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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-11-03 - Orange Coast PilotDonna Green, 32, holds daughter, Malikah, 9 months old, as they are reunited in Salt lake City Wednesday. Mallkah was taken at gunpoint from her Chicago home Oct. 7, then abandoned in a Salt Lake City hospital Sun- day night. THURSDAY AFTERNOON, ~OVEMBER 3, 1977 VOL 71, HO •••• saa10NS. 41 ,.AOU • 1e Sam Suspect Says They Raped Victims ;. NEW YORK CAP) -David Berkowilz, lhe alleged Son of S«4M killer, ho}M!d his "demons" .Would leave Jilin after a certain )lumber of slayin1s and that be wouldn't be caupt, accordidl to newly released transcripts. ,l'he transcripts of Berkowitz•s c<'onversations with two psychiatrists were released by Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice John Starkey. Excerpts were published today in the Daily News. Berkowitz was also quoted as saying the demons seized the souls of his vicUms and bad sex with them moments after death. "They chain them up and have sex forever," Berkowitz said. "They take the victims and drag them into the houses and rape them and molest them." Berkowitz said he was sup- i>Qsed to marry Donna Lauria, the first victim. .. Sam promised her to me," be a.aid, adding that he did not know · by he did not get her. Berkowitz allegedly told police utter his arrest at his Yonkers . -· ---- . . apartment three montbS qo that he took orders from a dot owned by a neighbor, Sam Carr. In the transcripts, Berkowitz refers to himself as "a dog. I'm not human • anymore." Berkowitz baa been ruled com· petent to st.and trial in Brooklyn for the murder of Stacy Moskowitz, 20, the sixth and final , victim of the killer who ter- rorized this city f Olt • year With the .«-caliber b1nd1un that became bis trademark. Seven other people were wounded. "I was hoping 1 wOuldn't have to be caught." Berkowitz told the court-apPOinted' paycbiatrilts who examined him. "that all I would have to do ia kill a certain number of people and then they (the demons) would leave." When asked about the first kill· • ing, the following exchan1e took place with the psychiat.Nts: "I went home; went right to bed, I was very tired. I slept very good that night. I remember eveeythin~ that bap~ned that time becease l kept rellvlnl it, you know." Foar From ~ast -NB :Police. Hunt ---- / TEL AVIV, Amerie Jlo!lfltftn:t Al ju jet flying ON r Y VlA today aner th• c Uddoftb' loat pr~ and U.. pilot put the jetliJ1er into a dive from SS,000 feet to 14.,000 feet, a spokesman for the l&raell airline reported. The ~Al gpokesman ldenWied the victim as W .c. Holder of !J~oa;:•:~ did not know the auseofdeatb. The apotesman said two doc- tors amaag the •01 puseraers on the fllabt. El Al 001 from Tel Aviv to New York vla Amsterdam, ex- amined the stricken man and recommended that the plane land immediately, but Bolder was de- ed by the time Capt. Colman Goldstein landed the Boeing 747 at Belgrade, the Yugoslav capital. capital. · The spokesman said the body was taken from the plane, and Holder's widow and two friends traveling with them also re- mained in Yuaoslavia. The spokesman said the plane flew to Amsterdam with the other 403 passen1ers after the In-cident, keeping to a low altitude because of the cabin pressure problem. Repairs and an in· vestigaUon of tbe cause of the loss of pressurization were to ~ carried out in Amsterdam, the · spokesman said. The diving maneuver is aimed at bringing a plane to a lower altitude where normal external pressure ls blgh enouah to pre- vent injury to pa.saenaen. El Al does not fly regularly to Belgrade, and Israel has no diplomatic relations with Yugoslavia. Horse Troupe Catches Cold NEW YORK (AP) -The world·famous Lippizan horse troupe bu withdrawn from the National Horse Show here. The anim ala have caught colds. "It's a typical viral infection," said Dr. Robert Carr, the horse show veterinarian. "You and I would call it a cold -the horses are sniffling, toulhinl and nlD· · ning sligbtfevers." The doctor's orders Included plenty of rest for ~f iq~ular white stallions and tbt)' we~ sent to a farm in Conn~cut. Of. ficlals of the show at Madison Square Garden said they hoped several might recover in time for weekend performances. Fro. Page Al SAM ••• said. "I didn't want to kill anybody. I tried to fight it ... Berkowitz tells of picking out "nice streets" on bis killing nights, "where there are pretty girls, you know, young couples, where they're neat, clean and well.groomed, you know, they have good hygiene ••• they're clean; they're washed; ready to be killed." Most of the Son of Sam victims were young couples sitting in parked cars on dimly lit streets in middle class areas. The final shooting, in Booklyn, was the on· }y one out.side of the Bronx or Queens. Critic Raps US. JOHANNESBURG, South Africa <AP>-TbeSouttJAlrlcan aovemment's leading newspaper critic today objected to lncrea.Sed U.S. pressure for rattal UberaUzatlon, 11ayin1t America la provtdln1 the whlte·mlnorlt¥ aovernment with' domestlc political ammUnltion. DAILY PILOT That's a Lenton? It is, according to Myron BQger. caretaker of Trexler Park greenhouses in Allentown, Pa., who shows .off bis hybrid creation. Boger says lemons on the hybrid tree normally average about half the size of this monster. Fr .. PageAJ DIEDRICH LOAN. cilman Wllllam Kott in a grand jury indictment banded down Ju. ly 1. -Answered ''volun-· tarily and freely" four hours worth of recorded questions asked biD) Wednesday night by district attorney investigators. ., . About 1GO ill al U from M•xlco were arrested wblle pla.nU a BttaWberrkt In North JIUDtl 8Ch~W • day mOrD.lft1. U.S. Imm Uon and NaturalliaUooServlce <INS> offlclall said today. • Tbe Mexican utlonalt. mostly men, ere taken to t.08 Anaetes for processing and then to San Ysidro where thn were retumed to Kexleo, aaid INS t ln· veati1atlon Dlreclor Pbl)il> Smltb. Smith aald more alien ra ds ln Orange County ltrlwberry tWd.s are planned todl)'. · • Huntinaton Beach and Westminster po~ce offlcers were called in to aSs1lt INS aaenta ih roundtne up atlens atreated Wednesday ~ear tbe intersection of BoliJa Avenue and Springdale Street. The raid took place at 10:49 a.m. It involved aliens emplo~~ by the Slater Farms and UJe Kotaki Brothers, aald Smith. The INS spokesman said the farm laborers bad been working· in the Huntington »each fields for abb\it two wffkl before their arrest. Last week ab011t 70 lllegal aliens were arrested in strawberry fields near the Los Alamitos Race Track. Smith said. Angel'~ Deer Kill Backed . SACRAMENTO CAP> -Deer on Angel Island State Park in San Francisco Bay should be re- mond or killed. u soon as posal- ble, state oftlclala aald today. Ruuell Cahill, director of tbe state Parks and Recreation Department, said he approved an. envircllUDental ldip~ r~ that recolilmendS ridding the 750-acre island of deer. Bandit Fires Four Shots in .. Collnty Holdup ®ouAt.lt¥ TELEVISION ~li~~~iiii!Th~e~C:OLE::•SJ1938W fln-"ed In simUlated ·grained Amef~n Walnut with bnlShed Aluminum colOl accents. Earphone •• ,,·"Ff!'IAL 1977 CllEA TWo JtunUnataDBeecti mm tie-mQ held in CODDei:Uon wt a niurder in ~ Beach were at•en new fd ties and movecl to the Oranae Coaat by the federal govern.men.& aft.91' telllfJ• iDI aaalmt Ol'laaiaM crime riaures ID tbe .... police eaai- firmed today. N~ Bada= ref-.d to nYal tberelll ~~the two men. Bo•Het, it •H teamed ttilinamet 1JitM OD their loeal ,armt recOt'U 'are Jerry Peter Flori and &aymood Steven Belco. Plod, fl, ti 11823 Brook.burst 6'., Bunttqtoo Beach, la ac· ouNd d belnl tbe •'trioer man .. la tbe tb<diq death Ol Stephen JobD BoYan. wbodled Oct. 22out· Ude tbe El Rancbito Restaurant la Newport Beach. a.to. a ol 10l21 Merrimac . , Drive. JI~ Beacll# la ac-cused of conaplraq In the murder case. N•wPort Beach police HY the real ldmtitles and bactcrouftds. of tbe men are a clolsely guarded secret d •tbe U.S. Marshal's Of. nee h~ Loi Anaeles and that· federal aatborities are rehWD.i to cooperate in the Newport Beach lnril&tiil.tlon. ~ 6 More Sough~ • m 825,008 DelJt .Diedrich Loan Still 'Unpaid' ~ By GARY G&ANVILLE Of .. o.MJ ......... Attorney Mkbael Remlqtoa said early today tlaat Oranae County Supervisor Ralph Diedrich received $25,000 of a $7S,OOO legal fee he got from representing the Granl Corp. in 1973 in an is~e tben pending before the Board of Sul>ervlsor.. Remm,ton, who until recently was Diedrich'• personal at- to01ey, said the money was given to Diedrich as a loan and bu never been repatd. p The Fullerton attorney aald another $25,000 of the $75,000 Jeaal fee rwu loaned "at Ralpb'.a behest" to a Diedrich friend whose name he couldn't, at s a,m. todaY. recall. Diedrich was attenClina a meet· ial in LQI Aillgeles todq and ns allable tor comment. \Vben~thematwratx a ago. tiowever, Diedric!l aenJed receivinc "an7 ~,ln dnl form" from th' 11ead'JMI eminiton was paid by tile de. velopment compailJ ifter Diedrich admittedly . said they abould.bire the attorney. "l never received a dime tram ¥l.ke that had any eonncttlOii . ..;.,/ wltb the Grant eorp .• u Diedrlcll said. But RemJnst,oo sald today the ·$75.000 be received from the rom· paay was depo1lted to a special account uMf the )oan cbecb al· Jegedlv issued to Diedrich '<UNI his uniiamed frieod were dran on that special acct>unt. Remington also said that be ls not concerned that the money bas not been repaid because he said its repll)'ment was ac.heduled to come when DJedrlcb divested himself d JOme reil eat.ate ~d· inp. Remlnston'• re...,.ta were in Palm Spriftp aDa dGled • for ada)'bnrhlchhe: ~IMll-1_~,1t •la tM teauty- tbe~ Grand Jury lliio; ·~ ~~ , dl"a mae tif JeadlnC the oarct ~ SUperYiiont ta tm to cancel ao urfcaltural pre. ~sen• ~-tUt JrU Chen •tmylna deYelopm•at on th , Nohl Baadl ln 4n&belm m11s:' ·~ -Pleade4 a•ltt:r to a sin1le poliUcal coasplrae:r charge brought a11lnat blm. <See DJEDmm, Pate A2) North Besa Area ~= CouDCil to .Hear. •: Rezon~ Options N~ BeaCh Nice Depai:t. IDeDt a81d bis department h been tr1illl to aet bacJraround tn· form,tton on the. two men to me in the «iUrt case but bu not been able to tme0ver llDY. He •aid the santa Ana office ot the FBI was t.o aid his ottlce in •the investigation but ao far. ~Jn the FBI Office baYe not proVtdedanytbinJ. 0 lt iS our u:ndetsta:odioS that remains paralysed from the waist dOWil and that bis chances of regaining Ule use ot bis lep are not iood. He uid a· $5 million lawsuit ~ain&t tbe City ~ Hawthorne has been filed and tl)at it is ~­ble-anotber lawsuit allefini clvil rights violations mQ: be-fUed. Kroll said be does not believe the grand jury's declslon not to lridJct Officer Michael Moran, 80, precludes the polsibility of win· Ding a clVil claim. The shOoting Oecurred during an 11r1QD1eDt between Moran and JdcClure at McClure'• auto re-pali' ahop. The argument reo ported.Jy be1an when Moran drove bis oar across a freahly cleanednoor. - ## ........... KELLY GIRL DOLL 'RAISES CONNOTATIONS'? · 'They Certainly Don't Want to Alienate Anyone' DOii Baekfires- Now Blasts Kelly Girl SOUTHFIELD. Mich <AP> A corporation that specializes in temporary office h<'IP is sending someone new into the field these days a cuddly ·•Kelly Girr· rag doll. But some secretaries and women's groups are not cuddling up to the P!nafored doll Some 35,000 copies of the doll are being l d1stri buled by Kelly Services Inc. as part of a nauonwule promo- • t1onal effort ( . "THEY'RE TALKING ABOUT WOMEN as dolls and playthings, and that ra ises a lot of connotations," said Linda Miller. president of lhe Detroit chapter of the National Organlza· lion for Women. She said the chapter drafted a letter ~complaint. which would be sent to Kelly Services. A spokeswoman at Kelly Services' world headquarters in Detroit said the company received no complaint.a about the doUa. the latest in a series of promotions that have included birthday cakes and tiny trees for top client.a. "WHEN A COMPANY GOES TO the extent of dotna something like this. they certainly don·t want to alienate • anyon<' ·said Ann Reynolds, public relations director. .-: Kelly Service~ has 350 offices In this country. as well u aome O\ C'rseas. that arrane!e for temporary workers. One division spcctahze<> in offi ce help Most of these employees are women. Ms Reynolds addt'cl that no one who works for Kelly Services ls called a· Kelly girl." The doll 1!. one root tall. "Kelly Girl" is stitched in white on lta green pinafore. Ms. Reynolds termed it the innot rag variety, not sophisticatt.'<i or curvaceous ~ FEMINISTS ALSO EXPRESSED dissatisfaction abol.lt a let- • ter that preceded distribution or the dolls, saying that ll contained sex u a I overtones and double meanings. ·. The letter was sent last monhth lo top Kelly Servlcet customers Signed by President Terence Adderley, it ptomlled each customer a doll, "a little something special" because "tbeae dolls have always been favorites and alwaya will be." The dolls are beine delivered by local Kelly Services representat1 ves. =Jury Watches 1.0th 1 . ·Porrw Flick iii, SA By TOM BARLEY Of IM Dally 1"119' St.alf the A Judge'• rul1nl ttiat ·Edward Charle• Allaway waa lnaane wben he shot nine people in aad around the Cal State Fullerton library la be.\na challenged today by the Orange County Diatrlct Attome1'1 office. Chief Deputy Di.strict Attorney James Enriaht decided to file an appeal Wednesday shortly .rter Superior Court Judge Robert P. Kneeland declared Allaway, 38, to be "hopelessly psycboUc." Enright argued in vain during the bearing before Judge Kneeland that Allaway'a killio.e of seven people and the wounding of two othen on July 12, 1978 wu tbe carefully planned work of a sane man. Enriebt argued that Allaway took elaborate precautions to make sure he got hi! rtne and boxes of ammunition into the campus library without detec- tion. And he reminded Judge Kneef and of trial testimony to lhe effect that Allaway stalked two of his victims down a long corridor and deliberately gunned them down wt.en tbey realUed they were trapped. '1No way ls be insane,·· Enright argued. "He knew what be was doing then JWll a.a be knows what he is doing oow -faking in- s anity." Judge Kneeland listened carefully to Enright and then heard opposing areuments from Deputy public defender Ron Butler before rullng that Allaway was insane. The judge 's comments were in- terrupted by the screams or a blonde woman who had .sobbed in the courtroom throughout the argument.a of both lawyers. The woman, identified as Mrs. Pat Almazan, ran from the courtroom pursued by court personnel, yelling that Judge Kneeland had "given Allaway his ticket to freedom so he can get out and do it-tl over a1ain." Mrs. Almaun waa ldentified as the daughter of Cal Stale Fullerton employee Frank Toplanaky wbo was shot three Umea by Allaway and died before help could reach him. Mrs. Almazan explalned out- alde the courtroom that ah'e Celt no real .,,ort had been made to tell what she described as the "full story of the Allaway kill· ings." The weeping woman con- demned the prosecution for what she said was failure to put on wit· nesses whose testimony would have insured that the jury which found Allaway cuilty of seven counts or murder would also have found him sane. The jury which found Allaway 2ullty on seven counts of murder and two of a.as•ult could not reach a verdlot on bis mental state after four days of delibera- tion in lheaanit.y bearing. Lawyers lot both sides agreed lo let Judee Kneeland rule alone on lhe lsaue of Allaway's mental state when he took a rifle to the Fullertclll campus. Judge Kneeland s cheduled Nov. 18 as the date be will an· nounce where Allaway, now legally not guilty by reason of in· s anity, will be confined Siesta Ti•e in Laguna as he catches 40 winks at Main f$each Park in Laguna Beach. He's a long way from home and he's tired , so Bryan Wisher, 19, of Lackawan· na, N.Y., uses his back pack for a pillow Over-65 Pay ResiSied W ASlllNGTON (AP) -The Carter administration is resist· ing a congre:tSiooal move to let people over age 65 earn as much as t hey wish without losin1 some of their Social Security money. Joseph A. Califano. secretary of health, educaUon and welfare. said Wednesday that only 1.3 million of the 22 million U.S. re- tirees would benefit from the pro- posal. But the American Association of Retired Persons, a leader in t he ··~ray power·· movement to gain more right.a for the elderly. says those figures do not tell the whOle etory. The ~called earnings test af. feels two mllllon other relirild persons who also work "but quit wbeo~they hit the $3,000 ceillnc because t.Oey don't want to lose any benefits," says James Hack· ine, a le&islative counael for the associaUon. Califano's protest was prompt· ed by a move in Congress to eliminate the $3,000 ceiling on wages that Americans over 6.5 can earn without having their Social Security checks reduced. He said tbe leeJ,slation would serve only "a privileged minort· ty'' while placing new burdens on workinJ~le. Last week. tbe Bouse passecl a blll that WOuld ptiue out the cell· mg by 1982. The Senate beian conaidertng lb version cl t.be Social Security bll1 Wednesday. The Senate Finance Commit- tee proposed raising the ceillni to $4,500 in 19'11 and $l,OOO in 1979. But Sen. Bob Dole <R·K&n.), and other aenftors plan to off er an amendment to eliminate the cell· ing by 1982. " . '., Special Saving on SOFAS Thru NOVEMBER 30.th 78"8•1• Now 8 499. Choice of 4 Styles Othw dzn •.,.ua•U and a~ •aln pric.-cl uloUOtD.: S fl L•~ SH& 1.tf49. 7 o,...,a It Sol•• •599. l1NDEU A AWnJLS: Waaa and wlta alcni our Orange Coast are having a field day currenUy becau ol tbe ~pa t dilloca· tlon of one of our artificial fishin1 reef1. The man-made reef in question · is located in an area known as the Huntington Beach fiata where the fish population was estimat· ed to be near extinction in the late 1960s. Wh~ authorities installed the artilJcial reef, in an effort to en· courage fish propagation, they dido 't promise us a rose garden. They promised a pile of old rub- ber tires on the sandy bottom. Alas. recent developments sug- gest that th~ rubber reef isn't staying put. The old tires are now beginning to wash up along the Huntington Beach shoreline. THUS THE WAGS among us are refernng to the reef experi- ment as the Firestone Follies. The rubberized r~ef sector is now called Akron Acres. Some people like the name Goodyear Gardens. Others suggest it's the Michelin Mess or the Uniroyal Und N g where all of this will early, those who started this experiment had nothing but good intentions. They planted some 12,000 old tires on the bottom of the flats some time back and lhen later added another 12,000. That's 25,000 chunks 0£ old rub- ber down there for the fishes to play m and hopefully expand 'their population for the delight of our Orange Coast fishermen. ABOur A YEAR ago, some of the old freeway skins broke loose from the bottom and drifted into the beach. High brass of the Los Angeles Rod and Reel Club, one of the organizations supporting the reef brainchild, insisted this couldn't happen. • Some club spokesmen hinted darkly that scuba divers with ~vii intentions must have cut the old tires free. Now, however, the Pacific has ... kicked up agam and since last -weekend, more than 300 of the old chunks of rubber have floated up :along the shoreline. : As the tires float ashore, they "fill up with sand. Thla makes ~them heavy. This makes lucetng • them off to a regular on-shore :junkyard an .odious task. FOR THE LUGGERS, there is little comfort m the knowledge that out there on the ocean bot· tom still lurk 24, 700 soggy Firestones, Michelins, Uniroyals and Goodyears that may soon be dotting the beaches. It has long been the dream of the state Fish & Game people to get some artificial reefs off our coastline and increase the f"tsb population. This particular ex· periment appears to have turned out to be more of a nightmare than a dream. The Fish and Game people, however, have plans to sink a Liberty ship off the Newport shoreline to form another artificial reef. After seeing the rubber tire thing come apart, the Liberty ship notion looks better all the time. Once sunk, a Liberty ship is likely to stay sunk. JPlwlesale Index Signals lnc-eease WASHINGTON (AP> - Wholesale prl~ jumped ellht· tentba d 1 ~eat lut moatb. the bluest lncnale 1 April, u farm Prices roee for the llnt ti\lle iJr ah· month'., tM p: • ment reported today. After declin1na a total of 12.S percent since April, prices for farm products climbed 2.4 per- cent tn October. alpllbil JWdler prices ahead at the supermar&et. HIGHER PRICES were re-ported for livestock, fresh ancJ dried fruits and vecetables. grains, live poultry and oilseeds. Also contributing to the sharp wholesale price increue lut month were cars and trucks, reflecting the bigger price tacs for the new 1978 models. Wholesale prices are paid by retailers and manufacturers before they reach the cona~mer, but any price changes event\aally show up at retail stores. THE OCTOBER wholesale price increase was the largest since a 1.1 percent rise in April, at a time when inflation was ris· ing at a 10 percent annual rate. Food prices were largely responsible for the rapid price in· creases eaarlier this year, but as they began to decline last spring the rate of inflation began to slow. Wholesale prices, which had risen 1 percent or more for three consecutive months between February and April, rose only four-tenths of a percent in May. They then dropped by seven- tenths of a percent in June and by one-tenth of a percent in July before rising one-tenth of a per- cent in August and one-half of a percent in September. THE CARTER administration has predicted an inflation rate of about 8 percent for the entire year, which is regarded as high but acceptable. In 1976, the infla· lion rate was 4.8 percent. Underscoring the news of the soaring wholesale prices was another Labor Department re· port that weekly paychecks of most'American workers were $15 fatter last May than a year ago, but inflation destroyed any real gain. The department said W ednes- Freed on. Bail TV Interview they were of concern to agricultural ofOclata, who aatd farmer1 were tderint cul· backs m ~uctioe tl)belp drive up prt* and make up for thttlr losses. 'l'be tiolesa e pr ce ndtx stood. at 199;;a\ii OCtobllr,. mean· ing that goods that sold for $100 lb 1967 now sell for $116.30. WboJ e FriOM ave n $.1 percent over the put 12 lllontlis. Finished consumer gooda. which are product. re&cly foa; sale to coblumen, rose el1ht·tentba of a percent in Octobu followinl a rise Ol tour-tenths of a percent in Septeuiber and, before that, three 1Qootb.a of little or no change. Federal Gay Ban Backed by Bryant 'Balanced 'Speech' In an effort to rallr support for his Mideast ·peace policies in the American Jewish community, President Carter made what supporters called a .. balanced speech .. Wednesday night before the Int~national Jewish Congress in Wasbin,OOn. Three demonstrators interrupted the speech, which made no new demandS on Israel: NEW YORK (AP) -As about 150 gay ritbta acUvista demonstrated at the NBC building in mid-Manhattan today, the network aired a taped interview in which Anita Bryant aaid she would favor a federal s h • \V • lawoutlawingbomosexuallty. ace arm arn1no , The singer and orange juice saleswoman pleaded lack of legal ~ " qualifications when asked what ------·------ the scope and penalties of such a successfully last winter to defeat E d d ·);,: p I la:i1::w:~ant taped the in· ~:~:=1?":~:~~~:= n orse uy . ane. terview for the NBC ''Today" Miami. prog.ram Weclnesday And then She bu been on a publicity WASHINGTON CAP) -ProductS with saccharin woiild carry a flewhometoFlorlda.. tourtopromoteanewbook, "The warning label if a conference committee's compromise bill TBE INTERVIEW was ln-Anita BryantStory." . becomes law. troduced with a film clip of Miss Asked whether she thought The ~e-Senate panel'approved the Senate version Wednes· Bryant being hit in the face with homosexuality should be illegal day. Jt woutd place this label on saccharin items sbtpped tn in· a pte in Des Moines, Iowa, on across the nation. Mias Bryant terstatecommerce: Oct. 14. said: 0 1 believe in God ·a laws •'USE OF TRIS PROD Vet MAY 8£ huardous to your health. The pie and threats to her life and that the law ol the land This product containS saccharin w,b.lcb bu bee,. determined to and livelihood were upects of should be in alignment with it." cause cancer in laboratory animals.' the counterattack a1ainst her by The comprornJae. wblcb will be sent to the &use and Senate tor "militant homosexuals,·• she ••yss I DO," she said when the final approval, aJao prohibits the Food and Drue Adnlirustntioo said. question of whether there should from banning the artificial 11w~ner at leut for the next 18 months. "It that's the price I have to beafederallawwasrepea~ Duringthattlme,the1ovenunentwlllconductfurtherstudiea. pay to stand up for right and de------~-'"'"""" _________ ...._ _________________ -.---:-~- cency and the protection of my children, r·m willing to pay lt," she said. MISS BRY A.NT became Iden· tified with the anti-gay rights movement when she campaigned Western Federal Savings Prese~ts a Definition of Savings: ~ Ex-agent t~ Face JFK ShOts (]barge NEW YORK (AP> -Watergate bur1lar Frant Sturgis bas been freed on $10,000 bail that was raised by friends, his lawyers said. Sturgis was jailed for allegedly trying to force ex-spy Marita Lorenz to change her testimony about what she says wu hia part in the as-sassination of President Kennedy. Sturgis' lawyers got the bail Sturgis to New York and had sent for the 53-year-old ex-CIA him the airfare. operative reduced ftom $25,000to Mias Lorenz rePorted.ly told in· $10,000 on Wednesday. Stur_1is-is vestigators for the Howse Com· expected to appear at a hearmg in. mlttee on Asausinatlons that state Su pre me Court in she, Sturgia. Oswald and others ManhattanFriday. drove to Dallas from Miami a ASSISTANT DISTRICT At· toroey Alan Broomer said Sturgis threatened Miss Lorem with death, telling her that "the 'company' would take care of her" if she did not change her story. Miss Lorenz reportedly has told federal officials that Sturgis fired at Kennedy from a grassy knoll in Dallas on the day Kennedy was kiHed by Lee-Harvey Oswald. One of Sturgis' lawyers, Alan Goldfarb, said at the bail hearirig that Miss Lorenz had invited few days Wore Kennedy was shot: She said she left.before the shooting. IN AN INTESVIEW Wednes- day with The New YOTt Post. Mias Lorem was quoted as say- tna she and ber 15-year-old dau1bter were being ruarded by police, which the Police denied. "I don't lite being threatened," she told The Post. "I can be dangerous. My daughter can be dangerous. I'm very proud of my daughter for protecting me ... Fog Covers Wa~er.ways What wise savers do for all their hollifays by join· ing the West.em Federal Holidays Cilb: for ChHSt· ~for Hanuk.J<ah; for vacations. You join, save on a monthly basis, and we send you a check in time for your holiday. Be P,teparea. Ask us. Thundentornu_ Sweep Al01f6: EaatBm Coaat Tempe,,..•ra ll'ql. REDLANDS <AP> -Sherlff•s officer. from two counties 'Wedn-.,. hunted ~~,at two )'OUDI women whose a.tile. muUJat«l bodies wre found •few mUea apart in the Redlaods- Beaum• area. "W o• ~ a P-oul out there somewhere, • San Bernardino County Sheriff'& Detective Den- nis O'ROW'kesald. THE BODY of the latest vic- tim, ldenUfied •-21-year-old Kimberly Gano, was discovered near Interstate 10 just west of Yucaipa. She reportedly had been dil- emboweled and her breuta part- ly cut off, u bad been done with an earlier victim whose body wu found Oct. 20 near Beaumont. The other victlm, Karen Litzau, 20, of Enid, Okla., wu described by authorities as a transient who bad stayed recent- ly with various friends in the San Bernardino area and was last seen alive by a motorist on In- terstate 10 who let. her out at Colton. ., .. ,... ONE OF 47 SUSPECTS NABBED IN BAY AREA DRUG BUST Police Subdue Suspected Puaher In Halght·A•hbury SAN FRANCISCO (Al» -Fable(! Haltht Street -the cebter of Ban FruetaeO'c 1aeot dtug culture -yielded. IO•UIJ>te'" betobt ,u1Mrl after police tlusbed people out Of ~ the bwJcUnp on an entire block. . Jn all, 47 people w~ arrested Wednesda1 tn wliat .POUce said was a major crackdown on street dnlg peddling, marking the city's lar1est l1D1le heroin raid. BESIDES TBB HEROIN ptddlers: police rrested people W'bo had m .. .i barbtt ratu, amphetamines or mirljoana, C)r who were wanted on other charges -htcludlq ace or two who bad not paid parking nnes. Police said the block wu known u a center for heroin sales. TU RAID, WRICR NE'ITSD a relatively small amount of beroin -about $2,000 worth -and smaller amounts of other illegal narcotlcs, occurred nine blockl from the intersection of Haight and Aehbury streets -the symbol of the psyc:bedellc cttu. culture of the late 1960s. Lt. Will Casey, head of the San Francisco police narcotics unit, said police began the noon raid with arrest warrants that named S5 known heroin peddlers. The 3S had 1old heroin to two underco\'er agentt who have walked the block for the past seten week". "WE DIDN'T GET as many as we wimted today, but they know we're lookina for them. That place is 1onna be bot,•• Cuey aald. The ln1ent of the raid was not to seize a larce amount of heroin but "to 10 after the street pushers," be sald. v AN NUYS <AP> -An a-comict who HYI he murdeNd b1a lover and tbc fttd to Florida where he surrerider9d at a newspaper bu bMn HOtenced to five yeara to Ufo ln state prison. James N. Kron, a, ot Panorama City, pleaded guilty: to leC(md-degree murder ha t.be d .. t.h ol 29- year-old Francene Dvorkin of ~tut April. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-=--~~~~--~--~~----~~--~~--....-- ' BusnapTerrorRelived~------------------..-------~~--.. OAKLAND <AP> with their school bus They have admitted T h r e e con f es s e d driver remembered the th e y ht j a ck e d a kidnappers stared ordeal. They spoke of Chowchilla school bus on blankly usome children tears and prayer•, of July ilS, 1976, took the of Chowchilla wept on falntlng from frtaht and children and bus driver the wltnesa. stand and bol&tering their couraie to a rr_avel quarry and others told in small with songs sung in the buried them in a voices of their terror at darkness of their dirt-covered moving being buried alive. underground tomb. van. They deny that they "I was scared," each T h e r e w e r e harmed anyone, and that child echoed as they took sympathetic smiles from issue is to be resolved in turns tesufyina. Some spectatora. But across lhe current trial. were so small they the room at the counsel If found 1uUty or · seemed lost in the table James Schoenfeld, kidnapplna with bodily witness chair. 26, Richard Schoenfeld, harm, they face llfe lD One by one, six. of the 23, and Fred Woods, 28, prison with no chance of. 26 youngsters kidnapped _w_e_r_e_st_or\Y __ f_a_ced_. ___ P_•_r_ol_e_. ----- Bob Dylan To Returri · Children LOS ANGELES <AP> -Folk einger-compoaer Bob Dylan LI retumlna his children to hia former wife in line with a court order, accordl.ni to bis attorney. Robert Kaufman said Wednesday that Dylan, compl)'lng with the order by Superior Court Com· missioner John Alex- ander, would turn over the four youngsters to- day \~ his ex-wife, Sara, at an undisclosed loca: tlon. The couple, married 13 years, divorced in June. Mrs. Dylan was given custody of the youngsters -Jesse, 11; Anna, 10; Samuel, 9; and Jakob, 6. The singer wu awarded visitation rights. Dylan. however, took the children in Sep- tember when h1a ex-wife ' went to Hawaii to set llP a home for herself and the younisters, accord- inc to court papers. ,......,. ....... RllMl(fUI • -- Ubu~' SAVE I SAVE f' SAVEi--~(!_· DANISH TEAK FURNITURE , ................................. ,...,. ... Dining Tables -• EXTEND . Rq. $289.00 SALE $199.00 Rea. $260.00 . R ... $33&.00 SALE $199.00 SALE $249.00 1 Game Tables • -EXTEND Rec. '200.00 SALE $145.00 Rq. $18!5.00 SALE $119.00 Side Chairs SALE $29.95 ll \JP vlnyl or fabric natl Serving Carts SALE & UP • Lamp Tables SALE Rea. noo.oo . ~tttal 23" dl~m. Bar Stools SALE $ 4 7 .50 Rea. SS0.00 · Sideboards AS LOW AS $139.00 Book Cases SALE $109.00 Rfl. U89.00 71" x 30" : Lounge Chairs SALE $59.00! R•r. $103.00 llrnJt.ct number • Hl·Chairs . SALE $59.00 Rea; $89.0Q blue or natural • Sweden OUR Stta V!S AU llUIUTUfG WITM 041UlW IOIAS 1M ~CC!SSORl!S ANO Dl!CO"° • ·MAMY,MANY 5PIOAl.SI ~':a'." ~~-'P"'~~·1! ·....._ _____ _ ~ -~Q~ ·:::er.~: ... .... ~-"· ~ '1'> rM"\b .. :a:J~tt). fl& .. ~ ... rT :Nursery To Calm Pressure OCEANSIDE (AP> - Parents who fear for the safety or a child at home may take the youngster soon to a "crisis nursery" financed by $96,500 in San Diego County funds. Casa de Amparo opened formally this · week in the M1ss10ft San Luis Rey parish c~nter, but some work remains to be done before children are accepted. THE CENTER is located in the San Luis Rey Academy for high school girls, which closed last summer. Eventually, lt will be able to accommodate 15 children "aged zero to 17" overnight, a spokeswoman for the supervising Women's Resources Center said. They will be able to stay 30days. "When parents feel themselves under pres· ~ sure and they tblnk they might take some of that pressure out on the kida, they can bring them here," Barbara Chase sa~d. COORDINATOR Kelli Straesser said .. in- tensive and long-term af· ter-care" will also be provided to parents as well as children. · After the child returns home, staff workers wlll visit and see if counsel· ing help is needed. Singer Sued by Kansas TOPEKA, Kan. CAP> -The state ol Kansas has filed suit for $100,000 against sin«er Helen Reddy and her aaents for , alleged breach of con- tract. The sui~ flied in the U.S. District Court, is baaed on Mlsa ~dy's failure to appear at the Kansas State Fair on Sept. 16. Also named u , defend.ants are tho William Moma Agency. Inc.. and lts agent, Sidney Epstein. Call 142-5671. Put a few words to work for ou. Antoine Blanchard • Livier Eduardo Cortes • John Duty Julian Ritter • LeCoque Beatrfx Maurine McCulley Hamsen • Vlhcent • Gunther Many others, as well as decorative art In oils. Open D~lly Except Monday 334 I Newport ll•cl. 673-0400 Vegetarian Dishes Featuring Falafel Turkish Q>ffee Bakalva Setvlng Beer I Wine ' •.. , . I ..... , ... . ........... ' w.cater Open 11-11 3325 Newport ll•cl. 675-4661 • 3337 Mewport.llYd. 67M393 !. sale · · . o 1nsons&eleer9Floe Starts today Shop Thurs. & Fri. 10-9. Sat 10-5.30 Sun.12-5. Facllities l CARSON CITY CAP> -A '8 mlllloo espatiJOn of the North ShOr. Chlb at Ceyatal Bay bffu "approflid bf the N•vada Tahoe .Re1looal Plu- ninl A1enc:y despite a warQfnl tbe north end of Lake Tahoe could end up Goodman to Celebrate ]az talk.inf to h1I wt!e, "l Hid, 'I don't know about 40 yean. But J •"PJ>OH It would be optlmiatlc, really, to wait 50 years.' She 1ald, 'Not optimistic -un. reaU.Uc.'" Goodman uld he'll try to 1et.10tlle ol Ule lo&ofata wbo played wlUl him ln ~ej1ein1938 to appear a1&1n. • a "mesa'' Wee tbe aoutb r ahort. -----~~------~~~~~~--~---..,.....---:---"~__.__,~-.::---~---.o.;._----~~ Sinee, drummer Gene Krupa u well u uxol>hoaJata Johnny Hodces and H8ftY Carney of the Duke Ell· in1ton Band. •11ton1 others whO ap. peared With b1m then, have died. t The NTRPA voted 3·1 W edneaday to approve the pr9ject, with panel member Tom Cooke of Reno oppo1ing it. He • argued the Nl'RPA mu.st .. look to the future" and go slow in allowing hotel- • casino expansioo. 8 VT OV'tGOING board chaltman John Meder. said the NTllPA didn't have the authorlty to look ahead lo potential construction. and bad to deal with current pro- posals. The Cali!ornia·Nevada TR PA is scheduled lo re· view the project in mid· December. NTRPA member Joe Bensinger of Carson City said project approvals should be issued on a first-come, first·served basis. Bensinger said that iC traffic increu.ecl as a result ot the North. Shore Club Job, it mieht slow down driver speeds. THAT WOULD be ••a healthy situation," he said. "It would aave gasoline and' maybe some lives." The J>"1Ject constr\ioUon story. 14f r facillt.f ln4 CC!l-JlJ~l>ll the currtnt Clubou&no square re.. -··" .... , .. sched\11 _ tor eoat1t>It1ll® in the 6f Agency Sued by, DisCo GIAN GA~GE . "-·~ S/4LE GOLDER WEST COLLEGE ... mtlT ... Ul) SAT., NOY. 5 • 9.4 SCHOLARSHIP FUND RAISING SPONSml IY ... IEIT caJm NJllllS CIKU BUYERS FREE! SfftftSPHOMI Executive Offices: 7-812 Edinger Ave., Huntington Beach, CA 92&4 7 Southern C•llfornl• ~IOMI Offlce1: ---·-... 4140 Long Beact. Blvd., Long Be•ch, CA 90807 • 81155 Valley View St., Buena Park, CA 90820 G) 20715 S. Malon Blvd., Carson, CA ll0748 • 1001 E. Imperial Hwy., La Habra. CA 90631 Al 1095 lrvlne BIVd., Tuetlft, CA 92880 ..19.1!1"° 235 N. Cltr"a Ave., West Covin1, CA 91793 'Uroc1 fill:,; SAT. a MIM. llMHTI MOY ..... 14111& .. .... Pro,perty of 11m1l.promintrtt leiwre World raidtfttl, totidi• with inven- tory 1f wttl-known L.A. jeweler in financial trouble • TERMS: 8ankArneric.rd • M•st•rCtl•rte P.nonel check· Cash -Some utendtd ttrmt c:ao be arrangld. • Pt'OPHtY moved'°'~°""""'"~ of 1111• to: c¥ewpt11'/ c,j-?1trllent:..f. £td 2542 West Coast Highway, Newport Beach, CA (714) 645-2200 Consignments Accepted 'tll s p,m. Fr)dav Art-Uvtne •f'J'CtJoneer • He swinised a few people here a cou- ple of week.a aao when he opened at the S hara Tatv:>e ln a cbocolate·colored tux. 1j.nllng ''Stranger in Paradise." ON THE &AME 1ta1e I our years aao. he appeared weartns ·chains and not much else. At that Ume, he appealed to a 1pecta1 group of music listeners. Now he's tryina to widen that appeal. After a oout with ftnanclal problems, he's back. planning appearances and - ph'i&in& a nt:w album. laced wlth mid· die oft.be road cuts. .,. The heavy soul with the driving beat ls • still there, but it lsn 't quite the same. "Mommy, ever since you deaned up my room, I can't find ANYT~INGI" HAYES, AT 3S, has gone cm a diet, a training program and says simply: "lt'a good to~ back." What a6but his new imllJCe? ''I've always liked all klDda CA music. 1 At hJs four-day Tahoe run,#fs¥ sang like slow, easy thinp. I guess you eould most of ~hits: 0 Never Can say Good· say I'm a sentimentalist. Now I'm just bye," "Shift'' and more. But the new A discussion on the im· going to sinF. more of lt. It's a baa most look wu there. port a o c e of w i 11 s. people aren t use<! to seeing me In. changes in estate laws Judging from the audience reaction on and tax benefits through uyou KNOW, BEFORE I dido 't openinc ni&bt. Hayes may have some do- charitable giving will be always sing what I want. Now I'm gQini ing to latch on to the broader cross· aired Monday at 10:30 to. I haven't abandoned the old Jsaac. section of audience he seeks. Before his UCl's Talk Set "Music la a i'iOecUon· of the times. It refiecta attlluc!ea, development and technology. ao keep up with the ace, music must be tbat r~Uon. If it doea th t, it moves forward,•· he said. ~Events Listed a.m. on channel 6 in the I've just added something most people rtnale. a number of penoll$ had Silently Saddleback Valley. haven't heard from me," he said. ~xited, ap~ently n«?t im~eC:l that The following scbedule iiJ!~i!ii!~~i!iiiil!ii!iiiiiii!iiii!~~~,~~~~l!!Jl~~-t'!~~~~llJll~~~~'8i!!i!)~!!)~~~!'i~~'!!!f!!~~~-~~~·~~jii~~--~ililiijl~ of activities open to the public has been an- nounced by the Extension program of UC Irvine.: TODAY "Income To• Sowlnos through Trvstl and Glflt." ~· Chrl .. tlofttoft, LLB~ -y; and Denni~ IUorln, J.D., C.P.A. f'.n of a UC trvlno h19ftll0ft lecture MrlH, ·~tocttnv and t~no an El· focllve T•• Pim\," 7·10p.m~ Rm. 101, Pllytkal Sc-.c. Bldg., UCI c.,-nP'lt. Slntle edmitUDI et the ooor 11 "*° pennlts. st. "U~ ~ -1 .. 11"'9 EmPIO~ ... ._nl WllM>n, P<"I· Sl~~ elem, A.clm11111l1'ollve R-rch A .. aocl•tH, Int. A UC lrvl .. l!xt-• -..WY Mmln«, t :JOa.m.-4.lOp.m., HOll<My I""-llJI BrlstOI, CO!. .. Mow. ..... uo. lncluOOI hinch, CIHI motfflol1-porklnQ. PRIDAY ANDiATURDAY ..OV.•AMO' • "T•lll .. ,,., • Olone K. s--rs, M~ M.F.C.C.. merr6-Md family coun1elo,, Colllornlo Human 0.Ye~ Service; and IU<lwrd ll".ln.:•-- $ol!V'nert. B.S.C.E. UCLA l!lllolnlloft Instructor. A UC Irvine I!..._._ -'tend COWM, Fri., MO p.m.; Sot., t:lOo.m.·12noonond1-4::JOp.m., Rm.-.:-:::=.,... 220, Social 5'lenc.t T-r. UCI cam-pus. FH: MO .. , couple. l!MOll,,_ llml l9d to XI QIUPleS. PRIDAY,IATUROAY AND SUNDAY NOV.4,IANIH "Tha Heollnl Toucll/' l!wwett ShOUrOfft, Ptl.D .. Cllrector of t.,. Institute of Actw.1111119 Therapy; euthor. A UC lnlne l!xten1lo11 Wftll911d _..._, Fr1., M• p.m.; Sot .. t o.m.·tl ,_.,... 1..S p.m. - 1·10 p.m.; Sun., ta.m.·12-ond l•S • p.m., ln1t1,ute of Actllollrlae Therapy, 305 W. 2ICh $1., SonMI NIA '· FM:Ul. 1m•~ l'RID&Y, MOW.•AJCO 11 IATURD&Y,NOV.IAICOtJ llflltj~ "Tl'le "-M Al<ot.lk," Jooll SMvw, M.S., l«Vke ~. Clore Fo11nC11ollon Comm11nltt ~ S.W.; ""'"'-.,... f-41y c--.r In llrlW-. prKtko. A.UC1rvlne~hi9 llUM ~. l"ri. MO p.m.; Sot.. t a..m.•12 -end 1-S p.m.. Rm. 145, Sec'-' &c:..._ ua ua _,.... ,...: ..., lftclu.clta ........ l'RtOAY,M0¥.4MO• l'IUDAY ,IAT11ROAY AMO IUMDAYN0¥.11, U.AN01J lllOW.11, 1J-D1J °"Self•~lntheNMwet R• VllOlllMflt: A ""°'°91'_.. SClld'r of YOMmlta lfl Alltirnn_" A. M1c11oo1 O..tJenwt*y, a.s., tns.tructor of PllOtGlt-"Y. Or ... ONNlt c:.t .... A UC lrvlN Ellten6ioll flelcl tf1p Wltll ll!trodUctory INttlnll Md fOI._.. ~. lntredlldory !Netlllg; Ftt., Nn. 4. MOp.m., Rm. 100. HulNlll.,_. Holl, UCI c.en.-. Fleld trip: l'r1 • ....... ttlnluGtl 5'tll. ~ ... 11•U; F~ tnMtlfla! f'rl., "'"' ii. MO p.m., Rm. 100. HllllWllUes MMl,UCI ~ FM:S100,lncl!IOM tod9l1111 Md tnNIS II\ Yos.nlto, E"'°""*" ......... "RequeU.s for a ra1M will bave to wait unW Mr. Binley rretuma. Mr. Bl.Dlef W. to laqb in your face personally." AIRSIRIP VSE NlXED VISALIA (AP) -The . The foundation Synanon Foundation bas operates a drug re-been ordered by a juctce . . . . t$> stop using an airstrip babihtat1on facility at near the mountain com-Badger and has been un. IJlUnity of Badger. An aP:,. der fire from local resi· qeal was expected. dents. .. . ....... ,., .. ~' THE CONVIVIAL SOCIETY that re· suits is governed main1y by women. Automobiles are banned aild travel is by foot, bieycle or hista·1peed train. Loud public IU'CUJDenta and ritual war aamea replace violent apQrts as a w~y to release aggression and 11 freer: and ewer • 'Xtie Somti t Communit~~itel a~liary 1a ljqldlng lts annual ar r~ . Thanugivill't and Cbristmu decoqtion aboppen Nov. t-10 at the SouUi Leauna bosP-ital. Holiday cnftl for home decoration aud gift-gi~ bave been band-made by members Of the aWUary. Lowice wear will be mOdeled during the eveninc hours Nov. 9 and holiday 1ifta will be sold both days in the hospital lObby. the bazaar will nm from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Nov.lOandfrom 9Lm. to5:30p.m. Nov. 11. Proceeds go to\fard community hospital auxlllary projects. For mOl'e information. call Ooar Goes at •93-576'. • Amount al~ $400 Down Payment It tWne al Order or 11Sa11tion $100 $300 A.P.R RD & Flnence o.rv-..0... _ Totlll al Paymtnta $300 12 equal paymenta of $2S each : First payment not due till January! ---- ___ -------- - e. But UUs week, in the White House Rose Garden, the AFL<:CIO:nl'l dent w.~J all miles as he watched CaiWr go tttroulh eetPP'lOnloue aipinl of the mlilttnum wage lawp1Ned b.Y Congress. · . · Meany had reuon to smile. The law wtll gtve the minimum wage its blggest single boost in history -up 4G percent by 1981 when the annual minimum.salary, based on a 40-hour week, will be $7 ,000, compared with today's $4,784. The first increase on:.l'an. 1 will raise the minimum legal wage in the United States from $2.30 an hour to $2.85. Then, in three annual steps, it will reach $3.35 an hour by Jan. 1, 1981. A far cry from the flrst minimum wage of 2S cents an hour, signed by President Franklin D. Roose'fe!Un ~. Carter claims all this wtll pufilp $9 billion more into th ·economy; via the pay checks Ot'low-wage workers, lifting them outofpoverty. So far, so good. But he also admits the new minimum wage "could be inflationary.'' You bet it will. And the ·mere fact that he acknowledges the possibility tells the whole 5twY more honestly than his words. Big labor's enthusiastic b.ack.ing of the minimum ware increase has nothing-to do with llfiin8 low-paid workers, who are not unionized, ()Ut of poverty. · Their strategy is to ~t the floor on wages so they can argue for bigger pat increases in succeeding rounds of contract negotiations to maintain the differential between skilled and unskilled workers. Some increase in tone minimum wage was justified - California already has a $late minimum of $2.50. But an increase that will add up to 46 percent in four years can be nothing Jess than inflationary. · A survey of businesses in 400 congressional districts in all SO states makes some uncomfortable predictions: -48 percent said they would respond to an increase in the minimum wage by cutting the num,ber of hours per week their~mployees work. -46 percent expected to reduce their number of employees. -79percentexpectedtoboldoffhiringnewemployees. -48 percent expected to invest in labor-saving equip- ment to replace present or future employees. Many said their training programs for young, un- skllled workers would have to go, or be greatly curtailed. Some said flatly they would in future hire only experienced help. <Elsewhere on this page, columnTst Earl Waters dis- cusses the adverse impact on jobs for youth). Most agreed consumer prices would go up. In short, President Carter bas lavishly paid off his debt to labor with your money. Bus Shelter Risks 'I Orange County supervisors were prudent when they decided to e)CJ>erlment for a few months before permitting ·the installation of bus shelters in unincorporated county areas. The board will be watching an experimental bus shelter project in two Anaheim locations and has Uivtted interested firms to place one shelter each in selec~ coun- ty regions. The shelters would be installed and maintained at no cost to the county by firms that make their profit by selling advertising space on or in the shelters. The experiment should enable supervisors to fmd out the extent to which bus riders will use shelters, whether they can be located so as not to present traffic l'tazards by blocking views at intersections, and if they will attract graf- fiti and become a general nuisance. Most important, the supervisors should place strict re- qvirements on shelter maintenance and on the use of the shelters to carry advertising messages. There should be no ads on the outside of the shelters. Ad cards should be restricted to the interiors. When the county is being tough on billboards and de- manding a more attractive environment from businesses and builders, there is no reason to permit bus shelters to become either billboards or displays of graffiti. • Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Dally POot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors aAd artists. Reader comment la lnvlttd. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92826. Phone (714) 642--4321. Boyd/ Water ByLM.BOYD Eight years a10, women lived an average of alx years lone er than dld the men. Now, the women Uve an averase ol 9.6 years longer. How do you .account for the wtd.ea;ili\g Of th1' PJ7 r4"1!4'.i...,.,:i;.-.;::.yo1,~•,, All evidence poinUng the other af. COnarees seems bent upon maklliji Hie even more dlffic for teenaaen bY blocking th from even the mo~t cuu employment. This can be the only effect of the legislation just passed by Congress to establish tbe same minimum wages for .minors as ap- ply to adult.I. Arguing for an amend- ment to permit employers to pay mtnen 8$ percent of td\Ut mlnhnums, Sena\Or Sam •Hayakawa contended tht amount of money earned b) teena1ers was unimportant a that what mattertd wu llvipl them opport\mltel to 1et work ii· perience. • What Hayakawa was "*-1il wu the adopUon «laws •im.U• ly to Callf o~~ 'a. wa1e ~· SBOVLD A poUUcal tittle- ment fall, Sharon'• rlnalnf ~orda to the Jetuhlem POil Sn an interview lut montb wlU point the way: colomdnf the West Banlc will be done Mc:ause· It bu to be done. 'the im~ct of tbll profqund Ztonlat n1ponse to centuries d the Jewiab dlUJ>OI'& 11 bard to meuure, but at the le.,t Bec1D and Sharon lli~• touched a past chord in the Jewtah psyche which bH reinforced the almost . "ft IS A vialon and It wDl 1t.1' with us forever," Mn. YACOOY aaid. MOit d her croup <but not ASIDNGTON .-4 inor u uproar ot ill& ~ pre-UJ l d ben two qlp n1 med l<ea and ta were rated from the ta where '¥lived and were th 1ubjecC. xperimenta eondueted by a iver1ity of H'a•alt cholQlist. !'>Althou&b no ooe bas accuaed ~_.. ..... , ... ~~ 'a ten ~ . cruel to t. em, th• 1eagolng mammals' al· 1·• e g e d J'lberators contend keep- i.P g such 11nsitive and ~telligent be- lNS in a salt 'f'aler slam· •er without due process ls wrong. The psychologist con· tends the manumission of dolphins who don't belong to you ! a· grand theft, ceta,ctan. <For ·more on this matter see the Oc· l fober 14 issue ot New Times ' magazine -"Should This !1 .,,. .. '• .l{Vlpbin Be Set Free," by Arthur • !Aibow.) 11 "·The treatment accol"'ded the ;1 4'>lpbins is but part ol the laraer question on how we oueht to treat every sort of animal, although Civen the treatment of black BtJT twANY valu• 10 to mak· ing up a eocletY, and lb• ones concerning Ulimala are impor· taat to UU one. Aa a people, we're animal happy. For an urban-subw'l)ari tttbe, th6 decree to whlcb mm ft sure IA our art and entertalnmenUs utoundlnl. Televlalon programming ls loaded WWi animal and wildlife features aimed al audiences of every age. The senthneat in favor of protecting various kinds ot animals ts ferocious, as any politician who hu bad to deal with the killing of wild bones or baby seals will tell you. No animal, no matter bow exotic and unlovable, i.e., the aJUgator, will fall to win a lobby for itseJf once it is announced that the species is in danger of extinction. TRIS PASSION goes quite beyond ohiinary ecological or conservation concerns. It's a special feeling many Americana have about animals, a totemhl feeling, as though they and tbe animal are one in some fashion only understood completely by the late Walt Dianey. He, more .f ... "Sorry, w• are 90t of P•aee-&laoH are Armed Neuuall\yt.~lUo•al WlU.drawal, and uo•a•>' Ceueftre." • • . I . than anyone el who com quickly to mind, taught us that animals are really cuddly, tdealiied people or that the better sort of people are really cuddly animala. Our: anthropomorphlllna. animals doesn't alwaya seem to have ~ten our four-looted or teatherid ·friends Jood treat· ment. 'lbe £nill,ah, who adore anlma.ls bUt cso.i~~denttfy With them, eYideiltJy ue tiDdel' '°"''~·•~re111n:;:,11 1111nPlrlln• ..... -,.,,,...... them. Did you know, for instance. that some zoos sen animals, especiall)' blC cats, to big bun· ters, wtio then sta1e phony bunts with them? Peter Batten, the author of "Living Trophy" <Thomas Y. Crowell Company, New York, 1918). interviewed a man in Belize, Central Amertca, who explained bow the business is done: ''$ortle Jaiuars come from New Orleans ... Sometimes the cw don't waot to be free, but run back jn the ca,e. Tbe animals were afraid,-and that's why they went back into the caee . . . One guy caJlle on the plane with the same cat he killed." SINCE MOST ZOOS are non· pt:ofit, tax-~upported en· terpriaes, they are elven a special re.spect. Zoos are re· garded as at least' quasi· educational, althou1b In fact they, Ute many anotbet modern educattoaal endeavor, a.re IA the twillabt zone between mild pedagogy and outriibt entertain· ment. U Marlon Perkins is a serious scientist and educator, then Mutual of Omaha ia a philanthropie foundation and Bambi ii a documentary movie on the crazing habits ol tbe North A~erican Ibex. It's JI() wonder that Batten bu been able to find -sooloSical Quotes ''Newspapers are the schoolmasters of the common people. That endless book, the newspaper, ls our national glory." Hemv We1rd Bnchtt 19th Caaluf'JI AmmorJ" ci.rwman . CALORIC PILOTLESS IAS ~ RAlllES SAYE UP TO 'e Dual con.,.,lion 1ueiver with IF filtan! • lt#al for s•cond car or truck: 1ust 1 ffx5~K8ff"I ' • Sqtdkh cl}ntfof • Built·in noise.limiter • With plug.Jn mii•. mounting bracket, fuslld pow11 cord(, ' • SM•tyl C01tv1ni•n«I Funf Give CB this Christme1I l ' ' .· • I . . • . . J . • "Marmaduke, we agreed tt"t when a guest is leaving, I would get 'his hat!" FUNKY WINKERBEAN OUESTIOt-.) NO. 7 CASEY i J . A ! \tnY I>o Yoo CARRY ALL 11loSE ~NAP~CTTS Cl= YOUR ~MER WNE.5, MR. ~£RP'S r __ ......,.., .. "<J fT'~ A WEAPc>N. ~PR>~A 1lW~ 'SAY~ TO IN: .•. MOON MULLINS E)CCOSEME, PL£.A$E··l~ -LAUNDRY 1~0CK WILL BEH~~ SOON . . ..._ ...... GIVE AN ExAMPLE OF A c:.oNlRADIC.TIOO OF U~ { • by Tom Batiuk by Ferd and Tom Johnson --l WA~JUST 11 ~t>ERIN, How 1 IT FELT ~l.ESPIN' H ON /4 8Et>! e -YOU L.OOK ·A 1.-11"1"1.-S PRAWN, MRS. ~RAP~ I _l 1HINK HE'S ' f ~FPI~' Wl'TH \ 1 ™~1<.ARAT~ 1 \ $1U m~/ \ ~. , ' . , ........ ~ by GcltArrlola PEANUTS WELL. THEI( ALSO ~ID ~OU~ CAAZI/. y;- HAVS: CROWt..SY'S 6AR C'RAW YOO A FISW eee:Rs! TODAY'S llDISIDID PVllLI UNllCF•tute~ l --'~--man · Oper tes: 2 Docs, Others Held HAUPPAUGE, N.Y. CAP> -Two octora, an operati•1·roo01 upervisor and u anesthetJoloelat ve been ind.lcted in a cue involving medical supply 1ale11Qan who al· taedly took part In 1uraery on a pa. dent. The indJctmenta, diacloaed Wednes- d ay by Suffolk County District At· t orney Henry O'Brien, are t.be first announced since reports 1ur- • faced that there m a y b e a widespread prac· tice of allowing surgical equip- ment salesmen to perform operatina chores. NB Eyes -Surfing ·ZoiwBid Newport Beach Parks, Beaches and Recreation commissioners say they will take the issue of whethe r to set a side apec1al surfing beaches to the City Council. Commissioners said . they will bring up the :.topic Nov. 28 at a council study session Under consideration is . a proposal to set aside : four-block beach areas • for all-day surfing. Other side for swimming and body surfing only ~Order Upheld . FRESNO CAP) -A Stanis lau s County judge's order suppress· ' ing evidence and dis- ; missing a drug case has : been upheld by t he : state's 5th District Court : of Appeal. The prosecu- . tion sought reversal of Superior Court Judge Gerald Underwood's dis- missal ot charges that Billy Lloyd Hunter possessed heroin and a 1 ~~~~~~!!~~~~!!!!!!!!!~~~~ hypodermic needle. L: A WIDE VARIETY OF SELECTED PATTERNS TO CHOOSE FROM Here's our greatest aole 0( the yeor, just In time to decorate your home for the coming Holiday Seoaon. BUY THE FIRST ROLL AT OUR LOW SUPERMARKET PRICES AND GET A SECOND ROLL FOR JUST ONE CENTI FAIRIC·IA~D PRMIA111D VINYU $:.:~io $10.95 NbW $388 TO $888 I* alngle IOU t>AILY PILOT ;4.J Art Establishment Illusion No. 1: ''Art Has Be To Be Goo $650 Gallery Painting This is a photograph of an actual painting bought on October 22, 1977 at a major California art gallery. It was represented as an Investment. and it cost $650 plus tax. This framed original oil painting from Starving Artls1a cost $600 dollars lesa than the one on the left. Can you see the difference? SEE FOR YQIJRSELF ~THIS WEEKEND/ ' J --- - --- ---- - -- --.... --..... ~"---- be • l water di.strict compaaaes all ot ,.....u.i;~ N uc1 oortb ol Paciltc Coast HiabwQ, ~ a H1U1, • majority of Mission \'l~o arperittt Parkway. and about Ullrd th Lil!!j~MWorld co mu lty. Tbedistrtct's 11,&sl votes voters..,.. elllt t.o I cme .ate for acb dollar of useaaed value on proptrty owned in the dlatrtct u of Stpt. u. ~to Carl Kymla, 1envaJ mana1er. Sb c;and1date. are 1eekt.na full four·year t4trm1 ma the water diltrtct. Laurance R. UioHe ls one of the three tull·Ume _.mbents to the water panel. · .lk)'ear Lacwia. Ntiud reaident la a past member ot the Oran1e COUnty Home BUilders Council and a former director ot planning and eneiDeering for the Laauna Niguel Corp. Incumbent Robert Dwyer of Lacuna Niguel is a retired marketing executive and former member of the board of directors of the South Coast County Water Dialrict. He serves as chairman of the ~o ulton district's committees on water conservation, legislative. community relations and management audit. Board member Forest Dlekason is an appointed incumbent and a nine-year resident ot Mission VieJo. He ia a planning clirector for a Newport Beach architectural• firm and formerly served in the Or8Jlie County Plannine Department for 20 years, 10 years as director. Bob D. ffUJ'lt, a 12-year Laguna Niguel resident served as president of the Capistrano Unified School District board of directors and-ts a member of the board of the Orange County School Board 'a Association. llurst Is also past president of the Laguna Niguel Homeowners Association. va l1bt CtDdldatH are seeking seats as unexplJ'ecl tum directon, poets that run fQ( two 1 •~an S. Rall It an ap~ted incwnbenl on the low<Oci·Ntc\iel Watet: Dfatrlet board and a 22-yeu Oranae County reeldent. Tbe real eatate consultant la a former aaaiatapt director of property manaaement tor tbe U11lver1lty of Southern California. . Don W. Sml" ia a 10-year resident of Laguna Nl1uel u an f!J>polAted incumbent to the board. ,..kinl tJCUoa..~he real estat. appraber and COD· sultant ii currently chairman of the board of 1ov· eroors ol the Paclflc Island Village Homeownen A.ssociatloo. Gerald E. Buck la an officer of a local develop. ment and property manaaement company and a member of the board ot two homeowners a.ssocia· tlons. He hu lived in the Saddleback Valley for eigbtyean. Wendy E4greD, a 10-year Mission Viejo rest· dent, ta an in.ltructor at Saddleback Collete and president and founder of the Mlasion Viejo Cultural and Heritage AeaociatJon. She ls also chairman of the MunlcipalAdvllory Council committee. IUcbard W. Flore la an attorney and chairman of the planning and architectural review commit- tees of the Milslon Viejo Municipal Advisory Coun· ell. Dol"Otlty L. Hufford, a resident of Ml.ssion Viejo for more than (lve years, ii a aell euu>loyed social welfare consultant. She recently retired after 25 years as a aocial aervicea worker and aclministrat.or for the Or~ge County Department of Social Welfare. ORANGE COUNTY I OBllUA dirCctOr president of the South Lapna Hills· Homeowners aociaUon. He was a cit1 .rou er for 11ver.U mJdwest and eastern cltJ• ror 12 yean. David F. Stein, formerly vice president -.nd general man-.aer of Avco Community Develo~ra. Inc., is a five year rteldent ot Laauna Nliuel. He la form er vice president ol the Oraqe County chapter of the Buildini Industry AaaoclaUon and a member ot the county's committee for campaian reform. UCI Seeks Experts To Teach Expert• In 1uiur, harmonica, dbco and ballroom dancini and other special lkllls are being souaht by the UC Irvine Experimental Colleie to conduct winter quarter elasaea: The college ii sponsored by the UCI Alsoclated Student.. Teach!ni in the college requires no specific qualiticaUons other than knowledge of the subject matter and a wlllln1ne11 to share that knowledge. Teachers volunteer thell' tlme. The UCI Experimental College Qffers a v1triety of non-credit courses including instruction in wtnetastina, cardiopulmonary resuscitation, ceramics, backgammon, basic COME! SEEi THE MANUFACTURED HOME AND RECREATION VEHIC~E SHOW eo btautlfully dec:Of'attd manu1actu1e<1 hoo'IM, both moblt• •nd mocsotar, with an ld-lllfed enerov·rnoulOe oonMtVellon vlll•oe 1.000 reereetlon vehfclea-•ff typea of motor hornet, tra..,.I t,.ltora. vans. 5th WhMll, truck campera and fold-doW11 "mplng trall«t. OOdg9r Sl8dlum No"9mber 5·13 Mu!tl •uo Sall.lnSay 10 A.M. toll PM aun<Uiy'IOA.M I01 P.M J1mloA 1-18 11.SO ......clayw Noon to II PM. Chlklr9n uoo.r e Fr• Dll«>uM ldl.-l'l&llMte 81 AllN llllCa .,_, TIWll\I Drug IJ fl •tJ Carole S. Neustadt ls a 10-year resident of Saddleback Valley She ls the area coordinator of Com mun1ty mental health services in the Saddleback Valley and is responsible for program planning and a variety of community education programs. Mrs. Neustadt ls also a member of the Saddleback Valley Unified School Dlstrict board of trustees Robert L. Price, a South Laguna Hills resident for the past 13 years, served aa administrator for Ross,.oor Leisure World. He wu a founder and cartooning and the art of ""-----------------------------...:.;,' bicycle repair. l Talk Set at UCI Experimental Colle&e classes are held parallel to the regular UCI quarter schedule. Winter quarter classes will begin Jan. 9. For tlie Record A On 0 • · AtJa • Those interested In Plate •cts teaching classa in the ., UCI Experimental D .. •olutio"•. 01 Morriag~ GRuss, s... M. •nd Al"-" c; College should contact LEANZA, Mlrma Junette '"' Dr. Sol Snyder or Johns Hopk1"ns Unlve-lty 'Beth Snevely in the UCI E-erd J~, BRAHE EM. Mllwe • o •nd 11-•IJ.; l!NGElKE, l(•lllMell wm. deliver a publlc talk on pain and opiate As~ociated Students L,,_ end wutr.o J.,., BRiOGu. addiction Wednesday at the annual meeting of the Office at833-5547 by Nov. LeJu•ne S. ""° Jarry F , APPEL, F11ec10c10bertt su'•" T •r>d G•rv ~·· MAGS1N, Society for Neuroscience at the Anaheim 30. EVANS, o.tn1e1 N ""d Pt1111v lu. Barb••• eno Edwud. CARTER, Convention Center ----------DAVI!>. Jimmy L. •nd M•rQolrtt Ann M•r)or1e J and Scott Edwud, FAIRCLOTH. ""'9d'1 '"" c.1enn Al ouN!>ON, Maruyn D .""John w, Three hundred tickets have been set aside for 1..,, <.kOWl. c..r .. 1d fr•nc .. •nd <:ON NERS, Patrick Fr•ncis •nd the public for Dr. Snyder's talk, ''The Brain's-Own Vlfolnl• Mary, ANAXAC.ORAS, AlyceArm1lronQ. M · d eo11oenK dndA•• .. m;MORR1soN, PAvTON,L•llM>1v.en<1Ro1>ertc.; orphme an Its Receptor," which will be geared Jann rrolh •nd Lynn Elltn THEMM, Joan and Rlcn-rd; foralayaudience. MATsu1-1i!>A, Shluo •nd Nu•. JUARl!Z, L111• •l'ld G•~10 s.; T1'ckets are available at the UC Irvin• SCHMID, Robert Lewr•nce end TAFOYA, Lewrence H. and " Call 142 ... st78. Put• fe)IW words to work for ou. JoeM. E ODY. Jo -Gary Wlillem; Meryellen; BAILEY, ~ti-L.. Department of Psycbobloloay. 238 Steinhaus Hall. WIDNER,Wllh~H--~·~~E. andWlll~mJ~;WAO~H.S~~ ~---------------~---------------~ INMAN, Gloria EllUl>tlh •nd Cllf· ran M. end -It red L.; HUD· ford; HAfNER, BlllvGtoroe.jr· e;:a DLESTON, Roblynn L. and Eerl Cindy Ann. HUNT, Collin a Morshell. SHEFLER.OeOreK•V•nd O.wn; THOMPSON, Elnel v end Sl•nlty J-; CONROY, Terry An- Affreo. OLSON, J<KQuthnt JHn •nd arew ena c • .,,., ... M., MARTIN, ...,rvon Herold; HEINECKE, Glend• kOOtrlJ 111-Const•nce F M.•ndNorrnanR,;GONZALf,S,Ro.. CiUMBLETON. Janet C. •na -tit <1na Rl<ll•rd Sr ; z'l>.8KA, P•lrlek D, HAISLEY, Nency A. end Rosell~ end Robert JOHPh. TP>Om•s R. REIBER. Donne E.•nd PORTER, !><11•.,. E end Terry A.; Eow1n J.; SCHEUER, Mlrgafet M. HEINl<ICH. CJwlrloltt Joy and Oavld enC1 D•nnyJ.;MAROHDE,RO*ltyA. Eelw•rd Mid Ver• M.; PaTEllSON, Jlftlce A. BUE l TI<( R, y, ll••m and Judy A,; end J•mes M.; PANDO. JOMIM and ALLEN, Mary T .tnd Gent W.; IQn.clo;HOBliS,TerTyL.-LAl/re; Hl'NOER!.ON. :>oonor• I(. -byoe VAIUSO, Fran• s .• ,,., Marc••: Ec1 ... 1n BRA .. !.lEITl:.R. P•rn••• BELL, NOtm.1 ~ ..... •nd Jonn Je•n ena !.••pn•n 0, ~ RANCIN Tt>omo. e>.D"tl A ...,., ,... ..... w. MUI< PHY, I'< PITTS. RKNrdT. •nd K•lhlffn A ; ODro1 .. naC..r••aL .cul<Tllo,IHu••" ANDREWS. oan.1d L. •nd Yvonne Op•I •no kOO<rl l,...,., ZUMGA, M KEIR!>EV.Merolyn-•ndJ<M K•rtn A •nd Jonn w , SMITH, Fowler TOON, J•nMtte M. ena Cl•ua•• AM ""a lnom .. l:UQtM, Geor~W.PANARO.Albtrt•nOSut TURI< HAM, Mtlocllt P!.end Cl•r.nu L .. ; BARROW, Katlly Ltt end B CIMlrl" N. Jr.; RUDZINSKI, JK• POLI<. 0.ryl)..'fM Mid Bert ll!mll; quellnt Manna end Dennis Deen; HART I:. R, C•lol Ann •n<I R09er CONTRERAS, Henry GIMvera •nd Ruuell. BERNSTEIN, Ruuell D. M•rgery; CUSABASOGLOU, Md Merilyn a., Lio TT SR., HeltnoM. TIMreM R. -Ttiomu; MAXWELL, ana C.1enn C., SANSOM, K•lhl"yn JuntR.enclJarnnFloyd. R•yt •nd J•mta Howerd; SOM· CHU, Wtn-K..an end ShHu-Wel; MERS, Dtl>r• L. and Stephen M.. TAYLOR, Gary D. end Mary A.; JOHN!.ON, Oonnt c. -David A., ROUSE, 11!.lalne •nd Ch•rlH E.; WAGNER, Scott Jameo •nd Ottlble KINGSBURY, l..a<lr.nce Henry •nd Ann; HOOEY, Cl•uclttte J •no Rulll Flo.....ce; SETTLES, JOdy Ind Norm•n C..; DAULEY, Su..,, 0. encl Wllll•m O.vld; EVANS, Peay e. Geor9e w ; BOECKER, Donald end Jeffrey A.; FRIEDRICH, HllM P. Allred •nd Rot.rt.a l'fMi MU SAL I', encl PtQQY A.; SUI TE R, RlclMlrd end Eatllraud-Gemerd. Paullne; CARRUTH, ~rolyn J .. n BOC.VE, c..otfrty w. and Cynthie •nd M IC"h HI Lewis; LA8UOA, 0 • VAUGHT, Jtlll end Roy ; MlrcellaA.wldJotwlA. ELKMAN, Wlllla"' RO•rt •nd WtLSOH,WllllamP.Md~ ..... Barbera JM; SPEER, Lola a . ..0 NAV.t.RRO, RIQlllo Jr. -Cellnl; Jem .. J.; HAYGOOD, Sue II!. •nd AFAGALILO, APHll and ~-; A1cn1ra J.,,_; ZOOK, Mary Ann KELLEY, Ely V. -,,,_., Qulnft; end !>•mmy .-; HAPO~O. Olrletnetl' AZll!NARA, Mertt""'91i. Md Frtnll; Md (h•rles; 811!N'Mll!R, l!sl/wr M. DE.t.NE,Ottl98.-Doretll'(Pt1rt. ena Robert L; CRAIG, 8trbtre MICHAIEL,Su$ML enoJOltl>flA.· Joyte •nd SttpfMn Let; PHIPPS, MARLOW WallH \/ktor and~ Ptut w1111am1-1;tr•ldl,. AQntt. ,.,. 0 SCOTT EdWard G •nd Jo-• BATES, L-renc• A eno Berbere eu ' • · •• J ., GOLD, RoneldWolloem •no Bever. M. MC kOWN,.JUCloll'IA. end Vernon •• JO.n etc SAlERLll:. p M LU, HOSHAW. Joyce D•rltne •nd i na I< ~nMlh R MC FA ~YN D. Rontld C>Nn; UVo/18, Bef1111r1 8 . end Carolyn L. e ~d Ml<hatl l.: J•muC.:SMITH,P•hYLendJ•lfles WELkER,LOrneK -R-rtA. Romond. UU. laOADWAY MOITUAIT 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642·9150 SMITH TVTHIU LAMI COST A MHA CHAPll. 427 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa* 64&-4888 Santa Ana Chapel , 618 N. Broadway Santa Ana* 647:-4131 ,_ClaOTHUS SMl'fMI° NOITUAllY 627 Main SI. Huntington Beach ~ssa. ,_MMfl.T ~MIALflUMIUL "°""' 7901 Bolu Ave. Weltmintter 893-3526 Deaths CAR~BAD (AP) - Max Palkowakt, Carlsbad•s flnt police chief, is dead at 57. He was 32 when he was 1appolnledin1952. I w ASIDNGTON (AP) -Rowland F. Klrks, 62, director of the · Adminiattative Office of the U.S. coun.. and a close confldant of Chief Justice Wafren Btarger. died Wedoeeday. -IOmlnld• lhal can change yow We Home Show At ••• South Coast Plaza Brlatol Street Coeta Meaa Thru Su". Nov. 6 • 1111111-lita In • corl\ar of yo11r 911r19• or~"' A Spec:lal lnYlladon to .U P'I Woalcl·il· rou.-coa.W Woodworbn ,. .. -···-.. fotl '""''., yo11n.lf u •1iu thum• •• We Clll\ ahow yo" how to cn&le wood p•ot-yo111l lie pn>ud 10 ahow-ol, •. 11-JIO ...... '""' 1n YOvt l"J91lf• 11 ............ Moir 10 Mlwe money wlule d""'tl &I Wood_.,"9 can lie• rremaftdo¥a _,_of ..u. gra.i.lic;lli.ca. II'• 1JT91111Hn", Ancl, wit), lh• S>.epMUdl M1rk V (a'.M e liale Mil' ..... •tWL v'a • YWI-• W..01 w.-. •• _I I•- S.. tw ,_,_u ~----------------------------------------------------------...... ~· - • IS Pereons not Included" in a retirement pl•n can set aside some rncome In a special Los Angelet Federal Savings Account and pay no taxes on It now. No taxes now on the rnterest your retirement aavl1iga earn. either. Not until you retire, when you'll probably be In a tower tax bracket. • To gain the tax exemption offered by a Keog~n or Indi- vidual Retirement Account, you must be either self-employed or not rncluded in any company retirement plan. And you must-. this Is most important -act during the ahOrt time remaining of 1977. Specialists are ready to tietp you. Whether you seve for retirement or any other purP91e, you r~ cetve higher Interest than any commercial bant< paya, plus FSLIC Insurance on your savln9e, plus a safe dePo&lt bo~ In- come tax preparaflon. many other eervices. all WfthoUt charge with a minimum balance. · Why not start your Retire~nt Account today? Annual Yield 8.06% 8.08% 779% 6.98% 6.72% 5.39% INVESTM!NT CERTIFICATES Current S1000 OR MORE Annual Rate 6 to 1 O years 7o/•"° 3 yeare IRA, Keogh 7~% 4 years I 7Ya o/o CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT $1000 OR MORE 30 months 12 months ~ PASSBOOK SAVINGS ACCOUNTS ANY AMOUNT I Day in to day out , 5y, O/o ALL INTEREST COMPOUNDED DAILY t Funds prematurely withdrawn from Certificate Accounts earn Interest at the Passbook rate, as provided by ~ederal regulatiOn. for the full term of investment, less ninety days. ,. I ,t •• In Suit TB MJrA 1\Jlt. ftled ._ ______________________ _.. ____ .._ __ ln San Prancl1co 0 lt wa hard bargaining-we get Che ma lftCI honey, bt.!t the antJ-edultery oiau.. ltlra lft.0 . Superior Court, WH de1crlbed DJ a· 1poknwaman u a tat· ~~~--~--~~--~-~-------------------------...... · · ca,:.~9 •wt alio nam• AP and fJPI Carl Schmltt. California ____ ...__ ....... __ DEAR PAT; We bad a narrow escape recently. Our two-year-old child waa picking up a bottle of weed killer I had cerelessly left unattended tor a few minutes. I saw him just aa he lifted the bottle up toward bia mouth, and was able to atop him. rve wondered ever since where one should call about an accidental poilonln1? 1upertntendent of bank· tna. for allt1edlY f~ to compl)t with orden bJ the 1tate Le,Ulature to prepare new replattona. Tbe re1ulatlon1 re- portedly should have established whether or not banks are permitted to operate travel aeen· cies. THE SPOKES· woman said ASTA ls concerned that banks uae travel agen· clff to offer special pro. motional rates that re- J . H .• Huntington Beach gular travel aaencies are Phou &U·P88 before attemptbl1 any treat-not permitted to offer, meat. Tile UCJ Medical C...kr Polson Control creating unfair competi· Cea&er operatet JC bours a day. la caffl ti aeeldea· lion ta1 pobcmlDi, be sue~ sue the bouseboM cleuer, ASTA has previously weed klller container or prescription bottles, to help • TtJed law.uJt.s on the Eut tbe cemer ldenWy the bannf1al a1ent and presertbe Coast and ls hoping to ob-re1cue meuures. taln a decision banning travel agencies at other ·Greett Pean Ntt!fl Spedtd C•re We3t Coaat banks l DEA-a PAT: Pears may be a bargain In the Bank of Newport was \!uperroarket.s, but I 've almost given up b~in& a PP a re.n tl Y chos en them. They're always green and even thou.ch I store because 1t has one of the them in the refrigerator until I ripen them at room most active bank travel temperature, they remain tough and somewhat agencies in the state tasteless. Am I doing something wrong? G. N., Miasion Viejo Air Polluted : Pean are always picked CJ'ff'-beeaue tree ripening produces an unpleasant palay texture and l'lpe pears would bruise easily darln• abJpment. :Your ripening 'method may be at fault. Tbe belt method is to place pears ht a nearly cloaed paper l>af, ud hold at room temperatue utll thy tva fat 1 yellow and bave a SU1ht llve ••en held In the hand. Three or more pears In the same HI ripen better than one or two. Store In the refrtgerator after rlpeai.n& until 1enlng. BOlllM!ed Ord~ Rd..U D~ DEAR PAT: (wonder lf you could help me set fome information about what ls betnl done for emtomen of the Universal Money Order Co.? Tbis firm declared bankruptcy In January, and people -ere told to submit claims to the state Bantins Department. There's been no word on refunds since. M. W., Costa M•a • Robert Cameron, state Ban.kin' Departmut , Stjlehook In Effect ON MONDAY, Al,llOST IDENTICAL new atylebooka coverin1 capltaliPUon. abbnriatlou and other nlceUes were put into efltct b1 AP and UPI and adopted by many newspapers, mehadla1 the Daily PUot Arraneed atphabtti~. the entry under "president" rearur "Capitalize president only as a formal t1Ue before ooe or more names· President Carter, Prest· dent.I Ford and Carter "Lowercase in all other us~·. Tbe presldeot said today He ts runnint for president. Llncoln wu president during the Civil War " .-ior examlDer, told AYS that UnlYertal Moae1 Order Co. has not yet relmbaned CaBforala COD· !•men, bat dl5trtbutlon Is anttclpatel bJ mid· December. Cameron added that tbe in1penateadeaa ., ltank.a "dldn •t know If It could be done tty tlaea," lowenr. This firm remains aader Chapter 11 •ankrupt(y court Jurlldlctlon, aad leCten are malled to clalmut.s reg1rd1n1 repayment. : Peraons who purebaaed these unbollored tnoney orders still may s11bmlt c:lalms by sendlll1 a tflotocopy of tllelr mall ~nlera or lcleatlfytni ••mber and amout to: Calllomla Baaklq DepJ!i~ CDent, MO S. Commonwealtb, SulCe 15111 Los Mieles, CA tMtS. The date forwards all elaims to 4be comt weekly. ctalm1 Cwttb proof of pa,meat> 2100 w. eoat ""'· •• ..,...., Newport atcicla 1110 may be eubmUted to tile reeelnr la aalaap&cy: Banknlptey Oen, aoom Dt, Atten. oa: .Jactce JohDJ. GaJ1a1, New York, N.Y.1Mr1. -- - ,Gtlte ,Sfto rP«., l'l,terior5 I ONA $15.0a SILVER DOLLARS 3.00 FOOD COUPON 4.50 COCkTAIL COUPONS 2.00 LUCKY BUCKS 2.00 TWO S1 .DO 10·spot Keno tickets (You could win SS0,000) $26.50 , ' I "NO," SAID nNMY Carter, quickly. "That may come. But I don't respond that way. I am at ease. When we have dJfficulUes, I don't withdraw. I am aot paranoid. "I recognlte that some ol lbe controversy and difficulUea and fallures are because of the am· bltious nature of some ot OQr un· dertakings . . • There has never been an evening when I went to bed that I didn't look forward to the next day." "You eenerally appe-1' so confident. Do you have your mo- menta ofself doubt?" "OH. SUllE. AS long as I feel there is something I can do about a question, it prays on my m1Dd and causes me some concern. Jfl do the best I can with sometbi.n1 and then fail, I don't have any second thoughts or post· regrets ... Some of the limlta· lions I have found in the job are frustrating but I have accepted them "I have·a substanUal lack ~ experience and knowledge about the history o( government hefe ln .Washington. the inter- relationship among the agencies, the proper division of authority and responsibility between the . Congress and the President that 'W ASIUNGTON <AP> -Now it can be told. Jimmy a man fA quick Dllndi:JO!Pllb,UcJUOD and mm •• ~clplli.e who, bll moth~ •aid, la never l.oklnc .in self. confidence, wu about to debate Gerald 1'ord for the fll'at Umelut)'ear. On the w~ · mU> tbe TV theater, an~ wed ii be was nervous. "No, I'm well prepared. I'm not nervous." But Carter wu aervour in that debatt anCl lai.r the aame aide asked wbi. .. J au~only reaUud. there I was, J:lm mr~ Carte?, • boy fror.n southwest Geareia, •od the:re was theiPresldent . the United States. I bad never really met a presi- dent before.'' teara in bia eyes but I've never seen him just cry.·' ' Like the corner of a closed museum, the Oval Office radial· ed a particular quiet this day as H none but serene men ever uaed lt. One side is dominated by a bia wooden desk, wbic'b Jack Ken- nedy used and under whlcb bla little son once materlaliaed magically. Now it is antiseptically neat. One notices a small glass donkey prancana on. a pedestal, the President•a schedule for \he day, a plaque echoing Harry Truman's feelinl 'I never have understood, even during the first days of the campaign, how anyone could look on me as a person of mystery.' everyone has who basn 't served in Washington longer, who hasn't actualJy been president. That is a handicap for me and a limitation. " ... SO THE LIMM'ATIONS are human -time and lack ol ex- perience in federal government service. They are the ones that I constantly have to be sure that I compensate for." Eight months in the job, the .President made tbese observa· lions in the sunlit Oval Office during an interview marted bJ apparent candor, charm and con· fidence. He discussed his satisfactions and frustrations, the shocks and bruises of the Washington Establishment he once opposed and now beads, .. the enigma of Jimmy Carter," the pleasant and \Dlpleasut sur• prises he found in the White ' House. People may be surprised by what surprised bim. Among other things, he waa aurpriaecl to find Congress so sWqegly assert· ing Itself in foreip )ad defense matters. At any rate, as far as a vi.litor could detect, Jimmy Carter. re- mains tranquil at the core. . "IF I GET distressed by things I read -that Jimmy doea't ·know what he's doib1, lhatthlngs aren't working right -"e sit down and we talk," said · Rosalynn Carter. "He Juat calms •au my anxieties becau1e he knows what be is doin1, knows what he wants to do and doesn't let day to day criticism fruatrate him." "Does he ever let 10. aftet" a· partlcularty rough day. in the prtvacyofh.l.sho~?" "Every once bl a while he11 make a rem that'• .not very nice abOot sornetbtn1 that hap. peoed. But mClt. ol tb• tluie be cao pat It completelY oat of bl.a mind. Occaalonalijr, be'lUaave a drink, but not~ Or M!Jl eee 11 movie tonight. to for~ bla problems.·· - abqut where the buelt stops, and a Bible on a clean, white pad. The office is used now for ceremony or visit.ors. nMMY CAJlTEll DOES bis real work down the ball in a :snialler, more intimate olfice, · where frequenUy in the darkness before dawn or in the eveainc after dinner be likes to turn up the stereo real loud -country rock or classics -and plunie iJl. to bls paper work. Be bu another stereo back 1n Ole retldence, but Mrs. Carter does not like for the leader ot the Western world to tum it up loud. On this day be sat in the tall chair near the Oval Office fireplace and the Peale portratt of George Washington. He nobut· toned bis dark blue suit jacket and drapect one arm o"'1 the back of the chair. Up close and ill response, tboee bir blue ~. ··which in anger or impatience · buro like laser be-..ms, now ap. :pe~ u coatacioualY friendly · as those ot a young minister on a house call. "What bas been your sreatest single satisfacUon in the job ao far?" THE PJQ'mDENT said, after a pause, that on \be domestic side it was puttlng together a "harm<Cous and bJghly efllei~t RB DNTIONED INDIA, which ance bad '!'a atron1 atlan- ment withtbeSOviet Union.•• and no" ''tbe 1ltuatlon baa re- venecl." He ~ tllat be bu com muoicated • •aeetetly nd voluminously" wltb MorarJl Desai, the new prime minister~ lodia. . ~ "Conversely, what has been your areatest disappointment or trwitraUOQ ao rarr" uw eu, those frustrations almost always derive from lmpa- tienc:e." "Yours!" "NINE. YF.8. WREN you try to evolve a comprehensive ent.t•Y policy, when there has . been a total absence of even tbe effort in the past, the conflict in interest g!"oupa, aome benevolent, some otherwise; have to be reconciled. AJld their you suffer disappointment because they are not reconciled immediately. "Bul I think I won the pres· idency ... because I was methodical and tenacious. There were many times during the campalo when I was disappoint· ed and impatient, but I am very stubbom and my general m4llhod of purauing a difficult questfon is dilferent from some others. "I study tt thoroughly, I analyze the opUons, I set an ul- timate goal, wblcb may transcend immediate, puctical achievement. and then beeln to work as rapJdly 81 I can to reach that ultimate ~oal, SOIDetlmM iJl sta1es. · w ~ -..-B11T I THINK it helps me. .. an my staff ••• thereat Of the world to know what we Ytut to achtevo u a final objective, · recoCnlz:lni that ft can't ,,_ u m- stant acldeveSMnt.. SomeUmel people say. 'Well, be 1ets Ideals and he COJbprom1ses them ' away.' But the c:ompromlles are inevitable, the)' are predictable. and, in JD1 oplniOD, t.be7 · Ue transient." " ..• You have found the power• of Ws ~ a>Gre tUnl~ ed than you u:pectedt .. Jimmy Catt« nodCied b1a he_, llastantly, almost Uk• an "ameo.'' &Ddbilaid; &Oftly: -"YES. I THINK t un- cferesUttiaSal the inel'Ua or the mom entUtD of the federal bureaucracy, wlllcb f/Ol'u bOtb '*•Y•· Althotaah tt la diffic\llt to ehuce, tt baa ~t.y COUt.tt a.Gd • ~uity tbat.poba~ fl adYantageous to our;<C()Untry. • • . ''The Qtbol'it.J o1 ~· ooacreu hJ betpmc to &bpe f~ d• dSlou is ireatet tlau I bad an· ticlJ>ated .. ,)rfy deallnf with the Geewtla ~atw'e, ilQaoUP It tauabt mes air.eat deal~ the peraonal lnter·rela~pa wWa memberaot Coacret•~'fidil't pare~• wtU for tbci in- fluence that ~ war-ranta and uaena ln .iert!Dse ed foretcn matt.en. ~Be's PreSideni Br.i,t He's· Not Always' Boss W ASHINGToN <AP> -Ulce Harry ~man before bim, Jim· my Carter find& that simply because a man is presi(jeat doeln't meat1 he can issue an order and aee ll ciarried out. WaJJcina with Mrs. Carter IOUth of the White House, Ute Prat· dent recalled that five weeb earlier he aaked the staff to: .. PLA.CB LITl'LE MARKERS ON the trees because J am in- tereated in the diffel'ent varieties alJ)d tbis is like a botanical garden. . . "Some of these trees were imported from fO!'elgn cOUQtrles; aome onbem were planted by previous presidents, the oJdest ono by John Quincy Adams. I wanted to kncnr t.he name of the tree, the country it came from and which p.resident planted lt. ~ "A.l.TllOUGll l RAVE BEEN w.ttln.g five weeks, tbe UttJe markers are stUl not up.•: . Tbe President tauched. "So just iasulng an order, even within the White House al'OQftdl, , doesn't mean instant compliance. And the de~ee of ln11~nce when you gel outside the White House &rounds <Linlahes rapld\y with distance." • presidents actlnl fndepebdenUy in forelp affairs. lt doUed Ford and Ka.ssinger almosy every. wbete they tried to commit P! tA> aomethlnt abroad, from ·~ ·to llelSiilki tot.be fall 'ol Saigon. ·-· Bacttn tbi OYm E>fflce. "ls doUlg the Job bUder than geWQ1lt'r" "No.'! Jimmy Carter aatd eui· phlticalfy. "The campaip ta b&ckbreaklag. 0~1 it is J\tlt an ahnoat nnbe1Jeva1ne trial and w- deet Ud"Db:iiicatatram. \'~are ao ~·Ycia milwa.11 •Xl*led .ad Jou.are always Wlntrable and you are alway1 able. WITH BEl I B& ADVICE, UU. man •Bid. the Presldeftt W'OU1 not ltHe eeDt hll •eerettirY d it.ate oil oa his ftnt Oil to Moscow with two tou1b JlNi' po5a11 tMt lbded ln .. cllaater. •• With bettet' advice. be said, lb& Presidemt would have handled the bu!!Wl .richta lalue wl~ miGn dellcac,y. "You can't beat all)'bodJ ~ the heed tilth lt, ~peel.Uy tM Soviets. You can talk ab0u1 human rights, but you sholalcl alao abow some uDderstandJna ti U.e comptexiUea ln.volvecl la other countries and DOt leave them completely on the d• fensive.•• ·- \ ' • Carter Praises Powell in Daily Job • •Alt) OtJT8SaNaas. io•tlle.r"- • wUl tell 7ou. tud to e e peclall7 cootcloua of pl.-they cam• fro• 1D tr&Yel!Dc ~ Tbe.r tend to tlalnk. ooo•cloualy and un- C0111cl0Qlly, that for more than a cea~. th8' of tho country created them a& poor. uot too lwtebt relatives. Earlier thla year. Carter wu maklDJ: appearance in Yazoo City, . "The public TV operaUon 1n Mlaslaslppi is incredibly 1ood. •• remarked an aide, who happens io be a New Yorker. ~BY DO YOU ftnd that in- credible?" asked the President. "I guess you cauaht me with my Southern prejudice ahow- in1. •• ''I 1uess I did.•• Carter said with a smile. One day last sumxner one of candidate Carter's lieutenants traveled north to solicit the J>Ublic support of a Washington lawyer who was a power in DemocraUc politics. The aide re· turned to Atlanta to announce be Hd gotten the lawyer's support. /'lbe Carter inner circle was not impressed. ··wuo NEEDS THAT has. been," said one man. "He 's part of the Establishment we're against." The lawyer's name is Clark McAdam.a CWford. He is remem- bered by TV audiences as the pillar of elegance and Washington know·how who was asked by a good ol' boy from 'Georgia named Bert Lance to represent him before his Senate inquisitors. "Have you, in the job, found it more difficult than you might have expected to hold to your pledge never to lie to the American people?" "No," he said, evenly and without pause. "I don't believe that l or Jody Powell Chis press secr etary) have ever been tempt· ed to dissemble or to mislead or to he to the American people. I think it is a tremendous achieve· ment that Jody, who has to have an hour or hour and a half every day. sometimes answering unan· ticipated questions, has had his statements and my positions con· firmed. "TBEJlE IS ALWAYS a fear ... that we might inad- vertently say something based on ignorance that later proves untrue. But if I ever thought that Jody would make a misleading statement to the press, I would discharge him instantly. And I have not found that lo be a prob- lem.·· "Are there pubhc misconcep- tions about you that you would like lo see corrected if you could?'' The President paused. "WELL, I HAVE never un- derstood, even during the first days of the campaign, bow anyone could look on me as a person of mystery .. My own character and position on issues have been presented to the public as best we can without distortion, W'ithout any effort to mis- lead. . .Had I been in Congress for ... years, there would be a 'much clearer understanding of what I am, what I stand for. But I 'lion 't know what I can do about it. " I don't understand how anyone coul~ claim I am enigmatic." He said that when the question of the "Carter enigma" arises in' print or when bis position suffers from an "erroneous analysis" in the media, be and Powell try to deal with it in their news con- ferences or press briefings or Powell calls the reporter in- 'W'olved to point out the inac- ~uracy. • "'BUT I THINK that is prob: '.'1ibly a problem that was in- !ltMrent in the prestdmcy of even tboae who Mrved in W ashlncton for a l<JQI tlme. Nobody com- pletely understood Lyndon !h.:S~ nobod1 completely \Jn· d Richard NlxOll. ~ ... think UMre !&. • ·-al .,. "1N1Dpdon that people unde:ntood 3errr Ferd better or eaav or mQbe Dwtabt Blleeonr. t Ink it wa1 dlftleult to 1111- !det•taDIS the de;t,hi of' eom- •tence and coma•n•lon &1'17 1 tW.nk ll• •• UDderel\lmAted at 'The ....... "ft"'ll q1dekl• ••d I •• ••..,••• ••rJtrl••• tehftl tlaetl .re eeer." Carters get along. A fa th er who could not prevent some marital trouble in bis own son. A rich man who, in the words ol bis press secretary, bas alwa.ya been, always will be "tight u a tick." The President of the richest country on earth. who was playing tennis at Camp David when a partner belted ooe over the fence. The ball was ooe of many used in six set.a. "Let's keep playing," said the culprit. "I'll find it later." "LET'S FIND IT now," and Carter. ''We might forget It later." And he led the troop out into the woods. A complex man, a private man, who holds more news COO· ferences than anybody before hlm, ducks fewer questions and remains in command the way Jack Kennedy and Franklin Roosevelt did, without the wit ol the one or the guile of the other. Back in the Oval Office, President said he enjoys the Jo and tncJjcated be plunae'S with te- llsb into "tbe complexiUes which are almost lncompreberudble" - nuclear proliferation, nuclear disarmament, the Mideast, southern Africa. . He said he watches and takes part in controversy "with com- plete equanimity," loses no sleep, fin,ds "excitement" ln the diversity or bis problems and wakes up eveey momln1 "eaaer to go to work ... .. THE DAYS PASS very quick· ly and I am always surprised when they are over. I very seldom feel tired and I think l have learned In the proces1. •• " .•. Raving come from "Ollt· side Wasbincton and cam· palgned aia.in.st it, ls the 'inlide• of Washington a revelatlon to you? .. "Yes. Of course, the President inherently is above a lot ot the In· trigue and the competition tor status and the social st.r\i1tl•. My own personal life with my family has been much more pleasant than I anticipated.•• But ..• '"TBEBB 18 A '1'8NDBNCY m the media to .•. separate the component parta ol an over.ii objective, to deplore !mt.ant IUC· cesa, to emphulze failure and dispute tha\ does mue It yery dttftcutt ror me u P?tstdm to '"THAT WAS A PaOSPECT that I never anticipated." ". . .Have you fdund the busl· ness of predlcU., public or con- sreu.lonal reaetioa araJher inex-act 1dencef.. • • "Absol.Ci.t!°;1eUmes when I think ls completely Innocuous. it will ltab Ute at9!- . t1on of tho nation, the preas. ~ Coniress. And that bu been a aurprlae to me on occaalchi. Recently there w'aa the joint statement of ours and the So~et Union about the Middle East." IN THAT STATEMENT, the two countries a1reed to !o- s pansor another attempt •in Geneva to end the Mtde .. t pro- blem. It included reference to tbe "leeiUmate ritht.s" of Palesti- nians there, a phrase that ignited an up~ among l.sraelil and their many American sup- porters. • "In the past." ~ PreslAnt continued, "the Soviets have been just a complete obstacl•to progress. They bne been re- calcitrant. They have never re- cognized the rtght of Israel to ex- lit or that an absence of complete peace wu an obstacle to a aolu· lion of the Middle East. They came so far. , · "We looked upon that as a great political achievement to re- move a major obstacle. And when it was announced It cauRd coutematlon alD()lll those who, id my aptnion, will ultimately benefit most." ' "Alad that caQSe4 JOU COD• ternatkla7" ~ "Absolutely. • • , .. ~ P&SSIDENT BAD. aener with bll Ume. A Jut quesUoo. · • "How would you like to be re- membered u president? .. He tholl&h\ a loaa UD\e be · •ls bed, be nid 1n a... aolemnl~ ! ... I would like obviously to h9Ve comrlbuted toward ~ace •. to lelltlmat. pride lo what our na-tion ll. J Would like to alleviate dlscrimlnatloo-4 sutferinc and hunaer • much u I poalbly could. I would llb to be loobd on • u solJMCllle wbo admbillt.ered the affaln ol ~uJdenunent well, wbowuQOl '" "Not timid?" 6 "NOT ftJllD ••• H BB 1ild be ha1 tried to make Harry Truman's "boldneta0 his "pat-tern." Thi.I WM tM Jlmmf. Cai1er who 1ave the oil JobbJ hol.Y and ua.mlt11ated bell. • . • • Area Chamber WW Honor NB Policemen • Senior Kelly Kuster is Coron~ del Mar High Schoof a 1971 homeocming queen. Sbe was crowned at halftime of Corona del ;Mar- Mission Viejo football game. Mike Newboror. also senior, was crownea Sea King homecoming kine at dance after the 1ame. C.H. Turner· . Eled~Staff Chief at Hoag Dr. Charles H. Turner, a member of the Hoac Memorial H011Pital staff for 18 yeara, bu been elected chief of staff.at the Newport Beach facWty. The specialist ln familY. prac· ttce bas held the offices of ffcretary-treasurer, and pre- sident-elect. , New offtcers elected to the medical staff's executive com· miltee are Dr. Donald J. Drake, presldei>t-elect; and Dr. BJchU'd c. Barano, secretary-treuuret. Also eletted to the committee are Dr. Paul l<'ukuda, Dr. )larearet Peterson and Dr. Thomas Twaddell. TBS BOilD'_!!L~SGlJLAll public meetin11 ....,., reGtentj to raise qaesUou about tb• aenlce provided by tbeamtrlet. No m.s« laluea surfaced~ lDI the eaar.paip. All tbe t_. dldates ltrelled a need for the diatrict to enad m.euwea tba1 will auure an adequate auntJ ol hllh.quallty water in tbe Mure. Candldat.I .,..: Gll'f RllE&llt\NN -can- didate in Dl'filion 5, Ate: ... M· ctreas~2822ndSt. Yeanm a; · 5. 0cC'QP1doa: Water HIOGrCla eouultlnt for a Colta 11 ... mm. Cltlnl bla 10 year. of ts· perieuce in wate:t reaeaftb azid manaaement~•erman..,. tie .. tb~ most qaalifted candldate to step luto immediate Mn'lce cm t.beboatd. 0 Tbe ;rice we PaT for Import- ed water is sure to skyrocket la 10 yean. What we do now at the local level Will belP cushion tbese impacta,"belaid. ' Eikerman advocates wastewater reclamaUqina a key to boldinc down the cOlt to con· sum era. He WO\lldn't back any move toward e<msolldatlon ot the di• trict with the city because "blf· ger bn't always better. I believe in a local, lndependentl1 ~ trolled water board,•• be said. ·JOHN INDIUKIS -Candidate in Dlvillm &. Aao: a. Acldreu: 458 Either St. Years in area; U. OccupaUon: Aerospace ayatema eiicinec:r in Seal Beach. .. l really believe I tnmr what people in Costa Mesa want frOm their elected c:aiclals -that II to save. tazl>Q'el'I' dollars," ald IndrWB. .. Drtlllng new wells ts a IOOCt step u is wastewater recycllnr. We need a lOOl·r&DJ• plan for an adequate supply at the lowest PoSsible price.•• he addecl. lndrikts "oold like to see-a bet- ter water eonaefvaUono~ because the current one ta only enforceable ••Ydleft •· n~~ looks over the fence and rats on you.•• He suuesu tbe poalbUit, ol a meter system that ti•• eadl home a set allotinent ol water. ELSIE C. DOESCllE -Can- didate lu Divbton 5. Al•~ "mature.,. Addreaa! 2.54 Cahrillo St. Years in area: 16. OCcqpa· tion: Retired high school ~,acber CM1 libnrian. Paat praai4ent ~ the Ol'Jnse Cout IA•P• ol Womm. Senecl fOUJ yean cm State Water Quality Control Board. ''The water board has taken • care ol the north aide, but now I think its time to take care of the /older part of the CltJ. Tb east aide la deftclent lD .byc1ranta and needi expanded water maim to take care of poHlble fire baWda ... abe aald. -"LOna·rapae water planntnc abQsdd eomctde With &ona·ranie e 'I 11Ulnlnl ud the water **1d work clOMb' wtth Clt,1 t" abe llddecl. Mn. Kroeacbe, who ...Sin ...,,.... .... ,.... "'' Cit.a• mercer with tbe .,.;....;;._._ •-MGU · 41ititet Wben ibe served an a ~--. • dtlaen'aeommltUie,sataahehas Mike Camp fUfd Erin Carlson ~ thne to be a dedlcaftld board are the homecotntng k1nl member. and queen of CoSta Mesa's Estancia lDah School for 1977. Bdth are 17-year-old ~•''Al!l4n-aeniora at the biib schOol. dna: as.& Broadway. Years m area: ao. Occupation~ OWner JManqer of tnd\astriil un- tta. .. 11, tnter.t Is bual.Mss .ncl• fln.uce..and they need aomecne '° bell> out wiUa flpra, •• ahe said. .CaJ11.i1« hene1f a "crusroocs indepeDaent,.. Mrs. Rees 1aid 1lle baa at~oded numerous w•tflr board meeUnp and bas "a firm iraspoo thed.iltrict. •• She ls lmpieaSed with the d.is- ttict's operation and says con. aervau. and at.1lnl withill a prescribed budget should be •oa.la of tile diltrict. "I llke people and have no political axes to srJnd. I like to work bfll1nd the aceDes.•• ~ aald. B A N It P A N J '4 N - candldat. in .Dl\'isloo '· Ale: 49. Address; 436 Sw~ Lane. Years in area: 22. Occupa-tion: ProfeSJor of U.S. and Callfornla Hlltorj at Orua• eout eonece. Ser •d 011 ·campalgaa for the Featber Biver Project ud t It e Metropolitan Water Di•· trict refinanc-m, electlon. ••1•ve followed the .Ualra ot tbe local dlatrlct '°" 15 years ud rve tried to learn what'• been aotng oo. 0 he aald • Panlan, who bu visited state and Metropolitan aqueducts, said the district must sbltl ita. emphasis trom aqueduct.a and n>o ae"oln to reclaimed and -re-: tycled water. lb addition, b feels more water wells in the city will help fight fUture shortages. Be en'fblons "'increased paaa~ hil coe:Jus Ihnita on OtU' ~ Jy. 'fh ore. "•must be4'til ao tb1ak now of ways to suppJemd the prelmta)'l~ID. ••be added. Pulm .auJd al.lo suppmt a diJtrict newallllter to eon.sumen, Jll'OV!ded It m "on a ~l!blo' acale." ST&VE &IDDLZ -Candid in Dlvlslon 4. Age: 28. Adclre:iS: 181 Morristo'iln ~e. Years !i; area: 20. Oceupatton: Realtor. "'I'd Wte to eeo that we pump more wtil water to achieve self.. reliance, •• be wd. Riddle belle"9 this would teut-., water rates at .turr tents and J>(U1b}1 lead to a driit m waterrataataU..future. Jte a1sO bellovtll in the use~ reclalnaed • water to \rri1•'4t p1rk1, folf courses an4 ,,..ieultural land within tile clt1, Riddle aupporta tbe COD Uon ol DO propert~ UIMI ment by UM waw ct. 0 Aa 1 llt•btf resident ol arH, I'm well aware ol ~ ater affect.a oar llfast;yle, .. aald • to. nae tlilat would be bitter on •pendl.Qa bi.I lite to an tutitu· lion. I . He tuffered from Down'• Syn· diOme whleb b a fotm of marta1 DllllY ...... SUit ...... DESPITE MASSIVE PROBLEMS, JOEY MAKES PROGRESS Fountain Valley Boy la March of Olmea Poster ChUd Developers Win Houseboat Colony Loses Court Fight SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -Residents of houseboats moored north_ or Sausalito have lost a court batUe to block a development they claam will push them out. The State Court of Appeal denied without comment their petttion asking for a court order against the proposed development at Waldo Point. TR E ACTION WAS brought by the Waterfront Preservation As- soc1at10n against Marin County, Marin County Superior Court, county officials and Waldo Point Harbor, a partnership formed to develop the area Waldo Point covers 36 acres, eight of them above water, and the rest under San Francisco Bay. Some 350 people live on small houseboats in the area. THE COURT WAS told the de- velopment, Waldo Point Hu:bor Marina, will result In the eviction of most, if not all, of the resi- dents. They claim the development violates Marin County, state and federal regulations. HECK'S MEN'S STORE PRE-HOUDAYSun SALE JUST IN TIME FOR YOUR THANKSGIVING AND CHRISTMAS EVENTS. -TAKE YOUR PICK FROM OUR FINE SELECTION OF PIN STRIPES. PLAIDS OR SOLID COLORS -VESTED OR ret-erdatlon formerly called moa)golism. BUT JOEY BM been beating that pace, and by plenty, With the help of his pareots and two older brothers, Andy, 15, and Bob, 19. · The entire fatnily bas been pushing at hi! legs and pulling at his arms since be came home from the hospital. The exerclsa sliD)ulate his central nervous system, accord· ing to Mrs. Heissman. She says that Joey has been running and jumping since he was 14 months old. He swims, bouncea on trampolines and rides a two-wheeled bicycle. RE CAN OOUNT to 10, knows his colors and can draw circles at the Nueva View 1peclal eel~&· .lion school in Huntington Beach. We also ts beginning to write hi.a name. • 'Thjs shows what you can do it· you start early enough,.. Mrs. Helssman said. • • U nothing els~. I hope that our success with Joey will encourage · parents ol children with this dis· ease that somethln1 can be done if you start the day you bring the baby home." she said. "WE ARE ALL very proud ol Joey," Mrs. Heissman says. "He's a real achiever. He has ac. coftlpllshed many t.binga and he• is giving and loving. "He'll do anything you ask and some things you don't ask," sbe smiled. Joey wtll take part in a West Orange County fundraising bike/hike Nov. 20 to raise money for the March of Dimes' re· search on birth defects. Youngsters are expected to collect $12,000 from the event We are itlll taktng onfers for custom ·maoo dr 1>erles and In- stallation prior to Christmas. Orders mvst be placed by November 17. . . . OXFORD The tr~dltlona1 elegance of the tight ftleze Of fhe old World of Wool. Now brougtit tO vou In the Antron Nylon of today. Autoclave heat set and static controlletS. · MAESTRG Th~ ever p0pular dense solld color pluSh for ease of decorating arid wearabllttY. See our total Une of FIOOW~e,G~o:'~~e~~ Annstron9 vr..;::.:.r::~arpet Care AND OUR OWN T-SHIRTS (714) 751·2314 ~oms~~o~w~~llpQ~ :~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ each kilometer they have traveled. THE BIKE/HIKE will start at Mile Square Park in Fountain Valley and go through parts ol Huntington Beach, including Central Park. Additional information and sponsor forms can be obtairted by calling the March of Dimes at 979-2270. TllllR .. ,. ....... RllAlUfUI Add the pol~ Securfty " deedlodc with 1.fnch bolt. Replace yout otd entry-door IOc:k with the s.curtty 11 lrX:kset with anti·jlmmying &ateh. RoseD.bleoln Says NYet OJ. Battle for the BaU Dan Bellini (10) of Ocean View High in Huntington Beach duels Garden Grove High 's Gene Lytle for a pass during Wednesday night's Garden Grove League • sophomore game. Sandwiched between Lytle and Bellini is Bill Durbin. Ocean View, with a highly success( ul sports program in just its second year, won 41-12. See page B3 for complete story on OV football and the game. Gilded Hen, WningNeck Too Much The American Humane As· sociation wants Iowa's attorney general to prosecute a high school football coach who paint- ed a chicken gold to represent the golden eagle mascot of an op. posing team, then bad bis team kick it. One of the players later killed the chicken by wringing its neck. The incident occurred in Du- buque, Iowa, about three weeks ago. Hempstead High School varsity football coach Robert Timmerman apologized publicly after the incident was made public. Milton C. Searle, director of the Denver-based humane as. soclation, wrote Iowa attorney general Richard C. Turner that the act represented a clear viola· tion of Iowa law. "We ask you to investigate the allegations aDd, if they are true, charge and pros· .ecute, "Searle wrote. The incident was reported to have been taken before the school board in Dubuque, but no action was taken against the coach. Temple Arrested ASHEVILLE, N.C. Former major league baseball star Johnny Temple, a fiery Cin- cinnati Reds' infielder, bas been :identified as one of several men charged With larceny of farm -equipment in western North 'Carolina. authorities revealed &o-,Yancey Goes Wild; , • oelay. nt to Hospital Temple, 49, played 12 years in the major leagues. He was not available im· med.iatel1 for comment. Temple is charged with breaking and entering_ and larceny in. connection witb the theft of a tractor from Farm EqulpmeDt Company in Asheville, said police Captain W.M.Nail BEAUFORT, SC. (AP> -Bert Yancey, one of golf's top money winners, is under observation at a state mental hospital after be- ing arrested for lewd conduct, a pokes man for the Beaufort Coun- t ty Sheriff's Deeartment said. The 39-year-()ld golfer was ar- rested Monday after a woman re- ported a prowler at a house next door to Yancey's residence on nearby Hilton Head Island. The sbel1ff'"!I department did not release a pub~ report of the arrest until Wednesday. Deputies responding to the The Longest Soccer Duel: ·22 Overtimes prowler call said when they ar· rived at the scene, they saw a man looking through a rear window in- to the ?!<>m~-'1te mllli approached a deputy and exposed himself while ma.kl.ng obscene gestures, the deputies said. The man became belligerent and was handcuffed en route to the county Jail. but still damaged the inside ol the deputies' patrol car by kicking, according to Lt. John KisUer of the sheriff's de- partmeot. The man became violent wben taken to the coun~ Jail and was tran.aferr~ to the State Hoapital in Columbia, Kistler said. Yancey was charged with look· ing through the window of a woman's home, Indecent ei- posure, resisting arrest and destruction of coun~y property. said Kistler. , "When be was put in t,\e car, he apparently went sort of berserk," Kistler.said. Reeords at the district at- torney's office show that Temple waived preliminary heanng in District Court. His case is now awaiting action by a Superior Court grand jury while he is free on $10,000 bond. E~Mas RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. Top-seeded Chris Evert probably won't ·reach the finals of a $250,000 round-robin tennis tournament being played at the Mission Hilts Country Club, but she bas dispelled any doubts about her physical condition. Evert bounced back· from her .first-match defeat at the bands ot Dianne Fromboltz and posted an easy 6-4, 8-1 vic- tory over Martina Navratilova. ·' Wml~s McKay Is OK Not Siveating Job that Simpson, unhappy With the reeling Bills, may retire unless he·a traded to a. con- Bloefdng • Slaot Dave Cowens (18) aiid Curt.is Rowe of Boston block Bing Smith•s attempted basket Wednesday night in Boston. It didn't matter, However, u Clevelaru! on to a 1~101 triumph. The Big llors.e Switch lnvestigfttion . Rolls On they can," Van Lindt said of the investigating team. · Dr. Gerard was suspended last w~ek after a highly regarded Uru1uayan colt. the 4-year-old Cinr;ano, won a race at Belmont Sept. 28. The veterinarian al- legedly had destroyed the horse June 12 at Muttontown, N.Y., after It suffered a skull fracture. Cinzano allegedly was racing under the name or Lebon, a mediocre performer. The victory by the "ringer ... listed at odds or 57-1, triggered the international scandal. One bettor, 1dent1f1ed as Dr. Gerard, reportedly collected $77,290 after the race Authorities now suspect that the horse actually destroyed was Lebon. Meanwhile, IJoyd's of London bad paid Cinzano's owner Joseph Taub, $1.S0,000 after the "death" of the )JOne. Rowever. David Howard, who hanctles bloodstock matters for the consortium, was quoted as saying "t!pat I'd also be interest· ed in knowing ii there are any other Insurers of Ciniano. If the possibility of fraud ~Lsta, we'd lilce to aet our money back.·· The otber auapected switc~ involved horses named Enchumao, As de Pique II, Sun· doro and Chirico. Mancuso was identified as tAe first American owner of Enchumao, now listed as dead; and Sundoro. Another Nixon In the Spotlight. Dellfrti.t..-. OREO SP!ICHl!R (22) Ll!ADS 8ADDLllACK AGAINST CITRUS SATURDAY. Gauchos Not Expecting A Laugher Against O~ls Saddleback Colleae 1oes after its fifth straight Mission Con· ference victory Saturday nl1ht <7:30>-but It doesn't tlgure to tome rui easy as the rest. Coach Ken Swearingen 'a c;auchos have had little trouble wiping out four Mission foes-but ~aturday'a game at Mlsslon Vie· JO High wlth Citrus will be anything but a laugher. The two teams are 4.0 in circuit play wlth the winner expected 10 advance to the Nov. 26 MIHlon Bowl game aaahut the Western· State Conterence champion. "Citrus Ls a sound, very well coached football team. They do not beat them1elvea, •• uys Swearingen. "Cttrua runa the veer very, very well. Their quarterback <Ken Ertkaen) la not aa iood a runner u Dale BuM Ccttrus• QB laat year> but he's a betterpaaaer. "The series baa been a very iood one wtth most ot the 11mes very close. So we don't have to worry about 1ettln1 our 1uya up for a clOH aame llke lhla, .. aays Swearingen. The Gauchos rolled to a 85-7 wtn over San Die10 last Saturday .and the Saddleback coach says hi• team played better tban he origlnally thou&ht. "Orl1lnally, 1 thought we dldn 't play well, but after looking at the rums we didn't play badly at all. The offense, particularly, did a 1ood Job. We had 118 yards ln penalUes and It's hard to sua. taln a drive when a penalty Js alwaya slowtn1 you down," says Swearlnaen. Edison Has Hopes For Playoff Berth Despite the penalties, the Gauchoe 1ot top performances from nnnln1 back Greg Speicher, quarterback Billy Yan· cy and detenalve back Steve Crapo. Speicher ran tor 11' yard.a to in· crease his season total to 695 yards in ~carries, He now bas 1,183 7ards ln two 1easons. Yancy completed 7 of 13 passes tot 98 yardl and one TD <to Speicher) to raise his totals to 50 for 108 pus• and 837 yards. Seven have gone for TDs. In two ~ seasons, Yancy has passed for 1,601 yards. Edison High School <Hunt· ington Beach > rootball coach Bill Workman says lhe best time to play his team ls the week before or the week after the Char1er1 game Wlth Fountain Valley. This week, the Westminster Illgh Lions get that opportunity when the two teams tangle at Huntington Beach High Friday night (8) in Sunset Lcaeue toot· ball action. . "The best ttme to play us is i_ust before the Fountain Valley game or right after," Workman s ays. "Just ask Newport Harbor " The tats defeated Edison, 17·14, a week before the FV cla_,h and Wesbninster's Uons come imo Friday's 1ame knowing that a win will probably give them a ~layoff berth reprdle!IS of the outcome or their game with l"ountaJn Valley In the Clnal week ~c the season. • "We have ttrwin two in a r ow to lie ln contention for a ptayorr 'berth," Workman says. "Ir we beat Westminster and they lose \o Fountain Valley and we win bver Huntington Beach, we ~ould Ue for third place, then I pon 't know what happens.•• : Injuries have hampered the Jluntiugton Youth . Cage Tryouts Set , ' ' 1 Tryouts Cor the Huqtlngton lleach All-star bas'etball travel· 1ng teams !or bo11 in 1rad11 4-8 will be held SatutcS.aY Not. U ~t Ocean View Hlgb. Tryouts for ll'adt! 4·5 (third t adera are welcome> are at 1 m.; e.T at2!30; and 8tb araderit m meet au. « Additional tntonnatJon can tie pbWned b1 calllnr Bob Thrall UN230). Chargers this season but starting quarterback Frank Seurer, a sophomore, and tailback Jim Criss, are ready for full duty. Both aut!ered lnJurtes two weeks ago but played well aaalnst Fountain Valley. Reserve tailback Paul Irving suffered a shoulder tnjury last week and will miss Friday's tilt. The Chargers will enter the game as four.Point underdop despite having won all three pre· vious meetings between the two teams. The big problem for Workman's crew will be to stop the rejuvenated Westminster running game that hat come tnto ita own the past twoweeka. Eddie Remele sparks the ruablng game. Crapo, a freshman, returned a punt 80 yards for a touchdown and Intercepted two passes atalnst San Diego. The Gauchos now have intercepted 20 passes for the aeason. Saddleback comes 1nto Saturday'• 1ame aa the No. 1 de- fen1lve team In the conference, yielding 237.3 yards per game: Cllrus is seventh (289. 7 > ,UtSCIOtlH 1t7~1~k 7, Cltrws 1 lt71-(ltnn ?•. s.clo19C>eca." ,.,._ S..-k :U, """' 2• 1t7l-~o 17,Cit"'so 1t1•-Olr\ls 2t, S-Sl~k 21 1'7S.. ~-13. Cltnts 1l 1t7t-OWW7,S-~J Cll'VS llllOl .. fltl, ).1·l. JC Football Stars Of'FENS£ STEVE FOGEL, Gold Wes& -The RuaUera' rwinina back gained 174 yards and scored five toucbdowna ln a 50-33 win over LA Harbor. , DENNl8 B08WttL, Or1a1e CoHl -The Pirates' sophomore back averapd '8.5 yafda llunlln1 ln a 27-10 loaa to Fullerton. His longest was a 66-yarder, a South Coast Conference record. GftEG IPEICBER, 8e44Jebac:k -Speicher aalned 11' yards and scol'fld three touchdowna ln the Gauohoa' 85-1 wln ov"' San Diego CC. Dl:FENS£ &ICK SBIBL&Y. o.Jcr.n Wai -The Ruttlets' inaicfe· Untbacker mldt niDe taOklet and lntercept.d. a pu1. . COaKY WINDEa, Oraqe Cout -WinCSer led th• Pi.rat .. in tackles wt th 17, tnclu41na ntne unau!lted tackltt. STEVE CUJl'O, Sid4ltbitk -Tb• Oaucbot ·defensive back had two illtercepttom ao4 an 80·far4 punt retutQ tor a touchdown. 81\~ll~N Newport !larbor~'a qain~: are Qff to thalr *' •Wt (1!1 ove.rall and a.o IA 8uhiei liJ•M> ainc•· ~ ~bamplooahlp _~~.d 1'14 ·~ ono ot tbe !ll~ iln theSalldH'~haa Q 200-J>ou:nd I»Ue Bt0e1Ubnv. SU Med on tbi Mme th• lint with t4t Ide J'oeCamlhU and t11ht end Jolt Bll•&U, BrocJune1n Ille been tn. •trumeotal ln N•WpQl't'••uaceu with b.is crap bloetln1 and ex- ecution ou quick traps. "Brockmeyer 11 aa looct"a techo.tclan u -.e'v• had bere ln • lohg tl~e." says Newp,ort Harbor coacb Blll Pimca u b1a team &itda for the c~aolplonahip 1ho•down wtth ubiattn J'ou.o- taln Valley Friday nJabt at Orange Coast Colleae. "With Broclc.me7tr'1 aln Al.id mobillty,'' cont11aue1 Plailca. "we're recommending him fOl' a four-year acbool," Brockmeyer, active ID ab.Idem government and m1lntalntn1 clote to a 4,0 a.p.a., ts a Stuford. Harvard type accordlnc to Pizzlca. •'Brockmeyer ti one of tbe most coachable players I've ever had." continues Piulca. ..He'1 as quick u any on the fteld wlthln 10 yards of the llne ol scrim maae and we cb.olr with him belo,. maklnf any blocldq chaneea. He's a neat iuy to have around." WhUe Brockmeyer'• torte ii on offense, he hu also been a bis factor iD Newport's defeiiilve prowess. Ta:Cing over tor the lnJ\lnld Bltettl at defensive end and OC· caslonally 1pelllJ\1 Mlke Alben on the other flank, the SaUora have lost UtUe. if any, efftct.lve· ness. It was Brockmeyer'• effort. that led to Don Barker's in· terception and SO·rard return tor a touchdown that broke open Jut week's victory at HunUn1ton Beach. Brockmeyer put the pressure on Huntineton Be•cb quarterback Marco )Pagnanelll and f Oreill the lattet to throw ott balanc•. Broctme1er bit Pa111anew•1 erm and tb• ball wenttoBatbr. "Wt lib to pt Sroctmeyw 1n on def ... oa pbvtou pualni downa blc&UM ot hll bellht ua quJCkn•," ~ Ptuica. •·a.•1 1aqkt4 ta.. cauan.tbact fom or ftve u.m. tb1I , .. , a.od h1I pr.-fer~ II cWeue. "But 11t•a tile m.almtq on ol· ftAH for UI and W• tend to nrn • llttle more to Ilia 1lde wltb Carnahan mt 8httl. W• 6'p our line an4 UluallY use the other alde Of tbit llili lor downn.ld blockl.ni... . • Newpart'I ~same !tit not J.u.il Utt Plilka twould like to thJJ pcUt. with bnildona oc. curtn1 tn Yarioua areu-but not where Bl'ockmeyer 11 atatloned. "Brockmeyer could earry 225-230 pounds real easy," HYI Piulca. "He's Just a grow1n1 boy and that'• exactly why I feel he's a major c0Ue1e Otoapect. Collea• are looklni tor he11ht .•. the,eubulldbulk." Grid Contenders Listed CIF Playoff• Will Begin Ntm. 18 With only two rounds or action remainina before the CH' foot. ball playoffs be11n, attentaon la rocu1ing on bads to the elimlna· tions for blah school team• The playoffs, under • new format thil year. be1an Nov 18 with every lea1ue suaranletld three entries. Each conference hH five leaeues, thua one extra team will be invited to round out lhe 16- team format. Here is a loek at each of the three conterences Orange Coaai area teams are involved in with the contenders hsted ... ,.,.,.~. .. ..... Ill...... ...,.,. ....... St. PAul 2 1 t..M All°' S 0 0 ~ler 0.1 I 1 So.itll Hllll 4 1 0 5ervlle I I fffft CO\'lftl 4 I 0 BllMC>Arn.I 1 t Gle,,..re l I I PhAIC 1 t C11Pv18elt~ Cl\elley • ' E IMfllleW« • t RedfeMI 4 1 Font~ J 2 S.ntrdO a J Detiteyi..._ St. Fr•nclJ I 0 0 Loyo._. 7 0 I St.John9-1 1 t Crespi o , 1 ...... &.-.. l'lllVeU..-I f ...... 1*1 J 0 w.tll,llfttW 2 ' l:dlMn I 2 c.«ref~ Or .... ~ ~~ e1 Ooraoo s o o hett s o Brte J t 0 ..... afll f 0 SOf>Ore 3 l 0 Ar1tt.11 .) 1 E5"rlftUI 2 2 I 8tllllowtr a 2 Pf_.....,. P..-•-' a a Avlallon 4 1 o Mlr11es1e 4 1 o Lawndale J I I Herverd I 2 1 el Stiluncle 2 2 1 Sall ..... ~ ~ryStw S o Alemany • I SI, Ger>evl..,.. 4 I Pater Nostw a t Benefit Game Set . .., ....... fllwt••flllty 5 0 .t.rllnft• ' ' RI,,, Hon!\ J 2 H«t.• 3 2 Col• a 2 lte1M"""9kllMll'" atrw-..i.....,. .... .. _..,,........,._ .. ~; ....... El11tnhow«&::.1:k et A..--; H..,. 10 -CMMa at : ....... 11 -,........_ It PH/lie: S.11 O•tt•nl• It klltlfttl •• ., Btrnardllltll.......,., TOf11911t -Mahr-~= tt SA a...; HO¥. • -8lll'lop Ame\"" s.n.1i. a\ S.SMtt Mllll1 Holl. 10 -Senlltlt"" M1U1r Del M SA ia-1; -· 11 -111 .. Mllllltk ...... . Def ... &Miit ..... •-&RtMllttk.JoM .... ,~. .......,"'-' N..,, • -AllMUlll ft ~ll tit KawlllMltl RI See ........ lttdlrldoJ WWlldltle .. ..__ • l.A\ltl.,.er; l.Auilll!IM It Mlralaf.te 12;451; HOii. JO -uwnMi. et""~'-''"-" et••~ Nov, 11-M1r--..,Hal'lr ... ............... No,,. 4 _...,ec.lwtnt AWmlnf; ~ti' ,,..,._It Miry 6tar1Nov,11-k Otllt'lltftltA~; Nov, 11-C.Vltclf'elll Pater Notteri Mef\1'4.wat Cll•ml.,.., ..... &Mellt HO,,, • -Paramownt .. Arlellll .. «WWII ,,. Bellllowar et f!•ctltlw; MeVf•lr v1 '8ff It Bellflow ... HIOfl; *"'• 10 -OleM • ~I Ar1etlt at .. Ill-; HQY, 11 -fMff ft ........ at t.e Mir ... Sladlum. ••tU..-HO'f. 4 -Col'8n n Anl"Vtoll at It,,_ 'S\IOl11m; RMnoM _, HotC.O; fll,,.1'11* ~"' Palm '°'1ntl at UC,., __ ; RI~ N'f• Rul>ldOt.111; Nov, 10 -AMION .a Rlvtf'lld9 Hof1ll at UC Al~;Nov, 11-H0«0atColton;Nw, 12 -M ii ngten 1'I Al"'"'419 Poly_, UC Rlwn4dle. Major Task Ahead For El Toro--Brown. team," says Brown. "We'd like to control the clock and have a 60-40 advantaae in numt>et ot ol- ftiudve plays run. A few home runs w~d be nice, but we don't rtaJJr have the home run hitt.tr. •• Brown saya his defense ls El Toro'• strtnath and credits the ~rtormances of Tim Albri1ht and Dale Mitchell off the benQb in recent outlhfs Cor keeplna lt that way. El Toro's victory tn the Sot.atll Coaat Leai\le opener at L•&una Beacb -..aa lb~ t.umm, point loit the Chargers, b1it Brown S&)'a the wlnntna (hive at Saft CJemmue was the cl.lnCber. • "That. was a veey proud day tot UJ,. I H)"I Bi'oWn. Carter Competes IDUSACRace • A;,YEJillGEfl8 ·-n.;.=~~ I WNT T1lL VOUft 'Anwl lo~: -. YIU.A M.SlR& 1:30 TOM ANOJEMY ADA»-12 ~08t<&'1"0HING .. Ribbon ~lpe" 8:00 8 CU NEWS 8teWS EMEAOEHCV ONEI Squad 51 matt• It to the ftM!t In the flte ~ t.ket· bal INQUe, but ... gelta'/ can. dim th* f'°PM for • vtctory. G MOVIE ** "Oper~tfon P•ttl~t" (1969) Cary Grant. Tony Curtll. A submarine c:ommand•r • lgnoree regulations In order to get h&a weMI blOl In IC:tlon. (2 hta.) • ™E PAPI I RtOOE FAMILY Shtrley'e matctvne«lng almost IOM9 tr. family a manager. • THE AOOK1E8 In otder to proteet for better food and wonting conditions, lnmat• tak• Jill D#fko and Dr. Malcolm hoetage. fDZOOM Ci> AS MAN BEHAVES "Psychology Of Sexual lnad• ~acy'' 0 Al\CNEW8 9:308 MOVIE **** "High Noon" (1962) Gary Cooper, Grae. Kelly. A. murderer end hi• broth.-. attempt to even the ICOf'9 with the 9her1ff wbo sent him to pris- on. (1 hr., 30 min.) G) THE ODO COUPLE Otcat hires Felix to cover an International wreatllng match and Is thrQWn tor• tall by sub- sequent developmenta. OB AS WE BEE rr "What Happens When It Works?" A aucceuful city-wide. effort to prepare for deeegre- gatlon; "No Mor•· Lunchaacks For Me" Free lunch programs affect deMgregatlon. m GROWING 'fEAAs "Developlng Language SklHs" (()CBS NEWS ®) MERV GRIFFIN 7:00 D NBC NEWS 8 LIARS CLUB 0 ABC NEWS 8) ILOVELVCY "Ragtime Band" Cl) ADA.M-12 Officers Malloy and Reed are assigned a new car In an exper- iment to catch car ecceseory thieves. &!) MACNEIL / LEHRER REPORT Ci> EARTH, SEA. AND SKY ''M.tamo~i.·· (J) TO TELL TitE TRUTH 7:308 $100,000NAUETHAT TUNE D NEWL 'VWEO GAME 0 TO BE ANNOOHCED • THE BRA.DY BUNCH Marcfa'I diary la ~Illy giver WWftl to• UMd be>c* ctcn by Mr alatet Cindy. . • LET'S MAKE A DEAL 9 21 TONtGHf A dlte:ultlon of eeoond mat• Mgel 8lld •t~ .,. thetop4ca. ID NEWSCHECK Cl) IN SEARCH OF- "Haunted Cast .... ' GI MATCH GAME P.M. 8:008 Cl> THE WAL TONS With her OWf1 baby due any day, Mary Elen IUffen a trau- matlo ~ wtlln .,. Wl1w8 too late to helP a men. tally r9tarded woman wno has Jutt given birth to • atlllbom baby. (2 hrs.) 8 CHIPS "Taking Its Toll" The highway patrolrMn contend tMtfully with .• truckload of ctUShed onklne; face en encounter with • tollbooth bMdtt and~. c:f\auffeUr trapped In • limo r9lldy to cMtonat .. •MOVIE •• % "Someone Behind The Door" (1971) a.... Stonaon, Anthony PMclnl. A ~·a ..,_ ·~-·.-..ft of hw hUll>and'• mentpurauon of an amn1'lf1 ~ (2 fltt,) { •«I WELCOME BACK. KOTTE1' • • "Barbarino rn t.ove"' v1nn1e ~ ftndy 8UOCUmba to a young Ratings Guide CM4Mes -,_. kcordlnt to boll ottke ~. Movies tor Tlf • ._ Jlldgld llrt Hiiie.) • * • • * -Excellent * 1r * -Very Good • * --OOOd •1'2 • On 'Soap' BoX· Actress De/erula Spiey Seriea • • By WINIFRED ELZE nothing is ever seen. We can1 •we wo:k°:;harct on the even come near the ~ally soap show. It has a wonderful group of operas, can't &o near any ol the actors and I think it bas the ~~~~~.eta they deal with every potential to be a good television show. I hope people will stay witli it and watch it-. •. and use themselves to Judge rather than be told what to think by someon19 else," says Katherine Helmond 01 ABC's controversial new com- edy "Soap." in which she stars. The audience the show is aimed at, says Miss Belmond, is '1an adult one, which we certain· ly bope to get at 9:30 at night. There have ~n a lot of wild ob- jedions to exposin1 children to it, but surely by 9:30 not all of trlevisioo. should be geared for children." "In the last tour scripts," says Miss Helm<>n<l, 'rrbe abow bat taken a dr~atlc turn. They start out tunny and end up quite serious. We're going lnto character develapm...at,f sex -it·~ all exaggerated. .. WE'RE NOT REALLY mak· ing fun of anybody. We're laughing with life instead of at it. Also there have been ao m~ taboos tn thls country •boUt sex. mainly tn such a rigid, Vlct.orlu WI)', that l thlDk tbeMbU Men too much concen~ation on it tn a pseudo-serious w~. It' aoctal comment. more.·: The cnti.c Of ••a Denver paper, -Vf!IJ c:uiservatsve -after he saw it bedidn 't feel Use morals ol milli ol An1ericUs went down thedtablwtth ·~ap.' •. girl'• bMuty and cM'm but the new frtendlhlp atstd9 to ruin hta l'9let1onahlp with the ,... of the 6WMttlogt. (P.rt 1 of 2) 0 JOl<EA'8 WILD ot • CAROL BURNETT AND FRU5N08 Gu.I: Kaye Wllrd. • MOVIE * • • V:z "Mlste,. Roberts" (1955) James cagney, Jack Lemmon. The oommender ana· the 2nd otftclr Of • U.S. N*'Y cergo ahlp oonNct OWi the N'lnlng of tr. ...... (2 twa.) . e ONCE UPOH A Cl.A88tO "Robin Hood" Robin, WMI and Rllph, wNJe running fr()n1 the Sheriff'• men, ~ Ftter . .Tuck, who afferl them ~ ln the foreat. (Part 6 of 12) • WOMANTMEANDCO. ~8W'~r8 HAPPENINGfl "TM Pfey'• The Big lNng" When Rerun edmlts he'H fd ttleet• wta beca'88 h9 heM't ~ • pro)ect. Raj give. him the lead In the pay he'• written. 0 CONCENtRAnoN 8) TRUTHOR CONSEQUENCES . e FAWLTY TOWER& .. WOf'ld Wll looma In the ,..., tutu,. • 8YIJ'J ~ the ~ pft.al end a.JI MndJM thlng8 bedly. (Par15of8) e MWESEErT . Hlghllghta from program8 lnvoMng Pontlae, Mich:, Port- tand, Ore., Memphia, T.,,,., Evan91on, Ill.. San Francfleo, Calif. and ChlcagO, II. 9:00 D JAMES AT 15 "The Girl Wtth The Bad Rep'' ...,,_ te ...,-to prove h1s • minhood With. ~(Ttft Nunn) Whole t.arnltMd if'NOtJa ~and 9dd,. ham. to a gratfttl lllt on the of the n1Mngout. .. BltDa'r~~-QCy Fridag's Daytime Mel'in . ~!~-~~!1 Buy It at Sears, 4 Days Only ~immed Very Clo.sely lacuum· Sealed Vinyl Boxes. ~ezer Burn, You Do Not Have ks For Your Freezer. llGE-IT venient Credit Plan (BEEP W1" BONE-IN) 90 8LB. BOX Appl'Oximate)y 14-19 Per Box Ave~es $1.17 each steak ONLY at Brea OV QUARTERBACK RAY KOTLER (15) SETS TO PASS B~HIND ~INO"OF LARRY HASTINGS. Ocean View Rolling Young Seahawks Like a Growing River By ~LENN WRITE Of tfle O.lly f'f ... IUft They are the Ocean View High Seabawks and folks who follow the fortunes of the 2-year-old Huntington Beach high school seem to have solid ground for laying claim that the OV sophomore football team is the best in the southern part of Orange County. The Seahawks of coach Ken Moats have fileted all eight foes this season, racking up 210 points lo 33. Their most recent landslide came Wednesday night at Hunt· ington Beach High where they humbled twice-beaten Garden Grove, 41·12. That should cement the Garden Grove Leag~Ue furO~ ~- It had been reported --that Ocean View was a nmnine team. It wasn't that way Wednesday, however as a marvelous young quarterback pr~pect had a field day throwin& the ball. The young man, Ray Kotler, connected on 12 of 11 passes for 233 yards and four touchdowns. And to top off that, he had a 70. yard touchdown gallop. Terry Bachmeier took in three or the TD throws and had slX receptions for 120 yards. Tom Antonopoulos had a TD catch and Qui Que Molina ran four yards for the other score. Rick Copeland toed five conversions. Defensively the Seahawks a.l'e an alert bunch of opportunists. They got four interceptions as Dan Clearwater, Jack Aquirre, Dan Bellini and Glenn Freeman had one apiece. Clearwater and Aquirre each recovered a fumble as Robert Falls and Doug Shutnway forced the bobbles with hard tackling. Greg Settles, Ron Coopman and Copeland also pl~ed •ell on a defenl'Je that threw Garden Grove backs for 11 yards in f05$eS. Moats is blessed with a unit that has been together two years and which now can look forward to playing a pair of varsity seasons together Football Odds Tiie loll-lng-lh9oddlon 11111-Uncrteol· 1~ ano pro1...i-1fo90Ntl119mH n relMsed t>y Herr eh·• R-~ R~llooll: c:ou..aGH use 12 o....rsumerd UCLA21-0rep\ C•l tfotnoe •-W...,U'Qton W.ul>lnQlonSt. 7-0reGQO\ SI 8ro•fl2-r~ N••Y JoverSyucw• P•ntt St 10-H.CMoll,..St. P•ll I• over Wnt Vlt'olftl• Y•I• •o•er Prine.ton 01111e 1oowrw-..._at FIOrl<le Sc. 100\'ef Virginia Tedi FICM'tcs. 3 owr ~ H_.,dl_r ..... Nortll (MOON ....... 0..- Comell 1-ColQll'IOie Ml<hlg,anSC.MI,....__ WIKOnMnlowrP\a'Oua Of'llo st: u-r 1111-. OklehOma "-<*lal>ome SI. Nnras"41•-~I ·-·i-·~ 1<enws7owrk-St. KenllKllY 1'_V...,.bllt I owe SI, S-Col9rlldo Aub<itn •-Mllallllpjll St. Arrnyl-/IJrl"ot'Cll Not,. Oeme1S011WG9ClrliaTteh Teu~IS_ ......... Afe!Mmal-~ M141ml fFla).,.°'."WTUI- Ar1tansu 13....,ar ear1or Arl1-St-.1•overWycm1ng ~llOS RamJ,......, 8"cunnrs P•lrlois II-811ts E•Ol•U-Saln~ 8rownu....,. &engeh. Oolpl\lnt • °"9r Jft$ Cowtioyt1-G'9nt~ Fal<ons•-...,.. c ... r9en,owrli..,s e..r.2-0i~ Clllefs4-PecMtl Vllrlftgs ,_ GlrdfNl5 ll•lden21-S.......ks ervncos.~.....,. eo11a11-.~• FollGIWlno .,. 1tte odds on ora1199 CiMsl .,.. "1911 IC"°919"" f""'-' U>I .. ean-U pk~ b"t Ola Dllllr 1911ot....,Uslett. E11anei.-Tllltln by 6'h Plld )l -,,,._ Oe4 by S F-taln'olall..,_rNewpcw1HWlllWb¥tO'n W.stmnw-r Edison 9l' • Hlllltl,_, &Ntft-Marina 11¥' Cal'Ma ... MM'-t Unl_.stty bY•h ~8MCll-0.ta~Dy6 EITClf'O-OlnaHlllstry• Mlulon VlelO-Sin Clamenle by 4'11 Capo Vallty-r 1....,.lal Cl'(• Nelles-rlnllneDy7 G.io.nw.&-RIOHofldeW IS ()rfll'ljleGoeltOYWSlntaAneby 10 Se*~-Cltnaaby1 As freslunen they last a aame. With one game left tbbyear, it is clear that the team's 1oal of a perfect season in '71 ls goln1 to be achieved "We have good toeetberneu, the kids work very hard and we build around intensity,··. Moats says. Having a team together for four years can work to advan· tage, Moats says. He recalls his 1966 Irvine League vanity title team at HB High. It was ai.o a group that had been together three years. starting out as sophomores in 1964. Moats notices improvement al Ocean View in the jump from freshmen tosophs. •'The kids are more •I· iressive, make fewer· mistakes and have better knowledae tban they did a year ago," Moats aaya. "The future could be tough since we go into Empire Leaaue varal- ty competition next year. "I believe so far we have been ugtested but that will chan1e ln the Empire Leaeue ... Perhaps one of the btggeat changes smee tbe OV trosb were doing so well is with Bellini. A third string quarterback a year ago, he has developed into a fine safety and plaiues opposing of- fenses with his prowess. Ocean View's football fortunes have been like a rolling river. The school started with players who came in from seven di!- ferent elementary schools. like feeder streams. And now that river is formed and is rolling along. ~STATISTICS Flntdowna~no FlrslCIOWlll~ "''" Cl-ns119'1alllft lotat llrlt~ Yards rutrll"I Yal'CISJINS',.. 'Yal'Cls!Ol1 N•I yanUllAlned Pun~·~ Clie&ence "-Mlllevt-sienetl&ad F11mDl~IOllt kMaWOUrtara 00 1 • l 14 111J 2111 71 211 ,,., 21~ 212 ov l ' :i '14 Hl 2A1 :a ,,. 211' 111121 2.1 O•rclenGrow II • II ... 12 CX-Vlitw 14 t• J3 \>-4> New QB Revit&lizes 11Ull 11 I I 4 l 2 ••2 °""12 ..,_ 2 • • 1 , ' ,_.,, H•11tlnvton 8Hc" •coring-· ....,,..._.,.,, TllCIONrt. McNWNY &. Mattu~,,,._ -.,wlnfrwy, ~2. ...... QMNrw T..U. e t t 0-t l&Sancla • ' 1 .,_,, •.-.cJe WWW .. C&t•, H..,..., Kl.ftltwr t, .J. Wyllll I, R. WY•tt t, a.em, • .....,., a. o.-tl, Orllill ... -..a. ... ........ o.w.:.y • s 2, 6-17 Jrvlne I I % t-10 INIM ..... #apllr J, ~ I,_.....,_,_ PU, T eytor. JUNM>llVMlSITY S-..9l'~ "41w61«t...,_ .... 5 4-17 F-.ta111V .. lty 0 0 0 0-0 ~ i.1IOr KOrlft9-WllllarM •, o.vrfKJ. o.rmtn 1, s.-.12, G. Alll-2, k~y, J . Alllson; s.wi. . --..-,o-ws T11tlln 0 t J ,_ " ENncla 2 o 2 3-7 ''° tts uo ... ,,, . ~ CoU....,e Soceer "' --e ,. 1'5 ,. , .. 'Glad You Asked That' by Marilyn .ct Hy Gardner in syndication> is mulling over the idea or revMna the show with Youngman doln1 the Gtoucho bit. Q: Anything to the recurrtna rurnv ~., t11e Manson killers were really after Dorta Day'1 aon, Terry Melcher, when they broke lato the house and murdered Sharon Tate and the OCJlers! -Mrs. Nora C., San Jose. Cal. A· No, According to Doris. the Charles Manson family knew fulJ well who was hvlng in thebouae at the time. Terry, who had been llvin1 there earlier, gave 1t up some 10 months before and moved to t.}}e beach. Sharon Tate moved in after Terry moved out Q: Is Uberace a sick man? Jn recent TV pro· grams he ~ms to have Jost a Jot of weight. What's wrong wll.h him? -Mn. Mary TreaJta, Cleveland Hts., Ohio. · A· Nothing. Liberace says he's fine. He ju1t shmmed down on doctors' orders. Q: Once we slart reading a Harold Robbla1 nov· eJ we can't put it down. But why are they all so over· sexed! -Mrs. D. Walker, Phoenix. A: "I think without writing about sex," Robbins explains, ''you can't reveal the characters! I love sex. I've tried everythlna I've ever written about and I'm Jooklt\f to find more ways to enjoy lt lf 1 can!" Q: On "The Captaio and Ttnnllle" 1bow, t~ Captaln <Dar)') Dragon) made it appear to be more corporal punishment tban entertainment. He Jooked IO bored yCMa'd thllllt be wa1 a viewer, a• a performer. What keeps tbem to1etbert -P. Barnard, Blrmlnpam, A.la. A : 'nley'rehappUy married. Q: About tbe boy wbo was so realJJtlc at the drut·addlc&ed teenaaer In the TV movie, ''Tbe Death ol RlcbJe." I beard thit was his flnt attln& role. la WI tnef -Cyadlla lloblnl, Mllwauee. Seeond 6e11er.atloll Susan Kendall rlewman, daughter of Paul Nttwman and Joanne Woodward, takes a cof. f eo break during the filming of her first mov· ie, "I Want to Hold Your Hand," about teenagers struggling to get tlckets to the Beatles' first U.S appearance. "THI SAJLOll WHO NU.' NOM~CI WITI41"1 $A4. Ill 1".u-4t.lJ-... ~,. .. "TA» 08IYll'" .., ta'"'4t/llM-I~ .. AIRJDGE TOO FAR .. f PGJ WKOA VS -t :OO IAT/IUN -2:to-S11M1U "1MI IM/oeeY t.A.• .. , 1111 .. ,,--.i.....,..,.. .._,.A WLD POM'f" "ltv.f/tlM ... tol~ Thmlll ti Jiii ltwarlel .... RllAl.llfUI 0 ........ mr::-nul TMIA~ICO SENIOR OTIZEHS Sl.50 S . COAST PLAZA S . COAST PLAZA l4111nllt1SI '442111 l•lfUI• "IN lHI ltlAU4 Ol lHI llHIU" uu .... ~·rcx1 .......... .,.,.,. .. ..,. A: No. Thouah Robby Btnton never studied actln1, he'• been on the ataae alnce he wu flve. He made hll d~ut u one ot the UtUe prlnca in Yul Brynner'• Broadway hlt, "1'he Kine and I." Robby haa a lone llat ol credlta: He alan'ed in "Search for Tgmorrow," was Al Paclno'1 aon ln "Godfather IJ," Wha a standout in 61 0de to Bllly Joe," work-1 ~..----------------.;::-, alonaalde IJza Minnelll and Gene Hackman tn ' ''Lucky Lady" and waa Dyan Cannon'• brother ln ''Vlrainla Hill." Another touchin1 role of bl.I wu the dYlnt boy ln TV'j "Death Be Not Proud." Q: 1 rtmelQber durln1 World War U &bat Jim• mr 8&nart wen& ott botnblnt mlalou ln tht Alr lotce. Yet I tecelldf beard be'• •Gr.nutlou aboat f1yla1 ln a eommerclll plaae. h be -z. Jettenoa, Toplk& Kua. A: Yea. So mucb 10 tbat be reveall he wear1 the samt ntektle u a ~hack charm every ttmt ht flitl. The Mft.cpot.n ictor, IOOll tQ .bt IMO Ill '1A1rport '1'7," enliattd u a private ln the All' rorce in ''l.. AftAr complftlna 20 bomb~ mla1lon1, he rose to the rank of full coJonel. In 51, the Stn1t1 autborlaed Stewart'• promotion to n11rvt brl1adl1r 1eneral. But it waa held up for two year• after Sen. Martartt ChaH Sml~ po1Dt.cS out that Stewart had only put ln nlnt dl)'I Of trainlns ln U yean. The Senate overcame the obJtetloa by ord•r· ine Jimmy to put ln two weekl Of trl1ntni. Q: 11 Jape ll•Dlll•ld'• dQC-.oeeaPJflll ...:::::!!~~~~~===~~=~~99!1!!!!~' her moeber'• famou Holl~ wt~ Ute . belrt·lhaJMtd 1wtmm1A1 poolt -Mel1Dda PanGGI, Oakland •. A: No euch Juok. It wu a too-up lot a wbUt which 1uptrat1r 1101.r wo\Ud "lnhtrlt" tb• showplace -Bn1elbert Hu~perdinclc Ot Tom Jon ... 1.'he former 11 taldlfi poAesalon any day whll• TOlll, at Ulla wnttni. wa1~1l boU1•b14nttna nearby. . and llOU' q\llltiolu to H11 Ocsrdnfr, "Glad Yo. A•kld Tbat ," ccn o/ ,,,,, ftfWJIOJ)fr, P.O. B~ IMO, Co-ta M1to 82dil. M4rlf Jffl end H11 Ocrdnlr au GMOtr oa man~ ~ CJ1 tMs/ can bi tMlr cOI"""'• but &ht 1'ol"m' Of mcdl makl1 pit~ t@iltt• tmpo•tf~. Singer Pat BoOrie and his Wife Shirley <right> are ahown during a recording session with ditughteri Debbie (left> and IJndy. Debbie has a hit single with "You Light Up My Life." PR AS EFLEC'l1VE lat career monol~ -with numerous~ 1Wllt cut.a to anhna· tlona Of p,.it deeds -tbe script toucbes OD :no :Jy all of the eventa that tranaformed a rich. trail N York elitbt'lnto a bustliol reformer and aClvocate of big-stick nationalism. Whitmore 'aDd Alden rea..-ct Ute nation'• 28th ~---------------------------president u a mmtorfoua subject for contem- porary inspiration. He put over creation ol the Panama Canal. recenKY a beadllite concern again. But all the other trust·l>usUnc. aorru_pUon fl&htin1 and P91itical l>Jttlinl' episodea simply lack -or al least are not developed ertoµali-to pip with much relevancy. Non··stop_ TaUdp.g Peter Ustinov Pumps for His ~k By BOB THOMAS LOS ANGELES (AP> -"I have been talking around the clock and I am dying for silence," said Peter Ustinov. "I may become a Trappist monk." Not likely . There is no more chance that the British-born actor will enter a monastery than there is that be wUl QU1t talking. He remains one of the world's great conversationalists, as he has demonstrated on the nation's TV talk shows. Ustinov has been doing all of them. all the biggies, anyway. The reason: to promote his autobiography, "Dear Me" (Lillie, Brown, $9.95>. • "NOW I MUST RUSH to England lo continue the trumpeting, because the book is being published there simultaneously," he remarked. "It's easier to promote a book there; you can practically walk Crom one place to another, England being about the size of Rhode Island .. It's doubtful that Ustinov would do the same hustling for one of his mov- ies But then, there is something about the printed word that attracts actors, especially those as literate as Ustinov. Ile has earned just about evecy honor an actor can enjoy: two Oscars ("Spartacus," "Topkapl"), three Emmies, a Grammy, a Golden Globe. Still, he enjoys writing01bre. "It lS the most mysterious of oc- cupations," he observed. "There is something fascinating about starting with nothing on the page. I find writ- ing much more exciting than my other endeavors. Yes, there is not the immediate applause that you get in the theater. But as you grow oldel', you are willing to wait for a response." PETER USTINOV is 56, with no ob- servable diminution of his immense capacities Why then would he un- dertake an autobiography at this point in his hfe? "Because I was asked. Both my American and my English publishers thought it would be a good idea, so why not? I worked with both editors at the same Ume, hoping I could use the same galleys. Alas, that was impossi- ble. The Americans can't bear to have 'honor' spelled with a 'u.' ·'I liked the idea of a stoCk·taking at this pomt in my life. Shops do it. And A.,.Wt,..... PUSHING AUTOBIOGRAPHY Actor-Writer Ustinov after all, I come from & nation or · shopkeepers." Ustinov wrote .. Dear Me" all over the world; He was at work oo it when I last saw him on the soggy plains ot Spain for ~'The Last Remake ot Beau Geste.; .. •"The director accused me of being merely a verbal comed.len~ Et tu, Feldman." "THE Wlll'l1NG CAME hard until I happened upon the device of dividina myseU in two and conducting ·a dialogue with myself, .. lie said. "That made sense. Tb ere is a little sehiza0phreniain everyone ... Ustinov wrote the eotire m•uscript in longhand, using a felt pen for eentle approach. Copies wer& sent to the two publishers with few in· quirie.s except from the company lawyers. One was concerned about oossible libel Of Joachim Von Ribben- trop and wanted to be certain the Nazi leader was dead. "Obviously a very young lawyer,•• observed Ustinov. "I was keen not to make it a sbow- bQineaa book," he added. Whitmore. who previouslY hu done tlmllar stints on behalf of Wlll Rogers and Harry S Truman, bas the man-alone technique under brilliant eontrol. At the start of each of th• two acts, be comes roaring down an aisle in robust out<190r caper as the overture to "William Tell" blares en- couragingly over the public addre&s system. He is on the aoconstantly'. MOVING A.BOUT A STAGE that has been dressed up with enough bi& game trophies to resem- ble the great hJl!l of the American Museum of Natural History. WhitmOl"e portrays TR as a man of public roar and family-circle purr. • With just the famous mustache and a pair of spectacles, be evokes rather than impersonates the sage of Sagamore Hill. And at the end there comes a fine reflection upon all that has happened which gives .. Bully .. its finest moment. . Peter Hunt directed Whit.more throu&b the mercurial mood shifts with commendable grace, and supervised the lighting score with rather arbitrary llareups and shadow. John Conklin rounded up all the bison beads, usorted antlers and several fine period pieces of furniture. ~Tops In Pops@ In the DAILY PILOT ' 'Finding the one~ love ... is finaing yourself 1~151MDl!J A TURMAN-FOSTER COMPANY PRODUCTION NHEROES'" Co-stamng HARRISON fORD·Written by JAMES CARABATSOS Music by JACK NITZSCHf and RlCHARD HAZARD Directed by JEREMY PAUL KAGAN · Pcoduceo by DAVID FOSTER and LAWRENCE TURMAN A UNIVERSAL PICTURE PO -c:im=a~=::--. TECHNICOLOR• ~..3ill . ' ~ . • .. .. By DENNIS McLELIAN °' .. ~ .......... As a boy in the 1920s, movle st'-"t pilot Frank Tallman visited relatives in Florida who took him to aee one ol the era's death-de!yiog barnstormers in action. "I saw a woman picked out ol a moving car b7 a jenny," recalls Tallman, the lsicldent •Wl vivid a half-century latft'. If that parUcQJar scene sounds familiar It's because Tallman and director George Roy Hill included it in "The Great Waldo Pepper," their high-flying tribute to aviation's pioneer days. "The eventa ln 'Waldo Pepper' were all taken from history," notes Ta Um an, who learned to fly in the days when forced landin&s were a normal part of the game. In fact, lhe dashing, QU.lltebioed Orange Coast aviator has survi\'ed numerous mishaps while flying museum-piece aircraft for movie cameras. THIS IS WELL-ILLUSTRATED by newspaper clippings of just the last !decade: "Frank Tallman Eludes Death in Plane Crash," "County's Tallman Escapes Injury" and "Tallman lndestructable." The gentlemanly, dapperly dressed pilot, St'ated in his antique and book· filled office. at Tallmant.z Aviation at he Orange County Airport, was asked how many forced landings and rashes he's ex~rienced. "Oh God, I don't know," he said. 1"When I learned to fly the first thing you did was accept the fact that a forced landing is going to come. ''You can 'l fly 40 years and not have your share of nicks. Of course, I wrtte some of them out of my mind. It's not a thing lhat scares me, though I scare easy. ••I don't think anybody who does anytbmg really dangerous doesn't get some kind of adrenalin goir&g. The only difference between us and other people is we go ahead and do it. .. . BUT FlRST THEY carefully plan and prepare their stunts emphasiaed Tallman. And after they've done _ everyth.in~ they can think ot, and a lit- tle bit more, then• 'you go ahead and do ll ... Audi~ have witnened thefruita ot that plannins in hundreds of televiatan shows and movies from "Tbe Amazing Howard Hwrbel" and .. Baa Baa Blacuheep" to:«catcb 22" and the classic flyins·tbroulh·the- billboard scene in ''Mad, ad. Mad; Mad World." Tallman rehearsed that 11162 stunt in the nearby fields ot what ls now· UCI. The actual scene was filmed near El Toro, where the Coca-Cola billboard was constructed with a framework of 24-incb structural steel. It goes without saying that it was a dangerous feat. "Oh, it was monstrous," said Tallmaii. "Any mistake and you're dead. There's no halt way on that. Despite his planning and safety pre. cautions, he lost an engine flying through the Styrofoam and balsa wood billboard and bis face and neck were sprinkled with windshield &lass. A LAJt.GESILVER tray from direc· tor Stanley Kramer is a souvenir of that stunt. But it is only one ol the many mementoes collected throughout his life, which began in Orange, N.J. Frank Tallman grew up beln& around the pilot friends of his father, a naval aviator in World War I. "Though I was a youngster I can re· member going out with my father in a jenny," he recalled. He fll'St took the controls of an airplane at the age of 10. And when the lure of flying proved more powerful than studying, he quit high school and headed to Los Angeles where he took flying lessons. He was a mght instructor before en- tering World War II as a naval aviator and wound up doing movie stunt fly. tng in the '50s. A decade later he teamed up with his "friendly com- petitor" Paw Mantz. "HE WAS THE grand old man of the business," said Tallman with a smile. "And now I'm considered an old man in the business." His partnership with the leeendary .Mantz, who did the flying for "Test Pilot" with Clark Gable and in bun· dreds of other films, ended in 1965 when Mantz was killed In a crash while filmine "Fli&bt of the Phoenix." <See TALLMAN, Paie"cn Solo By ChGfYI Romo . ~ ·t ~ ~ ·~ ~ ~~"~ ~~ u w~~~~ ~~.~ ~t~~~ Sign Ber Bea Fa 24 years, Bea Beey. has spent her life helping the deaf communicate. ByMARCfAFOISBERG Of Ttilo.11\' ,._SUH tr-~ftmlMJ'dlidDll!l,~W!llO'lllllNlll'tllltr-'iMlreat~':.'9' 1~ ._......_ ......... • ~ DtrtY.ln Uli1r ij COlta •• lt~~uo. n•ve • .,,~ -· ,_ ~ .• proach• to f ubloo but tbllr lln11 complem t •lcbother. Paule, one of AuatralJa'a top dta11Dtf'I for many 1-.n, 1utcb11 wltb a IOJ)hlaUoattd lit• 1t)'l•, 1n mind, and Mn. Otddlntl, who bu Uvtd aod worked tn Medco, bu a colorf\11, rteb ai>- proacb to her CalJtomla look. . The lhowlnl marked tbe llrtt Umt one of ,,-;.1ule'1eollecUona bu IJffn abown 1n tbt U.S. He : .b•• moved permant0Uy to Colta M11a, however, t and plana to eontln\l• h1I work here. : Paul~, wbo dlll~ boeteu unlfonu for 1• .Q4Atu AJrUn11 for et1ht yean. wu named ! ~Ot1l1ner-d·tb•Y1ar In b1a bomt eou.ntry twice. 1 JJ• .bu wen nwnll'OUI other awarda, 1ucb u th• ; :t'fbl ruhlon Award and wu eommtulontd to : '6;.1ate the wtddlnt 1own when Sonia McMahon t rted the Prtmt Mlnllttr. t He lllo d11tintd a 1own to npre1ent the new Sydney opera bout• wbtn lt had tta premiere i flV•ral JHn aao. ~ Paule'• talent w11 lnh1rlttd from hl1 l mo~er. who wa1 .. an1xc1llent 11am1treu." i ··He recalll, "My mother Hld that from a tiny l Utt.I• boy ot 4 or SI WU alw1y11twtn1 ... , • Ht bu bad no formal l1110n1 nor bu be. • 1tu4led at an art or dt1l1D achool. l · •'Th• fabrlc •r.u• to mt -that'• bow I t work," Paule sat . "All my fabrics are Crom Paris, from the place which supplies Dior and other desieners. ·' ae conalden hit dru111 u woru of art and primarily does indMdual dHllll '" cllenta. Thouah he does tailored cloth11, ht 11 at b1I best in glamorous weddinl and ball towns. Paul believes that "women are 1oln1 back to glamorous wear all around tbe world. "I like to aee a woman wtll·dreased at all times," he 11ald. "The latt tlthl yean have alven a great laxity to dress. But everyone 11 1tart1n1 to dress in a much more 1lamoroua fuhlon now.'' Paule said his dresses art dffl&ntd for more th an one season of wear. "They don't date. They go on for a long time. They an not juat a fuhion fad." The woman who feelt ah• muat have a new dress for every party is "very txtrava1ant," ht said. "I like to see a woman ~artna a drffl Ume and time again." • Why would a dt1lper Uk• PaUl• leave a COUDtJ'Y Whtn ht hU _ .. tlbUJhtd I 1'$1ta~ and a client.el• for 1 amlll orana• eo.iiltr. clb't ... hav• alwa>-• h•d ·le to bt 1n th• U.S. 1lnctlw1111.._"b11al • 0 10 tfor.thtftnt ttme ln 1810 aa4 nav1 been llftral Um• 11nc1." <-• • • One of the put attracUona of tbll aountry ii its freeway system, Paule asserted. "I just adore the freeways. It's amuln& that you can 1et from here to LOI Anaelll IO qu.lokb'. •• For h1I portion Of tbe lhow, be Hleci.d baalo jersey drtuel, a lace ltlmono dNla a Cbanel· Inspired 1ult, a black ~ama outftt btih111hted by a 1Uver acarf from the-ltlOl Ind otbtt •Ytlllna 1own1. Mn. OlddJn11 1bowtd her n.w 11ne 1n three portJon.1, be11nn.ln1 with aportawear and batlka • and en..dJ.nC with anUqu1 paltle)'I. Sbe pr111nttd leat.btr •nf•mbl11. ·an Ar1hanl1tan 1klrt of band·wovtn1 hand· em brotdered tabrtc1 a tu.nlo and pan\I or rrtnoh. 1llk with a matchlnl b.,, a lllk lndoolllan tualc flnl1htd wttb hand·eaivtd lv~ buUonl and batik• worn wlth dtnlm. . Tb• ahow tndtd wltb Mn. Ol4d1np' 'ferllOll of the Ptl'fect outllta tor alamoroua Jo11ll'li sliver and •old lame w.arm-up au{tl 11\k--mat.c~Jackttl. / Harry McMahan is the watchdog of televi1ion commercials, watching 14,000 of them a Y••r. -He's a Penny ~incher Paul•'• 0N1~ed velvet gown. PBIM'a Chinese IOok in orion }fh.ey,.tar left. Leon Paule, left. Co1•1nereials ESCONDIDO <AP> -In Harry McMahari'I oplnlon, personality with a llt· tle 1ood humor la what sells. And Mc Mahan should know. He has worked for more than 650 advertisers in 31 countries and says heh~ written 4,000 c.om- mercials. He ll ~mpllmentary or Ptne Sol. of which he says, "after only seven years, it bas built a ~onallty as a dislnfeotant that ls hard working and helpful." He also praises ads for a bre&klut cereal, ChMtlol. "It has built ill story and personality ln the last fiv• years and now la o\ltselllna Kellogg•s Corn Flakes.•• . -Dr. Pepper, the soft drink, la movtn1 up on 7-Up in sales ln "juat two year1 throufb ad1 in aewtpapera, maaazines, TV and billboardS aimed at the gtl'leraUon 30 yeara old and under,·· he says. The clue ia pel'.lonallty. accordJn1 ~o McMahan. Adverttsln(, partlculerly bl. televt&lon, "must Identify the product as havl~.J a senae 6f hwnor or to be helpful and frienc111." ., Although he semi-retired to ralse avocados north of San Diego, h• still does consultant work and writing which require hlm to watch 14,000 tetevtston comniercWS annually and pipk 1,000 "milestones of chant1-QI communicaUotts. •• Tht bilt cotnmil'eials of aU. cMahan think• hll L ~1a11 hosiery and ~tyhos•. He saJd, 11Hanu Hollery of North Carollila came on the market II\ 1971 with L ·ea gs at a time when there were 600 br'1td• -and none hid more than I percent Of;th& market. With a 1ood name, packqing in plaltlc eggs and aelf·iervice dllplay in supermarketa, L '•111 sold up to 30 percent of the market th• flrat y-ear. It's a trem~ dou11tory." current styles! - I. "She's someone. the pupils can identify with. She tells them, 'I know what you 're going through,· and they realize it ... In her f 1rst teaching job, Mrs. Winship bubbles with happi· ness. Now 23, she has been deaf since she was 3 a.s the result of 0..1, P'llet __ ,, lllCMN lt- 868 Berry signs to a student. ""'.··· Sign Der Bea <From Page Cl) for the interpreter lo give the gist of 1t all," in a tegular classroom. Plus. dea( studen&s can 'l take notes while watcbinghvsign She sai~at the admmistrallon at sec has n supportlve of the pro· gram, indl ting that it could become part of the turriculum "when we get 20 Cdeaf) students." Meanwhilt. her philOl>Ophy remains stron&. ''I want to encourage young people in their education, and there are young deaf students who feel they would Uke t.o have their education in a Christian college. There are some who would like to give their lives to the m inistry "QUAUnED DEAF persons can meet the needs or other deaf people s ince they've had the same ex· pcrience:>, Jlld they serve as excellent role models for the young deaf," said the Riversidl' resident In addition to signing in classes for sec·. deal day students, she also in· terprets for them at Chapel, a youth· oriented church service of singing, s pecial speakers and panel dis· cussions Mrs. Berry has been the co-pastor with her husband , John, at Riverside's Calvary Silent Temple for 21 years. The Berrys have four children and have helped raise nine fos ter children. "Some of them were deal,•· she said She has interpreted for the deaf in court, in emergency hospital rooms, at juvenile hall, in psychiatric wards, in schools and churches. For four years she was the head interpreter at Riverside City College, and she has taught sign language courses as a community service She interpreted gospel rock music two years ago at a celebration at Magic Mountain and "really got caught up with what I was doing." Her greatest compliment? For a deaf person to tell her, "Gee, I thought you were deaf, too~· I • • • Tallman Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Bodenhoefer celebrated their soth weddina an- niversary with a sur- prise open house buffet hosted by their sons and daughters-in-law, Mr and Mrs. William J . Bodenboefer and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth R. Bodenhoefcr. <From PageCl> That ume month another tragedy struck Tallman. ~ left leg, broken in a go-cart acci- dent, refusfd to heal and bad to be amputated below tbe )cjiee. But With characteristic flair and determina· tion he was ackin the air within five weeks. One Of is most memorable moments came in 1967 wh he re-created Charles Lindbergh's triumphant af"lt.val 1ri Paris for the 4oth an- n.\versary o l'e'blstotlc night. "We t that airplane from the ground up ao I knew ~ alrplane as well as Lindbergh did," he ~cL 'It was the same size, weight - everythliig u Spirit of St. LOuis. I'm very proud oftt·" The party for the Bodenhoefers, who were married Sept. 20, 1927, was held Jn Big Bear City, where the former Costa Mesa residents have a summer home. They now Uve in Lan- ders. Bode.nhoefer owned a boat yard in Newport Beach in the 1920s and later had an upholstery \ business in Costa Mesa and PaJm Springs. . spinal meningitis. · Her parents, Fred and Ann Swearingen of Carlsbad, provided her with speech therapy, and Denise earned a bachelor'• degree at California State University at Northridge. In addition, she holds special teaching credentials in elementary educa- tion and special education and is com- pleting a master's degree at Nortbridge. She's alSo the un* paid teacher of 20 adults and young peo- ple unable to hear but woo are enrotled in the CarlSb d school every Thursday. A deputy Calif omia attorney general, William R. Winship, says his wife is ·'dynamite, dynamite.·· Until they met, Winsiiip never knew a deaf. person, but they'\'e solved their own com- munication probJem with the. help of sign language. She teaches with the help of finger spelling and facial gestures as well as sign language and· iip reading. E,...a .... Welc Someday, I'll Age I never go to a collece reunion that I don't come away feeling sorry for all those paunchy ba I ding jocks trying to hang" oot.o )'QUth. ' I feel sorry for the men tOO. • Mayya and I always sit together. We seem to be the only two in the class Who have fought the battle of middle ace and won. "How do we do it?" I whispered watching the class of '49 dance away in merctrui darkness. "I f~~i like Marie Osmond at a Prune Festival." I know what you're say"ing," said Mayva. "Look at Ginger Horwich. Can you believe she's wearing glasses this thick? Blind as a bat." "Where?" I asked, dieging in rny purse and hold!!'i my bifocals to my nose like a lormiette. And what about Marci Mill'1'1 WhO is she fooling with that caftan?" "Mayva, as I have always said, 'You show me a woman in a caftan and I '11 s~w you a Jot of fat that doesn't fit.' Incidentally, isn't that caftan a lot Ukeyours?" . ''No," said Mayva irritably, ''mine has no waist. Ob my goodness, would you look at who just came in. Mary Mooset>aum With hair as wtiite as the driven snow. Who does she remind, you of?" "Thomas Edison." "ExacUy. Of course,• we 15!\0uldn't laulh. Someday our hair will start to turn u<I we'll no . longerbe ... " .. , "Henna No. 4. Bey, look at the next table. It s the, class success, Barbara Judson, our newly-elected Senator. They're sure making a big fuss over her, but I respect her. If you have to wor~ to .m~e ends meet, you have to work. Bes.ides, 1t ought lead to some~nr big. At least she s not like Paula ~rin&le." "That. vicious old broad," said Mayva, "never has a kind word to say about anyone. I'm going over and tell her how mu~b I've missed her." f Aa Mayva left the t:lble, l couldn't help re·. marting to my huaballd, "Mayva looks old. Wonder how lonr it will take' me to start showing my age?" ·"·~~-... ...,,, ----.......... -~._ ___ ,,_ .... _ into an ~citin Clcle. Don't tako too much for ~"cu -• LEO <July 2$Aue. 23): Legal affairs, prop· erty considerations, appralsals command at- tel\t on. ~o ~nsibillty. VJBGO (Aug. +'·Sept, 22>: Finish rather than btlgin -accent distrJbution, display, forward·loC)k.i,ng sales campaign. Aries Libra fl"1ro n scenario. Backstage cltmpsea dominate. UBRA (Sept. %3.0ct. 22): bphasls on et· tllne c:lil.,reementT, •unorthodox approach to problenu, new starts, being creative, indepen· dentandorl&lnal. Yes, Leoiainplcture. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21>: Follow throueh on hunch. ltave faith in your .extrasensory percepUon. Unusual situation, changes, substitu· tions will work in your favor. SAGITl'AlllUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Highlight flexibility. Concentrate on e:tpansion. Tak~ Iona· range view. Phitoaopby, religion, journeys, education -these command attention. CffRICORN (Dec. a2.Jan 19>: Avoid showdowns, confrontations. Bide your time. Be shrewd, patient, observant -deal witb Aquarius, Scoprpio persons. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Obtaiil hint from Capric;orn message. Emphasis on sign~tures, contracts, biodin1 aareements, marital status. , PISCES <Feb. 1g...Marcb 20): Accent on home adj':15tment, purchase of luxury item. art ob]ect or Jewelry. Taurus, Libra, Scorpio figure prominently -and so does number "6." • • • Solo <From Pa&e Cl) Maybe you would like to go back to school and take a few night classes (it's another way to meet other singles). In fact, a college professor who was recently divorced told me becoming a solo was the greatest thing that ever happened to her. Why? Because for the first time in her life she 'had her own room. ,,) Hopefully, through this' column, I'll be able to share some of my own funny (and not so fun ny) experiences with you -and I hope you will share yours with me. In addition, I will be talking to ex~rts in the field about living alone, dating, chUdren and dealing with life in a positive and assertive way. And, pethaps, we wtll be able to come up with some suggestions about how and where to meet other sin1les. Until next week ..• • Orapert• • Carpehng • Wall Covering •furniture • Upholaterlng • 8tdroom Entem~ GEORGE PRINCE, 25, POSES IN MIAMI BEACH _Photographer Kaaaan Doaen't Love Thia Job It's 'Beefeake' Will It Sell Miami Beach? . · MIAMI BEACH, Fla. <AP> -After 75 years of aelllnl Florida with pictures of beautiful womesa playing on the seasllc>n, Miami Beach publicista are tryin1 a male cheesecake pboto- eraJ>h .. "The mothe~ of the models are always coming in and look· tng at all the girls• pictures on our walls and asking wby we don't · tend out any pictures of men," says Dick Kassan, photographer for the Miami Beach Tourist Development Authority. "WE ALWAYS SAID THAT men aren't as sracelUl, that 4f'tlsts have always found a woman's curves more beautiful,'' Kassan said. But a letter from the Dade County Commilslon on the Status of Women prompted some rethinJdna. Dorothy Yates, head of the commission, complained about a city tourist map adorned with a woman castln& sultry loolca from the shore. The caption: "A guide to Miami Beach wlldllle." "This commission does not feel that the pbotoarapm dis· played provides a proper image for Dade County nor a proper im· age for women, and we hope that in the future you will take into consideration the cbangin1 imaae ol women," Ms. States wrote. KAS8AN SAID HIS OFFICE didn't plan to amwerthe letter, but decided to include a male 1n their monthly maillns ot pictuns and aee bow much it was used. He said he wasn't particularly enthuslaatic about ct-::• a \ male cheesecake picture. But a former body·bulldlnl pion referred him to a Mt a ml gym. The owner, George Prince. qreed to pose and carried It off without looking u awkward u ht felt. "I felt awkward too, because I didn't know bow to poee blm," Kassan said. "A girl, I Know bow to make them look graceful. A man can look klutzier but I did have him do some of the same things -run out of the water and so forth. I'm golni to have to de· velop some new techniques if this thing catches on." Kassan added, ''Our job ia to fill hotel rooms. U thil will db lt, I'm for it." the nucJ .~~i;~:~ Y m. Slit wbtsi they Cfo, tbelt power. 1eneratlQa fnnP'da Will. be left daocerously radloact1v fron1 yean ot expolUl'.e to th4t en a bunta ot •plittinl atom.. And \bey wlll ""' "bot" aM ba1ardOU1 ff»'. period.a of tlrlle that male• hlUllan 1enerat1om 1eem llke merelmtants. l'BE NlJCLBA& ioduatry'a cblef expert in thla field baa testified that lt wOuld take ~1.350 years for the carbon-14 radioae· Uvity created in a 111-cooled nuclear plant to decay "to accep- tablj low levele." Tboexpert, Wllllam J. Manioo. a dinalon praldent of Nuclear Energy Serviees. Inc .• tettllled It wOllld take betw~ 234,000 and SOS,000 yeara for the acceptable decay ot nickel·59 radioactivity / In water-cooled reactors, the kind alraldy lo 1eneral use. It was Manion who directed a study published in November 1976 for the Atomic Industrial Forum, the nuclear Industry trade or11nhatlon wblcb estimated the coats of k.eepm, these "bot" poweir plant& Lsolat· ed lrom the public and the en· vtronment BASICALLY, MANJON'S study identified two ways of do- in& this: Tear down the radioac· live power plant Immediately, with careful IUld cosUy protee· SWIFTAllfE WINS INCREASE SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -'lbe state Public Utiltttea Comt mission will allow Swift Aire Lines a $1.!iO fare increase on all flights from Los An1eles, Sacramento and San Francisco. The increase, which may be put into effect Dec. 1, will raise revenues by 5.1 percent or $201,000 annually. Swift AlJ'e will have a $258,000 annual operating loss on the basis ot operations for the first six months of 1171, the PUC nat- ed. The rate.boost will not offset the entire lou. Detaikd Labe& Hit .Wine Institute Says Data Could Be Confusing SAN FRANC LCO (AP) -Toomucb detail on a label might mislead consumers who aren't wine connoisseurs, according to government and in· d\4stry leaders opposed to some new federal reawa- tions. "The forced -rather than voluntary -re- quirement of the percentace of the primary crape on the label inevitably sug1ests to the uninformed buyer that h111¥!r numbers mean better wines, which in reality may not be the case,•• George Vare Jr .• chairman of the Wine lnatitute's -committee on * * * 5.Gallo Wines Honored Over The Counter MASDLJ~ .. 2 4'1'1 1f l) 11 I All9Pw 1 .. I 11} AlltnC.P 10 I )9 ~:::(.JJ.•n ~·~ d~ AllQMnl .• • J .-.110Pa .oto 4 AllO~I• I, 10 6 7l AllCl'>~I> SI C.r~ . ..;.: ei -,,llo .... : C..t"-w I t S 11'-... , CM1HW>I 2 • J 32 ' ••• , CMIVA"'TI .40 t 10 '"" ... ClscNG ~ I 37 I'-•. C.utlOt IOb I 1U 101+ l't • (Mrplr 1 I011 '31 ~~· ''• C.c~ ntt •Sot.-·~ C.l.,l1t 2 IOIO JO 4H.-1,, C.1.,,pt4~ •• S SIYJ-V> c.nc.o . t7 s .... C.nlu 16 I llt ll', • 1-t C.nSoW 1 26 I 161-15 .. , \<II C.nH..O 1 .. 1 l'I 20 , -''t C.nllLI I'° 10 .ll \1>;, \o Cnll.lpf 2 "'. •lJO JO>t -~ Cl>l 1.1 Ill 2 •2 1200 , ... -'·• •• ConllPS 12t10 JI 14\o • \<t CMIL.aE I 40 8 4' 21 • , •• '• C.tMPw 1.40 f •I I&~• \: .~ g~~r, a•, m u~ .. -... 1 QtnlrO.I 1 'I 107 d19'1,,-'• Crl IHC! 70 I 31 2S + 1'1 OtHAlr I 44 1 11 lO"w + l't 8:::.'fln: ;& , ~ 2~ i: -I• 014m~ ... I 14S 101o\ 0-.l'ICo .16 6 A9 4 OlrlNY 2 12 6 4l 18 o -• Qw;Fd 70. • 11 'I'•+ Vt OlblM 2 20 7 490 21' J ... Q\ll>eT S. 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C.11~" t1 •S , I N -IOI en w 11 n '*° _.,,, .. ._ Cn * ftll 16 • ll10 U --\It 2'.. . • SS•· .. I, ~·· ~ ,, •• t ) .. . 1S -'• .. .. ,., .... '°'I Ah .. \0•1. 21 • , .. ~~nilfr122~ ·~ ,ii 2~::::::: Con1C4' .. 17 l"'"-~ C.nlC If I ZS •• tlilO IZ'•• I.ti tentlC:lil J 6 '*> •t~ l>'I cn110r1111 20 1 83 11 ..... \.'• CnlOOPr l .. 2• •-'-Conllll I:» • 102 24••• \;i C.On111 P 1 2121 Joi I•"'• i... (OnlllRI 21 H•,. .. <.on1011 1 00 I ~I~ 2t -. ~ (.Ol\llel 1 It ' 4<14 U -W C.110•1• 15 1 121 IOh+ \;i CnOI of ' SO t/O •1 -I C.on*O 110 I a 2o\o ... I. toot.Un 1'1 i JZ J~ .. "t.; ~:L~b1 ~IJ IOJ th,! .. c-i>TR .10 l l 11~1 ... .. l llS .. 1 IPll ... . .1. 7 10 , •• ,., .. "" 110. .. 111,.1-'• • 2010 ll 2 ·-'. I S211 211 54'.o-'" I .IO t I !He-It (.~~~-:. iS. ~ ,)t!:.. ·;,,. ~~1" 1·.~ li j1tt~-~ fkk~·1 "'• \;; =111' ~~~ ,.Ht' J ' 'tt-t\oi ~~~~ '] i t .. ~:~ c~~". t-\ii ~~~?;~ '. ,, ~-··" WtflM,. I '"" iltt¥1t . I ' I .... , ~~r.:.t, J , I t +·k tf«•• t d \>'I+ t; Cyprllt I~ -0 --h ' egal TRE PRODUCTS INVOLVED AR_ thoso lh t. are n. canned or hermtUcaUy aealtd d thus Jose or 11.iti ' mot.tun tween t.ht time tht1 leave the factOty and hlath tbl ahopplna baske,. Th•• lncJudt nour. ftlh, rnut a t1 poultr)' bttad, 1oap1, fl'Oien tooela. c , ri and pasJ.Q Under federal reaulalions, sach items must wei1h tM amount stamped on the package •t the time aro sbtpptd from th• plant. Bt U1 Uroo t)' havo rtacbed grocery sbelvte. "rtucanablt variaUons" lh th\ al· lowed. lt.'I thl l'OIPoi\)Jblll· ty of it.ate lnapector1 to check packages at the retail store, but under ambiguous Ceder al rules, each inspector i5 ' left to figure out for ""'_.._._ ___ ,...._,,,,_. hi msell what coldUtutes a ."reasonable" 1hort11t ta1 loss ol moisture Until this year. atate and local weights and m•••ures of· fiola.ls, acting under stricter state laws. pulled short- we111hted Items from the stores. But ln Much the U.S. Suprtme Court ruled that. federal laws, no manv how va1ut, preemptstate an4 local regulat.lo~. THUS, SAY STATE INSPECfORS, they a~ prevented from .Protecting consumers agalfl!t abort· weighting. • Food processors and packagers of other weight-labeled products are hurt too, when a manufacturer labels h1' package as 18 owices but packs less in it and undersells hll coinpeUtior. Wholesalers and retail eta also Tely on accuru wel1bt.s and measures. Conetrned about the dangera, state and local officials, farm organlutlotia, con.urner 1roups and co-operaUve:s have petlUoned the Department of Agriculture, the Food and Dru1 AdmintStratJon and the Federal Trade Com· million to tithten up A1 one illuatralion. the Arrtculture Department is workinJ lo reVise regulatJon1 aoverruna meat and poultr)' producw. ••wg Alt£ MOVING TO llEMEDY the difficulty creat- ed b~ th• Supreme Court declslon," Hf• Carol Tucker Foreman, ... l1\anl agriculture secretary tor food and nutrition nrvlc•. As another llluatntion, the American Meat Institute agree1 With etatea• eftoru to change the federal laws. "We want a wU!orm atuidanl uniformly enforced;· says a spokesman "not $0 dJfftrtnt stat.e standards ... Mean;\ule, many state inspectors are trying to keep short-weighted items off the market "We are even risking contempt of court citations by pulling items off the shelves," says Herbert. Cohen, COWlSel for California's Department or Food and Agriculture. "Weights and measures officials around the country are holding the line, but they can't.cootlnuetor 1001." Dow Average Stays Near 800 Leilel NEW YORK (AP> -The stock market w .. fairly lb· ble in cautious trading today following stffp dtollnes earlier in the week. The Dow Jones industrial index, which closed a\ a t•o- year low ot I00.85 Wednesday, flirted near the 800 level for llSt.&Ch of the •111100. Tht averaat of ao industrial stocks feU to about 797ln • early tradln11 rallltd a btt. then slipped aiain by af\ernoon.. Tht J>owlnduatrlal 1vtrageclosedat802.67, upl.82poinu; • "Thi market '"m• to run into buying support when the DOw movt1 below tht 800 level," said Alan c. Poole of Laidlaw & Ooa111ball lnc. Lo.en llsu~ out.numbered gainers by a slim 7·6 ratio today alter margins of more than 2·1 earlier in the day. Analysts said the government's report of a sharp in- crease m wholesale prices in October wu lar1ely anUclpat· ed by the market. which also eltpecled disappointing news when the Federal RMerve Boatd rel1ued mone>-1llpply figures after the close of the NYSE this afternoon. OotolonnAr~ra~• Whal Slo~k• Old .~n.ltrt.IAPl Fl,../ Oow"'-t• .. r•ges 11 ~ CloM Cl>Q l!IO » I02 61 + I 11 T ., 201 tt-o.» rr a: ' J ':.,,. 101 n -0 2l \i jJ 1 i I~ 2S 21H•· ~ ~ .'.'.:',:•,•:.·:.::',',','.",'.'.'.'.. I,~ ·····················JS .. t. ,,..................... 2.t20,JOI IW YOR .. IA91)· Mies.' p "'· .,ltt Mt c~ IN IOfl ,.,... 1«111'1 ''"" •• ,1*>0e .. -. ti.. tr ac men 111en s1. "" •••• !"AGO 21¥' + .. v .. ,........ 40.000 llh -"' N I""' ca....... 31,aoo '"' -.,. v ....... Ii...... "·"°° J" 1 "' Ec .. 11 ~.. ...... 31,'90 l>"' •• .,, s,n1111 Coro...... ll,100 6\.• + h K•IHr ~ ... ,.. 31,* •~ .... ""°"' y .. • .. • »~5GO ,.... + \.. Glouutr n..... 22 11-. • 10\o 1.,,,..,. ......... t ·~ .,. "' #UIVll~ .. btell...o vncrieng<>d "'"· -r.Mr ~ I -T ol•I I\ \UH Ntw lfll ll•tM NtW IYI/ IOWl SAL.•i ,.J NEW YORK IAP) -NY SIOCll .... APC>'Ox I_. .. • • .. . • .... " , • 11.otO, Pre~lou' o.r ............... . JO,~ mr''" ~ltzii-.\/.:::·~~~~~:~;:~1: •t• • .Ute , .. .. • . . .. • • • 4.•11 ....,., '11 te.,... .... ........... ~tJ•.m.1 WHAT AMl!Jt 010 NEW YORK IAP I ,.llPtOIC fllll:-Je" ....... •" • .. MIC~...... ... ......... . ~rO• f"'4 Mnd .... ••• .. ••• 8oncl MllU Y.., ...... , ,., .,, • t Sl~1" l'M 'l'lae Spot llgltt I I I r~- FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY ' Sweeter dreams Here's a charming touch of yesteryear for your bedroom. Headboards are made of brass plate over steel to give years and years of pleasure. Choose exactly the size you need. BRASS TYPE HEADBOARDS, Twin Reg. 35.99 Queen Reg. 44.99 19.88 26.88 King Reg. 49.99 29.88 Full Reg. 39.99 23.88 Not available al 111& Orange slore. A swag with character Conramporary swag ramp blends lhe old fashioned charm of cane w11h a sleek moaern design. The result ls a dehghtlul swag for any room m your house Natural cane with 12' of brass chain. 15' of cord Scalloped shade measures t3"x16". Model :1397.34 CANE SWAG, Reg 29.99 16.88 Not available at the Orange store. When quality work comes flrat Use this high-grade hardwood plywoOd for truly profesalon1I resulla. It's esptclelly good for cabinet work. Ask any do-it· yourselfer who does ii with wood. 4'x8'XY•"· HARDWOOD UTILITY PLYWOOD, Reg.8.99 6.88 The wal te waiter Thia Waste King Disposer thrivea on food w11tes too tough tor others to handle, Ilka bOnea, stalk• and stringy foods. OHlgned lor &Yeryday e<:onomy, efficiency and relleblllty. F1t1 any .ink with a 3Yz" drain opening. v~ h.p. Model.#1000. Refreshment at your fingertips ti's a thermos that dispenses your favorite b8'(erage through a con- 11enlent spout. Just press, end enjoy. tn assorted decora1or designs. Ot. - Model ~P150·A ALLADIN PUMP·A·DRINK, Reg. 12 99 9.88 ' Not available at the Orange store. A pric81ess pair Use the power tape favored by the pros for accuracy every time. ARd with this fine tape, you'll get a dependable "Sheffield" hand saw. That's a deaf every smart do-it-yourself er will appreciate. FREE 26" NICHOLSON HAND SAW WITH PURCHASE OF 16' LCJFKIN TAPE, 7.99 j Legs that get admiring looks Add strenglh and elegance io tablet, plant stands, fumiture with these f\Vrutltre·quality WOOd tumlnga. In Colonial, Mediten.Man and Traditional ltYI•. EMCO HUSKY TABLE LEGS, 8* Reg. 1.19 88c 'if' Reg. 1.79• 1.28 14· Reg. 2.69 1.98 21" Reg. 3.99 2.88 Not available at the Orang• atore. .. - A handsome return on your money An Investment In a pecJ<y cedar Loon 1peclal because It Is This board was ptcked because lt'1 top quality pine. so you can put up ahelvfno with..,, expenalve, custom look. Tl'Nt your home, fence really pays off In reli- able protection ror child· ran. pell and property. And, with &Qe. It takes on an attractive natural, ruslic 1ppearance. Weather-resistant 1 x 12 x 8'. PECKY CEDAR BOARDS, Reg. 1.99 ea. 1.58 ea. The 1h0wer revoluUon Showet1 will never be the aame. The Shower ~· bY W1ter Plk9comblnes a to1allyunlque pu!Mllng action with a genii• tptay·Rke shower=Juats from a conventional spray to a ma action or• combination or the. two. Model SM·2.; THE SHOWER MASSAGE BY WATER PIK8, and yourself, to th fl,,.st tOday. 1x12x6'. SELECTED PINE SHELVING, Reg. 2.75 ea. 2.10 ea. WASTE.KING DISPOfER, Reg.34,99 Rtg.19.99 28.88 14~ .u.,.. kCttt to d 9o)'IJ £Marr-, c.. ha 0-MtClrtDly oltM tlril Pnller f• a..,~ Olllo. Dear loyal Elvia Cao. J'in IUr'C tbat yoa are u disJUlted u I am .wr tht cheap and undignified memcntcm Ol our hero that ha~ appeared aince hiJ ~ni. So, wt the mcmbm of the Elvia Praley fan Oub heri in Canion, Ohio, decided to do tocnethina about it. We have orpnir.od a propam to produce a memorial to Elvia that would be dipiried, Lut forever, be nmembertd in hiatoric archivea. and be nluable ao it •ould be lccpt aod protected. The item we •uled on filll the bill beyond our wildest dreams. ID cooperation with the United States Commemoratl~ Gallery, we ari producina a limited number of these inemoriala .which are dedicated only to loyal fans of Elvis Praley. The historic object dedicated to you is an uclusive. limited edition. memorial plale. But. this plate ii different from any other limited edition plato ever made. The plaie Is beins done by rhe foremost expert on this type or commemorative plate:, the Unilc:d States Commemorative Gallery. 1t is done: f&m claaa. We even ..-cot to Germany to get the top plate craftsmen in the world. Fil1l. your plate will be in a unique display case with this imcription engra¥td fol't\'er on a broue memorial plaque: "Elvis With You Forever", memorial plate; Serial No. (Yow p/att's s"kll 11umbtr hm). dedicated to (you1 11/J~ htrt). Now here is the second big r~our plate is so diflc:nnt from any other com- mcmonlive plate. Your name wiU be immortalized wilh Elvis. This plate will have a histoncal registry book in The Library of Congress which contains the names ind addresses of the select people, such u yourself, to whom this special memento wa1 dedicated. • The valuable feature: thlt insures that this plate will be kept ind protected will also be a nwanl to the fans who make this memorial pouiblc. The reward 11 thiJ -this plate hu an excellent chaOQt olbecominaa solid wet _ - a WtY lar&ic eolid uxt. An expert on limited edition plates, Geor,e Gittelson or the United States Commemorative Gallery, pvc: hiJ expert opiruon that thiJ plale wiU become ooc o( the higllat priced coUcctors' items in the history of commemorative plates. Hm's why: I) It is a limil.ed edition; 2) the apcc:iat plalc: artwork and color rcprodiaction tcckniquc is by the world leader in the fxld , RICHARD FRITSCH KG of Wat Germany. The German m.utcrcran.me11 Herr Moertl and Keifncr, witb their handmade procesa arc used by the top cobectibla china companies of the world inclucSin& ltotenthal and Hutschcnreuther: 3) t'w poac is the most provocative of Elvia in b.itcaiwr;4) the art ia in full color ft.red fomer on a plate that will stand the test of timr; S) cbc plate material is the best there ls. fine china alld gold; 6) the historlccl.ua of limited edition plates goes up in value at tJle highest rate; 7) it com· mtlMflte. a 'once in the hUio'ry of the world event -the life of Elvis Presley. Elvis will definitely be considered aa part of American history and heritqe; 8) the unique hiJtorical rc:ptry book. unique In the collectible plate field, ICJVCI to make this plate a f1mous . .commodity; and 9) plates or thia quality almost ll'nys go 11p in valite at 1 high rate (put history ahows aood limjtc:d edition plates incnuina in value ~ in ju.st two )Un and alter that the ~ is the limit). The price O<thb memento baJ been kept u 'rcuonable a possible. Most com- mtmorative plates of tbil caliber sell for SS$.OO to $200.00 lor just the plate alone. the total prioc of the Elvis Praley Com- memorative Plate, wooden frame., ensraved bronl.Cd name platt ud hiJtoric registry book ia only SJ7.00. Why Was A Plate Chosen As The Best Memorial To Elvis? Wht11 tM many artifacts dlstovtrtd ln thL qyp1lon pyramids ..wrt Wt«lftlttd tht ob}ttts tnJJtil of wood and cloth wtrti dttO)wl and darltQitd. HDWrlrr. tltt t:m1m/( trtasurts madt thou.sands of yeor1 aio wtrt 111 JNrftct condition. TMH cmzlfff( trtasurts stood tht ttst of tlmt as a P"mantnJ and lasting mtmtnto to tht £option ('U/turt. With tht portrait of Elvis firtd into tltt pfatt by tht sptcial ttthnlquts of Gtrma11 craftsmm. tht fKJ'lrait actually bontlt and btcomts pall of tht plait. ThiJ ruara11ttts tlu11 thls mt11JDfi4/ to £Ms wlll hut f orrwr as did ctramk's found in tltt 5,000 • ytar • old Egyp1u111 pyramids. Pbtt F.m al Spcdfkadom by Gtorft Gitttlson United States Commemorative Galltry ARTWORJ( The 1rtwork reproduction and ceramic firing technique used to create the ceramic color matrix transfer for the Elvis Presley plate was done by the world leader in the field, RICHARD FRJTSCH KG, of West Gc:many. This compao~ has been produang fine ceramic color matrix transfera 'ince 1936. Among the many craftslllC'll working for Friuch are Herr Mocrtl and Keifncr, two of the most skilled mutercraftsmen in the world. They have produced ceramic color matrix transrers for the finest collectible art producers in the woi:Ld, such as Bjorn Wiinblld of Denmark ind Edna Hibcl of Germany. 11\c:ir artwork has been reproduc- ed on fine china such as Roeentl\ll ind Huuchenrcuthcr which sells for $195.00 for each plate. Moct ,cople think that commemorative art plates are made by limply taking a pi<:turc of lhe artwork and sticking al on the plate. Thaf's hardly the way it works. If you did that, it would soon ped, and the color would chanee Ind fade in a matttr of boun. You could not fire it .n for a permanent and lastina lifetime if you did that. Each ceramic eolor matrix transfer ii peu.takinaJy hand made. lbe process goes like this: Herr Moertl starts the an reproduction process by putting cloth ha in on the original artwork. Next, a cleat piece Of acetate is laid on the original artwork and an exact, matching ICl of cloth hairs ls marked on the acetate. The first color la very carefully penned in. with black ink, to exactly match where the color ia in the original painting. When one color is ~pie<~. the next color is reproduced on another clear piece o( acetate: in the wnc manner. Each color takes •bout twenty houn of work' to get au of tbi' necetaery detail of the original paintini. II usually takes from c:lcven to twenty colon to reproduce in ceramics the ame quality of tho on,inal artwork. Each acetate or "oolor 1eparation" la then photogJ1phed and expotcd to make a ceramic reproduction. AMhis time the art ~roduction -work is complete and it i1 turned o~r to the CCtMlic transfer matrill; production area headed by Herr Kc:ifner. Umltfd fdltlo'n plate wftb fnmt IJld Won%H penoulzed name plate. Each plate o'"1ft' wtJ1 ttttbe: I) The JQ&.S" full color MJ;lvis With You Fon~r" Jiroited edition. sequentially 1111mbtn:d, memorial ptaie; 2) A walnut mined, durable, real wooden frame:; 3) A bronz.ec:nara\'Cd name plait 011 thdramc wilhthepi&icnamc.p&tctitk. plate serial number and the name of the plate owner (your name:); 4) A historical archi~ rcaistry book witll the: highli&hts of Elvis' life and the names ind addrcaes of all the: owners of this limited~ition plate. Thia bootwiU go iato l~ UbraryofCongressandatbcT historical arehi~ · IMPORTAST1 The picture above comes nowhere near to doing this plate justice. The plate is in full color and is breathtaiini. EMs• shin is bright red, his acarf i.s red and black "polka dot, and the background is sky bloc. GENERAL SPECIFICATIONS: TYPE Commemorative, sequentially numbered, limiied edition SIZE J().l /2 inches CLASSIFICATION Commemorative BROKER Corpontt Oflka: United States Commemora1M Gallery ~26 Clewland Avenue N. W. Canton, Ohio 44767 Phone (216) 494-5065 8'rm DlfWoa: United States Commemorat.hle Gallery 5100 Pearl Road Ocvelaod, Ohio 44129 Phooc (216) 39S-l I 14 PLATE COMPOSITION Fine china wilh 24K aold trlm YEAR OF CASTING 1977 GUARANTEE: The value of the "Elvia With Y Oci Fomu'" commemorative:, memorial pl.ie le guaranteed for OllC full )Ur. The: United States Commemorative Gallefy agrees t() buy beck any o( t~ plates for the full purchaw price for one year from dale of purchase. ART TYPE The art on each plate of•EJvis With You Forever" will be an art print. For tbOte unf1m1liar wilh art printa. the lollmpJ pointa should be known: • An at1 print is not a reproduction of 11> ori&inAI paintin&- • A aourcematrix(fomi, mold.p1atc:,dl:.)ia created by an artist. An prinu are then made from thia aoarce nm!'ix; • h takca &JUI akin to create an art print source matrix so that the print wm be preciae with rapec:t 10 quality; color, brightness, color mix. colOr futMSS. etc. • Onli a limited edition or art prinll are prochiced from tlw ••rce matrix. The eource ma trill is then dtltroyed, lhetd'orc, Jhe existiaa prints can~ be duplicated again. Thia inakes the limited number o( uisting print& a very valuable and scarce commodity, PLAtt ENSHRINEMENT FlXTUJtE The unique enshrinement fixture ia IT x 12" and protecta and displays lbr: PRCiout memorial plate in ~ut fuhWn. Jt it inade or ,., woOd -wons and durable with walnut atafn. 'llltckdic&rioname pt.te ii brolimd en,,_ mt. (Sie f.liUre f.), SUBJECT Dl:SCRIPTION: With tbe9e Cacta in mibd, t11e•EMs With The 1rtwortifor the plale was chosen Ybu Fora-er" memorial plate lw en<Suah through a grueling prooeu of tesung over 4S unique aunounding circutnstanca to allow EIVJs poses while ll'\Clsuring the response it to ahallc:r all put appreciation recordund frem a large test voup of £1vit fans. The picture &hows Elvis at a perfeet middle: pat1 &O up in ~ue beyond the wildest dreamt or o.f hia career. Every wofhln says that the collq:tible art experts. picture Jends chllla down her spine. "The IASIC FACTS AND GUIDEUN!S eyes: says one woman, "it's in the eyes. They OF COLLECTIBLE PLA Tf.S are saying something wry intimate to you." . • . You immediately &et the rctliftf that Elvis. Today there u a new collectors boon:a Ul will be with you ahways.. And that'• how 1We proaresa. Plate j.10l~ting bu always bad a got the title for the plate "Elvis Wilh You l&cldy foUowiq for over 100 )UR. And, Forever". today tbousa.oda of collccton tbroupout HISTORICAL REGISTRY IOOl the counll)' u. paying top dollar for plates Each dcdicatce wiU have hia name. city, ~ are DO loll#f available ill sift or SI.ate, and plate: aumbcr recorded ill the dcputmat stores. And. every day "f.Ms W"ltb You fOttYCT.. Historical &homanda of oew collcc:tora enter the Rqj.uy Boole. The fll'll llllCtion will list marl.et. 10mC ol the .,-dnt emit.I ia lbe 11re ol Accordiai to Mara;uite A&b'WOl1h 'Elvia. The ltCIOnd ICICtion -W list t~ 11&1DC1 Bnnmer, author of ~lflif•ll/tW,4_.,_, or. the memorial plate dodicatea who are O• • Sio11trl•1 •1141«. it im.'I miual tlvis' loyal fans. This Historical~ forasin&leplat.etobrina$1,0C».00orrnon Book will be placod in: The Libflry of thouab it oriaiulJy COil oalJ SlS.00. And., Conpesa of The United Sta tel of America. abe also addl that IDOlt of thae oolJcccad Each dc:dicatce will abo receive aoopy alona P• are not rwnerily old. • with his memorial plate. Dmiq the Americu Revolutiotla.ry Wu. APPRECA TION ANALYSIS manyoftlae Brititbpottcmympathmd with It is, of COUl'IC, impossible to pmflct or guarantee the appreciation value of any collectible ittm. However, It is poaible to make an expert aPPfCCiation ualysia which can aivi a probable forecast hued on IGtuaJ, cue h.istoriet and pracnt kpowledae of the market, Bued on thia pmnisc, the wctJ of tlus plate ha¥t to iM it one of the hiaJ!est appreciation potcntiali of any limitid c:didon plate: e\'t?producc:d. The foJmnna ia a list of tbcle ..Sr. I. It ii a runited edition .... 2. The art is in full color 3. The plate material is the best tbcrc ia, fme cbina and gold the cok>oiltJ. AIDoq the more prominent at thelc £n&lish nmten WU Josiall Wedpood wbo wu the fll'lt to methaniu plate ma.tin& withou~ losina any-quality. le the late 1800'&, Wcdpood atarted inakin& petriotic plit.ea for the A(nericaQ marUt. ~ p'4tes became ao popular that Wedgwood dedicated one entire plant to handle the Aaicrii:an mart.ct. or coune. other muter potters from Germany, Den- mark. Md tJll: cwt of Europe sat in oo this aw.rtct. nmc plata m naturaOy an:ie aow. bu't tOday ~bit plates arc made acan:ie by the fact tb&t only &!Med namWI of cada desiaa are made. Al a ra1llt. many platea become utrcmdy wahJable In a wry abort pmod or time. OfC01ne, bc:inaa limitcdeditionia.notthe only thiea that makea a c:oJlcc:ton• plate valuable. Hu. ia a list of other thhtp to look lor before you in}'Clt your money. f .It it ~ hrlportant to bay a coDectlbk pJa(I: at tbe iirue price. Usually.uaoonu a limiJed edilioa iuo1d out. ft imirilDdiatdy iuaulCI iD ~ tha UK:rc:U1ial your ~t4ollat. ,,Platet witll fuU color art 11~ u lht hiahelt ntc. 6. Tbe molt vatuabki pljio u. the nwnbeRd. ~tcd Cid1tiooL 11iiC ~tea m naturally man raiaad liaw a~ awnber 011 Ute beet ._ llq With. number of plates it IM.~ Jn the manuflCture ol Om Clalaa, ftrioaa mbtura of city and Cl1lttDizl:d roCb aro put toptbct by thl pot~ Tb1i fl.DI! mixUire 91ust be l1ICh thit the~ or molded daJ cu witbltaD4 the a!t:ra bigb =~ flCCc:llley (or firinl flilC ch.ina: I OOrbam'• ~971 •&oJ mid In. Dot.. by Norman llockwtll. oriaimDJ aold for S<I0.00. It bu IOld lor aa IDtb a S«I0.00 'since l!lm. Lenox Bodim Bini ..... 1'171 "Oold- finch" WU iu\1ed at s.JS.00. Today. ii c:ommuda • price ot sno.oo. 8iaa a Grooclahl'• 1969 lkltl~· plato aoJd ror $9. 7,. h ... $470.00. Bina a Groodali.r• 1m antmie n.1 plate •frozaa W'llldoW:" Is 80W Wb11J1 Sl,000.00. Its issue price IQ 119$ -fifty c:cuta. Tho ~ ct -~ fia. colkdibla plates ~rile~~ mt~ ~~)'CUL GOodeo~~ ......... __,. on,i.t ~ prioa olW.OO to S200.00. . • • • . ~· ! • Leddy Cooper. part-Ume nu.rt& and mother oflo who &ot fed up With a oel1bborhood youth 1an1 that went ffOID "punt" bebaTSor to eertoua crime. la tbe Chlcap Crime Commi11loo'a top a.an1buat.er ot the year. Before brlqlni peace to her North Slde nel&bborbood streets, she eald she and other reaidenta bad to endure the "bewilderment, ra1e and frustration" of a criminal juatlce system that pats victims ........... of crime "al an extreme diaad· ---• vant.aae." Jt took nearly four years, but the eani'a overt criminal acUvitie.s have virtually eel.Md. Mrs. Cooper said. It.a leader ls In Jail tor murder, and convictions were won ln 39 of 42 cornplalnta brouaht . by cltluns who "were determined that some.. thing be done corrie hell or bl&b water,'' she aaid in an interview. .. Sen. Georae McGovern canceled a ~ay visit to Yale Unlversit7 because he refuses to cross picket Unes set up by Yale's 1,400 striking employees, the worker1' union said. Tbe South Dakota Democrat. who wu scheduled to urive at Yale for a Chubb tellowlbip, said that "under no circumstances would he cross our pl~)d lines," said Vln~t Slra~ business manaeer of Local 35 at the Federation of McOOvu• University Employees. Another Chubb fellow, Mayor Ienneth Gibson of Newark, N. J., was creetedwtth sboutsof "scab" lut month u he crossed picket lines to participate in the fellowship. • Glovanbattlsta Meneghlnl, the estranged husband or the late soprano Muta Callas, donated a 16th century altar piece t.o an Italian church to PEOPLE )' • S Sen. Bubert H. ''SIEip" eldest eon ot Minnesota'• beat·known nounced bl• candidacy for Congress 1n the suburban 3rd District oltbat state. The 35-year-old lawyer said he will seek the endorsement of Mlnneaota',s Democratlc· Farmer-Labor ~arty to run a1ain1t Republican incumbent BW FremeL. Alto seeking the endorterneot h Michael Preeman, 29, a Rlchfteld lawyer and ·son tJl former Minnesota Gov. On1De Freemaa. Y C>UDg Humphrey said be consulted his fa th er 1.' -_..,..---....,........,'""!""~~-i about the congressional race and sald he wu ad-P1CTtnouuu1a• ... vised: "Make up your mind, get going and let's talk ••MUTAT._NT about it after you've reached a deciaion." • Former Georgia Gov. Lester Maddox says tre still feels weak from a recent heart attack, but not too weak to criticize President Carter for "go!ni in too many direct.ions." "I've been low before, but never this low," Maddox said in an interview at hi& home, where the flamboyant anti·int.eerationist is reeuperating from : a severe heart attack which felled htm in Sep-tem ber. The 62-year-old Maddox said be probably won•t be able to resume his normal activities u a real estate dealer and a nightclub performer before Jan. 1,1978. Killer Faces Life Tern\ LOS ANGELES (AP) -Sentencing Is set for Nov. 30 tor an allesed member of the Black Guerrilla Family convicted of first-degree murder, aaaault and robbery. Michael Cowan1, 11, waa found 1u11ty Wedneact-.y by a Superior Court jury of tiWnc two men and ~ another man and a woman tn wba~ POllce called a retall.atoey attack against heroin thieves. Inn· Fire. Kills 4; Others Sa/ e .. NEW C~E. Pa. (AP) -A fire swept through a Holiday Ion in this western Pennsylvania commurllty before dawn today, killing at least four people, authorities said. Several others were injured leaping to safety. A 23-year-old Columbus, Ohio, man was credited with alertins many of the SS overnight euesta at the 100-room motel just ou.atside the city line. •'I woke qp to an UpI~." said Michael Lynch. ''"Jbere wu a security 8'W'd who said he ~ouldn't 1et the tire out with a fire ~xthlgulsber, ao I went through the halls yeWn~F\re, fire' I" · • · ~ saved a Jot of lives," said one rump ed suest who escaped unharined. "If il hadn't been for him, I'd probably still be in there.>' ' Cowans, convicted of two count.a each of murder, aaaault with a deadly weapon and robbery,. could receive Ute in prison. •r•.,. Orders •eiter Care LOS ANG~ (AP) -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Ir. has stepped into the patient care crisis at Metropolitan State Hospital, orderinl state health and finance officlala to plan immediate improvements at the mental inltituUoo. The governor made a surprise visit Wednesdiy. t.o the bospttal in suburban Norwalk, where three wards have been closed to new patients and an Inspection team bu reported numerous health and tnatment deficiencies. Vletl• Flada Bal'etl SYLMAR <AP) -A 33-year-old cerebral palsy victim whoee grandfather was beaten t.o death by a robber wearing a Halloween mNk and costume was beln8 cared for at the Spastic Children'• Foundation, a foundaUoo spokesman aald. ( J lmre A. Robitaek, SJ'.4.TE who is OC?Dfined to a · . wbeelcbaar, was left without relatives follo'fin& the death of b1s crandfather, Zoltan Rob1taek. 68, a textile ezporter-lmporter. M...terAtU..pt Rap Doletl INDIO CAP) -A P-.Jm Sprtnp psychlatrtat hu pleaded innocent to a cbar1e of sollcitbur the mu.rder of Dr. J'aJDa O'Connor, sz. a Yucea Valley •eneralpractitloner. Dr. Morten Kurland, .CS. accused of blrlnc a J)Olice Unclereovet" aaent PQllJll u an ua1111n to k:W O'Connor last July, Is to face trial Dec. 30 in Blvenlde CoUlitf Superior Court. . TRS.PLEX NEWY STIHGf 2* MINER ST W at e r Ir o n t ; n e Yi PIMHSULA POIMr Serv1nq Cost.1 Mesa·lrvine H untington Beach·Ncwport Beach Gd C.M. k>c., xlnt lnc. • ~d Is pier; 30x100 tax shelter. Oj>en dally, R·2 lot with cbarmiq Ownt act . sus,ooo . house + 1ueat cottage. 5'8·5777. S17S,000 4 Bdnn., 2 bL home. All ameniUes. Lovely area, few steps to beach. $189,500 t--~~~--~~-1 ldboalayl'ro~ UDO ISU • HUNTINGTON •. GeMra1 too2 •EA.CH lttciffora " ... 67~7060 * Newly remodeled 4 bdrm., den, .4 b aths, living rm. w/cathedral ceiUrig. Lge. master ~m. suite. $221.950 E:RllOIS: Ad•trffser1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• FOUR UNITS COSTA MESA ...... _.. Four IUX\lrloua untts wJt)) -d ch.ck ~Ir ad1 CAMEO SHORES spacious owner's unit. D,UPLEX dcUJy tind report er· From the moment you Almost carrle1. Owner Ch arming picket fence rors l,_dlahly. The enter courtyard gates of will trade. For profit pro· duplex with private yard DAILY PILOT assumes this Cameo Shores beau· Jectlon lncJudln1 tu and 1eparate iarage. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR J.lJ Bny\t<I•· U11111· N H. 6 7~ 6161 liabllty for tlM first 1 ty you are aware of an ahelter benefits, please Priced low at f74,900. VA Gw al ,. e~-£1n-~i _,,..immaculate 4 bedrm & call962·'1788 . ~!!'~ottered. CALL ..... ! .... ! ............ ••••••••••••• ......... ,. :i!!!!!!J~~-~!i!!i!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!! ~....... _.....on orwy. pool home. Totally UP· "--KE:Y -·~ .: -------·I graded lhruout. Maerufi· •Q P.E:AlTORsH C: SELf::CT Jl~6+3,9JuOGI Publl~i Motlct: cent view orrered at T PROPERTIES All real estate adverti:.ed 5374•900· CAPE COD FAM. RM. WITH In this new1paper is sub. $51,000 ~ FIREPLACE Ir. IA& ject to the 1''ederaJ 1''air $2, f SO Cliff Dr. o.te• Located on cal·de·tac Housing Act oC 1968 T. Home + income. 3 lot. Great fam. bome ~hich makes it lllcg11l lo TO Al DOWN Bedrm , beamed ceilmc. encl<lle<I patio • pnme e1d Hrtise "an> pre· w•ndlor roadway to matched redwood int .. 2 Huntiniton Beach loca· ft:rencc, llm1tat1on, or soaring 2 aty retreat! BR sep. new unlt. Xllll tioo, Fouhis unique buy d1:;crimina1Jon based on 1 CORO.._.A Private grounda protect location. $190,000. call96.1-6767 race, color, rell~ion, sex, ,... secluded entry to lavish PETE BARRElT Ol'fNn19·WSltJl'f rowM(t• ornat1onnl on g1n,oran DELMAR liv.Jm.' Gourmet 1·· I intcmtion to ma)ce any kitchen overlooks 11un· -REALTY-· i11i.f-.i!ii such preference. llm1la· South of Hwy shine (.~yard! Wind· :"'; . .1 JiiJiil t1on,ordiacrimanat10n." int stairway leads lo 541·.SZOO . ..:.'-==--•-•r;;:;oo< $143,400. JiWdeeplnt mahs1tel' ~~ This nc1o1.·spapcr will not A "'"Al t I h . be room plus c I d. s --G-u..:rs Dream n a.,.,., u e y c arming t t• R II · •-.--~-... --•! VI~ kno~1ng. ly ucctlpL any 2 •--'room on Po;ft-tti·a re rea . Urry, se er 1s1• ... V advtrt1s1na for r <!ul hbe 'Cul h d'"ood anxious.847·6010 lrYIMTerroce aiesa erde'a moat e1ttatewh1ch i:. in \iola w1l aull ar w. OPfNlll9·•1HUNroartilCt' F1U11tly homenearpar!i. SPECTACULARbome.5 lionoflhe law. floors Own!!r occup1e~ I;•,· I Spacious S bedrm, 4 B'R, 4 ba, FR, DR, LR. r~rever •.nd m xlnt cond1: • .•. i,\filil''f·'\l bath, formal dining rm, Spanjab 2 staey, Y.t acre. Houses fOf' Scale lion thru out. 2 Full dou ~'· ,, ft , ii:J: fam rm, fireplace. The The golf co\.lne is )'our •••••••••••••••••••• ••• b I e garages < not _,,,, «·.:..1 whole family will enjoy back yard. Open House Get.rat I 002 ~~~:rJou house offered CREAM PUFF the sparkling pool. Ask· ~:!;;hruy c~~·1~.5A1"~ ••••••• • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • rcJr the first time in over "' lni 1229,llOO. 644· 7270 3 IR-2 BA 12years. This ls really something 1_540-0608 _____ _.... __ OCE .._ .... FRO .... T Cad 644-7211 special. 3 Bedroom. 2 "'" " bath, dinlna room, new Right on the Bluffs, .. for detail carpetrng, water watching cras hing pwificatlon system, new wa\·es. cataJln• & an oc· l no-wax floor, greenhouse~~~~~~;;;;;1 cask>nal passlna whale. I • window and muc h ·!': Prof. decorated .. Model" 1 much, more Pri ced1 ___ .._ ____ •I condo in San Clemente -ri&ht at $78,500 CALL w,'all the bltns. & private CONDO COMFORT 751·3191. stairway to beach. !p SELECT $184,500 LusciOW! greenbelt vi~• J Acoa' s· RE ALTY from hvmg rm .• upata1rs PROPERTIES A A mstr. bdrm. at lge. 675 6670 formal dirung rm. The 4 Ill + POOL • k1tcheo features modern SSS,800 appli~nces & cu~ ealini Joa to beacb from thls area lD thia 3 bdrm., 21,io beautiful garoen home. bath Bluffs Condo. &,st buy in Huntington Sl3S,OOO, And there's no Besch. $2300 down or ta· lease payment you own sume S240/mo pa)lments. &XCHA.HGE or ~ ! Prime East61de Cbst• Mesa duplex at $146,500. Five years old. Spacious three tilt• land! Hurry! CAIL 963·676'7 ~'~~:s,~lo [jliJi bedroom-two bath up· DUPLEX Lar. ASE , .... per unit (Just like a CA " home). Let the lower two Deluxe units, golf course WESTCLIFF bedroom unit help make view. 2 Bedrms each, Coodollvlngatit.11 beslin your l)ayments. Custom, private, quiet, large this btn ar bn gbt 2 bdrm, quah~y bullt k1nas1zc 1ara1es. Perfect retire-2 bath end unit w/brick bedrooms elec tri c ment home and lncorne. rrplc. bltns & extra b~ltl~)dlcbens, wood Call ~1151 storage space. $390 per biiinfu11 brick fireplaces. mo. AvaiJ Nov. 15. Pool Needfour to1ixunits 1n utilized by only 12 San Clemente. owne.rst 646-7711 associated BROI< CRS-IH llL TORS NH w ~0•1>~" ,71.Joo l ST AR'l'UHOME Located 1n qui et neighborhood. Ready Cor that family who wants tbe privacy of tb.tl!r own home on a modest budget! New cpt in living rm It hallway which lead to 3 comfortable bdrma Super pat.lo w/Oshporid. ~reat ror entertaining. RV ar~s. mun see to -MillllllWl~ill61iliiMllillltiiJI c;J WCJlker & lee Real Estate AIAMDOMEO SP AHISH VILLA IE~CH ASSUME $28,SOO Arched formal entry huge 20' hv. rm. with crackling stone fireplace · oountry kitchen · dln· In.&:. Fiesta part1 rm o\lerlooks covered dance pavWoo " IU11h grounds.1.-~;..;.;.;==;.:.._~.;....;­ Separate wtng for ma· Jestlc muter 1ulte ~• euest quarters. Tax ov•I~ VA.loan. No new loan ~ta. No AUalllyin1. 1288/ mo. pays ,11. COLEOFHEWPORT 1~~~~~~~ ~..,._,.._,.,.. ... REALTORS ,,.. 67S.SS 11 Hwry r l*J. 788J 1-iiilliill ____ lflm•I °""''•I>• H HUN rON NICf' appreciate, ""' AS~ Reallstcm,~. 754-7100 OM&. y $64,500 OJ-ul Costa Meu home. 3 Large bdrm•. over· slud 1ot with t)earing rruit trees. Good Condi· lion lnmde A: out. Price lncludea near new refrig. wuber fe deyQ. J ust move-in. Hurry call MS-5* • ,~~:. HERITAGE . • REAi.TORS 1Hr: REAt -i ESTATERS I ------ A OOMICHIENT ltOPINC AH IEWINO QUID( fOtt TH£ CAL OH THE GO Softly Rom11tic! ull Ocean Br.eete Keep cool tbruout the summer. ~ Mlle to the bea('b. Ceramic tile ln kitchen and beth, big 3 bedrm noor plan. Hui• family room, formal iiln· Ing, RV perldn1. '95,500, BKR, 142·2S61 .. Public Notice Take advantaf.e of lht new FHA •ov t lll!ured loan pro&r"a&n with tons up to ltl0.000. IW~ Int. & LOWER down pay· ments. (Only fl"°· down on $60,000. prictl. We bave 10 choke hom•• Crom $52,000 to $'74,~ Wilb FHA terms. CaU for detall1. ~l·SIOO lat1 u Hetwonc LIVEOM TM WATER red hill ~· . 552-7500 •uWOODBRIDGE BROADMOOR 3 'Br. A beauly lnslde ts out. SH,900. Owner/Alt 551-4038 To place your message before the rtadini public, phone Daily Pilot Classl.fted, 642-5671 3 Monarcb Ba)' Plata La1'1fta Nll\lel 49'97122 831-0136 ~H111s ••••••••••••••••••••••• Prillle I BR pool home, NC. Sietl, Rent or Trade. AM·86U Ownlast i---------~ LOVaY & SPACIOUS l~~~~~~~~~l 1 Yr old 4Br. II fam rm w1frplc, Uv rm, formal din rm, profe11ioaally decorated le f ndscpd, 3 car 1arate. Reduced to tll.5,000 OwnerT68 ·51U DEAL FILL THRU Owner lea•lng state. View condo, adult over In Oranaetree ls thts sharp Plan 3 In beautiful Irvine. This 1 btdroom condo lnch1des ~addi· tional amenlUea and community pool, spa andi---~-_.._...;.:,_ __ 1 aym. Asklnc$54,000 ~=~~!!!~=:I!~~~~~~~~ I I l . I t J PACIFIC VIEW Muonfc Sect.Ion. ! Iota. Sell for ~/both, apllt transfer coat. Call 980·5844 cean view R42 lot Ocunalde. 116,000. 49'-2312 evN CAHALFROHT NewPort Shores Vacant lot $'7.5,000 Lot tn PMclflc Vlew Rfftfstcrh Cemetery, Value l290. &daclncJI Sell suo. (714) 46e-8052 ••••••••••••••••••••••• PROBLEMS? __ ......__ __ , Commercl.. They are our 1peclaUy. rrop.ty 1600 Creall vely handled by ••••••••••••••••••••••• OFFICE BUILDJNG, 11ly, Near Harbor Blvd on 19th C M . $158,000. 979-5099 ownr/brkr. NewPor\ Beach C 1, cot· o.MXH/ Unit•••. 1800 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S ... r Write Off! Great rental area. 2 ---------.1-----''------1 Triplexes, all 2 Br. H\1--------• ba. S23S.OOO. So. Caur. Really 546·5605 Must seJI b)' owner J,ovely Opl:<. ,Nwpt Jl "t1 645·i:!ll1. &c8·U303 EASTSIDE TRl-PLEX 3 ·2 bcdrm,, scp garagei.. 2 Blodo,s to 17th st. Owner must sell. make offer' $129,500 Cull !or info. t;.15 7221 Ontu~ ~21TM,.__ ___ W•stcllff Realty Seashore Duplex $172,500. TRIPLIX R...tals Clote to beach and •bop· pin£. 2 Vea.ta old. Newly developed area of Hunt· --------~·---------i inftol'I Beacb. Prlce~1---------1barply reduced to 1158,500. tor quick nle, Good 'financln& avalla· ble. loyMcc:.-. flt O..._port ll•cl. C9tta Mda 541·7729 MESA DEL MAit ON WATER wlt.h boat Spaclous 5 br, 3 ba, hUlt dock, 2 story, 3 bdrm llvln1 rm IJ ltllcben. New w1 View S790/mo. crpla, drpa, paint. ~. ON LIDO. Elegant 2 'TIO-"'°'; 75HJ80 assoc iated 81F1"f<f"• 1111\Lr'.•ll". 1 11 ;• /V '"''' ., 1>t' •I I $.WE/Side~ ... 2b&, frplc, yd .• end. pr. 'ISL Mont 842·1!103 Br, frplc, C?'Pt., atove. I OX.2Br. SZZ:tt Cm0 11· poo , car'Por • a S'OOFFDE.Pw/AD STUNNING lt1 2 br, 2 ba l'&rdeD aJt. pool, ,... rm, 1275. 710W.-lathSt. NEWBR!!.!DAPTS 1 Br '290. Adutt only. No pets. 383 Hamilton. ~11 \ 8 UW""'-Ana.betm-t:ZOOJC 19 Unlta-RV-SI>-Sl98K 12 Unlta-C.M.-c325K CURTISR.B.ls BLUFFS BEAU TIE associated H f.J t) )" f w '1 •It f· l .. Si·, •l'•" .... I,• •1 • • 'I._ I J t I --...... Apartments Unfurw. Apca liilffh u.tur.. Aftw lz••h.......... ~"h Furnished R ..... to S..... 4JOO ciHlce...... 4400 Mhctl--•••••••. •••••••••••••• •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• ••••.••••••••••••••••••• or Unfwnllhed 3900 ••••••••••••••··-··-··~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rentll1 Costa Mesa 382 Costa Mno 3824 twwport t.och 3169 ....................... NEED A ROOMMATE? •••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• THE EXCITING Call The Professional.a -----------------.New duplexes 2-3 br $3SO PALMMESAAPTS. you'vesee~ltheardol! up yrly. Farnily " pets MINU~~lo NPT Tima:~~i7li-eaa SUNFLOWER APJS ok. &7S-49l2 Bach, 1&2 BR. {?ousE-~ ~ Under tent ewport Shores area. l 'h . Crom $220. & up 1----------c new ntCMGCJ~ aew OWft_.. blocks beach, 2 bd, 1 ba. Adults, No Pets Successfully Sioce 1971 I, 2 & 3 bdrnts. 2 baths Yr lse. <714)9M-5871 1561 Mesa Dr 832..f.l!W • 3 a.m towaholtsft tSBUts East of Newport F b 1 3 Pools. Jacuzzi, saulUl, bJtn range, 3Br2 &.beamclgs,Nat. Blvd.> R~C:;p~J:ie:. oven & dishwasher Completely ~~~~ose to bch. 546·9860 Pvtbr&ba. 751·7593 carpeted & dr~ped.. $39.'5. 3 br, 2 ba. block lo llOGm$ 4000 NWPT lux Jge Br & Ba, No pet.s please beach Encl. aar. Yard. ••••••••••••••••••••••• tennis, pool, jac, $115 inc 251 I Sunflower . Adults, no pets. Room w/ ldtcbenette util. 646.a368 ---__:;.----~ 557-4800 Hounl0.5cla0y TSLMgmt 6421803 $SOweek&up. ..,F . 2 BR b .. OOOaq.ft.deluxeoffice,W. 548·9755 .. • ruce . ous .. , 19th Sl, Costa Mesa. ~!!!!!!~!!!~~~~~!!!~!!!~!!!!!!!!!~5450. Lar&e 3br, 2 ba. N.B. Pool & tenrus. $200. $~/mo. Tom, 540-2200 .:: Block to beacb. Encl. Ambassador Inn in Costa mo. 646-8082 C ~~ •---L ~•4 gar., balcony. No pet~. Mesa, 2277 Harbor. Ceo --------• MEWPORTCEHlll osta MHa 3824 • -"""'1'°"-~ ~ TSL Mgmt 642-l603 trally located, 235 rooms. ~~ •••••••••••••!••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• MANY with kitc hen, for'lw1 4350 SUITE 110 . LoVtb' Irish Set-ter, remale w/Kern County \ags. Mesa Verde. 540.3828 FOUND; Ladies or girl's wrist watch. ~bier, Nr Harbor Blvd, on 10/28i 77. Eves 548:-8015 Afghan, cream w/blk HEWP'ORT APARTMENTS NEW 2 & 3 br, rrplc, 3br, 2ba, l blk bcb Gur & phone & TV. Swimming •••••.t.••••••••••••••••• PresUge locaUon, ocean garages, nr Beach & blt.ns, yrly, nu decor. dck pool, jacuzzi, and rec. WANTED views avail. Executive Slater Shown daily 3 to patio. 6?3·2571 room Daily & weekly Garage or atora~e space, otncea w;full •ecy ft ----------.-----...--1 muule, tnale 4yrs. Lost :! Br $;:!00 Ga:. pnicl 2 Hr 6PM, wknds 12 to SPM. -· rates startine lrom $48 a safe & accesa1ble, for telephone services Con. SCRIU LETS :-,!!ill i ulll lnt,ints uni>. 177ll VanBuren,894-2610 BAYFRONT Lease. 2 Br, week. resp. individual Call ferenc:e facllilles Conve-e~~~~~~~~I _,.,.. Halloweea Vic. or bi schl. Lac. Collar w/sllver bell. 497-3:2"/9 -110 r><·h 2ba, gar, terraces, pool. 645-4840 Jefr759-l.574 nient parking. Many ex· ANSWERS it~ Nl·wport Hlvd •LOOK* S650. 833·9442 eves tra's. Com11eUtivel)' ~?=8cs wbrakln: Found: YOW\C Jref CAT. Cosl.iMt>sa Deluxe 2 Br+ garage. 3 Br 2 ba 'h blk from Sleepingrms$75·$105mo. Single Garage $40. Costa priced on rnoath to lovatmt Yeq'd. Or Namely-Snort-AboUt 6 mos old. Flea &12 76711 hefor1'5pm Bike to beach! New cpts, bch'. Nu cpts, drps, pnt All SSO. wk. Share kiti Mesa, 731 W. 18th St. month bub. Call Kathy purcbMe option. Ph: Pame-Nlnety-collar. Hatbori8aker paint & drapes. Call No pets. $400. 675·6084 bath. Shown Mon·Sat. 6?J.118'7eves. 644-7180. 180 Newport Moa tbru Fri. 10·12. • MANSIONS vtc,CM.$48-SUS 2 Br I Ba up~r m 4 plex Mike, 847·6010 Refsteq'd. 556-0058 Center Drive,N.B. ---~pri~O(cotfeeis8el· stove, drps. l'pts, forced,__________ NEW DUPLEX GARAGE & Storage in al··l:-:-:-:-=-:-:-:-:=:-~-:---·l~v~·.,__,~~-----~1 Ung to the point where Fou.Qd; fem Viisla type, air heat. S200. W. CM . no 6 PL.A YGOUHDS JBr 2Ba $550 mo Profess. Man for elegant ley at lS6 E. 19lb, CM. '40 Sub lease oUice space, l'ltAYa .A•BCCY. coUee bouaes are yo med. build, reddish pets. Avl 11, 15.631·3725 We are i·o t.be family apt 00.211i • 646·63o3 rm & ba + pat. $200 mo. mo. 548-«n2 paime Newport Beach T .--"'-w ho .. So become co fee brown. Amber eyes. Vic. Nr Fash. Isl. &t gott. area, approx 700 +sq ft. ~t.artl.Cll......, you T w ..,eJ MANSIONS, Buena Park rea. !lk, encl'd yrd. patio. dbl business! 1---------i M0-6594. Office lentai 4400 S850 mo., includin1 • au agency. rav IZMZ37 gar. stv, frig Call Pre·scbooJ•2poo1s ••••••••••••••••••••••• utilities" maln\, 1001 exp.DOlneceuary.Total fr Jou own a SONvt·--....... -:....o-.=...:;...:;...._..._ &lti 717:1 Jacuzzi•Sauna BACHELOR APJ Very nJce room It krtchen. 65• PER u.o. FT Dove St.. Suite 160. sl&rtllp le openitoa BET.ulAX, pleUe clill Found Fe.male Siamese Z br duplex, ,:araf:<.'. huge yd 8n W Walson. S29S. mo 642 0282 •AdultSectionToo• · • UU1pd$145.2121 Balboa ...,. 7c .. _ 7"""••• "•"""·'-"red ~.000 Colt cat vtc K I oUa • ALLtrrrLSPO! Blvd.N867J..145lafl3;30 161?WESTCLIFF·NB --or,_.__ '-'"Yn.-......... • · (Tl4>1'4.ott4 ect. • • n lnn• from the o"•an. AGl'.54J.:i032 Tl4'2:2lM'l81.SS9'l:5a Haipllton. BB. Call vv .... r.rJ sq. ft. deluxe corn.er 5300 •9428 Seml·furnlshed. Avail Aoona& loard 4050 -1-50-1-W---1-Hf--suite, A/C, lrvioe. CaU WIMEACH&sl ---· ------- 'now! 201 E. Balboa BJvd. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ftfc Dr. rorappt. 751-7873 SO.ORANGECTY .......... •••••••• .. ••• L 0 ST : W H 1 '? E Dana Point 3826 CJa1t/#nL ee'14J Yrly. $2.50 per mo. NO Need«! by elderly Scotch Newport Financial Ctr Perfect one.rperaoa or Pound •r.t? Call SAMOYED ••••••••••••••••••••••• -, FEE. Call: Sue at &entleman, livini ac· Lecningotflc. Spoc:e LOVELY F8'hloa Island opera~ Pricfdt.o;dJI AnJmal Asa stance Haleaamed ••1'.bla''Vk. 1 !..!l 3 Rr 2 na. lriih:, hcam 16161 Viewpoint Lane 556-1707anytime com. w,some meals, CallonSiteManager offices. Decorated. $150, TIMI Lia1Wt5'J..J27Jnofoe. t7tb •Tustin. Cl( Call u:1hnJ;!>. sun tlec·k. Ol'ean Off Beach near Warner laun, " shower assiat. (714) 642-3IU ext 248 ~r ore. Air Anthoay' 75 l-1400 POUND: lrtab Setter• collect 1·'11S-7US I 842 6604 Nr. buslnesa area. Soc.--------• (714)640-4082 \1ew < sh\\:.hr S350 & • 2 BR, 1 ba. frpl, 1 blk to Sec. & old age asaiat. DB.UXEOFFICES r....:.:.::.:::.::.:.::...::=.: ____ ,..__~----:..---:--=--1 =-~~·rem. 22nd 6 '9111t .. t 1350 S375 mol9JOOi5 bcb,$3SOmo.yry.Adult.. Non ·s mo'"er Non· GATIWAYrLA.%.A ..... ,,.."°"~' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---El'erythlng new, 2 Br COD· nopet.a aft, tprn .. Com.ml & mdstl spaces. 630 ft M t.o ro rp m r a. no.A-~-bl 9 Panorama view. new ctn do nr beach, wtr sof· ' · drlnker. Xlnt rels. Call 200 to 2000 sq. ft. A.a low aq · o. mo, or ~ • Foa.nd• Oct tnh Vic unu.wfpro em. 2br. :! ba -t-dt•n 4·plex. lener, pool & rec area. Secluded 181', freshly de· 631-2619alt6 PM as:Wsq. ft. LagNlgueI• _lle_._642-8803 _______ 1 coratot. S roorn re· Gmtieid•MaPOU~ Ftn Cl1l~ecibOl1'elplin No pets M1:r4961097 _ $325mo.6?5-624Sall6PM conted, blwn Ocean & Vac.affoaR...ta1s 4250 Mission Viejo areu. ady CO 1or Call Bob at Valle,y Tan Colar Part auna4itJSIS-3830 Ba min ta to h Randy to S.D. Frwy. 15-9330Cll'G3l-%Dl. OoWe/Genn Sbtp pu... • L .,.,. Townhouse, near new, 2 Brand new 2 Br & den, 2~ te~ & tr"ansp. ~ .. ~'. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call: 831·1400 ISaslnltts Rentd 44$0 •-------•I 9 ea'ii • ,t'a-NANT? BH, plus chm. dbl gar, Ba, encl gar, adlts. $375. '"'lOW Balboa ~5.7101 SKIERS, Houaefor rent tn .......... ••••••••••••• PY. IJ>Jll'01. mot. Car nc c:onfldeAtlal ore an\ ll'W SJ?!'> mo. 979·2228; 842-42'7 · .., · · v• Tahoe, $200. ror 4 mo's AlrDort Offices ~7 couoselinc • referral. 661 181 t OCEANVIEW yrty 2 Br 1 546-3428 · 1 ~ONTii FREE ' DB.WCI OFC'$ t~!~D,. adoption 4r -f,.,lne 1844 Ba, duplex, new decor: Cabin, Big Bear, 1lpe 4·18. FUll service. No lease re· ~ied~m~4:~:5th :!~ ~E 547•2563 HWttfnc;on Beach 3840 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ::,:~mo . 544•57SO' $35 up. Pool tbl, cir tv, q'd. 200-600 sq. tt. Plenty ar. l or 2 re. lease. Lake •••••••••••••••••••••• $325. Super popular Lake dhlfrpl,494-8611. or parking. 2082 S.E . Fore.i area. Kent •S420 K1d5, pets ok. Ne condo; free tennis, swim· 5ll2 Seashore Yrly 2 Br, Carlsbad Condo 011 water :;!~~~k~i@~0Newport Harkins. , 3. Br: 2 Ba, bltns, frplc, ml o g, etc. Adu Its. gar, 041wl)r dee. $450/mo. w;pvt dock: Skiing, fish--::---:------j __ __:7,:::14::,·$81::::.::::·939:=:3:_ __ 11lft'ltdi-.at :>ard. Wshr/dryer hook-s;n.3307 lst.\l•.880-1025 ing, pool, sauna, Jacuni. Euc.atne Row htc • up 675 6670 !'r 645•5506· Nu Lakeside condo, A/C, Br, l bath. Ocean View Sec. prttna. 2br. 2ba. Ofc space in Newport· --------~ teMis, pool. Adil comm. nice patio. FUlly cpt'd. 1425. 1 yr lse. Owner Airport Area. RecepUoo, lbr. $285. 752-8380 Prk'g. '300/mo. ~-1493 844-0UO pbooe serv .. conference C'....;.. ,,..,~_.._ 3176Rintcis ,.---t0-5-...._--. -4-3-0-0 rm, titch, secy aerv. die· -~-m•nnw taling • copy machlne. J841 ••••••••••··~··•••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• From$290. (714>752·7170 WESTCLIFF BLDG. NEVIPORl Bb\CH .to .. •W\o• ,, J•!•,,. ••• ,, •• •t•l1• • f • •MICHELLE'S•' Outcall 11._.ge 10AM·2AM 731-4462 Splfthlalleadlr IIJS~ ~ Cam.IDo Real San Clemente. P'oll1 li~ f'w tppt. ~72116 MASS.AGE - FICIUU MODEl.'9 &SCOITS OUTCAU. OMLY 631·311 I •SHERI LEE * Ce:rtl.fted M lllSWSe House c.Jls • By Appt. 838-6839 7 -Adv nun amokinC dfl OYW 28, for CntW 0 , SC' Xucb for crulae to S 1.. Pacific. E11Wr. m•tu1·e 5klpper. Wit.rain. 631'()2'10 _ _;__...:_ _ _;, __ -f GUARDS "dill p1time. Work any •hilt. N.B. area. Uniform Nat'l co. FREE 10 Week Travel Joumeymen or Appren· lice needed at lbe South Course. If qual'd. we Gate Plant of Weatherby train as Travel Agt. Must Inc. For further mro call purchase books, $50. or write. C~rle• Mur· 731 5441 lookkff,... F/C ray: <213l S61Ml86. Z18l Jobs W..ted, 7075 Fasb Isl investment Firestone Blvd, South ••••••••••••••••••••••• firm. Xlnl oppor. Ex~r. P/tlm• evn ings GateCabf.90280 .--------•I Babysitter for 3 days & maturity ran'd. Call Saturday• manafin EXEC. SECllTARY k N e h ~... Junior Salts Person .... a ..... y iu•M Hwdw ... S•'PffSOft PRIVATIDUTY w.~e • · · ome 640-0123. selllog subscrintlon " ....... '"" "'d 1 r S d "' ----~:......;;:...,_ __ , HURSE r.v•1R 7833. 302900·6PM. Ph Hood, z:=-"' We need ag"reaslve ,, aylii nc 8 un ay. pO ''---___..;.....,.__....._ _ _.,.., GENA EIO IOIU'" IOOtelCEUER i!UUI' to aoor. Require .. • e\es. Crown Hardware. MAID-Exper only,. Ref:;•· Also Quad~ Fvll-Ch van or lar1e statio loyal person w/superior 3107 E. Coast Hwy, CdM. req'd. P1T. Xlnl salary. 1lDf JR.I£ POHD OSA HOMES 557-'441 557-6447 BABYSITTER Mon-Fri. Mus l be r":Pm l Ii ar wagon. P hone collect, tio!:~ai;~ll~ ~!':~~~!t Before 10 AM. Reply to ad #~. Daily '1" llft 2U82 Biaine:.:.Ctr Dr· ~~~~~~~~~I permanent, l toddler, 213·597·0398. Arte Pllot P.O. Box 1560, EVENINGS &ntelOO -Turtlerock7S2-7172 w1servlce bureau com· 5:00pm.2l3-498·2473. managemtnt of aa· HELICOmR•EP•lR CostaMesa.Ca.92626 lrvlne,CA92'J1S Have van wlll move or --puter &yitems & exper'd ere;sive co. Send re.surue All as~s or helicopter: Adul\s wtth out.standlq. haul anything. No job loo BABYSITTER needed, In Ai P, A/R, payroll, to Oon'3::J Newfort malntl!nance & repair. MAID, F/tin attractive personaUtl~ smau.645 e&n my home, Ftn Vly Dai gen'I ledaer thru T.B Federal Via ldo, No n~rience reqwre<t; Forlitecleanup Richard wbo eil]Oy worldnt W\th I y Pb 8 3 9 4 2 0 Call (714) 549-3281. Mon· Data Processing Suite 210, New por t P1tld w~lle training. For Oue llette Salon. 200 kids Start at $3.50 pE't~~~~~~~~~ 8 0 A. 'f SERVICE · evl>:1 wknds. Fri. S·:.l·5PM ror appt. JOIM THE Beach, 92M3 673-2700. Army enllstment. Call NewportClr Dr, NB hour Phone 642 •3U, ox• RECEPTlO.NtST Full painUnl(, varnashang, & EOE r t d t 11 L boat del. 12 yrs cKp. Let· Bul>ysatter, occas. days, UNDERSEA Food S..-.lc• AHt or or e a s: M A 1 0 s w ANTE 0 tension 250 between 1:00 time, txper p~t'd. lght • ters of rec. & re:sume my home. own tran'sp. F Boy, 161$. Ille factory WORLD OF 54abstltuh ~~~B~~sa ::~:~~ Laguna Beach, full or pt. andS·OO PM typina ltphonoa ... 1·5874 avail Call Enk art ff Vly 554.3534 work. 6·10pm eve:;. Call On-Call Basia. 2.21,; hrs -~---. ll!lle. 494-6533 Ask fOf' Jim EC&P.TIONIS!I' t PM. 759 1080 . BABYSITTER, full time 645 2702 JACQUES per day $3.10 per hr. Ap· Hou!\ecleenTng women Equal Oppor\ 11ntty k pa r . ply to Irvine Unified wanted. BE.5T WAG ES. MAIDS ~NTED Employer time, '3 days 1t w r 8·30 to Help Want.d 7100 my home for 3 mo old BOYS. GIRLS School District. 2941 Koors flexible 642·7430 Don Quixote Motel ----5. C6rporate headqtrs. ••••••••••••••••••••••• II B. nr Beach & Warner 12-16 years -• age. Eve· COUSTEAU 2100New~ Bl CM Part Ume help wanted, pleasant •urroundlngs. 848 3152 ning work. Obtain ~ew ~~~.ve. Irvine. <714> or&4i·4871 . ...,.. ' Jade House Fine Standard Paclllc Corp Acctng Bkkpng ---I-AKER subscnpuoru; lor the Oat· World's l ariest scuba Equal Oppor Employer HousecleananR st>rvtce ~"'~H·~.,. AHM~!ER JOew~lry. N3400B ~o. 2,1 Vla._M_&_1_1s_1..;.,..---''---- TEMflORARY I} Pilot working with a.n manufacturer hali an un-, nee.d!i permanent & ... ....._ """.... .....-.. porlo • reY oua EC£PTIONIST needed Regil>ter Today to work ~n~,h~fl'~ P~u~ ~~~s~ adult supervisor. Earn mediate openang for a GAG & J~KE c9. S~all ~1 llme ~elp to work With strong mech'l back jewelry sale:. exl>'!r pre· by St. John Knlls. full on vanous accounting & 6791 Warner Ave, H S20 lo $30 per week or Senior Programmer ro co. sell11 oallonwade Nwpt, lrnne. C~ area ground lo setup " care fd. 67l·5658 time perm JN>Sltlon wiad· bookkeeping assign· 847 9'm more. Call '213/ 5970396 Systems 3 MOD 15 needs effielenl typist It Top wages. lmmed In lac plastics m•xing. dis· PIXA.aiwet"S•rv. vancement posslbiUties. ments. Work close to ----------1 noon·5pm. 2131 498 2473 SHOP. Minimum• year gen'! ofc personnel. tervlews. S40·952.'I pen sing, & l abeling Pi Ume OaY5 & E\·a. Eii· For ailtnc\h·c person your home . F 1 g u re 5pm·9pm, Call Collect. e. po.rienc e .., ri· Li "i Pleasant workin& conda. equip. S48·Sl.2S. nar'd &~('d. but ~,.11 w/ll ofnce skills. Xlnl C k ,, .. .. .. Gal.d.eJl.'A. .Jd.4£!C Wand Hou~ekteper, live 1n; ~. .. d 73 ler s to Sr. Accoun· BANKING • BOYS W 4MTEO COBOL ud RP<i 11. !N6 W. 17th St, CM Apply chUd care, It. cookini:, MAHICualST train. co. bentrllli. workin&: eon s. l 12 tanh needed thruout Progress1vemdependen . AGES IO-l5 KnowledgeofBOMPand 9am-llam lge. Laeuna house. Fi time Tues lhru Sal. EOE.846-8000. Easlman,lrv.540-1171 Orar\gt.•Co bank bas am~e<!-~o.i>en-=:;mt~on Beach area MRP helpluL ExC!!llen · 4'4·3138 Following pref'd. RR#"._O .... IST Robcrtllalf'!>. mgforaqualh1oo--""·· salary llnd Cring GENERALOFFICE PIXA'MwerServ ....._...-.. " Accountemps INSTALLMENT Earn ·S30 per week. benefits package. Con· Looking for respon11lbleHOUSEKE~PER ·LIVE Ricb!lrd Ouellette Salon. Wanttoworkdaya,after· "Tralriee to work In ah SOOS Maan.Sti-501 Getting new customers tact Jon Wh1,lford, person. CdM rellldent. IN.Npt~chfamlly ,m~st ~NewportCtrDr.N .B. noons & everunas in NB Optometrist ofc. Pitimt! :":o Tower. t nion Rilnk LOAM OFCR ~~ ~1~;'~1L!. ~~~~~: Manager 0111ta I rocess· for local Insurance Agen· speak ~ng, refs req d. MARKET CLERK & Cd~I areas? Work tl to start. Exper. prerd, lnTht>C1ty11fOrangc 2 Yrs exper. w major mg Call this number to m&at(714)~·8010 . cy. EKpex. helpful, but Ca11644·6680or642-3475 Bon dable. Hrs 411rn . tlme o r p/ t i m e • .bUl.no&.pec.'94-!039for ---71•4•'835-•1•10•3--•I ~~1L~c~!~i3~~~en~lr~~ apply U.$ • .DJVERS not req\Jlred . .c~fler· HOUSEKEEPER Older ll:~m. Will train. $"50 Wet:kend:t a mufit, Xtfda._.•-:p..:.pt_. ______ _ ----892-4625 3323West Warner oooas per week. uccas. woman to lave in hr 673-1602 betwn 9am· P1IY ror ex per. RECPTfTypfst su~~;:TIAGO IAMK Santa Ana, CA 92702 use of own car may be re· w rather & 10 yr old son. llam Thunday. <>per~rs. Call 6"0·0812 Legal Office. La1unu ACCOUMT CLERK BRIGHTEN qui red. Please .resPond rm 4i board + salary E.O · Hills. Must be 1ood, neat $794 to $87 6 Mo. ~ 5200 YOUR DAY I Equal Opportunity to Insurance, p O.Box 96J.1SM MATURE W O MAN PHOTOGRAPHER :1ern i· typbt I& atble to handle Pubhc school accountini;: 535 E . lst St Tustin A little moonlight can put Employer 741. CdM. Ca. 9'.!625 --- --pi t I me to : 0 lcotm~ profesaiohul. part' lime reception, telephone & cxpcr desired. Typini: Equal Oppor Employer a lot of sunshine tn your Housekeeper, live·tn, non newcomers • con ac Need reliable-4ndividual i::eneral ore duties. Nu req'd Apply 1mmed1ate· hfe. Earn xtta Income GEMERAL OFflCE smoker. for family of 3· merchants Flexible hrs Mu..t. have ucce~1 lo de· shorthand required. Call 1 C . L ·---------1 Opening In young Orange Hll . .534·6221 Need car • Ute typing ,·elopment (acllrt' lei Call l't, •rs. Wi"clow ~or appt. y, apastruno a11una 1• w 6-10 hrs per mo Mr Data Processlnl( Co flf'm. Seeking sharp 547 3095 ~ • "" '' Beach RegaonaJ Ot•t·upa BANKING Sears, 644·5391 COMPUTER girl good at AiP. A R. 0 US E K E E P F; R . . . btwn8·6, ~2· ._837_·_1060 ___ ...:;.;; __ _ taonul Program. :!GllOO Proi;:ress1vt.-independent -OGR ... u~.n:R typing & 10 key by touch. mature resp person Mature, respon adlt for ,.- ACJachcma St, SJC. bank seeking bank ex CAllMET MAKER "'" ,_.,.... 546-2901. Woodli&htmg needtd to care tor 2 early A.M. newspaper PLAS t.fC •196·3118 EOE per'd F.xper~ craftsman Challenamg oppor in an Fixture Co. 2001 s. E . children. 7&11, perfprm delivery, mst haVt!trans --------•I IRA.NCH Must be able to read & expand&ni systems 3 in· MamSt. lrvine. general hskpng duUes. 84(J.Z756 INJECTION Ambitlou1 couple Help Exe w/fam1ly l>u:.1· m:~. p l. 55~5 APT ~tanai:crs. mature couple 20 urul children complex an Ornni:e. S4001mo and. n'nl. E" "penenced only. 752·Z881 understand prints Work stallallon for an RPG II S I 1---------1 SECRETARY al bench w , m In proarammer. Xln GEHERALOFFICE ~ :!,~e~a;~t r~,:ri Medlcal-Neuroloay ore. MOl.;DING Airport OHice. Xlnt supervision. Good conds, beneftis Call or apply ~brtners S~vlngs has board """2·1845 Irv mature woman,. flume. FOlEMAH benefu.., Coll or ,apply I r al: -' Typin&, slerlllitn&, ID· at pay & l>eoef1ts Ca I or S ... ~ ... ,._,... I ....... K immed. requl ement for • d C2.nd & li-d Shffhl appl.orapplyinperson. """"""vv """ PIXRICEPTIOMIST sur. Exper . req . SANTIAGO IA.HK A If red M . G 0 rd 0 n 132-5200 At main ofc ln N.8. Oen'I HOUSE r ARBITS ,_548_·ZM_7_. -----~~ ~~!H 832-5200 Designs. 2:;0 l''ischer 535 E . lstSt Tustin Ofc It Ute typlna skills RELIEF. Medical office assist. WHI uiun 111 ~ E 1st St Tustin A\·e. CM. 540-2860 Equal Oppor Employer desirable. X'nt benefafs train. ~anish reqwred Rapidly expanding c:om· Equal Oppor Employer $2 97 per hour l p11ny wlth immedl11te Career Opportunity. & working conds. Apply The Orange County Ut.H.v &...Mustbeabe optninp,toppa~&com· Leading mt'l co needs Delivery O ri •er & at: Dept. or Mental Health toworkeves.&iiorwkDds. pany benefits 11\·aal Ex· ~~~~~----1~..;;.. ... ~.;.-;.._I ambitious person or un· Production Worker $3 to 1Sl5 Westcliff Dr.ND needs a marrted couple 1_548 __ ·77_7_1 __ -"'-'---I per. necesslll'Y. Apply at RESALES ,. LUSK ltEALTY Is opentng a new resale office in tM HunUngton Beacb aru. Need b mar\l.aer, salary t com· mlaslon •nfl sltleSpeople. Better tban 11:~·erac~ commi.s.slon + lfleentl\'e plateaus. This office will be uppro:t 1900 ~q fl. wtlh· a lot ol com panr i.upport. Call Paul. 7l4.6iS·301. A.SSEM BLY BANKING questionable character start. Call 642-2256. Equal Oppor Employer to work as weelrend MESSENGER Orange COast Plastics, Progresslve Independent for its sales/manaae· f 1 General Help wanted for house parents. Tbe 1 ed ,_ ind Pl tlme 850W.18lhSt C.M. lf'lt.,..M:llefs bank has Im med. open· ment trairung program. Oeh.erymt'ft or ear Y C 1 Sh 0 duties '11Clude llV1nl In a mm · -..-n .... · _________ _.__ for p ro mintint N .B. mg for a qualified· Above avg earnings. I AM newspaper delivery .eram c op. ays sheller home from Fri-11·3 wkdyg. Need rell•·t-•llli ... -illml•--1 reslaurant.lli3·0121. VOLT OPERATIONS quahfaed. College educa an CM S3SO per mo. + 7.30-4pm. Mature, de day evenln& to Sunday ble. ioduslrious person PlaaUct lion prer'd Teaching, bonll.!I. 548·1140. !~~:~~. ~ou~~c~=~~1~!~ evenins each week and w,own ear. Irvine Sav· MOLD PRESS HEEDS OFFICER salei.. or mg ml b11ck · transp & be wulint to creating• home environ· lngs, 752-6456 EOE. INDUSTRIAL Xlnt benefits. Call or ground helpful. Call BU DEMO .... STR'TOR w 0 r k . Gu p t 0 I\• a ment for Juveniles resid· Mission Viejo OPERATOR send resume to: Helmuth. 557-1041. Equal " "' Ceramics 2251 Harbor in& lher• on a lemPorary MOTOR ROUTE SAMTIAGOl.AHIC Oppor Employer L-109 HOMEMAK~RS CM ' ' basis . Con.tact· Men~al The Dally Pilot has a To operate lnjc!ctlon WORKERS 132-5200 To demonstrate food In Heall" OHtce PersoMel large route in Mission moldln4 m llchlnei. & k Tod 535 E . 1st St Tustin CHEfS supermarkets, Fri & Sat.GENE R AL HE L p. Office at {714) 834 3918 Viejo • approx earnings trim small plasllc parts. •Star+Wor ay• Io;qualOppor Employer for prominent N .B Need car. good pay. F i tt m e ror smal l forCurther lnformatlon. $300permonUt.Mon lhru Dayshtrl.Exper prefd, •Padlagtn 1 _ _. _______ ,1...:.r.:::es:::t.:.au::r~a::n.:.:t·::..6.:.:73:..:·0:,::l=.21:.:.· __ 962·9841or (2U> 783·7906 wholesale novelty & Fri afternoons and wUUratn. •Trahtee Asffftlblen CHEMICAL OPR magic comp,any In ship· An Affirmattv~ Sat&Sun mornings. Car STACOSWITCH IHC •=/RecelvlftcJ . E._.T L ping Ii rec. depts. Apply Action Employer and iood driving record 1139 Bak.itCCJSta Meisa BANKING SJ.SO Per hf wiperiodic D ,... A 9am-Uam, Golden's required. Call 6'42-4321 r....119.3041 * /UntoadlncJ Progressive md..........,dent re\iews. H.S. Chemistry Rec:.,,./Secret-Magic Wand 946 W 17th Le Ing a a d .. _ ... e -•Inventory Clef-tu ~ .. ~·· k e ,.. -r ' • · Inspector. Exp'd lo quall· av n i:ne n Pnvu Equal Oppor Employer E d bank has immed. open· ~~ ch~~rcalse ~ref'd: CM ore. Send br1ef r~-S\,C.~1. t y as 8 u ran c e f 0 r 1n~u=m=be~r·::--:-=--.--=-::li~~~~~~~~~ * xpw' AsMmb&en ingfor "'49·3281, 8am··.·aopm. sume to Adlt49, Dally m~ .. Antcal compoflents ~10TEL "'--'" t-1 k ..... 11 . APPLY NOTES Ir " .. Pilot. Box 1560, Costa """'.. p. ~A ':''er 'cu PLUMBING Eltp'd. dram 3141 c_,,..s Drive COLLr.rTIO .... S EOE. Mesa, CA 112626 GEN'l LABOR Small mrg plant, Hunt Ume pos. avail as dt;i.k c 1 e a n e r w a n I e cl • ...... " Sch 894·~1. E.O.E clrk. on evening shirt, Preferably w/own tnkk. 546-4741 TEU.ER Cleaning Lady, Big Ca · DENTIST· Associate. URGEHTl Y HEEDED INTERIOR Decorator some up. i:leslrable, bul Could e•rn 1400 wk. Afl <AcrossErom Xlntbenefits Callorap-~~na;.~n~~:"Hr.'1 w1proareaslve office in :tfustbavephone&reha.· Drapery exp Cpt. exp will train t he right 6PM495·1465 Orance Co. AlrporO ply al: · ' Costa Mesa·Santa Ana ble transport1ttlon. Lon" pref' d but will train person. Must be wllllnJ1--·---------1 EqualOpporEmploytt SAH11AGOIANK CI;ERICAL area. 2 Days i wk . & short term Hslgn~ CanietBazaar,8716701 · to work hard & become PRESSME.,. 112-5200 RECEPTIOHIST 9$.3970 ments. Holiday fJ vaca· part or a growing or· A B.Olck, l ·TEK. P.l.P. SJS E. wst Tustin Typist. weekends • Di =~~lairospltalh:ation cJ~:O~iRK ~8!1~~~f~ ~~;~ c~::;i r.oE.11thSt.C.M. Equal Oppor Employer holidays. Couv.bosp. ~· •W &•EHOus•uE.... Immediate opening tor ror Interview,~ PRESS OPERATOR. ex l~~~~~~~~~I per prer'd. Call Sh1t~Y. £ """ '"'"' " I I-842 5551. •STOCK CLERKS Inventory control ~ erk MOTHERS AIDE r ,_ ~r. on A&. Dick 360. 333 w I r e l a I 1 e x p e r . • • av~ u1o Third Sl LaJ:. Bch. •SHIPf lllCllVIM• Knowled&e or 10 key " chlld care1 Ute hsJtp1. __ ~ _ ..-. •FOR.KUFT C)PRS exper w;detaited figur cooking. al och •94·3138 ""-~- lotervlews 8·3 l'tton·Frl work useful. S56·8944 PROPIRTY MGR. APP.LY •..nJENTORY CONTROL iu T for rcnt•I lncome unlt11 '' M0(1UAU 'r "~f n\I• • f, RETAIL . CLERKS LOcatedAt! 12442 Litmpaon, 0 . Gn• ~10 w SwUaSl..Anahm.. 1ll Del )t.a_r r C,P.l. ~Clenneyre. U.J Bcb Weare an el!u 1 opportuntt1 tmployer ct;.ERK-Ordering, ex· • with growlnc. a&1'resalve pe<litlng & posUn&. Ex· le succeasful Real F .. state~;.;....;;..;...~,_...:...:.;.;...:...-...:.;..- per. dcsltlld. nol req'd. ror Co. Opp for: udv•nc · l tust be aagreaslve We have openin gs lrvlne ar ea. Ca I\ for appt SCC>-7639. E.O.E . ANITOR Work d ays. Needs trans. Start S3 75 hr. Call: DlcU44t1832 KUDO P:xper•d In ~II relaled ROSAN. TEACH!R/ Alsht•t lrvlne.1.8ynorover. Germen Sbortbaiud Cal1552-7494 Pointer, need1 famlly. TEACHER·Pre·School, ---------1 Mele. Papers, Sbots. Cert. or exper. lpm-5pm. O'Kede le Msritt _6'$-_1369 _______ 1 sz.eo hr. 640-8820. Gu ran1• wllh artdle. Kittens, 2 fem ealleos. 1 ~ ..... 1161...-.aCM 64Mtll TECHHICIAM $'ZS. 6't-rem mlud. l yell male. H.fpWant.d 7IOOHelpW•ted 7100 Precialonmecbanlcalaa· KEHMOQWASHll _!882~·-~-----i~~~~~~~I ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• aembly Is test exper re· & DlYEI S71. COWE mother le Blac Kint &be bed SECRITARY.P,ITlme quired. Salary bued on CaU......rlG rat.her?? 2 moci. old fem. '15. SALES Girl, contempory Xlnt typina akllls+filing exp er. Gener o u 1 pupplea. ~2538 983-2'71J clothln& boutique. telephone"aen'lo(c. N benefit.. Sm. Mfl plant -·E--•G•E-R•A•T-O•R•l...;......;..;;...._ ______ , ________ -t Balboa Penin. 675·5&41 H.B. 994.5351 E.O.E. R FR 1 Male pup, 9 wks old.l&t .. • S• -----• O.C Airport. 751-4760 1---------1 (ft.epo 11 mo.) 1977 GE 14 Cockapoo/BaNet mix. SECRET• RY icx&e. t•phone Sales cu ft, 2 dr, wht. $14 pay. 84'1·3320 SALES "' • Want to make money? The Pres Ir Exec. V.P. of Can you sell on the an Irvine based manul. phone? Tops in our busl· co. are seeking an ex· ness. 846·3030, ask for JC f'IENH!YS 24 Fashlo. llland Newport leach Now Interviewing For~ COMMISSIOH SPECIALIST per'd, elficient 4J mature Ra exec. secretary. Appli·•--'y_. ______ _ cant must have xlnt taErHOHE~ALES •-------•I skills in sh & typin& as Tired oflhe routine? In Floor Coverings. well as the ability to Thisjobls(oryou! com municate w/internal call Us Now At Apply lo Person Mon-Fri 10am-4pm Equal Oppor Employer personnel & others. lll-1091 Please send resume to Tl.ME-LIFE PO Box 16307, ln1ne, Ca LIBRARIES 92713. Equal Opp Emplyrm/f Saleslady, Gift Shop. SECRETARY Mature. Qp not apply un· Doc u m e n t a ti o n . less you bave exper. Buggs Internal1onal, Newport Ctr investment 2043WestclltrDr,NB rum. Xlnt skills req'd ---------· Call 640-0123. Sales, outside, w /follow· ing New travel aiiency SECRET ARY in N.B. Call 1146-:5051 G cneral supervision Telephone 111les. S3 25 per S •LES from Natlonal Sales hr minimum. Plenty of "' Mgr. Must have :dnl typ-Tapa. 960-1665 Part lime, 5·9pm, Mon· lng, shorthand abillties, ---------1 Fri, perfect tor College lett.er composing & good TelephoneSollclton, need1---------1 Student, no pressure phonepersonaUty. (10) Immediately lo l>ales or quotas to meet. Apply HOBIE CAT Corp. work pleasant evenlna 5310811 2026 McGaw, Irvtne. -------•---------1 S3-$3.50 hr. Call SALES POSITION lpm, 754-1601 CALL TOLL FREE SECURITY 1800 321·9696 RECoarii>J\~ESSAGE OFFICERS Ful.Part-TllM SALESPERSON Prefer over age 50. Laiuna Hilla Mall. 4-0 br Responstbile, dependa· wk. $2. 75 to start. ble people onlY need ap· Definite advancement ply. potential. M/F, 18 & up. Hospffab, rt..ts. _586-_8445 __ . _____ 1 Holm OWMrS Auoc.. SALIS-STOCK WORK Gate C ..... ol No weapon• req'd. MERYYN'S Observe A: report onJy. Strictly bualness. Applications are belDi <Please No "Play Cop" accepted at 9811 Adams people apply) Patrol Ave. Huntington Beach, I al Nov. lst thru 4th. 10:00 PoS~~~.fTIONAL TELEPHONE SALES Frleldalre Frostproof Work Part·lime in one or Refrig/freeier 17 cu ft. our circulation ules ' r ooms AM. to 12:00 Noon" 2:00 CITY l'.M. lo 5:00 P.ld. Open· SECURITY TILE SETTER •-a.r.-8015 '"~' are available in 1~1 wsALAMITOS H rd kl ' ~Datruc -- ISTATISAU MOTJ-4•5 •. SANTAANA 101.SW. IJtbSt.S.A Between Towner • now er a..t.ofG~l El.LIM MOLAHD Sa ... •-•• ,.,.k work dur. "'" BLVD a wor n . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ""' • -"'" Uon orient.A!d person. Tile IO g l he ch r i 8 t mas LOS ALAMITOS ex pr. not n e ~' bu tl•o·RI-G.IN_AL_O.P·E·N·J·N·o·1~::::..=-----......:.-: _______ _ !>ea~on. Ex per preferred IN 11IE hel ful 751 2339 •• but not necessary. AN BUSINESSPARK p . . PUBI.JCFURNITURE EQUAL OPP TY <Offices atthenaapole> TOOL SITTO *AUCTION* EMPLOYER (714) 827·3020 ror ~peclal machine. Will ~ 1·~0, ..... l d (213)430·1548 train. Must have ad. n-r ·• -· Sandwich/Sa a • unique, ________ .. me c b . aptitude . IDetlhn WelcOfltl shop. 10 : 15·2: 15, p/t. CORTEC ..... ., 1877 CONSIGNMENTS Counter " prep. No exp Servlce Sta. Night Attend '.,..... nee. Ms. Kerrt79..o303. 2 Ors nltea a wk. Apply, ow Truck Driven ex· =~~~~~~~ SARVER SKI Shell, 17th&lrvine, NB per'd. Top pay. Apply, G&W Towing, 1000 Irvine ....., ...... 15 looklna for career Service Station Atten-1-A~v~e=, ~N~B~6'2~·12~2S2====-~.....,.~-~~~~~~~I minded people lntere1ted dant, exper'd. Day & ln around floor op-Eves. Full• p/Ume. Ap· portunlty In snow aki ply, Shell Station, 17th & manufacturin1. Apply lo Irv1De. NB. pel'IOD at SARVER SKI. ---------t 1835 Whittier St, Bldg Servlc~ Sta. Attendant, Bl3, ob Monday Nov 7th aper d. Full or p/Ume., ________ -1 btwn the hrs of l·S PM. Apply Arco Stat.Ion, 17th Only !lard workers need It Irvine, C.U. apply. Serv. Sta Hell> needed lm· med. Full or p/L. Apply, 980 E. Cat Hw7, Nwpt SICAIT AIY /bM. Kuat type GO wpm shorthand 80 wpm Cultomer sales ori,ellt & 1tron1 ••le• ad mln1atratioft nee. \ SpauldJot Di.of Quest.or Inc. Bcl\. SEWlMG MACH Of'R W AMT llSU&. TS? 8eJI JOUr bO# thrU SOU'THWIStaH YACHTSAUS PU.11/MlWPOaT OW.Ill (714) ITN!U ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11' ROADRUNNER. Self· conialned, Sips 6 ~ S950fotr. Ph842's&U Callt. 9' CabQver. Jacks, 7 . ' f ... W•waya Camper. Mo ruaonable offer w t.nlUMd .••. 581-8348 ..l'r. Lac. Mdl Ariatocra Mll·contalned, loaded HIY·llft bitch. $23$0 ... 13'12 '10 Artatouat. Ja' .-.111 cond. Refrie, stove, oven. Bst olr 540-1189 1"1iws, UffUtr 't 10 •••••••••••••••••••••• US Utility Trailer, eon verted ~ Toa pkup bed. Sl00.5'6-8849 ..... Service, ,.arts & AcceuoriH 9400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'h·'77 Used M uatang Parts. 990 No. Parker. Orange. Call 997·2000 ENGINE FOR SALE Ford 289 cu Jn, ln good runnlngcond.$300.Ford, · • spd sblfter Un.ka1e, $30. 48Wl09 . Alltosfof'Sde ....................... 4 Wheel Drl••• 9550 ••••••••••••••••••••••• t"';'\, .-. I.. r~· · 1 ~·-·· !61JJ'J UI ACll Hi ,'(1 ttUNTIN(,lOri 1.H :.t H I<.\.' ~ '81 '\HI 11.141 WE HEED CLEAN USIDCARS NOW CAl.LPAPPY . 540-5630 IOllXSOX & SO, . • LINCOlN ·MERCUHY 2626 HARIOR BLVD. COSTA MESA WEIUY USED CA.RSI We're tbe new Chevrole dealership ln the Irvin Auto Center. We nee your used car! _ JOE MACPHERSON CHEVROLET BARWICK OAT~UH ',, I I Ill t l•'I '. d i·• 8Jl.f 3H49l.J37S '73 240Z Xtnt cond. Am/Fm, air, maaa, 4 spd . $4000.~1. 1972DATSUM AMC-JEEP 21AutoCenter Drive 510 WA~M #I In Calif. IRVINE In excellent condition. 4 WE OUTSELL ALL 7 68-7222 speed, radio & heater. J EEP DEALERS •---------'Less than 40,000 miles. .1. • ..A--.___...d (f05KW). lNTIIESTATE --.... ,,_ '"' HUGE IMYEHTORY •••••••••••••••••••••• HURRY HOW! AllModelsNew&Used Audi t707 Lec:i:;.a:.b1e ····,·;;:;-;~~.·;;;~··· COSTA MESA OATSUM -~ AMC JHp Automatic with air cond. 252itHARBOR BLVD. Super low miles-less COsta Meaa 549.8023 than 21,000. (872LQY). 2845 HARBOR BLVD. 540-6410 54~2 I l '72 Ml% 2ZOD 1951 Bentley Mark VI, left . Automatic ae ah' cond hand drive, xlnt cond Cocllac 9915 For the luxury of 8 $15,000 759·1131 days or ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mercedes & (ht elllclen-~·2966 eves cyotadl8S4!;l t.8MEIE> f'orota 9761 ~ ·•···················•• '74 MIX ZIOC Silver blue metallic ex-IEFORE YOU terior, stereo, pwr win· SELL YOUR dowa le low miles. In fan· TOY OT A, Orcmgt C-'(1 t as t l c c o n d l t i on See us for ,a top dollar S.dlt C...,_ • 5C:ORYmE T·TOP. Fully eqUlpped including atereo, pwr. wiodows fl air cond. Low Miles " In au_perb con<U· lion I ( f0903()) Ml5 SION Vil JO IMPOlllS . ~ . t;J I I l 4~ -19 5 I /04 consider low book trade. 960-3826 JEEPS 1177" CJ·S's, CJ·7's, Cherokees Wagoneers, Ptck-ups, up to $1,200di.s· MA.KE OFFER Ml~S/ON ;lfJO IMPOIH~ .. . '. . .. '75~ 280Z. Map/radials, AM/FM, 10,000 ml, Soper Clean! 640-2360 dy, 64().10i59 ev. (138LQQ) estimate' • '71 Vette T-top SSCt Auto. urY · t9SO •74 MIZ 4SOSEL MAR9UIS TOYOTA J 977 CADILLAC extras. ltlnt eond. Muat ••:_:::':!G1••E•:._:.~8·•.• 1_.;......_-..:.~......;.--..;,;,. MISSION VJ&JO SIDAH DEVILLE sell. $5099. 413-8885 UAA4'u1w"'v15"'"y'" • ~randvWe ... dr, ..... ,, Leather interior, pwr ll l·ZllO 495. U I 0 " "1 • "" windows, cruise control,1--------DeBflJOllU Dodge : 9935 UNCOLN:MERCURY pwt, AM/FM Jle.reo. . .. . .. ·-. llJ I 1748 ·19S 1 l0-1 --------counts. S yr 50,000 mile '74 Audi 1001..S sunroof The •71, An Here All models & colors, lmmedlah Delivery Today! sWU'OO! Ir metallic paint '72Toyota Corona Mark 11 Stereo tape. cruise con· .................... -.. De.al bl ta Ol_>EN a:oc>d cond. $1750. '91-763$ In great condition Statlon Wagon 9,000 trol. SO/SO power spUl Must &ell 1973 Dodge W FUDHOI orbefon2Prn4N-6707 (199LOY> miles on rebuilt engine. aeat & padded to~. Charger S.E. IJke new. LINCOLN-MERCURY '68 Firebird, (00 Cu. In. -Best offer 948·9498 aft Loaded' (311RXH) $2000. MB-2700 16-18AutoCenter Dr. Muncee f ·spd. Hurst warrantys avatlable. stereo, air. xiot condi'. Copeland Mtrs Inc lion. $2850. 575.2571 ;!001 E 1st, SA 558-8000 '75 FOX 2 dr, auto , '67 CJS AM/FM, A/C, Lo m1., RemaifthMJ 1977 Han Got To Go! Wehavea1oodselection 'lPM,Mon-Fri. $9488 Ii k us of other model~ and • '74 Swinger, ltlnt cond. SD Fwy-Lake Forest exit n age, · · mag&. years to select fro '70 Mk 11, nu dk blu pnt, Auto, 8 cyl All pwr IRVINE positractionrear end 411. Best olr. 640·0849 eve mint cond. $4000. 549·5031 Trucks 9560 IMW 97 IZ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• COSTA MESA OATSUM Hue t uphol, mags, Blue Book Nabers 11995.557-8542 130.7000 SH00.832·2128 ' ;ri~ ~ p~c!J~3i.tit:Sh, 73 Dodge Colt, very good '69 Col. Pk. Stn wen. lassie convt. Cat ·12. Cadill cond. 4 new tires. Upd, Loaded. p /S, p I B, Rum pert. All pwr. AM· ,. 'I'll~ Sii.JN VII JO 1Ml'0Rf ', 1976FORD Stepside Pickup Custom paint & interior. f speed, air cond. & low miles. OD12139). CREVIER 1975 TOYOTA • ac S 1 7 0 O 8 9 2 ·a 4 8 l stereo. A/C-. P/Wln. FM. i2000. Make offer. 2845HARBOR BLVD. ' AM'siwknds 5C8-87Q1 Lv'i tor HawaU. 642·3086 6 I 0. 3 Landcrulser 2600 H.1•h11r Blvd eves. 551-$837 .. .. .. . •' "" . - 8Jl./l48 •195·17CN 9970 How ONy $449& BILL YA.TES YW.PORSCHE & 1 51 • HOADWAY 540-4 O 54 021 Lease 4-Whfff Drive Cm1J Mc ... , 540-9 • C)(l Ford 9940 172 COL PK WGN SAMTA MIA 976 Datsun .280Z-Air Hew• U1ed Very low miles & priced ••••t"•••• .. •••••••••• 96M, F/pwrS1250 835'3171 cond., wire wheels, OVER 100 tosell! <425NDN). ;:::t~ • 6't-98'11, T·Blr4 coupe, xlnt ™' ~TII DtUVINO MAQtllll stereo tape plus extras! MERCID•S llLL YA TES 'M Cad Coupe De Vllle, P~I 9951 eGDd. S141' or best otter. Like new! Prt. pty, Best "' YW.PORSCHE full power, mud sell 6 •USEDIMW's* Offer-Must Sell! Call ONDJS,UY $900/Bestofr.545-1291 ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• ~<2.S90 · '77530i4apd286.5EU 759-09U days; 830·4911 House of lmrgrts San Juan Capistrano F()RO' 8 flfustanc 390 GtT. ecJO 9974 - '77320la S/R 177RSK evenlnpls weekends. AU"'1ZORll D 137-4800493-4511 '75 Edorado, <>nlY. 18,000 ccq>e, R.T.1 P/S, PJB ... ••••••••••••••••••••• '7620024apd S/R ~"lPDP ~.. ml, loaded. Jilust •M. Flair lo IDI mutt 1eel _'73_C_ou_rl_er--P-U-, _c_a_m_pe_r_, '763.0sl .. spS/RmPQM 76 280Z, 4 apd w;mag MERCEDES DEALER Trimtph 9767 17495. PP. 54W3ll or ' • • • VIG~176 " shell, clean. S2200. Call '74 Bavaria auto 780MVG whls, A/C, AMi FM, lo 6862 Mimctbester, •••••••••"••••••••••••• 55'1"8711 Xl.ttt, 8'e-68Sl HATCHIACK San Juan Capistrano 137-4800 493-451 I 968.9109. Clowd On Sundays mi. $6495/ moving. Buena Park '74Spitfire, $2700. , Co • '87 V8 Mustang, air cood, 5Speed trans., radio, etc. 645-5~ . 521·'250 CallStevealteripm. 76 nvert. El Dorado, wbt side walls.I cherry Onl~eleven milu ! '69 lot~rnational OUHGECOUHTY'S OntheSantaAnaFwy. 962·5865. blue.P~~SOO. cond.$1S00."4·708C (115" Gl ~vf~~~I.' 4~~~~oloaded. OLDEST '75 45<&C, fully eqwp'd. '76 Triumph. 'J'R7. Blood '66 Mustang, V8, auto, PS, ML y $329 5 & Cne coat, etc. Alloy red. racina stripes. Air. '76 8do Convert. xlnt cond, SlSOO Caab HOWARD Che•roltt '75 Ford FlOO Ranger PU Gd cood, dual tanks. PiS, PiB. AM·FM. Bsl oiler. ~·1548 ma Dodge Pickup,· S1875 or best offer. 754·18SO •77 C,._.wt wbh, eleet. sm'f, micb rust proofing • no Like new. Only 20,000 646-1515 • Dove & Quall Sts. $500v•IPelce XWl, Blk. fU,500. catalytic converter, AM· mi's. All options. Must '731.TDSqulreWgn. Xlnt OCdtmitle 9955 NEWPORT BEACH 494·3866 FM stereo, a trk, auto. sell this week. fl0,1195. cond. loaded. Must see 13J..O I f6 Sales·Servlce·Leaslna on remalnlnt BZlOs, F!Os 2.000 ml. Xlnt $5200 Call Tom, Rome $30.1101, beltoft.1(2.()Qf ' •••••••••••••• .. •••••••._ __ -----Roy Carver,lnc. &710sinstockl '74 240.Diesel. Xlnt cond. 673-3S62 · · Work83t-1B5S. . , F 72 CUTLASS 21200 mi, ,74 Vega Wag. Lo mi's. f\ 888DOVESTREET AM /FM. caa• s\ereo. 81 ord P.U. Rebuilt air, PiS, P/B, AM/F)i, AIC, new tires, auto. Rolls oyce· BMW <Near MacArthur Sunroot. Aux ruel tank. •73 Triumph TR-6, needs '72 Cad Coupe De Ville. drive cbal~ 6 cyl short PiW, l ownr. 640-0740 Clean. $1550. 540.1142. lMOJamboree AndJamboree> S8400/ofr.~·5370evet. clutch. Make any re· brown w/lthr bU, $2200. bed step Slde. can Tim .,,ft-.1.& It Newport Beach 640·6444 Ni:WPORTBEACH 'al MBZ' pd Ir d asonableoffer.9U-8497. 98&-6710 =-~n 6 It I P~19'1$. b.;-·~ 197• Ve1a, ireat Jha~. ·~u~Es~tr ~~:~c~'t~: '73 2002, auto, air, l3J-llOO 62M mi: xl~t c~:d. ~'.Volkswagen t770 '10 Cad CdV, A·l ccmd. 1 6 • $425.cas 8f ·S311aftS ==~~i.JAM/Fflfllft;' 549-15'7 AM/FM, sharp. '5200. Mint ''14 B210 Htchbk, Ph 497.3792 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ownr c:u. Nu tlr.es1 brka, ~.Hew . tlOO Aulftt, Hew tlOO 13179C5 • Sl200/BO. ;;::::-------;:-:::;;-:l.--~Ca~ll.!67!:5-~321~6~--1map,28,~ml. sac. See •is Rabbit, Auto, Red, air shoeb. ball Joints. •••••••••••• ........... ••• · ·•••••••H•• .... "•~-·---------y_, 9570•75 2002. Low ml new &makeofr.548-9545 1962 220SE b coupe, new P/P radio heater.'2399. $2500.Sf8.0CMO .... • ••••••••••••••••••••••• i ' eng, trans, clutch & ,.,.., ~~ • R M ch. AM/ F.111 cass '75 710 WAGON. A/C, 4 paint. S7500. AND 861...;...,...,..,.,.,., ________ ,•77 CAD. Coup• de ~ !.~M.. s~ereo, ~hrome wlrt spd,17000mL 250SE aedan, sunrOQf, '71 VW Sqbk, anrf, £teaance, silver grel w-.,. r m~. e ec sunroo • 979·2186 new paint, fuU pwr. AM!FM, new tires vt/gre1 top, t•.ooo m • hpeed, V8, ma11 wheels, special Brn Mtlc paint., $4500. 536-7525 dys, brakes U 700/ofr' many xt.raS. $10,500. Se• special eltbaust & brand Xlnt cond. $6895. Pb 77280Z, clean. blue w/blk m-am evea/wlmda ff'l5-7aa7 ' • toapprec. 960-4636 new, fully carpeted ar 646·2624 dya, 499·4631 int, pin striping,l:-7=-=.;..;...;..-=--;_;;.;_.;;...::;;.;::::-=-::-:-t...:.:::::.::=..:.._.-.-...;. ___ t-.,;...;;.,------1 customized interior. evesaft6. AM/FM,alr,mags,incld MGI 9744 .CVWBeetle,47.000mt, (79451Wl. 5 yr/50,000 mi extended ••••••••••••••••••••••• +spd, R!H. vin int. Wlll _.. f9 I 7 SADDLEIACK warranty, S'7200. or best '13 MGB Hard & soO top. Mll below Blue Book, •••••••••••••••••••••• VAi.UY IMPORTS offer. 158-09$8 daya, or R&H, new clutch, btkl, $21M.66H681 'Tt Cama~. &ood cond • • 31 1040 49•-.. 949 sas-8492eves. rings & valves. Almost 35,000 mt guarantead . • ,. _.. new tires car cover 58 VW Van, needs enc 1'$50. '94·2.IUevu. 'Tl Dodge Van B-100. cu.st. apd.~,C::.'°~~/~ runssct.ss:ioo.548-8175 • work,$3506'5.'973 191'1 Camero, 1lere lbt/ext, AMiFM stereo, takes it. 494-6133, 494-85 "75 MGB Mint eood. Lo , ,cassette. many xtras. T cassette w/4 spiel's, su BuyOrL.eoseMow , mi. Many extras. Must 68VWFstbck,30·35mpg, Top. Asktnc $5800. roof, mags. Must sell 74 Datsun late Mdl ~Z. see to appreciate. $4800. mech. perfect. Receipts 751-0502; &.»8456 eves. fast, Hkiaa for loan IEAT'n4I Loaded. Mint condiUon. 96MlOO SUQO.ata-M06. balance only. Low C.11840-3019 'TILOADED mileage, so~ mile war-PRICE INCREASE , '85 MGB, reblt every· '68 BUG AM/FM Cass., IMMACULATE ranty. 559~ aft. 6 le 73S10Waaon,lowmt,pvt thing.Giveaway. ne_w rad9', reblt eng, $5750 541M9 , wtmds. OURCOMPLm owner.bestorfer. • a1-1ms beaut. in ft ~must IODY S 0 ~1·3082 aeel S1500. 87 aft 'U .POLLY l!lqulf'd + VAN·Shop Demo. •10 Ford H ' Optl '9746 6P¥ many extras. Mln cond. Longbed. Complete con-IS NOW O,EM Rat 9725 ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• $3400.m.-eo •ersloll Xlnt co.... ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ~vw. ~•-tco""A. • . ...... IMW RESALES rt75 FIAT .,, OPEL Best::ffer!.,,.. • .,., Xlnt. Air, PIS. auto. =:t:~~91Z'l dya, 124~ ~'fu'::a=t;~·J::. ~~ • G3·861htl.6pm ~,,t,..e':~:pkrs. ·-:u'::.' l!"~: i!'1.:i1: cJZ~~ ~!~~~). v~1e'°.!'1 <40:J~>~ery ~~:~J.rice '2900• ~ 08:;b:!(~~~~~ C•1.,ottt .. 7·1121 Priced to Sell! I Porsche • 97$0 radials & map. 837·977' •••••••••••••••••••••• I t76 2002 llLL YA TES •••••••••••,••••••••••• ''12 ~ Super Bot. sunl ... .-.... .---...... !flmoi.I t488t> VW.POlSCHI 1976 POISCHI · root. e tom paint, dnt • SanluanCaplltrano 9115 TARGA cone!. $1850.f7M411 • ·~~~ 137-4100 493~5 If Wltb alr cond., attl'eo Yol.0 ~71J ! ''27 cassette, map 4 low •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• • mnes~~CIC ORANG• COUMTY Jt VAWY-tMPOaTS VOLVO • ll 1 ·2040 49Mt4t EXCLUStVEt. Y VOLVO Largest Valvo Dealu lo Oran1e Count}'J &UYotLEA86 I DlB CT 1 '72 FORD $ PINTO 1599 AUTOMATIC S41'>0tii . HEAR-YE HEAR· YE . ALL PLEASE . RISE 177TOYOTA 4x4 55665 l "70 TOYOTJ\ 171 FORD • I COIOMA PINTO !NTERS GUILTY PLEA Attorney Remington By GARY GRANVILLE Ot•o.My ...... SUH Attorney Michael Remlniton said early today that Orange County Supervisor Ralph Diedrich received SU.000 of a $75 ,000 legal fee he got from representing the Grant Corp. ln 1973 in an issue then pending before the Board of Supervisors. • Remlngton, who unW recently. was Diedrich 's personal at· torney. said lbe money was elven to Diedrich as a lo.ii and bm never beea repaid. The Fullerton attorne1 said another $25,000 of lbe 175~000 legal fee w&S loaned "at Ralph's behest" to a Diedrich friend whose name be couldn'l, at 3 a .m. today, recall. Diedrich was attending a meet· ing in Los Angeles today and was uma•allable for commenL When discussing the matter six weeu ago, however, Diedrich dented receiving ••any money ln any form" from the le1al fees Remington was Paid by the de- •lop men t company after Diedrich admittedly said they abould hire the att.orneJ. • "I never received a dime fronr Miker that had any conoecUon with ibe Grant Corp.," Diedrich said. - But Remington today said the $75',000 be received from the com· pany was deposited to a special account aDd the loan checks al· ltgedly issued to Diedrich and bi$ unnamed friend were drawn on that special accotllrt. . Remington also said that he is not concerned that the money has not been repaid because he said its repayment was scheduled to come when Dltdrlcb divested himself of some real ..Ute bOld· ings. Remington's remarks were made in Pa1111 Sprinas and cl<l.1ed for blm a day Jn which he: · ....:.Speat M minutes tesllfY· ing befOll"O the county Grand Jury in it.a probe mto, amona other things. Diedrich'• role in leading the Board ol Su~rvlaora in 1973 to cancel an airlcullural ~ serve ~t that wu then stmylnC development on the Nohl Ranch in Anaheim Hills. -Pleaded &•II t1 to a sinele polltlcal conspiracy charge brought agalnat him, Diedrich, SUpervi.lor Philip An· tbony, polltical angel Gene Conrad and Anabelm City Coun· . ,, .. u ............ NEW CHARGES AIRED Supervl'°' Diedrich Suspects· Switched· Id.entities . Pair TeSdfied . 160 Aliens HB Ber~y Plnnters Held About 160 illegal aliens from Mexico were arrested while 7 planting strawberries in North Huntin~ Beach fields Wed.Dei- day mOmlng, U.S. IminiaraUon and Naturalization Service <INS> officials said today. WIDdSends rnog Into oast Area An unusual wind condition ushed inland smog into Orange C'qunty today but should be 1one bY..·Friday, a South Coast Air Qqility Management District n1tteorologist said. Bruce Selik noted that unusual· ly ·bigh levels of smog were re· ~ed Wednesday in Costa Mesa ·apit San Juan Capistrano and w~re expected to recur by early •afternoon today. ::The high levels, which he sald oe~ur only three or four days out of 'the year along lbe Orange Coast. were reported at .19 parts or ozone, just under the minimum for a stage one smog alert at .20 parts. Selik said the winds, which are aa1 strong enough to be called SOta Ana winds, were caused by a.b1gh pressure system over the aesert that pushes smoggy air toward the sea. · lie said the winds cause prob- lems in the morning and early As a result, this morning's readings were 'only .07 parts in both San Juan Capistrano and Costa Mesa. The Mexican nationals, mostly men, were taken to Los Anleles for processing and lbeo to San Y stdro where they were returned to Me.xko, u.ld INS A Qt In. vestlgation Director PbiUf Smith. Smith Hid teore alien raids Id Orange CouDty strawberry are planned today. Huntington »each and W"estmimter police offtcera were called in to assist INS agents tn rounding up aliens arrested Wednesday near the lntenection of Bolsa Avenue and Sprincdale Street. The raid took place at 10:49 a.m. It involved aliens employed by the Slater Farm• and the Kotaki Brothers, said Smith. · The INS spokesman said the farm laborers had been.work.int· in the HuntinJrt.on Beach fields for a bout two weeks before their arrest. Last week about 70 Illegal aliens were arrested in strawberry fields near the Los Alamitos Rae~ Track, Smith said. Happy Mother Donna Green~ 32, hOlds daughter, Malikah. 9 months old, as thei are reunited in Salt lake City Wednesday. Mallkab was tu~n at awnpoint from her Chicago home <>et: 7, then abandoned in a Salt Lake City hospital Sun· day night. Against 'M0h' . Tb t led to b cone lOD that ,000 ol tbe ~000 fee wu al· lt&edb loaned to Diedricb a.ad other '25.ooo t.o a Dleclridl friend. Remincton spetulated that 19'13 reCord5 of tho sl)ffial ac· count "will probably IOOD M ln the bandit ot aome kind ol lo- vestigat.ora. •• The Fullerton attorney said It w•s Diedrich 11 referral that laq"td m tbe Gra t Coq. ent u the development eom· Jltn1 wu trying to free ttaell from the development restric- tions· of the agricultural pre- serve. Remlniton said he had done exten1lve research on the Anaheim Hil1I property, legal re- search that wu interrupted 1n mid-19'13 when he was arrested and later acquitted on murder conapiracycharges. --, Attorney Marshall Moraan continued the work begun by Remington after picklnt tbe case files up from Remington's office in Fullerton. Edl!t' weeks ago, Morg~ald Remmcton had, in ract, ex· tensive work on the case It was necessary for him to borrow a carton to carry away the 11ulky files . "All that showed publicly was a two-page memo. But I can as· sure you Mike had labored hard and well on the ag preserve," Morgan said When asked about a so·called Diedrich "Spokane connection," Remington said he had only a vague knowledge of any Diedrich business affairs in Spokane It was in 1974, Remington said, that Anaheim architect LeRoy Rose paid him for wbat purportedly were legal services and the money was then passed on to Diedrich. ··I'm not at all sure but that might have had something to do with Ralph's business in Spokane," Remington said. It was after he testified before the Grand Jury that Remington in the company of his attorney, Robert McElroy, and Assistant District Attorney Michael Capizzi went to Judge Philip Schwab's courtroom. There, he became the first or five men named m the July 1 political conspiracy indictment to answer the charges. In response to an amended single count of the in4ictment, Remington pluded guilty to ·•conspinng with others" m 1976 and 1977 to violate a section of the government code related to political campaip dlffJOIUrf.J. Judge Schwab Call~ Whit ln the indictment waa a f•lony charge ''approprtatel)' a mllde· meanor." He then reduced the charge to a misdemeanor1 fined Rem· angton $15,000 and placed him on three years unsupervised proba· taon. Judge Schwab said Remington could pay the fine beginning next January in $1,000 monthly in· slallments. He then said $5,QOO of the fine would be stayed until Remington satisfactorily com- pletes his three years probation. meaning that if the attorney suc- cessfully completes his probation the fine amount will be only Sl0,000. ''The court also finds there was no moraJ turpitude (involved in the offense)," Judge Schwab said. That finding means it is unlike- ly that ~mington's license to practice la\t will be jeopardized by bis guilty plea to the misde- meanor charge All other charges brought against Remington in the July l indictment were dismissed after Critic Raps U.S. JOHANNESBURG, Soutll Africa (AP) -The South Afrtcab government's leading newspaper crttlc todllf objected to inc~ased U.S. pressure for racial liberalization, saying America ts prQvidlna the white-minorlly goYernment with domestic political am.munition. DAILY PILOT c"""''~ ... -'"'" lb Juq y. RemlqtGo•a llty pt a has the eff eet 'Of haYlJit one membei ot the allteed eauph'M1. admit that. in fact. wu a ooo· •piracy destined to circumv 1tate campalell tlnanclal dfs- eloaure r-erutaliona. Wben ent.erin1 his plea, Rem· ington adm\Ued to 13 overt acts. including in Ma~ • ms, aote~·~"'"-~"'" • tng $17,100 frOni Diedrich iricJ then gtvtng $15,000 to Anthony and $2, 700 to Kott Remin,ion's plea and bis sUnt before the Grand Jury came as no surprise to Diedrich. !n ao otf-tbe·record convetaa· tion Monday. Dledrich aald he Jcnew Remington was achedwed to appear before tbe jury and that he was being repraeoted by McElroy "in some kind of negotiations." "No. I don't think it would be a good idea for me to t.UC to Mike. He bas to do what he has to do and I have to do what I have to" do. I must admit I don't un· derstand b1m tboueb, •• Diedrich said. Diedrich's and Remington's once close business relaUonshJp deteriorated rapidly after the in· dictment was banded down July 1. Remington, who ts a registered Republican voter in Riverside County, said he had no interest in Orange County politics "and re- ally don't care who is elected supervisor in any district." Whatever was done, Rem- ington said, was done to accom- modate a client and not for any political purposes of bis own. Immediately after the indict· ment came down, Remington went to hi5 hometown or Jackson Hole, Wyoming, and for the rest of the summer managed ex· tensive family business interests there At the cl~e of the summer season, he and his family went to Palm Springs where his children were enrolled in school. . He indicated at that time he Is closing out his law practice in Orange County and henceforth will be spending half the year in Jackson Hole and half the year in Palm Springs. The Grand Jury probe into Diedrich's affairs ls believed to have expanded to include the county's cootrac\ for data pro- cessing services with Computer Sciences Corp. and a $5,000 cam· paign contribution received from that firm's lawyer in Seattle ClinicPlam Comedy Night To Get Funds The Huntingt.on Beach Com· munity Clinic is sponsoring a fund-raising event Sunday night at a comedy night club in Newport Beach. Tickets are $10 per person for l wo comedy ahows and a drink. The clinic hopes to raise more than $600 which will go into its general fund, accordinf to Susie New rnan, pre•iden or the clinic's boa.rd of direct.ors. Mrs. Newman s-.ya that the clinic's annual budget of tm,ooo is made up almost entirely from state Department of Health grants and general revenue ahar· ing funds. The clinic also receives $3,600 from the West Oran1e County United Cnlsade. Located at 506 Oran1e Ave .. the clinic provides medical services and legal and psychological e<>t1meling to Hun· ttn1ton Beach residents of all ages. Further inf ormatlon abOut Sunday's event can be obtained by calling 538-8884. Marshland& Talk Slated 'Son of Sa~' . . Says Devils Seize Souls NEW YORK (AP) -David Berkowitz, the alleg~ Son or Sam killer, hoped bis "demons" would leave him after a certain number of slayings and that he wouldn't be caught, accord in& to newly released transcripts. The lran.saripts of Berkowitz's conversations with two psychiatrists were released by Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice John Starkey. Excerpts were published today in the Daily News. Berkowitz was also quoted as sayJng the demons seJzed the souls or bis victims and bad sex with them moments after death. "They chain them up and bave sex forever... Berkowitz said. "The~. take the victims and drag them ant.o the houses a.nd rape them and molest them." Berkowitz said he was sup· posed to marry Donna Lauria, the first victim. ''Sam promised her to me,'' he said, addinl that he did not know why hedtdnotgether. Berkowitz allegedly told police after bis arrest at his Yonkers apartment three months ago that he took orders rrom a doe owned by a neighbor. Sam Carr. In the transcripts, Berkowitz refers to himself u "a dog. I'm not human anymore ... Berkowitz has been ruled com- , petent to stand trial in Brooklyn for the murder of Stacy Moskowiu, 20, the sixth and fl.bat victim of the killer who tu· rorized this city ror a year wttb the .44-caliber handgun that became his trademark. Seven other people were wounded. "I was hoping I wouldn'lbave to be caught.'' Berkowiti told the court-appointed psychiatrists who examined him, "that all I would have to do is till a certain number of people and then they <the demons> would l~ave." When asked about tbe first kill- ing, the following exchange took pl ace with ~ychiatri$ts: "I went home; went right to bed. I was very tired. I slept very good that night. I remember everything that happened that time because I kept reliving it, you know." Q: "Youkep&reUvtneJt!" A: "Yeah." Q: "Wbeef" A: ••An.el it happened. A bun· dred, you know, times." Q: "YOG meaa that Dl&bt or even tbeaextd~· A: "Yeah. Tot.his day." Q: .. Wlt1T Ia lt aometlttnc worth rdJTIDI!" A: "It wu a stranae event. It w u a happy event. Very strange." Berkowitz said he felt no re. morae a1>9ut the klUhigs, but felt he wu ?e$PoMlble because be did not f1eht the demons hard eno\l&h. The transcripts reveal a chill· ing picture of Berltowlta' night· time acuviu .. : .. It cetS dark and l can't 1leep. Wh~ l'm bome I have to go out. I know what bas to be done. .. FrOlll Page Al ALIASES ••. Hamilton said. He said he doubts the real iden- tities of the men will be revealed publicly because they could face death from organized crime figures they testified against. Library Observes Youth Book Week National Children's Book Week will be celebrated Nov. 14-20 at the Huntington Beacb Central Library, '111 Talbert Ave. Kkldng off the WMk will be a Winnie the Poob party Nov. U for 4 to 8-year-old HunllnftOq Beach children. More intormatJon can be obtained by calling the library at 842-4481.. A tniddlMged Fountain Val~y woman~ answereid a knock at the cSoor of ber cocdoml.Alum homi early. toda)' was raped at gunpoint try an lntrud•r wbo pushed ~ ~ into the house, poliC•Mlcl% In•~ators aald they arrest- , ed a a~ln the case latetthls momlng l8d booked hlm on aus- picion ofrf0ttible ra~ arid a variety of othercli~. .. Tbe ·~ was ideDtltied liy police as Aron WilliaQ)s, 34, of Los Angeles . .He was in custody at Orange County Jail in lieu or '25,000 bail. The fncldent occurred about 2: 15 a.m., accordlnc to In· vestfgat.ors. ~ ·. Authorities said the woman was treated at Fountain Valley Commwllty Hospital. Queen Asks Tax . LONDON <AP> -Qt4.eJ!n Elizabeth II opened Parliament today it.nd called for an "anti· hijacking" tax on air travelers in Britain to pay for extra airport security. ® QtJAllTY TELEVISION 'l'rUStee Norma VaaCler Molen said she resented the I act that tbp; p~al was put before her I« acUoa just minutes before the board acted two weeks ago. "I aaw no survey that relates Uiia program to the oeedl or the children.'' she said. • ''I am very, very insulted because this wasn't brought to my fl.t~Uon until 1Ve were asked· to act'Oll it, How ca.n you mate in telligent decisions like that?" ~ Garland and other trustees ap- parently lolew about the prcr. gram previously. It gives you that great zenith color plcttire automafiCallv! lj~~~iiiiiii~~~~::: TlllNI oC • • a TV con1l'Ol n>Oftl In ~ ... It controls the co~ P!ciln ~ Th• COLE. SJ1nl1¥ .:·: oomieta ~· eolcr'pl~e -.. 30 f1lnM aMConcl•utomatloel/yf Finished In Sttniji.t8d grained American Wttlnut with bfutntd Aluminum color accents. Earphone. ··--"••t-._.....,.....,..._..,.,.,.._ ·-··-· ....... -..... --·:~ti:':~~-~*~~--'"".'."::~='""""""!':~~~ ~~-BIG SAVINGS EXTRA TRAf>E:]N AU.OWAN<B ' . CONVICTION UPHELD Hef reH Patty Hearst Moon's Church Charged With Illegal FondS SACRAMENTO (AP> -The Unification Church. headed by Korean evangelist Sun My\lng Moon, collected more lhan $:55,000 in dona· lions in the Sacramento area without a required permit. The sect raised that amount in Sacramento over a 16-rnonth period ending last May, church spokesman Stephen Hall reported in a letter to the city-county Solicitation Appeals Board THE BOARD reJected the churcb's appeal from a permit application de- nial, ruling it failed to show proof of an adequate accounting or contrQl system. Officials said local centers or af- filiated corporations of the ehurch bave been given five permits at • various times datinc back to 1972, but an had either expired or beer\ revoked foi' CillUte to7:Pt0\'lde ttoancial re· ports IN HIS LETfER. Hall apologized 'for this past lack of concern," but said it was because Sacramento is one of the few places with a religious solicitation ordinance. He enclosed a financial report showing $55,628 collected during the 16 montm, with $41,1« of that sent to the New York beadquarter.5. AT HEB EIGlrl'·WBElt trtal, ahe invoked her Fifth Amendment rljbt against sd.f.lncrimlnatlon 42 times and refused to answer certain quee- t inn~ asked bv U.S Attorney James L. Browning Jr. ~ Miss Hearst's fatfuw, · "' • ~ executive Randolph A. Hearst. aald the family was "disappointed. We had hoped the appeal would be in her favor. We UMJught there were very good grounds for the appeal." Chie( defense attorney F. Lee Bailey's associate, Wayne Smith, said in Washington they "will definite!¥ appeal" to the U.S. Supreme Court. MISS HEARST, Z3, is expected to remain free on $l million ball. Brown- ing said at a P.-esf conterenee alter the decision wu announced lhat the government "wUJ'not seek any order for her conl\nement'' pendlng com- pletion of the appeal.a process. He said Miss Hearst's attorneys have 14 days to file for a rebeariiig and an additional 30 days to file a petition to the Supreme Court. Asked about the possibility of Miss Hearst spending more time in prison, Browning replied, "That would be up lo the trial judge, William Orrick. It is up to him to decide if the previously imposed senten~ should stand or should be modified" if and when the conviction is finally upheld. ORRICK TOOK OVER the caae when the trial judge, Olivet' J. Carter. died ln June 1978, three montbs after Mi.ss Hearst was convtcted. Orrick later.sentenced her to seven years in prison for her part aa a carbine- 'fielding bandit in the April 15, 19"/C, holdup, just 10 weeks after ber Feb. c kidnap at gunpoint. The appellate court, in upbotdlh1 the verdict, agreed with the govern· ment's argument that Miss Hearst's activities while dn the run with the SLA alter the bank robbery were crucial to her defense of duress . ..... ""'-.... 10ISAPPOINTE01 Randolph Hearst Don Cook, Huntington Beach, hu been promot- ed to the position of product training manager for Calavar Corp., Santa Fe Springs. A 12-year vetenn of the heavy mobile equip· ment industry, be •erved earlier as a aales representative for Cata var. * Paul A. Linow1ki h•s been named manager o( the new brancn office of South Coui Natloeal Bank. Opening early in 1978, it will be loc,ted at the corner ol Warner and Los Jardines in Fountain Valley. He has been active in the field or bankin1 for more than lS years. Since Joinini UW. bank iJl June 1976, he has bee.a 854iat.aitt vice ~dent.tor loanJ at the main drtice in CoSt& Mesa. where he bas also served as consumer credit lilw compliance Olfker. * Management staff assl&nment.s for the new J.C. Penney store in Orance Mall Shopping Center in· · elude Rohen S. Fbldley, store manager; Bea H. Wood, general merchandise manacer; 5'ena J. Bllfar, personnel manager; and Davlct Small, operations manaier. They wiU be responsible fot day-to-day opera· tion of the new 95,436 square-root store. , Robert W. Betker and Kenoetlt C. Jones were named senior merchandise manegers, and Mlc:llael G. Mount, Carolin L. Mettbant and Naaer L. MeKerUe have been named mtrchandbe managers. JohJlson T. J.,au has been named as manager of f90d servic~. Brian lllebard ~euedy as fine jewelry m~rcb~diser, aod Eater ~tOr as a merchandiser. SHE TESTH'IED THAT her kid· nappers threatened to kill her U she did not join the heist. But ahe refused, on instructions from Bailey. to lii!!iii~iiiiii~!iiiii!iiiii~ifiiiiiiii~iiii!iiiiiiiii~~~~~ answer any qtJestions abOut 12 o( her 19 months in the terrorist under· ground during wbich time anot,ber bank robbery was linked to the SLA. Miss Hearst later pleaded no con· test to a charge of firing a weapon during an SLA crime spree in Los Angeles a month after the San Fran· cisco bank robbery. She was placed on fi\'e years probation in that case. n.1&111yaa 1..-... Rll 111.1 If us -- .. THE INCIDENT tiappened at the Hilltop West shopping center. Jifra. Holden said a woman saw tile attack from a bookstore . "I hoped she would help me or call the police. She on}¥ locked lhe door," sbe said. If you are a fashion conscious teen or voung woman. vou II fit right 1n, Because we ere fashion apecl•ll1ts ottering a or•at selection ot comtemp0r8ty styled reedy-to-weer, Especltlly for the petite and h•rd to fit small. ' ... and 4aaRion This week we're featuring the Hq Ten Cofduroy Claalc ahOwn here.: l i "It was hard bargaining-we get the mWc and honey, but the anti-adultery clauae staya In."' • Pot.on Cnater Ollnos Aatld•~ DEAR PAT: We had a narrow escape recently. Our two-year-old child was picking up a bottle of weed killer I had carelessly left unattended for a few minutes. 1 saw him just as he lifted the boWe up toward his mouth, and was able to stop him. I've wondered ever since where one should call about an accidental pou;oning? J. H., Huntlniton Beach Pboae 634·5188 before attemptlq any treat· meat. Tbe UCI Medical Center Polson Coatrol <:eater operates Z4 hours a day. ID cases of acdden· la1 polaoo.ln1, be sore to save the household cleaner, weed killer container or prescription botUes, to help f." center ldenUfy the harmful aient ucl prescribe rescue measures. ~6reea P"8r• Nf!ftl Speeltll Care : DEAR PAT: Pears may be a bargain in the ~upermarkets, but I've almost given up buying them. They're always green and even though I store ~hem In the refrigerator until I ripen them at room jtemperature, they remain tough and somewhat •tasteless. Am 1 domg something wrong? i G. N., Mission Viejo '1 Pears are always picked green ~use tree frtpenlng produces an unpleasant iralny .testure and ;rtpe pears would bruise easlly dllrlog shipment. tvour ripen.log 'method may be at fault. Tho beat :method ls to place pears In a nearly elMtd paper J>a1 and bold at room temperature uatD tlaeJ t1llll Jully yellow and have a slltltt give wh"ea laeld lii tlte aad. Three or more pears In the same bag ripen tter Uiu one or two. Store lD tbe refrigerator after rt~aatU eervl_q. 8eull4!ed Order Ret..ta 8eltqrtil ~U~ PAT: 1·wonder if you could help me t some i rmatlon about what is being done eustomers of the Universal Money Order Co.? Thia llrm declared bankruptcy in January, and people Jrere told to submit claims to the state Banking Department. There's been no word on refunds since. M. W., Costa :Mesa ~ Robert Cameroa, state Baaklb.g Depu11aent enlor examiner, told A YS that Uni venal "Moaey Order Co. bas not yet relmbuned California con· mera, but dlslrtbatlon is anttclpated bJ mkl· ember. Cameron added that the aupertntetldeat aaka .. didn't know If It eoWd be done bJ Uaea,0 wever. Tbla firm remalu Wlder Cbapter 11 •ankruptcy co'-rt Jurlldlctlon, and lettua are ailed to claim ants regardlnl repayment. . Persons who purchased tbde unhonored oney orders stUl may submit claims by aend1D1 a botoeopy of their mall orders or ldeatlfJlnl umber and amount to: Callfornla Banklq Depart· en&, IOt S. Com monwealtlt, Salte H•l, Los n1ele1,, CA 9'005. Tbe state forwards all claims to e court weekly. Claims (wlt1t proof of pa7meaO 110 may be aubmiUed to tile recei•er I• aa.laUl*f: Bu.knptey Oerk, Roozq 231, Atteti• oa: Judle.Jolul .J. GaJlay, New York, N.Y. letl1, WASIDNGTON <AP) -Maybe you baven't noticed but a lot of newspapers besan ref errtna this week to the president instead of the Pi'eatdent. The change in widely used newspaper style should not ~ taken personally by Jhr111\y Carter. The Associated Press and United Preas lntema· tional began wrestling such queeUon.s of C!lpltaUza· .i:111~•!t tion long before anyone knew Carter wowd reach the :Wblte House. • ON MONDAY, ALMOsT IDENTICAL new styleboob covering capitall2aUon, abbreviations and other nlceti~ were put into effect by AP and UPI and adopted by many newspapers. lncludirig the Daily Pilot Arranaed alphabetically, the entry under '°president" reads' "Capitalize presld4tnt only as a fonaal UUe before one or more names· President Carter. den ta Ford and Carter "Lowercase in all other UHi~ The presldeot said today He is running forpresldent. Ll.ncoln wu president during the Civil War " MAYBE IT'S PART OF THE delmpeflallntlon Air Polluted of the presidency If that's the cue, stylebOOk com· pilers have been at it for a Iona lime SACRAMENTO (AP) Until Harry Truman became president, all AP -A IAmg Beach plant dispatches put a "Mr ... before each reterence to a haa been lined $1,000 for president's last name Truman became 1lmpl1 exceeding asbestos alr Truman. quality atandards, the·-----------------...... - state Department of I . Health H)'S The fine •• CIONCD- lollowed an inspection at nwDnWUUM Atphalt Products Olli ,..., /GO!PG IP 1~~--_.:..;;....i.,~--....;.;;~.:....;:.:.------~~~~· t CONVICTION UPHELD Heiress Petty Heerat Moon's Church Charged With Illegal FundS SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Unification Church, headed by Korean evangelist Sun Myung Moon, collected more lhan $S5,000 in dona· uons in the Sacramento area without a required permit. The sect raised that amoutit \n Sacramento over a 16-11\0nth period ending last May, church spokesman Stephen Hall reported in a letter to the city-county Solicitation Appeals Board THE BOARD rejected the church's appeal from a permit application de- nial, ruling it failed to show proof of an adequate accounting or conlfol system. Officials said local centers or af. filiated coQ>Orations of the church • bave been elven five permits at various limes dating back to 1972. but all had either expir-1 or been revoked fot e to 1X'0•1de nntmcial re- ports .. IN JDS LETTER, Hall apologized · for this past lack of concern,·· but said 1t was because Sacramento is one of the few places with a religious sol ic1tatlon ordinance. He enclosed a financial report showing $.55,628 collected during the 16 months, with &U,144 of that sent to tions asl<ea by U.S. Attorney :iarn Browning Jr. ., Miss Hearst's father, newspaper executive Randolph A. Hearst. aald the family was "disappointed. We had hoped the appeal would be in her favor. We thought there were very good grounds for the appeal ... Chiet defense att0tney P'. Lee Bailey's associate, Wayne Smith, said in Washington they , "will definitely appeal" to the U.S. Supreme Court. MISS-HEABS'I', i:s, Is e_xpeded to remain tree on $1 Jnilllon ti&ll, Brown.; lng sald at a prtsS confereoee after the decision was announced that the government "WllJ'not seek any order for her confinement" pending com· pletion of the appeals process. He said Miss Hearst's attorneys h-uve 14 days to file for a rehearing and an additional 30 days to file a petition to the Supreme Court. Asked about the posslbillty ol Miss Hearst spending more time in prison, Browning replied, "That would be up to the trial judge, William Orrick. It is up to him to decide if the previously imposed senten~ should stand or should be modified" if and when the conviction is finally upheld. ORRICK TOOK OVER the cue when tbe trial judge, Oliver J. Carter, died in June 1976, \hree months after Miss Hearst was convtcted. Orrick later. sentenced her to ieven yean in prison for her part as a carbin• .. yielding bandit in the April 15, 1974, holdup, just 10 weeks after her Feb. 4 kidnap at gunpoint. The appellate court, In upholding the verdict, agreed with the govern· ment's argument that Miss Hearst's activities while on the run with the SLA after lbe bank robbery were crucial to her defense bf duress SHE TESTH1ED THAT her kid- nappers threatened to kill her U she did not join the bellt. But ah~ ref used, on instructions Crom Bailey, to answer any questions about 12 0( her 19 months ln the terrorist under· ground during wtilch time another bank robbery was linked to the SLA. Miss Hearst later pleaded no con· teat to a charge of firing a weapon during an SLA crime spree in Los Angeles a month after the San Pru· cisco bank robbery. She was placed on five years probation in that case. 1'1181 ,.. .. It ...... FGRAl.lCfUS the New York headquarters. .- ... ~~ .... 'DISAPPOINTED' R•ndolph Heerst Don Cook, Huntington Beach, has been promot· ed to the position of product training manacer for Calavar Corp •• Santa Fe Sprir\gs. A 12-year veteran of the heavy mobile equlp- m ent industry. he served earlier as a aales representative for Calavar. • Paul A. Linowski has been named manager of the new branch office of South C.oui Nalloaal Bank. Openina early in 1978, it will be located at the corner of Warner and Los J ardiries in Fountain Valley. He has been active in the field of banking Cor more than lS years. Since joining the bank in June 1976, he has beeri assistant vice president for loans at the main office in C.Osta Mesa, ... ~ he.b.U also served as consumer credit law compliance officer. * Management staff asslgnmenta for the new J .C. Penney store in Oran&e Mall Shopping Center in· elude Robert S. Findley, W>re manager; Bea ff. W~ general merchandise manager; Steve• J . Biffar, personnel manager; and David Small, operations m"1lager. They will be responsible for day-to-day opera· IJon of the new 95,436 square-foot store. Robert W. Betker and Ke1111eth C. Jones were named senior merchandise managers, and ¥1ebael G. Mount, Carolla L. Merchant and Naacy L. l'lcKerlle have been named merchandhe managers. Johason T. Lau hu been named as manager or food service, Brian Rlcbard knaedy as flne jewelry merchandiser, and Eater Spector: ~s a merchandiser. • • If you are a fashion conscious teen or young woman. you II flt light In Because we are fashion epeelat .. te offering a grtat sel~hon of comtemporery styled ready-to-weer. Eepeclatly ~or the petlte and hard to f1t small. ·You'll aleo lib our maj()r bt~ .. name merchandise from HanQ Ten and Chemin de Fer to Nifty 11 of C.hfomia and JOdf. 0.13 Ir.•• &-14 T.ens ~ ... and JaRiOn 17 ---~-= -~~~~~-. ------------- ----------. -... -~ VOL. 701 NO. 307, .. SECTIONS, '42 PAGES -By GARY GRANVILLE • OI tlle Delly "•le41Uff ~ttomey Michael Remington said early today that Orange County Supervisor Ralph Diedrich received $25,000 of a $75,000 legal fee he eot from representing the Grant Corp. in 1973 in an issue tben pending before the Board of Supervisors. Ati;,rne;. Say~ Fee Received From (!-rant Corp. t to hi.I cone lan that' $25.000 of the $7$,000 fee WU al• Jeged.ly k>&ned to Diedrich and another $25.ooo to a Died.rich friend. •Remington, who until recently was Diedrich's personal at- terney, said the money was given to Diedrich as a loan and has never been repaid. The Fullerton attorney said another $25,000 or the $75,000 leJal fee was loaned "at Ralph's behest" to a Diedrich friend whose name he couldn't, at 3 a.m. today, recall. Diedrich was attending a meet- ing in Los Angeles today and was unavailable for comment. When dis<:ussing the matter six weeks ago, however, Dieddch denied receiving "any money in any form" from the le,al fees Remington was paid by Uie de- v el op men t company after Diedrich admittedly said they should hire the attorney. "I never received a dime from Mike that bad any. connection with the Grant Corp.," Diedrich said. But Remington said today the $75.000 he received from the com- pany was deposited to a special account and the loan checks aJ. legedlv issued to Diedrich and Bead& in the Pall7' An autumnal Laguna Beach pair enjoy sun~hine ~d seclusion by reading at Main Beach Park dunng Indian Summer in November. Farther down the beach, ;,tt Oak Street. Lee Turner, 19, and Mark Mac Rae. ·23. play_ pad· die tennis on the sand. If it were not for the scarcity of crowds. you'd swear it was summer all over again. his unnamed friend were drawn on that special account. Remington also said that he is not concerned that the money has not been repaid because be said its repayment was scheduled to come when Diedrich divested himself of some real estate bold· in gs. Remington's remarks were made tn PatmSprings1uutctos~ for him a day in which he: -Spent 90 minutes testify. ine before the county Grqd Jury in its probe into, among other things. Died.rich 's role in leading the Board of Supervisors in 1973 to cancel an agricultural pre- serve agreement that was theo atmying development on the Nobl Raneh Jn Anaheim Hills. -Pleaded guilty to a single political conspiracy charge brought against him, Diedrich, Supervisor Philip An· thony, poll tic al angel Gene Conrad and An.,heim City Coun· cllman WIIllam Koll in a grand jury indictment handed down Ju· ly 1. -Answered "volun- tarily and freely" four hours worth of recorded queatlona asked him Wedneeday night by diatrictattomey investigators. -Along tile way received a grant of iJJlmunity for his er-and jury testimony and thrff waivera of attorney-client privilege Jn. eluding those of the Grant Cori>. and Anaheim Hills! Inc. At the close of that day which didn't end until he retutned to bis Palm Springs home shortly aAe:i' 2 a.m .. Re~ refused le> dia· CU.SS bis griild Jury-testimony. "I won't answer any questioN about my testimony be<:ause I've been admonished not to. But I will answer your questions as long as they are not in reference to my grand jury testimony." he said. Remington speculated that 1973 necrds of the special ee· coWlt ••ww probably soon be tn the bands of some klod of in· iveauaaton." The Fullerton attorney said it waa Diedrich'• referral that landed him the Grant Corp. client a tbo development com- pany u tr:Y1DI .to tree 1tMlf from tho development rest.de· tiona of tho qricultural pre- serve. . Rem~ said be had done extensive research on tbe Anaheim mu. property. leaall'Oo (Sff DIEDRICH, Paae Al) Suspects Have Aliases 2 Held in Murder TeStified .Against 'MOb' Two Huntington Beach men be- in& held in connection with a murder in Newport Beach were given new identities and moved to the Orange Coast by the federal government after testify- ing against organized crime figures in the east. police con· firmed today. Newport Beach police refUsed to reveal the real identities of the two men. However, it was learned the names listed on their local arrest records are Jerry Peter Fiori and Raymond Steven Resco. Fiori, 41, of 19822 Brookhurst St., Huntington Beach, ls ac- cused of being the "trigger man•• in the shooting death of Stephen John Bovan, who died Oct. 22 out· side the El Ranchito Restaurant in Newport Beach/ Resco, 28, of 10121 Merrimac Drive, Huntington Beach, ls ac· cused of conspiracy in the murder case. Newport Beach Police say the real identities and· backgrounds or the men are a closely guarded secret of the U.S. Marshal·s of- fice in Los Angeles and that federal authorities are refuslng to cooperate in the Newport Beach investigation. No one at the marshal's office was available for comment to- dtay. According to court records, Deputy Orange County District Attorney Dave Carter satd Fiori has been convicted of murder LAKFSDE (AP) -Shotgun.armed 11oldup men liit a :Sev~Eleven tore southeast of San Diego at 2:30a.m. today. · In the next 45 nilnutes. they robbed seven-Eleven stores in El c.;on. Los Cocbes Road. old Highway 80 and L&keside -all in a line on the map. The two sherift•s deputies on duty figured it out and headed for the next all-night mart. spotting the suspected getaway car en route. A chase at 70 tqjles an hour ended in a crash with two youths taken iflto custody along with a shotgun and cash. before. However. lnfonn1UOO oo that convfcUon has been un, available to local law eilforce- ment officlals, polleesldd. CapL Richard Hamllton of the Newport Beach Police Depart- ment said his department bas been tfYlr!a to get background in· formation on the two men to use in the court case but bas not beea able to uncover any. He said the Santa Ana office of the FBI was to aid h1s office in <See AUABES. P1ge AZ) An unusual wind condition pushed inland smog into Onmce County todJl)' but should be eone by Fridiu'. a South Coast Air Quallty Management D$.Strict meteorologist. said. Bruce Sel1Jc noted that unusual· ly high levels of smog were re. ded Weclnesday in Costa Mesa San Juan Capistrano and e e'1)eCted to recur l>~ early atternoon today. Irvine Homes llit By Power Blackout Culverdaledevelapments. ' 'The blgh Jevela, which he said occur ooly tbi'ee or four days Out of tbe Y'*' along the Orange Cout. were reported at .19 ~ of ozone, just under the minimum for a stace OJle smog alert at .20 parts. The industries affected were just ea.st of the homes to Jam· boree Boulevard. Irvine Police and Califomla Highway Patrol officers were kept busy directing traffic at slx m-.Jor int.ersedion.s Where traffic signals were darkened. Dozens Ol residents telephoned police abOut the incident. • . Selik said the winds, wbich:ue not stroq enouah to be cilled Santa Aria Whids. were caused by a hltb pressure system over the desert that puahes smoqy air toward the sea. He aald the winds cause p~ lems bl tbe moriliD1 and early afternoon houn. but that tJJ' toni&ht sea bi'eetes are eXpected to push the smog bact lhl~~· As a 1reault,0 this mortihlg's readmg.s were only J11 pw In ooth San Juan <;aplstrlno and Costa Mesa. ,.... ....,. ,.....,. ... NEW YORK <AP> -David Jle{kowil&, the alleged ~ of Sam knt , hO b.ls ''clemorus" would le ve h m after ..c!{taln number Ol sliYln«s ariil ltiat he wol&!dn't.be cau ~ accoi'dtng to It\. n •.1 tr.V•"".......,~ -_.;.. ·r.--· The transcripts of Berkowitz's con v ers atlons w llh two psychlatriJt.a wtre released by Brooklyn Supre~ourt Juatice John Starkey. Excerpts were published t9<1ay in the Daily. NEW CHARGES AIRED Supervisor Diedrich -News. Fr .. PageAJ • DIEDRICH LOAN. ; • search that was interrupted in mid·1973 when he was arrested and later acqwlled on murder conspiracy charges. Attorney Marshall Morgan continued the work begun by Remington after picking the case files up from Remington's office in Fullerton. Four weeks ago, Morgan said Remington had, in fact, done ex- tensive work on the case and it was necessary for him to borrow a carton to carry away the bulky files "All that i.howed publicly was a two·page memo. But I can as· sure you Mike bad labored hard and well on the ag preserve," Morgan said. When asked about a so·called Diedrich ··Spok•ne connection,·· Remington said he had only a "ague knowledge of any Diedrich bus mess affairs 1n Spokane. It was in 1974, Remington said. that Anaheim architect LeRoy Rose paid him for what purportedly were legal services and the money was then passed on to Diedrich "I'm not at all sure but that might have had something to do with Ralph's business In Spokane," kemington said It was after he testified before the Grand Jury that Remington in the company of his attorney, Robert McElroy1 and Assistant Distrtct Attorney Michael Capizzi went to Judge Philip Schwab's courtroom. There, he became the first of five men named in the July 1 political conspiracy indictment to answer the charges. In response to an amended single count of the indictment, Remington pleaded guilty to "conspiring with others" in 1976 and 1977 to violate a section or the government code related to political campaign disclosures. Judge Schwab called what in the indictment was a felony charge "appropriately a ~isde· meanor." He then reduced the charge to a misdemeanor, fined Rem- ington $15,000 and placed him on three years unsupervised proba· tioo. Judge Schwab said Remington could pay the fine beginning next January in Sl,000 monthly in- stallments. He then said $5,000 of the fine would be stayed until Remington satisfactorily com- pletes his three years probation, meaning that if the attorney sue· cessfully completes his probation the fine amount will be only SlQ,000. Four From Coast NB Police Hunt ·~ 6 More in Slaying By JOANNE REYNOLDS 0t the D•1ly l'tlot St.tlf Newport Beach police sought six more people investigators believe arc tied to the shooting death of Stephen John Bovan of Fountain Valley. Warrants charging murder conspiracy have been issued for four one time Orange Coast resi· dents Elsie Caban Kulik. Joseph Shelton Davis, Joseph Gabriel Fedorowski and Roy Christopher Richard. connection with the alleged con· spiracy and the four that are still being sought. Those arrested and expected to return today to the Harbor Judicial Dls~t courtroom of Judge Selim S. ranklin for ar· ra1gnment are· -uebra Ann Addison, 24, of 19822 Brookhurst St., Huntington Beach; -Jerry Peter Fiori, 41, or the same address; -Raymond Steven Resco, 28, of 10121 Merrimac Drive, Hunt- ington Beach. -Anthony "Little Tony .. Berkowitz was allo quoted as saying the demons telied the souls of his victims and bad sex with them moments aft.er death. "They chain them up and have ~ex forever:• Berkowtu said. ·'They take the victims and drag them into t.be boUAes and rape them and molest them ... Berkowitz said he was sup. posed to marry Donna Lauria, the first victim. ·'Sam promised her to me," be said, adding that he did not know why he did not get her. Berkowitz allegedly told police after his arrest at his Yonkers apartment three months ago that he took orders from a dog owned by a neighbor. Sam Carr. In the transcripts, Berkowitz refers to himself as "a dog. I'm not human anymore.·· Berkowitz has been ruled com- petent to stand trial in Brooklyn fo r the murder of ' '·a c y Moskowiu. 20, the sixth at1d final victim of the klller wbo ter· rorized this city for a year with the .44·caliber handgun that became his trademark. Seven other people were wounded "l was hoping I wouldn't have to be caught," Berkowitz to.d the court-appointed psychiatrists who examined him, "that all I would have to do is kill a certain number of people and then they (the demons) would leave." When asked about the first kill· ing, the following exchange took place with the psychiatrtsts: "I went home; went right to bed, I was very tired. I slept very good that night. I remember everything that happened tha~ time because l kept reliving it, you know." Irvine Plans Workshops For ~couples Workshops in communication for couples are scheduled on four consecutive Mondays beginning next Monday at University Com- munity Parle, No. 1 Beech Tree Lane, Irvine. The 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. sessions are sponsored by the Irvine community services de- partment and the Family Service Association. Cost is $40 per couple, paid at the time of registration at city ball during normal working hours. The woman is the wife of Alex- ander Kubk, already jailed in the t•ase The three men are Kulik's business partners in a Newport Beach investment firm , Prasadam Distributing, Inc. <POI). Two other one-time Orange Coast residents, thought to be colleagues of the dead man, are being sought as witnesses in the case. Marone Jr., of the same address; -Alexander Kullk. 28, who- lists his address as 3 Linda Isle. Newport Beach. The workshops explore the im· portance of eCfective com- munication in resolving con· flicls, enhancine self-esteem of both partners and as a basia for deciaion-maldng. · Angel's Deer * * * Fr .. PageAJ , Kill Backed $SO. Concerned ctll 4)rpl Uh y d today mon y t.ed by peopl ot llv.tng In san :Juan was used primarily fo .. a mail petition ear· ly this year. · "That monav waa used &o d• term1ne what the will of ttie peo· I ~" nd wh ther thoy would • support.the councilmanlc dbt.riet proposal," Matthey~. clt!nl.~ tho l,000 s~ure.s ~· ,..,.t..a.illhlaalltt_._. *kM• dicatfon of resic\ent deaares. • The concerned citizens- inltlated ballot measure calls for creation ~ aeven counc;ilmanic districts, each electing its own councilman. There are curreoUy five councilman elected at·larae. Matthey 1aid monoy for the actua14oor to 41oor petition drive -which secured 17 percent ol the city'a voters• signatures to place the issue on the ballot - was provided primarily by himself and Mlabln, both San Juan residents. Matthey defcmded developer contribution5 to the' concerned citizens group. · "I don't believe developers are incapable of having a magnanimous attitude toward the voters," he explained. "I think what they did was a public service." Spooks Stay ~oder Cover WASHING TON ~p) -CIA employees need to remain under- cover even after retlrement, and that's why they need a separate pension plan, the agency says. The plan allows some workers to retire at age 50, according to testimony released Wednesday by the House intelligence subcommittee ••Even upon retirement, certain employees must remain under cover and «:annot reveal any affiliation with the CIA, or in some cases, even the U.S. government," the agency offtcial said. Department eommlttee on the military code of con· duct. the executive order announced today 1ay1 prisoners would be "re· quired to give name. rank, service number and date of· birth." Formerly tbe provlslon read, "When questioned, should I becomo a prisoner of war. I em bound to give only name. rank, service llWDber and date of birth." Irvine School Te~eher Eyed For Honors Karen Sp4!ros, a social science and Engllsb teacher at Unlversl· ty Rlgb stbool ln Irvine, ls one of three teacliers nominated by the Orange County Department of Education for lhe national Teacberolthe Year Award. Mrs. Speros will be conaidenld in state competition. U aelect.ed as California Teacher of the Year, she becomes eliClble for the national title. She bas taught at University High since 1971. In previous years she was a substitute teacher and wOrked in a procra.m of counseling unwed motben. She is president of the board of directors ot Crossroads, an Irvine youth counseling pro.:. , gram, and a direct.or of alwiml admissions for Nortbweatern University. TM COLE • SJ1931W t Finished In simulated grelned AmeTlcan Walnut with bfuahed Aluminum color accents. Earphone •• t'h& Mexacan nauenats, moew men. were taken to Los .\naelee ror procaalnc and then to SaJ\ Ysidro wberethey were lum6d to Mexlco. uld INS~.sbtant In· veaU1ation Director Philip Smlth. •. Smith 1aid more alien raids in. Oran&• Cou.ftty strawbem f1el are planned~. HuntlA1ton Beach and WutmwWI' wlice officers were ceUeii 1il to usist INS •cent.a lo rouodlnc up aliens arretted Wednesday near the lnteraectioo of Bolsa Avenue and Sprblcd• Street. The ratd took place at 10:4.9 a.m. lUnvolved alieM emple>,yed by the Slater Farma and the Kotaki Brothen, aaid Smith. The INS spokesman said the farm laborers bad been.workinl in the HunU~ Beacb fields for about two weeks before thelr arrest. Last week about 10 illegal allens were arrested 111 strawberry fields near the LOS l\lamltoa Race Tract. Smith 1atd. , ..... PLANE ••• ;. They are Stanton Keiffer and Robert Shea. Both are named in the murder complaint tiled in Harbor Judicial District Court as the subjects of the murder con- spiracy along with Bovan~ "We don't even know for sure that they're still alive," com- menteJ Capt. Richard Hamilton of the Newport Beach Police Department. • the investigaUon but so far, personnel in the FBI office have not provided anything. SACRAMENTO (AP> -Deter on Angel Ialand State Park In Sm Francisco Bay should be re· moved or killed as soon as possi· ble, atat.eoftlclals said today. FIMAL 1977 CLEARANCE· "Right now, we are concerned for their safety and we're trying to let them know that we want them to contact us," he added. Hamilton explained that in· vestigators believe the two men could provide evidence tn \_be up- coming court case against tbe five 'l'SOl1S alread ailed in "It is our understanding that the federal government paJa these indivtduals as much as $1,500 a month under this ,pro- gram for relocating witnesses against organized crime," Hamilton said. He said he doUbtS the real iden· titles of the men will be revealed publicly bect\l8e tbey could face death from organized crime figures they testlfted against. Russell CablU, director of the state Parks and Recteatlon Department, satd be approved an environmental impact report that recommends riddlna the '150-acre island of deer. The report, written by the 1tate Department of Fish. and Game, said the deer poputatloft of 8C> to 100 has arown too lara• for the taland and many anlmilt !)ave 1tarv~ or died or dl.aease. BIG SAVINGS ~KS I SYLVIA PORTER Thur Clos.in )'' Pri e NYSE COMEOSITE &WiR""Mu ·; ~II• 2010 -. s~:.?+·(., CipHold .611 10 " 22 -• \ C.Wllk I 24 10 Wd'7 <t6 + l 111 C.llnaO ., 10 , • c.11m 1 • 1 zi .. 11o Clrefrg .lO 7 S ••· ~f.";~lL~ ·~ ~~·: . <Arlee I 10 s l)l t8 " Ulrr(Jl ao 1 •O dll'• • c.v '"" "" JI t2 • C...IH•w 1 9 ! 19>e CMIH,.pl 1 J JI (M1W1ll 40 ~ 16 8' • C..<NC. 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'• Unl.Hf 1 .• 1 10 JI'" Up/Ol'lfl 11013 TU )I\.• '9 u•LtFE S2 • 99 1H• t, 8:!•W'L 1'tt ti 1~! l~:.:; .,,; UIPLpl 2.IO.. 1• lift v-v \/~ C.1> 1 10 1 .. 11 -"-\/SIC.Of'P I 1 17 2lh-'" ll•lltytn ID II 1• ,,,_ • - varitn It 10 •l t•. • h V1ro1nc lOa • 2• •~ \ • \/en<IO ID )4., • .,. Ven1c• ISi • 2-.i •••' Vfll~ 1 Jlw 8 ........ . Vtt<o .20e3'11"8 22'• '• V••com 2012 '8 0' • • '• vaEPw 12• 1 ... u 1.+ '· V•EP pfa ...... tJ00 101 -.... Y•EPDfJ.'10 . I JO .. -h 'i•EP pfl 10 • 1'100 101 ..... \/aEP pf1.0 .. UIO 14 -I~• \/0tnaclo • • • t I • VulcnM I IO , • 23' ,_ ... a DAllV PILOT THE PRODUCTS INVOLVED ARE tho.se that a.re not canned or hennetically sealed 1nd t.hu.s •lose or 1aln moisture between the time tbey leave the factory aod reach t.he abopplng basket. These inclu<!e flour, fish, meat end poultry. bread, soaps, frozen roods. ctteals, rice and pasta, Under federal regulations, such items must welgh tlae amount stamped on the package at the lime they are sh1pped from the plant. By the t.im they have reached grooery shelves, "reasonable variation,;" in wei1ht are al· lowed. ll 's the responsibili· ty of state inspectors to check packages at the retail store. but pnder ambiguous federal rules, each inspeetor 1s left to figure out for Money's Worth himself what constitutes a "reasonable" shortaee for loss of . moisture. UnW this year, state and local weights and meaaures of. ficials, acting under stricter state laws, pulled short· weighted items from the stores. But in March the V S. Supreme Court ruled that federal laws, no matter how vague, preempt.state and lcx:al regulataons. THUS, SAY STATE INSPECTORS, they are prevented from protecting consumers againstshor!'.'weighting. Food processors and packagers of other weight-labeled products are hurt too, when a manuracturer labels hJs package as 18 ounces but packs less in it undersells hls competitior. Wholesalers and retaile o rely on accurate weights and measures. -Concerned about the dangers, ate and local officials, farm organizations, consumer gr ups and co-operatives have petitioned the Department Agnculture, the Food and Drug Administration and Federal Trade Com· misston to tighten up ' As one illustration, the Agriculture Department 1s working to revise regulations governing meat and poultry products. - "WE ARE MOVING TO REMEDY the difficulty creat· ed by the Supreme Court decbion," says Carol Tucker Foremarr, assistant agriculture secretary for food and nutrition services. As another illustration, the Amencan Meat Institute agrees with states' erforts to change the federal laws. "We want a uniform standard uniformly enforced," says a spokesman, "not 50 different state standards." Meanwhile, many state inspectors are trying lo keep short-weighted items off the market. "We are even risking cnntempt of court citations by pulling items orf the shelves," says Herbert Cohen, counsel for California's Department of Food and Agnculture. "Weights and measures officials around the country are holding the line, but they can't continue for Jong.'· Recording For'lnfonnation' Starting Nov. 12, most General Telephone of Oalifom1a customers will bear a recorded message before they speak to a directory assistance operator. The recording asks customers to use the directory as- sistance service only when they can 'l find the number io their phone books. By putting it into operation, General' Telephone hopes lo reduce its number of directory as~ aislance calls by 25 percent. THAT WILL SAVE THE company an estimated S2 2 million in the first year of operation, General says. The recordmg program will be implemented in the 21S, 714 afltd ~S area codes in Southern California on Nov. 12. It is scheduled to be put into operation in the company's Los Gatos division at the end of the first quarter of 1978. Plans are being formulated to implement the program ( J in the other Central 00,JU~UMER California communities• 1-,J served by General. In an effort to pro- ------------vide statewide uniformi- ty and prevent customer confusion, the recorded message will be identical to one of those used by Pac1f1c Telephone. It will state: "If Uie number you need isn't in the phone book, please stay on th&. line. When the operat..or gives you the number, writ.e it down . for £uture use." l . Since Pacific TelJr.hone introduced it& recording in the • Los Anaeles area in :June and July of ms. ·directory as-: sistance calls placed by its customers have been reduced by 25percent. The call volume to General's directory assistance operators has risen S8 percent over the past 10 years, from about 77 million in 1967 to 138 mtllion last year. According to Edward L. LambeQ>, vice presldenJ, .. service, for General, a disproportionate number of those: calls are made by a minority or cmtomers . .,We esUmate: that 7 percent ot our cuatomer1 place some 50 pereen\ of the calls to directory assistance. About 80 percel1\ of our : customers make three or less such calls a month,•· beaatd. 1 i F. INCREASE IN VOLUME has raiaed General's • I total cost of providine directory usiatance service by UIS ... 1 percflot in the past 10 years, he said. Dwi.ne lbat thue, the cost er from$7.4mUllonto$211 million annually. ·:on a ~r-montb buts, director assistance cO&t 5' cents ~r customer 10 years 110," Lambeth said. ·~. t lUf tigl.ire Ls abOut '1 a montb per customer." : General Telephone recelved Califom11 PubUc UtlUU Comm· on permlaslon to convert to the recordin pfd. sram lh lune. Jt ls expected that implement.tJon otthe rccordiot .P~ 1ram will eventually result in a U -perctnt operator WOJ't fore relductJon\ which wlU be aecornplt hed through ttri lion .. _L • ~ FRIDAY SATURDAY suNgAv Sweeter dreams Here's a charming touch of yesteryear for your bedroom. Headboards are made of brass plate over steel to give years and years of pleasure. Choose exactly the size you need. BRASS TYPE HEADBOARDS, Twin Reg. 35.99 Queen Reg. 44.99 19.88 26.88 Full Reg. 39.99 23.88 King Reg. 49.99 29.88 Not available .it rhe Orango slore. A swag with character Contemporary swag lamp blends the old lash1oned charm of cane with a sleek modern design The result is a delightful swag for any room in your house Natural cane with 12' of brass chain. l 5· ol cord Scalloped shade measures 13"x16' Model #1387·3-'. CANE SWAG. Reg 29 99 J 16.88 Not available at lho Orange srortJ. When quality work comes first u,e this high-grade hardwo d plywood for truly professional results. It's especially good for cabinet work. Ask any d0·1t- yourselferwho does It with wood . 4' x 8' x 1/4 ". HARDWOOD UTILfTY PLYWOOD. Reg. 8.99 6.88 Th11 Wasfe King Disposer thrives on foodwastea too tough fqr othera to handle, like bOnes. atalq ind strlpgy foodt. Designed !Of everyday economy, elliclency and reliability. -- F11s any sink wilh a 3Yl. drain opening. Vi h.p. Model #1000. WASTE KING DISPOJER. Reg.34.99 26.88 . A priceless pair Use the power tape favored by the pros for accuracy every time. And with this fine tape, you'll get a dependable "Sheffield" hand saw. That's a deal every smart do-it-yourself er will appreciate. FREE 26" NICHOLSON HAND SAW WITH PURCHASE · OF 16' LUFKIN TAPE, Refreshment at your fingertips .. It's a thermos that dispenses your lavorile beverage lhrough a con vement spout. Just press, and enioy. In assorted decoralOf designs Ct - Model ;::p1so-A ALLADIN PUMP-A-DRINK Reg. 12 9') 9.88 Nol available at the Orange store. 7.99 A handsome return on your money An investment in a pecky cedar fence really pays ofl in reli- able protection tor child- ren, pets and property. And. with age, it takes on an a11rac11ve natural, rustic appearance. Weather-resistant. 1x12 x 6'. PECJ<Y CEDAR BOARDS, Reg. 1.99 oa. 1.58 ea. • Th• ahOwer revoluUon Showers Will never bt th• eame. The 'Shower Massage by Water Plk9 combines• totally unique pulsating action with a ~entle spray-Ake , shower. Adju.ia froM a conventional~,.., to a maaage actJon 01 •combination of th91two. Model4'8M·2. THE SHOWER MASSAGE BY WATER PIK&, Reg.19.99 14.88 Legs that getadmlrlng-fook• Add strength and elegance to tables, plant stands, fumlture with the~ f1Jm1ture-<1uallty WOOd tum Inga. In Colonial, Mediterranean and Traditional styles EMCO HUSKY T MLE LEGS, 6 .. Reg_ 1.1g... 88c 9" Reg. 1.79 1.28 14• Reg.2.69 1.98 21" Reg.3.99 2.88 Not available at the Orange store. Looks special beCauae It I• This bOardwaa picked becauee ii'• top quality pine. So you can put up ahelvlng wilh an expensive, custom look. Tmt your home, and yourself, to the nnnt tQ<lay. 1X12x6'. • SELECTED PINE SHEU/ING, Reg. 2.75 ea. 2.10 ea. • -..- 1VOL. 70, NO. 307, ~ SECTIONS. 42 PAGES ByGAllY GRANVILtE OIU. O..lr P'tlMS..tt Attorney Michael Remington said early today that Orange County Supervisor Ralph Diedrich received $25,000 of a $15,000 legal fee he got from representing the Grant Corp in 1973 m an issue then pending before the Board of Supervisors. Remington, who until recently was Diedrich's personal at- torney, said the money was given to Diedrich as a loan and bas never been repaid The Fullerton attorney said another $25,000 of the $75,000 legal fee was loaned "at Ralpb"ll behest" to a Diedrich friend whose name he couldn't, at 3 Beach in Winter? An autumnal Laguna Beach pair enjoy sun~hlne and seclusion by reading at Main Beach Park during Indian Summer in November. Farther down the beach, at Oak Street, Lee Turner, 19, and Marie MacRae, '23. play pad· dle tennis on the sand. If it were not for tbtt_~arcity or crowds, you'd swear it was summer all over ain.. ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA • a.m. today, recall. Remington was paid by the /J,e- Diedrlch was attending a meet-velopment company after ing in Los Angeles today and was Diedrich admittedly said they unavailable for comment. should hire the attorney. When discussing the matter six "I never received a dime rrom weeks ago, however, Diedrich • Mike that had any connection denied receiving .. any money in with the Grant Corp.," Diedrich any form" from the legal fees said. But Remington today said the $75,000 he received fh>m the com· pany was deposited lo a special acco1.¥tt and the loan checks al· lesedly issued to Diedrich and bis unnamed friend were drawn on that special account. Remington also sald that he is SUspects Have • as es 2 Held in Murder Testified A.g_aimt 'Mob' Two Huntington Beach men be· ing held in connection with a murder in Newport Beach were given new identities and moved to the Orange Coast by the federal government after testify- ing against organized crime figures in the east, police con- firmed today . Newport Beacb police refused to reveal the real Identities of the two men. However, it was learned the names listed on their local arrest records are Jerry Peter Fiori and Raymond Steven Res co. SC Nixes Inspection Of. Houses San Clemente city COW"«:llmen received a round of applaU.e Wednesday night after a 4-0 vote to deny a ltatf.b ea Ofdill ce Which WoUkt h o ~Ulred city inspection ot -bulldlll1 ovtr a year old before It COUid be aolcL ·°The mljorit7 of thoSe here tofti,bt u•aaa1.nsUt, the ma.>ori· ty o the Wis I'vi received have been against it, and for that reason I would have to vote again.at it, .. said Councilman William Walker at the conclusion or a public hearinc on the pro- posed ordinance. Also voting for denial were Mayor Doooa Wilkinson and Coancllmen Patrick Lane and Tony DiGiovanni. Councilman Thomas O'Keefe did not ilttend the meeting. Attorney Bernard Allen, of San Clemente, representlnt the South Orange County Boud of Realtors, told councilmen tbt or· dinancewas ''not just a matter of dollars and cents. but of bwnan rights." ··You are people of good faith," he said, "but what happens 18 years from now, when you aren't around" Will the police chief go to the building inspector and say, 'I notice this house is for sale. When you go in, I want you to check this, this and this'.·· Allen warned the proposed in- spection ordinance, similar to a Newport Beach ordinance, might pose a liability problem for the city. "Ir you have 1,850 sales a year, that makes 1,650 times a city employe would be IQing on prlv ale property, hesaid. " A random telephone sutvey conducted. b~ the SOutb Orange County BOard of Realtora showed 109 of 122 respondents opposed lo the pro~ed ordinance, realtor Thoma Axlater told coun· dim n. Fiori, 41, of 19822 Brookhllt'St St.. Huntington Beach, is ac· cused of being the ''trigger man" in the shooting death of Stephen John Bovan, who died Oct. 22 out· side the El Rancbito Restaurant in Newport Beach. Resco, 28, of 10121 MerriD)ac Dri\'e, Huntington Beach, is ac- cused of conspiracy in the murder case. Newport Beach police say the real identities and backgrounds of the men are a closely guarded secret or the U.S. Marshal's of- fice in Los Angeles and that federal authorities are ·refuaing to cooperate in the Newport Beach investigation. No one at the marshal's office was available for comment to- day. According to court records, Deputy Orange County District Attorney Dave Carter aaid :tiori has been convicted or murder before. However, information on tha\ conviction has been un- available to local law enforce- ment officials, police said. Capt. Richard Hamilton of the Newport Beach Police Depart. . . San .Juan Council Developers_ Back Election Cha~ge B1W1i.UAM BODOE ,.. Ol•o.ltr"""SUN A group advocatin1 drutie chaDges in San Juan Caplttnao'1 couodlmanlo el~· tion process was bankrolled by developers and real estate in- • urests, clt1 records show. The croup, Concenaed Cit.Ii.ens for Responsive Government. col- lected $2,881 in its successful at- tempt to place a controversial counciJmanic district proposal on the March ballot, according to campaign financial reports on file with the city. Largest contributor was Alto Capistrano developer Morris Mis bin, who donated $1,411 to aid the petiUondrive. Other contributions included $269 from Bernie Matthey, a local real estate salesman and spokesman for the concerned citizens group. Matthey lives in Alto Capistrano. Another $1,071 was contributed by developers, property owners and development.related busi- nessmen, none of whom live in San Juan Capistrano. Among that group is Douglas ..... By gr£V£ MITCHELL Of .. .,..,., .. _ • ..,. Councilmen have given their support ln principle to a plan lhal would allocate one percent of a builder's project cost to the art.a in Lagunfl Beach. The action Wednesday nltbt followed a presentation by tbe city•s cultural committee, wbich recommended th& councU ad t the fee to be Imposed oo cte- vetopers of commentlal projects wllh a vlllue of $10,000 or more in the city. • Councllinen sala tbey wOU.ld like the committee to lnvest.lgate the possibility of an arts councU to be established in Laguna Beach to ov eo cult'1l:Dhven , Claru. G date lderat • ings ond LOan president. He con- trf bote4' $20() to Cltlsel11 tor Res~n.si¥'.f Q:Wernment cqtf ers, Glendale Federal is tlie llU'Pst San Juan pro~ owner aiidliu an SU million lawsuit pendiQ& against tbe clty on a land use matter. • The Concerned Citiren 's flnan. cial report also included $130 in anonymous contributions under $50. Concerned citkens spokesman Bernie Matthey said today money contributed by people not livini in San Juan was used primarily for a mail petition ear- ly this year. "That m<>oey was used to de- term ine what the will of the~ pie wu and whether they would support the c:Ouncilmanic district proposal," Matthey explained, citin1 the 1,000 slgoatures re· · ceived tbroagb the mail as u in· die a lion of re;sident desires:' The concerned citizens· initiated ballot measure calls for creation of seven councilmanic. districts, each electtng its own <See ELECl10N. Page A!) ment said bis department has been trying to get background in· formation on tbe two men to use hi the court cue but has not been able to uncover any. . He said the Santa Ana office of the FBI was to aid bis omce in the investication but so far, personnel in the FBI office have not provided anythlng. "It is our understanding that the federal government pays these individuals as much as $1,500 a month under this pro- gram far relocating witnesses <8'9 AUASES, Pate.\%) 'Runaways'· Get Home Jn·Lqguna A Luaa Beach homo will become ~ .. orange Coun,fy7• first faCllity to band.I• the ao-• called ~ative•• rQDaway or lneom,lbte )'.OUtbs wbo by law can no loiigcr be forcJbty de-tained. The booie on the 400 block of St. Ann's Drive bas been operating as a shelter bOme for troubled youngsters who., with the cooperaUon of their p~ts. are seeking co\DlSeling services. But, accordJnf to plans ap. proved by eounty supervisors Wednesday, the facility now will be used for youngsters •hose parents may not be avaiJabJe to assist in working out problems or who are not voluntarily seekhle help. ..... Dr. Em~ Klatte. assistant director of the county Buman Services Agency, said neighborhood residents in Laeuna Beach were contacted about the change ln the facility. The residence will be convert· ed from a flve-4ay-a-weet facili· ty to a 24-bour-a.<fay seven-day· a-week ~r offering higbly- struc\Urecl CO'UMelini pro&ram.s. Klatte 1ald count; officials also diJcUssed the change with city andschooloffi.cials. \ • Warrants ls By IOANNI!: REYNOLD.\ ........ Nllll llMI Newport Beach police aouaiht t>IX more people lnve1U1at.ors believe att lied to the '5bootinl death or Stephen John Bovan or Founttiln Valley. Warrants chareina murder conspiracy have been issued for four one-time Orange Coast resl- den ts Elsie Caban Kulik. ..._10Al"~t} Sti~tnp Qav~, JoisJlph Gabriel Fedorow.ald and Roy ChriJltopher Richard. ' The woman 1s the wire of Alex· ander Kulik, already jailed in the case. The three men are KuUk's business partners m a Newport Beach investment firm, * * * Fr .. Page 1\ l ALIASES ••. against organized crime, .. Hamilton said. He said be doubts the real iden- tities of the men will be revealed publicly because they could race death from organized crime figures lhey testified against Praaadam Di1trabutan1. lnc. tPDll • Two other one-time Oran1e Coa5t residents, tboqht to be colleagues of the dead man. aff heme sought as witneaaes In the case. They are Stanton Kelrrer and Robert Shea. Both are named in the murder complaint flied in Harbor Judicial District Court as t.M ~u!Uec&a ot the murder con- spiracy a.loa&witb llcmua. "We don't even know ror sure that they're still alive," com· mented Capt. Richard Hamilton or the Newport Beach Police Department. "Right now, we are concerned for their safety and we 're trying to let them know that we want them to contact us," he added. Hamilton explained that in- vestigators believe the two men could provide evidence in the up- coming court case against the five persons already jailed in connection with the alleged con· :spiracy and the four that are still being sought. Those arrested and expected to return today to the Harbor Judicial District courtroom of Map Aids COps Tiro Youths Held.in Heists LAKESIDE <AP> -Shotgun-armed holdup men hit a Seven-Eleven store southeast of San Diego at 2:30 am today. In the next 45 minutes, they robbed Seven-Eleven :-1tores in El Cajon, Los Coches Road, old Highway 80 <rnd Lakeside all in a hne on the map. The two sheriff's deputies on duty figured it out and headed for the next all-night mart, spotting the suspected getaway car en route. . . A chase al 70 miles an hour ended m a crash with two vouths taken into custody along with a shotgun and cash Services Scheduled For Drowned .Priest Rosary will be recited Friday for The Rev. Patrick Colleran,. 43 or Long Beach, who drowned T~esday afternoon in a skin div- . ine mishap at Three Arch Bay. The rosary service begins at 7 p.m . at St. V1biana Cathedral in Los Angeles. Mass of the Chris- tian Burial follows at 8:30 p.m. with Cardinal Timothy Manning the principal celebrant joined by Bishop William Johnson or Oran~e. Masses of Christian Burial will also be celebrated at St. Anthony Church m Long Beach at 9·30 <J.m. and at noon on Saturday. The Rev. Desmond Colleran, brother of the dead priest, will be the principal celebrant in that ceremony. Burial will follow the noon mass at All Soul's Cemetery in Long Beach. · Colleran died Tuesday after- noon after he was washed into rocks in rough surf at Three Arch Bay in South Laguna. Capistrano Eyes Planners. Applications are being accept- ed for a position on San Juan Capistrano's planning com- mission. The commission reviews city developments and makes recom- mendations to the City Council. The group meets the second and fourth Tuesday of each month at 7p.m. incityoffices. Applicants must be San Juan residents. For more information, phone the city manager's office at 493-1171. OAANQI[ COAST LISC DAILY PILOT Efforts by a 13-year-old friend of the priest failed and Colleran died en route to the hospital. His brother was skin diving with him at the time or the mishap. He was not seriously hurt in the church ocean. Officials jrom the Diocese of Orange said Colleran 1s survived by family members in Ireland and California. He was ordained in 1957 and was msl re- cently the coordinator for the Catholic Church's Worldwide Marriage Encounter programs and was associated with St. An- thony's Church in LonK Beach. Front Page Al ELECTION •• councilman. There are currently five councilman elected at-large. Matthey said money for the actual door to door petition drive -which secured 17 percent or the city's voters' signatures to place the issue on the ballot - was provided primarily by himself and Misbin, both San Juan residents. M atlhey defended developer contributions to the concerned citizens group. "I don't believe developers are incapable ot havln1 a magnanimous attitude toward the voters," he explained. "I think what they did was a public service." Equipment Stolen -Camera equipment and silver bicentennial coins worth a total of $1.020 were reported stolen Wednesday, The burglar entered a San aanente home through a sliding bedroom door. Jack Poulalion, of 209 Cenito Clelo. told police he ion a camera, camera equ.lt>ment and $15 wOrtb of coiaS in the burglary. Judae Selim S. Franklin for ar- ·ral1nment are; -Debra Ann Aadison, 2', of llfDZ Brookhurst St., Huntington Beach; -lei'!')' Peter Flori, 41, or lhe eameaddrea; • Raymond Steven Reseo, 28, or J0121 Merri.mac Drive, Htmt- ington Beach: The complaint filed with the newest arreat warrants alleces that between Aug. 20 and Oct. 25, the suspects conspired to kidnap and kill Boyan, Shea and Keiffer. Shea and Keiffer. accordini to police. were both sales agents for POI. Accordin~ to police, they helped Bovan. an employee of one of the firms m which PDI had in- vested, kidnap Kulik in August. Fiori, Resco and Marone were used by PDI to help free Kulik after paymg $100,000 ransom. Police allege that as much as SS0,000 was then offered by the tour business partners for ~e deaths of Bovan, Shea and Keif- fer The warrants ror the four miss- ing suspects carry $500,000 bail for each suspect. Kulik. who we originally jailed for allegedly be- ing in possession of more than a pound or nearly pure beroln, is now held on a total of Sl million bail. The other four suspects -Miss /\ddison, Fiori, Marone and Resco -are being held without bail Thieves Hit Two Laguna Businesses· Thieves gained access to two downtown Laguna Beach busi· nesses through louvered win· dows, escaping with cash from one resturant, and em ply handed from the other. Police Sgt. Terry Temple said burglars entered the Epicurean shop at 384 Forest Ave. by re- moving window louvers located 12 reel from the ground. Owner Robert Denning said $75 in cash was taken from the till in that burglary. Ralph Lucero, owner or the La Concha restaurant at '83 North Coast Highway told police someone cut open a screen win- dow and removed eight louvers from a window to get into his eatery. But the restaurant owner said nothing appeared to be 11\isS· mg from his business. Sergeant Temple said there have been several commercial break-ins recently in which the burglars entered through the easy-to-remove windows. He sugaested exterior security bars be plac~ on louvered win- dows, or that they be taken out and replaced. F,...PageAJ ARTS ••• Deusen, a member of the cultural committee, said the cur- rent committee bas no power. "We've been boycotted by the Festival of Arts people, and ig- nored by the playhouse people because both gr<>UPI have direct channels to the City Council. "Power ia money," be con- tinued, indicating that a council appointed arts council could recommend allocations or funds to dlfferent art projects and agen-, ~ ~tes. Councilwoman Phyllis Sweeney said she fears the one percent feel will raise some problems but added, "~t·s not mlolmi1e the ltrides this little town has taken. We have ballet. an art m'-'eum and an opera. ••1 think that should we create an arts coundl, we wowd he launching a new enttty i.dto the political makeup of LaaunJ Beach ... . -~ cause of death. Tbe spokesman said two doc· tors amoni the 407 passergers on f'r .. P-A J the tlllrbt, El Al OOUrom Tel Avlv -v-to New York via Amsterdam. eX--::!_ amined the stricken man and IJIEDRICH LOAN. recommendedthattheplanellU\4 in· its probe into, among other things, Diedrlch's role in leading the Board of Supervisors in 1973 to cancel an agricultural pre- serve ai:reement that was then stmying development on the Nobl Ranch to Anaheim Hilla. -Pleaded gullt1 to a single political conspiracy charge brought against him, Diedrich, Supervisor Philip An· th""" nn}_iHl'lll ~n111•1 f:PT>• cilman William Kott bl a grand jury indictment handed down Ju- ly 1. -Answered "vol un - tarily and freely" four hours worth ot recorded questions asked him Wednesday night by district attorney investicllors. -Aloag the way received a grant of immunity for bis grand jury testimony and three waivers of attorney-client privilege in- cluding those of the Grant Corp. and Anaheim Hills, Inc. At the close of that day which dido 't end until he returned to his Palm Springs home shortly alter 2 a.m .. Remington refused to dis· cuss his grand jury testimony. •·1 won't answer any questions about my testimony because I've been admonished not to. But I will answer your questions as long as they are not in reference • • immediately, but Holder was de- to my grand jurY tesUmoay," be ad by the time Capt. Colman said. Goldst.ein landed the Boeing 747 at That led to bis concession that Belgrade,tbeYu1oslavcapital. $25,000 or the $75,000 fee was al· capital. legedly loaned to Diedrich and The spokesman said the bodt another $25,000 to a Diedrich was taken from the plane, and friend. Holder's widow and two friends Remington speculated that traveling witb them also re· 1973 records or the special ac-malned in Yugoslavia. count ''will probably soon be in The spe>kesman aald the plane the bands ol some kind of in-new to Amsterdam with the vesUaatol'S." other 403 passengers after the m. • The Fullerton attorney said it cldent, ~~ping to a low altitude was Dledrich's referral that because of the cabin pressure ""lnded him the Grant Corp. problem. Re»airs and an in- ellent as the development com-vesllsaUoo of .the cause of tht pany was trying to free ltseU Losa of pressunzaUon were to bl! from the development restri~ canied out in Amsterdam, the tions of the a&ricultural pr~ ~knman said. . serve. The~ maneuver is aimed Remington said he bad done at a plane to a low~ extensive research on tbe alUt\lde where norJDal external Anaheim Hills property. letal re-pressure ls hiib enoueb to pre. search that was lnterrupled in vent lPJuri to pusencers. mid-1973 when he was arrested El Al doeS not fly regularly to and later acqu.ltted on murder Beltrade, and Israel bas llO conspiracycharges. diplomaUc .relation• with Attorney Marshall organ -yuao.atavia. · continued the wcn'k begun by Remington after picking the cue files up from Remington's office Teachers Strike in Fullertco. Four weeks ago, Moraan aaid Remington bad, in fact, done ex- tensive work oo the case and it was necessary for bim to borrow a carton to carry away the bulky files. ®QUALITY TELEVISION OAKLAND (AP> -Picket& aet up llhes •t aome 90 acbotb in the Oak.land Unified ScbOOl District today to launch the fltst t.eacbera' strike in the city's bb- tory. Th• COLE • SJ1938W Finished In simulated grained American Walnut with b«ished Aluminum color accents. Earphone. ..... _ ..... CM»• • -5f'lllY ....... "°""''""' .,.. ... ·""""""··-...... ---~ ... ·~-c..-......... t MO-~ FINAL .. 1977 CLEABNCE BIG SAVINGS EXTRA TRADE-IN AllOWANCES l ·~ -Caplatruo Beaell Couty WaJ,er Dlstrlet, with S,46'1 registered voters in Capistrano Beach, Dana Point and San Clemente, who will elect two directors from among four candidates to serve four years on the fiv•member board. Two ol the four candidates are incumbents Ken Lawrence. 27012 Del Gado Road in Capistrano Beach, and Duncan Blackbum, 33856 Mariana Dr. in Dana Point. The others are Capistrano Beach residents L.W. "Vern" Stirling, 34824 Calle del Sol, a real estate broker, and Henry Hf).mhwki, 34942 Calle Fortuna, an eneineering draftsman. -Caplstrano Beacla Sanitary Dlstnc&, with 4, 111 registered voters in Dana Point, San Clemente, San Juan Capistrano and ~lstrano Beach, who will elect two full term and short term director lrom among five candidates to serve two and four-year termsontheflve-memberboard. Running for full four-year terms are Capistrano Beach incumbents Larry Montoya, 34366 Camino El Molino, and Robert Shayer. 26751 Calle Maria. Challenging them 1s Henry Halminskl, 34942 Calle Fortuna in Capistrano Beach. Running for the two-year term are incumbent Erna Estep, 26972 Calle Granada in Capistrano Beach, and Joe Gonzales, 4117 Calle Abril in San cfemente, a public agency manager. -C.plstraao Bay Community Services Dis· trlct, with.158 registered voters on Beach Road in Capistrano Beach, wiJl elect three directors from among six candidates to serve four years on the five-member board. The community services district provides security service, street lishtine and maintenance and trash collection for Beach R~ad residents. Incumbents are Wayne Schafer, 35811 Beach Road, a realtor; Gwen Reese, 3STI1 Beach Road, a retired teacher; and Charles Peterson, ~1 Beach Road, a mill owner Also running are Hobie Alter, ~ Beach Road, a boat manufacturer; James Sutton, 35485 Beach Road, a corporation president; and William Turnage Jr . 35351 Beach Road, a retired sales manager Parker Hannifin To Pay Dividend Directors of Parker Hannifin Corp.. whose Aerospace headquarters are in Irvine. have declared the regular quarterly cash dh·idend of 25 cents a common share payable Dec. 9 to shareholders of resi>rd on Nov. 25. This Is Parker's llOth consecutive ~arterly divtdend. The company's sales, income and orders showed year-to-year gains durlng the first quarter Sales for the first quarter were up 16 percent $133.2 million, compared with $114.3 million last year, and income increased 13 percent to $6.6 million or 58 cents ashare ror the first quarteroffiscal 1§77. lrvlae .Fl,... Reergaalses Symbolic Displays, Inc., Irvine, has re· organized as two operating divisions, electronics and display products. Richard B Fritz, former manager of research and engineering, has been named \'ice president and general manager of the di!\play products d1vis1on . Alan Hanks, former director of marketing. has been named vice president and general manager of the electronics division. Don Gallant, president. has retired. William H. Eadie Jr. has assumed the duties of both president and chairman of the parent corporation. "These chanees are designed to give the cor- poration treater nexlbility in responding to OUT mar"et environment and lo enable us to promptly respond to changes in customer requirements,·· Eadiesaad. Group Lea.n Btdld"'9 . ~ Investment BuJldlng Group, Irvine, ha.s enttred into a 2S-fear multrlease contract w~ purcha.se option lor. a 12l,225·1quare-foot lridU.trial buildtn1 al 3530 E. La Palma Ave., Anaheim. • Tho lease calls fol' a total consideration of more than $3 million, accordina to Jack l\f. Langson, managlng partner. .. MARENGO EXPERIEN(;E "We wlU find the look that'• beat for you.:· "The key WCM'd here It YOU!" HJ• Marengo. ·•we c.n't lmpoae tomebody elae'a look on you, nor do we went to." (What makes a Jook your very own Is not th•t ever- yone hH voted It In, but that tt aultayou.) Your flrtt step la to • quiet facial room, an atmosphere so relaldng you could almost fall Hleep. Your akin la u,oro11ghly cleensed, vacuumed, ateemed and mt_aeaged, using a multitude of beauty ptoducta, Heh fHllng better than. ..... lHt. At the encl of •II thla luscloua Indulgence (which take• abOut 9f'e hour), ro'l wm be ... .., to ~r atyllat, ,.., .. heel, retuect, and with tM deaneat t.ce hi town. Aft• an lnten t\elr anatyttt, your haft atytlat wtll decide 01' th9 IMat look DUE TO IHE~~JVJENDOUS RESPONSE ·. : . . ;rr11.s OFFER HAS BEEN E~TENDED THROUGH NOVEMBER!! . MAKE.UP • Cclltur....,• ·~ • c:.n .... • •••o (o'I for your face & llfeatyle. Thlt wtll be followed by aham· pooa, conditioning, ttyllng •nd blowdeylng. 1 Back a.gain for your turn with the make-up artist. She wlll spend dose to • haH hour app1JlnQ and explaining what she I• doing. Th• matt.up lea.on wm be most en tightening and 1h• rHult a ~wy. glowing look. Glamorous yet casual. YH, a memorabf• •11J>•rlence It Wfll be. A Marengo upet'lenee1 •• ; "It was hard bargaining-we get the milk and honey, but the anti-adultery ciauae stays In." THE ASTA sult, filed in San Fra..nclsco Superior Court, was .described by a spokeswoman as a test ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ caT~·e suit also names AP and lJPf • Pen.on Cnatrr Ollf'Jn A•tldoCe DEAR PAT: We had a narrow escape recently. Our two-year old child was picking up a bottle of weed kill~r I had carelessly left unatt.ende<f for a few minutes. I saw him just as he lifted the bottle up toward his mouth, and was able to slop him. I've wondered ever since where one should call about an accidental poisoning? J. H., Huntington Beach Pbooe 634·5988 before attempUns uy treat· ment. The UCI Medical Cuter Potsc. Coatrol Cenler operalt's 24 hours a da7. la eases ol aeeldea· &al poisoning, be sure to save the ltouelloJd cleaner, weed killer container or prescrlpUoa bottles, to belJ> tJ)e cent.er ldentlfy the barmfal a1ent aad presertbe rescue measures. : Green Pear• Need Spedlll <:are ' DEAR PAT: Pears may be a bargain in the !supermarkets, but l 've almost given up buying lthem. They're always green and even thouah I store 11them in the refrigerator until I ripen them at room ,temperature, they remain tough and somewhat :tasteless. Am I doing something wrong? , G. N., Mission Viejo \ Pears are always picked green beeause tree •ripening produces an uapleaaant grainy texture and !ripe pears would brlllse easily dulnJ alalpment. ,Your ripening ·method may be at faalt. The best !method Is to place pean ln a nearly eloted paper 'bag and bold at room ~mpenture uaW U..1 tva !rully yellow and have a f>llgbt give when held la the ,band. Three or more pears ln the aa•e baa :rt~n 1better than one or two. Store ID tile reM&~tor •after ripening until servin&. Stylebook In Effect Carl Schmitt, California superintendent of bank· ing, for allegedly failing to comply with orders by the state Legislature to prepare new regulations. The regulations re portedly should have established whether or not banks are permitted to operate travel agen WASfUNGTON (AP> -Maybe you haven't cies. noticed but a lot of newspapers began refeflini this '1 H E S p 0 K E S . week to the president instead of the President. The change in widely used n~wspaper style w om an s a Id AST A should not be taken personally by Jimmy Carter. i s c on c er n e d l h a t The Assoc lated Press and United Press Intern•· · · b~nks use travel uen· lional began wresWns such questiom of capltalli&• a-~• c1es to offer special pro· lion long before anyone knew Carter wOUld re ch motional rates that re· the White 119use gular travel agencies are- not ~ennitted to offer, '()N MONDAY, ALMOST JDBNTIC~ new c.reating unfair competi· stylebooks covering capitali.14Uon, abbrnlaUons llon . and other niceUes were putinto effect by AP and· . AST A b~ previously UPI and adopted by many newspapers. including filed laws~ts on_ the East the Dally Pilot Arranged alphabetically, the entry C~ast and is hoping to ob· under "presiden .,, read.s-tain a decision banning . . tTavel aaencles at other "CapitalUe president only u a fonn tiUe west Coast banks before one or more names· ~ident Carter, PreSI .. Bank of Newport was dents Ford and Carter . apparently chosen "Lowercase in all other uses: '.l]le president because it has one of the said today He is nmntn1torpresideriL Lincoln wiu most active bank travel presidentdurlngtheCivil-War" agencies in the state ,. MAYBE IT'S PART OP THE deim~illiaUon of the presidency U ttiat's the cue. atyleboolc com· pl lers have been at it for a tons time Air Polluted SACRAMENTO CAP) Until Harry Trum•n becam president, U1 AP -A Long Beach plant <,tispatches put a "Mr." before each reference to a has been fined $1,000 for president's last name Truman became almpb' exceeding asbestos air Truman. quality standards, the. 1 ... -----------~~--~:-."':-:1 state Department of Health says The fine •• CONCONU> followed an inspection at NMNT wtL8'N9 Asphalt Products Olli ,,... _:---Co~ 1.L-_...:.:.:;__.:...;_~~_::.'~---~~ ··:...-=--·~~~~ g • . aouaced Order Rd-4a •et••• DEAR PAT: I wonder if you could help me get some information about what is beiDC done for ~-----~--~~~~.....;...--~---~------~---~---=---~--~-~--~--~ - f ustomers or the Universal Money Order Co.? Th1S 1rm declared bankruptcy in January, and people were told to submit claims to the state ~anking bcparlment. There's been no word on refunds M. W., Costa Mesa Robert Cameron, state Banldn& Department senior examiner. told AYS tbat UnlvenaJ Money Order Co. has not yet retmboned California con· $umcrs, but distribution is aoUclpated by mid· J>ecember. Cam~n added that the superintendent E banks "didn't kn°" tf ll could be done by tben," owever. This firm remains under Chapter 11 ankruptcy court jurlsdlction, and letters are ailed to claimants regarding repayme11t. . Persons who purebased these unhonored inoney orders still may submit claims by sendlDg a ~hotocopy of their mall orders or ldenttrylng humber and amount to: California Banklng Depart· tnent, 60t S. Commonwealth, Suite 1501, Los }\ngeles, CA 90005. The state forwards all claims to $he court weekly. Claims (with proof of payment> tlso may be submitted to &be receiver ln ankruptcy: Bankruptcy Clerk, Room 231, Atten· 4!on: Judge John J. GaJgay, New York, N.Y.1"'7. COin Jewelry Autnentlc American Gold COcns. KNQe'1'llldl, ~n GOid . 14 Kt. CNlnt & Bezels Collectot Coina & Investment Programs 2700 W. Coast HW1a I• IU""""l Mewport ...... Chess-plarillg r. ..... •• on Hie at Clleu & Gemes. Ualtd. Y•lcmgll7 A.c..,.t•ls"- Mlllnesota State c• s I•! ' TAkE A GieJl;JOund • . ONA (liA~~~ ll~~tfW~·· ypu RECEivE FREE -$15.00 SILVER DOLLARS 3.00 FOOD COUPON 4.50 COCKTAIL COUPONS 2.00 LUCKY BUCKS 2.00 TWO $1.0010·spot Keno tickets (You could win $50,000) RESPONSE TO KILLING INCLUDES REWARD MONEY Frank and Frieda Waer Admire Champagne, Prtze-wlnnlnt Morgan ~illing of 2 Horses 'I. Praws ·Wide Sympathy ~ By Wll.UAM HODGE I Ot ,,.. Oluly Polotlu.tl The Labor Oay thnll·kllhng of two jlS,000 Morgan mares in norlheast El Toro has appanmtly touched off a re- action among l.'qume cnthus1asU. from California lo Connecticut. ,. ''We've been getting letters from all over the United States," f'neda Waer taid. Mrs Wal'r and her husband (<'rank bBve b~t·n ra1:-.mg the prized Morgans jn the h1lh abO\ t• El Toro for more than 20 yl'ars .. THt: LETTERS HAVE been awful aice and many have included rewards from two dollars on up to tbe boy whe aw the shootings," Mrs. Waer ex- plained "Ana the Morgan Horse Club of Southern California has given $250 for the boy." A 19 yl'ar·old Hunhngtqn Beach youth wit nessed the shootings and prov1dL·d OranAC County sheriffs de· puties "'1th a llt·ense number and a description of the vehicle and its occu pants . Authonhes and the Waers refuse lo release the young man's name pend· 1ng the outcome of an investigaUop, A San Pedro youth has been cbatged with Ci.ve counts of cruelty to animals a nd tbree coun~s Qf felonious m aliciQP5 mied\ief in the sb00Un1 in· c1dent..., · · •"fHAT KID WAS 1JP here 15 minutes after the shootioe hap· pened," ~er recalle'd. ••u it hedn't have been for hit» we ouldn't have had aoythlngto1oon." • Meanwhile. a g"6up in New England beaded by the ConnecUcut Horse Council seized the Waer horse killing$ as an issue involving cruelty to horses. • The horse council's monthly magazine, Council Currents, carried a cover story over the killings which prompted much or the mail the Waers ba ve received from the East Coast. ·'I didn't realize how this stuff travels from one end of the country to the other," Wear said-"We've sold some or our horses to people in the East but I had no idea we would re- ceive letters from so many people." Appeals Coqrt .BackS ~atty's ConViction · SA "i FRANCISCO I AP> A federal appeals court has re1ected P atricia lkarst's contention that she fu ilcd to get a fair trial and un- Jtnimow;ly upheld her 1976 bank rob· bery conv1ct1on A three 1udge panel of the 9th U .S Circuit Court of Appoals on Wednes- <Ciay declared the trial judge acted pro· .i>erly in ordl'nng the newspaper h e1n•ss to answer government ques· ·iions about ht•r months as a fu gitive ':With her terrorist Symb1oneso Libera· '.tion Army kidnappers . AT HER F.IGllT·WEEK trial, she nvoked her Fifth Amendment right ',against self 1ncr1minat1on 42 times and refused to answer certain ciues· tions asked hy l S Attorney James L l3rowning Jr. Mis:; Hearst's father, newspaper executive Randolph A. Hearst, said the family was "disappointed. We had ,hoped the appeal would be m her \favor. We thought there were very ~good grounds for the appeal." ;: Chief defense attorney F. Lee :Bailey's associate, Wayne Smith, said 'in Washington they · \\ 111 definitely ~appeal " to the US Supreme Court. ~ MISS HEARST, 23, 1s expected lo \remain free on Sl million bail Brown- lng said at a press conference after . the decision was announced that the government "will not seek any order :ror her confinement" pend int com- )>letion of the appeals process. He said Miss Hearst's attorneys have 14 days to file for a rehearing and an additional 30 dAys to file a petition to the Supreme Court. Ask~boul the possibility of Mi.sa He arst spending more time In prison, Browning replied. "That would be up to the trial judge, William Ornck. It is up to him to decide if the previously imposed sentence should stand or shollld be modified" if and when the conviction is finally upheld ORJUCK TOOK OVER the case when the trial )udae, Ollver J . Carter, died in June 1976, three months after Miss Hearst was convicted. Orrick later sentenced her to seven years in prison for her part as a carbine· wielding bandit in the April 15, 1974, holdup, just 10 weeks after her Feb. 4 kidnap at gunpoinL The appellate court, in upholding the verdict, agreed with the govern· ment's argument that Miss Hearst's activities while on the run with the SLA after the bank robbery were crucial to her detense of duress. SHE TESTIFIED THAT her kid- nappers threatened to till her if she did not join the heist. But she refused, on instructions from Bailey, to answer any questions about 12 of her 19 months in the te?Torist under· ground puring which time another bank robbery was linked to the SLA. Miss Hearst.later pleaded no con· test to a charge of fitlnf'' weapon during an SLA crime spree In Loe Angeles a month after the San Fran· cisco bank robbery. She was placed on five years proba~on in that cue. S~uanSeniors Get Free-Shots INTERSTATE • STEEL RADIALS • GLASS BEL TED 2 + 2 • 4 PLY POLY • IMPORTED CAR SIZES • RV ON & OFF ROAD TIRES • WIDE 50.60-70 SERIES • TRUCK TIRES I ~ El Toro US.M C. canada MOUMTIMG& IALAMCIMG AT 1HEWARE- HOUSE l1AELL1 DRAGMASnR ,/ ·cASH ,/ CHECK Wl..ARE .FORBIDDEN TO ADVERTISE I THESE PRICES IN THIS AD - HOWEVER WE Will BE HAPPY TO QUOTE PRICES ON THE PHONE! l .,4UDAA.Y OT By ROBERT·~~ a OI .. o.tif f>M IQtt • Wt\en Joe¥ Helssman was bOrn, doctors advised hls parent.I t.o leave him at the boapi\.al. They - suggested that he would be better orf llipendine his U!e in an insUtu· lion. · He suffered'from Down'a Syn· drome which is a form of mental a ~ . "e' c.u.uu '"" ~ "°"" ..,.....,.. ounty-Mardrart>fm • · Doctors said that younisters who had the disease as severely as Joey normally can't walk unW they ares. Tbeycan'tsitunW3. BUT JOEY HAS been beatllig that pace, and by plenty, with the help of his parenta and two older brothers, Andy, 15, and Bob, 19. The entire family bas been pushing at hls legs and pulling at his arms since he came home • from lhe hospital. The exercises stimulate his central nervous system, accord· Ing to Mrs. Helssman. We Are the OLDESt carpet firm in Southern California " ~~-==~- • Dally ri ... SUit ,,_ DESPITE MASSIVE PROBLEMS, JOEY MAKES PROGRESS Fountain Valley Boy It March of Dimes Poster Chlld Houseboat Colony Loses Court Fight SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -Residents or houseboats moored north of Sausalito have lost a court battle to block a development lhey claim will push them out. .. The State Court of Appeal dented without comment their petition asking for a court order against the proposed development at Waldo Point. THE ACMON WAS brought by the W atcrfront Preservation As· sociation against Marin County, Marin County Superior Court. countv officials and Waldo Point Harb.:;r, a pnrtncrsh1p formed to develop the a rea Waldo Pomt rovers 36 acres. eight of them. above water, and the rest un<kr ~an Francisco Bay Some-350 people live on small houseboats in the area. THE COURT WAS told the de· velopment. Waldo Point Harbor' Marina, will result in the eviction of most. 1f not the rcs1 dents. They clai the ~vel ment .. 1olates Marin Count , tat and federal regulations · She says lhat Joey has been running and jumpb\g alnce he was 14 months old. He JiWlms, bounces on trampolines and rides a two-wheeled bicycle. . , .. ~?i;~~ 't'u~tg~ ~~~ t~~:rr:::risd ~ 3 50L ~ ..s1 ~-< stallation prior to Christmas. 70 Orders must be placed by November 17. OFF HE CAN COUNT to 10, knows his colors and can draw circles at the Nueva View special educa- tion school in Huntington Beach. He also is beginning to write bis name. •'This shows what you can do if you start early enough,•• Mrs. Heissman said. · "If nothing else. I hope that gur success with Joey will encourlge parents or children with this dis· ease that something can be done 1r you start lhe day you bring lhe baby home." she said. "WE ARE ALL very proud of Joey;' Mrs. Heiss man says. "He's a real acbiever~Hehas ac· compllsbed many things and be1 is giving and loving. Cfi_,b.~Ji ... n .OXFORD ~7~"7~ The traditional elegance of .........::::::::::;:::::::=:..-__,,~ the. tight frieze of the old World of Wool . Now brought to you in the Antron Nylon of today. Autoclave heat set and static controlled. MAESTRO The ever papular dense solid col9r plush for ease of decorating and wearabllitv. "He'll do anything you ask and some things you don't ask," she smiled. 111· ~· . Joey will take part in a West r Orange County fundraising bike/hike Nov. 20 to raise money c~~. COSl'A MESA for the March of Dimes' re-L11;:f 2927 s. Bristol search on birth defects. -.... c::.-~.., Youngsters are expected to "r~~· NOW 1 ·4~5 Sq. Yd. NOW 1195 Sq. Yd. collect $12,000 from the event 11<» J?14) 751·2324 from sponsors who will pay for ; ~---••••••••••-•••••••••llml•••illlllil•••~ each kilometer they have trave\ed. THE BIKE/BIKE will start at Mile Sq~e Park in Fountain • Valley and go through parts of Huntington Beach, including Central Park. Additional inform atlon and sponsor forms can be obtained by calhng lhe March of Dimes at 979-2270. llm*lll,. ........ A fUUllm:US. Ut«MW9\I Add the police-approved Security II deadlock with 1·1nch bolt. HECK'S MEN'S STORE ~youro4d entry~ k>c* With 1he Securlty II IOckset with anU..pm_mylng latch. JUST IN TIME FOR YOUR THANKSGIVING AND CHRISTMAS EVENTS. -TAKE YOUR PICK FROM OUR FINE SELECTION OF PIN STRI PES. PLAIDS OR SOLID COLORS -VESTED OR NON-VESTED STYLES AND ALL FROM OUR REGULAR STOCK. All 'fasoo ancJCt19500 SUITS 5159°0 All ~650' ond 117500SUITSs139oo ' • ... . Suspeets Came West· to .Eseape Pasts int held in connection with a 'murder in Newport Beac~ Biven new identitiea and t.o the Orange Coast by t e tederal government after testify. ing against organized crime ftcures in the ea.at, police con- firmed today. Newport Beach police refused to reveal the real identities of the two men. However, it. was , 825,000 DefJt JIMIM-llMsdutM11a.1·111o~n1111•·1idJ~;,, .. ·oc1·oo··~w-r~.1'QAi.mr.•llf•~¥f"" .-ua.~11 AC• looal arrest records are Jerry cus;ci of conspthey fzi·.tbe Peter Fiori and Rayinond Steven murder case. Res co. "iori, 41, of 19822 BrookhW"6t Newport Beach pollce say the St .• Huntington Beach, ls ac-real idenUUes and back1rounds cused ol bemg the "trigger man" of the men are a closely 1uarded in the shooting death of Stephen secret ol tho U.S. Marshal's of. John Bovan, who died Oct. 22out-flee in Loa Angeles and that side the El Rancblto Restaurant federal authorities are refusing in Newport Beach. to cooperate in the Newport Reaco, 28, of 10121 Merrimac Beach investigation. No one •t the manltal'a ornce w available for commeol to. day. • Aecord!ng to court records, Deputy Orance County Daslrict Attorney Dave Carter sald Fiori has been convicted of mu~r before. However, Information on that conviction has been un· available to Joeal law enforce- ment officials, police sa1d. Capt. Richard Hamilton of the !'4eWpon .ae en roucc :u~v.i ~­ meat said hls department has been trymr to 1et backrround in· formation on the two men to uae in the court case but bas not been able to uncover any. He said the Santa Ana omce of the FBI was to aid his olfice ln the Investigation but so hlr, personnel in the FBI office have not provided anything. "It is our \&l\deratandin& that * * * . ~ -· --------· -.-...-&\,;; .... ~'>! .. "'-:"'"-..-----,.._~-these il:adl•lduals 11 mQc u St.500 a month under Oils pro- gram for relocating witne&ll against organized crime;• Hamilton said. He said ho doubts the real Iden· titles of the men will be revelled. publicly because they could race death from organbed crim~ fliure• they ~Ulied •&alnst. *• * * . Four Fre111 €oast Di~drich Loan Still 'Unpaid' 6 More Sought In Mtirder Case By GARY GRANVILLE Ol IM o.llt ...... SLalf Attorney Michael Remington said early today that Orange County Supervisor Ralph Diedrich ~eived $25,000 of a $75,000 legal fee he got from representing the Granl Corp. In 1973 in an issue then pending before the Board of Supervisors. Remington, who until recently was Diedrich 's personal at- torney. said the money was given to Diednch as a loan and has never been repaid The Fullerton attorney said another $25.000 of the $75,000 legal f~ was loaned "at Ralph's behest" to a Diedrich friend whose name he rouldn •t. at 3 a m today. recall Diedrich was attending a meet· ing in Los Angeles today and was unavailable for comment. When discussing the matter six weeks ago, however, Diedrich denied receiving "any money in any form" from the legal fee. Resnington waa paid by tbo de. Lifeguards at Huntington St.ate Beach, Bolsa Chica State Beach and Huntington City Beach, a stretch of six sandy miles, today had a reprieve from their newest beJchfront invasion by hundreds •of old vebicle tires. I They and volunteers from the California Department of Fish land Game have been cleaning up hundreds of wornout tires for the past five days. 'the Ures were planted on the sea floor more than a year a.go by tbe Los Angeles Rod and Reel Club and intended to Corm an artificial fishing reef to anchor kelp beds. The rubber reef was expected velopment company art.er Diedrich admittedly said they should hire the attorney. "I never received a dime from Mike that had ahy connecUOh with the Grant Corp.," Diedrich said. But Remington said today the $75,000 he received from the com- pany was deposited to a special account and the loan checks al· legedly issued t~ Diedrich and hls unnamed friend were drawn on that special account. lleriuhgton ,.lso·sahl that he is not concerned that the money has not been repaid.because he said 1ts repayment was scheduled to come when Diedrich divested himself or some real estate hold· in gs Remington 's remarks were made in Palm Springs and cl~ed for him a day in which be: -Spent H minutes testify. Ing before the counl)' Grand Jury in· its probe into. among other thin&•· Diedricb'• rol• in leading tbel~ti~ taum ' to propagate more fish to replenish ttie fished-out Hunt· ington Fl~ and fatten Southland anglers' gunny sacks. The cement-filled tires anchored wtth both nylon cord and concrete fillings nonetheless have a tendency to break up in heavy i>urf generated by Baja California storms of the fall season. So far in the past five days, several hundred have wuhed up from the area planted by the well-meaning Los Angeles fishermen's club. Who has to clean up the mess, which !'U'St appeared about a year ago ~h~ the tire reef began If P'lltUtaft ,,_ ENTERS GUILTY PLEA Attorney Remington .................. NEW CHARGES AIRED Supervisor Dledrtch By JOANNE REYNOLDS OI-CN11Y P'li.t SUft Newport Beach police sought six more people investigators believe are tied to the shooting death of Stephen John Bovan of Fountain Valley. • W arrant...r• .. tlag murder conspiracy have been issued for four one-time Orance Coast resi· dents -Elsie Caban Kulik, Joseph Shelton Davis, Joseph ' Gabriel Fedorowski and Roy lo ca\1<!et an t1grtc11ltU'.Tal"1>1'8'-" • ·tartly and-frtttyv. four ~rs -CAristopher .Richar<1. . _ serve agreement that was then worth of recorded questions The woman is the wile of Alex- stmymg development on the asked him Wednesday night by ander Kulik, already jailed in the Nohl Ranch in Anabeim Hills. district attorney investigators. case The three men are Kulik's business partners in a Newport -Pleaded y to a -Alone 'be way received Beach investment. firm, single polit sp1racy agrantofimmunityforbisgrand Pra.sadam Distributing, Inc. charge brought against him, jury testimony and three waivers (PDI). Diedrich, Supervisor Philip An· of attorney-client privilege in· Two other one-time Orange tbony, polllical angel Gene eluding those of the Grant Corp. Coast residents, thought lo be Conrad and Anaheim City Coun· and Anaheim Hills, Inc. colleagues of the d~d man, are cltman Wllllam Kott in a O'and At the close of that d-.y which beinJ SOUCht Q witnesses In the jury iridictment h-.oded doWJ Ju· didn't end until he ret~ to bP case. '\ ly .t. Palm S home hortly after They ~ St8iltOn ~eiffet" A •• r: cl • •:v 61 u n • < I •SOM> Bot>ert ~ 'BOth .re nam the murder complairit filed bi Harbol' Judicial District Coort as the subjects ol tbe murder COil· aplracyalonJwttb Bovan. breaking up In stonn surf! The most recent w~ekend • balcb was picked up by Depart· ment of Flsb and Game Marine Habitat Coordinator John G. "Jack" Carlisle Jr., who was rather outapoken Wednesday, and six marine biologist friends he enlisted. "If these things keep coming up on the beach I'm goini· to re· tire,·· Carlisle declared after the 'back-breaking exercise of re· movtng 300 or 10 womout tires among Ute original 25,000 dumped off ,a barge by en· thusiasUc clubmen. "Seven or us cleaned up a whole bunch. We can't. do thls • kind of thing on a regular basi5," Carlisle declared "l even bad to go to the chiropractor." ''Unfortunately, they have no responsibility." says Depart· ment of Fish and Game kesman Ralph L. Young of t e fishing club's pa.st and cur- r t role in creating the fishini re . • as fellow state taxpayers ens, if we have several hundr wash up, we'll send someone down to clean them up. 'Ibey went right to the 1overnor's office for permission to build this r~f." "We don't even know for 1ure that tbey'N .UU alive... com- mented Capt. Richard Hamilton of the Newport Beach Police Department • "Right now, we are concerned for their safety and we 're trying to let them know that we want them to contact us,·• be added. Hamilton explained that in- vestigators believe the two men could provide evidence in the up- coming court case against ~ five penons. already ·Jailed m connection with the alleged con· spirac:y and the four that are still being sought. Those arrested and expeeted to return today to the Harbor J udlcial District courtmom of Judie Selim S. Frankli.Q for ar-raignment are: -l>ebl'a Ann Addison, 24, of 19822 Brookhurst St., Buntlngtoo Beach; -Jerry Peter Fiori. U, of the same address; . -Raymond Steven Resco. 28. or 10121 Merrimac Drive, Hunt· ington Beach; -Anthony "Little Tony .. -Marone Ir., or the same a-mess:- -Alexander Kulik, 28, who lists his address ~ 3 Linda Isle. NewportBeacb. · The complaint fa.led with the newest arrest warrants alle&es that between Aug. 20.and Oct. ~. the •uspects con.spired to kidnap and kill Bovan. SheaandKelftel'. Shea a Xeltter, aceordillC to police, were both sales •lenb for PDl. A~ to polJce, tbey belpej ~empteree« of ihe ft.nns Which PDl W th+ vested, lddllap Kulik ln Aurust. Fioi't R8ico and Kanne~ uaed by PDl to belp tr.. Jtulik • after p~ $100,000 ransom. Polle• 8lleCie that as much as $50,000 •u tMn ottefed i,y tbe lour buSlnesa pai1nen for the deathS of SoVan, Sbea and K.eif. fer. . The warrants for the four mlu- ing suspects COlifY $500,000 bail for each s~pect. Kulik, wbo wu originally Jailed for allegedly be- ing in poaesaion of more than a pound of nearly pure heroin, is now held on a total of $1 mnuon ball. The other four suspects -Klis Addison, Fiori, Marone and Resco -are being hel<l without bail. Developers Back Change "People are enthusias~c when it comes to starting something like this, but they're never around when something goes wrong," ad~ Carlisle, whose of· fice signed ttie permita to build the ill-fated artificial fishing reef. Spokesmen for the Rod and Reel Club claimed a year ago the elements couldn't be breaking up Smog to Clear Out ·By Fridayon Cdast? An unusual wind condition pushed inland smog into Orange County today but should be eone by Friday. a South Coast Air Qnllty Manaeement District meteorologist said. Sellk safd ihe winds, hlch are not st'°°' enOQ&b to be called Santa Ana wtiMls, were c:auled bi' a high pressure s)'&tem over the. desert that pushes smogey air towardtbesea. By WILLIAM HODGE Ol t .. Dally Pllet SuH A group advocating drastic c.hanges in San Juan Capistrano's councilmanic elec- tion process was bankrolled by developers and real estate in· terests, city records show. The group, Concerned Citizens fol" Responsive Government, col- lected $2,881 in its aucceesful al· 2,000 Biddi,.g For 'C'/Waper' . " Irvine Homea. tempt to place a controversial councilmanic district proposal on lbe March ballot, according to campaign financial reports on rile with the cit)'. Largest cootrtbutor was Alto Capistrano developet Morris M isbln, who donated $1,411 to aid the petitiQfl drive. Other contributions included $269 from Bernie Matthey, a local real estate salesman and spokesman for the concel'fed citizens group. Matthey lives in AltoCapiltrano. Another Sl,071 was contributed by developers, property owners and de\"elopment-related busl· nesamen, DOM Of whom live in San Juan Caj>lJvano·. Amona th.al ll"OUP is DouC)u Clarke, Glendale Federal Sav- lnp and IA>lll pJ'Sldent. He con- tributed $200 to Cltltens tor R•pousive Go\>emment Cotters. Glendale Fedetal b the Jariest SaaJuanp ownerandhu an su mmuc: lawsuit ma acainst the city on a land use matter. The Concerned Citizen~ finan· cial report also included $130 in anonymous contributions under $50. Concerned citizens spokesman Bernie Matthey said today money contributed by people not livine in San Juan was used primarily for a mall petition ear· 1y this year. •'That money was Used to de- termfne what the will or the peo- ple waa and whether tlfeY would support tl\e counoilmanie dlltrict, proposal." Matthey explained, cltinc tba 1,000 slpatifes re- ceived tlrl'Oijg.h the mall u an in· dicaU0nOlresldentdCSJr • Tbe concerned citizens· initiated :ballot meuute calla fof' creaUOn or 1even coundlmaftic dlatrlcta. each tlectlna it.s OWn councllman. There ue currently fl-..ee \Iman elected at·lar1e. Mat y said money for the ( £.lJBCnON, a1e Al) <See'i'UlES, Page AZ> 160 Aliens Arrested in Be17Y Fields Bruce Selik noted that unusual· ly high levels of smog were re· corded Wednesday in Costa Mesa and San Juan ,Papistrano and were expected to ~c:ur by early afternoon today. The high levels, which he Hid occtir only three or four days out of the y~ alona the Or~• Coast, were reported at .19 parts of o'ione, just under the hllnimum for a $lafe one smog alert~.~ puti. Aliortion Vote Tbughihi:i Jfiew He saicl the winds cause Pf.ob.. legis in the morning and earl)r afternoon tiours, but ttiat by toni&tlt sea l)feeiea ue ex~ to push the smoe back in1aDd. As a reSuit.' .this moniliia·· readings w~ only .07 parts in. both San J Capistrano and Costa Mesa. V.-tLOf N O NEW YORK (AP> -Da\ilcl Berkowits. tbe alleeeci SoD of Sam killer. i.ap.i hf.I "demoaa" would leave him after a certain number ol slayi.n11 and that be wouldn't. be caught. accordiDC tO t1ewly releued trans~ripta. The tramcripla ol Berkowitz'• conversations wltb two •• ._ I .__:.-....._ ---'----.....a ........., B;.~Yn Supreme Court Justice John Starkey. Excerpts were published today in the Daily News. • Berkowitz was also quoted as :;aying the demons selzed the souls of his victims and bad sex with them moments alter death. "They chain them up and have Ber&ow1u aueaewy w, .. .,_. .... after bis arr•t at his Yonkers apartment three monlhl a10 thal he took orders from a dog owned by a neiihJ>or, Sam Carr. In the transcripts, Berltowits refers to himself as "a do&. l 'm not human anymore.•• Berkowib baa been ruled com· Los Alamitos Traek OC Fair Officials ~o-....."" .... ,..,. ........ __ • • who examined blm. '"th t all l • would have to do is kill a certain number of people and then \bey (the demons> would leave." When asked about the first kill· ine. the f ollowinl acbu&e look place with t.be~cbiatriata; • •1 went home; went riaht ,to bed, I was very tired. I slept very good that niebt. I remember everything lbat happened tbat ............. • BLAMES "DEMONS' S..-pecl Berkowitz p...,.pageAJ time becat.llte I kept rellvlnl it, TIRES you know." • .• • Q: "Y• kepbeU'1al U.!0 A: "Yeah." • the reef, a tJaeoo Department of Q: "Wbee!'" Fiah and Gaiq_e apokeamao Younc fiatq coatradlc Remington speculatia that 1973 records of the speeial · ac-~t ·~bl.1 IOOl:l be in ...... _,, .&.. veatl1aton.4' .. The Fullerton attorney said ~ was Diedrich'• referral that landed bim the Grant COl'p. client u the development tom· pany was '1Yina to free Itself from the developmct restric- tions of the qdeultural pre- serve. Remiqton said he had done extensive research on th Anaheim Hills property, leeal search that was Interrupted in mid-1973 when be was arrested and later acquitted on murder conspiracy charges. .JUage :,caw•u ~.-.. • .. _ 614 tbe indictment w a f lony charge •·appropnai.ly a mlsd~ meanw." : He then a mlsde inJt.on three tio udge Schwab said RemlngtOfl could pay the fine beginninJ next January in $1,000 monthly In· stallmnt:a. He UieD said $5,000 ol• • the ftne would be at.Qed \IP1l1: A: "After it happened. A bun· "They aaid tt just couldn "t be: dred, you know, Umes." that acuba dlvert with ctlmllial • Q: "Yoa meu &llat lllilat or · tendencies must bave aabotqed . A.wait Race Verdict Attorney Marshall Mor&Jll coDtinued the wo.rk begun by Remtqtoa .rter pictint the ease files up t.rom Remington 'a office in Full~ Remington satisfactorily eom.: pletes his three years probatlonr meantna that tr tile attoney auc- eesdully complet. bi:a pn>balioll tbe fine amount will be only $10,000. Orange County Fair officials awaited word today on their Canal, and poss1bly futile, attempt to reinstate horse racing at an off.season fair set to begin n~ wt•ek al Los Alamitos raceway. Deputy Attorney General 'Vlarilyn Mayer filed a writ of a~ peal in Los Angeles Wednesday m an effort to reverse a Monday l'<>Urt ruling that canceled the 12 day racing meeL She said she hoped a three- judge panel would act on the ap- peal today, but admitted the. <·hances of a reversal "aren't ter- ribly good ... The "Fall Fair/' set td run Nov. 8 21, will go ahead as :-.cheduled However, fair of- ficials said the loss of revenue from horse racing means the fair <.·ould lose as much as $118,000 There will be no admission l hargc for the fair. but it will cost Sl for parking. The fair wall in· Air Passenger Dies as Plane Dives Quickly TEL AVIV, Israel <AP> -An American aboard an El Al jumbo jet flying over Yugoslavia died today after the cabin suddenly Jost pressure and the pilot put the Jetliner mto a dive from 33,000 feet to 14,000 feet, a spokesman for the Israeli airline reported The El A1 spokesman identified the victim as W.C. Holder of Llano. Texas He said he did not know the ('a use or death. fhe spokesman said two doc· tors among the 407 passergers on the flight, El Al 001 from Tel Aviv to New York via Amsterdam, ex- amined the stricken man and rccommendl"<i that the plane land 1mmed1ately, bul Holder was de- ad by the time Capt. Colman Goldstein landed the Boelna 747 at Bcl~rade, the Yugoslav capital. The spokesman said the body was \alien from the plane, and Holder's widow and lwo friends tr a.Y~ling with them also re- m a med in Yugoslavia. The spQkesman said the plane flew to Amsterdam with the other 4o.1 passengers after the Jn- elude homecraft exhibits, animal shows and ll midway. The racing dat~a *ere eliminated Monday when Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Oa vid N. Eagleson ruled that lhe California Horse Racing Board had not used proper procedures in granting the racing dates. Colson Urges Nixon Role T~A. Okla. (AP> -Charles Colson says the United States s hould use former President Nixon as an elder statesman on foreign policy. "We have sitting on the shelf a man who knows more about the inner workings of foreign policy in China and the Soviet Union than anyone else," Colson said Wednesday. "Il is a waste or a national asset not to utilize Nixon's foreign policy genius.'' Colson was in Tulsa to discuss penal reform. He served seven months 1n prison for obstruction of justice In connection with the Water&ate cover-up. Kissing Cop Not Assault TULSA, Okla. (AP) - Trying to kiss a Pohcewoman may not be proper but that doean 't mean it '1 assault, says City Prosecutor Jaclt Morgan. Morgan dismissed complainu filed by two policewomen who said men they stopped for traffic violations tried to kiss them. "You would get laughed out or the courtroom lf you flied an assault on a kiss,·· Morgan said Wednesday. Angel's Deer Kill Backed c adent, keeping to a low altitude .., because of the cabin lres!ure SACRAMENTO (AP> -Deer problem. Repairs an an In-on AngelJslandState Park in San vestigation of the cause ot the Francisco Bay should be re- loss of pressurization were to be moved or killed as aoon as J>O&Si· carried out in Amsterdam, th& ble, stateofftclal.s sald today. spokesman said. Ruasell Cablll. director oC the The diving maneuver Is aimed state Parka and RecreaUon • at bringing a plane •to a lower Dep~ent, said. he approved. altitude where aormal external an enviraruneDtal unpact report. pressure is high enouah lo pre. that recommends rlddlAI the vent injury lo puseaaen. 750-acre llland Of deer. El Al does not fly xeaularly to 'l'b!report. ~~'?1the~e Belgrade, and Israel bas no Department ot Pllll Gd Game, diplomatic relations wltb said the deer~ ot IO to YUiOSlavia. 100 bas grown too lar&e toe tbe ORANQllCOlff " island and many animals have starve<! or died or disease. evea tlteaextdayf" -1 A: "Yeah. Tot.bis day." tbere<c1. "Wbeo those Urea were Q: ••Wiiiy! 11 It someWag wordl renvtac!" dumped olf the buae tt wu a A: "It was a strange event. It foulup f10m the start," Y<>Ulll said today. ;;.::ng:.'~appy event. Very Carlisle -who got the tin! Berkowitz said be felt oo re-cleanup job supervision cbore morse ~about the ldllin1s, but felt over the weekend -says be blld he was responsible be(:auae he misgivtnga about it from the out- did not fight the demons hard s~~he wbole thini'• been a dis-enougb. The transcripts reveal 8 cbill-aster,•• says Hunttneton State ing picture ot Berkowitz' Diibt-• B~~i~ 1:e1:::f!i~ ~ time activities: "It gets dart and· artllidal n ... , .... reef project that I can't sleep. When rm home l ~ have lo go ouL I know what bas lo has some controversy'" says be done." Young, mentlao.i,Jla the ainkinl of He said be made himself old mothballed' World War II av ail able, and the demons direct· Liberty ships off the coast. ed him to the victims, but somellmes be resisted. "I wouldn't do it, you know," the 24-year-old postal worker said. "I didn't want to kill anybody. I tried to fight it." Berkowitz tells of pickine out "nice streets" on bis killing nights, "where there are preUy girls, you know, young couples, where they're neat, clean and well-groomed, you know, they have good by&iene . • they're clean; they're washed. ready to be killed." M•st of the Son of Sam ~k:Um • were young couples sitting in parked cars on dimly lit streets in middle class areas. The final shooting. in Book.Jyn, •81 tbe Oft· ly one outside of the 8""1K or Queens. Spooks Stay. Under Cover WASHINGTON (AP) -CIA employees need to remain under cover even aft.er retirement, and that's why they need a separate pension plan, the agency says. The plan allows some workers to retire al age 50, according to testimony released Wednesday by the House Intelligence subcommittee. "Even upon retirement, certain empJayees must remain undec cover and cannot reveal any affiliation with tbe CIA, or in some cases, even the U.S. government," the aaency official said. ELECTION •. actual door lo door petition drive which secUtt:d 17 percent. of the city's voters• strnat~ lo place the issue on the ballot - was. provlded tf.l:°arily by himself a Ills both San Juan residents. Matthey defended developer contrtbutlom to tbe cClllcerned citizens group. "l don't believe developers are incapable of bavtna a mapanimows .ttltude toward the l'oten," he explained. "I thlnt what they did wu a public serVlce." Chief Arrested SAN PEDRO (AP> -Joseph Morgan, 48-year-old reputed bead of the ~ailed Mexican Mafia, has been arrested on a federal charge of illegal possession of a firearm, authorit.M say. DAILY PILOT &rvices Scheduled l For Drowfted ene~t . ' Four weeks ago_ Morgan _.d Reminetoo d. in fact, d0n$U· tensive wort on the cue aiad It was n~essary for him lo borl9w a carton lo carry away the bulky files. 0 All that sbowed publiclY was a two-pa&e memo. But I can as· sure you Mike bad labored bard and well on the ag preserve..•• Morgan said. When asked about. a s<>-ealled Diedrich "Spokane COMectiM. •• Remtngtoo said be had only a vague knowledge of .. Y Diedrich busines atf alrs Ill Spokane. It was in 19T•, Remlnlton said. that Anabelm architect LeRoy Rose patd btm for what purportedly were legal servtees and the money was then pasaed on to Diedrich. "I'm not at all sure but that might have had somethin& to do with Ralph's business in Spokane," Remington said. ®QUALITY TELEVISION • 1Tbe court also fmds there w~ no moral turpitude Onvolved in the offense>:' Judie Schwab said. That finding means it is unlike4 ly that Remin.aton ·s lltenae to practice law will be jeo)>ardized by h1s IUilt1 plea to the miade.. meanorcbqo. · All other charaa brouebt against lWnhlitoo 1D tile July \ indictment were dll01iased after heeot.endbis1\lllt:Jplea. Ironically. be was the first of the five defendants to answer~ CbU'S• ·: Diedrich. Aat.boaJ, Kotl anc1 CODJ"ad are sclaedule4 to entet. pleH in Judie Schwab'• court Monday. .. Remingtoo's guilty plea ha$ the effect of having one member of the alleaed conspiracy admit that, 1n tact. there was a con· splracy dealped to circumvent state campalgn f'manclal d.._ closure rec.!!latloos. FIMAL 1977 CLEARANCE ,BIG SAVINGS EXTRA TRADE-IN Al.LOW ANCES • - Diedrich :Loan .. • • '1JGARYG&Mvi r;-"i. I tile Deify ...... IUff · Attomey Michael Remlneton said early today that Orange County Sttpervisor Ralph Diedrich received $25,000 of a $75,000 legal (ee he eot from representing the Grant Corp. in 1973 in an issue then pending before the Board of Supervisors. Remington, who unUl recently was Diedricb's personal al· torney, said the money wu given to Diedrich as a loan and bas never been repaid. The Fullerton attorney said aoother $25,000 of the $75,000 legal fee was loaned "at Ralph's behest" to a Diedrich friend ~ose name he couldn't, at 3 ~m. today, recall. ?'Diedrich was attending a meet· ing In Los Angeles today and was . . unavailable for comment. When discussing the matter six weeks ago, however. Diedrich denied receiving "any moqey in any form" from the legal fees Remington was paid by the de- v e lop men t company after Diedrich. admittedly said they should hire the attomey. "I never received a dime from Mike that had any connection with the Grant Corp.," Diedrich said. But Remington said today the $75,000 he received. from the com· pany was deposited to a special account and the loan checks al- legedlv issued to Died.rich and bis unnamed friend were drawn on that special account. Remington also said that he is not concerned that the money bas not ~ repaid because he said ita repayment was schedu.Jed to come when Died.rich di\•ested. hhnself ot some real estate hold· ings. Remington's remarks were made in Palm Springs and cl~ed for him a day in which he: -Spent to mlautes testify. ing before the county Grand Jury in its probe into, among olber things, Dledrich's role in leading the Board of Supervisors m 1973 to cancel an agricultural pre- serve agreement that was then stmyina~ development oo the Nohl Ranch in Anaheim HiUs. -Pleaded cullty to a single political conspiracy charge brought against him, Diedrich, Supervisor Philip An· thony, polltical angel Gene Conrad abd Ana.ieim City Coun-, c1lman William Kott in a grand jury indictment handed down Ju. ly 1 -Answered "volun- tarily and fJ'.eely" four hours worth of recorded questions asked him Wednesday nlght by district attorney investiaators. -Atoa1 tile ay received a grant of immunity for bis 1rand jury testimony and three waivers· of altomey-client privilege in· · cludinf tho.se of the Grant Corv. and Anaheim Hilla, lnc. .. At the clos~Of Uiat i:lay whith didn't end until be returned to his Palm Springs home shortly after 2 a.m ., ROmin~n retueed to di&- cuss his grud JUl"J teatimony. "I won't answer any questions about my testimony because l'~ been admcniahed not to. B'Ut I will answet.J'Our questions a.a long as they are not ln reference to my grand jury tesUmony," be said. Tlf at led tp h concession tliat fNI WAS al· le ly loan o Dtedricb and · another $25,000 to a Diedrlcb fnend. Remlneton s~culated that 1973 records Of th6 special ac- count "will probably soon be in the hands of some kind of in- vestigators." The Fullerton attorney said it was Diedrich 's referral that landed him the Grant Corp. client as the development com- pany was trying to free i~elf from the development restric- tions of the agricultural pre- serve. Remington said he bad done ~xtenalve research on the - Anaheim fills property, lecal ~ <See DIEDRICH, Paie A!> _Suspects Swit_elted ·Identities Saddleback Schools 'It Bond Election Delay Voted Saddleback Valley Unified School District trustees agreed Wednesday to wait a month before deciding whether they will call for a bond election this. sptlne. District admlnfstrators have been recommending tbat trustees seek voter appro~al or loc•I bonds totaling $75 miWon alld another $10 million in State Sehool BuUdln1 Pro&raza tuDdl on ?tt arch 7, 1978. scheduled within the next two weeks. Robert Ferguson, the district's director of planning and develop- ment, also said be is c:onsidertng the diatrict's recent enrollment trendl and recalcuJatln1 proJec· tlons for future lf'Owth. He said this raay baY n ~ i Clh election. ~ Only abput $410,000 remains of lbe total ~Ilion In t>Ond.l lnJI state aid aulhOrUea by Ui vOt.Cn in February, 1873. ~.:I'he district now has an enroll-Originally, the trustees were t r bou' 17 000 b t t• •-scheduled. to make this decision n ° a • • u • 13 ex· on Nov. 16. However, they a___. pected to grow to about 34,000 in ••....,,.. 15 to 20 yeari. Wednesday lo hold it off until Trustees and admintatrato:s ~ec . 7, the last possible date have fretted over the growth In hen an election can be called. the district, and the need for • Loa Young, president of the more money for school construc- ard, explained that she would ti on, for more than a year. ke to wait until after trustees Initially, they talked of holding nclude their discussions of a bond elec:tion last spring. But possible future building unsettled teacher contracts and altf!rnalivea with district an uncertain money situation a.rehit.ects. These meetings are (Sett.BONDS. Pa1e AZ> .. * * ·* * (* * ~cHng' Weighed A. School Today, .. . Office Toniorrow? . l;addleback Valley Unified SDbool District trustees may s6.rpeday consider building scbools that can be converted in· to medical offices or even con• domlniums. Recyclable schools were among the building alternatives ltsted for trustees Wednesday by Kal Pbrter, a partn~r in the architectural firm of Porter· Jensen-Hansen-Manzarol. His firm was the fitlt of six . . 2Face Murder Charges Two Huntington Beach men be- ing held in conn~tion with a murder: in Newport Beach were given new identities and mo•ed to the Orange Coast by tbe federal eovernment after testify. lne against organized crime firures in the east, police con· firmed today. Newport Beach police refused to reveal tbe real identities of the .--i,;j two mea. H&wtver. it was learned the names listed on..thelr • local arrest records are JflRT Peter Flori and Raymond Steven Bes Fio St.. un~ Beach, 1i ac- cused olbelngtbe ·~a man'' 1tfaittling IJoum the Wilds in the ~ dffth of stepbec John Bovan, wbodJed Oct. 22out- side the El Rantblto Restaurant These giant earth movers (above), locat- ed just off La Paz Road in the Aliso Hills development, sit poised to rearrange south Orange County's hilly terrain. Scenic turnout.a, like the one below on <>so -Tmck Driver Blames Crash On Burrito A Santa Ana man couldn't quite swallow his burrito but his truck: managed to take a blte out of two cmtlnilhed houses in Mis· sion Viejo Wednesday attemoon. Elias Carrillo oC 1056 W. Third St. was eating the burrito while drivine west on Los Alisos Boulevard. Suddenly, a chunk of the burrito lodged in his throat. He told CalUornla IDgbway ·Patrol officers that ibe couldn't breathe a.od tears blocked bis vis· io.P-... Parkway in the Nellie Gale Ranch, are becoming a 'Vanishing breed as earth mov- ers grind up the hills in grading opera· lions for more housing tracts.! ·in Newport Beach. Resco, 23, ot 10121 Merrimac Drive, Huntbigtoo Beach, is ac- c uaed of conspiracy ln tbe ,. murder case. Newport Beach police say the real identities and backgrounds of the men are a closely cuarded secret ot the U.S. Marahal'a of- fice 1n Los Anaelet and that federal autbori~ ar6 nfusiot to cooperate ift the Newport Beach fnve.stt&ation. · ' No one at the manbars office was available for comment to- day. According to ~rt recordl, Deputy Orange County District Attorney Dave.Carter said Fiori has been convicted bf mtifder before. However, information on that convtctlon bas been un- (Sff AUASF.S, Page AZ) * * * Police Seeking Six More in Coast Slaying • • O.tty Pli.t 5tett ,_. MINISTER-PSYCHIC Archie Matson f'ro. Page AI DICE •.. -.uch things. and went to shave. When he returned, the ke)s were slitting on lopofthc book. ··1 didn't believe in those things but there st wab. I was flab· berg.1sted," he recalled A couple days later, he got on his kneei; he said, and asked for somt• confirmation if this was. s1gm£1cant. Later. he found the cross and chain on a <'hair m the spa re room of his house. "Nobody else had been in the house but there it was," he said. Next, he asked the significance nf the keys and the cross and had a drc.1m much different from the dreams he normally has In that dream. he s<.11d he was told tnat I he l'SSt.•nce of the gospel {!; alway.'> and everywhere availa· hie to each and ~vt>ry person just .i s evt>ryhody is ready to receive ll So, he said, he knew the ex· plan,1t1on or the keys and the l 'I nss .\nd. his dream was the has1-. of many of his lectures a1-rus:-; the country that year. I IP re<'ounh other ex perienccs .111d has wnllcn three books on the subject, "f'rom Mystery to '.\!caning." "A Month With the \taster' anu The Waiting \.\ orld." Wht•n hl' wrote the last book, which deals with life after death, eight years ago, no one in this country would touch it He had to ~o to London to have it published. Now, however, there is more interest in the subject, And this year, his book was retitled ·•After Life" and published in this country. f'rma Page A J . ALIASES ••• ,1va1lable to local law enforce· men\ officials, Policeaald. Capt. ·Richard HamUton of the 'IJewport Beach Police Depart· .nent said hls department bu been trying to get background ln· formation on the two men to UJe in the court case but baa not been able to uncover any. He S8ld the Santa Ana office of the FBI was to aid his office in the investiaation bt4t so far, personnel in the· FBI Office have not provided anything. ·'It is our understandint that the federal government pays these individuals as much as $1,500 a month under this pro· gram for relocating wltneues against organized crime," JI am Uton said. He said he doubta thQ real lden· tiUes of the men will be revealed publicly because they could face death from organized crime figures they testified against. Toro Home Hit .Jewelry and cash with a total value of $2,370 waa taken by a burglar who twisted of( the front ·door knob to gain entry to a mobile home ln El Toro. Orante County sheriff's orncers saJd the theft occurred at the home or housewife Ellle M. Lynch, 73, of 24922 Muirlands Blvd., while 1he w 11 sleepinl on the premls"MJ. oa.1.NCn COMT .. • DAILY PILOT f About 160 Ule1at alleoi from Medco were ar ... a,t.ed while planting strawberries In North Huntlnatan Beach fields W • day momlnc, u.s. lmmtaraUOn and NaturaliaaUon Servlc. (INS) officials said today. The Mexican natlonals, mostly men. were t to Los Anaeles for proceasanc ind tllen to sail Ysidro where they were returned to Mexico, said lNS AAsistant In· vestlgation Diredor Philip Smith. Smith aaid more alien raids lo Trustees Approve Exchange After expressing concern that "only the rich" wlll go, Sad- dleback Valley Unified School District trustees approved a German student exchanee pro- gram for Mission Viejo High School Wednesday. About 1S to 25 students wilt travel to Germany for three weeks In the spring. All ex- penses, $489 for air fare and spending money, will be paid by the students. "So the rich get to go and the poor stay home,·' said Loa Young, president of the board. "That's been the case with most foreten exchange pro· grams," replied Donald Ames, assatant aupe.rintendent. But, he added, the state's Education Code says the district. can't deny a student who wants to go even it he or she can't afford 1t. The distnct, he said, has never had a request from a student who couldn't afford a trip. Still, several trustees aaid they wanted to help such student.a. 'l'?rey appeared ready to establish a district work pro1ram when they learned that one already~x­ ists. ''Everyone I know who want.a to work hu bad a job,'' said Bailey Daugherty, principal ot Silverado Continuation High School. Lut aammer, he aaid, Jobs even went unfilled. The problem, explained Mark Howell, stUdent board member, may be lack of publicity about the program on campuaea other than Silverado. . Trustfts dropped the Idea and approved the exchange student program which includes havlng German students go to Mission VieJo at a time yet to be ar· ranged. Fro.Page Al BONDS ••• made a November elecUon aeem more favorable. Then, ne1otlatlons broke down completely and teachen went OJ\ strike in May. Althouab the dla- pute wu re1olved Within a w.ek, it took a lon1er thne for the di•· trlct to recover from tts effect.a. District offtclall aeemed fearful that voter resentment over the strike would hurt a NoveDlber bond effort. Diatrlct officials atreu· that bond authorlzaUon wm bave no effect ~ the tu rate, aometbinl several realdtnt1 queatloned Wedneaday. Gtlbert Moreno, the d11trtct'1 bu1lne11 man11er. upJalaecl that the maximum rate for bond redemption and lnterett will ht 90 centl per SlOO of 111111t4 valuatklll -the ..Prt1tnt rate -a. loni u tbe cllltrlct rt&nalnl under the ltatAI ald proaracn. But wlth or wltbout the autborlutloft. be u1d, realdenta• bllll probably will rlH bCIUll of lnoreue1 in ..... Hd Ta!uatlon whleh tnllt.tl don't coatrol. Moreno explained tbat the bond .~uon would atntch the leqth olt!M cUa\rlct'• debt. Oranae County strawberry rtelds are planned today. Hunttn•ton Beach and Wea\mlnstar police orrtce were called ln to aaalst JNS llCeDtl ln roundlllC up "9ltta1 arrffted W$esday near the lnteraecUon ot Bolsa Avenue and ~Prin&dale Street. .. 'l'be rald took place a a.m. It ihvolved aliens empk>yed by the Slater Farms and the Kotaki Brothers, saidSmit.b The INS spokesman aald the farm laborers had been workina in the Hun~ Beach fields for about two weeks before their arrest Last week about 70 Ulegal aliens were arrested tn strawberry fields near the Los Alamitos Race Trac~, Smith said. f'ra. Pllfle AJ SCHOOLS. • • into other uses, as medical of- fices. Although it has never been done, trustees ml1ht be able to work with developers and build a school into a condominium. be sald. When the school ls no lon1er needed, it could revert to the hous- ing units. "I don't know if it would work but it is intriguing," Porter said. He also proposed building re locatable facilities and allowin& several uses to occupy the school buildinc at the salne Ume. A den- tal office, real estate office or a private school may share a build· ing with the public school, be ex- ' plained. He also suuested that trustees consider reducin~ the size of their school sites, estinina com- pact facilities an sharin1 the costs and facilities with non- school atencies. • The architect told trustees their goal should be cost effec- tl veness. "As a stn1le item, nothing looms rnore 1t1nificant in terms of Uf e-cycle coat of plant operation than does energy,'' he said. Porter suggested tho trustees consider applylne for solar grants, de1lgnin1 schools for alternate fuel uaa1H, com- mission an "ener1y budletlns· monltorlng" service, desl1n schools beyond state standards and evaluate achooll Wblcb are not air condiUoned. To belp trustees declde on any suggestion, Porter 1u11ested they consider forming a commit· tee to research planning and building alternatives. The trustees have scheduled meetings with representaUvet of three more architectural firms on Wednesday, Nov. 9. Froma Page AJ SUSPECTS. • "Rtght now, we are concerned for their Hfety and we •re trying to let them know that we want them to contact ua," be added. Hamilton explained that tn· veat.11atot1 believe the two men could provide evidence In the up- comtnc court cue qalnat the five PerlODI alr.ady Jailed tn connection wtth tbe alleaed con- aplracy and the four that are still beln1 IOUll)t. Tb• complaint med with the newest arrest warrants all••• tbat between Aua. ao aad Oct. 25, the 1u1pects conaplred to kldn~ and km Boyan, Shea and Kelffer. 'Thief Geta 8605 A 1holl\ln. ca1b and a oamwa wtrt taken from _,a El Toro homo by a bur1lar who entered via the bedrootU window. Oranae County aheriff't omcera aald the theft wu reported by mechanJc .Mlcbatl Bruce Map1"l 19, of 15392 Gemlol Road. The OU WU valued at '805. • li'r .. Page AJ DIEDRICH LOAN. • • ' searer. that wu lnt.errupied in mid-1913 when he was arreeted and later acquitted on murder conspiracy c.,arges. Attorney ... crahall Mor1an continued the work begun by Remington after picking the case files up Crom Reminston 'a omce in Fullerton. Four weeks ago, Mor1an said Remington bad, in fact, done ex- tensive work on the case and it was necessary for him to borrow a carton to carry away the bulky files. "All that showed publicly wu a two-paae memo. But I can &s• sure you Mike had labored hard and wen on the ag preserve,·• Morgan said. When asked about a so-called Diedrich "Spokane connection," Remington said he had only a vague knowledge of an~Diedricb bualneu affairs in Spokane. It was in W74, Reminaton aaid, that Anaheim architect LeRoy'" Roa e paid hlm for what purportedly were legal services and the money was then puaed on to Diedrich. ''l 'm not at all sure but that might. have had aoinethin& to do with Ralph '1 buainess in Spokane," Reminaton said. iA the comPanY of hie 1tt0mey, Robert ·McEltoy, ind ,\aatstant District Attorney Michael Capizzi went to Judie Philip Schwab'• cou""'°°m. There, he became the fJn;t f1' five men named In the July l polltka1 conspiracy lndtctment to answer the charau. In response. to an amended s\Dale eount of the inclJctment, Remln1ton pleaded guilty to "conspiring with others" in 19'76 and 1977 to violate a section otthe government code related to political campaign dilclosures. Jud•• Schwab eall~ bat in the indictn» t aa a f•lony charee "appropriately a mllde- meanor. •• He then reduced the charge to a misdemeanor. fined Rem- ington $15,000 and placed him on three years unsupervised proba· lion. Judie Scbwab said Remington conld pay the fibe beginning Mxt January lo $1,000 moathly in· stallD\ent.t. He then said SS,000 rl the fine would be stayed until Remington satisfactorily com· pletes his three years probation, meaning that lf the attorney suc- cessfully completes bia probation the fine amount wtll be only $10,000. The spokesman said the plal'le flew to ADllterdam with tbe other 40S passengers after the lJt.. cident. keepin1 to a low alUtu(fe *•u.se of the cabin preuure problem. Mission Community Hosp1t-1 ln Mlsaion Viejo ta offenni a card1o pulmonary resusdtatlon class from G;S(tto 9;30 p.m. Nov. 8 and 9 ln the hoSpiu.1 's ron- ftrence room. , The dasl, wbith ts o~n to tbe public, wtU ~t of a tectu~ and step by Step instruction in tbe proper resuscitation techniques. The baspitaJ i5 located at 27802 Puert• Real. Anyone Interested in the court~ should phone 431-~00. ext. 391. It was after be leJUfied before the Grand Jury that Reml1titon ·----------.....;;_--~....:.......-..:;;.. ____________ ~--~----~---------------------------:- FEATURING ~iiWRIER It gives yoo that great iehith color picture gutomaticallYI v~~~~-iiii~~~~~·~i , "' ... u.-..~~-tt It~'· U!i c~ il!M:t.IK• ~ Th• COLI!. SJ1939W ''. .. coo•ctl the Ceilor picture .•• 30 times a second autom111c-1tyt Fln1~ned In s1muratea graln9d American Walnut w11h brush~ Aluminum color acoentt. EarpMne .,_.....,..._°"_ . ,_ """'_,. ~ .... .,.. ... ._ ............... 0-·-C.-... .,.,_....,_,..c--.or-. ..... ,,._Como_ .. FINAL 1977 tCLEARANCE BIG SAVINGS EXTRA TRADE-IN AllOWAN<JS S'JiOCKS I SYL VjA PORTER Thu d y'• 2 p.m. (EDT) P TU Paooucrs INVOLVED ARB cannea or hennetlcally sealed and thus l or 1ain moisture between the time they leavo the factoty and r "i~ • the 1hoppln1 bl!ket. These include nocu, fil , meat •nu~ poultry, bread, soaps, froien foods, cerc411, rice and pasta. Under rederal regulations. such Items must weigh ti amount stamped on the pack.age at the time they shipped from the pl.ant. By the tJme t.hey have reach grocery shelves, "reasonable variations" in weJght are al- lowed It's the responsiblb ty of state inspectora to check packagea at the retail at.ore, but under ambiguous federal rules, each inspector ia tert to figure out for himself what constitutes a "reasonable" shortage for loss of moisture. Until this year. state and local weiaht.s and meuures of- ficiatS, acting under stricter state law1, pulled shorl- welghted items from the stores. But in March the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that federal laws, no matter how vague, preempt st.ate and local regulaUon1 THVS, SAY STATE INSPECl'OllS, they are prevented from protecting consumers acainst short-weigh tin&. Food processors and packagers or other weight-labeled products are hurt too. when a manufacturer labels his paekage as 18 ounces but packs less in it and undersells his competitior. Wholesalers and retailers also rely on accurate weights and measures. Concerned about the dangers. state and local orrtcials, '4r'!Jl orpnizatlon!, consumer eroups and co-operatives have petiUoned the Department of Aert~ture. the Food and Drug Administration and the Federal Trade Com- mission to tighten up. As one illustration, the Apiculture Department is working to revise regulations governing meat and poultry products. "WE ARE MOVING TO REMEDY the difficulty creat ed by the Supreme Court decision,•· says Carol Tucker Foreman. assistant agriculture secretary for food and nutrition services. As another illustration, the American Meat Institute agrees with states' efforts tv change the federal laws. "We want a uni!orm standard uni!onnly enforced,., says a spokesman, •'not 50 different state standards.'• Meanwhile, many state inspectors are trying to keep short-weighted items off the market. "We are e~en risking contempt of court citations by pulling it-ems orr the shelves, .. says Herbert Cohen. counsel for California's Department ot Food and Agriculture. "Weights and measures officlilla around the country are holding the line, but they can't continue for long ... Start.inl Nov. 12, most Oeneral Telephone or C ornla customers wiU bear a recorded message bef'ore they 1peak to a di.rectory ualstance operator. ~ The record1n1 asks customers to use the directory as· sistance service only when they ~an't find the number in· ., their phone books. By putting it into operation, General • Telephone hopes to reduce its number of directory as- sistance calls by 25 percent ('---_ro_N_s_UM_E_R. __ J I l i FRIDAY SATURDAY -SUNDAY Sweeter dreams Here's a charming touch of yesteryear for your bedroom. Headboards are made of brass plate over steel to give years and years of pleasure. Choose exactly the size you need. BRASS TYPE HEADBOARDS, Twin Reg. 35.99 Queen Reg. 44.99 19.88 26.88 Full Reg. 39.99 King Reg. 49.99 23.88 29.88 Not ava1lablo at the Orange slore A swag with 9haraetef Contemporary swag lamp blends~ho old fashioned cnarm ol ~ane w1tll a sleek modern design. The result i$ e delightful swag for arry room in your house Na1ural cane with 12' of brass chain 15' of (:Ord. Scall90fld 6had9 m.-sures 13'x16". Model ;:1387-34. CANE SWAG, • Reg. 29 99 16.88 Not available at the Orange store. When quality work comes first Use this high-grade hardwood plywood for truly professionat 'resulls. It's especially good tor cabinet work. Ask any do-it· yourselforwho does ii with wood. 4'x6'x Y•"· HARDWOOD UTILrrY PLYWOOD. Aeg.8.99 6.88 " ' • Refreshment at your fingertips It's a thermos thal dispenses your favorite beverage through a con- vqt1ient spout. Just press. ond enjoy. In assorted decorator designs. Ot. - Model ;:p1so-A. ALLADfN PUMP·A·DRINK, Reg. 12 99 9.88 Not available at the Orange store. . A priceless pair Use the power tape favored by the pros for accuracy every time. And with this fine tape, you'll get a dependable "Sheffield'' hand $8W. That's a deal every smart do-lt~yourselfer will appreciate. FREE 26'' NICHOLSON HANO SAW WITH PURCHASE OF 1s> LUFKIN TAPE. 7.99 • Legs that get admiring looks Add atrength and elegance to tablet, plant stands. furniture with tltese fumlture·quallly wood turnings. In Colonlal, Mediterranean and Tradlllonal styles. EMCO HUSKY 11181..£ LEGS. . &· Reg. 1.19 88c 9" Reg. 1.79 1.28 1'4" Reg.2.69 1.98 21 ... Reg. 3.99 2.88 Not avallabte at ltle Orange •lore. A handsome return on your ~oney Lookl lpecfal ""use It ta An Investment in a pee~ cedar fence realty pays off In rell· able protection for c:hlld· ren, pets and property. And, with age, It talc .. on an attractive natural, rustic appearance Weather-reslsl/Vll. lx12x6'. PECKV CEO!.R 80AADS, Reg. 1.99 ea. 1.58 ea. This board was picked *-use It's top quality pine. So you can pvt up shelving with an expen11Ye, custom loo~ T,.atyour home, and rotJrsflf, IO the finest today. 1xt2xt'. SELECTEQ PINE SHELVING, Reg.2,75• 2.10 ea. / C. . •. .. .. a .. --..,... areadJlcrw c.e ,..v ,.,....., • • 'f'B Digit ~ i School Vote I F olloWs Visit . ' · The fate of a proposed plan to provide more I• parking and athletic fields at Huntington Beach Rteh School apparently hinges on a school board tnember's visit to the campus Monday. Huntington Beach Union High School District Trustee Doris Allen said she will visit the downtown ~school prior to a vote on the plan slated Tuesday. )& ;t THE SCHOOL BOARD VOTED 3 to 2 last week ·~tD buy five acres of property Ju.st south of Hunt- ·tihgton Beach High School, 1905 Main St.. for ··~.ooo. ' ..... ~ But the funds for the purchase were expected to 1come from the sale or $Choo! district property in • Westminster. ,, Mrs. Allen and Trustee JohGHundley have vot· •eel down the Westminster property sale because !they claim "it is not fiscally sound." ;. I I : SCHOOL BOARD MEMBERS AIET at : Westminster H.igh School Tuesday nt•hl to re-~consider the plan but took no action. Hundley did not attend the meeting. • Mrs. Allen said she will tour the Huntlqton ~8each High School athletic fields and facilities to ~ee if parent's, student's and teacher's claims about ~the situation there are justified. ; Huntington Beach community members claim :parking is inadequate and students "are bumping :into each other on the overcrowded athletic fields. ~ t HUNDLEY SAID IN A TELEPHONE in- utview, "As far as l'm concerned it's a <lead issue ;.._I won't vote for it.'' • Said Hwidley, "I'm opposed to robbin& Pe\e.r lo ;,ay P auJ." .. Hundley said he would be in favor of using a dis· •trict owned lot across the street ftom Huntin :aeach High School for additional t>Vking. • Hundley said he favored "giviae the land to the city of Westminster" instead .._cl selling it fi>r :J50(>.000 . • ... ~" THE CITY OF WESTMINSTER hopes to joint- ly build a park with the school diatrict. on the 10 ... ~res the school district baa offered to sell. "' Meanwhile, Huntington Beach High School ::teechers, students and parent! have ~gedly been ~pressuring Mrs. Allen and Hundley into cbangiDa ~ltieir votes on the land deal . ' Hundley said parents have launched ~ con- tinual phone call campaign to force a vote change ktbeissue. The proposed land purchase would involve a oint-use agreement with the city of Huntington 98Ch. ' THE HUNTING'rON BEACH COMP.\NY, which owns the land the district wants to buy, wm ot sell the land unless the city and the school dis· ict enter into the joint-use agreement. ~ The agreement would call for the school district ~nd the city to take the five acres plus an adjacent / even acres and develop the property into a park ilb extra parking for autos. f Huntington Beach Company officials will not ell the school district the five acres unless the oint-use agreement ls reached. • HUNTINGTON BEACH PARK AND Recrea- Eon Director Norm Worthy said the Huntinaton each Company plans to give the city the aeven • cres in lieu of park fees. J. The seven·acre area is located between an ex- rting high school parking Jot and 17th Stt.e~ f;xport Businesl!- tTo Be Discussed_. f A federal Coiiunerce J)epartinent official will ~ilcuas aport development at the FOUDtain Vall~ .bamber of Commerce 1eneral m6etlna and uncb~ atdoall Tuesday. . The $3. '15 lUbeheon wtll be beld at the • oss~Jteat.aurant, 108508roothuratSt., Foun. aioV.Uey. . I J Campas, lDWirnaUonal Trad• Dlv&$lon p taUv ot: th U.S. artment of Com· r~ , 1s um r tUred 11peJi • CAMPIEU®HAUSFELD AIRLESS HEAVY DUTY SPRAY GUN ... You aren't fooling Cll'OWld when you get one of theH. You mean to tell me that they ... n ha.• a better one? 44700 BASS .AIRBRUSH ·KIT 1900 MDJ.ER POWER ROllER 2700 GLIDDEN SPBED GLIDE-ON a~,,,... gooder. QQalltr att&fL WJ11TE6:Z.. COLORS7tt_ ... ..,,"' ALUMINUM IW>DERS STEP LADDERS~ ~~If· 'rr 6t7 LADDERS ,.. 9" 14' . , ,., .. 13" . 18' 19" r 24" 20' 29" '~~n Ababl .AnQthu pad deal. O.L 111 concede. Th•• thing• worked real well. 8098Y UNSlll AllD DAN GUUIY WRL U AT IHI TODANCI sroD .. OM NOON ft&; 4100 P.M. WITH 1111 WINNING INDY SOO CAil ON SATURDAY, NOY. S I •1 •oaEn uaua °'-~ .......... When J049y HeJssman was n, docttts advised his parenta !eave him at the boapataJ. They OllllY "'-' Malt ~ DESPITE MASSIVE PROBLEMS, JOEY MAKES PROGRESS Fountain Valley Boy Is March of Dlmea Poiter Child De~eAopers Win Houseboat Colony Loses Court Fight • SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Residents or hol1seboats moored north of Sausalito have lost a court batlle to block a development they claim will push th<'m out. : The State Court of Appeal denied without comment their petition asklng for a court order against the proposed development at Waldo Point., THE ACTION WAS brought by • the Waterfront Preservation As- • sociation again!>t Marin County, ~'Marin County Superior Cpurt, !4:ounty officials and Waldo Point !Harbor, a partnership formed to . develop the area Wa ldo Pmnt covers 36 acres, eight of them above water, and the rest under San Francisco Bay. Some 350 people live on small houseboats in the area. THE COURT WAS told the de- velopment, Waldo Point Harbor Marina, wUJ result in the eviction or most, if not all. of the resi- dents. They claim the development violates Marin County. state and fedetal regUlaUons. HICK'S MEN'S STORE JUST IN TIME FOR YOUR THANKSGIVING AND CHRISTMAS EVENTS. -TAKE YOUR PICK FROM OUR FINE SEt:ECTION OF PIN STRIPES, PLAIDS OR SOLID COLORS -VESTED OR BUT JOllY BAS been beatirig that pace, o.nd tiy i>lenty, with the help of bls parenta and two older brothers, Andy; 1~. and Bob, 19. The entire CamUy has been pushing at his legs and pulllQI at his arms since be came home from the hospital. The exercises stimulate his central nervous .system, accord· mii to Mrs. Heiasman. She says that Joey hu been running and jumping since be was 14 mootm oJd. He swima; bounces· on trampolines and rtdes a two-wheeled bicycle. HE CAN COUNT to 10, knows his colors and can draw circles at the Nueva View apeeial educa- tion school in Huntington Beach. He also is beginning to write his name "This shows what you can do if you start early enough," Mrs. Heiss man sald. "If nothing else. I hope that our success wtth Joey will encoW"age parents of children with t.hil dis-· ease that somethine can be doae if you 5tart the day you bring the baby home,·· she said. -.. WE ABE ALL very proud ot· Joey," Mrs. Heissman aays. "He's a real achiever. He bas ac- cotnpli.shed many things and be, ls giving and loving. "He'll do anything you ask and some things you don't ask," she smiled. Joey will take part in a West Orange County fundraising bike/hike Nov. 20 to raise money for the March of Dimes' re- searchonbii'U;ldefects. Youngsters are expected to collect Sl.2,000 from the event Chrtstmas. from sponso?S who will pay for : ~--•llil•lllilillilllill•••llilliil•il[lllilil~•lll!l ... llli.iilllliimllliillllillillillllllif' each kilometer the>: h•ve ·-~=-:-----=---~----~~--------....... --..--...-..... _ _...._ ............. _ lraveled JJIE BIKE/IDKE will start at Mlle Squwe Park in Fount&iil Valley and go through parts al Huntington Beach, including Central Park. Additional information and spon!>or forms can be obtained by calling the March of Dimes at 979·2270. llllllll ti,. .. ..... . . A RIUUlfUS •