Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-08-24 - Orange Coast Pilot, otic? Alioto Contends Wife \ DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * Lives Grand Lifestgle WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 24, 1977 VOL 79. MO. D6. 4 HCTIOIU, G l"ACH5 ' ' ' • ~· • • Drug Party Hospitalizes 4 ~ Bogus Ring Alleged Leader ·L May Get Bail I By J OANNEREVNOLDS taken b;s tw-o alleged •<· OIU'9 0.11, '"''•Ut.tt complices into custody at the Los The alleged ringleader of a Alamitos printing plant where group arrested on charges that the phony money was allegedly ~hey were m the process of print-being printed. mg S7 malhon m bogus S20 and s.50 The other two men. Robert balls in Los Alamitos was Samuel Lewis. 54. or Panorama scheduled lo appear 1n federal Calv and Elvin Baker. 60. of San court today. . . . . . 1 • Diego appeared before Los Robert Powis. special agent. an Angeles federal magistrate charge of the Los. /\ngcl~s of~a~e Ralph Geffen Tuesday. They of the Secret Service. said ba1l 1s were released aft er posting to be set for Steven ~lash. Sr .. 53. S..5.000 bail . b~ the federal magistrate in San According lo Powis. the arrest Diego. of the trio culminated a month· Blash w~~ ar;est~d early ~es-long surveillance of the group day morna.ng an has San Diego triggered when Blash ap· home by agents \\.ho had Just proached an unidentified Los A.l'laway's Mentm State Seen Acute By TOM BARLEY OI t• Delly l"llet lutf A psychiatrist testified Tues- day in Orange Cour:ity Superior Court that convicted killer Edward Charles Allaway was in an acute psychotic state four or five days before he shot seven people to death on the Cal State ~ Fullerton campus. Dr. Daniel Castile told the jury as the third defense witness ln the sanity henrlng that he does not believe that Allaway can re- call what really happened on Ju- • ly 12, 1976. Rejecting a prosecution sug- gestion that Allaway. 38, is fak· ing psychosis. Dr. Castile argued that the defendant has no re(lSon to "put Qn an act. "He feels he will be lncarcerat· ed for the rest of his life and be doesn't care where. He ls a t ypical case of paranoid CSeeALLAWAY. P -.t..U) Angeles resident to buy paper and mk for his operation Blash. according to Powis. w,as convicted of counterfeattng in 1971 after he sold S7.000 worth of bogus S20 bills to Secret Service agents. Powis said the three men. working out of Vanguard Automated Graphics. 10013 Bloomfield St., a llegedly planned to print a total of S7 million and pass the money in Mexico. At the time of the Tuesday morning raid, Powis said agents confiscated $150,000 worth of $20 and $.50 bills which haQ only the backs printed. SD CLUB ACT RUUD OBSCENE 'Burn·a Shave' Signs Remember the old Burma Shave signs that delighted travelers along the old highways and byways of rural America? These are 'Bum-A-Shave' signs, on Marguerite Parkway near Alicia Parkway in Mission Viejo. The very serious shaggy doggerel is work of Orange County Fire DllllY f'lll4 StMI ....... Capt. Dave Huber, a part-time signmaker. assigned to nearby Station 31. and his wife Barbara. who writes poetry. "Fire Season is Here Now," the message warns. "Remember Mrs. O'Leary's Cow ... Please Be Careful With ... Your Matches ... Or We'll Have alazeS' By the Batches ... 'Sam' Stuns Court, Denies His Identity · IsLfud Women Angered; Doc Withholds Pill ·Officials Suspect RCP Use An nil-night party in Corona del Mar ended in a dash for the hospital early today for four • participants who police alle~e may have taken too much animal tranquilizer. Two paramedic units, two private ambulances, a fire truck and two police cars raced to an. apartment at 605 Poppy Avenue where officers say they found two women and a man nude and un· conscious. Police said another man, who was clothed, was conscious but "extremely confused." Fire department officials 1den- ti fied the two men, who were taken to Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital for emergency treat- ment, as Eduardo Pena and David Vojnovich, both of Stan- ton. Both are in their twenties. Neither police nor firemen were able to identify the two women, who apparenUy occupy the apartment, other than to de· termine their first names were Karen and Sandy. The two ap- pear to be In their thirties. firemen said. They were taken to Hoag Memorial Hospital. According to Newport Beach police, the four apparenUy in. haled PCP, an animal tran• quiliier. sometime during the night. CSee PARTY, Page AZ> ose~ ;Figh.t .. . . Court Rules if .S. MtiY Search "Boxes \\ \~ 111 ~ (; I () N I 1\1' I t<1C'h:trrl !li1~on hl'\t • rourt rl~hl c~l.1 \ 111 p11•\1•11l Uw l!oH:• nmcnl lr11n1 r u1u111u111n1 throuih boxei. Ill· kit twhind to •·~ 1r t.h y t'On tu111 • lut'" to 011• "h 1 c·11bout11 <Jf \".tlll.1hl1• i:1rh t1on1 fort·i••n d1~ntl.H lt''o t S lh-.'111 I .l11dp· \Uhfl'\ t: R11l11n.-.on .Ir :-..11cl thL• lu\\-l'lcurh ii\ l'' tht• 1(11\ernnlt'nt lhtl n~ht l11 roui.. ·•t un.) lbm~ dct'mt'<.l pr~~ r tdl•nt1ul hl1>tul'lcul 11'14Ulonala UllU 1u1t a!'i ch•nrly rcqulrt~ it to re turn 1tcm11 th.al '" l' ponwnal und pr!\ .1tu 'Wt-'V~ eut l() 1tart the proc· 1•1111 h 1111ld "The1•e'!i eot to be u pr1•J1mina1) dt.•tt-1·minution Im 1111·t.h.1tl1lv uf what is per~onal ,111<1 pt I\ .ill' ,\nd 1f 1t ·s personal a11d 111"1\ .itl' tl dot•sn 't belong lo the ~o' l'mm1:nt ·· ~tcV('ll 1''nrnk, a Ot:partmtlnt or Phony Req-.iest 'Lance' Bank Call Joke PJDLADELPHIA <AP 1 Joseph Garwood said he \\JS juM having fun \\hen he telep~oned the First .Nut1onul Jfonk of Calhoun. Ga .. asking for a S200 n11llwn loan. "I told them if ~ood old Bett I Lance > could do it. I should be able to <lo it." Gm·wood. 53, said, adding that the bank "tninsf erred me around a lot" and ~id not think his joke d1retted at the director of the Office of .Managerm.•nt <tnd Budget and former head of the Gcorgw hank \\'as funny On Monday. his telephone rang, and "Bert Lance mlroduc:l·d himself." ~aid Garwood. "lie said he was returning my call," • . Garnood. a wido\\er who spends a great deal of hrs lite 1r1 bed from injuries suffered in World War Il. ..,u1d he and Lance chatted mostly about politics. and ignored Lance's pl'rsonal ~ina~cial ~roubl~s. "I \\;is surprised at hrs fnendhness. He said he told Lanl'c to "hang in there." Illinois Action 'Legal' Laetrile Measure Vetoed ('Ill('.\(;() !,\I') c;o, Jame~ H ThornpM111 'ctot·d legislation toda~ lhul would hun· legalin·d I ht· i1.,t• ol l..1t'l rr It• in the I r<."<ll 1111·111 111 ll'1m1n.ri t'JIH't.'I' J>·I· 111·11h Tin· gon•rnor said 1n a st•tt'- 1! 111t·11t he lhinJ..., l...ietrtll• ts· total I ' 111 l· I I l· t t 1 ' 1· 1 n t 1· ea l t n J!. l'.tlll'l'I' Lactnlc has ne\ l'r bet>n -· ;.ho\\n to ht: cffr<:ll\ c 1n an't "l'P· f .II t a h I 1• t' I 1 n 1 c a I !\ C \I u y-. · • Thompson .... 11d "I cannot JUSllf't' rts use without h<.!com 111~ a h1<f. dC'll p.1rtnt'f' in dt•ccption r "tll not hC'roml' .in 110\\llttng t·nc·on.,1>11.11<>1 1n a n.1t1on,,1<fe 1·ono,11nwr fr .11111 Thi• .,t,1t"., Ci1·1w1 al \ssembh· \hio, o,prang pa.,scd leg1slali11;1 th:rl \\Olll<I ha\·c 1Wrm1ttcd the use of I he suhsli.1ncc. \\ hirh i-; m anufal'\ 111·c•cl from upncot pits. , in tht' treatment of terminal <·" IH'l'I' patH•nts Thomp:-.on adrno\l, lcd~rd in his . Bandit Hits ittesa Market' . :·For $200 Cash "Cl\'C' me all ~our bones ... 1s what the gunman told a clerk at a Costa Mesa <'onvenience market earl~ today But "hat he meant was cash. and the young clerk at lhe U- Tote M Market, 19l:l Pomona I\ ve. handed over about S200 lo the tall hllndlt Police snid the gunman ap- pt>art>d at ubout 1 a m and dis- played the barrel of a gun to the derk. The bandit wai; described a~ standing six feet {o .. r inches · tall. weighing 170 pounds. with black huir and wearing a green nylon night-type jacket. No car was seen lea\1n« the parking lot, but tne clerk said Ile heard a Volkswugt!n englno rapidly dcpartlngU'le area. · slaten1l'nt. which was distributed to reporters before a news con· ference, that a number of cancer p<itll'nls have claimed succes~ for the substance in arresttng their illness How~ver. most physacic.m:-. ha' e rejectad 'LaHrtle as' :.i • canter cure l'se oC the substance has been legalized in 1l stales, but the federal Food and Drug .. A4· minist.tation hat'liabn«Mt 1tom interstate safe. ' Split Seen I For Jaggers LONDON CAP I -The m arriagc or the Rollin~ Stones· lead :-;inger Mick Jagger and his Nicarai,:uan • wife Bianca 1s about to hrcak up. a British newspaper reported today . The Sun said the Jaggers ''ere cruising aboard a friend 's yacht in the Mediterranean to try to patch up their diffeten('es But the paper said the at tempted reconciliation failed. The Jaggers were mar· ried in St. Tropel. France. on ~lay 12. 1971. and have a 5-year-old daughter. J adc F,.._Pa,,.,AI PILL ••. Cath,otic religions. nnd "they oil a~ree: their views arc based on tl'<pedence not expediency.·· He. dted tf\~ p~octfce of one tribe•io ancient trmes. He said the matt and women got together only once e"(t'l'Y rive yeats for ~exun1 r.elatkms and conception. Ju16Uce hawyer, Hid the search ot • the records \\•ill begin next week /\t stake in the hearing was more lhan just a listing of the gifts, some of Which may be ''missing" through poor record . kt'eping In fact. the gifts were barely mentioned at all durmg the l\W· huur court ::.css1on. The proposed searct) is the go\· ernment's first attempt to look throueh materials in its possession since the 0 S Supreme Court a" arded custody to t:oclc Sam specifying that ::.tr1ct regulations mu::.t gon:·rn uccess 1L was Jl ... o :\1xon's nrst chc.am·e to diallenge thost' rules, Uodtr the re~ation~ Ni:\-un must be giv-en notice that materials wm be searched Frank ~aid the notice will be !'>ent to Nixon's lawyers within a tew days. R. Stan Mortenson. Nixon·:. lawyer. said the former pre::.1 dent hus no objection to pl"ovid· 1ng lht.• gifts mv1.:ntory to the go,·· l'rnmenl but s<1id he feared that the search mighL reve11l per::.oriul documents as well. While the fight qver CU$lody or Nixon·s papers. tapes and other materials was going thrqugh the courts, the bo)<es remained un. touched under court order. ?'\ow that the case 1s settled. regula- tions tor government access ha' e gone into effect and rules for pu bfi(' acces::. 01 rt' being eon '>ldl•red by Congress. Last month. State Department Chief uf Proto<:ol Evan S. Dobelle "rote the General Sen·ices \cJ. m 1n1strut1on that ··questions have arisen" about the location uf l'ore1~n gifts to Nixon and his family . Public!}. at least. Do belle didn't spell out the ques· t10ns or who asked them. lie said he wanted an inventor~ 1>f all /;!Ills in the custody of lht> :'\at1onal Atcbt\'es. an agency of t hl' CSA. wh1<:h is storing all thr m atcl'lals left behind by the Nt:<· on ~1dmi111stratwn . ,.,.... Page Al • sch1zophr~nia. · The prosecutor s questioning of Dr Calile produced the re\'· el~t1on that ~tnl\•:ay bad a roltulntic «llt&.ci~ l lo one of hfs victims. Oeborllft Paulsen. 25. Over the objections of qeputy ~ublic defender Ron Butler. statements by Miss Paw ken ·s mother to the effect that Allawu~· planned to live with her daughter were read into the record Mrs. Paulsen told in- vestigators that Allaway told her ch1ughter he had asked his wife. Bonnie, for a dh·orce. She said her daughter seemed to enjoy the relalionship with Al - laway and offered no objections to his suggestion that he move in with her. Casllle at that point did not dis- pute Enright ·s suggestion that Allaway knew the idehtity of his · victim when he pursued Miss Paulsen down a library hallway and shot her in the chest as she fled . The jury found Allaway guilty of ~even coUl)ts of murder and two counts of assault with a dead· ly weapon in the guilt phase of the trial before Judge Robert P . Kneeland. The same jury must now de- termine 1f Allaway was sane when he took his rtfle to the cam- pus library and felled nine people in a slx-mint1teshooting spree. Dr. Castile came under heavy cross examination from pros- ecutor James Enright who re- peated I y challeng~d the psychiatrist's bel\ef that Allaway did not understand tl\A! llature of his actions. Enright argued that state- ments later made to the police by Allaway clearl)l lndicated fhat he k{'lew the natu~ of his actions afuJ that he had shot at least seven people • 1 AddlUonaU7. Enright told Dr. Castile. statements made by Al· laway to trts ~tr·11bgt!d w.lfe im- mediatelv after he fled the cam- pus tndieated.~at.tll• shootings • Wert carefutlfplanned. BOrirtle Allaway;who sued her huaband for divorce three d&>it before the f hootln,Js, earlier told inve$tlgators th•t Allaway told ~er while they w11ited for poUce at ,the HJltop IJ!n that Debbie Paul n w a one oC hi• vlct.irq"- Dusty Road Cleaaup Ca !Trans lTC\\ s dean up S<l\\ dust \\hi ch . spilled \\hen a dump truck O\'erturned m southbound lanes of the Santa Ana Freewa). ju~t north of the mterseetion \\1th the San Dil•go 1' rec\\ <.1~. at about 1 p.m. Tuesda}. <;ali(orn1a Highway Patrol oCftcers said a lire ble\\. causing the fruck to roll o\ er . The dri\er, Sebastian Thla\<1tz1. 23. or fluntmgton Oaks, was taket1 to SaddldHH'" Community Hospital \\ ith modL·• ate m1urll'!-i Plane. €rash Caused I • By Engine TroUble? By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Ofai.O.Uy~letltatf Speculation among in vestigators today suggested engine trouble caused the crash of a cargo plane that slammed 1n to a Catalina Island moun· tains1de Monda> night. kilhn~ both men aboard The dead were 1dcnllficd as pilot Charl<•s C Clifford. 38. of Long Beach. and Robert G • Gra\ cs. also38. of Cerritos Lo:; Angt>les Count) Sht.'nff s Department investigators said thlY died 111::.t:.intly "twn thl'ir Heel'hl'l'aft B lR smashed mto the rugged bluff above the sea. JU:-.t after takeoff. 1 A <:ompany spokesman ut Long Bea<:h Munici1>al Airport notified rnvestiguton; when the twin engtne plane 011\:rated by Air Fast f'reight Inc .. fa tied to arri\·c on schedule. Graves was a partner in thC' firm wluch ft.>rries frei~ht of all sorts to the islund \'i:.J it:-. Airporl- in the-Sky high ator> u flattened mounta111 on Catalina ( 'ltrtonl \\as a n·c·enl rl'ltrt'<.' from the U S. Na\'V and leaves a "1fe still mamtalning their homt.· 1n San Diego A team of investigators from the National Transportation S;ifet) Board und Federal Av1a · tion Adm1mslratwn was on the island today probmg wrecJ..agc at the crash s1te. The bodies ul Chfrord und Gl'il\'es \\Cre airlifted lo the Los Angeles Count) Morgue folio\\ ing the 10:12 am discover) of the wreckage Tue::.da) b~ shenff's he! 1copler. A sheriffs spokesman <m th<" island said today the shattt•1 ed "reek of the empty <:urgo plane.• ''as found at the 1.000-foot len·I. four miles \\est of A\'alon .ind a q:.iarter-milc from Long Pomt. Deputy Von Dunlop uss1gnt•d to the LASO Emergent·.' Sen ll'O~ Detail on the island ~car around. calculated where the plum.-might have slammed mto the h11lsick and hiked to the ~ile Crewmen or a Coast Guard helicopter ancl ruttl•r o!hhort• spotted it about the :,ame l1ml' ··There is dt:f1mtc :-.pL•<·uiatu111 they had eng1m· truuhll-. · :1 sheriff's spokl•sman 'aul toda\ "Thcv "'ere both H't et ;111 p1 l111 s and thcv made that flight I 1' L' times a 0 da\. The\ took c•ff alll-1 unloadin~ and appurcntl) macl1• :i 180-degree turn to c·ome bad; lo the airport .. F a rn i ti l's o r C I ir I o 1 cl a 11 ti Graves toda~ had not ~ L'I sl'll'<·t cd mortuane::. or St'hL•dulc•d funeral sen ices F roatPageAJ SAM ••• "l had no ide;.i t lwl this\\ as go- 111 i.: to happc·n . llc"s under 11a•dtl'at1on at the hospital." said lie lier. The ana1gnmenl was the .,ccond 10 two days for Uerkow1t1 Tuc~du~ he pleaded innocent to <·har~l':-t of murdering t\\O young womt'n ancJ \\ oundtnl: rn e people m thl• Hru11x Jk \\aS Pl'l'\'IOUSly ind1rtc<l for the murder 111 Brooklyn of Trac.' \lo..,kowltl, :w. thl• last of Son or S.1111 !-. six hom1t1de v1ct1ms. and tht• alkmpll'd munkr of ~tiss \losko\\1t1 s d~tc, Robert \ 1olan\e. abo <!O In all. seH·n rwopll' ''l'rl' \\OUlldL•d b) the kllll'r. FrotR Page A J PARTY ••• Pc.·m1 tallc<I his w1fo early this 111orn111g and when she got lo the aparlm<"nl ~l about 7 a.m .. she r .ii led the.• It re men · Sgt Darryl You le 'Of the polil'e dl'(l<itlml'nt said a small quantity uf \\hat ht• believes IS PCP \HI'> found 111 the• apartment. lie a:-.· serts that he also round a large quanta!} of mariJuana as well I le ::.;.ud he plans lo file charj!es .tj.!Ullhl lht• lOLll Pan.1ml•d1rs 'aid none of the four v1c·t1ms "as in critical c·on· d1t1on I rom the drug overdose 3ShortDays Sa ve up to 40o/() It's the wind-up of our great furniture event VOL. 70. NO. 236 •SECTIONS, '2 PAGES . . .. • Allaway PsychOtic, Witness Testifies By TOM BAaLBY .. ..., ......... A ps~hlalrilt te tlfiod Tues· day In Orante County Superior Court that convleted klller Edward Ct\arl• Allaway wu in an acute paY<'hotic atate rour or five days bef ote he shot seven people to death on the Cal State FUUettoo cam~ Dr. Daniel Castlle told lbe Jw-y as tho third defense witness ln lhe »anlty hearlnt that he does not believe that Allaway can re· call what really happened on Ju. ly 12, 1976. ReJec:ttni a prosecution sua- cestion thal Allaway, 38, Is fak· inc psychosis, Dr. Castile areued that the defendant has oo reason to "put on an act. "He feels he will be incarcerat- ed for the rest or his llte and be doesn't care where. He is a typicul caao of paranoid 1chtzophrtnla." The prosecutor's questioning of Dr. CatJle produced the rev- elation that Allaw•1 had a romanuc attachment to one of hit victims, Deborah Paulsen, 2.S. Over the objections of deputy public defender Ron Butler. statements by Miss Paulsen's mother to the e!tect that Allaway planned to live with her daughter . were read into the record. Mrs . Paulsen told in- vestigators that Allaway told her daughter he had asked hil wm BoQnie, ror a divorce. She said her daughter seemed to enjoy the relaUonsbip with Al- laway and offered no objections to his sugaestion that be move in witbher. Castile at that point did not dis- pute Enright's sunestioo that Allaway knew the identity of his victim when he pursued1 Miu Paulsen down a library hallway and shot her in the chest as sbe fled. The jury found Allaway guilty of seven counts of murder nd two counts of assault with a dead· ly weapon in the guilt phase or the trial before Judge Robert P. Kneeland. The same jury must now de·. Battle on Gifts I Lost by Niion , 'Living mgh' Alioro Raps Ex-wife'• Style SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -- Former Mayor Joseph Alioto says the SS,500 monthly support he pays his estranged wife .. permits her to hve in the grandei.t lifestyle in America lo· dC:ly.·· f ncludcd in l)lat lifestyle. Alioto told a court hearing Tues- day, was purcJiiase of a Rolls Royce automobile which he said "she doesn't even use.·· Alioto made his own opening statement before Superior Court Judge Jay Pfotenhauer, who is handling his plea for dissolution of the 36-year marriage. He and Angelina Alioto have been separated since Dec. 2, 1975. "Not many people Uve in four homes and have a Mercedes· Benz ahd a Rolls Royce in the garage at the same Ume, both bought on the same day ... Alioto said. ··And the Rolls Royce she doesn't even use. She has a habit of acquiring properlies and then not using them.·· Mrs. Alioto was absent Cor most or her ht•sband·s speech. The judge ordered her lo appear later. Alioto. 60. said he filed for divorce "in desperation,·· In re· action lo his wife's on.again. oH- again atlitudeJoward dissolution of the marriage. .. Angelina chose to be sepatat· ed -·lots of times ... he said. "She ran ~way to the missions. then she filed for divorce and unfiled. and then filed it again. and un· filed it when she read in the papers rumors of my remar-riage.·· Alioto has been seen frequently in the company of Boston socialite Kathleen Sullivan, 32-. • and news accounts have speculated they will marry when his divorce Is final. Pf<ltenhauer also is consider· ing Mrs. Alioto's charge of con· tempt of court against her husband for spending S600.00o of his law firm ·s income, aJle&iidlY in viol'8tion of a restralnine order ~ainst either party disposm, ot community property. 11:5Dri~¥.11~:.mil..;:::iX• ""'T.._... 'LIVING IN STYLE' Angelina Alioto Bandit llits Mesa Market For $200 Cash "Give me all you..-boaes, ·· is wbat the gunman told a clerk at a Costa Mesa convenience market early toda)'.. But what he meant was cash, and the young clerk at the U· Tote-M Market, 1913 Pomona Ave. handed over about $200 to the tal}bandit. Police said the gunman ap- peared at .about 1 a.m and dis· played the barrel or a eun to the clerk. The bandit was described as standing six feet four inches tall, weighing 170 pounds, with black hair and wearing a green nylon fllght-lype jacket. ... No car w•s seen leavlb1 Ole parki~ lot, but the clerk said he tteard a Volk!wagen engine rapidly departing the area. Searching Of Boxes Approve~ WASHINGTON <APl Richard Nixon lost a court fight today to prevent the government from rummaging through boxes he left behind to see if they con· lain clues to the whereabouts of valuable gifts from foreign dignitaries. · U.S. District Judge Aubrey E. Robinson Jr. said the law clearly gives the government the right to look at anything deemed pres" identiu historical matetials J.nd Just BS clearly r~ulra it to re- turn items that are personal and privfte. "We've got to start the proc· ess:· he said. "There's got to be a preltmlnary determination im· mediately or what is personal and private. And if It's personal and private It doesn't belong to the government.·· Steven Frank, a Department of Justice lawyer. said the search of the records will begin next week. TeWinkle Middle School seventh grader-Lisa Edwards was one of 10 top finalists in the "Our Little Miss World Colnpetition" held last week in Niagara F~ls. N.Y. Lisa represented Orange County and California in the com· petition and was selected best jazz dancer. The pageant was filmed by CBS 60 Minutes and will be aired in Sep· tember. Lisa is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Edwards of Costa Mesa. At stake In the bearing was more than just a listing of the girts. some or which may be "mlsslni .. through poor record keeping. In fact, the gifts were barely mentioned at all during the two- hour court session. The proposed search is the gov- ernment's first attempt to look throuah materials in its possession since the U.S. Police Probe Drug AbuSe at CdM Party <See NIXO~, Pa~e A2> Bay Club Hit ·1n $700 Theft More than S'TOO was taken at gunpoint from a Balboa Bay Club employe early today by a lone gunman who Newport Beach police aaid ·•made a clean An all-night party in Corona del Mar ended in a dash for the hospital early today for four participants who police allege may have taken too much animal tranquilizer. Two paramedic units, two private ambulances. a fire truck and two police cars raced to an apartment at 605 Poppy Avenue where officers say they found two women and a man nude 31\d un- conscious Police said another man, who was clothed, was conscious but "extremely confused.·· • getaway.·· Fire department officials iden· Jeff SCeranka,tihe club's night lilied the two men, who were auditol', told police he was work· taken to COSta Mesa Memorial ing in a back omce when he was •. ):lospital for emergency treat.. confronted by a ski-mask garbed · ment, as Eduardo Pena and gunm&Q. • David· .Vojnovlch., both of Stan· He sald the man ne\fer spoke, ton. i3otb are In their twentb~s. · but gestured with the revolver Neither police nor rtremen that he was to hand over the cash were able to identity the two thenlaydownonthefloor. women, who apparcmUy occ~py • Sceranka ~ald the eunman ap-the apartment, other than to Ck:· parenUy fled on foot. termino their first names were Karen and Sandy. The two ap- pear to be in their thirties, firemen said. They were taken to Hoag Memorial Hospital. . According to Newport Beach police~ the four appar~ntly in- haled PCP~ an animal tran· quilizer, sometime during the night. Pena called his wire early this morning and when she got to the apartment at about 7 a.m .. she called the firemen. Sgt. Darryl YouJe of the potlce department said a small quantity of what be belie)'es is PCP w~ found in the· apartment. He BS'• serts that he also found a large quli\Dtlty or marijuana as well, Hesald he pl~ns to file charee.s (See PARTY. Page .U> termlno lf Allaway was sane when he took his rifie to the catn· pus library and felled nine people in a six.minute shooting spree. Dr. CuWe came under beayy cross examil\ation froru pr95- -ecutor James Enright who re- peatedly challenged the psychiatrist's belief that Allaway dtd not understand the nature of his actiOClS-csee ALIAWAY. Pa«e AZl IOOntity As Sam Denied NEW YORK <AP> --David Berkowitz, who pleaded innocent today to killing three people and wounding a fourth in the Bronx. surprised the hearing by denying that he was in fact the defendant. The man accused of being the .44-caliber killer was arraignfld for the second straight day in a makeshift Kings County Hospital courtroom: \t' Justice Alexander Chananau or Bronx Supreme Court asked, "Are YoU David R. Berkowitz?·· "No, your honor, I am not ... replied the 24-year-old postal clerk, clad lo blue pajamas and a blue-and-white robe. Defense attorneys, who en- terea a plea of innocent for Berkowitz on three counts of murder and one count of attempt· ed murder stemming from two attacks in the Bronx, said they were surprised by the statement. Immediately after Berkowiu·s re~~· defense attorney Marl; J. Heller asked the Judge Ula1 no furthtt qUestions "be cllrected at the defendant and that he be al-• lowed to stand mute.·• ~ ••I had no idea that tbJs was go- 1 n i to h appen. He's uod~r medlcaUoti at the bospltal. ·• sOI Heller. The arraignment was the second in two days f or Berkowitz. Tuesday, be pleaded Innocent to charges of murdering two young women and wounding five people in the Bronx. • He was previously indicted ror the murder in Brooklyn of Stacy Moskowitz. 20, the last of Son o( Sam.·s six homicide victims. and the attempted murder or Miss Moskowaiz· date. Rob'1"t Violante. also 20. In all. seven p,eopte were wounded by Ute killer. Teen Girl Killed In Auto i\ccident A 17·year-old Brea girl wu killed Tuesday morning when the car she was driving collided \\ith a half-ton truck. Orange Count~· coroner's deputies said today. WenctY Kay Mitchell \\"&S pro. nounced dead on arrival ct Brea Community Hospital shortb~ after the 9:50 a.m, coll1$ion at ColllltrY Lane anC:t Lauibert Road in Brt~ deputies said, u. ·~..,..,.... H.EADACHE -Keith Hig. gmson, commissioner of the . U.S. Bureau of Reclama- tion, explains proposed tightened limitation on ir· rigaled larn;ls in California. Air Crash Caused By Engine? By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of tN 0.lly ...... Ii.ff Speculation among 1n vest1gators today suggested engine trouble caused the crash of a cargo pl anc that slam med in· to a Catalina Is land moun- lJtnside Monday niRht, killing both men aboard 1'he dead were Identified as ptlot Charles C Clifford, 38 of · Long Beach. and Robert' G. Graves. also 38, of Cerritos. Los Angeles County Sheriffs Department investigators said they died instantly when their Beechcratt 8 ·18 smashed mto the rugged blurt above the sea. just ; after takeoff. A_r.Qmp.any spokesman at Long B~ach Municipal Airport notified investigators when the twin- engint plane operated by Air i"•st Freiiht Inc .. failed to arrive on schedule Graves was a partner in the rlrm which ferries freight of all sorts to the island via its Airport- in·the-Sky high atop a flattened mountain on Catalina ,Clifford was a recent retiree from the U.S. Navy and leaves a wife still mamtainmi their home in San Die~o Cyclist Hort In Costa Mesa Road Crash A Huntington Beach man was hurt Tuaday morning when bis motorcycle slammed Into the - rear of an auto waiting ·lo make a left hand turn In north Costa Mesa. Kurt J . Sebesta. 17, oC 18871 Flustatr Lane, wu treated and later released from Fountain Valley Community Hoapltal where he was taken followin3 the 10:30a.m. collision al MacArthur and Harbor boulevllrds. Pollce said Sebeita tumed right onto.., MacAT'thur from Harbor shortly before colllding with the rear of a car driven by Robert E. Lee. 62, or Tustin. Lee told 'orncers hts car was &topped in the roadw,.y wMn! he \ was attemptina to make a left ' hand l~ into a driveway. . 8y b"TEV.£ MITCHELL .................. Fon tl\at ler1• farmln1 operation In Or n&t County wuuld ~ broken up beeau.ae of fcdcrul water restrictions were ol\ed M>mewhat today. The 100.acr" limitation specter thut ijure11u of Reclamation of· flcluls rnlJed Monday seems now not applicable to lout farming aiohath.' such 4lS the Irvine Com · pany. The situation, however. still wat lesa than clear this morning. The proponl announced Mon· day would hm1t federally· controlled irrigation water to en couragesmall "familytanna ·; But confusion arose over the &t•tus of water coming from both federal and state sourcH u Is the case in the State Water ProJ· eot. The sUckler caroe in in· l ,rpreting tbe federal govern· m.ent·s term o( "co.mlngUnJ water" -that water cqming from both federal and state sources. The Interior Department an· nounced late Monday that the acreage.Umltatlon regu1atlona proposed were not intended to ap· ply to users ol state water de· Ii vered through a joint sl'-te· fed~al facility where there ls no fedl!ral subsidy to the user. That indicates Orange County agribusinesses, such aa the Irvine Company and Rancho Mission Viejo, do not fall under the 160-acre limita and woul4 not have to divest themselvei of ex· tra farmlands. B~ Met.lopolitan Waler Dis- trict -which supplies Orange County -is curreoUy receiving its water from the Colorado Aqueduct as a result or the drought in the northern part of the state. SEAT •.• v ariely of posts with the Bayvl,ew Elementary School, PT A, work with the Kaiser Mt'ddle School PTA. Youth Chairman for the Southern Counties YWCA, work on the Harbor Council of PTAs Youth Protection Committee. membership on the dlstrictwide Advi!ory Committee and Chairman or the Savt layview committee. She said she felt so strongly thal she was more qualified for the appointment than anv of the other candidates, that she con· sadered challenginl( the appoint- ment and forcing an election. ··But I dropped the idea when I found out it would cost between S20,000 and $35,000 for the elec· lion;· she said. "That money would have come out of the district's general Cund and no way was I goln& tQ force the district to spend that kind of money just so I could be on the school board a year and five months earlier." - Mrs. Beaupre operates a day ca re center in her home. Children, she says, are her abld- ing interest. "lt follows that education ls one of their areatest needs and that·s why I'm so In· volved in the schools. "l intend to set even more tn· volved in the next year and five months,·· she added. lJp Go. the Walls Wo~k crews are raisin~ the walls on a $628,134 gym· nas1um on the west side of Estancia High ~choot in Costa Mesa. The 10,950 square foot facility will ·seat 800 spectators when completed in Apl'il and includes a mtr· rored wall for ~ dance studio and facllities for adaptive physical education for handicapped children. It is bemg built by Nick PoJsrajac, Inc. .Rites Set Friday For Stallton Hale Memorial services will~ held Friday in Los Angeles for Stan- ton G. Hale. former chairman or Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Company, who died Tuesday at the age or 67. Mr. Male also had served as a director o( the James Irvine f'oundation. He died at the UCLA Medical <?epte~after a lengtby illn~·· A prominent businessman and civic leader , he joined the in- s urance company now based in Newport }leach In 1963 as presi- dent and member or tt1e board of directors. He retired as chief ex· ec uli ve o ffi ce r and board chairman in 1975. At the time or his death. he was a board merober of Carter· Hawley-Hale Stores. Inc .. Southern California Edison Com- pany, Santa Anita Foundation and Pacific Telephone and Tele· graph Compinf. lTe was a trustee oT California Ins titute of Technology, the Henry Huntington Library and Art Gallery and the Boys Clubs F oundatlon Qf Southern California:· · His civic service also included directorship of the Greater Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce. the California State Chamber of Commerce and the American Cancer Society. Services wlll be conducted at Lhe Westwood Ward Chapel orthe Church of Jesus Christ of the Lat· ter Day Saints, 10740 Ohto Ave., West Los Angeles at l p.m. The family suggest.a memorial contributions to the Stanton G. Hale-UCLA Medical School Stu· dent Scholan;hlp Fund. BO~~ Bill Suspect DUe in Court TOdaiy By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of .. DlillY ..... Steff The all~led ringleader of a group arrested on charges that they Weft in the process or print· ing fl mllUcm tn boaua S'20 and $$0 bills in Los Alamitos was scheduled to appear in federal court today. Robe.rt Powis, special apnt tn charge of the Loi An1ela office of the ~ret Service said baU is to be set £or. Steven Blash, Sr., $3, by: the feCferal magistrate in San Ql9C0. WASHINGTON <AP> -The FBl ~retapped the National lt_awyers Ouild and ma)'. h1tve burglartied guild membe~· of. fices in Washington and New Haven. Conn., in the late J940S and early 1950s, &(cording to newly disclosed FBI rues. The guild I• a national or· ganbatiQn of lawyers and leaal workers, which was founded in 1937 to work for civil rlaht.s and civil liberties. It was 4tt&cked as a Communist-front organization durtng tlle "Red scare .. era ot the1950s. The guild recently tllt<l a multimillion dollar damage suit acclBllll the Far and otl)er cov· erpment agencies of 11legal harassment and disruption of legitimate guild activities. In the course of the. lawsuit, the FBI was required to provide th~ i\lild wit!t 21,000 page• of bur~14 files on the organbatlon and its members. Guild officials said In a written statement today they have analyzed 4,500 pages and found "ample evidence of the bureau's eorly oampai&n to sUence crltici$ms .. from the guild'. 'The guild and the foundation -a~id l.M -OocuinentJ show thal FBI agents in 1948 apparently broke into the Yale Law School office of Prof. Thomas u Em~rson. then the guild pres1 dent to photoiraph an article Emerson was writing for the Yale Law Journal, 'l'ONIGHT COAST COMMVNlTY COLLEGE BOARD --Resular meetine. 1370 Adams, 8 p.fll. MUSIC OF AMERICA ·- Mustc·ofthe40's with Ansell Hill. South Coast Village rree concert. 7:30p.m. THURSDAY, AVG. 25 '"JAMES JOYCE'S WOMEN'. --South Coast Repertory Theater, Aug. 25-28. 8 p.m. SUn· d~3p.m. Hoover wrote the New Haven FBI office on J\lne 11. 1948: "It is desired Uta you dllcreetly al· ttmpt to ascertain It Professor Emerson ii preparing some arU· c le ar-treatise·• discussing Hoovel''s recent congressional testimony. The New H ven acent reported a month later that an FBI in· former at Yale "has been wiable to ucertaJn'' Emerson's olans. But on Sept. 22. 19'8. t~ New Hitven omce sent 1'81 head· quarters "pboto,raphs of Jn arti· cle prepared by Professor Emerson." Gultd omciala said the Uming or the incident and the 1 anguage of the memos suggest that the photographs were obtained ln a break·in at Emerson's office. In addition ''there la atrong •vldence thal lo 1M9 the F8l broke Into the gulld"a Washington national office three times in or· der to microfilm the guild·s membership list and drafts of another article which ex(>Oled FBI wiretapping,·· said lhe state- ment prepared by Ute guild ~d the foundation. f"ro91 Page AJ Supreme Court awarded custodv to ~ncle Sam --specifying that stnct regulations must govern access. It was also Nixon's first chance lo challenge those rules. Under the regulations. Nixon must be given notice that materials will be searched. Frank said the notice will be ffnt lo Nixon ·s lawyers within a rew days. ,..,._,,. Page A J PARTY ••. against the four. Paramedics said none of the ·rour victims was in critical con - dition from the drug ovetdose. PCP. when taken in large amounts, can. cau:se unconscious· ness, convulsions and vomiting and po~stbty death. 3ShortDays It's the wind-up of our great furniture event • . Af'Wl,....tt 'LADY IN BLACK' AMONG VALENTINO MOURNERS After 51 Years, 'the Sheik' Still a Legend Elderly Pilgrims Mourn ValentinO LOS ANGELES <AP> T~rough the overgrown graveyard &roun<\s, past the OS· tentatious shrines lo people long dead, they gathered in the hot August sun · · old actresses. grandmothers unable to smother their girlhood crushes and the Lady ln Black. The pllgtims had come to the old Hollywood Memorial Cemetery, as they always do on Aug. 23, to stand before the modest crypt of a legend Rudolfo Guglielmi Valentino. Fifty-one years arter he died too young. Rudolf Valcntmo \\as still making the ladles swoon. "There were thousands here last year ... said one woman. "I guess with the Presley thing, though. this. was kind of an- ticlimactic.' But Valentino will always be with us.·· Among these mourners of the Sheik · -perhaps 150 of them was a lady who. In her dogged mourning of Valentino. has become somethlnt .or a legend herself --the Lady in Black. .. This is my Slst year here." said the plump. veiled woman. "I'm always here because T made him a promise.·· Through the years. the lady in black has piqued th.e curiosity C>f the press W~ she Valent1n11·s first wife, JanC' Ackt't"' Was shl• the famous Latin ·s IO\ er. aetn:ss Pola Negri'! ··t um Ditra Flam<'.·· hhf' said "That's Flah-may. even though it looks like flame. l decided to come out openly because there were so many stories about who I was.·· . Why had she so ruht)f'ull~· maintained mournins: Mr u mun half a century dead'' "lt was a promise I made to him when 1 was 14 ... she suid ··r was ln the hospital and thought I was going to die. M~ parents got him to come visit me. l tolct him l \\as afraid or being alone. I \\as scaredorthecotd anct th•dark. "He was so wonderful. he laughed and said. ·oon·t be afraid. You won't be alone.· He said. ·Remember. I may die first. tr l do, I don't want to be lonel~·. either.· He called me ·sorellna: which means ·titUe sister' in Italian. He s!Hd, ·Sorelln~. lrt die first, you must always come see --me-andbriflS mea tedr~e: ·· On the other side of the room. flanked by rows of crypts. Mat)· Macl.aren posed with a 1910 cot>~· or Photoplay magazine. \\ith a color picture or the beautirut sllent screen star. l\lary ·MacLaren on the cover. • I EV Still The Marines haven't complete· ly abandoned the idea of military houslna In .Mile Square Park but tht>Y hav~ apparently decided their existt~ bases are best for such development in the im· mediate future. Col. G.L. '·Red" Fenenga. plans and programs officer for the .Murlne Corps in the western region. said Tuesday Congress wlll b(! usked for monev to build h o u s 1 n g ;1 l t h c S <.i i1 t a A n u helicopttl· lJase Fenenga nute<.l. hO\\ e\ er. that the in1l1ul JJ4 units that would be built then: would f '111 short of the future needs of the Mannes in Orange County. For that reason. he said Mile Square in Fountain Valley can· not be ruled out entirely. ··ny no means are we fixed on building on the currently owned federal property IM ile Square 1 We are amenable to a land·tradl' option since the Fountain \'ulle~ :-.j.te has a number of itf·awbtick:-.. ·· Fcntmga :-.;11<1 The federal go\'l•rnm<•nt U\\ ns t:IO acres in th<' l'en1er nf the hug1· <· o u n t y 1· C' g 111 n a I p ~1 r k a n ti the J\lanncs >-tll'l'NI up u 1-.111· I rover~· recent I~ "h<•n th1'.' pro· posed h11ild1nJ.! housini.: on that l>l'Ollt.'ll.\ According to ren<'ngn. Hw n•- que:-1 for ho11:-111g lunlli; will go 111 ('onJ?re-,s during lhl' next fiscal· 'l'<ll". \\ h1ch :-;t ;111-. O<.·t 1 · Thi• on ha1-t• hll'ution of lht• hOUl'lllJ.! \\lltlld lit• llUl:-ldt" l hC' hii.th nm.Sl' .&mpal'I ;ireu and Uw cl\\ cll1ngs coultl hl· rl'~•d~ ror oc:· <.•Upancy by t9i9 Fcnen~u l-.11<1 I hl' :-1 alt• ol mllltm~· housmg 111 El ·rum 11nd Santa 1\n<11s :11 ;1cr1t1l'al 1101111 The two h~1se::. rutT<.·nll~ h.1\ e about 1.400 units. of'' h1c-h llf'arl~· 300 arc considered 111adl·quu1e l'\·en though lh<'~ are c111-rent ly occupied FenCnJ.!<J ~<lid J.200 Mannes ore on the w a1ting h!>l for ba!le hOU!>ing and a recl'nl federal suney indicated a lot<il need or 521 add1l101wl milit<.il'\' homes. · ;\ccordin~ to Feneng::i ·11 11tatlstics. a t.Ptal of S.2.5!l Marines either 'rent or own homes in ch·illan Orange Count~· and 524 live in adequate off-base quarters. The base planning officer said it is becoming increasingly di(. flcult for ~Iarines to afford ade- quate housing in Orange County. Transplant Snit Filed But D1tdrich f uHested the county c<>Wd k lt.1 mi q op· tlons opep OY SnaulUn~ no permanent park incnlties along San Juan Clny<ML Sawyer: alao coni di! tbe rnlnlnl operotlon would ri:i trlct park UH for up eQ Ye&l'$ • While portions of the park could be used white mining con· tinued, he said, tencn would have CO be built to prottct park visitors from the mlnine excava- tion and n costly entranceway likely would b'&netded. Both Clark and Diedrich d when the park was purchased three years ago for M 4 mJllion. aupervlSOrs ad hoped 'tO reeoup part ot t.M purchase t later with mlnm, ro1altlet. Clarie said mining mtsht not be advisaable now but there could bo a time tn the future when the need and the price for 11nd and gravel would make the mlnini worthwhile. Riley. pressing for adopUOD of a de\·elopment plan. said Casper: contains "some of the most beautiful land in the count)".,. He said. "It has "\he chance to .. .,, ........... WILL SHE FACE BOOT OVER LACK OF SHOES? Female Sailors Protest Dlscipllnary Action Heel· Hassle Women Chafe at Na11Y Action SAN DIEGO IAP> • The !"a'~ i::. kicking up its heelso\'er. t '' o female ~ailors "ho shed theirs. • The two women were put on report for getting out of their high heels In an honor formation. Officers admitted the decision \\ <1s hased on photographs of the women. suns shoes. pubTished In a newspaper. , "THE PF.RSON WllO PLACED these women on report is a male chauvinist pi~ who never had to stand around In the hot sun in high heels.-· su1d one Nav)-woman i~ response to the announce- ment. . · "It is n'tritc thing to wnstl' so much energy on." said anot.'1er female sailol'. "I think it is kind of chicken.~~ The two women. who were not ldentifie·d under provisions ot the National Privacy Act. were in the back rows of hundreds of sailors standing In review formation during a change or com· mand ceremony Friday at the North Island Na\·al Air Station. APPARENTLY THE ONLY ONE TO notice them was Den· nis Hufs. a photographer for the San Diego Union. which published two photos of the women. rr found guilty in a court-martial or captain's mast.. the two women could be reduced in rank. stripped of a month's pay and confined for30 days at hard labor. "Maybe they will Jet them bust rocks with the spikes in their high heels ... said another Navy woman. Denied A 6uperlor Court judge re- f used 'l"uesday to . lower the SlS0,000 ball for Fred Berrc Do\&Slas, accused of planning 'to filtn tadlatic murders fol'° 'SO· called "1huff.pomo" films. 1 Judge Mason Fenton made his ruling after hearing araumenls from· both sldes in the case against Douglas, 54, o( 276 l6th Place, Costa Mesa. He set Sept. 6 for pretrial ac· tion in his courtroom. The ac- cused upholsterer will be tried Oct. s on chargH or attempte<l murder and soliciting murder. Douglas was arrested JuJ.t'. 20 in the Yucca Valley desert area by two undercover police women allegedly hired by him to play parts in pornographic movi~ It is alle1ed that Douglas in· tended to murder them and dis· member them as tbe final scene in his movie and then dispo6e or the bodies in the surrounding desert. A witness testified in municipal court action against Douglas thut he orrered her Sl,000 for each or five women he ~ked her to recruit for movie maklng and subsequent torture and elimination. She testified that Douglas told her he had already killed five women who starred in bis mov- ies. dismembered them and burled them in lhe desert. lampoon Suit · Not So Funny LOS ANGELES <AP> --A judge has refused to di11mlJ.'l a suit by artist Grant Wood's si5ter etalnst HusUer magazine for a semlnude lampoon of her brother's famous .. American Gothic" portrait. . Nan Wood Graham, 77, tiled the suit April 1, contending the April issue of Hustler defamed her and:caused her emotional distress by showing a version of the painUng with the womtn nude above the waist . She posed for the cmgtrral-piinttng attined in a gingham r~rm dress. "This is one of the most dif· flcult cases I've bad in a Jong ti me, .. said Superior Court Judie Vernon Foster. . . Tahoe Fire SOt.rl'HLAKETAHOE (AP}- A warehouse full of firewood burned Monday at South Lde T~~ cauSing a spectacular fire and rorcfn1 fire fighters lo 1cramble to keep it from 1pf'ead. Irie to the thider-dry f orut. . . J 'Making' Money LO 'G GllEEN DEPT. ~-Do ~ ou ha\'e a con umln1 de ire for neh U\ tbe m11Uons! Do you h rbor th frenzif'd ambition to make a lot of money7 lf ~. )esterdayb oction by the lilUted Slates Secr•t Service up in l.os Alamitos might unest lo ) O\I how not to do it No. it t!>n't true th-t the T·Meo lost their collective shirt at the Lo.J Alamitos race track, They " .. re in town on an entirely dif· rer~ntmiss1on. ',Che Secret Service operatives :.wooped down on a Los Alamitos pri#lt. shop and arrestef) thr•e m"n on alleaations of making money. In this instance$. CQUP· terfeiting 20 and 50 dollar bills. NOW YOU ARE allowed to make cash in numerous ways in this country so long as you pony up your share to Uncle Sam ·s Eternal Revenue Service at the endofeachyear. But the pracuce or printin" your own is hugely frowned upon by Uncle Sugar and his treasury agents. According to the Secret Service charges. however. the ~ Alamitos free enterprisers ~n't really cashed in. They ~e only half-cashed. 'fhat is. at t})e time of the raid. e Secret Service people allege at the operators had only print-«at the backs of the S20 and SM ltlls. 1'hey had a w})ole press run *t to go on Andrew Jackson·s Ste. lflf convicted. you huve to won- cllt. does this mean they·u only do hair the lime in the federal slammer" You have to admit the allega· tions suggest the printshop trio were ambitious. The T·aeents al-lege they were shooting for a press run of S7 million in bogu~ currency. '"4 . CLEARLY SO!tE people. • driven by universal greed. will do anything to make money. Some of the rest of us can't seem to do anything but spend il. Last night. for exiimple. I came into possession of ()•huge fund-raiser pizzas. ~ I am not going to bore you with some convoluted explanation of how I happened to become custo- dian of these pastry and pasta delights. Suffice to say the 10 pizzas arc enormou~>. about the size of a cocktail table. Reminded that I bad this load of nab-producer in sny car irunk. I hauled the pizzas lrtta.mY apart- ment witb the hope ;:'bf .8toring them in.tlmret.ri&~!rl!eum. ·"The move will be in response to representations from leading Irish-American political figures. ancludint SenatQrs Edward Ken- nedy and Patrick Moynihan. to U.S. Secretary of Staie Cyrus Vance, earlier this summer ... A BBC REPORTER ln Belfast said Carter had sent the BriUsh and Irish governments copies or what he intends to say. No con· !lrmation of this report was ob· tainable early today. There was no indication or when or where Carter would outline his pro- posals. The Times reported Carter·s statement is expected · ·m the nextfew days.·· BBC ·Belfast correspondent Bill Flax called the reported move "this unprecedented American initiative:· He noted that Roy Mason, British cabinet minister for Northern Ireland. will visit the United States soon to try to convince America!\ busi· . . Care Ho~ WHARTON, Tex. <AP> --Thir· ·teen undernourished and mental- ly disabled people, including six armed service veterans. have been found virtuallY .imprisoned at a rural rest bOm~ .llorth or here. ~ Five men were found tocked in an un\tentitated garage, said police. Police arrested a man and were .seeking a worn~ today. The woman was believed \Q have brough.t some o( the ~rans from Cillifornia anct JieJd_.pu:m at the rest home w~te C"'bJng their disability and penston checks. HELD IN ~rt.on County jail was Elmer Arnold Tompkins. 34. of Van Nuys, Calif. ·He was ~har'ed with 12 counts of false 1mpnsonment. Bond was set at 560,000. Jack Kemp, an investigator for the Wharton County crime task force. said warrants also were out for the arre~t of Lillian Gobert, 35. also of Van Novs but formerly or Wharton. She was ch$rged with seven counts of false imprisonment. Kemp said the people at the home, located at the settlement Q( Spanish Camp. ranged in age 1rom28to 50. Two were women. ) Mexico, U.S. Ready Prisone~ Exchallge MEXICO CITY (AP) ··• Pretparations are under way to begin transferring imprisoned-Atned'tans to U.S . .authorities as soon as the U.S. Conpess ~asses the l~~•Uon necessary to put a prisoner ex- change treaty into effect. Authorities said 16 Americans have been brought to Mexico City from prisons in southwest Mex- ico during the past week. Other American prisoners will be con- centrated in detention centers along the U.S.-Mexican border and in Guadalajara. .. Dr. Cesar Lechuga RoJas. director of the agency carrying out the prisoner transfer. said he had learned Congress might pass the needed legislation in Sep· tember. ( IN SHOKI' J plans of Sen. William Proxmire cD-Wis. >.chairman of the Senate Banking Committee. to bold the hearings. The President said he does not oppose them because they would be "part of our political process that ought to be encouraged.·· Mandel lndeebl1'e ANNAPOLIS, Md. <AP> Gov. Marvin Mandel, tonvicted of mail fraud and racketeering charges, bas "llot" tn8Ue up his mind whetb~ to stay on as Maryland's <:hief execut(ve until he is automatically removed in October. Acting Gov. Blalr Lee llI said today. Under Maryland law. Mandel must eive up the governorship upon sentencing, which is scheduled for Oct. 7. There have been reports that be planned to resign before that. A photographer and firefi&hter run for cover as the roof ol a. burning building collapses toward them in downtown Indianapolis Tuesday afternoon. Six firefigbters on the other side of the building were in· jured when the roof and wall fell at the same1.lme. GM to .Hike Car Priees lncreaae tDAveraB-e $405·Per Yehkle DETROIT <AP> -Prices on General MotoTS0 new cars are going up an average S&05 a ve~le this fall, accordingtothe.nation's largest automaker. The increase -near al.x percent from a com· parably-equieee<f 1977 car -means the suggested manufacturers' price of a 1978 GM car. including options, Will cUmb to an estimated S7.200. That price does not include l8lces or discounts that dealers usuallr. offer b&O"ers. GM, which builds more than half the cars pro- duced in the country, announced Tuesday that base prices on its new cars are going ulf S242. or 4.6 J>Oi· cent, on the average. from 1~7. INCLUDING ADDED-COST OPTIONS. GM estimates its average 1978 car will carry a price that is up $387, or 5.7 percent. than a comparable 1977 car-. On top of that. shipping charges are being raised an average Sl8, whlcb raises the per unit in· crease to $405. · GM previously irtdicated it might raise car prices b)' up to six percent,·on the average. because o\ increased costs tor materials and Jabor. -and despite recQrd profits. GM, the industry's pricing leader because of its size, traditionally is the first domestic automaker fo set prices for the new model year. which officialb· begins ~t. 1. . . FOltD MOTOR CO. AND CHRYSLEll CORP. bavesaid earlier that they too were considering six percent price increases •. Last~ear. GM raised prices on 1977 models by an average~. or S.9 percent. ''The priee increases for tlt78 are substantially • less than increases in the C06t of raw materials and labor which occurred during the past year.~.' GM said in a prepared litatemen(. "Steel. alumtn\Un. lead, glass Jlr1d plastiu are all up, GM's labor .costs have risen more than H ~rcent in the past >'f'ar ... In 1976. GM earned a record 52.9 billion. The firm is running well ahead of that pace this year. with profits or $2 billlon in the first hair. including Sl.l billion in the second quartet'. GM DID NOT RELEASE BASE prices for 1978·model Cadillacs, the Chevrolet Cbevette and the firm's new intermediate cars. which have been . made shorter and lighter for 1978. GM said prices. on those cars w~uld be announced during late Sep· tember and early Octobfr. For its other cars. new-model base vehicle prices ranged from $3,,62 for the subcot'npact Chevrolet Monia Coupe·to 68,899 fort the tuxuty OldsmobtJeToronado. ~ GM .ise> disclosed that Oldsmobile win charge between S740 and S850 for an optional diesel enalne • on its full-sized cars. The JSO.cubic-incb V.S ls. n- pected to provide 25 percent better fuel econorov than a comparable ga~~ne.power~ngine. ~ · . . ~-,,.,f)ul lnf enw Fulens SAN FRA CISCO tAP' Pacirlc Telephone Company worked today to repair circuits damaged in a Creak accident that k no..c:k•d out so_me 20:000 ('--_-SIA._ .. _TE_J telephones, jangling the West Coasrs financial nerve center Jack Anglus. spoke!lman for Paciric Telephone. said the damaged circuits may not be restored until Thursday night Service in the heart of the city's rinancial district went haywire when a machine digging 12 feet deep for soil samples cut through six maJor underground cables. lllJeleet Get• RJde PASADENA <AP> --Scien- tists believe the Voyager 2 space ·craft's erratic behav'°r after its launch last weekend may have been caused' by a jettisoneli rocket that bumped into it The 350·pound expended rocket. which should have fallen clear, may be tagging along with the unmanned space probe bound for Jupiter. Saturn and beyond. scientists at Jet Propuls ion Laboratory here said Tuesday. ~t•llpped SACRAMJ:NTO <AP> · -Fifty- seven C~liCornJa counties met state iuidelines this year on prop- erty assessments. but San Luis Obispo County faces a probable • state order to boost assessments by 2'T~rcent. San Luis Obispo was the only California co""nty that failed this year to meet state Board jll. F.quahation t.andards for as- sessment ratios. 14 Btart ia Brat0I LOS ANGELES t AP > Tensions were eased at a county maximum-security facility in Saugus fol lowing a brawl between black and Mexican· AmeTican inmates that left H men injured. official'! said. *HAND GUNS * RIR.ES *SHOTGUNS * RSHING TACKlE ·*DOWN JACIClTS *HATS CAPS * WOOL SHIRTS * SPORT SHOES *LETTERING * SKATE IOAROS *SKI BOOTS * RAC®Ef BAU * SPEEDO SUITS * FlY TIE1NG LOS ANGELES <AP> -Dry air spread Ins over Southern California today helped calm Imperial • County restdents' fears of renewed Oooding Ju t after ~Y dried out from last week ·a rainstorms. Ftub-OOod watches were ordered for desert and mocmtaln areas for sovei'al hours Tuesday. but were later lifted. Tl\e NaUonal We~ther service ex· pe.eted only a sllcht chahce of raln in the area. which had heavy flooding last week. "' FIFTEEN TO 20 homes In Yucca Valley in San Swedish .Actress lltitt E~lund 1s suing British rock star Rod Stewart for 815 million. The couple, who had lived togel_h'~r for _2':? _years. spht up 10 days:ago w~en ~·. Stewart moved out ot the home they shared m exclusive llolmby Hills. The actress said her he lp contributed to ·SlO miilion of Stewart's earnings and another 520 million recording contract. 'Pussycat' Owner Guilty of Porno · However. the Jury acquitted Miranda, of Los Angeles. of six other courrt.s involving four full- Bernardino County suffered minor Ooodlna Tu.es· day when 1.92 inches Qt rain fell within 35 minutes. Somel'Oads were closed because t~y were awa$h. Two washes in Blythe overflowed, but there was no immediate danaer to residents or property. the sheriffs department said. BLYTHE POUCE Lt. Bob Feemster estimated a batf·inch of rain bad fallen by Tuesday evening. "I don't think the ground can take much more moisture, .. he sald. Officers in four·wbitel vehicles cruised the area checking for damage. he said. Btrr NATIONAL Weather Service !!pokesman Wally Cegael said the rains wouldn't be as heavy as last week's. "It doesn·t. l.Qok like it'll be a heavy blast, .. he said. . r). The forecast called for the thundershowers to dry up by Thursday. LAST WEEK. Intense rains were brought to Southern California by the northern tip of Jiur- ric ane Doreen. Tb~ estimate of damage inflicted on agriculture tn Imperial Valley ls being upgraded by more than SS million. · CLAUDE FINNELL, the county's agriculture cotftrnissioner, put the damage report at Sl4.3 million Tuesday after touring farm areas by air. • Finnell said the cotton crop tQ be harvested in November was hardest hit by the two days of rain that accompanied the storm. He estimated 10 per· cent of the 140,000 acres of cotton in the prolific county was destroyed, a loss of S8.S milli.oh. GOV. EDMUND Brown Jr. declared a state of· emergency in Imperial County Tuesday because or a week of high winds, heavy rains and flood.in&. The Democratic governor also reported Tues· day he requested the U.S. Department of Agriculture to declare the county a federal agricultural disaster area. SAN BERN'ARD11'0 <AP l - Vincent l\firanda. owner or some 50 Pussycat movie theaters m California, ~ convicted by a Municipal Court jury Tuesday of displaying obscene matter at a preview of the film ··Sex Freaks ... Jen1th features and two other MEANWIDL'!. the Board or Supervisors in San film previews. All were screened Diego Counly --just to the west --asked Gov. Ed- at San Bernardino Pussycat mund Brown Jr. to declare a state of emergency in Theaters in September 1974 and the Anza-Borrego Desert, which also traverses Im- a II depicted expli cit sex acts. perial County, so property owners and farmers will Senate Raps 'IYMayMm SACRAMENTO tAP > - The .California Senate thinks it"S time for the television networks to re· duce the amount or violence on their pro· grams. .On.a&l voteTut!SdS¥. it urg.ed the three major television networks to do so ··expeditious l y. responsibly and effec- tively ... The resolution by Sen. Bi JJ Greene <D ·L oo Angeles), also nsks the Federal C.ornmumca~ions Commission to take action if tbe networks fail to act.. PROSECUTOR Jules Fleure said he beli~ved the misde-I meanor 'lonvlction was Miran-· da ·s fjrst, "Qlthough the theater owner has ~en tried on similar c harges several times pre- viously The verdict in the five•Week· old trial was unanimous. MIRANDA'$ attorneys said they would appeal the decision.· and a hearing on a new trial was scheduled Oct. 13. Otle,µ;e-Jt\W}-ers con~nded the films did not ap~eal to a sliameful Interest in sex and that the sex acts depicted were within community st andards for can· dor. Miranda was acquitted of c harges related to the films ··woman·s Liberation,·· '"Ask Any Hooker," ··Personals .. and "T he Flasher:· as well as pre· views of ··High Rise"' and ··Sex Clinic Girls.·· be eligible for low interest loans to repair damages. This Ad EfMctiv• throuP August 30th. For Campus or Career Fashion Pants Auofted •tylH and fabrics. Easy.core. Dual tltft. lteg. $8.99 Skirts Asiorted stylH, colors ami fabrics. Dual sJxes. · lt99. $7.99 .• Tailored Shira Easy-co,. poly•tei twiU. Classic •tytlng. Pret~ prints , or colers • .,; 16. Reg. $6.99 a.-Wrap Cardigans Shawl collaf, potch pockett, belt. Warm bulky acryUc knit. T...dy look. Reg. $13.99 629 * *-r .,. LQS ANGELES tAP> -Sweltering beat and high humidity has kllJed an estimated 1.000 cows in the rich dairy country or the Chino Valley. "Basically it is beat exhaustion ... said Bendt Pedersen, a supervising dairy Inspector for San Bernardino County. "Becau.Se of ~ hieh tem- peratures and the high humidity. the cows simply couldn •t get enough water and enough shade ... , CATl'LE LOSSES so far totaled SS00.000. and milk productioif was down by more thin 1S ~ttent over the weekend, officials said. The decrease ln milk production cost dairy ranch..srs another Sl million, they Sf id. "It. was a disaster." said Dr. Robert Jackson. San BemardlhO County's senior public heaJUi veteriparian. "These cows ~ere In the prime of Ure. at the~akofproduction:· •· NEARLY ALL .MILK from the Chino Valle~· is sold in the Los Angeles area. Dairy officials said it could be two weeks before milk production returns to its previous level. · However. officials would not speculate on how much effect the cattle deaths would ha,·e on retail milk prices. Now open dally! ~ excitlng new out- door Caflfomla Plaza &t Restaurant at Movteland Wax MUMUm Is open fre.e to the publlc and offer• a fatlvc dining, atmosphere nmlnlscent of early CallrQmlL Th~ c;.llforala'~ • Is also available for buslnus meetlngt and luncheons. Plan your vl1U now! Call 714/522·ll54. Freewa11 close at 77ll Beach Boulevard. • Buena Park. California • .. Hcmoown 1 upf orenUr will be pa)1NJ l than ycnr in ddilJO"I munlcipol tax· ·t y r. d Wt an 1v~ro1c: 17 percent lncr• e a~~!iClJ \ Ju ifoni in the ell>. • Th ·.r h \l" th eat)· coun<-11 and th city's fin{lnce ~ departm nt to thank for thul mockr•t~ uacre •. ! Count·ilm n otppro\ t'<I ;.1n 18-<:t.•nt rutt• cut in next ~ 'Nr . ~. 7 mil hon dty hudact document, 5tt\ln& the ~ cit> tal( rntr ut .14 rrorn tti 197 ·77 $1.32 fi&Utt.• ' About a quar' r of that taic r-atc cut is due lo a de· t.'l ion to reduce th-0 d~llnqucnc:~ rate set ustde to cov· ~ t..·rCO!\taM n whodonotpa,>ttltrrtuxc~ · In the p t, the bud1ttt reflected u S percerit delln· qucncy rate to C'Over th~e non-puymcnts But finance oUtuab decided tu cut th'1l rate lo 2 percent, thereby ::iavine about 4 cents on the tax rate Careful bud&et considerations like this kept the tax rate from climbing an Costa Mesa the last two yeani Councilmen will gel ;mother <'hance to test thl· cit~ 's finan<:e skills this October when salary adjust ment~ for city employes are set Whether thosl· pay acJju:itmt!nts will cuUSL' a large • <.\dJustment in the approved budget remuinb to be seen School Home Needed Contro,·ersy is bubbling again in the :\ewport· Mesa t:nified School District o\·er proposed reloca- tion of Costa Mesa's Mc Nally High School, a contmua- lion school with special goals and fuocfions. The district wants to sell the school and its site and move Mc:'\ally students to one of several schools with declining enrollment But residents uround these ' other schools ha \L' expressed fear that continuation schools are dumping grounds for outcasts from the regular system. fill ed \\ith delinquents and trouble· makers That's not ...._ full'~ nor is it an accurate. new of ''hut continual ion schoob are all about. They are schools tor chlldren :whos dlfterent loaming pattern require individual attention they can't get in the reaular chool pro1ram. 4 SOm of the students are non-conformists. kids lost m the shuffle. Others work and caMot adapt their schedules to normal school hours. And. sure, there ure some trouble-makers--just as Ulere are trouble· makers at other high schools in the district. Uthe critics of McNally would take the trouble to find out what really g0es on there, they would flr\d most of their rears groundless. They will also find a "orthwhile program that deserves support from the community. Your Chance ,to Help How many Harbor Area residents find themselves with a few extra hours on their hands every »'eek? Quite a few, we'd guess. It "happens that Fairview State Hospital has a need for people with some time to spare to help out with the developmentally disabled children, teenagers and adults who live there. Hospital officials will welcome anyone aged 14 or older to work with the patients in a variety of pro· &rams~ . They don't want ~·ou to come in to help the medical staff, they want you there to be with the pa· tients, to take walks with the-m, to tutor them. to do arts and crafts with them or maybe even drive them to church. There are six. different volunteer programs operating at the hospital, each geared to a specific kind of patient and each needing volunteers. There are no special skills needed, just some time each week and a little co.mpassion. There are 140,000 people living in the Harbor Area. There are 1,550 at Fairview .. It's a small seg ment of the local population, but they could ~ure use some help from the rest of us who 1i ve here. ----~- c Diredor of -th& 9""g&-t -That Stir ls Energy ~In Action Dear Gloon1y Gus Still in tla.?Bighwag Business ' (JACK ANDERSON] WASHINGTON -Pr~sldent Carter's new Dept. or Energy isn't even open for business yet. but it is already tho focus or a backstage brouhaha. The White House has issued marching orders to 5,000 Army and Air Force · employes to make room for the energy bureaucrats. 1 They are tak- ing over the James For- restal Build- ing, a mass- ive, modern white struc lure conveniently located In the heart of downtown W41shington. Ironically, the civilian eiieray experts are ~basing the brus hats from a tiuildina named tor the Ont secretary of defense. t CAllTEB lasued Uie COnftdtn· tlal eviction notice In a June 3 memo to the General Services Administration (GSA), but news of th• order quickly 1'ak«l °'1t to · everyone in town. E\'ery~ that 1 is, except Defeue S ntary; Harold Brown, wbo'W•fll told ol the president's declaton unW nearly a month later. It waa the GSA's reaponslbUlty to inform the Def en:se Dept. of the eviction, claimed a White House l)>Okes1nan. But in eluate buck-passing fashion, G~ r• rused to comment on the Qlemo 1 on the grouods it was a White House document. not GSA 's. In any event, the Whlte Houl• wants the building vacated PQ.'St haste. The man with the teaat tlme to· clean out hla dealt ts ,._,, a.n. H.R. Vaaue. Ute Air Fotce'aJudie>l advocate. U• bu until Oct. k~ evacuate his aeventb-flool:'Offiee, l the most luxuiioua sUite ln the building. The reuoo, apparent~ 1Y, Ja Ulit the S)edanUc. plpe- s mokin1 enercy ae~retary, James Scblaln1er, baa hli eye on the Po'h quuun Mid 11 earer My pet peeve: The parking lot on 19th Street between Newport Blvd . and Fullerton Ave. is a dis- grace to the city of Costa Mesa M.L.K. 01-.myo..~··,.~1 "' ... "••wt~w~rtfi.ct ,,...., .......... 11!1 .. I..:'. -....., ... ....,.., .... 0. .. ., lo move in and begin solvin& the energy crisis. The unfortunate Vague. meanwhile, will be banished to a nondescript office building in an area known as Buzzards Point. TO MAKE matters worse, no one is sure which government agency will pick up the tab tor the move. Federal regulationa require that GSA pay for such forced rel~ations. but an In· ternal Dept. of Defense memo explains that "the regional GSA administrator has already in- dicated he bas no funds for this purpose." Additional funds for the bureaucr,ts to change placea, the. memo obaoerves, ••trouJJrbe diltlcult to obtain from the Congress." The only ~ that is perfectly clear is that the taxpayers wm foot the bill. It could amoubt to '6.9 mllllon. CalTrans Priorities Outlined . To the Editor: A recent Daily Pilot editorial, "Public Disagrees." states that CalTrans refuses to allDcate funds for new freeways, is reluc- tant to complete projeds already started and insists on unpopular traffic management techniques . to stimulate the use of buses anq oarpoolL It 1oes on to cite a Field Poll, 'fl{hich apparently de- termined that the public's -priQtities are for more and bt:tter fru'ways and highway11 better road maintenance and more safety improvements. It says that this is the opp0site of what CalTrans wants. These statements are contrary to CalTrans' well publicized six- year planning pro4!:am. "bJch a1loc•tes the $2.5 btlUon availa- ble for highway construction as follows: 52 percent for new highway facilities, 17 percent for rehabilitation and reconstruc· tion. 16 percent for safety and operational improvemeots, nine percent foe: noise abatement and landscapin~. and six percent for mass transit use. WE WILL also be spending about $250 million a year on maintenance activities.. It would~ that thos~spend­ ing prioriUet are pretty much i.n line with what you feel the pubUc wants. Over the next two monttiS. the California Hl1bway Com- misaioq will be holding a number of meetings to gather more {>UbHc input into this year's version of the plann.lna prop am. The same editorial also says that Orane• County resident.I Cet proPC>rttonately leas of their gas tax monq back than they con- tribute. That's true. In California, highway funds are not proportioned to counties on the basis "' tax revenue generat- ed by the co'1nly. lnlteed the l•w requires that tbe money be al- rocated to proJecta accordlne to merits Of each )>roject in com· parison wt th all other projects. Your commeni. about 0rte1a Hl&hway are alao esaenUally cor- rect. Jfo\lever. we conrj~er the proataromed safety project a very high prio ty,proJect. It cov- en the POrUon of th& route whlth has.QU.storically bad by far the m<>!t c>peraUonal problems. We intend to construct the improve. ments just as soon as the environ· mental clearances can be ob- tained and the needed ripta ol way pu.rchued. • ( MAILBOX ) Ltttera from reader• are ~lcome The right to condm1e lftters to /11 tpOCe or eUminate libd u 1eserwd. Letter• oj JOO word$ or Leu wm be giwn preference. All letter• mun m· d!MU lignature and mailing address but name• may b1 WUhheld ors re- que1t if aufficient ~aaon u'bppor;rit Pott111toUl1¥'' be publUMd. .. to 1et a limit on the allowable number or peak hour arrivals •nd cfepattures, forcing the airlines to spread out their ruchts · over a greater perlod of the day. .Passengers could be encouraged to fly during off.peak hours by levying an airline ticket sur- char'e (or airport head tax) for peak hour flights. Or perhaps a "bargaJn" or lower fares or off· peak hour nights. With peak hour trafnc cut, a rational approach to terminal ex- pansion can be developed, result· Ing in less cost to taxpayers, bet· ter utilization of terminal facilities and a reasonable as- surance that terminal develop- ment will. improv._ui• comfort and eonvenienc6 of -travelers rather than merely crowd more passengers into the peak hour periods. . PATRICIA LlLLEGRA VEN r..-ee CM c.Js 1 about. 90 days to review the bids and make a construction award. no actual work will start until the mic\dle or 1979. S<f THE people of Newport Beach had better make up their minds to suffer through three more years or traffic congestion. wasted energy, and air pollution created by long lanes or backed up tratnc, which intreases each year .. The only thing that will change or Improve this timing is a sense or urgency on the part· or CatTtans! It remains to be seen it any speclal effort will be put forth! E.P.~ENSON ' Qlt)ea., .. c .. ,.iez To the Editor: The Democrats are always so anxious Lo give up territories. Roosevelt at Yalta allowed Stalin's occupation of the eastern European countries taken by Hitler, even though Churchill was against it. Those people could be free today. Truman again repeated this mistake at Potsdam an<l allowed Russta continued control, again opPOfingQiURhiU. Kennedy allowed t!)e Berlin wall to be built, reatrictlng more freedoms. Now Carter wants to gi vo away the Panama Canal. W ateh out America. ' FLO DAYTON SdlMIB ... e•lllfl To the Editor: The Newport-Mesa School Dis- trict's total ceneral fund budget for l.97'1-78 contains more than $7 million to be derived from the sale of land and the securtq of federal building monies. Neither or these funds relates to the dis· trict's tax rat" other than in- direct11 ~to lower it; neither of these fUnds wm bo reflected in the tu bitls this fall. In fact, if th'9 pubUc W'Orkl and land aale pro_\ec:ts are ~chideid. the total percentage inCfeAH of the general fund bQdC•t fot 1977-78 ls 3.8 percent -not tbe 21 percent )'OU ·ecntorialiied over in the Dally PUot Aug. 17. JOHN W. NICOLL Superintendent or Schools the Rendezvous one could look around and see quite a bit ol bare flesh coming and goins. One warm summer morning, about 0300 hrs, after the dance, there were four of us who had re- tired and were about to go to sleep in our bou$e at 911 E. Cen· tral Avenue, when we beard someone hollering for help out on the bay. We didn't stop tc) don clothes, but ran nued to the Pavilion from whence the sound seemed to come. . . A drunk had fallen off a boat moored in ttie. turnin1 butn 80 a couple of the boy1 swam out and helped him back abo.rd. By the time they returned to the Pavilion a crowd bad aathered: No problem, we walked home naked and went back to bed. ltoland Hodgkins or Balboa was a great police chief. He played Godfather to at least three aenerations of boys. II we had more like him there would be much less juvenile delinquency. Nude beaches help to reduce crime and improve our society. JACK.RAAB L~aSBe~ To the Editor: Row CoUiil the .&metican peo- ple elect Carter and his gang to practice on the United States Government and jeopardlle the country? Lance is the slickest operator we've •~eu yet. Hts numer«as loans into the bllllons are certain- ly questionable. Cvte1'1 financial loans into the mllllons when be went into office were jUft as queatlonable and no one lnHstlgated or even ques- tioned tiim regarding them. OLIVE K. PETERS J . \: . A First Women Piped On SAN DIEGO <AP> -It mi&ht surprise the late Secretary of the Treasury Henry Mor1enthau lf be knewwhat11 beln1donetotheU.S. CoutGuardcut· ter named for btm. A folding door ls being installed between two staterooms and the adjoining bathroom. Diet foodl will be on the menu. and cosmetics will be told in the exchange. THE ALL·MALE CREW IS preparing to welcome women aboard. Alone with the cutter Gallatin at Governor's Island, N.Y.1 it wlll be the lint time that women · have been assigned to sea duty aboard a combat •• ship in the Coast Guard. When the Morgenthau ends its last all.male · combat training mission Sept. 16 and beads home to · San Francisco, the first two women wm board three days later. A STATEROOM WITH AD.JOINING bath will • be ready for Ens. Debra Gale Snelson of Frostburg, Md., and another for Ens. Beverly Gwyn KeUe,. of -Miami, Fla. Ten more women crew members will report for duty Oct. 3. A 10-bertb compartment witb it.5 own bathroom will be ready for them. "I'm looking forwe.rd to It," Ens. David , Lawrence of Lawnalde. N.J •• uid Monti&)'. "It's a trip." "IT'S A BBAND·NEW SITUATION and generally the Unknown can be upsetting," said Capt. G~r1e E. Wal ton. commanding officer of the Morgesithau. But DOl\e of the men appeared upset. TJ:Je 3l8-foot Mouenthau is aangned to enforce ~ U.S. flabtn1 restricUona ln the 200-mile economic zone off Aluka and will be on a 60-day patrol this fall and M 80-day patrol next spring. Althou1b U.S. " Law forbidt·women from serving on combat sbips durina war, Walton said the uae of gobs lsn 't expect· eel "in our law ~orcement. 11 :~ TJD8 JS THE FIRST TIME women have ever sfi'ved on a combat e>l' "line" ahlp, 1alcfEXtcUlive Offtcft 4'ames K. Woodle of Portland, Ore., but they badNayy dutyonbospltal 1blp1 and hirtiortUp. None of the first doien women~ wbo WUl serve their eilitlre two-year tours abOaid ahl_p, II rated for ename duty but "generally. l th1nk that either men or "men can be uallned to any Job we have," WaltDD. of Btooklyn, N. Y ., Said ln an lnterview. 1:bft is one thia,i the 151 men of the cutter Koraenthau can do, thOugb; that the women can't. "It'• customary at the atiit ol ea.ch \loYa1e for men to be&iJl IJ'Owina beardt,1' WoOidlt la:ld. JN lt73, U.S. Rep. WilUain 0 . Milli (R·Md.) was found lbot to death ln an apparent suicide after newspapers reported he bisten to our ' . . ., experts talk about wine and cheese. You'll become Q.uite an 1 e~pert yOurse'lf. DURHAM, N.C. (AP) -:1U(tie Sam Gantt's eyebrow arched only 11l1bUy, becauae there tin 't much hit honor bam't eoen, aa tie read the defendant'' name. aloud: .. Joclde ShOna." Shorts w•• accuse4 with two fJ'ltnd1 of brnkm• lhtO.. v~-4 ateallnl some rrOOettes. Gantt banded them two· year auapendell sen-• tences and; three years on probaUon. He also or· dered them to pay $1,75 to thevan'aowner. "I remem~ when J WU ln the Navy, .. Gantt consoled Stiorta. ..The CO{Dmander "'the AUan- tic Fleet Suppl)' was named Strong Booier. ·· Probe Called SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -'lbe Cellfol'Jlia Public Utilities Com- mission has ordered an investigation into four railroad croHlap hl Berkeley that may re- quire closing or im· by tbe Co~ Mna County Water District Continuous showing from 11 :00 to 3:00 SATURDAY,AUGUST27 in the Children'• Department Kid,, bring your best ideas for water conservation and enter our Weter Con•rvatlon Contest! Submit"Sl>oster (agei 7·9) or •n eaay (agea 10-12) See yoJJ Saturday I provedpr~c?n· .._ _______________ _ • No need to be nervous about serving wine to guests. After oor experts have schooled you In all phases of wine etiquette. You'll know which wine to serve with any meal. And what glass to serve 1t in. To go with your wine, what else but · oheese? Our cheese people know all the best ways to serve cheese, plus how to harmonize cheese and wine. Cheese experts courtesy of "La Malson du Fromage" of Hollywood Cheese courtesy of ..the Dauisn Cheese Association. Wine experts from Paul Masson. lt'a all In Housewares WednMdl Giria to Quit Spanish F.ilm A a 1ald ah• ia 1oln1 home to Italy wllbout mlklnt a lilro becauao Am.tca.n J)toduc T•t Naturo refueecl to pay her, Navarro la In Spaln maldna "Wldowa Neat," lhe atocy ol. a Spanlah woman ln 1931 who 1oe1 to Cuba. lt a1Jo lnchrde• American actre. • Patricia Neal and llallan act.r V a Cortne. "He d1d 'l pay me, ao l did 't work," uld Ml41 LollobriiJda, who arrived ln Spain tor filmln& Aue. 3. She said her contract called tor .P•Yment in ad· vance "but all I have been civen Ls S'lSI in pesetas for t.ul money." • Pres.ldeat Can.er ac:knowledced that like a lot ol other Amencans be and his wife have written checks and discovered they didn't have enough money in the bank to cover lbe111. ··1 can 'l deny lb at I have wntten overdrafts ( ) on my own bank account PEOPLE and so has my wife, not deliberately," the Presi- ---------dent told a news con- ference. A reporter had asked the President if be stiU had confidence in Budget Director Bert Lance's ability to manage the federal budget after the dis- closure that Lance and his wife overdrew their ac- counls at the Calhoun, Ga., bank he headed by as much as $152,706. ,. The producer of last season's television sensa- tion "Roots" says it could no longer be duplicated because networks have decided to reduce violence on the screen. The comment was made in an interview with five producers published in the Aug. 27 issue of TV Guide. John F Cyprlen of Oranee bas been ap- p o 1 n t q d to th e Oranae Count1. Plao- n ing Comm1ssion, replacing Floyd Furano, who re- signed. .. ··~· .. Co11rts Sqpporied alTaldy Backs Measur,e ProposK 1 aslatioll that would creat four • tional Orant• County Su~or CowU n~w,.i, won the en· dorsemenL ot C()Ut\ty 1upervl1ors ~ueaday. Supervi10Ts Thomas Rlley .. Laurence Schmit and Philip AnthQny Joined force$ to support the court ex· pansion with Super:viaor Ralph Clark opposed and Su9ervisor Ralph Dledrich absto.inina. Rlley had atteQlpted to pass e, resolution endorslnc the le&islalion a week beCore but hUled to muater and support. ASSEMBLYMAN &ICHA&D RoblnJOn <D·Santa Ana> bu authored a bill which would creat.e. nine new couiu in addition to lbe 39 existin1 now. But Riley said Robl.nson baa offered to reduce tbe ll"1mber ~ lout and also require that a manacement audit be perlonnecl in Superior Court. Riley said Cou.nty Administrative Officer Robert Thomas is now dis· ' . Taxpayers in County Gripe, but Settle Up Orange County property owners' complaints about higher tax bills dur- ing 1976-77 didn't stop many of them from paying their taxes on time, County T ax Collector-Treasurer Robert Citron reports. Citron said Tuesday the amount of unprud tax dollars owed the county, cities, school districts and other tu- ing aeencies fell by $242,000in197S.T7 Crom $9 million in 1975·76 to $8.8 million last year . tax bills last fall subsequent threats to withhold tax payments didn't materialize. Cltron also warned those who will receive the 500,000 tax bills his office will mail Oct. 15 to expect another in- crease this year. TJIE COUNTYWIDE increase in assessed valuation of 19. 7 percent plus an increase in the budgets of all 213 taxing agencies in the county will mean higher tax bills !or many pro- perty owners, he said. Citron said the 30 school distrlcts in • "If I were domg 'Roots' to- day, I could not do the same s how I did a year and a half ago for network television," said David Wolper, whose produc- tions also include "Chico and the Man" and documentaries. • WOLPE II That means 1.29 percent of the coun- tywide $684.5 million property tax bill was delinquent in 1976-Tl compared with 1.53 percent a year earlier, he said. tl\e cou!ltY ~nd County D~partment of : * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Educabon1ncreased their budg~s a~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~--~~~~--~~~~~ tutul of 5121 million, county govern· Ctucago publisher Louis Lerner, the new am· bassudor to Norway, presented his credentials to King Olav at the Royal Palace in Oslo. Lerner arrived at the guarded palace by car and did not stop for photographs or interviews out- side the palace area. Lerner, 41, owns a chain of newspapers in the Chlcago area. He replaces WllUam A. Anders, a former astronaut who left Norway last month. CITRON NOTED the number of un· paid bills climbed by 710 dunng the year from 9,678 delinquent payments in 1975-76 to 10,:188 delinquent pay· rnents for the year ending July 1. Citron said although there was "rightful indignation" by property taxpayers when they received their ment's budget went up by $84 million and the 26 c1tie~ also increased their budgets ror tht! year 11owever, ht.! noted. a large perc~n· tage of those 1.Jud~et Increases IAIHI come from state and federal sources. li<:t!nscs, fees. sales taxes aud fines and n6l solely propcrl)" tuxes. Death Notice• · Death Notl«!e• -County Orders MAllTIN MeH., "Ith Werren E How lend Chris· Machine Requested FRANK M-'RTIN. rHldent or Hunt· ll•n Science Rellder of Newport 8eac:n H z Cod l1>9ton 8e.ch, C.lllornl•. Palwd ewey oflk:l.Ml'19-~th Tuthill Lamb Coste orse one es at home GI\ A,.lt U, 1'11. Survived by MH.a~dlr~~_... his dwghl ... June LH of Hunttnvton 8e•cll, ca. tllru 9ra11dchtldren. Mershe 8er9, Randi 8u~rdl, both of -HuntlngtOl'I beach, C•., end Steve PHr\On of P•11t City Nebl'Mlle, nine 9r1•t·or•ndchlldren, one slater VerOl'lb l..awell Of Sant• Monie•. <A Fu,..., .. wrvlces wlll be held Frklay .l'u<JUSt 2', 1917 •t 10 OOAM. "'ere• Brot. SmtlM' Monuer; dlre<tort- ST•WAllT Deaths Elsewhere CORA e newAAT,•ge .. rHident ol Hunlln91on Buch. C•llforn1• LOS A:'\GELES (.'\Pl -"••~•-•Y A1J11U•• 1l. 1911.1n Hunt· Awarrl·\\inn. in!! stauc. tnc;iton Beach. Ca S<INl....:I by thrM ) ~ • nlMes. MAblol Dunktlllerg, of E-w:on film :mrl tClc\'tSiO{l rlireC- d1do. c. Marilyn w•1c11e1 of Hunt tor Alex Scj.!al. 6?, \\ hoi;e lngton Beach, Ca Helol\ S.emen • . H•vwaro, two neOhew•. Arch•• W•lup p rorl uct1nns 1 nc l ud ed 01 e1111e. Mont•na, Alct.erd "°" o1 ''The Oiarv of Anne AneN11m, C. F.,,,.r•I 'W!Nk:es wlll bl , • • , f 1111d r11u .. oav Auc;iust ts. t•n •t Frnnk and · Death o a 2 OOPM. Pierce Br°' Smltt\s CNPtl. Salesman,"· <heel l\1on -1n1ermen1 will b• Westminster Memorl1I Pirie Pierce llrot. SmltN day Of Cancer· Mor1uarydlrteton ~·~ AP VAL JOKEAST, rnlclenl of Hunt-M I AM I ( ) - 1n11ton eeac:11, c.111om11. P4Kled •w•v George S. Okell. 71, a Auqus1u. im.i•999of.,. F"""'111 ~otitical maverick who 'llNICM .,. pending. Smith Tutlllll --·---' umbCostaMIMCllrec:bws.~ ed \egisJatlve ~WU1Ues MARGAR~~~~=N. ••Slclentat to est<,.bltsh the Univ~rsi· L~ Hms. ca111orn1 •• ,. .. ..o .... ,., ty ot Miami Medical .a.uoust 21. "" 11 th• •1• 01 •'-School and the Dade Port 5urvl"lld by i.. lOl'I Al Rotleson of • • eo11e Mesa, c. Funer•' ""'k:" Mid Authority, died Thurs- :.~Y~=· ~~.:.:' c:.:~ day. Mortu•rv C11111el, with W1rre11 E How11N1 O.rlstien Science ~r of EPIDAURUS Greece N~wPOrt Buell offlcl1ll119. Smltll ' Tut11111 u.mt> Cost• MeW "'41rtue!'Y CAP> -Leon Saks. 56, o.,.cion..-.... leadine violinist of the New ZQning codes designed to determine ho" close a horse should li ve to a house were orclen:d Tuesday by Orange County supervisors. • County 1\n1mal Control Officer Len foster recommended that a 50·foot distance st!parutc neighboring homes from horse anti live!>tnck cor rats. . . . But he also 1rn1d the zoning codes s hould provide exceptions so those with corrals l~s than 50 feet from nei~hbormg homes could ot>tam spt:caal permits where warranted SUPERVISORS ASKED COUNTY ptannt:rs and the Planning Commission to study possible zon· ing changes. They also said the code should Include provisions for families wlth horses aJfe(ted by new deveh>pment next lo their existing corrals. UnU\ 1975, a co'linty animal control ordlnaflce required.µte SO·fQOt space between livestock and neighboring homes. But the---provlston was deleted then for aOcli· t\onal study. Foster. in the meantime. also had been asked to review the possible Ucensine or horses. BUT IN A REPORT 1'0 aupervisqrs, he said. enforcement of horse licenses not only would be "a monumental enforcement problem ror the county but would also be a money loser.·· Supervisors, tn other action Tuesday, changed county animal control ordinances to make viola· tions infraetions rather than miademeanqrs, Luc•uE ~~~ToeDOM, '"'· Soviet Bolshoi Ballet dtnl o( Latut1• Hiiis. Cllllf•r"''· Orchestra. died Sunday Pt ned INHIY AllOYlt "·""et IN. f :-~uri h h f 11 ol S6. SUfVtwd tty lier ... O!Mr Al 0 Uf,1 es W en e e Aot>e10n o1 °"" Mell, c.. F1111trt1 ft' o m a c 1i £r w h i I e Aid Off ed ~~.''~0:-~ ~~:~~~ sightseeing with the or-er Mortuer; Chlpel, me. 11111 se .. o.te chestra near here. PACIFIC YtlW MEM011AL PAii{ Cemetery Mortuary Cl'lapel 3500 Pacific View Drlw Newport. Csllfornla 644-2700 McCOIM8CI MOITUAlllS Laguna Beach 49...a415 Laguna Hllfa 788-0933 San Juan Ciplstrano 49S.1178 l\ publt(• hearing on u rcq ll~Ht by I\ n a hci m Mt!mnt'WI ilu~p1t:il tom slall ii linc<tr 11<:ccl<'r<1t11r ~·f<.IY mul·h1nc ui.cd 111 t• an cc 1 tr cu t rn t' n t 1 s sfhcdull'cl Th11r~d;1 y, Supt l!'i in S:.inta Ana 'l'he hearing ul JO u m tn S:Jnta An:.i Ctl \ C11u11- <'1l chaml>er~. 22· C1v1c Center Plaza: •~ lo de· tcrmlne whether the l\ospatol really needs the 1><>werful device. us re· <jUlrt>d hy raw. L1neur accelerators arc not used m routine X· ray work such as that in, volved In initial medical examinations. but treat _and attempt to eliminate malignant tumors already cftscovttred. ' THE ORIG,NAL St\EEPHERDER BREAD COPXRIGHT 1938 . . ' ' "Don't worry, come ·straight In. That's only Marmaduke's ltomach growllngl" FUNKY WINKER BEAN OK~15WF/1RAT BA51CAUJ,l C.OOt:.tQ> OCI( Pl..AA5 ~ 1HE. FIRST D1'.l OF~ OOOER 1"E NE:.00 BO.SING-~I .t i;i;....:..:.ii-.:.-.l-..£.~~~~111:1 ..._.....__ ~OON MULLINS~ ~---------". ···----~ \, • ~DDAY'S CIDSSIDll PVIZLI ~!!> me. BOTTOM LtNe, 8t./ODIJ:.:J/ I ' by Tom Batiuk 3RCXJ . i /$OMS}' '°" :o4P L::lllnhlllr Dl~'IrcHI!~ PllOPU tJt/T rdft'g~Tle INTAcTf B·M JUDGE PARKER I • DR. SMOCK CHleF.' 1'"He PA"ttEiNI IN Zl4 MAPf; A PASS ,A.I NURSE! FtNSIE:=R! MOTLEY'S CREW p-1Ml1¥6 NO't'MIN& ~ Wl1'H eel\~ Ji. DOCTOF. Of-r-He oPft>6tf~ 6e)( I DAil Y PILOT .4 I by Charles M. Schulz ~ I C/WT 60 ll{roLJGH WITH IT! l'M TOO ~CXJNG TO Off ! DONT 6E NERVOUS ... ALMOST EVER'CHE f€EL5 LIKf THAT WHEN THE ()Al( FINAU.Ir' COME5 ... C~ ON .. ~15 WILL 6E THE AAPPIEST 01W OF '(OU~ LIFE! by George Lemont ~A,-MAN HAS -ro e>e ReAt.-L-Y SICK! by Templeton and Forman VP LOT COMMENT : Som• 1h0rt quee· ttom erve Jona answers. Her•'• one that'• not too tone. Ftnt, I'll have to k,aome qu Uons ol my WHAT I AM I ttlna at is that~ ere uklni aomethlrie you don't ai:· tu-11y know about. Suppose it bn t arthrtt!I? It may .,. neuritis. It may be myaliJ• (mutcle , pam>. Have you considered tbe po1SlbWt.y Of bUralt1s? --.....;.;;~-----J ow n. But let'11uppose arthritls is real· ly your problem. (The fact that you are 0 only" 38 ii not lmPQrtant in conslderi"' the diaan06ls. Arthritis can ()(;Cl.Ii' at any •8•· > What m kn you think you have arthritis? Where d<>ft lt hurt! How REG. 99C 60-MINUTI BLANK CASSETIE 0 "' SJqwly but urely It myst eom.e to IEVER BEFORE have we been able to off er a Calculator with •MORY at this fantastic low price! PLUS • BRIGHT l.E.D. READ · OUT • CLEAR ENTRY KEY • MEMORY • '• KEY 99 . WMIU STOCU W Tl eCMQUTOI n,ujo 99' DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE ou'that I bavo n S~Jiestlna at )'OU atop cuesslni al)CS_ put tbe respol).libillty ol a dla(bOlls and treatment in your doctor'• bands. ~ An'ER TALIDNC TO ;him you wUl learn that your re&{'S about aspirin (if YQU need to tJk"4 it> have been mU;placed and e~J&aerated. Thia ~ ls still the nUJDber one medicine in m1Q1atln1 mblt aches and J\llM ol arths:t~. *·~·--....... ... " .. o.t.lylla ... ..... Looks like THE nationallJ famous brand shoe but at manJ $$$ lass! ~~ ::':l5. IEl'S SUEDE WTIER SP,ORT SHOES . etroit Matches Longest Str~&k TyCobbandolherformerstand- outs with the Detroit Tigers ~ver the years probabJy would be •hocked to hear what Jason· Tbompson tlas to say about Tiaer Stadium. , The 23-year.old Betroit flrst baseman thinks there nre better parks for hitters thaf) the Tiaers· horne field. T hompson collected three singles Tuesday night rn his team·s 3·1 victory over the A-.ei. Sl•te • AllO.mHOlllCM~CllH .. (110) AUl-240-ltndetC.tl!WN&W • • S5P.m. I Auer. '4Cet11or,.1a.e10.11011 • sso"' AIHI 11 C.lllornoeet 0.troll II '°" m Cahfom1a Angeb. The triumph ~as Detroit's fifth 1n a ro''. matching its longest '1ctor~· strin~ of the season · Tiger Stadium 1s probably a littlt! over-rated us a hitters p.irk. •· said Thompson. who raised his batting average to .268 Tuesday night. The former Cal State <Northradgc > star has a 1 team-leading 24' nome runs and i11 .f third in lhe Amerjcan League with 90 runs batted in. .. The infield grass is high at . , opr park and it hurts our hll fers. ·· added ThompsM ... Scat tle. Toronto and Anaheim. all round, are probably better parks to hit in:· . ·'That opinion can't be proved • by the recent performances ot tbe home team. The Ahgels haH• lost four of five since returning ' bomefrom a successful trip. :Sob Sykes allpwed Callfornw four hils through ttie first sh in •Dings and Ste\'e Foucault al- Curtis Given lowed onl~ one hit the rut or lhe way in pit-king up his 10th sa,·e of the season. Thompson thinks that Tig Stadium. always known as a hit· ters' ~radise. has been changed to accommodate Detroit's )'OUng pitching staff. ··we have four sinkerball pitchers.·· said Thompson, refer- ring to Sykes. Mark Fldrych, Dave Rozema and Fernando Ar· rovo ··That's why the grass as high tto slow down ground balls 1. · Arroyo allowed only five h.its in beating the Angels 5-1 Monday night. The Tigers wrapped up Tues- day night ·s game against California starter Wayne Simpson m the fourth inning. Co n secutive s in~les by Th.ompson. Ben Ogilvie and Miit :\I ay accounted for one run. Ogilvie scored what proved to be the winning run on a sacnf1ce (ly by Tom Veryzer Pennant hopes of the Angeb. flickertng at the beginning of lhl' homestand. would seem to be totally ex ti-0g u ish ed now. California lraLls Kansas Citv b\ 11 12 games in the American League West. .. Injuries turned things around for them:· said Ti_gers manager Ralph Houk. ··1 picked them to win it. Then they lost Joe Ruda and Bobby Grich. .. I think Rudi is the best clutch hitter In baseball.·· oeTllOIT •lirll ... L•F-d • 1 2 1 .P'"9nb211 so 1 o SUlubdll • 0 I 0 Kemp If So o o T~1b • 130 ()gllvlerf • \ 1 o IA Mr/C • 0 1 I A lloOrlljUel& '4 0 1 0 Verycwu l O 0 1 CAUP'OttNIA F .... 11 • ~~~f~ Aernytb J o o o ~ •OOO Ro.Jec:kton tb 2 0 0 I 5olelte 1b 1 o o o Bayllrd 4 0 IO c ... IUI> io 1 0 G--.idh • o 1 o ll.T-pr t 0 0 0 Mlllllflills• )0 0 0 l!tc11ec.rr....dt2. 0 0 Goedwle ptt 1 0 0 0 Humflfn'YC 0 0 0 0 T.talt 37 3 10 J Tot.ell J2 \ J I Del rolt 000 200 ,...., C.lllOmle OIO 001 -.:-1 £-Re.Jeckson, Remy, Var.,aer. Olt- CelllOmla 1. L08~troll 10. Cellfomie 7. t Flor•~ 38--0uerrero. HR-UFkwe ""· LeF.-. SF-Ro.Jec:kson. Val')l5Ur ... " • •11 ••to SVk• IW_.,.I ' 4 t I 2 l F~t J I t 0 0 J Slmplon IL,6-tOl 6l) I 3 3 2 1 La~ Jh 2 0 0 0 J S..,,._,,oucaull 110). T-t::IA A-U,IH. D tpll'r, tontucted at his home e rly this morn1n1. 111d he could not confirm or deny the Sun's re· PQrt. . However, the Sun quoted athtetlc dlrc:ctor Bill Ireland as 11yln1 probation was a sure thing. .. "We're going on probutioo. We know that.·· 1relaf1d ~ld the Sun. "'l'here were 10010 violations or the NCAA code some time ago. We have admitted that.· But Baepler was somewhat moro cons rvative. aaying the NCAA rules do not allow h1'11 to comment on a pending ca~e. "l have no official word from the NCAA.·· said Baepler. "I honeslly don 'l kno". We hne • hod no orticlal notlClcatfon. Any announcement. will come from the NCAA:' · In the put, the NCAA has aenerally made its announce· ments regarding probation on Sundays from tholr headquarters in Shawnee Mission, Kan. Baepler pointed out that the rumor mill Involving UNLV. has b n tumln out tories for the nast !he ~ears. Baes>ler admitlcO that be wns tn Knox\;He ton<!~y. but h to what his m1sslon w • Jt was thought. by NCAA Ob· ervett> that Baepler and other ffl¢als would travel to Ten- ness to ap.,.al a ruling handed down l t ay: probation. While probation seems imminent.: the exa~ terms of the sanctlons are unknown. One source close to Baeptcr H id he thlnks tbe terms wiU Jn· .~,.... USA'S TOM ANDREWS (LEFT) BEATS KLAUS SCHONBERGER IN WORLD UNIVERSITY GAMES. Brutal Cllhan Assault Slashes U.S. Cage Aoe SOFIA, Bulgarill (AP) ··-Jim Bailey had his left arm in stitches today after being slashed by a broken bottle wielded by a Cuban opponent. and no longer will be able to help the United States basketball team in its bict for the gold medal at the World University Games. . Bailey, a 6-9 starting center rtom Rut&ers Universtty. was the only serious casualt)" in the melee that erupted Tuesda~· night, ~wo minutes into the second half of the hotly contested game between the Americans and Cubans. The unbeaten United States team went on to win 94·78. for its fifth victory in the 31·nation tournament. The loss was the first for the Cubans af~er four victories. Bailey was given emergency medical treatment at Sofia's Universjtv Hull Arena. then taken back to thl' Cnited States · ~e{lm dormitory. where the two deep slashes were stitched by a team physician. The Amencans had lost the services of 6-7 forward Phil Hub· bard with a wrenched knee our- tnJ a 112·95 victor~· over the So- ,. iet Union Monday night. "It's <the two injuries> going to hurt the offense. defense and re- boundUlg," said tJ.S. coach ~n­ o}' Ctum of the Usajversity of Louisville. The Americans play Brazil tonight. "Everybody else will have to play a little harder:· said Crum. who was In the center oftbe fight. "Cuba·s No. 12 pushed me when I was talking to the referee and I pushed him back." Crum said The Cubans then rushed the U S. team bench. carrying broken bOttles and attacked the American players. who fought back with punches. The melee. before a sellout crowd or 2.000. lasted several minutes before 1>0U~e managed to separate. the playe1-s. The fight --sirnllar to one .,.tween American and CUban players at the 1973 Upiversit~· Games in Moscow ··-was the turning point of the game. The Cubans· play deteriorated after that. and the Americans raced away from a 4.8·46 tie. win· ning easily. .. I think lhe team that·s in the right on these kinds of things comG.$ back ahd playa the best.·· Crum said. ··1 don't know how the Cubans felt, but I know we djdJfl start that fight." . elude a on ·Year period. adding• that he docs not thlnk Tarka· nlan·sjobisinJeopardy. i. The alleatd violations qainst t.he university date back to the' early 1'70i and the tenu~ or former basketball coach: .John Bayer. They include: students taking examh1ations for plaQ•ers. overpayment. to players. an ii· lee.al basketball 1ame aaalnst th• Univeratty of New Mexico prior to the 1972 season and the ll· legal transportation of a player on a free j unket airplane. Inside Fast Ball · Sinb LA ST. LOUIS CAP> --When Preston Gomez was a coach with the St. Louis Cardbtals. he said Bob Forscb ·s best pitch was an Jnslde Cast ball. Now Gomez is a coach with the Dodgers but Forsch 's best pitch still ls the inside fastball. He used it Tuesday night to beat Los Angeles 2-1. Forsch, a right-hander. walked Rel(l(le Smith with the delivery in the eighth inning and in so doing emerged with a victory that lift- ed him to his major league high Tuesday night. ''That Forsch --what a dif- ference in this year and what I saw last year:· said Gomez, a veteran of four National League clubs as coach and manager who spent 1976 with the Cards while Forschwas8·11. •·He wasn't going to give him anything good Lo hit ... said Gomez ot Forsch 's improvement in a 2-1 St. Louis triumph. "He w~sn't going to let him <Smith> beat him.·· The 6-4 Forsch. who pegged 3 tbree-hitwr. raised his record·to a 16-S level by weatherlng anx· 1ous moments to outduel the Dodgers' Don Sutton.11·8. Exc:,ept for Vic Davalill9·s dou- ble, which produced Los Angeles· run in the second. Forsch coasted through seven innings. But in the eighth, after pinch- hitter Ed Good.son jained life on first baseman ~ellh Hernandn: error. a ground ball and subse· quent wild pitch advanced pinch-runner Davey Lopes tothltd. Two were out when Smith. a .305 awitch·hltler, was •albd by Forsch on a 3-2 coqnt. The off. tarect delivery paid off when Ron Cey ended the ionlng by lift- ing a pop fly. ··rd been pitching him away. I just thought. ·1·11 try to come in on· him,· · · Forsch confirmed or hJs caution against Smith. ··1 knew I had an open base and I didn't want to give him anything too good. He'd already taken me out ot lhe yard with a home run once last year. Forsch, following a 98-pitch performance. rat.ed bi$ victory ''the best game that I've thrown all year.·· UISAHOl!lAI ........ 3000 1000 OOtt 4110 3000 400t '0•• 3, 1 0 4011 :s 0 0. 2000 1000 Ottt Jll, :s t ST.LOUIS 91" .... lrodtlt 4 1 2 • 8-ttllf OtOO M~d 4000 T ......... IOOG 51-c 3021 1C.•ten111•tb:s 0 0 0 ~ff 1101 "91trll> I t o• ~-300• a.fl'or9dlo 1 o o o 171St . 010 C100 --· 110 OIO Otii-2 ti" N a .... SO O.S4mml R.,tl .. ) 7 S 2 1 O 3 Sos. '000•2 A., .... lW,16-S) 9 I t t t • W~Arsctl. til~ O.SllHDlt ("•Oz>. T-t:m..~. . . 8711DWAUL HANDY ................. w a Junior In ~ldlool.lllkeWald ow., bn.SC:alllnl a B Tbree·l Loque all 1amea of tho Sprftl&ft 14 Brown1 in the mJd...t. Bulan t.boda)' be WU bQtn. bia motberW ~tbou,hta ftw bi:I t'UlUft -ltke beeiom· JD.I a at doetor and the pnipered b' that eventualll> wbeo•aamedhlm. ••All Qf my mother· s brol.Mra were doctons Mnd whm I was bom. abo named me Mkbael D. Walden. She a lways said she was lt)()ktng forward to the time when she • would see thiS on the aim out- side of my offtce: M. D. Walclen,M.D" Walden disappoioted his mother by rema1nine in sports broadcastlne when he finiabed his schooling and over the years, he has never regretted his decision, • to take over the USC broM!: casts on•rJdlo for •••en years. When be was sUU in school at the University of Illilt<>ls and doinl llllni brpadcasta to help pay bis way th.-ou1b col· leae. he bad a slip ol the tongue that still st.ands out in his memo!1'. • I DAU.AS (AP1 -Tbe ~ year ot Southweit j ecmterenc:o fOotball thia autumn shbuld l>iO" pbot.o flnlab almUar to Uait '19'16 campalp wben T~,.S Tech and Houston croued tb• t.inlsh wire face muk to face tntul,\t • T«lh and Houston are loaded aaatn with quail~ quarterbacks 1A> run the helm of •xplaalve o.f· fenaes. · But perhaps the mpst awesome badow (a cast by the Texas McM • Jiles Who flniahttd $~Venth ln th• nation last year and return ibelr enUre flnt team offeiise. ,. • .. !t tau.le! De tbe bat offenl1v• 'team I've had ln nveyean-:-an4 •• weren •t exactly alaekers last y~ar. aeoriDI ove1»30'~Dolxlts a tame," Sa.YI Texas A&ll coac;b , Emory Bellard. Defensively. Texas 1'ech re- turns the moat vewraQ.S alt.b®lh both Houston and Mc.lit wm,fit)d., talent calore. • However, none of the: above · mfYwin. There's a darkho.rse {rom Waco called Baylor whktl could lap the field. . "This is going l~ be -.n vn· Walden is currently doing UCLA football and basketball on television (Channel 5) and is in his fourth season in that capacity. He also does the sports news five times daily on radio station KFI in Los Angeles. "I was cilline the Illinois· Purdue football c~me for tbo Illinois Sports Network and the Purdue band waa on the field at halttime w)lile I was interviewinl AleJS A~•l'e. · • • AfteD t,be interview, I · predictable team," say$ 8.aylor coach Grant Teaff. ..When you *11ke the talent and ln~rience · and throw it up a,lainst ·talented teams you don't kho.w What to ~x · pect. • • He remembers his first Rose Bowl .broadcast in 1963 wh e n USC defeated Wisconsin, 42·37. "I split the broadcast with Tom Kelly who was doing play-by-play for tbe USC games on radio at that time. 1 was doing Wisconsin broad· casts and before the game started, we flipped a coin to see which one of us would be on the air in each half. "I won the toss and elected to do the second half." Walden recalls ... It was almost disastrous because USC went out in front, .t2-14, after three quarters and I felt 1 had been a dummy and picked the wrong half to broadcast. J thought nobody would be Jistenine at the end of a rout. .. As things turned out, Ron Vanderkellen was at quarterback for Wisconsin end the Badgers scored 23 points in that last quarter and had the ball in USC territory when the game ended. It was a thrilling finish ... Walden remajned in Milwaukee until 1966 when he moved to Southern California Sports in Brief tttrned bac:k to th«! field and said: 'I can still aee the Purdue band on t,he field standing in their P.' "The band bad formed the letter on the field but it dido 't come out the way it was in· tended." Walden still gets a thrill out of broadcasting any action between USC and UCLA. "I remember the 1967 foot. ball game that use won, 21·20. That was a tremeodQUS game. Butljustgetakickout o f doing any USC.UCLA game because or. tbe great rivalry." Walden has run the gamut. of broadcasting. having aired college football, basketball, baseball, track a.nd even an NCAA fencing tournament. He also did stock car racing on weekertds, Green Bay Packers professional football games and Milwaukee Braves baseball telecasts . Currently. be is also as· sociated with World Team Tennis anct hopes to have a television series of Super Gal. Super Guy tennis competition this fall. But it is doubtful if he will ever fulfill his mother's dream of hanging a shingle to say: M.D. Walden,M.D. Ma"' Alive! Phils: • Make It 19 for 20' ATLANTA Grei Luz.inski's two-run single in the first inning and Mike Schmidt's 31st homC' run in the fifth powered the Philadelphia Phillies to their sixth consecutive victory Tues- day night. a 3·2 decision over the Atlanta Braves. It was also the 19th triumph in the last 20 gam es for the red-hot Phillies, who began play 712 games ahead of the second.place Pittsburgh Pirates m the N.a· lional Leuue East. Cta•HaaSIOI• LOS ANG~LES. -·A 20·year· old"·Hermosa Be~ch woman swam from Catalina Island to the mainland Tuesday. the second time in as many days the cross- ing was accomplished. Syndi Goldenson m ade the· swim in 15 !)Ours, five minutes and 20 seconds, wen off the. world-record time of eight hours, '3 minutes and l6 seconds establlahed by 18-year-old Mary Beth Colpo of Bellflower Mon· day. Sc....rr11_..,. The Orange County Stars are within one came of ~ttncbirig a tie for farst place in Ule JnternaUonal Volleyt.11 ASsoclallon '1 Western Divllloo followiJil a 12-6, 14·12. lVI ainquest. Offr rt'\acson Tues- day D.labt at lJntvet Sty High <Irvine>. • • ly Martin upset Cor.-ad o Barauutti. 6·4. 6·4: Dic k Stockton breeied to a 6·3, 6·8 de· cision over Pat Crammer: Roscoe Tanner whipped .Doug Crawford. 6-4. 6·4: San Clemente resident Bob Lutz rallied fqr a 1·6, 6·2, 6-3 triumph over .Jose ffigueras. P.hil Dent advanced With a 8-3. 6-2 win over Steve 'Krufe\'ltz; Hank Flister defell(ed Javlet Soler. 9·2. 6·2: Paf Cotne}<> eliminated RusseU"f!lmpson. Hl .• 1--3. 6-3: and Jvan roolina edged Buster Mottram. 3·6. 7·5, 7·&: El CaJ .. C'ellffu WlLLIAMSPORT. Pa. ·John ., Osbome smashed a home run and fired a three'.hitter with is strikeouts :r.u~aday. teadtq El Cajon, Calif., to a 3·1 \>iat()ti'l>ver · l;{iµtlesburg, Miss., in the open· ing round of the Little Leque WorldSeries. • 1 fo the r&tSt. &&¢le of the ~lat an· nual tourqament. Louis Rod.ripe~ socked a •olo h(>mer Jnd laced a tWO<ru» do\lb1t. lHd· illl Lati.il America to an S.f vJ~· · tor.rover Euro~. • "They are not, v.ofd. of talent', they just need experience. They'll get that in a bµft'Y." Baylor and Texaa Teeb tangle ln the first crack O\lt Qf th~ ~x Sept. 10 in what should be a wild SWC opener. AndlJaflor catcbes the Red Raiders at home. ~ Baylor just doesn't have sn d· perienced quarterback. ·'Thal will be a key game for us," says Tech coach Steve Sloan. ··we beat Colorado tn oul opener last year and we were hard to catch after that.'"' Texas Tech returns 16 starters and 42 lettermen while Cotton Bowl winner Houston lost only four starters on both offense and defense. . · Houston gets a quick test on Sept. 12, playing UCLA At Southern Methodist, Ron Meyer must find a quarterback to replace Ricky Wesson as TCU looms on the schedule Sept. 10. The Mustangs need to huO-.y on their rebuilding program with Ohio State paying a call Oct. 1. Coach Homer Ri,ce of tbe Rice Owls is saddled with finding a replacement {or Alt-~erican quarterback Tommy Kramer. Baseball Standings Philadelphia· Pittsburgh Chicago St. Lou\5 Montreal .. IRiSH DEF!NS,VE ACE · · Satre Dame Junior Jim Browner <33 > allo~·ed his Penn State opponent little m breakjng up this pass attempt. Bro" ner and his Xotrt.• Dame mates are eyeing another big year and OO\\·l tnp as the 1971 <·olle~iatc fool - ball seafi-On nears. .~ Midw$'s Big Three ND, Oklalwma, Michigan Are Best CHICAGO <AP) -Oklahoma, Michigan and Notre Dame ap- pear to carry the ~alance of power in the Midwest and all three could challenge for the na· tional coltegiate football cham- pionsblp. Oltlahoma, seeklnl its third na· tional title in four years, is favored to ftniab first in the rugged Big E11ht over the likes of Colorado, Nebraska, Missouri, Kansas and Iowa state. Michigan, as usual, bas only lo conl(md with Ohio State for the Big Ten cl\ampionship. Nqtre Dame bopd to fteld its ~t team since winning the 1973 national ti· tie. A wide-open race is expected in the Mid-American Conferettce where Ball State was a surpris· ing wi,nner last seas'on. Oklahoma hfB 18 starters re· turning. tnclud1ng a quarterback who can't pass. Thomas Lott played sev~p eame8 last season, attempted 12 pasjJes, completed two 8"d b\ld tbtee intercepted. But he knows what to do.in. the wishbone ~d will work with fine runtienJ like tlvls Peacodk, lten· ny King and BWt ZJats. Tbe Sooeera .iao will be.atroog defensi•elx wUb su<?b All· American. oaodlda~t\S 'aa Uneba~er Daryl Hunt and de- f ettsi'Ve back Zac HebdersOh. Behlnd tho Soon~ tbere could be a ·wild ICfalnblt for aeconct· place in the BJ1 Ettbt with only Kahsu State not a com.mter. Oklahoma State ,..Jao doesn't ftaure. but ~dt. ~counted out. became Of 1'~ Miller, who . . ~ will be for third place wit Michigan State and Mioneso\ the likely contenders. Colorado he/,lds the scramb behind Oklahoma in the B Eight. Coach Bill Mallory hopeful that leading junior c~ lege rusher Eddie Walker w flourish behind an awesome C, fensive line. Nebraska lo ·quarterback Vince FerragaD\ and five other top players. Returning at quarterback f M lssouri, which defeat( Southern Cal and Ohio State la seasoo, is Pete Woods. And U Tigers have Joe Stewart _and LJ Lewis back as top ree~vers. Iowa State's Cyclones ha· running back Dexter Green, w ran for more than 1,000 yards 1 season, coming back. But th title hopes were dasned al with quarterback Bud Hardeman·s academic di ficulties. At Kansas, running backs Bl Campfield and Norris Banks turn, while junior colle transfer Brian Bethke and Ma Vincendese will battle for t quarterback job that Nol Cromwell vacated. Kansas State has its offense turning intact from a 1-10 se and hopes binge on quarterb Wendell Henrikson. The Big Ten race bebi Michigan and Ohio State sb up as a wtde-~h affair. w Michigan State and Ukely cont.enders for tbe No spot which could carry with t bo~lbid. J •. DELI TAX T"-IOllowing lllOrhl.Clooft •re UMd fortrwworelu•t-'t•tlleln. IMAl-MARAllEO Adm • AdmowstrM• Mlt -#Nftldecturlng Adm• Adn•nlstrMrl• IMf>·MIHOtt """ ·AIV'\,.,,.~IMp ,_.reel NU1nller IMMl ·MAAAIEOMAN Apt ·A~rtnwnl IMS) ·MARAIEOMAN,SEPAAATE Aun AHOCl•Uon Ml -Mood AHoc:-AHo<••tes IMV)-MIXEOVESTINGS (•tat) 81dg·lw0cllng IMWl·MAAltlEOWOMAN Brix 8l'Olllers NA. Netion.t Assoc:i.tlon C.1/CMll·C.lllornl• N•ll HMl-1 ICO) ·COMP-'NY NOl•·-Co-~y CHOI-HO VESTING Con\I · Construcl•on IN A). HOT llESEAltCHE'O COOP·'-••11... NT&SA·NM1-1Trust-S.¥1ng Corp· Corpor•Uon A•\OCl•tlon •CPI ·COMMUNITY PROPERTY IPTI. PAltTNEASHIP !CAI -CORPORATION S&L ·S.vlr191-Lo<tft Conwr Conserv•lor tSE>-SEPAAATE Dept ~rl"*ll SECY -Secretary Dev Oevel_.,I 1$1 I· SINGLE Dist · Dl\lrlct 1 SM I-SINGLE MAN D• v • Olvkkln Sr • Senior Ed • EOUC•llon St S.lnl Enl-•-l!nterP"l•o !$WI-SINGLE WOMAN Esl Est.t• •TCl ·TENANCYINCOMMO!lt Pl •I· &nCl Ol,_rt IUMl-UNMAltltll!D MAN Exec· E-.cutor, EQ<utrlw IUN)-UNMAAAIEO F & "'. F•rrnen & l'Mr<'*''' USA . UnltedSlat"of Amerlc• IFll-FAACTIONAL.INTIEltEST IUWI UNMAAAIEDWOMAN ~-Guwd.., lleta.llltt..-- IHWl-HUS&ANDANOWIFI! IWDl·WIOOW Hwy-Hl9flw•y IWAl-WIOOWEA Hwys· Ht(lhw•rs IWSI ·MARIUEOWOMAN, lnc..tl'CorPOrMed SEPAltATE lns-1 ....... .nce (XPl-~YEXEMl"T. Inv lnvUl!Nftl l'AACTIONALINT. Jr -J .... ror rxn ~LVEXEMPT IJTI ·JOINT TENANCY .TAX OEaOEO ' IJlll·JOINTllEN1'UAIE IXXl-~LYEXEMPT LA• l.DSAn!ll!IH &-And ILEl-LIPEESTATE &'Or·Aftd• L Id· Llmile<I !' ·Number l'AltcaL lfU-IEltllfO SYIT~lil axll'l.AlfATtOtl PROPERTY IN HUNTINGTON BEACH CITY TAX ltATa AlllllA Wl1' MUSlll 11, Phi llp M . (J T) A .. S20.S2. 23-061·:16, '1, 111.lO. AP 24-13447, S 1,Ul.04. DMf'dlll1f, JKIC H., A_. "7-33!-07, ~-:i.&. 0. \I-, Wlflltm L., AP '6r~·2:3 ...,..,,_ Kl11t. Merl• L., AP 167-~t-n, IS1S. 12. Pum .. , .Wr'I E., All 167...,_,,, "'""· P•HP"on9, Thnat CUM>~ AP 161·4"·"· $71 .. ~ H1911fna, Jollft J. ISM), AP 167-49241, Jt,117.M. H•lll.id, Arth\lr W. (JT), AP ..,.,.,, ....... ,.. Lecrlval11, Corine IN It I, AP M1·sn.os.ot, S1,JOU6. "orrester, Jell G. !UM>. AP m.1MZJ,sa12. TllomH. Oa11l•I J . lJTl. AP tl1-to-liU"'S-a. ~I, Naft(y G. et et IJTI, AP tit-to-••. aa. 't. BroO~, W•Ylla A, ISMI, AP "2-1Mtl,'2SB.'1- Moore. NenC'f M. COWi. AP ~1).91,...,.. .. Brown, J•l'lle• R. IUAjll, AP m-1>101.muL TAX •AT• ARU 4411 L1m11t, w. 1Ce1111etll et al, AP I 53-ltl .O:S, \I ,Oll .D6. AP 15.).12).11,~.JS. Urllb, Eerl A., AP 1~7. UW .... H.,._, Melvl11 I. et al IMll), AP 153-»1-16,"31.92.. Lemb, l!arl A .. AP 15J.lH-2'>, \A36 ... AP1S>371_..,SIJl.te. AP l!IS-m4,Q5L7t. 4P 153-3'2-19, U.1.ZI. ICltl, AP CJT>. AP IClt). AP IPTI, AP Jer~oslow, Ste~n L. IJT), 1S>-14-14,S9IM..2'. A11denen, ltl<Mrd c. IJTl, Af' 1$>-u:i.-, U7'.S7. 0 Grettl~. ltl<Mr41 M. IJTI, Af' 15J. t "'°'' U1'.S1. Prl•, Mall H. UTI. AP 1$).JZ#IS, USIM L•mb, W. 1(111111111 et al, A" 1S>HI..,, ..... Ouf'Nu, Alberl IMMI, AP ISJ-112.SS, .,,,_ ... lltoY, 0emtt O. (.IT), AP 1$).le).tl, .., ... Lo-.u, Jemu f:. CJT), AP 1SW1t.el, \54U7. Mee Heh .... ~ C. IJTI, A" •~n•n..t1.m.u. Ward, C. O. et el Tr (~01, All ·~..-.11.on.• W. 1'. "9Wllllld 11'.~9" CPTt, AP1SM6:MM,"4S.01. All 1~2-11 M1UO. IC.Ill\, c1fuo11 c., AP IU·Oll ?:t.. $1,092.k J P OMRTlY·IN NntPOllT·MISA UNll•t•D . SCHOOL 01STlllCT T .. MJ'llMA ... --. ...... MU.#--.... ..,, ... ~·~"\..°::.: .... «Dt. u ~......... .. • ..._. ""'* '· .... fJT>, ... , .... ..., ...... MetUI, P!IYllle..-. '"01, Al" '""'*""··· .. l'ltc ... r, Oeelel .I. CHWI, A" ,,......, ... ,,. .. . ~ wu-"· ,.,. ,,..~u . ....... TAX_,.,....._ 1t14lr1fl. A1Mre1 H. ICfl), Al' 11~~ ........ . ....... UN7).11.~ .. TAllllA,..~ ... .......... "-• P. (NOi. Al' ,..._..t.M.J4. Teulah,,._ Atwla WTJ, AP , .. ~.,,Ul2. c:.I"-. .I •......... ,. 119-"2-M, ..... N. Vlnle1, Cbarl11 '" (JT), Al' 11a.21t.W1, t.S:ll.,., TAX •AT• U•A _.,. 1.tt. Mel'il W .. AP llHt\.1 1.$ .. 7 .37 TOOf, .I.,,,.. E. (Jf), AP llf.~ ~ l.lltlt, """*A. CNtU, AP 11,_Jt4.U, .,... ... A" 1 "'JtMI. ""·°'· AP1IH .......... 4 . Ote..,y, .l•mti H. CJT>. AP ,.,.ma, S12$.4 C•m•IM, Ke•lfl A IJTI. AP ~11,Sl,IJ),9'. G•rcle. c;....,.. UT>, Ap ~. S*.U. Grey, •DY C. Jr, A,. qt.101·20, SJU.21. Mc ~ • .JoM AL, A,. •10MI, UllCltt. • Tellele, Teru.,,f T. IJT), AP .,..111·33,$1,ott .... Holley, Alltn t. J,. CJT), AP 4't-1114l ...... Allen, CNt'I• 8. et et IJTI, AP """" "· '401.111. • Motlne. 0s"9lclcr £. tt el IMVl. Al' n..01.-. ...... TU ltAT• UllA u.m Hewport·MtH C'tlrhtl•ot Ce,.ter ICR ), APC2'.olt.01,U14.61. l'tlct, IE ... .,d Sc. AP 424..01 f.13 llU.ll. TAlll llATa~~ IHft P-. EfW 1Np>. AP 4IM77~. U.2 .... Gl. 1U ttAt• All•& ffeU. At...-r, ltotlett e. Ill •I UTI, AP ttHt .. 1',IOt.56. · Maxwell, M•r-.. IWS). AP , ...... ,, ........ TAXllA~ ..... JMtl "•-. lfll,APUMtMl,'111t.. , -T•ylar.~jlfl/4. lHIU,APll~l«I, "'1.D. Mc Neill, Sttplle11 J. IJTI. AP llS.OU-17.~U. lllUfl't'•"· Robert. w. IVMl, AP tlS.OJ1.0, SI, 13177, Miiier, llOllert A .. AP tlS.641 17, $Jlt.ot. e..,.. of Mlertc. lrTUAetel IMO), AP lt~.ust.6S. ,_)tltATS~UA...._ Ftrr.,1•, Sfllp ISM). AP ~. ~•.n •••u• .... Oo11eld ft. IJTI, "" qt.GD-IS, ~15. Mullllt, 0111 .. f A. I.IT>, AP '°"'°"'' '· tla7 .42. -I , ... ...,. .... ...., .:.r• .IOllft A. (t/'l.AP I 19-2»-:IO. MullM, J.c-W. et el CTCI. Al' '""2J'.12. l'l,J:17 ~ FlllMck, °"1'1H J. "fr el •I IMVI, AP llf.DWl. Sl,tPl.tt. S~ A~ ~~el IMVl, AP ,... .ws.n. ~ OH'ty, Gr..,sonAo\,. AP ltt-2'2-21, st0).1t.. Oe Vrln, George IMS). AP 11 .. 24·». WO.Z3. PROPERTY IN HUNTINGTON BEACH SCHOOL DISTRICT PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE ---~ -. -.... ---.. ~ . -- Abaut 40 duldren ot u~ crldu te 1t\V 4tbta.,. thtOwma pota ~ t(l~~ak ~ lcw thlfd an. nu P,Jnn1 arnlval. a t.~p:m.'nlunday. no camtval la on tho aroundl ol an apartment compl1& at tJCI. the Verano Place Recrea· Uon c.ater at Campus .Drlve and Verano Road. · Carnival a•m•1.toocl apd priqa are planned. ·Vbltors buy food ancl play sames by .S::'' lor tJckeUI tbe c en. aaed2to1S. make. Tbe kids aay inflaUon ha1 taken its toll, however. Penny Carnival tickets are now three cents apiece. By BOB THOMAS LOS ANGELES (AP> -A film CTeW ii wortclnl deep Ut the plaot that cooll'and heats the ex· • clualn ;f:qit~' City hllb me eomj>lex. The workers ltfain to peer o r the P&Pa ;Gd co dultt that fill the roaaalve bulldine. No probletn toi-the director. Mlcbael Crichton. who ls 1lxfeet10. Crichton. 34, is re- m ark able In other respects. He has a medical degree Crom Harvard University, althouah be never in- terned. He has written 16 boob al wide variety. in- cludln& bestaellers like •'The Andromeda Straia ... "Dealing,'' •'The Termi,nal Man'• and "The Great Train Robbery ... Like others of his gener,tion, he believes film ta the best mode of communication, and be is now directing bis third. The first as a TV movie, "Pursuit."' Then came .. Westworld," an Imaginative look at a futurist. deadly Dis- neyland. . *•WHAT DIDN'T ap· peal to me was the medical background. What did appeal waa that it was a thriller with sub· stance~ it bad-Something to say. Another appeal was that it is a $lory about women, which ts somethina films need ... "Coma" concerns a . THE \.NEW movie ia .. •lil•••••l!ll!l!lll•llll!!l!l!!I ... -.. "CQma," adapted by Crlchton {rom the car· rent best seller by Robio. Cook, who also is an M .D. MGM has given Crichtqo $C.S million and a cast headed by Genevieve Bujold, M i.c h a e 1 D 0 u g la I , Ricba1'd Widmark, Elizabeth Aahley and Rip Torn. The director 'Bpent the morning filming scenes in which Bujold and Douglas searched for clues amid the pipes <what is causing a series of surgery patients to lapse into comas?). Then Crichton called for the lunch break, and be joined the crew at tables set vp on a Century Chy sidewalk. "I had resisted any picture with a medical background," he ad· milted. "l Just dido 't think it was a eood idea. Then an agent, Bolt Bookman, called me --~=~I Mll:n~~I J Ttt•llTll H.\RflOA Jt A/)llMS • COSTA,~SA (714)M-3102 lV£11YOAT: It I l-Jtlo.l:4W:Oo. I 0: 11 CINEPOME 23 JOOO W CHA~ AllE OlllANOl'. ~.., EYUYDAY: ... ll5. 5:.3Cl 1:6 I 1t:Olltlll Also I• ..... ,._. g fUU. ITlJIEO,_. IOGD PACIFIC'S~ DOME -..n•YM • )IOWWOOD • _ _, ~·· 1t:JI, I*. l:Je, .,.., ,.,,. ... UlCW. ... f aan fllCAY UI &ATUllAY AT ltJIAll ''A 'BRIDGE TOO FAR" (f>G1 "SORCERER" (PG) '"n-fE SPY WHO LOVED ME" (PG) "LOGAN'S RUN" CPQ) "NEW YORK. NEW YORK" (PG) "THE WAY WE WERE" (PG) ';FANTASIA .. (G) "MARCH OR DIE" (PG) ''THc EAGLE HAS LANDED'' (PG) "ONE ON ONE" (PG) J A California team has claimed an 535.000 prize offered for 16 years by flying this pedal-powered airplane around a figure- e1ght course a t Shafter. The London Royal Countians David P. Mlddlemas, senior vice D.Qance of the Koll Company, Newport Beach, bas been elect· ed president of the Orange Coon· ty chapter of the Finaoelal Ex· eeattves•1nst1tateforl977-78. Other offi cers and directors ror 1977 • 78: Frederick J. Barnes, vtce president of finance, Smith In- te rn ati on al , Inc ., Newport B each ; Dion M. Cairns, • secretary. Business Systems MtDDt.aMU Technology, Inc., Santa Ana; John S. Pederson, vi ce president of finance, Signal Landmark Properties, lnc., lrvlne; Wllllam D. Procblsoa, vice president of finance, Master Fence Fittings, Inc., La Habra; Warren D. Fix, vice president and con- troller, the Irvine Company, Newport Beach; Uoyd Olson. director of finance, Campus Crusade for Christ, Inc., Arrowhead Springs. Aeronautic Society had m1;1de a st'tlnding off er to an~·one able to make a specific course in a manpower plane. The pilot was Bryan Allen. 24. or Bauersfield. .. operation of Amcord'a five m-.Joc ceme.nt plants in Southern California, Arizcma. Mifhttan and hn· nsylvanla. as well u tor the ceftenl ope.ration.a ot Pascoe Steel. . ' Patrick C. JlaJey. vice eresident of exploration and production (U.S.) for Oroeo. Newport Beach, bas been elected to ita board ol directon. Before joinin1 OXOCO in December 1976, Haley was president of I.D.S. Oil Proframs. Inc .• Los Angeles. * 8-Dlce BallaM. Irvine, has been named vice president and man•get of Bull of Newport, Corona del Mar office. She aucoeeds Bnce Olsoa, who has joined the commercial loan departm«mt at the 1>ant•1 main of· fice. One of the bant•s orilinal staff members, &be began her banking career in 1163 u a tell~ for Bank of America. She later joined the former Newport Na· tional Bank as one of lts oricfnal staff members. In 1172. she joined the bank's foundlnc staff and served as vice prtstdent for new accounts. * Stepbea J . 8111H•, San Clemente, bas been named vice president and assistant to the president at Bank of Newpert. uu.Ho He is former bead ol the bank's prafessionaJ services division, now beaded by II.an)' Bnmaer. Smith was vice president. loan division, for Seeuri· ty National Bank ofBattl$0'eek• .Mich. "' " Susan GallforcJ has been named modi supervlaor for Coebraae Cllue le: Cemp~. By contrast, tbt recoverlee ol two other lnduitrlal 1lan~ W•t Germany and Japan. art> "even now leu than complete.". the au\.boru~. "Arnone the three m.Uor in d.u1tria1 tconomlea of the non· Commun.lat wMld. the Unt~ States bu not only rnade the most complete recovery ... but its proepects tor tho Immediate future seem to be brlChter alfo." Ot.bel'. researchers otter the ex· ample of employment- uoemploym · t to back their con· • tenllon that thln1s aren't really u atootny as aomeilmes they mi1ht be painted. SACRAMENTO (AP.) -A bill to extd un· employment insurance "'to 80<MOO aoveriuneut workers has been rejected tor the second t,iriie in a Senate committee. even though tls absence may COit Calitomi-el"J?lOyers St blfUOI\. . Th Brown administratiOl\t. which bacb the blll,1 it UmueatblrdtrYtorpuaage. • A l'E LAW REQ\JIRES states-to cover an publle;emplores with unemployment insurance b1 next :January. If a state refuses, its pfivate emDlOYS'f ean lose federal tax credits that, in Callfomia's cue, total $1 billlon. Ma.t st.ate employes ln California will have un- employment coverqe next January. But a bill to include the remaining 20,000 itate workers --and 880.000 local employea is stalled ln the st.ate Senate. . . 11IE SENATE INDUSTJUA.L Relations Com- mittee, which defeated the measure last week on a 3-C vote. dkl not muster a quorum Monday at a special hearin1 called to recoo.sider it. The bill. AB 6« by Assemblyman Alister McAllster CD.San Joee>. bas cleared the &aembty. but must take it throuab the senate ~fore the Newport Beach. She Will be respansible for meiClia buyipg, plannlnC and analyala fo:r senral anecy · clients. .-.:-h·. leglalative recus Sept. u to meet the January deadllne. • SOtne oornmittee members have eXl>r~ed re· sent~t lt the ledetal requirement. ''Our torefatbera went to Wat tor le«SS imposi· tidn than tbls reptesents. •• said Sen. Dttnnis Carpen~r <R·Newport Beach.> New Club Folfffl8 Deak and Derrlclt, an lntematl()Qat orw..UZ•· tion for women employed in the pekoleum ~ enerty-related industries, bas estabUahed an Orange County club. . . . Joan Yost ol Sm\th Tool, lrv\lle. bas ~elect· ed 'President. Other officers include Naney B~. Chevron OU Field Research Coropan.y. first vice president; Mary Sharon White. Dyna-Drill, 1ecodd vice president; Pat Wilson. Smith Tool. recording secretary; Darlene Shipman, Fluol' Corp.. cor· responding secretary and Bettye Troutman, Smith Toot. ~asurer. · The club will meet reaularly for educational programs involving the petroleum industry. .,_.., J s... '-l lhdtl cio. a... p.[ \1*1 ~ {Ilg r.&' ~fl 'r ~~·ii st~ t.2h1j ~~·: .. ~.5 ..... i!: a 1 11":; ii .. , ' ; . , .. ~ E ~ i J r· "' -!!1 JI 1m::::: 11 ,, 11: '1"'f~ :1h '° n~" y 1· 10 'P c-... ~ ,. ff 1 .. ... = 1· ,! dl ~ :. tt u~.~ .. """'-,·.' ... l a'I , f ~ · ! 21S lfi:: l: •• ... .. .4011.. .. ., 1' ,...,..., J~ 1.-.•••• '· •'ii '1 t d 11:;·~ •· ,, • '~"' .to .. m., ···4 Ht , ~ :,~::::: ll :: = !!~:., fl .1011 ll\4-111 .OJ· i fl rs14• •• • • :C~ ==~ 'Ji~.. i !mt; :: f"4..... m·.~;o 1r, w;+·~ y --t -II "'" I 1.24 t U .,..,._ Ioli 1~1llft 1.n • .. ,..._. ~ Vt t.» • wr "..,._." 1~1UJO 6 CJ • '4 l'ldM 2 I ,._ ... ,. I N"'9 n ., ·"····· ·~ a:, ~ rz~+·i4 A(:p t.Jf t fl'J CN. ··.. 118rd :.0 7 ft 12Vt-Vt "'" 1'~" as IO • "' RR .is 1 1 •~-\.\ IUlllAI , t 10 !~ .. ~· 11016 MIS St\.\-1 MMlt f•1 IO 8' !1........ nP 1:1,10 26 21~ Vt 1:::.-rs·lO • 1& ~ ~ ... u , 12441• ... 111"-t. 1t 215 »~ Vo M11111111 .A8 6 27 201-\ ..... ,._ m ~ 15 _ \.\ Mfl9cC 1.10 S !11 A2\lt-Vt ".,._ 2::. 50\.\+1 Mo~· !bl•• 17 '"4' lll"!IW $j -II. "'°bii pf1A4 • • i:t l.._ 1fw ... Ii tt\6-\.\ =:i.Muo 1 ~ ~~:; ~ l'llPIC» .AO s 2n tS-+ \lo .. 90'i 11 u~ INCO 1.40t • ·~ ti"'"'" Met* I . It 2.St 611t~'i' ~ .. IS 4'h• ~ Mohk 1.20 4 S 1'\Go I .81t.. 3 IOV.-Yto Monr1t t~ S • 2214~·~ pl7.16 .. 1100 " -2 """"'°" 21 4 ~ l4V. lldlMOlt ..... &l<IOO '9\lo-. MDnan J'.10 1 763 ~"'~·w; lndAMPf2.IS .. t 2Sllt ... 1; Mo OU 240 9 13 37 1 1::11ffttri12 ~ J r.~-... ~ 1:11111 335 26 :..:·i4 ndllUI ;' 1 • 17~·Ya MOlllSl1.eo... II 23~+ \41 lntlCCO .0 20 731 24 -1 ~ .... IS AO 11:1\ ..... ,5 2 12 156 6l _ in MoortM .90 s 12 JOlilo-'\lo lft uo 9 3 25141-'A to!Dnlln 2 10 4tl> 50 ••• ; • t St UO 1 St' 3S -~ Mbrltn1.10b 1 IS 34 + >'r '"l'llOllC · 110 c 2av... ... =rrr.nso • U 1m: ~ tnsltco .• 6 126 nv.-"' MorNOf' 1 ·9 2• 2"'° lnsllplAl.ts.. I 1~-'A ii' 1413 796 AS :..:;y; lnll>t"C .201 41 12 nv.. Vo ~F I • 2 9 27 AO lnsllnv1'r . . • 1~ V. e.L 1.a 9 l ~:..!..'i,4 1~1.• 1 ti ~ .. ~ ..«114 .ts '"'• " :~:1i'Pl2\o : t~ J~r:: 'Ill Munld!lf .40.. l 5'41;_: ... IBM 1016 625 268 -11/t Munstllil.20 9 14 """ ~ lntFIW .... ,. S02 n + "' ~u· 6 s 11'111+ .... 1n~rv us 5 7'5 JOV>-14 Mur;IOll .eo 9 92 3lV. ..... 1ntMtn i.60 6 47 IMo..... /NITYQ wi 1 1 1! ~~= ~ lntMno ,20. 5 "~·••-• ~ "4" i• l"L ·~ lntMuRl I 7 3' 1~-\4 ~ I.~•.. • .... + "" lntP111»r 210 332 A6lh-\lo M.,.,.t\. .401'._J'. U + '•• lntRKtl .20 .. 16 7~-Yto N<R 'i>~17"4-«l!'t-H't lnlTT 1.76 I 496 33 .... · NUlld f.20 9 210 19'!.0-~ tnlTTpfH 4 .. 3 61\lt-°"' NL'r 7' a 37S 2''111-V. ln\TTpllC A • 37 SS~-'h NVF l 4st s lW Sli'o-\4 1n1TT pfO S ·1 I 6J._ ~. NM>!sco is212 73 52"'-''• Int TT pl 2.25 .. 164 -a .... · flllloo 1 1012 UT 27'h-Vt tnlTT PIA.SO.. 3 61 -v. N«co .60 • 20 IJV.+ 11.o lnlrl>Qf 1.6S 1 10 29'l't+ ~. =ue '6812 • 2S'h->.. lntri>Oo 1.IO 1 ,. 3' + 14 • ~ I tn•tlPW 1 45 9 1r19 11~-v. IAitl .503' 6J 11.,..+ ... "' •.. i-2 ~ ,_ Nl\VI• .70... 5' '"'-•,. lnPw~ 2...... """ 6"+ i'" NalC.n .S7 S 30 U'lll+ , ... :~;~,n] ' Jg 2~! :; N!Olem .4111 17 ll'tt-Vt lowtEI 1.50 ' 27 ,...., + "" NtO.yL .60e 9 .., 14VJ. .... 1owttG t.14 a 30 21~-,.. Nttletr 1.52 7 A~ u~ •..... 26"°-~-IUU>tst 1.60 7 10$ ~!"': :: ONE BEASON TREY AU NOi' aw..,e la tbat 1'111 of JapADl!le can are &tlll hea'rily ooneentrated in coutal states., near ~rls-<ll4fttry. Wblle JapaneMmodell MtCaUnt· ed forD ~atotnatkml nlelin ~. th*tban-of the Lal AJlf ~ mutet, tbe blQat car mutet In the nation, wu ·~~ 40 percent -and Toyota was battllna Ford&nd Cbevro el for aalfll leaderlhlp in tbat market. ot the m.ooo can boulht b)( Americana in JUly, lat,ooo wereforetga mates. Thoimpoda. .,....._thlll tatiQI nearly 20 percent ol. tbo entire market. And whereas in the early days of t.be lmPorted car surae. tM parade wu led by Gennan and Britl.sh makes. the Japane•e now dominate. Money Tree Oftbealx~ imports, five .are Japanese. QI t.be 12 top- selllna it0~rtl, eltht are Japanese. The ooly non.Japanese makes ill the top 12 are Volkawa1en <ln 3rd place), Flat <in Tth place), Volvo (ln 9th placo) and ltercecles-lieni (in 10th place>. Counted in Ule Japanese totals an cars made there for U.S. auto companies. Chrysler brings ln the Colt and Arrow from Japan. And the Opel&-lold •t Buick dealera. U'-e also manufactured In Japan, General Moton having transferred the production from Germany. HERE ARE THE SALES TOTALS for Japanese cars duringthemoothofJuly: · ·Toyota Datsun Honda Subaru Arrow Colt Mazda Opel 47,248 •. 33,159 21,277 5,944 4,540 4,482 4,215 2,707 Toyota, by itself. accounted for 5.2 percent of the U.S. market, outsold the Dodge division of Chrysler and retailed twice as many cars as Cadillac. Datsun, accounting for 3.6 percent of the U.S. market, came close to outselling Dodge and sold 10,000 mote. cars than C&dlllac. ' HONDA. WHICH BAS A WAITING list for its can, aold close to wbat Cldlllac sold and retailed nearly 10,000 more cars than Ainerfcan Moton Corp. Having done-so well shipping cars here by boat. the Japanese are preparing for the next stage: putting plants into the United States. It's a strategy pioneered SO yean ago by General Moton and Ford. whose plants are scattered across the world. lleckrnan Earnings Net earnings Increased (1 percent and sales 18 percent to record level$ in flscal lm. Beckman Instruments Inc. re· ported. ' • . The 12-month period enaed June 30 niartea. the FUllertoo company's sixth eomecutive year of strong operating gains, said Dr. Arnold 0. 8'Ckman. chairman. and Dr. William F. Ballhaus, president. Since 19'11, net earnings have incr~ased at a compound annual rate ot Z1. percent and. salq '~ JJ.pefcent. · ·~~ Sotne Buyers Wait For Trade· Report NEW YORK <AP J -The stock market moved lower to· day. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials 'A'8S o(( 2.69 points to.,f62.JI. Losers beJ.d a narrow lead o\·er gain on the New York Stock Exchange. Some,inveswa 1eeJlled to be waiting fot the Com°"rce Department's latest monthly report on the country's eXl)ort- import trade figures. acbeduled to be released Thursdaf. ' Do"'lannAeerage . Y'ltat St~ DJ NEW YORK (Alt> Ml.a -=~ .. '!:~~ .. ~.'!':'::~,...,. ., ................... ~ ttt ......................... JI; if~800.:::::::::::::::::::::. ~.--···············.:..·..!!-················~# .................... ,,w .................... ~ NEW ~w:-J.:r•r< OID II """· TOClay i 1-S .. , m rm Ml 1111 II It " . " A9eaeia s...., .. 1 .. U.t ..... DEAR PAT: Where in Orange County can I ask a boat available federal civil service openin&a? N-E.~ Santa Ana H_&t.s. For an open Job announcement lilt for federal · civil aervice positions. write the Federal lob In· formation Center, 34 Civic Center Piasa. Room 111, Santa Ana, CA. mo1. or phone 836-2171. Information about state clvU service Jobs ls available from the Callfomla Personnel Board, 107 S. Broadway, Los Angeles, CA. 90012 (phone: (213) 620-2790). arew •~•ea a..o. ••a ... DEAR PAT: Is there any club for devoted circus fans? My son, a teenager, has attended every circus in Southern California since he was a small boy. I think he's read everything ever printed about circus life. L.T., Irvine &. • Your son can joln more than 2,0IO other circus fIDclen by writlpg to the Circus Fans AssoclatJon of Amenca. Box 805, Aarora, IL 60507. The Circus Hls~al Society, 2515 Dorset Road. Colamous. Oll 1, also may lnterest him. I , ' . ' " .. Cweled Otd1 AlrHtN! Paw• DEAR PAT: I've heard that an airline has the right to cancel a person's reservation if he doesn't show up at the 1ate a half hour before departure time. Is this true? P.G., Huntington Beach ,No, but you must appear at the gate at least 10 to ZO minutes before the nigbt ls scheduled to leave to ~ yoar reservation from cancellation. U • yoa arrive early and are bumped from a domestic tarrjer anyway, ctvU AeroaauUcs Board regula· Ud entitle yoa to both a wrlU. ltatement of YOW' rlCJlta ud certain compensations. Y• doa•t qnlifY" for eompensatfon ti Ute night la dtlayed or if yoa Me"'1mped because tile airlble n!Mtltates a plane with fewer seats or cancels &be night. f ._.,.,. Grcu• 1 .. 't. Greetter , DEAR PAT: I've spent a fortune on lawn pro- [iuct.s, but the grass still isn't doing well. Can you fin.d out where I can have soil tested at a reasonable -pnce? h J .J ., Newport Beach Roger's Gardens of Newport Beacb 1)..-.ery UI arran1e for an lnexpen.alve IOU test by ••11 hrough Gro/Power Jura prodacta. IDc:lade gmples ol botJt bare aoll and arau·toYered "11. e resaHs wW let you kilo• whl& materials need to added &o yoar lawn for baluce aud best growth. osi nurseries selling KeOocl'• garden products o offer soil apalysla by mall. · By ALMONLOCKAB~Y o.lty ............ ~ Patient Lady JU. the C Class catamaran1batis defending title to the Little Amerlca·a Cup. won her third strajght race in a beat four of seven ,series tuesday. Or did she? . The answer to that hinged on the deci$ion of the Judges as to whether th• race committee waited too long to start the race~ thus contributing to the Australian challeneet' Nicbolps Jra second breakdown of the series. ALSO IONGING ON THE verdict will be the answer to this question: Was today's race the third or fourth or the series? It all came about this way: The rules of the International C Class Catamaran Trophy <Little America·s' Cup> clearly state that the race $hall be started if the wiod.s are blowing in a range between lour and 2S miles per hour. At the 12;30 p.m. starting Ume Tuesda7 the wind was definitely blowing more than tlte minimum four miles per hour. But the race com- mittee didn't like the way the zephyrs were shifting a bout. Too difficult to set a proper weather mark. SO THEY ANNOUNCED TO both competitors that the start was being delayed. There was no pro- test from Patient Lady's skipper Duncan MacLane. But Nicholas Il's skipper Lindsay Cunningham voiced a verbal protest, indicating he liked the weight of wind as it was. The wind didn't settle down to a true westerly. but the race committee started the race anyhow •.• an hour late. All thoughts of a protest vanished from Cun· ningham 's mind at the first weatber mark where hl! found himaelf 18 seconds ahead or tile def ender. On the ensuing reachine leg the Aussie skipper began to entertaln second tbO\llhts when .MacLan~ brought Patient Lady from behind and round~ the wing mark four seconds ahead. ON mE RUN TO THE leeward mark Cua• ningham again dlsmlssed any tbouChts of·protest when he found a favorable slant ol wind that put him ahead at tbe mark by a minute and 40 seconds. Winds shirts along the ensuine weather leg further favored the challenger and at the weather pin Nicholas 11 W'is enjoying a 4 minute. 24 second lead. increasina it to 4: 30 on the)lext downwind leg. NEWPORT, JU. CAP> ·-Lowell North. a San Dieao saUmaker. was fired as kipper of the Amenca's Cup defense candidate Enterpri e Tues~ d•Y· ''I'd been forewarned," North a Id of hlS fir· lng, "and I think it's an the belt interest or the · yacht ... Replacing North will be Halsey Herreshoff of Hoston. who bu salted with Ente11>tise durini the ellmtnatlon trials to Jtft:k the United States· 23rd America'• Cup <lefender. · 0 Halsey ts one of my good friends;' said North. ··and 1 know he will do • better Job. Halsey will make oil the de· clslons." *"'"'" NORTH'S FIRING DID not come as a sur· . prise. There had been criticism or his sailing tac- tics and ho had fared badly against Courageous in previous races, losing because or tactical errors. Malin Burnham. who has been serving as UP· wind helmsman. will take the boat at the start. and Herreshoff will handle the boat upwind. John Marshall will remain at the helm on the reaching and downwind legs. ''The reason I 've been fired as because our tac· tics have been amiss;· North said. ··1 don·t be· irudae it. I'll be laking some time orf for a few days, but I'll be around -but not on Enterprise.·· . . NORTH SAID HE FELT th~ America·s Cup committee bad put pressure on the Enterprise syn- dicate, the Fort Schuyler Foundation, to make the change. ' .. There are only two weeks left before the cup final begin& Sept. 13, and I see that the America's Cup committee put some pressure on to make the change;· Sald North. ··1 don·t feel bitter about it. When I went into it, I knew something like this could happen... ·•·• · George Hinman. a senior member or the selec· tion committee, denied the committee had anything to do with North ·s firing. SPECULATION HAS BEEN that Enterprise. a new yacht, wes the favored boat of the New York Yacht Club, and it therefore took a greater interest in how that boat rared than the other two -the Kings Point SYJJdicate entry of Courageous aQd In- dependence. "Yes, I've heard those rumors, too ... said Hin- 31,500 Sign At State u. SAN DIEGO <AP) A near~recoard 31,500 stu· dents are registering for the fell semester at San Diego State, officials said today. The rmal fall registra- tion ln 1975 came to 3J..5S7. Tbe total a year .,.,. •• 29,631. ALLERGY1 (2131 284-25$6 17141543-9624 Recorded Message · ALLERGY COIHIOL· RUIADON e.x 1513, hlfe ca ma wJ ..... ,,... .. , • .....,_ Then things began to happen. On .the next weather leg Patlent Lady III chopped 30 seconds off Nicholas U's lead. No big deal --except that the de· fender gained another 13 seconds on lhe reaching ~~~~~!:!~~~~~~~~~~~~l leg and still another 2.5 seconds at the leeward mark ·- where Nicholas II's lead was still a healt.hy 3:22. Then, guess what? · KT[.A 0 8:00 --.. The Fly ... David Hedison (billed as Al in thJs 1958 horror flick) is really bugged when he tries out his new transformation machine. Vincent Price co-stars. KHJ m 8:00 --·'Arrowheaa.u Charlton Heston and Jack Palance square off as antagonists in this 1953 epic western. CBS 8 9:00 -.. "Attack on l'error: Tbe FBI vs. the Ku Klux KJan:• The second and final part of this four·hour movie based on the KKK sJayings of three civil rights workers. Wayne Rogel'S. Dabney Coleman and Ned. Beatty are featured. · lV DAILY EOG . . J ~ Time to Wean Americans? Cow's milk, Dr. Frank A. Oski contends, is not natural, except maybe for calves ... By BRIAN SULLIVAN NEW YORK (AP) -Milk, the perfect food, the stuff that mUllons of mothers urge their kids to drink because it will make them stron1, tall, and healthy -could there possibly be anything )Vrone with it? Not just possibly, argues Dr. Frank A. Oski, a pedlatri· cian and department head at New York State University, but· derirut.eJy. And he's set out to prove his case in a book starkly entitled, "Don't Drink Your Milt.•• "lsn'tit time," he asks, "for the weaning of America?" Milk -cow's milk, that is -is not natural, Dr. Oski contends, except for calves. For humans, especially l.n1ants and children, cow's milk ·is linked with iron-deficiency anemia; is a cause of cramps, vomiting, and diarrhea; can cause allergic reactions like nasal congestion, asthma, skin rash, chest infections including bronchitis, and may play a role in the origin of arteriosclerosis and heart attacks, Dr. Oskisays. • · His book, p..ublished by Wyden Books in August, was written with reporter John D. Bell. It includes a discu$Slon of the politl~ of the milk industry, but its main focqs is the· medical as~t. · "I think this is a subject, the bad parts about milk, that should be br0l(8ht to the attention of the public," Dr. Qski said in an intervlew. "The public is bomb..-ded with the good things about milk continuously, so that it•s a part of the collective unconscious. When I see children all the tlble who are affected badly by milk, well~ somebody has to stand up and say, 'Hey, wait a minute.'" , Taking a.lier etc reactions to milk as an example, J>r. Oskl aa~ that 25 percent of children who are fed cow milk before tbe age of six months will develop one or more. al- lergies. For those given cow milk before 1 year of age be says, 8 to 10 percent develop allergies. A spokesman for the National Dairy Council, Robert Kowalski, said, "Yes, milk causes allergies, there's no • question about it.'' But be added that the majority of pediatrlctans place the estimate at 1to2 percent; and that the allergy is outgrown at age 2. "It's \Dlfortunate that Dr. Oski has chosen to denounce milk drinking at a time when a number of nutrition survtys have demonstrated that many American diets are low on riboflavin, vitamin A, andealclum-nu\lieota abundant in milk and other dairy foods,'' Kowalski said. "Most health. authorities still recommend eating balanced dleta with foods from four basic food ll"OUP5= Mille. meat, ftui1s and vegetables, and grains." Another anti·milk point made by Dr. Oski in hia bOok ls that the majority of the poeple in the world are "laotOse In- tolerant." Lactose ls the sugar in milk. When the lac\ose in milk is consumed, it must be broken down by the enzyme lactase before it cau be absorbed from the intestinal tract into the blood stream. But if the amount of lactose exceeds the capacity of the eozyme to break' it down, the result in the intestine ls a sense of bloating. gts, cramps and perhaps a watery diarrhea. Dr. Oskt said a study at Johns Hopkins ~l of Medicine showed that 15 percent of all whjtes and 70 te~nt of all blacks teated were unable to digest laciose. ''Sw ys of the world populations wer~ begun and we now know at far more people are unable to digest lactose than are able to dieestlt," Dt. Oskl writes. i The Dairy council's Kowalski COQllters that no other re- searchers have come up with the aame results as tboSe {n the Hopkins study. And he cont.ends that checks with health dep~ent officials and others Jnvolved in providinf mUk for blacks and others held to be lactose intolerant failed to produce such evidence. HOwever, Dr. Oskl r~mmends against giviJlC any In· fant any cow milk. "Ideally," be writes, "the infant should be exchWJely fed hi.Iman milk fdr the first year of life. If tht$ ls not~­ ble or deslrable, then the infant should be fed a commercial f ormUla for the first year. · "The in!aiii should never receive cow milk In an un· modified form. After the first year of life, tbe child requires no mlllt of any type. The child, like .us adults, can thrive without cow milk ever crosainl bis ll)>s." By CHERYL SOMO ... Dl¥Y ........... "Unfontmately, on• of tho bl&· •Ht food Htea la in seek lunch . It'• because parents don't think about the time it tlkM for children to eat certain foods . uor else th•Y aeDd 10 mucb food the kida can't poeslbl)' eat tt all." With ach<d around the tomer • Eve Cremers. food service dkec- tor for the Newport-Mesa Unified School District, stresses tbe im- portance ol plllUliDg nutritious mld-day meall tor youngstent. The most Important factora to keep In mind, says the dietician, are to make lunches interestini and wholesome. There are four basic food rules that apply -not Just to luaehes -btit to all meals. Each meal should contain a protein, a fridt or vegetable, a serving of b~ad or cereal and milk. She suggest& younger chlldren be given only half a sandwich, and that large fruits are best cut into wedges and enclosed in plastic wrap or a container. r CANS OF PUDDING oa fruit are discouraged because they are difficult for youngsters to open and the sharp-lids 11l1IY'1>e dangerous. To save time in the monilng, Mrs. Cremers suggests sandwiches be made a&eacl and frozen. Freezing also keeps food fresher until lunch time. She said bologna and cheese is an all·time kid favorite and school officials seldom "see these sandwiches thrown out." One of her pet peeves ls the popularity of the peanut butter and jelly sandwich: "A sandwich with just peanut butter is fine -but leave <ff the jelly." If sweets are to be included in the hmch. she recommends send- ing "natural toothbrush" type foods such as carrot or celery &ticb as an accompaniment "But you don't always have to send a sandwich. How about a bard·bolled eu? Or a piece of bread and butter and some finget food?" Leftovers from dinner, such as . ·a i>iece of chicken or meatloaf and a.piece of bread and butter-- makes a hearty lunch. OJ', on cold days, she recopimends $end- ln1 a thermos of hot soup, a ttgbt sandwich <or crackers> and a .piece of fresh fruit. THE DIETICIAN ALSO sue-. gests packing a wedge of cheese Last weflk's rain is the trlf , story. How much and where i~ 1oea are the questions being asked. You might look for higher . veaotables prices with lesser qu8lltq. In the short term the rain damai-ed cl"Ops throughout. the area caualn( atreme price flue-. tuat1ons. In the Jons range it can Ol)ly help. I VEGETABLES ,. The comittbdity affected ~e most will be tomatoes. San Diego was flnlshinl its harvest; the J'aln will miake the season finish 1 Wedne.day,Auguat24, 19n with some sandwich meat. or any bacOd left. over from breakfast because "klds love cold bacon." White bread. a subject ol con· trovetSy in the last few years, is okay. MJt. Crtmf)ts believes "if it la ennched." W)lole wheat and bom~baie<l breads are con· sidered superior though, she says, and inexpensive bareain. type bt'.eaKls ~e acceptable "but are oner t~t.de.ss.. and lack sub-. , s~ance.· She encbUrages children to br· ing or purchase milk at school. •'We'd really like to!~ them st.op drinking sogar-Ylden,. non · , ~at much sooner. Local sup ~ _ ___._ will mostly be heavijy damaaect • .,. Northern supplies are a big '!if'' :· , • at the present tfme. Maturing wlll be set back tor sure anct some dam&ie may result. Ex· ceSslve rain also will cause tbe alkali in the aoU to rile from the deptba and thereby dam_. the fruit. Tomato prices will be going • up! Corn supplies are erratic arid will remain 10 unUI the flat weeks of November when Florida supplies berm amvinc. Tbe rain .i50 will beve a tremen- dous affect on loc81 suppties. A1ain, loOk for price rises in thls commodity. Brotcoli and cauliflower ~ plies are abort and will remata ;so forthenextlOdays. . It weather remain.I stable 1D Northetn California lOOk for a price break in leaf vegetables. Quality alsO,.ul lmprote. Celery is IJIOlber Hem that will sbow a price reduction in the next f~ d~ Ct nutritious drinks." For dessert: fruit, peanut and oatmeal bars, cakes without frosting. "But be careful not to send too much dessert ~ause they won't eat the rest of their meal," she says . As far as a container is con· cerned, a hmch box should not be so large it becomes overwhelm· tug. Paper bags are fine as long as the child's name is on it. IF BAGS ARE used, she re: ~ommends purchasing white or colored ones because '~hey stand The Lunch Bunch:~ ·Autum, B; Joe, 11; ·· and Shannon Gray(, 6. They attend Lindbergh School, Costa Mesa. out0 from the common brown bag and adds that a fun projectilt to let the kids decorate their owli lunch bags. t "Be sure and wrap all itetn$ well and always use plastic or foil wrap on rainy days. Also, on rainy days, you can put the bag Inside a plastic produce b~ keep itfrom gettine wet." A non-edible, but impon~ item, says Mrs. Cremers, is~ tle note from Mom sayilijk . .'~ Jove you" or "I miss you." .,,. "It's the first thing they ~ ... (See BllOWN BAG, PateCJ)4 • ,,, ; . Tbe sauce 1s delicious and lo order not to waste a drop, Hr¥e over bot cooked rice to wbleh diced pimiento bas been added roc a color accent. In fact. rice 1s a nice ac- companiment for fish and seafood with or wit.bout a sauce. TROUT A LA SUISSE 1 Y.a pounds trout, or flounder fillets or other ... -···--white fish \ Salt and pepper IA cup butter or margarine, melted 2tablespoons flour a.4 cup milk ·l4 cup chicken broth 1 4 teaspoon salt Dash of red pepper 2 tablespoons pre· pared mustard 4 ounces Swiss cheese. sliced 3 cups Pimiento Rice Cut fish into 6 serving pieces; place 1n a greased baking pan. Season with salt and pep- per. Drizzle with 2 tablespoons butter. Bake at 350 degrees for 10 minutes. Meanwhile. blend flour into remaining butler. 1\dd milk and broth. Cook, slirring constant· From C1 ly, witil sauce thickens. Remove from beat; stir iq v.. teaspoon salt, re<l pepper, and mustard. Remove fish from oven. Place a slice of cbeese on each piece of fish. Spoon sauce over all. Return to oven and bake 10 minutes longer. Serve with Pimiento Rice. Serves6 Pimiento Rice Stir 14 cup diced pi· miento into 3 cups hot cooked rice. Each serving pro· vides: 444 calories, 31f.i meat exchanges, 1 bread exchange, 2Y.a fat ex· changes, some milk. Here are some quick tricks ... ways to dress up rice to serve with any meal: -curry 1t1ce. Saul., a chopped onion iD a lltUe oil until tender. Add a teaspoon or two of curry powder; beat thoroughly to develop the fiavor of the curry powder, then stir in 3 cups or cooked rice. -creamy Rice. Cook rice in chicken brott\. When it bas finished cooking, stir in diced cream cheese and put the cover back on the pan. By the time you're ready to serve the meal, the cheese will be almost melted. -Oriental Rice. Before cooking the rice, add a couple tablespoons or soy sauce to the cook· ing liquid along with a half teaspoon each dry • • .Brown Bag for and it makes their lunch com- plete. "Do anything to make a child's lunch stand out as an individual e ffort above a ll , lunches should be interesting." The following recipes are sug- gcst1ons for nutritious lunch bag de!Sserts by Eve Cremers: APPLESAUC~SQUARE ORANGE ICING l ~ to 2 pounds powdered sugar Y.! cup orange juice Rind or orange Sift powdered sugar. Add orange juice and rind. Mix until smooth and of proper consisten· cy. Dip top or cookies into frost· ing. Place on racks to dry. : .,,,., ... -!·· 1 can applesauce (21h size> CHEm PEANUT "" ~L "~. .. • (,.\\ ~­... cru ~bsc up graham cracker BUTTEaBAa ~2 cup Rice Kris pies 4 cups flour 1 2 cup brown sugar 1 tablespoon baking powder i1, teaspoon cinnamon 12 ounces butter Dasb nutmeg 11~ cup peanut butter 1 , cup melted butter 1 cup brown sugar 112 cup marshmallows 4~ cups white sugar Mix all ingredients together. ~teaspoonsalt Put in 8xl2·inch pan. Chill in Seegs refrigerator 1 Y.a to 2 hours. Cul in 1 tablespoon vanilla squares. Serves 6 to s. 1 Y.! cup coconut Note: If not moist enouh when Sift flour and baking powder mixing, add ~up 1in1erale. • together. Combine butter, ~anut MISSOURI COOKIES IA cup margarine 2cupssugar ·~cupmilk butter, bl'OWD and white su1ar. salt. eggs and vanilla ln mixing bowl. Mix at low speed until well blended. Add dry ingredients, mix only until blended. Add coconut. ,ck. 3 mt tablespoons coco01 Bring to boil and add: 1 2 cup peanut buUer Spread mixture in greased baking sheets ~inch deep. Bake at 350 degrees for 30 minutes. cut into bars while slightly warm. Makes approximately 50. • 3 cups quick oatmeal Dash salt l teaspoon vanilla Drop by teaspoons on wax paper and let set until firm. TBOPICALOA~AL COOKIES Y.a cup shortening Y.i cup brown sugar Y.i cup '1'anulated suaar legg 1 9-ounce can crullbed pineapple l cup sifted flour ~teaspoon soda ~teaspoon salt ~teaspoon clnriamon \it teaspoon nutmeg 1 in cups oatmeal ~cup chopped walnuta • mustard and powdered ginger. Serve garnished with thinly sliced green onions. -Crunchy Healthy Rice. You can use brown rice for this if you like and just before serving, stir in lightly sauteed chopped onions, celery, green pepper, and grat· ed carrot. Garnish with a s prinkling of wheat germ. -NUtty Rice. You'll be surprised how sood chopped nuts taste with rice. The crunchy lex· ture is a &ood contrast. Saute a quarter cup or so chopped nuts ln butter and toss with hot cooked rice. -Mushroom Rice ls great with steak. Cook rice In beef broth or Trout a la Suisse is topped with Swiss cheese and mustard sauce; then baked. bouillon to which bas been added a dash of Worcestershire sauce. Just befoce serving, stir In coarsely chopped fresh muahrooms. For additional rice side dishes and entrees write to: Rice Council. Box 228}2, Houston Tex. 770'l7 -ask for a copy ol "Let Rlce Slice the Price." at home in a sandibfc.h, a salad or at a banquet! A gounnet will tell you "what goes" in a real Thuringer sausage. Strictly the finest meats and spices .•• that's what makes this Teutonic tempter so delicious. Here's a tangy blend of pure beef and spices, hickory smoked and cured naturally for extra flavor. Jost slice and serve for party-tlme or sandwich-time. tool lot tr.. U(ti. Schlrmer's S1uuu Maker ... ~-1 on tht pacltlft In your 1Jt•rk•t. nSdlirmrat® the Sociable Sausage Av1llable In lhe Dell HCtlon of: LUCXY DISCOUNT STORES ftlCl'S OffmYI WD.,AM.U,llH na .. AM.M.ltn. : 2 ~ cut up fry. iog cbickeo parts ,,. cup tomato juice (6-ouncecan) 1~ tablespoons lemonjulee ~cupwater ~teaspoon nutmec ¥.a teaspoon cin· namon 2 cloves garlic. . minced (or one.quarter .. teaspoon instant) 2t.easpoons oregano 3 small onions. .. . peeled and quartered . ' 1 medium (or 10· . ounce frozen package) sliced mcchln1 ·~cup low.fat ,-oeurt 1 tableepoon flour •.4 cup mJnced fresh parsley Spray a l&rae nonstick sklUet or electric frypan with cooking spray for no.fat frying. Add tbe chicken pieces skin·side 1 Chicken With a . Twist So easy to make and so successful! LEMONSOYCIDCKEN 3'h·pound roaatln& chicken. cut up "6 cup fresh lemon Jolee '.4 cup soy sauce ?tablespoons sugar 1 larse clove garlic, crushed l ·inch fresh ginger root, peeled and minced (1 tablespoon) Wash and dry chicken. Jn a 13~ by 8=¥4 or by' l~·inch <I-quart> glass b= dish or slmilar ut stir together the lemon jui~. soy sauce. sugar, nrl c and alneer until suaar clissOl ves. Arrange chicken lo a single layer, skin side up, in the dish. Cover tigbUy with foll. Bake in a preheated 4~ oven, basting midway, until tender - 40 to60~utes. Makea4 to 6 seivitlgs. • .. • 1n .. •on Auguat 11th, for the 22nd time In lh• pMt 23 w11ka. ucky w• ahown to haw• lower prtcea than the other five leading aupennarktta by Vector Consumer RepQrts of permarket prices In the Los Angeles and Orange County•, · area. They reviewed 150 items: meat, produce, groceries and sundries. If you had used their list, and shopped at one of those five markets, you would have spent nearly 10% more than at Lucky. Chances are your list differs from Vector's. After all, no twq shopping lists are exactly alike. Even your list may vary rom week to week. That's why we ask you to compare tor youreetf. Bring your list to Lucky this week. Trust the vldence of your own survey. You're gonna love the lower prices at Lucky. BLADE CUT CHUCK AOAS'Ji · BONELESS CROSS RIB ROAST ----·---.aoao-~ ··-····-··----···-&& LARGE END RIB ROAST 2!0l.!_NDTURKE~ .. -_ .u.a1Q.1.•98 ~~~~~~~=J(R..:.49 !!J!l.8!~~~-POR~1?1!~ 1»' UDY LEE SUCEDBACON 1• . . ... --·---··--· .. ----- . ' f P&\ll B&BA.D ·\i =~Gm tex· bread tablespoons but. maraarlne teaspoon cin· largeeges l~ cups half and ¥Y cupboney ~teaspoon salt ... ~ fresh California ettpears 2 teaspoons lemon ca ast bread and pread with butter, us • DI ~ tablespoon for · acb slice. Cut toast into arge cubes t.o measure 3 ups. Tum into shallow inch square or round aking dish (6-cup acit.y). Sprinkle with h Oftbecinnamon. at ens with half a ball, .honey and salt; • pour over t.oasl Pare, dlD and •lice pears to meesure 2 C\lf.8 and ar-• range over al • Sprinkle wi lemon juice and re· dlnini ~ teaspoon cin· moo. Bake in center of oven at ~ degree.s, for 45 to :SO minutes, unW puddJpf -ia puffy. custard is set and pears are cooked. Makes8aervinp. ~ SJDIMPCUOYJN • GINGERP&US 1 teaspoon curry ~er e ,. tablespoon butter •dlal'aarine 11,': te~poons com: . . I v s s h 0 W h ate v e r yo u r When meat is marinat· NK BV'ITERMILK Javodte sport. after ed in buttermilk over· SMOOTIDE strenuous exercise, a night, It )\elps tenderize 2 c up'S cold but-t.an, frosty Apr~-Sport the meal When used as a te · k CgpffT wlll bring im· marinad~ for game meat 2 cups cold tomato-Atedl~tel'dreshment. such as venison, it qff. ve table juice 1ho ll•ely tart-sweet setspuneentwildflavors . t t e a s p o o n fiavorotu..h Callfortlla Included in drink$, W cester~bire sauce oectarineslsthebaselor s alad dressings and 2teaspoon salt this delicious fruit drink. soups, buttermilk is a Dash hot pepper Add sparkling soda or boon to people concerned sau ~inger ale, a splash ot about swnlller entertain· mbine all iogre· lemon and you 'll have an ing and entertaining d i ts in pitcher or exciting, foll-flnored' within the limits 1>f bl er container. )4ix tbi.rst. quencher that's weightcootrol. unt thoroughly com· just. ri&bt tor the whole ORANGE bin Makes 4 servines, family. BUTl'ERMILK APBES-SPdRT COOLER APPl-E COOLER · ()OOLBR 1\-l cups cold' but-cups ~~ld but- i t o 8 f r e a h termUk Calitomianectarlnes l \.ii cups cold orange cups unsweetened 2 cups eranulated juice ple juice sugar 1 tablespoon lemon aspoons sugar or Dash salt Juice arti cial s wee tener 2 tablespoons lemon ~ cup sugar or equi ent juice artificial s weetener teas poon rum 6 cups chilled club equivalent navo g soda or ginger ale • Mea!ure all ingr e-Co bine all ing re· . Dip. nect~es 2 at a dients into patcher or d1 e n in pitcher or time mto bolling water blender container. Mix blen r container. Mix for 1 minute; plunse into until suiar is disaolved. until uaar is dis~lved. cold water, then lllp off Makes41ervings. Mak •servings. s kins. Slice fruit to _.;:;..::.;,;;,;__~----....-.;.;.;~~...;;..;.;;=-..;.:...~;;_..i measure about 1 quart1 and combine with augaa; and salt in kettle. i Cook over low heat for about 15 min,utes, &1ir· k'iqg oft~ Puree ht -blender or pres. thtough seive. MJx Jn letnon Juice and refrigerate until ready to use. To make cooler, place a few ice cubes into a tall' glass; add '4 cup nee-I tarine puree and ~ cup club sodl. Add a lemon twist if you like, and stir with a swizzle stick or ice tea spoon. ld.akea U -:serwings (3 C'iiP!.; nec- tarine concenuate}. Ancient ~d~ tiasecl them~~ value dtpieJr .------.--......;~.,_~-.....;...~...io-.oio~ CO'ft'S Oft the •moubt of ,butter churned from their milk. Some 5000 ~ears later as th.ls coun· try was being settlfd, tbe buttermilk Jett efter the churnll\g process was morepriJed than butter. _________ ....,. This tangy, refreshing liquid was given only to the most deserving fami- ly members and in the South was shared with slaves only on special oc- casions. A merlcan colonists '~~~~~~~~~!!!t~~~~~~I ; prob~y wouldn't. rec·~ '-ogntie the buttermtlk-of today. Most of it is pro· duced b>t,f erinentatlon of nonfat milk under con- trolled tottdlUons com- pletely independent of butter mlkl~ lrl'latloatJ.~ t cooks ~ave lone valued but· tetrnWC cOoklN· ln· :i gredient. ~U •s a •nutrlt) us, tlllrst- quenchi'18 tieverage. Its slight acidity =produces litht d tender ~ab· caku, btscuits and cat~- ROCK LOBSTER MACARONI 8.\LAD , • -4 (S ounces each) zen South African \" k loblter tall• l pound (16 ounces> ~c~een pepper, s~ed and chopped 2 cups sliced celery 2 carrots, coarsely s redded si1t ~, to 2 \a'tftespoona . ~ teaspoon while r Desired dressln1 Salad creen.s Prop froaen rock l<>bster talla into boilin& stlled water. When '4ter reboils, boil for ~· minutes. (Lars er 4 ounce tails require 5 minutes bolling time). Drain immediately and df' ch with cold water . • 1 ith sciasors, remove • u derslde membrane a~d pull out meat in one pt;ce. Cui into i,.)-inch croHwlse slices and c'1!1. •In a 'bowl mlx ~tcaroni, green pepper, cflery, carrots and "~· SUr in roc:t lobster and desired . Macaroni . pepperonata v.aue • Trtmmed Beef 0 ~!:.~~.~~~~-~~.~ .. ,L9. •:t• o ~~~~· ............ ::~~er GrOceries . . ® ~~·~~pl(ge. ••··••• 89° a>. Olive OH $"21 \l!Y ..,_ 24 Oz. Cl!\ ..................... I&.-- ® ~~~-~~.~~~~~~58· T~ Beef ® ~.~~.~~-~~-·.~~3J.1 ® ~~.!t~~~~~~ .......... 3i*1 ® ~==.!~~ .... Ul.15° ® ~:!~=-.~~~~~ .... ua.39° ® ~.~~~~ ........... UJ. :10C 0 ~!!:~~ey'! ................ 3&c Gigantic P"nt &ale! --<I t • 0 ~~-~~~~.~ ........ •1• .. ... @ sMol<i'o ~ PICNIC ~ 99c Slloed 79c L~. Lb. ... ,.ii ·, - ® ~~~~~~··· ......... .': .. ea. tz! .. ® ~=~ ..... ·.~~.r ... 2' :i . Grocefies @ ~!!!.~~~-~~-~~ ..... 64c Frozen Foods ·® ~::.=~: ........... 530 0 ~~!: ~:~=-~ ......... 93° 0 ~~-!=.~.-~ ... : ......... ssc .... -_.,.._ ............ -..-.. ...... .......---........ .-.--....._ .... __. .. . .. .......... ..........--....-·-·· ··--\-··-~ . --·--·-----·--· ... 1- l '. I . . -1 • f< v .. 1 LOOK FOR THE I SPECIAL' IRROWS : Bright red or yellow Safeway Special arrows flag attention throughout tbe store. Look tor them! They'll mark genulntf savings, the kind that you can get excited about. Come and save. Stock up on JSPecials And cfoft't.... · fhH• H•lne• are in lddltlon to our~ everyday low price9. Look for shelf tag• hlghfightlng these exceptional values. 4 More Safeway Money-Saving Special1! ' . ' ( ••.. '. \ q Lucerne . . LARGE 'AA' EGGS j to Any Size Peck•~ Grallld Beel ® ,,., lb. per lb. ~sw1;1s 0 ar:;.~rsitlOin D E;11~ School Supplies "' ... , .. .,., lb. ... These fine fruits and vegetables are extra special beeause they come from local areas. like our own San Joaquin V•ll•Y· Not havtng to travel long dis- tances means frest\er produce for you. Brfnglng you the ffeshest fruits and ~etables available Is the Number One Way ... the Ralphs way. Rid Grapes . FmtlPurpie Pnlla· Pllllll e ~Uao 2 tablespoons butter or n.arsarine ! tablespoons tomato put.e Z ~ab I es po on s chopped parsley Pet.11 core, seed and coarsely chop enough tomatoes to measure 2 cups. L·emon Ice for Italian Lemon Jee CGranita di Limone> is so refreshing it's worth concoctin~ a version of i~ at borne. , ITAUAN LEMON ICE (Granita dJ Umone> t cup sugar 4 cups water . t tablespoon Creshlr grated lemon rind. '• % cup freshly squeezM lernonjuice PindtoUalt Bring the sugar aad w~ter to a boil , stirrin1 until su1ar dissolves. Remove from heat Stir in the lemon rmd, lemon juice and salt. Pour into 2 ice trays that do not hav e dividers. Freeze, st1r- ririg occasionally, until icy-hard. Just before serving, remove one tray at a time; d.lp the bottom pf the tray in warm water, loosen' ed&es and turo out; break into quarters &nd J>Ut through ah ice crusher. At once firmly pack in• to an ice-cream scoop and mound in glass sherbet cup~· or glass ierlving dishes. Rush to eaters! Makes 6 to 8 hrvings .• ITAT1a8a•1. MONEY BACK GVAllAMTD ON QVALlrf MIA.Tl (Vfll PtlCt ()I MIA TIS UHCQNDITIOMAU 'I' GU .. AtnftO "TO~U YOO-~"'~ YOUI AilONl1' Wlti ll CMlt.llf'&'. Y lfJUHOlO deli. ---_. • . - ' f I I YOGAenc;t CONTOURING EXERCISES • i 1 CHRISTMAS CARDS 20%0FF FRANCI0-0RR fine stationery corona del mar C:Omel, ~nch Blue, .-Rust, Ught Grey, Wine, oatmeal; Purple, White $26 • I fruit Drinks ~69c Lemonade, Berry Punch, Grape! 6 az • , POTATO 69e I .. CHIPS LAY'S Reg., B-B-Q, RuITTes-9 oz bag Italian Dressing 49 c Wiahbone's preferred quality! 8 oz Heddi-Whip. . . . . s 129 Real cream topping-15 oz aerosol L & P Sauce . . .ggc ~esty Worcestershire-10 oz btle Diet Cola ~ •.... 49c 'fhe big 67.6 oz. bottle for value! . · J,OILET 79e . TISSUE Nice 'n' Soft-4 roll'Pock . -..---....... _ .. .. Cen t from U.S.D.A. Choice beef loina-natwally ~for flavor and tendemeu, trimmed Cor mol'e ftlue! Roast .. 89~ ·Top Sirloin flSTCUT s25! Chuck cu S.D.A. Choice beef Loin cut of 'l).S.D.A. Choice beef Groun BEEF Bulk or patties-does not e ,., lPBBh Pork Cubes IEESS s21•. Fresh Eaatem pork loin for kabobs Slic8a Bacon ... s1 2! Read's Salaas • 55c.:.-Jilli German Potato, 3 Bean-15 oz glass ROAST Fresh Eastern! Roaat it on the spit . Hi .. Ho Crackers. &gc • risp, buttery Sunshine! 16 oz COLONY SJ09 WINES . Cabemet or Pinot Noir! 1.6 liter Crackling Wines s349 . Paul M&llOn &.e, CbabU.-fifth Cribari Wines •• s239 Fruit Drinks=ec Lemonade, Berry Punch, Grape! 6 •z .)POTATO it CHIPS m·s 6 9c Reg., B·B·Q, Ruffies-9 oz beg Italian Dressing 49c Wishbone's preferred quality! 8 oz Heddi-Whip. . . . . s 129 Real cream topping-16 oz aerosol L & P Sauce . . .ggc Zesty Worcestershire-IO oz btle . Diet Cola •sn •••• 49c The big 67.6 oz. bottle for value! . -JOILET 79e .YISSUE Nice 'n' Soft-4 roll 'Pack Read's Salads . ssc _ .. ___ ......_ __ __........._..... . .. .. ...,.......~ ... .-..-............ _. ...... ~-.-· . • ~Ceri t from U.S.0.A. Cholct beef loin~natwally ag~ for flavor and tendemea, trimmed (or more value! . ' ll'BBh Pork Cubes muss s21\ Fresh Eastern pork loi11 for kabobs lfli ROAST ·Top Sirloin flST cur s2st Loin cut of U.S.D.A. Choice beef We feature Genuine Milk-Fed Veal Tender! Tuty! Look for the difference Crackling Wines s349 . ~ul MalJion Roee, ChabU.-fifth Critiari Wines •• s239 • PVBUCNOl'ICB PUBLIC NO'l1CE c ....... NOT I Ca TOC91•ot~•I IUl'eRIOlt COURTOI' TH• STATEOl'CAUl'OttN14"1t • THECOUNTYOl' .. ANee ..... ..,.,. ••tm of F"IO•••clC NATt41N WATIRS. Oe<eeMd ( rn • 11G .. 1.vru con~­ Tti charming appearance of an.: old cottagft, Ytst the size and convenience of a Bil Canyan townhome; It's all here in this 4 bdrm 3000 sq.ft. ~· sidenets in Old Corona del Mar: r°"fl· lined walkway, dormer windows. sun-ny brict~,J>•tio, two fireplaces and heavy shaked roof. Just an evtning's stroll from IdspiraUon Point. Present· ed at $242,$00. UlllWlc:>UI:. tf()Ml:S REAL TORSt: 876·eood 2443 East Coen HiGhMY. Corona dtl Mer also In Mesa Verde, tt 646,5990 ...,1; ~ HERITAGE . . flEALrORS MEWPORT llACH oe1AN view Dr.earn No More! CONDO New 10U cu on one ot SI 13,900,' 15p)'llua Hl!Pa b.,t 2 BB + totio&l ~· \nn,.J~ b BA, bttnl, t>rtck I frplc, • \lPtUd•d oarp•UJSI • drpa. Overslted dbl tar w/elM opener. • Tennis/PoollSauna/ Jae JACOISRIALn 675-6670 tEf..r COl\1 S.-. wnLLACE RE Ai. I SlM E INC ---- PEOPLE PLEASERS! associated f... ~ .: '-• .. , .... . '· HARBOR VIEW HOMES ,\bs(mte~ owner has just reduced the price on 8 wen design~ • bdrm.. 2 bath home, with lge. pie-sha~ lot ~ i dtral for large family -quick pos.i~. $.149,500 ' 759-0811 .... ..... UstefVA Hoftlt1laO.C. OruteCo'1, Lat1est VA HoCD• Broker c•a•Hn. 675-2626 WORLD REAL EST ATt . . i J I ... .. 11aiil-&'ll}. ... llACH TOWMHOUll 8121 P'oX Hilll Dr., Hunt Bch 9.900 Walle to 1c'h, pool & hoppins. These 1>0Pular str!sJde homes move /ut. Com smell tbe seaweed & watch carefUl.ly the seagulls circlin& over· head, 3 Beiiroom, 1 ~ bath. double garage. concrete patios & built·ins. call 9113-8311. IMVISTOIS. OPPOlmnGTY IHOCKS 812'J Opal Circle, Hunt. Bch. $117,900 LOvely duple'! located m prime area or J:Juntington Beach. Has lot large eooogh for a4'1itionaJ units. Situated t the end of a quiet cul-de-sac &treet. Room for boat or recreational vehicle. Fa.est in area. 4 IDl)f POOL HOME 2036 W. Willow, t\naheim $72,SOO Relax or play ~Y the pool. Entertain on big covered patio with brick built· ins. Comer lot tiome in sought arter Loara School Dittrict. Rock roof, lux- ury carpets. new,texture coating. Live & enjoy. Please c~ll 963-8311. 18055 t¥CllJllOHa Sf. ,.,_..,.v~ 963 .. 311 100 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••• r•••••••••••••••••••••• POOL&AIR . UTIFU&. IUIWNGAMI ln Harbo View Milli! A ullt\ll urlinsame mOdel: th 4 bdrm~:Pl 11. ~ room that conv~rta into 5th and 6th bedrooms and still t>rOVld o family room. formal dining and I ra~ livinl room. This Unique Horne has mountain and ocean views rrom a stirene setbng of tr~. lawns, hrub& and an occasional cow mean· dCirlng along thEl hillsid~ trails. Prest:nted at $278.000. U~IC>UI: fi()Ml:S REALTORS'". 675·6000 2443 East Coast Highway, Coro"a del Mar c1lso i" Mesa Verde, dt 546·5990 l002 ·~········· .................................. . .. GOOD AS THE SWEIPSTAllS ... to fmd thls LUCKY buy, they could price it higher. but they want to sell FAST. A 3 bdrm., 2 bath con- dominium in The Bluffs, going for $117.000. Open Wed. & Thurs., 1 to 5. 2323 V1Sta Hogar. 673-4400 Larae 3 Bdrm. i ba, huge lot, areal carpet., fresh MISA Df L MAR paint. redwood patio. $76,000 much more Priced Ranrb lYI h'Oml' with belowmarkl't Call h avy shake roof. HADLIY RIALTY shrouded II\ tus~lous t H:.at ll maturo landac: pll\I, Oceanfront Duplex Cool enclosed patio Built~~~~~~~~ Balboa. !'tin only plbaae Village Creek Townhst!· b'!J!~rl~ ~~l~I -sas SPANISH ~ea_n_tn_s;_SG4_4 _____ 1 ~~.=1; I~~!c!ii carpel We have an anx Bmtrl-tevet,cBr,2'~Ba. Caplstrmo leach IO t 8 Lee AM at 957-1312 lolL, owner. so call oow. lg Uv rm. formal din rm, ••••••••••••••••••••••·--------·1 645-1221 spactout lam rm • 2B 1 .... n-fresh'·· t"C CENTURY 21 wlfrplc • w•l bar, ~"~:.om bit "h~~.: COLLEGE c~ drps • uparaded ..,.. l<N\ 493 H..., Westd ff R..alty cpta thruouL Thls home _._ • .,,......,_. __ ._._. ____ • ---------• la clean. Price juat re- C..Oct.l M_. 1022 PARK SAVE Thousands of ducedlorqwcksale Ex· UMCHRIALTY ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dollani. 3 BR houlle &: c:eptlona l value at SS l·.2000 H ow n e r w / c a r r Y SUBJIQO. Bolaa Chlca Lo1-----------CDM BE.AC A 4 Br PLUS an added morl&aee. To aee, Duncannon off Milan. 2000+ s~FT COTTAGE fam rm. and Uirouah1Y IW6-3490 5352 Clark Circle. """' uwaded-localed on a will make you comrortn· Lots or wood and stained qwet cul·de·sac street DUPLEX-E/SIDE _-._.e.s_14 _____ --1 ble in this spacious 4 glass. Sl39,93C>. This is truly "FIRST COSTA MESA IS YOUll WIFE bedroom home plus a R.C. TAYLOR CO. CABIN" Accomodallon Drive by l!l(M92 Albert RUNMIMG AIOUND7 DEN 1 n beaut if u I 955..0350 for the "BELOW DECK" Pl. Please do not disturb , .,.,,,_1 for 8 beautiful GREENTREE of Irvine --------• nncc of h t t 38 •· 2B ~ Cooven1tnl Lo parks, pool ,, t e ennan s. r.. r. home t.olive & raise your l/J BL&TOOCEAM $79,900 S84,600 , Call Ken children. We bave the an4 shopping. Good Completely remodeled li l213H38-262'7 f~•Y aceesses. 11. home ot your dreama, on an oversized lot. A Pac1f1c Coast. Realty Just wailinf to be full· I smuhlng •BR f.lus den (2131433·4968 filled. This totally pl~ formal din ng plus ANYTIME COST"' MES"' charming 2 aty. 4 br. ~ huge family room with " "' .. _ 1..-to be b t I $55•000 R.2 1wftle, must uc $eeD open eama, na ura . appreciated. wood tenures and oceanllllliiiiiiiiiiil_____ c bar min a Cam' 1 y OPEN HOUSE SAT. 12-4 ~~lJ,.e~!KtevLe~n~~~k. SUPER Mesa del Mar. for neighborhood. Handy Ca.UC$ER REALTV Just.,.a..,.LoOc'"'unBlvd. sale by owner/a&ent. 4 gourmet kitchen. 3 946·~1 • e.a.i...1,..HRIALTY ..-.... .... 8 '<>-Spacious bdrms. Hu&e -----'-----1 ftl'U''"' 1235,000. r 2 oa, many xtras. as· R-2 lot. Don't h~itate. Huntinaton Landmark SS 1·2000 Call 64 .. 7a I I sumable. loan. sss.ooo. 752-1700 Condo 2 Br 2 Ba, adults. --------~ 1154 Mission Drive. C>Mir11'1·1 Country Club llvin1. up-UNIVERSITY PARK _ 556-6'1'95or64i.7692 · graded lower. S69,500. S94.950 • '' Lots of J•! ... iWWaJ~ll ~ Exciting Edinburg ~: 180 o.g View Oft the model town home w. 3 CORO.._.• Pri. cit ittti~ •• . .£L., 4000 'i!m bdrms, family rm. 2~: ""' 1 h •Nvrn batbs. Huge backyard HIGH• .,.. .,.05 Ong nal owner om-:. 3 VA-NO MONEY DOWN Sprawling custom e Wi brick patJo&firepit. ~" bedrooms. den, eating or FHA. 565,500 Agent. with view of city llahts Waterfront Homes The ideaJ combination of area. separate family 963-7600 539..0784 and our coaaUme. 19x27 631-1400 a new home 10 an room, brick rit'eplace to Family rm wicircular -------- e s t a b I i s h e d warm your toes. Handy Garden of Eden f I b'lli d II NuTurtleroc:k Hlnhlands neighborhood, featuring kitchen built-ans, only Green th umbers and Pc, + 8 1 ar rm, V· Plan 3 w/4 B<lr~s. ram all the latest appoint· ns.ooo. BKR, Call Ing rm w1rplc, s.kyhahts. men's. Oversized c..,,1-.-garden enthusiasts Chef kitchen has micro. 'lP· Avail Aug. ~65.000. • .,...,.. •~ MUST call on this exotic food lamps. BBQ, Inter· Call 752.0017 Own/Agt. gara1e, large rooms, 3 property. All terms. 3 com. 30x43 Pool.-------- bath, step down wet· bar. TARllLL Bedrm house. princ. on· Red _.. .1..1-•• ~ .... BKR RACQUET CLUB mini ocean view. all Cully ly . Coastline Realty uc ..... u...., ....... Beautiful Granada 4 Br. landscaped, walking dis· 6.'11·1846 _962_·55_u ______ 2'h Ba. 2500 sq.fl. Lge tance to priva~ beach. "#I In CalifonNa" pool &: spa, int.ercom & St95,ooo. ree. R·Z LOT-HOUSE HOT TO JROTJ music system, backs to Spacious 4 bedroom with 1 pool, central air condi· GtMr.. 1002 GNeral 1002 CALL '44-7211 & ROOM TO IUILD Cozy 3 bedroom home orange grove. $140,000. with mini orchard In 13602 Onkayha Cr. Ownr. /JD.NIGEL Bl\IL(Y & Live The S60.000. Agt. 645-ll03 great ramily area, close _559-_l.9._13 _____ _ Uonmg and family room. •••••••••••-•••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Located m prime re· PROMOMTORY s1denlial area. Full price GoodUffl COLLEGEPARK to schools & shopping. TURTUROCK ---------• In this Monticello Best buy in area. 3 This sharp house ls Plan 4. P~estigious ASSOCIATES IAY sm,500. CALL 7Sl·3191. Newport Beach C:: SELECT Waterfront home. pier & T'PROPERTIES sbp for SO' boat. Spacious -------- 4 bedroom home with un· UHOBSTRUCTED usual aame room with coiy fireplace overlook· VIEW LIDO ISLE. 4 BR, 2 ba. Newly decor. Large patio. Beamed ceil's.. hdwd. floors. 48 Ft. lot. $225.000 PENINSULAi 4 BR, 3 ba. homt: All amenities. Loyely area $195 000 townhome. 2 Story with Bdrm, 2 ba, lge yard priced to sell at $68,000. Turtler~k Hills home new carpets, 3 bedrooms wifru.it trees & more. Hurry!! 540-ll.Sl with FOREVER VIEW! Oc~n view w/smaJI ren· or den. d1rung quarters Priced to sell. Quiel cul de sac loc • table cottage for interim served by a gourmet 646 3928or 545·3483 walk lo elem. & high incomH~LS1P22l~CH. IM kitchen. Comm. pool, schools; 4 BR. ram. rm .• "' n smallpataoarea.561,500. 2 ba .• EXECUTIVE REALTORS BKR540·1720 ~~~~~~~~~HOME. Fine construc-675·4392 _______ _.. lion. A very SPECIAL HOME SITE 1ng the water. Beautiful· Of tnl1re uppel' B.!ck ty decorated -ehows like Bay & sparkling liq ht:. at PRE5TIG E WATERFRO~ HOM.ES a model home. night. Superb pride of FROM, ctann 000 TA.BEU. Pris~ Area home for very SPECIAL CHARl\UNG 2 sly, 3 br, DanaPoint 1026 people! Priced nght al lg. SUQdeck. 2 rrplcs. elec ••••••••••••••••••••••• Quality liv I close to 1139,900. Call Evelyn COLE OF ownership evidenced In ,-v HE'lUBORT this spacious 3 bdrm. 3 k1tch. So of H".VY 9wner "#I tn Califontfa DUPLEX beach and park. You SS2-0434 finance Pran only. . II t D p . l mustaeetbl.sexCflptlonal VIL.LAGE! ..,,,.. bath Npt. Bch. executive 675·5511 home. New on the --------• market. Belter take a TERRIFIC look! 646-77u TWO STORY TOWNHOME Spacu>\ls and airy 2 Realbtate bedroom, 2 bath in adult ...... EWPORT HG TS community with pool. " • 1ac112zl and mtJ('h more. AREA It's less than 2 years old On quiet tree shaded and you couldn't touch a !llreet. Lge. corner lot newonerorth1slowprice w,room for boat or oU74,900. CALL 556·2660. trailer. Btfl area wltb f;: SELECT lols or privacy. Just re-T' PROPERTl ES ducedS20,500~84a.1111 · THISISA (~i\'S1!5§1$faj MODR HOME! Real Est.ate Bl.Illy decorated (former mdJl 4 bdrms & fmly rm all highly upgraded w/got'geous wallpaper, cpt.ing & draperies. New dishwasher & garbage disposal. plus central an c:ond. • Great buy at ~.'95b. 545·9491 CdM DUPLEX Brand new 3 bdrm owner's unit + guest quarters & totally refurbished front 2 bdrm w /frplc unit on comer site. Motivated seller will consider 2nd T.D. $189.700. WOllJ -BRICK & SHAKE CdM Bright & cheery kitch en & breakfast nook w, lush shade trees & warm wood deck patio. Popular U-shaped design, 3 bdrm. 2 bath home in 1mmac. cond. Pvt. beach access only 3 blks away. Seller is moving -S159.500. ' NEWPORT HEIGHTS Prime loc. 2 bdrm yellow .& wh.lte ta rter home w;deta~ed gar. & plOyhouse. Price jusl/e'duc for quick lt&le. $73,500. • 1160,000. 646·4319 for MESA VERDE O~ER I~~~. ~2 s:~~-1 ~~. ~=r!F~n1:e:·~:fa~d SllARP MARQUETTE appt S74~100 MOTIVATED -one of our best. ooly type street. Formal din· re atµ ring ~ BR. VIEW HOME J . HEADING N 0 RT H $119 SIOO ·-r 'I A L. ~RYET kitchen with •. asmme Jbr.2ba.cust kiUpl.bar WEST. c' OAST PACIFIC i ... rm. am1 Y rm. .....,.. Creek,2br. den. $190,000. 3232 Iowa St ()it EN REALESTATF. tinct1ve pea and groove q lty appllaoces. 2 "-·--r "'·ul764 flnn-pl .. eh cpl .. uge lot Frplcs., formal dlnin" vw1"' ,.,._. HOUSE 11·6 VA OK ~""' .... ..., 931'.""""' .,......, -•" r -• .._ ,.. A J o R .. _ ....,_..,., """" with bevin& £ru!L trees. •u "' .a& BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR J41 Bo y'>1tlr• D11vt• N B 675 · 6161 10021--------•I WILLHAGGLE5S7·5443 ---------• Won·t last, owner is GREENBELTLOC. Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Easy to oW'\, live In one BY OWNER R2 LOT motivated. Call Ceotury Lor raine 552-7001 & cl these 2 units & fol the 21Sur< 536-147•. 833-3307 I 002 GetMt'GI BE~CH BEAUTY Btruy decorati;d 3 bdrm, 2 bath charmqr. Sunken livlnc rm w/cathedral ceilings. Country kitchen leads to lge redwood decking llt'ea w/gas BBQ & flrepit. Mstr suite has auium window for 11ea breeze. Terrific area clole to beach. 046-7711 ~ Walker & leH h he) th This house has ever· Joe DeLucia, Ait.._ _______ mll ya'•• "'GElll VETS LETS ot er P pay e rent. ythmg and the price is 496-5101 .. .._ You can make the 3 reduced because t here --------OWNER WIU. HELP Sharp & picture pretty Desigq a buylna plan for Bdrm 2 Ba or the 2 Bdrm are no agents involved. 3 S94,900 Charming 2 br prden home with 2 cov- you. Its unbeltevably 1 Ba cottage your home. br. l'~ ba. New Copper home. ~.cean view. FIMA.NCE erect patios. Central air. slmple.Tbereareadvan· ~.SIQC). plumbing, new carpets Beamcedgs.&lg.frpl. 3 Br . 1~ Ba condo. 3 BR. 21,.; ba .• MANY tages you may not be EJO&.PHIM lt.E. and paint. Lots or cement Auum. VA loan. Better Beaut. cond. Bike lo Lhe EXTRAS I Pnced at only aware or. 1.et the m,arket Call 4t4-851 I and a covered patio on Horn• Rily. 4t4.o748 bch. SS't,000. S89.900. Call Evelyn work for you. •-------•I this huge yard fenced by Fountain Valley l034 NELSONR,E. 8'6-1305 552--0434 541-0425 (24 Hrl Agt. I 024 block wallf o.n all sides. ••••••••••••••••••••••• OCEAN nma WALMUT S'i)UARE Costa Mesa CI06e to UM beach, shop· O.Unil condo; 2 BR. 114 BY OWNER ••••••••••••••••••••••• p[ng and easy walk to all 4bd; clean. painted, vj· Sharp 2 BR. corner Coo· ba., sep. lndry. rm., deck This house bas ever· MESA ~O'RTH schools. S69.500 prtn· can.t, new carpel. enc:· do. w/rec tac, close lo capeted in AstroturC. ythtnJ and the price ls "' cipalsonly.Call541-8778. orpa~~9895,500agt. 96&+6503 schools " s hoJ)pin g. Nice. cood. 154,900.. Call reduced because there Super location-dose to ...,.. sso.ooo. w/terms. By EvelynSS2-0434. arenoagenlsinvotved.3 shoppiof and schools. 4 PROMISES i--------1 Owner. 968·3433 or E¥B.YMCOPELAND br, rn1 ba. New Copper Bedrm home, needs PROMISES S 963-1012 REALTOR 552-0434 lteal Estate plumbing. new carpets &0mc TLC. Seller is vecy Suner harp u...aa.....Oft ---------• andpaint.Lotsofcement motivated, bought All fulfilled in this extra Bea t.3'b 'th fpl ·~~ l•------11!191•1 and a covered patio on another aod MUST nice 3 bedroont, 2 bath u r wt coiy c. Hart.Our I 042 CORONA. DEL MAR this huie yard fenced by SE;LL! Take advantaie pool home, located on a sep ram rm, access to ••••••••••••••••••••••• OUPW block walls on all aides. noW! Call 645-0303. lovely tree lined street. pool & 23 acre park. 4 Br. 3 Ba end condo on Close to the beach. ghop-Owner ts extremely ~la!K!o. point surrounded by wide f;!!~ ~~~~~~~~~~ ping and easy walk to all ~~~ated. Call tor de· l'ijl6@1mtOllj$t:I channels. ss· side tie FO~J;ST E OLSON Walk to beach. Priced to schools. S69.SOO prin· 9e2'"'447tlaiiS"54&-810'3 dock. $289,900 make orr. sell. c1palsonly.Cal15'8-87i8. CALL 540 .. 3666 -------•I AfJ.840-1879.0WC2nd. ~ ... ,,. ...... , mllm:~ 1 1 \t-;IQl(l\ll ' 7~1~ t Cm!~., Cm~~ Otl Mir • ACtllilwll ..... Ca # ; WESTSIDE Family home. 3 BR, 2 BA, huge lot. $69,500. Jncludlng 1 Yr. war· ranty. VALLEY 640.9900 tlf f telc'111 Wt Al l~TAI I MESA VERDE, quiet c de sac. a Br 2 Ba, Fa Rm, Fonrral dinlna, lo mainL yd, cov'd patio ~9S11Aet. u.-aa-.;;& t.. IO nine I 044 .--., .. ~on hoc.,. 40 ••••••••••••••••••••••. ....................... OEERFtELD BEACH! POOL! 2 BR &KWOODPLAH COhdos, 2 baths. Spacious SgL story 3 br, 2 ba, fam. & luxurious llvtng--¥ery r m. atrium, 2 frplcs., unique-loaded with patio. Nr .. pool, abort charm. REAL ESTATE walk to scllls. & park. byMcVAY,842·9371. $87,500. Shown by appt. --------•! Occupy 9/15. Owner ------1 ---~-----1 673·2959eves. S&S Resale Specialist.I. a, --------CRV ~O 000 'or 5 bdrm models avail, ' somew/poc>ls, 968-4602 Shatp 4 br Coata M esu . Penninaton Properties 551 Pierpont SL MoDow•VA 556-7777 Wortd RHI Est.te REDUCED S7.soo OWHEltS MUST SEU! If you're-hrokillg for value plus rantastic callfoml.a li•lng, don 'l miss seelng this lovely Village 111 home in University Park. Local· ed on major greenbelt With 3 bdrm.s .. 2~ baths. a lat1e family rm .• new c:arpet.s. CreshJy painted Interior, custom drapes. plus much. much more! All thls and priced under market at $112,000 red hill ~"·· 552-7500 I s • 1' 0 IWA NMIMIULA DWLD l>Ji.J Nwpt Deb .950 Price NducU ;1 t aut.hotl • This a prime tax shelter In a 'il'W\jrnN'JSr..,,.._iatton area. Yet It will ~~ d a tlve c now. For more lrifi oa thls aort or ma(lc, utl lia;Hli:Dl. ,_. llACH TOWMHOUll 1121 Foa Hall Dr., HWlt Bch *59,900 Walk to ._ch, pool Ir shopplna. These J>Opular at.rfalde bom~ move /aal. Come ameU the seaweed & watch ca.retUlly the eagulls circling over bead, 3 Bedroom, l "2 bath, double iarage.. con~te patios & built·ins. Call 963-8311.' ~S. Ol'POITVHfTY KNOC•S am Opal Circle, Hunt. Bch. $117,900 LOVeJy daplex located in prime area or Huntington Beach. Has lot large enough for a~tional units. Situated t the end or a quiet cul-de-sac street. Room for boat or recreational vehicle. Finest in area. 4 IDtif POOL HOME 2006 W. Willow. Anaheim $72,500 Relax or play ~Y the pool. Entertain on big covered patio with brick built- ins. Comer lot tiome in sought after Loara School Di,trict. Rock roof, lux- ury carpets. new (texture coating. Live & enjoy. Please c£1 963-8311 . 18055 CICJIMlll• SI. Fo.t .. v.., 963.IJI I 100 1002 ·-····················· , ...•...............•.. POOL&AIR ~ ............................... . llAunfUI: "'1FV IVWMGAMI NC>4' ltiit.ing, ln Ha~bor Vi w Hill!! A bNuUful ·Burlin1amu mOd l: the 4 bdrm plus 1arn~ room that conV'Elrts into 5th and 6th IM:droom.s and still i>nWid a f amUy room. formal dining and I r1e livinl room. This Unlqut Hom · has mountain and ocean ViE:ws from a 6tsrentt st:tting of tr~s. lawns. hrubs and an occasional cow mean· d«:l'lng along the hillside trails. Prest:ntttd at $278.000. U~lfJUI:. fif)Ml:.i REAL TORS': 675·6000 2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar dlso tn Mesa Verde, .it 546·5990 I OOZIG1Mrol 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• (i()()I) AS THE SWEEPSTAICIS .to fmd fhis LUCKY buy, they could price it higher, but they want to sell FAST. A 3 bdrm .• 2 bath con- dominiwn in The Bluffs, going for $117.000. Open Wed . & Thurs., 1 to 5. 2323 Vista Hogar. 673-4400 DMa1on of Harbor tlrtnhnent Co. )) Spacious 4 bedroom with , pool, central air condi· GeMr.. I 002 GNeraf I 002 Uoru.ne and family room. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••. •••••••••••••••••• Located in prime re-PROMOMTORY :.1(lenlial area. Full pnce IA Y SID.500. CALL 751-3191. Mewpori Beach C: SELECT w_aterfront borne. pier & T' PROPERTIES slip for 50' boat. Spacious - LIDO ISLE. 4 BR, 2 ba. Newly decor. Large patio. Beamed c<:irs.. hdwd. floors. 48 Ft. lot. $225,000 ~i:\~~o~~t~ft'h UHOBSTRUCTED PENINSULAi 4 BR, 3 ba. home All cozy fireplace overlook VIEW amenitit:S. Loyely area $195 000 mg lbe water. Beau\1£uJ. or ~ntire uppel' Balk ly ~orated -6hows like Bay & sparldmg li~hls at PRESTIGE WATER FROtfP HOM.ES a model home. mgbt. Superb pride or FROM,~ 000 · COLE OF ownership evidenced in yvvv HEWPORT lh1s spacious .3 bdrm, 3 bath Npt. Bch. executive 675-5511 home. New on the ---------1 market. Beller take a TERRIFIC TWO STORY TOWNHOME look! 646-7711 Bill GRUNDY , REALTOR 341 Bcry\1d" 01111L· N B 675 -6161 Laree 3 Bdrm, t ba, huge loti ar,at c'rpeta. fr.esh pa nt, redwood patio, much more. Priced below market. Call HADLIY RULTY MUAOELMAR S76.000 Ran b •t>1 hOme with heavy !lb• ke roof. shrouded ln Junlou1 mature lal\d1cap1og. 1----....-.-----t Cool tnolosed paUo. Bu.llt~~~~~~~~~I in air condhlonln1.1~ ba.tdwood nocn and ne'W SIS SPANISH carpet.. We have 11n am:· Btn ttt-levei, 4Br, 2hBa, loua owner. ao call now. lg Uv rm, formal din rm, -1--~------'1 64$-1221 1paclou1 fam rm. 2flr, H\ Bo, fmbl.Y atuC! CENTURY 21 w1rrptc • wet bar, coed custom bll home, cus,tom dl"PS • 11paraded -CN\ 493 "°·'" WntcUff Rtalty c:pta lhruout. This home •• .,,_,, ._ ---------''--"'-• ls clean. Price Just r~· C....,adelMw PARK SAVE Thousands of duced for quick sale. Ex· RAH.CHlllALTY ••••••••••••••••••••••• DoUars. 3 BR house & ceptlonal value at 551·2000 •£&c•"' ow Der w i car r Y SU6,900. Bolla Chica \01---------CDM 5A " A. Br PLUS an added morl&ace. To see, OunC!annon off )Ulan "000+ s~ FT COTTAGE lam rm. arid throughly 84&-3400 5352 Clark Circle. 6 "" uparaded..:....focat.td on a -------will make you comforta· Lots or wood and stained quiet cul-de-sac street DUPW-«/SIDE _ae._.es_t•-------i ble an this spacious " gloss. Sl39.~. This is truly "FIRST COSTA MESA 15 YOUR WIFE ~room home plus a R.C. TAYLOR CO. CABIN" Accomodation Drivo by l9CM9Z Albert RUHMJMG ilOUMD7 DEN 1 n beaut l r u I 955·0350 for the "BELOW DECK" Pl. Please do not disturb , ....._1,.0 for a beautiful GREENTREE of Irvine. nriceof th t t 30 •-28 .......... ... Convenient to parks. pool Oc~"' ..... r e ennan 6 · ar "' r · home l4 live & raise your 1/J BUCTO ~ $79,900 U4.600. Call Ken children. We bave the an<( &hopping. Good Complete!" remodeled li •213u .... 26Z7 freeway accesses. J ' ......,.,. home of your dreams. on an oversited Jot. A Pac1r1c Coast Realty just waltlnc to be rull· ~ 11mashinf4 BR plus den 12131433·4-968 filled. This totally plus rormat dining plus b ~ · huae family room wl\h AUVW'IME COSTA. MESA charming 2 sty. 4 r, open beams, natural ~·" $55,040 R·2 home, must be.s~ to be .iiiiiiiiiiiil_____ apl)l'ec.laled. wood texl\U'es and ocean Ch a r m I n 8 f a m i I Y OPEN BOUSE SAT. 12-4 ~~tire~!.l'tevle~~~~~ SUPER Mesadel Mar. ror neighborhood. Handy CaUCH.EER REALTY J·~•s•• .... ton-eanBlvd. sale by owner/a&ent. 4 gourmet kitchen. 3 846-~l . n.a.1o...1cHR1r. ... LTY ...... ... ,_ v.: Br "Ba _,_ Spacious bdrms. Huae ---------1 ~ ""' 1235.000. "" ·many .... as. as· R·2 lot. Don't hesitate. Huntington Landmark 551·2000 Call 64f.72.l I sumable loan. W,000. 7$!·1700 Condo 2 Br 2 Ba, adults. --,------- 1154 Mission Drive. Ol'mln9•• sllJNn:>atNl(t• Country Club living, up-UNIVERSITY PARK SS&-&195or642-7692 araded lower. S69,500. $94.950 /Jn ~IGEL UAIL[ Y E. l\SSOCIJ\TCS ____ .Lots of Prf dt inside ~~~~II -~---------1 Exciting Edinburg l80D-Vlewonthe model townhomc w;3 -'21 bdrms, family rm. 2• ~ COROMA HIGHLANDS The ideal combination or a new home in an establ11hed neighborhood, featuring all the latest appomt· menl t1. Oversized garage, large rooms. 3 bath, step down wet· bar. mlnl ocean view. all fully landscaped, walkmg dis· t,ance to private beach. Sl95,000. ree. CAU. 644-72 I I On&inal owner home, 3 bedrooms. den, eating area, separat-e family room. brick fireplace to warm your toes. Handy kitchen built-ins, only 175,000. BKR, Call 54().1~ VA·NOMONEY DOWN or FllA. SBS,500 Agent. 963· 7600 S39·0784 Bluth. 4000 sqft baths. Huge backyard Sprawling custom borne wibnck pal.Jo & f1rep1t. with view of city ll&hls Waterrroot Homes and our coaaUine. l.9x27 631·1400 G Family rm w/clrcular -------arden <>f Eden Cplc, +a billiard rm. liv· NuTurtlerockHighlands Green th umbers and lng rm w/lplc, skylights. Plan 3 w/4 Bdrms. fom garden enthusiasts Chef kitchen has micro, r91. AvaH Aua. S\65.000. MUST call on this exotic food lamps. BBQ. lnter· _Ca_lll_752_-06_1_1_0_w_n_iA_g_t_. _ property. All terms. 3 com . 30x43 Pool. RACQUETCLUB RRl-L Bedrm house. pnnc. on· Reduced Ws week. BKR I ly. Coastline Realty 9&2·5Sll Beautiful Granada 4 Br. --631-1846 ---------12~~ Ba. 2500 sq.ft. Lge "#I a. CalfonMa" ----------------.. pool & spa, intercom & R·2 LOT-HOUSE HOT TO TROT! music system, backs to & ROOM TO IUILD Cozy 3 bedroom home orange grove. Sl40,000. with mini orchard in l.3602 Onkayha Cr. Ownr. Live The S60,000. Aet. 645-UOJ great ramily area, cl06e _559o-_~_,__l3 _____ _ Good Ufe! COUEGE PARK to schools & shopping. TURTLEROCK ---------i In this Monticello Best buy in area. 3 This sharp house is Plan 4. Prestigious HOME SITE t-OWnhome. 2 Story with Bdrm, 2 ba, lge yard priced to sell at S68,000. Turtlerock Hills home /JD.NI GEL: llAILEY &. ASSOCIATES new cnrnots, 3 bedrooms wifruil trees & more. Hurry!! 540-l l.51 'lb FOREVER VIEW• Ocean view w/small ren· ~ ..-w1 · or den. di rung quarters Priced to sell. Quiet cul de sac loc . table cottage ror intenm served by a gourmet Me-2928 or 545·3"83 walk to elem. & high income. $122,500. kitchen. Comm. pool, sA._ __ ,_ 4 BR ( m rm HAL PIMCHIM small patio area. 561,500. ~~~~~~~~~ 2 "'b;:~; EX ECaUTl v E REALTORS BKRS40·l720 I~ HOME. Fine construe· 675-4392 i--------.. lion. A very SPECIAL TA.--. --p-1-" I 026 Prts:!l! A.No borne for very SPECIAL CHARMING 2 sly, 3 br, -u.n-r people! Priced nght at lg. sundeck. 2 Crplcs, elec ••••••••••••••••••••••• Quality liv ' close to 1139,900. Call Evelyn k h. So o1 H o .. a. beach and park. You •Le wy . wner "#I lit Califontfa DUPLCA must see this exceptional SS2-0434 ranance. Pran only. · II D p · VI'' ... GE I S160,000. 646·4319 for MESA VERDE OWNER in exce ent ana oint 3 bednn, 1114 bath home .._ appt S74 700 MOTIVATED l~auon. 1·2 BR, 1-1 BR. nestled on New Enfland SHARP MARQUETTE · H EA 01 NG N 0 RT H one of our best, only type street. Forma din· re a t 1.1 r i n g 3 B R • VlcEWk HbOMdE. Jasmine 3br.2ba,cust kil.fpl.bar 8i,1ic,~COASTPACIFIC tiingct~m. ramilydrm. dis· GOquiMnMY ~PPka!~ecnes-:1t~ ree ,2 r, en. Sl&0.000. 3232 Iowa St O~EN REALESTATF. n 1ve pea an groove Owner. 644·1764 HOUSE 11 ·6 VA OK ~-Ac•>1: 831.·"""" noora. plush cpl, huge lol Frplcs .• form.al dlninl! .._.._..... """" with bearing Crull trees. r m • & JI A J 0 R -I 002 G.......a I 0021--------•t WILL HAGGLE M7·544J --------1 Won·t last, owner ts GREENBELT LOC. <;ell •---------••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Easy to ow'>, live tn one ay OWNER R2 LOT motivated. Call Cenlw-y Lorraine S52·7001 & of these 2 \I.nits & lot the T .. I b h 21Surf536-1474. ~7 CdM DUPLEX Brllftd new 3 bdrm owner's unit + guest quarters & totally refurbished front 2 bdrm w /frplc unit on comer site. Motivated seller will consider 2nd T.D. $189,700. WOOD -BRICK & SHAKE CdM Bright & cheery kitchen & breakfast nook w;lush shade trees & warm wood deck patio. Popular U-shapeci design, 3 bdrm. 2 bath home in immac. cond. Pvt. beach access only 3 blks away. Seller is . moving -5159.500, BEACH VETS lETS oth h I lb t ••• ouse u ever· Joe DeLucia. Agt Vl.L' .a.GElll er e P pay e ren · ything and the price is 496-5101 - You can make the 3 redt.lced ~ause there ---------1 Sharp & picture pretty BEAUTY Desiill a bJ.1Yln1 plan for Bdrm2Ba ortbe2 Bdrm are no aaents involved. 3 S94.900 Charmine 2 br OWNER WIU. HELP garden home wilh 2 cov· Bt!lly decorat~d 3 bdrm. you. lts unbehevably 1 Ba cottaae your home. br, 11 :i ba. New Copper home. ~.cean view. RMAMCE ered patios. Central air. 2 balb charmer. Sunken sample. Tbereare advan· Sl.S9.5QO, plumbing, new carpets Beam ce1I cs. & lg. frpl. 3 Br, 1 ~ Ba condo. 3 BR, 2~ ba .• MANY livinc rm w/calbedral tages you may not be DOLPHIN R.E. andpainl. Lot.sol cement Auum. VA IOJlD. Belt.er Beaut. cond. Bike to the EXTRAS! Pnced at only ceilings.Country kitchen awareof.Letthemarket C11114f4"8511 and a covered patio on HomesRlty.494-0748 bch.S5'7,000. $89,900. Call Evelyn leads to lge redwood work for you. ~~~~~~~~~I this huge yard fenced by Fo.teht Valley l 034 NELSON R.E. 846-130S 552-0434 declung area w/gas BBQ 541-0425 (24 Hrl Agt. ,. _ _,.0 ..._._0 blodt w•llJ on all aides. ••••••••••••••••••••••• OCEAN IREEU WM.HUT 59UARE & firep1t. Mslr suite has ---.......----~ ..,_., ~ • I 024 C1oae to tU beac.b, 1bop· . D-Unit condo; 2 BR. 1 v .. atrium window for sea BY OWMER •••••••••••0 ••••••u•• plhg and easy waUc to all 4bd. tclean, paa.ntrt, va1· Sharp 2 BR, cornet' Coo· ba., sep. lndr.y. rm., deck breeze. Ternf1c area This house has ever· MErA llO..IQRTH schools. S69,SOO prln· can • new carpe • enc · do. w/rec lac~ clOM lo capeted in Astroturr. clotetobeach. 046-7711 ytbang and the priee IS ~. " cipalsonly. Call SCl-8778. !!'!!!~9895.500 aet. 968-6503 schools & •hopping. Nlce cond. 154,900. Call teduced because there Super JocaUon-<:lose to "'....., S50,000. w/ternu. By Evel.Yn552..o434. arenoagentsinvolved.s shoppinl and 1chools. 4 PROMISES i--------1 Owner. 988-3433 or EVB.YMCOPELAMD nea1 Estate ~fu~~n~~· :ee: ~~~ ~:M~u4"-:;~~; PROMISES S!er Sharp 963- 1012 on REALTOR ss2-0434 •---------1 andpaint.Lotsolcement motivated, bought All fulfilled in this extra ,... r 1 ~ i--------• 1--------•1 and a covered patio on another and MUST nice 3 bedroom. 2 bath Beaul3 rw""'cozy pc, HarbOur 1042 R.EDUCID$7,500 c::1 Walker & leH CORONA DEL WAR thaa hueo yard fenced by SE;LL!. Take advantaae pool home, located on • 5eP ram rm, access to ••••••••••••••••••••••• DUPW block walls on all sides. DOW! CallMS-0303. lovely tree Uned sµoeet. pool &: 23 acre park. 4 Br, 3 Ba end condo on OWNERS MUST SB.L! Lovely duple~. each unit Close to the beach, shop-Owner Is ext remely S89.~. point surrounded by wide If you·re lookina for having 2 bedrooms each. ping and easy walk to all motint.ed. Call for de· l(fffi<. iJt!S~;m channels. 55' side tie value plus rantastic FORl::STE OLSON Wallt to beach Priced to schools. $69.500 prin· taib. --·~-;-.--3 dock. S289,900 make orr. Callforma liYlng, don't sell. ca pals only. Call 548-8778. CA.LL 540.3666 ·~~-~~ ·~~~~' Ag1840-1879. owe 2nd. miss .seeing this lovely ~ I I '-I'. '1 I( I \ I I ' . . \ \ i~IS f Cm! ""' Coroni atl Mai ""rf ......... . 1. Village Ill home in •.--~ ~ leoCh I 040 lrviM I 044 University Park. Local· .._.....,on •••••••••••••-•••• •••• ed on ""8JO. r greenbelt WESTSIDE ••••••••••••••••••••••• •µ D!SlFIB.D with 3 bdrms .. 2L-s baths. --'~~l;~~J BEACH! POOL! 2 BR B.KWOOD PLAN a Jaree family rm .• new carpets. freshJJ painted condos,2 bat.M. Spacloua Sgl.story 3 br,2 ba, fam. interior, custom drapes. & laxurious living-very rm, atrium, 2 frplcs., plus much. much more! unique-loaded with patio. Nr. pool. short All lbis and priced under charm. REAL ESTATE wallc to schls. a& park. marketalS112,000 by MCVAY. 842·9371. S87,500. Shown by appt. iiiiii~l ---...._ ___ _,.~~~~~~~~~I OC!cupy 9/15. Owner -673.ase eves. red hill ~, .. 552-7500 •STAR WARS• In all the galait)' thil Franciacian Fountain l~~~~~~~~~I 3Br, 28• boine ls the brightest. Sparklinc clean 4c a down to earth value. Short shulUe to schools & s hopping. You'll ,be Ught years ahead m Uus home ba1e. Priced iii the iow S90'a, Turtlerock Plan2 POOL. LOCATION. UPGRADING and the care tlli5 4 bdrm., 2 ba. home has beeo &lven makes It one pf\he best b\G'I in T\lrtlerock. Let us 11\ow you today! SllB.900 I .. t1n1nc HI.LI -~ ................. ....., .......... wlftiM ....... ..._ ...... ....... ,. ..................... .,..... ~.._. 1041 ..._an.ooo. ....................... 4tf-4111 UTll UO~A OANA HAYM NJOUEL POINT lklPl • al'7 O·Y·O -.1no GS-lllt ~. 2 Bdrm• • 2 • • A thort walk to &..JIM IHclt I 041 Li..-hoch. I 041 \oW'D it 1J>. oeean, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newly rcdtcorattd. 0 rot weeboda or rd.ift.llDelM. Owner Will • ~-,llO. ;: ' HOltMS llALn •494-1057 • '• .· Pansy-Clwm . IY OWMa SPYGLASS JIAD!WN»S The best front row view of ocean. Harbor & lights. 4 BR home w/farnily room & dlrilill room. Bcautif ul pool ck 11pa w/SpantSb tile decks. $277.000 640.0127 LARGI flAMILY'I Tbm tlke a look at thf ntw ~ bedroom. JifereidJUl Canyon home that IBcludea a areat famll1 kitchen and rand· l1 fOOtn with flreplac and wet bar. n has the size and dramatic fffllnl you've been looltln1 for. A.lao cloee to btacbes and harbor. 1195.000 I - .. • Ftamlni. finish, remodel repaln. Lie. Qulc CEMENT WORK. All Houaectqoilag, 2 men servace. Wrt 1uar lcindl. RUIOllllb&e. Pree If lllti.rdBeclrtc SELL ldlo items with a boaest.rellablolutepen- 962-1314 • em. Call 7~ Uc am.ae ~• DaUy PilotClaumed Ad. ~,._MO-DIS Call M1 Howard 645·6101 *MICHELLE'S• tost: female blk La OutcallMasaage type, "Camber". Vic. 10AM-2AX 731-4482 16th & Santa Ana, C.M --------1 645-0222 Spiritual R__. LOST, bl~/wbt JDale Cat 1815So.EJC&QlinqJteal name .. Reccle' •, Vic. San Clemente. FullY lie. Balboa Blvd & 6th S __ F_or_a.:.;ppl.:...-492...;.._·7_298_-4 "2 "·"" I NB, AQg. 18. if you bav .. 6,.,, ~~ llVltfE or need any info.· cal ,._..~-------• 675-3083 or 875-2919 o -,-R-E_E_R_E_~~r ..... !----i G~uopporluoity (11·4> ns.3252 uoo. IJ""llll ~~ $142JIOO ules. R E W A a D F 0 ate net p('ofit ot over RETUllN. *SHARON'S* lhr 1 Whit~ lkdr ~· .',. ,,. •. _....,, ,, tJI • I "'II • ' 1 I f • ... '"' U l : .. lrlV~t just $100,000 --------• OUTCALLMASSAGE including J&e Inventory. LOST ~ Ye11ow/Wblu1 499.1224 , mo. old male kitten, vi ---------1 Ellis/Brookburat. F.V AU.EAGY CONTROL 963.arr IMFORMATIOM LOST: Wblte Samoye vie Ecli1lier/Euclid,E .V ~ Pre·recorded meuage UlSl 284·2556, (714> S43-9824orwnte: XU Control Foundat.k>n, Bo 1.583, Orange, Ca. 92668 RELAXING MASSAGE Bob Jamea-Uc Maawr 0'1lCall 8-9, .. -6U1 •UTO TUH ... P. MECMMaC · Newly open.lag 1~: tune center ID S.C. Must have scope and infra·red exp. Call~ da¥ or e-Je or~:~ ?kd)'s S.s pm •' . # • ' -. ' I ---............ ~ ... ~- REAt ESTATE CreatJve & prot. co. in Npt. Bcb. It C.H. areu. We have Qpellin1s for new or exper. salespersons & b1Jrl who are lntereateci In a career. Apply by eall.ln& for interview. 631-0 \ I I J ~ ' - J . Help o.eded tm. mial. ll'UU or Pit.. App!J', ., £.. Cal Bwr, Nwpt -~-~~----1 ~ lYAITlESSes 81!W ~aa, Eapar'd Exper'd for eountry w/eorn lal mathlHI club. Mu't be over 21. •an1'4 to Somt cocklall nptr . C..1114a-mo. prel'd. Fl.Ill " p/tlmo .............. ~ .......... , .. 411pt1 .. ..-........... -. ....._ ...... . Mtll'h1-JG(cCd ..................... ... .............. , 3 •••• kb Al ............................... ,. .. ,.. ............ ,.. .. t $' Ctl .... M1116 ................. M1 • ..-111C .. .,...,.. Po•ltaoH avall. Xlnt _._.. 511..-.~ atarUni rate. Oood ttl)I. a'J\AINElt Call tor oppl lo~ ID· --------i-......;..--"------1 WWlna totraln conacl n tervtew 3·5pm dally, llcydff IOJO C<>untey •l.11• dlo. rm. Uoullndl•.Ml.lltbtable 492·1800 ask tor••••••,•••••••••• .. •••• Replacement. value ....,...... 710 ...... w..... 11 to UI\ hoa.Jtt boxet, have restaurant mgr. J $pd t>lk.t. aood cood SSOOO. Trt1tle tbll T' SC'l"Y I DKKPR. parl ~:fcS C d drive~ Wtlt.r d Takl.og },fade if\ Ena. ISO CaU hutch, 8 upbOI. armcura, ............................................ SALES ~ YOW..CO tSSSSSSS PAIT11MI TKIPHOMIWOIX tlm•. Arc:hlted ofrlce. wo:~1:'1 ~~C:'d• & appti~~oa?~pply In afU,MS-'7857. • S.L500.6'6-a74' _N_._a_.tca_ .. _._, ____ 1 btnettta. ApPlY, NaUonJl peraou only. Beagars BrandMWlO-apeedladlea Complete doublo Met, lo· ~ma Corp, 4361 Blrc!h Opfra Restaurant, 4251 blJco sao. Pbooo af\er ~ nenprin1 It framt. U2 ~ll1'AIY St, N.B. <Nr OC Airport) M.artlnplo. Ma.cArUnar PM &M-lMJ Flower,rear.C.M. • &UM!.._ ........ • vaned PoS· E.o.E. Sqwu-t,NB C.; 1035 COUCH SALE~ Lllto new ~ an OW' tducaUoP S. ~ CLM.K WaltresaesJ Maids, Dis· •••••••••h•••••••••••• brwn. Naueh. '60. MOUSIWIYU CO' a lfal STil>fMTS Guara•l••d Hour&y Wqe Pho Bon-. &:JO pm lo l :SO pm. CaU ~ oc come Lo .z:so &. ck-pt. PCMi req't lYPlnl Sbatp, eam"•.Uc JC>Wll bwuber ior retirement 'PERSIAN & HlMAL· '759-lt14 a>-41 wpm, dictation " man aoeded to handle home 1.0 La(Uba Beach. A.YAN Kttteos; some Distressed Oak DhilDI dlcupboM. X1ot work· ahlJ>Jllnf ji nC1. dutJes. D~ shill only· 494·9'58. ad.lb, S50 ue. 546-994!5 Table It 6 chairs, blue • loaoc.ds "beodlt.. Ap-F/tlrno llOD·Frl. SUrt WAITRESS & Busboys DoCJ1 8040 velvet seat1. S400. ply, National Syatems $2.6S br. Appbo, M ter, needed for pvt country ••••••••••••••••••••••• 673-9259 Corp.,438181.n:b&,N.B. 2U Fl1cber. C.K. club.XlnthrJywage.No DOGTRAINlNG . (NrOCAitport> EOE. ~ Ups. Good co. benefiu. YourplaeeorMlne Kg sa water bed. 2 night John 675 2440 stands, & bookcase, Sl25 .... 1_1tk_St,-',_eoai.a __ 11_-... __ ....i SecNtary ror 1 girl ofc SALIS CAIEER lt\Jture ma.nacement op. par, for qualifled penon W1ules or t>ubllc coot.act backllJ'OW)d. lnltlal a yr• salary " commiu1on plan. StarUnc sal l.IP to 18,000 per year. Xlnt fr· mge benefita, Call Tom Bradley, ~. Equal Oppor. Employer rn/f Sales clerk, hardware. Hrs 12·9 Mon·Frl. 9·6 Sat. Cont.aCt Phil, M2·11.33, Rion Hardware, 1024 lrvlneAve,N.B. wanted immed. Typing, Sitter for toddler & Infant, filial 4' phone skills re· approx 4 hr a day. Wed· quired. Costtact Cindy Sun. lo my home. wUI fiBl-1'55,131·3232 provld~ tr•o•po. Call SICllT AIY belore 2 .00. 6'5·9025 C&Mfttt.et South Wen Bank S eek I n g m a t u r e la accepting reapoasible Individual to appllcadone tor WO(k 30 hre per week _, __ ,. <&AM-4PM> lo our ad· an ex.,... •• en"' ..... verttslng dept. Will ban· operation• otncer. die all crlerical duties in-can 01-1m cludlnc typlna, filing, Equal Oppr Ernplr M/F phones It follow-ups. Ap --------• Sales Girl, exper, over 21. 1--------114 Jr. Dress Shop. Ask for Mrs. Mirecld, ~fiB oc 673-141.S Saleslady, mature. Women's High Fashion Apparel shop. Apply in person al 3840 So, Plaz.a Dr, S.A. ln South Coast Valla&e. Honni .Bear Fasluorui, 545-7611 SALES LADY Mature, ex· per'd, full·time, 40 hrs. No eve1. C.M. Dress .shop, Call btwn 2 & 6Plrf. only. 645-5711 SALES 10·4 ON THAT SALES JOB GOOD BUDDY! Secrdar1 MEDICAL SECRETARY HEEDED STAT Type «>wpm, shorthand i.>wpm. 1 Year medica exper. needed for tem porary 2 mooth assign ment. Holiday • vaca- llon pay1 bolspilafuation plan available. APPLY VOLl TEMPOIWl't SIRVICES Across from Oranit; Co. Airport 879-9330 Brookburst, Fountain Valley. 962·331~ or 963-7831 162t Onngethorpe TEACHERS Anaheim. . Reading cJJ.n.ic, ~ time, .. lhftbthemostlMMtest, Equal()ppor.Employer erades v3; al8o Mi time, Wensting & M sales ---------. &rades 4-6. Send letter of ~ r.-o-,.._ We ,._ _______ _, application resume & ,_""" • -T" -•• confidential tile to offer a bate pay, a Secretary Personnel Offlce, qood co•rn., .xlnf FIMAMCE La.au.a.a Beach School bonff & •uMI at• SECRET ARY' Dist. "so BJumout St, nosphen to 1:!ffl'9 Immedi&UI opening (or La1uDa Beaob,. Calif w/O#ll' staff s. secretary with good 92ml.GC-8541 Ho door to door. Ow ~call1Jling.10 key, y.._.._;. ~ CaU~767. · or bst orr. Dbl oven WAREHOUSEMEN WirehalredFoxTemer,6 stove, 1150/bst ofr. Reeeivilll & dlatnbution mo's old, •!l shots, Matcblnl dressing table of men's clothing. 30-40 champ. bced, lie. & AKC &dresser,~. 631-0447 hrs ._ A 1Y 3198K reg. Sl.25. ~-1724 per w... PP • Antique Square oak Ta· =·Loop Dr, C.!f. AKC NewfOWMlland fml, ble wo. <lood condition, Warehouse & delivery ---------1 driver, Cood drivinc re· cord a must, lmmed opening, 18 & over. S49~C.M. and dictapbooe stills. ~ ofc .,_.Is a..-tiful Ioiliatlve and ability to Wiii& io in.te mane)'? --------1 & no exper. necest. work well with people 8 Cu JOU sell on the 1•--111111!1----•1 W• Troift. must. Excellent com· pbone? Top S lo our bual· •JOHA,,..,,.'S* SOUND GOOD? pauy benefits. Dess. &i6-3030e uk for Wholeule to t.be trade, ----~---• Theft Call Call6"-33899am·llOOG 1_RQ_._·------~ belt quallly anUquee al RUBIER DUCK THE IRVIME CO. Telephone Sales-.AdvuL .... 550 ~ewport Centel' Dr "' Newpon Beacb 83J.809S Equal()pporEmployer TIMIM.flRA.RIES Equal Opp Emplyr m/f SALESPERSOH Pitime. Smarty Pants• ·Tops Too, 105 fdcFaddeD Pl, N.B. Apply lo person ScHs Ptnamel Fashionable men•• doe.bing store sollciUnJ exper. aales personnel for p;tlme employment.. Interested pa.rtles con· tact Lord Rebel Shop, So. Coast Plan. 5'N11'1 ult for Mr. Sctmeuth'. SCRAM4.Ds· aERs Tangle-Brawl-· Hovel-Ly~um - MY WALLET WAMl'ED: EXSlCISOR llKI aEASONABLE • 1 .. BOUlBCAT. 1800. 640·7'21 cS7a. 875-17~evs ' I f~ ve 0, {1,1 p rQ SC st he or a t 8( at Pl di 1957 Bwck Supt>r Good f k 9560 l'ood 35.000 m 1 rue s SlS00.642-4271 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '77 Chtlv ~1 lOn hvy dty, 1958 Edael Ranger 6 <'YI long bed 350 \'8, Auto, S495. 552·6275. 1969 D~l:l p S. p B. S-1 WO &14·9583 Monaco. air, pwr. Sti50 - 49'-SMtGdconda • <.:lean ·121.2 D111.aun P .U. Must sell. See to apprec. '57 T·BIRI), Orig. White, ~-7058M1kc I bUc 6: wht lot. Xlnt. cond. --- Por1Mte hrdtp. Blk 1ort ' 7 2 D A T S U N P . U . top, tonneau co•. Skirts w cmpr. M;,igs <Tiger New cpl. S090C). to right Paws>. stereo, cheap: pvty. 21J.24S·tl39'l 675·8228 ~------~-· 19S7 T·Blrd, porthole lop, '73 EL CAMINO 2engs.:. Auto-airS2750. _1 --~-19 art6PM ~·0528 898·4-0ZZ RARE ,,...~ ........ ~ ..... ~ .... yo.bMl"'9wprfc" ..,, ..................... : ............ $1111 ~ tp, .... Wue. t.rrillc cond. lo ....._ 34U<IM '71 T...t•c.lk• ····· ·· · ·· · ··•· · · · · · · .11611 • ep,',.....; 1111iO. .,_ "'1IOw ....... 003EIF 71T~eor..4 *· w.,, ............. Siii& Allle. lilr,,..., t800 ...... -. •t~ '7UWtlO ~c:-. ............... 11211 foo_,....,...o~~ '4ftftN OVER 251961-1975 .. VWBUGS TO CHOOSE FROM BARWICK DA TSUH ~.1t1.l'IJI• I ...... ' 1f11 1 831-1375 493-Jl75 WE BUY ClEAMCAIS f.TlUCKS CONNELL CHEVROLET ~~ l'l" 1'>Al t.r I• Ill VD IH 'Pl1iP1C,I•1•~ t:JI A',tl h \.' ''H1 ', l l! 'I l·S.-' IMPORT CARS ALL MODELS WE HEED CLEAN USED CARS MOW CAUP•PPY S4<r."5630 1011\SO\ & SO\ • UNCOLN·MERCURY 2626 HARBOR ILVO. COSTA MESA WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FORHIFTY IMPORTS .. I SADDLEBACK i BMW I C:OMI tM & Sii THIAUMIW '30CSI HOW!I! ·-COM,LITI IODYSHOP MOW Or .. BARWICK OATSUH ,.t,1 I it 111 ~ .1pa,11 111 831-1)75 493.3375 COSTA MESA DATSUN * MAIERS AUTO CENTER SUPER SALE OM SUPB USED CA.IS $3SO. .. ] '77 MODELS ---EMONS:rRA TO SALE!· ~ · .. GIANT SELECTION OUTSTANDING VALUES! DONT MISS THIS --~-... GREAT SALES EVENT! J 17 6 CHRYSL:Ell COIDOIA v.s. IU1omltic. air condllonTno. OOW8I" ateering. power brakes. p0wer windowt. power Hate. AM/t=M stereo radio with 8 track. heater. whitewall ti,..., vtn)'I roof. delwce lnterlO(. c:nne control. tilt wheel. (241PCX) 'i; ). 1 75 CHRYSLER . IROUGHAM V-8. aut°"'8tfc. air conditioning, SJOWlll' ~. POWer tif'lket, power Windows. C)OllHf ... ts. AM/FM stereo radio. heater. whltew.all tne. vinyl roof. aulse control, tllt Wheel. (508RF8) Ser. tSS22J7R305814 Ser.#SS22J7R305615 Ser.#22J7R305812 Ser.#22J7R305168 Ser. #SS22J7R3025n Ser. fSS22J7R305169 Huntington Beach Fount In Valley EOlllON • VOL. 70, NO. 236, 4 SECTIONS, '2 PAGES VO\, - ( 118 Annexation • ,, are Lat Be port &iv pun coat Tl An11 By aoa BT BAaKER .... ...., ........... A':> emblyman Dennl1 Mangers <D·HunUna\on Beach> ~aid Tu ay that rUon taken by lhe Huntlnaton Beach City Council toward partJal anneiut· uon of the Bolsa Chica wHdh(e area "1s incredibly visionary and public i.pi.nted ... He said that other city councils probably v.ould have opted ror total annexation of the 1,eoo acre11 •n ord r to 1et Ute max· lmum 1n property and oil batTel taxes which come to about $175,000 per year. But Geor1e Strlnaer, vice pres- ident or Signal Properties which 1s the dom1nant property owner in the area, says he is perplexed by the council ·s action on Aug. lS although he doesn't disagree with it. Pleads Innocent .. Thia is exactly what Signal haa been trying to do tor several years," hesa)d. "But we had been turned down beeause the city w~nt.ed total annexation.·· "Maybe it dependfi c>n who does the asking -a land ~eveloper or an assemblyman, .. be said. Stringer said it is unlikely that Signal will turn the first ground on construction for three years despite the council's p~rported 'Sani' Defendant Denies Identity NEW YORK <AP> --David Berkowitz. who pleaded innocent today to killing three people and wounding a fourth in the Bronx. surprised the hearing by denying that he was in fact the defendant. The man accused of being the .44 -calibcr killer was arraigned for the second straight day in a makeshift Kings County Hospital courtroom. Justice Alexander Cl}ananau or Bronx Supreme Court asked, "Are you David R. Berkowiu? .. ''No, you{ honor. I am not,·· replied the 24-year-,9ld postal B 'Living Jng1'' A/,ioto Raps Ex-wife's Styl,e SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -- Former Mayor Joseph Alioto says the SS,500 monthly support he pays bis estranged wife "permits her to live in' the grandest lifestyle in America Lo· day:· ] Included in that lifestyle, Alioto told a court 'hearlng Tues- -day, was purchase or a Rolls Royce automobile which he said "she doesn •t even use ... fol ve or fu pa m SC st he or 81 81 at Pl di j j I k1 0 p Alioto ml!de his own opening statement before Superior Court Judge Jay Pfotenhauer, who is handling his plea for dissolution of the 36-year marriage. He and Angelina Alioto have been separated since Dec. 2, 1975. "Not many people live in four homes and have a Mercedes. Benz and a Rolls Royce in the garage at the same time. both bought on the same day ... Alioto said "And the Rolls Royce she doesn·t even use She has a habit or acquiring properties and then not using them.·· Mrs. Alioto was absent for most of her husband ·s speech. The judge ordered her to appear later Alioto, 60, said he filed for divorce "in desperation, .. in re- action to his wife's on-again, off. again attitude toward dissolution • of the marriage. • "Angelin& chose to be separat- ed -b>t.s or times, .. he said. "She ran away to the missions, then she filed for divorce and unnled. and then filed it again. and un- riled 1t when she read in the papers rumors of my remar· riage.·· Alioto has been seen frequently In the company of Boston socialite Kathleen Sullivan, 32, ·"~ ·uv1NG IN STYLE' Angeltn• Alioto and news.accounts have speculated they will marry when his divorce is final. Pfotenhauer also is consider- ing Mrs. Alioto·s charge of con- tempt or court against· her husband for spending $600,000 of his law firm ·s income. allegedly in violation of a restraining order against either party disposing of community ptoperty. Alioto's request for a jury trial on the issue was denied Tuesday. He told the judge much of the mOhey was spent by his son and law Partner, Joseph Alioto Jr .. who be said did not realize the court order applied to the funds. clerk, clad in blue pajamas and a blue-and-white robe. Defense attorneys, who en- tered a plea or innocent for Berkowitz on three counts of murder and one count or attempt· ed murder stemming from two attacks in the Bronx. said they were surprised by the statement. Immediately after Berkowitz's response, defense attorney Mark J . Heller asked the judge that no further questions "be directed at the defendant and that he be al- lowed to stand mute.·· "I had no idea that this was go- ing to happen. He·s under medication at the hospital.·· said Heller. · • The arraignment was the second In two days for Berkowitz. · Tuesday, he pleaded innocent to charges or murdering two }'oung women and woundin& five peopleintheBrona. Ht: was previously indicted for the murder ln Brookl7n of Tracy Moskowitz, 20, the last of Son of Sam's six homicide victims. and the attempted murder of Miss Moskowitz's date, Robert Violante, also 20. In all. seven people were wounded by the killer. Val~Win8 $650,000 /or Well Project The City of Fountain Valley has been awarded a combination g"rant and loan totaling S650.000 for drought relief from the Economic Development Agency <EDA>. Rep. Jeny Patterson <D· Santa Ana> announced Tuesday. The money will be used to drill two new water wells and redrill and expand an existing well, act- ing City Manager Howard Stephens said today. The· city currently pumps water from six wells and the completion of two more will give the city the option of eliminating the purchase of water from the Orange County Water Distrcict. Stephens said. The city must repay $.520,000 of the EDA funds as a low interest (five percent) loan. The re- mainder CS130,000> it a straight grant. Stephens said one of the new weU1 will be drllled In Mile Square Park, wltb the other set tor construction In the northeast sectiof\ OI the city near Edinaer Avenue. intenUol\S to speed up blufltop de· velopment in the n9rthwest por· ti on of the property. He said delays could be expect- ed from the annexation process, environmental requirements and approval by the state Coastal Commission. Stringer said that possible de- velopment could include smale family residences. con- dominiums. offices and perhaps a hotel and restaurant with a water view. "lt•s dUncult to say what the exact plans are at this stage, however," he said. Stringer also said that •'it is very wrong to convert 900 acres of oilfields into a marsh. 4'lt's 1l ereat waste of tax· payers' money," he said. Strineer said that he favors de· velopment of a marina •·which Tandem River Projeets would yield enormous rev· enues." Mangers bu gone on record against a marina which also ts opposed by environmental groups who want the marshlands saved as an ecolo&jeal ~ and for open space. Tryin& to sort out impllcati~ of the blufftop annexation is Planning Director Edwar <Se4LAND, Paee A2> It looks a mess now. but when two county projects arc completed, motorists will have six lanes to traverse the Adams A venue bridge between Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach. View looking east toward Costa Mesa shows bridge work un- der way on left-hand side of structure. Work is to be complete in about a year. County-contracted crews are also lining the levee running between the Santa Ana River and the Greenville-Banning Chan· nel. shown on the left of the photo. That Sl.44 million project is expected to be completed by November. By JOANNE REYNOLDS . Of•Dfl"~-sc.tt The alleged ringleader or a group arrested on charges that they were in the process of print- ing S7 million in bogus S20 and $50 bills in Los Alamitos was scheduled to appear In federal court today. Robert Powis, special agent In charge of the Los Angeles office of the Secret Service, satd baH ts lo be set for Steven Blash. Sr .. 53, by the federal magistrate in San Diego. Blash was arrested early Tues· day morning in his San Diego home by agents who had just taken his two alleged ac- complices into custody at the Los Alamitos printing plant where the phony money was allegedly being printed. The other two men, Robert Samuel Lewis, 54, of Panorama City and Elvin Baker. 60, of San Diego appeared before Los Angeles federal magistrate Ralph Getren Tuesday. They were released after postine SS,000 bail. According to Powis, the arrest of the trio culminated a month· long surveillance or the group triggered when Blash ap· proacbed an unidentified Los Angeles resident to buy paper and ink for his operation. Bl~h. according to Powis. was convicted or counterfeiting in 1971 after he sold $7 .000 worth of bogus S'20 bills to Secret Service agents. Powis said the three men. working out of Vanguard Automated Graphics. 10013 Bloomfield St .. allegedly planned to print a total of ST million and pass the money in Mexico. At the time of the Tuesday morning raid, Powis said agents confiscated $150,000 worth of S'20 and $50 bills which had only tbe backs printed. seal Beach's Court Says (!J.jien Boxes Of Nixon WASHINGTON <AP> Richard Nixon lost a court fight today to prevent the government from rummaging through boxes he left behind to see i.I they con· lain clues to the whereabouts of valuable gifts from foreign dignitaries. U.S. District Judge Aubrey E. Robinson Jr. Hid the law clearly gives the government the right to look at anything deemed pre1· idential historical materials and just as clearly requires it to te· turn items that.tare persoDal and private. ''We've got to st.art the proc· · ess." he said. ''There's got to be a preliminary determit1ati6P im· mediately of what is personal and pnvate. And it' il's ·personal and privatt! it doesn't betone to the governmeot." Steven Frank, a Department of Justice lawyft', 1a1d the seatcb·oc the records wlJl begin next wee'k. At 1take in the bearing was more than ju.<Jt a UsUng d the gifts, some of which may be ·•mwlna" through P-C>Or rt~ keepmg. In fact, the gifts were barely (See ~ON, ,a,e A!) " l1TO•B4RLEV ••o.1., ..... ~ A Pli)'d\iatriJlt te t1ficd Tut•i. d Y 1n <>nan1e County Supt.•rif.>r Court that ~onvleted kUler Edward (J,ar Allawa7 wa 1n ~n •~ute J>!IYChotlt' i.f atr four t>r fne daya be.fort-hi.' ~hfl! aeVl'n Air Crash Caused By Engine? By ARTHUR R. VI NSEL Of .. o.lfy ...... SUtt S~eculatlon amone 1n vest1gators today suegested engine trouble caused t,he crash o/.a cargo plane that slammed In· lo. a Catalina Island moun- la1nslde Monday night, killing both men aboard. . The dead were identified as pilot Charles C. Clifford, 38, or Lone Beach, aod Robert G Gravea, also 38. of Cerritos. Los Angeles County Sheriffs Department inveslleators said they died instantly when their Beechcraft B-18 smashed into the rugged bluff above the sea, just after t.akeorr. A company spokesman at Long Beach Municipal Airport notified investigators when the twin· engine plane operated by Air Fast Freight Inc , failed to arrive on schedule. . Graves was a partner an the firm which ferries freight of all sorts to the island via its Airport in-the-Sky high atop a flattened mountain on Catalina Clifford was a recent retiree from the U.S. Navy and leaves a '' ife still maintaining their home m San Diego. A team or investi&ators from the National Tnrnsportalion Safety Board and F ederal Avia- tion Administration was on the 1~land today probing wreckage at the crash site The bodies of Chffonl and Gra\'CS \\ere a1rhftccl to the Los Angeles County Moqrne follow mg the 10 12 a m d ll>CO\ ery of the wreckage Tues day b' llJ;fleriCh helicopter. · · A sheriff's spokesman on the is land said today the shattered wreck of the empty cargo plaoe '1'4s fou.nd at lhe 1.000.foot tevel. four miles west of Avalon and a quarter mile from Long Point Deputy Don Dunlop, a ssigned to the LASO Emergencv Services Detail on the island year around <"al<"ulated \\-here the plane might have slammed into the hillside and hiked to the site. Crewmen or a Coast Guarrl helicopter and cutter offshore spotted it about the sarne ti me. ''There is definite speculation they had engine trouble " a i;heriff"s spokesman said tOday. "They were both veteran pilots and they made that flight five times a day. They took off after u(lloading and apparently made a 180-degree turn to come back to the airport · · Families or 'Clifford and Graves today had not yet select· ed mortuaries or scheduled runeral services. Watson Asked Make Up Mind LOS ANGELES <AP I The Olbogain. off·o~aln career or As· segsor Philip Watson was ten· tatively ()fl aeain after countv supervisors were told the as· se1t1or. struggling wlth hen rt trouble, had not yet submitted his ofricial resignation to the board. ' The Bonrd of SuPfr\''Sors \'Ot· ed Tuesday to \Hlto a letter to Wa on asking him once and for nll hether he ~ould resign. Jn"Ople lo deuth on the Cail Sl1tle l''ullerton cumpua Or Damcl Caatlle told the 1ur-y '" tbe Wrd drfenst wllntoss In ttll' 1onily htarfne that he doei1 not bellf'\t! th l Allaway cJAn re- (•a ll what really happened on Ju. I)' 12. 1976. ltt>Je(:Unc • prosecution aug· ~t!Sllon that Alla\\ ay, 38, la fak· tn4' 1>1Ychoa111, Dr. Castile ar(ued that I.he defendant haa no reuon to put on an act. "He feels he w1U be mcarcerat· tld '°' the rest of bu life and he doesn "t care wbere. He is a lypical CIUe or paranoid -.c h1wphrema. ·' The proseculor·s questioning of Dr. Cat.lie produced the rev- elation that Allaway had a romantic attachment to one or his Vlctims, Deborah Paulsen, 25. Over the objections of deputy public defender Ron Buller, statements by Miss Paulsen's mother to the effttt that Allaway planned to live with her daughter were read into the record. Mrs . Paulsen told in· vestiJators that Allaway told her daughter he had aslCed hls wlfe Bonnie, for a divorce. ' She said her daughtet seemec:t to enjoy the relationship wlth Al~ laway and offered no objections to his suegestion that he move In with her. Castile at that point did not dis· pule Enrlght's suggestion that A.Ila.way knew the identity of his v1cl1m when he pursued Miss Paulsen down a library hallway and shot her in the chest as she fled. The jury found Allaway fuilty or seven counts of murder and two counts of assault with a dead- ly weapon in the euilt phase of the trial before Judge Robert P. Kneeland. The same jury muat now de- termine if Allaway was sane when he took his rine to the cam- pus librarr and felled nine people m a six-minute shooting spree. Dr. Castile came under heavy cross examination from pros- ecutor James Enright who re· peatedly challenged the psychiatrist·s belief that Allaway did not understand the nature of his actions. Enright argued that state· ments later made to the police by Allaway clearly indicated that he knew the nature of his actions and that he had shot at least seven people. Additionally. Enright told Dr. Caslile, statements niade by Al· laway to his estranged wife Im· mediately after he fled the cam· pus indicated that the shootings were carefully planned. Bonnie Allaway, who sued her husband for divorce three days before the shootings, earlier told investi~ators that Allaway told her while they waited for police at the Hilton Inn that Debbie Paulsen was one of his victims. l'r.., Page Al LAND ••• . . .......... H.EADACHE Keith Hig· itnson. commissioner of the U.S. Bureau of Reclama· t~on, explains prop015ed tightened Umitation on ir- rigated lands In California. Fann Fears For Water Subsiding By STEVE MITCHELL ottlleD911y ..... 1'41ft Fears that large farming operations in Orange County would be broken up because or federal water restrictions were eased somewhat today The 160-acre limitation specter that Bureau of Reclamation of. ficials raised Monday seems now not. applicable to local farming gohathJ such as the Irvine Com· pany. The situation, however still was less lhan clear thi~ morning. The proposal announced Mon- day would limit federally- controlled irrigation water to en- courage small "family farms.·· But confosion arose over the stntus of water coming from both federal and stute sources as is the case in the State Waler Proj- ecl. The stickler came in in· terpretlng the federal govern- ment ·s tC'rm or ··co.mingling water" that waler coming from both federal and state sources. The Interior Department an· nounced late Mom.lay that the acreage-limitation regulations proposed were not intended lo ap- ply to users of state water de- Ii vered through a joint state· fed6fal racalit.,y where then! 1s no fedt>tal subsidy to the user. That indicates Orange County agribusinesses, such as the Irvine Company and Rancho Mission Viejo, do not fall under the 160-acre limits and would not have lo divest themselves of ex- tra rarmlands. Bul Metropolitan Water Dis- trict w~lcb supplies Orange County -1s currently receiving its water from the Colorado Aqueduct as a result of the d roughl in the northern part of the state. An nll·ntltht party 1n Corona del Mar ended an a dash ror the hos~i~al early today for four part1c1pants who police •liege may have taken too mucJ\ animal tranquilizer. !wo paramedlc untta, two private ambulances, a fire truck and two police cars raced to an apartment at 605 Poppy Avenue where officers say they found two women and a tnan nude and un· conscious. Police sald another m~. who was clothed, was consdous but "extremely confuied .. Fire department officials iden· tified the two men, who were taken to Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital for emergency treat· ment, as Eduardo Pena and David Vo1novich, both of Stan- ton. Both are in their twenties. Neither police nor firemen were able to identify the two women, who apparently occupy the apartment, other than to de· termine their first names were Karen and Sandy. The two ap· pear lo be in their thirties, firemen said They were ta~n to Hoag Memorial Hospital. According to Newport Beach pofice, the four apparently in· haled PCP. an animal tran quilizer, sometime during the night. Pena called his wile early this morning and when she got to the apartment at about 1 a .m., she called the firemen. Sgt Darryl Youle of tbe police department said a small quantltv of what he believes is PCP was found ln the apartment. He as- serts that he also round a large quantity or marijuana as well. lie said he plans to file charges against lhe rout Paramedics said none or the four victims was in critical con· dition from the drug overdose PCP, when taken in large amounts, can cause unconscious- ness, convulsions and vomiting and possibly death. Tuna Crew Freed SAN DIEGO <A P > The American Tunaboat Associat10n says a helicopter and eight mem· bers of the crew or the tunaboat Day Island are free after being held for two days on the 1slan,d or Sao Tome off the west coast of Africa. ............... Actor Crttk al Walter Pidgeon, one of the stars of MGM's golden era, has lapsed 1nto critical cond1· lion with a blood clot in his lung. The 78-year·old actor was recovering from a blood clot on the brain. ,.,....Page A J NIXPN ••• mentioned at all during the two· hour court session. The proposed search is the gov ernment·s first attempt to look lhrough materials in its possession since the U.S. Supreme Court awarded custody to Uncle Sam .. _ specifying that strict regulations must go\ern access. It was also Nixon's first chan« to challenge those rules. Under the regulations. Nixon must be given notice that materials will be searched Frank said the notice will be sent lo Nixon ·s lawyers within a few da}S. R. Stan Mortenson, N1xon ·s lawyer, said lhe rormer presi- dent has no objection to prov1d· ing the gifts inventory to the gov· ernment but said he feared that the search m1ght reveal personal documents as weU. While the fight over custody of Nixon·s-papers, J.apes and other materials was golng through the courts. the boxes remained un· touched under court order. Now that the cue is setUed, regula· lions for government access have gone int.o ef!ect and rules for public access are beinf con· sidered by Congress. . 'Legal' Laetrile Vetoe~ CHICAGO <AP> -Gov James R. Thompson vetoed legislatlon today that would have legalized the use of Laetrile In the treat- ment of terminal cancer pa. tients. The Qovernor Hid in a state- ment he thinks Laetrile Is "total- 1 y ineffectl ve in treating can<'er. ·· "Laetrile has never been shown lo be effective in any rep- u tab I e clinical study.·· Thompson said. "I cannot justify •ls use without becoming a hid· den partner m deception. I will not become an unwitting coconspirator in a nationwide consumer fraud ... !he state's General Assembly this spring )>assed legislallon that would have permitted the use of the sumtance. which is !'flanufactured from apricot pits. in the treatment of terminill canC'er patiet>ts. \ Thompson acknowledged tn his statement. which w~ distributed to reporters before i news con· rer~nce, that a num~ of cancer pabent.s have claimeil success for the substance in lrresting their Illness. -\ 11,...rageAi . CENTER ••• ·. cision, ··Belsito said. PFC Vice Chairman Ruth Batley indicated today that she may not go along with lhe city administration. · She suggests that instead or putting the money back into the building, it should be returned to lhe taxpayers in the form or re- duced utility taxes. The utility tax is a five percent levy placed on all utility bills to finance the construction of the clvic center and library. She says further that the de· partment heads had a hand in planning the building "and they should have been looking at these needs earlier ... She also takes exception to the fact that none of the recom· mended improvements have been put through the budget process "There s apparently not a high priority for them. Besides that. no one from the public has had a chance to respond to the pro· posals ... Mrs. Bailey declared. 3Short0ays It's the wind-up of our great furniture event lrvme EDITION VOL 70, NO. 236, • SECTIONS, 42 PAGES TENCENTSI Coast 'Frien&·' Seek Lag~n a · S_uppori By JO.~NB aEYN Cit_ ............ Tho Friend.A fJ the Irvine Coalt itr~ Ur&Ull lhi! cit.la ol lmne. Lacuna Beach and Newpol t Beoch lo set con(r'tSlionaJ sup. port for a federal study whlch bu 11 ven hi eh priorhy to the purchase ol 20,000 acres of Yirtln coastal land. The study of the ereate:r Los AnieJes and Oral)ge County ~a was prepared by lht Interior Department's Bureau or Outdoor RttreaUon for a conareuionaJ 1tudy of urban problem•. The draft report. which dis· cusses the possblllty of fundme a new type of federal park, says the 20,000 acres stretching along the coastal tulb from Corona del Mar through the Laeuna Green- belt to Ahso Creek. ·'is one of the most significant open space arul Burn-~Slaave Signs recreational resources In the area,·· and that it "s}Wuld be pre- served and developed for ap· propriate recreetional use." The report lists only two other major Southern California coastal open a.-eas, the Santa Monica Mountains and Camp Pendleton. lt suceests Ule paaslbility or federal purchase of the county coastal area --at a price of up to Remember the old Burma Shave signs that delighted travelers along the old highways and byways of rural America? These are 'Burn-A-Shave· signs, on Marguerite Parkway near Alicia Parkway in Mission Viejo. The very serious shaggy doggerel is work of Orange County Fire Capt. Dave Huber, a part-time signmaker. assigned to nearby Station 31. and his wife Barbara, who writes poetry. "Fire Season is Here Now," the message warns. "Rem~mber Mrs. O'Leary's Cow ... Please Be Careful With ... Your Matches . -.Or We'll Have Blazes By the Batches. _ . Irvine Gra~g ()kayed • I 1 '.l Procedarea Carue Split in Council Vote A split Irvine City Council found a way to proceed wiUt de· velopment of a hillside grading ordinance Tuesda1 without further delaying two Irvine Com- pany hilltop residential develop- ments. The council voted 3·2 to schedule public hearings and city 5taff review of the Turtle Rock housing projects and the grading ordinance in tandem. ,--Councilwomen Gabrielle Pryor /and Mary Ann Gaido voted against the procedure. They argued that before further hilltop projects are approved. an or- dinance governing grading of the Tardy Tax list Posted Names of some or the best- known personalities along the Orange Coast appear on t~ pages of the Daily Pilot today. Orange County offictals are publisbin& the naroes or those people wt\ have made the delin· quent pro rty tax lists. Ustings appear in the leaat fld\·eftlsina section beginning on PAie 'JU. Read the Dady Pilot lecal ads today and n~~t We<inesda~· to see who"s listed hills should be adopted. Tbe Irvine City Council bas considered such an ordinance since at least 1972. A former mayor, Art Anthony, told the council that city starr planners have delayed study of a hillside grading law in favor or working on Irvine Company de· velopmenls instead. Irvine Company represen- tatives complained that the two Turtle Rock pr-0jects. which would add nearly 900 housing units to the city. have already been delayed two months while ci- ty staff have been working on a draft of the hillside ordinance. City planners told the council it would be at least another three months before an ordinance might be adopted. It is scheduled • to be presented for Planning Commission review in late Sep- tember. The council majority --Mayor Bill Vardoulis, John Burton and David Sills -ordered that hear- ings on both the hillside or- dinance and the Turtle Rock projects be scheduled simultaneously. Special meetln&s will be scheduled at University .filgh School so th.at Turtle Rock t}omeowners associations can be in on Ule planning process. • Tbe"Nsociations opposed pro- c eding with the new projects un- til a hnlslde ordinance uld be passed to ruard against reckless grading of the hills. · Mayor Vardoulis explained that his support to proceed with the Irvine Company housing de- velopments was "not a rush to tear up the hills," but rather a re- luctance to delay a project '"six months to a year.. while the council debates the ordinance. Sills said delays would drive up the cost not only of the new Turtle Rock homes. but also of othel' homes throughout the city wruch he said would be affected by CSeeGRADING, Pa&e A2) Irvine Slices Tax Rate, But BillA t,o Jump $10,000 an acre --based on Its designation as an urban parlt. The bureau's study recom- mends Congress create a cate&ory of fundini for urban parks wbicb w()\&ld allow federal purchase ofsltes deemed sipifl· cant. such as the 330,000 acres in the Santa Monica Mountains or the Irvine.South Coast a~a. but that do not meet the require· · ments for a national park. Th& Friends have sought federal beJp In purchase or the 10,000-acre Irvine Coa$l since the beginning of the ye•r and this spnna they were successful ln getting the Ulree cities that sur- round ~ area to pass resolu.· lions saying that public purchase of the area sbou.Jd be thorougbly inv~ated berore private de- velopment ls allowed lo begin. Onder a plan approved by the county lut year, there could be as many as 50,000 people llvint tn the coastal area. But Irvine Company offkf als say it will be at leut five years before l'l'Ound is broken on any developments. · About 1,600 acres of the ·area ' have been identified f<N" public purchase by either the state or the county and one major state cSee COAST. Pace. AZ) l 11-viiie to · Keep Skate ho By PIUlJP ROSMARIN (If ........ ..,. ..... Led by Irvine City Coun- cilwoman Gabrielle Pryor's call to "stick up for the kids." the council majority discounted a $350,000 homeowners· lawsuit Tuesday and voted 3-2 to keep open the University Community Park skateboard course. Councilmen David Sills and John Burton opposed the action. T~ey favored either movine the course to Woodbridge Communi- ty Park, next to an existing bicy- cle motocross track, or closing it. The council majority provided that a five-foot-high wooden fence be built to screen the skateboard track rrom the sight of 19 Tahoe Street residents who are suing the city. Landscapir\g is to adorn ,the fence so that from the homeowners' side it doeso·t look like a fence. • Mrs. Pryor estimated the cost at $9,000. 'Living Wgh' . Alioto Raps Ex-wife'• Style SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -· Former Mayor Joseph Alioto says the $5.500 monthly support he pays his .estranged wife "permits her to live la the grandest Ulestyle in America too day.,. Included In that Ufeatyte. Alioto told a court he•rine Tues- day. was purchase or a Rolls Royce automobile which he said "shedoesn'teven use." Alioto made his own opening statement before Superior Court Judge Jay Pfoteobauer, whQ is handling his plea for dissol&ltlon of the 36-year marriage. He and Aogelina Alioto have been separated since Dec. 2. 1975. "Not many people live in four homes and have a Mereedes- Benz and a 1tolls Royce in the garage at the same time. botb bought on the same day." Alioto said ... Al'UI ttre Rolk Royce ~he­ dodn't even use. She bu a habit of aequlring properties and then not using them." fSee ANGElJNA. Page .U> Park I Cost of relocating the course I would have been about $40.000. City officials said it would cost about $4,000 to demollsh the con- crete course. The council action did not satisfy the protesting homeowners. Michael Pfeifer. an attorney for them, argued that ci- ty staff had previously rejected fencing proposals as inadequate buffering or the houses. Mrs. Pryor told him to save his (See SKATERS, Page AZ> Allaway~s Psychosis Debated By TOM BARLEY Oftllto.t.ly .......... j 1 A psychiatrist testified Tues-, day ln Orange County Superior Court that coavlcted killer Edward Charles Allaway was in an acute psycbotJc state four or f'ive days bef ot'e be shot seven people to death on the Cal State Fullerton campus. Dr. Daniel CasUle told the jury as tbe third defense witness in the sanity hearing that be does not believe that Allaway can re- call What really happened on Ju- ly 12, 1976. • ~ecting a prose(ution sug. gestion that Allaway, 38, is faJc. Ing psychosis, Dr. Castile argued that the defendant has oo reason to "put on an act. "He feels be wtll be incarcerat. ed for Ule rest of bls life and be doesn't care where. He ts a typical case of paranoid schizophrenia." The prosecutor's questioning of Dr. Catile produced the rev· elation that Allaway bad a romantic attachment to one of his victims, Deborah Paulsen,25. Over the objections of deputy pubUc defender Ron Butler. statements by Miss Paulsen·s mother to the effect that Allaway planned to live with her da\llhtet were read into the re(ord. Mrs. Paulsen told In· vestigators that Allaway told her daughter be had asked bis wlfe. CSeeALL&WAY • Pa«e A%) . . I I • AP...,._ HEADACHE Keith Hig. 1inaon, commissioner of the U S. Bureau or Reclama- t Ion, explalns proposed tightened limitation on 1r· rigated lands in California Fro•PapAJ WATER •.• ·'I don't believe our contract with MWD contains any reference to the 160-acre limitation.·· But Wllhams· counterpart in Sacramento, Gerald King, &alll that if Orange County is receiv- ing lrrigatfon water from a federal project --either the Bureau of Reclamation or the Corps of Engineers ··Then the excess land rule would applv ... Many of the dams and pumps on the Colorado River were built by the Corps or Engineers and Colorado River water is treated at federally controlled facahhes. And John Lauten. general manager of the MWD. snict this morning he could not positively exclude the possibility that large Oran~e County ranch operations would not fall under the acre . limitations. ·'What we do know is that there are no federal subs1d1es going lo any MWD water users ... Laulen said .. And.many event. it would be many years before anv de- cision is made ... Officials at the Irvine Com- pany, which has 14,000 acres in row crops and orchards. say they are not concerned about the pro- posed regulations. "On its face, the proposal is so unrealistic that it 1s never likcl\ to be implemented ... said a com pany spokesman. "In time and public interest it surely wall be • eorrectcd. whether through Jeitslation or ht.Jgation. · · MWD"s Lauten said the pro- posal. stemming from the Reclamation Act of 1902. 1s not feasible in 1977. .. Back then 160 acre!> was a pretty good chunk of Jund for a man with u horse and plow:· he said ... But today, small farmers can't afford to buy or rent modern equipment to produce many field crops ... "Small 1s beautiful," he said. 'but ifs also very expensive ... Irvine Planners Meet on Homing A public hearing on a proposed revision of the housing provision of the Irvine general plan is scheduled before the Planning Commission, at 7:30 p.m. Thurs- day at the civic center The draft revision includes an analyais of lrvlne"s current hous- ing picture and needs for future reaidflilial development. Airport Ban Lifts TEL AVIV, Israel <AP> Israel agreed Tuesday to let two U.S. airUnee. Pan American and Capitol. fly 28 charter flights to Tel Aviv·s Ben-Gurion Airport rather than to the pollUcally sensit,lve Atarot t\irp0rt outside Jerusalem. Airlines would be al- lowed to fly charters into Ben- G u r lo n in November and Deumb.r. DAILY PILOT • Denies Identity NEW YOttK <API . David 84:rltowltl, who pluded tnnoetnt tuduy to killlni three people and wuundm" .i fourth tn the Bronx. •urprUed the hearan1 by denylnai th11t ht' wu" In tacl the defendant The 111an accused of beln& the .44•eall• killer was arraigned for the second stra\ght day in a makt>shitt Kings County Hospital courtroom. JuaUce Alexander Chananau of Nixon Loses Fight • • To Prevent Search WASHINGTON tAP> Richard Nixon lost a court fight today to prevent the government from rummaging through boxes he left behind to aee If they con· taln clues lo the whereabouts or valuable gifts Crom foreign dignitaries U.S. District Judge Aubrey E. Robinson Jr. said the law clearly gives the government the right to look at anythmll deemed pres· ldential historical materials and just as clearly requlres lt to re- turn items that are personal and private. "We've got to start the proc· ess." he said. "There's got to be a preliminary determination im- mediately of what is personal and pnvate. And 1f it's personal and private it doesn't ~long to the government." .. Steven Frank. a Department of Justice lawyer. said the search of the records will beJ{in next week Fro..PageAJ ALLAWAY. • Bonnie, for a divorce. She said her daughter seemed to enjoy the relationship wtth Al· laway and offered no objections to his suggestion that he move in with her, Castile at that point did not dis· pule Enright ·s suggestion that Allaway knew the ldehtlty of his victim when he pursued Miss Paulsen down a library hallway and shot her in the chest. a.a she fled. The jury found Allaway guilty or seven counts of murder and two counts of assault with a dead· Jy weapon in the guilt phase or the trial before Judge Robert P. Kneeland . The same jury must now de- termine if Allaway was sane when he took his rifle to the cam- pus library and felled nine people in a six-minute shooting spree. Dr. Castile came under heavy cross examination from pros- ecutor James Enright who re· peatedly cballeneed th·e psychiatrist's belief that Allaway did not understand the nature of his actions. Enright argued that state· ments later made to the police by Allaway clearly indicated t'hat he knew the nature: of his actions and that he had shot at least seven people. Additionally, Enright told Dr. Castile, statements made by Al- laway to his estranged wife im· mediately after h~ fled the cam· pus indicated that the shootings were carefully planned. Bonnie Allaway, who sued her husband for divorce three days before the shootinp. earlier told investigators that Allaway 'told her while they waited for police at the Hilton Inn tha1 Debbie Paulsen was one of his victims. FroatPageAJ. ANGE~INA At stake in the hearing was more than just a listing of the gifts, some of which may be "missing" through poor reeord keeping. . In fact, the girts were barely mentioned at all during the two. hour court session. The proposed search is the gov- ernment's first attempt to look throuah materiala in its possesaion t1ince the U .S. Supreme Court awarded custody· to Uncle Sam --specifying that strict regulations must govern access. It was also Nixon ·s first chance to challenge those rules. Under the regulations. Nixon must be given notice that m aterlals will be searched. Frank said the notice will be sent to Nlxon'a lawyers within a few days. • R . Stan Mortenson. Nixon·s lawyer, said the former presi- dent has no objection lo provid· Ing the gifts inventory to the gov· ernment but said he feared that the search might reveal personal documents as well. While the fight over custody of Nixon·s papei;s, tapes and other materials was soing through the courts, the boxes remained un- touched under court order. Now that the case is settled, regula- tion5 for government access have gone Into eUect and rules for public access are being con- sidered by Congress. Last month. State Department Chief of Protocol Evan S. Dobelle wrote the General Services Ad· ministration that "questions have arisen" about the location of foreign gifts to Nixon and his family. Publicly. at least. Do belle dldn 't spell out the ques- Uons or who a.sked them. F,.._PageAl COAST ••• purchase of the El Moro Canyon area bas been held up for three years in a lawsuit fil~d by Joan Irvine Smith. Spokesman for the Friends Mark Northcross appeared before the Irvine City Council Tuesday to urge their backing of the report when it is sef\l to Congress at the~nd of the year. He said tfie purchase has the backina of u. s. Senators Alan Cranston <D-Calif. > and S. I. Hayakawa <R-Calif. > as well as Assemblyman Ron Cordova <D· El Toro> and Rep. Bobert Badham <R·.Newt>ort Beaeh>. Bureau offlc1als say con- gressional support will be needed if there is to be federal purchoe of the area Mcause the group baekin( public acquiaitlon or the Santa Monica Mountains has de- veloped "coniressional clout.·· somethlnl the Orange County arouplacb. The Irvine council voted 4-1 to study the report for possible further action. The dlsaeoting vote was cut by John Burton who described the list of the re· port's le~lslat1ve backers as "in· f amoua. · He did not elab()rate. ,,.._,..,,.AJ . SllTrERS ••.• Bronx Supreme Court uked. · ••Are you Oavtd R. Berkowlla? .. "No, your honor, I am not ... replied the 24-year·old postal clerk, clad In blue pajamu and a blue-and-white robe. Defense attorneys, who en· tered a plea of Innocent for Berkowitz on three counts of murder and one count of attempt· ed murder stemming from two attacks in the Bronx, said they were surpriJed by the statement. Immediately after Berkowitz"& response, defense attorney Mark J. Heller asked the judge that no further questions .. be directed at the defendant and that he be al· lowed to stand mute.·· "I had no idea that thb was 10. ing to happen. He's under medication at the hospital.'' said Heller. The arraignment was the second ln two days for Berkowitz. Tuesday, he pleaded innocent to charges or murdering two young women and woundlng five people in the Bronx. . He was previously Indicted for the murder ln Brooklyn of Stacy Moskowitz, 20, the last of Son of Sam ·a six homicide victims. and the attempted murder of Mlss Mosko'!(itz · date, Robert Violante. also 20. In all. seven p~ple were wounded by the kWer. FroaaJ"age Al GRADING. e overall higher market prices. But Mrs. Gaido urged caution: "Once those ridgelines are gone. they're gone forever.·· City planners sald the projects included some building --and grading -of ridgeline prop- erties. Beirut Duel8 Rage BEIRUT. Lebanon <AP> ·· Artillery duels raged today between risht·wlng Christian militiamen and PalesUnlan ~uer­ r i 11 as in south Lebanon. Save ' . up to· 40o/~ PHtLADELPHIA <A ) -Joseph Garwood said he was just having fun when be telephoned the First National Bank of Calhoun, Ga., asking for a S200 million loan. "I told them it iood old Bert (Lance> could do It, I should be able to do it," Garwood, 53, said, adding that the bank ''transferred me around a lot•' and did not think his joke difected at the director of the Office of Management and Budget and former head of the Georgia bank was f qnny. On Monday, his telephone rang, and "Bert Lance introduced himself." said Garwood. "He said he was returning my call ... Garwood. a widow~r who spends a great deal of bis life in bed from injuries suffered in World War II. said he and Lance chatted mostly about polltf cs. and ignored Lance's personal financial troubles. "I was surprised at his frlendUness." He said be told Lance to "bang in there." Plane Crash Caused By Engine ~roUIJle? By ARTHUR R. VINSEL~ Ol .. Deft'I.......... . Sp~culallon amons in· vestlgators today suag,.i d engine trouble caused the er of a ca.-go plane that slammed ln· to a Catalina Island moun· tainside Monday night, klllina both men aboard. The dead were identified as pilot Charles C. Clifford. 38, of Long Beach, tncl Robert G. Graves, also38, of Cerritos. Los A,nJeles County Sheriff's Department investigators said they died instantly when their Beecbcraft 8·18 smashed into the rugged bluff above the sea. Just after takeoff. A company spokesman at Long Beach Municipal Airport notified investigators when the twin- engine plane operated by Air Fast Freight Inc., failed to arrive on schedule. Graves was a partner in the firm which ferries freight of all sorts to the island via its Airport· in-the·SkY high atop a flattened mountain on Catalina. CWford was a recent retiree from the U.S. Navy al)d leaves a wife still maintaining their home in San Diego. . A team or investigators from the National Trans portation Safety Board and Federal A via· tion AdminfstraUoo was on the island today probing wreckaee at the crash site. The bodlea of Clifford and Graves were alrllfted to the Los Angelee County Morgue follow- tns the 10:12 a.m. dJscovery of the w'r'eckaie Tuesday by sheriff's hellcopter. Famlllea of Clifford and Graves today had not yet. select- ed mortuaries or scheduled tuneralaervlces. Spl,it &!en For]aggen LONDON <AP> ··-The marrlaae or the Rolling Stones· lead singer Mick Jagger and his Nicaraguan wife Bianca is about to break up. a British newspaper reported today. The Sun said the Jaggers were cruising aboard a friencfs yacht in the Mediterranean to try to patch up their dl!terences. But the paper said the at· tempted reconciliation Called. The Jaggers were mar- ried in St. Tropez, France. on 14,ay 12, 1971, and bave a 5-year-old daughter. Jade. 3ShortDays It's the wind-up of our great furniture event - ~ gunil/Sou h Coast ' EDITION VOL 10, NO. 236, "4 S CTIONS, '42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 241 1977 0 Coast ~Friends' Seek Lag1111a Suf!port· · B)' JOAN, t~ aEYNOLDI °'_....,,........, The f)'u~nd ot the lrvane Coast ure ura1n1 the titJes or lrvtnc. Lacuna Buch and Newpo1 t Beach to 1et congres1lonal UP· port for a federal itudy \\hi ch has given high praorlty to lhe purchase of 20.000 acres of virgin coastal land. The study of the greater Los An~eles and Orange County area \\-Ill prepared by the Interior Department's Uurcau of Outdoor Rt-cre11hon tor n coneret.slonul study of urbun problemi.. Th, draft report. which dis· cuases tht: possbihty or funding a new typo or federal park. <;ays the 20,000 acres stretching along the coastal hills from Corona del Mar through the Laguna Green· belt lo Aliso Creek. "is one of lhe most significant open :;pace end Bum-a-Shave Signs recreational resources in the area, .. and that it ··should ~pre· served and developed for ap· propri11te recreational use ... The report lists onJy two other major Southern C'illfornia coastal open areas. the Santa ·Monica Mountains and Camp Pendleton. lt suggests the possibility of federal purchase of the county coastal area al a price of up to Remember the old Burma Shave signs that delighted travelers a lung the old highways and byways of rural America? These a re ·Burn-A-Shave' signs, on Marguerite Parkway near Alicia Parkway in Mission Viejo. The very' serious s haggy dog,gerel is work of Orange County Fire Capt. Dave Huber, a part-time signmaker. assigned to nearby Station 31, and his wife Barbara, who writes poetry. "Fire Season is Here Now," the m essage warn9. "Remember Mrs. O'Leary's Cow ... Please Be Careful With ... Your Matches . Or We'll Have Blazes By the Batches ... SC Teen. Allaway 'Psychotic' .. Saves Home· Prior to Slayiligs From Fire Fire damage to a $150,000 San Clemente home was minimal Tuesday. thanks to the quick response of a 16-year-o\d boy, Ci· ty fire officials said today. Jim Dudley, a San Clemente High School Junior. was visiting a triend in the Riviera district of south ·san Clemente, when he spotted smok e coming from the William Neely home. at 510 Ave. La Costa. Dudley phoned the fire depart· ment and then rushed to the Neeley home. where he ran a garden hose through a window and put out the fire. Firemen said by the time they .. arrived all lhat remained for them to do was open windows to c tear the house of smoke. "The boy got there just in • time," sai' Capt. Gary <:armtchael of the city fire de- partment. "There would prob- ably have been extensive damage, if he had just waited for us to arrive ... Carmichael said the fire was epparently started by an over· heated hairdrJer, left on when the Neele)'s went out for tbe day. The blaze, which was reported just before noon, cau:sed an estimated $425 damage to the home. located in an amuent San Clemente neighborhoo4 near lhe beach. By TOM BARLEY ou• °"'" ""',..,, A psychiatrist testified Tues- day in Orange County Supenor Court that convicted killer Edward Charles Allaway was in an acute psychotic state lour or five days before he shot seven people lo death on the Cal State Fullerton campus. Dr. Daniel Castile told the jury as the third defense witness in the sanity hearing that he does not believe that Allaway can re- call what really happened on Ju· ly 12, 1976. The jury found Allaway guilty of seven counts of murder and two counts of assault with a dead· ly weapon in the guilt phase of the trial before Judge Robert P. Kneeland. The same jury must now de· termine if Allaway was sane when he took his rifle to the cam- <See ALLAWAY, Page A2> Lady Dogs Championed In Irvine Irvine Councilwoman Gabrielle Pryor struck a blow Tuesday for pregnant dogs and female dogs who have to work for their ?d ilk bones. . As the council moved lo adopt an amended animal control ordinance. Mrs. Pryor commented upon two sections she said were unfair to the fairer canine s~x . She pointed out one piece of legalese that referred to a working dog performing ''his" duties. "Are there no remale working dogs?·· she asked. Eying a section requir- ing female dogs to be con· fined during breeding periods, Mrs. Pryor coun· tered that iC pet owners · kept their male dogs in- . side, there wouldn ·1 be any need to loc:k the ladies up. A three·m;t!l council ma· jori:ty tHsagr ed and p&&!ied the ordinance in· tact. $10,000 an acre -based on its designation as an urban park. The bureau's study recom- m end s Concress create a category of funding for urban parks which would allow federal purchase of sites deemed sicnlfi· cant, such as the 330,000 acres in the Santa MonicP: Mountains or the Irvine-South C~ast area. but that do not meet the require- ments for a national park The Friends have sought rederal help in purchase of the 10,000.acre lrvine Coast since the beginning of the ye.-r and this spring they were successful in getting the three cities that sur· round the area to pass re$OlU· tions saying that public purchase of the area should be thoroughly investigated betore private de· velopment ls allowed to begin. Under a plan approved by the county last )'tar. there could tie as many u IJ0,000 ptt0ple livin1 Ln the coastal area. But Irvine Company ottlclals say it will be at least five years before ground ls broken on Ill.)' develoPment.s. About 1,$>0 acres ot the area have been identified for public purchase by either the state or the county and one major state (See COAST, Page A2> Battle Lost by NixOn 'Living. mgh' A/,ioto Rapa E~/e_'• Str,le SAN FRANCISCO <A P> -- Former Mayor Joseph Alioto says the SS,500 monthly support he pays his estranged wife "permlts her to live in the grandest lifestyle in America to-day:· Included in that lifestyle, Alioto told a court hearing Tues· day, was purcha~ of a Rolls Royce automobile which he said "she doesn't even use:· Alioto made his own opening statement before Superior Court Judge Jay Pfotenhauer, who is handling his plea for dissolution of the 36-year marriage. He and Angelina Alioto have been separated sif\Ce Dec. 2, 1975, "Not many people live in four homes and have a Mercedes· Benz and a Rolls Royce in \fle garage at tt\e same timtt, bOth bought on the same day," Alioto said. "And the Rolla Royce she doesn •t even use. She has a habit of acquiring properties and then not using them ... Mrs. AHofo was absent for most of ber husband's speech. The judge ordered her to appear later. Alioto, 60, said he filed ror divorce "in desperation." in re- action to his wife's on-again, off. again attitude toward dissolution of the marriage. "Angelina chose to be separat· ed -lots or times, .. be said. "She ran away to the missions, then she filed for divorce and µnfiled. and then filed it again, and un· filed it when she read in the papers rumors of my remar· riage:· Alioto has been seen frequently in the company or Boston socialite Kathleen Sulllvan, 32, and news accounts have speculated they will marry when his divorce is final. Protenhauer also is consider- ing Mrs. Alioto's charge of con - tempt or court against her husband for spending S600.000 of his law firm's income. allegedly in violatlon of a restrajnlng order against either party disposing or communitypro~rty. _ Ailoto's request for a jury trial on the lssue was denied Tuesday. He told the judge much of the money waa spent by his son and law partner, Joseph Alioto Jr., who he said did not realize the court order applied to the funds. Plane €rash Caused I By Engige Trouble? searching c Of Boxes Appr.-oved: WASHINGTON <APt Richard Nixon lost a court fight today to prevent the government from rummaging through boxes he ten behind to see if they con· tain clues to the whereabouts of valuable giCls from foreign dignitaries . U.S. District Judge Aubrey E. Robinson Jr. said lhe law clearly gives the government the right to look at anything deemed pres· idenU~ hlllOrical materials and juat ~ clearly requires it to re- tu~ items thal are personal and : private. ''We've ,al to start the proC• est, •. be laid. '"fbere 'a sot to be a preliminary determination Im· mediately or what is personal and pnvate. And lf it ·s personal and private it doesn ·1 belong to the go~rnment ... Steven Frank. a Department ot Justice lawyer. said the search of the records will begin next week. At stake In the bearins was more than just a listing of the gifts. some or which may be ' "missing" through poor record kffping. r ln fact. the girts were barely mentioned at •II during the two. hour court session. · The proposed search is the gov. ernmenfa first altempl to look through materfals in ifi possession slnce the U.S. Supreme Court awarded custocb' to Uncle Sam -specifylne ~~ strict reculations must govern access. ft was also Nixon's first chance to challenge those rules. Under the regulations. Nixon must be given notice that materials will be. searched .. Frank said the notice will be sent· to Nixon's lawyer$ within a ~w . days. R. Stan Mortenson, Nixon· lawyer, utd the former pl'ft4. dent has no objection lo provi~ tng the gift& lnventory t•the cov• ernmw tiut Jaid he feared \hat Lhe se~ti might reveal personal documentis as well. Wl\ile tt;e fipt over ctstddY ~ Nhton'.s-papen, tapes and oihel'° materials was soma through tiff courts, t.M bOxes' remained Wl• (Bee NIXON, Pag~ .u.) • I DAILY PILOT LlSG an Juan an Juan C•Pl•tnmo"• old Hot . prln 1 Oo.nn~ Hall will ht' marctuns to a dlff.rtmt drum m nc:•t April whtn It tx-t·omtt• the • home (Qt the clty't. re auon and a nlor elttlt'n •c · 1M Cll> roun<'llmt'n \Ot.ct 4·0 lut w~ctt to authoriif! an t>lttetrkal a ptumbina s~clrkahon~ ron tract for lh~ danct' hall rt'ftOYa· UonprojKl Theotd bu1ld1n1 -.ill be lout~ ~hind tM ell},., plannine de- P• rtment, parallel ~1th the Tr buco Creek bed According to city Recreation Director Tbom&.l) Baktt, the dance hall v.1ll suve a dualpurp<be ""The city h~ no recreation builcbng at the present llml':· Baker noted ··we intend to use the dance hall to fill that gap and also to carr} on a proposed senior c1U&enS program Baker also s aid tbe fac1ht> v. ould have a large meetrn& room a\ ailable to city groups The renovated recreation center will be paid for \\1th a comb1nat1on of cit,>-, stale and federal funds . "We"ve applied for Sl0,000 1n revenue sharing from the county that will be used primarily lo start the seniors program:· , Baker explaihed He md1cated that a count:. romm1ttee responsible for set· tmg revenue sharing program prior1l1es was recommending county supervisors approval or the grant The city also 1s receiving s.18,000 m state parks and recrea lion money Lo renovate the old dancehaJl Baker said the proposed seniors program would include counseling on legal and financial 10lormat1on. medical ass}stance. adult education and referraJ pro· grams Renovation work on the build ing is expected lo begin an February. Laguna Board Views Panel For Parking -Dismayed by lack of progress with Laguna Beach summer 5~1nking and traffic problems, the planning commission has recom· mended establishment of a 10· member coordination committee to begin planning for next year The committee 1s proposed to include members from the three art festivals. the chamber or commerce. the city council. the existing committees dealing with parking and circulation and a planning comm1ss1on member The commission members re- viewed a staff report Tuesday which said that of the seven ma· JOr actions proposed last year to relieve traffic woes this year, on· ly one \\as successfully ac- complished. The others languished because of citizen protest.& and appeals whict1' prevl'nted them from gel· tmg off the ground before the start of the festival summer season. Additionally, a proposed pedestrian bypass m front or the Festival of Arts became ensnarled at city council over whether the crossing should be a I unnel or a bridge Diana Dike. com mission chairman, said today sbe hoped lh'llt by starting early this year and with the experience gained through uttempts to establish perpheral parking this year, things will go more smoothly next year. Mrs. Dike said that while technically the commission WO\lld be starting from scratch tn con.sldering the lpcptlon <>t the outlying parking lots\ those locat· ed along Lagun-Canyon Roati and El Toro road would obvious· ly be in the runnins. DAILY PILOT .. ~DELPHIA (~P) .._JOI pb Carwbod aala b t bA m tun wh h pbo eel t.M Flnt Nutional Bank o Calhoun, Ga .. askina ror a S200 million lo n. "I told th m if IOOd old Bert <Lance> could do it, 1 tshould be able to Clo lt,'' Garwood, 53, said, adding that the bnnk ''tranarerrcd me around a lot" and did not think bia jok dlr ted at the dlrector of the omce of Manugem nt and Budaet and former head of the Oeorgiu bank was funny On Monday. his telephone rang, and "Bert Lance introducc.'<i himself," tuud Garwood. "He said he was rctumln& my calJ. • · Garwood, a widower who spends a great deal of hbJ life m bed from injuries suffered ln World War II, said he and Lance chatted mostly about politics, and 1goor~ Lance's personal financial troubles. ··1 was surprised at his friendliness." He said he told Lance to •'hang in there ... 'Sam' Stuns Court, Denies His Identity NEW YOHK !AP> David Berkowitz, who pleaded innocent toda)' to killing three people and wounding a fourth in the Bronx. surprised the hearing by denying tbat he was m fact the defendant. The man accused of being the 44 -caliber killer was arraigned for the second straight day m a makeshift Kings County Ilospit1d courtroom. Justice Alexander Chananau of Bronx Supreme Court asked. "Are you David R. Berkowitz?·· ·No, your honor, I am not.·· replied the 24-year-old postal clerk, clad in blue paJamas and a blue-and-white robe Defense attorneys, who en tered a plea of innocent for Berkowitz on three counts of murder and one count or attempt· ed murder stemming from two attacks in the Bronx, said they were surprised by the statement. Immediately after Berkowitz's response, defense attorney Mark J . Heller asked the judge that no further questions .. be directed at the defendant and that he be al· lowed to stand mute.·· "I had no idea that this was go- ing to happen . He ·s under Fro• Page Al COAST ••• purchase of the El Moro Canyon area has been held up ror three years in a lawsuit filed by Joan lrvme Smith. Spokesman for the Friends :\lark Northcross appeared before the Irvine City Council Tuesday to urge their backing of th~ report when 1t is sent lo Congress at the end or the year. I le said the purchase has the backing of U. S. Senators Alan Cranston <D-Calif.) and S. I Hayakawa !R-Calif. I as well as Assemblymap Ron Cordova ID· E 1 Toro> and R ep. Robert Badham (R-Newport Beach). Bureau officials say con· g ressional support will be needed 1r there is to be federal purchase of the area because the group backmgl>ublic acquisition of the Santa Monica Mountains has de· \•eloped "congressional clout.·· something the Orange County group lacks. The Irvine council voted 4·1 to s tudy the report for possible further action. The dissenting bole was cast by John Burton who described the hst of the re· pOrl"s legislative backers as ··1n. famous·· He did not elaborate Tardy Tax lat Posted l"lames or some or the best· known personalities along the Orange Coast appear on the pages of t.)le Daily Pllottoday. Orange County officials are publishing the names or those people Who have made tile delin· quent property tax list~. l..istinas appear io the teaal advertising section beiinnins on paie .83. • Read the Daily PilOt leaal ads today and next Wednesda~· to see who's listed. · medication at the hospital." said Heller. The arraignment was the second in two days for Berkowitz. Tuesday, he pleaded innotent to charses of murdering two young women and wounding five people in the Bronx. SCHS Grad Trial Slated In Assault A San Clemente High School June graduate. accused of punching a teacher because of a girlfriend's grade. is sabeduled to go on trial Sept. 14 ln south county municipal court in Laguna Niguel. Michael Hackett. 18, of Mission Viejo pleaded innocent to a mis- demeanor charge of battery. The youth has been described by school district officials as a •·vel")' fine" student, who was awarded a Unive r sity of Southern California scholarship for the 1977-78 school year. Teacher, John Moore. 27. said a student he didn't know at the tirrte came up to him June 13 to complain about a grade the stu- denl"s girlfriend had received in Moore's "Living Sea .. class. MOPre said the student argued with him and then hit him with. a single blow to the jaw and neck. He later identified the student as Hackett. Moore was treated at the San Clemente General Hospital emergency room for a bleeding ear and released. He said he pressed charges against Hackett in consideration of his professional responsibilities. "Students can't think they can hit a teacher and get away with it,·· he said. ''Teachers shouldn •t have to worry amout ptiysical abuse from their students.·· MooresaJd. F,.._PageAJ WATER ••• Alleged An all·oi&ht parly an Corona del Mar ~nded In a dash for the hospital early toduy for four participants who police alle&e may have taken too much animal tranqulUzer. Two paramedic units, two private ambulances. a fire truck and two police cars raced to an apartment at 605 Poppy Avenue where officers say they found two women and a man nude and un• conscious. Police said another man, who was clothed, was conscious but "extremely confused." Fire department officials Iden tified the two men, who were taken to Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital for emergency treat· ment, as Eduardo Pena and David Vojnovich. both of Stan· ton. Both a.re Ul their twenties. Neither police nor firemen were able to identify the two women. who apparently occupy the apartment, other than to de· termlne their first names were Karen and Sandy. The two ap- pear to be in their thirties, firemen said. ThfY were taken to Hoag Memorial Hospital. · According to Newport Beach police, the four apparently in- haled PCP, an animal tran· quillzer, sometime during the night. Pena called his wife early this morning and when she got to the apartment at about 7 a.m .• she called the firemen. Sit. Darryl Youle of the police department said a small quantity of what he believes is PCP was found m the apartment. He as· serts that he also round a large quantity of marijuana as well. He said he plans to file charges against the four. Paramedics said none of the four victims was in critical con· dition from the drug overdose. PCP. when taken in large amounts, can cause unconscious· ness, convulsions and vomiting and possibly death. From Page Al NIXON ••• touched under court order. Now that the case 1s settled, regula· lions for government access have gone into effect and rules for public access are being con· sidered by Congress Save up to 40'7() .............. C..met Die• Ronald Harvey, convicted in the slayings of seven Hanafi Muslims in Washington, has died of heart failu re in the in- firmary of the federal peniteqtiary at Springfield, Mo. E',.._ Page AJ CRASH ••• Safety 8oatd and Federal Avla· lion Admll\istratlon was on the island today probinJ wreckage at the crasb site. The 'bodies of Clifford and Graves were airllf!ed to the Los Angeles County Morgue follow- ing the 10:12 a.m. discovery or the wreckage Tuesday b~ sberiff .11 helicople.r. ·A sheriff's spokesman on the island saill. today the shattered wreck o( the empty cargo plane was found at the 1,000-foot level. four miles west or Avalon and a quarter-mile from Long Point. Deputy Don Dunlop, assigned to the LASO Emergency Services Detail on the island year around. ealculated where the plane might have slammed into ·the hillside and hiked to the site. Crewmen of a Coast Guard he licopter and cutter offshore spotted lt about the same time. "There is definite speculation they had engine trouble.·· a sheriff's spokesman said today. "They were both veteran pilots and they made that flight five times a day. They took off after unloading and apparently made a 180-degree turn to come back to the airport.·· Families of Clifford and Graves t.oday had not yet select· ed mortuaries or scheduled funeral services. Planners· Eye LB . Exclmion The city of Laguna Beach \ should seek exclusion rrom f Coastal C"'bmmlSsion permit re· quirements for all developed single family resiclential zone areu. the pl nnlnf commission decided Tuesday The exclusion, if approved by the City Council and by the coastal commission, would re- lieve property owners ln the cov- ered R·l area rrom getting coastal permit.s for construction on their land The property owners would still be subjecl to all city permit requirements. some or which are more stringent than the coastal com mission's ln arriving at Its recommenda· lions for the ·•urban exclusion.·· the planning commission began with the entire city and then beaan elimtnaUnc from the zone areas which have the potential for reelooal impaet. Doug ~hmit.t, planning director. said. Bit by bit, commercial, multi· family c R·2. R·3 > and industrial ly zoned areas were eliminated Crom the area the planners fell could be dropped from the coastal per.mil requirements. A map of the exclusion area is available at city hall. E',..,. Page AJ AIALAWAY •• pus library and felled nin~ people in a six-minute shooting spree. Or. Castile came under heavy cross' examil\ation from pros· ecutor James Enright who re· peatedly challenged the psychiatrist's belief that Allawa~ did not understand the nature of his actions. Enright ar&ued that state· ments later made to the police by Allaway clearly indicated that he knew the nature of his actions and that he had shot at least seven people. · Additionally. Enright told Dr. .Castile, statements made by Al- laway to his estranged wire im· mediately after he fled the cam· pus indicated that the shootings were carefully planned. Bonnie Allaway, who sued her husband for divorce three days before the shootings. earlier told investigators that Allaway told her while they waited for police at the Hilton Inn that Debbie Paulsen was one of his victims. 3ShortDays It's the wind-up of our great furniture event I $10,000 an acre -based on its designation as an urban park. r '. county last year. there ~ be 87 JOANNE a YNOLD6 ........... Tbe FrMndl ol the lrvloe Cout art w-linl the clUea of Irvine, Latuna 8eacb a11d Newpo' t Beach &o fet tonaresalonal IUP· port for a federal &tudy which has 1iven hilh priority lo the purchase of 20,000 ecres ol vircin c stallaqd. w aa prepaffd by tbe Interior Departmeat '1 Bureau of Outdoor Recreation for a con1resalonal study ol urban problem a. recreational resources In lhe are11." and that it "should be pre· served and developed for ap· propriate recreational use.·· • • The bureau's study· recom· ·The Friends have sought federal help in purchase ol the 10,000-acre Irvine Coast since the beginning of tbe year and this •Prins they were successful in tettiJW the three cities that Sur· round:J,be area to pass resolu· tions saying Lha.t public purchase of the area should be thorouahly investigated before private de· velopment is allowed to begin. 11manyas50,000 people UYinim the coastal area. But Irvine Company officials say lt will ~ at least five ytaa before c.round is broken on any developments. The study of the ireater Los ' Anaeles Ind Oran1e Count.y area The draft report. which dis· cu11es the possblUty of fundln1 a new type of federal park, says the 20,000 acres stretchine along the coastal hills from Corona del Mar through the Laeuna Green· belt to Aliso Creek, "is ou of the most significant open space and 'Battle on Tbe report llsts only two Other m aJor Southern California coastal open areas, the Santa Monica Mountains and Camp Pendleton. It sueeests the posslbilltY' or federal purchase of the county coastal area -at a price of .up to .· Lost by Nixon 'Living mgh' AJ,ioto Rapa Ex-wife'• Style SAN FRANCISCO <AP> - Former Mayor Joseph Alioto says the $5,500 monthly support he pays his estranged wife "permits her ' to li ve In' the grandest lifest~le in America lo· day." Included in that li(estyte, Alioto told ~ court hearing Tues- day. was purchase or a Rolls Royce automobile which he said ·'she doesn •t even use.·· Alioto made hJs own opening statement before Superior Court Judge Jay Pfotenhauer, who is handling his plea for dissolution of ~ 36-year marriage. Re and Anaellna AUot~ ba·,. .,een separated stn~ Dec. 2, 1975. • ..Not many people live in fOW' homes and have a Merceda- Ben1 a a B.ol18 &.re• kl the garage at the same time. both bought on the same day,·· Alioto said. .. And the Rolls Royce she doesn't even use. She has a habit of acquiring properties and then not using them.·· Mrs. Alioto was absent for most of her husband's speeeh. The judge ordered her to appear later. Alioto, 80, said he filed for divorce "in desperation.·· in re- action to his wife's on-again, off· again altitude toward dissolution or the marriage. "Angelina chose to be sepilrat· ed --lots of times, .. he said. "She ran away to the mls1Uons, then she tiled for divorce and untiled. and then filed it again, and un- filed it when she read in the papers rumors of my remar· riage." Alioto has been seen frequently in the company of Boston socialite Kathleen Sullivan, 32, • and news accounts have specutated they will marry when his divorce is final. Pfotenhauer also ls consider"· ing Mrs. Alioto's charge of COD· lettipt of court against ber husband for spending l600.000 bf his law firm's income, alles lY in violation of a restraini~ ~r against either party dbi>OsiDI Of commwlity pro~rty. ""'"---·uvaNG IN STYLE• Angelln• Alloto Drug Aboses Suspected at Party in CdM searching Of Boxes Approved WASHINGTON <AP> Richard Nixon lost a court fight today to prevent the government from rummaging through boxes he left behind to see if they con- tain clues to the whereabouts of v alualile .gifts from foreign dignitaries. t U.S. District Judge Aubrey E. Robinson Jr. said the law clearly gives the government the right to look at qyUUa.1 ~ed Pres· demtil hlstoriw materials and just u clearly requtres it to re- turn items that are persOQal and private. ••w,·ve got to 1tart the p~· ess." ~e aaid. •'11lere·s got to be a prelJminary determination lm- mediat.ely of what is personal and private. And if it's personal and private it doesn't belong to the government.·· Steven Frank, a Department of Justice lawyer, said the searchol the records will begin next week. At stake in the bearing was more (han just a listing of the gifts, some of which may be "misslng" through poor rtcord keeping. In fact, the eifls were barely mentioned at all during the two- hour court session. The proposed search is the gov· ernment's first attempt to look through materials in its possession since the U.S. Supreme. Court awarded custody to Uncle Sam -specllytng thal strlct regulations musl govern access. It was also Nixon's fint chance to cballenee those rules'. Under the regulations. Nixon must be given notice that materials will be searched. Frank said the notice will be sent: to Nixon's lawyers within a few days. <See NIXO~. Pag~ A%> mends Coneress create a cateeory or fundlnt tor urban parka which would allow federal purchase of sites deemed sienifi· cant, such as the 330,000 acres in t~t Santa Monica Mountains or the lrvi.De.SOuth CoJUJt area, but that do not meet the require- ment. tor a national park. • u~ a plan approved by the About 1,500 acres of tbe area have been Identified for pubtlo purchase by either the state or the county and one major state (See COAST, Pate A.2) ARTIST'S DRAWING OF MAKESHIFT COURT IN NEw YORK HOSPITAL PRISON WARD SUapec:t In 'Son of S.m' Sleylnga Now Denies He's David Berkowitz ~ Beaupre lwt spent au OI. her 34 yeara1ivinl \Jl whaU1 now the Newport-Keo Unllled School Dlstrict. Not only was she educated in its schools, but ber mother was as well. -The long association bas pro- duced a profound interest on ber part in the workings of the school district. · So last month, when Marian Bergeson announced her res· ignatlon from the school board. Mrs Beaupre was tbe first pel'$0n to take out an application for appointment to Mrs. Bergeson ·a seat. LOng active 1n the district, she figured she stood a pretty good chance to win the seat over four other opponents. When she lost out to anotber school volunteer, B.J. Skllling, she was disappointed but un· daunted. "I'm goinl to run tor the seit in the next election ... she said in .an interview T\lesday. A peppery woman who describes herself as oplnlonaled, Mrs. Beaupre said she is aware it may be a bit early to throw her hat into the ring -the election is a year and five montb.s off -but she says she plans to spend the tlme being nen more active tn the district. Arid In liliJ.ng up bat:kets m>d campaien funds. Slttinl lD the l.Mng raom of her • Santa Ana Helghta home, the . NEW. YORK (AP> -Davie! Berkowitz, who pleaded innocent ~ today toCil.ling three people and wounding a fourth in.the BronX. surprised the bearing by denyinc lb at be was in tact the defendant. slender candidate listed her qualifications which include a varietY of posts with the Bayview Elementary School PT A, work with the Kaiser Middle School PTA. Youth Chairman for the Southern Counties YWCA. work on the Harbor Council of PTAs CSeeSEAT, Pace A!) 1'he man accused of being ~ .«·caliber killer was arraign~ for the second straight day in a makeshift. Kings County Hospit~ <:ourtroom. · JusticeAleltander Cbananauot Bronx Supreme Court asked. ••Are you David R. Berkowitz? .. "No, 1our honor, I am not.'"' replied the 24-year-otd wstal clerk, clad in blue pajamas and.a blue·and·white robe. Defense attorneys. \Vbo en• tered a plea of innocent for Berkowitz on three counts ot murder and one count of attempt.. ed murder stemminc from two attacks ln the Brom, said ttiey were surprised by the 'tatement. Immediately after BerkOwitZ·a response, deten.se attome1 Mark J. Heller asked the judge that DO further questlons "~ directed at the defendant and that be be al· lowed to 5Und mute.•· "I had no idea that this was&~ ing to happen. ne·s undet medication at the hospital.·· si.ld Heller. • The arraianmeot was the second ln two days fol' Berkowitz. DAJLY PILOT ,.,. ........ HEADACHE Keith Hig· ginson, commissioner of the U.S. Bureau of Reclama· lion, explains proposed tightened limitation on ir- rigated lands in California. \ Air Crash Caused By Engine? By ARTHUR R. VINSEL OUIW 0.tty l'tleUtaH Speculation among in · vestigators today suggested engine trouble caused the crash of a cargo plane that slammed in lo a Catalina Island moon· tainside Monday night, kllling both men aboard The dead were identified as pilot Charles C. Clifford. 38, of Long Beach, and Robert G. Graves, also 38, of Cerritos. Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department investigators said they died instantly when their Beechcraft 8 ·18 smashed into the rugged bluff above the sea, just after takeoff. A company spoknman at Long · Beach Municipal Airport notified investigators when the twin· engine plane operated by Air Fast Freight Inc .. failed to arrive on schedule. Graves was a partner in the firm which ferries freight of all . sorts to the island via its Airport ln·the·Sky high atop a nattened mountain on Catalina. .. Clifford was a recent retiree rrom the U.S. Navy and leaves a . wife still maintaining their home in San Diego. A team of investigators from ~he National Transportation Safety Board and Federal Avia· tion Administration was on the island today probing wreckage at the crash site. The bodies of ChHord and Graves were airlifted to the Los Angeles County Morgue follow- mg the 10: 12 a.m. discovery of lbe wreckage Tuesday by sheriffs helicopter. A sheriff's spokesman on the .island said today the shattered wrecl< of the empty cargo plane was found at the l ,OOO·fool level. four miles west of Avalon and a quarter· mile from Long Point. Deputy Don Dunlop, assigned to the LASO Emergency Services Detail on the island year around. calculated where the plane might have slammed into the ·hillside and hiked to the site. Crewmen of a Coast Guard helicopler and cutler offshore spotted it about the same time. Families of Clifford and Graves today had not yet select. ed mortuaries or scheduled funeral services. DAILY PILOT By STEVE MITCHELL ae .. ..,'""...,. f''Hra that tar•• farmlna opl'raUon1 ln Orange County would be broken up because or f t.-df'ral water restrlctJona were e1a1ed 10mewhat today. The UIO·acre llmltatlon 1pecter that Bureau or Recl1m1Uon of· flciab raised MO.OdlY lffrnl DOW not applicable t.o local farrnln1 110Uathl such the Irvine Com· pany. The ~ltuatlon, however. stlll was lesa than clear lbla momlne. The proposal aMounced MOl\· day would limit federaUy- controlled irrigation water to en- courage small "family farms.·· But confusion aroae over the status of water coming from both federal and state sources as la the case in the State Water Proj- ect. The stickler came ln in· terpreting the federal govem· ment's term of "co·mibgllng waler" -that water coming from both federal and state SOUN:e5. The Interior Department an· nounced late Monday that the acreage· Ii mitation regulations proposed were not inten~ed to ap- ply to users of slate water de- livered through a joint state- federal facility where there is no federal subsidy tothe user. That·indicates Orange County agribusinesses, s"cb as the Irvine Company and Rancho Mission Viejo, do not fall under the 160-acre limits and would nol have to divest themselves of ex tra farmlands. But Metropolitan Water Dis- trict -which supplies O~ge County -is currently receiving its water from the Colorado Aqueduct as a result of the drought in the northern part of the state. And while some Bureau of .Reclamation officials do not believe Colorado River water falls under those limitations. they will not positively exclude that possibility. f'romPageAJ SEAT ••. Youth Protection Committee. membership on the districtwide Advisory Committee and Chairman o( the Save Bayview committee. She said she felt so stronaly that she was more qualified for the appointment than any of the other candidates, thai she con- sidered challenging the appoint· ment and forcin( an election. "Butt droppea the idea when I found out it would cost between S20,000 and ~.ooo for the elec- tion,;:.sbe said.. "ntat money would have come out of the distrtct•is 1eneral fund and no way was I ·1oln1 to force the district to spend that kind of money just '° I could be on the school board a year and five months earlier.·· Mrs. Beaupre operates a dllY care center in her home. Children. she says, are her abld· ing interest. "It follows that education is one of their greatest needs and that's why I'm so in· vol ved in the schools "I intend to get even more m· volved in the next year and five months," she added. Kindergarten Registriltion Being Taken Bogus lleariJYl, Slateil .By JOANNE aEYNOLDS Ot .. OMtf .,.... ..... The alle1e<l ringleader ot a group arrested on cbarg that· they were in the process o( prlnt- lnl S71rilllion tn boc\18 S20 Nld $50 blll1 in Los Alamitos was scheduled to appear in federal • court today. 1~11~ Robert Powis. specjal aaent in charge of the Los Anaeles office of the Secret Service. said bail is to be set ft>r Steven Blash, Sr .• !53. Burn-a-Slaa1'e SI .... . Remember the old Burma Shave signs that delighted travelers along the old highways and byways of rural America'> These are 'Burn·A-Shave' signs. on Marguerite Parkway near Alicia Parkway in M.issiQD Viejo. The very serious shaggy doggerel is work of Orange County Fire Capt. Dave Huber, a part-time signmaker, assigned to nearby Station 31, and his w1f e Barbara, who writes poetry. "Fire Season is Here Now," the message warns. "Remember Mrs. O'Leary's Cow ... Please Be Careful With ... Your Matches ••. Or We'll Have Blazes By the Batches ... Rites Set Friday For Stanton ~ Hale Memorial services will be held Friday in Los Angeles for Stan· ton G. Hale, former chairman of Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Company, who died Tuesday al the age of 67. Mr. Hale also had served as a director of the James Irvine Foundation. He died at the UCLA Medical Center after a lengthy illness. A prominent businessman and civic leader, he joined the in- suranqe company now based in Newport Beach in 1963 as presi · dent and member of the board of Frea Page Al • the trial before Judge Robert P . Kneeland. The same jury must now de- termine if Allaway was sane when he took his rifle to the cam· pus library and felled nine people in a six·minute shooting spree. Dr. Castile cjlrne under heavy crosa examination from prps ecutor James Enright who re· peatedly challenged the psychiatrist's belief that Allaway did not understand the nature of his actions. directors He retired as chief ex· ecutive officer and board chairman in 1975. At the time or his death, he was a board member of Carter- Hawley.Hale Stores. Inc • Southern Califorrua Edison Com· pany, Santa Anita Foundation and Pacific Telephone and Tele· graph Company. He was a tru.stee of California Institute of Technology, the Henry Huntington Library and Art Gallery and the Boys Clubs Foundation of Southern California. His civic service also included directorship of the Greater Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce, the California Slate Chamber of Commerce and the American Cancer Society. Services will be conducted at the Westwood Ward Chapel of the Church of Jesus Christ of the Lat- ter Day Saints, 10740 Ohio Ave., . West Los Angeles all p.m. The family sugeests memorial contributions to the Stanton G. Hale-UCLA Medical School Stu· dent Scholarship Fund. I'..._ Page Al COAST ••• \>urchase of the El Moro Canyon area bas been held op for three years in a lawsuit filed by Joan Irvine Smith. Spokesman £o11 the Friends Mark .Northcross appe.ared before the Irvine City Council Tuesday to urge their backing of the report when it is sent to Congress at the end of the year. He said the purchase has the backing of U. S. Senators Alan Cranston lD·Calif. > and S. 1. Hayakawa <R·CaJif. > as well as Asse'mblyman Ron Cordova (0. El Toro> and Rep. Robert Badham <R·Newport Beach>. Bureau officials say con- gressional support will be needed if there is lb 6e federal purchase of the area because the group backing public acquisition of the Santa Monica Mountains has de· veloped "congressional clout ... something the Orange County erouplacks.' The lrvine council voted 4-1 to study the report for possible further action. The dissenting vote was cast by John Burton who destrlbed the list or the re· port's legislative backers as ··in· famous.·· He did not elaborat~. by the federal maatstrat.e in San Diego. Blash was arr~ted early Tues- day morning ln his San Diego home by agents wbo bad just taken his tW"o alleged ac- complices into cuatody at the Los AlamlU>s printing plant where the phony money was allegedly being printed. The other two men. Robert Sanu&f'l Lewis, ~. of Panorama City and Elvin Baker, ~' of San Dlego appeared before Los Angeles federal magistrate Ralph Geffen Tuesday. They were released after posting SS,000 bail. According to Powis, the arrest of the trio culminated a month· long surveillance of the group triggered when Blash IP· proached an unidentified Los Angeles resident to buy paper and ink for his operaLion. Blash, according to Powis, was ,convicted of counletfelting in 2tn after be sold S7,000 worth of bogus S20 bills to Secret Service agents. Fog Delays Cup Trials NEWPORT, R.I. <AP) --For the third consecuti~ day. weather forced cancellation to- day of racing In the America's Cup final defense trials between Coui;ageous and Enterprise. <Earlierstory, 810) With fog limiting visibility to about one·half mile and a severe thunderstorm watch posted, the New York Yacht Club Race Com- mittee held two practice starts between Courageous and En- terprise, then canceled tacing. They were paired again on Thursday. Enright argued that state- ments later made lo the police by Allaway clearly indicated that he knew the nature of his actions and that he had shot at least seven people. It's the wind-up of our great furniture event Additionally, Enright told Dr. CastUe, statements made by AJ. laway to his estranged wife im· mediately •after he fled the cam· pus indicated that the shootings were carefully planned. Bonnie Allaway, who sued her husband for divorce three days before the shootings, earlier told investigators that Allaway told her while they waited for police at the Hilton Inn that Debbie Paulsen wu one of his victims. f'ro• P.,,e AJ NIXON ••• R. Stan Mortenson. Nixoo·s lawyer, said the former presi· dent bas no object.ion to provid· ing the glfts inventory to the gov. eroment but said he feared that the search might reveal personal docqmenta as well .. Wblle the fight over custody of NJxon'a papers, tapes and other mat4lrlala was going tbr~gh the cpuH.s, the boxes remained un: touched under court order. Now that the case q settled, regula- tb:>n. foe 80\'etnftlent access .,ave gone into effect and rule11 for public access are being con· sidered by Congress. Last month, State Department Chief ol Protocol Evan S. Dobelle wrote the General Services Ad· piinlstratloo tbat "questions have arisen'' about tbe location of foreign 1lfts to Nlxon and his family. Publicly. at least. Do belt• didn't apeU out the ques. tionaorwbbbked them. _ddlebaek EDITION VOL. 70, NO. 236, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES Nixon Loses WASHlNGTON tAP> -· Richanl Nixon lost a court fiaht t ~lo prnent the covemment rtOm rwnma11n1 throuch bo• he left bth1Dd to see 11 lbey con· lain cl to tbe whereabouts of valuable Cills from foreign dj O&tariel. \J:S. D' lrid Judie Aubrey E . Robinson Jr. said th• law clearly gives t.he covernment the right to look at anythmi deemed pres- ldenU .. hiatorlcat maten.Js and Just u clearly requlret it to re· turn it.ems tbal are perlOi\al and private. ··we've sot to alart the proe. esa, •· he said. '1'here'1 tot to be a preliminary determination im- mediately of what is personal and pnvate. And if it'apenonaJ and private i1 doesn •t ~long to the aovernment. ·· Ste\'en Frank, a Departmenk(,_ Bum-a-Shave Signs Ju Uce lawyer, Hid the search of tb records Will bestn next week. At stake In the hearing was more than Just a listing ~ the gifts, aome or which may be ··roissing" throuch poor reeord keej>ine. In !act, the &lfts w buely mentioned at all durin1 the two.- ho\U' coUrt. session. The proposed March ls the gov· ernment's first attempt to look Remember the old Burma Shave signs that delighted travelers along the old highways ~nd byways of rural America? These are 'Burn-A-Shave' signs, on Marguerite Parkway near Alicia Parkway in Mission Viejo. The very serious shaggy doggerel is work of Orange County Fire Capt. Dave Huber. a part·time signmaker. assigned to nearby Station 31, and his wife Barbara, who writes poetry. "Fire Season is Here Now." the message warns. "Remember Mrs. O'Leary's Cow •.• Please Be Careful With ..• Your Matches .•. Or We'll Have Blazes By the Batches .•• . Allaway Said ·Psyello~i~' Br TORI BA.LEY °' .. ~ .. IUfl A psychiatrist testified Tues· day in Orange County Superior Court that convicted killer Edward Charles Allaway was in an acute psychotic state four or five days before he shot seven people to death on the Cal State Fullerton CB!llPUS. Dr. Daniel Castile told the jury as the third defense witness in the sanity hearing that he does not believe that Allaway can re- call what really happened on Ju. ly 12, 1976. Rejecting a prosecution sug- gestion that Allaway, 38, is fak- ing psychosis, Dr. Castile argued that the defendant has no reason to "put on an act. "He feels he will be Incarcerat- ed for the rest of his hfe and he doesn·t care where. He is a typical case of paranoid schizophrenia ... The prosecutor's questioninc· of Dr. Catile produced the rev- el alion that Allaway had a romantic attachment to one or his victims, Deborah Paulsen, 2S. Over the objections of deputy pubUc: defender Ron Butler, statements by Miss Paulsen's mother to the effect that Allaway planned to live 'With her dauthter were read into tho record. Mrs. Paulsen told in· vesUgators that Allaway told her daushter he had asked hjs wile, ' Bonn.le, tor a divorce. She said her daughter seemed to enjoy the relationship with Al- laway and offered no objections to his suggestion that he move in with her. Castile at that point did not dis- pute Enright's suggestion that Allaway knew the identity of hi s victim when he pursued Miss Paulsen down a library hallway and shot her in the chest as she fled . The jury found Allaway guilty or seven counts of murder and two counts of assault with a dead- ly weapon in the guilt phase or the trial before Judge Robert P. Kneeland. The same jury must now de- termine if Allaway was sane when he took his rifle to the cam- Police Hold ~a Mail After Crash pus Ubrarr. anctf flied. nhte pdOpte in a she-minute shooting spree. • Dr. Castile came under heavy cross examination from pros- ecutor James Enright who re- peatedly challenged the psychiatrist's belief that Allaway did not understand the nature of his actions. Enright argued that state· ments later made to the police by Allaway clearly indicated that he knew the nature of his actions and that he bad shot at least seven people. AdditionaJly, Enrigbt told Dr. Castile, statements made by Al- laway to his estranged wife im- mediately alter he fled the cam· pus indicated that the shootings were carefully planned. Fight for BQxes .;. through materials ln Its possession alnce the U.S. Supreme Court awarded custody· to Uncle Sam -specifying that strict regulaUoQ.S must sovern access. It was aJso Nixon's first chance to challenge tbose rules. Under the regulatle>ns, NJ.icon must be given notice that materials wnr be searched. Frank said the notice will be sent to Nixon's lawyers within a few days. R. Stan Mortenson, Nlxon's lawyer, said the former presl· dent has no Objection to provid· ing the cifts inventory to the gov· emment but said he feared that the search might reveal personal documents as well. While the fight over custody of Nixon's papers, tapes and other materials was going through the courts, tbe boxe$ remained un- touched under court order. Now that the case Is settled, ~@l•· Uons tor eovemment ac ve gone into effect and rule& or public access are beln1 don· sidered by Congress. Last month. State DeNrtm Chief of Prok>CO.l tvan S. Dobelte wrote th& General Services fttd· ministration that ·•questions <See NIXON. Pace AZ) r 3 Roads Backei Planners View Viejo Netivork Orange County planning com- missioners have stuck by their earlier recommendation to add a network of three four-lane roads north or Mission Viejo to county plannin.r maps. County supervisors, who will decide Sept. 14 if the roadways should be added lo road plans. had asked the commission to re- consider its recommendation. Supervisors Ralph Diedrich and Thomas Riley said they op- posed the three roadways which would link what is now un· developed area with a future six- lane road stretching southeast from El Toro Road. Riley said Tuesday the roadways are not justified by land use plans and could violate population limits supervisors set last summer for the south county area. But David Celestin, manager of advance planning for the Mis- sion Viejo Company. told com- missioners Tuesday the roads may be needed both to improve traffic nows in north Mission Vie· jo and to serve future develop. mentifitoccurs later. Ruth Saadi of the Orange Coun· ty League of Women Voters op· posed the roadway addition saying it could open about 1,500 acres of Rancho Mission Viejo for development. But Commissioners Earl Wooden, Peggy Cranston and Richard Footner said they still believed the roadways should be 'Living IDgh' Alioto~ E»-td/e'1 Style SAN FRANCISCO <AP> .:. .. of acq~ric'9J"Opert1es and tbeQ Jl'ormer Mayor Joseph AliotO notuslngthem. •• • . says the ~.600 monthly 1tupport • ~ he pays hit eatrang'd Ytif e • Mn. Alioto ,.,as •bient for "p~rml her· to live In the Oit GI htr balbancrs b:: arandest li!estyle in Atnerica to. l'he ~ otdeted her to a~ar day·· later. • Alioto, 60. said he filed for Included ln that lifestyle. divorce ''ln desperation;· in r~ Alioto told a court bearing Tues-action to bis wife's on-agaJn. oft· day, was purchase of a Rolls again attitude toward dissolution Royce automobile which he said of the marriage. .. shedoesn'teven use.·· .. Angelina chose to be separat· Alioto made his own opening ed -lots of limes ... he said. .. She statement before Superior Court r~ away to the missions, then Judge Jay Pfotenhauer. who is ~he filed tor divorce and unfiled, handling his plea for disaolutlon and then fl)ed it again, and un· of the 36-year marriage. He and filed it wben she read in the AniJelina Alioto have been papers rutnors or my remar- separated since Dec. 2, 1975. riage. ·• '"Nol many people Jive In four Alioto bas been seen frequenU" homes and have a Mercedes-' Benz and a Rolls Royce in the in the company of Boston garage at the same time, both sociaJitA! K;athleen Sullivan. 32, boughtontbesameday,"AJloto and news accounts have said. .. And the Rolls Royce she speculated they will marry wben doesn't.even use. She has a habit <SeeANGEUNA.PageA!l added to keep options open. Commissioner John Cyprien,. who was appointed to tbe com- mission this w«!ek. abstained. and Commissioner William Mac· Dougall was absent. Commissioners also stuck ~· their earlier recommendation that portions oC Live Oak and Trabuco Canyon Roads be re- tained in their ruraJ state rather than be earmarked for widening' later. Supervisors had asked them tQ consider designating tbe roadways for widening to four lanes. But Mrs. Cranston said that would mean removal of old and scenic trees along the roadway. Overdoses At~ P~~Yed AD ialJ.IQJit party tn Corona del Mar eniled in a duh for the hospital early today for four participants who police allege may have taken too much animal tranquilizer, Two paramedic units. two private amt>Wances. a fire truck and two police cars raced to an apartment at 805 Poppy Avenue. where officers say they found two women and a man nude and un- consclous. Police said another man, who was clothed, was conscious but ••extremely confused.·· Fire department officials tden; tifi«d the two men, who weiit taken to Costa Mesa MemotjJl Hosplt.al for emergency treat• ment, as Eduardo Pena and David Vojnovich, both of Stan· ton. Both are in their twenijes. Neither police nor firema were able to identify the two women, who appareatly occupy the apartment, other than to~ termine their first names were Karen and Sandy. The two a,. pear to be in their thirties. firemen saJd. They were taken to Hoag Memonat Hospital. Accordine to NewPOrt Beacb . police, the four apparently In.· haled PCP, an animal tran• (f uilizer, sometime during the night. CSee PARTY, Pace A!) 8)' 'O NIL at:YNOL ................... 1'he all n I ad r ot a sroup eel on ch1r1• t Ill th~y •ue In the pr~H• of print tna ST rililhon 1n boiu• S2(I and ISO • btllt 1n Lo11 Alan'lltol\ wa11 " Air Crash Caused By Engine? 8)' ARTIIUR R. VINSEL Ot•o.llyl"I ... ...., SpeculalJon amona Ill veati1aJJ>rs today 1usge1ted ~sine trouble caused the crash of a cargo plane that slammed In· to a Catalina hland moun ta1nside Monday night. killing both men aboard The dead were identified as pilot Charles C . .Clifford. 38. or Long Beach , and Robert ('; Gr aves. ali.o 38, ol Cerritos. t,.os Angeles County Sheriffs Department inve!itigators said they died Jnslantly when their Beechcrart 8 ·18 smashed lntothc rugged bluff above the sea, just after takeoff A company 'pokes man at Long Beach Municipal Airport notified investigators when the twm- ('ngine plane operated ~Y Air Fast Freight Inc , failed lo arrive on schedule Graves \\US a partner in the firm which ferries freight of all sorts to the island vw its Airport in-the-Sky high atop a flattened mountain on Catalina Clifford was a rl'cent retiree frOl1\ the lJ.S Navy and lt'aves a wife stlll mamtaimng their home mSan Diego A team of investigators from the National Transport1i1tion Safety Board and Federal Avia· lion Adm1mstral1on was on the jshmd today probing wreckage al lhe crash site. The bodies of Clifford and Graves were airlifted to the Lo:. ~ngeles County Morgue follow- ' mg the 10: 12 a m. discovery of •the wreckage Tuesday ~v sheriffs helicopter. · A sheriff's spokesman •n Uae l~and said today the shattered wreck of th.-empty cargo plane was found at the 1.000.root level. rour miles west of Avalon and a quarter-mile from Long Poll\t Deputy Don Dunlop. assigned to the LASO Emergency ~rvlces Detail on the Island year around. calculated where the plane might ha\•e slammed into the hillside and h.iked to the site. Crewmen of a Coast Guard · helicopter and cutter offshore spotted it about the same time. "There is derinite speculation ' they had engine trouble.·· a sheriff's spokesman said today. "They were both veteran pilots and they made that flight five times a day. They look off after unloading and apparently made a l!JO.qegree turn to come back to the airport.·· Families or Clifford a l\d Graves today had not yet select· ed mortuaries or scheduled funeral services. F,....PGfleAJ NIXON ••• have arisen·· about the location of foreign gifts to Nixon and his family. Publlcly. at l~asl. Dobelle didn't spell out the ques· tionsor who asked them . He said he wanted an inventory or all 1lfts Jn the custody of the National Archives, an agency ot the GSA. which is storU\g all the mat.rials left behind by the NJx· on administration. DAILY PILOT rhf<Juled tu MPPHr m federal c.·ourt today Hobert Powis, tptolal ujent ln churAe ol lb.-Loi An1ele1 offaee of the Secret ~rvlce. uld ball ls lo be.• at>l tor Steven Blaah, Sr .. ~· by tho federitl ma1l1trute ln San l>lt'"O Bia. b waa arrested urly TUOGs· day mornln& In his San Diego horn. by 11.m~ who had JUSt takn ht1 two alleced iC complic into c tody _.l the Los Alamitos printiQI phtnt where the phony money wu alletedlY be&Q.i printed. The other two men, Robert Samuel Lewis. 54. of ~anorama City and Elvin Baker. 60. of San Diego appeared before Los Angeles federal maeistrate Ralph Geffen Tuesday. They were released after postina SS,000 bail. According to Powis. the arrest of the trio culminated a month· loni surveillance of the group triggered w he n Blash ap- proached an unidentified Los Angeles resident to buy paper and ink for his operation Blash, according to Powis, was convicted of counterfeiting 1n 1971 after he sold S'l,000 worth or bogus S20 bills to Secret ~rvice agents. Powis said the three men. working out of Vanguard Automated Graphics. 10013 Bloomfield St.. alletedly planned le print a total of $1 million and pass the money in Mexico. At the time of the Tuesday mornini: raid. Powis s aiti agents confiscated $150,otO werth of S20 and S50 bills which had only the backs printed A .. WI,..,.... H_EADACHE -:· Keith Hig- ginson, commissioner of the U.S. Bureau of R ec lam a - t~ on, expl.ai~s proposed tightened hm1tation on ir· rigated lands in California. Water Board Aide Resigns · Courtney R . Chandler, an Orange County Water Distrh:t ICWD > director for 24 years hes resigned his post effective Sept. 1. Chandler, 73, a former Santa An{l mayor. was president of the OCWD board of directors Crom 1973 to 1975 and has served as Santa Ana's repr~sentatJve on the board since 1953. He-announced blJ restgnatJon ~1ast week iii Fountain Valley, ell· ing personal reasons. Santa Ana city councilmen will select a replacement for Chandler ln Sep· tember or October. . F,.....PageAJ l ANGELINA .. ARTIST'S DRAWING OF MAKESHIFT COURT IN NEW YORK HOSPITAL PRISON WARD ..... Suspect In 'Son of Sam' Sfaylnga Now Deni .. H•'• David Berkowttz 'Sam' Den\es ltlen.titY 1Jefe1111e Attomeya Startled at SU.~t'• Reply NEW YORK IAP > David Berkowitz. who pleaded innocent today lo killing three people and wounding a fourth in the i ronx. s urprised the hearing by denying that he was in fact the defendant. The man accused of being the 44-calibcr killer was arrairned for the second strajrht day in a makeshift Kini:s County Hospital courtroom. Justice Alexander Chananau of Bronx Supreme Court as ked, "Are you David R. 8 erkewitz?" "No. your honor, I am not," r eplied the 24· year-ohl postal clerk, clad m blue pajamas and a blue-and-white rob<'. Defense attorneys. who en- tered a plea of innocent for BerkowitT. on three counts of murder and one C'Ount of attempt- . E'ro• Page Al ~WATER ... "I don't believe our contract\\ 1th MWO contajns an} reference to the 160,acre 1imitation · ed murder stem.ming frem two attacks in the Bronx, said they were surprised by the statement. Immediately after Ber.Jtowitz's response, defense attorney Mark J. Heller wed the judge that no further questions "be directed at the defendant and that Jte be al· lowed to stand mute." "l had ne ldea that this was go-• ing lo happen. He's un4er medication at lhe hospital, .. said Heller. The arraignment was the secon d 1n two days for Berkowitz. Tuesday. he pleaded innocent to charges of murderrng two young women and woundmg five people m the Bronx. Amin Sets Trials NAIROBI, Kenya <APJ -Six· teen Ugandans have been put on lrial on charges of plotting the overthrow of President ldi Amin. a Uganda radio broadcast said Tuesday. It was believed to be the first time Amin has held trials for persons accused of plot· tm~ against him He waa previouAly indicted for the murder in Brooklyn of Stacy Moskowitz. 20, t¥ last of Son or Sam's.six homicide victims and the attemp{ea murder of 'Miss Mo~kowuz:· dale, Robert Violante, also 20. In all, seven people were wounded by the killer. PARTY ••• Pena called his wife early this morning and when she got to the . apartment at about 7 a.m .. she ca lied the firemen. Sgt. Darryl Youle of the police department said. a small quantity of what he believes is PCP was found in the apartment. He as· serts that he also found a large quantity of marijuana as well. He said be plans to file charges against the feur. Parametlics saii none of the.- four victims was in critical con· dition from the ciru~ overdese. PCP, wbea taken in la rge amounts, can cause unconscious· ness, convulsions and vomltmg and possibly death. Women Refused Pill Use ZEEHAN, Australia CAP> Women ln this small town on the Australian island oC Tasmania are angry because the ooly doc· tor refwes to pr~ctibe birth con- trol pllls Or. Desmond Bracken. a 64· year old eeneral pracUtioner, says he won't is.sue the prescrip· lions nece:>sary lo obtain the pill because he opposes mechanical and chemical melhods of con- traception ·'They cannot make me change my mmd, .. said Bracken, who took over lbe medical pract.ice in• the mining town ol 3,000 three weeks aeo. "A lot of us can 10 elsewhere. and wlll, .. said Joy Hiddlestone. "but. the nearest town ls 25 miles away over a windina road ... Tho dOctor told a protest meet· lng MOnday he opposes the pill on reUgious grounds and because he believes it is unsafe. ''The women insist. whether I think so or not, that they have the right to tell me what to do:· Bracken said later. "This is a dictatorial attUude. '· The doctor, married 33 years. s_aid he believes oral contracep· lives cause fatal side effects. in· eluding cancer He said he has studied the teaching on contraception of the Moslem, Shinto and Roman Catholic religions. and .. they all agree: their views are based on experience not expediency ... He cited the practice of one tribe in ancient times. He said the men and women got together only once every five vears for sexual relations and conception. Anaheim Youth Killed in Crash Injuries suffered ln an accident early Sciturday morning in Orange claimed the life or a 17· year-old Anaheim youth Tuesda\' evening, Orange County cor- oner's deputies reported today. John Ennis died al St. Joseph flospitat deputies said. He was JOJured when he lost control of his motorized bicycle in the 1800 block of Tustin A venue in Orange and struck his head on the pa\'e· ment, depunes reported. Bt•t Williams' counterpart in Sacrarhentcl. Gerald King, said that if Oran~e County is receiv- ing 1rri~at1on waler Crom a federnl project -either the Bureau of Redamat1on or the Corps of Engineers -"Then the excess land rule would apply .. Many of the dams and pumps on the Colorado River were built by the Corps of Engineers and Colorado River water is treated ut federally controlled facilities. 3ShortDays And John Lauten, general manager of the MW D, said this 111ornlng he could not positively exclude the possibility that large Orange County ranch operations would not fall under the acre llmitations. "What we do know 1s that there are ne federal subsidies going to any l\fWD water users, .. Lauten said. "And, ln any event, it would be many years before any de· cislon is made ... Officials at the Irvine Com- pany, which has 14,000 acres in row crops and erchards, say they are not concerned about the 'ro- posed regulations. ''On it£ race , the proposal is so unrealistic that it is never likely to be implemented ... said a com· pany spokesman. "In time and public mterest it surely will be corrected, whether through leglslatJon or litigation.·· MWD's Lauten said the pro- pos al , stemm ing from the Reclamation Act of 1902. is not feasible In 1977. "Back then 160 acres was a pretty good chunk of Jand for a man with a horae and plow," he sal<t. "But toda)', amall farmers can't artord to buy or rent modem equipment to produce many field crops ... "Small is beautiful,·· be said. "but it's also very expensive." Save up to 40% It's the wind-up of our great furniture event --"~~ ..... .,... ..,...._ .I.. - . -.... . ~-~ -~ BY. MILTONM06&0Wft'Z One out ot every tleht MW eats beinC bcluibt in America thelod.ays LI madO In Japan. That's tho 1tartlln1 1tatl1Ue that emercu from tht sales resuJtj ~led by autA>makWI for lilt mont.b, While the Japanese penet.ratlcmll ~tte near what it ls tn color televtalcn. wber• it baa mounted to mor. 'than 33 pere t. tbo automobUo bustneu ll a linldl bl.Qu atfair ~ moet Americana are probabb' not aware tb8.t ~ JapailtM make. are t~ such a bl• dee. -ONE B.E&SON TUY AU NOT aware 11 that 1ale1 of Japanese cars are 1UU be&VllY eoocentrated in coastal st•tes. near p0rts-ol-eatry. WhUe J&Pfnes• models ac(OUJlt· eel fot 13 percent of national aalee in July. their lb are of the Los Aqelea market, the bluest car market ln 'the naUon, was approaching 40 percent -and Toyota wu batWn1 Ford and Chevrolet for sales leadenltlp tri that marlcet. Of the 912,000 can bought by Americans in July, 181,000 were foreign makes. Ttie lmporta wre tbua takln1 nearly 20 percent of the enth'e market. And whereu in the early diuta of tbe irnPorted ear aur1e, tho -paraClo wu led by German and British makes, the Japanese now dominate. Of the six top.selling imports, fiYe are Japanese. Of the 12 tof>. selllne imports, eight are Japanese. The onJy Money Tree non.Japanese makes in the top 13 ere Votkswa1en <ln 3rd place), Fiat (in 7\J\ place). Volvo Un 9th place> and Mercedes-Benz On lotb place). Counted in Ute Japanese tota1I are cars made there for U.S. auto companies. Chrysler brinp in tbe Colt' and Arrow from Japan. And the Opels sold at Buick dealers are 8lso manufactured in Japan, General Motors having transferred the production from Getmanf. HEBE ARE.THE SALES TOTALS for Japanese cars during the month of July: Toyota Datsun Honda Subaru Arrow Co!t Mazda ()pel . 47,248 33,159 21,277 5,9" 4,540 4,482 4,21S 2,707 Toyota, by Itself, accounted for 6,2 percent of the U.S. market, outsold the Dodge division of Chrysler and retailed twice as many cars as Cadillac. ")· ~ Datsun, accounting to~ 3.6 percent of the U.S. marbt, came close to outselling Dodge and sold 10,000 more cars than Cadillac. HONDA. WBICHHAS A WAITING list for its-cars, sold close to what Cadillac sold and retailetl nearly 10,000 more cars than American Motors Corp. Having done so well shipping cars here by boat, the Japanese are preparing for the next stage: putting plants into the United St.ates. It's a strategy pioneered 60 years aio by General Motors and Ford. whose plants are scattered across the world. Airline Asks Cui'· In Fares tO Asia ltt ,. WASJUNGTON <:AP> -Trans International Alrliqes has asked the Civil Aeronautics Board for permissiop to Of· fer scheduled alt service to Alla at tares more than 50 per· cent below current levels. The chart.er airline's president. Henry P. Huff, said the slashed fares would "generate substantially increased .A11ian travel and introduce an entire new market of American tourists to tbe OrieJit." THE PBOPosED NEW SERVICE would be between five U.S. cities and Hong Kong and Tokyo. TIA also would have to obtain permission from the Japanese governm~t and the Crown Colony of Hong Kong. Sample one· way fares to Hong Kong from Los Ancel.a, Oakland and Seattle would be $299, compared with the pr . sent sclieduled fare of '856. The one-"ay fare to Hong Kong from New York Would be $3119 and from Ctucago $339. One. way fare to Tokyo on TIA scheduled filalits WO\dd be·$239 from the West Coast cltiea, $a29 from New York and $219 from Chicago. . TIA carries about 3Q,_O®_charter ~assen~ annual~ to the Far East. ~ i'oa THE SCHEDULED FUGR'rS. the carrier would use wide·bodY DClO Jets with all-economy clus seating. Reservations would be made in advance. and tickets coulfj be purchased through travel aaents. Three weeks aco T~ proposed a low.coat scheduled service to Brussels. B~lglum, from 15 American cities at about half the cost of a regular ticket. Great Soiithwest . µstsE~loss For the second quarter, Gren ~thwat Corp .• which operates tho Coto de C•sa property ln soutbeu~ . Orallge County, ewned $3,85S.Obe>. or 8IS cents a abare. on re-venues of $42.909.~. Jn th6 Uk• period lat ~ear. the eompNlf earned $7,139:000, or Sl.48, qn revenua Of $40,Mt~. tor the fltst aix. m~UIS, Gteat ~west earned $2.~ooo. or •s ~ents. on revMu• of .-,tsl.ooo. In the first ~alf of 197$. the eompaoy ~ed tf,5'1,000, or 91 cents, Od rQvenues of $45,4,41,()00. ;Atrellefes s..,,.,.1 .. u.i-.. DEAR PAT: Where in Oranse County can I ask about avall;tble federal civil service opalift&a? N. E .. Santa Ana Hgts. For an open job announcement list tor federal . clvll service posltJons write the Federal Job ln- f ormaUOll Center, 3' civic Center Plaza, Room Ill, Santa Ana, CA. 92701, or phone 836-2171. . Information about state civil service jobs is available from the California Personnel Board, 107 S. Broadway, Los Angeles, CA. 90012 (phone: (213) 620·%790). Ore.s D_,.iees 0..,.1• a ... DEAR PAT: Is there any club for devoted circus fans? My son, a teenager, has attended every circus in Southern California since be was a small boy. I think he's read everything ever printed about circus life. L.T., Irvine &. • Your son can Join more than 2,000 other clttus IJ'bclers by writlpg to the Circus Fans Association of Amenca, Box 605, AllrOn, IL "5t7. Tbe Circus IUstorlcal Society, 2515 Dorse& Road, Columbus, OH 43221, also may Interest him. ~ ~led .Otd1 AlrHtte Pfltl• DEAR PAT: I've heard that an airline has the , •• . •ight to cancel a person's reservation· if he doesn't •i• show up at the gate a half hour before departure time. ls this true? P.G., Huntington Beach No, but you must appear at tbe gate at least 10 , lo 20 mlnutes before the filght b acbed.alec:l to le.ave • • to pro&ee& yoar ftftnaUon from canceU.Uoa. If • yoa antve early and are bumped from a domesUc canter anyway, ClvU Aeroaaatlea Board regula- tions eatlde you to J>otb a writtea .C.tement of your rjglrts and cenaln eompensatfem. Yea doa't qoallfy tor eompensatklll II tbe ~t ls delayed or U yoa are bumped bec1ue tbe llrllDe •bltitates a plaae with fewer seat. or cancels tbe fi1&1al. Reader'• Gr .. • , .. ,, Gl'ft!llft" DEAR PAT: I've spent a fortune on lawn pro· ducts, but the grass still isn't doing well. Can you find out where I can have soil tested at a reasonable price? J .J ., Newport Beach Roger's Gardens of Newport Beaeb qarsery will arrange for an Inexpensive aoll test by mall tbroagb Gto/Power lawo products. Include samples of both bare soil aad pau·covered soil. The results will lel you know What materials need to be added to yoar lawn for balance and best powtll. Most nanerlea teJl.bsg Kelloa&'• garden prodacta -alaooffet10Uana1J1Jab, IU.U. • PATIENT LADY Ill WINS THIRD CUP RACE Catamaran Br .. ka Down; Skipper Protests Patient Lady IJ?in Marked by PFOtest · By ALMON LOCK.ABEY. o.lty ............ .,.. Patient Lady UI. the C Class catamaran that is defending title to the Little America's Cup won her third straight race In a best four of seven series tuesday. Ordidsbe? The answer to that hinged Qn the decision of the judges as to whether the race committee waited too long to start the race, thus contributing to the Australian challenger Nicbol'9s n ·s second breakdown or the series. Al.SO IDNGING ON THE verdict will be the answer to this question; Was today's race the third or fourth of the series? It all came about this way: The rules of the International C Class Catamaran Trophy (Little America ·s' Cup> clearly state that the race shall be started if the winds are blowing in a range between four and 25 miles per hour. At the 12:30 p.m. starting time Tuesday the wind was definitely blowing more tban the minimum four miles per hou.r. But the race com- mittee didn ·t like the way the zephyrs were shifting a bout. Too difficult to set a proper weather mark. SO THEY ANNOUNCED TO both competitors that the start was being delayed. There was no pro- test from Patient Lady's skipper Duncan MacLane. But Nicholas II ·s skipper Lindsay Cunningham voiced a verbal protest. indicating he liked the weight of wind as It was. The wind didn't settle down to a true westerly. but the race committee started lhe race apybow ··~ an hour tale. All thoughts of a protest vanished from Cun· ningham 's mind at the first weather mark where he found hlmself 18 seconds ahe•d ot the defender. On the ensuifte reacbin1 te1 the-Aussl& skipfer began to entertain sctcond thoughts 1Vbell SscL,ane brought Patient Lady from behind and roundf!d tbe wing mark four seconds ahead.. ON THE RUN TO THE leeward mark Cun- ningham again dismissed any thoughts of protest when he found a favorable slant of wind that put him ahead at the mark by a minute and 40s~nds. Winds shifts along the ensuin& weather leg further favored the challenger and at the weather pin Nicholas II was enjoying a 4 minute. 24 secood lead. increasing it to 4 :30 on the next downwind leg. Then things began to happen. On the next we~ther leg Patient Lady III chopped 30 seconds ore Nicholas Irs lead. No big deal -except that the de· NOllTit ~ · . . · KTLA 0 8:00 •Mfhe Fly." David NORTH'S FIRING ~~~ not come ~s. a sur· ~ Hedison (billed as Al in this 1958 horror prise. There had been cqttcaspt of his saaltng ta~-flick) is really bugged when he tries out tics and he bacl fared badly asalnst Courageous m h" f i · · previous races, losing because of tactical errors. 1~ new trans ormat on machine. Vincent Malin Burnham who has been serving •s up.. Price co-stars. wind helmsman. wi'n take the boat at the start. KHJ 0 8:00 --.. Arrowhead:• · and H~hoff will handle the boat upwind. John Charlton Heston and Jack Pala ce Marshall will remain at Ute helm on the reaching square off as antagonists in this 1953 eP.ic. and downwind lees. · western. "nte reason I've been fired is because our tac-CBS f) 9:00 . "Attack on Terror: tics have ~en amis~;· North ~aid. "I dol\'t be· The FBI vs. the Ku Klux Klan." The grudge it .1 n be talung some time orr for a f!~ second and final part of this four-hour ••Y•· but I ll be around -but not on Enterprise. • movie based on the KKK slayings of three NORTH SAID HE FELT the America's tlip co'tnmittee bad put pressure on the Enterprise syn- dicate, the Fort Schuyler Foundation. to make the change. "There are only two weeks left before the cup final begins Sept. 13, and l see that the America's Cup committee put some pressure on to make the change;• said North ... I don't feel bitter about it. When I went Into lt, I knew something like this could happen.·· ~;.- George Hinman,~ senior memberofthe6elec- tion committee, denied the committee had an)'lhlng to do with North's firing. · SPECt/LATION BAS BEEN that Enterprise. a new yacht, was the favored boat of the New York: Yacht Club, and it ther~fore took a greater intefest in bow that boat fared than the other two -the Kings Point Syndicate entry of Courageous and In· dependence. ··ves, l"ve heard those rumors. too:· said Hin- 31,SOO~ign At State U. SAN DIEGO (AP) -A near·recoard 31,500 stu- dents are reglstertnc for tbe fall semester at San Diego State, officials said today. The final fall registra- tion in 1975 came to 31,557. 1'!le total Jl.Ye qo was 28,631. civil rights workers. Wayne Rogers, Dabney Coleman and Ned Beatty are featur~. TV DAILY · LOG 8:00 • Cl> ((17) CJ)) .. GGCl)<II ... • ............ tf .. S.. Cl)s-etr,te •C1><8<D) .. ec....-... •Waer ...... COllt'd from 4:30PM. Los Altctles Oodtm vs. P'ittsWril Pntts. • .. Slliltl & ,_ m ~ • Mftlltll• S .... Oaklind A's vs. Dtlroft Tigers. GUedric~ • Dr..tlc Serill G>&.tltMt -6:30-u llowie: CC) (90) "TIMI Art tf Low" (com) '6f>-Oick Yin Oy\e, James Gwner. Elke Sommer. Cl) ""' Criffll9I ;-aDJled. Sdflla a.. (tm CJ)) 1111 ... llllgw az.. cam ....... OCJJ . • Mtyr... fender gained another 13 seconds on the reaching .~~~:!:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ leg and still another 2S seconds at the leeward mark where Nicholas ll"s lead wasstill a healthy 3:22. Then, guess what? AT THE NEXT WEAmER mark Patient Lady was ahead by 29 seconds. Tbe personnel on the stake boat reported-that Nicboln 11 appe~ to be having some tro~ble but was still sailing. As indeed she was, losi.na only lo more secC>DQs on the next run. So no one was greaUy surprised when P~tlent Lady ill patiently salled across the fl.nisli lme with a healthy 1:3Sto.spare. . The surprise catne. when Nicholas )[ came limping across with a protestfiagfiyin&. •