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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-11-16 - Orange Coast Pilot... • SAN DIEGO (AP> - A gun. man commandeered a city bus, forced the passengers off and at· tacked tho woman driver before a (itizen chased bJm off, police said. "The bUacker bad a pistol to . my neck," said the 2S-year-old driver. "I was fightlni back and would havefougbttolhedeath. •• The driver', Kathlyn Littlefield. was robbed of $2 and a watch but neither she nor her two passengers 'f.1.-,hurt. ' • • Author f imh Fear Nearby SAN FfiANC!SCO CAP)...,_ -A woman administra\or, preparing a report on safe- ty at San Francisco Stule, bnrl'ly escaped attack h (' r s l' I f 1 n a c a m p u s restroom. offlciub said. "I'm gonna get you. I'm J:(o nna get you," Konnalyn 1"l·1~. 38. said a man armed v.1th a s mall knif e sc re a ffi(•d .it her as she bolled out of a rc~troo~ ,ind ran lo her ncarbv or fi('(' . She locked hcrscJf mlo the offic:,e and the man 'anished before campus police could arrive, Ma Feig said. l30o/e; lrilerest Rate on Loans Leatb to Jail :-.AN DIEGO <AP> -Frances <: ordon Skinm•r or Escondido I .u·c• 120 d ays in jail and five .~l'.irs of prob0Jl100 for lending muney ul 130 rwrcenl interest to u"l'<I car dealers Sl..1 nner. 51. ;iJ!'lo was fined ,;;,ouo hut tolcl Su1>cnor Court .Judgt• Edward T. Uuller that the 1mf\ thing he dtCI wrong W<JS pro· '1dl· money for those who ncc..'<.led ·~ 'w help me God. l will not ,., l'I' hc:'IJ> another man monetan- 1~ .· \O\\ed Ski nner at his sen. lcn<'1n).! Tuesday. '1'11 th.it, Butler l'ommented. You reel no remorse. l don't !lee any ('Onlnlton in you. You socked t hem for 130 percent interest in this humanitarian gesture und ~<lY) ou won 'l do 1t again? .. "I have round out it is a crime to help people when they need help," said the dc(endant. Skinner pleaded innocCJ\t to 17 rounts of loan s harking but <'hanged the pica to guilty of two <'Ounts when 15 were disms1sed. Hi~ .1alf term begins Dec. I. VC to Reduce Student Fee? S,\CRJ\~1ENTO CAP) -The Student Lobby or the Univen,ly or California says it has agrf)ed \\ ith the UC administration on a $)1 reduction in the •tudcht cducallon fee. Hut the lobby said Tuesday the reduction depends on the s\ate appropriating about $6.6 million to make up the difference, and Cov. Edmund Brown Jr. ha& not• ugreed to this. The proposal ls to be presented to lhe regents Thunday. ALLAWAY •• . ' Janitor at Cal State. becarne ob· ~cssed with the beUe( that rqem· bers of the unJversitt statt w~re having sexual relationS wlth his wife. ' ' He further believed, It was testified. that his wit~. Bonnie, who has since divorced him, was also being forced \0 particlpate in the maklng of t;>or.nograph\c movies on campus. DAILY PILOT Jn the artcrm~th of TuMday'a raudous street protests, w~ich re· suited inQ24 in.iurieJ pnd Jl ar· rest~ when nnunc broke QUt amotic ~ro-arid antl·ah•h fq~~. a heavy police cootlngent today ke pt the groups more than a block apart. The protesting groups wer11/ar smaller in numbers and more O?'- derly thwi Tuetday, &$the police lines ~re doubloo. About 1,000 chttn\ing Iranian students. many wearine masks to conc,£ll their Identity. con· tinued to pto~est the sbah's U.S. visit. from 'Lafayette .Park, ~cross Penns ylvania Avenue from the front of the executive mansion Some 200 other opponents marched in a cirelc on t.he El· Upsc. u park area behipd the White House wf!ere m"ch 'Of Tuesday's violence occurred. Meanwhile, abou~ 200 pro·shap U'=monslrators assembled at 17th Street and Pennsylvania Avet')ue. several hundred feet from t.he students. Police canceled p~rrnlt$ for demoqsiratiaas closer to. the While House in the wake oJ Tuesda~·s violence. • .Following ll'l_e White ffouse meeti~lh ~rter. the sh$'s sch~H e cnlled for him to attend an Em y Row l,µncheon bolt· ed by Vice President W.-l,ef F, Monda!~ and •a meetlng on Capitol Jlill with .the House In- lernaliQnal llelallons Commit· lee. Ji-I The~ shah and his wife, the Em· press Farah, are Lo leave tonight from Andrew• Air Force .Base outside Washin&l<>Jl ror Paris. In a White liouse meeting Tuesday that was overshadowe;d by the demonstrations. lhe shah reportedly pledged lo Carter \hat he would not push Cor hiaher oil prices at a meeting of the Organization of Petroleum E~· porting Countries next. month. The monarch, whose nation supplies 7 percent to 8 per<:ent of U.S. oil imports, said In recent in· lerv1cws that Iran would remain neutral on the pricing issue. The Washington Post said he was un- derstood to have told Carter the same thing. The shah's supporters see him a~ n hero for bringing prosperity and stabilit.y to Ir.an. His detrac· tors look. upon hiin as a lyranti whose regime would crumble without U.S. economic and military ties, and also claim he has J oiled' all polltj~~J dlHenters. Tllls has been t.he tnos l tul'T)ultuQus of the shah's 12 visits here during his 36-year reign. N atlonal Park Service police estimated that about 8.000 people took part. in Tuesday's protests, the largest and most violent since the Vietnam wa.r protei.t. days. ll could not be ascertained "".hich side lri&gered :rutsday·s v1olcnce. Some witnesses said the ma.in confrontation began whtn apU• shah demonstrators armed With ~tic.ks rrom.plckel sisns charge4 into a crowd or supportegs tic the monarch. However. the shah:• opponents have claimed I.hat Jrahian agents would ti")' to In. fil~qite their rank• to provoke vi tcnce ~ bl._me lhp re,.ulUQi tr uble Oil them. ' , Mettnwbile, In San 'Fr'•o.c~ on Tue.541ay, a Uel\Ui WJ•n~ pat~dt: of 2.00() aotl••hah dam, onstr~tors. mostly Iranian c:ol· lege .St\ldenta, .W~d slowly but. noi~Uy througt> ~overnmeQt and fin'antlll distrrct.a.. PHANTOM •• 'I'Rey laid bls' ~Jothes had been patched wU.h animal akins and his shGeS had been t'el)alred wlth strip.s taken from discarded car tir~s. ( It la alleJM th•l Horton ls the bearded .black l1l&q wffo often was &etn 1tanding on the center divtder:olth• ltiYetside freeway hurlltig rock. ~t f)Jltsing car1. · . More \han 50 wJndlhltld• wve shatt•red f>Y lhe lnan wbp btrama known as tie "phantom rock thrower, .. ornc~ruaJd. --lnnocent pleas have ~n eti· terect by four of five ~mivalcon­ ceseion workers arre.sted at Foiuntain Vfllley'a annual HaUoween festival tor allegedly rlgging sames or alleged skill and luck. The fiCth defendant was scheduled to appear Jn court to- day to enter a plea tcS tt>e mlsde· meanorcharaes carrying a max· imum penalty or she months in county Jal! and a $500 rlne. Investigators led by Police Sgt. Norman Satterfield arrested and booked the five suspects after watching the general public lose ror 3~'2 hours. while trying, to W,in plush sturted toy anlrnllls.7 They then dug into their own pockets -two softball losses for 50 cenl.5 or three-for-a.dollar ~ and had no better luck o..-s1JUI at the game, the badge-carrying customert.> alleged. Electronic devices were .es- sertei;lly utlli1~ to foll PQte,n.ti~ winners in the games, whlth itl· volved two concessions at which patrons tossed softballs into bushel baskets and ~ third simUar lo a pinball mach\ne. Trial is scheduled Jan. 12 for Jerry Lee Shatley. 24, of Modesto; John Cargile, 18. or Skid ~!ljules . :Newport Man llaymond Joseph Bo,audry or New1>9rt Beach ls In crjtical con· dition· loda1! ~l4tr beiag injun:d Tuesday n(Cht whell his ur .skldded into • lraftic 1ignal pole in Costa M~a. poUce rfported, 841audry, 21, ot 4703 Hilada Wp.y. Newport Be"cb. i-ePQrtedb' underwecit suriery at Costa Mesa Memorial HOlplt.il folJow- iqg the 7:45 p.m. l:ra11h near the tnt~rsectlon or Newport Boulevard and Me• Drl\le. ' Clemente Man Arrested in Armed Heist A San Clemente man was ar· rested Tuesday on armed rob- bery 'charges when o city policeman alleged he recogmzed him as wonted by the Orange countv Sheriff's ornc:e tn com:tec· llt>n wh.htht holdup or rt San Juab C'npl1thno llq\Jtjr stord tout- years ago. Larry Willial'T) Dalton, 30, of 240 Ave. Poniente. was to appear today in $0lllh~ounty mun~if¥l .court. H.isbail wauet at. •u> 120. Investigator William Johnson of the Sheriff's Otface said Dalton has been eludine poUce tor rour years. traveling around the coun· try under assumed names. Officers believe ho has bffn0&r- rested at least twice -once in Lake Tahoe ~nd ~ce in Ohio. Detalls -of the liquor store holdup were nol availlble today. ·2,soo Ev•euat~ LOUISVILLE. Ky. CAP> - About 2,SOO people were evacuat· ed from a ~li6n or western Loutsvllle for about 90 mlnutes Tuesday while two derat~ tank ca rs conta1nhfJ over 30,000 1anons . htghty toxic eheminl .were rlihted, poJlcesald. According to1 wHneS3es, BHudry wait lrav~lina l\Orth-~ound on Newport ijoue\vard and lost control oJ tJi,_ ~ar at the in· tersecUon. Th., car Jtfuck ~ c&frb before movln& hea~ OJ\ \nto the t.ratrlc pofo. Costa Mesa paramedics ' transported the unconscious vie· tim to Costa Me~a. Nemori•l ltospilal, where he •tnains in tp~ hospit,..al ·s intel\Sivecare unit. • • , VOL. 70, NO. 320, 4 SECTIONS, .. 8 MGES r a. ................ ctNDY "'It.LEA AND MUSTANqs• MUSTANG eo.ta M••• High Mascot Comee Allv• Live Maseot MW1t~a Adopt 'Mrutani! B7 MICBAELPMKBVICR Of ... DM!y .......... Sbe'uUJlahorMwitbnonameandlSn'tqultecomfortableyet wlthhernewhomeontheCoetaMesaHiabScbooJFarm. But THE filly's nervousness is sure to fade as qUlckly as' the green "189" painted on her dark-brown hide. The horse was obtained about three weeµ ago throuab the federal Adopt.a-Hone program, dvlnl the school a llvlnl mascot &o represent the Costa esa High School "Mustangs." WHEN THE just-weaned beauty gets accustomed to crowd noise, &be 'll be prancin1 about at parades and at COit.a Mesa Hlgh s~rtinl events. The six-week old flll7 was sbtppecl from Susanville to Eaton· dido, where teacher Roy Center anct Other ataff members picked her up. · SHE DOESN'T have a name yet, but she certainly Wt 't lack· Ing attention. senior ctndy Mllltt, wbo ts tend.inc the bonle until the ~cb06111 bone~fochicUon dau takes over, fiiurea the bone ls tielna ~ect.~30eUm• a4i1. Eventually the 11 be trilned for rldlnC aad the acbOoJ lntendl to have h'1' bred. Any olfaprla, wUI be1oni to tile seboOt alU.0..Ch ' the horse~ remaJn the P?"Operty ol t.be federal •overnment. Allaway was advfied ot bis rJsbt to appeal hit i.risanlty con- vlctton during;~Jbrief beartq b'f forf JUdce JCJieeland. But dewty pubUt ·det'ender Ron Butler later made it elear that no such appeal will be ftled. A Jury found Allaway guilty ot seven COUDtl ot mUrder and two of assault after listen.log to Protesi Pickets Re tum WASHINGTON <AP> -Rival demonstrators massed near the White House today as the Shah ot Iran, winding up his violence. scarred state visit, paid a return call on Prestdenl Carter. , But ln contrast to the 124 in· Juries and 12 arrests that result· ed Tuesday when fighting broke out among pro-and anti-shah forces, a heavy POiice conUneent today kept the groups more than a block apart to prevent large. scale violence. The protesting 1roups were tar smaller ln number -nd more or· derly than Tuesday. Three ar· rests tor d!SQC'dtrJy conduct re· sultJni from mloor scUfllea were reported~ tbe~. Carter told report.en that bis 80·minute 1Deetin• tocflf wi~~ shab cov~ ! Side range of toplf.1, ~tudtna human ri.lhts. OpponeDta of the abab tiave · critlcliiCl Ul• state of htUU.a rights ln Jran. The president. wb;o walked his visitor to • limousine after the meetbic. said be expraaed hope that the J.3.aatlon Organtiadon ot Petroleum Exportin1 Countries would not decide to raise petrole\llD prices when lt meets in Venezuela In December. · Carter 4ecllned to atate the shah'• vl•w•, although the <SeePROTES'I\ Pa1e .U) " _,...,..._ • te11ttmony that Allaway shot nUie people ln aod around the elm pm Ubtary on July a , ms. But the same jury could not reach a verdict in a subs:equent unity ht'aring on Allaway•s mental •ta.ta at the tJme ol the klllln1s. Lawyers for both sides egreed to alJQw Judge Kneeland tc> rule alone on the sanity issue rather own1un. , However, O'Rourk'esald today that relatives of Myers told him the 57-year-old speclallat in the tre1,tment of l~trlal water didn't carry ammu.nition for the weapon. Detectives are stJll searc~ for ¥yera' 197.f. •old-colored than SumtDOD a new jury to alt throueh a second sanity hearinf. Judge Kneeland subsequently declared Allaway to be "com· pletely psycboUc'• wbeo he took a rifle to the campus and shot ,..me university emplo)'ees. It was testified that Allaway, a janitor at cal State, became olr Ford van. "We possibly can find Jots of things once we get the van," O'Rourkesaid. O'Rourke said that a paulnf motorilt wbo saw a body being thrown from the van Friday may be put tmder hypnosis to provide additional details about wh.t be saw. l . i eued with the belief that mem· : ben Of tbii uDlv•nitY staff were : havhtc MX1W relatloos With his· \Yif e. . He turtber believed. it was· testified, that hb wile, Bc>mile, wbo baa since divorced bim, was .. also belna forced to participate in the makinC of pe>rnC)lraphlc. movies on campus. Thjrd By WILLIAM HODGE °' • ....., .......... At least two Orange Coast resi· dent.a -and poeaibly a third - perished Tuesday when their light plane plunged into the ocean 3\i miles IOUtb ot the Newport Beach jetty. followiq a a:Ud·alr colllllon abcM.at noon. ' The victims were identified aa · James Tlbbott, 38, of 931.2 Comstock Drive in Huntington Beach, and Robert Baker, 41. of 22842 Foxborough WJy to El· Toro. oranie County coroner'• offtctai. believe there may have been a third victim but the name baa been withheld pendinc notification" kin. Olftclill •aid '11bbott checked out tho OeSsiia 182 from Cbabafy Relm •nd Auociat•• of N.wport. Beach. The frOUP 0-parentlY planned a ll001l ~/ flliht over the cout; offtdilt tald. It •• Ui:\lcnOWn who was pilot· tq lilie ill!Med ili'Cratt .t tbO time~ COlllaloo. A HeOnd aircraft landed safelJ' at Oran1e County airport, despite a badly damaged wtn.r. tollowlill the mid-alr callision off CryatalCoVe. · 'l'be aircraft. a Pip~r PA2S, wu owned by Martin Avhatloq of.Newport Beach. Marun olfl~IAb decllned com- ment on the incident citing their attotney•1 advice to make no comD>ent Tho l>i~r'• two occupants. Paul (2u:istopber Jacobs. 26822 Caneta. l>live, Mlai01' Viejo and (i~ory · n . Brouse, acm • Acacia taDe; Laguna Hills, weti unavallabletorcomment. Oranie COWity J.l'ire J>epart. ment officials 11ld Brouse was pllotln• tbe plane at the time ~ 'the · colllslon. They identified Jacobs as a Martin Aviation fligbt instructor and eaid Brouse was a atudentpllot. ,, They said. however. BroUse had a private pllot'a license and speculated that be was undergo- ing actvaaced flllbt traJniug. Flre offlclalu said the two men were shaken after lancling at the airport but recall seeing the other aircraft. imme41atety !ollowm, the mld-alr colllslQD. • AccOl'dlng to fire officlala the twq men said the other aircraft went spinning off and dlsap· peared. A considerab1e portion o( the· (~PLANES, Pap Al) WINO DAMAGED IN FATAL MIDAIR COLLISION Piper PA28 Returned T.o Hengar At M41rtln Aviation 130o/o Interest Rate on Loam Lecub t~ Jail SAN DIEGO CAP> -F'rances Gordon Skinner of Escondido faces 120 days in jail and fi ve years of probation for lending money at 130 percent interest to used car dealers. Skinner, 51, also was fined SS,000 but told Superior Court Judgl' Edward T. Butler that the only thing he did wrong was pro- \ 1dt• mone:v for those who needed I( .. So help me God, J will not <•vl'r help another man monctan- 1\. ·· \OW<'<i Skinner al his sen ll'n<:1ng Tuesday To that. Duller comment<.'<!· You feel no remorse. I don •t sec <•ns t·ontntion 1n you. You socked llwm for 130 percent interest 1n this humanitarian gesture <1nd )\ay you won 't do it again? .. .. I have found out 1t 1s a crime lo help people when they need help,·· said thederendant. Skinner pleaded innocent to 17 <·ounts or loan sharking but changed the plea to guilty of two 1•ount-; when 15 wer e dismsised. I l1s Jail tl'rm bec1ns Dec. I Fro..PageAJ PLANES ... Piper's right wing was torn off in the collision leaving the right aileron hanging from the wing. Despite the wing damage, fire offic ials said the Piper PA28 made a near perfect" landin1 at the airport. The search for the second aircraft o(f Lagun a Beach was hampered initiall,y by fog in the area . Searchers warned of heavy s hark activity in the crash site vicinity. Orange County Harbor .P.atrol. Newport Beach Hreguard and· Huntington Beach state llteiuard boats respe>nded to t.he .noon )lour collision report. They were as- sisted by a Coast Guard cutter fro rn Long Beach a nd two helicopters. By early afternoon, searchers had l ocated an oil slick and pieces of wreckage on the water but described the debris as small pieces of the aircraft and parts of the bodies. An Orange County Harbor Patrol official said the aircraft's t ire was the largest piece of wreckage. Balking Inmates Miss 'God/ ather' ' NEW YORK CAP) -Because they insisted on remaining out of their cells after lockup time to watch the last hour of the "1he God father, .. 75 in mates of the Queens House of DttenUon Ylave been dealt a penalty they cannot ref use 25 days in solitary con· finement. Jn addition. the 75 also missed the final segm ent of the four-part l<;lccast of the program Tuesday night Dul 425 other inmates at the jail stayc<i up until 11 p.m . Tuesd ay -an hour past lockup - to watch the nnal installation or the pr ogr am about an organized crime "family." The larger group had returned to their cells as ordered before tho s how finished Saturday niJ{hl. but the other 75 ref\lled and •· squad of correction guarde had to be called in to remove them. They were later sentenced to 25 days in solitary. The prisoners' council had not u~ked permjsslon for the late lockup Saturday and the correc- Police Halt . . .. TBidto Fame .. w NEW YORK CAP> -James •.Campbell's bid for fame didn't 1et0Utheroof. The would-be darede•tl was grabbed by police Tuesday as he prepared to parachute from atop t.be 110-sto ry Wo.rld Trade Cente r. A policeman spotted Cimpbell, 21. of Oakland, N.J ., as he un- loaded a parachu~ from a suit- (ase on the top ot the south tower of the twin skyscrapers, the tallest in the clty. DAILY PILOT tiol\ officer in charee did not have the power to authorize overtime to guard the prisoners. Prison QUiclals granted a re-- qutat tor Ute late lockup Tuesday night, presumably to impress on the inmates the wages of sin. Tough Crime Policy A.ked LOS ANGELES (l\P ) - Hollywood's pr06Utulion, porn· ography"5ind crime can 't be eliminated until major changes are made on local and state le ve ls t o touchen s anctions against such acUvlly, Hye the director of the state Alcoholic Beverage Control Board. Baxter Rice said Tuesday bta agency is hampered because it lacks the authority t<> prevent conlinuln& violations at bars and taverns. He added that a manpower shortaaie and the red tape re- quired to suspend or revoke a liquor license also were pro- blem•. UCtoRednce Student Fee? SACRAMENTO CAP> -The Student Lobby of the University ot CaJllornla says it bu agreed with the UC administration on a $51 reduction in the student educaUon leo. But th•lobby said Tuesday the reduction dependa on Ufe state approprtaUn1 about $8.6 mll&.l to make up the dllf erence, and Gov, Edmund Browil Ir. has not agreed to thJ1. The proposal ts to be preaentttt to the recent1 Thunday. ~ Blazes RANCHO SANTA FE (AP> - The campfires that keep llleeal aliens warm in dirt caves dug near some ot SOuthem ·catu- ornJa •s most expensl•• homes are aettlng themdeportecl. Twenty-four foreat ran1era tryln& to prevent a mtJor nre captured 91 aliens Tue.aday with the. help ot eight U .S. border patrohnen. • The wealthy Amerleu.a wbO live in $400,Geil) homes oor\b or San Diego complained about lhe fires at night. Deputy Border Patrol chief Winford Baze said some aliens reportedly lived as looc"u slx months ln the bovels. Doug Allen of the California Department of Forestry aald the special task force was formed by ran1ers from JUvenlde, San Bernardino. Oraoae and San Die10 counUes. .. "The primary objective of \his was not to apprehend me1al aliens but to put a stop to the il· legal camptlres that pet.eel a ~ threattolhearea," Allenaald. Two had burned a :SO-foot area. SpanJ!Jh·languaee algna were put up months before, 1aytn1 that fires are illegal in the tinder-dry area. After that djdn 't put them out, a forest ranger 1pent the last two months there "t.ryina to atop tbe campfire threat wi~ut suc- cess," said Atten, addina "lt was at that point we dl!dded to so lllto the area and put them out." A few oC the aliens were awake but most of them were sleeplnc on the ground in the huts northeast of San Dle1ulto Re.i.ervoir when the of(icers sw~ped down. They were PJ'OC· esaed today for d~Uon to Mexico. Author Fimla Fear Nearby ' SAN 'FRANCISCO CAP> -A woman administrator, preparing a report on safe· ty at San Francisco State, barely escaped attack h.rs etr iA a campus restroom. otflclals sald. "I'm gonna 1et yoo. I'm gonna get you,·• KonnUyn Feig1 38, aa.Ut a maQ um~ wltn a sinialt knlh screamed at her as she bolted out of a restroom and ran to her nearby of· fice. She lock~ herself into the omce and the man vanished before campus police could arrive, Ms. Feig said. CM High Sets ·Vegas Night Students at Costa Men Hllh School will hold a hand rablng Las Vecas Night Saturday In the ~ys'gym. A catered dinner will be availa- ble bealnntng at 6 p.m . Ad· mission with dinner will be SS and without, $3. Food wUI be serve<! buftet at1Je with tmey, ham. roast beef, salads and dessert. Music and eames also wlU be offered. Tickets are avaUable from the student ac:tl vllles office and some tickets will be SC>ld at the door . Funds will benefit student ac- tiviliea. OKa Mesa Tract South Coaat Reetottal Z<spe Control CommlaslOn members have given their approval to a 12-unit, feOO,OO(Jtract of homes on Costa Maa '•west lide, /ollowtna. earlier city approv.i of t.he project. The u homes will be built.on an extenaton oC Sundance Drive~ north of Wat Jeth St.rid, by d~~ • veloper ftallo McClellan, accord- ing to Coastal Commission of-' rtclala. ' l',..,.P_AJ PROTEST. • monarch reportedly pledced at a meeting With the president Tues- dl\Y that Iran would not pmh for a price me. The shah bas said In re<:ent intA!rviews that hi.I naUon, which supplies 7 to.8 percent ol U.S. oil imports, would remain neutral on the issue. Followlnt today·a meeunc with Carter, the 1hah drove to W ashlngton 's Embassy Row sec- tion for a luncheon hosted by Vice President Waller F . Mondale. Some ~ponents were kept in a cord -<>ft area about· two bloc.ks from that site. After the luncheon, the shah planned to meet on Capitol Hill with the House lnternatlonal Relations Committee before he and his wife, the Empress Farah, fly to Paris toni9ht from nearby Andrews Air Force Base. During the White House meet· ing. about 1,000 Iranian stud,ents s t a tioned thems elves In Lafayette Park, across Penn- sylvania Avenue from tbe front ot the executive mansion. to pro-test the sbaJ\ 's r~glrne. About 200 other opponents marched in a circle on the El· lipse, a park area behind lhe White Houff where hlUCh of Tuesday'• Violence ot(!Ut'red. Meanwhile. about 200 pro·shah demonstrators assembled at 17th Street and Pennsylvanla Avenue. s"eral hundred feet from the students. Police had canceled permits tor demOl\!ltratlons closer to the White House In the wake of Tuesday's violence. Some witnesses Hid the main confrontation began wben anti- shab demomtrators armed with' sticks frOD\ picket signs charged Into a crowd of supporters of the monarch. However, lhe shah's opponents have claimed that Iranian agents would try to in· filtrate thdr ranks to pro\'oke vJolenct and blame ~ ruulUna trouble on them. Meanwhile, ln San Francisco on Tu~, a uatrtl1 organized pared~ ot" 2.000 ant~sbah dem- on1tratora1 rnostty • Jranlan col- Jege studet\~ 'fOW'd alowly but noisily t.hl'ougb govunment and flnanclal dlattictl. LOS ANGELES <AP) - Henacfnl desert wlhd1 ret\lmed today u ftrefightel'S pushed to c;ont.ain a fire tliat spread from a dump and charred 2,000 acres ol bruah in the parched Santa Monica Mountains. (Related photo, PqeAS.) ~· Roy Talbot, a spokesman Cor the Los Angeles Coupty Fire Department. dnerlbed the winds as "Just not good. It's pMty· warm fortbiatimeoftheyf!ar." The forec~1t htch tem- peratu~ for today was BS. Fire spokeaman Dennis Phillips aaid the fire was 60 to,70 perce nt contained at mid- morning and estimated final con- tainment would ~ declared by this evening ln the area's seco,id major fir-: in two days. He said 1,350 acres continued to burn at midmoinlna. · Weather fpceeasl-8 called for Qonli?Wed dryness apdSa.nta Apa wlndl of 10 to 1$ miles an hOur alter a nlft\\ f n whkb rito1tt sea breoze• aAd fog helped ff ref l.ihter• c•l'1 tbe \lpper hand. ·'The Santa Ana condition makes it a Utt.le more hazardous. If t he wind were 35 to 40 miles per hour, it would. ma.lee it a little more serious," said Talbot. Tuesday night, firemen hacked out a 20-mlle Ore line thrq_ugh the dense undergrowth ano steep c a n y ons 30 miles west of downtownLosM\Jeles. Six fireme.rt were injured, in- cluding ~ke Euban.1<1. 2S, who ..,as crlUcaJJy hurt wbeQ a trac· tor roll~d ov~r him. He un- derwent sureery at Westlake Hospital. -The others sustained minor injuries, autborftles said. The root of one home on l'tf ulhol!and m~way caul)lt fire and there were unconfirm~ re- port• of damaee to two other •tt)lctures, flr~Jnep said. About 070 flrert1Mers re- mained on the fire 1hie today lifter the teleue or crews from the lJ.S. Fo,rest SerVice and some 200 olhm: PhUUpa satd. But firefighters contlnuW an all-out battle uslne 32 camp crews, three tractors and four ~tet~WJ\Pins beUcoptera. The •po~e1m~n 1ald firetigbt.el'I were coa.centnting their efforts on tbe fire's southern .flank at 'l'raneu ean: ·yon, which Un between the coast and the blue. and 11t'OUld re~atablilb fire llnea alone &he ea1t and west. of the charred area. • The blue betan mtd-da)l Tues· day, when the winds tanned a smold'ring fire in a dump1 fire oftlclals Hid. Tbe blowing sparks ianJted the tlnder-dry brush ~WTOUndin& the dump. Co\lnty Fire Inspectoc Dennis MUler originally aaJd the dump fire had been smoldering for seNeral weeks. But early today fire Information ofClcer Roy Talbot said witnesses reported se,Jn.r a man sta.rtln1 an llle1a1 fire tn the dump Tuesday ln an area that was not buriliaf earlier. ~-' 'I• TONIGHT OCC CELEBRITY SERIES - Dr. Laurence Peter, "The Peter Principle." Audltorlum.s p,m . ''STREETC AR NAMED DESIR!f" ....-OCC 'Drama Lab. Nov. l6-19,8p.m. OCC J.,ECI'tJRE -''Aviation Safety for Pilots," Fine Art.I U9, 7:30p.m. · .THURSDAY NOV.17 OCC WOMEN~ WEEK - Kat4t MUlett, A~torium, Noon. OCC LEC1'UltE -"Slim Chance io a Fat World," Wom6n'1Center, 1p.m. • I • WASlllNGTON. (AP> - Amerlru 's fert.IUly rate 11 on the up&wing and u prornlnen~ economu~l HY• • baby boom may ()(•cur wi\b1n Lhc nexl dee· adt. Or. Richard A !nlliltrlln, an economic::. profeuor at the Unlveri.ily o( l'crmaylvanla, says it's too early to tell whether the 6 percent to 7 percent Increase In America '11 birth rat~ during the firs t cighl moothis or 1977 is Shhoting Suspect Arraigned • A m4n accused or klllln1 a San- ta Ana policeman during a shoot.out that erupted when of- flc~rs ln•esligated a reparted burglary last weekend was ar- raigned Tuesday in his hospital bed at UC Irvine Medlcal Cent.er. Santa Ana Municipal Court Judge John Smith Jr. took lawyers for both sides and court personnel to the bedalde of DeWayno Emmett Dunlap, 38, of Fullerton. The defend ant pleaded inno- cent to charges of murder. at- te m ptcd murder, receiving stolen property and possession of a firearm. Ile is confined to the hospital's jail ward with bail de- nied. Dunlap, who was seriou~ly wounded in an exchange of gun- fire between police aod two re- ported burglary suspects. was ordered to face a preliminary hearing Dec. lJ Deputy Dlslrict Attorney Jay MoselC'y :.uid his office will de- mand the death penalty for Dunlap's aHegL>d slaying of of- fi cer Damel Allan Hale, 31, o( Mission Viejo. Police said Hale was shot by one of two men he spotted while investigating the burglary of a southwest Santa Ana home. Officers supporting Hale used a s hotgun to fell a fleeing burglary s uspect they later identified as transient Roy Ken- neth llill, 38. Hill died at the scene. Officers claim Dunlap fired at least one shot at another officer before he fell seriously wounded in the exchange ot gunfire. Hospital officials list him as critical but stable. Teen Beau Cliff Fall S YDNEY, Australia <AP ) -An 18-year-old wlth a compound leg frac- ture survived for 13 days in._ a o.reek bed as be crawled on his back to eafety, hospital spokesmen said today. Stephen Sheehy's Ol'deal took place only 30 yards from a busy hlgh~ay and a few hundred yards from houses in a heavily butlt-up suburb five miles from downtown Sydney. She~hy went out for an afternoon ride on his blcy· ~le Oct. :.>. He said be was thrown off, pos&lbly bt a hit-and-run driver, and tumbled ovel" a barrier and down a 25-foot cWf, break- lnf hla 1.n1ec. HD&l>and Sees . "" ' . Wife Killed BAKERS~D (AP> -An Arv~~hou,nlfe waa beaten over e h~ad ~'°d killed as she wall ~ cJ~ iei .S,kepnelcl COilege. I t • ... BdaeratleJ~ -'-~~-l_!_ce said Franc•~ ~"· 24, had juat beei ~R'f .i a coUes• parldn• lot T\liidq nlaht b1 ber huabaod wtieD a f!>aD Jumped out from behlDd a car and htt·, h4ir over the bead with a blunt. metal object. Mrs. B1ow1f1 hiaatiarid aawtbea~k. Shortly after tbe attaek, police arreated 'WUU~ .Edwa:rtl Level. 19, ot Balt.nfttf 4, lot lh • Uonotmufd • • ,, Bhat Sign? When there are a tot or young people, auctt as thoserl>om durina th~ post.World War 11 gen&ra- Uon, competlllon for schoollnf. Jobs and what is ceneraUy con- sidered to bet the good ure will ~ stilt. Today. oowever, lhe relatJYe number <11 ouna adult• fo America 1t s art.ing to declJne, meanl~ that there wtll be len competlUon to eet Into college eod m<>re job~ ovallable, E::'asterUn aaid. "Jn ~lmplet5~-term1, the fertlll· ty of yOufli adults depends on their relative weU·belnt -how Four Marines ignore a "Handicapped Seat· ing Only" message as they occupy four seats in tlie terminal at Lindbergh Field in San Diego. CoUnty' s Foster Homes Decreasing tinued. lls members include representatives or civic, busineS6 and govm-nmental groups. County officials also are contin- uing efforts to provide dis· cussion aroups and training sessioDS I« foal.er PIU"tnt.s. Phone Taping Trial Slated Charles ~mu Miller was or- dered Tuesday to face trial Jan. 9 on charges that he lUegaUy taped telephone conversaUons while campalplng f()fl. reform of the OraneeOoantyJatl. SUperlor Court Judge Robert E. Rlc~les aet tbe trial dote for Mlller, i:f, arJd scheduled a pre· trtal appearance for Dec. 2. Miller ls rree on his promise to appear. It Is altered that Millet' lllegal· Jy taped a telephone conversa· lion between binuelf and Santa Ana Municipal Court Judge Richard Parslow and a separate conversation between himself and FBI agent J. Francis SuJUvan. 7Testing Plane Die In Blaze GREENSBOJW, Ala. CAP> - A pilot and six passengers taking a trial flight to decide if they wanted to purchase an airplane were killed 1Vh~ the craft ex· plodtd ln l1h~Fll ~nd butned. · authorltieuaid. Wreckage of tho twin-eqine Cessna 411 was scatt.ered 1n a wooded area 10 miles northwest of hete in west-central Alabama (lfter the explosion Tue.day nieht, the Federal Aviation Ad· ministration said. The pilot. identified as Georie Stock, 32, of Atlanta, bad filed a plan to ny from Blrminfl\am to Mobile, Ala, 1 . The dead pa91enger1 were identiftecl "by J(ercury Frelpt Linet lnMoblle as Clareneetevi, 66, MercorY·s president: bla Wife Doris Levi, :;G: W. A. Jernigan. 48 vice Pfetuaent; ·rod\ tter· reh. 42, thirfirm's auditor; Jack Hunnicutt, 28, a company ptlot. all of Moblle, and Robert Cardinal Jr., 58, president ot Dlx: le Air Inc., ofTuscaloos•· The bodies were badly charred. The twin-enline ~plane, with Jess than 100 boura ot ru1bt time, was being demonstrated tor the Mereury people who were con· siderinl bu)ltn& lt. By JACKIE HYMAN oe• °""' ,_ "'*' Calilor;nia psycruatric technl· clans 1ay they will eolitinue their attempt to block a reorganization ot Falrvlew and other stale hospital stafts despite stale l\ealth officials· refusal to ne'gotiate at a meeting in SacrameotoTUesday. William Grimm, executive director of the California As· sociation of Human Services Technologists, sald hi.s aroup doesn't want to take action tbat will hurt patients but will seek "vislblllty"-in its attempts to stop what psych techs see as a barrier to Job advancement. The reorganization. aimed at~ regaining federal certification and Medi-Cal funds (or Fairview and three other state hospitals, involves setting up n e w supervisor)' positions to be filled by registered nurses. The poslUons replace 108 cur- rent positions statewide that have been fllled by both nurses and psych t.ecb.s. An estimated 41 psych techs will be demoted as a result and one channel of ad· van cement will be closed. Psych techs at Fairview in Costa Mesa contend most pa· tients there, wbo are qaentally re- tar d ed or pbyalcall1 han• dlcapped, need lr$1na ln skills more than custodial medical care. Dr. William Keating, usoclate deputy director of the state Pepartl118'2tot Heattla. 1,td Tuea- day ln a telephone interview tbat "I wouldn't have made these rule. if licensing badn 't forctd me'° mau t.besp ... He said bOCA fedeNI and mte ~tal ltADidarda lltrell pUUlng nun• in~ Potitlons. Improper it8fOng was one of the vtolaUons of federal codes found at FatnMW lut aummer ~1 a state Uceosb'lf team, which de· certified the hospital. Pa{n1ew ts currenu1 losing ssoo.oc» '*' month in federal funds, whlcb1tho atate la making upi>r. :keattnst said Ute onlr COD• cesslon his clepartment ls con· sldertbg ls to belp D)ote pa)'c!.h ~tb• earn tbelP regftterecl nurse ~egr~ to qa.alty for tbe neW posit!•· "l'b.e state m•1 allocate funds to pernitt 47 ~Cb.techs. the saane number a• those beinc demoted. to receive tull-Ume pay lot barf.time work while studying nur11n£ he said. "Tbere·1 no question, we have to admit Ul1s wlll reduce one avenue of promotion, .. Or. JCeat· ingsaid. Dr.Franc:JsCrlDella.execu.U•e director of Fairview, whlch employs about 650 ps1cb techs, said T~ he believes tbe de. partment of health ·s otter la In• adequate and that be doesn't ' • believe the real issue is eiUi money or advancement. "I think the real lssue is the erosion of thelr proressional stature.·· Dr. Crlnella said' "WKat it amounts to ls a senae of betr•yal <in the psych tech,,~ by people who have told them they're import.ant ... Adding to the problem is that Fairview will be seeking sever~ hundred psyehiatrlc tecb.nlciau lo rm openings within the next ab months. * * * • Conflicts 'I Surfacing At. College .· ,t 'I A state-mandated reor1aniz.a· lion at Falmew State Hospital iA Costa Mesa that bas brought PJlO-teats from psychiatric techqt.. clans also has cast a cloud over.- psych t.cb tralnlng program at Golden West College In Hunt.-lngton Beach, collece officiels sar.· · 'I think probably in terms Of the morale ot these students. it makes them think about w~ they really want to be empio,.d in the state hospitals, .. ~ Shirley Carroll, who coordi tile college prograpi. The 'problem centers on a're; organbatlca inteaded to b~ Fairview up to federal stand &y ~lbUsb.lng a new class suP41:dton,JIOSiUOD1 l9 be filled bf re•~ nunes. ratberUtill ps,Ychlatrte technicians. ~' Psych techs have complabwif that the ~lrement that nurse: fill the posit.Jons Is unnecessary cu ta tbelr ·opportunities and short-changes patlents·wbo mat. need \raining in skills rath~ than medical care Jn many cases. 1 About 160 students are enrdWI in Golden West's program. a two-" year plan.leading to an associate ot artedegree. UaualJY abouthal( the fradttates go to work for the state lM>spttal s)'ltem. Ms. Car, roll Hid. .. "I think when they downgradb · these posttlonl it bas an elem~ of beiq dllc:ourqinJ to us,·· she said, noting that no students have dropped out of tbe progr~ because ot the changes, but th-* there ls some uncertainty and un· rest. "They abticlpated that ther"Js a career ladder and tbey will bave an oppe>rtunlty to f~ their OWl1 careers, n Ks. c~ aald. • > M11 Eue• Are Dim, l Cannot See; l Jlove Not Brought MySpecsW1thMe. ,/ I Hove, lley, / Not, Ho, r Bro'!Phi Mv ~ Speda Will\ Mt . • • -: ,. ..a-aer .. aln of St111r.,. -Or nklngSon1 tTHE DMV DIZZIESt Alas, a~ptber birthday had passed and -~sit was time for ltle10 report ~n to our friendly C01'ner partment of Motor Vehicles o Gee for the drtver'll license re-· n \val. For me, this is always a . t of trauma. ''I never go down tltere but at something aioes wrong," l g umped to tl'le wife on the ap· p inted day. I shou~d tell her, The I s._ Ume she reported to the MV. they gave her the mtslead- i g ·directions and she stoOd in l e f.'rong line for more than one . ~-Anyway, I'm always a nervous wrcck going to the motor vehicle i1tcensing place. Some clerk is 'always sm1ppmg at me "Are Yo1,1r Papers iJ'.l Order'!·· tHEY ARE NEVER in order. \\y purushment 1s lo go stand in J~othcr Imo to get them m order. Mv mission. I felt. was com· pl1catcd this time because I'd been gr anted one or those automatic extensions on.-my driver's license. Surely this was J?omg to catch me up in some k uld of bureaucratic trap. Bolstered by six cups of coffee aod a terminal case of jitters. I reported to the DMV. Remarkably, it wasn't too \'rowded. The lines were about like average super market. 1 shuffled into one. Then cal1\e trouble. The i:.hort. tat man had just reached the OMV clerk's window. This time, it wasn't the clerk glv· mg the customer hell. It was the other way aro\Uld. The fat man was yelling in her ear, waving his arms. sromping the floor and generally throwing a fit. • I CARMEL, Ind. <AP> -Teachers are' promoting a new came at Carmel Juntbr High School, one that ~n 'l require• spect.t playi~ field, expensive equipment or pbyalcal exertion. 'l'b~ call it reading. • ' . • . · FQr a half hour Tuesday, everyone from P\lPils to,qultodtans dropp_ed everr.thing for ttie S~Qgl's !h'~t weekly readJnl break. 'Even Piincipa) Jerry Holifield traded administrative matters for a book on the Bermuda Triangle. . VISITORS WANDEllED THJlOUGH stlent halls to noiseless classrooms where students bent over books brou1ht from home or selected from 8,200 volumes donated for the project. Anything but textbooks was approved readina. In one room, Tracy Hollander. a seventh 1r11der. sprawled on the floor with her book. No one seemed to mind, least of all Bruce Breeden, tl'le football coach and Latin teacher, who read while leantni back In his chair and propping bis feet on his desk. Readine is not a problem for the l,170 students in this ar. nuen~ predominantly white ~chool oortl\ or In.dianawlis. l'heir scores on standardized tests are above average. but Holifield said the teachers felt there was room for Improvement. "WE DON'T USUALLY STRESS reading a book for enjoy- ment as much as we do for academic purposes.·· he said. "Ir w~ create the atmosphere and the enthusiasm for reading that will beenou.1h." . In the vmnasium. athletic director Bob Johnson looked up from "All Quiet on the Western Front·· to check on his unusually docile brood. ".Most or them are deeply engrossed, We just hope we can have.enouahbooks ~o keep everyone busy,·· he said. ' . FOR mE KIDS',. THE CHOICES ranged trom nature study to novels and even a few paperback cartoon books. One qi. the light readers was Ken Veilands, who conceded it miJht .be cheating a bit to read the comics. t "I like it, I guess,·· said the eightil grader. llddipg te pre· ferred to spend his free time watching television. . 4 . h .. ' " SHE, IN TURN, was helplessly M. 3 romog her eye.s skyward. ap-5 en, Women parently appeallng for he venly WASJUNGTON (AP) -Pen· rescue. c Se tagon officials say lhey are work· .. Just my luck I'll get her for T 7~. ~as I 0 urt a .. _~. ing on ways to combat a dropout my clerk after she's taken this J' ~ lt4 problem that has seen more than kind of working over,·· I mut· 40 percent or lhose who volun· tered to myself, trying to shuffle leered since the dratt ended In mypaperslntoorder. 8 'Ughes '~i.ll"'· J .. ury'.. 1973 fall to complete their first When I got to the window. enlistment. amazingly, my papers were in Pentagon manpower chief order. I was given the wrl\ten ex-John Whit.e, disclosin1 the effort amination to fill out. · LAS VEGAS, ~4!·1,. <AP) -A registered nurs , a tFli lectronics Tuesday, gave no d~ta.tla on the T n EN 1 T HA pp EN ED. tecnnician, a housew\.A-.and the operator or a s vertising asen· steps to be taken. Squinting at the questions, my cy are among jUrors whd ~lll deterrnin ,ard 1;1.._ahes sat down He said the early dlscharaes. <>yes blurred. r could ~rely read on March.19, 1968, aA4-.,wrot Mormon Will. . many less tban honorable. were the question on whjit a~r•en curb A Jury or five men a~ ,.. ee women was selected Tues~ay to hear caused bydlsclptft\arfproblems. m!eant. 1 stagaered blhuUr \J:\tJ wiJ.1,cotttest tr;4at. y;.uiJ pro-, unsultabillty Ol' faJJure to acijust th.rough lhe written t~&.t • ·Sf.de~ ov'fl by Cit..:' CO. \lp~~ Pl.. . lite Nevada declared ~ome of to mUltary lift! and medical pr0b- 1"Good Lord ... ·I rnhii,td• tric;t;r~<!Celtel~ll41M·.' 1 ._, the late recluse lnduatrtalist lema not lcnoWn at the Im• ·ot ··!'11 never pass the eye'bba,t. . Two ~at&Jul'i~,a~ "'ctf1 . b~ause Nev.•da ~~· no estate enUstf1'ent. More than half ~e• Tbey'll clap me in jrons rtgtttl. tentatively aeaf.ed. ~ ~ tax. , dropoub came from amo,.. mtn here and row ~way llJY car. My ... lh' l'ltttma~· aolec Ob tr~a HUGHES' JtE£Nl'IVES claim who also had been hlg!t "bOOl papers will never ~ ln• or'der ' .wuto@fJ1uie~)'.1 .... •J ,·;the MQrrtlon Will~ a forgery. dropouts before enterln• \~.t again." 1 • It . · -* _ Loi Aaaele• ~torney Harold servfce, he iafd. 1rhe years or uadlhl over .. T f:·. l'0'1ll.~tT£ ~~T~'! ·ltbod•n~ repnftnUn• former -..~-•...;..-IJ;........•-Ulde 1 t { ... who wm hear ~ Cafe Wl\ll ~ Uu1bea •Ide ~oah Dletrfcb, ~ ~ count ess news 6 Qriea on w•• . l'e1ular jury are exp~~ to b4' cl lrflS the.Dfferecfwtll ls lhe real' WASHINGTON CAP> -FBI cop~Y~:.it:•ve finally ~ne m, ·blcked ~ ~day, ahl! operu~ . thf\l-'· , ' agentsquesUonedatormerPenn· my · atatemefltnreatat~No\r,,2$. 1 Tfie iKl'ee·)>ase, han'\twrittt.o sylnnta congru.smart abOut al· STANDING IN the ~ye cUd.(" JiJean~. Jur"Y.. select.iOt\ co'n· 'dbCwnnent names Dietrich as !egaUons that a Korean am· line, I clO&ed my old or1)s to ,.t 1tl'n'U~d ln llouston, wHn~ ~··~x•utor'Of t)lie vast Huthes them. Then I thouaht tt mt~be f'robate JUd;e Patrick Greco'1 atac.. vahied '.Y9rlously ~ween better' for a pre· test by 16oklnc ' wlU ~de ov~r a trial· to de· $187 inlllion teticJ more than S? out the window and readlnc t.be termtn• the "vaUqtty ,of tit~,,. billion. . , · gas station eign across the iitreet. .Mormon Will and the question ol · The ?(otmon wm cllvldes the I looked. I couldn•t find the fb Hu1hes' residence at the time of estat•·ltact.1onally between a station. hls death. number ot beneficiaries. includ- Stitllnl a sob, I wat finally con-CalUornla, Tau and Nevada tng the city of Long Beach, or- !ronted by the Jady clerk with the claim Hughes as a resJdent. TU· pbans, the B.oy Scouts, the eye chart. "Z,B,O,S1~ lJ, '' l ln· as and CaUfornJa authorities 11'& Mormon Church, severtl uni· toned. · looking longingly at tho millions versities and Melvtn Dummar. a It was a miracle. l puaed. It of cloUara they milb& reap in the former servioe staUon operator. must have been because my form of .eatate ''urea, while who•tahbstohavemetHugheslO papers werefn order. Huahes' Telatlv would rattier yeare ago, SAN DIEGO IAP I Eight bellM and all"~ well that t>nds well. th e <'liCheb ~o und so i.uy th~ :\Jurin<'s who havt> their mtl>l>tng m;,iritlme bell ba<'k in its place al the M :iri111• Corp~ Ht:C'r~1t r>t.•(lfll Snm1·11ni· -.111le the• bell. Tax Relief! Bill ·G:Of Seeking To Reconvene SACRAMENTO IAPJ An <Jltempt lo force the California Legislature lo reconvene to act on properly lax reheC proposals has been launched by 10 Republican lawmakers ..,. "Our purpose In bringing the Le11slature back 1 together 1s to <'reate a forum lo enact property tax relief prior to the lel{islal1 ve onslaughtin January." Assl•mbly minority floor leader Paul Pt'1olp of ~ah bu ~:11d Tuel>day Nt:JTllER ASSEMBLY Speaker Leo McCarthy of San FrahC'isco nor Senate President pro tern J:.imcs Mills. tht• two Dt'mocrats who head up the Le~1sla~rc. w1•n• 1mmedrntcly c.ivailable for com- ment. ' :\tcCerthy .ind a Senate comm1tt~ headeet by ~1ills hove authority to reconvene the Ugislature before the 1978 session begins Jan 2 • U: ~cc;ARTllY and Mills don tact lot() (lays on tl\#<lOP-petil1on Hepubhcans say they will attempt lo go around the Democratic leadership by circulat· ins petlll-ORS to the entire Legisl a lure That munc11ver would require the suppart of nearly half oC Ute Democrats m the Legislature. but <\9P !>Ources i.aid they felt many Democrats now may be willln.ii to reconvene to lake up a tax relief biH Ofil'IOCRl\ .. 1C GOV. Edmund Brown Jr ·s of· fico did not comment on the Republican move Brown-prcnoui,ly l>uld he wanted the Legislature to '"rnecfilato·· on the tax tl>Suc before he would call a i:u>eci1,1l session fn comm<•nts rc:lcuscd by a spokesman. Priolo 't~d Republicans "don't have u specific proposal·· b~causc lhot would immediately s plit l•~m&kers along the partisan lines which caused tax relief bills Lo. Cail \>cfotc the Legislature recessed two months a&o P.l.:ACERVJtA,: ~tA.Ji.:::~l;"t Dorado unl~ aiupervlsors are detayhu& • proposed airpqrt nQbe stundard~ that ~outd have the e((ect M t~~· in' many jets from and· ing at South Lake Tahoe. lnstoud. th<! iupervi$Or1' votfd Tues· } day lo moni\or no11.e levels ut the Lake Tiho~ Airport. Cotutty omclals u id t e monito ci n i. -'":"::'-__,,__-:--'~~~~'":""":'~~-....-.,.;.;-._.;.._;_;~~~~-:-i-:7-:-:~~""':-~ would delay enactment,\"r---~--:i~~~~~--'!"lli-!oi~~~~~~~~~~~~"f"""t Sheriff's deputies sift through-the ashes for possible valuables that might be sal\'agt'<.I by d1struught owners . .-Six homes were destroyed by the blaze which charred some 600 acre:; .. or any ord•panco 'or nbo 11 .)·ear, because the ulpment won 'l be a\'allabJe unlll next spring. THE BOARD ali.o asked the Federal A\•ia· , lion Adntlnislution, which has cntlciitd lhe proposed ordinance. lo_ work wllh tltt counly on noise standards. used .. to teat·h nov1ct• Marines how to toll the lime of day on~ i;hip. off its post Suncla) night 1n front of lhl' Murine St•a S('hool Some Tahoe Basin rei.- ldents have been com· < pl11lning about Jet nolse . l.,Sul orhcial.s say a whreh t]\ey 1ay 1~ mystery phone cutter ampUfied l)y the·basln"s h1tc Monday told them nat\lral ec1'p .• tht')' Muld Cill<.l the 50· Urider ~propofiecl Qr· ) l'ar-old trcas1,m~ at the dlnanee, ulrp)Me nQise bu»t• chup~l \\'ould be limited to 99 on 1f perfect prtce , Trad1t1onat loom-woven acrylrc blankets. they have Perri]a Solt~ finish that ma}<es 1hem a1yffieoet1er to sleep under Nylon satin b inding won't ravel. thanks to Everlocke stl!ch Marvelous savings on white. champagne. mahogany. buttercup or cognac. Not all colors Twin size. If perfect $35, 15.99 "' Full size. l.!_perfect $40, 18.99 King size. If perfect $54. 25.99 Bedroom Accessories .(• .r llllU_,.cwcl ....... c...,... 4RAHS£ T ...... _ ... ... I 41t .... ,..,, .... 4,., 11 J4) 99) ·9960 l1CAH£11i1 Tiit ¥10,. Ct.ter 1212 s. lrooldlwtt llltWl ltcLI !7141 635·2'61 Recently released results of basic skill~ tests revealed students in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District had slipped just a liUle from their previous year 's state rank· jngs. But in most c;.ategories, they're still head and ·· Shoulders above students in the rest of the slate. In fact, the scorf:s placed Newport-Men in the top 12 tq 27 percent of all California school d1stricts. ~ Significantly, the highest scores (or the district were r gistered in the high school s~niors · reading tests which p ced them in the upper 12 percent statewide. And the s'niors scored almost as well in written expression testa. • This could be a response, on the pa'rt Of. both f acultr ahd students, to news that deficiencies in language ak\lla ate creating problems for students gotng on to higher ec)ucation. And to a general tightening up in anticipation of ~andatory testing for high school diploma candidates. In the lower grades, the second grade students showed a ls light increase over the previoU$ )'ear in their reading scores. but dropped slightly in their state ranking, while ttiird graders both increased their scores and held thefr rdnking. The district's lowest scores were in sixth grade math and wnttcn expression. But even there the-sixth graders emerged 111 \he top 27 percent for their grade level in the s tale. In sum, as California school districts go, Newport- Mcsa is managing to hold a spot among the best. . Untim.ely Display The Coast Community College District is telling of its accomplishments of the 1976-77 school year with a handsome publicatiqn now ~ing circulated Thl• 30-pagc booklet is p~inted on heavy stock and has bCl•n laid out and designed 'r\.ilh a flair that would do .1 ust1c.·c.· to U.S. Steel's Annual Report. The rover features a coUege-owne<r"sailing vessel. :-.lu:ing through 11gh\. Pasific seas. Aboard are happy students obviously enjoying their sail through college life. The boat also is used in a casuaJly posed picture of the f1vt' d istrict trustee~ and as a setting for a photo of the t·hancellor of the district. Sails billowing. the Saudade appears seven more limes lo he lp the PR people explain the district's missions Jncl achievements. Last Augu$l trustees of the district increased its property I ax r<!lc 9 6 cents per SlOO of assessed valuation. This canw on top of a whopping 34 percent increase in asst•sse<l valuations in the district. I It came out lo about ~ 30 percent increase in what an 1 in<l1 \. tdual homeowner would pa~ to the two-year college 'ciistrict in 1977-78 It also came out as the biggest single ~• icn•ase list~ on the property tax bills received last week. We do not demean or challenge the accomplishments or he Coast district. We do find this slick, back-patting ooklct amazingly insensitive in view~f the dollars it cost taxpayers whose backs already were to the wall. A little Jess slick and a little more simplicity is the PR jJ.imagc tux payers would find most impressive. jHope for the Ditch Last week saw a glimmer maybe even a glow -· or hope that Costa Mesa won't be tied in knots by the state's 1nuction on the freeway gash that runs through the center of the city Th"e excavations are ugly. The make-do traffic lanes of Newport Boulevard are creating increasing dangers to drivers and pedestrians. And the redevelopment program for the old downtown area is stymied. But freshman Assemblyman Dennis Mangers vowed before a local group last l"riday that he intends to le8$l the state Department of TransPQrtatton into a more reason- abll.! attitude toward co.mptetingtheonce-promised project. Mangers already has prodded CalTl'ans into a re·study of the abandoned Costa Mesa Freeway <once Newport 1'~reeway> program. He says he's optimistic that reason will prevail and that tl) interirn.aafety improvements can be made on Newport Boulevard and C2) the freeway Jtse)! can be under way again ln five or six years .. Mangers ill getting sotne attention from Gov,. Brown and from Cal Trans Chief Adrtana GlanturoQ in ctlllng for action on Costa Mesa 'sfreeway problem. We ur~e him to keep the prod hotand sharp. • Op1n1ons expressed in the apace above are tho1jt or tM Dally Pilot. Other views expressed on ttli• page are thote ol their authora and artists. Reader comment Is Invited. ,\ddress The Dally Piiot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (71 .. ) ~·2·4321 . Boyd/.Gerbil Talk BY L.M. BOY..D Jt has now been determJned Bcientlftcally that the little antmall known as gerbllJ d.o talk lo one another ln their own Janauage -taylnl such thin,• u ~·11ovo 7ou" and "I Cffl o~y today" -but in ut trasonic ayllabl•~t c:•n on· ly be plcked \IP by htahb' aeosltlve inltr&1m•nh. U.oivarslty ol TelCAS achoters lo~nd lbOl out. • in her bedrwm for more than three years.~ didn't want anybody to know she heeded hit haJ)CliWOtk .. Thon wbo press for public nudity pOlnt out that there are more than 300 Ufe1lie naked n,ures 1n Michelanaeto•a $\). tine Cba~ldlUng. • The only nsh that develo_l>f arlerl,sclorosts ls th~, salmon. Ni ~esch OEARBORN, Mlcb. -Auto makers have ltumpeted the won· dera and benefits of their new models for so many years that we • tend to tum a deaf ear to this ~normous Industry. But now the rulers or autodom have n message worth .liatenini to because it tells us what w e wlll b e driving in the yea r s im· m e diate l y ahead and how o ur economy will chatngc bl• cau:;c of It Simply put. most people won't be able to buy the cars th~y are accustomed to, what lhey will drive will feel dlf· ferent, will evel}tuolly cost somewhat more to buy, but wiU be Jess expensive to operate. "This is a revolution," says Robert B. At,exandcr, vice pres.t· dent of product development at Ford Motor Co. •'Our Industry tended to be evolutionary rather than revolutionary. We used to de&ign and style can for what we perceived was consumer de- mand. Now we do it to meet gov· ern m cnt-mandated require· men ts. The big ice-cream cone I& always what sold. Now the gov. l'rnment tell:; us what tee-cream the cone mu.st be." DETROIT Iii spending billioni. to trim down its future m odels. bO that their performance Will im· prqve from an average of 18 ntife~ per gallon in 1978 to 27•12 m.ptg by 1985. Federal laws caused Detroit to engage in a "downsizing" effort. as it is called here Consider how formidable the auto industry is in our economy. One of every six workers makes his living from motor1 vehicle and relatM industnes. When auto sales drop $1 billion, 57 .ooo jobs are lo:;t. The m· clustry's whopping appetite con· sumcs 60 percent of all the syn- theJic rubber produced in the United Stutes and also these am ounL'i: malleable iron, 47 per· cent: 11teel. 19 percent: zinc, 33 percent; aluminum, 12 percent Americans s pend nearly 10 percent of their disposable in· come on ownership and use of cars. While the United Stales has 6 percent of the world's popula· &lon, 41 percent of the world'ti passenger cars are here. There are now some 140 million car~ and trucks on our highway:;. If the st:llislics arc hcavy,.lhc future car won't be. At F ord, cars ) TO Ctft' weight. Detroit will budd mo1e (ronl·Wheel dnves <allowing a lighter rramo J, create thioner doors and use rnore aluminum, high-strength. low·aUoystff.ls and pJ.utlcs. Only last week Ford an- nounce<! it was using super·Uaht, expensive, graphtte fiber In some or It! better cars and wlll evef\- tually build a prototype 1979 car, us ing graphite extensively, weighing only 2,750 pounds. A graphite drive {ihaft weighs tivc pounds lt>Ss than one or Jteel, and a graphite hood is 2S pounds less lhan a steel version. "The U.S. economy wlfl be altered con>iderably." Alex- ander sro-s. ''Radial tire• will virtually bectme 1.standard on future ~ because they affect fuel economy favorably. Then . • ,. Robtrt N. Wted/PubHsher THER'E'S wholesale applica· lion of electronic Ignition devices on 1918 cara, and electronic engine controls are coming. This means the vfabitity of the small H rvi ce s tatio n co uld be threatened because they'll need m o re sophistica ted tools. diagnostic equipment and skilled technicians. We've already seen the trend to self-service gas sta· lions which aot out or lhe repair business. "I think there is misun· "HORSEPOWER won't mean much," Alexander explah1s, '"because less will be needed for these nwch lighter cars. In the ·30~, wo had a Ford V-8 enttne w 1th only 6S horsepowel'." Car buyers, five to 10 years from now, will see much smaller models, but they will still be loaded wtth popular options like automatic transmission, power assists and alr-condltionin&. There wiU be less emphasla on ~tyling. and buyers will have to pay premium prices for larger models "A.ll the companies Cace the same problem or conformine to the new laws~ so that 11\•es \15 a chance to change our traditional shnc <2S percent> of the market. Whoever does \he new work best should improve his share or the market," Alexander s ays. Prod any auto Jl)an and he'll grudgingly agree the new Stan· dards are n~es.sary but will llso mutter that the federal tlmetable is often unrea1istic. "It implies that tnvenUon can be leglatat.ed, which we bow lsnJt true,·· Alex· ander says. "ll 's dlrficult to meet tougher emission standards, which cut fuel econom)', and at the samo time meet new stan- dards for fuel econ()my." WHATEVER, there is no slgn · lhnt Amer1c.aos want to give up their beloved can. As one1 of Jim· my Carter's own officials In the Department. or Transportation observed: ''If the car dido 't ex· ist. the first lhlng 1 would do ls in· vent lt because it is such· a marvelous transportation de· vice. I don't.see a substitute for lt · in the next SO years.'' Those are word.t Detroit nkes to hear, while rendJng off Imports (now about 20 percent of market), coping with federal re· • gulatlons and tt'Yln& to persuade cu11tomers accustomed to· big, son -rtde cars, lo the new, aUff· ride, more bulc models coming up. Help for Real Estate Rip-off Victims To the Editor: I read with lnt.erest the letter to the editor \n the No•. 6 edition of the Pilot headed "Cut-Throat Tactic" and signed by Michael I). Gardner. Iain pleased the let- ter was written and printed, as it gtve1 me the opportunity to respond in a maMer that might be helpful to those who Cind thenuelves in a similar situation, and, perhaps, to Mr. Gardner, himself. First ot all. there are, necessarily, many gp.ps in Mr. Gardner's letter. If it was too long, or course, you would not print it. Reading between the lines, howeve r . there Is a possibility that California Real t•tate Law has been violated, In wblcb case the commissioner will take action. Incidentally, there now is a Department of Real Estate office In Santa Ana wblch may be contacted. Costa Mesa area over the years. We are especially grateful for the services rendered in helping us recover money for fraudulent checks. THIS SERVICE was most poigntintly demonstrated recent· ly when the department -and most particularly Investigator Strickland -recovered money due us ror a bad check from • party who had moved to Tucson, Arizona. That's what r would call outstanding effort! We. as merchants. value lhe- Police Department's service and too few of us take time to let them know It. ERVENLAFF President. Big Fella Men's Wear M~NaUfl Needed I To the Editor: We four students at McNally reel that there's a real need for AfcNally as It ls because some kids need more attention than others and McNoUy otters those opportunities. This school teaches you to be Independent. When kids are lookin1 for a job and can't Ond. one, they really help you find one. The hours are nextblo beca\lae everytM>dy can have o JQb and~ to scf\oot both. EVl!llYBOD'f. aets alont 1oclally, you don't ha~c tO be lo any kind or 1 uoup, F.ach pei:aon here la always want.rd. If you oecd help In anyth1nR th~n you l<?I lt rlahl twa,y, not ' later. They want to help every· . .. C>ody as much as they can , and gel them In the direction that lhey want lo go MA~IL YN CRULL ROBIN GOE~tER 80BB1LSON TONY O'BRIEN Poor E:ira.,.~ To the Editor· lam the parent of a 14-year old who attends a local public high school lt has come to my attenllQn in recent weeks of the use of pro- fanity and intimidaUon In our schools. Not by the students, but the teachers! The teachers, to whom we entrust the education of our children. The educated, ndult, mature individual. What good does it do to instill respect for authority and respect for elders when children' can be cursed at and lhrealened' I( teacher1 want retpect, obe· dlence and d\sclpllne In a classroom then they have to ex- pcd It ....... not threaten tn order to achieve thoer end. NAME WITRff ELD m ..... ,..,.. the service <Conlrary to what Mr. Elias Implies, we said ln our request for a ruling, that "Pacilic obviously desires to re- tain its eligibility ... "> Afr. Elias claims that we never asked the IRS !or a ruline on eliglbilitf when we began uslt)1 the deferrals and credits in~­ This is net so. We dtd ask tor such a ruttng at that time. The ruling we rtlcelved then, plus the best legal opinions we have been able \0 Qbt;iln alnce, convinces us that we are now treating our taxes the only way we can ~er federal law. .. ~ Mr, Efias clalms correctly U1al loss ot ell&PbUity would leave u,, liable for St billion in back tax payments to the IRS. He goes on lo cite u suggestion made by three Callrornia cW.es that lf the I RS declares us hiellaible. tht CPUC should continue to set rates u 1hougll we wete .4UU gt\-... llng the tax benefits. 1; We hope that neither Mr. Elias, the cities in question nor the CPUC would display auch • callous disre1ard for the Ca{lforn1a telepbooe customer by ultfmately following this tOW'M or actlOfl. The financial ccmdlUona im· posed on PacJnc l'1lephono un· der those dreuroatanccs, nd thelr lmpnct on telephone tttV1ct would be 4uch that the true loeb11 party would be the telt'l)bono c sumer. Mr. Dos and thoae whom b• quolff 1 m to be of tbe oplit1CJC) that the Btll System f• en1a&ln9 • in • PoWer play with the CPUC; 1 The reaJ power ptay I~ between tho CPUC and the: Con1ress at the United Sta~ under wb.ot tax laws wo must operate. We Cio not want ou~ custom to be VicUm.ized by such a play. GllA YA. N!S81T Dtstricl Manl8W PacUlc T&l~•~ · and TelearaJ>b CO. t t 8Y llUGB A. IUILLIGA.N .,, .... (e(,. .......... CHICAOO bouble double, boll and ' trouble: lhe secret lngredlents or the 0 Reule, Reg11e, Regeae" candy bar h•v• leaked out or the pressure·ti&ht cauJd.rom ot the high security kitchens here at Standard Brands. dicnlfied manner In which the 1reat man approaches a fly ball, a few cordial cher----:---'!'------.....,..-__.;.....;_.;...;.;.;_.... _ _..;,~,.....;~---....;.;.~.-...--:--~ Tbe lld wu on tor competlUve reasons in 'the cavity lndjlstry because no ballpla1er has been memorialized on a candy wrapper since the Baby Ruth bar came on the market decade11 aeo ln tribute to Ruth Cleveland, winsome dauabl.~r of President Grover Cleveland. who bac.ted .286 (about t~!.~~e as Res-ale) in the old Potomac ~League. IT'S NO SECRET t.Mt the lltlle ole lozenge maJcers put in many a b1l· tersweet month over their Bunsen burners and steaming sau~ans trying lo boil up a candy confeclton4bat would suggest al first bite the essential Reggie Jackson They knew from consumer studies done in the Yankee dugout that. tastebudwise, Reeg1e never could be confu1ed wlth Mr. Goodbar or Chuckles or Candy Kisses. Suggestions came troa> the vicinity of the water cooler that something on the order of a Snicker mt1bt be more appropriate, but that was before the titular bon bon hit those three home runs In the final World Series· game. HONOR SWEETENED Y•nk1' ReggJe J•ck1on tailor's son has had to cross on his way to greatness. Next comes a,Jayer of taffy and fudge, symbolic of the give and take at contract time with George Steinbrenner and the Yankee front office. THERE ARE NO PEANlJTS tn the Reggie, R91gie, Reagle bar. No pres- idential alight Is intended here, but'Rtl· gie Jackson just doesn't work tor peanuts. ries in sour syrup evokes his relatlon11hlp with manager Billy Martin and a streak or rum buc.ter. lightly whipped, prov1des the tangy flavor or laz)' winter after· noons m the off.seaason Puerto Rican Jeague. BUT DOWN DE!':P AT the core of tbe Reggie, Reggie, Regtte bar is a soft an~ gooey center of rich marshmallow. cap. turlng the quintessential J-.ckson, the man who gives away Thunderbird cars to sweet charity, the way John D. Rockefeller used to bepd out dimes. The whole is lopped off, with a sprink, ling or crushed nut.s, a rueful reminder or the brand ot bleacherites generic to Yankee Stadium. especially the oafs who toss the beer bottJes and firecrackers and the one who hung !rom the scoreboard with his breeches al half mast in the set!ond Series game. CONFECTED AT GREAT expense and wrapped in the pencil striped reg. 1mentals of lhe New York Yankees, the Regaie. Renie, Reagle bar ta a chocolate coated crispy cMwey candy colossus that can't be beat when 1l comes to the crunch. Kids should get a kick out of it, jurisprudence notwlthstandlng. Remember, a Reggie, Rejgie, Reggie can be bought but never traded: at least that was sweet talk among the candy butchers last week up 't tbe house that Ruth built. Babe not Baby, tbat Is. ,, ORIENTAL CARPETS AND ~UGS . . , Shipment, ICXeo3 or<Mr.d by PhOne •If l<>Non watthouw 5/f/77. 23 txcest ~· arrived Loa Angelea 7/19177. E1Cct1• refuted by lmpe>rter. Wt have t>ttn commissioned to auction the eJCc.M 23 ~ to 1vo1d rtthl~ to London and reallte eath to cover various char;ts Incurred en route AuQtloneera note: we have exatnined ti» baltt afld tound the ru~ 10 be of ,,,,_ quality and In excellent condition. TheY Vfl'l In alz.e from 3'x2' 10 1B'Jt12 In '/Moua makes and origins. Thia ia a grMt QPPC>rtunlty to oe.tatn fl~ NQ9 and should not be missed. • AUCTION WILL.T All PL:AC• FRIDAY MC>VEMHll 11 ' ATIPM ' VIEW DAY OF AUCTIOH 1 PM AT HOUDAY:INN l I JI Ulsrof.. AVL COSTAMISA , •. ·c;d·~· C:ATALOGUH AUi.AU .t.T .t.UCTIOM NOW IT CAN BE revealed, thanks to the treachery or an embittered ladle stir- rer in the syrup shed. that the Reggie, Reggie, Reegie bar is encased in rich mocha chocolate whipped up lnt.o peaks and mounds and hillocks. These represent the ethnic barriers, the moun· tains of bias that the Philadelphia Near tt1e center or this toothsome masterpiece are bite-sized bits of licorice, emblematic or the dar1< double krills on the plate umpires. which Reggie chews up when questioning a strike call. Thin stripe of molassea ~usgests the Get one today tor just under three million dollars. · ' I 'Memento of Past' . . Winner Looks To the Future PETALUMA <AP> Medal or Honor winner Richard "Butch" Penry was not at a weekend reunion for the nation·s bravest seTvlceYqen because. he said. "that medal has nothing lo do with. real life:· He ended a three-year probation for drug dea I ing the day before "J don 't need 1t and it ·s not going to clo anyth,in1 for me." Penry said or the Medal or Honor Society gala in San Jose, where 167 of A4iterica 's 266 medalists slapped backs , swapped stories and (~It proud af'ain. "FOR ME," SAID PENRY, 28, "it".s just something that happened in the past. It's behind me. Vietnam was . . Just a game. I went there, but 1 don "l know why.•· Now, while he's lryin& to build a future, the medal is just a memento of the put, he aays. Penry's first drug arrest was for selling methedrlne in 1969. The draft saved him. The judce urged Pcnry to prove himself In the U.S. Army. He did. ON JAN. 31, 1971, according lo his Medal of Honor titation. Sgt. Richard Penry almost singlehandedly stopped an enemy attack in Vlet· nam 's Birth Tuy Province that ten nearly every man in his platoon wo1o1nded. • Besides taklnl the front position to fire at 30 enemy soldiers, he carried 18 woW)ded comrades to safety and ran through a f\a$1lade o{ fire to retrieve radios, weapons and ammunition, the citation said. 1·1 was ;ust saving my own aas and helping my friends out, · Penry says to play down the honor. HE CAME HOME TO rural Petaluma a hero. Two years later. his arrest for selling heroin r<><:ked the town. .. -. · TMs Ume, it was his Medal of Honor that kept him out of jail. -1 i.Thls man has done more for bis country in one day than most do in a lifetime, .. Sonoma County Superior Court Judge Kenneth Eymann 4a1d of bis decision to give Penry probation. Penry finally was tossed in jail for seven months late last year alt.er drup were found in bis home in violation of probation rules. LAST WEEK, WHEN IDS probation ended, Penry said he's ready to face the future. 'Tm trying to pay my debts and get a busln.ss going now. I'm getting older, and I want a wlte, a home and a couple ofklds." That's why Butch Penry didn't. ao t.o San Jose Saturday to relive the past. t Redheads PowerfUI? ... ALIJANCt, Ohio <AP> -Redheads, wbo have lon1 been labeled fier)'-tempered, now may have. a new stereotype to live down. According to' a survey of .200 Utab colleae stu- dents, recl-balred women are regli'ded u powe.rfl&l wblte their male counterpar? areaeen u Umld.. ; 1 •. ; N aw you can fly the triendly.skies to more Super Saver oitieS th&n a.ny other a.1rl1ne. Un1ted'a Super Sa.var gives you 9 Eastern cities a.t unbea.ta.ble sa.vtngs. FlyfOr as low as 1234 round-trip when you travel Tuesday through Th\ll'Sda¥-Kids under 12 traveling with you fly for 60% off the regular Coa.ch fa.re. You11 t1nd Un1t.ed's exolUSive "Ooea.n to Ocean" Service, too, on Super Saver fl1ghts to New York. Wasb.in8t0n, D,C., a.ndPhlla.delphia.. It's Coach in a olass by itself. ... To get your 8uper Saver seat, just buy your t1Cket 30 ~before depa.rture ands~7to 45 ~.Return rught reservations ca.n be ch.a.nge(1. but you must do so a.t least 30 d.a&s before the new dlt.e Of your return or the cUsoount for tl}e ent1l'e fa.re itlloot. Sava $10 on a BUDGET B .... BR ... !ACAL Now Budget saves you $10 on a ~or longer rental at any compact or la.rg.er s1ze Lincoln/Mercury oarwbsnyou land. Just present your lJ.nitedsuper ~tick.et at your super ooa.ch destination. (Offer TO- NewYork Philadelphla Waebl,ngton, D.C. Allentown Baltimore Hartford Newport News Norfolk aitoblnond •' .. • ·' I ' Tues .• Wed.. lion.. ~ ReeuJu Th\ll'e. 111. Sun. ec..ah ...... 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GREAT . ~ ; ( , ' I 14730 The Moppets Paint·By · 1 99 Number Set tll2t by AVALON • I ADORN · I . . j HAIR SPRAY Miit tM I ltll fnlll '. lu'tF ..... fCO WKOUSAWS w OTllEI R£TAll£RS 8/0wtmRN LOCO i., ESSkAY 12~" lon&·realistic g 99 .• whistle sound. •UU • l2\id~ 1.99 CHRISTMAS NEEDS • 6-Colors. 3/l~xTlJ/ For pretty · i>aeka&eS- SOUNDISIGN "'AIA/FIA" STEREO RECEIVER , SUPER sm 7.IOL LADIES'· Boat. Neck · .. ~ . Knit Tops ~/\,. 1001 Acrylic with 3/4 steeves. Assorted stripe prints. Fashionably styled for today's wardrobe. ::uzaa~~- . PAllASONIC FM/AM ELEmONIC DIGITAL CLOCK RADIO f M/AM ELECTRONIC DIGITAL CLOCK RADIO I -~ -= _: :" ·.~,.~ . . ' ' -· Noiseless fluorescent "CAPT Alf ma. r' 1.1. USTm SMOKE. DETECTOR I A • ' • i Power' Line Acquired Jf.;,fng IJp Kevin O'Con· nell. San Fran· HAMILTON, Ontario <AP> -A NOTllER PR.OS P ECTI VE c1sco, and \\ idc E\·erireen, a two-ton raclnt yacht rhallC'llgcr 11 belni buJlt in OaJtvi11•1 · l y k n o w n 1 n that measures two inches over 41 feet, tor p aul Phelan of the Royal Cana-H By Santa A.na Finn S o u t h c r n 1s the first declared compeUlor for the d1un Yacht Club in Toronto and ls ex· • C a I i f o r n i n right lo reprt>Sent CanAda when It peeled lo bo luunched in a week or,, , yachting cin:lcs. tries to recapture tt)e Canada'• Cup two has been named from tho United States in September, . ,uf Tiob Poole, oy,·ncr und president or Down East Yac hts. a snllboal manufacturing firm In Santa Ana, has announced lhe acqu1s1t1on of ull rights and molds tor the Pussugemaker line of lonl( distance power cruisers, formtirly built by J-enscn Marine of Costa Melia At the samt• time, Poole unnounced the completion of arrangements with Arthur DeFcver, designer of Pas$agemaker vachts to build them 1n 34 and 48 fool modt•ls in the future. Construction of '-h e first Passagemaker at Down East will bl'grn immediately, Poole said OOW!'I F.AST IS TUE bu1ldl'r of the dassu.• 32 38 and 45 foot suihng) achts of the same naml' A:,,ked wh\ ht• <'hose to acquire the The L'nited States Yacht Racing l'nion ll'SYRU l has announced that it will ('Olll1nuc its Mobile Race :\lanagcmc.>nl Tt·am. an cxpt•nmenta~, nt•w St'rnce to one design racing. in J9i8 The program was started this year Ba:.cd on last summer's successful t"<p<•riml•ntal program and the rt'SjJOllM: to ll, lh(• l 'SYRU board of list Posted On Problems The Department of Transportation has announced that the Coast Guard has 1i.sm-<I 1ls periodic hst of i:.afety prohlt•ms affecting 101 boat models and 1•1ght ''ngrno models. Thi• most n·c·t·nt list includes all re· l''all tam1m1gn-. that an• active as of S1•pt. :«>. 1!.177 Th(• problem descrip· t111ns refer only to the spciflc model names. model years and seria' num· hers l1~l<'d and do not extend to other boats or enJ(mes manufactured by the ~ame company Copies of the hst may be obtained by ''riling the U.S. Coast Guard <G· bbl> Washington. D.C 20590 1978 BAYVU!W Yacht Club of 0.trolt., Passagemaker line. P09le said. vice presjdent of Tho yacht, bull~ Col" Don Gteen of which succ Cully defended the cup , •·1 have long felt there wus a market Narco /Bar~ent, the Royal Hamilton Ya.ebt Club by C ill Lake St. CJak in 1975, hasn'tnamed,u. for an AmerJcan-bullt. Joni range and C Yach~ In nearby !Iron~. On· tho U.S. representative but is report·,., diesel cruising power boat. I stress --=~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;_;;;;;;~t~a~r~io~. ~w~a~s~la~u~n~c~h~ed~in~L~ak;e~On;t;at~lo~·~;;:;c~d;t~o~b;e:;~;u;U~d~ln~g~a~bo~a~t~. ;;:~~;---~" 1, American-made because supervision . •, ot ~onstructlon on a day·lo-day basis -...,: can deliver a product with integrity. '-i'HE R E ARE M}(NY PEOPLE who would ltkc to make long. leisurely voyages in safety and comfort and " wlt.h fuel economy. For maqy rca!ion,s they do not wish to make thut voyage under sail. ''Besides that. it was inevitable that we must someday aet into the busj ness of power boats that are com para bJe to our Down Easters. This seemed l o b e t h e r-t g h t t 1 tn e . T h e Passagemaxer will bah.ince our Jme perfectly ... Poole said COSTS OF THE PROGR AM are rovered ln part by general funds of tbe USYRU and part by fees paid by those benefiting from the sen·1ce The team has two m1ssJons .-to ~n the best pos~lblc racing fQr cham· p1onship regattas. and lo improve race managelncnt by passlllg ltS' knowledge l!na procedures along to dubs and others sponsoring races. 1.'f CAN ACCOMPLISH the latter in ~three ways --. demonstrating by ex· ample. by involving others m the team's race management work. and by lectures· and question·an!lwor sessions. at regattas and in cvenin& programs at clubs between regattas. For further information or for scheduling the team. write or phone the One-De&1go Office, United States Yacht Racing Union, 821> Davis St , Evanston, Ill. oP,201. Three Levels of Fine Shopping & Dining In a Relaxed Atmosphere Ope• 7 Day• ac JO AM. i REG. 36~99 tors keep on warnln1 heavy drinkers of the potential dan•en or hepatit.la and clrrhosia But, like your h1.uband, alcohohcs go on drinktn" b4Uevin1 they are immune against any dangers to heallb. SO I nDNK you will a,ree. Mn. W , that what ls most important Is to try lo have your hu1band admit h(• is an alcoholic and find help through Alcoholics Anonymous or other sources. · But let us assume that your husband already has tome llvtr damage. What can be done! I've been readln1 about a new teclinJ • • e 99 POLAROID ONE STEP CAMERA ,.,....,_.._ ........ ,_.. -t-t••.i-tt u ... 11·70 ~ .......... ...,.. ~ ....... ---'"' .., ••. llelif'nllltt. lltltriat4, "''' •t.-tlc .... '""'..,......, ,.._,. MEN'S SHAWL COLLAR CARDIGAN SWIARIS ''°~ euylic bit ......... .. .......... , ..... ..,...,. w.. C111c. " c.11n. tar. s • n • HEALTH DOCJ.OR IN THE HOUSE. quo being studied in the treatment of alcoholic Uver Tho study was presented before the aMual meet· in& or The CUnJcal Research Socle· ly or Toronto by Dr. Hector Orrego, proteasor of pharmacoloay at the University of Toronto Accor<lln1 to the article by Oeane Irwin in the U,S. Journal or Dru1 and· Alcohol Dependence. the sclentlsta used an anU·th~rolddruJ called Pre>"-Yltbloureacil. They postutate that aJCQhol, like tyJ'OJ,d hormene. uuses an increase in liver metaboltsQl. This increase in oxycen requirement& can't be mt;t anc:t the llvtr ~omes Injured. The purpose of tho dtUI la to slow ox- yaen needs -thus preventlnl ox· y1e1utarva~ . .., ... TUE 1NVF$flGATOllS studled 125 paUenta with alcoholic liver disease treated wltb pro. pyJUuouracu. and those treated with lhls drUf{ showed Improved liver function clinically and In study of laboratbry testl. IMAGINllll 2~ LB. WINTERWllGHT FOR LESS THAN S.00 . 72 x 90" FASHION PRINTED WINTER. WEIGHT BLANKETS Wt, -' "'"' ......... '"" """'" ,..,, flt .... " ... Mn J Nwtlftl ,..._, T,.,ic-, IMt Ger-. & ~ flertl, ......, KNttlfrtille4 ................ , .... ..,. . , . . ' OAR.V l'tLOT .4JJ THEY INCLUDED Wallace E . Johns on or Memphis . Tenn . CO· foundl'r of Holiday Inm-; Inc .. who is th~· i>roJLram 's ibternalional cha1r.1mm. mo.vie star Roy Ro1er& of Apple Yallcy, Calif . who is vice chairman. Rogerio' w1fc. Dale EYanS . and !':cl~on Bunker Hunt, Oallu oilman arfct investor who is chalrmon of the mtemational executive cfm· m 1ltee # • ~ The irusUgotor of the ca~po1gn 1s Dr. W.R. Bright, founder of the re- cently i:ompletcd "Here's Life. Am erica'' cam11us crusade whi~h he i.a1d I!> wcu-king through 15,000 churchf.':). A measagc was read from Chicago financi• W. Clemen\ Stone. onother leader in {he movement. UPIPlleto , NELSON HUNT Tiit~ Plit'\N ·as to r~e $1 billion in I ... Be an early Santa: Select this famous Hathaway 2 shirt now and we'll monogram it free! 7 GREAT COLORS· LIGHT BLUE. TAN CAMEL PINK, Y~t>W GREY, WHITE Luslrous troadc Olh ol Oacron• µol, ea!er and c:onon tJ1'01"d w1tti met1c:vlous Halha .vJy :;inglo netlOI.: cons1ruct1on Cla~,,.c r.t~ing '1.•lh med•um po•nl collar. t.roa•1 pockot nM nd1u~11b1t> bull on cuffs. Size:; 1.1 ''· -1 7' PQDular ,, ' vo lcro1~ 18.50 1,.0 or cco o n~'•O tiuck·.·.·cJr 'r~m 0 '·U ' t \ \,, silverwoods f , I I ' I \ ........................ ~-.----, The speakers outlined a "situra· lion.. plan to uie varibus modern . means or commµnkat~ns such a~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ rums and television and to reach re-;,...; mole ur~oi> through v~ns and molorcyctes By coincidence, lhe plall was un veiled only a day after the U.S. Con- fer~ncc of Slshops l)resident. Archbh;hop Joseph It· Bernardjn ~C Cincinnati. said mi&Uons or Catholics n~\!d a "true conversion experience" similar to th~ "Born Again" ex- pression of evarfgelicals and fun· da.mentulists. I Booklets Can Aid . Health WASHINGTON 'AP' Concerned about · physieal fitness, your weight • .J'Olir teeth or mental health?" Government agencies LIVER+ 812 I 00 T~BLETS , I 24 0&1'1Ces Reg. 1.77 RflJ. 2.10 have 3 variety of pam-t----.~"--;---::~--------------.:---:-..:_=-=--o,;__..._.:.,.:.;,:;:.~:.;;..~:...:;.:~ phleL'l on the subjects. ;l I All ore available fTom the Consumer Jnlorma· lion Center. Pueblo, COASTLINE VIT~MIN 11C .. 1~00 MGS. Colo. 81009. Here's a list t------r.---:~__,;~~------------=-~.;.;_~~-;...~...:..:..;;..:;;~.:.;;_;__....;..:.;~ of some of them: "Adult Physical Fit· ness." 70 cents, number J33E. .. Aqua Dynamics" exercise in the water, 75 cents. numbl!r 118E "Consumer's Guide lo Mental Health Ser\'i ce~. ·· 35 cents. numbcr035E. ··Exercise and Weight Controt." 35 cents, number 108E ·In Ont y Pour _.:,:;__;__..:. __ _..;_,__ ___ :::..,;;.;.,_...:..,.-.;....,.;..~~-=,:;~~~~~~~,.._--Ml;..,.-:;~~~..::;;.;,r~ Weeks " danJeroui> eight. loss treatmenti.. no charge, number .560E,, • "First Aid. · 80 cents, number 120E • • R x I'' o r So u n d Teeth, .. no charge , number563E. Ration Over .. PITTSBURG P > Citing good work by water savers. the city of PJt~bure has Ufted man· datory water r.ationin~ for commercial, in- dustrial and te$identiul users. t "' GUO.Wt John E. Swearln1en. chairman of Standard Oil Co. of Jnatnna, has been elected 1978 chairman of the American Petroleum Institute, the oil in· dustry's largest trade grou~ t Business WEST LAFAYETTE, lnd. <AP> -The poUtlcal atorm cloud• that drove him from of nee aren't JWlrllni around Earl Bub, theseda)'t. Life for the former secretary ot a1rtculture IA almoat ••busy, but much qw~. No Joncer hound~ by the crlUc• oC hfl day1 ot tn· nuence ln the Whi~ House, he travels around the country and usea hJs own r&dto proeram to preach the aospel of conservative eovernment AT 88 -"l'M A youna 88, a vigorous 68, but I'm 88" -Butz still appears hearty and relaxed, Co1•utians Cited KennPlh E. Clark. Huntington Beach, manager of the Balboa Bank ol America, has retired after 41 years in bunkm& Clark. with thu bunk since 1936, had ~crved ai. Balboa manager :.ince October 1975 He previously was a~s1:-.tnnt vice president for loans at tho BofA Third and Long Beach Boulevard office His entire bunking career was spent in the Los Angeles Coast region. He began as an 11. 18-year·old messenger al Third and J~on~ Beach Boulevard on Sept J. 1936. and rose through lhe ranks to become the opera· t1ons off1C'l•r of various branches, then the manager. Born 1n Hutchison, Kan .. Clark attended .Jordan High School in Long Beach. He furthered his education throughout his career with ~dvanced.pro· fc!>sional cour~es offered by the American Institute of Banking. lie also attended the famed Dale Carne~1e Public Speaking Course on an A 0 Gian· 0101 FoWldalion Scholarship. • • Among new directors or Commuter Computer are Barbara J. Fox, assistant director, General Services Agency or Orange County and J•y Rted, vice president-administration, Fluor Corp • KurtE. Wltthert, Newport Beach, has been ap- poiitted seruor lest engineer or Microelectronic Testing Laboratories, Irvine, a d1vis1on or D•tatron, ~c. Ills pr~v1ous experience Include~ teaching courses on COfllpuler software and hardware an the mathemallcs department at UCLA and the University of Utah • She has 13 years of banklna experience and joined Unlon in 1969. Her most recent J><M;ltlon was operations aB!JIStant. • Ro~rt N. Schuhmann, South Laguna. has Joined 1'tSI Data Corp., Costa Mesa, director or North American sales. lie ha'! 18 years· experience 1n computer ules management From 1959 thrqugh 1969 he was iJSsoclated with Control Data Corp .. serving as Los Angelei; d1slricti.alca manager in his la:>t ussii:nment with that company. From Control Data Schuhmann went to Systems En~inecring Laboratorlos. where he advanced to the post of •'""""~" Western region director. He subsequently Joined General Automation, Inc., where his last position wns Western regional manager. lie will direct MSl's United States and Cana- dian staff of salesmen and systems analysts, who number more than 100. , These personnel are based in nine district of· flc·es that report to regional offices in Boston. Dallas and San Francisco. Each regional manager will report to Schuhmann. • The following peri.onncl appolntmen~ have been unnounced by Airco Cryogenics, a division of Alrco, Inc., Irvine· -Edwud W. Winfilow has been named manager of marketing services and. i~ responsible for customer service. proposal adman1stralion and contract administration. ~e previoui;ly held engineering and marketing positions with Alresearch Manufacturing Co. Robert C. Warren has been promoted to head a new corporate division of the Irvine Co., NeWpOrt Beach that conso)ldatcs the firm '11 property manag~ment activities into a single operating unit. Hugh M. Davis, Lake Forest, has Joined the division as cruet engineer in turbomachinery. He ls responsible ror design and project management or turbocompressors. turboexpanders and turbo drives. He Is former manager of compressor engineering and production at DeLaval centrifu&al compressor division of DeLaval Steam T.Mrbtne Co. His new position is general property manaeer lie will be in charge of the newly created properly management division. David M. Koch. Irvine, has been promoted to the new position of director of property manage. ment. He will be Warren's p~ncipal aide. Warren has b~n director of comrrterc1aJ property manage· ment for the company since Aprll 1975. Before that. he was general manarier of the Galleria Complex. a multl·use commercial center In Houston. Koch ln his five years with the company. has served ~corporate property services director and commercial and multi-family property man•ger • Two promotions have been announced at lnlne National Bank, Irvine: Donald E. WUsoa, Oranie. has been named senior vice presldeot and J.atn B. Wat&, Mir.slon ·Viejo, has been named branch managero!the Irvine orrlce. Wilson was one or the original officers or the bank when it opened ln 1973. He had been.serving as vice president and sent or loan officer. Watt joined the bank earlier this year and had been aerv:ing as a vlte president. * ..,_ ~ Jlarianne WUllam11 Jrvine, has been promoted to Oj>erations officer at Union Bank'• SoutJ\ Orange County regional office ln ~ewport Beach. -Pool H. Andersen has been named manager of centrifugal pumps, responsible !or tcch!"ical and project management of the division s pump products. He 111 a former project manager with Kobe, Inc. • William C. "CUff" Colllncs, Newport Beach. has been appointed to the newly created position of c·ustomer relations represenlaUve at CU.Stomweave Carpets FQUntain Valley. I He ls f<>nner Western regional sales manager (or Beaunit Corp . • J. Scott Turpin ha& joined Grubb Ir Ellls, Newport Beach, as land specialist. Ile i• former marketing manager for W.L. Gore & As11oelates. Newport Beach • Robert C. Parker. Costa Mesa, has been named general order manager for the Los Angeles service center of Joseph T. Ryerson & Son, Inc. He will be responsible (or tnside sales and merchandise ac- tivities atthe plant. He joined the center in 19'1 and has. aervcd in various sQ!es capacities, including three years as a sales representative. Better Understanding OCC Seminar to Deal . With Small Business .. Cost accounUn1 and profit plan· rung" ls the title of a four-hour morn- ing seminar that will be preaented Saturday at Orante Coast College, C°'ta Meaa. The 1eminer runs from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p,m. in OCC'a sclence lecture hall 2. lt is co-eponaored by the Small · Business AdmlnJstrat.lon. Pre·regtstraUon fee ls t:a .50. Checks pa)' able to <>ranee Cdut Collea• may be sent t.o Butlneu Manqemtnt Development Center, OCC, 2101 Fa1tvlew Road, Cotta Meaa 92e20. llEGISl'aATJON WILL be conduct-ed at the door at 8 a .m. on a space· available baais. Fee at tho door ta $3.50. The seminar i• desltned to be!P th• snu11Mriau.netaman better undenitand the prtndPI• of eost acc:ountb\1. the. types Of COit &CCOrrtlni ayatew CUt· renUy ln u.se, •tad the aature Of CO$t eatimatJon. Jt wlll .tao a111&t 1toaU· businessmen ln clev~opJai and ualrtl nnancial atat.mente. anoull prQfl' plans or budaata, ..id cuh rctrec .. t.. The school baa more Information at 55$·5725. HE SAID 200 would "be lil the ball park" Cor the number of spe cb• ho hu mad• in the last ye~r -"1omebody Hid one s~b 200 tlmes" -and h•'• ac-,, cepUQI probably no more than a quar r of UM tn\'ltatlons. That, he aaid, i• "too many, If you a.all mywlle.·· Ho lns~t.1 ht'• not bluer about the way he left Wasblnston - amid a hall or coQ\,roversy stirred by the dl1cloa"'4! lhat he had made an oft·color raclal re- mark on a nt1ht to Waahlngton Crom t.he Republican National Convention In Kansas City. l n retro.peel, Butz aald that controversy "had a plus Maring. It made a martyr or me," especially ln the Farm Belt. He smile. a.a be remembera u bumper sticker at a recent ap· pearance in Kansas City: •·Farmers Want Their Buts Back." "THESE PARMERS almott throw their arms aro11nd me to the point It ·s embarrasslnc." tte said. "They associate me with their iood Umes. Fortunately, things were playin1 in our favor, but our philosophy was such that we took advantaJte of it." He Is spreading bis message noljust in speechea, but in a daily five-minute radlo proeram syn- dicated out of ~ Ans et es by the same firm that handles Ronald Reagan's show. In the first month, Butz said, bis program was picked up by SO stations. He bas been told that will double by the end of the year. Over The Counter MASO UttffMJI MUTUALF:UNDS -Al"lli! HE'S NOT 81TTER Ou1tec:f Eart lutz ~$ CJ10 kL ,._ • .. Ufl JU •w • lh UH ,._,,.. 4~, • '• CAI l).j ~-" <At "~ 2 -... (ltl ,,,, ,.., -\.. ~ 10.CI ''· -\0 '"' """ ~-.. -' Vii .... J •• ,. (111 , .. .-...... ... 1.41 .. , ,,_ -'· VI,' I.I 4 ~.... • "· (>I u ,. ,,.,.uu1.11 )... -~. (ltt ••• ,.. -.. "" ,,, ' • \.o c;tt IJ 1-• H, (ltl 1.1 ~ -... 011 1J "" -.... (Jlf '·' ••• -.. c;ff 1.1 • ho -.. 011 1.1 ,,. -... C,llf .... ... -\. t.tt M h. -.... "'' ., ;;:: t~ .. ,~ I TOCKS I SYLVIA PORTER edneaday' Closing Price.B I,•-.-• 10'<. .... •••• SJ.,.._ '• U'-1 ~ ,,,.. ~ 111,. \1 v.. ...... '"···· . ..... ~ 2•··-"· 41'-.. 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Ttmkn 2.IDe I te '°"'-\.\ +=:r .. 1~: 'f"~·~ ToMSlt 11 11 1.-+ "' r.u101s 2.12 a a 24'h ..... TOll:;df1 •• 4 ~+ I/I Tell• I .. 4 24't ..•.. TIN!e All 21 ~ .... TOOCA Ab IO 2t ~ ..... Tr-.)9 7 II U.0.-\lo Tr-1..» t :114 » + 11. Tr•nUn 1.t:t t •1 lS\'I + ~. ~ > m t _..., TWAfff ' 31 11 .. .. TWAOI 1 • .0.. II 1 ...... . +~,::.~ ~ ;I~.:~ Tr-1.10 I 14> 21'-..•• Tr-.s.2 1 20 I -lo\ TrS(!pl US 1260 71'• 1" TrGji• Lt 1100 ..-0 + '• l~.:J:.1:,, • J m:: ~ Tr.,._., 1 ... I A1 U"+ ~ TrtY!rt I 29 • ZJI 11' • ~. Tr-irot2 1J SI••-!• TriC..flAe 109 20"-• '' TrlOlpf t.50 2 JI••+ "' Tr llncl .OIJ . • I 7V. ... TriePec .IO S "2 24 v. TrllltVln All I ti U + ,. T•oolcen 1 u 234 n,.._""' Tuc"1G 1.1' I 20S 1"'°···· n •• .,en .10 • •" n~-v. T\olnOa .90 7 s ""• 14 T-1..111 ,_, • 27 JS,.-14 YYl«CI> ·60 • 171 ,,-.. ..... Tymr11r _ :J-lJ' _ '21... • UAL ·:: 4 675 fA-~ rk bs .' ~ if.::.;:v; 1.a • ,. tn. .... UJllll Tr . . ISl 2h UOP .1' 1 n 14'-... Wind I S 429 21~H fl UAACO UO • 4 71 + 14 The tm autO mOdela are tn. altl)fllnl tht be'1 the new.;ca.r bUyinl se&soft. They al&o acnal a Dft' MU00 reaolvU., complainta Witb dealan &ndmanutacturen.. A new concept to h~lp tbe car 1MJ1erftnd IOUrtlonato com• . plain ta la being ~torect. Ford Motor Oo ... MltiAI up. COC· IUIJl•r appeall board on •'Pilot IJl"Oll'&m lft Nytb CuQllu. u tbe con.CC!Pt woru.Jt wlll aooationwlde. \IND TlUI LOT, A PIVS·lll'!MBB• panel wW atmn to the eo~latota ol car buyua wbo feel t.b.t.Y have been rooked either on dl car thty buy or the aervlce'they r.ceivo on tht autoJrom an auttioriseddealer. U the panel's declllon 11 In favor of the cODJumer, the board will commit the company or dealer ln\IOlved to make r~alrs or reat.ltutlon. The coal, says Ford vice president BeMettBidwell, ii to "enhance the customer'• perception of ourselves and our doAlers.'' ~ The panel CS>nSista or two dealers, a North Carollnaolflclal, a voca· tional training teacher and a full·tlmo con· sumer advocate. Money's Worth Tho dltrel"f!llCe between tJllJ project and the ~ nwnber ol city and atate dealer uaocl.UODJ that havt biei). aetUn• up proarama in 39 marteta to help aettle#lpu iltll81t the Ford board's recommendatlant are bb\dlns: tbe othen are not and there la no legal obU,aUoo on dealers to Ahldet.,- UJ city.state panel'• teeommeridatiou. ., ~ M EDIATOas IN THE P&OGIAMS set up by tbt dt7 and at.ate dealer assQClaUons -ealled AutomotlveCcftlumer A~Uon Programs or AUTOCAPS -~vene reaula.rly. They have the endonementofthe prdldeqt's Olftce of Co~umer Affairs and are run by am all paid atatts plus volunteer panels of auto clealen and.consumers. The medlaton bear complaints th.at canoot be resolved by consumer contact with the dealers or by AUTOCAP awr membtfrs. While under no loCal obligaUon to abide by the recom meodaUom, peer pressure hu f.orted enoutb to do so to hav~ made the AUTOCAP proaram an increulna suc- cess. ' Tbe Natlonal Autom"obUe Dealers AlaoclaUoa II worldng with dealer asaoc.Lat.lons to set up additional procrama, and last •Prinl tbe mana1eN of A1JTOCAP uaoc.laUOD4 formed a national council. ITS AIMS OB 'J'O.-BXPAND TIU! pl'Ogl'am to other dealer asaoclatlona, provide a forum for the excbanae of In· rormatloo, recommend natiooal sla.ndardl and procedures to assist auociallcm.s in their indlvidual programs. There are 21 AtrrOCAPS set up to handle complaint&. TbereisnoneinCallfonlla. Other programs funcUon without the panel system ln stat.ea across the nation, so everyone should be able to find some aulstance from AUTOCA.P. But in tryln1 to retolve auto complaint.&, alt.empt first to work out the problem wtth the dealer. For more fact.I about th.ls consumer-oriented non-profit prosram, write or phone the National Automobile Dealett Asso.,MOOWestParkDrive, McLean. Va.,22101; phona<T03> 821-7070. Srock Gainers A.Mad Altlwugh--now Dt;non Unt<co .10 • t 11' • ..... UlllHV ~ 1 10 U~-lll Untsnq, .... 11+ 1216 ..... l-1~ t:'1 ~ ~ .. = ~ NEW YORK <AP> -Strong cross-eurreots of buying ~. 11 is Mio+ ~ and selling left the stock mark« mixed 1A a busy session to-Unlon<:o • 31 s ........ . U111!1ac· 1.»10 1n 1s-.+ "• day ~!!!!! tn : 11 ~·~ The Do'tlr lones averqe cl 30 industrials wu down 5.72 u;ooi uo 1 "' )4"'-" i ··to837 06 UC>Ca pfUO . J 701'>-.\l po lho . • uPiicc 11011 m ... -.. "' Bul~era retained a sll .. "t advan'•"e over losers in """'°"" jO s ,.. '" -\\ a-• -Un1ry11p1 • 1:10 '"'" the bro tally of New York Stock Excb~e-lisiedissµes. ~t:= .1 5f 1,n.~.~ Tra~ wu acUve. Die Board volume reached 24.8~ ~~ ,~·i 1~ ~::: t% milllonahares. · • ~~ ·'° : ,~ ~~:--~ Late Tuesday the Federal ReAerve Board reported that ~::::; U:.~ 11J~ rJ:t ~ industrial production re1Jstered a aluUisb 0.3 percent iQ· un111nc1 .lllb 1 11 »'"'• "' crease in October. :t.·~ I.~: l! 1n~. ·\.. l..--------------...-.-.------------- UN\KI I.JOI 1 n ~-~ Sto~ In TIN! .._..,1011nA ee--· Un PllMrl 1 2 2 • "" ..,. • ---Un'=~•.,:.~ t: ::"· ~ . spo11191ac .m:url,lt.l>' "IMI ,,., ....... .., .... l l::, ~ ~~"'· .:Ji:.~~'-~= .. ~ .Ind cr::...i~m1=~ ':~ , ;it 21~= ~ H"' v.,. -..-~ • .-.. ~ Trr 211.!! ~ 2 m .. ., S2 7 UO IV.+ V. , tradlftl natloNlly .. nw"W ~· :_t t~ 111. f; 1 I I m:'t: •· 10 19;40 .• 111 U + ~ c.t Oec..... ... 171 \t + Iii 't= .. 2.'!: ... ~!:~........ \ai(, ,,/~ _A3 S -.... Q~lfll ..... • +~ "' ._, 1 to i fJl 211't-~ M• P«.. ~·· *M, M~ + loo rM ...................... ., .. uss1 .. 1 i 20 • ,.s HI\-"' ' "-lie.a · • · · • · · · »t a.v. --Utll• .... · · · · · · · · · ·· "· · ·· • ~ USTotK 1".011 1• nv.-1o1, I lflff•ITel ...... ,..._ ~ + w '5 lk ....................... 2.*too UnTKll 1:.0 1 , .. ~-.. I Amtt ......... 291,MI I04't -.... ---------------UT<ll" e., I '" .... I A=iffl • "" · 216,•. SJV. -tVlt Uni Tel 1.29 t Ut I"' -''°i In<........ UVlt -~ VTd•pf7.Jl 1110 .... I .... ........ H ---· UtllT'.lpf!.50 .. S 24~-~ l 011, ........ ~ -.. UnllrM .10 t v :v...... M91M•..... 'i!! ;-Vlt Un1111r .SI 7 S -"11 ltlE~ • • ••• 111 -f'o Unl•l"d 1.• 1 u n~+ i.. o .... ... · 1 -._ Unl.tet 1.a 1 u n\4t+ Vt ,,. oee...... ,..;,.. "°"' -lilt VDron 1.10 IJ m 11 -'4 1..-."9t .... • 114,MO ""' + _, us IP'I .n 1 m 1.v.+ ~ 11--------------.., Ullrtl' ...... u 11 .... A---.a-•n•--..1t--wl'I. Ultt M 20~+ V. ~ Al~ Ull't.pl t• . 1 12 utfl\.pt t.OI.. 10 ts~ N IEW YOAK IAI'). .._ 4 ,.111, "'°' -Y-'t -,.,_ ntt <t'llfllll of Ille • ~ .CUw VI' a, 1,10 1 '2 17\• V. AIMtlUll 51.0tll IX<Mf!llt '-• VSltonl I 1 I U' • 1• lrMlll!O IMl'-llY al ,_, ti\*' it. v11i.-tln J 'J • 1\4 • ~. HouOllM M~ a -'-Verf.., . ' 21t , ..... '• UVIM •I -a• ........ "-. Ju 1~+ ,,.. o.i.11tOG • . ~-llw -.,.. v.ndo .. 1S • ··" 111 .. r'ff•ir QI, • ~MO 81._ -+ .ft VtnlCI .1$1., 11 2'"1+ \.It UoW. llr .. _;,eo .__-+ \t VHIJ91 lit u 11 14"11-Vlt Hytff IM... . lt,1'0 •14 -~ Vttc.a tot.-. lt 1f'o · • · · PlllW~ C,. , ... .._. _..., ~r .-r.'I m ~~·:% Aft9 Lid •• : •• ,.. M. .. "' • • 0 ... l c:.. .. • 11,900 1t • -~= :,1,.J:: Jf~ :.:·.,.; Gltllf'tc.k "'···•. 112.519 M .+ - VII ~llf'.1J ,. r101011'H V. !:---------------! =·:·: Jlol"'~.~~ fJps and o • .,,.. VMIOIM l.IOH.., ,;""!". ~ MlW Yottlt (l~ -,,. .............. --...,.. .... ..... v ... lllc& 1 llldillllt w.c.r. _, t U -\(i 11.cU ellll _.,..... ..... MW~ • . ..-....... ~ .. ~~ ..-....~ ~mf~. ~.ar.~--=~. :.1£!$- ' -1111 .,...., ... _. 111runr•~-'•· .. ,, ~ ....-.n Vie .,...___ .,,_.,.. ,nee.,.....,.. tli"'-,.,kit • .. _ ..... ~ ~ l'ct.. 1 !~~ n" t1!\\ ~= m • o.a hid • r : m u: l{f, ~ :1 e H ~ • '~ \lit • !\Ila Ult + 1i,I, ~ • • u, 1.J : t: 8: !~ ~ • • UI> Jj ~ ot I U. 7,t t: tt ~ ts s.A~n =• W Y°"K CAP) ·NY 5tock Mitt It f lftel .. . • . • .. • • . • . It= ................ ............................ 2. ~": .. ·::·.:·:.:·.: .. ·.·:.·:.·:.:·di f;;' .,..,. eoo . . .. .. .. . . • .. .. 1•,1111. $1 1 It Mtf .. ., , • , • . . • . . . 4 .. 1. ..................... ...... ....... .,, ... WHAT •M•X 010 N£W YORK IAP) • YP1LOT San Diego fina ncier C. Arnholt Smith and his dau~htcr have been sued for mor e than $8,000 in unpaid accounts to a t rav<rt agency! Deatla Notice• CJIOLl.MAN HELE N C.. 'ROLLMAN, •9e a . Rutdenl Of HunUng1on O.e<ll, C. .,•H•O away #/tlOltWUr Nowmtier u , 1911 a t Hoeg Memortat HO•P•lat. !>vrvlved by a nlKe GledYl Pverllnt ol Trenton, Hew JtrMy. MIY Crollm.,., .. u a rnemtier ol Tiie Hvottn9ton BO<ll ~nlor Clttnni. GU ve•ld11 .. ,.,,_. Frkley Nowmbef' ''· 1977 el 12 lO P.M In Ille N4'W C..metery, Som· mervlll•, -Jerwoy p,.rt• Orollle" !>mltn•' Mon-y tn ,.,.,91' of tou t••· rengement~ IATTAOl.IA HARRY J OATTAGLIA OIH Nov u. 1911, '""_.,,of Ml>\lon Viejo. He I• >urvtved by M• wile Aoell...,, 1.,0 >On\, .JWPh & Phllltp h•ll•Qll•. eight 9rl\ndthUdren, one '1)ter Mr' Jo\tPh•"• Poru. and \.fttP\l \tf'r Jo,.pf'Hnl 0.mt\.. ko\.&rv V'U\ eweninQ 1.,M a t 0 'onnor l•gvne H•ll• Mortwry ~I. ~ .. of <llro>to•n burt•I, ThurSO.y •NA. ,u ~I Kllll•n <.•lh«MI< C.h•lf<fl. Ml~ Vleto. lnlff· ",."'"""""on<.emettty MOSULLY MARGARE l L. ~ULLY, <HKlent of l'<•wPO<t ii.«11, Pol>-•••Y Nov· •me>er tl, IY// Sf>e o> wrv1""d by -'°'let GtnNCM JKk,,.,., of Alltllo V•llrt, CA. Memorl•I M,.lte• woll be llelG on T ""'WIO No ... n.o.r ti. 1•11 •I t oo P Aii llell llroeaw1 y '"•pet. Pt1v•tt 1nh1tnll'f'lt In 1 .. v ot flO'flf'er•1 clon•I'°'" rNIJ 0. m.cl• 10 • l•vortte <h•rlly. bell Bro•O••Y Mortu•ry 01tt(t0f"~ HUNT HAROLD P HUN I, r•\ldfnl °' '°''• M•W. P••loe<l-•Y Nowml><'r 11, 1'11. H• i' \urwlftd by motrwr P•lrt<ht .,.liil'lt ot l •fl. , •.. one'"'" M•l....ia Hunt ol N:t•port S.«h Funtr•I w-rv1(.t> .tnd interment 1n 1 •tt. (A Btll 8rCldd••Y MorluUy IOUIChfe<to" Deaths 1 'Elsewhere DENVER CA P > Arthur Roy Mitchell, 86. the Western artist com· missioned in 1959 to de· sign Colorado's centen· nial emblem, "Rush to the Rock1<•s." died Tues· day. AT LANTA IJ\P l --Al· Jen Lockerman, 70, one or the FBI special agents 'involved in the capture ond slaying of the in· famous gangster J ohn Dil linger, died Monday. COTTONWOOD. Idaho <AP) -Elmer Taylor, 90, g reat· grandson of President Zachary Taylor . died Monday . ..... Cl .. onfHS SMITHS' MO«TUAIY 627 Main St Hunlin(lfon Beach 536-6539 PHI( fAMILT COlOMIAL JUMllAL HO Ml 7801 Bolsa Ave Westminster ·e93-3525 'AClffC YtlW MIMOllAL rAIK Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3&00 Pacific View Onve Newport.' Califor nia 844·2700 McCORMICK MOITUAlllS Lagun1 Beach 494·9415 Laguna Hills 788.0933 San Juan Ceplstrano .C95·1778 IAl.n.1116110M .,,. ...... "° ... Cotona def Mar 873-i450 Costa,...., 048·2424 SAN DIEGO (AP) -A fed~ral Jud&• ls being asked to rule whether stud nt newapapera must carry a sports paae. ne Ctty Colleee paper, ortknlghtly. filed a ault a.sklng for a preUm.lnary in· Junclloo to prevent th• admlnistraUon from aetUna policy oo lhe papu. A tew months ago. the Fortknlahtty be11n carrying fewer sports stodes, lD· eluding them under the heading, "Recreat,lon." President Allen J. Repashy told the editors recently that "we can demand coveraee 9f sports." ''There Is no question in my mind that dropping the sports page as a re•ular feature will bave an adverse ~eel on the recrulttng · actlVltles of tbe 'Cfy Coll ege coaching staff," a dean adviled ear Iler. Io their sult, editor Anthony P. Stevens and facwt)' adviser Glen Robert.s aaid--...J.......;;.;..,..~~.:.--:"""!'""~ constltutlonal rights are threatened. ~ A beartne is souaht Dec. s In U.S. Dt1- trlct Court. • been a cue or us not bein1 able to block and tackhl our oppooen\s We've had 34 turnovQrJ in 10 ~onu~s; that's a major problem. ~eatin'g -UCJiA Is Last ~~afion .. I LOS ANGELES (AP) -"Our Pec-8 lead with Wuhincton. rsltualion." the Trojans coach last goal -or aaJvatlon -11 to "I don •t want to dwell on the satct. '1 have ione throuah •11 the beat UCLA," Soothern California things that are wron& with our thin«• that went wrong in my football coach ,John Robinson team aod don't want our players mind. We aeern to be a jittery said 'I'uetday. l'Our one attain•· to either,'' Robinson said. "I team on the road where we've • bl~ goal l• the city cham· would rather wait until after the lost tho last three every time pl&Jshlpt.'/ season to comment on that. We playing ~fore seiiout croWcli It haa ~a 11tran1e season for sUll have a pme left, and I want and a1tainat. teams that were Roblnson'eTroJans. A UWe more our players to concentrate on .really upforus. ·• than a month ago, t.bey were un· that." benen, ranked No. 1 In the na· Still, Robinson did offer some 1'on, and COl1-'Sidered a ahoo·ln for analysis of the troubles of h1I the Paclnc-8 champaon1h1p. team, which was knocked out or I Now, four losses latet, lhe Tro· the conference picture wi\h a jans can hope only to salvaae 28·10 loss to Washington last some pride Nov. 2S by spoiling Saturday. USC is 6·4 overall and the Rose Bowl hope• or arch· 4·2inthePac..a. rival UCLA, which Is tled ror the .._ "11. ·s a perplexing. confusing The Trojans have lost. but ont homo ••me this season, to Alabama. but fell t.oNotre Dame. Cal. then the Huskies on the road. "It's interesting to note that the only eame we didn't out.gain our opponent was Notre Dame, .. Robjni;on conllniled ·'So it hasn 'l "And they've come In clut<:ti sit.uaUons." Robln1on sald ttl.at he still believed, despite •ll the dlsap. pointmenta thil season, that the Trojans would be ready for the UCLAjfame. ' '"We have ~ome molivatio1 factors for the came," be said. "It is a ,ireat rivalry. Many players on our team have friends c>n the UCLA team. They want to :shQvt their Crje~tls up ... Michigan, OSU . . I I l I • 1 (! MINNESOTA'S ROD CAREW, .. LEAQUE MVP. Sports in Brief < Landslide Ballot Selects Carew MVP here have reported. If the prepesed off er was to be accepted, it would mMk the nrst time a Big Ten -conference team had pla~intheSugar Bowl. AIA 1t'l11• SAN DIEGO <AP> -Former UCLA star lJah>l'I Drot1lnger scor~d a Jatne~hlgh 22 points to lead Athletes in Action lo an 89·82 victory over San Diego State Univel'Silyhere. Brace for ·Duel CUI CAGO <AP> This is Ohio Stale· Mlehigan week in the M ld~sl. the week in which the Big Ten football chamµionsrup and Rose Bowl bid are decided "This is fun "W!k."' Ohio State l'01u:h Woody fMyes said Tues· day "H you enjoy coaching it's ru n . J t 's the most intense week of the year. "We look forward to it and work towards it," said Hayes. "Even the players look rorwt&rd to It ~use it's the !lnal week and we have less work.·· However, few people will ktlow for sure how rquch work the last week is because both teams· 'practices are closed and Hayes and Michigan coach Bo Scl'te~· bechler keep players and assis· tunts awny from prying media. "We went through all of that after the Purdue game... said Schembcchl er. "We reel it's be&r ter to keep things closed. If you want to eull that buttoning up. thel1'we're buUoned up ... In contrast to Michigan's~ victory at f;olumb •s tast ,,.-r, both coaches expect a close 1ame thls year. "The te~ are us ually evenly matcbed in this series,·· said Schembechler. "I think they were stron&er in 1970 and I think we were a little stronger in 1971. They were evenly matched last year. too. except Ohio State lost its quarterback. "The litUe things will add up ... said Schembcchler. "in unex. peeled turnover, the kicking ga me or a mistake here or there ... Hayes ~oncurred and added the advantage "will be with the lea m which doesn't. lose the ball with consistency. controls It and maintains field po!\lUon ... Thia lime around Hayes has a healthy Rod Gerald at ciuarterback. "We're happy to have him." said Wdt>dy, "and we hope he'll 1 mako-quit.e a dill~c.e.Jla waa m there when we weut ahead ih tbe only game-we lost tftls-year Clo Oklahoma 29·28> and he wasn't there when we lost ... Running back J eff Logan is also at full strength. evidenced by his 148 yards ln 20 rushes agalrtst Indiana last Saturday. lie will team wtth Ron Sprin,::s. who is the si)(th Ohio State player to reach 1.000 yards rushing. Schembechler is not without ammuNlion. Ile has one of the finest. quarterbacks in the coun· try ira Rick Leach, who makes the Michigan option ao and who passes w1t.b uncann~ accuracy. Ue ach )) a1 t.h rown 12 toachdo\fn pass~ with only six interceptton.s and is the only quarterback ln the conference witb more TD passes Uian in· .tercevtions. · "Vie are comfortable with our passing game,·· s aid Schem· bechler. who hopes to have run· ning hacks Harlan lluckleby and ll09~evflt Snuth both healthy to go aloniwith Russell Davis. INGLEWOOD (AP> -Campy Russell hit a lO·foot jump shot eas1t:Y in the overtime Tuesday night to break an 89·89 tie and lead the Cleveland CavaUera to a 102·95 National Basketball As· sociation victory over the Los Angeles Lakers. Held to just three pqints 1.n th~ first half and just three more in the third quarter. Russell scored eight consecutive points late in the follrth period as the Cavs, 9·~. rallied {rom ~n 8$-7'1 deficit to lie Ute score at 87 at the end of r~gulation. • Cleveland won d espite a tremendous defensive performance by Don Ford, tho 6·9, LA forward w~_irabbed a career hlJh 15 rebounds and permitted ju t 10 pofnu io 'be scored against him7 John Lambert'sjumper with33 seconds left in regulation tied the score LAS VEGAS -llard-servtnA Roscoe Tanner overwhelmed veteran Rod Laver and Ken Rosewall took a close victory over John Alexander TueJday night In the WCT Challenge Cup tennis tournament. Tanner, whose booming serve has been clocked at nearly 120 miles per bout, downed Newport Beach resident Laver 6·3. 6·1. Rosewall opened challenge cup pl ar with a $-6:--6-4, 6·4 victory dter John Alexander. Rosewall and l'armer are 1;.c> I~ the eight-man round·robin com~ pe'UUoD, as are Jimmy COno.ors and me Nastase, who won tlidr openers the previous ev~nTnti. In tonight's matches, Connors meets Dick Stockton, Vlt.u Gerulaitis pJays Tanner and Nasta&e lakes on Laver. Tanner was extremely 10'\· pressive in his opening match. taking just 45 minutes to down his roe. ' .. t Defense Key for FV Foe Foritana Elirrdnated Borom Lasi Year . P'ONTANA-Fountaln Valley Bl1li't Barona have lo•t only •• aarnea Jn their past 2.5 .tartl and Fontana Hilb coach Dick Brulcb bu been a lnte1raJ &>art of two or those defeat.a-as an aa.Jstaqt at St. Paul (Santa Fe fk>rlna• > In 1976 and as a Fontana -14'tn '76. 8rulch took over the relns at Fontana tt\la ~ear and the Steel era' Iron.curtain defense hu done a Job, blanklnc four op- panents. Friday the Steelers will be trying to do what they dJd last year-eliminate Fountaln Valley from tbe ctF f ootbaU playotts at Oran1e O>ast Collece. Foftt.na ta tbe w!ld card entrr-a f ourtb place team from the Cltrua Belt Lea1ue. "Our kids have been up and down," aays Bruich. "We didn't know what wu 1otn1 to happen after latt Friday when we l~t to San Goraonlo <San Bernardlno) High. It was like havln• a noocse slipped around your neck and at the 11th hour, someone all)>I a gun to you for an escape.·• Estancia Tested Top Backs Spark Riverside Poly RIVER.SIDE -Estahcla <Gos ta Mesa) Hlgh 's Eagles figure to have a distinct advan· lage in terms of size Friday rught (1 :30 ), but the Eagles wlll also be dealing with the quickest tootball team they've seen this year as they enter the first round of the CIF <Southern Conference) playoffs. The Bears of Riverside Poly coach Barry Meier. seeded No. 2 in the playoffi; and boasting a 9·0 record. await Estancia at UC Riverside, but that is the only time you11 sec the Bears stand- )ng around. Exceptionally quick, Meier's Iv.r League c1tamp1ons boast Dir.cl-• t,o llC ,. ........ "'orttl on ,..._, f rtew•y IHI to "Mr"oe ~reowo 1") i. .. 1on~1 to Rl .. r,loeonet.._e ,,.. ltr\IOI• UE lurn.311 tut on Ol .... ,o Vtll¥trMI~ '"" tUrr>Qtl, the best receiver we•u ever face. Estancia compares wlth Colton on defense and maybe like Ari· ington Hlgh on offense, but with a better passing gmne." Meier, in his thlrd year al the helm, has turned things •round at Riverside Poly. The '76 t.eam shared· the league crown and finished 9-2, the best record ln 20 years. Now the Bears are 9-0 and :\1 eier says he's surprised his team has done this well. '·r Ctgured we would win three games. but another three were a tossup and three others I really thought we'd be the underdog," says Meier. "But our 3S·O win over R amona High .was the turn- ing point. 34 S.n Gor90f'IO " Moreno ltolltY JO horco J~ R•mOM l1 (..otron If 70 hatth t Rolf) J ,... "'•Im !>i>rl"9• IJ •I hub•®'l• u 20 Ar llng1on I 14 10 ,, u 'fhe Steelers l~t a lot or their power to &roduatlon but Foun· taln Valley tans should re.- member Dell Cannady, a S.9, 170-pound quarterback, who ran the wishbone with emphasis on the runnlne came throu'h the Barons defense In '76. Running backs Include Juniors Draymond Crawford, Dale Paul and Tom Patrone with 175-pound fullback Tom Coon providJn' power up the mlddle. Russ Silverthorn (6-3, 200), a starter as a sophomore against Fountain Valley last year, and linebacker Keith Hartline (6·2, 210) key the Steelers· defense. "We have 12 juniors In our :;tarting lineup,·· sa~ Bruich. "We 're happy to be in the playoffs. but from what we·ve '>een on film, Fountain Valley ap. pears better than a year ago. It Is bigger and Willie Gittens is one of the best backs in the United States. "A lot of teams have talent. but Fountain Valley seems to be get· ting the most out of its talent. We ·re not having probleflls in preparing for Fountain Valley in terms of figuring out what we h u ve to do, the problem is how do you practice against a Willie Git· tens? ''We know Gittens is going to gel the ball 20 times. but the blocking patterns are diffi~ult to ~<>Ive." Fontana's defense? "We play it exactly as my defense did at St. Paul. We 're a reading team with a zone sttondary. "We try lo prevent the Jong ball and we don't really attack, rather we wait ror the other team to make Its move ... . ........ , .. ,, 10 Vtrbum ~ 0 I• CoroM 0 14 ~Ofty • 1 f'oc;lt~ 0 0 (./1fflf'tl I 21 JI E.t-r 14 1 Rl'OI-J1 I• Son Gorgon;o 2A I !>On blmArOlnO o 5· 10, 180-pound senior Larry Thomas, the league's back of the year Thomas has rushed for 1.257 yards In 152 carries for lJ touchdowns. lie has averaged 8 2 yards p(•r crack out of the Bears· oplion offense. The player who makes things /.!O is quarterback Jack Woodhead. a 150·pound senior, who although he doesn't go to the air too often, is effective when he does. He has completed 30 of S8 ~fsses for 602 yards (an averaae ff 20 yards per completion) and 5 :-i Ds. And, he has run for 305 tards. St. Francis Expects Defensive Struggle Don Teague and Trip Hord are l\'oodheact ·s favorite receivers and another back of note is iophomore Robert Lephart. · Defensively the Bears are led by Ivy League defensive player bf the year Steve Mona, a 6·1, J85·pounder. Also, linebackers Pana Mansfield (190) and Ron J.,itton <t 75 ) lend their talent olon~ with fiord at safety and !Thomas at corner. t Hord has seven interceptloTIS ~nd Meier says hi• two aces in the secondary will be concenlrat· ing most of their efforts on Estan. cla receiver Mike Camp, · ','Estancia 's quarterback, Pave Jeranko, is the best JIUarterback we've seen this rear," says Meier. "And Camp is . ~Prep Grid, Polo X-coontry Polls "'-~ .......... ti '5•W-Oe<t"°' T .. 10 " ... ., I Sotllo AN V•l'-Y tt-01 2. J-ounlotnV<111~ 1..01 • ~. Wetl CovtN O·HI ~ ~1 J) • •• t.t ..... 1 11-11 " 11 . ' . .. -• 5. LotAllM lf-11 6.1.0VOla ll•HI 7, R.otonat t/.21 I. Moltf' 0.1 1$-41 y 'viii• f-erll ..,;a, 10. 5">11111Hilt\1 .. ll •·A c,..., Co\Hltrr 1 ...... , II IS " 10 • I, l'Alft \/trOH, t. i..otlltll) l . ~l .. ~1 •· ~ou111a1n 'valley;}, Morino,•· 'lllfttlmlll'ttl'; 7. <Arona eel ~· 1 a. Cotto Meo&o 1 •. lilawbury ••n: HI, Doi Pu.lllos Illa"" MttcOt G1rt1 Cl'Ota Cffftetr , .. , ... ,, I, f.ClllOll, 2. CMtn• otl Nr; l f-~-'" Vetley; 4. <.oat• MtMJ $. ~t-.rlilYI •• SOnl• turbu1; 7. °"' Put1110•: I. f>olo. Vff9e1; •· t.IM!tho-; 10,Qi»f\4 Miii, ... ~ ..... ,.... ., .... ,. 1. Miro ~; i. ,..,....," kllfW} ~ ~ ti.tell l'Qly, 4 Ulll ... rMl'tl ~. &uMy Hlllt; •• (Nf, tw; 1. 1.9411 IMch WllMlll e. &..ot Ali..1 t. c.tllf M<IMl lO.~. LA CANADA-This was one season St. Francis head football coach Jack Friedman didn't ex- pect hls Knights to be In the Cl F playoffs. A traditional Del Rey League powerhouse, the Vikings were hard hit by graduation losses and struggled to a 1·2·1 pre·lea1ue re· cord. But Friday, for the sixth con· secullve year, St. Francis will be in the post-season affair, meeting Sunset League runnerup Newport Harbor on the Sailors· turf in what promises to be a de· fensivestruggle. "We dldn't expect to be here this year," Friedman said by telephone. ''We had Henry Bell and that's about all." , Bell, a 6-0, 200 senior tailback, gatned over 1,000 yards rushlng as a Junior and picked up 892 ln seven games thls season. , However, he was held out of last. week's championship showdown against Loyola for dis· ciplinary reasons and Friedman won~ know untlt gflme time whether he will st.art or not. SL Francis lost to Loyola, 7--0, when "8 blocked punt at the Knights' three.yard line led to the only touchdown. A young team, St. Francis bu· just 16 seniors on the roater, Six of which start. Three oC the five sophomores on the 42·man roster are starters wbUe the balk of the team is comprised of Juniors. The Kniaht.s operate a pro I on offense and employ an okle (5-2) defense. Only two players go both ways, &JUy Ward (8·1, 118) u a 1pllt end and d~Censlve back and Joe Catalfamo ($·0, 200) u a fullback and defensive end. .. Junior Jfm Jhn.lnea (5·10. 170> ls $h• quarterback of the run· oriented tnm while Henry Boll'• brother, Kerwin, (S.9, 15$) 1tuta at wingback. In the event Henry B~ll dotlS . not start, Brian MacKentyre will open at t11lback. MacKentyre has seen plenty of action this season, especiaJly when SL Fran· els runs out of a rullhouee backfield. Also doubling as a re· celver and def~ni.lve back, MacKentyre rushed for 360 yl},J'ds this season. At 215 pounds tackle Tony Cunha Is the largest of the Knights' linemen. He Is also the only senior on the line. Friedman, who has a 161-46·3 record In 18 yr_ars at St. Francis, say~ the key 1or his team is to stop Newport Harbor's aerial at· tadk. 0 Mlllr ll 'venhwa O U NOit• J v•noe 1!..<.1.1 > 14 '"'"a'• 2 LomllO< " 19 I• Vetl>I 1(1 U !>I. JOM 80$CO 1 o Lovo•• I REDLANDS-A atout de· fellslve unit and a power.I of. fense will give the Redlands Hieb School Terriers momentum Fri-day night (7:00) when they host the Mater Del <Santa Ana> Monarchs in a ftrst-round CIF playoct game at Redlands University here. The Terriers have made an about·f ace from a dlsmal 1978 Reason and have posted • 7·2 re' cord to gain a co·champlocship (.fl the atrws Belt Leaeue. In tact, the Terrler1 were 'orctd to turn thJngt around afttt tJle nrat came tbf1 1eason in which they lost to l'o\lntaln Valley's Baron• 35-e, In a game • coacb Paul Womack uys should hive beet 21·U . "~ate~ Dei ll\he type Of team that bu cotne aJon1 1tron1 at th• end of the season," bo aua of • • I FOOTBAtL ~ MY Standout • MIHlon VieJo Hhrh'1 Mlke Och()f. il"tho kind of player who doesn't care where you put hhn, Just as lon1 as you put hhn somewhere on the toolball fleld. 41He's a coach'• ~a10," say1 . • Mluion VJeJo coach John Murlo. ~ "He has a super attitude and ___ ...;.;.;.;.:.;,;;;..;;~.;.;;;.;.;....~--be 'II play anywhere ·we want hltn Sunset .Loop to~~hoa will be a key aa Mission Viejo meet.5 Capistrano Valley in the Urst round of the CJFpla~(• Trio-~ers us ~~3i8!m~ght (7:30) at the MV ~ ' At various Umea thls 1tuon • Ochoa has played delettslv• end, Says Ancic~ h linebacker, ~uar:terba~k. tailback, fullbacli and aptft back. SANTA FE SPRINGS-St. Paul High 's Swordsmen are in their cust.omary position as an Angelus League champion In.I.be ClF football playoff~ as they pre· pare for the invasion of Edison munUnttoo Beachl Wah Friday night (7:30). Although Edison sport.a only a 5·4 record, St. Paul coach Marl· jon Anclch says he won't have any problem eetUng his eleven mentally ready for Edison. ''The Sunset Lea11ue trlgarers Ol-._•M. ,..,,"11'1 Nort11 on i.ill Ot090 h-•Y 140)1 U. ,.,_av to). Ne><tnonW.cross Soni• A"6 'r-•y tj) -w~e leff9<_,. Ro. IWMfl. t•11 on lt ..... , oou ,.0,,••111. r11va. •no hun 1•11 on !>"°""'•~•ri<><ffnltef. lo<llOol locottu 01 ~ vrMnte.1. us," says Ancicb, who has eulded the Swordsmen to the CIF playorfs 11 times in the past 15 years. st. Paul bas not mlssed a playotrs berth since 1966. Coaches say ho excels tt. every position. Last ynr Ocho• wa• the 1ophomore team'• startlnc quarterback and he came lrito yaratty practice t.hia aeuon u a candidate for the 1tartln.1 QB Job, but the Junior rave W&f. to another versatile ath~•. lei1lOt' Scott Spear. , So Ochoa converie« to de- fensive end, where he bN started most of the seuoo. A:t U111es M has also filled ln a1 Unet>aclitr. On otfense, Ochoa'i prospects ot getftng a lot oC pla)lln1 me at quarterback were din\ so be con· verted lnto a runntn1 back. Althou1h the Dlal>los bJIVe an abundance ol quality ballcar· riert, Ochoa became one oC the beat. A frequent starter, Ochoa bu a 4.6 avera,e per carry with at1 yards on 82 carries. ~e·• stored five touchdowns, one of them a 59.yatd run a1ata1t. San Clemente. .... Not wanting to WHte hl1 powerful arn1, Murio has had Octtoa pass occasionally on raule-dazzlq pJt.chOpt play1. Ha h111 complet~ one ot five tor H yards. '"Mlke has •very ~q um,•• 1utfo H)'I. ~·He c•n tbrow tho baJI 60 qr as yardS. Sin~ be·a. sprint out quarterback, w• l•l~ we could use bis qulcknetS. aQd runnt~ abUl~ ln ot.bel' are'5. ·• Alt.l\~h Oeboa onl}' atandi $-9 and welahl 180. Murlo •11• be'• ttie strongest athlete on the team. Ochoa hu wrtsUed oo the vant· ty slnco tio was a freshman and was the league champ for bis weight division laat seaaon. .. With bl1 strength and qulek· ness, wo can play him anywhere we w~t." Murlo Hys. "It 'a a real aasettobavealdd Ukebiman· the team." Injuries have platued Mlsll~ Viejo this aeaJOQ, ao much ao that Murlo baa never been able to field hlt ltartln1 unlt ial the aanw time. Ochoa hasn't bffn uempt. from the plague, but be bun't ml.aaed any plaitn• time. "He's had shQ\,lldtr problems and lee problems but be plays hurt," Murfo 1aya. 0 He'a a touah player." Another Ochoa ln tbt same mold hll.$ recently Joined the vanity aft.er playing all season as a tailback with the sophornorea. Louie Ochoa,. Mlke's younger brother, bas mewed Into a •tarllni pcmUoo at tight end. "He'U be a good runnin1 back next year," Murio 1ays, "but we have a lot ot lQJwiea at U,ht end and we're fortunate we bne b1m to etep In and fill the gap, .. Louie'• performance ln hia llrst varalt.y start wu ao Im- pressive that coaches voted him often1lve player of the week. It's an honor that brother Mike had earned Just one week earlier. ·'Our offense has not been what it has been ln the past," says An· clch. "But we·ve come up with the blg play when we've had to and our secondary has turned in· terceptlons into good field posl· tion ror us ... Pacing tht> secondary Is Chu6k Wiiiig and Mike Loiica, WUU~ has 11 Interception& to his credit and Anclch says his defenders will be keeping their eyes on Edison receiver Jeff Hyder. Rick Valentuela, a 168·pound junior, Is the key runner for St. Paul, having scored seven touchdowns and chalklnc up a 5.:; yards per carry aver11e. S~arp Does It .}\fl Fo~ GOiden Hawks Chris Arena. a runner· receiver, and split end Mlke Gallego are Injured and out of the game according to Anclch, mak· Ing the Swordsmen more of a running threat to Edlaon. Linebackers Jim Pallares and Robert \'.barn are In the lradi· tional mold or St. Paul linebackers. "Our linebackers have been doing a job and this Is one or our better secondaries,·· says Anclch. .......... ( .. 11 u $1, Louis 1N1111atll1 '° l>lllt.11 7 ,, !.Into foe • 6 S.r11llt 2'2 w .1.a Po1., 14 Jt Gorden~ t2 21 H119"4'1'11t 0 14 M•l•t 0.1 t ta t11 "'°" AIN.t • FrJday's foe. "They must have a heck of a defensive team because all of their scorea have been low." Womack pralH• bll own team'• defensive unit 81 well. "Defense Is the slroniiest part 01rwt11Mtt• ...... ~i.("9nl1J ,.ortn °" h.-oort "'"~.,. •• lcl~ri!Ot 1-rHlllrlY. USI Oii klvt•JIOt "'"'°""' lo ~ ll«MralllO ,.,_oy. ~-on k11 ...,,....,. "-•Y IO un1wrs1tv !it. L.ttt on unl•••lll'( lo umpv\, IO«tl091\l •9hlo of our ballclub, .. he 1a11. ''Since the flrat game, we've tlad tlve shutouta and given up only 28 . potntl." Eight foet1 couldn't match the polnt total ol Fountain Valley'a Barons (35). · Sorne of the top detenct.rs tor the Terrters are; Todd Pcatterson CS.0, 190 ar.) and th coacb11 ton; Greg Womack <•.o. 195, ar.) at -• p • Corona del Mar HJgb wlll be up against its toughest ~~nent of the season Friday lll.Ot 7:30 when the Sea Kings travel to Valencia High 's stadium for CIF opening round playoff aame against powerful El Dorado. I Ranked ftfth in CIF, El l>otado owns a 7·1·1 feCOr4 and boasta the most formfdabl defense Corona del Mar bas seen yet. The Golden Hawks shut out F'µllerton 21;o in thtlr Oranee League finale last week and elsp have under their belts im· presslve victories over Valencia <19·0), Canyon (41,7) and La Ka.bra (35-8). El Dorado-"'°" lts off en1e out of muJt.ipJe formations under the dlrectlon ~ Junior quart.back • I ends: Danny Earp (5-10, 180, Jr.> at middle guara; and IQstde llnebackets David Hubby ($.10.' 185, jr.> and Scott Reevet (6-0, 190, ar.), While Womack praised ff de- Cense, the offense has lilso come In for ita &bJte of tbe tlotY. The Tentera an averagln 21 points agameto8.9fortheog~Ulon. Gene Larson (5-10, 166, sr.) dlreeh the olhttae at quarterback. He has c'6mS,1eted 50 percent of his passes ( 45 of 90). Riek T~r cs.9, 1~. •r.> ls thf leadlnt b•1t carrier. He hH picked up 933 yarda In 1S2 earrfes and hu acottd 'r2 PoJnts this season at taJlback. ....... (1·11 Tim Sharp (&-1, 181>>. the leader ln otfenatve output in the north end o! Or ante County. "Sharp can do it an:· says El Dorado coach Glen HuUnis. •'He passes well, runs well does our placeldcklng and could also punt if we needed hlm.•· Besides Sharp, El Dorado's brightest star la probably Sean Olsen, a S-9, 160·pound senior who plays tailback and defensive back. Although HasUnrs e.Umates Ol_lleM .. "•ltlKI• " ... f'!Oftll on ~nto Ano f-•-•r IO ..,_'I' t7. North on )1, petl (.Al stMo 1f-U1ler10111 IO "Mfba L1110A BIVQ. IUl'noll tno pr'Oll-tlst to llfaofOfQ A~,,.19'1(M8r~l-,1ChoOl~ .. Mft. that Olsen has only average speed, he ii the Golden ffawb' leadlnt ~aUoanier and hu 100· plus yarda1e outputa ln fo\lr games .. At defensive back be is a re· turntng Alt·~,anae County aelec· Uon. Only QPe pass hu beeo com- »leted tn hfJ &\tea all seuon. Sltatp ·a \Op recelveta ar6 0ui1·---+&11-A Dresiel~ • 8-4. -.pound ttaht end, Kelly Wlnsell <84.170> and Mike Patras (S.0, 170). Winlell and Patras alterDate at split•. The t-01m I• young. like Coroca del Mar, b'4t RasUn11 bat managed. to find aom& blg rockl lo place In his defense. M 01t notable are two·W.Y starter Jlm Haft'ft Cs.J, 225) a.t tackle and Mark Speck (8-3, 205> at def enalve end. "Our CS.tense .has been pretty 11Ungy late\,Y,.. Hutln1s aays. •\MO$t ot the point.. we"Ve Jiven up have been «whtn our' ~econd team was in ther6. We feeJ our teant Jit just starting.to Jell now~"' 81 Dw-O·t•ll • • • FOOTBALL I HORSE RACNG I MISCELLANY 1>AlLY PJLOT 11:1 I 0..1, ....... l"llet. GOLDEN WEST'S LOREN MICKLIN. For GJast Area Girls' Sports WOMEI( Sflf.l.D .. O<.kf.Y GelMft ""'"' UI (01 P'•w.leH Gotaen W»l •<Orlng C..Onnor., MtH41< ~ Pal-111 IOI Of ... CM•I c.1Lu~ ~'A11s1n "'flwport kiir ~ 19) (I) VIII•• m1n\h :t "' M'fl f\ NI ~t lo rot1(·f A·6, 01 t ttufOJl)(J ...0, Yttfth tt'tfl to'f , .. 1 "'l. °'-·~ &.Antht.-f "•JOcl (.h..}wi.)ot•-l.04.·t. /,,.UfltJ'r ~. 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I 10'>1 ) 1. ftOn b '/, b"')tn I,._ I nt"' fJ••Ckff" fJ 7 I GWCKickers In Playoff~ Golden West College will host Southwestern College of Chuta Vlsta In the opening round or the Southern Calffornta JC soccer playoffs Satur- day. The mat.ch begins at 1. In the other Southern Cal tilt. El Camino hosts Santa Ana Saturday night (7:30) The two winners will dash Nov. 2& at. Golden West .lor the SoCal crown, but both will ad· vance to the state tournii. menl Dec. 2·3 at El Camino. GWC's Ruatlers have a 12·5·2 record <7·0·1 in Southem cal Conference play) while Soutbwest.ern captured the San Diego League wtth a 1-2 marlt. Golden :Wast is led by Tyrone lJlllr, tho lead1n1 scorer with 24 foals. """' to ... a11ec.t ! •· van~ .a ._ ""°'" "'· 1011 J.6, A tlt:. ,,. J 10 .. t co F<uon•t.1n io 10"1tOL..,..2.._. k1~._..,.1 .. 1wi,ott•·1 ·~• • •. bf'<~tron •• .,. , to .. t to .Ju 1 &> • 10.,1 ltl brl·•c:acno.ten ;.., f-rrft(..h • ; "''''·•.lb vtntt\ M•rooun11r1cttf lcm 1J"i•l , hon•UOf'r .-•. -1>«llfl-""'IO I·• .-u,ln1qu1"' took 1 ... t won ).), to>t •• '" ,,.,!l>._..,.,.ntt«rtt ,.,., to\t to ~' I u'h"·"" ,.., -I 10 ~-\al Ut , •· h~U"''O·,M1t'4i'r O· J k>\t •·•· • o t•u11n·A9utrr~ tt-I atf. \tttn(..Ott· -. l•ICIO<l oJ, .X,I, ,.orbtt-~IW ... ... , h •ll·l"-•Y , .. , -• '· >·~. <.oltt"•n1V..oooa 11-1 l°'I to l<lltrt\· t Jh! .. Jo. to\t to f"tM'WY·k~J .J.-o \.•\h '"""·'""'" t~• t0\.la won••· ""'',,,.. lltl ll)I H""' Buell S1nt!K '"'a 11 oel ""4<All1~1er •-O. o•l '" '' ~ O. HM\\ll\IC 1M1 Weft ._J I .. >tr.O..tn M1 Ot-t t-IUCHOfl'#-<#, k)\C t\J "''\.tllUlrf' J •• Ntorr• '"''' "'°" ... J,b-'. "ot.•ltu 1M1 ~t '° JJatm.•'' •·1, oer •<'•n ono'"'4 ,,_,,., 1111110.c >-1 ,.on,,,.,, JunQ \Ml Ol't. Vlir •Qhl •...J. 10ii..t ~ <...r tf\h"f J I, (Jw'411Jt• • /v\J k>\t .a • • ~-,.. ,, ... , d t't«nn1notr '"'" ot-f H19 ,,n,,..Y'H.:00 .. 1, CMI. D~l·MOUne I, 9'~\IM-l<eyala IMI wan )&, .. 1 t ef"M>tt·~L 1/-'I t..c:.t to ktdnt.f • otienon ...._<Ml, CA1.,.•J<-1 •·• l'.tl•urerl OIOI' tMI .. ,,,, •·l, O·~. :.en"'e . .,.111..,.S \NI/ •1 IO .,_,, M6CAlll\ltt' ..-., IOtt to ~ •·I>: MOO<IY•Mll'n lllnl l~tU, '*°" .. 3; u1il.l·1C.•laoMI lh / IOll IO Le1Qh ><>IOl'loCft ••, oef, 6wyer-1evtor 6-~. b~kll l·L.el'llllltn IMI IOM 1•• H.. .IU NtO• VMSl n c....uMeN uoi ui1 ue-e.ec11 ,_... l.tU IU dlt, ~ ~. lltf, Hll o·l, Ocl. V!>l.tlllv ... 6-2; 11111 ((.I IO•I ~ ..... ,O..;O'lltetl ((.11($1·•.2•.1 .. OWlllft 1-1sner-\'_,,1to 1<.1 aet. <>emoo- H4..,lnotne 1-}, Clef. 111-escrit•l-PeMr .,.J, CHI!. Ml<.'-1-lj\oh1lmet\ ... J. Crocker•S<.lll'lll ICJ WOii 1-6, ..0, O·l, lc.rw1n l<•rttS 1<.J t.M"1,-~. ~I .... Mis-'°" YlflO 0 II 171 AITeto blotnCd 11:1 IC>\110 c,,-... 2·6 IHI I •OfY .. t, Olll. 11011...,a w. f'iltul•tt• 11;.1 I0,13-•, ""°" ... 3. ••1; f'e$10f' lt'f ~t~·o,won~7·~ ~nato·,,,.,;;;.~~o« ~tl'-ktrn• h•Glern >•, 105l lo Ur~e,,.Ntll•Pl>Y 4 o, IOU 10 t<tbtlJ.NIC(>O'fOen J.• nhJOt••,.rroYI) 11:1.1 IOSI .. 1. I·•, Won • '• 11-t<-"' ........... 01/ IO>t I 0 'o, ...... Sett(.1-19) lt) Oll!lt Hiii\ ..... ,..., ..... _ .. "_ ....... ...,. lM ...... ._,,_ c.1 1011 111> H«n•t(I' H , - i.•O.OY f>-4, ot1 t'OUlM' bf 091..,11, ,ltvens t>I IClil 1 .. , 'Won .. ), •·2, "' urun\noon 1!.1 k>$1~-.. ,, "'con D'r -•utt. SANTA MONI CA Santa MonJca College 1s JUSt one i.lep away from an unbeat n reiular season and u return engageaaenl an the vocado Bowl aiaillJil f<'ullerton C.oUete ut W11 'I very btt 5t.ep. • have held nine opponcntli to JUSt ~5 p01ntJ>. "Our defense has bten s uperb tf\ia ason, .. ttepl on.a> for 1.11 yard• thl~ a JOn. A ltntte.m ll"tonr ren~ ptck • ~ar a10. toe pu1ed for 1,102 yatds last seaaon says Young. The enUre defense 1s playlns aroat." And Santa MoniH ~acb liet Younc is the lirsl to admll that Saturctar. 11l1tit 's Southern California Conference ahowe!own t\ere against Golden West Collece will be a lOusffi one. The Corsairs have a bundle of alan on de. fense'-topped. by a pair of cornerb4)o~.....JuUus 01rect ... \t"'9\t~ l•~•s.itDl990Ft-tfOM/lltMOnk•~r_.,,w1ott011C. ..... r1 ..... .,,_o tcfl eo c:.~i.IO IWIJ bl«U lo ,.IU>, Go r~ • ~ • .,_. •1-Ml'<A 14 llltf '°4 ..... Hamilton and Larry MeConcllchie. both ol whOm earned all-«>of erenee honors a yur ago. Santa Monica also haa two good run1un1 bacb m fr hman Miko Porchia (8--0, 185) and sophomore BOb Spalllno <S.10, 8()),. ore bl a Is the third leading ru11ber to the conftrenco with $()7 yards wblle Spallinobu~l. - And if that Ian' enouib.tbe COrUli9 b&ve hlO ~ eood receiven In llUey Guy (40 catch • 47t y rda, 4 TDI> aDd Geof 10 Farmer t?5 catchei. yardlt 1 TD>. ••Golden Writ is the best team we·~e pll)'ed so far," say Youni, a atar quarterback for Santa Monica in 1958-59. "Gelden Weal's clfeoae is very good. They set off well and tbey can 1et you on the run or the pass. We can't afford to give them those seven and eight-yard gains series after series. We have to f~ce them Into bad plays." And Santa Monka 's defense has been foretng teams into bad plays all season Jong. The Corsairs And ends Mario Culton (8-2, 190) and Mlke Jackson UH, 225), along with tackles Ike Williams <6·2, 225) and John McEwen ($-10. 210) bavo been the keys tostopplng the runruni came. Otfenslv.Jy, the Corsairs have \be No. l paner In the conference in 6-0, 111,)-pound sophomore Keith Lee. He's cpmpleted 95 of 157 puaes (three in- Santa Moolc h .. won lT rel\lllr'aeason 1•m• • in a row and ono of tho&e wu a 3-0 victory ov r Golder\ We.ta yetr qo. The Conain finished will\ a 9-2 mark Jutae~on.falUng to Fullert4D..30·.10,Mil tho.Avocado.Bowl. ' , Los Alamitos Race · Entries ~''"''" f. TllllnMy beo !>u~ ll.ew1t1 Rustlers, OCCNab ::~ Polo Wins Mt. S4C Has Deceiving 54 Foot"IJall Record .. CIU•, tr.U lfll, f ll"JI ""' H- f t H n JIAC£ -Al>oul •' 11l1<long• • Y•··" OIO <lllOIN4'f\<t. J.ur .. ~. "" o.ttoc.w. U1t<.Nt .. 1C>non oel bUJ(llp llr•"Wf'MI O•nC•\\o"Me ....... V H•rll M•glcl•llon 1C.0ot•1 ::~ Tony Wooten and J eff WALNUT--Oraoce Coast College '" Bowen scored five goaJ.i wmds upthe!ootbatlseasonSaturday vlfl l<orse l .. OQU<:tl M•» Jvnny Lynn •h•tll L•hh·•·lll-•V JLuo1 .. i V.•IG f'•n<V h.a•"I 6.'tHlct· "cw• ll¥111nn t MtOOle !,o:& R""~'"' 1'011< y Ou"tt' \C...ll 1 12~ 111 U .'/E"lH "ACE 7 111rlon9> . nlgbt against Mt. San .AntonJo at OCC apiece as Gol~en .West hoping to avoid its first loalng season College stayed 10_a tie tor in 11 years. 11• C.l••mlflll. ~or ...... CMoru. .; .. ' Vt•• 111 010.. .,u, .. $000. t.111n11n9 pnce I II ) 10,000 'Nil(), f, l r s l Pl a c e 1 ~ t b e But that might be easier said than 11• Southern California COJl· done 114 l\l>y> In~ lk0U9"1 114 Jonnny •Man 11ttlf'r•1 Ov••a11e J.rtmenl l~hnottl •·••llOll 1ktmtrw11 ~!. CDND llAC~ -J)(I Y4•0> J .. • ytdt OIO>. All°"'•nc:e. l'ur>t: ~ H• 'C.rtcktn lbenksl :. •• luun~ 1<.Maoa1 11.1 tty '!>un>hl,,. \l\l•nerl l'o0<tl1< 1Jr~o1m lWtrGI 1 ly tit "'•Qhl BM INC19U"t1 k•••• l,,. 1<001 .......,,,., VO M1>> IJ1tt110.ton•Doll II\/ f.o'• boOOoo IU•llllOI 111 kuler8"11r•rv1 • 11 kalt Line P•••.,, •Luc~••i 11) f'IM IA--.r lN~ll "" bllQhl ...... lltO IS\oMllf'9•1 II~ THtllD filAC~ f>luroono • Y••• ,.., ference waler polo · . • ::~ standings with a 24·3 Coach. Mal Eaton s Mt. SAC club 111 thumping over visiting comes nit.o the South Cout Con-;;~ LA Harbor Tues.day. rerence finale with an 5-4 record-but 11• that ls very mialeadlng. 11• Wooten now has 73 The Mounties have dropped heart- "' goals for the ~us,lers , breakers to Pasadena (Z1·24), San ~1c;HTH11.aca~ ...... ,ono •. J .. •• wh19 are lO·l in con-Diego Mesa <27·24) and Fullerton 010 t. up. t.1•1n,1119 rOr ll'Wlloen JerenCe play, 8~d }~·~ (26-21) after leading all lhtee late in :~·:;,~zci~,"'1. f'V•59 ~)()0 ~1'"1"'· overall. GW~ 1s bed with the final quarter. The other setback ;;~ ~~.:~~~~=:~~o.11 ') Ventura for f1rs~place. wns lo co-Western State Confer~nce 010 n101etw•. C.101m1nQ flur"4' )O~ U•lm•t111 ""'~ ~o.ow 11.000 '"""' ulJ "'mo •"09'IW U¥t•ton"• lor11 tLuc.kn:J "' Leory > ,_... •l>UMll"<J•• ::! Ten players JOined '" leader Glendale (17·7>, a game that i , ,.-... ,,.,,..""•' i ,. the sconng onslaught as Eaton calls his team's worst of the 11w .... ,...., 1r..11~01 1111 h e a d coach T ')\lm40ruli.ttl •NOQ\N'JI M•» f'.,qwrettt 1-M•I Mt. CJ J lhl'OQMll Al• boy 1 r w1nn I II) vuUyC111oylPeu1tno 110 ,.. Om Season. 11) ,. .• ,.1 .. ,.1411.avm 11) Hermstad juggled the Mt. SAC has definitely been the sur-hOU., M#lty b.H'~-I (11Alldntly 'J<an lrt-/1 Lon9 Llnco1n 1<...m11H\I .,•PP•'> In~ •M.. t i 11> v•11 .. ~n .. 1o1<:.e>111101 11• lineup throughout the , •• f-ittt ~., .. ,,..,..,.., , prise of the conferenee. ... C.01ortul lour IHOW<Jro .~, co"test. "A lot of people picked us to finish In a South Coast Con-very low In the Soutb Coast Con· fer e nce clash, host ference, butourklds.baveJ>\IYed..Y.ery Orange Coast College well. We've-been in every ~l game. :~~ also won handily, sinking Our kids come to play," aays Eaton. FOullTH RAC.to o turlO<\O\ > yMr ola• • YC>o C.l•1n11no. f-ur .. )SiOll ..... , H kAC~ -• turl01>9• a., .... 0<0> 6o \IC), ~"""O ~UIMI ~. Ll••m•noM1ce~. t.•••m•no Pf'IC.~. 111 Qu•~•r -long ,...., .. , Ml•\ SIKUIO 1CM1tllol ~l~ny 0--l/llllt<~I ... , ... c;_, ,~ IMen•I Heo's l\l91>110-1tm1»1 Lomet 'H~ 11.uo1e1 M.ouro '"'011ueZ) 11, btao O.y 11<.in-·1'911 114 My k•a 1<.n111111 1M11rc.te101 •• 11• ho Ii.• Oll~JI 1111 Mt. San Antonio College, And despite the loss to Fullerton ::: 16·7. k th M SAC b .a~ 't 'V'.tc,. Retttver •~ooo >rwnruo '(.up 'Alt•rayu·• "'n9 LounlH\ ll>ell•r., trOfl vl•n<~ C.tUll ,,. Goalie Larry Sistler last wee • e t . coac ~n 1 •• ~ had 16 saves for lhe think the Mounties will suffer a let· v down against the Ptrates. 1,4 )PVY•fl• 11Wnin1 II• """''VII 18r0Qtnl 110 voto.n ~""' 11 .. 11 •.. Pirates whlle Eric Elder . ·our kids have a lot.of pride and we '• paved the way offensive· have. a lot ot cort!Jdence in tMm. lENU• ""''f.. '~vw ly with five goals. Four They'll be ready to play Oranoe ~10 • '''" .,..,.. >'l<MI of those came in the first a 1 •> ~ .. ~.., 1:.1tt111no» l!Ht I nuna"r kut11n..,obov1 '"" ""'n1qt\lM•ti.~r t~ Ju~•"'"' '"'oqu.o11 11< Coast.·' Ill Ahnorl •Ret>lWltl ;U hulf. But Ea!on also says the Dtrates will llu 1..1•,0rd(Of lHin<~I ,...,.,000 I , ~W~t'Mn ,.., Fl" l H NA'tl: • b • 1 lurlOftll• ~tlflt.'\ I )tar otot.. C1•1m11tQ .,_urw. ~-Prou~.000111.coo lo•11ty loauult<J 1R.....,1re11 t.nr0<.h;t ._..,,_.,,,. ~ o•noi1 \ <,,1rt bM\•5 J.oon• ..-ttlltt. 1»Uf:tti1 11.dll•• b C..irw!otl>I I,, >UrO•M ~ UloY •Mtrn•I ... Mt ,AL ;, 7 ~ ,. 1 be a t.ough obstacle. 11 .,,u .. no1~'"""\olv •tt•o0un 11 O••notLo • .,1 > ' ' >· 1• •·1 putCoastinlhesamecategory llS '"' "'"<H>•-sw &.uf '"' vC.L "Coring t:.l<Mo• >,~•In;,• l D-' l l th bl•n<• b6t>y IM«C600 t•••na Jvwtl \NOQ1otelJ 'IV l'rocrwra, Mc.l..o .. en, .. 1111n•r. :.oro.. Fu lerton. .a ens ve y. ey are 11v 1:.u111;,.1111c•c1:. ,~ .. ,,010... .. .. o.l.•11>1>CIC'uJ every bit.as good as Fullerton. Andof- Sill TH flACI:. e1u YMO> J ytut U9 ,. ••• " •• nll~ ....... ,,..,1"9 OU•'-\ sc.r.a,c...nm r . I 0 c t • i ..... o ._,.,,., 1nop•o<.• ..,""" l.Ah••t>a• 11 1 ,, 1-3 ens1ve y range o 1 s pass ng <>loJ t. up. c.1o11mm9 hir>41 S>OOIJ (.l .. m1"9Pf1U~)(JO(I "'u ••d""'" •v.""" , • vo1oenwo1 ) 1 ) / ,. game is equal to Fu N'•OO•~ \ belb "'OQUl'll 11 CA.(,. kO<tng· _I., S, *""•n), "0 ng Co t an .,.oo ,.... h0<k.t1 1M11uw II• C.oley s l 1Qer<C.r•uo<• 1 11uiuec;,,1 1Mr••1 llU ""'Ohl ct /••dbl• 1l,.•9<JrJ I I A•1l.O ~. lvl1tcr .... ll 3, c..onway ~. »v•r 2. ra . e 81 , , • """'"'' M'"'"•11A11 ... o~·~ ,. .. , •• °""'«1. J.11ey,v.••1t•'-many aimnar thlngs. 111 1'•' .. O• !!llC .. hnQ)I ' II• ....... vsne~ 1b...,k•I I•~ LU<JPtnQ ll>M\t.•I Ill Llteot &J()IW9a& lh..trb Mr. v.111<> .. »•1111> 1Rouon1 ' . CIF Grid Sites f"IDAY l(IOHT • .... 1 ... f-OtHMW V~ ~°""l•n V•ll•'f •l V<. l. ~rvll•., Lo'rOI••" :.O.nttMll ••la• M•ter &At V1o k.Ot6nCUI •1 \,r.1\P Of k..Ot•no• 1:JO Lr .. p1 et lo> AllO> e l:01.on•ISt.f' ... 1e '.>GUiii l11llS•I t./Ullley ~ ~ l'toln<IS<ll~port• t ,..,,,_-•I ... >I l..OV1Me ~a.,, .. _. Lil ~Ofv •• Mfl\e MonlU •I l><tl'l4 Mont<• t.1ly l..Ollaot 7. JO ~n 11nercout l11C>Ui,eno C.11t1 I Lb MllllkMI lflMUlt•t P-... C.• l~c.olM9t1. .... .. , 10!'•tne.e ""Senl• be•ber• •• !>anl~ b.-1 C.OIY <.oilttte • Ulk.••GOll•l (..llln.lt!rlllo. OQI ~\Ill bf OHi Nete>I• f VOS<tnt.t 'l .. flYv• Rolll11911111• "' "'o· 1orura11.,..1:>0 Roy at •I (.A>mjllon t ~'*'""--· L• Oli•nt••S !Nnl.t AM lr•llC:y ., ')A bOwf8• ()'prou ~ ~Y H•ll~ •I 1-utlert"n 11111"1:.IO LAI At.,,,1t01otl WlOll e 1,.0.,tll v• .. "''' ••I bolY (.r....,. 1::.M ~ A rlfngton "' 'lttto> ... , .. •I lol _.,. ..... ,.JO ~v.,_ ..sl,oMlll tA .. •ltflt .,.,~ 1 •ov v• ~ll1go •l wraen C-ro ... h1~J;l0 l!.Jlln<•• •• Rt•oo•oe t'oly •t l.tl. kiY•rlMI• /:30 c-trel c..•-· Altrn1nv v' N•ll al LA Ml••G• S1410lum 1 JO ljf .. VI Mita~• 11 II--11lllfl 11;o Ari.st av' SI. Go'ltlVHrVt •I (.al1o9t or 1ne t:Jlft'f'O"J 1!>.tllll'a.tr nlQM •I 7:301 • 1:.-r•nc• ill Serl U.n*l\e 7 :JO AYllllon ., -...111 •I l ltUIMor • U"8rn C:.ltret10 b11r1>enl!. .;t !>o\lln l'•wa.,,. I 1'I b411f\10W "' ~UH •t Mof\1ei)tllO t11Qh/ ..... ~•f1to1nl• •C LynwOOd I .N """ M~rtroo•t IWrtOUOflO I Ill M••• k•PP*lel len.p111t.11y1 .I</ '-.ittHt10\ ~ LA Strna .. , c..•• HtQh I .itl .,.100.tr ~ t1ocver til VICncutlt' h1Qt1 l<OMl"•HO•l iol kM!<llO I <fJ Selll-•tenl CMtteronc:• '-"1on•11Mm1en "'orln•1-•t <.o.Ktiellif \l•ller c.1atemon1 "' L• ~.,, • .,, '"~""'°' l..t.1 lO (An(rll ¥S ll'r8111U( at l,.O"IM (/ .. I. Sttta111m 7:JO lrr•.,lltV YS ~•I Mt. :wn An- IOfltO C.011t99 7 )0 workm"" ·~ Cil-lont •I Ultus CoHogo1.30 (.l'llllOV\ke<Nl•IHtmetJl'l 7:30 Hov•t OM •1 iel-•n P.n 7 :30 ..ort ......... CM!fw-• Morn1nos1 .. e1 LCHTIPX a ~I. Anl'*'"f •• 0..-t 1)1-s •I Hutrlen10 Httft 7 JO 1tora11011 •I owru "111 1 :10 !>an LU°' (ltM'1'9 n b4t""rly 111111 •I 1..ulwer l.llY n19'1I Herl •I klo,_.. torr dn<t .c lll"'°C! MOnl90fl'lery :..trr ••I s.t!C. ""'°''" LUIYtf CllUI Mlt'-'t'•lleVI De~---·"'~· Nl~leUI fllt"'°"'J JO "dlley Olr•llltrt-t!>.ttllaYne17;JO t-trn \lttlley "' Onl••IO Olrl•llan al <.llatfuy 1,.0llege7:30 b1Shop$.lieglo.C f'a50 f'<Obl~?:JO "'"" "'"-•"' ... floe\re Otlm. •I Rtrnon• "lllfl7:JO t;IQIO ~l'I • 9ofOll 7 llO t119 a..J al lt'nl*IM l":JO =-e" J•~•nw•Otnn•no 1:30 Hlg!ll:aG I u wnG•le ~ MAIY ~ .. al Dtn14!l> f It«!, Sen'-"• 1 .. Uplilreno llelleV •t MIWIOn \llflO 1.IO '41ron• ewt """' .. , U Ool'41do .i ..... ~·· Hlllfl1 :.» WIN PRIZES WORTH MORETftAN $3,000 IN tbe same kind• of problems.·· says Eaton.. But OCC figures to have some problems also agalnst a Mt. SAC team thatis averaging 20.2 points per game. The Mounties are led b " quartcrb.-ck Butch Stockin• and rwi. ning backs Stan Webster and Mute Hamilklh. • · Stocking has completed 43 of llf passes for 536 yards and si~ touchdowns 'and has also run fJ>r another 163, Webster ls the JO\D''h leading rusher tn the conference with 623 yards while Hamilton has 334. ., UCI in Playoffs? LONG BEACH-UC Irvine's wat~r polo team is rucpected to have f~w problems winnini the Pacific ~t Athletic Association tournamenf 'trf. day a net SatuJ'day a~ BellnOb.t Pl-*k Pool.here. Coach F.d Ncwland's QCI Anteaters open the-toumey at 10 a.m. Frida:v against San Jose State, a team i} whipp~ recenUy by a 18-0 score. • , A win would put UC[ into a 6J.§V game Friday night against the Pacific:·'CJC Santa Barbar.._ victor .Apel another triumph would place the A~­ ealers m the championship game. • 1 ,. ... C>.t.~11~ s 1•1rs•11-1 lu• n1,• 1.JC.trviMn.k11JOS0~1•1e. o1:1> J.O<•ll'•"vt.~•111.,.btrt I•:» ~a•nt•$.,.r-i.i.1t .~· Ul:.C•t"l.bl•S.SMIC.levo::.t•la "' ,. . Jl'1 I 1 • v<.l·~-io!e~!"::'lu111owr :t > 12 ~epptt ~<HOO IOMtr ·~· &.•1..i..:..n (I~ ~l•lv IOset. •·""' t..t.l·~-.. !l\nervs.PO<tftC•\lt.~ ... 11\ftb f 1:•> ~ ...... -,.,-.... _, •S. ~b-Wn "• ~l•le""tn(l<tr. • • Pfirtg 'l'tnfeS Fairah Fawcett-Majors and Shirley MacLaine get together at a party in a New Yortc discotheque following the premiere or Miss MacLaine 's new movie, .. The Turning Pomt.·· Movie Thriller - Slated for Del~n LOS ANGEL~ <AP> -Alaia Deh9 will star in the psychological thriller "The Children Are Watching" •.. Augusta Malaoney, daughter of actor Jock Mabooey and sister or actress Sally Field, . makes her film debut in two movies, "The End" anti "Coma." lroadway actor KeiUli Mc0en9olt has been sign4'd to star ln ~ screen YerskJn of .lames Xirk;reod•uiove) "Good Times, Bad 'nmes" ..• ~ Caner, mother of tbe president., will make a .. surprise .. appearanee on •1'be Lucille Ball'Special ··on CBS on Monday. !Cov.21 ... !~eld plays a mother charged wil.bslay· ing twochlldnn tncss· .. AQaestioa of G,.u1!" •• . Die ~ will play hJmsetr in the Canad lab film ''Po rPlay.•• Ala A..rldn'• son, Toar -"'dll. makes his .c:UDC debut as the vol~ of Bubbet' in NBC's animauid versl~n of Arkin's book, "The Lemmlng Condi· taon" •.. Blargea MeredJUI joins st.an GGWJe Ha .. and Chny Olase in Paramount's "Foul Play ... : .Rene A uberjonots hu been signed for "Eyes,", now in production starring Faye ~WaJ' and Tomm7 Lee .Jones. . . THELMA. lllft'AVl&WED 88f'OtS Mt' show at the Saara·TalfM tdel~ IMifit, "1*lt Ute •ummet' tou:rillC tM u..t.14 .... A ew albun\. ·~ De9\l M•:• Ml jtlllt.,... Nkalll. and 1be'•P1...-•ottUtand&DOtbttnctec*-1bum. She says the scidde11,ucce5a "Ceels 1reat. I find that with each aucceas eocnes more responalbUily, bUU don't nd that. I'• •rowinc widt •• Tbelm1,.aays taer record eocn,.n,, Motown. groomed her tor the Bes.sle Smith role by ae~4inJ her to an actine teacher. Sb~ 6iillDd ••t c b4leh • Y~Set FOP 'Opium' LOS ANGELES CAP> -Tf;rence Young will direct exterior scenes for ••opium." an interna- tiooal adventure story, in Hong Knog, Macao and "Bangkok before comlWg to HoUywood for the ip\eri.ors. "OAMNA"TtON AU.EY• The original ltory ia by RudQlph Johnson Jr., who wrote t.he scr eenplay with Rine Lardner Jr. : "3 DAYS OF THE CONDOR" (R) · · "LOOKING FOR MR. GOOOSAR" (R) "SMOKEY ANO THE BANDIT" 0 THE STING" (PG) "BOSSY DEERFIELD" (PG) .. AL1CE DOESN'T LJVE HERE ANY ~OR~ .. NETWORK" (R) "THE.OTHER SIDE OF MIDNIGHT" .. .... 1 1 DEAR PAT: Several yeara ago all-cotton tb•mal blanket& were iD all tbe &tores. Now they seem to be nonexts~ AH they .no longer beiJ1( mtnafad.ared. or ban ljuat missed them? D.S .• Laeuna Beach ~ AY8 CllU!a'l lente • aU-cottoe Uter•aJ ~aall ... lll9t u ..... weawe. cot&od/JM)yes&er ~aaket cu M ~ *-cl Sean Hlalec de- )>.nmem. Major departmea& .-Ores ·~ eate ... ~art-...a are eseeu.t pt1ea to f1Dd aHSUal w ~rev...,,_ '°JMllar mere~...-. that ls no 1aG1er raffled'r ..... Mltermau-..es. o•1* Bet ......... POJties . ~ DEAR PAT: This may sound strange, but I baolutely Jove QiM of tbe earousel horses at Dis· eyJand. Row often do they change wom-<>ut Ol'Sea? WoWd lt be possible for me to buy this articular horse when it Is replaced, and bow much would it cost? M .B... Huntington Beach A Dlmeylnd .-esmH laas bad aews for you. Jt1 earemel llenes are aever replaced. Tate1 are re· '-alnted and f~raJJy sprwed ap wben Mee9SUJ. Also. DlsaeJfud cloet not &di any ol &be park'• W'O- 'perty CO t6e pabtlt. A YS fUes conta'8 aewenl iollrces wMre lndfvWuals cu buy ca1·oesel w.e.. bm prices range from SSOt to $1,0GI, clepeedlni on elae. Write ap.la for details. .._,._,_ St•• .. •ftk Enlore~d. DEAR PAT: I'm aftare that imported cars ~ust llleet California emlsslan control standards, l>ut what proviUcn ls m8de when a persoo who bas been uvm. abroad want.I to bring a car he's )JW'cbased and driven tn Earope into c.llfornia! r111 tbinldnc of older models tbat might not be able 'to be nOtted t.o conform to California standards. l'm al.to curious lf cider can brought to California from other' states also must conform to our tough .em isslon standards. N. F .• Corotra del Mar All 1915 and newer cars brw&btlntoCallfomla- wlletber from abroad or frem altOUter 1&ate-m1tSt meet ,.._ .uee•1 emluton control standards. A t•1me1 eerttfleate" showlag lnapecllon ••d tertlflcaUon by an aa&•orl1ed faclUty must atcom · pu7 •111 Ont applJcaUOG for vehJcle re1U&ra**a la tlU ttace. says &.be Depart•eet ol M-. Vdllclea. Jleqatred emlufoa coat.col eqalpment d-. n17 de- t>tndblg • the ur mecfd and Its year el •aafae· -e~ however. SpecUk laformaUon can h oMaa.d h~ ~ &i.e Bvreau ol Automiltlve -..U at ..... 8. .. - LOS ANGELES <AP> -Gregory Peck and Laurence Olivier star in "'l'be Boya i"rom Brazil," which Franklin J . Schaffner is now directing in Lisbon. Lili Palm•r, Uta Hagen, Qosemary ·.Harris. and AM Meara have QJao befn~ for maJoio role• la tbe tbrmer about a former Nazi doctor who tries to "plant•• nearly a hun· dred young HUien around Uie world. Sonny'· Cher t'eam for Toor A PBANU.Y TID8 waJTD bU fttm Views on 1he subject. And he turther feels that Mehta himself amply pwered t.bequt1U. s.b.ltday lil&ht. The popular LAPO m1estr0 \lied the pOdhirn to 1upply tile am~ to tM ques. tloa via a bteathhJtlng pe'rformance of Gustav Mlihler'1 SymPtioQy No, 1 that aoea 1.Dto um writ.tr'• dl..,, as • the bat renditioa OC tbe work he baa ever heard. lt b8d nerytbin• end 11 we needed a Utile extra to eoo'rillce us tbat Mehta and .. Mahler belon1 together Hke tea and ,_. .. ,a erumpits we 1ot lo It ln that glorious f\nal movement; .. aturmlsth ~. •• STOIUllL Y .\GIT.WED Indeed and Mehta worked like a slave on his podium i.llV. the klnd of messace that QQly Mahler cou)d-jl,.,. •: ibat there is no peace Without p .. IGD and ~ \'fa.ion of heaven muat be pald 1.-w1Ua a lllmpse OCbdl. We coald have no ire.-authoritj tbta the troubled M$hler for tbat pbUotopbJ ~ the m~asure of the man'• greatneu 1'> &bat•• ably ... transmitted his JoYt aJld des~ blt.ot!teaeore tbal Mehta dlcbt't need Saturday nigtit, , Jt was a superhuman effort 111 N.ebtraod ili ..... orchestra and they thoroutbly deleTved the ltaJld, ing ovation they Immediately g~ GreatScoU. we would be standing there still and elapPint today it we were to give Ule LAPO thetribOteft"deierved for this splendid performance. · N011DNG WRONG WJTtl the~ CGOCerio that preceded the Mahler; its ctfatalline beauty 'Eternity' Slated. • For Vi~o Sems ~ · LOS ANGELES <AP> -.. FromJleretoEtemi. ty, •·previously made lnto an award·wtnniq movie, win be made into a miniseries for NBC . Only about a thjrd of the book by James Jones was uud in the film. however. said pt'Oducers Harve Bennett and Harris KatJeman. It was one of the most popular novels to come out of World War ' II. Tbe tncwte version won the 0$~ar as best pie· ture of l9$J and earned aupportlnt awards for Frank Sinatra and Donna Reed. DAltV PILOT EVEHeNG 8:001~9 NEWS "No Lea A Man" 8 TH AVEHOERS ''The Jotter" MICKEY MOU8ECl.UB SUPERMAN SESAME STREET G VILLA ALEGRE 5-.30fD BEWITCHED ''Toys In Babeland" CD AOAM-12 "Keeping Tabs" '9 HODGEPODGE LOOOE "Dog Training" e:OO a C8S NEWS DD NEWS 8 EMERGENCY ONEI In between emergency calls, Gage drives the fire atatlon up the wall with his attempts to learn various muslcal Instru- ments. 0 MOVIE * * "Preda tors Of The Sea"Oocumentary Narrated by 8111 Burrud. (2 hrs.) CD THE BRADY BUNCH "How To Succeed In Bualneaa" Cl) THE ROOKIES A dope addict Is out to steal $2,000,000 worth of cocaine fm ZOOM a,!) FOODS FOR THE MODERN FAMILY "Fast Cooking" ®)ABC NEWS 8:308 MOVIE • * * V1 "The Sona Of Katie Elder" (Part 1) (1~5) John Wayne. Dean Martin. Four brothers delve into1the deaths of their parents ano the loss or thelr r1nch. (1 hr., 30 min j CD MY THREE SONS "Hong Kong Story" Eli) OVER EASY Richard Brool<e, a history ol aging In America; auto Insur- ance; dealing with retirement 0:!) FAMILY PORTRAIT "Sexual Compatlblllty" (I) CBS NEWS 9 MERV GRIFFIN Guests: Sammy Davi., Foster Brooks. Marty Brill, Susan Anton, Barclay Shaw. 7:00 D NBC NEWS 8 LIARSCLUB 0 ABC NEWS 4D ILOVELUCY "Be A Pal" (I) AOAM-12. A "disturbing the peace" com- plaint culminates In tragedy fll) MACNEJL / LEHRER REPORT 0:!) YOGA WITH MADELINE (I) TO TELL THE TRUTH 7:30 0 SHA NA NA Guests: The Lennon Sisters 8 NEWLYWED GAME 0 MATCH GAME P.t.\ 4D THE BRADY BUNCH Greg gets a Job at his fathet's llrm so he can llnance a car of h1sown II) LET'S MAKE A DEAL fll) 28 TONIGHT • "Serrano: Do Dolla1s Make Scholars?" ExamlnaUon of the California Supreme Court rul- ing that financing 8Chools through local propel'ty tax Is unconsltutlonal. ON NBC Tonight • Risking Career Baret\a < Robett Blake > puts his eareer on the line when he hides a rctafded youth sought fo r the murder Qf his mother on "Buretta," tonight at 10 on ABC, Channel 7. ~STARBOARD "Phantom Herd" (I) $128,000 QUESTION ~FAMILY FEUD 8:00 8 (I) GOOD TIMES Bookman recelvet more than a cold shoulder from Wlllona and the Evans family after tricking them into saving Ms 1ob Cl HALLMARK HAU OF FAME "The Last Hurrah" Mayor Skeffington (Carroll O'Connor), ag1013 and aHlng head of a big- ti me polltlcal machln&, schemes to win a fourth term. But. almost lmmedtately. details of his private life beCome public and threaten to undermine the campaign 8 MOVIE * * "Birth Of A Legend" (1973) Documentary. An orphaned coyote pup has some unus1Aal adventures as he tra- vels among mri and animals (i hrs.) 0 9 EIGHT IS ENOUGH "I Quit" Tom Bradford abdi- cates aa head of the household When his children accuse him of being a dictator. William Bogert, Wiiiiam Oozier guest star. Q JOKER'S WILD Q) CAROL BURNETT ANO Ratings Guide 1Mo.-lft .,. r.oted M <O<dl"O I• ll01I ofh<i att~• .Mov't,. tor TV ,.,,. 1""9'0 by • <tltl< l • • * • -Excellenl • • • -Very Good • • -Good • •. -Fair • -Poor FRIENDS Guesta: Anthony Newley, Dick Martin II) MOVIE • * * "The Pink Panther" ( 1984) David Niven, Pe1er Sellers. A tewel thief attempts to take possession of a price- less gem. with the help of the Fr.nch police Inspector's wife (2 tlra.) ~ ~ MAGIC OF OIL PAINTING "FIOf'aJ" 8:30 8 Cf) BUSTING LOOSE The first time Vinnie meets the hoatlle Helene (Annie Potts), they strike aparka • she punches him and he tosses her 1n the closet. 0 CONCENTRATION 4D CROSS-WITS ~OVER EASY A history ol aging In Amerl~; auto Insurance; deaHng with retirement. (R) 9:001J CBS MOVIE "From Noon Tiii Three" (Prem· lere) Charles Bronson, Jiii Ireland. A drifter, recruited Into a rag-tag robber band. spends an amorous afternoon with a widow who has him lmmortal- tzed when she tl'llnks he hat been gunned down. 0 9J CHARLIE'S ANGELS "The Baby Sellers" In order to crack a blgtlme black ma1ket baby ring. Kelly poses as an expectant unwed mother. Krlt u a profMtk>nal eource of babies and Sabrina and Bo~ as a rich, arrogant coople In March qr a • ptrlect chll<J. Edward Winter. Scott Colomby guest atar. 0 IRONSIDE "The Caller" 4D MERV GRIFFIN Guests· Sammy Davis, Foster Listless 'Hurrah' :TV 'Movie Remake By JA'V SUARBUTr LOS ANGELES (AP> -~ 1956, Edwin O'Connor wrote a fine novel, "The Laal Hurrah.·· ·Bllsed on Bost.on p0Utfcs. it con- cen:ied the final campaign of a droll oJd Irish rogue or a m ayor. .fi'rQn~ Skeffington ~onight . 4 made-Cor-N6C ver sion of il starts the 27th sea son or "Hallmark Hall of f'ame " at 8 on Channel 4. Carroll O~Connor. no relation to the nov enat.. stars as the mayor . He also wrote the script. SlJtCe he's o ( lrasl'\ heritage, Bl· tended college in Dublin and act· ed three y"ars al the Dublln Gate Theater, be seemc!d a happy choice to write the show aud act tle part of the good mayor. , ALAS, O'CONNOR seems to have bten writillg with tbe gov- ernor on. Hi• scrJpt has llUJe Of &be Jnsh sense. ot rurt, Jlttle or what tbe lrish call "cood cra('Jc, .. or lively banter • ( 1VREVIEW J noble birth. She drifts in and out of scenes, scolding or l!upportin« him • And there's the problem of the mayor's son. In the book, he W8$ a handsome, amiable dolt of a lawyer. a bachelor playboy about whom t.he mayor once sighed "l 've sil'cd a fcatherhcad .. ' . &rook•. Marty Britt, Su-.n Anton, 8-tctay Sh•w. Aellftlc Wlppet, Oaflcin' Mechlnt, ~­ .,Ray. • GAEA PEJ¥OrtMANCE9 "The Ato•t• PromJt•' ObMltld by 11nr~ult9d to,.., • 1rar;.uo.ed ectot (MttiOrlY Hopt Da) becomef btnt on tffff. Iott - Nr1N.CfTYUMlT8 "Townes Van z.anctt And Ctlrtcm Chtni.t" Van Zandt ~ humorOYJ and mcwtng eonge with ~u&I east. C&Jun a«# .. 41ontst ~-,. joln.d by hi• Fled Hot l.OWlfMA Banet Cl)MOVI! • * * "The Sugar land ' .., Expreta" (1974) Goldle Hewn, , Ben ohNOn. A young ccx.tple are pureued through Tft.8• by• hlgl'Hanklng polloeman. (2 h.1'9,) 10:00 G BIO HAWAII "Vou C.,'t L0te 'Em All" The devlow lfdekldc (Dtvld Wayne) of an allJng rodeo tt•r (Richard JffCl<el) ~ldee Mitch to enter Into eompetlllon against the champ -then ~ti heavil)' against Mitch hoping to make a tut fortune. ea NEWS 89 BARETTA "Buddy" COnvlnced the boy la lnncx:ent, Sarette Jeopatdliet hi• career by ttldlng • ,..tarded 1t year old whO IS being sought by the police fO< the >faying of 1111 mother. ~r Kern, J . Pet O'Mallty, El* Geer goect star. CD OET8MART Max mu1t PoM u another men In a coronation ceremony. '1i) TO BE A MAt' A loolc at the 1dvant11ge1 .and dlsedvantao-t for ~ In our society as a result of the women's movement 10:30 4D C NEWS fZl) THESPARK An examination or two com- munities of H•lldlc Jews In New York. 11:00GODCll9 NEWS U HOlL YWOOO CONNECTION • (iJ MOVIE * * "Predator• Of The Sea"Oocumentary Narrated by 8111 Burrud. (2 hrs.) CD THE 000 COUPLE "Big Mouth" CD HONEYMOONERS Involved In an accident on hla way to a driver safety award ceremony. Ralph lea(nl that the don0< of the award Is the other party In the accident 83 OfCK CAVETT Guest: William F. Buckley, host of "Firing Line." eI!) MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT 11:308 HAWAII FlVE-0 "I'm A Femlly Crook'' A hUI• bend and wife contldenoe team (Andy Grlfmh. Joyce Van Patten) almost aet off a war between two crime factions when they con a tioodfum. Cl TOHtGHT Hott: Johnny Caraon. Guests: Tony Randall, Biiiy Cryatel, Jack Douglas. • 8 LOVE, AMERICAN 81YL! "Love And The Ouel I Love And The Note" \ ao 8TAMl<Yt.HU1'Cli ''Siience" et•lkY ~ Hutdl dllCO* th•t a prlMt (CWt Betz) In charge of a heltway houM f x.:~1 11, In 1.41Y. I OOp-«11-v MftcrKk.,, (R) aNEW8 e GET8MAM' flmt #Id tt tWe9t e G1JJU. ~ 9 CAPTIONED A&C N6W8 (I} MOVI& "*'* * "Marrlaga On Tite .. Aocka" (19$~) ,rank Slnetra. Oteirt Mtrtln. A '#Oman, tebe'- llng •lnet the monotony Of hat marrltge, pereuad•• her huabaod to take a trip to Meltl- co where they qual'fJI and ~ quickie divorce. (2 hr•.) ~NINO ' 12:00 9 TWILIGHT ZONE "Perchance To Dream" CD FOREVER FERNWOOO CD MOVIE *** "Tonight We Sing" ( f963) Ezlo Plnza. Anne Bancroft. Biography of S04 Hvrot<, a ~an WhO t>ecame aucceeatul In Ameffean opera manegement. (1 hr .. 30 min.) 12:30 e MOVIE *** "Circle Of Deception" • (1Qe1) Bradford Dittman, Suzy Parker. A captured British agent revHll Information under torture. but the Informa- tion la falae. (1 hr .. 55 min.) e MOVIE * *'~ "Once Upon A Time" ( 1"'"> Caty Grant, Janet Blair. A prod~. a boy, and hla dancing oaterpl11ar go Into t>u• n ... together. (2 hrt.) MORNING t-.308 MOVIE *** "The Second Gr-.Mt S.x" (195t) Jean,,. Cr91n, George Nader. Women bani. cad• themselvea In an old tort ~ their husband• are con- stantly away tryjog to ~ttle a count)' dlapute. (1hr.,30 min.) 12:37 8 OJ ,ABC MYSTERY MOVIE **'h "'Good Salery. Pro. pect1, Free 6offln" (1975) Kim Darby, James Maxwell •. A young woman's susiHclOns ere aroused When her two room- m1tea disappear after answer- ing the ume help wanted ad. (RI 10:00 8 MOVIE 12;40 8 088 LATE MOVIE • * "Famlly Flight" (1972) Rod Taylor. Dina Merrill. A fly1ng v~tlon to Mexlc::o for an at- odda farnlty turna Into a near- hopel• battle for 1Urvival. (R) 1:00CJ TOMORROW (iJ I SPY "Trlal By Treehouae" 1:308) MOVIE *** "The Brave One" (1956) Michael Ray, Rodolfo Hoyos. A young boy travel• to Mexico to find hla pet bull that tlad been aol<l acc::ldentalty. ( 1 hr • 3·0 min.) 2:001J 8 D NEWS G MOVIES **•in •·canyon Pauage" (1948) Susan Hayward, Dana Andrew•. An lndlen mauaet• In the Old West cauees a man to lote his PfoPWty bUt win the heart. of the girt he loves. (2 hrs.) * • *'.i "Fleth And Fantasy" (1943) Cherie& Boyer, Edward G. Robinson. A ttlo of vlgnett• lnctudtng the ttory of a working girl. the alory of • fottune teller who ~nttt1 murd« end the '1ory of a Jewel thief. (2 h'9.) 2:258 NEWS 2:301J MOVIE * ** "Nocturne" (1948) ci.otge Raft, Myrna Dell. Atter * * "Desire In The Oust" (19e0) Raymond Burr, Joan BenMtt. A young aherecropper who SQenl elx veara on a tt\ak\ gang few a crime he didn't com- mit fln«ta things have draattcally changed tn hit ab~. (2 hra.) AFTERNOON I 12:00 8) MOVI~ ··~ "Song Of Love" (1947). Katherine Hepburn, PauJ H,nreid. The Brahma bf'ofhert share 1helr love for mu.ic and the aame woman. (2 hra., 20 min.) 2:008 MOVIE ***'n "The BrldQN At TOko RI" (1954) WUllam Holden, • Gr~ Kelty, The per9008' fives or men WhO struggle to eurvtve In the danQe!'out battleftelda of the Korean War. (2 htt.) 3:000 MOVIE **** "The Secret W11 Of Harry Frl{lg" ( 1969) Paul N~an, sytva KOtcflia. An Army private IS eent to help flV6 brlgedler generals eecape from the ltaflana. (2 hra.) 3~0 MOVle **IA "Marooned" (1969) G,.._ gory Peck. Rk:tlatd Crenna. Ttne astrontUtt, ~ ~ f« five month-, are unable to '9tum to elrth attw their equipment melfunctlona. ( 1 hr., 30mln.) TUBE !EOPPERS KCET@7:30 -''Ser- rano: Do Dollars Make Scholars? .. An ex- amination of the state Supreme Court 1"ullng on financing scbools. !'IBCU8:00-"The Last Hurrah... Carroll O'Connorplnys a fading politician Jn the retnake of the Spe9cer Tracy movie. <See review. tt'lis page.> ORANGE COUNTY / P-EOP~E I STATE PVBUC NOTICE c~ IUN••• coun 0" TM• ITATaOfl~ll'OtlllllAl'O• TM&C:OUMTT°'ORAN•& ........ ~ NOTIC Of "'-"1t1NG Of "TlflOH ll'CMt P•oa.ATa 0' •IU.. A .. D f' 0" LITT La$ 0.. A 0. MfNISTaATIOM •ITH lilloll.L AN· tt•ll&D ~O AUTHOltl:&AllO.. TO ADMINUTr.• IJNO&a Tkr. IWDaP&ND«NT AOMINlil.ATIOlll 0, anATl5AC1 llte'4 Of MAHY LOU YtlLLIAM!>, Deue..o. NOllCE IS kU<U•Y l>IVEN INlt ,_lkST AMtklCAN THl.Jlol COM PANT "411 llleo >!t'teln • 1>41llllon lor Preo. .. OI V.111-IOf ,,,....,... ot 1.•t tera Of .-.ml"'1trat10ll '""" V.111 All· ,, ... o IO the PoltUU--eulhOrW• lion to .oJ>lllll&IM lhe ~t•t• under II• tnoeiie-t AGmllW•l••llon 011:, .. 1 .. A<I, refer-. to .. 111<11 h m .. ~ further pertlCUIM" MIO mat Ille ....... anCI ple<t Of Nerlng lllt uni• 1Mt ~ Ml'"" No......,., 2', 1917, .. 110;00e.n •• Ill lhe<°""'-'Of 0.perl....,.. Ht.> of wkl covrt, •t 700 t.1vlc t.en .. r Dt1wt Ytttl, In the City of l>•nta 1111•, UlllorftlL D•t.o lo-10. 1971, ¥11LLIAMl.llJOHNe County c1 ..... JeinHli..Vlrl ....... 11,INOEL& ANOIASOff 1ntH. lr--y,leallJ S.llC. ..... tA tZ7'1 11141 Ul-1111 Art., ... , 1., Pttlll-.. PuOllMle<I Or..nQU LOd•t Lltlfy F-11ot Nov. I), 1t.n. 1911 '4ttt-71 PUBUC NOTICE S.t>Me NOTICE TOCllEOITOllS. No ... tl* SUPlalOft c;()Ultl OF TH~ HATIOFtALlfOANIA FOR t H• COUNTY OF Oii ANGE PUBLIC NOTICE PUIJUC NOTICE R>421 NOTICa TOUl&OITD•• ,u,.••1oacov•To,.1Hlf ITATr.O,.CALll'OIUoA•Ott TH& COUlllTYO,.DaANGI. -"'11UU In th• Mellor 01 "'• Ellet• of CkARLtS V.ILLIAM 'ft.Alt'!'. Al.)(/ 11."CIV.h AS 0.AHl.1.S ~. II.RIO, ChAllLI:!> TlHR'r, ~ V., TlkkY, 0.tU•M NOiie• I• heteby 9lv•n 10 <rtollort "-"'"" <t••-l>OO•nlt tlw "''O onedt11t to Ille w10 <l••m• on the 01110 Ol tht lier• ol t"" et .... UWl(I (Oyfl "'topra .. 11t111tm tothtunottl~•I tNt OlllCk Of \o'\otLLIAM (. P(it:, Al· tu<l\4fy •t I.•"'· t<AWl Chutnut ~t •• Lo• Alem110•, CA '1!1110, wt>lcn t•lt•• ott"• " 1ht Jll.t<t 01 111a•~• ot ,.,. un a•r"ll""° 1n ell ""'II•" 110M••n1t19 to HIO Ht<Oll. ~ucn <lalm• .. nh Ith• htUllMry YOUC"90 ,,_t lie llllO Of presente• u tlore .. kt within lout n10•11n111ttr tr.11"1°'*4K.tlonof 11\11 nollu. CJe1101oov. 10, m1 CLaO \.ABOUROETTE t::llK\ltor of Ille Wll I 01 Mloatc.eo..nl ~ILLIAMC."°9 Alter,..y.-uw 1DMJCMa-M. i... Alem1111, CA91120 PuOllS/MO Or.nge UHi Oe11y Pltol, loov. I•, U, JO, CJ«.1, ltll .. ,01-11 PUBUC NOTICE FICTITIOUS llVSINES~ ICAMt STjt.TIMEloT The tollowlnQ llC'"""• •r• """'11 IHl•I· ....... CJVI LAtlloL!.Y~llM~,M61$ .. tr Mre•l,, ;; .-Q), ~ ... Mew. l•l•forn•• 92-JI> \o'\olllli "-er a~••'. 21'1 l:mtrelO B•"t, lttQun.t tM4Kn, l •ltf0<met Yl.~I Merz yrote b••n lrl L noerolld b•y. \.•Qbrw btottcn. C.•htortu• ''-~' 1 hl\ butilf'Mr',,$ I\ lOOQUC. \to by •n In FICTI TIOVS 81.JSINt.» NAMES TATlMINT l nt toll°"''"ll l)ef"loOl\i ert aolng l>UM ------------1 M,\.\ 1.~0Ai. O<l:ST, J2ll .... S.lboe FICTITIOUS auSINESS NAMl!HATEMIENT 1 ht• fOlklw1ng pct )Of'! I~ OV1nQ b1.1't r\O\ ~\ I MA"'"llN CLAY flLM~ 4 f •m'1U\ CJrtv~. !)u1 le J.ti, ~~wlJ'C)rt u~~<'1, CA q!M() ., rea•r•clt. .-. .. ,..,hbaroer Jlt}Y ~Ung Pl.o<•. Cotw ~ .... I.A ~1•1• 1111> OU>lr>Ui ll 'onou<t.O llY •n •n· OIViOual. frtdtrkk11.rY\be<Ql.,. bl•d "•,.-1 bMCl1,<.e111orn••9MJ koy .,. "out111, '1•1 01ymp1c Ltnve, H\lnhr'Qton b•«h, C...hlOrnf• .. , ... M1<llllLO K.oucn1, '1•2 (11ympic (Jr, .. , kun11n11ton u .... ch, c.111orn1• t:IM& I ,, •• DUilnetl II c.oncluClto by •n In· dl'i0114' AoyM.r.oucn1 l "" t1a1m14r11t .... 111100 wlln the U>Vnty UHi< of ore1191 LOunty on "'OV• ~10.r •~# "" 1 'us $-l•leimt'ftt wtt~ hl«J •1th Uw County Cl.,k ol Ort<\941 Counly on Nov. J.1~// fl5l6t PubllthMI Ur•noe Co.loll O•llY .. ttOI, F-2 hov, 1•, 2l, JO, -O.C. 7. 1911 41 .. 11 Publl"*' 0r'""99 C.Wll 0..ly Pilot, Nov.~. It., iJ, JO, tY/1 4'20·7/ PUBl.JC NOTICE STATEMENT Of ABAHOOtlMENT 0,.UUOF FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME in.: 101..,..ong II"'""" h•• •t>.tll<IOnf'd the u~ of th«r tktltl0\l,bu\1nt ''~nltt UOH Nl>.ON A!>!>OCtAfl;S. 1>10 hewoort (.Pnl~t (Jr1ve. ~ulh: •U. Ntwpar I 8f',\Ch, CA. ~lM>O t tw F IWtlolis 8u>1n<·•" Name rt• hf It'd to •bovt' W•\ fth.-d In Or¥\tt Lounty on' I• f1 1-. lion.old M~on. 1016 v. .. 1 ... 1no Vvev. Nrw-t ~Mh CA qi~ 1 hi\ bu .. tnt\.i. w ... (_Qnt.h.i( tl'd by • ~ntret iwrtne•>ft<c>. F. Oonakl "''"°" 1 hi• \te""'9n\ W•\ 11100 Wllh Iha Co.,n1y <.Jtrk ot ouno• C.011nir on "'OV l, ltl1 ""'" f'ubll>hecl Oran<)" COUI O•llY Piiot, f•O• 9, t•, U,JO, It/I 411H7 PUBUC NOTICE AE50LUTIOHOFTHE BOAAOOfTaUITE£10F t.0.UTCOMMUlolTY COl.U" OtSl lllCT Ol'ORANGl&COUNTY CALIFOllNIA N ........... 1'71 Un motion ot 1 r<Atl\I ¥1orth K~IW, Oul y \<lc.GndloO .,., (.,, •• a. lh• IOllOW 11111 Hoolullon of I"''"'"°" to Lt aw keel Properly tor l:aucellon•I l'U<JIO"'' MIO Ult lor !>f .. •11 b10• "'*' &c>Opl.O • "'f•Lkf<A) .. IOConlmunilyC.Ollt9f ua '''•ll t'\ ttw o.,,,..,. _.ctn••" r•••....., P<"Ond• P•llP"l' nto'"""'' OO(rl .... O, And •C'ltrWn pewioon"' UMI pr OPt r I Y •• !lot -neeotCI fer Khoot pure>u\UDY .. tolll•fkl. el'O ""'tt£1\iA$, 1t ~to tit In Ille 0111t 1nterOMtOINIOCMTlfnllllllf COi .... dlttrlcl tNI eat1.1•n"'11Gftef ..,_pr .. ptrty lie ·--,. "" 11._..t lllOCW, 1111nuant to Stcljjlfl 11$Jlot tn. ~ llo!I C.-ef Ille tt-t.OI GalllOfnl•; flf(IY., lHllt&,.Okii, II~ I !lk50L.\lf;(j , .... '"'' ., .... ~' htf'o, •-111 lntllllliNI e •-IM tt•rtll\ltl .. r OOK•I ... ,.., •no -------------• ptr60nel "ocienr er.o " 1, tMre., 1 ... nc1, aettrmu'80, -ttqtr,.S: PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS IUStNHS NAME STATIMINT 1 lie lollowlr.g perWJna .ir • OOtr>o IHl•I • "'" .. lll"l110AV PROFtLl:S, ••'91 Lowell Clrtlt, Hunt11111ton llucn, CA UMt Cleudf!I .. Eunice Smith, 1•t.i Lowell Clrtlt. 11unllllQIOO 11 .. ch, CA 9JMY C:.eor•I• EllHOl'th Jon~•. 16911 Lowell Circle, Hut1llng1on 8N<h, CA •1M't Thi$ l>ualntU I• tonducted by • QSntr•I pertnt<iNP CJ-I~ Eun1ct Smith 1 1\1 t •t•tornNll was lllf'd with thll Ceunty Clef!\ OI Or•llllt <:ouoty 011 Nov, ..... n. n..na Publl~ Orenve cont Dell' Piiot. N<I• ••• 1•. 2l,J0, 1911 44111 PUBUC NOTICE ... CTITIOUI aUSIHIU NAMISTAT&M8NT l tto loll_.r>o 111nona ere aolt\11 OU.I· fl'UHI I SALIS8UAY RtAl.TY,JUMerkle .Avenue, a .. _ 19'end, CA. n .. 2 ' "f•terlrtlll 11omt1, Jn<., • Cflltornl• cwporetlOll, ~ Wt\l CN•I "'O""'ey, ~ a.~,CA. '26'.i 11111> O<ialllfH It ~ltd by• tW• pirtllOll, w•ttrfront .._, ,~ PeltKltJ, '9HM .. , -'"*"I Tlllt ,t91..,,.,.. W tll .. Wltl!·IN ~y Cltlk Of Orenve Gounty Oft fw, J,jt71 , ..... P111111.-Ot..,qo1 C-lt Dally l"tt41, NOY.t, 1',H,llO, 1'17 1 1 ne prtptrlv lttrtlne•t•t O.Krlbel II-*' 0y IM (.ojjJt Cofto• munlly C.011991 l>IMrlrt -It Mt n .. o.., IOUtheOtpWpOMt. 1 11 "\IW lllltn11on ot lhlt ~ro tv tHM ... Id pruperty i. thll ll!Qllffl l>l•r w11n • n11n.n-1 •u;f1'4Mll• rtftlel el IWO lhou\tllO OOlllfS ll:w<>OI per mGlllll or rqulveltnl In klna con.,otretlon, lK• coro11111 to troe I~'"'' •NI <_II,.. rw·r1r1n•tlHW1tor1tt ll•111nnlnQ wttn tilt annlvtrwry o•I• ol lht ~ttt<t1vea.1tof thll INJt In 1'19. tna con11nu1nQ 1roe1eel 1tr liw tr. t~r "' <1l tn1t1u...,, 1tn tnnottl eo1tlt4"'9nt In llW rent~I """"'"t •h•ll .,. ITl<IOt, °""a upon •ht pe•etn~ ln<rtaie Of (M(I ..... Ill l/'tf' Con--f'rKf )lld4Ji tor urb•n Y"-t.ernot'I ena Clerical Vvorktr• lor LOS AnOtlet·l.onll w.Kll, Ullfornoe, '"pu.,.I~ by Int Buttetl DI Ltl>Or ~e11>11u of tilt o.i>enment of LeDor or any all<UU•r ll1tttof, 111t1•••'4r INO~ ..... r.ucn llMuel .01.m· meot >11111 tit eciu•lt~ ••1trlbt1IM t11ro1J<Jheui It. ~,,. yeer ti\ • mOl'tnly IM>I-. 1 ,.. 1).1141 IMO tor •ucll 111 ~·u•I· f1'>41hl .,,.,, "" ,,,. lhCJ•• • " ,. pub111hHl lor IN •tt~IM Mt• Aprlf t, 1911. s..<11 eGJU\tmel\I IM•t lie nt- yUr I y .,_"'° upoft Ille l'f!llilf jMtlt Glltl1'19 the , .. , lmn>IOlll\fl' l'l'f«<ll"9 t"41 Ml Ju\ln.ent. -oot upll\ U..trl9trwol r-tel I« 1'1• lint Yfff Ol tlM I t, lllUPI ror lhe ""'' ,....,. t 11t 1111Ju•ttnt"I •""" - PUBUC NOTICE PUBl.JC NOTICE Cop Held In Slaying ' WEST COVINA <APl -A West Covina police officer was to be ar· raigned today in Los Angeles Superior Court on rape and murder charges In the shooling death of a 34-year-old woman. Timothy G. Willis. 28, was arrested Tuesday and booked fort investiga· lion or the rape and slay· tng of Geraldine Bureh, 34. Willia, wllQ was being held withouf bail, would be ·aubJeet to the death penalty It convlJ::ted of the chdrges. • • • • , LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Jewish Defense J League's West Coast leader aaya bis group will "break up the whole Convention Cebter" the next. tlme they visit. the Soviet trade and technical exhibition housed there • Dana High ~~ ,._,I> c~,, ... ., ............... .._... ••n.~ ................. .. We have to do 4 somet.blne drastic to i gain the attention of the press," Irving Rubin In a telephone interview from jail Tuesday after being arrested for in- vestigglion or trespass- ing. Band Best The sweepstakes award al the Wtlittler College band competi· lion was won by the Dana Hills High School marching band with a. score of 93.2 out or 100 points. The 56-member band directed by Gary Horimoto competed against six high school bands to win Its rlrst sweepstakes award, said Paula Key. assistant principal. Plan Rejected SACRAMENTO (AP) -The city of Arcata ·s plan to continue dls· charging treated sewage lnto Humboldt Bay un· der an expanded trtat- ment program wu re~ jected 3-0 by the Water Resources Control Board. Jet Noise ' Trial Fees A~$167,200 "This is going to hap- pen .every t ime we go down there. It's going to ge\ hotter and hotter if we havo to 10 to jail everyday:• a .... -w .. By Tlle Altoelated PJ:ess j A Pedfic storm ·s bot· / tom fringe crecped over L the Oregon border and ,-· doused parts of Northern i Orange County officials may spend as much as California with rain ear· t 1167,200 in consultants' fees to prepare for a May 8 }Y today. And the Na· J trial over Orange County Airport jet noise. ' Owners of 64 properties southwest or tbe airport ( _______ -J)-.! in the Newport Beach area have alleged their SCA.TE _ property values have been dl minJshed'beuuse of jet. aircraft noise. .. tional Weatbes; Servic~ County supervisors hlred the consulUnc Orm of said another shower• Bolt, Beranek and Newman Inc. for an estimated yieldin& lroat was rolling 14$,200 to conduct sound measurements lo the area toward the dl'1 region. and assist ln the trial. Crescent Clt.y, which ~uperviaors earlier hired two appl'&illl firms bas been spared drought at a eost of up to Slll,000 to aueu \be values or w«>e!i this season, re· pertjes involved. celved 1.4 inches of rain County Counael Adrian Kuyper satd All three during the 24-bour period firms have been used by the county ln ~etending ending at 5 a.m. today, prevlous noise suits. t.he weather service said. 1'tng PllUJp U Of Macedon, lather of AJesaaclff i._e Great, the <;reek Arcbae,ologlcal Society tan· nounced, The tomb wu discovered 19 feet under .a nar• row street io the vllla1e or VlrafDa, 7.5 D'llles from tbe town ol Veroia. Archaeolo&iata led by Satonlc:a University f>rof essor Manolis AndroolJce>S hlve been excavat· ang tn the area fot years uncoverilll some finds, but they were not consid~red of peat lmportance. TeaeJaen 8aelc OAKLAND CAP> -· Teachers at the state's slxth largest district were b ack in class· rooms today after eodlng an t'l-day strike by acceptina a three· year contract by more than a t wo to on~ margin. The contract includes a 6 percent. aalary in- crease the first year. a S percent hike the secon~ and third years and ·a fringe benefit increase equal to a 4 percent blke inpay.: · • J . 0 I •I t :I; ' • : f • ·i t. :\ ., •• '1 • s By JlJDrl'B OLSON ot•Ollltr ...... llMf ... They start coaimc w.Y before 11 a .m. and by nooo, &M areen spaces beblact the LQe Aqelea Coliseum are filled wlth plcniekera enjoying the fiaest 1D Call!omta fare. It's "in" to have a tailgate plcnle before tJie bla bom.1ames durtna football aeuoa. Alum.nae and fans crowd together for fOOd, .fun and frivollt,r and some friendly kid· di,n1. On a recent Saturday, USC and Stanford fans mixed, with 1ood natured rivalry between the Cardinal and Gold and the Red and White. For many fans Lt ii an .annual tradition &tretcbin1 back many years. One party, in fact, was ln its 30th year of picnicldnc and others have been getting together for 15 to : 20. 1 The picnics get more elaborate every year, one woman sa1d. "Peo-1 ple try to outdo each other." t I t The tb1nt t.b do now la rent a motor home for the day, load up as many friends as possible and drive to th• coli.sewn for a picnic with 0 all the con:a!orta of borne." Motor bomes•eemed Uke a very good Idea wben 1t started ra1ning just befon the USC-Stanford came' Mott picnickers were gatherine up basket. and l'\IMlJli to their cars to avoid the downpour, while those with thelare• vans aim!y continued the party ln their "I' grooms." he green lawns behind the col- iseum and county museum are quite a sight durtna picnic time. Hundreds of people sit oo the lawns, either with tables and chairs or blankets, and there are dozens of ela~rate wicker baskets. So me people even bring barbecues for instant "tube steak" or T ·bones, while others set their .. CSeeTAILGATE. Page CZ) . ~ ... •. • . C&ANllEa&WaATATO~~~~ "4 cup Hlad or oUve 011. l lqeonloo, cbop 1 clove aarllc, chop a iuccblnl. Ullckly • l* 1 •mall e1tplant, cut lDto 1cb cubes , a 1 teaspool\ thyme • 1 can (1 pound) t0mat0i~1~.....,~:....i;. 1 K ~fresh or froitn·freah • ranberriea, rimed and d.ralned Salt aQd pepper • • 1 Jn a large S'1!c•~ 1klllet or utcb oven, beat oU and cOOk 1lon with garlic until Colden, irrin1 occasionally. Ad.& re· t alning lnaredlenu, cover Mel ~ mmer for 20 to ZS minutes, ,ur. n g o~caslonally or unin 1getables are tender. Seuoo \o ste with salt and pepper, JI de· red. llANBERRY CAUUFLOWER BAKE 1, cup butter or margarine l small onion, chopped l 'h cups fresh cranberries, nsed and drained 11~ cups seasoned dry bread umbs 1 bend caullnower. broken to florets, cooked and drained 1 can (10~ ounces) c9n· nsed cream or celery soup, un- luted J~pmilk Y.i cup chopped peanut. In a large skillet, melt butter, d cook onion unW golden, stir· 1g occasionally. S~ in cran· rries and crumbs. Cook stir· ng over low heat, for 10 1nule!> In a bowl, mix ultflower with soup, milk and anuts. Place cauliflower mix· ~e in a shallow casserole. Cov· top lightly with cranberry .xture. Bake in a preheated bot t•n (400 degrees F > for 15 to 20 nutes or until bubbly. Serve at ce. \ well rounded dinner Is truly • mplete with the accompani· ent or a vegetable which hances an entree greaUy not . ly by navor but color too. The ngy piquancy of ruby bued anberries whether r~sh, or in ltsh or sauce combines with getables in many ways for a ~tful variety of dishes. Here c four recipes that will comple- •nt, add taste pleasure and af. ·d versatility lo many a menu. 'Cranberry Corn Pudding" _ !>llY prepared in a casserole, m bines creamed corn, cran· rry·orange r elish, eggs, need onion, cream and cbed· r cheese One might easily l ke this dish ahead, and re· rve in a refrigerktor till halting 11e, which takes leu than an ur. Serve this &olden pudding th fried chicken, pork chops or t roast . cRANBEUY CORN PUDDING 3 ew, well beaten 1 cup (~pint) heavy cream 2 cans (1 pound each> cream style com ~ cup cranberry-orange relish 2 tablespootU hDtant minced onion· 1 cup C4 ounces) grated sharp cheddar cheese Jn a 1~ quart cuserole, beat eJ{gs with cream. Add re- maining ingredients, except cheese; stir well. Sprinkle corn mixture with cheese. Bake lD a preheated moderate oven (!SO deareea F.> for 40 to 4S ml.nut.es or until puffed and 1olden brown. Ser"e at once. .BE0RRYGLAZED'NSTUFFED ACORN SQUASH Squash: 3 acorn squash 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 1 onion. chopped 1 cup whole berry cranberry sauce 6 slices sprouted wheat bread, cut Into\.\ inch cubes Y.i cup orange juice 1 carrot, shredded Glue: . 1 cup cranberry apple drink \.\ cup hooey 2 tablespoons lemon Ju.ice Cut acorn squash into halves and remove seeds. Remove thin slice from bot.tom of each squash half so they sit level. In a Hoit quart saucepan melt butter end cook onion for s minutes. Remove from heat. Stir in cran· berry sauce, bread cubes, orange juice and carrot. Use mixture to sturr squash halves. Place filled squash in a roasting pan. Cover and bake in a preheated moderate oven (350 degrees F. > for 40 to 45 minutes or until squash is easily pierced. Jn bowl combine Glaze ln1redlenta. Remove cover and 1po0n onr squash. Continue baktn1 for another 10 minutes or until light· lybrowned. • • Tailgating · <From Page CH blcs with silver candlelabra and ystal wineglasses. The food is endless and maanifi· •nt. Anyone viewing the bountJful re w 1th an empty stomach IOOD comes ravenous. There a.re swb- ;nine sandwiches, 1~urmet 'ndw1ches, extraordinary hors ')euvres. vegetables of all kind.$. \c wines, bowls of guaoamole and viar-studded sprea4:!J. And, there are banners, fiqa, 1ttons and balloons, maklng it a olorful and exciting pageant. Some people bring all the com- • •1tls or home. The Jack Dixons and •• Woody Archers, for example ,rcher designed th.e original 5"n· "rd mascot), sat under a Galll•no nbrella to watch their TV set .1ile they ate. Another group, with a Clnzano nbrella. had hired a guitar player stroll nnd sing while they ate. Most cars back up to the park ca so trunks can be opctned or 1lgates lowered for. the plcnl~. rhe name of the game Is to--{et ·re early so you can get your ·nch," said Betty House, who was ,• cnicldng with her family. Her ...aughter was in USC's class of "13. . The 1'udor family, from Brentwood, even had a centerpieee in the USC colors. Their menu In· eluded submarine s~wtches. They picnic "everylirne USC is playing," Mary Allee Tudor said matter-of-factly. . The Bob Malones and Don Pearson.s wer~ tnJoring pita bread •andwiches, potato salad, cam>t slicks, 1uacamole dip, apples. special cookies and Fritos. "You want the vlntqe or our wine?" Ptar89'1 kidded. The Pearsons, from Newport Beach, said they have been pic· nicking befoTe every home .1ame •'for 25 years ... Elaine Reeves. a Pasaden• real· dent, perhaps h•d the most elaboratedlaho{all, Gourmet Bfff Vinaigrette, wbleh she served on pewter plates remlniscent of a medieval banquet. The dish, whJeh can be ffrved hot or cold, ts from the Puadena Junior Lea1ue•1 California Herltaie cookbook. she 1ald. "Dessert" tor the USC'f ans was a sweet victory over the Stanford Cardinals by a wbopplna 49 points. The ftut was moveable, after all . RED .VEL V.ET ' HORMEL EASTERN PORK SPARERIBS 99! WISCOMSIN CHEDDAR CHEESE - ' ' 1 " HEMS or TOMS ' WITH POP.UP GAUGE I 0 to 24 US. MO PIE$ERVATIVES ADDED . FOSTER ~AIMS DUCJWNGS .1 .. . . Choose candy that travef8 well when shipping Christmas goodies. ,. J Holiday Candy to Travel Once you've created your favorite sweets for holiday gifts, don't let them be crushed in the mail. Careful planning and packing can treat your friends lo the best of your Christmas cookies and candies. First, pick varictJes that travel well fudge, caramels or fruit drops, for example Use a metal container and place a layer of crushed waxed paper in the bot· tom. Then, cut dividers of cardboard and fit into the box to help keep the pieces from shift· ing about in transit. After arranging the candies and cookies attractively in their gift box, add the lid, and tape or tie it shut for extra protection. Set the container in a strong, larger carton and fill In the spaces with unsalted popcorn or crushed paper to cushion the bounce. Wrap the outer carton in heavy brown paper, tie securely and al· lacb a label (printed or typed) on one aide only. Mark the package .. Keep from heat " BUTl'ON MACA.aOONS 1 egg, separated 11:1 cup sugar l teaspoon baking powder 1 11 teaspoon salt 1~ teaspoon vanilla 3c cup quick·cooking rolled oats 11:1 cup flaked coconut <from a 31'2 ·ounce catt) 1 t.ablespoon butter or margarine, me~ Candied red and green cher· nes, cut 1n slivers Beat egg white until foamy. white and double in volume in a small bowl with electrlemlxer at high speed; beat in 3 tablespoon· futs of the sugar, 1 tablespooo at a time, until ft.rm peaks form. Beat egg yolk well 1n a medium-size bowl; beJt in tbe re· mainin& sugar unW fidft)l'·lieht. Stir in baklne l>OWder, salt, vanilla, rolled oats, coconut -.nd melted butter or margarine; told in meringue. Drop by half teaspoon1\11s, t inch a,Part, onto greased eoolty sheets; decorate with cherries. Bake ia slow oven (325 degrees) lS·minutes, or until firm and ligbUy golden. Remove Goodthi to from cooky sheets; cool com· pletely on wire racks. St.ore in tightly covered cont.atner. Makes about 3 dozen. SPICY GINGER W .\FEa5 2 cups sifted all.purpose flour 3 teaspoons ground ginger 2 teaspoons baking soda 1 teaspoon eround cinnamon ~ teaspoon salt l egg ~ cup Cl~ sticks> butter or margarine, softened 1 cup sugar <for dough) ~ cup molasses Sugar (for coaUn1) Sift flour, ginger, s<¥1a. ctn· namoo and salt onto waxed paper . Cream butter or mar1arine wtth sugar until fluff1 ill a medlum·siie bowl; beat in etl and molasses. Stir in flour mixture, one third at a time, unW well blended. Roll douah. a teaspoonful at a time, into small balls; rolf each in sugar in a pie plate to coat. Place, 2 inches apart, on cooky <See'l'BA VEL, Page CS> DAILY PLOT C!\ Raisins ·'1 :J • ... A Guide to Bu~g the Big ~~d @ . .... 18·22 LB. .RIB fl'(SH rllOltN TURBOT FILLET cooiEJ SHRIMP fll[$H WESTEIN OYSTERS~1 ~---~ -~ deli. O&CAAlllAYCll • &ANDfoiJC>U""IAO O' 5 9• BRAUNSCHWllGIR ~~ • u STA TEii 11101 • AIST 7 9 c I LUNCHEON MEATS ~~gz c• OleAll lllAYlll • 8fllOlll6LMolll5 OA s 13 9 CHEESE SMOIU£S ~gz c• OSCAll MA Y(ll • llOUNO, SOUAIU. OR BEEF s 1 4 9 VARIETY PACK 120Z PKG lA SHOWBOAT SLICED BACON ,~, l'ICG (· FOOD Q) . beets. Ji'lalua • with botto otalaa1. Bake in moderaio oven (350 deueee> foe 11 mlnutea. or unW tqpe an er 8t ve to racks. Cool. •-H •bout ' doien. BtJ1TEBSCO'l'Of C&ISPIES left s4 cup granulated au1ar st. cup ftrmly packed brown su1ar 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour Dub of salt 14 &e.pooo.vanllla f!a cup tlnely chopped walnuts ~ cup flnely chopped mixed candied frufta Beat the ea unW Uabt In small bowl: beat ~ the aranulated and brown 1Qgar; 1tir Ul the nour. aal~ vanilla. walnut. and can· died fruits. Drop batter from tip of small spatula about 11h inches apart. on well·areaaed cooky sheet.I. · Salte in a ~ow oven (325 degrees) S 111 utes, or until colden. Remove f m the cooky sheets with a at]da; cool on wire rackr.•· about 3 dozen. PEP oa flou '1:t cups all-purpose 1h teas baking soda 1111 teaspoon salt 34 teaspoon ground ginger 112 teaspoon ground ctn· namon 14 teU'P4>0n ground cloves · ~ teaspoon goound cardamom 6 tablespoons <~ slick> but· lcr or margarine, aoftened 1 :1 CUP sugar •;,. cup light molasses 1 teaspoon arated orange rind 14 cup finely chopped toasted almonds Royal Frosting (recipe below) Sift the flour, baking soda, salt, gineer, cinnamon, cloves and cardamom on waxed paper. Cream. butter or marearlne with sucar unW fluffy-light in a larce bowl ; beat in molasses, oraJtge rind and almonds. Stir in nour mixture, one third at a time, blending we11 to make a stiff dough. Chill several hours, or overnight, until firm enough to roll. Roll out dough, one third at a lime, i.ii·incft thlck, on a lightly floured pastry clolh or board; cut into fancy shapes wilh floured, 2-lnch cooky cutters. Place, 1 in· ch apart, on large, lightly greased cooky sheets. Roll, cut out trlmmi.Qll. Bake in moderate oven (350 degrees> 7 minutes, or unW firm. Reinove fro~ cooky sheetatonek.s; cool. BOYAL nosTING 3eawhites i,, teaspoon cream ol tartar 1 packaa• (1 ~d> 1ox (contecttooen• powdered) SUI· ar,1ifted Beat ea whites and cream ol tartar with an electric mlxer at hleb speed until foamy in • small bowl. Beat kl lOX suau traduallY. until frosting stands In firm peaks and ls stW eooush to bold a sharp line when cut throu1b with a knife. Store any left over tn tightly covered jar lo refrigerator. Makes •bout Z~ cups. LEBIWCBEN :i,4 cup hooey :i... cup firmly packed darlt brown sugar 1 egg 2 teaspoons grated lemcm rind 1 3 ta~spooo.s. lemon juice ' 312 cups sifted all·pUJ'pQISe flour 1 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoQD ground clnnatQOD 1 teaspoon around outmec 1h teaspoon ground allspiee 1 2 teaspoon ground gln1er 1/4 teaspoon ground cl<>v• 112 teaspoon baking loda 1 container (8 ounces) citron, fmely chopped . 1 cup chopped unblancbed almonds Sugar Glaze frecipe follows> Heat honey to boilinl in a small saucepan; pour into a large bowl: cool about 30 minutes. Stir in brown sugar, egg and lemon rind and juice; blend well. Sift flour, salt, cinnamon, nutmeg, all spice, ginger, cloves and baking soda onto waxed paper. Stir flour mixture into honey mixture one third at a Ume. stir In citron and alm,on4s. Dough will be stiff but sticky. Wrap In foil or plastic; chill several hours, till firm. Roll out dough, one eiibth at a time, on a UJbUy floured pastry board, to a 6x5-lncb rect&lllle. Cut into eight 21t'..,:: lYJ·incb ~· tangles. Place, 1 inch apart, on large greased cooky sheets. Bake in moderate oven <~ degrees) for lQ minutes, or until firm. Remove to wire racks. While cookes are bot, brush with hot Sugar Glaze. Cool cookies completely. Store Jn tightly covered coatatoer atleast 2 weeks to mellow. Mates aboC5 dozen. •1 8a1ar Glue -Comb!M 1~ cups granulated suau and '4 cup water in a medl'Um·alze For the • I I Roll dou2h. Jbout 1 teaspoonful at a time, Into small balls; plJce 2 inches apart. on gfeaaed cooky sheet. Top eac6 witft ·a piece of candied cherry. ~ Stir milk into reserved 'A cup of 10X susar unUI amootl) ln small cup. Drlule very llfbUy over topol ~ch cooky. Bake ln moderate oven <350 degrees) 8 m.!nutel. or till llptly browned. Remove fro~ aheets at once: coo1.-racb. Jllpes llbc)at 6~0. BASKIOOOKRDPONJ>ANT 2 cups ll'Uulated sugar Mi tQ.spoOn salt 2 tablespoona h1ht corp syrup 114 cups water Combb1e suga.,. salt, corn syrup and water iq a laree, heavy sauqepan. Heat, slirrifti constantly, until sugar dissolves and mixture comes to the boil. Wrap a fork with damp paper toweling; wipe sugar crystals -from side of pan as mlxtun cook!. ' Reduce beat to meQJum aDCl cook, without 1tir.tln&,. to 240 degrees .oii a cand:r thermometer. (Syrup forms a <SeeTUVEL. Pase Ct> • t .. I ~· . . ' ' I . ~ I , CHUCK 79 SIOK !. ~n .)'OC' want to be tun. • • wlwa ,ou partku/PrlY ~that cuoythfnt toiU M aactly cu ~'d ho,,.d for -that'• U.. tirM ~ looJt '9 Bl R.ancho. ~ ~°"' hOlidlzy really Nt.w York '$959 STRIP ~ • Center cut! U.S.D.A. Choice beef Chuck cut U.S.D.A. Choice beef · BONELESS ROl.L£D BEEF ROAST Chuck cut shoulder clod! Choice beef Liquor Dep 't. Kamcha~ka $898 VODKA The I. 75 later size reduced 51¢ Black & White . s 1495 Greot scotch! Save 2.00 half.gallon Canadian Club •• se•9 The fifth now reduced 5le Gordon's Gin •• ~ 5991 ., Martini time! Reduced 1.00! 1.75 ltr Old For ester ••• s599 Stroif(ht whi skey! Save 50¢ fifth Champagne :S. s1 99 X Dry, Cold Duck or Pink -fifth W. s331 1nes AWIO ••••• Grenache Rote, Ruby Cabernet, French Columbard or Chenin Blanc. Magnum ·-------- •vam ' TlmEYS ' flDZlll... '• 59! -·..,."A" , tllUUll. • • • \ • to 21 l.IS Hen.• T~ •. ~plump abd tender with-· « ... puanteed! \ ~ Tu.V, Breasts. 115! Plump-.-..r aaftil rt•t clilltl) Tu'*er---. ........ 49c. ~' Tender, ""'"'64 dd'md juiayl ' I . ' •p«iol! Pork Sausage • • 992 Our own "old fashioned" 1oodn .. ! Sliced Bacon ••• s1 1! El Rancho's thicker "ranch style" 0 st FU $141 y er m 1t11 ••••• Get out your best recipe! 8ozjar HCml'S Clll 81 HAM Boneleaa! Lean! Whole or Hain •' • Seagram's $699 11 7 Crown A favoFite reduced 61e Quart Your choice of hlli11uv ~al this pl'ica! And you can know you'll never find finer quality! The pick of the flock -raieed in San Fernando Valley and rushed to wi! Toma from 18 to 26 lbs ..•. Hens from 10 t.o.J? lbs .... , either will live up to its promise of assured satisfaction! ,,,..... ... -lllCW) . .. •• Menu Makers Dressing WBBISON's •••• -•••• _59 c· Your turkey deserves the beat! All·Purpoae or Com Bread-12 oz • '\ Cranberry ~·UCE •••••••• .2'4 for value -and flavor! Springfield Strained or Whole -16 oz can P '-·h• TWIN &At olalo -" 1ps PACK ..... u~·~ · With Bell brand, it'll really be a party! Regular, B·B-Q or Dip Water Chestnuts 49c Young's Supreme in 8 ounce can Cranberry sm •••• 39c &. W Strained or Whole-16 oz Pinnp~n PIE Loln cut U.S.D.A1Cboi~ be.t • Ground 1ee1=:s1'! Lean-doea not nceed ~fat Chopped Steaks 512! · Leane.t grind doet qQt txc.ed 16% fat New Yor~ $399 STEAK . • Loin cut U.S.D.A. Choice beef • Orange Juice • ~ • s1°• Minute Maid-ready to pour! 64 ~· Cheese Spread 59c Laushing Cow 6 oz. Reg. or Continental Rondele Cheese 79c You'll Want .. ' .. Pineapple DOLFs .... .-... _49c Choose Chunks, Slicee or Cruabed in No. 2 cao-packed in syrup Ripe OliVes PITTED ....... 49c Lindaay'•-Extia Lute aiie olivee for the relish tray! No 300 can Cl0¥.teilf. Party Plake -pq ot 12 Aluminum Foil •• sgc ........ FOOD -~ ¥W~. Howmber18.,.,., .. !Make and ea80n Yule Edibles '.Ahea Mlnlature fruit cakes, ebocolate bourbon balls aoc1 blacli: and wblte teu are part ol the treulll")' o(de11ciou.a sweet.a. Packated tocet.ber· or wrarped indlvidually. they are certaJNy a de· li«btfu way to HY '"Merry Cbristmu". 'l'bfle are.i.1,tat some of the many favorites in makin1 tb& JOY ot al vine Just a UtUe more apeclal. The miniature fruit catt1 and chocolate bourbon balls can be made aeve.ral daya ahead of time and let season in covered contalnen. The black and white teas are adellcloua tut· ing cookie, pressed onto an ungNued eootte sheet and topped with a chocolate douth squeezed through a cookie press to form ·the Chriatmaa star. MlNIATURE FRUITCAKES 1hcupflour ¥.a measuring teaspoon baking powder 1h measuring teaspoon salt 14 measuring teupoon bakinC soda 1 6-oz. Pk&. (1 cup) semi·aweet chocolate morsels YJ cup butter, softened 1-& cup firmly packed brown sugar l measuring teaspoon orange extract 3egp 14 cup water Po& cups mixed candied fruit, finely chopped 1 cup finely chopped nuts Preheat oven to ~ degrees. In small bowl, combine flou~, baking powder, salt and baking .soda; set aside. Melt over hot (not boiling) water, semi·sweet chocolate morsels; remove from heat. In large bowl, combine butter, brown• sugar •. and orange extract; beat until creamy. Beat tn eggs, one at a time. Stir in melted chocolate. ~dd flo~r mixture alternately with water. Fold in candied fruit and nuts. Spoon into greased 5-oz. individual bundt cake pans or custard cups, using 1/.i cup batter for each. Bake 1 at 350 degrees. Time: 25 minutes. If desired, • brush hot cakes with corn syrup and decorate with a candied cherry half. Makes 12 cakes. CHOCOLATE BOURBON BALl.8 l 6-oz. pkg. Cl cup) semi·sweet chocolate morsels 3 measuring tablespoons corn syrup 1 2 cup bourbon 21h cups vanilla wafer crumbs Candled fruit peel to give. 1h CUJlain..d confecUoners' sugar 1 cup finely chopped nuts Granulated 11uiar Melt over hot (not bolllnc> water, aeml· sweet chocolate morsels; remove from beat. Add corn syrup and bourbon. In larae bowl, combine vanilla water crumbs, confectioners' 1ugar and nuts; add chocolate mixture and mix well. Let stan~ about 30 minutes. Form into l·incb balls. Roll in granulated sugar. Let season in covered container for several days. Makes 4"2 dozen bourbon balls. · BLACK AND WBITE TEAS t 1 6-oz. pk(. (1 cup) aemi-aweet chocolate morsels 2~cupsflour 1 meuuring teaspoon baking powder 1h meuurine teupoon salt A fruitcake with everyday appeal. A Peanutty Cake Fruitcake u a holiday ¥.acupboney hi&bligbt. but often forgotten the 1 teaspoon vanilla rest of the year. Give your fruit-2 cups raisins cake everyday appeal, and pro-1 "2 cups diced mixed candled vide an added nutritional boost fruit to keep stren'1b up during the of-1 cup chopped nut.a ten-barrowtn1 boUdays. Peanut-Glaze ty Fruitcake, with a honey-rum ~ cuphoney glaze, is laden with the expected 2 tablespoons rum fruit.a, nuts and spices but baa an In a large bowl eream tocether all-American surprise -peanut peanut butter, butter and auaar. butter is added to the batter so 8eat in egp. Combine flour, bat· each plt!Ce bouts added proteln. ing powder, tall and spices. Set PEANU'ITY FRUITCAKE aalde. Comblne julce, honey and 1 cup peanut butter • ' vanma. Alternately add nour ~ stick ( v. cup) butter or and juice mbturel to peanut but• margarine . ter, blendlna well du eaeb ~ 2 cupe packed brown su1ar dltton. Stir In ralflnl, fruit and 4 e1p nuta. Pour lllto a well-peued 3 cupe lltted nour 10-tnch tube or baDdt pan. Bake 1 teupooo baklna powde~ in a 300 clecree oven abOut 2" ~ teaspoon salt houn or until a wooden plck ln· 1 teaspoon cinnamon serted near tbe center com11 Out 1 teupooamaee clean. (c.,ak9 will eraet oo top.> ~ teupooQnutmea Allow tb ~ W.rap UCbU1 and ~ taspooo alllplce store tn 9!°'~· WMn l'liild,)' ~ t.-pooo~ elcrrt1 to aerve eolDllfDa tieiMy a.Del rum. ~cupCJl'&Dl•J~e DrlnltO\WW•. Miniature fruit cakes. lcupsuiar 1 cup butter, softened 1 J.oz. pkg. cream cheese, softened legg 1 mensuring teaspoon vanilla extract 2 measuring teaspoons water Melt over hot (not bolling) water. semi· sweet chocolate morsels; cool ' 10 minutes. In small bowl, combine flour, baking powder and salt; set ulde. Jn large bowl, combine sugar, butter and cream cheese. beat until creamy . Beat In eeg and vanllla extract. Gradually add flour mixture. Remove 2 cups dough and chill thoroughly (about 1 hour). St1r melted chocolate morsels and wat.. into remaining dough. Preheat oven to :ris deerees. Farm chilled doQ&b into~,. ball.a usln& a roundect ~measuring te•· spoou for each. Place on ungrea.sed cookie sheets. .HIGH PROTEIN ·~~ . ~l ' . t i LOW CALORIE QI OM. Y Pi~OT ananas Pear. Together. Fresh fruit In season is always a aood buy. Ri&bl ow. fall a.pd winter pears. and b~anas. in season year around. are JOOd value at the market A sl&oiflcant art or the "buy" .la lo e r-ef resblnt taste and m portant nutrition hese fnlii. supply. Four ervln&s of fruits and vegetables, one of the Basic Four Jood &roupa, are required dally for a healthful diet. 4 medium> '• cu.,0111& 1 ttupoop vanilla , Jn larae rnlxlnc bowt, cream butter. Gradually beat Jn au,ar. and beat untll U•bt and flu!fv. Beat in ew. Slit tosether Clour, b~lnl powder, bakiDI aoda and salt. Combine bananu. milk and v anllla. Blend dry ln· gredJent• into batter alternately with banan mixture. Turn into 2 are used and loured 9-inch layer cake pans. Bake ln 350 degree oven 30 to S$ mlnutes, unt..11 cake tester inurted tn Ntte cornea o~t oltan Cool 10 mlnut , tum ~ onto racks arid coel comptete- ly. FhliA :wtQi ChOcolate Fro1tlng and use aUces ot banana 11 candle holders. Vleld; One 9· incb layer cake CJIOCOLATE FROSTING 1 package (! ounces > aeml sw,et chocolate p1ecea b cup sour cream • 1 teaspoon vanilla V. teaspoon salt 2 Vt cups •lfte<l con· tectloners' 1u1ar. Melt c:hocofato In dou- ble boller over hot water, remove Jrom water and cool. Blend in remaining ln&redleot.s and beat UD· til smooth. The pear is a fruit that tastes better when not ripened on the tree. Th_.... __ sugar content increases after picking as starch converts to sugar for finer flavor and smoother texture -the soft, melting flesh that gave pears the nickn11me •'butter fruit" way back m the 1700s, As everyone knows, bananas are shipped green and then ripened here in specially controlled ripening rooms. Even when eaten in the tropics, bananas are ripened off the "tree." The btnana plant isn't really a tree at all; ll's an herb. The United Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Association gives these tips for fresh fruit at its best. Scars or minor surface blemishes don't affect a pear's inner delicacy. Green bananas become less firm a nd develop a .fruity aroma as they ripen ; how ripe a .banana should be is a matter of individual taste. Some like all·yellow bananas best; some t>refer the brown.flecked stage. To Tipen pears or bananas, let them stand at room temperature. A pear is ready for eating when It respond!; readily to gentle pressure. Uananas can be kept in th<.· refrigerator for several days after they • haH ripened to the stage you hke. The skin will turn dark but the inside will be luscious. For baking or cooking, pears should be slightly under·ripe and firm. Pear Macaroon Bake is a quick and easy dessert or pears, orange juice and macaroons. PEAR MACAROON BAKE 4 firm pears, (2 pounds) 2 tablespoons fresh orange juice 2 teaspoons grated fresh orange rind l cup crumbled macaroons C8to 10 ) 1 tablespoon butter or marganne Pare and core pears; cut into ~il·inch slices. Arrange In layers In an 8·inch greased shallow baking pan or pie plate. Sprinkle oranee Juice and grated rind over pears. Distribute crumbled macaroons evenly over pears; dot with butter. Bake ln a 400 degree oven 15 to 20 minutes or until pears are tender and macaroons are browned. Baking time will vary according to the type of pear used. Serve warm. Makes: &servings. LANCASTER OR V ALCHRIS USDA GRADE A FROZEN, 16-22 LBS. Limit One per family at thl~ prlc;~ \ GRADE A TURKEY 1110.'I .... I 1\:\l , ... I II• VALCllH15. IU 11 1 U SWIFT BUTTERBALL TURKEY C.RAOl A. l1t t.? (R<; f l\Otr N l0· 14 LBS. FROZEN. LB. 74¢ ; HARVEST DAY 65 BUTTER BASTED GRADE A TURKt.Y. 16 22 LBS I kOZLN .. L~· JO. J4 LBS. FROZEN, LB 68¢ ~~E~,.!URKEYS ,:,·:69 ., f1, 'lw~. 1 ....... 1ldbloThubJJy NW 1/utnoOn ADDlTlONAl HOLIDAY POUL TRY ITEMS: !:><· ... CJUr compll'le :ot•lec11on r>f clu1.k'> !Jli'l:!:le. CJPOlh. 11).cr r.1ie turkeys. !>tutfed rurkeyi,. gdml.? hen~ ,m<l 11l<)re, mcludmg lacky's fresh~oung 1urkeys w .. mull reMtV<P ~m•I righta on al hn~ .it l~H r'fVU. "° ""' ,.,rofV f!iil .. be .iequ.1~ (0< aa oor C\lllom.ira No aalu' '' dny rOl'l'llTll<1C'IJI ~Jl1.:_:;,,.:s:,.. --'1lim1 Turkey is better than ever. We've heard tales that some farmers have had to strap a bicycle-like contraption to the front of some extra plump birds, so they could get around without toppling forward. That may just be a tall tale; we haven't seen 1t with our own two eyes. But we can tell you some things we do know for sure. U.S.DA. GRADE A. What's it mean? It means 'look out for below grade birds' (birds without the Grade A), 'cause at this time of year you want the best for your table. U.S. Department of Agriculture guide· lines require that the turkey be whole, with· Fresh Meats n1.38 .o 1.88 out parts missing. There musflbe no tom skin, and no pin feathers. You shouk:ln't have to pluck away with tweezers to make this bird beautiful. A word about freezing. . Some of our customers have been buying fresh turkeys to take home to freeze. We sure wish you wouldn't. You see our frozen birds have been blast·frozen. This takes only a few hours, leaving little time for natural bacteria to multiply. The ~r stays tip·top. It takes up to two days for the same size bird to freeze in a home freezer. Tastebuds can tell the difference. So if 90u want to roast your turkey right away. purchase it Liquor FOOD Peer Macaroon Bake uses fresh frt:Jlt In !CftJSon: --- fresh. 1f you plan to store it before yov cook it up, the P~·frozen Janq will save tne flavor. A word allout cooking. Come into our stores this week for a copy of this ad plbs information on roasting times, and instructions on carving, free for the asking. FREE IRON-ON. By popular request, and because we thought you'd like it, we've reproduced the turkey in this illustration above as an iron-on fort· shirts. By a mlrade of modem printing, it's on our grocery bag. Get one with your purchase, withOut charge. ·. Produce OJSP ~LE~ ........ ~ .• 25 VELVET i~, ....... la .19 ... J TQ ' Ci-anherry 'tars in Pie I Cll-1' ClllPPON PR tur• liCIJUy Into c~ed ~ .. bell. Z cups fnlib or lroaeA·fresb Swlrl top. 1amiah wltb reatrved aanbert•. rinH"d Ud drained cranberries and e•Ul until firm. • ~eapqar CBANBEtBY '4 cupwater PINEAPP EPIE 2 eQvelopH unflavored Pie clUlt for 2-crut .. tncb l 1telaUa m1sed wfth \.t cup water pie l~ cupa trabam cracker 1 pound fresh or froien·fNlb • crumbs cranberries. rinsed and.drained 2 tablespoom su1ar ~ cup water 'H cup melted but tu or 2 cups auiar ·mar1a.rine 7 tableapooqs all-purpose . 1 packase (8 ounces> cream nour cheese 1 cup weU-dtalil>ed cruabed l can CS ounces) frozfr con· pineapple ceotrat.edorangejulce, un tut.eel >4 cup finely chopped 1 cup (~ pint) heavy ream, crystalllzed=· whipped Line. the an.d sides ol a In a aaucepan, combine cnn-9-incb piepaQ, crust allowtnc berries, sugar and water. Sim· an overba.ngctf Unch. Roll out re· mer for 5 minutes. Stir ln aefaUn maining c~ into a 10" x 8" rec- untll thoroughly dissolved. tangle and cut into ten ~-lncb RemovVn>m heat and cool. In a wide strips. Jn a bowl, coinblne bowl, mix crumbs, sugar and remainina iQgredienta and pour butter. Press mixture firmly and into pie crust lined pan. Arruie evenly Into a 9-inch pie pan. strips of pie crust ln a lattice over Chill. In a bowl, beat cream fiUlng. Fold edge ot pie crust cheese until nuffy. over the ends of the pie crust Gradually beat in orange juice, strips. Firmly crimp edges. Bake beal1n& until smooth. Stir in in a preheated bot oven (400 cranberry mixture removing a degrees F.) for 30 to 40 minutes few whole berries for 1arnish. or until richly browned. Cool Chill until slightly thickened. thorou1hly before cutting into Fold in whipped cream. Pile mix-wedges. •• .Travel ffrom Page CS> soft ball when dropped in cold water ) Pour syrup onto a dampened. large platter or marble slab, if you have one. VO not scrape pan. Cool to 110 degrees, Cir until mix- ture feels lukewarm. Beat mixture with a broad· bladed spatula, or a new stiff. bladed putty knife (from the ,paint store), until white and creamy, scraping and UfUng mixture from the edge toward 1 the center, turning the platter oc- casionally. Continue beating un· til fondant becomes very white and stiffens. Knead fondant until it softens and is smooth: do not over knead. Pack into a plastic refrigerator container: cover Refrigerate at least 2 days lo ripen. Makes 1 pound CANDIED FRUIT RIND Freshly made, it's tangy and soft and stays just that way. Plain gelatin dissolved In the syrupy coating is the secret. Because it's such a good keeper, it can be made up early for gifts, family snacks or as a garnish for holiday fruJtsaJads and desserts. Rind from 3 oranges Rind from 1 grapefruit 2 \.'I cupe sugar l tablespoon light corn syrup 1 teaspoon ground ginger 1,a teaspoon salt l 11"l cups water 1 envelope unflavored gelatin Peel rind from fruit$ in quarters; trim orr while mem· brane, then cut rind Into \4·inch· wide strips. Place ln large, heavy saucepan with water to cover; bring to boiling; simmer 15 minutes. Drain; repeat cooking with fresh water and draining two more Umes. Return rind to pan. Stir in 2 cups of the sugar, the corn syrup, ginger and salt, and 1 cup of the water. Cook slowly, stlrrina often trom bottom of pan. 40 minutes, or until most or syrup is absorbed. Meanwhile, soften the 1elatin ln tbe remain· ing ~ cup water; stir tt into the fruit strips until dissolved, then cool. Lllt. out the strips, one at a Ume, and roll in the remaining ~ cup suaar, sprinkled on sheet ot waied paper, to coat generously. Place m a single layer on a cooky sheet to dry slighUy. If stored in a tightly covered container. nnd will keep for weeks. Makes J •-, pounds. GOLDEN FUDGE 3 cups'\ugar 14 cup llght corn syrup 3 tablespoons butter or margarine 1·2 teaspoon salt l cup evaporated m.ilk 1h cup water 2 teaspoons vanilla Green and red candled cher- ries, slivered Combine sugar, corn syrup, butter or margarine, salt, evaporated milk and water in a medium-size heavy suacepan. Heat. stirring constantly, to boHing, lht•n cook rapidly, sbr· nng several.times. to 238 on a candy thermometer. <Syrup forms a sof\ ball when dropped in cold water ) Remove from heat at once. Add vanilla, but do not stir in. ' Let mixture cool in pan on rack to 110, or UDtU bottom of pan feels lukewarm; beat 10 to 15 minutes. or just until tudge starts to thicken and lose its glosalneas. Spread in a buttered 8x8x2-lnch irao. Let stand 2 to 3 minutes, or just until set: cut into squares. Decorate each with the slivered cherries. l;et stand until firm. Makes about l 'h pounds. f'IOCURAILE PRESENTS AT f'ROf'ER PRICES c.in be found under the I>ally Pilot Christmas Tree each Thursday an the Clnsiflc<i ~cctlpn . C&ANBEaRYAPPLE POU PIE 2 table1poon1 butter or ar1arine 1 larteonlca. chopped l dove 1artte. minced 1 ~ CuPI frelb or fl'oien·ftah cranberries, rimed Md drained. 1 Pound ll'OUlld ~rll 4 ana-. pee1ec1, C«ec1 and aUced 1 teupoca poultry Huonlna Salt and pepper 1 packqe (11 OUDCfll) pie cruatmix In a skillet, beat butter and ·cook onion, carllc and cranbef.. ries for 5 minute.. SUr ln port and coatinue MOldn1 until pork ts brown and crumbly. •llrrlni occ aalooally. Drain all fat. Stir In apples. poultry aeasontni and salt and pepper to lute. Pt>ur pork mtuure into a •hallow 2· quart cuserole. Prepare pio cruat mix accordiq to packqe direc:Uons. Roll out crust lar1e enoutb to cover top of caasefOle, cut slita ln crust to allow steam to escape. Seal ed.Cea and bake ln a preheated moderate oven (350 degrea F.) for 1hourto1 hour and 20 m.lautea or until CruJt ii richly browned. · Y04lr Dally Pltot can be ftec:yci.d. Ornoe Coa\I Coll* IS 11\e ollfci.I recycling ctnter for Costa MHa. ., .. Crant>erry Chiffon pie for tho festive season ahead. Any 2-12 oz. or larger j cir~ . of Vlasic Pickles. ~ • . .frOm the vlas1c Stork Right now you can save 35¢ when you b'f:1Y 2 jars of Vl~sic Pickles. The Vlasic·,. St0rk has been working overtime aeliv.eri~g extra supplies to Y.our grocer,4 to be sure there's enough for eve~yqne. · ·- ... 11 ,. . t I l •I ·t • ( '1 ., l ~ • Ii ... I•• '• .. I " ,, I 11 I I I .. i •l 1 I I ''l ,. Cit DAILY N.OT MIRMiDUKE 1 • t• I f I I' f~J(o "You 're not suppose~ to lick faces in a huddle'" FUNKY WINKER BEAN Record Roundup-The Azuma 20,000 watt amplifier should be more than ad.equate for any system. CASEY ~ow·s T"E J.IOCK'EY LEA4UE AT 'tblJR SANITARIUM, DOC? ....llilil- MOON MULLINS COULD BE, US MULLINSES HAVE RUN °"PE INTO 'TW GROUND, t<AYO GERIATRfX _JL --:-i ......... ~­w-.- WE'L-L. SE SO 13l.6Y YOU KIDOINGf JOCK WITH HOMECOMING Wl\..L. 60 ~ANAS ACT1v1T1E$, we WHEN He ~T~ HI$ SHOUL..D HAVE l,.£J=T OL..O 'TI<EE FRIEND JOCI-: WITH 1l-IE IN "THE CEN~ MACKS! OF Tl-IE 'tDM/'NJNS~ MJSSPEACH .... _ ..... by Tom Batiuk It also has the added advantage of being able to heat a small home. (~! (.LACK/ by Charles Rodrigues .•. U£ SAW5 114E ~0!1<£'( PUCK IN UALF. ' I I ! by Wm. F. Brown and Mel cuson · DR.SMOCK l l 1 . • ~ SO Wlo-4A.,.. weRe: 1"HE! RSSUt.-1'"5 OF 1"HIS SWISS DOC"T"OR'S RSJUVSNA"T"IO!'-J "f'RSA"T'ME!N1'", MRS. Kl,..INI!! ~ MOTLEY'S CREW JU~ CALL '.f MOOML16Hl'IN6· SMAE PAMIL V ..tsMITE$1 St;OllPIONS, R~H FJ.15AS A>/f) '>~VN!~f:" aNTIPEPESl! COMICS I CROSSWORD by Templeton and Forman lDDAY'S CROSSWDID PVZZLI ACROSS po11t1on1 '3 N Y.'1 1 Arom11tc neighbor plant 44 ldenl1C1I 5Wet 9 S .• 45Tllleol --UI tlollOf 1 H4akuufftr 48 Feel dizzy 1 !S ·-Kazan: 48 Poat UNI TEO Feature Syndicate r...-r"1111tlohM: Al~ Ir :I.alt: L ~ v 'IRll F Rlf '~ ~ ~ ~ f Ill N ~ ~ ~ D I 1 IC IP• n 0 ~ IS Movil VIP 2 p I 1eMan01t11e 5 ,,."':.~ 0 F E '" E ~ -Q-R R cloth 1 money T R E E 0 Flk H Ohii LIE• G' 17 Notion se 81klnl part 11 European 57 Music.I 19 Pleu 1n a direction f J 11 l fl f llA~ A ~ ' I l r: In 11 ' ti s I N c • H r'1'# 58 Pretext 20 lntefjec\lon 59 Cardlnals Of ( I~ , J F ,., A IA A A I' T ot 1hoCk 11._ Jay a 21 Nouglltl eo •... bOlrd R I DE I N s I D A /}, ( '~ ~ ~ T I!' R I! and crosses 81 Where Anne 23 ·--taught ~ f n s HA c ,, s r puU1 38 Church p,w ltrtnotll H Hive value 25 N. Amer. 63 Medicine 9 Placed at In· 42 Ullfellabte coin porhons 28 Goll lttm && Current tervata person t 0 Promenades 44 E lhdlln t 1 Newapeper aotdltlrs 27 Happy ea City In Iowa 29Chetr Mem 45 Et'l)flUl\O t 2 W~; Preflll ~'* 328ar 13R1bbon: 47·-r'lolla: blYtflllll 35 Olspereglng DOWN Pr1h1 BelltlfMn 21 UnllH ours.I~• remark 38 Kind ot allow 37 Objector WOfshll) 3Sl11Cllnt 39N1rrow m"9IJ) 40Pl1D111c:l~ Met• '1 Ne•P.tf. •2~COll\· 22 Sec)er1ted '48 Piie• .. 24 S"®W0tn 49 s ... 1 g!fdlf 1 Change of 2HOfHter• 50 Soe11t workers 21 Clelr de·· 1>Ubltcty 2 Hero-act0t 30 P•ss•ee s 1 Titles '"-MurOf\y 31 Pronoun 52 Ma11"'11t1's 3 Untried 32 Farm build-tow 4 Alttt Zeta Ing 53 BIOod~ n111nt 33Qodofar1 Clr1hJ1 ~Ms.Faye 3H.n111 54Ct\urctlerea 1t<1ndoffllf 35Met0tf 6SCo11tlO 8 Emitloud 38 Oannent 59 Pewitt' eo.n 4 N IK .. .. FOOD . w~. Nov•mbel 11. 1971 DAILY PILOT CJJ Add a Taste of Israel to Your Got11md Me8.Is Ralphs .is clet8rininecl •• ~ - You won't Pilra 19we, . price on-roz•n Gracle.A .---'1rkey. Frozen, Grade A Armour Star Turkeys ~ ........ -.r • *You won't pay a low• ptke- 11·. true. It ta Relphl ~ dell,. tti.tt tttlt ~~ng. rou won't pey 4 low•r pra on OrHe A froz1tt hen or ICMft ~ """ Ralphe prtce on Ar· mour Sa. frozen Grade A tlllkeye. Thi• otter 1pplie9 to our ti• m1jot food chtln c«nPetltors' chllnwide, non· rntricted prlcff..Alpfla lttl, Fu\o, Luctcy, Mttbt lllket. lafenf end Vona. Olfef .n.ctive Novembef 17 ftwouoh ~ii, 1t77. So II you find• Or.ct• A turhy for i..t, a.II Jull9 Oraytelft at 1·800-292·1100. You can help !Nk• Ralphe the OM plac. for the IMtt wlkte on row hoUdtf turkey. IHf.lladeCut Wileofll~ Clu:k Roast CornDlg Bacan 1 lb. II ,,., lb. -- : ,. 89 .......... 1(1 ..... Rollllllte Style Tip ROilt ,,., lb. ': Golden Premium Meats •-lttl Pop Up Coolrlng °"""58 Tam Tlllc8y ':' • ~~Chicken :r.78 ~~urkey ::.78 ~ .....Wl'Olllt 78 ~JuniorTwkly ~. ~Y~ngDuck s:.88 Pantry Fillers '!:.28 ... 58 ::: .29 .... 89 ,,,, . t1• 99 -· &tnlnedOfW.. OceanSpray Crad81y sm 1:: II ......,.eem.,.. M11.CIMllClll'1 DresUag Mix Super Deli Super Bakef'y Frozen Foods ~.49 ':' 1•• ::: .47 :: a• , .. 45 .... S upel' Produce Super Floral .. -1· ... a- Wines & Spirits j •• j I • r ' I CJ2 DAil Y Pn.C>r , ORANGE COUNTY PHll.BAS•ONIC 80CIETY: Concert pianist Helene lbwket will en-t~rtala tM Mesa Verde Committee at 10:30 a.m. Thur d~. Nov.17, at the home of Mrs. Lewla Kid- d.er. For more information. call M.rJ. GIJ'Y Johnson, S57·9329. 'CAUFORNIA FEDERATION OF WO~N·s CLtraS: Orange District will hold its annual mem- berablp tea at 10 a.m. Thursday; Nov. 17. at the ~t~ Mesa Women's Club. • TEEN CHAl,LENGE WOMEN: The Christian Wqmen 'i; dub wlll participate in Orange County . TeiJh Challenge Week by showing the movie "The Jesu~ Factor" nt l 1 ·30 a.m. Thursday, Nov. 17, at the Teen Cha11engc center, Orange. More informa- 11on is available from 633·3000. DUSTY WINGS: The Orange County group will hold its annual bout1qut• auction at 7:30 p.m. Thurs- day, Nov. 17, al the College Park Clubhol..lSe m Jrvinc. Proc<.'eds ~111 be donated to the Salvation \rmy s Summl'r Camp Program. More informa. lion 1s ava1lahlc from Veronica Von Grosse )jJ0-7671. • TROJAN Gl.ilLD: The Orange County group \\ 111 meet for coff<.'I~. a program and luncheon. at 10 .1 m. Thursday. ~ov 17, in the Newport Beach home of Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert W. Ferguson. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF RETIRED PER~ONS: Th(• Newport Chapter 121 will meet at noon Thurl'iduy, Nov. 17, at the Senior Citizens Center m Corona dcl Mar for lunch and a business mechn~. NATIONAi, ASSOCIATION Of' PARl.JAMEN· TARIANS: A series of classes on parliamentary procedure is bcmi.t sponsored by the Chi Unit. Class<.'s mecl from 7:30 to 9 :30 p.m. on Thursdays at the Magnolia Elementary School Dis· trwt Hoard Jtoom, Anaheim. More information is .a all able from Mari<.' Karcher, 533-4038. f..\ LEC:llE LEAGUE: The Irvine group will tnl'l'l aUI p m Thursda~'. Nov.17, in the Irvine home uf :\J ary Jl•ns1m ;\>Jor<· mfopmation is available from Hila Obon, !15.'i 2117 lffSl:\t;ss AND PROFESSIONAL WOMEN: I he Ltguna llcach dub wHI hold its Young Career Woman Proi:<1m at 6 30 p.m, Thursd~NQv. 17, m llll' rommumly rooms of Laguna FedefilrSavings .ind Loan Association. H<.•servallons may be made with Peg Bumbera. ·l\H 2732. KAPPA Al.PUA THETA AUXILIARY CLUB: The El Camino Real group will meet for a .de· monstraUon of custom jewelry at a luncheon meet· lll1': on Thursday, Nov. 17. More information is .1\ ail able from Mrs.TB. Jlaskell, 831-0658. NEWPORT HARBOR ART MUSUEM: Busi- ness Not as Usual will be the theme from 6 to 9 p.m. F'riday, Nov. 18, a s the museum hosts the opening of the Sal<'S and llcntal Gallery Exhibition. DAt:GllTERS OF THE BRITISH EMPIRE: CavaUer Chapter will hold a fund-ra1sing event to <lid the British Home for the Aged at 8 p.m. Friday :-<ov. 18 at the Bu11 & Bus h, Costa Mesa. ' The Old Fashioned .British Pub Night is open to the public. HUNTINGTON JtEl\.cH HISTORICAL SOCIETY: The annual Christmas l>azaar is planned for 4 to 7 p.m. Friday, Nov. 18, and 10 a.m. to 4:30 Pm. Saturday, Nov. 19, in the Pacific Room of the Central Library In Huntington Beach. . Proceedi. wiil be used to contmue restoring the \\ T. Newland house and gardens m Huntington lkad1. COSTA lllESA WOMEN'S CLUB: Dr. Kenneth \. Carlson, specialist in human relations and fami- ly problems, will be the guest speaker at a noon luncheon on Frlday. Nov. 18, at the clubhouse in Cost.a Mesa. ST. CECILIA'S CHURCU: A country• Christmas holiday boutique is planned by Area 3 'lo~ Irvine Community ,on Saturday, Nov. 19. at Jrv1nemahSchooJ. · PARENTS OF FATIMA~ The group's first an- nual Christmas boutique will be held from 8:30 a.m. to7p.m. Saturday, Nov.111andfrom9a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 20, at Our Lady of Fatima School, San Clemente. BllANDEIS UNIVERSITY NATIONAL WOMEN'S COMMITTEE: The Orange County chapter will bold an art ~\Jctloo on Saturday, lfov. 19, at the ~~Inn. Irvine. Viewina be&isl!J at 7;JS p.m... with auction at '8: 1 s. AdmiJ.sion ls $'1. GO. OUR LADY QUEEN OF ANGELS SCHOOL AUXILIARY: The group's~ annual auction wlll be held at 8 p.m. Sa~. Nov. 19, in the Parls'h Hall, Newport Beac:h. Proceeds will provide financial assistance to the parish IChool education program. Reservations mat be mo.de with Mrs. Michael~. '1~·1637. CHILDREN'S HOME 80CIETYt Las Brtzu del Mar Auxiliary wJll present Its second ~ual arts and craft fair frorQ )0 a.m. to 3:80 p.m. on Saturday, Nov.19; at th• 1'ountat Vall&1 Recru-tion Center, 1 ., - Among the entertainers for the Irvine Phi/harmonic Committee Home Tour will be Todd Van Dell and Julia Ringwalt of Corona de/ Mar. COMMUNITY UNITED METHODIST C~URCH: ~e United Methodist Women's &roup ~ 111 present its annual fall boutique at 10 a.m. !faturday, Nov. 19, at the church in Huntington Beach. DELTA GAMMA: The Delta Phi chapter will hold its annual luncheon and fashion show at 11:30 am. Saturday, Nov. 19, at the Registry Hotel Irvine. The event benerus the Blind Children's Center m Los Angeles. More information is available from Delta Gam- m a at the Campus Organizations Office at UC I rv1nc, 833·5181or675·9465. l!;LKS LAJ)IES: The Eilcs Ladies of Mission VieJo Lodge 2444 will sponsor a dance and country fair at6p.m. Saturday, Nov.19, at the lodge in Mis· s1on VieJo _ Ti.ckcts. are av~1lable from Carleen Rigg, 168·1365: Mildred Trischlcr, 830·4767; or Delphia· f'rank, 581·6178. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF UNIVEaSITY WOMEN; Members ot the Westministe.r·Fountain Valley branch wm hear a speech by Dennis Mangers, assemblyman from the 73rd district. at i ·30 a.m. Saturday. Nov. 19, at Ute Mile Square Country Club, Fountam Valley. CALIFORNIA. WOMEN LAWYERS• The public is invited to a noon luncheon on SatUrctay, Nov. 19, at the Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club Corona del l\tar. ' Price is $10, and reservations must be made at least 48 hours in advance with Susan C. W"strach 548-0382. ., • ALPHA PHI ALUMNA~: An open board m~t· ini wiJl be belcf llt 7 p.in. Monday; Nov. 21. at tbe Fountain Valley home Of DeUa Woodward. Moi-e in- formation 1s •vallable frona Ma. 'Woodward m-9639. • KAPPA DELTA: Members of the Newport Harbor Alumnae Alsoclatton..w meet llt"7:80-p.m. Monday. NcW. 21, at tho Corona del Mar home ot Mrs. RaymOriclHattey. MONDAY llOJlNING CWB: ~ Huntington Beach IJ'OUPWUI meet at 10:.» •• m. ~.Nov. 21, at the HtmtlnetoQ Beachll:ul. Hostesses Karen Posers and ~BJram will /J!l(t/clpete Jn the Laguna TVDDAY a.VB orr NEWPORT lla\JlBOa: . Nigu81 Women's The group ·s amiu.l Christmu l:p.itlqu• WU! be pre. aiJb Christmas , sented fromtoa.m.to~.Nov.~,atthe Home Tour. Balboa Bay Club. A alt-down luncheon dl'follow. I .. AMERICAN L'VPVS 60Uftt: Uward E. Harnage!. lA>I .Anlelee rl\ewnatololiat, will aPeaic to the Orange County chapter at 7 p.m. Tuesday. Nov. 22, at the Del Mar Mobile J!!statee Qubbowse Hunttnaton Beach. ' • Mort lnfotmotl~ It available from stephen Stelfina, ~1. • . Holiday Tour .. . . . ' ' '/ can't turn down a job. I always think it might be the last.' Mode/·Carla LaMonte: On a whirl. NEW YORK lAP) To Carl~ LaMonte, de la Renta is "Oscar" and Blass is "Bill." She has climbed to the top of one of the most slippery heaps in the world to earn $100 an hour as a fashion model. But all is not soft swirling fabrics. gentle background music, wealth and fame -for this long-limbed daughter of a Holyoke, Mass., fac- tory worker is realistic: 1t could all end tomorrow, she says. "At first I just wanted to make a living. Then I \fanted to beoneo!the top 10 models. Then I wanted to be one or the top five. But once you ·re on top, what's next? "Down. So I can't turn doW!l a job -I always think it might be the last.·· She works virtually 365 days a year, often for as long as 16 hours a day. No matter what havoc it will wreak on her personal pl~. Carla almost never turns down a job, "IC I find out I've been left out of a show I call my agents and ask why. They say, 'because you·retoo busy,· and I say, 'but did they want me?'·· So most of the time Carla La Monte runs from job to job -dashing for subways, flagging taxicabs. Her thick brunette hair askew, she clutches bulky tote bags filled with the paraphernalia of her trade - [.____H_o_r_os_(!_op_e,____,,) Hubby Has Fixation Wedding and engagement O'nnotn'ICementa run on Sunday 11t the Do•IJI Pdot. Forma are avc&Jable at alt Dally Pilot offices or by callmg the reo.tures Dtpart- ment.642·4321. To auold disappointment, prospective bndts are reminded lo have their wedding stotie~. with a black· and· wfute glo:uy of the bride or of the couple. to the ,..eature!i ~rtmt'Tlt one we~ before the tttddmg. TllURSDAY,NOV.17 By SYDNEY OMARR ARJES fMarch 21-April 19 >· Emphasis on friendship, meaningful relationship, money con- nected with business, authority, goal, long.range investment. Member or opposite sex is In pkture DEAR ANN LANDERS: My husband 1s a hard worker, raithful TAURUS (Ap ril 20·May 201 Study Anes and kind. The problem IS message Added rcspons1b1lity, recognition on gluttony and a fixation on a~enda. One "in char~c" takes you into his con the television. fidence. Key now is to realize when a situation It ·s regular fare for or relalionstup -has run its course. him to eat three dozen GEMINI <May 21 ·Junc 20>: Emphasis on de-donuts. one bag of potato sire, philosophy, willingness to struggle for a chips, several pounds of principle. Creative approach is necessary and nuts and a couple of desirable. Personal magnetism, attraction and salami sandwiches in the Ann I.,, anders Jove are in picture. course of s.s hours ot - CANCER (Jtme 21-July 22>~ Emphasis on watchingt.elevision. ' ~-------' hard facts of finance. Partner, mate is involved. His appearance is dis- Emotions run deep. You are super-sensitive. Key gusting. He outweighs 1-;ngayeme11t announcements, with black-and w/11te glossy uf lhP /uture bride or the couple. musl bl' rt'ceu:<"d by the 1-'eatures Department att weeks be/Ori' th1• u·ed.dmy date Club Calt!ru.Jnr runR each Wednesdo111n the Dady P1l111 and co11tams nnllces of women'• and service club meetings and events for the /oLlowsng ~ek -Thurs day through Wednesday . Send notices to Club Cat.rl· ~.Doily Ptlol. P 0. EJo:r 1560, Cost(I Me.ta, CA 92626 1t1re to include your name and phone number. ticu m1L't be m our hands two weeks in advcmce. To req~t a picture. wnte or call the F'taturu Dt?partment, 642-4321. Pictures are limited to Jund· ra1~ers open fo the pub!tc. spare stockings and shoes. makeup and bobby pins, and an enormous. hour-by-hour appointment calendar. Carla has been modeling for 10 years, but her age is a mystery. She won't tell because, she says, each designer has a different notion of who Carla LaMonte is: Blass sees her as a sophisticated woman in her 30s; Clovis thinks of her as 25-ish. Carla LaMonte intends to keep i. working for both. , The work is no picnic. One recent Monday, Carla rose at 6:00 a.m. to set her hair before embarking on a series of seven fashion shows scat- tered around the city that began at 8 a.m. and ended after 10 p.m. Sun- day's schedule was much the same, and Tuesday's. Carla changed clothes at least 40 times, zipped at least 40 zippers. changed hairstyles nearly as often in not many more minutes. She whipped herself into elegant, glowing beauty in tiny overheated dressing rooms where as many as 16 other models zipped and pinned and brushed and, now and then, brulsed one another with bony elbows in the frenzy of changini. Of course, the money is fabulous. "That's not true, .. Carla objects. "It sounds great, bJJt I don't get paid until they send the money to my 1 agent. I must lose $3,000 a year from l designers wbo go out of business without paying me ... "And now, in the United States, _, blondes are in,.. Carta says. "Of course. if there's one brunette in a show, it ·s likely to be me. is to give logic a fair chan<:e. me by at least 150 pounds LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Emphasis on oblig•· and has a closet full of I still love him, but my respect diminishes with ,----------------------------------_:;...-,-.,- cvt:~=~~~~~e~~ing r· Butte Knit • Debby of California • Fred Rottich11 tions; wUUngness to listen to various points Of clothes lhal don't fit. lie view. Hilarioua situation is under way -laugh refuses lo give them and be merry. If you choose tears, you'll appear away on the pretense that ridiculous. Lie low. · d VIRGO <Aun. 23-Sept. 22): Be ~areful re· he s going on a iet "next " week." He admits he has garding details. Check specifics, measurement.s. a neurotic eating prob· Accent on work, service, written material sub· lem but he won 't seek mitte~ by relative. It is a report, but it ls based help. Our marriage is in on superficial observation. ""I t bl b h · LIBRA <Sept. 23·0et. 22): Good lunar aspect '' g r.ou e ut e won t let me get counseling -coincides with sienificant chan~es. intensified says, "They don't know relationships. children, speculation, fun-and-anything ... I've even ex· games, perceiving what a •'special person" ex-a m i n e d m y 0 w n peels of you. b h · • h · k · SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21 >: Emphasis on e av&or, • in ing perhaps I drive him to achievement, finishing transaction. getting cal, but I'm not a nagger basic values into focus. Taurus, Libra in· and resent the guilt he dividuals figure in scenario. Money, property. has laid on me by in· Jong.range programs featured. nuendo. SAGJTrARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Emphasis r·m busy with three on movement, decision, involvement in mystery. preschool children, one Illusion plays major role m scenario. Pisces. who is handicapped and Virgo figure prominently ·-and so does the requires special care. I number"7." ~rounds for divorce? Whal about his health? The store with the He knows be's killing Ra·e's Fashions fashi~,.,ble Labels himsc(fSJOWlywithevery ca , VI"'-" , bite he takes. What does t.. lhissayabouthisfeelings >G» P.. RE~ H' 0 I.ID .It._ "ffllJ.I_ for me and the children? ~Ti~·_ Whatapproachdoltake? • Silence and pretending the problem isn't there doesn 'l work. He)p me. - WIFE OF MR. FAT DEAR WIFE: I sug- gest counseling for you. Some foodaholics Cllke alcoholics) hue to be shocked ln(o shaping up by being Jeft. MQbe thJs is the way It is ln your family. • .a Aua n•us (Jan. 20·Feb. lB>: CynJe at peak get absolutely no help m~ n.u " from fat stuff. I do A good therapist can • -you gain added acceptance and have chance to _ EVERYTHING from show you thew.ay. Check create lttQlendous demand for product, talent. paperwork to home can the mental health clinics Personal appearances on agenda. t d k to in your area and get •o· PISCES(Feb.19·March20>:Liehtisshedon ning 0 yar wor e areas previously dark. Be courageous where _c_a....:rp_c_n_try....;._. ______ i_n_g_. -------- convictions ate concerned; do1ft jump at abadows. Vitality makes a comeback. If Nov. 17 ls your birthday, you are an or 1aruzer, a batUe.r; you are capable or succeeding in business, of creating, setting pace and policy. Capricorn, Cancer persons play important roles i.D YOU? lite. EVERY ENTRY HAS 3 WAYS TO WINI WfllllY lll·llOlll ~llAWl~MGS _ EACH f TllE 2~ PAllTICIPATlltG SAfEWlY STOAES Will KAVE A WEEKLY DMWlll6 TO AWAAO I _s5ooo~J~IRC.m 2 s25oowrwn • WI CUnJCATU T • waahlngton State Extra Fancy Red Delicious UTO t W((U Of •WTUTIDlll au ~f9.IU na NITIClftfltl W(W&f (Tllff WU 9f a.tiff .... r• fGUftUIC '8IUS WU • IWUlft I ·LINCOLN CONTINENTAL MARK v AUTO 8 ·FQ~~.!..E!f~ JOO ·'IOO"WfWAY GIFT CUTIFICATU • f.RESH ROLLS Whol'e or Half, Water Added I Smoked-In-Flavor NEW '77 FORD· LTD 2 OOOI fll.&.AUD NAUTO' PACTOIY All COMOfTIOMa.._ Selecilhlft c:rulMoO-n'latlc. power front disc bfak". P<>W•r stffring. front bu,.,._. g~a. br1ght rocker D8I* moldlngs, deluxe ateenng wheel, power' Yef'ltilation syatem, 400 CIO v.a engine, ~ '11d1a1 tires. rear bu"l*' guards. dual c•• eeat speakers, AM radio, tinted glau~eta. Wheel c:ov~. Ser. f18ta..e.~tk. t1oge ~ .• -1 ~ WIDE SELECTIONS TO CHOOSE FROM AT DISCOUNTED PRICES B"' ?ODAY AND SA VE! NEW '77 FORD COUllER SEE AND DRIVE THE NEW :'78 TRUCKS \ . ~ ~ WE'VE GOT 'EM i AND WE'RE OFFE~ING OUR . VOLUME DISCOUNTS ·. RIGHI NiWI ,; '73 DODGE CHAJlGB HAJtDTOr '76 CHEVROLET MONfl CAia.:o'TLAMDAU Auto. tran~. PoW9( 11eerlng, oower b(ake1, rac:tro. Lie. #535KJY Stk. #1.5~ V-8, auto. ttlnl., factory air c:ondltJ<:n. il'lO· power eteenng, power dilo ~ '9dlo, heat~. Whltewall tlrft, tinted ~._., wheel covert. Landau top, tilt eef. 21,000 mi. Lie. l424e84 Stk. 174TOYOTA WA~ie..e.t " cyl .. " IC)Md. r8dlo. heater. luggage r1Ck. UC. t) 12MNN Stock 13010. "' OOOA. .. speed, AMIFM & tape ater.0 rldiO, heater. only 23.500 mllea. Lie. f,098MXN Stk. tP3024A. . ECOHOMY flfCICUP 176 FORD L\MC:l4110 PIC&UP V-8, auto. trans .. power Sfffring, power bralc••· radio, heater, with ahell~ to Lo Mllea;e. Stk: tT244,.1Ct9187 ... Stick ahlft, tldlo. hater. Hard to find! Lie. fe27KRK Stl<. f330A Chrome front bOITIDer. fOlding seat ~. do~ tamp, headliner, t\Hone -regular & deluxe. 5600 GVW package, 302 v.a engine, R.nger P1Ckage. wcndow-shdlng rear. exhau1t system-reduced sound. pOWef steering, tlre carrier1'1d.-out, mirrot'Mow mount-bright, handling package. light group, glass tinted-all around, ex1ra coohng radiator. chr6me rear step bumper. Ser. tAJ2086 Stk. t0300 •is PLYMOUTH ~WA•OH v.a. aut'O • .....,._, fac:by alf conditlon- lng. s>owet ateerlng, pe>wer braket. radio, heat.,, tinted OIHs. 10 PuHnger, L .. than 33.000 mll ... Cream Pufft Lie. t164NWA Stlc. 1192&, ·I c;, "Miu He1en put o steeple in there to hold my popen together." PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PICTITIOUS aUSINIU SU PE Ala.I COUllT O,. THI HAMl5TATIMlllH 'tile lollowlnn-..-·--• .... -wl· STATECWCAl.ll'<>AHIA 1111 nHiO: ... r-· , • ...,,,..-• ANO FOii THE OGl!AN HOUSE APARlMl:NT5, (~~y~~=Gli 2U Lower 0111 Drl\19, ~ llffcJI, OllOlllTOSHOWCAUSE Qlllorol•n.51 l'OllOtANGIO,.NAMI Jtllrty Barn•• W•yman, US ln 1111 Maller 01 Applfullon ol Lower Cllll Pr•~•. "100, L•oun• MARIANNE TAHUHUTEAANI lor Beacn, c..111ornt•mi1 cnanQtol Na..,., Josepnlne barno• W•ym•n, SIM J ,.. •PPllUllon ol MAR !AHNE " .... <.anc111, N•llrPOrl BH Cll, TM•UHUTEAAHI IOf'<ll~ of Nm•. '°'lllornl• Ila¥ Ing Dt'<!o 11111<1 In Cout I. and 11 •P. l 111• bu>h>*H I• conout1eo by • 1>9arln1i trom w10 epp11cat1on th•I gentHlp.trlnlrSl\lp. MARIANNE TAHUHUTERANI hat Jtlf....,bM,,..V.aymen llltcl an aPC>llCallon ptopc»l"IJ lMI Mr Thia ·~·-· w• llled wllh Ille Nrne b<I ,......., 10 MARIANNE VAN Counly G.lerkcl Orange County on Nov. THll.LO • ... 1'11. NO"', tl'lffelore, II h ller•bV .. ~M ...._ , .. tu and dlretltd, IMI all por>on' it1ltr .. I· ... ubll~ °'"""99 Goatt D•llY Piiot. I-cl In wld ,,,.11 .. dO ._..,. l>eiort "''' ....... 1•, 2J, JO, ancJ OK. 1, 1911 Co.irt In ~rl""""I 3 on ,,.,.. 011> <WY ol _________ ...;•;.:9.:.;ll=·11 O..cemb .. r, '""· .,111 OOo'tt«~ • m., PUBLIC NOTICE f ICTtltOUS BV~lhl:.SS l<AMl:.SlAllMl:."T l he 1011ow1ng ~'ion••• e ooU>e 11u.,. MHH f'RCIM 1..,1:. CiHOUhO UP, 1921 V., MacAr\h\lr -IUI, !>e<!tt Ao4, Ctlllornta t2104 from TIW' vrwoo IJp, • LahtC><n•• corpou1-.... JI v., M.t<Artn..r ~ 101. ~nu1 ,.,..., uo111orn14tJ14'4 Sf"I buwnn• It conouc:lecl by• cor· ~aAIOn. • ~ rom 1 he CirounO U• kOO<'r10..,. Vo<•l-rei>Jo.t>t Thll lWlen11tnl ,.d, 111., will> Illa <.out1ly C.lrrh OI Or-Coutlly on,.Ov· cmoer u . 1v// / "IWJ l'ubtl"'"" <i<-U><Ol 0.lly 1'1101, OI WIG d4y ID ~ '"'"" why the • pUtMlon '"' <'*'99 ol nt"'9 Sh0uld not ... Q(Mllecl It " tun"'-r -red tr.at • copy ol lh•• Orcltr b< puoll'>he<I In Ille 0.M>Qe C.OWllV 0d•ly l'llc.t. • ~w•p.ol>t'r 01 91n-erel <lf<.ut.;Uon. prtnlt'O in W•O 'ounly, •I le..I ono ~.,"' IM<'k tor'°"" WC<tUI•• -i.i. pt1or lo '"" cloy ol WKI M•r•OQ. O•l-d "''' 7Str•<Urol Octooer, ltll. l.fftw Ven l •~nove J~otv;o5-1'1orCourt JOHN H. flTZ.Sl~S AltWMY at Law ..a s.wtlt Cout Mltlltw•f t.At ... aatacll,C4tuJI r.1. C11•1-10ll .......... , '"'Allllflcotll P11bll\Md Or ... CA>a•I 0.lly Piiot, Hov•mb<lr 7, '· "· U. ,,,, ~1~n fl<O•.l•,IJ,.JIJ,dnCICi<·c /,19/I •'1 .. 11 I------------ PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC'NOTJCE FICTITIOUS IUSINIU NAME ST4TEMINT The lotlOIW!ng--Me cto1119 Du~ ''"'": WESTIRN PACll'IC llENTAJ.S, 210.2 Br-i-.l SI .. Suite ~1, Hllflt. Ing Ion Beach, CA 921>16 RM....,. eo1ucc1. Jl 12 "'""-"' Avt., l.Ot A"llflft. CA 'IOOJ2 vm11i. CclU«t, a111 "--"' Ave. l.OJjllngt..._ CA 400lJ Tti)I bjitllltlM It CO!IGWCted •y I ~,.1'*1nt<11\1P. 11..,...eo11..c1 Tlllt tutement W9' llllld wtlll the c.o.inly Clerk OI Of "'911 C.OU..\y Oii Oct. 2'.1'11. NllW1 hlllltftlid °''"" C.0..t Oelly Pllet fd·»•MH0¥.2,t.,,,1m ~n PUBUC NOTICE I L y c L A s s I F I E . D ,, • • u~~sif{#~~s~'UU IN I' I' ,. r r r I TRl·PLEX 8 9cf;;:,\ upm '0 [ j. I J A J I [ ] Gd c~ :!~~:i~'fnc. " SQW6.UTS Ml~tn !" Ctutlflcatlon 1~.!0 ~:t;c'~~[: WJ1s~~1~: ~~ M1-577T, OCIAHMOHT By ownr. dp~ BaJboa, 4 Br 2 Ba, fr 2 Br 1 Ba. S48-7211; 559-42%1 311-21A OCEANFRONT Rl1bt on. th• Blutfl, watc~lnc nutahac wava,<:ataUna •an oc- c•k>ml ~asalnt while. Prof. d..-ated "Model" condo U, San Clemente w/all the bltna. & private stairway io beach. $184,500 ~COISRULTY 675-6670 IUY 14.. VE1J14M >.HOME . Ute that VA on thls Im· maculat.e C0&ta Meu I bdrm, 2 bath ,beauty. All new ki~ben, new copper phunblns. new carpet, new drap••· Lattlee ireenbouse, lnlit t.ree., prdeo. Tb1I one ls a Will· us. 001 nowN-nn WHTCLlr. o •Picture yourself mov· Ing right into lbl• r apactous t 3 bedrm home. CounlJ'y ""~ n ~ k.itchen ror the holidaya, HUte o~ and loveJy yard enhance the convenient JoeaUon. VacaolnowJ 1144.900. 'PETE BARRETT ' -REAL1Y-I " •U·SZto Wltlp up dozens ti tNtd• silts. orfltfMllts wltll tllb ~ SM lats of doli.t-ldd lob of Cflrl$!1111S SC>itlt encl sp.wkle to ,_·IMmt. £.es, Gifts & Oln•· l!llllti .... trims fot t/11, door pin thrifty. uart,. f1111-to. mal!e ems lot all. Mail one doll¥ 111d • half 0rllll'llll!ts. SM ti: JUMP for -" copy of Easy Clftl 111d ..... , .. and call to ... this im· ~.~· preulH 2 a\ory home ln "'lU. Ol4 ai.-.. s..,: ... a private, qwet Co•ta '"'-IT 10011. rrint ...., Mesa area. 4 Bedrms. AHi-. z;,, l'lttn ,...._. Sep. family room, and WALUE ,.cbd. 1971 NECOLE· d i n J n g r o o m w it h CRAfT e1t~lol. CllOOse llom beautiful pool. Loaded 225 ~ 3 tree 1n~e. All wiih pride at SUS,000. ~fti;'"l(il !;.. ~ndftl:75( Call now'4$-7221 _,, '*' "'-· .... a..Otta ........ . .., ... ""' ~.-•• A2S Site*~,.. Qlllll .... .SlJS c.tllt1fltll ........ SLOO C:.CWt .......... "f.Sl.01 IMJ''*•··--·-·.suo W ..._,, _.. C.-.. .. .-..... JUO •------~..::·-...... ~-s.w aw w ......... .11.n 3 UNITS 111 • 1=:.":!ik::::-111 IASTSIDE $=:::::::::: t:: Th1t ldtally located In-~, ...,... ......... ..-... .oo'°' come propert7 may be .... ~_ ........ . JLWtwtiat you are looklnl '-•1· ...... .Sl.00 lor. One a bdrm, 2 bath " ~ ' m ... .Sl.!I' two l bdJ18 unit.I cloM ll Na' IU ........ 154 ahopptn1 • t.ran1porta· lllllf 1 ll. ........ nt --.._ ... 12 ..... .11t tioo._.7'1U lSCl.lllllt ~fl ....... ™ ...... l&JlftJ ......... nf ... • IALIOA PIMIMSULA DU'l.IX SI H . '50 Prtct' r<'duction just authorized. This 34.SO bmldmg is a prime tax shelter ln a hea\ y appreciation area. Yet it will ) ield a posili\'e cash flo". For more informut1on on this sort or magk. t•aJI !JtiJ.8Jl I su.-. AT THE HACH $17.SOO i-.njoy sunning or surf mg, just 1 2 mtle I rom the beach in this lovely 2 li('<.lroom. i hath mobile home Hurrv. \\ on't last' · IY THE SEA H 7,900 Walking distance to beach. c·ommunity pool. 3 bedroom, 11 2 bath. l"O n do. L c n <.I c r w 1 l I fin an c ~ to investors. INDOOR SUHSHIME $69. 900 Good news! Light up your lite "1th the indoor sunshine of this beautiful 3 bt.odroom. P 1 bath cornered lot home. :\lany amcruties. Bring your wife & smell the lrt.>shly baked bread in this sunny kitchrn 18055 Magnolia St. Fountaftt Valley 963-1311 General I 002 Ge1Nral I 002 .••........................•................•. PEHIHSULA POINT 4 Bdrm .. 2 ba. home All amenities. Lovely area. few steps to beach. $189,500 UDO ISLE N cwly remodeled 4 bdrm.. den, 1 baths. li\'tng rm. w 'cathcdral c.:eihng. Lgc. ma:stcr bdrm. suite $224,~ BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 8oy~1d1• Oriv~" N .B 675 ·6161 G~ral 1002Gnerol 1002 ···••·················· ··•············•·•····· CUTE L1tllt-:! hdrm rnllaitt' \)'Ill.' mob11l-hom«> in prime '11t•wporl Ucal'h l<X·atum' ,\II amcn1t1es ml'ludma.t pool & Jacul:r.I JU.~l !.k~ .1wa~, would m.ikl• a trrnf1c home for lll'Wh' married rouple. Sll.ailO $92,500 Will l>u~· u dupll·x I blk from tht• ocean, a 3 hdrm & a bachelor. with a dbl J:OJrJS:l' J,e:.isl"hnld biJ J(i6J 833·0523 !!; \ cs associated llAOl"ERS ~AEl\LTORS lO]~ W 8olbo" 611 J66 l YUODOWN LIGHT AND IRIGHT IN IRVINE TERRACE Locallon is everything m this 3 bedroom doll house with a large pool, shutters, shake roof and neat as ~ pin. $168,000 A CO&.DWEU. IA.Nia CO. 644-1766 macnab I trvJne realty ' lu.L&.Y UHIQUE IH H. V, HIUS ... and also clean and nice. Three bedrooms $Uld a dt.•n , and open liVtng area that includes living. dining. enlcrtaming und kitchen areas all surrounding a fireplace. You should sec it! Done m Country f<'r·ent'h. You s hould also src the \\.ood flooring. hnrl>or and oceun \.IO\\-and pool :m:e lot. A new Uniqu(• Home at 1ust s 11~0 000 U ~l()U t: tif)M t:§ REAL TORS', 676 6000 1443 East Coast Highway, Cotona del Mdr Jl\o '" MrSJ Vl·rd1• 11 !>46 ·b990 CO$TA MESA IEAUTY charming 4 hectrm home with separate dming room m.•;.u· South Coast Plaz.a. Lovel~ anll'nor with plush carpets, drapes ~ dcl'oralor wall coverings. Larg<.! l.Hu:k ya rd \\1th palw · ·11 ard to fiml" largl' b<'llrms too~ $70.500 and tl s ~uurs ' Coll 5<t6-4 I 4 I S~ll-A-lratlon You can bcnl'l1t The o"' ncr says sell my 4 bdrm homt' quickly You can celebrate on your patio on the West ··40" under the towering pines. On!) $74,950. Coll 640.6161 Serving Costa Mesa-Irvine Hunhngton B each -Newport Beach llG CYM "IORJ)aAUX" I-STORY True clcg;rnce ~ Your 111spcd101¥ an' 1tcd to sec lJ real beauty on chOlcl' corner s1lc l"c\\. ly dccorat<.id w ~lush cptng, tustom drapes, \'an Lu1t papers. J llR. 3 baths. Beaut enlr) 3 Car gar. lmmcd poss. $249,500. WESLEY H. TAYLOI CO., RULTOIS 21 t I S.. Jooquin Hil1 Road HEW PORT CENTER. M.I . 644-4t I 0 MAJlVELOUS MONACO Call us about this Im· maculote one owner. 2 l;\edroom, con\·ertible deu home \n Harbor View Homes The owner's meticulous care to every "13intenuhce ~ '14'1U Impress you. And the hu1hly com· ~titivc price of Sl:J6.SOO. Ice will pleut' your pocketbook: .. •644•121 I • 21EDROOMS LOW LOW PRICI! lllahly upiraded 2 bdrm patlo bomt! Three; year i----------i okl llomt. HJib degree of prtv~cy with xtru like a DU,LIX tP.s.-a ..... ~ .. ...._. •• ._. ... ,. tld• job" •aut owning twe hGIMI -•• it's strfaus: qilldc Ide "Hdtd to c--... mate pwcJtm. ..t •ottt.. ltolMI. COLE OF HEWPOIT 1111:\-oas 2515 E. Coast Hwy,. C•OftCI del Mtl- 67S.55 I I ~~~! .......... !!~~,!:~ .......... !~.~~ DUPLEX - 3 BR. EACH Un • Corona del Mar lf>vely street, close to everything -best swim beach. stores & Fashion Island. Overly spacious 3 bdrm. & 2 baths each. with enclosed garages. Always rented~ 759-0811 Fiu t Al#t Gitw WuUu 'BUg. ~7loo. .Remodel~ 3 bedroom. 2 b•th h ome! Garden Grove schoolt.' Low .down! \IA or FHA terms! Call now!. Red Carpet. 7~ 1202 ~p. HERITAGE ·~· R£ALTORS CMT~ :i Br •och, xlnt lncorne. 4t ~HERITAGE .-• REALTORS SIDIM MISAOB.MAR Gre$.l home for your lgc fl'nl)' Huge lot. Cov'd brick storaie Walk to schools & tennis ('lub Jw.t hslcd. Coll now l<J see. s.iS-9491 MISAVlltDI QUEBt This attractive 3 bdtm beauty is fit ror • queen. Mint conditwn, Jae ranch kitchen & fmly rm com bo. Vaulted ceilings. C.ll now for appl. 545·9491 --. VAOIC ZHOUSES Just hated 2 home:. on l••MA-•G•M•l•A•C•EH-T•!•! -i Wesbide. Different st.s. Good areas. Both tlafe Greenbfook 3 br home, OJ terms. Call now to pro(. decor'd. thruout. aee. one al SSS,500. th~ Fine wallpapers, plush other ti wr.ooo. :MS·94f1 cptt & catm' dri>s. Priced under mkl al $96.SOO. You must s.ee to really appreciate! 154~7100 8As:TAA ~ le ... l[,tulo 111< ~ Walker C lee Real Estate •R·Z* ROOM TO BUILD Recently remodeled 2 bedroom home on R·2 IOC. ! Greut IOl'Oml' pote11· tlal ! Sll7 ,500 1006 ~8,500 .-.. •••••••••••••••••••• It's A Cheapie! Qua1·1 DAY VJEW Clxcr \lppcr. 1£ 3 j xtta lge I~ :J Br 1,11 aa ln price but not m quah • Place __...,. By owner Sl6V,OOO l} ' H a n di.om a...-...tt.a b/3-SOOO toWnhonre Nt-w carpets ... • -r152.,.,0 G...-ol t 002 ~al t ooi 3 bedrooms. dlrunit o,re11. 1400 odAl4t.1. lll~t telo4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOME&lncomerent.ai.4 Forced air hcutinit.--~--·----- CRY APPRAISED $70,000 WILL SJLL FOR". ' $67 500 Super newfy decorated ·1br. 2ba, lge t3mlly din llmlfmDl'K'.19 yrs ·old. beaut owner oc· pauo, BKR, call 54U·l72U PRICllS lllGtff'' cuplt:d. 4 br. 2 bu. all p,·t party, must aell os:w clec .. hl·bHm ceihnp + TAltlllL or 1wo properttu on 3 br. 2 ba rent.al Im mac F1ower St. in £ast C.11. i cond . By Owner ... .i; •• e;..,wi.;.;_i .. duplex or 1 lot W/2 S:U.S.000. 675·1387 ft ft -"Tvnn0 hoUR11. 61l-6372 NOW Vacant-*'' recady IS THI TIME for yoa to moVc your family in Sharp 3br, New paint a roomy and comfortable lhruout. remodeled )u.l. home m lte:ia del Mar. Lrg lot Only 112.~. Br, 3ba, fr . pool, + RV 1'olnrRlty, 1-956·3940 pky. OWncr desires last --- Escrow. SOUTR COAST INV Dana Polat 1016 645-1103 ..................... .,. TENNESSEE EXEC. CONDO aak ....... qc" I 011 7'1t;' where tbe original Harbor &c Whitewater .~~~··•••••••••h•••• own ol lh .. beauUf&ll 4 View 3 Bdrm. 2~ bo, oe!AMMOMT br; Meta Verde home, faro rm, frpk. End unit, woWd U.ke to 10. Pence· Prof landsupod " de. Lh ... At Ifs lest tion jn every dct.il rotated. Gu BBq, wet 3 BR. 2 BA home on .Don't mlsst,hiaor1e! bar, \4 m ile beach_ Beach Road . lnvltlnc SOUTIICOASTlNV Comm pool, Jae, sauna. surf ~ white sands at '45·• lOl clubhouse. $121,500 . ourdooc·•t.ep. SJO\l.000. •---------•Tran 11 le r. q u l H AMCNOIAGI az. 4 Ill 2 IA possession. Own'itt' ·R·2coroer lol ln quiet re· 493-8147 ~ • IMYISTMIHTS sidct\tlal area. $74 ,~. C7141496-7711 Owner will consider Choice R·l Lot $5%,50() luscoption Won't last Network. BR + din. a rea. Really attractl~e Mme. SG4.000. By appt. 8'5--C373. flurry! MF.SA VERDE Point Rtty, 416-S&OO d. fomtofn VCllley I 0 t , ...•.........••.••..•. Delua.e unlt.J, COlf COW'SO vtew. 2 Bedrm1 each, p rivate\ qulct . large prafes. Pel"fecl reUre· me~ hon\e and lncome. cau :M0-1u1 garaae door oponer, pool, .aauoa, tenni1 ct.4.1-----------1 club prlvlleps, Call ir~· me&.tely. 54&·231~ I I 'I.. f9 I. I 'I I 1 4Br l~Ba. lR corner lot. 1uper stiarp w /maay l<tras, also RV or boat ac· cesa; 119.500. Bkr Mr. BlaclCll98-7870 .. "a 1 "u "•• .:.•tt1V'IJ • """' 9•tt f'.!"I•~~· red hill _ ~52-7500 '!·-----Nt-*'""s=--•• • • YICTOllA IL\CH: •h J:)lk. to ocean, with peek~a-boo view from under mature trees. SJl)all home with big deck. $144,500 . Hill~~~~·~ I 000 "*" e...t Hwy. 494-7551 aou OPEN Bill 1.$ 3Ua..,_Ln. BlliCMYDI . ...... . .. ' .. - ron. •,rt OLSON ...... ,. .•....•........ Ho.Mshrftlihed ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... filmMI 3 I 06 ••••••••••••••••••••••• per sharp 3br home on w/frplc. Bri&ht cheerful kit. Cl~ to achool1 It 1bopp1ng. '4¥· M&-9427 --,,,.., I luxe dplx·tnplex. New & nr. new 2 Br. H~ Ba, frplc, gar, frwy eta. Q\tlet &lreet. ~ l.O S3TS/mo. Call 962-'7187; ~0907. Br 3 Ba, cul de sac lot, pool It sep play yacd. ? Ba. scrtened Pool •v. Xlnt area. Nr patio, gar. 857 Joann. sc ho.011" Parkll . $42!J. mo. 546·7645 539-2'708; 962·93.U Jim .COZY COTTAGE• 6drm, 2 Ba. larg~ yd. At l Br s 111 a 11 d e n Newport W6t. Walk to brea.ld~al nook, fresh!} beach. $400. 962·1019 palnted., fncd yd. Wtr ADULT COMDO ON WATER CHARMING 2 Stoey, 4 Bdrm home on Beat Bayfront location. Yrly leue. $1400/mo. Avalla· b&eonsbort~rm. pd, no.does. S27S mo. $S2S Clean 3 Br. H~ Ea, club mov~ Jn. 2231 Pomon house, pool, $3~S &no. rear· 960-3989 968-3680. avail Im med. 1--------:.--1 SALISBURY REALTY cpls, drps, all major ap. ~11878-6900 pins. P\'l patio, tcnm.s. ----'--------1 pool, jacuz1.1. No pet~. eor..tMIMer 1122 M50 mo. Nr. S. Coast ••••••••••••-•••••••• • Plazn. ~0.8888 BEST CHINA COVE LOCATION. Fabulous wpt Hgt11, new 3 Br 21~ Channel View and beach Ba. fplc. patio decks, out rront. Decorator's 2 5495 inc grdnr. 548·3365, .. tory. 4 Bdrm home. _a_rt_a __ SllSOi mo winter lease. pac 38r. 2ba, cpts1drPfl. Waterfront H o m es. Jo'rplc, fncd yrd S-175 631·1400 5'19-0022. 642-0550 Univ Prlt 3br, 21"ba 19 sq ft. Former model Nr SlOO Move ii\ anowance. Modem 2 Br a Ba, d('n, (pie. pool condq. Nt. Bch, $&50. MS-8534; 8'15· 1938 NWPT SHORES· Wik lo bctf, no pets, 2Br, den. 2Ba.1495. MB·36S7 ~fi5I~ I I ... ~ w f{ I 'I I·, .~I) I ,, " .• , I' ' ,,, ..... " ...... ~ SSO.lrvine (1tt l7lhl 645-0SSO ... .... ~ ..... l"TOO 16th St, Wovtt at 16thl '42-8170 1t C>CEAMFtlOMT YIAILY a BR .. 2 ba. sses WIHTER Lae 3 BR .• 2 Ba. ssoo associated fl ll•J•F ll", Wf ALT llS Jtj I• ~ • 1•t •I f. t I ''I Bachelor ms.sus 1 Bdrm S265·S2'1S 2 Bdrm S29S·S3ZS 84~Paularino 5'35 )'t'IY. 2 br. z ba , 2 atoey. 2 Hr trtCI. &aras~.1-....-----..;;;....;_;....:;..1 balcony. TSLMitlllt 642·1&03 ~ DILUUOHCCU ~ Wtiltff 1030 ·--------""'! Conunl • IDdlU ••••••••••••••••••••••• 200 to 2000 1q. tt. '.l:~ lt you•re not setttn1 118S'aq. ft. LaaN•auei1i ~•mumonyourln· \\.~ have .n e1Cc•Utnt cpJ)orluntt1 tl'I our t."oll• ~1 .. u oltlct for a veniame. polted'J*"Oft •hoJ• aood •t d••lma with \h• public. ·our vart.t retpon lblllUtt wUl tnchtde: ord r ))rocUIJnJ. prtce quOUna, •"41en~rnl cterioal dull • The IUCCt511tul •PPUC•nt lhOCJld l\aV& 100t1 t>i>ln• sldU.. 'l \\X -.ti.nee helpful. ) 1\pply in pt1'flOl'I 1'hu~daY. llJ7., J:);dllt, \I JI& ~"een llA!'tl &41'M. Mlulon Viejo areu. vertment, call Sandy __ ....., ______ • Handy to S.D. Frwy •. !\OM. Aiu Co. 837·!'1'4 1----------t Call: UJ.1400 •Averaie yteld on pay. ---------• otf1 to Aju lnv .. tora. Offla. Jan. thru July. lt'7T .1--caa.,.--•.;..>--,.-~---1 State law pennlt• a pre• "".r ,,_ "_.... NTH PREE P9YmeGt ~naJty char10 llUBo. El CamlnoRnl &.----------1 ~II aervlce. No leaae re .--ava\ent to I0'7<o of 8 ., .. _Cl rnente ~Uc Q d. 200-4500 aq. ft. PJent month• unearned In· '3i111Fo: appt. m." . of parkln•. 2082 S. , ttreii on the balance. ------------t -----'"-------1 Brlalol St, Newpor Mortraie Broken. OC· • Sff£1ULl!:1S• Beacti. 557-'?0LO fered to California , .. ,. Certilled Maueuae beaift•• low Inc dent.I only. Houae =Y APJ>t. 1-----------1 Ofc 11pace in Newport. =ri Area. =:•pti()ri. ,.,..., ... 1,,..• Btll~:i:~~et ~c:o " * 10.25hr 050 kl aerv.. •renc DMdi 5035 ra~aenlon. lOAM to ..... rm. tch, secy aerv z cUc .,••••••••••••••••••• •• Noex~r. bee., we train ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• SINGLE _535 tatlna & copy macnll'le. 2A Mon-Sat 825 N. •IMSTAU.llS \mbau&dor lan tn Coa\a DOUBLE-sso. From $290. (714)TS!-''170 ReUNCI couple bas money Euclid Antb sse-6150 Me.a, zm Jlarbor. C.n· Costa Mesa 832-S128 1fi::. :,.~2nd TD's. FREE SESSION WI AD •SA.LIS traUy located, 235 rooma. RELAXlNG MASSAGE •SBVICi MANY wltb kitchen. l""al 4400 ._...., • ...._. 4450 LOWEST BobJan\U-LlcMua•ur •MGMJTltHllS phone & TV. Swlmmln• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Outcallt·t,,t4-$l1l FullotPanTSm.Can pool, Jacuul, and rec. 5,...,.. ,,.,IM...,_ 4 DILUXI oFC•s ltlterKt R.tea •957.a 119 Cafeterla/\oduatrlal. .room. Dally • weekly "'" -_.. •" Cont .,., II Wanted: SioaJ.ee 13S-o419 Near Harbor Blvd & San c--•tt nteutartlnJ from MS a Meclc .. Arhlldg paneied~~~~:~;s~ :e. htT.D.'s. .. • 530·8844. Saddlebaek Mtlf'.ekMth ... treta AVON Dteio Jl'rwY, C.M. Mon· w;nu'is week. Ideal Medical or Dental ar. l or 2 yr. lease. Lake llNIT.D • ......._ SlnaleClub,lreebroeh. Z.per.Partor ll'UUTtme ii Fri, e:aopm-Upm. Sat hri 6'5-4140 suites. Plush carpet.a IJ F 0 re at are 8 • K 8 n t Fairest Terms 1lnce 1949 S?S.l3ll 11 a m ·Ip m • G r l l l , Leam lo 40 t.M filOSl central air. M" per rt. Harklna. s.ttterMfg. c;0 • •SAN"Y.'S* Qwot.._,.....,. und.lcJtes. Hlad1. ei1c:lths1, 1lamorou1. Roomw/kltchenette CallYEATSCOMPANY 714-581-tl393 642-2171 . 54M" I If' AmblUauaCoup~Waoted .........._.._.,, 00.r Joti. alto avail. ~~ldpror .... Day SSOweek&up. 498-0660 499.2237 Outc•U"•••1• to manage a small bu, ~VAY Call1'70"3'73. or eve ,..lOM. Pl•c:.· 541-9755 • •GU...... 8PM·3AK wn-0329 • Wll 1 ..1 .._... ~ ""'" mietlt ustst. Good Job op· VISUmS -""' WE BUY FIRST" 2ND I not nt.t .. erew/your IEPllS8n'A11YIS . CARPETLAYERS iio!· IXICUTI 2Shops, one470sq. Ct. & TRUST DEEDS. AGT. BREAST prese,ntJob.Muatbewlll· Ben tJm6 to ea&.abllab Exper.only. Ctl714nlt·91f4 PVT ENT " Ba, quiet empld. woman. Lile ckn1, refs. Sl~O mo. J4'1502,CM Be au t If u I b Id i. the other 900 sq. ft. in the 714-498--0800 I ENLA.RGEM~ lnc to learn. Mr. Han, cu.tomers. lnMr"MtedT 7u.«1Ge So. Calif;. Cock~\ • PenonaUzed phone cov-heart of downtown blab ,,___.,.., It &U-1834 ., erace,secyservl<:e,conf. toottrafflc.nextto'park· PRIVATE PARTY wlU ·-....,..,,_ot om·~OILCO. off-Call ~1041 or Zerlllb CB~ICITfrl•ee Waltreaae.. l.nc. 1 4-room. xerox " more. tnalot Xlntretalltoc pay more for: exlath11 Group therapy, wel1llt, ~ ••• '1·13S ~ 1.• • Sk Puk Bl. I\• C. ~ nn, pref male, day Easy frwy acce11. Neu Reaioooml~615~00 2ndTD:S.CaUOf.2·~73 d•J>rffalon " Hit Im· PLENTY or MONEY Permaneat full tint• 1 .e&t1714 . ~ee r, nr OCC. Sl30 mo. So. Coast Plaza. From pateoce.1-7pm W-4li334 plm ca&h bonUSM, frill palttlom with beoenta. Boom for rent. Sil adult 40-60. No pels. Nr Fairview & Newport., CM.558-Q'71 '""""' """21s1 -ao 1 st Off! ......__flt• to mature n· ••zllhr' W..tM !ftlv 1n .......,.n Vobann c:.c11W W......_. -"· •• .,.. .. ie. . ore· ce, •-_._/ IXOTIC GIRLS ......,. ,.._ , .. _ L' .. bt # r-•-960sq.1l. under». 194'18 -••C1•'"• dlvldual In Beach area. Fwl 9yearo-. .. Califonda, Inc. N2U Full or p /thM. ApPly to fice apace for rent by BeacbBl.HB.842-283" ,.,....,,., ¥unce•Kodelln1 Re1ardle11 of ox· hou1ekeepln1, TuH.-Dobeoy Park Jtcl. 'Sar Mall•I*"· 2·~pm sq. rt. 2 &tory bldc. Near.......,.., • .,..., 4500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• , Pru., Amerlcao 8:30 tn Mt .. loo Viejo. at6 opeolac for••· Jnn.12$AYeol4a Eaplan· month. Approx. W per lMf lrfloUltcl Out.call542-3let/543-3250 5eoce, writ• P. L . Wedl ... Tbul'JI., 2:JO to ~•trano BcW. Im· Mon-P'rL SU Clemeate BollJa Chica & Warner.••••••••••••••••••••••• ATTRACTIVE LADY rtcant.aCo., Boxfl96, S30/week.Rererence•n· In• abfft (4 PK· dla.a.,SaaCJem. ,........--------From $100. & up. Call • t..wM~-• seeks companlo1t11hl na ... -. Ohlo .. """l quired.CallU7"9882. llidn1 ..... , ~mforrentS115mo.ln· 848-1311 ... ::r5 f':r2s .... 25 AM~emtlth 5100 w/arfhaent or prof ~-· ......, · ..;....;;_.:...,_.;..• _____ c:.01mpamott/Hffkvr li'ft clds util, rood, etc.1---------•;;""uisq.6's.;3s7 -•••••••••••-•••••-••• ienUeman,so.ec>,enJoya ARCHrrECTUML Bab)'lltterforltmo.ctrl. CHllSTMASMOHIY inDlededlmmed.toetar. Anaheim 750·1630 aq.f\.deluxeofflce,W. .U pd. ATTOIMIYATLAW travellnc. cooklng, DRAFTSMAN Irvine area. Mon tbnl &ell oeedlewort, yous: fot ntal'd9d 1S 11 old Suzanne or Kell>' 19th St. Costa Mesa· M2 2000 Sq Fl aporta mualc dancln1 You.n1 1ro'1Jln1 Hunt Friday. '152-22G9. home or otben. {ou ctrt. Sa~ necoUabLa. Large sleeping rm w'pvt SlSO/mo.Tom,MO·Z200 With OFFICE BANKRUPTCY $95 714~ ' ' ~~:i,chl;1::v~~: BabyslUer Mon, Tuea ~~f.~~ ~~~.,!! ::':a.e.: .. ~mwbda 6 bath for day empl'd 496-560! DIVORCE $95 J-'-Ne-Club "'--! _. __ .,_ ,7·14>"""--2pm-6;SOpm. Within ud' ·-' person Ref,, SllO mo. Th~eekOnly.rP;rtlee. •w...-wuu. --walllot dlatance o 195.calJJ Y842·""19 CMk .,..,._. 546·2573 BulcDivorceOnly Raps,Int.ro.,971-1882 AITISTJ'ASTIUP Monte Vilta School, CLEANING WOMEN &maucoav.i..e.nthoep. Y9COfioftR...t~ 4250 640.2507 Drattlnc. ln.klnc, preaa ~. WANTED. U br . C.M. atea. Will train. •••••••••••••••! ••••••• i-----------------~~ •tor!esp~f tyou preparation. E.xper'd. BABYSJ't'TEB Needed lrvlne/NB, Hunt Beb._Mt-: __ •_1. _____ _ Cabin, Big Bear, sips 4·18. m up. Pool tbl, cir l\', ~bl Crpl. 494-8611. CQblns nr Big Bear. sips 2·7 w1or w/o meala. Spec. crp rates for2540. Rec. rm. w1frpl. lennis ell. (714) 247-242:; ••••••••••••••••••••••• NWPT lux furn apt lfe 28r & 2Ba, tennis. pool, )ac, S173lne uUI. 646·6368 Nffd a Great roommate'.' Cut hvtng e)(penses ! Call The Orance County Professionals ..._.McrtHUnltd 832-4134 Dependabllaince 1971 HO. COSTA MESA •S Rm, 803sq ft S391 mo •l201q ftsn&I ore 185 mo •442aq I\ tae ofc $195 mo All ground rloor. front prttg, A/C, util pd., prof. bldg, etc. Resp MiF. 1hare quleti--------•1 Irvine. Univ. Pk hme. 2 poola. Jae. tennis. 5225 ln· clds util. 559-5084 ~'TOP LOOKING! Great value! Mature male share Nwpt Crest furn'd c:ondo:•Oc vu. Ali amenit1ea incl"d. s:us. 6'5-20N MOM JOTO We Play Muaic. Have a ... u. or pe..... 1c urea lnteruttni work . from 2P•-4:30PM, Mon area.Muslbavoowncar. f'ull 00 sq FT Party or <Ht Married. OK.Box5282HB ~fitl && advancement thru Fri. Ref'•· 844-484.1 a.eua Um9. aA':i ~ ~· 1• O • • ~.~Wynnloew's. SIXUA&.IM,OTIMT w1ero•ln,co.9'19·T660 aft5:30J>¥,'f~1"da79c1ea11ln& lady (ot LeBlarri&l~C.fle, 1--------18ABYSITTER Aft. ~o. 3 hrs, twice '1•N.Newport.Blvd.NB 7005 •••••••••••••••••••••• DISCO/SALSA LESSONS Clute& at.art Wed. M.00 per claaa, call 8"-8834 ASSEMBLY Scbool/alck da)'s, petlD. Wk. Must have car four·t-MU100 _______ _ Irvine. $512-031'1 !!.n~ Call aft 3PM. VOLT 11 "'°"'°" .. tHlf'i' •.t ...... I to HllDI 'INDUSTRIAL WORIEIS •St.rt Wott Todcly• ... , .... ,.,. •T,......._ .... ,.. •~,lbcefvlltt ·~1UM0••1 *"'""'Off Clefts ........ 4 ....... .,. APPLY • 1'41 C:.... l>ri•• 5~741 (ACIOll From Oritt~. Airport) Equal . r Employer __. •COOK BABYSITrER for Mon.,._ _______ , !!xper'd DlU~J'~ ~ok Wed• Fri, 1-SPM & Sat.•• wa.lad.Coochalal1. AP· 8-aPM. Irvine. Owo Clerical plyJ..4pm,8anClemtote t.rana. $3.50 hr & $3. ar"L'! nv"sr ~ 121.~r~an. Saa carfare. 540·5017 &. Ma /cl.I ..,.,.... -~-752•15 ACCW'Ji typlst matunt pert06alily & #roat ofc K/ Bxper'd. DIN· BABYSITTER, Uvt·lD, ·~·nee. Abl•to dtal NER ~ BllEAKPA&T. older child. Rm " brd. pleMUtlyw/vt.ltottraf· Day •~I\: :.Jolly l\olttr . Hl'I Bcb. Reta. MT.ow1 Cle && heavy ulepbonu. 1m E. Dyer .Rel, lrvfM. • or 960-2866 ReceQt •lf'1'. req 'd. apply btwn hnd 4 PM. , ______ , ITACOSWITCH IMC COOK Banldn 1139 Bake.r eo.i. JI ... 'LOAN 549·304 I for tm. ratWrao&. Opp. F.qua.I Oppor Employer for future m1mt. Appl1: OFRCEll 2133 w. CbNtHW)', N.B. Mll'I. 2 yn lnltallm.nt Iii Clerical 1_'42;.....-147_5 _____ _ Ute comm'I bank lendln& e x P • r . r e q • d • C&.81( TYrtST COOK ProirallH indepeiMlftt ReQ'11ood typln1 akllla, Full • p/Ulr:te. Xlnt bankoffen xlm beMfiUI. 50+ wpm. fl1ure •P· Was• Iii BeDllfita. M•a callorapp&,.at: Utude belpful. Variety of 'Ves'de CoQv. Heap. Ml SANTIAGO IANK dUU.. Xlnt workinl COD• eeaterSt. CK 5'1-iSU. -..5200 cts•beaetltl. W«k Joca..i-------- $.15 E lltStTuattrt UoD ~ta M••· Apply •COOKS• F.qu.l 0ppor Em&>'01•-r ~r::J!!~trp, ~a:. eo1oay Kik* DO* ac· AIMmbttn !~~~~~~~~ Btrebfit. N.B. (Near cepdnt appUuUou tor .__._ _____ , ll.IC'TaOHIC Santina ' Airport> EOIJ. ~akfut C90kt, PIT, --ATIDUTY Tuln .. 1 Iii •aper'd: 1&&.11 iOOd stal1.tq,pay. Apply .,...... :::=. 1l'01rinl co bu d. a.EllKfororderproeeaa bl"'"° Wpm. ct.fly. MUISI IXPB. .,..unp 1 • tbe Banlupet.nca'4 toe. Bmy otc • pbooet. No 11boae;calll-pJeu•. _..___._ ______ , Alto~ · 0 " OalltadBoba.tlliitott. Use calc:aJator, typo. mtllartlot,OottaM••· 117~41 J~N1Uoaal8ank roretp lnf· CLlllC lmmedtat. openlns for a ~~~~~~~~-i f Sellin& an.vtllln& with a or the open air airair. Dally Pilot Cluaifled Ad Any occaslon-peraonal fs a simple matter ..• service. Cabana Cater· Juet call 842·!1878. lui. tu-• Ma-5678 HelpWMfed 7100HtlpW..tect 7tooMelpW.t.d 7100 HelpW..t.d 7100 H.-,w.~ 1IOOHtlpWtiiltH 7100 Hil;W.-W ~ 71 W-..M 7100 ·················································~··················· .................................................................................................................. . De It very or Iv• r & Gen I Ofc Fee Pald MACHtMIST •"~--------------Produclloa Worker. $3 lo Foreman, dock. Imme llUIVI IT!! . HOUSEKEEPER-LIVE P/tlme m.atun n r 'd t ~ '1art.. Call M2·22se. open.Int. Reply to P .0 Oppor. to mana1e entire lN. Npt Bc:h family, must IC_.• T,.._e on Bridle rt MJll :ml Box217, Placfjnth1. CA. ore of respected eatab'I apea:,.,~ refs req'd snoo To Start. Hr1 8am d in ' Delivery. Home delivery FO co. for bright. •harp aell Call ortw.2-8475 . to4:30pm. f~0 UC on, kc•~·· auto route w i the REMAH' starter! Call Candace, -CallDorl• oennce ~or· 0 • ~al.ater. Perm. p/tlme Working supervisor I 848-1288. Also Fee Jobs. HOUSIKWIR avallnow.6418880. s1tuaUon aa a carrier-production & warehou1 Dennis le Dennis Person· L J v E . JN F u L L . ~'1... m 1 11 1 It dealer. Approx hrs operation• of 1row1n nelServlceolHuntlncton CHARGE pe~n to run .. la · •n • 4~AM.7Dayswk.Need fiberglass 1n1ulatio Beach, 16168 Beach Bl, htehold I n N 8 .. lulte111 reap. penson w/good car. plant. AppUcanl mus Ste121. ReaporuilblllUes Include" -Or•n~l47-IOOI Oro111 earnings about have some prevlou . care of 2 1lrls. aces, 12 & $J.'5() per mo. CM area. s upervisory expr G1EN. ore. '.J'yplng, fillnc. 1.5•hskpnadutlea Must1--------•I call ~·3008 be! noon. strong ab i I It Y t In oo, n1en1al do(~-Entry be mature outa' oln1 MIY,UMCH motl te d I d eve poe. w/g . ucnefltl · · l>ELIVERY PERSON, va an ea · Start immed . Se personable le be able to P1tlme, $2.65 hr. Apply pie Sahiry + frior ClaudJa at Boat Transit relate to Leena1en 81 8 in person I.. Io Yd" beneClls. • 0 Jnc., 1343 Logan Ave. governeu .. An energetic Nunerv 2030 Newport CLEC N, lNC. . . CM pel'IOO W1hiib atandardJ Blvd.CM.646·7«l lss:llOelAmoAv,Tustm ol n~t.nesa,. cleanllne111 UM. ISTATI llOKUS & IALIS We have an opening for two men with experience in conunercl-1 & lnveat- meot pfOl*tles. Wesley N. Ta)'l~ Co. ts a 32~year-old firm owned & opftated by lt• founder. We are not a 1ub- s ldi ary, division or branch of aornething el.le -just he~qu-.rters. Appllcants must postesa highest pro- f esaion al qualltie1 " integrity to mat.ch our own. Interview by appoint- ment only. .. '11urt'1 AW )'OU pa)" ~ IO ad4 IQ DAILY PILOT .SERVICE DIRECTORY w-.ca '100 . .................... . QG9'T.tol700 EHe. ofQ •"b 1our phone flneue for tront fJ center of aetlvltr poa. Call Cari, m.noo. Din· nit " Denni• Penoa~ Service of Irvl.De. Mtchellon Dr. 731-4855 Glnibam Girl houaeclna lcor1anbation ••well aa DELIVERY man for ear'· GilDINB aervice nds women p/t a peraon who enjoys the WHUY t4. fAYLOI CO,. UALTOU a••• S.Jau7f11Hat .... MIWPOlf' C1Mr11. M.I. 644-4910 ~_. ssoo ... ly AM. LA Times home tops. car nee 645-51.23 arts ia desirable. Must ~livery route. No col· Perm poa. Appl1 I drive, cur ls provided. lectlng, economical car person 7am·3pm. <n Girl for Houaework $3. Sbould be nexlble as re· req 'd. ~ mo net lake phone calla). A1k fo hr, own t.rans. cardlng worldn& wknda. home. Adlls only. 2'1 hrs Clay Ellis, Newporte 979-0MI 979-6815 Lovely pvt rm It ba. Sal day. Westmlni.ter/HB Inn, 1101 JamborM Rd, Is SSSO per mo + rm at Callorcomeintoday area.838·0128 N.8. EOE. GIRL FRIDAY Over bnf. Send ruume to M. IELE~ _ __ Yrs. Lile bkkpn1 & typ. Seeaer PO Box 19~7 Dental Lab DeUvery. GARDENERS ASST., ln&:Perrn.J>/Ume. $4/hr. trvtoeCamt3 ' Purl-Tl~. Good ror clas13 dJ"lven Uc. valid. N.Bcb. Mr. Rex644·0439 , . se;~VIOe!:& housewives. 846-~. Exper. P/Ttme. f11..Ml7 GlllLS MIEDED ouaekeeper, lite cook. 1Jl·t441 Dental Aa11l1t-Chrslde, 3"1 ~Office llv•ln for mature cou· 1--------•I daya. Pref. CDA or RDA llC9tT. to $710 t;.'1:~~~ hC:,:1~~;~~)w~ pie. Aft uam 833·1382· or min 2 yrs nper. Trea1 JQUnelf to PfOple tranap. Earn ovr s:uo ~ 7141833-1631. · ori.ad poe. w /bu.y co. hr. Ca 11 8a m • 1 p IT\ , PotlffoM A•.u.ble ---------1 Call Carl. 131-2700. Den· 540-t338. DENTAL A11t. Mature, n1.s • o.mia Penonnel -------Immed. openln&a for .. · · d bath men & women on c 11a1ra1 e exp, en-Semce ol Irvine, 2082 •GOOD the evening shift. Exper. lhuslasUc. 631-lt20 MichellaaDr. JOB helpful, butnotn~c. Dental. chalrslde. F /T, General Office _ Recep· * ,Apply In Person exp. Aa of [)(!c t X-ray t i 0 n A: 0 v e r 1 0 a d Ptlntionera men 2 da)'• Sa.n Clemente 1£c. required. Xlnt op· eeereta.ry. Develop ln pu week. Ca r . no GeneralH0tpltal ATTEJlf pc>rt.~ property mana&emen drlnken, no sellin1. &MCamlnodeLos Mares pvt cn poa Reef a typinl pro-Perm. 673-2289 Dl11bwaabers. Cooka & blem solvln1 w~rkln Waltre11e1. wlU train, w/numbera. ~aaerllve. Apply, 1045 S. Coast Pbooel..S 640--46..10 Hwy, La1una Beach. • • HOTEL MOU51KHf'IMG ··~· ~llt NIW ~ USTAUliNT OPINING CAIL-S:.lt.: C.OOU •CoUnter Penoruitl ne«ted. Part II rutlJl'hne. J>.:g•Ntpu. A yiA~: .. Nov 11&.h ru 1tU\ 8amtAt5pm 1.IMOGoldtewat. ,... W•lmiutu,CA . . " i Ol.ANGI COAST DAtL Y PJLOT no 'W. IAY ST •• COSTA MIS• bet.ween the hours of S:OOa.m . l:OOp.m C•ll for •PPOldtment pleHe 642-4121, ... , 276 Equal Opportunity Efnployer M1fp 'W..tff 7100 W..eM 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• RH S.-"hor SAUSHISOH 7-3:30, Costa Mesa area. P/thn.e. Smarty Pants, <Jall~IMl&J.... l~McFadden Pl.N.B .....,.,,...0,... Will train. Co. ben~flts. 162-4l848 SALIS SUrrLIMINT YOUllMCOME $SSSSSSS PA&TTIMI T8MtHOHEWORJC HOUSIWIVIS COU.IGI STUDENTS Guaranteed Hourly waie Plus Bon•. 5:30 pm to 8:30 pm. Call 646-4223 or come to 250 E 17th St., Costa Mesa. SALES SALES SI.AP A SMILE ON YOll FACE & A BULGE IN YOUR WALLET TIME/LIFE LIBRARIES Hn11 both full & part time poelUoM u\•ail. 4 Fwi loving articulate indlvidual1 who are eager to learn how to make top SSSS$SS$ w. Offet': ,.. Howty Salary Gwrw. c__,ss1ott1 htc~•~,....., Sec'y P./T, JM. Good typist. MtQlmum 60·1 wrd1. O p erat calculator. ln1urance exp. nee. IC hr, 9'f·l3$7 rvice Sta. Night Aitend 2 Or 5 pit.el a wk. Ap~ly. Shell, 17th ldrvine, N8 rvice Sta. Altfl\danl. rvlce St.a. Attendant, no . . . - Are you an arti1>l1c. creative, energetic pel'IOn who likes things sparkUn1? LI kes to clean, has sales ability? Lido Villages leadin&. jeweler wishes Cull time or part-lime. Including Sat. <No ni~hts > 673·9334 CAL~ US TODAY AND START SMILIN 833-8095 exper. nee. Day le night•-------'-----. shirts. Apply, Airport _.;.... ________ , Tnaco. 4678Campus Dr, SALES Experienced s ales persons needed. Many company beneC1fs. Apply in penon to John or l>ave. AMCAll POMTIAC GMC /RINAUL T 2000 Jo: llil Santa Anll' Sales FASHIOM SHOES Prefer young woman 18 25, w fabhaon ex per. to sell young :.hoes & bues. ,\pply 1n per:.on at: Dale:. l"ootwork:.. S. Coast Village. 979.9252 ---- FEDCOIMC. Salespersottt Mlr,ariTi.- Applkatlons being taken <Ulily from t2 Noon lo S PM .at FEDCO, Inc. 3000 Harbor Bh•d, Costa Me!>a • for Cull & p1 ttme ex perienced per110nnel SALES Health Product.JI ln de· TIME/UFI UIURllS, INC. Equal Opp Emplyr m;( Newport Beach. SHIPPLNG / RECEIVING INSPECTION TRAINEE High 11c:hool Ed. Irvine Complex area. Mu1t have transportation, Calif drivers lie. Our -----..-----1 -------. Product Computer Com · les Trainee p0nents. Call BlU Shinn. PerscMIMI CCM1rttelor 54().«l88 Outgoing indtv who 111--------- slncerely inurested .in a lpper ----------• car~r 11-0ught by our ofc ,.OFISSIOMAL __ ....__.,..__._.......,_ BIROS BIRDS BIRDS H»lf'Moon Parrou Gold Crown Parrots 88Panot$ Pi\RAktETS PAUH4SnTS Nt>xt to acw RALPH'S at Ford Rd.N.B. 64CM)900 portmenl st.ore, $.50 a day1---------i per-diem when travel· ini:. Must be wllllna to train, cooct appe,.rance. 752.9541 SALESLADY Contemporary rttail ,...:..; _ __;~-=--~,.--~ .~ t \ HARWIC I( OA TSlJH ... ,. .......... ,, .... ,, .. , ,, 83 1-1375 493.3375 WEBU'r CLIAMCAIS &TRUCKS CONNELL 18' GLASSPAR w/15bp t CHEVROLET t:vl!P'Ude. Beaut, coqd.r----------1 $1000. Ownr. 1162·-Ft10TOR llOMES 2'28 llarbor Blvd. FOR t\ENT COSTA MESA loatt. Sal t060 _!"rom $100, wk. 710-0$44 546· t 200 --------1~~~~-~-~ •••••••••••••••••• .. •••• ENT ~reball 23' Self . WAMTUSllLTS7, cont. Auto/air. cc. CB. w~~~h~i~rg~~~~ S!•~xour boat lhru 1>leroo, sips 6 645-2283 FOREIGN. DOM F.STlC SOUTHWUTEltM . or CLASSICS y ... ,.NT SAt.ES '73 Holiday 2S'. xlnt cond U your car LS extra clean ~,,... Travel/11v1na: comfort. 5" ua first. FUJ:t.l'L~~AT B O. over $9000. 646-<C3T6 IAUY IUICtC ~ n. Apollo motoriiome. 2925Harbor Blvd. Cn4)f'IS.92tl Must aee to appreciate• Costa ~tua 9711·~ HOlll 16 RACI Call John Felter'at .E~ellent eoms. MZ-0010 or 540-3211. TOP $1750: (Z ) 5t2-5t50 23' Fleld ~ 'fitreain: · DOu.All Cbr«>nada 25 by WHJ:o, loaded w/xlras, lo mi, 'AID' custom Interior. Xlnt S10.500. !M&·l130'8fl 4PM ll'ORCLEAN 1 condttlon, many extras. )11.111l aee. Slip avaUable. trneo. Call 9S7.039& or nrffen, Travel ?SI~ , •••••••••••••••••••••,•• 1. So · • I S' Prowler, sel(,oorit. 1 ; rehlon Sloop cm pl l~. eds·nnd S22UO,. • w aux-mtr $1760. cvs 51>2·5002 75&!·8a59dys 521·5920 Bob. i------''""'-'---1 '72 IT' Komfort t'elf con· KJTi: u)I boat w new tolncd wilh shower and lf•I!~ ... U50<Jr be.st octer hot water heater, ~x-•---------• ~~ __ ceJlent cond. Mu~~ ~4'\I. WE 24• WJnd(ose, '75. 7 SHP 1 ~50._637_'4_156 ____ -i MEED Yr~ct Mere. en«, Sips 5, ·66 lllW Terry S/C xtr' CLI!,......., gillie)', *"8d, atl( cont'd. <:Jean, alps e. 'S2095: e&ll ~ 'traUu. tli000.142·6907. 830-2007. -USED CARS HOW ·· 16' AMF Sunblrd. Xlnt 11' FirebaU '6$. Self-cont farntly da-y salter, Clbl axle, sips 61 Mly CALLP4'PY Gal~•nbed trlr w/wlnch equl~d. $1400 or ofr 540• 563() &sprue tire. GUO. 6'2-ueo •"M~lllllmMllWlftl 710110·1012 wDRIVEA * * LITILE ••• * SAVE A LOT • ........ \'''7 HewGOt oGol COSTA MESA OATSUN NEWPORT DA1SUN '71 CSearanc• Dtmo " uecuttve Hie now goln• on-f\ul'l'Y ! 888 DOVE STRE2T (Near MuArthur Blvd. le.Jamboree aoadl NEWPORT BEACH ;_. \" • Dart, f eyl, ( dr, JdDt cond. 841-202% or evea "P>J,.7'83 . .... t ,,. '75 Dodfe window van. =Ceaety'• V•, PS, PB, air, AM· S.. ~~1~, • , _t_~_· _!,_\_~~-e_d_.~_t_"·-~_:1_~_·1 lt7' eADJ~C fiord SiVIUI ....................... . With padded t.op, loather in~rtor & all lbe deluxe elltru. (212N.Uf). $9888 Nabers · Cadillac 2600 tl,11 nm BJyJ 'ST TIU. Rebuilt fJ>I fi C.11\I.& M\',,1 5~<~·11100 tuna+overdrlve. New .t.op. Neb minor wort'.•-------------~ SHOO. 611·5J79 efC., 6 '77 Cpe DeVille. Xln Wkdy.. cond. 13.SOO. 97701--~-7-~-~-91~--299-3 ~~-------------1 HUGE SELECTION NEW & USED CARS Toe> cub a''"'°"" vw. Pa'id fot or not, C1U K6tJtorJ~. • 808 WlmAM '1"W 7GOOWeatmJW.1' Ave. m.1MJor611·1880 • wht Jtbi:, 1-ewnr. l7. ml. SllOOO firm. 644-221 bus I l BRAMD NEW 1977 PLYMOUTH ARROW 1 73 ·FORD LTD V-8, automatlo. air conditlon1ng, PoWflf st .. ring, pewe< braM1. PQWerMats. ,.Slo, heater, wtiitewall tlrn. vlnyt roof. (387NXO} .. 1 I With his wife, Alice, at his side, Huntil')gton Bea~-Cily Councilman Ted Bartlett opens one of the gifts be re- ceived Tuesday. It was Bartlett's 76th birthday and a few friends threw a surprise party for him at the Seacliff Country Club. Killer Sentenced. , To Mental Facility Ron Butler tater made It clear that no such appeal will be filed. A jury round Allaway 1unty or seven counts of murder and two of assault after listening to testimony that Allaway shot nine people in and around the campus library on July 12, 19'16. <See ALI.AWAY. Pase A!) • m HBMan · Shot by 2Guns By ROBERT BARKER Of .. o..11, ,... ttlH Huntington Beach resident Robert Myers, who was murdered in the desert near Barstow last Friday, was shot by two separate weapons, in· vestigat.ors confirmed today. Detective Dennis O'Rourke said that a pathotoeist's report showed that Myers was shot by a s mall calibered weapon and a · larger weapon. 1\1 yers had been known to carry a .22 caliber handgun in bis van and there bas been conjec· ture that he was killed with bis own gun However, o ·Rourke said today that relatives or Myers told him the 57 -year-old specialist in the treatment or industrial water didn't carry ammunition tor the weapon. Detectives are still searching for Myers· 1974 gold-colored Ford van. "We possibly can find lol!'I of things once we get the van,·· O'Rourkcsaid. O ·Rourke said that a passing motorist who saw a bOdy being thrown from the van Frlday may be put under hypnosl• to provide additional details about whal he b3W. "The wit.ness saw only one SU$· pect who he described as white. The suspect WO!'t elaases and had a must.ache.·· O'RourlJe ~. O'Rourke said pollce ;are sUU working on ~theory that MyerJ either pick Id .up h.itchhiken near ~ Vlctorvllte or that t\e had •topped to help so~e dllabled on the desert road. "He apparently was a super nice indlvidualwbo wplgbt do just that ... O'Rourk~sald. Memorial services for Myen were to be held this afternoon at the Christ Presbyterian Church in Huntington Beach. Desert Fuula FmiSanla Monica Fire l:EN CENTS~ HE WANTS PEACE Sch~ Trustee How HB Council Approves I.and Swap 1 luntincton Beach City Council m1·mhers have g1vl'n approval to ,, l'Ompllcated land swap with a fo(' :.i I d<'"eloJX'r The new land is 1h•:.tan('(f to bi•comc part or a p.irk Ttll' councal vokd 4 I to ex 1 h ..1ni:t• 2 5 acr<'!> of city property 1111 Taylor On\'c west of Beach llnule,·ard for a 1 1 acre parcel 1>Wnt'd by the f<'oxx Development {o The Fo.·u property is lotated ht• l we t1 n JI u n t 1 n gt on and Dt•law~1rc :.treets. south of Yorktown A\'enue ft 1s an an .in::i 1•ast ol ca tv hall that 1s com· 111001\ called "Old Town " Ofhc1uls sav that the city also " a II n ·cc•1\1· S29.000 from Foxx as p.1rl Of the l'XChange. .\s,astant Caty Administrator II 1chard llarlow said Tuesday 1 h.1l the city romes out well in the .. ,change, d~p1te the dispanty 111 the ~ire orthe two parcels. I !Jr lo\\ said the area the ~lty is t radang for is z.oned for apart· menl!> and has a much higher prlct• per acre than the residen· t 1.1 I property on Taylor Drive. louncilwoman llarriett Wieder voted against the a1ree· rnenl, urging the council to put off ;id1on until an ordinance con- ' c·rnin~ land ~urplus sales takes • ffcl'! Dec 7. llo\H!\'l'r. Councilman Richard Saclwrt rnnll·nrled that the new onltnancc dO('sn 't deal with land 1•\chang1.•s. He added that any I llrlhcr delay!> would likely dnve up t''"'ts lo the caty because of 1·~calatms: land pnces and new ,qi pr aisal procedures. Tht• land is earmarked to be part of a five.acre park to serve the Old Town area. Voting In favor of the exchange \\ere Councilmen Ron PatUnSOI\, Siebert. Norma Gibbs and Ted U:.irllett. CouncHmen Al Coen and Ron Shenkman were absent. Wildlife Area . Tqurs Planned ' Tours or the Bolsa Chic:a wildlife areo will be offered Saturday from 9 to 10:3() a.m. by the Anugos de Bolsa Chica. Those who wish to pacticipate ~hould meet al lhe dam whlch is visible from PaciClc Coast Highway, just south or Warner Avenue. Experts on the area's b\rd and ni;h wildlire. the curreot p01ltica1 situation. history o! Bolaa Chica and the aeoloaY of the area will boon hand. Of'Aifol COAST " "'' DAILY PILOT A call for help was sounded Tue&day ntsbt iD an 1tttempt to restore civUlly between meD"I· hers of the lhmU.,gton Beach Ci· ty < elomenlaty >School DlaLrict. Truatee Roy How asked few the 11ssi1lonce of an oulllde consul· tont fo smooth relations follow- ing u blowup between board members al a ml'eling two weeks ago. , How. who was absent at the previous meeting, said he re· alized lhal something needed to be done after learning of the ac· Uvllies. • • 1 am attempting to be the peacemaker," he said. '11 want to make sure that trustees don't get tnrrit=d away emotionally. and that inchJde,s myself. "It Is time that we admit we need help on boardsmanship," he dl·clarcd. How said that a consultant t'Ould help on a number or issues an addition to trying to patch up personal relationships lie said that the selection of -a ~11perintendent to replac~ S.A. Moffett at the end of the 1979 ~rhool year is the Single most Im· porlant issue facing the board. He said the consultant could help in the guidance and dire<:· taon pf finding a new superinten· dent. Other challenges How says need to be addressed lnclude: -"Disengaging ourselves from putting out fires and involv· ing ourselves in administrative tjsks. -"Ide ntifying goals and l'~tablishing a philosophy o) positive leadership. -"Development of a master plan tor the education of our <'hildreo to meet their needs." now added that he believes trustees must halt the pracUce of dealing with personalities and must halt the bickering. Bitler sniping had broken out two weeks ago between Trustees Norma Vander Molen anct Paula 11 ulse91"1 one side and bQard Presi· dent Briaft Garland and Dave Sonkseoon,theother. How added that he feels that ls· l>Ues are sometimes decided on the basis of who the proPonents and opponents are on specific measures. Ile also said there was a lack or tolerance for differences of opinions. ,,...Page Al FIRE ••• more serious." said Talbot. Tuesday night, firemen hacked out a »mile fire line through the dense undergrowth and steep <' anyons 30 mlles west ot downtown Los Angeles. Six rrremen we!'o injured. in· eluding Mike Eubanks, 25, who was crlUcally hurt when a trac- t or rolled over bhn. He un- derw~ni surgery at Westlake I lospltal. The others 1uatalned mlnQr in)°"~· authorities said. The roof or one home on Mulhollard Highway causht fire and there were unconfirmed re- ports or dama.:f) to two other structures, firemen said. /\bout 670 Cirefighlers re· maincd on the fire line today ufler the release of crows from the U.S. Forest Service ahd some 200 others, Phillips said. But firefigJllers continued an atl ·out battle usinc 32 ~1mp crews. tht'ee tractors and four water-dumping hellcoplers. The spokesman said firefighters were concentratll\1 their eHorts on the fire'• southern fiank at Trances Can· yon. which lies between the cdast and the blaze, and wO\lld re-establish tire line& alon1 the cast and \Vest or the charred area The blate bqan mid-clay Tues· day, when the wtnds fanned a smoldering fire ln a dump, nre officials aald. Tile &lowtn1 sparks tgr\lted the tinder-dry brush sW'roundl~ the dUP'P· FIEPORTS ON CRIMI! Newport'• J•mn Qlavaa · • • Miifia-type crone Said '• SACRAMENTO -Retired Newport Beach poJlc• <:hlet B. James Glavas said Tuesday tbat California has Mafia.t.ype crime but "itsrootsarenotdeep. ·• Glavas was commenttnf ln his ne• role as chairman of the •t· torney seneral ·a oreantzed crirne· control commlsston. He said the commission has round· e~idenc1 of crime 11n· dicatesln a11l'e&lonsof California with no apecial concentration in anyooearea. But he refused to discuss specifics or say whether or- ganized crime is increasing or decreasing. ''I wouldn't care to minimize or maximiiethe influence of Mafia· type crime at this Ume," Glavas told reporters at tire opening of a closed-door commission hearlnc. "The roots of orcanlzed crime are not deep in the traditional sense in CaUfomla -not In the vein as cxempllfied in 'The God· father.· We do have Mafia crime in Ca lifomia, ··he said. . Glavas said the commission 1s "in fair agreement we haven't had a great deal of the traditional organized crime type activity in ' California -extortion, inroads in gam blln&. protection. ,,. F,....PageAJ .if unti~ Beach City Council mombera •en~r•lly ar• ple•td about proposed changes in the cl· t.y charter. The ctty'a ntne-membor charter reYi11ton commtu.e h•1t been working 13 months on a rel· vised •·constltuUon" for the city Dnd streamlined the dooumenl from 38 to 25 ~ea. •'The col1lO'Uttee hu done a f antaslic job.·· Mayor Ron l>at· Linson said. "It hes done a lot or hard work and met all time con· etraints." Mixed with the prlase tor l.he · panel's occompll1hments wero indtcatlons that some modlfica· lions of the recommended re· visions will be made before they .RO to the publlc for vote. Pattinson and Councilman Richard Siebert say they want voters to decide several key Is- sues on their own merit rather lhan voting on the entire s>ackage on one vote as suuested by Harold Bauman, chairman of the. charter revision eomrotttee. "l would hate to see t'ho total package brou;bt down because voters rclt.itrongly on a single is- sue," Pattinson said. Pattinson said controv~rsial measures such as the status of the city attomey, the proposed creation of a new poeJtlon of city controller and possible removal oC department heads from the city's personnel system should be voled on separately. The chart.er group favors keep- ing the city attorney's post elec· live so tha\ the office·holder can be more independent of the city council and administrator. Members of the committee also said that removal or the position Crom the ballot would take another orric1al out of the hands or voters. Chairman Bauman said that the committee voted to remove department heads from the personnel system so that any future new city administrator could choose his own team "without having to work with a group that may be alieQ to ham ... Department directors and othets have claimed that this ac- tion could create a "spoils system" in the city . A public hearing on the pro· posed changes will be held next month. Pattinson sajd he hopes that revi1ion11 can go on a ALLA WA¥. • citywide ballot next April. But the same jury co\ild not reach a verdict 1n a aubsequeot sanity hearing on Allaway'a mental state at the time of the kllllnis. Lawyers tor both sides aareed to allow Judge Kneeland to rule alone on the sanity Issue ,.ather than summon a new jury to alt throuih a second sanity hearint. Judie Kneeland aublequenlly dec1Jare4 Allawar, to be "com· pl~ly peychotlc • when be took a rtne to the campus and ahot nine untvendtyemployees. . It$ tatJned that Allaway, a janitor at cal State, became of>. 1essed wtth the beliet that mehl- bers or the university 5ta(f were . having sexual relaUons with his wtre. He further believed, it was testified, that his wife, Bonnie, who has since divorced him. was alsQ being forced to parUclpate ih the mak1n1 of pornorraphic movies on campus. BOUd Pa,rEyed By,; BB Trustees A proJ,o..at to pay board mem· bers up to $20 for each •chool bbard meeting wu scheduled for action Tuesday nlfht by tnisteet ot the · Huntinston Beactt· City <elementary> School District. HD Chamber Seeks 'Citizen' The Huntington Beach Chamber of Commerce i1 receiv· ing nominations for its aMual citizen of Ute )'ear award. Neither membership in the ~hamber nor resldenty in Hunt· ington Beach ls• retu.irement. The candidate may be · pro· posed by an onranlzation or an individual. · A resume ln writing must be submitted to the chamber office, 1$58? Beach Bivd .• Suite 224, by Dec. is. The clUzen of the year. wW be announced at qie ctiamber's ln- stallaUon banquet ln January. Bot trustees, wJlo have been • embroiled in recent con- trovertl~. tabled the action. In a vo!cejuM Abo'Je a wh11per, board President Brian Garland waa heard to say. ''We better wait untU Wtahowthit wede1ervelt. •• Tbe protestlq gr<>Ups wue tar smaller: in numbers atJd more or· derly Uum TueSday. u the police lines wetedoubl~. About 1.000 Chanting Iranian students, many wearlna masks to conceal their Identity, con- tinued to protest the 1hah's U.S. vislt from Lafayette Park, across Pennsylvania Avenue from the front of the ex~uUve mansion. Some 200 other opponents marctied ln a clrde on the El· hpse1 • park area behind the Arraigr}ment Delay Granted Suspect · By TOM BARLEY ·-~~ ..... A man dUbbed the ''Phani.om rock thrower" because of hls al· leged pench•nt fbr t hrowing rocks at passing cars on the Riverside Freeway made his first court appearance today in Santa Ana Municipal Court. Judge John Smith Jr. delayed the arraignment of James llorton, 42, tq Nov. 30 arter ap· pointing the public defender to represent tbe accused transient. Horton remains held tn the coonty Jail with ball set at '6.000. He faces charees of assault with a deadly wea~n and trespass- ing. Horton appeare4 calm today and Jaoked turi.Otilly ,round the packed courtroom while Judge Smith mtde arranaementa for h.11 def enae. J~I dep11th~a de.scribe him ea "a model prisoner." · Horton., arrest. ltlat Frld'y climaxed a long bunt by offU:ers that was intensifiea last May when Horton allegedll atwked and wouqdcd fl ~hJ'rltf's d~\4\)' • wlth a knife. Backed by otttcers of the Border Patrol and lhe California Highway Patrol, sheri{f's of- ficers e'Jentually ~eked llorton to a small cave in the Santa Ana Canyon. area where the dcfen· dant surrendered w)thout a slruigle. · Off leers said the • ra1ged (ugllive had been Jiving on a diet of fruit and nut.~ supplemcnlcd by whatever be could find in eubage cans. They said his clothes ))ad been patched with animal skins and his shoes had been repaired with strips taken lroro discarded car tire1J. It ls alleged that Horton is the bearded black man who often wu seen atan4inc on the center divider of the Riverside Freeway hurltng rocks at passing cars. More than~ windshields were shat~ered by the man who became known as the "phantom rock thrower,•· offlcerssaid. I \ STATE I SOUTHERN CALIFORNtA .. Portrait of Tragedy .~ chilcfs bacr~le and a burned-out found4l tron or the home he left al'c grim remind ~rs -0f the brush fire that raged through t~ Santo Monica mountain::. :.\Ionday and 'flle&day b<'forc IH"ing partially contuint.:d , .. Sheriff's deputies sift through the ashes for possible valuables lhlil might be sah agl~ by distraught owners Six homes 1\ ere dt:slrovcd b v the blaze: wh I ch churrccl sonw 6oo act:cs • ··Thieves Ring Wrong· Chimes ~.\' DIE<;o 1.\P1 Eight bdb and airs wdl l h a l l' n d s \.\ c 11 • t h c <'11t·h,·s ~o ::ind 'iO i.ay the :'It :1rt11t•s who ha\ l' tht·1 r m1ss111 g m;irat1mt• lwll h:.i<'k 111 ll!-> placl' ut the \J a11111: Corps Hl'<:rutl lkt>OI Sum1•0111' st oil' the bell Tax Relief Bill GOP Seeking .,J I. t To Reconvene S.\C:HJ\~tBNTO '""' J\n <ittempl to force ll'> NI to l t.' •H· h no' 1t·t· M ar1ncs ho"' to tuU the tinw of d.1.\ on a ship olf tis post S11nda~ ni~hl 111 lront ul thl· \tarnw Sea S<·hool U1:t olfit-rnls '•" u m)sl~ry µhone ca.Iler lall· 'lunday told them the) to11ld find lhl· ~i-0 \l·<Jr old lrl·asun· al tlw busc ehupel I' PLACl!:RVILLE IAP > El DOl'ado Count) sup.ccvhors aro dcla)•ing propolied airport nqisc standards that would h;.1vc the effect of keep· in& many jets Crom land· in& at South L1tkeTaho@. Instead. the oupervisors volt'<! Tues· dl.ly to mo~·tor noise le\'Cls at the ake Tahoe Airport Cou ty ofrtc1als del'1bcls from 7 u m to 10 p m and 85 dectbels fromlOJLm. to7u.m. An utrport oCCtctal. \\ho a1iktd not to be lden tificd. shid th~t: hmit would bar nl leust lt<>Dl~ or tbe prwate 1.md com mercial jets that take ofr and lan<fot the airport, said tho mon1torinu ____________ .._.. __ \\OUld d lay cnal'lnH·nt of an¥ ordinance for ;,,bout a year. because the ec1uipmt.·nt ''on 't be a\ allablc until rH.·'l .. prina T If E BOARD abo .Jskcd the Ft'dcral 1\viat ~ion Administration. which has criticized the propoi;cd or<lanuncc. to work with the count) on noise standards Some Tahcx: Hasm res. 1dents ha\•e been com plaining about jet noisti. which they sa) 1s amplified by the basin's n.ttural echo. t;nder the proposed or· dinancc. airplane noise would bc limjted to 99 0 \. f~ ~-ricud Mlllttt'Cltor9' OR.ANGE Tv.tilt ..-ketth 1419 No. Tintl"A•• (714) 997-9960 AMAHCIM n.v•••c.mer 1222S.~t 1.+ lalt Rd.I 014) 63H461 the C'<iltforma IA1i:11>lJlure tu reconvene to act on • j)l'OIJl'l'l) ta~ relief proposals h<is been launchtid by : Our Touch . of Class IU Hl·1>ublk..in lawmukcr:-. I I ··our purpose an brinJ.(1ni.: lhe Lel::11>lalurc back togdhcr 1s lo (Teall' a forum lo enact properly tax 00 n:l1l'f prior to the )(•Jo;1slal1vc on1>laug hl in January .. 'ma ' rn~e· \~st·mblv minontv floor ll·ader Paul Priolo or \.JI . M ;_ii 1 bu su1d TUl'MI a y ~EITIU:R ,\SSE~BLV S~'.!kcr Leo McCorthy CJf San Fram·1sco nor Senate President pro tcm luxurious with .J:tml''> \l11lc;. tlw lwQ Dl'motrats who head up the . ~\~:tl:Jtllrl'. V.t·n· 1mmcd1alely availat.le for com ·I Persma Soft ® M'=C:irthy ;ind a Senate committed headed by :\l1lls h:t\'C authority to .rccon\'l'IH.' t. he Lel(1Slalurc '~ Sa ~r so· OY< hl•fon• th~ l!)iR session bl'i:! ins .Jan 2 • • IF )le(.'\ RTI I\' u nd '11Jls don't act in 10 days on ve 0 the <\<V' petition Hepubhl·an11 say ther w111 att(•mpl • to go ~1r<>und lht.• Dl·mc~crat1c ~cadcrsh1p by r1rculat· 1 on tf perfect nnce 1nj.! pctlt1011s lo lht• t•nllre Le!l1i.lature. _ • "' / , Tlrnt maneuver wQUltl require the i;upport or Trad1t1onal. loom ·woven ~cryl1c 1 nearly httlf o( the Democrats in the Lef.(islalure. but • 1.., GOP sourrci. said they fell many Democrat~ now blankets. lhey ~ave Perma Sof fini sh ~tt~ h<· wlllmJ! t-0 rcconnnc to take up a tax rcltcr ! thal makes them all the better lo 111 I I .. sleep under Nylon satin binding OE~10CRATIC GO\I. Edmund Brown Jr. 's of· flt·c did nol c·ommcnt on the Ttepubhcan move Brown pn·\ iou:-.ly said h<' wanlt•d the Legislature to mt•ditak" on the la'< issue before he would call a , spt-l.'tal 'o('~SIOll won't ravel. lhanl<.s to Everlocke stitch Marvelous savings on white. champagne. mahogany. buttercup or In <·omrnt•nts r('((;ascd by a spoke'im:m. Priolo said Ill-publicans "tlon 't have a specific proposal · bcc:rnsl! tl)ut would immed1utcly s plit lawmakers .tlonJ{ tfle parti~an line~ which raus<.'<1 tax relief bills to fail before the Lcg1slature reccsi;ed two months ago A $4.8 BILLION five-year relief plan. ftnanct..-d mostly from surplus slate runds, died in the finol hours or the regular sesi.ion in September. llC'pubUcans helped block that measure. ar~uinp that too much of the money was <·armarkcd for low· income pen;onli and not enough for m1ddle-mcome fam1lics faclflJ{ big me reuses in propertv lax bills "Olwiouslv we huve our own idC'as. We arc verv much in favor o( syx•ndlng ltm1ts on the :.late and loeal go,ernment and indcxlni:? .. to adjust income tax brnckets for inflation and giving a greater por· tion or the relter to middle-i ncome home-owners than Brown propo<1ed. Priolo add<.>d TOE REPUBLICANS filed under rules that would reconH~ne the lawmakers-into re.tular sessions. which opernte under bro~der niJes than the special sesi,ion which Brown has the power to convene Priolo said h(• had no .spcc1f1c date in mind l'O cruivfne the Legislature. except that it would prob· ab)y be early December. SEV.ES A~E)IBLYMES und three i;enators. includloa nearly all of the GOP leastea:ship or both hous~s. signed Lho petitions. which were filed late Tuesdoy 'Aitb Lh<' <'.lorfcs or the Senate nnd Al· 1\t'(llbly • Priolo Hald the Repubhcan leadership decided \tonduy to til the potitlon'J to reconvene b~cause "a comblnallon Of f11.ClOnJ hai; come lOfelher • cognac. Not all colors . 1 Twin size. If perfect $35. 15.99 I Full size. It perfect $40". 18.99 I . J King size. If perfect $54. 25.99 I Bedroom Accessories . . • mJr Keep Watch on Surf Meet Cost I If Huntington Beach has a national identity. it ls probably because of lts good surling conditions. Officials may be stretching local pride when they say lhe city is the s urting capital of the country, but it is unquestionably one of the premier sul'fing areas. The majority of the city council has taken action to promote th.is image by approving $8,600 to finance the first annual All American National Surfing Cnampl<1nships pext month at the city beach. Leader!" declare that the event will be a good )nvestment of taxpayers' money, particularly if the event 1s to be televJsed. We don't quarrel with that reasoning or with the status of the champiorui hips which are expected to attract top pmateur athletes from throughout the nation. Backers a lso say that the event may lead to surfing )>eing accepted as an Olympic event some day, which is another argument in its favor. But oCficials should be especially mindful of not l.etting expenses get out of h and. Some of the costs trophies. a banquet and airplane f are for Judges and the widow of Duke Kahanamoku, "the fa th er of surfin~· · probably deserved a harder look. We remember that the U.S. Surfboard Championships M'ere held in l luntmgton Beach for 13 years until they were discontinued in 1971 because expenses got out o( hand. The affair could be a plus for the city. We are counting on city council rnembers to keep it from becoming a mipus by spending too much m oney on It. Untim.ely Display The Coast Community College District is telling of its accomphshml•nts of the 1976-77 school year with a handsome publi<.·atton now being circulated • Thl• 30 pagl' booklet is printed on heav~ stock and has . been laid out and designed with a flair that would do 1ust1<:e to l ' S Steel's Annual Report. The cover features a college-owned sailing \'esscl, slicing through light Pacific seas. Aboard are happy students obnousl~· enjoying their sail through college hfc . The boat also 1s used in a casually posed picture of the f1H• district trnstcC's and as a setting for a photo of the chancellor of th<.• distract. Sails billowm~. thl' Saudade appears seven more times to help the PR people explam the district's missions :.ind ach1cvcments Last August trustees of the distri~t increased its propl•1ty la:< rall' !) 6 cents per $100 of assessed valuation This cam<.' on top of a whopping 34 percent increase in aSsl'SSl'(l \' aluations in the district. It eamc.• out to :.ilJout u 30 percent increase in what an incJ1vidual homl'<>wncr would pay to the two-year college district in Hl77-7R It also came out as the biggest single me reuse lasted on the property tax bills received last week. Wedo not<kmcan or challenge the accomplishme nts of the Coast district. We clo find this slick, back-patting • booklet umazmgly insensitive m view of the dollars ft cost taxpayers whose backs already were to the wall. A IHtlc less slick and a little more simplicity is the PR image taxp:iyers would find most impressive. I s~~~. ~~~!~~Gene Saunders me dl'partmcnt Capt Robert Baker. Ivor Gitsham. Thomas f Vick Marv Matakovich These' arc special people of whom Huntington Beach ( l'an be proud. Kiwanis Club m ember s have honored each for deep commitment to community service, or for acts of valor and heroism whichln at least three instances saved lives. One of those who acted without regard for his own safety, young Joe Cook, was only 11 when he rescued a i:rown man from Lake Huntington after a tiny sailboat capsized • One of those who acted without concern for himself is Tom Vick. who was injured smashing his way into a blaz- inil home to save a five-month-old baby boy. Capt Saunders was honored for his dramatic rescue of two young boys overcome by toxic fumes in a flood control channel. The yearly salute should continue as a tradition to re- mind us time and again or the fact. cited by this year's awards luncheon chairman, Dr. Richard Altimart, that no matter.how discouraging humanity sometimes seems, ~ there are people who care. · • Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment 11 invited. Addreaa The Daily Pilot, P.O. Sox 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (114) 642·4321 . Boyd/ Gerbil, Talk t BY L.M. BOYD ' lt bu now been determined scie.nti(lcally \bat the ll\tle anlQ\ala lcnown u ,-erblls do talk to one another In thelr own lanauace -aaylnf 1uch thtng1 u ''I lo'/e you" and "I reel lousy today" -but ln ul· truonlc syU-.bla that can on· ly be picked up by hl•hlr atn1ltlve ln1trusnenS•. University of Tnu scholars found that out. in her bedtqom for more than three years. Sbe didn't want anybody to know she needed his handiwork. Those who preu for public nudity t>oint out that there are more than 300 litHite naked fiaurea in Michelangelo's Sis; tJne Chapel celllng. The only filh that devetopa arterlo1clero1is \s the salmon. DEARBORN, Mich. -Auto ·makers have trumpeted the won· ders and benefits of their new models fot so many year& that we tend to turn a deaf ear to this enormous lndUJtry. But now the rulers of autodom have a message worth listening to because it tens us what we will be driving in the years im mediately ahead and how our economy will change be cause of 1t Simpf>' put, most people won't be able to buy the cars they are accustomed to, what they will drive will feel dll· fercnt. will eventually cost somewhat more to buy, but will be less expensive to operate "This is a revolution." says Robert B. Alexander. vice presi- dent of product development at Ford Motor Co. ''Our Industry tended to be evolutionary rather than revolullonary. We used to design and style cars for what we perceived was consumer· de- mand. Now we do it to me.a,t gov- C?rn m cot· mandated req·uire- mcnts The big ice-cream cone is always what sold. Now the gov- t•rnment tells us what ice-cream the cone must be " DETROIT 1s spending billions to tram down its future models, so that their performance will im- prove from an avt!rage of 18 miles per eallon 10 1978 to 271, m.p ~ by 1985 Federal laws caused IX?trml to engage m a "downsmng" effort, as it 1s called here. Consider how formidable the auto industry 1s in our economy. One of every six workers makes hi!! living from motor vehiC'lc and related industries. When auto sales drop Sl billion, 57 .ooo Jobs are Jost. The in- dustry's whopping appetite con· sumcs f,() percent of all the syn- thct ic rubber produced in the lJnited Stales and also these amounts: malleable iron. 47 per· cent; slt.'el, 19 percenti zinc, 33 pcrcct1t; aluminum, 12 percent. Ameracaos spend nearly 10 percent of their disposable in· come on ownership and use of cars While the United States has 6 percent o( the world's popula- l1on, 41 percent ol the world's passenger cars are here. TMre .. are now some 140 million cars and trucks on our highways. If the statistics are heavy. the fut urc car won't be. Al Ford. cars produced now avtrace bout 4,000 pounda. By 1980 that numbn wlU be 3,500, and by 1118$ orily 3,000 pol,U)d5. TO CVT wel1ht. Detroit will build more front.wheel drives <allowing a lighter frame>, create thinner door• and use more aJumlnum, hlah•strength, low·alloy steels and plastics. Only last week Ford an nounced It was using super-light, expensive, graphJte fiber In some of Its better cars and will even· tually build a prQLotype 1979 car, using graphite extensively, weiihing only 2.750 pounds. A graphite drive shaft weighs rive pounds less than one of tteel, and a graphite hood is 25 po11nds less than a steel version. "The U S economy w11l be altered considerably," Alex· ander saya. "Radial tires will virlually betome standard on future cars because they arrect fuel economy favorably There RobM N. Wted/Publllhtf' will be more and more can oo deratandloi tn tho eoh1umer:'t the road, but 1uoll•e con1ump. mind about what'• h•p~od -., tion is 101na to .iAfop 1ubstan· our lndu1ttry. The co1t1u.mtr tlally. ~........._m~l1h~ want one tbln1. but the "Wo are m<wbi• toward a 1over11ment tell• ua to build rnaintenance-free car requlrlnl aomethln& elae abd tbat'1 a no acheduletl wort tor the first permantnt rondltJon we are will· 50,000 miles. We're already Into int to Uvowlth." ensines where the oil needa to be The term "horsepower" bl o changed only at 7,500 or even h ... (A rt • 111 .. 1 10,000 miles. New can with four muc ap1 .. o me ca1ho.,. ore aa ••Panama Canal," and lt won't cylinders need tune ups only be usy for Americans to drop lt every 30,000 miles. and start lh1nkln1 in terim or THERE'S wholesale appUCJ• ;;~~~;~~~~.:.::~~actor"« lion of electronic ignition devices on 1978 cars, and electrontc "BOBSEPOWER Ott't mjtaa engine controls are coming. Ttds much," Alexandet explains, means the viability o( the s mall "beca~ Jess wJll be needed for servic e station could be these much Utbter can. In the threatened because they'll need •30s had ... ...., v 8 · more sophis ticated tools, •we a.-"'~ • enone diagnostic equipment and skilled with only~ bonepower ·" · technicians. We've already seen Car buyers. rtve tf 10 years lbc trend to self-service gas sta-from now, will see much smaller " bi h At t r lh al madels, but they wUl •till be b~~i~:Ss.c gV» ou 0 6 rep r loaded with popular optlona like "l think there 1s misun automatic transmission, power assists and alt-conditioning. There will be less emphuls on styUna, and buyers ~UI h•ve to pay pretnlum prices for larger models. "All the companies face the same problem of conf6rminC to tbe new Jaws, '° that atvea &IS a chance to change our tradlUonal share (25 percent> of the market. Whoever does tbe oew work best. should Improve-hla abare of the market," Alexander st)'•. Prod any auto mall and be'U grudgingly 11ree the new stan- dards are ~essary but wtU also mutter that the federal timetable is often unrealistic. "It. Implies thnt invention can be Jeti:~lated. which we k.no• iln't true. ' Alex- ander says. ''It's dlfn~lt to meet tougher emission standards, which cut fuel economy, and at the same time meet new &tan· dards for fuel economy." WHA'tEVER, there t• no stgn that Anierkans want to give up tbelr beloved cars. Aa one of Jim·. my Carter's own ofllclals lh the Departm41nt of 'l'tansportation observed: "If th~ car didn't ex· ist, the first thing J would do is Jn· •ent It becauae It is auch • marvelous tran1portatlon de· vice. I don't see a subsUtute for it In the next 50 years." Those are words. Detrott likes to hear, while fending off imports (now about ao perce'ftt .t market>, coplnt wltaa Tedetal r. • gulotlons and trylnc to:penuade customen accustomed to big, soft·ride cars, to tbt new, ltlff· ride, more basic models coming up. ( Help for Real Estate Rip-off Victims To the Editor: I read with loterest the letter to the editor tn the Nov. 6 edition of the Pilot headed "Cul·Throat Tactic" and signed by Michael D. Gardner. tam pleased the let- ter wu wrtUen and printed, as it aives me the opportunity to respond in a manner that might be helpful to those who find themselves in a similar situation, and, perha&>s, to Mr. Gardner, himself .. First of all, there are, neceaurtly, many gaps In Mr. Gardner's letter. If it was too long, ol course, you would not print it. Readinc between , the llne1, tiowever .. there is a pos1iblllty that Call!oroia Real Estate Law bu been violated, In which case the commlssloner wlll take action. lpcidentally, there now Is a Department or Real Estate office in Santa Ana whlch may be contacted. Crom her $30,000 per year job. Perhaps she could flnd something she could do in tbe private sector, but then again, to be fired from a position which would probably pay much less does not re<iuire an attorney or a hearing. DALE JOHNSON Poor Ez••JJ~ To tJte Editor I am the parent of a 14-year old who attends a local publlc high school. It has come to m y attention In recent weeks of the use of pro- fanlty and intimidation In our schools. Not by the students, but the teachers! The teachers, to whom we entrust the education of our children. The educated. adult, mature tndMdual. What good doea it do to JnBUll respect for authority and respect for elders when children can be cursed at and threatened? If teachers want res~ct, obe· dlence and dlsclpllne tn a classroom then they have to ex- pect it -not threaten in order to achieve tbetr end. NAME WITHHELD Af"J'en Safet• To the F.dJtor : We hid another plane crash at Meadowlark because the runway is about 600 feet too short to pass today's safety requirement.. PJJot Davis is in the hospital because she couldn't get up enough speed on that short runway. If she had come another 100 feet she would have been on my house. TUE crrY councll 's airport commlUee didn't st.op tbat ~rub and they won't stop anx..crasb because the problem is no clear zone and short runway and only Art Nerio has the power and money to correct that. He bJa re· fused to bring that a.lrP9rt '1P to today's code for 27 years. What right does one private busi- nessman have to endanger all · our lives? The residents of Huntington Beach had better forget thelr TV shows and go to city council meeUngs before ihel'e ls a tel'ti· ble tragedy. These out:Of·town pilots and our city ctouncU don't give adamnaboutourUves. AL OAKDEN Apo .... Dtte To the Editor: ln the Daily Pilot of Nov. 2, )'OU printed a letter entlt.led ''Pllota l\espond," by a Mr. James R. Evans, In which he ade a t Judg~ S~nteDces ~ By TOM BARLEY Of .. o.ltr ....... "" A judge who ruled that Edward Charles Allaway was insane when be killed seven people oo the Cal State Fullertoat campus decided today that Allaway should be committed to the state's Atascadero facility. And Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert P . Kneeland made it clear in reading a pre· pared &tatement f'rom the bench that be feels Allaway, 38, should remain in the mental health facility for the rest of his life. "He presents a Clear danger If he is ever released back Into society," the judge told lawyers for both sides. "He must be kept under maximum security condi- tions." Allaway was advised of hls tight lo appeal hi• inea.ilJly con- viction during the brief beating before Judee Kneeland. But deputy public defender Ron BuUer later made it clear that no such appeal will be filed. A jury found Allaway guilt:; ot seven counts of murder and two of assault after listening to . 2 Countians Die In •'' Anita Baeked IJryant'a Pact Extended LAKELAND, Fla. <AP> -The Florida Citrus Commission gave singer Anita Bryant a unanimous vote of confidence today, extending her SlOO,OOO·a· year promotional contract through August 1979. The commission voted today rather than next February as originally scheduled to end s peculation that she would lose her job because of her stand against homosexual rights. "She's doing a great job for us, .. commission chairman Dan Richardson said after the vote. He said Miss Bryant "s positions against homosex. uality and in favor of prayer rn public schools "have nothing to do with our decision. Our decision is on whether she still is effective, and she is.·· Balking Inmates Miss 'Godfatlwr' NEW YORK CAP> -Because they insisted on remaining out of iheir cells af\er lockup time w watch the 18-t hbU.r of th• '111\e Godfather, .. 75 inmates ot the Queens House of Detention have been deall a penalt.y t!Mt)' cl!ADOt refuse -25 days in solitary oon· flnement: In addition, the 75 also missed the final segment or the four.part. telecast of the program Tuesday night. But 425 other inmates at the jail stayed up until 11 p.m. Tuesday -an hour past lockup - to wiitch the final installation of the program about an organized crime "famlly." \ The lareer group had returned lo their cells as drdered before thf show flittshed Saturday night, but the other 75 refused and a squad of correction euards had lo be c•lled in to remove ihtm. The)' were Jater sentenced lo 25 " day1 ln eoll~. The prisoners' council bad not asked permlsaion for the late lock'1p Saturday and the ce>rrec· tion officer in charge did not have the power to authorize overtime to guard the prisoners. Prison offlclals granted a re· quest for Uie late lockup Tuesday night, presumably to impress on the inmates the wages or sin. Hot Desert WiDds Slow Fire Control Protest • Pickets Return W ASJilNGTON CAP> -Rival demonstrators massed near the White House today as the Shah of Iran, winding up his vlotence· scarred state visit, paid a return call on President Carter. But in contrast to the 124 in- juries and 12 arrests that result· ed Tuesday when fighting brofte out among pro· and anti-shah forces, a heavy police contineent today kept the groups more than a block apart to prevent large· scale violenee. • The protesting groups were far smaller in number and more or· derly than Tuesday. 'three ar· rests for disorderly conduct re· suiting from minor scuffies were reported by the anernoon. Carter told report.en that bts SO· minute meeting today with the shah covered a wic;le r"'ge of topics, 1bcludltts haman ti&b\t. Opponents of the shah have crltici1ed the st.i.e of humllD rights ln Iran. • The p~ldelll. wbo walked h1s visitor to a Urnousliie after the meeting, sald he e"pressed hope that the 13·naUon Orcanltation of Petr'lleum Exporting Countrtes would not decide to raise petroleum prices when it meet.I in Venezuela in December. Carter declined to state the shah's views, altbouch the monarch reportedly pledeed at a meeting with tbe president Tues· day that Iran would not push foko a price me. The shah bas &aid in recent int~rviews that bi.a naUon. wblcb suwlles 7 to • percent of·, U.S. oil importi, would remain neutral on tbe issue. Following today's l!leetine with Carter, the •beb drove to Washington's Embassy Row sec· tion for a luncheon boSt.ed by Vice President Walter F. Monc1,a1e. Some SOO opponents were )lept in a cordoned-off area about two blocks from that site. ,\fter the luncheon, the shah planned to meet on Capitol Hill wttb the H9u1e Jnteroatloaat R~latJoos Committee before be and hls wlft. the Emprelis l'at8' fly to Parta tonl t frotn nearby Andrews Afr Force Bi ... Durlbg the White Ho6se mllet· tng, about 1,000 lranlan a~t.t (See PB<Yl'EST. Page .U~ ,. aeasecl Wilb the belief that mem- bers of the univtrslty start were bav!na sexual rflatlona with ~ wife. He further believed. lt wu· testified. tbat his wife. Boonie, who h-. alnce divorced him, was also being forced to parUclpate in the making o( pornograpblc movies on campus • DAILY PILOT Blazes Locate megals • RANCHO SANTA FE (AP> -the campfires that keep tlle1al ahem. warm in dirt caves dUJ near some or Southern Calif· orl'lia 's most.expensive homes AN tetbnithem deported. Twenty-four-forest ranfffS trying to prevent a major fire captured 91 aliens Tuesday with the help or eight. U.S. border patrolmen. The wealthy Americans who lave in $400.000 homes north ol San t>iego complained about the fire! at night Deputy Border Patrol chief Winford Baze sai~ some aliens reportedly laved as long as six months in the hovels . ~ Doug Allen of the California Department of .Forestry said the :-.pecial task force was formed by rangers from Riverside, San Bernardino, Oranae a nfilt San Diego counties. ·'The primary objective or this was not to apprehend illegal aliens but to put a stop to the ii· lcgat campfires that posed a threat.to the area ... Allen sald. Two had burned a 50-foot area. Spanish-language signs were r>u t up months before, saying that fi res art• illt·~al m the tinder.dry ure<t Aflt'r that didn "t put them out. a fon.-st ranger s pent the last two months there "trying to stop the c·ampfin.• threat without sue· C'css, .. said Allen, adding "it was .it that point we decided to go into the area and put them out ... A few of the altens were awake hut most of them were sleepini o n the ground in the hills northeast of San Dieguilo Reservoir when the officers swooped down. They were proc· csscd today for deportation lo Mexico " Fro• Page Al FIRE ... Dul firefighters continued an all-out battle using 32 camp C'rews. three tractors and four water-dumping helicopters. T h e spokes man said firefighters were concentrating their efforts on the fire 's southern Oank at Trancas Can· yon. which lies between the \·oast and, the bl14ze, and would re·establish fire lines along the east and west of the charred area. The blaze began mid-day Tues· day. when the wif¥1s r•notd a sinC?l~eri,, fjre i~.4~'1\R,,.nt', ofh cialll ,ans. • dlt]flhJ !'!parks (pijed t a i.lpdt,·ftr¥ brush sumnmt1ing CHl8\l~. ... County Fire Inspector Dennll' Miller originally iJaid t~ dump fire had been smoldering for several weeks. But early today. fire information officer Roy lfatbot said witnesses report«!· seeing a man starting an illegal fire in the dump Tuesday In an area that was nol. burnlng ~urller. Police Halt Bid to Fame NEW YORK <AP> -James Campbell's bid for fame didn't get off the roof. The would-be daredevil 'llfU grabbed by police Tuesday y he grepared to parachute from lt.op the 110-etory World Trade Ce11ter. A policeman spotted Campbelt. 21, of Oakland, N.J .• as he un·· loaded a parachute from a aUll· case on tbe top of the south to•~r of the twin sk-ywr.apers. th& talle11t in the city. Protest Lodged MANILA, Phlllpph'l .. tAP> - The Philippines is whbdrawin& !tom the Miss World pa1eant in London W. week, apparently to protest the participation of South Africa. - 130o/o Interest Rate on Loans • Lecuh to ] ail SAN DIEGO <AP> -i'ran~· Gordon Skinner or E condido faces 120 qays In jall and five years of probation for lebding money at 130 percent interest to used car dealers. , Skinner, Sl, also ·was, fined S5,000 6ut told Superior Court .Judge Edward T. Buller that the only thing he did wrong was pro· n de money for those who needed 11 ··so help me God. I wm not t•ver help another man tnone\art· ly... vowed Skinner at hf s sen· tt•nclngTuesday. To that. Butler commented: ·'You feel no remorse. l don't see any contrition in you. You socked them for 130 perqent interest lll this humanitarian ge$ture and say you won'tdolt afaJn? .. .._."I have round Qut it is a crime tl> help people when they need help, .. said the defendant. Skinner pleaded innocent to 17 counts of loan. sharking bul' changed the plea t-0 guilty of two counts when 15 were disms1sed. llls jail term begins Dec 1. Sa/ety Po8ters Withdrawn MERCED (AP ) -Trame safety pesters criticized as of· fensive to Mexican-Americans have been withdrawn from ciroulatlen here. Capt. Paul Gunder~an, com· mander Of the Merced-area CHP unit, sald he had been "ordered from big,het up" lo roc:nove the ~t~rs M<>May.. " Gunderman Had no hiA~ tfmi. ment abouttheJs ue PLANES •.•• Pt per 's right ~Ing was tom off in the collisJon leavior the ri1ht iu~ro~ han«Jng from the w1nf. Dea¥>lte the wing damaie. nre -0m~ta11 said the Plper PA.28 made a near perfect" land.lnl tt the airport. The search ror the second aircraft o!f La&u'U\ Beach was hampered initially by f 01 ln U\6 area. Searchers warnfd of J\eavy aharJc activity in the erub alte \ticinity. Oranee County Harbot' Patrol Newport Beach life,euard and · Kunlinston Beach state llfeauard boats responded U> tbe noon hour coUtsiop report. They were a..-• sisted by a Coast Guard cult.er from Lone Beach and two heUcopters. 'By early afternoon, searchers had located ao oU aUck and places of wreckate on the water but ddcribed tit• d•brf 1 as rmall pieces of the aircraft and partl oC the bodies . An Orange County Harbor Patrol.official eald the aircraft'• tire was th~ laraeat piece or wr eckage. ,,, G11nipan Robe Bus Driver SAN DIEGO CAP> -A gun· man commandeered a city bus. forced the puse~ers off and at· tacked the woman drh•er before .. a citizen cbased him otr, police said. .. The b1Jac1'er bad a pistol to my neck, 1' aatd lbe ~year-old driver. ''1 WU ft&htlriS back and would havelouabtle>thedeatb,.. . The drlver, Katbl)'nL1Welleld, was rob~ of $2)p4~ wateh but nttl\her 1he nor h r two passen•~ were hurt. If --.!.......~~~· ~~.:.:.....:..=--~~~-+:-~~~,·. The d{8COYOt'Y or flDOU&b plastic expJosfve to blow up the San Cl•ment. bus depot hai re· 1ul~ Ill a "nonjudicial" hear· Int tot two Camp ~ndleton Maitl\ts. A routine check or the depot lockers laat WedMaday revealed four blocks at C-4 pluUc ex· J>lo.iye. said San Clemente Fite M•nhal Don Hod&ton -enOUlh ''to blow t.bo ~away;• he aald. · Hod11on sa he believed wha.vcr stored t.M expl<J8ive i.n the lock~ probably intended to aoll it, Wit.bout a det.onatinc d•· vice, th.e explosive posed no danger. he •aid. A match applied to the plasUc tnat.erlal would only SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -A woman administrator. preparfns a report on safe- ty at San Francllco State. bare ly escaped at.tack h e rself in a camp\.fa restroom, of(icial• said. .. , 'm eonna fet you. I'tn gonna get you, .. Konnllyn Feig, 38, said a man armed with a small kn i fe screamed at her as 1be bolted wt of a restroom and ran to her nearby of· fice. She locked herself· into the office and the man vanished before campus police could arrive. Ms. Feig1ald. cause ittoburn. a&Jd HOdeaon. Newa ttPortf'f's last. week were asked to hold slorles of the db· eovery. beea111e Naval n· telll1enee officer_+ hop•d omeone WO«.lld come t0th6<Sepot. toplck uptheexplosive. Mast.er Ser1eant Don O'Neal <>f " the Camp l'CJM!Jetob t>ubUc af. fairs om~ aald the two Marines were e"arged wlt.b tbefl of tbe e~pl01h1e aod witb recelvi.n1 stolen peoperty attu tbe7 'ftte tncec\ ttirou•h otfltr lt1m1 stored with tti• exptost~ tn the bu• depot locker. Roy Kooren, o. ot WlnJdale, N.Y .• was char•ed with larceny of 10\'ernrne.nt property. O'.Neal said. He was demoted from lance corporal to private first class and lined $100. Montie Purdue. 20, of Ale:un· drla, lt:,d., was charse4 'ffllh Jcnowiotly receiving stolen pro~.Htspuei.ihm ntwutbe same aslCooren'e. LONDON <AP) -Strl)clna British firemen refl.wed to help tnexp~rlenced mlHtary fireffghten battle a raclna blaze in a po~r etaUon east or London today. The fire was reported burnin•outof control. The reruaat indicated a hardening of the riremen·s poaltlon in tho three· day-old strike. I Glavas Reports • &udent F-ee? SACRAMENTO <AP > · The Student. Lobby of the Universit,y of Ca\\fornia says it. has aar:eed with tbc UC administration oo a SSl reduction in the student education ree. Bul the lobby said Tuesc}ay the reduct.loo depends on ~e stale appropriatJ.ng about •.& mWion to make up the dltference, and Gov. Edmun<t Brqwo Jr. bu not. aareed to th.if. The proposal Is U> be presented to the regents thursday. ... State Cri-lne ·'ShDltoW' SACRAMENTO -ReU~d Newport Beach police chief B. James Glav,aa saJd Tuesday that California baa Malla·type mme but "ltsrootswenotdeep." Glavu wu commenUn1 io hla new role u chairman of the at· t.orney general 'a organised c:rlme. control commiaaion. • He sald the commission ha• found evidence of orirnt •rn· dk a tea in all region a of Callfofl\la wltb no special concentration in any one area. But be refused to discuss specifics or say whether or· ganl~ed crim• is lncreaalns or decreasing. •'I woutdn 't care to mlnlmue or maximbe the lnfluence of Mafia· type crime at Ulla time," Glavas told res'ortA!rs ~dopeo.inc of a cloaed-doorcom oolwarfnl. "Th• roots of or1antJed crime are not deep tn the tradl~-1 sense tn CalUOrnla -not In the ve1n as exemplified in 'Tht God· Cather.· We do have Milla crtme In CaUfornl•." he eald. ' Glaves said the commi111Jon Is "ln tatr airtetaent we haven't h~ct a t~t ct.al of Utt tudlttonal or1anlzecf crime tyPf actMty In oautomia-extortfon, lnroadf ill cambUnt, protection. ·'This type of thins wt believe to ~ be at. a fatr1y low Jevtl. But we have what seems to be eoa.aldtta· ble acUvity ill the leiJllrnaU. bu i· neas area,•• he added: Olavaa said some ol tho crime involvement tn business ls for the purpose of launderin1 profits from criminal actl vlties, sotne ill· volvea taklo1 over flrma lhd ''spendlna tb4tm i1\\o bankrupt(ly .. by dralninf ,9ft u- sets, 'aod some is tor iinv"tment "like anyone else." Re llaCeClliotets and theat.e'°' as an area p( crirnhial investment, but he retu.Sed to aive furUler Cle• tails. Olayaa also .said there was a great deal of crim\nal activity in dru~ t.rafficklng'1 bU\ Ulat "there are a ~t many tndependent.s, with only he~e and ltitre a cop.nee· tion.·• He said ln part because of tbe great number of unrelatA!d croup$ dealing in druaa, Lh' (ommt-1~ will request an eittenalt>n 1ft the on.e t•ar aftowed to Conduct its study. Glavu s&ld lbe comm1ssion ii" invesucating criminal tiea Ith lal)Qt Qtganliatlonl, buf he re· fused todlscuesspeciflcs. Asked it the commluton had round ~dence or polltical cor'· ruption. Glaves replied, "W~ have found none." 17 By TOM BARL'EY OI ... ~ ........... A judge who ruled that Edward Charles Allaway was insane when he killed seven people on . the Cal State Fullerton campus decided today that Allawa·1 should be committed to the slate's Atascadero f acWty. And Orange County Superior Court Judce Robert P. Kneeland made it clear ln reading • pre· oared statement from the bench that he feels Allaway, 38, shou.ld remain in the mental health facility ror the rest of hls Ute. "He presents a clear dan1er if he is ever released back,, into society," the judge told lawyers for both sides. "He must be kept under maximum security c:oldi• Anita Backed , Bryant's Paet Extended LAKELAND, Fla. (AP) -The Florida Citrus Commission gave singer Anita Bryant a unanimous vote of confidence today, extending her $100,000-a· year proaiotional contract through August 1979. The commission voted today rather than next February ~s ginally scheduled to end speculation that she wo d lose her job because of her stand against ho sexual rights. "She's doing a great job for us," commission chairman Dan Richardson said after the vote. He said Miss Bryant's positions against homosex· uality and in favor of prayer in public schools "have nothing to do with our decision. Our decision is on whether she still is effective, and she is." Searrll for Van HB Victim Shot By Two Weap~ns By ROBEJT MaK&& o. ... oet.,,... .... ,..,. Huntin1ton Beach resident 1\obert Myers, ,who was murdered in the deaert Dear Barstow last Friday, was sltot by two separate weapont, ln- vestigators confirmed today. .I' Ford nn. "We possibly can find lots of thinas once we get the v~" O'Rourke aaid. O Rourke •aid that a puslng motoriat wbo saw a body beint tbrowq from the van Frtday rnay be put under hypnosis to provide additional details about what he saw. Detective Dennis O'Rourke said that a palhologtars report showed that Myers was'5hot by a s mall calibered weapon and a larger weapon. Myers had been known to carry a .22 caliber handgun in his van and there has been conjec- ture that he was kllled with his own gun. However, O'Rourke said today that relatives of Myers told bim the 57 -year-old apectattst in the treatment or lndust.rlal w,ter didn't carry ammunittoo !or the weapon. Detectives are stlll ae•rchlng for Myers' 1974 gold-colored "The wi~pw only one sus- pect wbo be described as white. The suspect wore glasses and had a mustache;· O'Rourke aald. O'RQ.urlte said 1>01ice are stlll working on the theory that Myers either picked up hitchhikers near Victorville or that he had stopped to help someone disabled on the desert road. .. He aPJ>&MnUy WU • super nice Individual who ml1bt do just that," O'&urke said. Memorial services for Myers were to be held this afternoon at th~ Christ Presbyterian Church in Huntinatoo Beach. tlons." Allaway was adVlaed of hi• ri1ht to appeal his Uisanity con· vicUon during the-brief bearln1 before Judie Kneet.nd. But deputy public defender Ron Butler later made it clear that no such appeal will be filed. A jury found Allaway 1ullty ot seven counts of murder and two ot assault after lls nine to Explo~ive Found in SC Depot The discoveh of tnouth plastk: explosive to blo• up the San Clemente bus depot has re· suited in a "nonjudieial" hear· ing for two Camp Pendleton Marines. A routine check of the depot lockers last Wednesday revealed Cour blocks of C·4 plastic ex- plosive, said San Clemerrte--Ji'ire Marshal Don Hodgson -enough "to blow the depot away," he said. Hodgson said he believed whoever stored lht explosive ln the locker probably intended to sell it. Without a detonatin1 de- vice, the explosive posed no danger, be said. A match applied to the plastic material would only causeittobum,saidHodgson. News reporters lait week were asked to hold stories of the dl~ covery, because Nav•l Ip· telH•ence ofl1eera oped someone would come to tJie depot tol>lckuptbe lve. Master Se!'C'attt Don ,Q1.real ol the Camp Pettdleton PibU<: if. !airs office 1ald the tw~ JllarldeS were ~ha.reed with theft of tbe exploalve and with recelvinl stolen property after th~y were trace(! through other items stored with the explosive in the bus depot locker. Roy Kooren, 22, of Wlngdat~. N. Y •• was charged with la:t«nY of government property, O'Neal said. He was demoted from lance corporal to private first cla.Ss and fined $1.0I). Mont.le Purdue, 20. of Alexan- •dri a, Ind., was charfed with knowingly uceivlae stolen property. ffls punlahmentwa.s the sameasKooren's. Hodgson said the explQ.'llve was apparenUy taken from the ammunlUon dump at 29 Palms where Marines are a.ulaned to trainin1 exercises. The explosive weighed about five pounds, Hodgaon sald. .Judge KneelancJ sut;eequently declared Allaway tO be "com· pletely psychotic" when he toolc a rifle to the camPUS and tbot nlne unlvemty emptoyees. The <ll= slte. in whfob a community c ter would be con· structed atop existincparklng lot, wu tbe latest proposal ten• taUvely end<ned by tbecouncill The; ~kijlg lot center concept worl(ed on the tbeory that senior cititensdoriQtdriv~cars, thereby leaving the patklng structure available fOT downtown com- muters. But parking committee mem~ bers said they are W8J'¥ of addi· tional circwallon and parkit)g problems in the vic:inlty of tbe lot should tJie semors not mue hill useoUbecenter. They,also cite increasod con- st.rucUOn costs for the multi-level parkin« lot tf a communlJv center (Sff ctN'fER, Pase.\%) 1 I OAJl y fl'tlO' City plann~rs are ready with ulternalav~ 1hould a propoted federally funded low income housing project adJacent to a church tn Lugunu Beach tum l>OUI' The .proposed Park·""'rrnaid housing project, which would be located adjacent to St. Mary's Episcopal Church bctwl!en those two streets, 111 fur from becoming a reallly. And planning staff members are playing devil 'b advocate by coming up with potenlhl alternatives for us e or the $222,400 set aside for the project. Planner Murcia Raines said her Housina and Community Development Act •'shopping hst" will be presented to councilmen tonight ror review "If the Park·Mermmd plan £or low income hous ing ra11, lhrough, we want to have several options for use of the money," she said today. The hilltop parcels, owned by the church. ue beln« studied as a lo<.'ation ror about 100 low-income hous1n.: unit:;. But problems over control Of tbc t\ousl!>f unit." t'Xlat. accQrdlq to a Park-Mermaid c:ommlttee study aubm.ilted lo the ceuncil 1n mJd·Octobt:r One lternatlveto be preaented by plannera inchldes abandoning the Park-Mermaid copcept to eeek an alternHlive sito for hout Ing ror low ._nd moderate Income Laeuna Bcuch residents. A second option would be to seek a redesl.gnation of the rroj- ecls. amending the orlglna UP· placation lo use the funda for other related purposea. Miss Raines said the funds rould possibly be used ror con· struction of a community center, provided 75 percent of the people uiung the center are low income re.al dents. She said other c1t1es have been able lo use the funds by bu1ld1ng centers in low income areas, but admitted there are rew such loca· Uons in the Art Colony. Potential aites foi;,low 1ncome housing or a community center lo be discussed tonight incrude: The American LeJCion Post Campfires Rev"eal .,, .. bualdlna would be Ideal due to· ltA proximity to downtown b'ua routes, the AsaJst~nce Leaiue und thocrty·s lunch program. The Boys Club, seen as a p0:,:uble communitr center :tite, aerv ~by bus routes, t"vlne Bowl Park, •lso cen· ' trutly loci\ed •r\d pOtenUal site for low·cost housing. Ruin said planners have not dl~cu11sed the potential sites \vltb ownere ot the parcels, but sut- gested the locations as a means ol possible altematlve1. , . S~CRAMENTO -Retired Newport Beach Polite otiter B Jnmts Glavas said Tuesd.l.Y that ·c.ufornia has Mafia-type crtme but "it, roots arenot'deep.'' Gluvas was commenting In bl new ~ole as chairman of the at· to~n 7 a en er al 's ortanlzed crtft'lO coO&rol commlfslon. He uid the commleslon has round evidence of crime •Yn· die ates In all reglonsof Calllorn.ia with no special-concentration in 91 Ill l Al • • '1nyonearea. '1. • But he refused to discuss e g a ie'tltr; ~tpecifics or say whether or· HANCHO SANTA FE CAP > - The rumpf1rcs that keep illegal aliens warm in dirt caves dug near some or Southern Cahf· 11rn1a 's most expensive homes are J.!Ctli ng them deported. Autlwr Finda Fear Nearby SAN FRANCISCO CAP) A woman administrator, preparing a report on safe· ly al San FranciRco Slate, bu rely cscuped attack h l' r s 1· If 1 n a campus restroom, officials said. ''I'm gonna get you. I'm gonna get you," Konnilyn Feig, 38, said a man armed with a !;mall knife screamed ul her as she bolted out or a restroom and ran to her nearby of- f1tc She locked hersetr .into the office and the man \'an1l>hed before cam?,us police could attlve, Ms. Fc1i; said Frma P"fle A J CENTER •• , is included in the p'an. City estimates show a two·level park· ing structure at Gleoneyr~ would cost about $750,000. But parking committee members belleve that cost would skyrocket due to the multiple useoflhe facility. They also fear the multiple use oC the structure could make CLI· vlronmental, funding and public approval morcdiff1cuJ( to obtain. Tough Crime . Policy AJJIM~ LOS ANGE LES CAP> Hollywood's prostitution, eorn· ography ahd crime can t be eliminated until major changes are made on locaf and state levels to tougheh sancttons against such activity, says the director or the state Alcoholic Beverage C.Ont.rol Board. BaxJcr Rice sald Tuesday his agency ls hampered because It lacks the auUtorlty to prevent conttnuJng violations at bars and laverns. DAILY PILOT ~ •• canlied crime is lncreum, or Twenty-tour roresl rangers de~reasing .• trying to prevent a major fire I wouldn t care to miJUmlie or captured 91 aliens Tueaday with maximize the innuence bf Mafia. the help o( eight U.S. border type crime at tllis Ume, •• Glavaa patrolrpen. told reporters at the opening ot a The wealthy Americans who closed-Ooorcommlsslonhearmg. live in $400,000 bomes north of San Diego complained about the fires at night. Deputy Border Patrol chier Winford Baze said some allena reportedly lived ae long as six mQnths in the hovets. Doug Allen of the California Department of Forestry said the special task fQrce was formed by s:anger~ from Riverside, San Bernardino. Otange and San Diego counties. '"f.he primary objectlfe of this was not to appreheQd Illegal aliens but to put a stop to the ii· legal .campfires thal posed a · threat to the auea," Allen said. Two had burned a so-root area. Spanlsh·language sf gns wer..e put up months before, aaylng that fires are illegal in-the ttnder·dry area. After that didn't put them out. a forest ranger spent tM last two months there "trying (6 stop the campfire ihrtat without auc· cess," iraid Allen, adding "1t was W.bat wint we'd~cllted lo go 1oto m area and put them out ... Cle~nteMan Arrested in Armed Heist A San Clemente man wa'!I ar· rested Tuesday on armed rob- bery chargu when a city policeaian alleie<I he recognized him as wanted by the Orange County Sheriff's Office in connec- tion with the holdup or a San Juan Capistrano liquor store rour yearugo. Larry Wiiiiam Dalton. 30, or 240 Ave. Ponlente, was to appear today in south county municipal court. His bail wps tJl at s10.120. Investigator William Johnson of the Sheriff'~Omce said Dalton has been eludin1 police for four years. traveling around the coun· try under assumed narnes. Officers believe he has been ar· rested at least twice -one& 1n Lake Tahoe artd on~e In Ohio. Details of the Hquor ~tore holdup were not available today Poiice Halt Bid to Fame "The roots of organized crime are not deep Jn the traditional sense In C~fornla -not In tile "eln as exemplified in 'The God· rather.' We do have Mani crime ln California," he said. Glavas said the commission Is "in rair agreement we baven 't hud a areal deal of Ute traditional organized crime type activity in Callromia ~extortion, inroads in gambling, protection. A man dubbed the .. phantom rock 1.hrower",becauae or bl.I al· leged penchant ror throwing rocks at puMn1 cu-1 on the Riverside P.reeway made his • rrrst court -appearance today in Santa Ana Municipal Court. Judge John Smith Jr. deJayed ~he arraignment of James Hort.on. 42. to Nov. 30 after ap- pointing the publlc defender to represent the accused transient. Horton remains held tn the county jail wlth bail set at SS,000. He faces charaes oC assault With a deadly weapon and trespass- Three N~niM Directors of ~District Three South Orange County residents were appointed direc· tors or the Capistrano Bay Park and Recr4!ation District b7 county supervisors Tuesday . They were M.E. "Larry·• Larsen, 34912 Camino Capistrano. Capistrano Beach; Fred Duren, 33081 Santiago Drive. Dana Potnt; and DonaJdi, r... Hickman, 34~ C!IJe Naran· ja, Capl1t.rano BfMJ', all JP· pointed for four·Ytlr terwis. Dana Point reatctenta Blll and l Cnr(>lyn Myrter llso had ftled ror the directors· pt>sta before last week's election. But eounty of, fl~htls later learned they ,Uved just out.aide tta. dl&triet boun· dartes. The elecUon tn that district then was cancelled 11nd sup,rvlsors made e ~t· m nta sin~~ Ui fte no qualified charteii1 ror tbe three J>OSts. REPORTS ON CRIME Newport'• Jam•• QlavH -''This type or thing we belleve t.o be at a fairly l~w level. But we have what seems to be cons1deru· ble activity in the legitimate busi· ness area,·· he added. ing. Horton appeared calm today and looked curiousfy around the packed courtroom while Judge Smith made arrangements for his defense. Jail deputies describe him as "a model prisoner ... Horton ·s arrest last Friday cUmnxed a long hunt by officers that was intensified last May when Horton allegedly attacked and wOUhded a sheriff'11 deputy with a knife. Backed by otrlcets o( the Border Patrol and the Callrornla Highway Patrol, sheriff's of· ricers ev~tuany tracked Hort.on to 11 small cave in tht Santa Ma Canyon atpa where the defen· dant surrendered without a stru,gle. 0 flcers said the raaJ.ed fugitive had been llvtn1 on a diet of Cruil ~nd nuts $Upplemente4 by whatever he could llnd in garba1e earns. They said his clothes had been patched 'With afll~nl skins and h\s sboes had been t'~paired with strips taken rrom dfscarded car tireis. Glavas said some oC the crime Involvement.in buslC a i1 fortbe purpose of laundertna proflta .Jrorn crinunw activlUes, aome In· volves taking over ttrms and .. sp~nding them Into bankruptcy .. by draininJ ort WI· sets. ·and some is for investment •11ike anyoneel11e ... He Usied hqtell and thoa\en de an area 61 criminal investment, but he refu.sed to give further de- tails. Glavas also said there was a great deal of criminal activity In drug trafficking, but that "there are a great many lodependenta. with only here and there a connec· lion ... He said In part becawie or the great number of unrelated gr~pa dealing in drugs, the commission will request an extension in the one year allowed to conduct its study. Glavas said the commission is investigating criminal ties with labor organizations, but he re· fused lodiscussspedflcs. Asked if the commission had found evidence Of political COr· ruplion, Glavas replied. "We have found none ... ·It ls aneged that ltott.on ls tJ\e bearded black man whd often wBS seen standing Ol') the center divider or Ute Rlverslde Freeway burling rocks at plssinc cars. More than ::A) windshields were shattered by the man who became lenbwn a' lhe "phantom rock thrower." officers said. UC to Reduce -;.I Student Fee? SACRAMEN:fO <AP ) -The Student. Lobby of the University or ,Calttornla says it haa agreed with the UC admlntstrplf<>n on a S51 reduction in the stladent education ree: - But the lobby ~aJd Tuesday the reduction depepds on the slate appropriating about S6,6 mUUon to make up the difference, and Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. h•s not agreed to this. The proposal Is Co be presented lo the regents Thursday. PD .. PiP._er ri wJng WU \om off to th colt on leavlfts ttie rt1ht ell ron tu1njlin1 rrom th• wln1. De pit• lhe wine dama1e. fire otflclala aaid the Piper PA.28 made u near perCect" landln& at tho airport. The 1eorch tor tho second aircraft off Laguna Beach was hampered initlaUy by fog in U. aroa. Searcbe warned or h vy 1hork' Mty ln \he crash ,.te vkfnlty 'l Oruni• Coubly Uarbor Patrol. Newport B ach lifeguard and· Huntington Beach state lite1uard boats res~e9 to the noon hour collision report. They were as- sisted by a Coast Guard cutter from Long 8each and two helicopters. By early Qfternoon, seatcllers hnd located an oil sHck and pieces of wrcck11ae on tile watet' but described the debris aa small pieces of the aircraft nod parts of the bodies. .. An Orunge County Harbor Patrol ortic1a1 said the aircraft's tire was the larcest piece of wrecka~e. 30o/c lntere•t Rate on Loans '~to Jail SAN t>IEGO CAP> -Frances Gordon Sttltaner Qt ~scondido races l20 days in jail and rive years of probation f~r lending money at 130 percent interest to used car.dealers. Skinner, 51, also was fined M,000 but told Superior Court Judae Edward T. Butler that the only thing he did wrong was pro· \'ide poney for those who needed It .~ •·so help me God, t will not ever help another man monetari· ly :· vowed Skinnet at his sen· tencin&Tuesday. To that, Butler commented· "You feel no temorse. r don't see any contrition in you. \'ou socked them for \30 percent interest In th.is humanitarian gesture and HY you won'tdo it again?" • "I have found ou\ It Is a crime ott> help people when they need help, .. sllid the defendant. Skinner pleaded tnnocent to 17 counts of loan sharklnl{ but changed the plea lo iuilty of two copnts wh'n 1$ were dlsmsised. llis juil term begins Dec. l. Taken From Home f '· Property valued by the victim at Sl ,000 wu taken from a San Juan Capistuno home by 1a bur&Jor who forced open tile garandoor. Or&Cl&e County sheritr'a officers said housewife El~ R. Kaplan, 43, of 3371.S . Miramar, listed lhe .lo• of silverware. jewelry. a stamp collectlon, c1111h and liquor. She was away at work al the lime. 'Pig in a Poke' LOS ANGELES <AP> Superior ~rt Judge Paul Egly has asked µie Los Angeles school board rorfurther d~alls on its in· tegraUon plan. saying approving the plan as presented would be like "buying. eig in a poke ... ' I WASHINGTON <A P > -Amerlt·a·s fertilily rate is on Ibo ups wing a nd, prominent ecooomti.t say1 a baby boom may occur within tho next dec- ade. Dr Richard A. Eusterhn. an econom1c5 proressor at the Univt:r:.ity or Punnsylvanla, aays it. 's too early to tell whether the 6 percent lo 7 pcr('cnt increase ln Amer1c~·/j bu-th rate <turinl the first e ight months or urn is Slwoting Swpect Arraigned A man accused or kilUna a San- ta Ana policeman during a shootout that erupted when of· ricers invesUgated a reported burglary last weekend was ar- raigned Tuesday in hil hospital bed at UC Irvine Medical Center. Santa Ana Munlclpal Court Judge John Smith Jr. took lawyers for both sides and court p ersonnel to the bedslde of DeWayne Emmett Dunlap, 38, of Fullerton. The defendant pleaded inno- cent to charge~ or ~rder, at- t empted murder, receiving stolen property and posseS5ion or a firearm He is confined to the hospital's jail ward with bail de- nied. Dunlap. who was seriously wounded in an exchange or gun- fire between police and two re- ported burglary suspects. was ordered to face a preliminary hearing Dec. 13. Deputy District Attorney Jay Moseley said his oCflce will de- mand the death penalty for Dunlap's alleg<.'<i slaying of of· fleer Dan1el Allan Hale, 31, of Mission Viejo. Police said Hale was shot b y oqe of two t:nen he spotted while investigating the burglary or a southwest Santa Ana home. omcers supporting Hale used a s hotgun to fell a fleeing burglary suspect they later identified as transtent Roy Ken· 11eth Hill, 38. Hill died al the scene. Officers claim Dunlap fired at least one shot at another officer before he fell seriously wounded Jn the exchange of gunfire. Hospital officials list him as critical but stable. TeenBeatB Cliff Fall SY DNEY, Australia <AP> -An 18-year-old with a compound leg frac- ture survived for 13 days in a creek bed as he crawled on his back to safety, hospital s~kesmen said today. I" Stephen Sheehy's ordeal took place only 30 yards from a busy highway aod a few hundred yards from houses in a heavily bullt·UP sµbµrb five mllff from ~PWn\o,wn Sydney. Shiehy went out for an afternoon ride 9fl..hls bicy- cle Oct. 30. He bid he was thrown otf, pouibty by a hit-and-run driver, and tumbled over a barrier and down a 25-(ool cl.lff. break- ing· his left let. H11sband Sees ltlaat Sign? t Jobs and what Is generally con· sidered to be the good life will bQ '5tltt. Todoy, however, \he relative number of young adults In Amedca ls startinl le> decline, meaning that there :wlll be l s compeUtioo to 1et into ~olltt• pnd 1'\0re jobs •vatlttble, ·E•aterUo said. • ''IQ simple6t tettn1, the Ccrt.iU- ty of yc>ung adulta dependJ on thelT relaUve well·belnt -how p p Four Marines ignore a "Handicapped Seat- ing Only" message as they occupy four seats in Uie terminal at Lindbergh Field in Sao Diego. County's Foster· Homes Decl-e&sing tlnu~d. Us members include representatives of civic, bu$i~s and 1ovemmental groups. . County oCOclals also are contin· uing efforts to provide dls- cussl&n ·croups and tra~ning s6Slonsfor foster parents. I I PliOne Tap.i0 g ~ Triil Slated Charles 'Ibomas Mlller was or- dered 1ue;w)"1 to face trial Jan. 9 on ch,rsesthat he illegallf taped telephctne conversations whlle catnp~ for reform of the Oraqge Count.lt Jail. Superior Court Judge Robert E. Rickles ut the trtat dDte for Mlllt!!r, 33, add seheduled a pre- trial atp_peaunce tor Dec. 2. Miller la free on bis promise to appear. It is alleged that Mllter Ulegal· ty taped a telephone convel"la· tion bet.ween hltnaelf and Santa Ana Munldpal Court Judge Richard Pantow and a separate conversation between hlmllelr and FBI a1ent J. Francis Sullivan. 7Testing Plane Die In Blaze GREENSBORO, Ala. CAP> - A pilot and six passengers taking a trial flight to de<:ide lf they wanted to purchase an airplane were kllled when the craft ex· ploded la flicbt and b~Tn.d, authorities said. , Wreckage of the twin.engine Cessna 411 was scattered in a wooded t1C"ea 10 rnlfA northwe1t ot hent ln egt.centa:al Alabama after. the explosion Tuesday night. the Federal A vlaUon Ad· mlntstrat.ion said. The 'Pilot. identltted as George Stock, :rz. of Atlanta, had filed a p1an t.o fly from Birmingham to ·Mciliile,'Ala. The dead pasaengeis were identified by Mercury Fretcht Lines in Mobile.as Clarenc• IJevi. se, Merc~·s president: Mt wlfe Doria Levi, 50~ W, A. Jernlpn. 48 vlce presaoeat.; ·rom ttar· reh., u ,the rtrm's auditor: Jack Hunnicutt, 28, a company pilot. all of Mobile, and Ro~J't C1rdi11al Jr •• 58, preelcSetltef »iX~ le Air Inc., of Tuscaloosa. Thtt bodlea were badly charred. ' The twtn-engtne • plane. with Jes than 100 houri oC tucbt tline, was being demonstrated for thie Mercury PeoP&e wh<> were con- alderlng bu)'in.g lt.. * * ~ Conflicts Surftreing .. At.College A state-mandated reora~a, tion at Fairview State Hospital ht Costa Mesa that baa brou&bt Prot tests from psychiatric technlt clans also bas cast a cloud over~ psych tecll tralnina pro1ram •l Golden West Colleie in Hunt" inston Beach. college official~ say. • "I think probably in terms of the morale of these students, 1~ makes thetn t.hlnk about wbetbet they really want to be empl= tn the si• hospitals,· sal Shirley Carroll, who coordina 1 tbecolleceprogram. 1 rI'be ~lem.centa's on a re1 ortanizatlon Intended to brlnt! Fairview~ to federal standardj • &y e\tabl ing a new clasa ad • supervlsor1 poaltlons to be fill~ by re8istered nunes, rather tb.,, psychlatttctechnlclana. _,__.i, Pay~ teens liave complamca: that the requlfement that n~ filltbeposiUonsls qu~ecessat)k cuts their: opportunities and short-changes patlents·who m~ need training in ski.Ila rather than me.dttal care in man'y ca•es. About 160stuclents are enro1ui b\ Golden wesi·s program, a twct yelT plan leadlng to an aaeoclate or llrts de~ •• usually about half the 1raduates 10 t.o work for t!ie state boepltal systern, Ms. Car4 rollnJd. I M11 Eye1 Art Dim, 1 Cannot Se«>; 1 llove Not Hrought MySpecsWtthMt', J llave, /Jey, JYot, /lo, Brought My Speca With M• . • . -ltefraln or OI• Stanfor4 Drinking Song THE DMV DIZZIES: Alas. an~ther birthday h. ad passed and th sit was lime for me to report do o to our friendly corner Department of Motor Vchkles offi~e for the driver's license re· ney.'fll. For me, this is always a ti"e of trauma. - -"I never go down there but w}\at somettu,ng goes wrong," I erumped lo the wife on the ap· pointed day. I should tell her. The last time she reported lo the DMV, they gave her the mislead· ing directions and she s tood in the wrong line for more than one hour. . Anyway, I 'm always a nervous wreck going lo the motor vehicle • licensing place. Some clerk is always snapping at me: "Arc Your Papers m Order''" TUEY ARE NEVER in order. )ty punishment is to go stand in another line to gel them in order. My m1ss1on, I felt, was com· . plicated this time because I'd been granted one of those automatic extensions on my driver's license. Surely this was going to catch me up in some kind or bureaucratic trap. Bolstered by six cups of coffee and a terminal case or jitters, 1 reported to the OMV. Remarkably, it wasn't too crowded. The lines were about like average super market. I shuffled into one. Then came trouble. The short, fat man hod just reached the OMV clerk's window. This time, It wasn't the clerk giv· ing the customer hell. It was the other way around. The rat man was yelling in her ear, waving his arms, stomping the floor and ~cncrally throwing a fit. SHE, IN TURN, was helplessly rolUng her eyes skyward, ap· parently appealing for heavenly rescue. ·'Just my luck I'll get her for my c !erk aft.er she's taken this k ind of working over." I mul· tered to myself, trying lo shuffle my papers into order. When I got to the window. amazingly, my papers were in order. I was given the written ex· amination to fill out. THEN IT HAPPENED. Squinllng at the questions, my eyes blurred. I could barely read the question on what \l (tt'een curb meant. I s taggered blindly through the written test. "Good Lord," t murmured. "I'll never pass the eye chart, They 'II clap me in iron$ rigbt here and tow away my car. My papers will never be in order again.'' The years or readlng over countless news stories on the copy desk have finally done iJl my eyeballs. ST ANDING IN the eye chart Hne, l closed my old orbs to rest tbem .. Then I thoueht it miaht be better for a pre-test by Jookj.ng out. the window and res.dine the gas station sign across the istreet. I looked. l couldn't flnd the gas slation. Stifling a sob, I was finally con· fronted by the lady clerk with the eye charL "Z,B,O,S,T U," l in· tort ed. It was a miracle. I passed. It must have been because my papers were in order. CARMEL, Ind. CAP> -Teachers are promotin1 a new game at Carmel Junior High School, one that doesn't r~uire a 1peclal playing field, expensive equipment or physical eitertfon. They call it reading. . For a half hour Tuesday, everyone from pupils to eus\odlans dropped everythil)g for the school's first weekly r•adinf break. Even Principal Jerry ltolltleld traded adrnlni•t.rallv., matt rs for a book on the Bermuda Triangle. VISITORS WANDERED THROUGH ,nent halls' tonotwess classrooms where students bent over boOks brought fro*2\ bom_, or selected from 8,200 volumes donated for-the project. Anything but textbooks was approved reading. · In one room, Tracy Hollander, a seventh 1rader, sprawled on the floor with her book. No one seeate4 to mind, least of all Bruce Breeden, the football coach and Latin teacher, who read whUe leaning back in his chair and proppin&J\ia feet on hls Cles~ • Reading is not a problem for the 1,170 students I~ this at! fluent, predominantly white school hOrttr of Indianapolis. Their scores on standardized tests are above average, but Holifield said• the teachers felt there was room for improvement. "WE DON'T USUALLY STRESS readtng a book for enjoy· ment as much as we do for academic purposes, .. he said. "Jr we create the atmosphere and the enthusiasm f<>r reading that wlll be enough.'' In the gymnasium, athletic director Bob Johnson looked op from "All Qµiet on the Western Front .. to check on hls unusually docile brood. "Most or them are deeply engrossed. We Just hope we can have enough books to keep everyone busy, "hesald. FOR THE KIDS, THE CROICEStranged from nature sti.idy to noveJs and even a few paperback cartoon book1. One of the Jlgbt readers was Ken Veilands, who conced.S U mi1ht be cheadhg a bit to read the comics. . "I like it, l guess," sald the eighth grader. adding he pre· ferred to spend his free time watching television. 5 ~en, 3 Women LAS VEGAS,, Nev. <AP> -A registered nurse, a retired electronics technician, a housewife and the operatoc of a small advert\Jing aeen- cy are among juror.s who will determine ii Howard Hughes sat down on March 19, 1968, and wrote the so-called Mormon wm. A jucy of five men and three women was sel~~ed TuesdGy to hear the wjll contt?St trial beln1 pre· sided over by Clark County Dls· see Nevada declared the home of lrictJudie,¥eiU> Hayes. tbe late recluse hadu.tr1~1i•t 'I'wo allei;natejurors.alao w~ because Nevada hos no estate tentaiivety ~eated TPesday •nd tax.. the alterna~ selection proce11 HUGHES' RE~'l'fVES claJm waatoconlinuetoday. 1he MOl'mon Will la ·a toraery. ... , " "" Los Angelu attorney Harold TUE FO~ ALTE1\""T8c:t Rhoden, re~esenUog former who will hear the case with the H shes aide Noah Dietrich reeular j'f"Y are expected lo be cJ ms: the offered will f.s the rceai oic;ked by F~iday, and openhig thing. statem~,,~ar~slat~Nov,28. Tbe. ttiree.paie, handwritten Meanwhile, JUI')' selection con· documnent names Dietrich as tinued in Houston. where the executor of the vast Hughes Probate Judge Patrip_lt Gregog estate '1aluecl variomly between will preslde over a t.rial to de· .s.tai .;u.Uon and more th S2 termine the v~Udlb of the billloft. Mormon Yf"ill od the question of • Th~ Mormon WUl divides the Hu1hes' residence aL the Ume 9f estate tracUonally ~ween a his death, .. number of beneficiaries. lnclud· CaJlfornia, Texas and Nevada Jng the cit.Y of Long Beach, or· cJalm Hughes as a resident. Tex· phans the Boy Scouts the as and California authorities are Morm~n Churoh sever•i ulil· looking longingly at the millions versities and Mel~in .Dummar, a o( dollars they might reap lo the former aervlce station op_erator. farl'll of ost.t• lad~, while who~lalmstohavemet.HusheslO Hu1rtes tetdd'ves would . rather ~ears ago. ~. _,.,_ JL. .,.. • :.\, .• L -·-.& .., ~ • • -..... -~ -• .A.,. ... -> ' • 2. s. \nl an artificial one. Permanent hair dyes can·t be waabed out ~Y aeinlpermanent dyes or color rinses. A ~rson·s hair remains the dyed color until it grows out or is replaced by another ~rmanent dye-. A tnontb ago. Kennedy told re· porters be bad asked the institute to expedite its testing of the SUS· pect hair dyes. But he said he would wait ror the lnstilute's final report before taking reg. ulatory action as demanded by tt\e Environmental Defense • Fund. 6. ON AN INTERIM BASIS, PLACE STUOENTS11 N"-IN THE LAGUNA NIGUEL FEDERAL BU .... 01 ~ 7. e. <ZIGGURAT), IFAVAILABL~? • Portra.t of T-ragedg Ii! hlJd's bjoyclc and & burned-out founda· .tWf\•l>(~l,be home she Jen. arc grim remind· ~'s ~Qt the brush fire that ragt>d through t'hc Sal)t~· Monica mountains Mondav and Tuesday before bemg partially contained Sheriff's deputies si ft through the ashes for possible valuables that might be sJlvag1..'<i b) d1strau~ht O\\ne1·s Six homes were dcslro,ctl IJ\ the blaze which charred some ·uoo uc1:l'!'>. :~·Thieves Ring Wrong Chimes S.\ !\ 1>11-~(;0 IA P I Eight bl'lls and ~1ll's well lh1,1t t•nds well. the dichcl'> go and so suy lhc :\J arrnl·~ who hH\'t• lht•1r m1 ... i.1nJ,! maritime bell hu('k in its plat'e al the :\lart11<' Corps -tlccru1t Depot Soml•om· :-.lolc lhe bell, Tax Relief Bill GOP. Seeking To Reconvene used lo teach no' 1tc '' ari ncs how to toll th<' liml' uf dtiy on a ship, off Ill'> µusl Sunday n ight 1n lr'unl c1f tht.· \1 urine Sea School S \l'Jt,\ \1 ENTO 1 A I' 1 An attempt to force 1 ~ Uut urri~iab suy a m~ Sl«!ry phone calter late :'itunday told them they tuuld find the 50 \'cur-old lrcu~ure a'· the l>us1.1 chupcl. .. ,.,., .... --- PL,\CERVILL El Dorudo ountv 11uper\'l1>ors Uf'C dcluymg propoiu .. '<l ~urporl noise s l.-ndfrd1 that "ould huve th& eftecl ot l<t~· Ing mamy jf'"' r m land ine ut South Lake rrahoe In stcud. the det1bt>I rrom 7 a m . to o p. m .. und 85 dee lb Crom lOp rn to7a.m . An u1cport otflclal. \\ho usked not to bQ lder> • tified. s!Ud lhotte limits would but nt lettt1l ~ome s upt1rvi1on1 voted Tuts· TUE' SUPERVISORS day to monU... noise enacted un emcl'aency levels al the Luke Tuhoe TWO COMMERCIAL ordlrumcc last summer ... • Airport. County offsciah1 u l r I i n s. Puc i Ii c prohibiting jct opera s a I d the m onilor inj( --------------------....,....,,..,-.,..,...._,...~~---~:-=~ would dclayf en<tctmen~ of an¥ ord nuncc for ubout .) ear. bccuusc lhe equipmenl won 'l be U\'ailablc until next spring, TUE 801\RO also asked the fo'c..'<ler al A nu t1on Adman1strat10n , which has cntacized the proposed onlinance . to work with the ('ount) on noise standard!>. Some Tahoe Busin res· 1dcnts ha\ e been com plaining about jet noise. which •they s u y 1s amplified by the husin K natur1.1l echo Under the pro1>0scd or dinance, airplunc noiKc would be limited to 99 a..A...,rtcercl ..._terChw99 ORANGE TtntM-K .. •He 14 It Ho. Tustin A•• (7141991·9960 • • Hcotl~ to Sl-r\l· "'1th 1111111'~ 'n Sp1l't' Ulu1t.' • Spiral Shl'ed for t•u:.) "en 1ni: • \\ ,. 1'.id ... 1.it• m1tl Sh11> trom (.;°OJlll lo (;oasl • "'ull Sen tct.' Dchl'iltcsi.t·11 • lmpoitt'CI (;hcc~l'" ANAHEIM ,.,.. vr•..-c-..tff I 2U s. trookhwlt lat loll Rel.I (7 14) 635·2461 CORONA DEL MAR l700 I. Cffsf Hwy. (714) 673-9000 AC:llOS\ .. OM .... caOWN\ USTAUIANT PALM SPalNGS 71550 Hwy. 111 lft RMC:ho Mid. RANCHO MIRAGE (714) 346-3194 Of'tHIMO 500NIN B. TORO .. , \"' " ' l. '.. '· I i~ " I tht• California Leg1slaturt tu rc•convene lo act on 11rupt•11\ la\ rd1cf pro1Xl~ab hal'> been launched b\• 10 Rt•puhh£'an luwmukt·r<; · "Our puq>ow 1n bringing lht· Le~1slature back tu~l'lh<.•r ii. to crealc a forum to t.-nucl properly tax n·l1t'f prior to till' lc·~t!i I al1 \'l' onslaught in January," 1\sst:mbly m111orlly n oor leuder Paul Priolo of [ . I · Our Touch of Cla&s :\tali bu said Tut•Mlay I made more . "' N F.ITllER ASS EM Bt Y Speaker Leo McCarthy of San Francis('() nor Senate Presid~nt pro tern .J:afT!cS Mill!S, tht.• two Oemoc·ruts who head up the Legislature..'. wt.•re 1mmccJ1alcly f,lva ila ble for com- ment. McCarthy ttnd h Scnate committee headed by :\1 ills have authority lo reconvene the Legislature be fort' thc• 1!178 sesl'>ion begins Jun 2 IF ~1cC.\KTllY and ~alls don ·l act in 10 days on th't' GOP petition lkpubhcans sa} they will attempt lo go around tht• Ih·mocratic leaderi-.h1p hy circulat· ~ 1ng 1>ct1laons to the t•nt1rc Legislature That muncuver would require the s upport or 1~·a rly half of th<' Dt•mocrat.s m the Legislature. but GOP sourc:c·s saul lhev fell manv Democrats now ma} be w1lhng to n·c·<)n,·cnt• lo lake up a tax relief '"II OEMOCR.\TIC GO\'. Edmund Brown Jr 's of· 1 fi<-c dtd not c·ommt•nt on the Republican move Bro\\ n J>rt:\ 1oul'>ly suid he wanted the Legislature to "meditate' on lht• t.ix 1ssut• h<:forc he would call a spec 1a1 st.•sswn Jn comtncnls released by a spokesman. Priolo -,aid Rcpuuhcum. "don't have a !ipec1fic :Proposal"' bccuust• thut would Immediately splll lawmakers along thl· partisan lines which caused tax r elief bills to fail before th<.• Legisluture recessed two months ag~h :\ 54.8 BILI.ION five-year relier plan. rinan<'cd mostly from surplus state funds, died in the final hours of the regular session in September 1 Ropubltcan• holped block that measure. arguinf! t hal lOQ much of the money was earmarked for low· incuMo porsoni. and not enough for m1ddle·incom e famali-Oi. focini big Increases m property tax bills. "Ob\1ously we have our own ideas We are very muc.h m favor of spending limits on the state and local 1'0\'crrlmenl und Indexing"' to adNst incom e lul' braclce~ for inflation and giving a greater por· lion of the relief to middle-income home-owners than Brown prOPoScd, Priolo added luxurious with .. Perma Sbtt ~· "save 50 °/o. on 1f perfec t price Trad1t1onal. loom · woven acryltc blankets. they huve Perma Soft® finish thaJ makes them aH the belier to sleep under. Nylon satin binding won~ravel. thanks to Everlock® str~ ~rvelous savings on white. champagne. mahogany. buttercup or cognac. Not all colors Twin size. If pe~ct $35, 15.99 Full size. If p~rfect $40, 18.99 King size II perfect $54, 25.99 Bedroom Accessories J .. v .. 1 I . I I ,. I· I . I . " t • £1 Reason for ride In Our Students Students in the Laguna Beach and Capistrano Unified Sehoot Districts not only·showed impressive scores In state tests last year. but they beat their own scores from the year before in all but four categories. Results of the stale testing for 1976-77 show Laguna Beach seniors scoring higher than 90 percent of California's other youngsters in basic skills. And Cap1slruno 12th graders scored in the 89th percentile statewide in written expression. . The tC'sts. in reading, written expression, spelling and math, were given to sixth and 12th graders statewide last year Second and third grade youngsters were tested for reading skills. Studcnti, i11 both districts scored not1ceably higher than the average in ull lour categories, Witt) Laguna seniors ranking m thl' top I> percent statewide in mathematics skills In fact. students an both districts either improved :;<:ore~ or n•muint•d in the same percentage rank in most areas. Capistrano :,c<:ond 1-{ra<.lers fell 2 percent in spelling, lum C\ ~r. and th al district ·s seniors dipped 3 percent m the samcan·<t Lagun.1 lkaeh second gn.idcrs slipped 2 percent in s pl'lling .111cl :-i\lh ~rudcrs in Laguna fell 5 percent in rl'admg ski I ls statc.•w1de. Uut ovt'rnll. an imprcssi\'e picture indeed for student:-. in both school <.hslri<.'ls Voting Oddity On lht· t'\l' 111 loe~d wat<.or district elections last week. trustc.·<.·:-111 lht• S.1d<lldwck V<.clley and Capistrano unified school rl1slnl'ls lv.trnc•d, apparently for the first time. that th<.·' C'oulcl '"lt• in the t'lc<:llon in the name of their <li:-.tnt·h lkt',tll!-.t' 'olt•s •Ht' distributed on the ba~is of assessed valu.1t1011 of land. th<.• districts "ere eligible ,·otcrs. , Comh11wd. lhl·~ ht•ld ahuul four million votes in \hrcc ".1k1 tl1sl11tt l'ic<'l1ons '1•1lhl·t st·hool hoard eould ~cl the agreement needed to lhl' th<.•1r rntmg power Hut 1f trustees had. they could ha\ t· rnlt'<I in \\ •ller distnc.·t halloting for one current ~<·hm1l tn1slt'<'. 01w former lrustt:c. the husband of another trusl<.•t• .ind a Saddlcback College trustee. Tht· d1sl1w1 ·s \'Ole>s \H•re not enough to make a d11fcn•m·t• 111 an~ of the elections But the story could be c·hang<.'(f in lh<.' luture wht•n major land holdings are hrokt•n up for de\ l'lopmcnl t If the t'lllTl'll( land·bascd election system continues, tht· dislntt s \oll'!-i c·oulrl be a deciding factor in water I d1:,lric·t clt•d1ons It ~ a pt•c·ultar situation tor a chanJ.(c• in I lw S) stt.·m. major L..1nd1m nt'rs can tax residents thal underlines the need :'\.ow. directors elected b) and create debt Cot the If r<.'sidc.·nts don 't ha\ e the abilil) to outvote the I a ndcJ\\ ncrs. tht•n 1t 's I axat1on without representation This JUsl doesn t Jibe '' ith what we expect from our J!O\ crnmcnt toe.ta) School Anienities Tht• Dana llllls lligh School community is unckrslandably pro\•oked that brand new Capistrano \'alll'y lhgh School will have. a stadium next year. when O<ma I Iii!-.; has none after four years. Dana llills s tudents tlave tried to raise funds for a stadium smc<.· November. 1974, \VheR their principa11 Waltt·r Spencer, di~d. The Spencer memorial funo currently amounts to $1,800. Ncm a $137,500 gift from the Mission Viejo Company has bought a stadium for Capistrano Valid High, with no apparent effort by anyone connected with the school. But school amenities don't have to depend ·upon the largess ot a single developer. The El Toro High School community left no stone unturned in Its determination to sec a sw1mmin~ pool built at the school. When Its chief back~r. Supenisor Ronald Caspers. died, his successor, Thomas Riley. was won to the cause. The pool opened last year. This kind of effort could build a Dana llJlls stadium as well. • Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Other views expressed on thll page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment 11 1nv1ted. Address T.)e Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) ~2-432\. Boyd/ Gerbil X6lk BVL.M.BOYD . ln her ~O<>m for more than thr41e years. She dldn 't want anybody to know she needed his handiwork. Those who press for public nudity point out that there are more than 300 Ufealie n.aked Cteures in 'Micbe1'n1elo'a ~ tloe Chapel ceiling. The only fiah at develops arteriosclerosis is the .salmon. Nick Thimmesch ' DEARBORN. Mich. -Auto makers have trumpeted the won· dcu ond benefits of their new models for so m1i11y years that we tend to tum a .dear ear to this enormous industry. But now the rulers of autodom have a messuge worth listening to be<.'ausc It tells us what Wl' Will be driving in the years im - mediately ahead and how our • ccunomy will change bl· caUH' of it Simpl:r put, most J>CQple won't be able to bu) the cari; they are accustomed to. what th<.•y will drive will feel dll· rerent. will eventually cost somewhat more to buy, but will be less cx~ns1ve to operate "This is n revolution," says Robc:rt 8. Alexander. vice pre:.t· dent of product development at l''urd Motor <.:o "Our industry tended to be t•volutionary rather thun revolutionary We used to design and style cars for what we pcrcc1vod was consumer de· mand. Now we do it lo meet ROV· ern m ent mandated require· m1:>nts Thti big i<.'e-l·ream cone 1s always what sol<l. Now the gov- l'rllmcnt tells us what Jee-cream the cone must be .. DETROIT is spending b1lhons to trim down 11s futurn mockls. so that their pt:rformance will im· pro\ c from nn avera~e of 18 miles per gallon in 1978 to 27' ~ m p i:: by 1985 Fedtt'al law'I c~111st•d Detroit lo cnl{agc in a "dow ns11.in1(' effort as 1t 1s l'"' 11 l'<I h<•n• Consider how form 1dablL· the auto industry 1s 1n our economy 01\l' or every sl\ workers m akt's his living from motor veh1dt• and related industries When auto sales drop SJ billion. 57 ,000 Jobs are losl The in· dustry's whopping appetite COO· sumes 60 p<:rcent of all the syn. thellc rubber produced In the t:n1tcd States and ulso these amount!:>. malleable iron, 47 per - cent: stcel, 19 percent: zinc. 33 percent; aluminum, 12 percent Americans spend nearly 10 percent of their disposable m- <.'Ornl' on ownership and use or carit While the United States ha s Ii percent or the world's popula- tion , ·11 percent of the world':. passenger cars arc here There arc now some 140 million cars and trucks on our highways If the stat1stt(':. arP hca\ ~ the future car won't be.· AL F1Jrd, cars Mailbox TO CUT weight, Detroit .will build more front-wheel drives (allowing a lighter framel. create thinner door!l and use more aluminum, high-strength, low.alloy steels and plastics. Only last week Ford an nounced il was using auper-Uch\. expensive. graphlletlber In some of its better cars and will even tually build a prototype 1979 car. using -graphite extons1vcly, weighing only 2,750 pouJlds. A ~raphJle drive shaft weighs nve pounds less than one of steel, and a j!raph1te hood is 25 pounds le:;s that) a steel version ·'The U S. economy will be altered &ont:.idcrably," Alex· andcr says. "Radial tires will \ 1rtuaUy beco19e standard on future cars because they arrect fuel economy favorably. There THERE'S wholesale •PPllca lion of electronic ignition ~vices on a1s cars. and electronic t'ngine controls are coming. This means the viability o( the small service station could ·be Lhteatened because they'll need more sophisticated tools, diagnostic equipment and skilled lcchnlcians. We'vt; already seen the trend to self.service gas ala· tlon1 which got out of the repair business. _ "I think there 1s mlsun - derat•ndlnf * e onaumer's m l\d bOut. 't'b '• #Pt'aod tO our lndu1try. Tb con1unser mlgtit want ono thin•. but the aovernll\ent tells u• to bUUd somothlnc else and tbat'a a pertnoncnt tondiUon we are will· lna to live with." The term "boracpower ... 1s u much a part of American folklore as "Panarna Canal,,.. and lt won't be eh)' tor Americana to drop k apd t.tart lhlnklns ln ternu of ••tforaepower·to-wetghttactor .. er "cut>lc-d pa.ce nt ... ''llOR.8EPOWER on't. mean routh," Alexander eig>lalns, "because less will bQ neefect for these much Uahter cars. ln e ·aos, we had a Ford V-8 en•lne with only 6S horsepower.·· Car buyers, rive to 10 years" from now. wllJ se~ much smaller models, but they wlll sun be load~ With popular optlons like automotic transmission, power assists and air-conditioning. There will be les1 emphasis on styling. and buyers will have to pay premium prices tor larler models. ,-· "All the companies face the same proble'm of coQlormlng to lhe new a.ws, SQ that Bives us a chan~c to change our traditl(mal sh a.re ~ percent> of the market. Whoever does the new work' best 1hould improve h.t share of the cnarket," Alexander says. Prod ooy aulo man and he'll grudgingly ~~ the new ~­ dards are necessary blrt wUl also mutter that the federal timetable 1s often unrealistic. "It implies lh»t invention can be legl.51ated, which we know isn't true," Alex- :inder says. "It's <lifficuJt to meet tougher emission stapdards, which cul fuel economy, and at the same time meet new stan-dards for fuel economy ... WHATEVER, there ia no 18'1- that Americans want to give up their beloved cars. As one of .lit!l- my CalVr's own atflcia1s in the Departmen~ of TratlspOi'lation ob11erved; "IC the car didn't ex. Isl, the first thing I would Ho is ~n, vent it because It is such a marvelous transportation de- vice. I don't see a substitute for lt. in the n~~t 50 years.'· Those are words Detroit likes to hear, while tending oftims>orW <now about 20 percent of market), copine with federal re· • gulations and trying to persuade customers accustomed to big. soft-ride cars, to the new, stifri ride, roore b:uiic models coming up Help for Real Es~ate Rip-of.f Victims To tbe Editor: I read wtth Interest the letter to the editor in the Nov. fi edition of the Pilot headed "Cut-Throat Tactic" and signed by Michael D . Gardner.tam pleased the let· ter was written and printed, as 1t 11 ves me the opportunity to respond in a manner that might be helpful lo those who find themselves In a similar situation. and, perhaPfi, to Mr Gardner, himself. First '>f all , lhere are. necessarily, many gaps m Mr. Gardner's letter If il was too long, ~·c0urse, you would not print \t. Readin~ between lhe Jines. however, there is a paselblU~ that California Reai Estate Law has been violated. irt which case the commissioner will take action. Incidentally, there now ls a Department o( Real Esta~ Office m Santa Ana which m$Y be contacted. from her ~.000 per year job. Perhaps s h e could find something she could do tn the private sector, but then again, to be fired from a position which would probably pay much less does not re<iuirc an attorney or a hearing DALE JOHNSON Poor Eza•ple To the Editor· I am the parent of a 14-year old who attends a local public high school IL nas come to my attention in recent weeks of the use or pro- f anlty and intimidation in our schools. Not by tM students. but the teacners 1 The teachers, to whom we e{ltrust the education of our cmlaren. The educatea, adult, mature mdivaduai. Wha~ good tioes i~ do to in.still respect for authority an<i respect for elders when children can be cursed nt and threatened? H teachers want ,...,peel, obt- di enc e and dlsc1ptlne In a classroom then they hawe to 9"· peel tt not threaten In order to acbieve lheJr end. N fE'WITHH~LD DffU Wro•11 To the Editor: For the third lime in less than a year. Thomas Elias has seen fit to attack our treatment of tax de· fcrrals and credits to which we are entitled under Federal law. 1-'or the lh1rd time, Mr. Elias' <'olumn contains a distortion oC the facts. Three elements ot his latest column -"Firms' Loss is Ours, Too·• (Nov. 5> require parUcular mentlon in this regard. Mr. Elill.li claims we "asked the Internal Re~nue Service to declare them inelietble for tax writeorrs they have used since 1970." JN ASKING the IRS for a rul- m& regardjng Qur oontlna.red eliftbiUty rpr t•t deferrals and credlll under th~ methods the California Publlc UtiUUes Com- lnisslon seeks to lmpc1&e on us, 'we did not ask w~ be declared in· ~liRible. We did exi>ress our doubt• that the CPUO method was consistent with Federal la~ becaute we must c.ndidly pOlnt out all the facts to th JRS ot the r rU.Unc wnJ not be bbidllle 00 ,, .· Newport Beach city councll members are seeking the rts· ignallon of their most recent ap. pointee to the plannln1 com- mission, but so far he hasn't oh- liged them. Commissioner Larry Lynch had not submitted a resignation by today, despite the council's vole Monday to aak him to re- 2 Protest Pickets Return WASHINGTON CAP) -Rival demonstrators massed near the White House today as the Shah of lran, winding up his violence· scarred state visit, paid a return call on President Carter. But in contrast lo the 124 In· juries and 12 arrests that result· ed Tuesday when fighting broke out among pro-and anti·shah forces. a heavy police contingent today kept the groups more than a block apart lo prevent large- sc ale violence. The protesting groups were far smaller in number and more or· derly than Tuesday. Three ar· rests for disorderly conduct re· suiting from minor scuffles were reported by the afternoon. Carter told reporters that his 17 SO·minule meeting today with the shah covered a wide ranee of topics, including human rights. Oppooenta of tbe 1laah have criticized the state of human rights in Iran. The president., wbo walktd his visitor to a llmousiu after the meeting, said be expressed hope that the 13·nalion Oreanlzatlon of Petroleum Exporting Countries would not decide lo raise petroleum prices when it meets in Venezuela in December. II 11 Carter dee!llned to state the shah's views, although the monarch reportedly pledged at a meeting with the pretident Tues· day that Iran would not push for a price rise. The shah has aaid lo recent interviews that his n•tion, which supplies 7 to 8 percent ol U.S. oil imports, would remain neutral on the ilss1.te. Following today•a pieetini with Carter, th• shah drove to Washington's Embassy Row sec· tion for a luncheon hosted by Vice President Waller F. Mondale. Some 500 opponents wete kept in a cordoned-off area about two block• from that site. After the luncheon, the ahah planned to meet on Capitol mu with the Houae lnteraatlonal RelaUons Committee before he and hll-wife, the Empresa Farah, fly 10 p.r._, torolht fr01'9.· nearby Andrews Air Poree BaH. During th49 Wblt.e HoUse~eet­ j.ng, atbout 1,800 Jtantan students st~Uoned tbe!nt•lvH In <SeeP&OTEST,I' 1eAJ) , ,. 'I alp. Lyncb could oot be reacbed for comment earlY today. The vote C!ame bec:ause councll members have adopted pollcles prohibitln& financial conflicts of interest. Lynch is a part.Mr ln a land planning and landscaplna firm that works on contracts with the Irvine Company. Lynch"s appointment was con- trovenial at the time he was 'llamed to the comtnLsaioa in Juae. but hb potential coalllct ot interest did not then violate any city policy. ,. Lynch was not al Monday nl1bt'1 meetlna, wblcb stirred up some old disagreementa am(¥lg council members. Council mem· bers Ray Williams, Paul Ryckoff It looked like a circus on Bayside o1've Tuesday, but it was no picnic for the termite/.-A Western Ex· terminators spokeswoman sai" problems with dry-wood By TOM BAKLEY Ot .. Oelly ..... , .... before Judge Kaeel~d. But deputy public defendt!r Ron Butler later made it clear that no such appeal wlll be filed. A jury fot.Jnd Allaway guilty of seven count.I of murder and two of assault after listentn1 to teathnott~ that Allaway shot nine people ln and around the campua lJbNTY on July 12, 1978. But ~ same jury could not reach a verdict in a subsequent A judge who ruled that Edward Charles Allaway was Insane when he kUled seven people on the Cal State Fullerton campus decided today· that Allaway should b• committed to the state's Atascadt.:o faclllty. And Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert P. Kneeland made it clear in reading a pre· pared statement from the bench that be feels Allaway, 38, should remain in the mental health facility fortberestofhis life. Ex plosio n ~ 7 "He presents a clear dan&er 11 . he ls ever releued back lnto aoclet1 ... the judae told lawyers for both sides. "He must be kttpt under maximum security cOOdl· Uons." Allaway was advised of hJa rf&bt to appe~it'hl& insanity con· victfon ~e brief h1artn1 ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates CAP> -A British hov· ercraft making a seismographic survey exploded over the Persian Gull Tuesday 1 kllllna at least seven med, the Abu Dhabi Petroleum Co. annoupced today. Three ot.hers were reportA?d missin1. A spolrelman said the bOY· ercraft had been conducUnc the · survey for the petroleum com· pany when the explosion oc- curred about ~ miles otf the coast of Abu Dhabi. Victim F eared Bywtu..IAM DODGE Of ................ At leUt t• ()ranie Coast iwl· dents -and poutbly a third - perished TUeaday when their light plane plun1ed into theocean 3\'!t mile. south ot the Ne1fPOl't Beach jetty, followin& a mid-air .. · colllllooaboutnoon. . sanlty. hearing on Allaway•s mental at.ate at the Ume of the kilUnts. . La~ers for both sides a~ t~ allow Judge Kneeland to nil.e alone on the sanity Issue rather than summon a new j1µ'Y to lit through a second sanity heattui. Judge Kneeland subsequeotly declared Allaway to be "com- pletely psychotic'' when he took a rifle to the campus and abot nlrie ubivenity employees. JtJWas testified that Attaway, a janitor at Cal State, became ob- sessed with the belief that me!\'· ben of ~university staff were having Mxual relations With his· wife. , • He further tiel.ieved, It was· tntified. that his wife, BOliide; wbo bas linCe divorced him,. was also tie1rig forced to participate. tn the making of pomograptilc movies oncampua. The vlctlma were identlfled as James Tlbbott, 38, of 9312 Comstock Drive in Huntlngtoo Beacb, and Dobert Baker, 41, of 228'2 Foxborough Way ln El Toro. Orange County coroner's officlala believe there may have been a third victim but the name has been wit}lheld pending notification of kin. Officials said Tibbott checked out the Cessna 182 from Cbabafy Helm and Associates of Newport Beach. The group ap- parently planned a noon hour rupt over the c:oaat. offidals safd. Jt wu Ui*iliowD :who was~ I.DI tile JU~ aircraft at the - Ume of the coU1slon. A Mcopd atrcnn landed safely at Oran e County alrport, d damqed wing, lo ·alt ltllilon otf ~. • r.craft, a Plp!'r PAH, u owned by lfartln Aviation of Newport Beach. Martin officials declined com· ment on the incident citing their attomey•1 advice to make no comment. The Piper's two occupants, Paul Ouistopber Jacobs, 26822 Carretaa Drive, Mlasion Viejo and Gre1ory L. Brouse, 2'982 Acacia Liitie, Laguna Hills, were 'unav-1lableforcomment. Oranc~ County Fire. Depart.. ment Qmclals said Brouse was pUotina the plane at the time Of 'the collblon. They identified Jacob• u a Martin A viatlon flight instructor and said Brouse was a 1tudentpUot. Tbay said, however, Brouse had a private pilot's license and speculated that be was underao- ing advaDced fll&ht training. Flff. Grocialas said the two men were ibaken after landing at the al1Poft but recall •eein& the other aircraft immediately lollowtnc the mid·alr colllsion. According to fire officials the two men said the other alrcra1t went 1plnnlng off and disap· · pea red • . A coftslderable portion of the Pi~r·1 rlitrt wing was torn off in (S-PL\NES, P11e AZ) E!qllosive Found in . ~Depot The discovery of enouah plastic explosive to blow up the San ,ciemente bus depot bas re· f \llted tn a "not\Judlctal°' hear· \ng for two Camp Pendleton Mal'ines. A routine check of the depot lockers last Wednesday revealed four blocks of C-4 plastic ex· plosive, aaid San Clemenle Fire Marshal Don Hodgson -enoueh ·'to blow the depot away," he said tlodgson said he believed whoever stored the explosive in the locker probably Intended to sell it. Without a detonating de- vtce, the explosive posed no danger, he said. A match apphed to the plastic material would only cause 1t to burn, said Hodgson. News reporters last week were asked to hold stories of the dis- co v~ ry, because Naval In- telligence officers hoped someone would come to the depot - to plck up the explosive. Ollltr "" ................... Master Scr~eant Don 0 'Neal of the Camp Pendleton public af. fairs offJ(·c said the two Marines were churged with theft of the explosive and with receiving stolen property after they were traced through other items stored with the explosive in the bus depot locker. OFFICIALS EXAMINE DEBRIS OF CAASH£D CHINA 112 Jack Ben., Harbor Department Mechan!C, With Wheel Offer Accepted Inmates Couldn't Refrae NEW YORK CAP) -Because they Insisted on remaining out of their cell'! after lockup time to watch the last hour of the '"The Godfather.·· 75 inmates of the Queens House of Detention have btcn dealt a penalty they cannot refuse -25 days m solitary con· flnemcnt In addition. the 75 also missed the final ~cgment of the four-part wlecast of the program Tuesday night But 425 other inmates al the Jllil stayed up until 11 p.m. Tuesday -an hour past lockup - to watch the final installation of the program about an organized crime "family." The larger group had returned to their cells as ordered before the show finished Saturday m~ht. bul the other 75 refused and a Skid,')lnjurea~1 ' • l • t ! ·Newi>ort Ma~· Raymond Joseph Beaudry of 'lcwport Beach is in critical con· d1tion today after being Injured Tuesday night when his car :.kidded into a traffic signal pole in Costa Mesa. police reported. squad of correction guards bad to be called in to remove them. They were later sentenced to 25 days in solitary. The priSODers' council had not asked permission for the late lockup Saturday and the correc- tion officer in charge did not have the power to au\hori.ie overtime to guard the prisoners. Prison officials granted a re-. quest tor the late lockup Tu~sday mght, presumably to impress on the inmates the wages of sln. Ff'em Page AJ PROTEST. • Lafayette Park, across Penn· sy\vania Avenue from tbe. front of Lhc execµtlve mansion, to e.ro· test the shah's regime. About 200 otb4r opponents marched in a cltcle 011 the El· Jipse. a park area behind the White House where much or Tuesday's violence occ1.1rred. Meanwhile, about 200 pro-lhah demonstrators assembled at 17th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue, several hundred feet from the :.tudents. Police had canceled pcmiji.s for demonstrat..iona closer to the White House in the wake of Tuesday's violence. PLl\NES ••• the cotlllioo leavin' the riabt aileron banging from the winJf. Despite the wine damaie. lire otriclals said the Piper PA.28 made a near perfect" landiDc at the airport. The search for the second aircraft olf Lasuna Beach was hampered inlUally by fog in the area. Searchers warned of heavy shark activity in the crab site vicinity. Orange County Harbor Pattol. Newport Beach lifeguard and• Huntington Beach state lifecuard boats responded to the noon a.our colli.slon report. They were U · sisted by a Co.ut Guar4 cutter from Long Beach and two helicopters. By early afternoon, searchers had located an oil sllck and pieces oC wreckage on the waler but described the debris as small piece5 or the aircraft and parts Of the~tes. An Ora nce County Harbor Patrol 9fftclal said the aircraft's tire was the largest piece of wreckaae. Protest Lodged MANILA, Pblllpplnes (AP) - The Philippines fs withdrawing lrom the Miss World pageant in London this week, apparently· to protest the parl.ie1pation of South Africa. • Deaudry, 27~ of 4703 Hilaria Way. Newport Beach. reportedly underwent bU rgery at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital follow- ing the 7·45 p.m. crash near the 1nlersection or Newport Boulevard and Mesa Drive. According to witnesses. Hot Desert Winds Beaudry was traveling north· - bound on Newport Bouelvard aad lost control of his car at the in· tcnectlon. The car struck a curb before moving head on into the traffic pole. Costa Mesa paramedics transported the unconscious vic· tim to Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital. where he remains ln the hospital's intensive care unit. Bed Sale Alleged OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) aep. Glenn English, D·Okla ... uys he has learned •1by acci· dent" of the sale of 20 million lo M million bushels of American wbeat to Ch.ina. There has been n() confirmation or the sale from t h e U.S. De partment ot Agriculture in Washington. DAILY PILOT , Slow Fire Control Saf etf Po1ten Withdrawn . MERCED (AP) -Trafflc sal~>' posters criUclled as of· fenaive to Mmc&A·Americans have been withdrawn from circulation here. . Capt. Paul Gunderman, ~­ mander of th' Merced-area~ unlt. sa!d he had ~ .. ordered Crom higher Up" to remove the posters Monday . Gunderman had no other com- ment about. lhe lss.te The Irvine Com_paoy today an. nO\Jnced ao increased commit· ment to aeric:Wtoral proddction by tbe ccavenfon o( SGC> ~ of grazin1landlntoa•ocadogroves. Company dltecwrs said they will plow $1.S million into avocado production with an ex- pected return on tbe investment of an event.u-1.8 l.Dilllon poUJMh a year. The effort wlll double ptesent 'avocado P"JducUoa. within the next. year, -companY •Poketmen said. BB Victim Shot By Tw.O .Weapons B1aOURT BAllUR Of .. Delty ......... Huntlniton Beach resident Robert Jilyera, who wu murdered in the desert near Barstow la.at Friday. wu ehot by two 1eparale weapons. in· vestlgators eonflrJoed today. humor. Se•eral IUest speaJrere were forced to 6o double 41uty in the a btedce of a number of scheduled apealten, lnclt.Mliqf the ma1ter of ~eremonlea, builder W.tlllaD'l D. Lutk, M&Jor Mllalt Dostal, and former police chief B. James Glavu. In addltlon. Coniressman Robert Badbam (R·Newport Beach) amxed too late to lead the pledce Of alle•iabce. He volunteered to S{ve the benedlc· lion. I An additional toucll of bumg,r was added by the pest of hoDOt. Officer F\lcher, who appeared aligbtly nervous u he rutd his wife came up to accept the award. · . "I'qi proud to receive tb.i,s award, .. be-uld, ••anc1 J'm 'V9'1 more pf"OUd to be a part ol the flneat police force ln thb city.·· I Irvine Com~bY tPrntdent Peter c. Xtemet" called the ac· Uoo ''a lQJ<>t com.Wtll\ent td the compab)''• l~g-term tuture 8' an agrtcUltu.nlenterptlae.:: Jn related a,dloas. tbe tom· Detective Dennis O'Rourke said that a pathologtst'f report showed that Myers was shot by· a small caltbered weapon and a larger weapon. Myers had beeii kno•D to carry a .22 caliber handgten ill h1a van and there has been c~­ ture that be was killed with blJ owngWl. Howev~r. O'Bourke said today that relatives ot Myers told him the 57-year-old specialist in the treatment of industrial water didn't carry ammunition for the we~pon. Det~ctlves are ~ aeuehibC · for r.tyen • 1914 1old-c:otor~ Ford van. '1We posslbly can llnd lots of thil)gs once we ce.i tho van." O'Rourke aald. O'Rourke sald thlt a paaslQg motorist who saw a body being throtm from the nn Friday may be put under bypnoal1 to provide addlUonlll detalls about what be saw. "Tbe witness aaw only one •us· pect who be described 11 wbtte. The suspect wore ll)aNeS an4 had a mustacbe,''O~eaald. O'Rourke utd ~Ice are still working on the theory that ¥yen either pleqd up hitchhikers near Victorville or that be had stopped to help someone dltablecl'on'lhe . desert road. ' "He apparentl1' WU a super nice 1nd1vtduat wbomJ~ do JuJt tbat.''O'RGbaaJd. · 1'4~ nm•• fol' -~ were to be treld thl• aft.emoab at • the Christ PresbyterlaJt Cbmtb · in Huntin.,JWn ~qch. PLACERVlt.LE CAP.> Et Dorad .Co nty supervisors are delaying prqposed alrPQrt noiS& stondar(ts 1hat would have th effe«. '.Q( ~eep. fng many jeki (rol)\ land· ing at South Lake Tahoe. TWO COMMERCIAL iii rl tnts. Puclth DAILY PILOT In stead, the i;upervisors voted Tues day to monitor naise levels nt the Lake Tahoe Airport. County officials u id lhe m onltori ng ------------------------_.,..----,__ would delay enactment of any ordinance ror ,1bout n year. because the equipment won't be uvailable until next 'Port~a~t. of Tragedy A child.ts ~icyc}e and a l>urned-out founda· Lion or tM home she lcfl arc gri m remmd- t-rs of the b1i.1sh fire that raged through the Santa Monica mount:.uns Monday and Tuesday bcf ore being partwlly cont~incd Sheriff's deputies sift through the ashes for possible valuubles that might be salvaged by distraught O\\ners. Six homes were destroyed by tht· blaze which churrcd some GOO act'es .·Thieves Jling Wrong Chimes S\~ DIEGO IAfll E1 •ht lwll., and atrs well fh.tl 1·1Hb Wt>lf, ttrc 1·lld1l'' )!o Jnd .,o .. ,n· the '1Jl'llll'' \\ho ha\1• ·their m1s'lng mar1t1m1• hl'll bal'I, 111 its pl<1cc ul thl' .\t :nin1· Corp .. lll•<·rurt u,•pol Som1·om· ... t11h· th1· hl'l I Tax Relief Bill GQP Seeking To Reconvene S1\CRA~ENTO <AP 1 An atlcmpl lo force , 11!'.t'd to lt·.1ch no' H'1· .\lannes how to toll tht.' l1tnl' 11f d:n on a !-.hip. ulf 1i-. p11-.t Sund;" mght 111 l1onl of th1· .\larine Sl·u "\1•h11ol llut off1c1JI., :.<.t) a mystery phone caller lull' '.\tondoy told them lhl•\ could rind \hl' 50. \ t•;i1 old I l'CUSUrl' ut lhc hu ... \' chapt•I !tprlng THE BOARD also asked lhe Federal Avia· lion AdminMJtratlon. which bas crlUciied the propos~ ord\nance, to work with the county on noise standards. Some Tahoe Basm res- idents have been com· plaining about jet noise. which they say 1s amplified by the basin's natu~I echo. Under the proposed or dinancc. airpla ne noise would be limited to 99 the C&hforma Legislature to reconvene to act on propcrt~· tax relief proposals has been 1<.tunched by 10 Republican lawmakers ··our purpose m bringing the Legislature back to~:cthl'r 1:. to cr eate a forum to enact property tax 1 n·llcf prior to lht.' lcg1~lalrvc: onslaught in January." .\s!'il'mhly minority floor lc:udcr Paul Priolo o( .\1;1l1 bu sJrt.i Tuc!-.du~ :\EITllE H ASSE1l!BLY Speaker Leo McCarthy of Sun Frunc·1.,t·o nor Senate President pro tem .Jamei. :\tills tlw lwo Democrah who head up the Ll'S,:1slal1Jrl'. \\'1•re 1mmcdiutcly a\·uilable for com· ml'nt. M cl'arth;\ -.nd .t Senate c:omm1ltcc headed by .\tills h.hvc ~1llthority lo rcconvcnt-the Legislature lwforc thl' 1978 s1•ssron begins Jan 2 Our Touch of Cla&S made more luxurious with Perma Soft ® · ff Mc.l't\RTllY and M1lb don't act In 10 days on I Ire GPP pcl1tion Repuhhcans say ttfey will att('mpt 10 J.:O around the• Dcmocfallc leadership by c1rculat· 111~ petitions to lhc entire Legislature , Thal mant.·u~cr wquld requ1rl' the support of rwarJy h<.1lf of the Democrats in the.Legislature. but COP ~uurccs s<.11d they felt mam· Democrat~ now ma~ bl· "1lhng lD n·< onn•nt• to lake up a tax rehef 11111 Save 50 -0/o on if perfect price Trad1t1pnal. loom-woven acrylic blankets they hnve Perri'la Soft~ finish that makes them all the better to " ' sleep under Nylon satin brndmg • DE~OCRATIC oov. Edmund Brown Jr s of· won't ravel. thanks to Everlock• fate did not c·omrncnt on the Republican move Brem n prl·viously said he wanted the Lc~islaturc to Siii Ch Marvelous savings on white mN.htak" on the t,ax issue before he would call a champagne. mahogany. buttercup or ... pee 1 al st•ssion In c:ommentl> rt'll.'ased by a spokesman. Prrolo cognac Nol all colors ... 11d Rt·1mhhcans "don't have a specanc proposal.. Twin size. If perfect $35, 15.99 bccaui.c that would immediately split lawmakers _ along tlw parthan lint's which caused tax relief bills Full size 11-£..erfecl $40. 18.99 to farl lwforc th<' Lc~1slaturc rcCCi>Scd two months K If f I $54 25 99 ugo. 1ng size. _per ec . . .\ ~t.8 BILLIOS five.year relief plan. L• Bedroom Accessories financl•d mostly from surplus state funds. died in the fan:il hours of the regular ses~1on in September-1 HcpublH·anc; helped block that measure. arguinp 1 that too much of the money was earmarked for low· I income persons and not enough for middle income families fncing t>1~ increases in property lax btlls. ''Ob,·1ous~· we have our own ideas We are very I much in favQ of spcndina limits on the state and I local go\•t·rr~ cnt and Indexing" to adjust income 1 ttl'< brackcls for infl:ltlon and giving a greater por· tion or the relief lo mlddlc·lncome home·own~rs thal'\ Srown prowsed, Priolo rAddcd THE REPUBLICANS° tiled under rules that would re<?oft.venc-the hiwrnakers Into regular -;cssions, which opernte under broader rules than the a;p~ciol ses:iion which Drown has the power to convene. Priolo sold he hod no spedf1c date 10 mind to convene tl\e LeglslatUraJ?xcept that it would prob· ably beearlyDccembe~ upltcan leaderal\lp decided _f.A" ... I OM to teconvene bccaus~ hu (orne together.· ' . ....._.en Mettwtherte 0tANG£ , ..... _ . .,... 14" He. '"'"" ••• . '1141 917·99&0 !( ~ hocl .•. tt WU1 ,._..You'tlltt's0-." rrs NOT TOO ..... y TO OUllt ••• ,_.CM.,.. ti! ... ;·•.._.,_. ... hYH• X..tfft ... ,.. .. ~ • ., ............. . AND YOUR OWH THAM«SGIYftilG Ii CHRISTMAS OIHMM • Keady to Scne with lloney 'n Spice Gwte • Spiral ShctcJ fqr ca11y :.<'M'ln& • Wt> Package Md Ship from Coai.t to Cou11l • l"ull Service Delitutessen • lmport<!d Chff'let> lM'KEIM CORONA DEL MU PALM SPllMGS MOW IN , n.. rr•:.,. ~-..·~ J100 1. Coeit Hw,. 71 slo Hw,. 111 I.A HABRA I 212 S. lnM*ftunt f714) 173-9100 19 ll9ldMt Miit. ,.. ... ..... ...CIOU _.. IANCffO MllASE (714) 635·2461 ::,~= (714) 346-3894 •• r · ,•d ,t(, • ··h ,. I ·:~ ' . I I I . i ' L', J J I . • . . . t I ~ '"l A Good SHowmg By Our Students Recently released result.I or bas1c skills tests revealed students in the Newport· Mesa Unified School District had slipped just u little from thear previous year's state rank ings. But in most categories, they're still head a.nd shoµlders above students in the restorthe stale. f In fact, the scores placed Newport-Mesa in the top 12 to 27 percent of all California school districts. Significantly, the highest scores tor the district were tegislercd in the high school seniors' reading tests which ~laced them in the upper 12 percent statewide. And the 'cniors scored almost as well in written expression tests. This could be a response, on the part of both faculty and students. to news that deficiencies in language skills ~re creating problems for students going on to higher tducation. And to a general tightening up in anticipation of mandatory testing for high school diploma candidates. In the lower grades, the second grade students showed a sltght increase over the previous year in their reading scores, but dropped s lightly in their state ranking, while third i!rndt•rs both increased their scores and held their rankm~ 1 The district's lowest scores were in sixth grade math and wnltcn expression. But even there the sixth graders 'mcrgt'Cl tn the top 27 percent for their grade level in the $late. • Jn sum. as California school districts go, Newport M csa is managing to hold u spot among the best Untim.ely Display The Coast Community College District is telling of its accompltshmcnls of th<.· 1976-77 school year with a handsomt• publit·allon now being circulated. Tht• 30 pagt• hooklct is printed on heavy stock and has been lattl out and designed with a flair that would do JUSltcl' to l ' S Sll•t•l"t; Annual Report. The t·on•r features a college-owned saihng vessel. '>hcmg through light Pacific seas. Aboard are happy stud<:'nls Ob\1ously l'nJ oying their sail through college life. l'he boat also is used in a casually posed picture or the f1 \ e d1str1C"l trustees and as a setting for a photo of the l'han<.'l'llor of lhC' cltslrtct Sa1 Is h1llcm in~. the Saudiidc appears seven more lime.., lo hl'lp the PH people explain the district's missions and a<.'hit•\ emt•nls La!-it August trustees of the district increased its propl•rty lax rate !J 6 C'cnts per SlOO of assessed valuation. This t';Jmt· on lop of :.i whopping 34 percent increase in assessed valuations in the district. 1 t caml' out to etboul a 30 percent increase in what an mdiv1dual homeowner would pay to the two-year college distnt'l in 1977-78. It also came out as the biggest single in<.'n•asl' ltstccl on the property tax bills received last week. We do not demean or challenge the accomplishments of the Coast dtstric:t. We do find this slick, back·patting hook let amazingly insensitive in view of the dollars it cost taxpayers whose backs already were to the wall. /\ little less slick and a little more simplicity is the PR image taxpayers would find most impressive. ~ Political ~Ploy The appt>al of a project planned for the entrance to Balhoa Island heard Monday, seemed to be a thinly veiled" opportunity for New~rt Beach City Councilman Paul Ryckorr to sound off on his favorite subject -traffic l't.1Ust>d by Irvine Company development. The appeal was filed by one of Ryckoff's fellow Balboa Island residents who made some vague references in his appe<>.l lcttcr to a lack of planning and study of the parcel. That was sheer nonsense. That one-acre parcel has hecn planned und studied more than most other similar pieces of Jund in Newport Beach. Representatives of three homeowner a$sociations joined city staff members and company planners in devising the plan which will preserve the view of the bay and Jeavc the public with a landscaped walkway along the waterfront Ryckoff, in his zeal to sting the Irvine C-Ompany. at one point suggested the site would be better used if a restaurant were built there, a position not shared by residents. His arguments were an obvious p0litical ploy that left his fellow councilmen unimpressed. They all voted against him. ., • Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Dally Pilot Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is invited. Address The Daily Piiot, P.0 Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92628. Phone (71•) 642·•321 . Boyd/ Gerbil Talk BYL.M.BOYD It has now been determined· scieqtifically that the little arU.._alt known u gerbll1 do t8Uc to one another 1n their own lanauage -aaying such things as "l Jove you'' and "I feel lousy today" -bat in ul· trasonic syllables that can on· l)' be picked up by h18hlY sensitive instruments. Unlvenity oC Texu scbol&rS f°'1ad that out. in her bedroom for more tbu thr~e ~ears. She didn't want anybO<lY to kne>w she needed bia handiwork. Those who prat for public nudity point out that there are more than 300 lltes1ze naked li1urea 1n Mic:helan.telo'a Sll· tine Ctu.pel celling. DEARBORN, Mich -Auto maker• have trumpeted the won d~ta and benefits or their new models tor 110 many years that we tend to tum a deaf ear to tbia enormou.s industry. But now the rulers of autodom have a messa1te worth listening to b~causc lt teUa us what we will be drivin1 in the years im · mediately ahead and how our economy will chnnee be· cause of it Simply put, mo.st people won 't be able to buy the cars they are accustomed to, what they will drive will reel di£- f erent, will eventually cost somewhat more to buy, but will be lei;s expensive to operate. "This is a revolution," says Robert B. Alexander, vice presi· dent of product development at Ford Motor Co. "Our Industry tenc.Jed to be evolutionary rather than revolutionary. We used to design and style cars for what we perl'eived was consumer de· mand Now we do it lo meet gov· (•rn m cnl mandated require- ments The big ice-c ream cone is alway:> what .sold Now the go·:· ernmcnt tells us whal ice-cream lltc cone must be.'' DETROIT 1s spending billions lo trim down its future models, so that their performance will im- prove from an average or 18 miles per gallon in 1978 to 271'l m p.g hy 1985 Federal laws caused Detroit to engage in a "downsi11ng'' effort, as it is called her<' Consider how formidable the auto industry is in our economy. One or every s ix workers makes his living from motor vehicle 1md related industries. Whl·n auto sales drop $~hillion, 57 ,000 jobs arc lost The tn· dustry's whoppin~ appetite con· sumcs fiO percent of all the syn- thetic rubber produced in the United States and also these amounts: malleable 1roi\, 47 per· cent: steel, 19 percent; zinc. 33 percent: aluminum, 12 percent. Americans spend nearly 10 percent of their disposable in · come on ownership and use of cars. While the United States has 6 percent or the world's popula- tion, 41 percent of the world's passenger cats are here. There are now some 140 million cars and trucks on our highways. Jf the statistics are heavy, the ·ruture car won't be. At Ford, car s TO Ctlf't. wetpl, Detroit wlll bulld more frtmt·wheel drives (allowlnJ a UJM•r frame), create thinner doors and use moro aluminum, hieh·strenst.h. row-a Uoy steels and plastics. Only )aat week Ford an nounced it wu wslne super·llihl. expensive, graphlte fiber in some of Its better cars and wlll even- tually build a prototype 1979 car, using graphite exiens lvely, weighlng only 2,7$0 pounds. A graphite drive shaft weighs five· pounds less than one or steel, and a graphite hood is 25 pounds less than a steel version. "'The U .S economy will be altered considerably,'' Alex- ander says. "Radial tires will • virtually become standard on future cars because they affect fuel economy favorably. There0 Robert N. Weed/PubllsMr Thom•• KM'illl!dttw THERE'S wholesale applica· lion of electronlc ignition devlc~ on 1978 cars, and electronk engine controb are comtna. Thia meuns the viability of the small ~c rvice 5lation could be threatened because they'll need more sophisticated tools. diagnostic equipment and s killed technicians. We've already seen the trend to self-service eas st•· lions whlch got out ot the repair business. '· l think there is mis un· derataudln in Che cogsum r's mlnd •bout what'• h'ppentd to our: lnduatry 'Cb• consumer mlcl'at want one thln1. but the governm~nt 'tells ua to b\lild somethin1 else nd that's a permanent c:ondltlon we are wm. mi to Uve wtth." The term "horeepower" bu much a palt of American folklore as "Panama Canal," and it won'l be easy for Americans to drop tt and start thlnldn1 In terms ol ''hor1epower-to-welghtt'actor" or "cublc-dlJplacemont." "HORSEPOWER won't mean much." Alexander explains. "becnu e leas will be needed for these much li&hler cars. In the '30s, we had a Ford V ·8 engble with only 6.~ horsepower." Car buyers, rive to 10 years from now, will see much smaller models, but they will still be loaded with popular options like automatic transmission, power assists and alr-condltloQtng. There will be less emphas~ styling, and buyers will bave ~ pay pr Jum prices for larger models. ''All the companies face the ' same problem of conformlng to the new laws, so that Jives us a chance to change our traditional share (25 percent> of the market. Whoever doos the new work best should i!Jlprove his share of the market,' Alexander says. Prod any auto man and be'll grudgingly acree the new Nn· dards are necessary but will also mutter that the federal timetable is often unrealistic. "ll lm.Plles that invention can be Jegfslated, which we know isn't true," Alex- ander says. "It's difficult to meet tougher emission s tandards, which cul fuel economy. and at the same time meet new stan· dards for fuel economy." WHATEVER, there is no glgn that Americans want lo give up their beloved cars. A,.'i one of Jim· my Carter's own officials hi the Department of Transportation observed: ''Jf the car didn't ex· ist , the first thing I would do Is in· vent it because it is such. a ' marvelous transportation de· vice. I don't see a substitute for it in the next SO years." Those· are words Detroit likes to bear, while fending ore import$ <now about 20 percent of market>. coping with federal re· • gulallons and trying to persuade customers accustomed to big, soft-ride cars, to th«!'new, stiff. ride, more bulc models coming up Uelp for Real Estate Rip-off Victims To the Editor: commission. They have clearly I read with interest the letter to stated for several months that it the editor in the Nov. 6 edition of is unacceptable to allow a the Pilot headed "Cut-Throat pri vale association to dump Tactic" and signed by Michael spoils on a public recreation l). Gardner. I amJ)leased the let-area. fer was written and printed, as it The Army Corps or Enaineers gives· me the opportunity to in a cursory manner expressed respOod 1n a manner that might their opinion without evidence, a be helpful to those who rind thorough review. or hearing of themselves in a similar situation, the facts. and, perhaps, to Mr. Gardner.· • himself. First of all, there are, nece111arlly, many gaps in Mr. Gardner'• Jetter. If It was too lone. of course, you would not print it. Reading bel..,een the llnea, however, thete is a po11tbillt,y that California Real Estate Law has been violated, in which case the commissioner wlll take action. Incidentally, there now is a Department of Real Estate office in Santa Ana whlch may be contacted. IT IS entirely possible that the Corps.in not taklng a close look at the problem was misled by ln- accurate data presented by tne Dover Shores Association. Further the DaHy PUot. in its haste lo attack the coastal com· 1'rlissfon failed to report the facts or the issue properly. For exam· pie: l) The Corps did not prohlblt1 the dumping of the material at sea. Mr. Young of the Corps only issued an "dvisory opinlon pend· ing a hearina. 2) Gene Atherton, to whom was attributed 1everaJ statements WH not in attendance at the ap- peal. 3) The statements attributed to Mr. Atherton were tabn from the coastal commlsaion atalf re· port. We should thank the coastal commbllon tor a clear revlow ol the facts despl~ the r'J><>IJUcal chicanery that. often charac· ttrize1 Jocal Newport 1saues. HA.ROLD M. THOMAS body as much as they can, and get them in the direction that they want to go. MARILYN CRULL ROBIN GOE.MER BOB BILSON TONY O'BRIEN Poor ba•ple To the Editor: I am the parent.of a 14-year old who attends a local publlc high school. It has come to my attention in recent weeks of the use of pro- fanity and intimidation in our schools. Not by the student&, but the teachers! The teachers, to whom we entrust the education o! our children. Tbe educated, adult, mature individual. What good does it do to instill respect fo'r authority and respect for elders when children can be cursed at and threatened? Ir teachers want r~spect, obe· dience and discipline ln a classroom then they have to ex· pect It -not thruten lh order to achieve their end. NAME WITHJlELD ... ,, ...... To tne Editor: . For the thlrd time ln less lhlD a year. '11l0mu Ello tiat seen flt to attack our treatment or tax de· ferrals and credit.a tO which we are enliUed undt!r Federal law. For the third time, Mr. Ellu' column contains a cUt\ortion of the tacta. ' Three eleme\\ll or hi.I lateat cotumn - ' Firms' LOss ls OUrt, Too" <Nov. 'S) r~re particulll' Q)eotion in thJ1 re(trd. Mr. E.Uu claim wt •1uted tho lnte.mal Revenuo Scrv1C4t to Clectare th.em intllalble ror tu wrlt~ffs they, have used slnce 1t70." the service. ((;ontrary to what Mr. Elias implies, we said in our request (or a ruliog , that "Pacific obviously desires to re· ta in Its eliflbiUty. . . "> Mr. Elias claims that we never asked the IRS for a ruling on eligibility when we began using the deferrals and credits in 1970. This is not ao. We did ask for such a ruling at that time. The ruling we received then, plus the best legal opinions we have been able to obtain sloce, convlnc"-" us that we are now treatlna our taxes the only way we can under federal law. Mr. Elias claims correcUy that Joss of eli1ibllity would leave us llable for $1 billion in back tax payments to the IRS. He goea on to elte a suggestion made by three Caillomia cities that if the IRS declares us inellaible, the CPUC should continue t~ •et rat .. ai th(>u1h we wer• sUlJ 1et· Ung the tu beneflts. Webopet.hatneither Mr. Etiaa, Uae cltJ• Jn qu~on nor the CPUC would dlaplay 1'1cb a callc>us dlareaard. tor the caurornia telephone custom .. b)' ultirn~~ follOWinl thls counc of action ... The fil'Mltfttlal conditions im· Posed on Pacltte Telephone Wl dn those elrc:um1~rn1es, .aM their Impact on telephOnitcervt~ would be 11uch th\t the true lcillQa. party would be Uie telepboot!toil sumer. Mr. Ellas and those whom hie quotea seem to be of the oplnJon that tH Belt System Is eneaitd lJi a powtr play with the CPUC. 1Ji T,ht real power play ts~ U:ae CJ>,UC and the Con1reu Of tht United St• urider whoa lait law1 W.mDStoperato Wf d.O not want our custom~ lob VleUmllc<I by such a plaf. GRAY A. NESB DI.strict Mane.a• Paclfic Telt~ and Tele1raph ~ VOL. 70, NO. 320, _. SECTIONS, 48 PAGES By TOM BARLEY Ol ... ~p .......... A judge who ruled that Edward Charles ~Jlaway was insane when he killed seven people oo the Cal St.ate Fullerton campus decided today that Allaway s hould be committed to the state's Atascadero facility. . And Oran1e County Superior Court Judce Robert P. Kneeland mad• lt clear in readin' a pre· pared statement from the bench that he feels Allaway, 38, 1hould remain In the mental health facillty for the rest of hls life. "He presents a clear dan1er if he is ever released back into socie!y." the judge told lawyers for both sides. "He must be kept under maximum security condi· Toro Man. Shah lnrident tion1.'' Allaway was advised of hl1 right to appetl hi• insanity con· viction durlltg the brief hearing before Judie Kneeland. But deput.y public defender Ron BuUer later made it clear that no such appeal will be filed. A Jury !ound Allaway guilty of seven counts of murder and two or assault after listening to Police Separate. Warring Factions_ WASHINGTON <AP> -Rival demonstrators reassembled at ~eparale locations near the White House today as the Shah of !ran, wmdtng up his violence· scarred s\ate visit, paid a return call on President Carter. In the aftermath of Tuesday's raucous street protests, which re· suited in 124 Injuries and 12 ar- rests when fiehting broke out a mong pro· and anti·shah rorces, a heavy police contingent today kept the groups more than a block apart. The protesting groups were far smaller in numbers and more or· derly than Tuesday. as the police lines were doubled. About 1,000 chanting Iranian students, many wearing masks to conceal their Identity. con· tinued to protest the shah's U.S visit from Lafayette Park, acrosg Pennsylvania Avenue from the front of the executive mansion. Some 200 other opponents marched in a circle on the El· lipse, a park area behind the White House where much or Tuesday's violence occurred. Meanwhile, about 200 pro-shah demonstrators assembled at 17th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. several hundred feet from the students. Police canceled permits for de monstrations closer to the White House in the wake of Tuesday ·s violence. Following the White House ru_eeling with Carter, the shah's schedule called ror him to attend <See PROO'EST, Page AZ) $15 Maximum Rate Set . - ~iling Pltreed on El Toro ~r ~jl& By LAURIE KASPER OI • DelfJ .._, .... Los Alisos Water District directors have agreed to place a $15 maximum on their bimonthly sewer bills to appease customers whose bills have jumped since new rates went into effect In Sep· tember. .. Direetors set the maximum as proposed by a committee of Lake Forest residents Tuesday. However, they held off until February consideraUoo 'Of the community group's proposal to also add a minimum charge. The district's latest water and sewer bills have been computed at a rate of 33 cents per 100 eubie , feel for each service -a total of 66 cents per 100 cubic feet of water used. Since customers previously paid only a fiat rate of $8 for sewage, high water users found their recent bllis had skyrocketed. Many of these people com· plained this was unra\r because their irrigation water goes into the ground and not the sewer system. Gene Swanson, one ot Viejo ~AC Views seniors ~ ·uen1e·r the "esidents' repregebtalives. said without the maximum many people would have to Jet their landscaping go. Although the new maxlmum means the district races a $25,000 deficit in its budget for the cur· rent fiscal year, none of the directors orrered any resistance to it. A. J. West, presldent of the board, said their main concerns with the rates are equity for all customers and water conserva· ti on. (See SEWER. Page AU testimony that Allaway shot nine people in 81\d around the campus library on July 12, 1'78. But I the iame Jury coald not rea~h a verdict In a subsequent sanity bearing on Allaway's mentat itate at the time of the killings. Lawyers for both sides agreed to allow Judge Kneeland to rule alone on the sanity issue rather ·. FW. Nearby ~n~:a~IOO CA ) ...J Aw administrator. preparil\c a report on :iare ty at San Francisco State, barely c5caped attack herself 1n a campus restroom, 0Uic1al11 suld . "l'm aoona get you I'm • gonlla get you, .. Konnl1yn Feig, 38, said a man armed with a bm11ll knife screamed al her as she bolled out or a r troom · and ran to her nearby of. rice. She locked hcr11etr into the office and the man vanished before campus police could arrive, Ms. Feig said. LOS ANGELES <AP> -Menaclnc desert winds returned today as firefighters pushed to conllln a fire th•t spread from a dump and charred 2,000 acrea of brush •in the parched Santa Monica Mountains. <Related photo, Page AS.) Hoy Talbot. a spokesman for l~ Los Angeles County Fire Department, described the winds as ''just not good. It's pretty warm for this time of the year ... Offer Accepted . I Inmates Couldn't Refwe NEW YORK CA P> Because The larger group had returned they insisted on remaining out of to their cells as ordered before their cells after lockup time to the bhow finished Saturday night. watch the last hour or the ''The but the other 75 refused and a Oodfalher... 75 Inmates or the SQUad of correctioo guards had lO Queens House of Oclenlion have be called in to remove them. bten deall a penally lhey cannot They w.cre later senlenced to 25 refuse -25 days in solitary con-days in solitary. finement. The prisoners' touncll had not In addition, ~e 75 also miosed asked permission for the late the final scJ.(meol of the four -part lockup Saturday and the correc· tt:lecasl of the progra!fl Tuesday tion offtce'r in charge dld not have night. But 425 other inmates at the power to authorize overtime the jail stayed up until 11 p.m. lo guard tl)e prisoners. Tuesday an hour past lockup -• Prison olficials granted a re. to watch the final installation of quest for the late lockup Tuesday the program about an organized night, presumably lO Impress on crime "family." the Inmates the waees of sin. f'ro• Page Al BUDGETS BLAMED ••• Howevl'r, he said, Sen. Dennis Carpenter CR-Newport Beach) has exprC"ssed interest in the-pro· vosal he made in June. Bradley·s proposal includes a "dynamic homcowner's exemp· t1on •· which calls for the exemp· lion to increase the same percent as the increase in a hou,e·s value. Right now, he explained. values and tax rates change but the exemption stays the same. 'l'h• foreout ht1h tem- parQture for today was u . Fire spokesman Dennis Phllllps aald the: fire was to to 10 percent contained at mld- mornlnt and esUrnaced tlaal coe- tainment would .,. d"1ared by this evenlng In the area'• second major fire In two daya. Re said 1.3!0 acra conUaued to bum at mldmomlnf. We•tb•r torecata cilleet for .. continued dryness and Santa Ana wlnct. of 10 to ~5 mllU an boUr. after a nilht ln1. wblcb moltt 1u breeze• and to1 belptd nrerJghters gain the upper hand. ''Tbe Santa Ana eoncUUon maku it a little more baurdoua Ir the wind were 35 to 40 rnlles pe~ hour, lt would make lt a UUJe more t1erlout, ••said Talbot. Tuetday nlsht, firemen backed out. .a 20-mlle fire line throutb the denae undergrowth and 1teep C4lnyon• JO milt' west of downtown Los Angeles. Six firemen were injured, hi· cludlnt Mike Eub}lnu, 15. who waa critically hurt ~hen a trac- tor rolled over blm, Ht un· derwent suraery at WHUake Hospital. The othora 1uat.alned ml nor injuries, .autborlUea aald. Th• roof of one h~me on Mulholland HJabway eaupt flre and there were uncOnllrmed re. porta of dam••e to two other structurea, firemen ii.Id. About 670 flreflshten re· mained on the fire tine today after the releate of crews from the U.S. Forest Servtce and some 200 othen, Phillipa said. But firefll}tters coatlnued an all-out battle u1ln1 32 camp crews, three tractors antt tour water-dumplnt helicopters. The 1poketman aald fi reflahtera were concentraU~ thelr eftorta on the tlre'a southern flank at TrancH Can· yon. which lie• between the f'rmw Page Al PLANES .•. The ·assessor said he now has 615,000 units of propertr. ranging from eumball machines to Dis· neyland, on the roll of values which Lotals about $40 billion. .-::oast and the blaae, and would re-eetabUsh fire Unp aloni the eut and weat or the charred area. Piper's right wing was torn off In the collision leaving the right •uleron. hanging from the wing. Despite the wing damage fire ofric1als said the Piper PA28 made a near perfect" landing at lhc airport. The search for the second alrcrnft off Laguna Beach was hampered 1nit1ally by fog In the area. Searchers "arned of heavy shark act1v1t\ 1n the crash site \ 1cinity Orange County Harbor Patrol. 'llcwport Beach hfe&uard and lluntangton Beach state lifeguard boats responded lo the noon hour colhs1on report. They were as- s111ted by a Coast Guard cutter from Long Beach and two hellcopterb. By early afternoon, searchers had located an oil slick and pieces of wreckage on the water but described the debris as small pieces or the aircraft and parts of the bodies. An Orange County Harbor Patrol otciclul said the aircraft ·s tire was the largest piece of wreckage Art Auction Aids Library An Art Show and Auction ~lnnJng at 7 p.m. Saturday t~ the Lake Forest Sun and Sall Club, will beneftt S.rtpno In· termediate School's library. The Serrano Student-Teacher· Parent Organization hopes to earn t&,000 from the aucUon. "With growlnc student enroll· ment and escalattni book cos~ ·thls amount will considerably help us to increase our library holdings," said Pr\nctpaJ Ray OarubO. Ticketa are priced at $1.50 and may be purchased at. the school or the ctoor of tti. event. While ·explaining his omce·s function, he said that 6,000 laws rules and regulations tell hi~ what he can and can't do. Ile told the residents that jf they have problems w{ h •P· praisals made on their property, they should call one of his ap· pr~lsers. If this doesn't help, he said, they should call one or his project managers. And If this still doesn 'l help, he said, "call me." I'...,,. Page Al CENTER ..• ly level, Clark said there was a definite need for a racilHy to ad· minister programs such as a re· duced-cost lunch program. At first, MAC members seemed to overwhelmtntlY sup· port the notion of a central loca· lion. Then, when Clark revealed the potential site as a lS.acre parcel in'MlsJton Vlejo'a private retirement community, Casa del Sol, MAC members hedeed some on their aupport. ''I support the idea of y9ur COD· cept but the location 'bothen me," Ted Keene told Clark. Several other MAC rnembera expressed support for the Idea but hedged on the location. Their concern seemed to stem from worries that the factllty would be closed to people outside Casa del Sol, since Lt l• • private com· munliy. Afttr ~taln\fta ~~port from the WAC 1lon4af Clark will aeek support from the Saddle~ck l' Area CootdinJlting Council CSACC) 'At 1 :30 tonight at People's .Federal Savlnts and Loan, 236118 El Tol'O Road ln 'El Toro. Safety Po1ten WithtUawn The blaze bee an mid-day Tues.- day. when th• wlnda fanned a smoldertn1 tire ln a dump, fire otflclals aald. Tht blowin1 sparks tcnlted the Under-dry brush 1urroundlna the dump. County Fire Inspector Dennis Mlller ortlinally ••ld U.e dump fire had been 1molderln1 tor 1ever,~ weeks. But early ~ fire Information otf1cer Roy Talbot aa1d wftnusn rtPorted seelnt a man 1tarttn• an llleaaJ flre in the d\lmp Tuesday JI\ an area that was not burnln1 earner. p,...p_,,eAJ l PROTEST. • SACRAMENTO Retired Newport. Beach pplice chief B. James Gh1vu said Tuesday that Cartrornia llas Mafia-type crone but "ltsroot.sarenotdeep ... Glavas was commentine ln his new role as chairman or the al· torney general's organized crime control commission. He sald the commtsaloll hu .found evidenc, or crime •rn· di.cates in all regiOM of California.• with no special concentration in anyone area. But he refused to discuss specifics or say whether or- ganized crhx\c is lncreaalng or decreaalnJ. . "I wouldn'tcareto minimize or maxlmhe the infJuence of Mafia. type crime at this time,·· Glavas told reporters at the opening of a closed-door commission hearin1 "The root.a oC oreanized crtm~ are not deep in the traditional sense in Callfornia -not tn the vein as exemplified in 'The God· father.' We do have Mafia crime in Callromla, "he said. Glavas said the commission is "hi fair agreement we haven't had a great deal of the traditional organized crime type activity In California -extortion, Inroads in gambling, protection. "Thlstypeortblngwebelleveto be at a fairly low level. But we have what seems to be consiftra- ble activity in the legitimate busi- ness area," he added. Glavaa aald some of the crlme i.Wolvement in buaineu la for the purpose or laundering profits from criminal activities. some In- volves takin1 over nrms and "spendlnr them into bankruptcy" by draining orr as- sets. and aome la for anveatment ·'Hke anyooeelae. •· He listed hotels and theaton as anl area oC criminal Investment. bu' he refused to give f'Urther de- tails. EPR Swanson and DeVnla Lightner. who dettrtbed blma tf at low w•ter ~. al propose(t that director• tablilh a $10 minimum d\Wce so everyo 1harc1 ln the cost of the acwer ' service. The dl~trict hat Mt aaed • mlnlmuro dlars• to •~r .. e woter conservation. ''People who conserve tn our dtstrtct bavo the lower bills,•• explained l"oni Mc::Faddtrn, Ceowal ntana1er. BecaQICI ~ ~ 1...uu m· votved In chanaing the rate structure, directors refused to consider the minlmum now. Althou~ they couLd ptece tbe maximum and feduce people'• bill•. they nld~ US01 could not establish · a mlnhn\lm wblch would ralseotber ptople'1 bUJ.a. ~ However, the dlNctor1 did achedule a meettna Feb. 8 tO con- sider revtted rata for the hext fiscal year. W arnlng that "there will have RANCHO SANTA FE <AP> The campfires that keep illegal aliens warm tn dlrt caves dug nea_r • some or SOuthe-rn CaliC· orma s most expensive homes are gelling them deported. 'Arsenic, Ola Lace' Opens At Toro IDgh El Toro JDgtt School'• produc- tion of "Arsenic aod Old Lace" will open at 8 p.m. Tbur1day in the scbool 's Charaer Hall. The producUoo wlll conllnue Friday and Saturday with an 8 p.m. curtain. Tlcket..s, whlcb may be purchased at the door. 8"9 priced at S2.50 ror adult• and St.25 for student. apd chUdren under 12. Tbe comedy features the two elderly Brew1ter si1ters1 pl~yed by Lori Varnado and Lupe Ramirez, who •'innocently·· poisoned old men and btUi•d them in the tellar. , Others in the cast are Perry Gentry, Dennis t(raner, Carl Binder, Kelly McBride, Dean Es· trow, Slove Jones, tom Mahoney, Clift Mauvais, Steve Meadows • .Kirk Ea1row. Jofln Wilson, Angel Pickark, Lenny Weber and Kevin Banford~ Theproductiooiacoordlnat.e4 by Mrs. Carol Stanfield. Donkey Baaeball Played at Toro El Toro High School"1 third an- Glavas atao said there was a nual Donkey Basketball Game sreat dead of criminal activity in will begin at 7:30 toniaht in the dru1 trafficking, but that "there school'sl)'m. are a great many independents Tickets are priced at $1.50 for with only here and Ute re a connec: children and S2 tor adults. tlori... While ridins donkeys, 1tudents and faculty will vie for polnta ac:· lie said in part because of cording to regular basketball great number of unrelated sroup rulea. dealing in drugs, the co!'"misslon The school's Key Club rnem- wlll requefl\ un extension In the bers have invited residents of the one year allowed to conduct Its Good Shepherd Lutheran Home study. as their guests at the iame. Twenty.four forest rangers · trying w pr,vent a maJer 111"• captured 91 6ltens TueJday wlth the help of eight U.S. border patrolmen. The wealthy Americans who live Jh $400,000 home• narth of San Dle10 compl~ln~ about the • fires at nifbt• Deputy Border Patrol chief Winford Baze said some aliens reportedly lived as lapg as six months in the hovels. Douc /illen of the C1llforrlla Departrneht of FOt'eltrY nld tJle 1pectal tuk force wu 'formed by rangera from JUvertlde, San. Bernardino, Orange and San Diego counties. "The 1>ri~ry objective~ th\s was not to apprehend Illegal aUens but l<t put a stop to the il· Je1al campfir~ that po•ed a threat to the area,•· Allen 1atd. Two hl4 bumocl a 50·foot. area. Spanlsh·l-'1uase stsm we.re PUt up mQt"lthl before, d1tn1 that fires ar1 llleg11l Jn the finder-dry area. • Alter llfat didn't put them out. a tor~t ran1et nt the I.at two montba there "(ryint to stop the campfire thr•ai without suc- cess, .. said Allen, addlnt "it was at that point we decided to go into the area and putthem out. .. Stance T()nghem LONDON <AP) -Strlklnc • ~rlllsh nrem~n rttuaed to help ine1Cp•rlenced mlllt11ry rtreflghtera batllo a raalnf bl~ In a power .tat.ion eut or Lc>ftdoft today. The flre was reported burningoutoCcontrol. The refusal indiceted a hardening or tht• fireJf\en '•.~posit.ion in the U.reiff day..qld1ti1ke. • \ .. •. • • ~~~~~ ~~-~--~ .................................... !l!llilR•o~bert .... ~N .• W.Hd .. /.'U·b~ll-•"9 .. rlillllll•ThOtna .... •.K"llilllv~ll .. ~~t~ •. Orange Proposed Reform Goes Overboard The campaign reform ordinance '-lne considered by the Irvine City Council is, tlke tho proposed county or- dinance upon which it ls modeled, unfair in its assumptions about contributors. Jt would forbid u council member from voting on prac· ticall'y any muller which involved a so-called "major .. qampalgn contributor. Such a contributor would be de· fined, if sctme members of the council have their way, as one who donates any sum to a candidate. That provislon would take away the vote of the council rpcmber, who ts presumed "bought off" by a contribution 'not until but even if proved otherwise). It also would dis- enfranchise the prospective contributor. And it disen· Cranchil:;es the rest of the citizens who voted for that particularcoun,il member. Further, it could lead to maJOf decisions bemg voted · by a minority of the council It assumes that the contributor can have no interest m good government for its own sake, nor interest in the com- mon welfare of the community in which he lives. It is true that county and city governments in Orange County have suffered tremendous losses of prestige because of heavy bankrolls handed over to political cam- oail.rns. But the proposed Irvine ordinance assumes too much evil on the part ot the contributor and too much mherent dishonesty on the part of the elected official. And, besides, it's almost certainly unconstitutional Voting Oddity On the eve of local water district elections last week, trustees in the Saddlcback Valley and Capistrano unified school districts learned, apparently for the first time, that thcv could vote in the election in the name of their districts Because votes ure distributed on the basis of assessed· valuation of land, the districts were eligible voters. Combined, they held about four million votes in three water district elections Neither school board could get the agreement needed to use ~ci r voting power But if trustees had, they could have voted m water district balloting for one current school trustee. one former trustee. the husband of another trustee and a Saddleback College trustee. The district's votes were not enough to make a diff erencc in any of the elections. But the story could be changed in the future when maJor land holdings are l broken up for lk\'l'lopment. f If the c·urn·nt lund-ln 1scd election system continues, f the district's votes could he a deciding factor in water i district ell•l'lions. It ·s a peculiar situat10n that underlines the need 1 for a chunJ,!e Jn the system. Now, directors elected by major lundowncrs can lax and create debt for the residents If residents don't huve the ability to outvote the landowners. then it's taxation without representation This just doesn't Jibe with what we expect from our government today School Anienities The Dan a Hi II s 'lli gh School community Is I understandably provoked that brand new Capistrano Valley lhgh School will have a stadium next year. when 1 Dana IUlls has none after four years Dana Hills students have tried to raise funds for a stadium since November, 1974, when their principal1 Walter Spencer, diod. The Spencer memorial funa currently amounts to Sl,800. Now a 5437,500 gift from the Mission Viejo Company has bought a stadium for Capistrano Valley fliih, with no apparent effort by anyone connected with the school. But school amenities don"t have to depend upon the largess of a single developer. The El Toro High School communitv left no atone unturned in its determination to see a swimming pool built at tht: school. When its chief backer. Supe.rvi$or Ronald Caspers, died, his successor, Thom as Riley, was won lo the cause. The pool opened last year. This kind of effort could build a Dana Hills stadium as well. • Opinions expressed 1n th• space above are those of the Dally Piiot Other views expressed on thla page are thoae of their authora and artists. Reader comment 11 invited. Addr111 The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560. Costa Meaa. CA 92828. Phone{71<4) 642·<4321 Boyd/ Gerbil Talk BYL.M. 80\'1) I lt has now been determined aclentirically that the little animals known 411erbil1 do \al.k. to one another ln their ow""'guaec · -aayJn1 auch thing1 m "I love you" and "I feel lousy today" -but In ul· tr a sonic syUablts that ean on· ly be plekeCl up by bl&hly 1enaltivo in~trumentt . Unlvenlty ot Texat 1cholarB round that out. In her bedroom for more than three years. Sho didn•t want anybody to know she needed his handiwork. Those who press for public nudity point out that there are more than 300 lifesize naked fi,Jures in MlchelaDJ"tJ0'1 St•· tine Chapel c~nna. The only fish that develops arteriosclerosis Is the 1almon. Nick Thimmescli Auto Makers See 'Revolution' DEARBORN, Mich. -Auto makers have trurnpeted the won· den and be'nellb ot their new models for so many yean that we tend to turn a deaf ear to this enormous industry. But now the rulers of autodom have a measaae worth li1tenln& to bee aUie it tells us what we will be drivme in the years im mediately ahead and how our economy will change be cause of 1l Simply put, most pt."<>ple won 'l be able to buy the cars they are accustomed .10. what they will drive will feel dlf· terenl. will eventually cost l!Omewhat more to buy, but will be less expensive to operate. ~ "Thls ls a revolution," s y Robert B. Alexander, vice pr i· dent of product development at Ford Motor Co. "Our industry tended to be evolutionary rather than revolutionary. We used to design and style cars for what we perceived was consumer de· mand. Now we do it to meet gov- ern m cnt-mandatcd require- menli.. Tho bi~ ice-cream cone is alw uy~ what sold. Now tt1e gov- ernment tells us what ice-cream the cone must be " DETROIT 1s spending billions to trim down its future models. so that their 1>erformance will Im- prove from an a\ eraue of 18 mile., per gallon 1n 1978 lo 271 ~ m p I( b) 1985 fo'ederal laws r auscd Dctrmt to engage in a . do\J.nst.ting" crrort, as it is t•allcd here Consider h<J\4 formidable the auto industry 1s in our cconom) One of C\'en· six workers make-s his living rrom motor vch1clc and related industries. When auto sales drop $1 bllhon. 57 ,000 Jobs are lost. The in· dulit ry 's whopping appetite con- sumes 60 percent of all the syn. thclic rubber produced in the L'nitt!d States and also these amounts: malleable iron, 47 per· rent, steel, 19 percent; zinc, 33 percent: aluminum, 12 percent. Am era cans spend nearly 10 percent of their disposable in· come on ownership and use of cars While the United Stales has 6 percent of the world's popula· tion, 41 percent of the world's passenger cars are here. There arc now i>Ome HO million cars and trucks on our highway~ Jr the statistics are heavy, the future car won"l be At Ford. cars produced now avtr11r about 4.ooo pound• By 1980 that numbet wUI be 3,500, and by 1985 only 3,000 pounds. TO CUT wel•ht, Detroit will build more Cronl·wbeel drlves <aUowlne a Uehter frame>, create thinner dOQrs and use more aluminum, hl1h-stren,th, low·aJloy steels and plastics. Only laat week Ford an· nounced lt was uslna 11upor·ll1ht, expensive, araphlte liber In some or ita better cars and will even· tually build a prototype 1979 car, using graphite extensively, weighing only 2,760 pounds A graphite drive shaft welahs five µounds less than one of steel, and a graphite hood is 25 pounds lesa than a steel version. "The U.S. economy will be altered cons1dernbly,' · Alex· anaer says ... Radial tires will virtually be<:ome standard on future ca!"ll because they affect. fuel t!conomy favorably. There wllJ be more and more can on lhe road, bUt •QOUne consurnp. lion l• solnf to drop l\lblt.n· uany. "We are inovins toward a maintenance-free ccu· requlrlna no scbeduled work for Uie first so,ooo mUM. We're Wready into en1lnes where the oU needa to be chanaed only at 7,500 or even 10,000 mUea. New cars with four cyllnd@ra need tune ups only ever)' 30,000 mlles THERE'S wholesale appllca· Lion of electronic ignition devices on 19711 cars, and electronic enelne controls are comlne. Thia means the viability of the small service station could be threatened because they'll need more sophisticated tools. diagnostic equipment and skilled technicians. We've already seen the trend to aelf-servace gas sta· tlons which &<>t out of the repair bustrs.s· " think there Is tnisun- deratandln; ln the CQl\IW'fte?'• • mtnd about what'• h•ppened to our Industry. The rona~er mlaht want ono thln1, but 'th• aovernment tells UJ to bultd 1omethln1 elH and that'• a permanent condition we are will-. lns tollvewtU\." The term .. horae~wer·• Ii as much a part of American folk.lore H "Panama Canal," imd It WOft't be easy for Americana to drop It and a tart UUnkf n1 In terms of · 'horsepower-to-weigh.ttactor·• or .. cublc-dlaplacem«1at." "HORSEPOWER won't mean much." Alexander explains, "because less wlll be needed for these much lllhler cars. In the '30s, we had a Ford V-8 enaJne with only 65 horaepower. • · Car buyers, five lo 10 years from now, will see mucb amaller models, but tttey . wlll still be loaded with popular opt.ions like automatic transml.ssion, power assists and air-condltionlne. There will bo less emphasis on styllne. ~nd buyers will have to pay prerulum prices for larger models. "All the companies face the same problem of conforming to the 11 w Jawa~ so thClL glves ua a chance to chante our tradltlonal share (25 percent> ot the market. Whoever does the new work best should improve hla share of the market,•· Alexander says. Prod an~· uuto man and he'll grudgingly aaree the new atar<- dards arc necessary but w1ll also muller that the Ced~ral timetable Is o(ten unrealistic. "It tmplies "" that Invention un be leaislated, which we know l1n't true,·· AIQ· ander sayi.. "It's difficult to meet tougher emission standards. which cut f~cl economy. and at the same time meet new stan· dards for ruel economy.·· WHATEVER, there ls no iitin that .AmerlcanR want to gtve up their\ beloved cars. A11 one of Jim· my Carter'$ own officials. In the Department of Transportation observed: "(f the car didn't ex· isl. the fiNll thing r would do ls in· vent it because it ls such a marvelous transportation de. vice. I don't see a substltu\e tor St In the next SO years.·· Those are words f>e\roit likes to hear, while feodJne ort imports <now about 20 percent of market), coplna with federal re. eulatlona and trying to persuade' customers accustomed to bl&. soft.rJde cars, to the new, sUff· ride, more basic models comlne up Help for Real Estate Rip-off Victims To the Editor: J read wlth interest the letter to the editor 1n the Nov. 6 edition of the Pilot headed •'Cut-Throat Tactic" and al1ned by Michael D. Gardner. I am pleased the let· ter was written and printed, as it alves me the opportunity, to re.pond ln a manner'that might be helptul to those who find themselves ln a aimilar situation, and, perhaJ>I, to Mr. Gardner. hlm1eU. Firat ot all, there are, nece11arlly, many gaps in Mr. Gardner'• letter. If it was loo lon.i, or course, you would not print it. Reading between the lines. however, there is a po11lblllty that California Real Estate Law haa been violated, in which case the commissioner wHl take action. Incidentally, there now I• a Department of Real Estate office In Santa Ana which may be contacted. from her $30,000 per year job. Perhaps she could find something she could do in the To the Editor: private sector, but then aeain, to For the third time In less than a year, Thomas Elias bae seen Ill be fired from 8 position which to attack our treatment of tax de· would probably pay much less rerrals and credits to wblcb we does not require an attorney or a e t'tled d Feder llaw. hearm~ are n 1 un er a . DALE JOHNSON For the thi~ time., Mr. Elias' ..A'"olumn contains a distortion of Poor Esa•p~ ( th;~~~~· elements of his latest To the Editor· column "Firms' Loss is Ours, I am the parent of a 14-year old Too" <Nov. S) require particular who attends a local public tugh mention in this r-egard . school. Mr. Elias claims we "asked It has come to my attention in the Internal Revenue Service to recent weeks of the use of pro· declare them lneU1ible for tax fanity and intimidation in our wrileoffs they have uatd since schools. Not by the students, but 1970. · · ' the teachers! The teachers, to whom we entrust the education of our children. The educated, adult, mature indtvldual. What good does lt do to instill respect for authority and respect for elders when ch.lldren can be cursed at and threalened? Ir teachers want respect, Obe· dlence and discipline In a classroom then they have to ex· pect it -not threaten ln prder to achieve theJr end. NAME WITHHELD Punch IN ASKING the IRS for a rul· ing regarding our continued ellgibiUty for tax deferrals and credits under the methods the California Public UtiUtiu Com· mission seeks to lmpose Oh Us, we dld not ask we be declaNKl In· eligible. We did eicpresa our doubts that the CPUC method was consistent. wlth Federal law because we must oandJdl[ point out all the facts to Uae RS or their rullnc will not be blndlnt oo .. A·~b.lld'~ ~icycJc and a burned-out founda· t dr tllf home she left arc grim remind· f.t~ or•the brush fire that raged through th.c Santa Monica m""'buntams Monday and Tucs<.lay before being partially contained Sheriff's deputies sift through the ashes for possible valuables that might be salvaged by distraught owners. Six homes were destroyed by the blaze which charred some GOO acre!.. Thieves Ring Wrong Chimes S.\~ Dl1'~GO (l\J>l Eight 1'l·ll~ an(.! all "s well t h a I <.· 11 els \H' 11 • t h c l'lil-he" go imd ''° ""Y lhc :\I i.ir 1 nt·~ \\ho ha \It.' thci r m1 ... sing maritime: bell back 1n its placl' al the ~1al'llll' Corps Rec·rutt Depot Sotnl'<>nL' stoic the bell. Tax Relief Bill GOP Seeking To Reconvene S \l'H.UfEYl'O 'APi An attempt to force used lo tc:;.ic;h novice :\Tanncs how lo loll the ti me of day on a shrp, off it-. post Sunduy night jn fro11l of th<.· ~urine Seti Sc·hool But officials say a mystcrv phone culler lat~ Monday told them they tould find the 50· )'l!ar-old lrcasul"c at the bsc chapel. PLACERVJLl.E <ARI decibcbfrom7a.m.to10 El Dorudo County j),m . u.nd 85 decl~tll supervisors arc delaying I rom JOp.m. to7 o,tn. proµosed uirport noh.e Ah uirport omcial. stundurds thut would ~ho usked not to be \den· hnve the emx:t of kcop. l1fu:d. ~aid those brnils Su porn. or 'fhorn \ng many jets from lund \\.OUld bltf' at leust some Stewart said 4lt the hear 1 mg 11t South Lake Tabol'. of "the J>rt\'ate and com suw. ing that without ~omt1 J n s t e a d • t h c-hlt.>rclol Jets thut tuke orr method or enforcm& the supervisors vote<! Tues· trnd lundi\l lhc airport. T H! S\JPE J\Yl SOJtS propost.>d ordinance. It day to ' monitor nols enacted un conorgoncy would be ·•u tiurplus luw levels at the Lake Tuhot• lfWO tOMMJ;RCIAL ordinuoc~ lost summer. on the-book11." Stew•rt Airport. County 0Cfl~u1ls n 1 rt 1 n e ~. ~a e if I c prohibiUng jet opera· nddcd. i :; a Id the monitor Ing --~-r,----....,..,..------~_.._.:.,.....,........,.,,_,_.....,,._.. ....... ---.--_;..~,,_.. would delay enactment of any ordinance for about a >Car. bccau:;c the ~uipment won't be a,. a iJ u bl c u n ti I n <' x t :;prin.i T U J:; BOARD uho a:;ked the f'ederal A-Aa- t1on Administrat\on. which has crlt1c1zed the proposed ordinance, lo work with the county on noise standards Some Tahoe Ba.sm res- idents ha\'e been com· plaining about jet noise, which they bUY IS amplified by the bai;in's natural echo. Under the proposed or dinance, airplane noise t.MA•ricerd MethrC...,.._ OIAH6E T1tttlit -kotefl• I 4 It Ho. T111tln A .-e 1714) 997·9968 • Hudy to Sl!rn \nlh Uonl!)' 'n Spice GlaLI! • S11lrul Shced for l.!ftliY ~Ct\lng •We P.u:ka.ie und Ship from Coa:.l to Cou~l • Full Servkc 1>1.!l11.:1All'1>i.cn • lmpottl-d <.:hce!>t.'11 • 'l1MAHEIM n.. vfnep ce..t.r 1222 s. lroellhwtt ... W ltd.J 014) 635-2461 COIONA on Md flLM SPRINGS noo J. C:oott Hwy. 7 f5\i ""'Y· I 11 014) '13·9000 '" lt911eho Miit. AC&OltHOM IANCNO MIRAGE ::,~= (714) 346-3894 would be limited to 99 .._ _____ _. _____ _. ______ ._. ____ ..._ ___ _.. ; :r th<.• C.1 hfornaa Legislature to n·c:onvene to act on propt·rl\ ta' rc.'hl'f proposals ha.., been launched by HI {<l'Jlllhht<in lawmakt•rs ··our purposl' in hringing the Legislature back rog(•thl•r rs to ('n:.1tt• a forum to enact property tax r·elil'f pnor to the lt.·i.:1-.lall\ c 1inslaught rn January,·· .hSt•mhly minority rtoor leadf!r Paul Priolo or .'.\tal11'11 s:JHJ Tuc·sday · Our Touch of Cla&S . ' 'I EITJIEI< ,\SSE~f BL V Sp!!akcr Leo McCarthy of San 1"runc:1st·o nor Sl!natc President pro tem .J;1m1·~ Milts. llw two Democrats whQ head up the l.t•gr~wlurl" were rmmcdiutcly a\'atlable for com-ment :\I tC:arthy and a Senate c()mmittee beaded by :\t ills have authurit.v to rt'convene the Legislature hrfon• the l!liH st·s-.wn ht· gins .ltln 2 IF Mc<~RTllV and Milbdon"t act in lOdays()Jl lhl' GOP pct1l1on Republicans say they will ;ittempt to ~o <iround tht• Dt•mocratH· leadersh1p by circulat- ing Pt'l1t1dns to the entire Legrslatu~ That mnneuvcr would require the support o( nl.'arl~ half of the· Oemocrats in the Legislature, but c:oP sources said lh<!y foll many Dcmocruts now may bt· \\II ling tr, rct·11m•cm· to take up a tax relief h11l UE'10(.'R.\TI(' GOV. Edmund Brown Jr s of. rH'l' d ul not t·om m<.•nt on the Republican movf! Uru\111 µr<.'\ ruusl.r !YU rd he wanted th<• Legislature to ·nwd1lall' .. on tht• lax 1s-.ue before he would call a 'lJl"l"lill "l'~"ICln In comment'> rcleasl•d by a spokesman, Priolo 'a1<1 HL·p~1canR "don't have a specific proposar· lit·c·;.iu,c that \\Ould immediately split lawmakers along llw partisan lln<'s which caused tax relier bills to tall lll'ron• lh11 l.cg1sl11turc n•cessed two months ago ,\ Sl.8 RILi.iON five-year relief plan. financed mostly from i.urplus state runds, died in the final hour~ of the regular session in September llepubht'1IOS helped btock that measure. arguing Lila! loo much of the money was earmarked for low. income pcrsoni. and not enough for middle.income flln11hc.., racld~ b1J.: UlCreascs in property tax bills. '"Oh\'1011sl~ we have our own ideas. We are very m~t·h 111 favor of s~nding limits on the stale and local go,emment and indexing·· to adjust income ta¥ bruckets for inflation and giving a greater pot- t1on of the rehef to middle-income home-owners th<01 Hrown.,ropo!-ied. Priolo added I made more luxurious with ·Perma SOft " Save 50°/o on 1f perfect price Trad1tlonal. loom woven acrylic blart\(ets. they have Perm~ Soll® finish that m!ikes 1hem 'all lhe better 10 sleep under. Nylon satin binding won't ravel. rhanks to Everlock~ s11tch Marvelous savings on wh11e. champagne. rnahogany, bullercup or cognac. Not all colors Twin size. If perfect $35, 15.99 Full size. If perfect $40. 18.99 King size If perfect $54. 25.99 Bedroom Accessories I T UE l\E PUBLICJ\NS filed under rules that would reconvene the lawmakers into regular I sessions. which or>crate under broader rules than • the spcc1ul session which Brown has the power to <.'Onvene 1 Priolo said he hud no specific date 1n mind to oonnme the L.egislutµre , excc~l that it would prob· ably becartyD.ecomber. ( . ' .. •, .. ll . . ! ' . i •• . i ·~ . . I " I f I ·. . " ~. I t)( • . j:: ., ~ .~ .. I• ' I. I .. I SYLVIA PORTER .... '! V-w ~ ,~,J!-~!~ .\Pl.. 1 t li 11",. \lo ::f' ui'~ a: ~·49 •to ' loll ·-~ , ,. "' w -\· " t II..,_ .. ~ s 11 J\11+"' ... '·'"' •• 21 11\o• lo. ii .... ~ ~~­...... V2 14h-. \a ..... • *ii••"' ff/fJ •• I$) ... -:;:=· .. J in ~::·~ • ,AOll W2 ti*"-.. " .1011 2 l•l<t ••••• 1.1$' 20 ~ .. A 1.lOll ).a 11-.. Al~• IA t • l•tw •••.• .... .-hi_.., ~ Ut.+ ~ AllliMY AO • 20 ~ + \'.. A-.no ..»14 IO 7f1 ..... :=:r,:::.: tw.:::: = ..... 22-.-\'I A Ut ..:r2• 1n 41 ...... . 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Mia CnPwpll. •• 12100 .. ~.-_.,. nPort .IOtlS JM O.Pw p17M .. di 14•~ ..••• GPll 1.7• I -~";Ar,·~~., ,: ' ~~'t: 1·1 11~ ~ ~ CnUGrp 2.20 7 •1 CtitGp pr 2.. t Contlll 1.32 7 llt1 ConlllP 1.JIZA 3' ConlllAt •• .. Cotll OU 1.AO I 1717 ContTef 1.16 9 ts CllOato . U I 2961 Tallty .10 • .. 11~ .... T•=*ley f 4 11• .. -W 1.,. uoh 111 1tpu ~ T f '1 fl'-h 1r1orc.1t • 1 ,...... " l.,.... If 1n .... f9'111Kr ... • 1 )I 11"-• """411r .AO J 1J 10~ ...... -.11n1cn IO tl ~ 1 • .. T•tmll ~U 1 41 ..... reteew • l "-• .. •r !~I.• l ~ ~'-+ n tLI "Pl • i..-~ • •If>( I 24 I "'(' .l.. 7 m ~+ • T"'Mt I • *2 + !It ,,..,~, ••• 9'11 .... . '-*'" t.it • .J; ..... .... +:.UCAll"' ,,ztit 12 m:; ~ Tu It t.lt t 14 4' -'°' 'ft• T 2AI I tD '41i., •• 1• TH lid lit 1 11 111\11+ -. 'l'talntl Ul1' W lll•a-k To111t 11 e6 .... _ "9 l•~ .a• ua ii"'+"' MEDIATORS IN THE PllOGllt\MS set up by the cilt-y a1>d 1ua\edealer as10Ctatl~n1 ..... calJed AQtomoth•• Comu"*' Actlon frog,rams or A UTOCAPS-conveo~ re1utcly. They bave tlte endorsement of tho praident'a Office of Coo1umer A tr airs and are nan by 1Q\Alll paldstaffa ptus voluntffr panel• ot autodealen ind contumers. The medlatot1 hear complalnts that cannot be resolved by consumer cont.ct with the deal~rs or by AtrrOCAP 1taff memt>eraf Whlle under no Jegal obU&ation to abid• by the recomQtenda1lom, peef pressure bas forced enouah to do so to hav .. made the AUTOCAP proiram &n increulna 1uc~ ce1J1. " The National Automobile Dealers Assoelatlo~ Is worklnr wltb dealer assoolaUona to aet up additional proaratn•, and last spring the manaiers ot AUTOCAP 1JJsoqlatlons formed a national councir. ITS AIMS ARE TO EXPAND mE procram to other de•ler auscd Uom., prov id a forum tor tbe exebange of in· (orlgation, NCOmmend national stan<Jarda and procedures to aasist asaocfa\lons h\ their lndlvidual p~r1m1. There are zCAUT-OCAPS'set ul) to handle complalnts. The.re lsllOfleb' cauromla. Other programs function without the panel system ln states aerosi the hatlon, so everyone should be able to find some aslistlll\Ce from AUTOCAP. But ti:i tryini. to resolve auto complall)t,a. at.tempt first to work out the problem with. 1hedealer. For more f aels about tbls c0nsurner-orlented non.profit proaram, write or phone the National Automobile Dealers Assn., 8400 \fpst Park Drive, Mc.Lean, Va., 22101; pbone (703) *21·7070. CAMBRIDGE. 14~1. <AP>-MIT,r~tarcbers 1~con- 1tructtng a ~hoof bdlldldg they HY wlll capture 85 percent of lts heat trom tbe IUD by, USlnJ special W.indOWJ, celUJ28 Ules and venetian blinds -but no movtnc parts. Tbe one.story structure, wbich wlll be the size ind shape of a house, wHI be used tor classroom• at Massachusetts Inautute of Technology. Ill buUden say lts heating system is Use fint or its k.tnd. THEY SAY TllAT HEATING TQOtTGK the build Inc's structural parts la far che .. per than the more con~nt.lonal kind of aolar heating, which uaes t.he sun to heat c(rculatln' water. The 900-squartt·f oot buUdJ011 which wiJI cost lt00,000• w)ll be flniahed In January. The new building matertalt beint u.sed aro~ -Double·C>at\e windows that lose on..-:quarter or tho beat of ordinary insultt.cl ~,ius but let In almon as much • U1bt. • #!I -One-Jneh·lhlck ( J uilina WM that store E'~Dl"'V ttie day's heat and re· n.nnui reaseitatnfght. -VeMtlan blind$ tha~ reflect awtlfght on-,,._...;;...;;.. ..... _______ to the ceiUne. • The we that does wU1 be produced by llectrlc ' 1 •.Si9iili8 Po,.~-r.f;iit of Tragedy A·:fJitJd's ~icyclt'"'bnd a burned-out rounda· t oT .t~ home she left arc grim remind· t! ! orthe. brush fire that raged through lb~ Santa Monica mountmns Monday and 'rucsd<.ty bcrore being partially contained. , .... • .-ril~~l:~PLACERVJU.:.E fAPt El Oorndo Counly supervisors arc delayini proposed airport noise 6lundurds that would • have the effect of k'eep· ·-"1'.tl'~:.:i1u in1 man)' jets from land· Sheriff's deputies sift through the ashes for possible valuables that might be salvaged by distraught owners. Six homes were destroyed by the blaze which charrt>d some 000 acres. Ins at South Lake Tahoe. Instead. the supervisors voted 'rut's day to mooltor nohte levels at the Lake Tahoe Airport. County otficiuls said the rnonilorl ng -~....,..---------0--------~.,.,.,..--...-..... -...... _..,...........,.,..._-'"--ft-- would delay chactment of any ordinance for about a year. becuusc .the equipment won't b available until next sprlni. THE BOARD also asked the Federal A \'it.I· lion Administration. which has critic1~d the proposed ordinance, to Thieves Ring Wrong Chimes work with the county on noise standards Some Tahoe Basin reli· idents have been com- plaining about jet noise. which they vay 1s amplified by the basin's natural echo. ....u .. rlc:.,d M.terC._,.. S\'\ DIEGO 11'1'1 Eight bl•ll., anlJ ull s well l h a I l' rHh wt• I I , t h c dil'hcs go and '>0 say the :\1 urtnl'~ \\ho lwvc· their m1.,s111s.: murit1m<: bell back 111 il'i place al the :\hHllll' Corps Rel'ru1t Dt>pot Somt·Onl' stole the bell. Tax Relief Bill GOP Seeking To Reconvene S1\CH,\ \f ENTO 1:\P1 ,\n attempt to force th<• C<1liforrua Lcs.:1.,laturc to reconvene to act on , propert~ lax relid proposal-; ha-; hcen launched by 10 {{c·1mhlitan la\\ makt·rs · Our purpost• in bringing the Legislature back ' togclht•1 1s to trt-<1tc· a !Jlrum to enact property lax I r<:hl·f µnor to lh<: h:g 1sl .itT\ <:<ins I aught in January,·· \s~wmlJly minont) floc1r leader Paul Priolo of )lahbu said TuC'sday ~EITHER .\SSE~1BL Y Speaker Leo McCarthy of San l'runt 1sco nor St>natc President pro tem James· Mitts, llw two Democrats who h«i_ad up the IA·~islaturc. were immediately available for com- m ent McCarthy and a Senute commitle&"b~aded by Mills ha\'e aulhorit v to reconvene the Legislature hrforcthc l!JiKi.t•ssion hcgin..,Jan 2 r •· ~fcO\RTllY and M1lb don't act in 10 days o.n lht• (;op 11ct1t1on ncpuhl1cans say they will,altempl to go :iround the D<'mocrat1c leadership t)y circulat· mg petition-; to the entire Lc~1slature. That maneuver would require the support of nJ;arl\ half of the Democrats in the Legislature. but GOP sources smd thoy felt many Dclnocrats now ll)ay be" 1lhng lo rcccrnvenc to take up a tax relier hill .. Dfo:~10CHATI{' GOV. Edmund Brown Jr ·~ of. ftct• <111.J not tomment on the Republican move. Bro'' n pn.~' iously said he wanted the Legislature lo "meditate" on the tax Jssue before he would call a sp t'('IUI SCSSllJO ·In commcnL-; released by a spokesman. Priolo said fil·pubhcuna "don't have a specific proposal .. because thut WQuld immediately split lawmakers aloni.: lh<' purt11;an lines which caused lax relief bills to f:.111 bt'forc lhq Legislature recessed two months ago A 54.8 B ILLIO~ r1ve·year relief plan. rl11anccd mostly from surplus state funds. died in the final hours or the regular session in September. Rt.>publiCflns helped btock that measure, arguing tJl<U t00-much of lhe money was earmarked for low· income person~ and not ~nough for middle.Income families facldg big U>creascs in property tax bills. "Obv1owJly we have our own ideas. We.are very rn~·h in fuyor of spcntling limits on the state and local government :ind indexing " to adjust income tai bruckelB for inflation and giving a greater pot· tion or the relief to mlddle·incomc home-owners th;o. Bcowa~topose<.I. Priolo added used lo l1.'i4Ch novice :\fannc-; hovJ to toll the time of day on a 11h1p, off ih post Sunday night in front of the Murine Se~ Srhvol But oUicials say a mystery 11honc caller l<Jtc Monday lold them lhoy could find the 50· ·car-old trcusure al the 'lie c hapt11. ., Under the proposed or dinance, airplane noise ORAH6E Te11ffft -kllftfl• 14" Mo. T1t1Hn Mt 17J4) 997·9960 would be limited to 99 ------------~-----!"'--~----.---- I .. Our T OUGh of Cla&S made more luxurious with · Pernla S6tt • save 50?/o on if perf ~ct price T raa1tion&I. loom -woven acrylic blaM<ets. they have Perm~ '5oft® f 1n1sh lhal ~kes them all the oetter to sleep under. NyJ.P.o...~at1n b1nd1ng won t ravel. thanks to Everlocke sl1tch Marvelous savings on wh11e. champagne. mahogany. buttercup or cognac. Not all colors . Twin size. If perfect $35. 15.99 Full size. lf_e_erfect !40. 18.99 King size. If perfect $54. 25.99 Bedroom Accessories I I TUB .. f\EPOBLICl\NS filed under rules that . ' would reconvene tho lawmakers into regular l sessions, ~ich operate under broader rutes than • ttle special ses!Son which Brown has the power to C()R)(~~ I t Priolo said he hud no ~pec\fic date in mind t.o I ®nvcnc the Legislatµre. except that it would ps;ob· ably be early DR¢cm1)er. f ~ . ' ' SEVEN i\SS£rtl BLVMEN ond three senators. Jncluding ncurly all of the GOP leadership of both !!f'uses. !llifl<.'<l the e_elltions. which were filed lato JIUesduy WJtta., {ho Clerkll CJ( the Senate and AS· sernbly Priolo said the RepubUcan leadership decided Monday to file ttl pct1t1on1 to reconvene beC?ause "a eombtnalion'Or r-.clotll has come logeUieri .. •• • • . \ • • orangoeo. 1oa11yP110~ Editorial Page .. .................................... ~~ ............. , Proposed Reform Goes Overboard The campaign reform ordinance beine considered by the Irvine City Council is, like the proposed county or- dinance upon which it is modeled, unfair in its assumptions about contributors. It would forbid a council member from voting on prac· ticall'y any matter which involved a so-called "major" qampaign contributor. Such a contributor would be de· fined , if some members of the council have their way, as one who donates any sum to a candidate. That provision would take away the vote of the council l)lember, who is presumed "bought off' by a contribution (not until but even if proved otherwise). 1t also would dl1: enfranchise the prospective contributor . And it dllen- franchises the rest of the citizens who voted for that particularcoun'il member . Further, it \':ould lead to m8Jor decisions being voted · by a minority of the council It assumes that the contnbutor can have no interest in good government for its own sake, nor interest in the com- mon welfare of the community in which he lives. It is true that county and city governments in Orange County have suffered tremendous losses of prestige · because of heavy bank rolls handed over to political cam- oaigns. But the proposed Irvine ordinance assumes too much evil on the part ot tl'le contributor and too much inherent dishonesty on the part of the elected official. And, besides, it's almost certainly unconstitutional. Voting Oddity On the eve of local water district elections last week. trustees in the Saddlcback Valley and Capistrano unified school districts learned, apparently for the fi rst time, that they could vote m the election in the name of their districts. Because votes ar~ distributed on the basis of assessed valu ation of land. the districts were eligible voters. Combined, the}' held about four million votes in three water district elections. Neither school board could get the agreement needed to use ~eir voting power But 1f trustees had. they could have voted m water district balloting for one current school trustee. one former trustee, the husband of another trustee and a Saddleback College trustee. The d istrict's votes were not enough to make a differ ence m any of the elections . But the story could be changed in the fu ture when major land hol dings are t broken up for development. f If the eu1-r<mt land·bascd election system continues, • the district ·s votes cou ld be a deciding factor in water ' dislrit'l elections. It ·s a pcc.:uli ar situation that underlines the need for a change in the system. Now, directors elected by ' major landowners c.::rn tax a nd create debt for the residents If residents don't have the a bi Ii ty to out vote the landowners. then it's taxation without representation. 'This jm;t doesn't jibe with what we expect from our government today School Am.enities T h e Dana Iii lls 'High School c om munlty is 1 understandably provoked that brand new Capistrano f Vall ey High School will have a stadium next year, when 1 Da na IUlls has none arter four years. • Dana Hills students have tried to raise ful)ds ror a stadium since November, 1974 , when their principal1 Wa lter Spencer , died. The Spencer memorial funa currently amounts to $1,800. Now a 5437 ,500 gi(t from the Mission Viejo Company has bought a st adium for Capistrano Valley High, with no apparent effo rt by anyone connected with the school. But school amenities don't have to depend upon the largess of a single developer. The El Toro High School community left no stone unturned in its determlnatlon to see a swimming pool built at th~ school. When its chief backer, Supervisor Ronald Caspers, died, his successor, Thomas Riley, was won to the cause. The pool opened last year .. Thia kind of effort could build a Dana Hills stadium as well. • Op1n1ons expressed •n th• apace above are those of the Dally Piiot. Other views expressed on thl• page are thoae of their author• and at1ists. Reader comment 11 Invited. Addr••• The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Meaa, CA 92626. Phone(714) 642·4321 . Boyd/ Gerbil Talk JSY LM. BOYi) It has now been determ1ned scientifically that the nttle onimala known as 1erbl11 do talk to one another ln their own languaco "r.:--1a,y!n1 such thin11 as "I love you .. and "I feel IOU$)' today·• -but in ul- traaon~ ayllabh lhat oan on· ly be ptckeil up by hl1hly sensttlve lnatrumentl. Unlveraity of tt'Uu •cholars founCl that out. , tn ~er bedroom for more than three years. She dldn"t. want anybody to know she needed hla handiwork. Those who press tor public nudity polntout that there are more than 300 Jifesbe naked flaurea in Micbelan1elo'a 811· Une Chaptl ceinhl· DEARBORN, Mlcli. -Auto maker• have trumpeted the won· der1 and benefits of their new models for so many years that we tend to tum a deaf ear to this enormous Industry. But now the rulers of autodom have a meaaage worth li1t to because lt tells us what w e w ill b e drivlna in the yea r s Im med la t e l y a he a d and b o w o ur economy will c hange be· cause or it Simply put, most people won't be able to buy the cars they are accustomed 10, wh at they will drive will feel dif· fe rent, will even.tua lly cost somewhat more to buy, but will be lessexpensive to opetale. "Th ls ls a revolution," says Robert B. Alexander, vice presi- dent of product development al Ford Motor Co. "Our induatr)' tended lo be evolutionary rather than revolutionary. We used to design and style cars for what we perceived was cons umer de· mand. Now we do it to meet gov. ernmenl·m a ndated require· men ls. The big lce·cream cone is always what sold. Now tbe gov- ernment tells us wh at ice-cream the cone must be " DETROIT IS spending b\llions lo trim do>A1\ its future models, so that their performance will lm· prove from a n average of 18 m iles per "allon in 1978 to 271'2 m p.g by 1985. Federal laws caused Detroit to engage in a "downsizing" effort, as it is called here Consider how fo rmidable the auto industry ts in our economy. One of every six workers makes his living from motor vehicle and related industries. When auto sales drop $1 billion, 57 ,000 Jobs ar e lost. The in· dustry's whopping appetite con- sumes 60 percent of all the syn. lhclic rubber produced in the Uni ted Stales and also these amounL-;: malleable iron, 47 per· cent; steel, 19 percent; 7.inc. 33 percent; aluminum . 12 percent. Am en cans s pend nearly 10 percent of their disposable in· come on ownership and use of cars While the United Stales has 6 percent or the world's popula- tion, 41 percent oC the world's passencer cars are here. There are now some 140 million cars and trucks on our highways If the statistics are heavy. the fu ture car won't be At Ford, cars produced now avera1e about 4,000 pounds. By 1910 that number wUl be 3,500, and by l~ only 3,000 pounds. TO Ct1I' weifht, Detroit wlll build more 'front·wheel drives (allowlnai a ll1hter frame>. create thinner doors and uee more aluminum, hl1h·strenrth, low-alloy steels and plastics. Only lHt week Ford an· nounced it was W1ln1 super·lltht, expensive, (raphlte fiber in aome of its better cars and wlll even· tually build a prototype 1979 car, using 1raphite extens ively, weighing only 2,750 pounds A graphite drive shaft weiahs five po unds less than one of steel, and a graphite hood la 25 pounds less than a steel version ·'The U.S. economy will be alte red cons iderably,·· Al ex- ~dtU" says. "Radial tires wUI rtually become 1!.Jndard nn ture cars because they affect. cl economy favorably. There ., wlll be more and m CU'I on the road, but gaaolfne consump. lion ta lolnf to drop subltan· tlaUy. "We are movJn1 toward a maintenance.free car requlrln1 no scheduled work for the flnt 50,000 mllet. We're already into ensioea where tbe oil needa to be chanaed onty at 7,500 Qr even 10,000 miles. New can with tour cyllndera need tune ups only every 30,000 miles. THERE'S wholesale appUu- lion or ....... , •• devices on 1978 c • and electronic engine con s comlnc. This means the y of the small service on could be threatened ause they'll need m o r e sophisticated t..00111 . diagnostic equipment and skilled technicians. We've already seen the trend to sell-service gas sta- tions which aot out of the repair business. "( thin k the re is misun- 4eutandlng in th ~umtr'• • mind aboUt what's hap~ned to our f nduatrY.. The conaumer ml1bt want one thins, bul 'thO aovernment tells u• to: bulld sometbint else and that's a permanent condition we aro wW-:. ma to live wltli. '' The t rm .. horsepower" It u much a part ol American folklore as "Panama Canal," andlt:won't be easy for Americana to drop It end start. thlnkln1 ln terms of "horsePQwer·t&wei1hUactor"' or "cubic-c:Uaplacement.. ·· "HOBSEPOWEll won •t mean much," Alexander explains. "because leas wlll be needed. f~ these much Utthter can. lo the '30s, we had a Ford V·8 enaLne with only 6S honepower. •· Car buyers, five to 10 years rrolft now, will see mucb smaller model1, but ttl•Y wlll 1tl11 be loaded wt.th popular opUons like automatic transmlssion, power assists and air-condtuonin1. There will be less empbasts on styllnai. •nd buyers wlll have to pa)' prerolum prices ror l&rle&' models. ''All the companies face the same problen'l ot col)(orming to tht new Jaw111, &o th li-'ivd ua a chance to chante °"" ttadltlonal share (25 percent> otthe tnarket. Whoever doos the new work best should improve hll awe of the market,'' Alexander says. Prod any auto man and he'lJ , grudgingly a gre. the new star<- dards are neceasary but w1U also mutt.er that tno rederal tltnetable IR prten unrealistic. ''ll hnplles that Invention un be Je1lslated, which we know lsn'tjrue," Alex- ander says. "It's dittlcult. to meet t oug he r emisaion standar<ls, which cut ruel economy, and at the s ame time moet new stan- dards ror ruel economy.·· WHATEVER, there ls no sip that .Americans want to gtve up their.beloved cars. A• one of Jim· m y Ctsrtcr·a own Qfflclals. ln the Department or Transportation observed: "tr the car djdn't ex- ist, the rtnt. lhing l would do la in· vent. ll because it i11 such a marvelous transportation de- vice. I don't see a aubstllute tor it in the next S() years." Thote are words i>etroil llkes to hear, wh1le fending off imports <now about 20 percent of market), coplnt with federal re- aulatlona and tr,yin& to persuade' customet1 accu1tomed to big, sort-rlde cars, to the oew, st.JfC~ ride, more basic models comina up. Help for Real ~state Rip-off Vieiims To the Editor: I read with interest the letter to the editor lb the Nov. 6 edition or the Pllot headed ·'Cut-Throat Tactic'' and 1t1ned by Michael D. Gardner. I am pleased the let· ter was written and printed, as it gives me the oppqrtunity. to re1pond h\ a manner that might be helpful to those who find them1elvea in a similar situation, and, perhaps, to Mr. Gardner, hlmeelf. Flrat of all, the re are. nece11artly, many gaps in Mr. Gardner'• letter. If it was too lon1, of course; you would not print tt Rtadlnt between the llne1, howev er, there 15 a po11ibility that California Real Eatate Law h .. been violated, in which case the commissioner wUl ,take actlon. Incidentally, there now la a Department of Real Ettat. office in Santa Ana which may be contacted. BOAJffis or realtors, such as the one whlch employs me, are prlvale organlzatlons and cannot pre-empt the courts..J but we do have a certala. .;'tlnuence and cauae for action against one of o\f? own members who violate. lht law or our coide of ethics. Our boal'd, for example, tlu einplo)'ed a ~•ltor or experUso ln thla area lo act H "om· bud1man'" for want ol a b8ttetU· tie. He lt well known In the com- nnsnll)I u a~ Qf credlblllty. and wen vtried ln the :pracUcal ap~lldUob ot our code Of etblcs. U a lniinber of the ieneral ~ublk hu ":a It! viftce qaliisl one of our memb,tr1, that .,.non ahould call our ombudsman, M . Gior1e Wllll1mt0ill at 8*1811 for con.uuatlon. If h~ can belp. ht will. II h1 f tt.11 the problem b OUt.iWle GUt ~vt'9 J\iriidleu6n, lit Will IO MriM tDd •Ula-t Who lb• •111'.lev.cl ~lei ~a.act G~MARtlN Sx~tlnoalew N~ll ..... .ca.taM•a Biard el~ AC14A-•lat TothtMtcli' .... ,.. i!1 MlllllW;' *"' ....... from her $30,000 per year job. Perhaps i;he could rlnd something she could do in the private sector, but then again, to be fired Crom a position which would protlably pay much less does not require an aUorney or a hearing. DALE JOHNSON Poer E%••Jtle To the Editor· I am the parent of a 14.year old who attends a local public hiab school. It bas come to my attention in recent weeks of tbe use of pro- r ani ty and intimidation in our schools. Not by the students, but the teachers! The teach.rs, to whom we entrust the education of our children. The educated, adult, muture individual. What good doe• lt do to Instill resJ'ect ror authority and respect tor elderis when children can be cursed at '1\d threatened? If teachers want respect, Obe· dlence and dl1cipllne !n a classroom then the~ have to ex· peel lt -not threaten ln order to achieve their end. NAME WITHHELD . .. ., ...... To the Editor: For the third time in less than a year. Thomas Ellu baa eeen flt to attack our treatment of tax de- ferrals and credits to wbitb we are entitled under Federal law. For the third lime, Mr. Eliu' column contains a diatorilon of the facts. Three element.s of bis latest column -"Firms' Losa ii Oun, Too" (Nov 5) requJre particular mention ln this regard. Mr. Elias claims we "asked the Internal Revenue Service to declare them ineU1lble for tax writeoffs they_ have used alnce 1970." I IN ASKING the IRS for a rul- ing re1ardin1 our contlnued ellglblUty for tax deferrals and credits under the metl'iods the Cal,fomia Publlc Utlllties Com· mission seeks to impose on us, we dld not ask we be declared in· ellgible. We did expreH out doubts lhat the CPUC method was coruslatent with Federal Jaw because we must oandidlf polnt out all tbe facta to the RS or their ~· wtll not be bindlnl~ ,., ""' ' a.. (Ill> N Qllt °" ;ir..-1: 1: ~·:ll: ~ 1-::.~ pr~··]~ ~i=i*t!~.~ ,1.tt , 1 :-. 41 .. ~ i '1 ~·t.· • u, H,,, ···t;. A 1·· " -\.o ~". 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" IJ *"J lJllo • ... . • MEDIA'l'ORS tN THE f&oGRAMS set U.P by the city an>d atatedealer usoci1tlon1 -calledAutomotlve Consumu Adlon t>rograma ozo AUTOCAPS-convene "1\11.,-ly. They hive the endorsement or the predd~t 'a Office of CoDtumer A1faJrsandarenmb11oullpaidataff11>lusvolunteerpanela ot auto dealers andconsumen. • The mediators hear cornplalnta that c1onot be resolved by copa,un\er eonllct with the deal~ra.or by AUTOCAP ataft memoert. While under no le&al obli&•tJon to abide by the recommendaUona, peer pressure has forced enou1h to do so to have made tbe AUTOCAP proaram an increuloa auc- cesa. The National Automobile Dealen Al$0Clat.lcm la working wttb dealer ~laUons to set up addlUoMl. procr•ms. end last a print the rnanaaera or AUTOCAP usoclaUona formed a national couoclf. I -ITS .PMS ARE TO .EXPAND THE procram to other dealer asiocUtlons, provide a forum for the e"ebange of in· fonoQUOn. ~mrnend naUonal st.an~ards and proceduru to u11l1t auocfa\{Obl tn their Individual p~rams. There m M~AUTOCAJ>S'set up t6 bindle complaint&. '11\~Te ianonei.aCallfomia. Other pn>graftl1 function wtthout the panel aystem in states across the ne<lon, so everyone should be able to find some asst.stance from AUTOCAP. But in tryio1. to resolve auto complall)ta, attempt firtl to work oul the problem •1th. tbodeater. For more fact.a about thla eonaumer-orlented non·proflt. prQ1r1m, wttto or phone the NaUonal Automobile n.alen • Asan.,8400\fi tParkDrive,McLean, Va.122101; phone(7~> ~21·7010. L ENERGY San Diego financier C. Arnholt Smith ond his daughter have been sued for more than $8,000 in unpaid accounts to a travel agency. CllOLLMAN HELEN E. CHOLLMAH, ~ 1•. R .. 101n1 of Hunlfn91on 811ch, C. Pe\..O •••Y ~Y Hovemllff 14, 't/111 •I Ho.9 Memorltl HHplltl, St.rvlwd by• noe<:t Gt.Or• Pv.,.11"9 of Trenton, ,.... Jer"y Mll4 Crollm.,. wH • rneml>lr ol l Ill Hwnllntldfl Buell S.nlor Clllttfll, GrtvulO• .-.. 101 frkley Nowmw 11, ltll et 12.lO P.M. tn llMI N~w Cemtllry, Som· mervlll•, ,...., Jetwv Pier<• &rollllrs Sm11ns' Mor1-y on ctwr119 of lo<el ••· r1nvemtfl111. IATTAGLIA HARltY J . BATIAC.LIA. Ollld Nov. 13, 1911, r .. IOenl OI Ml•\lon ll11Jo. Hell ~urvlved by 1111 •lie Adtl•""· two .on•. JOHPh & Pnlt11p 8ell•9 ll1, e l9M 9re11dclllldren, one ""'' Mr\. JOUphlne l'ortl, And "•P•lller Jo'tpl\1ne °""''" Rowry 1111• 1v1n1n9 1 P M II 0 C.onnor Lt9une Htlh Morl~ry U..pel. Min of chrt•llen ' -1•1, Tllu<MWy ,AM, II ~I. Ktlhen ~tho41< Cl>vr<I\, Ml"'°" lllljO. lnllf" menl A>ttn>oon C:..mtltry MOSULLY MARC.ARE. r L M(Y.)uLL y. , .. ldenl o4 NtwpOrl 0.KI" IM\'o.0 IWly Nov• 1m1>er 11, IV/I !.ne I\ wrv1veo by ont \l\lar Ger1rude Jeckton of APC»• Vettty, Ce. Memorntt Mtvo<•• wilt be Mid on T""'-Y November 11, ""el I 00 PM Btll BrotdWly Chepel , Pr1w•t• 1nt~tnvftl In 1..-u ot flow•n. oon•t.on\ ~., bt """'1• to • ••vorne <htrtly. bell bro..a .. 1y Mor111ery c:J1rett0f\ HUNT HAROLD p HUN r. ·~•clenl ol C.O•i. M•W, P••..O ....... Nowml>er 12, IYl1, He 1\ \urv1Yedby mottwr P•lrt<Li t1uttt ot l •11. C• • one""•' Mal-. Hunl of NellWOOfl B•tkh f.-UfWr•• Mf'll(ei ~ 1nl•rn11nt In T.it, CA. 8111 Brwelway Mor •~r., '«•I a1rec.ton Deaths . Elsewhere· DENVER CAP> - Arthur Roy Mitchell, 86, the Western artist com- missioned in 1959 to de· sign Colorado's centen- nial e mblem, "Rush to the Rockies,·· died Tues· day. ATLANTA <AP> Al· Jen Locker man, 70, one of the FBI special acents involved in the capture and s laying of the m· famous gangster John Dillinger, died Monday. COTTONWOO·D . Idaho <A P> -E lmer Tay l or, 90, great · grandson of President Zachary Taylor, died Monday. PtPCI IROTHEIS SfMTMS' MOftUARY 627 Main St Huntington 8NCh 53M539 ,.., ....... , CCM.OMIAL NMDAL HOMI 7801 Bolsa Ave. · Westminster '893-3525 P4ClltC YllW MIMORIAL PAH CemetetY Mortuary Chapel 3500 Paoflc View Oriw Newpo~. C.llfornla 84"•2700 W.CO•MICI MOllUARIH Laguna Beach 49.C·9<f15 Laguna Hilla 798.0933 San Juat'l C.pistrano •es.1ns