 675·6000 -•: ~....,. LIVEONTHESAND 4 .. ev . -------- ................ •NOWSELLIHG• ni.AA/ ... _, ~ w----------------· Hunlioeton Paclflc OCIANVIEW ,.. ' 1 ~· n. . .. BeaelrbOaw. 1'birU a L&e a bd. a ba units DA&l f&OT • 11 , MESA VllDI limited offering ol unJ. w/btll interiors. Very at-=hr ......... 1 REDUCED TO $89,000 , que coopentive apart-tractive pecky cedar meats. located on lbe tbr•out. Low main· hnrfl•...,. Attractive 4 bdrm .• 2 ba. home in sand. A NE v ER tenance redwood ex· immac. condition. Xlnt I~. ~ EJ~RF.NN'bv~~ Jerior.sm.ooo.648-mt Fine 4 bdrm .• ~~c:Str lum1y hom.-<>!' ricr~e1l°:o ~~ fOIVMU!DNIQiJ quiet ct.l de sac. Overshed pool, vestllate this real find, Real Estate . .................... ,. ....... 1002 ....................... playhouse, extra storage S~G'lf.000 Prices rrom SST.SOC> to --------MOV6-IM I..__ 5269.000. 711 Oct!an Ave., BUSY & UrrNIUl' Fonnal dinin~ room:..liv-"''"'ONT < PCH) Huntington IKIUlna ing room & den. s Bl\ on Several finf. bayf ront hom~ Beach.-Ca. SaJa omee Un\Que Homes ol Mesa a fantastic pool-sized lot with i •· elOfledoan.daya.. Verde la ''llll&&gged into" in Mesa Verde. $126.SOO. p er °' sllps Broker 539'4!083 a r,.tooatJon referral fuvtl!t.. ftl'Yice tbal bu created "T~ a demand fOt' more your time, paint & brush. ON JHE W'rKB sale.people. We arP buly Make 1.his 3 BR. 2 BA · IHQ and n~ i•~lp! Ex- flom e int o a jewel. lN NEWPOR'TB&tCH J.< • aenc ed or new Ea.$Ul~~ C~ta Mesa. P.t-r &. tlltp in rront salespeople may apply. $95,750.l. '!'OU: ncmt-. Completely Attractive (antiques> of 1'WOHOUSIS! MES"' ft.l!I ......... 1 1 ~AMJOA.9Uf~ l'emoae!ed and updated. fice -t top quality <peo. 1'rythese2booser.or.oa ,...,..._..,... Sf'ICTACULAI. Vlew ~ llvina pie> associates to won lot. Balboa Island ror a POOi. VllW!I famll!• room. 3 batla 2 wilb. Contad Sandy dS27ouOb.'IY eooo. omveslment. Super family home with Th!s lvl,y 2 bdrni c-ondo ticrn. tormal dinln1 Orlowski qrJlm Wood at 000 sparkling awlmming _, l~-·""' 1... room off'eredatss:i0,000. 546.5990 pool & lush landscapin1. oveuoob .,_ .... -e f ·or deat1l· ral1~1151 --------Spaciou: 4 bedroom. 2 & UCI. Ad t oriented CLASSIC bath with famiJu room. eomplexintbehUll.near ~Cl! C hool pool & jacuui. Hurry on oovenienl to sc s & this one . it won't last al Over 2'100 1q " of bdUy : ' • shopping. CALL 751-3191. only $ll9.900.M5-H9l decorated liv apace. !i5 SELECT --------1 l{uge matr suite + 3 ~~~'Y PROPERTIES TIMITOIUY W~ii'f~cJj! 673•1100 l•-------•l ___ Reat __ FAta_te ___ • MOUNTAIN RETREAT ly rm. Frml din rm, --------------"-----• fl'1'ftn[ 1 Off h.lgbway 319 DUI' Bat 13'dl'. wet bar. btage Hafll IAJl'111N., 3 YEARS OLD • Park, s acre lot blgb oa )lrd. AU Ul1s foe a great •lt.O.Cff-~•Tt ou·· ITV BUILT 1 Bloc"111 to teach d :;yil•'( hill ln trees. Neighbors Pl'lce. pan for appt. ~ .... "_ NJ 11 less than 3 yrs o c E<>cf\ water and electric clo-e 5'5-9'91 Court says tell! Pnced 3 Bdrm 2 batb. large ualtbasbltnraoge.oven. e nough. Year roa.r.df well under market! Ex-family room. used brick dishwasher. brick frplc. vacation & permaner.t rcutlv" town~ome llv-ffrepJace, shake roef, Also has huge 4 car borae adiacenL Askin& Walkr.r J; Lee l~t& !'t~~l~ newly pialnted in/out. garace.Sll6.IOO $11,500. Tetma available. ________ .,. ~rurei~~l: ~:zGo~~!ft~J's~rry ! JACOISMALTY rltll" •J\l,..._•~·wo-UMnS ___ ., 67""670 1 4 Bdl'n' • bachelor. ~. -,; : '1.'f;\ \.~OH CO ' ~-----~- H CANYON C.C. -$261.000 New ExclUSive;1 Deane Homes Do•er .. mode.l ! Grandsamd view ol Big Cyn golf course & Newport Cent~! 2 Lie bedrooms. family room. formal dining Clubhouse. won•t last so better h~! WISLIY M. TAn.ott CO.. llALTOD Zll I S.. J1 4 I ... .... ,.. MIWPOl'f C11m1. M.I. ""4tt fl • ~ ' TH£ RE AL ES'I A'1 ERS ~000 101 No qualifying! Owneo wilUinance! C&llNow! ,. RED CARPET154·1202 ~1KN11e1 Banker · RESIClENTIAl ~-~ IVB~ YOU ALWAYS WAMTID Exqulslte new home in Old Corona del Mar. one block from the ocean. 4 bedrooms. 3 fireplaces. top of the. line appliances. country kitchen, separate dining room. Fully landscaped and a hundred other quality features. ~000. A COUMll&IM«M co; 644·9060 2111 UM.IOMMNalLUN>. IMNnlflOMCIN1U ~O~EST E OLSON ~ ~~~ HERITAGE REALTORS FrpJe., ballt·ln.s: atepa to •--~~~~-~~!!!!!!!~~~~ beach. S185.000Inct0diq • I Judi ··~ .... a. .. , ~~~~~~~ ..... NOMI OCIAIROMJ OMLYSlt,too 3 Bdrm.+ den IM>me on Well c...-for former model home ln Oraoce needs new ownen! ..• ~ meone Who will enjoy a beaum.i Jacunl year round round ... someocie who needs a Jot ot room with little maintenance. 3 Bdrm. walk-ln closetl, offlce in 1arage. New paint. paper & muc X li:t price · X1nt locatJon 30x8S ft. lot: frpl .• bollt· • Xlnt cond. Oklee to ever· ins, patio, beamed ceil· yplace you want to be & tna. SSJS,000 pr i_ va c y . Thi a f7S..U M!-2Z53Eves Sopblsticat.ed 3 bdrm, ba home la a steal I 751MS01 ~ Walker 1; lee a ss~ciated : ' . ~ ' . . • • ... j Real Estate ----- more.Sll2,000 ---------•---------• c•Mot.121l IASTSaDI . .. -. VA TenDSt ,reat 4 Bdrm 2 bath ramll.Y bome in~· centnt localioo. Priced to s~J at only -.soo. ~~-~---~~ CaJl$46-5880 Duptn. 3 " 1-bd.nn. QD• lta, eads with frplc. Dbl. garage, corner lot. SN0.000 lnclQdiaa land! .._IW,...,. •VETS* 0 OOWN-OCLOSING Homes in all areas ol ORANGE COUNTY VITA•T. C.141.otOO ~ ! ~ HERITAGE REALTO~S ••••• •671-1MO• aom.ts CTAHCJHSEPRUJZDVISI SJTAERIRHAJTZERWE~Y ICCTDNUSTREEMZRALOE OETAU~ASRAFARECT~GA NSTTMBTEEAR"MAR~LTO VOUIATTHRAROR YMOOH TOOLUNEACLT8 lOTU LKATADCEROO ACLSW HCACPEIEMY PUlANC LUETAHWWD HAU~BTD I D B I ~ E l £ I S S S T 0 T A ATDAMUJ AWSAHT&OE SHRRQZR lUIJTAf£8S MAIRLPK OLMkTaRTURN CSQAYIOSMRIEHR•EAOR I ' I ' • . ., .... ;::i.:, • r l . . i , ' : ~ , • . . . ' \. ... • •••• ~, I ' , r ) • ~.~~ ..•.•.• ~.~!:'!:. ..•••.. ,~.~~ ...•••. ~.~~ •.•••• J~.~~ ....... ' ~~~ ...... . •-WW. 1167 Mlwwt.._. t06t Ml~INdi IOff ,.............. .... .......... 1141 ........... I .. ·····--~ ...................................................... . ..... • ... ·-···· ~................ ....................... ONE HOUSE FROM nu; ARTIST-WJUTEB --~~ !! :1a111 119 till. I • • Lingo AWEnn ~---BAYtBr.$130000 '8.000 ntreat blre ln privacy, •--Mltwl• dwnllMiea · · aecurtly • trlJMluUlty. 4 Ill, fallllly rm. clln1QI Paint Ule delelt. Mulco. rm, air coad .. new MIWPOIT HI'S. Hrly C&Ut.=i'brl Dtw t~i~o~::n·i>·~r:. os s auues ~a:t .moo.ma: ;:i~ numero.aa bt•ut .. rrul 3 Bdrm. Victorian na via Was.ltn Udo u... &Ulna •.900. Br cbermer with modern ltlt. PIT OQC). Cletl• lDIUSJOUrOlr•.Dr· amealtiel: beeut. oek Quilltard. ~.crwc {Ira .• country tJtcbea, fl KentucllCJ Colonel. eeded llesa • aeparatt 32nd 1~ • K lilt· 1MUI AICH IA y LOTS &uestquarten. Sla.eoo •-'-'n1:....•_. mcso ____ _ -Dow t• lot•=.._ Ylltw _. 3 Bdrm. •family rm. mTIUY! ... .._ .S ·-.__. W ....-. '-!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~ superb~ remodeled Newport fftllbU, I •• ~ • .-.. _.,.... • -I · bomel ln ....__._,. • .._ bd Id b oms-.e-..a.-:. la ,..e --• ...-. MAl>RJD150 · .__.__, rm. o er ome on -,, • ...., .... '"""""w c If -.. ..... _._ window wta. eocy trplc. lar&• lot wtth Drtnte I ...,. ~ '*t:· ' Ntll. Meclt _....... • .SJOl,000. ~• view, I .. .,_., Is a sundedc. $149.900 reel' yenL a'CI &arm. ar letPI Macb. •tt-4lll ~·AC. $137,110. RotJueUenanxioUI' hobby rm.~ batlt at. :9:!:;~=~f1Ct;; ~ tacbedtopnce.<>wner nOWt• • g:=.,== !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ G~,a~1>'tT t?: II llijl ~'i°:C:2 &s:1 ..... aa.. c11a tohldffwa,muterawtt '"'-1044 ~ ~ bo ~u--_ I d d wftb _......, .... "'-.J•ce L me, "'!"_,, pro • ICp • ID p I '--.;'i ......... . ·-················ .. •• .d bar ~ Bayfront mobUe bome. D u p L E x 0 N t atnt. M111t NII, m~srruat:wi. ~~.:~ ~"~~ ~ top \oeadGD. CaD to 1ee Udo Lile Trtr Prt. Furn. PENINSULA ID quiet IOO •pprailal llGUClt. the b ue ..__lft". Prl__. LEA. SE C!OIDpare.511·1000 135.000.~ block. Completel1 re· lat/Su l ·I . Wk a s-IK .. ~ modeled iDllCM 6 OUL a MS-1428. ffW' quick aale! PJ:UOO. Beyfront eCllldo + ~· ll.lp. BR Al BR w/l peUm, Is l f7S 0mvet-Ori", f('llef' !~l~aoce. Sec. IWlJ'd. pool, IUI>-2 Cir encl .IU'. 1115,0llO. -___ PriD _______ . __ ~,,--;lri,UNK>ll!Nlfl • OPTION 1are1e. tum. Lse 915C> Ownerwouldlikttocao.t mo, aale $250.000. in January 1179. P'lnanc· " ! 4 .... S71.t00 '-!~~~~~~~..:67~5-~8839~~----ill& avaUable. 1'75-tMt f;;#======-.,!!~~!!~-t==t;aiiiiai~~+~~~~ ~ • Bedroom tn umverauy REAL £STATE, 1 ~ u1t for 11r. Dore "l:OITA..aA a•... deeoreted. Ready to Park! Lease wblle y $10 OOv---r-.aCM:ftlOl;-----r-i~ Verf '"'lal COUU'1 -w newfamily.llwTy!Call: aavethedownpayment. -LAGUNAHEIGHTS br Sen Velarde, prof.9 -_ ::J.ll~. Tllrff 1u1 ~-=Slues· '*Tln ._ _______ , REDCARPET75'-l202 INBRIGHTLIOHTS landscaped, new noor. DOWN . ·' t~r'::-:·.,'~ ::~k ~· ':Slrroeudv~ O'fMl119•1ftlUHIOlfHICl' w ~PANIC Woodbridge Brillhtoo. 2 ~a~~~~~ ln1.Sl.29,500.830-2011. juJet cul de aac, 3 BR 2 ti I ~-•~wc:Dl'Oduce BR +den. 2~ ba. aun-fiolntments. bullt·lna. A. 180 dee 1oU COUJ'M rep •e••t taYtra ,... .. Prod·-tf s.u-d .. .....-ded thru b Maw~----1A..i.9 vie9'. new cpts,• drpa. AMOl'tul Sparkllnl 3 Br, 2 sty, A· tr•me wB:. dilbwbl'. etc.Only • 111 ltcliea wlta ell the .... l"OOID •family room. --.. __,_ · ec ... u_.... out, lreplace, open eam ,... _ -palnt~.000 ·balance. mod•r=••cea. P'oraal dlDha1 room. th al d • 1 lr•1 A/C Sl.28,500.551.oas celllnp.louotglass.Af· 0 •• ... _ ............ at $l mo .. no credit Brick ard. Sa· CIMf'a..._liU.,.,., RV/boat/stonpareaoo --·--------• rord1 a terrific ocean MIWPOIYl•lllTS ne.cl • 957-1.998 Prine. ceu.at Prletd coa•eaieaee. Laviab Noquallfy.flramatie, au eorner~IW!d EZcare llG _. .,..D 1 u usual noorpl l Ma!fna yta-mO • rle.btat.... meater wln1. DtD o It)', IBr, I~ ba. Nr bell, lot. Wewtll add' BR. Z~ A" le::a a ~ctive touc':. 11112.000 1-on_Y,__· ____ __.._, COUOI'~ at&ac11.~~lawadl'y 8Kdn$129.850.646-1035 baths.famllyroom,lots BEAUTIFUL 3Beclroom,2Bathbome. Prlvatey secluded.superior Quellty Cstm aEA.LTOltS room. _...... pool ta· 11-·VERDE ofatora.papece +much Seller mot!veted due to funky charmer. Poten· Cape Cod ColonlaJ. Back 6-.-11 ble blm a.reo ~ ~ more. $114,atlO. 5 Bdrm .• 3 b a . tranafec out ot the area. Ual 1Ucn. Be f1rat to Bay area. 3Bdrm & den ___ , _____ __. fanta&tlc ator•i• too' ey·owner. 3 br .2 ba1 Devonshire Model ln Sl'9.500. prevlewtCall:M&-nn + huge attic stora~e. --11111111111~-~,.. ... Private beacbu-111~ family rm. trpl, fencea Turtlerock Glen. Ex· OflfNlllC>•llSfUNIOlllNICf' Hrdwd nn "2 frplc •. ·~,,, ........ JDuda man! For private yrd. Reduced to $19, tensive upgradin.I and 497•2457 Very priv eountry yard httJ Ken' ANllJ •• .__ .. __ .. Deeds pain~ etc superlaodscaplnl. on 80 x 1.50' let. Assum o--.aHOUSI .................. .,_,. 2910 J d c 1' 11""" ..... ""-~Hi r.... Ol'fH r• ••,,HUN row NICI• acaran a. a .,....,. ""' ... "' way 8~~ mortaie. Drive-by A dynamite vtew house. •alt~er~5~.17M41!!!;!!!1L._ __ r-~~~~~~~I LAGUNABEACH 2424 22nd a. Call owner T ll d 1 d ~·-TH[ RfAl ~ £Sl ;\HHS -= for detalll " abowln1. Looat .. a_ ~ ~r.,.em.owoode e .: KESAVERDE4Br2 4br,tba,D/W.fpl.1mlto SIOOODOWM 646-9273. -UI "" mt ecmd., a.soo. bch, $7!~~-Owner eonte-ary 2 br 2 ba, IYOWIB used bric . 3 Bdrms. Sat/&IDl.M.2'22 980-GlO;KHB:llU vi 7:.r;;'.-N-rt m •-coruer .. ________ I pool, Jacuzzi. Opu ,,..~~ --------ew, ~-· Leaaeop--r ... Sat/SuD12.S fllmWlflR SC:,_..,.. Priv. party want.a to buy 4 tlon.. 4M-10M lot, 2 bdr ba, f&nlily rm WALITO llACH 10011%1o.10.SP" .t.1>£ T1lla ~ aeedt eome br bOme to Hunt. Bc.h ---------1 + boaua rm. Sll9.500. $107.SOO nu.. .,_.., T .L .C. to mah l _ J .... Z... frompriv.party.548-3173 Ll ... 1...... 1052 645-7CMC:OpaSunday. 3 Bdrm. 2 bath, aeUer1---'-7_J._l_l_l_I __ •b•ohattlJ beautiful. double 1era1e. patio, ONnlESAND s,,~ ,..... ft...---······-·············· ~~,~~.2!~ .. -. ~~9~:_ted. Submit! CaU WAMIW: Front --... a BR. fruit tnea, aprinklera. 3 br penthouse. Runt· .. '~ """'"'.ua!'"9 "'1; Laguna Niguel VW'IU ..... ..._ ...... -.,_. ·-~ BA. 2 ~c. opm beam t'Tl,800. ln1ton Pacific reaaJea. 3Ba, orol lndlcpd. "~ FUSSY IUYll ~ ~~-bdlo~ ..,Mee ...... Rooorllax ~ Lo··~ FOR Realfu • coraled w/Jacu111. for thla Pf'OfeuloaaUy. -.-on --.,. UIUna .. 7 pool. BltD microwave, taaterull{ cldecorated 1ara1e. We tblDlt you1J sa,7729 s10000 down·neat ocean A nt'llf. man1 otber xrraa •Pnt·leve a bedroom. love tL Call f« appt. + • Ed.1aan Hl. X&ra lJ 4 ~IUU. $229,500. Opn Sund~• famll:r room home. M0-5112qt.. IT'SCOOLI lfeadelM l>T. den. rec rm. poo1 + This la IL A sorceoua a SllCTAC''-M 12·5. 1531 lllchland Dr. whlcb 1181 ~ been ~~~~~~~~1;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;I .. n.. bl -i d patio 21381 A ......... Cir bedroom home wit PUU.OCIAN ¥llW 6'5-42:211at~IJU. lived In IDd t.be owner -$6',000 !i:,:a~r'tlKelsn)!o.:O. ~e: 968-5700. Sl35.~--· ra m ll y room • end a BR, large family & dla· View Home bplanaas h,~! .. cab!,!!le•. Aofct ""l90llYllW wUJ nn-... ~w atrium, central alr. tn1 rooms on pool .. lzed •H_...Yllw..... SSS0.000.GalaxyDr. .......... ... Lov=I , pride or 4 Bdnm., family rm. only. ownerfore $7500DOWN Priced to sell now. ot. In e.reat11louE EnlartedPortofino Prlnonly.955-0212. now! ~e 3 bdrm bome ma11tve lot; crlap sca-7530 SfM.900. Luxury living· Monarch Bay Terrace. 4 bdrma, study. cedar TIM lnveatment.slnc. In dea e resldeotlal brt1ht! Area'• bee 3 BR. 2 Ba, new cpt.a, vacant and ready. Call to Truly a home for the d1a p&Hled bonus rm ft fam area ~ •·-IWD· val'!!·.~qc>l>Oroffer IAS'TSIDI drp1, paint, Glenmer see. crimlnatlni buyer rmw/aecoodbrictfrplc. -...., HM>l'IJ'<IOSlrCO. home. Min from beacll. at -ooo 4 ba. View~bl"canyon. __ _ mer ~ huce N1*1~a~EAL~;ro~RS~~;;~~ U I &HIS J ·u cany ba.tuce at S700 .... -. · Fee land. • like bacllJard. lm·r. 3 Bdrm., 2 bltb. modem mo. No credit needed. 49 .. 1413 49J.f494 17'8 PortManielgbClr JOTAI. DOWN =~~~le. uat Hated! bome~tb assumable 957·1"8pri.oc0Dly. 491-1220 IJO.IOIO SZl.5.000 Broadmoor Seavtew Me~Cllllr loan. S7S.SIOO S1r.S Reule Specialist.a. BJ; 0~ 5 Br 2~ ba, W For lnformalkla ccntact: bome. 8 mos '*I. 3Bdrm, .... 357 Walkt:r 1; lt:r. ..... I024 4 Bdrm.:r family rm. M or 5 bdrm models e1ree n. t«e lndacpd Richard A. Fuller 2Ba, community. Poo1.•-----...... ------1Lani wun new, •-carpet&, avail, some w/pool1. yaid.SUUOO.l31·1G Offiee:IM-tOtO jacuui,tsmis. Nocrectit ..,_.. •• ,,... ___ Real __ Eatate ___ -1EASTSIDE R·2. 3 Br. a • • e roo • • tree 96M602. LA*e....., IOIS Home:.....,. needed.lmmedoccupan· Glent 3 bdrm., famJly •-i:W()QD;m:il, Ba.Tci;CondJtioo.Plw bouae!Sl3e,!'12....... Pennlngt.onPropertles ............ -... -cy. Owner to carry rm. home: t frplca .• CALL_._ ~-·' ••••••••••• .. •-•••• .. • IY-• bal n4-&t0-.,.,... shake roof. choice WOOIIRmll Far 3 '2 Ba. Addition. 551-2000 IYOWIB °"1 ance. ~ ..... Tbla -~--.,__ H\ll'l'Y Ts°',000. HVH M=· o 4.Br, DR, BLUFFS. tBdrm bonus Newport Hetpts loca· -. .,..._.... _...._ ·-------•I 2 BR tow-nbouse, lrl FR •• ..,.. Newly d--• tloa.$179,900 lnveated over SH,000 __. ti SUN " SAi • ._.. · .,-rm. 2~Ba. end unit oa Call,.... .. ~ .... more~-;:\n1thla l·IMO ·----PIUCIDIUGHTI pa o, couted. A1111mable free nbelt ~pool. _._... l I ~ ~ Be a d-eller ln u-•v. CLUB. S63.SOO. 835-3178 loan &t0-1141 l",.. """' ..... ove Y um. 2i--------•I Aaltln1cnlyP.59,000. It .. w wkdys. • · .,.,....., . ._.. · Mariner's Cove 1:-<..t.·'... I...:.!'--i.-=(e~ ~Ov:: POfULAITPLAM No Deed to~ualify for a sconnw.n ~ha:m~rnl~~·~ _$_9 ___ 0_0_0_D_O_WM__ Sll.•DOWM By Owner. Prite reduced l~pool 6greenbell Super abarp family :!,~~Mt. v.~·':°an. _ 136-7133 Windsor Model. Hu a t .~BJ! .. ~1.,!!EAawCHav. S1011~K· .. "°'p1 ...... ~.f 2~1tlu1fLf~1-----='-----Tbla lOcat.ion ia acelJmt bome, 2 patloa, boat•· fiice a&r home. dtn rm '--1044 nice deck and a covered Brand new 2 aty 4 BR. 3 .. --. ,,_ -.-" bet -, IAYlllONTS lorpeaoefrprivaey.On ct11, beautiful lawn.. lg fam rm iorseous -p1Uoandlt'1JuatwalUns Ba,den,boouaroom,2 3sr.2Ba.f.rpl~1 2 car1ar br, 2 ba. S129.900. I W1Utplerfsll1~4BR • cul de sac. Willing to Only I block• to all frplc ...... e ~ll kept yd •••••••-• .. ••••••• for you. Tbe prtce la u wet ban, I'll cUTy at ln a Carmel-uu setttn1 briebt klcbn w /eatin1 3~ ea. formal den, 2 carry2ndTDtoqualJfied 1eboolalcl>U'b.Callfor $17,tO~ Prln only: TUmaoclfJ dellebtful aa tbe home. SHOO imo. No credit ona~at.lnUdoSand.I area, pantry" blt·W . fi~leeea. II 4 R 2\'i buver moredetalls.~ 551.3950 YllW•Sl2t,to01 Can beyounforSS:S.000. needed. 95'J.1888. Prine. SUI, 141-1.282 Lovely liv rm w/dinlq Ba,formaldlne,femrm. -~ , :.. HERITAGE Turtlerocll: Broad moor You own t.be land. on.b'. area· frpl. upgraded bollua rm. a fireplacea. i------------------ff._.. Bmtifll carpets 4i decor Web.onACo. Rltn . . REALTORS Pl an 2 boat• lovely •w.v throuout. Back pet lo VETERANS foothill view. All We en· •PrlcedltlowMllt* OUTSTANDING 3500 overloob pool & green.1=iiiiiiiiiiim..eeooiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9 PETE R NO DOWN PAYMENT try· Wood paneled Comer lot. 2 sty. 4 BR. S.F. 4BD.formalcltninc. belt. Front patJo creates•• HO .. ES fireplace. Formal dlnlng famJl ... _,_ F.R. bome ( + btdeawa1 tt u e tr <""-•.. '61.6. ~ -room. Floral etrium 1~~~~~~~~~ Y rm. Wllllll rm. a rec v en ·y UVUJ "Anl a. 3 _... & FAM IM All areaa ot <>ranee Co. hosta waterfall & pood.1. sell cleanlnt oven, wet· sewtn1rm>.OD~12,000 have easy care for care-p ._. • emit Xlnthomeoalargecor. all VA appra.ls«L Aat. L wood alledfamJ bar, •Ir cond .. loaded S.F. cul dew ·Bil rree llvln1>. Walk to 1W4AI ...,_ ner lot ft'ldaaced for fut 543-18218-24Hn. 1 nse V w b ...... ! .: La....... 104' w/extraa. Senaatlonal at beautiful rooted peUo1 nelgbborboodsbops. bus. fw ,wllaa• '-· aale~-w/V.• a.eou .. ~~~~~~~~~ 1 room. ery ~..,.t .. •••••••••-•••••• .. •••• $125,000. Call todav overlooltJnt "Ro1en' school• 6 cburcbea .• .__._ .. • ~ -n•rnnl• open kitchen, GorJeous IU ... RW ""n2111 " ty•pe landscaped vard •-~ •-'1 -..... ,_ terms. V aceeu. Call: decorator master wtnl * IAWWliA * .,.,. w/bloct rence. Ses>Uate &.elV area. must ....... ..,_,..rain: ... . Ml-2313 COll•UMST H 0 M E F U L Ocean aide of hwy, level ··=· r it •· _ _....;_ Be•-Prln __ ..... _~----_.... •••••·---••••• cwNr11••11s11JN1011N1C1• IBR l~BA.,2•-con IN s u l tobe h [j .a "' • vq ,..._ - ......... 1006 $219.500. ""·-lex, ~ A 2 do. In d•ll'a~'Back L A T E D ! ot, easy access ac · 0:' sure you see this lovely Prime Peeba location. l Re.PIY µ, ,M sos. Dally .,_ :3 ·--....................... a Profess Ion a 11 Y Needs Pllnt. minor re-~!!! bomel Call ror appt. hse from °'*II ~r. Pilot. BOx ueo. CO.ta bdrm. Immaculate --·--landscaped-much peln; fdeal for home 6 b bd ~ -~n~~ e~LCtom•tt m~l ~~~l~ income.Hurey.~lyt~~~~~~~~d6~4g6~··=-==R=u=t~~=a=u=ri=ell2~~r~m~~rm~==OOO~~M~M~.~~·~~~~~~~~ beautlful. Pint tJme on Bkr · __ 552·5448. • - ...._, ' 01 1007 market at Slll,'750. MN11t9•1tS1UNIOllN1Cr• $1591800 •••••••-•-••••• Motivated aeller. Call MlllloaBeal&,y 49Mn31 Xlnt 1oc.. a BR. c1en, trot Mlle Up T1 M0-5wtoaee. Ast. 2 .._ + .... patio, 2·~~)'. $115,000 I ff ~ , iaraies. beam cell· llanballJUtJ.f7M8QO • er ln11. mucb panelln1, ~ ...... 1 With &bis newly ueed Larn 3 •·1* BA HeritapParlt 2br 2~ba. frJ>lc'1etc.AbltV1ctorla •••••·---·•-•••• Mesa Verde executive. FlreJllce,_ quiet au.et. upireded, landacaped, Beach. Ocean views, a.Int .__.. ~ Lota of amenltlea for Eutalde. Alt-f45.t18l draped. $78.500. 5Sl"*5 c o n d . By Own e r . Lo -....-! ,.,. y~ur family aafetyl 4 ~~·Consider tl'lde. wnt price """JI. bdrms, dlDiJl&, den & ...... ~ 28drm. lBa In front. family rm. _a D.replftes. Studioln re.al'. $135.000. Fruit • cltrua 'rffl. __ B .... y_owner __ . t40-_40-_'7*M_.__, S149,000. BKR. 5*1'120 IOUIM OPll•IWAY JOMILOT Lt• a lot. nr 11th St stioDpt.q area. 2 1maU _ ......... -..-. ........ _......._...-..-• uait:i.1110,000. Wlll&'~our="? P.c:.MllALTY ,,..,,.':.'°~ m ••• .fcr ... IDibtDllllJ Piiot DUPLD. ProDl. I Br, 1 ..,._Dr...., tlll&-batb. Sml feed .1ard, .. 2'¢ ,_lluf 1 met cpta. drpl.lml chUd OK, .ldlatMJ. Pot mon la· DO ~ 1M _.., Pl • ... .--aa--. .,,mo...,.. MISAYml Nr golf eoune, larler l sty luxury home, ' R, a BA, den tHt,000. By cnrner.H>-nte SIXHOttlS ..... 170MO Choice Colta 11 .. loca- tlosa1. Better burrf. Term• available. Call now I --... ~ .... tlf ltelc111 1. ' .\ E ') T ,\ T t ADULTSOMLY ln the bu.rt ot Lquna. Sbort wall to beacti., parks, fe1llval1, ple)'house Ir 1bop1. Freah & spacious 2 Bed. 2 Ba tarden apartment la onlysas.•. AWAY MOM TMICIOWDS BeauUtw peaceful COUD· try aetUJUt. Loads ol OX· UP PCM!liJilltl• Cll' COID· fortable u la. Lquna Het1hta 2 Bed, deft, a Ba ... tm.500. MOIUMS UALn 494-1117 ~~p':r.!'nd treea aboUnd. Lara• lot with extra paJtinf and alley •ct.WI. Hom• bl A·l e...... Boom CO ea-oand.1179.500 IT'S SO EASY TO PLACE A CLAS•.-..a D •You may use the handy order fOrm prtnted below to furnish ys With copv fot your ed. •Please note that the bottom OOttion of the coupon may be cftpped mid lfftxed to vwt envelope, uving you the lime to write our correct eddt-. we Piii .. pG111get elf you need more room for your m•11oe. just print or type It on another 8'Ml8t al paper and mall it. e You m91 piece your 8d by phone, lf you wtah. Just dial (714) ~ llatt a Pc lflll I l•ltefll lltl•rrtelll 111111 II 1•1111111 1111116 I d Ill I 11#1111 d .. ,, USE THIS HANDY OIDER II.AMIL WE PAY POSTA&E! • WOOi MAii ONI lM MO Ml LISS THAM J Ute I . 4 ' 14 ..... ne ... ... - --\ - M.n MAI llJ.JI m.n 96.11 SllM 111.n W.t~ $1.JI tll.71 SJlM MUI PAYMENT ENCLOSED CJ SEND BILL 0 Charge: BantcAmertcard I ............ 1 ... Exp. o.te ...... .. Master Charge I ................ Exp. Date ....... . Publtsh for •••..•.•.••• days, beginning ••.....•....••...... Clasaiflcatlon , •......•••••..•••. I I I • I •••••• ·'· •••••••••••••• ~ ................... ················ ................... . I 81J81NE.8S REPl Y MAIL s-.-. ... ....................... PRICED UNDER IDtT. <>wner .mt last Nle Ye17 ftexftlle. VA stop beref I BR. 1~ BA. -in.-. .'J'MOaz. ~•,·1 ! ,·, I• i. 't I I If 1 ---• .uc 11'\' l \ We I ' IB IOft ....................... a.. ........ Two a•1 ..• Oraqe .. ~«m/ea. 1 ..... Au. . -.0001••· •... Calta .......... 000 •... Col&a ....... *150.000 Five •·1. .. 0..-Orove. .. IUB.500/ea. $. •• Ccllta ..... . .'215.000 s. . .o.ta .... . #10.000 8. . .ec.ta ...... . #10.000 1& .• nmtlD .. .-.ooo ~ •... 0r ...... ,WJ0,000 32 .. .sen Dleco County ••• t1.ooo.ooo 75+~ y-..oraae Cowaty:. • ..,.,,...._ 100+ s.n Dieao~ti .. fl•ooo. •••••••-••••-•••••---------•IO~• gr •• 2 4·pleua, ......_.._. ......_.._Shre nn.ooo ea. a br.2 ba am· ,_. S. 11 IO A s 1 u ma b l e • • r e · Ila, &ood &enm. WW take ................. -... poellf"Slonsbu.Yreotall. 16'J. down. Owner. rent town. For{nfo 551·USIO,$tM132 •EXCITING• "141.....,1 Mobile Rome. acrou hi all ~inf. mucb more-if you wan h.O •121' encl cabani. to live ID tbl.l lap ol ha beaut decorated, mny ury with a paupers xtraa. WW Mil f\lnl/un-thla ta It. (K'JU>T-8). furn. tealO. MMJ.Si c .. ._.Pedtlc SellrDI•• lllll lllobUe&omeSalee 1978 DoubleWide Som· 270811.arbor,&.D men«. MIJ~aded. ___ 14N __ m ____ Prof. lodac • Frwy J MO. ... ...,. close. (257· ) only 1917 Dbl wide Madiaon P 2.990. 28r, 2Ba.litelDtertor, al Mollle"-se.r. apf raded. Priced fo <TWSCl-8895 qu ck ule. su.ooo w.-..sp1cllll <17-tMCA>. Walk to beacb! Super ..... =Stan 1ln1 lewtde Accent. ---------wtnew ldd-at, unn!ded drp a It crpt 'r . (BPIOC7.Cl sza.ooo. ~-=-... 3 bd.rm., 214 ..... cpta. dis lnrHber. patio 6 1ara1e. SUS. L••· 1'1J."13.,,.,.. aa. ZM.f-.rm. &lb. ~-..... -· A&eatm.a51 ' l . ·' NEW DBLUXE APTS. l,IU lk, falllllt rm, rr,te. --. -.zono. •.auc ------_· C"!' DISCOUNT! • ' i f IUCJtotlCS TIClllCW. lmmed opeodno fc op- portunitJei ln an •tab. Office a.'tllstGI .. , .•• .. ...,, '81Places .. I ! (8 DAil Y Pll.OT ............ wanted. Fantueie compaey localed .in pre st116ou MeWfJ(Jrt wea Actiwe tfftM wD ex cellHt ~ condl tiona. GNl!t oommlssl s p Ii t . Comp u lo termtnaL l:Urdwarklng ~•r eef' mtnde dree9S9 •'Hr tlllPlY £xperienceJnf . .s.IPr:..••• AIKft> ILAA 67MllO * P9W 111 lf'rRE ... ,,, ........ .... ·~ ... llii'll"r· ....... , ......... 11 ................ ,.. .c...-..... *" .......... ... ; °'' ... ,........ rt. CompmutMm incbades annual base salary el -.-; supplemental saJBJ')' ol $~050; bi-weekly commlsaicms ll'i1h a nrst year aver8'e of $7.8.13 and yearly bonus averacmc Sl.'12.2 the ftrst yell'. Fer GTE ' Today'• Ar111r offers tr•lnlng, ed· llon, good pay Md ~·It• us choice location. Oppoftunl· IM for edvancement. See what raining you Clf:lllitY for. F.ind out how YO\I can b8 ~Id to learn... I • ~ eqt&lpment • artlUer,Y, st.uveyor • ac:tmln1atratlorilclel'k ••Ir traffic control • mechanic •truck drjviog • med.lctl SEA RAYS! SPECIAL SALE 1978 24' c:...,c--. Side curtiafils. camper covers, rial\ wells, 100 •••. ruel, trim taba. b..._mn. "'loclude9 T--Trailen mne H.P.Mliu I R"I Stodt *562 A UC IU.tll HAlllSOM'S llAIAYIOATS llOl~Hwy,fi& . ...., ; Cal-34 auper cood:. fan taatlc price-just redu tn5-0lr.M UllTHI DAILYP&OT "'"" aSULr •Y1C• DlllCTOIY Far Result Seritce Call 641-1671 ... w :t:= .. •Cl I 8' Laf PllCI .. , ...... .... suu 59495 Mondlly, Aug.-t 14, 1971 . DAILYPtlOT .. •• l i f , l ' I . ' .. •; I I t ; i . ' WASHINGTON (AP> - Martin ,Luther King Jr.'s chief' lieutenant in the civil rights movement said today be 1 believes King received advance i warnina of his assassination. ~ "I think he had Teceived some word from some sources that he was going to be assassinated," 1 the Rev. Ralph David Abernathy ;. told the House assassJnations • committee as the panel ypened a i week of public hearines:On its in \ vestisat.ioo of Kina's death. Howevtr under 'q~oning, Abernathy said lie bas .. no knowledge" of any warnio1 4e- livered to King'. H'e said that although he and King were the closest of friends, Kine had said nothing to him about any tbr~•ts. Nevertheless. Abernatby re· called that the nigbt before the murder' lo Merrtphi&, Teno .• Aprll 4, 1968, Kin~ delivered a speech in wbicJa be seemed to foretell bls death. Tbat was a famous apeeeb in which . King declared, ·~ have been' to the mounlalntop and I ba.ve seen the promised laf\d." In tnOI'~ than an hour or test~m~, Abemlltby described bis relationship with King from th' time \he, l'J)et in Atlanta in ~51. He traced ~e develop111ent of JCin~'ll belie! In nonviolence as <See PROBE. Paie AJ) •• Chemical 1 Fumes . Be leased By GARY GRANVILLE Ge•Dllty ......... A one-square-mile area in central Orange was evacuat· ed today when a 12.000-gallon chemical tank overheated. began spewing fumes and thr~ateoed to explode. Though" chiefly a light in· dustrial and manufacturing center. a trailer park and two schools were included in-the evacuation area. PoUce and firefighters began moving people out of the en· dangered zone .shortly after 7 a.m. when the large chemical storage tank at Sterling Plastics Corp., ~ W. Struck Ave .. Oranse. besan spewing its po- tent fumes. Fire. officials said those fumes are not deadl,v unless inhaled ''in heavy doses" but warned they are potent enough to cause illness and painful discomfort. Should the tank firemen hosed with water in an attempt to cool the chemical reaction explode. the result "is likely to be dev· astating, •'one fire official said. Afteraoea N.Y. S&eeks TEN CENTS The troubled tank contains styrene monoer. a chemical sub· stance formed into pellets that are used to shape such styrofoam products as drinking cups, .a company spokesman said. • . _., ............... FUME..flGHTING PLAN -MAPPED DURING EVACUATION Steven Adkins of Stertlng Ptaatlc:s Aids Rreman Brta'9 Page As he talked. the Red Cross was setting up evacuation centers in the area and city fire officials talked of tnlar1in1 the evacuated area. Motoreyele Crash ~--------.....;---~~--~----~--· First to arrive at th' Red Cross ~ were elderl)' peo. pie orde"9d from a trailer park near Collins Str~ and Ba1avia Avenue. Workers who would normally h ave been in the small industrial buildings that dot the area were turned away by police bar· ricades before they entered the area. They sat in cars parked along roads leading into the en· dangered area walling for the "all clear" that will let them get to their jo~. Meanwhile, fire and police of. ricials planned strategy they hope will end the emergency that was first reported at 6 a.m. One fire d epa rtment spokesman said the seepege of the watery. colorless mass began when workers at Sterling began transferring the sub- stance from underground tanks to those above ground. The heat and pressure pro- duced by the chemical combina· lion was potent enough to blow away a vapor release cover and to start floating the plastic chemieal odor over the area. No count of people evacuated wu available. Newport Beach Police Depart· ment Tl'ainee Gordon Roberts was near death today after his personal motorcycle crashed into a parked car on Daisy Avenue in Fountain Valley. Trainee Roberts. 27 , a s tudent of• the Los Angeles Police Department academy. was Usted in critical condition at Fountain Valley Community Hospital with severe head in· juries. a fractured pelvis and a Viel.8 Fear 'War' BANGKOK. Thailand CAP> - Vietnam, apparentl~ sounding a warning about its collapsing re· lations with neighboring China. called on its people lOday to pre· pare for "a large-scale . ·war or aggression." By GENE 8'1NT GOLETA <AP> -It was like being inside a p1lnt shaker. With no warning, the house started shaking violently from aide to aide. I waa b'ina oo the livlns room floor reading the Sunde)' paper wben ~ ea.rtbQaake bit. c Related stories, photo, A5. > IT BEGAN WITH A LOUD ruJQbllna sound that "~ 1Jmost deaf enini~' My·t'Irst thouabt wu a car had nm into my house or that an airplane bad crathed. But then it kept 101111 and l knew wbat It waa. My atereo equipment on a shelf tumbled to the noor as I tried to Cet 00 my feet tote(. ®tlide, (JUI& Wmtted to Cet OUt of there. But when I tried to 1et otr the floor. r couldn't do it. After a lw lffCl84&. the lbak}U HMd up I bSt an4;I f WU able lo let up ._.. lllY Wife aid IDJMlf CMlt to tbt froet y8"1. broken left leg. Police said ~ was not wearing a helmet. Authorities said Roberts had been at a bachelor party for bis best friend. Newport Bt!ach police Officer Tom Little. who had persuaded the Navy veteran to go into police work upon dis· charge from the service. Fountain VaJley police traffic Sgt. Richard Davenport was un· available for further informa· lion after being out most of the predawn hours investigating the crash. HE'S DEBIJGGED WITH PILUI' AD ·'Thanks to my ad in the Daily Pilot. 1 sold my bug." That's the sales success story told by the Santa Ana Heights man who placed this classiffed ad . ·59 Bug Auto. rf'blt eng . '.\l ech'I}' xlnl Sl.000 xxx· lCXXX If you have a car you want to convert to cash. call 642.S678. A friendly ad-vtser will help you. We make 1t easy to put a few words to work for you. in the Daily Pilot. ., Coast Low cloudineaa nt1ht and morning hours. Sunny during afternoons throut.h Tuesday. but onty partly sunny a.t the beaches. Sll8hll)' wumer days. t' High near 85. Lows tonight 80 to 65. l INSIDE Te8.4 l' t TM 1US • ~ tM ' tntricuaU /rttOtteitfo for tM • ~ ot t1w l"'6M ~ll dil· CWIU IU ~ .uifh AP btcftll1u "*""' Joltn c.n.. nif/. ~,,. &t ..... ' ' , . l SPRINGFIELD. 111. CA ~ -Yetua1 ••Id· wlittlliin ! " ut ~ top of Mr h.11111. aAttoa ........ took Ont platff and • S75 prar.e for wtnnlna th third unn\l"l h ·calllnt contest .al tbc lllf not. Stut~ Fair. A~ u crowd ol 5DO lOoked on UP<l•Y. Mrs Run dolph, u M-y •u d m r ol two rrom Wuverb'. Ill .• outcalk.'<I 11 ~~ with thrt'Mts, words of ende•l"llVtn 1 litU. hum0r. Women lJudled cm " 100-polnt SCMle ln call· •na for l\ulb4nds Of husbunds·to-be They wer~ alv•n \AP to 50 pOlnts for loudn and clarity or u call. up to 25 pointa ror appeal. a maximum of 15 points for ussurunee un4 up to 10 Point& ror ort1lnuUty. Mrs. Rundofph suld she won second pluce in the conte t twq y~n .-go und hns practiced d1aUy alnce then CWlifli her bu.sbMDd for dlnnet'. Edwin. the object of uU the shoutlng. suld bls wlf e cnigbt wllllt to spend her prize money on u new set otlungs. TeenFbver Peddler Hurt In Robbery A YOW\8 nower peddler. 19, who resisted a stroqarm rob- ber's phacldni of hls posies, is "W'Sing bruises today after be· ins draued down a Huntinaton Beach street Sunday by the man's car. Ron Johnson. of Garden Grove. held onto the bouquet after he handed It to the street corner customer who pulled hi.a car over at Magnolia ,Street and the San Diego Freeway. Police U . John Foster said the suspect. long-haired and in his 20s. asked the price and Johnson proffered the flower arranae· ment. The man stepped on the gu 11nd tried to speed off wjth the youtbfuJ Flower Shack employee clinging to the sample 0( bis wares. He was dragged about 10 feet before he let go, police sald. Ranch House Board Holds 1st Meeting The newly elected trustees of Huntington Beach's hi&ttoric Vic· torian ranch m~n'slon.. the Newland House, have held their first organizational m eeting following election. Huntington Beach Historical Society President Teresa Reynolds. met with them Thurs· day ni9ht as an alternate trustee appointee City Ubrarian Walter Johnson ls the other alternate member of the Newland House Board or Trustees. Other members include Charlene Bauer, Jean Hamill, Sue Kene. Nancy Phillips, City Councilman Richard Siebert, and Virainia Whipple. H istoric1.tl Society members whose efforts ha"Ve saved the 80-year·old edifice on a grassy plot near Beach Boulevard and Adams Avenue are working to have it designated a Stale HiJ. torical Landmark. Pilot LamhJ In Law's A.mu BURBANK <AP> -A young hang glider pilot with $200 worth of traffic wanants out against• him new into the arms of the law when he crashed. onto the roof of a vacant house, police said. Douglas C. Evans, 23, of Burbank bad tried \o &J.ide a half mile Sunday but a au.st of wind knocked b1Jn onto lbe root, of. ficers said. DA l~Y PILOT f' ... P-AJ PROBE ••• the most effective way to protest mistreatment of blacks throughout the South in the ~ and 1980s. And be told of King's efforts to show support for the mostly black sanllatioo workers o( Memphis strildns fot wa1e in· creases. Sympathy for the strike brou1ht Kina. Abernathy and other 1&.tategiata of the $ouU..m Christian Lea,.derfhfp Con· ference to Memphis to lead a oivll rights march March 28, 1968. When the march turned violent, Kini became extremely depressed but concluded later that he would return to lead a peaceful protest, Abernathy re· counted. Throughout hi.a experiences in Memphis and elsewhere. King distrusted Jaw enforcement a,gencies and felt he could not re· ly on th~m for protection. Abernathy continued. "He really did not rely on or truat the police powers in this country," Abernathy said. "He knew the FBI was against him tlnd could not be trusted. He knew the CIA was against him and could not be trusted. His hotel rooms had been bugged. The police were looked on as an enemy." Abernath,Y . who succeeded King u head of the SCLC, was the only wltnesi during the open· ing day of testimony. As the session opened, com· mit\ee members saiq they have in~estigaled 21 allegations of conspiracy in the King murder but will reserve judgment until review.ing t.he evidence. Among the spectators today was Mark Lane, the lawyer wJlo blames a conspiracy and who now represents J ames Earl Ray. convicted or killing King. Ray. who now claims he is inno· cent, is scheduled to testify Wednesday. Questioned by reporters. Lane repeated hls claim that ''people associated with the FBI are prime suspects" in lhe murder. The Justice Department con· cluded in a report last year that the FBI had nothing to do with the assassinulion. Two Arrested In Smuggling Of 14 Aliens Fourteen undocumented Cen- tral American nationals and two men Sl4spected or smuuHna them into the United States were picked up by U.S. Border Patrol a•ents Saturday in the San Clemente bllll. John Wesson. border patrol agent In charge, aold the 14 aliens had apparently widked north through undeveloped San Clemente rancbland. They were believed to have gathered at a point near San Clemente kJp School, where two men were re· portedly l.ickln1 the m up, Wesson aai . The two men arrested wort Julio Medina Gomes, lt, and 1 17-year.ald companion. Both men told Border Pa\rol a1ont1 they were u.ndocum-.ct Mu. lean nationala, WeMOn taJd. Of the 1' other alttna IP· ptebended. 10 Wert rtported to be ttom El s.tvador. oqe froJn Coeta Rica and tbtee from M••· \co. LONDON CAP> -Tbe dollar hlt record Iowa u1ulnat the West Gtirmun mark and the Swiss franc today for the third day in aucceuloa. and the price of told rose lo • r«Ot"d ln aftemoon tradln1 -$213.ao ea oun~ in London and $214.375 in Zurich. London's five major &old traders set the mid-morning "fixing" price at $212.25. and tbe Zurich market -set Ill price at '211. 75. Gold prtcea usually rise ugalnst a declining dollar because traders 5uy the pre· cious metal aa a lted(e a1alnst inflation. Tridlne is done on paper with the gold remaining in vaults. The dollar was tradln& on the Zurich exchange at 1.5925 Swiss ~ancs. down·rrom the ptevlous tow of 1.6400 at the end or bUSI· ness Friday. In Frankfurt, t.be dollar was quoted al 1.9532 m arks, down from 1.9672 on Friday. Thal, too, had been a low. Jn London. the pound sterlin• was trading at $1..9760. and dealers predicted U mlght soon go above $2 for the tirst time since Macch 5. 1978. The pound ck>sed Friday atSl.9640. Tourists are already having to pay some money changers more than S2 a pound. • The dollar also slid back In Tokyo to a near-record low of 184.82 yen. Tbe low. 184.65 was registered on Autt. 2. A London foreign uchanae dealer said trading was pretty active although banks and busl· nesses in France and Belgium were closed for the Assumption Day holiday 011 Tuesday. Other morning dollar rates in· eluded 826 lire in Milan. down from 830.40 at the close of trad· ing Friday. and 2.1215 guilders in Amsterdam. down from 2.1395. No Monkey Business; Store Robbed A bandit who wore a rubber monkey or baboon Halloween mask is stul being sought today rouowing the $7.000 armed rob: bery of a Huntington Beach dis· count store Friday night. He apparently hid in the Akron, 7777 Edinfer Ave .. until closing Ume, then s urprised three employees, including the manager. They were forced into the store office in the holdup which occurred shortly alter IJ p.m .. then bound with twin~. Police said the man. about 30. took the day's t ake at the specialty discount house. Woman Killed On Freeway; Two Injured A woman was killed and two men were seriously Injured Sun· day night when two cars collided beadon on the Riverside Freeway in the Yorba Llnda area. Identified as the dead woman was Kelly Allaman. 25. of Corona. According to a Californiu Highway Patrol accident report. Mrs. Alt.sman was a passenger In a car being driven eastbound by her husband about 10 p.m. when a weatt>o\lnd ai.ato skidded acro11 an open divider. The driver or the othet car. Ronald Muyne. 34, of Portland. Ore .. wu seriously Injured and taken to Canyon Gen(!ral Ho11'pltal ulon• with the dc1d woman '• huaband. the CHP lllld. F1re Ga.ta Office OfLDALlt CAPt -T"-·main B•ktttfltld ofllh 'or the Southern C.Ufornl• Oas Oo. waa dtatroyld tOda)' whon 1 flN that b•t•ft tn 1 "l\chtnttte aru on1ulffd lho bulldln•. cautln1 tl6,000 In d•m•I • ffrt ortlolula Htd, • • Gives Us Jazz. ' 8y CRAaLBS B. l..008 Of .............. Every Stan Kenton fan has personal memonea ot tff· • Ing the tall, rangy iconoctaal ot big band Jau lead bis musicJana through a powerful performaoee somewhe~. W.U 11' AT some c0Ue1e c•JDPU1t Or WH tt ·ai tk opera bOule ln San Francisco wttb .lune Cbrllty a.net ~ Four P'relhmen? Or anaybe. bat of all. was lt at tbe old Re1deavous Ballroom in Balboa. where It all belua ln lNl? If you were at Orante Coast Collqe in Col&a lleN. t wheH Kenton and bis cutTelrt band played Sund•y nlOtt, YO\l couldn't help feelin& lt waa all eemtn1 to• clOM Just aix mlles from where that big bam of a blll stood on the Balboa Peninsula. It wasn't the same Stan Kent.Qn who shuffled onto the stage Sunday nlpt. Tbe tall frame. older now. •• bent. 'Itie apeecb was slurred. the talk ram- bling. He sank heavily onto hla seat at the piano. When he stood. be held onto the piano for support. And tbe gestures. formerly dramatic, sweeping motions ol those enormously long arma. were more like weak waves. ; ....... THERE HAD BEEN that fall about a year 110. Ken· ton explained In a ramblln1 talk Juat before the evenin1'1 final number-"Concerto io End All Concertos." lt wu in a parkin1 lot somewhere in Pennaylvaoia and his bead had boWtct!d off the bumper of a car anct when be woke 111p he didn't even know who he was. The doctors told him not to go back to work for 18 months. But be was back at il ln six months and now his strength was giving out and. aside from one more concert this month in San Francisco, this performance In Costa Mesa would be the last one for a while. THE B.\ND WILL scatter and Ken· lon will take a rest. It never bas been made clear just what happerJed to him and a cynic c.ooa might say that wu on pul'J>Ole. perbape to maintain the Kenton mystique. But two things Sunday night tlefied lbal cynical ex· plana&ion. It was obvious that Sten Kenton. at 66. isn't well. Then. there was the band. EVEN FOR A high-powered Kenton band. it played with incredible fervor. Kenton banda have always been young. Most of the kids in the current band weren't even born when Kenton unveiled bis style of modem Jau in Balboa. But Sunday night, they were blowing their guts out. And it was clear they were doing it ln homage. to Stanley Newcomb Kenton. ThoUgh Kenton appeared physically weak, be played quite a lot at t.hJs concert. leading the band wilb Introduc- tory passaees. The band members-watcheCI ancl lbtened latently, sometimes shufrun1 aheet music t'Urloully when they reallud what he wanted them to play. And despite bb obvious weakneu. bis piano playihl wu atrona. The opening arranaement of Johnny Green's "Body and Soul" was done in a w11 you've ttever beard t.be aona. w~ich always has been a Jauman's showpiece. THERE WERE several traditional Kenton numbers. things like "Intermission Riff" and "Peanut Vendor:· There seemed to be more of these than usual. K~riton baa never been one to dwell on the past, preferring io hilbliabt' new mu.sic, new arrangements. new mu.alclana. But be seemed. for l'tlm. almost nostaJgtc Sunday night. "Did you know we started in Balboa?" he asked the audience at one point. Al the end there was-a long standing ovation. THE OVATION wasn't for the band. although many of the 900 or so in the audience wanted to bear more. The band stood. loo. jolnlng ln the applause. The ovation was a tribute to The Man. Yachtsman Arrested The youthful skipper of lbe Uno Mas. a 40-foot cabin ctulser. faces drunken boating charges today after officers allege he ihrew 11 life jackets at authorities who boarded his ~t In Huntington Harbour Sunday. Storm Bartling, 20, of 1659'l Nalu Circle. Huntington Beach. was booked by Orange County Sheriff's Harbor Patrol deputies following the 3 p.m. Incident. Investigators said they over· hauled the vessel after report!; of it speeding up the Anaheim Bay channel through the Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station. Two 20·fOot Harbor ~atrol boats hooked lines to tile Uno Mas. Deputy Fred Torromeo bo~~ded the vessel and began wr1t1ni;i a speeding ticket. A_..,....,.,,, tom.~. -~{liner\) blCtC: bllllO ·~·--..... 8 -• .. lhrt 100%~ ena ~ tl!Mni ~ bllld __ ,__ Los An1•le1 County authorities are hunUna two men who opened fire on a car earry. fn1 two Hun{in,ton Buch women and u ~anion on lbe S.n Gabriel River 'Freeway Sun· dJy. Investigators who took a re. port in Huntington Beach said neither of the two s}Jots fired at the women'& vehicle near the Flreatoae Boulevard offramp ~ttrated the auto. Nonetbelea. they 1Lst the inci· chnl 8' obe of ... ult with Intent to eommil murder. Occupants of the car were ldentltted a.a Shelalh Lawrence. 2e. ~aren Wilson, 26, both of fluntlnaton Beach ttnd Julian Medflo~cb, also 26. or Santa Ana. The victims told police t.be car carrying two Lalin men re· peatedly swerved lrylng to cut ahem off in traffic and finaUy pOlled up to the rear. One oecupant 'Ired two shots. probably from a .22 caliber weapon, MlJch ricocheted away due to lbe angle. . Valley Park Board 'Views Mile Square Fountain Valley Parks and Recreation Commission mem· hers have scbedu~ed a pUblic hearing t.onight to discuss de·. velopment of the 86-acre northwest sector or Mile Square Park. The meeting will begin at 7:30 p.m. in the Community Center. 10200 Slat.er Ave. The city park comtnisaion plans to draft a recommendation for the Orange County Harbors. Beaches and Parks Commission as lo what' type of recreational facilities should be developecS In the last remaining open' area at Mile Square Park. County officials have received two proposals for development of the area. A group or Fountain Valley homeowners oppose both plans. The homeowners · group. called Citizens for Mlle Squatt Park. protested both proposals before the Fountain Valley City Council last month. The council voled to oppose the plans. The homeowners· 1roup told the councll they want grassy. open space areas. The propo&ed plans would cause Increases in crime. noise and light pollution. 8roup members claim. But both plans submit~ to the county. one by VT N Consolidated, Inc .. and the other by Johnny Mann Sports World, a call for active rttrealionaJ use oClh-.Jand. The VTN plans calls for c1 s kateboJA rd park and bicy~le moto cross course. The Johnny Mann plan calls for a largt' softball-soccer field concession. Crane Collapses SAN DIEGO <AP> -The col· lapse of a big crane being used to overhaul the Navy cargo ship Mobile ls under investigation. The $300,000 crane became un· balanced 30 feet in the air Sun- day. keeled over the edge of the dock and fell 42 reet lo the base or the ship. 7 I { I I 17 ... \ '\ TOtlay'• (;1 .. 1_, ' N.Y. S&eeb . . ' . ORANG£ COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS . b: ·'Like •eitlfl In Pai• Slulr«h-' 9J GBNS lft1NT GOLETA <AP> -lt was Ub belnJ lukle a paint lft&er. Wltll a. .....m,, the boule ltartM lllMint vtoleatly from sideto.m. I •• b1ac • tlile Jl•bal fOlln tloal' re114lDt tM Qmday pepeT' wh .. lbe euttiquu Mt. f Related ltoriel, pMto, tU.J -n aaGAN Wftll A LOUD nnnbllllf sou.ftd that •• almo.t deaf'etUna. , My ftrit U.O..Ot waa a Ht bad run Into my boule 91' tbat an airplam Ud··cr..i.ect. But theb it lrept ~a I new 'dat It . was. lly .._.. ~eat on • shelf tumbled to tM tloOr u I tried te 1et en my feet to let outside. I JUlt wanted to let out· of tbe.re. But whien I U1ed to tet off tbe floor, I caWdn' do it. After • few HCOOdl. tbe abatlna eued up • bit and I WU able to set up and 1et my wtre and 11\yaelf out to tbe front yard. I 1'lllN& T8'E QtJdB U8TED 10 or 1S aeeonds. It felt lib a very ltlq quake, bUt oUtatde t.b1Dp teemed pfttiy much ln order. Two ltl'ODC aftershocks folloMd 't.be bic quake by 10 or J5 mlnutet. I was standing .on tbe ~e of the porch and it bucked ~ and down. The aftenhock dldn t have tbe side·to-slde move- ment like t.he flnt quake. A third aftershock ~ame about ao mJJtutes lat«; it was minor. · I ab.a off the ias supply to the house and looted for cfamqe. We were very lucky. One ol the officers I work with bad bis house broken in half. . J fOUDd no problems on tbe outside so I went back in. I mew what to nped and, sure enough, all oi my stereo cear waa on the floor. , • IN THE Ul'C!lllN, WAJD. coffee, diabel, jelly Ul4l ~ were all over the floor. TM Tetrtprator door bad DOODe(I Gp9ll and almolt everything Inside was .,,_en and scatteNcl: lt aoot..l like a bomb bad gone off there. I've been throuab some 9'iDOr earthquakes before but l10t.bi.ac . Ute this. ) Back outside, I belped calm some triptened and eenfued children, while my nelabbora and I' were trylftl to callD ounelves. WE WENT VP TBE STaEET ANO -.aw windows broken in several buslnetset. Tbat•s when I beaan .to reaJbe um waa even worse than I bad thought. The earthquake bad one pleasant aide effect. I was amued bow everyone was trying to help everyope elae. I wODdered why it always seems to take something like this to 1et people to1ether. Abernathy's Belief Rev .. King Wa1·ned Of Death· Threat? WASHINGTON <AP) - Martin Luther King Jr.'s chief lleut.enimt in the civil rights movement said today he believes King reffived advance warning of bis assassination. ''I t.blnk be bad received some word frqm some sources that be was going to be assassinated,•• the Rev. Ralph David Abernathy told the House assusinaUona committee as the panel opened a week of public hearings on its in· vestlgatlon of King's death. . civil rights march March 28, 1968. When the march turned violent, King became extremely depressed but concluded ld« that be would return to lead a peaceful protest. Abernathy re- counted. Throughout bis experiences-in Memphis and elsewhere, King distrusted law enforcement agencies and relt be could not re- l y on them for protection, Abernadly continued. ........... · FAEIGKT TRAIN LIES CRUMPLED AFTER DERAIUENT IN SANTA BARBARA EARTHQUAKE Tremor Shook City Vlaleflllf and '9 ...... 5.1 on Rleltter loale lundaY However under questionfha, Abernathy said be has ••no knowledat\" of any warnln.1 de· livered to Kina. Re 1aJd that althou&b he and Kint were tbe closnt al friends; .Klba llacl said n°*bln1 to bim al>out any ~.ts. - ·•He really did not rely oa or mast the police powers in this cootry;• Abernathy said ... He new the FBI was a&aimt~ltim and eould not be trustect. He kne U.. CIA Wal\ qalnst blm : aDd~ ...... ~m. hGUl ... w ben bQlecl. Werkers Betar11 Nuclear Protest Sparks 18 Arrests SEABROOK. N.H. CAP> - Eighteen anti-nuclear dem- ons trators were arrested to- day as hundreds of construction workers returned to their jobs at the Seabrook auclear power plant The protesters, all members of the Clamshell Alliance, staged the demonstration as more than 300 workers returned to their jobs at the site after be- ing laid olf for three weeks. The workers, many of them vlslbly angt'y at the prgCesters, were among the first to return te their jobs after l.800were laid off. The Nuclear Regulatory Com· miuion last week ruled work may proceed on the plant. Six or those arrested were taken into custody alter tbey en- tered the site tlirouab a marsh and over a fence and chained themselves to a crane and at- taabed a large "No Nukes" sign to the top of the crane. Six othen marched tbrou&b the olant'a main J(a&e as workers shouted der11lvety. Tbe Dem- onstrators then confronted a line of 12 state policemen, wbo Wormed them they would be ar- rested ii they remalffd inside the gate. When the protelten re- fued to leave, the police betan <=arler '~ee Bay' WASHINGTON <AP) -Preli~ dent Carter. seeldng to make poUtical laay out ot rialDI fann prices, flew to 111uowi today to addTela a farmen' c:oftvetitlon. lWS DEBl/GGED ··Tbana to my act tn t.be Duly Pilot, I iOld ~ l*I·" Tbat•a tbi .._ llU«t!IS a&ory told by tM s.nt. Aaa ffeiOts man wbO Plaffd WI clU.OWd ad: hauling them into a waiting school bus. Oae woman, who was in a wheelchair, shouted at police as they arresfed her: "I'm not go- ing to leave. I will come every time I can. You will have to take me away by ambulance.'' 1 She then rell from ber wheelcbalr and wamed police she might be seriously burt if they moved her, but even1Ually she pulled herself back into tbe wheelchair and allowed berse\f to be placed on the school bus. The 12 who actually entered the property of the PubUc Service Co. were charged with criminal tn!spass. · Six more dem.onstraton, wbo chained themselves to the "Seabrook Statton" sicn outside the tenced·in area, were arre&t· ed I or disorderly conduct. Spokesmen for the Clamshell Alliance, an umbrella 1roup which baa organized a •umber of deJDClllltnltlom at Seabrook since )178, said toOaJ's pn&4llt was the ~of a wave ol demonstrations at tbe $2.3 billion power plant. The pntesta are intendl!d to recall the arrests of 18 penons two years ago during tbe fint 4lemoostration at tbe plant site. An. estimated 18,000 penons atten4ed a ClamabeU-1pomond weeUDd, protest adjacent .to tbe co111tri1ctfon site in late June. No one wu arrested. A year qo, 1,.1, Uttl·IUJC)eat demonstntors were NTeited for criminal trespasa at tM lltt. Marine Dies As Car Hits Pole in Irvine An El Toro Marine was killed Sunday in Irvine when bis car went out ol control. struck a Ugbt pole and was cut in half, Irvine police reported today. KlUed in the 2:30 a .m . acci· dent was David A. Westlake, 22, of El Toro. Police said the accident on Unlvenity Drive at the south· bound San. Diego f;Teeway off· ramp occurred, according to witnesses, when Westlake Jost control of bis car while driving at more than 80 miles pet hour northbound in the southbound lues. Witnesses reported that the mld•alr.ed car &truck the curb of the center median, spun out of control and l'lit a Hgbt pole. Police sald Westlake was pro- nounced dead at the scerie. NPy Probe Told BOSTON <APl -The Navy is investigating events tbat led to tbe brealting of a propeller shaft on the nuclear submarine Tullibff while it was submerged, tbe Boltotl Globe reported Sun· day . It was reported that crewmen i.old the vessel's cap- tain. Cmdr. Charles Arnest, that tbe shift. was cracJdng seven days befere it broke. Knertbeless. At>ernatby re~ called that tbe nigh\ before the murder in Mempbia, Tenn., April '· li88, Kin« ·delivered a speech in which be aeemed to foretell bis death. Ttiat was a famous speech In wbith King d«lared, ''( have beeJl t. the mountaintop and I have seen the promised land." In more tban an hour of testimony. Abemathy described bis relationship ~ King from the time they met in AUanta In 1951. He traced the development of King's belief ln nonviolence as the most effel!tive way to yrotest mistreatment of b acts tbro.,gbout tbe South in the 1950s and 198118. And be told of Kine's efforts to sbow support for tbe mostl,y black sanitation workers of Memphis striking for wage in· creases. Sympathy for the strike brou1ht King, Abernathy and other strategists or the Soutlrem Christian Leadership Con· ference to Memphis to lead a lriille Ineldent Qff·daty, Newport Policeman Atta£ked An off·duty Newport Beach poUce officer was auacked and hit in the bead Sunday when be went to investigate an early. morning dl4turbance oear hb home, Irvine pollce reported to- day. Tbey said S"tt. John Simon wa1 not seriously Injured in the 2:30 a .m. incident, which ended ln the arrtSt of Daniel AgWre Torres, 20, a neiibbor of Simon's in the Woodbridge area of Irvine. Torres was booked Into UC Irvine Medical Center for 00. servaUon.. P&ir Seized 0ii Hunting, Drug €barges A dove $dn 't symbolize peace Sunday for two lrvlne visitors when police alleae they found the dead btrd oa the front seat al their car. Not only did polite clalm they found a vlolaat\on or Flsb a.net Game bt.lrlUng codes, they also connscated several shot1um abd •llete they found two am· . Plietamine ptlls and tWQ otber unidentified pills In the glove compartment ol the car while aear~bh'f for more weapons. Booked Into Oranae County Jall on SJ,000 ball on .ch~•· <A pOllellkJn "' • conti'olle"d lub-stance vtH Ml~liul Evans Archie, 33. Of Ldtwood. 11ls companion, W111U4' Gene KroeH, •. of Bellflower •aa clteel for the huitinf vloiltlcla and rete..ed, police 11ld. POiice nported lnmtJaatlna tbe men"fat about nooa 9unda)' on • servtee rotd off C\llwer Orht .tllen tb1y, beard nmota. 'l1ai doft, wbldl Ii ncilt lft ,,.._. rw •una. • .. ,... portedly found t\fnned and cleiifld.lf\:tbt rrQal ~ Ml bl Ardk's ear. Tbe pelce wett lootetl on u an enemy.·• Abernathy, who succeedeCI King as head ol the SCLC. was the only witness durinc the open. ing day of testimony. As the session opened, com- mittee members said tbey have investigated 21 allegations of conspiracy in tbe King murder but will reserve judgment \DlUl reviewing the evidence. Among the spectators today was Mark Lane, the lawyer who blames a conspiracy and who now represents James Earl Ray, convicted of killing King. Ray. who now claims be ls inno- <See PROBE, Page A%> Man Stabbed In UCI Fight UC Irvine police are in· vestigating a fight in a campus housing area in which a Dana Point man was stabbed Sunday. Arthur J. Avila, 27, required 18 stitches in a knife wound 'in his upper arm following the 8:20 p.m . fight, according to the re- ports. He was not hospitalised. Police said A vtla. wl)O is not a UCI student, was visiting someone wbert the fight. involv· ing about five people, erupted. No arTelts have been made but investigation is continuing, police said. Low cloudiness nt1ht and mornlJll hours. Sunny durin1 afternoons tbroqb Tuesday. but oaly partlf sunny at tbe beaches. Slightly warmer days. Hieb near es. Lows tonlgbt eo to es. IN81BBT8DAW Tlac mall tdlo <11 rClftijfd U.. fnlrlcott /fnatldfto /or tM .ole o/ thl ,,..., AG*Jt dU· a&eHt llU ~ "*'9 AP ~---JoM C.· m/l.S.~Bf. ' Run, R~ Run for Fun; Fun, Ftm It was a mob scene Sunday morning as ~bout 2.200 run ners took off for 6.2-mile trek W'Ollnd federal Ziggurat buildi"B in Laguna Niguel. One runner. Ted Cole <below> took his headset radio with him. Race conduct- Girl Sla"" Teen Injured By Attacker SAN DIEGO <AP> -A 17- year-old Long Beach boy was listed in serious condition at Scripps Hospital today after an apparent beating by an assailant who killed a 16-year-old girl on the beach. The nude body of Barbara Nuntais of Lakewood was found early Swlduy near Torrey Pines State Beach. She suffered head injuries in un apparent strugiJe, Deputy Coroner Joe Cogen said. Her companion was not iden- tified publicly, but police said It looked as \f he was knocked un- conscious while in his sleeping bag. ' The youth told police that the couple went tq the beach wil:h another couple Saturday nigKt but joined a group ol males at a nearby beach party before re- turning to their sleeping bags. No weapon was found and no arrest made. f',....PageAJ PROBE ••• c~nt. is scheduled to testify Wednesday. ed b} Laguna Niguel. Addidas and Runners Dellaht wu seen by the sponsoring orgamz1ttwos WI evsdence of the big strides 1n popularity running for fun und heulth has t aken along the Oran.re Co~st. ~~~~~~--~~~~-- Firefighters Join Memphis Police Strike MEMPHIS, Tenn. <AP> Memphis firefighters Joined poJlce officers today in a ~Ideal strike as riot·equipped National Guu.dsmen used jeeps and' armored personnel carriers to round up . l>iclretlng policemen who violated dusk-to-dawn curfew. Members of the 1.400-member firefighters union, which ls sWl under court lnJunctlon as tbe re- s ult of a three-day, arson- plagued strike in July. vcMied 1>verwhelmingty to reject the city's. CQtitract proposal. Police turned down a similar proposal by a 9-l margin July 15. "I explained to them the con- sequ e nces of walking out again." said Kubron Hud- dleston. president of the union. Local 1184 of the International Firefighters Association. "'They listened and they booed." Asked what e ffect the firefighters' action mlgbt have on the troubled cily, Huddleston said. "I asked my ra mily to leave town." Questioned by reporters, Lane r epeated bis claim that "people associated with the FBI are prime suspects" in the murder. StnUflflHng €ases Mayor Wyeth Chandler asked about 100 armed Tennessee Guardsmen -part of l ,200 soldiers activated in response to tbe police walkout that entered its fourth day today -to help non-striking policemen arre,St picketlnl officers at precinct houses. The Justice Department con. duded in a report last year that the FBI had nothing to do with the assassination. "We are suspending judgment as a committee untll all the evidence is in. Nothin& else would be fair," said commit.tee Chairman Louis Stokes, D-Ohlo. Recruiting Probe Set PARRIS ISUAND, S.C. fAP> -A Marine Corps sergeant ac- cused of recruiting Illegal aliens told a court-martial Jury that he was never suspicious ol docu- ments submitted to him by recruits. Staff Sgt. Jon Funk, 31, .said hit immediat~ superiot', Gunnell)' Sgt. RaCael Veles, 31, was always first to interview ap- plicants when they came to the recruiting station in the Queens ffction of New Vorlc City. CMWMaaCCMT DAILY PILOT Border Cops Ask Car Seizure Right WASHINGTON CAP>.:__ Smug- glers bringing illegal aliens across the border from Mexico often use the same trucks over and over because Border Patrol officers cannot seize the vebieles, a Senate subcommittee was told today. lram4gration Commissioner Leonel J. Castillo. a federal pros- ecutor from a border district and representatives of labor and environmental 8J'OUPS uraed ap- proval of legislation to authorize sueb seizures. , Testif)'lDI before a Senate * * * Two Ar~~ttted In Sm11ggling Of 14 Aliens Fourteen undocumented Ce#\· tral American nattonals and two men suspected ot sm"••Un1 thi!pi into tbe Ua(ted ~ta W'ere picked up by U.S. Border Pattol a1ent1 Saturday In t-• San Clemente bllll. John WeNOD, border patrol a1ent 1n cbar1e. aatd the 14 allena had ~arenUy, n W~lk., north ~ amdeveJoptc'I 8811 Clemente r~and. 11l6T were believed to baye 11athtrtd at a point near san Clemot• Hilb School, where two men were re- po rtedly -paclda1 theiu up, Wmonaaid~ Tbe two meo arre.ted were JUUO Mtdln& Gomet, lt, Ud a 17·1ear-old companloa. •oth •• tOld .,,..._ Pitiol ....... tM; ~-=,~w Mu~ tcann •-NW. ~l~11.o:r. :=.tt c~ .. , ....... rrom COltt Rlce d tbree frOtn ••· ... subcommltt.ee on immi81'atlon. Castillo said a 1967 Chevrolet pickup engaged In smu11llng operations was stopped by lm- mi gr a tlon offieera 12 times between April, 1977. and Marcb. 1978. • "When we make a smuggling arrest the owner of the vehlclt" may simply claim tt from ua," C{lStlllo 111,id. "Often the veblclt> I• back ln use for sntug1Una by the next day." ·· Michael 0 . Hawklns. U S. at- torney for Arizona. satd tbe 1el1ure lealilaUon would make •m•Hlll\8 more costly by 1ub- Jeettn1 the amuulers to the loss of their vehlclea.. Hawkina aaJd airplanes, trac- tor trailers and large rec:rea. Uonal veblcleii "are flndtn• ln· ereaalnc use rn thit sordid buai- hesa" because they can hold large numben at people. , ln one uae t'effntly, he satd, ieo alleQI were found tn the back of one tractor-trailer • Castillo aa1cl 1mu11ltn• opera. Uona "may Involve crammln1 tf 1e numbers ot person• lnto · ny 1pace1, f alle bottoma, « dden eompartmtntl wheretbey m••t remain wJtbout food, water, proper venblat\on or HnltatJon rormany~.'' Phylll1 ElHn, immlartll• pro1ram dtuctor for Zero PopuleUon Oro~1 1atd 1mli1· 1rat1oa ~ naa ~­._... ~ ........ Uail ..... • nar old and alie.cb have tra•eled tnot• titan tff.000 ., .... About 50 strikers were arrest· ed by early today and charged with violation of the curfew and tbreatenln~ a breach of peace. I National Guard smen. last month foqht fires during the fire men's walkout. At a televised news conference early today. a haggard-looking Chandler said he decided to deploy the guardsmen aner rocks were thrown through win- dows at Cenlral Police Head- quarters and two precinct sta- tioqs. By CIL\aUS 11. LOOS Ot•Of!IY ......... • Every Stan Kenton fan baa personal memories of see- • ina the tall. ranCY iconoclast -bic band Jan lead bts 'musicians tbroucb a powerful performance aome'tfbere. WAS IT AT some college campus! Or was it at the Qpera house in San Franciseo with June Christy and the Four Freshmen? Or maybe, best of all. was it at the old Rendeivous Ballroom ln Balboa. ·where it all beaan ln lt61?. If you were at Orange Coast Colle,e ln Costa Mesa. where Kenton and bis cur.rent band played Swlday nl8bt. you couldn't.help feelln1 it was an eom1ftl to a don just six miles hom where that blg ,barn or a ballroom once stood on the Balboa Peninsula. It wasn't the aame Stan Kenton who shufned onto the stage Sunday night. The tall frame. older now. wu bent. The speech was slurred. the talk ram· bllng. He sal\k heavily onto bis seat at the piano. When be stood. be held onto the piano for support. And the gestures. formerly dramatic, sweeping motions ol thOR enormously Iona arms. were more·like weak waves. . I(..,. TU:BllE BAD BEEN that fall about a 9ear ago. K~· ton exPlained lo a r"'amblinl talk Just be~re the evenina'• final munber -"Concerto to End All ConcertOI. •• ._, It wu in a parkha• lot somewhere In Pennsylvania and ru• bead bad bounced off the 'bumper of a car and when be wblce up be.didn't even know who lie was. Tbe doct.ora told blm not to go back to wort for U months. Jklt be was back at It in six months and now b1a ~ was lirinl out and, aside from one more concert tbia month in San Francisco. tbla performance in Colt.a Mesa would be the last one for a while. 'l'llE BAND WILL scatter and Ken· ten wlll lake a rest. .. It neyet' has been made clear just what bappene<t to him a.ad a cynic LOOS might say that was on purj>oae, perhaps ~ to malntain the .Kenton mystique. Bl.¢ two things Sunday niaJI! defied tlfat cynical ex· planatfon. It was obvious that Stan Renton. at 66, isn't well Then. there was the baad. · EVEN l'Qlt A b.itb-powered Kenton band, it played with incredible fervor. Keqt.on bands ban always been young. Most of the kids in the current band weren't even born when KentOb unveiled his style ot modern Jui in Balboa. But Sunday night, they were blowing thelr guts out. And it was clear they were doing It in homage to Stanley Newcomb Kenton. Though Kenton appeared physically weak. he played quite a Jot at this concert, leading the band with introduc· tory passages. The band members watched and listened intently. sometimes shuffiing sheet music furiously when they realized what be wanted them to play. And despite bis obvious weakness. his piano playing wa& strong. The opening arrangement or Johnny Green's "Body and Soul" was done in a way you've never beard the song. which always bas ~n a jauman'.s showpiece. THERE WERE sever al traditional Kenton numbers. things like "Intermission Riff" and "Peanut Vendor." There seemed to be more or these than usual. Kenton bas never been one to dwell on the past. preferting to highlight new music, new arrangements. new musicians. But. he seemed. for him. almost nostalgic Sunday night. "Did you know we started in Balboa!" he asked the audience at one point. Al the end there was a long standing ovation. ntE OVATION wasn't for the band. although many of the 900 or so in the audience wanted lo bear more. The band stood. too. joining in the applause. The ovation was a tribute to Tbe Man. Tmirwe Injured Newport. Beach Police Depart- m e nt Train ee Gordon Roberts was near death today after h1.s persanal motorcycle crashed into a parked car on Daisy Avenue in Fountlin Valley. Trainee Robe rts, 27. a stude nt or the Los Anaeles Police Department academy. was listed in critica l condition at Fountain Valley Community Hospital with severe head in- juries. a fractured pelvis and a broken left leg. Police said he was not wearing a helmet. Authorities aald Roberts had been at a bachelor party for bis best friend, Newport Beach police Officer Tom Little. who had persuaded the Navy veteran to go into .pollae work upon dis- charie from the servlce. I a Chemical ·Peril in Orang_e f :-By G.\RY GR.\NVILl;E t Ot .. o.lly .... 14.ttf A one-square-mile area in centred Orange was evacuat- ed today when a 12.000-gallon chemical lank overheated. begun spewing fumes and threatened to explode. Though chiefly a light in· dustrial and manufacturing f center. a trailer park and two schools were included in the evacuation area. PoUce and firefighters began moving people out or the en· dangered zone shortly after 7 a.m. when the large chemical storage tank at Sterling Plastics Corp .. 545 W. Struck Ave .. Orange. began spewing its po· tent fumes. Fire officials said those fumes are not deadly unless inhaled "in heavy doses" but warned they are potent enough to cause Illness and painful discomfort. Should the tank firemen hosed with water in an atteD)pt to cool 7 · the chemical reaction explode. lhe result .. bs likely to be dev- astating," one fire official said. The troubled tank contains · styrene monoer. a chemical sub- stance formed Into pellets that are used to s hape sucb styrofoam products as drinking cups, a company spokesman said. l\S he talked. the Red Cross wals setting up evacuation centers in the area and city fire officials talked of enlarging the evacuated area First to arrive at the Red <See FUMES, Page AZ> Girl Slain, Teen Injured By Attacker SAN DlEGO CAP > -A 17· yeclr·old Long Beach ,boy was listed in serious condition at Scripps Hospital today after an apparent beating by an assailant who kiUed a 16-year-old girl on the beach. The nude body or Barbara N anlais or Lakewood was found early Sunday near Torrey Pines State Beach She suffered head injuries in an apparent struggle, Deputy Coroner Joe Cogen said. Her companion was not Iden· tified publicly. but police said it looked as if be was knocked un- conscious while ln his sleeping bag The youth told police that the couple went to the beach with another couple Saturday night but joined 11 group of males at a nearby beach party before re- turning to their sleepin1 bags. No weapon was Cound and no arr~t made. . ~-• ft wws a mob ~e Sunday ......, • ~ a.200 run~ ners took ofr for 6.2-mile trek around federal Ziggurat building in La1una Nig'9el. pne runner. Ted Cole (bt;low> took his-udset rlidio ~ hilll. a.ace conduct- Clemente ·Men Arrested on Drilg Charges Two San Clemente residents were arrested Sunday on charges of possessing marijuana and cocaine. two weeks after ci· ty police officers aUeg~ they spotted marijuana plants grow. ing in their back yard. Karen Madseft" Stoner, 29. and Ray Lon Jones. 30, both of 60l, Apt. 2. Calle Puente, were ar- rested on a felony warrant is· sued by the District Attorney's Office, a police spokesman 1aid. Detectives were investlg~tlng a burglary report at the couple's apartment on July 28, when they saw the mdrijuana plants, the spokesman said. Taken. as evjdence from the apartment were four o~ces of marijuana and less than an Q&Ulce of co- caine, he said. ' Jon~ ·and Miss Stoner were released, each on S5,000 bail, pending anwlgnment in SouUl Orange County Municipal Court. Carter 'Makea· 8ay' WASJONGTON <AP> ~PNN· dent Carter. Attlnr .to makt political laaytOUt of .,_lq farm prices. ~ to Mtasourl today to address afarmen' coovenlioo. 4tcS by LQvna Nituel. Addidas -4 Runners Delight was seen by the sponsormg orgamzatlons as evidence of the big strides in PoPUlari(y running for Cun und health has tMew eioftg.11te or.ange Coast. - ~istrano YOuihHurt In Car Fall A 15-year -old San Juan Capistrano boy remains in a Mission Community Hospital in- tensive care ward today after (suffering head injuries when he fell from the hood of a car at 2:35 p.m . Saturday. The victim, Robert Skinner of 30151 Sliver Spur Road. suffered .. major head injuries... accord· Ing t-0 Califomht Highway Patrol officers. wben he attempted to jump from the hood of a moving car in a parking lot at 27762 Forbes Road. Laguna Hills. The driver of the car was Christina Roberts. 19. of 33242 Ocean Hill Drive. Dana Point. patrolmen said. Young Skinner ls reported in "satisfactory con· dition." Man Stabbed In UCI Fight UC Irvine police a r e in- vestigating IA fight in a campus housing area in which a Dana Point man was stabbed Sunday. Arthur J . Avila. 27. required 16 ttitches in a knife wound In his upper arm following the 8 :20 p.m. fight. accordln1 to the re· ports. He was not hospitalized. Police said Avila. who is not a UCJ student. was visiting someone when the fi&ht, lnvoJv. ins aboutftve peopte. erupted. No arrests have been made but lnvesti1ation ls continuing. poUce said. Afteraeoa N.Y. sa~ktl . J ' ' . , i .,, . t TEN CENTS' 10 Times In Nearly 4Moiiths By STEVE Mrrot1£LL Oltlllt,..., ..... ...,. The 10th arson ln three and one·half months In the Arch Beach Heights of ~alUfla Beach was extinguia,hed by a neiahbor Saturday morning, before a home under construction could become fully engulfed i~ 01mes. Laguna Beach firemen responded to a fire call at a two· story home under construction at 798 Miramat-St. early Satur· day mornms. lo find a nei.hbor had put ou( the small blaze in· tentionally set on the east side of the unfinished garage. The home. being constructed by realty partners Clark Smith and Neil Papp. Is a block and a half rrom the scene of a three- home rtre last April 27 which caused S'lS0.000 damage to those structures under construction. and damaged a fourth home. Laguna Beach fire in - vestigator Mike Davis said to- day the 4 a.m. fire Saturday was s potted by neighbor Casey Vermeullen. of 971 Miramar St .. who quickly extinguished the small blaze. Arson probers round a coffee can containing a flammable liq· uid at the site of the latest · arson attempt. Davis. who was at the scene of the fl.re Saturday momins. said the incident fits in· with nine other anons In the bllltop com· munity since late April. ··The building was under con- struction. the time is about right and there were no witnesses." Davis said: .. 1'he only difference is the manner in which the fire was set." Firemen have been unable to determine the method used to set the O\ber arsons In Arch Beach He.ghts. and state fire marshal investigators are keep- ing close wraps on their in- vestigation. Joe Halasz. chief investigator for the state·s Fire Marshal·s Arson and Bomb Investigation Unit in Sacramento. said today <See ABSON. P•ge AZ> HE'S DEBlJGCED WITH PILOT AD ·'Thanks to my ad in the Daily Pilot. I sold my bug ... That ·s the sales sutcess story told by the Santa Ana Heights man who placed this classified ad: '69 Bug. Auto. reblt enft \fech ·1y l int Sl.000 XXX· xx xx Jr you have a car you want to convert to cash. caJl 642.5678. A friendly ad·vi&er will belp you. We make it easy lo put a few words to work for you, in the Daily Pilot. Cea!lt Low cloudiness ni1hl and morning hOqrs. Sunny durlnt aftemoons throµgb Tue.day. but only partly sunn~ at the beaches. Sli1htJy warmet days. Hliih near 85. Lows tonlabt 60 to 65. IN81Dt:TeD~¥ ' I, • 41 ONLY N.OT Rev. Ki'OIJ, . Wamed Of Death?, Camp Pendleton WASHINGTON <AP> - Murtln Luther King Jr.'s ~hter lieutenant In the civil rights movemtHJl .aid today he believes Kina received advance warnln1 or his a86asslnation. "I think he had received some word h'om some sources that he wua eolna to be assassinated," the Rev. R11lph David Abernathy told the House aHasslnaUona commiU. aa the panel opened a week ot pubUc bearings on ita f.n, vestiaatJon of Kini'a deatb. However under questioning, Abernathy said he has "no knowledge" of any warning de- hvered to Klq. He said that ulthough he and Kiili were the closest ol friends. KJng tiad said notbina to him about any threata. Nevertheless, Aberti'atby re• called that the n\abt before the murder ln Memphis. 'l'enn., April 4, Ul68. Kln~ delivered a speech tn which he seemed to roretell his death. Grazing cattle on San Clemente's 2.000·acre Vii.beek Ranch are scheduled to give way in coming mont~ to bulldozers. us the Nu-West Development Corp. hones its plans to build about 3,000 homes on the ranch. This is the largest of three , San Clemente ranches under de· velopment. The three-ranch building boom is expected to double the city's population 25.500 within 10 years. That was a ramous speech in which King declared. "I have been to the mountaintop and I have s~n the promised land." ln more than an hour of teaUmony, Abernathy deacribe,d his relationship with King from the time they met in Atlanta ill. \ 1951. He traced the development of Kine's belief In nonviolence as the most etrectJve way to protest mistreatment of .blacks throuehout the South in the 19505 and 19608. Woman Loses Wallet to Panhandler A Laguna .Beach woman who stopped lo &Ive change to a panhandler found herself minus her wallet when the young man grabbed It and rao orr down Glenneyre Street. Wilma Prather, 62, told police Friday she bad stopped to get change from her purse for a blond-haired mah who asked for a handout. When she pulled her wallet containing S75 from her purse. the suspect snatched it from her hand and ran west on Glenn· eyre. Police Sgt. Terry Temple. who was in a nearby building, heard the woman'a 1:1creams and beean running in the direction h1dicat· ed by the woman. The suspect, reported to be betwt1en 18 and 24 years of age, weighing 175 pounds and wear· ing light colore d painting clothes. escaped. Architectural F1r111 Burgled In Clemente Crystal. artwork and drafting equipment valued at S2,000 were r eported stolen Sunday from the San Clemente architectural firm of Keisker-Johnson. A police spokesman said a side door appeared to have been forced open at the downtown Keis ker.Johnson offices, 129 Ave. Victoria Reported missing from the premises were crystal ashtrays. vases and a bowl. framed photographs and office ('qulpment The Kjesker-Johnson firm has been employed extensively by the city or San Clemente. Plans for the city 's pler•bowl r e· development were prepared by Keisker-Johnson. as well as pro· posals for refurbishing of the city's beach club and swimming pool Murder Charged SAN DJEGO <AP) -A 19· year-old Vista man, Richard D. Hartman, bas been char~ed with murder ln the beating death of the 5-month·old son of his wife of one week, sheriff's deputies say. Ll\C F,...PageAJ ARSON ••• his investigators a(e plagued wiill a paucity of resources. "We have eight field ln· vesllgators to cover the entire slate," be said. "Arson in· vestigatioo ta.lees a concerted ef· fort, and we haven't been able to devote the energy or resources to this <Arch Beach Heights> area." Halasz said he bas one in· vestigator in Sacramento coordinating all the Laguna Beach arson reports. "He is evaluating the reports and will follow through on them," the top arson investigator said. He agreed with Davis' conten- tion that the arsons all appear to be set by the same man or group, adding that the victims· homes are all in the construction stage -with most having com- pleted the framing segment of their structures. The worse rlre occurred April 27 where flames gutted three homes under construction and part of a fourth completed home on La Mirada Street. Other fires, believed to have been intenti~ally set, occurred at 900 Santa Ana St.. 906 Tia Juana St., 992 Miramar St.. 1151 Summit Way, and 503 Alta Vista Way. · The Alta Vista Way blaze OC· curred July , 25. and caused $40,000 to a house under con- struction at that address. Saturday's arson was 'con- tained to a few pieces or plywood laying in the open garage or the home . State arson investigators said they are following up several clues in their search for the arsonists. but do not want to publicly reveal that information at this time. Naval Plane Crashes at Sea AGANA , Guam <AP l -A twin-engine U.S. Navy airplane carrying Undersecretary of the Interior James Joseph, two 11d· mirals and 27 other persons crashed today ip the Pacific Ocean and sank. Joseph, the admirals and 25 passengers and crew were rescued. but two Navy men were missing. Nine were hospitall1ed tn good condition today at the Naval Regional Medical Center on Guam, authoriUes sald. Joseph was among those treat· ed and released. And he told of King's efforts to show support for the mosUy black sanitation workers of Memphis striklng for wage in· creases. Sympathy for the strike brought King, Abernathy and other strategists of the Southern Christian Leadership Con· ference to Memphis to lead a civil rights march March 28. 1968. When the march turned violent, King became extremely depressed but concluded later that he would return to lead a peaceful protest, Abernathy re· counted. Throughout his experiences in Memphis and elsewhere, King dis trusted law enforcement agencies und felt he could not re- 1 y on them for protection, Abernathy continued. · "He really did not rely on or trust the police powers in this country ... Abernathy said. "He knew the FBI was against him and could oot be trusted. He knew the CIA was against him and could not be trusted. His hotel rooms had been bugged. The police were looked on as an enemy." Abernathy. who succeeded King as head ot the SCLC. was the only witness during the open· ing day ortestimony. Two Arrested In Smuggling Of 14 Aliens Fourteen undocumented Cen· tral American nationals and two men suspected of smuegling them into the United States were pioked up by U.S. Border Patn>l agents Saturday in the San Clemente hills. John Wesson, border patrol agent in charge, said the 14 aliens bad appl\rently walked north thr~gb undeveloped San Clemente rancbland. They were believed to have gathered at a point near San Clemente High School, where two men,were re- po rt edly picklne them up. Wesson said. The two men arrested were Julio Medina Gomez. 19, and a 17 -year·old companion. Both men told Border Pat~ agmts they were undooumented Mex· lean nationals, Wesson said. Of the 1' other aUeas ap· prehended. 10 were reported to be from EJ Salvador, one {('Om Costa Rica and three from Mex· ico. ·Hubbj-Hailer Takes PriM SPRINGJl'l~D. lij. CAP> -Yelllng ··Ed· wiiltiiiin ! •· at th~ top or her IW1g5' Sburon Rttndolph took first place 1md u S75 prize for winning the third ann~Hl trmt>and·callin& contest .at the Illinois Stute Fair, As a crowd oC 600 looked on S\lnd.uy. Mrs. Ran· dolph. a M~year-old mother of tWQ. from Waverly. tll.. out.called 12 competitors with threats, words of endearment und u Ultle humor: Women were judged on » 100-point s~ule ln. can. tne for' huabunds or butbunds·to·be. They wfre given up to SO point.a tor loudness and charity o'f u cull up to 25 pobb for appeal u muxlmum of 15 po nts for ussurunce and up to JO polnt.5 ror originality. Mrs. RttndolPh s11id sh;won second pluce in the • contest two yem ttlQ und us practiced ct.Mlly Since then callhil her.busJ>Qnd lo dinner. Edwin. the object ot au the ahout1n1. suid his wife ri\igbt ant lo spend her prize money on u new set or tunas. • . ,,. By CHARLES 8 .:1..00& · °' ... Dlllty .,. .. - -- Every Stan Kenton ran bas 'l>tl'IOnal memories of &eft' Ing the tall. rangy iconoclast of bi• band, J~n lead hip musicians through a powerful performance aomewbe~ . WAS IT t\T some college earnDQS! Or wu lt at ~ OJ)era bouse in San Franclsc6 with June Cluiaty aad the Four Freshmen? Or maybe. IMlt ~ all. was it at tl,e Old Rendezvous Ballroom In Ba&boal Where It all began tn 1941? If you were at Orange Coast College in Costa Mfaa. wbere Kenton and his current band played S"1Ki•Y "isht. you couldn't help feeling it was an comin1 to a close Just six miles from where that big bam of a ballroom one stood on the Balboa Peninsula. It wasn't the same Stan Keqton wbo shurned onto the stqe SundllY ntsht. Tht tall frame. older now. ~ ben.t· Tbe speech was slurred. the talk ram· bllna. He sank heavily onto bis seat at the piano. When he atood. be belcl onto t.he piano ror support. And fhe eestures. formerly dramatic. sweepint motions or those enormously lone arms. 'were more like weak waves. .. • k•tnclet ' THERE HAD BEEN J,bat fall. about a· p!_ar aao. Ken· ton explained In a rambllnt talk J~L.,!ore the eveqma's final number -••Concerto w !lnd All Wf!Certos... · It was In a parkine lot 50mewhere In P~Jtvanla anct his bead had bounced o!f Ute bumpett of-.!& car·Od When he woke up he dldn 't even know who he was. The doctors told him not to ao back to work for 18 months. But he was bac~ at it eh •ix months and ftQ"\lfllis stren;tb was 1ivia1 out and. aside.. f~ on' more concert this month ht Saft F.i'ancisco. this performance in COsta Mesa would be the last one for a While. THE BAND'WILL scatter '1Jd Ken• ton will take a rest .. It oever bas.been made clear'Jus' w)lat happened to him and a cynic nflght say that was on purpose, perhaps &..oos to maintain the Keaton mystique. But two things Sunday nitbt defied tbat cynical ex · planation.' It was obvious that Stan Kenton. at 66. Isn't well. Then. there was the band. EVEN FOR A high-powered Kenton band. It played with Incredible fervor. Kenton bands have always been young. Most of the kids ln the currant band weren't even born when Kenton unveiled bis style of modern jau in Balboa. But Sunday night. they were blowing tbeir guts out. And It was clear they were doing It in homage to Stanley Newcomb Kenton. Though Kenton appeared physically weak. he played quite a lot at this concert. leading the band with lntroduc· tory passages. The band members watched and U~tened intently. sometimes shuffling sheet mbsic furiousl,y when \hey realized what he wanted them to play. And despite his obvious weakness. his piano playing was strong. The opening arrangement of Jobnny Green's ··Body and Soul" was done In a way you've never beard the sons. which always has been·a jazzman's showpiece THERE WERE several tradWonal Kenton numbers. things like "Intermission Riff" and .. Peanut Vendor " There seemed to be more of these than usual. Kenton bas never been one to dwell on the past. preferrine to hi&hliiht new music. new arrangements. new musicians. But he seemed. ror him. almost nostalgic Sunday night. "Old you know we started in BaJboa7" be asked the audience at one point. At the end there was a long standing ovation. THE OVA110N wasn't for the band. although many of the 900 or so In the audience wanted to hear more. The band stood. too. joining in the applause. The ovation was a tribute lo The Man. F,...Paflf!AJ FUMES SPREAD ••. Cross centers were elderly peo· pie ordered from a trailer park nt!ar Collins Street and Batavia Avenue Workers who would normaJly have been ln the small industrial buildings that dot the area were turned away by police bar· ricades tMVore they entered the .· area. They sat In cars parked along roads leading Into the en· dangered area wailing for the "all cJear" that will let them get to their jobs. Meanwhile, fire and police of· ficials planned strategy they hope wm .A!hd the emereency that was first reJ>Orted at 6 a.m. ( LONDON CAPJ -Tll~ dollar hlt record 1°"" a1ainai the West German mark aDd th4t SWiss fnnc today for tb• third day in succession. and tilt! price of aold rose to a record ln aReraoon trading -$213.50 al\ ouhce in London and S2t413?S ln Zurich. London's five major gold traders set the mid·morning "flxina" prtce •l qu.25. and the Zurf~h market set lts prJce at trU.15. Gold prices usually rise ataMlnat i1 dee1tnina do~I · r JJec.ause traders buy the p e- dout met.Bl 'aS a hedge ag t fnfiatlon. Trading Is done on paper with the gotd remaining in vaults. The dollar was trading on the Zurich exchange at 1.5925 Swiss fr•O"CS, down from ~ previous low of.. t.~ at th~ end of bust· {less ~ay. In FranJcfUrt. the dollar was quoted at 1.9532 marks. down from l.9$72 on Friday. That. too. bad beed a low. In Londo11, the pound sterling Witts trading at Sl.9760. and de1tlers predicted it might soon go above $2 for the first time since March 5. 1976. The pound closed Friday atSl.9640. Tourlsts are already ha"ing to pay J<>me money changers more than S2 a pound. The dollar also slid back in Tokyo to a near-record low df 184.82 yen. The low. 184.65 was registered on Aug. 2. A London foreign exchange dealer said trading was pretty 1tct1ve although banks and busi· nesses in France and Belgium were closed for the Assumption Day holiday on Tuesday. Other morning dollar rates in· eluded 826 lire in Milan. down from 830.40 at the close of trad· mg Friday. and 2:1215 guilders 1n Ams terdam. down from 2 1395. Burglars Hit 1hree Homes In Laguna Residents or three homes in Lagurn. Beach suffered brealt- ins over the weekend. with prop. erty stolen by burglars ranging fr:om bicycles to sextants. Carol Autb. or 2858 ChiUon Way. told police someone stole two bicycles from her garage over the weekend. valued at $130. Police learned Sundety that Sl.500 in stereo eqwpment and other items were taken from the home or Lynn MacGillivry of 596 Anita St. The burglars entered the home through louvers in the front door. taking a stereo. television set. jewelry and cash. In another burglary Sunday. thieves made of( with a sexta~l and a chronometer owned by Donuld Brown of 449 Thalia St. Brown valued those nautical instruments 1tt $680. Navy Probe Told. BOSTON <A1>> -The Navy is investigating events that led to the breakine or a Rropeller shaft on the nuclear submarine Tullibee whJle It was submerged, the Boston Globe reported Sun· duy . It WltS reported th<fl crewmen told the vessel's cap. lain. Cmdr. Charles Arnest. that the shaft was cracking seven days before it broke 91 GSNS IR1NT GOLETA CAP> -lt WU like belq tn.ide a palAt lbUer. Wltll no •arnlna. tbe house started abakina v'°6totly from sid to Ude. l w l)'ina on tbe livine room Door Nadlnl lbe ~paper wben tbe ~bl\. <Related ltoriel, ~. A5.) , IT a&GAN Wl'n A LOUD nunblias SOU1MI that wn almo1t deafeniftl.'.~ • . ~ My lint tboulht was a cw bad nm brto ~ bcMllle or tbat an airplane bad crubed. But tben it kept IOIQI and I beW what it WU. My ltel'eo equipment GD a lllelf tumbled to the l1oor ¥I tried Run, Run, R1111 tor.,...., F~ Faaa It was a mob scene Suml~y morning as about 2,200 run· ners took off for 6.2-mile trek around federal Ziggurat building in Laguna Niguel. One runoer. Ted Cole <below> took his headset radio witb him. Race conduct~ Newport Cop Attacked in Irvine Fra£aa An off-duty Newport Beach police officer was attacked and hit in the bead Sunday when he went to investieate an early. morning disturbance near his home. Irvine pollce reported to- dav. They said Sgt. John Simon was not seriously injured in the 2:30 a.m. incident~ which ended in lbe arrest of Daniel Aaulre Torres, 20, a neighbor of Simon's in the Woodbridge area of lrvine Torres was booked into UC Irvine Medical Center for ob- seTVation. Police said he was to be transferred to Orange County Jail on SI0,000 ball to face cha~1es ol assault with a .deadly weapon. Police said Simon and many other neighbors were awakehetl. by crashJng noises and yelllna. They said that Simon went to invmtgate and aUe1edly found the t!USJ>eet throwing a metal mailbox around and yelling ob-- scenities. When Simon asked what was wrons, Torres re· J>Ortedly yelled lncoberenU,y and threw 'the mailbox at him. blt-t.ina Simon in the bead. to I« on my fNt to Pt OUUMle. I Jult wuted to let CRlt ol there. ~ .. , wMn I U1ed to tel off the llOor., 1-eoulda't do rt. Aft« a few MC08da. tbe sbMiiu eaecl up a bit and J w11 able to set ap _.,. 1et my wife aDd -..V out to0tbe fl'OlU yard. j I ftllNK 'DIE qvA&E IASl'BD 10 or 15 seeOIMll. lt felt Ille • very llnac quke, but ouWde tblnp aeemed pretty lll'Ucb in orde~ . / I'•o strong aftenbocb followed µ,f bla quake by 10 or 15 mlautet. I wu ataDdinl on the edae ol tbe porch aad it bucked up and doWa. The a.rtenbock didn't have the aide-to-llde move- ment Ulle the ftnt quake. A third afteraboclt came about 30 mtnute1 later; it was minor. I •ut atf the gas supply to tM house and looted for damace. We were very lucky. One of the officers I work with bad his hO\ale broken in half. l found no proijfems on the outside so I went back in. I knew what to expeet and, sure enouab, all of my stereo gear was on tbe floor. ed by Laguna Niguel. Addidas and Runners Uelight was seen by the sponsoring orgamzauons as eVldence of the big strides in popularity runntng for fun and health has Utken along the Orange Coast. Newport Man 'Ne ar D e ath' From Crash i Newpor\ Beach Police Depart· ment Trainee Gordon Roberts was near death today after his personal motorcycle crashed into a parked car oa Daisy Avenue in Fountain Valley. Trainee Roberts , 27, a student of the Loa Anieles Police J'.)epartment academy, was listed in critical condition at Fountain Valley Community Hospital with severe bead tn- jurres, a fractured pelvis and a broken left leg. Police said be was not wearing'a helmet. • Authorities said Roberti had been at a bachelor party for bis beat f~d, Newpor,t Beach police VlnCer Tom Little, who bad pert\laded the Navy veteran to go into police wort upon dis· cbar•e from the service. Fountain Valley police traffic S.t. Richard Davenport was un- 11vaUable tor further informa- tion alter btMe out most of Uie predawn hours lnvestigallne tbe crash. 1' .. ay's£ ... t~ -N.Y. Steep .>' N Tl!N C~NTS . . IN 11IE ld'rCREN. WATF.a, cotree. dlslles. Jelly ind milk were aH over the floor. Tiie refriaerator door bad PoPPed open and aim.t enrythlng lnslde was broken .and scattered. It leoiled like a bomb bad gone orf there. I've been through some minor earthquakes ~fore but ~I like this. Back O\.Hlde. I helped calm some frightened and contused cbUdren. while my neighbors and I were tryln1 to calm ourselves. WE WENT UP TUE STllEBT ANJ) saw windows broken in- senral businesses. That's when I be&an to realize this waa even wora.e than I bad thought. The earthquake bad one pleasant sld& effect. I was amared how everyone waa trymg to help everyone else. I wondered wb~ it always seems to take something like lbis to get people 'together. In N ewpo rt Dog n ·ebate Set -Tonight The annual summer debate about dogs on the beach will be held tonight before the Newport Beach City Council. Councilmen are slated to dis· CQll tbe issue after the city's Troubles Beset Arts BJ IOANNE &BYNOLDS Of ... Oller ......... The 1978-19 year bas got.ten off to a rocky start for the Newport Beach City Arts Commission. For example: -Jackie Kilbourne, a long. time commission member and its chairman res1gned in June and councilmen have yet to replace her. -Badget cuts due to Proposi· lion 13 lopped the Sl0,000 ear- marked for the annual arts festival off ttft! commissioner's allocation. -Commissioner George Jef· Cries resigned aa of last week in protest over lack of city council support. -A small controversy ap· pears to be brewing over use of S300 worth of photos from this sprlng's festlnl. The brief history of lbe com· minion. created in 1974. has <See ARTS, Page Al> Foot ball Star Alive i n Crash BL YTHg <A Pl -One youth was killed and former Fountain Valley football star Willie Gil· tens irtjured early today when their C¥ rolled over several times and ejected them in the desert off Interstate 10, a California Highway Patrol spokesman said. Doug Thompson, 17, an ex- Fountaln Valley quarterback, was pronounced dead on arrival at Palo Verde Hospital after be ~nd the car's driver. Gittens, were thrown from the car. A bolpltal nursing supervisor re· ported Gittens in good condition with miD01' head lnJurles. A CHP sPokesman su11ested that tbe driver may bave fallen asleep at the wbeel before dawn alone the J.ona, bar~en stretch or desert road. n. routha ttiere students at Arlaona State, where they bad been tee'"'~ for football. Parks. Beaches and Recreation Commissioners recommended that dogs be allowed to use ocean beaches during the sum- mer months. That recommendation came Aug. l on a 4.3 commission vote arter a two-hour public bearing. Current city law bans dogs from the beaches from June ts ' to Sept. 15. The animals are fil. lowed to use the beachea during the winter months after 5 p.m. and before 9 a.m . Dogs are forbtdden from using bay beaches at any time. • Members of Society. Concerned Owners or Pets <SCOOP> !n June asked coun- cilmen to. lift the summertime ban. At that time, councilmen forwarded the proposal to the commission for the public hear· ing which ended with com· missioners Mike Johnson, Bren· da Ross, Gary Lovell and Standford Green voting to rec- ommend lifting of the sum· mertime ban. In addition to the beach use question. SCOOP members got commissioners to agree to a pro· posal in which the city leash law signs, posted at all beach en· trances, would be altered. The signs, which note the sum· mertime prohibition of beach use by dogs, would be altered to add that violation of the city's animal litter law would result in a SOO fine for the first offense and a SlOO fine for the second. A third SCOOP proposal to have councilmen "instruct the animal control officers in the aim and purpose of lhe leash law." was rejected by com· missioners as being vague. Councilmen have been con- fronted with the ~uest to allow animals on the ocean beaches in the s ummertime lo previous years, but have always defeated the proposal. The council meeting gets un· der way at 7:30 p.m. at city haU. Coast. Low cloudiness night and mornirt1 hoµ.rs . Sunny ·during afternoons LbfOUgh Tuesday, but only p41rt1y sunny at tbe beaches. Slightly warmer days. High near 85. l..ows tonight eo to 65. • IIUl•ETeDAW The mQrl aMo omafteld tlM •ntricott ~ /or ,,.,. .aie "' uw lnae.'Rftlt •· cutfl Ml~'°"" AP buftwH ~ Jolta G'lm· mff. See Potif a.. • Close quarter action like this was the order of lht• day off !'Jewport Beach Sunday as 39 :-.k 1ppt'rs and c rews scr a mbled for points in lhe Etche lls-22 world ch ampionship out of ~ ewport Harbor Yacht Club. Frank Tolhurst. ~o. KA68 def ending champion from Sydney. Australia. is s hown fighting off a challenge by NHYC's Phil Ramser ufter rounding weathe r ma rk. Story on Boating. Page A-8. ~King Warned of Death? Civil Righu A.Uk Testifies at Hearing WASHINGTON <AP> ~I artm Luther King Jr.'s chieC li e utenant in the civil rights mov e m e nt said today h e believes King received advance warning or bis assassination. "I think he bad received some word from some sources that he was going to be assassinated," the Rev. Ralph David Abernathy told the House assassinations committee as the panel opened a week of public hearings on It.a in- vestigation or King's death. However under questioning, Abernathy said he h as "no knowledge" of any warning de· livered to King. He said that although he and King were the closest of rriendi. King had said nothing to him about a ny threats. Nevert~less. Abernathy re· called tha the night before the murder Memphis, Tenn .. April 4. 1968. Kina delivered a speech in which he seemed to foretell hJs death. T hul was a famous speech ir which King declared, "l have ht"en to the mountaintop and. I h<ive seen the promised land." In more than a n hour of lesttmony, Abernathy descnbed his re lationship with King from the time they met in Atlanta in 1951. He traced the development of King's belief in nonviolence as the most effective way to protest mi s treatme nt of blacks throughout the South in the 1950s and 1960s. And he told of King's efforts to show support for the mostly black sanitation workers of Memphis striking for wage in· Af' 'KING HAO WORD' Rev. Ralph Abernathy creases. Sympathy ror the strike brought King. Abernathy and other strategists or the Southern Ch ristia n Leadershi)> Con · ference to Memphis to lead a civil rights m arcb March 28, 1968. When the m arc h turned violent. King became extremely depressed but concluded later that he would rt?t.urn to lead a peaceful protest, Abernathy re-counted. _ Throughout his experiences In Memphis and elsewhere .. Kiniz distrusted law enforcement agencies and felt be could not re- ly on them for protection. Abernathy continued. "He really did not rely on or trust the police powers in this country," Abemalby said. "He knew the FBI was against him and could not be trust.eel. He knew the CIA was asainsl him and could not be trusted. His hotel rooms had been bugged. The police were looked on as an enemy." Abernathy. who succeeded King as head of the SCLC. was the only witness during the open- ing day ol testimony. As the session opened. com- mittee members said they have +nvestigated 21 allegations or conspiracy in the King murder but will reserve judgment until reviewing the evidence. Among the spectators today was Mark Lane. the lawyer who blames a conspiracy and who now represents James E a rl Ray. convicted or killing King. Rav. who now claims he is inno· cent. is scheduled to testify Wednesday. Questioned by reporters, Lane repeated his claim that "people associated with the FBI are prime suspects" in the murder. T he Justice Department con- cluded jn a report last year that the FBI had nothing to do with the assassination. "We are s uspending judgment as a committee until all the evid ence is in. Nothing else would be fair." said committee Chairman Louis Stokes. D·Ohio. East Coast Yields Gas NEW YORK <A P ) -The first discovery of natural gas orr the East Coast was announced today by Texaco Inc .. but the company said it doesn't know whether it found enough of the fuel lo make it worth extracting. Texaco said it had gotten ·very encour agjng" test results from 14,000 feet down the well It owns with five companies in the Baltimore Canyon 100 miles east or Atlantic City, N.J. The well produced natural gas at a rate of Plans Shelved BATON ROUGE, La. (AP> - Gulf States Utilities Co .. citing severe economic ris ks, bas s he lved pla ns for a nuclear gt'Perating plant in east Texas. DAILY PILOT . ...,. ...... ..._ __ _ l<lctrllC ...... viu _...,,_o.. .. ......, ~ ...... ..... 7 .5 million cubic feet a day. con· sidered a s mall quantity for an offshore well. Industry analysts said that while a well of this size on land would probably be put into pro- duction. more gas would have to be round at the ocean site to j ustify building a production platform and a pipeline to shore. The company said it would drill additional test wells on the 5.693-acre site before deciding to · set up a production facility. fo. duslry experts have said that gas was more likely to be round in Baltimore Canyon than oil. The U.S. Geological Survey estimates there are 1.02 bllllon barrels of oil and 13.5 trtWon cubic feet of natural gas under all Baltimore Canyon tracts, In· c1udlng tracts already leased by the government and areaa that will be bid on in February. There bas been Intense speculation recently about drill· utg in the Baltimore Canyon, particularly since last month when Texaco announced that it found traces or hydrocarbons. Several other companies are also drilUng In the area. Two. Shell OU Co. and ConUnental Oil Co., have reported that their test wells were "dry holes." The company said it will con- duct tests within three weeks lo determine whether there is more gas In the well than the in- iti a I test.a Indicate. Texaco began drilling the well Aprll 16, in partnership with Getty Oil Co., Sun Oil Co. of Delaware, Allied Chemical Co .• Transco Exploration Co.· and Freeport otl Co. Texaco's 31.S percent slake in the well makes It the larJest partner. The com· panlea paid S16.88 mUllon Jt auc· lion for lbe rights to drill ip the block. Ed··wllinner Hubby Hqjier Takea Prize SPRINGFIELD. Ill. CAP > -Yelllng "Ed· wliiiiiiin ! " at the top or ber lungs, Shatron Randolph took first place and u SV6 prize ror winning the third annual busband..calllng contest at tbe Illinois StMte Fair. . As a crowd of 500 looked on Sunday, Mrs. Ran· dolph. a 34-year·old mother of two from W1verly. Ill., outcalled 12 coml)etitors with threuts. wol'ds or · endearment and '1 lltlle humor. . • Women were Judged on a 100.polnt scale In call· Ing for husbands or h\lSbands·to·be. Tbey were given up to so polrits fpr loudness and clarity or a call. up to 25 points for appeal, u mandmum of 15 points for a~suronce und up lo 10 ,polil\s for ortalnallty. Mrs. Randolph said .she won tttond place in the• contest. two yeara a10~ bas practle!d d.Uy 1Jnce tben callin1 her busbaod for dtMet. EdWln, ~ Object of oll tM 1houtm1. said hls wif• inllbl want to tpend her priu money on a new aet of lurtp. J Nuclear Foes • ~ested SEABROOK. N.H. <AP) - EiaMeen antl~nuclear dem· onstratora were arrested to- da)' aa hundl'eds of construction •orken r~urned to their Jobs at the Sea"·rook nuclear power plant. The protesters. all members of the Cla ms he ll Alliance. staged the demonstr ation as more than 300 workers returned to their jobs at the site after be· tng laid off for three weeks. The workers, many or them visibly angry at the protesters. were among the first to return lo their jobs after 1,800 were I aid off. The Nuclear Regulatory Com· mission last week ruled work may proceed on the plant. Six of those arrested were taken into custody arter they en· tered the site through a marsh and over a fence and chained themselves to a crane .and al· tacbed a large "No Nukes" sign to the top or the crane. Six others marched through the plant's main gate as workers shouted derisively. The Dem- on1trators then confronted a Un~ of 12 sta'te policemen. who informed Ulem they would be ar· rested ll they remained inside the gate. When tbe protesters re· ruaed to leave. the police began haullng Jhem into a waiting school bus. One woman. who was in a wheelchair. shouted at police as they arrested her : "I'm not go- ing to leave. I will come every time I can. You will have to take me away by ambulance." She then f e ll from her wbee~air and warned police she might be seriously hurt if they moved her, but eventually she pulled herself back Into the wheelchair and allowed herself to be placed on the school bus. The 12 who actually entered the properly of the Public Service-Co. were charged with criminal trespass. Six more demonstrators. who ch ained themselves lo the "Seabrook Station" sign out.side the fenced-in area, were arrest- ed for disorderly conduct. Spokesmen for the Clamshell Alliance. an umbrella group \f!hich has organized a number or demonstrations at Seabrook since l976, said today's protest was the beginning of a wave of d emonstrations ut the $2.3 billion power plant. The protests are intended to recall the arrests of 18 persons two years ago during the first demonstration at the plant site 'St,ar Trek' At Library Star Trek fans will have the opportunity lo view on~ of the popular television series' a word-winnlng episodes from Tuesday through Frid"y. courtesy of the Newport.Beach library. The library is sponsor ing a screening of the 52· minute, "City on the l!:dge of Tomorrow." filmed in 1967 and the winner or the Hugo Award on Futurism tmd Science Fiction. It will be s hown at the Corona del Mar branch at8 o. m . Tuesdav : at the Balboa branch at 7: 30 Wednesday; at the West Newport children's library at 3:30 p.m. Thursday, and at the Mariner's branch at 1 p.11). Friday. All or the screenings are free. ,_.., ____________ ..... ____ ~" ,,. · Piiot Logbook The Man Still '.(;iv:es Us Jazz ' By CRAaLES 11. LOOS OftMIMNy ......... Every Stan Kenton ran has penonal memories of see- ln1 the tall, ranay Iconoclast of tits band jan lead his musicians throulh a powerful performance somewhere. WAS rr AT some college campus? Or was It al the opera house in San Francisco with June Christy and th~ Four Freshmen? Or maybe, best of all. was it at the old Rendezvous Ballroom In Balboa. where It all began in 1941? If you were at Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa. where Kenton and his current band played Sunday night, you couldn't help reeling it was all comlna to a close just six miles from where that big barn of a batllroom one~ stood on the Balboa Peninsula It wasn't the same Stan Kenton who shuffled onto the stage Sunday night. The tall frame. older now. was bent. The speech was slur red. the talk ram- bling. He sank heavily onto his seat at the piano. When he stood. he held onto the piano for support.. And the gestures. formerly dramatic. s weeping motions of those enormous ly long arms. were more like weak waves. ••1tTC* THERE HAD BEEN that fall about a y,ear ago •. Ken· ton explained in a r ambling talk ju.st before the evening's • final number -"Concerto to End All Concertos." ll was in a parking lot somewhere ih Pennsylvania and his head had bounced ofr the bumper of at c.11r and when be "Woke up he didn't even know who he was . • The doctors told him not lQ go back lo work for 18 months But he was back at it in six months and now bis strength was giving out and. aside from one more concert. this month in San Francisco. this performance in Costa Mesa would be the last one ror a while. THE BAND WILL scatter and Ken- ton will take a rest. It never has been made clear just wt)at happened lo him and a cynic &.oos m ight say that was on purpose. perhaps to maintain the Kent.on mystique. But two things Sunday night defied that cynical ex- planadon. It was obvious that Stan Kenton. at 66. isn't well. Then. there was the band. EVEN FOR A high-powered Kenton band, it played with incredible fervor. Kenton bands have always been young. Most of the kids In the current .. band weren't even born when Kenton unveiled his style of modern jazz m BalboQ. But Sunday night. they were blowint their guts out. And It was clear tbey were doi ng it in homage to Stanley Newcomb Kenton. Though Kenton appeared physica lly weak. he played quite e lot at this concert. leadln,g the band with introduc- tory passages. The band members watched and listened intently. sometimes s huffling sheet music rurlously wbeD they realized what be wanted them to play. And despite his obvious weakness, his piano playing was strong. The opening arrangement of Johnny Green's ''Body and Soul" was done in a way you've never.heard the song. which always has been a Jazzman's showpiece THERE WERE several traditional Kenton numbers. things like "Intermission Riff" and ·•Peanut Vendor " There seemed to be more or these than usual. Kenton has never been one to dwell on the past. preferring to highlight new music. new arrangemen''!. new m usicians. Bul he seemed. ror him, almost t1ostalg1c Sunday night. "Did you know we started in Balboa'"' he asked the audience at one point. At the end there was a long standing ovation • THE OVATION wasn't for the band, although many of tb~· 900 or so in the audience wanted to heC1r more. The band s~. too. joining in the upplaust.' The ovation was a tribute to The Man f'retaPa~AJ ARTS TROUBLES. • • been marked by some inflght· ing, but neither commissioners nor city staff members would at- trl but'e the latest series of events to that internal strife. Jeffries. a Ne~rt Center al· torney. pointed out that Mn. Kilbourne resigned because she moved out of town. His resignation. he said. has absolutely nothing to do with a nrt among commission mem- bers. but with his own frustra- tion at the lack of financial SUP· port for the commission. The commission. without tht.' Sl0.000 festival allocation, is left with a $3.500 budget. We Recommend· Banded Collars and Vests Al,;$ GAR.tGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACti (714) 64+7030 A .......... shin. t00% oocton andcanv85 (bnen) ~betted -•ravosi e -.. ,. '"'" 1~ootton ~ OQnJuroy (llntn), t.cl( belled __ ,_vest ' 1 7 r • VOL 71, NO. 216, 3 SECTIONS, 29 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, AUGUST 14, 1978 Aft.,raoea N. 'Y. Stoeks < TIE¥ CENTS ~ ke: '~Ike ·aei*a·in Paint Slaahei-' . 8y GSNE R\JNT GOLETA lAP> lt WAI like bet.na inrid~ a paint 6balwr Wtlb no w4lrn1nC, the boae start.cl abukln& violently from Md~ to I de. I WN b'tna on the llvln1 room f1oof' readlnt the Sunduy paper when lM e rthquuke hit t Related stones, photo, A5. > IT BEGAN wrru , LOOD rumbling sound lb .. t was almost dearentna. My first tboulht was a car had run into my houst. or that an airplane bl.Id ctdhed. But then 1t kept 1oin1 and I knew what it w~. • My siereo equipment on a shelf tumbled to the noor as l tried to f" on my reet to let outside. I Just wanted to 1et out or there. Bu when I trled to eet off the floor. I couldn't do It. After a few seconds. the sbaklna eased up a btt and I was able to 1et up and get my wife and myself out to the front yard. I '10NK Tllf: QUAKE lASTBO 10 or 15 seconds. It felt like • very atront quake. but outside tb1qa seemed pretty much in order. Two strons aftershocks followed the bl& quake by 10 or l.~ minutes. I was standing on the edge of the porch and it buckei up and down. The artenbock didn't have the side-to-side move· meat like the first quake. A third aftershock came about 30 minutes later ; lt was minor. I shut off the gu supply to the house and looted for damage. We were very lucky. One or lbe officers I work with bad his house broken in ball. I round no problems on the outside so I went back in. I knew what to expect and. sure enough. aH oi my stereo gear was on the floor. ,IN 11IE KITCHEN, WATER coffee. dishes, jelly and mUt were all over the floor. The refrlgerator door bad popped open and a lmost everything inside was broken and scattered. It looked like a bomb had gone off there. I've been throUgh some minor earthquakes before but nothing like this. Back outside. I helped calm some frightened and confused children . while my neighbors and I were try ing to calm ourselves. WE WENT UP THE STREET AND saw windows broken in several b~inesses. That's when I began lo realize this was even wor se than I had thought. The earthquake had one pleasant side effect. I was amazed how everyone was trying to help everyone else. I wondered why It always seems to take something like this to get people together . 'All But Over' AP ........ Orange Residents Flee Funie Threat By GARV GRANVILLE Of .. Deify ....... Yff A one-square-mile area in central Orange was evacuat· ed today when a 12.000-gallon chemical tank overheated. beg an spewing fumes and threatened to explode . Though chiefly a light in· dus lrial and ma nufacturing center. a trailer park and two schools were included in the evacuation area. FREIGHT TRAIN LIES CRUMPLED AFTER DERAILMENT IN SANTA BARBARA EARTHQUAKE Tremor Shook Ctty V1olentty end M4t••ured 5:1 on Richter Scale Sunday Police and firefighters began moving people out of the en· dangered zone shortly after 7 a.m. wtw!n the large chemical storage tank at Sterling Plastics Corp .• 545 W. Struck Ave .. Orange, beaan s pewing its po· tent fumes. Abernathy Believes Rev. King Warned Of Death Threat? WASHI NGTO N <AP I - Ma rtin Luther King Jr. 's chief lieutenant in the civil rights m o v e me nt said tod ay he belleves King received advance warning of his assassination. "I think he had received some word from some sources that he was going lo be assassinated." the l\cv. Ralph David Abernathy told the House assassinations committee as the panel opened a week of public hearings on its in· vesligation of King 's death. However under questioning. Abe rnathy said he has "no knowledge" of any wa rning de· livered to King. He said that although he and King were th~ closest or friends, King had said no thi ng lo him a bout a ny threats Nevertheless, Abernathy re- called that the night before the murder in Me mphis. Tenn .. April 4, 1968, King delivered a speech in which he seemed to foretell his death. Thal was a famous speech in which Kini declared, "I have Coast Weat•er Lo w cloudiness night and mom.mi hours. Sunny during aft.ernoons tbrou1h Tuesday, but onJy partly sunny at the beaches . Slightly warmer days . HiJh l\e ar 85. Lows tonight 80 lo 65. INSIDE TODAY The man who CJTTanged tM intricate /jna~ng /or the tole of ""' lrviM Rmtch cfU. cuue• Ml ~11 with AP btiatnfu analfl't Johl'I Curt· nlf/. See Pafle IU. .... Jl a a ... I M .., .... Jj ,.. t4 been to the mountaintop and I have seen the promised land." In more tha n an hour of testlmony, Abernathy described his relationship with King from the time they met in Atlanta In 1951. He traced the development of King's belier in nonviolence as the most effective way to protest mi str eatm ent of blac k s throughout the South in the 1950s and 1960s. And he told of King's efforts to s how support for the mostly black sanitation workers or Memphis striking ror wage In· creases. Sympathy fo r the strike brought King, Abernathy and other strategists of the Southern Chris t ian Lead e r ship Con · ference to Memphis to lead a civil rights march March 28, 1968. Whe n the m a r c h turne d violent, King became extremely depressed but concluded later that he would return to lead a peaceful ,Protest, A,bernatby re· counted. Throu&houl hll eJu,rerlencea tn Memphi.e ~ else'Wbere, 1CJng d istrusted law enforc~uuent agencies and felt he could ttot re· (See PllOBE. ~e AZ> A 15·year·old San Juan Ca,pls\rano boy remains ln a Minion Comm..,lty Hospital ln· tensive care ~ today after aufferih,8 head Jdjurtes wben he reU from the ~ 9f a car at 2:35 p.m . Saturday. The victim, Robert Skinner ol 30151 Silver $par Road, s\lffered "major head injuries," accord· Int to Ca.llfoml• Hllhway Patrol olficera, wben ~attempt.ct '° Jump from the ot a ...,.. car ln a partln1 lot 1f ·met forbel Road, WIUD& Hllli. The driver of the car wu ChriaUna Rc>btiiU. 11, ol ;JIMa Ocean Hill Drive, Dana Point, patrolmn aald. YOUlll alriDer la reported ln "aaUaladorJ ~· dttlop ... Storefront Oiurches Get Study Storefront churches could become a reality in Mission Viejo if a temporary use permit M uniciJ?a l Advisory Council members are scheduled to re· view tonight is approved by the Orange County Planning Com· mission. Council members are expect· ed to discuss the permit ap· plication trom the First Church of Christ for space in Mission Viej o 's indust r ial p ark al J e r onimo Road a nd Alicia Parkway. The meeting begins at 7:30 p .m . in MAC offices, 27021 La P az Road, Suite 2K. The Mission Viejo Company's EnvironmentaJ Planning Direc· tor Dave Celestin said today the company has no objection lo the church locating in the industrial area. "ll 's a use whicb la normally not found in an industrial area," he noted. "But if the planning commission will allow it, we'll accept it." Church representa tives are · approachlna MAC prior to filing the actual use permit appUca-• uon. A spokesman for the county's Environmental Manage ment Agesacy aaid today he told the church IJ'OUP it might be good for them to ~ure MAC support before 10lns through the permit flUna procedure. The spokes man s aid it normally takes six weeks to procna an application through the PlannlOll Commisaioo. ErS DEBUGGED "Tbanu to my ad In the DaUy Piiot, I sold my bq. '' That's the aales auccesa story told by the Santa Ana Helibtl man wbo pl&C!ed tb1I claulfied ad: Al 11 :27 a.m. today an Orange fire official s aid the emergency that caused the mass evacuation "is all but over." The leak In the 12.000·ga llon s tor a g e lank "Is a ll but stopped." the official said. He also reported that the bar · ricades into the area will be lift· ed within the hour except those in the immediate vicinity of the plastics l)lanl. "We expect things to be back to normal by 1 p.m. and all the workers in the area back on the job," the orficial reported. Fire officials said those fumes are not deadly unless inhaled "in heavy doses" but warned they are potent enough to cause illness and pa inful discomfort. Should the tank firemen hosed with water in an attempt to coot the chemical reaction explode. tbe result "is likely to be dev· asl aling," one rireofficial_said. The troubled t ank contains ;;tyrene monoer. a chem ical sub· >lance formed into pellets that a r e u sed t o s h a pe s uch styrofoam products as drinking t ups, a company spokesman said. As he talked. the Red Cross w as setting up e va cuation centers in the area and city fire officials talked of enlarging the evacuated area. First to arrive at the Red Cross centers were elderly peo- ple ordered from a trailer park near Collins Street end Batavia Avenue. WorkeN who would normally have been ln the small Industrial buildings that dot the area were turned away by poUce b ar · ricadea before they ei:itered the area. They sat lo cars parked alone roads leudlng into the e n- dangered area waiting ror the "all clear" that will let them get to their jobls. Meanwhile. fire and police of. flclals planned stra te1Y they hope wtU end the emer1ency lbat wu ttrst reported ate a.m. ;Budget Set ForTnutees A publication bud1et Of au mtlllon II fCheduled to come up for approval by Saddlebact Co..,mualty Collea• trust••• iontpt. Tbl111 tbe leeoad tn a thne- slep pn>ce11 ror the 1.978·71 budlil PJIW approval deadline laStpl. I. The IDIClq la acbedulld to btjla at T:• p.m., ln rooci 105 of tbe UbrU"J~ ... room com· p I e 1. 21000 M • r • u e r I te Panw~. _.lllton Viejo. .,..,, ,,... scan - FUME-FIGHTING PLAN MAPPED DURING EVACUATION Steven Adkins of Sterling Plastics Aids Fireman Brian Page AV I;; tn c -~ z i 'ti} g ~ i !C CD $ 0 oi.., .............. ., .... 0- MALTESE CROSS MARKS CHEMICAL LEAK IN ORANGE About 2.500 People Evacuated from Area Early Today Mar'/4 Franc Slam U.S. Dollar Again LONDON <AP> -The dollar hit tecord lows .aainst the West Germ1Jn mark and the Swill rranc today for lbe third day lri 1ucceuk>n, and lbe prlce of aold roM to a record ln afternoon tradln& -1213.IO an ounce to London and 1214 375 ln Zurlcb. London's rtve m-.Jor &old traders aet the m ld·mornina · 'fixlnt" price at S212.2S, and the Zurlrb market sec. lta prlC"e at $211 .75. Gold prices usu.ally rlJe a1aln1t a decllnln1 d 9 llar becau.ae traders buy th J>N· clous metal as a hed1e a1ainst inflatlon. Tractin1 l: d<>ne on paper with the eold remainint in vaults. The dollar wu trading on the Zurich exchnnse at 1.StW Swiss francs. down rrorn the previous low of lMeO at the end of bual· neas Friday Io Frankfurt, the dollar wu quoted at ).~ marn, down rrom J.9872 on Friday. That, too, had been a low. In London. the pound 1terli04' w 11 tradlnt a t 11.9760. ., I Run., R1m, Run for Fun, Fun, Fun 1l w;.i~ u mob SCl'ne Sunda~ morning as about 2.200 r un ncrs look off for 6.2-mile trl•k around foder.d Ziggurat building in Lugunu Niguel One runner 'J'tod Cole c below 1 took his headset rndio with him Ract.· conduct · Girl Slain, Teen Injured By Attacker SA!'! DIEGO (AP 1 A li· ,vear-old Long Bt•..ich boy wai. hstPd 1n serious cond1t1on at Scnpps Hospitul toduy after an e1ppurent bt'atin~ by un ussailant who killed a 16-ye1:1r-old girl on the beach The nude bodv of Barbara Nantais of L11kewood was found early S1.1nday near Torn•y Pines Stale Beuch. She suffored head injuries IQ an apparent struggle, Deputy Coroner Joe Cogen said Her compunion was not ide n- tified publicly. but police said it looked as if he was knocked un . conscious while in his sleeping bag. The youth told pohce that the couple went to the beuch with another couple Suturduy night but Joined u group of ma les al a neurb} beach party before re. turning lo their sleeping bags No weapon was found und no <1rrest n·wdl' Fro., Page Al L'd by L ;..1guna Niguel. Addidus and Runners Debght was s<•en t>y the sponsoring orgumzut1ons as evidence of the bag strides in popularity ru11ning for fun und heahh has tuken ulong the Ontni:?e Coast Two Arrested In Soiuggling Of 14 Aliens Fourteen undocumented Cen- tral Amencan nationals ~nd two me n .suspected of smuegling the m into the Un ited States we..e picked up by U.S. Border Patrol agents Saturday 1n the San Clemente hills. John Wesson. border patrol agent in charge. said the 14 aliens hud uppurenlly walked. north through undeveloped San Clemente ranchland. They were bl'lieved to have gathered at u point near Sun Clemente High School. where two men were re· portedly p1ck111 ~ thl'm up . Wesson said Tht· two men arrested were Julio Medinu Gomez. 19. and a 17 ·Y l'ar-uld compun1on Both mt•n told Border P11troJ <:1gents they wen: undocumented Mex· 1cJn nationals. Wesson said Of the 14 OthL•r alie ns Up· prehl'llded, 10 were reported to be rrom El Salvudor . Onl' from Co!>t.1 Rica and lhre<.• from Mex l<.'O PROBE ... l y on them for protl'ct1on Abernathy continued. "He reall y did not rely on or trust the police powers in this country." Abe rnathy said. "He knew the FBI was against him und could not be trust ed. He knew the CIA wus against him and could not be trusted His hotel rooms had been bugged The police were loolred on as an enemy .. 091 Snake Missed But Man Dead A bt'rnuthy. who succeeded h.mg as head of the SCLC. was the only witness during the open- ing day or testimony. As lht> st•ss ion opened. com m1ltet• members said they have investigated 21 allegations of <:unsp1racy in the King murder but will reserve Judgment until re" 1ewing the evidence Among the spectators today was Mark Lane. th<> lawyer who blames a conspiracy and who now represents J a mes E:.irl R.iy. convicted of kilting King R<iy. who now cl.i1ms he l$ inno. cent. is scheduled to test.1fy Wednesday Questioned by reporters, Lane re peated his claim that "people associated with the FBI an• prime suspects" In the murder OflANOI! COAST DAILY PILOT ,..,.°' ... ~'°"''?~ .... ~ .. -... -=~~ ... ~:...-~=:~ =.:·i::.=:-i.:~~lv~.:.:c ... ~ f~" VaH•• lr•tft• S.dct~• V•I .. • ~ ~leec" Sovl"Co.t\I "W90'._''"" ,..,,. ,, ..,.,.,"'" ~tvrNf\ .,_, ~' 1,_ onnc.aott ~·tftt"O Of•fll' ., .. no Wht fM• SI.-OMl•,,_w C.11tont•e-. ... .:;:r.:. =-- """' ~ Yot• "'n-le"t O.-•IN- "'-•• It-td11« n.-.1" ,....,... ~ ........ l!- a..ftMN Uft ·-""-" """'-,,..~ ...... l.Clllw\ Laguna's I 0th Neighbor Douses Arson,.caused Fire By STEVE 1'11TCHELL OI llw o.llr ,.ltot St.tit Thl' loth arson in thrt•t• .ind one half months 1n thl' Arch Beach Heightl> of Laguna Bt'<iCh was extingu1~ht'<l by ,1 nl'1ghbor Satu rday morning , bl'fore a home under construction could become fully engulfed in n amei. Laguna Beach fi r e men res ponded to a fi re cull at a two story horn<.· under constructum at 798 Miramar St. t•arly S:.itur day morning, to find <i neighbor had put out the sm1:1ll blaze· 1n tentionally set on the eust side of the unfinished garage The home. being constructed by realty partners Clark Smith a nd Neil Papp, Is a block and a half from the scene of a three home fire last April 27 which caused $750,000 damage to those s tructures under construction. and da maged a fourth home Laguna Be ac h fire 1n vest igator Mike Davis stud to· dlly the 4 a.m fire Saturda)' ww, 'S p otted by nel&hbo r Casey Vermeullen. of 971 M1r111mar St , who quickly extinguished the s mall blaze Arson probers found t1 coffee can containing u flammable liq- uid at the site of the latest arson attempt. Da vis, who was at the scene of lhe fire Saturday morning, said the incident fits In with nine other arsons iD the htlltop com- m un lty since lute April "The building was under con· structlon, the Ume 11 about rlaht •ng <.'IO!>t' wraps on their in· \ l'~t1gat1on .lOl' Hala!>z. chief investigator for the state'~ Fire Marshal's Arson and Bomb lnvestig1.1Lion Un11 in Sacramento. said today his investigators are plagued with <i paucity of resources. "We huve eight fie ld in· vt.•st1gators to cover the entire sl ate,·· he said. "Ar son in· vest1 gut1on takes a concerted ef. fort. und we haven't been able to de vote the energy or, r esources to t his. (Arch Beach Heil(hls > arcµ " Hulasz said he has one in- vestigator In Sacramento coordinating a ll the Laguna Beach arson reports '"He is evaJuuUng the reports and will follow .through on them," the top arson mvesUgator said He agreed with DaVls' conten· t1on that the arsons all appear to be set by the sam e man. or group. adding that the victims" homes arc all in the const\"ucllon stasze Man Stabbed In UCI Fight UC Irvine police are In · vestlgattng a fight In a cumpus housing ureu \n whictt t\ Dana Point m un wu• stubbed Sund.a.Y VISALIA IA P I A Southern Ci.1lifornh.1 mun ucc1dentaOy shot himself to d('ath while putting his revolver b11ck in his vehicle aftl'r firing Cit <1 rattlesnake. a uthorities said A U S . Fores t Se rvi ce hl'licopter crew flew Willh1m M i<.'h<•cl Brumett. 27. of Vtin Nu) s. to a hospital in Fresno. but hl' was dead on arrival Tulare County she riff's of f1<.'ers said Brumett. his brother and nephew had stopped ncur Chimney Rock outs ide Sequow ~ationut Park to fire al a rut· tlesnakl' By CHARLES H. LOOS / " ot Ula Oalty 11'1 ... IUfl Every ·Stan Kenton fan has personal memories of see- ing ~he t~l. rangy iconoclast of bi8 band Jasi lead his mustclaostJtrotub a powerful performance somewhere. WAS IT AT some college canu>us! Or was it at the opera h~e in Su Francisco with June Christy and the Four Freshmen? Or maybe, best or all. was It at the old Rendezvous Ballroom ln Balboa, where it ~di began in 190? Ir you were at Ol"ange Coast Collete In Costa M~sa where Kenton and his current band played Sunday night. you couldn't help feeling It was aJI coming to 1 tlose just s ix mtles from where that bl1 barn of a baUr&m once stood on the Balboa Peninsula. It wasn't the same Stan Kent.on who shuffled onto the stage Sunday night. The tall frame. older now, was bent. The speech was slWTed. the talk ram. bling. He sank heavily onto his seat at the piano. When he stood. he held onto the piano tor support. And the gestures. formerly dramatic. s weeping motions of those enormously long arms. were inore like weak waves. 1t•NTON ·THERE HAD BEEN that tall about ~ year ago, Ken- ton explained in a rambling talk just before the evening's fioal number -"Concerto to End All Co1 certos." It was ln a parking lot somewhere in Pennsylvania ancl his head bad bounced off the bumper or a car and when he woke up he didn't even know who be was. ' The doctors told hiqJ not to ao bac~ to WQrk for 18 months. But he .was back at It in stx' months and now his strength was giving out and. aside from one more concert this month in San Francisco. this pe rformance in Costa Mesa would be the last one for a while. THE BAND WILL scatter and Ken. ton will take a rest. · It never has been made clear just what happened to him and a cynic LOOI might say that was on purpose. perhaps . to maintain the Kenton mystique. But two things Sunday night defied that cynical ex· pJanatio~. It was obvious that Stan Kenton. at 66. isn't well. Then. there was the band. EVEN FOR A high-powered Kenton band, it played with incredible fervor. Kenton bands have always been young. Most of the kids in °'e current band weren't even • born when Kenton unveiled his style of modern ja2Z in Balboa. B~t Sunday night. they were blowing their guts out. And 1t was clear they were doing it in homage to Stanley Newcomb Kenton . Though Ke~ton appeared physically weak. he played quite a lot at this concert. leading the band with introduc. lory passages. The band members watched and list ened intently. :50metimes shurmng s heet mu5ic furiously when the}'. realized what he wanted them to ptuy And despite his obvious weakness. his piano playing wus strong The opening arrangeme nt of Johnny Green's '"Body and Soul" was done in a way you've never heard lbe song, which always has been a ja uman's showpiece THERE WEil£ several traditional Kenton numbers. things like "Intermiss ion Riff" and "Peanut VendGr. ·· There seemed to be more of these than usual. Kenton bas never bee_n one to dwell on the past. preferring to highlight new music. new arrangements. new mus1ci1ms. But ht seemed. for him. almost nostalgic Sunday night. "Did you know we started in Balboa"'' he asked the audience at one point. Al the end there was a long standing ovation THE OVATION wasn't for the band. although many or the 900 or so in the aud1ence wunted to hear more. The band stood. too. joining In the appluuse. · The ovation wus a tribute to The Man Policeman Attacked An off-duty Newport Beach police officer was attacked and hit in the head Sunday when he went to investigate an early· morning disturbance near his home. Irvine police reported to-da v They said Sgt. John Simon was not seriously injured in the 2:30 u.m. incident. which ended in the arrest of Daniel Aguirt.• Torres. 20. a neighbor of Simon's 1n the Woodbridge area of Irvine Torres was booked into UC Irvine Medical Center for ob- serv;ition. Police said he was to be transferred to Orange County Jail on Sl0.000 bail lo face charges or assault with a deadly weapon .- .. fli ~ I • and lh•re were no wltnc ses." Davis SiilCI. "The o"lY dlffertncl' ta thE' manner In which th fire wa" set." Arthur J Avilu. f7. req~lred 16 8Lilchcs In J knire wound \n h1i; upper arm rollowina th~ 8;20 p m fight, uccordln1 to thti re· port' He wu:1 not hospltallJed We Recommend Banded Collars and V8sts AL:SGAFWJE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (71'4) ~-7030 "'< ...... _ ... 1 ....... ~ CMt1I ...... Cel1fer111e ~""""' .. " 1tt ,,.,,.. UM _,,,, h .,,., ,. ,. __,.; """' ... ~·--u•_,.,, • ' Firemen bave bt-E'n unable to d tumine the mtthOd ~ed to set the other arson ln Arch &e•ch lk1ahts. nd ~tale flr mur,hul lnve~u~ator.11 ure keep· Police said Avllu. who Is nol .. UCI ~tudent was v1'1tinll omeon(' whl.!n the tt1ht. lnvolv- lnll ubout fi ve people, erupted. No arr ts have:> been madtt but 1nv<'1tlautaon Is continuina. pu It r '.'\ tll"' A , ... .,,,,. shin 1004J6 c:otton and canvas (llllen> bfCk oeueo __ ,.*' I ) . °"'' .................. THE TREASURE WITHIN DRAWS INTEREST Grace Songolo With 'Teke-ep•rt' Sculpture Artist Re-creating Egyptian Pyramids By JACKIE HYMAN Of-D91tr ~ Staoff Grace Songolo became so fascinated with Egyptian pyramids that she decided to make some of her own, complete • with hidden treasures. So the Laguna Beach potter began working with clay to de· vise what she calls "take-apart sculpture." pyramids lht\t dis· assemble. each piece glazed on a ll sides <ind designed as a separate work of art. At at the heart of each pyramid is a treasure. Sometimes it's a real treasure. such as a pearl lying In a velvet bed In the heart of a pyramid perhaps six to eight in- ches high. Or it can be u marble. a baU- bearing. or potpourri. adding its scent to the experience. Ms. Songolo began making the pyramids four years ago. "I was doing small ones just for fun and I got interested in lite possibilities of design," she said. "Every time I'd go al it, new ideas would come." Although she was inspired by Egyptian pyramids, Ms Songolo soid she began with squares. She quickly discovered that fope Lottery Not Lucky , ROME <AP L - Thousands of superstitious gamblers who picked the "pope's numbers" for lot· tery drawing lost their bets when their numbers were not picked. Many Italians find omens in great events and this time they bet on the numbers 21, 40. 6 and 80 to correspond with the pope's age and the date and time of his death. He died Aug. 6 at 2140. or 9:40 p.m .. at age 80. or the numbers, only number 40 was drawn. but to win money in the gov- ernment lottery you must guess two numbers in a row. pyramids ha d more design possibilities. Her pieces had Lheir major un· veiling at the spring 1976 show al the Laguna Beach Museum of Art. They won first place in sculpture, "That was my encouragement to go on." Ms. Songolo said. She sells the works at her studio and at both the Festivul of Arts und Sawdust Festival. which continue now through Aug. 27 in Laguna Beach. Ms. Songolo said she's exceed· ed her expectations at these summer festivals, selling some 50 of tbe larger pyramids, which r ange in price from S20 to $150. Some or the smaller ones sell for $9 to $15. "They really aren 'l functional m any way." Ms. Songolo said. "People usually buy them because they enjoy opening and discovering them and sharing them with friends." She said people often ask her what the pyramids are used ror aod she answers. "It's take- apart sculpture. Then it doesn't have to ht! for anything." Ms. Songolo said she'd never seen any other works like hers but that recently she's received publicity. Some design students have photographed her works and at least one art teacher showed slides. She said she wouldn't be sur· prised It imitations begin pop- ping up. "Actually. it's a compliment if people want to do them." Ms. Songolo said . "But for my pro- fessional career I think it's im· portant that I establish that I originated them." She said she plans to continue creating the forms, on which she uses low-fire luster glazes and which she fires in an eledric kiln. In fact. Ms. Songolo said. she believes the time has come when she will begin entering more shows. But it's clear, watching her take apart a pyramid for one or the crowds that quickly ga.ther whenever she opens the dome over her display that she hasn't lost any of her own delight at find· ingthetreasurewlthln. 'Teacher, Doig Jtlan' . '· s. SmuggHng Cases Right tO Seize Vehicles Asked WASlUNGTON CAPl -Smug· 1lun brlnalna llleaal aliens wcro 1 the border from Mexico often use the same trucks over nod over because Border Patrol offlct!rs cannot seize the vehicle», u Senate subcommittee w us told toduy. lmmianllon Commissioner Leon~IJ CasUUo.¥feder~lpro5· ~culor from a border district autd represenlatives of labor and environmental aroups urged ap- prov al ot legisllllion t.o alllhorize ~uch 11cizurcs. Tcslifyin& before a Senate subcomnutlee on immigration. Caslillo said a 1967 Chevrolet pickup engaged In smuggling operulions was stopped by im· m1grat1on officers 12 times La Habra ManSlwt In His Car A 22-year-old La Habra man was reported in guarded condi~ lion toduy after being shot once tn the face us he sat in his parked car Sunday night. La Habra pohce reported today. Fred Gonzales is being treated in the intensive care unit or La Habr1t Community Hospital. Police said Gonzales was sit- ting in bis parked car in the 500 block of W. 4th Street at 10 p.m. when someone pulled up beside him. asked some questions and then fired one shot from a pistol. Officers said two suspects in the vehicle are still at large and details surrounding the shooting ure still under investigation. Rams Official Sets Clemente Talk on Move Chuck Benedict, head of the Los Angeles Rams speakers bureau. will discuss the team's 1980 move to the Anaheim Stadi um Tuesday in San Clem ente. Benedict is scheduled to ad-' dress the quarterly meeting of the San Clemente Chamber of Commerce. The breakfast meet· \ng will start at 7:30 a.m. at the San Clemente Inn. 125 Ave Esplaqdtan "It's a great thing for the en· tirl' county." said Chamber President Bernard Allen. "And we're very pleased that the team chose our meeting lo make its first promotional ap- pearance on the south Coast." Additional information on Tuesday's meeting is available by calling the Chamber office. 492-1131. Enforcement Talk Slated Lauren Rusk , challenging Orange County Sheriff Brad Gales 1n the November election. ts scheduled to discuss "Law Enforcement and Its Many Problems,' at the Laguna Hills Rotary Club's noon luncheon. Wednesday at Barone's Rusk has 12 years law enforce- ment. e?'~rience in patrol. jail and civil divisions and is founder of the Association of Orange Coynty Deputy Sheriffs . between April. 1977. and Murch. 1978. "When we make a smuggling arrest the owner or the vehlcle may simply claim It rrom us," Castillo sald. "Often the vehicle is back In use for smuggling by the next day." Michael D. Hawkins, U.S. at· torney for Arizona, satd the seizure legislation would make smugaling more costly by sub- jec\in1 the smugglers to the loss or their vehicles. Hawkins said airplanes. trac· tor trailers and large recrea· tional vehicles "are finding in· creasing use in thts sordid bust· ness" because they can hold large numbers of people. In one case recently. he said. 160 aliens were fount! in the back or one tractor-trailer. Castillo said smuggling opera· lions "may involve cramming large numbers of persons into tiny spaces, false bottoms. or hidden compartments where they must remain without food. water. proper ventilation or sanitation for many hours ." Gerda Blkales, program as- sociate for population of the ma· tional Parks and Conservation Association. said the legislation "would have a very definite. de· sirable effect in stemming the now or Illegal entrants into the United States." Phyllis Eisen. immigration program direct or for Zero Population Growth, said immi- gration officers find automobiles used by smugglers that are only a year old and already have traveled more than 100.000 miles. Other federal investigative agencies such us the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Customs Service and Drug En- forcement Admini stration already have authority to con- fiscate vehicles. The proposed legislation would permit the Border Patrol to seize vehicles used in smug- gling and would allow the seizure to be carried out without a war- rant when it was done in connec· tion with an arrest. Castillo said federal court de· cisions "cast serious doubt" on the constitutionality of the war- rantless seizure provisions. Hawkins suid he would be "very reluctant·· to authorize seizure without u warrant. Marine Dies As Car· Hits Pole in Irvine An El Toro Marine was killed Sunday in Irvine when his car went out or control. struck a light pole and was cut in half. Irvine police reported toduy. Killed in the 2:30 a.m acct· dent was David A. Westlake. 22. of El Toro. Polict-said the uccident on University Drive at the south· t>ound San Diego Fret>way off· rnmp occurred. according to witnesses. when Westlake lost control of his car while driving at more than 80 miles per hour northbound in the southbound lanes. Witnesses reported thut tht' mid-sized car struck the curb of the center medillJl. spun out of control and hit :.t light pole. Police said Westlake was pro- nounced dead al the scene. Factions PtiSh· fo:P P~pe ROME <AP> -Factions within the Roman Catholic Church have begun lobbyloa for the kind of pope they waht as the mourning period for Paul VI continues and thousands pray at bis tomb. The 112 cardinals expected to vote roe Paul'• sueceMOr are to be locked lnto thelr atctet elec· toral conclave Aua. 2S. Meanwhile, the lobbyists are busy. Names are awlded. but they pour out detail on wbat klnd of man they want. -bl• theotoaical tendencies, bis perwonaUty, b\s policies on various \elues. The ultta·eoftMrvatlve uanan orcanlzuUon Clvtlta Cbrlstian1, which conald red Pope Paul too liberal, put. up po1tu1 1n St. Peter'• Squ•"' Silturday camni for election or A "ttacber of a ery1tal~lear ctoctriot and a aaatodlan of lnlth •••Inst cur· rent tten.y and tn0n of th~ ao- ~alled ·modem bumanltm." .. A llbenl Ametkaa fl'CHlp, tbe Commtuee for t.be Responslbl• - ElecUon of the Pope, held a news conference Sunday at which the Rev. Andrew M. Greeley of Chicago called for an open-minded, progressive pope, "a holy man wtt.h a smile." The committee al.so sent each Q( tbe c~als a copy or t.he new boOft ''The Inner Elite," containing dossiers on each cardinal. A group of ptogressive Catbollc tbeoloalans and nhol.arl ,.gave their require· ments in a Jetter to the Italian weekly Panorama. The slpers Included Yves Con1ar of France. Hana Kue,na of Swluerlapd, Eduard Schlllebeeck ot the Netbertandl, Gluaeppc Albeti10 of Italy and Greeley They MW the Mitt pope should be open to I.be world. and other rtllJIOUI ll"OUPI· un autbenUc pastor of aouts. a promoter ot women•• rlthll •nd a dtcen· tralia.r o1,.pa1 power some cardinals snmt.lon«t u "papabW .. -po11lble popes -. l have also made statements ubout the ~ of man who is needed. Cardinal Franz Koenig of Austria said: "For whoever becomes pope, there are avenues already opened to pursue: the struggle ror peace. ecumenism. tbe decrees or t.he Second Vatican Council wbicb he must know hOw t.o make bear fruit . . . Then be must continue on the road of cootact with the world oC today." Cardlnlll Eduardo Plroolo of Aracntlna said in en lat~ th11t the next pope m111t pursue Pope Paul's dialogue with the world and his search for peace and Jualice. A total or 115 ot tbe uo mem· bera of tho Collea• of c~ •~ eUtibl• to'*• pert bt tbt electoral eooclave .... .,. are under 80, but thrif ~· l.Y will be ablenl becaUM of PGaf' health. Tbe abHDletl d tll· cl&lde Cardinal Jobo Wrillll oC the Unlt«t States. wbo ii la 1 Boston tto.pti.t for eye aur..,.. I ... • HEADING FOR SHAD£ AFTER FLYING A_. ATTACK JET Mluion Viejo's Capt. Nelaon DoubtH A1 M•I• Nurae Jets to Bedpans Pilot Doubles as Male Nurse For one weekend a month and two weeks each summer. El Toro Marine Air Reserve Capt Gustav W. Nelson is a fast flying. hard-charging attack Jet pilot. familiar with bombing. s trafing. a nd other aerial warfare techniques. The rest of the year. the Mis· s1on Viejo resident is a nurse. Nelson. of 2i582 Agrado. is a registered nurse who worked at Children's Hospital in Orang~ while completing his traming Originally. upon completing • active duty. Nelson had planned on becoming a pbysician·s ass1s· tant -a paramedic -but 1t didn't work out that way. complished for humanity. Tht.' pos1ltves always seem to out- weigh any negatives." The reserve captam also ad· m1ts that there has been peer pressurt• from both sides. ''The people in the medical profession don't understand my continued affection and participation with tht-corps, but I've fotUtd it gtves me 1m identity that others don't havt- "Thts has come in particularly handy when 1 ·ve been working with older men -those who are veterans of World War II. We have something in common and they tend to trust me "As ror my Manne contem- poraries. Lhere may have been a degree or hostthty from some of them tn the begmnmg. However . I've got a pretty good thing go- ing with the troops. They ttunk "I thought that I could tell them l'd spent five years flymg jets in the Marine Corps and I'd have my choice of colleges." ht recalls somewhat ironically. "I applied to 14 different schools and there were no takers. Need- less to say, my military ex- perience didn't impress them." · my double life is ioteresting. As a student nurse. he carried out many of the duties of a nurse. but also caught a lot of the less pleasant chores connect- ed with hospital work. But with his registered status. he feels he will be ··considered more or a technician. I 'll have-more responsibility. I'll be able to help people more.·· Nelson held a degree from Cal Poly. San Luls Obispo at tht- time he was ordered to active duty in 1971. He was released in 1976 and was assigned to a re- serve unit. Marine Attack Squadron 134. at El Toro Mannt- Corps Air Station. where ht- tra ins. ··it can be a little tough. trymJl to operate in two dtv er~ent wo rlds ... he will udm1t. 11 pressed. "But with both lht: Marine Corps and nursing. I'm doing what I want to do. "There are those w·ho don't understand that. a~ a Marine. I sptnt several years learning how to kill people and that f have no qualms about answt'rin~ uny call that the Marine Co~ might make upon me. "As for the nursing, I try to stl down al the end of each day and tola I up the things I've ac· Containment Due CAZADERO IAPI -A blai(' that consumed more than 12,000 acres or timber and brush and destroyed dozens of home~ near this tiny town may be contained today. fire orricials said. Even tun. And on occasion. when there isn't a doctor uround. they'll come to me with some minor medical problem." Nelson is quick to admit that he-could make more money as an airline pilot than as a male nurse. "but again. I'm doing what I lik<.• and l'm home each night with my two daughters. I think that's important these days " The girls are Tessa. 5. and Britta. 3. "And when one comes to think a bout it, .. he muses ... the sword and the scalpel aren't so greatly different. The difference is in knowing when to use one or th.-other ... City Panel Vacancy Eyed San Juan Capistrano official!. urt still accepting applications for a vacancy on thl' Downtown Plaza and Parking Study Com· mlttce. which wtll be filled by appomtmcnl of the City Council Aug. 14 . The comm1tte4! meets on an on- e• a II basis. oft en aurmg the daytime. and iL<> duties are lo guide and monitor thl' develop- ment of a downtown plaza and parkinJ? study now being pre- pared by J consultmg firm. city officials said Anyonl• interested 1n serving on the committee may pick up an apphcatton from city hall. 32400 Paseo Adelanto. between 8 a m. and Sp m ... .... .. ~:·~:. ~ ...... , What Earthquake? 08Uvt008 TO SHAil 6 811UDDSU: Uader no ctTcum.uncet can you make llPt ol an eanbquake which duall» u frwi&bt train. tnjura aeveral doaen peo~lt and knucka 11 ~pit ol radio 1u1Sonl ()ff the air. Tb1t 1 what tu.ppenfd Sunday afternoon In the Santa Barbara area. It should t. noted, however. wbUe the earth •bake wu i>rctty sb•'l> In tM nu 8arbll.NI ana. Celifomla did not slip ott ant.o Ute aea. Th~ As.socialtd Press moved or" pboto9raph of a hap· 4ess store clerk. surveylnc acattered canned cooda In U.e aisle of '* Goleta market on t~ outaklrta or Sanu Barbara Thal pho(otraph will no doubt &et wtdeapread play in lhe p1tpen cast of the M1ss1ss1pp1 BUT IN TRUTH, veteran news pbotograph~rs know that 1t dot>sn't t~lke much of an earthquake to knock canned goods out into the .u:.lc at a market. Af\er we get one of our California shakes. the «nowledcenble news photovapher is likely to heact for the flrst handy grocery outlet, where his picture Is likely awu1tmg rum : canned corn and green peas all over the place Despite this, most of us in our region were probably 'blissfully unaware lhJl Santa Barbara Coun~y had JUSt taken 11 pretty good ~hock I think at about 3:54 p.m. when Eaitemer's Mental Image of California After Quake the quake hit up there, I was sawing a door in two. Don't ask why. But even if the quake had been closer, I doubt if I would have noticed if the whole house had fallen down around mt' and the door. · It is true, however, that people from other regions figure all of th<.• Golden State has cracked open when one or these quakes strikes. NOT LONG AFTER the Santa Barbara shake, one or our co-workers here at the paper got a call from a distant r elative. The anxious voice inquired. "Are you all right? Are you all okay?" Al the time, the family had been languishing around -their Costa Mesa swimming pool, oblivious to the fact that Santa Barbara had just registered 5.1 on the Richter scale. They didn't have the foggiest notion what the distant relative was lAlklng a bout. THE RELATIVE NO DOUBT feared that if Santa Ba rbara shook, Costa Mesa probab1¥ shuddered at the same time. Well, if Costa Mesa got any aftershocks, it was prob~ ably caused by me sawing a door in two down in Balboa. Petadltafl Stm1•lt Israelis Delay 5 Settlements TEL AVIV, Israel <AP> -The IaraeU Cabinet. trying to blunt a poUUoal atorm. shelved plans today to bu.lid five new Jewish settle· ment.a ln the occupied Weat Bank of the Jordan River unUI after the Camp David summit next month. "The sovemment decided to dlscuaa the matter after the Camp Duvid meeting." Cabinet Secretary Arieh Naor told re. the Sept. 5 meeting of Israeli portert1 llfter the Cablnet met in Prime Minister Menachem Jerusalem. Begin and Egyptian Presklent Preeldent Carter will medlate Anwar Sadat at . the Maryland '---4/J-mountain retreat In a bid to re· 1'.T • U vitalize the flagging peace drive 1 ,azi n Ult ~~'::~:r~d by Sadat last No· In Attack Over Radio KANSAS CITY. Kan. IAP> - Shouts, screams and breaking glass shocked the audience or a live r adio talk show as they li stened to an attack by club. swinging youths on a Nazi or· ganizer who was a guest on the program. More than a dozen attackers broke into radio station KCKN and attaeked self-described Nazi Michael Breda, his unidentifle<t companion. and two station e mployees just as the show "Community Hot Line" was go- inl on the air, police said. BREDA IS ONE of two or· ganlzers in Kansas City for the American White People's Party. Breda and his companion .. whom he declined to name, suf· fered head cuts. Two station workers were injured slightly when they were struck by clubs. The attack lasted less than a minute. Breda continued with the program and later was treat- ed at a Kansas City hospital. Police said as many as 15 persons. whites and blacks mostly in their early 20s or late teens. broke into a side door or the s tation and rushed the studio. A caller who said he was a m ember of the International Committee Against Racism and the Revolutionary Communist PrQgressive Labor Party later t ele phoned The Associated Press and claimed his group had been the attackers. BEGIN IS vacationing and did not attend today's Ca binet session . Also absent was Agric ulture Minis t e r Ariel Sharon. the Cabinet's chief ad· vocate or new settlements in the occupied territories. Naor said they were informed or the de· cision during the meeting. The session was chaired by Deputy Prime Minister Yliael Yadin. In an interview after the m eeting, Yadin told lsh4tli radio he ObJected to the taming of the decision to build the new settlements in the Jordan Valley. although his party -the minority Democratic Movement for Change -favors increasing Jewish outposts in the West Bank. "I THOUGHT THAT, although we are for such a thing <the set- tlements>. we don't have to do it exactly whHe the negotiations take place," Yadin said. "My objection was against the tim· ing." The Cabinet made the decision on the five new settlements JWle 28 but ruled that meeting was a session or the ministerial de· fense committee. a device that c la mps strict secr ecy a nd military censorship on the pro· ceedings. The secret was kept until a week ago when some Kn esset members began complaining about the censorship and saying the public was being denied es· sential information. NAOR SAID YADIN brought the decision before the Cabinet along with his protest and the Cabinet decided to defer the en· tire matter. NATION I WORLD Brunner Quint• French teacher Claudt' Brunner. 31. and her husband. Jean. 30. hold their quintuplets. Anne. Maud. Luc. Gilles and Marc. They were born June 9 at !'Janey. France. and have been pronounced healthy and normal by ~OC· tors. Mme. Brunner had received hormone treatment. The children are the couple's first. Pro-Syrians Blamed For Beirut Bombing BEIRlIT. Lebanon <APl -The leader of a radical Palestinian guerrilla faction supported by Iraq has accused a pro-Syrian guer- rilla group of the bombing of his Beirut headquarters in which at least 161 Palestinans are reported dead or missing. Abdul Abass, the 29-year-old head of the pro-Iraqi PaWstine Liberation Front. said the bomb- ing. which leveled a nine-story apartment building early Sun- day . was the work or the Popular Front for the Liberation or Palestine-General Command, led by a former Syrian army captain named Ahmed Gebril. ''THEY WANTED TO kill me and the movement in order to undermine reconciliation moves that were under way. They wanted to keep the inter· Palestinian rift brewing." said Abass. Gebril and his organization were silent. and there was no confirmation of Abass · clatm from other' sources. But some observers said if Gebril's guer- rillas did make the attack. they might have been acting for Vasser Arafat, whose Al Falah guerrillas have been warring with pro-lcaqi guerrillas in Lon- don. Paris and Pakistan for the past month. Arafat. chairman or the Palestine Liberation Organira· ti-On . has been holding recon- ciliation talks with Abass and other pro -Iraqi guerrilla leaders. The observers said he probably s till wants t o neutrauze rus rivals but cannot pursue factional bloodletting publicly and sti ll claim leadership o( the entire guerrilla movement. Rains Hit Plains You wouldn't say "keep the change" at the supermarket. .flour-inch Snow Falla in ldalw HI Lo P<' .. lbll'que ., .. Amarillo tJ 74 ......... " .. a •ttlrnor• u 70 .07 411-.rck " .. 8otM 5) SI .11 ~·Oft ,. 10 8 rowmvllfe t7 19 8uflato IS .. Cllarl•lnK '° 11 03 Chl~o • n Clr>elnflalt ... .. Ctevet1"4 ... " 0.t Fl. Wiii 100 77 O.nver ., SI .OJ O.s M01~ " ,. O.lroll " ., He1..-a •S n ·°' H-lulu '° H H~lon ., 71 12 JICks'vllfe tl 11 l(en'sCily ts 1J LnV~s " 12 Little Ro<k . .. Los A~les 11 as Mteml .. •1 Mll•-M ., .. MPl$-SI. P. ts 7S Nas/lvllle 17 II .ti New Ori-., 70 .» New Yori! u 10 Olli•. City 103 1S °"''"' ~) ,. Orlancto ti 7> Phllad'plll• .. ,, PhOenl• 10. IO Pltllt>urtfl ., .. P'll..-cl, Ore ,. ,. •• lleno " ,. !ot. Loul• ti 70 s.11 Laite ., n .n SMIOI-71 70 ~nFrM .. ,. S.•111• ,. So< Tul .. 101 14 w.,,. ....... ., 74 1.11 CAUllOtlNIA 8ellerslletd ti a7 "''""" ... , N-lft 10$ IO °""-n ,. Reel a11M tO .. s.cr......... u JS s........... " " ~I '°' 1J .. , -·11.s.s •••• ,,, wtt_ .. _.. __ .. et 1111 net'-" ff llleWen •ncl ~ HrSler"'-.,_. t .. 11 .... , Ille ltKltln, tlle ~ !JM <"ltrat Plal n1, ••tltrll Cll•r•tlo anti nortlll•Ultft Mori!-. "''" ....... , Mill'IQy-""'-°' .,. 0... Gf Mellk:o <Mtt, perts of .... lo.., Ml .. h•lcipl Yellty, 1111 • M>Ulllern ...a cer,.ral APDalA<hlanJ -atono Ille 90Uthern hall of t,. Atlantic Co.st. CODI air Pll5Nd !Kross the nof1hern Pia ..... Incl _,,_.. 11toc1ti.., brlno· •no lllth• up to only Ille 60s -1~ In -1lon1 of Idaho Incl WH!ffn MOfl.. tan•, <Dmll«ed wlln e ... 1i.r 111011s In lite llOs W teh. Snow fall In ,,,. lllgller ell••tlons ol t ... ho. wltl't four India. repor1.cl -Salmon. In t he ... 1 ... n -1 °'tile state. Wermtnv tnncts emerged !Of' parts of New Eno1anci, with • n&1mber of ., ... ••POrtlno hlllM In ,,,. ~ 1~ end tow IOs ~•rly mor111ng t11np1ra1uru llf'Olllld Ille Miion f9"19d lnim 43 In 8alttr, o,..., to to In Plwlenl•. A<lz. , ... Low clovdlnns 1119111 -lllDf'nlno lloun, otlttr#IM MINIY a• .. ·-· , tllrouQll T ..... y • Llgllt varl1bl1 winds nl9ht end rnornlno hours. HIGlll• Tuesday In Ille 70.. Coastal WnwlffalUf'H..wlll reno.• b~twttn '3 alld 11. tnfe!IO '''"' peratures wlll rlflOI be'-" ltlld 79, Thi weter t.enlpefetwa wlll 111 '7. MOftOAY second•-12: 11 P.m. 5Koftd 111911 t :.O p.m. TUalOAY "rauow l:Sh.m. ~''""'"' ''"'·"" ~-''"""'· 5-<0ftd llllfl 7:30 p.m. t.6 Sll11 rllft •· w a.m., MU 7141 , ''" ~·l-4•S.p.m .• Mtat!Ot• '"· , ... , .... ... Hllfttll!llml a.o.; ....... fl'9fll .. ........................... 111Qt9tffftir. .._, hedl1 ~JM IWf\llt """ Ofla• II , ........ IWllt ,,_ tllt ....... t. Merrill's Poocha ltival New York's MERRILL, Wis. CAP) -lt's oot New York City,butthlscityOC9,500sUUhaado,Uttttproblems. l'aklni a leaf from lb• BJ1 Apple, the Merrill CltY c..mtU approved by a t-0 vote an ordlnanc. makl.ni pet owncn rea~ble for cleanln1 up dropph\IS ldl by their: pet& affyWhere but on thelr ow a propert,y. Tb ordiDance. 1lmU1r to on• put. liito elf.et ln New YCl"k City. Mt.I fin rao1i.n, from tlO lo S200 for vlolaton. ' Why say it where you keep yoursavings? $15.48 is the extra amount earned by an average Los Angeles Federal Savings Account. That's $15.48 more than a commercial bank pays . At today's prices. that won't fill your grocery cart. But rt's worth adding to the many money·savrng services yo~·re entitled to as a Los Angeles Federal Saver. Passbook savings accounts pay 5 V• % , day in day out, 5.39% a year with dally compounding . A $1,000 or more Certificate pays a higher rate, guaranteed, 61/2 % for a one year term, up to 8% for 1 O years, 8.33% with dally compounding. There Is also a 6-month, $10,000 Money Market Certificate which Is based on U.S. Treasury Bill interest rates and pays V• o/o more than any commerclal bank.• I Why not transfer your savings to the Newport office of Los Angeles Federal Savings today- and "keep the change" yourself! Savings insured to $40.000 LOS ANGELES FEDERAL SAVINGS NEWPORT BEACH 81Q1 Newport 81\ld •• ac:roea from City Hall • 17Ma00 ONN Mon. tflrOU8lt TtMn. t AIM Pll; Fri. tAfl'f ... ·Prematurely withdrawn Certificate Accounts eem Interest et lhe Passbook rate for the term of investment. '811 90 deye. • BASEBALL I FOOTBALL ~[p)©lf~~ ~If®~~ A Capsute Repon from the WOftd of lpoltl .. ~..,...... DIANA NYAD STARTS SWIM FROM CUBA TO FLORIDA. Gruelling 103-mile Swim Begins for Diana Nyad From AP Dlspateltes ORTEJASO. Cuba -American marathon swimmer Diana Nyad atruagled with waves and faUgue today and completed QlOre than one·fourth of, her daring 103-mile swim from CUba to the F1orida Keys. ''The swimmer's still in the water and is doing tine." a Coast Guard spokesman said at mid·moming. The spokesman. who asked not lo be identified. said the Coast Guard was in radio contact with Nyad's support boat. Follow The Sun, and confirmed she was about SO miles west oC Havana. The spokesman said another boat in the notllla. the Proud Mary, was taking on a small amount of water this morning but was In no danger beeause a Coast Guard airplane dropped a large pump to it. .. The size or the waves is the only thing that could de· real that girl.'' Kt>n Gundersen, the swimmer's operations man1:1ger, said Sunday. Three.fool waves greeted Nyad at 2:05 p.m . EDT Sun· . day as she peeled down to two swimsuits. told her. crew, "I guess I'll see you all in 2"'2 days," and stepped into the water about se miles west or Havana. From there, she raced a fiO.hour ordeal of exhaustion. tieasickness and hallucination. hoping for landfatl somewhere in the chah1 of flat islands that curl southwest from the Up of Florid\! . .Jf she succeeds. she will have made the lol'\iesl open.water swim on record. Trlma l . or the world records set In the 1968 01)1Glpics in Mexico City. how many still stand? 2. What hapPt>ned to the Seattle Pilots of the American Leagut::' Quof f! of ,,.. Dat1 After Seattle Stew captured an allowance Tace at Suratog,1 . .L'O·owner Dr. James Hill said of the Triple Crown winner : "f think that Slew was as sharp as he's ~ver been." In fact. he said he was so confident of victory that .. we installed Slew with a rear view mirror." Else.,llere hi Sp•n• ... MOTOR SPORTS -The Australian Grand Prix was st aged in two parts Sunday and Sweden's Ronnie Peterson was the wmncr. Peterson was leading when he ran off the rain soetkt>d track, causing officials to halt the race for an hour. With rain tires, he started first ' ~ ~ and went on to win his 10th Grand Prix ~vent .... \. J. Foyt survived a col· lision and intense heat to capture the .U S . Auto Club's stock car race at Milwaukee Sunday over Joe RuUman. brother former Indy of winner Troy Kuuman ... John WUllams. one of Bri· tain's lop motorcycle road racers, died in a hospital after a high·speed crash in ' the Ulst er Gra nd Prix Sunday in Belfast. Northern Ireland. ~.'°YT HORSE RACING -Jockey Lamt Plncay guided hea vily favored Effervescing to a narrow victory in the .Eddie Read Handicap Sunday at Del Mar. Rider Darrel McRargue had four victories for the day. BASEBAJ,.L -San Diego made it tbree out or four over the Cincinnati Reds as Dave Winfield and Oscar Gamble each had two hits and both drove in a run in the Padres' three·run first lnnlng to pace a 3-2 triumph . . . Bob Balley raced home from second base on a forceout in the 10th inning to give Toronto a 3·2 vietory over the Kansas City Royals . . . The OakllUld A's dropped both ends of a doubleheader agatnst the Minnesota Twins. Corona del Mar High product Matt K...,. was the losing pitcher tn the opener, S·l, as be gave up 12 bits and two walks In elgbt fnninp. Keoueh struck out 1bc.. Hts record ls now 7·10 DA • • • Dave Parter•• three·run homer ln the third \Mine triggered the Pittsburgh Pirates to a 7·3 vl~tory over Philadelphia, snapplna a four·1ame wlnntna streak for the Phllllee . . . CultOn f'b1&•1 bases·loaded grounder past third buse in the 10th inning scored lefT)' aem1 and aave the Boston Red Sox • 4·8 vtctory over the M'llwaukee Brewen. 1t dropped Milwaukee 11 aawnes of.I the pace ... Raln killed the New York Yankffl aa a heavy raJnatonn on an already soued field wlJ>ed out. a five.run New Yortt rally tn the RYenth fnntna and save the Baltimore Orioles a 3.0 victory ... Mut1 B'Jlb'O•, a 20·year·old rl1ht·hander for the Peninsula PUots, a Philadelphia PhllUes fartn team, pitched a perfect tame to lead his team t.o a 3.0 wln over Winston-Salem In tbt Sln1le A Carolina Leaaue. Byatrom threw 89 pttcb ... 67 of tlaem atrlke . llatlle;T ...... • aAJ>tO: Tonl&ht -ffone Raclnt -Del Mar Featµn Race, $:3$, KlEV (870> TV~ Tonilfhl -Baseball -Cincinnati at Pltt.abur1h. t :30, Ch1ancl 7 Cdtlayed>. .41W&4111eNN l f'Our. 8'* ~111n<1n'• ku~ j~ (IN'11: ''m a.Att1 t• .. lhe tOI m411m:~mle 8"'11111 am lit OW • .....,,. Dad a..+ th11;t~t:S:~~":..U.•n..,. ... -.,. DODGERS. • • tomethlns and that'11oin1 to be th• dlfference 1o1n1 down the •tretch. Tho tretch hos alwa)• ~en toup and tM Olanta don't know what It's Ilk "You bave to want to win and be txclt.ed about wlnnlnf.• and thl• club ti. I would have o 1lve UI tho edl.: 00 OUr experience ulone." aald Lacy. Conversely. who\ advantage the Dodaert ma,y have In ex· perlence. the Glanta are 1ub- 1tltullnc w1th lnaplratlon. dealre and conftdence. '"THE GIANTS RAVE to feel confldent ... acknowledced Smlth. "but tn the long run I like our poelUon. We Just have to go out and do whitt we're capable of doln1." Sutton &&reed. ··The Giants are in a fantasy world. They're just as surprised us everyone else as lQ. where they are so everything \hey do from here on out has to be a plua "Thia win won't do anythlng to change an attitude they already have. They've 'ot nothing to lose a nymore, they ll just play each game loose and easy." And how will this loss affect the Dodaers? ··on a normal ball club a loss like this might affect them. but not ours. You can check us tomorrow and you won •t know whether "we won or lost. Tlaat's just the make~up of our team." LOS ANULaS • Mlrll .. SAM l'RMCllCO MHIOClt 111 Ow,,.r <I HerftdOnd Cleft!. rf McCovn. lb LeMetter.u Ev-.311 -llfle ... 11 A.MeU~,H lvM,lb T-eoc Ml11t6fl p Cllrtl• p H•tlOl p MonWtlltCO, p Wlll~P H.Crulph uvtllep Mofflttq Hiii e .. , .... s ' 0 0 4 I t I 1 1 I 0 •0 21 • 0 2 I 1 1 0 0 so oo 6 0 I 0 4 I I 0 0 1 0 0 , 1 0 0 0000 0000 0000 100 0 Ot OO I 0 I I 1 0 0 0 0 011 0 1 0 I 2 Nonh,d • 0 0 0 Au-11,U 6 0 3 0 R.Sffllttl, rf 6 l l 2 c:e,.. • 1J0 tE.H~pr 0 000 o.n.1. 111 • 1 a o Lacy, a • 1 'z T.MenlMt.211 0 0 0 C. o.v ... 1 .... ptl ' ' ' 0 .._.., p 0 0 0 0 o.~.plt 1 o o o _,..,," l 0' 0 OetH,c 2 o o o F~.c )000 $Ut1eft, p s 0 0 0 Mota, ph 1 o o o Fonw.11 0000 llllMN!I. p 0 0 0 0 LoPe1 a 1 0 II T1Mal1 «I 1 11 7 Tot•l1 ., 6 16 S S.11 Fr•11<ltc0 040 000 000 ' 11-7 LOii A119eles 100 210 000-21>-6 E -u~. OP-SM ffreMIJCO 1. l0&-$an Fr•Mlt<O II. Los Af1911fft 12. 211-t4er-. HA- R .Sm ith 2 IH I, L~Y 1101. sa -ow,tr. s- M0111tfutc0, Clertt. Mo11lefU:SCo Wllllt"U uvell• MOHlll Mll•IOft Curtlt CW,4-11 Htllckl If' H It Elt 88 SO MN FltAHCIKO • .,, I 4 4 0 S 11 I 0 0 0 0 3,,, 3 0 0 1 ) •• 0 ~ l ~ I ~ 0 LOSANGIELl:S 0 0 0 0 2 2 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 SullOfl • 7 • • 7 • FonllH' .-, I 2 2 2 0 R~ '> I 0 0 0 0 H0U9h lL..~ll I 1 I I 0 0 S.vt -H.Mkkl Of T-l .. A -Sl.417. * ooooe• ..ans-Tite Oad9lf's N'te a11 oH· .. ., today beftre ~ • .,,,......,.. _ ... wtllt 1i.. ............ It Ptlllllft. ProMbtts for tlW -lft -OMlg Rtu ClHI YI Ok k R"*'-llH I, eoe WtlOI 1..01 .... si. ... CMllOft llf.1 11 .... 8ur1 HOetOn CIN I "'· LArrv c:Mlsttnstn c•lll Of' R~~h ( .. 11 •.• TI"'MOt-Swlll be televlMd Oft t"9 l'Oed lrlp -rrom Pflli.dtlpN• Oft Tll~. Ntw YOf1l Ofl ~' lbOtlt Oft~ ~I 111. and MontrMI Oft Monda' ICM-111 ... Tiie tour~ _.., with ,.,. Gltflll - • .. -hf9ll ~of 201.)10 '°' .,. -"9 of s1.m. wftkll Is •Ito t Ngll If> 1i.. m•Jon this YHr. FOf' lht -·IN OodQefl •r• tv«tOlno 41.)04 Will Herrera Be Traded To Buffalo? THOUSAND OAKS <AP> - The order fin~Uy arrived from Dallas Cowboy Coach Tom Lan· dry. Trade Efren Herrera. The field goal s pecialist was embroiled In a contract dispute with the Cowboys and failed to report to camp with other veterans. ··1 can'\ say right now who we are talking with," said Cowboy }1ersonnel director Gil Brandt. .. All I can say is that I'm active- ly seeking a trade." Brandt also conlirmed that he bad Increased the club's con· tract offer last week and Her· rera, too, bad compromised. However. the kicker ultimately rejected the propoaal. Asked about tumors of Her- rera going to Buffalo, Brandt added, "I can't deny we will tr'ade him to Buttalo. But there is at least one more team that ls interHted in Herrera rlabt now and we are talking lo them, too." Herrera'• a1ent, Bucky Woy of Dallas. aald Sunday no one had contact.eel bJm or bis client about a possible trade. ··1 think lt would be foollsb for a team to accept a trade unless they talked to me or Efren flnt. •• 1ald Woy. "B'rt knowtna t.be Cowbo)'a, they would do this. J know that Buffalo h11 been very lntlfttted tn Efren. And I doubt t.blt tbt Cowboys would trade blm to a 1ood team like Lo• A!lltl• or Oakland, wbo have •llO "8en interettec:t.•• ~llNill Eveut Lmee 500 Playen More thllO 500 elayers itre ex· ptcted for lht ncond Mnnual JoUJt Racq~baU Tournt1mtnt plenntd AUi. M·27 1t kln,·1 Ra,quetbal1 Co'lrt n .............. Prt• __, °' 11.• ,, of. 1:z:r.:-... :=.;tac: ror.Olfttliol~ , • .., latormauon .-u tlae el•~ '.at •llU. , ' Mbndly, Augu.t 14, 1811 Huskies May -Be Tougher 18 Starters Retwnfor Rose Bowl Champions SEA'ITLE <AP> -Hey, Don James. what's It going to take to get your Wuhlniton Huskles to the ltose Bowl a1aln this season! .. No question," says James. colleae football's national Coach of the Year In 1977, "we've·aot to aet to be a better team early. We can•t wait until the firth game this year." Last fall, the Huakies wefe wonderlna wbat ln the name bf s~ond-ranked Crimson Tide. "I don 't think e i1hu W asblngtoo or UCLA wouJd pre· fer this game for an opener ... sald James. "The team that wlns It will be In the driver's seat. They'll be 1olne into a period of thrft or four ween of non·conference 1ames lbat'U be IJke the pros' exhibition season. A victory would put you one ahead of everybody once tbe conference race really begins. •"f TEAM THAT loses is COILEGE GRID PREVIEW competitive football was wrong wltb them after 106ing three or their first four games. "We were 1·3 and we expected to be no less than 3·1." James recalled. ~ I to need aome help from other teams along the way. he danger comes in making it make-or-break situation. You •. can't look at it and say, 'Hey, it's allornotlung'." . •. W asbington retums 18 starters. from last year's Junior dom·· inated 8-4 team. The mosl visible of the four jobs left va· cant Is quarterback. where War· ren Moon earned CO· Pacific·8 Conference and Rose Bowl MQSt Valuable Player awards last seasob. SUDDENLY. all the pieces f~l into place. just in time for the Paclflc.S Conference race. Washington won six or its last seven games to capture the Pac-8 tiUe and proceeded t.o baf· fie Big Ten Conference rooters with a 27·20 upset victory over Michigan in thelr first Rose Bowl appearance in 14 years. The No. l candidate for the Job is senior Duane Akins. Moon's backup the past two seasons. :: The trlumph at Pasadena earned Wasbln~on 1.0lh place- ia last season's llnal Associated Ptess college potl. · DON JAMES Aklna is being pushed by sophomore redshh"l Tom Flick and junior college transfer Tom Porras. None of the three. however, has played a complete major college game. The Huskies "can't wait until the fifth game" to 1et going this season for a couple of reasons . FIRST, TREY OPEN with a nationally·televised eame at Husky Sladium agalftlt UCLA. the only conference team to beat W asbington lut season and one or three teams J ames expects to challenge for the new Pacific-10 Conference championship. The other two are Washington and Southern CaJ . Secondly, the Huskies filth game this year is a gainst Alabama. in Seat~e. ''Tbey·re definitely going to be favored." said James of las t season's SENIOR TOM TENURE is tht> top candidate to replace second team All·America cente r Blan Bush. Non.letterman junios • Chris Linnin is In line lo fill the gap created by the loss to graduation of All·Coast de· fensive tact.le Dave Browning. DelMar Results IJers-Mr (11tlltl.._,_....,, F l r H r•c e -cn1Cdt Ot•I CMCH.,.QUI), LIO, l.IO, J.00; Reb"l Promlw 15-mehr l. J.,o. 1 to. Tr•vell11' Jadl IPlnc•,l, l .'°. Second r--4<ftflY• IOl•il. 10 tt. 4.00, J.00; Martos IMc:CMrOlll, 3.10, 2.60; CIHh of Arm1 CM<H•r9u-l, 3.tD. S2 O.lly OoW>le 0 •11 P6ld SUO. Th i rd r•ct-Un<I• Jim IMcHtrOUll, 17,00, 6.20, J.IO; IMl•fll Poller lfOf'O), •.OO, ).00, LAl'I hl- C PlllC.,I. U O. SS El!Kla Cf.71 Ptld us.. so. Fo11rlh rac:t-Fllrn Pl•11 ICllap. m•nl, 1.40, I.Ml; 8•llrl11t IPlll· c •YI. J.40, 2.60; l'trrlton l•OY IM<H.,.01111, l.«I. Flfltl rac.--Ortndl llrlM ICNo-mtf'I. s.00, 1.00, 2AO; A TWl<tkll119 IMc~rrOftl, 6.IO, 4,60; T1lltrMr CM<H•roue1. 1'0. u E&iKU (WI pal0'7.50. Slalh ••ce -H•w•ll'l Pride I McH•roue l, 7 40, J .60, >.•O; Tel•m•rle IMHHI, 6.10, s 20, E""iu Mullll l~I. 14 20 Seve11111 ••<•-Cl"•ocauln CMcH•rouel. J.60. 2.•0, 1 40; O•lltohl•11 Cf'l11<•YI. J.00, l 00. lk•lltm Ht_..-(MtNI, • .. 40. S.S E1tiK'I• ts-11PtldS2&.SO. EIOlllll riKt-EfftrVH<lflO CPI,._ UY\, l . .O. 2.40, 2.~ THt CTorol. l .Ou . 2.•o. avwt,ofchlc•oo 1c.1~1uo. Nl111h r•<•-Jtnlcn Gol<ll• IT-I, 5.20, J.AO, 2.'°; 00.M' ~rt l~,,.e-erl, S.AO. J.40; SllCll Mouf'· tal11 IP lncayl. UO. ~D+tqualHlff from Isl ""° pltQd 2nd. U E•Kta IH I peld S16.QO. AttlH'ldaMe-ll.610 Physicals Set AtEI Toro Physicals for all boys attending El Toro High School are scheduled for Tuesday at l p. m. In the coaches' office on the school campus. A fee of $10 is required for the examination. Anyone mls sfng on Tuesday will have to ob- tain his physical through a private physician. PUBLIC NOTICE Baseball Leaden .... "cnTious 9USl1tea lfAMSSTATeMalfT AMelltte.Ut LtEAoba 8ATTINO ms ti Nt.11 -CMN. Mill, .UI; A. 011-. Tt•, -316; Rice. ISll, .>20; G. llrett, KC. .Jl6; PIMll•. .JIO. RUNS -LAFlore, Ott, tl; Ria, Ill', ts: ...,_, CM, 11; Hisle, Mii. 13; Th0"'40fl, Cle, 72. RUNS IATTEO IN -Alce. Blf', t6; Slaub. Ott, •s; Hille, Mii. '3; J . ThOmPM>f', Otte. II; ThornlOfl. Cit, 73 HITS-Alce, Btn, 1S4; Ctrew, Ml11. 111; 51.utJ, o.c, 13'; LAFiore, 0.t. 13'; ~.HY, 13'. OOUBLl!S -G. Bretl, KC, JJ: Fisk. 81n. JI; e. Murr••· 8.111. 21; M(AM, ICC. 26; 0.0-. S.I. 2S; l'ord, Min. ts. TRIPLES -Al<:I, 8MO, U ; YOUttt. Mii, I ; C:O-, KC. 1; Carew, Min, 7, 1 Tied Wlltl 6. HOME RUNS -ltkl, 8111. 21; G. TllomH, Mlt, 27; Hlsl•. Mii. 26; at11W, cat, M; TIIOrnton, Cle. :U. STOLEN BASES -LAFiore. o.1, 53; Olt.M, 011c. 41; J. Cnil, SH, •1; wlfls, TH,l11WlllOfl,1CC.5' • P ITCHING 111 Oeclslon1l -Oulelr,, NY, 1•2, IM; Gwt. ICC; 10-2. 1 SS. Gtll, ICC, IJ.3. 2.11; E<ker1le1. 81n, 1J.•. 3.l2; Biii· 1non.m. o.t, IH . J.43. Torru. a sn. 14 ... JM. Romo, Su ..... i .zt; T-N, c.1. tJ.I, Aa.1.17. STRIKEOUTS -.,.,., cat. 1M; Gulclr.,, NY. 112; FC-oen. 8.JI, IU . ltofl.,d, KC. 124; UncllH'Woocl, Tor, lat NATl~LEAOUI: BATTING lt1S •t INlll -Bur• ""'9111. All, .>17; Row. 0 11 • .>11. MMloC•, SI' •• J01; llow•, ...... .lOS; Wlll"leld. SI' • .a ltUNS ~ Aafe, Clfl, Ill; 0. Jews, Chi, n : s. H ... o.n o11. NV, ••: Fost••: On,"; Griffey, 0 11, U , It. lft!IUI, LA. 61, RUNS 8ATTEO IN -FO\ltt. 0 11, WT; Cl•rti. SF. &l; o.rw,, U , 16; R. SmlUt. LA. 76; lullntlll. Ptll, H ; Win· II.id. SO, 7S HITS -Aow, 0 11, ISO; Bow•, Piii. 10; C.bell, Ht11, 1•; Griffey, Cln, t3'; G-y, LA. IJ6. DOUBLES -Row. ccn. 37; Sim· mo<IS, SIL, l2; i..rer, Mii. JI. Cl•••. SF. JI. H-, Hin. 2t. TA I Pl.ES -IUcll•rd•. so .•. HtrndOll, SF,•; Rtlldl•. NV, I. TemplelOft, Sil •• 7; Grlffef, Cln, I. HOME AUNS -uaJl!Mll, ""'· ?t: FO\ter. 011, 216; R. Smltll, LA. JS; Tiie follOWl119 ....-s -doifo9 """""S•• COURREGES, 3l1$ Ftlrvltw ltMCI, Gotta MIM. CA. n.2' CO U TURE 8 0 UTIOUIE $ CC•llfor11l•I. l31S F•trvlew Roeil. Goll• #MM, CA. ... Th•• buslftel& •• c-.cted l>Y • cor- SMW•llof'. COUT\JAE llOOTIOUES HetWV T. SeQer\t"'"' Pf'ftidem & Chief e QC\lllvt Offk er This na'-t wes llled wltlt ~ C:-ly C19<'11 Of Or ... Coullty Oft Ju-ly 14, tt71. "'1Ut f'vbll"'9d Or ... (i&)Mt Delly Pll04 Jul, u. ll, ~ 1, , .. 1'71 O•wSOfl, Mii, 20; P•~. "911. 20. 1----------- STOLEN 8ASES -*'-· Pqll. PUBLIC NOTICE O ; LePtt, LA, at; Al~, SO, JI, i.----------0 . Smith, SO, JI, G. Madelo•. Pfll, 26, P ITCHING Cll Ot Cl\ICH"I -8of1Mn>. Ciro, f.1. ?.97; Blue. SF. t•s, 2.74; McGr-, Piii, f.3, 2..Jt. PerrY. SO. IJ.S, J.IS; --·SF.~. 1.11 . Aoo•n . Mii, IJ.7, 1.U , Grimsley. MIC. 1 .... J JI. 0 ~ • Chi., ... l.7' STRIKEOUTS -R1<11trd Hiii 22'; P. N......,. AU, 181. SH .... r. Cl11, 151. MofltffuKo, SF. 13'; Blu-. SF, 127. Pro Soccer ltertlt ~ lecar "-.... ArntrlCaf' ~ Pl,,yofh Fl. I.~ 4, Oemllt l C041 A-.tc.-leCCM L...- llldl.,.....els l, C-Cll<lll 1 FICT1l10VS .US.NH& ...._.. ITATaMalfT Tht fol ...... --Is dlllftl M l f\tlt.S: !CUTTINO KORNER, ICLOTZ"S, 1J7IO Go.._., Wfftm+Mt.r. c. .,.., Deftflls H. IClclU, 10161 0. Omt Or., WH~. C... t2ll3 TMt IMISIMts It~ bf.., tll· Cllvkllltl OeMls H. ICIOtl Tiiis 1~ -meet w1111 111e C-ly Cl«tl OI Or .... c-icy on JUiy 27,1'71. ...... PW)ll-Or .. ca.st 0.MIV Pltot ,My JI. Auq I. 14.11. "11 2911-11 PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS eUSINU$ HAM« STATeM .. CT Tlle followlflO ...... II dOl"9 bllsl· ...... , Pl.ANT TRANFOttMATION, Utt Siltlt• Ant A111t., ~Mew, C.. e2627 C.rol ,.,.,,. Code41ft. U1e Stlll• Allt Ave •. Gott• Mesa, C.. '2611 Tllll IMniftnt IS COflCIUct9d by .., I,._ Cllvldu•I CMOI COdllttS This ll•Wmlfll .... fifed wlttt u. c-tty Cl«tl Of Ortnot c:.ou..tf Oft Jiily 11 •.. 71. ....... PvOll-()rar191 '-t o.llY Piiot JllfyJl.A""-7• 14,U, 1'71 ?IU"'11 PUBLIC NOTICE . ----------~. COSMETIC SURGERY FOR MEN Our cosmetic Surgery Center understands the apedal needs of the male. If you are a m&n who desires to improve his appearance, we are now offering free private CC>Nubtions which e>eplains the UB«Y & anesthesii for hai' nmplants, face & eyeld lfts, moclfic.ation of the nose, din, ears and chet'nlal peel-also learn ·~ the newer scalp redudlon for tw loss. eosmetic SU'lJel')' Center Medical Croup Dr. I.I. f r1nkel, Director M....._ al Alwk• Medktl ~tlon A.,ocMled IWd Ctt1ffled/Quallfltd Surpon1 ~ DtrMltoloshtf r···---··--------·-· .. ~t/ff.''Heit~ ... "-!~Ol Wlllht" : Dt ......... ,....,....,__...,. .......,...,.~ •uw--.,._......,..... I""' ..._..., • ...,. ..,... ~ 1e&er0 V"'turl 8t No. 314 (213) 990·4990 ' w. '" 4 W ..... ~ ,,,...,. a&lfMrd (213) -3787 I g~ ~- ..... lt03 ~ loutl¥1rd (213) 53t·7420 I DOw ltkf; I ( i I ... 110} NIWnllft hftt C C114) 540-8805 ! t4AMI ... llfl l100 N; -... • (114) 541·8651 • -------- • ..... ;_,.,~ ....... ,, f7t..4) 27&-3332 i :-'" --~=...,..... .. ...,,_....,...,,.' •tA"-------- 5' ...... tt 11111 .. ••acu:-. ....._"I~•--------­..._,.. .. 9".._......, .. ._...,...,.....,. • ' i • j s ..__.MIG'* 1 .. 1171 STOCKS I BUSINESS Monday'• NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS I p.m. (ED'O Prieee ' qi,N1~~.,...~1111Mv~•-.-.11we11k.-•w ........ °'t""'"'~'""'11.-. W,..,..Wh~4-....... tftecWltlttOt9'tnlMIMllllet Sale-leaseback . ' . . l '