Page 10-Thursday, August 9, 1979-The Michigan Daily Forest fires still rage in West BOISE, Idaho (AP)-Smoke-filled Western skies clouded over yesterday and temperatures dropped, but the director of 7,000 men and women bat- tling 24 separate forest fires said the situation remained "grim" and out of control. Fully half the nation's federal firefighting forces were involved in the battle against the fires,, which have devastated more than 143,000 acres in six states, a U.S. Forest Service official said. The agency is coordinating efforts to quell fires in Idaho, Montana, Califor- nia, Wyoming, Oregon, and Arizona. MOISTURE AND lower tem- peratures provided some aid to the fire fighters, but Bob Bjornsen, Forest Ser- vice director for the Boise Interagency Fire Center, said, "The outlook is very grim." Bjornsen's comments came just after Forest Service spokesman Joe Nadolski issued the first good report on weather conditions in several days. TEMPERATURES AND winds were down and humidity was up, said Nadolski, adding, "That means the fire won't burn nearly as fast." But Bjornsen said the long-range weather outlook was for more hot and dry wiher in most areas over the next to dv He called yesterday's overcast rondi to "transient relief." - i be extremely difficult to nwk uch progress on the fires," he said r tAVE ALL the resources, men, and e pment that we can use effecit- ve W're looking for a change in the wea ' that would allow us to work at the iof the fires," Bjornsen said. Fi ighters have been limited to the flanks of major fires because winds were blowing smoke so far ahead of front lines, he said. Bjornsen said there was little danger to buildings, commercial property, or commercially valuable timber. GOV. JOHN EVANS, whose state is hardest hit with 123,000 acres charred or burning, said Idaho appeared to have ..... _ SMOKE BILLOWS from one of several forest fires in Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming. Firefighters are battling 24 separate blazes throughout the Western U.S. "the most serious conditions that ever existed." He flew over the fires yester- day. The governor admitted he was "second guessing" but queried a Forest Service decision to let the Gallagher Peak blaze burn out of control. The fire eventually exploded to destroy 57,000 acres along the Idaho-Montana border. "The Fore'st Service did not. recognize the serious fire conditions at that time. That fire should not have been allowed to go on as long as it did," he said. THE FIRE STARTED July 6 when lightning struck a mountaintop. Last week, high winds suddenly pushed it out of control. Bjornsen said it was the right decision under conditions that existed. Nadolski said one quarter inch of rain fell on the Gallagher Peak fire over- night and the blaze was expected to be controlled tomorrow. Gordon Stevens, boss at the Mortar Creek fire, burning on both sides of the Middle Fork of the Salmon River, said, "There's no force on Earth powerful enough to cope with what we've seen. Nature will just have to do her thing fir- st." SMOKE FROM Mortar Creek, which Stevens said "will rank with the greatest fires in recent memory," darkened the sky more than 100 miles away at Yellowstone National Park. Also burning in Idaho were fires at Moose Creek, Ship Island, and Little Eight Mile in the Salmon National Forest, at Tupperman Lake in the Panhandle National Forest, and at East Fork in the Payette National Forest. In Montana, a wind shift threatened to spread the stubborn 2.500-acre Barker Canyon fire, burning west of Anaconda, over a ridge and into a large area of downed timber. FIRE FIGHTERS DROPPED a gasoline gel substance from helicopters Wednesday to start a "backfire" at Barker Canyon. The backfire method involved digging a fireline well in ad- vance of the blaze then burning timber back from it to createa wider fire line. The other major fire in Montana, along Cabin Creek in the Lincoln- Scapegoat Wilderness, remained out of control. But fire fighters there-from as far away as New Hampshire and North Carolina-said they were within five miles of ringing the blaze with firelines yesterday. A serious brush fire had eaten through 1,200 acres of rocky terrain in the Sequoia National Forest near Por- terville, Calif., by yesterday. A smaller blaze was burning on the north-facing slope of the San Bernardino Mountains 10 miles northwest of Big Bear Lake. Memories of Manson (Continued from Page 3> cult leader. convict was arrested in the desert near Even now, the Manson murders form here with a drug-crazed tribe of young a puzzle with missing pieces. followers ,who called him Christ and "I don't think there has been a real ,God and the devil. effort to learn and understand the real THE BIZARRE saga of the roving mechanism of the control Manson had Manson "family" unraveled at a over" these people," says Paul Fit- dramatic murder trial. The youthful zgerald, defense attorney for Patricia murderers - three of them women - Krenwinkel in the Manson trial. "There killed with no apparent motive other are still so many unexplained things." than mindless devotion to a demonigc IF THERE IS an answer, he says, it may be locked in the prisons where 14st Manson and four of his followers serve life sentences for murder. Here is what I Ais known about them today: Charles Manson, now 44, is described as "strange" by his prison counselor at U the California Medical Facility at Vacaville. E E "His conversations are very disjoin- NAT L BOARDS ted," says David Caprio. "I've never' clan still haunt L.A. had a conversation with Manson that didn't turn into gobbledeygook. He's a strange individual in that regard." MANSON LIVES in a cell in a high- security area, a moody, withdrawn loner who sometimes preaches to others the jumbled philosophy with which-he led his ragged clan. He still claims he is innocent. "He's the same old Manson. Nothing has changed," says Caprio. "His ego is strong. He will not give in to anyone. Do it Charlie's way or not at all." Manson strums his new guitar - he broke two other guitars and a TV set in fits of rage - and is very interested in current events. "He's right on top of Jimmy Carter's energy programs," says Caprio. THE THREE women who killed for Manson - Susan Atkins, 31, Patricia Krenwinkel, 33, and Leslie Van Houten, 29 - once isolated from other inmates at the California Institution for Women at Frontera, are now in the general prison population. "You might say they are model in- mates," says assistant superintendent Lee Cribb. "They are very dependable and they're good influences on other inmates. Atkins, a "born again Christian," works as a clerk typist in the prison's psychiatric unit. Krenwinkel is a prison janitor and takes college courses. VAN HOUTEN, who tasted freedom briefly during two re-trials, was convic- ted again last summer. Although her attorney, Maxwell Keith, says, "It was a terrible blow for her to go back," she has adjusted. She works as a medical clerk, edits the prison newspaper, and takes college correspondence courses. Charles "Tex" Watson, 33, Manson's chief lieutenant in the Tate murders, also is a "born-again Christian" who preaches in church at the California Men's Colony at San Luis Obispo. He has repented, he says, and plans to marry a woman he met at the prison chapel. Other Manson followers are in prison, too: Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme, con- victed' of threatening President Ford's life, and Sandra Good, convicted of sending threatening letters to businesspeople. I CONT6CT LENSES soft and hard* contact lenses $210.00 includes exam, fitting, dispensing, follow-up visits, starter kits, and 6 month checkup. * includes a second pair of hard lenses Dr. Paul C. Uslan, Optometrist 545 Church Street 769-1222 by appointment