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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-08-18 - Orange Coast Pilot. . Hunipfi:rey f!ndergoes .. THURSDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 18, 1977 VOL 11, NO. m . I s•CTIC*S, 44 ~AOH Presley Drug Problem Denied ME P tU , Tenn. <A P> - Author t d tu nt re that ElvLS Pr I 'I had a aertoua drua problem before his death. ··1 l';ua't u y ht• "'as t•k1na no dru •t nll." ~uld Or Jerry Franc isco , She lby Count y m~Jcal examiner, "~came his o"'n doctor has said he was tak· mg appettledepr aot.a." But Francisco, who conducted a thn.-e hour autopsy on the o· terlainer 's body, emphatically derued Presley s howed aoy sign of a drug a buse ·'There was no evidence ~ IDY .tbaormal. illegal druc use," he said In Beverly Hilla, t wo or Pres ley s ex -b od yguards . Delbert "Sonny' West and David Hebler, said Wednesday he was a ••tormented man" pushed into heavy drug use by the weight of his own legend. The bodyiuard• were tired JU4t be fore t hey started writing ··E lvis. What Happened?,'' a book touted by pubUcists as WU~ * * * Front Page A I d crtbl~ a frlm aide of Prelley lhat Wiii 'broodln•, violent, ob-aeaaeCJ wlth death, struna out, sexually driven.'' . West and Hebler emphasized that their book, which describes Presley as a reelu.slve drut ad· diet, was written more than a year aeo. It was released two weeks ago. "Elvis wu a tormented man," aald Hebler . ''He was a victlm of himself ... the imact, tbe legend." . The bodycuardJ sa.td Presley . started tak.log pllls dwiD( bJs two-year 1t1nt in tho Army and coqtim.ted takinl them to set up for hls heavy concert and film schedule. ''Like in Las Vegas, the first couple of days he was there he would get totally wiped out on Demarol and j ust sit t here and not be able to open his eyei," Weatsaid. He a dded that 1omt or Presley's friend~ tried to persuade him to quit druP_l bu~ he finally pulled one of t.nem aside and said: "I need it, man I needlt. '' Francisco said if Prealey had been ta.kine dru1s in the amount su ggested by West , visi ble evidence would have shown on the body. Francisco said he f ounc1 no nee· die marks -which would have been apparent had P resley been taking drugs with a hypodermic -and he said thore waa no 1len of damage or change in his tJs- s ues and organs which would have shown evidence or heavy drug abuse. Into the Hilb WASHINGTON (AP> ~ .Federal bankinc tnve1U1ato,. Hid today they baVt fou,nd DO m• formation that would. .t airut the eecutlon of BllCl&et J>tm· tor Lance or any other ~ pit volved ln Lane•'• b~ acUVIUes lo Geor1ta. t; However, Comptroller ot th Currency John Helm.on told Conpeu ln a lenatby report Lance'f banklnc activit.lea • ., unrao!Ved questions as to con.t.ltutes acceptable b praoUces." Heimann 11ld in a letter to SenateGoverume.ntAffairsCOm-· mlttee that h1I office will try to dectdo ti It. reaulatlons on ban"· Jna need to be chanaed. . A new road and sewer line winds tnto the Northeast El Toro })ills. pavins the way for construction projects that wlll follow. Here, a midst the . eucalypttis windrows along old Canada Road, the citrus r'anches are gradually glvina way to urban do· velownent of the Saddleback Valley. Lance hid predicted that t.hp comot.roll•r'1 olflce would find noth.ln, wrona with bJ1 ~Jl flnances ln t.he period befqre IJ" joined the federal aovernmAht with tho Carter admlniltratt~1 The committee aald " " Lance and lfehnann will asked to tesUfy at a bearing Sept. 7. SCR Sets New Tl!teo.tEF The report aaJd Lance did i)ot rue required report.a with ba,qks he headed or a 1ummary ot \ls outside interests and loans he had received. But the report said the only actioo tbat would le taken against Lance, should he The South Coasl Repertory profeaalonal tbeate~ company will st.art construction of a new 506·seat, $2.S million theatrical center in November, lt1 ex- ecutlve director reported today. SCR's David Emmes said eon- trlbut.lons toward building the complex; on donated acreage next to the South Coast PJaia Hotel ln Costa Mesa, totals about $1.2 m.llllon so far. • The non·protit. thttter group . currenUy stages plays in a 217· •eat tboater ors Ne wport B oulevard ln Costa Me sa. Emmes said this theater season alr~ady has sold out, to 9,400 su~ scnbers. able t9 start the building.'' still be with the banks, would be He predicted a groundb~na to require that tho repo te Nov ... Ii Wilb tbe the•ter ~ fllectimmediately. ' in OdObtr, 1971. · •"Ille offtce cannot conclud• I a con f u n e tl on w tt b that Mt. Lance knowinaly made gro dbi'eeld.li(, Eoul)es said }ncoi:nplete and inaccurate rd- SCR plw • maJor public C&Ql· nss. the reportsaid p~gn /,~!wadi. Molt contribu. "We do n9t believe thei· • t on. have bettJi made by ealtby formation developed to date. patrms Of the tl\eater. ~ elt1 ~ the Inquiry warrants' the p • PRESLEY ... l orcc, said the singer and his father, Vernon Presley , ha d planned his funeral. From Pflfle A I l'he.lwid·raising campaign to build a bl11er, better theater" be a an l••t ye ar, and SCR forecast varying timetables for the move. Cost.a Mesa (>Ut up $250,000, ecutlon ~ any individuals,·· the EqiJDea taid; count)' sovenr comptroller aaJd in a letter to Uie met:tmatcbeCltJiit(l,IOd. • com mtttie 'a oh a l rm an "This is running exa<.'lly t he way Elvis' father suggested it be run," Grob said. ''It's been run In acC'ordance with El vis' wishes." The family had planned to al· low the public to view Presley's body for two hours Wednesday. The time stretched to 31~ hours but there were still about 15,000 , whose p1lgrimaee lo see Presley a final time was in vain S he riff Gen e Ba r ksd al e estimated that 25,000 to 30,000 walked past the seamless copper coffin. The estimate may have been generous, but the hn con- tinued without letUI) tor flle ~ti rt 3•,2 hours. Pres ley was dressed in a c r eam-colored, almost white, suit with pule blue shirt and sil ver lie Christmas presents from his father . llis face showed the effects of the weight he gained in his later years. On one finger was a ring with an enormous diamond. So zealously did the family guard lbe private aspect.f or the day that the names of those of· fi cialini al the ser vice a nd most of those invitad to attend were withheld. Rex Humbar d. a nationally known evangelist from Akron, Ohio, said he would officiate. Humbard had. viiited Presley at his Memphia hom~. known p Gra~el81\d M8Jlston. • . A family 1pokesqiap sejd s.m- my Davia Jr. and singer James Brown would attend. Guitarist Chet Atkins and fellow •x· ecuUves at RCA Victor, for wboin Presley r«orded, were to be there. There were repor t s t hat . CarQllno Ktmnedy and movie • .st.ra Burt ReyoQ~I and Ann· M araret would attend. 'f\lnnessee's sovernor, Ray B\anton. wbo ordered tha\ all fla11 in the at,te fly at half !itaff. al•o w~ lo fly to Meqip))iJ. 'J'h• pa.llbearer15 weH th~ men ~fosest to Presley : }lji road m anaaer, Joe 'Es~lto; hts \'!~: tor, <?eorJr• 'Nl~hopoJJloai bts CUitati1t , Char1le Hod&e: ht. rec: Otd producer, ftjtO]\ J f\'J$i hi~ music publi1~et, ~od loi'lgliD\e trlen<S; Lam•r tlkc; and >. cousin, Billy Smlth. • RAIN ENDS THREAT. way to sunshine Friday. He said w._rmer weather will return with the sunshine with highs in Orange County expected to reach 85 Friday. Overnight lows will be in the upper 60S. Gordon Elser, information of· fleer for the Oran1e County Water District, said tbe two-day storm dropped nearly ~.ooo acre feet of water into the parahed soil. •'If our district was buying that water from Qorthern California," Elser sald, "then JVe're talkinl about lm,000." 1Jut Oran&• County can't buy water from the nqrth portion of the state, ~en at twlce the $tC> per acre root cost. because ot drought conditions up there. Elser said there are other ad· v antaees to the Au1ust rainfall. "It means people won't be water· ing their lawns for awhllfl." he said. The light·falllng rain al10 means a lot was soaked into the soil instead of runnln1 off, tho water expert said. He 1aid the water dis trict's eoo-acre Jand spreadinc grounds on the Santa Emmes, s peaking to the Citlzena HarbOr Area Research Team, said "It now looks like it's a virtual .certainty that we'll be Emm,eS' "Said moving the ' Abraham A. lUblcoff <D·Conn > ' thealel' four mUes inland will in· Riblcoff and Sen. Charles· ff. ·.crease Ute SCR aucUence. "TWla Percy OHll. ), issued a state· fish don't •go to tile theater," he ment afterward noting that the reQlarked. comptroller had still not com. Emmes called SCR "the DJs-pleted his inquiry on several sub- neyland otthe arts." jects.-. .. ... . ~ t l ~ ............ FANS OF ELVIS PRESLEY MOURN THE DEATH OF THEIR IDOL NEAR HIS MEMPHIS HOME Hundreds Maintain Vlgll Outald• Manelon as Tragedy Strtk•• Two Mourner• I ~ .. . . .. . . . MEMPlUS, Tenn. (AP) -As more than 1,000 people watched outside the cates of Elvia Presley's mansion today, celebrities joined the family in· aJde, at__private funeral services fortheK.ingofRock 'n'Roll. , . Many of those who waited in the 90-degree afternoon beat brouaht port.able tape players that boomed out Presley's bit soncs. The fans, some with tears s~eaming doWn their cheeks, a\OOd °" sat on automobile hoods and stared.at the big,.white house on the bill. Celebrities attendinc the services included actors John Wayqe and Burl Reynolds, singer-actress Ann-Margret and Iler husband, Roger Smith, and entertainer Sammy Davis Jr. A few hours earlier, about 300 peraom keepina an all-night vigil at the scene bad watched in hor· ror as a car struck and killed two women and crit.icially injured a third. Police said the car involved in the predawn traffic accident was traveling 55 miles an hour in a 40 m.p.b. zone and the dri~r bad been drinking. Tbe male ilriver The pallbearers were the men closest to Presley: his road manager, Joe Esposito; bis doc- tor,·· George Nicbopoulos; his IUitarlst. Cbarlle Roelle; his rec-ord producer, Felton Jarvis; his music publisher and loqtlme friend, Lamar Fike; and a cousin. Billy Smith. County· Smee 1389 Rainfall Most • ID __;;,Sp_rg_e-ry_P_e_r_fo_rm __ ~e_d__________________ $1 Million t:ropWss Predicted I :·1 \ .. MEMPHIS, Tenn. CAP) -AuthoriUes discount reports that Elvls Presley had a serlout drq problen.bef ore his death. "I can't say be was ~kbJI no • drUCJI at all,'' laid Dr. Jerry Francisco, S.btlby Couhty medical examiner, "becauae his own doctor ha& said he was tak- ing appetite depressants." But Frapclaco, who conducted a three-~ autopsy on the en· tert~net·~ body, ~ph~ically denied Presley sh.owed any sign of a drug abuse. , "There was no evidence of any • abflormal, illegal drug uae," be \ sald. ld Bever!¥ Hilla two of Presley·~ ei-bodfguards Delbert "SOnnyt• West and David Hebler, said Wednesday be was a "tormented man" puahed into heavy drug use by the weight of his own legend. o.ttr PlllM ,,... ,..._ RAIN-SOAKED ART·A·FAIR REOPENED TODAY Worker Jack Caldwell Pushes Water Out of Grounds· • I performances call the box office and make a reservation for one of the two days. The pageant rainouts Tuesday and Wednesday were only the second and third time in the 42-· year history of the show that it was rained out. The fir~t time was the July 29, 196!;, per· formance. '<' * * * "\ ... , ' Fro1t1 Page AJ .RAIN.• The bodyguards were fired just before they started writing "Elvis: What Happened?," a book touted by publicists as describing a gtim side of Presley that was 1'br0oding, violent, ob· sessed tlith death, strung out, sexually driven." West and Hebler emphasized that their book, which describes Presley aa a reelusive drug ad· diet, was written more than a year ago. It was released two weeks ago. "Elvis was a tormented man," said Hebler. "He was a victim of himself ... the image. the legend ... The bodyguards said Presley started taJdng pills during his two·year stint in the Army an,d continued taking them to get up for his heavy concert and tilm schedule. "Like in Las Vegas, the first couple of days he was there he would get totally wiped out on Demerol and just sit there and not be able to open bis eyes " West said. ' . , TONIGlrr COSI'A MESA WATER SUOW 12th Annual Water Show, Estancia High School, August 18 and 19, 7:30p.m. SO cents. ''SOMETHING 'S ~FOOT" - FRIDAY, AUGUST it STAN·KENTON CONC$RT - OCC Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. MOTORCYct.E SPEEDWAY RACING -F&irCrounds. a p. m. ' ' .. He added that' some of J>realey'1 fr\eqd,I tded to persuade him to qQJt c:IJ'uas, but he fJnally pulled on• of .them aside and aaJd: .. l need lt, man. l need it." Francisco said ii Presley had been taklbg drugs tn the amount su1aeated by West, Ylsible evidence would b"-ve shown on the~. Fri.nCiBco a..W ht found no nee· ctle marlta ..... which would have been apparent had Presley been talrtng druls with a byP6dermlc -·ana he said there w .. no slan of dam.ate or chance ~'bis tf1- sues and o~ana · wbtcn would have sli'Own eVidence of .heavy drueabuse. A man identilting himself as 9ft Orange county Harbor patrolman &J\d apparently at· tempting a pranld:sotified an unlmown number of·resl.dents from Mission Viejo to San Clemente to flee their homes in threat of a Udal wave to- day, sheriff's Officers said. Sbetiff's Lt. Tom Conner said, however. there· was no emergency and what the rnan may have thought was a prank is .a_ violation of the California Penal Code. He alleged the caller phoned residents between 9 and 10:30 a.m. saying an earthquake had hit Catalina Island and that-SOuth Orange County homes were threatened by a tidal wave. Conner said the· man ad· vised residents to evacuate Conner said his office had received to to 13 calls from residents about the report: Sheriff's in~estigators and ph~e company ·officials are trying to learn the cjaller's identify. He said the viOlatfon f alts under placement of an· npyblgphone ~alls. ManKilled GILA BEND, Ariz. <AP> - A California man, Samuel Flye. ss. of Cabuon, was killed when be apparently fell a1leep and slammed into the rear wheels of a semi-truck trailer on U.S. 80 about four miles east of here Wednesday, the Department J4 Public Safety said. • A e~aman for the lrvtne Company denied t.Oday that..the flrm no longer plus to dona e,an 18-acn bOepttal alte •dja to tho UC lrvlne campus to -the Western Wdrid Medlcal a· don. 1 • Tom WUck, company v}c:e · president of f.\lbllt af'.fails, ~4id the company s new ownenr are unfamUlat wttb the Westetn World plans and the commit t t.o tb8 medical foundation ~e 1>)' the company•a pre Dils owners. .11 He .•aid tho mauer ii atudf and an annoonceaii\)t 1bould be fortbCOiniDI tD 80 d~ .• ;wtltk't 11-tema\t WU issued itter newt r porie quoted J.oan Irvine &illth, a member of Ute company'• board of diredor'I, as saytnc the land &1ft wu ~ wtthdriwn by tbe new onen. • Members of a foundation- appolnted committee whlc~ has be~n maklni plans fot tbe b<>t~tal and medical comolex. are leeldn• a meeting ~e ·land flrm'a new owners te· solve questions about the and lift. . Mn. Smith,· who last week save '1 mllllon to UCJ for US&.in espandinl the campus medttal school facillttes, reportedlY tqld two Western World committee members that tbe new Irvine Company ownership· w·as wtthdr.wtns the land gift offer because they could no longer af • ford to ctve the 18-acre site away. Committee members said they ue eeekin1 a meeting with trvlne Company offic~ls • because they are unsure whetller Mrs. Smith was speaking as an individual Irvine Company direc- tor or as a spokesmJn for th~ ep- Ure bOard and management or the lrvlhe Company. Wilek ~d that "at present, no decision bas been made and no position taken wtth respect to the (Western World) property." Just Fishing Nore .::: World War II heroes Gregory "Pappy" Boyington «left 1 ~ ·~,and James Doolittle got together for a little action in the ;,:;: Pacific· again. but this time they were only after fi~h . ~; .. Roth. obviouslv. were successful ili-:"" ·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ •" '."t. ,~ .. - By KATHY CLANCY Of .. o.lly ..... , .. ,. Oranae County govermnent of. fidals spent $220,231 durint the past two years to influence the worktnes of state government, tbe California Feir Political Practices Commission said Wednesday. The report, covering lobbying activities in t9f5 and 1976, •\so showed the Orange Cou.aty Employea Assoclation, which in· eludes Most county amj many Ci· ty workers, spent $14,234 for the same purpose. Jn additioQ, the City of Newport Beach spent $10,123; the Huntington Beach Union High School District, $2,908, and the Fountain Valley Scl\ool District, $999. Commission spokesman John Keplinger aaid in all, business. government and special interest groups spent $40.1 million during the two years covered bx the re- port. Businesses, utilities and fl.nan· cial institutions accounted for $22.3 million in e>tpenses and lob· Big Fire Wntrol Due Today? . bying efforts by labor croups totaled $3.7 million, while aov- ernment spent $t.2 mituon. Los "'Aneeles County speot $374,414, th6 report •aid, and th& city of LOS AUeles, $343,831. Most of the money went to finance the $alaries and Office expenses of about 600 registered lobbyists, their seeretarles, at· torneys and consultants, the re· J>OrtSaid. Keplinger explained that state law requires business, govern- ment and special interest gl'O\lps to report regular lobbytna ac- tivities as well as any expenses totaling more than S250 in one month. The expenses may include trips to Sacramento to meet with legislators or testify at belrines as well as campaigns by mall to legislators, he sa1d. Among other Orange County agencies reporting lobbying ex· penses were the Irvine Ranch Water District. $8,2$5; the Costa Mesa County \Valer Diatrict. $4,205; the Santa Ana Watershed Project Authority, $~,655; the South Coast County Water Dis· t.rict, $1,816, and tlie Municipal Waler District of Orange ~unty, $1,832. Education groops, excluding • teacher a~iatlons, !Spent $1. 7 miJU(Jft, Keplinger $aid. Of that $~31,'91 waa spent by the Calit~a ScbQC>l Adinlnist~ors Aa&QClatioo whose members in- clude O(f~als of most Orange Co'mty Sd>001 di3tricts., The Calltomta Teachers AB- sociatloll.paid .$.176,290 for ita 1ob-bY1ns dforts, a.nd the California Federatkllrofteacbers $92,889.. Kepllnger-said most Orante County cities likely rely on the California League of Cities for their lobbying eUDrls, That or- ganiz.atlc.l apent $402,M9 in the two-year period. The Metroj>olttan Water Dis-trict. which imports water for ()ran1e and otb~~ &o\lthern California counties, reJ)Orted tpb- bylnc costs ol. lifJ7 ,212. ltepU,,.er. cont;lnued. , The ~t.hern California As-'socfatlol) of Governments. which inclUdes Otange County. spent $31, 788. while tbe County Supervisors Association of California tallied expenses of s.1$3,947. The figures d~n·t include political campaign contribut.ioos. lor·Fmht Joseph aad Shirley Kandle re· cenUy d~ided th_at white with a briC}lt gold triin -would be the ideal color scheme for their home at 1300 Seacrest Drive, Corula del Mar. But they will now have to go to court to defend that decision or repaint the bome in other colors. An Oranc• County Superior Couct lawsuit filed by the Harbor View Hilb Hotneowners A,.woeia~ lion claims that tbe !Candles 'Violated association regQ!ations when tber repainted their home white and 1014. It is alle&ed that the Kandlu were denied permission to re- paint their home in the allegedly offending colors when they ap- plied to the assodation but ig- nored the plalntift$ • warnillg. ACfUALLY.1 never really got to Sacramento. I was in a sub- urb called Davis, where the University of California operates a campus. I was there for three days with Daughter, who will be entering the place come fall. The occasion was a session called Freshman Advising. where parents and prospective frosh live in the dorms, eat in the dorm cafeteria and stomp around campus. This is all to give the parent "a feel" for cam- pus life. What you get is to sleep on a bunk bed. share a central bathroom with 50 other gu,ys and stand in line so you can grab your tray and get s~rved meals. All of this seemed faintly familiar. You would think you had just returned lo the United States· military establishment. The next thing you expected was for somebody with stripes on his arm to burst into your room and l :;tart inspecting your shoethine. t . In truth, it was all very produc- tt v e. Students got advice separately from parents. You _ suspect the parents were being advised on how to cope witJa the advice that was being &iven to ' the freshmen. UC DAVIS IS suth a beauti!ul. rural, bueolic campus setting that it's difficult to realize that our California Legislature is in session just up the road. But YoU do get some hints. Every now and then, a blast or hot air blows acrossth~Daviscampus. Then at one meal out on the green. a whole flodc of ducks challenged me for my barbecue sandwich. They were pushing each other, bitina. running in circles, flapping and all quacking at once. , It was like· watching a debate in theAssemblY. Getting oU the Da.vis campus can be a problem at times. One ftllatrated Fullerton father kept leaping in~ the sinsle phone booth avaUabte in tryin1 to reach Air California in Sacramento . .. They keep puttinl me on hold and then playing music over the phone," he w.Ued.. .. I can't ~et through." CLEARLYP TBIS is a n"w trend in puttina the pbone call~ CJll bold. Give him some masie. Pretty llOGl we'll hue our fire departmeata puttinc yoq on llold playing, ••smoke Gets irt Yoo.r E~es. ".Or the li.f ecuarda Jtll1 hit the hotd button and Plat >'°" "l'm F.orever Blowtnc Bubbles .• t Apparently you can •t simply have plain old silence a~ more. ~N BB~ELS, the Belgian ministries of Justice, iQterior and foreign affai.n and the U.S. Em· bassy all aaid tMy knew J'othing / ol Agee'awbereabout.s. In Loodoa, Aiee•s American attorney Melvin L. Wulf said be has sent a cable to Secretary of State Cn\as R. Vance sll)'i.nl that Agee was arrested In n"ance because of his "dbsident ~ews on American intelligence-policy. "Jn light of Preaidept Carter's eoncern for international human rights, I rciquest as Agee•s at- torney that the U.S. protest Agee's arrest and extend afl as· sistance possible in his defense · · Wulf's cable read. ' Agee, 41, has been llvif\8 open- ly in Paris and last week told an interviewer he was wrltin& a a>ok about CIA intervecttionj in ...-estem Europe, amona other !e&ions. This, presumably, will mclude CIA activities in France. BE ALSO SAID fn. the in- ... , ....... OUSTED BY FRANCE Agent PhHip Agee and ~ple .. known to have CIA connections. Agee'& British lawyer, lM'rY Grant. said in .London that the agent-turned-a'.uthor went to Boulogne to meet bis wife. Angela, who bad tra,veled from the couple's home at Cambridge, 50 miles nortb of London. She had pllln!led to go with hlm to Paris. Agee moved to the Frenc h capital from The Netherlands . where he w~nt after obeying a British aovem- ment deportation order June 3. Grant «aid both Ag~ and •bis wire were arrested but sbe'was released. ~ terview·that be was working on AGEE'S DEPARTURE from an index of ''all the organizations Britain followed an unsuccessful Soviets Say1 Aide Murdered by CIA MOSCOW CAP) -A Russian·born double agent whQ dlsap- peare<;t 19 months ago probably broke under the strain of his job and was killed by the CIA to avoid another scandal, an official Soviet weekly says. In a IWl·PUe article titled "They Shoot Horses, Don't They?" Literatumaya Cazeta said Soviet officials are demanding to know what happened to former Capt. Nikolai Artanionov, 49, alias Nlcbolu Shadrin. · . "The CIA. kills people who are a threat to them, not only oppO- nent.s butits own people.•• the article Hid. "Sbadrtn has a wife and son.here and together with them we have a right to demand where be is add what happened to him.·' SJHlha A•mnaatlo11 Plot? :M¥>RID, .Spain <AP~ Police are investigating an attempt to assassmate King Juan Car1oa. Queen Sofia and PNrnie'J' Adolfo Suarez. AuthorJUes d11coverect a bomb Wednesday \lllder a bricf&e shortly belore the royal pllrl;y ~ros&td it in a ~r. 1 Juan Carlos Qd his wJfe remained lit their Mediterranean vaca-tio~ retreftt.on Majorca today. Suarei retUtned tq Madrid where he ibdicatfci to r~J>Ort~rs that radicals were responslble. He did not elaboi:ate. hbce aources sai8 the nearly ~o ,po\Utds of plastic ex· plosivea, packaged in a metal box, were detOJ)ated tbree miles 0&.&tstde P•hn.a d• Jda-J or ca by a t>ome sq41•0 Wednesday nrght.?.. •bbut i5 minutes alter the aeviQ was found. • BhMDOnlh lecaJ bd1e to 8'otd comPUance wttb a Home Otftce Older Luue'cl lut Nb•. lt. 'tbe covernmentorderid Im~· tioo fo-r unapeclftect act!'1tlu .. banntul to the te&ritT Of the United tcinJdQlll. ,, The Home Otnce alle1ed Acee matntatned recutar eontacts barri:afUI to the HCurity of Britain With torelll' tn~lU•ence aceJ>ts. He charced that the U.S. 1overn-. ment ptessUNd the Brltlsb gov-ecnmemJ.Qto GPelllnl btm. • A1ee.,J by, bll owia atc:oant, sened With the· CIA lD Latin America from 1960 to 1$69. became dilllluslo.ned. quit. and ,,,,._ea me to Bdla1n ln lt72- .i. ~ wrote -book called .. CIA Dlary ... ' wb1c1-n1UDM! a number ot CIA 1hen, and be bas written detailed accounts of bow the agency qperates. "l thlnk the Unl\e<l States gov-ernment put pressure on the British resulting in tbis action, .. Agee told reporters u be left Bri- tain. xpl~ion . At Gum Plimt . ' NEW YORK CAP> -Wamer- Lambert Co. and rour of its ex- ~utives were indicted today on charges of reckless manslaughter and criminally negll&~homlctde In coonectlon with an explosion and fire at a chewing cum factory that killed six penoos last November. Queens Dist. Atty. John J. San- tuccl said a crand Jury charged the eompany and officials with "reckless and conscious dis- regard" for the lives and safety ·ot its emtaloyes. The blat occurnid last Nov. 21 at the American Chicle Division plant in Queens. The executives were arrested and scheduled for arraignment Thursday. Santucci said the grand jury found that ~ploeive maaoeslum stearate powder, used as a lubri· cant in the manufacturing pro- cess, was alJowed to accumulate in an area where Freshen-Up gum was being manuftttured. The indictment said the com- pany and officials had !ailed to take remedial action despite complaints from supervisory petSoo.nel and notification from an ir\:5uraoce company about the problein. SENATI! CONFIRMATION? Judge FranJl Johneon Alliert A.Ule Won't~r Konian Pro'be. WASHINGTON <AP>.-Sud Part 'lbom.-faces poatble contempt ot Coairesa etaarees · f,or refusing to answer House in· vesUptora• questions about al- lefed South Korean lbftuenc• buying. The investigators reportedly warned Mrs. Thomson, a one· time employe or former House Speaker Carl Albert. that the House. ethics committee may bectn contempt actlon acainst beroext..eet • SBB OFFEaED to aDSW'el" e•ch of three ~uestlooa in- vestigators pat to ber Wednesday onl7 in public, her lawyer, PbilUp Birsbkop. said. He said she wu uted whether she knew of any .. payoffs .. to con- gressmen by Korean rice dealer Toll85UD Part, 1f she knew of any by former South Korean Am· bassadot Kim Dong Jo, and what she knows about a 1975 con-uesstooal trip to Korea. THE COMMITTEE and the Justice Departmeot are in- vestigating whether Park, Kim and other South Koreans tried to buy influence in Congress for the • Seoul government with cash con.- trlbutiom, gifts and favors. Mrs. Thomson said last month that she was not involved in any such schemes herself and that "I koow nothing of any South Korean agents or operaUves on Capitol Hill." CON~R't'? 'RESTAURANT? . ' .' · ~ · ~1~.,? tHEATE 'l , ~~ c;y~~? fliaeo! ; · m&UIE? wen tell y~u whetetogo • ' Ronald L. Nichols. 19, d San Diego, has flled a SI l million damage suit claiming he was infprisoned against his will in an effort to 'de-program· him of Ha.re Krishna religious beliefs. Nichols is the son of a Western Airlines vice president. State· Solons See . . ·Alaska Oil Threat .~ SACRAMENTO (AP> - '.California's oU fields could be ';;out down, costing tho state ,,Jnilllons' of dollars, if Alaskan oil '.J>µshes out the domestic product, ~late olficials warn. • • Thia could happen if importers .-9r North Slope crude offer :Clllifomia refineries a discount : f'ltice, the officials say. • JIOWEVER, spokesmen for oil ·'tc<?mpanies S81d Wednesday that It would be unlikely, even with t.he recently ordered $3-a-barrel · ·~nUtlement &iven the North '$ope producers by the Federal '1.='oergy Administration. ;'.But California's two U.S. 1 ·~enators, Democrat Alan _Cranston and Republican S.I. ·~?yakawa, expressed that con· • cem last week when they asked . tJle Carter administration to hold . qfr any special treatment for the North Slope production. . A few days later, the FEA is· '.sued regulations giving pro· :.Jl1,1cers of North Slope oil a $3-a· • bllrrel prlce·equalizing erttitler ment, the same given to foreign imports. •• NOll'nl SLOPE crude is sup-. f"poseci to displace foreip imports in California, not domestic pro- duction. .. We believe there is a chance, a very good chance, that California domestic crude prices will have to be cut," said Bob Shinn of the State Energy Com- mission, because FEA rules "give Alaska oil importers the ability to undersell." * *· * Oil Terminal Under Fire LONG BEACH CAP) -Resi· dents have continued their battle against building a terminal for Alaskan oil tankers in their com· munity at a marathon meeting of the California Coastal Com- mission . Residents urged the com- mission to prevent their city fl'om being turned into a crude oil tanker port. One speaker, Robert Kilpatrick, said Long Beach is already "on its way to becomillg the New Jersey of the West." The coastal com mission opened its own review of the pro- posed project T\lesday night. Tax Bill Nearly Ready? FREE ICE-MAKER ASHER-DRYE In Santa Cruz await outeome otthe psycblatric ex amlnatlon before deciding whether' to ~s ebarres atem- mina trom tbe alx·hour ordeal thai uw the release in stqes of au clPf;lves unharmed. Persuaded by a hostage neaotlatiOP team •d tho Cap-I Uves. the i:qan turned himself In •PJ>uentbt Without flrlns a shot · ana \Without hi• demands that two men be brought before him belnl met, Ganiloff said. Day Care Choice A comprehensive study of day care ne.eds seems lo conclude that most parent~ thmk they know bes t when it comes to look - ing after their young. . The survey. conducted for the Urban Institute, notes that a very high percentage of working mothers. particularly the poor. would rather have relatives or neighbor&. take care of their children at l\ome than place them in a day care od.dter. Even when excellent. free or lQw-cost .. Red Tape ·-center& are JH~vtded by the government or by an employer, many mothers are unwill- ing to use them, the study revealed. It also questioned the urgutnent that provision of more day care centers would enable more women to work. When one ma- jor center was closed. not one woman left her job. They aJJ made other arrangements for their children, usually with relatives or friends. The researcher& made one interesting ob rvation : Most of those pushing for 01ore day care centers are upper middle- class whites. They seem to overlook the fact that poorer mothers are much more likely to be part of an extended f amity where there is no shortage of relatives to look after the working mother·s children. Conclusion: It probably would be wjser to give poorer working mothers a small sub- sidy to pay for the kind of home child care they prefer than to make a major invest- m ent in more day care centers. Phone Inflation Think your phone bill is loo h.igh "! CQnsider 25 cents instead of a dime for a pay phone call; 15 cents for each directory assistance call after six free ones each month; home service rate for a one-party line up 10 percent to $12.60 a month: long distance rates up 18 percent: home installa- tion costs up from S45 to s.52. Don 't worry. n·s not some d1abolicul plot they're hatching for us in Southern California. It"s alreadv been hatched b' Southern Bell Telephone Company for 38 counties in Florida. The new charges are lhe result of a Sl33 million rate increase granted Southern Bell by the Florida Public Service Commis- sion. The phone company had asked for 5218 n\illion. So, if you have any relatives in Florida. do them a favor and tell them. "'Don't call m~ I'll call you.·· , U.S. Fiuuls Not Alwaya Reaerved for Needy H WA.SlilNGTON -Just about every nation in real or apparent need has received substantial aid fllom the United States. Now the · official in charge of dispensing the aid, John Gillipnf bas been quoted in the papers as sayfpg our tax money •baa gone tor .. Rolls-Royces and flgbtet planes- and bowling alleys to keep tbe rulers happy." (JACK ANDERSON J were misrep.resenting the pro- gram over which you were in charge." He, deman4.ed to know ·'where ali.4 wh~n b'ave we bought RoJli,.Royces under the AID program? Where .and when have we bougbt bowling alleys to keeptbe rulers happy?" often been use<l as a form of bribery to keep foreign poten. tates on our side in tt1e world power struggle. BVT THE focus bas chanced in recent years; ·AID projects are now destined 1o help the world's impoverished people increase their agricultural productivity. ''Rural development," has become the watchword. ,, Th.ii is raising a rumpus in the backrooms of Washington. Gilligan . director of the Agency for In· ternational Development (.AID>. has been accused of spouting off "half-bak"d· out-dated clicbes," of ta kine "a THE AID director responded that be had been "speaking in the past tense," that he had been ·•attempting to m~ke the polnf that numerous Americans believe" aid funds have been misused and that, in fact, aid money had been used to buy a heUcopter for EgypUan Presi- dent Anwar Sadat. to c~nst.ruct a Most of the programs look im- pressive enough on paper; the re- sults are often less impressive. • AID officials find themselves en- tangled in endless red tape. They forher fill out forms and Ille re- ports to Washington unb1 they have dme for little else. series .of cb\ap shots,'' of un· dennining hia own a1ency. Dis- mayed subordinates have beard to ~t be abould bi banisbed to Gillie an 's Island. Thewbi>le hubbub can be sum- marized in a ffnfidential ex- chanie of letters between .. iA· dignant con1ressman and the olltapoken Gillis an. J\ep. ~ Solarz <J>.N.Y.>.~ champion oC the unpopular aid program. wrote angrily: "I can only HY that I was ~bocked and CHsma)ted at \he content or Your ~tements as reported in the newspeper , "Either the thincs y°"Hidve true and your st8ff has been tun· mn1 a woefully mismanaaid pro- gram, .. Solarz said, "Qr else you · lnury hotel in the Dominican Re~ubtlc and to bolster Clic- tator&bt~12~: Sut G~ Ulsisted be merely want•a ' to c•t. across the ~messa1e th•t Uie new ad· 1l>inistrator d AID waa aware ct these and other criticiams and ln· tended to see that fund.a are used u Cangress has directed. •1 We have kept a Ckile wl1Cti on lhe distribution of aid for a quarter century. The procram began from the best motlves; the AmerlcJD people an.er Wodd War II wanted to get the world IOinC agabl. But ell too often, Un· cle Sam offered handouts to bands that were Only too quick to pick poeketa. Nor has tfte • llow of aid, u Gilligan SUU*9ted, always been channeled to the neediest. 1t has • T~_e Lance Affair •I First Test for Carter WASIDNGTON -The cor· rosive impact of the Berl Lance affair within the administration is seen in this privately ex- pressed judgment by a member of Jimmy Carter's subcabinet: ·'This i.a a.be first ~ea.l test to sbow just what kind of Presi- dent he really is.•: ' Since this Assi~t ~etvry had informed JtJs colleag~es two week:S eatli~ t)1at-·Lance simply bad to go as director of the Office of M149a.ae- m e rtt and Budget <OMB ), the "test" in tliis official's mind wa s . . ,, whet.her or not President Carter had the louibness to fire the cabinet's strongpian. Such talk pro~ the 'fall Qf big Bert Lance, not always expr·essed in sorl'ow. ls wi.despre'ad among administration officials. But there i$ countervaiUng bitterness else.where ln the ad- tninistration thpt 1l decent man who bas not y4 ·~ shown to have1committ~ on«; Ulecal act as heme crucified by the press. aided by officials in the Trea•ury ·and ,other df!part- ments. Partisans or Lance. then, see a very diffefent "~" foe the President: Whether he will play Harry Truman by def}'ing the press aod the growing con- seDSus within his adminlstration. LANCE'S FALL, which now aeerm inevitable, will deprive the administration of its in· ( EV ANS-N,OV AK ) valuable "deputy President .. and its principal link to the business community. Following recent setbacks for the budget- balancera, the end of Lance signals more federal spending But beyond this. the political death Of Lance will bequeath animosity and suspicion among those left b-bind in the ad- ministration. From many aspect:;, then, the Lance affair is not only President Carter's first crisis but his rarst calamity. Lance's closest friends and al· hes here are convinced t.hi! in terest in Lance's private flnan- cial affairs was partially !lleled by non-friends ot Lance inside the administration. and their suspicions concentrate on the 'l'reasury. , Whether or nqt T'°e&Sury ~relary W. Michael Blumenthal is i9vo\ved, Lance is no favorite amoa.g Treasury subordinateS". ments,'wbile in no way sabotag- ing Lance, shed few tears over his predicamept. Middle-level liberals who want higher, not lower , federal s pehding perceive Lance as Unch-pin of the balanced budget policy and believe the President will 1006en (ederal pursestrings without the blg, soft-spo,ken banker from Calhoun County, Ga., at his Ji.ide. 1ACfVALLY, Lance's policy bas been eroding ov~r the last mon~. He failed to trigger an a,ll-out presid~ economizing drive against the Health, Education and WellarQ (HEW> appropriations bill. The new welfare reform plan, expected to boost speqding by more than the advertised $3 billion, was another Lance defeat: preoc- ~upied b,r pel'Sonat difficulties, he miase<l the key July 21 pres- \dential meeting to consider welfare options. Ev.er since he learned qii Aug. s about ·that Manufacturers Hanover Bank memo af>pearin& to link a personal loan to J,ance with depostts from hfg-,\llant.a bank. Ule..normallf )Ug~~rited Lance heb·be~a deeply depressed. Usuplly the-mC)St ac- cesslble of men, he spent days at his summer home iO Sea Island. Ga., declining tQ take calla e\Cen from friends. A~h 50me White House aidea and cabinet members privately insist that Lance has done nOtblng'.11,(egal, they worry that public: ~tee1>t1ons, fed by a midsummer, dog-days press campalp, l\ave f,t'ozen u&nst Lance. M"oreover. when 1 Democratl'C' Senators who weeks ago gave Lance a hasty clean bill of health r~tum from the August recess, they will be anxfous t9 balance their ledgers by goijjg after him -if he is still arou.nd. All of this points to lbe d~ parture ot Bert Lance, protilbly: ciuite soon. Less otivlousl~. whenever Lance leaves, the ad· mimsti'aUon will carry deep in· ternil scan nOt llkel~ to he•l anytime soon. Seven-year-old Jordan Williams of On- tario's Walpole Indian reser e appe~rs almost oblivious to the spectators as he dances to the d~ums at the S~geen . powwow .Jtec~ntlY.. . . a., ::,. I • ~ j ' • '• -I . ... . TV Sliow Stuilied OD 'Son of Sani' By &be Associated Presa n~ ,.. A TV show may be made about New York's "Son of Sam" and the six .4'-callber killings at- .: • tributed to him over a year's time. Industry sources in Los Angeles say Lorimar Productions, maker of the "Waltoo.s." is negotiat- . . . ing for TV riJbts to a "nonfiction novel" that us~ the fact&, but not all the names, of the case. The book, tent•tively called "Son of Sam,·· is ·~· being hurriedly written by cohunn~st Jimq;ay . Breslin, close to the case ever since be got a letter · " · ftom "Sagt." and ss>omwriter Dick Schaap. · ;·1 _' Lee Rich, president of Lorimar, declined com- , " · m ent when asked if his ftrm Is negotiating with r . · Breslin's agent for the book, scheduled for publica- •,, tion ln·October by Viking Press. - 1940 Starring WlLtIAM HOLDEN MARTiiA scan and THOMAS MITCl-lEtL Directed by SAM WOOD ,; 0 R •s APP&EHllNSIVE about the appeaJ, conce~ned about it from a lea-.! pOint of T• , and about wbat the Mure h:L~ her," said attorney AI J in a telephone interview from hts Boston office. Since her release from prison Uat ~vem~r on $1 millicm ball pOsted by ber family, most of Ml~ Henst'..s acthJ.tiu have been gu~ from.the public. "We•H keepini away from characteliZ!ng her per$onal life aa much as J>OS$lble, tor a~urlty rea1ona1 •• said Johnson, a partner of the chief def en$e lawyer at the bank robbery trial. F . Lee Bailey. THE 23·YEA&·OLO newspaper heiress spent 19 months in the underaround as kidnap victim turned fugitive, 14 months behind bars and lline months in guarded freedom. · She was sentenced to seven years in prison term for her l>arl · in the 1974 robbery of a San Fran· clsco bank carried out by the Symbionese Liberation Army terrorists who abducted ber. Later i,n Los Angeles, she en- tered a no-contest plea to charges of firing shots dutinc the May 197• SLA robbery of a sporting aoods store. She 1$ servlr>i five rears probation on that.charge. BAIUY AND John•on asked the appeals eourt to throw out the bank robbOfY conviction. o~ grounds ber rigtlt to a fiUr trial was violated, p&1'tly, b~9use prosecuwr James L. Bro~ asl(ed her question.& aboµt her life in the undergrOUJfd. Whether she wins or loses lb& appeal, Johnson said, the case could be taken to the U.~. Supreme Court. U forced to no turn to prilon, she wouht be ellai· ble for parole after &ervlnc another 14 months. He would not say who her friends ate. A tabloid magutne recently reported she was aialn seeing former fiance Steven Weed. but Johnson said that isn't true. I Meet Trist()n· Jores, author of a remgrkable . . . . ~ true-adventure sforY, 'The Incredible Voyage:;. I ' ! He's sailed over 350,000 miles aroundl~ world. from the Dead Seo f\\~the Andes, In a craft less tnan 40 feet long; holds 9 soRtrtg records; <Jnd hos l~.f!lOI'& miles h:Jn aoY, Other saUor In 1he. wood ~"a small crdft! His amazing adVentures Include being joHed, starved to 90 pounds. attacked by Arabs, rescued by Ethiopians, neortv killed by a rat and saved.~ a crOCQdilel Meet him dt our Nautical Boutique, Friday, August 19, for reoeptlon and ooddolls, 6;,30-~:3QJ).m. (For reservations dlol 644-2800. ext. 245.) Or CQme to.<>w Book Dept .• Sarurday, August 20, noon to 2 p.m. He'll autograph your copv" of 1he Incredible Voyage: A Personal Odysse(. $i195. And you'H see his b60t on display. 'Books,24 . . Shop Thursday and Friday 10-9. . ' . A Personal Odyssey' I THE PROPOSAL WOULD prohibit funeral Castle or condominium , find your dream home Sund a ya utSJ11t in the DAILY PILOT Marticians ' homes• from plctlnl up a corpse wttho"t the f 1mlly'1 per_inll Ion and from embaJmlna a body unt .. tb family auttioriied It. The proposill are the flm effort by tbe f edtral 10Vttmment to fe8Wlte tbe funeral lnduatry I Wblcb the f"TC eathnated did a bUllOQ lD b\aslness ln 197$. Tho aeneral covosel of tho NaUonal Funeral DlNCton and Mortielana Aaaoelattoa. Larry C. William, aald th• or1a.Ulatl<>D oppo1ea pric• ad· vertillna recutatlons. RE SAID TBE oaGA.NJMTION elS9 opposes the FTC'• proposed req~mesit that funeral dlrec· tors diaplay tbe1r full UJM ot cuketa, lncl\1<11nt low· price models. Haniet Mlller. e~ecutlve director of tbe ,Na- Uanal Retired Teachers Aaodatton, aald the report "undencores our belief tbat the funeral lnduatry la tn need of regulation and consumeroversi1bt.1• The Continental A.uoclaUon of Funeral and Memorial Societfe& Inc., an organization advocat· ing freedom ot choice ln the making of funeral ar- ran1ements, also applauded the re(M)rt and urged swift FTC action. Variety· fi)uality Your N~l;Nwhood Shopping Center ·~·%­i.eonani Nlinoy, Mr. Spock of "Star Trek,·· lias exchanged bis fll'St officer's niform for a deputy sheriff's badge. Passaic, N.J .County Sheriff Edwin Englehardt said be swore Nlmoy in as one of more tharr 2SO "friends of law eftforcement ·· du~ a recent ceremony tn . Paterson. .SAVES60 save 37' on our Realtstie Modulettee "808" total music system In time for school! Perfect for apartment or dOt'ITI. Auto-stop, auto-level, phono and mike Inputs, matched speakers! 14-MI Reg. 5995 Ea. Acoustic suspension C·1000 fits on a shett but houses an I " woofer & 3" tweeter for full 30-20,000 Hz. Genuine walnut veneer case, 17%x8%x11 W'. Save '50 on matched etereo palrt co.1NO lblAYP•Dtm "'"fl t ... A.a .......... -.U.Sl"lel'ea· t.iGal fll ldllal ...... ---Jirodl&Hd bJ' CllteriAdn· m• ~ _..._,..,a DOtable aceptioa to U.nle: 8oblwt ·'&bed··~. Oil 1DM ,,_ lf8C Mewttotb. u« .. k,_ ..... t1•ra• .W.. ~ aJounaalllt molt olbll .., . .._.. fl'O$lcbll a .._.ama, .. 8untVGl'I ol ~"-~11JWNBC. nftMlftNT•m.wmbe-**• ~ad .. aboat tbe .... Vlrlb* dam ... ............... 11Sllftlla19"12. a'a a rMlcal daanle •tile c...-el U. m• wbo prodaced tile [ -------]· 'H11ntle1·Brlnkley ,.., REVIEW Report" tor DMl'b' tCllW' • ,,.. 1•an aD4 later made ------IUCb re1pected NBC Hen documeDtarles as "Gaihy by RemCJll ot R.ee. •• •-n. Navajo Way" and ''Sim~ the Fathers.•• Northlhield, who belan In JOurnUam after World War D 1enice u ao infantr)'mlD. wu med wby NBC'a entert••nme aide~ ldm fer tbe ~ Buffalo creek I.bow, wbldl·WUI air I_. tbiunc111. . It bl~ ....... .., UOlld. belmld: "I wenttotMID." . Beuld •Nltltlllllll JINID1*d ldc.,,.. One WU tbat be WU IWU.. -Ida lalt ~ NBC News essllnment bid bem • ez.ecu&he producer of N.BC's July 4 triNmfmnlal coverqe a 1Mf aao. ANOTllEB l'ACroR WAS TBAT be's become impressed wttb tbe popularity of sucb doc1Mtr1mu as • • MiBsiles of October'' and ''Helter-Skelter.·· "It seemed to me a guy who'd dooe a lot of <news) documentary stuff could make a livlna at tbat;andallolt'dbealot~tun. .. beaaid. -..,. And, be said, various NBC eueutives Jlbd bfs · docu-drama proposals, amoo& them Richard C. Wald. president of NBC News. . ''He'd wanted to do tMee tWnes -lite a re- enactment of tbe w._...--. tlllnp of Uaat sort -but was Pl"....eed a'Cllil doinl IO bee ... I& was decided the nen slde eouldn"t -mcton." be said. NBC'1 READS OF NONNBWS shows; Irwin Segel.stein and Paul Klein. liked tbe Idea ol a ataffer doing doeu-dramas. and NBC's buainess affairs chief, Don Carswell, liked lt from a costatandpoUU. he added. · As a result, Northsbleld ls producing not onl7 the Buffalo Creek show, buttwootherdoc:u-dramaa later on. Off.Broadway dramatist David Epstein wrote the script of the first effort, Frank ('.'David and Lisa") Perry is directinl it "and rm tbenonf.lc:tioo not." Nortbshielc;laaid. "SO WB ~ aJME AT IT from dlffeiat anP. • : •. I dGll 't bow a damn tb1q about bow to cast a drmna. On the other band. Frank or David aren't all that laterelted in being sure lt'a al:molm. l.Y~ "Bat I am. Becase I'm 55 ,._n old, r.e alwap dooe MW8 b a Uvinl and I'm ia about to become. ftotioo t.reak. •• 1)bould this lbow and Its 'succesaors be sue-~esaful, Nortbfteld UJS. he'll »robably.Jlllb bis temponrJ lene from NBC News permaaeat. "It'• a plaee I can ai,..,. Co back to -t.blnt." be said. "It's not that I've OQt&rown lt ·er that I'm over the bll!t !_bope.1t•1 Jmt that this it new andez· cillng, IDd UleT're ca1alnly roodn& for me. .. ALLERGY? 12 I 3J 214-2556 1714J 541-9624 .R e co rd e d Message ·· ALLEUY CONTIOL FOUllATlOll • . au 1513. hilt ca 92&&1 Wrtt.fer,,_ ........... GiCPt t*f ~ Salons' SPEECBM~KING IS a lucrative sideline tor ienators. Seventy-four of them' made money at It In me. and reported receiving a t.otal of $183, m in bonoraria, almost all of it in lec- tu~e fees. . Und (he Sen te 's new code of etblcs, tbe lecture business wa.Wd DQledlve after Jan. 1, 1919, wtien an SS.825 limit on outside •aril.DP la &o take etfect.. That is the provhioo challenged in court by the Republican plaintiffs, led by Sen. Paw Lax~at of Nevada, who contends that tM earnings limit will mak• Seoate.aervlce 18" at- tractive to people who aren't iD- dependep'tly wealthy. The ceiling does ~ apply to dividends, in· terest and other investment in- come. STILL, NOBODY UAS quit because of the impending llmit on outside eamlnga, and there t. no sflorlace of applleanta for Senate seats in the next elect.loo. The other plaintiff a in the eourt challence aro Sens. Barr~ Goldwater ot Arizona, Carl T; Curtis of Nebraska, Lowell P. Welcker .lr. of Connecticut, and a conservaUve _poliUcal action or· gani1&tioo, the CommiU. for the Surviv-1 or a Free Congress. They contend that the Uinit on speech fees and 11.mllar ~~· THEY ALSO -ARGUE that there ls no real connection between the earnlJies limit and ttie ethical conduct of senators. SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -The state Court of Appeal has denied 4 request to permanently block demolition of the controversial lntemational.liotel. 1 1 P riva te Shew Three-year-old Willie Rose of Omaha, Neb .• had his own s pecial circus while lying in his hospital bed recently. Dus- ty the clown, with the Ringling Brothers. Barnum and .. Bailey Circus. makes Willie a toy out of balloons. Dusty t >aid he visits hospitals whenever anyone asks him. IAXALT SAID THE earnin~s rule would in effect determine "the type of individual found ac- cept.able to Join the club." Another of the plaintiffs, Sen. S. I. Hayakawa of California, bas said that he might not have run for the Senate if he bad known the The court also terminated a temporary sta.y it bad granted Aug. 8 pending its ruling on the writ l calling for a permanentstay. . ·t•~1v•Offlcea: 7812 Edinger >.ve., The action lets stand the June 10 order by sail · -., H.111\llngton e.ach, CA 02847 Francisco Superior Court which held that a demoll-SoUthern Collfornl• Regional Offlc..: -------lion permit issued to Four Seas Investment Com-4140 Long Bee.eh Blvd., Long Beach. CA 90807 pany, the owners, was valid. 89$5 VaU•y View St., Btiena Partc, CA 90620 ~ About 70 tenants, mostly elderly Filipinios and r~~~~~~~Y~1 ~~:: f.~:~~~::31 1!!!I Chinese. were evicted from the hotel early on the 1095 lrvlne Blvd., Tustin, CA 92880 ~:;c morning of Aug. 4 after courts refused to 81'an1 a 235 N. Citrus Av• .. West Covina, CA 91793 Ll11oc11 I Taped Vo ices 'Ecise Patients WALNUT CREEK, Calif. <P> Patients at a hospital here who listen to the taped voice of a com- forting doctor the night before an operation require less medication and recover more quickly, officials report. At Kaiser Hospital, Dr. Robert Collins calms the fears of surgery patients with hypnotic sugges- tions, telling them to •'use the remarkable power of your own mind (s) in speeding your return to health. THETAPES"REALLYDOhelp,"saidchiefre- covery room nurse Regina Sullivan. When patients have heard their messages, "Their color is better, they thrash around less and they are more alert and less demanding." ( --------] In a masters thesis MEDICINE project, she studied 56 _ hysterectomy patients .._________ and found that those who heard the tapes felt better about the surgery and stayed an average of one day less in the hospital than women wbo did not hear I them Patients hear one tape JUSt as they·re going to sleep the night before surgery and another in the re· covery room as they·re coming out of anesthesia. 1 That second tape is p\ayed again when patient.S are wide awake The technique was devised by Dr. Forrest Chioppa. an emergency room physician interested in alternative medicine "PEOPLE UNDEa STRESS A&E wide open to suggestion, good and bad. They don•t discriminate between the two," Chioppa said. His program uses such vulnerabilit~ to intplanJ positive attit\ldes ;&.bout surgery and recovery. Negative suggestions could have .i,ust the op- posite effect, Chloppa said. A patient in the ·•twilight period" of stress 'll'ho is about to undergo a routine operation may qverl;lear comments about the critically ill patient in the next bed and think they applied to him. "If you were awake, you·d know the conversa- tion was about the other patient. But you ·re mesmerized. You peraqnal,lze it.·· CIOOPPA. BEGAN PIA YING tapes ror P•· tients in 1968, but found tbat many or his colleagues thought the technique was "hocus pocus." He credits a staff nurse with persuadiQ,& other doctors lo try the tapes. · Now patients rather than doctors -have the choice of whether they will bear the tape$ hall decide to listen stay while the ouster action ls being appealed. ' For warm-weather ca.r care You're probably driving more this time of year. And the heat makes things tough on that hard-working engine. If you're a smart do-it- yourselfer, you'll lubricate it with quality oil. And you'll get special products thatprotect it from over-heating and • unnecessary wear. That's where we come ln. A. UNION SPECIAL MOTOR OIL Non·detergent motor oil. blended from highly refined base stocks. 30 wt. • Reg.49c 38c B. YOUR CHOICE DUPONT ANTI-RUST, SEALER/STOP LEAK. FAST FLUSH To prevent overheating. protect metal, seal most common leaks Reg 1.29 sac C. PRESTONE FLUSH 'N FILL KIT To reverse flush the cooling system in minutes. Reg. 2.99 2.48 0. PRESTONE II ANTI-FREEZE • A Beatlemaniacs to l'ake CARSON CITY CAP> -UP to IOO.• ae1'el of pn .. andltal.t! ~OD tile ~-slope Of • erra Nftada · !D be e10Hd to tbe pabllt, b••lulDI SaturclaJ, ..... of ftr8 dul•. •t•te l'orester Lody Smithaaid. SJnith aaid the area stretches from tbe CalifOnll•·Nevada ltate Une on Foothill Road near GeJioa, Dou1lu County, Dortbward to the point at which U.S. 395 crosaes from Nevada ln· tQ California, near Susanville. EXCLUDED ARE home areas, developed recreation sites, areas between lnteratat& 80 and the Truckee River and between Clear Creek and old U.S. SO. • .. We have an explosive fire condition in wildland areas, as experienced by the fires at Boca Dam and Bridgeport areas. The ftres boll up and 10 I so fut. H Sap~ said. "We're seeing a lot of man-caused fires and abandooed campfires ln these areu. We are t!l- ing to avoid a major forest fire on the east slor.e of the Sierras. We re not trying to be hard nosed," he added. . . -"EVERYONE Jiving In •estem Nevada and everyone who visits this area stands to lose a great deal it a 'Marble Cone' or 'Scar1afe¥""fire were to destro1 the eastern Sierra. watershed," be said. Much of the llJld on the east slope is federal. But Smith said the closure of state end prtnte lands will block most acceu to the federal land. · He said plane patrols are being stepped up ln the area and f ersons caught wl bout pennlssion to enter the big area will be cited. · , ,A •r.Auo.w 11. 1m 'Udall 1'eeps Aetive Law Practice Covers Spectru'"' WASHlNGTON <AP> - wart Udall b bffD OU ~ public Mntce for•~ yean, Juat ''" modhl t.baa b• serwd I sec:rttarJ of U.. lDt41rior I« PrHldenh lC•n••d7 and Job.nlon. He votAll moll of bll time to hi• J>~lvat• leaal practlce. sped.al1::cf ln envtronmntal. m•ro lndlan attain. Hb client.a rans• from a hamlet flfbtln1 a propoHd state• hilbway in New Jersey to tribal 1roups aeekln1 1overnment claims 10 Hawa.11 and Ala.sU. AMONG 011IEa projects, be is eyeinc a loominC batUe with ( U.S. Steel OD behalf ot a cllilens group in and around Conneaut, t Ohio, where ~ lnduatry liaot i wants to build one ol the world's Jargest steel plants on the shores of Lake Erie. $ Udall baa become somet.bint of '-a hired leeal iun for enviroomen-~ talists, t.ryiq to put out one local , brushfire after another. And, as ~ might be expected of a man who f helped write laws as a con· STILL ACTIVE Stewart Udall ••1 UNDBUTAND IT.'' he 11\d. ''Att•r all, mr brother . (Monti) wu Jimmy, Carter'• · op~ for tbe noDlinauGft wt yMr. aesldee, )'OU trMliUOa.ally don:t 11t th top pya to come back when yOUI' party regains the Wblte Houle. It's the aecond· level people. . . who cet the Cabinet jobs the nest time around." Aftu he left the covemment in 1969, Stewart Udall formed an environmerJtal consulting firm, alt.boueh be spent much of his time lecturing to university and bualness audiencei on ecol<>eY andeneqy. • From 1970 to 1972 be coauthored a syndi~ column on the environment. \{e joined a Wubingtoo law firm as those • sues began shifting more and more from the political to tho judidal arena. Peter Dohorman, 12, <at right>, orders a Civil Air Patrol squad in Ft. Huachuca. Ariz., to march in exercises. Peter is the youngeit cadet in the encampment but did so well ln his ratings that he got to lead a nine.man squad of older yooths. cressman and then admlnbtered ! America's open spaces for near-~ ly a decade, he's highly re- , garded. ! While some of hls Democratic ! colleagues from the Kennedy and ! Johnson years are back in power, : Udall is still on the outside look· ! ing in, from an office a block • from the White House. still young enoueh to be around for awhile." At 57, Udall easily could pass for a man in his early 405. He ~ an avid outdoorsman and tennis player, although he baa given up touch football, a game he often played when working for Ken· nedy, as "too strenuous ... The only indication of the advancing years is his tanr silver hair, a striking contrast against his dark crewcutofthe early 1960s. BIS FIB8T 8001', .. The Quiet Crisis," was a best seller. Writ· ten ln 1963, lt advanced the ''pro. position that men must grasp completely the relationship between human stewardship and the fullness of the American· earth." He authored two other books, the latest of •htcb was "The Energy Balloon" in 1974. Although be saw sweeping ex· panslona of. Americ• 's protected lands and other major environ· mental action as interior secretary, his proudest ac- compllshments have a simpler • more personal ring. They Include arranein~ for Robert Frost to read at Kennedy's inauguration in 1961 and returning live performances to Ford's Theatre in Washington after a century· ·Key Water Bill Studied • ~ ! RE TRIES NOT to mind too : much, even as he admits that, : "Yes I'd be interested " if Jim· • my Carter caJled. "Aft~r all," he ~ says, "I've been public service· · oriented all my life and, well, I'm Despite bis energy and en· thusiasm, Udall concedes be will likely stay in private life. Still Smiling The happy face will be out in front of the Laguna Beach County Water District headquarters for another week as Lagunans cut water use just a shade more than the 15 percoot district goal during the last seven days. If water use exceeds the cutback target. district officials post the frowning face. Since April, water use is down nearly 20 percent from the same period last year. °fBrown Vows Fight .. ;0n Canal Measure long absence. Udall has been asked by an or· ganization called Concerned Citizens in tbe Conneaut area, on the Oblo-Pennsylnnla boider, to look into environmental hazards from the proposed U.S. Steel plant. THE INDVSTBY sUll is work· ln1 on its own environmental im- pact rei>ort on the plant, due this fall. Production, i.n any case, would notbeain until the 118>&. "It's reallY. too soon to judge" whether a coiart fight is merited, Udall said. But he made it clear that he thought the •.ooo.acre facility should go somewhere else. · ''They want to put the thing in a gardea," he said. ..The area has a plicroclimate all its own, prime for grape growina and full of nurserjes and greenhouses. My question is: Why do you want to put it in a garden!'• UDA.IL SAYS HE has not been officially retained by the group but plans to return to the area next month. He first visit~ the area earlier this year. And while that may mean he wm wind up butting heads with one of the nation ·s biggest cor• porat.ions, Udall hardly seems to be anU·industry. Among his ellents are the several firms that want to build an '8 billion gas pl~lln~ from Alaska through Canadt. to the- U ,S. border. "8UT rM STIUFon the ritht side ol that environmental is· 1ue, • be lnsiSta. "We need that natural gas, and you either brine it out <ot Alaska> or it coes to waste. Aftd if you bri.ng lt out. ours 11 the clearly superior. route;" As fOt' CartU'a enerfY p~ gram. Udall says, "It's a 1ood begljpilng, b\lt only a ~inning. I ' have a stniog bunch we're notdo- in1 enoaa,b." tt Amon& other thtnes. be says, Carter ought to a.st authority tQ ration 1asoline. a step tie believes is inevttabler~ a few years. ~ • "WE'D BE A lot better off with a dose of sacrifice, .. Udall said. "Gu rationln1 would be a sip~ to tile American peopte· that the eoertY problem ll real. Ttiere'• been a tendeoey lD the country for.. lone tiDMt to~ m m)'tba aOd mus~·· . Measure Could Aid Locitl Water Agencies By AttmUJl &;;TINSEL Of'"' o.n., ptMt l&Mt Various water quality control and sewage treatment eaeo.cles in California, including the Orange County Sanitation Dis· trict, which stands to save t80 million, are watching Congressional proeress of a bill recently approved by the U.S. Senate. . The blll. expeet.ed to be passed into law by the Houae, would al· low the Environmental Protee· ti on Aaency to walve rules ol the Clean Water Act for certain water and sanitation procesaors. BY TERMS 01! thai law, lll83 is the absolute deadline for them to build sewage treatment plants that treat waste to tbe secondary degree before it is diacharged in· to the sea. California's 39 affected acen· cies. -they rµn from San Diego County to Humboldt County - could be forced to spend nearly $900 mUUon if the w•iver measure fails, All Oranee Coast water quality control and sewaae treatment bodies affected already ad- minister secoqdary treatment to guard against pollution. THEY COULD STILL save money. a survey amonc them shows, both on future coostruc· tion and use Of utlllty power. The sewaae picture Isn't so pretty for Other smaller water purlflcatlon ana . waste dispogal ... ag~nclea up and down tbe ci)&Sl. especlall1 ln smaller, leas· u.rbanlzed ~u. ••Th.e rest.dt would be lar1e ·focal ci:plt» expencUtures and a doubllnc Of operaUonal costs," says Sen. Alan Cranston <D· Calif.)~ one of tbe waiver meuure•astronaeStsupportera. llB M Y8 STATE ordera tO }Di· prove sewage dlsposil ol waste deposited in the P•clftc Ocean already adds up to $WS million tab for those agencies not already inwlv.ed in secondary treatment. FUrther federal government orders under the Clean Wat.er Act guaranteeing relative purity of treated sewage would double the figure to -m!Woa amoq the 39 asenciffs. he explalned. Callfomla's essentially deep- water_aboretme. which drops olt rapidly compared to the AtlanUc Coast. is tbe key. Cranston told fellow m'mbers of the Senate. SEwAGE DUMPED into re- latively shallow seas without suf- ficient treatment. consumes more OXYCe!\ needed by fl.sh and other Qlarlne life in tbe oraanlc breakdown process, thua damq· iog the sea emiroament,; Tbis ii called blologteal oxygen demand <BOD> and lt ii cme of the bases for eoncerm leadlna to pauage of the ori&1iial Clean Wa'8'Act. .. Environmental scientist.a, en1lneers. munielpal O.fflciata and C&lifornla state qenctes have all concluded that BOD ls not a signirteant concem when wastes are discharted tb.rOOib deep ocean outfalls," Cranston told the Senate. District Finance Director Wayne Sylvester says . grantln1 of the discretionary waiver clause to the EPA would mean a big benefit to his agency and ~ taxpayers. "We would eliminate at least $90 million from our five-year budget plan," Sylvester said. He said this repN1Sents the cost of buildine secondary ~e treatment factllt1e$ to wpple- m ent those now handling SO million gallons of wastewater per day ln the present system. • "It's really kind of inconse- quential to us, w.S already bave secondary sewage treatment, .. says Jim M anning, civil engineering assistant with the City of San Clemente. THE SAME SITtJA'ttON bolds tr~ for the Aliso Water lifanqe- .menl Apncy <A WMAl whidHD· compaases a large number of south county communlU• a older sanitation and •ater dis; tticts. • "The st.ate Water Quality eon., trol Board lays out the atandit'ds we Jive by.'' saya AWMA spokesman Jim Foley. But Laguna Beach City Manager Al Tbeal suggests paasqe or the bill relaxing water quality control for California could affect design of an A WMA sewage treatment facility cur· rently ln the works. ... •·.DoD'& just at.Ind I.here -10 eat • litterb\.11 for your COUDli'J!" . For the Record 1'1•,.,....!' LI~ l.AS VEGAS -1MNW191 licmltn Albert, ,., afld Plltrk la Jim, 30, botlt hslled .._.. '"''"°'' of c..-c1e1 ,,..,, JWy 1S STARICl!Y·Ol!Tlll.IAN Ren<Hll IVACllC·OETtLLIAN -Mertln Vin· l.M, ti. erlll Suseft L.,...., 16, both of cent, :JI, end~ O.y, •.&»Ill of Wn tmlftlW. Wutmil)Stlt'. .. . BOWMAN-THOMPSON Cr•lg OEAOWYLER·Hot.MES -s.tnw l Reymoncl, 31, N•wporl Buell, jlnd SUI 11e M., 30, SI \.ovll, Ml> f'RAHC1!-SU"LOW -lv•n Boyd, 40, Santa ,.,.., end Loh Cleudett•, 40, Wntmlnster. • • MAROUEZ·CAMUNEt -HKlor H , 1t, W•"'*-'-· end Prlsclll•, 11. ol uMeM,N.M. .L -RE tLLV.ol.l!A -Teny MICl\etf, n. t E lsew1rere ~:a:=~-LVM 10. both of Hunt· NORMOYLE MANN Joupll Amedt, 40, Huntington Beech, end Merv Olenn,J7, 0..ndler,Arli. kl.INo-<:HltYSLER -~ lh•I, 19, end L..i M•rle, 16, bolll ef Wntmfnst«. INGRAM.FAOGliT -Marlon H., •T. end Stelle l.'l'Ole, 72, both Of t.eguna lillls. HOllBS.CECCHINI -Meh1ln Xen rn Ill, 27, end N&fl<y .S.U, 21. both of L99uneNl~I TM Callf~la RorM R clna Boarct hu de- laJed lJcenatN Oranc• County Pair thorou1bbred ractn1 • dttttl al I.QI Alamltoe Ra Tratll. cboo9tna tt ~ to ntt until an Au1, ~ m~ to d• cide the ilsuo. Racina Board mec:D· beri Y. Charla Soda ud Harvey Furcatcb de- cided to wait. until the tbtrd board member. Cbairmu1 Nathaniel Colley could. be lia atten- daDce to vote .on licens- ing of race dates fot' the • OranpCouoty Fair: The state panel -bas already a\ltborb.ed race d.4tea h'om Nov. 8 to 21 for the Orange County Fair. But Ctorneya for Santa Anita and Hollywood Park are COD· testing the fair board's contention that it does Busmess Promoter Resigns Roland A. Loveless, p r es ident~of the Economic Development Corporation of Orange County, bas resiped to .. purs ue other OP· portunities" after only seven months on the job. Lucien Truhill , chairman of the board of the coreoration that operates under the --. -... . . • LOW COST I.MAL SEllYICIS .•C ·11 IUll ............... : •••••••• tl ............. I I.I•• ..... . . ' •... ~···· .......................... ' .. Decision . ~ .. ~ ..................................... ...... • Dnl* DrMlti!U, to lrilll • • • .. .. .. .. • .. • • . .. • Jtl ... • A.....,-'i:•c• •De It Y.....W Dtu•cc .............• : .............. II.It . , ....... ....,.11411. ....... ,.,, clatm tho fa.lr can roaUze manager aaid. tiW lec.evwy-Me ... betwHD $11',000 and The full Hone Racln1 ~ .. =:.:,:'..:::.,..., St:I0,000 a year from fall Board i1 expeeted to ._. ...., , ..., radr11 data. hear tbe race traek 8ll\l·· ntOMP~·= r llCHAlD Those t\tads would ment.s at a meetiOI 1n ... .,..,._~ ......,........,..,11,.,,,.., help defray~~ Of a '16 ;~~·~n~Di~et~o~A~ua.~~~·:_::.~,· _}~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ tnlllion faeellf of' the...:. 150-acre falr~da· in CottaNesa. · . Ken Fulk, mlinliser of th.9 C>range County Fair, said W~ that at· torneya for the race ORAN~£ COUNlY tracks are cont••ting ti f ailllre of tbe fair board to pn:sent ~ environ- mental impact rePort on not need a full.blown en-Use fall lair activity. viranmental impact re-But Fulk said the fair port to bold fair ac-board bas '•been through tivlties in the Loi all of t/.l;e processes, and Alamitos Race Track· all ot the state depart~ parklPc lot 1n c«¥ljuoc-mentt say we don't neect_ tion with horse racing. an EIR. · The !air board baa "We filed a declara-~ b e e 11 1 e e Jc l n g tion of negaUve lmpai( tboroulhbred race dates and we've been told at Los Alamlto1 for th al'• all that is several years. Members necessary,'• the fair THE: ICE . CREAM MAN We Make Our Own le• Cream FrounYogurt In The Trodition of IUD'S of S.. Francisco UOtMe_,_.11.._ MewportlMcll 67S-J770 ESTATE JEWECRV & fine Crystal, ~laina, Chiqa, Bronzes, ~ugs •. · . , Furniture, Silver, Oils, etc. · 1Ya Milll~n Dollars Worth ~ Don't miss ttiis important sale! E F •eta · . . . till ,. y L011oldim;,ood1Glllllmonddumts.Fine ~ Night men'• and a.dies•*"" rinp, tlfriags. ~ ~ brlClltts. ·~-. m.. •twt11a dlf. 14..ft_ 19 - 8 pm ·mon."'d1, •.m iffl~ cubin, apphiru. · • "' -7 · • Seytrll im~artlnt ltf'll emerllds tM~ aol •ppbns. ~ FRIDAY. AM. lflll •••••••••• *. .....5,...., .• _,... Fine crystal, china sets,. ~ ·~to _....__ • Property m .. .-r conve......-European furniture,. Of ate to: . bronzes, rugs, oils Newport· Galleries and many other · Ltd items. "' • H d eds Of 254ZWEST ·cbAST HIGHWAY un ri ~ N a_ ...... lt'a.lif • ewport --. -ora11 · QOJd ~ AcroamestrettfromeotMof;"9tlneuwmrftotlt · r.aaur.,.ts In Southem c.tlforrri-.. Chains gj Cootlct 111 fo1 info oa aur ._nfly IDd Sc.tndty night am this"'"" Ff#Adminlott~ Public Md 1"ERMS: SMllAmericwd • Me.-Chwfe "-'-" ,_..... dleck •Ca.It· lame uc.nded --.C814 be lrT*"'4 (714) 645-2200 CONSIGNMENTS ACCEPTED UNTIL 6 p.m. FRIDAY LA JOLLA <AP> - Delmer L•w~eoce Daves, whose 40-year career encompassed mo- tion picture producing, directing and screen \nitinl as well as star· ring in the silent film. "The Duke Steps Out," died Wednesday at the ageof73. ~· MOTTS.FLORES -TlmotllY Merit, 22. Colt• Mew, end Lindi Kristi•~ 22, lrvlM STUIU!GES-WOOO -R*.rt o ..... 43. Coron• del Mer, and JeM lltr _,,_..._,,_ ............. , ...... -~ Art leo!lne • Auc:tloneer auspices of the county ._ _______ _..._..., _____ _. _ __. Chamber of Commerce,-=-===-~-=...:.:....:.:.....:__...:.:. __ .::....:~-=--------------------------:'."~------;-~­NEw HOPE, Pa. CAP) -Dr. Herbert WUsoa, a nationally prominent civil rights activist and a profe1i5or of political science for. more lba.n 30 year, at Princeton University, died Monday in ne &r y Sol e bury Township. He was 68. \ LOS ANGELES (APJ -Funeral services have \ · been held for Viola Hart, one ol the founders of the Music Center · and the wife of Alfred Hart, found.er of City National Bank of Beverly Hills. Mrs. Hart died Monday. JH n, 30, Newport llH<J>, llUNCH·KUEBLRR -Larry LM Jr., "· end K.UW111e ~. It, llolll fll Westminster. FORO.l'LORENOO -Clerk O .. 24, Ind OWrtle Rlllh, 21, llOtl'I Of Coste Mese. Death Notice• W•LC>AY M ARIE AHNA weLOAY, rnhlerltef c"'" MKe. C.llfornl•. Pesstcr 1wer AU9\nt 11, 1'17. 5urvl""d by ... U9"1et' Marl• LA«lt, brotll9r OOulcf H•nr'V Ullrlcll, llttlevue, Wesh, slsi.n M N Devis, NN< ltoclltfle, H V., L-. Uhrlcll, -ltochetle, N.Y .• Frl9de Sller"*I, Seattle. WHll., Mer111e Att- denon, a.1iew., WMft and -~ TflOnlpson. Hew Rchelle. N.Y. Two 9'"lftCllOnl StAIWf\ ~It, Twttlll, Ca and "'91et Uuc:lt, Cotta "'"8, ca. Four 11r••t·11r•ndd•uo11ters. Cryptslde wrvlcH Fri .. Aug. 1' at 2:00PM, Pad fk View -1et Pllt'IL Pacil>< VI-Mllrtuerydlrecton. HUllS s aid Loveles$' back· ground anti experience made him tbe riibt man for the job at the right time. The corporation was created as an arm of the Chamber to attract new bpsiness and industry to Orange County. Trubill said Loveless was instrumental in de- ve~oping and implement· Ing a start-up program for the corporation. Shew~72. CHARLE$ EOWIN HUBBS Passed ..... ., AuQust 16. 1m. s..rv1...., or I'll• • Wife LM ~ et Costa Mesa, ca. _____ .-. ___ , DltlJ9ftler AllllSldH, s.n ca.m..ue, ca. Applicants seeking the president's post wm be screened with Loveless' assistance and the outgo- ing executive said he would be available to work until the new presi- PHI fAMI&. Y COl.ONIAL fUMHAL HOWi 7801 Bo1sa Ave. Westminster 893-3525 . PACIAC VllW MIM0114L 'AIU( Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 P~1tlc View Drive Newport. Cahforn1a 644-2700 McCOIMICK MOITUAlllS Laguna Beach 494·1M15 Laguna Hiiis 788-0933 San Juan C.plslrano 495-1778 .. LTZ-111.eDOM IUMBA&.MOMI eornn. del Mar e 73--9450 Costa Mesa S.C&-2424 18.&.UOADWAT MOftVAIT 110 Broadway Cotta Mesa 642·9150 M1M nmmL I.AMI COSTA .. IA CHAP& 427 E. 17th St. Co.st• Mesa • .MM888 ,• Santa Ana Ch"* • 518N.~ Sam.Ana• 547 ... 131 - Son ,...., H<lbW, SM> Ci.mente, ce. Slsl •rs Merguerlt• McGr•tl'I, Clev•I-, Olllo, satly M.cl!lrayM , Ca,_, Maille, 1Wo .-aMdllldnft. Al -,..,est ol ll'le decM-S. ftO MrVktt Wiii bll held. -1•1 Cefttrfllldlont m•v be,.,... tetlle HQrt Fund. IUTCHIH JAMES N BUTCHER, rHldtnt of dent is hired. Bar Slates 3 Seminars Huntington Be.ell, Caltfornl•. P•uH A series of three legal •w•v A"9Ust '' "77 at the eoe O! 1S S..rvlv•d 11v 111s "'"" Arnell• L information s eminars llutchw,-.gtrt.,.M¥'(9err-Hunt· l ed this fall b lnQIOft llHcll, Ca .. Hft James f. are p ann Y au1c11er. Nftf""'" Park, Ce. s1..ier the Orange County Bar 8etll llan'on. Sen Diego. C• .• step. AS"'""•'ation They're d'"'-\lsteri G<-8CllW1ltoft. L«•IM, Ollloalld """' • " Pearl Hanson, Corinth, M IU. Sia Signed for lawyers WhO granoctllldnn Me'.IOnic ffrYkU Fri., want to learn about the Aug. 1t, 1:30PM et Pltrce Broll'lers d • Smiths' Cha pel Interment Good } a W 0 U tS i e l he l r s~ ~-P~• Brot?lert specialties. s.n11n.• "'°"=ro~~~ The seminars, on Sept. CHARLES w1t.t.1AM w e101HGe"· 10, Oct. 8 and Nov. 12, all , .. , ........ Coste Mesa. cai•1on1••· will be held from 9 a.m. PHJed -.y ~ t, 1tn. $UNI .... • iw fl"llled ic-.tl\ ,,...,.. s.rv1C9$ to 1 p.m. at city hall an· wCllbll*-t., lf:toAMeta.111roedwey 530 N Ros St S Cttepel. lnt.,nwnt In ClnclnMtl, Olllo. neX, • S •t &n· ••" arotdwty MMWerv •-m11,,. ta Ana. ClrecWt.. ---------- PUBLIC NOTICE . PUBUC NOTICE .. ..,.,.. 1850 CA7Sl11) ...,~. (C1S/14) 21 so ~/jJ • (f71/fl) cn1u• 2350 <,71Jt1e) I +£71/14 2450 (11SlU41 • 40191,. 2650 (-.nt) ~~;29so Q71/f5 2650 t-.t11) '""" 2950 (215/U) • L71/tl 35so (2'5111) DOU8UI ••LUD STll•L RADIAL . B FGoodrich ------- BJ JOYCE L.UN EDY .lefct: I •• ....... U a .._..,.._....-.,.,.....1eu wn beekl for dlldNm. coald 1. ... ! -a. v .• aasu..., ... Tb«b Powen ~v • a form,r ~ and maiallne ed.Jt.or tor 111ijor llnm. and now pubUaher ol Freelan· ccr'a Market. often these Up1 for aaec1.anen : -Read children'• boob. Content and R.1'1• are markedly different thn in past boob. Most editors will e<m· 11der any subject written with hon tJ and~te. -Courses. conferences &Del elube are actiVllies that can ctve you con· atructive crihclsm. news of the marketplace and a1oral support. Ex-~n>ple: New England Coaf erence tn C'bild:ren's Uterature. beldlutspring by the Society of Children •1 Book Writers (Box 296, Los Anaeles 90066>. -YOU SHOULD IL\ VE some idea ot whether you want to write for younger or older children. In addition to content and reading level, manuscript length can vary. -Unless you're an accomplished artist, submit only your manuscript. The publisher will select an artist if your book is accepted and needs artwork. Your suggestions on an artist will be considered. -A literary agent is not a necessity. -Time and money are wasted if you send your folk /fairytale to a publisher of nonfiction. Write for catalogs to see which publishing Judge's Ruling Girl Kept From Folks ........... CAN'T GO HOME KJmberty Cox MlLWAUKEE CAP> -A county judge has re- fused to return a 7·year-old leukemia victim to her parents' custody, saying he could not allow them to experiment with their child ·s life. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Cox of suburban Brookfield went before two judges in an effort to re- move their daughter, Kimberly, from Milwaukee Children's Hospital to take her to a California clinic for a nutritionally based cancer treatment. TEMPORARY CUSTODY WAS GRANTED to the Milwaukee County Public Welfare Department last week ~r the couple sought to take the child to the facility recommended by an advo"Cate of Laetrile, the controversial substance some say is effective in treating cancer. · Doctors tettified tbat if chemotherapy and an· tibiotic treatments were halted, Kimberly's life would be threatened. They said they could not eet assurance that the California facility was a medically recognized cancer.treatment center. County Judge Michael D. Guolee ordered that Kimberly stay in county custody and continue treat- ments here. NIGHTWATCH . THE MOOD SHIFTS TO SOFTNESS ~lip into a shimmPry satin t.town. lace topped by \'anity Fair. Powder pink with <UU lace or silver smoke loucht•d with pink. Both in Antmn• Ill nyfen. G<•nt ly t>last icized bodice can be \\'<)rn strapless. to~. · ~>to .l6, S24 Sll't>p fashions. ,,11 4 BW !ilort>c; BUllO(~~ 'MlSUIR~ ------------., -----------·-T BOYS' /STUDENTS' I : : HUSKIES I I f I I I I I ~ ~ ___ pENIM BELLS : : '.,._.------......., .. ------,. t I (.,a ... - -....... ~...... ... ... : .. -------.::!!! I ' ' ~ ; '~ I~ AT OUR ' .... ~ .. -/ 949 I I I I COMPETITORS ,, SIZES • I I I $ 81 I' I I $12.50-lS..50 • • I I ~. 11 99 '' ~~--~ow 26·36 _J/ .... __ -... -:::.":-. ,,,---:;,-J ....... :-....... _,-:,,-..... _ .... _ ...... MEN'S . , I I NUVO FLARES ; : t ... .--_:-:':""--.. .,,-----......... I I ,.,,,, -........ ::_-., _ ...... __ -----...... _......, '. .., .. , ,' ,' ...... '' ATOUR '.,'" '' ~ ~ COMPETITORS• '' 1399 : ,' ~ I $16.00 1 11 ~~ NOW :: ·~ ~t .......... :-.. , ... -;_., ....... ..... ----.-~_.............. ..--::.---' # ~~_-....... =,-'"' • I • AND WE'RE PREPARED TO ME~T YOUR NEEDS -------._.. -----,. , ~-.------------~ -.-T-t · BOYS' /STUDENTS' I : : HUSKIES : : I I , , ·DENIM BELLS : : t '° ....,--:----"" ... -----... , I I ' , .. --~ ......... ..._, .,,, ----~--... ~ ._.., ... .... ,' ... -'"'h . ' ....... '.... , ,,"' ' AT OUR ..... ,, / 949 , I ~\COMPETITORS .. ~. SIZES : : I ~ $12.50·$15.50 8-14 I I ~ ~--~ NOW . 26-36 11 ~~~: ........ :.......... __ ,-,,---~ -.-."' "' .... ,:............ _,, _,,;""" --......... ,. ,,,,-' of world NCC:il'd pc medallata to•l1bt at Ml11Son Vl•Jo'1 :iitarperil• Becrutton Ctnler poOl • • tell• field takes u.1 iaub for UI ttnala. ot the 400- h'ees\yle. Jt will be UI feature event ol tbe l1nt lloals ni•ht ln the Na· tlooal AAU tone coune 1wtm· D:Unt eb.amplonshlpe. whleh con· tlude&mdQ. Abo on tap tcnlpt, •tartinl at 1. JU"C final& in tbe 200-meter TOMIGNT'llCM•OU&.a lA.N ....... ) , •• ......_'\~b«klt .... 1 ...-·,..,.,...Ncti..,.. •. . ,, ..... ., .......... Ht$tl'CIU. •. ........,.,,.__.,._b,,.. '''° Vi •• , •• ..__._, .. ,,,..__. .. ~.._, .. •: 10 tffl)rJsnen'1 ,...,...,-butterfly. t:...-•s!Ol)omew~erfly. l'alDo\Y'l ll'a•UMINA•••• IS"'1 M ti•·"'•) W_,s~.,.fl"MllYM -·s Jl».meler ,_,.., ... w-·s-.meter llldl~ ,.,. ... ,. -·s~ter1M1¥1duel medl•r. w-·s~nwdleyre141y. _.,......,.. ... ,.,...,. ... ..,. h p that 10 snya r. n 11 a c:Ut· lerent MUOD ~ l'm a dltferent awlmmvnow." Coach Mark Scbutiert, when uked lf ere WN •Y apatl\y on tbe put ol hla protqe, Good U, aay1: "When you llH lJi a com- munity for 10 years and have the national championships rlabt here ln your own pool, ttiere ls po way that ho will take the meet liebUy. He's ready." Sbaw flBW"es as a contri>der. althot.Wb be says be is still suffer· ing from anemia which almost wrecked his chances at an Olym. pie team berth a year aio. 0 Tbey have found several types of anemia and I am sWl undergoing tests," he says Shaw had to come from far off the ,pace in the 01Ytnpic trials a year ago to gain th1rd plaee in the 400 and a place on the U.S. team. He then finished second to Goodell in Montreal. Hackett, the thitd member of the U.S. 400 free team ill Canada. may be the sl"por. backstroke, 100 -meter breaststroke and 100-meter. but· terfly for men and women. Women's finals are first in each event. "He's ready !or ~is meet,'' says his coach. J<Mt Bernal who will take over as swim coach for Harvard Universltytfus fall. TIM SHAW, FOAMER WORLD RECORD HOLDER AND OLYMPIC SILVER MEDALIST, VIES TONIGHT AT MV. Set to fight it out in the 400 are: Brian Goodell of the host Mission Viejo Nadadores. world record holder at 3:51.93 and 1976 Olym- pic ctiampion; Tim Shaw, former world record bolder and Olympic silver medalist; Bobby Hackett of Yonkers, NY, Olympic silver medalist in lhe 1,500. Others include Bruce Furniss, a graduate of Foothill High in Santa Ana, who bolds two world records and Mike Bruner or Los Altos, record holder in the 200- meter butterfly. "I feel like I am ready and I always lpok forward to the first race I will swim in any meet of this importance," Goodell says. "I feel the 400 will be one of my better races in this meet." Does be look for a world record to fall? "l don't know about that," be says. "I set a lime standard for each race I am in but I like to "We don't come out to swim against Brian and we don't try to pattern after anyone i.p the race. "BQbby has been l<nown to go out extremely quick and I believe in letting a swimmer do what is natural for him. I don't want to curtail what he does naturally," the coach adds, giving credence to a possible world record performance for the winner. Goodell likes to drag in lhe wake of another swimmer in lhe early going. Not so for Hackett. "He isn't dependent in drag· ging off other people," his coach says. "He is more independent and sell-reliant to swim the race he should. He has the speed to go out fast and the enc;lurance to stay with the 1,500. He bas a clock in his bead." Shaw, Hackett and Goodell will have three chances to reach the winner's circle in races against See Duel, P•ge 82 Texas in First With 6-5 Win ARLINGTON <AP> -Jim Sundberg delivered a two-stnke, twO-OUl single to score Toby Har· rah from second base in the bot- tom of the 10th inning and propel the Texas Rangers into first place in the American League West with a 6·5 come-from· behind victory over the Toronto BlueJa,ys. The Rangers, who scored three runs in the eighth inning to erase a 5-2 deficit, climbed one-half game ahead of the Chicago White Sox and Minnesota Twins in cap- turing first place for the first time since April 16. Sundberg's game~winning hit came off Toronto rehever Mike Willis, 2·5. . From Ump to Broadeaster Stratton Got His Start With R.turu Games EdUor'a note: This i! the Ji/th in a Mriea of J7 article a f eaLuring Southern California Tadio and televiaion ~ casters of pro- minence. Today'• $J>Otlight i! on Gil Strotton. By HOWARD L. RANDY Ol IM OaUy r!IM ltaft When you piclUN! an umpire in baseball, you set an image of a big man who stands for authority. When you picture a motorcy· cle rider, you generally think of a person with long hair and grubby btue jeans who rides fearlessly through traffic. Neither one of these pictures can be used to portray Gil Stratton even though be has had considerable experience in both fields. Stratto11 came up in the broadcasting field doing Los Angeles Rams broadcasts with the late Bob Kelly and at- tributes a great deal of his suc- cess to his original partner. "When I first started work·· ing with Bob, I was amazed at hts preparation and hts knowledge of tbe eame," Stratton says. "He was cal.ling things I hadn't even seen yet and he knew what he wu talk- ing about. ''I've tried to pattern my career along that line and feel that preparation is a great part of broadcasting." Stratton is small of stature but commanded authority when he worked sames in tbe Pacific Coast Lea.&ue befdn · advent of the Loa Aneetes Doclten. in 19$$. GIL STRATTON One would think that his as· · sociation with the game would make him knowledeeable about the future. Notso. ''One of the most embarrass- ing things I have done on the air has been to predict that the Dodgers wouldn't come to California. I almost jumped off the Santa Monica pier as punishment When they did sbowup." Lo$ Angeles Aztecs soccer matches are alred by Stratton these days with a great deal of enthusiasm. What does be think or the future of soccer in this coun· t.ey? ~ ••1t'1 guit coming and is already here to some cities,'' be aays. ·•~en we plt)'ed in New York City, we had a crowd of 57 ,000 at Giant Stadium. The aame was played at the same time as a Yankees-Boston Red Sox American League baseball game at Yankee Stadium and we out.drew Ulem." Does he rmd it difficult to · keep from rooting for the home team? ''I try to keep the broadcasts as impartial as possible. But obviously, when you are with the same team all year, you don't have to say anything to praise the team or its players. Your voice inflections will live you away. ' "I rode m°'orcycles all of the time on the streets and freeways until about five years ago,·• he says. ·•1 did it Jone before it was the chic thing to do. "But now I only ride in the mountains on dirt patha. The freeways are a llttle too feisty and I quit while 1 was ahead.·· Stratton also works in mov- ing plctures and television shows and bas a part in Ute new ~ae West picture. Sex· tette. e bas alsO appeared oo Bare a and Police Womal\ on TV recently. "Mi biggest pi-oblem is that the old ones were <!one befbre residuals came in an~I don't get~outorthem." As an umpire, tie worked in the lQwer mlnqr lea.1aes five years belont cettma a cb~e in the PCL wbere be worked with the fltlt negro umpire to make t to th& miJor leagues. Emmett Aa~ord. Cappelletti Sets Goals: . - Improve, Make Pro Bowl Without much fanfare, John Cappelletti has quietly become a solid running back !or the Los Angeles Rams. Now, the Heisman Trophy winner of 1973 wants a little more. . Cappelletti climaxed a brilliant career at Penn State four years ago by being selected as college football's out.standing player, but like many N~tional Football League rookies, he was a seldom-used reserve in 1974. The ~1. 217-pound native of Philadelphia saw more action in 1975, being used in short-yardage situations, but his all-around ability earne( him a.starting job last year. Cappelletti responded by gain- ing 688 yards on 1T7 carries and catching 30 passes for 302 yards. In addition, bis fine blocking helped running mate Lawrence McCutcheon rush for a team· record l,168 yards. "I want to improve and just do as well as I can," sa'ld the 25- year-old Cappelletti at the Rams' Cal State (Fullerton) training camp Wednesday. "My aoais are pretty basic, I'd like to pl•y in a Pr.o Bowl game and make the All· Proteamsomeday. . "But the main thin( is to im· prove every year," he con- tinued, "to play as many years as I canandtodoaconslstentjob." _ As a Heisman Trophy winner, Cap]>elletli was closely watched as a rookie. He carried~ times for 198 yards, being used mostly· in games that were decided by · the tjme he ll)ade his ap- pearance. · . In 1975, be scor•d six touchdowns ·while eatning 1S8 yards in 41 attempts. While be he bad in bis rookie year, he was emplo,yed in important situations much more so than ln 1974. "There wasn't much I or af\Yone else could do those first two ··yea.rs, .. said Cappelletti. "Tbey had some good players and there was a lot for me to learn. "I'm fairly satisfied so far because I think I've made steady improvement." Ca~ earned his starting position in tbe ,preseason last year, averaging 4.8 yards per carry and leading the team with 17 receptions. He gained over 100 yards in each of Los Angeles' firsttworea· ular-season games, but tQok a back seat to Mccutcheon statistically after that. , didn't carry the ball as much as .• ,,...,_...__._.,..,........,,....,,..,,,..,--..--...__--..,._ McCutcbeon not only set a team record for most yards gained iJu season, but his 291 carri~ established another mark. As far as the current Rams are concerned, Cappelletti feels tlnlt "it's a little early to tell yet. We really haven't come toaetber because of some holdouts and some injuries. But there's still a lot of time before the regular season starts.·· It's been a different kind of pt.&· season for Cappelletti than his other three. Earlier,' be wu fighting !or a job. Now be h.u one. • Dodgers Try Giants Today; Davalillo Up " .. ~YPILOT / Albritton Nixed For Uni Games· . SOFIA. 8\111araa -Carol &J~ poured tn 21 polnta lOdQ to le.cl \he U.S . wom n's bHhlball tum to a 7S·el victory ov r Huniary in the operuna round ol the World Untverslty Games. Ken Sbannon. coach of the U.S. lrack and field tuiu. was l~A> than~. .. We have lo.t some vllluablt- at.bleta who should have .been bere. •• beaald. ·"lbe Padflc Coast Club would not allow Tuey Albritton, the ~. oc three 18-foot pole ••ult.en to come. The Russians and tho East European countries ~akethesegames very s4riously, bat we have a Jack of concern,·· SbamJOD said. Albritton is from Newport Beach. Efforts to contact Pacific Coast Club officials for commeni on wby the athletes were prevented from compet.ingprovedfruitle11s. Ott Won't Pa11 CHICAGO --Pitts burgh Pirates catcher Edd Ott says he will not. pay a fine levied against him for throwing Felix Millan of the New York Mets to the ground during a game in Pittsburgh last week. .. I'll take it to court if I have to orove my point. There's no way I '11 pay the fine," Ott said Wednesday m Chicago where the f>jrateslost to the Cubs, 4·2. Ott was fined $250 by National League president Charles Feeney for the fight in which Millan suffered a broken collar bone. Ott threw the second baseman to the ground after Millan punched him an the face while holding a baseball in his hand Ott had slid into Millan while baseronning during the second game of a doubleheader last Fri- day. Star• Clinch Tie DENVER -TheOrangeCoun· ty Stars clinched at least a tie for · f irs t in the International Volleybalf Association's Western Division Wednesday night by up setting the Denver Comets in four games here, 13· l l , 8· 12, 12· 7, 12·7. Na..atlt OK Recovered trom the flu, quarterback Joe Namath re· -joined his Los Angeles Rams . teammates and sloshed through an hour-Jong practice Wednes· day, preparing !or Sunday·s foot · ball game. The t.am went tllrou1b llow· moUon 'Wallrtbro_utbl ol olfcnaive aand cleremlvt plays planned for \he ~uoa s•m• with the San. J.•ranchco 41ea. ,., .. , ... a..uea.1 CfDCAGO -Bobby Mu.rcer drilled two home tuna and R.lck R~ struck out 11 batttn • WeclDesclav to.slvt tbe Chteuo Cuba a 4.t victory over die Plttaburab Pirates. J\euldiel, 11-5, won bls first game1lnce a relief victory on Ju. ly 28. . Dldltfl a.a..., HOUSTON -Chri&tioe l.oQlk e d g e d d e Ce n d i n g c b aib · pion Cynthia Mclnevale Wednes- day in the final• of the three· meter competition at the Amateur AthJetlc Union <AAU> . National meq':s and women'sout· door divin1 cbampionsblps. DUEL .... CoatJnued From 81 each other. They also go in the 200 and 1,500 free events. Goodell wil1 swim m the 400 individual medley 8lld Hackett in the 200 JM. In the women's 400 free. Schubert feels at least four of his N adadores have a chance at reachinl the finals including Alice Browne, theCoronadel Mar High· sophomore; Tracey Wkkham. Nicole Kramer. Jen- niferHooker and Valerie Lee. Shirley Babashoff, silver medalist an Montreal and a former Nadadore$ team member, has retired from acUve competition. Cynthia Woodhead, a 13-year-old from Riverside, is the favorite in the event here off her performances in the Mission Viejo Invitational meet several weeks ago. In the backstroke events, Lm· da Jezek of Santa Clara will be the women 's favorite with Cheryl Gibson of Canada as a leading challenger. For the men, Peter Rocca of Concord, Dan Harrigan of Long Beach and Mark ToneUi of the host Nadadores figure in the top echelon. In the 100 butterfly. Olympian Wendy Boglioli will face a tough field including Nancy Hogshead of Florida. Wickham anct Don· nalee Wennerstrom of Long Beach. For the men. Joe and Mike Bottom head tbe llat, along with SteveGreuofLoo&Beach. Swimming ActiOn Europeans Break 2 World Record$ JONKOPlNG. Sweden <AP> - The margins are often narrow. but no other sport produces so many world record& as swim- ming. Two more were broken at the European championships W ednelday, and there Could be plenty more before the week-long splasbpan,y ends Sunday. ~·1 will do everytbing to be.l my IOO freestyle record. f feel l can do it. I never swam so well befOl'e. •• said 18-year-old Petra Tbuemet, one Of those fantastic East German females who beat hf:r own -coo-meter free1tyle mark ·by a Mcond with a •:08.91 dock:in,. Another teenaier. 17·year-old Gera)d Moerken of West Germany, erased John Hencken from the record books with a l :02.86 in the men•s 100 breaststroke. Hencken set hl& record when be captured the Olympic gold in Montr.al last summer. Nobody bad reckoned wlth Moerken. whose stunning performance made him West Germany's flnt world record holder alnce Bans Faunacht. wbo held the 200 buttcrfl7 mark seven yeara qo. Spitz, who watched the action from poolltde. say• M~en will be the man to beat in tocJay•.s 200 breaststroke, .. I never tteard of bim befor~ tod~1" said Spits. who only has one <lDO butterfly> ~ hla many world records 1tlll Oft the tiOob. "He really is a lfeat aVlimmer and I believe he can do il qaln. But I'm glad he's not a butterfty speciallst. ·• Seveo ot.ber events were com- pleted and Eut Germany, led by its female swlmmetJ who own all but one ol the world records. topped the medal harvest· with six cold, four ailnr a.l\.d one bron2e in 1wtmmln1, dlvlng and synchrofti&ed awim. The East Guman.a. 'tlho won all but ooe ol the Yt'omen's tiUes at the laat European cbam· pionships in Vlenita In 1914, picked up two othen. Brisit Pollack wo11 the 200 bec~ttoke In z:u.10. sev,n· ten of a aecbn:d olf 'her world record, ind Andrea Pollack took th• 100 butterfly in 1:00.61, a rneet~rd. .. . ..,, . .., RICK LEACH (7) WILL HEAD THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN'S'VAUNTEO OFFENSE THIS YEAR AS A JUNIOR. .. ·Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division Boston Baltimore New York Detroit Cleveland Milwaukee Toronto W L Pct. GB 70 45 .609 68 49 .581 J 68 50 .576 3 12 !)4 63 .462 17 53 65 .449 181 2 53 70 .431 21 40 76 .:ws 301 'l W~t Division Texas Chicago M innes«>ta Kansas City Angels Seattle Oakland 67 50 .573 66 50 .569 1"'.! 68 52 .567 1".! 65 51 .580 11:? 58 58 .500 81''2 50 72 .410 191, 44 73 .376 23 W-.Ny'sO<tmes lt.t-Clly s. c1.---.1 ... o J N""Y-7,0.tro•IS MtlWIJU'N' S. Bo\lon l ~alllt3. MonnOPtola 7 Te•H6 'ToronloS. IOlnno~ Only_, sclledull!d Tec1n'1Gwn•• 9Mton Ufllk•n\ ,.1) •t Mllw•uk .. •~II 1 ., '!>P•ltlp Ge••"O 0 11 •I MlnnP\OU tTllOrtnOlhQ•r<H., • K•n~s C•IJ tUon,.,o U 101 •t C .. Wl..,d 1Ci•r1...010.IJ). n fol•w Vor~ •H""l.,.7·71•t0etr04t rCr...,.onu •J fl Toronto lCl...CY l•JJ at 'THH IE lllU·•>. fl Only_.,,.,. sclleelllled ..,...,.•G•""" Cftl<9QO et MflWMIUe. fl 8.tlU...weM~. n Boston at K-Clty. n N-Y•ketTUa!,n T OfOflfO .t Celllomle, n Clt .. l•nd ., 0.kl-." 0.lt'OlllllSHtl"' n NATION"LLEAGUE East Division W L Pct. GB Philadelphia 72 45 .615 Pittsbur«h 69 51 .57S 4 trz Chicago 66 51 .564 6 St. Louis 66 54 .sso 71,2 Montreal 53 65 .449 19"2 New Y<Jl"k 49 69 .415 23 '-'lz West Division Dod'eJ'S 72 4'7 .605 Cincinnati 6l 59 .sos .U "2 H~tm S7 64 .•71 M San Jrrancisco SS 66 .453 18 San Diego 54 70 .•35 20~ Atlanta t2 76 .356 3912 ........,..o._ CJ'lk9!111 •, PlttJb<lrqll 2 A'*'lat.~llfl• ..,..._,... ·~ ""' ...... 0 Sall OletO,. Ql(._.14 St.l..Olllst • ....,YOf1lt Set1FrW1Clscoell0tAnge1-•,0Pcf .ref<1 T ... ,.,....,_. P~ (""1st .. 12) •t CMc4t0 111/rrli 11·10 "1111 ... 111111• IL..ui.to •·>l •t _.,lfffl 1tw11-.1w1 5911 l'r9nthc0 18¥r 11·'1 •I Lo. A,.alft lkt· '°" 10.7), fl Onl'f{llll-11CIWCIUIH .. ,....,...o.- LM MQf(H •I ChkllllO Atlanta •t MottlrMI. 2. fl Cl"'!Mtd et N.-Yori n H-loll•I l'tllt9dllplll•. n s.n f'l'llftCllClO et l'maVUr9'1. fl Sefl Dt•QHI $~ l<Mil\, fl Michigan Loaded Again · Returnees Make Wolverines Awesonw ANN ARBOR CAP>~ For the eight years Bo ~bembecbler has been football coach at Michigan, the Wolverines have been na- tionally ranked in the top 10 ln the final poll of the collegiate season Don't expect that to change this year. The Wolverines. ranked No. 1 much of last season, appear every bit as good as their 1976 squad, despit~ the loss of some key players. The team is so good. lbat ats 100.701-seat stadium is sold out for all but two of the seven home games. Even if the Big Ten is on tbe verge of becoming more balanced. as some predict, it won't affect Michigan's role as a conference powerhouse with Ohio state. In the National ColJegiate A tblet.ic Association last year. Michigan ranked first in total of- fense (448. l yards a game average), in rushing offense (392.6), in scoring offense (38.7 points), tied for first in scoring defense (aJlowmg 7.4 points a game>. and second in giving up fewest penalties (28 tor 287 yards>. This year's squad is capable of accomplishing similar statistics. even without graduated All· Americans Rob Lytle, Jim Smith and Calvin O'Neal. Michigan's offensive line could be the best in the nation. Guard Mark Donahue. center Walt Downing and tackle Bill Dufek were all All·American honorable mention picks by the Associated Press last year. They're back. Other offensive line stars re- turning are Mike Kenn, Greg Bartnick and Gerry Szara. They'll be opening up holes for the likes of tailback Harlan Huck)eby (912 yards last year> Friars Top ~aters · and fullback Russell Dav1s <S96 yards). · Junior Rick Leach begins his third year as quarterback. He won't have flanker Smith to pa$s to, but Curt Stephenson, Rick White, Gene Johnson and Mark Schmerge are good receivers -~ a! Schembechler ever decides to pass. ·' lf Rick Leach makes the same improvement this year as he did from his freshman to sophomore year. he'll be some quarterback," Schembechler said. He calls Downing. "the pre· m1er center in the nation.·· The most depleted unit is the defensive line. with middle guard Steve Graves the onty returning starter. Bob Taylor and Chris Godfrey are rated key newcomers to fill in. Linebacking, led by All-Big Ten choice John Anderson. Ron Simpkins. Dom Tedesco and Tom Seabron, is superb. All -American candidate Dwight Hicks leads a defensive secondary that needs to improve. .. ,,,,.,;,..ver Sparks wm· Michigan lost placekicker Bob '-'ii 'Wood to ,-raduation and will be counting ori Gregg Willmer or u.-isoi11ee1McM1t1e...oei1<tt .. , Nick Labun -both unproven. SAN DIEGO A final-set men 's doubles victory by Newport Beach resident Rod Laver and Cliff Drysdale lifted the San Diego Friars into the Western Division finals ln the World Team Teonia playoffs. The 6-1 defeat of Golden Gaters Tom Ok~r and Frew McMillan gave the Frjars a 24·Zl victory Wednesday and ·a 2-0 ed&e In the best.-of ·threeseriea. M1.s -0un-McM111 ... 1001 ., .. , GYo,,.,,.. Key up-and-comers includt> uA~~••S..0fe90. tailbacks Ralph Clayton and ...........,..WTTStlM• Gerald Diggs, CuJlback Lawrence ,..,._2M1ewver11u Reid, offensive lineman John w--w.-.K'"' <NYl 11N1 M•PIM,.. Powers, cornerbaclt Mike kt~?•;.....,IUM.CW9dt .. S. • M9ll -~· u1 Mllt MaY9f"·Rtlffm ~,: Harden and freshman wade re-~~1s!• =.=r~! INY) 001 st--ceiver Rodney Feaster. k~! .... v...-. Of Michigan•• 49 lettermen. 33 are back. Nine of 2S starters were ......._.,,._,..... lost W--CWfi IP) _. Stow 14; ltlltHll· • seovel$1"111Mtliwrt·SNwM " Two o( Scbembechler·s usis- M411 -W.tta fl"l-~fl 1$·Pl • J; Wett.-.... Die911C,_...O, .. ti e.,. <"l11UtOOcll9rt-,.0er._.1.. tants have moved on to bead ~~ -,_.,. 1so1 w.t Holt.tcSey "4: °""' "''• -R1ntt1•-0octttrtV cs Pl i.• ,.... Jobs: Gary ¥oeller to Illinois and HOll.0.VIGGl._.lt ... ~..,H·2. Stwlw .. ., Cb kL'•-.. arttoT Jed M.n-Orytdele 1so1 -t011k•r .. •..:.:..:.~~--;;;;.;..· __ ,._-_,._._,"°"-'-lnd----=:--------u_c_~ ____ o __ o_. __ _ Top Ten AM&alCAlll&.llAOU• •Ala MP«; c.r..Mln tu 4M .. 04 ·* lloltlldl Min "' Mt a t• m si,.,..,_e.. ,. ,,. ~ 124 ·"' ltl~ 1!19't • 114 462 7J , .. .'21 lt1""'9MY tt _,st 12' .J:11 hllw Ter IOI 41' 5S 111 .t1S l I slt Oii IOS AOs '1 f2' .IU uf'l-o.t 110 4'7 1't w ,,,. 'l'cMlntMU 114 d6 to 141 :30t H..-vrow T•• "" -6t 117 -..._"_ R~. 8otto'I, JO: llOftdt, Qtlfornla, JO. G,Scott, lollon, 2'l Netti ... MtW 'I'm, 21; Zltll,Oel<HO, 2J "_..._.,. loflstt, Mlllnntl•, o , tor1f1, c .. lfwllla. to: HalNOn. ~ • .,: ~. Oetrolt,a ; Xlt11, Clllcetr0. &J. "I 1'eT8I' wen drilarned at belt· in« Henckeb'• record. 1 ~ tts still~ wb~ 1 wake up,~', said M~. who lliillbed thirit 0.1' 1 !ot.at) durina qua1lfYtn1 heata. JPonner Olfl"J>lc hero Mark Peter Nocke. Wen Germany's fi ve·tlme chtfl\P. ht Vienna. swim ttie 200 ''-~e In a wtn-ntni tbM ot iJ:51: n. •meet rec-ord and tbt f 11tut 1lme re- co'11ed tb1s year, ~ m.t record was·~ ln tho meo•a a · lncUvldual btitt.rfly u strceY. Fe enko led a 1·2 Russian ftnlah.~_, . .., .. _ wlthatlm.eoff:21t.8S. t ' DAILY PILOT F Beach Crowd Enjoys oogie Board Craze • . . Race Results ....... , PtlUT uc• a. y.,.._ J Y .. ,. otdl &. ..,_ Clalml .... PulW $HOO TitM-•Jt AltoltM ....... ~ 87 DAV • C\INNINGllAM • .. .. Dell,,.__,..,. .::J.oo out. ~urfl'r1. Move over, tcbovd tre s. Tht boollt board •here, and la two 1umm 111 It hu mpletely overcomt an enUre eration ol wave rid . , 'lbt Utlnll are MlJint Wte craiy," 1 Pat NacPhl',.on ot the Oak Surf Sbop sn Lapna Beach .n·• ttpland t.be akat.eboard u the t lucra:Jve item to sell." Says La1una Beach llfeauard Mikl' :OwineU: "Yesterday when the aurf ~up I'd say about 90 percent of the •eople in the waler were ridsn& !loog1es They've ttaJly caupt oo." Says one Huntlneton Beach surf .fb'op salesman "You eo down to the hacb and il seems like everyone has \>de under their arm." What UI a boogie board., Up until hut summer, when the fad first start- eJ to break, not very many people lctew. • But now, ar you're between the ages :iot' seven and 18 and live in the Orange :t;oast area, you own one, have ridden ·dne, or at least know what one is. · · "It's a small board of handmade :material made from soft polyethlene joam," says Jim Floyd, general !Ip anager or the Tom Morey Company. ~ of the largest boogie board dis- tributors. Floyd insists they be called "Morey :RJ>ogies," rather than boogie boards. but his company has at least rive com- petitors now and can only claim that it originated the concept. · Four years ago Tom Morey look his foam surf-mat type boards to a few select surf shops. He was well-known as a surfboard manufl)cturer, so some or the shops accepted his boogies, ·= .. ··Riverside in Finals LAFAYETTE, Ind. -AJ Davis slammed a home run and Tom Walsh went three-for-three as Riverside de- feated Austin, Tex ., 3-2 in, the semifinals of the Colt Baseball World Series here Wednesday night. Riverside, 4-1, meets Lafayette, ·Ind., 3-0, in the championship game to- , day. even tbouCb they didn't. Mll bll at ~~ • .,. flnl. T nfOIOld !Cell) tt.IO 14 00 •-00 ~~·..::-::.~:o.. Ga, ...... ~· ScrlltCIWd -~ a.r, 0. Tip TOii But towards lb md ot the 1ummer of '1$ a rew boost wer• ~arin• tn the wav• aod a lot of 'curl°'41 wave- r Ide.rt muat have mad meotil notes bee a the wmmer of "ll ltai1ed the boo le uplQltoa. Last IUINDer Mofe1 sold fOW' um. •• many bocli1 aa be bed the pre- vloua aeaaon, and had a t«al ol ~.ooo boo&iea in Ule Soutbem California w11ten. Tb1a year tho company will •elJ over 100,000, more than triple what lt had sold 1n tta eotlre three. year existence prior to tbiJ summer. Distributicn la now worldwide with outlet. lo Japan, South America, France, England, Australia and the Hawaiian Islands, as well as the U.S. eastern seaboard and the pJt cout. "Last week our store could have sold 1,500 but we only bad 200," Mac- Pberson says. "People have been calling and crying because they can't get them. The company can't make them fast enough." Floyd says the Morey company bu three shifts working 24 hours a day to produce the boogies, which sell for about $40. "Each Morey Boogie is handmade. They're not molded," says Floyd. "The unique material and the band labor are what put the price where it is .•• T-n OUaw\ !Adalrl 1 J» S.00 f'IMllll 1"9uPI 3 60 Time -1t.4t • Alto RM -Rosy JO'f, Oenctys Sier. Kl-II. Tep Tonto Ben, Ofctlt 8\lt Goodie, er.1 .i.ya Rttltl, Oo C.JUft Sc,. .. CMd -~y Jet, IM' M Trv Gto,.1•. Lindy s Chen • L•o Priem U llllolC9 i..Tnl Cl9M a 7·T-DffC-...-'4 .. 1.lt. IECOMD llACC -350 yel'dS. 3 y .. r Oldl. ClelfTllng PvrM UIDO. Tt•~<Tr_..) U.60 1100 " 60 VqebandJolwt CAM!rl OukktnO.lt Cc.fl) Tlme-tt.a5 '40 6.00 .. oo AIM> RM MM"• ••• St¥. Tur Ablee Tuff, Ra•M ,,,. ltoof. Double C.prl, SnlOOerl u P-Ho scr•W.. TIURO ltltCIE -170 yards l yHr okls I. uia. CIMmlno-l'IKM "4200. S.r R""""°'t ICMclotel IUO 6 «> 4.00 SlrHkln!Crew llCnlQ/111 S.CondO-us ILlptteml Timt-"9.12 4 40 HO 3 00 Alto RM> -SeveMMn SloWTlp•n, Sof•rwoood. AlUf'9 One, Send River Rullell, Ro<Mt THI S<retclled -Tender warrior U litllKa. e-Str RtlMRMn & 1· s-•SVew . .-.11ss.• f'OURTH llACIE -440 yards 8yHr old$. All_.nc.. Purse S4SOO. ChergtnLAOy !Treesurel 9.60 4.IO l '° Rao tN Olet1 IH•r1 I 4 40 3 00 Fo•y Boll !Oe-1 J.10 Tlmt 2l 70 "'"' Ren -Roc-ttlAI Tiny, l.Obe Lucky, F umlngton. KellySun•hlnt Sun sh Int NO sc;reld>e$ f'll'TM RACIE -SSO 'l'••d•. 3 yHr aid$ I. up. Start.n Allowance Pu~ S4000 A·C•I .. Otvll IT r .. aure I 4.0 J'lO 2.0 SalarO..r91 IUphaml • . .O • AIO Golel lC.rdaul J 40 u ................ M:IMltllt ............ ,,.,.. sav..,.,. •ACS -.,., .,...._ i ylfWalcll 6 uP. llWlllitleNI ~ Pllrtot US.000. Tiie MW.u.on. TM~dllAlllr rTrwUIW) "·· , .... ,_. ...... °'""°' UJpMml s.-"10 0.11'$$119111W (~I SM Tlme-J0.1' • AIM '1•11 -Big llectter ler, Amtr1<M Gertt. 5-tl. WNAA llM GtorY, l(IPt Sen. Ho Kt9llCtlH l!IOHnf llACIE-~'°yenU.Zyeer olds.Alldwlllcll. l'UIW..000. e1-1tt0ICMO.UI 1UO 6.IO 460 Spal101119 flall Go IHMtl Ml.a Wort Wrf rTl'MIUAI Tlm9-'8.t0 1.40 S.40 S.60 Alto RM -Mr TC 2, Ribs Folly .. ,, ~'f~, Hot Sl•,Al\QtllM~ euo.MttaSdr, ~Ga4dwlt Sc,.,_,-WindlJ H Wlldllnl, V•-· lno U..Aftaltwr Antk. Azure L- $1 eucta ......... Re• -I· ........ ~o. • ..-.11UA1t NIWTl4 ltAC9 -HI yat'IK. I YN' oldS & up. CIMmlne. Pww U40G. He's Foolln IOU!lffl .. .., uo :uo Nev•dll Fll'I• IHert) 5.00 A.40 Limits ltocllet IT~) •AO Tlme -ta.tt AISI> Ren SI. Leull Jr~ Ml• Go Light, Shu Bf'•u Perr. Dov CM!\, Sc>t<k Pr1at1. 0..-~, LUCl!y 7S Scr.tchlO -Mall Ztn«. Ooogotell. Wt•I Vlrv<lll•. HIOClen Tettnt Too SS l!ucte tt-He't ....... & 1• ... ........ .,.,. ...... 111.a. Att..-.cllnc» -7 ,.505 Calendar-· Tltw91ey { ....... ,., '5wlmrni11g-.+.U Hetr-t Che,., plonslllPI et Mtsslo11 Vl•Jor, Mar-lie Recr..Clon C..nttr. Trl.,a •111•..m.-11Mltat7p.m ' l"riN'f (A_.e ") Riding a boogie board is not unlike riding a surf mat or belly board, but the boogie is easier to handle than a mat and sorter than a belly board. It combines the best qualities of each and eliminates the drawbacks. "It makes it a lot easier to catch .....__, o~a.• c .. "~ waves.~tt~~~ft~~noooe~er -~~~~S-~~N~T_H_O_M_P_~~N~T_R_IE~S_O_U_T~B_O_O_G_l_E~B_O_A_R_D_.~~~~~ Time 29•2 "''° ..., -"""'" or DIC• BfQ en Breery, TN Je-1. Mr Doly Bar\, S••mmlne-AAV Ketlonel Ol•m- p I onslll ps •t M1nto" Vl•Jo's MerQUtrl .. RtlCYOellon C..nttr. T~ •• 11•.m.enclflnelsat7p,m. gets hurt,'' says boogie rider Mike Bartlett of Huntington Beach. Junior llfeg.uard programs have begun to use boogie boards in training and lifesaving techniques because of their buoyancy, and rental houses are stocking them in greater numbers than the traditional surf mats. "We've bad letters from all typ~ of people and all ages," Floyd says. "People in their 70's are riding them all the way down to two-year-olds.·' Rain Won't Hurt Deep Sea Fishing Top Ten NATIONltL LIEAOUIE 0 Aa R H f'ct. p.,_H ,,._. HI _, If 16' .3"7 StenMtl "911 I 11 -OJ S3 145 .»1 SimrnonsStL 110 _. 62 127 .331 Tmplft)n SIL 110 450 71 us .m Ntgnt~, TUCIO<IJ•I Na sc.ret<hff A -M. w Cl'ook tfllrv SIXTH RACI! -uo yards. 3 year ot.. I. up. AllowAnCe. Purse $10,000. Ht Ftys ICrtagerl • 00 4.40 l 00 CNnlsEt ....... (Adaorl 7MJ S.00 ClltNI DollSU lC..doul •.AO s-1 ..... ,,, ........ , Sw1rnmiftl>-AAU lqllonel ~ p•on•hlps et Mission VltJo'• Mar_.-.1, Recre.tlon Center. Trl•IS •I 11e.l'\.endflnatset7p.m. ~~11) Swimming-MU Hetr-t °'91ft- p lonslltpa at Mission Vl•Jo•t Mer-1lAI Recl'Mtloro Caoletr. TrtMt at 11 a.m.-llnel1.t7p.m, JeM0<e~Clll 112 400 S1 129 .:no Gentle rain without too 80 to 90 miles away from Lu11ns111P111 '°' 400 10 121 .m M • C T•tJ much wind will not affect here,.. a Dana Wharf Gtfff .... On llS '41 IS "1 .ll7 anna ops I e fishing along the Orange spokesman adds. "That ~;:;,-;_,c~~L i~ ;: : 1: :~:~ Coast where bass and is out ot our range but we e Ro!JjMCn ~ " m s1 109 ,.,. LONG BEACH-Pulling out a 2·1 victory in 10 mackerel have been· hit-sllll hope they will come G.t<oste. =!'::'.' 31, Lurtttt*I, innings. the Marina Pacifica Vikings, a team of 16 tinginlargenumt)ersre-inclose." Phll•d•tph••. >•. sc11 ... 1d1. andl7-year-oldsfromHuntingtonBeach.caplured cently with an occasionaJ SAN ,..oRo IZ?M st u..,.,,.., Phll-tpll••· 30' Bwr°"9f'S "11.,.,1•· the Southern California Joe DiMaggio baseball title bonito and barracuda ~;~~~:;=!;.!"°"''oc.u> 30' httcll,C,.':.s~!... Sunday at Blair Field in Long Beach. also being taken. f'ORT HUliNIEME -.o •n<:1•~ ° FMt•r. Cincinnati, 1°'· Luzins•u. The Vikings ousted A&S Cake Decorati .... <San· S20 ••t •· •• "fl Phll..ielQllle, 'If>! C..y, Los Aft9a1H. .Uf6 Unseasonal rain that ~R:,-~~;-.r;~.,·~,....., ., GMWv. 1..os Anve•H. •• e.nc11. ta AnaJ when the loser's pitcher walked across the bit the coast Tuesday "·~ 1 H1"19 cOd m roe-cocs cinctnNtti.17 winrung run in the bottom of the 10th inninJ. ahnd Wednesday didn 'l :!c~~~.;'1 ll•l>9'*'•· 1S6 Rau, ~~~~~t JoM. The victory qualified Marina Pacifica for state c urn up the waters, ac-sAH SIMEON -121 ang•m a 11114 Los Anoetes. , ..... na: R Reusc11e1. playoffs in Stockton but coach Paul Frey says a di to rts f od 13:1 oclleod Chlca90, IS·S •. 750: CMIOlrla. Pll· in ( cor ng repo out o c LO..; HACH co.-i·a w11ar1> tsburah. 12.4. 1so C•rtton, str g o injuries ot the team has caused him tO the three area landings-~•na'-" •talbecore. 1 blwtt111une .. ,,,,_,..p111 •. 11• .. 1Jt. R Foncll. s1 withdraw, so runnerup A&S Cake DecoraUna will A t • L di I GOLETA BEACH n 1 so Louts. 14 s 7l7. S.•Wf, '""'"...," t.od th • r s an n g o •"9 .,, 1 11.s. m Cllr•tMon ""''..,..'°"'•· compete ay rough Monday m place of the' N e w p 0 r t B e. a c h : ~':.~:ic' 2S hng cod. 20 calico D•H 2 11-S -Southern California champs. . Davey's Locker out of NIWf'ORT io. ... ,·, Lee_.,., si Marina Paclfica's roster includes Mike Bore. th ~. Balbo an9le<\ I barracud• 11 bo'lito s. • ._. e pav on a; !NIU. so roe• cod. n l'\Kl<erel 111 Brooks Boatwright Kevin Olson, Mike Farole, BobJudie:BrianSmith. and D n a W ha r C Dt..,.ba\s 1 b k tb ll r Rick Mielke, Steve Porath, Frank Cresci, Sportlishing Landing. A-Vtu aAY ,,._. s... u.111 ss P ays as e a or •"ll•en· 1•t1ngcoc1.•1oroe11,fl•h N av y but George JeU Newton, Eric Irwin, Steve Masjoan. Eric "The rain won't make SANTA •AHHA -1• -···~· w h ' gt · s ·th Ruilhenc~d, Rod Davis, Mark Dapello, Jeff that much difference to u1 roe-ttsh. ' c•tlco b•u. , as in on 1 w 1 .... cwe1 Hayward State Graham Gary Springer. ' us," a spokesman for ,.------------------------------------------Davey's Locker says. "We sent a boat out Wednesday morning but didn't go out \n the after- noon." "The rain won't affect fishing as far as we are concerned," a Dana Wharf spokesman says. •'There isn't a lot of wind to churn up the water. When that happens, it takes a couple of days to lay the water down aealo." How about a possible albacore run in this area? HGYllO 1HATGIVESWXI A CDMPElllNE IDGE. "They are catching , them out of San Pedro .but they go up the coast to Santa Barbara Island and that is too far for us," Davey's Locker re· ports. "We still hope there will be a bite on them between Catalina and San Clemente Islands." "The albacore are still Dyna Bee strengthens your grip, wrists and arms and improves your coordination. It's a high precision jnstru- ment that produces a gyro- scoRiC force so pqwerful for: its size it wm amaze you. It's ideal conditioning for practically every sport. for both men ahd women. It's also a perfect gift idea .. • t -- Thu ,. 1tn Stella Stevens Finds a Horne on the Range M1M SM!vena wu a a.ex symbol or character actnll ln co movtea. lndudlnl "The Pole1doa Adventure," .. llan Trap,•• "Glrll. Glrla, Glrla," ''The Nutty Proteuor .. '"nte CowUhlp ot Eddie'• Father," "Synmum~" ''Slauabt.r .: "Tho Mad Room .. and ''Wblr9Ancell Go.'' • • STATEUNE, Nev. (AP> -Im· presaionist Rieb Uttle acbleTed fame ____________ _.._ ...................... __ ___....__--. ____ by eopytq Voices and mamieliama of dldn't want to itand there willl a monOlocue. You doG'tbeldllae u..t way. CBS 9 6 :30 --"Mildred Pierce.·· Joan Crawford won her only Osca( for playmg the title role in this 1945 movie ·drama with Ann Blyth and Zachary Scott. NBC fD 8:00 --"Robinson Crusoe:· Stanley Baker stars in this new <1974 > verst00 d. the Daniel Defoe classic about a shipwrecked sailor on a tropical island. ABC fJ 8:00 • The David Soul and Friends Special. The star of Starsky and Hutch branches out with this musical variety hour. Guests include Ron Moody -· and Dick Clark. . ;(rv DAILY LOG) consciences and wei&h the moral and ethical consequences of a New York City police walk-out CD Merv Griffl11 sa.. m Tiit Ylrlitriall m "•1111• lruk/Ac• ,, UICtr· tlinty "'Weekend 1n Vermont" John Kenneth Galbraith meets with world lnders and scholau (inchtdlDI Hecuy Kminaer) to discuss WOl1d problems ~ s-..r m11 a.acs -9:30-u COMEDY HIT'S BACA! * "TMREM COMPANY'' o CD CIDl <a Cl>) nr .. ·s C-,.11 (R) Jxk is lllO¥inz to share the 1partment w1lh Jaael and Cllr1SSY wlltn Chrissy s lllOther deades to pay I W1$ll m Soccer f rim Germ., 10:00 D ((J1J (]) (() llaruby .loMS (R) Betty drops over for a birthday party with a cirHnend and dsscovers that the friend has been burglarized." But she myste11ousty refuses to report • the cmoe. u u Cll m a Den 111rt111 Roat Joe Gara11ola IS the roastee. and dais euests include Orson Welles, Mickey Mantle. Hank Aaron, Yoa1 Bern and Chlriie Finley. • Dlltws Cll llM: (2tlr) "Mapiflcl9t Der (com) '46-Gift&tr Rocers. 8 CD <ID (flt(()) Wemm IWlcal (II) Coocl. Phil bas con· Yln«d $mer Mart Delom to have the hurt optralton slle despentely needed but her recovery 1s en· dlnpred by some IMlltaf lllrmod he Qnnot r1cvre out. m CiYa1caN o1 .. ., mo ...... -10:30-m m m11tws ~~11.uterpilce nutR 11:00 D CJ> e ~ (l!J) CIJ) ._ ltOCl>9GO._ :1:.~> LM a.rial StJ'I .. ,.._...,. IDMlrcaWelllr e Ulll ~ fa B CllllM • lladllll/l*tf laflOrt -11:30-u ((U) CD) CD Mewlts: Kei•' "liteht of the Plratus." a:> "Crilllt CM" (dra) '73~lloyd Bnctps. 8@(1)•Gll>JelllmrC'arm Cl> IMit: ........ ., ..., ...... liief" (dra) '42-0oo Btfly. e CJ) 9 (8 Cl>) S.W.A.TJ Tiit Thrldly llllM s,.daJ -~ n.Ma.. -~-biilil-­•a...34 12:00 .,......z-. ... : (C) "&ei1 .... ., ~(tin) 7(1;:.IWlert Wuw. •c..a .... <Cl.,.. .......... nr.." (drl) '62-f1111k Ubl!IOR. -12:JO-: ~ ..... """" ( .. ) '~7-Kim NovU. Jtft Cltln«•. 1100 80Cl>9T..,.. • lillldll: "Old AcQ1111ntanee." "A Soldilr Named Joe," "Hiked Fur,* -1:30-CD MtN: "lifystlfJ S..rl1t" <•cM '6J-Mdona14 c..,. t 2100 UlllM:<C>~Y ..... a.. tltllltf'! <•> 'SI-Frid "°'*'· • lltties: "fll0t111& Taraet. .. •·si..,tac Cer to Tnellt" BOAt1NG ·Sailing •Yachts ·Power Boats •Remote Control Boats more than 180 movie starstl~tical flauree and other celebri: Now be'• doilla more Rlcb Uttle. Llttle""'llu cradually interjected more fl blmself into his acts tn recent rean, sandwiched -"~--. • \r '·'~· .. ~ .·. ·.~ .... " - ' . 4a .~· ·. "' "' 'f:J •,. n between humor;oua lm· praalona of actors litre John Wayne. Humphrey Bo1art and James Stewart, and poUUcal fl1ures such u Richard Nixon and Jimmy Carter. · um.a .. . IN AN INTERVIEW here. LitUe said bis ambition ii "to do what I'm doing right now -except maybe some more dramatic thlnp, some more Rieb LltUe, do more actiq." Uttle. a Canadian, launched his U.S. career with a television spot in 1964. Early in bis career, "I used to do solid impressions, but people didn't know wbo I was. They wouldn't re· cognlJe my own voice," hraaya. "I realized I bad to change," be said. ad- di.Qa that there's a "llkeabWtf fac- tor'' an entertainer achieves with an audleace which allows more leeway ln alhow. Now Little jokes, sings, ad libs, break& out of character, and aeneral- ly "l make it more of.• show. I Just sot ...... ( 'O :\ST ft-fl Afkt I A < Ll"'llA t't (, J4 • 1 f ' \ . ... ........... s.t.-S..1:41 JUI "NEW YORK TBE SYSfEir HAS worked. ·UHle. now baa a »week schedule ~ ap- pearanCflll in, major clubs, hotels and theaters aroUnd the country, u Well as a 1teady round of television .~ pearancts. He writea most of his c>wn material and mastera not only voices but facial expre81lona and physical movements. , Even tbou1h more Rieb Little shows ~ ln bis act, IJttle, 38, plans to continue do1ne lmpreulona aa be bu since he wu 14 and mlmlctin& Ju, school teachers ln Ottawa. Audiences ehjoy ~eelna ·portrayals of "people who are supposed to be very lntelll~ent, ln hlah pl~ sayia& silly ~ 'be says. AND AUDIENCES always lite humorous or nostalaic lmpressians of actors and sinters like Wayne. Clark Gable. Anthony Newley or Johnny Cub, he aaya. But it's 1ettln& tou&ber to mimic man:r new stars wbo don't have distinctive voices or the "lar&er than lile" quality of stars ot the l!MO:.'I and 19505, he adds. LlWo aaya the art ol doinl im· presslons has been around for a loq Ume. He's certain some court jester wu "dolne a devastatln& Merlin .. during King Arthur's time in early Enaland, and there's no sip yet that audiences are Urina of such acts. "AUDREY ROSE" t:IOOMLT NEW YORK'~, llt;Ja-.""' ... _-_ .. _,......_~ ''REINCARNATION ! • Of lONITE! 7:30p.m THIAftl R ---'ANN 1 E (PO) HALL' WlflaWoedyAIM C ..... Mt-JI ."THI IPT WNO LOYIDMI" C•ll 142-H71." Put • t•w word• to work tor you. In the DAILY PILOT ~S.conatr.uaton on ~he · Panama canal IJecan'l The year WIS 1904 and the plan was to apen a wat.r· w1y across the Isthmus of Panama for connecting the Pacific and Atlantlc Oceans. Undtr the sUPtr· vision of G.W.. Goethals the dream t»came a ,..,. lty and on Au,ust 15, "" ltt. first trflg,,f HSUntler ship, urtte Ancion" 1'alSltd throWlt ttHt anal. 2.S years earlier. on ffie I 1lte of,,,. prfHftf Los An-~City Hall, tht Jolin SlaeHr Carpe.t Co. '*''" ulllng fine ca(Pfts to Southland homn and building a rePUtatlon u,.. matched In the Southland. It's your 1u1rantee ol complete utlsfactlon when you next pUrchase carJMt, draperies or vinyl "°"''""· 110UTLAW PmRPROllr 7:00.11:11 Evety Ftkl•y Midnight JClllllllWSl.*2111 ,..,... ·"LOVE & DEA TH" '-"~ . ..,. "ROClr CPGJ It ......... COAST PLAZA Hit Star Returns To Earth ... By 808 THOMAI LOS ANGELES <AP> -Luke Skywalker, lhe 1nttrtalacUc warrior, ii repalrtDI old CUI lD Burbank. Sound like a com•· down? l>erhapa, but tbere be ta in the auto 1bop ot Burbank Hilb School, dressed In COY• eralla w1tb face smudaed. l•borinl over •sick Corvetta. AS ANYONE who bu atood in line to see "Star Wars" knows, Luke Skywalker is Mark Hamill, a television ac- tor who suddenly round himself star of the year's superbit. He is now mak· mg "Stingray." wath Hal Barwood producing and Matthew Robbins direct· mg for MGM. Barwood-Robbins went to USC film school with George Lucas, the "Star Wars" maker. The pair wrot e "The Su garland Express," "Bingo Long" and .. MacArthur" and now are filming their own script. Based in part on their own high school ex- periences or not too long ago. .. Stingray" casts Hamill as a high school misfit whose only in- terest is remaking C8J"S. When bis prize Corvette is ripped off, be begins a wild chase to find it. -~-,....... STARS TO CARS Maf't( tt.mtll laxlna tn b1-dreuln1 room-trailer. a far cry from the lean·tol be was 1i ven u a TV act.or. but not u ,rand u hia oew status micht aunest. But be denies that he really leeh much ChllJlle. ·'The only time it real- ly hit me was when Fox sent Harrison Ford and me on a three-week ap- pearance tour," he said. "I bad the whole works -TV and radio in- te rviews, fans at the aarports, Fox officials to take care of every need, limousines, hotel suites. .. BUTASSOONaslgot home, it was like living in a vacuum again. I went back to the same house, I see the eight or nine friends I always see, I go to no parties, because I don•tlikepartles." - One outfall of "Star Wars" that displeases Hamill is some of the at- tention he has been get- ting in print. "I've been called 'a California clone with brains baked by the sun,"' he compl&tned. Dutthtn• for tbe pownupe U410metblna '°" the ld4I aN olfeNd tt'1a weekend ID two new Ital• pi'oduc.'UODI by tbe HGDtlnitm Beacb Playbouae and tbe BadcUeback Vallt)' Commuillty Theater. · Tb• mON actwt on..in.s 11 ••My Daqbt.11''1 n& e4 X" bJ the HuntlnlUMi players, tbelr MeciDd din· nu theater lbow t the Edcewat.el' Bntt lloUlo lD Lon• Beaeb, opentna PrtdaJ Dlabt. )°olJowlDI oo Saturdl.Y aft.nioOli ta .. Audiod .. and the LlOG .. by the Saddlebact ~p. TBB llVNTJNGTON BEACH. pla,, a flrat OD toe al at8t•, cent.en OD a CODIVY&Uve DlOvlo rater, b1I more Uberal·mtnded Wife and their dautbt. who turns up wttb a baby, mtnus the father. John WUUams ii dh'ect.l.nl tile comedf. wblch features Robert Renfrow. Ann Leverett and Patricia Corbett. Also 1D the Huatlnitoo cut are Peony Coffman. Da~d Brown and Robert Stacb. Ten perfonnances will be liven tbroulh Sept. a3 In the Empire Room of the Hyatt. <JC Coast lllOway at 7:30 and cu.rtaln at8:30. RelervaUoos 12&.()583. 111E MDDLBBACK VAU..BY plQers are of· ferlng "Androcles" as tbeirsummer children's pro- duction for two weekends, Saturdays and Sundays. ·in Miaslon Viejo'a Montanoso Recreation Center. Todd Humphrey la di.rec:tinl the adapt.ab of Crosby 'Comeback' Cheered in Concor CONCORD (AP> -"I'm dreamJ.nc o( a Wbite- Chri.stmas," sang the familiar figure on the stage. The crowd, from teeaaaira to gray·balred oldsters, sighed as Bing Crosby, 73, returned to the boards after a five-month absence recovering from a fall last March from a stage in Pasadena. "'IT FEE~ GOOD, it feels right, to be a part of the seene •· was Crosby's opelli.n& number. He looked a u'we stiff, but be joked about the fall that left him hospitalized three weeks with a ruptured spinal disc. · The fall came as the celebrated crooner was tapm, a television show commemorating bis 50 years in show business. ONE ROT day in Burbank, Hamill was re· "As though I just fell into -~:iiiiiiiiiiiiiii;::;:;::;:==========='­all this by accident! " LA MlllAOA • • LAICEWOOO • _,..DAV ....,,•f.Mii:ot~=r=~ ,a:» i. 5:00 LA MlllAOA 4 ONLY IUHOtiYI a HOllDtiYI 1no lo 2:00 UZA Ml-1.11 • tosf DfNHIO NIW YOH, NIW YOH 1'°> IOHY. NO •um "1MI ITOIY Of A ~l" ONI OH OHi !NI 1•tM1tt4St*4S tMSt IMS • A different kind of ... / . Intermission ·Tom· Titus tile ltallan fable with MU1 Betb WUaon and Eltla !!ti. tn tbe Utle ralee. <>then in the cut .... Dlck Vara. Oluck Lo«an. Julie Kuelme.ft. Sberll Ann Scott and d1reetAr Humphrey. • Ourtalft U!ne la• p.m. for the abow, wblcb Is d• 111Ded t~ children.,. 8 and over. R•ervaUou ., .... WINDING UPTBEJa reapectlve encacements in Colla Me.a tb.18 weekend are "Vanltles" at South COut ~ and ''Sometbilic'• Afoot'" at the Costa Ilea• Clvt.c Playbouae. . ••Vlnltiea .. will be perfmnecl ~t throu&b Sunda1 at I p.m. with a 3 o'clock Sunday matinee at Uae SCR theater, 18a7 Newport Blvd., Calta Men. ReservatJcma 648-1.MI. ''Sometblna'• Afoot0 closes with ftnal performances tonlebt throulh Saturday at 8:30 in the Community Recrutlon Center on the Oraqe County FalrlJ'QUDda. Reaervatloos 558-5'58. OONTIN11ING TDOOGR Aqust are three d1nDer tbeat.er attractions -"My Fair Lady" at Sebutian'a West in San Clemente: "Carnival" at Sebastian's in the Grand Hotel, Anaheim, and "The Odd Couple .. at the Harlequin Dinner Pla.ybouse Juatnort.bofColta MesainSantaAnL ' AU three abowa run nllbtly except Monday. Rnervatioos and curtain information may be ob· talned by calling Sebut!an'a West at 492·9950, Sebastlan'• Grand at. m-mo. or tbe Harlequin at 97~ Hefoaghtwm IDCI won them. Hedelled Prulclentl- and mlgbt hnebeen one. AN OUl'RAGEOUS MF.AL OF MADNESS PVBUC NOTICE fllCTtTIOUI •USINHS MAMll STATaldNT T lie ~tawlnt --¥• Clal"9 ~ M.SH WATl[RS & TARNUTUlR, 11U Wttflclltf Ori,..., ~t a..c11. CA. '1"'3 &yf'Of\ w. Ta"'utzer. 8elb<M ll•Y CIUO, 1121 W. C0Mt Hwy., Newport llH<.11, CA. '*3 COl\welo M. T.,nulrer, llelbo• Bay CIUI), Int W. c.o.st Hwy., N"'port • !IUCll, CA. fW3 , •. Tell-IWY T•11~ U,,... Will ol Jolln R. W.-n, 111S Wft1<.lltt 0<1"'9, ... _ _, &e.:11. CA.. 92663 ,. • Tiiis business h conCluUed by • generel pe<11WrS11lp R~L.T..- Tllls •lM-1 wes flied w1111 ,,,. County Cleril of Or enoe County on Al.f9. I. 1917 PUBUC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS•USIHl:H N.U.WSTATEMIENT Tlllt toll-41111 --15 dol119 llllSI· ness•s· AC$. UO.O \.OOIWI StrMI, C:O.te M.s.,CA'76111 John R. Harris, Jlst !lermuoe, CoslaMeY, CAm» Tllh ~S$ IS ccndUCled by an l1>- c:t111!4INI. John R. Harris Tiiis Slfl(-nt was 11...S •illl Ille County Clttrk ol ~.,. County on A1i91nt n. "" • ting Solution AH AUGUST SUH CAM SPOIL YOUR FUN . Forgetting to wear sun glasses. protect your skin against burning by applying a good sun cream. or exercising too strenuously can tum a day of pleasure Into a night or pain. Summer bu~s can ruin any picnic unless you apply an insect repellent TAXIMERMIST FINISHES 80-POUND TARPON Ray Moore Sey• Cuatomer• 'Unteaaonable' 'Stuff It'. Taxidermist Troubl,ed BAY CITY, Wash. CAP> -People are trying to tell Ray Moore how to Stuff It. That's the name or his taxidermy shop here. and Moore says his bunt, ing and angling customers drive him nuts with their special requests -such as eyebrows Qn fish. "Everybody wants an artistic job, but nobody wants to take the time. Wben they teU you how to do it, you have to grit your teeth and say they're right because they're the customers," said Moore, 40, who has spent more than 20 years as a taxldermlst. Moore, who works near the busy fishing resort or Westport and specialiJes ln fish, claims that the big problem for him and his colleagues is not so much that taxidermy is dying out as that "the customers are driving the taxidermists so crazy that they commit suicide or go nuts.'· TIDNGS RA VE GOTl"EN SO bad with one group, hunters, that Moore said he will mount deer, elk and other land animals only for himself and close friends . Stuffing animals rather than fish, be said, made him feel "like a hairdresser more than a taxidermist. .. .. A taxidermist tries to improve on nature all the time," he said. "In nature'• way, when they (animals) come in, they're just awful looking, with matted, dirty hair and the rest, and if you did them like they really were, the people would never like them." Hunters, he says, are peculiar people. "THEY ARE NUTl'IER TRAN a fruitcake most or the time," he said. ·~0ne guy brought a pheasant in a cage and expected me to kill it for him. I 'told him 1 wouldn't do it So he grabbed lt by the head and spun it around unUl the bead went one way and the body went the other. There was blood all over the shop. "l told him I couldn't take it because he had torn the head off." Moore says some people want improvements on their finny tropbiea. too. "One lady came in and said a fish I had done for her just didn't look right. The eyes looked like fish eyes. I told her to go away tor at couple hours. I added the eyebrow and when she came back, she loved it." Smaller Burger ~ackages Due .. . \ Ford Motor COmpany RecaUs 765,550 Can DETROIT (APJ -Enctne coollnt fans in an eaChnatod ~.&00 ford Motor Co. can could breaJt off Ind kill or 11\JUH ~ peflOQ worldQI under the hood, the auto maker Hid tn umou.nclnc a recall of Uio vehlcJe1. • • . tember, wh n 1Pltial 1uppU11 ot replacement part.a wUl be available. · IN1UE M ANTIME. Ford warned ownt" and meehanlc1 •••Inst working under the hoOd of a car With tho enpne nmninf until the fana have been replaced. Tbe recall, •nnowu:ed this week raiaes to 1.2 mJU1on, tbe llumber of cars Ford bu recalled since June for tbe tame 'Problem, wblcb bu resulted in one death and at least 19 injuries, accordlna to 1ov· emmentreporta. Aftected '19'16-tnoclels are: The 1edenl aovvnmeot bas said it is in-- v~a•Una e.i mllUon Ford can and UCht trucks built aln~ the 1~ model yur which ml~t have tho detect. A eov,rnment otflclal said Tuesday the new recall doea DOt. end the invesUaaUon. Air-eoodltioned Fords and Mereurys with 3U· cubJc·lncb and 400.c.l. engtnes;.aon·air cond.lUoned Fords and Mercurys with police packaJes and, in the case of the 400-c.L enttnt, With traller·towinl pacU&es, a.nd all nOJl•air conditioned Fords anCl Mercurys wltb '80·c.1. en1ines except those equipped with police Jfack~es. Affected 19'n·modela art: 1'llE LATEST campaign involves 1978 and 197"1·model standard·sb:ed Fords a11d Mercurys and 60me 1971 Uncohul, all with v .g enames. Ford aaid the fan blades on the vehicles may crack and pr~ ot the blades nuy eventually fiy loose Crom the fan assemblies. F.otd said deal«& would replace the fans at no charge to owners beginning .at the e,od ol Sep· · Air conditlotled Fords and Mercury& •Ith J02· and 3M-c.1. enlines; non·air conditioned Ford& and Mercurys wlth 35l·c.i. engines and police packages; Uncolna with 400-c. l. enalnes, noll&lr .con· ditioned Fords and Memays with 400-c.I. ~ and police or trailer·towing pacltqes, and all DOil.air conditioned Ford and Mercurys •itb 4f0.c.l. engines,esceptthosewotbpollcepacka1es. _ Qldest OC Bank Bought The board of directors of huge Wells Fargo Bank Tuesday ap- proved the pµrch"#'e -for $18.9 million cash -of First National Bank of Orange County, the oldest bank headquartered in the county. Wells Fargo arranged the loans, eatimated by Forbes magazine at $237 million, for the sale of the Irvine Co. The bank purchase expands the lnstltu-tioo 's Orange County base. First National's board of direc- tors previously approved the merg.e.r. The acUon requires the two-thirds vote of shareholders of both banks. and federal re· gulatoey agencies. SHAREHOLDERS OF First National Bank of Orang&County stock WOUid get $90 per share. Previous offers rrom other banks this year were of $C0 and $60 per share. There are 210,000 outstanding First Nat.1o0al shares. A meeting of shJreholders and their proxies (representatives to whom moat sbareb(>lden are asked to asslp their votes) will meet ln October to vote oo the merger. WEU.S FARGO OFnCJALS saJd if the merier ls approved. and federal agencies okay it, the takeover would be eUective the second quarter of 1978. First National Bank of Orange County was established In Orange April 18, 1906. Today there are ll officea in cities iJ1. eluding Laguna Hills, Costa Mesa. Santa Ana and Irvine. Assets to dale were $141.3 milUm; there were $131.6 million in deposits. Over The Counter HASOUfrfincp Wells Fargo is the naUon's lltb largest bank, with $13 billion in assets and $10.5 billion in de- posits. State Bank Proposal Eyed SACRAMENTO CAP) -A legislative committee is to bold bearings next month on a pro- posal that the State of California cr~ate its own bank. St.ate Sen. John Dunlap <D· Napa), chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Investment Priorities and Objecttvea, said the heJrings woUld be held Sept. 19 in San Francisco and Setp. 20 in Los Angeles. D~p has beencampalgn.ing agaln&t the University of DOW'MS +°'!.. + "' + 1 + ..., + <w. + '~ + "'" + ,~ + 1141 '+ .. +' + '4 + ,.. + ~ + ' + ,. .. ... .. 'h . "'" + •4 + .. + v. + '~ + .. Pct. Uo 2S.O "" 11.t Ui> "·' U'o u.~ Uo 11.0 Uo IU U1t 12.S 1111 11.7 Up 1U Vp '1.1 Uo 1U Uo 100 u. '1 tJp 9.7 u. • s UP •.1 UP t.1 Up •1 U1t e.• Uo t.J U'o .., Vp u Uo 7.7 u. 7,1 "".'/ -°1 Oft~\.o 't~ -~ OH fU 1 -, Oft 11.1 211 -w. °'' "·' 2 -V. OH II.I : = ~ fl~ :::: 1'14 -·~ ,.,. """ --"1 216-\41 ·-Mo v. °" t.s 2* "" Oft t.s t'lla .,... "" g; t.1 S'li Yt a.1 2* 14 t t:J ~ v. Off l.l 2"'-V.Offl.3 ~ -.... Off •. , J llr0ff7' ~ -..., Off 7.1 • -Yt Off,, 12 -I Off 7.7 ~ .... Oft ... ..... "" Oft t..7 J..., -~ Off t7 llJ SYLVIA to&TD T.-m tuuruce li 11'9Winl In popuJarlty amQD AmedeaDI. As Ne.u, u .ua. it acc0unt4icl f• ._. tbaD ~ pttteiltoltOtal Ule laluHnn •al•. ~5, th pr~ bad rtsen to!l peRal mt tbe tlend bat bMD perper dicuJWQP. • ~ YGUD1 famW a1lo plan to conUnue term llfeJr autenee fer 10 yean or mor.. Mllllona Of Ufe lnluranc poUC1bcilderl find term Potiet• pi'lf••.,.• to th• mon e> J)411111ye 1Wbalt Uf • ud belleve they cu lov•t tbelr fuadS i 1uperi<lr ways than tn whOle llle or eodowmflllt lmurance: Tbef an beiDi unturtr p.naU&ed. . MANY BUYllU OP 'fEU ID tbe p~t have let thei pollcl• l•PM after a abort period aDd tb1a hip lapse rat bu bMll ec.tlY to the eompanlea. So tbt lnauranee lnduatr; bu tnd.lti0Dall1 kept term tmuranee preaiJum.1 hlebe than neeeu1117 b¥ ta-· cludlq ln rates a re· ,coveryoltbelnltlal CCMltl of wrlUnltbepolJey. =b HOD wbo keeps premiums "· • p~ to offset tbOle who .DenDit pollct.tolQHafte.r afewyeU'lh Finally, after more tban a decade of experimentation .. depoelt term" Is eomlnt Into itl own to slub premiu.n rat.ea !or buyers of term insurance for a prolon1ed period. l. ia a real breattbrouah for consumer-oriented llf e lnsuruce YET, WHILE DEPOSIT TE&M IS offered by bunmect: of companies acroo the country -ranein1 from Pacifk Fld• ol Los AJl&elea to Kemper lmurance of Kanau Cit~ to lbdlson Life ol New York City -it la not fully un derstood even b1 many llf e insurance professionals. Undertbe depoalt term policy offered by Madison Lik inNewYork: -The buyer must pay a depoeit ol $10 per Sl,000 cov era1e ol additlooal premium tor the flrat year of a lO-year plan. -Tbls deposit ls returned, doo.,._, at the end of 10 years or lD the event ot prior death. if the policy is ln torce. -'Ibe doubled amount. paranteed lD tl)e form of tht tenth year cub value of the policy, repre!en\s an interest return of 7.2 percent compounded on the additional pre- mium. -UNDER CUSBKNT TAX &ULES the intere~t on the retU111 ii tu free. , Thole who allow the policy to laf>se before the end of the tenth policy year will fotfelt some or all ol the deposit. •"lbls plan It neither intended nor recommended Lor ln· dlvicluala wbo do not feel reasonablY certain that they can maiDtaln covera1e ln force for the tull 10 years. lo event of lapse prior to the end of the tenth policy year some or all of the eddltiooal flnt year premium 1a forfeited. 11 is, though, a plan orTnsurance uniquely desi1oed to reward pollcybotderJ wbo maintain their policies ln force for the re· quired~" al)'I Milton A. Schiff, president of Madlaon lJfe. Early Rlilly Fades In Stock Trading . NEW YORK CAP> -'lbe stock market turned upward in a tecbnlcal rally today, but the advance be1an fading toward the close. Ttae DowJones ••••IP ol 30 lnduatriala, up more thu 6 polDQatttapeak.dOMCI Wilha .~lopat864.17. OalDel'a cluq to a T..Slead ovet losers amoq New York Stoek !:xcb111i•listed blut1. Analyatafound notb.lng partkular in the economic news to account.for the earlf up1wtn1. They sald some buyers evldenUy were attracted b\)' the depressed prices of many U.ues. . ,,. By late aftsnooD it was evident that a 1ood many traders wereunwill1n1t0Jomhl the rally. ~onnAH....,,e• .NWY .. W'> PiMl .._.,_.. _. ITOCU ~··Ii··· ·~·"Qei,e"'' ·· au. ~ ... ,1· .P.f !! = lU 1.11 B14~tn.U:: ;;I n Utl 1JJ.1,.t1t to•-~ u -,....... tt1 ita.11-• tMut ....................... ~" T,_ ..................... ,... _. Utl" .. .. ........... •. .•• •• 14'1.lOI "sac ...................... 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" Mflll .... ., ... •·•••··•••••• FOJn'WORTH. .. (A.f) -Alone and without fanr .... N r.auent.t o d tW'IMd TO I t ontb, •= "WiUull l'vt • J t I 'Ola e . "V.'bo needs a b!rtbday c e?" M dcftsnt u evw, tbesUver·lla1ted, a ll· l)tled ·•a:ioUMr ot history" "mat unwaveri ln de. c ... ot ber IOn, lM. umed by tbe Warren Com· U&Jl-11111•tbelOM ualnotPnl Ktnnedy. ''The w..-ren Commlum w wron•." Be 50~. SHAUNG A FROSTY 8EEA wlth a visitor in her modest, immaculate brick homo, she launched at once into the mOlt recent area ol indignation, a . p~blisbed contention she is "now aitni and In ill health ... E,,_ n hinc, abe produced a copy of a letter mailed to news media, ii\ which she declared. "I'll admit to the aging; it's a nat~al process. ) But to aay rm in ill healtll is a Rross error and I eon· sider it ao effort to discredit me ... t don't feel my age, don't look it and have never been sick a day in my life. I'll bet the author can't say the same thiftg." . Indeed, time has taken no apparent toll on the stocky firebrand in the 14 y"ar,; since the assassination and sub· sequent )IUing of her son by Jack Ruby in the basement of the Dallas County Jail. "I've n~ver 1 seen a doctor, hevef taken an aspirin," she · said. "I've fooled 'em .,. .,,..,..." all by li":in.g 1~ years MARGUERITE OSWALD h~:l~~!!lammg in good Mrs. Oswald discussed her way of life reluc- tantly, preferring to attack authors and critics who have assailed her and her son. "l'VE J:XPEIUENCED AND SURVIVED Ws trauma," she said. ''I've lived it and I )tnow it. What do the critics know? ... I may look stupid, but I know everything that's going on. Don't kid yourselt about that." She is an incessant reader, and her library overflows with books on the assassination and the presidency, on Cuba and Russia, where Oswald visrted, and on New Orleans, where her son spent muchofbisyouth. 'Tm very interested in everything going on in . this case," Mrs. Oswald said. "I hope sometime to . have an opportunity to change some of the things that have been said -an opportunity to write the truth. "I DON'T REALLY HA VE . TO investigate anymore; it's just a matter of keeping on top of thines as they come up. If a boot comes~ on the assassination, there's no pµtting it down -even if it talc es all night and the next day.·· . She recently read Victor Lasl(y's .. It Didn't , Start with Watergate" and Bernard Fen.sterwald : Jr.'s .book on Vie assassinat,ion, "Coincidence or Conspiracy?" And she said she ls waiUng with more than casual interest for the October release or "Marina and Lee," as told by Lee Oswald's widow, Marina, to Priscilla Johnsan McMillan. "I'm glad Marina's book ls ~tng poblished, but · I wonder why they waited 14 years," she said. MRS. oSWALD SAID SHE BAS spoten neither to Marina nor another son, Robert Oswald, since . November 1963. "I called t.hem a couple of times, but they elther wouldn •t talk to me or bune up.·· She said she doesn't know why, adding, "I don't really give a damn. I've always been pretty much on my own and I've accepted that. "'Ibis is just pari of Wb•tl'•egone tJlrouglt .... Much more distressing, she indicated, .b the continuing disinterest of publishers for Ji book by Marguerite Oswald. "Robert had his book. and Marina's is comine out in October. He had a atoeytotell and Marina bas a stoey to tell and I have a ltC)ry to tell," she said. "I CAN'T UNDERSTAND~ I don't have e book ••• t think the publls.bers ve under tbe Im- pression I'm just a mother defendlna her son .•• I'm going to defend Lee Harvey Oswald un· :m the day Idle. butlfnu10tcotng totak•\apfor him.. 7here's a difference. · "I dOn't want to appear rm pushiDa for a boot but, after all, I am tile mother QI the man accused of killing the PresJdent of the Unlled States." ·She liW.. tho said. on Soctal Security, oc· casibnal fees for inte.rviews and the sale of un-~ified "personal~~··· BEil DA VS. SHE JNSlftED, we .. ·mpJi, not lone enough. I~. clean bouse,1t6ej; ~e taWii, pay \ bills, a.hamPoo my hair. and .'4 course, read a lot and ~enot.s. '•nus ts not an Ofdlnary'case arid I'm not an or- . ' dma,ry ~· But I eiat \Yell. I sleep well and 1 have r~'E~iifl a free mind •• ~After 2• 1ean Gt suppreuion and dl.at.Grtioaa; t•m proud to have suriived. . "I do ~feel '1btTY for myself because l thlnt I'm fin8l1Y comiDI into my own ••• 11uat can't un- deritUdWbil doa'thave• book ••• " tanli 01 energy to go Tru Test propane gu tank& tor tordlee Md-all your Pf01*'9 bum· Ing camping eppllencft. 0!" all you rlMCt .. this tow price. extend your source of power The Rhino Hfde h .. vy duty ••ten· llqn cord la JUst what you need for power toot&. 12·3, 50 tt. Reg. 31.95 Scientific Choice: Moral Questions By SERGIO LAW ........ .,.....~ CLEVELAND <A.P) Neurosurgeon Robert J . White la at home on the frontiers of science. In e;xperlments with animals, he'a isolated brains, kept them alive. trwplanted· them. He performed early research on coolinc the brain to slow metabolic rates and give sur- geons more time to operate on that most delicate and mysterious of oreans. Now he expresses concern about such work as much for its philosophical and moral implica- tions as for its practicalit1. The conflict between what ls scientifically possible and what is morally acceptable is especial- ly felt by White, who is' as deeply rooted in his Roman Catholic faith as he is In~ Thursday, August 18, 1977 •'When we want to arcue the rl1ht1 and wronea ln the fabricated·man business, re· member it can be done," White says. "But if it is done, if the human brain is bolat.ed or is transplant- ed, ana so forth, what are the philosophical and ethical con- sJderaDoa.s? What is eoing on? la the brain the same? Where is the soul? Where ls the mind we talk about?" White was referring to the IUl· . c ient mystery of how the biochemical functions of the brain become thought, memory and imagination. WHEllE DOES ONE find foot· prints ol the soul? He ls a professor of ne~urgery at Case Western Reserve University, director of neurosur1ery at Cleveland's Metropolitan General Hospital. C1 He doesn't have much time to 5it in his lab pciadertng auch ques· lions. His hoepltal office ls near the emergency l'OOm, and be ts on call M hours a day. He bas a private practice, writes and lec- tures extensively. He ls as com· fortable talking shop with brain surgeons in Russia u be is talk- ing with Pope ~ul, with whom be bas had several audiences. A self-described "old time Catholic," White ia the father of 10. He 1s 51. while·baired and balding. "Fifteen years ago I came to Cleveland from the Mayo Clinic to do some NSearch oo some very practical matterp ... Wbite says. At that Ume, one of his preoc· cupatioos wu trylng to extend the time doctors bad to operate on the human brain when the blood supply is cut off, as hap- pens during a heart attack. Cut off from its blood now' the brain suffers damage or dies after three tonve minutes. If the brain could be cooled safely and its metabolic rate thus reduced, White reasoned, lt would give doctors more time to operate and prevent brain damage. THE COOUNG technique also could be applied to certain spidal cord injuries where paralysis ls not immediate and total. White once inflicted identical spinal cord injuries on t• anesthetized monlreys. The paralyl:ed monkeys were left alone ror four hours -the average time it takes to get spinal-cord injury vid.lms from accident scenes to operating rooms. Then through mechanical and chemical means, White cOoled the atrected part of th• spinal cord Of each monkey. Within tTio wffb, all of the monkeys wen lit 1ood conditloo. White once tried bis cooling techniques on some patients terminally W with brain cancer. In one case. White cooled the brain of .a. s.t-year-old man who bad a massive brain tumor that bad kept him In a coma for a month. The tumor was so big that lt could not be re~oved within tbe-ttlre"e to five 'mimJtes-1ben a vallable for neurosurgery. With the coolio& technique, White spent 30 minutes removing the tumor. After the operation, the patient was able to sit up and talk with friends. He was able to spend the last days of bis llfe coo· ecious end comfortable. Although White points out that the cooling technique doesn't always work, doctors in Verona. Italy, reported success last )'ear ln cooling the spinal cord to permit surcery. But. White especially wanted to study the performance of the brain in isolation. "I could have continued in a more plodding wax,•• he said> ''Thia is like pushing a peanut across the floor. It takes so long to go anywhere. Initead, 1 used the leapfrog technique: You perform a succasfw experiment and let your imagination guide you to the next one. somebody else will fill in behlrid you." BY 1118, AFl'f;ll he bad kept isolated.monkey brains alive, be was transferring mOn.keys' Uvini headS onto other monkeys' fllhc· tioning but headless bodies bceathi.ng by resl)trator. The headless body kept the new bead nourished with blood, but the bead could nol control its new body because the spinal cord had been severed. No one has yet worked out a way to reconnect the nerve endinls in the spinal cord where much of the com- munication between tbe brain and the body takes place. The transplanted head experl· ment, therefore, cannot now lead to a Frankenstein-type fabricat- ed~, Whitesays. Appbcation of White's ex· • perimental techniques has 'stopped short of development of an emergeo'Cy bram·cooling system for bum ans or of isolation ofthehuman brairf. "We're in a valley right now." Whlt.e says of this line of ex- perimentation. "There is first of .-.:; White doesn't speculate ollfloW far 1ueb research should IQ.: JllJI· own mind and· heart oscUtat.e between science and rellOolU tt "It's fun ror me to come to::tlle lab after all the stress~ of neurosurgery." be said as h• walked through his Brain Research Laboratory at Metro General Hospital. • White's .other world centeit' his religion. He tries to attend mass every day. ,,../!11'1 "You have to believe in w'bat. you 're doing,.. he says. uyoq have to have some sort of philosophy. This neurosurg~ Iii a life and death business. "I like to believe that l'ln u comfortable as anyone in belq able to cope with the s~bJ&t I'm not above praying. I aure c1o believe that I got out of eOm8 operations because I prayed and because of the intervention ol \be good Lord. ' ··I believe the brain is \b• supreme organ and is· the ~ substrata of the mind. My WWtt brinp me face to face with Ml these questions." GoQl's the Real McCoy~ By MARCIA FORSBEllG Ott•OlltYPfMts.tf It could be said that Dr. D. Dicketaon McCoy's mission tn life ls to teach everybody In the entire country the fWldamentals of CardiopUlmonary aesmclta· tlon <CPR>. Sloce that's obviously not feasible. he's 101ne to !}ave to set- tle for a less lofty goal, but a monumental task nevertbe· less -to establlah programs of Advanced Card.lac Life Support (ACLS> in our nation's medical schools. By "teachlnt the teachers." who in tum teach others in a pyramid type of syitem, Dr. McCoy is well on the way to educating a substanti&l number of individuals in llfe·savln1 techniques. An anealbe1lolo1l1t at St. Joseph lbPltal since 1958 and one of the filcomill& 'vlce presi· dents of the Orange 'County chapter of the American Heart Association, the good doctor took his BA pre-medical 4egree from Occidental College, did post. . graduate work at UCLA and toot his MD degree from USC Medical School. He knew bi wanted to tie an anesthe$iologiat since hi.I jWitOY. year ln medical school, and tie believes that he and others m bis position are ah•ays faced with ' .. WE SHOULD BE in the front of any resuscitation effort, since that's what we're eood at," said the Newport Beach resident. He added tllat resuscitation methods that meet American Heart Assoclatlon standards were rust established In 1973, and the Advanced CardJac Life Support course began in 1975. "When the program was de· veloped. I took it up with a fervor. •'This was what I bad always believed everybody working in critical care should be capable of ~particularly anesthesiologists." Th<ise ln critical care come from au comers of medical Ute and include pediatric sureeons, radio)~, cardiologist.a, and coronary and intensive care un· itsrbepolnted out. So it's pne of Dr. McCoy's jobs to teach them the AHA·approved techniques of treating patients with serious heart problems, be it heart attack, f&llureor arrest. But it doesn't •toe there - what be teacbea works on ail· ments other than heart ~o­ blems. trocution, suffocatlon. allergic reactions, poiSoninc, accndental drur overdose, drowning and even auto accident victims. His two-fold mission ls to train the public in CPR and to teacb faculty at medical schools to become faculty lnatructor;1J in ACLS. "Basic life support (CPR> iS an integral part of Ad~a~ced Critical IJfe Support, which Is of no &ood unless CPR has gone on in the first minute,'' he explained. The ABC's of CPR are to establish an airway for the vic-- ti m, breathe for him and stimulate circulation by •~al cJrdiae compression. ACLS involves specia'l pro- cedures. Dr. McCoy said. Extra equipment is needed, in· travenous lines must be established and cardiac dysrbytbniias <abnormal cardiac rhythms) mmt be re- cognized. He has trained instructors at UCI to teach CPR, and they go on to teach students. He recently returned from Dallas wh«e he taught ACL.5 p~ures to 48 faculty mem- bera fri>JJi 3S medical schOols. · -...... . . . • OA.ll Y PILOT ,A Ctw • he rted to · ve our tc:r- ri'1' s.aa~ o1 beer. I told him •t was not &ood for OJaa. <that'• the do1' name>. Vernoa aald it wouldn't do hirn •ll1 harm. After a weell Mbeer Blue l.inored his fl'tler pao. He'd sniff tt, w.it away and 10 a1t by ""e stove and cry. l coUld. s.e sometJunc ' \. ' l~how I Is All s • ~Heart ~ art show and auction nsored by the El Camino Real nior Woman's Club wUJ be held 3 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 25, in the an Clemente Community nter. . Proceed£' will go toward the ub's projects such as Cardio ulmonary Resuscitation <CPR> uipment for the coromunity, arch of Dimes support, the ultihandicapped Center at R.H. ana School and scholarship nds for outstanding high school udents. CPR projects, such as purchas- g equipment or sponsoring l"Ses, have been adopted by range District, California ederation of Women's Clubs, nior Membership. Many or the district clubs have opted to support CPR as one or eir annual endeavors. The exhibition and auction will arranged by Jamin Art Auc- ns of Van Nuys. Oils, litho- lphs. etchings, serigraphs and e er mi'Xed media will be pre- sented. Each piece will be an .j'),vidually custom framed and ff rea,dy lo hang. ·- "When do you work?" Then they demed to know the name of the company:boW long 1've ther•and wher.tt•a located. Jf I explain that I have wor.ked ha.rd at all kJnds of odd and aJdUed Jobs for tbe lut20 yean, they are ulllnipreaaed. Ac- tually.' I'm on Social Security diaabl~ and it'• nOlle of tholr busi- ness. To look at me a peraon would never 1uess there ls an)'tbing physically wrong. D E A R A N N I am also one of the LANDERS: The first few WQmen Jen 1n the question uked m by world wbo gets alimony. every one of the las Believe me, I earned men I have met w.. : · every cent or it. (He wu 1l Admission is $2 per person and ! cb.atnpagne and hors d'oeuvres ~. wlll be served. Further informa- ?) tion Is available by calling the :: Juniors at 492·2062 or 493-3.118. t. Carole Long (left), and Jeanne Loomis practice resuscitating "heart attack victim" played by Andy Loomis. ••• I r·~f. Coastal Part_y Time ~1 PARENTS WITHOUT PARTNERS: The *· Orange Coast Chapter 'kill have a clane&at 9 p. m. ~; Friday. Aug. 19, at the Coat.a Mesa Country Club. ;; other activities on the calendar include ~"'; lfeacb parties Aug. 24 and 31 at Huntington State t.r£, 1tPark <near lifeguatd post 4) and a family pan· '• ake breakfast at 9:30 a.m. Sunday, Aug. is, at ions Park, Cosi.a Me~. • Information about these and oth.er PWP ac-.. tlvjties is availabltl from 546·5788. . BAIUA CORIN'l'WAN YAClfl' CLtJB: A 'i floor show by the Tami Manh Tahitians trom ~ • Los An8eles will hlthlight the seventh annual •" l.,Ou planned by the club Saturday, ~ug. 20, ~nnin& with cocktails at$: 30 p. m. ' J .. • NEWPOltT HARBOR COVNSELING N'J'Et: A cours~ in Youth EffecUveness aming, based ()J) the famous Parent Effective- Tralning of Dr. Thomas Gordon, wUJ be ht in Newport Beach two consecutive :~!~~MKends, Aug. 20·21and27-28. ,.... .Instruct.or will be Lee Hatcbey, MA, a mar- ~llK.!ttie and ftrnUy counselor. Tuition t.rill be charted for the course. ~iMtr,,atlons can be made by calling the center mo. :.c._ _NEWPORT HAaaea SPASTIC LEAGUE: .1.'Dtl leque's annual Cb.ristrnas card party to beneftt the spast.tc chfldten of Oranae County is planned for 5:30·9 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 20, in the Newport Beach home of Mrs. Robert Barneson. Proceeds will Jo lo the buildiog or the first Jive-in home for spastic children in Orange Coun- ty. The home will be located ln Garden Grove on a sil() purchased by the league In 1973. BETA SIGMA PHI: Orange County Council and chapter presidents and selected represen- tatives will have a special philanthropic meeting at8p.01. Wednesday, Aug. 31. Mrs. Gerald Camobell \vU1 be hostess. ART8llmS FOtJNDATlpN: VarjoUs heal\h otaanizat.idns and fa~\UUes ~eived ~.2$0 in grants fo~ research and treatrnent o[ arthritis problems .. Recipients irtelude the Departmen\ of RheumatoJogy at UC Irvine, Vlslttng Nurse As- sochaUon, UCI Medleal Center and th:e Attbrttls ClirttC at Children 'a Hoapital ol Orange Count.)'. • ,. louse and I took/lent)' before I file for divorce.> But l don't dare mentlon It because Women's Ub bu made allmooy a clJrty word. (Ann Landers ~ DE AR ANN f ll I y ANDERS: Don't be so knowing bow ar or an fe styles? Does ...,. what c:Urecllon they'll 10. anything go? Ann Lan- quick to eat your words b(iq•t ~le otf. I've been dera's completely new about transvestites. thete. You haven't. -•:the Bride's Gulde" Some may be falthful t•LL TAKE MINE tells what's riaht for husbands whO 'et their STRAIGHT, TllANKS today's weddings. For a Jollies from cross-DEAR FRIEND: U I copy, send a dollar bill, dresslne and go no were a drlakl.D' womaa plus a long , self· further, but my ex-I'd d.rl8k to tbat. Tbank• addressed, stamped en- •How do J answer these ill-mannered slobs - which is everybody? - A.A.G. DEAK A.A.G.: ln our cou.nir)'. "Wbe ... do yoa work?" la eonaldered a perfectly respectable conversatloaaJ opener. If you resen& the question you could say, .. rm a booker." I& will probably brJ•c &be . caala to a promp& halt and I.bow the q•esUc.ltt dull you llave a lfeaae of ba•or. (I hope.) husband was one and no f ............. I ">A ts attractlve male was sale or ..... _... ve ope <-cen s>OSta1e> Wl'lbbl-. to Ann Lan~ers, P.O. He puaded aro .. -..a the What kind ot wedding Box um. Chlcago, JU. UQU goea with today's new 60611 streets of Union, N.J., in ' drag wlth the police · - close on his heels. I spent thou.sands of dollars on psychiatrists who tried to help him but It was like throwing money in tbesewer. Kinky is ldnky LOt>K SMASHING WHEN YOU ENTER A ROOM Call your apparel con1u1tant. GAIL-833-3495 and there's no way of _________________ _. Dream Books Sales Rise Mail order cata.101s, containing everything from common household producta to ran and ex. otic items, are a method or marketlng adult fan- tasies, children's dreams -and just plain customer convenience. The f atD.lliar 1Ut books that seem to be on everyone's coffee table during the Christmas season are only the tip-of the mail order "iceber1." Although a few suppliers handle up to 50 percent of thelr business during these holidays, Dee. 25 makes·UttledJ.lference to most . The value of purchases that result from browsing through mail order catalogs or answer- ing direct mail sales promotions is $60 billion per year. Direct marketing accounts for 12 percent of all consumer purchases. The most familiar maU order compantea -Sears Roebuck. Montgomery Ward and J.C. Penney -have combined aales or $33 billion in this area. Customers who r~eive these malled materials might want to know how their names were chosen. According to Direct Mail /Market· Ing Asroctation lnc., there are about 21,000 com. mercial mailing llst.s ava.ilabl#for one·time ren· tal through mailing list brokers or dfrectly from the owners of the lists. Many businesses normal· ly compile and maintain their own lists also. Neiman-Marcus, the Texas-based store with a reputation for the most exotic mail order pro- ducts, offers such unique gifts as a Chinese junk, a pure-bred American buffalo, a paleontological safari, or ah ark with two animals each of 500 species. Anyone who must ask for prices prob- ably can't afford them. No matter how ex· pensive, customers simply fill out the order form and give their charge card number. Direct mail also has a serious side. for the customer and the marketer. Many relatively low volume items cannot be marketed easUy except through mail order. Shopping by mall has increased substantial· ly over the years ror a number of reasons. Work- ing women don't always have the time for shop- ping. Transportation costs and parking problems often discourage travel for shopping. And, there are a greater number ot items available by mail. The mail order shopper sitting at hotne selecting potential purchases should follow a few simple guidelines to avoid an unhappy rnaJI or- der experience. -It's best to shop only through reputable dealers wbo are known to make good on thelr guarantees. -Pon 't buy from any mail order source that will not allow a return of its goods. -1.oOk for a guarantee statement on the mail order literature. -Print or type the order, double-checkJnc an figures and taxes. -Pay only by check, money order~ credit card. ' • Hair j)eslgn •Skin Care • Sculptured Nalls • Manicure/Pedicure 1120 Irvine Blvd .. Newport Beach -642·8'84 • You've had breast surgery ... and now? L1!1>~Pef'S frc."lt{l rn:::l so 00 \OJ .... , .. .no !/'OP r ;.no ,., Tit'..> o rcw ~m~or k<r1r.. Iner• out lot lh' • '"" !11no Vou re rrae WJrO ~ IOll !!'I,€( aX1 'rOJ W<Y•' cr.e<n to ~r.c,w 111 Vo... ~! to looic rx>VOI Ol..1 yo: >J 10 IOO busy lo wary )n.J{lle ~With VOlJ l •Q.Jld fined 11$ lnQJe snope CO'lbms IO 'Pl l'Ody. ~ 10 PJ A f,()11 IOoTI base t:lfeott-es as voo dO 0'1d wcnl mtole Sl3"91Ne sic¥'\ Vou <XTI H'!ci~ conlldenl VOJ loOk 0'1d loel ~al. e.'8r\ al the 00 ~not StlP n 0'1d dlsc.o.<er tQN Tru-t.1({ cai help k8ej) )'OlJ fl'lOV(lQ • ~A~K '-100 · MEDIC.At MART I . I , • I. -RentO 'lento ROys LOS ANGELES (AP> -Once upon a time, t"'o restles&, bouse..wi ves. pooled their $3S savlnes. Qffered to do "anything legal and kind" and madtt a milUon doll us. A fairy tale.? Well, list. to the stocY of Ren- ta Yebta. •'tt ·w·as 411.a years ago," rememberf tila Greene. "We could~'t find jobl. There waa • nothing two bousewives who drove caxs and madedinn~ C1JQ!d do." Then one day, TQby " Brown looked at Lila across a pile of laundry and struck on the answer -they wou.Jd do eyery t.hing for everybody. ''We'll call ourselves yentas/' Toby said, us· jng a Yiddish expression for a busybody. Her passion for rhyming took over and Renta Yenta was born. .. With a name like that. we have been a hit," aaidLila. Soon, the two ladles were carting around gorillas and camels, de- livering a girl in a mum- my case and sendin& a stuntman m a spacesuit ~p the side of a s)fyscraper .. A woman wanted to. cheet up her husband. llenta Yenta had the •nswer. They suspended a belly dancer on a scaf- fold in front of bis office window. For various clients. they taught a parrot to Ulk, delivered gift. wrapped matzoh balls, l,aunched a bride and groom in a hot air balloon and dressed in costumes when no one else would. Toby was Yogi Bear; Li)a was her trainer. "It was 110 degrees in that eostume." Toby recalls. ••1 thought I'd die." In the early days of Renta Yenta. Toby and Lila laughed a lot. Then Lila Greene (left) and Toby Brown (second from right) built million dollar business by 'doing anything legal, nice. ' business began booming Their phone became so busy they had to get an answering service. But, alas. they were not proriting. "There was no other business structur~ we c~a looi lr b ~ause­ thet!e had never been a .. busmen like ours ... Toby recalls. •'It was very diffi ,Jt pricing things. Someobe would call and say 'We'd like a camel tb meet someone at the a(rport.' And I'd say. • Uo'w much could a C:jlmel cost?' Eventually, r learned to say, 'I'll call you back with a price.• " Lila, mother of five, and Toby, mother of three, wanted no help from men. They bad de- vis~ Renta Yenta as an escai>e route from finan- oial dependency on their bus bands. But 'roby and Lila swallowed their pride enc>ugb ~ hire • male btrsi.Dess manager . .. Now we have to lie to the buslneas manaeer llke we used to lie to our husbands." Lila said, laughing. DAILY PILOT a · SOUTH COAST . ·. [ OVTDOORS) • ACI'ORS CO.PP -- Is always searching for. new or •xpertenced In , ... talent for films, TV, • " stage & commercials. (714) 957"°282 . DAILY PILOT FOR THE SHAPE OF YOUR FUTURE U1E Wt4AT YOU HAVI N.A T'UftAU.V ••• MO MACHINES ONLY IODV 6 MINO YOGA and CONTOURING EXERCISES t Ms-saoo I '-,,, " Let u. help you CtU19 • ~ bdlltlflit tlOme. Our ttli{'*f deooqtoq Merch OUf ·~ and dee.Ion II~ ~ "°'-~ uve vour time but to otrwtlil; wry beat color Md tatdc OOt ordln1t1on1. There I• flO eddltlonel ch1rg1 r.t thl• ..vice. You ~ onty for lht men::hl~ you eelect. • • Drlperiel • • C'""9tlng • W .. Coveting •Fumlt11r1 ~·· • Uphollt«lng .. ~ • Bedtoom Enaetnblle - C°"'9 In or Clll today tOt M'I appblntment In yoUt home -&U-NIO. SAVE20% NOWJ 23 Fashion lstan~ Newport BHCh W. 88 Enderle s=enter Newpt. Freeway at E. 11 Tustin• 5'4·1SSO It's HAWTHORNE CHRISTIAN SCHOOLS for the right start in life Kindetgarten thru 81b Grade • All·dly classes EltlUJl.t~- Fau Semester Starts Tuelday, Sept. 6 . Registration Fee ONLY $20 -Reasonable Tuition A¥f. l"O"~-A.v-i'-ioJ'J -(1,•,Y~ -,f -JI f~ 7• ....... ___ ...,1,;,..,., -'vft '<~.:.: , . .,.,;,.-:i -•• .,~".j '"". lt'\:·~1..,;.i,om..<\l.,.,.i•--• ,..:~ . .,.n.,.,.~ FOUNTAIN VALLEY• 16835 Brookhurst 1ust "°'"' of Warner 714-962-3312 d I I x "A Private School of Drstinclion Founded in 1942" .. ---. .._,, ______ , __ ....._ __ . ~· {:J DAll.Y,.ILOT Thul"!d!X.@Auat 11, 1!77 Ate Thrushes Lushes?· Birdies BomDeCJ . ., DU ao•a&CK One of tht leut dltcu11ed .odal problems ~ our ~ todQ "t.baL of dnink• btrds. • l"m 90t taltial about 1our a bl.rd wbo dri.Dkl a UWe 1 at Ole aftlee Cb.rllUllu party CM' r wbo ba9 a nip to fet bhu throulb tbe da7. I 'm talklnl about c~ aleobollam amoac our fe tbered trlendl. 7 ftrat encounter with a feetbered lush wu a duck back io Ohio who cau1bt cold one day. I broulbt him into the house and 1. ca.e bbn a drink from a bottle I kept around cnly in tbe event that a duet causht cold. Prem that day oo, be drove me eruy with bls cout hing and haeldnl and blowing bis nose. I 1 • figured be was weak and in-.. .It seoure and let it 80 at that. t ) When we moved west, I was re- lieved to fmd wonderfully, well- adjusted stable birds with ob-vi o us l y few pulmonary disorders. ' Then, last week I noticed a few birds laughing it up while balanc- ing rather unsteadily on a pyracantha bush. They would peck away on a few berries, become hysterical, and then have another go at tbe berries. I called up a friend w1:>J:!;'~ happens to be one ol tbe 1 ()mithologists in the country, who confirmed my suspicions. The birds were bombed. She reported that word of her great supply of fermented fruit had spread s o extensivel1 Horoscope: Leo AT WIT'S END throuattout the country that mi-cratory rob1na went aeveral hun- dred miles out "of their way to .,Stop off at Betty'• place for a Ut· tleaauce." Mockinlblrda bad been ban1· inc around her house for weeks waiting for the berries to aee. And ltories bad drifted back to / her of birds so "relaxed" they passed berries from one to another beak to beak. As my best ctrl friend and I stood at the window "Watching this omitholodat's orgy, I said absently, "I wonder wb7 birds drink?'' "I don't know," she said, "Do you suppose they have days when the kids won't pick up tbe nest and they find wofms betweei the pages ol library book.a and the male is fooling around witb bis secretary while she sjts at home on another batch of egas and a pl&(lt developer is reiontna their busbudttallstacks upon her?" 1 •1 think I'm aoina to cry .. I sald, slouching ln a chair. f "I know," she ~aid. ..Have another pyracantha berry before we start lunch." Take Short Trip FRIDAY, AUGUST 19 capabilities. B SYD .. _, oMa aa LIBRA <Sept. 23·0ct. Y "''u " 22): Move ahead, take ARIES <March 21· initiative; trust judg- April 19): Go slow -m e nt, hunc hes. Be avoid co-signing, making direct, dynamic, confi- commitments. Time is dent. You will be on a on your side. Play wait-more solid founaation. iog gam e. Accent on SCORPIO (Oct. 23-c ooperati ve e fforts, No v . 21 ): Stick to partnership, marriage. number "S." Be ready TAURUS (April 20-for change of scenery. f May 20): Low-key ap-Make inquiries -don't r proacb is best -. past o!). accept superficial ex- ligations prevent free-planations. Dig beneath • and-easy decisions. surface, go behind the Accent on work, service, scenes. basic issues and health. SAGl'ITAlltus <Nov. GElllNI <May 21-Jun~ 22-Dec. 21): Accent on 20): Accent on creativl· building for future in- ty, .. sp.~eading . the ' vesting in enterprise' that message, getting nd of has potential, making burden ~ot your own to v a l u able cont a c ts . c:arry ~n ~irs' place. Romance, friendship P.qpulanty. m~reases as and recreation also views are vindicated. figure in scenario. CANCER <June 21-CAPRICORN (Dec. t ~ • r ·-···-· JUiy 22): New approach 22·Jan. 19): Be positive to~lderind~vidualscould concerning terms - bring desired results. check resources of one Home, property hll· who makes slick claims. provement may be in Steer away from any ten· picture. You end one dene1_ towards se lf- pbaseof activity. deception. Build on solid LEO <July 23-Aua. 22): baae.· Short trip is on qenda. AQUARllJS (Jan. Close nelgbbor, relaUve 20-Feb. 18): Solidify might be involved. )OUJ(·ranae plans. Your Favor ls requested, ts ;;;;;;;;-=:;;;;;;:;:; ~~::::=~~ FABtJtOUS SAVINGS 0N~PATIO FURNITURE IN STOCK titne·consuming but you should do it. If you go out of your way -you will be repaid many tlmea. VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept, 22>: Accent on re- sourcefulness. VersaUU- ty can win major poiata. Financial picture ls brlabter than might be •pparent. Know it and take chance on your . .. Erom C1 ·· .Rec::all THROUGH AUGUST 31, 1977. .. -.... _ - MARMADUK g.,. "Looks like a meeting of Car Cf\aaera Anonymous!" :uNKY WtNK ERB EAN .. FRE.E. K11iENS FoR SALE } rANK McNAMARA DDAY'S CRDSSIDRD PVZZLI •3 In a head· UNITED Feature Syndicate slrong man· ner d' Barga•n 45 WOOdy fibe< •6 ThebOss: ?words •9 Cahforn11 community 53 In add1t1on 5' 01ng- Jerk 55 Point tn time ~t-':'tii 56 Canadian l•bef.:its lnlormal 11 ~mong ti Rodents 13 Fruit salad · ingredient 1 lllhuanian 21 Makesa 2 Trop!cal tree decision 3 M1croorg1n-22 Meat Item ism 24 Mo~s Into view 25 Mean1of ascent character 37 --one'9 laurel a 39 Oeeoll ~Hurl 42 Owns up 43 N.Y. athlete 45 Smallcl<um '6 Follows ctoeely • 47 8ru11th "t>eraon 48 lnjlUf« 49 P. Moalem natJVe SO Utltt by Tom BatJuk by Ferd and Tom Johnson , .............. .. __ SL.l!EP IN A TREE, LIJ<.E #-V Jt:tt,'v:.sr • r • ..... DOOLEY'S WORLD DR. SMOCK YOU SAY IF we csrve YOLJ ONS MORS e.owr...-OF CHICKE3N SOUP, YOU' L..t..-PO WHA-r, MRS. Pr1""-r? S-18 by Mell Thcnday, August 18, 1977 PEANUTS TME WEOOING WIU. TAKE PLACE HERE IN THE BACK l(ARO TME ~Cff'TION WIU.. SE HELD ~STAIRS IN THE 006 MOUSE OKAY.' OKAY.1 W&'L..L-SW11""CH you -ro eee~ CON SOM Mc:: 1""0MORROW! by Roger Bradfield by George Lemont by Templeton and Forman .. .. . . . . . Q DM.VPILOT £fj W@lli1r? ~@r?Wn@@ ........................ DEAR PAT: Wlwm I bad my wuber repaired neeatly, the aervice man Po(nted out that I wu •et· tla• "noo-Dbosphate detercem buildup" in my wuber and this could damqe tbe finish u.d re- qu.lre 8DOtber service call for cleanfna. I• this true? B.E., Costa Mesa Seme appUuee IBdutrJ esenU"9 WU M. FrlUlldia D. 1.bldsay, m .... er el prodad enlaa· ... ,.. 'fte • .,... Co. ..... ~ to &lte .u. aeelaU.. of Dome Appllaaee Maallfadurers. Undsay reeaatly reporled to laome ecoGOmle1 eeaeaton ud lDdmtry leaden U.at earbomates are a pear mbstibde for pbospilates fw eoadldonial die walla wa&er and removl.Dg Mil beeaase U..y read wtdt minerals la llard wa&er aad Ute IOll to form a preelpHa&e wblcla won't dluolve ud eu't be waabed away. HJglaer alkallnlty of tbe aon· pbospbate de&ergea& ma&edal wu blamed for the potmtlal problem• yoar aenice maa oaUIAed. se .. p Collector Smrtfl Orart~ DEAR PAT: Recently I found several filled Orange premium stamp books in my house. Can they still be redeemed? L.E ., Costa Mesa Orange stamps were discontinued la 1970, bot you wU1 be paid $1.2t for each ol your filled books if yoa mall them to Alfred M. Lewis, Inc., Box M, Riverside, CA. 92501. Get a Ba•dl.e on that Coolaeare DEAR PAT; I own a set of Duncan Hines stain· less steel cookware. The handle on the large skillet needs to be replaced. Is there a store or re- pair shop able to do this for me? E.B., Costa Mesa Contact the Metal Cookware Manufacturen' Association, Box D, Fontana, WI 531%5. Uthey can't belp, let AYS know. Dut11-lree ltenu Mag Be Tazed DEAR PAT: Are items purchased abroad at a duty-free shop or free port subject to U.S. customs duties? 'N.W., Newport Beach Articles acqulred abroad (outside the U.S.) in a duty-free shop or free port are subject to U.S. customs duties, and may be included lo your customs exemption, according to customs officials. The &erm duty-free outside the U.S. means that the merchandise is being sold for consumption in a duty.free area in the country where it was purchased. It, therefor.e, ls free of that country's dutles. · Ade For Who• /tf a Bell Toi,. Free DEAR PAT : Which hotels and motels throughout the country have toll-free phone num- • bers? I'm also interested in toll-free car rental sources, especially in the East. I°d like to save on long distance charges. D.L., Mission Viejo The Traveler's Toll-Free Telephone Directory contains toll-free numbers for more than t,000 hotell and motels by city and state. Ustlngs are alphabetical. Car rental chains, major national and ID&eraaUonal alrllaea, campgroands, honeymoon resorts, travel agenelea and~ ranches also Ire included for all 50 states. ,,Us 1Z8·page directory sells for S:.50. Wri&e to Landmark Publlshlnt, Box 3287 · R, Burlington, VT. 05401. • .,,_ Z.a Z•a Clai,.. A•otlaer Co••unaer . DEAR PAT: I a}so am a victim of tb~.~a Zsa cosmetic offer. My $4 check was mailed last ~P· tember. I sent followup letters whln my order didn't arrive, but nothing has happened. Can you help me.too? · B.A., HuntmgtQn Beach Your comptahat ls be1Dt forw~ to Mary Ayres, consamer services representatlv~ tor Fatnl· ly Weekly magaalDe, la wldcb &H Zsa Zsa eos· met.la achertlaement appeared~ Family W~y bas contacted ~ advertller on behalf jaf>00ler A YS readen .. rteacl.Dg aoa-dellvery 1'i'oblems wltb um pnicblct. :All bave-beea bUd1ed satlila'ttolily. I HO colliMiSStOtB S.ALISte4 I ADDS UP TO .aAMT SA VIM4H :.·~-;· ---. .. _,_ ·-.... 5,125Zt ZOOM REMOTE CASM-tO IJ "'•-"' I 01 TBMS TO J6-MONTHS _ -~ J2126DWI' I SJ2127 REMOTE IN STOCK JZSJ4X SJ253S IEMOTI fN STOCK • ; rr\1 1 r~-~ I ...::;;__;.. ! - --1 ' ~ D0% Solid-state ClilOMA(OlOIII Fa TURES • ·~SGlclSlate • Cilar swry Wfli .~,_. . • llectlOlk Twl- • Mo ... CIMllll• • Clra1 ual•Pkhiil•T• -3-YIU PICTUU TUii WARIANTY l•YR. PARTS& SERVICE J2140XI SJ114t UMO'lllM STOCK ............ JltJlpl•• llectr••lc • IH~ Sell• Shit. ......... ....._ • l'•ll AIC w...., ,-----. :~-I:~ ' ' I ' '• !_~ --~! T..... JltJI 2311 DIAGONAL DMITH FOil ?I ---· t ~ JJ544 JH42 SJ254J UMOTI IH STOCK t ~ --- .__. ~--·-, .. ~ ... ..:.__ 0 --~-.. ~--.l.·. --~-: ~~ • NEW 1977 ASTIE Ser #2C11 B7U534332 53691 Sf J7' PER MONTH TOTAL DOWN ONLY s395 CASH OR TRADE S395 total down. 48 monthly payments of S97 79 Deferred price $5088 92 APR 13 48'41 On Approved Credit IMMEDIATE DELIVERY NEW 1977 l FIREBIRIS 33 MPG HtGHWAY 23 MPG CITY . l eMd • .... rHMlts ef tfth c..._ted or cerMecf tty the U.S. ••ir....t 'r•t•ctlett A9•"cy the ty,lc.. ta• ...... offllb•etildelt .......... be JJ MPG dty. JJ MPG M91way. Y- achld......_.-y.,~. ......... ""'" ·~1~cubic Inell tnQlno l 11_.,d '~ IMMEDIATE DELIVERY • TRANS AM • FORMULA • ESPRIT • 350's • V-6's Ser 1'2M27B72348874 53995 s9999 PER MOtmt . , TOTAL DOWN ONLl' s595 I CASH OR TRADE S595 00 Total Down. 48 Monthly Payments of s~ 99. Deferred Price S539'4.52 APR 13.09" On ApptOYed Credit IMMEDIATE DELIVERY . NEW , 1977 . PONTIAC , IRAID ·PRIK IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Ll MODEL SJ MODEL J MODEL ' I ptc;nnous au11N1u UMSHATl .... lfT ~ ,,......_.... ,..._ •r•delne 1114111· -•: Cll•ATIVI PARTICIPATION, =.,........,,,, N~ .. .qi.CA Wllil-L Crelt. t~ .. ~. O~Hellr ... IS. ~ M. c.ordft. ISIO .._,. ~~Beech, CA'16'0 tlflllt IMltl-• Is conduclff by • CIRMl'llf Pll1Mnlllp. Mlrglnl M. Cordes Tlllt ,..._,, •• , filed Wltll .... C-'Y o.'11 • Oranoe County on A~ . ~tm. ,.,.,.1--------------------- j ~ Orente CM'I Delly Pliot, A,..alt, M,1',S.pt. I, 1977 PVBIJC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE UleALNOflC• MO'rtCW INYITINO a UK • PVBUC NOTJC£ PJCT'lnous ausi ... a llAMa STATIIMllCT Tiie fOflowl"9 -llOft 11 dolft9 ~ ncssa: · PUBUC NO'ftCE . PUBUC NOTlCB 111CT1nous •Ulf .. ss HAMS STATIIMll.lff TM folltwlftg p«-61 ... 1Mf.. 119UU! IT'S l"AHTASTICI, m L t7ttl St., Colt• Mew. CA t»27 Relend JOHt>h LeC:oll, attt N. Merlflll Pedflce, L4N19 __,.,CA~ Tiiis ""'-' Is cAlftdlldlll lly • • dMdulll. Rolend JoMt)ll l.aCoq This ltetll\'WIM •es flied •ltll U. County Clwk ol OI'-. Gount• Oft .luly 22. lt77. ..,... PublllMcl Oranoe Coect Oelly Pl.._, July 21,end ~•.II, \I, Im 1124-1' PUBUC NOTICE lllCTlnOUI 9\JJINISS ~STA-YaMelCT TM followlllt ___ _..._. . neues: a. ~TM'S, SDUltlstoUt.. Cost•MeM.CA. m• INr" SMphenl ~ W'9Vl9- t• CeucMI, N9wport lleecll. CA. nMO Dell s. ~ 1"5 No. ·-£.. -· UllflM601 This buslllffs Is concN<teel lly • 91Mrel 1»f1nt<tfllp. .... ~ .......... Tiiis SIM_.,. •• filed wltfl .. c.u.ty OM ol Onno1 County °" JW., 12, "71. F1tW PWl!tlled Ol'enge Coesl Oelly Pl .... July •• endAuQuSt•. 11, "· 1977 ~ core REM. TV • INYESTMl!N"Y COMP~. 1aN_,on C»nter on., 1--------------~111l~ .. edl.cA'2WO 11111fti.. ""91<1S Cite, u .... PlJBUC NOTICE T•...-.lrv1M,CA'271J 1------------------ Tlllt_,,_la ~.., .. -lht»ijiOIMed ~.tloft ~ tfllll • pettnerslllo IUNatClllCOU•TOl"CALll"OltNIA Amendlt~lf~YOl"O•ANOE WUllenl F,..clt GMe "Tiiis st-t •• "'" wl81 .. '*"""' Cl4ll1I ol Or .. (¥1111l'Clfl-. OROER TO SHOW CAUSI! fi'Ol'CHANGE OF NAME ........ ~~NUMHllA~ PUBLIC NOTICE •--------------11.•m .. ..., 111 Ille_. .. of Ille ~l<atlon., 9'0NALO llERRY STOWERS Fw Clle1199ofHetN lllCTITIOOS IUSINESS NAMIEITATEMENT Tiie fOfl-1119 person Is cloift9 llUSI· nus 8!1: PUbllthed 0rtlfl9e CO.II Oelly Piiot, A~. II, 11,U,Sept. I, 1977 PUBLIC NOTICE "'CTITIOUS aUSINIU NAME ST ATUlll!lllT Tiie lol'-lnl -IOM are CIDl119 lllnl· MSsas: OHOARO AWD l"RANCIS, 1'7 ~· ....... Y9UM 9"dl, CA n.Jt AM'-V T'hofNs Or!OMo, 141 CM- QV!te, u.,.e lluc.h. CA m51 M~ H. French. m Meftanlte, L99une 11eec11. CA ms1 Tiiis 11U:Slfto1 Is condllctld lly • 99M'•' pertnel'Slllp. -yT.Oncaro This..._,,. -flied with tM Gou11ty oer11 o1 or .... o.unty" Jvly 29,im. n.. Pulllltl!M OrM!lll ())est Delly Piie« Alle.4.t1.tt..ts,1m • aas.n PVBUC NOTICE RONALO BERRY STOWERS hH llltd • petition In this c«1rt fOf' en .,. ci.r elrowlng petltloMr lo clle1>99 Ills neme from RONALO BERRY STOWERS to RONALO BARAY STOWERS. II II IWrlb'i Of'd!f'ed tllel ell .,.,_ lnt1~ec1 In .,. matt..-eforHeid • peer ~ INS COllrl In Oeperlment , •t 100 Civic C"'ter OrlYI Wttt. Senta AN. c..i1tem1e. on s.pi 6, 1m. et 11 :GO o'dOdt ..,,.., end 111en eftCI V.rt lo'-~ It.,.,, ltwy NW, wt1v Mid •lt.klo ""chlr>Qlt of ....... -nolbt.,..,I.... . It Is fWlller ordered !Ml • COPY ef Ulh order'°,,...,_ be pWll\Md"' Or ... eo.sl Delly Piiot. • -- of _,Ml clrClll.wtlon, putillslled '" "'1s co.ll!Cy .wt IMst orKI e WWlt -tour <.1111--Uth ......... prior lo lfle dey of selcl ........ 0.-Jl/llr"-ttt7 • 8~W.SUMNl:R JullltOf""' ~lor c:-. .................. ,...,... . ......... tM.u.-.e.ec•.ut»O T...,.._:7-...JMt A.......,. .... ,....._ ~ISl!ef Or~ CMst Deity ll'flet. Jiiiy 2*, ... __ 4, "· ,,, "" Jm..71 PUBUC NOTICE I ' ·. .. D ~ A . I L· y ~1Hotlcr. All real estate advertised 1D tbJa newspaper is sub· Jeet to tho Federal Fair Housln1 Act of 1988 wblcb makes It illegal t.o advertise "any pre· ference, llmltaUon, (>r dl.scrhninaUon baaed on race, color, reU1ion, sex, or national origin. or an intenUon to make any such preference, llmita· Uon, or d.laerlmioatlon. •' 'Ibis newspaper will not knowtnf ly accept any advert alng for' real estate which is in viola· lion of the law. SOMETHING FOR EYERYOME! Whether you like the beach -or simply walk alODg the ocean -or possibly do a little surf fishing -you have it all with this superbly designed 5 bdrm .• 6 bath home, located just 1· door away from Ocean Blvd. in CdM. You will delight lD the myriad of love- ly detalll incorporated in•tbis elegant 5,000 sq. ft. home. $350,000 -You own the land -not leasehold. 759-0811 HO.es for Sale I 002. G...e..a. I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• GentrCll I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Soler H.ated Pool · Large 2 story Costa Mesa 4 bedroom borne. Heavy ·lhake roof, custom brick and tile work. Gas BBQ. Low maintenance yard. Hurry, nee<b TLC! Save m. Priced only 182,500. Submit your tenm. Call .~. ... ""'' ~ HERITAGE . • REALTORS IN NEWPORT IEACH MOT A HO HOM COMOOMIMIUM! This one's exciting! And only $86.500 for a Back Bay view. 1440 sq ft of llv· Ing space. 3 bedrooms, 3 baths. 2 stories and a sunny patio. Attractive wood exterior gives a woodsy feeling. That price again: $86,500. Go for it! IJ~ICJUI: li()MI:§ REAL TORS': 675-6000 2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar •also In Mesa Verde, at 546·5WO HCMMtfOI~ • ....................... tOOJ . ..................... . A11resslve. up_andlng 114•1 Estate Company needs top ~ucer to rnanaee e1Ubllah.ed Costa Mesa olflce. For confidential inter w. contact J.C. Nash. 768-7700 PRICE REDUCED This beautiful 1padous Mesa del Mar borne has been reduced suoo. Features • bedrOOm,,, 2 baths. brealrfaat bar. hUi• ramilY tuninl. btg comer lot. freahlJ Nint· ed. beautlfuHy landscaped " i patios. Asldn&S82.700. • 546--4141 ~ COATS &WALL ACE REAL ESTATE INC. ~~ I BALBOA rotMt Wood & Brick·~ cov- ered cottage wilb lots of warmth & character! 3 Bedrooms • large master suite upstairs with balcony. Large eara1e. Close to Up of peolnsuJa. 5149.500 PETE BARRETT -R~ '42·5200 BEACH & OCEAN VIEW 3 Bdrm&. lim. rm.. 2 baths, beaut. cpt•1. bltns, (rplc. dbl. 1ar. Ir room fOC' boat & trtr: Bll cor. lot w;spri.oklers & view of aolr coune. 118,500 feealmple. JACOIS REALn 675-6670 Ge11ral 1ooi GeMNI 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Sensuous bacbe'°-' con· domin1um with beacli & ocean view lroro master bedroom suite plus secluded loft d en. Cathedral living room hosts Swedish fireplace & overlooltt private cocktail balcony. $83,900. Please call 9'2·7188. GARDEN GROVE 3 BR. 2 ba, dble gar., COY patio w/brick BBQ 560.950. See to apprec. 646-3828 5'5-34&3 •TIMtl.!XES •FOUR.PLEXES Available. Sunset Heigbta and downtowll Huntlnlton Beaeb. Good tax s!Mlten & appreeaa· tlon. P1lced from S18SJOOO and up. Call for details. COUNTY PROPERTY Cute. remodeled 3 bdrm. home on huge lot. Won't last! Just listed~ Near Orange County Airport. $73,900. • a11£1l.ISTATt 3115-1 ... II.YD., ctSTA MESA • 556-7777 • K€Y I P.E:AL TORS A TENHIS AMYOME7 By0....- 3 br, 3 ba Big ~yn. Townhome. Lusury • features. Dramatic architecture! Tennis, pool & jacuzzi. Ow~r: agl. 759-0087 bom 3 BR , 3 ba., 1tr lot Brkk patio. ll .000 PENIN 'ULA huant·, l bdrm". 3 bu • all 1ti l..ovcly n 11hborhood. a '"' from th be ch $195,000 BIL L GRUNDY . REALTOR . • •• l . . ,...t h (J/'1 (.•t(ll • 11411 1001 ............................................... llVI E TERRACE. CdM Picture the ocean as seen thru beautlful. lush 1reen f0Jia1e & a 1tand of stately pmea. rrom your kitchen. llvtng rm & mstr. bdrm. windows. 10Xl00 Fl. lot. 3 Bdrms .. 2 baths. with new carpetmR thruout All for just Slf'2.500 671-4400 llG CANYON TOWMHOME-' 145,000 Country club atrr1osphert:' You'll lovt" this spacious Greenbrier model with lgt: master BR suite & s1ttm_g rm up '>Lairs & 2nd BR & bath dn. Lgt' dining rm. fireplact with logs. hugt patios & bright kitcht:n Pool & tenni!> court 21 I I San Joaquin HIUs Rood NEWPORT CEMTH. M.I. 644-49 I 0 Geftffal 1002 G....-ot 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• MAIN ATTRACTION Xtru Sharp Single Story 2 Br Condo with ... hake roof. ga:. f1replJ u. p.1t111 pool & jacu111 3 Y \'JI~ new ·aeaut1lul park hkl• settm~ near Sn '"·I Plaui. Call no" 1.11 ..,,., SS&,900 ~:~tfl -ANYTIME ~ COATS&WALLACE REAL ESTATE, INC. OCEAMAtR YOUR OWN PARK An act1H· family w1I have years of enJoymen m thti. attractive lt:a'I llluff's <·ondo Overlook mi.: an cxpansl\e tree· lmoo ~n.·cnbelt 2 lovcl 111.lrm!. ,, c·overcd df>t· 111 'lt'W your park ht> Jul 1ful s t ep ... a' t•r k1t <:hen rloubh.: ~lll a,.:t• I do~e Io !>()()Is & be!.l ol a IV .i H'r} modt!bl pnt·e c Jll 11.., for d<.·tatls 64~ 7171 "',. ,., 'I• 1 \ • t " ~ Walkt!r t: l r.~ Beal l".sl1h1 i t f :Nn NIG[L tlA"-.[ Y & ASSlJCl i\HS MISA Val)f A CHARMING Duplex, 3 IEAUTIPUI. HOME Br, Z Ba, & t ~r. 2 Patios, Om-Ol Qt.Ir fin t . Re-.dy Close to wnms 1162,000 to mo"e 10 Quiel str et, _Owner 640·7030 bdrms, la.m rm. damn rm wet bar •I'd priced t sell fotst .It with fas escrow It w11l sell ltsel when yuu •et> st the fin Ume Call ror your ap. pomtment 5'6·1313 CORONA HIGHLANDS The ideal comb1natl0ll of a new home 1n an ~i.t abl1xh~d neighborhood. featuring all the latest appoint· me nts. Oversated garage. large rooms, 3 bath, step down wet·bar , ~~=;;;~~~~~~ mini ocean view, all Cully landscaped, walktn& dis· ~ lo private beach. Sl.95,000. fee CLASSIC IEAUTY VA TYMS Practically new. Charm· Ing 11pacious 2 stry home. Over 2300 sq ft. Walk·in bar, plush rust cr pt1ng. Frt brick p:1t10. Nr. So. C4LL 644-7211 :Nn NIGH OAIL;[Y & ASSl:JCIATES Coas t Plat.a & all•====----- "#I In CoUfontla" • NEWPORT HEIGHTS R-2 Cute 2 bedroom home with fireplace and French doori.. patios large fenced backyard with trader access off al· ley. Z.Ooecl R-2 and only S82.000 st'h<lols Make >our orrer Owner Must MU! I£ .Qu~il & i:ct in before i.chool Lowest priced Ocean Plac. start s Onlv S97 .9UO view avail 2 Frplc's. 3 Prap--Lf- 545·94!n BR. fam·rm. formal din , :f-~o . Spa~h me warm & m 1400 OWll\~ llACH v1tmg. Great entertain • Real Estate ment home un,ooo 1114 • OME OF THE White Sa1h. Way. 759.94411 MICEST HOMES OWNER ANXIOUS ~ On Wei;t Side. Approx LOW! LOW! LOW! EXCLUSIVE Ll\e m a Costa Mei.a 1500 sq IL. 3 Br. dm area, beaut frplc & detached 2 car gar. S68,900. Ope n House Sal1Sun 12·5. 2130 Continental. 645·401-l Greenbrook home. Close CdM l' • to everything, school~. . tstmgs i.llopping and parki.. Bes R --~ii~/1ho::r1taf~ru! Roger's ealty av_o_w_NE-R Mfl..2313 · r•--...--..... --.. 67-.S ... ·~ .. 1111111 .. -..... ..,......_.., Sharp 2 sty. SBr. n-rna, [ij;i~lii ~~ ~~~~~;f~€~ MESA VERDE LUCKY CHARMER ~ 1 1'".a 1n\11 ' ti/, 1,, , f \ • / m~ l Cm ! Mw1 t11tr1J dtl to&., income Sl22,SOO. --- HALPIMCHIN REALTORS 675-4392 DUPLEX 4 Bdrms. up. 2 bdrms. down . Sundecks. balconies & palio, JUS steps to beach. 1180,000 BIG IUY·CDM __.._ Big lot·big potential for ---------c e'<tra big unit 3 Bdrm, ~ 673-3663 548-0715 Eve · associated 8110Kf.:!S RlJ\L TOPS l v1'. W lolbno o' ··IU 1 Ba t Bdrm l Un SOUTH Of' HIWr\Y Askmg SlSS.000. 64-1·7270 macnab /Irvine realty VETERAN HOUSING SERVICE Can your local Veteran Couru;elor for info. on V home loaru; Call. Bkr. 55&7777, 24 HRS. FOREST E OLSON ..... l•I'• l)M'e ··~-C 0 I JC 01-t!. r:: T r:: OLSON Hou1t1 fot'S. ~ ~ ml30r.noe.c:o.i..,._ ~ 645-9161 Dana Point • • •• • • • • • • •• • • • • • •• • • • • & Br. 3 Ba end condo on DUPLEX potntaurrounded by wide in excellent Dana Point location. 1·2 BR, 1-1 BR, one of our best, only $119,900. WESI' COAST PACIFIC REAL ESTATE 400-8535 831·2600 channela. 55' side tie dock. $281MJOO make orr. Agt 840·1879. owe 2nd. PAD YOUR. IOAT in front of this beautiful custom waterfront. Huge rooms. 48r, 3ba·Spams h tile on Davenport Island owe. no loan cost.i. PURCf;LLREALTY Sunset Bch 1146·2848 Super sham Park llom~. Plan s. 4 bedrooms, fonna1 drning room, steSJ down to beautll\11 famlly room. Large kitchen, breakJast ~ It 3 run baths. Sittin.g room off ma&ter bedroom . Professionally •••••••••• •••••• ••••••• landscaped. Great loca· IYOWNER Uontone,vpark. Must see to appreciate ~ this 2200 sq ft exec home. 4Br. 2~283, (am rm, & playrm, interior ii. freshly painted wi lot.s of wallp'a)1er, redwood . pane Ii n g & b I l n -R ...... CH Rf ••TY bookcases. For outdoor """ ~ entertainment an 18x36 55 I ·2000 pool w,"jacuzzi, redwood decking & a bltn BBQ. WOODBRIDGE 3 Br2 Ba, Sll8,500. Open Hse Fam Rm, ().In Rm, Aueust 20 & 21 or caU for SllS.000. AgL '171-2386 appt. 962.5723 or 5'9..a73 SPANISH CHARM Lovely• BR, 2~ ba home with lots or quality Im· IUl~L'JTI OLSON . DEERFIELD • B.KWO()f) PLAN Sd. storr 3 bt, 2 ba, ram. rm. atrium, : frplcs., patio1 Nr-. pool. short walk t.o schl.s. & perk. $87,IOO. Shown by appt. Occupy "9;15. Owner 87J.29Se eves. RANCH REALTY· SSl-2000 RARE OFFERl.,.G Plan Ill Turtle Rock -' BR & family room On hu&e secluded lot l Yr. warranty included COMPARE~ The Colony 4 BR. 2 BA home upgraded thru-out Only SSZ.900. See th~ one-you'll buy Jt. l Yr. .-arramy toctuded. VALLEY 640·9900 ~ UHtVHSITY I' AU $94.tSO Exciting Edinburg model townbome w /3 bdnm. family rm. 2'1!1 baths. Huie backyard w, brick patio & fire pit _ WaterfrontHomes 83H400 • C:W:c"agM u.1ng oo-.a s heer budget. Highly upgrad4'd Townhome wilh central 811', fpfc, mirrored walls, wine rack & plush crpta. 2 Laree bedrm & spacious sundeck for °"'" lyS64.950. 531·5800, eves 968-7725 lnt1 RE Network WOODIRIDGE New Broadmoo1 Laurel wood 4 br. 3 ba, 3 car gar Cul de·sac. Min dow" payml lo qualified buyer. 5145.000. 759-0511 OWNER AMXIOUS SB.LH'S LOSS YOURGAIH. New on the market &tfk' owner must sell th)s week! You'll find voJue + fantastic Callfornfa livfn& m this super sbaip Greentree home. Up· &raded thruout Ii: in mO\I·' e-tn condition. Comple\e wrtb 2 bdrms.. den le . family rm. Hurry on this one! It won't last. Priced at under market ;it S85.500 red hill~ . 552·75 00 You Must See 'Ibis exqW.,ite 3 bdrm . .,2 be., free-standing Cam bndge m Viii. I. No ell· pense has been spareli, from the new pilotlesi. kttchen appliances to tl\e crystal and brass fQt · ----'------• 1ures in the baths. So man1 cxlras are in- cluded in the purcha e price that you really must see this love4y home! urn ..... w. 1W CUSTOM HOMI V ew, _ ey. xt.ra 1pa • complete a• alnt location. Famlly llvlna. mTNIOCIAHt ww. rroa u.~•Ddrm Two di b•lhs, 11•• rrn, frplc. ~ood ttrlftl 6 ICIH. OOU"HIM 1.L Ctl4tUUI OCEAN VIEW HOME 4 Br 2 Ba. form. din. Lge patio, courtyard w, Vene· lian fountain, newly lndscpd & decorated. Avail 1mmed. Owner w;help refinance. 270~ Temple Hllls By owner 494-4444 or 494·9966 Ready by mid Sept, 3br & atudy, 2ba. Ocean & ca- nyon vu S2 19,500. '«H-$129 Pl climate. Move ln now for ly Soanish Style 2 dedroom. l~ bath home with We roof. Spec. tacular ocean view. Totally refurbished •. 3 decks, hardwood noors; rtady to mo\/e in condi· tion. sue.soo ( 464 > -~ ..... HERITAGE . . REALTORS -. MOVEIMHOW lBR +den adult 2BR,Adult 2BR +den adultAiC 2BR 2BR+ denAiC 3BR .SBR 4BR 4BR.A1C 4BR,A/C 4.BR RANCH REALTY 551·2000 Lease oew Seavlew 3 BR Forlse.3Br,2baona70f Oceanfront 3 BR. 2 Ba, w/oceanvlew, p()OI & ten· lot. like new .. For inform. frplc, S600. mo. SepL • rtls courts. 1750. mo. Red call Jim Berkshire. Jun~. or 1825. yrty. Carpel, 754.1202 675-7900. _996-_67_56 _____ _ red hill ~·· 552-7500 ALTERATIONS, exper. f\111 or part time. Nwpt Bch. 6'2"'4047 Answer SwY PIX Want to work day1,afttt· noons &evenings in N.B. & CdM areas? Work (/time or p;'time. . , Weekends a must. Xtra pa y for e x per'd operators. EOE. Call 1• N>-0812 Apt manager, couple needed for 40 unit com· ' plex in Coate MeH. _ · Husband nHy work out. Apt +Wary. 831.2950 AITISTIC A.IQ.ITT and Layout work. inteli. outaolnt peraonallty a ,., must fot' cialt. .....tee. " llature penoo pref. Sal • op& Write: Orvllle Pakrata 24001 Muirlanda El Toro CA 92830 QUALITY PAINTING •Lowat Prices •l:so.e9fApa. ltlt/Ext. •Work Gaar. Refs. To plic• your Want Ad Call ,_. __ • ..... •-~I ae~ &tat• PIX RECEPTIOMIS1 Immediato ui>enloa ror • R•tepUon\at PBX ,........~-........ ~~~-• ()per•tor. M\.11\ have typ· LftCITNE MAlllHIS We are looktni for a few aood. licensed men & women who want to be an actlve part. of a Real Estate otflce with hlab standards of ethics & performance, an ex- cellet'lt ll'aduated com· mlsaloo schedule & ou.t· ~Int otflce racilllles. For an interview. ap· pointment. please call: SALES PERSOMS Call (714) 547.&507 For Santa AnaAppt. Iotervlewjne Wed· ITiday aam 'tll lpm Equal Oppor Employer Apply Personnel Ofrtc:e Standard shoes l.S ahnost SECY /GIRL: FRI Mon tJtru Sat 10:30-4 ready to opeo It$ doors In lnternatlooal or1anba· Cost. Men. We are loo~-Uon. Starting at SS50/i*' . . ., ......... West refrig, 5 mos old, selt·der, green 5250. 645-258J before 3 PM. int akUla of aowpm and 6 mQoU\s recent work ex· peritnee prererablf u a rccepUonlst. Wil ad clerical support t personnel. We can offe aa excellent startln aalaJ'1. Wlth ltberal frtn4 1---------t bcndiC.. Pleue apply t 957-0701 c:nnm.rd Ii Assoc. SEARS ROEIUCI ~~veneg:at,fi1t~w1' 'tba1a· mo. Call S37 -8621. & ....... .,, ... MOVING Mus t sell COMPANY sincere es re to &•t SECY/RECEPT wshr/dryr, refrigerator. Western llJl S. lristol .St ahead. Good pay aJtd for new 1 man law office, x1n\ cooc:J 552-1741 So. c:_..t Ploilil ~nts with eacelleut Irv. Good skills essen· _ ...;.......;..:.....-------· -..iEMDATA c:ocT• MESA. • advanceme"bt OP· ti.al. Will ~ain Jegal U Upholstery trainee for HOTPOINT double oven 1 •" Sal~people, ex per. • ~ flortWllties. Pie~• call nee. No fnnge benefits. medical co. Sew'i exp electric range. COIJ'-. Call for app't. F.qual ()pporEmp oyer for· appointment at Salary $000 mo. to start. nee 3107So Ki.llOO SA 962-8740 rSTA.MD410 1~497~·:!33118!!_ __ ~644-~221~21.~~~~~~~~I · 2J a · $ 9 7 • l 3 86 o r a:G-OGJ3 betwn 9-5 • · ' 'TU·S.0·5811, 9A'H tU . Utility Maintenance Man 1960 RCA Elec. Dryer, Me:MORllS REAL ESTATE Robbie's Rog&Mop ooon.Askfor Stan Service Station Allen Day Shift. 45 Hr wk. pink. '67. Kenmore QIYISIOH Women needed tor _ __,,,_, ______ • dant, exper'd. Day & Company benefits. South Washer, while. Both xlnt per&OJI: REALISTATE m1rmu s:t71:n 1:o1: An Applted Ma1aetics Co CreaUve It prof. co. will h 1 • 1 SALESraSOM/lxprcl. Eves. FuU & p/Ume. Ap-c.oasi Plau. ~ ~!,38S35. ea . $60. bth. Jeweliy 3400Seaerstrom soon be opening ofc's in ousec eanmg &erv ce. ~ood opportuolly for pty. Shell Station, 17tb & WAITRESSES, .,.........,. J.HEllEaT SantaAna,CA92704 Npt B<:h & C.l\f. areas. _548-07 __ 57 ______ mature woman. 40 hrs _IrV_'lne---',_NB_. _____ 1 Kenmore electric HAUJIWELLHS Mechanic to maintain We have openings for SALES per wk, lncludin Cooks &Dlshwashers wasber/.~er. $150 for lawn mowing equip. EqualOpportunaty new o r ex P er. SUppt.1:uEMT eves/wknds. Apply ln Semce Sta. Attendant; Full&P/t.Appl.y,2-Spm, XI ls Now lntervlewina For Must have exp. on small Employer M/ F salespersons & mgrs who YOUR l~COME person. 1931 Newport exper'd. Full or p/tlme. Denney's, 529 Avenlda ~~E. fri~. $'90. .nl. F/Th•hper'd enginestobeconsidered. are intereste d in a " mvd.CostaMesa ApplyArcoStation, 17~ Pico,SanClem. --------SALESPEltSOM Located ln Irvine, career.Applybycalling SSSSSSSS &Irvine,C.14. w•ITRESSES FOUND MONEY: For ..... Apply at South Coast ~rmanent. full lime job. , in --' P·RTTIME s ·LES A Id f ·g Fast aid vacation •-benefi•-. PLASTICS aor te~ new. • " ~ Service Sta. Attendant, E 'd r t your o re n •. • Plaia.333SBristolCM ' Good opport."'ror right * MA C H I N 631-0400 TB.fPHOMEWOllK Part Ume, 5-Dpm, Mon-p/time. Clean appear. cl~:.e~ust 0~ ~~~~ ~l. service, best price • ... ------.----------1 person. Pbooe 552·8200 0•RS HOUSEWIVES SFrltu'dpedtect. for Collegre 3128E.CoastHwy,CdM Some cocktail exper . _96M __ 7_47 _____ _ ..-.-..-.----:----forappt. ' COUEGI STUDENTS sales e:r q~:::~et~ Serv. Sta Help needed Im· pref'd. Full & p/lime Wanted: Motor for West· J r.Draft•person $700+ Further expan sion Rec.elviftCJClerk Guaranteed Hourly 591~11 med. Full or-p/t. Apply, positions avail. Xlnt lnghouse dishwasher. . RE/Constt'Sec wSOOO MECHANIC wanted for creates perm. openings Exper. de!ired. but not Wage Plus Bonus. s::.> llQO E. Cst Hwy, Nwpl slatting rate. Good Ups. 493.1989 • . . Prog10pri1BMS3, S13K repair & maintenance of for exper'd & traine req'd. Will lralo. Mus 8 30 c 11 Call for appt for in -------- • , Exec.Se2 toll2K heavy equipment. Must · machine operators on pass co. physical includ· pm to : pm. a SALEs-RETAfL · Bcb. terview 3.5pm daily,· Auction 8015 h Cl 1 L. "-be f o ~or come'" 2SO E. Home•tead Furniture ,---------Fees Pai ; Also Fee Jobs ave aas 1c ex 2nd It 3rd •h'i ts. ur ina back X·ray. Call fo ,., .. Se Sta AtL full •-"9 2. 2 6 o o a s k r or ••••••••••••••••••••••• bl todrl .. _._ ... -oo ~... 17thSt...._Costa~a. Co'a "rand openln rv. · ... part • Irvine Personnel Agency a e ve "'""'"· -· trainmc" merit revl appt. 6•0~7639 Irvin makes it necess. lo hire ~edHrly + comaL rertaurantmgr. 488 E. 17th Coela Mesa hr to start. Call 545-1541 procedla"es assure rapl _Area __ ._E_._o_. E_. ____ 1SALES an outgoin,, per·sonalit" 673·3320 WaJtr.ess, ex per. Balboa PUBLIC FURNITURE SuileZ24 842-1470 u-.ncal •-,t advancement for al IEB.l ... Ef•SHIO .... S • " UC N _._ A> b h b REC E PT I 0 NIST · " "' " for insJde re. laH sal_es. SEWING Lead n.-rson. Peninsula area. *A JIO * • ~~ employees w o ave l Has att ct' por r~ For back omce + X · basic ability & desire Switchboard, personable forst~llsts~s~U~~~ne,; SaJe.sexper.lS arequue Soper. 3 person dept. ____ 67_5-_2650 ___ -1 ··--------1 rays,646--3903 Good pay + nighl shi lodiv, w/typ.b)e exper, line. Instant profit menL Call 751-154.Z for Mfe. cushions & naoa. Wa1trfsaes exp'd. bus Friday7:30PM 1 LAIORERS M•dlcal bonus & profit sharing for pvt Country Club. checks, no mvestment-appt. items. 540-1144 boy. Friendly altitude u (Dealers We4come & WAREHOUSING • xJntfnngebenefilS. · Good salary /fringe earn wardrobe. No col-SALES must. s;o&ta Mesa a.rea. REPO Needed Jmmed. Daily-Transcription S•v Apply, 8a111-5pm _belwJ __ r._u_..s __ 767 ___ -t lectmg or delivery. Car & SHIP /REC CLERK 833-0422 wkdys 9-4: :.> for CONSIGNMENTS Week Iv work. Start Now. good salary & benefrt.s. CIMCO Re • nls Bk Call f 1 TV & A PP Ii an c es· $1arp, energetic young lolormalion STOCK LIQUIDATIONS <HO FEES F i tlme. Hospital Brl A C,... ceptio l · pr phooe nee. or n· P,llme. Eves & Sun a man needed to handle Waitresses dishwashers SSSSAYESSS transcription back· 265 u s ve, ·'"· Exper. Educational Co tervwappt,963.7470· must. shipping & re<:. duties. days. Taking apptica: We honor BofA. M/C. MAMPOWER,IHC: """''"dprerd.Mustbav (lBlkSo.ofBakerSt Spanlsh·Eng. Xlnt op· SALES Need . KermRimaHardware F /time Mo" Fri Start ••--A 1 C ... v-• Off Redhill) portunltv. Good pay. • ex.penence bo ,.. • .......,.. PP Y m personoo· Cas hier's Checks 41: «8W.l9thSt, .M. own vehlcle,·inclds sub· ~ S40-206l " party J>lan Gal for 211i68Har rBl,C.M. 12.85 hr. Apply, Master, ly. Beggars Opera CASH. No pe rsonal C:all 64S..204l stanUal drivlna. F.qual Opp Emplyr m,'f Basket & Wicker parties. SECRETARY 234 Fis ch e r, C • M · Restaurant 42SL Mart-checks PLEASE. --------1 MED·TYPE 768..SSOO RECEPT/SECY CallPaulSayre,493·1246 Partllmeto fulltimefor 540-51546. ingale, MacArthur MASTERSAUCTIOM MEDICAL RECEPT PLUMBING REPAIR st!!~~~~;~~.a;!?pfF:i~c:lnt *SALES* new. growini Yacht ShowroontClean.,. Square. . 2075 Hewportll.C:M . , LADIES Earn $20. for 2 hrs. work In your home. ·.• 536-2403 experonly,fol"busydoc-DRAJN MAN Top pay working cond. s6oo . Exper'd Sales or PR Broke~age. Bro~era~e Pitime dally Mon-Fri, WAR,EHOUSEMEH C:alll7141833-9625 • tors office. 64&-3903 $400 wk. Must have ow start. 548.oo76 work. Sell an liq ues. ecxpell rNience prbe e,r~ · clean showroom for Rccc1vin1t & distrlbution or 1714) 646-8686 ·y ...... E PATROL GUARD truck & band tools E ---------1 Mature att1'tude ess"'n. a ancy, e ween ftu:nlture mfg, Apply in of men':.. clothing. 30-40 1~~~~~~~~~ :·· fil t'me position La~ MEDICALAsst.forl.glrl Rooter 1337 S. B~iat.~l p m position Must"be 9AM & 6PM any day. person, Novello. 18285 htaperwk.Apply.3198KI· ·,·· Ent~rcem ent.'MP , :J1~~:~sr_0i·u~fesNi:: S.A. ' •ECEPT/TYPISTS , de~ndable .. • fJ"IJ.9211 Euclid Ave., Fountain Airport Loop Dr, C.M Bi~ydes 8020 Harbor Pal~ol back, elude telephone. recpt., Needed immedia~ly to So.Coast Village Secretary/Bltkpr, P/T, Valley. 5S6.fl646. ••••••••••••••••••••••• eround required. Call mecUyping,gjvlngshots PRECISIOM ml temporary a'!>slgn-Ca11Dorothy557-696J sm. bus. nr Dyer Rd. SPRAY PAINTER --Scbwtnn~:;i:;ruiser .c.F. Bpswell.586-0860 & lite back QCc. work. IMSPECTOR ments. Our jobs go from SALESGIRLS Need d 5 Ahle to orsan., handle Helper over 18 yrs 00 WAREHOUSE S46-l856 L--"'-WOf"lc..-Send resume of penonal a f~ days to long term Da k 4 H ~ resp. 13.50/hr. 49$-1370 exp. nee. must have tar. .ASSIST. TRUC:IC -·-' . info, work exp &ref's to: <2ndShlft.) assign~~tsEnr EZ~k.' Ea~o~; s:f.~ SECRET AR Y·GIR L C.11168-8749. . DRJVERJJUMIOR luildingMcrterlalsl02& Wltnds only. Bayview Box 111, Daily Pilot, P.O. For s mall mech'I aJ """'~ hr 646-3'18S WAREHOUSEMAN ••••••••••••••••••••••• Conv. Hosp, 2055 Tburlo Box 1560, Costa Mesa, sembly & components Tell Us wb.en you want to per . . FR ID A Y Mon .~ r i Station attendant. Full or We have ao i'mmediate Ceramic tile, beaut. 8'' Ave,Cltf642·3505. ca.9262S · Mustbeabletointerpre work. 1-~PM. Good typing p/time. Exper. pref. A ~=::-=--::=:=:::-::::-1-=:..:::=------t prints & specs. Nee C:all 645 .. 20 .. 3 skills $400 mo. 549·1815 Chevron ~ Fairview, opening for an 10cliv1dual ltallan. pprox. 1000 sq. LF.GALSECRETARY th& r .. 1ft.... who ha s a valid ft. Below 0 cost. Or Co l Med. Sec'y Recepl. good ma use 0 pre MANPOWER, INC:. SALES mom.._ C.M. Cali' forn1· a drive r 's C7l4)SS1·5098 • ange . a rport area. p,"time. 2-6pm. Moo-Fri. cisJoo measuring tools Call 751-1831 Exp prerd. 54<MS8S. : XInt wages " benefits 448 W. 19thSt, C.lf. J .C. P&i4HEYS SecretarY·AdmiolstraUve Sunday ~cense and a clean dnv· Cats 8035 Appl,Yat. --------• 24Foshiolltl.a.d Ranch1n1 " lnve~t-MOTORIOUTE mg record to be a back-••••o••••••••••••••••• • LegaJ Secretary, exper'd. MEN· WOMEN wi cars. AMF, INC. RRl"•T/SCTY New-rt •och !"1ents. Accuritcy, mt· Su.Dda.Y Only dell•~C up truck dnver: Jn addl· Beautiful ui--'--Kit-N.B. Salary open. Call ait.. Fuller Brush Sales Potter&Brumfield Div .._. N In·r--, ___ ln F it aUve paramoun • .Dailv Pilot bWldles to lion, you will aJso ~1,AM Llnda,631-0lSl routes. Top earnings. 2S181Avenkla deededfbrSales&Cater· ow tervnrw IC or: Shorthand, typlot, tel, c:urfers. Requires large perform warehouse ten. male, 5 mos, blk, 531~ Aeropuerto ing ornce. Attractive out-COMMISSION simple bklronl for l man ltat1oo Wfioa or van and duties such as polhng must sell quietly. $15. • .. LEGAL SECRETARY SanJuanCaplstnoo goin1 person, heavy SPECIALIST office. 28 hrs per week. a good driving record stock. sbipping and re-!_494-MIO _____ __.'--- -for Newport Beach firm, MICROFU.M CLERK Equal Oppor Employer phones " public contact Men'a Clothing.. Older appllc:ant. AJl 3 Apply at 300 West Bay eelrinK, etc. You mu.st be "--1040 general practice. Nl.&ht shift Spm-1:30am. Good typlat. Apply in Foll-Time. day weekends off. Street Costa Mesa OT over2landbeabletollft :::;. ................. . Consider tr&inee, 1f ex-Exper. helpful, but not person. Sheraton XJntcompany De~•lled resume. Jay call G4.2-4324 ask'tor at least 60 pounds. cetlentskills. Mai card req'd for filmin&, pro· PRE-SCHOOL Teacher Newport Beach. No benefits. Eye Corp., Suite l3D, Han7Seeley 13.45/hour. Please call "PAL0 lsmyname&l'll helpful. Salarr com-l't!SSlM, stuffin1 & relat-oefl. or exp. $!.80 per hr phooe.ealla please. Apply ln persoo Gateivay Plaza. 180 • PenonneHor an appoint· be the aame. I need a menaurate. Cal Laura ed dutfes. Phone 644-4360 ~ ioam lofpm Mon-Fri Newport Center Dr. NB, TBACHERS rteeded for ment. home so that I don't 7»o234 fi interview Pleasecall RIPRESEHTATIVES EqualOpporEmptoyer 92880 Christian School. 16835 WILLIAMHARV'EY roam. I'm ~ Golden or c· PJ • PR I HT ER For '"'•ton ad accounts. 0 rookborst Fo11ntaln ·sante .... na 7141'835-2422 Lab, ~!t Shepherd & a :. Liquor Store Clerk, afU. · High quality mull Ir ~·want a reaponsi-· SE~Rf!~~y 1 bk Valley. 9S2·3312 ctr F.qualc}ppEmplyrMi F' moon child. 493·1989 .~11 matu~.Apply, Tues-Sat, Moroing Newspaper Auto operator.12501240LW M. bl• lnte,resting & SALESLADf MatJJre,ex-Xl01 typust ....... uma • 963-'1831 an.er7pm. 8am·2pmooly. Ab-porter Route. Approx. hrs area. Exp and pride a cba'llengin g job-per'd, full-tlme, 40 hrs. kpigexper.N.8.lawotc. WeneedSOpeoplewboare --~------ Inn, 18700 MacArthur 4·6amdaHy.Perm.situa-be,lng the best approx expanding Orange Co. No eves. C.M. Dress Cal1Trlah16'2-8532. T~Salfs at least 10 lbs over· German Shorthail' Blvd, Irvine. No Phone ti®. Immed. opening for lmate startlna salar publlcaUon baa a place shop, Call btwn 2 It 6PM Want to make money? weleht. Call Ms. Stone at Pol~t.er Puppy. ,\KC. 31f.r cans. mature per$0n w/small $6.t>G pr hr. 837-8282 aft fbr /ou. Sal + comm. only. 645-~1U Can you sell on the 751.9175• We can tell you mo sold.494-8255 Liquor Clerk. p /tlme, cmoar~~~::!~~r~ pm :: esvacU, ~~~To~ Saleslady, mature. pbone! .. ~~°!1!'1cbusf 1• bow t'o lose pounds & Siberian Husky Puppy, " nighu. '"-'. noon The Register, PRIMTJH~ 991 H!'n · Women's High Fashion ~ -..... .....,v. -or earn money at tho same male, AKCreg. Copper& • · 642·6537 ~ """"'· ........,. Apparel ~bop. Apply .in n.y. Ume. ... .... _ ""'l·l""" • .,..,....,..., Exper. chlef 17 opr So Pl ........ ,._ ""° ---------t metal plates, qu= l Real ~tate Sales People person at 384.0 • aza CHELL'S n• LYN'S 7·l Ir l·ll MOTEL FRONT OFFICE 2rolorwork.548· wanted. Up to 90i10~ Dr, S.A. in South Coast DONUT HOUSE Medlcatlons & treat· CLERK. neat.nea & ac-comm. split. Newport Village. Ronnl Bear mentl. Full or p/time. curacy essentJal. S Day PRODUCTION Beach. 548-3614 Fash.Ions, 545-7611 Mesa Verde Conv. Hosft wk includ. wknds, ~ex-TRAINEES .J. ~~s.isenter St, C per.nec.49Hl521. Rubber hoae products •1• Nd resp lad1 for care of Must pass co. physic ., l'o Na chin is t . Sm o 11 girl~ yrs lo Sept. Vic including back X·ray. "· macblhe shop ln Costa Joann st. 1 ·5. Ref. Irvine area. Call fo Jr 1th s a need a I at he 548-1438 appt. 540-'IG. r.o. operator. 645·•004 call ---------1 , 1~ betweepHcSpm. Needed: Hou.sekeeper,l••,•1•0•0-U•C•T•1•0•N ..... ----------t companJon. ch auffeu tOC' ~ month. Sep\. 1 CONTIOL tt)rU Oct. 16, for couple IMnt on watulront. EXPEQITOR Non-smoker required. ~orSST-1'891 1 RESTAURAHT OPERATIONS t Australian Shepherd. blue Twin bed w/mattreu & frame S3S, old piano •tool. walnut. awtvm seat SSS. call aft 5:30pm, 645-785"1. Dintnltablew/ 4 chairs, 3 le•ves, walnut wood, · modem siso. 788-782S Twn Canopy Bed 145, Goodcood. SUMMER CLEARAMCE! SUPER SELECTION OFGMCTRUCKS "VANS VW Crew Cab '72 duel port engiae. Xlnt cond. $1995. See at 179 E. 18th St., CM, or call 548-1'87. ..,, Dodp Tradelman 100 auto, PIS. alr, AM/FM tape, IUD ro6f, ma11, panel, crpt. HJ50. Mi-2305 BARWICK DAT5UN ~ I I • 111 ' I I ! I " • 831 -1.37 5 491-3375 WE BUY CLEAMCAJIS •TRUCkS CONNlll CHMOLET 28Z8Harbor Blvd. SADDlEBACK BMW • f . 1Hl630CSI MOW ON DISPLAY' OUICOM IODYSHO, ISHOWOPIM IMWRIS·-- 1969JOOZ Automatic, air COD4., I: AM /nt radio. A OD owner car. <ZRV•>· 19722002 f)AllWI!._ W: \f'.llN l4 ' I I ~ : LI \ "" l j i '1 •• --- COSTA MESA DATSUN au BARBO& BLVD. 14M411144MJIJ AutoaWlc wWl air coad. 7S Datawi 3IOZ. 'spd. alr. One ow o er car . AKil"ll t•"· abarp. <121.FTQ>. make otter. flf.CM~ 1972 2002t0 m.me . 4 1peed. air cood • ~tereo 76 Datauo !WO, Zl.000 ml. casse-tte • mau . DlOO/o&.Xlntcond.1731 (627FOX). Superior, CM. 8a·3'34 COSTA MESA 1974 ZOOZ Rat 9725 ___ S_4_6-_1_2_0D ___ , 4 speed, AM/FM & only •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• WE PAY TO.P DOLLAR 23,000 orialoal mllea. 72 SPORT COUPE FORTOPUSEDCARS S&.lperabarpl (OllOICYT). 5-lpd. mai wheels. FOREIGN. DOME.5TIC AM/FM . rad lo, dual or CLASSICS 1974 2002tf1 pipes, blk vinyl bard·top, u YoW" car ia extra clean ' 11~, air cond .• sun-canary yellow. Good COft· aee us lint. rool " stereo cusett.e. di1ioo. Aakinl SlD or • .. u-1u1cK lOObeela. <•Mell'>. makeotrer.M&-3811.after ~ U\ Spmor6'JS.71'4udleave ~~bor 8~2500 1976 2002 ma&forTammy. . . 4 speed with atereo "l3Flatl2'7CoupeLGreat TOP cass ette. Superb I eon4.. SHOO. Must sell. DOLLAR <«><>NMV>. 6C-3008orm.-. PAID '·., 1977 lZOI 19'1t Fiat U&TC. All·l'M. FOi\ CLEAN White with black Recaro J.5,000mLRadlals. ~ IHH"' ~I ,\.~•I 1-11 VD HUN1lr•C.!Oll01 ,\CH l!.1/ ; 'bl 'l.l(• OH/ seats, air cond., ' speed, SllOO. 4M-2130 stereo sport steering .., .... ., dr wheel • like new I •5 .... _ 4 •auto ~ans. <299RXH> All/FM stereo, A, C, lo • ml. Xlnt. cood. sauo. Aft 4PM,M2-036 miracle mazda --:t,., ·~ ............ ...................... .... t7Ml....,'IMIM tt7•MADA WCOUPI '~........ -J.;.;..;;;~;.;,,i,;,; ........ _..,.~ ••H•·• ~••aaa. ~ 8"dal -.... , ... Ot&Yll"' , IADN.llACIC ' YAl.LIYNOICll 971 MIZDllSa ta slloW1oom eoodition ! J'or tile ec0taomy of 6ilel 6 tbe lwnuy of a x---. <1S7NRN>. -·-Other fiae .. ~ ln .:, ...... _ ~· '• " .... J M•~)•Ot. VI/JO IMPORIS . .. llJI II.Jo .f OS 170 4 -· .· Lease Hew·UHCI OVEA 100 MEI CEDES OHDISPUY . House of Imports ' AU'nlOl\.IZtD •_MERCEDES DEALER • 6162 Manchester, • • B~Park 523-7250 '71 280SL. Both tops. A beauly. Only 43,000 m1. 673-0728 IMMACULATE 197H50SEL. $12,500. 675-5520 19'7MBZ230 Automatic, air cond .. radio & heater. A nice sharp car! <UPY768). EZ terms-0 .A.C. 1 yr. parts & labor aervice ·policy avail. Auto Cen- ter's price is OHLYSl999 HAIRS AUTO CENTER Div.·NaberaCadUlac 1425 Baker St .• C.M. _ ~~ blk east ol Harbor Bl 540-9109 Find what you want Daily Pilot Classified•. VWSALE!!! We Ha .. An Exdellent •---------• Seledion Of VW n...acampers I YATES YW..ftORSCHE Sao Jan Capistrano 131-4100 493-45 l I l9f0 VW Crew Cab <truck>. '12 duel port en&AM· Xlnt cond. $1995. See •t 11t E. 18th St., '69 WITH New paint, CM,or call548-1487. , ________ _. JJm VW Pop.to~. AM·FM stereo. crpt d, Mich. IUOO. Eves/wltnd1 ttio ········~·· ... ·········· 74 Chev Vega, auto trans, A/C. asking $1100. 14 Station Wgn. Air, 4 spd. lo mileage, xi..t cond. Sl600i ofr. Pt 581·34.58 '14 Veia Kamback, A/C, .UtO. a.Int COf\d. S20$I. Jennifer. Doak, 3, 11 )uat one ot mani vleltor1 who flnet the Sherman Foun· datlon botanical QardeM In Corona Cl•I Mar • plenant apot for a visit. Th• gardeM, et 2619 E. Pacific Coaat H19hway, er• open to the public from 10:30 to 4 p.m., ffftftdaya a week. Highlight• of the g.,den Include • froplcal con- ••rvetory, a cactue and succulent col· lectlon and the tea room for lunch. Photo: Terry Covftfe r Garden Show Saves Energy Eoeray-coiuclous VJaftora wut be lrivlted homeowners can 1et to tour the Ublblt where some helpful tipa on con-they will rec elve aervaUoo at th• Home litel'ature cootalntn1 and Garden Show start· PTOPCllala an bOw to cut lDI Satui'clay • down bome utllit,y uu. Many exhibitors wDl Also demonstrated will be abowfnc the .newest be clwU :Mi.Owln8 Sust prOducti for conserya· what percent.ale of aas Uon d enerey includ.ina ls consumed by various insulation, solar beatlna u f kin and plant waterln1 app ances or coo 8 systems. and beatini. Southern CaUtornla Several booth• will Gas Co. will have an tm· alao empbaslH home Ure display devoted to aaf ety and protection conservation sugces· with cllaP1.v• o1 Jocks, tlom. 1afe1 aud safety alarms. • • ~-. Quality mater1ala and wOrkmanshlp Beautiful ceramic tlle Energy-saving trlwall foam construction Spacious. comfortable seating A 10.-foot high <:olumn of water pours out of .a •tsuspended" ·faucet fn\o an 11ctuaJ ralnbarrel. Faucet has no visible means of support Water comes from nowhere. I.. !J sl f J.ll I I I\ t o t .;;::._~ -~~if1""'\lt-.--r-ffll1rui barref. t . 7 ,000 Acres of Pine Woods Fun Await' Buyers in Park Have you ever thou1bt of ownins 7 ,000 pine· covered ~res along wltb other outdoor oriented f amllles end developinJ& tof ether your own pr vate ·recreational park? Such a park ls now be. ·101 offered to the Southern California land buyer. Pines Recrea· tlonal Park, located in the northern corner of California, encompasses f ,000 acres of the purest recreaUonal tountry left In the state. It will be sold to the first 7,000 families. The park will be de· veloped by the 7 ,ooo owners who share an UD· dlvlded interest. Famllles can fish, ski, hike, boat, explore, pie· nlc, horseback ride and ahn~t anythln1 possible in a national forest, yet ownen Deed never make a resenatlon. The park ls open 365 days a year and there Is no fee for use of the lakeside camp ~ Tbe park would be de· veloped by its owners, each with an equal voice, and with an elected boardot directors. The ownership voting rtaht can be passed on to your children. or to a new ownerif the original owner sells )aJB share. Exlstln,I f aciUties at Pines Recreatlonal Park include: showers, water hookups. dump station, rustic cabins (8), ponds, atreams, picnic areas, trails, sreen meadows and ta)l pines. Now, for a limited Ume. tbe outdoor famlly can purchase a 1n,ooo 1b1s New ALL-IN.ONE sh«t concept COl\'lbioes top~. bottom sheet and pillow cases Into ooe cooveulaii, oomrortable and economical unit. AUachcs to mattress whh dutlc ttraps, no more tudtlna uncler. Available in light 7d1ow and blue solids. Pa11em1 lilduded: Frab dalslc:s, mountains, lake, dcsen and beech acaMI, also zisay. Most In pettalc to n1 all standard and W8tetbcd slz.a. Ort.al ror )omc, ap1., boat, RV, trailer, camper, etc. Made or fmest quality, oo-lroo cotton/polyester. Introductory pri<lCS are ror complete ALL·IN·ONE unit. TWln Sl6' • Double Sl9 • Queen SU • Kl111 $33 Telephone 631-3434 for Custom Siies interest for $995 -the full, cash price. Leisure Industries, Inc., in Los Angeles ls bf. feting the park for sale. For more detailed In· formation call (213) 552-1722, or check the booth at the Southland Home 8nd Garden Show at the Anaheim Conven· UonCenter. Here's How To Save soe You can save so cents on the prlce o( an adult ticket for the Southland Dome and Garden Show by pick· lDI up discount c:oupom 'lt mlJor ln· dustrlal planta. parUclpatlnl Thrifty Dru1 le Discount stores, and Alpha Beta Marketa throughout Oraore County. The nine-day show starts Saturday at the Anaheim Convention Center. Admission prices without a dls· count are: adults. $2.50; children and junlora, aaes 8·18, '1; children under 8 free, when accompanied by an 1¥lult. · t . ' I l I )_ RE! . • . . you'll enjoy Piet PatJlo and Company, the outstanding ilfusionist •.. you'll see Howard Hardin, the master juggler ..• also the Wheel· ers, artists on the Marimbas .•• here is enter· tainment for the entire family. .. . . ~; ~ .. •. •. ['-. ! .. . .'..'. ~ r.", • T 8 DAIL V PILOT Thursday, Auaust 11, 1977 Visit our booth, ISpace C-31 and see the finest de$igns on display by world famous Scandinavian designers and manufacturers. --The wortd's famous leather chair for comfort and @esigtt 1>Y WESTNOFA OP NQRWAY. "" Comes ln high & low beck and ottoman • Rosewood or Teak finish. Several colors to choose from ... CHRIS HALL TAKES tea with some of the special figures used to decorate the Oower exhibit at the Southland Home and Garden Show in the Anaheim Convention Cen~er. treated by Harry ()fr. Flower Show> Macres. and hia son, Harry. Jr. Th• Arena wlU be transformed lnto a •artlen aeWna With vW itors entertn1 throup Ill old-fashioned garden gate Into an area con· talnlng a flower-clad mountain. waterfall, fountains, and paths bordered by exotic flowers and shrub• representing areas -thrOugbout the-world. Mobile lfome Villafe w ll 1 con a U t.u t e a supermarket ol the latest models of coaches where vi1ttora can savtng devices, will be be seen with the one ad• on exhibit In hundreds of mission price. decorated booths. Admission ls $2.50 for SwlmmiJia pools, spas, adult;t; $1 tor youths barbecue e1ulpm,11t 6·16, .and free for ~t d • children under s. 181lV 1 •v cu, •P· Tbe home 1bow first pllancee an4 furniablna• • will·be among the many held lo 1955, baa now ........ eta ..u-1 ed · grown to be the largest va .,..u ....... ., 81 • event of its kind on the Free entertainment North American Conti· wttl be ptesentect ·Dent, according to througbcMlt the day, each 'ColourLs.. dayoftheahow. This year, more than George ColourlJ, foun· " million worth of pro-d er-producer of the-'4aetar-w.lll 1>e oar exhibit show, •phaaliea tb•t eoverblg 270,000 square all faCtta of the show can feet of space. Planters Go On Display leisurely compare ModularredwC>e>apJan .. deck, or for any room in prices, styles and ters, a simple Idea thebouse. features. simply dealanecl and Do-lt-youraelf Ideas Many of the nation's easily built, enhances will be shown at the lead.Ina muuf acturers the home-environment Southland !Jome and and diitrlbutors wUl be both lndoora an4out. G a rd en show b y represented ln mobile Stmpeoo lf~ Co. of bomevillage. Veriatlle mutU-tlered Cerritos. Plans and Ideas Produ*fotthebome, planters permit a vari• for the multi·tlerea tncludtnC the latest Q-t1 of arran1ement1, pJant:ers wU1 be· part of i>llancea and energy· aultable for patio or theexblblt. • ...._ . . -t .. • l ' -~ KINGSBROOK IT . SILYERCRESI 2 BEDROOMS.2 BATHS DELIVERED WHllmlOOMilei '! • ~WI ..... • FANS OF ELVIS PRESLEY MOURN THE DEATH OF THEIR IDOL NEAR HIS MEMPHIS HOME .t Hundreds Maintain Vlgl1 Ollt.llM Manalon •• Tr,pedy Strike• Two Mournera ... • l MEMPIDS. Tenn. (~) - Hundreds keeptni vigil outalde. Elvia Pl'elley's mamlon watcbed in horror -e~ly today as a ~ar struck md killed two women, boura Wore thesl.nger11 funeral. POU.Ce said the car was Speed- l_nJ . ~d the· driver had beell drinkiq. i The women, and a third peraon who wu injured~ were standing in a medi~ section of four .. Jane ElvfS Presley Boulevard, wblle 1 about 300 perB<ltls were gatbeted on the sideulk across from Graceland Mansion. Three women and one man were arrested several blocks away after the incident. .. Pollct9 said the cu was travel- ing at~ miles per hour down the street, where the limit ls 40 miles per hot.Ir. The accident came on a day that was to have been for the . family and the close friends ol. Elvis Presley, not for the claw· ing, elute bing, adoring crowds. As he wished lt, the fUn~ for the 42-)'ear-old sin&el' was to be conducted lb private, in mJdaf- ~moon, with prayer and eul<>CY in the manslon he called home and entombment near his mother. ln a cemetery not far away. Diet Grob, the chief of Presley's personal security force, said the siqer and his father, Vernon Presley, bad planned his fUQeral. .. Tbls ls runnlng exactly the way Elvis' father sui1ested lt be run, .. Grob said. "It's been run in accordance with Elvia' wlSbes. •• ne f.mtly had planned to ti· low the public to view PrflsleY'a body,for two hours Wednesda1. The time 1tretebed to 3~ bioUrs but there were still about 15,000 whose pillffib&1e to see PffSley a final timewaa in vain. • Sheriff Gene Barksdale estimated that 25,000 to. 00,000 walked'J)alt the seamless copper coffbl. 'lbe ~tlmate may have been generous, but the lines COil• tinued without letup for the entire 3~bours. ~ Presley was dressed In a cream.colored, almost .white, suit with pale blue shirt and silver tie -Christmas presents from bis father • His face showed the effects of the weight ho &al.ned in -bis later years. On one finler wu a ring with an enormous diamond. • SO zealously did the famlb" au.8rd the private upecta "' the day that the names of thiose «· fl~iatinl at the service a.rid most of those invited to attend were withheld. Res Humbard, a natimall.Y bown evangelist from Abui. Ohle>; •aid be would officiate. Humbard bad VWted Presley at · hla Mempbla home, known aa GraOeland Mansion. A f~ spokesman said.Sam· lnY DaVls Jr~ and singer" James Brown would attend. Guitarist Chet Atkins and fellow ex. ecutlves at RCA Victor, for wbom Prel$ley recorded, were to betbere. There were reports that Caroline Kennedy and movie stars Burt Reynolds and AJm. Margret would attend. Tennessee's governor. Ray Blanton. who ordered that all nags in the state fly at balhtaff, also was to~ to Memphll. Rainfall :Most ~· Co~~f S•ee 1~89 Doetor Dies $1' .Million .. .-fJrop Loss Predicted ' ' . ~ ) Dllltr ""'.--.. lm'flc* O'~ PLENTY OF PLACES TO PARK AT NEWPORT PIER AREA Wintry Scehe Pictures August Weather on Oran.a• Coast Rain C FroaaPageAJ a uses $20 Million RAIN. • • Crop~sses LOS ANGELES CAP> -A tropical storm fiuled out today after battering drought-stricken Southern California for two days, washing out highways, flooding homes and causing an estimated $20 milllon in crop damage. "It's falling apart," a National Weather Service fore- caster said of the storm that hit Southern California Monday as Hurricane Doreen. "There's hardly ~Y wind left, but there's still plenty of rain." At least five deaths in Southern California were attributed to the storm, and several other persons -including three Riverside children and a fireman -nar- rowly escaped death in s~ floodwaters. The storm's fury took its heaviest toll in the Mexican· border town of Mexicali, where more than 2,000 people were left homeless after their houses - many of them cardboard shan- ties -were reduced to pulp by the heavy rains. The town, the capital of aaja California, was declared a dis- aster area by the Mexican gov- ernment Wednesday after the en- tire downtown section was re- ported awash, with water as deep as four feet in 1ome p*es. Police and army teams rescued 400 stranded motorists after the highway between.. Tijuana and Mexicali was wuhed out. In Calif~a1. the storm was breaking u,p waaY after inundat- ing parts of tbtf st.ate.~nmicJDy, the water came too hard and too fast to really help break the ·drouJbt. "We "'have water (our to sli inches deep in several places alone Interstate 39S,0 an lnyQ County sheriff's spokeswoman said. However, she said ·tic> homes had be41ll "'ported 0.ooded by the ri.sml Wilent. The Calilornia Department of Transportation reported sefet'al hidtways awuh 1n Death Vall~y and Inyo County. state Hishw1:1 U7 bet.ween the S~n Bemardln9 Tbe eieettce Of Boler Slltei tO a tblril wm u chilrillan d the Huntln1to11 'each PJannlq COIPmtlalOa WU brilidecl UD• tblcal and morally ~ J>J a fellow eommllaloner Wedlies· d11.,: TIM cluart• Wal 1Helecl b1 Ruth i'tnley wbo said that Slates took advantace of a loophole in ·thec:ommlsstoa'a bylaws • . Bylawa of the eommlsalon, whteb Slatet tald he helped write, pn>blbit a chairman from aervinl more tban two con· aecuUve years. • • Tbe apparent loophole de- veloped laat July when llra. Finley wu elected eomQllmon chairman and serV.t' ta tlm of· , f:,!~ ~ as loq •two The city council 41.ssobed the plannlDI eommisalon and re- orauizecl it tmmectlately after llra. F1nley'1 election. Slates WU re-elected chairman at tbe ( tint meetiol of the reorcantaed ~~ominissioll for bis seeood term. Mrs. Finley served as chairman for only a portion of oo4f "55100 and in fact didn't CfD' vene a si.Qlle meeting. Yet U..t brief epJaode was enouib tc> tecbnlcally coastltute a term in office and provide a ~eak in Slate's tenure. accord· ing to legal adviser )(ark Travis. Slates. a real estate broker, /served as chairman in 1975-76 .and 1976-77 before hia election a•aln Tuesday nl&ht. .. "'1,1 don't think it's any big. deal, .. SlatesaaldWed.nesday. "Some of the other com· mlaslooerS asked 1f I'd be wW1DI tQ serve aealn and I asked, 'don't you want anyone else?' " Slates said that be was the first cb8ice of the others so he ~ to take the office again. lln. Finley, who said abe neither baa the desire nor the time to be' chairman, said that Slatel' election flaunts the intent . of the bylaws. "You can't tell me that out ol seven members selected by the clty eowtcll on the basil of their ability to perform city plannlnt, you can't find a new chairman after two yeJJ'I," 1be said. • She aai,d tie intent of the ban oa three consecutive terms ii to al· low rotation of the position amonc commiuloaers and not allow any ooe person to be a con- trollln( force. .. Any person as active in the businoa of development of prop- erty in the city aa Mrs. Slates 'anuot help but to ban eacum-brances,~· Mrs. FlDleyaaJd.; "I don't care hoW bard be tries. thete encumbranc .. are &Cini to get in the way," she declared. Slates said the nmalnla8 com- missioners didn't have too much experience, .. and I am able to run an dclent meettna." "41be dlalrm= Ii notblnl'I covetecl.~l a to accept it ratbet reluctantly. Tbe chalrJQft dOean't 1et p~ more . thantbe~andthed\ltlesare more d4=1nan4ln1, '' be·!fald. <Plannin& coinmlssloners re-ceive $U per meetfng.) SI.US Aid his election 1'88 not an attempt to violate the-intent ol the bylaws. He· said lie also scrupulWllJ' avolcb any ~ble confllct and abstalm OD wues wbera there is a poUlbillty mconJllcr. CastiQ vcUs fOI' Slates· were Prim· Shea, Suale N"man, Cbar1es Gibson, newcomers Frank Hoffman and John Stern and Slates himself. Mrs. Finley cast the only negative vote .and refused to go along with a later re<iuest to make SlatH • election u.n· anlmo.d. Mn. She• wu elected vice cba.lrinan by a S to .0 TOte. )lrs. Finley abltained. Detective Gary Blact iSHrted he recognized the man at that moment from remote C<>1ltrol bank camera photographs ot the Baseball Cap Bandit and be was· immediately placed under ar- rest. Investigators allege the money was taken ln a holdup at the California First National Bank, 17122 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach, less than one hour before they picked up Gano. . Tbe suspect found by homlclde detectives at a Santa Ana motel apartment where be wu Uvtn1 under an 888umed name wu subsequenUy indicted by a Jederal arand jury. <;ano la held at Los Anaeles County Jail in lieu of $50,000 ball pending arraignment in U.S. Dis- trict Court before Maaistrate Harvey Schneider. The former salesman for a commercial check printing firm and auto financing account ex- ecutive said in an interview that he plans to plead auilty. The suspect said in hla jailbouse telephone interview after calling a newspaper and asking to telf his stocy that he robbed banks to finance his as- serted heroin habit t>ecauae they ~ere the,alest way to go, Ero.tPf'HleAJ eARK ••• · -· ·. be available next week. Cot. Fenenga said he ii optimistic that the site will qualify for home conitructioo. Tbe Marines' original propos&l called for 200 military bousidg unl,ta. However, Navy plans to construct 200 homes i'Sl Bremerton, Wash., have ap- parently been delayed, allowing the Marines to double their pl<Ots to 400 units, Col. Fenen&• said. · The request for the added Ullits will be Included iD the Marine5 • 1979 fllCal budget and requires congressional approval. This still leaves the Marines 900 units short of the housing the Corps says it need.S in Orange County, Col. F#len1a1.aid. " .,..,..,... FANS OF ELVIS PRESLEY MOURN THE DEATH OF THEIR IDOL NEAR HIS MEMPHIS HOME MEMPHJS, Tenn. (AP) - Hundreds keeplng vllil outside . Elvis PreSley•s mansion watched in borrot eatly today as a car struck and killed two women, hQUl'S before the singer's funeral. Police sald tbe car was sJ>ffd· Ing and the driver bad been drinking. . The women, and a thlrd person who was injured, were standtng in a median s~tlon ol four-lane Elvis Presley Boulevard, while about 300 persons were gathered on the sidewalk across from Graceland Mansion. Three women and one man were arrested several blocks away after lhe incident. · Police sa1d the car was travel- ing at '55 mites per hour down the street, where the limit ls 40 miles per hour. The accident came on a day that was to have been for tbe family and the close friends of Elvis Presley, not for the claw- ing, clutcpm,g, adoring crowds. As be wished it, the funeral for the 42-year-old singer .was to bt; conducted in private, in midaf- ternoon. with prayer and eulogy in the man.aion he called home . . and entombment near b is mother, in a cemetery not far away. Dick Grob, the chief of Presley's personat security force, saJ,d the singer and bis father, Vernon Presley, bad planned his funeral. "Tbb is running exactly the way Elvt.s' father suagested it be run," Grobuid. "It's been run in accordance with Elvis' wishes.·• The family had planned to al- low the pablic to view Presley's body for two hours Wednesday. The time stretched. to 3~ hours but there were still about lS,000 whose pilgrimage to see Presley a final time was in vain. Sheriff Gene Barks dale estimated that 25,000 to 30,000 walked past the seamless copper coffin .• The estimate may have been generous, but the lines con- tinued without letup for the en life 3~hours. Presley was dressed in a cream-colored, almost white, suit with pale blue shirt and silver tie -Christmas presents from bis father. His face showed the effects of the weight be gained in his later years. On one finger was a rini with an enormous diamond. So zealously dld th'e family guard the private aspects of the day that the names of those of- ficiating at the service and most of tho6e invited to attend were withheld. Rex Humbard, a nationally known evangelist from Akron, Ohio, said be would officiate. Humbard had visited Presley at his Memphis home, known u · Graceland Mansion. A family spokesman said Sam- my Davis Jr. and singer James Brown would attend. Guitarist Chet Atkins and fellow ex- ecutives at RCA Victor, for whom Presley recorded, were to be there. Ther e we re reports that Caroline Kennedy and movie stars Burt Reynolds and Ann- M argret would attend. Tennessee's governor, Ray Blanton, who ordered that all flags in the state fly at half staff, also was to fly to Memphis. I . . Hundred• ~•lnloln Vigil Outolde M:••lon H Tragedy StrikH Two Mourner• 'Million Donar_Rain' Subsi • g .- Snrgery Performed loss Felt By County . Farmen n was a million dollar rainfall • for orange County. but whether jl wq a plus or mlnus depends on your Vie_wpoil)t. ". To waler uaen in tbe count.ft th• rainfall meant ~lenished groundwater 1uppUe1. It also meane a lesaentnc. for now at least, ot tbe bruahfiT* "threat ln hill areas of the county. But for some Orange County farmers, the storm meant a $1 million Joss in some crops. Irvine Company officials said their crop loss, mosUy in ca.nninl tomatoes, could amOWlt to $500,000 alone. They think that figure coold be doubled throughout Orange County. -~Dorffn nudeit the wettest August in 89 yeQ'.S hereabouts, with some portions ot the county re<:eiving as much as 2.6 inches pf rain durina tbe two-day drenching. After brewin& herselt up into .~ hurric•v. stfeadh .Monday oft the coast of Mexlco, Doreen had cooled off enough to be calJed a tropical 1torm by the time sbe reached Ensenada. Weather forecasters said s~e djed Wednesday about 50 miles-San Diego. w- Los Arl(etes Weather ServicB forecaster Don ne,.uw Hid today's cloud)'. ski• ahOuld live waytosunshiJ)eFriday. 1 He .said warmet'I weather Will return with the sunshJn. wiUt highs in Orange COW\\)' Upectei1 to reacb ~ r.riday. Overni&ht 10"1 lfi11 be in the upper eos. I m n Id nti(yin h mieU as an Or n o County l IMrbor p trolmun und uppMrently at- temptina u pr nk notified an uriknown number of rcsldcnll from Ii~ ion Vle]o 1.o Son Clemente to tlw thttr home:-. in thTeal uf u tid~ wave ·to· day, ~.w ornc~n said. Sb iff's Lt. Tom Conner ~uad, however. there wa no emcrgell("y and what the man may ha\~ thought wu~ .i prank is a \'mlahon of the Cahfomaa Penal Code. 1 lie a lleged the caller t phoned residents bet ween 9 and 10:30 a .m. saying an Sheriff's invest igutors and phone company officials are trying to learn the caller's identity. He said the "iolation falls under placem(.tnt of an· noying phone calls I .ag11ua' s . Festivals ··Continue-Damply By JACK CHAPPELL . Of-0.11, ll'ti.tStatf "We're soggy, but we're hang· ing in there," Laguna Art-A-Fair artist Joyce Stone said today as paintings and other art works were being brought out from 1 whatever rain cover was found. Wednesday's downpour shut ~ ~1i'i ~~:: o~~~~U::.'~o~~:~~ws. ' Only minor damage was re· ported to the pieces being ex- . hibited, although most were ex· posed to the elements. When the rains came, artists scrambled to get their pieces un- der cover. "We had lo store some in the pr1vvaes, we're callmg them 'Art· A-Johns.' "Mrs. Stone scud ... Al the Festival of Arts, Grounds Manager Mogens Abel said a few water color paintings and fabric liners lo some other works had been dampened, but that he and other artists had placed threatened plece5 under cover. "I would say we ha ve bad sur· prisingly little damage for the amount of rain we had.•· Abel said. At the Sawdust FestivalL ex· hibitors trenched a ditch through the grounds to channel runoff rrom the bill behlnd the 1rounds into a flood control channel. A spokeswoman said there was lit· Uedamage. Festival of Arts spokeswoman Sally Reeve said today, "we as· su111.e'' the pageant of the mastert scheduled (or this eve· ning wrn goon as scheduled. Performances Tuesday and Wednesday were tanceled because of the rain. Ticket holders to the canceled performances may e>cchange their tickets for tickets or equal value to two added pllg~'ant performances Aug. 29 and 30, or * * * they may t.urn them 1n for re· .4 __. F • 1 ~ funds. /t.TI, eStlVQUJ Tickets for the additiona l performances will be placed on E E • sale beginniqg Aug . ·24 at the ve Xf_erlsl0ft Festival df Afts box office. The .l . box office will be open from noon Laguna Beach's three art to 9 p.m. for sales and new ex· reslavals will seek lo stay open changes. another two days, Aug. 29and30 Mrs. R eeve suggested to make up for gale losses in· curred as a result of this week 's tic'ketholdets to rained out perr0rmances can the box office rains. d k t· f r The F<.-sllval of Arts and the an ma ea reserva ion or one o Pageant of the Masters need no the two days. ' special permission for extending The PaJeanl. rarnouts Tuesooy the 44·day run. but Art·A·Fair and Wedilesdlly ~ere only the and the Sawdust Ftstival may second aJ1d third U1* in the 42· need extensions or cifY permits to year history of the Show that it do so. · was rained ouh The first time Tracy Moscaritolo of the •was tt;>e JulY'I 29, 1985, k'· Sawdust Festival said her group formance. • would be seeking permission for the extra two days to recoup gate losses. Jack Caldwell of Art·A· Fair said his organization in· tended to do so as well. * * * Front Page A J :·RAIN ••. ln Southern California, nearly all those evacua~ from their homes In several tm~rial Ooun- ty communities during lhe height nf the lftorm were m6vlng"back in and 'beginning to d'-throogh the mud and debrls7' Imperial County Agricultural Commissioner Claude Finnell estimated crop damage would run as.hijh as $19 million. Re said 10 pereent of the cotton crop was lost at a cost or $7.5 million: 60 percent of the alfalfa seed crop tor a loas ot $1.5 mllllon. and five . percent of the harvested altalla '.hay for a loss or $100,000. 1 Total acTlcunural loss io "~them California was expect• ,,ed torucb $29milllon. Additional loaaca were expect· ed after officlals ch6Ck.ed Im• perial County's 3,000 mUes ot canals for leaKS and breaks. Th• 'count)' wu d*l•ttd ~ dilfU\W Qrea by th~ county~aoird if .Supervtsors earll!f:'lhii weei. Burglars Get 5 Barbecues I A spokesman for the Irvine Company denied today that the firm no longer Plahs to donate an 18-acre hospital site adjacent to the UC Irvine campus to the Westem World Mtdical Founda- tion. Tom WHck, company vlce pr~~ldent of pubUc affairs, said l~ company's new owners are untamiliar with the Western World plans and the commitment to the medic4tl foundation made by the cQmpany's previous owners. . • He said the matter is under study and an announcement shOu.ld be forthcoming in 90 days. Wilek's statement was issued after news reports quoted Joan Irvll\e Smith, a member of the company's board of directors, as saying the land gift was being withdrawn by the new owners. Members of a foundation· appointed commiUee which has been making plans for the hospital and medical complex, are seeking a meeting with the land firm's new owners to re· solve questions about the land gift. Mrs. Smith. who last week gave $1 million to UCI for use in expanding the campus medical school facilities, reportedly told two Westerrl World committee members that the new Irvine Company ownership was withdrawing the land gift otler because they could no longer af. ford to give the 18·acre site away. • Committee members said they . are seeking a meeting with Irvine Company officials because they are unsure whether Mrs. Smith was speaJCing as an individual Irvine Company dlrec· tor or as a spokes man for the en· tare board and management of the Irvine Company. Wilek said that "at present,• no decision has been made and no position taken with respect to the <Western World> property." ii'rora Page AJ VANDALS • • • .,.....Pa~AJ befont l•t• afternoon. Calla from weU·wWlers -in·,..,...,,,,.,._,...,.,.,_., __ .,._ cl udlng Prulden t Carter. ·~;~t~~~hG .. ~~~E..~::,,-...U,~~~~~~~~~~~~ Secretary of State Cyrus Vance and Health, '.Education aftd Welfue Secretary Joseph Califano r-streamed Into Ullivenlty Hospl'al Wednesday nl•ht. Vice President Walter F. Mon· dale, in his home state on vaca- tion, visited with Humphrey for about 30 m1nute1. A ho•pltal spokesman said Carter called the Minnesota Democrat about~ p.m. She said the conversation lasted about five minutes and Humphrey described 1t afterwards as "super." Humphrey was a<lmitted to the hospital Tuesday and was ex· amined by N-.Jarlan and cancer treatment specialist Dr. B.J . KeM~y. Najarian said there was no direct evidence of cancer, but there was no way to know without surgery. Other possible causes ot the obstruction he Usted were scarriftl from the cancer opera- tion last October or from radla· tioo treatments Humphrey has received. "U you saw him you wouldn't think he was sick," Najarian said. He added that \he senator's excellent general health reduces the surgical risk, altbouah he has lost some weight with the ln· testiJlal problem. Najarian said the problem ap. parently began about a month ago and.became severe this week when the lower end of the colon, near the rectum, became either totally or almost totally blocked. The surgeon said be planned to perform a colostomy because there is no way to simply cut out the obstruction in the colon. Soviet First MOSCOW (AP> -In a feat rivallrta American Robert E. Peary's discovery of the North Pole, a Soviet nuclear-powered i cebreake r , the 25,000 -ton ArkUka, has . become the first surface ship to reach the top of the world. MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) - Authorities diseotu1t reports that Elvis Presley had a serious d.r\ll· problem before his dtath. ''( can't HY he wu tUln& no dtllgs •t all," s•id Dr. Jerry Francisco. Shelby County medical examiner, "because hll own doct.or hu eaid he waa tak- lnS appeUte depressants." But Franciaco, who conducted • a three-hour autopsy on tho en· • Us,rlalner's body, empllaUcally denied Presley showed BM' IJp of a drug abuie. "There was no·evidence ot any abnormal, Wegal chill UH. .. be said. In Beverly Hills, two of Pre1ley'1 ex-body1uard1, Delbert "Sonny" West and David Hebler, sald Wednesday hewu • .. tormeoted man". pushed into beavyrdrUg use bY the'welaht of bi5 own legend. The bodyg\Jards were fired just before they started wratln1 "Elvts: wttat Happened?," a book touted by p~bliclats as describing a gi-tm stae of Prel'lley that was "broodinl1 violent, ob- sessed with death, strung out, se>eUBlly dtlven." He addea ttiat some tr Pre1ley'1 friends tried to perauado him to qwt drugs, but he fin~ pulled one of t.Mm ulde said: "lneed it, m~ I nffdlt-'' • . Franctaco said if Presley had been t.ik1nf drucs in the amount 1u1geattd by West, vislb•e evidence would hue shown on the body. • . Francisco said be found no nee· die roarks -which would tuave been apparent bad Presley ~n talcing dtUgs with a hypodermic -and be said there was no sign of damaae or change in his t1$· sues and organs which would have ahown evidence of heavy drug abuse. West and Hebler emphuiled that their book, which describes Presley as a reclu1lve drui ad· diet} ~ wrl1t.fm. more than a yearago. • ~l 'A..:~t' It was released two weekl ago. Y~ "~vis was a <onnente4 inan,.. D!u Re1· ~ted satd Hebler. "He was a vtctlm of ~ ~ himself ..• the Hnaee. the legend." Tbe bodyguards said Presley started taking pills during his two-year stint 'in the Army and cootimled taking them to get up for his heavy concert and film schedule. "Like in Las Veeas, the fint. couple of days he was there he would get totally wiped out on Demarol and just sit there and not be able to open his eyes," West said. SACRAMENTO (AP> -The Education Committee of the s tate Senate bas overwhehntag· ly defeated a bill to alliw schools to hold a minute of silence each day for prayer· or contemplation. The committee, which has re- peatedly rejected such pro- posals, gave a 5·1 vote Wednes· day· to the measure, AB 843 by Assemblyman Mike Antonovich, <R·Glendale>. VOL. 70, NO. 230, 5 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES .,..,. ....... FANS OF ELVIS PRESt.eY MOURN THE DEATH OF THEIR IDOL NEAR HIS MEMPHIS HOME . Hundred• Maintain VlgU Out9'de Mansion H Tragedy Strike• Two Mourner• DoetorBies -MEMPHIS, ·Tenn. <AP) -- Hundreds ~eeplna vfall outside . ElviS Presley's mansion watched in bOrror arty tOday as a car struclt and lrilled two women. bow'I before the singer'• funeral. Police said the car was speed· ing and the. Clrlver had been drinklng. The women, and a third person who was iAJured. were standing in a median section ot tour-lane Elvis Presley Boulevard, while about 300 persons were gathered on the sidewallt across from Graceland Mansion. Three women and· one man were arrested several blocks away after the incident. Police said the car was travel- ing at SS miles per hour down the street. ~here the limit is40 miles per hour. The accident came on a day that was to have been for the family and the close friends of Elvis Presley, not for the claw· lna. clutching, .adorinl crowds. As be wished it, the funeral for the 42-year-old singer was to be conducted in prlvate, in midaf· temooo, with prayer and eulOIY in the mansion be called home and ·entombment near his mother, in a cemetery not far away. Dlck Grob, tbe chief of Presley's personal security force, said the slnaer and hl5 father, Vernon Presle~ bad plapnedhis funer.al. ''This is running exactly the way Elvia' father suggested it be run," Grob said. •'It's been run in accordance with El Tis' wbbes. •• The family had planned to al· low the public to view Presley's body for two hours Wednesday. Tb& time stretched to 3~ hours but there were still about 15,000 whose pilgrimage to see Presley a final time wu in vain. Sherilf Gene Barksdale estimated that 25,000 to 3>,000 walked past the seamlps copper coffin. 1be estimate may have been generous. but the lines COO· tinued without letl)p for the entire 3~hours. Presley was dressed in a cream-colored, almost wblte, sutt with pale blue sbirt and sliver tie -Christmas presents from~ father. Alteraeoa N.Y.Steeks ms face showed the effects t4 the weight he gained in bis later years. On one finaer wu a rm, with an eoonD°"8 diamond. So zealously did the family guard the private aspects ot the day that the names of those of. ficiating at the service and qJOSt of time Invited to attend were withheld. Rex Humbard, a nationally knowp evangelist from Akron. Ohio, said he would offfolate. Humbard had visited Presley at bis Memphis bome, known as Graceland Man5Jon. A family spokesman sald Sam.· tny Davis Jr. and stnaer James Brown would attend. Guitarist Ch.t-AtkiM" nd--hllow 'ft" ecutives at RCA Victor, for whom Presley recorded, were to be there. There were reports that Caroline Kennedy and movie stars Burt Reynolds and Alm· Mar~ would attend. Tennessee's 1overnor, Ray Blantoo, who ordered that all flags in the state fiy at half ataff, atao was to Qy to Memphis. ...., ............ .,. ............ KATHt WINTEACOOPER PONDERS LIMB THAT FELL: IN HER HARO Weight of R•ln Breaka Branch, but Huntington Bemch Wom•n'a Home Eacapea Damage -,...,. Page AJ B • C Fro. Page Al ~•n_· auses RAIN ••.• TAX ••• gesUohs she made for savtn, tax dollars was a recommendation that scrap metal and discarded vehicles in the city yard be sold. ' City Manager Gerald Weeks said scrap metal ,iready is being sold twice or three times a year, 'whenever enough accumuJates. As for the "discarded" vehicles, Weeks said, they have not been discarded at all. but are used by citvworkers. ••All I am ask.ingisfora.nbonest· to-gosh savings, so people can af· « ford to stay ln their homes," said Mrs.Koester. Drug Deaths On Decrease WASHINGTON CAP) - Deaths from heroin and morphine overdoses decreased sharply in Detroit. Los Angeles and San Francisco from January through March, a trend that couJd be nationwide, says · the D.roe Enforcement Ad· ministration. .. ''Heroin and morphine over· dose deaths have decreased 74 percent in Detroit, 53 percent in Los Angeles and S8 percent ln San Francisco," said Peter 1 Bens.iftger, administrator of the DEA. The .statistics froin these heroin-use cenle$ $how 1'b~ we may reasona'bly expeit • much more encottraginJt ~ nationally," Bensincer added. 85,000 Minen ~eStrike CHARLESTON, W. Va. <AP) -As a growlne wildcat strike kept an estimated 85,000 coal miners off tJie jo~ Wedltesday, United Mine Workers ,President Arnold Miller met with Labor Secretary Ray M arabaJJ in 'Wasbinaton to discuss tl:le walkout. ' A spokesman for Manhall said 'the private, ~Jlov1lOQ& aeaston 'w~ • J~aJ discumod of Ute w~ alfd of tbejroblema ol the union health an reiltement .funds that spar)!ed.it. I Eddie West 'ID Hospital . . .Q 20 M·ii·on water from the north portion of CJP II the state. even at twice the $40 Crop Losse~ LOS ANGELES CAP> -A tropical storm fizzled out today after battering drought-stricken Southern California for two days. washing out highways, flooding homes and causing an estimated $20 million in crop damage. ·"'It's falling apart," a National Weather S~rvlce fore · caster said of the storm that hit Southern California Monday as Hurricane Doreen. ''There's hardly any wind left, but there's still plenty of rain." At least five deaths in Southern California were attributed to the storm, and several other persons -including three Riverside children and a fireman -nar· rowly escaped death in swirling floodwaters. The storm's fury took its heaviest toll in the Mexican border town of Mexicali, where more than 2,000 people wer$ left homeless after their houses - many of them cardboard shan· ties -were reduced to pulp by the heavy rains. Tht! town, the caJ)ital of. Bfrja California, was declared a "dis· aster area by the Mexican gov- ernment Wednesday after the en. tire downtowu ·~ WJ1S re-- p()rted •as~ "'.futw•ter ti deef> as tour feet 14 •ome places. Police and army teams rescued 400 llbUded m~ls ifter the hithway betwet'll Tiju~a and Mexicali wu washed out. In California, the storm· was b,reaking up today aft.er inundat~ ing parts of the state. Ironically, the water came too hard and tOo fast to really help break the drought. per acre foot cost, beca~ of drought conditions up there. Elser said there are other ad· vantages to the August rainfall. .. It means people won't be water· ing their lawns for awhile," he said. The light-falling rain also means a lot wu soaked into the soil instead of running off. the water expert said. He said the water district's 600·acre sand spreading grounds on the Santa Ana River in Anaheim caught much of the rainfall and that will help replenish the groundwater level which bas reached record lows ln recent months. The storm brougbt Oranze County's annual rainf ~ level to almoet 11 incJles, Just two and a half inches short of the county's normal rainfall for October through September. "It won't pull u8 completely OJ,lt of u,, drought. but it sure helps,•' Elser said. J. Sherman Denny, Huntington Beach's weather watc~~rt said the storm dropped 1.90 mcaes of rain in that ei(y u of 8 this morn- ine. · · · Denny checked records since the National Weather Service wu formed in Itm and says the previous record for A.UlllSt was .61 lnches in 1889 in HUJ1tinlton Beach. ~8WAOrt Beach had a ltot'm ·to~ d"'l..82 inches and Se Juan ~ap.istrano weather wateben re- corded 2.26 inches of rai.Df all. Mardian Trial A SWll'-"1d nun 11 prob· ably p1toblnf -:wbat f drinks today after be had'i run·iA With a flamlof Blue Bluer cocktail late Wednesday niaht in Newport Beach, . Firemen were Sl.lm~ moned to the Beach Ball, a . bar at 2116 W. Ocean Front. about qiidpiabt where they found Cbatle:> Milli. 216; who )lad suffered 10me .allabt b~ to ht• face. Capt. Robert Kelly said he asked the burn victim how the mishap occurred. MUia apl&ined be bad o~ dered a ftamina drink. then tried to drink it while it wusUll afire. SkatehOard Park Nixed • • In San Juan A proposed San Juan Capistrano skateboard park was rejected by city councilmen Wednesday. They unanimously agreed the facillt~. would create problems for an adjacent housing tract inhabited by older people. The park would have been located at San Juan Creek Road and Interstate :s. On a f.-0 vote with CouncllmJD John Sweeney absent, the council rejected Plannln& Commisai~ flndinp that the proposed park s location would create a health and safety hazard for patrons. But councilmen upheld a June 28 Planning Commisilon n!Jec· lion of the project based on in· compatibility with surrounding uses, particularly the San Juan Hills t.-act located across the street. "I am concerned about the compatibility of the use," said Councilman Douglas Nash, cit- ing objections based on Poise and lighting. . "The area has been seared for older people," Nash said. MEMPIUS. Tenn. <AP) - Authorlttes diact)Uftt reporta that Elvis Presley had a serious dru1 problem before his death, "I can't aay be \VU tntne no drugs at all," said D~. Jerry Francisco. Shelby County medical examiner, .. be.cause hia own doctor bu •aicl be wu talt· ms appetite d~s~ta ... B~ FranclaCo. wbo conduct.s a UJree:hOur autopsy on the en· t~~·a body. eb\pbatleally dented Presley showed. any GP. of a drus abUse. '''lbere was no evidence ot aay abnormal. Weaial dru1 use." be' said. ~ In Be"Verly llfll1. two of Prealey•a ex·bodyauarda. Oelbert "Sonny" w .. t and Davtd Hebler, said Wedhactay b• was a "tormented man" pushed lntO he•TY drue use by the •eiaht ot hi• own legend. J The bodnuards were flrtdjust Erora Page A before they started wrmna .FE·s· TIVA LS . "Elvis; What Hai>pened? ," a book touted bf publlclats u describing a O"Un side of Presley ... .that wu "broodinl. vloleot. ob-becauseoftherain. · sesHd with -4~ •b'uDI ota~ _... l'idca holden to the canceled seauallydriven.0 • performances may excbanse West and Hebler em)>blsiied their tickets for tickets of equal that :tbeir..boolt, wh1cli deici:lbieS value to two added pageant Presley u a rec:lmive clrQa ad· perfonnencee Aua. 29 .~30. Or diet, was wrttteA mo.re thm a they may twii them in for re. year ago. . funds. · It wa&rel~ twowe.b 110. Tlctet1 for the. additional "Elvis wu atonnented mant" performances will be placed Ob sald Hebler ... He waa a victim of sale ~nnine Aua. ~ at the himself ••• tbe lmaae, tbe Festiv Of ~rts box office. The legend... box <ifice will be open from noon The bodyguards said Presley to 9 p.m. for sales and new ex- started taking pllla du.ring his changes. twe>-year stint in the Army and Mrs. Reeve s u ~ g est ed continued taking them to 1et up tlcketholders to rained Otat for bis beavy concert and rum performances call the box office schedule. and make a reservation for one of "Uke m Las Ve1u, the Ont the two days. couple of days be was there be The pqeant uin<>tUs Tuesday would get totally wiped out on and Wednesd~ were . only the Demarol and just sit there and second and third time m the ~-. not te able to open bJ.s eyes,•• year history of the show th~t tt w t 8 · d was rained out. The first time ~e 8!cided that some of was the Jul}' 29. 1965, per· Presley's friends tried to formance. . . I APWl,..... FANS OF ELVIS PRESLEY MOURN THE DEATH OF THEIR IDOL NEAR HIS MEMPHIS HOME Hundred• Maintain Vlgll Outside Manalon ~· Tre~dy Strtk•• Two Mourners MEMPHIS, Tam. (AP) -As lDore than 1,000 people watcMd "OUtslde the aates of Elvis Prealey'S' mansion today. celebrities Joined t.M family in-side at private funeral services fortlieKiQlofRoctc 'n' Roll. . ·A few hours earlier, about 300 persons keeping an a1J.ft1ght vigil at the scene had watched in bor- .-or as a ell!" struck' and tilled two women anti criticially injured a q third. Many ol those wbo waited in the 90-degree afternoon heat brought portable tape players that boomed out Presley's hit sobi!. The fans, aome with tears · streaming down their cheeks, stood or sat on automobile hoods and stared at the bi& white house ontbehlll. Celebrities attending the services. included actors John Wayne ancl Burt Reynolds, singer-actress Ann-MargM and her husband, Jtopr Smith, and entertaiDu Sammy Davis Jr. Police said the car involved in the predawn traffic accident was traveling.SS miles an hour in a 40 m .p.h. aoite and the driver.had been drinking. The male driver and UU'ee lemal~ passengers were taken into custOdj a few blocks away. The funeral for the 42:.Year..o!cJ sing~ was· planned juat M be wi.9bed.lt; with pr.ayer and eel91Y ill the mansion he called home · and e~tombm~nt near bis . mother, in a cemetery not far away. . · : Dick Grob·, the chief of Presley's personal seeurJty force, said the singer and his father, V~rnon Presley. bad . planned llis funeral.. · -~ - "Tbls is running eltac:tlT the way Elvis' father suggested.if be run." Groltsaid. "It's been run in a~cordance with Elvis' wishes." ,,, The famtly had pl8.Dllod to al-low the pablic to View Prestey•a, body for two hours Wednesday. The time. stntched to 3\.11 hOqrs ~ut there ~re still about 15,()0() 'whose pilgrimage to see Presley a final time wQin vain. Sberiff Gene Barksdale estimated that 25,000 to 30,000 walked past the searq_less copper comn. The estimate m~ have been generOu.s, but the lines con- tinued without letup for~ entire Rainfall Most .in C~Bftty Sine~~ 1~~ ~ Surgery Performed $1 Million ' • .,_lly "* Stiff PMt• RAIN-SOAKED ART·A·FAIR REQPENED TODAY , Worker Jae .. ~ald)Vell Pu.tlfe Wa~er Out .of Gro"'1'Q1 :_ ,, .. · . ... "' -~ I .a~na' s Festivals ' Centilitif:-Damply By JACK CHAPPELL Of tM 0.11, l'llot ..... "We're so~gy, but we're hang- ing ln there, 'Laguna Art·•· Fair artist Joyce Stone said today as paintings and other art works were being brought out from whatever rain cover wa~ found. Wednesday's downpour s hut all three of Laguna's art shows. All were open today, however. Only minor damage was re-J 1 ported to the'pieces being ex- 1 hibited, although most were ex- posed to the elements. r When the rains c-.uie, ~ ls scrambled to get1theit-plec~ - dercover. , "We had to store some in the privvies, we're calling them 'Art- A-Johns.' "Mrs. Stone said. At the Fes tival of Arts, Grounds Manager Mogens Abel said a few water color paintings and fabric liners to some other 1 works had been dampened, but * * * SronnKeep1 I' ~l Fireme~ Busy :1 In Newport Water District, sai~ the ~wo-day storm dropped nearl~ 20,000 acte feet of water into tbe parched. soU. ' ,MEMPHlS, Tenn. (.\P) - Authorities discount report& that Elvis Pre.ley bad a $trloua drq , problem before hla dtatb. . "I can't HY be WU takinf no , drugs at all." aald Dr. Jerry Francisco, Shelby County medical examiner. "because his own doetor has aa.Hl he was ta.It· in1 appetite depr"s~ta." But Fren~llco, who conducted a thr~hoy.i' autopsy on the en- tertainer'$ bOdy, emphatically denied Presley showed any ailft of a drug abuse. "There was no evidence of any abnormal. ill91al drug uae." he said, 111 Beverly Hilla, two of Presley's e~·bodysuards, Delbert "Sonny'' West and David H~bler, said Wednesday be wu a ''tormented man" puabed into heavy drui uae by the weight of his own leeend. The bodyeuards were fired just before they started writing "Elvis: What Happened?," a book touted by publicists as describing a 1rim side of Prestey that was "brooding, violent, ob- sessed with death, strung out, sexually driven." West and Hebler emphasized that their book. which describes Presley as a reclusive dru& ad- dict, was written more than a yearaeo. Jt was released two weeks ago. "Elvis was a tormented man," said Hebler. "He wu a victim of SCRSlates Comtnretwn Of Theater The South Coast Repertory professional theater company will start construction of a new· 506-seat, $2.5 mlllion thntrlcal center in Novembe11. •lts ex. ecutive director reported today. SCR's David Emqies aa.ld con- tributiops toward bulldina the complex, on donated acreage next to the South Coast Plaza Hotel in Costa Mesa, t-0tals about $1.2 million so far. The non-profit theate1 .eroup currenUy stages plays ta a 217· seat theater on Newport 6oulevard in Costa Meo. E mes said this theater .season al ad)A has sold out, to t,400 sub-• Scriberi. . The fWld·railing c•mPllln to build a biner, better ttieatec be1an lastl year, and .SCR forecast varying timetables for the move. Emmes, sputinl( 'to the Cltizens Harbor Area Rtaearc~ Team, said "lt now looll& likt lt 's a virtual «?ertalnty that wal be able to start the bulldlnc. '' He predicted a groundbreaking )'.Jov. 1, witJi the theater Gpening tn October, l978, In cortjunctlon' with sroundbreakln1, Emmes aaid SCR plans a major pubUc cam· paign for tundl. Mo.tt C!Ontribu- Uons have been made by 1'ealthy patr<M'IS of the tbelter. The city of Costa Mesa put up $25G,OOO, Emmes aald; county &overn· 1 ment rnatcbeid that fund. Emmes aald blovin• the _theater four mUet 1alaDd lrill in· crease tbe SCR audience. "Tuna .filh ~ ao to the theater ... be remarked. ,.. Emmes callecl SCR 11th6 Dis- neyland of the arts." South~t ' Ywtimized by FloOd p.,ymk By MICHt\EL PASUVICJI • J OftlllDlllYl'llltltaff 'Fbe U.S. Marine Corps an .. - nouneed Wedrteaday that a Plan to coriltruet 1,800 mllltary !JdUi. lnJ unlt.s on 128.5 acl'es 1n Mile Square Park bas been aban· doned, at leut temporarily. A '1ew plan calla for the Marines to build 400 units oo two sites totaling 72 acres at the Marine Corps helicopter station in Tustin, according to Col. G. L. "Red" Fenenga, chief of plan- ning at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. Fountain Valley Ma)'or lloeei Stanton, who headed t.be opposl· tlon to the Marines' pJans, today said he ls pleased with the an- nouncement, but added that "a larger issue still exists." Because the Marines sUU own the land In th' center of the park, Stanton i.s pressln« for a land . . Pre.ldeat ·carter lD~ a week'• vacatloa at Camp DaYid to take a helicopter back to the White House, apparently to make a public statement about LaQce and the report. He left Camp David atl:S7 p.m. EDT. • -. The committee uid both Laoee and Heimann will be asked to testily at a bearing on Sept. 7. The report said Lance did not file required report& with banks he headed or a summary ot his outside interests and lo~ he had received. f ............ .FANS OF ELVIS PRESLEY MOURN THE DEATH OF THEIR IDOL NEAR HIS MEMPHIS HOME . Hundr~s Maintain Vlgll Out1lde Mansion H Tragedy Strtkea Two Mourners MEMPKIS, Tenn. h\P>--· -Huiidreds keeping· \'i1ll outslde. EJYis Presley's mansion watched • in horror early today as a car struck and killed two women, hours before the singer's funeral. Pol.lee uid the car was speed- ing and the driver had been ~drinking: The women, and a third person who was .i.ltjured, .were standing in ·a medilm ·Section of four-lane Elvis Presley Boulevard, while about 300 persons were gathered on the sidewalk across from Grateland Mansion. Three women and one man were arrested several blocks away after the incident. Police said the car was travel-in1 at 5S miles per hour down the street, where the limit is 40 miles ~rbour. • The aeeident came on a day- tbat was to have been for the fa111lly and the close friends of Elvis Presley, not for the claw- ing, Clu~hing, adoring crowds. As he wished it, the funeral for the 42-year-old singer was to be conducted in private, in midaf- ternoon, with prayer and eulo&y in the mansion he called home and entombmetit near· l,lls mother, 1n a cel!letery not far away. Dick Grob. the chief of Presley's personal security force, said the singer alid b1S father, Vernon Prealej, had planned bis funeral. •'This is running exactly the way Elvis' fai,ber su11ested lt be run," Grobsaid ... It's beennm!n accordance with Elvia' wbbeS." The fJl!llily had planned to al· low the public to view Presley's body for two hours Wednesday. The time stretched to 3~ hours but there were still about lS,000 whose pilgrimage to see Pn:sley a final time was in vain. Sheriff Gene Barksdale estimated that 25,000 to 30,000 walked.past the seamless copper coffin. Tbe estimate may have been generous, but the lines COO• tinued withoutletupfortheeotire 3~hours. Presley was dressed in a cream-colored," al moat white, suit with pale blue shirt and silver tie -Christmas presents from his f.athei. Rex Humbard, a nationally known evanaelist from Akroa, Ohio, said he would oflidate. Humbard bad 'fislted Pr~ey at bis Memphi9 home, known as Gracelod.Mansion. A family spokesman said Sam· my Davis Jr. and stnger James Brown would attend. Guitarist Chet .Atkins and fellow ex4 ecutives at RCA Victor, tor whom Presley recorded, were to bet.here. There were reports that Caroline K•nnedy and movie stars Bu.rt Reynolds and AQn4 Margret would attend. Tennessee's iovernor, Ray Blantcm, who ordered that all flags in the state fly at half staff, also was to fly to Memphis, Phony -Tid~l Wa~e Call lits C~ast MINNEAPOIJS (AP) -Sen.. Huben H. Hwnpbrey (Q-?tfinn.), underwent exploratory surcery today, and docton aaid t~ found an inoperable lllaliP:ant tumor blocldns bis colon. Dr. John Najarian, who beaded ~ a team of five surgeons, sald "tomor throughout the pelvia seems to )>e conflned to that area:" Najarian said there was no way to remove the tuinor sur· gically and chemotherapy would begin in about two weeks. He said the tumor was a recur· rence of the cancerous tumor which necesitated the real:>val • • ·-·-.. llesidents Told:.Fle e .. From Area - ,:.,..:2:-~D~~~~-y~~~L·ONT~~-s_a_.., ____ .......,.....,.~~~~~~ College ·Affected HjHaili <>nap tJ'• mld·aummtr rata1torm ut Saddfebaok Coll lldmlnlltratcn In motJon WedaHda1 1hutrlln1 fall •• c1 ..... from tawtle pro drl .....,. Tbe cill e la IC to ~ It.I doon Aq. 2', but rain from tropieal 1t.orm Doreen bu forced a delay in the completion ol 15 elMlrGma an U.e collqe'• so-called ''QPOet campua." "We don't anticipate any larce problem., just a few 1bort·term lncoovenlened," Dr. Edward Hut, aast.. 1upt. for general de· velopment, uld today. • Hart uld the main prol4ems involved access to classrooms iD a ~ew quad area situated near the Ubcary. • • "The contractor had intended to start paving tbJs Wffk, but the rain bas forced a delay ln that open.lion." be explained. "It will take al least two days or drying up before they can becin paving again.'' Hart predicted the ralJJS wou\d force a one-week delay in lh~ projects. "We 've &one to great lengths to open the bookstore in the new quad area and we'fe anticipating the sitµation will get a little bet- ter each day," Hart explained. Meanwhile, Associate Dean of Instruction Frank Sci11rrotta sald today contingency plans have been drawn up to relocate about 15 classrooms for at least the first week of classes. "We bad some cl&s£rooms that were scheduled for renovation work, so we're delaying those projects and usin& the rooms for classes scheduled in the quad area and the fine arts complex," Sciarrotla said. He said some classrooms in the new fine arts complex would be ready for the openine of cl~es next Wednesday. · The relocation effort involves about 25 classes at the college. Sciatrotta also said catered food services had been arr.anged for the campus since rain would also delay opening or the new cafeteria in the quad area. * * * Fro•PageAJ RAIN •.• · were to be completed by next • Thursday. In Southern California, naarly all those evacuated from thelr homes in several Imperial Coun· ty communities during the height ot the storm were mo vine back in and beginning to dig through ~ mud and debris. Imperial County Agricultural Commissioner Claude Finnell estimated crop damage would run as high as $10 million. He said 10 percent of the cotton crop · was .lost at a cost of $7.5 million; , 60 percent of the alfalra seed crop . for a lQSs or $1.5 million, ~ul five 1 percent of the l)arvested alfalfa , hay for a loss of $700,000. ·Total agricultural loss in , Southern (:aUfon\ia was expect- ! ed t.o reach $20 mlfUon. I Additional losses were expect- ed aft.er orfloials checked Im- perial County'• "J,000 'mlles or ca~ for leaks and breaks. The coUnty was decl.,-ed a disa.sCer area by the COWl\¥. .Dovel of Supervisors earlier this week. 'smiiol~t · BiU Rejected Dally ...... IWft ,,.._. RAIN-SOAKED ART-A-FAIR REOPENED TODAY Worker Jack Caldwell.Pushes Water Out of Grounds l.aguna's Festivals Conting.e-Da~ply By JACK CHAPPELL Of t1'e Dally "II" S~ll '"We're soggy, but we"re hang- ing in there," Laguna Art-A· Fair artist Joyce Stone said today as paintings and other art works were being brought out from whatever rain cover was found. Wednesday's downpour shut all three of Laguna's art shows. All were open today, however. • Only minor damage wa11 re- ported to the pieces being ex· hibited, although most were ex- posed to the elements. When the rains came, artists • scrambled to 1et their pit!fes un- der cover. "We had to store some in the privvies, we're calling them ·Art- • A•Je>hns, • "Mrs. Stone said .. At "the Festival of Arts, Grounds Man~r Mo(ens Abel said a few water color paintings and fabric liners to some other works bad been dampened, b\lt that be and other artists had placed threatened pieces un(ler cover. • "I would say we have had sur- prisingly little damage' for the amount of rain we had," Abel said. At the 5'wdus£ Festival, ex- hibitors trertched a ditch th.rough the grounds to channel runoff from the hill behind the" grounds ·iJ)to a flood control chatmel\.A ·~ppkeswom;an said there was ut· ttedamage. ,Festival of Arts spokeswoman Sally Ree~ said today, ·"we as~ sum't" tb& pageant of the roasters scheduled for this eve- ningwill goon as scheduled. Performance~ TueMlay and Wednesday were canceled Crilne Surge Bits Juarez JUAREZ, Mexico (AP) - Many of the estimated 50,000 p~r$0DS lured northward to this Mexican border city bf dreams ol United States citizenship have • tu.rned to crime to support because or the rain. Ticket holders t-0 the canceled performances may exchange their tickets for tickets• or equal value to two added pagt!ant performances Aug. 29 and 30, or they may turn them in for r~ .. fun~. · Tickets tor the additional performances wUl be placed on sale beginning Aug. 24 at the Festival of Arts box office. The box office will be open from noon to 9 p.m. for sales and new ex· changes. Mrs. Reeve suegested t1cjtelholders to rained out performances call the box olfice and make a reserva~on for one of the two days. The pageant rainouts Tuesday and Wednesday were only the second and third time in the 42- year history of the show that it was rained out. The first time w,as the July 29, 1965, per- formance. * * * F~~age··Af -PLA(;UE •• ·• Too ·Thinty; He'aBumed A Sunland ~tQ ..P&-c~ ab~ watqhl 1 wtjet-.,~---.;.oo·~·~·-"""!'":~!':~,---::;;_-,.,__,,,,.., drinks today after he had a run-in -Mlb a fiaminl Blue • Blazer cocktail late Wednesday night in • San Juan Capistrano coun- cUmen have set Sept. 7 for a public hearing on a controversial growth management code amendment covering land an- nexation. The proposed amendment would allow proJecls anne¥1ng to the city to receive buildjng permits above the city's current 400·unit annual restriction on residential development. Councilmen argued over the desirability of granting addi- tional building permits when in- city residential projects were competing wttb each other for the tOO annual pefJllits. Planning Director Tom Mer- rell pointed out that the amend- ment was "permissive." which means the council bas the pre. rogative of authorizing all or none of the additional permits for annexed projects. The council eventually decided to reject a portion of the amend· ment that called for phasing an- nexed projects into the regular 400 limit after the first year or de- velopment. The tinal amendment that will be the subject of the public hear- ing calls for annexed projects to be phased separately from in- city residential developments. The amendment nets an an- nual limit for annexed residen- tial developments based on a formula setting one housing unit per acre of the p.roJect) as the maximum allow.able develop- menlm any given year . That means a 20-acre develop- ment could be authorized up to 20 residential building permits in a year. If the project proposed a higher density than one unit per acre, the additional units would have to be phased over succeed· mg years. NewportBeacb. Firemen were 1um- moned to the Beach Ball, a bar .at 2118 w. Ocean Front. about midniabt where they found Charles Mills, 26, who bad suffered some altlht burns to h.la face. Capt. Robert Kelly said he asked the burn victim how the mishap .occurred. MUls explained he had or· dered a naming drink. then tried to drink it while it wa.s still afire. 'No Fault' In Probing Of Lance WASHINGTON (AP> Federal banking investigators said today they have found no ln .. formation that would warrant the prosecution of Budget Direc- tor. Bert Lance or any other peo- ple involved in Lance's banklnii activities in Georgia. However, Comptroller of the Currency John Heimann told Congress in a lengthy report that Lance's banking activities "raise unresolved questions as to what . consti,tutes acceptable banking practices.,. Heimann said in a letter to the Senate Government Affairs Com- mittee that his office will try to decide if its regulations on bank- ing need to be changed. Lance had predicted that the comptroller's office would find nothing wrong with his pers~nal' finances in the period before be joined the rederal government with the Carter administration. 17'' diagonal color portable MEMPHIS; Tenn. (AP) - Autboritie1 discount reports .A~; Elvts Prelley bad a serious Yl'l6 problem before hi• death, · • "I cao't ·~ he as taldng'..\lo drup at all," said Dr. JettY Franciaco, Shelby County medical examiner, "because 'lttS own doctor has sald he was tak- ing appetite depreaaaot4. •• • · t But Franciaco, who cond~ a three-hour au~y on the tertalner'1 bOdy, empbatk denied J>rilley abOwed •M of a drug abUse. "'lbcne 'WM no e"fidence cl abnormal. llle.aal drug wse," no said. In Beverly Hilla, two l>f PrtsleY'• ex-bodyguards, Delbert r'Sonny" West ud DaVid Hebler. aald W~esdar be was~ "tormented man" pushed Into heavy dnlJ use by the weight Of bis own legend. , The bodyguards were fired J"'-t before they started writing ••Elvia: What Haepened?.'' a book touted by publie~~s describing a grim side or ~Y that was ''brooding, violenb'Ob- sessed witb death, st.rune out. sexually driven." West aD4i Hebler ~mpbulled that tbelr book, which descri,bes Presley as a reclusive dl'\11" ~­ diet, wu wrltt~ more than a year aeo._,___ · It wu released two weeks ago. "Elm wu a tormented man," said Hebler. "He wu a victim of himself , •• the image, the 1eeend." The bodyguards said Presley started taking puts during his two-year stint in tile Army and continued taking them to get :Up for his heavy concert and film schedule. .. 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So the insurance industry bu tnditioaally kept term Insurance premiums hlg~r than necessary by ln· elucllna in . rates a re· eoveryoltbelnitlal COit.i of writing the Polley. The peuon wbo keeps paytnc prel!llums · IJ, therefore, payl.Qf' to • MOney's Worth offset thole who permit pol.ides to lapse aft.er a few years. • Finally, after more than a decade t:A experimentation, "'deposit term" ts comtn1 illto its own to slash prernl\Ull rates for buyers ot term insurance for a prolonied period. lt ls a real breakthrough for c:onsUDler-«lented llfe insurance. n.-1', WHILE DEPOSIT TUii iS offered by hundreds of companies acrou th• country -ranctna from Pacific Fidelity of Los ~eles to Kemper Insurance of Kan.au City to Madison Llte of New York City -it ls not lully un· derst.ood even by ma.ll)' lite insuran~ prolesskeab. Under the deposit term pollc7 offered by Madlson Ufe in New York: -'11le buyer must pay a depostt ot $10 per $1,000 cov erage of additional premium for the first year of a 10-year plan. -This deposit is returned, doubled, at the end of lCJ yearsorintbeeveQtofpl'iordeath,ifthepollcyiSinforce. -'lbe doubled amount, cuaranteed tn the form of thr tenth year cash value of the policy, represents an int~st return of 7.2 percent compounded Oil the additioaal pre- mium. -UNDER cuaaENT T.U RULES the interest OD th< return ls tax free. 1bo5e who allow the policy to lapse before the end of the tenth POiicy year will forfeit some or au ol the deposit. "This plan ta neither intended nor recommended for in dlTiduals wbo do not feel reasonably certain that they car. maintain coverage in force for the fUll 10 yean. In event ol lapse prior to the end of the tenth policy year some or all ol the additional flnt year premium is forfeited. It is, though. a plan of lnsurartce uniquely desl1ned to rewarG policyboldera wbo maintain their policies in f 0tte for the re quired period," says MlltGn A. Schiff, president of Madison IJfe. Headlight Fad To Add to Cost DETROIT <AP> -Those rectangular headlamps or your new car are tbe latest 1tylln1 fad from Detroit. The: offer no better UChttng, yet require more glass and ene~ to produce and cost. twice u mucb as round lamps tc replace. 1be conversion to rectangular lamps since 1975 ha been as swill and pervulve as that to tailllm two decade: ago. . Uke tal.lflns, the new lamps are deaiened for cosmetif 'purpoges -,to make new ean look newer, crisper and dil ferent. "TllE WAY WE STAltTED OUT undoubtedly was ;• styling deelaion,•• says Rex Oyter, executive engineer a• General Motors Guide La.mp Division in Anderson, Ind. wbicb make.a llabta for Girl and other vehicles. "I doo't thfnk that ls all bad," adds Oyler. "To the ex teslt thattt. makes a product more appeallni. we like that.·· ~ Gll introduced dual ~taniular lamps, two or each side, oa aome tarce can in 1975. k was the lint ma.Jot stylina change in light 1 J :et::4in ~ed lamp: ( 1'1'1 m"'n ,..E' ~D GM will continue ltr ~'f b'D ~ expanded use of rec _ _ tanaular lalllpt iotc 1971. . Ford and Chrysler bepn ualn.c rectancular J~ tbla rear. and Amertciu Moton will join the movement for 19'18. '1be lamps provide no more 'fialbWty than round \amps Fed~al Jaw requires tbat they meet identkal U1btllw re ctulrementa. The cost differ~,~""'· is aubstanUal wb@ YQ\I bavetottJl[act• bUt.Deo-ocalamp. ILY Pll.Of PORT WORTH, Tu. <APJ -Alone and without fanf..-e, lilarlUMi O.waSd turned 'JO tut monlh, a97i , "With all 1·~~ hen throup, Juat belna 70 la "Whoneedl a birthday cue?" As dd\ant as ever, t.be aU~t1'·h••red, .. f.atylta "mother ol hiatory" t"tmalns unwaverina tn d• feue ol IGb, Lee, nam._. t>y the Warren Com· milskn u ~lone uaualn of Pratdent Kennedy. "'!be Wa.rren Commwion wu wron1," she a upped. SHARING A FaOSTY BEER with a visitor In her modest, immaculate brick home. she launched at once into the most recent area <>I ind.i1oation, a published eootention ahe ia "now a&ln& and in ill health." Eyes flashing, s he produced a copy of a letter malled to news media, in which she declared: "I'll admit. to t.h aiing; it'• a natural process. But to say I'm in lU-health is a K?"OSS error and I con- sider it an effort to discreclit me ... I don't feel my age, don't look it and have never been sick a d ay in my lite. I'll bet the author can't say the same thing." . Indeed , time bas t aken no apparent toll on the stocky firebrand in the 14 years since the assassinat,ion and sub- sequent killing of her son by Jack. Ruby in the basement of the Dallas County Jail. "I've never seen a doctor • .nevef t aicen an aspirin," she said. ''I've fooled 'em ,. •• ,, • ..,_ all by liv_in.g l~ years MARGUERITE OSWALD ~~~J"i~~a.irung m g~ Mrs. ~wald discussed her way of life reluc- tantly. preferring to attack authors and critics who have. assailed her and her son. "I'VE EXPEKIENCEfJ AND SURVIVED this tra1Jma," she said ... I've Javed it and I know it. What do the crit.;cs know?. . .1 may look stupid, but I know everything that's going on. Don't kid yourself about thc.t" She is ar. incessant reader, and her library overflows with books on the assassination and the presidency, on Cuba and Russia, where Oswald visited, and on New Orleans, where her son spent muchofhisyouth. "I'm very interested in everything going on in . this case," Mrs. Oswald said. "I hope sometime lo . have an opportunity to change some of the things that have been said -an opportunity to write the truth. ·•1 DON'T REALLY HA VE TO investigate anymore; it's just a matter of keeping on top ot things as lhey come up. 11 a book comes out on the assassination, there's no putting it down -even if it _ takes all night and the next day.·· She recently r ead Victor Lasky's "It Didn't Start with Watertate" and Bernard Fensterwal<l Jr.'s book on the assassination, •'Coincidence or Conspiracy?" And she said she is waiting with more than casual Interest for the October release of "Marina and Lee," as told by Lee Oswald's widow, Marina, to Priscilla Johnson McMillan. ·•rm glad Marina's book is being published, but I wonder why they waited 14 years," she said. MRS. OSWALD SAID SHE HAS spoken neither to Marina nor another son, Robert Oswald, since Novetl}ber 1963. "I called thein a couple of times, but they either wouldn't talk to me or bung up.·· She said she doesn't know'Wby. adding, "I don •t really give a damn. I've always been pretty much on my own and I've accepted that. "This ts just part of what I've gone through.·· Much more distressing •• she indicated, is the continuing disinterest of publitlbers for a book by Marguerite Oswald. "Robert had bis book, mid Marina's is C!Oming out tn Oc.'tober. He ti ad a story to tell and Manna bas a story to tell and I have a story to telJ," she said. "I CAN'T UNDERSTAND 1VJ1X I don..'t have a book. • .I think the publlabera are under the im· pression I'm Just a mother defencUne Iler son ••• I'm going to defend Lee Harvey Oswald OD· tn tbe day I die. bµt rm not aoina to take up for.him. There's a difference. · "I don't want to appear I'm pushing for a book but. after all, I am tbe mother (Jf tbe man accused of \illlngthe President of the Umted States.•· She lives, she aald. on Social Seeurity, oc· cas1onal fees for interviews and the sale of un· specified ••personal property.•• llE• DAYS, SHE INSISl'ED, ate "simply not long eDOl:llh· I cook, dean house. keep the lawn, pay bl~. shampoo my hair; and !Jf eourse, read a lot and rpl\Je notes. •"J.bi.S ls not an ordinary ~aae and rm not a.nor· di.nary ~non. But 1eat1ffeJ.1. l sleep weU and l have l\ ~ mind. • .After l• ye.an of auppreislon and distai11ons. l'm proud to have aurvi,vect .. 1 dO oat feel'so.rry for myself because I think l'm fli&ltY tami~ lnt0101 OWlL •. I just can't un- 1 tientddwtty I dOil 'thaYt a book ••• " .. ~ ~~~~~'iSF~h::a;lp~s~you handle ~ big Vlork projects tank of , enemy to go Ttu T•t propaM gas tank• for torcM9 and· all your propane burn· Ing camping appU~ Get all you ne9d at thla low price. · 121 Workmate by Black & Decker ll llk• an extra pair of hands. lt'a a work bench and vlee combination wtth an extra long 29" vlee that holds materials up to 10" wide. ~ures Irregular or clrculat 1hapa for...,.,. and motJt accurate cutiJng. Fold• flat for easy storage. #79-001. Reg. 19.99 extend your source of power The Rhino Hide heavy duty exten- •IOn COf'd Is Jult what you need tor power tools. 12·3, 50 ft. Reg. 31.95 1911 ... ~-,er1, ,.... S7 ........ 35.00 .. put some. llght on the .subject 4 ft. ahop light fixture tlolcta 2 t1UO<MC*lt wl>M (not lndudecS) whk:h lllumlnatee more brlghtty than lncandeteent bulbe. #SL.240. Reg. 1ua 128.8 s . 11\u!!d!y, Aual'lt 1•. 1111 J f4JIDAn.YPI OT When Cats Away,, Staffel's Will Pf;dy WASHINGTON (AP> -Wh I Uae Pte&ldent d.laa1'5"tan ror • quiet ~·· •uaUoa at Camp Davkl. wbcn the -.lee Hllclent ls on ~ 1n tho nortJt ftOdl ~ MUmaot.. Cc.sr-a hu scattered to tho four •lodt, odd tb1n1• happen at the White HOUie. An old·fHbloned, wlnd·UP alarm clock l1 plaeed ln • cardboard box and 1tatr mem· ben PNtenct tbe tiekint p11ekqe is a Ume bomb. aeodiftl lt to each other's offlcet in the White House • West Wiq, •here Carter'• olflce is located. 1t'ai1'er Plan A &LAllNG Jun batUe enu>ta In a con1dor Just a few Ceet from th• Oval OCtlco, u Junior staff memben •pray etcb ot.her wllh w atei-from aqwrt 1un1. Other ataff members guide friend.I and relatives around the Wblte House. They atop, like tourlste at one of dozens or Waahl~ 1l1btseetng stops, to peer lnto the empty Oval Office. One senior aide jokes that the dos dan ol August are the best time for reading her bosses· memoranda and the vice presl- dent'adiary. Water Panels Eye Key Bill By ARTHVR R. VINSEL Of hie DlllY Pltll St.ff .Various wa.ter quality control and sewage treat· ~ ment agencies in California, including the Orange ' County Sanitation District, which stands to save $90 • million, are watching Congressional progress of a bill recently approved by the U.S. Senate. The bill, expected to be passed into law by the 18 THIS really tbe Wblte House? It is, on a sultry Au1ust aftemooo. The President and his family left Washington nearly two weeks aao for a five-day visit to Plains, Ga. After four days back at the While House, they were off again, for a vacation at the pre- sidential retreat in Maryland's Catoctin Mountains. So, staff members, who are less-than-formal when the Presi· dent is in town, are playing a few pranks and relaxing a bit. Some are even ua1ng the break to catch uponworJc. THE TELEPHONE o~rators at the White House switchboard are ftndlng the •orldoad only slightty diminished. You can't talk to them. They're too busy answering the telephones. Margaret .. Midge" Costanza, the President's assistant for public liaison, was in a playful mood. What does she do when Carter and Vice· President Walter F. Mondale are out of town? "I'm using their offices and reading their memos •• she said. jo~y. uljustseerched the vice p.reslctent•a diary and I'~ not in it." "PM CATCHING up on my phone calls ... said the assiatant, who can sometimes take days to reach on the telepbOne ... I'm only eight weeks behind." • B"t, she said seriously, what she is really trying to do is catch up with accumulated work and · givehersWhometim&off. The maintenance staff even took advantage ot the break to vacuum and shampoo the carpet WALLA . WALLA ON THE MIRROR in the press office and Prest briefing room, liftlbf uveral months• accumulaUon of cigarette ashes and coffee stains. (NORMAN COIJ81NS) EXPANDS YOUR . WORCO In the DAILY PILOT House, would allow the Environmental Protection ~ Agency to waive rules of the Clean Water Act for ,; certain water and sanitation processors. ,. , BY TERMS OF that'law·, 1983 is the absolute : deadline for them to build sewage treatment plants ~ that treat waste to the secondary degree before it is MIRRO·R · TILE BREAKTHROUGH • dischargedintothesea. • CalifonUa.'s 39 allected ag~neies -they run ~ from San Diego County to Humboldt County - could be forced to spend nearly $'900 million if the waiver measure fails. All Orange Coast water quality control and . sewage treatment bodies affected already ad-11 ' minister secondary treatment to guard against pollution. • · · · - THEY COULD STILL save mcmey, a surVey among them shows. both on Cuture construction and use of utility power. , . The sewage picture isn't so pretty for other • smaller water purification and waste disposal agencies up and down the coast, especially in . smaller, less-urbanized areas. "The result would be large local capital expen- ditures and a doubling of operational costs," says Sen. Alan Cranston <D-Calif.), one of the waiver measure's strongest supporters. HE SAYS 'STATE.orders to improve sewage . disposal of waste deposited in the Pacific Ocean already adds up to $«S million tab for those agen- cies not already involved in secondary treatment. Further federal government orders under the Clean Water Act guaranteeing relative purity of treated sewage would double the figure to $899 million among the 39 agencies, be explained. I guess breakthrough is not the ·beat choice of words. But we do have the best choice of Diiuor tiles. Oh, the ways we can see us. All 12xl2 tiles • : • all under a buck! , California's essentially deep.water shoreline. which drops off rapidly. compared to the Atlantic· .. r--------!!Jlm'I-------~~:::;=~==~~~~~~~~------~-------------. Coast, is the key, Cranston told fellow members of. the Senate. SEWAGE DUMPED into relatively shallow seas without sufficient treatment consumes more oxygen needed by fish and other marine life in the organic breakdown process, thus damaging the sea environment. This is called biological oxygen demand CBOD> and it is one of the bases for concerns leading to passage of the original Clean Water Act. ''Environmental scientists, engineers, municipal officials and California state agencies have all concluded that BOD ls' not a significant con- cern when wastes are discharged through deep ocean outfalls," Cranston told the Senate. ORANGE COUNTY. Sanitation District Finance Director Wayne Sylvester says granting of the discretionary waiver clause to the EPA would mean a btg benefit to his agency and county tax· payers. "We would eliminate at least $90 million from our five.year buqet plan," Sylvester said. He said this represents tbe cost of building secondjlcy sewage treatment facilities to supple- ment . those now handling SO million gallons of wastewater per day in the present system. "It's really kind of lnCOMC1qUential to us, we already have secondary sewage treatment," says Jim Manning, civil englneerina asaiatant with the · City of San Clemente. . THE SAME SITtJATION bolds true for the All.so Water Manaaement.Aaency <AWMA> wbicb encompasses a large number ol 80\IP\ county com· munities and older sanltatioa and water districts. "'Jbe state Water Qu8Jlty Control Board lays out the standards we liv& by.'• 1~1 AWMA spokesman Jim Folly. But i.a,una Beach City Vanaaer Al Tbeal IUI• gests passage of the but ri.lixing water quallt.1 con· ttol for California eoutd aff~ .. ~ of¥ AWMA a.wage treaUnentfacWb' ciirriiltlY: lil th&.orn. ·~=6 W:AllPAPER ,.... .' :o<f~· Myriad• (sound. · "'•"'9. like a rock band). • ii All atyl••· colon I PANEL · STRIPS Thia stuff' s great. Pretty wood. pretty easy and Pt•tty low pricedll andpattems. 10%ro40% OFF SUGGESTED RETAIL The first Khbophrenlc tape. (Muat be a GemhU). Great formountlltg mirron, poatere ot the pc:src:lbet to the wall. PECIYCEDAR WALL PANELING BOARD DELUXE MIRROR TILE CUTTER 129 ·~Thia-either mean• it'• a deluxe cutt.r or it • cut• delux. tile ••• we'r. not aure. CLASSIC BRIE • Beatlenianiae.s to Pake CHICAGO CP> -Tbe ataSd with hundreds of blu•Jean w tr• Harrison SS. They llaven 't "The BeaUes are as Important .. And she wua't even born .i , •kleb bU 11 lat 1oun• and not·t0·1oun1 Ptrlonnedtotetberblmwethan todaya1theywerelnS.ptember when the Beatles were • ''tM .,Stom• ol opuJ~ tn a. Ut1 fua hummlnt like tllht ye.n. But "n.atleawda" 1984 when they were on Ed tofether." el weoaunodatJont,'' wiU t>. "Yellow Submarine." Uveson. Sullivan," b• said. There's a · He said t.be Beatles are lmpor- lU• crttr th11 •Mk b1 more Jt'• been a lont and troubled. And it lln't noat.al&ia that will whole new 1eneraU6n of BeaUes tant to people who crew up In the \bua.ooo Uema lac1. toad line• th• Beatles cut their brina toCeCher 2,000 to 3,000fan.s fans. Wehada&-year-oldlitlcall 1960s because .. the ·Beatles mtMld ot U wearint patrou tln' record, ''Love Mt bO," ln for a two-day "BeaUefeat" belin· us and promise to win the Beatie represented 1ood thin(s In a era and . ~tet1 matron• rHdln1 Liverpool, Entland, ta 1182. nll\l l'riday, •aya Mark Laptdos, trivia cont.est. She said ibe knew fWed wltb trouble." Ol*"',WCS. and tbt like, UM Of· RU110 6tarr l1 81, John Lemton tbt 29--year-old BeaUefeat or-everythlna conceivable about the "Taclay'a t~a1ers want to ll&l.eb6tel lobbJ •W be~flll:;:ed=-....:•:·~P~•:w~M::CC=artn:.::~•1:..,:an=d~G90l'~::::.:•~·~~·~a=nJ=11r~.--:..........;:.;;... ________ ~Bu:.::~U.::.:.•·~----~-T---~~-s~h~ar~e.;;...;.t~he:.....:;m~a~c~1c;...:.:th~e~Be~a~U~e~P~~--~---------~~ ........ Nevada oresta To Close CARSON CITY <AP> -Up to 500,000 acres of private and state land on the east slope of the Sietta in Nevada · JI be elosed to the public, • becinninc Saturday, • because ol fire danger, state Forester Lody ! Smith said. \ Smith said the area I •tretches from the California·Nevada 1tate t line on Foothill Road near Genoa, Douglas ; County, northward to the ·point at which U.S. 395 , crosses from Nevada in- , to California, near · Susanville. , EXCLUDED ARE · borne areas, developed recreation sites, areas . between Interstate 80 and the Truckee River and between Clear Creek and old U.S. 50. · "We have an explosive fire condition in wildland areas, as experienced by the fires at Boca Dam and Bridgeport areas. Tbe fires boil up and 10 ' so fast." Smith said. "We're seeing a lot of m an·caused fires and abandoned camprlres in these areas. We are try. ing to avo'id a major forest fire on the east slope of the Sierras. We're not trying to be hard nosed," be added. . -"EVERYONE living in western Nevada and everyone who visits this area atands to lose a great deal if a :'1Prble Cone' or 'Scarface fire were to destroy the eastern Sierra. watershed," beaaid. Jrfuch ol the land oa the eut alope la federal. But Smith said the cloaun or state and private lands will block most access to the federal land. He said plane patrols are being stepped up in the area and persons caught without permiasion lo enter the big area will be cited. ENTRY PERMITS will be given to land· owners, utility com· pany employes or others wilh "leeltim"te busi· ness" in the areas, Smith said. Individuals able to get written permlaalon from landownen can also get the entry.permltl, Smith said. addlnt many lan- downers· re<(Ueated the closure. But be .aald the area mllht ltiU be closed dur- inl deer seuon; and bun· ters may want to get tags for other areas. Smith wd the closure wlll t>. lilt.ed "aa aoon as conclltiona warrant IL" Smith aaJd the declalon to close off the area was made after he met with Gov. Mike O'Calla1ban and with Norm Hall of the state Dep&J1ment of Conservation and Natural Resources. s' cotton c. bO'/ b\ue 1eoos deo\~\o\d sn\rts. oodP 7 , s\z.es ~ ~o. , '52 ·~\ oovs . \h ' e ~ . ., 4 99 ••tt• 5 nq \ea• • not thowt' •'I • ,_ece 7 .SO . ,.ere e.7S ·1\'s dtesses, 0. Q\ f"On' Q\.lf 0 ne ' · co\\ect\of\ \O d 'vesteton pO -M-on • .7-"\A. co'' -.. ~ore­t>udget s . s· 2A . dresses g\f\S . _ . · w\\.hl~ or o•naccl s.99~a~ t \\ttie g\t!s' . Cotd\QO~· lo\d sn,rts .. ·P ~to 6'/... . s\zes "+. . ·\·-M-\e Q\f\S 56 - \ll , 199~-' Q nq ._cc• •10 ~ g •.., ca,cl\1an ._....12 <' I 1