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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-09-20 - Orange Coast Pilot--. -- tfaekle Severs Tie· With Dnassis Elvis Presley: 'Perfect Syinbol' To Outlive Us (See Page C1) ' . 'l l Dist1•rbed Gt•nlnan Kills Dayton N11n DAILY PILOT Public ' * * * 10< * * * TUESDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 20, 1977 VOL, 1t, NO. 1'I, J S•CT10NS, D ~AOl!J JACt<IE ONASSIS SETTLES FOR $20 MILLION Shown With StepdaughterChr11tlna Ona11ls 1aCkie Onassis Due ~ Million Pay_of/ on Lance ~letoP 'Shock' Kilh Giraffe MARWELL HALL, England <AP> Victor, the spread- eagled giraffe, died today ap· parently or shock during an at- tempt to winch him to his feet in a canvas sling made by the Royal Navy. The glrafrc, who had been una· ble to stand since he did the splits Thursday, could not survive the attempt to lift him with a block and tackle hung from steel scar. folding. The plight or 15-year-old Victor was front-page news in this animal-loving nation and around the world. Telegrams and letters Dayton Nun ' Hears Shot, Murdered DAYTON, Ohio (AP> -A Roman Catholic nun was shot to death when she went to the door of the convent after bearing a gunshot, authorities said today. Police took a 55-year-old Daytoo man into custody and described him as highly disturbed and distraught. His name was not released pending the fillng of charges. Sister Donna Blaul, 34, was shot once in the ch'5t Monday night, the Montgomery County cor- oner'1olfice1ald. Acconlin1 to tbe coroner's re- port, the auapect rang the rear doorbell at St. Agnes Convent at about 8:25 p.m. The convent is in northwest Dayton, described as a traUWonal area with a high crime rate. Tbe report 11ve the followtn& accoUDt: Sitter Rita Curry answered the door Md tbe man asked for Sister Joan. Wben sater Joao Pfeiffer came w Ulit door the man said, "Wbilltail Ill .. -.llftlflei"mecttbeman wblll be ....... the IHD pulled out • .a-e.Dber retelver and .._Ntnil,PqeU> ~lliart83. poured in to the Marwell Park Zoo with ~uggestions on how to get him to his feet. He apparently Cell while trying to mate with one of the zoo's 1.hree remale girarfes. Viet.or "was a bit stressed by all the activity around him last nigh~" said his keeper, 21-year- old Ruth Giles. "But he appeared to have settled down and had something to eat this morning." A veterinarian who examined the girafre said be died from "shock ." An autopsy was planned. The giraICe had shed an oc- casional tear and quietly nibbled fresh grass as his keepers fed saline solutions into his weaken- ing body through an intravenous tube in his eight-root neck. The 18 foot-tall East African giraffe had been raised in the air, clad in a harness specially made by Royal Navy sailmakers. The one-ton animal bun& sway- ing from the steel scaffolding as workmen lowered him near the ground in a seesaw operation de- signed to slowly restore circula- tion to his rickety legs. He seemed to have trouble with his breathing as they lowered him, and died. · "I think it is the shock <A what has happened progressively, and in this.last trauma he didn't have . the will to stand it," said John Knowles, owner oC the Marwell Park Zoo about 70 miles southwest of London. "It is always a problem with giraffes. '.!'hey suppress their <See GIRAFFE, Pa1e Al) ·~ ......... · PEACE NEAR? • Israel's Dayan Dayan Sees Revival of Geneva Meet WASHINGTON <AP) -Hint- ing that he is in direct touch with Arab leaders, Israeli Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan said to- day he thinks "ultimately an agreed formula will be found" to reconvene the Geneva peace con- ference by the end or the year. Dayan told a news conference he represents the first Israeli government that does not simply say, "no, no" to Arab propogab but one that 'la even willing to sur· render setUements on the West Banlt of tbe Jordan River in a fmalpeacetreaty. However, Dayan said Israel flaUy refuses to negotiate with the Palestine Liberation Or,a~Uon, or to the establish- ment: ill a Palestinian state. .DQan virtually cOnfiniMd re- ports that be met recenUy with kiri1 HUileUi of Jordaa. but said be could n0t NJ OM way 6t \be otlMil' became be la ''WB<• neid wltb OtlMr' people too IDd UM!y .... -too ....... to baye any iueh meetlap 1M1blldliid . RADNOR, Pa. (AP) -The American people, the Jury that Bert Lance sought to judge his case, are sharply divided over whether Lance should keep his job as budget director in tha Carter administration, an As- sociated Press public opinion poll shows. The nationwide survey of 1,548 adults, taken Monday evening. also found President Carter's im- age bad been dented b.Y the Lance affair, particularly in re- gard to Carter's oft.repeated campaign pledge to enforce moral standards in government. The AP survey showed that nearly 38 percent of those in· terviewed felt Lance should re- sign as direct.or of the Office of Management and Budget, while about 35 percent said he should stay. Nearly 27 percent e:&· pressed no opinion. despite publicity about the case. The AP survey followed Lance's vigorous lftlt-defeose • durine three days of natlooall.y televised Senat~ com mlttee bear· Ing into Lance's personal and business dealings. The bearings before the Senate Governmental Af£airs Commit- tee were intended to focus on al· legations that Lance wltbbeld <~LANCE, Pace.U> Coast - ' • her," be nid. "Even our h•rdened nut1t1 ln lnt.n.sive caro 1obbed wtuuuhedled, every one olthem. '' Jane Doe wUI rest. ln Cook Couot.y morsue for at le11t • da)'I. le!en·ater. found beaten unc.on1clou1 an a forest preHrve ed unl.nown but not alone PosslblY she wUJ be ldentlfltd. ll not, the tiosptt1t 1poke11Hn 11ld ahe "will be given a dignifi~ burial." He said a tuneral home will 'provide services without charge. Hospital employes are starting a fund for a grave sue a~d marker. lllaJ:Cl'ION "OSPITAL &ECIJVED ~ teltphon• CJllll rrom parent. ln a dozen 1taiea. Tbt •1.1burban Schlller JPark pallet who bt ed tlle cue eathnat.acl they recelvtd 1,000 call• from par • Plrtur. ~ tll• llrl ln her holpltal btd appeared in naw1~p19r1 and on televt11oo. More thanJOC> people vlalled her. She wa1 a pltlful saghl 8otb •>' were blackened and there was"' u1ty brulHon the side of bcr hud. JANE DOE WA8 J'OUN'D Jlffl .. a. road ln Scblller Wood• by a passerby who htt1'd sroane trom a ihlcket. Sht waa bound ln - blanket wrapped wlth I knotted cord. Th• a~sattant. had fa1bloned 1 one end of the cord into a hangman'-nooae. but it w .. not uound htr neck. Police said Jane Doe, 5-foot-6, 100 poun<b, Sl41f•ted a ekull frac· ture. She had been struck in the head and ovel' the body possibly with the heel of a boot. or the type of hamrner uaod to tenden11 meat. ni. frecita..faced myatery 1irl, believed to be 15 to 11 yHrs old. died Sunday. never re1atnln1 consclo\llness. A memorial 1ervice was held ln the hospital chapel Monday, and more lh1ln 150 atiended, most of them wbite·un1formed hospital workers who fought for her Ule. Police theOtlzed 1he bad been dumJ>td in the woods from a pass· ang auto. She was wearing a multicolored nower print blouse and black slacks. AT JANE DOE'S MASS, THE Rev. John Kuhlmey, a hospital ''I RAD A CALL FROM A MOTHER an Pennsylvania yesterday 'ebaplaiit, i+ld ~b!Ye for her: who had not heard from her daughter for a year," a hospital ~ "I'D\ sorry lo leh'~ YOU 50 early, but for some unexplained s pokesman said. "Like all the real she aaked about ldentifylnl reuon. someone didn't want me to linger here too lonl." he read. clues. Some parents or relative. who called thous ht they nri1ht be ·'There a.re many ..:irls -; out there -jusl like rne. Some of them are on the right tratl and took a plane to4ff ber. They looked Ind le.fl J hul'lary·ancfcold; h}u!grworlove and cold1rom lndmere.nce. weeping, or went to the chapel to say a prayer for her. · · "'c0uldn't yoU"d<Tsomet.bing for them? Search them oul, bring "The girl had a remMrkable errect on those who worked with them to loving people." Fro• Pafle AJ $20 MILLION herself and $50,000 for her children. The bequest was to have been paid through a foundation In Lichtenstein, and the bulk ot the shipping tycoon '1 estate was to gq to his daughter. now 26, and to il fOlUldation in memory of hiJ late son, Alexander, killed In a plane crash an 1973 at age 25. Onassis' hand written will, dat· ed Jan. 3, 1974. indicated that Mrs. Onassis signed a document an N~w York in which she relln· quished all rights lo her late husband 's estate. However, The Times quotes friends of Christina Onassis as saying that soon after he r father's death, Mrs. Onassis and her brother·in-law, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy. began pressing the heiress to increase the bequest to Mrs. Onassis. Mias OniUlsis ' share of her father's estate Is ealimated at $250 million. Friends of Christina Onassis said she opposed her father's marriage in 1968 to the widow of President Kennedy and was never able to become close to her. The relationship was said to have become even mo.-. atralned after Onassis' death, althou1h hil daughter made a statement to the contrary and denled reports that her father planned to divorce hll wife. Air Debris Due on Coast WASHINGTON <AP> - Federal offlclal1 are expecUng ' an air maas conlamlnated with hi&b alt.lt\lde radioactive debris Crom a Chlne1e nuclear teat blast lo reach the United Staw on Wednesday. The Environmental Protection Aaency (ICPA> la watching ' weat.het condiUon1 cloHb' to de· termlne the PQllible lmpact or the Chi.Que atomic explosion last · Saturday. Ao iPA 1p0kn1nan aaid today that th• nrat ,lr mu1 containing radioactive debris "IU Ukely p111 over the 1wte or W aahlnaton early Wed.n•day. Pactt Terminated BRASILIA. Brasil CAP) - Braiil bu canceled ill lut tour defenH a1reemenll wit1' the United States, ending formal mllltary cooperaUoo that betan during World War II. The action Monday was a tollowup to Brazil's cancellaUon last March of a 1952 mlUtary uil1tance trea· l)' wtlh th• United Stat.ea and its re,ecUon of tao hrilllon In U.S. m lltary aid because the aid was linked to human rt1hi.. ORANOl!COAIT s DAILY PILOT ~----~ ~~~~ 1tfaoop• ••• Despite the attention to detail one usually 1tneounters at a bank, both the American and California Flags al this Bank of America branch in Missio~i· ej~. were upsidq down Monday. Asked .l!·th~re >we1'e repsq~. d bani( spokeswoman said no. Som~me ·~ n ent;on apparently was nagging. . . , '. • >-1 4. ,. • .,.... ' : ,.I • -., • F,....P..,._,AJ " -Police Hold NUN· ·•· • Father in fire( one •~Qi whlcb atn19k ~. ;. • ...... _... wa~lat.theb0ttom0Hhe1t.ep. Baby's Death Then Silt.el .. Blut. who was ~ •L 1radln1 school .work, came A 23·year·ol Westml".'swr downstairs and ailc6ct tbe man to (ather was book , on suspicion ?f leave. Hefiredanothershotwhich murder today lq the death of tus struck Slater Blaunn the chest, five-month-old son, police said. the report Hid. She died at the Frederick I\. ]dueller of 1J82s c()Dventatabout8:30p.m . La PaC Place,. was ladled :in. . •. · . }• 8rango County' Jail alter the Sl:iter Blul. desc:tJbed by a de,.u. ei i a.m. tfday of bll Infant p~h ~u.• 1poke1woman·u tf •Of\, J.,rfrey Al(en Mueller, 1c- g1fted. smger. was a member oi cordlnttoSgt. HJl'r'Y Hoover. the S1ste~ af Notre Dame de The baby waa~ken to the UCI Namur. Medical Centeqat 11 p.m .. Mon· day. Hoover 1aJq •. A native or Chicago, Srwter A 1pokeaman· for the Orange Blaul bad been 1 rn~t.h teacher at county Coronet'• Departm4'nt · Chaminade·Julieruie Ht"1 School said the cauae Olt.ho baby's death alnce 1973. Sb9 ~o t1u1hi al St. • 11 under 111veaU1aUon. Arne.School. No ot.ber de.tall• were im- mediately available. r ' Jreaty r.mbe Concl~ .7 .• , ... .,,...........-,WMHJN<fTON (AP) -A Senate eommlttee Is ending its inve1t11at1on of aUe1ed U.S. eave1droppln1 In connect.Jon with Panama Canal treaty ne1.ot1auo._1 without saying whether the oh&rlf:ll are true. At t.he tad of two days Ol cloted hH~. Sen, Dentel ¥. lnoUJe, D·Hawalr, a-halrmab of the S.nate intellt1e60.· tommittee,. ••ld anlY tbattnv..U.aton fOQnd DO ._Yldlnee \bal U.S. mtelUgenc:e acUvltlq alf ecltd tbt outoom• ot lbe treatJLlaJICI. ln a carefUllY worded state-tnent Mond.t1 , lDOU.Yt left W" answered the quut.tce of what, it illlJ, inteW1enc• ~tlVWes oc• cur~d~~ •••oUadQos. F,...Paf18AJ GIRAFFE ... shock but their worry and con· cern is goin1 on in1lde them. They reach the point where they just give up," Knowles said. Victor appeared distressed and continuaJly turned his head lo watch workers who set up the lift· in1 &ear lail ni&bl. Jt'ad he survived , s aid Knowles, he would have been ''the first iiiraffe as far as I know. to have done tho splits and live." But the zoo owner had ratee the elraffe'1 chancei at only 50.50 Many of the 200 animal lovers 1athered around Victor's enclosure bunit into tears when the giraffe died. He was lowered from the winch onto the ground, his legs tucked b e neath him , and the veterinarian pronounced him dead. Hi1 keepers cradled Victor's head as he breathed his last gasp. U.S~· Flighl Sighted? TOKYO <AP > -Radio Pyongyang charted that a U.S. Air Foroe SR71 Jet Intruded deep Into North Korean air space twice. The radio, In a broadcast heard Tuesday In Tokyo, said the plane was spoUed Monday night flying o ver Cape Musu ·Dan in northeastern Norih Korea at 11 : 18 p.m. (S: 18 PDT> and aawn two hours later. The broadcaat said the ntght "betrayed llle preparation the United States i11 maktne to launch a new war and it.s inten· . tlon to helchten tensions on the Korean pentn1uta." There was • no lm01edJate commenL Iron) the Air Foree. Chrlatian• Banned NAIJ\OBI, Kenya (AP) - President ldl Amln today banned 26 Christian organizations and the Baha'i faith from operating in Ugande. U1•nda Radio quoted an internal affatrs ministry spokesman as saying the ban was all'eAAy in rorce aaainat lhe organJseUons, which he said "are not conducive to the securi· ty of Uganda.·· p,...p ... .4J LANCE ••• personal financial information during hll Senate conlirmat.Jon hearinca tn January. Tbe f mp ct of Lance's 20-plus hours of lettlrnony last week before tbe Senate panel is dlf· tlcult to meaaure, since the lelevWon audlenc• for the hear· ln11 wer• belleved t.o be small. NaUonal t.elevlston raUnas for last week are not yet avallable. The survey provided some in· dicatlon that Lance's televis1on performance helped bis staodina with some Americana. The telephone survey was con· ducted for The AP by Chilton Reeearch Services of JUdnor, Pa. Tbe 3 percent . difference between t.hoae ravorfng Lance'• re1lgnation and th011 oppo1tnc lt la tnconcl\lllve became or lh• margin of possible statistical er· ror. Lance hu repeatedly 11id that he would not resign and that be ls innocent of any wrongdoing in his personal financial affairs. Carter and Lance met private- ly Monday. White HousQ pres1 secretary Jody Powell said he had no information on what was discussed or who requested the session. Powell aald if Carter has.made a deciaion on whether to ketp Lance as budget director "I'm certainly not aware or lt." Mesa Shooting Victim Said Still Critical A Costa Mesa auto repair shop owner, allegedly shot twice in lhe chest Saturday by an oCC-duly Hawthorne police office\" after t~ two men ar1ued, remaned In crtUcal condition t.oaay at Coeta Mesa Memorial Hospital. Police believe the argument started when officer Michael Moran, 30, drove over a freshly cleaned floor of the A&A Garaie, 2037 Harbor Boulevard, an1erin1 34.year-old Jon Allan McClure of Santa Ana. . McClure alle1edly charaed the off.duty officer with a Jara• met.al bar and W8!J shot twice in the chest when he Ignored the of. ficer·s commands to halt. Officer Moran was questioned by Costa Mesa police but not held. A report has been filed wilh the Oranae County District. At· torney's office, but offlciala have yet to determine If criminal ChlU'll• wiU a,. broutbt Ualmt Moran. • McClure underwect sursery Saturday nicht. ror removal of two bullets ln hia cheat which were fired from a Gf)rman·mide semi-automatic pistol. He re- maln.a in the hospltalB'1 lntemlve care unit. C<»ta Mesa police are 1eekln1 wltnea1ea to the 1:30 p.m. •hoot· in& ln front of the auto repair shop. Man Murder• Family, SeU BAKERSFIELD CA~) -A Bakersfield man 1hot hl1 wtlt and lraf ant aon to de.th. thtA kllltid hitnaelfi police reported. OftlcQ cal ed to an apU'tment Monday found all three ,'1.oUrna tn a double bed. They wtrt llten- tlfied u GreJOI')' Reno MaunU 21: Terri Dale Man anti IS; ;~ Dominique Mauan~t. tlVe montha. A neighbor aummoned police because the family had not been seen since Saturday ni&bl. Asian '. ' Refugees: Arrive SAN FRANCISCO CAP>-Tbe tlrat lt'OUP of refa1... from Southeast Asla II arrlvJnc toda, tn the United State. under a new Cart.er administration program. The M adulta ud six cbUdreJ:t fro,n VletnllQ, Laot . and Cam· bodJa are tho Rnt of 15,000 In· dochlne.. r1fu1M1 being al· low.ct into t.he country under speelal Juatlce Department authortaatlo.n. The Ntugoea .,. scheduled to arrtw at San Francllco lnlema· tJonal Airport. From there, most will catcb flights t.o new homes with volun· tary lpoDIOl'l la dti• acrpu the country, David llcbert, district director ot the U.S. Immigration and N1turall1aUon Service, said. A IQ\all Sl'OUP Is lo remain in the San Frarielsco Bay area. U.S. Atty. Gen. Griffin Bell authorized the program to adinil th~ refugees, effective Aug. 11 aa1d Ilchert. • The move followed a U.S. State Department report this summer that aatd some 80,000 people were crowded Into refugee camps 1n Thailand, he said . .. For humanit.arian reasont," the refu1eea are being allowed to come to lhe U.S., Ilchert said. About 7,000 incoming refugees are so·called "boat case1," persons who fled their homeland by sea and survived a hand.to. mouth existence aboard their boats wbUe aw•iUn11poDIOrlhip abroad, Ilchert said. The remaining 8,000 will come from the Thai camps, be said. The refu1eea wlll meet sponsors arran1ed by aeveral aervtce or1anisatiOlll, Including lbe U.S. Cat.bollc Conference, the International Rescue Commit· tee and the Churc h World Servlce. For thON wbo'havt come here, lbero is a modicum of comfort and security, but their lo1ai status 11 1omewbat unatable, llchertaaid. Technl.call,Y. \be nfu1ee1 are bein1 ''J>al'Ol~" into tbe country on an lndeflnlte basla, which means they aren't eligible for citizenship unlesa lbey apply for a chan&e or status. It ls expected that it will take several months before all 15,000 refueees reaob lb.ii country. ' Vandals Paint· Irvine Teen Center Walla Vandal• 1plubtd black and whl~ paint over the lntertor walls of a new teen cent. under eon· 1tructlon at Irvine'• Hertta1e P=l WalnutAve.,Mond81. Jtoe=IMr ao, a Ruue Corp. lite IU tend• Hid dam5tot.b1 .. tmt Rtdcedar pa.no m~ amount to ....,i thOUI dolS.n. · "Thu nalb' co•INll lt jp 1ood." IM1ald. Koew 11Jd UM eu!Jmta a1ao tore CNt eetllft1 p,anell hom '11 elevator, and Ht th"• to a Pil• ot papw C'UPL Tbtl ft.re tallld it> tpread. Tb• vandal• apparently ~their°'"' Paint. leavtllg bebbid two plat CPI. Kocberqld footprintl Wt in the apilltd palbt werool aduJtalle. , Police laid tbe IUIDNta ._,.e into the uncompleted clubhouse by kicking a covering board from a window frame. Orange Coast EDITION VOL. 70. NO. 263, 3 SECTIONS, 21 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS j Even the Hardened Jtlourn '.Jane Boe' : ClUCAGO CAP > -Hotp tal au.end nu lovlnsly called her Jane ·and Wei>t whn cbe died. Hundred.I of par nta called or visited in the bopie lb.al th J.itelly, blonde Jane Doe mltbt. be their mlsslng •41u,O.ter. : '!'be tttnaru. found beaten unconscloua lD a forest preserve ~t. s. dtfld nown but not. aJone U'.SUUECl'ION HOSPITAL aECEIVED ~telephone calls from parents in a dozen states. The suburban Schiller Parlll police "'"'°investigated the case estimated they received 1,000 calls from parents. Pictures of the firl in bel' hospital bed appeared in newspapers and on television. More than 200 people visited her. She was a pitiful sJiht. Both eyes were blackened and there was an ugly bruise on the slde ol her head. The freckle.faced mystery girl, believed to be 15lo18 years old, died Sunday, never regalnin& consciousness. A memorial service was held In the hospital chapel Monday, and more than l:SO attended, most of them whlte·unilormed hospital workers who fought for her llfe. clues. Some parents or relaUves who called thOuabt they ml1ht be on the right. trail and took a rlane to see her. They looked and left weeping, or went to the chape to say a prayer ror her. "The 1lrl had a remarkable effed on thote wbo worked with her," he said. "Even our hardened nurses in intensive care sobbed when she died, every one of them.•• Jane Doe wlU rest in Cook County mor1ue for at lea.st 28 days. Possibly she will be identified. U not, the hospital spokesman said she "will be given a dl.gnified burial." He said a funeral home will ••1 HAD A CALL FROM A MOTHER in Pennsylvania yesterday provide services without charge. Hospital employes are st.art.inl a who had not heard from her daughter for a year," a hospital Cundforagravesiteandmarker. spokesman said. "Like all the rest she asked about identifyin& <See JANE DOE MOURNED, Pale AU ~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Chula Son Held 3Holtlup Suspects Arrested Suspect • in Cocaine Smuggling · Steven Loyd Chula, the 27· year·old son of attorney George Chula, surrendved today to Newport Beach p{>lice who were seeking the sometime-Harbor Area resident in connection with an alleged international cocaine s muggling ring. The younger Chula was brought into the Newport Beach police station by his father, a prominent criminal attorney. Detective Sgt. Darryl Youle said the younger Chula, who list· ed the Irvine address where his mother lives, would be arraigned before the U.S. magistrate in Santa Ana on the charges con- talned in a federal grand jury in· dictment hand ed down in Honolulu last week. Youle said be expected Chula, who also goes by the name of Steven Loyd Booth, to be re- leased after posting $10,000 bail. Chula's surrender brings lo ftve the number of local people arrested in connection witn the ring. A total of 11 names were listed on the indictment. Six are being sought by federal agents in Hawail. • According to federal Drug En· forcement Administration of· <irials the ring, which has been the subject or a three·year in· vesligatlon spearheaded by Newport Beach police, is responsible for bringing into the U.S. nearly f7 million worth of the Ulicit drug from Peru. Still in custody are Joe and Sergio AvUa. owners of the El Rancbito restaurants In Newport Beach and Costa Mesa. Also taken Into custody in the sweep that began last Thursday were J oy Marlene Chaban, 26, of El Toro, and Stephen Granat, 26. of Newport Beach. Granat re- mains in custody, while Miss Chaban was released. Slwoting Victim Critical ·~--... ,.,,..,.shop " owDflr ~ 8~ shot twlce ln the chtlt ~ by an off-duty H& .. Dl'llC£ ..... llfftaer aftet the two men afned. 111mlllaed in critical ecadition toc1a1 at COlta Mesa Memorial Hospital. ~,. .............. SCIENCE FICTION GIVEN AN INJECTION OF SCENCE Gregory Benford Steers CIHr of 'Thud, Blunder' LB Autlwr lnjecta Scienee .... By ST,EVE MITCHELL Ola.Oatl'r ~ ... Slaff You won't find a Darth Vader c:haracter strangling Alderaan rebels in any of Gregory Ben· ford's science fiction books. And the UCI physics professor, ,..ho writes science fiction books on the side, says he steers away lrom what he calls "thud and blunder" in bis outer space writing ventures. .. 'Star Wars ' was a fun mov- ie," the bespectacled and bearded scientist said, staring out bis picture window overlook· ing the green slopes of Laguna Beuh. "But it's not a ereat ~ovie. It's good science fiction , and it has had major success, but Coast Weather Police beUeve the argument started wbn officer Michael Moran, 30, drove over a treshly cleaned floor ol the A&A Garaee. 2037 Harbor boulevard, aneering 34·year-old Joo Allan McClure of Santa Ana. McClure alleaedly cbar1ed the off.duly officer with a large metal bar and was shot twice in the chest when be l@ored the of· ficer's commands tolialt. Offtcer Moran was questioned by Costa Mesa police but not held. A report has been filed with the Orange County District At· torney's office, but officials have yet to determine if criminal charges will be brought against Moran. McClure underwent surgery Saturday night for removal of two bulleta in bis chest which .were ft.red from a German· made s~ml-automatlc platol. He re- mains in the bospltals'a intensive careunlt. Costa Mesa poJlce are seeking witneues to the 1:30 p.m . shoot· in~ In front. of the auto repair shop. Woman, 70, Found Dead in Trailer Agne.a Whitehurst, a 10-year- ofd te1ldeot of a tr.Uer part at 1640 Newport Bl..t .• w~s found dead in ber home Monday eve· n1n1. police reported. Officers were called to the scene 'at 10:15 p.m . after a puserby 1aw the woman lying Oll the ftoor of ber traller. An autopsy i1 scheduled to de· termlDe !fM eauae of death. Sheriff's de puties in Dana Point have arrested three youths they suspect or holding up conve· nience markets in Costa Mesa and Lal\Ula Beach Monday night and early this momine. The ~rlo were pulled over shortly after leaving a fast food restaurant in Dana Point when deputies noted they had failed to turn on their headlamps. Deputies allegedly found two handguns and somewhat less ~ than two cases of ~er inside the car. 1tlaoops ••• Despitia the attention to detail one uaually encQuntm at a bank, both the American and CaUfomia Flags at this Bank of America branch in Mission Viejo were upside down Monday. Mked if there w • re.a.on. a bank spokeswoman said no. SomtK>ne '• attention apparently was flagging. Jackie Onassis Due ·$21 Million Payoff ATHENS, Greece <AP) -Jac- queline Onassis has reached a $21 million settlement with her stepdaughter, Christina Onusis, in return for relinquishing any further claim to her husband's estate, sources close to the Onassis family said today. The settlement, about twice what Mrs. Onassis could have ex· pect.ed under terms of the late Aristotle Onassis' will, severs any connection she may have had with Onassis·owned en· t.erprises and brings to an end her $250.000 a yeu allowance, the sources said. Neither Mrs. Onassis, 41, nor her stepdaughter could be reached for comment. The New York Times repurted today that Christina a1reed to the settlement because sbe was eager to cut all ties with her step. mother. She also was advised that Mrs. Onassis would not con· sider anything less than $21 million. the Times said. Sources told The Aasodat.ed Press that Mrs. Onassis beian seeking the settlement shortly after her husband's death ln Paris at age 69inMarch19751 ~ut Christina "simply ignored her. • "Christina relented and 8'reed to give Jackie the generous amount only lf she would qree to sever all her Ues with the Onassis estate," they added. It remalbed unclear whether the $21 million figure was in addi· lion to S8 million Mrs. Onassis re· portedly received from Christina a year ago to relinquish her s hare ln the family·owned yacht, Chrlatina, and Scorpios Island In the Ionian Sea, where Onassis ls buried. Althoogh initial reports after Onassis' death were that he had left bis widow some $200 million, it was revealed when the will was made public In June 1975 that be left her only $100,000 a year from tax.free bonds and $100,000 a year from other income fbr berself and $50,000 tor her cbUdren. (8ee$UMILLION,PaieA2) SYMBOL UYES JN MYSrERY Elvis Presley ••was the perfect American symbol, ftm· damebtally .a myst.er,y, and tbe idea w.. be-would outlive us alJ, ·• wtffes Greil Marcus of Rollln1 Stone. 1'hat symbol ii explored today as the Pilot concludes its series or artlcl• on the king of rock. See Page Cl. . Arrested were John F. Shearer, 20, and Douglas E Onken, 19, both of 24712 Cordova in Dana Point. and a 17·year old Redlands youth. Laguna Beach police drove a clerk from the Tic Toe Market to Dana Point to ldent.ify the trio afterthe2a.m. arrests. The clerk, who was working at 1 the convenience mar~el at Glenneyre and Thalia Streets, said be was approaebed b1 med ~ wielding a small caliber handgun at about 1 WI DlOl'llinC· The men fled wU..b about ao fl'om t.be UU and • case of • • Jfkllillot;>beer. Laeuna Beach poll~ in· - vesttpt« GerTJ Bl'OOlls aid be ~1U1a• .. tbNe men were also -~ lit ... antted robbery of a U Tote JI( Market at 1tlb Street and Pomona Avenue in Costa Mesa earlier In the evening. .. 1be suspects ln that robbery got away with soine money and a case ol Mlchelob," Brooks said. He said that when sheriff's deputies pulled the three men overtbis mominJ. tbereweretwo cuesolthebeermsidethecar. "ot course, some of the beer t was mlsslng," Brooks said. Police in Cost.a Mesa s aid the <See AUESTS, Pa•e AZ) Mesa Council Tells Staff 'Slow Down' Alt.bough the Costa Mesa Plan- DinJ _Department bas enough backJoUed work to keep its staff busy for four months city COUD· cltmen want the stai/en to slow down and relax a bit. ... Upon leamiai that planning ataffers have been bumina tbe mJdnight oil and that planniDg comm.issloa meetings have been eoing into the early momlng, councilman Dom Raciti suggest- ed they ease their frantic pace. Councilmen aireed that ex- cessive wor~ could mean a higher percentage of errors on the part ol plannlnl dt!partment • staff and comusionera. The council ~n voted unan· l imoualy Monday · night. recom• mendini shorter planllina eom· ml&slon apndu nd an 11:30 p.m. halttothepubllc meetinp. "I don't think anyone here will t m ind," one planninr staffer noted. , - c-.. .,.. ,OUDdt ..... taullv-e •PPf"O\'•• ..-., to LO ruaae pd)Uom dellsned to pave the ••Y fot UM r.devtiop-ma fl U.dowDIDWD a:na. ftlLI) apprcwaJ b'om I.be c:ounril, mast ol the ch~ wru ehminau comm•rcl•l CUvelop. mtota In favor of .-..ldeth1J w U1bt eommetttal projffb. Ooe ol the ra:me ~ lD· abated by the city involves tbe loc•Uon ol • federally sumldl&ed senior citizens bouslnc project at the ~ut corner ol Park Avenue and Center Streel The ooJy controversy duriq the poorly attended pubJh: bear· mgs centered on the rezonins or parcels on Wells Plaee, cabrillo Street, and Orange and Fullerton Avenues. The council voted 3-1, with Councilman Ed McFarland op- posed and Councilwoman Mary Smallwood absent, to downione the area from heavy to limited· commercial use. This will allow residents in the area to operate small retail shops out of homes. McFarland opposed the move. claiming the shops would be out or place in the residential area. The city council is expected to consider the zoning changes again at its Oct. 3 meeting. If no changes are made, the new ron· ing designations would become law :.>days after that meetin1. The downtown redeveJopment area generally encompasses lots bordered by 19th Street on the north, 17th Street on the south, Pomona A venue on the west and Orange Avenue on the easL .. rw__, Jflesa Fire St•t• Rendering shows how Fire House NO. 3' . will loo.k when completed at 1865 Park A venue. City councilmen Monday night awarded a ~.ooo contract (OJ" construe· ~ ......... __ tion of the station which will replace exist· ing one at 111 Rochester Ave. It should be completed within a year. Lane,e ;tsk_(f~ ~Ba~k Rule Lifted .. rf~ I • ' • '"""( ~ ~ c : t \I I J a WASHINGTON~ (A~f. ~ Seit :'Tarletab, "'8l~cftnil\istrator agr,~menl, which imposed was made simply as a reference Lance aUegedJy told a federal for the comptroller's office in restrictions on flle First National in discussing in a general way banking r~ulator last ~ be AtlaoLa, Ga., descr,bed to BJJ))c of Calhoun, Ga. Lance'was the improvements that had taken "just w~re\i U ~OJl c6Ul4 see,._ 11:tridca on Feb. 23 an Miami, at thetlme <!hairman of the board place atthe bank." y09J' way ~lelJ": Ji# ~eJtric~: . ., ~conv,~a(io)t ,,lt~ Lance or the Calhoun bank. Lane~ also has s1tid that al ~o lions on a Georg a bank that at tOok place shortly before Lance said in his testimony time did he ask Tarleton to lift Lance headed, according to an Lance's itPWht}rp«;nt, was an· that be and Tarleton did discuss the a~reement. 1RS memorandum disclosed this nounce!;l'by Pre.-sadeot Carter. the agreement at a Nov. 22 meet· afternoon. According to Patriarca's ac· ing in Tarleton's office, but on~y Tarleton testified previoui.ly The conversation was l'eported count, u reported by the IRS, in a general way. that he did not rec al' discussing second-hand in ttfe' memo re-Tarleton said Lance told him: Lance told the committee it at all during the conversation leased by the Sena'te-Govemmen-"Jimmy wants mtf to be the Thursda)'.: Carter. then the Prt!sident·elect, tal Affairs CommiUee. The com-head of the OMB (Office or "During the course or t.bal announced Dec. 3 that he '" miltee said it received the som-Management and Budget). and 1 meeting, we briefly mentioned tended to nominate the Georgaa mary today from the Internal want to go into it wi\h a· clear the greaUy improved condition or banker as budget director. Revenue Service of an interview • record so, l just wondered if you the Calhoun First National Bank ..Xarleton, in an affidavit for conducted by IRS investigators could see your way clear to lift the and in that context made passing I RS investigators. said he "dad with Michael M. Patriarca. .an aireementonCalhoun." reference to the agreement not recall Mr. Lance ever dis· attorney in the Office of the Both Lance and Tarleton have which bad been entered into cussing anything" regarding the Comptroller of the Currency denied in testimony before the between the colllplroller's office Calhoun bank after the agree- T he investigators said cqmmit~ that Lance asked the and the Calhoun First National menl was entered into in Patriarca told them Donald L. ban.k:ina·reetllJltor to remove the Bank. Mention of the agreement December 1975. .F...-P .. AJ Co11ncil Action SCI FI .... It In Monday night action, theC0&ta Mesa City Council· FIRE STATION: Awarded a $428,000 contract foe con- struction of Fire Station No. 3at1866 Park Avenue LOAN . Approved a $182 ,000 loan to the city's Redevelopment Agency. REZONE: Approved first readings for 10 city rezone requests for decreased density in the downtown redevelopment area. BAKER S'J'JlE~: Approved undergrQund plaee.merJ\ of utility poles between Randolph Avenue and Corona del Mar Freeway. RECREATION VEJUCLES: Set Oct. io study session. on illegal parking of RVs. WASTEWATER: Endorsed Orange County Water Ols- tricl project lo irrigate city parks and golf courses with wastewater. for the future.·• he explained He wrote the book just after the Pioneer probes were making their way past Jupiter a few years ago. ··when everyone was saying there would~ no manned explorations or Jupiter because ~r It's high radiation." So Benford cannibalized "parts·· from space station de s igns of today for his bool<, tossed m some ideas or his own. and came up with a futuristic station called "TheCan," wtuch houses ·hundreds~ SCl!ieMixts. and!ls pro· • tected from radiation. "I put a. s\\ield of water sur· fOWJdini L~f •• 1p,aoe st~~ to absorb the radl~Uon." Benford said. "Ten meters of water can stop almost anything. plus the water s hie ld has the ad<Sed benefit of providing drinking :water for UttJse lihnard"tbe l;ta- 'UOn, .• ht'S;dd. : TI. ... . . . ·, • ...1 • ·And w~re.dt> Be'hfor6 ·s space s tation residents go tQ.replenish Ba Cl--·L G d .. ,. "" , Lh.arprw.~.tw.t~=? Y · UU -1iar ·. · ;_ ':, i;3i~~~'%ur~~s • ~~ng .... .,. "We know the moons or Jupifer Slashed . Scuffl· ·e.. have ice on them. so we just send In out parties to suck it up," he shrugged. · 'i Just like he says, sci fi is an in- I • • Balboa Bay ClUbseeurity 1 i!Uard Ken Wexler was slashed on the left arm by either a knife 1 or razor today when he surpri11ed · an apparent intruder in :a tJµb , restroom. 1 The attacker escaped, despite , a dragnet by Newport Beach j police wha fanned out across , Mariners Mile and through the I Bayshores subdivision nearby. 1 The police helicopter also Yt'8$ 1 overhead in the search. 1 Wexler, 39, suffered about an 1 eight-inch gash down his Jen 1 arm. He was taken to lll>ac I Memorial Hospl\al where" his 1 condition Is listed as 400<1. 1 According to pre.liminar)l r~- 1 ports, the attack occUl'l°M alfout 110 a.m. when Wexler was -:naking 1 routine checks in the 'est Q>Oms 1 in the garage area near the I B-1boa B~y Club's lobby number 'four. I The guard told poll~ Ile found 1 the mad washin1 bis bands and when he spoke ~ him. the sus-. c DAILY PILOT .,. _ ·e:. -re~-• • -....Jdlectu&L_...,. _ • peel snoved wexler to the floor ·noes Dem~ think a film like and slashed him .• ; · "Star Wars ' will increase Wexler called for belp as his al-popularity in \science riction lacker fled. • .. bQoks? j -! New po rt B t'll c.h police , "Several owners of science fi e· described the susl>ffta$ a black Wm specialty l)ookstores hal.re man, wearing a nowered shirt. told me sales ar! going up in Los He is believed to be about six feet Angeles,.. Ben~rd said. "They t.aq. ml pouads and about ao · say they're sellf'g "Star Wm" years old. ~lers, books ap~ a few real sci •· fi n0vels on the stcte. Body. ~I .. M... an. ;.. ,r~t··· encouraging.·· he said .... after a ~ort. PfUSe. "It shows ... : some ol them C'8 read. doesn 't it .• • I Who Fled Red& ·HesaidthesameboostoccurM ,durinc the hey~y or the "Star • Trek. ' television~eries, "but in Found ~ U S ~ that case, they ust went in tAe ....-• •·. ~ bookstores and ugbt posters," Benford said. VlSALIA <AP)-A bodyfound buried in a shallow 1rave wu-, identified today U 'a man whp- eacaped from Commuollt Czechoslovakia ln "i bomemade tank almost a quattet 'of a e4fn· tu.ryago. ~ ' T~e victim, Vall Wa(b Uhhk, SS, probably • ad been beat.en to deaUl, Tul~ County cor,:mer's olfl« J"!'portild. His body WU dlsCOfel'td ~· 10 after an animal, Pfe>bablt • bear, UMOVeJ'ed the fnve n .. r the entrance to Se<luola NaUonaJ Park in the Sierra Nevada eut ol here. Ob yes, That'S:another ol Ben- ford's favorite sq fi taraets. "The first atason of "Star Trek" was gre-. but that was because the acri~ were written by SF writers. • ' • "It was the Rcond and thi~ sea~__Jh~~ere · written ~Y l!all,,.~KJJ," the outspoken S'Fcrtu.c said. That Gre1oey Benford pads.a mean ph8:H'"· • JACKIE ONASSIS SETTLES FOR $21 Ml(LION Shown, With Stepdaughter Christine Onassis In 1915 NeWport Pioneer Les Isbell, 83, Dies Private funeraJ services are pending today for piof\ee r Newport Beach resident Lester L. "Les" Isbell who died Monday night after a lengthy illness. He was83. Mr. lsbell served 12 year's on the city councn from 1942 to 1954, serving as mayor from 1944 to 1946 and again from 1950 to 1952. , His wife, Helen, f!!Called ~t Housi:ngS~ J • , Goin'g Strolig he was the councal organizer present city hall which was built Fresent city hall which was built in 1948. A resident of Balboa from 1922 to 1970, Mr. Isbell and his wife have Uved In Westcliff since leav- ing the Peninsula. W~ he first came to Newport Beach, Mr. Isbell worked with the Newport Beach Lumber Company. In 1936, he started his own firl'J'l, Newport Builders Sup· ply and actively ran the business until 1970 when he liquidated it to retire. Originally a member of the Santa Ana Elks. Mr. Isbell was one of the rounding members of the Newport Harbor Lod~e, 1767. ln addition to his wife, Mr. Isbell leaves a daughter. Patricia MaUack or Santee; a stepdaughter. Dolores Willit of Santa Barbara; a stepson, ~ald E. Elder of Balboa.11lso a formet Newisort Beac:b' l:oun· cilman, and five 1randchildren. , Fro• Page A J $21 MILLION ~ The bequest was to have be~n paid through a foundation in Lichtenstein, and the bulk of tbe shipping tycoon's estate was i.o JO to his daughter, now 26, and j.o a foundation in memory or bis late son, Alexander, killed In a plane crash in l973 at age 25. Onassis' band-written will, dat- ed Jan. 3. 1974, indicated U\•l Mrs. Onassis signed a document in New York In which she relin- quished all rights to her late husbtild 's estate. · Ho~er. tbe Tlmes-quotes friencta of Christin• Onassis as saying that soon after her father's death, Mrs. Onassis and her brother-in-law, Sen. Edward M . Kennedy, began pressing the heiress to increase the bequest to Mrs. Onassis. Miss Onassis' stiare of her father's estate is estimated at S250 million. FriJmds of Christina Onassis said she opposed her father's marriage in 1968 lo the widow of President Kennedy and was never able to become close to her. The relationship was said to have become even more strained afte.i:. Onaasis' d~lh. .although his daughter made a stale!l'ent to the contrary and denied rePorts that her father planned lo . divorce his wife. Sextupleu Doing Well LEIDEN. The Netherlands CAP) ~ Sex- tuplets born Sunday to a 27-year-old Dutch woman were rePorted doing well today and s howing im· provemenl in respiratory problems. A medical bulletin said the condition of the six in· rants was "very good" and extra oxygen was no longer necessary. The babies -four girls and two boys -were born lo Mrs. Cornella Nijssen. wife of a Dutch steel wortcer. 'l:be couple have no other children, and Mrs. Nijssen bad been receiving hormone treatment for sometime. An autopey showed Uhllt Mt~ ti' been beaten to dtat.h and, a~1• parently was burled a week to JP, \ days before b1s body wu ~, ~ •• .. . r ..... r ... AJ ' :t Pottuve ldutlficatlon· wu ,. made throuah comparboea ol x· rQS and dental reco'*. t . ' ' " CONQUERING HERO RETURNS TO ATLANT1 .. ..,..... Wiii Cup Champ Ted Turner Try It Again? Domeeoming Jt,lanta Cheers Ted T~r ATLANTA <AP J After beat.mg the yacht Australia in the America's Cup races and tangling with the white-flanneled sail- ing set at Newport. R T , Ted Turner says he and Courageous may be back. The 38·year-old Atlanta communications millionaire came home Monday night and lold a crowd of well-wishers he "might like to try it again with the same boat" during the next scheduled America's Cup trials 10 1980 ON IDS WAY TO A 4·0 sweep of the best·of-seven senes against the Australian challenger. Turner·s brash approach to the compet1t1on offended some of the more staid yachting crowd On Monday, Turner conceded there had been ··a little" an1m~1ty between himself and some members of the sa1hng establishment. But he added, "The people m Newport are like the people everywhere else. They got10 fingers and 10 toes.·' TURNER. WHO WAS REFERRED TO as "the mouth" by some Newport detractors. added. "I don't thmk I'm a loudmouth. I don't mean to be a loudmouth. I try to be good, but sometimes it's hard." · Turner. owner of the Alla9ta Br av~ baseball team and the Atlanta I lawks of the National Basketball Association, was welcomed home by a btass band, a city proclamation designating Monday "Ted Turner Day" and banners celebrating the 23rd suc- cessful defense of the 126-year-old yachting cup. ·. Ger01an Crew Wins Tornado Olympics Jorg Spengler or West Germany and his crewman, Rolf Dullenkopf, showed a llktng fo!.J the 20-knot wes terly winds t1f'r Long Beach Harbor Monday and ran away from the other 63 boats in wining the fourth race of the Olympic Tornado class world championship. The German crew got away to . a quick start and led the fleet He's Out /Of Ardor SACRAMENTO CAP > A persistent 27 -year-old law student has been fined S300 for wrihnf( love let ters Waller Wagner. under a contempt-of-court convic· lion involving his relent· less pursuit or a former female cla~smate at McGeorge School of Law. also was placed on two years robation Monday by Municipal Court Judge Edward Garcia. Garcia suspended a jail sentence, ordering Wagner's "full com- pliance" with an order not to attempt to contact Gall Morton. 23, during the pro- bationary period. Miss Morton said Wagner re· peatcdly harassed her with letters, telephone calls and his unexpected presence. SAN DJEGO <AP ,. VOW'S heTe are deci41nc today whether to call for a cover-up on the n•· tion's fint cit.y-•ar>QUoned nl&de •beacb. • More tban lJ0,000 of San DJego'S •.ooo re1lltered voters were expected to vote on the question that ha.a divided re- Hcious leaders and stirred poUUcal debate. A "yes" vote rneana a vole to abolish nude batldA&at 'Black's Beach. The"'\each covers an isolated IOOofoot .-erv• of Hnd and surt below ihe clltt bordertn1 UC San Diep. Thi rule at 8l1ck's Buch amce 1974 ..... been that bathln1 ......... ~ .. 'l'ti8 ae.. Richard Mat.ton of tile Le JoWi :......,.,an amtth .. ., .-~...,.ch called PMbllc· over Ule 18··mtle course. gainine on each of the ~ laps of the dou- b I e Olympic course Their elapsed tune was 1:58:50 despite a short chop that drenched the crews on the trapeze wires. The victory moved Spengler in- to second place on points after the four races, 4.6 points behind Brian Lewis of Australia. The series is scored on the best six ol seven races. Using the throwout after the fourth race, Spengler would be leading Lewis by 3. 7 points. His worst race has been an eighth 1n the opener last Fri· day. Keith Notary of the United Stales, who scored a one-sided win in Sunday's race, finished sixth Monday to drop lo third place in the standings. The strong winds and short chop contributed to several minor breakdowns and one col· lision. The collision was between two U.S. entries. Ted Rebman and Al Lizarrarus. No one was In· jured on either boats. but the Liznrrarus boat was towed back to port in a sinking condition. Today will be a rest day with the competition to resume Wednesda~d continue through Friday. Top 10 finishers, fourth race: 1, Spengler-Dullendorpf, Wes\ Germany; 2, Woods-Burrows. Canada; 3, Lewis -Rock, Australia; -4, Dossett-Koeck. U.S.; 5, Beauchamp·Eddi.r\iton. U.S.: 6, Notary-Gamblin, U.S.; T, Fraser-Stephens, England; 8, Taylor-Hasbro, U.S.; 9, Seaman· Hunlet, U .S .; 101 Douglas- Tim,ns, New Zealana. ly ror rejection ot the ban. term- ini invalid the Old Test.ment story Uiat Adam ate fotbldden fruit and cove.red him•elf in shame. •'What people forget iS that we also bave the New Testament. especially in the Book or Hebrews. where it says thal In Adam all men dlfd and that they live ln Cbrist," said the Jtev. R. Preston Prace of Rancho Bernardo Uta ited MethOdtat Church. Among clernmen speaklng out a1ainat the nude bueb were the Molt Rtv. Leo T. M-*'er, bllhop of the Romu Catholic Oiocai, anct tbe fttv. Robtrt II. Woateratorrt. bleboi» of the JC~ DioeeMOCS.Dleco. .8Gt.b San~ .... _,.n Stet• Sen. I>ennla Carpenter <R·Nowport Beach) said Monday a •urpl~ fn the state treUUJ'Y. • 'th&t may be appro1ch1na $' blJUoo" sb.ouJd be used for proper- ty tax relief. Carpenter called the ac- cumulation of tax mQJiey in Sa~ amento w e proper- l owners C-ally are ddled with ounting tax- e "obscene ·· However, 8-month Tenn Given To Marine By KATHY CLANCY Of tM Dan, P'lltlC Steff A Camp Pendleton Marine whose passenger died after he lost control of his motorcycle at a San Clemente intersection has been sentenced to eight months · • Sixty-five new buses costing in the Orange County Jail. nearly $100,000 e"ch were or- Superior Court Judge H. War· dered Monday by dU'ectors of the ren Knight ordered the jail term Orange County Transit District for Marine William Andrew COCTD). Booher. 23. after the defendant While direct.ors all agreed the pleaded guilty to manslaughter 65 coaches should be ordered, charges they spilt 3-2 in decid!Qg to Booher was arrested Feb. 20 purchase the buses without after his motorcycle crashed wheelchair lifts. near the intersection of Avenida Direct.ors Philip Anthony and Pico and El Camino Real in San William Farris areued unsuc- Clemente cessfully the lifts would help They found Camp Pendleton meet the transportation needs of Martne Allen C. Eide. 22, dead at the count.r's handicapped resi· the scene. Booher was booked on dents. man.slaughter and drunken drlv-But Directors Al Holllnden. ing charges. Robm Young and Ralph Clark Officers said Eid&. whO owned coo(ended many handicapped the machine. died ol massive in-would not be able to reach bus Juries suffered when he was stops apyway and would be bet. hurled from the motorcycle after~rved by OCTD's Dial-a-Uft Booher vainly tried to stop for a program which offers door-to· ~ light. destination bus service in lift equit>ped vans. Three Nixed In Fee Flap LA JOLLA (AP) -tJC San Dle&o says tt won't :1110 up three students who wlthheld·a portion of their r91i.d-at.ica fee beca.µse it coveia !fiumncei..alortict\s Har.old Temm.e.r. aia\atant vice Farria noted that Dial-a-Lift service requlres a reservation 24 hours ahead or time. "And that , ladies and gentlemen, ia discrimination." he declared. Hollinden said even if OCI'D's whole bus fleet canied lifts, "you stiU ebu&. out to pereent of the handicapped. They are not able to eet to the stol)I," ·be said. ''Tbet ..,.. not alilt t6 set where llle)t are goiblf," Clark argu~~in addition. that operating wheelchair Uf\S on OCTD routes would slow the system and require massive schedule changes. Greg Winterbottom, a han· dicapped Vllla Park resident and aide to SupeTvisor Laurence Schmit, said he favored an ex- panded Dial·a-Lirt program over equipping coaches with lifts. He said most bus stops are al least• quarter mile from homes. and many handicapped would be unable lO travel that distance by wheelchair, particularly in rainy or hot weather. "For me to 10 out in the rain, I would n.asi," he said, "&n<t there would be no way to get where I was going once I rusted on .the bus." Anthony. however . said purchasing the 65 lift-equipped buses would mark •'the first step in what will be a long journey to provide better service for everyone." 1 The 65 buses, with a $6.5 million price tag, wlll not be de· Ii vered for a year. Adding wheelchair lifts would have raised the price tag by about $500,000 and delayed de· livery for another rour rnonU\s. The new btlae., to be built by the F1exible Company, will be fln~ed with :Jtate and fedual , Jundt. "Those ·~ Un value> have given local governments the ability t.o increase reve11ue withollt lncreasln1 taxes,•· he ~dded. "An<Y ' Carpenter continued, ''loca1 government expenditures have gone up 300 percent in the pastei&ht years." he pointed out that legislation aimed at putting a lid on local spending by putt.in1 a limit on lax rat~ (smG) has failed ~ause o( skyrocketing inflatiop. "In five years not once has an agency had lo 10 lO the voters <as required by SB90) for approval of a tax rate increase, .. Carpenter s aid. "And during those five years they've (local governmen(s > recei~ed ri c hes they've never dreamed of," he con- tinued The stale senate·s mmonty caucus leader said the property tax dilemma is forcing tum to · ··take a closer look al the CHoward l Jarvis proposal."' J.ar\lis has s uggested that Umits be put on property taxes al one perce~t of fair market value. <.:eFpenter also said he has been attracted by Orange County Assessor Bradley Jacobs' pro- posal, a proposal that would&:ive graduated exemptions to homeowners. ''I think Jacobs' dynarruc ex· emption plan is an intelligent ap- proach to the problem," Carpenter sa.id "It does not create a new bureaucracy and 1s not a .mass ive new program ,·· Carpenter said. Turning to another subject. Carpenter sa.id he does not regret his recent vote against the i.o· called peripheral canal measure. "I knew I'd come down here and some people would criticize me for voting no on the peripheral canal blll. That's un· derst.andable," Carpenter said. But he pointed out that the blll. was rushed through the· Senate Finance Committee Thursday as a compromise measure hastily put together in the Legislature's closing hours. He wint.ed out lhal backers of the WI admitted they weren't quite sure of its consequences aod, uncle!' t.bole condlUons. be couldn'lsupport the leiislation. chanc•llpr for academic ~~__;_;..;.._~~-,-.....;.......;;....__;;.;;..;;;...=....::;~~_;..;;;:.::..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ services, said the students must pay the fuU $120 registration fee which tbeyi-efuse to do. Althou1h they paid $112 in education and S\lpport fees, they put the $120 registraUon fee in a trust account because the uni· versity refUJed to guarantee that none of 1t w1J1 r>e used. even Indirectly. to pay for abortions. Bus Terminal Study Slated A study aimed at pinpointing the location of a future $1. 7 million Huntington Beach bus terminal was approved Monday by directors of lbe Orange Coun- ty Transit District ( OCTD >. The study, which will be done by a consuJt.ant to be selected later. wilt involve lhe help of both OCTD and Huntin&lon Beach of· fi cials ll will be nnanced with $49,800 in federal funds and $6,000 in OCTDfunds. The terminal ls tQ be localed near Beach Boulevard and the San Diego fre4:way in tbe vicinity of Huntington Center Fawt UDlillely SACRAMENTO ..(~P> - Evidence strongly suft*t.s no active earthquake rauJ exists at the Sile Of the CODtTOVerslal Auburn Darn, federal geologists said lo<lay. J . • FOii Oassics-Palm Beach Vested Suits In Stripes And Plaids. , . AYAIT, LVD.SU1 U,... tM fam•d aportt•rlt•r or ,.•teryear, Grantland JU~. Who ooce t.cl. "WltD...U., a )'aclllraceb aboutu urW..,aa \Ht~ ll'UI frow ·" 1f lb.at 1 '°· t.M world bu Just witnesaed the moat a~ular 1rau-srower ot au Ume back ott Rhode Wand for what la termed by yachllnl people H 1lobal aupremacy in the saUlng dodte Tlus was called the America's Cup, a competition of big wind· driven yachts known aa 12· meters You have to win four out ol seven races to become yacbl· ing's king of the universe. High brass of the New York Yacht Club select a defender to represent the United States and also pick the best challenger from anywhere else on the seven seas or earth WE HA VE JVST seen the con· duslon or the 23rd running of the America's Cup epic It was a boat called Courageous, skip· pered by Ted Turner for the U.S. against the 12-meter Australia. for the country or the same 11ame. skippered by Noel Robins. Now even as a non-yachting person, you have to conclude that this malchup clearly met Grantland Rice's specifications for grass-growing. Tl must have been a yawner.-Better than sleeping pills. They should have mailed It in. Turner and his Courageous crew whipped the Aussies four straight races to retain the America's Cup for the United States. Therein as a non-sailor, you re- mind yourself that the cup has never left the United States. Since the Year of Our Lord 1851, they have now run this con- test 23 times and the foreign challengers have come up losers 23times. THUS YOU HAVE the specta- c 1 e or sailin g men from elsewhere who spend millions of dollars designing a boat that doesn't even have a kitchen, as- sembling crews, running test trials and tranporting everything to Newport, Rhode Island. Even when they 11et bere, they don't even know If they'll get to race against the American de- fender. Fl.nrt they have to beat out all the other foreign entries who want to be the challenger. Il's lilce you put together a pro- fessional football team and then the league says no, you don't gel to play. So the challenger s pends millions just ror his chance to come over here and get whipped. You'd think they'd look harder at the odds. Zero out of 23. Now real· ly. would that encourage you? BUT THEY DO IT. They must do it. 1l becomes an obsession that you might just be the first boating person to dislodge the old cup from the New York Yacht Club. Don't try lo apply logic or l'eason to it. Some guys go out to scale unclimbed mountain peaks. Others want to be the first to have a barbecue at the North Pole. SWl others ride rocket& to the moon, then stomp aroundaUrrinedust. As for me, I llke to collect old mayonnaise jars. l'ktor Wins Kiss Liberal Rep. Edward Koch ex changes a kiss with cam· paign chairperson Bess Myerson after winning Mon- da v 's New York City Democratic party mayoral primary. He took about 55 percent of the vote to defeat Mario Cuomo New York ·s secretary of state. and virtually assur~ his election as mayor. Cuomo remains on the November ballot as the Liberal party candate. -Ex-agent Claims msassination Pio NEW YORK <AP> ->. tonncr. undercover CIA operaUv• cl&lni.I sbe accompanied lAe Harvey Oswald and an "uaualnatlon aq~ad .. to Dallu a few days before Prelkteot Jtenn~ was killed. the New York Dally News reported today. 'the Dally News Hlcl that Martha Lorena told the newapeper that she and others with her on the trip to Dallas were members ot Operation 40t a lfJCret l\lel'rilla 1roup formed DY the CIA In lJIO for the Cuban In· vu\oftottbe Bay of Plt•· TOE STATEMENTS Ms. Lorenz made to the neW1paper were forwarded to the House As- sassinations Committee. Tbe newspaper said Robert. Blakey, · the committee'• eblef eounsel, has assigned an invesU1ator to intervlewber. Blakey could not .be reached for comment MOQday night. According to the Dally News. Ms. Lorenz claimed the group' tbat went to Dallu planned to kill Kennedy, whom they blamed for the failure of the Bay of Pigs invasion, and Cuban President Fidel Castro. SHE SAID SHE met Oswald when be called at an Operation 40 "safehouae" in Miami in 1963. Kennedy was killed In Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963. The Warren Com· mission has said that Its findings concluded that Oswald, later also killed. asaasaioated Kennedy on his own. lb. IAlrlm, accQridlnf to the Dall,y News, wut by car ~ Dalla tr0m 11.laml with Onald; Prank Stursll. a CIA C!C1atratt asent and ooe ot tbe ftve mea wbo broke into the l>emocre1ic National Com~ oftleoes lo tbe Watersate complex ftve years qo; Cuban exile leaders Orlando BOlscb and Pedro Dlu Lam; and two other C11b&n men -boee namee lbe did not lmoW. Shi dalmed abe ... ·-to Mlaml two dan before ~ nedy ... kUled. lk»ch la DOW a Venezuelan J>ri9clD Jn eoanebC tlon with an exploslOil and ~ otaCobanJedlnerleat,.ar. : Stuqla la quoted b7 the D~ News as 1QtQ. ''To tbe best ti; my lmowled10. I never m• Olwald... ~ Two Receive Letters From 'Sam' Suspect NEW YORK (AP) -David Berltowtt1, accused of beinf the .«- caliber killer called "Son ol Sam," has written two letters recently from bis hospital jail cell: one to the New York Post and one to the daughter of the man Berkowlti allegedly called "Sam." Wheat Carr, daughter or Sam Carr, said she received the letter at her home in Yonkers, a suburb of New York, more "than a week ago. She s aid it was written on plain unllned white paper and re- sembled the style of other letters her family received before Berkowitz, a neighbor, was ar· rested. MISS CARR, A dispatcher for the Yonkers Police Department, said she turned the letter over to police and would not comment on its contents. The other Berkowitz letter was published Monday by the New York P06t. ln it, Berkowitz said that when be killed six young persons over a one-year period. ··r really saved many lives. You will understand later." He referred to Sam Carr and Craig Glassman, a nother Yonkers neighbor, as "demons." CHIEF OF DETECTIVES John Keenan said he had no doubt the letter to the Post w• from Berkowitz. . Berkowitz is undergoing ps ychiatric examination at Kings County Hospital lo Brooklyn. King Widow Nixes Battle Over Attacks CONCORD. N.H. <AP> An aide to Corella King, widow or civil rights.leader Martin Luther King Jr., says she won't help publicize attacks by New Hampshire Gov . Meldrim Thomson on her late husband. Mrs. King has canceled an an- nounced trip to New Hampshire next week, where she was ex- pected to·counter verbal attacks by Thomson on both her late husband and United Nations Am· bassador Andrew Young. GIVE YOUR APPLIANCES THE AFTERNOON OFF. Black leaders bad announced last week th"at Mrs. King said sbe would come because or Thomson's remarks linking King and Young with Communist causes. George Clements, an aide to Mrs. King, said Monday, "It wouldn't be appropriate for a na- tional figure like Mrs. King to get into a debate with Gov. Thomson -thus giving his views national publicity." Doily Pilot D•<iwy ls~ll--~ Monday·Friday II you db not nave your pappr by 5 30 p m CAii before I p m and your copy ¥1111 bo del1~od Satll!'day and Sunday II YoU do not receive your copy by 8 a.m . call belore 10 am and YOur cooy will be dohvered Clrul ..... T ..... CRll Most Orange County Areas MJ-4Ut North..,est Hunllngton BNcn and Westm1M'4r .•••••. 5*1JJt San Clemente. Caolstrano Beacn. San Juan CaplSlrano. DW\8 Point. South L11g11na. Laguna N1guel •...•..•• 4t._.... 1 Northern State Get s Little Rain Relief Te•per•t_... AlbV'.,_ Atle<1le llolw 'llflton ll'OWftlVllle t11t111o Chlce90 Cln<l-tl Cl.,,.._ Oel·Flwtl\ 0.llWr o.trol1 --t400IOIW1t ~ .. Ke11 .. 0ty usv-.. \.ltt .. "9cll M !Mftl MllWlllllw ~~ NewOrMMa ..... v...- o.te.CIW ~ . ~ P!Vt ........ llllleefll• ~ ~ tt.LAlll• s.ltUlll Siii~ ....... ••l•t • Ml ... 11'\'C . .., " ... as ...... •• ., 1S 7) .s ·1• ,, St ., sr T7 " .!» ., w " . ?t ... ~ 71 ... 11 " n ..... 11 SI .... M SI " " ... 61 ,, ., " .. , .. " ... .. " .. llD 61 • " ,, .. n" ·• ,., n 19 ..•• 61 • .It tJ ,, "' . .. .. " ..... '6 a .M tt n Most of the electricity y.re generate is needed by factories farms and offices-so people can make a living. The greatest demand for this electricity is dur- ing the day. You need electricity to run appliances in your home, too. And the greatest demand for this eledridty 1s also duriJ1¥ the day. • Here's the problem: Because of the growmg demand for elecqicity durjng the day, we'll have to build more power plants. Aril building power plants today ia more expensive. That drives up the cost of eJectridtY to eveiybodf •. Now there's~ we an can do to help: Spreacj the use of el~more-evenly around the ~ F.di80n is wcninl ... indu8trial CU5' **'to hielp ~·til""' to ebift IOme of their electric use to the evening hours. But most people prefer to work during the day1 so there's only so much mdustry can do without drastic rescheduling of work shifts. It's afte(IlOOJl use of electricity that's the biggest ~lem. So you can help by doing some of your daily routine at night or in the morning. Perhaps you can wash and dry your clothes at night Use your dish- washer at nJglit. Iron in the evening. Bake in the morajng. ' It means dtanging your routine ~ -a bit.But If we do use eleclricity ::,i wisely, it will help to hdd down the cost in the future. Southern c.Jllomla Edl4on Remember to camene energy and wale& ... ' . .. ... . . " i . \ Tunaing It On DA.IL V PILOT .45 . PolBnski· Rell/it SANTA MONICA <AP> -She WMU n4Jex• ually precoc ous. He wu u and a ramoua movie director But the tlrl'a buxom buUd and aophlaUcaUon off•td no t1tcu1t ror Roman P\llanl&l '1crime111y1 tbe Judie who ordered hlm to prison for test.I. ' Su)>trlor Court Judie Laurence J. Rlttenband, wbo earlier accepted Polanski'• sullty plea to UD· lawful a xu&l lnt.trerou•• With • minor, aevere.ly crlUclied tho director'• conduct Moaday. "Altbou•b the vlcUm wu not an inexperienced end unsopb!atlcated younc tlrl," saJd the judge, ''thla ract wu not a Ucense to the defendJDt, a man of the world tn hta 40a, to enaaae tn an act of un· lawful aexual lnlercoune with het, however sub· mlaalve or unlnhiblted she ml&ht have been." 11IE JUDGE, who allowed Polan.ski three months to finish a movie, poetponed sentencing an· tiJ the director under1oe1 90 days of dlapostlc tests while incarcerated at Chino State Priaoo. The judge's comments came after be read a probation report which revealed Polanaki'.s penonal recollections of the sexual encounter for the first time. Polaillki Hid be drov .. U\e 1lrl to a photo )Ocattoft. Tbe &iM>tber was called. but. U.. 1irl •l.aleli on. ad -.hen the 1un faded. he took her to tb• bome of he .-Id, iM eventually took ~of a Qu~alude #lt.h actor Jack Nlcholson, ,vbo was out ol town. him. .. We talked about dnJo," Polanski sald ol tbell "f toolC some pictures. There was nothinl by • to the houSe, "and sbe said sbe had used now on the Uaht meter. l jumped m the p001 and Qu'81udef, which she stole from her mother. Sht awam. I med ber into tbe pool. Sbe said abe bad talked about sex. and said that she first bad 10 asthma .•• t told her to rest in tbe bedroom;• with the kid down the street and later her Polansldsald. boyfriend." "l went to the bedroom,'' he aid. ''She never Elsewhere in the report, the atrl reveals she objee~. • • Tb• whole tb1D& waa very spoa.- first had sex althe age of 8. taneous. It was not pl.uect:• "We went to the houae," Polanski continued. ''The girl was thirsty·'' THE GIRL'S VERSION of the incident. also de. tailed, dlfrerecl only on minor Items. She said they BE REMEMBERED giving_ her champaane. ..1:--~---..1-...1.. trot "'-d ......... int·-·-·· thenjoiningherin a healed,out.doot'Jacuzzi. ,n, .. .;_ ua..'\.U con Pwo ........ ...""'"'"""• "She took her blouse off, and I took her pie· Polansklaalditwudi.scussedmthecar. lure." Polanski saJd. "It was dusky. I aald we Pot~·s admitted crime carries a penalty of should call her n\other." one-to-50 years tn prison. --~~~--------------~~~----__;,----------~--------~~ Oroville Teacher Murdered So don't light tti. POLANSKI, director of such films as "Chinatown" and ''Rosemary's Baby" told of meeting the girl's mother, an actreas, last winter. He beard of her 13·year-old daughter and asked if OROVILLE CAP> - she could model for fashloo magazine photos. The An autopsy was being mot.her "was excited" at the prospect. be said. performed today on tbe "I came to photograph her in the late after· bludgeoned body or a noon," Polanski, now -«,~recalled of the first en· 3 o. y <?a r . o 1 d sch o o 1 counter Feb. 20. ·teacher, found in her <:411 w. lin.t. take a hrst National' Home Improvement Loan. 11111t!llmllel,,; .ind go directly 10 VOW contractor' Consider lhe ~.-zeany longer. VI.sit the branch manager or loan officer at the F1r5l Actress Farrah Fawcett·~l ajors d isplays "The F awcett.'' a tiny fauret·shaped pen· dant which was named after her. ·'The Fawcett" was introduced Monday evening at a special media preview in Beverly llills. The actress' engraved s ignatur;e <ip- pcars on the pendant . ..... She took off her blouse. There was no em· apartment where her barrassment. . .Topless photograph is accep· 2·year·old daughter was table in Europe. I didn't realize It was objectionable tied up but unharmed. here. The mothe r was exceedingly cordial. · . " They identified the vie· ON THEIR SECOND photo date March 10, tim Monday as Susan June Wiley, who lived alone in the apartment in Decree Inked Palermo, south of here. poss1b1l11fes: A new f.im1ly room. Central cm condlhomng A ~wimmmg pool A hullt in k1tch11n Al· mo,t .inv home Im rrovement or redecorating ea you can think of c.dll be yovrs With a low cost Home lmpro11ement L Ocln Imm the First National Bank of Orange Counry. MAIN OFFICE Nallonal branch rwar· ycu. Well give vou some room to breathe1 l~~~al Banlc~ ,.. .. ,,....,, ............... ,.,,,..,. Me-ol F.O IC. Reversal of Rape Conviction Upheld LOS ANGELES <AP I The state Supreme Court has left standing a re· versaJ or a rape conv1ct1on in which a judge's comments about female hitchhikers ignited a furious uproar among women's groups Atty. Gen. Evelle J Younger had asked the court to rehear the case and uphold the conv1ct1on of Clifford Alan Hunt. But the high court la.st week re fused to grant a hearing, with only Justice Frank K. Richardson dissent· 111g. f The stale Court of Appeal bad re· versed the .convictJon on grounds of faulty jury inst.ruction. [ __ sr._~_TE_) In sentencing John Frank Quinn, 33, on Monday, U. S. District Court Judge Albert L. Stephens said the ''public in· terest demands a certain severity when a public official betrays his trust." Wcto.,,t•••••Jt OAKLAND CAP> -Thedefensehas scoreq a victory in a pretrial bearing for three young men acj:used r#. kid· naping 26 children and their acbool bus driver. SACRAMENTO (AP J -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. has issued a decree establishing a California office of the Southwest Border Stales Com· mission. Her father discovered the body after she didn't answer his telephone call. Officers s aid a rolling pin was found on the floor next to the body. At the Plaza in downtown Orange COSTA MESA: Mesa Verde & Adams IRVJNE: University Dr. & Michelson Dr. LAGUNA HILLS: Alicia Parkway & San Diego Freeway I 'Rau.SoaluNert• Superior Court Judie Leo. Deeean ruled Monday that no testimony will be allowed regarding the mental Im· pact of the lddnaping on the 27 ~IC· • ! By The Associated Presa Clear sides returned to most or Northern California today after a three·day storm dampened the drought-dried region with periodical· ly heavy rains. The most intense rain from what the NaUooal Weather Service called ·'the flrst sl1nificaot weather front of the sea19D" fell in California's r~. north. Several coast and mountam points recorded more than two inches or rain on Monday. Ontg Serat~e Set LOS ANGELES CAP) -A former U.S. Customs chemist who worked in the agency 's Terminal Island laboratory has been sentenced to four years in prison on charges of possess· ing four pounds of cocalne stolen from the lab. Urns. . Frederick Woods, Jam es Schoen· feld and Richard Schoenfeld pleaded guilty last July 25 to lddnapinc for ransom in the July is. 1976. abduc- tiom in Chowchilla. Gaw s~ Gtllk• LOS ANGELES <AP> -Four persons facing trial on felony cbareea stemming from their participation ln a homosexual "slave auction" have pleaded guilty to misdemeanor charges. The four entering pleas Monday were among 40 persOM arrested April 10, 1976, when teams of police officers broke up the event at the Mark IV Health Club. Vacation in San Francisco, San Jose & Oakland with a Sunjet Tour. Arrange It oil with just one coll. Complete Sunjet Tou~ priced from only $28.95; three days. two nights (per person. double occupancy, not Including airfare). Moneysavtno dtseountfores for families, groups and military. It's the easy way to vacation In the Bay Area ••• because we're with you all the way. ~ tend me your new full color "'Boy Ale<;J EO$'f SunJet Tours bfochUf9. Thia r1mlly-llre Frlold1lre IHlures • perm1nent pr-. c:yei• end timed dryiftG. s .... moneydUMg.,. ..... $$SAYE$$ . a.EARANaD PRICEDI! t•OF .THE UilE Frloldall'O '*f modtt llH any fHfure you w.nt In 1 dryer. come In fOr e full deitlOOltl idon of "' the CXJtNelllenoe money c:an buY • Ollt' '°"' Summer o-~ pnca Thi• aiandard capacity model feature• 140 mlnu1e1 ot ll•ed temperature drylno. renlO\Mble Ul>"fron1 titter. 1nd porcelain/enamel drum. HOWOHLY · SJ.,95 BSOR comROL SAVE •WI ·oe....,~lftlhle ..,,_ CIPdVOrtw""" opflonal """" ~. Potye1tef Knit &litre 'Cet'l 8electlon. BUY NOW & SAVEii! S10RE HOURS: 9-9 DAILY 9-6 SATURDAY. • . I 1 1 • Board Should Set · Noise Study Rules ~County a Airport COmmtttlon made• rN&Onable auggllUOn lat week whln It uld the Board of SupetvllOrt &houfd Mt standatda fM nolM ttudlea at El Toro Marine Corpa AJr Station. 1 Not• studies at El Toro become lmportant when a ~ bUlldet wants to develop houtlng In treu tald to be Impacted by &rport no1 ... If ad&Yeloper can prove a atte 11. In fact. not Impacted by 1et noise, clearanoe can be obtained to go ahead with the residential develapment. The Airport Commltek>n Mld eupervlsora should aet standards for consultants who might be hired to make noise studies for developers. SUpervlSOf"S also stl<>utd outline procedures to be used when the county proc""9 completed noise studies and lay down requirements for a county agency to monitor the work as It 1s being done, the commission said. Establishment of such ground rules on noise study 1 should be helpful to thoee aeeking exemptions from the residential building ban in what are said to be noise-Impacted areas. While the commission's suggestions have merit, it should be noted that once again It has strayed Into an airport matter beyond its jurisdiction. The commission's charge is to be concerned with all matters pertaining to county-owned or operated airports. And El Toro Marine Corps Air Station, in case the commission didn't notice, IS neither county-owned norcou.nty-operated. " · Galloping Governor The press corps up in Sacramento has taken to referring to Gov. Brown as the Galloping Guru. They're irked because the governor has become so adept at evading the news people who are assigned to cover the Legislature. He hasn't had a formal press conference with the state capital reporters since February. The best they can do, they complain, is try to catch up with him in the hallways in between his comings and goings. It's not that he's adverse to publicity. His appearances around the state generate lots of local newspaper and television coverage -at times and places of his choosing, and on sub1ects of his choosing. But this is very different from facing up to sessions of tough, informed questioning by the group of news people who are the most thoroughly familiar with the operatrons of his administration and the Legislature. · For example, they would like to have been able to give the public his views during debates on the death penalty, tax relief, school financing and other difficult subjects. Perhaps understandably, Brown seems to prefer choosing his own •topics for discussion -hardly possible at a formal press conference. It's a neat way of avoiding hard. scrutiny. Unlike the White House press corps. reporters assigned to Sacramento usually don't have the privilege of traveling with the governor. And since It's unlikely he'll change his ways, they'll probably have to make do with ~haslng him around the hallways of the capitol-when he drops by. A Basic Right The third attempt to give Californians a right-to-privacy law has met with success in Sacramento. Two previous bills passed by the Legislature were vetoed by Gov. Brown, who declared their implementation would be too costly. Now he has signed a measure introduced by Sens. David A. Roberti (D-Los Angeles), and Oennla Carpenter (R~Newport Beach) and Assemblyman Vic Fazio (~acramento). lhe new bill. modelid8ffiir pnvKey feglslatlOrJ passed by Congress In 1974, gives citizens the right to examine-and If necessary correct-all records kept on them by the state, ex- ceptfor some law enforcement data. It also strictly limits the exchange of personal Information by state agencies. In this computerized age, such a law is 8SlMtntlal. The indiscriminate collection and exchange of pel'$0nal information, much of which may be outdated or Inaccurate, has become an Increasing hazard to the hapless citizen who u~ to now has had no idea of what the government knows, or th mks It knows, about him. And the right "to be let alone" is still, as U.S. Supreme Court Justice Louis 0 . Brandeis said in 1928, "the right most valued by clvlllzed men." • Opinions e>epressed In the spaGe above are those of the Dally Piiot. Othef' views e•pressed on this p11ge are thOse of their authOrs and artists. Reeder comment ls Invited. Boyd/Suici<M BJLM.BOYD Medical re11earcbers corr. • lend that few women who cut their wrlsta in seemlng at· • tempts at suicide really mean to kill themselves. Three fourths of them reveal lo sub- sequent mental examinations that they're all mixed up In matters oC physical romance. Mostly, those so described are cateaorised aa pro· miscuous, but some admit frigidity, and others list dif. rerent aberrations. For some ID.)'$ttrious reason, men are far leu likely than women to do that thing that way. A lot of women who take poisons to commit suicide don't really mean to kill themsel\Pes, either, but they're generally much more serious .about it than tbe ~utters, tbe re· !iearcbers claim. Q. "How come only the palms of my hands and the soles of my feet wrinkle when tbey're in the water too Ion&?" A. Because there aren't any f•t tla.nds ~in. Elsewhere under the skin those fat &lands lubricate the tissue so as to repel water instead of soaldfta It up. Robin N. Wffdl'PUbllwr Ca~er Fights for Ar.ms Sales WASHING TON -President carter hu scotched the most damqlnJ opposition within bis own offlclal family to sale of A, WACS radar planes to Iran, but bis deelslon to force the issue In Congress Is still one of his most courageous and most dangerous steps since laking office. Before the August recess, un· expectedly severe opposition forced the President temporarily to pull back from Con- gresss the proposed $1 .2 billion transaction. Liberals op· Posed to arms sales in gen· eral and to authoritarian Iran in particular. hoped Mr. Carter would not renew the transaction m September But the President is going ahead, both to provide early warrung against surprise Soviet attack and possibly to stimulate A WACS purchases by Western European states. Even broader questions are in· volved. If the sale is killed by both Houses voting against it, a landmark will have been reached in the executive's steady loss of foreign policy power to the legislature. That encroachment has been In full swing since the trauma of Vietnam. 'JHES.E congressional foes have been helped by allies within the Carter administration. What particularly damaged Mr. Carter in July was the stunning attack on the plan by his close ad· viser, Central Intelligence direc· tor Stansfield Turner. Adm. Turner's opposition, never even discussed with the President. was based on con· cerns of espk>nage: Soviet agents might capture a super.secret en· clpherment gear used in the aircraft. Actually, that device was never inlenaed to be used in the planes destined for Iran. So, In a confidential letter to the President last weelc, Turner s aid "additional measures" Earl Waters taken by the U.S. and by Iran to minimize the security riak "should materially reduce tho likelihood that physical com- promise will in fact take pla~." . SIMILARLY, muted opposl· t1on by Jessica Tuchman, a Na· tional Security Council (NSC> aide on arms control matters, has ended. Miss Tuchman aave ambiguous a~wers to one un· committed Congressman who called her In July for guidance on the deal. Now she. is convinced the sale Ls in U.S. Interests. But elsewhere lo the ad- ministration, Mr. Carter's policy is being subtly undermined - particularly by the Ar~s Control and Disarmament Aaeocy (AC. DA). Sale of the sophisticated fighter to Saudi Arabia seemed to its ACDA critics to violate the President's campaign edlct against introducing advanced weapons systems to an area that did not have them. That is pre· 'Bad Publicity' or .. } Although he called 1l .. bad pubhc1ty .. the case involving the Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control provides another classic example of how a press serv~ lo aid the pubhc in controlUng government. The department's director, Baxter Rice, n former seminary classmate of Governor Jerry Brown. h a d u n · dertaken a •'training·· program for his liquor law enforcement agents. The "seminar" in· el ud ed a drinking session which he said was for the purpose or acquaint· ing the employes with the e(fects of drinking too much. Partici· pants were required to remain overnight at the hotel where the affair took place to sleep It off. While the right or wrong ol the program may be debatable, it Charles McCabe certainly raises some questions. Rice. a one time CIA operative, defend~.ttae classes staling. "It persotl'lilized abstract concepts.·· asserting sever al other gov· ernmental agencies used the ''.controlled drinking .. concept m training. JlNE MAY well wonder what kind of liquor law enforce~nt agents the stale has. to have led so sheltered a life, not to be kn.owledgeable about the ef· fects of alcohol. Or even question the lntelUgence of the agents, who, apparently Rice thought, were too obtuse to understand his observation, that, ··very simply, drinking alcohol wut cause lntox· ication, •· without having to• personally experience getting spiffed. Even a• child un. derstands when It ls told a stove Is hot without having to suffer a burned hand. Jn rationalizing the program Rice explained that the part!ci· pants paid for the spirits with their own funda. Nevertbel~. clsely whit moUvates many Uber ale on Capitol Hill in flihtlng the AWACSaaleto Iran. ANOTHEll undercover critic of the plan ls Dr. Lynn Davis, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for policy and plan.a and principal author o( the notorious PRM·10 study on U.S. forces. She felt so strongly she wrote a letter outllnlnt her objections to Secretary of Defense Harold Brown, according to one well· Informed congress.ion al aide. But Brown's own support has mousetrapped Miss Davis. Brown informed tbe President to a private memorandum last week that 0 it is my personal view that there is always some risk" in any arms sale but tbls one bas "clearly adequate safepards." That any President should have to work so hard to assure ad~traUon support for bis pohcy tells much about tbc unique problems Jimmy Carter fac• ln adJ\,laun1 bls promises .... and some of b1s naUonal security appointments -to fit the u.gly factsolrealllle. THE BA'ITLE wW be decided in the House; the Senate is stacked against the sale. Sen. Hubert Humphrey's terminal cancer dealt a shattering blow to Mr. Carter's hopes of 1ettln1 his plan approved by the Senate. With Humphrey absent, his post as chairman of the Foreien Rel•· lions subcommittee handling arms sales goes to Sen. ~ Cburcb. Humphrey leaned toward the sale; Cbu.rcb was one of a ICOr'e of Senaton who wrote a blatantly critical letter about it to Mr. Carter. Ir the President loses tbls bat. Ue, be may well have lost the wholeanu-salewar. Tbatwould further whet the congressional appetite for ever more control over the details or U.S. foreign policy, with Potentially grave consequences for the nation. a Diligent PreSs? the cost of the hotel rooms, and any travel and meals involved m the two day seminar. was paid by the slate as were the conference rooms and fees for guest speakers. · But the fact that such a pro- gram was sponsored by a state agency is not nearly as impor. tanra.s Rice ·s attttade when he was compelled to cancel rurther training sessions. HE HAD held tw..o sessions, each attended by at least 20 e mployes, and had planned further sessions to complete training tor aboul. 250 or his personnel. Even after the press got wind of what was going on he staunchly upheld the concept declaring he intended to "eon· tinue to give visibility to my sup· Port" <oCtbe program). Obviously be figured wit.bout full app~iation of the awesome Power of an aroused public. For. just a few short days later Rice announced tersely that there would be no more "controlled drinking·• sessions. Reading between the lines it is apparent that Rice. an appointee or the governor, got explicit orders from the top to cool it, which sug. gests that the mailbag in the gov· ernor's office was hot and heavy. Rice blamed the cancellation on ··bad publicity, .. a euphemism of bureaucrats when news cov· er age of their activities results in shattering their plans. Apparent· ly Rice's secluded training In the seminary didn •t permit him to learn that a free press is the reason tbls form of government hassurvivedtwohundredyears. WREN PRESS coverage of governmental affairs is favora· ble the bureaucrats are loud in their praise or the free press. When the coverage becomes criUcal and prevents them from exercisinti autocratic power. It is "bad publicity.·· It was indeed "bad publicity" which forced Richard Nixon to resign the Presidency. Briggs. New Right Favorite St~ Trouble One or the more depressing figures on the Callfornia political scene is Republican State Senator John Briggs of Fullerton. The Senator, it seems to me, Is trouble waiting for some place to happen. Right l\OW he Is the darling of the ''New Right" and Is moving Into ~me real trouble, a showdown on in thls state.. • · ii There exists in this matter • a potenUal brannigan of immense pro; PQrtions. lt Is a httit Yft could all very prol~•Wtlllout. BtlQI, Wfto •ants to be IOV· emor, runs abo\rt. the stale say. lnl lhlnas ltke thi.c ''Jn 5an t'ranc~. t.MJ acktltly ffCIUh'e that Uie.Y teach a Uf• tytt tlau abou\· homoaeuallty as an alterutlwtofamU)I Utt • ''Thlll ~)lM ........ all OY• ~~.JW dGa't give ~ ·"':1:*-·ll~anc• •.W~.W• tOlh'e ..... lu&tbe" = la ~t 1 the majority. We can't risk our children.·· Briggs has already introduced legislation In the State Senate to bar homosexuals from teaching in the public schoo15. easy to exploit, with a nat\aral ap- peal to the far right." Represen. tative Elaine Noble, the lesbian legislator from MasaachUMtts believes· "the Bryant 'people, the anti-ERA groups, the New Right generally go for what they think are easy pickings, as tbe Nazis did the Jews." The Briggs campaign is a cheap shot, no matter bOW yoo look at Jt. ~rizina oplnJOn on the homoeexuaUty question, by usine the tbreat of deviant teachers to school pupils, is anothtr way of assuring t.bat what was a battle In Dade County will become a full-scale war in CaUfomia. tf the homosexual bloc takes the aame line against. BiiQI that It toOk against Anita Bryant. the result wlll only be the escalation of Briggs' fortunes, as it was of Bryant ·s. We cannot expect moderation from the amvi&tt Briggs. THE ISSUE of homosexuality in the schools is one of immense delicacy. Fifty.seven percent or those interviewed by the Gallup Poll said they believe homoseit- ual.s should have equal job OP· portunltles, but almost two· thirds opposed the hlrinc of homosexuals as teachers in elementary schools. It can be araued that it is tasy tor someone uninvolved tn the controversy. like myself, t.o urge political restraint on the homosexuals. 1 do. nooeUteleu. think il ts the Qftly ••1 t.be Issue can be defbled1 Wore Mrious 1ocl•I &rouble rnwt.1 for the boma1ou• ftratly. and tH rt1lol•u"1.. The &bnllt ot Uae law CJft the boOlll ba Calitomta 88d ln Brtlaln .. ti*. bornoeeX\iaJI~ Is l~~l am11t1 ~ adutll actin1 IN PRIVATE. If lb6M homOleX· ualteaclMrt •¥bbl on makl.n1 tbelr Hxaal Identity clHr ID U. ~ ltke command of t,be bOmoeexual antJ·B~s ,...._ ... ,Md up w•ua wa OU......-.\1' 11> U ce>vemor. ............. ~ ....... ,p ................... ~M ._, ______________ .._;,;.___;,.;..;.;.._ __ ..,.. ______ ~ 1 • ..Why don 'I you bribe aomcbody. Thal al~s makes you ~' reel better." J, _:, .. '·· For the Record . ' .. ·· Dusolldlo11• Of Marrfflfle ...... ._.,, THROSSELL, l'aHlcle IC •nd Fr•nll; t<Ol.T. Hul»r1 Al<Mrd •n<I 1'11·~-t •• Zoe-· AAMIAEZ.-1• C•rm•n end Rodollo S , llALfS, Chrl~llnA And WllllAm, STEWART. Slllrtey R .. And GAor~ All....S. KIMBER, Fr•nc" AIO<lle •nd Hetson E.; JACOBSON. Andrew IC . •nd Kethlun 0 . MARLIN, L..oul• MlcNlol Md 8Ar~r• "'""""'· COUROm. B•r~raM ond AlchArd W.; PAULEY, CO.Illy A. And J1me1H. IC RUEGER. Ann• Cheri• •nd Cnuln Wiiii""'; GREENE. Jew .. •nd KeMelft E . MEYER. Slet'li"9 I< •nd -rly A , 5£ AN. LlniSA -l'll<n•rd, OE LA TO RE, Lell<I• M •nd Luo> M , GROS , (;Ary A •nd Otbr• lYn", ZY ICtEL. 8f1iin Fr•nll .no Ell"'; G p$S. Adele and Cn•••·· F .• t<A MONO, Jo on Elh•i..ln •nd omu Crock•tl. CONLEY, Oeb<'o.no AuMlcftAtl. OAVIS, ~e E-.; -L.O P. Jr.; BARKER. Aoun• J. ene1 Beat.It Not.lee• W11111"1 I(.; • LOPl!Z, Oonn•L- Moen• Md AllOll L.Oult; OOANE, Oevld All.,. ond Vicki Annelle; HOXOM SNEOEICEA. UOVd S. Md Linde&.; SAMUEL H. NOXON, resident of I EASLEY, o.llcWell -StWOll J.; Cosl• MHo. CMllornl• PHMCI oway HOl8S, CoftllM i.e. end Alcnord on ~ 11. l9n S..vlWCI t>v e ' W•ntwor111; GAA'™WAITE. Vlrtlnla ........ 0.-MAnnlnt of West Cov- •nd WllllAm O.; HAAOEMAH, lno,C. .• -tonJoHll"IC.A-ttofLA Petrlcl• AIYt -J-OIA~lff; C.Nda. C.., --r Wlll\am O. HARRELL. Edw•rdH .no Slier'... Ho•onol SAi> MArco•, c. .. --51• HOSl(IHS. Judilh Ann -Jonn tor s.twlno £. F ........ of Upllftd, c. .. Wei~; 01 LEO. Krlst• lleetrke ..... two Q ... ndctltlclr .. -lhrM llfMt· Poul AntllOny; BOMllAROIEA, Qr•nclchOdrtn F~r•IM,..,,kHwlllbe Kelhryn l..oulM-Ulo PAUi, St<AM· hold on wedlltMMY Set>U<ftl»r 21, 1m llURG • .--ICeMeth L . CON •• 10 ~ .. PACtllc vie .. °"'"'· HOR • .JoyneMMie-WtlllArnE. wilt> tnltrmenl al Pu1flc View Mtmot••I P•A Friends nwv <•U •• ~lt•~-rl 1!•118•-•yOwli-IT~•Yl lOPM CHRISTENSEN, Mery ...,o Wtt11em lo I lOPM Bell e.-ay Mor11>ary A ' HARPER. MelOdV J -JK"• a .. t<lon 0 • COATES. Lynd<I I( -Ao«>erto alllOWH B • PIAO, Loi• A •nd Relph, MAUOE 8LOOOETT BAOWN, - GOULO, 0.-end A•ymond t.M •• ru1c1tn1 of Hunlln11ton BH<ll ~ Roy, ICUllllVAMA, lw.o end Hldeko; CAii"""'• P•--•'I' on 5"11..,,ber F AASE, RICl\A(d ti ~ Anl'I T.. 17, 1'71 •t lio4IQ Memorial HOH>ltel. Wt<EELOCIC; 8"1rbere J ond Hew-' llN<h. C... SN wM born In AlcNlrd R., RAINBOLT. JM,,,.. S. Sonto An•. C~. on MAY II, IM3 -Jofv'I E , L0Cl(£TT. AMO l . •IWI S..,,11-bf ~ 4-ug;,t., M~ . .i.we11 O.vld F .• DUO.OS. WllllAm T .,,d s H....,kkMn o1 Huntinoton &ea<h. PMn M.; SI~. 111\k lwlle M•r'-Co, •lll•r Mn .. Miidred IC. Bock o1 • -~ JOf(n; REl!O, Wllll•m J . W11lmln•Mr, C.., '"'•Qt..oclllklren, ., ....., oi..i-M.; HELO, Jacot> etod ,,..,.n 9nt•1'9rtndchlldr"'· Slw wes • COii_, Rul>v: TRUMAN, LAN Sue Member of Gr•ce P•lour N1tlv. -Horris w .• "''NCH, 54,.,.., A, •IWI Oauollle" ol ~ WMt. Gr ..... , ... Oebr• L.; BESSETTli, Jo/In 6, -Mrvlca-lnl.rmellt "lilt I» on TUH-Oorotny; llETKI!, Ann• J. •nd csev S41>t-r to, 1m .t 10:~. Edwin; OAISHAM, Lvrwtll• I!. -OINCled lly WHlnt\M ... MA"'°'lal R......,_ I!.; UTAVIS. JoM9ft M . Porl!Mort-vlltld°"""....,: -L.IM9G. . WIUON t."! OAR~HO ...... .., .... ••u1 WILLIM\O. w1i:SOfl SR .. ralcMnt .. , .. F..-.CID; TRUMAN, L-ren<• L.. o1 C-dll MAr. C.llfomle. P1...0 ..... P9lrtd9 A.; ARIAS. Mol ... P ...... ., an Seplembef' "· 1m. Surv•-.... Ide L ; BARNES. llewrly end, by ftls wife HAiii. Wll,...., son Wllllwn -ldL; WILLIAMS, ECIWlnV. -O. Wiison, Jr •• do119hl•r E1th1r J...,lta L.; McDOHOVGt<, Oolorn M-1. 11-grAnddtllclr.,. three --KeltnR.; PAGET, 01..,,.e S. gre•l·Qrondcnlldrtn. M•morl•I -Cllve O.; WHEELER,~1 wrvlns _.held 10:00AM ~'I' -MWltlA L.; WATSON, htlt~ 211. "17 9t PKl~Vt.w RA.,......_. ...0 Jiii Su....,,.: 0..pet. hclflc View MotWwy dlrK· Al-...-Mrie 0.. ton. MARKELL. c .. undre e nd llDWA•DS Rlcherd Jcww1U1on, TEMPLETON, MARY RUTH EOWAROS,-.,.63.,.. Oorotllu E. •nd MIChHI w . llClen1ofSlnlAAnA,C.llfomlL P•Mad CAMPJEU.. ~-M. Ind ~Id •••Y"' Se!MM-19. "71. Sunlwd G.; WILSON. G.reld Ralptl ..... byw~ltay~­ Lour• AMe; EATON. Cherlolle Mor'I' Skinner, •htn Mrs. Huel Lucille -Oonold R.; SWENSON. w1111-. Q\Apel ..-vices -lnt--Doro"'YA.91d~W. ..-t ~y 12 00-.. OtrKled by WHtmlMter Memorlal Peril " MOrt-v .no c..nwterv. F•mll'f --11• •I• con1rlbut1on1 to Coryell • Memorlol Fund M.f.T. Cencer Reaeorcn Fund, C•mbrldg•. Deaths Elsewhere • ~W1Jt. WASHINGTON (AP) Jam es T . Hoasewelgbt, 55, presi· d ent. of the 700,000· member Retail Clerks IntemaUonal Union and an AFL-CIO vice presi· dent, died Monday or cancer. MCKINNEY, Tex . (AP> -Toat Emeno•, 83, whose advertising gimmicks helped popularize the ball point pen in lbe 1940s, died Monday. Ll.A04MAM MARTl<A ltUTH CHANDLER Ll!ACHMAN> ru1t1eot of L•oun• HIQuet. C.llftrnle. PUMCI •'llll•Y on' '"91....W 1•; 1'1'7 In Soulll C:O.sl Cotl>- munlty H05jlltol ol!M • ll"91rlnt 11'-neu. The wlf• of &JI. LAac-. ,,.. tlr.ct f.,._,. Pretl<IMI And OWMr of on lnduslrl .. and commercl•I construe· tlon com-Y ol Clevelend, Ohio. Mrs. LHChmAll WM e netlve"' G-. Ten. neu" -llAd pr1vale setloollnq In Hew Orte.ns, Loul1I0110. Slw wH a member ol £1 Hlvutl Country Club 8-ldel .... ~ -INYH two 11 .. ten Mr\. J.M. Forti ot P...o.n., C. end Mrt.. EM. a-sot VIU., C.., two bf'Othen. -twin Rlltl CllOllCll., ol L•kewood. low• and HUQll Owlndler of Pa•-., C. ""'"'" nle<H •nd flye nel)hew\. Funerll servlcn wlll be hold 11 11 00AM Tl>urtda'I' $99ttml»r 12, 1'17 Ill P.cllk View Qwlpet. Interment •t P•clllc Vl.e• M•morl•I Perk. PKlllcVW"""'1u•r,tllro<10n. YOUNT HARRIET H. YOUNT, rH..,..1 of CO\t• MHA. c.tlfornla. Pes...S away ... s.111-, •. '1971. Stwvl-.,., .. , •hter Au9USI• A Merrill al Cos\A Me .. ,c..,1>o111-1Ei-Y. TM•· -----------'°" ot Fruno, C.. and Ev•I.,,. Y. SM11M 1U'THtU LAMI COSTA ... SA CH.APB. 427 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa • 64M888 Santa Ana Chapel 518 N. Broadway Santa Ant• 547-4131 f'tlllCI llO'TMllS SMITMS' MOtml41Y 827MtUn St, Huntlng1on Beach 53&-853~ -.. B~ ol ,._,.-. C... o,. gntll·nle<• J~EI V,,.,,,.,. of CIOvls, C. , -Ql'NI· nel!Mw Rl<llArd E. Thatrt.., ol Fr-. Co . 1WO g<H1'9nt•lnf.cn J•nnelle encl Ctlfhtv V1,;olln of Clovis, c.. Servlcn ere t••llno .c 81111 en.d••v MOr1-V lltll llrMCIWrt Morlvuet dlr..:ton. lt09SOM l!THEL M, A08SQH, rHhMhl of Cosll MHe, Qll!fo<-nli. PesMCI IWA'I' on s.p1...-l1. 1m. SU<VIY'ld b'( two d•u9ht.,1 Vlollll E . 8as., of S.n ll•rnordlftO, Ce. •nd Mlrtoret J. Jens.n of SM Cl•llM"'•· ca .. SOii Wllllem 0. ~ fll Hotttw1411t. CA., ..... lister Nell WllllllM <If' ClKi. MeM, Mesa O.Uege. Shedd.ng Anoaymlty By MICHAEL PASKEVJCR °'""' o.tlt ,. ......... Ask anyone, even a Cotta Mesan. hi• oplnron of SOulbern tall1omla Collet• aDd ll'I a 1oo4 bft ~11 &et a blan tattlnre1Jl)O 1. Evon thoUfh the reU1lous~rlented collece has been around 11.Dco 1950. thr yean before t.ho ci\y wu in· corponleid, It 1Ull ls'Oranie Coun~11 most anonymou. inaUtuuon. "Nobody 1tnow1 we're here .... lts rtdlculoua," HY• Denn ls Green, re. c:enU.r hired to help SCC fl&ht lts lden· lity criais. "Bt.rr THAT'S GOING to chanae. the 24·lear-old development officer says. ' We've aot a lot. golng for us here, except vlslbillty." His first taak is lo correct a past problem with "poor communica- tion ol campus pro- grams and evenli to the olf-campus community. A speaker's bureau baa been set up and each of the school's 30 faculty members are being counted ••••N on lo volunteer their services to give speeches to religious and civic groups in the area. rttreatiolt to chemlStrJ and pN-med. Allhou1n SCC Pl'esldent Wayne Kral.as expecu enrollment to climb to aearly 1,000 1tudenta by 11182. be eon- eSdera u.~·· present me a bless~ ma. "THE STUDENT TO teacher ratio is about 20 to one and we 1et to know tbe atudeota quite well," said Kratss. About 80 percent of SCC'a students are full-time and are required to llve in one of two segregated donnltortea connected by a Jowl&e area. The college dininl commons pro. vides three meals a day which is in· eluded in the tuition of $835 per semester. Campus life is much like other col· leges except students are expected to dress ''in conformity with the best col· legiate Christian standards and ex- tremes in style sboUld be avoided." Students are also required to attend chapel services each w~k. ' SCC ORA WS ¥A.NY. out-of-state students, espoclaUy from the Midwest. It is ooe' ot ll eolleies operated under the auspices of the A:s- sembly of God Church. The closest to SCC is Bethany Bible College in the bills near Santa Cruz . sec officials work with an annual budget of slightly more than $2 million. ...., .............. VIEW OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA COLLEGE IN COITA MESA 'Nobody Knowa We're Here ••. But Ttuit'• Going to Change' SCC's 6SO students have news tip forms at their disposal which they can send to various media if they spot an Interesting story. GREEN BELIEVES his ''instJlu· tional identity" program will form a positive image of the obscure cam· pus. Amcrig the research studies cur- rently under way at sec are studies of f ~~~~~!!i~~ arthquake fault activity and smog in Baldwl the San Bernardino area. Green believes its time county ' Pianos sports fans recognize the "giant d ~· 1 killer'' capabilities of SCC's baseball an .... "· .::.\I I. team which competes as an indepen· Organs • I ,.. Located on 35 acre!> at the intersec· tion of Fair Drive and N Boulevard in Costa Mesa, SCC first opened in 1950 .. occupying vacant army training bar .. dent. Factory Flnenclno LESSONS· INSTRUMENTS LASI' YEAR, sec scored nine runs "81,11 CMENTEUSICR in the last inning to defeat UCLA 15·4. Im racks. · ' "That's progress and that's just part f91Non 1111nc1 ...,,. of what we want the community to ~5555-~·::;-~ .. ~·=~~;.t: The original campus opened in Pasadena in 1920. The school was known as Southern California Bible College until 1959 when Bible was dropped from the name because the school began bffer· ing programs in liberal arts. CLOSELY TIED WITH the As· sembly of God Church, sec still places a heavy emphasis on religious study. Green estimates that at least SO percent of sec·s undergraduates are pursuing religion· related careers. know," said Green. ~ Besides baseball, sec competes in men's soccer and basketball. A new women's athletic director, Melinda Ourster, bas been hired and sec will soon field women's teams in volleyball and basketball. Many of the old army barracks that housed scc·s first classrooms ar now shut down. There is still a g.i:eat deal of open space ror new buildlJlis. In 1976, construction was completed on the school's modern adm.inlstra· ALLERGY? (714) 543-9624 Recorded Message ALLERGY CONTROL FOUNDATION Box 1583, Orai11 ca 92661 "In 1964, sec was fully•ccredited as a liberal arts colleee by the Western Associ•tion of Schools and Oc>U~1es. ti on and classroom complex.. on Fair Drive, directly across from the coun· ty fairgrounds and just down the ~=====~==~ street from Costa Mesa's Civic Center. Today, the lour-year college offers majors in 18 li~ds raneing from UCI Gets . Cancer Aid · A new teaching aid given to the UC Irvine College of Medicine al· lows medical students tc view cancerous and pre· c~ncerous conditions '*lthout having to ex· amine patients. The "tUtorendoscope, '' a gift from the American Cancer Society, enables students to learn in a few hours what otherwise would require many years or experience to accumulate. Students 'Vtew colol' transparencies of can- cerous conditions pro· jected onto an 18·bY·l8- inch screen as tbelr in· structor explains what they are seeing. At the same time, one of the group of students may look directly into the in· strument and ~ee a th.ree-41men.slonal pie· ture of the dlseued area. Archeology Talk. The new teaching tool is oow being used by medical students but eventually pbyslctana from the community who are involwd Jn contlnu· ing medical ~ucation programs alsO will use the tutorendoscope. "Making a Date with an Arcbeologist'; is the ti- tle of a lecture to be presented by Oranee Coast College archeology instructor William 0 . P&111e • Oct. 6 al Bowers Museum in Santa Ana. The-lecture is set for 7:30 p.m. and admission is free. The event is sponsored by th~ Pacific Coast Using the tutoreri· doscope, which costs about ~.ooo. enables stu· dents to team to detect cancer at an early stage, UCI officials said. Archeological Society. . · · A potter·archeologist, and. an expert in pre- CoJumbian pottery. Payne will describe traditional, methods of dating archeological materials. Admiral Sets County Speech Vice Admiral William R . St. George, com· m and er of the U.S. Navy's surface fleel in the Pacific, will be the speaker Friday at a din· ner sponsored by t he Orange County Council of the Navy Leaaue. Re$ervations for the evening at t h e Newport.er Inn can be made by calling Warren Pack, 552·7028. NEW? FOR ORANGE COUNTY SOUTH' COAST **MUSIC CATERING** Having a party, reception, or sales booster event? Had a problem with live music? , Custom music systems are now availa-ble for your home, hall or business. Complete installation & ·operation · featuring.a Dimension 7 disc lockey. Super sound musical lights. Yl>ur music or ours. Reasonable rates, five hour minimum. Early reservations are suo· ges.ted. CDB Chertle'• Diaco Business After Six please: Charlie (714) 9SS..3S35 Danny (213) 691·9944 FeaturlngllBlJ •IClCIMCIRND NIVINT WILDIM9 ... ·~Money to Make Money Ask .Jack, Uftda or Dod. W hether it's an opportunity for your businns or a new investment. Newport Equity Funds may just give you the opportunity to take advantage of it. We specialize in arranging secondary real estate finan- cing for people who alttady own prime residential property and have a better-than·awrage income. If you quaijfy, why not let us arrange a loan for you for a sub- stantial percmtage of your home's appraised value -at attractive rates • For details, call Jack Barnes, Linda Blue or Doug BuJley at 644--8824. They work together to help you get the money you need I P9PAMH.Y COl.OHIAL MtlUL c:.,, .._ tranddll!dr• .... ""*" tr'Ml1<llldiclt'**'· l'l'MIMll IMV Cell •• vlsl~lof)~ ,..,_,.., f~ 11:00 ,,_ to l:.PM 1t llell ~y Mofluer(CM1191. StNlckWlll M Mid ·~-----lli!l----~ ... ~-•llllli----------ll!lllliili!l4 Wttlllttd•Y at TM f'lrst U111ll•d NOMI ) 7801 BolN /lt.ve. Westminster 893-3525 M•thOdltt Olurdl. Mfl~l•"t' "tv. Clwlf'lle Olri •N ltev. OIUC* l!Wltll. • I~ wlU lleot tlle Mountol11 V'"' Ce,,,ettry of Alled•t>o, C•. lell ·-y~dltedon. MA_... GllOftG• E. HAltPS•, ~ of t.oAA ..... OlllMr'lll&. ..... ~ s.t..-1', tm. SuM...OWlils- Ge" M...,.r flf Olfl• ~ -C.1 ..... Mn. ............ e-.. -...c... ................. .....,. EIJA_.., C.., ,_.....,....,-.Ctt .,.. 1111 tl'W"dtH.... Mlllft !NY CAllllon4tltMll~-••:ewM le • l'M e.41 lre.Ml••Y Cllapel. Gr_.. .-vlcn Wiii ,. ..... ...,. ~y•t:""°'.tT"9W.s1"11MW .... __________ ~---·-~-------------.. .....,_ ... Pwti. Olfkllftt •1" ,. ..... ltwc• A. ICurfle ..... ltNCl'#ll' ·~~ . N9*PO't leech 820 Newport Center Drive, Suite 21 1 (714) 644-8824 .. . • . . I I • -Ma. Mary A. Shufon Troy,NewVOfk UI UI .. •maiedl I "n'I 1NJu11e ,,.., • low i.r •nd ni&orine d(•relU &On UMU ·aoc~ " -J. Thomas Ellicott, Jr. Nortn Palm a..cn, Florida -Mrs. Elaine R. Turiano New Brunswick, New Jersey "Bincot 'CJda 'la reoJJy &he Jir•t Jaw tllr dcoreeu that I &on UUte.J' -James E. Yates, Jr. Johnson Cily, Tennessee "WeJJ, o po&f( of Merit &icorette• &•uclat my eye. It wos the yeJJow and brown atripe& I ""of<.e down and boucht a JNU'<.· I uJJ you &hot &hey are rontoa&kt " ••• if you can &hance me, you can chance anyone." -Mrs. Bonnie Lindsay Br1dgepert, Connecticut "I ihinft. you people Mlle &ome out with the lleac · menthoJ &icarette yet.'' -Robert E. Wright Columbus, Ohio "' wont to thonf<. you ror produdnc a ctcareiu which Mhudly Jives up to its advert'laing-Jow tor and fuJJ ctcarette flavor." -Irene Feiffer New Yortl, New Yorlt "We rrled moat of she new one•, but none aeemed JU{e you were amoJ(inc at aJJ, until MERIT." -William L. Platter South Plalnlleld, New Jerse'(. "I have lrled aome ordae low uar and Jaw nkoilne cic11retU1, ht ne11er &•red for them until MERIT W• "It tltouW lie aslkd llN er.~..-. dc•r•IS. (h'IN soJJMco ... ,.).,, -Mr. J. W. Mcleod M.nnlng, South Catolina "' ... .,. IO ...Smle I WU al(eprk•J INC41uu I Juul irlell. u11n•I Jaw i.r &icoretee .. Afkr amol(lnc one puJ{, I wos re•JJy 11nuaied •... they 11re ,,. cood a the ~ic•rette• with fdchn ior.n -Mrs. Brenda Clark Opelika. Alabama u1 ho11e Ileen aair~hinc for o Jaw u.r acaretu for aome ume now. AJJ odaera 1•11e tried ha11e no toau ••• I'm • MER.IT nuan.n -Ray Echard Parltersburg, West Virginia "I dqn't 1(,now what you did, but you certainly did somethinc ncht." -Mrs. Marian Friedman V111fey Stream, New York "MERIT is Urriftc. 'Che J27ear effort wos worth itl" -Mrs. Emmett Wagner Mannowoc, Wisconsin u1 ..,,. wridnc in r•c•rda to your MERIT MEN~HOL dc•reaua. I •m e~h'em.Jy pleoaed wida l1Nm. Slnu dJe flrar. lime I irlcd them, &My Jua11e hen my dc•resu.n -Joanne Gudvangen St.Paul,~ "Leave it to the e,.ers.t · 'Chey h11ve doiN 'Ii •coin.ff -Robert M. Hornsby TC)p9ka,K1neaa -Mias Meg Vollmer SlJarnea, New York ' "Juai wanud to drop ·a Jin. •ft4 •7 c.ncr•tuMdofta for Mml 100·~~ -· CN41a.n -Mr. Fred w. Gruman AotalP.tc.....,VOfS wn..tas.ofMme ..,,,.,,..,... an Olltna. It fa noi orlJ7,,.,,.,..., cood ,..,,,..,, -Mrs. Ethel C8megle· Wlllhklgton. O.C. cq 'lua11c fleen N11rchlnc for.• Jaw uar and nkodne dc•reu. .- for• Jone time. I nnn dreomed I would~ one· dual I an.Id •tuaDj .,.J07• I founll·one. MEBIT.n , -Y(endelt D. Austin e.\A¥Ono P91m~ "I Mlle tried your MEB.lr UCJ"Juanfc. you for m.Jrinc she M.EJVcrHOL,.,.. you u11• Wcce•t ""e•Jc.throuch ln aoJd me-" •mofc.inc in •JJ the ye11rs . I have smofc.ed. 'Che lllaU •nd pJe...,re I cet from MERIT is unbelievable." -Marc A. Nolan Akron, Ohio "I wan& to ehonfc. you •11 for your super worl{ in produdnc this A + dcorette.I' · -Ml;s Jo Arlene Refford York, Pennaylvanla -Mary Felix Mleml Buch, Flortd• "' do11'1 us.,,,IJy write to · comp11nie• 11boue &heir produce., hi in lht. uue you deftni~Jy deNf'Jle prow on · your new dc•rene-MEBlr MENcrHOL 100'a. "Your 'Bnmhed Flllvor• pr~eN u the cre11ea1. 'Ch•n'<. you!" -Mrs. Patricia Amato linden, NewJerMy 'ISelleral montha aco, I tried Merit.,11n41uJ11e bentamo1tlnc diem ner ain&e. 'Chey 11re &he ftrai Jaw lllr dc•reeu lhllt uhUIUy toatea cood." . -Barbara G. Wllllhlre 1 Richmond. Vlrg1"'a • I "I srled your dcaretu. I ~ ! cou14n't INHeve ii, • smoodaer 1 amofc.e, real &icareeee 141aee.n -Mrs. Christine Buczak Now Yor1c. N.w York uconcr•eui.tiona on cominc oui with a low UJr, Jaw nicotine acaretU Iha& us.us lif(e tolHJc&o inauu of lettuce.» -Mrs. Glen C. Skaggs San Antonio, Texas "I tried MERIT. Since my fir•& one.J I h1111e •toyed with IJNm. I 1eeJ Coad about t:Uldnc down on lllr •nd nkonne. MERIT hlls 11 creot taaUl" -Mra. Charolette Nemetz Whittler, Calllornla "MERIT la" creat uaadnc c;carette." -David Schneider Eaatchaltr. N-York put on she m.rl(ee. I re111Jy enjoy diem very much and I juat wonud io uy thllnfc.• for o nice dcareite.n · . ·Regular & Menthol Kings & lOO's. UCJ"he (r•llU•I •moJ(fne ple....,r~ I Mve ner e~ed. I ha11e ftrudly •erwf<. cold." -Mra. Rodney Alce lndlan Orchatd, Maueehueetta "As o dcarelU amofc.er for aome. 60 yeora, I wonull to compliment you on your flne product, MERIT dc•retu .. n -Rex B. Little San Diego, Callfomla 1crou'11e done •t; JIUlde • cood toatinc dcarette, Jaw in tar. l'11e swiuhed ea MERIT I" ' 0 ftill, ~«anfa ,_ 1 '17 -Mra. Fredette Shaw Jenlll~town. P•nnaylvanla une taste ia ouisrondinc. Keep up the iood worl{. 'Chey are really rerreshtnc." -Douglas B. DeMaris Mlnneapells, Mln~esota . "MERITis the only. llr•nd in Jaw lllr to ('l11e me die t1011or ond ut"fution tMI I hod been Jooftinc for.n -Ce<:llla Beberman went•on.,New York "In &he ,,_.t, I uve h'led oiher llr•r'uk .. they ctune on the nuarfc.et, llut &hey •11 IMJc.ed aoriNdtfnc. MERIT conuuna IMI aome&hlnc &he odlaa 1-ftd." -Guy e. Noble Or1ando. Florida Kings: 8 mg'.'tar:' 0.5 mg. nicotine av. per cigarene, FTC Repon Dec:76 ' 100' s:12 mg:' air:· 0.9 mg. nicotine av. per cigareue by FTC Method. "You ho11e my word I w• delichted. So from now on it'• MERIT for me." -Mr. Michael Noga Brooklyn, New York "I llouchl II pMJ{ of MERIT cic•reltes ond onodler •nd 11nother. '1teY're ve11t. Llf(e ,, •Y• on the PMft: A 4uoJliy of fto11or in • Jow uar •nd nkoline ncor.elte." ' . . . l -Mrs. George AlchaUd 911!enfleld, CilltomM -Ms. Clara C. Zeigler Blrmlngl\atl), Alabama UHoor11y for lower lllr llnd no· uniJke offlavor ~Jiiyt" -C. L. Burtnett Venlc•, Aorlda -Mrs. Virginia Pe)'ton Kirlc Havre d• Grace. M1ryland u1 ful11e recnally avildted to MERIT. I h'llly najoy, the .. fe*" -Paur J. Weiss Lof\g la1lnd Clty, New Yorit • UMEIUTt. lhe •moJ(• of intpa"'1Jk wu.n -M1'11. Evelyn R. MaJone Bell. Callfornle -Mrs. Rose Palmieri Lynbrook, Now York "By the time I finished my :Jir•C pul{ of MERIT ~ic•reteea, I "''" reaJJy aoJd on Jlsem.JI -Edward J. Waddington Weatmont, New JerMy UI "°11(ht G JH"Jt•C• of 'l'eplor MERIT and w•• really impreued.n -Dorothy M. Hempel C1nc1nnat1, Ohio "1"our new ln'ond, MERIT, ia • re•l acoreiu.11 -Richard S. Williams Bol Air, Maryland "'Chi• Jetter ia Jo Jet you foJJ{s l{now how m~h we enjoy your new Jow u.r acoretie, MERIT. We hod trud &he other new dc•re&&es , on the marl{ee ht were dQcw&ed wflh the "'rdllo•rd fl•11or. Howner, Ille /1411or of MERIT wa pleaslnc·" -Mrs. Paul A. Creal NOfrlstown, Pennsylvania UVndke: FINALLY,• low "JGr dc•reeee with &oakl" -Blanca Ooeschner New York, New York '41su ~·••IS. ha COi WMI wn• •11 kna looJc.lnc for. Sm.flin• MERIT la re•11y o pkaur-.n --£ctw1rd LeVfnson Coklmbue, Ohio ~aymond T. Abdoo Sullleld, Ohio "My hwhnd •rad I awlklNd '° ME&IT ,.,.. we re•Uy Jil{e lhe t&IU. It'• 'unll•Jlell""Je how flood • Jow Mr /Jaw nkoiine dc•r•IS. ~nuuu.t• -Kathy Lynn Mazzarella South Bend, lndl1na . U]u•t o note ea My &h•nl{ you for maJt.inc Merie 100• .. 'rhey ore cre•t." -Mrs. Betty Taylor MontgorMty, Alabama "l'11e tried oJJ the Jow eor, low nuotine ticore&k• and they •JI JMJ{ed &ate and jlovor. CChen &•me 'MERIT', voilill 'Che flavor 'la Jtne and I enjoy &hem.'' -Mrs. Jeannette Trebllcoek Virginia Beach, Virginia UBy (Olly, it'• true Whot people .,.,. •lloui Mme. I irkd them, I awiuhedl ~·re aotl•frlnc, while I'm &11ttlnc clown on 1ar.n -Mrs. Dawn Rauh Burbank, Californla UJ would juat Jif{e to aoy lhal I thfnl{ your Merit JOO'a ore the creouae. 'rhonl{• for • creo& ticore&&e!n -Mias Karen Matthews Columbus, Ohio -Hilary· Frost Chicago, llllnols "I couJdn•i lleliftle how Coad they uuee •nd how Jow dtey ore in rar •rad nUotlrw.Jf -Roselyn Hall Mlnne•Polla. Mlnnnota -J. Gordon Wiida ~x.Mzona UMEBIT~• Jhrouch with JIY'nc colora.n . -Ms. Dorothy Pendergast North SyracuN. ~ v• ''Your yeors of reseor&h wilh your new dc•reeu, MERIT, ho11• &ere.inly Jinn mo•t a.&~e .. fuU• -Mrs. Barbara F. Miiier Venice, Florida -Mrs. Judith Pietras .Streamwood. llllnole "' lried your Men&hoJ MERIT. 'Che lleal' Jow IOr •ncl nicotine dcoretie yei.n -Mrs. Sam Maniaci Monroe, Michigan "Mnd o he•p-.. Good Jii&l{.f' -Mrs.H.S.Cohen Mobile, Alabama "Merit A(GrelU• ho11e eon11nted me from• confirmed hie& eor dcare1ee smol{er io •Jaw Mr amol{er.J• -Mr. Robin Katz New York, New Yorlc --Ernest Walters Joppa. MaJ'Ylend -Anthony N. Friscia Evergl'99n,Colorado U'Now dull 'la one reoUy cood nc•reeee •••• CJ1uanlt• •c•ln-your,...,, MER.Jr M~CCHOLu reoJJy oue of ache. BMu11fll1t11n -Mrs. Gayte D. Aosen~ren Mlrm-.potle, Mlnnttc>ta • DM.Vf!P!. Al "CJ"honft you '° 11ny mlU& ror mal(lnc • mlJd low ,,.., dc•rette. 9:1ae flll11or la 11ery pkaanc·" -£d H. Bourne. Jr. Sioux f all-.So&llb DakoC• -Unda Harvey 8roalf. New VOit "I ruuJ your d for MERIT. I IH>uche on. JH"lt and w .. .a .urpriu_, at die irue llUle of cood '°""""'' -Mrs. Marjorie H. Belanger Oxnard, Coli ornia "' tried o Merit, foun4 the U..ee 11ny mild, •nd ho11e llun amof{inc them ever dme." -Mrs. Helen Shuv1er Winter Hsven, Florlcfa urour rww dcoreiee is o real winnerl" -Mrs. Nunzio A. Barone. J r. Metairie. Louisiana UI tried • pocft of MERIT- enjoyed dte Jlr•I dc•••tte •n4 ho11e Ileen amo1{inc MERIT ner sin&e. You're not putnnc jual air .,.., vni ,,..,.,,, -Mrs. D. Glrtud eo.&11 Mita. Callfomla "FlnoJJy, o cooct,,_dnc ac•reiu Jow in &or. You feeJ llJt• you're smol{fnc .amethlnc lleaua alr." -SUMn Wilmington Chleago,Jlllnola "I hove ju.I df.uol/ned your ac•reau ~me• •ncl •m allchudtn ' . .. L1ghtC'r matenals and s horter length art> aamt.'d ctl greater fuel efficiency in the 1978 Cutl ass Suprem~ Brougham The sedan and coupll' modcb are an a' ernge 657 pounds li~bter Mexico Oils U.S. Palm Expons Could Help Solve EcoJWmic Problems E:dtlor'ir Nolt! M~nco promues to become a ma1or supplier of oil and natural gas to the petroleum.hungry United States Harold Milks. former AuOCJaled Press foreign correspon· dent and riow managing editor of the Arizona Republic tn Phoenu. hal just returned from a tour of the oil produc- ing regwn.s of Mexico Thi.~ is his re port By HAROLD MILKS PHOENIX. Ariz. CAP> A virtual explosion of oil and natural gas from newly de- veloped on-and offshore fields in Mexico promises lo help fill American tanks for years to come and earn Mexico $20 milhon a day to ease its financial crisis . The rapidly developing inland fields are located an the rain- soaked Tabasco and Chiapas :.tales and the important offshore discoveries are in the Bay ofCam- pcchc al the southern end or the GulfofMex1C'o GOVERNMENT EXPERTS say they expect Me:ocan crude production to exceed 2. 7 million barrels daily by 1982. It has already surpassed a million bar- rels a day with 200,000 barrels tabbed for export daily, 180,000 to the United States and 20,000 to Israel. ' Everywhere an Mexico. from the rapidly expanding oilfields of lower Mexico lo the towcnng headquarters an Mexico City or Petgroleos Meyicanas (Pemex >. the government 011 monopoly. there is growing enthusiasm that the mounting exports will help President Jose Lopez Portillo solve economic problems left behind last December by retiring President Luis Eche verria. Pemex Director-general Jorge Diaz Serrano 1 ~ the first petroleum e ngineer to head Pemex since 1t was created 39 years ago through nationalization of a group of U.S. oil companies in Mexico. "WITH OUR PROGRAMMED production of crude oil we shall reach in 1982 a production equal to that or Venezuela, long No. l in Lalin American petroleum," he said " Other Pemex e: '!Cutives con- firmed that given t .... necessary financing or about $1 billion ror a 750-mile 48-inch gas line, they could deliver four billion cubic feet of natural gas daily to the United Stales by 1979 "We estimate construction of the line will require about 24 months from the oil fields to Reynosa on the Texas border," said one Pemex spokesman. ·"IT WILL INV,->LVE lmporta- 'VE JI:'.~ -4 N.4 L YSi S " tion of 700,000 tons of steel pipe since Mexican plants are not equipped to produce tubing of such a largesize. '' This official confirmed that the El Paso Natural Gas Company, which supplies gas users throughout much of the American Southwest, is one of several firms negotiatincfor Mexican gas. The explosion of Mexican oil and gas production goes back more than two years with Mex- ican officials .. silting on" the ex- tent of new discoveries for months before admitting they had a ma jorenergy find. SER~ANO DISCLOSED the extent of Mexico·s crude dis- coveries with the comment earlier this year that the Reform a region alone -in Tabasco and Chiapas states -his country has found oil "which might be more Important than the north slope of Alaska, and also less expensive to produce." A Pemex official estimated Mexican oil production at the time the government seized two groups of 14 foreign companies in 1938 at only 106,351 barrels a day. ''Our 'six-year development plan started irt 1976 called for a total of 3,476 wells 1,324 ex- ploration wells and 2.152 develop- ment wells ... he said. "ALREADY WE HAVE sur- passed that figure with an approx- imate 4,000 wells in all Mexico. Present production of oil is about l.7 million barrels daily, of which a substantial part can be ex- Porled. "There is no question where most of this oil will go. The United States is tbe best market in the whole world and the one most con- veniently served." The Pemex executive predicted new oil lines would be constructed to supplement those already ex- tending from the present oil Cields to Mexican industrial centers and to the U.S. border. SUPPLEMENTING THE ma- jor discoveries producing in the Tabasco-Chiapas region and the adjoining Canu>eche state are off· shore explorations in both the Gulf of Mexico and along the west coast of Baja California. ·'Three major wells have been completed off-shore In Campeche Bay." one expert said. "Of these all three are good producers, giv- ing promise that by 1982 we will be Executives To Hear Talk .. producing 360,000 barrels per day from these off-shore rigs." Pemex mentions at least 60 pro· speclivc off-shore ~tructures in the bay area. and some experts say this may grow to 100 before the six-year plan ends. ••NOT ONLY WILL WE pro· duce oil from the sea but we will havesomuchofil that it would not be economically desirable to pipe 1l all the way to shore." the Pemex official said. "We may earmark all this of- fshore oil for export and pipe it directly into tankers through storage and loading facilities in theGulf .. Serrano, has promised that a .. significant part of the exported volume of crude 011 and, due lo geographical reasons, all of the exPorted gas, shall be marketed in your United Stales country and shall contribute to cover some of your present shortages.·· Most officials say Mexican crude will be sold at existing world prices while the price of $2.60 per thousand cubic feet is most frequently mentioned for Mexican •natural gas, pre- sumably delivered lo the Texas border _. 'lhree-county B~rsGroup Set,s. Meeting Banke rs from Orange, Riverside and . San Bernardino counties will meet Wednesday to finalize the organization of the Desert-Sea chapter or the Bank . Administration Institute. The meeting will be held at the Saddleback Inn, Santa Ana. at 6:30p.m. Bankslnthethreecoun- ties were invited to send represen- tatives. ATTENDING THE meeting will be Ron Burke: president of the Bank Adm inistralion Institute. headquartered in Chicago. The institute is the second largest professional bank,ing or- ganization in the nation, with more than 265 chapters in the United States and Pbillipines representing about 85 percent of the nation's bank resources. The new chapter plans regular meetings on the second Wednes- dayof each monlb. ·'How to Achieve Super Success" will be the topic o( Kathy Alls' talk at the Sales and Marketing Ex· ecuUves of Orange Coun- ty's general meeting to be held on Wednesday at the Alrporter Inn, Irvine. CoMa..ic1a9 t.9roup Fo,.,,.ed Social hour beings at 6 p.m . wilhdinnerat7p.m. Neweort Consulting Group, providing manage- ment assistance to product and servlce·oriented companies, has been established by Robert S. Divit1e. Divine, former president of Chinook Mobilodge, Inc., has organi.ied the fl'OUll ol lndMduala and firms. 1"8offtce i1 ln Newport ~ach. . ............... Chevrolet's midsize Mulibu Classis ls a foot shorter and 540 to 968 pounds lighter for 1978. The car comes equipped with a new 200-cublc-inch V6 engine. Year's B est Mile a g e Rabbit 'Fops ·E,PA Test WASlllNGTON (AP> -The diesel-powered Volkswa1en Rab- bit provides the best gas mileage of 1978 model cars being offered for sale in lbe United States, ac- cording to the Environmental Protection Agency <EPA>. The Rabbit posted 40 miles per ~allon in city driving and 53 mpg an highway driving for an over-all averageof45mpg HOWEVER, EPA 's auto mileage tests did not include the Honda · Civic CVCC, which was ranked No. l last year. Honda was omitted because it has not yet been certified by EPA. Autos were evaluated in five size classifications. Diesel- powerod cars ranked first in three of the classifications, indicating the gasoline engine may be losing ground as the automakers battle to boost auto mileage and con- serve fuel. Last year, the Rabbit was rated at 37 mpg in the city and 52 on the highway , compared with the No.1-ranked Honda's 40 mpg in the e1ty and 52 mpg on the highway NO OVER-ALL MILEAGE figures were given for all autos tested. wbicb EPA said was ap. proximately 91 percent or all cars to be sold ln the United States dur- int the coming model·year. A law goes into effect this year requir- ing each automaker's fleelol cars to average 18 mpg. ·'Al though c ale ul a lions of manufacturers' average fuel economy cannot be completed ror about four weeks. I am confident that the 1978 models continue the fuel economy improvement of the last fe w years," EPA ad- ministrator Douglas CosUe said Monday. The auto tests are conducted under laboratory-controlled con- ditions by professional drivers on a testing instrUJJlent. The city test simulates a 7.5 mile, stop.and-go drive at an average speed of 20 mph. The highway tests simulates a 10-mile. nonstop trip averaging SO mph. FOR THE AVERAGE ·car buyer, the mileage lists give only an approximation or the fuel economy to be expected. This is because of wide differences in driving habits. maintenance pro- cedures, road, traffic and weatherconditions. "The best way" to use the nwn- bers is to recognize that if Car A Over T h e Counter MASO Uffinc)s MUTUAL FUND S ' get~ 20 percent better fuel economyontbeEPAtestthanCar B, then any owner can reasonably expect to eet 20 percent better f\lel economy in Car A than Car B," saidCo6Ue. The lowest mUeage was report· ed for the Plymouth Fury and Dodge Monaco equipped with 440-cublc inch engines. They post· ed 10 mpg in the city and 14 mpg in · the country A SPOKESMAN FOR Chrysler Corp., which manufactures both cars, s.aid the low·mileage models are special police pursuit cars sold only to law enforcement agencies. Models sold to the public have smaller engines and get better gas mileage, the com. panysald. The top auto in each class· mlnicompact, Datsun B·210, 36 mpg city and 48 mpg highway; subcompact, Volkswagen Rabbit diesel. 40 mpg city and 53 mpg country; compact. Peugot 504 diesel, 28 mpg city and 34 mpg highway; mldslze. a tie between the Ford Fairmont and Lincoln- Mercury Zephyr, 23 mpg city and 33 mpg highway; large. a tie between the Oldsmobile Delta 88 die.set and Olds mobile 98 diesel, 21 mpg city and30mpghighway. .. ... .. .. ., Pct Vo 196 VO 16• Uo IU Vo U l Up t•l Up tJJ uo n s Up 11 S Up ti 1 Up 11 1 uo too Up 9 1 Up <1 1 Up 9 1 Vo 9 1 Up 71 Up 1S Up '·' VP 7 • Up 7,t Up 7.1 Up •• Up •• Up U Up 6.7 Up 6.1 Up ._, Pct. Oii ,.., Off IU Oii u.o Oii tl,1 Ott 10,s Off 10.5 Off lO.l Off tO,} Off 10.0 Off 1H Ol• , , 011 •.1 Oft • ' Oft ., Oft ...., Oii •• ] Oii u Olf , , -.. Oii t.O I Off , .. •• Ott 11 '• OH 1.t .. Oii , 0 • •• Oft 70 • '-Oft , .. -~ Off ... _; t • Bf IOLTON MOSXOWITZ Altbouab it's tho sales leld r in on1Y one atate, Shell on baa appareollJ diaplaced Texaco as the natlon '1 lariesl aetter ot ,-asollne. At least that'• the word from tbe Lundbul Letter, a petroleum lDdustey pubUcaUoo that tracu lal• tbrouab re· tall outlet.a. Ttxaco bu held the No. 1 poaltklb tor etghl year1, but la~ nPQIU <lrorn tM roarketplace 1how that Sbell bU torced ahud wltb a 19114 it'a likebto bold for all of tm. TOE DETHJlONING OF TEXACO HAS been 1.n the werks tor some tlme. Not eveo Bob Hope, current spokeeman for Texaco, could stave it tltf. The very fact.ors that helped to vaull Texaco lnto first place were the ones t.bat undid it in the end. Texaco has, more than any other fasoUne marketer, maintained a national presence. You can fill up wit.b Texaco easoline m all so states and the District of Columbia. That's not true for any other brand. Texaco thus has more service stations pumping jts guoline than any other com· pany. There are 30,000 Texaco outlets. The closest any company comes to that-reach is Money Tree Amoco, the Standard OU of Indiana unit, which bas some 24 ,000 stations. But the trend in the gasoline business has not been toward a multJpllcity of ataUons but toward fewer and larger stations. We had 226,000 service stations in 1972; now we're down to 183,000. The trend has also been away from full·service stations and toward self·servtce outlets or spU\· island stations that offer moto~t.s a choice. OTHER MARKETERS, NOTABLY SHELL, have moved with these trends more alertly than Texaco, which has remained locked into an older pattern. As a result, Shell outsells Texaco even though it bas 11,000 fewer stations and markets in only 40 states. Figures compiled by Lundberg show Shell with 7.6 per cent of the national market. Texaco holds 7.4 percent. And coming up strongly are Exxon and Amoco, each with 7.1 percent. Shell, Exxon and Amoco increased their gasoline sales last year. Texaco's were down. While Shell bolds the national lead, it's No. I in only one state, Arimna, where it pumps 16 percent of the gaUonaa,e. It's tberunnerupio many stales, TEXACO STATIONS COVER THE country, but it's the market leader in only three states: Colorado, North Carolina and Oklahoma. The Midwest is Amoco territory, this brand being the top seller in 12 states: Illinois, Indiana. Iowa. Kansas. Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota. South Dakota, Wisconsin and Wyoming. Standard OU of California is dominant in the Far West and holds a strong position in the Southeast through its sob- sidiary, Standard Oil of Kentucky. It's No. 1 in 12 states. Alabama, Alaska, California, Florida, Hawaii, Idaho, Ken· lucky, Mississippi, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah and Washington. EXXON IS STllONG IN THE BAST and Southeast. lt 's the market leader in New Jersey, Maine, Maryland, Delaware, District of Columbia, Arkaoasa.s. Loulslat)a, Virginia, South Carolina and TeMess~. Mobil stations lead the sales parade in Connecticut, Massacbusetta, Vermont, New Hampshire and New York. Gulf, wbicb ranks fifth in the sta.ndinas, la No. 1 only, in Georgia. Stock Market Up But, Just Slightly NEW YORK CAP) -The stock market drifted slightly higher today in the aftermath of Monday's decline to a new low for the year. The Dow Jones averaae of 30 industrials showed a .26 &ainto851.78. Declines outnumbered advances by a 7·S margin among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues. Trading remained quiet. Big Board volume totalled 19 million shares. The Dow's 5.29-point Joss Monday brought it to ill lowest closing level since Dec. 23, 1975. Sambo's Restaurants Inc., the New York Stock Ex· cbange's most actively traded Issue Monday after officials of the nation's larfest coffee shop dlal.n announced a possi- ble merger, was traded heavily agaln today. 1be stock rose nearly $4 Monday to $23.SO on a volume of 433,000sbares. Todayltfell backl,,. points to221/!a. Doso.lonnA "f!ra~• M'haf Slo«"lu Did NlW YO..lt IAPI SALES HEW YOftK IAPl ·HY $totlt Ul9' ~ f ......................... ".o:ao,a ~-.................. 16..,. ... =" ~ ·:::::::::::::::::::::·;:;=1·· Y•r 8911 ....................... 16.JDO ,... --.................... 11,1'9 • ...... f .. .s.-................ 3,1•.l:Jll, mttodtllt• ·········••••·••• •••~ 1f1S I•*" ................ , ,_,.,,111, I , ,t II DAft. y PILOT 'GOl • ~' Tlwrt w"'' to N °'6rm Pol wtlt cw * ..... fd IM OftAlC'r• Cll'ld odlOtl I/OM ~ lO MW neqWt~• trl 001.-.mmlrlt Giid bulmf" MaJl ,_, ...., to Pal Dwtin, Al Your Smik•. Orono• Cocut Pilot, P 0 Boz '"°· COflo M1to, CA l2ll2f .V ITllOnll kit.,. a. poutt>t. wlU w OltfWff'fd, ,.,. pholwd tnqidri4'1 (W ~,,.,. not Including ,,.. Mldtt'a fulJ 1'C117W.oddr1H ond tiudn«u hour•' p~ IUl"'baCGMOCl»connkr.t'd ThUcolumnoppcartdof· IJI ~re~ Sat11nlay1 " ,,.,,.Pfd•C6 .. l..U._.,_. DEAR PAT I repainted my house a year 110 with a good brand or paint that was quite expensive. The pamt is ctuppane and slartine to flake. I've talked to the manaeer of the paint store. but have not received any satisfaction. Is there someone wbo handles coo.sumer complain~ about paint? J .J , Newport Beach Caetact lbe National Pa.lDt and Coatlll11 A.so., 15" lli.ode lslud Ave., Wutuaiton. DC 1t0t5. U tJae palll& maallfactuer ls a member of this assoela· lion. NPCA wUJ aUempt &e help you. Rese 11.edpe •eers ~•fag DEAR PAT: Someone told me you'd published an easy recipe for old-fashioned rose water. I would like to make some, but all the instructions I've been ablP. to find call for distilling and seem complicated. C.G., Mission Viejo Take two handfuls of scented red rose petah and put them In a jug or earthen pot. Pour over them two pints of water Jnd n lb. sugar. Let petals steep In this solution for one hour. Then pour water and roses from one vessel Into another until the water is scented by the nowers. Strain and keep ID a cool place. Boole AUote• Solflla'11 Bfago DEAR PAT: An invalid friend of mine has asked me to get her a bingo book that is played with a pencil. She's seen the book, but can't recall its name. She says you rub a pencil over a blank square on the call sheet and a number appears. I've looked all over for this book to no avail. J .S., Laguna Beach Chances are you are looklng for "B·B·B· Bingo," by Harvey Wish. This book ls distributed by Dell Dlstrfbutlng, Inc., USE. 47th St., New York, NY 10017. It should be available wherever paperback books are sold. Separai~ Credit. /JlaadallfH"fl'! DEAR PAT: ls iJ.true that credit bureaus now must file credit information separately under the names of each person rather than as a joint ac· count? l 'd like to find out If this change is automatic or if a person has to request separate files. l11eaen lt'ratla Singer Helen 'Reddy incurred the wrath of Kansas State Fair of· ficials after cancell· ing an appearance. Officials have asked the Kansas attorney general to sue. Travel Series Slated The Newport Harbor Kiwanis Club will be host to a series or travel and adventure lectures at Orange Coast College. The series, which in· eludes lectures and photographs or Yosemite, Alaska, the Nile River, Guatemala and Colorado, runs on Friday nights at 8. Tieket.s are $2.50 per lecture for adults and $1 for students. Proceeds go to charitable causes. The next lecture will be Oct. 14, when former ranger Bob Roney talks about Yosemite. The re· maining lectures will be on Dec. 16. Feb. 17, March 10, and June 16. R. E., Huntington Beach U you are or were married and a credit bureau Po~~ ~·, has you included In a Joint credit file established • •...., before 1977, you should ask that the Information be filed separately under botlJ names. Credit lnforma-Stands tlon received since Jan. I, Im, ls automatically filed separately under both spouses• names. A mar- • rled or divorced woman can use her maiden name and not have to refer to her husband or former .Re ..... ~.ad husband's name to «•In access to her credit file. • • ....,~ ~~~~~~----~~~_;...;~....;;.;;..;;~~:.=-~ OXNARD CAP) THE FAMILY CIRCUS. By Bil Keane Newsracks diaplayinr ® "What are you drawing?" "I don't know. It isn't finished yet." 1 pornographic materials have started disappear- ing from the sidewalks or · Oxnard ·as police begin enforcing a new city or-dinance. Police removed 14 racks after owners failed to withdraw them volun- t.arily. Notices were post· ed on the racks a week ago demanding removal within three days. Under the new or- dinance, the display oL pornographic matter is prohibited within 1,000 feet of schools, homes, churches, parks and recreation areas. ~ ;J' /' 25%0FF SPECIAL SELECTION OF OUTSTANDING SILVER JEWELRY DESIGNS SEMINOLE. Tex. (AP) -The 500 Mennonites who left their homes in Canada and Mexico lo establish a com· munlt,y of worship here thouaht they'd have no problem stayln1 in the United Sta&.tl alter they s•nlt 12.6 million into land. Now they're beina told they have to leave. The U.S. Immlgtatlon and Naturauza. tJon Service says their temporary viaas have run out and they must leave the 8,400 acres in Gaines County in WeJt Texas that they'd hoped to tum into a re· l11lous community ln the tracHUon of their parents. THE MENNONITES SAY tbey·were assured they cou.ld get permanent visas, and many townspeople here are behind ' their effort to stay. "It makes me mad as bell,.. says Mayor Bob ClMk. ''Tbey were Just get-Une some bad advice or sopieooe was decelvinc them." The immigration service has started · sending wamlng letters to the Men-• nonites. FRANK WIEBE. A MEXICAN·BOaM Canadian, has been told to leave b Thursday for overstaytna bis temporary visa. The Mennonites, evanaelical Pr'Otes· tan ts noted for plain dress and exclusive. ness, were unable In Canida to establlsb. the community they wanted ~ause enouih land was never avaUable in one place. In Mexico. land expropriaUoo wu the problem. S.S. CatalinaOwner / Coastal Port Project Eyed GUADALUPE <AP> -Beverly HJlls developer Hymie Singer says he plans lo convert about a mile or sand dune-covered Santa Barbara County coastline "into a billion-dollar port." · Denve1 Omelette Included in Singer 's plans are a small boat marina, industrial site development for "factories freezer plants and canneries" and a harbor Co; freighters and tankers. Santa Barbara County Supervisor Harrell Fletcher, usually a strong proponent of develop· ment, advised Singer that the proposed harbor would not "really fit" in the area. • Singer, who bought the S.S. Catalina as a Valen· tine's Day gift for his wife, said he may keep the ship at the proposed harbor, since il costs $300 a day to moor it at Los Angeles harbor. The fabled steamship previously ferried passengers between Los Angeles and Catalina Island. . SEPTEMBER SPECIAL $ · OF THE MONTH .-:I 59 Made with three fresh eggs. dteed ham. onions and pepper Served wrth choice of toast. butter, A 1elly and hash brown potatoes. • Served 24 hours. Reg. 2.35 SPIRES COSTA MESA IRVINE . 3125 Harbor Blvd. MacArthur Blvd. at SO. Fwv. SOFA & LOVESEAT :.;:.a~:z::t!.-:= BOTH PIECES · ~... NOT IH COVER SHOWN Chic and IP8fldlng 'WetlWOOO" by Guldctalt keeps ils be1111y 1ni.ci for ~s. made llP '" $ 2 9 9 alaln ,.._,,.,long WMrlng, -y·IO-<:ate·for HerCU!Orf Olehn hblf. It's CflSP. lulfedo arm NOW . atyfing loOM pillow tleclt 1 nd ma Idling side pillowl kMp on making a strong contemporary st1tenWint. Btlnga home s><oot'lhat IUllion and v1lue llill llve. ONLY FAMILY ROOM SPEBALI. ·-fenolllyl-....-,8999 This Is a value you have to aee to appreciate. Our all new ramlly room package. All pieces match. Vou11 get tM aola. loveaeat. chair, ottoman. rock•. coctdail tlble, lame> table and an end tlble All for thl1 low, low pn<:4al Covered In vl"Yf •nd Herculon. It's very comrortat>I• & attractoo.'et VELVET MODULAR GROUP SACRIFla ONLY ·-· • . ZNCIN11'AS (APl -The ..,.,.,..-t bom raa Ii.ii r tht >tltlor1 r tb1 Sn Dl•10 Padres b SI, .... b•Hb•ll C'U'ell' , DOW Nata Colbert 11 becomln1 a car .. , no rep , " he d its an tntcn cw Mcmday. ''I C'OUld ba~e made a dec~t llv· tns in ~ mtnort 1f I 'd wanted to bana on. but I didn't want to 10 that rvute a1111n b and au l 'ot apoUcd In lhe ma JOl'I." Col alammt'd hia name JDto lbs ttearet book Aus. 1, 1m, bltUn• ftn home runs tn a doubt header 111ln t the Brav•inAUantaStadlum. Jn his nnt lout IU Ol\5 In tba maJon, he hit 132 home runs. Jte a11ned his 1873 con tract for an eattmated .,,000 and later l'etched the $80,000 ltvel. Tbe e 2. 210 pound native ol St 1 .. oull tied the major leaau• rttord for the most homc111 ln u doubleheuder and moat homers In two con· aecvt.rve aam~. He set major leaaue doubleheader marks for the most total bases wlt.h 22 L NATE COLBERT (LEFT) IS SELLING CARS. .. and molt runs·batlcd·ln with 13. Colbert allo set a NaUonal Leque record for most rbi in two consecutive eames, 13, and tied the mark for most homers ln a week, Sunday throuih Saturday, with elC}lt. He finished the 1972 season with 38 homers but fell to 22 the next year and 14In1974. The Padres traded Colbert to the Detroit Tisers 11.Jter the 1974 season, but he never re- gained his batting skills. Colbert rut less than .200 with tooly ei1bt. homers In 197$ wlth Detroit and Montreal. Mont.rut released him last aeaaon after just IS.games. He ~gned later wiLb Oakland as a Tree agent and waa assigned to Tucson in the Pacific Coast League, where he hit .248 wlLh 12bomers. In Oakland. he went O·fOr·S in two games with the A's. Colbert played out his option and was declared a free agent last Nov. 1, but failed lo catch on with the expansion Toronto Blue Jays in a trial last spring. The suddenness w1lh which 49ers Tra•pled Resurgent Steele-rs Awaiting Oakland PITTSBURGH tAP J The television viewers who saw Fran· co H.arns outgain the whole San Fraqcisco 49crs offense had to in· elude some of the guys who wilL be here next Sunday --the Oakland Raiders. ·'Oakland is heralded to be the best football team in the NFL," Harris said Monday night alter he and a totally dominant Pitts- burgh Steelers defense com- bined to crush San Francisco, 27·0. "So here we are playing the best team in the NFL," Harris added. "And I don't think we are second to anybody, so something has to give." The Steelers did lit· tie gJVing at all Monday night, yielding 101 net offensive yards 82 by the run and 19 by the pass. Harns who scored a pair of Steelers touchdowns rushed for 100 yards himself and added nine more on a pass reception. "I've always scored points in my career, always,·· lamented 49ers quarterback Jim Plunkett who hit three of 13 passes for 30 yards. all of which were erased by Steelers sacks for minus 30 yurds. ··we couldn't pass. We couldn't rush." said new 49ers coach Ken Meyer, whose team has scored just three points in its last three preseason games. "But I don't think many people are going to move the ball up and down the fleld on Pittsburgh." Oakland did just that against the Steelers in the AFC title game last season and the victory helped the Raiders to the Super Bowl title that belonged to Pitt the previous two years. "I'm looking forward to next Sunday. Everybody is," said the smiling Harris who missed the AFC title game with damaged ribs. Harris gave Pitt all the points it needed aulnst San Fran· cisco in the second period when tie broke two arm tackles and ran 14 yards for a touchdown. Roy Gerela added a 49--yard field goal to give the Steelers a 10·0 half time edge, and he added a 47-yard scoring kick that made it 13-0 in the third period. In the last quarter, Harris ran seven yards for another touchdown and quarterback Terry Bradshaw hit John Stallworth with a IS.yard scoring pass. "Their defense was tough and physical. They gave us a beat· ing," Harris said after the best opening game of his career. "But they just got let down by their offense," he added. 'I'be 49crs did not cross mid· field in the first half. They visited Steelers territory only three times in the second half, once via a Harris fumble. Sports Clipped Slwn le••.., OU.rt..-. s. ........ ,_ 0 0 0 o-0 ..,,....,. ••• J ,._,, Red Sox Trim Yankees BOSTON -Carlton Fisk drove a three-run homer in the third in· ning and the Boston Red Sox held <>n for a 6-3 ~ictory over the New York Yankees Monday night behind the pitching or Reggie Cleveland. The triumph kept alive Boston's pennant hopes. enabling the Red Sox to move to within 31r.i games of the Yankees in the American League East. Fisk broke a l ·l tie with his 24th homer, a line shot high into the screen in left. With one out, rookie Ted Cox looped a single in· to shallow right-center for his sixth consecutive maJor leaeue hit. Jim Rice lined a single to le rt-center. sending Cox to second, and both runners moved up as Carl Yastrzemski grounded out. Dave Kingman pulled New York to within 4·3 with a pinch· hit homer In the eighth, his third in three games since being ac· quired by the Yankees last week. on.laL.ae BALTIMORE -Jerry Garvin dealt Baltimore's pennant hopes a severe blow Monday ni1ht. al· lowing nine hits while pitching the Toronto Blue Jays to a 3· l vie· tory over the Orioles. The rookie left-bander, 10..16, gave up only a sixth-inning home run to Rich Dauer. The loss went to Rudy May, 17·13. It was the Orioles' third de· feat in their last 12 games and they remained 31h games behind New York. They have a season record of 7-5 against the ex pansion club. ntte Race1 AME Ill CAN 1.lAOU IE l!•llOM~ 'II I. P'tt. GI Now Yo<• •l " tlt ee111.._. " 41 m i•, 8o"on " '1 .J'3 l' ' NEWYOAK Home 171 Clt,,_1-4,Stllt 2'. ?1, H. "· O.t.c11t l. Sept 30, Oct. I 2. Awey 10 8otlon I, 5ttpl 10, Tor...,10 J Stl>I 1l, 24 1S 8Al.TIMOA6 -Hom• l•I, To<onlo J. Stpt. JO 21, n : O.trolt J, S-ot. 11. n. 2' A,...., t'1; Cltvet-3. S.PI. 23, 14. U; 8o•lon l. Stpt. JD, Oct. I,, BOSTON -._,. II); Now Y-t, ~-10; T0<on1o •. Stac. ». n , 21, 2'; e.1ttm.w. l . ""'· M, Oct. I, 2 A,.,.t' 14). Oe\ro114, Stllt.22.23,!A,U. Oda• •• 0'9..,te.1 LONDON -Lord Killani.D, president of the International Olympic Committee, saJd upon his return from China Tuesday that he had made some proeress Ryan's Arm Ailing Angela Ftill ta Te~, 6-1 "I'm not go1n1 out there if I'm going to hurt It. 1 'm not ~oinl tc hurt it for one game, • said California An1els p'tcher Nolan Ryan referri.nc to Ma injur~ a.rm. A three-nm homer off 1l1an by Toby Haftab lift4ld DoJle Alu .. ander and UM l'exu Rane..-. to• where I Cfn 't throw. it eets rldicQlous." · Ryan, attempting to become the American League's first 20· game winner, left the 1ame in the s1xt.h inning when his ri1ht forearm tilbt.eced. Tbe loss was J\Js 15th of the season. Alexander scattered 10 bita 1n ~proving bis record to 1&-10. on the reentry of the Chinese into the Olympic Games. After two days of discussions with the All-China Sports Federation, .Killanin said: "The Chinese have said there is only one China and that is the problem we now have to solve. Jr we go carefully and slowly a solution will be found." He said the talks. at the invita· lion of the Chinese, had been "'positive, helpful. frank and very friendly'' and be bad established vital contacts. He will report on the progress made at an International Olympic meeting next montb. China withdrew from the Olympics al the 1956 Games in Melbourne because of the IOC's ·• decision to admit a team from Taiwan under the designation "Formosa China." OWest St•r Dies CLEVELAND -The longest surviving player from the American Baseball League's 1901 inaugural ~eason, Paddy Livingston, died .Mopday in a Cleveland ho.1pltal. Livingston\ who turned 97 last Januaey, made bis major league debut as a catcher with Cleveland. He played with Cleveland, Philadelphia, Cincinnati and St. Loula in the majors and. for several minor league and sandlot teams. He batted against Walter Johnson and threw to teammate Eddie Collins as Ty Cobb at- tempted to steal second. Honus Waaner1 Chief Bender, Nap La· jole. John .MeGraw and Cy Younc were also plQin1 ball in Llvtnpton's time. ~lt..-.rts 14""' lGtrel• •k' I P•l-GO.rtle4t Pll~O.re,.n ~lt-Herr117Nll lGtrtl•"<kl Pll~I_,. IS ... u trorn Breos""w IGt,.I• -k kl ... ___ l'lrsl- AIKNirY•ds p .......... ds Atlumyerca PMWS """" F-bl&lasl ~ ... llM$-yerdl --"" • It »-CZ 4S-f7S .. ·~ 17 IS •••t n -2..0 .. ,. .. I I I I .. » ) " INDl¥1DUAl. l.IADIH RVSS41NG-Qn Frenclsco, JKksoro tS-'1. D. · Wllllerm ,._,.., PlttillurQll, Herrlt 21-100, e .. i.r 1·U , Br..,.._1-20. PASSING-s.n Fr11n<ltco, Ph"'''" J.1).t l v••ds. Bull 1·"4, 26. Plthbur9f\, 8reds.,.., 12·n.c> 16' RECEIVING~ Fran<IKo. 0. Wllll..,,t J.30. SHI 1-26. Pllls11U•9"1, sw-4 •l. Slellwonh , ... ,. Cvnnl"9f*n 1·19. he slipped .lla• pu.nled Colbert'• fana 'but be explains it this way: "I've always been a fast ball hitter and the word eot ar<>und that I live off speed so they gave me everyt.hl~ else but speed and I just wasn't able to adjust." Now his hopes are turned to his 7-year-old son De.rone. who waa 4-0 as a pitcher in Little League this summer, "He can throw a baseball 190 ·feet," said Colbert addtng proudly, "That's farther than his old man can throw.·' FRANCO HARRIS Sparks Pittsburgh DAILY PlLOT •J Soccer Violence Rans Club LONDON <AP) -Officials ot tho Manchester United football team were dismayed today by the European football union's de· cisi0C1 to ban the British chtb from European competition because of violence that erupted at a game the team played in France. "We were shocked to receive the decision that we have been banned," said a statement Issued by club secretary Les Olive. "It Is our intention to lodge an ap- peal and we are now gathering evidence for this purpose." Manchester United, which became the first English Club to win the European Cup in 1968, was informed or the decision Monday morning in a telegram from UEFA -Union of Euro- pean Football Associations. The chairman of the Manchester Uruted 's supporters· club said he was amazed by the dec1sion. The chairman. David Smith. s aid the violence at last Wednesday's match between Manchester United and St. Etienne. f<'rance, was caused because there was no segrega. tion of French and English fans at the St. Etienne grounds. "While J appreciate that the presence of the red and whlte col· ors and the reputation of United linked with the incidents which happened during the day by those people who made their own way to France -inflamed the situa- R • C tioo and brought about the inci-81DS ome; dents, 1 think the decision is astonishing." Smith said. He said he was also amazed Deer Hunters . that Manchester United was be· ing blamed for trouble on the home ground or another club. Get Sanction "We always understood that SACRAMENTO (A p ) -State and federal officials. encouraged by late-summer rains. agreed Monday to open California's in- land and late deer hunting !>Casons on schedule Saturday. About 250,000 deer hunters are expected to enter the forests Saturday for the seasons that en· compass all of California except for a band of counties from Men- docino south to Santa Barbara and Ventura and the northwest comer of Los Angeles. State Fish and Game and Forestry departments an · nounced last week that there was a possibiliw the seasons could be postponed ln some areas because of fire dangers. But the decision to go ahead with the seasons followed the second storm of late summer, particularly in the central and southern Sierra Nevada where the fire hazard nad been con· sidered most critical. State officials, consulting with the fjre hazard had been con- Bureau of Land Management, also warned hunters to use cau· lion. carry their own water and note any special restrictions in effect in many areas. The DFG forecasts a good season for deer hunters because of improved carryover of bucks and survival of fawns ·ror the third straight year. the home club was responsible for security on its own ground. Denis Howell <Britain's ma.nister for sports) has already made his point and WI.! ba c k him wholeheartedly on this.•· The ban means Manchester United 1s out of the Eu rope an Cup. Gottfried Bags Victory LOS ANGELES-Brian Gotll fried , top seeded in the $100,000 Southern Cali!Qmia Open tennis • champion.ships, captured a 6-3, 6·3 victory over Tim Wilkison in a first round match Monday. Paul Ramirez also won, defeat. ing Dick B<>hrnstedt, 6·2, but following the first game of the second set with Ramirez leading 1-0, .Bohmstedt left the game, saying his left hip and back hurt. George Hardie downed Russell Simpson 6 ·3, 6·1, Jurgen Fass bender of West Germ any de- feated Chico Hagey 6-4, 6-4, and Brian Teacher defeated Bruce Manson, 4-6, 6-3, 7~. Tom Leonard of Laguna Niguel topped Steve Krulevit.z, 7·6, 4·6. , 1·6 and Van Winitsky advanced to the second round, beating Geoff Masters, 6·2, 6·3. t 'I fllt\.Of Coast Players Area's of Week 'n.. folklwlf\I •u• c:tacn playera of Lb week for t.bel.r e lollowlnt we end focAball acUon u picked by their htlbat'bool co ch • Of lnue kltll.t Wllllama. E1taiteta fColt• MeH) tilth. Williama led thew~ for Eatan<'la '• h•<'kJC with ht• otren11n blocktn.r at tackle and ctov.nflcld bloc1Un1 Jlm . llln, Coro•• del Mar. Sholhn° bl()('ked well on the oul ~1de 1,.ttr run < au1bt \hret-pat.11e1 for 55 yards and Intercepted c>nl" wtuch he run back 50 yarda for a touchdown Pdr Stroag, Dana HUI.a. At spilt end, Strong blocked well and hauled m five puses for 78 yards u tne Dolphins made a second· half comeback to Lie the game SU-Ve Plnes, El Toro. The Chargers didn't have a big of· fensn·e rugbt, but coaches spotted the blocking of left tackle Pines as ootstandmg John Wklte. Mlasioo V~jo. The Oiablos were eapeciallY suc- cessful m running up the nuddle. and coaches say a primary reason was the blocldngof iUllrd White. Nate Rowsey, Su Clemente. Rowsey blocked and ran well from lu.s halfback pa6•tion for the Tri tons. Rowsey is a junior. Dana Wa.odrocke, Newport Barbor. Wandrocke ran well from tus fullback position and provided tight pus protecUon. Coaches also say he made no mental errors. Marco PagnanelH, Huntington Beacb. PagnanelJi was responsible for more than 300 offensive yards as be passed for 215 yards (eight completions in 19 attempts) and carried the ball 18 tirnPS for 89 y_ards . David Gonsales. Mater Del (Santa Ana). Gonzales did everything well. . running, blocking and breaking tackles as he gamed42yards m nine carries. -Mark Dow, Laguna Beach. Although he was outweighed by his front-Une opponent by 4-0 pounds, Dow <170 pounds> blocked.a nearly-perfect game at offensive guard. WUlle Gittens, .F.puntaln Valley. Gittens ran wild against Redlands, averaging" 10 yards per carry and scoring three touchdowns. He also had an 89-yard run caJled back on a penalty. Robin Charles, Capistrano Valley. Charles pij\yed quarterback after Brad Parker was injured and scored two touchdowns. one on a 12-yard run and the other on an 82-yard kick return. Jim Criss. Edison. Criss gained 44 yards oo five carries as one or the few offensive standouts the Chargers had in their de- feat. Lynn Buchan, Irvine. Buchan was providing good pass pro- tectLon and operung up holes from his position al right tackle before he left the game with an injured hand. Greg Karman, Marina. Karman scored two touchdowns, one on a 32-yard pass reception and the other on a 15-yard run and averaged 10.8 carries yards per carry on rive carries. Steve Finch, Costa Mesa. Fmch made nearly every block asked of him, says coach Tom French. The center is Costa Mesa's best offensive lineman now, coaches say. De#ftl•e Mike Camp, Estancia ffigb <Costa Mesa}. Camp bad a fine all-around game and made three key plays, blocking a field goal atte~pt, mte~cepting ~pass and making a tackle 15 yards behind the hne of scrimmage ma key situation. Kent Tucker, Marina <Huntln1tC.On Beach). Tucker. a lert tackle, consistently beat his man on the offensiye lir_:ie_.~<! w~~ one of lhe few bright defensive spots Marina bad. Dean Gent.er, Capistrano Valley. Genter made seven un- ~ssisted tackles and .was credited with four assisted stops as tbe linebacker helped his team to a shutout over Elsinore. Genter also recovered a rumble. Jeff Bl&etll, Ne!'l!Or1 Harbor. Bitetli notched a couple of sacks against the Millikan quarterback and played nearly naw- Jess defensive football. Randy Dick, El Toro. Dick was one of lhe few bright spots in a defense which gave up 28 points. From bis linebacker position Dick was epeciaJly effecli ve against the run. ' Mike ~boa, Mission Viejo. At defensive end Ochoa led the team in tackles and was praised by coach Joh~ Murio for his clutch performances on the crucial plays . . Carl Blsb, ~an Cleme!!l.e· A ~enior nose guard, Bish was the primary force m a defensive unit that continually harassed the Bolsa Grande quarterback. Eric Raff, Corona del Mar. Raff was credited with five un· assisted tackles, seven assists on tackles, recovered one fumble and caused another. ~arty ~atte~, Dana Hllls. Coach~ praised PaUerson's consist:encr ~ his first-ever varsity start at. defensive end. Pat- terson 1s &Junior. Steve .t:nJllsb, University HJgb UrvlDe>. English coDslltenuy stopped Tuslin's oH-tackle play from his defensive end position. He's a transfer from Long Beach Wilson. Brian Gloshen, Edison (HunUngC.On Beach). Gloshen led his team in tackles with 14 from his position at linebacker. Ron Padilla, Fountain Valley. PadilJa blocked a punt and ln· ler~epted a ~ass which he ran back 84 yards for a touchdown. He s a retunung all-league comer back. Oark Taylor, lrvlae. Coach Chl.lck Sorcabal says the play of i:aylor was the highlight of the game. Though triple-teamed at t1 mes, the sophomore still broke through for several tackles. Marc BaqHrbo, Ma&er Del CSanta Ana ). Baquerizo made 10 tackles and very few mistakes at out.side linebacker. BUJ Murphy, HunUngtoa Beach. A two-way starter Murphy was cited for a good all-around job in lbe defensive tac kl~ slot. Malt McCullough, Laguna Beach. As a linebacker McCullough made several key tackles, recover«! two fumbles and tackled the Brea quarterback in lbe end zone for a safety. Costa Mesa-None. Baseball Standings AME&ICAN LEAGUE Eut DlvlJloa New York B•lUmore 8oaton Detroit Cleveland Milwaukee Toronto W L Pd. GB 93 58 .616 89 61 .593 3~ 89 61 .593 31(t 70 81 .464 23 67 84 .444 26 63 89 .414 301h 52 97 .~49 40 Weat Divblon Kansas City 93 ~5 . 628 Teitas 84 66 .5«1 10 Chicago 84 67 .556 10'1'l Minnesota 80 11 .530 141'l Angels 71 78 .417 22"2 Oakland 58 90 .392 3:; Seattle 58 93 384 361 t MeM•y'a O..m•t f...-oJ, a.111more 1 llo•IOl'I •• -York l O..r«Mt,Clew1Mld4 Ch~l. o.ltl9"" 0 r. ...... C.t41-• • °"'' _.... K'.Nduled T_,,,, Ge<toe• HewY-CTerrer 1s-1u •• ao.ton m .. 11 ... 1. .. Tor-o (OM<' ... , •I B•ltlmot~ IG<lrmley ,.,,, .. c1.,,.1....i •-1-0IM Oetron IAou,....1~11.n S.otue IMOM-OW 7·111 •I Mll..,..,t.Ae ISIMCW> .. u l,n Oekl.nd IU.nvford .. ,,, el Oll<e<10 tstone 14 111,n Ml~• CZ.M 11 111 el Ka.,. .. Oly 151>111- torlf , ... ,, .. TexAt (Elll1 .. Ul al C..hlornle IBntl tJ-111.n _.,.., .• oa .... 1 TOf'ontoll 9•111more. n Oel<lend et O>lc-." Minne,.,.• et K.,,ws Cllv n SHl11t e1 Mllw,...i..., n Te,..u1c..111omte,n Only~tch..sulod NATIONAL LEAGUE East Dlvlsloo W L Pct.GB Philadelphia 93 56 .624 Pittsburgh 86 6S .570 8 Chicago 78 72 .520 15'1'l St . Louis 78 12 .520 15'1'l Montreal 69 80 .466 24 NewYork 60 91 .397 34 West Division Dodgers Cincinnati Houston San Francisco San Diego Atlanta 91 59 .607 80 71 .530 ll '1'l 75 74 .503 1S'1'l 69 82 .457 22'1'l 6S 86 .430 261h 57 93 .380 34 ~··~" NO 0-"'"" K'-'led r-.,··-" SI Louil (UfT .. 7·41 •I Mofllr .. I IOU..• 1.01 n '"~ lllurrl• 1).Ul et Pltll-lplll• IC¥11on 21 .. l,n Pllhb<M'O" fCAnckl.,I• 11-Sl •• New Yori< CE1of,_.•11l.n . l.118"1A IAut-7·101 et HouSl"'1 IJ N141cro n -•1,11 Clnc:lnnetl fNonnen U·lll el San 01eoa (Slllntv ... 11),n L.01 Anoel" IJOM !IHI •• s ... Fron<IKO IHalkkJ 1 .... 11), n _., •• Ge ..... SI L.oulut-.1 ..... 1.n Chlc.eQO et Pltll-lpllla," Plt~atNtwYork.11 1'11 ... 1• at Hou'llCW>, .. C1nc:1nn.ttl et S... 01-. 11 l..0t Anofln •I S.n Francltco, n Pickeroo Winners Mary Anne Puccinelli o( Newport Beach 1s the winner of the first weekly Dally Pilot Pigskin Pickeroo football con· test. She correctly tabbed 24 win- ners ln a week marked by upsets. particularly in the pro rauks. She was the only one of the top 16 finishers to correctly pick Atlanta overthe Rams. None of the top 16 doped Cleveland lo knock off Cincin· natl. There was a 14-way tie for second place and aft.er the tie-- breaker was used, Kathy ~gl of Irvine winds up second. Jeff Perkins of Costa Mesa ls third. Puccinelli will get. a year's membership al Nautilus Newport health club while the next two place winners earn $10 gift certificates from South Coast Plaza. Football Ratings ay Ti. AHICl•bll -· T,_ T"" ,....,,.., _ ,., T ... AS-Mt.d PU~ con-.. laOC1lell DOii, •1111 flrst-pl--'" .,.,...,_ ~,__...., tOlel polftts: I MldllOI ,_.. 1,GIM 11.NtrOm 1-1.0 206 2.usc:cs1 ~ 1.on n .Mlt&St ,_ :i.w l.Olll•C11 240 tiJ 1J.Flw1d9 1-''° •.OllloQI 2... fl17 tA.NbnlllllUI 1-1-4 161 5.,..,,,SICJl 2+o 111 u .Wllldt 2+0 11t '-T...uM >00 1111 ~ 2 ... IOI J.TuT<llOI ,_.. .it '1.~ MO al l.C411 ... -11.UCl.A ,_Ml Ill 9,Tpant ~ 111 "·,._... HO 73 -;;m;-;;;;;;;:;--~~==W.AIA~~~l-1.0 21t aeYU M>O .. Rose Bowl Ticket Sale · PASADENA CAP) -People who want t.o go t.o the Rose Bowl January 2 had better start sending theirpostcardsin soon. P<>St card entries are being accepted by the Pasadena Tournament. of Roses Association for a drawinc in what wllJ be the only public sale or ticket.a tOthe 1978 game. .. ____ ..,... ____ ___ To~her Test Awaits CX _ Capl.strano Valley HiCh'I Cou1ars tot oU c.o lhe perfect start for its first edition of varsity football Fri~ night -but bu.slneu now turns to a foe more formidable than the 33..() loser that Elsinore Hi&h proved. Thursday nlght (7 :30> at Valencia (Placentia) High the Aztecs of Esperanza High <Anaheim), CIF playoff entrlH the past two years and ranked No. a lD Orange County this week after a 1·6 victory over Troy (Fullerton} High, are walUng for Cv . Valley," says Yoder. "We acouted them, but we have oo filma. We bavt a Sood defensive team, however, and we anticipate a 1ood seaaon. Capistrano Valley is a now school, but we ahould have no problem aetUng u9 for the came. WHhould be ready.'' Esperanza's leadlna auns include tallbaclc Brad Goettsche, Junlor quarterback Mlke Ludwlg and receiven Tom Sheffield and Joo Hamptoo. Esper~a coach Pete Yoder, a former bead coach at Pl.sadena 's Blair High and Cal State (Fullerton), and an assistant at use. says he feels this vear's team will be as good as the '76 unit. Goettache carried 18 Ume:a for 86 yard.I ualnst Troy. Ludwig, a second team all-league choice u a sop&more, completed six ol 11 pus• for 68 yards and his only two taraets were Sheffield and Hampton. The Aztecs work out of an I-formation with Goettsche and Ludwig lhe keys to the at.tack. "We don't know much about Capistrano CC Meet Saturday Barons Still No. 1 In Grid Rankings Sixteen schools have filed entries for the Uth It's the same story at crosa-town rival Costa annual Corona del Mar the top of the offi ~lal Mesa Friday nlgbt, Cross Country Invita-Orange County Top-10 whlcb was upset by La tional Saturday at football poll for high Quinta (Garden Grove}, Bayview School on Upper school football as in 13-0 . NewportBay. 1976-Fountain Valley Newport Harbor's de· Palos Verdes , Villa High's Barons continue fensive victory over Park and Edison IUgb of as the unanimous choice. Lon~ Beach MiJllkan Huntington Beach are The Ba rons raced lo a <3·0> earned the Sailors among the favorites in 3 S · 6 victory o v er the No. 7 spot, which will division three, regarded Redlands in their opener be challenged. by arch by meet director Jim b e h Ind lb e three · rival Corona del Mar Tomlinasthestrongestof touchdown performance Friday night in another 14 races scheduled. or Willie Gittens. Now non.league encounter. Tomlin's Corona del they await what may be No. 2 rated Santa Ana Mar squad wlJI run in their toughest pre-league Valley, which edged division two and is rated challenge Long Beach Servite or Anaheim in Its among the top contend· Wllson. o~ner, has a breather at ders, along with Long Wilson and Fountain Chino Friday. Beach Wilson and Hunt-Valley c lash Friday TOP 10 ingt.onBeachHigh. night at Huntington Pos.Team,recordPolnts Boys varsity and JV Beach High School. 1. Ftn. Valley (1.0) tO will run three miles Other Orange Coast 2. SA Valley (1-0> 51 throughthecourseofroll-area teams to gain 3. Westminster (1-0) SO ing hills, while girls. berths are Estancia 4. Servite (0-1) 33 so phomor es a n d <Costa Mesa) (fifth) and 5. Eatanela (1-0) zt f brn Newport Harbot'. 6. Villa Park (1-0) 25 ~es . en run 3 lwo-mil~ Estancia dealt always 7. Newport (1-0) 18 cU'cWt. tough Edison (Hunt-8. Esperanza (1-0) 16 Orange Coast area ington Beach> a 16-13 9. Los Alamitos (1-0) 12 Calendar 'II A •• ., """"10 c.-~, ~H.t•41tsoft u.m. Weter ... lo-laftta f'o at Seft Ct-O:lsl. Socctr~ a.._. Mww .t OoNtft West c.11-ff:•l. ~o'-ff •I Or ..... OMll&c.I .... 01. "1'1llnely """'-n> 0..~9M<1' •114 .....,. tlMc.tl --• ~u. L.oa AIAl'lll"" M MllrtN a.ti oC l : U l. s.n.tto, CM Hlell -I 1'¥1M at UC lrvlno Qp.m.I. w-Plolo-Calte -· V111 ... n1. l'I. ~ oet M¥, IMno, El Toro. MIHI ... vi.1o. ltlan<lo. ~rt Ha~ -L..-.. odl ot Sioutll Ceut tourftey; l!tlofttla. \.o• Alemltoo, Edlton, '"-t Hat110r, 1E11-1e. Ma<lne et £11-IA fro•ll- •oollomo._ tourMY, H1t11tl11110" 8ff<h •I VIII• ~-1_.,, Or-C.0.•I ColleOt M S.-tack CAMI• 11f::1:,.11-·t11 llU...nliol vs Nl•t•r Ool et Saftl• AM eowt, Ceplllr-Val..., "' l!ICl9Nf'IA •I veienclo HIQI\ Cbotf\et 1 :ilOl. Girts ltMla-+MlllftllM llMclt IOI L.aoune 8Mcll ll:1Sl. =--a Moflke et E•IAMIA (2), e1 T-.. ··-m. FCMCNH .. C.0.-dtl -Q:lOI, T ustln tit Mltllan Vlojo 01. • • ..... WIDE AREA COVERAGE schools which will com· loss and now awaits 10. Sonora (1-0) 8 pete include Irvine. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~..:_._;_~~~-=-OBAH\00.:-U Ocean View, University P-----9111!1 <Irvine), Huntington Beach, Laguna Beach, Newport Harbor, Edison <Huntington Be ach), Mater Dei (Santa Ana) .a.-. 64r3221 for and the host, Corona del , .... w..... ~ • · · Mar. • R.,_ AUTOMOTIVE UflMISHIHG Others which have en· • LOCAL REFlllHCIS FUIHISHID tered include Mammoth, • ALL WORK RILLY ~UAIAMTHD Los Amigos <Fountain ::===~.r--~-- VaJJey), Gardel\ Grove, II "'" '-\JO\.I • I ""' Ii=== Villa Park, El Modena I JOJZOfUC&mAAV!.. 645 ~22 I I !Orange), Santa Ana COU6!:1M, CAQfOBHJA ·~ Valley and Palos Ve rdes. ~;;====~=~:::;:;::::;:;::;::;::=;;;~ ••••• ;;:~ NODEPOOTON APPROVED CREDrr RULES WIN PRIZES WORTH MORE THAN $3,000 IN ............................................. ·77 PIGSKIN PICKEROO Sponsored by and $oa1l!~u1 ! ENTRY BLANK ! • • : ... .,,. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. .. .. . . . . . : • • Aidillr'ess .••.•.•..••..••••••••••••••• , ••••• City ........................ Zip ......... . Pllcllte .•••....•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • • • • • • • • Circle teams you ""'* will win tftls week• .. ,,. : • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .. • • .. • • • • • • • • • • • • • nae drawing will be held in late October. Only cards will be accepted and should be malled to Rose Bowl Ticket Drawing, P .O. Box 1800, Pasadena ~~~~~!:!~~~~~~~~~!!!~~~~ 91109. - • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • The cards must contain lbe sender's name and address and must be postmarked prior to midnttbt Oct. IS. In all, 3,500 seats will be made available through the drawlna. Drawing winnen wlll be able to b"Y two ticketa to lbe 64th annual same to be played Jan. 2, 1978. Tickets will be $17.SOeach. t . .. ~ • • • ~ ' ' MARMADUKE ~.llowMU&w WIU. IT C06f iO (ilJ~ 1M ~~? • GO~. ~Ar ~ '6U 1.00KING R>tl NoW ? by Wm. F. Brown and Mel C.Sson !;;.1T<-S . FUNKY WINKERBEAN smFF, 1Ht& 1s MR. NATE GREEN! IE.'Ll BE 'rnKINGi OVER FOR IYll&S PL..DT1" ... TANK McNAMARA A Jl)(·CCP <;LYlul. IT'S eRILLtANTr f=~DD~ ';llV601N.l'7 A GENIUS ~ ... 0 . ..,. ..... __ , .... .,..,."'""""- I I l ~I .'i( ~ •·ZD BoY1 T,ALk ,ABoUT RDLJGHING IT·· NI! CIVILl'l,ATION ~ TODAY'S CBDSSWDRD PUZZLI GORDO ACROSS 1 Is out Iron! 6Numerlut prefix 1QSat111ty beyond dflllire 1"4 Conleas 15 Motten metal reluae Ht Amiss 17 l(ltchen .. CCHSO<Y , ,.,...tel fastener 19 ~1m1 I. wild •goat 2C.Oenuded · 52 Involved by neceaalty 54 Alarms 58 King or Norman 59Release 61 EmPty 62 Grain IOf bfewtng liquor 63 Hindu god: Ver. 84 Greene or Burr 65 Fusses 66 Male animel 67 Slightest DOWN · ~are 1 CollHn 22 8 1t1er 2 Correct crlllc1sm 3 Part of UNITED Feature Syndicate by Tom Batiuk WHO , Bl;) "THE W{l/..), 15 AU.OOJED 10 e>EE V151TO~ NOOJ "THAI 51-1£'5 ~""J 1 00T OF TfiE. r ~101..ENT WARD I by Jeff Millar and Bill Hinds by Mell c DOOLEY'S WORLD DR. SMOCK SAY, W HE!Re's A (SOOP P L-AC.e -ro eoY M S PICAL.-UN l ~ORMS , PR. FESi,PMA N ? MOTLEY'S CREW 9 iO 1..00K~ l..IKe. "fr\~ GU'<? 1w ·n-1e or.1-t~R 56CflON 60T M/4D Al 1'H~IR raREMAN "'6).\N. by Gus Arriola by Harold Le Ooux WHEN THE TIME COMES, 'l'Otl'LL ME.ET ME, #AR. t.AV910AA ••. eoT IT'S G0046 1'0TAKE LIKE $00000 FOft THE • 24 Quarrel U.S.A. PIWlLEGE! l'M THE ONLY ONE W~ KNOWS 'l'OO KILLED 'IOtllt 28 Makes o4 Milll1ry 1.11i1I 27,Critic • 5 ---··· 1n 3tBunghole Entered plug 6 Her Serene 32"Take ••••• Highness. look.. Abb<. 33 Fiction al 7 Modified narr11tve • organlam 35 Apple • •• 8 Performing 38Wln art 39 Pulled along 9 Granted a behind share ol • •11Towering l O Subotdlnale At Boundary ruler • 42 Extracted 1 t Be 1n store • ore1 tor '4l ~akas dlrly 12 Group of • 44 Tiiie clans 1s-----w1lh. t3Circu11 Oow1ll'lout court1 47 ,erused 21 Large lancy ·• · hastily marble 6t,emale 23 Shadeol student green 25 Mor11se·s ····Hinea arm 43 Out oltlle 2 7 Flt ol anger ordinu y 28 Atasken 4' ta petntut QOVernor '6 Call for help 29 lnelfecti'le 4 7 Southern 30W111crew . city member 48 Press with 34 Of Hindu the hands sacred wrll· 49 011.0fen·s rnga laf'ld : Prehx 35 Unplea1111t 50 Rtalgn aenaallon 53 sing., . 38 Aliments $5 N.Z. limber 37 ._.ore tree 39 HaY1110 se ~dim'• t>oundteas grandson •MtOY 57 S~nlah iir· 40 Ballel hat 1 .. 111te: 2 60 Toucll a words baff runner 42 Comtdlenne TUMBLEWEEDS WIFE ... AAD LOLA! by Tom K. Ryan J • • J i .~ . l ~ ! ; by (harlts M. Scbuli THIS IS THE TIME OF L{EAA WHEN SOME O~ 'lliE LEAVES BEGIN TO FALL .• by R0ger Bradfield . by George Lemont by Templeton and Forman GERIATRIX NOW, I'M 60IN5 ·TO TEU.. ')()\J OE ~:,TIME.,. COACH, •• · .,.,~ CJGAI< AOAY, OME COCKTAIL. ANO STOP ReA/)JNG PUSSYCAT mc.ATRE. N>S! DENNIS THE MENACE .... ~------..... ----. ~. 11 t"IJ\\ 1:009 •• ( a NEWS -~OWES'( "The Ntghf Of The Sudden Plague" w .. 1 and Ocwoon 1nve1U· Qlte I myil«10Ua melady which C)Maly:itM the popuc111on of entire fOWf\I • MICKEY MOUSE CLUB g) HECKLE AHO JECK LE e SESAME STREET GD VILLA ALEGRE 5:30. TOM AHO JERRY • WAIT TIL YOUR FA THEA GET'SHOME '9 FREEHAND SKETCHING 8:00 8 CBS NEWS aa News 0 EMERGENCY ONEI G MY PARTNER THE GHOST • THE PARTRIDGE FAMILY Shirley Is puraued by a presidential ambassad0<. ti) THE ROOKIES fn ELECTRIC COMPANY m AS MAN BEHAVES @)ABC NEWS 6:30 1) MOVIE • • * "She Wa11s" ( 197 t) Dorothy McGuire. Pally Duke A young bride ts possessed by the avenging sp1n1 ol her husband's lirsl wile ( 1 hr , 30 min) m THE ODD COUPLE Feltx volunteers on behall at Oscar and h1msell 10 coke care ol 11 small boy EID AS WE SEE IT "Gradua11on Flashbacks" Scu- denlS from Pontiac, Michigan give their views on early busing; "Char- lie Brown" Portland, Oregon stu- dents dm:\Jss ster&P4Ypes stu- dents and teachers have of eech other. el) GROWING YEARS • '"Introduction" CJ) CBS NEWS @) MERV GRIFFIN Guests: Freddy Fender, Wayland FltSwers and Madame, Fred Travalena. Les Whitten 7:00 D NBC NEWS 0 LIARS CLUB fJ ABC NEWS 8 CONCENTRATION (D I LOVE LUCY "Staten Island Ferry" (!) LET'S MAKE A DEAL EID MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT . m EARTH, SEA ANO SKY "lntroduc11on To Earth Science" @ TO TELL THE TRUTH 7:30 0 CANDID CAMERA 0 NEWL YWEO GAME 0 ®) HOLLYWOOD SQUARES 0 JOKER'S WILD Q) THE BRADY BUNCH Bobby saves Peter from being hit by a falling ladder. Q) ADAM-12 fil) 28 TONIGHT '11) SPECIAL ··A Chat With Country Music Artist Doc Wiiiiams" Veteran musician • .. Gary Frank as Wiiiie Lawrence embraces Brooke Adams as Lizzy Schlller, the seriously 111 young woman he loves, In the second part or the season premiere of Family, tonight at 10 p.m. on ABC, Channel 7. Williams discusses his care-er and several mistaken myths. ()) THE GONG SHOW 8:00 f) THE FITZPATRICKS (Premiere) The friendship between Max F1czpa1rick (Sean Marshall) and R.J. (Derek Wells) 1s severely shaken when Max's new bicycle is stolen while his friend was suppos- edly watching It. . D RICHARD PRYOR II MOVIE **'h "One Foot In Hell'' (1960) Alan Ladd, Don MurT-v. A deputy sheriff holds three people respona s1ble for the death of his wife. (2 hrs.) fJ @) HAPPY DAYS "Fonzie ... The Movie Siar?" While awaiting his Hollywood screen test, Fonzie accepts a challenge lo compete in a water skiing contest. (Part 2 or 2) 0 MOVIE * *•'I• "Apartment For Peggy" ( 1948) William Holden, Jeanne Ratings· Guide fMOYtes 11r~ r•ted A<<Ot'dinq to bov office •tllonclM>C•. Movlo lor Tl/ ••• )uOQed ltY • critk. I * * * * -Excellent * * * -Very Good ** -Good * ·~ -Fair * -Poor Crain A processor offers his attic to house a student ~nd his preg- nant wife (2 hrs.) m LAST OF THE WILD (!) PERRY MASON EID MASTERPIECE THEATRE "Upstairs, Down1talrs: The Under- Siudy" The Beflamys are about to have an lmp<H"tant dinner party. and suddenly, Hudson Is unable to take charge. ~ MASTERPIECETHEATRE "Upstairs, OownS1alrs: Alberto" An embarrassing situation arises wtien Georgina develops a friend- ship with a wild eoclety girl. (J) PUBLIC AFFAIRS 8:30 0 ®l LAVERNE & SHIRLEY . (Season Premiere) "Airport '59" When the glrla accldentaUy pour hot coffee Into the lap of pilot Buzz Anderson (Roy Stuart), he hits his head and Is knocked unconscious leaving Laverne to take over the con trots. Q) CROSS-WITS CJ) SAN DIEGO 9:00f)(J) M•A•S•H (Season Premiere) Maj. Charles Emerson Winchester (David Ogden Stiers). an aristocratic Bostonian. becomes a reluctant member of the 4077th when tits pr~eoes.sor, Maj. Burns. goes AWOL and receives a pel'manent transfer. 0 NBC MOVIE * * 'n "T~ Girl In 'The Empty Grave" (Premiere) Andy Griffith, Sharon Spelman. Small-town sher-. 111, Abel Marsh, launches an 1nves-- • tlgatlon Into the mYJterlous deaths or a couple whose reputedly cMcNMd daughter was seen alive ' Just hoiAta befor9 thJW demi.le. 8 al THREB'S COMPANY ''Jack Look• For A Job" Jeok's prlncfplea are at stake 'When he Is hired as a model and learns he ls to POie nuct. for a mag&ZJne ~nterlold with another model (Sally Klrlcllll\d). m MERV GRIFFIN (9 BOLDONES fD IN PERFORMANCE AT WOLF TRAP "Roberto Devereaux'' Beverly Sills stars In Oonlzettl'a opera which portrays the tragic love story of Queen Elizabeth and the Earl of Essex. 6!) MASTERPIECE THEATRE "D4cken1 Of London" UnlUCCeSS- ful In hie courting attempt•. Char1es spends more time writing and Is offered a lucfatlve contract after some ol his stories have been published. (Part 4 of 10) 9:30 D tm SOAP (Episode 2) A SYrprlsa awaits both Iha Cempbell and Tate families when they get together for dinner. 10:00 8 Cl) LOU GRANT (Premiere) Lou Grant (Ed Asner) IS offered a chance to take over the city desk at the faltering Los Ange- les Tribune. He accepts the chal- lenge but Is shocked to learn the final decision rests with the pub- I 1sh er --a woman (Nancy Marchand). ea NEWS fJ ®' FAMILY "Acts Of Love" Willie wins Lizzy (Brooke Adams) over and they are married at the Lawrence home with only his and her family (Pricilla Pointer. Harold Gould) In atten- danoe. (Part 2 of 2) G) ROOM 222 Cl) IN PURSUIT OF LIBERTY ''The Trouble That Truth Makes" The evolution of freedom of th<>t11hl· 10:30 ID CD NEWS 11:008 D fJ Cl) ®l NEWS 0 HOLL YWOOO CONNECTION G IRONSIDE Q) FERNWOOD 2NIGHT Guests: Chuck Jackson. Margaret Woodbury, the Salvation Army Singers. ti) MARCUS WELBY, M.O. ~ MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT 11:30 f) (J) KOJAK "A Wind From Corsica" Dominic Bruno (Joseph Hlndy), unaware he has a highly communicable disease, strives to carry out his deceased brother's vendetta whlle the entire PoHce and Health -Departments search for him. (R) · D TONIGHT . Host: Johnny Carson. Guests: Kel- ly Monteith, Erma Bombeck, Lola falana, Pete Fountain. &'I LOV!. AMERICAN STYLE fJ ~ ABC MOVIE * * 'n ·'The Thief Who Came To Dinner" ( 1973) Rypn O'Nell, - Jacqu.llne BISMt. A computer analy9l puts hla cti.sa playing expertence to good uae w'*' he beeomesa i.w-thief. (R) m WORLD OF SURVIVAL f.I) CAPTIONED ABC NEWS MORNING 12:00 8 TWILIGHT ZONE 8 MOVIE **lh "A Time For Kllllng'' (1967) Glenn FQrd, Inger Stevena.. A Union officer's zeal Is heightened when the Confe<$eraJes krdnep his girlfriend. (2 hrs.) OJ MOVIE *** "Macbeth" (1948) Orson Welles, Jeanette Nolan. Shak• speare's drama of a man and hll Wife whose greed and ambition lead them to traigedy In 11th-ceo- tury Scotland. (1hr.,30 min.) at MOVIE * * "The Secret 8-wn" (11MO) Bruce Bennett. Aorence AAcie A gang of brutal murdereta are tracked down by crlmlnal scien- tists. (1 hr., 30 min.) fl) LATINO CONSORTIUM "La Muralla Latin Band" 12:30 8 (J) CBS LA TE MOVIE **~ '"The Alpha Capel'" (1973) Henry Fonda, Leonard Nlmoy. A parole officer, embittered over his forced retirement. masterminds a mllllon-dollar gold bullion heist to be executed by three or his paro- lees (RI D MOVIE • * 'h "The Second Best Secret Agent In The Whole Wide World" ( 1965) Tom Adams, karel Stepanek. The Russians try to gain control of a secret formula, but a British secret agent foll• the plan. ( 1 hr., 55 min.) 1:00 D TOMORROW Guest~ Robin Moore, author of 'The Washington COnnectlon,' discusses the Korean scandal. 1:308 NEWS Q) MOVIE **Yt .. Telf It To The Judge" ( 1949) Rosalind Ruaaell, Robert Cummlng1. A couple gets a divorce, only to discover that they are still In love with each other. (2 hrs.) G) MOVIE ** "Cavalry Command" (1963) John Agar, Richard Arlen. Horsa soldiers attempt to restore peace to a Phlllpplne village during the Spanish-American conlllct. ( 1 hr .• JO min.) 1:380 NEWS 2:000 NEWS 0 MOVIES * 'h "Operation Hong Kong" ( 1964) Horst Frank, Maria Perachy. A highly respected shipping mag- nate is 98Cretly the head ol a Inter- national narcotics smuggling ring. (2 hra.) * * ~ "Somewhere In The Night" (19 .. 6) John Hodlak, Nancy Guild. A w•r v«eran suffering from amnMta attempts to uncover his former life. (2 hrs.) • 2:058 MOVIE *** .. So TIVa la love'' (1953) Kathryn Gtay90n. M«Y Otlttlll. P'rfif*lnQ for her debut Ill • MetrC>PQlltlan Op«e Houee. G"°9 Moore recalt8 the ....,.ta tMdlng '° thle night. (1 hr., 55 min.) 2:2se NEWS 2:30 8 MOVIES * ** "Ambush'' •(1950) Aowtt Taylor, John Hodlak. An Indian scout and a cavalry captain c~­ fllct during a relC\ltl tnlaslOn. (1 f\r.. 25mln.) * * • * "Gener at Della Aovec~· ( 1960) Vittorio De Sica. Hannes M ... mer. A petty crOOk Who II forced to Impersonate an ltallan general comae to Identify hlmMtf with the role of martyr for hAa COUl)w tty. (2 hra.) ·3:00G) NEWS 3:308) MOVIE * * "Man In The s.ddte" (1Q5f) Randolph Scott. JOM Leela. " man'• search for rewnge on h1e wife'• loYet brings Nm death. t1 hr •• 30 mln.) . ~:00 8 NEWSMAKERS ~30 8 NOONTIME •• Wednesdag'• ·: Daytime /tlo.,ies MORNING 9:00 G MOVIE * * * 'h "The Matchmaker" (1958) Shirley Booth, Anthony Plerlclns,•A matchmaker tries to find a proper mate for a rich, crochety pld widower. (2 hrs.) 10:00 8 MOVIE * * "Madlaon Avenu.'• (19'2) Dana Andrews, a.nor Parker..:4n unexpected tum of ewnta N¥eaJa that a hlghly reapected public fig.. ure P<>MS • deedty ttnet to U. nation. (2 hrs.) AFTERNOON 12:00 «D MOVIE **'h "The Loves Of Cannen'' (1948) Rita Heyworth, Glenn Ford. A gypsy girt manages to ruin tl'9 lives of the men who ioYe her. (2 hrs., 20 min.) 2:00 G MOVIE *** ''Solomon And Sheba" (1959) Yul Brynner, Gina Lollobrf- glda. The Israelites revolt agall;\at the romance between the Queen of Sheba and Solomon, their king. (2 hrs.) 3:00 ®) MOVIE * * * "Deadlock" ( 1969) Lealle Nielsen, Harl Rhodes. A D.A .• run- ning for senator, tries to find a killer and settle his differences with the police chief at the same time. (2 hrs.) 3:30 D MOVIE **'h "Two On A Bench" (1911) Patty Duke, Ted Beuell. A pelr ot uotlkely spies are thrown togelhw to find out which of them Is llCw.lly an agent. (1 hr .. 30 min.) .. Premiere Tonight 'Gntwing Years' on 50 'Lou Gtant' Resurfaces ~·In Solid Dra1na Slww To!Tight mar~s the this prodoctioo work was Design and Curriculum 'hows' ol being a parent. "birth" in Orange Coun· a systemic process of Planning and who is Students can enroD in ty of a new lelecou.rse on academic scrutiny to shorlJy to become a lbe course up to October child development from ensure that standard and mother herself for the 21. Phone 9~ to conception through contentgoalsweremet. second lime in early register.Programtimes adolescence. -DecG1nber. on KOCE-50 are Mondays 1 lt will be "born" lo Heading up the team and Wednesdays at 8 ~three 1>roud parents • whi ch designed the S HE SAID, "The a.m., Tuesdays and LOS ANGELES (AP)-· Ed Asner, who with Mary Tyler Moore got canned from that Minneapolis TV st.a· lion last spring, returns whence he began -to newspapers -as CBS' new "Lou Grant" series premiere tonight at 10 on Channel 2. It's a classy show. But don't expect 1t to be an hour-Jong echo or the MTM era, playea mostly for laughs. It's played tn06Uy for serious, "ith nary a Ted Knight type in sight. Besides Asner, chief players are Robert Walden and Rebecca Balding as tough young scribes; Peter Hobbs as a burnt-out old police reporter; ?,fason Adams as a 'spineless manag- ing editor and Nancy Marchand, the feared publisher of the Los Angeles Tribune. TONIGHT'S TALE opens with sad, beautifully played scenes ol Asner ar- riving here and undereoing the ego- ballering indignities of a middle- aged, nearly broke man desperately seeking a job. He's been a TV news executive 10 years. Now, he's asking Adams. acol- Jeague from old print days, for work as a journeyman reporter. Aft.er a losine attempt by both to re- hash old limes, Adams sym~ pathetically aaka his pal why the Tribune shouJd hire blm. • (TV REVIEW J '# the McGraw.Hill Book course Is Dr. Leslie Growing Years' is not a Thursdays at 6:30 p.m • Company of New York, Purdy who bolds a doc-parenting-course and S:30 p.m. on Sun· the UC Ext ens Ion tor ate in Imtr uctional because it's not aboutthe days. Division at San Diego ------------------------------- ··u ·s easy," the old pro bluntly replies. ''I'm 50 years old and I have S280 in the bank." He's surprised to learn he's up for city editor. But Adams hasn't the final say about it. and the Coast Communi· ty College District here in Orange County.-who have nourished its de- velopment over the last eighteen months with re- sourtes totallnt $850,000. They have called their teleci>urse "The Grow· . ing Years" and also have THAT'S RESERVED for Miss • .,..,,...· distributed it this filll to Marchand, up in the office suite they TURNS SERIOUS 15 other colleges aro\lDd caJI "the tower." Up they go to the Ed .. the comitry wbo are of· tower, with Asner nervously jokin&, -----"-•_n_er ____ fe""" it over their local .. I feel like Anne Boleyn." Nervous • -moments ensue. TV stations. · But he's hired. The rpt ol the hour concerns: -Misa Marchand's feelinl tbere've been too many neeative •tories about police lately, that they now should be played down. -Walden's claim that Hobbs, too loyal to cops he's covered 30 years, won't report a police sex scandal (n. volving under-age &lrls, a case the police department itself is lnvestleat- ing .. TV Theme Song Set For Sarah LOS ANG~t..s CAP> -Sarah Vaugha wUl re- cord the theine song "The Days , Have No Names" for the NBC movie "Sharon: Portrait of a Mistr41ss." Tbe Paramount film stars Trlall Vaa De•ere; Patikk o •Ne.t ud Mel Fe~ ••• Premieres Tonigh 6:30 P.M. • r rlwat ' SCR Comedy Superb ,.. T le HJ of playwrJtbt· omPo •~·••t rhtn.r Notl O'> _,.. U M -•Lh for a 1aod many 1un, and 001 of c.bt ·primary re•cm la that b.la work I t$ encto .. 't'd tritb tuct. r "1&Ra· I blc stA.>10& po•er. Wb1t was fuo· JU' a hAlf tury 110 11. for \M-l 11MJ6t part. equally lauahabla to- d.a> I 1 Certamly \bis as true ln the ! ~ase ol · Pnvate L1ves," which t "-•v•T• uv•aw A t..-. .., -C-f ..,KIM ..,, &»v14 . ..,.._. •ti·-..,, --a...--!Ir 1;4.o•lft ,.,... __ ......... ltl' Ti.om. "WIU, I ... --~11 IHUCl4 -YI ........ wl'll -•-•S.t __ ._.¥•tJ11m ..,,_ .. c.o..~t .. ..., .... •01--•111 ... c.u-.. .. _,,,_._..,:i.J t TMI C.UT r,u-a-.v ··~:'o.~ ~v•O-. ,.....Ml a..ri.\A<rfw ~Sn>iti. -0......-.. ... ........ ~ . .._ ........ ~ s howcases the mulU-talented J British showman at the zenith of his geruus. And nowhere could • ' this astringent comedy be t performed closer to perfection • • • than at South Coast Repertory : 1,,M1der the direction of David Emmes EMMES' REVIVA L of this , 1930 play 1s an unabashed de· 1 'light, a superb staging of a com· · edy that, when properly done as · it is at SCR. wjll outstrip any Nell Simon effort on the laugh meter. Never mind that its characters I <'ad their actions are hardly l ~·plaUsible.; the point is that they '""' ~· ·~ Tom Titus are fwmy Very funn.y. ) Undf'r Emmea • meticulous dJr.nloo, each of Coward'a four prlnclpall t.elll you all you need to know about him or her in the rtr1t few minute• on1ta1e. While Coward plays are inclined to be talky, there ls precious Utlle wut.ed motion ln lbe SCR pro- duction, which Illuminates even the more mundane momenta ol thescript. The SCR cast is impeccable, beaded by Charles Lanyer and Caroline Smith as the dJvorced couple reunited on ·their respec· live wedding ni&.bta with their new mates -splendidly in- terpreted by Anni Lona and John-David Keller. LANYER IS IN extraordinary form as the smug, self-centered Elyot, tossing orr Coward's barbed diaJogue with whiplash effect and getting as good as he gives from the flaming tongue of Miss Smith. Their characteriza. lion and timing as they flail away at each other, then call a truce, get cozy and have at it again are embossed with high professional polish. Not to be outdone in the crusting of invective, onJy in stage time, a re Keller and Miss Long as their f I Broadway Reri1'al mllmatched mates wbose honey- moon.a ar• cut abort br the atralns of "Somewhere l'1 Find You." Keller enact.a the pompous ttultecl 1hlrt, a natural foll for Lanyer'a thnlata, to perfection, whUe MJss Lonf. ls equally effec- tive u Lanyer s shrill, scream. ln1spouse. Backed by Michael Devine's superlative settings and iarbed In Charles TomUnson's richly elegant costumes, the foursome of "Private Lives'' put on the most enjoyable show or the year among local professional theaters. The Coward comedy continues through October at SCR's Third Step Theater, lUJ Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. ••• TIDS SEEMS TO be the week ---------for Noel Coward in Costa Mesa. Orange Coast College opens the musical revue "Ob Coward" Wednesday night for four performances in the Drama Lab Theater. A potpourri of many Coward songs, excerpts from his plays and scraps of dialogue from his books, thl' show Is a project of the OCC Orama Club under the direction of student Dan McWest. The company includes Joseph Amster, Alexandra Mandarino. Deborah Brucher , Sandra Massad, Chriss Zaida, Patrick Lipot and Michael Max Proud· foot. Curtarn time 1s 8 p.m and tickets are $1 Dragon Fli.ck For Disney LOS ANGELES IAP ) Wmners In Movie "ANNIE HALL" plus "NORMAN, IS L 0 S .A N G E L ES ·~~TH~A~T~Y~O~U~?~"~(R~)~ CAPl -Forty contest - winners mad e a whirlwind movie debut in a musical number In "Grease," a 1950s musical s tarring John' Travolta. Oliva Newton. John and Stockard Chan- ning Air were winners of local contests. They were treated to a tour of Paramount Studios, taken ta a Hollywood party and costumed for the number filmed at Venice High School. 'Man of La Mancha' Walt Di sney's Call642-5678. Christmas movie will be Put• few words Returns Ill• Tri• UJDph ~~:.~~;s fa~;:5~0~f ·;iv: ~=='o:w:o::rk=l=o=r ~o=u=. ~~~~~~~~~~ action and an1mal1on s tarring Helen Reddy. !111!1l.!91~ Jim Dale and Mickey i~ Jsy WILLIAM GLOVER NEW YORK !AP> · .' Once more, "Man or La " Mancha" gloriously. --··-Rooney. All the visual splendor, "\he melodic magic and fhe noble spirit that ',makes this musical a 'showbiz rarity arc ~voked anew 1n the produ ctio n at Broadway's Palace •'Theater. ~.. The engagem~nt, at \he midpoint of an ex- • tensive national tour. 1s \ limited here to l2 weeks. '--If cai.t energy sustains. there should be quite a box office Jam A long ovation at the final cour· tain was certainly well earned. ' ONCE MORE Richard ~11 ltiley ap~ars in the cen· j•tt•ral double role of Don ..-, Quixote and Miguel ·1.Cervanles, who created .. t h e m o r d a n t •. masterpiece that serves Cl a s tbe source of the 1•musical fantasy. Kiley handled the as- signment in the original pres entation, that scooped up a shelfload of ards in 1965 and then n for almost six years, pealed In the London rsion, and came back a 1972 Lincoln Center prise Such s us tained in lvement leads to role rfe<:t..1on, but the mint r eshness or thi s rformance is a re- arkable defiance or the zard of staleness. The -•11 ... :: "'JAlllaWALr llt Ill M._L .. ~ "THISD MACHIHrlll '"'"" "WAIOf THI WOILDS" l•t -"'WHltt WOILDS CCk.UDI"' •• , ,_..._ 'LA MANCHA' STARS AFTER OPENING Emily Yancey and Richard Kiiey glowing peak of the af- fair is hi s clarion rendi· tion of "The lmpossib'e Dream." THE REST OF the main players are of s horter indenture but have been nicely gathered to ensemble smoothness by Albert Moore. the original s tager Note particularly Emi· ly Yancy, the spitfire slattern Aldonazo whom the Kilight of the Woeful Countenance idealizes into a wondrously poign- ant Dulcinea. Standouts too are Bob Wright, Tony Martinez, Ian Sullivan, Ted Forlow and Taylor Reed. Together they make the inspirational senli· ment of Dale Wasserman's adaptation and Joe Darion's lyrics perfectly reasonable in an unreasonable world. THE PHYSICAL set· ling by Jloward Bay duplicates the original concept of lmposinat flex- ibility, and the Bay Patton Campbell cos· tumes nre equally tradi· tional. For the· f i r st. performance, composer Mitch Leigh conducted the overture with dash that set the tone for all the ensuing delight. "THE SPY WHO LOVED ME" "THE SORCERER" (PG) "SMOKEY AND THE BANDIT" "THE STING" (PG) ''NEW YORK. NEW YORK" (PG) "RETURN OF THE PINK PANTHER" "FANT ASIA" (G) "STAR WARS" lrGI "JAllHWAUr' Ill "AlllDGITOOFAI" "ICIHTUeJCY fltllD MOYlrlll WANTID TO IMOW (Al AIOVT Sir 'KENTUCKY FRIED MOVIE" IA "JAHllWAUC" 111 • "'1' "A lltD•I TOO FAI" : LA MIRADA 4 • LAKEWOOD 4 WAUl~ll •AllOAlll ,..IC( 11.M MONOA1"""14JUllOA'f tt•.,.e H-Y•I lltllllo t:ID lA MIRADA 4 Olll Y IUllOA'l't • MOllOATI it-•";; llOO *'""~ •• "~ )'"' lAH 1tM.Ut~11A11 oun CllOI \!.J,...;,., • ·-"4-2400 . flNAl CMAml·W~IUNO TAU (Ill IOHY. MO llASIU OAVIO CAllAel ... 0 ICAU IACUOfl ~ ~I THUNDll ",~TNIN0 111 ~--·-·-· -· MOVING VIOlATION tl'OI .. acuu '""' IAlll.WAl.k{t) '"" SIX MACH1Nlc11 ANINUMl-1 NVIO CAl&lllt* O IC.t.fl IAC .. OH THUHOll & UOHTNINO (N I ,PWI MOYINO VIOLATION1110I .,.,,. HARllOll 01 ADAMS COSTA MlSA 171411414112 .....,...._,~,.. .... "' ... ....... ,1tu..1-. .. a•u1111it AP ..... Jlwoerlil9 Danielle Spencer, 12, oC the TV series ''What's Hap· pening, •• is re- cuperating from near-fat al ln- j uries in an auto accident. She's shown with her mother. Cberyt Pelt, and pet dog. CINEOOME23 3000 W. CHAPMAN AVC. ORANGE 134-2983 ......_. tJWv ,.._. ,_ .... & •cut,.. .......... \A~IS.. ... 7'.A&te'OON PACIFIC'S~DOME ._,,._WC tiClt...LJ'-.oo .... ,... llltfttf ~··· .. ···- "WAR WORLDS" PLUS(G) EN WORLDS "'- COLLIDE" CINDUCEHTEI .. ~~~o•;;~': • ...&.=:;:::;:::;::=9 "TEASERS" PLUS (R) A WINNI .. "Girls Who Wiii PL'8~ Do Anything" "~~vA\~~0 I "WAROFTHE WORLDS .. PWS(G) 0iwHEN WORLDS COWDE'' l ... AIMcl•W "'-9 11.lllloll• Of cl are ltanaac t.bat tt tocn•tlnMt P•~ . to pow older. 'nwy are utlns advantqe of d1 count P">l,.m• otr nng old r Amttkam up to~ perc~nt ofr on prochxta ud services. THE P&OO&AM , M08T ol wtucb were be1un to late lt15 or early 1976, are 1preadln1 acros1 the country. They vary in or- ganization and eli1iblllty re· <tuirementa, but all have the same 1oal: to help 1en1or citizens, particularly tbme on fixedinc:omes, save money. One of the most ambitious ef- forts is Ohio's "Golden Buckeye Card." Joe Gall of the Oblo Com· mission on Aging said it is the on- ly statewide pro1ram in the country. The Golden Buckeye plan started ~arch 1976. Ohio resi· dents 65"" arid over can apply for a card al any one or about 1,500 locations. Holders or the cards are then entitled to discounts on everything from auto repairs to groceries at participating merchants. AS OF SEPT. 1, Gall said, 517,465 persons had applied for ,cards and 17,178 merchants were participating. He said the state started a campaign to reach shut-ins and others who normally ( would not heur about the pro- 1ram throuah or•anlzed senior r1Uuns clubs or actlvl\fea. A nationwide dl1count pro· "ram ll avallable throuth the American AssoclaUon of Retlre.d Pertons, a Washln1too-based group with 10.8 million members. Anyone SS or over can join the iiroup -you don't necessarily have to be retired. MEMBERS PAY A S3 annual fee and receive discounts at nine national hotel and motel chains and two renl·a·car companies, Hertz and Avis. They al.so can take advantage of a pharmacy service providinl home delivery or prescription drugs and medical items al low cost. Information is available from the association at 1909 K. St., Washington. D.C . 20049. The as· sociation, in conjunction with the National Retired Teachers As· sociation. also published a com- prehensive "Retirement In· formation Guide ... available from Fulfillment Section, NRTA· AARP, P.O. Box 2400, Long Beach, 90801. INDIVIDUAL STORES IN some areas also offer discounts Al"WI ....... Li% Likes Dolton John Dalton. the Virginia GOP gubenatoral candidate. places a ''Dalton for Governor" sticker on actress Elizabeth TC}ylor Warner in Middleburg. The Warners held a rally for Dalton at their home. Ranking state Republicans were among those attending. · on ptttlcular procluctl on particular days.• • A New York SUHfSOar'ket, ehaln. for example, lives tenlor ctthens 10 percent off on fresh produceonoday •week. Korvettes a New York-based chain of discount department stores, recently announced it would otter senior citi.iens a 10 percent discount on merchandise in all its 58 branches every Wed- nesday. SENIOR CITIZENS IN lllloois not only get store discounts, but also can participate in special programs of entertainment and recreation thanks l<> the VIP Council of Illinois, Inc., in Wheaton. VIP, a nonprofit group which receives some govern- ment funds and makes up the rest of its budget from fund· raising events and donaUons, bas issued 35,000 cards to persons over 60. There is no charge for the cards, but the council accepts donatiOIUi from those wtio can af. ford them. Cardholders receive store dis- counts. free admission to some local college entertainment pro- ductions and special benefits such as low-cost trips to sporting events. Most participating merchants are in northern 11· linois, but a council spokesman s aid some cardholder~ suc- cessfully used VIP identilica· lions to get discounts elsewhere. THE ELDERLY AREN'T the only beneficiaries of the dis- counts. The merchants themselves benefit through in· creased business. "There ·s lots more buying by senior citizens than by the young." said a spokesman for the Los Angeles Department of Parks, which started a Senior Citizen Discount Program last year. Retailers participating in the Los Angeles program display a special emblem indicating that they give discounts to seniors. Lists of stores -now about 500 -are published regularly, and the s pokesman said 1,500 copies or the latest directory, issued in May, already have been dis· tributed. The federal government has many programs to help the elder· ly . They range from well-known, widespread plans like Social Security to more limited things like the Golden Age Passport, which entitles holders to fr~ ad· mission to national parks, monu· ments and recreatlon areas. INFORMATION ON THE pro- grams is available from federal departments involved, but in· dividuals m4y find it easier to contact state or local agencies. A list or state agencies is available from the Administration on the Aging, Washington, D.C. 20201. A list or some federal aids in the areas or jobs, food. medical services and Income supple· ments Is included in a fact sheet from the Departrflent or Health, Education and Welfare. For a free copy, write to Consumer In- formation Center. Dept. 671E, Pueblo. Colo. 81009. ------------------------ PUBLIC' NOTICE l'ICTITIOUSIUSINUS HAMISTATSMIHT rn. l<Mlowlno ,.,..,,.. " 001 ... 0 bu\I nen•s Tl1ERMO ICING> OF ORANGE COU NTY. 1141 North i.omo ... Slrfft O••noe. C.11tornle'l'lM7 Thermo 1(1119 S.l.s -Service of lo• .,.._, • a.lllotllle coo•ullon. ••II Ptclllc Boulevard. Vernon Cetltomle'°°9 Th~ buSll'Ht Is cOfldU<lecl by e COf'. -•tlon.. n.,.,.,.1(1119 S.lff- Servltt of lOS AnoelH .i.k~ ,.._ldentalldTr .. surer Tiiis stM--lllecl w1tt1 Ii. C-tv o.t. of 0r*'9ll c-ty on A"lf n,1m.W111....,t°St.Jotw1. c.nyc.... .. ,_ . ....._ PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTfCE PICTITIOUS IUSINESS "CTl'{IOUS IUllHIH NAMI STATIMdlT NAM a STATIMIHT ,..,. t<Mlowing ,_r_ I• OOlno busl· The toflowlno ,.,_ 11 oolno busl MU et M,,. A REBOURS ET CIE. ?flt Chill°" SPRINGTIME MARICETING. tMI Wo. l.-Be.ell, CA. t2t51 So F•lrv ..... -'Pl c. ,..,,. An•. CA Vi-nt p C«cHe. mt Ch111°" '1'1707 Wey.~tt«;fl.CA nu1 Ml-• Jam .. D•••nl. 21.i So Tllh .....,,,.., Is c-.Cted bY .,, In-Felrvl-. Al>I C, Sente Ane CA '1'1707 dlv'-1 Tl>ls """""sh c-.CIM bY en In Vlnteftt P. C«cew dM <IUei This S1el-wet flied with ttle Miu O.lessl County o.rll of <>reno-County on s.p. Thi• llet_,,, wM flied with tht i.mber7, tf77. OluntYO...itofOreft119CouMyo115-9' ,.,..,. , .. "" l'ullll"'" Oreno-~ o.lly l"llot. ,.,,. Stpt. ta,20.27,-0ct.4, "71 l'llllll.,_,, Or-C.0.d Dally Piiot •t·n Sei>I-• 20.11. 0t1o1>er 4, 11, '~n-n PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE f'tCTtTIOUS •USINHS HAMISTATIMEHT TM 1011-1119 perton It doino bus•· MH4"; 8t!TSY'S OtSTlll8UTING. 4603 Ori.,, SI • HunllnQion llff<ll. CA'%"" Ellrabelll AIWI llllllo!I, ol603 Ori°" SI l1Ul'lll1'91onlle«ll,(;A~ Tiiis butltwu Is condu<led by .., ;,... dlvl- Ellubeth AIWI Allloft This Itel-WIS flied wilfl ltle Counly Oeftl f/4 Or ltl99 County on Stpt. "· lf77. "'1ff1 Pullllsllld Or81191 CMtt Delly Pltot Stpt•narto.n,<>c,_4, 11, tm _..n . ,.c...y,..,. .... SeltaM9 L•A ........ CA'9t1 16mgtor Q9mgnlc. 16mgtor 12 mg nic. l6mg1or 1.1 mg nlc. 16mgtor 1.0mgnlc. 13mg lar 1.0mg nic. 12 mg tor 16 mg tor 0 .9 mg nlc. 1.2 mg nlc. ~ l2 mg tor 0.7mg nlc. 11 mg tor 0.9mg nlc. 100's-only10 mg tar Regular and Menthol l7mg tor l2mg nlc. I .• • Jean Nidetch: 'I was not tat-no no, no. I weighed 214 pounds and I was chubby.' ........ ---... ~~ O.ltyfllt.e ...... ..,ll~KMtllW 'Born Again' to Thinness By DENNIS MeLEUAN Ott•Dallyl'tletlWt Two pink-tinted spoWghts beamed down on the stage, illuminating the dynamic blonde woman in an ethereal floor-length white sown. Her voice echoed through the cavernous Anaheim Convention Center where more than 1,000 of her followers-men, women and children-had come from all pms of Southern California to hear her speak last week. "What do you call this thing that touches millions and millions of lives throughout the world?" she said. "I've heard some call it brainwashing. Some say it's self-hypnosis. Others call it group therapy. "l don't care what anybody calls it-I get a fix every Tuesday night." The audience cheered and applauded as their guru, Jean Nidetch, continued courting her flock of Weight Watchers. While her delivery is more Joan Rivers than Kathryn Kuhlman, it is no coincidence that the former overweight Queens housewife resembles an evangelist at a revival meeting. . AT THE DOZENS of appearances she makes around the world there are testimonials where members -many of whom have lost well over 100 pounds-talk of being .. born a1ain." Since she began spreading her message to the overweight in 1961. Mn. Nidetch, who often is referred to as the .. high priestess" of Weight Watchers, has gained millions of followers in 26 countries. Her organization came to Southern California 10 years ago. ln that time members have shed a total of five million pounds in Orange, San Diego, Riverside and San Bernardino counties. For anyone who has lost even 10 pounds, that's cause for celebration. And that's what brought Jean Nidetch to Anaheim for her first public appearance there in five years. "It was in 1961," she said, beginning the story of Weight Watchers, a tale she has tireless- ly told thousands of times. "I was not fat-no, no, no. I weighed 214 pounds and I was chubby. "I was also 38 years old in 1961. But you can't be chubby at 38; that's for 18-year-olds. So I became big-boned-on a big frame." SHE WENT ON to say how she fell back on all the cliches and excuses fat people make for being overweight. "It's glandular.'' she would tell those who wondered how a girl with such a pretty face could let her body get in such sad shape. Mrs. Nldetch's recitation of what it was like for her to be obese -she maintains a weight of Elvis J42 pounds -is as humor-filled '8S Erma Bom- beck at her best. Consider her meeting those women who are the proverbial size seven: "You know what a size seven is -they have no personality," she said to laughter and ap- plause. "And take heart, they age faster ... Then there's the son who leaves the cold French fries covered with cold ketchup on the kitchen table. "I dOh't even like cold French fries with cold ketchup, but if you throw them away somebody T~. September 20., 1'77 Art Grimes, Anaheim, got a standing ovation for losing 295 pounds. He holds an old pair of pants. in Europe will drop dead," she said: "I ate for them.", But being fat is nota laughi~ matter. How about trying to get out 'of the back seat of a two-door. car. ''There's always some idiot who says, 'You push and I'll pull.• That hurta. .. HAVE YOU EVER walked into a public phone booth and panicked because that's where you're going to spend the rest of your Ule? That hurts." She became so desperate in 1961 that she 'He was the perfect American symb~I, fundamentally a mystery, and the idea was that he would outlive us all. . . The Peorb nction todarl c:oncfudu a two-day aertea of article•. crzcerpted from Rolling Stone magaziM. on Elvil Prealey. menta cl redemption. tbe-1961 TV show and the string of vital hits that surrounded it. "U J Can · Dream,•· "Kentucky Rain,·· "The Wonder of You" and "Suspicious Minda" were amon1 the greatest records be ever made. As depressing as the musical backsliding -perhaps more so - was the physical deierioration. From a lithe, athletic and lnfinltely sexual creature, Elvis became the antithesis of our dreams. Still, many of us turned to each new record with expectations that must confound those who missed even the final 1llmmerinas of his majes- ty. Why did we bother! Because Elvia was unique. He had it all. Every element of the rock & roll dream was hls -pink C'adillacs. beautiful women. untold wealth. \nit •enlus and lnsplraUon r-and that was·a claim no one el.le could ever make. ~pl I make teo much ot Elvl• Presley - be yas.. ~all, not a saint~ a pna. But lf any individual Of our time can be IUd to bave cbqed the world, Elvis Presley la the one. Ill bJa wake more tbu mualc la different. Notbln& and no ooe toob or sounds the 1ame. H1s music was the moll lltieratllat event of our era ~a.ase it iauaht us new poutbiliUea ot feellnc and perception. new modes of acUol\ and •P· pearance. and because it reft'Undid ua not oilly ot 'hJs creatnet• but ot our own . poUatlal. II tbol• thine• were not alreMb' eo well ..,..Med mto ourllws t.hal they hne become~. k wOuld be aim pier to :expleiD bOw, ~ a featl!lvll Prelley'a l4twnli'MllJ ..... Of eoun•. 1l JI~...._ thil u..n ..... ._a) • The 'high priestess' of Weight Watchers, above. Ct went to the New York City Board of Health obesl· ty clinic, where she valiantly managed to shed 20 pounds in 10 weeks. That diet, which eventually helped her lose 72 pounds, was the beginning of Weight Watchers International, Inc., which became a publicly· held corporation In 1968. It began in her living room with six neighbors and has mushroomed to some 12.000 individual classes held weekly throughout the world. While most classes are for both men and women there even ls one for jockeys and one for cab drivers. In Washington there is a class for senators and congressmen. THE PRIQRY purpose of the organization Is to help people lose weight and keep it off throqb a program that uses a nutritious, scien- U fically·developed diet combined with a behavior modification program. Mrs. Nidetch, 53, who now lives in Brentwood. resigned as president of the company in 1973 because she found traveling and speaking to members more appealing than handling ad- ministrativecbores. <See BOaN, Pase CZ> • .. . a Pal • dflcer riDCll It iJlfteillt to let hia emotions out. aft.er an eldlt·hOur ablft, h1I ""'re either tal• Ul.e bna.at o(UMM or feela left out. And the mania&•~-to crumble. Tbb atld other problama pe(Ullar to law en· forceme:nt marr~ wu d.tscuued b7 Dr. Strattoo. a ccimult.ant to UM Loi Anaelea County mfr• Department, du.rt:n, the thlrd annual trainlq coalereoee ot the California Crime Pf'eYeDtioft omcen Aun. at the Dt.meyland Hotel. CALENDAR HAPPY BOMBMAKEILS: Members will meet foe hmcb at 10 a.m. Friday. SepL 23. in the Fountain Valley Civic Center. A protram on the modern approach to traditional quiltmaldng will be present«! by Blanch Yount. LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS: The Orange Coast unit will have a Back·to-League brunch at 9:30 a.m. Wedne5day, Sept. 21, in the Jrvine home of Pat McLaughlin. President Mary Brooks will give a briefing on the calendar for the upcoming year. Prospeetive members wit! be introduced to the program. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF RETIR ED PERSONS: A Hawaiian theme has been ch~en for the Wednesday, Sept. 21. meeting of Hunt- ington Beach Chapter at Murdy Park Center. Slides of the islands will be shown during the 1 p .m . event. GAMMA Pill BETA: The South Orange County Alumnae Chapter will meet at 7: 30 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 21, in the Mission Viejo home of Woody Morgan. A program will be given by a Galliano representative. CHR1STlAN WOMEN'S CUJB : Back to the Courts will be the theme of the Wednesday, Sept. 21, meet.lni of tbe Newport Beach club. After~ 11:45 a.m. luncbeon at the Airporter Inn,~ fashions will be shown. Guest speaker will be Jackie Kennedy, a homemaker. NOON PllOGltAMS: Golden West College's women's center wlll begin its fall series of mid· ·day programs with a discussion of transactional analysis Thursday, Sept. 22. Tom Bell will be the speaker for the event, "8Chedt.tled for the cam pus' community center. Future programs include All I Want Is Everything, Oct. 4. Kay Mortenson, art instruc· tor will tell bow well-known artists have bal:anced roles of wife, mother and artist. Marriage counselor G. Pat Camey will dis· cuss the topic Growing With Children. Oct. 20, and Faye Leiberman of the American Cancer Society will talk about breast cancer Nov. 3. Coocludlng the series will be a discussion of aloneness, Nov. 17, led by Joan Woodland, mar· riage and family counselor. COMMUNITY WORKSHOP: The Mental Health Assn. will offer a look at the nontradi- tional pollce conuau.nlty outreach P?'OP'aml in the cities d Sant.a Ana. Tustin and Oraqe du.rlq a wodtabop Tbunda7, Sept. 23. The 9 a.m. event will take place ln Anderson Lounge at the First United Methodist Chun:b, Santa Ana. -.. JUNIOR EBELL CLUB: Ylc Knight, direc• tor of community relations for Cblldren't Hospital of Orange County, will talk about the needs of CHOC when the Newport Beach club meets at 10 a .m. Thursday, Sept. 22, in the Ebell Clubhouse, B~lboa. A check will be presented to Knight for the hospital. SIGMA CID MOTHER'S CLUB: Mrs. Dean McCormick of Tustin has been elected president of the USC chapter. On her board are Mn. Doanld M. Sutherland of Costa Mesa. first vtce president; Mn. Keith Burnham, New~rt Beach, publicity director, and Mn. Robert Lucas, Newport Beach, past president advisor. ~ O<x= WOllEN'S CENTER: A variety of pro- grams have been planned for the fall semester, including a weekly group dealing with emotional enrichment. a professional women's group and a series of rap groups. Gemini: Versatility Is Highlighted WEDNESDAY, SEPT. %1, 1971 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES <March 2l·Aprll 19): Be direct, in- dependent, original, welcome chance to dem- ()nstrale, illuslrate. Legal matter need not re- t ard progress. Know it and proceed with confidence. There is room for you. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Someone lets proverbial cat out of bag. What had been quiet becomes raucous. Hunch pays off -one who was your "teacher" could be back in picture. Aquarian figures prominently. Messages fly back and forth. GEMINI (May 21·June 20): Highlight versatility; give full play to intellectual curiosi- ty. Financial status of partner, mate figures in picture. Avoid speculation. CANCER (June 21·July 22): Study Gemini· message -work with lime, play waiting game. Refuse lo be manipulated by one wbo displays temper tantrum. LEO (July 23·Aug. 22>: Be flexible, analytical take nothing for granted. Accent on issues, opinions, decisions affecting employ- ment, special services. VlRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22>: Change at home is in picture. One close lo you talks about budget. remodeling, :!!ettling or differences -and debts. UBBA (Sept. 23·0Cl. 22): Empbaaia on land, security, home base. Get appraisal from authoritative source. Define terms,-see as is, not through haze of wis hful thinking. SCORPIO (Oct 23·NOV. 21): Solidify ideas means transform inspiration into viable concept. You can s uccessfully deal with al,ltborities. A void seeming shortcuts which lead into traffic jam . SAGITfARIUS <Nov. 22·Dec. 21): You're able to finish with situation tbat bu been a drain financially. and in emotional sense. Money is.ac- cented in connection with legal .aireement, joint effort, partner or mate. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19): The old ways will not suffice. There is "ribbon of li&ht" which enables you to see way out of maze. Key is to act independently, to trust yourself, to know that you are more capable than any committee. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Follow through on bunch -take a chance on your own feelings, responses, instincts. You learn by teaching. PISCES <Feb. 19·March 20}: Friends could be involved in dispute. Refuse to be drawn into morass of confusion, controversy. Maintain neutral stance. lfSepUmber 21St Is your blrtbday, you enjoy travel -you write, express, have remarkable sense ol humor, the ability to make others see the ouUaodlsb side of life. Gemini, Sagittarius 'persons play key roles in your scenario. You travel in December -you are due for added recognition before September is finished. You make new start in October and you could fall in love -again. ·rroa. ·lbe,., •e urges couple• to com· • ' .a.. Wltb spilt abifls 1l onu b diffJcUlt, he UN, ....... 1 pOiiee officer often will end up 4rtltilf Wttb h1I buddies at 2 a.m. after he cets ~ wortr inatMd ot talkinc with his wife. t;llOllllloiDeu,__ Tq ~ offlcme ud their wives acljust to the ~ ot the profession, lhe la Angeles &ltertfrt ~ct bas l.nltiated an eliht-week .,_..tor •PGUl•, lncludJng men wbose wives --~~ Altl//l etJ ortataUon by adminlstrators, the. ~ .tttt nrlous parts of the depart· men~ JeatD •bout firearm safety and ride In a petrotr.r. Worotn bav• reported, after lb~ program, that tbey han m~ of a feeling that they are valued by Ute depanmenl, they have fewer fears about fireanm and they have a more realistic viewoftbework. ''The bottom llne Is acknowledging that the spousetslDlportant. ••Dr. Stratton said. Ann Landers Answer Was Too Short DEAR ANN LANDERS: Why don't YOU wake up and smell the coffee? You told Bertha to iron her husband's shorts -after she told you be h as been wearing them unironed for seven years. Why do you suppose a man would suddenly de· mand that his shorts be ironed? And instead of asking her in person he leaves "her a smart aleck no~e yet that starts out with, "Unless you are sick. dymg or dead, .. " And to.thalinsult he tells her he is going to check on Tuesday to see if she t followed his instructions. · f Where is the guy eoing that ail of a sudden he t needs bis shorts to look so good? Any idiot should a be able t.o figure out that the old boy has taken up i with some disby doll. For a smart dame you sure fell flat on your l face when you aruiwered that one. I couldn't believe your reply. -ONE OF YOUR ADORING PUBLIC <FORMERLY) DEAD AD: You ud several thousand others. And now that I think of It I can't flpre out why somet.bing so obvious escaped my notlce. O.K. I'm awake now and the coffee smells a lot better than my answer. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Ifldidn'lhavecon· fidence in your sobriety I'd swear you were under the influence when you told Bertha to iron Sam's shorts. Your theory that Bertha would burn up less energy ironing the darned things than complain- ing about it cuts no ice. The Sam in my house figures he does bis share ~ when he puts in eight hours a day at his job. I put in 1· a good 16 hours a dav here at home and a lot of 1 things I do should be "Sam 's res~nsibill~. lt rankles me that I gave up a promising career to 1 get into this mess butl walked into it with my eyes ~ wjdeopensolwon'tcoJQplain. ~ I wash everything ttiat comes down the cbute and iron everything that needs it but I refuse to iron shorts until there's a let.up on the pressure around here. Fold them neatly -0 .K. lron the -noway. "Sam" handed m e your column and I saw red. Do me a big favor, Ann, and suggest that he help me position that heavy ladder so I can do the necessary maintenance on the upstairs window frames. -BURNING lN CLEVELAND DEAR BURN: What are you doing on that ladder anyway! It sounds as if your "Sam" is hopelessly spolled and nothlng I might say weaJCI make a dent. Husbands and children nlust be trained at the beginning. Sorry, dear. , My Beach Bunny Life .· .. B9rn Again· She beeame an employe and consultant for the company and schedules at leut two tours a month io different clUes that ba'Ve Weifht Watchenll'OU • Jean Nide1ch: 'It's like staylrtg blonde, honey. Ifs not easy.' . . In my fantasy, it's ! AT '1 always the same. WIT'S I 'm sittinl on the beach . . . alone. END My long, tanned legs are stretched lazily in ~ front of me. My balr is engaged in my fantasy at caught up In a chiffon the pool last week when a scarf, topped by a large woman sat down and brimmed bat that accen-said, "You can sure tell a tu ates my class i c lol about people by what cheekbones. they read." Whispers of "Who is I returned my book to she?" sound li~e leaves its plain brown wrapper. rustling. My lar1e, dark "Books aren't the only glasses reveal nothing. I thing that's revealing," wear a single piece oC she said. ·:1 can tell you jewelry around my neck things about youraelC -a suc1esUve 101~ that J>O!SSibly you never toothbrush. knew. Take your voice A voice whispers, ••• you speak aofUy. "Does anyone really You know what that know her?" means? It means you're Aoothervoice answers insecure. You'r~ trying back, .. Does anyone to hide something or knowthewind?'' you 're afraid· of •·• * something you don't l w as d row s ll Y • want to hear. Why are you doing that?" .. Doing what?'' I asked. "Making a square knot with your feet. That tells me something else,'' she observed. "lt tells me you 're a perfectionist in an imperfect world. You're concerned with image and are anxious to please. A bit prudish even. And your bathing suit reveals a lot. For elt· ample, if you were wear- ing a string bikini, I'd know you were a girl who knows what she wants and bow to get it. A one- piece suit tells me you 're no nonsense and strong, and a cut-out divulges you're aware of the im· pression you make on others." "And what does my suit tell you?" I asked. "J'm not sure, t 've never interpreted one with sleeves and whit collaJ' before. The colo yellow, though, mean you're a p se udo intellectual who woul like to be successful, bu you never do anything you just talk about it." As I got up to get awa she yelled, "I can als tell you've been here(' hours by the depth of th ridges on your legs!· She smiled and wav goodbye. What a shaQle sh didn'tread Ups! IE . CONCEINI PRlVENT FIRES Bi, I'm /tliu Sa.nd1 wW.... fall of yo•· to CGll ,,.. ORd ,..~/or our dou ,_,.,.. ,.... 2 . The King, In his splendor . • ,JONI.AN u tolJoloi_ .... tell~ Gl'PfO'ed la Roll· .. •& ,.. • ~ m1, fltf rfPOrl M 1M ..... Gor*lil .... ~ C'O"rlr'lNlf OM of lltf dmic "'£tw• ... ,,.. JWtlortwef.} N. ll • -Jfe atanda t.bt,.. lo a JWllPhllt wtth told 1p&nil• and an ora.o,. c lli he i&NUHI out h1I bands th• cape fonne a b•lr· un und r bu outspreJd arms and be Jaotl like U.. true kina of rock & roll. He pulldea ln front ol 15,000 people and waJts for the appf to ••h over him, and It eomea u it alw"9 doel and u be llnow1 It will. After at.rut linl from cme ~nd of the ac..p to the other, after wait.inc untJI be feell JU.t n&hl and unW the au· cbence can't wait another second, be turns to a backup mUStcian wbo bands him his acoustic guitar. itb the rhythm section cburntn1. be stands in frmt ol the ro.Uce, bolds but does not play the iwtar and ain1s. ''11lat.'s alritbt mama. tbat'a alrilht for you, that's alright mama, just any way you do." It was bis very first record, and it doesn't sound quite the same as when be did it 17 years ago at the Sun Studios in Memphis. But l am moved by the fact that be ls doing it at a1L The mqnificence of Presley's performance lies in its preaentaUoo of him as royalty. He is the one entertainer in the world who doesn't have to take out any insurance on his fame, success, grandeur or greatness.. He is the one and only performer :who can simply revel in it, and us with him. Onstage, Presley surrounds himself with the best that money can buy. Ron Tutt is the only true big-band rock drummer I have ever seen in action, and he is magn,lficent. But then· too, it isn't everyone who has James Burton himself for a lead guitarist and the Sweet Jnspirations for a third of the background voices. All of it is for the greater glory of Elvis himself. Every person onstage, every article of clothing. every instrument, light a nd microphone is a prop. When men solo. it isn't for music but effect; the accumulation of effect is the core of Presley's art. His success at it makes him one of the few touring pracUUoners of the art oC the American musical comedy. His 31 movies have given him enough training so that when we see him today we are watching a musical comedy artist first and a pure musician later. When he combines those talents with his projection of a very personal sort of regality, the result is a beautifully wrought modern-day pageant. Elvis Presley has lived through the greatest superstar trip of any performer, and he bas s4r· vived it in his own kind of way -with humor. The Beatles may have been more popular, but they were a group. Elvis participates in a pure one-to-One relationship with his audience, and when he steps onstage it is he and he alone who is the subject of the manic, uncontrolled, irrational adulation which is the core of the American star system. The price of a large audience is the need lo continually satisfy it. Part of Dylan's greatness has been his constant flirtation with his au- dience, his capacity to reject it, his refusal to capitulate to its demands upon him. When Dylan persisted in his rock & roll after endless denunciations for showing \IP at Newport with the Butterfield Band, he ushered in a freer approach which assumed greater capacities on The Book By BEN FONG-TORRES Four days before Elvis Presley's death, a paperback book appeared with this tiUe: "Elvis What Happened?" The book is an "as-told-to" af- fair written by Australian writer Steve Dunleavy (of publisher Rupert Murdoch's World News Corporation) with the help of three former Presley bodyguards -Red West. a friend of Elvia' since· high school; Red's cousin, Sonny West, and karate expert Dave Hebler. They were prominent members of the so-called "Memphis Mafia," the group that bad surrounded Elvis since bis discharge from the Army in 1960. The West cousins had been loyal to Presley for some 16 years when the three men were dismissed in July 1976 by Elvis' father, Vernon. He cited a • •cutdown on expenses." • the part of the audience. Elvis, however, re- m a ins of the old school. He has his audience, they have him, and his purpose is to please himself by pleasing them, never to please them by pleasing himself Elvis 1s too old t.o imitate his own past. He will not pretend that he is some adolescent high. energy rocker straight out of the Delta. Nor can he cope with a straight face with the continuing feelings .so many people have about him He must undercut their adulation of him just as he must undercut his own narcissism, 1f for no other reason than to preserve his sanity. The one thing Elvis Presley obviously doesn't want at his concerts is uncontrolled dis- plays of emotion. He has had them before, knows how to elicit them, could have them now if he wanted them. but controls his performance brilliantly t.o make sure they don't occur. They frighten him and drive him farther back into a conception of bimseU t,hat he cannot handle. He • wants bis people to have run. and he wants to have fun with them. And so he does his balancing act between really singing and acting, farce, burlesque, vaudeville. His brilliance is reflected in his control; he never moves too far in any one direction and therefore never loses his grip. Peo- ple have a good time, they scream and they shout, but they never once move to get out of their seats. fie does not have much lingering affection for the old numbers and does them as it they came out of a chapter in a book that he has already closed and only reopens for visitors who insist on taking a peek. But he still has some real feeling for the religio\1$ songs and the ballads. and it's at the end of the oldies medley that he put in the first of several tunes that proved be really can do everything he is supposed to and then some: •'How Great Thou Art." After several of his recent hits. he hit bis stride again in an absolutely stunnh1g performance ot "Bridge Adding to the mystery of Elvis· death was a book published four days before he died. ... Published by Ballantine Books, "Elvis What Happened?" is riddled with references to Presley's drug habits. The book also reveals Presley's affection for furlS, his contempt for tried to be with him and protect him and keep Q: Dld be e•er llave We&al drqa or were • singers he considered competitive Ch~ once uld 1 t God they all pft9Cl'ipUoa drq1T blasted a TV with a gun, the book says, when him happy as best we co · .swear 0 we . SONNY: No, the only ones I tnew of were Robert Goulet appeared> and his fascination did,:.an&.my, 108 said yoa dJdD•& understand prescription. but in sucb amounts, be bad so with~~s immediately pounced on iL Jn wlt.y lte dld wbat be did. What do yoa meu by man~-=~°alJWs,....art response to all the hoopla, the ex-bodyguards illla&T d1d th dru s? • 1 DA VE: I'd lite to respond to iUn a couple of C-"ed •press conference at their attorney's of-SONNY: Why be e g • «uess wa""'. Number one. I'm a little bit dl.Mresaed Kil' .. becausebewaabored. JV fice in Beverly Hilb. They did not write the book Q: What drqs are we talklDC about! about the total emphasis CJD dru11 ud that out of spite, hatred or to exploit Elvis, explained SONNY: We are talldnc about uppers and particular aspect of our lite. We liffd with tbe Sonny West. and Hebler. "Our thou&hts were all downers, about sleeping pilll, about things like man, you lmow! We loved him, we eared for bl~ po1iUve," Hebleraatd. Demerol. and I tb1Dk it was reciprocal. The be><* 'ftfY Tbe following la from the press conference Q: Wu he a coastaat aser flldnlaT . clearly deinonstrates that we bad notlaial but transcript. uld • and off •em After total respect for the man. We wi.nted more tliaD SONNY WEST: The reason that we are all SONNY: He wo ae,. on · anything else to see him as be was ln bla prim~ he_.'-'--a .. •e we've seen some of the coverage an engagement in Veeaa, the first COUl>le of days .._....... just Jmockin' em dead. We tried to •v .. ~ ..... be would not be able to do 8DYth1nl except take "'""".._.., trl total"' oo this, and we think that it's been entirelyp\at in sleeping pills and uppers and thinis~ For the first portray th.at in the book. we ed to be 03 the~ light. We'd like to see if somehow we two days he would just get totally wiped out on honest about It because we wanted to ebow the cen get ttstralght. Demerol ind just sit there and not even be able to total picture. We aren't interested in trylnc to get Q; Wbat ll atrat1bt! open hla eyes. even or cut him down or anytblnl like that. OUr SONNY: The straitht is that we loved that Q: Do yoa believe tllat Elvll died ol natural thoUihts were all positive. We wanted him to be · man, ~·a what the stral1ht ls. I'm telling you ea--.., do yoa believe &Ila& M died of a dnai Elvis Presley, the King. no one could have been more abpok up by tllat ov~! Q: Coaldn'& :roa have a&Gppell Ida rr.. do- man d)'lna Ulan me, and I mean that from the SONNY: 1 don't know, because 1 Wnk one la&aU&boM&blapT bottomolmyheart. Weatartedtbisbooltayear n. _...__I' not d tor DAVE:Howcanyou? aco, and lt was already completed, and w~didn't mi-1lt contribute to we.,.,...,... m a oe ' Q: lle'1rec!J'O'l&opNCedldlL ex_. uythblc H.ke th1J . • • • butr woul<I think that over a periocl of Ume if you DAVE: Of course. protect him. How do yw DAILVN_OT . 0 Above, Presley's gyrations earned him the nickname 'Elvis the Pelvis.· Bvis during a concert in recent years, left. • over Troubled Water.·· He sings like an angel and moves like a ballerina, and left me struc" dumb. Presley made greater records 17 years ago. But in his own way he has grown as an artist, and any man who can do the show 1 saw last week doesn't have to apologize to anyone for not sing- ing the old songs someone else may want bl~ to do. He is as much a pure reflection of Amencan pop culture as he was 15 years ago. He is, on the one hand, gross, excessive. vain, narcissistic and violent. On the other, be is incredibzy competent and professional. unpretentious. exhilaratingly visceral, and physical and talented lo the most natural and personal sense possible. He is a dif- Cereot artist today than be was 15 years ago, hut • to me, no matter bow frustrating the lapses in his career have been, he remains an artist: in fact. an American artist, and one.whom we &hoWd be proud to claim as our owo. ~-"17.llY llOlll"IS..""-11 .... [ ~-c::·-----1 ~--... ,...~..z;. LOOK, MA! Ci;we0,u,...8"edt11emuwbillhlallel • took enouah dnlp, down drup, that the bod)' protectam~f.romhlrDMlf? ..._....._..._ ...... u.el*pAllCt ., . ..;•;.;o;.;uld;.;.;•~tart~&~•~ert~IOl'~,.;;•~tiii~•.-·~~~~~....,-=-~---~-~~~~~~~~-.-~-, SONNY; W.U, lf' 1W l'Ud UM boOk 100 w.a.t 811111 M lt'• DOt tbe drul tblnS tbat &tleU oat. tt'• tbe Wn&a that we did cruy. tbe &God tbnll. tbe tblDO we ba.C!1 ~ bO'W we felt the d"81 ~ld:ia tiitD me.,..._ he beeame. Bwr l1Dce l'Ye tnown Elvia, Uda mu bu nMdid. ch.P-... Ud M'd meeUt. ff• dkl k ID im.-tae w•overwetcbL Hewuaoana dO a ut.llt9 abOW -• couatnea. a bUllOll pec>flt -.. ---.. aw; ......... to •1*1& lt5 ..... tb9 belt I bad ..-him loot in Hftfal ,. .... -... Dul on a clJl)U'D1M lboW, and un ...... not baet towbnbe ... ~wore. ue•6il't~H•kW9d~. •au tM tiiellll .... 1cm1tap adult bOUr, I ..... u.. ma~ jut bDr-M _. tt;tnc '° W iclf• -. to-. 119 ..-sd·l9l toys or tlUll. .. llli .. wlli1lil't. -rtil..a ......... ••~wror:-.Jiil'9te\oal ---~·!!._ ......... llU-~~=-.~:-:ra. -.... ( ' • M POBUC NOTICE l'tCT1110US ........ NAMIESTAftllll8NT fhttlllllwlftl..--4IOllllNi-... .. : QUALITY QUICK PllllNTING NO MAILING, 11.S -OYle 51., ion. MIM. c.tl~fM1' Stlln111 Mfl l.H, 11.S -ovl• :,..1, °""'9 Mew. C.lllwnl• tlU6 s1....-p..,, HoldSWOf'th, t7U lonrovl• Street, Coste Mne, tllfornlentlll This tionlneu 11 condlle1e4..., • _, .. 1*1,.nNP. Slwrr1111.M Sl--1'.~lt n.11 st._I -filed wltlt ti. °""IY C._ of Orenge c;.unty on ...,..,,,,,,,. "1m l'WlltNd O'-OIMt Delly Piiot. ...-.. u.au1.tt11 ~n PUBLIC NOTICE P'ICTlnOUS IUSINIU NNIW ITATaMl'.111 The toe.......,.,__ eredolno lllitl- ...s•••~ .. CfM l'.Nn:IU'IUZI!, MW ... lf., COiie-.. CA 91617 ....... Oaugl9 Mcew1'1y, ~· La .loll•.~8Nch,CA'7'6) Rorwl<I L• Colll1ti. 1U71 Vtftllll ~ .• -............... CAnMJ Tiiis bvslneu Is condu<IH by • ...... .....-.... p. .._, Mc<:erll!Y Th~ llAI-w• filed Willi 1llt °"""" Oet1I ot Or-c.ounty on s.,.. IS,ttn. .... "'*"'*' Orlll09 °'''"' Delly ..... ~20.21,0c1-•,11,1m <IOf!-77 PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE ·PUBl,IC NOTICE P'ICTtnouSSUSllfES5 NAM& STATEMliNT The foe-no..-.... doltlQ tKiiJ. neues: NEWPORT CENTER MEDICAL 8UILOIHO •I, 1«11 A~A-, Newport~. C611'°"'1e nM0 Giii a. QllMy, Im e..,-.Ttr· r11<t, c.or.....a.1-. CA '2'2S Fr-A. R-s. Jr., 1417 E••t Bey Fronc, ..._, 8Ncll, CA '26'0 Fr...it A. RhOdes. .Jt., Tn.•lee ot IM Merjorle S. A_, Trus.t, 1417 Eut ll•Y Frant, N-1 BMUI, CA '1660 Tllls-lneullc~tdbyellmll· .ct ~. fw ,,,. construction, ~P-operetlon of• nwdlul unter. kenlcAA,_1,Jr. This stetomenc wn flied 111r1111 the CcNnty Ot'1< ot Orange County on Ali<!. '3.1m. WOiiam I'.. st.John, CountY 04trlL 0911'.l!NANDOIU!IM a611Wlllllln......,.,.. ............. ~ ... OUl•nm l'l*llNd Cir-.. c.o.st 0.\ly Pilot, Alie ....... ,,,, .. 1'17 ,.,.,~ PUBLIC NOTICE PlJllLIC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE u-.e NOnC:CTOat•OtTOa SUN•• CIOUlt'TOPTM• ITAT9 OP CM.I POlt .. IA POii TM COUWT't'OP-....a IM.A4mJ •stet• et MARY N•M•TH IMlnt.~ HOTIC9' II H•1t•aY OIVl'.N ti .. ~ ................ .... flttlt 1'let ell -MW!o de!MI ....... ...., ........ ~ to fll• tlleM, wltll tM 11•ce•aery ....... Ill Ole9'flce"' u. dt41I.,.,. llllow •ltled cevrt. or t• ~ llltlft, """" .. _., _,.. • the U11dltt1l.-cl et Cle SILVAS & EATON, AnwM'l'I for ,,_tltl-, 11..0 'W ...... .,. lloultv-. 5Mte -· Cell~ .ma. Wlllell •• ltw plec. "' llUll-ffl .. lllldtr•loned In ell Met· •• , • ..,,.1111111 to"" ..... "' Nld - cecl9nt. wttlll1t tour "*'"" ...... Ille first PIM~ ot 11111 notice. OMMSep(emtlerl, tm. ALLAN JAMES SMITH lll9C\llorfflU. Wiii Of lllt lllOW~ decedent. SILVAl&UTON ,,. ................. . ......... ~tl7W Teh O'M)-11JU . ........,. .. .__... P\IOll.._. ClrMOit C..11 Dellr Pilot, Sept.1~•.v.-!d0ct.•. tm "'2·77 PUBUC NOTICE c ...... SUN911CM CDUlt'TottTM• IT Aft OP CAUPOltMIA POtt TM•COU.n'Of'~· -•mta NOTIC• OP IAL• OP 1t•AL PltONltTYATPlllVAftlAL• EltN al MAlllV NEMETH SMITH, dtce4lMd. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN ttwlt Ille ~. •l Ei..cvtor of I/Ill Wiii of Ille -nemed dtcHtnt, wlll Mii el privet• wle 10 Ille lllQflest IWld bell llkldtr ""°" the terms -condf. llCO>• Mr .. rwflef' me"4loneG •ltd sub- ject to c:onflrmeUOll by 1lld SUowlor Court on ~rldtv. 0c1-r 14. ttn al ,,,. l\OiWOl ll'.JDo'clOck a.m.,Of' tlltrMflAI,. within the time all~ O'f law, at Ille olllct 01 tr.. uftd4lr•lon<1d, ALLAN JAMES WITH, Ei.<Ulor,cl'OSILVAS t. EATON, by O.vld N. l(aYlll, At- torneys et !Aw, 11«1 W. S.nl• An• Boulevard, Stnta Ane, C•lllort1I• 92103. •II rlQM, tit~. Interest and eatete of ufd daaldttlt •I IN Utne of ,,., deetll, end eH rlQllt, lllle -lnltrtsl tllet ti. •Stele iney llew ec:.qulred b'f -•Uon Of lew, or ollwf'Wl•, since lier dMth, 111 •ltd tottwflollowfngdtlalbtd r .. I pro- perty IDc.HMI In tlle County of Or-. 51•1• of Celltorn1e end ING•ll, detttlbtdeslllelows: t..ot t>. 1 .. lllodl tt. of Tract au es per m.., --Ill Book u, P ... s 1' Md 1' al Mllctff"-,.._In Ille of. tic•., aw c...y -....rel 0r-.. Goullty. • IColftMonl, k-11 H 1MS S. P•rton,_...Aille.,C611tomlett1071 A.P ... t>fl>U lldl o.-ofJen -lllll!Md w aelct -cM .. _.ty, All MIC" Ill• ....... 11e "'""'lfto.-wl11 w._.1_ et..,. offkt al SILVAS & EATON, A-ys for E-.cutor, ALLAH JAMES SMITlf, 1140 w.-. Alie ...-n1. SeMa Ana, Cellfornle '71GJ, or mey 111t tl'9cl wltll lllt ~ of U. -W Nlft9d S.-rior eo.wt. or Mey tit dtllwred to Y id ElllK-personell'(, •t .,.,, time •fttr ""' l>Olbllcatlon of 1111• notlu ~ llelore trle mMl lr>o of ~d Wit. TERMS OF SALE. C.111, l•wf11I ...-yOCllltVlllltdSl-O<'t.,...,19'• ol>I*• to tllt ·-... 1111tc1 S-lor C....I'\. Ttnpercm 110"(.loftlM•~ Olf..-.d mutt «'-\' the wrft141'1 bid or Off.,. -tllt llel-mlllt .. paid -the C>OMI~ of .... W Yid Sul»rtor Cew1091 .... ~ •«•lll•ble to Ille ebove entitled 5-flor QM1. Said Nie Wiii lie -_,.,..,....1 .. crowttrmt. O.ted: ~..,,.,... •• ''" Al.LAN JAMESSMITM l!.J9CUtoref tMW111of MAltY NEMETHSMITH, -DAVIDlt.ltAVTM SILYAS&UTOM A..._ .. .._ ,,.. ... S..._lltN. ..... ..._CA,._ T ...... 1 aMl-.tJU .......... .__.... .....,.._ Or-.. CMll Delly """' $ept.1&.1~JO."" a.HJ PUBUC NOTICE , ' PUBUC NOTICE · . IU,..•ICM CDUltTOf' CALIPCHllflA • C:OUMTYCWOttANOa _ . ..._ NCmCS TOatCOITOP Estele of l"lllANK 01LBE911'. De<....S. NOTICI! IS HERl!8Y GIVEN tD Uw ct'tdlton Of the llllOW MtNcl decedlnt INt 111----cieirM .... ... Mid ----.,. ,...,. ...... tile tllttft, wlll Ille MC_., ,,_lltf't. In ,,,. offlu of ttw cltttl ot Ille •bow ..,.. lllltd court.°' to pre-llltm, with lllt nee•~ vouc~ to Ille undenl9'*S •I Int w. First Street, Los Anoeln. Celllorrlle, w!tldl la Ille Olkt of buM• ness Of tN undtnlQNd In •II melters pert•lnlng t.o ,,. Ht•t• of ..... C!Ke- dttll, wltlllft four "*'l/\s ef ler IN first publlcetloft of '"Is notice. OATEO: AuQust2A, lffl. VERAGILBEllT, Allmlnl•tretrl• JULIE aollNSTlllN Att-etLew 1J2'-~l'tt5t .... t UIA ....... CA- Ttl--:6M-1m Attt1rMY,_.Admllll1tr•lri• PUblllhtd Of-Cont O•llY Piiot, AuQllR~.sellt.6, 13, 20, 1917 3799-77 PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE Blue Bleod : Why not live ln one ot'tbe best ~ bedrooln bomes In Newport Be acb tor $341,000? Tbla home befits tbe d.lacrtminatln1 ~er wbo wanta elbow room and 'Wuld enjoy doln1 Interior decoral· bal.can I ~ COATS &WALLACE REAL ESTATE. INC. ARTtsrs SPICIAL IMCHJSTORY $54,'50 Dramatic ll v. rm, gourmet kitchen, dine, sweeptq stain to bid~ away master auite and fs1'~uarters. Hurry I Cl'fN Ill 9 •If S roN IO I! NICI' [9]1111 )) LOWERPLAHV ORAHGETWEE IN lltVINE 2 Bedroom con· dominium. Landscaped around a runni n g stream. Jt's new. it's fun. Air conditioned. com· munity association m· eludes: pool, lighted ten· nis courts, jacuzzi, sauna and exercise room. Price reduction to $61,500. Open DaJly 1-5 I 04 Oraage Blossom COLE OF HEWPORT REALTORS 675-5511 BEST LOCATION ON EASTSIDE BeauUful newly decorat· ed home hlllde and out. With plush landscaping on quiet cul-de·sac sur· rounded by maplflcent propertlea. a Large bed.rmt, 2 baths, " pool size side yard. One-oC·a· kind. Pruented at $100,.500. 546-4141 ~ COATS & WALLACE REAL ESTATE . INC. ACCINTOM VALUEllDRM JACUlll Best bu,y in beach area. Just listed. Owner bouabt another wants fast sale. Large bdrms big Cam kitchen, covered redwood deck w/bUUt·ln Jacuni • don't wait, call now I 842-2535 MN Tit 9 • ll'S FUN 10 81 NICfl THEY SOLD my twin Summerfield homo for $80,000! The VA appraised me for teO.OOOl Why won't so- meone buy me! I'm desperate for a new owner! Call RED CARPET. '75'-1202 to see me . DUPLEX ACROSS FROMIEACH $175,000 Best rental area or Newport Beach with 1ummer/win~r rentals . Spacious units witll 2 bdrms each. Balconies for indoor/outdoor living and year round enjoy. ment. ~~tl t ~1h ur!l . ' BALBOA ISLA~D •67Wt00• OVERLOOICIMG W.SSMSYC~ IMlal ....... OICOll This is a family home with Oalr: hugts sycamore almost bides the ~e; 3 bdrm, 2 story looks like a cottage: lives like a villa; rear yard has tall tr~ and much privacy and a pool that looks like a pond. The entire ex- perience is exciting. The 7000 sq. ft. lot and 2100 sq. ft. home are offered at just $137 ,900. U~l()UI: ti()MH REALTORS'*. 648-5990. 1&25 Mesa Verde Orive.,Eau, Co$U MesaJ. also in Corona del Mar. at 675·6000 , G1•rll 10021Gwr.. . tooJ ~ .. , ...................................... .... UDO ISU IUT IUY SUt,tlO Charming & delightful! Spacious 3 bt!drm & 2 story home on large comer loL Inviting family rm, 3 baths, func- tional kitchen w/fine appliances & BBQ. Prof decorated with near new cptng & Van Luit wallpal>f'rs. Beamed ceilings, north & south patios. Hurry! 2111 s-Jotllfll• ..... _ Ml'WPORT cana. H.L '44-4t 1 o 1002 G1•rll. 1ooa ······················· ..................... .. .THEPARK •OWNERWll.L Ir . LISTEN• VETS 1 In Mesa Del II 18 ~s Must move for bealtb re· large 4 Bedroom ~tb a 8 0 n 8 , a 1 r e 6 d y secluded master swte purcllased another hm. se_parated Crom U~e leaving their lovely hm ch1l~rens area o~ this for sale in Npt. Bch al spacwus home. Tb.is one 3000 Clay St. 3 BR, h!ls lt all. Gou:~et formal dlnin& rm, 23' kitchen and ad)Ol~g family rm-lanai. Huie 3 family room. Electnc car gar. Reared their 3 garage ope!1e~ · double children here for 20 yrs, oven and bwlt·ms, bnck because of best schl area fireplace. ~.900. CALL & because only 5 minutes ••FREE-• VACo.s•glc Info. SeNke " ~· to beaches & to ever· !p SELECT yt.hing. Open every day PROPERTIES 12-5. Come by & make your ofr to CLEO, their · Ho Dowa ,,,,_.. "'-lhtof Y 4 ...... o.c. .orange co;s. Larieat VA Home Broker i IEACH RETREAT+ agtUmTED BROKERS POOL W /VIEW 646-7tl4 543.2739 Family sized living•---------- Call 24 Hrs. I 675-2626 ' WORLD &EAL·PSrATE i room, gourmet kitchen wltb breakfast bar, step· down conversation area NERVOUS OWNER with fireplace, built·in says .. SELL". lmmed Joi\, unique 1arden holJle occupancy. Lowest at aooo. Call 963-6767 priced in complex & lm· OPfN 111 9. II s FUN 10 8f NJ(f) maculate. SS:Z,SOO. llODIGl8 YllW 3 Bdrm + 15d0 ft. enclosed pavilion. st• n the blll "trltb ua-- obstructed •iew. Tr7 $8,900down. can~ ()'fN Tit 9 •ITT NII t0• MO• • f~IDIJMJ ~;E~;E. 642-960'1 f9NM. $49,000. Immaculate family ._ ________ _ home in quiet residential a rea. Xtra Jge yard COMMERCIAL IY OWNER w /btfl landscapin i. • . ~--. us"· 50xlSO Lot. Si:nall bwld· WXURYUV .... G vELLwuer1 movmg. M T mg. Room to build oddl· '" 5 646-T7U lional, good parkln&. 3 br, 3 ba B(C Co1oD "' (~l~'MliMlmMJ ~~~~~a~~!t~!:=a~:f. fe0a~:~:.~8Dr~:::t~~ Real Estate eluded. Terrific walk-In. archltec&urel Tennla. Good for many types or P 0 0 l & J a c u a-al ·. business. Great OJ>· .()wpes'/Aeent • ON THE BEACH pottunity. Complete •-~-·1_1_9_.0_0_11_-:--_ Q ,900. 1 br. furn'd. condo w/super lagoon view, loo! Sec. bldg. on the sanclat$S9,900. Call: WALLACE & Co. REALTORS 714-729-5966 ! • HERITAGE . REALTORS · . Hl RITAGE 'if ','l"H'· cooE.u-.A. RMI All tll,, ... ~ *** P•Fmo. 264 Brentwood Cost&Meaa You aretbewlnneror 4TJct.htothe lnlneHCFYflt """" .. Family Entert.alnment Oct.land2 Woodbricfie In Irvine (Culver Or. at Barranca) • Please call 642·5678, Ext. 333, to. claim .YOU\' tickets. *** SPACIOUS DWPUX 3 Bedrooms, S baths1 • patlQ,, fpk:: 2 bedrm• a baths, 1uedeck. fplC.. • ll7S,OOO.M4·'1Z'10 .DIYOICE FOICIS SALi . of thh custom 2 · bedroom, 2 b•t.b nDCh home Oil quiet tree'Uoed lllreet nr. SoutJa Cout Plaza. All(« $53,500.,Alt call • . 540.3"' WHILAM TRl-PLEX .. By owaer, cJoae to all sbp'4 fn CJ(, 2 BR, 1~ BA. 1rg den°" c!lne·rm. LatJ\.6 plaater. Xlot; cond. Bltna, d&lnnlll'. cp&, dip, .(rple, V• Ladt wallp9perw n. a2 Ba•· Ila. Good inc. $l'l0,0CMO WUlc.ry 2nd TD.~,.. ODJT.Nl-5m. - • EAST COSTA MISA TllPLD to muk , bankl, po1t of. O or l'elta\ll'anta from \hiJ wtiU d(J· ~•anul trip! F.n>nt Wii&. ta around I 1 with 2 bdrma., conv rt. dt:n & f rplc. iddl & r.ar units ant atud.lo t,ype with luge Uv101 rm::t dint:ltts & kJtc.beu ~ bath down. PIUI 2 l•rat: bdnns. & full bath up. Excc:ptloul bQ at $1'2.5()0. YOU'U. un oua • •.• ~•al pename1 759.0111 $aw .a 100 Ch•r.a I OOJ ... ~ ....................... . .............•.....••. LIDO 1SLE attractlv• 4 bdrm, 2 bath, 11.ngJe story. used brick frplc. 8tiam4id ctsllln11. hardwood floon, L&e patio. 48 ft. lot. 1225,000. LISO ISLE Dt!Wl)' hmodeled 4 bdrm. den. C batb, living rm wlc•thtldral ceilln11. Lie m&SU!r bdrm IWl.tc. $224,95(). LUXURY waWrfront condo. 2 Bdrm. 2~ bath. Pool, jacun:i, 24 br. stcurity. Brand ntw; comp. turn. $220.000. PENNINSULA 4 bdrm , 2 ba homt. All amtnities. Lovely art:a. $195,QOO. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Boy\1dP Q,,.,,. N B 675 6161 ~ I I " h. II I! I ' I I ' ' I,, I 1~\~ I Cml Kw1 (911•J drl llJr Golfers Dream , Mesa Verde's mos t Local builder wuts , SPECI'ACULAR home. s bulldabl• prop•r ty 13R. 4 ba, FR. DR. LR, Newport, Costa Mna Spanish 2 stcry, ~ acre. -"-T._...wns. ad- ,. •· 'lbe ~ eoune &a your ~ -ltl I It back yard. Open House -111• •• P • •11 Wed.tbru Sun.1..s. 1790 prop•rty. FAST £:_nay Circle Ail. ES CR 0 W. Ca II 0808 640-8201 -rt•· PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP 4.:J>rime beach apt. ren-tal units. Perfect for the Owner/manager who ,...ants coastline location. Steps to the beach. Call for app't. $235,000 ~. F. Colesworthv ~TORS 640.0010 STEAL thls big .f br, 2 ba beauty! J&anY· plusea included fam1ly rm, patio, fruit trees etc, etc. Priced HUHTIMGTOM BEACH FOURUMITS 4 Lu.xunous units , with spacious owner's unit. Almost carries. Owner will help finance. For profit projection lnclud· mg tax shelter benefits, caU 962· 7788. ~ KE:Y ' RE:ALTOP.S A • Sl,OOO's befow mrkt. al 164.950. Convt. OT VA lOan OK. 675-2626 Agt. ... • OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE CORONA DEL MAR Located In The Newer Canyon Crest Area Of Popular Corona Del Mar. Lovely "E Plan .. Townhouse With 2 Spacious Bedrooms 2'h Baths, 2 Fireplaces 3 Patios -One Overlooks Pool & J acuzri. Built In All-Electric Kitchen. Beautifully Carpeted & Draped. Asking $124,900. 31 J1 SO. Pr. OM MOO SO. Pr. •Thia ans a spacious Unique Home on a Jar1e ftse lot. And this bom• ian 't Just bl(C, lt'• ~autl!ul: 4 bedrooms, a lonna.l dlnlnf room.· a f amlly room. a l(lf1X1 room, 3 baths, 2 firttplaces, a 3 car aaragf:: and a backyard dotted with trult tr~. This 3137 sq. ft. ~mt: is situated on 8400 sq. ft. of Harbor Vif::w HUls and will be open Sat. and Sun. at 1422 K~l Drivf::. UPliiil()U I: 11()M l:S REAL TORS•, 675·6000 2443 East Coast Highway, Carona del Mar also in Mesa Verde. at 546 5990 G-1.a ·1002 G...,... 1002 .............................................. MEXICO CITY Twelfth floor condominium pn pres· tigeious Tolanco area. 2500 sq. ft. 3 Bdrms., 2 baths +'maids Toom & bath. Guard on duty assurE:S privacy. $90,000 Unfurnished. Xlnt terms. 67).4400 ~ Walker & lee Real Estate "1n •,1 1 1 l, (', I ' 'r '• 01'11llL"ll' Dupleic • 2br, 2ba h11e +2br, 2ba apt over eara1e. $178,500. Larkspur, 500 bllc. 544.-xt ·'-~:.·-HERITAGE • • REALTORS ~ Walker t; lee Real Estate HOW WOULD YOU UICI TO UVEIMMISA D&MAR tor no down J>Qmenl. call quick, act. 540.366, WHB.AM All thla pl\11 the p~aal.lN ol llvtDI ta OM ol lM mo.t eiljoyable ~om· muniUea or b .. 11ufu1 Irvine. J111t think, )'OU can live In the Rane& in this beauUtul 4 ~m OUTSTAMDIM• OCIAMVU 1rom uu. a w, 2 bil •den IUck Arlen de1l1ned hlllaldt llome. Jn cl 'dt decb, &pl • opa baam ceil'o. SWt,500 J • I 1· .. ~ .. n: . - '1 • ·~ llW Ii I I ,b .. • • ... Lingo Rul "'" J.1111•- 315 Pit.ate Rd. Newport Beach You are the winner oC 4TkWttottt. ........ ~ ... hsHY .. -~. --- 3276 . ...................... . New Mira Costa Twnbme. 2 Br +den, fplc. ~mo. «11·71'7 or...,. DANI\ POr.<f ... \2 SOUTH LAGUNA ~l LAGUNA BEACH G'f~ -~ -- F1UDlly Entertainment Oct.Iand2 Woodbrldp in lrvlno <Culver Dr. at Ban-aoc•> Pleue call &U-S611. Ea 333, to claim you Uc:kct.s. COATS& WALLACE REAL ESTATE. INC. .......... 105 MewportlNdl 1069 REALTY INC • . 714/a46-1371 *** ....................... ............ , ......... . VliW·S6t.'50 180 De&ree view over Leisure World~ beaultful 3 bdrm .. 2 bal.b condo. aJl oo one floor; adu1L area. Moveinfut! 759-0226 ~) FAIULOUS VIEW VETBAMS HEED SPACE? Appc:ox. 2300 sq. fl. of supel' living spa<'e in lhil 5 br. eianl. Home is located in a chcnce Santa Ana area. & Is VA ap· praised al a low sale price or only $65,000. Owner will help w/cl~· }!Ju.I~[,.,,,.=~~~~ mg c:oslB. J usl hslod & wiU not last. Call now! La1J111M1 Hlglllt I 052 963-0191 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'mo. 8".0lOt VIEW.p()OL PRIVACY Monorcb Bay Terrilce. 5 Bedrooms, fam1ly room with wet bar. f'ormul dming. Great patio & pool area. 1249,500 CJ Coldwell Bonker 3Mooan:hBayPlua Laguna Niguel 496-7222 831..0836 Mousa Furnished r------.-.-.-.-.;-.-.-.-,;-.-.11 ••••••••••••••••••••••~ FOR LEASE Large 6 Bolboollland 3106 bdrm home . New! Distress ,roperiy! • ••• ••• ••• •• •• •• •• ••• •• $1000/roo. I can find ll for you. N. BA YFllONT-lO mo 644-1481 Beuch area specialist. al Probates, Foreelosures, winter O~Dt S600 mo. $575/mo. 3Br, 3ba, fplc, Bankruptcies.Divorce. 6"2·l67 ays,S48-8647 paUo, gar. walk to bch. Jn vestment properties. 431Goldenrod.6'4-8277 we s Gulde Belowmarketprice. SfEPSTO BAY,IBR l.ieduplexbomelnCdM. ---------• WortdW1dtlroken 2ba,dinrm,frpl,gar . 3 Bdrma & 3 Ba. Q.OSETOBEACH Cull 67:M.54S 2 patios & gardeo $425 Fabu'loua muter suite. Clean 2 Br, formal din MotW-S•? •---------i-328 __ Sa...;p,_p_hire_·_,644-0llCW __ _.__. Sm pvt yd. '600/mo rm1r' ll atytbpatio 'brr1e',__ ________ ,•--------- --J1 WI..-.~... 7~--0817 Agt.. w Ip c, we ar, re g,r .Beautiful 3 br, 2 ba. wiUI DOVER SHORES You betin this beaullrul 4 4 "-• H..t. ldt. "• !l;l'l wu;ro • ,_ D/W, bltns. Tennis, pool OCEAN VIEW brl<'lc fplc, cpta. drps, IEAUTIFULL Y ap· bedrm plan 3. Many up· Pride or ownership, 3 br, Charming2Br2Ba, fpl<', eo.t.Meso 3224 & RV storage. "25 mo. Adlllt.s. 2Br, 2 ba. Frplc, ~ly area or ML Sq. ---------1 _._,,__. 4 bedrM 2 grades. Water softener. l 'h ba owner's unit. Just garage. 675--0994 ••• ... •••••••••••••••••• 9 7 2 2 Verde Mar ., et·· .... -··--, Jacu--'-•. Park. KW/_. OK. $395. OldM t ,......,.... • Ele.c gar dr opener . reduccdtoalowSliS,900. (Brookhurst & • .............,. """'"' ..,... Oft erey batkhmm. Sep. Decorator dJ1J6 & pro!. 963-0891 lalaoaPeMnsula 3107 $400. New £.side 3 br, 2 Hamilton> 545·3359; poola.Leue.752·9260 963-4.567,Agentnofee. A cute guest unit ls na, formal lfy rm, lands.caped. OCfered for ••••••••••• .. •••Ht1•••• ba. yard, encl. aa.rage, 848 2600 BR, 2 ba home, pool, 2 BR. adult Condo. plush netitled on a corner of brick fplc , 2 car $92,00D. Red Carpet SPACIOUS oceanfront 4 lawn Ne pets. . new cpt., U75., l mo free & quiet w/refrlg., tge this huge lot behmd the garaCJe, landspd & Realtors.'45-3474. Br28acompletelyfurn. TSLJdfml 642•1603 3Br,2ba,cpt&.drps,2car rentwilyrlse.54&-62'74 palio. $325. A&ent main house. A charmer hme. Fplc, wshr/dryr, .Brand new coodo 3 Bdr, gar, fenced, frplc. $400, ~-saoo. with three bedrooms, spritddend. lest buy Tusffn 1090 dshwshr, 2 car gar, no 2'h Ba alr eond crpt 6'7$-~0.642·0393 New home, 3 Br 3 Ba, wet· --------- den, view and two blocks In this exclusl•• pets. Yrly rental avail. drps a~o-drdbtg'ar ali 1 n.."--A . ·um bar,nr. park&lake.$450 LOCJllllG 3216 to beach , 1n South i hb h d ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sepl lSt.h.644-9582 ' ' ....,....,.,m co .... omtni mo 493>9796 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Laguna. $188,000 (222) n • g o r o o . . mJr appl, pvt pauo,. ten· near pool and tennis. . bdrms 2 b th b "lt-l $146,500.0wnerwill NEW HOMES IN Winter rental nr Bay & nis, pool, Jacuzzi. n 1290 /monlh. Ca ll SEATERRACE·3Brden r.-p1.a" .~ ...... • Ul ~ Ian L-t .S---pets $48() mo 54().8886 """' ••77 ' ' un: ce, • ...,ams • ......,. .... p•-•· LEMON H EIGHTS & Ocean. 2 or 4br, frplc & · · <P..,...... • pool & bch access, permonlb ~ World Wide Brokers COWAN HEIGHTS rurna<'e . No pets. 3 BR. 2~ BA, gorgeous Neat 2 br 1 ba tiome guarded, ocn view. lse. C~y&Company 673-4545 AR EA OF TUSTI N <213 )243·5316 · brand ~ew cond~ With 2 w/cPts, driis. 2 car gar'. $650.1-756-3629 497-2457 i---------i HlLLS FROM $264,000 TWO houst!!l on lot. By 4 BR, 2 ba. Seashore Dr. lrg. ~Lios, ~ colf~aruge, Fenced yard. Nice area. Lease Sea Terr, 3 Br 2~ •---------•---------•Customized 4 & 5 owner. $67,500. lncomu Winter lease $575. mo. flD'.01.Jac~zzi,tennis.Sub· SJ.'50. 963·'567, agent, no Ba,T/H·tennis,pool,bch Westminster 3298 n ... ,, f ·'·'''' '"' J M1111,111 '' ll.1, P1.11.1 661 116 1 831 38138 THEtLUFFS Bedroom homes from $620/mo.OnlylO'·~~own. S3IHB27or960·l830 rrutonkids&pets.$460. fee. access, view. s47s.••••••••••••••••••••••• Lab Forest I 055 Better than new! Lge. 3 J400.3600 sq ft. Views, 510 So. Gltrnsey, Santa Call549·3710or 536·!956. 831·1678 Very nice4 br, 2 ba home ••••••••••••••••••••••• bdrm •. aplit·l~vel with Jacuzzi & sauna. PLUS ~· 839-482_!__ Capistrano leach 3118 Co St 3 8 ~ 8 2 BR, bllns. new c~ts & ---with ow drapes cpt.s 2 Priced tosell·New 4 br + bay &lights vtew. Total •. ALL Amenities. Open ---....................... ~~e "iam' Rr: ~ fpl~'. drps. Be~-~~?oarf1eld. Mewport leach 3269 <'ar gar . .'gooclarea.$395. library. Backed up to ly new interior decor. Sat /Sun 1·5. Call for On Th.e Beac~. 3 Br, 2 b~, Fncdyd. $425. 642.0282 $350. mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 963-4567 A&ent, aofee. woods. By Owner, Truly outstanding at Directions 1 UNITS S.SS01mo winter. Avail ' Bdrm, family rm, 2 •..rWATE.RFROMT tto..sr.n.llhed 51&11i221. $UO,AIJOOG __ .,_, """"' WATERFRONT HOMES ~~ta Mesa. $17,500. in· nowCall496·5913. 4 Br. 2 ba Mesa,del Mar. bath built-ins, frplc, 3 Br bltns frplc Yrly • ......._._L-_. «'3-0 =-:-=--:--:-:-::-:::--!l-.....'.==...,=£~-.-=:.:-=:-.--1 631 14-00 .....,., ~ Cln, frpl, nu tptc. cov ~ prde er No petAI ' • · .,,.........._ .. v PliceSlashed·Lake View . · t.-ome.Hut:elot.$169,95o. l.ogiMahach 31~1 pa.t.$450.eeG-OOOI :. 0 b n & 51 · lse. Days, 774-438' or ••••••••••••••-••••-•• ood B PRICEDTOSELL! 6 UNITS •••••••··~··••••••••••• . .J,s1r!: am ater. eves/wknds87S-6UID. •eCJDBAYFRONT~~ =:ron a~· ~o~e~x~ 2 +Den+ fonnal frplc. _.__1 .., tr.....L..&-3 Arch Bay. 2 lJr. frplc, l\iesa Verde 3 br ~ ba, 81&3J28 Eves. "93-&Ul BLUFFSCONDOS joy livlnC. Near' br. 3 owner S86-9221. +bfWns + 2 car gar. __. -on 30.000 sq ft + + + lot. ocn vu, pvt b<'h. $485. Fam. 1425. 1st. Liit. SlOO · . ba. din. rm. Pfer. No ---------1 +OttaD + JlOO).s + te&> ••••••••• ... •••••••••••• Zoned C.2 R-4 East.side 544-4418or 499·2066. sec. Ne'llF crp-drp·ipit. No 3 Br,% ba. [rpk, patio. 5 = ~~-~:5°° pell.$1100/mo.675-0525 Missbl~fo 1067 nis.$89,500 MoblleHOMes -Costa Mesa.,$129,950. •--Hils 31 $0 pets.S51-6623aft.4 M. blka ocean. BlUns, New ~;=;=~:=.:;=;.;::1~~;;i·;;---- •••••••••••••••-•••••• Lge. 2-st)'. A·Frame. 3 ForSale 1100 67S-2626agl. ~•••••••••••••••• 3Br 2Ba bl•-· recently cpWdrps.213~1' XJnt famUy home. SBr, 3425 B El& ya 4 Br Blt., 2 ba., A·l cond. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • • """' 3~ ba lge ram rm tge u..tw.1.-cf : ro:;e;· s s Joo n a l Y +ocean. $110,000 20XS6 Skylioe 2br, 3ba. 5 Leisure World Condo. 2br, carpeted & painted, fncd 3 Br. 2 ba, bllns, 2 en ldtcb ~ achls & shops. ··~·•••••••••••••;••••• Jandscaped. Super up· CAYWOOD Star C.M. Adult prk. Nwpt Hgts triplex, Iba, carport. S400 mo. yd. covered patio, boat gar., fenced yd. pool, Wesl~Uff. ~/mo. YrlY per28t'Condoinnlce graded. No agts. 581-0472 REALTY, INC. Rent under Sl.30. 3 m1 to SUB,500. Threes 20• B2r7 un· Barnes 545.3722 or R~~alge area, $375 $440. 14431 Chatea11 La. lse. tW().5231. area. Avail Oct. $295 mo. * 548 1290 * ocean. $27 ,500. By ats . Agt. 5 l · .. or Me-leech 3169 mo . .,,.,..,.,v 673-4545 84'7·31171. Mewporileac.h 1069 • Owner.645-3357,646-6267. 540-9007 ... ;!.':": ............... East.side lge 1 br house. BLUFFSWATERVIEW •--------- ••••••••••••••••••••••• PRIME Newport Bea<'h 3 IY OWNER Lovely bayfront 3 br. 2 ba Beamed clnp. fncd yd. REHTYS 3 BR. & ram .. beaut. gat.IAll_..IMlatsr..n.ished ---------1 BR, 2 ba., fam. rm. 8x31 Columbia, awning & utll pd. No dogs. S23S. edcourtydA&t&U·ll33 W~ront Sl09,!iOO. Agt. 648-4463 storage siled. C.M. adult Two 4-plexes, side by bch hse. Dshwhr, washer Let us show you how yo1.t --------- uwcrr ---------1 park. $2000. 5'11-6173 side Mesa del Mar. CM. & dryer, (2Ll>697·6087; mo.~ win be living rent free 3 Br, 2 ba, frplc, lge yard. Cape Cod Large Custom Home, Xlnt cond. Never a !213)749-4445 IACIC tAY and making money by MOO mo. 3 Bedroom home w/boat Lido Isle. Pool size lot. vacan<'y. $300,000. 25% Beach duplex, 3 br. Near Wiiderness area. purchasing your own 675-4912Bkr ISLAND, super dock m front. $189,500. S294,000/offer1. FlexibUi· $25 000 dwn. Short escrow req'd. Winter $595. Students ok. 3Br+. Walk ln closets. home. Call anytime. Oceanf t 2 BR 2 Ba nice. cherry, 2 Br, ls sun· P-Brom• ty OD interior features. Pnnc only. Please call A iL 9/U 751 9""" J ·--' I ttJ-.. u off scon llEALTY ront/A-' fri • deck. $375, no peta. Quiet -"3"3r • (8 5) 540 3883 B k ' • btwn4&8PM,M0-6338 va hi· • -acuu.i, 8 .. ~pa 0 SJL 7533 gar. crp .... .,a, re g. matureadulta.1173-G4 Realtor 645-1531 ~peraUo~. ro er 2 Bedrm, 2 bath, Mobile ____ _.;.____ din rm. Lge lrilch w/con· .-Yr.ly lse. ssoo. MZ-3443 Home. 20'x57'. In deluxe EXCLUSIVE OM THE SAND cealed laundry area. Pvt $400/mo for 1 BdnD w/lo(t HAUOR VIEW adult. no pet park. Call Beautiful 3br, 2ba, p'tlo, baetyard w/plne trees. 'Br, 3 ba, fam rm, 3200 & sunroof oil Grand for details. Ed Riddle ~!uxrpe :!!:;.:1~~~~ oew crpt.s, drps. ·Avail ~/mo. ~ RedlaJlds. Executive home Jtear sq.fl. 14" Santiago. N.B. Canal. Sallllbury. Realty PALERMO Realtors,646-881L immediately 'tll 6/78. (cul<dHac> nr lrvhle ocean: ' bd. 3 ba, fam $1.500mo.Agent,Ml·~ 67MllOO 48r, 2¥..Ba, fam rm, din1~~~~~~~~~ park like surroundings. s600 7-s2 74!0 d Uni A t'15-6m rm dlorm set.bar fire ..----------1---~--..,...---rm, prof Jnd scpd,1. Located in prime re· !M-4851 iwtnds ya, " ve. rlni, outdoor BB~"••••••••-rlySSSO/mo.3Br,2Ba. jacuni. Owner al r~~ Walk to beach locations 8ldeolial income area. 4 evs MESA Verde I br, 11A b pool. 1750/mo; Con!!!!er Sboreelllls. Q"81 2Bram aai.Sapphire, B.L duced prite of $179,500 $32,500 ..•••• .atxSS Ageot545-M24,67'3-77lf7. Oceanfront deluxe family bome.31ttLSicll7$42S.ln lse/opt.848410'7 rm home. Le• patio & 615-1652 --------1 Lease hold or $193,250 $21,500 ....... 12x60 D"'" •nnr: DU,L!X home. Compl. fW'll. 3 br, cl. prdnr.6'S--0838 .. u 2 Br! A steal• Kids back yard. Prt bcha. d Fee.644.&2\ AGENT64S-4380 u...v"5 2 ba, frplc, garages. -• $700/molse. Upper 2Br. cptsf rps, ---------·---------• $94,500. 2 Bdrm & new 1 Refs. Avail. 3 to s mos. Condo, new 3 Br 2 Ba, OK. small Cee, unit, call Lido Isle. 2 Br+den, frplc, ¥.. blk to bay,~ BAY VIEW 54' PARKLANE in Npt. Bdrm. lncome S62f1 per $700 675-1.849 car gar, refrig, wsb the experl roll urv. view. $800/roolae. ,_mo_.675-__ m_a ____ _ Sch. n r. Hoag. Clean. mo. Great neighborhood. · dryr, pool, teonls,yrl &45-4900 d 1 de OCUMFROHT West Newport 3 Br. Beach Home. Enjoy Catal.lna view fl s\lffing at your doorstep. $2$(),000. -------~-----1 ,eggy ....... ...... '4~1511 UDOtSLI CHARMING 3 bdrm. UDOISLE41k home. Open beam con· . ..1 11lruct.lon, spacious Plltl<>. 1 Br w/p~en.tzy • A~. s treet to at reel I ot., ..... __ rm__. ............. 1..:..-"_1_·2626 __ -1 iise.soo WESJ'CLIFF dlx 3 br, 2 UDO REALTY ba, country style Cam '73·7300 rm. outdoor ehtertalnlng ---------i J*loe. Open dall)', 1201 Pembl'Qke. By owner, $1'9,000. 646-9836/Eves ...0100 Adlts. no pets, 4 rms. 632 Plumer. Open Mon ON BEACR in s mall lse.S480mo.642-U43 ••C--raGuldt Li o la e. 2 Br+ n. So. Bayfront, 3 BR, 2 ba ~~:~2:,37mo. rent lhruFrl.9·5.5574579 ~~~:!!orc~~r:i~h':,'JY4 Uke new 2 bdrm 1 ba Kids 4' Pets OK! Only ~;:t~. 3Br+office, :~~~~~5-~7~.ury • FAHT ASTIC bedrm with VIEW 0£ 1315. N'l paint, cpta S230, lge 2 Br, call the fam rm, din rm. Lge 12Deluxe Units on the Ma.in Channel & Jetty. drape1.Gar&encJprlv rentalexpert.864900 home w /complete STE.PSTOBAY,lBR. water, iD the best section $850~0, winter. Agt. ~J0.8 fA Charle * •C__.. Gut• privacy. On water at G~~ ~gar. cl Newport Beach. In· 63H._, • 2 Story, 4 BR, 3 Ba, + turning basin. VJEW. 32S~S.J'Pb,ire,~ t.:~1~e ~~~~: .._.. C..fwalshtcl 2G~~':ia::t J.:Jd. · :m~!"ff ~ be~. ::': 0 bciacb, ·a Bdnn, ..,_Pa••• 3707 rl1'1D. $250,000. Down to····-······ .. ··•·····• S27S..831-8081 palnt.$500 .... ca.ii'lm; b•aut deo.orat•d, ...................... . 1rt T.D. WUl carry lt'a 8111r.. 3202 ~ . mo, .$750/molae. Wtnter. 2or 3 bdrm Dplx. selfl:thatit!Two3BR, •••••• .. •••••••-••••.. MesaVerd•lbr,!~ ---------WATERFRONTB011ES sass up, ll4 E. Balboa 2Y.a Ba Pentboua~. t•ARIMTAl.S 2fplc,vie'tfof&olf 3Br!Ba,cpta,clr1ic.2 CALL63'1·1..00 Blvd.1-811-51181 Stri .... lu \lftnclpals onl11 -. --coune.Sli00.540-aslO ..... 1..te v-•d "' .... cl""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!rl~;;:~;;;;-Nev;:-'bofoNolfe.red. .. ..., pay _.._,1!beD .. ' 06 tu ~u r: RoorQy, lu.xmious ·TREGLOCKNBRCO ywcangettbebeitfor 2 Br.1a,.. fncd Jrd, v ~ord Dr.$&50. NewNptTance3brCon· BayVlewapt.large 6M-0070o;reves ~$708 Jess, $15. fee. 7 Days clean, new &>alnt, pYl a 3 do, nr bcb. $525. e3H4'1 ~ear N.H.Y.C. -----·-----11$)1\arn'-PlexuW~ nr 6chla. $380/mo. C fniM z44 dysMS-676.1evs lBr,2Ba.SSOO OCEANSIDE $1&0Nwpt8chuWpd. • btwnMpJn,$1318 .............. -....... 2Br,3Ba,'850 $175Dplx, frpl, yrd Twenty tinlta-super ln• $1801 BR, pool, uUJ pd U I S Pd. vestment a~a. '435,000. $200 2 BR 2-Plx, will con· Sharp, ref+ more, man siderchlldren snore avl. Small fe G252BRC.M.Apt. LIFE MtV. Unit. Pro $2703BR.kidsOK RnUaerv '45-'900 1828Newport Bl. C.M. . • •COM••rs .... $15. fee ~5890 ----~.,---....... -1 8t9' arul sns. Lp 2 Br. k\dll OK. Nloe. Sm.U ree. Prot RDUS.....~ **Ct I ....... t~urr Wh1 t( lkdt,'r ,"KJ, N •• .,. p I ' f1 • 1 N u t l 1 •\ h /•, dt, ti' ... .. .. .. associated 8 1101< fll'>-llf Il l TORS zoz~. W lo•b• o t '' l•A I 3776 ••••••••••••••••••••••• _ Jmmaculate2Br, 1 ba apt. \•'Pool 4' a uodeclt. •• #IS/mo. ~7287 ,,,. &Cl' AP. laants ~......... . ---...................... . ..... ,..._ 3106 ............ ~ .......•... 3142 ~~---"""-~~---~ .... ....................... TSEEXC111NO PALMMIU A"5. ~ESTONPT BCH. BM!b, 1112 Ba. from$220. le Up. Ad\&lti, No Peta 1.MlllesaDr. (5 Blks East of Newport Blvd.) WESTCLIFF ALDG rH WPORT er :.::11 . ,., ' . . . r .Jll Mr Hc•w H•I • .. \5. {j101 PRODUCTION TYPIST IBM SDlCTIE D Experimced accurate Typist needed. lmnwfiately, 70 wpm (must) Part time or full time EEcellent Working Conditions Apply in Person Oranae Coast Daily Pilot -JlO .... .., St.. c..e. ..... Ask for Paul Ward An Equal Opportunity Empt~.- Practical Nurae. Prt, llef1. Call ~ut t :aoPll A rr 1y11•" -.--~ • •.•. •• • .i • AVON Bab.rB1tter needed to care I tar 2 children, aeea 2 & '· while mother worll:s: Men thru Fri., 1 :30 A.Ill. to 5:30 P.M. Sa.ate A.aa Heights area. 557-4305 UMITID CAUFORHIA IAMIC G:IOANewportCtrJ>r NftPQrtBo1cb 17141644-6464 , HOMESAVERS. Plumb-~ HeatmC & air COO• cfWoo-.._.. ... l...,n£.. Free est, $10 hr. Ho.nest " reliable service. Bot\., MIC OK .. 751.a!SO .~~ ... ~ ..... ?~.~! ~.~~ ..... ?!~ ~~~ ..... ?!!! ~!!~~ ..... ~!4! ~=! ....... ~~.~! T~, ~IO, 1!71 Q SAUICLlll ...,..anal ~~It.a. Nl1bt ~ :TIAY& ACf911' DISHWASHER Nearly ...... 105 u .... ocll 1011 1110 ffard•ar , Hrt: 11·3 2 Or5 nito. a wlr. AP.P_ly, Mio IJft'I. C"1"Nnt eit new. Waa&altl na. l;!i ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••"••• .. ••••••• -·••-••••••••••••• l'lft \}If" f"rl\fa)'. Cua .... .,. II. rn.b 6 ll'Y'IM. Nit In l • r n. t I 0 D a I ~ p~ce. SHI. El.ICC. Oven. Woe .. Cam• Show,. pc n.t. ftlotaan mar-a, bN>lte LUMA.SI rA•S •• rtti fUUJJ SICln.&•y Domeatlc tlckttlnc Tappan bltn. h price t.':.~I• _!Hkovl ca to rad•• dttve1 ~bllc 1 ""'~·t rd ""' Setvlef tA. Atttbdant, needed for 11 com. SHO. •nn ....... carv .... dark WOOd parade Nortan lllClln•, rom )'OU.r.,... nus ca ex~r'd •'Utt or p/llme. l'l)trclal automated ' bedroom 1et w/Tlftany Enc. WHtern ('UC> !tndplori. card for tacb •SALES* We are an eltttroblc:a Ai>olY An:o St1&tlon, 11th comput~rb4d Npt Bcb 5 C-1 w..a..n a1.. Retaal for "8QO. a.ion tal ua one 1pare. Wa manulaciurer of com· •uvlile. C.M. A a enc~ Sala~ + c Gas Comm'I Dryers 3 Aakln1 S3500. 5•8·7816 retura parmantntly HOT&•tn SHOP ~u ~utpment wllh an comm. ul'd; onl >:ieed Yrs old. Good cond. s.ss evesor67S.Ol'1$ M11t•I 1r, 1011 ... ltd aurat'tlve tat & lmrnoJJa.La ~aini • lminadlit• optDbil '°' • SERVlCE Station netda apDlY. l·Mart ~ 1 Each or "50 ror alt. Mutt 0 ....................... 1trap, m..Uni alr1loc llU f11r • Pl>"•Pl• ontnled Stnlor &ecNl&IY with a m!ln from' to 10 ta. day Seiv1ce, 1lC·52a-3302 rave Sett. Call$40.0'3Z. RJENTA.LSHOWCASE 2'il Volt Arc Welder Sean l .D. ~uu·emen&.s. ~ 1.-raua able tu work rnlnhitu.a\ ol a ,..,.. ,. ._ D lo s on 5'ul. l8a £, . Eletant band.carved eo amp Never used 4'' vent loll • tbeftl For • •~eAU bwn.El\JoyH Ul\t tecrel.,lal u ' l7lhSt.,CM TRAVEL TRAINEE for Reh11era1.or,GE,1ldoby Ttaltwood d•.~orato JWckwtUJolocr.MotOr& pen.analliodt.a1enclote t fll«•l <om paoy 11tn•ne.. Thll po&ltlon StrY 8t lielp eteled l Travel Aiency ln side. 2C cu. ft. Almond. :cr~.h.Fo8W'l8 p&l\tl&, &land. MOO ror botb. wallpaper, fabric or lb. wm report to our V P ~ a n m· Fub.lon Island. NB Noa Good eond. S250. l30-8896 Mi •ul rasa " atass 963-3532 "Da,y Glo" paper Is we ______ ........ , Appli::=.:rr,:on·rrl ud Otfteral Nan••~r: tlO !~~.r' J~;. A~~~{ ~"f:r, typin1 req'd. We IWlcha Moteriols 8025 ~P.,!~ai~'!~~~:~ L&. production belt ~. ~~k~ ~~ c.~ Production MAltllOlTHcrTa Mutt h ave eaceHent Och. b ttF In ti'avel. l''ull ••• ;.~9;.i ............... stunning Orlen\ accent sande~ G"x1'1" 230 IU becktobaclC IOONewp0rtC\rDr ~!: ::f :=•an-J !t ~MKh()pn ~~t=n~~~~111 or 1 8t!:W~f PfNfL'& ltems.SS2·3632 · phase,s H.Pmf.!1uat~tc1c· PRICES: Typl.Sl ... A Nr~'!°rtE BHch :Cwp:lit~&11tu':>11a4l• Cum euptoa81hr. TYP£SETTER ex· s..J:.de:k:,:i.:eo Decorator cust. Sofa, U" r . $1200. ~:r.;~~ ... ....,.ll.ll ""P mplyr m/f • ·'I o an • Expor' . Piece work. perlenoed IBM • t -WO. GoldleafCctfeeTbl, l/ttat1$1 &O 1---~~~~~~ challen1rn1 anl1n· 1&80 Monrovia, NB compoaer/Co:rs!': Cab 1035 195. King sz Headboard, Mlsal-o.s 1010 lOCll'mor~:si.:ea C 1;tt• typftf for SAL1.S. Horrible Job menta. POlltlon lnvolvtl '4a-"7a 500/804 8 to 5 sf b ....................... Lamlll. mlac. decorator ........... ,........... Sal T lllcludecl -•Iba -Utto. .. Rotten Urs Mean Bou a1111taneo to our con· -oo.iMitorappt. · r Himalayan Kittens, lteaui.971H>45i W'.&.NTED ~O~~RDf r-r-troUer. DuUes wUl In Shl,...nt,...tporeffon · C F .A. Rlcadoro lloe. A daysllfft. M.st '-.W. Rtur~ acceptec1 fl .. 7 elude 1taff meetln11. Wc18h, box. label &t load TYPIST Stud service 6'0·1780 Dark orange Ortho blde-a· TOP CASH DOLLAR Draw your own or eeud .. .,,. °" llM S.C· hr • l.'Omm 531~_0842 __ --1 typinl of ftrutnclal ltate truck w/40-~ lb boxes ot bed 1~ good shape, need1 PA r D Ji' OR YOUR ~~· cardpbone & Irie .tlMst 70W,M. SAUSLA.DYS menu and routine at· vllam.Jnt. Good matb. Fast. Accurate. 5 Days Adorable kittens nice clearungS25.~ JEWELRY, WATCHES, ~Add,; C>Mh. per s!!t,an, oe to our executive neat, reliable. Fllll·llme per wk. Pltatant work· selection. Good breed· ART OBJECTS. GOLD, ~check ::~eJ or· \PPLY ,\T DA.IL Y 'ILOT llOW ... ySt CostaMHo An Equ1tl Opportwuty Employ~r ~~::O~:r,::d0~-;t~~~teb ,..., · only. Apply In Jl(lrson, Inf cond!. Co. benefits. Ing, Angora background HERCULOH SILVER SERVICE , CS.to· Coll st PI a z a & Llnwtlco Labs, 8·9am. ~f.ply. P~nnysaver, 1660 R0.979-8978 l'Sofo&Lovneot FINE PURN. & AN· PU.OTralMTIMG Westm1nst~r Mall loca-~~e~~:~t,0t0::!~!1~~ 2H8 Newport Blvd, C.M. acenUa, C.M. Dogs 1040 IOTH l-IECES $199. TIQUES. 00-2:200 P.O. Do.x 1MO uons £.xp"d only need TYPIST ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,.. . ..-il.. &.-1.L..-ui..__..___ 1010 ,.__,,_~ ..... ca.-career oriented 1n · Shoe Nie.men, full Ume, ~"'""Nnr --.....,..... - MPS>IY divid"-' who w"•'--well manaaer/tratnee. E'· Pili.me. Muat be fast & DOGTRAINING l""r"--borBlvd.C ... P lo M _.__ _, -.... A E """"'"' -••••••••••••••••••••••• Fr .... -timale·• on ..... 09' y .._-..ity in the manufacturing en· pertenced or wlll train. accurate. xper'd on Your pl~ceor Mine 64S-61Sl ..... ~· ,. -M7-S734 vll"'Ol1menl. We olfer 0 . Standard Shoes, call Xerox 800 or w,ill train_ John Murlin 675-2440 lRVINE COAST Country boUt.erina. aola h.lde-e· cellent starting aalary Rick or Jim 5'()..5411 ~.!°'!~I~ work. ,,ex Olde Engllsh She Dog 4 H!W Club MembershUl, fast bed special. 768-MN Proclllctiotl Auiit SALESLADY Wanted, with Ii beral frl nge . in. nep.., to ClassLfled ep , Sp.It sale, $650 + tran.slet al Exper'd 10 produdion ri:~:!rk O:~tn .~/ptiamrtey. benefits. Please apply ln Sitler oeedad to watch tw ad no. 81, c/o Daily Pilot, mo. AKCS:Sbots. Sl.00. C.t It or fees. 499-231.6 ~ ~~ ~ 'peeing <mark·up> or sbop.84().W7 ... person or send resume c:u:idtr•ntta1e1b1lxl a(2od MPO Bocx 1560, Cosla -04~-8 .. ~~'!~"•'/ Sla1nlessSteelCookware. Sl75.'16"4t6 manuscnpls for typeset to: e gr 8 er sc 00 ·5 esa. 492628 Wire h&Jnd Fox Terne pc ........ vumset New, 19 pea, Lifetime --------- t & S PM> In their home. f al r, MUSTSACRIFICE II tCootractora L Bao mg paiietayout Xlnt ALESMEN wanted, Ex· Prefer bJnh school girl TYPI ST M /F , non em e,7mos.AUshots. $16'.00 i\l&f,mustse 538-3'03 .. · proofreadtn" ab1llly rt· per. In reta1·1.•lereo .... ll!UD.t.t• • __ .. 55 ood ltc AKC rea $100 d.ymen! 'whirlpool eas ~naf~utg,~:1~8 E~uc~n sales CallSS6-0420. 'coa'P. A ~:;~~t° :~cJ'11~8~~~ ~~7,'e~~vaoc~~~tg o~» ssz.'7724 • 1~':!'r~~~Ptl Tt~WMSQ:~li~J~~ ~::!~ 11~1~r:::.~fp~ c M. Call CJ rol1n1:. SALES STAMOAID Blvd., CM. 120.00 per rs~w:~~sitfwhAtlacn~ AKC West Highla nd 645-6151 Beslofr .m-2650. pina cues $150 ... aet. 7Sl·2113 M.....,011•5 week. PleaseJhone 0 P • · White Terrier fem pup. . J>.J>. 5'8-1338 Now recru1taoa s harp -15 631·3149alter 5P . S4()..6791 Champbkgmd. 002.9!>63 Sola sleeper, qn aii.e, Jthr Dinette table, 42 lncb dia. --------- P1time help wanted, O\'er 18. Apply in person. 69:1 S. Coast Hwy, Laguna amb1tlous men to sell DIVISIOM --look vin,yl, deep button marble top with four hardware, tools & shop An Applied MapeUcaCo SOUS CHEF VET olle attn. free studio ALASKAN Mal 11m ulc tufting, 1200. Modern chairs. Quality con.slrUc· !!quip. lo lndust'l ac-3400W.Segentrom • apt. utll pd. Musl be fem 1 mo& old bpaycd0 sideboard, solid wood lion, built to last many Mlscil•IOMS count.,, Avg to $280 per SantaAna,CA92704 with e~tenalve resp. CdM 673·1050. paper s, s hot's s11s'. $100.656-0525 years$300.631..a47C &fter W..ted 1011 wk. No ex per. nee. Call knowledae 10 all phues 9-6PM &l6-11S4 all. SPM Sor week ends ••••••••••••••••••••••• Quality Auuronce Mr Brown, 751·9134. Equal Opportunity of French continental - -Dbl bed. chest or drawer, ___ ....;_..;.;_ ____ IW £mployer M/F cui1ine easealial. Am· WAITRESS, part Ume. frff to You. 1045 & night ataod, maple. Destper cloth. es, btfi eve IMIMH=fON Salesperson needed Wed b . R 211 LI\,. ""'h Some exper. Apply In 1-·1. •· •-d 'l F G d ·~~~~~~~~~! roe1a, m • .,.... "'A P e r ~ o n • D e r b ••••••••••••••• •••••••• S200. 751-6570 aft 8 c uw1e1, sw .. • re&sea, Beal·h. " · oo v1:1ual & Thur~. Ft1 10am-8pm Corl-St NB • Y like new n 16. Call Tbur•---------manwil dexter1ty. Elec rcta1l~toreinN.B.Muat '· · R".St.auraot, 1262 S. E.2 Yroldmal~lrishSett~r. MOVING! Ant.q. ran1e, aft.10:30orJ.1'1'1/Sat/Slln anted : Pictures . tronics back~round. 6 belnterestedinenergy& Stationery Store in Bristol,CostaMesa. AKCreg.fircelofami.ly perf.cond.8'Bluevelvet beforel·00548·7082 manualsll:pert.alor19ll8 Yrs min ex per. Call waler conservation. S£CREJARJ£S C«onadel Mar needs ex· _w/lgeyard. 646-0783 sola.~ ---·-·-----•Packard. Carol. 581 31130. Xlnt 67U730 · per'dsalesladyfull-tlme WAITilESS M t fi d h (--.-Ca'!f!': Sbell for El 142·33'79 benefits M v area ·---------1 With " without sb. SO 5 days, xlnt workln1 con· Combo, a mall cortee us m ome or lD· LADI&S Dresser w/mir· Ca Cost new $399 •--------- --SALESPERSON: Even· : . .:t,·P ~&: v"'acal~nogn ds, espedally Cine cllea· shop In N.B. 5 Days. 9·3. ~~~ee;it spaled cat ~r ror, Walnut, 9drwr. Xlra Used once. SJU '250: BUYINGU.S.Coincollec· .--------I 1ogs. Enthusiastic ... " tele.f75-1010 Call attspm,548-4702. Ur ge ·~~sPI 0 poun 1·1 Ing. twin, firm. incl's 846-3378. tlons, slnglel!> boards. energetic. HICKORY pay. ---------1 ° · eaee ca frame pad hdbrd etc. Send me a Uat of 1:011oo~uco~~a ... lea,spesr9010~ FARMS. Westcliff Plaza. STUDIHTS WAITRESSES 18 yrs. or 831-3414 after s or wk. ~·atts:sOPM . CARPET 12x15 Rl·lo 1'bat you have. PP. Box " 642-0972 Bartender trainees, no over. Apply in person ends. shag, mulU color yellow, m Laiima Bcb CL 92ll5So2 We furnish de s k ---------~ expu nac:eeaary t btwn llAM & lPM KitW 1 lla.I. Prov. Couch. good brand new $100 f.8d in· telephone-secretary & SALES be clean cut. 21.z5. ~ Stubenville Weet, 2900 gra~bl~ (1 b: ~alekal cond. Sl2S. 2 Fireside cl'd. Brown, d 0 b. Sota ilinlcolt.1estadeot help. Part ume, 5-gpm, Mon-toCityourachedule p50 NewportBl.,NB. S46-S392 em e, W • 1reen cbrs $35 ea. hlde-a-bed,1d.cond.$3S. desperately needs good LA CASA RLTY f"rt. perfect for Colleae + llJll. Call Mr. &on~U We need 25 people who are 8»3718 84.2-4950 draftlnJ table, G " with 495-1870 eve: 831 07:r7 Student, no preuure lrviM 540.4415 Wed & Thur. ll:OOAM· at leaal 10 tbi over· Free dog, bu had all bls TWIN IED faraU bar Is 2 bulb sales or quotaa to meet. Tustin 731-5731 4:30PM atUS.Me9 weight. Newport & shots, needs 11ood home Rarely used 1uest bed, * * * amp. R e aaooable. 531~11 F.Qual Oppor Employer Teacher-Pre-School, Cert. Irvrne areas. Call Mrs. 646-7656 aft 7PM $20. Sel1U firm. 675-3812 ,_536-aMS _______ _ REAL ESTATE Sales. PP~1Tfih~e~lp~.-FFa;ib~rliic~~;~~~;;;;1 or expu. for morn. class. Wei r, 751·9175. We can Friendly male do& needs Antold llellty experience nee 12.SOHr. 640-8820 tell you how Lo lose lam. Sm Germ Shep, Garage Sal• 8055 134.5 .... --rt•-D 1Mt1 -•Ill• 1013 *SALES* C essary. SECRETARY·Borden poundl&earomoneyat abrtbalr.873.(!CllaJlS ••••••••••••••••••••••• t .... ""'"unaBe .... acbr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• all 646·4040 Foods. Inc. is loo"'-a for T I _.. r-1_ thcsameUme ~ l R I E "'"' t •pMNle-• · BAROAINSGALOREI Youarethewinnerof eme nhardt Student ea state salespeople SALES.RETAIL a s h a r p , ma t u r e Want to make mone~? ~ Flame Slamese male ldl· Moving/redeco sale. ias7 4 ""'-...._._to....._ 111.M, 1Uverplat.ed, G mo. open your future. l..<'t us secr etary In their c Len 8weeuold •~ .,,. '---1~ ···-"" .., h 1 int h b Office supplies & pnnt· w ao you sell on t e • · Texas CM 751-'822 lnM Hcr¥nt new, -......, lllDQI .. 1s. n::S!:jg10 3° ~o~p~~~ Ing. F'/time pos. avail. M~:~":,o!::~o,n :~f~~e~ phone? Top S In our busi· Call631·0082 Horwt 1060 Ffttf•.. 1_548_-5735 ______ _ name 16 years in Oranec P~ne, tor appt. S57·9212 averaaeskUls, able to as-ness. Me·3030, ask for 2 Adorable Germ. Shep. ••••••••oooo••••••••••• Fa"''~""-•-·ln.men• A1poclarlaat• County. Call Claire or as or Mr. West. sume reaponslblllly, Ray. WESTERN PACIFIC Puppies,male&fem.Nd Hermes 18~·· aaddle -"!"11-a-A..... ·~ V1olln S85 War ren at REAL NewportStatloners,lnc .. personable, bra 8AM -PERSONNElsaMCES goodhome.873-5586 w/fltUnga. Brand new, Woodbddgeb:i"r.m. 6'5-1191 ES'fATEbyMcVAY. •SALES• 4:4SPM, Mon·Frl. Al· TelephooeSalea 20902Brookhurst neveruaed.S725cuh. (CulwrDr.at. '7141842-9371 Retail aaleape raon tractive salary. Contact l"' Ste2111,HunUngtonBcb * • * 6'8~ Barranca) jewelry & &Lfl w ar A • Mr. Carl Armando (714 ) W"'f (714) 113-G104 Please call MM8'18, Ed. Real Eatat• Salea People ly at RM. AB'kAH.:ll· 769-1551Nwpt Dcbatea. '73 mckory Kint 2 borae 338, t o claim '!Ollt wanted. Up lo 90/10% · · S, ___ -=......;;;.;.:...;.;....;.:;......i ON THAT Jnte Palcp trlr dual a-•-xlnt cond JlTAR AMP. 210watta. Two U .. QID:'9. Treble born, fuu, reverb & more. XlDt CGDd $3:50. Pb 645-3233 comm. split. Nwpt Boh 1819Newport8lvd,C.14. SE<:RETARY-N~ Bch YARDMAN l lBE.l6thSt. ~~'96-nauti tickets. 548-8614 Sales, telephone. Na· 2gi.rloCc,seU·m vated, SAL£S JOB ~~3!,~ ;.~:~•w.::~; Coll&N.,. IPM *** FLtn'B ltddat 1rade. RECEPTIONIST Uoowlde aportln& good ~::S~di~booe. elf. HandwrltiDg must be YouanU..wtuetor Jew*J 1010 •· S ltadaD& Clarinets !\I F Xlnt ... ln,. 'd mfr. Good hours, xlnt $. --------~ neat. Mechanical abillty 4 TlcWa te.... ••••••-•••••M•••••••• ________ _, $45, '50 •m. All to xJnt . . ' . ..,p • req . 54().61'2 <t.re1>UT y GOOD .,.,... ... _ __. .......... _... •• & good phone exper . ---------~ AR helpful. Apply, 1930 .,......,_ W'.&.NTED ...-,-. ...._. ....... 4PM Small co. Good benefits.i-------· IMMED.OPENING BUDDY! Newport Blvd Cotta httl•tl A Monce 1_se.11U ______ _ ;\11Ssioo Viejo area. Call Sh pref'd, but not essen. Men. P'amUy Elttertalnmeot TOP CASH DOLLAR . bow Dally Pilot Clan-RU K p ET. $ l O O. Carol,S8l·3830. Use oClOke)'calculator. u-1.._...__ Oct.lancU PAID FOR YOUR ified ads dlaplay their CLARINET $SO. Gd ---Good bene. Call for appt. ~-Woodbrid1einlrvlne JEWELRY, WATCHF.S, messatea with legjbWt)' Coad.~TllO Recept beauty salon. Al S36-2SU. 1Ws Is tM-' "°'9ht, ••••••••••••••••••••••• <Culver Dr. at ART OBJECTS. GOLD, and impact? Ourada, we1--------- t ra ct i ve w i pleasant ---------' Wtit ..... & fw Mies Antl1111u 1005 Barranca) SILVER SERVICE, are proud to say, really Ttu~pet ·Olda Am -personahty btwn 20·30 Secretary/Office M~ .... fill OrMtt Co. Wt ....................... PleuecallM2-541'18, Elet. FINE FURN & AN· get r esults. Pbooa baasedor xlntOOftd _Tues-Sal, Irv. 752-6141 ~=~~wr.: ~c:.ll.Y offer • .,_.. pay. • Wonderland ~~eta~o claim your TIQUFS.645-2200 642-5678. 6.&.l.S'lo · RESALES LUSK REALTY 11 opening a new resale office in lbe HWltington Beach area. Need4 both manaaer, salary + com· mission and salespeople. lielter than average · commisaion + incentive ,plateaus. Tbis olfice will be approx 1800 aq.n. w1lb a lot or company support. Call Paul. 71C:67S·3411. Rnbber i»qas Opr. Will uaJn. DQ ahlt\. All co. benefits. ta-M48. SANDWICH MAKERS &GENERAL FOOD PREP. Ideal for students. M-F9-3, $2.50-$2.75. DELIVERY Cood drlvtna record M · ·F 3 : 3 0 · 1 p m S2.S0·$2.75. Meyerhof's, Irvine. MT-6232 ••• Meda all al'OUIKl omc 9ood co••·• xl•t Of & -.a• I mgr. Lite bklr.po1, S boMs Ir casHI et• AnTlqUeS. and t.ypina aktlla req'd. _......_lot~ HUGE warehouse Salary Commenaurat -r:-w• --... crammed wlth over 500 -------- wiexp. Excel. 1rowth op W/Ol/11' lhlff•fft1o music boxee, nlckelo· funlltwe 1050 portunlties, <714) Mo door to door. o .. deoo pianos, circus or· •oe•••••••••••••••••••• _644-8 __ 153_. --...:.....---" ofc lpCICt It IMwllM cans. wall clocks, STOREWlDESALE SECIETARY & "°ex.per. llfffflo arandfatber clocks , New&used lu.m.appl's, Wt,.,. fasctnatiDganUquea. misc. WlJllOD'a Bargain R.E. oCc. Prop. mgmt. Over.$1,000,000Worth Nook 5'5 le 81A w l9th Sh. typlni, Non-smolc~r. SOUMD CM>OD? American International CM. oo-713C>arMl·m ' Sen d r es u me t n... Ctll Gallertea; 1802·T Ketter-1---------1 Classllled ad DO. 954, C/ au11a DUCK lng St., Irvine. Tel. *•I BUY•* Daily Pilot. PO Box 1580, At 75'-lm . 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S3200. 49'-8620 U99LOY). m.TSSlcraJ.'190 41M·T1• ot49MSSS -------------•Gem eelectloD or odler 'UTIY .... $600. BMW '74 2002, All/FM fine MBZs In stock w ...._ stereo cass. Cust wbls, choose.from. ---------1 xlnt cond. 14850. Eva. VW Ba. reb\t _,, 546-5'M7 ~ .... IG4'1SI ~ 97i& 1114111 MIS~IOlll YlfJO IMPo;;:. , . . . . "' .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '7f 90Z, .ur, map, brown .,/br• lat, U,000 .-sl, AM/FM ateno, m"'\ ..u1m-1121 8JI li41l 49~ llfJ~ ~-PHIL LONG FORo· '76 STATION WAGON 6 Cyl, auto, being IOld at 1....:..-....;;.;..;.....;.;..._.....;;.;_-J low Blue Book. $2400. '77 CAPRICE Classic, 54CM9G9 daya, 144-4041 aaper opp. to take over1_eves __ fc_w_lmdl __ • ___ _ lse. OnJ7 $170 mo. Bnm. 74 PIMTO 2 tone pa.int. ever/ opt. 4UUAIREW··-M avail. Buny, won\ laat. -rw •WV r-•-P.P AW>. radio beater, rool -------· -----i rack. Low, tAw mileaee. * * * W11tYS) C.C.P._. 170UC.lnpRd. Newport lJeac:b You are the winner of 4 Tldletl to .... ............... ,....., .. FamllY Entea1ainment Oc:t. land 2 Woodbridce ln Irvine (Culver Dt. at 8a1111oca> Pleue call &G-56'1t. Eltt. sai, to claim your OMLYS2395 COSTA MESA DATSUN 2M5HAR80R BLVD. S4M41014M2 I J v.,. 9974 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' ' ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1977 Alteraooa N.Y.Stoeka TEN CENTS Bolsa Chica Issue May Go to Voters a, aoanTua11n ... ...., ........ H~ Bead City Cocmcll members have ordered more ~udy on the B91sa Chica annex•· tion and indleated that the coo· ttov~al issue may 10 to the Tbtenfor adeciaioo. Tbe council directed the city PJanni.n& Department Mooday to ebnduct a full study measuring °'e pnis and cons of partJal an- Man Held In Nun's Slaying DAYTON, Ohio (AP> -A Boman Catholic nun was shot to death when she went to the door or the convent after hearing e gunshot, authorities said today. Police took a 55-year-old Dayton man into custody and described him as hi&hly disturbed and distraught. His name was not released pending the filing or charees. Sister DoMa Blaul, 34, was shot once in the chest Monday night, the Montgomery County cor- oner'sofficesaid. · ,.. According to the coroner's re- port, the suspect rang the rear doorbell at St. Agnes Convent at about 8:25 p.m. The convent is In · northwest Dayton, described as a transitional area with a high crime rate. The report gave the following account: Sister Rita Curry answered the door and the man asked for Sister Joan. When Sister Joan Pfeiffer came to the door the man said, "'Wbereisit?" Sister Pfeiffer asked the man what be wanted, ~e man~ out • .31-edber revolwr and fired one lbot wblcb struck the wall at the bottom of the step. Then Slster Blau!, wbo was ·. 1radiog school wor• came · clownstaira and aaked the man to leave. He fired another shot which struek Sister Blaul in the chest, the report said. She died at the conventatabout8:30p.m. Sister Blaul, described by a parish house spokeswoman as a gifted singer, was a member ol {be Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur. A native of Chicago, Sister JJlaul had been a math teacher at Chaminade-Jullenne High School since 1973. She also taught at St. Agnes School. Police Hold Father in Son's Death ·A 23-year·old Westminster father.was booked on suspicion ol murder today in the death of his five-month-old son, police said. ·.Frederick R. Mueller of 13826 La Pal P1-ce, was lodfed in Orange County Jail after the dt•th at2 a .m. today of his lnbnt son, Jeffrey Allen Mueller, ac- cordingtoSgt. Harry Hoover. The baby WU taken to the UCI Medical Center al 11 p.m. Mon- dfly, Hoover said. A s~eeroan for the Oran1e Oounty Coroner'• Department aald tbe cause of the baby's death b WMSer invesd1atlon. No other detail• were lm· a:nediately nallable. Coast • neutJon asalnst the advantaies and disadvantages ol annexation of the entire 1,603 acres. On Au1. 15 the council voted to proceed with annexation ol only 327 acres of blufftops in the southwestern section of the wildllfe area between the Win- tersburc Flood Control Channel and Warner Avenue. Council members took that ac- tion after Assemblyman Dennis ltlaoop• ••• Mancera (D-Huntinaton Beach) volced a concern that annexation of the total area might drive up state acquisition costs. A state budget item of $3.6 million was approved thls sum- mer for the purchase of 927 acres of the low-lyin& marshlands southeast of Warner Avenue and inland from the Pacific Coast Highway. Some factions In the city want Despite the attention to detail one ~ually encoupters at a bank, both the American and California Ftaas at this Banlc of America branch in Mission Viejo were upside down Monday. Asked if there were a reason, a bank spokeswoman said no. Someone's attention apparently was flagging. School Office Move To Cost $138,000 Ocean View <elementary> School mstrict trustees Monday night voted 3 to 2 to move district ofCices to Rancho View School. . The move is expected to take place over the next six months and c08l $138,000, said Superinten- dent Dale Coogan. Rancho View Sthool, which currently is vacant, is just one block from current district of- fices at Beach Boulevard and $35,000 Fire Razes House In IJuntington Fire raced through the up- stairs of a four-bedroom, two· story Huntington Beach home Monday afternoon and caused $35,000 pi damage. firemen said today. . Lee Collins, 37, .of 8701 Fran- ciscan Circle, said he was chane- ing b1s dlot.hes when bis smoke detector alann sounded shortly after S p.m. No other members of the family were in the house at the time, according to ftre de- partment reports. Smoke clouded the upstairs bedrooms as Collins called fiffmen.: He raced outside and be&mn rtptiilg the blase with the aid el•~· COWns suffered a borken ricbt toe dUriill the i.Qcident, said Fire lilv~ Ji~ Merrill. Merrllt ~ ailil the, cause Of the blazeilatill under investigation. Warner A venue in Huntington. Beach. School board P.resident Chuck Osterlund and Trustee Maggie Stark voted against the move. They said they dido 't think a vote should be taken on the move the same night a public bearing on the matter was held. Trustees have considered the move since it became apparent Rancho View School would be closed because of declining enrollment. Thal was two years ago. The school was vacated last June. And trustees have discussed the office relocation for the past slx months during their public meetlnp. Trustee Stark also said the diJi- trict should delay the move and expenditure of $138,000 in re- modelinl and relocation costs unlll changes in kindergarten through slxth 1rade facllities are studied. Trustees have also considered the future sale of the current Beach-Warner office slte for commercial development. Tax Relief the marshlands preserved for open space and an ecological pre- serve while olhers .. are support- ing development of a marina. The city council, which may decide the course of annexation after the staff study is complet- ed, took Monday night's action on a 5-2 vote. Norma Gibbs, who said she is worried about possible increases in land value, and Ron Shenkman, who said be support- ed· Maneers' position, voled against the action. Those ravoring more study and possible ultimate decision on an - nexation by the city's voters were Mayor Ron Pattinson. Richard Siebert, Al Coen, Har- riett Wieder and Ted Bartlett. The call for further study was made by Bartlett who made the motion for partial annexation a little more than a month a10. "I've been fellinl a lot of com- ment and I now think that it was a bad motion," Bartlettsald. "We should do what we can to rescind it." Mrs. Weider said the city coun- cil earlier didn't give the staff an opportunity to tell what partial annexation means. Planning Director Edward (See ANNEX, Page AJ) Stepdaughter Settles $.20 Million Goes _To Jackie Onassis ATHENS, Greece (AP> -Jac- queline Onassis has reached a $20 million settlement with her stepdaughter, Christina Onassis. in return for relinquishing any further claim to her husband's estate, sources close to the Onassis family said today. The settlement, about twice what Mrs. Onassis could have ex- pected under terms of the late Aris~otle Onassis' will, severs any connection she may .have had with Onassis-owned en- terprises and brings to an end her $250,000 a year allowance, the sources said. Neither Mrs. Onassis. 47, nor her stepdaughter could be reached for comment. The New York 'l'imes reported today that Christina agreed to the settlement because she was eager to cut au ties with bet step- mother. She also was advised that Mrs. ~auJa WOUld not. con- sider anytbinJC lesa (han $20 ddlJlon, the Times said. Sourcea told Tbe A•soc:Jated Presa that Mn. Onaaals befan seeking the settlement shortly after her husband's death ln Parts·at age 61l In March 197S, but Christina "simply ignored her." "Christina relented and agreed to give Jackie the generous amount only if she would agree to sever all her ties with the Onassis estate," they added. It remained unclear whether the $20 million figure was In addi- tion to $8 million Mrs. Onassis re- portedly received from Christina a year ago to relinquish her share in the famlly-ow1;1ed yacht, Christina, and Scorpios JACKIE ONASSIS SETTLES FOR $20 MILLION Shown With Stepdaughter ChrtstJne On•••I• In 1975 Island in the Ionian Sea, where Onassis is burled. Alt.bough Initial reports after Onassis' death were that be bad left his widow some $200 million, it was revealed whe.n the will was made public in June 197S that he left her only $100,000 a year from tax-free bonds and $100,000 a year from other income for herself and SS0,000 for her chlldren. The beQuest was to have been <See SZO MILLION, Pa'e AZ) Lance 'Jury' Divided Public Poll: 38o/() Say 'Quit;' 35o/c Say 'Stay' RADNOR, Pa. (AP> -The American people, the jury that Bert Lance sought to Judge bis case, are sharply divided over whether Lance should keep his job as budget director in the Carter administration, an As- sociated Press public opinion poll shows. The nationwide survey of 1,548 adults, taken Monday evening, also found President Carter's im· age bad been dented by the Lance affair, particularly in re- gard to Carter's oft-repealed campaign pledge to enforce moral standards in government. The AP survey showed that nearly 38 percent of those in· terviewed felt Lance should re- sign as director of the Ofllce of Managem~t and Budget, while about 35 percent said he should stay. Nearly 27 percent ex- pressed no opinion, despite publicity about the case. Tbe AP survey followed Lance's vigorous self-defense during three days of nationally televised Senate committee hear- in& into Lan~e·s personal and business dealings. The bearings before the Senate Governmental Altaits Commit- tee were intended to focus on al· legations that Lance withheld personal financial information during bis Senate confirmation hearings in January. The impact of Lance's 20-plu.s hoµrs of testimony last week before the Senate panel Is dif- ficult to measure, since tbe television audiences for the bear- ings were believed to be small. NaUonal televi&Jon ratin&S for lut week arenot yet avallal>le. Tbe survey Pl'OVided aome in· dicaUoo that Lance's television performance helped his stmdin& with some Americans. The telephone survey wu c:«i~ ducted for The AP by Qllltoo Research Services of Radnor, Pa. The 3 percent. difference between those ffvorinc Lanc!e'a resignation and those oPpoQnc it is inconclusive because ol the mar&in or possible statlatical er~ ror. Lance has repeat.Uy said that be would DtJt.. rellp .ad that be is innocent ol any wl'Oftldoina ln bla personal ftnanclal atrain. Carter and Lance met private- ly Monday. White House press secretary Jody Powell aaid be bad D() in£on!iatlon Oil what WU discusaed or wbo requested the session. Powell said if Carter bu mlll• a dedalon on whetber to keep LanCe .. ~et dlnctolr "l"Da certainlY OOl aware Of lt." I Al'~ paid throu1h a foundatlOft in Llchtemtein, and the bullt ot the lppint \y~·· '9!6'.o wq. to o \o h1I diltat«.r. now.al. ancJ tc> a foundatlon ln roemory of bil Jate ~ Alexander, killed in • plane era.A ln JJ73 at a1e ZS. Onusi.~ hand-written will. dat. ed Jan. 3, 1P74. indicated that Mn. Onas1i1 altned a document ln New York in which she relfn. quilhed all rlghl.s to her late husband's estate. However. the Times quotes friends of Christina Onassis as saying thati aoon after tter father's death, Mrs. Onassis and her brother·in·law, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, beaan pressing the heiress to increaJe the bequest to Mn. Onassis. Miss Onassis' share of her father's estate ls estimated at $250 million. Friends of Christina Onassis said she oppased her father's marriage in 1968 to the widow of President ~eruJedy -.and was never able 'to betame ~6!Je to her. The relationship was said to Sailboats Steer SufJ : .have beooala.ven more strained bfter Cll':lass'ts' death, ~ough his daujhte~.made a sfe.tement lo the contrary and denied reports that her Cather p_lanned lo dJvorce his wif~. With two :.mall sa1lboaLc; as escorts. a Navy submarine leaves San Diego for the open sea and a joint U.S.· Canadian naval exercise off the coast of California. Downtown buildings arc in the backgroynd. 1 Dayan Foresees Peace Talk Start Reserves .Tested lnHB WASJ-ONGTON (AP) -Hint- ing that he 1s in direct touch with Arab leaders, Israeli Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan said to- day he thinks "ultimately an agreed formula will be found" to reconvene the Geneva peace con- ference by the end of lhe year. Dayan told a news conference he represents the first Israeli government that does not simply say, "no, no," to Arab proposals but one that is even willing to sur- render settlements on the West Bank of the Jordan River in a final peace treaty. However, Dayan said Israel flatly refuses to negotiate with the Palestine Liberation Organization, or to the establish- ment of a Palestinian state. Dayan virtually confirmed re- ports that he met recenUy with King Hussein of Jordan, but sald be could not say one 'way or the other because he is "concerned 1 with other people too and they are not too eager" to have any such meetinga publicized. BB Planners Meet Tonight On Laod Use · 1 Huntington Beach planning commissioners will hold a public meeting tonight on a con- 1 troversial land use amendment that proposes to rezone 200 acres ' of industrial land to residential i use. The meeting will start at 7 o'clock in city c'l).llnctl chambel"S. If approvooby the planning c-0mmission and city councilJ the changes in land use could aif~t 30 homes, a church, two worin 1 farms. warehouses, an auto re- ' pair shop, wrecking yards, and a boat repair and pallet storage business. I Planning Director Edward Selich said some or the tndustrtal uses may be declared mar8iD&J businesses and could be forced to cloae after a period or Ume if the plan is apptoved. I .,. : Pair Found Dead 1 FRESNO <AP)-ASantaCrvz 1 couple were found shot to death : in a camper east or here, sheriff's 1 officers reported . The man, 1 James Smith, 37, was holding a revolver", and deputiet aaid he ~ apparently shot his wlte, Gall, 21, , in the head, then kOled hlrmel! with a bullet to the head. ORMfOli COAIJ "'" DAILY PILOT Written examinations foi; Hun· hngton Beach Police reserve of- ficer applicants will be conduct- ed Oct 22 at 9 H.m . in the police auditorium, 2000 Main St. Those interested in the reserve program should obtain applica- tions at the police personnel of- • fice al the Main Street address. PEACE NEAR?' larael'• Dayan F,....PapAI ANNEX.--;-~- Selich said today his stud9 should -- be"" the hands o( the councU b:9 For more information, contact Officer Mike Relic, 536-5933. All reserve applicants must be 21to45 years or aie. have weight nrooort.ionate to height. normal hearing and vision and a high school diploma or equivalent. All necessary uniform equip- ment is supplied by the Hunt- ington Beach Police Department except a h&ndgun which the r~­ serve officer must s upply. Reserve officers take an active part in assisUng Police in all phases of department work. There are currently several re- serve officer openings: Relic said. Reserves are trained .in the West Orange Cquntf Police Reserve Academy. Class'es are hPld from 6 to 10 p .m . Tuesday and Thursday and every other Saturday from 8 a.m. 10 5 p.m. for abouti8 week~. Oct. 3. -• -8. • Q.aill. He said his staff.wilt st,udy th~ 0U~JDg ..:JI, plJnning aot!Jl"'•ti oyer lhe: . · • -• -: ~ , Bolsa Chica: revenues, seTYice • -_, ..... • ' • coststo thecity.~f~ts;ofUming Goino Strond on development Md impact on --e ~ the st.ate to !lCq~ them acres. w ASIDNGTON (AP) -HO~· Selicb sald Uiat. be was.taken . . by surprise by Monday'sJribve as mg starts m August. w.ere at an he was by the earlier dectsn>n for ~nnual rate of 2.0~ m~lhon, shQW· parUal anneutton. · ~ ·--~_thaUb4.]lousmg industry te- "It's a controverslal.i,ssue'81ld mams stront.,ven though other it is difficult for council members segments ?f tKe econ? my ha"1e to make up their minds. It would been coohng down in ~ecent be better if tbe city would make m<?nths, govew:nment f1gur~s up its minds once and tor all," he · s~owed. i said. . . The Comme&e Department An armexation hearing before said August hotf>ing starts w~e the ~~ A&ency Formation ~ down alighUy fr6m the July rtite Co~iss1on was delayed foi: t~e of nearly 2.08 '1illlon. but still fifih time l~t ~~ek at the city s were 32 percent hbove the rate' of request for ac!<lltJona1 planning. • 1.53 million a ye'r earlier. Senate Panel Nixes Carter 'Guzzle Tax' WASHINGTON· (AP) -'nte Senate Finance Committee, af\er approving President Carter's proposed tax credit for home. in· sulatlon. rejected todJy his tax on gas-thirst.)' a~tom~bilea. The surprise vote i!ainst the tax wu 11 to 5. Seve conunlt• tee memben said• · ey voted aeainst the Carter tax because the Senate'already has voted to ban the manufacture of fuel- Jnef.ftcieut cars beitnnJn1in1980. Anything over two million would be considered especially f,. v or a b l e •u n d e r any circumstances. :But it is even more impressive given the fact that so many ottier segments of the economy ha\te been slowing in recent months. --------..__,_,___~ ---- .......... WORKMEN ERECT SCAFFOLDING AROUND GIRAFFE Despite Effort1, Victor DIH During Rescue Attempt Victor Dies 'Siwek' Kilh Giro/le MARWELL HALL, England (A P > -Victor, the spread- eagled giraffe, died today ap- parently oC shock during an at· tempt to winch him to his reet in a canvas sll.Qg made by the Royal Navy. · The giraffe, who bad been una- ble to stand since be did the splits Thursday, could not survive the attempt lo lift him with a block and llfCJfle bUhg from stoel scaf- folding. The plighL of 15-year-old Vl(tor was fro~t-plge newa ip Oils animal-loving nation and around the world. Telegrams anrf IP.ff Pr" poured in to .the Marwell Park Zoo with suggestions on how to get him to bis feet. He apparently fell while trying to mate with one of the zoo's three lemaie giraffes. Victor "was a bit stressed by all the activity around him last night." said his keeper, 21-year- old Ruth Giles. "But he appeared to have setUed down and had something to eat this morning." A veterinarian who examined the giraffe Said he died from "shock ." An autopsy was planned. The giraff'e had shed an oc- casional tear and quietly nibbled fresh grass as 1JiB keeperJ fed saline."sol.utionsJn'to his weaken-• ing botty through an intrav~nous tube in his eight-foot neck. • .. ' . . School Meet Postponed TOl'light's scheduled meeting of the Huntington Beach City <Elementary> School District has been postpaned because of ii lness of two members. The meeting is rescheduled for next Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at Smith School, 1770 17th St., Hunt- ington Beach. Superintendent S.A. Moffett said that parents with concerns over changes in bus scliedules can speak next week. The 18 foot-tall East African giraffe had been Hised in the air, clad in a harness specially made by Royal Navy sailmakers. The one-ton animal bung away. ing from the steel scaffolding as workmen lowered him near the ground in a seesaw operation de- signed to slowly restore circula- tion to hi.s tickety legs. He seemed to ha ye trouble with his breathing as they lowered him, and died. "I think it is the shock ol what has happened progressively, and in this last trauma he didn't have the will to stand it." said John Kno\\'les, owner of the Marwell Park Zoo about 70 miles southwest of London. Louis Jacober Dead at 87; Bites Slated Memorial services for Louis Jacober, 87, a dairyman and· rancher in Orange County ror 68 years, will be held Wednesday at 10 a.m . in the Jehovah's Wit· o~s~ Ki;ngdo~ llalJ, 17580 Lo5 . Jard.Ines East, Fountain Valley. Mr. Jacober di~ Sunday in his home at 106S8 Soneto Ave., Foun· t~ln Valley, after a br.ter illness. Born in Switzerland, Mr. J acober came to CalJromla in 1908 and settled in HuntinJlon Beach the following year. Prior to moving to Fotmtain Valley 10 years ago, Mr. Jacober lived with his family in Hunt- ington Beach ud Gar<ferl Orove. He is survived by his widow, Cora; a son, Carl Louis, a teacher at. College Park Elemen- tary School in Costa Mesa; three brothers: three sisters and three gr~chiJdren. I I SAN l'B..\l'fCJSCO <AP) -T}ta flrat 1roup of ref\lc•es ~fl Southeast Asia Is arrlvmc tod in the United Stata under a n Carter edmlnistrld60 program 11M M adulq aDd alx ehlldr troaa Vietnam. Laos and c bodla are the ftnt of 1$,000 I • doch\Jlese retupes being lowed into the country und~r special Justice Departme~t autborisat.lon. 1 The refqees are scheduled~ arrtve at San Francisco lnternr· Uonal AlrJ>ort. , From there. m0&t will catqh ftlghts to new homes with vol~­ tary sponsors ln cities ac:f9SS t)Je co~try, David Dchert, di.stritt di.rector cl the U.S. lmmigraU<*l lnd Natura!Uatioo Service, sail. A small C?'OUP ls to remain in Uie Sao Francisco Bay area. ' autborUed the profram to t U.S. Atty. Gen. Grifftn~. l the refugees, effective Aui l saidJlchen. · · The move followed a U.S. Staie Department report thlJ summ'r t.fla\ said aome 80,000 people w~ crowded tnto refucee camps '1 Thailand, he •id. "For humanitarian reasoost the refugees are being allowed co come to the U.S., Ilcbert said. r About 7,000 incoming refugees are so·called ''boat cases,"' persons who fled their home)~ by sea and survived a band- mouth existence aboard the r boats while awaiting sponsors :p abroad, llchert said. The remaining 8,000 will come from the Thai camps, he sald. The refuiees will me~t sponsors a1Tanged by several service organizations, including the U.S. Catholic Conference, the International Rescue Commit· tee and the Church Worl'1 Service. . For those who have come hen!, there ls a modicum or comfort and security, but their lent status is somewhat unstabl~. llchertsaid. Technically, the refugees are being "paroled" into the country on an indefinite basis, which means they aren't eliiible for citizenship unless they apply for a change of status. It is expected that it will take several months before all 15,000 refugees reach this country. . .. Thi,ef Takes Stoplighi WntrolBox The signal box controlling traf- fic lights at an Irvine intersection was smashed open today and an eleetronic unit worth $11,000 atolenfrom it, police said. Police said the theft blacked out the sign4)s at Irvine Center and Culver drives for an unknown period. Ao officer on patrol spottedtbedarkenedllgbtsat4~20 a.m . A replacement control unit was used to put the signal back in worldna order within a ball hoUr PoliceSgt. ltobertKredehaid.: ' Police could not say of wttat value the control unit, which . weighs 30 tQ40 pounds, could beto the thief. · Christians Banned NAIROBI. Kenya (AP) - President Id1 Amin today bann..S 26 Cbriatian or1aniqtions and \be Baha'i faith from operatil'.lg in U1anda. U1anda Radio quoted an internal affairs mioistey spokesman as aa~ the ban WU already in f0tte atalmt the organi1at1ons, which be said "are not conducive to the securi- ty ofU&andL" ' l ' • e .,. JOANN • a£YNOLDS .... Ollfy ....... • A prop O S"it d b U 11 d l n I moratGriurn iD Newport Beach ,.as t.emporarlly laid to rest .Mon· clay nii)lt ~ lrvJne COcnpany President Peter Kremer told aoundlmen he would withhold four ol the firm's major develop- meitts until next February. Kr~nier aald lbe company ~ould not file any plans for the Cas&aways, the high ri&e con- Public Divided On Lance . RADNOR, Pa. (AP) -The American people, the J·ury that Bert Lance sought to udge his case, are sharply divided over whether Lance should keep his job as budget director in the Carter administration, an As· sociated Press public opinion poll shows. The nationwide survey of 1,548 adults, taken Monday evening, also found President Carter's Im- age had been dented by the Lante affair, particularly m re- gard lo Carter's oft-repeated campaign pledge to enforce moral standards in government. The AP survey showed that nearly 38 percent or those in- terviewed felt Lance s hould re· ,;ign as director of the om,ce of Management and Budget. while about JS percent said he should stay. Nearly 27 percent ex· pressed no opinion, despite publicity about the case. The AP survey followed Lance's vigorous self-defense during three days of nationally televised Senate committee hear- ing into Lance's personal and busineudeallnp. The hearings before the Senate Governmental Affairs Commit· tee were intended to focus on al· le1aUons lbat Lance withheld personal financial information during his Senate confirmation hearings in January. The Impact of Lance's 20-plus hours of testimony last week before the Senate panel is dif· ficult to measure. since the television audiences for the hear- ings were believed to be small. Na lion al television· ratings for last week are not yet available. The survey provided some In· dication that Lance's television performance helped his standing with some Americans. The telephone survey was con- ducted for The AP by Chilton Research Services of Radnor. Pa. The 3 percent difference between those favoring Lance's resignation and those opposing it (See LANCE, Page A2> Vandals Paint Irvine Teen :Center Walls domlnl\im site in Newport Center, tbe Newporter North or Holiday Harbor until then. Meanwh!Je, company olllclals, city representatives and Jocaj residents will review the city's eeneral plan to come up with a plan to phase development to road cooatruction. Kremer, who said he spoke for the city's major developers, declared that withholding the ~···· projeeta ls not to be considered a self.Imposed moratorium. . He said It Is "a declaration of commJtment" to the process of brln1ln1 together represen- tatives ol pro.growth and anti· growth forces to solve the city's problems, a process Kremer said already has be1un. In answers to questions from councilmen, Kremer further stressed that, while only the four Despite the attention to detail one ustitllY entounters at a bank. both the American and California Flags at this Bank ot America branch in Mission Viejo were ups1de down Monday Asked lf there were a reason, a bank spokeswoman said no Someone's attention apparently was flagging. Mystery Death Girl U~ Not Alo~ CHICAGO CAP) -Hospital attendants lo•lnlb' called her Jane and wept when she died. Hundreds of parents .called or visited In the hope that the pretly, blonde J aM Doe mliht be thels missing daughter. . The teenager. found beaten unconscious In a forest preserve Sept. 6, died unknown but not aJone. RF.SURRECTION HOSPITAL REC'tlVED 500 telephone calfs frorp parents in a dozen states. The suburban Schiller Park pollce who tnvestigated the case estimated they received 1,000 calls from parents. Pictures or the girl in her hospital bed appeared in newspapers and on television. More than 200 people visited her. Sbew.u a pitiful sight. Both eyes were blackened and there was an ualY bruise on the side of her head. The freckle-faced mystery girl, believed to be 15 to 18 years old, died Sunday, never regaining consciousness. A memorial service was held in the hospital chapel Monday, and more than 150 attended. m06t of them white-uniformed hospital workers who fouaht for her life. ••J HA.I> A CALL FROM A MOTHER in Penney\vania yesterday who had not heard from her daughter for a lear," a hospital spokesman said'. "Like all the rest she asked about identifying clues. Some paren<.s or relaUv~a who called thoUl'h\they mlQht be on the right trail and took a plane to !ff her. They. ooked ~d left (See JANE DOE MOUBNED, Pa&e Al) were bein1 withheld from nun1. all propcMJed development.I in the city, tncludin1 projects owned by other ckvelopers, would be sub- Ject to the review process. Councilman Paul Ryckotf, who bas pJ"Ol>O'led the moratoe1um, lauded Kremer and the other de· velopers for ••goinl a way down the road on this one,•• He m~e the motion tq lthdraw COJl· sideration of the moratoriufn. It was approved unanimously by his COUMil eoUeaeues. In all, there were three measures before councilmen that would affect tbe future of de- velopment in Newport Beach. One was tbe moratorium. which was withdrawn. Another was an amendment to the general plan which would bave limited future growth based on constraints of the city's traffic -1 TEN CENTS system . That amendment was not ap- proved in favor of the third measure. proposed by Coun- cilman Trudi Rccers, which called ror the comprehensive re- view of the entire general plan to adjust densities of future de- velopment and to prepare a pbas· inc plan t~ fit road construction to build.inc construct.ion. <See BUILDING, Pa1e A2> Stepdaughter Settles $21 · Million Goes ·To Jackie Onassis ATIIENS, Greece (AP) -Jae· queline Onassis has reached a $21 million settlement with her stepdaughter. Christina Onassis, in return for relinquishing any further claim t.o her husband's estate, sources close to the Onassis family said today. The settlement, about twice what Mrs. Onusis could have ex· pected under terms of the late Aristotle Onassis' will, severs any connection she may have bad with Onassis-owned en· terpri.ses and brings to an end her $250,000 a year allowance, the sources said. Neither Mrs. Onassis. 47, nor her stepdaughter could be reJlched for comment. An Irvine city councllwoman says public parks should be planned and designed by the public -and less exclusively by city planners. Gabrielle Pryor is hoping to ci)nvlnce fellow council members to adopt a parks policy that would, •'w here feasible , require citizen initiative in developing a p a r k system." Public ,."f9tt parks, by policy, would have to be "acceptable to indMduab adjacent to (them), yet ... meet the needs of local park users and, in the case of community level parks, one or more villages," Mrs. Pryor said. Her objective in part is to motivate .dtizens to take an active part designlna. building and mabllalnin& thelr parka. The New York Tim~s repurted today that Christina agreed to the settlement because she was eager to cut all ties with her step- mother. She also was advised that Mrs. Onassis would not con· s1der anything less than $21 million. the Times said. Sources told The Associated Press that Mrs. Onassis began seeking the settlement shortly after her husband's death in Paris at age 69 in March 1975, but Christina "simply ignored her." "Christina relented and agreed to give Jackie the generous amount only if she would agree to sever all her ties with the Onassis esta\e," they added. It remained unclear whether the $21 million figure was in addi• tion to $8 million Mrs. Onassis re. portedly received from Christina a year ago to relinquish her share in the famlly-owned yacht, Christina. and Scorpios Island in the Ionian Sea, where Onassis is buried. Although initial reports after Onassis' death were that be bad left his widow some $200 milllon, it was revealed when the will was made public In June 1975 that he left her only $100,000 a year from tax-free bonds and $100,000 a year from other income for herself and $50,000 for her children. The bequest was to have been (See$Zl MILLION, PageA2) Body, Identified " ' I As Czech Heffl,gee VISAllA CAP) -~body found buried in a shallow grave was identified today as a man who escaped from Communist Czechoslovakia in a homemade tank almost a qu_arter of a cen· tury ago. The victim, Vaclav Wally Uhllk; 55, probably had been beaten to deatb, Tulare County coroner's office reported. His body was disoovered Sept. 10 after an animal, probably a bear, uncovered the grave near the entrance to Se<auoia National Part in t.hE! Sierra Nevada east of here. • An autopsy sh6wed Uhlik had been beaten to death and ap· parently was buried a week to 10 days before his body was found. Positive identification was made through comparisonS of x· rays and dental records. Uhlik. 56, made headlines July 25, 1953, when he, his wife. two chlld.ren and four others rumbled a tank he had built acn:iss the border from Czechoslovakia into West Germany . Ublik, who served in the undercround against the Nazis in World War lJ. was treated as a hero in the West. He made headlines acain brief· ly in 1974 by trying to nee from sherlff's deputies in an armored truck he fashioned at his home in the foothills of Freano County. The deputies bad gone there to serve a warrant cbarglnc Uhlik with refusing to leave the land which had been granted his ex- wife in a divorce settlement. UhUk and two others rammed through a roadblock, but dep- uties shot out the tires on the armored rig &l)d it tipped over. Uhllk still refused to come out but fmally surrendered when of. ficers threw tear gas Into the vehicle. 'Disturbed'GunJDan Kills Catholic N 110 parish house spokeswoman as a gifted singer, was a member of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur. A native of Chicago, Sister Blaul had been a math teacher at Chaminade-Julienne High School. Weather Skies wlll be mOlltl)' sun· ny throuib Wednesday, wltb patchy clouds in· terferini at times. Lows tont1bt in the 505. HiiM WedDC!liday in the upper 60I to nii4 '70s. IN81DI! TODAY BUILDING~ • •>W Pro T•m P lo Barr l, ho endaned lh• n•vlew, notfd lhl d I ltd Y1 • &UWUH al .,.,.. th I_. WM alf'tlelb h•~• acuv ly Involved u.n:..iu:M:t 1rs:;a ln the pronu. ' .. IL '-bent on the oth r P•O•lt •ho 11 ve bore to p81~:lclpate In th I proc I and be b re •ban the d c:illont are be· lnl ~. TheH II tlwan Geed tor more • to be 1nvol\led, •· beWd. T'he atud7. wbkh I.I to ln"°'ve hHrln1s ~fore the plannlna ~mmtuion aa well u study sessions before the city counc:ll, ia alaied to COMlude in February ao UW proposed c:han1e1 c:an be incorporated lnlo tbe first bitch of 1978 amendmenta to lbe 1eneral plan. Jean Watt. president or SPON <Slop Pollulin1 Our Newport> and generally re1arded as a apokesman ror the clty'1 ciUzen groups concerned wilh 1lowing growth, said ber or1anluUon is grateful for the efforts made so far in bringing developers and environmentalists together. "I think we should be able to provide valuable input in the process." she said Meanwhile. Irvine Company officials said today they will pro- ceed with plans for projecta that were held back thia summer while tl)e morat.orhlm was under discussion. Included In the lis t of projects either to be filed with the city or brought before the planning com· mission for consideration are Bayside Square, the 32,000· square foot office building at the entrance to Balboa Island, four apartment or condominium proj. eels around Newport Center and Big Canyon, and Harbor 1-Ulls, a nother residential development. Harbor Hill ls located on 11 acres on the site of the aban- doned reservoir at the interstt- tion of Spyglass Hill Road and San Miguel Drive. Company orrlcials say they also expect to complete work on the environmental Impact report for the 450,000·squar e fobl Prudential high rise building in Newport Center within the next six months. That EIR will be reviewed by , the city council. Housing Still ~·.Going Strong W ASlilNGTON <AP) -Hous- ing starts in Aq1uat were at an 1 annual rate ot 2.02 million, show- ing that the housing industry re. -mains strong even though other I segments of the economy have 1 been cooling down in recent : months, govern ment figures 1 s howed. The Comme rce Department 1 said Au~t housin1 starts were t down slij:htly from the July rate I of nearly 2.08 million, but sllll 1 were 32 percent above the rate of I 1.53 million a year earlier . 1 Anything over two mllllon I would be considered especially 1fa vorabl e und e r a n y 1 circumstances. Biil lt ls even 1 more impressive given the fact I that SO many Other seamenl8 of I the economy have been slowing in recent months. I ' 1 ,., ..... r.,,.Ai I :LANCE .•• I • is inconclusive because or the ' margin of possible statistical •r· ror. ' Lance bu repeatedly 11ld that • be would not resign and that he is 'innocent of any wrongdoing ln his l personal financta i af!airs. • Carter and Lance met priy~ 1 Jy Monday. White House prillt ' secretary J ody Powell said he ~ had no information on whllt wu 1 discusaed or who request~ the 1 session. 1 Powell said if Carter has made , a decisloo on whether to keep , Lance a b\ld1et director "I'm 1 ce~notawareoflt." O"ANO&CC>Alt. • I ltt!11l)Qit.JI l'lleOr-CM"....,,....,,...,._., ltc-.. -m . .,..., 1t......,,.,..-, 11w 0r-CiMOt ~ ....... -..... ::'.!. •• l:C·='~"'~ ia-.!.!'!:.:r.'1.. . ~~ ..... ~=~=:~;: =--~-i:iT:~.::..--.. y ............ _...,._....,._ , '• ~ -:.. JACKll!' ONASSIS' SITTltES FOR $~ MILLION Shown With Stepdaughter Chrlatlne OnHil1 In l 975 M. . Sh 1. · ~ 'J E1ro•.l.a,,e A J esa. oo ll18 · " . r . v· ,. S .d $21.MILLION 1@ Im 81 . paid throu~h a ro'undation in Still Critical A Cosla Mesa auto repair shop owner. allegedly shot twice ln the chest Saturday by an off.duty Hawthorne police officer after the two men argued, remained in critical condition today at Cost11 Mesa Memorial Hospital. Police believe lhe argument started when officer Michael Moran, 30, drove QVer a freshly cleaned floor of the A&A Garaae. 2037 Harbor Boulevard. angering 34-year·old Jon Allan McClure or Santa Ana. McClure allegedly charted the off-duty officer with a large metal bar and was shot twice in the chest when he ignored the of- ficpr's commands to halt. Lichtenstein, and the bulk of the shipping tycoon's estilte was to go to his dat.tghter, now 261 and to e foundation in memory of his 1 late son. Alexander, killed in a piano crash ln 1973 at aa~ 25. Onassis' hand-written will, dat· ed Jan. 3, 1974, indicated that Mrs. Onassis signed a do<!ument ln New York in which she relln- qul11hed alt rights to her tate hu11band '11 estate. However. the Tim es quotes friends of Christina Onassis as sayin g that soon after her father 's death, Mrs. Onassis and heT brother·ln·law. Sen. Ed\vard M. Kennedy, began presslng the heiress to Increase the bequest to Mrs. Onassis .. SAN ll'RANCISCO <AP> -The first wave of an expected 15,000 Indochinese refugees arrived here early totlay afl•r a fli1ht from Bangko-. Thailand. ' : •Arriving on a plane calltd the Clipper P lyroouth Rock, us refugtes -most of them Vietnamese -were met at San Francllc<> Jnterqallonal Airport by blndala from a variety of . aoverhment, reUatowi and social service agenclu. r.t-.iy reCqee1 w.re tranJterred to otb"r flilhls leaving lot states that evtntually will be their new homes. The reCue_ees, some waving a\ televlaioo and new• cameras, ranged ln aae from inf anti to an elderly ~oman walking on Ule arm!).oC two grandson11. • Many of the •miles faded to l~ara when refugeea told aoclal workers ~bout rel.i,lves aUll. ln VletJWn. U.S. Atty. Gen. Griffin Bell a uthorized the program lo admit the l$ 000 lodocbinese ~aees, acco;:dhi& lo David Ucbert, dl11~t cllrector of t.be U.S. lmrnlgratlon and NaturallzaUon Service. The program was efb!C!Uve Aug. 11, he •ald. 'l'be move Collowed a U.S. State Dep.rtment report this aurtlmer that aaid some 801000 people were cro'Vded into reruaee cmtpt in Tbailabd, he said. "For humanitarian reuom ... the refugees are belnl allowed to come to I.be U.S., Uchert 1aid. About 7,000 incoming refupes are ao·called "boat CIH~ ... penooa who fied their homeland by sea and survived a fland·to- moutb existence aboard tbelr boata while awalllnt sponaonhlp abroad, Jlchertaata. Officer Moran was questioned by Costa Mesa police but not held. Miss Onwssis' sha re of her father's estate ls estimated at S250 million. -OellYPltli..., ..... SCIENCE FICTION OIVl!N AN INJICTION OF SCIENCI! Gregory Benford thffra CIHr of 'Thud, Blunder' A report has been filed with the Orange County District At- torney's office, but officials h ave yet to determine if crim ina l charges will be brought against Mofan. McClure underwent surgery Saturday night for removal of two bullets in his chest which were fired from a GerQlan·made semi-automatic pistol. He re- mains in the hdspitals's Intensive care unit. Costa Mesa police are seeking witnesses t~t.,., 1-:30 p.m.11hoot·· lng in front of the auto repair s hop. , . . - A,WI ..... • WORKMEN l! .. !CT SCAPFOLDING AROUND GIRAFFE Despite Efforts, Victor Dies burtng Rescue Attempt • 1. F,...PageAJ ,- 'JANE DOE' MOURNE~. • • we"'lnt, or went to the chapelto say a prayer for her... • 11'68 girl bacl a remarlt-.ble effect on those who worktd with her," be s-.id. 11Even our hardened nurses in intenst.e care sobbed when she dled1 evel'1 one of thdm." • Jane Doe wUI t'efl In doott County ~ue lt>r ~t leisUI da~. foKIWy lhe MU be ldetttlfted. If nQ~ th• b<>apltal spokesman aald ahe '..'will be ,e:.u a '1itdifiM burial. ' lte aald a fUneral llotne Will ~ .. ~ wtt.bou&. Chl!le. HOIPltal em1>1o)'U Ue atart!na a lud ftlr. crave alt• and lbarker. • MN'S DO• w.a MK1ND NEA• a road tn Sch.IU•r Woodt by • passerby who beard IJ'OIDI from J Ulleke(. !be w11 bOWJd ln a blanket wrapped with a knotted CGl'd. TM waU.nl ttad tub&oned one tad.fllU..eord '-.. • hantman'1 nooae, tiut lt •u Dot aro\lnd ht~ I',... Pllfle AJ SCI FI .. •: for material for his books, most of which are written for the teenage set. 1fhe professor, wJR> dabbles in astro-physics. "but mostly plasm physics," doesn 'tjust pull tu. fic- tion inventions from ~ero-gravity Hi r. I I • :Allead? t .... ~ WASdlNOfON <AP) -t- lnC that he la ln cffreet touch w Arab leaders, IsraeU Forel n Minister Ma&be DIU'U 1&1d day he thlak1 ""1U1Dat.e11 •n •INM tormwa wW be fcilUhd .. f.o reeonvena tb• Geoen !>flee CCfl· ferenceb~tbeendofthe~ear. I Dayan told a IHtws conferente ' b• npr.-ta th• n"t lsra•li govern~t that does not alrnp)y ••Y. ••no, no," to Arab proposalls but one that ls fVtn wJtltn1 to&'!'· Mnder Mttlemeols on th,e W~.t 8anl of tbe Jordan :l\lv•r ln a final puce\reaty. , However, Dayan aatd lsrl!l!l natl)t retuaes to ne1ot1ate wtlh the PalHtine Llbetatt,n Or1anlzaUon. or to l.ht •tablish- meot ~a Palatinlan stat.. 1 Dayan viltualb conrtrmed ile- port.s that be met recently Wilh King Husseln or Jordan, but 11,jd he could not HY one way or lf\e other became· be la "concernf(I with other people too and thty are not too eager" to have ady such meetinS• publicized. ' Thie/Takes Stopliglit UJntrol Box I I • . The signal box controlling tri fie li&bts at an Irvine interaecU wa1 smuhed open today and electronic unit worth SU, 1tolenfromlt,policesaid. ! Police said the theft blacked out the aignala at Irvine Center aril Cul\fer drives for ao unknqwfl period. An officer on patrql apoltedtbedarkenedliiblllat4:20 a .m . A replacemenl control unit was u1ed to put the signal back ih working order within a hall bout. Police Sit. Robert Kredel said. _ Police could not &ay ol whttl value the control unit, which weighs 30 t.o 40 pounds, could be t,O tbelh.lef. Irvine Plan For Fencing Park Delayed A ached.ted court appearance t.o present the clty of Irvine's plan for a n.i.ne·foot-blgb concrete wall to surround it.I skateboard run at University Park has been delayed to Sept. 30, city officials said. Judge Mason Fenton bad or- d ered city attorneys lo appear in court lut Friday with a plan for fencing ol tbe skateboard park. The order is part of a tem- porary injunction granted the Perkcreat Homeowners Associa- tion which is 11uing the city to close the facility. Fenton recently Ol!der~ city orricials to supervise the counie and enforce safely rul,es, or close it. 2 Councilmen Fighting SST INGLEWOOD (AP> -Two ti- ty councilmen here have vow~ to right any relaxation of Federal Aviation Administration reguJa- · lion1 that woufd ~llow tbe Brillsb·rrench Concorde supenonlc transport to land at Lo1 Angeles International Airport. Richard .Man1field and Bill Alberty contend thal the SST would only create mor.e ooi&e for residents near the airport. , Tbe FAA ta reportedly prep•t· in1 a report recommendiq U\al SSTs be .Uowed to fiy in and ~t or la American dun. lncludlq to. Angeles. I TBal,l Meet Setinlroine • An oraanizational meeUq of Jr~ln. p14nnt1 to plan next aeuon'& "T'' (for-Uoy) bdeball aeaso11 a. •obedwed loftt&bl at 1 :3C> at the Harvard Patlc: auiltlpurpme room • T Bill II playeil by b011 UC! alrla a&ild • ~ .. Plilt hit the bell tllf •tili 10U·trii • A board of dlreclon will eJec:ttd. Penona Interested }n coadltnl are tnvllld. .. Texaco Stepa A.Ule t By MILTON MOSKOWITZ Althoufb tt~• the a.tc' lead r tn onlY OflO auto, Shtll OU haa apparently di1plated Texaco u th• naUon ·1 larC'l&l Hll rof tuolln•. At least that'• t.bt wont trom the Lundbtt• IA~tt, a -petroleum industry publlcatJOI\ that tracks aat .. thJ"out,b re- tail ouUets. hxaco bu beld ~ No. 1 pollUoo tor tllht Y••J"t. but latul report.I froQl th• meltetpla~• abow tllat Shell hu ror1td &bead wJth •lead lt'a Ukeb to bold for au of 1171. THE DETBJlONING ()F TEXACO HAS been tn the works ror some tam•. Not even Bob Hope. current spokesman ror'Texaco, could stav• It off. The very ractors that helped lo vault Teuco Into fitst place were the ones that undid it ln the tnd. Texaco hu. more than any other 1uoUne marketer. maintained a naUonal presen~. You can fill up wlth Texaco gasoline ln ail 50 at ales and the Dtatrict of Columbia. That's not true ror any other bra.od. Texaco tb\la has more service st1ttlons pumpl11g its uaollne than any other com· paoy. There are 30,000 Texaco outlets . The closest any company comes to that reach is Money Tree Amoco, the Standard Oil of lndiana unit, which bu aome 24..000 stations. But the trend ln the gasoUne business has not been toward a multiplicity of stations but toward fewer and larger stations. We had 226,000 service stations in 1972 ; now we're down to 183,000. The ~nd has also been away frotn full-service stitlons and toward self-aervi~ outlet.a oc split· island stationa that offer motorists a cbolce. OTHER MARKETERS, NOTABLY SHELL, have moved with these trends more alertly than Texaco, which has remained locked into an older pattern. Aa a result, Shell outsells Texaco even though it bas 11.000 fewer stations and markets in only 40 states. Figures compiled by Lundberg show Shell wltb 7.6 per- cent of the national market. Texaco bolds 7.4 percet. And coming up strongly are Exxon and Amoco, ucb with 7.1 percent. Shell, Exxon and Amoco lncreued their 1uollne saleslastyear. Texaco's weredown. While Shell holds the national lead. it's No. 1 in only one state, Arizona, where il pumps 16 percent of th• 1aUonaae. lt 'a the runnerup in many slates. TEXACO STATIONS COVER THE country, but lt'a the market leader In only three alales: Colorado, North Carolina and Oklahoma. The Midwesl la Amoco terrilory, this brand being the top seller in 12 states: llllnol5, Indiana, Iowa, Kans as. Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wlsconsin and Wyoming. Standard Oil of California ls dominant ln the Far West and holds a strong position ln the Southeast throu•h Its aub· sidiary, Standard Oil of Kentucky. It's No. 1 in 12 states; Alabama. Aluka, California, Florida. Hawaii, Idaho, Ken· tucky, Mlaalaaippl, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah abd w ashinlton. EXXON IS STRONG IN mE EAST and Southeast. ll,.s the matket leader ln New Jersey, Malne, Maeylal\~. Delaware, Diatrict of Columbia, Arkanuaa, Loulaladfl, Virginia, South Carolina and Tennessee. Mobil ataUona lead the aales parade ln Connecticut. Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire and New York, Gulf, which ranks fifth in tM stancllnta, la No. 1 only ln Georgia. Stock Market Up But, Just Slightly NEW Y~IC fAP) • IALES NlW VotllC CAI') ·NY Stock Mitt A,..-,x llMI , ................... '!·~1000 "ft....--cs.., ................... 't;;• ~ ... ·:::::::::::::::::::::·~'3.o-v.·;·~ ....................... .,,. Two ,..,, * ................. 1'.1'9 • .JM f '° ................... ,_, .... ''" to -................. 3Mt....-.01J • TWI t• -..................... J,417,Ut..N WHAT AM•ll DID NIW °'tOt'K IAl'I AMiil SALl:S ..... , ...................... '·"°1 ~ ...................... ,,.,., ~ .... "°"" ................. . 9ollO NI• ~ -........ • ••• $1,fU St~lul11Tlw s,,.,,,.,., NIW YOtltt WJo ...... 4 •·Ill· ,..l<o .. ,,.. ~., .. '"'"" -· 11(1f ... New Y8~11 E•flellte 1--. •••. ,. • et..._.._ ••. ..... 111..tOI nv. -"'• ··-"· -~-•"' +"' .. .... tas:MO MW+ lit ........ 1rt°Aii0 '~ -~ ~ :·.::·.:· 114il: ~ :O:'iA =~ ........ m~ .,.~ ..... , ""' ....... 1414 +Ill --..... . ...... =..:.~.:.:.:.:... . 15, :i~ :~..... , . ······ ' "' -~. Get..... 121. \"I·····' t I T l £~ W.@Mrf ®@rrwt1©® .. a o ~~ ,.,.,,. Klt'll• ro l'oJ °""" P.oJ IOill C'1d Nfd •· ~UPW tit• avwr• OJMf od~ IK>U tWd ,. _, JIW'qllifw1"' 11"' m'"""' und buftn1u. Mou ,.,., ~ 10 l'al Dlirin, At Your &mrlc1. Oro,no. C'ocut Ol:al&I Pll«. P 0 Boz 15'0, Costa "'''°· CA nnf, .V mmt)I "1tn1 CU pollibU will ti. Ort"'11rfld, llld plrr;JnMJ "'4l1Urlll or llftn• MC mdudblfl tta. rHlllr • /..q 110m~, oddrtu end buaM11 ltourf' ~ ••twreonMt ti. c~ ThUcolumnapptartdol· tr u crp Saturdo111 " ..... Paf•C I .. lrlu ...... DEAR PAT: 1 repainted my house a year a10 with a good brand of paint that was quite expemive. The paint ls chipplnc and startin1 to nake. I've talked to the manacer of the paint at.ore, but have not received any HtistacUon. Is there someone who handles consumer complamt.s about paint'! J .J ., Newport Beach C.'act tbe Natloaal PalDt aad Coatlap .Usa., 1511 llllede lsl .. d Ave., W"1Wlatoa. DC ZtMS. lf tile palat maaufacturer la a member of lhla aasoc:Ja. tloa, NPCA wlU atiempt lo belp yoa. Rese Reefpe ae.ars 11.epetn ... DEAR PAT: Someone told me you'd published an easy recipe ror old·fashioned rose water. I wou1C1 like to make some, but all the instructions I've been ablP. to find call for di stilling and seem compUcated. C.G., Mission Viejo Take two handfuls of scented red rose petals and put them ln a jug or earthen pot. Pour over them two plots of water and 'i'a lb. sugar. Let petals steep In this solution for one hour. Then pour water and roses from one vessel Into another unUI the water ls scented by the nowers. Strain and keep baa cool place. Boole Allme• SoUca,,, •••go DEAR PAT: An invalid friend of mine has asked me to get her a bingo book that is played with a pencil. She's seen the book, but can't recall it.s name. She says you rub a pencil over a blank square on the call sheet and a number appears. I've looked all over for this book to no avail. J.S., Laguna Beach Chances are you are looklnl for "B·B·B· BlnKo," by Harvey Wlsb. This book ls dlatrUnrted by Dell Distributing, Inc., 24.S E. 47th St., New York, NV 10017. It should be available wherever paperback books are sold. Separate Credle !lfmedat.ert11 DEAR PAT: Is it true that credit bureaus now must file credit information separately under the names or each person rather than as a joint ac- co1:1nt? I'd like to find out if this change ls automatic or if a person has to request separate files. .. ·~·· ........ lt1Clll'W Wrat.• Singer Hel en Reddy incurred the wrath of Kansas State Fair of· ficials after cancell· ing an appearance. Officials have asked the Kansas attorney general to s ue. Travel Series Slated The Newport Harbor Kiwanis Club will be host to a series of travel and adventure lectures at Orange Coast College. The series, which in· eludes lectures and photographs of Yosemite, Alaska, the Nile River, Guatemala and Colorado, runs on Friday nights at 6. Tickets are $2.50 per lecture for adults and $1 ror students. Proceeds go to charitable causes. The next lecture will be Oct. 14, when former ranger Bob Roney talks about Yosemite. The re· maining lectures will be on Dec. 16, Feb. 17, March 10, and June 16. R. E., Huntington Beach If you are or were married and a credJt bureau p · has you included In a joint credJt IUe established 0-n'W before 1977, you should ask that the lnformaUoa be riled separately under both names. Credit Inform•· Stands tJon received since Jan. 1, 1977, ls automatically filed separately under both 1')>0USes' names. A mlr .. . ried or divorced woman can use her maiden name and not have to refer to her husband or former .Removed husband's name to Oin access to her credit rue. --------------_...;..;;..;;..;;;==--OXNARD (AP) THE FAMILY CIRCUS.. By Bil Keane Newsracks displaying pornographic materials have started disappear· ing from the sidewalks of · Oxnard ·as police begin enforcing a new city or· dinance. Police removed 14 racks after owners railed to withdraw them volun- tarily. Notices were post· ed on the racks a week ago demanding removal within three days. Under the new or· dinance, the display or pornographic mattel' is prohibited within 1,000 feet of schools, homes, churches, parks and recreation areas. A y-o.lly itllot cenbe ll«ycted. oc.c.----... .. c:... ........ 25%0FF SPECIAL SELECTION OF OUTSTANDING SILVER JEWELRY DESIGNS Mennonites Face Eviction SEMINOLE, Tex. (AP> -Tbe 500 II mftOnltea who left their homes in Canada and Mexico to establlJb a com- mwilty of worship here tbouiht they'd have no problem stayina ln the United States after they sank S:U million lnto land. Now they're belos told they have to leave. Thtt U.S. lmmlaraUon and Naturaliaa· lion Service says their temporary visas have run out and they must leave the 6,400 acres In Gaines Cowity in West Texas that they'd hoped to turn into a re· U&IOWI community in tho tradition of tbeh-p&ttftta. THE MENNONITES SAY they were assured they could set permanent visas. and many townspeople here are behind ·their effort to stay. "It makes me mad as hell," says Mayor Bob Clark. ''They were just set· Ung some bad advice or sopieone wu decelvinl them." The immigration service bu started · sendine warning letters to the Men: nonitee. PaAN'I: WIEBE, A Jll&XICAN-80JtN Canadian. hu been told to leave by Thursday roe overstayin1 bis temporary visa. Tbe Kennorutes, evanceUcal Pf'Otes tanta noted for plain dress and exclusive- ness, were unable ln Caoada to estabUsb the community they wanted ~ause enough land we never available tn one place. In Mexico, land expropriation wu the problem. • S.S. Catalina Owner COastal Port Project Eyed ·Denver Omelette GUADALUPE (AP) -Beverly Hills developer Hymie Singer says he plans to convert about a mile or sand dune-covered Santa Barbara County coastline ''into a billion·dollar Port.'' Included in Singer's pl~ are a small boat marina, industrial site development for ''factories, freezer plants and canneries" and a harbor for freighters and tan~~rs. Santa Barbara County Supervisor Harrell Fletcher, usually a strong proponent or develop· ment, advised Singer that the prope>sed harbor would not "really fit" in the area. Singer, who bought the S.S. Catalina as a Valen· tine's Day gift for his wife, said he may keep the ship at the pro~sed harbor, since it costs $300 a day to moor it at Los Angeles harbor. The fabled steamship previously ferried passengers between Los Angeles and Catalina Island. · SEPTEMBER sPECIAL $ Of THE MONTH 1 59 Made with three fresh eggs, diced ham. onions and pepper Served with choice of toast. butter. A 1elly and hash brown potatoes • Served 24 hours · Reg. 2.35 SPIRES ~.a~~= BOTH PIECES • ~.. NOT IN COVER SHOWN Olic and~ -w.stwoocr by Guoldctaft l\Hc)I ils beaUly intad for years.made up 111 $ 2 99 stain ,..,,., long wearing, euy-lO-care·lor ~ oi.1111 hber.11'• crisp, tuxedo arm NOW , lltytlng. ~ ~ I** Ind matcNng side pillows '*P on malcl11g 1 1tr011Q COlllempotary 1111"'"911t. "'""' florrlt proof 11111 fuhloll and value 111111 llve. ONL y . FAMILY · ROOM SPEGAL.I This Is a value you have to see to appreciate. Our IJI new family room pac:MQe. All pieces match. v~i1 get tbe 1ofa, tCMtSeat, chair. ottoman. rociler. cocl<talt ,_,.., lllT'IP table and en end tlble. All for this low, low pri<:4tl Covered In Vtnvt and Hereulon. It'• very comfortable & attradove! VELVET MODULAR GROUP ,. I $ . • a/South Coast It)' JO&N?lf& aEYNOLDS ...... ~ ... A propoaed bulldlna montorium ln NewJ>Ott Bucla was temporarily laid to rest Mon· da7 Pt atler lrv!M Compeny Prtsldeat Peter Kremer told ~men be would withhold four"' the nrm .• major develop-ments unW next Februal'J'. Kremer said lbe company would not file any plans for lbe Cutaways, the blgb rise con· llensen New SC Engineer Howard Bensen, an assistant public works director in Santa Barbara, bas been named San Clemente public works director and city engineer beginning Oct. 17. Bensen, 41, succeeds Phil t>eter, who resigned June 28, saying he was unhappy with his position in San Clemente. Bensen will be paid an annual salary of $31,200. Peter, who worked for the city nearly lS years, resigned at an annual salary ol $34,404. City Manager Gerald Weeks said Bensen was chosen from a field ot 49 applicants because ol his extensive backgr.ound, which Weeks says fits San Clemente's needs ao well. In addiUon, Weeks said Bensen has a "well baJanced manage· ment approach." Peter said when be resigned in June that he was unable to Cit into tile "reJime" or Week.s, who was hind as city manager juatover a 7earaco. ·Bensen bas been responsible · for the administr.ation 9f the San· ta Barbara public workl depart· meat. wtt.ll 175 eJllpioyts and-an annul bu4get of $it DJDJIC>ll, $&,n Clemente's ,deparlf\lent has 56 employes and an annual budget this year ol $7.t mlllton, Weeks said. Bensen bu held hla present poslUon alnce 1m. J>r•viously, be wu a civil engineer for the cl· ty or Sani. Cruz for alx years, and before that he worke4 three years tor the Federal Aviation A'dminL!tration in Los Aneeles. He was araduated from Long Beach St.ate University with a bachelor's de1rce in civil engineering and is a registered e~gloeer for the s tate of C•lifomia. James P"'ige, a city civil engineer, has been acting public works director slnce Peter's resignation In June. The city also hired the Wildan Associates engineering firm in the interim to handle work re- q ul rlng the si1nature of a certilled engineer. Barton Nun Bears Shot, ~dered domtnlum 1lte in Newport Center, lb Newporter North or Hollday Harbor untl1 then. MunwhlJe, company officials, clty repr entatlvea and local residents .-Ill review the city's general plan to come up with a pl an to phase development to road construction. Kremer, who said he spoke for the city's major developers. declared that witbboldine the projects ii not to be con~idered a 111aoop •••• self-Imposed moratorium. He sald it Is "a declaration ot commitment" to the process or brlnglne together repteseQ· tatives of pro-growth and anU- growth forces to solve the city's problems, a process Krem~r said already has begun. In answers to question.S fropt councilmen, Kremer rurther stressed that, while only the four were beioC witbheld from filing, all proposed devel6pments in the Despite the attetltion lo detail one usually encO\\fllers at a bank:, both the American a nd ·Callforn1a Flags at this Bank of America branch in Mission Viejo were upside down Monday. Asked If tfiere were a teason. a bank spokeswoman said no. Someone's attention apparently was flagging. Laguna Planiiers To Study Parking By STEVE MITCHELL Of ... Delly ~li.t Sleff "ln studying the possible ruture development of downtoW!'l Laguna it is immediately evident that for a continuing sound busi· ness development In this area, adequate automobile parking spac must bedeveloped." Sound familiar? It was publilhed in a locaJ news paper in JuneoC1947. As Laguna Beach planning commissioners open their agen· da packets next Tuesday, they will find this and other nostaJgia about the automobile and Its re- lationship to the Art Colony. • Plannlng director Doug Sch,mih has placed In the .,acket.s copie$ of newspa~r clip· pings -some dating batk 30 Petition Wim ~lYote On Ekctioru years -dealing with potential parking plans, programs and predictions for the city's downtown sector. And maps. Lots of early maps showing how the city can eliminate parking problems that are " ... making it dirficuJt to find parking space in the shop· ping area, even on the ordinary business day." as one 1948 editorial puts it. Commissioners will be looking at a multi-million parking pro· gram Tuesday evening that would include three parking structures in the downtown area, pllll parking programs for both enda of town and Laguna Canyon Road, SQ Schmitz thought It would bb <See PARKING, Pa1e A2) city, tncluding projects owned by other developers, would be sub- ject to the review process. Councilman Paul RyckoU, who has proposed the moratorium, lauded Kremer and the other de· velopers for "going a way down the road on this one," He made the motion to withdraw con· sideralloo of the moratorium. It was approved unanimously by his council collea&Ues. Jn all, there were three measures before councilmen that would affect the future ol de- velopment in Newport Beach. One was the moratorium, whlcll was withdrawn. A.oatber was an amendment to the· general pJao which would have limited future Jrowtb bued OD constraints of the city's lraftic system. That amendment was not aP: proved in ravor of the third measure, proposed by Coun· ' cil..,aa t'rudl Rocera·, wbicb called fOr lhe comprebeoslve ,.. view~ the enUre ,eneral plan to adjust demlUes of future d~ velopmtftt and to prepare a pbas-lnr plan to fit road cooslruC'Uoll to building c:onatructloo. Mayor Pro Tem Pete Barrett. who endorsed the review, nofled that the developen and eovil'On· mentalists in attendance at the meeting were the people who already have actively involved themselves lo the process. Stepdaughter Settles ·. .. ' , ... $20 Millioll Goes To Ja~kie .~nassis ATHENS, Greece.(AP> -Jae· queline Onassis has reached a $20 million settlement with her stepdaughter, Christina Onassis, in return for relinquishing any further claim to her husband's estate, sources close to the Onassis family said today. The settlement, about twice what Mrs. Onassis could have ex· peeled under terms of the late Aristotle Onassis' wlll, severs any connection she may have had with Onassis-owned en· terprises and brings to an end her $250,000 a year allowance, th~ sources said. Neither Mrs. Onassis, 47, nor he r stepda ughter could be reached for comment. Vandals Damage SC SChool Vandals struck at the Shorecliffs Junior High School site thiS weekend, causlng about $1,000 damage at \he school, which Is nearlng completion ln north San-Clemente. Security guards were posted at Lhe site in May, after repeated vandalism resulted in $400 damage over one weekend. School officials said today lha~ the guards were pulled off, after a period of no further incidents. The school remains tbe responsibility or the construction contractor until the Capistrlno Unified School District accepts owners hip. s a Id Charles M edelros, ad ministratlve services director. The vandaJs who litruck lb.ls weekend apparently en,ered an attic crawl s pace, punched two holes m a drywall ceillQI over a rest room and dropped through. Screens on another bulldln1 were aJso reported cut and bent. Construction delays at the school, located. at 240 Via Secorro, ha.ve postJ¥>ned itl open· ~g. originally ~hedule<l for Sept. 12 to later thiS fall. The New York Times reported today that Christina agreed to the settlement because she was eager to cut all ties with bet step- molber. She also was advised that Mrs. Onassis would not con· sider anything less than $20 million, the Times said. Sources told The Associated Press that Mrs. Onassis began seekipg the settlement shortly after her husband's death in Paris at age 69 ln March 1975, but Christina •:simply ignored ber." "Christina relented and agreed to giye Jackie the generous amOWlt only if she would agree to sever all her ties with the Onassis estate,'' they added. It remained unclear whether the $20 million figure was in addi- tion to $8 million Mrs. Onassis re- portedly received from Christina a year ago to relinquish her share lo the family-owned yacht, Christina, and Scorpios Island In the Ionian Sea, where Onassis is buried. Although initial reports after Onassis' death were that be had left his widow some $200 million. it was reveaJed when the will was made public In June 1975 that be left IM;r only $100,000 a year from tax.free bonds and $100,000 a year from other income for herself and $50,000 for her children. The bequest was to have been (See $20 MILLION, Page AU Mes~ Lagmaa Heists Sheriff's deputies in Dana Point have _.re4led three youths &hey suspect ot t)otding up conve- nience markets ln Costa Mesa and Laguna Beach early this momiQI. The trio were pulled over shortly after leaving a fast food reslauni~t In Dana Point when depuUes poted they had failed to turn on their headlamps. Deputies allegedly found two handguns and somewhat less than two cases of ~r in.side the car. Arrested were John F . Shearer, 20, and Doullas E. Onken, 19, both of um Cordova in Dana Point, and a 17-year old Redlands youth. Lquna Beach police drove a clerk from tbe nc Toe Market to Dana Point to Identify the trio after the 2 a.m. arrests. The clerk, who was wonm. at the COllven.ience market at Glermeyre and Thalia Streets. said he was approached by men wielding a small caliber handgun at about 1 this morning. The men fled with about $60 from the till and a case of MicMlob beer. Laguna Beach police in· vestigator Gerry Brooks said he believes the three men were also involved in an armed robbery of a U Tote M ~arket at 19th Street and Pomona Avenue in Co6ta Mesa earlier in the evening. ••The suspects in that robbery got away with some money and a ca11e cf Micbelob," B~ said. D:--...1 f M He said that when sberirrs I.JUUY 0 80 depvt.ies pulled the three men over thls IDOl"lll1'g, there were two casesoltbebeerinsidethecar. Who Fled Re...1.-.. Of course, some of the beer · U8 was missin& " Brooks said. "' Police in Cc6ta Mesa said the E'oun':.;J m· u s men _escaped with $'70 and the r 1 u • • beermthatro~. Shearer and Onken were belna held in Jail with bail set at $25,000 each. The teenaeer was to be transferred to Orange County J uvenil&Hall. JACKIE ONASSIS SETTLES FOR $20 MILLION Shown With Stepdaughter Christine Onassis In 1975 Americans Divided On Lance RADNOR, Pa. (AP) -The American people, the jury that Bert Lance sought to judge his case. are sharply divided over whether Lance should keep his job as budget director in the Carter administration, an As· sociated Press public opinion poll shows. The nationwide survey of 1,548 adults, taken Monday evening, also found President Carter's im-age had been dented by the Lance affair, particularly in re- gard to Carter's oft-repeated campaign pledge to enforce moral standa'rds In government. The AP survey showed that nearly 38 percent of those in- terviewed felt Lance should re· sign as director of the Office of Management and Budget, while about 35 percent said he should stay. Nearly 27 percent ex- pressed no opinion, despite publicity about the case. The AP survey. followed Lance's vigorous self-defense during three days of nationally televised Senate committee hear- ing into Lance's personal and business dealings. The hearinJs before the Senate Governmental Affairs Commit- tee were intended to focus on al· legations that Lance withheld personal financial information during bis Senate confirmation hearings in January. The impact of ·Lance's 20-plus hours of testimony last week before the Senate panel is dif· Iicull lo measure, since the television audiences for the hear· ings were believed to be small. National television ratings for last week are not yet available. Th~ survey provided some in· dication that Lance's television performance helped his standing with some Americans. The telephone survey was con· ducted for The AP by Chilton Research Services of Radnor. Pa. The 3 percent difference between those favoring Lance's resignation and those opp0sing it is inconclusive because or the margin of possible statistical er-ror. Lance tias repeatedly said that be would not resign and that he is innocent of any wronadoing in bis personal financial affairs. Carter and Lance met private- ly Monday. White House press secretary Jody Powell said he had no information on what was discussed or who requested the ·session. Powell said if Carter has made a decision on whether to keep Lance as budget director ''I'm certainly not aware of it." OAANGECOAIT UM: DAILY PILOT E'ro• Page AJ $20MILUON paid through a foundation in Lichtenstein, and the bulk of the shipping tycoon's estate was to go to his daughter, now 26, and to a foundation in memory of his late son, Alexander, killed in a plane crash in 1973 at age 25. Onassis' hand-written will, dat· ed Jan. 3, 1974, indicated that Mrs. Onassis signed a document in New York in which she relin· quished all rights to her late husband's estate. However, the Times quotes friends of Christina Onassis as saying that soon after her father's death, Mrs. Onassis and her brother-in-law, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, began pressing the heiress to increase the bequest to Mrs. Onassis. Miss Onassis' share of her father's estate is estimated at $250 million. Friends of Christina Onassis said she opposed her father's marriage in 1968 to the widow of President Kennedy and was never able to become close to her. The relationship was said to have become even more strained after Onassis' death, although his daughter made a statement to the contrary and denied reports that her father planned to divorce his wife. f'1"09IP9f1eAJ PARKING. • • helpful to give historical perspec· live on past efforts and anguish over parking. "We were going through an old planning department scrapbook and saw some of these articles about parking," Schmits said. Planner Marcia Raines took more of an interest in the old clips and went over to the public library for a lunch-hour research project. The lead paragraphs to some of the early news clips could be run today without changing a word. Liketbis June, 1947, example: "In studying the possible future development of downtown Laguna it is immediately evident that for a continuing sound busi· ness development In this area, adequate automobile parking space must be provided. Tb1s plan Ca map was attached) therefore proposes as one of its principal features, the acquisi- tion and development of ade- quate automobile parking space to serve the business area. the ci· tyoffices and Irvine Bowl.'' And this one, the following month, strikes close to home: "After months of pondering, the city plaftnlng commission last night went into a huddle on two alternative plans for pro- vision of off.street parklnfin the downtown area which may be presented for public considera-tion soon." In that same article, a planner asked if Laguna Beach could handle an Influx of people, clUng predictions of a 1.2 million population in the county by 1990. That planner could not have k.nown that Oran1e Oo.a~ty's population would be 1. '1 million by1977. A newa~per editorial in 1!MI point.I to the need for a parking and traffic study, and predicted probteou. involved in 1uoh a move. · ''There are bound to be co. ~tlnl oplnlou in a commuolty as to how to remedy \la ... prob-lems and bow to finance their cost." And. •urtJ eftouch, 21 yean later u '800,000 bond lM\16 tO construct a par~ IU\ltt.ari tft downtown LatWUl Beacll wu MDt tO the eledQl'ate Md d• fnted. Ttiat tt'f5 ballot conmct at.IDl.'ntd b:odl araument ovw tile patklnl 1olut.loo ud the-llnlOdnf. Now tbe plunlAa·com.-too I 81alit &CJokbaa11Dto P!anlDf ~MIGdaWrellMCllMto tbe cttl'• trifnC w.. luUbla Uaae, Uau1l baft 111it 1111C1111drbiltorl .. tofatt badr oa. ~•Y old tlw1 ., .. ••unct..,.•• over tbit iuua of WMD lo boJ~M tlec:U.. • "I'm 1Ull Clll the fence•• far u the jjrt,v eleeUoa ~ ... ~­elhnlift JClhn h'MM1 uJd, •J•m 1olna tq u.n to tll• dllcuulOI) Wednesday <at the CouncU meet. ln&) and decide what to do.'' "11 lt looks as though an earlier election would clear the air on the issue then l might •upport that." Sweeney uld he's asked clty attorney James Okadkl to ~re­ pare oplnions about the legal lhl· plicat!'lM of the election process change .1roposal. Councilman Ken Friess aireed with Sweeney. ·'The impacts of the meas~ are dlCferent dependin& on when th~ electlon ls held," Friess said, referring io potential changes ln the present council mak~up if the elecUoo proposal were passed by the voters. U special election were beld 1n December, and the issue was ap- proved by the voters, Coun· cilmah Sweeney and Mayor. Yvon Heckscber could lose their seats since they live in the same district as Councilman Richard McDowell, who is not. up for re- election untll 1980. Bernie Matthey, spokesman for Concerned Citizens for Responsive Government, said to- day he ls hopeful the Council will choose to bold the special December election. Matthey's group circulated the petition. "I plan to be at the meeting to encourage Council to hold the election," he said. Matthey acknowledged the $10,000 price tag (or a special election was high. "I bate to have to see the tax· payers pay for a special elec- tion," he said. "But I think Sl0,000 buys a lot of sell de· termination." Police Hold Father in Son's Death A 23-year·old Westminster father was booked on suspicion of murder today in the death of his five-month-old son, police said. Frederick R. Mueller of 13826 La Pat Place, was lodged in Orange County Jail after the death at 2 a.m. today of his infant son, Jeffrey Allen Mueller, ac- cording to Sgt. Harry Hoover. The baby was taken to the UCI Medical Center at 11 p.m. Mon-day, Hoover said. A spokesman for the Oranae County Coroner's Department said the cause of the baby's death is under investigation~ No other details were im- mediately available. Okroberfest Booths Eyed Organizations that would like to mix service with the suds, are invited to operate carnival and g4lme booths for the third annual Oktoberfest, scheduled Oct. 1 on Forest Avenue In Laguna Beach. Web Jones, chairman of the Vlllage Center Committee, said service groups mayset up booths to raise funds for their communi- ty projects during the festivities. The Oktoberfest will be held from 5 to 11 p.m. along Forest A venue from Coast Highway to Third Street. For booth information, call Rod Tucker at 494-4458. license a Clue SAN DIEGO <AP> -A set of Alabama license plates was the only clue today to the killing of a woman whose body was found in a van ln storage at the downtown Pickwick Hotel. • Oltty ..... , ........ SCtl!NCE FICTION GIVEN AN INJECTION OF SCIENCE Gregory Benford Steere Clear of 'Thud, Blunder' Dearth of 'Darth' I Marks Prof's Work By Sl'EVE MITCHELL OltMo.llY f'l ... ltll" You won't find a Darth Vader character strangling Alderaan rebels in any of Gregory Ben· ford's science fiction books. And the UCI physics professor, who writes science fiction books on the side, says he steers away from what be calls "thud and blunder" in his outer space writing ventures. " 'Star Wars' was a fun mov- ie," the bespectacled and bearded scientist said, staring out his picture window overlook- ing the green slopes of Latuna Beach. ''But it's not a great movie. It's good science fiction and it has bad major success, but it's too bad it has to come with an almost self-parody of the (science fiction} field." Benford, who bas four sci fi books to his credit, says "Star Wars" is all dude and flash. "It is a tribute to the Saturday matinee science fiction serials of the 1930s and 1940s," be said. ''But it doesn't take the fleltl as serious science fiction, and films really can't, can they," he asks no one in particular. Benford won the coveted "Nebula Award" last year from the· Science Fiction Writers of America for one of bis books, and is one of. the few research aclen· tists in the country who also writes sci fi -or "SF" as he calls it. ·'The reason science fiction has never made it. in movies, is because it's too intellectual. It takes a lot of explanati0o and movie makers don't like talk," Benford said An obvious ex-ception he claims, is Stanley Kubrick's "2001" which the 36-year-old author calls a fine bit of sci fi, mixing scientific research with the action. That's the secret of science nc-tion writing-, Benford says. "It can show you strange worlds, yet factual worlds." Benford draws ftom his ex· tensive astronomy-background Sex Discrimination In School8 Aired Josephine Sprague, a teacher and parent, will discuss sex dis- crimination In schools when the South Coast chapter of the Na- tional Organization for Women meets at 8 p.m. Wednesday In the Laguna Federal ~ayings and Loan building, Lasuna Beach. Miss Sprague, a member or the organlzQtlon 's Education 1'ask Forced Orange Couniy, ~ ~is­ c uss cb•ngea mandated by fed,raHaw and eXi.ating sex role stereotypes in schools and text· 0ooks. 'nle publle is invited to attend the meeting. for material for his books. most of which are written for the teenage set. The professor, who dabbles in astro-pbysics, "but mosUy plasm physics,'' doesn't just pull bis fie· . lion inventions from zero-gravity air. · In his book, "Jupiter Project," the SF writer describes a space station that isrft on lbe ~awing boru;ds today. "I looked at a lot of current space station designs and tried to come up with a workable station for the future," be e~lained. He wrote tbe book just after the Pioneer p'robes were making their way past Jupiter a few years ago, "when everyone was saying there would be no manned explorations of Jupiter because of it's high radiation." So Benford can'nibaliied "parts" from space staUoo de. signs ol today for bis book, tossed in some ideas of bis own, and came up with a futuristic station called "The Can," which houses hundreds of scientists and ls pro- tected from radiation. "I put a shield of water sur- rounding the space station to absorb the radiation," 8enford said. "Ten meters of water can stop almost anything, plus the water shield has the added benefit of providing drinking water for those aboard the sta- tion," he said. And where do Benford's space station residents go to replenish their protectJvewater supply? From the moons sul'l'OWlding Jupiter, of course. "We know the moons of Jupiter have ice on them, so we just send out parties to suck it up," he shrugged. F,....PageAJ NUN ••• door and the man asked for Sister Joan. When Sister Joan Pfeiffer came to the door the man said, "Where is it?" Sister Pfeiffer esked the man what he wanted, the man pulled out a .38-callber revolver and fired one shot which struck the wall at the bottom of the step. Then Sister Blaul, · who was grading school work, came downstairs and asked the man to leave. He fired another shot which struck Sister Blaul in the chest, the report said. She died at the cooveotatabout8:30p.m. Sister Blaul. described by a parish bouse spokeswoman·as a gifted iibger, waa.a member ol the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur. A native of Chicago, Sister Blaul bad been a maUl teacher at Cbamlnade·Julienne Hieb School since 1973. She also taught at St. Agnes School. The Lacun& Beach City ()Jun. ell told resldeni. lMn1 near lb& Old Brussels restaurant to let thorn know if they have ·~ problems with their commerQlal '"'11hbor ud they dJd just \b&l thbweek. Angry homeowners pmtested to the council two weeks ago thal owners of the reburbished eatery planned to have disco music, dancinl and pool tables in the 43-year-old establishment at 2007 South Coast ffi~way. The resta\ll'ant is located near homes alone Oceal\ Wry 'tlnd Diamond Street ''°d a peUUon conlainin1 the names of 28 neighbors asbd the council to ensure the noJse level would ~ main tolerable. Councllinen assured homeowners that the owtien would have to come before the council for an entertainment perm.it before the first dime was plunked in a Julee box ot lhe first eight-ball sunk. But what neighbors said they heard Sunday night was not quiet patrons eatinl thelr dinners. They clalmed they. beard billiard balls crashing, pinball machines clanging and a juke box full of the top 4.0 tunes blaring into their living rooms . Planning director Doug Srhmitz said police officers were sent to the restaurant Monday morning and, under their supervision, ordered operator Robert Shoemaker to unplug the pinball machines and the juke box. And Schmitz said he stopped processing a request horn the owners of the Old Brussels for an entertainment permit on Sept. 14. "We don't know who the new owners are," Schmitz explained. "And before we can even begin to process a permit like this we have to have a police investiga- tion of the owners." · Schmitz said the city bas re- ceived more than a half dozen applications for various permits from different owners. So the city won •t budee until they get the details on just who owns the restaurant. "They (the owners) are not helping their cause byapparent- ly not following the city's pro- cedures," said City Manager Al Theal. "There are a lot of angry neighbors out there watching that restaurant very closely." Restaurant operator Robert Shoemaker said today the altua· tion wftb the Jute box and plnball maddnes .. ,.. .. an oYerallht on my part." Shoemaker is a former Oregon resident and be said the vending machine compauy ls responsible for obtaining permits and licenses for lts customers In that state. "I had just assumed lt was taken care of," Sboem aker said. But the new restaurateur said be would not plug tbe machines back into the wall until he re- ceiv~ the proper permits. "A lot of the confusion (()mes from the cba.qge of ownership.·· he said. "It's <the Old Brussels> bas been closed for so long that there are a lot of little detaila to take care of." Pacts Terminated BRASILIA, Brazil (AP> - Brazil has canceled its last four defense agreements with the United States, endi.ng formal military cooperation Jhat began du!'ing World War II. '!'he action Monday WH a fo)Jowup U> Brazil's cancellation last March of a 1952 military assistance trea- ty with the UniUtd S~tel and lts rejection ol $50 mUlioo tn U.S. military aid because the aid was linked to human ripts. -----~ 'Ja:De' I.Dved, ltlo1•rn~d ~ -. Beating V"r.ctim M0vea Even Hartkned Medicos • ' THay'•CI I~ N.~. "'toek8 VOL. 70, NO. ?63, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1977 N • 8)' JOANNE REYNOLDS °' .. .,.,..""" .... A proposed bulldlns moratorium in Newport Beach was ~mporarily laid to rest Mon· day rught after Irvine Company Prhldent Pet.er Kremer told councilmen be would withhold four ol the farm'• major develop- ment.a unW next February. Kremer said tbe company would not. file any plans for the Castaways, the hi1h rise con· Trailer Use Won By Unit On a 4·3 vote, Newport Beach city councilmen decided to ignore parts of the city's buJlding code Monday to allow Carden School offi cials to use unanchored trailers for classrooms. The vote came even though City Attorney Dennis O'Neil told councilmen they don't have the authority to waive a building code requirement. Councilmen Trudi Rogers, Ray WiJLiams, Paul Ryckoff and Don Mcinnis, who voted tn favor or the school owner, also decided not to require a Sl,000 bond to assure the trailers will be removed when the school's lease expires next June. The vote was taken after school owner John Wilson complained that city staff members had been "somewhat zealous" in enforcing city building laws regarding the trailers. Wilson implied he had been sjngled out for special application or the laws. Staff members den led that was the case and carefully detailed their sumnHtr·loal efforta to apprise Wilson of the code req\drements and to pt him to get a bulldina perm1t for the trailers. The two trailers were Installed without a permit al the alte the school now shares with the senior citizen center at Fifth and Marguerite Avenues in Corona del Mar. The same four councU men who voted to waive the building code were the same four who agreed to allow the school to stay on at the Corona del Mar site when its anmlal lease expired this summer. Ryckoff sajd the requirement tor anchoring, which Wilson said would cost him more than $700, could b e waived w ithout ··prejudicing safety or anythmg else. "We don't need to get into the detail or the building codes and (See CARDEN, Pa1e t\2) Dayan See. Revival of C',eneva, Meet WASHING TON CAP) -Hint· ing that be is in direct touch with Arab leaders, Israeli Forelan Minister Moshe Dayan said ~ day he thinks "ulUmately an agreed formula will be found" to reconvene the Geneva peace con· fer~ce by the end of \he year. DayaQ told a news conference he represents the nrst Israeli gov~ment that does not simply say, "no, no," to Arab proposals but one that ls even wUlln1 to sur- render settlements on the West Bank of the Jordan Jllver In a fltlal ~ace treaty. Howevet', Dayan said Israel . nauy refuse. to neiouate wtth the Palestlne Liberation Or1...naaon. or to the estabUsb· mental a Paleltllilan at•te. Da.J'• Ylrtually confirmed re· ports that be met recently with Ktns Haaetn af Jordaa1 but Aid 1-COIN ndl 1ay ont w11-* tbe oth• because be ii ··~ ~tb otbei' peopa. too and they '" not too ..-·:. \o haft an,y •ueb meetrnp; publtm.d. Co111pany Delays NB Buil(ljftg . domJnium &Ile In Newport Center, the NewpoNr N~ or Holiday Harbor until then. Meanwhile, company officials, city representat.ivea and local residents will review the city's 1e1leral plan to come up with a plantophasedevelopmenltproad construction. Kremer. who said he spoke for the city's major developers, declared that withholding the ltfloop .... projects la not to be considered a self-Imposed moratorium. He said it ls "a declaration of commitment" to the process of brln1ln1 together represen· taUves of pro.growth and anti· &rowth forces to solve the city's probl~ms. a process Kremer said already has beaun. In answers to questions Crom councllmen, Kremer further stressed thJat, while only the four l1~t>lte the )llt'\mtfon fo detMI one usually encounters at a bllnk. both the Americ&tl and Calif om la Flags at th ls Barut of Amert" bl"anch i~ ..,,. VtejO were upside down Monday. Asked if there wer. a reason. a bank spokeswoman said no. Someone's attention apparently Wai flagging. Sprawled Giraffe Dies of 'Shock' MARWELL HALL, England CAP> -Victor. the giraffe who couldn't get back on hi& feet, died without a sound today as atten· dents who fought to save bis life cradled his graceful neck and watched him go. Victor had been lifted in a special sling made by the Royal Navy and had just been lowered for a rest when he died, apparent· ly of shock. The ts-year-old giraffe did the splits Thursday night apparently while mating with one of the three female giraffes at Marwell Zoological Park 70 miles southwest of London. For five days, he was at the center of a SYMBOL~ IN MfSTERY Elvis Presley "was the perfect Nnerican, s~mbol, fun· ilaaientally. a inyltet')'1 al)d the . l~a was he woold outlive us , ~ll. '' writes Greil .M.,.oqs of Rolllnt~e. · That symbol is explored tqday as ~ Pilo\ cCQcludea its s~es of artlcles on the kins or f9Ck. See Page Cl. · rescue drama which captured the Imagination of millions of British animal lovers and others around the world. Although no bones appeared broken, he could not be coaxed to his feet and lay stranded on his belly, steadily getting weaker despite intravenous feeding and nibbles at leaves brought by his keeper. By the time be laid his eight-foot neck on the s houlders of those who tried to save him and breathed a last r agged sigh, he bad lost nearly one-fourth of his 2,000 pounds. Normal life expectancy for a giraffe ls about 25 years in the wild and a few years longer in captivity. Occasionally, during his 125· hour fight for Ufe, a tear would slip trom his brown eyes and roll doWt'l b,is spotted face, but he made no sound qf suffering. Ginffes frequenUy cry. but they make nonolse. "I think he died -very quietly and I don't thlJtk he bad any real l>•in," said 100 owner John Knowles. . Knowles and veterinarian John Walmsley headed the attempt to ral1e Viet.or lo h1s feet with block and tackle. were being withheld from nuna. all proposed developments In the city, Including projects owned by other developers, would be aub· ject to the review process. Councilman Paul Ryckoff, who has proposed the moratorium, lauded Kremer and the other de· velopers for "going a way down the road on this one," He made the motion to withdraw con· sideration of the moratorium. It was approved unanimously by bla council colleagues. In all, there were three measures before councilmen that would affect the future of de· velopment in Newport Beach. One was the moratorium. which was withdrawn. Another was an amendment lo the general plan which would have limited future growth based on constraints of the city's tr:affic system. That amendment was not ap- proved lo• favor of the third measure, proposed by Coun· ell man Trudt Rogers, wbicb called for the comprehensive re- view or the entire 1eneral plan to adjust densities of fUtun d• velopment and to prepare a pba.s· ing plan to fit road construction to building construction. <See BtJILDING. Paae AZ> Chula Son Held ' Suspect • in Cotaine Smuggling · Steven Loyd Chula, the 27· year·old son of attorney George Chula su rrendered today to Newport Beach police who were seeking the sometlme·Harbor Area resident in connection with an alleged international cocaine smuggling ring. The younger Chula was brou~ht into the Newport Beach poHce station by his father, a prominent criminal attorney. Detective Sgt. Darryl Youle said the younger Chula, who hst· ed the Irvine address where his mother lives, would be arralgned before the U S: magistrate in Santa Ana on the charges con· Final Rites Pending/or NB Pioneer Private funeral services are peodlnr today for pioneer Ne.,...t a...ll .-..Jdet\l JMter L. "Les" Iabetlwhodled Moaday night after a lengthy tllne.a. He wu83. • Mr. Isbell served 12 years on the city council from 1942 to 1954, serving as mayor from 1944 to 1946 and again from 1950 to 1952. His wife, Helen, recalled that he was the council organizer present city hall which was built Fresent city ball which was built in HMS. A resident or Balboa from 1922 to 1970, Mr. Isbell and his wife have lived in Westcliff since leav· Ing the Peninsula. When he first came lo Newport Beach, Mr. Isbell worked with the Newport Beach Lumber Company. In 1936, be started hi& own firm, Newport Builders Sup- ply and actively ran the business until mo when be liquidated it to retire. Originally a member of the Santa Ana Elks~ Mr. Isbell was one of the foundine members of the Newport Harbor Lodge, 1767. In addition to his wife, Mr. I s bell leaves a daughter, Patricia Matlack of Santee; a tained in a federal grand jury in· dic tm e nt h a nded down in Honolulu last week. Youle said he expected Chula, who also goes by the name or Steven Loyd Booth, to be re· leased after posting $10,000 bail. Chula 's surrender brings to five the number of local people arrested in connection with the ring. A total of 11 names were listed on the indictment. Six are being sought by federal agents in Hawaii. According to federal Drug En· rorcement Administration of· ficials the ring, which has been °"'",..... .......... EX·NEWPORT MAYOR DIES Lester L. Isbell stepdaughter, Dolores Willit or Santa Barbara ; a stepson. Donald E. Elder of Balboa, also a former Newp0rt Beach coun- cilman, and fi ve grandchildren. Jackie Onassis Due $21 Million Payoff AnIENS. Greece <AP> -Jac- queline Onassla bas reached a $21 million aettlen>ent with her stepdaughter. Christina Onanls, in return for rellnquisblnJ any further claim to her huaband's estate, sources tloae to the Onassis family said today. the subject of a three-year in· vestigation s pearheaded by Newport Beach police, is responsible for bringing into the U.S. nearly $7 million worth of the illi<:it drug from Peru. Still in custody are J oe and Sergio Avila. owners of the El Ranchito restaurants in Newport Beach and Costa Mesa. Also taken into custody in the sweep that began last Thursday were Joy Marlene Chaban, 26, of El Toro, and Stephen Granat, 26, of Newport Beach. Granat re· mains in custody, while Miss Chaban was released Bay Club Guard SWlwd ' ) • Balboa Bay Club security • 1uard Ken Wexler was slashed oa the left a.rm by either a knif4t or ruor todaf when be surpris~ an apparent intruder In a ch1b rest.room. The attacker escaped. despite a dragnet by Newport Beach· police who fanned out across Mariners Mile and through the Bayshores subdivision nearby. The police helicopter also was overhead in the search. Wexler, 39, surrered about an eight-inch gash down his left arm. He was taken to Hoag Memorial Hospital where his condition is listed as good. According to preliminary re- ports, the attack occurred about 10 a.m. when Wexler was making roµtine checks in the rest rooms in the garage area near the Balboa Bay Club's lobby number four. The guard told police be found the man washing his hands and when he spoke to him, the sus· pect shoved Wexler to the floor and slashed him. Wexler called for help as his at· · tacker fled. Newport Beac h police described the suspect as a black man, wearing a flowered shirt. He is believed to be about six feet tall, 180 pounds and about 30 years old. Cholera Kills 90 By Tbe Auoclated PftSS Cholera spreadin1 through Banlladesh has killed 90 persons but was reported under control today in the Gilbert Islands after causing 17 fatalities. Coast Weather Skies will be mostly sun· ny tbrouah Wednesday, wlth patchy clouds In· terferinJ at times. Lows tonight in the SO.. Highs Wednelday in the upper 60s to mid '70S. INSIDE TODAY . " T~ks But Na Fire You may have wondered \\hat all the hre trucks are doing at Newport Beach ·s Ensign View Park where they have been parked every few days of late There's no fire .. It's 1ust that the firemen who man the trucks are taking medical aid classes during duty hours. The classes !ll'e be· ing conducted in the former church at the park s ite and the fil'e men ride to school on the trucks Americans Sharply Divided on Lance HADNOR, Pa. CAP> • The American people. the JUry that Bert Lance sought to Judge his ('ase. arc :.harply divided over "hether Lance should keep tu~ JOb as budget director in the Carter administration. an As !'.Oc1ated Press public opinion poll s hows. The nationwide survey of 1,548 adults, taken Monday evening, • aJ50 found President Carter's im· age had been dented by tbe , Lance affair, Pt1.rµ..c1.11p.r~ in te &ard . to Carter's ofl-repe•ted campaign pletlge to enforce moraJ standards in government. television audiences for the bear - ings were believed to be small NalionaJ televlsion ratings for last week are not yet available. The survey provided some in dication that Lance's television performance helped his st.anding with some Americans. The telephone survey was con· ducted for The AP by Chilt.on Research Services of Radnor, Pa. ' ' The 3 percent difference bet~~ thos~ fav~n1.~·s resignation and thOSe opj>o4Jng it is inconclusive because of the margin of possible statistical er· ror. --.... - ClHCACiO C/.P> -Hospital attendants lovingly called her Jane and wept w)len ebe died. llUndredl of parent& called or v\Slted in the hope that the pretty, blonde Jane Doe mltht be their miuini daughter. Ttie teenager, Coul\d beaten unconscious In a rorest preserve Sept. 8. dJed unknown 6\lt not'. atone. lt~tiaRECflON HOSMAL JlECEJVED 500 telephone calls from paren,ts In a dozen states. The suburban Schlller Pan police who investlgated the case estimated they received 1,000 calls from paren~ Pictures of the girl ln her hospital bed appeared In newspapers •nd on television. More th81\20<l people visited her, She was a piUl\aJ ~lght. Bot)) eyes were blackened and there was an ualy bruise on the side of her head. The freckle-faced mystery girl. bell~ved to be 15 lo 18 years old. died Sunday, never recalning consclousrtess. A memorial service was held in the hospital chapel Monday, and more than lSO attended. most of thent white·unifotmed hospital workers who fouaht for her life. · • AT JANE DOE'S MASS, THE Rev. John Kuhlmey, a hospitall "111.\D A CAU. ntonl A 'l'IOTHER in Pennsylvania yesterday chaplain, sajd goodbye for her : : who had not heard from her daughter for a year," a 'hos pital "I'm sorry to leave you so early, but for some unuplained spokesman said "Like all the rest she asked about identlfylng r eason, someone didn't want me to Unger here too tone." be read.• clues. Some parents or relatives wbo called thought they might be "There are many girls -out there -just like me. Some or them arel -0n the right trail and too~ a rlane to .$-ee ber. They looked and left hungry and cold; hUDCl"Y for love and cold from indifference. : weeping, or went to the ch ape to say a prayer for her "Couldn't you do something for them! Search \Mm out. bring' ''The girl had a remarkable effect on those who worked with them to loving people." · : ........------------------------------~ ----------------------------------------.n.aar~~~~~ ,...~ .... n.w.JL~~~~~~ 1 ... . . . --... . . 113 · Refugees SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -The first wave of an expected lS,000 Indochinese refugees arrived here early today after a flight from Bangkok, Thailand. · Arriving oo a plane called the Clipper Plymouth Rock, 113 refugees -mosi or them Vietnamese -were met at San Francisco International Airport by offtcials from a variety or government, religious and social service agencies. Many refugees were transferred to other flights leaving for states that eventually will be their new homes. The refugees, some waving at television ·and news cameras, ranged in age from infants to an elderly woman walking on the arms of two grandsons. Many of the smiles fad~ to tears when refugees told social workers about relatives still in Vietnam. U.S. Atty. Gen. Grifrin Bell authorized the program to admit the 15,000 Indochinese refugees, according to David Jlchert, district director of the U.S. ImmigraUon and Naturaliz.ation Service. The program • was effective Aug., 11, he said. • , The rllMe followed·a U,S.•Slate Department report this summer that sald some 80,000 people were _c[JUYded j nto refugee camps in Thailand, he said. .. For bu~anitarian reasons," the retuaees are being allowed to come to the U.S .• II chert sa.ld. About 7 ,000 incoming refugees are so-called "boat cases," persons who fled their homeland by sea and survived a band·to- mouth existence aboard their boats while awalting sponsorship abroad, Ilchertsaid. The remaining '8,000 will come • Arrive in U.S. Crom the Thai camps, be said . Tbe refugees will meet sponsors arranged by several service organizations. including the U.S. Catholic Conference, the International Re~cue Commit· tee and tbe Church World Service: For those who have come here, there ls a modicum of comfort and security, but their teial status is somewhat unstable, IJchert said. Technically, the refugees are being "paroled" into the country on an indefinite basis, whic~ means the,lt aren't eligible fof citizenship unless they apply fof a change of status. lt is expected that it will tak~ several months before all U,000 refuaees reach this country. f',....PageAJ SCI FI ••. ~tro-physics, "but mostly plasm physics,'' doesn 'l just pull his Ci~­ t1on inventions from zero-gravity air. In his book, "Jupiter Project ... the Sf' writer describes a spa~e station that isn't on the drawing boards today. "l looked at a lot of eurreill space station designs and tried to come up with a workable s tation for the future ... he explainQd. He wrote the book juat alter tbe Pioneer probes were t0aking their way past Jupiler a few years ago, "when everyop~vs sayin(~would be no m~~ • ejAoeia di Jupiter )ecause of it's · h rfldiatlon'." r The AP survey showed that : nearly 38 percent or those 10· 1 terviewed felt Lance should re· 1 .o;1gn as director of the Office· ol 1 Management and Budget, while I about 3.5 percent ~l;\id he shoold Lance has repeatedly said that he would not resi&n and that he is • ~ lnnocentof al\3J ~n«aotnt iqJU5 V · ·daJ: · p · . t So Be nford cannibalized "parts'' from space staUon de- signs oC'today for bis book. tossed io some ideas of his own, and came up with a futuristic stalian called "The Can,•· which bowies hundreds of scientists and is pro· tected from radiation. t s tay. Nearly !l per.cent ex1 pressed no o}lln\bn, despite • I publicity about the case. The AP s urvey followed Lance's vigorous self-defense I during three days of nationally I televised Senate committee bear· 11 mg into Lance's personal and business dealings. I The hearings before the ~nate I Governmental Affairs Cqmmit· 1 tee were lnt.ended to focu,9'on al· 1 legations that L!l(lCe wtthheld : personal financi~ lnfonn•tlon 1 during bis Seo~• conlirmaUon 1 hearings in J an~«ry, Tbe impact ot'Lance's 20-plus I hours of testt\bC>ny last week 1 before the Sen.ate panel is 'dU· I licult to measure, &lnce the I I I F,....PflfleAJ ~CARDEN ••• 1 all these kind of things," he s.ald. I suggesting a private bW11ness I like the school shouldb'\ ~ I forced to incur such toati.' '". I Mayor Milan ~tal, Mayor I Pro Tern Pete Uatrelt and I Councilwoman LucUte Kuehn. : said they could not support the measure because of the question 1 or safety of the school children : who would be occupying the I trailers. OMNGeCOAST t "- DAILY PILOT _.._ .... ......_ __ _ .,..,.,_,, ........... 111-0-•---lt-u. .. personal finaneial a.Ualrs. an . 8 am Carter and La~~~ met P,rivate· ly ,.MOf\day. Whi~ H~ press 'f'...,__!.:_ ... """ .-e~ Jody Powell.Yid;, ~e • ~Ille •a eeD Had no information oo what was discussed or wbc) r:cquetled the session. 4 Center Walls Powell said IC.Carter hd made a decision on '-'betber .. ~.,keep Lance as budctt directcl "I'm certainly no\ aware of tt." • Air Debris Due on :c~ast WASHINGTON <AP> - federal officials are expecting an air mass contaminated with hiah altitu~ radioacllve debris from a Chinese nuclear test blast to reach the United States on. Wednesday. The Environmental Protection Agency <EPA) is watching w'atber conditions closely to de- termine the possible impact ot the Chinese atomic expYosion tafil Saturday. FPOWIPflfleAJ Vandals splashed black and white paint over the interior walls --or 'a ftd'tbml center under rort· struction at lC'vine's Heritage Park,4601 Waln\¥Ave., Monday. Robert Kocher, 30, a Ruane Corp. site supefi.ntendent, said damage to the W"tern Red cedar paoellng may amount to severaJ thousand dollars. •'They really covered it up good," he said. .Kocher said ~e culprits also tore out ceiling panels from an elev at.Qr, and set fire to a pUe of paper cups. The fire failed to spread. ;rhe vanda ls apparently brought their own paint, leaving behind two pint cans. Kocher said footprints left ln the spilled paint were of adultsiae. ·Police said th\ suspects broke into the uncomP11eted clubhouse by kicking a coveriJl& board from a window frame. $21 MILI1ION ... s hare in the famUY·OWJ!ed yacht , Christina, alld Scorpios Island in the Ionian $:ea, \there Onassis is burieCI.-.. Although initial re41>rts after Onassis' death were tllal he had le!l bis widow some S200 million, it was revealed when the will was made public in June 197S tbat be left her only $100,000 • year from tax-free bonds and '100,000 a year from otber income for: herself and $50,000 for her children . The bequest was to .,." beOit paid throucb a fouDdaUOa lo Llchtemtetn, and the ~ cA th• sbippins ~coon's el\•t• was to CO to bis daughter, DOW•, led to a foundation In meinoey . 'itl bis late eoa. Aleunder, kUi.il In • planecrQb ~ lJ73 at qe as. r -Onus.ls' barid·Writt.ft wUl, d1\· tlll ~ 3, 19'1', lndk•t.d that EOnasais alJDMcl I documeftl' _\Ii Yortc In -wbCCh * rettn- .. q all rf&I* to ti• ... ~··~ How~r. tbe ~m• qllOtea ... ~ at C1lr'tiltiDa Oliuall as 'h1t~1 tbat soc,a •ft•r ber f1U-'I deatb ....... 0...-IDd her brotW·lft·ltt, s.o; ~ ... lbwrlr, .....,,.rru ,..._ Ml"9 .. lf*IW Uril MillWl t4 Mn.o.-11.. Delly,. ... ~~ SCIENCE FICTION GIVEN AN INJECTION OF SCIENCE Gregory Benford Steers Clear of 'Thud, Blunder f'ro.P-.eAJ BUILDING DELAYED. • • • Mayor Pro Tem Pete Barrett, wbo endoned the review, noted that the developers ~ environ· mentalists in attendance at the meeting were the people wbo already have actively involved themselves in the process. "It is incumbent on the other people who Ii ve here to Participate in' this process and be h'ere when the decisions are be· ing made. There is always need for more people to be involved, .. hesaJd. The study, which is to involve bearings before the planning commission as well a,, study sessions before the city council, ls slated to conclude in February so that proJ>05ed changes can be incorporated into the first batch or 1978 amendments to the general plan. Jean W~U. president of SJl'()N <Stop Pollutinc Our Newport> and generally regarded as a spokesman for the city's citben groups concerned with slowing growth. said her organizatioo is grateful for the efforts made so far in bringing developers and environmentalists together. ''I think we should be able to provide valuable input in the process." she said. Meanwhile, Irvine Company officials said today they will pro· ceed with plans for projects that were beld back this summer while the moratorium was under discussioo. Included in the Ust of projects either to be filed with the city or brougJU. before the planning com· mission for comildenUoo are Bayside Square, the 32.000· square foot office building at the entrance to Balboa Isl~ four apartment ot condominium proj- ects around Newport Center and Bi& Canyon. and Harbor IIDls, another residential development. Harbor Hill iJJ located on 11 acres ·on· the site of the aban· dooed reservoir at the lnteaec· tion of Spyglass Hill Road and San Miguel Drive. Cqmpany ottJcials say they a1so expect to complete woik on the ermtonmental impact report for the 450,000-square foot Prud.Ual hl&b rise buildin& in NeWport Center within the next aixmontm. "I put a shield of water aur· rounding the space station to absorb the radiation,·· Benford said ... Ten meters of water ean stop alm<>st anything, plus the water shie~d has. the added benefit of Prt>vidlnc, dl"inkipg water (Or those aboard the sta· tion. .. be said. And where do Bentos1n space stat.ion t'eSid~nts go to f-eplenish lbeirprotecUvewalersupply? From the moons surroundiJ'\g Jupiter, of course. "We know the moons of Jupiter have ice on them, so we just send out parties to suck tt up," he shrugged. Just Uke he says, sci fi ls all in· telleclual. Does Benford thint a film like •'Star Wars'' wtll Increase popi.¥arity in science fiction boots? .. Several oWbers of ldeace fie· lion specialty bookstores have told ~ sales are golni up in Los Angeles,•· Benford laid. "They say tbey"'re sellin1 ''Stal" Wars" poeters, bodts and a few ft811cl fi noftla on the side. .. 1bat'• e.ncoaragin~. •• be seJd aft.er a abort pause. ..lt shows some of them can read, &esn 't it.'' He said the aame boost occured durln& the beyd•Y of \Jle "Star Tr~· television series, ''but in that case. tbey Just we.at in the bookstores and bou&ht PO&ters.·· Benfordsaid. Ob yes, That's another ol Ben· . ford 'a lavoritAe sci fi targets. "Tbe first season of .. Star Tn1t•• was Jre8t, but that was beoauite t.he lerip\a wue written by SF Wriera. CHICAGO CAP> -Ha.p tat attend ntt lovlntl)' called her Jane and~ •·h~ ~he died. Hundreds of parenU caJled or visited ln the 1¥>pe tb.tt the pre\U', blonde Jane Doe might be their misalnc dau&bler. The teenager, lound beat.en unconscious in a rotest preserve Sept. $, d1ed unknown but DOt alone. •nd on television. More than 200 people visit~ her. She was a pitl/UJ sight. Both eyes were blackened and there was an ugly bruise on the side other head. The freckle-faced mystery eirl, believed to be lS to 18 years old, died Sunday, never reealnin1 consciousness. A memorial service was held in the hospital chapel Monday, and more than lSO attended, most of lhem wblle·uniformed hospital workers who fo\llht for her life. aESUa&EcnON HOSnrAL RECEIVED soo telephone cans from pa.rents in a dozen st.ates. Tbe suburban Schiller Park police who invuti1ated the case esUmated they received 1,000 calls from "I HAD A CALL FROM A MOTHER in Pennsylvania yesterday parents. who had not heard from her daugh~r for a year," a hospital Pictures of the 1lrl in her hospital bed appeared in newspapers spokesman said. "Like all the rest she asked about Identifying ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- clues. Some pal'ents qr relaUves who called thouiht they miaht be on the right trail and took a plane to see her. They looked and left weeping, or went to the chapelto say a prayer for her. "The girl bad a remarkable effect on those who worked with her," he said. "Even our hardened nurses in lntensive care sobbed when she died, every one oft.hem." Jane Doe will rest in Cook County motaue for at leut 28 days. Possibly she will be identified. U not, the hospital spokesman saJd she "will be given a dignified burial." He said a funeral home will provide services without char1e. Hospital employes are start.inc a fund for a grave site and marker. (See JANE DOE MOURNED. Pare A}) Jlming Limits Stepdaughte r Settles Protested Confronted again by parents concerned for their children's safety, Saddleback Valley Unified School District trustees agreed Monday to recon.sider cuts made this summer in the school busing program. Parents filled the school board meeting room to demand that trustees reinstate last year's two-mile walking limit for intermediate and high school students. This limit, which determines who is bused to school, was extended to two and a half miles this summer as one ol severaJ cuts in the district's expenses. Although trustees indicated neither support nor opposition to the parents' request, they promised it would be included on their agenda for the Oct. 5 meeting. This, they explained, ls a technicality required before any action can be taken on the requested change. Fourteen parent.a also signed up as a committee to diacuas their demand and the dlstrlct 's budget priorities with administrators. They will meet at 1 p.m. Thursday In the district QI fices. :. The parent.a, armed with a petition signed by 740 "taxpayen," argued the safety (See BUSING, Pa~e AJ) 1'fa00Jls. •• Despite the attention to detail one usoally _,..ceun n at a bank~ both the American and California Flags at tbis Banlt ~ America br~ch in Misalon Viejo were upslde down Monday. Asked if there were a .reason. a bank spokeswoman said no. Someone's attention apparently was flagging. Merit Raises Okay ed Vote Applies to SVUSD Adminiattators By LAURIE KASPER C!ftlileO.lly ......... tt · Saddleback Valley Unified S<:hool District's 80 management employes are eligible to receive an additional five to eight percent merit pay raise in addition to their five percent cost or living hike. District trustees approved a plan Monday whid: would give administrators considered "out· standing" a seven to eitht percent salary increase and those judged "above average" a five lo six percent raise. Under the new formula, administrators who are rated by their supemsors as averqe, need.inc improvement or dolng unsatisfactory work will aet no .merltpa)1. A total of $35,000 hu been bud&eted for the merit raises, . which are beinC aiven to admlrilstraton In addition to the average (iye percent cost ol JjvlJ\a raise .-warded previously. . Last yeat, • manqement .emplo1ff were etven merit raises rane.inc from aero '9 alx percent.. with t.tie average falling at about 4.5 percent, aad no cost of livlneincrease~ Under the new system. satd Supt:. Richard Welle, "merit pay wiU be truly merit pay." He said it wlll be given for one year only and not automatically roll forward in nest year's paychecks. One reason merit pay is being given. the superintendent said, is because all employes now are allowed to oreanize under the state's collective bargaininl law. He said there is a move aJnong principals in the state and the nation to organize. Welte said be doesll't believe this would be in the best interats 'Of the CQmmunity or the schools. He apparenUy believes merit p~y will block such a moveiq thJs district. The superintendent said merit pay wlll be difficult to obtain and given only for "exceptionally Cine work." He said there are "recognizable, acceptable criteria" for evaluating the ad· minlstraton1. Welte said he will evaluate school prloclpals and bis top level administrators. These men wlll evaluate the management employes working for them. He said his wife, MGM Supervisor Leah Webber, will be evaluated by Dr. Joseph Platow, director ot p"pil services. The superintendent also said the budse.ted amount or $35,000 may be more money than is needed. $20 Million Goes To Jackie Onassis ATHENS. Greece (AP> -Jae· queline Onassis has reached a $20 million settlement with her stepdaughter, Christina Onassis, in return for relinquishing any further claim to her husband's estate, sources close to the Onassis faJQily said today. The settrement, about twice what Mrs. Onassis could have ex· peeled under terms of the late Aristotle Onassis' will, severs any connection she may have had with Onassis·owned en· terprises and brings lo an end her $250,000 a year allowance, the sources said. Neither Mrs. Onassis, 47, nor her stepdaughter could be reachedlorcommep.t. RADNOR, Pa. (AP) -Tbe American people, the Jury that Bert Lance sought to udie his case. are sbarply divided over whether Lance sbouJd keep his job as budeet director in the Carter admlnlstraUon, an As· soclated Press public opinion poll shows. The nationwide survey of 1,548 adult.a, taken Monday evening, also found Presldent Carter's im- age bad been dented by the Lance affair, partlcularly in re· gard to Carter's oft-repeated campaign pledge to enforce moral standards in government. The AP survey showed that nearly 38 percent of those in- terviewed felt Lance should re- sign as director of the Office of Management and Budget, while about 3.5 percent said be should stay. Nearly 27 percent ex· pressed no opinion, despite publicity about the case. The AP survey followed Lance's vigorous self·defeMe durinl three days or nationally televised Senate committee hear· ing into Lance's personal and business dealings. The bearinp before the Senate Government.aJ Affairs Commit- tee were intended to focus on aJ. legations that Lance withheld personal financial information during bis Senate confirmation hearings in January. . The impact of Lance's 20-plus hours of testimony last week before the Senate panel ls dlf. ficult to measure, since the televislon audiences for the bear- ings were believed to be small. National television rattnp foe last week are not yet available. The survey provided some in· <SeelANCE.P11eAZ) · The New York Times repvrted today that Christina agreed to the settlement because she was eager to cut all ties with her step-- mother. She also was advised that Mrs. Onassis would not con· sider anything Jess than $20 million, the Times said. Sources told The Associated Press that Mrs. Onassis began seeking the settlement shortly after her husband's death in Paris at age 69inMarch1975, but Christina "simply ignored her ... "Christina relented and agreed to &ive Jackie the generous amount only il she would agree lo sever all her ties with the Onassis estate," they added. It remained unclear whether VISALIA (AP) -A body foUnd buried in a ahallow crave wu idenUfled today ., a man who eacapJ!d from Communist Czechoslovakia in a homemade tank alrnoet a quarter of a cen· turyago. The victim, Vaclav WalJy UbJlk, SS, probably bad been beaten to death, Tulare County coroou's otfice reported. lib body waa discovered Sept. 10 aft.er an. a,nlrnal, probably a bear, uncoveN<t the grave near the entrance to Sequoia National Park ln the Sierra Nevada east of here. An autopsy showed Uhllk bad been beaten to death and ap· parenUy was burled a week lo 10 days before his body was found. Positive identification was made through comparisons of x· rays and dental records. Uhllk, SB, made headlines July 25, 1953, when be, his wife, two the $20 milllon figure was in addi- tion to SB million Mrs. Onassis re. portedly received from Christina a ye&r ago to rellnqulsh her share in the family-owned yacht, Christina, and Scorpios Island in the Ionian Sea, where Onassis is buried. Alt.bough initial reports after Onassis' death were that he bad left his widow some $200 million. it was revealed when the will was made public in June 1975 that he lert her only $100,000 a year from tax.free bonds and $100,000 a year from other income for herself and $50,000 for her children. The bequest was to have been CSeeSZOMILUON, Pale Ai) ' cblldren and tour others rumbled a tanlt he bad built •cross the border fl'Om Crecboslovalda into West Germany. Ublik. who served in the underground against the Nazis in World War II, was lre1tted as a hero in the West. He made headlines again brief· ly in 1974 by trying to flee from sberifrs deputies in an armored truck be fashioned at his home in the foothills of Fresno County. The deputies had aone there to serve a warrant charging Uhlilc with refusing lo leave the land which had been granted his ex· wife in a divorce settlement. Uhlik and two others rammed · through a roadblock, but dep- uties shot out the tires on the armored rig and it Upped over. Uhllk still refused to come out but finally surrendered when of. ficers threw tear gas into the vehicle. 'Distorbed'G11nman ~ills Catholic N11n gifted sU.,er, wu a member ot the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur. A native of Chlcaao. Sliter Blaul ~been a math teacher at Chamlnade-Jullenne HiJh School since 1973. She also tau1ht at St. AanesScbool. ' 1 t . • At Limit . .,,., . ,,, ............. A proposed bulldin1 montartum ift Newport Beach WU artlJ l&fd lo test Oft• day ~ an.r tmoe Caimpany President Peter l(remw told councilmen be M>Ufd withhold four cl the finn'a maaJOr develop- ments wtU Mxt J'tbt\lary. Kremer said the company would not flle &D)' pl&DS foe lbe Cutaways, the hl&b rt.e con· domlnlum site in Newport Center, \be Newporter North or Holiday Harbor untlJ then. Meanwhile, companJ, oUiciala. city representaUvJs and local residents will review the city's general plan lo come up with a planlopbasedevelopmenttoroad construction. Kremer, who said he spoke for the city's major developers, declared that withholding the projeets is not to be considered a self-imposed moratorium. He said it is "a declaration of commitment." to the process. of brin1lng toaether represen· latives or pro-growth and anti- growth forces to solve the city's problems, a process Kremer said already has begun. In answers to questions from councilmen, Kremer further stressed that, whlJe only the lour were belng withheld from filing. all proposed developments in the city, including projects owned by other developers, would be sub· ject to the review process. Councilman Paul Ryckoff, who has pl"Opoted the moratorium, lauded Kremer and the other de· velopers for "goln1 a way down the road op this one, .. He made , the motion lo withdraw con· sideratlon of the moratorium. It was approved unanimously by his council colleagues. In !ill, the re were three measures before councilmen that would affect the future of de· velopment in Newport Beach. One was the moratorium, which was withdrawn. Another was an amendment lo the general plan which would have limited future growth based on constrainLc; of the city's traffic system. That amendment was not ap· proved in favor of the third measure, proposed by Coun- cilman Trudi Rogers, which . called for the comprehensive ni- view of the entire general plan to adjust densities of· future de- velopment and to prepare a p.has· I int plan to fit road construction c to building construcUon. t 1 I I Mayor Pro Tern Pete Barrett, who endorsed the review, noted that the developers and environ· mentalists in alt.endance at the meeuns were the people who 1 already have actively Involved themselves in the process. f',....Page AJ I : LANCE ••. t 1 dlcation that Lance's television I performance hel* hls standing I with some Americans. I The telephonq survey was con. dueled for The AP by Chilton Research Ser\'Jus of Radnor. Pa · The 3 perc~nt dlrrerence between those favoring Lance's ' resignation and those oppoaina it '' Inconclusive because ol the mar&in ol possible statistical e.r· rnr. Lance has repeatedly saictthat ~e wouJd nol resign and th•th.e1s mnocent of any wrongdolnfJo bJt. personal financial affairs. • -. Carter and Lance met pri'Vlte· ly Monday. White Houn press secmary Jody Powell said be had no information on what was discussed or who requested the aessk>o. Powell said tr Carter bas made a declston on wh&thet to keep Lance as budget dlrettor "I'm certainl~ not awiµ-e or Jl." O"ANQI COAl't .. DAI LY PI LOT ' Dallyl"lltCltlllf ....... SCIENCE FICTION GIVEN AN INJECTION OF SCIENCE Gregory Benford Steers CIHr of 'Thu~. BIW'tder' ~ Cop Q~~tieft~. . ,. M~sa ~'1-QP .Q~er ~ . Re1nains Crit ical A Costa Mesa auto reP.llir shop owner. allegedly shot twice in the chest Saturday by, an off-duty Hawthorne police officer after the two men argued, remained Ill c nhcaJ condition today al Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital Police believe the argume'nt started when officer Michael Moran, 30, drove over a freshly cleaned floor of the A&A Garage, 2037 Harbor Bo\,llevard, angering 34-year-old Jon Allan McClure or Santa Ana. McClure allegedly charged the off.duty officer with a large metal bar and was shot twice in the chest when he ignored the of. ficer's commands to hall Officer Moran was questioned by Costa Mesa police but not held. A report has been rited with the Orange County District At· torney's office. but omc1als have yet to determine 1f criminal charges will be brought against Moran McClure underwent surgery Saturday night for removal of two bulleLc; in his chest whlcb were fired Crom u German-made seml-automallc pistol He re· mains in the hospitals's intensive care unit. Costa Mesa police are seeking witnesses to the l 30 p m shoot ing tn front of the auto repair shop JACKIE ONASSIS SETTLES FOR $20 MILLION Shown With Stepdaughter Cttrlattne Onaasla in 1975 F ro• P.afl# A J Police Hold $20 MiLLION Father in Baby's Death ... paid t.fn'ough A foundation :in Lichtenstein. ~ the bulk of the s hipping tycool\iS estate was ,to g6 to hla daugbttr. now 26, and1to a foundation ln7 memory of bis late son. Alexdder. killed ma plane crash in 19"13 at age 25. · Onassis' handlwrltten will, ~pt· ed Jan. 3,' 197'1 indicated lf1at A 23-year-old Westmins ter lather was booked on suspicion of murder today in tbe death of ~ · five-month-old son, police said. Frederick R. Mueller or 13826 Mrs. Onassis slioed a document La Pat Plac~. was lodged h1 in New York i~t'hich she relln- Orange County Jail after the quiahed all ri'""ts to her l•e death at 2 a.m . loday of his infant husband's estate. son, Jeffrey Allen Mueller, ac-However, th~ Times quotes . cordingtoS.at. Harrv lt90ver. . friends or Chri~ina Onassis as 'l, .. _ b b t k" t .... tj!CI sayinQ that S:Oon after her 1rr:o a Y was ~ ""'-0 uie father'I death, '1rs. Onassis ahd ?.j~cal Center at 1111>.m· on· her brother·h~aw, Sen. Edward day. Hoover~~~· ,...~-... -•..,., ..,u . ~gan pressin• ~e A spokesman ror tfie Orange heiresa to increase the beques~to Cdunty Coroner's °'partrnent Mrs. Onassis. aaldthecauseoft.hebaby's death Miss Onassis' share of her Is under invesUgaUon. rather'• estate ls estimated at $250 mUllon. 'N& other details were Im· Friends of Christina Onu~is edl t 1.. 11 bl s!id she opposed her ralhet's ~ ae.,,ava a e. . , , m11rria~inl9G8toU,e'tl(ldow,or • .r.~slde (. .Kerisied)' •nd was • • 1 • ; :. ·iiever'a 1~· let bieom·e'clo.e 'to Fi .... e Dom'e...I ( ...... her. tlle.relatlonshtp WU said to && M . -..... "ave ~me even more strained • arter One.sals' death. aJt.bouih At Ho8pl• l .!;.; I hls dsugbtet made a statement to Ill the eoatrary and d1i1Ject reports that ht~ father »lanned to A ftre which appar•nUy dlvorce.~Ja wile. •Wied ln a cottef maltr caused aboUt t.ao dam~e to a third. 5 nunea a&atlon in ebact Conununtt1 HOIP'tti thia m.omu.a. 8r111'EV& MITCHELL OllllilDlltl>"i ........ \'ou w<'n't find a Darth Vader character atranallna Alderaan rebels in any ot Gre1ory Ben~ lord's science fiction books. And the UCI physics professor, who writett acience IJct.lOD boc*s ~the tlde. says be •teera away from what he calla "thud and '-blunder'' In his outer space , wrlUna ventures. · "·sa..r, Wars' was a fun mov- ie," the b•.spectacleCl and beardec1 sc!Mtlsl said, atarlng out hlis pleture window overlook· lnJ th6 •teen slopes ot i..IUJla Beacib. "But it's not a areal movie. It's good science flcUon and it has had major success. but it's too bad It has to come with an almost 'lleU.parodf of the (science ftctiOrt) field.• . f'roae Page A J BUSING ••• ... ol the'1-cbJl<lren bu -:i been jeopardized by the bu1ln1 cuta. Jel'l"Y Lalka, a Mlulon Viejo resident who said be repraent.ed "several buodred" people, vowed lbat bla group wµt see the busing relnstaW. . "We will do what's necessary but I J~t hope to Goel lt doesn't take the serious injury or a chJld to make W$ board act," be said. Supeflntendent Richard W~te pointed out that complicated financial problems are involved. To reinstate the two-mUe limit. he said, eight buses plua drivers and mech81)ics would be needed. He said this would coat about $226.182. Because enrollment pro· jec tlons were low the superlni~ndent said, the di.strict may be short a million doUan by next year. to addition, l\e $ald, it appears the district will' be getting onty $21.000 fro.rn recent state achool llnance legisJiltion. ThJ1, he aaJd, s hould be compa1ad to 1126,000 received last year. "Our ClnanCiJl problems are going lo increase because or stat& teglslat}Qn. pol1iecrease." Welte predicted. . ' . The parents insisted~ however. !hut areas other than busing c::uuld be cut from the budJ,?et Educalo~ have l>111d that the f1ri.t prtnC&ple or edUCMll(>n is good heulth. said Haney Todaro. a !sloo VJejo pare"t. He argu . ''Jr Ii )(id gets smeared all o r the street , he's not In any c::ondjtlon to ~o to school · · Louis Jacober Dead at 87; Rite s Slated Memorial services for U>u1s ~ J ucober . 87 ~ a "airy m~n and I hachec In Ot'ange County for 68 years. wiU be held Wednesday at 10 a.m. In the Jehovah's }'lit· nessea 'Kinadotn lJaJI, 17~ .Los Jardlnes East. Fountain Valley. MJ'. Jacober dJed Sunday In bis home at 10658 Soneto Ave., Foun· tam YaJJey, after a brief Illness. BQrn IA S'Wilzerland. Mr. Jacober came to California ln 1908 and settled In Huntington 1 Beach the following year. Prior to rnovlng to FO\llltain Valley 10 yd'l"s ago, Mr. Jacober lived with his (amity ln Hunt· ington 'Beach and Garden Grove. He ls survived by bis widow. Cora; a ..son, Carl Louis, a teacher at College Parlt: Elemen· tary School in Cos~ Mesa; three brothers; three sisters and three grandchildren. len!Otd, wb.o hu tour sci n boOks to hll crecU\, says ''Star w ara" 1.s all daule and nuh • •'It ls a tribute to the SilurclaY ma~ science ftctlon aerlala of the 1930I and 194()$." he aald. ''Bu\ lt doetn't take the field as serious aelenee fiction, anij filbll really caa't. can lt\ty," he asks no one ln particular. Benford won the coveted "Nebula Award" hut year from th• Sclcnce FicUon Writers of America ror one of his book.I, and is one of the few research sclen· list.a In lbe country who also writes set fi -or "SF" as be calls It. "The reuon scieoce lictlon bu never made lt ln movlu, ls because It's too intellectual. It takes a lot of explanation and movie makers don't lil(e talk," Benford tald. I An obvious exception he claims, Is Stanley Kubrick'• • '2001" whlcb Ule 36-year-old author calls a fU\e bit Qf t.el n. mixing sclenWlc research with the actlon, That 'a the secret or science fie· lion writing, Benford saya. "It can ahoW you atrange worlds, yet factual worlds.·· Benford draws from his ex· tensive aslrooomy back1round for material for his books. most or which are written for the teenaie set. The profeasor. who dabbles in astro-phyllcs, ••but rnosUy plum phys lea," doean 't juat puU his fie· tlon lnvmtJons lf'OCll terd-&r~v1 a.Ir. lo his book • .,Jupiter Project • tl\t SJ' Wt'l'*" tteMrlbel a spa taUCll that bn't oo U-. dr boards today. "I looked at a lot « t. 1pace1taUQridilfps udtried tome ~ with a Wortablt st for thef~ ''he expa.ined. He wrote the book Just after t e Pione.1" probel were rnakt their way ~ut. Juph.~t a f years aeo. • •hen eviryObe w s saytni there woutd b6 oo rnaon exr.locaUona ol Jupiter ~a ot t '•blah radifUon." So Benford cannlballz~ "parta" f rotn s pace staUon dj· sips ot today for his bOOk, l0$1!~ ln some ldeas or bis own, aJ)d C!ame up with a Murutlc 5taUoo called ''Tbe Can,•· which housts hundM! ol scientists and ls pJ1>- teeted from radiation. · • "J J>Ut a sbield of watec-•ut· roundina Ute apace &taUon lo absorb the radiatlon," Benfo~d said. "Ten meters of. water c n stop almost anything, plus t e water shield has t.he add4d benefit of provldlnt dtlnkl_g_g water ror lbole aboard the S'f· tion," he said. And where do Benford's spa~e station residenl.8 go to teplenlih tbelrprotecUvewatersupply? 1 From the moons sur~undlQg Ju~iter, of course. • We know the moons at IU•lt~r have ice on them, so we Just set\(f out parties to suck it up.·· tie shruiged. E,....P age A J l ' 'JANE DOE' MOURNED •• ·j; JANE DOE WAS POUND NEAR a road In Schiller Woods by puserb1 who heard croam from a thicket. She was bound in ~ blanket mapped with a knotted cord. The assailant bad lubJOli1 one end of the cord lntoa hangman's noose, but it was not around be neck. Police sald Jane Doe. 5-foot-6, 100 pounds, suffered a skull lracl ture. She had been slruck in the head and over the body possibly with the heel or a boot or the type ol hammer used to tenderise meat. P6llce theorized she bad been dumped in the woods from a paas- lng auto. She was wearlnt a multicolored flower print blouse and Wack slacks. AT JANE DOE'S MASS. THE Rev. John Kuhlmey, a hospital chaplain, said goodbye ror her: "I'm sorry to leave you so early, but for some unexplained reason. someone dldn 't want me to linaer here too long," he read. "There are many girls --out there --just like me. Some of them are hungry and cold ; hungry for love and cold from lndlfrerence. ·'Couldn't you do something for them? Seircb thelb out, brin• thern to loving people." New .C.rie~ ·Plaa First Indochinese Refugees Arrive SAN FRANCISCO c AP J -The first group of refugees from Southeast Asia Is arriving today in the United States under a new Carter administration proaram. The 94 adults and six children from Vietnam, Laos and Cam- bodia are the first of 15,000 Jn. dochtnese refuge.es bein1 al- lowed Into the country under special Jus tice Department a uthorisallon. The refugees are scheduled to arrive at. San Francisco lnlerna· lional Airport. From there, most will catch fights to oew homes with volun· tar)1 sponaora ln cities across the country, David llchert. dlstrict dlrec'°r of the U.S. ImmiSraUon ' ~d Naturalhat.ion Service, said. A amall croup ls to remain in the San Francisco Bay area. U.S. AUy. Gen. Griffin Bell authorized the prolJ'am to admit the refuaees, effective Aug 11 said Ilchert. · · The move followed a U.S. State Department report lbia summer that Hid IOl'.ne 80 000 peopJt were crowded lnto rdugee c:ampe ln Thailand, ll91atd. "For humanitarian reuaos, ·· the retu1ees ara beina. allowed to cometothe U.S .. llcherhald. About 7,000 lncoDJlnf retuaees are to-c!alled "boa caHa, •• The r e fug ees will m eet sponsors arranged by several service organizations, including the U.S. Catholic Conference, the fnternatlonal R6acue C6mmll· t ee and the Cbutcn World Service. For tbQse who have come be,,, there ls a mcMslcum ot comfort and security, but their legal status Is somewhat. W11table, llcberts aid. ; Technically, the refu•eea ate being "paroled" into the countty on an indefinite basis, whldh means they aren't eliaible r•r citizenship unless they apply C6r a change ol stalus. I It I.a expected that it will t.aJLe several mcntba before all 15,080 refugees reecb this country. Senate Panel N~sCarter 'Gu:szl,e Tax' I