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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-08-30 - Orange Coast Pilot* • Man CritieBI in • • . t • . • ~· Bank '11nnlel Heist Thwarted ,. TUESDAY AFTERNOON. AUGUST 30, 1977 YOL ... -. -J •c:onoas. • PAOel '111eapaeitated' Son of Sam . ( Unfit for Trial Nixon's ActioDs - ' 'Sbange' They aald ms career was noun-- derina; "He went QP on that bridge as a last gamble. He thought this 1amble woW.d brine him atten-JJon and rm,ht lead to somo auc· ceas," said a friend, who ret\lsecl to beideritlfled. The attempt was not a spur-d. the-moment occurrence. A room- mate a&id Rodlll bad climbed one of the towers on the bridae April 18 with the intention of jumpln8. Police l>Ulled him down then . .MondQ, he didn't lllow them the~ce. / ~.§f~ told police and news or· gantzatkms that lie intended to Jump. tbolr a cab onto the bttct;e about DOODJ Uien leaped when In· formed by'a POUceman. who was tl')'tnc to rescue bhn, that bUbor \inlta wwe bi UM watet belOw. Rodill, MN> wore proQctlve gear idCludlu a flotation Collar ant • .Hddecf' belt to eover bil ttOinam-and kidfteJI, WU pWhd f rom'llle water nililui.t lat« and 1'• rmwct tn art11te1a1 ~- t Nodes Viewed Col'ered Cops Ccmer Beach LA JOLLA <AP) -Police are showing up at Black's Beach, the nation's only municipal nude beach, wearing swim trunks with their badges and handcuffs in beach bags. In three weekends, they've made six arrests, for disorderly conduct or drunkenness and one involving a couple for having sexual relations in the ocean. No arrests were made last weekend after lifeguards complained that body painting had grown in popularity. __ _ The male, undercover officers walk or sun themselves in pairs. In addition, two others in full un- iform drive through the 300-yard area periodically. ;, Ex-senator's Widow Frances Pedrotti Funeral Held in U Frances A. Pedrotti of Laguna Hills. widow of a former California slate senator and daughter of an ex-Confederate soldier, was burled today in Los Angeles. She died Aug. 27 at the ageof87. A funeral mass for Mrs. Pedrotti took place today at 10 a .tn. at St. Nicholas Catholic Church, where she had been ac- tive since moving.to the Leisure World retirement community 11 years ago. Mrs. Pedrotti, a native of Los Angeles, was married to the late Sen. Joseph L. Pedrotti, who represented the old~ District in LOS Angeles Crom 1921-33. A family spokesman said Senator Pedrotti authored numerous reform laws, ranging from child labor measures to E',....PageAJ SAM ••• used. The report was band-delivered to Held on Monday by Dr. K Daniel Schwartz, director' of forensic psychiatric services at Kines County Medical Center, where Berkowitz had been in a . hospital prison cell. Schwartz, who headed the team of psychiatrists examining the 24-year-old postal worker, said the examination of the sus- pect was "the most difficult job I've ever done. I'm elad it's over." Berkowitz was arrairned two weeks ago fok' the slayine of Stacy Moskowitz and the wound- ing of her date, Robert Violante, both 20 and both from Brooklyn. The suspect also has been in· dieted in the sbootini deaths or fi"Ve other persOn.s and the wound, ing of ah. others. Those cases were belna handled ae.parately. Dist. Atty. Carl Vercari of sul>- urban West~hester CO\lllly Nld Mondi)' that a erand Jury ~ould beein beartni evldtnce against BerkoWlt& op we•pou l:bar1es. A ·*caltber seml·...u>tnatic rifle end a 1ho~aun allecedly were recovered when BerkoY(ltz w~s arreited outside his Yonkers 4p~t. The .«·caliber re- volver which bad become tbe killer"• trademark alleaedly was tpundin Berkowtta•a car. bills aimed at cleaning up the state prison system. He was con· sidered an expert in penology. Senator Pedrotti also wrote the bill that brought 10-round boxing back to California, urged im- portation of Colorado River water and helped bring California aviation under the control of the Federal Aviation Agency. Mrs. Pedrotti outlives four sis- ters and five brothers. She was th e daughter of Nicholas Mangerina, a Louisianan and Confederate veteran of the American Civil War who brought his family to California when the war ended.. ' '· A lifelong republican, Mrs. Pedrotti was a member of the Laguna Hills Republican Club. She was also a member of the St. Nicholas Church Council of Catholic Women and tbe Catholic Daughters of America. Mrs. Pedrotti is survived by a daunter, Ellzalleth Pedrotti or Laguna Hills and a niece, Dorothy.Wymare of San Pedro. Air S~e Ending LONDON (AP> -~ssistant air traffic controllers ended a weekend strike at six of Britain's s~ major airports today but rMumed a slowdown at. the two London airports and vowed to continue it despite a government threat to suspend them U they did not resume full operations by midnight Wednesday. .. an)' clalma be made dUrlDf lllin· tervlew on ABC-TV'• 1Good Mornlnc America" procram. He said tbe moet important evidence would be kept ftom Ule p~blk un· ut he could cet a peraon-.J lb· temew with Prealdent Carter . .. I c:.ao now prod'l~ a btthly r putahle witness who is in a Poll· lion &OldeaUfy the so\arce" cit tbe allettd plot to till Kennedy, Olttnansaaldintbetnterview. He refused to reveat the name of bis source. Ile said that tbe last time he named a witness, "The result~ mentioninl this witness is he was dead." . ... Oltmaos was referrine to George de MorenschUdt, a col- lege professor found dead in P•lm Beach, Fla., of an ap· parently aelf-infiicted gun.shot wound last March, just hours after a 1taff member of the ' House committee investigating ---4e Plaa A-*L--2..,.~ the assassination tried to in-...,_, .... ......-. ... ~ terview him: De Morenscbildt .. County supervisors ha~ authorized a con· had been Identified the day suiting firm t<> plan the 13-mlle route of a before in secret testimony by· · major traffic corridor linking the future Oltmans as a potential witness in th . Corona del Mar Freeway in Newport e case. ~ Ottmans refused to say what , Beach to the San Diego Freeway in Mis- sion Viejo anq to project the impact of such an arterial. The 00-month study will be made by Gruen Associates Inc. with a ceiling of $223,000 . former president might have had ---------...;;...---~---------- knowlqf of the events that led ' · to 'Kennedy's fl~lnllSination. He . c· I R d 0 did say the former chief ex-rew escue ne ecutive is still alive. The only liv-· ' ing ex-presidents are Richard NixonandGeraldFord. · Mi • • A As tor Mrs. Onassis. the Dutch ss1ng ID ttempt journalist WO\,lld only say that she was "in possessioo of informa- tion." He said the 1972 flane crash that took the life o Alexander Onassis, Aristotle Onassis' only son, was ,abotage. Oltmans said that the elder Onassis was in the process of exposing a Kennedy assassillalion plot when bis son was killed. Onassis did believe his son's death was the result of sabotage, although he never made any public connection between the crash and any Kennedy plot. But in December, 1974, Onassis of- fered a $500,000 reward for proof of sabotage. Such proof never materialized. Asked how so many people could know details of such a plot without making it public • ()ttm~ aaid: ••Everybody i~ petrifi~·: · Tito Arrives In Red China BELGRADE, Y\lgoslavia CAP)-Yugoslav President Tito, who never visited China during Mao Tse-tung's lifetime, arrived in Pekina today to a wal'm welcome from the top Com- munist leaderabl., and thousands of singing ~d dancing children, the YugQSliv news agency Tan-jug reported. ~ At the Chinese capital's central Tien An Men Square, Tito was greeted by more than 100,000 Chinese under stands of flowers that spelled out words of welcome. TanJug &aid. It called the reception "maplficent." PANAMA CITY, Fla. (AP) - A Texas-based Marine Reserve · jet fighter crashed in the GUl.f of Mexico. and a rescue helicopter lifted one of the jet's two crewmen aboard but then it, too, went down. The fighter crewman and all O'Neill Says Park Story 'RUliculom' W ASIDNGTON (AP> -House ~peaker Thomas P. O'Neill said today that a published report that South Korean busihessman Tongsun Park operated out of his office ls "ridiculous." The Muaachusetts Democrat denied statements printed in the Los Angeles Times that Park "frequently operated" out of O'Neill's office when O'Neill was majorit>' leader. The Los Angeles Times report- ed that Korean-born Suzi Park Thomson, an aide to former House Speaker Carl Albert, told a HOUJe committee tbat Park took telephone calla In O'Nelll's office. Mrs. Thomson testified last week before the House Standards of Official Copduct Committee which ia invesUaattng alle&ed at- tempt.a by SoUth .Koreans to bQy influence in Concress to conUnue U.S. supportfortbatcountry, O'Neill, whose statement came t.hrOUlh hil execuUve asailtant, said about Mn. Thomaon'a al· leged remarks : "This ls ridiculous." O'Neill also said Park nevu talked about Korea to him. ,..._P.,,eAJ BUN~LED. • five members of the helicopter crew were rescued Monday by another chopper. But the second Marine from the 84 Phantom re- mained missing as darkness fell. Tyndall Air Force Base spokesman Henk Basbam said the names of both Ft ruers were being withheld. He said the plane wu attached to the 112th Marine Reserve Fighter Attack Squadron from Dallas. The ruers were at Tyndall for two weeks of tralning. · Eight-foot waves. swept the Gulf in the crash area, about 70 miles souUt of Tyndall, where the jet bad taken off on a training ntght about 1 p.m. It crashed a few mln\ltes later. The pilot of the first rescue chopper, Maj. Leonard Knitter, was quoted by Basham as say- ing: "We circled and spoUed the F4 wreckage. Not large pieces, but enough to recognize. We started looking around but then our cockpit started filling with smoke." Basham added that Knitter said the chopper suffered a failure of the tall rotor system. He said the craft was too low for the crew to parachute, so he ditched the chopper. The s~agoing helicopter re· malned afloat but was battered by heavy seas and the crew took to a lite raft, from -which they were' rescued. Lance Gets Support WASHINGTON CAP) - Presidential spokesman Jody Powell sa;yS there's no reason for Bert Lance to resign and another admiaistntioo official predicts the budlet director will survive criticism ot his banklni ac· tivities. Union Backs Canal Pl,ana W ASHlNGTON (AP) - The AFL-CIO today became the first major or- ganization to support President Carter's plan to relinquish control of the Pan am a Canal. The labor group's ex- ecutive council, in a formal resolution, called the canal agreement "worthy of sup- • port" by U.S. citizens and the Congress. •'These new instruments constitute a jtJSt..and endur· Jng basis for barmo~y in the Western Hemisphere, and we support their ratification by the Senate," the council said. E',....PflfleAI NIXON ••• An editor for a New York Times-owned publish.inc house. Quadrangle, has said Haldeman was paid "a substantial, generous amount" as an advance for the book be is writing, in prison, with the help of writer Joseph DiMona. E',.... PllflC! AJ JUMPER ••• in Vietnam. But RodiD's fortunes declined when he returned after the war . He was unable to land a news job,, so he drove a cab to support himself before turning to writing plays. A recent effort -"The Dry Season," a play about Vietnam -was praised by professionals who read it, the friend said. BUt no one was willing to put up the cash topt"Odue&lt. Witp.ess ~ Mesans ' ~ Cut Use II ().{Water By STEVE MITCHELL Ol t• O.lly l'ltlltStMt A broken main that spilled several million gallons of water into the San Diego Creek last month didn't do much to help Costa Mesa water conservation figures. 8ut officials at the Costa Mesa County Water District say local water users consumed 11 percent less water for the four months ending in July over last year's figures. The s avings are based on actual billings to customers and don't count leaks. Officials said that the district's five largest water users were responsible for 48 million of·tbe 233 million gallons of water saved from April to the end of Ju- ly this year. "We went out and ask,ed for cooperation from the five big users and we got it in spades," said di.strict Vice P.resident Alvin L . Pinkley. He said the district, which services more than 19,000 users in Cost.I Mesa, tbe Oranat CGwJ. • ty Airport and som• •DID· corporated areas, set a 1oat ol a billion aallon.s s&vinp ! by llext year. ''Th.ls is just aboQt a quarter ~ that," Pinkley said. ..We used 6 ,437 acre feet of water last year for those four months compared"' with 5, 721 lbis year." He said much of the credit for the 233 million &allons In saved water goes lo lar1e user& in the city. Thesetncluded: -The dty of Costa Mesa saved 22.S percent. -The Newport-Mesa Unified School District recorded a 14.4 percent reductlQn for the four-month period. -Tbe •t•te'• Department of Transportation, wbich main- tains median strips on several streets in the clty, saved nearly 49 pe.rtent. -=-orance Co•ai1 falr· grounds, which is operated by' the state. saved another 22.S per. cent · --Oruge C.Ht Collep cut campus water use 14 percent. The 11 percent total reduction in the city wu based on actual billings compared with last year,. Pinkley said. He said that ftgure \VOuld have been higher were it not for a lar&e underground leak ln a~ inch pipe under the San DMto creek bed. That leak h~ slnce been ,. paired. ' Girl Pedah; Pooch Steen Neighbors stop llJld stare when Cynthia Jarvie and her 10· year-old dog ride tandem down the street. And it's no woqder. Cynthia pedals as Pandora-part cock-a-poo, part aomethlng else-steers the motocross-type bicycle down hills in their Newport Riviera neighborhood in east Costa ~es •. STE£B.ING'M.\GUT be an exageeraUon but you would notice tha\ · dnithlit. clOesn't Mld the handlebars as ahe speeds downnur wltb Pandora ar1ppln1 .••. pa. .. 1n1 tbe cf'O$Sbaronthebtcycle. Cynthia a-1d abe used to carry the doe around to frlemfs' house~ U.e bicycle but one ay' about two years ago, Pandora took over. .. SUE IUSJ', PUT her paws on the crossban and I let go,·· Cynthia said. ,. With a feW mmor modifications c 1 croaa~ pad and a cushion Ccw the canine on the btki frame) the twosome toe sholtexcursioas arourid thelrcondoinirilum commuDSty. The ffOOt feet f~t ls even more amuin1 wben you con- sider Pandora is an •lini grandniOt.ber, CynWa point.a out. "SHE'S AN -OLD DOG but this I• about the only trick she knowS,.. shrugs Cyntbia, a 12-year-old Harbor Day Scbool~ent. • But then there's ~arod, C)'qthla's three-year-old Gerilan sbepllerd. :Aaron'.& Sl*!l'1cy ls t0Win1 family an.cl friends al"Otlnd the~borbood on a skatebOard. 9at that's &nolher story, 1 Peek said be was Involved ln three arguments with Allaway, who was also employed as acu5to- dlan, tbatalmostended~blows. "He didn't like blacks,\' Peek said, glancing at the defendant. '•And I think be only sot alont with whites if~wes able tO'hne bis own way all Ute tim&. •• .., Defense psychiatrists have described Allaway as beln& le1ally ln$ane at the time of t.be .... .. stle>otlnp and have deflnect bis mental disorder as paranoid aCblaopbrenla. 'l'be'.Jury "Whicb fouDd Allaway guilty ot seYC!d counts of murder and two of assault wlth a deadly weapon ha been told that be believed b:b esU'anled wife, Bon- nie, was liaviri1 sexual rela- tionshipt with bia co-workers. It bas been testified. that Al- (SeeALL\WAY, Pase&z> · Trial for 'l;Jerko~itz Unlikely NEW YORK <AP> -David Berkowi~. the man accused of the Son of Sam murders, ls not mentally fit to stand trial, ac- c o rdj t;ig to the results of psychiatric testing made pul>Uc today. Berkowitz "lacks the capacity to understand the proceedin&s against him or t9 as.slst in hi.a de- fense," said State Supreme Court Justice Gerald S. Held. Held read from the cover letter tbat accompanied a report on the mental state of the accus~ .44- caliber killer . Berkowitz is charged in the murders of six people and the wounding of seven others during the space of just over a year. The remainder of the report was resealed, and those familiar with it were ordered not t.o dis- cuss its .contents. Th e cover letter said Berkowitz was "an incapacitated individual." The diagnosis was that Berkowitz was "paranoid" and that bis prosnosis was "guarded," Held aald, quoting th~~-• · On the motion of Brooklyn Dist. Atty .• _,l;JUt" Gold, the !uatlce ~· the 1us~ re- tun:i«l to Kinp county Hospltal, wbere be bad cmaer1on• the At Mesa Home Police are worktns on a tl., that as m~y as six t~aaers walked ott with a tet'evtslon set, s~reo equipment and other valuables from a Costa Mesa home Monday aftemoe>b. A woman who lives tn the house in the 600 block of Joann Street. told officers she reUln\ed home Crom a Crteod's house Mon- day to find her back d()OI' open and $1,167 \n household 1oocls milstn1. But a possible. witness to the i:nld~y tiur1Jary tollj officers a group ol six teenaaers, Including several youn1 women, were ln the driveway of the residence. The witness also said he saw a small blue pickup truck in the drivew&J, but did not act\lally see any ~ the youths leavtng the hoyse withJtems in their handil. The YoUths were described as between 16 and 18 years old wlth long bleached-blond balr. Elvis Presley and they are ~ receive all lb~ materiials used in the first test-in , fieadinC Crom the letter, Held said a PIYcblatric team toot intO account interviews with the ac- e used klller and letters fo newspaper columnist Jimmy Breslin and to the police. The team also anal~ed letters BerkoWltl wrote to bis Cather while a soldier in Korea. The psycblatrists said a braia scan sbowed a "normal level." They also said an electro- enC'J,'phal~am, which measures the brain s activity, was alsb used. t Th~ report was hand-delivered to Held on Monday by Dr. It Daniel Schwartz, director of forensic J11$ycblatrtc services at Kiop ,COunty Medical Center', where Berkowitz had been in a hospital prison cell. Schwartz, who headed the team ol peycblatrist.s examining .Ure 24-year-old postal worker, said the examination of the sus.- pect wu .. tbe most difficult job I 'vt iver done. I'm glad it'• over, . Bmowtu aa arraigned two weeu qo .... ror the •laying Ol • Sta~ MOstowtti and the wound· llii OI ber date, Robert Viol.ante. 3 Charged in Plot . To Snatch ·Body <t MEMPlUS, Tenn. (AP) - Three men seen \fleeing Crom Elvia Presley's tomb bav~ been charted with criminal lretpass· lng in what police said was •plot to snatdl tbe singer's bo4Y from a steel·lined, copper-plated col· fin aPdholdjtforransom. But . poJic dld the body- 25, and Bruce Eugene Nelson, 30, all of Memphis. They were released on $50 bond. Arraipment ln City Court bad been scheduled this mom- in1, but Judge John T. Dw)'el' postponed the heaiinf until Oct. 4 at the request of the defendanl9' lawyers . The trespassint charge, a state misdemeanor, carries a max-imum penalty of n mOnths, 29 day1 in Jail and a $1.000 fine. ( Bal•e•••' lleee .. t Book Says Nixon Acted 'Strangely' NEW YORK (AP) -A book wrltten by H .R. Haldeman. Richard M. Nixon'• fonner chief of staff, will confirm published accowrtl that the former presl· dent acted strangely during the last days of his presidency, a newspaper repol'ted today. FeteHonon School Trustee Mn. Berge1on Marian Bergeson will be honoted by her fellow trustees tonight as she attends her final meeting as a trustee of the Newport-Mesa Unified School District Mrs. Bergeson is stepping down from the post she baa held for 13 years to run for the Republican nomination for the 74th Assembly District. In addition to a resolution from the remaining six board mem· bers commending Mrs. Bergeson for her service to the school dis· trict. school officials say they ex· peel the meeting to be aUended by local civic leaders who have worked with Mrs. Beraeson. The school board will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Costa Mesa City Council Chambers. Tito Arrives In Red China 8 ELG RA DE, Yugollavia CAP> -Yugoslav President Tito, who never visited China during Mao Tse-tung's lifetime, arrived in Peking today to a warm welcome from the top Com· munist leadership and thou.sands of sm,ing and dancln1 cbJldrea, the Yugoslav news agency Tan· Jug reported. At the Chinese c~ital's central Tien An Men Square, Tito was greeted by more than 100,000 Chjnese under stands of flowers th at spelled out words of welcome, Tanjug said. It called the reception " magnificent." Tito was met at the airport by party Chairman,. Hua Kuo-feng and vice chairmen Tena Hslao- ptng and Li Hslen-nlen, the aeen- cy said. Vote Pending On Tax Bill SACRAMENTO (AP> - Back .. ~ a M-5-blllioa tax relief . bill Qe maneuvertni for final vote. tbls Week. altboulh there ls still a d.llp.ite over what 1' in tilt bill and boW i\ will work. Pl~ were announced Monday lor a Sen.ate noor vat. Thursday by Sen. Nicholaa Peh'il <D· · Oakland>, 1pon.sor of tht plan to give 6.6 million Caltforill&nf an- nual rebates averagina ~ for homeowners and '110 for Nnten. DA ILY PltOT Daily News columnist Lil Smith wrote: "It is my un- derstanding that Haldema1)'1 'Ends of Power' ... will carry sensational material that seems to confirm the Carl Bernstein· Bob Woodward thesis of "The Final Days" -to wit, that t.be chief executive was flaky and failing apart in the final days of Watergate." ~e book "The Final Days," written by the Washington Post reporters who broke many of the Wates-gate stories, characterizes Nixon as losing coatrol of himself in several sltuaUom u the House Judiciary Committee held hear· in&• cm impeachment. One of Haldeman'• scenes, Mias Smith wrote, .. will bave Richard Nixon comina into the Oval Office, strippin& off all bis clothes, sitting down naked behind his desk and ukin1 his crew·cut aJde Haldeman, 'Now whaf's on the agenda?' '' Tbe News account aays Haldeman was upset by Nixon's remarks during bis series or in· terviews with David Frost. Nixon discussed Watergate during an interview televised in May. After the program, Haldeman said that Nixon did not clear up questions about a. cover·UP of . Watergate and announced that. he would go ''full steam ahead" on a personal, in.side look at the cover-up. In a syndicated series "Inside the Nucon White House," that was published in June 1976, and carried Haldeman's by-line, the former Wblte House aide said that Nixon drank occasionally but did not bave "a drinking problem." Haldeman began serving a 2'12-to-8-year prison sentence at Lompoc Federal CorrecUonal Faciill.y in California lut June fQr Watergate-related crimes. An editor for a New York Times.owned publishing house, Quadrangle, bas aaid Haldeman w as paid "a substantial\ generous amount" as an advance for the book he is writing, in prison, witb the help or writer Joseph DiMona. F,.._Pflffe.41 .. AJJ,AWAY. • l'away also believed his wlfe waa be.lnc forced to J>art!clpate ln the maldni of pornographic movies that were privately screened to employes on the Fullerton cam· pus. Other testimony bas lndicated the films were commercially made. A psychiatrist aald Allaway told him that be bellend the mafia was really responalble for the killings and that he wu un· der some form of remote eoatrol ... hen he took his rifie to the cam· pus. a1 aouaTu•••• Of .. D9ltf Nie ..... Hunlln.lton Beacb City Council members approVed a seven-cont cut In tb clty'a propel11 tu rate a\ a loud and stormy meetinl Mondaynlaht. · More than 150 reslden\s, ap· parenUy drawn to the tax·stttina deliberations by an open letter from Councllwoman llaniett Wieder, lndicateci they staunchly 1upported a 10-cent. reduction al tbe mlnim"m. Many 1n the packed audience also indicated tbey wanted to air their pent up emotiou about lax· ea but were refused that op. port:unlty by a ml,jority ol the councll ·me.mben wbo nid that the appropriate time to speak up was at earlier puJ>llc bearings on the budget. The council chambers ex· ploded into an angry scene after the council refused lb& citizens• request to speak on tues and aeve'fll in the audience shouted threats.at the official.a Uwlt in- cluded: "Vote them out of office." "Let's have a recall." ''Wh.at about incJ'easing salaries?'' "All the incumbent.a must go." When the shouting was over and most of the protesters bad left, the council defeated a move . to cut the tax rate 10 cents after a great deal of speech makine by council members. The 10.cent reduction was sup. ported only by Mrs. Wieder and Richard Siebert. The council then approved a seven·ceflt cut and also set aside an additional three cent.a of tax money for a reserve fund iQ case the city loses a court appeal and must pay $1.2 million it collected in real estate transfer taxes in 1974 and 1975. Ford Told Of KeDnedy Assassin? ............ PLAYWRIGHT DAN CAMERON AODILL PULLS A 'STIVE BRODIE• ON 8ROOKL YN BRIDGE Former War Coneapondeftt Suffers Muttfpltt tn)urtea In Hit 'Laat Gamble' • Man · Survives Leap ~klyn Bridge Jump ·'IAAt Gambk' NEW YORK (AP> -In 1886, Stephen Brodie won a $200 bet when he survived a leap from tbe Brooklyn Brldee with oqly minor bruises. Dan Cameron Rodlll, a M- year-old playw.rigbt and former war correspondent, trled to duplicate the jump llOPday u a "laat 1amble ... He suffered mulUple fractures, collapsed tunas J)UnClured by broken rlba, and ctha' internal Injuries after landing on bis face ln the water. 133 reet below. He wu listed ln critical condition ea.rlytoday. Ft:tends said Rodill sta.ced the . event to attract media attention. They said bJs career was noun- dering. ··He went up on that bridge as a last gamble. He thought this gamble would br.ine him atteb· lion and might lead to some suc- cess," said a friend, who mused to be identified. The a~empt was not a spuN>f- the-moment occurrence. A room· mate said Rodill bad climbed one of the towers on the bridge April 18 with the intention of jumpini. Police pulled hlm down then. Monday. he didn't allow them the chance. He told police and news or· ganlaatlon.s that be intehded to jump, took a cab onto the bridge ~bout noon. then leaped wlMn ln· formed by a policeman, who •as trying to rescue him, that harbor units were in the water below. Rodill, who wore protective gear includln& a flotation collar and a padded belt to cover his stomach and kidneys, was pulled from the water minutes later and was revived by artificial respira· lion. Kiuxmis Club -- Flips Pancake1 Tbe South Coast Center Kiwanis Club will be flipping bot cakes during its annual pancake breakf~st to be held ln the Treasury store parking lot Sept. 10. The $1.25 donation covers hot· cakes, sausa1e, coif ee -j>lus seconds or thirds on all or the above-lrom 8 a .m. to noon.. The parlcing lot la located at • Bristol Street and Sunllower . Avenue ID Santa Ana. For more Information, call Mal Biebe:lbere atM5-61m. Rodlll bad served as a free- lance conespondent in Vietnam and c.mbodla between 1969 and 1975 and was one of the last America Journalists to leave Vietnam after it fell to the Com· munfttg. -Ne worked for CBS, and.he and another 1111 were reportang TONIGHT NEWPORT-MESA .SCHOOL BOARD -Regular meeting, Costa Mesa city council cham· bers, 7:30p.m. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 31 MUSIC OF AMERICA -Free concert, Jim Christensen and Pacifi.c Pops Orchestra. South Coast Vlllaie, 7:30 p.m. Marine Jet, Helicopter Crash in Gulf PANAMA CITY, Fla. <AP) - A Texas-based Marine Reserve jet fighter crashed in the Gulf of Mexico, and a rescue helicopter lifted one of the jet's two crewmen aboard but then it, too, went down. The fighter crewman and all five members of the helicopter crew ~ere rescued Monday by another chopper. But the second ·Marine Ctomtbe B4 Phantom re- mab\ed r.Q1ssina as d'9rkness fell . TJJdall Alr Force Base spokesmatt Hank Basham said the D&J!es~ of both F• fliers were beiDS wq.bheld. He aatd the plane was ~ed to the 112th Marine Reaerve Fighter Attack Squadron from Dallas. The fliers w~ .at Tyndall for two weeks of trainioe. ·Eight-foot waves swept the Gulf in the cr~h area, about 70. miles IOUth of Tynctall, whett the Jet bad taken off on • trainlna rugbt a~t 1 p.m. It trashed a few minutes lat.er. right up until the Cqmmun.ists cut the power to the building. He stayed there for about. four months after the takeover, then was expelled," said the friend, who also worked as a j.oumalist in Vietnam. But Rodill's fortunes declined when be returned after tbe •8!· Hood's Yacht Eliminated From Cup NEWPORT, R.I. (AP> -Ted Hood's new 12-meter yacht In· dependence was eliminated from the America's Cup final defense series by the New York Yacht Club's selection committee Mon· day. _ Tbe decision by the c;ommiUee came after it bad watched Hood lose bis fourth straieht race. Ironically, that loss came against Independence•s sister yacht, Courageous, the boat Hood skippered to victory in the 1974 America's Cup. Courageous' martin of victory was one minute, 23 secondl. The Losa cave Independence a 3·8 record. Countgeous is 9-1. En· terprilse, •kippered by Mali,n Burnham. was idle today and bas a 4·7record. ' Hood, a Marblehead, Mass. sailmaker, has been involved in every Cup defense since 1958, when the first 12-meter yacbt Columbia beat England's Scep- tre in four straigh\ races. But he probably will wQ.ch this one from the siaelines. The decision opened the wa:y for Courageous, skippered by Atlanta Braves owner Ted Turner,' and Enterprise to race every day until Sept. 8, wben the seleetion committee will declcle which yacht will represent tJte, United States in 1ts 23rd cup de· rense. c Costly Coats Gone Securlt.y officials at SouO> Coast Plaza told Costa Mesa police Monday they believe two men in a yellow foreign car fled the women's section at the Sears store over the weekend wttb two coata worth $225. Employes at tbe store notice(! the two winter coata missingearl1 Monday. On Sept. 23, Newport Beach 11 scheduled to become the fint city in the state to assume permit-ll"antine authority from tbe state coastal CC11Dmlasion for relldeJt. tlal nei~ ln the couta1 zone. According to ;i spokesman for the South Coui Reelonal 1.one Conservation Commlulon, the cities of Huntington Beach and ;,~an Clemente are seeking ,.imllar exclusions. Those ap· 1plicatioos are in the process of ,being reviewed. jb Newport Beach planner Dave 'l>mobowsld said his· city's ex- clusion. recently granted by the h~ommission, will go into effect provided the conditions of the ex· clusion are approved by the City CouncilonSept.12. Under terms of the exclusion, the city will hand out coastal permits for single family homes and duplex~ on lots of more tban 2,400 square feet for all .neighborhoods inside the coastal zone except Bayshores. Waterfront property, whether ~n the ocean or the bay, still will remain under comission control, as will high density property and 'Commercial property ins(de the 'coastal zone. ' . ~ .. NeighborbOOds included tn the exclusion are Cameo Shores and .• cameo Highlands, SborecWfs, Corona Hieblands, old Corona ....del Mar, Irvme Terrace, Balboa 1Island, Lido Isle, Central •Newport, Peninsula Point, West .Newport, including IJdo Sands, Cliff Haven itid Newport .Jleigbts, Dover Shores and the Anniversary tr~t in the Upper Bay. Bayshores reportedly was re· moved from the list because it is 1l private, guarded community and commissioners have said \hey want to retain control over \'the community io an eff9rt to ~orce public access to lhebeach there. <t 'iJ' Provisions for exclusion of •uill-0ut neighborhoods were in· eluded in the coastal act which i(Wenl into effect Jan. 1. 1t According to city officials, tPnce the exclusion takes effect, .-oastal zone homeowners will be ~ble to apply for their coastal <iM!rmits at the building depart· .ment in city hall when they get the building permits needed to build or alter their homes or duplexes. '.Eddie West, 77 , .. .. . the tavern llon~ay aad challenged them to nsbt. the of. ficlalaald. The moorcycllltl ned to their clubhouse, lJ\ ~ about ftve miles outllde town, lth about 300 'f11111en ln pUnult. Gunfire wu ~ba.nptt at the clubhouse. the sans membon ned lnto tbe wooda, add the clUbhoUM wu burned, th• otflclal said. Two polJ.ce oftlcen arriviq at Daughter, Mom Die M In Crash A mother and daugbter were killed Monday eYen.m. when the lightweight car in which they were passengers wu at.ruck by a Cypress police car that was chas- ing a s~ motorist, police reported. Seij0041y huured 1~ the 6:10 p.m. accident in the intersection of Walker Avenue and Ball Road were the dead woman's husband and her6-year-old son. Police identified the fatalities as Ada Lorraine McBrayar, 30, and her 9·year-old daughter, Dawn Charmane Wallace, botb of San Pedro. The injured were identified as Jack Lafon McBrayar1 27, and Eric James Wallace, 5, also ol San Pedro. TRANSSEXUAL TENNIS PLAYER DENIES LOVE MATCH Newport'• Richard• (Right) With MtchHI Backua Also injured in what police described as "a broadside col- lision" was Cypress police d· ficerCharles Vandevqrt. Police said Vandevort was in pursuit of a speeding car that bad run tbrouch two·red tights when Renee Richards' his patrol car collld~ with the auto driven by McBrayar. They reported that another patrol unit. stopped the speed.lag R .. ' .· . . ID') a· I) . . . . d suspect two blocks from the omance e utte . ~~~~~of the doub~e fatal acci· • -· .. • .• ~ · Arrested and charged with NEW roiiK" (P) -Dr Renee Richards, the Newport Beach traps.sexual t~s player, denied through her agent Tuesday tli'at. she is engaged to an actor, Michael Backus. "I know Mr. Backus," Dr. Richards was quoted b~ David Buff en of Saa Diep auatidl. ''The report of wedding plans are CO'!}P.l~y errQQ~~ 1 have n0 ~· wh~e '116y ... t.'Ule from. "My main concerb at the 'mo- ment is my match with Vfrlinla Wade in the first round of the U.S. Open Tennis Championships at. Forest Hills.''. The report was carried Mon- Parrot Flies Coop A blue emf gold parrot valued by its owner at J2,500 bas been stolen from a Laguna Niguel bo·me. Oranee County sheriffs offlcers said the theft of "Blugo" occurred while travel agent John Raven, 54, was away J~m his· home at 325'12 A.lores Drive'. The burglar's method of entry is un· known. day by the l"{ew York Posf:" • • .-vehicular manslauabter was • Dr. Richards, 43, i§....8 promi· RickSilver,24,ofCypress . nent .ophl.halmologis~ wlio '~s :· The two family survivors of the Richard lfisklnd was a leading· colllsion were listed as being in player fn the men's 35-and:Over' serious condition today in Los division before undergoing a sex Alamitos General Hospital. c!1angeoperaUon. Vandevort. the injured police As Renee Rictiards, .she• was officer, was reported in good con· barnd. t~mporarily by .tht! dition in West Aoahetm Women's 'fennis Associatlaa and Memortal Hospital wblle tl\,e ac- tho U.S. Tennt• AOociatlon. Btit cused driver was sUU in Orange recenUy a State Supremb cOurt County Jail. ruled she could not be de1l.led en· trance in the U.S. Open touma- m~~~ drew Miss Wade, the . Police HoJd Wimbledon champion, for her first match. · • Bullen said both he and Dr. Richards were disturbed by the engagement report, coming as it did a few days before Renee's import appearance at Forest Hills. · •'We have known Backus only a couple of weeks," he said. "The report is erroneO\IS." Dr. Ricblirds was reported declining interviews. Pentagon Asks -Rep@rt Check· Mesa Youth .. In Burglary A IS.year-old Costa Mesa youth was an-est.eel Monday.night after a policeman saw him peekine out a darkened window at a motorcy- cle shop. · Officers said tl\e Estancia High SchQOl student t'ripped off a silent alarm after enterlni the office area at Award Motors, 1680 Newport Blvd. at about 7:4Sp.m. Officer Bob Cornuke arrived at the cycle shop and notlced several louvered windows bad beerrremoved from the bullc:lJ.nt. ~ Register's S~rts JI WASIDNGTON <AP> _,The State Department says it doubts a puJ>Ji!hed report that Ugandan security agents behead~ three Americans in a Kampala hotel. Department spokesman Hod· ding Carter 111 said Monday a United States check of passport files bas not found the names of persona identified in the report: The high school junior was al'· rested and later tran!Jported to Orana• County Juvenl1e Hall on suspicion of attempted burglary. ~·, Editor-'Succum/b.1 · Rtcllud Sankey, George Milton Smith and Austin Brown. , U.S. diplomatic missions in countries bordering on Uganda , bave been asked to check on the ' report, Carter l$Bl<l. I ca . TbeY also burned or otbenrlM wreeke\\ five motorc;yclett twO care and a plckap truck, auu.t 1Bld. PoUce today were lOold.q for the caai members who llect-lnto the wood1. · Polle• aald no vlllacera bad been •n•tid. altboalltl soine weapou were seized a4 an ·investlaaUon was COOtb\ulnc. • ·Elvis' Prayer. Session Told LOS ANGELES (AP) - . The television evangelist who spoke at Elvia Presley• funeral aald be and the ldnger wept and prayed together at a Las Veg .. hotel and Elvia aald. "Christia gonna com• real soon, lsn'tbe?" . · The Rev. Rex Humbard, who preaches to mlWons of TV viewers around the world, said in an interview Monday that he was sum- moned by Presley last D~cember, just before Cblistmas. MR. llUJIBilD said be and bis wife went to the rock •n• roll star's dressing room at the Laa Ve1u Hilton Hotel. He said Presley greeted them with words d praise for the TV show, saying be was an avid viewer. , "Then. be sort of paused. staringoffintospace," Mr. Humbard recalled. ..Sud· denly, be turned aroUDd and motioned us to follow htm. We went·toto a very small room, like 1l closet, and be pulled the door. "For 80 minutes/'. said Mr. Humbard, "Elvis talked of nothing but the Scriptures. He quoted the Old Testament of the Bl· ble. "BE SAID, 'Christ is gonna come real soon, isn •t he'?" Mr. Humbard re- called. ..I said, 'Yes, I think so'." Mr. Humbard said Pt"esley spoke of biblical "rediclioos a( events .which . ,, would precede the Second Colnine. incluc:ltng famine, • pestnence and otbd illf. and asked. "Isn't that bap-penIN now?" "I could sense the or1en· • cy ot the hour," Mr. Hum- bard said as be recalled Elvis' comment, "We don't have long then, do we?" "I SAID, 'No, we don't." Mr. Humbard recalled. After Elvis bad spoken ol the Bible for some Ume, . the evangelist said, 0 1 just reached over and took both· his bandl in mine and I said, 'Elvis, rilbt DOW, 1 -·· ' TALKED OF CHRIST EM• Pre.Sey want to pray for you.• .. He 1aid, 'Please -do,' and be started weeping. He just emotionally shook and trembled. All of us in the room were weeping. It was a tremendous ex· perience." MB. HUMBARD said the prayer group included his wile and a musician in a 1ospel group that sang with Elvis. At one point, he said Elvia' 9-year-old daughter, Lisa, walked in on the prayer aesalon. "She 1aw him weeping • ~ sbe ran up to him, and Ervis just told her, •1t•a all ri&ht, honey.' But she tu med and aald, •Why is my daddy j:Q'lni'?" WBEN THE prayers were over, Mr. Humbard sald Elvis told him this was "the 1reatest Christmas present Elvis Presley ever had." Mr. Humbard said he told the story of Elvis' pl' ayer at the private funeral services 1n Mem·' fhia, Tenn., and "I crled .... just couldn't help it." He said he decided to tell the story publicly after re· .ceiving approval from Elvis' father, Verndn Presley. Tivo Saved From sea OXNARD (AP) -Two 10UDa men battled heavy surf to rescue two women trapped beneath a capsized power boat off SUver Strand beach here, official.I aa1d. Authorities said Monday that Tom Kimbrell, 24, and Dean Humphries, 21, both of ~ard. were Ol'l ~ beach Sundtf nlcbt when they •Pftted the disabled 19-foot fiberglass cabin cruiser and swam to rescue the trapped women, J>Ulli.D8 them to abOl"e. Roaemarfe Mebdoza, U. and Doruia Fadneu, both from Ox· nard, were among 1lx people thrown lato the five-foot surf after tbe1r boat overturned. l UNY DA& ! AU rl&bt, fol.kl, MW tUt ....... wtndiDI down to •\ the flnal Oi.Qp of IUD''1DeT, you 4 cu ~le the cra&la wall .J f &U upoo ua. Odd happen will h•PJMJll' Bea O\ldit.y, for example, bas abnJptly catapulted back into the news after beina small u an ls· sue duriJW molt of the summer. Tbe aaty ln 1 know of where butt bathia:. » permitted in our area is downcout at a 3QO.~str«eb of sand known as j Blact•• Beacb. la La Jolla. J'ollowera of'lb Starken llove- m ent bave •e•D 1ettln1 alt.oc«her taos at Black's Beach for aome time. • J l ~ 8\Tr NOW THE buff bathers are drawing criticlun . Liferuards along the 'Blaelc's Beach slral\d complain that body painting has become the latest fad at Black's Beach. You have to admit this is puzzl· ing. Why would a nudist want to go lo a buff bea~h to soak up rays , all over and then cover up with paint? Wonders never cease. Anyway,. lifeguards have al· leged that the nude body painting has escalated lnto other disorder· ly conduct. pOblic drunkenness 1t and sexual misconduct iii the • 1 ocean. In the ocean? Wbatnext? . - All or this bas resulted in un· dercover J>Olice .orr1cers being called in at Black's Beach to un· '·cover whatever hasn't already '' been uncovered. Apparently you do not have too much difficulty in spotting the secret police operatives at Black's Beach./ · They're the fnes wearing swim trunks. · Also, they carry beach bags, wherein are secreted their , badges and handcurfs. J IF MISCONDUCT i s ~ widespread at Black's Beach. ~ then you have to question the suc- 1 cess of the police crackdown. They've only made six &rre$ts in the last three weeks. Meanwhile, others are getting 1 into the nudie act. 1 Back on the 'East Coast: one '.$ Deborah Sale was arrested ror ;t allegedly sunbatlUng on a remote l Southampton, N'ew York, beach while wearing notbine more than a smile. l This would not be much oC a J . news item except she happens to be on the staff of United States Vice President Walter Mondale. Miss Sale, 29, was quoted as 1 saying sbe didn't know the anti· • nudity law applied on the be~ch where she reposed and, as a mat· ter of fact. she wasn't really sure what townsb~~·she was ln. Her job With the vice president is reportedly as an "advance person." Maybe she was just too advanced this time. snu. •MO&E meanwhile on tile summer sillies front, a tidal wave prediction attributed lo a M arlian visitor failed to materialise ln Caracas•, Venezuela. This is undentanda· ble since Caracas is 10 miles from ~ ocean behind a ranae of 6,000-foot mountains. But the last time we bad a tidal wave scare here, hundreds ol the curious turned out at Balboa's Wedge to watch a bJC wave come in. Summer sure cap be a crazy time. . · · '.' • .And.Baby Makea Tiro' MIAMI (AP> -A woman was ticketed for driving by herself in a traf· fie lane reserv~ for.£!!.!' pools. But she beat the rap.) County Judge Dominic Koo said the woman s howed up in court with her newborn infant. She _noted s he was eight months pregnant when she was cited. Koo found her innocent on the ground a fetus ts c ons idered a person. ·'Therefore. there were lwo people in the car .... ne said. "I think, it's a good rul ing, not a bit Crivoluous," Koo added. THE. BIGGEST contribUtor to tbe decline was the chan&e in s ensitive prices, which meant that the ,Price oC raw materials was declining. Although ,that · might. be good Cor inflatioh, it meant that there was less de· mand Crom manufacturers and producers and it was not a good sign (or economic gro\Vth. The Carter administration bas been predictine that the economy will grow at a still-healthy an- nual rate of about five percent in the second ball after a robust first half of about seven percent. P~Iiee sta•• By Louisville Busing Starts 'Snwothly' LOUlSVlLLE, Ky <AP> -The third year of court.ordered bus· ing started smoothly in Loulsvtlle today. A special force of police stood by in cruse the violence of the previous two years Oared agaU\. School oCCicials and Police Chief John Nevin expressed con· fidence that there would be no trouble. "I don't Uunk there's any more rear,'' one principal said. This year's integration plan requires busing of about 20,000 of the approximately 113,000 students in the public school sy,stem. About hall of the bused students are white and half black. Th~ are about 25,000 blacks in the system JM.,.p .DUe~• Rlaouda ~la• PaETORIA, South Africa CAP> -Bri\J'ih "Foreign Seci:etarY David Owen and U.S. Ambassador Adrew,Youag fly to Tanzania today to see President Julius Nyerere after slx hOW'S of talk' with Prime Minister John Vorster, a key fiaure in thelr efforts to bring a IN SH ORT k>'h~~\~. in neighboring ( J peaceful end to white minori· ' Foreign Minister R. F. Botha said Vorster was not asked to aoeept or reject the new British·American plan Cor Rhodesia and.did neither. "We fully discussed the Rhodesian issue, and I am not in a posi· ' ti on to characterize the talks.•' he said. Owen told repqrters the plan still must be discussed with other in\erested parties. Young said nothing. C...al te Slllp Aladca11 OH . . NEW YORK <AP) -About two million barrels of Alaska oil destined for ports in ltle Golf cl Mexico and to the East Coast will be · unloaded from a supertanker this week for shipment through the Pa!>ama C8.Dal ' ~ It'll betbelir$tnil frorhAlaska lo go through the Canal, officials saidlrfonday. - Z...ee ~erdraw ~ilCS''B~.. · - WASIDNGTON <AJ>> -OUl.Side directors of the Calhoun. Ga., First Nation81 Bablt were ~hocked" to learn about Bert Lance's overdrawn cl~eck:ing accounts in the early 1970s, the Was~n Post reported. .. , 'l'be news~aper said today that the outsid di.ftctors lo the "11k had flrSl learned of the Lance overdraft& when informed of them. bY. afederalbankexamlner. • AD investigation by the comp(roller of the currency recent.I.~ dis· cloeed that 1.abCe-;"dli'ector of the Office of Maoatenlenl and BQd&et, and '1iS relativea bad overdrawn their chec~ aeoountl at tbt Calhoun bank by as much as $&:i0,000 in the early 1910s: 'It's -r Worlil' Ex--convict Kill& Wife, Son and.HimseU ,_ -... EAST HARTFORD. C6nn. (AP> -An ex· . convict, driven by bitterness, killed bis wUe and son. then shot himself to death today alter boldine nearly 100 police at bay for 16 hours from a bar· ricadecl apartment. authorities said. · •'GO(l bales me. life is terrible. ll stmts." said the ewunan, Prank DeCorleto. M. shortly before he took bis own life. "It's '11 over.'• a state pollce spokesman said as the siete eame to an end. roucg C'HlEF Clarence Drumm, one of the authorities who ,pleaded by telephone with DeCorleto to give himself up, said that at one point the gunman •• allUded lo the fact that society had treated him badly became be was an ex-eon ... He had served lime for kllling a woman in 1963 in Georgia. At different points during the negQ.tiations. DeCorleto blamed God, life and society, Drumm said. · Drumm bad said durirtg the nieht that DeCorleto would rather kill himself than return to prison. "He's intent on ta.king bis own life. He feels he doesn't want to go back to jail, '1 Dn101m said. ... EARLIER, DeCORLETo telephoned the Hartford CQUrant and told a reporter he bad shot bis 22·yellr·old wife, Shloehon, then his •·:tear.old &On, Frank Ill, when the bc>y came running towvd hi.In. He said be bad hie son's blood on his hands and sobbed, "All I had in the whole world was my son." Stale Police Commissioner Edward P. ~nard said that on several occasions DeCorleto talked about his dead son and said be couldn~t understand how he cOUld have 4ont such at.bing. -- t'l 1 . -........... y after t .RJ n- day. J;>eeorlet.o said be a rifle With !lDOJ' or ammunition, two shot.tun! with tlve or six boXes or • .. shells and a pistol with 300 rounds of ammunition in the second·fioor apartment. l!e said he shot bis wife because 1•abe gave me a hard time," and the boy because "it's a rotten. stinking world.•' . '"lbey'l'e dead,•• he smd. "I'm all boarded up.· I've ldlled my four.year-old soo. He•a bleeding all over~place." D1lUllll SAID l)eCOJtLBTO "diicussed with me wbat be Dad dOne to someone whO 'trill neve1" reach bis fifth birthday. He 1ave me a \'ery erapbic description." "I'm a human being," said Drumm. · .. 1 save him any assurance a Christian genUeman Could • gtve tum for bis well Ming and ~ ." Dru.mm said psychiatrists who »i_dviaed him jn Ule negotia· • tions said that was probJtbly the wrona tact to take. "He wanted to die," Drumm faid. "He ha~ oo desire to go oo. We knew thatf rom the start." DRUM REPORTED that police bad planned an armed attack on the house shortly before dawn when telephone negotiations broke ofJ. "It was touch and ao and we baa to move before it got light," said Drumrtl. He said they wanted to move into the house before dayUgbt · when DeCorleto would hate been able to shoot at resi- de,nts SOing to work Of )q t.b,e ..... , " He said discussions throughout the night with DeCorleto proved fruitless. Shortly after 7 a.m •• poli<:e heard a nioise but weren't lure what it was. Police then. fired a tear gas grenade into the white, wood·framed tiome. When it brought no response. three state policemen and a dog entered the house and found the bOdies. 'I'he wife was fOWltl ift the ldtcbet1 and the boy was found~ on the Ooor •f the '*lrOom. DeCorleto's body was fc:iund on the ndorol the bedroom. '( • ,., 4 • I . FM , ... e.,..nwi ....... le B•t . SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -Local fWleral home operator'I accused or several offenses, inchldin1 tlldq bodies from lhe eoroner's office without authori&atiob. have settled a consumer fraud suit out~cowt. Dist. Atty. Joseph Freitas announced the settle- ment Mond~y. Under the agreement, Daphne Funeral Services will pay $60,000 in penalties and allow the district attorney to maintain a close watch over the practices of its fi ve funeral parlors. 2 Arrested f11 Slawi•fl Prolle BERKELEY (AP) -Two men have been ar-- rested in the probe into the June 11 death or interna- tionally-known University of California geneticist Spencer W. Brown, police reported. Police said Monday that Robert E . Dynes, 34, was arrested in Oakland on a murder warrant is- sue<l in Berkeley-Albqy MWlicipal Court. Also held on a ml,ll'der warrant was Cacvon L. Simpkins, 29, according to police spokesman Michael O'Shea. Simpkins was arrested in Jl\Cbmond. State C...trol e11 MUie Ll•tnl SACRAMENTO (AP> -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. has signed a bill that sharply restricts the state's power to Impose minimum retail and wholesale milk prices. AB 418 by Assemblyman Vic Fasio Ct>· Sacra.m.ento), goes Uitt effect Jan. l . It repeals tfte pricing authori\y, but allows the director of the state Department or Food and Agriculture to reim- pos~ retail and wholesale controls for W-day periods. ~rille Prbow F .... a 01'.'d WASK!NGTON (AP> -President Carter has signed. legislation appropriating $11.3 million for construction of a medium-security federal priaon in Camarillo. Calif . .Michael Aun, spokesman for the Federal Bureau of Prisons. s aid Monday it should take several month$ to solicit bids.and award a construc- tion contract. bot bureau officials hope work can beein by the end of the year. J'Olfaf1ft9 2 Correett... Made PASADENA (AP> -Scientists say they have jarred into place Voyager 2's troublesome camera boom, clearing the way for the craft to 1ather in- formation from Jupiter and Saturn. Meanwhile, a Sept. 5 launch date was set Mon· day for Voya,er 2's sister craft, Voyaser 1. The launching, onginally set for Sept. 1, bad been postponed because or Voyager's 2 problems since its takeoff Aug. 20. Big Srotlaer Beld .. 8ez c. ... t LOS ANGELES CAP> -A North Hollywood man. who Is a member o{ the Big Brothers of Greater Los Angeles, was arrested for investigation of sexually abusina two 9-year..old boys, including his "little brother," officials said. They said the other child involved bad been placed in his home for adoption. Donald Samuel Rimbey, 36, was released Mon- day on $2,500 bail. . . . P~m· MeaSUre: ·' Faces Defei:it ~ACRAMENTO (AP> Two bills toughening c1'ild pornography penalties have cleared a Senate committee, but a new amendment could kill one of • them. the author says. In ac~ion ~o~day, the Senate Judiciary Commit· t ee s1gntf1cantly ---------broadened the scope of 5·:c! over his objections to A~ 702 by Assemblyman add amendments pro· Ball McVittie, in effect posed by Atty. Gen. daring the more liberal Evelle Younger's office. Assembly Criminal "We're eetting a little • Ju.Stice Committee to kill bit Ured of getting black- tbe bill. Jacked by that commit- McVittie CD-Upland) tee," said Sen. George said that's just what the Deukmejian (R·Long Assembly panel ~might Beach), In a reference to do if the bill clears the the Criminal Justice Senate, as expei:ted panel. "I SHARE the same philosophy you do," he told a senator who want- ed to toughen the bill. ••But I am concerned there may be no bill " The committee voted SUtgerlll Illness has caused singer Judy Collins to pos tpone ap- pearances today and Wedne s day a t Universal Am · phitheatre and Thursday in Tempe, Ariz., a ~pokes . woman says. The s pokeswoman said t he e ngagements would be made up in September • SAN FRANCJSCO CAP> Paychotoctat.a ~l"ff that sexual inUmacy wilb cUenta ta Wl· ethical but are divided over the deflnition of sexual intimacy. Sl>eaken at a meetin1 of Ute ethics e<>Uft· ell of the American Paycboh>gtcal .\llSOC~a· lion. holdlna its 85Ut annual meeting hw.e. said Monday that there l~ a great deal ot con- fusion over what "aftection-1 gestW'es" - short or lntercou"e -are ethical. Also un· clear is whether the 1estures can help pa· tlents, they aald. Members of a panel also said It is bard to find le&al remedies to stop umcrupulous therapists. SOME OF THOSE opposed to sexual con- tact with patients aclmowledled that tbey sometimes had to flcht tM onslaucht of sexual fantasy . "I bad muay fantUiea about my patient -::-I had thouahts ot erotic interlachs dur· ing my office -hours,•' saya psychologist I Stanley Moldawski of Rutcers Univetalty, wbo opposes a physical relat1onsblp bet.ween therapist and client. "We can do our patients more good as therapists than as lovers,·' MoldawsJd told the panel. Santa Moruca psychotherapist Zolta~ Gross maintained that sexual feelings are natural for doctof and patient, saying: ··Psychotherapy is a highly erotic art." ~ VERBAL THERAPY IS very limited becaus e ll has a "•parse omotlonal vocabulary," said Grou.1 of the Center for Counsellng and Paycbotberapy. But ho added touching ean be a '"powerful source0 of emo· tioqal commWlicatlon. , ' Gross added •'The boundary has to do with actual genital intercourse .. I will touch them abOve the waist or below the waiit or anywhere else at la necessary to Jnake therq aware of what they are feelina. Very few pet>· ple misunderstand me; they see me as con· v~ytng inform.atlon: •' AS FOR WHAT TO DO about erotic feel· tngs, Moldwaski said, "What we do with our fantasies ls we ei\joy them. Since I bave been ·an analyst, my wife bas been the beneflclary of my fantasies. She likes ~wort.•• He said it ia important to realize that although theral>istS like to feel tbey are ll'e&t lov~n and altracuve peOpte, tbe sexual vibntioos of patients usually stem from the past. Th.rough the phenomenon known as transference, the troubled penon diNCts buried or forbidden sexual desires from the pastloward the t.herapl.st. And as these feelings a.re explored and worked on in therapy, Moldawski said. the therapist dims as a sexual target tor the pa- tient. Gay Jo.h Rights in High Court SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A case which raises the question of homosexual rights in the world of private employment bu reached the California Supreme Court. The court heard ariuments Monday tbat dis· crimination against homosexuals should be barred under tbe state's Fair Employment Practlces Act even though sexual orientation isn't mentioned spedfically in the law. TRE CASE APPEALED the San Francisco Superior Court dismissal of a law auit brought by the San Francisco Gay Law Studf!llts Association against Pacific Telephone Co. and tbe FEPC, which refused to accept complaints of job discrimination from four gay men. David Moon, attorney f« the homosexual group, said the commission should be forced to bear complaints from the gays. He claimed the court should interpret the fair employment lawsucb that employers are forbidden to di.sCrimlnate on the grounds of sexual orienta· tion. Tbe law's listinJ or race, religious creed. color; national origin, ance'stry, physical band.leaps. marital status and sex is meant to be "illustrative rather than restrictive," Moon araued. AND MOON SAID THAT common law in Calif omia provides that &Of. ~mployer or group may not arbitrarlly deny a worker access to a job. "The question is whether there is any control over access to a position . . . a significan\ act which has an impact upon the life of a person," he said. for fast relief from that run down feeling ... AtbERGY?~ (21 Jt 214-2556 (7 I 4t 543-9624 Recorded Message AllUGf COMTIOL FOOMOATlOM 801 l5ll, 0t111• Ca 926&1 c;,lll us hi~. ttke a First Na11ooal ~10 Loan, and go d1r«tly to • 1;our ·dealer! Thats aft there i~ to ii Upon •pprOllal cl, <lmpie crd:lrt application. we'll loan \:OU up 10 8()llb of lhe put· ch.Jse price of ill\y new car you choose. lnclud. lng~~~..-:::'T"\A And here's a bonus: Since ~~&)~~!!~~j) At the Plaza In downtown Orange COSTA MESA: Mesa Verde & Ad;uns IRVINE: University Dr. & Michelson Dr l.AGtJNA .Hlll.S; Alicia Parkway & San Diego freeway ( Park Lands Don't Come (or Nothing ' . •' ···~fOtpwkl. . '. C ifomf., wouldn't Uk• to -. more gn,._-• ...,y. men pubUo ~more pfaygroundt, more hlk· tng tnll more w11demw m •• all otferlng .-.crntfon and relllf from Cheek·andiowt oommerolal and recreatlonal de-• vetopwt? • . So It ahould cOfM • good nowt that tome federal gov· emnwtt folkt th nk It would be a grand tdea to acquire 20,000 ec,. ol 90Uth coastal Orange County for publlc ua. • Some ot the future-thlnket'9 In the Int.nor Oept._,are cat· tng a c:owwtous .ye on thlt p6ece of land pushing detp Inland from the buch between ~una Beach at1d Corona del Mar. They call thlt propetty 'OM of the moet algnlflcant open IP8C9 Ind ·recreational r9IOUtee1 In the area" and eay It "shOUld be preserved and deYeloped for appropriate ~,..... tional tm.'' • . Since the state already hal commttted ~-6 mllllon for ~ a.id purchae In this area. tt ta presumed ~In· tenor foUcs hope to double or triple the stze of th• ''urban park." at won't come ch~. Some of the property is worth as much• $10,000 an acre~ they're not tall-:lng about a small piece of property-20.000 acte1 la quite a spread. ganoe County takel In just ewer 500,000 acres. Of that, 76, acres already are In federal hands as part of the Cleveland National Forest Jf thtf new ·proP<>saj shou~wln Congressional approval, the U.S. would end up owning about one-fifth of the county when other federal lands are added In.) There's some question, too, about what the Interior Dept. might consider "appropriate recreatlonat use." Should It, for example, include entertainment parks? How about housing for visitors? Should it Jnclude hotels or just camping sites? Outhouses or running-water facllltlea? A haven for the back-packer or designed ·for the city dweller • seeking an urban-type weekend? As shown in the year&-long debate over the ill·fated Dis- ney project in the Sierra. there Is little agreement over who should benefit from a recreational development. One further ttem: It may be popular to deride housing de- velopers, but finding an affordable ho·me is a tremendous problem to a tremendous number of Southern Californians. Taking land off the market and setting It aside for parks can do nothing but drive up the prtce of surrounding land -and thus push housing prices still higher. So before we add our automatic appl•use to the ex- panded park proposal, it would serve us well to find some more facts and more concrete understanding of just what Is being proposed. . Purchase, development and maintenance of recreational lands m~t be balanced against other needs of society. Lotte'ry's Bad ~dds Don't bet on your government. As predictably as taxeG. a lottery scheme is being ad- vanced perpetually as a form of financing California's state government. The argument usually goes: tt the bookies and numbers racket participants make a bundle frosn man·s natural gam- bling instincts, why not make It legal ,af'\Cf sxit the profit Into ttie publlc coffers? Sounds good, but if 'it's such a hot idea, why have the re- sults been so disastrous in the 13 states that have ventured in· to various lottery schemes? A federally funded study over the past two years found the bureaucratic overhead and the demands of government for a big share of the take have made state lotteries a poor bargain in the terms of the pay-out. • State lotteries pay out 40 to 45 cents for each $1 taken in. Bookies pay 95 cents, slots 75 to 95 cents and even the long-- shot numbers games return 60 or 70 cents from each dollar II) vested. It obviously isn't good business to bet with your govern· ment. A constttutlonal amendment that would open the way for a.state-run lottery Is once more on the move In Sacramento. It should be abandoned Ilka all the other dazzling. get-rich· qyick schemes proposed In the past. • ()pinions expressed In the space above are those of the OaUy Pilot. Other views expresMCt on this peve are those of their authors and ,. artists. Reader ~omment Is Invited. Some prison doctors think ~ female temperament is . l.ilfluenC..S by the color of the costume said female we1n1. So here md there around the CbUD11'J, they're outftttlna the . flrla In penltentlarlet in stltus p .. teh. TJplcall$'. , truaties wear 1reen. Olrla oo ~obatton, whlte or blue. ard cases, the old stripes. OOd girls, pink. Maybe you ~ew tbat the ~estoaa covered wqou u named after a Penmyl- ~a river. But 'tf'ere you ..-1.re that the word ortamal· meant "crOoked creek with lnthem die"? • order hair d1e was ahiQS sent bi plain UDla~ed •· velopes . Q. "Wbat's «lSW' mean in medical Jargon?'' A. Gunshot wound, BUaiPed into a lot Of GSWs years ago when covertna pOfioe bea*8. It wu al\Q,yl a cmio81t1 tb me th't the vlctlma of,' tbost wouDds Ald the oriilntl piln wun't bad at all. Utat lt felt Uk• a blaw frOm a wblp or a stick Up. followed by a bum- int or stllltlngaen.aation. ~II a dtt dweller reciutNd to pay property tu• to tbe county? 1'hll • ~on which e6ft. atantly popa up, e1peelally around the dme one aeta the tax ·:=:"· Jt un&nY l1 Pl'O'Oted by the t that tboee llvlnt In the rur anaa don't have to pay tu-• to the city yet tbe urban reel· dent must par,to botb.Jevels'of local govermnent. • . • In the mlnda Of many, wbo r. ._late tbe property tax to aucb visi- ble services • ·,,, • u pallce and · fire protec· tton, 1ucb a •Y•tem con-• atltut• dual payments on the put ot tbe urbanlt. for duplicate ac-t iv i tl ea. Already PIY· ing IOI' a dty police department. for example_ they don't aee whY they abauld also pay for a sbertlf wbo patrol• only the uni•· .. / Jack Anderson,· ·. corporllted arua. But they are overlookln• the fact that their dollars ec> to $\Q)pioit overall COUDty IOVVD· m•ot whlch locludea tbe aupervbion. useuor, treaauur. recorder, tax collector, audit« and other eounty officers. · And, when ope atarta to lilt the various funct!Ons ot county gov- ernment which serve all of the residents. within aod without the clty boundaries, St becom• Im· preuive. Fint off, county 1ovemment provides all the aervi(eS related to the basis of sel.f ·1o•ernment. that ol registering voters and conductlq electlon5. IT ALSO funds most of the costs of the _,.iem Of justice, pro- vidln1 the district attorney, public defender, grand jury and trial Jurora, jud1e1, clerks, baillffa. marshals, probation Of. ficers and even the court rooms them.selves. While it is true the major part of the sheriff's ( Robef't N. Wttd/Publflhtr ~s K .. vtl/Edltot,. . 1ervieer primarily beneftt the unln~rated area, bt doll fUrD1sb courtroom ba.lllff1, ter-- tatn services connected •lth civil actions before the court. and o~ates the Jalb. · Most. counUes also QPefate a parks and recreation department for the benefit of all, and ml.P.)' . furnisbllbrary services to all. Probably the two IQOSt costly functions however are the health s~tvices and weltare, lncludlnC indigent aid. Coanty health d.• part~ts ar~ responalble for sanitation which includes lnapec- tion of food establlsbment.s; and are generally involved ln all ~ings relating to public health as weU as tbe operation Of the COUD· ty bos~tal JDd health cllnics. Of recent years responstbilttJ for mental bealUlbu beenlhllted from the state to the countiea u have clinics for alcobollc:a and drul addlc:tioo. WJDLE EACH county operates diUereotly, aom& counties have recolQized the unf almeu of tax· ... ·- di tor I inl cltr dwellertt for aerrica ren· dered only to rural ielklenta. "Among thete II Sacramento County, perbapa\!)D• ol. tbe f1nt "to do so. wbere separate fund& are maintained in an effort to segregate unlQcorporated services from tbo1e which benefit all, residents throulboUt. the county. . AND WHILE rural n:al<kml$. escape clty·t.axe1, most find this is more than offaet b)'· a. • multitude of• apeelal dlltrtcts. each turnlabiftc lDdlvtduaUy the collective services provided by the dt:y for lta residents. Even ~ the tax bUI, when the county ls comblned with ett.ber the cit;)' or all t.be tpedtl d.latricta for those outalde tbe city. usually la le111 than the amounts levied by the aebool d.iltrleta whether in· aide« outatde a cit)'. For most. then. lt would ap. pear that maybe eoqntlea are providinl clthens with the best buy fOI' their dollars of any level of covernment. --Heart and Vote Belong to _ Big Business WASHINGTON -A con- greeslona.l inquiry Into the lobby- ing practiees of the natloo'I big .. geat corporations is being sabotaied by one of the coo- IJ'ellmeft wbo ls supposed to be CODduc:tinc the mveaUtatlan :rhe culprit Is f ut-talkinj1 cbatn-amoktnr Rep Gartf Brown <R Mich.), wbose heart belongs to the tit.ans of commerce H e h a s Jalthfully championed their interests in the cham· b e r s o f Congress. They have reciprocated at elee· tion time by contributing generously to bis campaigns. Last year, for example. be col~ lected offerings fro111 the ex· ecutlves of 18 major corpora· tiona, including Bendix. Galeral Foods. General Mcton. Georgia Pacific, Sun Coml)IUIY, Texaco .. Texa• Eastem an4 Upjobn. AIL 18 RAVE just received con1resalonal questionnaires that they would rather not answer. The questionnaires. dis- tributed by the House Com· merce, Coo.sumer and Monetary Affairs subcot:nmitt.ee, seek de· tails about their lobbying ac- tivities. BefOfe the corporations could respca!, Brown heaved a well- aimed mookey wrench Ulto the htvestlgaUve macbioecy. He fired off a letter to Chairman Beajamln Rosetitbal (D.·N.Y.), notlfying hlm: "l am advising those who contact my of- fice . . • that the malling of the ·questionnaire is not pursuant tO action ta.ken by the subcommit-tee ... He conteDcled. therefore. Uiat th& ~auou .. ,bould nat pre- sume tb5at a response is beln& solicited pursuant to action of the subcommittee.'' · TbeD be slipped copies of the letter to several corporatlou that were lookina for an excuse to ianore tbe queatlonnnaire. Already, the subcommittee bas been served notice by some cor- porations tbat tbey won't respoqd to the questionnaire unW the In· t.erna1 diapute is ~lved. BROWN complained that • "YOU eome to toWD for "two months .. bewrote. "~w~lli six~. hW"11' awv, Ud tb'tl1 one bears no more cl. tou Ul1 next winter. • • Rosentbal ~ad mall~ the ques- tionnaires without con1oltlng him. He la the subcommittee's rankinc Republican. ~ . . .. In f aet. the lobb)'ing illYesu&a- tlon was discussed in at least two mootbb' reports tbal were dis· tributed to all the 'n.abcommittee members. Brown's staff • repnsctatlve on the subcom- mittee, Ravy 1'uempler. also was fuUy aware of the lobltying invesUgaUon.. But Ruempler told our assOciate. Gary Cohn. that he had not been inform~ about the questlonnatres. Under the rules of the House, Chairmen an supDOSed to cBn<.'l the dall~qperatlons ol theirtntb-comml tees. Brown's action, thereto , appears to be an at· tempt to obstruct the in- vestlgation. ThiJ is dent.a by Rueq,pler who said. bis boss w asn •t trying to kill any legitimate investigation. ' BROWN TOLD us Rosenthal should have discussed the queg. tionnalres with all members of · the subqoplmi~. Bis CODtribu• lions from corpor•ti• ,e;c.- ~ ecutlv". )le instated. had "absolutely not" aUeeted his de- cision to cbaitenae Rosenthal. Tbe states, meanwhile, are high. Corporationa aow spend hundreds of millions of dollars on grass roots lobbying to in· fiuence iovernment ~ons.. The subcommittee wadts to know whether these lobbyjn1 ~ have been deducted We1al!y from tbel.r taxes. -FOOTNOTE: Brown de- monstrated bis still at tossing monkey wrenches in 19'12. He plfyed a l.eadlDJ role in squashing a proposed Watergate investigation by the Jate Rep. Wrleht Patman, D.·TtxU. JI this invesUgatloo bad cone •act. it might have exp~sed the ·Watergate scandal liefore the 1972 elections. ••1 don't want you '° Ute tbe. , world; but a~ a wblte iii tt. 1>4c•uae wbl.le one ae.ea it one laughs at it, but when one id vet lt up. one~ 8Qll'Y with lt; and I hold ft mu.ch wtsertolaupthan to beoutothumor.'' Then ls notblna that comes mol'i9 ,easily ~ me than ao1er. There ts lU~ewise notbln1 Jn m)'tdf that. l more deplore than tbia tendency to rail at tbl that I cannot do much about. ( • FRIENDLY TELLERS. 'they make it a pleas.ure to do business with First Federal. We also off er free money orden and check cashing privileges. 1\nd of coune we ~ymaxtmum interest on insured savings. Stop by andeeewhat you've been mlasloa! Ignoran~e Cited Epileptics' . Plight Grows .... ~ - WASIDNGTON (AP) -Public misconceptions about epilepsy and a lack of coherent government · aaslsqmce programs are worseninJ the plight of more than two mllllon AD)ericana •lth the nervous · disorder, a study comn>lsslon charges. "Ignorance, superstttiOn and misconceptions about the disorder at every level of our society con· tinue to plague the person with •Pllepsy , .. ," said the Commission for the Control ot Epilepay and lts Consequences, in a report Monday concludtna an 18-month study. IN THE REPORT; P.llEPARED tor the Department or Health, E4deaUon and Welfare, tbe commission called on the govertunent to pull together an array of epilepsy assllwce programs to make them more efrective. "Perhaps more than in an,y ~r lmpairment, the person with epilepsy-epltomitet the dilemma of the handicapped in our complex medical, edu.ca· tional and social support system." aald Dr. Richard L. Masi and, the commission's exeeuUve director. "The greatest single problem is to improve tbe understanding of tbe dilorder by tbe person with epilepsy, b1s family, prof.esslonals and the public,"· hesald. EPILEPSY IS A DISORDER OP the nervous system marked by perioclle lostet of consciousness. Under preeent 1overnment regulations, peraons with epite1>3y cu reeelve flnanctu ••· slatance to purchase tnedlcaUon. U tbe medication works and they 1>4!come free of seizures, bowevea', they can no 10111er receive assistance to coqtinue purchulng the dnac. the panel said. 11:1e commission also notea that epUept1c1 who tell poteUtial employel"I' Of t.Mtr disorder a.re frt· quently tl,lmed down. I" they conceal it and bave a sei.sUre on the jOb, however, they can bi fired for lY· me. the reportuicL . the number of church membe.rl in Huniary at aboUt 9 million ot a populaUoo of 101nllllon. Mo.re than two-tblrdl Wert Roman Catholic. East.em Orthodox and Jewisb, and the larcest Protestant denominations 'were Ref or med and Lutheran. • ~ AT TUAT TIME, THERE WOE onfy an estimated SS,000 BapUsts and 2,SOO M•thodlsts. 'Ille government contto\$ the appointment of hiCh·rankinl church officials in Hunaary and 1ub· · sldiaet the churches. OAIL. y PIL.OT A A taviSh W¥J To Enjoy Cardin de Pierre ()ardin Piln'I Canlin'• ....... IQrf FtOna '" Au A .4 II. Plrfu fpl"IY uo Widt Aay lufdlillt Of cirdin di llim c.rdio. The 26-inch siu1r1 a:arf in deep brown on vanUl1. And tht fnurtnce In one of Its most c:oncentratid forms, rich in floral •nets and !"""V note!-May we: &1 st you t1kl advantage of thb spec:ial off tr with your j>urch• of Cardin de Pierre Cardin Oeluxt Parful1\ in tht Cf'Y$1al flan, ~ oz. 17.00. Plrfum dt To Datte Atomizer, no~osol, 2.5 01. 15.0Q. Eeu Cfe TOi.letttAtomizw, 2.5 01.10.00. Ptrlumed Ousting Powder, 6 oz.10.00. Ptl'fumed Soap, 2 cak• 9.00. Cosmetics. Sain tax end dlipping (boyood our local United l'lltli dlllvtry ... , will bolddtd to t~ophonund moil ordtll 1.magn1 n ,,,. OUR BEST SELLING FRIGIDAIRE WASHER FAMILY SIZE IE WASHER Funy automatic 2.s~ wosiie. with ~ Al• Ao Wash Sysrern. ( , I V PfLOT ByO.C. HUSTINGS ... ....,"" ...... Youn1 men and women in· tere1ted In applyln1 for ad· minion to U .S . mllltary academies ahould contact the of. flee ol Rep. Robert E. Badham. <R·Newport. Beach.> Appllcatlons ·for fall 1978 cla11es are now being taken. Badham said bis 40th Consresslonal District bu two openings to the Air Force Academy at Colorado Sprinp, "Pl vkar J _._ an opening for the U.S. Naval _____ .... __ • __ .. _._•• __ •_1•_•_••_ ..... _ .. _.,. __ ... ____ Academy at Annapolis, and an Tec~ology Course Topic Seven courses in petroleum technology are being offered this fall by Coastline Community College. The occupational pro· grams will be presented beginning Sept. 12 at Marina High School in Huntington Beach and include petroleum pro· duction, oil fi eld elec· tronics and oil well drill· ing. Four cooperative work experience courses, each Trees Killed SACRAMENTO IAP> -· Drought has killed most of the large pines, many oaks and brush in the Sierra Nevada foothills. a s tate Department of Forestry official says. "The bigger and older pines won't regenerate, .. said H . W. Wolfram . a department range s pecialist: worth between one and four units of credit, will also be offered to fall semester petroleum stu· dents. For more information, ca 11 963-0824. Marketing Head Set Colin L. Harris, manager of educational sales for Walt Disney Productions, has been named director of telecourse marketing for the Coast Community College District. . He will be responsible for promoting learning systems produced by the district which us~ a mix· ture of television and printed materials for students. The district has produced 10 pro- grams since 1972 and is planning another five courses. appointment to make for the U.S. Army Academy at West Point. QuesUons should be ref erred to the congreMman•s Newport Beach office at 1649 Westcllff Drive. * ANOTHER REPUBLICAN vi!Sitlng the Harbor Area will meet with business and ~om­ munity leaders Friday. Barry Goldwater, Arizona's senior Republican senator, will · hold an informal session with community members in a get· together sponsored by the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce at 7:30 a.m. in the chamber offices in Newport Beach. , Service Manager Card, 30, was chosen from more than 35 appli· cants ft>r the newly created J>C)lition. He will manaie the clty•s transportation program -ptannlng, operations. develop~t of roads, and~Uke. Sierra Club. Meets The Orange County Slerra OW> will hold it's monthly meeting Sept. 13 at Saddleback High School at Flower St. and Segerstrom Ave. in Santa Ana. The 7:30 p.m. meeting will be about ski touring and• ls open to the public. .. Jrfore l.nformatlon cap, be obtained by calling 1 the event's coord1natora, 11arian Merande or Lynne Brilhtman, at 197-2533. ' HEWPO~T IUCH MIWPORT llACH Clearance Auction Sala U.S.~Mry 177402141 HAHDMADI ORIENTAL CARPETS & RUGS ._.......,....er.w ...... ~ ...... _..._. .. ....... , .. ~..., -.. """" ....... ,.., .,.., ...... .,.. l'llr .. ll'stJ• .............. -~ ..................... , ...... ··-.. .................... . ·-.- ...... Wll T• Place W .. 11~,AllCJllllf,31 at I P:M •. View Day of Alicffotl at MEWPOITER IMM I I 07 JOfttlltoree Rood Mewpott leach T.,... Cmlt•CllK• .._ 211-ttMW • CATALOGUU A VAi.AiU AT AUCTIOM I I , .. Dodgen Romp [Reuschel ( 18-5) 1 Pitch~ Tonight ! LOS ANGELES CAP) -1 Reg· pick a YEjac. this is probably my IJie Smith owes Chicago Cubs finest. because of my consistency tpanager Herman Franl<s a attheplateandinthefield. Utank you. The home run was bis 25th of 1 Smith had struck out twice and the year, and it Improved Los lfopped oui, but when he ap· Angeles' lead to 4·0. Bill Russell peared in the seventh inning, and Ron Cey staked John lo a 2-0 home plate umpire Jerry Dale lead in the first inning, both asked. to look at his bat, pre· singlingrunsbome. sum ably at Ftank'a request. After Smith's home run, tne Dale detected somelhlng Cubs ended John's bid for his wrong with the bat. and ordered rourth shutout when Jose Smith to get a new one. On the Cardenal singled home Ivan de Dodgn-• Sl•ie All G•-•dl>ICAIC 17MI Auo JOCl\>e-at lO\Anoo•t• I 1Sp m AuQ Jt(1»<•9'UILO'oAncMP14> I nom S.01 2Plt~r9'1atl.OIA1>99IU 1 ~pm. \ first pitch from Mike Krukow. I the Los Angeles slugger belted a alwo-run homer. the cru$hing tl>low in the Dodgers' fourth straight victory, 4-1 over the Cubs Mondlfy hight. "It made me mad," said Smith. "Bat at Jeast it woke me up. Maybe I s hould thank Herman. I guess I w~s using the wrong bat all night " The victory enabled Los Angeles to up its lead over Cin- cinnati in the National League .Westto9Y.i games. , The Dodgers will send Doug Rau, 13·4, after their fifth straight victory. opposing Chicago's Rick Reuschel. 18-5. Tommy John earned the vie· lory for the Dodgers, his 16Ul of ' <be season, which matches his career best. John was backed by a defense that turned over three double plays and included a. remarkable catch by Smith. who took an ex- tra base hit away from Bobby Murcer in the sixth Inning. "l feel I'm having my best season," said Smith. "If I had to J e5us with a run in the eighth in· ning. Bill Buckner followed Cardenal's single with another base hit and manager Tom Lasorda replaced John with rookie lerthander Lance Rautzhan. He got Murcer on a called third strike and then Gene Clines grounded out to end the Cubs' I ast threat or the evening. * * * CHIC.AGO LO$ANGILI~ OeJewH• Cardenal cl BuOiwrao Murc..rf c11,,..11 c;1u.c10 OntlftrMJb Trlllo2b Mil-aide C.roHl)tl K•uk....,o B•lllMrll ... ,, . .,, ... , .. ~ 3 1 o o Looe• 2t> J t t o ' 0 1 ! Ru•~ll u ' ? 2 1 1 0 1 0 Smlthrf ' 1 t l • 0 O o CaV lb 4 O 2 t ' 0 0 0 G•rvey 11! ' 0 I O o O o o Oevllloc1 3 o o o l O 2 O 8urk~cl 1 O 1 o • 0 0 0 Bek .. If 2 0 0 o l 0 I 0 0.IHC • 0 1 0 I 0 0 0 JOl\n p 3 0 0 O •020 R.utt,..,,P too o I 0 I 0 MQl•pll I 0 0 0 • Garrn..,~ O'O D ~. oll" ~ • Tot• i ;r,;: ... ;; ClllC-000 000 t1•-1 Lo• Al!Qtlt5 2'0 000 20ll-4 O~-LO'\ A~ln l l09 Chtc..90 I, lo1 .Angeles t. S&-Mllt-ald, 0.lff HR-Slnftll 12.SI S~l.R\nsall 1~ H • 8R 81 so Kru~-CL.•111 I 1 • ' • S C.•usll t 2 o o O 1 JOM IW.tf>.Sl I'> 8 1 1 t I R•utlhan ,, 0 0 0 0 1 G•r,,,.,. I 0 0 0 1 1 Sa-~~arman 1 ... PB-O•le\ T .. ? JO A-J4,).IS Metric Game· Set I f 109-yanl Football Fiel,d 1 NORTHFIELD, Minn. CAP) -Two Minnesota collegiate rivals 4tan to play their first metric football game this fall.on a 109-yard 9eld that should produce an announcer's nightmare. i 1 Carleton and St. Olaf colleges, both or Northfield, have I ¥heduled the game for Sept.17. o 1 Although officials are expected to have difficulty deallnt with f f1elric football, the game poses no real problem tor spectators. 11 t The field will be 100 meters long -or 109 yards -and S3 meters de. about SS yards. Instead of 10-yard offensive drives for the first own. each team will push for the lO·meter first downs. Officials wUI b~ ve to stretch somewhat as they step ~t nalties ano announcers will bave to deal wltb the problem of 1lv· i g player hei&l\ts ln centimeters and weights ln kilograms. Coaches f6r the two teams say the additional distance for the rst down and the added length of the field wW affect the came. "I suspect both teams will have to rely heavily on their klckJn1 d paasint game," s aid Carleton coach Dale Quist. ''The t~ams U pave to e~t more distance oo the first two downs. Pa.ssm, may Uie answer.'• Quist said ht suspects there will be fewer first downs and that t e team with th• better punter an4 pl•ctkicker will have an adv an-t ge. . St. Olaf coa h Tom Porter s~ the extra Width of the field wlll vethep•ssn iveraned". •I SAN DIEGO (AP> -At a mo- m nl whm h s«>ry ts made, U:ae mind's often 1napa a pklw'e that WW Jut forever. Wben all the pre11ure bad been lifted, when Lou Broe~ sUd Into the re- cord bOoks with the 893rd atolen bHe of h1s career. his O'lental camera had no rum. •'There really weren't any othet thoughts iolnf lhto~b my mln~ at that m~ment. 0 s;Id tbe St. Louis ~ardinals star Monday night. "I Just looked down to duit myself off, thefl I looked up and everybody was grabblni my hand." That wu because Brock had Just become the top base-stealer ln major leaJ(Ue baseball history, rtplacln1 Ty Cobb's atandard with hlt own. But Brock'• main concern at . that motnellt, after a f}.yin1 lunge . Jn to le(oftd bue broke the mark in the seventh lnnlQJ qt th Cardinals' 4-3 loss to the PJd , was that be had spiked San l>leao shqrtatop BUI Afmon. "I was re· Ueved when 1 aaw he wasn't tlurt," ho said. And :he was felleved Uiat tfle mark nnaUy had fallen. But after play wu stopped and Brodt wu pc-e. ented the base by San Diego player representative Randy Jones, he made sure to add thls reactlan: "I ttdnk It should not be re· membered as an evening when PRESENT AND PAST -· Lou Brock <aboveJ steals his 893rd base Monday night at San Diego to break the ~II· time record of Ty Cobb (below >. who held the ma1or leagues record for stolen bases for 49 years Coemos Welcomed By Unruly Mob NEW YORK -Soccer im- mortal Pde was nearly overrun by the wild, chanUn1 and often unruly crowd of 4,000 whicb greeted the Ooamos cbam- plonsblp soccer team at Kennedy Airport Monday night. · Although the crowd gathered to greet the team, which Sunday won the North American Soccer League championship, Pele was clearly the star of the event.' Alter departing the airplane, it took him 40 n>lnutes to travel the first 20 feet across the tarmac. Lou Brock stole a base to set a re- cord," he told the crowd ol 9,M6, ''but a.s an eveoln1 in which the record of a tremendous ballplayer was surpassed." Now, the prospect of 1,000 stolen bases seems possible. Brock says, "I'm not thinldng in • terms of 1,000. Every stolen base over the lears has been a challenge~ th~ moment and not ant.ambef. "You have to learn to play in pain, you have to want to steal, you have to }>e daring, and you have lo get out there and chaUengepeople." Brock equaled the 49-year old mark in the first inning. then btoke it in the seventh with bis DAILY PILOT Wrd career theft. In the fl.rat lJlnlni. he walked, then atole eOond on the first pitch. In tbe aeventb, he grounded mt.O a Cletder's choice an<laaain stole on the first pitch. Tbe ~ord Cobb called h1s 1 great•t was rewritten by a baserunner who admits his sUd· iog form often is Incorrect. 1 •'I go into the base the wrong 1 way 99 percent of the Ume," 1 Brock remarked. "You're sup· 1 posed te> get the body low, like on I the hook slide. to make the I fielder bend down to tag yoo. J I use a bent·Jeg, pop.up slide, go io I a little higher. "But coming In that way, you I get more umps' judgment calls." I . . I Hita Grand Slain I He Didn't Know It Was Loaded BALTIMORE CAP > -Nolan Ryan and Bobby Bonds of the California Angels extended their well publicized personal records. but the Baltimore Orioles won 6· l on Pat KeJJy's grand slam borne run. And. when be came to bat in the eighth ioomg of Monday night's game, one mnmg after tus homer. Kelly wasn't even aware that he also bad a chance to jom an exclusive group with a second, slam inthe~ame game. "I didn't even know the bases were loaded." Kell y insisted. ··I was still on Cloud Nine from the homer. I didn't realize I had another chance unttl just before I grounded into a double play." A public address announce· menl was made in the first IJ:in.i.ng when Bonds stole his 30th base of 1977. and for the fourth time reached the plateau of 3() steals and~ homers in the same season. Then in the fourth, when Ryan fanned Doug DeClnces, a message was flashed on tbe t scoreboard that he had reached , 300 strikeouts. Bonds, who has 33 homers, is one of five players in the "30-30" club. Willie Mays reached that level twice, while Hank Aaron, 1 Tommy Harper and Ken Williams each accomplished the feat once. Ryan al!io extended bis own re-. cord. surpassing 300 strikeouts for the fifth time In six years. He fanned 11 to total 305 for the season, while reaching double figures for the 103rd time in his career C.ALlll'OllNIA l.ALTIMORI ........ '1 1 0 l'lorestf R•m'f21> 8"""'" ........ •ooo 3 0 '0 '0 ' 0 • I t t sooo , 0 0 0 l 0 O,P 1 o ffo 1000 •000 0000 811mbf'eyc1 Bel~u Pn•Ueylf Sino-I ton rf 3 I I 0 , • l ' • Ro Ja<klOl'l tb ) 0 1 0 • 8aylOl'dll Chalk lb M"lllniksu 8Q•l.V<I HumOltf'PVC L Maytb M11wrtb Murrtrr<llt ~C•nclHll> 8 Smllhlb SUQ9H 4 (> l I I 0000 r oo1 4 000 3000 c. ... rr1tto pl\ H•MPICWIC • ' 1 0 Total\ ,. I • I Tolat• J1 • 7 • I c1111ornl• 000 100 -...1 81111.._,. tOO 001 .ox-. E -Milll,,,.k, OP C4lltorn1a t. S.lllmore t l08 C•lllornl• l. B•llimore 9 28-Remy, Sl<•Qll• Hiit Ro Ja<klOl'I ISi. Pa.1<•11'1' 1'1. S8- 8onel$, Bumbf'y1 11 .... .,. 8 S...ilh SF-Murny Ry•n IL 11 131 8••·-R Mo tW 14 121 I~ M R E• 88 50 , • • s • 11 ' 1 0 0 ' ' 9 • I 1 2 J WP Rytn2 T 2 U A 10, 103 I' ~ Irate Herzog Starts With Four Pitchers ..- e Talent Alio11nds At Golden West Depth .nd 1kl ll In every utqoey mak• l outlook al Go&den W t Coll t •Olri&Jly brlabt u lb 1m football MNGn approaches aad coacb aay Shackleford at.kn01rled1es the: fart that a lot of talent la on hand "You think )'OU know and you hope )OU know ," 1.ay1 Sbacll.leford, "but you'ro n•ver au.-. We know we'r• cotna to have 1 aood team. how •ood· re· maim to be lt'en." H11 c rew invades Cilru1 C0Ue1te Saturday morntna no> (or I controlled ~Crtmma1e with the Owls an preparation for the ~pt lOopener at Santa Ana .. Everyone play& equally an the scrimmage with the same bulc playa;· says Sbackltlord. "We want to do \l.'ell, but our objective is to see every player on film so we can evaluate them and settle on our starters for the first game ·· Few positions have been <'hnched due to the depth in every · category, but former Huntington Beach High sta.r Bill Holst is operating a s the No. 1 quarterback, with Gary Coleman of Fountain Valley a notch behind. The Rusllers have five return- ing starters, but that's deceiving with backs Loren Micklin and Tim Janovick, rated as the two best in 1976, both returning after missing all or part of 1916 with pre-season Injuries "We have six backs who are quality players," s ays Shackleford. ''If our sophomores, MickJill, Ric Martin and JanoYic, can stay healthy it could be the core of the tory or our season.•' Puwn tb lint-whether U1 tM off n.idve or def enal Yt ll ~ Hcondary, llotbacken, rt· relver1. wha~ver-tb• RusUen are ln a ~pth po1ttton and In each c aory. Shackleford hu a tlock answ r : "A tremendous amount of quallt7." Two surprlfft ln the ftuatlera ump have come at U1ht end and tn the otltnalve Uno. Unh rpted 8lll Kelly ot Tu.ttin and <>ranee Cout Colteae transfer Jim Balch have bollteNd tblnp at tllht end and at offensive UneseveraJ have been Impressive who entered with low key credenU1l1. lmpresalve at tackle have been Erle Huth ol Edllon <Huntinaton Beach>. Curtla O'Neal of Garden Grove's i.. Quinta, and Steve Bolton of Garden Grove's Rancho Alamitos. At guard the pleasant sur- prises include La Quinta's Joho Orkish. Westminster's Mark Case and Steve Bruno of Newport Harbor, while center Bob wtl.;on of Edison is also better than ex- p~cted. ••Gene Farrell did a helluva job recruiting district players," says Shackleford. : Shackleford says the RusUers will be taking to the air even more than last year when Golden West passers accounted for over 1,500 yards. Summing up the '77 prospects, Shackleford says: "There are two things that make or break a Junior college team. First, you have to be lucky and have no one hurt. Secondly, ii you do 11et those injuries, you have to have \leptb." Aod at Golden West Colle1e. that's one thing the Rustlers ap- pear tohave-wltb quality. At Orange Coast 3 Outstandin§.QBs Make Tucker Smile The Orange Coast College Pirates have a lot of potential for a banner footbaJI season with 10 returning starters and quality depth in the skilled positions. But there are some possible pitfalls for coach Dick Tucker a nd h.as Bucs "We're a better team than we ~ere a year ago," says Tucker, "but whether we can win more than six games I don't know " Tucker will get a better look at his possibilities Saturday when the Pirates entertain MlraCosta College or Oceanside at 4:30 and Rio Hondo College of Whittier at 7 in controlled scrtmmaaes. Some answers Tucker is look- ing for in the scrimmages are ln the secondary where only Steve Foley returns and with the of- fen sive line, where the Bucs are building around center Tim Bienek, tackle Mark Cbakerian <230> and guard Steve Hedges (215), the latter pair retumln1 lettermen. and ,is the No. 1 QB unUI proven otherwise. Although the Pirates are smaller than usual (defensive tackle Joe Cameron at 240 pounds ts the heavywei&ht). tbe Dues bne several standouts in various areu to draw from. Tbey include linebackers Corky Winder (200) and Jeny Grundy (210), botb returnlns starters, Kevin Lindsay of Ne~ Harbor (210) and Jack Mackey of Garden Grove's Bolla Grande. A1ao lettermen tackles Ken Hill and Dave Sanders, and freshmen Rick Battersby <Dana Hills) and Bruce Divinsld <Santa Ana's Mater Del>, aloni with a lethal kicldna rame ('ounter Jim Aye.rs from. Claremont and Scott Lohman, who returns as the placekicker with solid creden-tials). Other blue chippers: Retum- mg starter Paul RadlJb at•de- fensive end; Randy Johnston and Terry Funches in the secondary; wide receivers Dave Panel and Don Whan (retuminf starters>; and Doug Boswel and All- Hawail ace Ed Mandano in the secondary. RAY SHACKLEFORD Baseball Standings AMBJUCAN LEAGUE Eut DlrilloD New York Bostoo BaltJmore Detroit Cleveland Milwaukee Torooto W L Pd. GB 78 52 .eoo 74 5' .578 3 73 55 .570 ( 61 67 .477 11 61 69 .489 17 57 78 .422 231h 45 84 -.341 32~ West Dlvlllon Kansas City 75 53 .586 Minnesota 75 58 .5$t 2Y.a Chicago 72 56 .563 3 Texas · 12 57 .ssa 31h An1m 61 66 .e 13'r'.l Oakland Sl 77 .398 24 Seattle 52 81 .391 25'1; ...... ,. ......... New Y-" S. It-OtyJ M-1 .. , Terame .. S, 1st .. me, 10IMlflel .. ,._.,, CaltMnlMI I c.....,..,.,,CNuQe2 0.-IMdl, ....... 1 Otlly...-scMcMed T ... .,.,.._. Cl!~ (Kr-7 .. ) .. C:'-""I.,._ (0-laM 1•u1,11 CallNr!N ,.,.. 11 .. ) .... ltl_ , ... ..,_ IJ.11)," 0.1-.. l~•W mt 9"10ft tn.tMl,n lffttlet ..... Mll lltNewYW11 l' ...... 12 .. 1, .. o.tlllt (.-0-1 ... S) M Mllw..U. (Caldwell ..... 11 THn 1"-"Y 11-10) et Kenws City (~Cl , ... ,01 ... Onf 'f Olft"" Klle<l\ll~ ......... ,..0. ..... CeHIOf'nl.t at aaltl.._e, n Cl-tend ott aoMll, n SHltleet New York, n Oe1roll at Mllwaukff, n Tex.He! K"'~' Cit, n OMiand at M1""9Mlta, n OnlYlllfTMSKMduled NATIONAL LEAGUE Eut Dlvltioa W L Pct. GB Pbilidetphia 79 SO .612 Plttabur&h 76 SS .580 4 Cblc~ 70 59 .5'3 9 St. Louis 71 60 .S42 9 Montreal 60 70 .462 191h New York 51 78 .. 395 28 Wm Division Dodcen 79 52 .603 Cincinnati 70 62 .s:.> 91h HoustA>n • • 62 69 .473 17 San Francisco 61 71 .462 lllh SanDiego 57 76 .429 23 Atlanta -48 82 .369 301h Offsetting the loss of receiver Bob Hughes (broken collarbone> has ~n the showing of running backs Dennis Boewell and Faye Weathers, Eric and Kurt Flowers of Michigan, Costa Mesa's Dan Duddrld&e"' Vic Lindsey from Ohio and Leroy Davis, a 218-year·o!5f ex-Marine. __ Craig Amerkharuan ls a bonus at tight end and Matt Braaa, who caught 52 ·passes while at Redlands Hilb in his senior year, gives the Bucs added streflllh at wide receiver. PERFECT JOB.·· • -. . The key bat.tie is at quarterback and it's a problem Tucker has not bad before. "I've never had three or this caliber in the picture before," says 1\&~ker. "I think all three are winners and all three could start. If we lost two ol them we'd still have a good chance of wlnnlnc with the tbil"d." The three Tucker ts speaking of are returnlnt starter Larry ff all, Gary Guiant4S (a startf4' early before an Injury KO'd h11n ) and former Coeta Mesa H1th ace Da\te Mollica. HUI ruahed for 111 and 100 yards \Jut year to leadlnt the Bucs lO vict«iea over Mt. San Antaaio COllei<e arid GrOllmont that will help ' NeWPort. Beach S Spar kl tionals ...... By a DAILY PU.OT WRITER When the public visit.a a roUer skating rink, the cry Is usually to "slowdown" as ooe makeshla or her way around the somewhat coofintna area. For those wilb a yen to skate fast. there are clubs such as tfie Harbor Roller Skating Club of Costa Mesa where this optton can be fulftlled and i>erbaps lead to national cbmpetilion. Ken Hutter of Newport Shores found th1a out at the aae of ll and has pursued his era vln& for speed everetnee. · Recently, tn Ft. Worth, be flntabed second tn the fenior men'• naUonal a~d akatlni cbamponsbl"-and t>efore that be had also fin.i•bed aecood in sophomore compet.lUon ln 1914 and in Junior men's 1ctioa in 197~. • "I hope. to keep with it until I can win first place," be aays. Placement of akaten ts de· termined in four races of 5,000. 3.000, l,SOO and 1,000 met.en on a 100-meter track. Nine com- petitors start a race with widths of'tracks varying. · "I'm p?Obably beUer In the shorter races, .. he saya, "because l have a pretty fa$l start. "In the longer race1, lt 'a usual- ly the better position to be in second place. It's pretty hard to go out in front all the •llY and have a good sprint to the finish. "It'• &lmllar to track. competi· tlon. You want to stay with the front runnen or skaters. to have the best chance to win ... Whlle be didn't win any of the fou• races in Texas, be did flnlsb 1977 Football KEN HUTTER second in the 5,000 and UIOO. third in the 1,000 and fourth in the 3,000. Skaters accumulate points in each race with the winner be· in& det.ennined by the highest poinltotal. ~ .. Most ~ple can s print or go distance, • he says. "I seem to be able to do all four races about the same. which helps in national competition." • When he-·was in junior high school, Hotter. was on the \rack team and played Pop Warner Football. · "Some friends of mine took me roller skatin& and t found I en- joye(l jt v!!ry much. Now I'm the only one still skating and 1 hope lo go into rink management someday,·· he says. Hutter remembets his first year at the nationat.. "I broke first in the 440 and coming around the first comer into the back at.retch, I spun around and was going backwards," he recalls. "I went down on one foot and everybody went by me. It's embarrasaln& to Gauchos' Goal: .._ Rebuild Defense Ken Swearingen seems destined to rebuild Saddleback College's football team one half at a time. When he took over as Gauchos head coach a year ago. Swear- ineen inherited nearly an entire defensive unit but bad to bulJd the offense from scratch. Thia season, the situation is re- versed. or the 12 returning starters from last year's· 6-3 squad, eight are on oClense, in- cludinl neet-footed quarterback Biil Yancy. Conversely, eight of tfle starters from the defense that re- • g ii ter ed four consecutive shutouts and allowed an average pf Just 3.9 points per .Mission Con- f e!ence game Jast ye_ar .have graduated. _ 'l'be blaeat dfacrepency is on · the line. ""Wbile l"ancbo Casllllo, Norm-Katnlk, Tony Lundy and Don Lachmund all return to anchor the offensive line, all of last year's down linemen on de. tense will have to be replaced. • It won't be an easy task but Sw.earingeo feels the situation ts not as bleak as it seems. "We've got quality people,.. he Jnslsts. •'They're Inexperienced but when they learn it <the system) they're golng to be good ... There II no such problem on of.- fense Where the Gauchos have re-tuminl atartera to thtow, catch and run the ball. ln addition to Yancy, wbo wu a socood team All·Ml••lon Conference quarter&ack ln 1976, there~s Grea Speicher (the stxth leadln1 rusher in the conference lut 'year) at tailback, and speedalen Tom Ha1ch and Mike Pardi at the wtde receiver •loua. Lost to ~aduation la nmntna back Cback Van Liew, wllo aalned 106 yarda in last year's finale. but retumtna to vie for his postUoo are a pa.Ir of resenes, Erle Peters and Brlan Wood. or the three defensive re- turnees, two are linebacket11, Ron Wade and Jeff f\olettJ. ~ other atarter back, Jeff pp, wW anebor the HCC>ndary. To rut tho holes on defense Sweartneen will rely on several college tnmfen to:~upplement wbat he terms a JOod crOt> al freshmen. Tommy Arons (Cal Poly Pomona> at linebacker. Dave Shanbron <UCLA> on the line and Doug Reeves <Cal Lutheran) at defensive back give Saddleback experience at all three phases ol the defense. Among the freshmen Swear- ingen lauded are linemen Phil Moen of Laguna Beach. Alkn Streeter of San Clemente and Mike Krulhers of San Clemente .• Swearinaen savs there is an abundance of sue on the first unit, pointing out that this year's defensive team will actually be bis~erthanlastyear's. • Being stingier might be a bit harder The Gauchos peeled off a string of 21 consecutive scorelesF quarters last year before the streak was snapped in the fourth "frame of their heart-breaking 7-3 ·1oss to champion Citrus. Overall, Saddleback allowed but four touchdowns during its 6-l con- f ererw:e campaign. Turnovers, eight in aJI, ruined the Gauc\los' tiUe hopel a&ainst Citnta, which wound up 6.0.1. But the benefit of a year's experience should alleviate that problem. ·•ow-off en.~e should be pretty eood ... Swearingen says. "Our defense waa outstanding lut year but we lost most ot them. I hope they're both aa good this year ... Saddleback will scrimmage Looi Beach City Collese this Saturday before openlng the ?e- gular season with a DOD· conference pme acalnSt CoUeee ofthe~Sept.10. Stan' Bonte Finale 10 from first to la1t in one 1tr-11b\*way " In ·~ likatJ01, lf you jump U)e IUD you are pe!\alind four fee( aDcl tt ts bard to 'le:t a decent 1tatt Solb« lntO thO flnt corner. Skaters don't ao ln lane:s and otheta can c!loso in oo another skater at the turn alttiouch penooaJ contact la frowned oo. A HCOPd Jump eliminates a skater lrGm a race. . At Ft. Worth. nine-year-old Stanley Johmoll of Long Beach. skat.Ina for tbe Harbor Roller SkaUq Club, finlshed second in the .tvvenlle division and Fran Smltll. 29, was flftb in the senior ladles divtstoo. Hutter was a member of a re- lay team that finished th.lrd and also included Richard Curnutte ofCcstaMesa .. Does the pressure of competi- Uon bother him? "There is more pressure in the individual races than 1n the re- lays." he says. "You have three other people with you in the re- lays. ·•in individual competition. you are on your own and a fast start is very important. You can reel the pressure ... Accidents l01peril • 500Drivers ONTARIO, Calif. CAP> - Johnny Rutherford narrowly escaped a fiery crash moments after turning the fastest lap oft.be day, and Johnny Parsons bad to baU out. of hi& burning McLaren in aqother incident during prac- t.i c e Monday for Sunday's. $345,000 California 500. Rutherjprd .raised the best practice si>eecl to l~.440 miles. per hour, then encountered prob- lems with rookie Chuck Gurney in 'Uie first turn of the 2.5-mlle rectangular oval. Rutherford trailed Gurney, who was lapping about 20 m.p.h. slower, into the corner, both of them in the groove. Tbe daring move apparenUy caught Gurney by surprise, or there might have been an instant of contact with the two cars, and the rookie went splnnln&. - The left rear of Gurney's Eagle plowed into the retaining wall. and sprayed a sheet of orange flame from shattering maanesium wheels and ruptured oil 1Jnes. It bit the wall again, then apun.cruily into the infield as Rutherford shot clear. Reseue crews, wb.icli reported a brief fire, let the dazed Gurney sit in the car for a {ew minutes before permitting him to climb out under bis own po•er. · Gurney sUffered a alight con- cussion, doctors said, but was in ~ need of hospitalization. · Rutherford said af~erward he • believed Gurney bad started to lose control of bis car before he .. pas1'ed. Earlier, Parsons was warming up bis McLaren at slow speeds when be noticed the crew of Pancho Carter's car from Dan Gumey'a All-American race as, frantically wavtn& thelr arms at him. "I thought maybe an oil line had come off, but, no, tbe sauce showed pleoty or oil pressure," p 'arson. explained •• ••nen I loOked aaain. They were all ttlll wa•lnf away and . running toWard me, ao I Just abut It off. ••Wbeft lt came to • stop, all . thll black smoke started to drift up to the c:ar. l; dedded lt wu I' tlmetoleave." .. . PanoM hulted out as c:rews arrived wttb fire extJn2Uiahen. Tbe ftte w~out quickly, and Parsons was pncticlng in bll car later In day, althougbJuaL brieQy. ,,.._._.•Sp• LOS ANGELES -arterbad~ Michael Brant carried the ball 18 time r 77 yardJ M9t1day u the UCLA Bruins held their st full scricntna1e. Brant, a freshma om San Fernando High .School, drew praise om hend coach Terry Donahue following the t ·hour workout on Spauld- ing Field. "He displayed g adersh1p and very aood quickness." Donah said. OUllM 111 ·f'flaab Lillie Eddie Dibbs look his toll with a steady ba court game Monday and b,amped olC Poland's jek Fibak in four sets to iain a berth in the fin of the U.S. Pro Tennis CbampiQDSbJps. Dfbbs, seeded rou 1D the $125,000 tourna· .-.ent, had trouble only the first set. and finally bfgan wearing down Fl . taking the match, 4-6, H ,6·2, 7·5. Earlier, third-see Manuel Orantes had dlninated 16th-seeded J ie Flllol 6·3. 6-0, 6·1. l'\Y Gfa .... 24-2 EAST RUTHER FO yard field goal with iod gave the New Y q r the BuffaJo Bills in p ·season game Monda ' Danelo's kick clima drive directed by completed 15 of cik punctuated the yards to Jimmy Ro T er as the Giants gai tb . losses , N.J. -Joe Dabelo's .40 left in the overtime k Giants a 24·21 victory ational Foot.balL League ight. a 12·play. 80-yar~ ~cor• arterback Joe Pisar~ik, passes for 178 yards". inning drive with puses nson and 21 yards to Bob their first victory after ~alo, 1·3. cwme ga'~~to overtime. :be Bills scored the ing touchdown with j~!Jt 77 !onds to play in re laClon,...ume when roOltie qoanback Ken Johnso went 11 yards. The play cltr1.<ed an 85-yard BU • drive that took 13 plays tndf\Sumed 7"'a minul ltil then, the Gi~had nursed a 21·14 lead builb the pinpoint p of Pbarcik, who com- pleleune consecuu ve sses over one stretch and dlrett three scoring drives ,..,...., 17-3 Ii.JsToN The Houston Oilers ovel"eame a first·~ hex with a !'l·vard touchdown Piii from Dan ltorini to Jimmr GUes and a on~_yard sneak by K~u1la1 Moruul ni&ht as the ooecs took. a 17 -3 l\onal Football Leaaue exhlbiUcm victory • ilers, frustra~ed by nine straigbt exhibi-overlancisco. tion 1 over the p~ two seasons. struck back with touchdowns ln the third quarter after hav· Ing t cbdowns, one a 91-yard touchdown pass, nullir~· holding penalties ln the first half. H kicker Sk~ Butler added the Oilers' final with 2: 38 left to play with a 29-yard field goal failing to convert on two previous lll· tempts. .. PUBUC NOTICE fl7"1'1 """*"-°'1111111 c..tlt Deity ,. .... ......... n. •• "11 ~ PUBUC NO'ftCB PUBLIC NOTIO£ l'tc:Ttttous au•••» MAMIE STATaMINf TM lol1owlnt pet' IOI! Is '°"It bu sl· neuas AON'S $EASHORE MAAINE t. AUTO AEPAlll, "'7 Jiii St N._P0<1 e .. c ... CA Earl AoNld Schenck. 416 Cott• Mew St., CMll Me ... CA 'tt27 Thi> -nesa I• <~ltd by M IA- dl•l•t E•rl AonAld Sc!IMClr lllls 'li.t..-.1 was lftM with Ille CIMllllY Olttll. of Of'-c:-IY t11 AllO-J, 1917 P7W11 Putlllll>td 0ref'99 Coest ~ly 1'11.c. Aututl t, ''· U, lt, 1911 34.»-77 PUBUC NOTICE' f'IOITIOUS •USllllSS NAME STATaMENT The 1o11ow1no oer1011 •~ ttolno IM.tsf· ~,., , DUO< ' ASSOCIATES,,.._ MOii leray. Coote Me••· CA '2•'26 OonaldQwen Ensign, 20»W•llfc•. co:~~.~;;! ~·~led by ~" In dM,iual Ool\fld O. E1111gn PUBUC NOTICE f'ICT1T10Ul llUllN•M NAM• ST A TaMCNT ....... ftllM"9 --la dOlno blitl· ness•s " .. p Tiiie, 10* PIK•r 111 ... , clrcte, F-ttl11 Veil~. c:.1tto. .. 11 molllldWd ._,.Co~ Inc., le C:.llf c.r.I ,.._ PIK• llhr~ Cln:te, ~ ta111VMMIY,Clllfllnfft2* • ™' ..,.,,,... Is cOlldlKWd by • ,.,. --41111. 11~•1t611MCo.,lc 0....~91 ,.......,.... TillS a~t wff fllld wl"° Ille C-ty C..,• of Of..,._. C041Aty °" ,..,....."·"n. ....a l"\ltllllNd Orllltl CMI' D.tlly Piiot. 1.119• n. JO, -s.cit ... u. 1tn .u-n PUBUC NOTICE fl1Cf1Tteut ·~ ..... NAM&tT~nMCNT TM Mllewl19 --eredelf't ....... MM ti: IEltCHANOE l!NTl!lll'lllHI, 2•40 • ..-.11 ........ Co.ta MeM, CatlfOt'IM... -Wll~e Ucti l'arllw, -All• Alie-,~ MtM. c:atHon>le .. # A.,,... N, f'NW, mt SITM\o llell lloed, ~ -... c:.t...,.,,.. ... Tllla Ml-• It <•llCNcted bf • ,_,..=i:=: l'Wlter W.....l...l'trtlff This tta'-M -Ill.. wll" tlll ~ Oertl .. 0r .... '-""" eftJU/tr 2',H71 ~ "'*llMd Or-.e Coest D.tlty ...... AA19.n.10.-s..•.1J, 1m a.u.n .... , ------------··-------:-. ---- PIAlllWIS 0r .... ON" Deity Piiot. PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE A\19, D, 30.-$eOI. '-IJ. 1'17 JUJ.n PUBLIC NOTICE ll'ICTITIOUSIUSIN•SS NAIMSTATIM•NT C:......, Tho tollowlno .. r10t11 are dOlna llllsl· WNlltOllC0411l1'0flTNa nesus: 'TATS ~CAUf'OtUHA f'Ott SG A~IATES. 1401 Dove Stroot TM•COUN?YO.,OllANOI a450.N"'llOl18Hcll.Cellfornlet?tt0 Nt.A-'2716 ROBERT J. BOEHNLEIN, ll'• N OTI ca Of' MI A• lttO Of' CIWlrtomeDrlve,o-ney,Callloml• f'aTtTlaet "CMI f'•oeAT• Of' W1U. VICTOR H. llOVD, 13702 Dall LIM, ANO CODICIL TMRllSTO ANO f'Oll SlllleAN,CA. L•TT••s TUTAMaNTAllY ANO JOHN e. RIGGINS, tOUI c-... A\aTNOIUIATION TO AOMINISTIEll He19MSOtlw,S1M1taAM,CA. UlfO•• TM• INfff'•MoaMT AO-Thls~-lslltlnt<ondUC ... bT• ''""I"""" OH °" &ST AT as ACl. PenlWf'lflll>. lllstote ol AACHI~ A. MecOOHM.O. $GASSOCl/llTI!& OatHYd VICT°"H.llOVD .ion CE IS Hl!JIEtV Gl\tl!N ,,.., Tllh st~ flled •• .,. Ille COll"'Y fl1CTITIOUS•UllNl$S NAM• ITATllM•NT Tiit IGllowlnt .,......,. Is dOlng blnl· ,..,, ... GOl.DfiNWl!ST CONTRACTORS, 1231 Terry 0.1.,., H1>nli1'91on Beech, Celllomle'174-17 John Elton Polk, 8111 Terry Or., Hu"'lnoton Bea<ll, CalltornlatM7 Tllll buslntn I\ conct11cled by an in· dlvlcNal JoMPolk Tiiis 1t•t-was tiled with llM COll~IV Clerk of Orar>90 C....t'ly Oii ""lll'St "· 1971. ........ "'*llSlltd Or""OO Cot'Jt D•lly Pilot. •111.n.•-5ec>t ... 13, 1t17 """" PUBUC NOTICE ELl.l!H M. MacDONALD, RAV MONO Clof'tl Of Or-~ .., 14ut111t I. J MacDONALD •nd MARK 1917. p ROBINSON ...... fifed llerel1t• pell· fl1'l9I f'ICTIT10USMlllNIEU tt.., for ,,,._. ol Wiii •nd Codl<ll P\1111~ ~ CMll o.lly ltllot. MAME STATEMeNT 111-0~ for I•~· of L .... ~ "'"""*'· ... u ••. "" TM lollowlnt .,.,._ Is dolnv busl· T•~ to !tit "91111-" .,,., lSIO n llOftll'. .ult>or1ullon 10 -lnlstor tr. fflAtlt ------------SCIENTIFIC L.AllOAATOAIES ,,_, 1tte 1n0epen0ent Mml11i5tr .. lon PUBLIC NOTICt LT0 .. 727Wetl 7111Streot.54111et?t. Los Of IEst-Act. ,.lff'tnn IO wflkh Is Al\ttln.Catll_. ~for'"""" P"'l~n. W 1"'111 ·-------------1 Jadt M Uvhon, ,.,.2 SuMycrest lho llme-"IU of lleerlflt Ille...-fllCTITtOUS•UllNHS L.n ,Hunlll'tQlonlH<ll.Clllfoml•,,.. Mt boof11t1 tw s.ti«ell'llltr U, 1977. at NAMa ITAT•M•NT Tllll buUIWSS Is <onclUCted by en ~ tO·OI • "'·· In the COUt\rOM"t ol OePtn· TM follOWlnt per.i Is dolnt bll\I· dlvt._.. ment Ho J"' MIO ~ •.. 100 Civic MU as: J«k M L.e¥1SGll CW\ltr 1>'1"9 W.$1.)11 tl'le City ol Sent• AMEIUCAN ~En l'AltTI, 1..U TMs ... ,_, ... , llled wlltt - ANl,Ctllfafllle. -NoyesA-,lrYIM,C..llfomltt21U County Cler1t • Oranoe c.. ...... on oatedAWU'l I•, 1.,1 Amerlcen Ault Strv Ito. • A11911at "· 1'17 WILUAMIE.St.lo+4N, Calllof'lll• c~etlon. ,..,, NOYH ... ....... C011ft1V Clertl Ave,,.,., Irvine, C.llfomle tZ7U P\lllflshed Or-CoHI DAiiy Piiot. HOllOAH ANO llOOINSOff This bull~s Is cOlldl.lctfod by • co,. Aut. U. JO, -Sec>t. '· 13, 1977 1144-11 • ._,.,. ....._ poratlon :.:'#ettSldtlt,;t' ,_.,k en Auto Servi<• L•sl' ..... C.•11 KerryP..il- Tet: ln>I •'"' . V•U PrMldent Attor!MIVt tw1 P.c"'-" TM\ st•tomenl ..,., flied with ,,,. PUOll"1IHI 0r.,. C.o.st D•llv Piiot, Countv Cieri< ot Or.;noe Counly on .tu.14u101. 2~.30, 1917 3140-71 A119Vll 17, "n PUBLIC NOTICE ManC• TOC1lEOITOllS SUNlltCMtCOUllTOPTMI! STA ff OP CALll"OllNIA f'Oll ntaCDUNT'fMCMIAMe• Ne.A.nm Est.ieolLOtST.VOGEL,0.C .. Md NOTICI! IS HIERE9V GIVIEN to tM creditors tA !tit llbwl ~«leftt I/lat •It perlOllS "8vlll0 ctalms eoelntt t,,. 11!0 cM<:edef'll ¥• requlnld tollte them, wllh Ille MCffMf'\' YCNCMfl. In , ... olflce of Ille clerk of the .oc>ve efl11tted court. or to ~ l1lln\, wllll I ... -IMY woucllers. lo ttl• 1111•tnl9.,.d "' Hunrlll. R-. MKOoMkl, MHdo t. Ronnweld, A Profeukwlal C0<por• tloll. MO ~ COfltel 0.IYe, SUlte IUS NewpOtt 9o•<h. CAl"oml• t266e. wfllcll IS h piece of busl•tt51 ti the .,.._ oersl9Md In 111 11\ttt.n pertafftlllo M llM estate of Mild dtc:eden\, wltlllll tow "'°"IMofW Ille lint ll\lbllcetlotttl ttll1 Mlkt. D•Wd•uousu.1m lt\l9fll T. Gflbtf1 Fr.-11111.•-· Q>.£llt(ut°"of lh0 Wiii of tllt ~ MIMCI cMffdeftt M•nfltt, •-,Mic.,_.. ........ _ .... :.:~:r-J .. ~s.ttetJlS ........ 9oldl, CA t*9 ITI41ttMm AttorartStwC:O.a-""'" PlltlllWCI Clt'8119t Cot'1 O.lly Piiot •uoust ''· u. 30, s.,ic. '· 1tn 3'10-n PUBUC NOTICE f'ICTIT10US •USINHI NAMaSTATIEMINT TllO loll-Int per9M.,.. dolno ~r. MU ft! PATll!NCIE COMPA .. V, !OS MlltA Street. 9110o1, Cellfomla.,._' Gllber1 A. Mllchl41, 1411 E 8•1bo• Blvd., Bllboo. Celll0<nl4' '1M1 RoUy H. Pulnlcl, 105 Mein $lrffl. l•lbol, Clllfot'lll.,M1 • Thll buslllHI ,, cendvctttd by • O•Mf'tl Ptrtnff'lhlP GllllertA. Mlldwll "811y H. l'Vlesitl Tlllt SIMOIMM w• fltod wlUI lhll Countv ,..,. or Oranoe c-.ty ~ ""'· •• 1977. ....,., P\ltllltlled Orenvt Coast o.<ly l'ilOt. AU9UR 14,D,30,MdSolot911lblr•.1'11. • UJA.11 PVBLIC NOTICE SUl'a•t<M C:OUWT Ol' CAU t'OllNIA (IOUWTYMCMtAMGa ..... ,,., NO'nta TOC:R•DtTO•S Ettel• el FllANlt GILBERT, OKHMCL .. OTIC:t! IS Hl!RllE8V GIVEN tot .... credlton •IN...,.~ dKfflnt 1t11t all .. "°"' .....,1111 ct.1m1 -oelnst lh9 stld dlc»dtM are requl.-t to flle ti.m, wllll IN N<"SMV \'OllC!len,"' PUBLIC NOTICE . 111e ot11cit o1 U. c1ert1 ot • tllqW -------------! tltled_.,«to~Mlllt,.m, wlU.IM ~· 'l/ollchefl, to lhe lltlder~ PICTITlOUl•utlN•lS Al Ult w. Fl"I Street, I.OS An~lff. NAMaSTATU ... NT ca11torni.. Whlell .. ti. piece .. ""''-Tr... tollowlne per"°" Is dlllnt bull· ntH of lllt Uftderl!oned In all rmdters MU a : pertollllnt .. tlW Oltllt• of tald CIK• SANO-PAIC llV. VOO~. San· dtnl, wltlllll tour ..,_IM MW tM tlrtt T•ls •lat...,.nl wa• lolNI w11rt tne ------------"""' Pu"'""9d Orenoe e.o.tt Dally Pilot. t. Ana, Callfornle'27CI' ~· not~ l.eon•rd M Porcelll. 23S11 P11111lutlolloh~1 • County Cltr-01 0 .. "Qf' County 011 Auq t . 1971 ""'" Pubh-Ore._ C .. ,, Daily Pit ... .t.1l9uSI 16 1J JO S.01 • 1•11 JS2t·71 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Aug 23, JO, and Sept 6, 13. 1•17 3'31·11 PU8UC NOTICE B••ckloof.. Pl«tnll•. C.llforn•• '1670 DA T&D: A1J9'1tt 14, 1•11 Tiiis ~·ness I\ <onducted by ... ·~· \.. VERAGll.llERT, dlvl-t. -.Wnhtratr•• UoNrd M. Pore.till JULllE llC>tlNt"nlN This SIAl-4 WH Ill .. With ............. ...... Countv Clerk al Or•-Co-y on IUt .... flll'lllM,...t IAtA ....... CAMit» ""?"'' "· "'' · ""'41 !::9.:=:.ww•• P~istwd OrM191 C:.oest ()ally PllOI. ""bllsNd 0r-.. Coest Dally ~llOI. _"_"9_._a_:11_._anc1_Soll4 __ ·•_._1l_.1_•_11_3'_»_'-11 AUOU't30.5ool '· •3.20. '"1 11 ... n PUBUC NOTICB PUBLIC NOTICE ~· 1m Recycling Oil Studied Proces W U 'OTO~ t.AP > - da.1 mhlm h1brkaUnt oU you pout to YoUr auto en&ln• a.1 hn• been Lb re btlor.. j ENERGY J AA old Id a, cl was up oil aod It qalA, la 1etUD1 w Im· cycled oil compart1 with the petua from atudles at th Na-rr .. b product, ita concluaton will l lkaftau ol Sl.and•rda. be MDl to the ederal Trldt Commluloo. • EXP •Tl IN tbe field B1eauao ot aome inferlor- •Y. Lb wl\b lh• water and quall\y recycled products sold In badce ffmOVed, ute4 oU can lh• 1,.,_ and 18150s, tbe FrC re- form th base which, with the qulret apeeial labellni on re- prop« edditins, can become • cycledolls. -product., cood as vlr1in oil.. · How hlah this qullcy really I• 1bfa label. "Made Crom pre- lll the bureau's current subject. ff vloualy wsed oil," discoura1es at ia ___. •ble, it eould mean the many buyers, and lf the Bureau -~...._. ot Standards can establish the sarin& ol up to 70,000 barrels of • -ulvalent quality of newly re. oil a day. ~ ... Currently that used oll winds cycled oil, the labeling may be up spreed on roads to keep <Jown cbaqed. bureau NCyclln1 prorram noted that the Ener1y Polley ancl Conservation Act eoeourases federal a1enetes to use recycled oil for a variety of jobs, lildudlna metal worldnc, bydraul.lca, fuel and transmbaton and cra:nkca.ae UH. Tbla means tbe federal government bu a direct interest in aqwing the quallcy of r• cycled oU both for it.elf and tor consumers. O CC O ffers New Courses dust, being mixed with other pro-RE-REFINING OIL actually In Busm· ess ducts for burning, or m landfills and nvers polluting the environ-dales to 1915. At one time as many as 150 firma eogaeed in the -ment. process,~ but Loday only about 30 More. than 60 Bus iness In- ONCE THE BUREAU of stan- dards detenmnes how closely re- companies are still recycling oil. formation Systems and <;od\-• • . puter Science courses are listed Donald Becker, who beads the · ·on Orange Coast College's · schedule this fall . Classes begin Sept.12. C ar Costs. Up OCC is offering new courses m "Micro Programming" and "Syst.ems Anal~sis ." Other classes include ··Keypunch,'' ··Intermediate Keypunch, ''Introduction to Compu~ers and Information Systems," "Computer ·Program- ming," "FORTRAN and APL.·· ''APL Programmin"g ,-·· Operating· E~nses Cited DET~OIT CAP ) It costs about 21 cents a mile to operate a family-sized car, up almost a penny in lbe last three months, the American Automobile Association reports. • A typical six-passenger, mid-sized car costs an average of 20.94 cen~s a mile to run, according to in AAA survey quoted in the Detroit News. Costs averaged 20.2 cents in May.' , "COBOL," "Data Communica- tions Systems." "Future Topics in Business Informations Systems," .. Management Problem Solving with APL ... "Advanced COBOL,.. "Micro Computers.•· "Management In- formation Systems,·' and "In- formations Systems Projects · · In 1972, shortly before the oil embargo, costs were estimated at 15.5 cents a mile. Faxed costs such as insurance, depreciation, registration and taxes -jumped 4.1 percent since May, while operating costs gas, oil maintenance and tires -increased only 2.9 percent. According to an AAA spokesman, most of the fixed,cost in- crease is due to rising insurance rates, which are outpacing m- creases in the consumer price index because of larger medical settlements in personal injury cases and higher price ta~ on new cars. Registration /or Jail classes ls underway through Sept. 16 in the OCC Admissions Office For re- g-i str ation fofot-mation. ·phone 556-5735 Business Peopk on Mov e ~ Barbara Jones, Newport Beach, has been 11amed loan officer for installment loans for South · _ Coast National Bank, Costa Mesa. · She has more than se'{en years of experience in banking, starting her caretr with Newport National Bank. * Peter Sardagna, lrvme, has been promoted to assistant vice president for the real estate loan division of San Diego Federal Savt.qa and Leu Aa- sociaUoo, Newport Beach. · He assumes responsibility for commercial lending· in Orange ·county, includin·g the-financing of quality shopping centers, mwtitenant industrial and office parks and apartment co~plexea. * Anthony Trafford, Mission Viejo, bas been named director of marketing of the S-C Division of Gultoo Industries, Inc. The division ls bead· quartered in Costa Mesa. He is responsible for sales and marketing ac- tivities in aerospace, commercial, medical, nuclear and industrial markets. "1 * Ellen Kaplan, Laguna Beach, bas been appoint- . ed group sales manager for lbe ReautrJ H.tel, Irvine. She is responsible for local corporate group accounts. She replaces Sheridan Davis, who bas been pro· moted to-national sales manager. • Directors of VTN Coq>., Irvine, have elected N.ewtGG J. Ruston, N~wport Beach, to the board. Ruston is vice president for corporate de- velopment executive marketing of Owl Cos. of Newport Beach. * Bill Scbwean, Irvine, has been named market- ing supervisor for Catallna lslud Cnlles. Be has served in marketin1 positions with Disneyland, Lion Country Safari, Japanese Vlllaae and Enchanted Villqe. In his new posiUon, be is responsible for the marketlnf funct.lona of both Catalina Island Cruises and Loni Beach /Catallna Cruises . • lleabice J. A.rJ•DO, M.D., has been appointed assistant vice itreaidesit Of medical services of • Padfte Mutaal We lanruee <::.mp&ay, Newport Beach. She Is former senior US<>Clate medical direc· tor, for a Midwest insurance company. In ber new post, she worb m the areu ol underwriting, cl alms consultation and eroptoye health . • IQp K.Jappeaback hu Joined Cocbtue Cllase 6 CompUY, Newport Beacb, as a copyWrtte ~Be ls a former copywriter at IAAnce-" R\'istr, Cost:a · Mesa. responsibilities will be a broadening of the existing client base. He is former corporate marketing manager with Rogers' Corp. * Harry Bre111ner, Corona del Mar, has been named vice pr~ent for the professional services division at Bank ·of Newport. He succeeds Steve Smith, who was l>romoted to"vice president and as- sistant to the president. Bremner was formerly in charge of business development for the professional services division. "Got.a~? Timi write to P.ot Dvnn. P.at·will cut r«I tape, getting tM ~&dnd.oction MOU tlffd to aolw inequit~s m govJrflmeni. and buatnets. Mail 11our quntionl to P.at Dtmn, At Your Snvfce, Qra)lge Coaat Daily Pflot, P.O. Boz 15aJ, ColtG Mesa, CA 92626. Al man111etter1.a.t poaible will be CJm\De7'ed, but phontld inquim& or ~Uera not including the reader'• 1\IU 1JCJme. addreu. and bumaess houra' phone number cannot be considered. Th'8 column QPPf(lT.f ~; 111 ncept Satul'd4ys. '· Propet t11 l•nte Tadatf DEAR PAT: Who's responsible for delinquept property taxes on a house that has Just been sold - the new or the old owner? I'm thinking of buying a bouae "sold by owner" and want to check this out before I commit myself to this purchase. F.H .• Costa Mesa . Security Pacific Bank will ofter a 10-week series In financial manage- ment for the small business pwner or manager in Newport Beach The course r~e ls $95 and foctudes text, materials and parking. Topics inch.Id«: financial filatement analysis, <:<?St•profit·volum~ analysis, NEW )'OAIC l"P) CrewfO The to110wlno 11u Crosseo h • •1«1tq NII-C\itlrFecl 10...1 Securities Oa111yM Oe.1..-s Aun, over O•t•Dl-b ""' c-1..-8enll, O.ta ICIO ln1ur.nce lo ''*"' D•YIM!tl rial 5IOC-• Oe<~• "EL lnO 410 ,...., g:t~~ """""°' r t DllCeilT AIO Inc 10 If OeUnlB "VM 0> 1'• J'lt 0.-y&t AdOlsnW ~ 7~ DI.CM AdVRou ?\Ii l 01xn 01' "'bel1• 11v. n Oocute1 Allco1nc 12~ U•4 Ooll•r ~ "llrnB l\lt '" Oorct> G AFlnCo 11\'o II .. Doyle 08 AFurnll AG.- ! TRANSACTIONS $M ... Pt°"'\( .... ("t ~nil •• 1 1• 1111 .... ~ ". 40 t1"41+ .. """* ' 1l-.. 10 S3 I 1 • •• tOn 10 ... • •••• _,_, - Tit( Cp 40U U4 11'1+ .. TltW UO t 118 ll'•-'• Tlfllrd I a 61 t1\t .... TilOltt tt 11 •411-\o t11 .10 ' ,. 10''t ..... '" 1 t• n••-"' t.11 tO .. , ta• .. • sso ~ t 6 II 1 t':' ... T .2410 24 ~-a ti nlcr .eo • 201 l -1l llnl rwl .. 40 t -T=r.40 7 '° 1 ..... 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JV>-Vt It W.+ "" s~w. ~ :: I + .. ......... ~I I.IN DAJL Y P)l.OT • Planning Alleacl , Widows to Face' Tough Problems 918YLVIAPORTE& .._. ........ MOit married women wiU outlive tb Ir buaband5. Thi!> will be partlculatl)' toush tor those wboU busbandl always made the financial. d~laiona. When Muriel's husband died recently, hlsauddenstroke and prolonged hospital stay had depleted their cash re- serves. The couple had owned a ~foot c&bJ.n cnlller which the)' used for weekends and vacations. Th y had Planned to reUre this year. sell their $75,000 bome, move to Florida and 10 on a world cruise. Alone, Muriel clld not know bow to carryoo. BER ASSETS INCLUDED a $15,000 aavinea account. a growtla-ortented mutual fund investment of $30,000, stocks and hoods valued at $15,000 and an insurance payment of SM,000. Her monthly income -Social Security plu.a her husband's retirement beneflt.s -t.ot.ted $464. Here i.s the advice offered to Muriel by Merrill Lynch: -Set up a supplementary health care program at once to avoid a repetition of huge medical costs. -Buy an apartment in Florida, rather than a house, and do so within one year or the sale or the present home to d e fer taxes on the capital gains produced by the sale. -Sell the growth· oriented fund. Growth stocks no longer make Money's Worth sense for older people, ..._ .... so-..' _____ _, who m'y need a higher annual return to finance a lifestyle including travel and moving expenses. -Learn at least the basics of sound, conservative in· vestin1 before you inUe any financial decisions. Find ou~ about tncome-produci.ng securities: high.yielding commoq stocks with a 1001 history of paying dividends. quality pre• !erred stocks and bonds, bigb·grade corporate and municipal bond funds. -ClONSIDER PUaCHASING UNIT investment trusts, which provide a professional selection of a diversified group of preferred stocks or bonds with different matun-i, dates and yields, regular payments of dividends or interest an~ semi-annual or monthly distributions of income. I Tnaats are sold in units, elcb of whichrepretenta a porj lion of all the Issues ln the trust's portfolio. Units can cost a~• little as SJ,,000. • A high-grade corpdrate bond Cund, for example, coul return roughly 81Aa percent and provide a monthly income As the bonds in the trust mature, or are called for redemp, lion, the principal is returned to unit holders. I ANal'llER OPTION JS TO leave savings at the $15,ood level-, pool the funds invested in stocks and bonds and mutual fund, the.n transfer the total ($45,000) along with lhe insurance payment of $55.000, to the trust. On J total invest- mer;at of Sl00,000, the return could be about $700 a month. Nut: tM &cl/-emproyed. Firm Qpens in NB Newport Equity Funds, Inc .. has announced plans to open an office in Huntinaton Beach, bringing to four the nu.mber ol branches maintained by the mortgage brokerage firm. The Huntington Beach branch, to open Thursday. will be located at 16168 Beach Blvd. in HunUngton Executive Park. • . Plans are to staff the office with three employes. headed by loan of!icer Cal Wolfe. Don Herzog wlll be branch office supervisor. Newport Equity Funds. headquartered in Newport Beach with branches in San Diego and Mission Viejo, spedalizes in second trust deed loans and l.nvestments. Stock Marke~ Falls Toward the Close NEW YORK <AP> -'Ille stock market headed low~ in the clcsing stages of an erratic session today. The Dow Jones average ol 30 industrials le>dt 5.20 points to858.89. Losers outnumbered eainers by a small martin among New York Stock EJtcbange-llsted issues. The market was amed ror most of tbe day as it absorbed negative new1 that bad been widely anticipated. Potelo11eaA.,.rage• ltlaal Saorlu Did tttw YrilAP) ~11111 ~· evtregK ITOCllS to lllCI °r:rt1 "n~D M71 f.!t!._ r.t 10 tr-. 21US .._45 iif .. lis:fl::: i.fl U Utl 1tQ,D II.SS lit.It 110-M+ US H SHI mM NM 1'1.iJ 1tt.n-1:?3 ~: .................... :................... 1n:1 Utllt ...................... 1 6S SU..,..................... I. \ l \ ' ~ •• ~ ;; 1 ': . •; ., j . :1 ... OAl\.YPILOT .: I . ' 1 Occ Looks ·Back On Thirty Years •'The campus ts not the beach No bare feet. No aborts. No Bermudas. No bare chata. Keep your face shaved except when J'OU're get.ti.DI ready for -Pirate Day. Forget tbe extreme b~ of the day -eet col· legiatt!" It's a good lhinf that advice was given to Orange Coast College students in 19411. Today, it probably would.n 't go over. As Orange Coast prepares to open its doors for the 30th time this month, faculty members and administrators are pausing to reflect upon this and other changes wrought in the last three decade David A. Grant, dean of stu- dent affairs who was an OCC freshman in 1956, says he's noticed the change in student at· tire in the last few years. "Our college population tQday is older than it was in 1941 and more mature. We don't pretend to tell the students what to wear. Our only hope is that they do wear something," he said with a grin. But while students may look different today, compared with their counterparts in 1948, they seem to perform at least as well in the classroom, according to Grant. The men weren't the only ones • J.l:tt I .. I Advice on dress in 1948: 'Get collegiate!' ~ with strict rule. to follow ln lh• early days. "Leave your toreadors, pedal pushers and &lrm\Jd s at homo. They don't belong on campus ex. cept for special occasions, aueb as picnics, Pihte Day or the week ol final exalns," the stu-• dent handbook told women. J "Pluse don't ba"• your bair pinned up in bobby pins. That should be kept for the privacy of your home. "For campus and class - sport or tailored dress, sweaters or blouses and skirts, low or Cub;lll heels, socks or hose." Were these rules all still in el· feet today, at least half' the OCC population would be asked to leave campus on any warm spring day, Grant said. There have been many other changes on the campus too. The school began operation on Sept. 13, 1948. with a faculty of 33 and a student body of 533. Classes met in a few scattered barracks buildings left over from the deac- tivated Santa Ana Army Air Base. This fall, an estimated 30,000 students will be enrolled in day and evening courses with nearly 600 teachers on the payroll. The campus now iaeludes 175 modem classrooms and laboratories and more than 35 buildings . " Above, students of the past were in the stars over th~ prom; (left) student of today, Nancy Kueneman, witl Sara, 1 O months old. • .. ! J u musl1 folio-. J Dau Pal,i 1tUM .. matt by" J pactt ot lb ~ nom l favoi l ·-..,._. \<11\ifW --J-. kelly~ l•n;. \wl\He H•trt c ....... youn seen tem1 high row~ mus: slO!°! liftec .. FOi M' In l l 1l1lC Shov My'J in f J drar: BaX' wao ltlea an a " ... . . . . . . • Relative ·Has· Enougfi Pro·~l1 efns Toniglit's TV · Hig~lights . .. . No~·llf-law ever deaaecl ap bv bOiseto pleue Mr ..._. ....... "-7 ·nsie.UOU aloec Uaolellilei ~4! beaweleome. So MYOB and clOD't wo117 .... UM Uiadela1lclift. ftey are probablY, 1>8Al\ ANN LANJ)ERS: Wbat en we mothers· 1 •-t.iurvCl'J~ by DOW. of cllrt)' dauaht.en·ln~faw do to aet them to clean up DEAR •t\NN LANDERS: I have been s~fni tboirftlt.l\1boules? • Mr. G for obout ei1hl months. He bas given me It teem1 there are'° many &irla toct.y with new aome ntco Jilts -mosUy jewelry. First a aotd born• and every ia.dcet and appliance you can bracelet then gold earrin1s and last mootb a wrist ' tl'U.Q olto make We easier. Yet clothes are scat-•watcbwfthl&diamondathatlook llkeglass. • . tered all over tbo place, the dithtowell are clln&Y, • Problem: The sold turns my wrist and ears the draperies are never cleaned and the bathtooms ereen and one of the diamonds broke in half. Does smellterrlble. this mean the jewelry is fake? -JUST • One ol my daucbten-ln-law complains that her WOJIDERING husband never comes home after work. Why should • • ho? U 1ooka like a chicken coop and smella Uke a, DEAit IVST: U you want an accurate eulaa- pl•pen. • -• tlon ol &be jieWelry, take lt to a jeweler. This I can' • CBS••·•-0'Iromlde." The pUot movie for Ra~ Burr'•loac-nnmtncTV detective aeries with Geraldine · --· Brooks and Barbara An· denon. ~ • KTLA 8 8:00 -:-''An ·.American Dream." 5'\&art Whitman and Janet Leilh •tar in this movie drama from 1966.. 1 • -. . . 'ABC89:00-"Havin& Babies." Four couples ex-...... perieocenatural cbildblrtbtn this 1'78TV mov. ie with Desi Arnu Jr., Karen ValeDtine, Harry Gu~ To~ Kennedy and Jessica Walter. We worry about the rrandcblldreD cettlq tome · tell yta. tiowever, evu flDe &old will ~•ase a .wrist fatal Wness. Whet can a·soo'a mother 1ay? -. oru.,_,to~·peenlf&bepenon's,~mlstrylla· • ••••• HATETOSEEIT <LACR~ WlS.> llUle tlf,.Af for~ ud.lam-4." Lt'• ~e .ao.~ "' • .. .. · -.":'r!~~u~~"".'~-claa'l'' fa~.:..~~· butK.!"""d~ .. "" -f IV DAil Y LO)i) . Call It MontezUfn_(f·1 .t;s .::~evenge I TUESDAY . . I tDllll'YCllfila .. • TM WlrdUt fD 0,.11 'nlutn "Ole Fleder · ma us' • BY ERMA BOMBECK s AT WIT'S END ___ __,~ After awhile, J couldn't sit on a sight-seeing bus any longer than an hour or so before l~aoing over to the bus driver and saying, "Aren't we going to make a gift-shop slop soon?·· "Is it absolutely necessary?" he'd plead. '·Are you willing to take a chance it isn't?·· .iVaA1N6 6:00 0 (]) 8 ()) (J)l llews D tU> Cl) Gt ~ llns D Anc•ts Baseball Cont'd l1om 4:JOPM. Cahlorn1a Aneels vs . Balttmore Olloles ()) GMtr Pyle m Gllnslllokt m &,.ctu11r •n m lmttrpila Tiltatre -9:30-a ({ll) (I)) ()) OM Oar at A Time (R) Juhe and Barbara take turns at be1n1 the "womed parent" when Ann is late in calllne white away on a bus(ness trip. 10:00 Years ago, I swore off going to Mexico because I had a biological intolerance for gift shops. The con<'htion 1s called Montezuma II's revenge. (Few people realize this, but there were two Mon- tezumas. Montezuma 1 is credited with lending bis name to an urgency Americans refer to as the Green Apple Two-Step. Montezuma II ls generally ' known as the patron saint of gift shops. Both are UD· kind to foreigners.) With Montezuma II 'a reven&e. I wouldn't be in the country five minutes before r got severe stomach rramps, my ri&ht hand would stiffen into the shape of a credit card, my step would quieten and I'd rush out into the streets shouting, "Cuanto? Cuanto?" room and wander up and down sniffing the wind and saying, "I SJDell gilt shops. Don"t worry, l"ll just buy a few cards and be back in time for lunch.·· My husband was less than sympathetic. ••wm you get bold of yourself! Remember; you're on a ship and the last port wben you tried to swim ashore you nearly drowned.•' I bought a box of matches, T-shirts, paperweights, pennants, ships in botUes, small glass ducks, corkscrews, and rocks with the Lord's Prayer on them. • I bought a moose for my charm bracelet, a cocktail apron, three cheese slicers with fur handles, a Spanish doll for my bed, a small chicken coming out of a soapstone egg, ashtrays, a set of coasters. a linen calendar with months l couldn't translate and a wild boar cookbook. QJ Tiit hrttidc• Family m • Sritll & JeMs (<11) ())) (Qil ())) """ U (Cl.D (])) CJ) -(R) In the hist Pill of a two-part episode. a tu1111y car w1tll a caclaYef In tlle trvnk is brol&l!t to th illlpouftd prace on tht same morninc 1 wife lulls her husband 1114 1bandons hu tWd. Despite all my precautions, on my recenl vaca· tion lo Europe, I fell victim to the malady. Sometimes, early in the morning, I would leave my I was a woman obsessed. I bought a bead scarf that when worn in the rain pve me a navy blue face. I boaaht a toilet tissue holder carved out ol wood and held by a man with one tooth. l bou&ht keyringa, naa.s. patches, and a left-banded letter opener made out of reindeer anUers. One night 1 met a woman with Moolemma I's Revenge roaming the deck. "I ate the lettuce," she said miserably. ••Wbat's your excuse?"' "lspentlt." Caprfc:orn: Practicality Bright ~Ideas The South Coast Junior Women's Club will present ''Bright Ideas Especially for You," a fashion show for mastectomy pa· tients, al 9:30 a.m. and 3 p.m . SatUl'day. Sept. 17. Proceeds will go for canc~r research through the American Cancer Society-Oranae County. The show will be held at Bullock's Santa Ana, Fashion Square, in the luncheon room. Tickets for t.he show m a Y.. b e ob ta i n e d through Dorothy Liff of the Orange County Unit of the American Cancer Society. 4030 Birch, Newport Beach • From C1 • • • Model Phyllis Magdziarz. By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES <March 21 - April 19): Emphasis on FromC1 ... . . . . Usher like his singing, con: tinues. "I could watch baseball games every day and if I can't watch them, I listen to them on ther~o." THE HOFFMANS re· cently returned from Florida where their mid- dle son, Glenn, ·19, is a shortstop lot the Bosto~ Red,~ minor league. ''It's quite an inspira- tion to ait her& and sUti and see the flag blQw- ing," commented Hoff. man, gazing at Old Glory fluttering itl the distance. It was getting close to opening time as a fellow usher passed by. "How are you doing, Ed?" he asked. "Are you 1oing to aing toalght?" "The Sittgini Usher·· shook bis bead no. ''But if they asked me to sing tonlgbt l'd say, ·sure, ju.st eive me five minutes to war.in up','' be mused. "That's all l . ask." independence, initiau've, going slow, playing wait· responsibility,. involve-ing game. · ment. Contradict.tons ex· S(ORPIO <Oct. 23 - ist. You can work yout . Nov. 21); Pace ~~uld be wayoulofdilemma. moderale. D'on t lrritate $"-,Perior~. Many are 'TAURUS (AJ?ftl 20-sy01pathetic, want.,you to May 20>: Look back only succeed -but there are to become informed con-basic factors wl,Ucb 'need cernlf\i your "roots.·• their attentioo. You have a right to live SAGrrTARIVS <Nov. your own ~ ., fs;-ee from 22·Dec. 21): GoOd Koon burdens not yout o~. aspect coincides with GEMINI (May 21.June e~~tional responses, 20 ). Emphasis on ab1litytod~ewbatyou ti. ·t 1 y th want, to articulate re-crea . vt Y., 01!.e. es. e quirements. Popularity ~elabo~hiJ;> is "mean-increases. ~gful. ~end wbo ad· CAPRICORN <Dec. vtses doesn t have all the 22.Jan. l9): Be practical. facts. Check investment, finan- CA CER (June 21 -cial potential. Accent on July ~): Emphasis on property, appraisals, tax as&\unmg responslbllity, shelters. !llaldng impact, cbeck-AQUARIUS (Jan . rne l.egal rt1hts and 2C>-Feb. 18): Stick to permissions. number "9" •. Finish LEO (July 23-Au1: ~): rather than initiate pro-~OQd Moon u~ct coin-j eel. Emphasis on cides now with JOUrneys, transacUo~.that requires messages, long.range telephone call, short trip. plans. Mov&men t, travel, inquiries, Jp- tellectual curiosity. publishing are spotlleht- ed. · • · VIRGO (Aug. 23--Sept. 22): Occult, mystery, 'PISCES <Feb . 19- M.rth ~): You can re- move barrier to money progress, Get rid of ~e sentiment. confidential informaUort, -;::=========; monev. lease -these Lose Water Bloat \Vith dominate. Y.ou may ODRN.-JUbn's WMi have to overturrt plans; .. , revision, digem1 deep - these factors come \nto focus. LIBRA (Sepi. il•Otl 22 >; Yes., ~ou re• ri,bt aoout chaage. analy3is. rea~itti stltus, ·--tt 1Mttu11 81 LM Liiey , Sil Badric c.,.., ., m Dnmt1c Stl'lts , ....... -6:30-a 11n1e: t1:l <'°> "lrtlltW•" (mys) '67-~yl'llOnd Bm. Gtraldme Brooks. Barbara Anderson. CD IUJNews ()) CB~ Sntfitll ® Men Crifflll Sllow ([l) (])) Tiii u.. hi&• QI Did v. Dr\t Sllow fDZ.. (1211 Cl)) lewltdltcl m~'*Yforum a a C1J • u • a.,.ts: ~flll•QI lo lurl-1..enrq to Fail" Betty Rolha Is Ille reporter tor Ibis special e1u1111i111 lu111in1 dis· ablfit1es. 1 Pfollietll tMt is pimnc wide reco.1n1hon because of the ettect it's hav111c 01 an estimated e1£hl mllhon school t-ildru and bea11Se rt is oae at ~e prinwy rmons tor dellllqllt1lt Mhawior. ...... ([) llltie: ~ "StJ111tr \trllllill" (dra) '74-Barbata Eden. Georee C1zmd m fl litn •• @ Kury S. T rvmaa: Pla111 Spukil& . -10:30- GJ Q)O)Mews 11:00 a CI> a rn <ti ..._ a @ Cf) <<m (])) a 11ews U (8 ())) LM AmetiGI Style 0 lroaside GJ S Ftl'llWtlM Zllipt • llbfClll ......,, ILi>· m LltiM c:..tti• GOramtlts.ries '9 lldelll*w w.rt -11:30-tl (all (])) Cl) lltfie: ~ ....,_. tlle 8ermllda Trbllttl" (dra) '1S-f1ed Madturray. Sam CrOOlll, 0.111 .Wis. llJ!Jnne lteed ll@CIJDaJjmr C:... · (() ... "Tiit ca..lf .... (dn) '40-Paul Ktlly. Anne Gflyllne. Ooac· lu Fowley. M111s Wmon. 8 (]) (QI) Cl)) Moria: "The Out of TowntfS" ® larltt.I CDlhtr1MWS a~ fD c.,tilMd Alt Eftftill& ICfts ma.a J4 12:00 9 Twlli&Jlt ZOlll -Cl lllowle: "T 1u4 Seffly Stnn1tr" (dra) '58-0iana Oors, Terence Mor1an, Ctoi&e Baker QJ Woflcl of SIHYiul Q) Mcmt: .. llest Time We LHe" (dra) '35-MaraMet Sullivan, James Stewart -12:30-o Drasnet UAl MtM: '1he Out of TDW11ers" GJ Movie: "Web of EwWeta" (dla} '59-Vao Jo~nson Vera Miles. Emlyn Wolharns. 1:00 D CIJ 6 ''"'°""' • Mftlta= ~ • Conlempt," "Man FrQ.111 Yule ht." "The W1ttl11n1 HGuf" -1:30- -~ .............. ,com) ·st~harf Dow. Mail Sttvus. I 2:00 -~~"~ltttl• ~ " 1Jlli" {Id-.-) 67-Seott 8'1df.' Gill NTm. Mlho•~r Elsley. ' e ,..._ m. ttltles tfTallitL" ''W• OWi1t•Y'::~ f ·2:~ e ~ "l&o4t1119 vs. the Th1na." ~fltl11r Was A fa~I' .... I' Harlequin Show Scores rr )OU w r born too hattl h• ••e lhu!>e "11howb11 " mu..tcal m<>Yle5 of thr· ,.oruc~ ~md early f'ttl1 th l followed plt hke C n KeUy, Judy G•rland. Da11 Oall • J Haver. t'lr . from Podunk to th\' Palace, )'OU ~•n c1td1 uv on thl'.' plot of mOt1t uf them at Hart 1un D1nne-r Phn huuht' G~•l·Amerlc•n · Uark1:1w"~ Mu111c1tl," m us debut an Oranae Count>. 1 ecreatt• thos~ by~ da)'ll w1tb lonns. n<>!tl1d11c tt'lll tn a bnAkly patfd and lm111nat1vt"lv stagrd produr.t1on It'!\ on~ or beU show of the HMI •lonjl the Orainat-c l. nd one that :.hould outli.sl the lf1trlt!qu1n' normal fivt!'-oattk run sc hf'duh· UKE "OAMl:.S AT SEA," lo ~hll'h ll'Comput•' f,.vorably, "Bacbtage Mus1e:al' featu~111 a small t TM• GRl4T 4MIRIC4M llACKUAGI M\IMC"-L' • "'">IC-' C-y..., 8111 Solh -OoN•d Ward dir«IH••><H...,,_,._d .. ~Tel ....... -<•l "''""'°'~~•no P<.-.t.a n.t"9u 11•'°"9" S.t~ et I IO ~Y• at 1 JO et t._ H•rl<"QV•ft o.,...., Pl••-'* JIOl \ H••-el...s ~ .... ,.. 1tew•••'"'""'"°ss11 TMIC4ST J-.. ...... Ktlty_., knte Sylvia H•rrv Con'9.-ce 0uq..,.11 > • C'••9GMOftwr ~r• l•lln1n_. To"""y ., ... ,,,. ~rstwl<r•m•' Jim P•''''" Llnd4 AY•f' young and energetic ca~l anrj Mmple but effective sceruc backdrops Its pnrilary virtue 1s the up tempo staging or Robert Talmage \\-hose rast 1s 1t highly skilled, coheMve ~semble. Authors Bill Solly ~nd DonaJd Ward have bor rowed freel> from a number or old-lime movie musicals, all or wi'lich contained the same basic story s tructure M\Jch of lheJ-1' show could have been lifted intact from the script of the mid-Forties flick "For Me anct. My Gal," in which Gene Kelly and MJ:M's Ted Knight. In Broadway Role I LOS ANGELES CA Pl Ted Knight, formerly llI\Chorman Ted Baxter on "The Mary Tyler Moore Show," w111 make his Broadway debut in "Some of My Best Friends" &llening at the Longacre Theatre in New York on Oct 25 Knight will have a central role in the fantasy drama, to be directed by Hal Pnnce Ile said, "People still tend lo think of me as Ted Baxter because l did that role for so long What l want the audience lo remember after leaving the ttieater is that this 1s Ted Knight playing a role, JUSt an actor doing his Job." CINEDOME 23 l()v •, .-.4 I. ,,U. A.".F • ft I 1l 1714) 546·3102 634-2553 115 330 5~ 800 & 1015PM 1 00 3 15. 5 30 7 45 & 10c00PM 11•8 I• llellyw ..... lo fUll nl•lOl'llOIHC: SOUllO PACIFIC'S 'iI1JIL1ll:l DOME ~., .......... Ml .. l•olll"(IO("• ... l'IOllA! II• l • ~-IOI I IOJllPM \Prt • • UC•f l,..W UllU HI IU~tU U t1106• THIS MOVIE IS TOTAI.l.Y OUT OF CONIROL <» [!!] ~ IQ71 kfM FllJ.1S. C'IC Rflf.A5ED ff'/ LNTW F1lM NS TRIBlJT1()ll ~ INc. --MOW PLATING_ -~~;;-~ ~CINEMAS ~ WU,_.Tlll IMTA l'E '"'9IOI UAWESTMAU. ........ LAMIW>o\OI "'2>'311 "What ~have here Is 1 total tack of rHpect for the law•" Intermission Tom Titus Judy Gllrland plltyed vaudevillians working the hank towns wilo wound up entertaining American Gia ln lhe war <I Ill that case, JI m the Harlequm ihow) The hero's enticement by a Big Star 1s Jnolher 1umHurity "BACKSTAGE MUSICAL" IS less a spoof of than u tnbute lo the movies of that genre. and Talma1e's troops turn it. mto a highly enjoyable t:verung with nary a weak lmk in the company. All -.1x performers turn In first rate showings with the vocaltzing of Marsha Kramer and the grande dame stylings or Linda Ryan topping the enjoyment list. ~Uss Kramer. in her two solos, displays a set of vocal chords w1th.0 a Garland punch and reaps the loudest and longest applause of the evening, though her role 1s one of the smaller parts m the show. Miss Ryan is excellent as the English music hall star who turns the hero's head; her gift for comedic liming 1s superior. Craig Gardner is well cast as the ambitious leader of the off, off Broadway group. Tommy Brt!slin gives a performance packed with comic cDergy as his sidekick. Sara Ballantine is very good as t.be rising Hollywood star (though her voice is weak in the first act finale), and Jim Parrish 1s :.olid as the friendly rival fo~ her affections. ADDED TO THE ENJOYMENT or "The Great American Backstage Musical" as a top-notch pre show performance by the Harlequins. the talented waiters and waitresses at the plush dmner house The routine 1s built around "dance" songs with Robbie Haymer stealing the show as a reluctant hoofer. "The show is scheduled for five weeks at the Harlequin, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd. just north of Costa Mesa. but may, and should. run longer 1'A BRIDGE TOO FAR" (PG) "SORCERER" (PG) "THE SPY WHO LOVED ME (PG) "LOGAN'S RUN" (PG) • "NEW '.'ORK. NEW YORK" (PG) "THE WAY WE WERE" (PG) "FANTASIA" (G) "MARCH OR DIE" (PG) "THE EAGLE HAS LANDED" (PG) "ONE ON ONE" (PG) HERBIE GOES TO MONTE CARLO "NEVER A DULL MOMENT"' (GI ~CIAL CHILDREN S PRICES "OTHER SIDE OF MIDNIGHT" "EXORCIST ll:THE HERETIC" CR) • . .. . ... ' -Golda Actres~ Anne Ban· croft is shown in re- heltrsal for cm up- coming Broadway play "Golda ," in which s h e plays former Israeli pre- mier Golda Meir. LOS ANGELES (AP> Beatrice Straiaht, who won an Academy Award (or "Networ.J," will aunt star as the Queen of Paradise on .. The New Adventures of Wonder Woman" for CBS ... Jessica Walter will also be a auest star In the same episode. Dir ector Bob Zemeckis and Bob Gale are developing a film for Universal about six New Jersey teenacers whose lives are cban&ed by the .Beatles' first visit to Ame-ilea , called "Bealle!. 4 Ever" ... Dana Elcar plays a wealthy real estate de· veloper who undermlnes LIZA roBEIH MINNEW DE NIQO "NEWY0:2K. ~::::: NfWYOJir l'~A ... VALLEY Ml\'"'' • .:,:~~~": ... u .,,. ••• ·-HI ... , ... ... "'FOi ntl • LOYI OfS MHJr l•t "A llJMI TOO PAl'" '-ntt Dllr" CNI "fUH WITH DICK &JA.Hl"CNI "'..,,_ "THI on. SIDI °' ~ MID.....n"' llU "A 11JDG1 TOO FAil" INI "GllAHD 'THEFT AUTO" CNJ "'SneAD & THI IYI OF THIT16•" Have something you want to sell"! Class1r1ed ads do tl well 642-5678 .... .. _...,_._ "ROCKY""CPGt ........ ,. . COAST PLAZA i-1••.rut~ 1111 1111 ••""" '"SUSPIRIA" IRJ 14T/_I,_,,,.._ ....... ·-~--··· '-ntl! DEEP"" f PGt ·~· WOU'TlA W ILUES .. _,,., CINEMALAND U14S. W.llhl ••-m7'1t '""- .. SllSPIRIA '' II) . .,....,.. ... ~·- 414 ........ ... , .. ,, .. . .,5'.AMDOll DR.MOUAU" IAIL'I' hl....,. ... 11 ~'N!AIUMG TaAIHIHG" .....,..,_ : I 1 I • J1 ~· tlln .. Don't wony. MannadukeWffJ newer get over our l'MiW t.ncer· FUNKY WINKER BEAN MOON MULLINS ~ ~' BJN~ ... . l LO~ 81N(5o ... BIN~ GSTS MY MIND COMPl.ETSl..y' 1 OFF MY ~BL.es ... ())lk)t, ~Ul 00 <,()(,)FEEL ~01snocr~ OJIU.. AFFEC.TlHE ~. I INUOUJED.;. I • I , I UNtTEO Feltur.e ~~ate ... . ! ·I WON~ ~T. t:'IPAl'TMl!NT · "4fl'U.. ee iN? ·-.. . . • by Wm. F; Brown and -• Clsson ft~tfmtO~ J t.~~, I / ~1' PtJlbJ I sit~? I l ~1 ... PEANUTS by Templeton and F.man .-----------------· ' . '1 """"'...... M.-... -0. ._._ ~-lonwMll, beell• -· ~. d-Of ~y. Ftnd HCft lt<ld bo.c It lfl _ I rook Brown &olden Blu•b•ck Stef lhead .. Cutthroat Sunapee j ~llllCOP' Loch Ltvtn ... Arct1 c RatnbCllll Dd'll¥ Virden TClllOrrow: Tht Roe~~ PVauc NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Cfl-NOTIC8 Ofl INTINTIOfll TOClllATI! MCUltlTY llfTl!ltl!ST "1BUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE NOTIC• 0, DISSOLUTION ANOLACKOl'AUTMOltlTY KOSTAA, a C.lltornl• ,..rtne-.lllp conslatlnvot J"MES l(IRKllAIOE ..... JAMES 5"VANT, ""''Cll llH urrlecl Oii Ila buslr,.u•t 1212 OuPont Ori••. SI.lie I(, 1n.1 .... C.lllornl1. WU dlHOIYed •f· lactMAUOUJIU, "71.lt tt·S•p.m. Alkr INI delt, no ,..rtner In tll9 ,..rtne1'1111P,..llhuutho<ltytollilldU. ,..,,,.."'""' ICOST"R • c..llton1l11Mtrt .. ~P'llp ByJ...,...Slv..,t Publl.,_, 0rMll9 C.0.5t Oally PllOI """ JO. 1'71 1$«1.•tt1-Ht7 u.c:.c:.1 Notice h llereby olven lo tht 1 cre<lll°" of Cllfford RaMlrch ~ PUBLIC NOTICE o. ... ._._ Co Inc • Oeblor, ·-11<111,_s address 11 1'10 Sunflower A-. (Jty of Colll ~ County of o ...... St•I• Of Callltrnl• , ... , I security lm9"fft 11 about to be cr .. 1.0 by OetMor M>d a••n•ed to s.tnt1•90 Ban-, • C1lllorn1a Corporallon, S.curtd Party. wflOta bu\1,..u Mldrn1 Is •700 ~ Orivt. Clly ol N••POrt BHch, COllnly ol Orange, State Of fllCTITIOUI aUSINl!SS NAMl!nATl!Ml!NT TM lol'-lno Pl<!On IS doing l>Wl- "ffs ~ C>IEMICAL SPECll'ICS. 6121 Sy<IMy Or .• HIHlllnQton Buel\, CA .,..., Jacll Genon, 6tt1 Syo,,.., Or Hunt· lnttOtl 8Ncl\. CA t?M7 Tiiis blnl,..n Is c0tld11ctl!d by an In· div•-• Ctlllornl• T,,.iw-1Y ln-r•I lnwlllCl\lhe I Security Interest wm be created t1 fix tur e,, t'qulomenl# furniture •nd Jae• Gerson Tiiis lldlament WIS '''"" wlll\ IM Co1111ty Clafll of 0r.,. County on A119 '· 1911 l'"'"'"'inotot OeOlor wllo .. l>u•l,..1111 known fS Clllloro ltuHrch ~ D•••l- ment Go .• Inc., and loctt<HI ti 1610 flllOI• Sunflower A-.nu., City ol Costa Mew, Publl~ OrtnQt Coast Delly PllOI. Ctlllornla. A11g. It, Zl,l0,Sep1.•, 1m n .. .tforUtlCI H<Urllv lrMlttCllon ---------""°--n twill be consumm.ttd °"or alter IM tin PUBLIC NOTICE day of $ep(tm11er, 1'77 at 10 00 A M at Santi-&Mk, wflOta ..,.,,.,u Is 4700 t C•mpu1 Drive, Newporl Be1c11. I-NV Ctlllornlt SU .. l!ltlOlll COUltTOI' TN• Sol••tlsl<nownlOll>tS.Cllred ..... ITAnoflCAUl'OltNIA l'Olt 'tv, •II.....,,,.,, names ..,Cl-... _ TNICOUNTYOflOltANOI I uMd by , .. Debtor for 11\t "" 11\rat Ht. A-92111 years•re ~. lfOTICI Ofl Nl!AltlHO Ofl Oiied: AllOUlln, itn fllTITlOlf "°" .. ~TE 01' WILL Senll-8-AICD flott LITTllti TISTAMIEH· lly:J-w.w-...111 TAltY AND~ AUTHOltlUTlOH Vk~,.,.nldtnl TO AON!llfllTllt UNDllt THI Soco.nd Party INDINNO .. fT ADMINISTltATIOtl UNTIAOOIANK Ol'nTATISACT. LAHO.,•r1n•lt f:tlah of flLOAEN<:E W . 41•earr.-on... l!AHAltOT.DK~ New"'11Hcll,CAtU.O NOTIC1! IS HEltl8V GIVEN ltllit l Publl"-1:1 Oranot CAt&I Dally Piiot. IVAN w. EltHAltOT .... filed rwretn. Aug 30, 1'17 pe11tlon for ...,_.. of Will tllll fOr 11- )802.77 IU-ellaller)T~an4for Auti.o.1a.11on lo~~ -~ l,..,.~AdmlnlstrallOnol &11ttes ' Act ~· to wfllcll is m-for PUBLIC NOTICE turtlltt' prtl(u••s, -t11a1 .,. •-1nd place Ol llearino lht ,._ llM i.et1 Ml tor S.PI. 10. 1m. •I 10 00 • m . In tM courtroun of 0•P•lrt_,,I ... 0. 3 of ttld to11i1. at 100 Civoc C.ntor Orlw Wot, In lllt City OI Stnl• Ane, Ctlllor"1e Da1ec1Auvus•25. 1m WILUAM•.StJOHN eou..ty Cle•ll VlttTUI 15041CK, INC:. 11111..,..-t C..ter Orlw Htw...., IH<1', CA f2IMt JesellflC.Ollewl .. ...,,..,, tw: flwtftl- Pullll1119d Or11199 Coast Oellv Pllol, "'"'·•u1.s.tic.•. m1 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 .T c L A s s I F I e. ·o Nl!IJjOM.ffee: AU~ tstat.'advertlsecl In &MW•paper la subo t::3 Walker t; I r.e CHAIMI• CAWA lHYllTA~ Jed to tho Ftdoral Fair Real Eat.ale llou1ln1 Act or 1968 ---------1 which makes It llleeal to IWPFS OP8t TUIS~ A THUIS 1·5 Beautifully m~tamed 2300 sq. ft., • bdrm., 3 full baths, f aml.ly home on a lush greenbelt. Oodles of extra storaae in rare basement area. End unit, elves more Upt as well a.a privacy. $162,SOO. And you own the • land! advertlu "an,y pre· Beautifully expanded ferel'c•. Umllallon. or and ~paraded 3 bdrm dlacrlmlnation based on eQd untt with night lliht race. color, reUIJOn, •ex. view. Tha. Pl'Ol"'rty la °" naUooal oneln. or an perfect IA every detail antenUoa t.o make any from the exquisite Ute sucb preference, Umlta. entry to the totally re· baa. ord.l.acrtmlllallon." mode I ed. lt.1 \ c be n. 873-8SSO This newspaper will not Ol'fN '" 9 .,, Slt#HO" ~P knowln1ly accept any advertlaloc tor real eat.ate which 1.s ln viola· Uoooftbelaw. ......... s. ••••••••••••••••••••••• G•r.. IOOZ ••••••••••••••••••••••• EXTRA MICE Superbly up1raded 3 Bdrm 2 bath rmly home w/fmJy rm. timing area, paUo & verY attractive entry. Blfly landscaped. Convenient to schoola & shopping. Just listed. On· ly $72,000. 646·7711. LOOKl,_FOI ADOUHOUSl1 Thia is it • Just reduced almost $4,000! lo btn Sandi>ointe. Hu shake root, huae lot w/room !or pool. & boat or camper acce11. On cul-de-sac that leads to a park. 3 bdrms, 2 baths for onty $'74,000. ~&491 (~111fbuan1m mi Real Estate MESAVBDEA IEAUTIRIL HOME NEWPORT HACH One of our finest. Ready OCEAN VIEW lo move in. Quiet street, 4 bdrms, ram. rm. dining 67M400 1tG CANYON CUSTOM HOMI Beautiful park-lttte approach to entry of this lovely contemporary home on pvte golf course. Rustic & quaint with a country flavor. Rough sawn wood exterior. 5 BR, huge play room, study & Slh baths. Informal living. $3501~ 22 CYPRESS PT. LN Dauy 1-5 , Ziii S..J .... tllsloed N!WPORT CEMTER. M.&. 644-4t I 0 CONDO nn. wel bar and priced to sell fast and with a fast SI ll,900 escrow. It will_ sell Itself G. tal IOOZ Ge•ral 1002 2 BR + formal dUling ~ben you see i1 the first ... ~ ........................................ . rm, 2th b BA, bltns. brick time. Call ror your ~ c r p I c • & upgraded pointment 546-Zll3 IY OWNER <>::~~~~.;r!/!t!c: ~N rot9·11S NN roac N~,. ~~~::-ee:u'!u~~; HORSE RANCH opener 1·· I carpellog, new paint, H\Ce home, only S yrs ~AC6~7PIMS1R6EAL7un0a'fY ·. .,,_,·. "' ... ll~l11;t ~~~-~~1o~~c!:~:i=~~~ ~'!npie~e~/len~~d~89 • · •;· -r. --·-==-•·~ Jy landscaped lot wltb Corrals. Must sell. ill· sprinklers. 10 minute ness. Submit. 1130.000. NANTUCKET (i»UIET, COOL dnve to beac~a. short l'IW@11211m IEACHESTATE SECWDED ~~1:0 sboppang and 982-44711 ~ 2 STY. 5 IDRM Escape from worldly R.attora lshd~ce~~~~~~~~ tension! Come & see Chis 1: $16,000 custom bit country home $71,950. 01r ce 11 Tree lined entry. Huge hidden away 1n a wooded $69,500, IMke ott.r. SUN liv. rm. with crackling rural setting. A lge but · 541..e771. ftrepla_ce & wall of al»ss cozy living rm features1---------- view of grounds. ~a~ge wood paneling. beam LUSK GEM country kitchen Du11ng ceilings & raised nearth rm. Separaie wing. for frplc. 4 Good sl:£e bdrms, ... among jewel11; large, secluded guest su1tes. one oC which can be con· low maintenance back SH l.N E Sweeping stair ~ to vertedtoagameroom. A yard. perfect for your hideaway master swte & terraced patio fine for polled plants. 4 Spacious children 's quarters. casualouldoorentertain· bdrrrui., with comfort&· Hurry I Just listed. Won't ing. Overlooks lee pool. b!e family rm., laundry Home! $71,500! Move in Inst 1002! 963-7881 Enjoy mellow afternoons rm. & more! d . i I F t ti 1.Jt1N 111 ~·11s 1uN 1oe1~1.r1 near serene lake OC· con 1t on an as c 6 SWIMM OI CM)l.F7 Wl:lat'll you b'ave9 This 4 bed.rooip on a comer lot bas its own pool for tour private swimmln• -and la located near the Mesa Verde Country Club - for you who love hitting that wblte ball down the fairways. The sunny. bay-windowed ltitchenette & cozy den with fireplace are most appeallnr after a day b{play. Sl.50,000. Shown by appointment only. U,_,lfJUI: ti()Ml:S REALTORSll", 546·5990. 1525 Mau Verde Drive, E1st. Costa Mey also in Corona del Mar, at 675·6000 TWO GREAT DUPLEXES . ~ Both in. finest Corona del Mar. one oa , Iris, one on Begonia. All apts. have 3 : bdrms., 2 baths & enclos~ garag~. ThE:Se duplexes are among the most modern & best built in t~e area .. Priced reasonably at $179,500 and $189,500 759-0811 4115() NEWPOAT C~NTER DRIVE 1002 ........ 1002 NEWPORT HEIGHTS SZ0,000 PllCE REDUCTtOH Beautiful exec. home, 3 bdrma, s bath, pool & Jacuul. Was f16S,OOO. now 1145,&oo. Owners have already moved and will carry• 2nd TD. You can purchase with less t.ban 20% down. Owner anxious. Call ~2313 OflfH 111 9.,, s flJH ro 11 N1C1 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• VETS-: ••FREE•• VA CCMIMlnc) & Info. Senlc~ rr.. .,,,...., la I c F Colesworth1v buy! Call now! RED ~ ~ftjftijilJ ~~~f¥~nb!£~~ce~ WLTOttS 640-0oto ,_c_A_R_:-:-c.;...' 7-:-~11Jfl-A_Y__ 2 OH A LOT · -·-= = -tional "get away from 1t --·.-----.--2 Smal ,&louses oil a ,....U.tefVA Ho.esillO.C. 0.-.nge Co's. Larcest VA Home Broker C411124Hn. THREE IEDROOM &POQL $54,000 Goraeous starter home with a 1ood sited bedrooms, 1ourmet kitchen. community pool and spacious grounds. Prloed for qwck sale. CALL 751 3191. C:SELECT I PROPERTIES 2STORY 4 IDRM + flOOL Walk to beach from this beautiful decorator garden home. Huie llv. rm with fireplace. formal d1nin1. slldlng glass door to patio !ind sundeck. -Priced for q~ck sale at $'12,~. Call 9'&8'767 QltN 1119 •II~ IL'I O• No{fl f~llNll DUMPYDUPW Pride of ownenhip ~ould be hard to find here, but lf thinai; like a low price o( $49,900 and rent potential of $420 mooth lntereal1 you, CALL s.:ie-$. C:SELECT T' PROPERTIES ii HOUSIOP •LASS Seclqded Oil quiet itee· lined cul·de·aac atreet. '11\ls 4 bdrm home ha1 been completely cwstqmlaed throu1ttout. Lota of wood and 1laa1, vaulted cellln.. located \'I mile from beach, Call 9GMm all" IQCation! 646-7711 JUST LISTED S8 I• 900 • SOxl.30 foOt Jot. Priced ln 3 Huae bedrooms with the high 80's. A 1reat (~1wma21t1uu11 Santo AM ~lr!o':nt 11~: ~!!Ti: !':st~~.~Jr :;:: J~: Real Esta•--SM,9IO, 3 br. 2 ba, lS yrs . 1 tails. ~ .. ._7171 "" .... he l blln R/O room, stone ftrep ace .,_. MW, .rn a • 1 ()fl(N 1119• II\ I I/ti 109( Nlft' .. -------•I cl)U drpa, laJ\dscaped, and eat·ln kitchen. I ~~··'" ~~1~~:~=~ ~•.rumu 1113.500. 3 br. 2 ba, bltn fki K€Y RIO. DW. dble gar. cpts, ""'1' P£ALTOf\Sil. AM41Yl!l$AIY drps . FA heal, call ISTATIS 963~ · I_,,..,_.,...,.....,_.._...,....,,.,.. SeclUded 3 br. Z ba coun ttunffnqto. leach ONLY 3 LEFT try home on a larce pool 675-2626 WORLD REAL ESTATE llG IUY-C:DM Bil lot·bic potential for extra b11 unit. 3 Bdrm, 2 Ba. 1 Bdrm. 1 Ba. SOUTH OF HIWAY. Asklnt~.000. 844-1270 '67,:500. 3 br. 2 ba, 1400 Marina Highlands Is size tot. country" iltchen :iq.ft .• bltn RIO, tenced, bustling with building with microwave oven · landacaped, cptJ, drps, activity. This ls an op· used brick fireplace. gas 1 ~::;;;;;;;;;;;::;;:;;;;;: dble gar. Call 963-4S67 portunlty to ii ve In a BBQ and best o( all, the 11 ....,.....°"leach brand new.a;l bedrm, 2 modest price. Call now _ --------168.soo. 4 'br, 2 ba, bltn bathhorne~theroneor 646-71n SPOTLESS!! IR/O, dfptc1. cpdts. drpds, 21 sto1d7 Mf1any1 amenlttiellel ~l119nnw::fll' s BR. 2 ba, fn>lc.; lie. 0~;;:.e~ dble8:ar!~!.Pca1i s~~ks5, ,r:::,c:•door !•. ·· . ·1J;tSj!!'\I glass & scrnd. lanai; lot 9634S67. openers & comfortable ~ l iAEHilJ~ 9-0XJOO. Quick possess. Village Real Est.ate reoced yards. Our prices f~;1;~~~~~~~· ~ 189~A YWOOD 963-4567 are from S79.SOO to .~--------•i I ~~~~~~~~~ S119.500. Please call for REA.LTV. INC. I~ appt.tosee. COIONADll.M.AR * 541·1290 * Orepn Bound Owner <le1perote and mu,,t sell. Best buy in al Costa Meaa. Sharp bedrm. 2 bath, ramll OUPW PETE BARRETT Lcwely dUplex, uch unit -REALTY-bavfn1 2 bedrooms each. $42-52.00 !U"' to beach. Pnced to -rm. + ar\11t'1 studio •------•-• -.u~a JtaD I' ~\11 1·11 1 1\ Many ntras. Hurry priced only S74,900. Cal ~ ,~~·HERITAGE ·' • RE Al.TORS SPYGLASS /)''I I I ' ' "'"' '.JIOl'J""' .. fl ,., ~ BILL GRUNDY . REALTOR • 1' ',,,11 ~,, . •, •. f,,··. ,,,bt ..USTUS MOIMIMG SUM? IASTSIDI You~ tD tNa t>eatlilflll 4 • COSTAMISA bedrm pl1n 3. Many up· tl 4 ~. dto + pool. oadel. wala' 50Aener. Ataeol~ claarmin& • klee· •u door opener. apotlebJ WJ>•lv fMllt Decorator drapes and =::;:::::;;;:;~=::::::=~~~~ \reea, poOl lliouae, prpf . lands c a p e d cabua; tbia bome wu 1$2,000. · RED .CARPET featured ha R•dboolil ReaJton;645-347'. J111arioe., Prlud' •'!~~~~~~~~~! 11.&\.000. • ~ ,. m-83 673-8086 E Ye&. . ' ,, ' (I •' associated B Q 0 ~ ; R '> ii E AL T •)RS i.·1•. Y\ a,,)1t-..,'1 , • 1 1 •• 1 Wftelc-.11 ~fAl lSTAtf 1'Jn NIGEL uA1a i bi fl5SOl 11\I (S Al I~~ ~Ol'lln,..Coal• ..... 645-9161 ABUY IYOWMER 38r, 1~8a. an copper plumbing. Beautiful Vf/W carpettn1, oew paint, block walJ fenclng, patio •• IAMcHaw.TY 551-2000 TOPOFWOILD Attr. 3 bdrm., 1 bath bomia: family J'm,, dln· -..,....-_,....... __ _ inll area. frptc:. Lge. SS9,IOO feneed )'ard. Some view 2 Br 1 Ba condo1 best Crom deck. Pa Uo off area Mlaalon V~•o. 8 .., rnst,., bdrm. Owner buy -" tna another home, anx· _own __ er_. _2l3_·_398-_~_s_1 __ ~='i:l°'tJ~ER Newport leaalt I 069 SEALlO.N REALTY ......... ;.;.-•• \•••••••• 1213N. Cout. L•i'"11 BLUFFS 497-1 311 644-22 U Fubs\ie Gre•obelt View. 3 br, r-.m. rm, 2 • l(ICI( IA.CIC pools eta. byf Walk to & LET THE INCOr.fE achts. It sbopptng ctr. P A Y F 0 R T H E lltl l·Vlsta E"atrada, ==;;;;;.;;;;;;;,;;;., PRQPEMYI ~ acr. Sl4T.000.640-8389' • =st~:C~=i IYOWMIR aUffS YOUR CHOICE area w/oft'lee. Tbat'a not ZlJ17 l'\esta, ·~ level, all·2 Bdrm. • 1 bath ''LindJa'• .end UDL I Br 2 ..,_. tool owe lit TD. Ba, fplc, J pa~ comm $117,SOO. pools, s~ ab;arp. ()pen · c-ey 1r CCMJlpClft'J ~ped.loo aDYdar~ . UMSo.Coaatllwy. LAGUNA BEACH 497·2457 •. --EMERALDBAY Exqulait.e 8Br, 3Ba, wblle wate r view , library. hardwood nrs. $235,000. Owner (714' 49M121 • ---Loipa Hilh I 050 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BLUFFS 3 BR. 2 ba., single story ; completely redecor. Sll.S,0001 Or Jease/opUoo at l550 per mo. AGENT 640-5560 "THECOVE" I Spedacular Townbouse. Delqxe. Master Suite. Water fioot community w/sandy bch, pool & Jacuui. Gared entrance. By <>wner. $215,000. Fee l Land. 6'1>3808or675-1014 IAYROMTCOHDO 2 Br. den. Z Ba, boat dock. pool.Jaeuul. view. By appt. only. 752-2265 or m.z33l or 675-1021 By owner. SPYGLASS HIU. 5 Bdrm Coronado. S279,000. Ph 551-1234 WUTCUFf Sturtevant B\U lt, 1212 Pembroke, 3 BR, ram· rm, attrac. floor pla o. SlJ0,000. Open SatiSun. ~-642-0758 . -~ $~ HERITAGE • • REALTORS _uoo1su __ Cbarmrn1 2-story Spanish hi>me. 3 Bdrms .• huce brick patio, large s treet to st.reel lot. $195,000 • . .• UDO REALTY 673-'7300 ~ r ., H • '. ' , :-:.' L -, 1, r' J .. ,. 4f7·Z4ff l.AOUNA NIGUEL 1'111 lllDIOOM RXa Brans yo11r painl T.L.C. for tlus Iara Eutblllf borne pnced Mil. LC.TAnoaco. 955-0JSO ILUFFS By owner. 4 Br, l ba, fa rm, lrg patio, dbl car New paint uis1de " out. Many upgrade feature:.. 428 V1sla Suerte Ope how,e 1·5 Sat. & Sun. Cal e'c" >as~ or 751· days_ REAL ESTATE Creattve & pror co will Owner. 4br, 3ba1 don. pool. shflbrd crt, alr1 3 car. auto sprklra. ~.ooo & 1090 dwn. 1"21 Gal)'. 731-3247 BY OWNER, Laurelwood Twnhn, 2 Br l"'-Ba. ap· crades. sso.990. m-0996 GOLF COURSE PRESTIGE COHDO End unit with lot1 or glass. 2 Bedroom!>, den and dining. Near pool, J11cuz7.11rnd aoll couri.t. 2 Yean. old, VACANT Asking Sl04.100 Call s+l·-&000 We 'II show you• REDHILL REALTY 544·4900 soon be opening ofc's 1n Other Real Estate Npt. Bcb & C M. areas. ••••••••••••••• •••••••• We have openings for Mobile Honws n e w o r e x p c r . For Sale I I OO saJes~rsons & mgrs who ••••••••••••••• •••••• •• are interested in a . career. Apply by calhn 8 x 31 1 Br Columbia in for interview C.M. Adult park. S2300or 631 _0400 best offer. 548-6173 _________ 1i BR. furnished. complete ---------1 ocean view, sun deck. So. LagWla. $32,000. 499·2630 DOVER SHORES IEAUTIFULLY ap·A~for54H 1200 pointed 4 bednn, 2 •••••••••••••••••• • • ••• berth homt. s.,. dining ATTENTION rm, formal llv rm, . DEVB.OPERS brick fplc, 2 car Riverside County 1n Sun· nymead. approx 490 garage. landspd & acres. Perfect for mini· sprinklered. lest buy ranches. S Miles from in t,ti Is e ll c I us Jv e Lake Perris n • I ~ b o r h o o d . R.C. TAYLOR CO. $146,500. Owner wlll 955-0350 REALTY INC. 7''!/846-1371 help finance. Wortd Wide Brokers '73-4545 AYOCADOCOU~TRY FOURPLEX . Costa 5 Acres. fantastic view. Mesa, nr. Hoaii flosp1tal. Over 200 avocado trees & all 2 br, $1~.000. Ai:ten1 two year old house. Xlnt. 549·~92 terms. BKR HARBOR VU PALERMO 48r, 21.2Ba, ram rm. din ---------1 1714 1676·5717 ORS22·~ THEIESTIN IEA.CH LIVIHG Unique, custom cedar & redwood environment. - FOURPLEX Excellent rental area-2 rrules from beach. All 2 ExcepUonally bcaot new Bayfront Dplx ranlasUc bay vtew, w; awlm an=a. FP, wetbar, elea bltna & ---------1 lndry area. ln'ea unit. At· 10CIAMROMT WINTER RENTALS z BR.1 ba. pro Lp.JBR,2ba. SMC> um .. 1 ba. S32S I BR. 2 ba. $400 SWSTOllACH 2 IP\. den, 2 ba $GOO J..BR., Jearb' $400 associated l~ '--(' • (II'> O<I t A, r \. U ~ : o' ~ fi .. 1t, •1 : ' It CORONA DEL MAR 2 Br . Town.bou.se, frplc. Pool. tennis. Some ocean 4k Catalina views. Close to shopping & fine beach. 6"·2611 ' ' I I I t l ... .... . . .. .. . .. . ........ C-.Nete n a• ....................... 1 Ir', pool, adulll, no • 11'1'b. SUO. Ml·lf• an tnf,IO.aJll J 6 I ldrmt, matur ........ pd. ill kott 'Pt.to.1113 · ll'IS. .,.. 2 •· n. ba, pallo. 1arden t ~__,;.-.. 141-1603 . . MOWUMTIMG 2br,Jba.all b!W. trplc, l eod. PT· Ba.ICOQJ, pa&Jo, r . .....,,..~ •. TSLJq:ml M2·11Ul ! •••Ht. lU br I~ I • . ..,a. Din rm, W.bwbr, frplc, pvt patio. Nr. . lrvine Ind. aru. Ml-2141 t OAD.IDGE VILLA 3br,2ba,bh.os.Cblldren welcome. $27S. &58 W. Ceoter St. 646-9569 }JewCONJ>O 2 br, 2~ ba, 2 rp1c·a. blt..lns, pool & ~ ape. t&25 mo. m.ou .. 2Br1Ba, pr, lndry fac1l. • l2SO mo. 2009 Maple, Mgr .Apt K. 548-6W • NEVERLIVEDIN! New 2 Br 2 Ba Fam Rm. D/W, children OK. $325. 5-18-<*4 2br w/frplc, nu hv. rm " cn>t. Encl'd patio. $265. •' 1323 Baker St. 645·2680 I . • Schools and · Instruction - Tllls•..W,effllescltaals co9il lldn 611:• • ~ ...... ._.,.. ·-~-........ ,= ..... l•f ........... ...,,... ........ .... .... , can 642-5678 Id. 325 MICROWAVE COOKING CLASSES STARTING MOW Pen90naJ Instructions Complete Selection Microwave Accessories Now offenng spec1allzed courses • Mulcm * Pwty .... • Lew C-.W a...t Stwt S... •C..._ .... ......,......_ .. Learn to really use your expensive investment. M We teach every phase of MICROWAVE COOKING Complete 7\.'l Hour - 3 Week Course For ,.. al 19 nt lirfenMff• Cal 76a.SOl I MICROW A. VE MA.GIC COOKING SCHOOLS ~if :tltC>THUflUI• COITA MUA l.......S ... • Y*""~ ART QASSES MIWPOl1' llACM OI,..... ~ CIHH :r ... A .... • Ir B.LIM CUii.MAM Mohd Arfltt of .... '• ........ Sctloel (& 14. IJHv. Oil ML ...... Gr8d) Maintaining the same degree of instruction from individual to group & association classes. Forillt...tl•c• &44-5415 1· S110 E/Stde tnplex. 3br, r--~--------------------~---------­·~ 2ba, frplc, yd, encl gar. •No pts. TSL .Mgmt • • &12-1603 '' 1 DR, 2 Ba, Mesa Verde, , Jrplc, across from park. SJOO. 979-8533 or 7 S l ·8888 EASTSIDE new 2 Br, pool, Kids OK. No pets. 1 $215. 548-0916 lbr. $210. Encl gar. No pets. Adlts. 2035 Fullerton. 642-5964 ·Adult Easts1de, 1 br. pool, jacuzt1. lndry, encl gar. Si2 l9. 6-1 HX3i8 $3'75. New 2 br. 2 ba, 4 plex. Lrg yd, laund, bllins TSL M~mt 642-1603 I --- un1""'1..t --~ f91C00"•tl0ft. ~ut11yl ' . .COASTLINE R.O.P • A Beauty Career Has It All! For Her ._, ..... ., -···· ~-. • ->Qel 0 ~ COASTLINE·R.O.P. . is now offering classes in Cosmetology, Manicuring & Skin Care -At N1tlonally AcCredlted FOR IMPOaMA110M A 9tlOUMIMT Cati AJtdrea Gross. Dir. of Aclllllstioas. 645-3150 r ;A.dull 2 .Bedroom. super ~~t~atmn. no pe~. ~~. :~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ''568 W Wilson. inq apl E. ~------. 0 llACH .. Cottage for .,..,malurt• adlts. New cpt & paint. $l!IS1 mo. incl ulll, -rctni.t. & yard marnt . 557-57i0 :\SS dys. 494·0:121 ·eves. , ~;;:;----... Lg lBr, lots of storage.1 ~enclosed gar. mature smglc or married couple only. Si225 mo. No peli. or .... ... ~tuldren. 645--9839 ----- ' Lge bach. good Joe • pvt t!Cpatio. Adults. $180. + · h'gas. 646·4546 't ~ , -Eastsidc 1 story J~c 2 hr, gar. litO\C, patio. ~95. -.IH2·S.166 &tS-4483 ------; TllF.SEVILLE '1 2Br w1gur. S2ti0 mo _ ,\dill>, cpl:. drps, ran~e. ~ .. rm·d \d w pallo. \\lr pd ... :.'\iJ'I II · !-i..1nl..1 \n..1 \\e, 6:lti 1120 I tu 5 'New lge 2 BR. all elt>r up J> .. per Lklkony & i:nrage. • Walk lo i.hop·~ & lrns. t '; ~ mo. 548-3365 • , ~ -EASTSIDE 1 •• • VILLA CORDOVA r,, •Locked gar. w /lg stor. 1 ;~, •D/W d1spl. lndry rm : , ,, •Special cabinet space • • " •Gas heat, gas cooking. ' .:::-gas hot water all pd. lli •Adults. no pets. c:: lBr Si240. 2BR S2i5 Month to month ·,-2323 Elden Ave. C M. tN• 646·0032 .)! -.. , .:..custom quality unit in tnplex 2 Br. paneled den -·w1lh wood buminl( FP. ~· 111Ba. Formal livlng /Aj ~ BEA Ba.I ~ TRAVEL Id IL) AGE~T · ,~ Day~ Night Classes ·For Men & Women -ftACIAC TRAVEL SCHOOL 610 hst 17HI Sine+, s.te.UO. Ce '2701 CALL 1714) 543.9495· Estabhshed 1963 Financial Aid Programs Accredited By The Accred1hng Commission or The Na11onal Association ot Trade & Technical Schools IRVINE.UMIVERSITY- SCHOOL OF LA. W .... .. '4400 C:...-S Dr. Hewpori leedl. C. HHO ~ '79-0711 , __ ,,., 1977 FAU & WtMTa B(ltOUMtKT OPIH. • Evening Classes -4 Year Program • NoV{ in 5th Year of Instruction •Graduates eam J .O. or L.LB. degree • Graduates Ouallfv to take Callf. Bar Exam • 2 Yrs College A.A degree -needed for admission as regular student • · • Distinguished faculty of 1ud9es & attorneys -.. O<_lor Bu•'-l•nlAQo!Qt""' l'I•-..... . Addr .. 1 ...... ~ ........... . l.•o •••.•• If') .... room, cpts & drps. Lr& ... _______________ .. ' sunny kitchen with all • v'1 bwll Ins. Only $345/mo. r .!:.. Adul~. no pets. First & l -,.. last 100 refundable de· .'"' posit. ~ manager at rt 2279 Miner St. Apt A. Or t call 631-3149, 842-1080, aft. ,-sPM · ~· 0-Polnt 1826 t •.••••••••••••••••••••••• , f Sunny, sparkllns cled ' new 2 Bi\, bltns. ocean • view, $265. 493-7231 t J Macnlficent. M arina • Vtew,aorgeo~t Apta. 4,93-4)071 • THEA l1UCA&. WOAf(IHOP ' .. ACCllSOAIES ~ Modellng (:laaaea for Children Off"""9 Stvdtwts A Znd Chenu lndlYldilal • s..11 Groep IMtnlcHClft 3R s & Related Skills Kindergarten-7th grade Mon-Sat t1ex1ble scheduling Credentialed Specialist 8 yrs experience "'""'-768-15'0 CCltOdo Business Cenhr 22691 ~ St .. ,,SOI. II T- Jlapp'J Cli.iftl ;JJevefopmenl . : ~nler Kindergarten ctasses Now Available Enroll Now For~Fall ht•-~hJC:.. CIP9lp C•w.,.Dtrectw . .. ARST SOUTHaH IAl'TIST CHUltCH 650 W • ......_Sf .. c .... Mete .. l·t4H TUIMFOa C"IL mv1c1 DAMS NilW Cftrtl/C.,..... • !!SS.II/HOUR ._ ... Qefb; •• ~ ...... M9tj.,...., """Of ... OIANGE COUM'ttS RIST Aftll;.UCEMSING ·UAL ESTATI TRAIMI .-siMhQI This eemlner ia dMlgned to ~'W)>lOU, the new Salesi>et'IOn the ·nuts. ·and bolts" of reat estate •••• a right ettrt after paulng the it at• exam and a firm foundation g~nded In the belles of this co~. yet highly l"ewll'dlng buelo.-.. YWWlll receive more than YoUr money's worth In accurtte. uo-tC>-<lat~edQ9 for Immediate use In ""-.. ,... wort<(" of rul .-t•el · • -ACC" 9 411D llALUrATITUIMl ... SIMIMM-. 12Oll)'Selaton•18-hour progra"' • .tCtuaee commence In Seotember ./Cell for tocatlon. dat• & furth!r Information: .. Mou.MINT~­ ........ STIA'nOM lltUIS11DI CALL: "17141 996-3460 ICOLLECTI T-enmle Sltca"Oft Pn-SdtaDI •• 1·V1.--............ c:..t. .... Announoee the oPenlng of reglstrlltlon for classes starting September 8, 1977. A Happy & Stimulating Environment Is Provided For A· Limited Number Of Children Under The Guidance Of A Trained & Licensed Staff. Please call Joyce Tachner at 652·7767 or IYlu riel Q~ngott at 536-sg79 for f urther Information. .. i.!F•4 .._,.,.Air AnecW.. RitlitSdleel A ftyilMJ A....,._ LlilM TO FLY -· $105 ~·""'"' •fM Al'f'IOVID* Course Includes: 35 Hours flJght time In C~a 150'• with 20 hours dual 1nstryetlon. Tndividual lnatrucllon tallor9d to YOUR ability. ~ Hours Ground School; -... 20 AlltCltAPT AVAIL:AIU AT LOWIST IA TH IM OltAHGE COUNTY ~to tty-.-.d ..... fwd -~ -foteo.-,,olal Of'lNtr_ 1......... • hr Co"91•te Detlllls Cll MOW 97'· 1155 lt71 t Alrporl ~ 5Mtt _ .. , __ ,_ o._c_,~ ~..;;,... d> ~ . . SEMINARS AT SEA Four days/tour nights at sea. learnlnf celestial navi&atioo, plloting, Aa1Un111).lp. · etc. A real educat~cmal v1catl,on. :tor \ . • dWlk• IClloo4 °' ~'IQ • • ll9cOn'9 contuMd Miiiy ·~1nxhool ..... _ •*lll•uala1lure ........ _llfll<l8S •i..rn~ ' WE SPE;CIALIZJ; IN OISCOVERIN(3 ANO HANDLING THE BASIC. -~~NING. ~' i • THE STUDENT IMPROVEMENT CENTER Call · 901 Dovw Drive 642-9088 Newpott Beech complete brochure, contact: ~ CAVANAUGH ASSOCIATES 107, Bay Lido Builalng 00 Newport Boulevard wport Beach, CA 92663 I (714) 548.8837 I • CHILDREN'S .. 'CORNER ~..o PRf .SQtOOl & EXTENDED DAYCARE . . Educational. Social & Recreational Program. Expenence wtth small animals. Field tnps thruout the year. 10 Years expen~ with children. Open 8am·6pm. ages 3 to 9 accepted. Home environment lln .. illf ''"'"'~ ell-fw Fii ,._....,., '4M04 ' YOGA IS WHAT YOU'RE LOOKING FOR! Throw out tension. find peace of mind while you build a more Healthy, beautiful t>ocM The Temarkable science of Yoga as taJght at Yoga Center 19 famous for Ila wholebody approach to a FULFILLED YOU . ·Taught by Sri Devi & Ananda Vldya. tY'O expert & charming Western women. Yoga slims. tones. calms the mind & satisfies through & through. leam deep relaxation. nutrition. secrets. meditation, how to breathe better for vitality! For ages 12-72 Y9CJa In The ·Moming! FttU DIMOHSTRATIOM TOMOllOW MORNING AT IQ A.M. YOGA CENTER · ... NURSES AIDE&_ TRAINING .V ·) Would you like to be trained u • nurset assistant? We wlll provide 60 hra Olnaroom Instruction & 100 hrs Clinic.I pracilce fOt qualifled applicants. Muat be lnt.,..ted In WQtlcing with long tet'm pltitnts l motivated to learn. TOP $8laries I benefits. Call Mra. Danna A make appointment for Interview ' ' Irvllte ~ollege of Business Grades 1-7 Saturdays 9 a.m.•12:.30 p.m. ,... ...... wi· 17141 H7-S461 121 JJ 5t6-l I I I . .. . . ..... P.O.lalOZI ................. tl647 . ' • ~· Cnfll tr• If ~rs MONA FRANCES · l.S.T.D. ~ofBALLET , ICJnder lallet to Profession .. CeccMtt mMf b11I• Techniqw , Chi.._ and Adult Clossff , .. I 642-4061 or 640-1443 lU% SANTA AMA AYE. COSTA MHA (between Del Mar and Mesa) ~· Brochure on request 3 BR, 2 BA. winter ren taJ. $425. Avail Sept 10 Ask for Les, 540-llSJ. OCEANVIEW yrly, 2 Br 1 --------1 Ba d pix, $400 mo. Qw!t female shr w/same 644-6780 OC' 642-3639 2 BR CdH c banner '225. Delux Newport H gts 644-70IOOC'673--5711 • WFSTC.Llrr P.LO(i tHWl•.1>r hi •• . . . ~ td Mr tfr \"" ''lfd 1;1.\:;, · tl I U' W..,W..W IOJO ....................... '1~.000Needed tor «MIO dais. for HIGHLY PROFJTABLS B.E. Ve.iture. CAPITAL INVESTED WILi. -----.---..-.. J) 0 U B L E • ~-~omce. GUABAN~EEDI Smltih-$.WWJ\IW. -•·OUS PJUNCIP.&TC! B..B.111-u&a:~ ~ Qlo..u 4 DILUX! OfC"S Ooaf. nn .• aeat 15, all paneled, sm. wbee In re- ar. 1ar2 Tr· lea-.. Lake Fore•t area. Kent Kaila. 114--511-9393 SCRAM-LETS AllSWEIS Rudely-Briak- Guild -Somber -SUBURBS . MIU\Y a farmer waJr.ea up one morning and finds h i m s elf in th e SWINGERS I t level,2Br,2 Ba,%patiOB. CHI .... -----------------------------.. S400/mo.4M&-86511 ._.._. 4350 • WelcomeatPort11. ~ __ uo_E._l_Ttb_.-.$....-C_..K.......;__ J INTERNATIONAL MONTESSO*I SCHOOLS Fwc••••2V2 .... 12~ '*Pfanned programs •Reading, Writing, Geography. Music, Arts. Physical Ed, Arithmetic, Language, Science, Independent Study & Social Activities. Summer Program Also Has Remedial Reading. Cea Rflecl Teadlei •· Mewpwf IHda t7t·fZ41 '"-''•!;:Z t3t·l7SO s.t. .,._ 54M75l . .,_ 12t.Ol21 20221 Cypnss St. _ 10511 Mel 1a A.-2511 W. S.••• 400 W. Ar S1Net -\ ¢RAFTS CLASSES . . \ GOLDEN WIST COU&I ART144 •. ,, ~2 , R.YWnH THI UST 01 II c:..tr'• ~ Plyt.gCWt -• ucauwr .... .._ Design Md Concepts•~ , ... to Ct'llft9- pro)ects wtU lnctude ~me of the following - Ceramics, Woodwo~lng. Jewefry, Leather; · Enamel, fiber, Plastics, Ooll11ge . ••• th ..... SAiii' • 0 : Clalt u 0 1 c::.. . ...,....,, . .ML,,,. ........... ... All.,,_A.TI • ..a..-.na •• c:a...o.......o. •• 10.IZ .. II, .,... . ...,..JO ..... If )QJ CAREi M>out the QUALITY of ~ flytng educ8lton c::all "'step bv . - ttHI ~Alrp..tW-r. s.t.~ CA .. II • 549-5252 ~(RN TRADITIONAL 3R1s . , • DEVELOP $OUND STUDY HABITS • MAX. 20 STUDEN-rS PER CLASS •TRANSPORTATION • EXTENDED DAY C~RE· I , .... KINDERGARTEN THAU 8TH GRADE 121 South Citron, Anaheim, Cstifomla 92805 (714) 835-7892 ... A Private achoOI dedicated to Academic: Achfe'vement" , . ~ 'ncllltMt. , .. , 0471 ••n 1467 150 I Wntclff Dr. ==~~ 3176 CallonS&eMana1er ••••••••••••••••••••••• s.a.-wte 2 Br 1 ~ ba or bcb, $275mo ._ 400 ............ ~·········· ROOMS $11 wk & up. ----.-~----11----.....:;---:..__1 W/JdtdMm, '42..50 wk 6 ·-DAJl.Y"LOT T Add IL.Bu Id lt ... OJaper lt ... Hammor it ... Carpet I .•• Cem nt lt ... Wlru lt...Hoe tt •.• Cle•n it •.. Mov• lt ••• Preu If ... Paint 1t ... Nall 1t ... Plctster i ... Fix It .. DIRECTORY •s ,.., •• ..,. c..,.._ ceQ;.e1c...-... .. .. _, , HaaMCteanlttCJ ,......,,,..n,.. •-....JP~ ....... ..._-+Wig .............................................. ·······'··············· ............................................................................... ;;-.~-.;........ ................ . ..................... . " , 86J.\ppltanreSfon • lvln1 1tot•1•r.blne1b or·na1ANCNw.-'>"eir WE~DrNOCLEANUPS Haullnf,rncwinC,cleanup Houaecleanln«. 2 men PalatYourCotffe ml ,.IDtill& co. st.HU TIUPCHAttO.: flO fur 1ar " uUI rnu . pr paurlna • fllliahlna. Weekly Maintenance fl/up. Treowork. Reas, bonelt, reUable & depeo· AverateExtrlSlry 539~ price. lntJ.,"xtr. Depea· .Matn,5 A Yorrn1u lnp, tm bll. 8et)'OW'owAtOJ'ro1,1ave !'.!!!~_t _ &C-H07 fast,Creeest8f.2..4Se7 dable.840-3385 2story~,lot.r$Unn dllble. Woric &Uar •• fr'CA! :Mf.azl "7 Ulefl ~!)4 -.i rnooey,lll·atl.1 GarderuncServlce; clean OCC Student. Bl11 ~. T L..dlc~ Pncestncl matr'l·labor est. 'JM.Cl •ri-,...,....~-ri~------t• ...... C.,.t W.tc. (.'Jl;Mll:NT WORJC . All up & haulln1. weekly truck. Trash, tree trim, ....................... Guar/lnard,Freeest. 9,...MtyP~ ... ~•••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• kinda. twuon•ble. Free maintenance. Reaaona· etc. l\andy 842 5703, a YTII e"per free eat alto Ted552-0J34ors:ta-'7085 • Lowest(\rtces M ... • deJ>f'ndable M~ Carpt·l Men 1111&U lay youra. 11 tA>. Call 71MMGS bl• rates, free esUmates. :14&-38ee lnd.scpng ~at.en al ~11a1I. PROFESSIONAL Paint· • Homes/Apta. Oran,&e~Inv Prop c 111. Lot'•I tl'Fa or min•. lhp111rs & After 4.30 ask for Ron. clean up & ref's J In ...._._ R lntr/Extr. n....jufa':t ax Appeals· .1 lS & D Concrete All •ucNCllor548-4i87 CHEAPEST haulln' in . ·· uy g. lnt.er/ .... AKT. eaa, ,.,_,. ~fe:DNd)d )tl 106'1 dHn•n•tw' v 1&1rw0tk ~··onc .. •''",b'--'-•. _....,____ __ Fr CllEAPI ~3or995 2155 workauar&42·o.186 •WorkGuar. (\ers. Appra als,EdSM-8}40 ----11l b11:1trr uvm•• i-'rt•c • '"'... ~ .. • town. es\8. · " •free Est.I. 552.0515 WIU bab),.1t In m' ho"1r ol, IH~ ~ work. Frff t':.l1. Reliable Expr Japanese '42-299Sor64S-J.S90 SPRINKLER SYSfEMS Flne work. State lie & lD· RoofitMJ l.;efn«ibadt .rd&. plav Uc'd.,bonded871S9T20 G11rdener. Reasonable, M v1.n d U -IMtallation&serv1ce. srd Extenor apeclallst. PAINTING. lntr/Extr ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,... Sh.1mpoo fa 11lt!atn 4'1"1in . freeest 645·5230Mlke. 0 I an Hau nf. stu Licensed Free Est. Expr'd, ho.nest, neat. ROOFS installed factory' .__ i.... •'ol"1 •·n"ht nt'ra w'"t Cedrador --dent !out yrs. exp, reas, Aft 5 Bob 642 .,.81 Try me-Calico83S-'SSSS Reas Lied 964 104" .-.M;>lJh ~lblO~~bl!.n·h <'I"~~••••••••••••••••••••••• E~pert Japane se rell,freeett.963-9586 ___!m'._ _. _. _ _. -------· · · "dlrm; estab'I 35 yrs. 1..6c d day c-.r<· '' ~ .. II\, 1hn rm h.111 $15 Av11 Specialu1ne l:Ju1ld1n G Gardener. Compl yard HouMct..-&a.. --Tree & Pit trim & rem. WORK GUAllANTEl!:D Dave C1tll Harold Gunn, ~t Pfau 1i111h thr u •· nn S1 ~' l'(•U<·h ))0 , hr Arch lks110 Planes for serv Cleanup. Free e11t. --... Roto soi.J prep, sprklrs lntenor/Extr. Frc.-e eat. lnt/Exl Pamttng. Res. _549-_298_1 _____ _ )ta 551.-st. $.) 1:u.ar 1•1lm ~t odur Add r~i.tdence 11pt Xlnt 548·9483afl 7pm ••••••••••••••••••••••• repr, lawn renov. & mst 2Syrsexp 642·02:95 rates, quality • eeat· ROOFSFOIWS laj ... , t'pt n•pa1r '~ yri. u1n iel•. N 8 6*1573 VERY LOW PRICES' -Want a REALLY <.:LEAN comp. 548·5863 ---oess. Free est 548-2129. -l>o "cirk n·~~elr lh-l!I HOUSE? Call Gingham Knowles Pa1nt1n1. AI..i. TYPES. 40 yrs ex-....................... It J Huft man & Son, Gen on gardeamg m u1n-Girl. Freeest64>5123 Masonry lnl /Ext, commercial Pett CcMdrail perieoce. Finan avail. Palm t"nHr~ lrelli·. )JI Ulfll <.'ootr C~lomAll&Add tenance.GeorgeS4&-2015 --------••••••••••••••••••••••• a pts, residential & ••••••••••••••••••••••• Free est, ltd'd bonded. F.-nC"lng , Uet•k1ni:. t~HVt"l&.Upholl.lerv . '"*t1ua., t·11b1net1>'. General Services -IMMACULATE CLEAN· &Jrickwork. Small Jobs mob1lebomes.83t>-U20 Pest Cootrol. Ftea a. ant Olllanytlme884.001 Bnckwork. Gates Ko !>leum clean Jo'ret• e:.l lurm1t'a. New t>onst. Reis ••••••••••••••••••••••• ING. You DESERVE the Newpart, Co:.ta Mesa & ---abatement. Landsca~ r,... Set-flee b42·9211 aft ti P\I 112J·'TM7 or M6·611til & comm. 645 · 4 644 u "NDYM .. .., C try Bl:'ST. 759-0377 lrvine. 67>3175 eves YOUNG Man. 5 yrs cxpr ma int. Comm'! & res1d, ••••••••••••••••••••••• --s.18~1 we. Bonded ""' "'" arpen · . . --II F aftS 5411-1Z19or6'2-S334 eleclnt>al, plumbing &i AlicesHousecleamng. Mo...._ in wa covenng. ree · Removals. trimming , I Jc tonlractor. remodel. floors 646·'6851, 847·2'187 Reas, reliable, rera. Own • ...., ests. 645-8576, Andy __ Plasfer/R-ir pruning. Pree est. Llc'd. trans. "•"·7207 or 'HG-4871 ••••••••••• ••• •••••• • • • -r-Ca rpe nt ry any t)pe,Refr1C"d Be~an~ to decks, pullo ('O\'er:.. No HANDYMAN .,..... .... ENERGYCRJSJS., Comm'l&Residential.No ••••••••••••••••••••••• fully1DSured642·2624 Panel, doors etc Als PhC'a~ant lnder t,luss ~:ci:ro s mall Eves NOJOBTOOSMALL __ __ ~calldoesllall.Caty jobtoobigortoosmall. VERYNEATPATCJI Comm'I. llc~>st Aft 5, PartyPlannt·rs du1iw1th 67~40 CARPET.WI NDOW. &. state wide moving 20 yrs expr. Rooms JOBS&TEXTURE NOWISTHETIME S48·2719 Cl.c;:. 5:lti :n111or842 8682 Electrical f'LOOR CLEANING service 24 hrs 7 days. Sl.S/up. Fully insrd &. Uc. foree est. 893-14.39 tor Job seekers to check Fr od C la.:--... ti ••••••••••••••••••••••• HANDYMAN-Homes & Dutch Majntenance 213.9444110• 714.523.4462 OddJObstoo636-6995 111.~ the Daily P ilot Help am1ng, hru!.h, rem cl ~ -..,.-. "'C041S c , Apts Consc1ent1ous ServlceS37·l508 ----• -·-~ Wanted classlfication. If repair s, Lir Quic ••••••••••••••••••••••• HubbardS.ctric Crunsmun. Ph645-0302 --. ..-...1 lnt/Extdependable. reas. ••••••••••••••••••••••• the Job you want Is not .. er v IC<' W r k i; u a r Ernnumy Arousttcs· l,lual Lit> 3271.36 645--0974 ---HOUSECLEANING ts our flainhnq/P..,..., .ng free estimate. Call Jay HOMESAVERS. Plumb· there you might consider 962..3314 l>pra)ed ce1llng:., re ~ --Gt'OClng Bus1oes!.. Rel1oble ....................... 6457965 mg&Healine&aircon· ofrerlng your services --patr11. gunr, Lie 11329695, ELECTRICIAN pnced ••••••••••••••••••••••• service Jamce'S\ Rag PETERS PAINTING ditiomng. Free est. SlO with an ad in the Job llave -.omethmg >Ou want frec!!!.l536·1800 ngbt·Irce esllmate on Skiploader, dump truck, gedy ~ns at675-6553 • 'Expt"'d. Reas Rate$. CJrcful quahly wallpapql' hr. Honest & reliable .Wanted cat.e&ory. Pbone to !>ell" c1a .. '>1f1ed ad-. dt --large or :.mall Jobs hauling, tr~ worlc. grad· Free Est. Call Gene hanging, free estimates. service BofA. MIC OK. 642.5678 1t well 642 5678 Want Ad:. Call 612 56'78 Lie 673-0359 Ing, demo, etc 751·3930 Ctass1fieod Ads 642·5678 552-04.58 ___ __ __SSl-6896 __ 751-3150 --------- HelpWant~d 7100H.tpWanted 7100 tWpWontect 7100 Help Wanted 7100 HeepW-~ 7100HelpW...ted 7100 HelpW.t.d 7100 .wp'wanhd 7100 twpWcmhcl 7100 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ACCOUNTIHG CLK AlITOMOTJVI'.: ~ortgage banking firm LOTMAt•( mOrangeCo.hasan1m Dl•pendable & l''<· med. oJ)ening for an al r1er1enccd. Apph 1n dng clerk ~ t•xper in pcr-.on. Sec ~fr Junm·k bank recoM·1 It a t1on:. Sadclle1'atk Vallt•y Im f'lcase cal~ Cathy port~. 28402 MaTgucrl(t· Thompson at Un1ca l Parkway, Mi ssion V1<'JO \lort,i:age, 71 1 963·7873 -E.O E AUTOMOTIVE - -SERYICEWRITER Chc\'y dea~r need~ e' Acl'tni: Bkkpni.: penence<I C'hevy scrnce TEMPORARY,. wnter for !he month o/ Banking UMIOHBAMK I la'! An Opening For A UTILITY CLERIC Career oppar. Must ha' t a mm of il yrs recent ullhly e'<per '" e~per in 'anou~ area!> or bank in,i:. Pleasant workin~ conds Sal cum men.-.ur;ite w1cxpcr Please Contact Oons Mitchell fiIONewport Ctr Dn\e .~ewport Beach 558-5280 Equal Oppor Employer Reg1sler Today lo wo1 k September only to (i II rn UO\dMOu:.acc·ount1ng& ror \ill'at1oner~ Sl40U bookkeeping ass1,i:n salJrv rorthe month. See menls. Work • lo"c to S<•rv1(•e Mgr , HOWARD ''our home F11?ure Chevrolet. Oo\e & Q4Jail Clerk:. to Sr \cc·oun Sts Newpart Beach ________ ..,. lants needed Lhrunut ---Orange Co. Aul o Par ls de II ' er y Robert llulf's dnver, female 11! or c1ver Banking ASST OPERATIONS AccoW\temps good driving record SOOS. Mam.Ste 50I Beac.on Auto P:.irt:. OFFICER No. Tower. Union Bank 548 1133 t::xper cl w1supervisang both telling & bookkeep mg operation.<>. In The City or Oran~t· 711 835 .tl03 OpenSat8 30 12.30 ANwer S•rv?IX Want to work day-;,-after noons & evenmJ:s m N ll & CDM •Heel:.'! Work •Auto SalHpeNon Porsche, VW & RV i.ales New & usrd Perm anent Po'll1on 1-'rmge benefits Immediate opening Call ror intervrew & ask for Sales Mgr. 837-4800 493.45 l I HEW ACCTS CLK New Accounts or bank ingexper TB.LER t time or p /t1mr --------- Exper as Pt R Teller • Challenging pas1t1on!. in our beautiful N B branch Pleasant work m~ conds. 'I.Int bcnehts 213/480.7237 Weekend~ a mw.t. Xtra pa) for cxper d operators. Call 640 807:1 ~~.O.E \pt. Mgr, adult c·pl. e'<p reliable & has rrfer Apt + income 111 C M IM-0011 AVON HEEO EXTRA CASH? Earrunj(s are good hours arc flexible when you re an AVON rt>presen tat1ve .Call 54().7041 or Zcmth 7-1359 or 714/751-0580 · CITY NATIONAL IAH K Equal Oppor Employt•r Bartt.>ndang lilc l'ooking. fem. pref for tenni~ club mtes & wknds. Cull \rch1tect~rl' Nt·~-d riffll'I.' Babysitter for ~he;,-l between 3 & Spm only. ~.o Y. f T l on la 1· l toddler. CdM. top salary. -~ ~eraldine ·•l Ludd o"n transp. mature BEAtrrY Oper. needed KC"l~ey Woodard, /\IA woman. 7 J0.4:30 Mon Slatltlns for rent & Ph 6'100770 Fri Rers. 675-7931 ManJcurast who does ASSEMBLERS !2nd Shift l Upenmgs avail for .i-. -.embly of small electro· mechanical drv1cl's Shop ex per pref'd Rt'q '!> ,i:ood dextenty & med1 I ability. Xlnl wage' ,'(, hcnefils Appl) AMF, l'il' Potter & Brumllcld D1,· 26181 Avemda Aeropuerto San Juan Capistrano Equal Oppor Employer ----Acrylt c nails. Hair Daby!>1tter. mature 1berapy,963-0717 woman ror l yr old glrl, 2 day~ wk Refs. 644-1658 lf:Bl IAR GIRL CdM Expr pref. 642·4527 •BABYSITTER• Blcycle Mechanic for re· Se e k 1 n g I o v 1 n g pairs & saJea. F/time. grandmother l ype for in Bike shop exper. only. tclh~ent, delightrul 3 yr cau 549-3677 ber lpm old girl Some eves. oc Mon-Fri ca" days and/or o\·er· -------- mght on wknds.,. 1n your BOOKKEEPER ho me. CdM, HVHills In House Restaurant. area 759-0100 eves Ex pr belprul. 6'73-4700 . BABYSITTER My home, Ji,; to 4 day wk, car 'refs r eq. Evei; 9641106 • BOOKKEEPER Part ·ume. Must type, know quarterly tax pre· parataon 646-9562 aft 9 AM .. BOOKKEEPING· Accounting & Figure Clerks. Uke figure work, use 10 key. 'fop $$$ & v11cataon pay. • 6~ 1 £MPOR~f<V ttl lP 40-4 t'71m$ky Park Suite 101 Irvine CASHIER CREDIT CLEAi< Permanent foll lime poslt100 apply J .HEAIERT HAU JEWBJ.ERS Apply atS. Cst Pl.aza. CASHllElt COOK Faist Pood. P.t1me nights . 3 :30·8:30. Kran06, 6800 W Coast Hwy. NB. 646-0120 DRIVER WANTED. semi retir ed, gentleman t dnve me, ·my car, Nw Heh area to Anaheim daily Call 772 0740 days . ------ GF.;NERALOfo'C. L1tetyp· Kennel & hse cln'g, bard 1ng, reservauons Must work. 20-30 hrs wk, m~t­ be depend Apply ID IY monungs, some sun. person 113 1 Back Bay Own trans p. Over 21. Dr. NB Train at S2 hr. raise to McmftftClllC4t Auist. F/time. Apply in person. ' Sao Clemente Inn. 125 &ptandian, San Clem. 492-6103. S2.50or ? 557-6020 ------------------• Mamtenance Man. Clean· Dshwshr/Busboy GEHERAL OFFtCE For s mall retirement Pt/full lime · energetic t;ntry level po:11tion borne m L.Hguna Beach, Cleanc~ 543·7948 ~radial( examinations COOK KITCHEN HELPER mg for pre-school. Hrs ,.. Tile Blue Beet. UYI 21st nexible. Call 640-8820. Pl. N. B. Apply m person exper. pref'd an homt• ELECTRONIC for National Education aft. 3pm MANAGEMENT F1t1me. sharp. krowth style cooking. Good Firm. Requires neat co. 5 Locations. working conds. For ill ASSEMBLER handwntmg & lite ty p· 1---------PEOPLE PERSON Exec needs p/time as· soc. in wholesale supply. Fully capitalized. 642·1634. 0ver 20. We tram terviewpbooe 494_9458 Openings for expr'd & IOR Apply National LAIORSlS METRO CAR WASH tra1nee11. PC Board, S)'lotems Corp. 4361 Birch 29SO Harbor, C.M. wmng & chassis Ca b. St Newport Beach (Nr PACKAGERS & COOKS Small company w/xlnt OCAirportl E.0 .E. ASSEMILERS CHILD CARE & Jgt growth & benefits. -------ManyNeededNowr MAMAGEM&lT housekpg. 3 mos baby, 0 •·N·gh0r A ·1 ~9-3146. 1_7935 Sky Park Gingham Girl ho:r,eclng Car&phoneamust my home. 7:30 AM to <tys "' 1 .., Viii er, D. •--'-e. E .O.E service nds worn n p il. Fast food(,managemenl Apply in per&on ... vw port··-•• o f h 3·30 PM, l\ton thru 'Fr1 M F · ·--------• tops. car nee 645-5123 op ww.Y. ne o t e day Refs req 546·5207 9am-4pm on· ra fastest arowing food SHACK SHO, ELLEN CARTER Girl Friday to assist office service companies in the CiYllEnCJWtffring 3446£.CoastHwy,CdM manager. Ne~Fashion country"•' sneral Qumttities Equal Oppor Employer Ii.I. 644-8824 , manage nre I) t op . Ex per nee Apply 1n SALES POSITIOHS Portunit.lea a\'atlable person to Mr. Fuente, Cooks exp break shift GIRLS HEEDED 540.4455 wilb xlnt growth paten. Robert. Bean. William New 'vorker Restaurant Cashier/Stock Girl Sandwich del. 5 Day wk, t7802Sky Park tlal. Persons s~~ed f'rost & Assoc, 1401 Quall Apply428 E. 17th St, CM 4 hr day. Own trans. StelOl Irvine wtll be prepared wrvugb St N 8 --------L·-S3 so h c 11 a combination or planned • -fnl<>rv1ew1ng Thur:.. Fn ""'m over · r. a Equal Oppor Employer --CIVl-L .,.._.Gl ... E.,... COOKS WAMTED 10.2 Sam·lpm Phone540-8339 storetram1ng and formal 1:;1""11 " ~ classroom instruction. Jr breakfast & lunch shift s. 131 fo'ashion bland 1\1all Dc~_1gner Calculator Donald E Stevens, Inc. 1828 Fullerton Ave, CM 646-8915 Ma Barkers, 212 E 17th ---------i Golf Shop needs retired Landscape Maintenance, you have had at lea.st 2 St, CM. __ ---____ person for P 'T help. Call work in Newport Beach years college tr•ining. Escrow Instructor 549·0522, Max & Irvine area. 40 hr wk fast rood management COOKS 5 Yrs exper In the field Mon·Fri. Call 644·4894 alt exper. or have the abU1tY GRILL COOi( GPM to run your own busiJaess Clean ·~ Hrvs need:. W1th exp in French Con necess toquahfyforpro No exper nee. Attn & or any eombinatloo or mnturto" womtm. Rt•lia-tinental Cuisine. Salary per credential. Cull Night Stull. Mr. D's Cof-LEGAL SECRETARY the above call us for an • bl f r CaplStranoLa0 una ROP, r C!r..~~ 3050 E C · · t e re s. c ar· nee open o r top pro· • ee ... ..,,.. . oast Needed rAr N.B. Law ·mterv1ew ap_~in ment. 642 496·3111! for rurther info. II CdM v .,_ 1403 fess1onab Apply Am ___ wy, Firm Cood skills re Interview FM ay~pt. 2. CLERICAL openin o ut bros1a.50530thSt.N_B quired "all Nancy at c;illusWed.orThurs.ror " Hostei,s & Busboy exper " t ("13 )979 "367 Dar Iv Pilot Advert1&ang COUNTER HELP. P time Exec Secy's to $12K apply in person. Mon· 54().5405 an app · ~ , Dept A Beginner PoSI· da.)'l>. Capt Mike's f'1sh Recepllof\ist $750 Thurs, btwn 9 & 10, l.& S, -----ask for Pat. An Equal lion I nvol van g record Fry 815 W. 191.h St CM RE 'Constr Sec~ to at Gullivers Restaurant, LEGAL SECRETARY. Opportunity Employer. keeping. some proor re· . ·--Jr. praflsperson il.2K 18482 McArthur Blvd. Corporation. Exprd adlng, messenger runs COUMTEA GIRL Irvine Personnel Agency Irvine. Newport Center 64().()800 MANAGER Requires r eason.able Full tame, apply in 488E17thC03taMesa ---------a:--stonClertl RECllVlMG language skills, a valid person. 1128 Irvine Ave. Suite244 642 14701----... -----..--Young lady for manage- dnvcrs liceG.Se with good Westchff Plaz.a . --~ HOS.-e~SES tJMaturAe. 1ex~r 'd, full ment training proaram. record Good opportunity '~ me. App Y m person. We need a self stal'Ur to ~or advancement. Apply Counter Person for deh. Fabncator, genera.I. Must CASHIERS 895 W. 19th St, CM work m receiving • ad-m person at Daily Pilot, P /tirne. Some exper know Heliarc weld1ftg. Lo_an_Serv __ i_ce._W_e-ne_ed_a .... l., manlstratson or fine 330 West Bay St., Costa pref'd. Apply, Gary's Apply in person at HAMBURGER girl dept with exp. in women's retail clothing. Mesa. Equal Opportuni-Deli, 3309 E. Coast Hwy, Westport Marine, 124 HAMLET Conventional & Govt. Send hand writte11 re- ly Employer. CdM. Tustin Ave, N.8. ~520 Good salary Is benefits loans. Top dollar for the sume to Mr. Reynolds, -ClericalTroinff COURT Dlrector. Tennis FABRICSSALES Apply m person btwn 2·5 right person. Superb 16865 Algonquin, H.B. Fashion Isle financial Club, H.B. Exper'd only P/time,exprnec ~~Adams. Costa location. atmosphere, _8264 __ 9_. ------- firm is looking for a resp. need apply. over 30 pre call 646-404-0 Linda etc. Call now, Irvine Sav· MANAGEMENT, LOCAL person for challenging . f'd Prev mgmt back· ------------------• ings, 752-MSS. E.O.E. 8 US IN ES S MAN clerical pos. lJte typing g~ Call betwn 3pm FACTORYWORKERS Rousecleaners, mature LVHC'"-Mwses NEEDS PART TIME Ir phone commu:nlcaUon &5pm0Cl.ly. 536-8832 ~Jnufacturi ng plant women, relieble. refs, .._.,. ASSOCIATE. l /89C-5047 w /c lle nts. Exper. needs factory help. Call owntrans,642-1403 Lge professional SNF AFT.7P.M. helpful, but willlng to DB.I GIRL ror Info. 646-8244 seeking cbarate nurses --------- train right person. Xlnt Full·time. 549 1422. • HOUSEKEEPERS for evening shift & nit MATURE WOMAN benerlts. CPI, 180 &46-667SEves. BOYS 16-18, ror lite fac-F/tim .. ~ew Manor ahift. Xlnt salary, p/tlme to welcome New1><>rt Ctr Dr, N.B. tory work, part lime, Conv. Hosp, 2055 Thurin benefits, snack shop. newcomera & cosatact 644-4360, ult ror Barbara Delivery man for L.A. mornings, afternoons & Ave, CM 642·3505. Cati for interview. merchants. F1exible hrs. Iacino.. nmesroute, north Costa eves.MS-2702 Roy ale Conv. Hosp, Need car. lite typing . ----.--Mesa area. No collect· HOUSEKEEllS.R, lite S46-64SO 547-3095. Cocktail Inc. Must have depend&· FACTORY cooking, live In, for COU· --------- Waitress hie car. 546·4481 PACKAGERS pie. Exper. 675-9388 Apply 4450 Newport Rd. Deli v er Y • D rt v e r & Female. SZ.50 ~ br to Housekeeper, II ve in. COCl<T AIL Production Worker $3 to 8tart.. M~t ra15es. 1531 Permanent. Nwpt Deb WAITIESS st.ut.&f.Z.2256. ::;~.visa Ave, N .B area. Care for 2 small Learn in 40 bra ~ most D E L 1 v E R y children lo Motherlen exciting, 1lamourous, AFTERNOON AUTO Fashion minded women, ho~~ .. ~3: drive. Reb highly pald profess. Day CARRIE BS NEEDED f~ntastic opportunity _nec_._~ _ _._ _____ 1 « eve ~ns. Place· F 0 R T ff E C 0 ST A with Beeline. Su~l B 0 USE K £ E P E R , mentasa1St.Goodfobop-MESA·NE'WPORT BCH earn1ngs without mature, 3.11 shift. in por. Alttl!AS $350-$400 MO neglecting your family. G u e II t ff o m e C.714(751·t194 MUST HAVE DEPEN: Fu!I or part time. C.M.646-67li • So. CAil . Cocktail DABLECAR.540-3008 UnJimJtedcb&nce forad· Waitresses, Ioc .• 17~2 vapcement. "lnst.anl pro-HOUSa&Pa Sky Park 81, Ste C, Dental Asst. cbairai6e. ~l checks. Call for 5 Daya~ wk..( Hrs per lrvine.Ca9271'. F1Ume. d mo's exper. P r sonal tntervtew. day. ~tQ...o ble. O•n SomeSat.s. H.B. 846-3540. 7470or 54J.2103 Transp.'?52-ltaJ.. Dental. Orthodontia, Chairatde, exp'd. Hunt Bcb,842>7707 •MAIDS• • Tfle Inn at L11uaa zu N. CA Hwy. Laauna Equal ()ppol' Employer --------- IHSURAHCI Beautiful Nuirport Beach Fire • C11ualit1 Ins. offi~e needs quaUCl~d underwrlier Wl1h experience in MAIDS Wanted Jm . mediately. F /tlme. Ex· ptr. unn~. We tr•l'-· Appl.)', Ne'trpOl't, Qlannel Inn, 9030 W. Pacific Coll.at Hwy, NB. Q0.30:.>. 6~ TEMPOHAt1¥ llLLP · CClff 54M455 178025.ly Park Suite 101 . Irvine Equat Oppor Employer UTOTEM - Coft•1nienc• Marlcth PIANO PLAYER-Perm Positions open l.Sl, 2nd & positJoci for Sun & Wed 3rd s hifts in San churcb aervices. Call Clemente & Laguna &bMolineSSl-1096 Beach. Other areaa have ---------1 openinp alao. No exper. Plunibing Repair/ req 'd. Apply at any of Drolnmet1 our stores. S400 wk. Must have own 2S88Newport Blvd • truck & hand tools. Will Co6ta Mesa 642-77~ train. EZ Rooter, 1337 S. Bnslol,SA PRODUCTIOH RCPT/TYPIST Nuded lull time, for Newport Beach ..Publ11bina Company. Good knowledge of spell· ing & grammar essen- tial. 675-3271 Rea.I Flstate Very successrul local firm wants QUALIFIED & licensed sales persons + exper. 1aJes manaier ruop commlutons ti .lure ortered tor top 1 ighl individual• who "'°'1 'l settle for less. Sub· rnit resume to Dally Pilot Ad #18, Daily Piiot P.O. ~x e1i::o. ~~ U~e response will be •tvta. 10..4 ON THAT SALIS JOI ___. •NPCA.RS AT'l'HEOLDPRIOF.S Ml E oow av•lla· ble. U or see m betor. you l!l COSTA MESA DATSUN T·Bh¢..., c:kan. run 1975 CA.Dll.LAC i.-•-----.~ power. •AM/FM tape COUPIDEYIU.IS M .. --~ ,..._ deelt. at.er'°, Utt whl, ($Uocho0sofrom cqtper brown w/match Clotll or IHlbH ln· '74 Grand Torino 4 Dr. vinyl top. 8000/blt ofr. terion. all .nu. pOWet Brou&bam.,H•• ever· (T14)673.68SS or 1ee at aasista 6 stereos. ~ .. ~!)~~ Union Oll Station. 3001 ccmLEI). Priced u tow .., .. _er~_._ NwptBlvd. 1--_;..~~~~~~- as • Ford wa~ l400 or ICJll 9974 $5988 bit aaer. Good nmnia1 •••••••••••••••••••••• Nabers cactillac eioad'tal01895 VEGA 76 POOL TO SCROOL. a HATCHIACK GT ron1w--.mcr.t450. DEMO. 5 speed trans .• &e-'1111 alr oond .. etc . (65115/3532). Wu s.Tl95. OMLY$3191 HOWAID CMYl'Oltt Dove fs Quall SU. NEWPOlllf.»~CH JlMliH ..... tlngton Beach 011ntaln Vallev E'O I T I 0 N -1· · VOL. 70, NO. 242, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ASHINOTON <AP> -A Dutcb journal t Hid today that former President Ford w told wbo ontered t.be kt1llnc ot Presi- de Kmnecty. ID a news conference, the journallat, WUlem Oltmana, said. "I have proof President Ford received the compl.te in· fonnaticln as to who killed Presi- dent Kennedy, and who ordered it (the assassination)." 1"" Harvey Oswald, Oltmans said, was only 0 a fall py." Ford was a member of the W arreo Commission which in- ve1U1ated the ususlnatlon and concluded Oswald acted alone in ldlJ.iDJ Kennedy. Oltmans aald a man whose identity be would not reveal said Ford was briefed on the so-called complete story, on which Oltmans repeatedly rerused to elaborate. OltmanS sald he would make the man's identity known only to President Carter and then only after presidential auarantees for the man's safety. . Oltmans said information re- ceived by Ford was also con· talned in a report compiled by a U.S. intelligence agency -be would not name the agency - and given to Jacqueline Kennedy Onusla as well as former Ke.b· nedy aide Theodore Sorensen. Oltmans said his witness has known or spoken with every president 5tnce Frapklln Roosevelt. with the exceptJon of Carter. Oltmans said the man ls far from Washington at the mo-• ment, and that be bad no . knowledge as to whether bis source had talked to anyone dur- ing the investigation of the as- 1aaslnatlon. Oltmans also 1atd earlier tn tbe day that the death of Aristotle OnUsls' son in a 1972 private · plane era.sh was no accident. In an appearance on ABC-TV's ••Good Momiq America" pro- cram. he also bad said a former U.S. president and Mrs. Onassis were anlQPI thOse who havf tn. formation that cowd prove there was a conspiracy to assassinate After eoa N.Y.. S1oe . TEN CENT~ Plot kenned)'. Du:rtq that ap1>41arance, be re- fused to ldeaUfy the foi'mel! president to whom he ref erred. ..I c~ now produce a hlgbly repmilile witness wlio is In a POISi., lion to identify the source•• of tha alle1ed plot. to till Kennedy. Oltmaosaaldlntbetnterview. He ritUsed to reveal the name of his Sour«; He said that the la.st (See IFK, .... AJ) gry Shouts Greet Tax ·Action. . . ' ' • 'lneapaeitated' Son -of Sam Unfit for Trial NEW YO~K CAP) -David Berkowitz, the man ;accused of the Son of Sam murders, is not mentally fit to stand trial, ac- cording to the r esults of psychiatric testing made public today. Berkowitz •'lacks the capacity to understand the proceedings against him or to assist in his de- fense," said State Supreme Court Justice Gerald S. Held. ' -~ ........... 'MENTALLY UNF1r Suspect Berkowitz Driver Freed After Term . For 2 Fatals A Huntington Beach man's seven months in the Orange County Jail were tuled Monday to be 1tufficlent confinement for his role in a 1975 traffic accident that claimed the lives of a woman and her daughter. Superior Court Jodee H. War- ren Knight placed Prentiss M arvln Custer. 43, of 5771 Terrier Driv~. on three years probation and ordered blm to put in 100 ho\ll"I of volunteer work. • Custer was found ,Wily of m.is- demea._or manslaughter and felony drunken drl'ri.ng whlcb led to the deaths of Noreen Anzalone, 42• and her daughter, Gayle, 11. Arresting officers said Custer was drunlc behind the wheel when his auto struck the car oc- cupied by the t.wo females at the inteneclion of Warner Avenue and Gothard Street in Huntington Beach. 7 Cen~-~ -~ Trim'Not Enough' By ROBERT MllKEB Of .. o.lfr PiiliiiH Huntington Beach City Council members approved a seven..c:ent cut in the city's property tu rate at a loud and stormy meeting Monday night. ' More than 150 residents, ap- parenUy drawn to the tax-setting deliberatiom by an open letter from Councilwoman Harriett Wieder, indicated they staunchly supported a 10-cent reduction at l the minimum. ' Many in the packed audience also indicated they wanted to air their pent up emotions about tQ· es but were refused that op· portunity by a majority ol the council members wbo aald Ulal the appropriate time to 1peak up -,.Jjl.S at eariter p®Uc tieartnas on ~budlet. . Tbe council chambers U• ploded into an angry scene after the council ref...-ed tfie cltilens' tequest to speak on taxes and several in the audience shouted threats at the officials that in· eluded: .. Vote them out of office." "Let's have a recalJ." ''What about increasinc salaries?" .. All the incumbents mustio." When the shouting was over and most of the protesters had left, the council defeated a move to cut the tu rate 10 cents def a great deal of speech matine by council members. • The 10.~t.reduction wu sup- ported oolY by Mrs. Wieder aD4l Ric bard Siebert. The council then approved a seven.cent cut and a1&o set aside an additional three cents of tax money for a reserve fund In case the city loees a court appeal an4 must pay $1.2 million it collected ln real estate trans/er taxes in · 1974 and ms. : . ' . . • Council ' Playing · .. Games? Huntlqton Beach City Co4mcll memben were accused today of playina sames with taxpayers' money by Mark Porter, presi- dent ol the HOME Council: · ~ said Lhat taxpayers are entJtled to i>ennanent tax reduc· tlom -••not a superficial bone to inawon." Porter made the statements followtn1 action by the City Council Monday night to cut aeveo cents from the city's prop- erty tax rate and to set aside another three cents ol tu rate money into a reserve fund beeauseol lawsuit under appeal. "We would be better served to a pend the funds necessary to hire competent legal counsel to perfect the ·city's appeal," be said. Porter also pointed out that the city is facing an $8.5 million lawsuit from downtown property owners because of past re· develop~~t -efforts. Mac the manx cat, snuggles up to Cherry, the apaloosa horse, al their home. an equestrian center in Chilliwack, British Columbi a. "We coiald establish contingen- cies for all sorµs of adverse le&al situations, but it just doesn't make sense," he added. • Porter also alleged that the ci- ty is getting more than $800,000 a year in excess revenues from the city's utility tax which was im-· posed to cover costs of tbe civic center and library buildings. Showdown Looms On Antenna Law "The HOME Council is on re- cord supporting a utility tax re- duction because it will show up immediately in reduced telephone, water, gas and elec- tric bills. A 2 to 2 vote by the Fountain Valley Planning Commission bas set the stage for another showdown Sept. 14 on the city's controversial antenna restriction ordmance. · City officials have responded ., to some residents' complaints th~t anteMas in neighborhoods are "unsightly." · But City Council consideration of a permanent law governing anteMas appears to be at least "' another month away after the Planning Commission could not agree last week on a new version of the law. Chairman John McKnight and, Commissioner Dale Edwards 1 voted in favor of a modified law which would allow radio operators to beild antenna towers as high as 4S feet. But Commissioner June Boykin and alternate Com· missioner John Knight voted against the ordinance and sent • the issue to the Sept. 14 Planning Commission meeting for a re· hearing. • Mrs. Boykin, who resigned her post last week due to a change of residence to Dana Point, said the Fountain Valley group had no authority to regulate antennas. Knight said he "could not con- ceive of the city enforcing tbe or- dinance." Commissioners Mike Capizzi and Ben Nielsen were absent from Wednesday's meeting. Both. commissioners have favored a Shoplifting ' Suspect Held In Huntington A man who apparently shoplifted a package of bot dogs Monday afternoon and then tried unsuccessfully to outrun employes of a Von 's Supermarket in Huntington Beach has been jailed on cbar1es of petty theft and assault. Police said Juan Moreno, 23, of Whittier, was chued down and cornered in a neatby trailer park at about 4:10 p.m. after be al- le1edly left tbe market at 21082 Beach Bouleva.rd without paying for a packa1e or wieners. •• Police said a fight. ensued between Moreno and two store employes, John Puchalald and Bob Hamilton but there were no serious iltjuries. The emPloyes overpowered Moreno and held him until police arrived. DAILY PILOT proposed 35-foot height restric- tion oo antennas in the past. Foufl.tain Valley currenUy bas no ordinance governing antennas since an interim law restrictine the structures to 3S feet has ex- "It woo't be buried or delayed in a one-shot rebate down the road," be added. - pired. . • The City Council tentatively .,...,.. P.,,e AJ approved • a 35-foot limit and other antenna restrictions April JFK 19 but balked at a final okay o6 · • • • , --the lawMay3 . . , .. • . •>The delay was prompted by a time he named a witness, "The request from Santia10 Radio result of mentioning this witness Emergency _Asso_siated Team la hewq de.ad." • Jf (REACT), a CB radio group, Oltmans was referring to whos°e leader wanted to meet George de Morenschildt, a col- with city officials leae prqfessor found dead in But CB and amateur radio Palm Beach, Fla., of an ap· operators are still not satisfied pareQUY aelf-innicted gunshot with the city's plan to restrict an-wound last March, just hours tennabeight. after '' ataff member of the .. It's still totally unaccept:. House committee tnv~tlgating ble " said REACT mem~r Paul the ~sassination tried to in- Taylor, of 9146 Cardlnal Ave.,' terview-nllit"De Morimclilldt FountainValley. had been identified th~ day Taylor said be waa not COil-before in secret 'testimony by vinced that many ,esidtnta favOI' Oltmans u a potential witned in the proposed antenna restriction the case. law. Oltmans refused to say what Fountain Valley attorney and former president might have bad long-time opponent of the pro. knowledge of the events that led posed antenna ordinance, Don. to Kennedy's assassimltion. He Royer, of 18761 Santa Isadora st. did aay the former chief ex- called the law t•unconatitu· ecutive ls still alive. The only Uv· tional.'~ Ina ex-presidents are Richard Ex-commissioner Boy"1 Hid, Nixon and Gerald Ford. "lowering antenna height won't Al for Mrs. Onassis. the Dutch make them any prettier. Anten· Journalist would only say that she nas are ugly but it's not fair to was "in possession or informa- those people who have antennu lion." to restrict them since other He said the 1972 plane crash eyesores are legal.'! that ~ the life of Alex~der The best thin&. aaid Mrs. Onassis, A.ristoUe Onassis only Boykin, w®ld have been for the eon, 'Waa aabota1e. Oltmans said city to have restrlcttd antennu that the elder Onassis wu in the from the start as waa done tn procesa bf exposing a K~edy Irvine •••uslnation plot when bis son Tbe ·Planning Commlllla1i will wu killed. r~er the propoMCI law at OnUlia dld believe bis $Oil's iu 7:30 PJD· meetinl Sept. 14 ln death was the reiult ol 1abcJta&e, the Council Cb1m~n. 10200 althovab be ne.er m1de any Slater Ave. publlc connection betwea the Pilots Meet Tonight op New Airport crash liMf any Kennedy ~ot. But tn Detember, lt'14, Onusia of· fend a '500,000 reward for proof ol sabotqe. Such proof never materialised. Aaked bow so many people could know detaUs of such a plot without maktn1 lt public, Oltmans said: '•Everybody is petrified." Police See~ • Anacker OfWom&n ............ PLAYWRIGHT DAN CAMERON RODILL PULL8 ·A 'STEVE BRODIE' ON BROOKLYN BRIDGE Fonner War Cone9P0ndent SUtfera MuftJpte lnJurtea In Hla 'LHt Gamble' Man Survives Leap Brooklyn Bridge Jump 'Laat Gamb"le' NEW YORK (AP> -In 1886, Stephen Brodie won a $200 bet when he survived a leap from the Brooklyn Bridge with only minor bruises. Dan Cameron Rodill, a 34· year-old playwright and former war correspondent, tried to duplicate the jump Monday as a "last gamble." He s uffered multiple fractures, collapsed lungs punctured by broken ribs, and other internal injuries after landing on bis face in the water 133 feet below. He was listed in critical condition early today. Friends said Rodill staged the event to attract media attention. They said his care.er wu floun- dering. "He went up on that bridge as a last gamble. He thought this Daldeman's Aeee .. t Book Says Nixon . A.Cted 'Strangely' NEW YORK (AP) -A book written by H.R . Haldeman, Richard M. Nixon's former chief or staff, will confirm published accoWlts that the former presi- Alarnu Foil / Bank Tunnel HeutPlam gamble would bring him atten· tion and might lead to some suc· cess," said a friend, who refused to be identified. The attempt was not a spur-of- tbe-moment occurrence. A room· mate said Rod ill bad climbed one of the towers on the bridee April 18 with the intention of jumping. Police pulled him down then. Monday, be didn't allow them the chance. He told police and news or- ganizations that he intended to jump, took a cab onto the bridge about noon, then leaped when io. formed by a policeman, who was trying to rescue him, that harbor units were ln tbe water below. Rodill, who wore pr~ye gear including a notation eOUar and a padded belt to cover bis stomach and kidneys, waa pulled from the water minutes later and was revived by artificial respira- tion. Rodill bad served as a free- lance correspondent in Vietnasn and Cambodia between 1960 and 1975 and was one of the last American journalists to leave Vietnam after it fell to the Com- munists. "He worked for CBS, and be and another guy were reparting right up until the Communists cut the power to tbe building. He stayed there for about four months after the takeover, then was expelled," said the friend, 'who also worked as a journalist in Vietnam. But RodiU 's fortunes declined when he returned after the war. He was unable to land a news job, so he drove a cab to support himself before turning to writing plays. A recent effort -"The Dry Sea~." a play about Vietnam -was praised by professionals who read it, the friend said. But no one was wiUing to put up the cash to produce it. The Sneezing Bandit Strikea A Buena Park bank robbery suspect went into a frenzied aneezine and coughinf spasm before demanding cash and flee- ing Monday, police reported t.o- day .. Officers said tbe pony-tailed susped about 27 years old en- tered \he Bank of America. 7855 La Palma Ave., at 1 :50 p.m. He ..,proacbed a teller, police said, went into a cousbina and sneezins spaam and was stven water by a bank empl°'1•· He theo demanded casl:t, took a,ooo and n~. officers said. The suspect diaplayed no weapon but threatened to shoot, poUee1-1d. ., CTIONS, 26 PAGES Witness Route Plaa Atltllori.:ed Co\tnty supervisors have authorized a .con- sulting firm to plan the 13-mile route of a major traffic corridor linking the future Corona del Mar Freeway in Newport Beach to the San Diego Freeway in Mis~ sion Viejo and to project \he impact of such an arterial. The 30-month study will be made by Gruen Associates Inc. wiU. a ceiling of $223,000. Peek said be was involved in three arguments trith Allaway, wbowas also employ~ aseeusto- dian, that almost ~ded ln blows. "Be didn't like blacks," Peek said, glancin• at the defendant. •·A~ 1 think be only cot alon& with whites if be wu able to have bis own way all the time." Defense psychiatrists have deaclib~d Allaway as beinf lecaUy ins~'le at the time of •.he ............. 'MENTALLY UNFIT' Sapect Berkowitz .. Wbat about increasinc salaries?" "All the incumbents JDUSt10." When the sbQutinr was over and most of the protestera bad left, the ~U defeated a mcwe .to cart the tttr•te 10 cents after a great deal of speech maldq by ~ouncil me~. The IO.cent reducti~n was su~ ported only by Mrs. Wieder and Rich.a.rd Siebert. 11te council Ulen approved a seven-cent cut and also aet aside an ildditklll_., three cents of tax money for ai'eserve fUild y. cue the city loses a coW't appeal and must pay ~~on it cOUected in real estate transfer wes in 1974and1915. INOTON (AP> -A d tod17 th t onl WU told ol PNI(. PANAllA CITY. a. CAP> - • A T baled Marine Beserve jet ftabter' crashed in the Gull ol Mex.ieo. and a rescue helicopter. Ufte4 one of tbe jet'• two. crewtnl!!D eboanl but then it, too. wentdna. , Tbe ftabter tre19man and all t-••••········· • • • • • • • • iiiiiiiFii~iiiiiiiift • . ·~!"9,l'P!!'~~~~ •.e~~==~~~~ .-,seesi...,, • • • • • • • A printer's goof over 50 years ago has turned out to be one of the most priceless blunders in the world of postage stamps. This one, among 1>nly 100 printed, went for $62,500 to collector , Irwin Weinberg of Wilkes- Barre, Pa., in an auction in San Francisco. ' five members of the helicopter crew were re$cued Monday by another chopper. But the secoad Marine from the B4 Pbetom re- mained missing as darkness fell. Tyndall Air Force Base spokesman Hank Basham aaid the names of both F4 men were being withheld. He 3aid the plane " was attached to the 112th Marlne Reserve Fighter Attack Squadron from Dallas. The fliers were at Tyndall for two weeks of training. Eight-foot waves swept the Gulf ln the crash area. about 70 miles south of Tyndall, where the jet bad taken off on a tralni.q flight about 1 p.m. lt crashed a few minutes later. The pilot of the flrat rescue cboppet. Maj. Leboarc:t ~tter. was quoted by Buham as say- ing: "We circled and spotted the F4 wreckage. Not laree pieces, but enough to recocnlze. We started looking around but then our cockpit started flllinl wlth smoke." Basham added that Knitter said the chopper suffered a failure of the tail rotor system. He said the craft was too low for the crew to parachute. so he ditched the chopper. The seagoing helicopter re- mained an.oat but was biltenld by heavy seas and the crew toot to a life raft, from which they were rescued. Franc~ .It. Pedrotti FUneral Held in LA Prances A. Pedrotti of Laguna Hilla, widow of a former California state senator and daughter of an ex-Confederate soldier, was buried today in Los Aa1ele1. She died Aue. 27 at the ageol11. A funeral mass for Mrs. Pedrotti took place today at 10 a.m. at St. Nicholas Catholic Tito Arrives In Red China BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP>-Yqoalav President Tito, who nevet visited Cttlna during Mao Tse-lung's Jlf etime, arrived in Peklng today to a warm ' ,.-eleome from the top Com- mwmt lMdenbip and tbousJD(ls of ai_llli.q and dancinc children, the Yuioslav new1 aeeocy Tan· '~ecapltal'1cenlral nen /.n Men Square, Tito was ll'eeted by more tbao 100.000 CblMM under st~ ol nowen th•• spelled out words of welcome, f anJu1 said, Il called tb•~oo "matnlficenl.'' Talki 'Impossible' !'BL AVIV, Israel (AP) - Arabr.1ml.stence on bavtna the Pal..Une Uberatlon Ortanila· .U9• attend the lllddle East peace eorlf~• makes It lin-~bl• to Htcftnven• the Geneva ,,_ace~ talks, Prf me Mlnl•t•r • ·~·~•aldtoday. Church, where sbe bad been ac- tive since moving to the Leisure World retirement community 11 years ago. Mrs. Pedrotti, a native of Los Angeles, was married to the late Sen. Joseph L. Pedrotti, who represented the old 29th District in Los Angeles from 1921-33. A family spokesman said Senator Pedrotti authored numerous reform laws, ranging from child labor measures to bills aimed at cleaning ut> the state prison systern. He was coo- sider~fan expert ln pepology. Senator Pedrotti also wrote the bill tbat btOQght 10-round boXtng tiack to Californll, urged im· portatton of Colorado River water and helped brlng California aviation under the control of the Federal Aviation Agency. Mr;. Pedrotti outlives four sl~ ters 8nd five brothers. She was the daughter of Nicholas Mangerhta, a Louisianan and Collf ederate veteran of the American Civil \Var who brouaht his family to Callfol'n.ia when tbe war ended. A lifelong republican, Mrs. Pedrotti was a member ol the Lagdna Jnlls Republican Club. She was also a member of the St. Nicholas Chureb Council of Catbollc Women and the Catholic Daughters of America. Mrs. Ped.tot.ti is survived by a dauitbler, EliHbetb PectrOlU of Laguna Hill• aJ'ld a nteo, Dor«h1 Wymal'$ ot San Pedro. atbtity ... wowd riot reveal •aid Ford wu britled oo ')o ~alllcl complete 1tor1. on wltlcl Oltmana repeatedly ret\iSed to ·'·~·· Oltm aald be would make ~ m1n•1 ldeoUly Imo only to Pl'Qlideilt Carter and tben only atw pnil.identlal guarantees fol' the man•• 1atety. Oltmana 1ald Information re-- celved bt Ford was allO eon- ta\ned ln a NPOrt compiled by a u.s. lnt.ellllonc• acency· -be would not name the qency - and liven to Jacquelllle K~edY Onusls u well as former .Kea· ned1 Ude 'lbeodore SoteNeQ. Oltmana said bla witness has known or spoken wltl:l every preeldent 1tnce Franklin ROOHVelt. with the excepdoo ol Carter. Oil.mans said the man is far from Washington al the mo- ment, and that he bad no knowledge as to whether his source had talked to anyooe dur-inl the inveaucaUon of the as- suaination. Oltmana allo 1ald earlier in the day that the death of Aristotle Onassis' aon in a 1972 private plane cruh was no accident. In an appearance on ABC· TV's "Good Morniq America" pro- 1ram, he also had said a former U.S. president and Mrs. Onassis were among those who have in· formation that could prove there was a conspiracy to aasaasinate KeMedy. During that appearance, he re- fused to ldenUfy the former president to whom be referred. "I can now produce a highly reputable witness who is in a pasi- tion to identify the source" of the alle1ed plot to kill Kennedy, Oltmanssaidintheinterview. He refused to reveal the name of bla source. He said that the last time be named a witness, "The result ol mentioning this wt~ is he was dead." Oltman1 was referring to Georie de Morenachildt, a col- lege prof easor found dead In Palm Beach, Fla., ·of an ap- parently self.inflicted gunshot wowad last March, just hours after a staff member of the House committee investigating the aa11asalnation tried to in- terview him. De Morenscbildt had been ldentlfled the day before in secret testimony by Oltmans as a potential witnMS in the case. Oltmans refused to say what. former president might bave had kno~e of the events tbat led to l{emMcly'a ususination. He did say the former chief ex- ecutive ia atil1 alive. The only ti v- ine ex-presidents are Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford. As for Mrs. Onassis. the Dutcb journallat would only saythatshe was "ln posse5sion of fnforma- ti9n." He said the 1972 plane crash thal took the life of Alexander Ona.sala, Aristotle Onuais' only son, was sabotaie. UnionBacka Canal Plana WASHING TON CAP> - The AFL-CJO today became the first m.ior or• gaiUutlon · to support President C~a. plan to relinquish ~ontrol of the Panama Canal. • The la~r lfoup•s e¥· ecutlve councU, in a formal resolution. called the c,uial aareement ••wort.by of SUP- : Port" by U.S. tltbens .and tbeeoncresa. • .,,,_e new lnstru111ents constitute a Just and endur· ·lb& bull for ha:tmooy tn the Weetem Hemisphere, and ~t! aqpport their ratification by the Senate," the council sald. NEW YORK (AP) -Jn 1886, Stephen Brodie ..-on a $200 bet ' when he survived a leap from the Brooklyn Briclge with only minor bruises . Dan Cameron Rodill, a 34· year-old playwright and forinu war correspondent. tried to duplicate the jump MoDda}' u a "last tamble." He 1uftered multiple fractures, collapsed O'Neill Says . Park Story 'Ritli£ulom' W ASHIN'GTON (AP) -Rouse Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill said today that a published report that South Korean businessm8Jl Tongsun Park operated out of his office ls ''ridiculous." The Massachusetts Democrat denied statements printed in the Los Angeles Times that Park "fr~uently operated" out of O'NeUl'1t office when O'Neill was m ajotity leader. The Los Angeles Times repGtt- ed that Korean-born Suzi Park Thomson, an aide to former House Speaker Carl Albert, told a House committee tbat t>ark took telopbone calls in O'NeW's office. Mrs. Thomson testified last week before the UouH"Studards of Official Conduct Committee which is investigating alleeed at- tempts by South Koreans tp buy influence in Congress to cor\tinue U.S. support for tbat country. O'Neill, whose statement came through his ex,cuthte assistant. · said about Mrs. Thomson's al· leaed remarks: ''Thia is ridiculous." O'Nelll also said Park never talked about Korea to him. The Sneezing Bandit Sirikes lungs punctured by broken ribs, and otbet internal ln.iuriea aftet landing oo his face ID the w-1er ua feet below. Jf' waa lilted !n criUcal eonditlbn early today . Friends aald Rodill staged the event to attract media attention. They said bis career was noun. dering. ••He went up on that bridge as a last gamble. He thought this F,....P,..eAI NIXON ••• he would go "fpll steam ahead'' on a personal, inside look at the cover-up. In a syndicated series "Inside the Nixon White House," that was published in June 1976, and crarried Haldeman's by-lirf'e, the former White House aide aaid that Nixon drank occasionally but did not have "a drinkinl problem." Haldeman began serving a 2~*8-year prison sentence at Lompoc Federal Correctional F•ciUty in California last June for Watergate-related trillles. An editor for a Ne\11 "vt>rk Times-owned publishing house, QuadranaJe, bas said Haldeman wa1 paid "a a"batantial. generous amount" as an advance for the book be is writing, in prison, with the help of writer Joseph Dl'Mona. F,....PapAJ • laway also believed bis wife was orced to participata lo the ot Pomoarapblc tnovtes t were privately scrffded to empJoyes oa the Fullerton cam- pus. Other lest1mony bas l.Dd.lcated the filma •~re coll)merclally macM, , A psychiatrist said Allaway told blm that he tielieved the ma:.fta was rutly respo.naible for the ldllf!lp 811<1 thit tie was un- der some form OJ remote cootrol when be~ his rlfte to tho catn· pua. gamble would bring him atten- tion and might lead to some sue· cess," said a fri~nd, who refused to be identified. The attempt was not a spur-of· the· moment occurrence. A room- mate said Rodill had climbed one of the towers on the bridge April 18 wiUl the intention of jumping. Police l)Ulled him down then. Monday, he didn't allow them the chance. He told police and news or- ganizations that he intended to jump, took a cab onto the bridge about noon, then leaped when in· formed by a policeman, who was trying to rescue him, that harbor units wtrre in the willer below. Rodill, who wore protective gear including a notation collar and a padded belt to cover his stomach and kidneys, was pulled from the water minutes later and was revived by artificial respira- tion. Rodill had served as a free. lance correspondent in Vietnam and Cambodia between 1969 and 1915 and was one of \be last American journalists to leave Vietna.n after it fell to tM COm- munlsta. "He worked for CBS, and he an~ another guy were reporting richt up until the Communists cut the power to the building. He stayed there for about four months alter the takeover, then was expelled," said the friend. who alsO worked u a Joumal.l.st in Vietnam. But RodJU's fortunes declined when he returned after the war Pilots Meet Tonight on New Airport A committee of south Orange County pilots and aircraft owners will meet tonight at Capistrano Airport to discuss plans for a new regional airport. The 7:30 p.m. meeting will take place at the airport ofJJce, 32932 Calle Perfecto in San Juan Capistrano. The aroup, beaded by San Clemente Councilman Tony DlGiovanni, was formed lut week to explore possible aites for a new south county airport facility. The committee's formation • comes oo the heels of the an- noUnced JUM 1, 1918 closure 'ol. San J,uan Capistrano'• tiny airport and Huntington &emc=.!- ty Councll'• announced mteb qf cloelq Meadowlark Airport. • Ac~nllna to county airport dt- f i cl ale, clo1ul'e of the two f aeillties will create severe space problems tor general aviallhn aircraft (light planes) in or~ County. · 1'be committee Will meet e to evaluate ptopertyoOWMr aqp- ' port for the proJ.ct. Tb proipo1ed lmprovetntnt project would •1tabU1b a downtown as1e11mtnt dtstrtct from the inland aide of A.Vtnlda de la Estrella, wut. to Calle Seville, and from the middle of Avenida Cabrillo, south to the tnlddleof Aven.lda Gra.naASa. " Uquna Beach ftremen and paramedics . treat Russell West, 16, of El Toro, injured Monday when his motorcy- cle collided with the rear of a car driven by Richard Gocharna, 26, of La Mirada. Russell was treated for a leg injury and released after ef!1ergency care at Sputh Coast Community Hospital. The accidel)t occurred ~t mid-day in the 900 block of La~una Canyon Road and backed traffic up about a half mlle. Leap From ~ri~e Man's 'Last Gamble' NEW YORK CAP) -ln 1886, Stephen Brodie won a $200 bet when be>fiurvi¥ed a leap from the Brookly.n Bridge with only mlnor bl'ul$es. Dan Cameron Rodlll, a 34· year-old play11rri«bt and fohner' war corre.spoJ1dtJlt, tried to dupl_icate the jump Monday as a "Jut gamble." He suffered m\llUple fractures, collapsed lungs punctured by brOken ribs1 and Clther internal injuries alter landing oo hls face ln the water 133 feet below. He WU listed in criUcal condition early today. Friends said ~~m stqed the event to attract media attention. T~ said bis career. was ftoun· derifti. ''He went up on that brldee as a lastr•gamble. Ue thoupt this 1amble would brln& bhn atten- . Tri,al for Berliowitz Unlikely NEW YORK (AP> -David Berkowitz, the man accused of the Son of Sam murders, is not mentally flt to stand trial, ac- cord l n g to tbe results of psychiatric testing made public today. Berkowitz "lacks tb• capacity to wideratand tbe proceedinp aaalnst blm or to uslat ln bis cte. feme, •• 1ald si.te SapfemeCourt Justice Gerald S. Held. Held read from the cover letter that accompanied a report on~ mental state.of the accused~ caliber killer. • Berkowitz is charged ln the murders of six people and the Conspiracy 9.UJFK: Belmidleft woundlng of seven otben du.ring the ,apace of just over a year. The remainder of the report was resealed, and thOle famlllar with it were ordered not to dis· cuss its contents. The cover. letter 1ald Berkowitz wa "an incapacitated individual." Tbe dlaO\Ollls was tbat Berkowi~ WU "patanoid" and that bis Rro11io1la was "guarded," lleld said. quoti.ni the letter. On the motion of Brootlyn 'll>ltt. AttJ. Epene Gold, the jusUce Ol'derecl the suspect re- turned to Kings County Hospital, '(here be bad underaone the psycluatnc evaJuation, pending an Oct. 4 bearing. Gold recelved permission to have psychiatrla&.I of bia own choosing examine Berkowitz, and they are to receive all the materials used In the first test· lng; Reading from the Jetter, Held 1ald a psychiatric team took into account lntemews with the ac- cused klller and letters to newspaper columnist Jimmy Breslin and to the police. • The team also analysed letters Berkowitz wrote to ,his father wblle a toldler in Korea. (8ee SAM, Page AJ) ............... 'MENTALLY UNFIT Suepect Berlcowltz Bobk Says N-ixoD.Was • ' I ..... fonnaliaa ., .. • ca:111allr 1' 1\1. DunQa that vane., re- f uaed to Id o\ltJ tile tormer preaidlll&to•bcm benf.-nd. .. , c• DOW produce a LO ~c• .• ,... eri1*1Wt.olt1Da .. don to 1 tbe ICIW'c." d \M aueaed pl to ldll Kenn.dy, Olt AldlaU.llUrvlew. ff ntmed to Nffal na.m ol He aald that thit I time he umed a wttnea:a. ""Tbe .._utt at tloalQI um wtmeu i1bewa1dead.0 Oltman• was nferr1QI to Georse do llonmcblJch. a col· Iese pJ"Of•aor fOUQd dead ln Palm Beaeb, Pia., of an ap- parently self.lnntcted pmbot wound last llattb. just bows after a staff member of tbe House eommittee invatljatina tbe assauinatioD tried to ·in- terview him. De llOl'elJSCbildt had been Iden.tined tbe day before iD aecnt teaUmC1D1 bt Oltmanl as a pot.aitia! wttlleA in tbeeue. Oltmans refused to 1ay what former president aai1bt have Ud knowlec!le d the eventl that Jed to Kennedy's assassination. Be did say tbe former eblef U · ecutive ii sWl.Uve. The only llv· ing ex-presicfenta are Richard Nixm and Gerald Ford. As for Mn. Onassis. the Dutch journalist would only say that she was "in possession of informa- tion." He said the 1972 plane crash that toot the life o( Alexander· Onassis, Aristotle Onassis' only son, was sabot.ale. Oltmans said that the elder Onuais wu in the process of exposinl a Kennedy assassination plot wben his son was k:illed. · .. Onassis did believe h~ son's death was the result of sabotage, although he never made any public connection between the crash and any Kennedy plof But in December, 1974, Onassis of- fered a $500,000 reward for proof of sabotaee. Such proof never materialized. Asked how so many people could know details of such a plot without m a king Tt ·public, Oltmans said : "Everybody is petrified." F,....PaeeAI • .,. ......... , Taxes BJSOBDTBASKD ... ...., ........ Huntlnstco Beach City Council memben •lJProved a aeven<ent cut ln the eity'• property tax rate at. a loud a.ad stormy meetlq Monday.night. More tban 150 resldems, ap- parenllJ drawn to the ta.X·settlna deliberations by aa open letter from Councilwoman Harriett Wieder, indicated ttieJ. ltaQDChly suppcllUd a to.eat redacUClll at the minimum MaD.1 in tbe packed audience also indiCated the1 wanted to air their pent up emoUons about tax· WASHINGTON (AP) -• Tb• AFL·ClO today became the fim major OC'· ianiutlon to support President Carter's plan to rellnquisb con.tr'Ol of the Panama Caul. The labor group's ex- ecuUvoc:ouneU. ma formal resolution, called tbe canal agreement 0 .arthJ of sup- • port" by U.S. clU.a.tllS and the Congress. "These new instruments constitute a just and el)dur. ina bastll' for harmony in the Westen! Hemlaphete, and "• support tlletr raUflcatlon l>y the Seiiale.'' the COUDCll aald. . AlamuFoil PLAYWRIGKT DAN CAMERON RODILL PULLS A 'STEVE BRODIE' ON BROOKLYN BR1DGE Former W•r Correepondent Suffera Muttlple lnjurt•• In Hie 'Last G•mbl•1 · es but were ref\lsed tbat op- pol"tunit1 by a maJoritJ ot the eouneil members who said that the appl'Ol>riat.e time to speak up wu It artier poblle beuiDp CJD Bank Tunnel Ii tb•bUdl«. Be:•t nr-~·:...: • The eowtcll chambera ex· so F UUUJ 3 Held in Presley. Body-stealb1g Plot so be drove ·a eab to support -himself befort' turntni to writine plays. -• A rteent effort -~"lbe Dry Season," a play about Vietnam -was pralaed by professiClllals who read it, tbe friend 1ald. But no one wu willina to put up the cash to produce It. • ploded into an aDir1 seene after the council refasecl the eittaeu" ~uest to ape.ak OD t4Xes and se1H tn the audience shouted ~ at the Offtcials tbat tn. clUded: • 11Vot6tbem out of omee." 0 Let's have a recall ... "What about increasln1 1alarleS?" SOtml GATE (AP) -Would- be bank burdars who tunneled beneath a busy bouMvard ap- pareoUy pve op when their d.18· glne kept. trtpp.In& an alarm · system,, poijce say. ·t .. After au ute trOuble, time, money and el'tort they went to, it's safe to sa)' we're Jooklng for some pretty a.nsry burllars," South. Gate Police sci. Al Knox MEMPHIS, Tenn. CAP> - Three men seen fleeing from Elvis Presley's tomb have been charged with criminal trespass- ing in what.police said was a plot to snatch the singer's body from a steel-lined. coppef·plated cof- fin and bold it for ransom. But police said the body- stealing plot may be diffcult to prove because of a lack of evidence, noting that neither · burglary tools nor explosins were found. Police Direetor E. Winslow Chapman said the men were ar- rested early Monday near the mal1S9lettm in the Forest Hill EVANGELIST TELLS OF PRAY~R ME~Ng-A3 Cemetery, where' Presley was entombed Aug. 18. Charged were Ronnie Lee Adkins, 26; Raymond M. Green, 25, and .Bruee Eugene Nelson, 30, all of Memphis. . evidence. He was arrested at Baptist Hospital where police said be had gone for treatment of a leg injured while fleeing the cemetery. • Ex-8eaator's 1"1••• . Frances.· Pedrotti . . ••All the incumbents must eo." When the sboutina w.-over and molt d tbe protest~ had Jett. t.be,council defeated a move to cut the tu rate 10 cents after a gr~ deal d speech makin& by council members. :'!'be 1Ckeat recluetlcm wu sup- ported Cin11 by Mn. Wieder and Rlcbud Siebert. said Monday. • Officials of Security Paclf'ac - N atlooal Bank o6 Jl()DQy in· vesti1ated wbat cauaod tbe alarm to ~er sevetal times during the weekend. Tbe7 found five boles, each three Inches in diameter, drllhd in the center ot thev.Wt'snoor. · The cound1 then approved a sevm-eent eut eDd alao set aside an addtttoD" three. eents d tu ••11ost d the concrete in the T ..4 money for a reMrVe tund ln case two-foot-deW. vault floor between ~ the city loses a court appeal and tbe drill boles" bad been d>.ipped . · ~ust,pay $1.2 milllm lt collected aVlay, said Knox. · . • ~ • • • m real estate transfer taxes in -. . · ~ Frances A. Pedrotti of Laguna She was aJjo a member of the St. 1974 and iil5. ,_ The first alarm sounded at 11 Funeral"Held in • Hills, widow of a former Nicholas Church Council of The luspeet also bu taem in-p.m. Friday, a.ti lnvestigation Caurornia state senatoc and Catholic Women and the Catholic dieted in the sbootinl deaths of turned up nothing and tlM alarm daughter of an ei.Confederate DaughtersofAmerica. fiveotberpenonsandthewound-• was reset. Four bours later the soldier, w.S burled today in Los Mrs. Pedrotti ls survived by a ing ot ab others. Those tases alarm went off again and ~er Angeles. She died Aug. 11 at the daudlter, Eliza.beth Pedrotti of were~b.andledoeparately. searchwu made. Again nothing. age of87. " Laguna Hills and a ~lece, • After the alarm sounded a A funeral mass for Mrs. DorothyWymareorsanPedtO. prit.p ..... '•.J ~rd tim.e at 6 a.m. 5atUrday, Pedrotti took place today at 10 • -.-,_ bank officials posted att' armed a.m . at St. Nicholas Catholic • · • · • 1 .... guard. That's apparently when Church, where she bad been·ac· Vote Pending SAM tbe would·be burglars gave up. tive since movinl to the Leisure · • .• • •. Knox said. World retirement community 11 On Tax "em yeanago. 1be psyehiatrilts said a brain scan llhowed a 0 normal level ... , Mrs. Pedrotti, a native of Los _TRUSTEE ••• They were released on $50 bond. Arraipment in City Court had been scbeduled tbls mom· ing, but Judge John T. Dwyer postponed the hearine unW Oct. 4 at the request or the defendants' lawyers. - Angeles, was married to the late SACRAMENTO (AP) Sen. Joseph L. Pedrotti, who Backers ol a $t.5-bUllon tu relief represented the old 29th District bill are maneuvertng for final They also. said an electro-Pilo•.a Meet encephalogram, which measures ...., tbe brain's activity, was illso used. Tonight on. , -Greinke's. dlltrlct entom· passes northwest Twstin and a s mall portion of Santa Ana. The resignation brings to a close Greinke's s ometimes- st ormy career on the college board. He bas been a trustee since February, 1975. His current term expires in 1979. Greinke's latest controversy involved often-bitter confronta· tions over the district's proposed sateUJte campus to serve Tustin and Irvine. The U-espassing charge, a state mlsdeitleanor, carries a max· imum penalty of 11 months, 29 days in jail and a $1,000 fine. Chapman said an unidentified fourth man was released without being charged because of lack ot Dir~ctors Contested In Election He supported a site in northeast Irvine while trustees eventually selected a site four miles south at Jeffrey Road and lrvtneCenter Drive. ~ Positions on .the boards ·oJ Greinke used his resignation dlrectotsoftbreeCapistranoarea • announcement to concede hi s public agencies are·to be filled in support ol the district •8 selected Nov. 8 elections. Deadlin8 for fil · site and to oppose a de-annexation in.I areSp.m . Friday. move currenUy under way in There are three open po5Jtions Tustin. on the Capistrano Bay Park and .. I thoroughly endorse Sad· Recreation ·District, two posi· dlebact College"aeainst any de-lions on tlie ~apistrano Beach annexation plans," Greinke said. ,,.. County Water f>iStrict , and three • · o n the Capistrano Beach . ·.. Sanitary District. CR4SH ll4NDY TOSD POUCE SAN DIEGO CAP'> -Police swarmed wtthin aeconds around three motorllts lnvolved in a col· Usion at Market Street and Paclf'lc Highw-.y. No one was injured terlously, ~ondQ. But the ,speed abown by polite was not espec:lallY re· markable. Market an4 Paclftc ts a1IO the address of ~lice head- quuten. To qualify, candidates must be registered electors living within tbe respective diatricts. F11inf la at the office of the llegist.rar of Voters, 1300 S. Grand Ave., Santa Ana. Water and sanitar,Y district directors are p~d $50 per meet· ine, and usually meet once a month. Capistrano park directors 1et $25 per m~tinJ. and normally meet t>NiC6 a month. Further information ti avail&· bl• by canlttc the relt!trar's of· fice at~~ and uklna fot tho candidate filing section. tn Los Angeles from 1$21·33. votes this week, althe>Ugb there is A family spokesman s aid still a dispute over what is in the S enator Pedrotti authored billandbowitwillwork. numerous reform laws, ranging from child labor measures to bills aimld at cleaning up the state prison system. He was con- sidered an expert in penology. Plans were announced Monday for a Sen.ate Ooor vote Thursday by Sen. Nicholas Petril (D-· Oakland), spoosor of the pl to give 6.6 million Californi8D$ an- nual rebates averaainl = for homeowners and $110 for renters. Senator Pedrotti also wrote the bill that brought 10-round boxing back to Califomi~.~ urged fm .. portatlon of Colorafto River w a ter and helped' bring Califomi~ aviation· under the control of the Federal Aviation Agency. Mrs. Pedrotti outlives four sis- ters and five brothers: Sbe was the daughter of Nicholas M angerina, a Loulslanan and Contederat~ veteran or the " American Civil War who brou1bt his f am.Uy to Califotni.a wbeo the But provisions of the measure , were sWl being negotiated today and a dJs.,ute was reopened over whetbe~ tbe tax blll and a companion school finance bill would trtgeer a future tax in- crease. warended.. _ •1 • A lifelong republican, Mrs. Peclrotfr was a membU of the Wi\ID4 • Republican Club. PARKING. • district since the 1850's.'' said Weeks. "As soon as over 50 per· cent of the affected property owners 1ien ·.Qlat peUUoo. City Council 11 J"eady to hire a consul· tant.. • "We cOuld go with tllll project alm06t ~time now," be said. The report wu hand-delivered to Held on Monday by Dr. K Daniel Schwartz, 41rector of f ore.nsic psychiatric services at Kinp County Medical Center, where Berkowiti bad been in a boepital prison cell. • New Airport Schwartz, who beaded the team ot psychiatrists examining the 24-year-old postal worker, said the examination of the sus· peel was "the most dif:ftcult job I've ever done. I'm clad it's place at the airport office, 32932 over."'' . Calle Perfecto in Saa Juan Berkowitz was arraip~ two Capistrano. . weeks ago for the. slaying of The group, be~ded by San Stacy MoiSkowiu and the woand-Clemente Counctlmaq• .Tony lna ~her date, Robert Violante, Di Giovanni, was forft\ll!ld last both 20 and both from Brooklyn. week to explore possible sites for . . a new south county llirport facility. • . .._..:..,to-. Gear_Stole... The committee's formation TllU _ ... comes on'tb• beets of the an· Orange County sheriff's of- ficers are investigatiq t.be thef\ of a camera and pbotop-apbic equipment from a Lapna Nipel home. Deputies said the Jou tf prop. erty nlued at more t.ba $1,000 was report.eel by sail-.; eqineer I{, Keith Chas6. 44, of b7G Isle Royal Drive. He wu away from home at the time. nounced June 1, 1978 closure of San Juan Capistr,ano'a tiny airport and ff~~ Ci· ty Council's aDbOWlcecl lntentior of closing Meadowtart Airport. ACCGl'dingto county ~of­ ficials, closure of • two factllU. will create s.vertspace problems for 1enera1 aviation aircraft (u,ht planes) · .-Orange County. Hood's ¥ach.t. ·- Ousted NEWPO&T, R.I. (AP> -Ted Hood's new 12-meter yacht In- dependence was eliminated from the America's Cup final defense series by the New York Yacht Club's selection committee Mon· day. The decision by the committee came after it bad watched Hood lose bis fourth straitbt race. Ironically, that loss came against Independence's slater yacht, Courageous, the boat Hood skippered to victory In the 19'14 America's Cup. Couraaeous' mar1in of victory was one minute, 23 seconds. The loss gave Independence a 3-8 record. Courageous is 9-1. En- terprise, skippered by Malin Burnham, was idle today and has • 4. 7 record. Hood, £ Marblehead, Maas. sailmaker, has been involved in every Cup defense since 1958, when the fill&... 12-meter. yacht 'Columbia bea?'Enlland's Scep- tre ln four straight races. But•he probably will watch thla one from the sidelilles. 'l1:le declslon ~ the way • for Courateoua. aldp~ bt Atlanta 'Bra .. a e>w11er Ted Turner and En~ to race every day unW Se'pt. 8, ~en the selection comfnltlee will decide which yacht will represent the United States in it.a 23rd cup de· fense. In the foreitn filial ellmina· tions, Australia took a 3-Cl lead over Sweden's Sveri1e ln tbeir best-of-seven aeries, beatina the Swediah yacht by 50 seconds. At Bannister's Wharf, where 1Jndependence and Couraieous are berthed, a spectator craft motor.s by bearing a large, and •per~ propbeUc slan, which re- ad: ''Hood's Good, But Turner JtarnedHer." The elimination of Indepen· dence-came as no surprise. Ruman began in early August that Independence and Hood would get the axe. "I don't wut to talk about it," .said Turner, tearful after bear-m. that Hood bad been .ilmlnat· • ed. "It ha.a nOthJ.Da to do with me." Hood stayed with his crew for nearly an bOu.r at the dock before meeting Witb reporten. He was asked tt be bad any lnkU!tt tbat tOday wu a do-ol'-dle day fot In· dependence. "No," be aaid, "we •new ~·d bave two races, but .when we heard there would be DO HCClld nee, we iot.a llWe con-1eerned.'1 • ' Hood sald he felt bl.I eUmina- 'tllon was premature. "I mean, they (Enterprtae> haven't beaten Couraieo'-yet, and we beat them once." be aald. Cirl Pedah; Pooch Steen By STEVE MITCHELL Oftlleo.ffy,.... ... Neighbors. stop and stare when CynUlia Jarvie and her 10-year-old dog ride tandem down the street. And it's no wonder. Cynthia pedal• as Pandora-part cock·a-poo, part something else-steen the motoc~·type . bicycle down bills in their Newport Riviera nei1bborbood in east Costa Men. .. . -. STEWNG MIGHT be an exaggeraUOb but you would notice tb•t Cyntbi• doesn't hold the 1'andlebars as she speeds dOWnblll with Pandora &rlPPinl· ••. pawlne the crossbarQD the bicycle. Cynthia said she used to carry the dot around to friends• house on the bicycle but one day, about two years aao, t>andora took over. "Sii£ JUST PUT her paws on the crossbars and I let go," Cynthia said. · • Wlth a few minoc. modifications <a crossbar pad and a cushion for the canine on the bike frame) the twosome take short exCW'Sions ~und their condominlum community. 1be ftooitt feet feat is even more amaztn1 when you con· sider P~ra ls an aginc crandmother, Cynthia point.a out. '1811E'8 AN OLD DOG but this is about the only trick she amows," sbru&J Cynthia, a 12·year-old Harbor Day Scbool :itudent . ii\lt then there'~ Aaron, Cyntbla'a tltree·1ear-old Germ~ lbepherd. Aaron'a speclalty is tQwiD& famUy ancl friend.$ llfOW\d the neithbol'hood on a skateboard. Buttfiat's another story. Sbe tdenuned • number of pboto1raph1 found tn her dauahter'• apartment after the sbooUnaa, lncludlnl one d Deb- bie 1n the library bulldina With a black library employe. Prosecutor James Enright'• second witness, university custo- dian Steve Peek, testified that Al· lawJY resented the relationship and particularly resented black members of the campus staff. I TEN CENTS) J 1 Trial for Berkowitz tlnlikely . . NEW YORK (AP) -David Berkowitz, the man accused d the Son of Sam murders, ls not mentally fit to stand trial, ac· cording to the results of psychiatric testing made public today. • Berkowitz "lacks the capacity to understand the proc8'Clinis aaai=t him or to assist iii bis .se: fense, '' said State Supreme Codrt .., Justice°"'aldS. H~d. Held read from the cover letter that accompanied a report on the mental state of the accused ."4 c.allber killer. ' Berkowitz is charged ln the murders of six people and the wounding of seven others during the 5pace of just over a year. The remainder of the report was resealed, and those famili...- with it were ordered not to dis· cuss lta content.a. The cover letter said Berkowitz was "an Incapacitated indJvidual." The diaposls was that Berkowitz was "paranoid" and that his proanosis was • "guarded," Held said, quotint Uleletter. On the motion of Brobk.11'ft D~ Atty:~EtaetSe Gold, the juau.ce ordfJred tbe suspect r• turned to Kings County Holpital, where be bad under1one the FeteHonon Tnutee Bergeson ·. ?ttarian Bereeson will be honored by her fellow trustees · t.onigbt as she attends her flnaJ 11\eeting as a trustee of the Newpon-M'.esa Unified School Disttict. Mrs. Bergeson la stepplq down trom the post sbe bu beld for 13 years tQ tun for the Republican nomination for the 74tb.A.ssembly District.. In additioo to a resolution from the rttoalning alx bOVd melD· bers comlDendine Mrs. Bergeson for her service to the school clis- triet, school Offlclala say they ex· pectthe meet.int to be ~ttended by local civic leaden who hue worked with Mrs. Bergeson. Tbe school board will meet at 7:30 p.m. in tbe Co!lta Mesa Clt)'. Council Chambers. • Orange County Supervisors ap- proved a contra~ today aiving adminlatratJon of a federal Hou&·, ln& and Urban Development (HUD> gx:ant to Newport Beacb for its senior citizen center.', A 1p0kesman for the county ' said the contract calls for. the couiity to give the city about $50,000 in cash temalnini from the nrsi two 1ean of the tbf'ee. year 11:ant as ,.ell u control over the center aite purchased with near11 $300,000 of the fundil. · In return, the city bas acreed to terminate ID June, 1'78. the lease OI the private scbool that occ:upkis part ol the ce!)ter alte at L ... r r~ t ' • t r r 0 N r ACT i.ots Woes :p~ Newport Newport Beach counclhnen thought they had fot.Uld a solution to the problem invoJvina two small city-owned lots in central ~ewport but now they've found an encroachment problem. Councilmen bad decided to use the two parcela u a site for a c;iommunlty center, relocatlllg a l92()s vintage house onto the lots on Bay Avenue at 18th Str~. But now they've learned their plans won't work because a neigbborin& home waa built ont.o more than half of one of the lQta. The problem will be thrown back into the councilmen's laps at their Sept. 12 meeting. The city bas owned the two 25-by-50-foot lots for about 50 years. Since the 1950s, the city bas leased parts of the property to the two homeowners w~e land backs up to the city lots. Ten years a.co, in a citywide election. voters authoriied coun· ~ilmen to sell the parcels but lot>. bytng by the Central Newport Beach Community AssociaUon kept the sales from coing through while councilmen studied the possibility of tumina the parcels into a small park or includini them in the nearby M arlnapa.rk master plan. Earlier this year, when the Mari.Dapark master plu was ap. proved without includin1 the lota. councilmen &Cain be1an to dia· cuas telling the parcels. But Councilman Trudi Roeers. a resident of the area, pushed throulh a plai1 to relocate a amall city-owned bouM that now slta in the par~ln& lot of the American Le&ion Hall on 15th Street. Plans to move the 800-square foot bUild!ne fell through when city surveyors dlacovered that one of the neighboring houses owned by the Straub family en- croached onto the city lot by 26 feet, leavtni no room for the pro- posed community center. At the lillle the relocation plan was approved, counoilmen were \old the home encroached about f1ve feet and that there would be room to move the small buildin&, known as the Scout House, onto the site. Accord Inc to City Man ager , Robert Wynn, the council Call cancel the $15-a-year leases It has with· ~e two homeowners and r«aulre them t.o remove all encrQaching strud\lfea or they ... can .torce the Straubs to remove J~st ~ousb ot thelr bouae to make room for the community center. . .. WfJU\ · ea\d the council could abo gift·"J> on the project and seU the land or councUft)en could (evtae1he ulatln; leases so th._t \he tiroPer:tf owueri are payina a lair mar\ctt velqe for.UJem . . BobbYl..ovell, a epokesman for the community apootatlon Is 1u1· MUna the ·citJ co"1ider 111aln-'9~· the -11~"' leuee with 1tbe7.pro•l10 tbat aboµld the ttraubl 1.U or remodel. the en· ·eroachment.8 would have to be,. . . mo.ed. Citizens Protest Taxes By aoa •T BA&KER .... OllW Plteel&lff Hunt.l~ S.ach Clty Council 01 mbln a~veid a aeven-t cut ln tbo dt1'• property tu rate at a lc:iud and stormy meeUnr Monday n11ht. More than 150 resldents, ap- parmtly drawn to the tax .. ettlng ddlberationa by an open letter from Counctlwomail Harriett Wieder, indlcated they atawichly supported a 10..cent reduction at the minimum. Many in the packed audience also indicated they wanted to air their pent up emotions about tu- ea but were refused that op- portuoit.y by a majority of tbe council members who said that the.appropriate time to speak up was at earlier public bearin&s on tbebudeet. The council chambers ex- ploded lntD an anery acene after the council refused the citlleQa' request to speak on taxes and several in the audience shouted threats at the officials that in· eluded: "Vote them out of office." "Let's have a recall." .. What about lncreasln1 salaries?" ' "All the incumbents must go." When the sbouUn1 waa over and most of the protest.en bad left, the council defeated a move to cut the t.ax rate 10 cents after a great deal of speech making by council memben. The IO.cent reduction was IUP· ported only by Mrs. Wieder and Richard Siebert. The council then approved a seven~ent cut and also set ulde an additional thrff cents of tax money for a reserve fund in cue the city loses a court appeal and must pay $1.2 million it collected in real estate transfer taxes in 1974 and 1975. Businessman James ChaYos Rites Slated Greek Orthodox Church services are scheduled Wednes- day for a 1001-tlme Newport Beach businessman James F. Chavos who died Sunday at the aseof62. Mr. Chavos was the founder of the Newport Center Orthopedic Company. He served on the board of the Newport Center As· socbtion. A 21-year resident of Or8llle County, Mr. Chavos lived in Anaheim before moving to Corona del Mar. As a resident of Anaheim. he served on the city's planning commission. In addition to his Newport· Center buainess, Mr. Chavos wu a member of General Surefcal- Medical Supply Company for 30 years. He leaves his wife, Stella, and sons Frank and Tony. Trtsagioo, a Greek Orthodox recitation ot the Roaary, win be held tonight at 7:30 at W estmlnater Memorial Park Mortuary Chapel. hneral services will be held Wednesday at 10 a.m. at st. John the Baptist Greek Orthodox Church, Anaheim. .. , Alte•••atla of TragefJ9 Unidentified woman Cleft) and a South Windsor, Conn .. policeman comfort Kathy DeCorleto, 24, ex-wife of Frank DeCorleto and mother of Frank DeCorleto Ill, age 4, as she arrived on the scene in East Hartford where DeCorleto was holding off a s eige by 100 police. The 18-hour standoff ended early today with the ex-convict kill· ing his present wife, son and himself. Story Page Af. Coast Plari Hearing · Set _Newport Beginning Preparation Proceas The Newport Beach planning commission will hold the first public hearing Thursday in the lengthy process lnvot.ved ln pre- pa ring' a local coastal plan (LCP). · The plan is the documeat the city needs to assum~ the com- plete authority over its coastal zone, authority that now rests wltb the state coastal com· mission. While the city ls preparing Its plan, it bas gotten an exclusion of most residential neiJbborhoods from commission authority, an esclusion that ls scheduled t.o 10 lqto effect on Sept. 23. <See story, pageA-3) Meanwhile, city ataffmembera are contacting resident$ and. representatives of local or· canliatlons to set Ulelr views on the fll'St stage of the plan which is identification of the issues that face the.city's coulal area. According to a preliminary re- port prepared by the city·~ Com· muntty Development Depart· ment, there are fout issues ID which the city's zoninJ laws and general plan ae ln coftfllct with coastal commission pollcles. Those. conflicts have to be re- solved as partoftbe plan. Thefourissues are: -The city's abillty tQ force n~w development.a to provide public access to the coa~t; -The extent of the city's res~ib1llty in solvlilg tnfflc and parking problems wblcb are generaWd on a relfonal bali&; -TM consistency of the city's gener~ pl.xi which calla tor • small boat harbor at the JDOUth ot the Santa Ana River In lleht of the coinmlaslon•/J plans to buy the land for a p_ubllc par,k. -'lbe building den.ally and in· tensity now allowed under city zontna laws and ill 1ener'1 plan in liaht of the commission's re- commended densitlts. The city report, prepared by planner Dave Dmohowski, also points out that virtually every area ottl\e city within the coastal zone races ,Problems resolving cl. ty laws and policies with com- m lsai on policies Involving everything grom be•oh access t.o provision ()f facilities tor visltors to construction of low and moderate cost housing. The bearinc on lssu~ ldentifica. lion wU1 be the first ol several wh.lcb may include more hear. lnp before the planninc com. mlaslon as well as hearings before \he city council and coutal comm.inion before that phase of the plan is approved. Once the issu~ have been iden- tified, the city wW then have to develop a plan f~ resolving the ipues lb light ol \be city's laws and policies and the com. mission's laws and policies, a pn>· cesa th9't will aboinvolve a series ofpubllclMarlne. . ,. 'Strange' NEW YOIUC CAP) -A boot written by R .R . Haldeman, Richard M. ~on·1 former chief of ataff, wUl cQnftnn published atcCMJta that former prest. d nt acted 6lr~ely during the Jut days of h.ls presidency, a newspaper reported today. Daily New1 col\lmniat Lli Smith wrote: ••tt la my un- der1taodlo1 t~t H•ldema~·s •Enda of Power' •. ~ wW ear~ seQJaUonal materi-1 that seem.a to confinn tbe Carl Bernstein· . Bob Woodward thesis of "Th• Flnal Days•• -to wit, that the chief execuUve wu fiaky and · falllna apart in the final dafl ot Water~· The "The FJnal Daya;• writtenbytheWublngt~Post reporters who broke many of the Watergate stories, cbaracteri1es Nixon as loslft8 control of himself in several situations theffoua judiciary CommlUee held bear- ings oo impeachment. One of Haldeman's scella. Miss Smith wrote, .. will have Richard Nixon comlnl lnto the Oval Office, stripping off all bis clothes, sitting down naked behind bis desk and uk1n& bla crew-cut aide Haldeman, 4NoW what's oo the agenda?' .. The News account says Haldeman was ups-..by Nlxon's remarks during his sertea ol ht· terviews with David Frost. Nixon discusaed Watercate durinl an interview televised in May. • After the program, Haldeman said that Nixon did not clear up questions about a cover-up or Watergate and announced that be would go "full steam ahead .. on a personal, inside look at the cover-up. Jn a syndicated series "Inside the Nixon White House,.. that was publlabed lb June 1978, and carried Haldeman's by-llile, the former White House aide aald that N'llCon drank occasionally but did not have "a drinkin& problem." Haldeman began serving a 21f.i·t.o-8-year prison sentence at Lomboc Federal Correctional Faclfity in Callf9mia last June for Watercate-related crimes. An editor, for a New York Times-owned publishing house. Quadrangle, .bas uld Haldeman was paid "a substantial. generous amount., a.s ao advance for the book be ls wrltiag, ln prison, with the help of Writer Joseph DiMona. .. ,,,.._PqeAl AI,I"'A WAY. • laway also believed his wile was be~ forced to participate in the m alctng of pomograpbk movies that were privately screened to employea on the Fullerton cam. pus. Other testimony bu lndicated the film• were commercially made. A psycblatriit 11\d Allaway told him that be belldved the mafia was really reapoulble for the killings and that he wu un- der some form of remote cOntroJ when ~e took bia rifle to the cam· pus. 16 Plead GWlty NAIROBI, Kenya (AP> -Slx~ teen men pleaded 1uUty to tr .. •on charlff in the fir•~ public trial of uccdaN aceusecl of plottini to ov~ Pnlll· deiit ld.l Amin. Uganda Rtldlo re· ported. • •• 4 • . 1 I 70, NO. !G, 3 S CTIONS, 26 PAGES C'tfe&st .Bttrt , Laguna Beach firemen and paramedics treat Russell West, 16, of El Toro. injured Monday when bis motorcy· cle collided with the rear of a car driven by Richard Gocharna, 26, of La Mirada. RusseU was treated for a leg injury and released after emergency care at South Coast Community Hospital. The accident oc<rurred at mid-day in the 900 block of Laguna Canyon Road and backed traffic up about a half mile. , , Peek said he was involved ln three arsume'Dts with Allaway, wbowu also employed as a custo- dian, that almost ended tn blows. . "~ didn't like blacks," Peek said, glanclnl at the defeodanl "And I thlilk be only 1ot ~ with whites if be was able to have his own way all the time." • Defense .psycblatrista bave described Allaway as bel-.1 le1ally insane at the time ot the Suspect 'Unfit' Trial for Berkowitz Unlikely NEW YORK (AP) -David Berkowitz, the man accused of the Son of Sam murders, is not mentally flt to stand trial, ac- cord l n 1 lo the results of psychiatric testini made public today. Berkowitz "lacks the capacity to understand tbe proceedinls against him or to auist in bis de- feose," said State Supreme Court Justice Gerald S. Held. Held read from the cover letter that accompanied a report on the mental state of the accu.sed .4'- callber killer. Berkowitz is charged in the murders of six people and the wounding of seven otben during the space of just over a year. • The remainder of the report wu resealed, and those familiar with it wen ordered not to dla· cuss ita contents. The cover letter said Berkowitz was •'an incapacitated individual." The dlagnoais was that BerkowiU was "paranoid" and that bls proenosla was "guarded," Held. altld. quoUDI tbeletter. On the motion of Brooklyn Dist. Atty. Eeuene Gold, the justice ordered the suspect re- turned to Kinas County llospltal, where be bad underge>oe the puchiatrlc evaluation, pending an Oct.4 hearing. Gold received permission ~ have psychiatrists of bis own choosing examine Berkowitz, and they are to receive all the materials used in the first test· ing. Reading from the letter, Held said a psychiatric team took into account interviews with the ac- e used killer and letters to newspe.per columnist Jimmy Breslin and to the Police. The team also apalyzed letters Berkowitz wrote to his father while a 8oldier in Jtorea. <See SAM, Page A2> . • sbootlnp Uid have defined h1I melltal disorder as paranol4 aeh~a. • Thi jury wtilcb found Allaway aullt.J of seven counts of murder and two ol usM\lt with a deadly weapan has been told that be bdlevedhls iiltranged wife, Boo; Ille, wu bavlnc sexual rel•· tlOnshlps With bis co-workers. It bas been testified tbat Al., . .. . . .. ,. ......... "MENTALLY UNF1'r SUspect Berkowitz SDper. S~at~r --" P~otti taSt mies w• , Book Says Nixon Was ·- NE\)' YORK (AP). -A boot written b)' H.R. Hataeman, Richard M. Nixon 'a former chief ot staff, Wl1l cOnftrm publisbed accoWlta thlt the former presi· dent acted atr&naely durtnc the last days or his presidency' a newspaper re~edtoday. Dally News columnist Liz Smith wrote: ''It ls my un- deratandlne U~at Haldeman's 'Ends ~ Power• ... will C811'Y aensat.lClllal material that seems to ~rm the Carl Btrnstein- Bob Woodward tbesls of ~1be Final Days'1 --: to wlt, that the chief executive was Oaky and falling apart in the final days of Wat~gate." The book ''The Final Days," written by the Wasbin&ton Post· reporters who broke ttiihy of the Watergate stories, chara~erizes Nlxoo as loeinl control of himself In several situations as the Bouse Judiciary Committee held hear· lnp Clll lmpeacbment; One of Haldeman'• scenes, Mlss Smith wrote, "Will have RlcbaM NlXon courlnl' lntO the Ovit! Office, strippint off an his clothes, stttlne down naked beblDd bls desk and as~ bis crew~ aide Haldeman.; 'Now what's on th1'i&enda'?' " The New1 account sa'ys Hi.ldeman was upset by N"ixoo'a remarb 4urtng hla aeries of lP· terviewa -.tb David Frost. Nb.on discussed Wateraiate durtna& an (Bee NIXON, Page AZ> ' • . .Beldin LA l • •• 24 •• ~ - • t r r 0 . Saddlebaek • WOL. 70, NO. 242, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES • I • ' I ' . ' ' I ' ' I ' I ' J i I 1 ' I ' I I 0 :Witness Laguna Beach firemen and paramedies treat Russell West, 16, of El Toro, injured Monday when his motorcy· cle collided with the rear of a car driven by Richard Gocharna, 26, of La Mirada. Russell was treated for a leg injury and released after emergency care at South Coast Community Hospital. The accident occurred at mid-day in the 900 block of Laguna Canyon Road and backed traffic up about a half mile. , , . \ j COUeg~ to Ap.P,oint Greinke Successo~ · 4 Shi· ld•ntlfled a num of ph6toeraphs found in her dauebt«'s apartment aft• the shootinp, includinl one of Dtb- ble tri tM library bulldlna wttll a black library employ .. ProHCutor '•mes EnrJgbt'a setalid witness, univ .. Jty custo-• dip Stew Peet, ttstllted that Al· laway resented the relation.Ship and particularly resented black JJ?emben of the campus staff. Peek said he was involved in three arguments with Allaway, wbowas also em ployed u acus~ di an, that almost ended in blows. . "He didn't like blacks," Peek saJd, '1ancing at the defendant. •·And I thiDk be only eot along with whites it be was able to have bis own way all the time." . Defense p~ycbiatriata have described Allaway as belo1 leaally in.sane at the time of the Suspect 'Unfit' • Trial for Berkowitz Unlikely NEW YORK (AP) -Davjd' Berkowitz, the man accused of the Son of Sam murders, is not mentally fit to stand trial, ac- cord Ing lo the results of psychiatric testinl made public today. Berkowitz "lacks the capacity to understand the proceedin,es against him or to assist in bis de- fense," said State Supreme Court Justice Gerald S. Held. · Held read from the cover letter that accompanied a report oo the mental state of the accused·* caliber killer. Berkowitz is charged in the murders of six people and the , ' Book Says Nixon Was 'Strang~' ,. . NEW YORK CAP).-A book wrlttea by ll.R. Haldez:nu, Richard M. Nixon's former chief ol ~. WW confirtti publlabed accotmtl ttiat the former pre$i· dent acted stranaely durlnl the last ~ or hiS presidency, a n~wSpaper reported. today. Dally News columnist Liz Smith wrote: "It ls my un· derstanding that Hildeman's •Ends Of Power' ... Will caru .sens~ material that seems to confirm the Carl B~rnsteln· Bob Woodward thesis of ·~e Final Days" ....., to wlt, that the chief execuUve was flaky and falling apart in the final days .of wou.ndina of aeven others during the space of just over a year. The remainder of the report wu resealed, and those familiar with it were ordered not to dla- cuss its contents. Tbe cover letter aaid Berkowitz was ''an incapacitated individual." Tbe diagnosis was that Berkowlta was "paranoid" and tbat his prognosis was "tuarded.'' Held aald, quottna tbeltitter. On the motion of Brooklyn Dist. Atty. Ecuene Gold, Ole justice ordered the suspect re- turned to Kings County Hospital, where be bad undergone the psychiatric evaluation, pending an Oct.A beartn&. Gold received permission to have psychiatrists of his own choosing examine Berkowitz, and they are to receive all the materials used in the first test- infi eacting from the letter, Held saJd a psychiatric team took into account interviews with the ac· cused killer and letters to newspaper columnist Jimmy Breslin and to the police. The team also apalyzed letters Berkowitz wrote to bis father while a soldier in aorea. <See SAM, Page A2) ,, Super. Sk~te.r , ··~ .--.~ -Yiej~ Girl, 14, a C!im!iPion : Pedrotti ~t,Rlies-· • • . ~Id ·inLA j SB ,. • d nt KeMeclY, Ind who oa'deted It (the U.lllln1Uon)." Lee Hari•J Ol•ald, Olt.mana 11td, w only ... ran 1uy." Ford wu a member ol the W arten Comml Ion which ln· veattrattd tl\e ualnaUoo and co chade4 Otwald acted .iooe In ttlllnl Ktnnedy. Oltmana aald a man whose Identity he would 1to reveal said Ford wu briefed on tbe so-eelled complete atory, OD which Oltrnau repeatedly ref Used to • elabante. Oltmans aald be would make th• man'• Jdenttty UOW'1 on11 to .Pteald t Carter and then CIG1Y after pnaldential 1uarantas to.-the man'uafety. Higher Water Bill ' .. Oltm1n1 said information re- ceived by Ford WU allO COD• taiaed ln a report compiled by a U.S. tntelll1enco ageiicy -be would oat name the aieacy - and oven to Jacquellne Kenned)' Onauis as well u former Ken· nedy aldeTbeodoN SorenMn. Oltmam aaid Im witneu bas ltno~ °" spoken with every president since Fran\lin Rooeevelt. with the exeeptiOQ ol Carter. Oltmua taid the mJ.D is far from Washington at the mo- m ent, and t.bat he bad no knowledge as to wbether his 1ource bad talked to anyone dur· inl the inveatllailoo of tbe as- aauination. . For. Leisf:&re World · The water district servlne Latuna Jnlls Leisure World IOOD will ra1se its water rates by 10 percent. It Js waitlos for the l Public UUllties Commission to Union llacla Canal Plana W ASHJNGTON CAP) - The AFL-CIO today became the first major or· ganizaUon to support President Carter's plan to r~lnqulsh control of the Panama Canal. The labor 1roup's ex· ecutive council, In a formal resolution, called the canal agreement "worthy of sup- . port" by U.S. citizens and the Coqress. "These new instruments constitute a just and endur· ing basis fM harmony in the Western Hemiaphere, and we support their ratification by the Senate," the council said. Pilots Meet Tonight on New Airport A committee of south Orange County pilots and aircraft owners will meet toni1bt at Caplllrano Airport to dlscuas plans for a new reeional airport. Tbe7:30p.m. meet1n1 will take place at the airport office, 32932 Calle Perfecto in San Juan Capiatrano. The eroup, beaded by San Clemente Councilman Tony DiGiovanni, was formed lut week to explore possible sites for a new aouth county airport facllity. The committee's formation comes on the heels of tbe an- nounced June 1, 1978 closure of San Juan Capistrano's liay airport and Huntlnston Be,c)tg; . ty ~u·a announced lntcmtior of cloem, Meadowlark Airport. According to county airport of. ficiala, closure of the two faciliU~ will cr6ate severe space problems for 1eneral aviation aircraft <Uth.t planes> in Oraqe Co\ID\y. p,....p ... AJ . PEDRO'E~-l Lapn.1 mu. Republican Club. She wu also a member of the St. Nltbolu Churcb Council of Ca&.bollc Women and the CaUlollc Dau,htera ot America. , Mn. Pedrotll Ja aurvtved by a dau«hter. EUaabetb Pedrotti of L•1una ffilllJ and a nieC?e , DorciCl\y Wymare of ~an .Pedl"O • • 5J'e 'MOderate' · PALMER, Alaska (AP) -A .iOdetate earthquah "1th a pr• Mmtnary mapitude of s.• on tlie •tcfl.tett Seale~~ aboQt 130 mil• nortbwm ol Ancboraio. tl'le eartl'lquate observa.tory htre ~ approve an additional boost to a total of 2A percent. The PUC recenUy tranted the Rossmoor Water Company's bid for a partial rate increase to bead off what the state regulatory agency viewed as a threat to the · waterdlstrtct'1 solvency. Evidence presented by Rossmoor indicated another $140,000 a year was needed or "credit may be seriously im· paired." Rossmoor Water Vice President Larry Sturgeon said the 10 percent hike wm generate about$147,000ayear. The increase, which will become effective toward the end of September, will be levied In the fonn or a surcharee OD user billings. Sturgeon said the increase was requested in February of 1976 to offset rising operating costs. In granting the 10 percent bike, the PUC directed Rosamoor to develop a "lifeline rate" for minimal water users at a lower cost. According to the Rossmoor ex- ecutive, the orlainal appttcatlon for the increase dJdn't tnelude such a provision because lifeliJle rates weren't a requirement at lhetime. Stlageon said his agency is working with the PUC to develop a lifeline rate. The PUC staff will continue to study Rossmoor's additional rate hike request, notint that because or the time lag involved, some of the data in the application needs reviaioo work. F ..... P-.AJ SKATE ••• and sioves are a required l>'Jt of the unifc:Jrm. "Sbe ettjoys it ao much," Mrs. Hammon added. "Jg 1ucb a nice way to spend theSQJDJQer.'' Oltmans also said earlier in Ute day tllat the death of Arlstotle Onassis' son in a 1972 private ·plane crash was no accident. In en appearance on ABC-TV's "Good Morning America.. pro. sram, he al.lo bad aald a former U.S. president and Mrs. Onassis were among those who have in· formatlco that could prove there was a conspiracy to usassinate Kennedy. During that appearance, be re- fused to Identify the former president to whom be referred. "I can now produce a highly reputable witness wbo is in a poei- lion to Identify the source" of the alleged plot to kill Kennedy, Oltmanssaidlntbelnterview. He refused to reveal ~ame of hil aource. Ht said t.bat tbe last Ume be named• witness, "Tile result ol mentioalng this witness ia be was dead." Oltmana was referring to George de Morenschildt, a col- lege professor found dead in Palm Beach, Fla., of an ap- parently self-inflicted gunshot wound last March, ju.at hours after a staff member of the House committee investigating the u1uslnation tried to in- terview him. De Morenschildt • had been identified the day before in secret testimony by Oltmans aa a potential witness in tbecue. Ollmam refused to say what former president mlabt have bad knowleclle of the events that led to Kenned.)"s assuslnatlon. • . -·. F~".,,e~J SAM.r. ~ Her dau1bter aalct abe will .. stay with it u loni as I can" but ahe bas no d!:fire to move into the ranks of the pros. Al. an amateur. she explained, 'You'li'e ln a team. y~ have more fun. Y6u hiwe frieiids." • · Although her freestyle performance this .weekend "felt good," sbe said, l1 helped to bave .. . ...... . · The psychiatrists said a brain scan showed a "normal level." They alto said an electro- encepbaJosram, which measures the brain's activity, was alao 'the moral support ot hel' team- mates. E,....PfMleAJ TRUSTEE ••• used. . The report was hand-delivered to Held on Monday by Dr. K Daniel Schwartz, dlrectdr or forensic p.sychiatric aervtces at Xtqs County Medical Center, where Berkowitz bad been lli a hosoltaJ prlaon cell. Schwarts, who beaded tbe team of psychiatrists examJnlng the 24-year-dd postal worker, aald the e.nminat!on -of the SUS· pect wa.s "tbe most dilftcult job I've ever doae. I'm elect It's over." Berkowitz was arrai;ned two weeb aio for the slaylnf of Stacy Molkowlt.z and the wound· inc of her date, Robert Violante. both 20 eiid both from Brook.I~. - ., ........... PLAYWRIGHT DAN CAJERON RODILL PULLS A 'STEVE BRODIE' ON BROOKLYN BRIDGE Former Wer CorrelpOftdent 8utfere Multfple lnJurtee In Hie •Laat Gamble' . ~ NEW YORK (AP) -Jn 1886, Stephen Bl'Qd.le won a ~ bet when be survived a leap fromtbe Brooltlyo Bridae with only minor bnalses. Dan Cameh>u Bocllll, a 34. year-old J>lllYWri1bt aud former war correspoudeo~ tried to duplicate the Jump Monda~ Q a ••Jast gambfe." He guffered multiple fractures, collapsed Marco Forster Junior Hi'gh School s tude nts new to the Capistrano Unified School Dis- trict can J)re-reglster for-seventh and eighth eradea on' Wednesday and Thursday. Pre-reeistration is scheduled from 8:30 to 11 :30 a.m. and from 1 to 2 p.ro. at the school, 25001 Camino del A vi on in San Juan Capistrano. Marco Forst.-boundaties In· elude Dana Point, aJtof San Juan excepl Alto Capistrano, i..guna Nieuel southeast ol Salt Creek and Mission Viejo aoutl\ ol Via Escolar. Students s1'ould take illl·· muniu,lion r•cords to pre· reiister and be prepared to take short tests in Ensllsh and math (or. correct;c.1'°. placement.. a s chool official said. . _ . ·"Marco f'onter-will~ on dou- ble session a.ow completicin 9f Shoreclltrs Junior Hiltb ln San Clemente. expected In Nov- ember. Marco Forster students will attend scbool frOIJl '1;45 a.m. to 12: 14 p,rn., be'lnnhil Sept. 12. Sboteeliff a stu<ttnts will attend r.....PflP.AJ .. CUP ..... .. Jn ~forolp final elimlna· tlona. tralla took a a.o le~ over Wecten'a SveriJ! lp;_tbetr belt-of-seven 1Uiea, ~l\inl the Swedlsh yacht by SQ seconds. At Bannlster•1 Wharf, wbere Independence and CourMeous are berthed, a ·~tator craft motored by bearini a lar•e• aDd perhqis prophetic 1l1n, which te- ad: ''HOOd'• GoOd, But l\arDer Earned.Her,'' O'Neill Soya PatkS~t,;~. ''ltiJi,c,ilouif' W ASHlNGTON (AP) -House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill said today that' a published report that Soutb Korean bu1ine11man Tonaaun Park operated out ol bis otncela ''ridiculous.'' '1he liusacbu.settt... Democrat deiiled statements prmtid ln the It.os · Angeles Times that Park "fr~uently .operated" out of O'Neill'• office'wben O'Neill was majority leader. The Loe Angeles Times report· ed that Koreaa·bor.n Sull Park Tbomson. an aid~ to former Ho~ Speaker Carl Albert, told a Howle committee that Park took telephone calla in O'Nelll's of flee". Mn. Thomson testified last week before the House.standards of OfftclaJ Conduct Committee which la tnwsttsattna alle&ed at- tempts by SOUtb Koreans to buy tn.flueaee bi~ to eontmue U .s. support for that country. O'NeDl~Wbose si.tement came tbr~ bis execUtlve assistant, said aboUt Kts. Tbi>mlOl\'1 al· legect remarks : • 'Tbla ls rldiciilaus." O'N'elll allo said Park never falkeCl about Jte>rNa to him. But Rodill's fortunes declined when be returned after the war. He was unable to land a news job, so be drove a cab ,to filPpott himself before turning to writiDg plays. · A recent effort -"The 'Dry"- Season," a play about Vietnam -waa praised by professionals • who tead it, the friend aaid. But no one was willing to put up the cash to produce it. . p,,...pogeAJ , 'JJRANSACTIONS COMPOStflt Tu aday'1 NYSE p.m. (EDT) e,lcea. s DAR.. y f'n.O'T •• Planning Ahead Widows to Eace • Tough PrOhle~ B18YLWAPC>aTn , . ............. MOit manied women •W outllve their bua • This will be pe.rtlcolarly tou&h fOf' tboM •bole b..tNlildl always m det.6ellnandal d.elstom. When Muriel's buabud died 1:'8CentJy, hll 1ucldeo stroke and prolonged hospital atay bed depleted tbttr. ciab re· HrVts. The ~ouple had owDed a «>-foot cablD cniiMr which they UMd toe weekendl and vac UMI. Tbey had planned to. retlN Ulla yoar. sell their '75,000 home, move to Fkidda and IO oo •world cruise. Alone. Muriel did cot know bow to carryoo. HE• rrs INCL\Jl>SD a $1$,000 HVings aceount, .. frowtb'Olieoted mutual fWld investment of '30,000, stocks and bonds valued al $15,000 and an 11l3urance parmen~ of $55,000. Her montblr lftcomo -SoctaJ Security pta1 bet, huaband's retirement beneftta-tot.aled '45'. , Here ls the advice offered to Muriel by Merrill Lynch: , -Set up a supplementary health care program atooce to avoid a repetition of huge medical costs. -Buy an apartment in Florida, rather than a house. and do so within one year of the sale of the present home \() defer laxes -0n the . • capital gains produced bJtbesaJe. M , ""' · -Sell t)\e growth-oney s ~· oriented fund: Growth Worth stocb no longer make f: sense for older people. , who m~ need a hl1her · •: annual return to finance a Westyle including travel and : moving expenses. l . • -Learn al leut the baalca ot sound, conservative in-' vest.lnc before you make any financial decisions. Find out I: about lncome-produclng securities: hllh·)'leldilfl common : 1tocka wtth a long history ol paying dlvldenda, quality pre-! : ferred atockl and bonda, hi1b·1rade corporate and ~: municipal bond funds. , : -CONSIDER PURCHASING UNIT Investment trusts, J: which provide a prof eaalonal selection of a dlverslfled group l : of prefen-ed stoc"ks or bonds witb different maturity dates ' : ud yields, regular payments ol dividend.a or inleresl and ; : seml·annual or moatbly distribuUons of income. 'r : 'I'nllts are sold in unlt.s, each of wblcb represents a por-1 : Uon ~all the issues ln the trust'• portfolio. Units can COit as l · UWeae$l,OOO. , · A hl«h·srade corporate boad fWtd, for example, could J · retum rou1h1y 8~ percent and provide a montbly income. As tbe bonds in the tnst mature, or are called for reclemp. 1 lioa, tbe ptinelpal II returned to unit holden. ANOTHER OPTION IS 'tO leave nvlngs al Ute $15,000 level. ~ tbe funds invested ln stock.a and bonds 3 mutual rund, then transfer the total ($4$,000> alone with lnaurance payment of SSS,000, to tbe trust. On a tot.al lnves · menl ot ll00,000, the return could be about $100 a month. Naf: thuft/•mplo.,ed. ' Farmers Criticize Wheat Program WJCIUTA, Kan. CAP> -President Carter's proposal to ~ut wheat production next year wUI hardly make a dent f'1 tho nation's grain surplus. breadbasket farmers say. • · The wheat surplus bas grown steadily whlle the price per bushel has declined from SS three years ago to less than $2now. CARTER PROPOSED MONDAY a 20 percent J'ed~~l lion in planting next spring. Some farmet"S would have pr~· fered a 2S percent reduction. Still others aay that a &rqter reduction would be needed to decrease •~plies enouah (o ralsepricea. ~ · 1 EqUity 'Finn . t•. , . J •• To Open in HB Newpj)rt Eqqlty Fundl, Inc .• bu AnlMlrll..ftCed 01.W Ao1 open an o(ftce in Hunllneton Beach, btl"'lill to ·toar tltei number Ot branchea maintained by the mortaa&e brokerqe firm. The HW\Un&ton Beach branch, to open TbundQ, w1JJ, be located al 11163 Beach Blvd. ln MunUnaton gxeouuf Park. . ,(.\ Plans are to staff the ornce witb tbi'M em~~ beaded by lotn orocer Cal Wolle. DoD Henot will be _ch otfi~1upervl8ar. ,.._'i• Newport EquJtY, Fundl, blad<tuirtered io N~~. Beach wlth branches in sen Dleao IU MllaloD .~VleJo. 1peclallzes ln aecoad trust.deed loans~ inv-.menta. M'. Divider.a AnnOu*M I • JIJ1 19. Pt. OM MOO sq. "· mum a apaclous Unlqu. Homt: oo a l&J"le fee lot. And this homes 11n't iust tq, it'• bo utlful: 4 bedrooms, a formal dlnln1 room, a f~mllf room. a 1ame room. 3 baths, 2 ftrepla~. a 3 car 1araaei ·and a b ckyard dottf.ld wtth fruit t.reM. This 3137 sq. ft. home la situ ted on 8400 sq.ft. of Harbor View Hills and ,.,m be o~ Sat. and Su4. at 1'22 K~l Drivt:. • IJ~ l()Ut: t1f)Ml:S REAL TORS•: 675-6000 2443 E.i Coast HlghW1y, Corona del Mar also in Me311 Verde, at 546-5990 & ...... ....................... 1nav1ew Balboa bland, 1235,000. •••••• CM. 4500 SQ.FT. pool sauna, jacuz11, $175,000. RUC:ICIR REAL TY 64Z..4758 ·NOW IS . the lime to get a great buy! 3 Bedroom + fam1· ly room home in College Park ' Buyers market forces motivated seller lo OfCer tb1s gorgeOU!> home for only $85.500! R~J>CARPET. 754-1202 ---NEWPORT IEACH Unusual. neat A frame 3 BR, Z ba., 2 patios. Walk to ocean, pool:; & tennis. Only $99.500 CAYWOOD REALTY. INC • 541·1290 * 1002 TWO GREAT DUPLEXES .Both In fin Cor na del Mar, onv on Jril, on Btt1onla. AU apt.I. have· 3 bdriril .• 2 bathl-& c:ncloe*i'Sl ,tarq~. 11li u dup xes ar• &IJ)Ol'll the most modtrn & bttat built in th4' ntia. Priced rt=asonably at $179,500 and '189,500 . 759.0111 FiUt 111.-<Mit W•IN 'Bf.4t. I • Gt•NI fOOZ e,..,... 1002 .............................................. LIDO ISLE. 4 BR, 2 ba. Newly decor. Large patio. Beamed ~il's., hdwd. floors. 48 Ft. lot. $225,000 PENINSULA. 4 BR, 3 ba. home. All amenities. Lovely area. $195,000 PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES FROM $900.000 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bny~•d· Or"". N B 67':J 6161 IAYSHOllS IHCLUDU lHI LAND Cbarniing home on quiet street. Rt.istlc LR & DR with cath~al cell· iJ\a, lovely BR & dm with wet bar, gorgeous hardwd fioors. Smart newly remodeled kitchen, huge guest bdrm & bath over 2-car gar. Re1dwood \jacuzzi in secluded patio. $1m,900 · 2111 S..Jo•••Nh.._. MMOU C&ftWI. tU. MoMtlO THE ILUFM Beautiful Carmelita end unit. 4 Bdrms., 3 full baths, close to schools & shopping. $162,500 Includes the land. 67J-4400 D1.WO.of ................. co. Cia•ral ~--~ ' THE REAL I ~5TATERS_, ~ l l "1-. d Ii I \I I\ ,. '' ! r ,, · •., re , ri .. 1~· .,. ,. 1006 . ..................... . !!!!!!!!!l!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!B!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I! ...................... . LOW MAINTENANCE HUH HA I I' I I Lachenmyer nealtor ------ ~!~~p~~~~nd must aell Best buy In all Costa Mesa. Sharp 3 bedrm, 2 bath, family rm, + artist's s ludio. Many extras. Hurry, pnced only $'74,900. Call 546-5880 ~~~ HERITAGE . • REALTORS VETS: ••FREE•• YAC.....a..g& lllfo. Stnice FrHAw"ahals fneLktofYA H0..1a.o.c. Orange Co'a. Larteat. VA Home Broker C4124Hra. 675-2626 WORLD REAL ESl'ATE /Jn NIL,[l l~l\ILL Y ~. AS~IJ£.I flT ( 5 I ( I· 1f , I I Ol ~,n!'\J PRICE SLASHED to$61.750. 3 Bed.rm, 2 bath, famllY rm. fple, dble gar. widt opener. Owne'I' desperate. Hurry, won't llltl l M0-1151 ~ . HERITAGE . RC ALTO HS tlfl1ela11 Of~l f<TA!I II I' al•._. 1040 ....................... LANDMARK Hurry to save $$ while for sale by owner & m need of some fixmi up. Popular 4Br, fam rm. sing.le story, converuent ·to stores, scbJs & bch, pl~b upgraded cpl in hv rm, hall & all bdrms. OPENHSESUN Entrance to tract So. of Magnolia & Adams. 968.0846 red hill ~,.;. 552-7500 Firiiwd tots .,, ............. ~ .. GM.W•t..._.! · ata.a.urut 1 La• z Br, IDU:t more ••••I at ......_Small t'•JUl'Jt 5-Tke UDL M5-«IO *'*Caez '" .... A1Qeal! Beautiful ramUy ~ Imm. la•. Br, ooly $390 &nallfee.~ -~·~·~c~ .. !~'~'!''~Gal~ldt~I~~~~~~~~~ 3ci'4 Bed.rm Townhouse. ELEGANT Brand NO, ~ &l"N. Childteo OK. x.tnt are.a 2 1t1 boiae nr • UH/mo. 863·71 20, bcb. a bd s ba '550. 1G478ort62-93Sl. 148-U.SS ·-~ ........ -----------· • MIWPOlT CRIST ••••••••••••••••••••••• MaOO WHIC & UP •Studlo Al BR Apts *'fV IJMaklServ Avail • Pbl>ne Serv. Btd pool 2311 Newport Blvd. CM 54$·9'1~ or 6'5-3917 associated 8110 I\ f P S PE I\ l UJ RS J d:' IA 11.,1,. ,J 11 • 'I I., I ....................... CORONA DEL MAR Large. 3br, 2ba Duplex. a Br TOWl'lhouM, frpk. CHANNEL REEF Wohrf1°"' Corona de1 Mar'• only IUHDHIW! 2 Br apta.. Wl De11ware, HB Open lZ.S Daily. 1 Mile to ocean. '42-9601 A#.-536-!d - I Wi. ._,!Cl II' LlLDC. • II .. • . t ~I • ~ . -. C7 l 5005 llCYCLI SflOIJM>ODS IOOM 'Complete dealership avall•ble~ area now r Nuaiblr cxae rat4id blc1· cl.I and Wlltioo 1oort.ln1 ,.oda. ladudes -rave• &.ol'y, tralDlal Ir ~L .. iai..nee. lU&b lneomo po&ntlal. Year 'rouDd bcldnille. Call tor det&llS. (7M)t'1NS1J { . .. ~ \ ' • t GIRL FRIDAY (2) wlt office akills. AU benefit.. lteavy phonea. ~tr per mo .• C.M . .tea. kl-5217 ' GIRLS NEEDED Sandwich def. s Day wk • tit do·. Own tr•"Jt. Earn over $3.50 hr. Call -6 .J_E21:_:~,~~ f '1 ~ -I 0 ' ' 6 ~ II MPllf<,HH Hf l P . . Garogtw. ••••••••••••••••••••••• loafs & MmiH 350 Chevy eng. Wheels & Eqll~ Urea & lots of other atut! •••••••••M••••••••••~·l~~~~~~~--J::-:--::--:-=:=-:::-:-~-:-1 854VidoriaSt.548.Q48 G ... ,.. . 9010 WA'i'fED: 37• Slip In '74 Ford PJ.CIO aborlbed, Jewell t 1070 ....................... Nwpt or Dana Point by low ml. clean, $3400/best ·••••••••••••••••••••••• Windsurfer, $335. Mid Sept. 642•0095 or ~~76'7~ Locust. F.v •• WANTED ,Kayu;iman,$225. 499-m> - TOP CASH I>OLLi\R 548-7t08 Speedf;_. '78 LtJV~ w/aheU, custom, PAID FOR YOUR AnM:IOATaS Sid 1010 xlet coiid. lS,000 ml, JEWELRY. WATCHES. SemtnarS A1Sea . .8eeour -··· .. ·-············· _ac_oo_._Sf5..a>t8 ______ , ART OBJECTS, GOLD, ad 8/30 Tuel School Sec· 4• fbrda w /50 BP '72 O.V, Luv.aac. IHV· SILVER SERVICE, 'Iba: · Evlnrude fc lrl wbl trlr. ln& countrJ w/camper FINE FURN " AN· loati,;........ Kultse!L 1675/bltotr. sbell, mac wheels $1795; · .TIQUa.MS-ZIOO ........ 9030 5&5-8609 SSl-41481 U1 ... Dck 1071 .. _ ................... Imp 17' V.C 1/0 ~. 262 ._ • • ....................... ll#tne radio &: e.lec:tronlc E. 21st St. Jlee. ll«pn mare, broke .salea, service. imtalla· .se.a100 to ride Is drive, blk t1on. Save up to 25%. parade llortao 1eldin1, Fue performance E•g, Wea tern <114) ebflek. GS-3309, 556-QOO · ·339-lOU WANTED TOP CASH DOLLAR $4950. Ernie Mlooe.y BM ml. $2175. PAID POR YOUR SADDLEBACK BMW COMelM•s& ·ne~MIW ' 6lOCSi MOWU! ·--COMPUTE IOOYSHOP . MOW6'EH • SADDLEIACK VALLEY IMPOltTS llJ-2040 '9~949 CREVIER .. . . . . . BAtlW1Ck OA T\UM H I I I ; 1 •, 4 9 J . l j 1 s ~ • 89NEWCARS A'tTHE OLD PJUCES All mode1a now avalla· COSTA MESA 0 . .\ TSUN 21MSHARBOR BLVD .• miracle n1azda . . $5988