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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-08-08 - Orange Coast Pilot. I I I• -. Conviets Seize 17 Hostages in New York Riot I I Firemen Strain . To, Battle 1.5 Million A.eres DAllY PILOT Polanski t· * * 10< * * * MONDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 8, 1977 VOL 11, HO no, S HCTIOHI, U ~AO•S ~Dies in Subway No One -Aided Knife Victim NEW YORK <AP> Police . say more than a doien people I watched without helpina as a would-be robber knifed a 34-year· old Manhattan woman to death in the 66th Street IRT subway sta· 1 tion at Llncoln Center. I Claudia Curfman Castellana was stabbed and slashed 10 Um es In the chest, back and arm at the bottom of the stairs of the sub· way station at noon Sunday, police said. Witnesses sa\d they heard the woman screaming, "Leave me alone. Leave me alone," just AD . FVRNISHED 7JlE BUYERS He had a sofa. a bed and c rocker to aell -he dld it ln the Dally Pilot classifieds. Thia aaUsf1ed customer's ad read lhls way: ~fore the killer began allackln& her with a large knife. Mrs. Caatellana sta11ered further lnlo the station and col· lapsed between the turnstiles and the change booth Just as passengers 'beean to'lean a train that had just pulled into the sta· lion. She was pronounced dead on arrival at Roosevelt Hospital at 12:30 p.m. Police said people who wlt· nesaed the· attack apparently made no move to helJ> the woman fight the killer off, but some of those getting off the northbround local chased a man they believed to be the assailant. The man aot away. "He got away and we don't know. whether it was the rtaht man or not," a detective said lat.e Sunday after intervlewinc wit· nesses. Police believe the assailant followed the woman into the sub- way t.intendlng to rob her. Potiee also ~overed the ap· parent murder weapon, a lar1e foldlnl knife with a black handle. A rrattve ot Deaver, Mn. Cutellana came here about. 10 yean aeo to earn a master's de1ree frorn Columbia Teachen Coll~ Three years aao. •h• married Frank s. Castellana a medical doctor alfUlat~ wltb Colu~\>la Unlvtralt)' and St. Lukes Hospital. i!_\e couple planned to a.,.nd (8" NO ON£, Pase .U> Nude Kia•ing 'Not Wotth It' TAMPA, FLA. CAP) - The self·proclaimed "World's First All Nude Kissing Booth" was open for 25 minutes before ita Cl rst customer put down his dollar for kiss. "It's not worth a dollar," 0 .D. Jones said after hit 20·second s mookh with a naked dancer ln the Tam· pa bar. GU Rodrigue&, the bar's owner, said potential kissers probably were acared by reporters and · undercover policemen ln the crowd. L4 Man AdmitA $13, 700 Theft LOS ANGELES CAP> -A 34· year-old Los An1ele1 man who ad~ilt.ed stealin& Sl3,'700 from a student body lteasury will be sentfncecJ Oct. 4 in Con1 Beach Superlor Court on 1rand theft charaes. W. Jeffrey Lakes, a former buslnesl manaser tor the As· soclated Stl.ldent Government at Californra Slate University at Lon& Beach, stole the mone1 between Jan.land JW\e23ofthls year, accordlna to Deputy Dtat. Atty. Arthur Jean. ex Western Blazes Mo11nt 8y The Altoclated Prep Cooler weather and rain helped fireflehtera worklna on '44 ·blazes across 1.5 million acra of ran1e and tWMlra ln Alpka. But in West and Northweat states. crews were strained to their Jtmlta today In battllna an estimated 300 aquare mlles of timber and brush fires. The 74,.500-acre "Marble·South Cone" fire in California '1 Los Padres National Forest near Bil Sur may double h_.be before lt ls contained, said Joe Nadolski of the federal Jntera1ency Fire Center at Boise, Idaho. About 3,000 firefltbters were tr)'inl to maneuver around the blaze to protect the Carmel Rlver watenhed1 which purifies and collects water and acta to pre- vent mudslidea for Carmel Valley towns, lncludlnt Mon· terey. The slx-day fire has atread.Y' claimed watershed t.bat ofllclm aay wm take $143 mUllon to~ace. "We have a limited number ot flrefilhtert and have to mllce a declsfon about what resources are most Important to protect.'' Nadc>lakl added. In ~uka, the fliet are still "covirina an area tar1er than the state of Delaware," Kerry Cartier, a 1pokeaman fw tbe Bureau Ol Land Mana•ement, c&ee naa. ••••Al) A~WI ....... PLEADS GUil TY Roman Potan1kl Corwict,s Riot In NY Priilon; 17Hostages Director ... Faci~ 50 Years SANTA MONICA (AP> -Mov· te director Roman Polanski pleaded 1ullty today to having unlawful sexual entercourse witb a 13-year·old tirl. "l had sexual Intercourse with a female person not my wife un· der the age of 18," Polanski declared, readln1 from a pre- pared le&aJ document. Deputy Dist. Atty. Ro1er • Gunson asked Polanski if be UD· derstOod what his maximum sen. tence mtaht be. The 43-year·old director answered calmly: "One to 50 years in state prison." Gunson then told Polanski • · •· proceeding will be lnitlat«l to d~ termine 1' he la a mentally dis· ordered sex offe~er. The proHCutor added: "Since you are not a clUien of tbie United States, a pouible consequence of your plea ti that you mlabt be de· ported." Gunson announced tbattMdls• trict attorney woUld recommeOd dropplq five other counts ol aex perversion and dru1 abuse against Polanski. • Superior Court Jud•• Laurence Rlttenband, wbO at· cepted the plea, ordierid tblt Polanski be examined by two p•ychlatrtsta and aet a beatln' Sept. 19 for a repOrt on me ,. <See POIAN8Kf, P1,..U) -----. ~-------~ ---~ --~-,- Y PILOT s Three Laguna Festi1'als 'Differ' 7 11~ PP LL ..... ~ .... Mid IY tbrou1h L••··· 8 C!•t-b'1 annca•I art fHU•al lr~nay, ro'1 only on tblol tor 1ur 10111 ror aure. A k two artlltt. bow th1nc• are 101na. 'II I l two dlll ru.-el"i. Talk to 500 arUata and F,...r..,.AI FIRES .•• a.:ud li.t~Sunday But the Bii Salt Raver rtre. • h1ch al one time apf:IJ".il t.o threiAtt-n lbe trian•·A aaka oil 9Jf>~lme ootth ol tbe Yukon llJver as "no loneer » threat," he uid. That 15,000 8l're fire hu been • '60 percent cont a med and the othf'r .0 percent border• on the Yukon . ..,o 1l '.., n o t g o 1ne anywher t.',' ht: .tdded M06t of the Alask<An hres were burrung w1Uun a 17S·mtlt radius of the Kotzebue area in the northwest part of the stale, with more than 1,200 firefighters on the hne at 28 bl ates Sixteen fires were unmanned . Cartier said. The largest of the fires, cover ing 335,000 acres about 100 miles north of Nome, has been burning since July 9 Nearly 90 men were concentrating on that blaze in an attempt to keep flames from spreading north W the village of Deering, he ::.<.llCI On Sunday, 24 fresh crews, 20 men to a crew, from throughout the country were nown to fires raging an Arizona, Californla, Colorado, Oregon, Nevada, Utah and Wastunglon. The crews arc professional firdaghters on loan from states and vC1n ous federal a gencies, ".J ;idolsk1 said With the add1 laon of the latest :l4 c·rews, more than 4,000 firehght<'rs have been moved in- to the West and Northwest since Aug I , Fire Center officials t!st1mated Thal as in addition lo slate forces, us in California, \\-h1ch has nearly 10,000 men fight- ing 1tsc1ght maJor rares A fire in Modoc County in the northeastern part of California was reported more than 30 per· c·ent contained Sunday, said Dale Wireman, California state forestry spokesman More than 100 million board reel of limber had been burned there. In Ari zona . firefighter s estimated Sunday evening that the 6,800.acre forest fire on the lluulapai Indian Reservation. Just south of the Grand Canyon, would be contained today. Another maJor fire, burrung m the high timberland an the Se- quoia National Forest 60 miles northeast of Bakersfield. had blackened more than 7.200 acres That Hissing Wasn't Leak OUNDALK, Md. <AP) -Brian Berkeridge was no( worried about that hi ssing he heard com- ing from the front of his car. He thought It was JUSt a leaky Ure. But as Berkerldaie pulled into a cur wash here. a state police trooper spotted a flve-root boa constrictor gilding out or the frtll of the car. Trooper James Emerick and Cpl. Francis France used a stick to prod the snake into a garbaaie can. John Hauserman or Towson, Md . reported that he and his pet boa constrictor had become 1eparaled while out for some u - ercise. Marines Held In Jeep Theft Two Camp Pendleton Marines were arrested at 2:28 a.m. today In Lquna Beach while •Ue1f!dty vandaJIJtin1 a stolen marine jeep. LQJ{Una police Identified the suspects at Raul Oallcla. 20, and Jorie L. J?enaflore. 22. Police earlier ltad been alerted to be on the lookout for the stolen military vehicle. The auapecta were turnod over to mWW'Y authoriUea. OlllANQI COAl'f I DAILY PILOT )'OU'U come away ~~«>n•lncid lh.eJ'" not ev bMo oa • aame pl , much 1111 tM aam• t.own duda1 the aam• Ulru • • The F UvaJ ol Art.I bu ... n aboul a 1' percent drop U\11 yur u oppoud to lut year and the Sawduat Festival la talklftC ln term•~ a 20 percent drop. ln Lquna Canyon near the OU\er ferent tdeu why that ml&bt be. Y •an w h 11 e A rt· A· F 1 1 r two art ahowa. Ill sookeaman Dick Qart, 1pokeama for tM FuUvll elalma Ju att ndance ls Zeny Ciesllkowakt aUrlbuted the Sawdutt F sUval, Hid be al· doubla that of la.at year. with new locaUon to the attendance In· trlbut«I the al ow ~ to too- about u many people bavinf crease. fUcll with the Orant• COWitY been lhroUlb the show dwint the Repretentatlves of both tho Jl'alr, allo runnlnt that weeted. ftnt three weeks u attended all Festival of Artl and Sawdust •nd to a brush fire which made lt • alx week.I la.t year. FesUval said the aeaaon opened dlfflcult for people to aet to Art·A·Falr this year ts located slowly this year. The)' bad dlf· La1u.na. He abo noted that a atplert called by the paUce dei>utment may have dJscoura1ed people from eomine to town. Dea Ware-Sawduat trtQarer. aald -'>out 100,000 persons ha.ve been tbrouih tbe ahow to far this year. • Sally Reeve, apokeswoman for the FeaUval of Am, aald she beUev• attend&bee is down only In compartson to Jut yaar's Lalun• ach tlremen uaod a bOaa: cult_. to clip the •baft from • oev em- titddectln th foot ol I !S-f Ht-old youth who had Jabbed hlmseU Saturday whlla apearflatunc. John P. Mdlurray of 1589Skyllne Drive. Laeuna Beach, was tak:eo by hls father to the South Coast Community Hospital emer1cncy room ln South i.a,una. He wu relea.aed aft.er treatment. ,/ Fluor Gets record crowds. Geo.th J Mrs. Reeve noted that durina e-...na the blcentennlal year, peopl• "' & '-- were out and travelin1 more. She said 113,000 had been on the Pl p grounds during the fint three ant act weeks. This Jncludes the 2,580 . who view the Pa1eant of the Masters niahtlY. As for art sales, sometimes at- tendance itself is unimportant, Art-A-Fair's Cieslikowskl 1ald. Art-A-Fair ha.s been attracting about 1,000 people week days and 2,500 oo Saturdays and Sundays, he said. "We have found that while there are fewer people during the week, a lot more of tbern are here lo buy. On lhe weekend, there are more people, but a smaller percent~e of them are buyers," heaaid. Special to &be DaUy Piiot LOS ANGELES -The F1l.IOL' Corp. announced today that a sub- std i a ry bas been awarded contracts ror approximately Mi million to deslfn, enelneer. pro- cure and coostruct a proposed 45-meaawaU e l ectric aeothermal power plant to ~ built near El Centro. ..,... .., ..... _ Some aJ'\.lsts are selllnf well, some are not, and some aren't terribly worried about art fesUval summer sales. They feel it's the exposure that counts. Called the Heber geothermal demonstration power plant, the facility ts scheduled to beflo operating in 1980, but ls con- tingent oo receipt of federal and other fundlnJ . Contracts for the proposed commercial-scale facility, which would be the larieat geothermal power plant of lts type In the United States, were awarded by San Dieao Gu 4c Electric Co. to Cbica10-bued Fluor Pioneer Inc. 'You Go First' Katie Huston, 10, urges younger brother J ohn, 7, to pet one of the three mule ~\\'ans that swam mto Beacon Bay for a quick bite of bread crumbs and a drink of \\ ater. The wild swans have been hvmg m Newport Harbor for about a year. After gcttm~ a close look at the bi~ birds. Katie and John dec1cted thl'y'd probably rather ha\e anothe r drink than a pal on the head. ,.,..,. Page AJ POLANSKI •• suits. Polanski wlll be sentenced sometime after that. Al the dramatic 20-minute plea hearing. an attorney represent- ing the famlly of the 13-year-old girl implored the judae to accept Polanski's plea to protect the teen-ager from the glare of publicity. "A stigma would attach to her for a lifetime," said attorney Lawrence Silver. "Ju1tlce ls not made of such stuff." Silver said the family doesn't seek Polanski '1 imprisonment but only hopes that he w1ll be ful· ly rehabilitated. ''The reliving of the sorry events with their delicate con· tent .. .in this courtroom packed with strangers would be a challen- ge to the emotional well being of any person.·· Silver said. "This is not the place for a re- covering young girl." The diminutive Polanski, clad in a gray pinslrlpe sull, blue shirt and red tie, appeared redeyed and nervous aa he stood before the judge aod answered the prosecutor's questions in a voice barely above a whisper. Gunson. noting that a defense for Polanski mleht be that he thought the 1lrl wu older, uked whether be knew her correct age. "I understand bet to be 13." Polanski 1aid. "Did you unde~land ber to be 13 when you bad sexual tn- tercoune with her?" Gunaon aaked. Polanski hesitated, conferred wlth hla attorney, Dou1tas Dalton. then answered: "Yes." The charge to which Polanski pleaded wu not tbe mOlt 1erlou1 in the she-count Indictment. Other charees -specllically furnlshlnl dru1s to a minor and rape by the use of dru1s -carry sentences as long as 10 yean to life ln prl!on. Di.st. Atty. John Van de Kamp, who normally will accept a plea only to the h11he1\ con•tctable count of an indictment, tasued a lenlth.Y written statement after the hearing to explain the un· usual plea ~r•aln. He said his concern wu to pro- tect the teen·q• 1lrl from a trial wbtcb "could victimlle her I Mexicans Gather For Border Tries NEW YORK CAP) Between 200,000 and 250,000 destitute Mex- ican migrants are walling near the U.S border for a chance to s lip into thls country before Coneress acts on an amnesty plan for ille~al aliens. the New York Times said today c Related slorypageA3> Each night at least 3,500 of the migrants attempt to elude border patrols and enter lhe U S., with about 1,000 being caught and re- Drown Death Probed in NB Orange County coroner's in- vestigators said today they are investigating the drowning death of a Newport Beach woman who was found floating In the swim- ming pool al her apartment cor.n- ptex. Emptoyes of the ·Versailles apartments called police early Saturday morning when they found the body of Gloria Edythe Plazza. 53, face down in the pool. Police inveatifators said lhey found nothlna In Mfs. Piazza's apartment at 901 Cagney Lane lo indicate the woman had taken her own lJ(e. They also lound no apparent evidence or foul play. RiOeman Killed WlDTTtER CAP) -A Los An1eles Sheriff's deputy has killed a man he said was wielding a rlfie at Monte Vista High School turned lo Mexico, the newspaper reported. Jn the border town of Tijuaha, Mexico, migrants are reportedly paying proresslonal s!Tiugglers $250 earh to guide them past border patrols and take them to Los Angeles. home of a large Mexican community. In addition, for an extra $300 to $400, the smugglers offer phony backdated documents, including rent receipts, utility bills, work permil'I and Social Security cards. The smugglers promise that the documents would Insure that the migrants would qualify under President Carter's amnes· t y proposal. the Times said. A border patrol agent, Robert McCord, was quoted by the newspaper as saying most or the migrants are living In sleazy hotel!!, garages and dirt-floor hovels or camping along roads. "It's a surging mass of humanity and with the limited manpower and facilities we now have, tens of thousands are bound to get past u11," McCord said. ·•we are 1imply betna over· whelmed." Beetles Feared· LOS ANGELES (AP> Agriculture offictala say the county may be hit by a devastat- ing outbreak or Japanese beeUes, spa,wned from the eags of insect.a transported from the East Cout thl1 summer. "It's a potenUal time bomb," ·county Agricultural Commissioner PauJ .E~erlald. 1ocoadttme." ,._ _ __ ._.. .... , "We cbo .. to side with her," Ven de Kamp a aid. • Clark said he had been keepint hi• ear to the around ln the Sll'Wduat. After talktn1 with a balch or exhibitors, be' a aid. abaut a quarter were "crytnf that salt1 are down," about tO to~ percent were "saying the same u i.,t year" and another 80 to ~ per· cent were saying "much better than last year." At the Sawdust FesUval, Ut• ••aument tuild" was doln1 especially well lhla year. Ht at· trlb\Jted this to new• media at- ientlon and to lashJon showa on Sunday. At the Festival of Arts, Anne Chase, a leatherwork artist and member of the board of direc- tors, said sales have varied among the artists. She noted that artists Jack Dudley and Hal Akins had tremendous first weeks. Dudley said he did better the first 10 days of this season than be did all six weeks lut year, Anne said. As for her own sales, Anne said she regarded gross sales rrom the booth "not at all significant." The contacts she made with peo- ple who later came by her store were more important. she said. Laguna Beach Hitchhiker ·Foils Kidnap A 22·year-otd Laguna Beach woman toiled ltldnaplng as she fou1ht off a platol-wleldlng motorist who bad arabbed her by lbe hair when she 'alt.mpt.ed to leave the car. The woman told police 1he was · hJtchhiklna al about 9:ac> p.m. Friday at Forest Avenue and South Coast HJ1hway. wheo a man driving a yellow ·Pinto pulled up and let her in the car. Wheq 1he aaid 1be wanted to set out at Diamond Street and South Cout Hll}lway, ttie man reachf!d underthefront seat and pulled out a plat.ol . A 1truaal• followed as the woman .Utempt.cl to leap from rthe car despite the 1unman'1 warnl.np not to. At one point, the man held her by the hair before abe was 1uc· cessful lD oPeDlnl lbe door lOd escapinc. Once outside, abe fleet. NEW D!un, lndla <AP> -Forn'lcr Primo Mlnllter lndira Gandbl. reportedly trytn1 a Political comeback, 1utfertd a aetba(k today u Concreu party otntlaJ• vc)lced oppoaitloo to al- lowlJU( bet a tOp leadenhlp role. Fluor Ploaeer wlll perform the work In coruunctlon with the Southern California division of ttuor Et\llneers & Con.struc1«s Inc,, at IrvCne. Work performed under the de- sign pbue will ualat SDG&E and Its project partn.en ~ pre· parlDJ their propoaal for fuDdlng to the Ener1y Research &t Development Admlni1trallon CERDA>. Fluor Is designing the plant to use a new approach for convert- ing heat energy ln geothermal brine Into electrical power. Successful use of geothermal heat for power in geotbermal- rtch areas or Southern Callfomia would reduce consumption of scarce foesU fuei., Fluor said. The Heber facility would uae aeothennal ener&y to replace the ' equivalent of 1,850 barrels of oil, or 12 mWJon standard cubic feet of pipeline quality natural gas daily. Geothermal experts con- servatively estimate that the Heber geothermal resource area could support production Of 400 to 500 mw or electric power, the Fluor announcement aald. If the Heber plant proves suc· cessful. it would lead the way to construction of a number of addi- tl on al geothermal electric generallni stations, Fluor saJd. The Heber plant will tak~ geothermal brine at a rate ot 15,000 aallons per minute from 12 wells to be drilled by Chevron Resources Co. in the port.ion of the field owned by Chevron US~ Inc. Heber brine charactert&liti5, established in a pUot PI'Oltam by SDG&E, lhow the Ould to be low ln salt content, hav\na about 14,000 parts per million or total dl1solved solids compared to about 380,000 pm In otber Im· penal Valley brine. Geothermal plants 1enerating more than 45 mw electric an on 1tream ln Northern California_ They are powered by dry aeothermal steam, rather than geothermal brine. .. Pro. Pflfle Al NO ONE ••• Sunday afternoon wltb J1r. Caaleltana '• pareau ll\ Queens. Mn. Caatellana•a murder came just u Tranait Authority &10llce released a report cJa.lmtng that major crime ln th• 1abw-.v dropped 11 perc to lbe flrtt ltvtn months ot this year. ! . . VOL. 70, NO. 220, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES NEW YORK <AP> -P co HY mcire than a dozu people watched without beJPtq u a wOQ\d-be robber knJfecl a 3'·year· • old Manhattan woman todeatb in the 88th Street IRT subway lta- t.aon Ill LiQCOln Center. Claaclia Curfmaa Cutellana was stabbed and alubed 10 times in the cbul, baek aod arm at the bottom ol the stain ol tbe aub- way at,tion al noon Sunda1. police said. WllMIHI Hid they beard tM wom Kreamln1, "Leave me alone. Leave me alone," Just before the killer beaan attacklni her Wtth 1 lar1t knlle. Hrs. Castellana 1t111ertd further into t.he ataUoa and col· lapsed between the turnaWea And tb.&-ch.&nJe booth Juat H panencen t>eean t.o leave a train that had Just pulled into the sta· Uon. Sbe was pronounced deed on arrival at Roosevelt Hoepltal atlJ:JOp.m. Police aald people wbo wit· neaaod the attack apparently made no move to help the woman f11bt tho killer off, but some ol thoee Jetting off t.he nortbbround local chased a man they billeved to be the assailant. The man 1ot away. • "He cot away and we don't know whether lt wu the riibt . man er not/' a detectlvuald late Sunday alter lntervlewinj wit· neua. Police believe the assailant followed the woman Into the sub- way lntendinl \o rob her. POUce also recovered the ap· parent murder weapon, a large foldinc knife with a black handle. A native of Denver, Mrs. Cutell•na came here about l& yea.rs aio t9 earn a master's desree from Columbia Teachers Colleee. Three years ago, she maoied Frank S. Caatellana, a In Newport medlcal doctor affUJated wlth Columbia University and St. Lukes Hospital. The couple planned to apeod Sunday aflern(\on with Dr. Castellana 's parents In Queens. Mrs. Castellana'• murder came jU!t as Transit Authority police released a report clalmln1 that mljor crime lo t.he subwa¥ dropped 16 percent ln the fll'lt seven months or this year. .Buildirig H8lt Vote Plea Due By JOANNE REYNOLDS OI tM EN!ty l'lNil llaft system. Mcinnis ha.s been critical olthe moratorium because, be said, it would be Imposed without sped· fyinc what should be acbiev durinl its duration. Our Crowded Beaf!hes Backers of a building moratorium In Newport Beach say t.hey believe it Is t.he only way to 1et needed road improve- ments before new construction 1enerates ao much traffic that cl· ty streets become impassable. Opponents of the moratorium say it la obstructlonlst and the same end can be accompllshed by other means. He baa 1u11eated that "lt. would be more productive to do an ln·depth look at the rener-1 plan. There are areaa t.hat may This is what it looked like Sunday at Big Corona beach in Corona del Mar. It was this way --wall to wall peo· pie -on most Orange Coast strands during the weekend. In Newport Beach. lifeguards estimated the two-day crowd at 170,000. Beach visitors all along the Orange Coast enjoyed temperatures in the 70s on the sands and, despite water temperatures that dropped in· to the low 60s, many were attracted into the water. Small surf made swimming conditions almost lake·like at most beaches. And, they wonder if the whole moratorium issue is bein1 brouaht up now to set up can· dldates for next April's election. Lido Isle . Man Seized ~After Siege Proof of Allaway's Sanity .Promised The April elections will Involve races for the seats now held by State F; •ns Mayor Milan Dollal, Mayor Pro ' ., • ..::::;;. Tem Pete Barrett and Coun· , cllwomen Trudi Ro1ers and D1n~y E'~ortS Lu~~:~u:r:~ on a building te:;; J 4 'J·J • moratorium were defeated on 4.3 votes with Mrs. Ro1er1 on the Qf. B ttl losln1 side with Councilmen Paul a ers Ryckolf and Ray Williama. By replacing either Dostal, Barrett A Udo Isle man, apparenUy depressed over business and f aptlly problems, held Newport Beach police at bay for more than two houri Sonday ~fore be- lnt taken mto custody. Police said John Nlcholu Adamo, 42. wu arN1Sted by the ahL·man Special WeaJ)Onl and Tactl~Team <SWAT> Uaalf~ hlm ln the bathroom of hia home at 211 Via Eboll. They sald be wu •rmed with a .32·caliber aut.omaU~ platol and a .22·caliber ri!le. Officers aald Adamo fired about 12 shots. Police fired none. Capt. Richard Hamilton. act· ln1 cbtef ol police, said the aleae beaan at about t p .m. when Adamo locked himself ln the bathroom and belQ 1hoottnc in· to the roof and walls. Hts wtre and two lrl~nds ned attet ttYina unsuC'ceaafully to talk him out. Police sealed off the area and, after a two-hour watt, a team led by Lt. Don Picker went into the houae NMl arrested Adamo who waa taken to UC Irvine Medical 'Center for observaUon. The proucutor quoted Allaway as telllQI an employe before the sbodll)p bepn: "Somethln,'s not richt here. This doesn't belOQI here.'' • AndM said one victim was told befcn ~ ..,., shot IA the ch .. t by AillWll)': .. How abOt.at .. •bol to; da 1" Eniilhl aald Alla•ay'a C01l· duct~,aher be ctro.e trom the catdP.&$Wll ji'OOf d h1a st.n.lty at tile time~ the shoot.lop. Re aald Allaway called tbe Anaheim Police Department from the Hlltcn Inn ta that city and told t.hem be wu resPoDllble for t.heNlerton tUUnca. Enri1bt said Allaway told t.hem he wu unarmed and th't be had hla wife wtth hlnl. Re aald All1111.; told pollce that they cOU1d do what tbe1 lilted wlt.h him but thq must not harm ht& wife. Mn. Bonnle Allaway sued ber hµ1band for divorce ln SUpenor-• Court three days betore be al· le1edfy took the rlno to the P'ullerton campus. Enrt1bt and Dei>ut1 Public Def ender l\on Butler have ln· dtcated tbat tbt expected aantt.y phase wW take up matt "of what ta expected to be an el'1lt-wffk trial. f: Califonda'a llres, already COY· ertna 'more than ao,ooo acres, posed the 1reateat danaer to popialatect attn • ._.,atetshed and timber forests. , In a summer ot severe droucht, liabtiilril 1torm1 had i,, nlted hundreds of blues ln Northern ind Central California lnthelutweet. By today, m~'1power was aptelld llO thin, ~ • aom• fires were IO far out of control, that 3,100 firemen ll&htln1 the (See rtaa, Paie AZ) or Mrs. Kuehn with a member of the pro-moratorium aroup, the outcome of the issue could be re· vernd. Toniaht. Ryckotf will try for a third ttm• to fet affirmative ac- tlon Ob a builcUni halt. He will ask the city council \o put the m alter to vat.era. There la allO a coalition of en· vlronmentaU1t1 -composed ptlmarlly of Wt1Uam1' and RyckoCf'a poUUcal baclCen - that la working oo a moratorium. Th• 1roup, called LEAF for Le1al· Envl11onmental Analysis Fund, was organized by Harbor bland housewife Jean Watt. LEAF is payin& for a le&al study oftbelJsue. Mn. Watt says the result may be an lnittatlve effort to force a moratorium. 'the LEAF and Ryckoff prop. oslUons could go on the ballot 1n April with the eity counclt ele<?· tlons. · Opponents of a moratorium HY lt appears t.o them the three councll votes on tbe subject have been en,ineered ln order to pro- vide anti-deve1opment forces with a tar1et to attack ln the ~uncU campatgb next year. Mn. Watt denied this la the caae and said an April vote on a motatorium would be "inap- propriate Uniliig.'' .. ~f.c.kOff also denied that he b setttn1bil fellow councilmen up. He added, 0 1 suppose lt de· pel\dl on the IM'Ol)le runnlnc for ofrlce arid tiow they use It (tb• morat«tum llsue). If they want· ed to, J auppose they could really 1oeoworkonit." Ryckatr• latest effort Will be met With a coo.nter propois&J put. forward by Mn. Rosen and Councilman Doa Mcinnis. They are auceealln1 that the couDcll authorize clty officials to tde~ lD;aeptli look at the clty'a , ... ai ;&an wttb. 1peclal em· phUll on the tl!eet of pnipoaed de¥--~ on the citJ.'1 tratfic 3 <See BUILDING, Pace AJ) , Fluor to Get Plant Contract 8-daJ ..... o.u, ..... LOS ANOELIS -The 1'1uor C... -~'*' tod11tbata1uf>.. aidlary a. .. bHn awarded eoatncta tor aJ11n'OX1mnety aa • m IO ... Ip, ei IAMr, &W'O- CUN ... ecmtnla a pf'OIDOMd 45·••••••U eteclrlo CeolbcraiaJ power plant to t. llluilt'Mal' !:J Centro. Called t.be Hebtor 1eot.bermal delDCIDl&nlti:on power plant, th• facillf.1 ii scheduled to .,_,.n ~ in lllO, but It COD Alie1U Wait For Chance At Border NEW YORK <AP> -Between 200,000 and 250,000 destitute Mex- 'ican rnigranta are waltlne near the U.S. border for a chance to slip tnto this country before Congress act.I on an amnesty ·plan for illegal aliens. the New York Times said today. <Related storypageA3) Each oitht at least 3,500 of the mi1ranta attempt to elude border patrols and enter the U.S., with about 1,000 being caught and re- turned to Mexico, the newspaper reported. In the border town or Tijuana. Mexico, migrants are reportedly payinc professional smueclers $250 each to euide them past border patrols and take them to Loa An1eles. home or a larae Mex.icancommunaty. In addition, ror an extra S300 to ' S400, the 1mu11Jlers offer phony backdated documents, including rent receipts, utility bills, work permits and Social Security card.a. The 1mu11len promise that the documents would lnaure that the migrants would qualify under President Carter's amnes· ty proposal, the Times aald. A border patrol agent, Robert McCord, was quoted by the newspaper as aaylni most of the mi4ranta are living in sleazy hotels, aaragea and dlrt·fioor hovels or camping along road.a. "It's a suraing mass or humanity and with the limited manP<>wer and faciUtiea we now have, tens of thousands are bound to get paat us," McCord said. "We are simply beine over- whelmed." Laguna Beach mtcbhiker Foils Kidnap A 22-year-old Laguna Beach woman foiled kldnaplng as she fought off a plstol-wieldlng motoriat who bad ftabbed her by the hair when she attempted to leave the car. The woman told police she wu hitchhlkinc at about 9;30 p.m. Friday at Foreat A venue and South Cout Hiehway. when a man drlvln1 a yellow Pinto pulled up and let her in the car. When abe aatd abe wanted to cet out at DtamOftd Street and South Coutff1thwl)', tb4' man reached under the trontseat and pull84 out aplatol. A •t.runle followed u the woman atteD)pted to' leap from the car daplte tbe au:nman'• warnlnP not to. At ooe point. the man held her by the balr before 1be was suc- cessful In opentq the door and escaplna. On~e outside, abe Oed. IUfleman Killed WJtl'l"l'IER <AP) -A Los An1el• Sberlff'1 deputJ baa JdUed a man be 11ld •11 wteldln1 a rill• at Monte Vllta Hlah Scbool. lln1em on reee!pt of f4Mlll'al and other tUndtnc. Contracts for the proposed commudal·acale f aclllt~t wbloh would be tbe lar1eat IOCMCrmll power ol&Dl of lta type IA the \Jnlt.ed at.t., w r• awardecl by San Dieco Gu " Electric Co. to Chlca1o·ba1od Fluor Pioneer Inc. .l''luor PlonMr wlll perform the work in conJunctton with the Southern California dlvWoa cl 1'1uor Engineers Ir Coftltrueton Inc .. atlrvioe. Work performed under tbe d• aigo phase will asalst SDO•E and its project partnen _ln pr-. paring tbetr proposal for fUndlq to tbe Energy Research • Development AdmlnlatraUoD CERDA>. Fluor is deaignlnc the plant to uae a new approach for eonvert- ang heat energy in geothermal brine into electrical power. Succeuful uae of 1eotbermal heat for power in eeothermal- rich areas of Southern Callforn!a would reduce consumption of scarce fossil fuels, Fluor said. The Heber facility would use geothermal energy to replace the equjvalent of 1,850 barrels ol oU, or 12 million standard cubic: feet of pipeline quality natural eas dally. Geothermal experts con- servatively estimate that the Heber geothermal resource area could support production ol 400 to 500 mw or electric power, the Fluor announcement said. IC the Heber plant proves suc- cessful, it would lead the way to construction of a number ol addl· tional geothermal electric generating slationa, Fluor sald. The Heber plant wlll take geothermal brine at a rate of 15,000 gallons per minute Crom 12 wells to be drilled by Chevron Resources Co. in the portion of the field owned by Chevron USA Inc. Heber brine characteri11tic1. established in a pilot proaram by SDG&E, show the fluid to be low in salt content, having aabout 14,000 parts per million of total dissolved solids comparest to about :B>,000 pm in other Im· perial Valley brine. Geothermal plants generating more than 45 mw electric are on stream in Northern California. They are powered by dry geothermal steam, rather than geothermal brine. f'l"09IPageAJ P O L·ANSKI •• "The reliving or the sorry events with their delicate con- tent. .. in th.ls court.room packed wilhstran1erswouldbeachallen· ge to the emotional well beine ot any person," Silver said. "This is not the place for a re- covering youne 1irl. •' "We chose to sid~ with her," Van de Kamp said. He added that in this caae justice would "provide the vie· Um with the opportunity to IJOW up ln a world where she'll not be known as the YOIJlll Cirl with whom Roman PolanaJd bad aexual intercourae." Tbe girl'~ anonymity has been protected lince the-incident oc· curred March 10. In a written recommendatlon to t.be Jodge, the dlltrlct al· tolDtY'• office uked atttenbanct to accept the plea to Hold "another "Hollywood Babylon' trial." The recommendation ooted that if Polanski .II judced to be a mentally dJ1ordored •!!,tt<>!i render, be could l>e comuu "" to a state bolpltal for treatment. If not, lt n.'*cl t.bat cornctlonal authorities have been appl.Ylna penaltlee of 1$ month• to thr.e years for thia crime ratbw tban theoneto50atatedlotbelaw. · Polan1ki and bl1 attorney ruatled out ot tho courthouQ hi a crush of cameru and n .. blDI U&bt.1. but dfflined commmt.. Car Comes t o Call ·, Marvel Wetmore, 65, told police she really didn't want to put her car on the front porch of her neighbor's home in Big Can- yon but that's what happened Sunday night. Mrs. Wetmore reporte<tly suffered only minor injuries when her car went iii· to drive instead of reverse 1lnd plun~ed down the embankment in front of 20 Pine Valley Lane. Thai Sticks Held; 2 NB Men Seized Trustees to V:iew Budget, Benefits By PIDUP aOSMARIN °' ...... ,~ .......... Newport Beach narcotics in-Appointment of a new trustee, \·estigators announced today and approval of a $58.4 milllon r t A • budget for the 1977-78 school they have con isca ey n1n.e year, lead off the 7:30 p.m. Tues-pounds ot a form or pot~nt ~an· juana known as Thai sticks in El day agenda of the Newport-Mesa Toro after a month-long in· school board. vestigation. Trustees also are scheduled to The narcotics, which police approve a five percent wage and claim are valued at about $50,000 benefits increase for the dls- ln llllclt sales, were confiscated trict's 1,260teachers. In two raids in which six people The meeting ls at Costa Mesa were arrested.by undercover in· City Council chambers, 77 Fair veatlgators. Accordlnc to Sgt. . Drive. DarrJ6 Youle of the Newport The trustee appointment was Beach police one pound or Thai made necessary by the reslena· stick.a were allegedly purchased lion of Marian Bergeson of the by Investigators in a deal cuhntnated near the intersection of Avenida De La Carlotta and El Toro Road Friday afternoon. He said the narcotics were al- legedly sold to investigators for $2,000 by Stuart Frederick White, 21. or 4'703'Aa River Ave.. and Richard Corby Jones, 23 of 779 Promontory Point West, both ot Newport Beach. The men then assertedly led of- fl c er s to a home at 24462 HJghpine Road, El Toro where police arTested four more people and confiscated an additional eight pounds of Thai sticks. White and Jones were booked on char1es ot consplracy to 11ell marijuana. Also arrested were Robert VaJ~tine Kalat.acban, ~. of the Hlghplne Road address, on a cbar1e or poueaslon of mari- juana for sale; Robert Michael Bullard, 19, of Claremont, on ldonttcal char1es and Steven Paul Hilbert, 23, also o1 Clare- m ont and alao booked for PQllellion ol marijuana for sale. Navy Probes Fire SAN DIEGO CAPl -Navy ln- vestJf a tors ebecked over the tank andJnl ablp Fresno today for a damaae uaeument after nre bUrned out ot control ln the l.>U1~ tor two boun. No one was repocted hQUACl in tbe fire Suh· day. f 'ro• Page AJ BUILDI NG. • need an overhaul and we should identify them first before con- sidering such a negative ap- proachas a moratorium." Councilmen also have criticized Ryckof'f'a specltlc plan Cot a ballot measure. It would Im· pose a bulldlng ban on all proj- ects south ol Bristol Street that involve more than four unlta of residential or more than 10,000 square feet of commercial or in- dustrial construction. When that proposal wu fint made ln June. Mrs. Kuehn not.eel that Koll Center, whlcb would be outside the boundary, aenerates as much tratrlc .. other ateas or the city. She noted later tbat Tim Strader, vice presldent cl the KoU Company, contributed '200 to Ryckoff '1 re·eleeUon cam-palpln 1'76. RJc:koft denied the cootdbu· tlou from Strader and tbe fact that the company use.a bis travel a1ency for bookln1 bualneu trips bad eJthln1 to do wttb teeplng Koll Center outalde the morat«tum area. Host ages NAPANOCH, N.Y. <AP> -In~ mat. at New Yorll:'1 ENtern Correctional Facility over- powered aome ol their suard.s to- day, .... 17 ho.ttac• and toolt OVeJ' a NCtion of the prt.lon. Tb dJaturbance broto O\lt 1hortlY WON I a.m. ln cell block 83 of the medium-security prison ~d.inl to Ruby Ryla, • 1PQk11womu for the 1tat.e Department of Correctional Seme.. She nld there had heal no aertous h\jurles, and aald the in- mates were DOt believed armed with IWll or lmJves. An aide to Gov. Ruib Carey aald 100 to UO Inmates were in- volved ln the Incident, and that there were 17 be>eta1ea -10 of them priJJoo 1uarda and aeven civilians. CorreeUona Commissioner Benjamin Ward was en route to the prison to Join oe1oUations between prison oftlctall and a committee of tbree inmate; representaUvet. The Inmates lnlUally took con- trol of tho dlnlnc and kitchen facWttee and part of the hospital in the 83 cell block. Prison of. ficlala recaptured the bolpllal eectton around noon. , Ms. Ryles 11ld she was not sure how the recapture was ac- comp)lahed, but 11ld no shots or aaa were fired. The prison, ln southern Ulster County about 70 miles north oC New York City, hold.a 680 inmates and has a capacity ot 7ll. "Tb11 ls aomethln1 we are. ready for ln our priaorus because they are overcrowded and tatlng in 1!0 to 220 persons a month,•• Carey aaid at a briefin1 in Rochester. · "We will enforce the laws in this state. Prisoners Inside prisons will not be allowed to harm persons, especially corTec· tion officers," he added. TwoOCMen . Die as Small .. Plmie Cr ashes Two Orange Coast men were killed Sunday when their llabt plane crashed lo n.agced terrain about one and a hall miles west of Bia Bear Dam, authorities aatd. San Bernardino County Sherlfra deputies ldenWled the pilot as Raymond Chester Onulak, 28, of Irvine. Identification of the other vic- tl m was withheld pending notlflcatlon of next of kin. A Big Bear clty airport spokesman said today at least one ol the men >Nu a Marine. The Cessna 172 was rented at the Bis Bear alrport and look off about 1 p.m. Sunday, the spokesman aald. The eruh OC• curred at about 7:30 p.m. Witnesses said the small plane wu fl)'tna extremely low over the Bil Bear valley prior to the eraab which started a small fire In the den5e brusb. Accordlng to Capt. John Under of the Bit Bear Late Fire Department, t.be aln1J~e aircraft waa buzalng camp-uou.nda near the late at treetop fevel before the crash. p,...pGflt!Al FIRES ••• .. DAIL y PILOT As • ·.Alien SIDnggliDg Grows Sophlsticatea M,,.,.OOr Newport Be.b pcltce are COD• linulq to q1Mlllba triendl and aeqnatnt ••• d mmderorape victim J-£Ilea 8ennlaatcl:l to develop~ la tbe C9e. 11.111B-Ml41c•21. ••round strancJ,ed to deMb In her Ooroaa del Mu IQW'tmeat Tuesday by her roommate. Police said lhe had been raped and had a bloody. aaah m t.r head. , The slain woman's roommate told offloen she bad lut aeen M ... BeDnlqtoo U tbey Wife leaving Bobby McGee's.. Police tbGOTize the former social worker drove herself · home. They say abe mq have bea followed by ber uaallant who slipped lnto the '!lj~ment · through an unlocftd sU &lua door. then eacaped lfter tbe crlme by breaJdnl out t.be acreen of the second floor bedroom. Miu Bennl~ton'a ex· boyfriend, James leveo Gano was taken lnto cua y tn connec· tion with the slaylna, but police said he was cleared of suspicion in tbecue. He remains in custody in Or&111e County JaU today as the 111.1pect in some 36 armed bank robberies throu1hout Southern California. Newport Beach Police booked Gano on the bank robbery char1es alter he pulled out a wad ot 100 crlap, new $10 billa to pay off two old traffic fines, dJs. covered by Newport Beach de- tectives. One detec:Uve, looldng at the roll of bllls and then Gano, said be suddenly realized tbe man 1 they were about to release matdled the delCl'lpUoo ol tbe ac>called BIMball Cap ba.ndlt. He ts suspectect of commltUna the string or robberies tn 5' days, endin& wilh the bold up of the California First NaUonaf Bank in Huntington Beach just an hour before he wu picked up for ques· t\oning in connection with bis former girl friend's death. l~lst Hughes 'Will' Found HOUSTON (AP> -Houston Probate Judge Pat Gregory has received anothe r Howard Hughes "will," one that leaves $l million to each of Huehes' aunt.a, uncles, nieces and nephews. A spokesman for Hughes Sum- ma Corp. labeled the document. ... n apparent hoax. a 1a1." There have been 140 others. • The three-pa1e docutnent. typed ln leaal form wlth a number of mJ.aspelUn1s. named Qordoo R. Hwey of MUwauk~. Wis.', as ''personal represen· uUve d my last will and test•· merit." ...... JIMMY CARTER ROUNDS THIRD IN '810 GAME' But Preeid9nt"• Team Lo9t to Media 8q\led Ji1n1ny Beaten President a Losing Pirehsr PLAINS, Ga. (AP) -Hestrtdesontotbefield lnteoUy. wltba slitht artn. Llke • mlllloo·dollar bonus baby, bia appearance brings spectators to their feet.· But tbia ls no profeulooal ballplayer; tt•s Jimmy Carter. president of the United States and a softball pitcher. . 8tlNDAY EVENING, ms TEAM, THE "Jlmmte.:· Jost 14-U, to tbe "Bad News Bearers,•• a raa·tai lfOUP of report .. and television tecblllctans. whose burler wu the President'• brother, BUly. Al pitchers. the Carter brotbera w~n·t as proflclent as Dizzy Dean and bla brot.ber, Paul, of the Gasbouae Gane st. Louil Cardi.nab, but Jimmy. wbotakes all this sertOU&ty. lmpnued the stands with bis determlnatton. · 1n While BUly wanned up by toatne.a couple of pitches and PoP. p 11acanctbeerGathe81dellnel, the Preltdalt aimed pitch after. pltCh at the mitt held by h1s catcher an4 penonal ph)'llclan, Adm. William Lukub. II!! PSOTESTED VIGOllOUSLY WREN the umpi.re'a calla on close plays went against hi• team of White House staff mem· bera and called encouragement -"Let's go, Jody; Okay, doetor" -to playera as they battled from a 7·3 deficit to 10ahead11·10 In the seventh inning. When the sun went behind a cloud, just after the ''Jimmies" took their first lead, Carter ~oked that 1t wu 1ettinc dU'k and waa time to call it quits. The 1U1aestton went unheeded. He complimented opponenta when tbey dld well and told a re- porter wh(>ae knees were bloodied on a allde lnto third base, "That'• what you set for tr)'1na to crawl into third." CARTER, TBE LSADOFF lllTl'E&. RAD the first hit, a double, and popped up to end the aame. "The Bad News Bearers," who toot tMlr names after a re· cent Hollywood comedy, turned several PTeSldeotlal pitcbel into home nms. and otbert lnto alnclea t.hat led to three-base errors, tylna the came In tbe ninth lnnlq and wtnnlna It in the loth. GM Exec Tortured FERNDALE, Mich. (AP> -A razor blade and Jt1hted cigarettes were used to torture a General Moton executive whose body wu founct a day after be disappearec1 en route to a bu.al· nesa meedng, accc:rd.lD1 to an aut.oply report. AutborlUea said they bad ruled out kidnap for ransom u a mottve in the slaytnc of Canon McDowell, '3. an assistant aalea manqer for Chevrolet trucU. because M was not ln a top.dollar ia.lary bracket. ~ucl~ar Po:wen Oppose~ Car Rams Into. Train; 4 Ki11ed AaeNlm poUce are at a louto- ,dq to explain wb)o • drt\ler if· nored a en1111q aate. naahtnc U&bta and • mnatna bell Sat\a- da1 ~ u be barreled hi• l1ahtwellbt car lnto the path ot a 1peedlna Amtrak pu1en1er traia. 'T~hBag'. ]Udge Gags Coverage RIVBBSD>t: CAP) -A J18'1D•· neat PC en.-bu beell baDd«t don ID t.be •6trub baS" murder caae, prohlblUDc out-of-court 1tatementa bJ attorne11. ln· veattaatcn, court olflclall and wltneuee ln tbe multiple murder cue a1atnlt Parttck W. Kearney. Judie Gerald F. Schulte lalued th• order Friday at the request of Kearney'• attorney, Jay Gr'OlllmAD. A temporary pa or· derwuiuuedlut week. Grauman requested the or- der because of wbat he ta'med prejudldal publicity aialnat his client. tQlna it was nffeuary to "prot.eat my client's r11ht to a fair trial." Kearney baa been charted wltb lnveltllalion of murder ln the all.Yiu of three YOUDI men whose cllsmembeNd bodies were dumped 1n Riverside Oounty. He has ple&aed lnnocent to all three countl and ii echeGWe4 tor trial OcL5. Deput)' Dist. A Uy. A. Dart Bacalakl a1·1ued that Gro11mao•1 motion wu too sweep!q, requlrln1 every wl&.- nese ln tlie cue to be told ot th4' 1a1 otder when they are au~ poenaed. "I cannot be reaponalblefor au the 1tatemenw made by every J>Otentlal wltneu bl thla cue:" !Jacallld aald. llowev« Gl'Oltman •aid, 11-nte order doesn't restrict what the prea can pebllab OP t.be matter. but it doel forbl4 anyone connect- ed wttb lt from f!Vlni Inform•· uon to the pn11. • Bet ore 1lp1na tbe order. Scbulte Uld be had 1ome "bale cone..." aliout lt. "1 queattoo the nece11lt1 of the order, the ~_. ot thll court to entorce lt.. aftd the lisallty ot auch thinal," be Hid. • But afia a I0·111fnute dis· cUd1oo ln oPeD C!OUrt, Schulte met wttb Gl'Ollman and Bacalald for 40 minutes In cum~. The Jude• returned to announce he had llpe4 the order aDd ottered DO exJ)Jtnatlqa fot hJt apparent cbupcf mind. While the drl•er of tbe 1881 Vollmraien 1urvlved the car· train caWalca. bla wife. b1a two eblldrea and a Wrct cblld were kWed. AD Orqe Count¥ COtODer's report todlY Identified the .Vic· tim1 a Guadalupe Orte1on. 21. Anthony Ortegon. 5, Alex Oneaon. 2, and Anaela Ortea•. 12. Tbe Ortecon famll7 members lived at 15352 Oakcllff Drive. Westmlnster. the coroner•a re· port said. No addrela waa elven for tbee>rt-.a child. OnlY penoo tn tbe llehtftlcbt car to survive the colllalon was itl dri~Stepbm Ort.econ. JO. of theOlk J>rlveaddrea. He ii ln AnW1m Memorial Ba1pttal with lQluri• delcrlbed by palloe u Mrtoul. ~to police, a wt.bas told them Orte100 tried to maneuver bl.I amall car between tbe extended croaaillt suard arms just u the 11-car train travellDI an estimated 40 to 50 mpbaped thrOUlh the croalq. The auto reportedly llammed Into the aide°' the tram's ename and wu b&anled &O feet down tbe trackwQ wblle the train c:<Jft- tinued Oft lbs route another 800 feet beloneom1n1 to a atop. Police •aid one wltnea told them he had stopped bla eut. bound ear on Sycamore Street when tbe crcmtq &UU'.d arms badtallen. · on.soa. bowetm, nana his auto around the lt.opped ear and appeared to attempt to thread his car'• way between the two arms, tho wltne81 toJdpollce. Girl Raped Near Valley Baseball Field A ~JNf-old Santa Ana llrl wu dnaed Into bushes and raped near a Fountain Valley baseball fteld while looklna for a telephone Sunday afternoon, police reported. Tbe girl aaked a man abe p....S where the nearest public telephone could be found. The man said there wu a phone near the Polle• ~latol ranae Oil Wu-d Street. The man. detcrlbed •• C"UCuf8Dt 2' yean old. about 150 ltw.. and flve feet. seven inches tn belPt, arabbed the vtctlm and a.saaulted her at the field near the San t>tego Preeway. . Tbe vtetlm was examined and released froll\ Fountain Valley Oouunwdty HOlpttal aoon after the 1p.m. lnaident. poUceaald. Gret,el II Gets Repairs A/tel-s. Fuming Trial. .. NEWPORT, R.t. \ tAP> -Gret.el JI cl Amtralla aappect her ldster 1acbt•e flv•Tace win-nlna streak Sun~. deteidlns tbe 12-meter alOOD Australia by four ml.Dutel and" 2S MCCmdl ID the toret~ eliminations for the America 1 Qu>. But Gret.l n probably won't race qalA until the aemlflnals because of l*lded wort (IQ ber hull. She ,._s hauled for tWaplng aqd palntfq lnunedlateq after the race and 11dp~ Gordon Inaate •aid the yachl would not be back ln the watet' befodt ThW'lday. In Gretel 11'1 •pot will be France II, the new•t l'Nnch 12-meter wbtoh bad been wltbdraW!l lD favor of Baroll Blch'• Franoe I which bH provedtobeaf uter boat. S~of BWeden beat l'rmce l by a:os m one race SUndaJ ln lilht w1Dda and perlodJo fOf. The other acbedUled race •aa can· ~•led. Australia la DOW S·l In tbe round robln Nrl• wblcb 1'10 de· ter.mJne tbe 1eldlftlt tor the 1emltlna11 .at~ Tbunday. Ore&el D la"'3 81icl5ftl1 .. la N. 8L E •ONDA YI: E•etY tuae YoU fWure our wondm'ful State l> partment of Motor Veb clu baa pulltd lll act t • lbe DNV com up with .nnkl• to fru•trate \he -.rt. >OU could uue thl• I"<' • The Mo·ped MadnHI but DJWQ, here' how 1t"" nt: orllln1 mother baa • d wbo ha JUSt turued lS"' ..,.. is absolutely wild about ' tb notion ol &CUUll her driv1ni learner's permit. so she may .iart praclJcan1 on b11 brother·s roo-ped. TBUS IT WA8 that this ' d•ughter studied her dnver's " manual until the pages were fall . me out. Then she wheedled away ' at her mother to take her to the OMV for the aforementioned learner's permit. Finally. with signs of resigna- tion. mother took time off from work aod down to the OMV Jn Costa Mesa the two of them went. Long lines greeted thla pair of applicants. They stood in one. After endless lime, they came to the window and informed the OMV lady they wanted applica- tions for a perm It so the dau1hter could start learning on big brother's mo.ped, They were told the applications were out scattered upon tables in the middle of the room So they 1ot ollt of line They round the applications. They rilled them out Then they got back at the end or the hne Endl ess time pussed ag1Un Slowl y the hne moved up. Pinal I y, they were back at the window Mother und duuahter presented their apphcat1oni. to the OMV lad)' Carefully. she studied numes. addresses. birth certificate and s1gnaturei> Then she told mother and 1laughkr to wait. She'd have to ~o off und find her supervisor. M<n'HER AND DAUGll1'£R hcgun to have this ominous feel· ,. 1ng that dii1aster wui. about tc ~fall them. .. As it turned out, their deepest l cars were fully JUStlf1ed FinaJly, the OMV Inspector • General. or whoever he was. showed up at the OMV window •tlong with the OMV lady. He too l'ttrefully wenl over the appUca t1ons. · · 1 am sorry. · he intoned to the mother .. You wall have to 10 to ~our daughter·s school and get us a certificate showing that your daughter intends to enroll in cl river's education 1n the fall. ··Bring that back to us and Wl•'ll process your applications.·· A certificate to Indicate intent? Amazing. So that WH life at the OMV one afternoon for a mother and daughter TOO BA'D THE OMV didn't hu ve some si1ns to tell the hap· ,. less pair where the appllcatlons wtte In the fint plact! Too bad when they first asked ror the application they weren't told they'd need that certificate of intent from the scboot. Too bad the worktn1 mother lost two houri of salary and her employ~r lost two hours o( her productav1ty whih she laogulahed in the Department ol Motor Vehicles -for nothin1. Zero. A bi& aoose e11. All you can conclude ia en~ Ute Lord watch out ror the ~r work· Ing person. The DMV aure l~n't aoi~to. A father and daughter died an each other s arms and fave others were rnJured, three :,eriousl:v when a Brooklyn tenement collapsed mysteriously · ~arly Sun · day. Francisco Ayala, 42, died when he returned to the buildin~ after his daughter, MaribOI. 8 Above. New York City firemen carry an unidentified dust-covered woman from the building, in which 12 family members were asleep at the time of the cave-in 9,-fte i\atoelllt .. PNls P.rli:n Minister M nabem Bee.ID publlclY confirtntd far th• rtra~ time today that Jaraell artillery bu flred on Paleet.lnlan units In southern Lebanon to de· fend Chrbtlan vtna1" under at· tack. Israel bad previously aaid it: san only qtaterlal atd to th Chriltlana m southern Lebanon. •1WE HELP THE¥ lnJUWi· ly ... Bealri N.ld. relerrin1 to thcl Lebanese Chrlltlan1. "It shouldn't be a secret." "Without our help the Chris· tian minority in Lebanon would have been 1001 aao wiped out totally," Begin told U.S. CUnd· railers ot the Israel Bonda or· gani.zation. Beain aald that when the f aleatlnlan1 open a nl&htly artlllery barrage on ChriaUan vllla1ea. "we train our fire upon the oriCins of the hostile fire, and MEANWHILE. P&ESIDENT Carter.said today that Palestln· ian leaden hav. tndteated in· directly to the United Stat• that th~ may edopt tho Untitd N•· lions resOlutlon that hu served aa a bUla for U.S. tffOl'tl to re· cOQ.vee the Middle Ban peace cOaf.-eneein ~·· The relolutioa allo rec:apiaea Jarael'I rlaht to uist. And U.S. olflclals travelinl with Secretary ol State Cyrus Vance confirmed today that they are in lnd1rect contact with the Palestine UberaUon OrfanJsa· lion <PLO> on pauible ways to remove roadblocks to such a con- ference. The Prisideot 41 the United Stawa hid been r..: lvlQa in· direct me11a1•• fr9m the Pale1tinlans throuah Syl'ia, Saudi Arab •·Jordan and F.upt. OFFICIALS T&A VBLING with Vance on bi Mide• tour said the PLO bu advised tbe Unlled States tbrou1b in· termediarles that it 1• consider· io1 "some modlflcatlons" resolutioo2'2. The informants said, however. there is "oothinJl firm" yet to in· dicate the PLO is about to rec· osnhe tho exlstence ot Israel. a key point of dispute. "We are aeek1n1 clarifica· lion," one olflclal said. RECOGNITION OF THE U.N. retOlutJon. which the PLO bas fought for years, would ~ con- sldered a breakthrou1b in Middle East peace attempts. ~ipeline Waste Claimed BUT THE PBUIDBNT, talk· ing with reporters outlide bis family'• bualne11 office in Plaioa, aald the chances for a re- convened peace meetina remain about the same as they were before the latest word from the P aleatlnlam. "There mi1ht be other ob· staclea to h." Carter said. Meanwhile, official reports in Beirut said ri&ht·wing Christian rorces exchaneed artlllery fire today with Palestinian perrillas at border areas for the second straight day. Two penons were reported killed and 18 wounded. Labor, Material Loss Totaled 81.5 Billion? FiX May Have Los~ LBJ's '41 Election WASlDNGTON CAP) Trans· Aluka pipeline builders wasted $1.5 blllion as workers sunbathed Qn the job, equipment that wu stored outside was ruined and contractors ordered parts already in their own w aretM>uses. a new report says The report on the S8 billlon pipeline was prepared for the Alaska Pipeline Commission by Washington attorney Terry F Lenmer, a former Water1ate prosecutor. "ONE OF TllE most serious ... ot Alyeaka 's labor problems was tbat or workers frequently idle at the job site On· Chureh Till cludina sleep1"' on buses and sunbathing along the right-of· way),'' the report. said. "Alyeska's o\lm documents ~how that the principal responsibility for Idleness rested wlth management's poor supervlsfon and utlllzatioo or the wOt'k force." The pipeline. operated by the Alyeska Pipeline Service Com· pany, qehvered It& flrat oU from the North Slope to the Alaskan port. of Valdez last week The pipeline has been the i;ubject of a number or anvest11aUons tollow- lna charges of lrregularltles and excessive c~ts Carter Won't Side With Either Group PLAJNS, Ga. <AJ» President Carter. concerned over racial strife that hu divided the coneretation of his home town church. 1s praying for reconcilatlon of Plains BapUsU while refusin1 to take sides Carter attended services at both the Plains Baptist Church and the breakaway Maranatha BapUat Church on Sunday During the presidential cam· paign Jaat year. the leaden of Plains Baptist Church declined to accept a black non - denominational minister, the Rev. Clennon Kine. as a member. CARTER, WHO worabipped re&ularly al the church and tau1ht Sunday school there before moving to Wall.hlngtoo, lllsaireed wlth iu raclal •tJnd. State Sen. Hu&h Carter. the Pruident 's cousin. helped establish the breakaway con· areaaUon. The P.realdent faced the dllem· ma on Sunday by attcridi.ni the Bible class at PlaJns Baptist Church and the wora)lip service al the M•ran•tha 8aptl1t Church. But Carter made it clear he wu dm:reased over tbe con· tinyin.r feud amOJt& Plaint B•P· lists. "Ob. Father, blesa t1\U •mall and new cburcb, separated, we all pray, not out of a senaa ot lllienatlon Wld hatred, but out of love and rededication for Thee:· he said in 11 prayer closing the M aranatha &ervlce. adding. "HELP ALL THE tensions to be alleviated and let there be a genuine ttearch for reconciliation with the Plalmi Baptist Church.·· Leav\n1 the Maranatha church, a lfM.year-old, white clapboard buUdlJli used earlier by a Lutheran iroup. Carter said that. on futu~ vialu to Plams .. we'll probably go to both churches." Mktd whether he thought the two con&regation could Jet back to&ether, the President replied "I doubt that. I think It's a healthy thine for the commumty tohavetwoatrontchurches." Earlier, Carter led the openin& prayer for Sunday school classes at Plal.Ds Bapt.lst Church. "Bind our hearts toaether in a sense or human purpose," he prayed. THE REPORT described a chaotic process of storin& equip- ment and orderlni spare parts. ''Execution contractors desperately ~&ht to requisition spare parts which unbeknownst to them were already located in thel'r own warehouse•." Lenzner's report. said ··Becaus e of 1n1tdequate warehouse space, equipment and m aterlal were orten stored out· side and effectively lost after the first snowfall By the tlme the s pring thaw came , much material had either been ruined by the weather or stolen.·· THE FINDINGS could be helpful in Alaska's drive to keep to a minimutn the costs for transporUne oil through the pipeline. A special formula iJves Alaska more oil Income as transportation costs decline The state could araue that un- rt>asonably high construction costs should not be counted in de· terminlng t~ transportation charges, Lenzner said. He called such an exclusion "established regulatory doctrine " BOSTON (AP> -Lyndon Johnson, said to have benefitted from an alleeed 1948 vote fraud scheme. may have lost an election becauae of a simllar scheme in 1941, says a Johnson blo1rapber. The 1941 U.S. Senate election In Texas could have been ragged hke the 1948 baJlot that Johnson has been accused of helping to fix . reports Harvard professor Doris Kearns Goodwin MRS. GOODWIN SAID SHE 1,ancoYered "no proor one way or d1sc0\lered dlscrepancles in the 1941 election while doin& research for the book ··Lyncson John.son and the Amen can Dream " Mrs. Kearns told the Boston Globe that Johnson had been declared.the whiner in the 1941 Senate contest agalnsi Texas Gov. W. Lee "Happy'' O'Oaniel but. lost in a recount. At the time, she re- lated, offlc1als said late returns were responsible for the turnaround from aS,000-voteJohnson victory to a 1,31l·vote loss ln a recount one day later. Lu.ls Salas, the election judge for Jim Wells County•s ballot box 13 In 1948, told The Anoclated Press recently that he certtfied 202 fictiliou.s' ballots to give Johnson the victory In a Senate primary runoff that year. MBS. GOODWIN SAID SHE in covered "no proof one way or the other" concernln1 the 1948 elecuon. uut she said the similarity be ween the 1941 and 1948 elections ml1ht ·'say something about the p0Jltical ethics of the Ume." She also said she believed Johnson would have aiven up politics had he not won In 1948 . 'People Who Care GJ>eople Who Create GJ>eople Who Help GJ>eople Who Comfort GJ>eople Who Guide Gf>eQple Who Enjoy Life You'll find them FPeople A firefighter shoots a flare int-0 the brush · in the Ventana area of the Btg Sur wilder- nes~ area to start backfires agains t flames that have ('harrect ovf"r 70,000 acres in Big Sur alone. Nearly 10,000 men a re 9n firellnes fighting numerous wildfires throughout the drought-stricke n area. Third Trial For Van Houten? SAN LUIS O~USPO CAP> ..,.. P'lfty-ooe ... u. · nuclear l)OWtr demonstrator. wbo cllmbtd over barbed wlre or 1wam ashore from a boat lo "" at-tempt to .. occupy" the Dlablo Canyon nuelear- powered tleetrlcal plant were arrested and booked on tretpauin1 chart~· _ 1he aneat.s came Sunday u abOot IOO people satwed to hear •Pffch and music on the 82nd annlvena:ry ot the dropptna ot an atomic bomb on Hiroebinia, ~apan, durina World War u. THE AllaF.StED were ct.mandlnf that the nuclear power plant not be &ranted u operaun, Ucenae because they believe lt ii n earthquake· SACRAMENTO CAP> safe. --California Hlabway Construction or the twin·unlt a,OOO.mecawatt Patrol Commissioner nuclear reactor is nearly complete. But llcemine Glen Crate says the baa been delayed pendtnt earthquake safety Teamsters Unieo is the studies. The Hos1rl fault, believed to be an active · main reuao bis ofllcers earthquake fault, wu discovered within three can't use radar to ca&eb miles ot tbe plant in 1971 after const.nact10ll had Speeden. bepn. The CH.P has for years ll06T OF THt; demonstrators were arrested late in tbe afteJllloon, when '8 or them traveled one mile along the seven·mlle private access road that leada to tbe plant. The other thr~ were arrested Sunday morning when tbey attempted to swim ~o the power plant from a small motor boat in San Luis Obispo Bay. The afternoon arrests followed a rally at nearby Avila Beach at which environmentalists author Barry Commoner and political activist Daniel Ellsbert spoke. sought le&hlathe pennisaion to use radar, but without su«ess. Craie said in an in· terview in the Sunday Sacramento Union: .. ntE CALIFORNIA Teamsters Le1lslative Council feels very strongly that this la a way for tbem to dem- LOS ANGELES <AP> Leslie Van Houten. Ttata C're.D Re•cued oitstrate to their mem-whose retrial ror the Tate-La Blanca murders COMMONER ACCUSED the Carter ad -bership that theS' are the '" ended in a mistrial, now must await an orriclal de· SAN DIEGO (AP) ·The crew ol the tuna boat ministration or pushing the United States toward a most effective and most cttionon whether she will be tried ror a third time. Mary Lucille finally abandoned hope and aban· nuclear economy, which, he said, would lead to in· powerrul teamsters Deputy Dist. Atty. Stephen Kay, wbo prosecut· doned ship u their leakina veaHl sank ln the flationand untmployment. legislative council in the California When every other st.ate wit. I "Solt'a Vert important to tbim enry year to kill it. They lobby aJMl \IJOl'k it v•ry bard. Tbe Teamaten Uolon ii very lnfhaeDtl•l wltb the members of tbe Catlfcrnla"l.flciatatu.re. "BEYOND THAT, leatslat.cn bave lndicat· ed to me that most of the l.tten they receive op~ pose our usln1 radtr. Our own public oplolon samples and others don't 1upport t.bat •••• " Cral& allo said it is more expensive to blre female officers because the attrition rate is rusher. Of tbe first 41 women to araduate from the academy in September. 1974., ooiy 15 are still on tbejob. · ed Miu Van Houten. sald his superiors would have Pacific Ocean 110 mlle1 IOUthor San Die10. Ellsberl said proUreralion of nuclear power United States, because to decide whether to accept a plea bargain or tackle All 15 crew members were picked up before the plants would lead to widespread availability of they have manaaed to another trial now that the second Jury has boatsankSundayni1ht. materialswithwhichtobulldnuclearweapons. keep radar out of deadlocked. ~~~~~~~~-.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--?-~~~~~--~~---------- B~t E'lre Co11talaed tps ANGELES <AP> Fnends of a .nude, Wl· * 0 arme(l man who was killed by a Los An1eles it >i policeman have picketed the Rampart Diviaion • 15 police station, demandln& an explanation for tbe • x~laliWliiN shooting. • "We're taUung about an unarmed man who • weiehed about 135 pounda sbot by an otficer . . . not ~ once, but six Um es,·' Richard Berg, a private detec:-• live, said Sunday. Ber1, 31, was hired by the man's ~:::::::=.::~~~T family alter the shooting Thursday. The man. Ronald Burkholder. 35, wu observed "climblna u street sign" while nude in Echo Park. policesatd. 1:3'W/ tt1is -week Bm· HiSses Mark • d Carter'• mualve ener1y ltac-19 f-.d hUler well U Jt WU bultled a •ac GD·mtnded HOUle-rrc>m Adl~lltl1Uon'• point ol view. But for ca:i11w:ner the blJl di up to little more Ulan a ol new tu•, hlaher prtcet and p 1lnl enero. 'Jtie ta will not tackle the ener1y tilt UD'W an.-the AulUft recet1, but predfo· tfom are h won't be subjected to many more cbqe&. One benefit tor lhe comumer wu House reJectlan al Carter's requ t for a 5-cent ln· ueue ln t.be 1uollne tu. That would be a real hardship for tha.e dependent on cars to aet to and from work and probably would 1tot put much of a dent in overall comump- tlon. And the proposal to use the 5·cent tax · for maa transit project. and bridge and b1'Jnray repairs would hardly generate mc:weeoero. Another proposal for a 4·cent tax. also defeated. made more sense. aince that would have been earmarked for energy re· search and development. Defeat of a proposal to remove federal ~ontrols on the price of newly discovered natural gas, in favor of an Administration· backed compromise allowinJ somewhat higher. but still controlled prices for new gas will save the consumer some.money. But bv the same token it will remove a possible incentive for new gas exploration and that in the long run could be very costly. The proposed tax on gas.guzzling cars survived the House vote and the Senate Energy Committee has gone even further by demanding a prohibition on the sale of any new car in 1980 that gets Jess than 16 miles per gallon of gas. Authorizing the Federal Energy Com- mission to take over much of the states• power to regulate electricity rates could be a bombshell costing consumers a fort.une and impeding new supplies. • Using the crude oil tax ror direct re· bates to consumers may be somewhat bet· tcr than a proposal to put all the money into the overburdened Social Security program. But qaln, tbo tax probably Will not reduce con1Ummton and does nothing to 1enerate new 1upplle1. And the House deteated a more logical proposal to tw1l part of tho crude oil tax over to oil producera provided they uae it tor ex· plorlilon. The whole ... energy package, ag J)ot to1ether In 90 daya by a White House team, and b01i1nc:ed ,oroupd by congressmen. aeema to be a costly bundle that could en. courago aome needed conservation, but it manaaca tO overlook t.he key point of the whole problem --expanded and better use ot exiltlnl energy sources and development ot new IOW'cea. Unfortunate Site Directors of the Orange County Transit District <OCTD) have been trying to get started on the constructlon ot a $4.5 million 700.car parking garage for bus travelers in the congested downtown Santa Ana Civic Center area. At present the project is delayed while negotiations are under way to permit an at· tractive and historic mortuary building to remain along the north end of the parking garage site. The mortuary issue Itself Is of merit and the white.columned building could be turned into an office building or restaurant. But the entire idea of channeling 700 ad· ditional cars each day into the already con. gested Civic Center area could use some rethinking. Perhaps there Is a need for a Santa Ana parking garage for bus passengers com. muting to work elsewhere. and the leftover parking spaces could be put to good use by Civic Center workers. But the garage might better be placed at the edge of the downtown Santa An• area \Ohere it wouldn't further crowd aJready- jammed str~ts. streets which constantly· confuse motorists by their complex maze of one-way travel. National Initiative Bill Propoatd Would Let Yoten Paa• Lmm ' WASHINGTON -Jtm A bourezk, the Democratic senator from South Dakota, bas introduced a con1tltut1onal amendment In ConcreH that would allow voters to pass lawa • themaelves by national referen- dum. Thls Idea oueht to put foam Oakes on the Ups of that kind of conservative "ho likes to remand you that the Umt· rd States of America Is a rrpubhc and NOT a d e· mocrucy Still it 1s those sa me con· servatlves whose tummies fill with acld each time the boys and atria in Congress vote themselves unother raise. but with the Jnitlative. as this rererendum procedure Is called, the same conservatives could vote that raise out of exlsten"ce. IN FACI' under the Abourak proposal we could cul Congesa's pay in half. That wouldn't balance the bud1et, of C9Uf", since It would be a aymbolfc act, not a lrue economy, but we have symbols to ctve ua aaUafaction when the facts can't. The Abouttzk proposal is prac· • tlcal, reasonable and Judldoua. For a prop<»iUon to be put on the ballot, sl111atures would bave to be gathered In at least 10 states , and would bue to equal ln number tbrff or more percent ol , those who voUld ln tbe lut pre- aidential election. Thus to put a • proJ)OSltlon such u ouUawtn1 aubaidtes to the tobacco lndustry 1 on the ballot In tlme for tbl next congNUlonal election would re- quire 2.u million ballot slrnatures. ( VON HOFFMAN J The Abourezk amendment wouldn't give the people tbe power to declare war-ContHU does that oft.en enouah already without outside help -or call out the Anny or amend the ConsUlu· lion or pasa any law ln violation of it. Thus the courts would have the power to review citben·made law and nibble it to death Juat as they erode conereaslonally made law. Coocress will have the power to repeal or amend a law pused by the national referendum, b\lt for the flrat two years after pasaaie that could only be done by a two-thirds roll call vote of each' house. Thus a simple ma· Jorlty would not be enou1b to thwart the people's will, and while lt could aUll be done. tho.e doing 1t would have to do so in full view~ their co9atituenta. Resfdenta in the 23 atates. m01U7 to the Mid and Far West, who have the lnitlaUve already will see-nothing dtsturbln, or dan1eroqs IJ) utendlna the prac· Uce to the nation. Experience with lt coes back 60 to 70 years so that ff the lnlUaUve wu 1oln1 to have the awful conHquences Its opponents have prc>ohealed they~dhaveoc:currtcf. InlUaUve was proposed and pushed by the turn-of ·th•cen· tury fact.Ion in the Rtl>\lbUcan P•rb' wbo called themselves The Prosresslves. A.a such It w~t a Popullst·Radlcal measure so much as it wu a middle class- refonnl.at one. It'• never hMrl uaed by lower clut or poor.peo. pie as a political tool beuuse it takes too much money. too much or1anWne and too much detail work. · In a state Uke California with a larae, college-.ctucaled middle class, It ceta considerable wse. It can't make It rain when there's a drouaht and ll can't put out for est fires, but it certainly baa helped to make r:llUcal dl1· cuaatons ln that ata e more exclt· lne and more 1ubttant1ve. With the InlUatlve there are concrete measW'es for voters to de)late and cbooce, not only a variety of political amltes and profiles to plck from. Indeed, tbe exlstenco ot t.bese referenda may force tandidates to be con· slderabl~ m()fe forthright. The threat ol one may also discipline the state le1talature to act on btlla It would otherwlH let lanauJ1h ror a de(ade or two in committee. A80VREZK IS careful not to clalm too much for the InlUaUve idea. It W()b't cure all that alls ua; If it 1limw1te1 bllher voter p&rUcipat1on rat.el that will be nice, but don't ex~ct It. It may even encoura1e eowardly na· Uonal legtilat.orl to be dJlatory and delay action on eontroveraial bUla becauae they hope a aa· tlonal ...Cerudum wUl take them off the boc>k. Nevertheless, lbe Idea Is tn ac. cord With the tlmea. Abodralc m ak11 tht pof nt that ai~·i>f the 10 last conat.ltuU01tal amendmen&.a hav~ extended votln1 richtf ln one way or. another. Knowihlf the public senUment haa never been more lmpc:jj1.ant to wi. Jt'I no acCldmst that public opl· tilon p0Ulli1 occuptes such a large plate Jn our dlsc•lom and Its canchmons are taken to be 10 eutborltattve. The lnltlative It bUt a lo\ider and more llNdM wq for the vox popuU to lput. Government Eges Corruption Teamster ·Crackdown WASIDNGTON -Fodera! In· ' ( ' ] vesUaatora are qulellY Ullhlen· JACK ANDERSON log the vise on the tpmultyoua Teamstera 'Union which, they . . claim, is the moat corrupt In the country. President Carter wants lo aive the airlines more leeway in de· cldln1 where lo fly and how much to char&•· His proposed leetala· lion could reduce air tarea by as much aa 60 percent in some areas. Innovative companies could attract new puaeneers by offerine cut.rate, no·frllls aervtce. The FBI and Labor Depart- ment have joined forcea to crack down on the alle1ed corruption. Their investigation isn't aimed at the rank·and·file truck driven, a ru&led but 10lid breed, who are known for their square dealln1. Tbe tar1et1 are a few free· wbeellns Teamster leaders who alle1edly have chiseled the drtvenoutofunioii money. Somo Teamster bo11es, ac· cordlna to the invesUgatlve files, have dlverted unJon funds to finance their high Uvlng. We have bad acc.,., fOI' ex· ample, to the coofldentlal ftlot on Teamster local 911 tn Loni Beach, Calif. '11lo fllea char1e that the bou ~the local. A. Dotson Ben· net~ ran hJ1 union lnto the fround and then embtaded near· Jy t:m.ooo to mt.ke up the I011es. The supreme Irony la that local 911 ,....enta policemen. It has already st1ned up 1.200 San Dteco Policemen «nd ll lr)'in8 to oreanJae the Lu Ve1u police force. The char.es 11alnat the enaai· tn1 BenneU claim he bas been living beyond bls union budCet ever since the locaJ Yfu or• &an.tud two years aao. He be1an alle1edly by leuJ!tc expensive can for union officials and, in at least cae cue. for the Wife of a Dear Gloomy Gus If CalTrau Director Adriana Gianturco 11Vere a man, would she have been fired by no1V! J .T. Teamsters aide. The Ille. also alle1ed that the local "purchased a nine· passenger, two-enalne DeHavlland airplane for $121,000." • The $3,000 monthly payments allegedly were carried on the boolca as letal expenses, and the full·time pilot wu Usted U a "bualneu aaenL •• 8ENNl:Tl''8 extrava1ance aJ. le1edly plunted the local tnto debt. He n4'1otlated two tB0.000 Joana froiq the . Bank of San Pedro, accordinC to FBI docu- ments, ln a desperate attempt to keep the union solvent. Then he siphoned off about $200,000, the documents alle1e, to pay union debts. The mcaey al· ,Ieeedly came from the Labor Department •s Comprehensive Employment Tralnlnf pro1ram. lt had been deposited ln a unloa account to Ray half the wares of mlnorit,y workers placed by the Teamaten. None ot these financial dff. flcultiea, apparently, slowed down the affable BeMett. He ar· rived ln srmd style last year at the 'J:eamsters convenUoa in Lu Vesu and ~ed two aultes at the fuhlooable Rtvlera Hotel. Declares one lnvesUeattve re· port: "Bennett. bis wife and two children occupied one sultet whJle his motber·ln·law ana father·in·law occupied tbe other auite." The tmlon officials who accom· panted him alao Uved It up. Altogether, they ran up a •.ooo bill, which alleaedty wu never paid. Meanwhile, Bennett hasn't called a local union meetln1 since May 1.9780 because, tbe documents state, ''he is unable to explain the union's financial COD· dJtlon. .. Footnote: BenQett declined to comment on the char1e1. A lawyer for local 911 also had no commesrt. UNl'&IENDLY SKIES -Corporations constantly com· plain about too mucb •overn· ment resuiation. But most ol the naUon't airlines are privately fi1hUn1 !or contlnued federal re· iulatlon, because they're afraid to take their chances on the open market. But many airlines would rather compete over cocktails and flnt·run movies, and let the government set their prices. •'They have a pretty cushy ar· ranaemenl now,'' one White Howse orrtclal told us. "They don't -..ant to open the door to thelr competitors." Consequently, some airlines have launched a h11h·flying lob- bying and lett.er·wriUna cam. palgn to shoot down the White Houae legialatton. Their sPOkesmen have jetted around the country, and have actually threatened lo cut oll aervke to many small communities il the bill paases. They have neaJected to men· Uon, however, that the bill 1uaranteet continued service to amall towns. "Il'a Juat a acare tactic, .. the White ltowse atflcJal tTUmbled. NEVEBTBEl.ESS; the in- dustry threats have apparently lntJmldated some key 1enators. Northwest Airlines, for example. warned Sen. John Melcher, D- MonL, that it mieht slash its service to Montana lf the bill becomes law. Thus, Melcher is opposln1 the leglalaUon. Another opponent la Sen. John Danforth, D·Mo., who hu been convinced by TWA that lh• bill jeopardize$ some of Its 14,000 workers in Missouri. Danforth argues that the bill ls un!alr to TWA and other large airlines. Dozens of alrltne lobbyists have been packing the commit· tee rooma to save their industry from ft-ee enterprtae. But Carter and his chief ally on the bUI, Sen. Edward Kennedy, D·Masa., are still bopin1 to pu.sh lt throuah Coneress. Footnote: A spokesman lnalst- ed TWA doesn't oppose alrllne reform, but he admflted his com· pany hu been lobb>i.nl aiainst the White House bill. "Northwest Airllltes declined to comment. A few alrtlnes, such u United, Pan Am and many smaller nrma. are aapporttng the move ror more competition. v would ··devastate Souther" CalJfornJa Dectmbtr 20:· It didn't. University of Micblcan economlats Saul ,Hyman.a and Karotd Sharplro latt November • predicted •lu111sh economic arowth. EverythJn1 Is boomlna. Even Alexander Soli.htnJtsyft for three years has beeB pronounctnc the West "on the verse OI coUapse. ·• Tbae fellow• are relylnJ oo our~ memory. "°'!'!'ti !:"IU!S" 1m oee.v PLOT Al. . \ Both ·SUJes F~ht °'Jews for JesiM' ......... -;::========================================================================================; WAL 1ER HOV1NO: 'PHl!NOMl!NAL' SUCCESS a.man Vlatta Saleewoman Nancy Ron Tiff any 'Soul:' 'Try God' Pins NEW YORK CAP> -The Tiffany touch em- braces emerald-laden bracelets, aoUd sold watches and diamooda by the yard. Yet few people know the gllttennc palace oo Flftb Avenue u a abowc ... for capitalllt com moo aenae and reU,ioua credo. The drivinl force 19 Walter Bovlnf, Tltfany's board chairman and cbJef exeeutlve. He Uk• to beUevethe world's mostfamouajeweley stcreba a comdence. "'I TlllN1' A COMPANY SHOULD have a aoaJ. Most don't, I know. That's why American bualness baa 1ouen sucb a bad reputation. Profit mulmb- ine IOUDda ao &reedy.•• Hovtn1 aaid in an interview. While this JenUeman enjoys setttni standards of taste and elecance for the Social Reliater set, he has another consumtn1 interest -the Walter Hov- ing Home in Garri5on, N.Y., for heroin-addicted 1irls. Moce than $.WS,000 ls sent to the center each year from store sales or a small pin with the message, ''Try God.'' Hoving, a devout Epiacopallan, wears one in the lapel of his tailol'- made suit jackets. "WE TEACH THE Gllll3 TO accept God into their lives," a aid the tall, lean Hovin1, who bas run Tiffany's since 1953. "We take them out of poverty and put them Into the Lord's hands. Our aucceu rate bas been phenomenal·· "J'Ut is the private side of Tiffany's. Tbe public aide 19 spelled out ln the st«e's familiar, subdued ads appearing almoet dally In the New York Times. the wan Street Journal, the CbJcaio Tribune, the Los Angeles Tlmea and other newspapers. Sometim• the Sl,000 ads dhplay jewelry. Ot.ber times they are minl·lesaont In capitallat thou&bt. with aucb Utles a "la Praflt a Dirt7 Word?" and "Are the Ricba Menace?" THl8 KIND OF P8a80NAL conviction myswtea Wall Street analysts and may be the re- ason Tiffany's has retained a unique corporate lm· age since it was founded ln 1837 by Charles Lewis Tiffany. Twice a day, slx days a week, Hovin1 vi.sits Tif- f any'a huge atreet floor. Greeted by salespeople who recolJlize him Ins tan Uy, Hovin& polnta out a new de- sl1n to a prospective customer or stops to admire the le1end.ary Tiffany diamond, the world's lareest canary diamond. Tiffany'• 800 employes don't spend hours anal)'Zlnc public tu te. Instead, they deelde for themaelves what Jewelry ls chic and exclUnc. ,.THAT OLD MOTTO ABOUT 'Give the customer what ab• wa.nta' ls ridiculous," Hovtnr said. "Moet people don't know what 19 beautifW. So they rely oo us to abow them." Wl1h branche11 in Atlanta, Cblcaio. Houston, San Francisco and Beverly Hlila and a boutique in Japan's famous Mitautosbl department store, Tif. rany'a hu lnfluenced all classes~ people AltboQch Tiff any'• cloeed ita Part• and London atores after World War ll, travellq lhows were sent recently to the Arab countrt• to caah ID on oil • money thfln. Bua•n•• wureported brlat. DESPi'fE STOCK MAllKET DSCLIND In .... cent yean, Tlflan.Y• profttl are tt.roac• &ban ever. Hov~N1"1~U1ually run abouttpettent-well abov•.ver•forretallanddeput.ment-.... Aft dlaft\Cladt • alrl'• bestfrtendt Horina .. tM ftrat to lidmlt that 1em1 have belli ~to an Old fal like 'nffM)"t. And, u he toad am~ of the New York Society 0t Securif.1.A.na!JN: "l'daq1'•'rebntqtbethHolCIU'UY&" . Softness. It begins with the versatile new blouson dress I "'""!"'!"'--~~'!"""""'-~-~':'I lhe IOftelt look of the 18010nl Genlti blouled on top, gathered to a prettv waist, tet to take ._;r:.t.11•"""'1 you from momlngJo .... --..... night. J. t Dreca Co. does It, In~ Careue"" tuper Jeraev. a perfoonanoe tested fabrtc by K1opman, knit of Qiana• nylon for the natural look. In rich brown or oheny. 6-14. $44. Mall/phone. Contempora1V Dresses, 112. D u e t o transmission pro· bl•ms V, W, X, Y, Z are Incomplete. \ •' • · ... Stock Challeng~ Proves Profits ,BJ JOUN aJNN'ltT ......... ~ :In December 1174. when tho ltoek market wu at. lta .In recent years, an Investor challenttd foo.r otben to a c:ioateat. ln wtif=tbe WQukl Melt UM frealelt ...,eel•· tloncw•aftve-year od. . All ftv' two enloaal and ttrrwe-amateuT members of the Natlonu A11oclatlon ot ln~estment Clubs' •tlYiloly tommlttee. pitted new ii«t1bll• ol 10 itoca eacb. IPDPOINT JN TBB '1VE·Y£0 chill -e re.ached Joly 1. and the challea,rw wu DOt fai1.Dt IO w1U. relatively apeaktnl. H w In fowtb place. with • ~alA ot on1Y "11. 7 percent. I>Urin& thla time the Dow Jon• lnduatrtal ave.rai• ro1e '8.t "'°'C*lt. but tho Jeaderln tbe raceebowed a s&lll ot 1913.2 perce.nL The other lncreuea were UO.I pucent. J.U percent. and '10.2. . Ol the 50 common 1tocb chosen by the five committee memben, onlY ftve declined. four ot them tri tho drui tn- du.stry. The three leadln1 port.foUoc abowed no loues at all. The bilfett Cala wu 432 percent, by Trinity Indu1Utt1, a metal• abrtcatol" purchued at. St.m , and which aold on July 1 at $2i&.62S. ''Tbls prov to me,'' aatd Tbomu O'Hara. chairman or the asaoclaUons board ol trust.es, "that the avera1e In- dividual Investor usins eood suldellnes can do quite well tn the market." Tll&EE BASIC PREMISES WERE used by the five contestants, O'Hara said. Here they are, In fais words: 1. "Believing that when a company cu"H'"" is carefully chosen for its characteristics of growth it wlll continue to erow for a lona period ot time, the selection or stocks was restricted to companies that had appeared in NAIC's maeuine. 'Better InvesUna.' during the put 25 years." Each month the investment committee chooses one stock for study by It's S,600 members clubs, so the contes· tants had about 300 stocks from which to choose. 2. "NO FEAR WAS FELT FOR interest rate chanies during the five-year period since it wu assumed the Federal Reserve was managing Interest rates for the total benefit of the country and that they would work out to the market's advanuge in the five.year period.•• 3. ''It was felt that the Individual investor would tend to select non·lnatitutional types of stocks in this peridd and that consequently such stocks would do better than the D-J averages." This Is the leading portfolio: Owens-Cornine, bought at ~.375, and priced at $68.7S on July 1: N. A. PhiUps, S12.7Sand $31.50; U.S. ure, $10, and $17.75; Detrox Chemical $8.625 and $13 ; Tiger International. $7.25 and $11.625; Costa! States Gas. $5.875 and $21.50; Am- cord, S3 and $11.75; American Family, $2.60 and $13.625, Great Lakes Chemical, $11 and '38.375, and Moog, $1.IS and $12.375. lNVESTMENT CLUB MEMBERS, who frequently out- performed the a~raaes, the mutual funds and other pro- fessional lnveaton, adhere to three underlying tenets in manaetng their portfolios: 1. Invest regularly each month without trying to guess the ups and downs. 2. Reinvest dividends a. Try to select companies growing at a rate better lh1m the particular industry and with a record or five. preferably 10 years, or doing so. WITH ADVICE BEING mE only thing free in the marketplace. records such as these speak for themselves and perbapg explain why the size of Investment clubs has been growin1 of late. Membership in the NAIC is available to clubs and lo in- dividuals, the latter at a $12 annual fee, by writing the Na- tional Assoclation or Investment Clubs, 1515 East Eleven Mile Road, Royal Oak, Mich. 48067 Interest Fears l)rag Market Down Again NEW YORK CAP> -Stock prices fell slowly but stead I· ly today amid fears or a further rise ln short-term interest { rates. The Dow Jones averafe ot 30 industrials was down 9.27 poJntsto87$.'2. Loetn outpaced eainers by c:Joee to a 2·1 margin on the New York Stock Exchanee. Bil Board volume reached ju.st u .a million shares in one of the quietest days of the year on Wall Street. The Dow's reading wu well below the l9·month closin1 low of 888 It reached Wednesday. · . ~&11.""(Nt) 1'11111 .,....,,_.._.... · ~e ..... c .... °" I ',,_ .~ . "'·! !Z!-'2-'·" H Tm fl ... ··-m·' -,. ,;.: ~ .. ~ .. ~:~. ~l-i-!! TrM ••••••••••••••·•••••·•••· ,.q Ulitt .,........................ .... ., Sit. .......................... 1,11>.• HllW YOlllt IA~I Ml.II Due to fate transmlulon1 todaV: Ustlng Wiil not ppear In the Dall~ Piiot. • l>ELANO <AP) -'ne M• al a lten "I commuo1t1 coll•1• bl' .... , .. been fou_ad l\llltJ of two morall alt--wttb a U.,.r old boy. MW dellblt.tlna tn ........ Suplrlar Court JUJ'J rtlbD'D«I tbe verdict a1al~1t DoaaJd KtllCMk. tn hit mid-«11, d••• of tlae DeJaao Aad-'t'-Ceater of Bakerafl•Jd G. -.~ 1 d . eouce. ov. me rim c .. a.c-c Peus,_.4.._ Btlla DEAR PAT: Are there any lawa 1overn1.nt prlse conleltl that require a penon to pay to com- pete1 I'm talk:ln1 about word pUUles that charie tor panitl1N1tlon.. L.o .• Hu.ntlnatoa Beach Callfunala law ,..111re1 tM ..ii dllcloAn of faeta ID uy COidest Gf aame f• llfta or pdaet la· nlvtai -• form of paymell& from tile parUel· put. i'aeu mu& tnelu4e: &M tGtal IUUllber of COD· testaata utlclpa&ed; Uae pereea&aae of eooae.taau sol• ... tllree m..t receetl1 e.mpleted eeatesta; the mutmam ....... of panlel......,., to eom· plete &be emtesti tlM •ulmam ..... ol memey tbe ~-Ht ma1 be uk .. &o.-,, ud a •arable lhat fata:re paules or U.breakcn •a1 be mon dll· ncu.tt. Rt was arrested lo Thomson o f New January after aberift'• Hampbhlre B&ked for deputies saw bis •ebJcle contr1but1ons for a with Ute liceue pl.a-campaign to remove ~arbd near a CGDStr'Uc· Andrew Young from UO!J Gte· Tbey reported· position as U.S. am-DAR Gl1'e9 IAlle-Ew ... PtUt ly impeded the area and bassador to the t:mted found him with the boy. Nauons DEAR PAT: Ky 1reat aunt ju.st told me I.bat Further testiJDOQ)' in .... ·--------she thought one of her cousins wu a member of th• the trial was provided by Daughters of the American ltevolation. ls there any officers wbo quelUoned Cadillae5toGo-Cart.a way 1 could check into tbh, and poulbly t.a:ace my the youth undet' hyp-Whatever the Fad family line back to revolutionary days? nosts. Roll 'emolfthemarket K.W.,COltaMesa Krischak ls due back With a Classified Ad ThC' Daugbten of the Amerleu Bnol.U. in court Sept. 20 for a C.all Now ! 642-5678 m al.D&alD more than 20t.• ftlee • members' · probation bearins. Unease. Provide all the lalormaUoe )'08 can about Chls distant coaaln and uk for help from tlae DAB L. lfl. Boyd NaUoaal Society, 1171 D St. N.W., WubJ.D,_ DC 2000I. A wealth ol lkb·ceatary IDformaUoa aJao la contained lD "Tbe Gulde to Genealo&lcal Beeorda ID the National Arcblns," available from the U.S. Government PrlD&lng Office, Wa11lln1ton, DC 20402. PetDter Potl11a 8ate te Pelildt1 • coUeetcn tall• pride la &be amoant of &nae patlaa acqalred by th metal over die 1ean. ~ lne w· lee*« avotdi a bJ•bl1 pollllaed look and prlcet tJae aoft ablDe ud 1Uver7 '11&)' CG1c11ta1 ol .... ODe pewter collectol" eontacUd by AYS cUaaar .... bowover~ 8be felt tbat ber Gld pewter waa ... 111.·· recardJe11 of "'-a& tile ,sperta aay. and aclale'fed a soft velvety appelruce by waU.1.q,uul 1111.DI an aQtodeanlq compowad. Bell Wrltlp B•..U ONr Delq• DEAR PAT: Slx moat.bs ago I sent for the "Lip Smacker" lip 1toss offer from Bonn.le Bell cosmetics. The ad aaid that delivery. would be within elpt weeks. I've written to the company twice 111d.D• about my miuini order. but haven't received an answer. • A.L .. San Clemente Your .... Is DOW beini fllled. Boule Bell Co. bu bem namped wltla --. f• Uals ofter, ud la sUll trylnl to ca&cb ap. DemllMI uceeded tile fa. lUal procbtd npplJ by ...... t1aan ...... mal&a, ud tile ftrm'• spokesman sa1• malllaia are bem1 made u qalckly u poulble. Pa&lemff II reqnst- ed, bat lnqlllrle8 can be Mal to 8-Jlle Bell Co., Lakewood, OU .. lt7. Prfttcle date el order ud pl"OGI al pQment. • Repairs • Mountings • Chains • Cutlng ~ MacTavieh flll Goldsmith, Inc. 833-3048 • 133-3064 4250 Scott Or., Newport Beach "We Buy Old Gold and Sliver" •finding• • Remounting •Stones How to Live To Be 100 DEAR PAT: A dear friend eave me aome very old pewter pieces that have been in her family for years. They were in storaate for aaes. and I want.to ~;;;;;;~iiii!iiiii;;l:Eii find out bow to remove accumulated dirt without 1 So you want to live to be 100, do you? The surveytakers checked 1,500 men and women who've done so to find out what they recom- mend: 1. Leave home early and slart making your own way. 2. Work for yourself rather than ror somebody else, when poss1ble. 3. Don't get all knotted up about security; just manage things aa they come. 4. Get married. And again, if necessary. And again. 5. Have plenty or children. Predictably enoush, there seems to be a kind of never-give.up attitude common to all these people, say the re· searchers. They insist on being in charge. SOUTH PACIFIC Q. "Whereabouts In which ocean is the world's most distant point from any land?" A. A place in the South Pacilic that's ap- proximately 1,660 miles from Pit.cairn Island Ducie lsland and Cape Bart. Consider the ctr'. cle of water around it in which there's no sur· face land at all, about 8,657,000 square miles. That sheet of brine la blsger than any one country, even the Soviet Union. Q. "Do women ever commit suicide by hangins themselves?'' A. That's rare. Very rare. When it happens. though, the woman uses a belt or strap from her own clotbins. virtually never a rope. Or so the police rec· ords indicate. Q. "How lone would you have to Joa or walk to bum up 140 calories in a dry martini?" A. Jog, about 14 minutes. Walk, about 27 minutes. Q. "What proportion of the full-term babies are born bead first?" A. 96 percent. HERO AND HEROINE What type of TV -show heroine has the moet appeal to male viewers? So inquires an 11plrtn1 acrtpt writer. The pretty divorcee or widow wbo'a tryin1 to overcome the odds to brini up her children, I'd iuess. Ar. for what sort of TV·abow bero most appeals to women, how about the handsome wrongfully accused man on the run? Addreu mail to l .M. Bos/d. P 0. 80% 1560, Coita Mao, m26. ruining the patina? A.J .• Coronadel Mar Dirt la not put of the pathaa, and yoa cu cleu tbJa pewter by wubl•I It la mild soap and water, then rubblnl UghUy to a aoft ahea. Most pewter SHOP BEFORE THE FASHION ISLANll CONCERTS MONDAYS 'Tlll:OOPM ~r ALLERGY? (714) 543-9624 Recorded Message ALLERGY CONTROL FOUNDATION 811 1513. Orate• CJ 92668 Wrft•fer~lll'f ......... l\71\'l,J~ll Newport Center Animal Hoslitll Announces the Aaaocfatlon of Mary C. Opel, DVM Dogs. Catt. Bires.. Small Exotic Anlmals Phone for Appointment or Emergency Service 644-5460 1333 Avocado Newport Center Newport Beach ¢: l~Nl~Ilt•Y ·s llONl~Y with this FREE KIT available at Fidelity Federal Savings. ·'Ibis· cat , • • • 0111e. Ho ' es. ... ' ! t EngUsh-the Bard Way Saddleback Instructor Teaches Spanish Strident,s To th atudent.a lo Dr. Maura Wood'• Sad· die back Colle1e Jtn•ll•b cla11 tbll aumme.r, Enslllb ta a forelp lansuaa• wtth arammat,lcal twllt.a and turns tbey never dreamed could ex1st. .. Some of these student.a are interested in the flne point.a of 1rammar, aome only ln survival En&llsh," aald Mn. Mahnke. She •aid even bUic communication ak:Uls should help, ti only in buy!ni stamps at tho POlt Office or lnqulriq about a food ator•ltem. There have been problems. thoulh none were ORANGE COUNTY 1'm'1nc In ••• from u to over ao. the atudentl are Mwctn·Am rlcans trylna \0 overcomt the lansuas• barrier that baa confronted many of their herlt&I• who have 1ettled la the aouth Orance Coun· lnaW'1DOUDtable. . FOR EXAMPLE, SOME students mtaaed the ~~==:::::==:~...r:....!Jl.~~:::::;!...!~-­ ftrat few weeks of claaa out of fear they dld.n 't hav• tyarea. Their claa• ta En11l1b 380, tailored by the Mia· 1lon VI.Jo colleae to aaallt Spanlab·apealtlnC resi- dent.a ol the dlatrlct in maldn1 the tranalUon to a lar&elY Enalllh·•peaklna society. IT HAS CONVENED AT tbe San Juan Capistrano Community COUMellna Center each week slnce the be1lnnln1 al summer and will con- clude near the end of Au1ust -IODI after reiuiar summer achoo! cl.uses have ended. "The atudentl showed a quiet dlatrust toward me d\.U'ln« the flnt month or ao," said Dr. Wood, wbobolcbaPb.DlnSpanlJh. the proper ldenUllcaUon documents. And, because of a wide r&n1e of ablUtles, Dr. Wood bed to tailor the coune to lndlvldual1. But the experience has ha• sreat meaninl for the teacher u well as the students. "A Itron& frlendlblp bes ll'OWD between us all, and betna their teacher hu been very rewardlnt for me. Every evenin1 when the clau ls over, the students ai.y until 1 uy a for.mil 1ood n.llht to each one," Dr. Wood said. A 548-55 5 4 lt14 Harbor Blvd." CHt.a Meaa Fumtn IDlll'IDCI an., Deatlu Elaewhere Particularly dlfflcult to reach were the totally m~lln&ual students who are also only 1emi· lit.er ate in Spanish. "When I finally decided to 1peak Spanish to them, they showed great courteay and respect toward me," said Dr. Wood. "At ease lmowinc they could communicate in their own hu1aua1e. they still took more than a month 1etUng used to my teacbln& . $10,000 for only $'155.26 a month.· LOS ANGEL!'.S CAP> -Funeral services have been set Tuesday for 'Vlr&lDI• RoblnloD, 99, a former board chairman e>f the J .S. Robinson Department Stores. Mrs. Robinaon, nicknamed the "First Lady of Beverly Hills" for her civic and philanthropic activities, died Friday. TURLOCK (AP> - Memorial services were held today for Dr. Marlon C. Collins, founder of the inlerna· tional Medic Alert system. Collins. 70, died Friday in Turlock, where he began his medical practice in 1931. CAMBRIDGE, England CAP) Lord Edgar Douglas Adrian, 87. a Nobel Prue· winning physiologist whose discoveries about the human brain helped revolutionize treatment of nervous disorders. died al his home Thurs· day. VATICAN CITY. CAP) -Dino CardJnal Staffa, 71, an Italian expert on Canon law and head of the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Seal, the highest Vatican court, died Sunday after a long illness, the Vatican an· nouoced. KINGSTON, Jamaica CA P> -Sir A.Jexander Buatamente, 94, the first prime minister or in· dependent Jamaica, died Promoted · Douglas Bellakoff, son of Mr . and Mrs . Theodore Beliakoff, 4012 Inlet Isle Drive, Corona del Mar, has been pro- moted to sergeant first class at Norwich University. a private military college. l'IHCl•OntlAS SMITHS' MOl'TUAlY 927 Main St Huntington Beach . ~539 ,..,._MILT COU>MtAL flUMlllAl HOWi 7801 Bolaa Ave • Westminster 893~3528 PAC~YllW MIMOllAL PAH Cemetery Mortuary Chapel "°° Pecif1c: View Oilve NewPort. Cahforn11 &<14·?700 W.COl...CI MOITVAllD &.:aoun1 Beach 494-941& L89\1n1 Hilla 7et-0933 sen Juan C&plstrano •9~177$ Saturday at his home in Irish Town , the gov· ernment-owned radio an- nounced CHU88UCK Kl!NNl!TH f/lo. CHU98UCI<, rftldtnt Of ColU MIM, CelllO<"nle PHMCI eway Avtutl •. 1m. Survlv.d .,., hi• wlf• Elelne, '°" Oevld, CMta Meu, Ce., Nvollt., 54ecv Deen Tl'\IH, MIM. -VI rvlnle Ruth CIMlblluck, (Olt. Ao\fte, ce., bnltNr• ..... ,._. Vermont eftd D .. n. ,klrlcle. One Ol'eneon Evenlno memoti.t MrVI<• Wiii be ,_kl WM., I :IOPM Ill IN ~ .. ,,.,. Church .. "" Cow~. affl<letl"9 wlll be Rev ll•IK• A. K@f'rl•-Mar Vl•t• Ma•Gftk Lodo• No I» lntermen1 Quincy Ceme1erv. QulftCy, Mau. TlloM - wish In 11«1 of now.n mey ,......, -tlOn> to ,,,. l<en ~ Mffno<lel ,!Ind, ..... -lel HOSj)llel c.nc:• ,._, ~ a..cJI, Ce ,lilWral .,. ren9ements by llell llroedwey _,.....,. 81AMAN MONTE M 81AMAH, '""""t of Cott• ~ Cellforftle. Peu..i •••Y A119U't •. tffl. SW\11\led 11¥ hi• wife II· ten, ....,,._. l'tly1111 Mey1, La er-. ta. Ce -TM• Hel'll\lne, 111-r. Ce .• 111ter Merci• McCollum, elQlll or•nd<hlldren end five oreat· oran«Mldren Servtcn •ill he held Moll Aug I, J OOPM et Pe<lllC V-Chepel lnlerment et Pec:lflc View Memorial Peril. In lleu ot !lowers, m-lal contribution• to !he C.nc., Soc l"V .,. IU9011111911. Pec:lllc View Mort.,.rydlrecton IOCKO"" REIO TAYLOR llOCKOFF. paned ewey ~t $, 1917 at the -of Ila• tHn ,.,_,M. S.wvlved 11¥ hi• ,..,,,.,, Dr. end IWs. Oevld a. Bockoft, tlrotNr ltobert JemH llockoff, paternal orandmotller l!ve C . Elllc1, Cl earwater, Fie., maternel orendmolhff Mrt. Robbye c . Hoey, Cott• MK•. Ce Servt<fl were held Sun , Aug I 111 l:OOPM. Interment w•• et Pec:lflc: View -lei Perk In lleu Of It-•· laM!ly 11199"1• memorlal conlrlbutlon> to the Clllldren•s Hot.ttltal l..OnO e ... ci.. ce or St Marv'• Ho&Pll•I FoundatlOll In memory of Reed TaylOf" 8o0ofl Pec:lllC View MOrl.,.ry cltrecton IAKUt JOHNNIE lOU llAl<Ell r"ldenl of N••-t .. Kh. Celllornl• PHHCI ••o Avtlllt 6. ttn 5'1rvlved by da119hltr Pl\11111 lie tier, NewPOrl kecll, Ce, ..,_, '""'"" ll•ller, ••tOfl ........ i... . .._ ., .... ,~ ... Debbi•, lob, James end llrende. Grev.Welt ,.,.,,kes wlll be ,.Id Tues, Aue •• II HAM Pacific View MOrluery clradors. SOL.M• ICATHl!IUNI SOLME, r .. lelent of Hunltngton lleacll. C.lllornle Peued •w•Y ""9lnt I, tt17 Survived by lier d••'ll'!IW Elwre l'°""tetn, Cypr ... s. Ce Vl1llet1on on Moll , f OOPM to ' OOPM, Pierce llrotller> Smith•' MOrt.,.ry, strvlces Tu.s .. 1 llOPM et Pl.,<• llrol""' SmllM" Mortuary. In. terme11t •t WHIMln>ler Memorl•I Perk, Pierce llrotllers Smllh1' MOrt.,.rydtrecton. met})ods.'' WITHOUT CLASSES SUCH as Saddleback's, Dr. Wood believes there ls little hope for these stu· dents to get formal Enilish trainln1. The procen can be extremely palMtaklng. At times, the students comprehend only family names such as Lopez ln their En1llsh language primer, which is called "The Lopez Family." The instructor said her students have great tolerance for each other's laniuaae 1bortcomlngs. There is no snickering or even smiling when a response comes hard. DR. WOOD SAID SHE hu three iOals for her special English classes -to establish rapport with the students, to teach practical En&lllh and to teach the students ways or coping in American society. ' [ J · Her zeal for the program bas drawn volunteer Piiot Candid commentaries, helpers such as Bruce Webster, a counselor at the Logbook center, Myrta Steele of Dana Point and Carol ____ ..,......,..._..,....._.., DAILY PILOT Mahnke of Laguna Beach exclualvely In th• • Grant Set Whether you need $3.500 or $10.000 get it from the people who l8nd mllllons. Commercial Credit. Monthly payment based on a $10.000 HomeO.Vner loan, for 120 months. at an annual percentage r4te of 14%. Total payment $18.631.20. NO POINTS. NO PREPAYMENT PENALTY. • We ftnd ways to hefp. COMME~IAL C~DIT C0 1'POR.ATION ~ ~l.oorll --~ I\ ...... ,,, S"l.000 o\nd -"'UM .. *"* .,,, • combl,...IOn ol rHI encl ~ION! pt°"'""" Costa Kesa • 870 E. 17th Street Oran~ • 1111 Town 6 CounU,. Rd. Sult. 28 T o College A $45,288 grant from the state Department or Rehabilitation wlll be used to create a center at Cypress College to help the handicapped live more lnderendently as members o society. Let Us Help ' The award to tt)e Santa Ana-based Oran1e Coun· ty Association ror Retarded Citizens w11 announced by As· semblyman Cheater B. "C het" Wray <D· Westminster>. He said about '8 in· di vi duals will study dally at the college's Indepen· dent Llvln1 Skills Developmental Laboratory, which ls geared to disabled adults. ... A father discovers his .~ .... 1lescent daughter is experimenting with drugs. He doesn't know what to do. ... A lonely wife sobs into a pillow. Her marriage is breaking up. Her elderly parents have become a burden. She can't cope. ... A middle-aged man with a good job shakes uncontrollably as he rea ches for a bottle of booze. He tried to stop drinking, but failed. ( ICMltAMM Rl!V. IUOINI "· c. SCHltAMM, Seco d T rHldllnl Of Wfflmlf'llt .... C:allfomlt. n erm PatMd """' Auoutl s. Im. H• ••• 1..--"y cllepjal11 M Wal11Ut Menot 111 ~~~~~~':!~~=~" For Manahan voted H years to Ille Lutlleren Mlfll.Cry ... ,, survived lly hi• .... Michael L. Manahan of ltt!wtr, -• O.vld of Or_.,, Oonlef\, .. ,,t• 1tou. c.t. s•-· La.-"'"" Newport Beach bu been ca .. •.,..,.....,. Hei.na McG•tOOf', s... apC>olnted to a 1econd ~~~~c.o!'r'.t~:~~= term u chairman of the These scenes are common everyday experiences. All of us have problems and we search for their solutions. =-=~-=~~'.··=':!;: H~n!"1~~~01;'tr'forR~b~ Sometimes we succeed. Other times we can't. Then we need professional ~I~ Where to find this help ~''.~:~.~~."~ 1971-71 academic year. can become a problem. PROBLEM TALK SHOP helps pepple find answers 1o their problems. ~ w., .. •t uol'M et ,....._,.,," Manahan la mana1er of L11t•• °""'" ..,""'"" 9Hc11. community relations for !':.:~~· "*"*' ....,.., .. s.l'V•c..111 ~eirvi.beCompany. PROB~EM ifALK SHOPS are free counseling and referral services located in o·range County. ~~~~~=Tii~~ PROBLEM T:A.LK SHOPS are here to offer you help through counseling and referral. There is no charge for our service to you. We refer to both public and private agencies in Orange County. Facili- ties to care for individuals are available on a 24-hour basis. That means we can help you whenever you need help. Appointments are not necessary. If you prefer to make an appointment, day and evening hours are available. (Office hours: 8:30 a.m. -5:00 p.m., Monday through ~riday. In extreme emergencies, a counselor can be reached after 5:00 p.m., and on weekenos.) ~--· The Kansas City Royals·. Joe Zdeb scales the wall in left field to bring down a fly ball Sunday in Kansas City. Kansas City be at Cb1cago 3-2 to sweep the series Lut w ln 'New York, th• Dodi ... wer• reiicly to bury the l\tda. '"Tbe Gnly way they ean catch us Jilt cur plane erubel. •• Stev. Yna• •lid. '6Tb• only way ta if we eompletel,y fall apart. .. A~ fQet to the fire that eou.Jd ~te tho bcSa. wbo bave WOD ftn ol tbetr lut ctlbt. were otber remark• b7 Yeqer'a HalO•atKC Angels Rookie Fi11i n g a Void When the Calllornla Angels si&ned Bobby Grieb as a fr" a1ent last winter, their shortatop problems were aupposed tQ be solved. They have been, but not by Grieb. JWolde Rance Mulliniks, who expected to be playln1 in Salt Lake City this year, bu taken over since Grich underwent back surgery in June and the 21-year- old youngster from Porterville may not give the poeltlon back. "I was aurpriaed to be called ap ao early," Mulllnlk.t said Sun- day after gettine three hits, in- cluding a game-winnlnf two-run s inale off Jim Pa mer in . \ California'• 6·3 Tlctory over Baltimore. The Anlda left Immediately after Sunday's aame for Kamas City, where they face the Royals in a twi·Di&bt double-header ton11ht. "I fiaured I'd be with Salt Lake City all year and spend Sep. A tlfleb Slate AllO-.. WMl'C•Mletrlft • A119. e Ctlllotllla.C IC-Oly (21 215'0.rn. Auo.1oc.111or111e•aa.ltft •:Hp.m. Auo. 11 CelltonUa1 a.to1t •:•'-""' tember wlth the bl& club," con- tinued Mullinllu. "I wun't even following the Angels. When I was called up, I didn't even know Grtcb was hurt." .Future GoH Great Wins Hartford Open As might be expected of a rookie, Mullinika got oil to a slow start with the Antela, collecting only three blta lo h1I nrat 25 at- bat.a. But with bls three bits Sun· day, Mul.linika raised bis average to.303. "I feel a lot more confident and relaxed," be said. ''When you succeed and get playiq Ume. you start to aetUe ln and feel moreconfldent. WETHERSFIELD, Conn. (AP> -Bill Krauert, a 25-year- old tour sophomore recognized by 'hia peers as a potential great, made up four strokes in flve holes, finished off a two-under· par 69 and scored his first in· dlvldual tour victory Sunday in the Greater Hartford Open golf tournament. Kratiert, poker.faced as usual and wearing his trademark dark glasses despite the gray, gloomy. threatening skies, put together the lowest 72 hole total of the year on the pro tour, 265. That was a whopping 19 below par on the friendly Utile, uee yard Wethersfield Country Club course, which traditionally yields some of the lowest scores of the tour year. It's also two strokes better than the previous low of the sea.son and four ahead of 22·year-old rookie Curtia Stranae, wbo held a two-stroke lead with seven holes to go, but fell victim to the pres~ •ure of the stretch run and finished with a 70 and 269 and dropped back to a Ue for third behind Larry Nelson. Nelson came on to take second alone with a six·under par Mand 268total. Although Krauert hooked up with Woody Blackburn to win the , NaUonal Team Championship as a roolcle last year. he's a relative unknown to the aeneral public. Not 19 to hla fellow pros . .. That guy," U.S. Open cham· pion Rubert Green said with a nod toward the dark-haired Kratzert just prior to the start of the final round. "could be a real lood one. There's n() lelllnc how aood he can be. He'• 1ot a great ~nFaces Eye Qper a tion ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP> B ftalo BU11 football star O.J. Slmpeon la a\lffertna from an eye problem that coul~ require sur- aery and probably will make blm mltlilt leut the next three pre. aeaa«a games. Soiarcea told the Roebater Democrat and Chronicle that Simpton~ Wt\O announced lut week that he will •""-4 todaJ at U.. Wllm• lnetltute eye clinic at JobM H~u UnivenitJ t.o LrY to dla~ver lbe c:aua GI OC· ea1lonal blurrtl vlaloo, aame, a great temperament. "He could be one of the future great.a." . l'lntl IC-end .....,.y.wlnnl"'S ~In Ille OrHltr HlrtfOrd °"9n .,,, ---on .... •.fft.JIWd, ..-NI, Wetheofleld C-ry CIUll courte 11111 ltr'"nn, $«1.000 Orler ...... ,Slt,CS Urry,.....,,., Slt,GS Curtll5C,.,.., St.JAG lll<tor ...,_._, 5',2AO Aod CUrt, 9',lllS C.Mn,...te,16.m L .. aldff, S6,11S Kermll z.ri.y, U,..O TerryOMN,U,..O Lou orwm. S4,2S2 HubertO<wtl, $4.U? 80lt ........ M,2" TomKlll,S4,m IMN'l•Het .. ,.~ Jerry ~.U....S U. Trwlno, U.7JO 1111.,_..,.,, $2,7JO Jlm11-.u.no AlenT.,..,$2.7JO Aod ,-'11.12,730 a.,,,., TllomclHn, Sl,'74 1.i11 MllJ-..le. Sl,tu o.w MoclllOll. St,'74 wa1tv AnNtrtftl. sues Kow~TWIUJ,11,"1 0 ............. 1.-.. ,.,. .• 1.-,..,.,.... ,.zlw, ti.JU aruc.e u.c:o.. s 1,flS Jim ...,,_,,1,1.s 1t011SCecll,11. w Johnny Miii«, ,,,,., Geor91 Arcller, SI, IU "lwentlnO MotlN. '' • 1., Perry\Atlle,$1,1'5 llredy Mitt.. $1, IU Pi.ti Hancock,Sl,16S ........ ..,., ........ MS-1M ......... s-a. '5Mllll,.. 67~"'67-­., ..... Ht-170 .7 .. 7'*67-vt ...... , .. 7-72-270 •Mt-7US-t71 ·~-171 1011 .. 11 m ......... 10-m .... 11 .. -tn =~ ... J0.67*-271 ... Jl."'41-4U ......... .,,-27, •S.70o71..,_,,, 10....7Ml-«14 .... ,.JMl-21, 7MS.70-70-C7S 71~7'""'27S t7·1'MMt-t7S 7011 .... 27• 67'**71-276 .......... 7>-«1, ... ~ . ,.~ ... 72>11"4-m ...... ,...........,., 11-~ , ..... ~ 10.J0.61·1'-f11 ,~,....,., 70-1047·~ ... ,, .... ,....,, JWf.71..,....,, "Wl\en you first come up, you never know what you'll do," added Mulliniks. "Lot.a ot Sood young players come up and struggle and are sent back. Sometimes it takes a couple of shots to stlck. You just try to do the best possible job." IALTt_,..a CAUl'OlllNIA 11.Smlltl:lb O•Wf2b M-d ~cf Pt.K....,lf Sl11911M11 rl Mun., lb L..Mt'tcll OtClnuta K.GarcleM MOt•llh ltlldolllllc Sflopeyjllt alH._. Hrll" J 0 I 1 IOtll!Yd 2 1 1 0 2 0 t 0 •tmyib J I I 0 2 t It lendttf 4 I 1 2 2 0 0 t ... 11t1• JI 00 •o•• 9""'19 ooo• 't 1 t .. ytorlf J 1 2 1 • t It lt.Ttr""lf OtOt 4 .1 2 t o..lllat S I I I 2118 M\111111111•• ,,,, 2000 ~dll JOit I I I 0 ltt.J8'UOrldll 1 0 0 0 3 1 1 1 Stc:lltbananc 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 Ttlalt JI) I t J Teitett JI t te t ltlll,..,. --~ c.tl....... -........ • ......,_ i. o~-1. ~ i. LOl ..... U._.. 7, c.tllWtli. S. 29 .... llY. .. ytor, Olalll, ~ Niii ....... C.I. Sl-ltyter ........... , 81Ct11etrt'411. ,,._._. lfl M a ... H IO ,..,._u .• ,.,., .-10 • • a ' T.Mar1'-1\lt O O O 1 1 Hel'Uell S 1 I I 1 4 1.a1tec1w cw.1 ... 1 a • • o 1 ' O.Mlllor 1 t t 0 I 0 St.......0.Mfltr(f). T-t:M. A-tt,m . ---~ Mond!y. August I, 1'71 .u ..... IT WAS AN EXPLOSIVE, WATERY DEATH SUNDAY FOR ~ERALD BANGS IN :nllS BOAT. Explosive Death on Water · Prominent Seattle Trial, Lawyer Kilkd • . SEATTLE (AP> -Unlimited hydroplane driver Gerald Bangs wu ldUed Sunday when he was thrown from bis boat at cloee to 130 m .p.h. during the Seafair Trophy races on Lake, W a.shington. Banp, 42, a SeaWe lawyer and father of four, was battling with another boat for seeond place in the day's first beat when be ac- celerated on the inside lane, aaid Sue Sponnoble, executive secretary of the Unlimited Rac- ing Commiuion. · The race was eventually won by Bill Muncey drivtq Atlaa Van Ltnes. Banp• boat. The Squire, spun, hooted a sponson ln the water and ~Uy WU l1fte4 into the air SpOD.Doble said. Banis waa rushed from the lake by Coast Guard helicopter to a medical center, where doctors ptonoanced him dead. A. U.S. Air Force resme doc- tor said there was no respiration or pulse when the driver wu lift- ed into the helicopter. He said re- susc1taUao attempt.a failed to re· vive Bangs. Cause of death was lilted as severe head injuries and possible cervical spine injuries. Bangs, drlvin1 a turbocharged, Alllson-po1rered cabover, was traveling aJIPl'C)¥· imately 180 miles per hour on the straightaway ln bis fourth Jap when the acclderit occurred. He -,ras attempting to pus the pay 'n Pak, d riven by ••n Ar~-Banp' craft landed riaht ildlt up and kept going at low 1pi1Md9 until chased down by crewme!Qot ben. . Banp set a world competltlor\ record in flve-Uter hydroplae.<i and wu national champloa • tn that dasa ln 1973. He also WU tbe national tlv•Uter boat bl~ pc8t champion from 19'12 t~gh 1974. Olymples Sough t . •' . \Vilt Sued " ForFihn Grid ~andal.Beealled Taylor Looks Boo/c at Illini, lnddent, I m Lucky to Be .. . r i Married to Cosell Misuse Editor's. noCt: TPw modem no 'POrl• llt«a " prcMcting ...... talnm.rd Q'UOlit11. ond oecadooa.I· coacblq pOlltloa. •'They were 101.ilr to mat• th• annouJ2Hm•t publlo oa lb• aune dt;y that aa. ....,. t lfl.4111 <AP> -Hit detrllC't.on t 1'bt tb•l nen a few houn t •eek on telntalon I• too much. "' I t U:w wife •bo hu apcnt J3 : an W\\h Howard COloeU UY• t '• a corwckrate, lovlnf man r who leU • raw deal trom th .. p t .. Moat pt'ople would be :'°"wu.wi to bt married lO • ,,. oward Coaell," 1ald wife ~Emmy. : • She'll c:onced• tbat aevt'n yean i « •• ed ath.1tlica" u wtr• .. -.. coalroVenlal lletwork rporta :4'0«Dmactor bu left bu fed up ( U. U. world ol •port. it :)wmtorena Lo8es 800 To Jamaican XALAPA, Mexico CAP> Junalcan Seymour Newman completed a double win in the ~entral American and Caribbean •thlet1c championships Sunday, taking the 800 meters in 1: 46.13. The Jamaican stunned apec- tatora by beating Olympic cham- pion Alberto Juantorena In the 400 meters on Saturday. Jamaica's Donald Quame did 'ot take part in the 200 meters. A ~okesman said Qua.rrle did not ._.ant to risk Injury by runninc on Che dirt track. Last May In Loi Angeles, Quarrle had to pull out of a race when he developed ~ramps In both legs. Quarrle and Juantorena wut gmpele next week In Guadal•· ara lJl the elimination meet to rm the Amerl<!a-2 team for the orld Cup next month In l>usseldorf, West Germany. · Canada and the South A merlcnn selection will joln the Central American and Caribbean tea m Aug. 10·12 In Guadalajara, f 20 mlle3 northwest of Mexico City. Mexico's Charlotte Bradley, a 25·year-old student of economics Ill l.he Unlverslly of Mexico, com· pleted a sweep in the women's middle distance event, b•gglng tk .. 3,000 meter!! In 10:00.61 and u~tting the record ror the race that was run for the first time. She also won the 800 meters in ~:07.46. , Friday, Bradley of Mexico Cl ~~ took the 1.~ meters. Cuban ~ttvla Leonard won the 200 ~elers ln 20. '10 whlle Silvia hlvu also from Cuba took the omen's 100-meter dash In 23.82. . amalcan Jackeline Puae¥ was &t.>cond with 23.82. ' Cuba completed its sweep of the meet. winning the 1,600- tneler and men's and women'• r elays in 3·09 24 and 3:37.50. "U I MVU' aff another 1port- \nt evtnl In my Uf• tb&n ttnnll J wUJ be perf tell1 con- ltnt," 11ld ln • telephoM ln· ltrvltw from her oct Dlront bOme Wllt.Umptoa. cio Ntw York'1Lona l1lU\d. K 18-ytAN>ld hutblnd hu been known to drlve common 1port1!en1 and crit.lc1 aUketoex· .. .,..auon wath 1u1 a1>ru1ve opla1ou and ut.encMcl upl&na. U0nt ol sparta tri vl 1. And Mn. Coltll, whole "lven name ol llU'1 pve way to Em· .my" lol1I .,o. conffd• ''tber• are peopl•·wbo can't ltaod b1a pr...n.ttoa. "But l've 1een too much love mi the road to believe what J rtld ... Readers reapondlnl to recent ntwtpaper polls In Waahlnlton and Ml•ml have ranked Colell u tbelr leut f avorlte 1por'Ucuter. "Jt•1 manipulated by the preu.'' •aid Mn. Coaelt. "He'a not their Idea of what a 1port1c11tu 1bould be an~ they've been fl1ht1nf with him aince tbe beal.nnlna. He doeen't conalder himself a 1por'tlcuter anyway; he conaldera bhmelf a Joumalllt." Coaetl i& a aentlmental, hi1h1trun1 man. one who "doesn't know h'>w to relax;· said h1a wtte. She aald the Colell viewed by millions on network televtalon ls about the same man at home, where he "still h11 as many opinions. I mean I bear u much u anybody hean who i• watching It on television. What you aee ls what you 1et. That'• Howard Cosell." Of their endurtn1 marrta1e. sh e said: "Ten tlmet 1 day, every day of our married Ute, be tells me that he loves me. LOS ANGELES -Former b11ketball 1r•at Wilt Cb•m· .,.rlain ba1 bftn 1utd for more tban JI0,000 for alle1ed4' U1lng unauthorlaed film of a pro· fenlcmal ikateboarder ln a new mof'te. Tho lull. WU nJed Frida)' Jn Loi Ancelet Superior Court by Tony Alva, who claimed the film footaae caused hJm 1reat em bar· raument and held hJm up to public rldlcule. The footace wu uted in the film "Oo For Jt." made by Ch1mberlaln11 produc- tion company. World Entertaln- mentCorp. Alva la aeekJnt $10,000 ln 1eneraJ dama1ea and lJ0,000 ln pun!Uve dama1ea. lleolde Kiiied PITTSBURGH -Funeral aervlcea will be held Wednesday for Pittaburgb Steelers rookie Randy Ftiach, who waa killed in a three-vehicle collision about ao mlla eutolhere. A 1POkeaman foe the NaUonal Football Leaaue club said aervicea for Frisch, 23, will be held Jn his hometown or Kirkwood, Mo. Frisch waa dead on arrival Sunday at Monsour Medical Cent.er In Jeannette, followin1 the accident In North HunUnidon Township. flghterDln ALBANY' N.Y. -Joe Bwl,. contender or the heavyweltht boxlna crown ln the 19'08, 11 dead at the .,e of 55. Baksi had been 1ufferln1 from cancer for several yeara and died Saturday nltht at the Albany Medlcal Center. The fi1hter worked hi• way up tbrou1h the club ranks here and ln New York City to 1atn bouts with future ch•mpa Ezurd Charles and Jersey Joe Walcott. lr1 controo.r-v °"· o M:oi. never be/ON 4ltlGNd bl "'' 100rid O/ o&hldka. Ylt lp0t1a o/ do,v1 QOfW ~.allo bod,,_ momtfttt.and "°' Pfrfor'l'Mr•· roctcw our look al ,,.... dawl·fOOV.U °" £aQa4 NlgM ........-, IJUl fClJllor. BJ BOWARD I.. HANDY °'""'Delly Htll 1\eff He wu an uelJtant coach under Pete Elliott ln the Roae Bowl while both were at the University of California and later at the Unlveralty of IJ. llnols. He was given the bead coachlnc job at the same time ElUott wu named atbletlc director at lllinol1. then r• 1t1ned h1a poslUon with tbe current Unlventty of Miami head man a short time later when a money scandal rocked tbe Fi&hllng n11n1 campus CunentJy But Taylor la a realdent of Laauna Niguel, la Going Back IN SPORTS an account executive and a six-handicap golfer. A native of North Platte. Neb .. he played for the Untvenlty of Nebraska as a 170-pound offensive guard and defenalve linebacker. He mlaaed one complete season when he was hurt on the openin& ldcko!f of the first game and subsequently had knee 1ur1ery. A• a aenior, he waa all·conference and the Cornhuskera' most valuable player. "We played a1alnst Woody Hayes and Ohio State In 1954 when they had Hopalong 81LL TAYLOR Ca11ldy and a number of other great players,'• T•ylor recalls. After iraduaUon, he joined Elliott'• staff u an ualatant for one year at Nebra1ka then moved to Berkeley for three years. The Bears won the Pactrlc-8 conference and played ln the Rose Bowl with Joe Kapp at quarterback and Jack Hart in the lineup. He followed Elliott to ti· llnol1 from 1980 throu1h 1966 where he wu offenalve line coach. "l also had the 1ood fortune to reeruU Dick llutku.s and Jim Grabowslcl for Illinois, .. he say1. At conclusion of the '66 season. Elliott was to move up os athletic director and s chool off\olala had alven Taylor the head Cootb~ll Los Alamitos tant ltblttic d.lnctor went to th• coUes• preald.nt. and ac- eu1ec1 thO ataff of tb• milme of funda. "He wanted the AD ~JtloQ and .-nt to the president. to blow tblqa clear out ol pro. PortlOl'l. '"nle Bit 10 bad peculiar rulee. No 1tud.nt could be ctven. part·tim• job and be on a aebolanblp at th• aam• Um•. Yet lbey weren't al· lowed anytbJq for laundt)' CIC' for SundQ mula. "Over a flv•year period. we 1pent a total of about a . 100 to help theae elbl«ee out. M a result. five playen were declared ineU1lblt and the accusauona Uncered on I or about 1lx week• witb th• rt1ult that Pete wu forced to rulp. lt wu • bwn rap. "I res1med too and took a Job wtth ihe Dallu Cowboys ln penoonel. We were very dlalUUlioned after the tb1q at llltnola ... Wby did h~ leave Dallu' ··0ne bl• teuon WU that I was in an airplane about 2IO daya each.year and wu never home." Did Elliott offer him a job when he went to Miami? ·'Pete Is • senaational IUY and we bave a atron& rela· Uonshlp. I came close to go- Ina with hlm to Miam\ a few ye.rs ago. We talked about it for several daya. .. But coaches have to make a decision to stay ln or aet out. of It. I enjoyed everything In football. But I also enjoy the business world. I think the bit thing l m1as 1s working with young people." "Ir you hove a husband who constantly cares and, even when you're middle-aged and eetting a little portly. tells you how darting you look and means It, somehow you aurvive It." He went the distance with Walcott. losing a lO·round de· cialon in l!MS. Charles stopped him In the 11th round of a 1948 fight. Oranie• IJpaea League Leaders AMll"ICAN LaAOUI Race Entries Soccer Standings Nuty Top& Borg LOS ANGELES -Ille Nastase rallled to defeat Wimbledon champion Bjorn Borg 7.5 in men'11 sln1les Sunday night to lead the Los Angeles Strtn11 to a 25-23 overtime victory over the Cleveland Nets In a World Team TenniJS match. In the second set. Naatase fell behlnd Bor14·1 but came back to outlast the Swedish 1tar. LM ....... U.~D.OT W--C..11 II.Al bMt Mlcllel .. 2; Ml(NI 51'"""'9tc" (Cl .... , Z ...... lllta Allt....,, .. a. Ml--c-.1 .... ell .... II.Al lot•l ll~u-111-.. 1. Men "-5 .. M ti.Al __. &o<9 H, ~ "lfttell 10 met IW•law-"•htDll ._t <>wrtim. -~lt .. t91 ILAI I, ~O llln-t A l.ID.CLoeA_...., NORTH CONWAY. N.H. UTTINO uo •I INI• ,., ••• TwelCth··eeded J ohn Alexander ,,..,"· 317: eottO(k, M in, .JH " Sl"OI.....,, 9el nt; "k•. 1111. tt• showed that brute force can win R1"'"· Hv. m over finesse as he upset fourth •um -c ...... Min,"' eo11•0. Min, 71: I'll&, I'". 15, hnd1, CAI, 14, seeded Manuel Orantes to cap· smet1tv.1111",12 lure the '20,000 first prize In .. "u"s BAnto •H -HI•••. M111. " 17 M....wt. HY, 11 . ._..,. 1111.11• S12S,000 International tennis z10 C/tl,n;aono-.c••.,. t l S d .. ITS C.r••· Ml", 14A, lo4toc~. ournamen un ay. Ml"· 10. RI••. 11'"· 141; v-1. Mu, Alexander. who lost the first 1>0; ul'>oA. 0t1. t1', co.er."'"· set to the finely engineered pas:.· '"ooueus "'•"••· "'· u · mg ahot.s of Orantes, came back "•J•o-... v. ''· c.-. "''"·a. with aces and volleys and won l•mon o.i.21;Ht11e,M•"·" the second set and five of the last 1!"11~~~~,:.~~:~; ~:.!:; s ix games In the thJrd set to take ~1 • "-""· HV •. 0 1011 t<c. the match 2-8, 8-4, 8-4 HOME "VHS -"'" l trt 1'; GS<oll. ~ 21, ....... Cal >• Ntl· \Ill,.. Acfva11ee• ""·"v,u1H11••·"''"·n STCXIN LUIS ,._. .. l(C lt SOUTH ORANGE, NJ Top ,.,,.,v. c.1. >•: ~F1.,, 0.1 u; ed Guill VII al __ , &ondt.cei u "~.o.i..u so ermo as reg neu l'tlCHtNO 11 oec111.11\ his strength during a 90-mlnute T0Jthn1on, Min, 1M •. IOO, u1 rain delay, reeled off five Out1t1t,Nv,io.), 1't.Jtt:,.or..,., •. 0.1 ....... >aa. 2 ,, 9.,,..,., Oil. 1 , . ._ stra.leht games and beat 18-year ·'"· 40.. LVI•. HY, H "'·, ,., old John McEnroe 6-2, 2·6, 8-0 In a .,,..,KC, .. 3 •. m . u1: Oe111, Min, 14_., .100, a.•1 WIM, Ill\ ... , , .. 1, semifinal match of the $85,000 us. claycourtt.ennlso...,nSunday. sr"1t<aovn -lty•"· ca1, i.1; r-Te~. bl, 16t; ~rd, llC. I .. ; The 24·year·old Ar1entlne, •owu.,, °' uo, e1y1..,.n, Tta, -'MBalCANL8AGUE w\nner of 28 atral&ht clay 1"°· NATIOHALLu•u• EutDtvblola matches,wUlputtheatreakonthe uniNo uo .. 11e1t -"""••· W L Pct. GB Un ln th h pl hl 1'91!, .to1 lle11nett. "'"· .1u1 e • c am OCH p tonl1ht Je~. CN, .n.; T,..i-. 14L M 43 .588 acalnat second seed Roecoe Tan· 32' • "-· '"·· S26. 81 47 ,865 31,-, ner.A.-."',000p•l·e'·atatak•. ltUHl-0,..11w,Cln,•;Mo<99n, ..., co~ .. Cl11, .. 10rlffty,Cltt. .. 1Wlllfletd.IO, flO -CIU\ C •1 ,.,..., ,...,1', -·-+I ltUHSUnao1N-O,....,,CI ... ..... ,."""" ,.,..,...,,, .. Jetlw "-' IMYe.•> hl•OIJel IMllClltlll l'l"ST "ACI -UO U•d> t r••r •Id f!W\deM Cl91m~ C<11lll btfl<J .... , .. '1200 ,,., ....... ,.,IU ~)000 lNdtcl 0.Cll IC.rdoHI Col«Mec..M IHwtl l•rll 19 Olk II I "°"Oft I Go loro Oo 1"111.-.1 o.<.,,, n--.> ltey91 TOdtlv l"dtlrl <14 KlltyC..Oo !W«t> SjlWll .. Safl IM ... lell ,.1 .. ,...,..,, llt.,.m> ., .. ,.,, ~•1y ICM4oal 8•1KMt• Ll'"ll' IHwtl o_ ow.,. 10tlembel .,...,,"9..,.. ,,._,...' 117 •U ,_IJoll• lttnl11MI tn H-y0oo"-Y (TrHtUf'9) 1n ~lft .. Trlllolt• IWM'dl '" °"'~ llToMal 121 ll•IMAftl99ftCOtlomNI "' ,, ........... 1n lwl,.MMt IMVl"I I 1' Wl\.tl.el•I ( A°"911 I ltt "' HOll'l"M AM8 .. ICA .. 1n socca•LaACtua lt1 AT&..UtTICCOH~l"IMCI 1n .......... OIWtltll llt W I. 01' OA II' "" "' • Tor-• 11 IJ 41 • J1 10 1tt SI Loufl II U » lS J2 tl).I llt R.c:llt•IM II It M 41 al " IU Citic,., 10 1• SI 0 1' • 1n C.-l1<UI 1 It M •1 • n 1n IMter•DIVIU. A l'IL*-It 1 4' " '1 161 "' C._ n II to Jf JO uo "' T•"'9911ar •• n u o 4' 1i1 WUhlnetOll 10 1• ~ ft ll t1 ,.AC'll'lC COfll'l"aNCI ._._...DI ..... • •. 0.11., ,. • ,. f7 u IU •n LO\ """t" n " ., ,.. '' 141 IU S.,,J_ 14 U )1 44 2S lit ltl ....... 1 " 11 •l )t .. lilt lit lt1V•tH II U a 44 J1 lf') 1n w..ten!DIVlll• ltt M·Ml-t• I• 10 44 a. •I 11' llt "•"'°".,., 1• 12 d .. "° 11• llllTM llACI -JSO YHf, l ,...,. el41t • •· Clelmlftt Pvr .. P«ID S.elll• U 11 4) U " UJ Poru-IO .. It q a .. • <•1ne"9Clc11"'.i .. 1111. THl"D lllAC& -400 yenlt l ..... r .. 0, Cl.i.N,,._ """'9 'ttiOO Clalml"I l'ric•VJOO. Hef\111 ICMdOl<11l 1n S.rllo lllr•ll 1n M-'•K•ndol~(U.,..m> ttt Itel-a IMtrtl 11' V•lft lncllllll (l("""'I lit Q4l11JH• (T.._.,,.I IU v~ JoM IA..irl '" lllOU ~ ltACS -U0 y•rd1. 2 yNr eld IMlfenL Cl .. ll'llfle, !"!HM U200 CllMll!lllle l'Ylee ..... Cl .. ml .. PYtc.f IUOO 1t1..._.i1 lo.lomNI J.Cl'l'W tCtN9trl l.,,..1114 ICM11w•I CtClt_.IC CUllNll'I ... -.... .., ,.,...,, Orvlllt"1W'1on IAllllOftl Ne'll .... l'l.,.r IT-urel DlkllwllM* IWMCll II• ... ,..., • .,.,_ 1.,. "'<'l""Y, Ont 01 llonut POllll •wllf-., for H Ch 90•' in 1,<oretl "!I to• ,....~,-fl/ u ..... '''" ,,, , .. ,., ... .-me •n ~·•MMCllM ltJ C1!1c9t9 l. C:-.<tlCIA 1. OT IU To'°"401, "°'"''' ... o tn k•1tlu ,Lou.110t1 .. 1 111 '19M-2, Pottt.11410 IHDOI' "l!OUl.A" SIAION AM8,.ICAN IOCClll UAeUI a..wt1D1Ylll• W L T 01' et. ... l'tJ .....,'I'_ It •••• "lOO ,....,.,.._,, 11 ' I ,. IS J2 " ..... a-.11c1 ,,, t n a ao .. c1.,,.1ane1 1 • > " a ti .., C.V.Ctklll • • 2 • Jt ,. "° Bo.ton Baltimore New York Detrolt MUwaukee Cleveland Toronto ~ !! ·.~1 116, F~ Opera'le• ,.,: en, ""' .. , ~ •• &.A, •1 ..,., -,.. LOS "'"'1•1·""·•1~.•tt . .,._ 46 flO .'84 17"'4 ANGELES -Dou• NITI -l'orll•~ ''"' tU; LAS VEGAS-Blll ••-••#•-> .... y· ..... •~r -70 u~ _,.._ France, the ala"''-· off-·tve ~. ttL.. ue: _,cm, t»: .... "...... ,. -·· ··--.--n t kJ , • ~ ..... O"•l•,C111,,..V1~1Hey.011, m Sct\mltt of Rlddlnl U·i •• _.....!\ Cltlll'lno. ~tlf·IH'w Newport Man 5th in Race __.11Dh41N9 S.cr-IS l 4 U t• JI 114 Lft..,..lta IO t • ti 1' II .. C.lllenN S II 2 M 411 '' U Jll·J•"'• lrllr • • • 1J ,, IJ .. Ch!c~o Mlnneaota Kl.l'.Llas City Tex a A•Cela Seattle Oakland Welt Dlvlllon ac •.or the Loi Aftielff Ranu, oou11.•• -,.,11, .... ::t· a.: tended h1i im NASCAR ::::,•~= ,_, '" 88 '4 .389 underwent kaM 1ur1ery Sunday f:rt~~C:;:~~ u.aa. Winaton Welt Grand N•• ,,.,.~""~*' 1tt 65 47 .5IO \.\ and wUI be 1tdeUntd for at leut T1t1~aa -TM"9tM. ''"· n1 ttonal Ch•mptonahl"' ••11ofllt0lc1tl°lf'llll•> 112 •J. 45 575 1..... two monthl, a tHm •PC>k•man ,......., """· t...~· '°· 11 ...._. 1 .. Mt. "•ow tu.mi '" v • Ta aatd. ,iirv.•t.. 11 1 ...... ,, .iervr. po nt lead Saturda7 l'lu&MYIAH'-1 "' : ~! ·~1 1~.L , "~• """' _ 0,,__, C'lfl. •: nl1ht by wlnnlnt tb• ::~=~d> !~ .,. .,.. ... Sialla.,.. .... klll'lll«, ""· •: ~ ..... •1 Wtnatoo-Lu Ve1u 100 ,, ... , .. Mrl\llCflltlill '" 48 84 .429 17~ L1111,..1, ""'· rtr ""'"· c111, ,., 1 t c r a l 1 a 0 a ... ,, • ..,,Wit., ""'"11e> 1n 42 M .a 21'1\ SAN FRANCISCO -Runnlna o~~';:·:U, _,,__.._ ""· Spffdway. M111._,,.....,<c.••uo> '" ..... , .. .._ baclca Sherman Smith and Don ~I ~ Hiii. ·=-LA. iJ~ a ............... I 1-s NI'"" ltACS _ ,,. ,...o. 1 ""r" t'I• ......, _._.._ "<ti ¥1( hrY ..... "'..,. ... ..,_ .... NCf\ ............. -..1111111, .. -. •·S.fli• ......... dh ... ; ... tumt l$Mlllled te 11110 S.1111 ••rwlfl111911 Cr#lt i.r I f-0 VICI ..... ""*'f'•MMrMI Let,......t, ..._ '""'"" J,OT , ... ,.. Mttrtllt Nt-l<llM~ .,, Fish Report r-'!!!..~~1i, .... !'.!...._., Testerman each 1cored on one· IMNM.'-'·"'o" ,ao,aa -.iu•11M• """ "'• "' .. , _...... Oellfllno ea111o11•e<1 -.......... _ __... inth "' ...... ..... ,1TOf1H011o.c1J1t11J-i.~L.A, Chtvrol..., won by Only ~..._011m1119PY1e•uo- M1.,......,, TW••t • f11n11 nma e 10U1 w• qu• ~•to u-t, ..,,, i.s.1 ""~1. °"· ••i; on'-', •.•cond over Jim O•llllfllll 1 ...... 1 in "'"l'OWT CM1'• ....,.._., _ .,. ll-•Otyl.OllC•tO five UM SeatUe Seabawkl a M·M .w . t..u11111\. L.A. tM. .1a. u11 llOblNIGi> cl SvJmar. -•·-W•*'""' <c:aNlot•• •n .,..,.,. " -·-· 1• .. , .. " ~~-.:.~· vtc•-over the San Fran-'--""•••c11, ''"· ...... tu. •·•h , autV 11'1t1e.,,_....tc:.m n• fl'l,K,.,.., i .... 1., t ... 11.,,, "rte* ~ -1 ... ~v c ..... ,, •. f'tll, ...... na ..... , artvln1 a Chev~ H•llfYWttcll IMtlrl '" tad, ............. (.,....... l,.acWl -.... Yw11t,s..tt1t1 49era ln a Natlonal Football c•11m_11N.tw..m ,u11tdWr, s Tli.yOllcMftrr-.1 •n .,--:,....,, ....................... . T ... ,..._... ct " -• .........:. umner lie t1ht of ,... .. ........ ..... "'_. ... c.,1,.,..... <ttv"' ,,. .. IM.,,,..... NI.. LeasueexhlblUon•ameSUnclay. ~.u.-· .. 141 --1.,·"111·•~ Newpen Be&cl\ flnllbed v;"o:"~U:-.:;: !~ :!1::,'i1•_::•=1·'"nw11 ~°".J KenN1Cll'f tltl4!1'lrff .. s•H...,i.rM1.1.i... Sm.Ith. a lecond year player s·u11e10\ln --...."'•u,tn1 flftb, drlvlft• ... 1971 u ... 111..,..11M11e111.,,., '" HNOtlOO<Mlmlk,......,1_, .. o.a...,111w-.11..,u~1.i1•1T-out .6Mt--' otOhJo, ca~ ... "°""",,.·'°'~ ... ., ,.., • Ki.tv¥MO..lltwtll> itt -11~,.. ..... _., .. ,,1,M UI .. UI --.. ,(~""' ,.. ... CIA. <Cb--'et .,. ... ,.,.~.-.............. , ........ , _,...,.,... 1.4!0 ........ lJ ""'"" ~-~"-~~~~·~ M~~.~~~~"~ •••~~·~~~·~'~-~·p~~·~·~~~,~~~~·~~~~~--·~~~--~·~-~·---~''-'~~~.fl~-~~~"~-~--­w~:.,.... c~ ,.., "°'''*' 1er.....,., yard plunae wltb 7 :~ left 1ri die >-4~.~ ... , .. CNC.,.,..,,...., ... ,,. ••m• to &lve tbe MahawR a 11 27•24lead. I °"''...-~" Testerman. aJao • 1econd-year ,..1._...11:::.,•::;:~ player from Clem1on1 acor9Cl ••~ .. ,.,...._.... from OM yard out with 1:10,.. =c;l,=:.,"':'1·" malnl.ni at the end of an et1bt· Oii''"'""~" play. 48-yard drive. MAIMAOUKI by Ired Altdl IOOMER PEANUTS by Qlrtes M. SCllulz 8·8 .. , . MISS PEACH by~· ' . ·. t '"Wouldn•t It be easter to juat aend him through • car wesh ?" .,,. .. ' 1.. .... ""· .. t , I I • ' •' '• '•, I , , , • ' [jjJ : :: . . • ,,11 •• 11 '·· "4nc. "9M.wt°. f "6 ~ t ••• , '., , •• , I • .... f FUNKY WINKER BEAN ~ OM\JN6 ME~E I ~mNOWHATI& ~A 8ANO CJltP WMERE A l..OCAL. H16M ~HOOL BAND I!> 6€1'0N& READ;> ~ lHE COMIN6 '-X:.AA I TANK McNAMARA MOON MULLINS r>::=:~:::::::::-/you NEED~ Do<5 TO f:)(E~C/SE1 NEIGHBOR. ~ IH;\T1S 4JT·· TH' ONl.Y Pe we GOT IS -~MM T'IDAT'I ClilSlllD PVllL GORDO by Tom Batiuk lt.l FACT Ar LEAf>T • MALF A ~ Kl06 I~ ~BAND HAVE ~NOW! by Jeff Millar and Btu Hinds DOOLEY'S WORLD DR.SMOCK W#AT A AIASTV :3WIT.:.H' • I ~SAYSI SUQULO sruoY LAW- ' NI NCM WAUTS ME . I 10 BE A DOCTOR . i ) A VIRUS IS 5 1.M .PL.-Y A PA.I SY CHALN OF Mr:£AN" ~E!RMS , ~~--....... - by Gus Arriola NOW j:'K...,OW HOW~~L..OS"r HIS 1"9 HING POS A~ HAf!'VA~P M.8p.1 by George Lemont THE GIRLS 1177 I Cypriot Student Fights ~os Fi H · R · ti.i. ... _ &Died i or 'f;8 lglf,f,lf NICOSIA, Cyprua • ,.,_ u .,._, <AP> -Arcbbtthop U 9'S1t1 taw ltadtat ftltd •federal ~p~a1'7i~~r 8!1 .,.._ ol ~to ~rtbble com· Cyprue' Otells majority. emre&ooee ln wlakb M malla hi• wu burled ln a moun-'""l'IJ paya toJ>ukePowiii'Co. talntop tomb today after ............ ol BllU.aMlr't.; Md., fll.U Ul bl1 body WH borne •""'U.S. AUi. &.•. •aen aDd Durbam throuah the atreeta of :9!Cldll••,..._ C••••1r. Nlcotfa In an emotional ~D NJd be wr<U U.. com ts OD hl• funeral proceNlon. .,. upreu eoana lot U4 aoourqe Tens Of thouaaodJ of .-.illlie wa ... o1 • • · ~•. unJun and Greek "'"'prlot.a many * ss.clt IU'UctW9 ol Duk• Power Co • • ~3 • u--..&A..._ .. ad•-..e•-~••-·-· .. --~•-b weepln1, lined tho ... ~-....... -.~Wllllpr-..~•• n atreetatovtewthecoltln med a compl t qalmt him a:nd be was carrted on a Jeep-drawn :•N:lir.-.t wtth erimlo~ prcHCUtlon under a law iun carrlace. After . ft11_......,proldbffaobscenlti4!'onmailed ltem1. church services, bis body wu driven to Her lea clllt dearly villble, acveu Mary Kykko mon t....., bilh ua. dwed tJte Cbarlestoa a:nd .-Ummled Jt.a1t as 1n the Trood: ;~taln the acript called for in her flnt range 80 miles from appearance in • play in eilht Nicosia. It wu placed tn years. an earth-covered stone Mus Martin, the Peter Pan tomb, resemblinl an an- w ho flew acrou television cient burial mound. 1creens two decades ago, opened Makarios was preai- • I TIM HOGAN STEERS HUMMINGBIRD TO SANTANA·20 WIN Fleet Round• Weeth., Merk In 8plrtted Bettle w ltb AaUaoay Qaayle in ----·------ Nuhvllle ln the play "Do You l ) N ' B Turn Someruults?" -two IN SHORT ·~•4''POrt s 0 1u.an ru1bu after she tore a ligament -. ~Ml. e ' In rebeanal. dent of Cyprua almost There was no effort to hide w lthout Interruption Sa Cha • e Q.year-old performer's ankle·to-tbigh cast as since the e a·s tern ntana mp.•on 1$be acooted across the multi-level stage. But she Mediterranean island . ., ,_,aa unable to perform the called-for backwards won Independence from tomersault Britain in 1960. He died • of a heart attack last • • Johnny Brau, whose 99-year sentence for rape Wednesday at the aae of Vt'U commuted by then-Tennessee Gov. Fruk Cle· 63. ,.mt alter be wrote the hit song, "Just Wa.lkln& in Bollef) Deltued the Rain," may be free aaain soon following a ahopllft.ing conviction. NEW YORK CAP) And Bragg, SS, who formed the "Priaonaires.·· Police defused a bomb ll singing group, at the Tennessee State Prison round today in a midtown !f}ule Clement was aovemor, may be a gospel re-Manhattan office build· FOrd1ng artist. ing occupied by the "I think Johnny ,.--------] Amax Corp. next door to Bragg h as suffered ( Radio City Mmic Hall. enough,•· said Charles PEOPLE Police said no injuries Traughber, u member of _ . ed the state parole board, were report as several which voted not to revoke sticks of dynamite were removed. Last week, the the commutation despite the conviction. building at l270 Sixth He noted that Bragii's wlle died two weeks ago Ave. was one of several following a three-year Illness. downtown s tructures · * mentioned in a Television star Lee Majora, featured in the pro-telephoned threat when gram "Six Million De>Uar Man," donned a reil bombs exploded In other astronaut suit for a new episode buildings in the city. being filmed at the Kennedy SpaceCenter. 'Biltz' l'e>teed Majors and Jenny Agutter were wearing the s pace suits BELFAST, Northern during filming of a t.wo-segment Ireland CAP> -Security installment entitled "Enemies chiefs braced today lor in Space... what Irish Republican • Majors wore the Skylab Army ORA) guerrillas I I have pledged to make a I tra n ng suit. Jack Loasm•, .. Jubilee blitz lo re· one of the lar1est aatronauts and member" when Queen a crewmember on the second Elizabeth II visita this Skylab mission. troubled province When "Tobacco Roa'' opened oo Broadway In Wednesday for the first 1933, EnJdne Caldwell skipped opea.ina night. lime In llyears. "I decided It wouldn't last IRA supporters said more than the first night and I about 30 Roman Catholic didn't want to be there for the milltant.a were detained funeral," said the author of the lo a weekend sweep by novel on which the play was security forces in prep- based. "So I waited until the aration for the queen's second night." controversial two-day The play ran for 7~ years on lour, part of official Broadway --a record for Its Silver Jubilee celebra- ttme. And Caldwell said In an ln· lions marklng the 25th tervlew that It now plays yearolherrelJn. somewhere ln the country about Platte. Grounded !IO weeks of every year. CAl.0'¥•1.1. OTTAWA, Canada CAP> -Virtually all commercial night.a lnlo and out of Canadian airport.a were •rounded today by an ajr traffic controllers strike called to press demands for a 12.6 percent pay increase In defiance of ionrn- ment antt-lnflatlon wa1e guidelines. The eovernment dls· patched military aircraft today to brtn1 members of parliament back to Ottawa from summer receaa. They are scheduled to meet Tuesday to debate leglsla\Jon that. would or- der the 1overnment· employed cootrollen back to WOfk. Pftotie "Vote Due W ASHJNGTON (AP> -Some 100 .000 telephone workef9 are Tim Hogan of the Newport Harbor Yadtt Club became the first national champion of the Santana·20 Class Sunday wben he out.cored 32 rivals competing for the title out of the Balboa Yacht Club. The five-race series was sailed in the ocean off the Santa Ana River Jetty Friday, Saturday a nd Sunday in winds that averaged 8to10 knots. At the association meeting Saturday night at the Balboa Yacht Club Ralph Winlrode of BYC waa elected president of the newly formed national group succeedln1 Jim Tyler, BYC. Hogan, at the helm of Uum- mlnablrd, acOC'ed 21 pointa to 23 for nmner-up Kas Kastner of the South Coast Corinthian Y-~bt Club, ln Alaluln. Third was Alan Field, WlndJammera Yacbtetub, sailing White Ponco with 2'7'h point.a. Fourth place went to Jim Tyler and Mark Hughes, co-skippers oC Sanbagger, BYC, and fifth was Cordon Bleu, sailed by Jeff Allen. BYC. Two Cats Leading In 'Little Cup' Race Two solid wing C Class catamarans dominated the first two days of match racing to select the defender for the Little America's CUp at Cabrlllo Beach Yacht Club Saturday and Sun· day. Patient Lady III owned by Tony Di Mau.rio of Roton Point, Conn .. won all of her three matches, includlne one against her solid wlng rival Coyote JV, sailed by Jim Hansen, San Fran· cisco. Coyote IV holds a record of 2·1. Hawk. a new soft wing C Cat sailed by Rick Taylor, Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club, also won all three of her Initial matches. The elimination series among eight contenders for the defense rote continues through next Fri· day with the winner to be an· nounced on Saturday. The wltl· n e r will sail against the Australian challenger for the In· ternational C Class Cat.amaran Trophy, known as the Little America's Cup starting Aug. 20 off Los Angeles Harbor. Saturday'• Bacea FIRST RACE -1, Patient Lady Ill, defeated Aquarius V, Bruce Harvey; Co1ote JV, de· teated Taina III, Lee Griswold~· Hawk defeated Aquariua IV, Robbie Harvey; Defiance. de· feated Super Duck ; Tsun•mi and Delta 88 both disqualified. SECOND RACE -Aquarius V defeated Coyote IV; Patient Lady Ill defeated Taku· Ill. Aquarius IV defeated Defiant; Hawk dereated Delta 88. 8UD.day'1 Races FIRST RACE -Coyote IV de- feated Aquarius V; PaUent Lady III defeated Aquarius IV; Hawk defeat~ Taku III; Delta 88 de· feated Blue Fly. SECOND RACE -1. Aquarius V defeated Aquarius IV: Patient Lady Ill deteated Coyote IV: Blue Fly defeated Taku III ; Hawk deleate4 Delt•l8 The United State• Yaabt Rae· tng Unl<>n has announced that the U.S. Naval Academy at An· napolis, Md., has been selected as the site of this ye-r's Cham· pion of Champions Re1att.a -the "kllli or the ma\lntain of one- dealgn sailors." The C ol C re1att.a ta t)\e ope Portunlty for all naUOQal 'cham· c . are 41 1klppen aeekina ~erican tlUe In the Oldest on4Mleatan aalliq ••cl~ 22~.foot atar is al.lo 11.x cluaes comoetiH q!KUl.U .. olymplea. Everett or the host club winner of a tune-up held :ion Bay Sunday. Qualify. will be held today and y after which the 25-boat ll be divided into the onahip filght and the Fred Trophy consolation nl1eht. ty-elsbt boats in seven cl turned out Sunday ln Udo Isle acbtClub's Au1ust Reeatta for all boats saUlng inside the bar . Summary of results: L ·1' A <14) -1, John Th ne, BYC; 2, Rowland Lo an, BYC; 3, Dudley ifu BYC; 4, Chris Raab, L 0 ·148 02) · l , Roy W y, LJYC : 2, Don Palm· qui LIYC; 3, Bob Mindte, LI ; 4, Bruce Crary, NHYC. L ER A (7) -1, Bill Buck ing • NBYC; 2, John Doyle, LI J, Moraan pio ln one-deaian sailing cl to compete against each oth on the same course ln iden· tic au. 0..... N'tUI rtcnnou••~••u NAMalTAT ..... f ""'" ....... .-....... ..... -••: . ANDV"I •u•o••t.. '°" w.sc laUr, Olillle .... c:.11 ..... t .. W61W J. ~ ._,,. ~ MMclet,IM~CM ....... ttlll l.UCUle M. ~·Ult C-llllt. M¥clat,..,.oi..,c:.i11Wi161t1t11 lll11 ----·· ,~ ... w .... . Inc..,-... -~ ....... . P«lnen1>1-. W..WJ.Jac- Tl\11 ... ~ -ffW ... tlw ~°f.~~ oen ot Ot--.~-,,..~ ...0,IQIOM.U. ISCAO# lll"'ICH 111M ........ MIM.- ,_1'"4•V.....,,CAt21W It<,__ .. ~, l'vDll.,..,. 0r._ CMll 0.11, "'~ Ju1os • ..,.~ 1,1, is.1t11 n4S-IT PlJBUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE c..~ ~ICllTIOUS IUSINaN NAMllTATIMUT Tiie foflow1"9 persont •• doi"9 ~•· nenea: THI! ICINGS INN, 720 ~pll. Cot1•Mtu, Gfllloml• •»• TilornM Ourltu, '°2 lllfMI W•y, A,,_Mlrn, CMlfOl'nla tMOS 0.Nk• Ouf'llUI, '°2 S.rM! Way, A,..Mlrn, c.lllorn••'2tOS Tiii& llu1lnen ., COftdveted by • •ne••I P9rtM~P n.orn. °"'"' tM Chtl\llla Ovr1 ... lll11 \191-W<tl llled Wfl" lfle Countv Cieri& ol OrellQll Coolnll' on J11lt n, ttn e11ov111 asc•ow eott~11•no.. 1*11 ............. Twttltl,CA.tHlt •ac,_...,~1m .. o ~Mt ~lllled Or919 Cotti o.11., ... ~ 4uQ&lll I. a. u. n. "" PUBLIC NOTICE ... .. . . ------------------~~~-::-:---------:";a "" Mo!?d!r,Aupu.tl, 1117 DAILY PlLOT •• They're GIVlng the Ew111nys ~er A·11 COAST PLAZA ,. ..... MJ1Jll ...... ""THIDllP'9'cNt DA& Y-7:»-~41 5.AT/5Ut'-l:JO.J:ll 5:4'4:00 ...... .._ ............ A different kind of ... -Wo hate to Hdden ••ard·lhow haten. but It tbert really wlll be • 21th annual Emmy 1wanb ahow for ev nm, pro1tams after all -on NBC'• "Bla Event" next s.t.11. ~-11 r Ill W. M · edo rallJ ODff wu Ht for 1117 U, but fell apart ...... TOOPArCNt "FOi THI LOVE Of l&Ut" IGJ A "15UHD OF Dl. MOllA V "OtlCA THI ICIUB WHALI" IPG I SOUTH COAST PLAZA 546-2711 634--2553 639-7160 534-6212 nJ.OS46 CINEDOMI STADIUM DllVl-IN Hf.WAY 39 DllV ... IN UA. WISTMIMS'tll r•~t4..,,; ..... ._ __________________________ _ amld feudlDI by t.be New York and Loi AD~tl chapten ot the Na _,i Academy ot Tel~llkift Artl and Selene•. .,,_ cm two 1~1i. to... aDcl for deslcnln1 ceedlnp, a raUn&s hit Emmy trtbll. TM MW tbt acen~ ol the "Billy lut January, swept last Academy ot Ttl..Won th• Kld' episode of week'• oom.lnatl8Pa.1et· Arta 8Dcl ldee. here 0 Am er l can Ba 11 et Ung 37 for indivi)ual and sot tultod1 o1 all even· Thuter." collecUveettort. Ina Bmm1l1la1. Tb• The sweep was ao • Gotham· 1aa1 1ot. IJIOl1LDHEaobome cleanfour "Roota"tb•· da"1GM U4 lporU to wtu.out an E111my. you plus were nominated ID ...rut. .. ~. may apect tht aun to tbt cateaory ... OUtatand· · TM feud tot IO bad that T1/ it.art b re d• f tct.ld fl'Om tilt lhow by tilt ..,,... Tba ralted Ute arave proapeot that IJmOlt no one lD DJtht.- tlmt TV would set u bmy award um )'tar. Vntblnkablt. AT/.& II tM evtnlnc ii.It In the Wt1~ And It la tn1 Lead Actor for a . abift ta called, llntd lta a 1111 ·bet aoyone even Smale Apepvanc• in a roatw of asomlDatlona remotely conn.ct.ct to Drama or Oo1ne4r L:::;:;:::=::::=;::=:~:::;::;~~~~:;::= J11t. weu. Tll• rotter ABO'• ''Roota" wW att a Serles." Noone hm any .. wu tmprelll••· It wu 1tatuettttotalcebom.. otber abow quallfi•d·· 10 IN 1l1LY tbtr monthanaQUartet·lncb That e11ht-part pro· here. tblck and wtt1h.ct 11 :;:::========:::::======~ ouncea. It contalntd 68 oateaoriet of nomlna· Uon1, compared to a panlnomloUa 11 for last 1Aprll'1 rou1lng "Televtal• Critlct' Cir· cle A..,. .. f..Uv'1 °" CBS •. ATAS dota aot .... ~ l'Oll'ftINATBLY, OD• lr tbe aa*" cateaori .. -•cttns. wrltlq. dlrect· lat aa4 lbow1ns up for lalt )'tar'I amlll)'I - will be ...,.,.ced OD the •• TM l'Olttl' also abowtd aN um•· eUstble for _,,_.,, TIE llD ...... 1EAll llllR am•YEMllUB .......... The Eyeoftbe Em11171. Tbl1 doean't ·mean 194 folkl were nomlnattd, tbou1h . ..,_ __ MaQ1 cont.Qden were nominated for men than one abow or ln more than a Titer e .................... ..... __ ....... ................ one tat.cor>'. · For e~ample1 publlc TV'a Jao Venaa 11 a flv• count ccnttader u ex· eeuUve producer ot lour eftort1 from .. Tbe Adam.a Cbroniclet" to "Arthur Rubenatein at .. JAUNTY !' . ._.., .............. ....., ... .. FUN· ............................... L . ..., ....................... ,....,. -... _.......... -............ ,.... ... ,_....,._ Appearing ..................... 11£ BAD NEWS BEARS IN BREAKING TRAHNG ...... •ettr ... '"""' ~II ~ ... -. .............. ....... ..... ::. .............. w .... .................... .,, .... .... .,.....,., 1111''''"'' ~$ii ~Al I I I I 1, .,1 '• '"'* ....... ,._..~ ONI ON ONt 1M1 "THE SPY WHO LOVED ME" (PG) "ANNIE HALL' (PG) "YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN .. "ONE ON ONE" (PG) "SMOKEY & THE BANDIT" "MOONSHINE COUNTY EXPRESS" (PG) "THE LAST REMAKE OF BEAU GESTE" "BITE THE BULLET" (PG) "ANNIE HALL" "YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN" (PG) "THE SPY WHO LOVED ME" "VIGILANTE FORCE" (PG) 'OTHER SIDE OF MIDNIGHT" "EXORCIST lt:THE HERETIC" (R) " . At recording session at a Song Writers' Guild member's home, Alice Maenza (center) adjusts volume as Vickie Blair. , Bob Simmons record. om posers ·'Guilded' By DEN llcLELLAN °' .. ...., .......... 'n)e handful of men in the record producers' office in .Hollywood hstened intenUy to the sonas on the tape brought In by •a friend ol the soo1writer. I Fascinated with the sin&er's voice. which they classified as a lcross between Joan Baez and Janis Ian, the men played the ta'pe. J over and over. . Across the street In a restaurant, Vickie Blair, an aubum- hatred 28-year-old, sat nervously waiting for the verdict: It was 1 • her voice and her songs that were belnl acruUnlzed by the men In f ·the office. · "They ended up liking the voice more than the songs " says ,·'tMrs. Blair, who works three nighu a week as a bartender in a le Fountain Valley beer and wine cafe. <She also sings when not dis· penslng thesuds.) 1 Altbou&h she was out to sell her songs, the Garden Grove re· I sldent certainly doesn't feel bad that It was her voice and not her tunes that made a hit. Four days after the restaurant scene -"I wasn't goin1 to sit there and listen to those auys Ustenina to the tape" -she met with the producers. who wined her and dined her. 1 THERE HA VE BEEN numerous phone calls from U>e music executives In the interim. • And although nothing definite has been decided on either her singlna or her songwrllina. the mere fact that producers ire In· terested ls a dream come true for the woman who bouabt bet lint guitar al a swap meet. Vickie Blair no doubt Is the talk of the Song Writers· G\dld. an Orange County group that meeu once a month to share ~rma· lion and contacts and to review members' material, It was at eulld president Allee Ma~Dd'I house tba Mn Blair -backed up by Huntington Beach guitarist Bob Slnynoni. recorded the four-track tape played for the producers. "Through the Song Writers• Guild I've gotten more dd than I have In the last lOyears," says Mrs. Blair. "Everybodyisttereto 1 help everybody else. It's like one bldamUy." , The Idea for having a group or songwritera 1et tofether began with Mrs. Maenza's mother. Doris Walker, wbp.atatted a small group In Massachusetu In the 19SOs and one in Qrange County In the early '60s. . MRS. MAENZA ATfENDED only occasionally. But it "'u at one workshop meeting that she discovered how much she could . learn by associating with other writers. There are many 1<>ngwriters around, she says, but most don't know anyone else who writes. ., \ "Unless you associate with other writers," she notes, "it's frustrating. You feel like an outcast." It was her "bralnatorm" to form the 1ulld, which held l first 1 monthly meeUna ln a Huntin&ton Beach restaurant last J uary. • Five members were present (two were Mn. Maem~ her •mot.her). • There now are 22 members and people continue to anqulre as word spreads. (Further Information ls available by callina Mrs Philip Bellefeuille, 893·4624. > The a&e span of members IO tar ran1es from an 111-year-old to an 80--year-old. Writlng styles span everythlna from aospel to hard rock. "Some' members are profenional musicians, says Mrs Mae~. "And we have some super amateur writers What la 1reat Ls that the musicians help the amateurs IN PACT. ALL the membera contnbute. They share tips on makln« demonstration tapes and wrlUn1 lead aheeta. One )VOman went to Universal Studlos and returned wttb the name of a con• tact who will llsteb to o'r1amal materlal. Other members are available as mualclan1or11 vocallJU for for thosewriws with bad pipes. The hiahliaht of each meetin& as when the members new songs are rated by the group. The \apes are judaed on words. music and commercial potenUal and then they are crltlqued "It's aood to get teed back because when you play somethlna for your famUr, they all think you're areal because you've creat· ed som«hlna. •says Mrs. Maenza. "You learn from everybody's experlenctt " The guild Is assembling a library of members' aonp. which will be available to musicians, publishers and producers aeekln1 orl&lnal material. <Tbe Guild, however. does not act as an a1ent l TRlt Gaotl• ALSO recently held it.a ftnt 1on1 compet.lUon. which wuJud1ed by a Golden West Collete music clasa New member Bob Shrunons, who plays in the rock 1roup , Zap, won ftnt place. He also t.led fot a~d with Bob Gay. also a Zap member. BEA. ANDERSON, Editor Monday, August a. 19n C1 ' • I "It really felt good," says Simmons, 24, wbo didn't start writ· Ing until two years aao. "It was the first Ume l actually won • anything." Simmons also is thinking of aendina a tape of country- westerh songs to Nashvllle. Selling a sona is really what lt'1 all abo\lt. Mrs. Maenza, referrlna to Mrs. Blair's cbancet. says: "I think It's super excltlna. I think I 1et more of a cbar1e)Mat of that than lflt'soneof my songs." Mrs. Maenza had somewhat of a similar cbar1e recently . Just as she caught the aongwritinl bul from her mother. so ap- parently has ber7-year-o1Gdauahter Lorraine. "'She wrote her ftnt soni.·· reports Mra. MHDJa with a la up. "And she's not at all satlifled-tfith lt. She k-rewrt..i .... lt." --....... Space Veh~ole ~eparting fo~ Lackey By CHERYL ROMO Of"" Delly "*' l\eft How does Bia Ear Intend to ac- complish all this wllh the little earthllnp? "We plan to focus on explorln• the apace within each person; the inner apace. In addition to all normal camp acUvttlea, we will have a lot of tlme ror int.rospec· ~on," says Fournier. DESIGNED FOR 50 young people, the camp's 15 pro· fesslonaJ mentors (counselors> will practlce their llstenlnl akllls and bipeds w1ll be encourated to expand their own self worth, whlle learning to respect the point of view and value of others. Bil Ear ref era to one who hu mastered b1s or ber own dreams as an "Olympic Person•• and youna people wilt be encoura•ed to try to attain thelr own ldeall. kids say. 'I want to be an out- at.andina person.' ••Almost everyone ln their life baa a hero; but lt'• 1ettln1 harder and harder to find such a penon. It is important that a child have an ideal or idea that ls reachable.'' He adds, in a camp as small 11 Space Trek, with a tar1e staff ol counselors, each chlld wW have an opportunity to explore with other alcnlflcant adultl who have been IUCceslful. '"l11rou1h role modellne with lndlvtduala and learnine from ex· perlence. we plan to chall~e personal attitudes and help youne folks look at the lnntr apace ln themselves,•• '8YI Fournier. • A 2"!-y f'tl.OT Hang-up Tr::arismitted (Ann L~nders • l>US WYi No. J&•1 t.a0a __,.. •IMa a U.,,. ue ta~etl byanother~.1'1len pref •doltal ra1ta& &rt .. to ce& ...,... ... tO • are two t.YPel -Herpee SlmpleJC l ll lllP.POMd to ... wM .. .......,. ... ...,." eo..1111 ,,_ a "11• ocC!UI' 0 1b0v• tJt. navel." and Herpes Slnaplea II, <•• ua r o&Mr-ID·l&• t• • •'belowthet\avet.•• 7Hn) 1'.wJdbereJed,eclud,..'dj ..... • Howt\'er • ...ttb tbe tlltlnl of vuto eeM la •"'ber ft#IU. • belnl pr&Ctle-4 10 IHely by iome people, elther ~ .; type may occur ~•bert OG tbe hldivtd\aal. J>EAR~NN LANDERS: Tbfs lett.r 11 for. 7berelore, a »tt1on With actlve fever 94UD1Uff m Alpena" beeauH your reply wu lo· blister. on tb• Ups ta conaldered tntectloa at co plu and 1omewhat m.lsle~inl. "UntUre'' leut until the bUalep are dtltd ~ r?ffl off, and ud othert abould be aware thit. wlth th• ln• that Del'IOa. atio\lld tefralD flom ~ l>ec&\IH. c: ... ue of oral 1txua1 acUvtty any dJJcusslon thevlrwtm11be•pre1dtotnendsandre11U~es. at;M>Ut Id.Nini 1hou1d include the anawtl'I to thae -Lel&ll• Nl~hol~•· JID, Prealdent·Eleet, four qu.Uon1: (1) Whom are yoq ldl•lnl? <2> AmerkanVDAQocJ~ How are you ttalnft (3) Wh•t an>'°" ldJllnaT • ~ .u. • •-~ (t) Where are you kluln11 DEA.a DB. NICKO.-.: ftult )'OU -Joel' In the act of entbualutlc 1daalni. enouch Jetter. It'• aoilll &o c1Dwa cm a lol ol *111 cellJ Of the auperflclal layen Of the Ups may be for a ...... ._, &bite. abraded u to permit th• aypbllil 1erm1 to enter WITHOUT an obvtoo. cracked or cut Up.. Oonorrttea ium• can lodge lo tbe tonal\I and PbU11'X-'lbese 1erm1 may l>e transmitted by d .. pkWlnJ. Wuta are a vlral lnfectlon. When present on th• Upe~ warts can be transferred by klastna to any pan ol the body -not only~· llpt. Got tboH weddlDI bell blues over ccm. ••• l\lfllt ~ ••• wbat to wear ••. a:nd «her detalla? Ann Lanciel's'• eompletely new ''Tbe Brlde'• Gulde" wW bel~,.For a co.PY. •end a clollar bill. plus a ICID.I, MU.addreaed stamped envelope (13 eenta poata1•> &o .un Landen, P .0. Boll~ Chlca,o, lLL eostL Capricorn Tonight's TV Hig~Jights 1t'1'LA 9 8:00-"A Time for Ever). Season. .. Tbls um documentary follows a man and boy explorin1 the Alukan tun· dra. KHJ tJ 8:00 -.. One, Two, Three:· Jame. Cagney's final (and funniest) ruck about llliaadventures ln diplomacy in Berlin. Arlene Francll, Pamela Tlfftn and Horst Buchholz are featured in the 1961 comedy. NBC IJ 9:00 -••The Family Way." Hayley MW.s and 11YWe1 Bennett play )'ouq ~b'weda in this 1981 drama with JohnMUJ.a. . .TV DAILY LOG Dates Selected Betrothals Understand 1 .--· ___ -DAY----1 Thompson-Hailstone Dr. and Mrs. Georl'e Rayrfor Thompson ot San Dleeo have announced the eniacement ol tbelr daughter ~an Elizabeth Thompson. and N. Lance Halla of Newport Beach. A Sept. 10 weddlne ll planned at Christ Lutheran Church, Long Beach. Miu Thompson, a Newport Beach resident, is a graduate of Yorktown Hi&h School. Arliniton Va .. She earned her bachelors degree at Capital University in Columbu.a, Ohio and her masters at California State Univenity Long Beach. Her fiance, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Neal Hailstone of San Bruno, eraduated from Capuchino High School in San Bf'UllO and the. College of San Mateo. ••• Blalock-McCarthv Mr. and Mrs. Homer A. Blalock of Atlanta have announced the entaeement of their daughter, Gwendolyn Carol Blalock. and Richard J . McCarthy. A June 1978 weddlna is planned ln Newport Beach. Mias Blalock 11 a sradoate of Leysin American School ln Swillerland, and Atlanta College of Medical and Dental Assisting. Her fiance. the son of Mn. Barbara J . McCarthy of Fountain Valley and Charles G. M cCartby of Santa Ana, a.ho graduated from Leyslo American School. He now ia a senior at Cal State Fullerton. ••• Wallace-Carr Darlene Annelte Wallace and Thomas Pat.rick Carr, both of Newport Beach, plan to marry next month at the Victor Hugo Inn, Laguna Beach. Their parents are the late Mr. Walter Dittmer, the late Mr. Charles H. Carr and Mrs. Mary Carr of Burbank. Miss Wallace graduated from Long Beach Polytechnic Higb School and UC Irvine and at· lended Orange Coast Collece. Her fiance Is a graduate of North Hollywood High School and Pierce Collete. He also attended California State University at Fullerton. ••• Loe ff ler-Resley Mr. and Mrs. Edmund W. Loeffler oC Peering Around __ _..._~--· Jean Thompaon. N.L. Hall1ton• Gwendolyn Blalock, R. J. McCarthy Newport Beach have announced the engagement of their daughter, Debora Therue Loeffler, and A Han Dean Resley, son of the Lynn Resleye of Alhambra. · A wedding Is beinc planned on Oct. J ln Our Lady Queen of Angels Church, Newport Beach. Mias Loeffler graduated from Alverno mah School, Sierra Madre and attended Pasadena Ct· ty and Orange C.oast colleees. Her flance, a graduate of Alhambra Hlgh. School, also attended PCC. Coupl~s Ce_lebrate Mrs. Sai holda a Fullerton and baa bachelors degree in worked u an interpreter at Loi Anaeles lnteroa· Un l v e rs it y • tlonal Airport. TUESDAY' AUGUST. I I BySYDNEYO""RR ~.--.-... ............. -.._.. A1Ul'.8 <March al-April 19>: Avold arau· mentll. traffic and adreutve relatives. Fix thines at home. Makt lnt.W1ent concesaiona &o loved oaea. Check bud8et. Promote luxury. art ob)ecta. TAV•tJS <Aprtl 20-llay 20>: Hold Uabt to possessions -someone wants somethlnl for nothing. You could be target. Accent realiatlo at· tilude lowards payments, collections. Separate fact from fancy. GEMINI (May 2l·June 20>: You get chance to beein again, to rectlfY past errors, to organJie. to express talent, capablliUes -and love. Hlghl11ht personality -wln your way. CANCER (June 21-July 22>: Past twirls forward -now ta no time to hide, obacure fac\a or attempt lo bend truth. Face facts as they au -let 10 of fears. You &ain as result ot ''private conference." LEO CJuly 23·Aug. 22>: Highlight lndepen· dence ol thoucht, action. Be receptive to aftee· Uon. love. You can make some wishes come true. Key la to be confident -and to let y~elf be happy. · • VIRGO (Aue. 23·Sept. 22>: You get action In connection with goals, careei:, ambit.ions, ability to make room for yourself at top. You cUmb above details, red tape -you gain overall view. LIBllA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22>: Travel la accent· ed. You're able to broaden experlence, to socialize, to make new contacta -and lo enjoy some irourmet dishes. SCORPIO COct. 23-Nov. 21): Be thorough where finances are concerned --count your change. Young peraon could display "streak of extravagance." Stand your 1round. Get ap· praisal -determlne basic values. SAGl1TAJUUS (Nov. 22·Dec. 21>: You're resUesa, but you require patience to put ftnlahlnc touches en creaUve e!fort. Le&al complications will be straleht.ened out -amooth going If you are analytical. CAPRICORN CDec. 22·Jan. 19>: Yes, the home or family situation harmoni1es, Emphasis on service, work , concessions made by relatives. Understanding could replace friction. AQUABJUS <Jan. 20-Feb. 181 : Romance, ii· lusioo, luxury, enjoyment ol material •OOdl - these are •pollighted. Young person aHkt counsel. Th• more you 11tve, the a:lOre you will M Uk ely to rec et ve. PISCF.S (Feb. 19·March 201: You imprint style, meanlnt -you're given more authority, opportunity to put your ideas, metbodl, pro-· cedures lnlo operation. Older person wan(a to help. . . I. ,.ltOJKTTIT\.• tl'Ult..cae LOCATION· IST1 Mill'ffO c::oa T: LOCATION: HTIMi'TaC>COllT. s.~cnnu "'"lllOlll! . .,.., ... "' .. _ .... -.. _...,..(,.,. .............. .-n111111M1,. "'4 .. 'l'tM °'"' Cll'ltl~,,.. MS.• 14 c.O.C.:dl..-st.n•.......--.-11.--.-.i.- c.o. """"-(lty .. ~Mela Ql-IMl~ClWt ... ''""°"'*•'-City.., ..... ..... ttfVIClllS__, .. ....._. ... ......... "'',.~-"' (lly .. Qllte ... 01• PVBUC NOTICE ~ ""'*"' ~M:YtTIOUSaulf .... N.._ITATIIMI~ • TM ... .._....,__clol"' ...,._ MUM: • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y ~·· t •• tlttf Clll All real atate lldve.rtlMd bl till .-.-per is 1ub-Ject to 0. hderal Fair 'lloual•I Act of 1968 wbicb mat. it UJeaal to ad•ertlae ••any pre· fenmce. llmitatiod, or cblcrimbi,atlon baaed 00 ~. -· ... --, c ... -... TH[ REAL •. ••.; '. ESTATE RS . nc:.:=c reUPm. au. at ariein. or an HOME + lateDdoa to make any ACb pnCerace. llmita- tm.ardilatmlD&Uoo.•• ~===~1 BUSINESS 1lds oewapaper will not ·--------•I Lar1e automotiv• lmowlnlly accept any i•r•a• Joeat•d ori acJvert£alna for real OCEANROH'f Newport Blvd. + re. eute wblch •in viola-ftlPLIX aldence 1n tho reu. c.a donolthelaw. Two a.bdrm., 2 bath unJU lot. ez~ OW1*' mQ MDIMtfors.le &one2-bdrm.,1batb +a belpllnuce.PllUpdee .. ••••••••••-••-••••• guest. Xlnt looatlon; $135,000. •-•·----~~!~ ~~~~1qmmer a;a;;NM"IMEIL UESAD&MAR Laree 4 bedroom wttb eeclllded master suite aeparat ed from tbe cblldrem area ol this spacious home. Tbis ooe !~~~~~~~~ baa It all. Gourmet l•--------kltchen & adJolnina famlly room. Electric prqe opener. double Oftll & built·ios. Brick Dreplace • its all over· looklnl Costa Mesa's tarc.-t park. ss•,ooo. CALLW.31180. C::.SELECT T'PROPERTI ES MISA VllDI FOR UHDEI SI0.000 ~~!J~r~lds to see this apack>wl 5 bednom bome. Thia poot home includes: formal dininc. double aar•ae with workshop area. Call ~ COATS&WALLACE •TRI-Pl.EXES *FOUR-Pl.EXES Available. Sun s~t Helibta aDd downtown Hmmcton Beach. Good tax abdters & apprecaa· tloo. PrlMcl fro m $1..85,000 and up. Call for details. 3 Bdrm•, famlly room REAL ESTATE . INC. P wtth bonus ts yours on a quiet cul-de-sac. See the 1011 course from your I•--------• REA'-TYINC. 7 141146-1371 front door wtth the value M I and Investment of one of VETlllA Costa Meaa•s finest HOUSIHGSERVICE ereaa. Yours for just Call your local Veteran caJllnJC us. 546-2313 Counselor for Info. on VA L 1-i iiil 1~l><>~::'~r·~':S~~m~ea~1·~1~~· ~H~RS~~ 0 -Reduced $11,550. IACK IA Y Newport Hei1trts atta. 2 FIXER UPPER Bedrm on l arae cul·de- T $70,ooo iJAC R·2 lot Room for trailer or boaL l&t.850 N~ac prestlatou.s Back a~IANmMEll a., area. 3 Bedroom, l atory, need• p~lnt , creative landpcaplna. tile, panelln1. minor re· pein • 11£. Hurry take c ~.d~~ag;E::nd call • P.OLTOP.Sft L A s s I F I E D T1REOOF MIWPORT PRICH? Try bt(l Mesa Verde. WOndertul fmly home on quiet tree shaded at. • spacious bdrma & fmly rm. Xtra wide lot VI /rm for your boat. Only Sl.2t.OOO ! 545-9491 ~ W•tlkm l~ lee Real Es&.ai. SS ' a AMXIOUS LEAVING STATE Lvl)t Sandpomte home oa hlC• lot 1/1/tm ror pool tr boat « cam,per cceas. i bdrml, 2 bat.bl 4' abake roof. Oo Clal-de·sac " near par Ir. Only rn ,9501 ~9'91 ~ Walkm i; ltrn DUPUX 2 BR + 1 BR. Good fn· come wlnter/1ummer. awpa to beach. Just re· duced. Owner anxloui.. VAi.UY •40.9900 OCEAMVllW AU.OVER Newport Creet la the area watb 4 bdrms. beautlfull1 uparaded with sreat reatu,.. Ttu.s :dnt value bu an ocean view rrom 3 rooms and wait UU you aee tbe up- ,,..... Hurry! ~%113 Ol'f~ 111 9." s '"" 10• Hll f. fBINI OCEAN .. ... 1 Block, del,aue duplex; 3 BR, 2 ba. ea. Clou to stores & Lido Vt11a1e. Reduced to $1..87,950 ....... ,,rop. It ........ • 675.7060 LAHDLAMD •J Parcels. R·2 lot. Desert. Hot Sprin1s. moo. •R·l, Lake Arrowhead, vtew. m.ooo. •100 Acres. ea.ur. Cit>. Sl200acre. Ml-~77 I • • • it. tt , l QlY MUCH IHCJDCU Ji JUJt Jl1ted I 9200 1q. ft. lot with d•llcbUul pool. blt-of·a-vltw, ' btldtooml and a bttauutuJJy remodtltd kitchen. Maybci you've bMn waJttna for thls? 'nMt 4th tMdroom la IUJ'*r lar1e. with beam1 and a bath. 'lbe. SborecUff1 addrHI lncluct. accna to t~ Jlriv•t• IHfachu and U,. beauWul Jdtc6tm includc=t two ovens (on• a mlcrowav•> and ont! flreplace. A fl.replace in the kitchen lt Vf:!r/ Sbcncli!fa t U,_,l()UI: tiC>Ml:S REAL TORS•, 875-6000 2443 East Coan Hlghwey, Corona del Mar also In Mesa Verde, at 646 6990 Ga•r:ll 1002IG ....... 1002 ....................•.....•.••............. , .. BLUFFS Premlum slnsle level Anita Plan 3 Br 2 Ba. flreflace, sunktm living room. new came carpets thruout, just ~n completely palnttid tnsldt! & out. OfM" Dally tR Sold at; $107,900 432 Vitia S11rt. 645-9950 551-4038 MIWPOIT NIWPOIT MIWPORT Ut«ally at.pa from the poundln1. awf • a very lbart walk to public ten· n.ll courta. a IU'I• bdrm• • a lovtly bat.hi, a areal open 11.ltcbea • klnplxe liv. rm. overlooklnl 1 very Pl'lvate yard • a VER\' aecluded concrete aide SNa!Jo • euy main· teoance yard • private 1tretta lo your double ..,.., •. Wluat more could you Ilk for at low a1klng price of 1115,000. Call 646-7171. Ol'fH 1119 •11HUN1081 Mr• [!111111 TWOHOM!S OMA LOT In a very n1ce retldent1al area. Ea1y tQ keep r~nt ed. or uae one for yourself & the other for molbtr·ln·law. Al full price of 172,500 that'• on lyDS,250eachl 548-7711 ~ Wal km C I r.e .... ,_, 1002 ca ... ,.. I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• llVIMI TlllACI Corona del Mar. Sharp 3 bdrm .• 2 bath home with ocean view. All thls tor 1162.500. Call for private showing, w~ know you'll enjoy this lovely view home! 673-4400 DMslOft of H.tMr lnY"'-' Co. GtMrat I 002 IG•Mral I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• PENINSULA home. 4 Or 5 BR. 8 ba. all amenltl•. Lovely nelJbborbood, a few 1tepa from the beach. 1195.000. PTIIER prestige waterfront homes. From 1115.000 -Up BIL L GRUNDY, REALTOR 1•11 f\uy·.,.J, '" '"' ri 11 1.l'> 61ol Ge1t1r• I 001 ., .. , .. 1002 ..............•.....•.. ~··········· .. ---' OPEN DAILY Harbor View Hill• ex· ecuUve home. Open 1·5 PM. auo ooo. uoo Beacrut, 'Corona dtl Jdar. 640..161 "1n ~rn.11 l~/\111 '( ~. 1V1'1Ul 1/\1 Ir, CDM Cbumer. LcU ot wood. a\alnad aJue. JW lot. SU8MO Al\-..0. CORONA ·-· 4UMITS WESTSIDE EXCELLENT OP PORTUNITYf Ll•• i1 the 3 bedroom, I bath WI It and nm oul the other unlta. Painted tbruout new carpeta many mor feature1. Call to ae owner:1untt. ~. r-c>nr «>T 1 OLSON ·--· HICWHLAMDS 'lbe ldeal comblnalloo ol a new home In an eatabllabed Mltbboctlood, featurtn1 all the laleal appoint· ment1. Overah:ed 1ar .. e. larse rooma, I bath, atep down wel·bar, mlnl oeean view au fully•-------... landlcaped, w;Jktoa dll· t-------· tuc. to private beach. IHlt.Gua•uk Sl.116.000. fM. Nr •• So. Coast Piasa, . CAU644-711 I yrs • .,..,, I br, 1-a.1 11 fam. rm, bltn. e1ec ldtdl. A1r Cond. Hug. OtN'ed pat.lo. Aak •bou oc:e'p)', UPOD JoaD ap proYal. VA appralaal or dln!d.185.000. "1n NIC,l I I ll\11 I 'i •'• l\•111l ll ll\ll 5 CRAWFORD Ir ASSOC. 11111-0101 Ev•-.. G.....-of I 002 Ge....-.1 I 002 Real E1tat1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . ................... , .. , _____ _:__ llG CAMYOH TOWHHOMl-SI 41.000 Lovt!ly "Greenbrit:r" modt!l with Iae master BR suite & sitting rm upstairs & 2nd BR & bath dn. Lge dining rm. LR fireplace with logs. lge patios. great kltcht:n. Comm. pool, jacuzzl & teMis courts. Private art:a. THE REAL ~ COATS& WALLACE Fabulou BurUn1ame Model ln HV Hiiia, apadoua w/ Fam Rm. Formal Dln.lnl Rm, 2 fl>lc'•, bus• bonua rm. ~ri~.:::·!1:~:::~ BUILDER'S THI HST Of REMODELED IRVIMI lta 20 yean old, but you Central h1&ll plan rondo would never know ll. The i\11 one level. Step down kitchen ha• been com· hv. rm with massive plolely re-done with rtreplare. P'ormal din bullt·lns & h1land cook· Ing, lircukC011t rm .. 2 top. The huge family i.epar•te muter s111le11. room haa a beautiful Lariit-r ear yard Cor 1kyll1lht, carpels are aarden• or ucluded lhlrk & now. tho paint Is jocunl. now U llt,500. fresh & the owner has Clll 673·8MO. moved & Is anxloua to C»IN 111•·"\1u1t 1011 N 1 • tell. F\Jll prtce 11 onl)' [ '11 llltl •:££~~~~·;~5 9249 •-11 '1t, 111' ,..;_ lfT~T- THIWIUOWS l IDRM S74,500 Quiet tree llned cul-de 1ac. Goraeoua mantled brick flroplace . Decorator mirrors 2111 S. J~ Hiia Rood HEWPORT CIKTB, M.I. 644-49 I 0 hlghll&hl living room G ol 1 OOZ G Kitchen holll• wall or ..-.r ....,.., I 002 pantry. Tuck ·a -way ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• mast.er suite. ThlJI model ..... 0 DOW.... NAMTUCKIT 102 It excellent •tarter ""' " home value! Call ra11t PAYM!NT llACH ESTATE 1~1100. TO VETS 2 STY -1 IR Ol'fN/1111 •11\•"N•CJ•IN ,. Home1 located In Costa $86,000 ltliJ!' INil'll pi .,.,, """ """"••••• .,.,.. "•"' •• ,,, """ ~ ti ;j I Er: 1~r:r0~Ml~:~1 a'~d er:!~~~ g;:~!r.:f~::: 540 3666 country kitchen. Dlnln1 CONDO ON THI WATER 1125,000 Commanding view oC lhc water, boats, ocean & nl1ht lllhll. Secure & 001wenlent 2 Bdrm Con do home for •dult llvini: Boat allp available • rm. Separate wing for Wftelan NIAL l~l/111 4 BR· S7S,OOO S 1250 + COSTS Great family nel11hborhood. Palo• Verde., !>lone fireplace. secluded gueat suile1. 1weeplng stalr1 to hideaway master suite Ir children's quarton. Hurry! Just listed Won 't lut loni1 ! 963-7M1 oPft11 • 0 . ,, \ lt.J"'I ~' '" f [~U;NI In naturally beautiful HEl\L LS rA TE . INC ESTl\T£RS · ----- ~~ACRE PLUS HORSES '•-------•I a u r r o u n d I n II 1 • Lookln1 for rooro to 1' OwM/t/AI\. By appt on· SRLOUJ 1pread out? Thi• unique MISnEDIM _b';;..·_M_•_a_u_1 ___ _ property hu It uJI. 5 BR, on lar1• cul-dt·1ac lot. ________ 1 pool 4' Jacuul, 11 barn Beautllw 3 bedrm Mosa I MORRO I •y Just I Unllt left f with a bonus room Verde home. Many e~· "' Bedrooma, 1800 aquar above, prof. lndlcpa ._ lru, lncludln1 wet bar, 0,.., Sat/Sun 1•5 feet, wet·bar, pool Iota or lrlr acceaa. In the lae paUO, eocloatd aun· Beautiful up1radtd JacuuU Alklnl m,aoo hill• of Yorbu Linda. room · and veaetable Portsmouth Mdl. Loweat »ut make us an offer Aient, 1/830·1480 f.•rden. Hurry, won't. price ln Spyalau. Fant11tlc Flaanclna utatl79,750. 5'8·5880 ~1000 II ,YoU own lbt RED CARPET, 71M-ll02 iana. Jame9 D. Tatum IASY UYtM• 1Utr7U.1191or 41M.ooz9 I BR1 beam celllDI l1 ~ ·: ... HERITAGE . • RfALTORS COLLEGE PARK Extra clean, 11paclou1, ~~~~~~~~lc.NM9M 1024 attractive, family home. •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• rm, * a cheery eoun tttcben llrtkea 1 Mlanc w/nat.un to lftclude &en nil a. n.1mmlnt fn thlJ S bdrmt, 2 baths, dlnlnf. rm. Huae (inly rm, o · rice/den. Encl'd patio. it.creaUonal vehicle 11c· c••· Nicely landscped for e11y maintenance. Convenient to schools II 1hoppln1. Ju1t listed. 948-7711 ~ Walker & lee Real ltltate --- MESA VERDE v~~a!~~ ~~:!JWi.S::: The popular T·plan. built 6om. to the M•a tM window. &o make I Newly painted lnalde and Verde Md.loa ol Coat.a pcmt~~all XANADl out. 3 Bednn, 2 bath, lot.a .... • BR fa rm •-llE:,_..,,,.. ol frul• •-. 2 Cover~ · 9 ' m. ·• •1--------'• ~ .. ...,.. ._ poalble 1ue1t quarten. paUol and other extraa. AlkJnl 1185,000. E Eaatalde l\nd, bea Hurry on thll one! I Alk· Aft. 87M800 lttt« ln town. I BR •. lnlf7UOO. ---=~-.:..;..--1 Ba. dln.arH, on I e lo 14&.4 l 4 I Owmlnl M•a Verde 4 w/aUey. CloH to ac Br.L. 2 Ba, walk &o M.V. Owner OUllf'OW1\ 41 an c."'-+ t.ennia crt.. Xlnt 1o1.aa &o ""· m.soo. Java Rd addreu. Bkr. 1umable T~ loan. Cal ~ - WATERFRONT HOM[~ REAL ESTATE 631-1400 ~·a m 11 y k it rho n . 4 3 Br 2~\ Ba, 2 16 acre1, spa c Io u 1 h d rm s . rantaatlc 180 deg. vlew.1 _______ _ Enormoui. lo~ VI\ buyers asking $145,000. San welc~me·P~l jUBt closing Marcoi. Mary Kincaid CC8ls . Wont lu•t al only Agt. 74-t-4081 or 746'1942 65H1Tl. tor appt. &tH75t Cou.IGf PARK COATS&WALLACE f..ltAL ESTATE .INC. llAL ISTATE Sbr. 2ba. Comar tot. L Save! Owner orrerH 2 br _!75.000Call now7~ (714) VETS• CreaUvo & prof. co. will sheet. Opn Hae lo.-6 dall ..... P•....,a I 007 soon be openlnl of e's In S7t.IOO. Owner. 2211 <.'Ondo. AC, OW, :.l e11r ---- gar, rrplr. 11001. huge ILUFFS CHERRY .......... , ... ••••••••• Npt. Bcb 11 C.M. area1 .. 1_C01-=-1a_te_D_r._6'_2_·99_19 __ _ FHA loan S59,500. CORONA DEL MAR Conveniently located Ms-5464 DUftLl!X townhouse: 1chool1 & FREE ..... P...an..a. We have opento11 for v: ~__.:;,, . '""'c..._. ~ .. ~;,:,.:-. • 'mx P :~ HOUSE BEAUTIFUL 'YOWHl!R BlGCANYON TWNllOMI:: Lovely duplex. each unit 1b(>ppln1; on one of the having 2 bedrooms each. Bhlr1 quietest ttreot.s. 3 Walk to beach. Priced to Bdrma .• H• ba. condo ell that. hu been complete!)' • · redone ln quiet. earth ~ft).,_ I I \lo, W It I \I I' "ill I CU \I ~., c .... , ........ tones. $102,75') C. F. Colesworthv RlALTORS 640.00fO Info. hnlu I Bdrm., 1 bath plua are tnterllt:.'r.n a Lllht,1bript, airy, I ~Jo apertment.. Larae CANM'. Apply by calllnl ma cu ate 3 Br 2 B ... a;J lot. One block to the a1.o.oc> 551.0110 home. 2 car attach "'" AppNIHh btach. SU.II tJme to enJo>' for Interview. Hlrln 1 1•ra1e. now• aood wor aummer In N•wPort. Mont.hru,..lbyappt. room. Could be conv fTM Utt of VA fUUOO. ~~~~~~~I tdto Family rm, prhu HotMa '" o.c. MOIUNS llALTY 1aJore. rruoo. 3 br, 8 ba hlthly up- 1raded E;I Dorado mdl. Extr• 11 patio, 1lr cond .. Pool. jacuzd & tennl1 In ~ 1[21f cree •etllnit. ---~-=-·--7.:..~---008~7 ---·------ Oranaecii:~. Lar1 .. t * 4t4-I057 * ::='w ~ VAHomeBroktr llACHSNCIAL TOWMHOMI ~ · HIWPORT HACH Call 24 Hrs. a BR Duplex, 1~ bl..lta to Great location at. the ~ MM.tt HDUCED St,900 6 7 5 2626 ocean sfw. )'OU a unique apa of an Ute frwya II tneo-tt.c.N .... Noatalglc Newport, quleL WORLD RiAL UT_ •TE cornblnatJon of loc .• d• near So. Coaat Plah. &45-9111 Mll(hborhood, pluah " 1ltn 6 the belt. vaJuo on Over 1eoo1q. f\. T11tef\.11· -------- t'arpetln1, 11aaa encloted BalbOa P•n. XANADU I)' upgraded w/t.remen· fireplace, s un kluod ..... .-._.111111111111.,_.._.. .... ,..... UALESTAT!!, 759·0781 cloua 11«aae. Near ten· _ ... I UMITI family kitchen, hu1e nil court. ft pool. Good Braou newao:tl l•tory tcparaie muter, 2 mora WISTCLIPP lnv11tment at only Offeredat ,000 queen sl&ed bedroom1, Lovely tradlUonal S'Jl,tso!MS-9'91 1tlant step·down tamlly home-perfect Httlnl -,..---__...__;......;..;...;..;. raom. Pool •lied lot.. Call for your anllqun and/or 752-1700 fine furnl1hln11. 'rlled oPIN Ill q. II HUIY IO II Hitt. entry. CUilom 1t1lned ~TH[ R[At 1 ~~lESTAT[ffS J 11a11w1ndow1,1hutten perfectly, manicured ya~ l•r«• enou1h tor pool. I Bedroom home with formal dlnlnt room-move In coodf· Uon-Jutt ti. homt tor a apedal family, lllJ,000. P.ETE BARAm ~ Walkr:r 1; l 1:1: .. '\ . . ... ..... . .. ............ --~,·-· . . OORPORA'l'ION LAGUNA BEACH 494·2146 Lingo RIAl&ml PACUlll& II _ ........,.., ,. ...... u,.. ... 4 bt ...... 2 ................... .,,.':: fNllt ........ ~ ................. .. ........ .. . .... , .............. . lot-S129,IOO. 495-1720 SOUTH LAGUNA 4.9M$51 LAGUNA BEACH «·mt . HAllOR VIEW HOMIS Uperadect Palermo Model;. 4 bdnnl .• f am.Uy rm.. formal dinlns. Exqulalte decor. Beautiful 1round1 wlth redwood deck.Inf. p,aybouae. fire pit, wau,fall, dual aaa BBQ. $220,000 ~o~~ ~ Jl77 Yle Udo ..... ,.... ...... -' 673 .. 7300 Prf¢e Redlacecl OW.. bai iloa&bt aew. 'i Lowel1 4 bedrm, 1 llllr4•oeld noan. au MW 1 • appll'I. VttY up~ed.. gacell 1cbool1. Now ! rrt,IOO. llabmlt tarma. ' CllS.bnae. ' 962-1121 SAVI YOUR SSS HODOWMGt Owner trafttferrlna. m\lll tel.It • l>'J bdrm1 wttb. all \lw a:aodem con- Mlwou I IMct. 10H Mtwwt~ 10" ~. ~'MM;ORT .... ·-f·~;~··•'"" -=~ llACH . 8Yowner.•Br,aba,fa11t 148-2lZl a Bdnot, ram.. rm., 2 rm. lrl p&tJo. dbl aar. · bath•tr:eaut. cpt'I· N.w paint lna.lde ,. out. :ror~tttrf:.'8~ ~='~oT.5 .......... oar. lot w /n>rtnklen " S a t • S u o • C a 11 ••••••••••••• ••••••••• • vlew of aoll eoo.r ... d&)'s/....,MllOU ~,.:--• I 100 .. .IOOf••lmple. HillOI VU ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• JACOIS IEALTY ,ALSMO 11mea axu. 1 br <cai>-675-6670 U!ir, 2~Ba. tam rm, din taln'•· bed), new roof & ________ ,rm, prof lodacpd, exL.. palnL Ad.ult c. M. •• ,..L EST,..TE .Jac:am,. <>wner at re· park.MM173 1U1A "' duced Drlce cit fllf.800. CreaUve a. prof. co. wtll "'"6221" r, tumlahed, complet& 8000 be °"nlnl ofc'• ln ocn view, 1un deck. So. N~ Bcb fe C.M, area1. THE ILUFPS IA&una•2530 We have opeolnp for 2Br, 2Ba, 1pUt level, up· Trall~1paceup&.otxao'. n e w o r e x P e r araded cpta/drpa, ll&hl Ad.ult. park, no pell. aa1eaperaoN lunars who tixut.rel, alt cond. close Ml-8173 are lnterut.ed ln a &.o pool, 1hoppln1 center.•-------- career.Applf bycalllna ~..t. By owoer/ate.ol lJOOPentn. In NB. nr 131-0.00 657-4110 SCO.IUJ bay "sandy bcb. $8000. for lntarYiew. Hlnbi &U-~'12t Mon thnl Fri by appt. \~ACRE Hone ranch w/21----,,_-.-_,_-1-2-0-0 ~~~~~~~~I houaea. workshop &iAll'!,_ .. .._._ .;.. barn. Back Bay area on ••••••••••••••••••••• • • UDO ISi.i \he soil cne. Mu.st sell FIVI ACRES tBr, ~ bl.k beacb•teoAia soon. llli,000. Owner. 0 A11 ... -r Owr.AJt.8'73-0289 ua.out He-aou " -'"~ _.....:.....;:;_--'----• 54&4013 Huie oak trees like --------1 _..;......:..~-----• you've never 1een, cover ow.ta Will thi. ienue ro1Un1 5 acre CADY AMAMCING 1/J ACRE peftel on paved roads. Sparkllni 3 bedrm, 2 PARK LIKE settlnf In All utll'1 avail. Terms . beth and family room. ctitrhaveo. I Bedrm1, 2 BKR.. Lowest priced alnale bat.M, beamed celUnp, ('714)178-mT family home in pride of formal dtnln1 room,1--__ o.;..R~S22-~PIO~-­ owner1blp Eaatblurr. lanai, bre1klut room.1im-------Now vacant. Seller air cood. " Insulated. BUlLDERSlt motivated. For detalla, $167,500. call540-1151. lloy McCcrcle .... ~..,.. HERITAGE . . m :Al TOH~ RHltor t It 0 Mtwprot Cott. MeH 548-7129 DEVELOPERS ATTN Prime 35 actu nr. Rancho Santa Fe. liberal terms at. about 116,000 perac. WAUACllrCo. RIALTORS 714""4lW490 I . . I 'I. By owner, Duplex, ~ blk from 1Urf " uont1. R.suced Sl0,000. A 1teal a& 1119,500. J BR Upper, 2 BR lower, frplca. bafconlea. encl. 2 car pr. Fee simple. Hurry! 5204 Neptune, N.B H2·U41 afl. 8 pm, 1·3'MU18 UHITSIUMITS!I New m 2 bedrm each Downtown CMta Meta $2ti0,000. . associated ~ red hill -•,•,:• .'~.uu 1~~~.;.;...;.;.;;;.;;;;..;;~--·l•FAllJLY •POO~ •IACUZZl •PU.SCUOOL •PARKING BANBURY CROSS 2Bedroom from '3'70. ••i.uo• .. -. . . -. . . ....... •••k•eeplat/T• •• f • l Ce • • U a 1 • e I ':J liililit~bPllO ll:llUli ... ~ 0 ••• lptclall .. ...u ... prof ,., I I '-• -ll ,SST-JOO ..... ~ ................. . .. • ..................................... ~ ............ ··~·· ·--· , ......... 119ooti . -- • -~ ------~-------------------------------------------Afatmutau..r.. S.-rl...tah 4200 Offldltntal 4400 ._..W..e.4 4600 Lost&,.._. 1300 SocWC... 5400 HefpW..,.4i 7100 MafpW..e.d 7100 MllPW.._. 7100 ................................................................ -.... ....................... . ...••.••......................•.............• ···•········•·········· ............................................. . H1wport1Hc• 3169 BEACH HSE. Steps to ISOI W llffD anted:Twol Brbouses, ISO Reward! Bob·lall Det.lnt & share rentai., ASSIMl'aS BABYSl'l'TER llffded. ••••••••••••••••••••••• sand in Npt Bch. Luxury estc r . partly furnlahed, w/fncd tlaer cat. Lost 5/25 vie. Video Enlerpriaes, AMweftStrY.PIX Aaaem~len, preclalon, Mature woman. my 2 Br. bl.II• deck, wiVlew. lbr, 2ba. Avail now. l300 !'=P1nanc:Ja1Cll yard near bch or Nwpt ~reek Villa1e, CM. 83S-l.Sllor996-8'116 Wanttowort atternocaoa male or rem. 41 yrw. m1n bome, lloq tbru i'rt. LgcLivRm,lblktobch. week.Ml8S~S2 Ll~Offlc.~~ ar ea. 714 -875·8604, ~lors.o.&213 Ir evenlnp ln N.B. Ir e'XJ*'.Goodmanuatdex• 1SWDOa.IUVM ~m.UliO IA YFROMT LUXURY <;:f!f;:~~~:~~~~ l :20-llAM, 6-l0:30PM l..osl WhPl 1te Male Samoyed 11'e-:! ~,~:,-:1 =:~m: =u:or mi~:::::; Bas bis~. f/t11 m•·J f'°)'S 2 Br w/carage 1240. Now Huee. br. 3 ba Bayfronl DILUXI o-•cll!a •/lft•H f/ Ptvlc acenall~! &70ll6Wltaon •••••• ~ ••••••••••••• must. Xtra pay for elt· expe. r. Sm••.• compo· ~··u::. o;rel 0 v':Z crpU &hruout. Fenced yd house. Avail Aug. IS thru m n ease C .,.... Sdlools & per'd operat.ora. EOE. ~· Hard'woctln1, d• ....__ 5Sl ..f18Saf\6PM w/natio. Wat.er pd. 2228 Sept. 15. Sauna. 60' boat Comn1l & lnd.U spaces. An.tee 1-&--.t.1-7005 Call840-0812 d lcat d lndlvld aJs1_1111_ .. _..,. ------"'A'"'-Placentia. Call btwn dock. furnished. yard, ~to 2000 aq. ft. As low ••••••••••••••••••••••• LOST: Siamese altered _ __._ r e u 1•5.~120 wet bar, pool tbl. Bay •3$'1f1.ft.LaaNJguellr ....._ mate cat. Reward! ..... •••••••••••••••••• n eeded . SmaJI co. BABYSlTl'EJl fot 1 yr -----------1 v•~ from ev...v room, u •-a•-n Viejo a-aa. OppOi....,.., 5005 La1una Bch uu EMBARRASSED By poor _.a 1~u--w/aood beoeftta, &d. op-Clid.llJbome.CK.2day Bd,2 ...... '-le d k .... ...., v•.1 -... "' .... "' -....... ' apelll ..... send ror \"'f.-1·-"-Cpl por. advancement. CaU wit fl occa•lo n a l 4 .... "., •sun ec · much more. S2000. for all ·Handy lO S.D. F rwy .... •••••••••••••••••••• ._.........,.. u • r ,._ i: Carol 581. llV 2howest.obch,2carencl 80 days or 1700 week . 0.11:831·1400 JANITORIAL Business. Lost Red " while Fem ~letptoohelBop. Spe.!!_nc Mlddlea1!csa:nenced ; ·ll30. evaJ•lmda • .-1• ~;in!,~;,~~~· Yrly Avail. yearly startln1 ~Offf !_SOOmo.~me.$5000. Baaset Hound, 3'h yrs. s;~·~a.'92'7l~.1&c\'. forl20UD.its.CDM.Apt N!:Sd llt.Ma.naid ertrorHlrt81n· w.pfftwW..ted Sept. 16. 11350 mo. ce1 c1rm. 493-....... reward. Call 710-l.l79. 12 " your name & ad· + aalary, no children. e Pen e n • . Looldnt ror responalbla 3 Br, 2 Ba. llu&e pallo, 173-181.8 Nnl FREE llCYCLE LOST: Near Park Lido. dreu M+-a811 dnlptore. Need dru\I: ~kind person for 20 mms frplc. pool, adults only. NB Best beach Au1. F\IUaervlce.Noleaaere· IJ'OC*)'atoreexper. . old boy 2dayawk Tues· l*/mo. 204.32 Santa Ana weeka aUU avail! Abo q'd. ~sq. ft. Plenty SPORTGOODS long haired gray /white Jobi W..ted 7075 TA~~~CCIAEN Hatch 8C7·2561. ~ !ibome, QIM erea. Ave. Call Kirk 540-6440 or winter rental. 2 br. Call of P•rltln(. 2082 B.E . IOOM ~ire~ ·~~~i •••••••••••••~••••••••• OUr ap""4pn"'ais"ce lechnl· Assist.ant Trainee -·- 645-l2180 between 7-8:30 A.M. Brl1Lol St. Newport Complete dealership . Male, 58 experienced and "lans earn $18,000 to .ALL ,,.., ..... n Beach. 557·7010 available vn11r area now I FOUND Old Blk/T r l 11 " 2 .R ...... ocr...... ......,........, ,__ : er an para-pro ess ona y $20,000 per yr-5 day Wk· UNEMPLOYED " ""'"" -2 Pvt Offices. reception & Number one rated blcy-German Shep wired col· trained, 1eek1 position u -•-•Crin ...... .-11.-t Brick fireplace, nr park. Balboa Island 2 Bdrm. 2 r,..,.rooma 120 an ft cle and Wilaon 1portlng tar, vie Brist.ol/Redhlll companJon/alde t.o con· be...,.. 1t9duo;ue1 ... ln·mU1 Local Distributor for Like new. 2 ba. Lse $400 wk. Au& & Sept. toUl.,.Fnt VaJie,"S62·32oo 1ood.s. Includes lnven-C.M. 546-8193 valescent/elderly/han· experl -open ~In larae Manufacturer now m>/mo.673-MSl KeUey640-55ll · "' --l0r7. training • m1ml. ---dlcapped/emotlonally· C.M., F\I lertoa & ll· hlrtnc for Sla service & Pint 1SSl.stance. Hlch Income Found: White Cockapoo? mentally disturbed or Uer-CerLllled Appliance. delivery. Must have Nwpt llgts duplex. Nu 3 Heart of Loguna Bch. I Euciltt•• Sult.• potential. Year 'round Vic. Irvine & l>over, N.8 . terrnlnal. Oranee Cowity 540-4720 valid driver• license. Br. 2 Pa. pets, cblld O.K. blk to bch, sb<>pe, ruo buaJneu. Call rordetails, CaJISU-6:568 merences. 492.551r7 _.._ ..... Cl Eamup to SS851 mo. 846-7171 From l200 per wk. Avail Office avail. Overlooks m•> m.aau ....-,-.. An $7 per hOlr 2 Br. 1, ... Ba to"""hou•e !°.,W,;.. .. !94-4531, 494·46M, airport & mounlaln1. Found· Black & Tan HelpW..ted 7100 RIPAUlMAM C47Sl·f7f0 ..,, -u .. ,_.._,.. Airport/Reclatry area. lea TAVEttM Germ Shep Mix. Longjjh ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• Major household ap· style. adults, no pets. ---------1 2'82 Mlchelaon, Irvine. BEACH CITY hair, male. Vic: P.C Hwy ACCOMl'AMIST pllances, min 3 yrs e1t· -------- 1245, $48·211182 Affthllt to Share 4100 752-0234 Nets tt.500. month. Help La1/CdM . 494-9330 La&una Beach Unillod per, C.M. 645-5215 3 Br 2 Ba, ocean view, I ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dana Pt. San Clem. pro· run. Trouble free run White female part angora School District. Aecom-Arch.. Dealaner, 2·5 yra home fr beach. 1475. yr· F=eintC~ba;l~3 br mineitt. new, ocean vu. ~t· -~~Terr ::.v.:.'if.t. w/rlea collar. Vic. or panies active H.S. It Jr. ftp. or recenl 1r9duate. ly.673-lllM,1080UveSt. . • mo. Coast Hwy, $130 up. """"' Ja1m1ne Creek & lnlh choral mualc pro-Residential, eommerc On Penlnsula, nice 1 Br. Call 842-4.133 488-1840 751"1400 Mareuertt.e. 759-9428 1rama. 20 Hra per ~k. projects. To work: w /alln ••-to ......... P><A yrly. ·vng rem. •tiare w/same CdM dlx aw·t .... util pd, Restaurant M u~l be ex per d . supervlalon. Salary -.-.,._,._ -"' furn 2 Br apl Pk Nwpl -LOST: Older miniature piarust/accompamst for open. Cootad. SUMMA 613-1884 __ Sl'TO+ ~ · A/C. ample pke. from FullLIQ.LJC.·seatal05. male silver poodle. challenglng&rewarding Enllneen & construe· Om Frt 2Br lBa yrly -· ~ -- -SLM. NolMreq. 875-4!800 Excellent perking . aood without medtclne will mt111ical experience. Call t4l'I lnc. Sunset Beach. 1450, quiet' cpte" or l Fem2S+, 2 Br. HD. doas Deluxe gardtn Oftlce for leue, larse dance noor. die.546-2848 ___ ~. Attn : Joe Hud1on. •lo1le, many features ok,Linda M0-@14 xM or IN IOt sq ft. 2 offices. OnPac:lficC'oaitHwy. Lott Wh\ fem. German 21J.582-2187; 714-846·5.581, 14Uf73 848-211176 l3llO mo. 113-MA 11.51 Shepherd pup . Vic A«"OWJlln« 1:30·5P M, a rt 6Pllit, 3176 Dove St.. Sult•2m, N.B. Sowers achl, H .B . Jlt.ACCOUMTIMG ,_n_usz. __ sm ____ _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 8'3tU.l CLak Now EJQ)lndlq In Orange County QUALtnCATIONS: fl.JJPh11 ta. Some coUet• pre· (erred, bu&•requlrect. #3. Retp. If amblilowl. For lnt.rv\ew appt.. 2 Dr 1 Ba. Condo. Pool, nr --------..----- beat h. $275 mo . Wlr /lrasb pd, '91· 7351 Los mix Airedale. 6 mo The Joll)' Roier. lne. has ASSEMI&. Y WD old. Vic Fairview & an entry level openlnl Aalembly ol amall elec· CAU.OUIUUW Paulartno. MS-4091 for *fl lnduautou1 lndlv. tro mecl\anlcal .. .evtces. COSTA MISA OPC Bankinl TELLERS Positloas open IOI" full· time & p/Ume el<J>er'd Tellen at Tustin office II Atrponomce. BOOKKEEPERS Trainee poalllons. Tustin olfice&AiJJJC!Golficc . INSTALlmENT LOAN SECRETARY Bank expar. req'd. 1'\lltin office. .-."%.:t~ USE i.t~ Tultln PenooneJ l>eptG-sax> F.qoal Oppor Employer Poaftoas Open Por: ra&.• HIAD-l'lt Banll experience r.q'd. CGlrtad. Bob Cftlibtoft Irvine NaUoftal Bink 13W'/OO. t. 0. E. 2 BR, &ar, pool, vi•w. aduJts. no pets. S300 290 looldna for oppor. to Requl r e1 exper. In Slt-111) IJ°OW· Mual be proficient diredlDI wotk of,up t.o 10 1•--------•IBanklni ,_....... U SO w/10 ltey adder. Position auembfers. Day blft. OUr beautiful Ne"l)Ort. Delpdo. 493-1988 rz:iO/mo.~ ...... Ctiplatr..o ••••••••••••••••••••••• lfS23CMfPllS~fRV~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• cana for nune. audltln1 STACOSWIT HIMC ASST. Mg r . M arine Beach Branch baa the Drinkln1 problem? ol daily sales report. for 1138 Baker Cott Mesa Hdwa..-. Min. 1 yr. exp. followlnC pcJ8Jt1ona avail: ----------• Call Alcohol Helpline oar restaurant. & mtac. 549.304 In h!ch volume retail ----------... zthnadayl3H830 1en'lofflcedulle1. Apply EquatOpporE ployer m 1 m t.. Sal. comm. T&LBt -------------1 In person, 170'2 Gillette w/exp. Call for appt. w·u ..-1 d t· r PREGNANT? Ave, Irvine. lam·Spm btwn.t•tL 14.$-1111 1 .,...~rm u let 0 Carin e confidential MonthruFrl •--------Ccmmercial paytna&re· counaellne " nferral.l•----·-.---1 Allem.blY Auto Mechanic, forelp celv lnf Telle r . Six Abortion. adoption & ------------• and/at domestic. Clean monU1a ~teller'• ex• keeoin,.11.E MECHANIC.AL abop.stea41 Job.14N31o per. roq d. APOAR 547-2563 ~ ACCOUMTS A'1'fOMOTIVI •HIST. --'11E1!.mc1ea..1r ,AV.AIU HKISIOH ... -' n sorn " UNO.A• VICll Q.lll ASSIMll.BS A new Chevrolet de · OHIATtOMS Al. TIRMATIVE o.tulll Maleeige AJ1 openln1 ex lat.a for ap atenhlp in lb• lnlne OFffCa Mo. to mo. rut lnc:t: For the,_ of ltl lndlvldual experienced ~=::m~~'t: Must be knowledta.ble In Jl e o,p t • a ,e r v • • Servln1allOranieco. In Account.a Payable and uaNOW! a ll area• or Braoct' ________ , penoaalh:-1 phone COV· 835-13U Receluble who typea u •c PH--so.... ~Opera~:_!YoW-!!~IAln era1e. conr. r m, mall ------------•wpm aocuratety and ,..,.., Ilia " .,.., ~-.. ~~ ~, undertrnd prke " MoMy to Locm 5025 SpiriW....,. usea a 10 key. Shorthand CHEYIOLIT &bl aupena6oa of other rnorolnNewport. ••••n••••••••••••••••• 1115So. ElCaminoReol h elp f u I, bu\ n o 21A\doC.OterDrive employees. Prior exper. 1'H&EXECUT1VE I-" •-~&3rdTD ' Sa.nClemente.P'ulb'llc. necessary. Salary I JW'VINE fun ettonln 1 ln t.his S\JITE,MO-:K70 WANSAVAJLABL: Forappt.02-72N 17$0. Pleue caJI for a CALL l61-7222 capacltyllooceu. COIOMA DB. MAR O'edlt not Important. ::_p~ l men t. t 714 > -------• D • 1 u x 0 1 rm . .......4tl-J l02 •KAREN'S* •--•OppEm""M/F OtrreALLMASSAOE -.-. .,. SWING LO.AMS 1PM·2Pll 113--0eP ------ Ind 4'ard T.o·s •SH.ARON~* ACCOUHTIM• Q.k lDAYAPPROVAL .--.u r ... ASSAG"' lilortca .. banklDI Orm vu.a. ... ~m ~ lnOraneeOo. huutm 499-1224 med. oDenin1 for an ac----------• ctnl dtrk w/uper. tn ---.....-----·• bank teconcllla\lons. P leau call Catby Tbompaon at Unlcal --------• Mott1•1e, 114/tP·'J871. E.O.E, - • • . . . . ... . -....... ~ .... • -···•":-.... ··.--· -~---= ... _ .... .. . . -........ . . 7100 . ..... g eee.x~ -.,AUQU1ta.1m Htfpw..w 1100 ...-w-.. 1100 tWpW9'" 1100 1100 • ::z=;; - - -············--··· -..~._ .... _. .............................. . . ........ ,. ........... w...... "'° tw.W..... 7100 P.e1ra.tr: Jroplal•• • ....asnum .... ALllCY EDICAL p/Ure .. IK OCCUPA'l'IOIUL (UCEPftONll'NJeeraJ ;;;ie, .... , ........ ;;:;~ ........ , .. , •••• M;I .. -.. .. -...... =~p•d or tome ftDIMILo,entnp.APIQ 0Mto1,..,._,.. aJ:8t dQlwk.~IDwlat· 'lB.atAPIST cim-.1t/Ume. lllllt be H rm CQ be.lpt!IL IQ~-lt.So. ~ llO ~ ,. la1 OPlbalmoloCl•t. I mall pa1obhttle well 1roo•e4. Call ~ OK MWlU.._,rrt Ollil&Plua .._ q!d. CaU. for appt. l•Dd r•••az..~~ ~'~ ............ ~-.a.a A .U cm . av U bl for ac• rr~ ESCROW Http Waated . muat be ~Z511. =~ed~~~ ,<:,=:lJ,:;::J.:,:::,:;~;;..;Sllel=__,,,__ __ _ curate elerk to a11l1t ta bu11 ooocaDl&HWASJmR MGR =APPl:itnper900, U.--tt... Calta II.a Caltf. w ....,. tn ,., ........... • •ANTU 8•PPr. ~n· ~ olfice. DuUee ate vartfld.. r1u-.•m1'1,INOW. :Yl'riedaatckea, Clerk, mature, exper, loch• pnMll ~· Nlet.d flt.Id. Coat.a« •""'l.,Ltr au.a !*Pl• mw.w&t bl• IOOCI tn> and operate• «-.HWJ.N.a. SECRETARY ms. Uw7.1A1Bch. :a;:~.~": ma•avallQ&l!l· ~,..,, .... at ~~3U::~:! 10..key a dlDI macbin• wlUa ~aklll. ooc:s U/PlrWim•. ~• H.B. ~ lbt.I • tnaa boJ. 111 ...... .' ~DCIPI' •--------• ate. at .. via Lldo. P8etiam tl4a oRlceupwlenee Oeurut~mloded otflet Htda Herow Ca a a 11 ex loan apweill,j,larbalJdoe-1_._ ______ CaUt .. .., 8r••a. Ill dliltratM. WIWk ln vtron• 9!"PU• ... .,.. manat• " Hcr.tUJ. ~ tCll llalD St. Ute llalnttaaDM. D11 w.arnc....-On'ICa -- wttb ~ oompc1 blMlltl tn OOOfCI IABTDIDEU 8abrl l)!UI loeecUvu Ba1* P& AOPtJ da1l1 INft. APPlY la penon, UIAll'NAJt d........_ latacm aftel' • DlUVhi:Ptu o, • Calllonla llataai t.fonUAll.ITUD N•1'~ff DODH, 1111 *~BICALOflllCI ~ --P..l*Up~toPeo/lOP~0 • .,._, CCllD paid~ lnaura.aoe, A~la ,...:lt!P.a lfope&aewww. -WORK LOAMllCY•T•llOO bUiJ=· Bud _.. ~.:...'i.. N .. PQrt --.. vat one ll Jemed me.' ., lilllcrow, call .. .cno. BOSTP.18 • OJ'J'IO• llels a. Dr H.B. ~ • clerical ~ --Pll' - ~ Ap~ at: fi Piiia PU'Lor, '10 Z. Po r N w pt B e la •EE PAID r:a~. :.:: w ..,_ OI 1~a.c.11. Z:.C.S.0")' tot121t ~11taurut, t&Udtntl 'hp blo!rlq m.tltutima wW ·, .... •mo m ca.rt ... R91'AUltANT ... COAST DA&Y N.01' COOKI • COUNT&a Prol/'Opr/IBllll;tlaX ~ta.GO per br .... H,... aUlldtd Lo-W.llUl .. P,C.11.. lddlllnr~ i.,,... etm'/ASSIST n:! '::. ~ ~ Ccmal:OO .J!~~.OO pu HELP, Daye Is eve 1:;m~c :::; 1 ~fo::r.r .... ~~: M=IH'~ &eHt>t. ~)I 1:• ~.as::~c:::::r~ ~ ~-_.., 11& aldJla. Am, Del Taco, c: Jml!LPoodCUhllf.u. •-.u~ w-.... • .,.__ llOD>M -"'811sai-. ----Call fC1'8*1ntmeDt ~ 11I081a~ A", C.11. =-Pa~eeJol» par s;nl'd. HoUdaJ Inn ---.. _ f/l'ffrd.---0... &bl dos. ..... B •a els-· Laauna ~ ..... a• <XXD 1sw.-..... So. •£17Uao.tAa=f Latuaa 11111 •• C:ODtaot Plclflc Western .......... w.adl,.. ..:..i:.m. ····••91 FAiaaJ OppmtunltJ ~. Ol. NB. Pltiae Is adt.er.M Ma-W'l'O pel'IOW!l.-..00 nRDDfELIUVICB ~ ~s:a-.=: m •----------F/Um9. Oll8te a.op mt· ~ BOl'l.LR&CIPllONtST -8rtokllul'll&ll.L .,_<tM)m.0n. · ......_ ........ 71-~W_... 7100 ~Cf:nS:~9Ji:) DIC.SICUT.UY ~~= ..._. MCtM'f lllllllBnlf' ..... 111"111111 inn••H•• , .. , ... _ .. NWI To mJdDt dlr. In f1DllD. meat. eaper Dot •to ftU.$10.100 Wa AMWAY CORPORATION OiilCl-Cia&AL General office. clerical & typing needed to fill vacant politioo. ~ cellmt benefit.I & location. Haun -.c: a>. Expcdence required. Jtt,ply 1800 E. DyN" Rd. Santa Ana. CA 92705 either iD ptnOD or by malL clal..m .. nna.a.p., .i.awa MACMIMIST ~-· _ • OOIC, •aat.d eicper. c ...... .., JI09 ID\IQlv. Oood 1_•1ter1l baell· --...... ~,.-~ SMACSIHOP Xlat waau, 1ood taa ..,_.at NCU.rit*. B°°"lenen. women 1NUD4.a..;ap6op1r9.ta .... '8dtf for ~"JI) M46~c..tHwy beaeflt1. Apply In lnlur.,R.E • ...0121 o..r 21, reliable rtl•, ftrtetJ cl macblw la· career poaWoe. lllpld m..ece C.--.. Mtl-~:,r,::r:~!.r..Cl•2:lo~~ IXIC..SICUTAIY ontnm.K&-IAm :~~::f. ':r~:~!:::::1 ::;::,c;:-at •tmt, OIMwll8ubr81d1 ADPalldoaa eo.tHwy,,..11.s.eca.er Oppor. for blsbly HOUSll9M ~1!~r ?!'!.~~-!!r!~'.!!·. Wlaturn Pacific .eollMA.rtllurBJ•d a.ope.&qAQ.n.t IQJILdir Gtrl Needed ror mothated, outst.aodlna No aper. nee:..,.. Q&Ual r•n .. IUD ---UR ... Newpoitlkb ... ~tt.si=a Dryclieansl 11 Or enc. •ecy dealrin& a M.anar, mGW. Bay, C.M. 1mall1tiop. Dapooly~ PERSONNZL&UVICE l!lqual~Smplofer s••om. · over. cballenain1 poe & xlnt 6G311G5. STACOSWITCHIMC mBroolma11u1.a. OfflceAHu•t .,.,,.. . ...,...ER o .. n /U =-=-Jt:wc:. H 0 us EK E E p E R I i.m a.,-4, Ool304tat .... .,...,. 7:»1:ao Sat/81.D. Mkl· ft-A·-....... ,,._ ... UWJ, p me. SteZlO N---Bcb.. OOVEll.NESS <Ltve·ln). ' • -------·· alat& to .. Tllea 6 Wed. n.ao~. u~ II ~ Capt. MIU'a Flab Fry, ' ... _. N.B. bm 9da run cbarje EQualOpporEmplo1ef MOLDPIBSOPI IO·HOI, Ba7•l•w M1W b1rtnc for lmmed. 81SW~1DthSt,CM FACTORY person to run baebld. --------Small mold ahop. Manor. =e.:Vply:!t. f~r OUr/TER GIRLS. Meo & women oeeded ReaponalblUUu tncl'a MACHJNIST/SE'MJP Operatetramferfs/orln·'---------• or• ' t. permanen& poelUon. Ell· ' Lota of k a 11 ! supen'lalon of 2 1lrla, a. up a. abort run, p'"'ch Jec:tl~1~1Di equlp. p1 IRJ ~~~:, ~~~~ per. ooly. 1'\IU or part ::Vi I C II WOI' va In •aea 12 " 15 ukp'1 pre11ea, automatic, WW ... ,..._ A ~ Fr~PM . ........ _... 7100 u..a..w..e.c1 7100 t Im e. A p PI y todaee a or come dt.ltl91• Must~ mature, STACOIWITCHIMC ..... • ...,. • ...,. GOODENOUGH Natural YI as well u able to relate chucker, mill, lathe, 6 JIME 2300.,,E, Brtatol, ••• .. •••••••••••••• •••• ••••••••••• ....... ••••• 7 5 ...1667 drill preuee. Sorn• tool 6 U. Baker CoMa 11 .. a <Nex1 to llcDonakl '• > Food, 105 Malo St. ..,. to ~na1ers. HJ •tao-die bel tul but 549-3041 •-··• Bkkpr/AHlllant, Full Cashier Clwt to work BalboaPea.61a.23'5 PromptTempServloea dard1 of neatoeu, uper P not ,___..,.._,__.-'opp::.:..em-.::p_loY;.;;....er_ Ttme. Mature. 919-7'50, e:ao-e Mon & SaL iwi--------• 2ll&6o. MalnSt.SA cleanllneas & oraanlu· neceuary. Zqual()ppor&mpl01er WORK Mn Van Horn Thurs & Fri In CdM. DelYtry & tioo req'd. Due to hi ex· Colelutnunen&Corp RET•IL BoatCarpenter Good rel1 Is exp req'd. Stockewtl Fenalefoc:tory ped relaUng to care or ___ 142-_IOIO ___ -. MO'IB.MAJDS W<ft r.'dlne la -cl " Flber1Ju .. 1Gel-Coat lfrl to lncreale In Fall. 12-lOpm Fri " Sat le Ped&agen t.be girla, a' yr deiree 11 MAIDS, 1'/TIMI ROMT DISI CLBI our e re.aatloa uln CLERICS Repeirmen.Applyat. Nostudeotsplease.Call 10-8pm 9m. 18 Yra or S:UO Per hr to start. pref'd; xlnt. opport few Oood benelib. Holiday l'\illtlmelsbeaelb..WW room1 "ellll lllave DanaPointShlpyard Mrs_ Adame for in· over.«>HralnFaU.lllah Merit raises. U37 Conner schl teacher. AD Inn. Laswa Hilla, Coo-1 U 1 3M71PuertoPlace _te:mew __ . .;...•"4-_7_57_5_. ___ 1 Tune Uqiaor, .-E. 17th ~~!!via Ave, N.B. ~~ •~-wls~-•lrlaoa t.adP«ICllU)t),1188-5000. t~:tD· aEH:1tp1•1Ya. prraetft. ~r;ea ::: .;~ UTOTEM Dana Point Harbor St. C M .,.,...,......,, ..._.1 ,. wrv ., '° .._ . l B: _., bo9e .. till1 punue Ca IL U 1 I Cl ..... ets · · ble. lliat drive: car 1a *MAIDS* _--..;...'-.------·• outalM aetlYUlff. We ~open LK. 2nd & oBOOKKEEPlNO provided.Sbouldbefiex· Tbel.Matl.apoa MOTOllOUTI P9.Jwac•+eo111m.AM 3rd ablfta ia Sao CdM realty and devel~ ~·f!~:;: ~~nz 2UN.OltHwy,La1UDa 'Iba Dally Pllot bat a "PM hrs av.U. Call rw Clemente Is Laauna !!:F~y~c~::c~ --------• batb. Sal la SSSO/mo. + MAIDS,TOPWAGB larte roate in South detalll, Beeeb.O&herareuhave .. --------.... board. Send resume La ...... Motel, Lqima • a.PPl'Oll •UD· LoaAqelee'nmee CllllDlaO also. No exper. type. Must have con CASHIERS • ._ •-1 .. _ •£ftA th ~ NQ'd. Appb< at uy r structlon bkkpg exp. "--aJOCrlce to: M. See&er~.O. Box 41N-2998 .._ -per mon • ---------1 ° I mmed. full & p/tlme ~ 19547, Irv, Ca. lfl713. --------• Mon thnl Fri afterDoou ourstara. CommunlcsUonsktllles. openln&a In our self Onelftah~ .=:.:.:.:.::...:.:..=::..:::;.:::;__l•-------•I ands.tlcSunmomlnp· PIXAMwtr.Sert. 2.'illSNewpartBlvd &entlal Salary open. service cu atatlona. --------We wont a SUPER HOUSEMAN/DRIVER, MAl~AHCIMAM Car l.Dd aood drlvlDJ re-P e rm . PI t Im• O.UMeu &42-7702 Weltcn&Co.675..fl900. H.B .. C.M. &S.A. areas. SHARP, Greganoua girl exper. Newport Beach Must have uper. In cord required. Call mtchboardopr.Cande·•------- --------1 callsat.QIO. thatcaresaboutthecom· area.Ca.116'().5339 malnt.alnln1 r"tauran\ &42..aa21 Leavins name wWptorttlmelld•lred. BOOKKEEPING ·~ Accountina & Figure Clerks. Like figure work, use 10 key. Top SSS & vacaUon pay, 0 ~ fll.1P<ll4All'l'll(LP I Bookkeeper· P /ti me. Mature, exper'd " rut • aiart.ar. Sal open. Cail betwn lam " .&pm , ~. BlUOCIS WILSHIRE A •••41DC '••bton .~,.....le now•«> ~I spplluUoris lor tM~l*Wonl. IUTSMAN M/F l*lY· Excellent skULI & & related equipment Ir andpbonearumber. We train lf 10u're wlWna common sense are prere· Ide a I p I t l m e J o b . h a v e a w 0 r k l n 1 --"-------1 to work evea 6 wltnds. quilltes. Jdeal 1urround· Housewives or colleae lmowledae of the elec-MOTOlt ROUTE Superior An1werln1 lnas, atmosphere and girls w/car. 10.m·lpm. tncal 6 plumbin1 trade. The Daily Pilot haa a Service. '50 E. 17th St, loMM'1lag&Mop Women needed tor bOW1ecleanbl1 aerv1ce. IWIM>757 pay or you do the Job!). Mon thru FrL Earn 175 to Apply at, Orange CountJ larce route ln Mtaaloo St. I, C.11. ---5-AUS----- We are a am all Medlcitl $95 (Guorn f75 wkly> Restaurant Services, Viejo area. Approx eana· j;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,1 Co.nearthealrport&of-Service eatab'l lunch lllOIDalmler,SantaAba, lnp POO per raontb • SWft.IMENT fer an enjoyable, stable routes. Must be neat, 8am·5pm, Mon thru Fri. llon thru Frl aft«noonl PIX OPBlATOIS YOUI INCOME opportunity. Apply at penonable & eneraetlc. and Sat" Suo momtn11. Pu.lie board. PABX. cord SSSS SSSS 979·07.&7 for appt aft Oar and Sood drlvinl r• 6 oardlea. So«n.o w/ly-p- lOam. Malntenaoc:e cord required. Call Loa.51.artNowlll PAITTIMI , ... 1r111 "'Tl,...,. Ufflty M ... M• 842-'321. Leavins neme ~I WORK 9"--v" D.-yablft. !:Jcper'd. cs Kr andpbonenumber. HOUSIWIVIS IHSTALUR wk. Company benerlta. COlUGI STUD .. TS Needed lmmed. Ex· So.CoutPlaza,Ma.M12 MOTC>aROUTI Guaranteed Hourly pe.r'd, Bau. Hanien on· The DailY Pilot bu a Wqe Pim Bemus. 5 :30 I y n e e d a p p I y . nue ln Newp0rt Beach, c l 714/558-1618. • MANA<ilM&tT afternoon. lloa. thru pm to l :ao pm. 81 IHSUIAMCI Group health clalo:aa H · amlner. E.xper'd at Jeut 1 yr. Sal open.&G.1781. IMTYVllWM P /T . Excell enl OP· portunlty for Marke t Researchers, rnothen w/ achoo! aae chlldren or college sludenta. needed to work for very Preet.laloua Department store at Faablon Island. Applicants muat be well croomed • have • pre· sentable appearance. Flexible schedule, day or evento1 houra Hlab hourly rate Call Mra. C:...140-4451 MMm or come to 250 E. OflfOITUMITllS Fri. IPll to 5:IOPM, Sat. 1-m... p-..&. 11\b et., Costa Meu. Is 5un. mornlllo IAM to ,_..., .. "" We are lookln1 for IAM. Good lor blah &atta101 • lnlne 5Meo-Or6tator cl.YD am l c me o and ICbool or aoUea• atudeot. -F.quaJ-•Op••por-EIDJllofer ___ lf Succenful Oran&• Co. ~ wbo enjoy a com· Approx •arnlDll $125 per Wider .-, •mart aa · ~vt industry where montb, S50 cub depotlt PIXOPRATOI p-eulve Vert toaether •~cellent potential ror r.quired. Call ~. Pl-.ant Npt. Deb stock penon to aulat market· advancement exJ.all u Aak for Clttulatloo, leav· b r k r •I of c . H r 1 Int dlrector. Secretarial " cont.lnue to ll"OW <• ln1 name "_phone or 8:30am·l2 noon. $3 hr. 1kl11 • • 1 •en t I a I • new Carl'• Jr. reet.auranl come In and nu out •P· Con ta ct sand,., at knowledge of escrow &. o pen• eaclt week) . .-pU_catl_on. ______ , M0-1480. conatruetlon helpful. Restaurant manaaer NIGHT CLERK. iood --------• ~14>~2881 poaltlona are open In •al•I')' apply ID person rlST CONTROL • • • • f 0 r s e a I 0 n your area. Manaaement ::cfl AU Baba Motel TICH .......... _,. .. .,. c1e---'-1tin"' experience 11 ideal. We N. d. Cll • ox..,,.......,. 1UU1au-.. ofter cla11room Is ln· ewpcwtBJ• • St•dy Job for rl1bt quality line of toys & store tralnln1. com·, ____ .... ___ , penon. No exper. nee. lifb. No collect1on or de· peUtlve salaries which Proftt ahartn1 and l"OUP Dvertnai. No ln•tettment. blcre ... dwin1trainln11 NOW Recrulµnt abarp, health. Apply Non Work your own Jin. Nd excelleftt compeny eala ambltlOU9 IQID to Hll earn.u. Uoyd Peat Q>n. car.N7-137l beoeflta-medlcal. den bardwar., toola ~ ehOp trol, 118 I!. Dyer Rd.,•-------- •-• U'• •-· .... an-' paid. equtpmmt to Industrial S.A. AL!S-Full 6 part· ...,, '"&nit-..... accoUDt9. Avf D per --------• \lme, co1metology vacation, alck leave, -. No _.pet\, ..e. Ca11 fllloMSolcftor lno\rledl• helpful, --------• hoUdaya, proOUJw1aa. 'm·tlU. Exper'd. No aale1 In· IA.,ma Sch, G'7·1003 JI you are a carterl~~~~~~~~~I YOlved, Btt·up appa for . 5 .... -• •DY ortent.ed lnd!•ktual wbo -•sa ..,_,,,,.,, Guam. tal + ---9*1a a cballqe and .-~ TMAM "'*' ......... Call Pb.U. Part Ume1 for exclusive lblll I Elrplr'd. f/Uine. perm. 111-Mll. a.oUQues • atfl abop at reapoa. t1 • P •aa llltur• male a.. n. I --------1 8cQla Cout P1au. CaJl amd JOUT reautne detail· Daye Sat la e l 11 d. • Ptad.lcat Nune Mr .. felme. 51M'74' ln1 experlenee aad J::!8un. Work w/planta Wao'8dPart.-'nrM. aa1al1 hiltol'J to: r-u ----. ir.... sa Hr t. up. Ad· --··~ SALISMAH CARL'S JI. vancement potential. ---------t lat ruo movltl now L~ Kllll N&lf'ler)', PaUSMAM avallable In La1una P.O. Bo•tM> lftc. DToro.ll0-51SJ. A.B. Dick •wJT..st. To Btachl 8alesmet1 to de· J>epartment M ._ ""' n-... Anabehn,CA~ NUaUSAfDIS •.ao 1«• .... rtnt n_, montlrat.t Ir hook·up & OIOMUU n'lfM.,_,, current cable TV aub· ora.nd far 1ppllc1Uoa 1--------1 sc:dben. l'uU • P /tlme. atabov•lddnla Eq)er'd. Bamew ConY. Real&tata5aletpenOD *· Dellll UM040. 10 to I~~~~~~~~ ~tG-:.~ Ave, 100"-..,•.;.pm. ______ _ c...a. .. T• v.. SALISMIMWANTID ._...._~-.GER MIMSUAIOI we runhb dHlr-bpr'cl m retail •t«eo * ""'l"""' * 7 to.". to U, exp.~ tel~ NCMarJ " aalea.c.tl~. fthad. Men Verde help. oo.tv. lbp. t$1 Center LACASAILTY Larae tlt.\bllshed offlct, St.1 CM <BUt Tbonlsiaoe Rltr, orime eorntr lc>catlon. • u • .-Pk Mut bave recent re· Nlhinl .., 2821 ... l'&'-•"-W'f, tld•o\lat axptrlenct LYM 11.,ao a.uo 11u.. VllJO --------•some eommerc:lal Xlnt benetUa • aal. ~== 1' ,_ ~o~ off ice • ~0-, overload 557-0061 3723 81 rch Sl, N 8 A --r~ Tl r.1POHAnv ~l[LP Cati 540-4455 J7802 Sky Park Su1tetOl In me Equal Oppor l!:mplnyt•r Scaetary. p lime 20 25 hrs. Lile typing & bk klllll &kllls. Call 833-3309. --- SECRITAltY Need hardworklna. dl\erslfied, mature perM>n Small ro w/lnls or rCllP Xlnl typm~ •'-' sh req'd Good henc. pay Mis~1on VICJO ..irl'J C..ill Carol. 5111 31130 !Oa m lo noon. SECRETARY Rapidly ~row1ni.: architectural nrm nerds multi talenlt'd secy for I girl otc. Typing llO wpm. Sal open. Peter A. Len· drum Aaaoc. 752-9164. .... Te11cht•r Credenualed ror pvt k1ndeq(arten. Sta.rt Sepl 640-8820 -.. BARWICK Oft.T'>UN ·,,d, i •J,11 I I\' 1 ti•" 8ll-137S 49J.JJ7> WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FORHIFTY tMf'OlTS MAJl9UIS MOTORS 28802 Mar&uent.e Pkwy. IHSSlON VIE.10 131 .. uao 4H·IZIO WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP USED CARS FOREIGN, DOMESTfC otCLMSlCS It )'OUI' car la extra clean aoeua(lnt. IAUEllUICIC 292Slhatbot Blvd. Colta Meta 17~ TOP DOLLAR PAID FORCL£AN ~;.1 r J •• • ' 'I •• ,.. •,I ' A' •• . . . ~ . 11\1. 761-7222 WEIUY Q.14MCilS &~I ~CPHIL: L:.OOG I 74 VY( IU• '10 ConvertJbi.. v.a, AIT, Wllb radio Ir heater. P IS, MlcheUna, new -------9-9-5-7 Hard to llnd model. ~ =:t: ~nra.i:i~~~~: <&OIJPW). 1:1. term•· ~ T -o.A.C.1 yr. pa.rtdtlabOt ttJ2 · ~ MW& wan. Air, ft/II. Jua. Hrvlce policy avall. ••• .. ••••••••••• .. ••••• eo,, .. M\altant Mach r. 390 rack. Xlnt concl Olia. AutoCtotAtr'~erlcet.t • tt71 COIYITTI ' _,., v.a, auto, pwr disc brka, owrv. SUI00.548-S7G OMl.YU7tl 2'1'oDe.•Pl~llMr~ w/tan UM,.,..,._...,.,. .... ., p/11 f•ct air, tit wbl, '74 Browu Plnto Sedan, HAias •• ,. ................... b:sledor. A'"6m•Uc, •lr .... ____ ,..... AM/P'M.ll~.498-741J AC. AT. PB. aood c:odd • • 11.--.¥ il~111J• AUTO C94T& 1'79 Buick &tate We1oa, cond., pwr. 1teerln1. '88 M~. Loaded, air. 11125. MJ.JIJ..S b ~; b Dlv.-N•be,.. Cadlllac l ttreo, • track. ona AM/Fii radio, chrome '18 Granada 2 dr White Sl'50 Call wkdys 6-9PM UlO 14Z5S.lrer8t.,C.M ownr • .'250Q.145-tl08tevt, ~.:!:{"s.~•I• w/aaddle i11t, A0M/FM allctaySun.6'5-33111 '••••• .. •••••••••••••••• PLmf f'llCH '7.Ul~td 290. lo ml'•· \.~ blk Htt ofK•rbor 81 'e8 Buick Special 1 °0 • M .,.. atereo, AC, $oMOO or take '73 Dust.er 1dnt eond PS. -. ... I A OAli w1r .. OA '\UN If t I I I f 11 'Y I 1 I 1 ~ C•Ja..M"•-Jmmac.SIN00.5a1·12Alor 14Mt0t S3501~UJ!!food ~·SIOe~ (lat VO>. ovslleatJ13Smo. Dia· OW..... tt55 PB alreond UooOml D.L TOD .a.yi ~1 atie. 040-.,_. .PfiC:. et:/llfll'1 Manapment Co ....... ••••••••••••••••• 12100 -.mi ' ' "' s:-:0~~·~·· k w Al OMLYS6671 <n•>l'J0.1t10 1t750LDS 1--·-----t'Uru90l£T •DOVt:STREET MaCIDH ~~:1~,:~·•te:.•10.o& MAltqUISVOLVO ~ 9945 CUTUSSSALOM ~/~~V41.;uto.Ali· Illa•• ear MacArthur UMOUllHIS •ea VW B"• • IWl ovw..f, n"'"fl mi's. '2500. 8SS-8e80 • IJIOI ~iCJ.N4Vlta.BJI 0210 •-•••••••••••••••••••• J'ln.labed l.n brooie w /tan .,_,,.,..._t oloro. '""T·~~n • -•wtaor tihd. frJam.botMl\oads Low m I I••. 198 7 -...... ... 1 ... ._ .......... A~/F~ t -... ... COSl'AMl'..SA IU-IJOO ISer.0392>. Alto bl•ck tlrie.newseatcvn,~ lllkiorDtrk. lt71MAlll(IV ~:;;·0~iee7in&~b:aek':: -"-9965 54'-1200 1trt1tch avaJlable. ~uk'°°· $12.50 or fer •rr Skylark, take as I~ ~ eorvett., air, AM /FM Every ntra ln the world window•, bucket aea\s, ........................ . ---------1 'nJWZ. buut. ~Ir, map, MOTOtt CAllS Bestorrer. MeNo, Ja.400 ml, $8400. lncludtni • burr,ler vinyl top, air cond , Excep. clean '63 Bon· ........... rtH =~·T~~~7~~~0• D..._.ANCI 'Tl VW Bus. AM/FM. 6CZ·l510 ~40 ~~~~,.~::~:ie'!ttco~: cruilecootrol.Ultwheel nevllle, pwr, air. 4 dr, ·-·••••••••••••••••••• --628W. 1Tth8A547 92!50 11395. Prtv.te Party. C.OOC ttl5 '87 Vette. F/B. Reltored l.v ST1'95. Cort Fox Leu· Locally driven car beltoffer.~1 AH. a-e '705 "72 JIOZ, many xtrua Kom CaJI 114/983·~. to --~k .,.. b dl (l (828NJO >. , M ... 100 4 pd ••-••••••••••••••••••• ,,_ ..... per con • 'ln&. Ca Aa..JLY $4995 9970 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1hocks, header1. etc G4 erceurs . s Uon...,...... Ph 8af.5SM """' •-tk Th .shftrpeal one '114 Baja, rtin1 IS Joob' 1d. fl· •• '""· tll-1641 ••••••••••••••••••••••• AH.~ 4t..LA.. M111t cund Mutt aee .. • e " _,,, ... -·t p p MAltftUIS VOLVO 'i• . Su-r ch:.:-:nd dri\e S3041U6or731·3204 you'll ever aee $2:100 ••\N°"""" · I Dodgt 9935 "'""' 1966 T·Bird, orit owner, ------962.8418 S31-'7225 ••••••••••••••••••••••• McrYerick 9947 MISSION VIEJO full pwr, air cond, xlnl mecban1cally perfect '74 260Z Clean! Air . ---'74 Otaraer. nu ra"lall, •••••• ... •••••••••••••• 131·2110495-1210 cond.$1500.644·7905 Not our b.oe of ('ar Jnd AM FM . mags , COY '73 4SOSE Brown Xlnt '62 with ·ee ens" lrana. 1976 c 01• • ·c A I c G d .. 'T2 Maverick 302 V8. AT. --------mw.l ~II TODAY' Cdn +more $4900 ssi-9263 rond.41M Must sell Pvt Nu 60 HP ena. Gd A _.. l3lOO/bttof~.0~9TJ'· PS, 4 dr, ractlals, $1500 'T2 Okb. xlnt cond, full VeCJD 9974 ft~ Ions term 01\C --prty.833-l4M tranaportallon. $550. B.DORADOCOU'I Firm. 548.7232, alt power , 1 owner,••••••••••••••••••••••• cl3MXN1 1974 DATSUH 531-'1225 Cabriolet top, full leather '71 DODCH DART s ::.>;wknds Sl4001 Beat otter. '92·8397 VEGA 76 House of lmport"i 710 COUPE t970 250 Sedan. Rblt ena. ,68 VW Squa"""ba-'",&ood anterior. 80/40 power ••oat _ __..... . alt&PM H"TCHl.i1.Ct1 GT AM·FM. air. new tires, "" .... seat. AM/FM stereo -• ,..._.. 1970. 2·dr, stick. 6 cyl. "' "' " 4 hspe1ed, sipec,la ~ •,110&'1 Xlntcond. 494.2074 ev.s ~tloo fl~/belt fer w/tape pl1yer & ft.di 4 door I 6 cyll nde r, Oood cond. Radio, $850. '74 CutJus Supreme 455, 8 DEMO. 5 speed trans .• w ee 5• v ny roo --v ...... ,21 lall (520PCX> autolnal c, power 1teer· 498-7762 c y I. PS. PB, AC . a 1 r con d . • etc • many other extras! Very '75450SLC (4 pa.ssl Met. poweraaa · · Ina dlo heate al fl799/bet fr 9682030 (""""" . .,c...,> w ..,.,.,.c .... ..... ... , ............ . •• ,,.. • 'I ., .harp ' <705L IV >. EZ red, sunroof. AM /FM '5 VW BUG. Od cond. $8988 • ra • r, r • -0 • • V>l'NI~ • 85-·-· coodJtlonJna. (458MGV>. '71 Mav. 2 dr. 6 cyl, 3 spd, O .... LY $3291 Auel 9707 lerm.s·O Ac 1 yr. parts lape dk. air. special Radial•. rbll ena. nsap, Only $199 down~ $80.89 RiH, 48M orig mi, clean. '67 CuUa.s.s Supreme. xlnt How"·RD c .. -.,--··· ••••••••••••••••••••••• & labor servke policy whls. only 10600 ml. $1050. Call642·3571 Nabe per month including tax, $1275. 846-2466 cond. Best orfer. 830-2210 "' -~ ·741.2 Audi 1001.S. 4 spd. uvu1l Auto Center's 714-759·1166 evo/wknd. ,7 4VW 9 palt ., rs license, It all finance aft5&wknd.s. Dove&QuaitSta. Jlr. AM L'•"" ~ter .. 0, sun pnce h1 833 :1184 dys1 wkdys • charaes for ..., mont"'-on '71 Maverick N t;WPORT BEACH r '" a " . 59c: . .. 13970 645 "80 Cadil d-... "d" It 6 cyl, auto, 1tlnl cond. '67Cutloas SJ75, llJ.0555 roof. lo m1. l3350 ll:.>·9495 OHL Y S2 ., MBlCEOl!St 969 . . lac ~!rrredo v perlcec !..e111,.... Sl,350. 494.9220 Lo mi. pvt pty --"·----or~ 6712 MAIERS BAJA BUG '68 VW 1700 .,..,,.., -·"'"· Call 675·6563 ,73GT Auitltt-HHl•y 9709 AUTOCEHTER 230MI% cc, aunroof. AM/FM 26CXlH.uhorBlvtJ Annual pettentage r ate '76 Maverick 2 dr, 1ood ---Sl250 Div. Nabers Cadillac f\llly Equipped. Brown, stereo. 8 trk, CB radio, C.m1.1 Ml•,,15~().'J I 00 lb.Mo/. or If YOU prefer to ahape, buckets, 3 spd, Sell idle Items 642·5678 3SOOOmi ...,..7811 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1425BakcrSt.,CM 4Dr CSer .W0388>. Jarman whls. $1500. paycuh stereot.ape,newradiala, --------"""" ·s9 Ausun llt>ah 3ooo •, blk cast of llarbor Bl $4819 1145-3557 $2491.88 '2500. 979-611)3 ~...&-.. .... w HOO Alltoa, Mew 9800 V.:ry good. bl'i.l offer W ~1..n ---" O\erS2000 640~93 540-9109 •.,,.... .... ,.. '5VWCamper. Neweng. 74 O'Eleaence cou~. lrieludlnlta•lrllcense Mere_, 9950 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9712 .77 8210 Plus 7.000 lfl Mercedei Extra clean. 12450 or of· blue, sunroof, I tr'ack, ••••••••••••••••••••••• * * * * * * * * * * * * IMW mi. Leasing & Service fer. Call646-4925 loaded. f7.000ML '5000. ORANGE COUNTY'S * lt ••••••••••••••••••••••• • .ur, ~lereo, S~spd l\I h S --175-5131 S4000 968 6893 " any ot er • ports '66 VW Runs &ood. look& HIWIST Cars bad.1495 c-...o 99 '7 LINCOLN·MERCURY ,,,.__ ,,,,.,_ '68 lo '7J Cpe ~edan & Exotics Cull 494·3223 ••••••••••••,•••••••••• DeaJenhlptsnow OPEN llf" llf" SADDLEBACK BMW ~~1.te~~av~ ~,49~0~~ 12inStock ·68-eu;, RunS great. Nds ~Camaro,LT.~tcond. "llW 9 .... Al d IAYFLADEIOE lt * em 6731784 Ca~~TOR~~R'sro ;;!1~~S::;~ Call aft !!i~e45~a:t" Must tow'~1. loa~ed: =~: lf:~O,.~~~;u~~ * JOE MAC PHERSON * COMEIM & SEE THEALL HEW 630CSI MOW!!! Rat 9725 D'H.EGAHCI P/P87H383/"6-T3llO SDFwy·Lake Forest exit -71 camaro. lo mi, auto, ~ 99 .. " IRVINE ,,,.__ ,,,.,__ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 626W 17lhSAS47·92SO VolYo 9772 xlnt cond.,muateelll ,.._... ' -131·7000 llf" "'f' COMPLETE IODYSHOP MOWOPEH 72 SPORT COUPE '65 iOO, •·door. sunroof. re ••••••••••••••••••••••• 551·0314 •• .. ··~··• .. ••••••••••• ,,,.__ Jt. 5 spd; ma1.t wheels. al clean $1695. 6451425 1972VOLVO Chtvrolt't 9920 .,,Ford~llte,a.lr,Ps.pb, 70MOftf990$IOO "'f' AM1 FM radio dual stereo. Xlnt cond. 12950. Good . d I •-l Lo * lt ' or646-9134 p 1100 COUf'f ••U••••••••••••••••••• _.. "'""1. COil . IJ .,. OU • pipes, blk vinyl hard·lop, --.....,......., mi 557 2881/5:17 4579 t•anary yellow. Gocxl l'On-MG 9742 Alrudy a ''classlc''.4 '71 El Camino Clo~alc. · · · ,,,,.,_ ,,,.,__ SADDLEIACK VAUEY IMPORTS 831·2040 495.4949 d1l1on Asking $19:>0 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• •peed"" overdrive. F\Jllpower.AC,AM·FM '73 Ford Ranthero. P /S, '73 Monle8o JdX. Good llf" Sales&Leaslng llf" make orrcr. 646·3Hl8 uflu SI MG.. AMI Jo'M stereo 8 track & stereo. ca~t rack. Xlnl ~~ A/C, Ma1 Wheels. condition SlfM. Or offer. ,,,.__ ,,,.,__ s 7 d 1 "' I e at.her i n t e r Io r . cond. tow mileage. ~ coed. ~. ,~ays 963-2913 -, "'f' llf" pmorr61'3 7144 an ea\t: Body man's spt:cial ' (JOlf."1'V>. ISJ95 557.2S()S '16Z·w70,evea55'7·27'M ----_,,,,'%'-----• msl( or ammy. Super mechanically ONLY $4995 , -F d e· U di '76 Monarch G)lia, 4 dr, * lt '74 Fial 1i1 Spyder con <Jl!:PQ58J. Yours for only '74 E1' CAMINO Xlnt1 1971 or • '( ra o, while w /aaddle velour CREVIER vcrt 2 topi.. AM ·FM $591 MARQUIS VOLVO cood. ~ew paint, new heat.er, 6 cyl, al ck. new lnt AM/FM •tereo. AC. ,,,.__ New & U•ed lt l I $31135 MOTolc •AS MJSSIONVIEJO wide ovals, air, P /B paint, 56.000 ml, new •~;,.,,..Ortakeov•r'-eat "'f' ., s nco, 0 m1. · "' .• , (if. clutduaaembJY 637 41.W _..,., "' "' ...._ Cars & Trucks ,,,.,__ &1 ST 6 H OADWAY 752-5752 D'ELEGAHCE llf·2810 495·12 IO P.S Mu1t sell. 134 · al'Uwkdwau~ · ; 1157. mo. Discovery ..,... "'f' SAHfA AHA ·11 Fial l:tlSpyder Conv. 626W 17lhSA~7 9~ -OttAHGICOUHTY ~ WFord~o~ ~~:ment Co. <714> * ZI AUTOCIHTl&Dtl ,,,.,__ 835·3171 1 mm ii c AM ; 1" M · MGI--'744 VOLVO Fi>retustnedAd •• Ooodrunnlnacar llVIMI ..,... '"'uLnMu10111v1,.01o c""t ~9711di3a11J9s5 new lop 124SO. ••••••••••••••••••••••• EX<;LUSIVELYVOLVO ' AC~~~N ~/bllofr.642·6820 ~~ .......... !!.~~ * 768•7222 ..t) ~ * •USED BMW's• " -·11 MGB GT. good coodl· 1 v I o I ,,,,.,_ ~~ ,,,.__ •74 BAVARIA, Auto Honda 9727 lion. l(ood paint & llre1, i:~er~na~~~~~r ~~I~:~ '75 LTD, 2 door. PS, PB, '73xlnMl acbd r.11lotrmlleMage. llf" "'f' Pp S2300 ... ., "I"" BUY or LE •"'E •~.,........, lir, v•nvl -...1, new en1. con • a x as. uat 7110 MVG ••••••••••••••••••••••• · .,..., . ., "" ~ ,.._...,,. -.., ·~ * * * * * * * * * * * * ·1.u OCpeS R 746LWB ~Mew '77 Opel 9746 DIRECT 1harp548.5853 aell6'75-4W . i620024spdS R401POP Q ••••••••••••••••••••••• ;f~-~,~·~ ...... UHd ...... UMd Mtol.UHd Alltot,UMd ...... UHd ·1112002 . .up Air. ZK<H38 H NDA Cars 1972 ore&. GT • • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••:•••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• '733 OCS 48pd 220KMT MANY 76 3 0 4 d "' 1• 4 speed. air cond & snPQM 111 i;p .., ' ToChoos.From! maj!S Looks like NEW' ..,,"fl!~!"'lll!lilif"l-~--1 Ck>Md °"Sunday• UNIVERSITY 094~y 52695 Ansr.:m M~ ORANGE COUMTY'S ~:::~I• GMC MAA(f>UIS TOY OT 4 -le Volvo 122 Sta Wgn OLDEST MISSION VIEJO Good cond. Ena runt gd, $ Tnacki 831·2110495·1210 bttol'r.Call492·56.15. 2850 Harbor Blvd. Cotita Meaa 540·9640 POl"ICM 9750 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~. UHd Sales &•rvl<'e Leuiung '74 CIVIC Blue Metallic. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • Whl V·top. new clutch. '76 TURBO Blk .. Tan Int AMC 9901 RoX Carver,lnc. New ••res •. brke~. Beat 12Q(>O ml. 11200 Berlln "' "' " radio. Sunrc>0r. CB, ml.nl. ••••••••••••••••-•••••• Holl.s oycc DM W oiler over 12300. 752·9299 a .i.:-a .,8,000. 675.81a1 7 6 AMC fi'ACa 1540Jamborce ""'"'' ... Nl'wport Beach 840·6444 J.,._ 9730 1968 Portche, new clutch S94.62,... "'°""' ••••••••••••••••••••••• •-t 6 c1llnder. automotlc, ·11 BMW 2800 ~S Cpe. '76 JAGUAR XJ6L. 22M ~llN,I rongenl.;5.3330 power ateertos. air con· auto, AC. AM I'M, must ml xlnt cond $12 000 ditlonlo~. Lf'IJ than i.cll (714) 833 3~81 or · · ' · 11~.1~ :i:~1s .2100 . home ":of:S:tu~~~~~:~~c:ii ~~$1';;.~~.r~Ji '76 • 2002. Ice blue, 3 yr . 7 2 X-K-E 8 1 2 2 + 2 644-«MS per month inchadlns tu. ----lloe:nH, le all finance wrnt). air. AM .FM. JAGUAR Partially llolhloyce 9756 cbaraearor42monthson hood bra. Best ofr restorttd. Very clean .••••••••••••••••••••••• approved credit. _6-16 4519 Io 1 de d . S 1 5 O O Pb # 1 DEALER IN U.S.A. Deremid PU1Mnt price atro.. t7 I 6 cm >994-0316 IOY SU73..04. Annu•I percen· •••••••••••••••••••••••Jens... · .9732 ~ taaerate18.l~orif)'()U ' •73 CITROIH MS ••••••••••••••••••••••• CAllVIR ~er to pay cuh 4 11pd., full power. air '74'• J .H .. uu. deck. ~!l}~;~~[ $3220.92 toM l337MICI. IOOd cood .• $5500. Call Ne.,..-1 .. .tcll titcludlnlf\ild,llceJ&H sa.11• "hrk • t 640·5000 or ....... MOTO. CAIS 5.59-1174 ClOSIO SUNDAYS D'B.l:GAHCI QI W. 17th SA 547.9250 .,..... 9720 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '74 21GOZ, 4 sPCI. a1c. mags. amifm. xlnt cond.lMR CBS> $'515. D)' 8U·UU,pm/wknds 875-5'00 ~,,,. 1 ,,, l1t111orr•, , I ---- 74JEHSEH Intercept.or. all oriainal. &aper cond. has ever· )'thine. (l84RDJ J Sil.lit MOTORCAIS D.._.AHCI QSW.11thSA$41-t250 mir.it:le n1.1zda , ,,_ .... GUSTAFSON I I'•' '11 N rM IH.Lll'V l "'l' l' II•··•· ti Fllvd ti1J'lf1nqtr,r1 n( ·'' ~, a·n ·BB44 l 1971 UMCOl.H C~. Ught QrMn with darlt green vlny1 root. full Power df COUtle, AM/FM etere<> radio. tllt wheel YOll mutt ... thit 009, Lie. t917MCO . . 1 1972 CHIYS&.H ' Newpott Custom 2 Dr H T Medium green. with green lnteri0t ·~ <Wk or..., vfn'tt root. power brak8e Ind stfff'lno. llr cond. & heater. radio ShlrP untt. test driw It today. Ser tCM23M2C271342 5 1395 I 961 CADILLAC Sedan Devllle. Gteen with white roof. full power l air oond .. radio, Ill! wt'IHI. Oreat tr·an•portatlon. Lie tNOS714 '195 1969 IUICIC Electra 226 2 Or H T Sh•P luxutY car. green With green vinyl roof. full Power. air cond . AM/FM radio. tilt wheel. !Ill set to go Lie. tXV1<105 5 1195 1'72 UHCOLH 4 Or Town Sd. Black. blacfc leather lntenor a vlnyt roof Loeded with extras this fine luxury car le all Mt tor the family needing room & com~ In a fine automobile Lie. t433EAP 1 t72 PONTIAC Grand S.flri WIQOtl Pow9r etMrlng. power brake•. power windowa. • AM/FM redl~. luggao• rack. tllt wheef. Uc. 1131ELT ____ .__ ____ __, ______ _,,_,,,._ ___ . __ ~------..-------------..,._- ii . tlngton Reaeh Fountain Valley EDITION -------~---------~~---- ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A MONDAY, AUGUST 8, 1977 TEN CEN ~------~~~~~~~~~Witnes~ OJfer No Help---------------... llofJfJer KnlfeS N¥ Woman to Death NEW YORK fAP) -Pohte say more than a doie11 people watdHod without beJptfll U a woWd ~robber ltntled a 3'·year· old Mar.hauan woman to death an the 66th Street IRT ~ubway 1ta· taon at Lincoln Center c1 .. ud1a Curfman Castelljilla "as stabbed and slashed 10 Umes 1n the ch~t. back and arm at the bottom or the stairs of the sub- way i.tataon at noon Sunday, pohce:,aid Witntu aaid thf>' heard tbe womnn acreamln1, "Leave me alone. Leave me alone," Just befon the killer betan attacklnc her with a large knife. Mrs. Castellana sta11ered further into Ute station and col· lapsed between the turnaWes and the tbanae booth jus t u pas11enjer1 began to leave a traln that had just pulled Into the sta· lion She was pronounced dead on arrival at Roosevelt Hospital at 12:30p.m. • Po.llco said people w.ho wit· nea1ed the attack apparently made no move to help the woman fight the killer oft, but some ot those setting off tbe northbround local chased a man they believed to be the assailant. The man iot away. "He got away and we don't know whether It was the rtght man or not," a detective said late Sunday after interviewing wit· neases. Police believe the auallant followed the woman lnto the sub- way 1,tntendln1 to rob her. Pouce also recovered the ap· parent murder weapon, a lar1e foldln& knift with a black handle. A native of Denver. Mrs. Castellana came he.re about lC years ago to earn a muter'• degree from Columbia Teachers College. Three years ago, she married Frank S. CuteUana, a medical doctor afflllated wltl\ Columbia Unlveraity and St. Lukes Hospltal. The couple planned to spend Sunday afternoon wltb Dr. Castellana 's parents In Queens. Mrs. Castellana 's murder came Just as Transit Authority police relea,aed a report c:lalmlng that major crime in the subway dropped 16 percent ln the first seven months of this year. Polanski Guilty of Sex Charges . 84,000 Loss Thieves Hit HB Free Clinic Medical services at the Hunt· ington Beach Community Clinic were al a standstill today after thieves, apparently ~earchmg for drugs ra ns a cke d the clinic: sometime during the weekend. takmg two macro:,copes valued at at least $4,000. Clime Director Susie Newman reported the breakin lo Hunt· Chamber mgton Beach police Sunday after discovering a broken window at the clinic, S060range Ave. Once inside th~ clinic the thieves punct)ed a hole throu1h the door of the clinic's pharmacy "and really messed the place up, even though the only dru1s we carry are birth control plHs and antibiotics," Mrs. Newman said. i ::) z ~ 0 i EDINGER ID WARNER .,_ _____ _ AV AVE Director Facing 50 ·Years SANTA MONICA (AP> -Mov· ie director Roman Polanski pleaded guilty today to having unlawful sexuaJ entercourse with a 13·year·old girl. "J had sexual Intercourse with a female person not my wife un· der the age of 18," Polanski declared, readini from a pre· pared legal document. Deputy Dist. Atty. Roger Gunaon asked Polanski If he un· derstood what his maximum sen· tenc:e might be. • //i.I'~ , Shelves Tax Clinic officials have yet to estabhsh a damage figure, but re· ported a microscoP.e vaJued •t $3,200 amone the missing items ,\ second microscope on loan to the clinic was also missing, ac· cording to Mrs. Newman. She said jt waa the first breakln at lbe clinic since It opened seven years ago. The clinic serves more than · 1,200 patl•Gta a month. The 43·year·old director answered calmly: "One to 50 years in state prison." Gun.son then told PolanskJ a proceedlni will be loJtlated to de· tersni.ne It ~ is a menlally dis· ordered sex offender. PLEADS GUILTY Roman Polenakl Some 250,ooo- Aliena Wait Along Border I ·cut Plans By ROBERT BAttKER Oll•O.lly '"' ... , ..... A Chamber of Commerce res· olutaon callln& for a drastic cut in Huntington Beach property taxes has been shelved after directors deadlocked on the Without Its microscopes, Mn. Newman said, the cUnlc wUl be unable to complete much of Ila daily lab work. Allhouth the cllnlc will remain open, she said, many patlenta will receive limited or no medical servlces until new micr0&eopes are obtained. The clinic Is funded by com· m unity donatlo111, primarily throuab the West Oran1e County United Crusade. Huntington'• Beachel Full On Weekend An estimated 275,000 people turned out UUa weekend to enjoy light surf and heavy sun aJon1 the el1ht·mtle shoreline from Hunllniton to Seal Beach. Life,uards reported more than 13S rescues in one to tJu-ee.root surf and a nwnber of cuts and brulseJ, but none of the vlctirn• required hoepltaUuUon. The heavl"t acUon wu at HunUn,ion State Beach where llteauarda rePorted more than 100 rescues, Including 21 on Sun· day by auards mannlnc tower 21. An isolated rlpttde near that tower was tbt cause. of the problem. Ufe1uardl aald. Boat traffic was conluted Sunday off the Seal each 1horeHne and the llf 11uud reacue boat lfU called into ac· tlon a dOttD times to a.Id craft wlth m hilnlcal ditt\cultles. ... .,,.... .......... SHAD!D AREA SPOTS OLO MARIN! AIRSTRIP In Fountain Valley, a New Controvetay Brew• . Ma17ines' Housing Looms Near.Park By RAYMOND ESTRADA Ja •. °' .. °""' "*'"*" Almost two decades ago, Foun· taln VaJley civic leaders teared homes were threatened by U.S. Marine Corps helicopters fiylnc out ol a training base in the Mlle Square A;ea. But today Fountain Valley leaden fear the hotne• Marine officials may build in the 130- acre triangular area surrQUDded by what ta now Mlle Square Park. • Marine otnclal1 say the hous· in1 ls needed to ease a critical bou1ln1 shorta1e for Oran1e County servicemen. f'ountaln Valley city coun-cilmen~ the propo1ed hou.ainC would mean the part would be uaed mainly by aervlce famltltt and that a dralft would be placed on ell)' service& by the concetrtra· tlon ol mttltary famUitf, The Mannes' currenUy p~e to bulld u many au..aoo mlUtary houslnc uriitl at th• unuud Mile ,Square faclltt.Y. County and , mllltar)' otnclaJa utd they wlll •kr.lore the POQtbHlty of tr.dint and clOMr to El Toro Manne Bue. lor tlUt Mlle Square site. But unless mmtary, city and county leaders work out a plan at • jotnt meetln1 1lated Sept. a. the prospect ol a new controversy over the Mlle Square tU"ea ap. pears likely. The brewint dispute over the helicopter facility 11 but another ln a aeries of cUa.puttl between local otnc1a11 and the mlllta.ry over the past 19 years. · Per)J1p1 the first local ofnclal to rap the military'• uae of lhe Mile Square area in north Foun· tal n Valley waa Juanita SOlonanolnl.851. Mrs. Solonano clalmed phots flew uasafe pauern1 over populated· areu lncludlnt Colonla Juarez. She tOok her fl1ht to tl\en·atate AH·emblyman Rlcbard T. Hanna. The MU• SQuare area, bounded by Watnlt\ and J;dlnaer avenues and Broo•hunt and Euclid streeta, today looks H~• an un· likely place for • batte. It la a county-owned park. Wltb Fountain Valle1'• <lee_.. ... PaB AZ> The pro1ecutor added: "Since you are not a clUzen of the United States. a poqib!e consequ.nce ol your plea ls that you mitht be de-portect ••• Gunaon announced that the dls· trlct attomey would recommend droppJJll five other counts ol aeJC perversion and drug abuse •&alnst l>olanakl. S 11 p e r I or C o u-r t J u d i e Laurence Rltl911band, who ac· cepted the plea, ordered that Polanski be examined by two p1ychiatri1ts and set a hearlo& Sept. 19 · for a report on the re· 1ults. Polanski will be sentenced sometime att.r that. Al the dramatlo 20·mlnu&e plea hearing, an attorney represent· int the ramUy of the 13·year-old &irl implored the judge to accept Polanakl'a Plea to protect the teen-ager lrom the glare of publicity. "A atlima would attach to her for a Ufeume," said attorney Lawrence Sliver. "Justice ls not made ol 1uch stuff.•• Silver 1aJd the family doesn't seek Polanski's Imprisonment (See POlANSXI, Pace A2) Sentenced For Murder NEW YORK <AP> -Between 200,000 and 250,000 destitute Mex- ican migrants are walUng near the U.S. border for a chance lo slip Into this country before. Congress acts on an amnesty plan for illegal aliens, the New Yorlt nmes said today. <Related atorypaseA3> E~ n!tbt at teut 1.soo or the miarant.a atlempl to elude border patrols and enier the U.S .. wlth about 1,000 beine cau1ht and re· turned to Mexico, the newspaper reported. ln the border town of Tijuana, Mexfco, mlgran~ ate reportedly paylnc professlonal smugglers · S250 each to tuide them past border patrols and teke them to Los · Aneetd, home of a large M mean community. In addition, for an extra ~>to $400,, the smu11lers offer Phony backdated documenta, ldcf udlni rent receipt.a, uUlily bill$, work permits abd Social Security cards. The smuttier. proiDlse that the document.s would insure that the mtara.nts would qua.lit)'. under Presldent Carter's amn.es· ty propo1aJ, the Times saJd. A border patrol a1ent. Robert McCord, was quoted }'Y the newspaper as aayint mQlt. Of, the mieranta are livtn• ln lleaay hotels. 1ara1ea and dlrt-noor hovel• oc camplns aJona roadi. ......... --~ _..._.._.._,_____.__ -. tJJ DAIL\' PILOT H/F Monday, AUQt.I!! I , tl77 44 Tundra Ftre• Rain Slowing Alaska Blaze DJ 'Re All*laa.4 Coola' wuther and raln helped nrtf wurltlnt 00 " bluea •~rou 1 ~ million acre• Qt rans• and t.uMn in A.ldka. But In We•\ and Northweal at.at.u. ~,.,,. were atralned to lh lr Umli. toda7 lo b1tUln1 •D Hostages Taken by Prisoners NAPANOCH, N Y. CAP) -In· mates at New Yorlc's Ea.st.em Correctional Fac ility over- powered some or lhelr guards to- day, seized 17 hostages and took over a section of the prison. The d1~turbance broke out shortly before 9 a.m. in cell block Bl of the medium-security prison, according lo Ruby Ryles, a spokeswoman for the state Departmenl of Correctional Services. She s aid there had been no serious injuries , and said the in- mates were not believed armed with guns or knives. An aide to Gov . Hu1h Carey said 100 to LSO Inmates were in- volved In the Incident, and that there were 17 hosta1es -10 or them prison gwirds and seven civilians Corrections Commissioner Benjamin Ward was en route to the prbon to join negotiations between prison oHicials and a committee or three inmate rl'prcsentalaves The inmates initially took con· trot or the dining and kitchen facilities and part or the hospital an the B3 cell block. Prison of- ficials recaptured the hospital section around noon. Ms. Ryles said she was not sure how the recapture was ac- complished, but said no shots or gas were fired. The prison, in southern Ulster County about 70 miles north of New York City, holds 680 inmates and has a capacity of 711 . "This Is something we are ready for In our prisons because they are overcrowded and taking m 180 to 220 persons a month," Carey said at a briefing in Rochester. "We will enforce the laws In this stale Prisoners Inside prison!! will not be allowed to harm persons, e!>pecaally correc· hon officers," he added Police Patrol Killer's Area NEW YORK <AP) -Unable to snare the ,44-caliber killer who has murdered six persons and wounded seven In little more than a year, police are trying to limit the number or possible tar gel!!. Police Commissioner Michael Codd had directed officers to or- der cart out of Isolated areas arter recordin1 their license numbers. Mayor A~raham D. Beame aaid "It's l<>1ical this would re- duce the opportunity for auch a crime to be committed aaain ... 'Apple Tree' Set In Fountain Valley The Fountain Valley Hl1h School Summer Theater will pre- aent a mu1lol, "The ~pple Tree,'' at the 1chool'1 Little Tboater Au1. 17 ·20 at 1: 30 ~· m. Admtulon la • for adulll and U for all atudenta. The Little Theater Is located at 17816 Bushard Avo. DAILY PILOT ettlmated aoO aquare mil• ~ limber and bru.h lira. The 74,ISQO.•cre "lhrbl.south Cone" tire in California'• IM Padra National Fort1t near Big ·Sur may double In tlae befON it I• contahMld, 11Jd Joe Nldolskt fll tho fedttal Jnterattncy Fire Ct1nlc:r at Boise, Idaho. About 3,000 flrefl1hter1 were trylnc to maneuver around the blaze to protect the Carmel River w11terabed, which purtfle1 and collect.I water and acll to pre- vent mudslldea for Carmel Valley towns, lncludin1 Mon· terey. Tbe slx·day fire hat already claimed watenbed that officials say wlU take Sl4B million to replace. "We have a limited number of firefight.era and have to make a decision about what resources are most important to protett." Nadolski added. In Alaska, the fires are still "covering an area larger than the state of Delaware," Kerry Cartier, a spokesman few the Bureau of Land Management, said late Sunday. But the Big Salt River fire, which at one time appeared to threaten the trans·Alaska oil pipeline north of t~e Yukon River is ··no longer a threat," he said. That 15,000-acre fire has been "60 percent contained and the other 40 percent borders on the Yukon. so it's not going anywhere," he added. Most of the Alaskan fires were burning withjn a 175-mlle radius of the Kotzebue area in the northwest part of the state, with more than 1,200 firefithtera on the line at 28 blazes. Sixteen fires were unmanned, Cartier said. The largest or the fires, cover- ing 335,000 acres about 100 miles north of Nome, has been burnlna since July 9. Nearly 90 men were concentrating on that blaze ln an attempt to keep flames from spreading north to the village of Deering, he said. On Sunday, 24 fresh crews, 20 men to a crew, from throughout the country were flown to fires raglqg in Arizona, California, Colorado, Oregon, Nevada, Utah and Washington. The crews are professional firefighters on loan from slates and various federal agencies, Nadolski said. · With the addition of the latest 24 crews, more than 4,000 firefi1'hters have been moved In- to the West and Northwest since Aug. l, Fire Center offlclala estimated. That is ln addition to state forces. as In California, "hi ch has nearly 10,000 men fight- ing its eight major fires. A fire In Mod<><: County in the northeastern part of CalJfornia was reported more than 30 per· cent contained Sunday, said Dale Wireman, California state forestry spokesman. More than 100 million board feet or timber had been burned there. In Arizona. firefighters estimated Sunday evening that the 6,800-acre forest fire on the Hualapai Indian Reservation, just south of the Grand Canyon, would be contained today. Another major fire, burnln1 In the high timberland In the Se- quoia National Forest 60 miles northeast of Bakersfield, had blackened more than 7 ,200 acres. Fro• Pa~AI HOMES ••• • Moto-crossers Go tor It You can find them on almost any Sunday. imitating btgtime moto-cross racers on their bikes. It happens at the City of Irvine's moto-cross park on Jeffrey Road. where youngsters of many ages slap on their racing CIABrothelStorv • SF Madam 'Should Have Been Asked' SAUSALITO <AP) -Former San f'ranclsco madame Sally Stanford. now mayor or the Golden Gate, says the CIA should have consulted her about the de- cor or the brothet it says it ran In the 19505. Miss Stanford, as she is known at her waterfront ba.r-restaurant, referred In an interview tn the Sunday Sacramento Bee to the o ·>eralion that Central In· telllgence Agency Director Stansfield Turner told about last week. Turner said hookers lured male "tricks'' to a bordello on San Francisco's Telegraph Hill, where they were unwlttintty used In tests of LSD. The nat was reportedly rented by Col. Geor1e White, who died two years a10. He was direc· tor of the San Francisco office of the federal Bureau of Narcotics. It was reportedly decorated an red and black, on which Miss Stanford commented: "That's about the scope of their minds. Now when l had my places, they were filled with good French furniture, lace curtaln1, Oriental ru!ls. All quality and taste. "The CIA 1hould have come arounc! and asked me to give them decoratin1 lessons. But maybe they thou1ht they were coing first class wlth those pic- tures of cair·can dancers and that sort of thing. "Well, I knew Col. While. And that kind of decor sounds like hls kind ol taste." • • • • leathers (or what passes for them> and helmets and· grind it out over a track that covers about one-third of a mile. For an entry fee, they can race three times lo qualify for the main event and a chance for stardom. From Page AJ POLANSKI •. but only hopes that he will be ru1. ly rehabilitated. "The reliving of the sorry events with their delicate con- tent. .. in this courtroom packed with strangers would be a challen- ge to the emotional well being of any person." Sliver said. "1llis is not the place for a re- covering young girl." The diminutive Polanski. clad ln a gray pinstripe suit, blue shirt and red tie, appeared! redeyed and nervous as he stood before the judge and an:.wered the prosecutor's questions in a voice barely above a whisper. Gunson, netlng that a defense for Polanski might be that he thouiht the girl was older, asked wbetHer he knew her correct aee. "I understand her to be l3," Polanski said. ·•Did you understand her to be 13 when you had sexual in- tercourse with he~?" Gunson asked. Polanski besitated. conferred wlth his attorney, Douglas Dalton, then answered: "Yes." The charge to which Polanski pleaded was not the most serious In the six-count Indictment. Other char«es -specifically furnishing drug's to a minor and rape by the uae of drugs -carry sentences as long as 10 years to life in prison. · Dist. Atty. John Van de Kamp, who normally will accept a plea only to the highest convictable count of an lndlctment, issued a lengthy written statement alter the hearing to explain the un· usual plea ~argain. He said his concern was to pro- tect the teen-aie 1lrl h'om a trial which 11could vlctlmlze her a second time." r,...Pa.AJ Fluor Gets Geothennal Plant Pact Spedal to the Dally PUot LOS ANGELES -The Fluor Corp.announc~todaythatasub­ s idiary has been awarded contracts lor approximately M2 million to design, engineer. pro- cure and construct a prol>O$ed 45 ·megawatt electric geothermal power plant to ~ built near El Centro. Called the Heber geothermal demonstration power plant, the facility is scheduled to begin operatmg in 1980, but is con- tingent on receipt or federal and other funding. Contracts for the proposed commercial-scale facility, which would be the largest geothermal power plant of its type in the United States, were awarded by San Diego Gas & Electric Co. to Chlcago-bast-d Fluor Pioneer Inc. Fluor Pioneer will perform the work in conjunction· with the Southern California division of Fluor Engineers & Constructors Inc . at Irvine. Work performed under the de· sign phase will assist SDG&E and its project partners In pr.,_ paring their proposal for funding to the Energy Research & Development Administration <ERDA). Fluor 1s designing the plant to use a new approach for convert· ang heat energy in geother01al brine into electrical power. Successful use of geothermal heat for power in geothermal· rich areas of Southern Cahlornia would reduce consumption of i.carce fossil fuels, Fluor saJd. The Heber facility would use geothermaJ energy to replace the equivalent of l,850 barrels o( oil, or 12 mUUon standard cubic feet of pipeline quality natural gas daily. Services Set · For Minister E.R. Schramin A memorial service will be conducted Tuesday for the RJ?v. Eu1ene R. Schramm who cijed last Friday at the a1e of 69 in Westminster. Mr. Schramm was a minister for 4S years and had servect· as pastor of the Redeemer Lutheran Church In Huntington Beach for seven years until be retired in 1973. Servi(et will be held at 10 a.m. at the "'Redeemer Lutheran Church, 16351 Sprlntdaie St. · • Mr. Schramm wu 1Ull active as a chaplain at a number of reat and retirement homes ln the Huntlngt.on Bt!ach area prior tQ hit death. He 11 survived by.4 1)fs widow, Esther, ol Watmhlaier; thr• toftJ, David of Portland, Gordon ot Santa Rosa and Steven· 9( L1&auna IDUt, and a dauihkr .... Natalie of San Clemeoi.. He 1& also .survlvi-d b)' •lbt 1randchUdren and three allt«'t lnr.tlnnaota. NEW YORK (AP> -Pallc. i;ay mare than a doiea plople watched Wlt.bout h slpinl u a woWd·be robber luuf ed a Sf-year· old Manhattan woman to death In the QJt.b Street IRT subway ala· hon al Uncoln Center. Claudia Curfman Castellana was stabbed and alasbed lOUmes in the chest, back ud arm at the bottom of the stairs of the sub- way station at noon Sunday, polices.aid. Wltnellel 11ld they beard the woman 1ereamtn1. "LeHe me alone. Leave me alone," Juat before the kllMr betan attact.lna her witb a lar1e kni.le. Mn. Caatellana sta11ered further into the station and col- lapsed between the turnstiles and tbe chan1e booth juat u pa11encera betan to leave a t.raJn · that bed just pulled Into the sta· tion. She wu pronounced dead on arrival at Roosevelt Hospital , at l2:30p.m. Police nid people who wit.. nea1ed the attack apparently made no move tOMlp tbe woman fltht the killer off, but some of those 1etUng off the northbround local chased a man they believed to be the assailant. The man aot away. "He 1ot away and we don't know whether it was the rtabt man or not," a detective said late Suncny after interviewifli wit· nesses. PA>lice belle.ve the usail~~ followed the woman into the sub- way ~torobher. Police also recovered the ap· parent murder weapon, a large folding knife with a black band.le. A native of Denver. Mrs. Castellana came here about. lC years aeo to earn • muter's de1ree from Columbia Teachers College. Three years ago, she married Frank S. Castellana, a • TEN CENTS ··-.... - medical doctor affiliated with Columbia University and St. Lukes Hospital. The couple planned to spend Sunday afternoon with Dr. Castellana· s parents in Queens. Mrs. Castellana ·s murder came just as Transit Authorily police released a report clalmint that major crime In the subway dropped 16 percent in the first beven months of this year. Fluor to Build:Gaetliermal Plant 1 /tloto-crosser• Go tor It You can find them on almost any Sunday, imitating • bigtime moto-cross racers on their bikes. It happens at the City of lrvioe·s moto·crou park on Je/Crey Road, where youngsters or many aaes alap on their racing Plane Crash Kills Pair 1 Frorn Toro Two Orange Coast men were llinea · S\.ilm'IY""Wnn-nmr 1tibt plane crashed' in ru11ed terrain about one and a half miles west of Big Bear Dam. autboriUu said San B e rnardino County Shenfl's deputies identlfied the pilot as Raymond Chester Orzulalc, 28, of Irvine. ldentillcaUon of the other vie· ti m was withheld pendlnt notification or next of kin. A Blt Bear. city airport spokesman 1ald today at lea.st one '1 the men was a Marine. The Ceuna 172 was rented at the Big Bear airport and took olf a bout 7 p. m. Su..nday. the spokesman aald. The crash oc· curred at about 7:30p.m. Wlt.nases said the small plane was nytna extremely low over the Bla Bear valley prior to th-. crash which started a small ftre In \heclenae brush. , Accordln1 to Capt. John lJndet of the Blc Bear Lake P'lre Department, the 1ln1l .. natne alrcraft was buaatna U~· 1rounds near the •ue at tretitop level before Utt ct uh. leathers (or what passes for them' and helmets and grind tt out over a track that covers about one·third of a mile. For '" ent[y fee. they can race ihree times to quality ror the main event an<t u chance for stardom. Irvine linked To Plan Special to tbe DaUy PUot LOS ANGELES -The Fluor Corp. announced today that a sub- s I dl ary has been awarded contracts ror approximately Ma million to design, engineer, pro- cure and conatruct a proposed 4S·megawatt electric aeothermal power plant lo be built near~ Centro. Called the Heber geothermal demonstration power plant, the facUlty la scheduled to beain operating In 1980, but Is con· llngent on receipt of federal and other fundin1. Contracts for the proposed commerclal·tcale facility, which would be the lai-gest eeolhermal power plant Qf its ty~ ln the United States, were awarded by San Dlego Gu & Electric Co. to Chlcafo'·based Fluor Pioneer Inc. Fluor PJoneer wt11 perform the work tn con/unction with the' Southern Cal fornla dlvls.lon of Fluor Enaineera • Con1tructors Inc .• at Irvine. Work performed under the de· s(Jn phase ~ assist SDG&E and lts projeCt parlnen To pre· parl"8 their proposal for fundin1 to the Energy Research & Development Administration (ERDA). Fluor 11·de1lfning the plant to use a new approach for convert ln1 heat entrff· In teothetmal brine into electric Ill power. ~.,._-..---sacceal'u1 aae ol seotMl'maJ heat for pe>wer ln reothermal- ricb ~ Qf Southern California would reduce consumption of scarce fOl!il fuela, Fluor said. cs .. nvoa, Pat• AZ> Joi '11i8i Sticks-, Confiscated in El 'Foro Raids A,..,.... PLEADS GUil TY Roman Polanakl Polanski Adniits Sex With Teen SANTA MONICA <AP>-Mov. ie director Roman Polanski pleaded guilty today to having unlawful sexual entercourae with a 13·year·old girl. "I had sexual intet>coune with a female person not my wife un· "1ttt" the ete el-la,!!-l>elwkl declared, readJn1 from a pr&- pared legal document. Deputy Dist. Atty. Rocer Gunsoo asked Polanski lf he un· derstood what bis maximum sen-tence might be. The 43-year·old director ariiwered ·calmly: "On'e to 50 years in state prison.,. Gunson then told Polansk.l a proceeding will be lnlUated to de- termine if he is a mentally dis- ordered sn offender. The presecutor added: .. Slnee you ar.e not a citizen of t.bdJn.iled States, a poulbl• conaequenc• oC your plea ia that you might be de- ported." I ,. dra Ftre• I •1 Tlw AuotlalC'd Pr Cooier •ulh r •od rain h lfled Orefiahtn-ii wnrluna on 44 bias DC'r t s m1lhtffl acrc:-11 Cit ranft- .and tundra 111 Al1dka. liul n We ' and Nurlhwut •lilt•. rre._.. ~Nt atntDtd to lhelr hm1t1 today ln b1ulln1 an c• t1matt'd lOO -.quare mll ur lJmbt-r and brue;h f1rr• T1w 74.SOO arrf' "Marble South Cone"' Arr 1n l'ahfornla'1 Los radtl'S N11t1on:.tl fo'oreat near 811 Sur may double in 111e before at l1 tnnt.unt'd, .,~td Joe NadoJski ot thr federal lntt•raaency Fire Center at Holi>t', ld<1ho Hostages Taken by Prisoners NAPANOCH, NY CAP) In- mates at New York's Eastern Corrt'ct10nal l''acdity over· powered somt> of their guards to- day, seized 17 hostages and took over a secUon of the prison. The disturbance broke out shortly before 9 a .m. In cell block B3 of the medium -security prison. according to Ruby Ryles. a spokeswoman for the stale Department of Correctional Services She said there had been no serious in1unes, and said the in· mates were not believed armed with guns or knave~ An aide· to Gov Hugh Carey !>aid 100 to 150 inmates were m valved m the incident, and that there were 17 hostages 10 of them prison guards and seven c1v1hans Corrections Com missioner Ben1amm Wurd was en route to the prison to join neg0Uat1ons between prison officials and a committee 01 three inmate reprcsentati ves "fhe Inmates initially took con· trol or the dining und kitchen fudllt1e!l ancl part or the hospital in the BJ cell block. Prison of fic1als recaptured the hosp1tul se~twn uround noon Ms Ryles said she wa.'I not s ure how the recapture was oc comphshed. but said no shots or gall were fired The prison. m !!Outhern Ul11ter County about 70 miles north or N<.•w York Caty, holds 680 inmates and has a capacity of 711 "This 1s ~omcth1og we arc ready for in our prisons because they are overcrowded and taking in l~ to 220 persons a month," Carey s1ud al a briefing in Rochl·stcr "We will enforce the laws an this state. Prisoners Inside prlsonli will not be allowed to harm pcrsonK, especially correc- tion officers," ho added. Five Killed In Car Wreck RIVERSIDE (AP> -Five peo- ple were killed wheQ their car vMred off a four-lane residential street, hit a center dJvlder and rammed at high apeed Into a tree, Riverside police said. Dead at the scene were two males, •1es 17 and 18, and an 18-monlh·old boby 1lrl. Pro- nounced dea<l at Rtvenlde Com- munity Hoepltal were 1 Z-year- old boy and a one·month·old 1lrl. Three peraons who survived the oruh wpre In critical to 1trloua condition, a hospital 1p0k:•woman aaid. ' OftANOI COMl DAILY PILOT About S,000 nreft1httra· were lr)'lna to maneuver around the blaie to proleet lht Carmel River w i.krlJ1ud, which purlfle1 and colll·l't• waiter 1tod •ell lo pre- vcnl mudalidea ror Carmel V .alley towna. lncludln1 Mon· l l'rcy The 1hc -<.lay flre haa ulrcudy <'lulmcd waterehed that uffldals say will take $143 million to n·pl<iceo "We havw a llmilc!d number of f1rer16(hhff1 and haeve lo make a dcc1s10n ;,ibout what resourcea Jrt-' mo!lt Important to protect," N adolsk1 added. In Alaska. the fires are still "c·ovcnng an area larcer than the state of Delaware," Kerry Cartier. a spokesman for lhe Bureau of Land Mana1ement, !>aid late Sunday But the Big Salt River rtre, which al one time appeared lo threalcn the trans-Alaska oil pipeline north or the Yukon River 1s · no longer a threat.·' he said. Thal 15,000-acre fire has been "60 percent contained and the other 40 percent borders on the Yukon, so it's not aoing anywhere," he added. Most of the Alaskan fires were burning within a 175-mile radius or the Kotzebue area In the northwest part of the slate, with more than 1,200 firefl1hters on the hne al 28 blazes. Sixteen fires were unmanned, Cartier said. The largest of the fires, cover- ing 335,000 acres about 100 miles north of Nome, has been burning since July 9. Nearly 90 men were cuncentratmg on that blaze in an attempt to keep flames from spreading north to the vlllaae of Deenng, he said. On Sunday, 24 fresh crews, 20 men to a crew, from throu&hout the country were flown to fires raging m Arizona. California. Colorado, Oregon, Nevada, Utah and Washington The crews are professional rircfighters on loan from states and various federal agencies, ~ adolsk1 !>aid With the addition or the latest 2 4 crews, more than 4,000 firefighters have been moved In· to the West arid Northwest since Aug. I, Fire Center officials estimated. That is In addition to ~late forces, as 1n California. which h11s nearly 10,000 men fight· ing its eight major fl res. A fire in Modoc County In th£ northeastern part or California ~as reported more than 30 per· cent contained Sunday, said Dale Wireman . California state rorcstry spokesman. More than 100 million board feel or timber had been burned there. In Arizona , firefi&hters estimated Sunday evening that the 6.~-acre forest fire on the Hualapai Indian Reservation, IU!il south or the Grand Canyon, would be contained today. Another major fire. burnln1 In the high timberland In the Se- quoia National Forest 80 miles northeast of Bakersrleld. had blackened more than 7,200 acres. Spearfuher Catchea Self Laguna Beach firemen used a bolt cutler to clip the shaft from a spear em- bedded in the foot of a 15- year-old youth who had jabbed himself Saturday while spearfishing. John P. )lcldurray of 1569 Skyline Drive, Laguna Beach, was taken by his father to the South Coast Co mmuoiLy Hospital emergency room In South Laruna. He waa rele11ed after treatment. G1mmanHeld 5 Hostages CANOGA PARK (AP) -A man held four cblldron and the wife ol a supermarket mUllftr at tunpolnt In a Cano1a Park home before fieeln&, police said. Our Crowded Beaehes Thll'I is what it looked like Sunday ot Big Col'ona beach in Corona del Mar. It was this way --wall to wall peo- ple on most Orange Coast strands durina the weekend. In Newport Beach. llf eguards estimated the two-duy crowd at 170,000. Beach visitors al~ along the Orange Coast enjoyed temperatures in the 70s on the sands and, despite water temperatures that dropped in- to the low 60s, many were attracted into the water. Small surf made swimming conditions almost lake-like at most beaches. •, Fro• Page A I FLUOR ••• The Heber facility would use geothermal energy to replace tbe equivalent or 1,850 barrels or oil, or 12 million 1tandard cubic feet of pipeline quality natural gas dally. SA Fugitive Hunted A.liens Wait In Child Molesting For Chance At Border Geothermal experts con- servatively estimate that the Heber aeothermal resource area could support production of 400 to 500 mw of electric power, the Fluor announcement said. If the Heber plant proves auc- cessful, lt would 141ad the way to const,,,.ction of a number ot addJ· tlonal geotl\ermal electric generat1nt atatlons, Ffuor 58.id . The Heber plant wlll take geothermal brlne at a rate of 15,000 1allon1 per minute from 12 well1 to be drUled by Chevron Re&OUrces Co. in the portion of the field owned by Chevron USA Inc. Heber brine characteristica, establl1hed In a pilot pro1ram by SDG&E, show the nuid to be low in salt content, having about 14,000 part.a per million ot total dissolved solids compared to about :w>,000 pm in other Im- perial Valley brl!'e. Geothermal plants generating more than 45 mw electric are on stream In Northern California. They are powered by dry geothermal steam. rather than 1eotherma1 brine. By ARTH\IR R. VINSEL Ot .... Olltly ......... .. A naUonwld• search conUtlued today for a c9nfe111ed child molester linked to cases In Laauna Beach, Newport Beach and Costa Mesa, althou1h It has been rumored recently the charge was withdrawn. Jerry L. Opson, 46, formerly of Santa Ana, Is still souabt on the felony charce lnvolvln1 hia fallure to appear for sentencln1 July 12 In addition to the mlsde- m eanor child molestation to which he pleaded eullty. Opson ls believed to have fled to Colorado or Wyomlni to avoid sentenclnr and jail time. He would have been sentenced to three years' probation and pro- bably three months In Orance County Jal) following his negotiated guilty plu on the one misdemeanor count. If the Oranre County District Al· torney'!l omce had prosecuted the three felony counts orl.inally riled •i&inst the ru1ltlve beer bar manager, he ml&ht have been ac- quitted by a jury based on the al· leged victims' a1es, authorities 81ly. The children Opson allegedly mole:sted were under 10 years old. CIA Brothel Story SF Madam 'Should Have Been Asked' SAUSALITO (AP) -Fonner San Francisco madame Sally Stanford, now mayor of the Golden Gate, says the CIA sbou.ld have conaulted her about the de· cor of the brothel It says lt ran ln the 19508. Mias Stanford, u 1he ls known at her waterfront bar-restaurant, referred In an interview ln tht• Sunday Sacramento Bee to th• o)eratlo.n that Central In· telli&e!JH Aaency D irector Stanafield Tl4rner told aoo..&t lut week. Turner 1a1d hooken lured male ••tncb'' to • bordello on San Francisco'• Tele1raJ>h Hill, where they were WlWlttlhllY used ln tftta of LSD. ' The nat was reportedly refit~ by Col. Gtorte White, who dled two yea.re a10. He w .. dlitc. tor of the San Francl1co offtce of the federal Bureau or Narcotics. It waa reportedly decorated In red and black, on whlch Mias Stanford commented: "Tbat'a about the scope of their mind.I. Now when I had my places, they were rilled with rood French furniture, lace·curtains, Oriental rulll. All quality and tute. ••'the CIA 1hould have come around and uked me lo clve them decoratlnf leasons. But maybe they thou1ht they were 101n1 fint cla11 with those ptc· turea of can-can dancera and that aort rA t.hlns. "Well , l knew Col. White. And that kind or decor sounds ll1ce his kind of l81ite." ffocky'B Road . " To Romance &ea.es <Jwner OU1'HRIE CENTER, Iowa CAP> .,.... Ban~er Erneat Uttle't do't RoCky had hi• day In court ana waa ablotved ot doin1 wh.at comes naturally. Dtltrtct Judie Anthony Critelli ruled that Uttle la innocent ot let. Un1 Rocky run at tar1e, reeulUnJ ln a 1exual encounter with " •nO«ber d~ named Toby. Tdby la owned by Earl MUler, aon·1'ol<Menlo Mayor Leroy Glen MWer. CrltellJ'a ruUnc overturned a ma1lstrate'1 court conviction of LltUe, •7, M a char1e of vtolat1ns a Menlo do1 tle·Up ordinance. It wu Rocky'• dttermlnatlon to travel the road to romance, rather than Little's ne1U11ence1 that ted to the incident, sala CritelU. Th• episode occurred last March when Toby was chalned to her do1ltouse In Earl MU1er'1 yard. Rocky, a pedlcreed German abepeherd, wu chained in Lltt1e'1 yard fbur blocks away. Four Um• on March 10 ltocky rot IOOH and went to vlalt Toby. Recently. a story began circulating that court aidea re- called the warrant for Opson'• arrest, theoretically meaning there waa no charge hanging over the Cugiti ve. Prosecuting Deputy District Attorney Stuart. Grant, Newport Beach Police Detective Sgt. Mike Blitch and Costa Mesa Police Warrant Detall Detective Jack Koch say that Is erroneous. "We've forwarded copies or the reports and the warrant to Denver, Colo., and Rock Sprln1s. Wyo., and the want on him is in the national crime computer.'"' Blitch said today. "Other than that, we have rfo idea where in lbe world he Is." Police aile1ed Opson posed as a photographer to galn the trust of children In Newport. Beach's Westcliff district, carryin1 a camera. asking them to pose and then took liberties with them. He was finally charged wltb three counts, but allowed to pl~od guilty to one misdemeanor count of chlld molestation. which would have guaranteed at least three years' probation and supervision. Deputy District Attorney Grant did not want to risk the possibility or his acquittal In a jury lrial, he explained. Front Pa~ A J POLANSKI .. teenager from the alare or publicity. "A stigma would attach to her for a Lifetime," said attorney Lawrence Sliver. ''Justice Is not made of such stuff." Silver said the family doesn't seek Polanski's Imprisonment but only hopes that he wlll be ful- ly rehabHltated. "The rellvtna of the sorry fvents with their delicate con- tent .. .in this. courtroom packed withatranters would bea challen- 1e to the emot.Jonal well being or anyperson,''SUversaJd. •"Thia ls not the r.•ace for a re- covertnc Youna cir . " "We choee to slde wltb her," Van de Kamp said. He adde<I that In this case justlce would "provide the vlc- tJm with the QPportunlt.Y to crow up In a world where she'll not be known u the youn1 sir) with whom Roma.n P0Jan1kl had sexuallntercourse." The 1lrl's anonymity has been protected since the lncldent oc- oc:urred March IO. In a written recommendation to the ju41e, the district at· tomey'1 ornce asked Rittenband to accept the plea to avoid "another 'Hollywood Babylon· trial." NEW YORK (l\P) -Between 200,000 and 250,000 destitute Mex- 1c on migrants are waiting near the U S. border for a chance to bhp into this country before Congress acts on un amnesty plan for illeaal aliens, the New York Times said today. (Related story page A3) Each n11ht at least 3,:500 of the migrants attempt to elude border p ols and enter tb• U.S., w!th ubo betn1 cau1ht and re- turned o xlco, tbe.newapaper reported. In lhe border town ot 'Iljuana. Mexico, mlcranll are reportedly paying professional smu11lers $250 each to 1uide them past border patrols and take \hem to Los Angeles, home of a lar1e Mexican community. In addition, for an utra $300 to S400, the smu11lera off er phony backdated documents, Including rent receipts, utility bllls, work permits and Soclal Security cords. The smugglers promise that lhe documents would insore that the migrants would qualify under President Carter's amnes· ty proposal, the Times sald. • A border p~trol agent, Robert McCord, wu quoted by tbe newspaper as saying most of the migrants are livlnr In aleazy hotels, garages and dirt-floor hovels or camping alona roads. "ll'1 a sur11n~ mass or humanity and with the Umlled manpower and facllitiea we now have, tens of thou1and1 are bound to cet past us." McCord so1d "We are simply beinc over- whelmed." Laguna Beach Hitchhiker Foils Kidnap· A 22-year·old Laguna Beac!h woman foiled kldnaping u she fou1ht off a plstoJ-wieldlrig motorist who had grabbed her by the hair when she attempted to leave tho car. The.woman told police she w~ hitchblking al about 9:30 p.m. Friday at Forest A venue al)d South Cout Hilbway, when a man driving a yellow Pinto pulled up and let. her in the car. When 1he said ahe wanted lo 11t out at Diamond Street and South Coast Hichway, the man reac:bed under the front seat and pulled out, a pistol. A 1tru11le followed u the woman attemP.ted to leap fl'Om the car deapate the c unmurs wamirt£• Dot to. At one polnt, the man held her by lhe hair before ahe wu s~· ce11rul in openJng the door and escaping. Once outslde, abe fled. ' f'roaa PflflfJ .4 J The recommendation noted that if Polanski ls Judged to be a mentally disord~red sex o.!;, feJtder, he could l)e commltt111N TRIAL to a stat• h01Pital for treatment. • • • , If not, it nolid that correctional Judge R-obert P. Kn~l1nd, autborlUu have been applying both lawyen, the Jury and the penalties ot 1f montha to three courtroom 1tatl Jett to vl.w year1 f« P,11 crtme rattler than ulme acene at Cal Stitt the one to SO stated In the law. Futlertoa Imm ediately af\er Polan1kl end his attorney Enri1ht finished his open..ld1 ru1hed 011t ot the courth001e In a -in.•[l!ft~t. cruah of cameru and nahlna llib~ but deelhied comment. VOL. ro, NO. 210, 3 SECTIONS 26 PAG ,;,,,.--------~-.--i!------~Wibieeses Offer No Help--~-~---------........ ----........ BofJber &nifes NY WOman to Di!atll NEW YORK (AP) -Polle• uy more than • down l*>Pl• walt'hed without belpln• aa • •ould·~ robber knJfed a M-yeu- old Manhattan woman t.o death ln the 6l8th Strttt I RT 1ubw•y at.· lion a\ Lant'oln Cent.er. Ch1udJa Curfman Castellana was '>tabbed and sluhed 10 Umes 1n the d1est, buck and arm at the bottom ol the st•ln ol the 1ub- ~ ay tat1on at noon Sunday. pohce said. Wltnestet Hid they heard the woman acre•mtq, "Leave me alon•. LHv. me alone," Just before the killer be1an 1ttaddn1 her wtth a lar1e kntle. Mrs. Castellana st•uered further lnto the station and col· J1paed between the turnstiles and the cban1e booth just a& paaaqen be1an to leave a train that had just pulled lnto the ala· lion. She wu pronounced dead on arrival at Roosevelt Hoepitai atU:30p.m. Poll~ aatd people who wtt· ne11ed the attack apparenUy made no move to help t.be woman ftcbt the killer off, but aome of thoee 1etttn1 alt the northbrou.nd loc-.1 cbued a man th•Y beUeved to be the asaallant. The man iot away. "He sot away and we don't ~now wbether it was the rl&ht m111 or not," a detective said late Sunday after interviewin& wit· nesses. Pollee be\leve the u.sallant followed the woman into tbe sub- way lntendtni to rob her. POU~ also re~Qvered the ap. parent murder weapon, a laree foldlnl knlf • wlth a black handle. A native of Denver, Mrs. Ca1tellana came here about 1& yean a•o to earn a master's de~ from Columbia Teach~ College. Three years aao, she married Frank S. Castellana, a : medical doctor arrmated with Columbia University and St. • Lukes Hoepltal. The couple planned to spend Sunday afternoon with Dr. Castellana '1 parent.a lo Queens. Mrs. Castellana'a ·murder came just as Transit Authority police released~ report claimhi# that m8')or crime in the subw~ dropped 16 percent In the first seven months of this year. Polanski Guilty ·Q( Sex Charges: Evidence . Vowed Ai Trial By TOM BARLEY Ol IN O•llf l"llet St.H Director Facing 50 Years & I An Orange County Superior Court jury was told today that It will be elven abundant evidence lo prove that Edward Charles Al· }away was sane when he alleged· ly killed seven people and wounded two others on the Cal State FuJlerton campus Our Crowded Beaches SANTA MONICA CAP) -Mov· le director Roman Polanski pleaded guJlty today to havinc unlawful sexual entercourse with a 13-year-old girl. Wavmg the .22·caliber rifle al· Jegedly used In the campus carnage on July 12, 1976, pros· ecutor James Enriaht described Allaway as "mentally responsl· ble even If he was mentally dis· turbed." The chlef deputy district at· torney told the panel In hla open- • ing statement that there is no doubt of Allaway's guilt and "equally no doubt of hia 1anlty at thetlme." Enright said the two university employes who survived the six minute shootln1 spree will 10 on the witness stand during the trial to clve their account ot the klll· in gs. And he told the jury that Al· laway, 32, proved to be an adept marksman with the sporting rifle he purchased just two days 1 before the shootings. "He fired 23 bullets and they all entered vital areas of nine bodies," Enright said. "Victims were shot In the head, the chest and the heart -every shot hit Its mark and every shot was above the waist." Enright said two university em ployes are dead today because they trie<t lo wresUe Al· (SeeTRIAL, Pace ,\2) Police Called Over Krishna , Noise Again A complaint of chanUni. cym· bal playtnc end drum thumplne sent ~· Beach police to lbe Hare Krishna temple Sunday in La1una Beach. . U. wu the second Sund~ 1n a row otncen were called to the 841 Ramona Ave. addre11. The prevtous Sunday otncer1 cited 13 followers of the Hare Kr11hna r• ligton. This time, all was quiet when the pollce urlYed. The Hare Krishna are under a co~rt Order forblddlns use ot the blt houu they Jnbablt on ' Rafttona Avenue as a temPle. The ClOUlt <>i'4• waa obtalntd b7 tbe city aCt.U nei&hbOrhOod com· '" Pli.lnta ol vandalbm, nOU• and thievery. Thi.s is what it looked like Sunday ut Big Corona beach in Corona del Mar. It was this way --wall to wall people · on most Orange Coast strands during the weekend. In Newport Beach, lifeguards estimated the two-day crowd at 170,000. Beach vis· itors all along the Orange Coast enjoyed temperatures in the 705 on the sands and, despite water temperatures that dropped into the low 60s, many were attracted into the water. Small surf made swimmln1 conditions almost lake·Jike. Aliens Wait ForChanee At Border 3 Laguna Festivals Differ on ·Success By JACK CHAPPELL 0t•.....,"9tlWf Midway through Laguna Beach's annual art festival frenzy, there's only one thing for sure -noth.in1 l1 for sure. Aslc two artists how things are going, you'll get two different anawen. Talk to SOO artist.a and you'll come away convinced they've not even been on the same planet, much Jess the aame town during the same tbrt!e weeu. The Festival of Arta has seen about a 1S percent drop this year as opposed to last year and the Sawdust Festival ls talklne in terms ol a 20 petc:ent drop. Meanwhile Art·A·Fail' Festival claims it.a attendance ts double that of last year. with about as many people bavlnc been through the 1how durin& the tlrtt three weds aa attended all six weeks Jast year. Art·A·Fair thla year lJ located In Laf\lna Can.yon near Ule other two art shows. Its spokesman Zeny CiesUkowskl attributed lbe new location to the attendance in· creue. Represeatatlvea of both the J'esUvaJ of Artl and Sawdiast Featlval Hid the 1euon ope.ited 1Jowly thl• year. They had dlf· ferent ldua why that rnlcht be. Dick Clark, apoketman for the Sawdust Festival, tald he at- tributed the alow openlhl to con· nlctl with the Oranae County . Fair, also runnln1 that weekend, 81\d to • brush nre whlch made it diUlcull for people to set to wcuna. He also noted lbat a si1aJert called by the poUce deputment 1Jlay have dlacouraaed people Crom comlnt to town. Don Ware, Sawdust treuurer. aaid about 100,000 persons have been through the ahow ao far thia yeal'. "·Sally Reeve, spokeswoman tor tne Festival of Arla, aaJd ahe believes attendance la down only in compartson to last year's record crowds, . Mn. Reeve noted that durlnc the blcenlelfmat year, peo9le were'ouland lravellnf more. She said 113,000 had been on the •rounds during the first Qaree weeks. This includes the 2.* who view the P11eanl of the M11ters nJchtly. M for art aalea, aometJmea at· tendance ltaelf ta unlmportant. Art·A·Fair's Cle1Ukowak1 said. Art·A·Fair hu been attracUna about 1,000 people week daya and 2.~ ~ Saturday• and Sund~•. heaaid. ''We have found that while there are fewer peop!e durinc the week, a lot. mOl'• of tt\tm are here to buY. On the weekend, th•• .,-e more people, but a 1caaller percent.ae of them are bu)'era, ·• b••aid. Some artlstl are Hlllni well, aom• are not, and aome aren't terrlbly worrled about art feattval turnmer saJea. TIMy feel lt '1 \he ex~re that cou11u. Clatk said he had bffn keePln• hl1 ear to ,,~he around ln the Sawdust. :After t.tkln1 ~tb. a bJtdl d. exhlbltora. he Htd about a quarter w•• "cry'n' that 1aJe1 are down," abOut 40 to 50 percent ;-.:,;;;...~-.,.,..,.... ... ,...., .... ,.~..,.~~~::...;ir;~-:were ·~~the ume u last )'•ar" and.another JO ton per· • nt w•• .. ~ h betier Utan ... .,.at ... At U.. a;;Mt .aUvll, U\e CIM !"D!!VAts, Pase AJ) ''I had sexual Intercourse with a temale person not my wire un· der the age of 18," Polanski declared, reading from a pre· pared legal document. Deputy Dist. Atty. Roger GuPIO() asked Polanski ii he un· derstood what his maximum sen· tence mJght be. The 43·year-old director answered calmly: "One to 50 years In state prison." Gunson then told Polanski a proceedlng will be initiated to de· termine if he is a mentally dia· ordered 8elC offender. Tbe prQIJeeutor added: "Since )'OU are not a clUien of the United Sta&ea, a poulble consequence ol your plea ta that you miJht be de· potted." G\.tftlOn announced that the dil· trict attorney would recommend droppll'll five other counts ol sex perversion and drug abuse &I ainsl Polanski. Superior Court Judge Laurence Rlttenband, who ac· cepted the plea. ordered tbat Polanakl be examined by two psychiatrists and set a hearing Sept. 19 Cor a report on the re· sutu. Polanski will be sentenced sometime after that. ~ · M'the dramatic JO.minute plea hearing, an attorney represent· Ing the f•mily of the 13-year-old Jlrl Implored the Judge to accept Polanski's plea to protect the teenaaer from the ••are of pu~lclly. "A sU,ma would attach to her for • Jlfethne," satd attorney IAwrence Silver. "Justlct la not made ol such stuff." Silver said the f amlly doesn't seek Polanski'• imprisonment but only hopes that he will be ful· ly rehabllltated. "The rellvlnc of tbe sorry events with their delicate con- tent •. .In this courtroom packed with it.rangers would be a cbal1en- 1e to the emottc>nal well belna ol any j>el'IOJ\," Sllvertaid. ''TIUI it not the place for a re· covertq )'OUl\S •irl." AP~ PLEADS GOil TY Romen Potan1kl Ptirking Meters Debated A proposal to put parklnc meters alone Laguna Beach's ocean area residential atreets will· be reviewed by the city's Plan.nine Commlaaion Tuesday. The recommendation comes from former Laiuna Beach Mayor Glenn Vedder, a resident ol one of the arua prOJ>OSed for parktng meter poattllg. Vedder said the revenue generated by the meters would help defray public safety costs Involved tn protecting the Vis- itors t.o Laguna's beaches. Additionally, if realdential permits were lsaued to homeowners in the area, the meuure of parkln1 control af. forded by the meters would make parkinc easier for them durin& the summer, Vedder aald. "Tbls Ja • residential sectiort to be sure, but taie residents uve little chance to uae street parkinf for Lhemaelvea or their pest.a near tbetr homes under present condJUons," V~der said. Staff eaUmatea lndlcate lh· ataUatlon of met.en and curbfnl and markJna weuld coat $48,000 which wo.ld be recouped after twoyeart. Eatlmated lpcome would be between '25,000 arid $$4,000 an· nually. · · 1'ueld~'• meetlnJ 1et under wayat4:80p.m. at city hall. - I DAIL v '9l9T 1.IBC ~· M I .. 117'7 Rain Slowing Alaska Blaze .,,,. "--' .... .._ Cooler wea&.bel' and ral.DlMdped ftnllabterl worklna OD 44 bU.lela ~ross l.~ milllan acrea ol raD1• and tu:Ddra lo Alulla. But bl West and NorUlwHt •tatet. erewa were 1tra1Md to thllr Umlu today I• battU•I aa.n •tlmaled 300 a.quare mll411 ol tun b« and bnasb rarea. About a.ooo flffftab&en--. tl'.Ylna to rnaneuvtr around the blu. to protect the Cann el JUv.r wat.cnbed, which purlft• and coUedl water and act.I to pr-. •ent mud41ldH for Carmel Valley t.owa.. lnelu4ln1 Mon .. terey. Tb• •b·day flre bH already claimed wat.erthed that official.a aay wW take $1'3 m11lloD to replace. Tbe 14.SOO-acre "Jlhrble-South · Cone" fltt In Calilorola'a Los Padres NatJona.I Fore.t near Bia &ar m.-r double to me betore It la cont.iMd, said Joe Nadolald d the federal lnteracency Pire Cent.er a1 Bcue, ldabo. "We have a Umlted number of flrensht.e:rs and baYe to make a decision about what resourc. are most lmJ>Ortant to Protect. 0 Nadolski added. In Alulta, the ftres aH atlll ••coverina an area lar1er than the state of Delaware, ° Kerry Cartier, a spokesman for tbe Bureau of Land Manacement, aaid late Sunday. ltloto-cro••ers Go tor It Hostages Taken by Prisoners NAPANOCll, N.Y. (AP) -In· mates at New York's Eastern Correctional Facility over- powered some of their guards to· day, seized 17 hostages and took over a section ot the prison. The disturbance broke out ahortJy before 9 a .m. In cell block B3 of the medium-security prison, according to Ruby Ryles, a spokeswoman for the state Department or Correctional Services. She said there had been no serious m1uries. and said the In· mates were not believed armed with guns or knives An aide to Gov Hugh Carey irn1d 100 to 150 inmates were In· volved In the Incident, and that there were 17 hostaaes -10 or them pnson guards and seven ca vi Ii ans. Corrections Commissioner BenJamln Ward was en route to the pnson to join neaoUalions b~twcen pri!1on otrlclals and a committee 01 three Inmate representatives. The inmates Initially took con· trol of the dlnln& and kitchen Cac1liUes and part of the hospital in the Bl cell block. Prison of- ficials recaptured the hospital section around noon. Ms. Ryles said she was not sure how the recapture wu ac· • <'Omphshed, but said no shots or gas were fired The prlson, m southern Ulster County about 70 miles north or New York City, holds 680 Inmates and has a capacity of 711. ''This 1s somethln& we are ready for in our prisons becau.se they are overcrowded and taJung an tfK> to 220 persons a month, .. Carey s u1d at a brieClng in Hochester "We wall enforce the laws In this slate. Prisoners Inside prisons will not be allowed t.o harm persons, especially correc· tton officers," he added. Park Permits Sold in SC Parking permit.a, whlch allow free parklna In any authorized parking or meter wne In San Clemente, are available for $10 from the city police department. The permit• are •ood Uuou1b July 31, 19'78. Anyone ustnc a 1976-77 permit after Au1. 1S may be cited, a pollce department spokesman a aid. The San Clemente Police Department Is located ln the lower level of clty ball, 100 Ave. Presidio. Aclditlonal informatJon on tbe parklnt permlta la avail•· ble by callinl '92·5101. Riftentan Killed WIUTTIEJl (AP> -A Los Antelea Sheriff' 1 deputy haa kUled a man he said wu wletdln1 a rlfie at Monte Vbta Hllh School. I OlllANQI COMT utc DAILY PILOT But the BiC Salt Jllver fl.re. wblch at one time appeared to threaten the trans-Aluka oil pipeline nonh ol the Yukon River is "no longer a threat," heaald. Tbat lS,000-acre fire baa been "80 perc:ent contained and the other .0 percent borders on \be Yukon, so it's not aolna anywhere," he added. Most of the Alaskan fires were burning within a 175-mlle radius of the Kotiebue area in the northwest part of the state, with more than 1,200 firefi&hters on the hne at 28 blazes. Sixteen fires were unmanned, Cartier said. The Jaraest of the fires, cover· ing 335,000 acres about 100 miles north of Nome, has been bumlnc smce July 9. Nearly 90 men were concentrating on that blaze Ln an attempt lo keep names from spreading north to the vlllaae of Deering, he said. On Sunday, 24 fresh crews. 20 men to a crew, from lhrouahout the country were flown to fires raaing in Arizona, California, Colorado, Oregon, Nevada, Utah and Washington. The crews are professional firefighters on loan from states and various federal aaencles, Nadolski swd. From Page Ai MOLEST ••• Police alle&ed Opson posed as a photoaraph~r to gain the trust of children In Newport Beach's Westcnrr district, carrylna a camera, asklna them to pose and then took liberties with them. He was finally char1ed wlth three counts, but allowed to plead guilty to one misdemeanor count of child molestation, which would have guaranteed at least three years' probation and supervision. Deputy District Attorney Grant did not want to risk the possibility of his acquittal In a jury trial, he explained. But ()pson failed to appear In court July 12 for sentencinti. so Judge Donald Dungan i11ued the $50,000 bench warrant. Public Defender Max DeLlema. who represented Opson, broke the newa in the courtroom that. his client. had skipped town after belnic re· leased on hh own written promise to appear for aent.encinc. F,....PageAJ FESTIVALS "1arment 1uUd" waa dolnc eapecially well thia year. He al· \ributed lh11 to newa media at- tention and to fuhlon ahows on Sunday. At tho Festival of ArU Anne Chue. a lealberwork artlat and member ot the board of dirte· ton, aald 1alea bave varied among the art.lltl. She noted that artlatl Jack Dudley and Hal Akln• bad tremendous nnt weeka. Dudley satd he did better the fl rat 10 days or this seuon than he dld all 1hc wtekl lut year, AM• aald. A.a for her own 11le1. A Mt aald she re1ardect 1ros1 aalet from the booth ••p0t al an alpltlcant." The contacts sb6 made wlth peo- ple who later came by ber aw. "er• IJM)te lsnpOi'tanl, 11'1 ald., You can find them on almost any Sunday, imitating bigtlme moto-cross racers on their bikes. It happens at the City of Irvine's moto-cross park on Jeffrey Road, where youngsters of many ages slap on their racing Capo Gf1!rumandering Co11ncilmen Face Moving Decision Two of three current Sa1' Juan Capistrano city fathers may have to move off the city council or to new homes If a proposal to create s~ven councllmanic dis- trlcu 1s placed before the voters and approved. There are currently five coun· ell men ln the city. They are elect· ed atlarae. A petition clrculatln1 now calls for seven counclhnen to be elect· ed from specific areas. . . Councilmen John Swe~ney and Richard McDowell and M ayc>r Yvon Hecbcher all live ln the same propoeed councilmanlc dlatrict. That means Oflly one could be elected lf tbe new dis· trlct.a are created. But proponents of the lnitlatlve move deny tbe dlatrlcta were aet up wlth the Intent of removtn1 1ome eouncUmen. "We tried to 1lve every klnd of bomeowna tl\eir own r~en­ taUon." aald Bernlt Matthey, a spokesman for the Concerned Clth:ens for Rapon1lve Govern· rnent. 1poke1man "We wanted every voter to set equal reprt94mtaUon." Mllttbe)' Hid bll 1roup uaed exlstlnl voter preelncta, nat.Ural boundaries and klnm of houslna a• the tnain criteria for outllnint th• seven proposed diatrlctl. ••J uaure you we dld not do any aerrymanderln,," ht Hid, Oerrymandtrlnc m••na re· allplnJ • le1lllaUv1 district to 1aln polltlcal advantaae. Althoul'h the petition drive beau a •eek •co. MattM1 •!ild It is too early to judge the resulu. lie said the group would continue circulatlna the petitions for another week to 10 days. A total of 1,205 signatures are needed to rorce an election on the issue. Matthey said the concerned c1t1zen11 croup believe!! electing councilmen rrom neighborhoods will make the city aovemment more reapon1lvc. The group lists seven members on papers filed at the San Juan cl· ty cl~rk's office, but Mathey aald the or1anbatlon has many more backers. SC Seta Art, ·~tShow More than 160 artl1t1 and craft.men are acbeduled to ex- blbtt thetr wort Au1u.at 20-21 at the San Clemente anaual Art· Craft Fait, to be located at the ~community center. The dlaplaya wlll be up both 'daya from 10 a.m. to 5 r.m. alt.he cornet of Avenida de Mar and Call• Seville. A juried art tbow 11 planned in the c4'nter'a Sandy M artln 1allery. A t>atcatn tabl~ It to be located on the center 1round1. and retr•bments will be served. Ad- dltltnal information II available by callbi 412-4631. leathers (or what passes {or them> and helmets and grind it out over Cl track that covers about one-third of a mile. For an entry fee, they can race three times to qualify for the main event and a chance for stardom. NBNarcos Get$50,000 Thai Haul Newport Beach narcotics In· \·estigators announced today they have confiscated nine pounds or a Corm of potent man· Juana known as Thai sticks m El Toro after a month-long in· vestigalion. The narcotics, which police claim are valued al about $50,000 In illicit sales. were confiscated in two raids in which six people were arrested by undercover in· veat.iaators. Accordin& lo Sat. Darryl Youle ol the Newport B,ach police one pound or Thai stlcka were alleaed.Jy purchased by investigators in a deal culminated near the intersection of Avenida De La Carlotta and El Toro Road Friday atternoon. He said the oarcotic1 were al- leaedly aold to lnvesUgators tor $2,000 by Stuart Frederick White, 21. of 4703"'1 River Ave., and Richard Corby Jones, 23 of 779 Promontol')' Point West, both or Newport Beach. Th• men then asaertedly led of- ficers to a home at 24462 Hiahplne Road, El Toro where police arrested four more people and confiscated an additional •l.aht pounds of Thal slicks. While and Jones were booked on charces or conspiracy to sell marijuana. Alao arrested we-e Robert ValenUne Kalatachan. 22, of the Hidiplne Road addreu, on a charge ~ possession ~ mari· Juana tor aale; Robert Michael Bullard, 19, or Claremont, on identical ch,.rgea and Steven Paul Hilbert, 23. also of Clare- mont and allo b9C>ked lor posseulon of marijuana for a ale. Plane Crash Kills Pair From. Toro Two El Toro men were kllled Sunday when their Ught plane crashed in rufged terrain about one and a hal miles west of Big Bear Dam, authorities said. ldentiJicatioo or the victims was withbel~ ~"' noliAca- tlon or next of km, but a Bil Bear city airport spokesman said to- day at lea.st one of the men was a Manne. The Cessna' 172 was rented at the Big Be ar airport and took olf about 7 p .m . Sunday, the spokesman sald. The crash OC· curred at about 7.30 p.m. Witnesses said the amall plane was flyln& extremely low over the Big Bear valley prior to the crash which started a small fire- ln the dense brush. Accordlna to Capt. John Linder of the Big Bear Lake Fire Department, the single·engine alrcrart was buzzing camp· grounds near tho lake at treetop level before the crash. NudeKu8ing 'Not Worth It' TAMPA, FLA. <AP> - The self-proclaimed "World'a First All Nude Ki11in1 Booth" was open ror 25 minutes before ib first customer put down his dollar ror kiss. "It's not worth a dollar," 0 .0 . Jones said alter hls ·20-second 1mootch with a naked dancer in the Tam- pa bar. Gil Rodritiuez, the bar's owner, said potential klssera probably were scared by reporters and undercover policemen ln the crowd. Three Injured In Accidents In Clemente Two chJldren and a 21-year-QJd woman were lnjured on Saturdty in separate San Clemente traffic accldenU. Chrlltopher Amat. 5, ~ 118 Ave. Del Poniente, war hlt by a car about 1 p.m. ln the 200 b~k oC Avenida del Mar. A wttnee1 told police the ArnOt bo~ ran acrou the shop-lined atreet ln front tA a car and tbe driver didn't have lime to atop. Flremtn took the boy to 5;ln Clemente General lfoapltal. where he war t.r•atelt for, a bfokenriabtleaudrtl a.Md. WUUam Howard. IJ, <i *Via Aleare, hurt h19 arm about 111 o.m., whtn b• fell off hla bAeyele at. * A.•e. V8411tro. Jle Md broan the aame arm a year aao. be tdd firemen. ·--·--....... -.----- "' .. dlebaclt • VOL. 70, NO. 220. 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGl!S ORANGE COUNTrY, CALI FORNI A . MONDAY, AUGUST 8, 1977 TEN CEN --------------Witnesses Wfer No Help .--~-----------.• Bo"IJIJer Knifes NY WOman to Death !'EW \ORK <AP> -Police . ay more than a dozen people " alched w1lhoul belPtnt as a wouJd·be robber knifed a M·year· old Manh1tt11n woman lodeatb ln the filth Strttt IRT subway ata- \lon ett Ullcoln Center Claudia Curfman Castellana "ai. stabbed and slashed 10 llmes in the cher.t. back and arm at the bottom o( the st&irs of the s ub- "ay station al noon Sunday, police said Witnesses aald they heard the woman screamlna. "Leave me alone. Leave me alone," JUlt before the killer beaan at.tacktnc her with a J arc• knife. Mrs. CastelJana atanered further into the stallon and col· lapsed between the turnstiles and tbe change booth JUSt as puaencera bqan to leave a trllin that had just pulled Into the sta· tion. She was pronounced dead on arrival at Roosevelt Hospital at 12:30p.m. Police said people who wit· nesaed the attack apparently made no move to help the woman fiibt the killer off, but som41 of thote setting off the norlhbround local chased a man they believed to be the ~ailant. The man got away. ''Ho got away and we don't know whether it was the right man or not," a detective Sllld lat~ Sunday after interviewing wit· neases. Police belieu the assailant f91lowed the woman illlo the sub- way tntendlnl to rob her. POUce also recovered the ap- parent murder weapon, a large foldingknl!ewith a black handle. A native of Denver, Mrs. Castellana came here about lC years ago to earn a master's de1ree from Columbia Teachers College. Three years ago, she man-led Frank. S. Castellana, a medical doctor afflllated with Columbia University and St. Lukes H01pltal. The couple planned to Sl>t'nd Sunday afternoon with Dr. Castellana 's parents ln Queens. Mrs. Castellana's murder came just as Transit Authonty police released a report ~laiminc that major crime in the subway dropped 16 percent ln the first seven months of this year. I Polanski G~ty of Sex Charges ,• 1ffoio-crosser11 Go for It You run find them on almost any Sundaf. imitatine bi~ltm<:' moto·cross racers on their bikes. It happens at tho Cit) of Irvine's molo-cross park on Jeffrey Road. "here voungstors of many ages slap on their ri:lcing Plane Cr ash Kills Pair Froin Toro Two El Toro men were killed Sunda) when their light plane crashed in rugged terrain about one and a half miles west of Big Bear Dam, authorities said. Identification of the victims was withheld pendina notlfica- tion of next of kin, but a Big Bear city airport spokl!sman aa1d to- day at least one of the men was a Marine. The Cessna 172 was rented at the Big Bear airport and took olf about 7 p m. Sunday, the spokesman said. The crash oc· curred at about 7·30 pm. Witnesses said the small plane was flying extremely low over the Big Bear valley prior lo the crash which started a amall fire in the dense brush. Accordin& to Capt. John. Linder of the Big Bear Lake Fire Department, the 1ln1le·enitne aircraft was buulna camp- grounds near the lake •t trfftop level before the crash. leathers <or what passes for them r and helmets and grind it out over a track that covers about ono-thlrd ol n mil<:'. For an entry fee. the~ can race three times to qualify for the main event and a cpancc Cor stardom. Director Facing 50 Years SANTA MONlCA (AP> -Mov- ie director Roman Polanski pleaded guilty today to having unlawful sexual entercourse with a 13-year-old girl. "l had sexual intercourse with a female person not my wife un· der the age of 18," Polanski declared, reading from a pre- pared legal document. Deputy Dial. Atty. Roger Gun.son asked Polanski if he un· derstood what his maximum sen· tence might be. The 43-year-ol d director answered calmly: "One to 50 years in state prison." Gunson then told Polan.ski a proceeding Will be lnillaled to de- termine tr be la a mentally dis- ordered aex offender. The proeecutor added: "Since you are not a clUaen of the United States, a possible conaequence of your plea ls that you might be de- ported." Gunson announced that the dis· trict auorney would recommend dropp!ne five other counts ol sex perversion and drug abuse aga~ Polanski. Superior Court J u dge Laurence Rittenband, who ac- cepted the plea, ordered that Polanski be examined by two p11ycblatrists and set a hearing Sept. 19 for a report on the re- <See POLANSKI, Pa1e AZ> Open Lunch Approved for High Schools A~WI ........ PLEADS GUil TY Rom•n Pol•nakl Thai Sticks · Grabbed in 4 Toro Raitls Newport Beach narcotics In· \·estigators announced today they have confiscated nine pounds or a form of potent mari- juana known as Thai sticks in El Toro after a month -long in vestlgation. The narcotics, which pollce claim are valued at about $50,000 in illicit sales, were confiscated in two raids in which six people were arrested by undercover in- vestigators. Accordin& to Sgt. Darryl Youle of the Newport Beach police one pound of Thai sticks were aUe1edly purchased by Jnvesti1atora in a deal culminated near the intersection of Avenlda De La Carlotta and El Toro Road Friday afternoon. He said the narcotics were al· legedly sold to Investigators for $2,000 by Stuart Frederick While, 21. ot 47031~ River Ave.~ and Richard Corby Jones, 23 ot 779 Promontory Point West, both or Newport Beach. The men lhen auertedly led ol· flcers to a home at !4462 Hlghpine Road, Et Toro where police arrested four more people and conflacated an addlUonal 'elcht J>OUnds of Thai aUcu. Whfte and Jones were booked on charaes ot conaplracy to aell marlji.aana. Also arrested were Robert Valentine Kalataehan, 22, (See RAIDS, P11e ~> S8 Mond dra Fires Rain Slowing Alaska· Blaze 81 Tt.R Anoctatt4 Pr • C'ooleor .,,.attltr and nln h lped f\rd\1htcn •orkln1 on '4 blucs t'f'Od I ) m1llmn Mt'r or rll.OCt D.d tundn In AIHk•. Hut Jo Wut and Northwest ataltl, ~rewa were tralned lo tbttr hmlt• today in baltllna an f'SUmatt'd 300 ,.quare miles CJI Umber and brush (tret The 74 ,5!00-acrt ··Marble·South Cone" fttt in Cattfornia'a Los Padn:s NitUonOAI forest near Bl& Sur may double an stu before 1l is ('Ott tamed. saJ d Joe N adolw ot the federal fnteraaeocy Fire Center al Bot~e. ldllho. Hostages Taken by Prisoners NAPANOCH. N.Y. (APl -In· mat~ at Nt!w York 's Eastern Correctional Facility over · powered some of their guards to· day, seized 17 hostages and took over a section or the prison. The disturbance broke out shortly before 9 a.m. In cell block 83 of the m edium-security prison, according to Ruby Ryles, a spokeswoman for the state Department or Correctional Services. She said there had been no serious IOJUries, and said the in· mates were not believed armed with guns or knives. An aide to Gov Hugh Carey said 100 lo 150 inmatei. were In volved 1n the 10c1denl, and that there were 17 hostages -10 or them prison guards and seven civilians. Corrections Commissioner Benjamin Ward was en route to the prison to join negotiations bt'tween prison offi cials and a committee or three inmate reprcsentat1 ves. The inmates initially took con· trol of the dining and kitchen fadhUcs and part of the hospital In the BJ cell bli1ck. Prison of- fmuls rt•captured the hospital sectwn around noon. Ms. Hyles said she was not :.ure how the recapture was ac· complisht>d, but said no shots or gas were hred. The prison, in southern Ulster County about 70 miles north or New York City, holds 680 inmates ;ind ha.'> ;i capacity of711 .. This I.!> something we are ready for in our prisons because they arc overcrowded and taJung in 111) lo 220 persons a month." Carey said al a briefing in Rochci.lcr. "We will enforce the laws in this slate. Prisoners inside prisons will riot be all owed lo harm persons. especially correc· lion ofClcers," he added. f'ro• Page AJ RAIDS ... of the Hlchplne Road address, on a charge of possession of marl· juana for sale; Robert Michael Bullard, 19, of Clar~mont, on identical charates and Steven Paul Hilbert, 23, also of Clare- mont and a lso booked fo r posaesaion or marijuana for sale. F ..... Page.4J TRIAL •.. Judge Robert P. Kneeland, both laW)'en, the jury and the courtroom staff lef't to view the crime acene at Cal State Fullerton Immediately after Enrtaht llnlah~ his openln1 atatanent. 0..ANOI GOAIT M DAILY PILOT About 3,000 flrefi&hten were lryln1 to maneuver around the bl no to protect the Carm I Riv• walawhed. whlch purlfl• and coll~u water and 1cll to pre· vt•nt mud•lldea for Carmel v.11., town.a, lncladJn1 Moo. t erey, The alx day lire bH aJrclldy c:lwmCld watershed that offlcl"11111uy will ta&ke i1u mlllloo to replac:l!. "We have a llmlted number ol firefighters and have to mate a deci.sion about what resaurcea urc most Important to protect.•• Nad~11k1 added. In Alaska. the fires are still .. covering an area lar1er than the state of Delaware." Kerry Cartier, a spokesman for the Bureau of Land Mana•ement. ~aid late Sunday. But the Big Salt River fire, which al one time appeared to threaten the trans-Alaska oil pipeline north of the Yukon River 1s .. no longer a threat," be said. That 15,000-acre fire bas been "60 percent contained and the other 40 percent borders on the Yukon, so It's n o t going anywhere," he added. Most of the Alaskan fires were burning within a 175-mile radlus of the Kotzebue area in the northwest part of the state, with more than 1,200 firefighters on the line at 28 blazes. Sixteen fires were unmanned, Cartier said. The largest or the fires, cover. ing 335,000 acres about 100 miles north of Nome, has been burning since JuJy 9. Nearly 90 men were concentrating on that blaze m an attempt to keep flames from spreading north to the village or Deering, he sa1d On Sunday, 24 fresh crews, 20 men to a crew, from throughout. the country were flown to fires raging in Arizona, California, Colorado, Oregon, Nevada, Utah and Washington. The crew! are professional firefighters on loan from states and various federal agencies Nadolski said. ' With the addition of the latest 24 crews, more than 4,000 firefighters have been moved in· to the West and Northwest since Aug. l , Fire Center ortlclals estimated. That is in addition to state forces, as in Calirornla, which has nearly 10,000 men fight· ing its eight major fires. A fire in Modoc County In tht northeastern part or CallComla was reported more than 30 per· cent contained Sunday, said Dale Wireman, California state forestry spokesman. More than 100 million board feet or timber had been burned there. In Arizona, fir efighters estimated Sunday evening that the 6,lr>O-acre forest fire on the Hualapai Indian Reservation, Just south of the Grand Canyon, would be contained today. Another major fire, bumln1 in the high timberland in the Se· quoia National Forest 60 miles northeast of Bakersfield, had blackened more than 7,200 acres. Laguna Beach Hitchhiker Foils Kidnap A 22-year-old Laguna Beach woman foiled kldnap1n1 as she roueht. ore a pistol-wleldlna motorist who bad grabbed her by the hair when sbe attempted to leave the car. The woman told police lhe wu hitchhiking at about 9:30 p.m. 1'"riday at Forest A venue and South Coast Hlabway, when a man driving a yellow Pinto pulled up and let ber in the car. Wben ahe said ahe wanted to 1et out at Diamond Street and South Coast Hi1hway. the man reached under theCrontseat and pulled out a pistol. A stru111e followed u the woman attempted to leap from the car desplte the aunman'a w amines not to. At one point. the man held bes' by the JWr befOl'e 1he WU IUC· cetal\d in e>peninl the doat and ~·e~ Onctoutlld~ ahilled. • • • Oar £ro..,ded Beae•es This ls what lt looked like Sunday at Big Corona beach ln Corona del Mar. It was tbts waur -wall to wall people -on most Orange Coast strands during the weekend. In Newport Beach, lifeguards estimated the two-day crowd at 170,000. Beach vis- itors all along the OrllJlge Coast enjoyed temperatures in the 70s on the sands and. despite water temperaturea that dropped lnto the low 60s, many were attracted into the water. Small surf made swimming conditions almost lake-like •. A.liens Wait For Chance A.t Border Clinic Offers Hope To Cancer Victims NEW YORK (AP> -Between 200,000 and 2:i0,000 destitute Mex- ican migrants are waiting near the U.S. border for a chance to slip Into this country before Congress acts on an amnesty plan for illegal aliens. the New York 'nmes said today. <Related storypa1eA3> Each night at least 3,500 of the migrants attempt to elude border patrols and enter the U.S .• with about 1,000 being caught and re- turned to Mexlco, the newspaper reported. In the border town of Tijuana. Mexico, mi1ranll are reportedly paylnJ prolesaiooal smuulen $250 each to culde them past border patrols and take them to Loa Anceles, home of a large M exlcan community. In addition. tor an extra S300 to $400, the 1mu11lera olfer phony backdated documents, Including rent receipts, uUUty bills, work permits and Social Security cardJ. The smueilers promise that the documenll would insure that the mi1rant.s would qualify underPrelaent Carter's amnea· ty proposal, the Times said. A border patrol a1ent, Robert McCord, was quoted by the newspaper as sayln1 most of the ml1ranll are living in aleuy hotels, 1ara1ea and dlrt-noor hovels or camping alooi roads. ·'It's a surging mass of humanity and with the limited manpower and facllltles we now have, tens or thousands are bound to set past us.•· McCord said. "We are simply beJ.na over- whelmed.'' Rifleman Killed WHITTIER CAP) -A Los Angeles Sheriff's deputy has killed a man he sald wu wielding a rifle at Monte Vista High School. 87 WIUJAM HODGE Of Ult o.llY .. , ......... The word cancer strikes fear in the minds of most people. But two people at Saddleback Com· munity ffotpital are settln1 out to prove there la alw•ys hope, even with cancer. "We're planning to talk more about living," Saddleback's clinical social worker, Marjorie Smith, said. She was describing a counseling group for cancer pa. \lent.a and their Camllies. "It "will be a group meeting where we're hoping people with cancer will have a chance to ven· tilate their feelln1s.'' she ex- plained. Alona with Saddleback's direc· tor of nursing, Jane Mlsener, Mrs: Smith 11 plannln& the first session next month. Such counsel· ing IJ'OUPI are necessary. sne said, because, frequently, cancer paUenll are unable to cope with their feelings and dlscu.ss the situation with family members. "Often the ramllies aren't will· ins to talk about this thins,•• Mrs. Smith explained. "They don't. want to talk about plans, they just want to avoid It like it Isn't there." And that's bad for the cancer patlent, who must ultimately come to grips with his future. Mn. Misener beJieves It wlll be easier for cancer patients to dis· cuss their feelings with each other. ''People who arc going throu&h it can help one another," she ex· plained. "Otherwise, the patient will tell a nurse or a doctor 'It's euy for you to say that, but you haven't1ooethrou1h It.' " "It's very hard for a terminal patient to say 'I'm scared,· ••she continued. "ottentlme! they wlll react with anger, like sayin& 'why ls this happeninll to me?' " "They have to be tau1ht how to deal wHh pain," s he added. ( Pilot ) _ Logbook: Sorry, Mrs. B.; Wrolig Niimher 81 IAVlltE KASPD ... ...., .......... Saddleback Collet• Trultee Norma Brandt wu nd· faced for: a couple of reatoaa dudn& the eollqe board meet· tnclutw k. In the midst of a heated ind Clften contusilll debate O'Nr bid• an a new campu telephone 111tem, lltl. Brandt wu becomlnc lncreulnclY Irritated .i tbe telephone compuy. wbleh abe blamed for tbe current syatem•a problemt. When two representaUv• ol Paclftc Tel.one. one male and one female. stood up to ~ln a eraeat1Uon oa thelr propoaed solution to tbe ICllool 1 tel•pboll• problems, Mrs. Brandt reddefted. The female telephone company repreaeot1Uve held dla1ram1 of 'la• company'• proposal while the iqate staffer el.plained tht mechanics ot thelr plan. Mrs. Brandt couldn't reatraln heraell. She IBlbed out at the phone COID• pany and crltl.clzed tbe male employ• tor u1tna the .. attracUH .. female u bait for trcllttea; ·•You briril. PNU.1 jlrl ID.,.,. ult that'• 1otni tO 1et "' to 10 alaac Yrltb iw"" JOW'Pl"OPOlll.0 11.,.. Brancttcharaed. ·~aut.·thla pnueman woru tor DMt•• th• female pbooe compa1a1 eaploJe.NS4 delenalvtlJ. 111•m &be atta •al• maDaltl': ... "How they eaa get tbe most out of their llvee even thou&b they have this disease." The free counseling session, co-sponsored by the American Cancer Society's Oran1e County unit, will be used as a research project to determine if such groups actually do cause an hn· provement in the patient's men-tal outlook. "We don't have anything sclen. tiflc to show that these groups ac- tually do enable people to function at a higher leve1;• Mn. Smlth explained. Each ol the group participants wlU be asked to fill out a ques- tionnaire about tbe quality ol the.Ir lives at the begtnnJna and the end of the eight-week 1roup sessions. Although the groups are restricted to 12 participants. Mrs. Smith said there are still openings for the September session. Cancer patienll futerested ln partlcipatine in the aroup counseling should contact Mar· jorle Smith or Jane Misener at 837-4500. F,.._PageAJ POLANSKI •• suits. Polanski .will he sentenced sometime after that. At the dramatic 20-mlnute plea hearing, an attorney represen~ tog the family of the 13-y~ar-old 1lrl implored the Judie lo accept Polanski's plea to protect the teenaaer from the &late of publlclty. "A stigma would attach to her for a lifetime,.. sald attorney Lawrence Silver. "Ju.slice ls not. made ot such stuff.•• Silver said the family doesn't seek Polanski's imprisonment but only hopes that be will be ful· ly rehabilitated. "The reliving of the sorry event.a with their delicate coo· tent. .. in thla courtroom packed with strangers would be a challen- ge to the emotional well being of anyperaon,••suversald. '''lbla ls not the f.lace f<lf' a re-covering youna glr • •• "We chose to side with her " Van de Kampaaid. • · He added that In Ult• case JusUce wbuld 0 provlde the vie· tlm with lbe opportunity to arow up lD a world where 1be'U not be kn"" as the YOUD& llrl with whom Roman Polanakl bad aexual lnterCOW'le." The Clrl'• anonymity has been protected alnce tbe lncldent OC• ieul'l'edMarcblO. In a wrltt.m reeonunenc!atlcn to the Judie, lbe ctJslrkt at- torney'• oftice asked Rlttebband to aecept the plea to avoid "anotbef •Jtollywood Babylon' trlal ... The roc:ommendalion noted that lf Polanski Is Juqld to be a mentally disordered 1ex .. of· ftnd•. be could be committed to a atata boepital for treatment. If not. tt ~ tbat corredlonal autboriU. have been applY1nc pnaJties of 10 montbl to three )'•an tor th.la crtmtt rather than th• one to :SO 1tated iii UM law. Pol1n1kl and bta attorney nllMd out "tb• courtbOUM .... cru.ab ol eameru aD4 f!utilrje llsbta. bu&decUDed~miat. "-ubr Awarded .. Contract • Soedal to tt.e Dally PUot LOS ANGELES -The Fluor Corp. announced todQ that a sub- std I ary baa been awarded contraCt.s cor apprO¥tma~elY ~ mllUoa to deatcn. ~. pro- cure and eoostruct a )ropostd •~·m•••••tt •fectrlc leotberuial pow plant to bf; built near El Centro. Called th• Heber Ceothermal demomtratlon power plant, the facility la scheduled to belln · Operating ln 1980. but· ls COD· tlncent on recelpt of federal a.ad other f'undlnl. Contracts fer the proposed commettlal-scale facWty. which would be the laraest ceotherJul power plant ot ill type tn tile United States, were awarded by San Diego Qas & Electric Co. to Chicago-baaed Fluor Pioneer Jnc. Fluor Pioneer wlll perform the work in conjunction with the Southern California dlvlsloo of Fluor Engineers & Constructors Inc., at Irvine. Work j>et'f ormed under the de- slcn phase will assist SDG&E and its project partners .W _.p1e- parfng the.Ir proposal for: MKding to the Enerey R esearch & Development. Admlniatratlon (ERDA). Fluor 11 designing the plant to use a new approach ror convert· Ing heat enerey In aeothermal brine Into electrical power. Successful use of leothennal heat for power In 1eothermal- rlcb areas of Southern Callfomla would reduce consumption of· scarce f oul.l fuels, Fluor Hid. Tbe Heber facility would use geothermal energy to replace th equivalent of 1.850 barrels ol oU. or 12 mlllioo standard cubic feet of pipeline quality natural aes dally. Geothermal experts con- servatively estimate that the Heber 1eothennal resoUl'Ce area could support production of 400 to 500 mw of electric power. tbe Fluor announcement said. If the Heber plant proves suc- cessful, lt would1ead the way to construction of a number ol addt· llonal geothermal electrtc generatlna stations, Fluor said. The Heber plant will take aeothennal brine at a rate of lS,000 gallons per minute Crom 1Z wells to be drilled by Chevron Resources Co. in the portion of the field owned by Chevron USA· Inc. Heber brine characterlslic:9. established In a pilot procram by SDG&E, show the Ould to be low tn salt content. having about U ,000 parts per million ol total dissolved sollda compared to about as>.000 pm In other Im· perial Valley bri!le. Geothermal plants generating m ore than 4S mw electric are on stream in Northern Callfornia. They are powered by dry geothermal ateam, rather than geothermal brine. G1mmanHeld 5 Host&ges · CANOGA PARK (AP) - A man held four children and the wile ol a supermarket manager at l\JDpolnt ln a Canota Park home before Oeelng. police aaid. The unidentlf1ed man reported. ly called the woman•s husband. Gerald Nunbaum. Saturday niaht. OC'dertnl him to deliver &ft undlsclOHd amount of cub to -A Glendalescbool. Police said Sundl)' the mot· Uonilt Defer arrived at the loca· Uon.. ------- DAil. 'f ~LOT ' onday"• 2 p.m. (EDT) P ri NYSE COMPOSITE • TRANSACTIONS • Nol SIM i. f•t 1~" u"" <"'l 'I'"''"' C-C•-i ll•af" 90 , " ,. lo. Tedw11c" 10 •1 I~ t v. 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Mil 91 It'~ ..... l:~e1':' 1 I' I ~~-:.:-: Wy~ ~-'r~ 1 , •••• l•ll•Y 10 ' 1 !E! l't Jt•,_11 UOll ·; ff''-,_ tllefJlf •,: • -• "' .,,. .... • -~ ~~"·'~ .. ~ m~ .o.:, ... ;~~ ~ l I tttr.: ~ a--t 1J 11 .. '"' $, ,., "' """• ~ ., 4 ' "'-• ... t ti 41 --elltlll Ill ., ll"'t° .. Tc •n II ""'• "' "'' • .o. t ·-- 4SotSOliue St~clt Challenge Proves Profits By IOBN CtJNNIFF ................ Back in December 1974, wbeo the alock market wu al ils worst ln rec ot years. an Inv tor challeqed four other~ Lo a coatest In whtch they ~d •eek the irutest apprec.aa- t.ioo over a flv•)'ttar-perlod. · All ·five. two profesaiooal and three amateur members or the Natlabal AAoolatloo of Investment Clubs' advisor) commlttoe. ~eked new portfolios ol 10 stocks each. THE lllDPOINT IN THE FIVE·YEA& challen&e wa~ reached July 1, and the challenaer was not farina so well. relatively' speaking. He was in fourth place, with a lain or only 18.1 percent. Durinl this Ume tbe Dow Jones·lnduslrial average ros~ 48.1 percent. but the leader in the race showed a gain ol 193.2 percent. The other Increases were 139.1 percent. U8 percent and70.2. Of the S> common stocks cbDsen by the five committee members, only five declined, four of them in the drua in dustry. The three leading portfolios showed no Joues at all The biggest 1ain was 432 percent, by Trinity Industries, • metals fabricat.or purchased at $4 .625. and wblch aoldon July 1 &t $24.625. "This pcoves lo me:· said Thomas O'Hara, chairman of the a.ssoc1auorus board of trustees, "that the averaee in- dividual investor using good guidelines can do qwte well in the market ·· THREE BASIC PREMISES WERE ~ used by the rive contestants. O'Hara 11aid. Here they are. In his words · ~ 1. "Believing that when a company e1'""'"" 1s carefully chosen for its characteristics of growth 1t will continue to grow for a long period or lime, the selecllon of stocks was restricted to companies that had appeared in NAJC's magiuane. ·Belter Invest.mg,· during the pa&l 25 years." Each month the 1nvestment committee chooses one i.tock for study by 1t 's S,600 member!. clubs, so the contr~ tants had about 300 stocks from which to choose ?. "NO F'EAR WAS FELT FOR mt.erest rate chunges during the fi ve.year period smce 1t was assumed the Federal Reserve was managmg interest rates for the total benefit or the country and that they would work out to the market's advantage 1n the five· year period •· 3. "It was felt that the in<liv1duaJ Investor would tend to select non·instit.utional types of stocks in this period and that consequently such stocks would do better than the D J uverages.'' This 1s the leading portfolio· Owens-Corning, bought at S2!5.37S, and pric~ at $66. 7S on July 1; N. A. Philips, $12.75 and SJt.SO: U .S. Life, $10. and $17 .75; Delrox Chemical $8.625 and $13: Tiger Internahonal. $7.25 and $11.625; Cost.al States Gas, SS.875 and $2150, Am ~ord. S3 and $11.75, American Family, $2.60 and $13 625 Great Lakes Chemical, $11 and S38.37S, and Moog. $7.25 and $12.375. INVESTMENT CLUB MEMBERS, who frequently out performed the uverages, the mutual funda and other pro tessionaJ investors, adhere to three underlying tenets in managif\a l.he1r portfolios 1 Invest regularly each month without try1nR to RUC~' the ups and downs 2. Reinvest dividends 3. Try to select comparues growmg at a rate better than the particular indu.,try 11nd With a rerord Of (1ve, preff'rahl~ 10 years. of doing so WITH ADVICE BEING THE only thmg free 1n the marketplace, records '1uch as these speak for themi:.elve ... and perhaps explain why the size of 1nvestment clubs has been growing of late. Membership In the NAIC is available to clubs and to in· dlvlduals, the latter at a $12 annual fee, by writing the Na· UonaJ Association of Investment Clubs. 1515 E~st Elevf'n Mile Road, Royal Ouk, Mich. 48067 · Business 'Games' Detailed in Book By The Associated Preas He was u top executive, adept at office pohtJcs and the Intrigues of corporate compel.Ilion. When his wife found about hls affair, •he explained that it was just another "game," an exercise in maneuverability perhaps, but cer ta inly nothing to get excited about. ·•To him It was a game --he wanted to eo on with the marriage," psychoanalyst Michael Maccoby said in an 1n- tervlew. Mond!y. AAIAUlt .. 1m DAILY "L?T .tz Both Si.des Fight 'Jews for Jesus' TBS caoss.naa ABOUT IT rumbled throuO tbl ancient Jnlab .-ld. 'l'flal ~· the coatat al ear)J Cbltatlanlt)>, and a ID........., Yll'llon al tbat lnt.loeldq ol faiths a1ao ta .uma, Nll,Som seal -and COGfllet -ln C!GOtemparu'J America. u.Jewafor /SUI," the --------main ot'f&nlutlonal [ ) manlfwadon o1 tt. bu ln RELIGION five yean nelled to a clalmed 11.000 to ao.ooo ~-------" bellev... molt ot them reared ...S edueated ln .Judalan. .. Jaus made me more koaber."' declare tbe1r T·•hirta and brochur& TREY Dl8PIA Y TBE STAil ol David, observe Jewiab fmtlvala and ltroaalY uaert their Jewish· DCU. ••Became ol tbelr belief lD Jea\11, they feel more Jewiab tban ev•, more loyal to Judlum and more committed to Jewtah Ca\IMI, •• Q1I the ~·a leader, Molabe Bolen ol San Raf ML .. We ...iect t.be medieval mentall~ wblda ln- 11.lta that Judlum and Cbrt.1Uanlt1 are mublalll' excluain rellliom." llVT SllA&P OPPOS1'110N llA8 come from re. gular Jewish bodlea. which cooald• the mealanlc .Jews u .. meshumada." tralt4". and a1llo fJ'Oll\. some Cbriatlan IJ'OUPI· Coatuaioo reaulta from ••mbdnc rell~ 1ym. boll in wap wblcb dlatort tbelr MMDUal mean· m. ... cbareed the Loq laland Councll ol Cbunhes. accUllnl Jews for Jt1ua ol "1Ubtshil•" ADCl "al- le1ed dlabonelt convenionary tact.lea." In reaction, Jews fOI' J•us flied a lawsuit lo New York State Supreme Court ln Manhattan, de- mandlnt an injunction to halt the Council from di&- semlnatlna allet1edl>' ••ta11e and mlaleaclln&'' criUdam. ..WE'VE BEEN ABSOL1JTBLY ABOVE board." Rosen 1aya. Some church achol11r1, both Protestant and Catbollc, in recent years have held that Cbriltiana sbouldnot seek converts from Judlum, alnce lt wu the cbolen channel of God'• revelation, produced the Bible, Je1ua, bia Apoltles and w.-tho "root" stock ol CbrilUanlty. "'Bemem ber. lt la not 1'0'l that IGPPOrt tbe root. but tbe root that aupporta you," PU! W"'9 iD Bom-u. 0 ADdaoall laMl will beaaftli." a)WBVE .. Tiii: BAMNIRft amtCllll ol the Jflft for Je1ua bu eome.lrom Jewlab 1~~ who tee tbe movement q miamn1 Jtwlah ~'*8 ~ a muquerade for hllb·pn11ure CbrUUu evanaellam. . It lnvolvea ''decepUcm and manlpullllloa .. by oslq Hetnw wwda, ~ and eenmoat.. to Imply it la Judilm al~-~t ii tundam~ Chrlathmlty "ln dlt1Ulae.' 1aya Rabbi Marc R. Tanenbaum, lnterreUCious affalra diredol' ol tbe American Jewish Committee. BOSEN, 45, REOBD AN OaTBODOX Jw who with bis Jewish wife turned to CbriaUu!U', at• tended a bible collete ln New Jewey and WN _.. dalned a Bapt.IJt mlnllter ln Den•er, later WOltilll 17 years for the American Board ol 11119k>GI to Jen, a proaelyth1n1 qeoey • However, be aaya be felt be wu bec:omlnt "GeoWJzed, aaalmilated. .. alnce be CODllMncl b1maelt buically Jewtab. · "We now find ourselves ahunned by our fellow Jews," be 1ay1, "bul we bave not left Judium. We are not converted Jewa. We ue Jews who beline lD Jeaua as the mtalab." ~---"';::=======================================================================================::;­ WALTEA HOVING: "PHENOMENAL' SUCCESS Ch*man Vlstta Sal..woman Nancy Ron Tiff any 'Soul:' 'Try God' Pim NEW YORK (AP> -The Tiffany tooclt em- braces emerald·laden bracelets, solid gold watches and diamonds by the yard. Yet few people know the glittering palace on Fifth Avenue aa a abowcaae for capital.isl common sense aod religious credo. The driving force is Walter Hovin1, Tiffany's board chairman and chief executive. He liltes to believe the world's most famous jewelry atoreh&a a conscience. ... TIDNK A COMPANY SHOULD have a aouJ. Most don•t. I know. That's why American business has gotten such a bad reputation. Profll maxlmu- mg soonds so greedy.'' Hoving said in an Interview. While this Jenlleman enjoys setUn1 standards of taste and elegance for the Social Reiisler set, he has another consuming interest -the Walter Hov· ang Home in Garrison, N.Y., foe beroln·addicled girls. More than $.156,000 ls senl to the center each year from store sales of a small pin with the message, ·'Tr y God.·· Hoving, a devout Episcopalian, w e11rs one in the lapel of bis lailor- m ade suit jackets. "WE TEACH THE GIRLS TO accept God Into their lives." said the tall, lean Hoving, who bu run Tiffany's since 1953. "We take them out of poverty and put them lnto the Lord·s bands. Our success rate baa been phenomenal.·· Thal la the private side of Tiffany's. The public side i1 spelled oul in the store's famlliar, subdued ads appearin& alm06t daily in the New York Tim ea, the Wall Street Journal, the Chicaeo Tribune, the Los Anaeles Times and other newspapers. Sometimes the Sl,000 ads display jewelry. Other times they are mini-lessons in capitalist thought, with such liUes as "Is Profit a Dirty Word?" and" Are the Rich a Menace?" THIS KIND OF PERSONAL conviction mysllfies Wall Street analyst..s and may be the re- ason Tiffany's has retained a unique corporate im- age since it. was founded In 1837 by Charles Lewta Tiffany. Twice a day, six days a week, Hovlng visits Tit· fany's hu1e street floor. Greeted by salespeople who recognbe him inslanUy, Hoving points oul a new de· slain to a pr01pectlve cuatomer or stops to admire the legendary Tiffany diamond, the world's largest ca nary diamond. Tiffany'• 800 employes don•t spend hours analyzing public lasle. Instead, they decide for themselves what jewelry la chic and excltlnl . .. THAT OLD MOTTO ABOUT 'Give lhe customer what abe wanta' is rldlculoua," Hovinc said. "Most people don't know what ls beauUful. So they rely on us to show them.'' With branches in AUan_l~1• Chlca10, Houston, San FranclKO and Beverly Hllll and a bouUque In Japan's famoua MltaukOlhl department store, Tit· f any's has lnfluenced all classes ol people Althouth Tll'fany'a closed lta Paris and London stores after World War ll, travellnt abowa were sent recentJ1 to the Arab counlrtea to cub In on oil • money there. Bualneaa wu reported blUk. DE8Pl'l'E STOCK MAUET DECUNBI lD re- cent yean, Tiffany'• protltl are •t.rooi•r tban ever. HoviOI 1ay1 they usually run about 6 percent -well above averqefOI' nta.l1 and department stores. ~dlamooda atlrl'• i.tlriend? Hcwtna ll tbe first to admit tbat ttma have been kind to ID old lal like Tlffany'L And, u ht told a meetlnl of the New York Society ol Security Anal)'lta: ''l'daqwe'rebavlnftbetlmeolourllves." Softness. It begins with the versatile new blouson dress! .__,.-----~~-_..., The softest look of the seosonl GentlV bloused on top. gathered to a pretty waist, set to take you from morning to night. J. t DreU Co. does tt, in luxurious Caresse TM super Jersey, a performance tested fabric by IOopman, knit of Qlanos nylon for the natural look. In rich brown or cherry. 6-14. $44. Mall/phone. Contemporary Dresses, 112. • . s ·-Nol .... ... pt 1• ... llaoo l"O , ( 1"1'1 v... ll>Q ll•~Oln IO 1 " 1• -"' l9Clln1<n 10 " 10\t • 14 ::r~.: ,1 ·~ .. -(.\ ~=~~i:: ·!': ''% -:~." ll•yinM I 6 :ad ,, -14 Tel..., 1.4Ji s '" .. lotl-tw lleyll!ft • tl JO •• • • Ttl~ oU I01 •••··· •• lltMIM M 1 ll ""'-1.. 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I •1' i.t"'-'• Wfi.tyUllelf • *2\11-t" r"w" ...... 1 ., ,...,_ "' w-,..,,, ..on u u•, ..... tetllt'ct I ' , 21 -\It Wy~ .:n 6 16 )14,.,., ;:~~ ·1~ f! ti:~'~ g:::· ·i~';f i.1t::: ~= I t.t t m ::::: :: m.t~ •Al , 14~ :~·\.; t=I\ I II .. -~ au .• t tt II~ .... Ta ,t4tl 4' .... I~ r.c. 4 4 1"' "<: Tttlllll(r IO t If •t ;,_ ._ 111111 tit ., JI._+ .,. 1'<~r .40 H 1' Hit• \\ ml,_ .. t t 14-... h 45of 50Rlae Stock Challeng"e Proves Profits B1 JOHN CUNNIFF .......... __,.. Back ln December 1914. wbeo the stock market wu u •la woni ln ~t y r1. an Investor cballqed four otberi. to a cootest ln '*blc.h tMy would Helt the ll'ffleat •pprecaa-lion ov a flv•year period. · AU live, two prote11lOQ,al and three amateur members of the Natlolial A.uoclaUon ol Investment CJubl' advitor'} c:ommlttee, pl.eked new portfollot of 10 stoc:ka each. , 'IUE MIDPOtNT IN THE PIVE-YBU cballence w ai. reached July 1 and the cballen1er wu not farina so well. relatively' 1peaktn1. He wu in fourth place, with a 1aln of only 78. 7 percent. Durin1 thls Ume the Dow Joneiindustrial average rose 48.l percerit, bul the leader in the ractsbowed a 1aln or 193.2 percent. Tbe other increases were 139.1 percent. 118 percent and70.2. · Of the 50 common stocks chosen by the five commiltceo members, only llve declined. four of them in the dru1 in dustry. The three leading port.loUos showed no losses al all The biegesl gain was 432 percent, by Trinity Industries, u metals fabricator purchased at $4.625, and which sold on July 1 at $24.625 "This proves to me." said Thoma:. O'Hara, chairman of the assoctations board or trustees. "that the averaee in- dividual Investor using good guidelines t•undoquitewell in the market ·· THREE BASIC PREMISES WERE used by the five contestants, O'Hara said Here they are. in his words. l. ·· Beheving that when n company cutt111~,. 1~ carefully chosen for its characteristics of (trowth 1t will continue lo e row for a long period ol time. the selection or stocks wus restricted to companies that had appeared 1n NAIC's magazine. ·Heller Investing,' durin& the past 25 years." Each month the investment committee chooses onl· "'tock for study by it's 5,600 members clubs. so the cont('' tan ts had about 300 stocks from whlch to choose !. "NO FEAR WAS FELT FOR interest rate changes during the five.year period since it was assumed the Federal Reserve "'as managing interest rate~ for the total benent or the country and that they would work out to lht· market's advantage in the five-year period." 3. "It was felt that the mdividual investor would tend t1> select oon·in.stitutionul types of stocks in this period and that consequently such stocks would do better than the D·.I averages." This 1s the leadmJ: portfollo. Owens-Corning; bought at $25.375, and priced al $66.75 <'In July t: N A. Philips, $12.75 and $31.50; US. Life, $10, and $17.75: Detrox Chemical $8 625 and Sl3; Tiger International $7.25 and $11 625: Costul States Gas. ~.875 and S21 so. Am cord. S3 and $11.75. Amencan Famtly, S2 60 and Sl3 62S Great Lakes Chemical. $11 and $38.375, and Moog, $7.25 anli $12.375. INVESTMENT CLUB MEMBERS, who frequently out performed the a\•erages, the mutual funds and other pro (essional investors, adhere to three underlytni tenets In managifli their portfolios. 1. Invei.t reaularly each month without trytn5' to llUC~' the ups and down:, 2. Reinvest div1dendi. 3. Try to select companies growin& at a rate better than the particular industry ;ind with 8 r('C'ord of flv<'. pref era bf\ 10 years. or doine so WITII ADVICE BEING TIIE only thing free in lh1• marketplace. records such as these speak for themselH'' and perhaps explain why the size of investment clut,~ hJ' been growing ot late. Membership in the NAIC 1s available to clubs and to in dividuals. the latler at a $12 annual fee, by writing the Na tionaJ ASM>Clation of Investment Clubs. ISIS Ef\Sl Eleven Mile Road, Royal Ouk, Mich. 48067 Business 'Games' Detailed in Book By The Assocla&ed PrHs He was a lop executive, Bdept al office polillcs and the Intrigues of corporate compeUUon. When hls wife found about his affair, ·he explained that it wu just another •·game," an exercise in maneuverability perhaps, but cer· ta Inly nothing to get excited about. "To htm It was a game --he wanted to ao on with tht• marriage," psychoanalyst Michael Maccoby u1d in an In tervtew. "SllE THOUGHT IT WAS NOT a game. that they c.:ouldn 't continue., and he jWJt couldn't tee it.·· Maccoby ls describing one of the subjecu or his book. "The Qamesman." in whlch he detcnbes the modem In· dustrial manater who "la takins over tM Jeader1h1p of lhe Q\ost techi*llllY ad¥anced comJanles In America." Maccoby, director of the Harvard Project on Technoloay, Work and Character. conducted depth in· terviewa with 250 rnan.,era In 12 mljor corporaUons fo M"lte the book. Tbe idea was to determine what ai.ake.s men who run businesses run. Maccoby found lhnt C ) today's corporation lli tr.Jl'.Y ~'W9Jf:! N'E"lr7 Inhabited by four bulc: ,,. r.11'1..I .. ~ L,,. peraonallty types: -·'The CrafLtman" ~---------~ hH the tradltionul valu of tbrlft, concern lor quality and the desire to do 1 1ood ]ob. lie ates othert In ~l'nu ot Mldber tlley help or hUrt hJm in accompijshlna his 1oal of a crat\imanllk• job. • Witnesses Tag CSF Slayer •County Youth's Slaying ItJystery (See PapeA3) • Teaehers Fined for Walkout ' • $850,000 Transit Ft•Dds St~len r TUESDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 9, 1977 VOL. ,., NO, tt1, I HCTIOIH. • ~AO•I CSFDeatlas Witnesses Name Allaway as Killer By TOM BARLEY OI .. Delly 11'*' It.ff Four women employes pointed t>ut EJward ChJrles Allaway Monday as the rftleman who ter· rorized the Cal State Fullerton campus as the trial or the former university janitor got under way. Library secretary Karen Dwindl told an Oranae County Superior Court jury that she was with the firal two of Allaway's aJ. leged nine victims when the de· t fendant burst into her office al 9:30 a.m. on July 12, 1978. "He stopped in front ol my t desk and pointed his 1un at my chest," the witness hesltanUy testified. 1 She said abe believes her Ula I was saved by the action ol photo- ~ •rapber Paul Henberf, 30, who l jumped on Allawa)' u the defen- dant alleiedly menaced Mrs. Dwhldl with a .22·caUber nne. "He turned around and shot Paul, shootina rrom the hip," Mrs. Dwinell ~aid. She said Al· laway then turned and shot technlcan Bruce Jacobson, 32, as Jacobson fled into the con· ference room. Mn. Dwinell testified that she heard more gunfire u she sou&ht refu1e from Allaway and saw the defendant shoot.inc in the dlrec· lion of the graphic arts sect.ion In the buement of the campus library. The witness said she later learned that the body of araphic arts employe Frank Teplansky, 51, was found ln that. area. Allaway, 32. ts accuaed of the ldlllnCJ ol 1even people includln& Heubers, J1cob1on and Teplamky. New Fire Rages On Slopes By The Associated Press A fire on sleep mountain slopes raged out of control today in tin· d er·dry Southern California brush alter destroyin& 10 animals and a houae. The California Departmenl ol Forestry said the fire, 2S miles west d Palm Sprln1s and one mile soutbeut of Cabuon. bid destroyed 1.000 acres of brush on steep mountain slope$ from the 1.600 to the 4,200·fool leve1. Fire spokeswoman Nora Ryan said the blaze 1utted a two- bedroom house late Monday, kill· Ing two does, seven •oats and one horse after the two occupants escaped. No other dwellings were threatened by the fire which was reforted only 10 percent con· ta ned by mldmornlna. the spokeswoman said. · Six air tankers dropped fire· retardant chemicals whlle 850 llremen fe>uabt the blaze on the ground. Offlclala aaid crews from Mlcblaan, Indiana, Arkansas, Mtsalsalppl, North Carolina, Wyomlna and Utah have been nown in to join 850 local flremen. The flre was burnJn1 only one mile from the San Jacinto Wilderness area, but the pre- serve remained open to bikers and campers toda)', authorlties said. Meanwhile, favorable weather conditions aided flreti1btera 1tl'\llllln1 to preserve precious Central California coastal watershed, where fire threatens future noodJng ln the ravaaed timberland. <See nau, ••c• AJ> , Sttn, Sea and Youth Youn~ bodysurrer leaps wave as he heads out for one more rlde --perhaps the wave or the day -near the Huntington Beach Pier. Monday was a sparkling day along the Orange Coast as this photo of silhouetted pier and surfer attests. It's the kind or cool summer photo rou can cut out and send to your relatives who are sweltering through summer in other parts of the U.S. Ju~e Fines Group ., ID Teacher Strike They returned to 1"0fk Jfter re· celvinl assurances that there would be no reprisals for the strike, flnt In San Dieao history. Some clauroom1 operated normally with 1ubltltutes. "'lbe only persons directly al· f ected by the a trike were the children. who, tn blunt laquage, were exploited as hostages for the purpcJdes of a pollUcal power play," added Lazar. Boyle, who stopped out •• prealdentofthearoupAue. t, was told to~ to county Jail Au1. 22. ,, An attorrie)t l&id WU'S 8C• lion wowd be appelled. "I'm d.l.tappolJlted, ttiat'• all, .. Boyle aatd., Parachutist Dies in Fall BAKERSFIELD (AP) -A woman skydiver from Lanouter fell to her death when her reserve parachute became tan&led in her matn chute, Kem County coc· oner's office reported. Darlene A. Bauer, 28, was kllled ln a jump from an airplane 3,500 feet above the Calllorilla Cl· ty all'J)9rt drop zone In the Ko- Jave Desert Sunday. Her mlilil chute failed to fully deploy, so 1be pulled tbe r~e chute and it tangled, Cofoner lllcbard Gcrv,ala said. •