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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-11-23 - Orange Coast PilotWEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 23, 1977 VOL. 7t, NO. 117, 4 HCTIOHI, • .. AGH MllUons of Dollars Im· Pot Raid .. Closes P:robe -By AJt'l'llU& &. \'INSEL ••Dlttf Nlil .... Federal narcotics aaenta at.rik- lng in downtown lla.11tlGCton Beach and SeatUe. Wash., ar- rested the laat two men indicted In connection with an alleged multi-million dollar West Coast marijuana distribution ring truesday nipt. The U.S. Justice Department had already taken unprecedent- ed action aeainst one of the al- lesed principals, aeizine nearly a half-million dollars worth of Buena Park real estate. Authorities said today It was conflacated under provisions of the federal Organized Crime Control Act because it was al· Je1edly purchased with funds trom 41'UI trafficking. AJent Joe Flanders of the U.S. Department of Drug Enforce- ment, slid it Is the first Ume the •tatute hu ever been used In Ce.llfomia. 4ent Flanders said the bulk <I the marijuana Involved was landed via a U.foot Marauder racht at various points in Oranae County h1cludtng Huntln1ton Beach aDd 101.d in SeatUe. Police Book .. I . ~:....,,,.. ...... ,,,, .. --~.-..... ·.,. - ..... '.. -· ' "The bulk of it •as distributed in Seattle, but there was some • dl9tributed in Orange County," he said. A Investigatort wh obtained a !ed,ral grand jury dictment in Los An1eles accuse the aix men -one cwrently in federal p'rison ,. on a previous narcotics sentence -of operat1n1 between June or 1973 and December of last year. "They were allegedly brinpi1 in 1,000 pounds a month from Mexico and that's only for tbe period in the indictment. We think they were lb business for a lot longer than that," Fland said. Charged 1n the case are: -Rud>'. Guerrero, 48, of 914 Pecan Ave .• HunUnaton Beadi. (See DRUGS, Pase A2) s· feet tall and is built annually by the Corps• of Cadets before the Texas-Texas A&M · 1 football game. The fire Will W lit Frittay on the A&M campus at 7:30 p.m. , Expendv' Accident Bemused tow truck driver contemplates damage to pair of high-priced autos following crash Tuesday aftemoon in Newport Beach. Accident took place about .12:30 p.m. in the 900 block of West Coast ~ghway. ~olice said no one was injured m the accident. The Porsche was driven ·' . F,....PageAI .t.bY Charles Patterson, •9, Newport Beacb1 e according to Police reports. Hia car slla u~der the parked Cadillac owned by G1ltspur Exhibits of Garden Grove. The cause of the crash is under investigation, ;>olice said. ~·,.....-~n- The 1pokeamu aaJd no Other Orance County eonnectlcm ls believed to be Involved ln tbe cue. which nporteid.bt eentAlhd on a dummi pone oPel'atlon .- Two Nevada Routes Aake.d For.Air Cal Obscene Gesttire ., .,,. DRUGS ••. -wmra'i11 J . Donnelly, 39, of Seattle. -David C. Christian, 48, of Downey. -August Palmeri, 47, of Ora nae. -Rog~r L . Nelson, 42, of Orange. -Keith A. Kidd, 42, who is cur· rently serving a drug-related federal prison term at the minimum security prison in Pleaauam, near San Francisco. All are charged in the indict· ment with possesaion and dis· tributioo of marijuana and con· spira~y to possess and distribute mariju8l)a. Ball for Christian, whose eight commercial lots and one residen· tial lot in Buena Park are being held by the government, is set at $35,000,Agent Flanders said. Ball for Guerrero, who was ar· rested Tuesday nilht. in Hunt· ington Beach, and Donnelly, who was arr~sted in Seattle, is $10,000, he added. Palmeri's bail is $25,000; Nelson's $15,000; and tt0,000 bail was set for Kidd just for eood measure, although he is safely confined and unable to skip out.of Pleasanton, DEA agents aald. Guerrwo and Donnelly were expected to be arraigned t.od~ in Loa Angeles and Seattle on the 14-count indictment naming all six codefendants. Investleatora said it was audits of buslness records that led to the defendants. "All Qf them are roofers," Agent Flanders said. "But their business .records showed they were l~lng money while they were bUytng real estate and a yacht." The value of Christian's Buena Parle property ia estlmat· ed at $4SO,OOO. After evaluating the 10.year· · old Organized Crime Control Act, federal attorneys and the arand jury ord~ed CbrlaUan's land seized last Friday. Mesa 'Model' Held by Police Costa Mesa pollce arrested an employee of a Costa Mesa outcall modeUn1 and escort aervlce TUesday after •he alle,edly of. f ered to do roore than model Patricia Susan Met11er, lt, of Costa Mesa, faces chareea of aolicltatlon to commlt prostltu· tlon, police said. Inv.atlsator Geor.ie Yefbkk eald he called tbe modeUnl service and arraneed to mf:et the 1u1»ect at a motel room at about l:Sd p.m. She was arrested after a dhctasaion with the in- v .. ueatot'. DAILY PILOT . . Air California bu epplled to the Civil AeronauUca Board for RUied 'No Cri.me' · perml11lon to fl1 betwHn Oranc• ~ NrPort anct two Nevada ~Uu. kiDo Ucl Lu Veau •. • LANSING, Mich. CAP) -A motorist wbo "aave the fin&er " to a plainclothes policeman after their cars were nearly involved in an accident did not commit a criminal offense ln making the gesture, the Michigan Court of Appeals ruled today. The court Qverturned a tower court decision which found Edward Smith of Auburn Heights guilty of making an obscene gesture and violating a minor traffic ordinance in the nearby city of Oak Park. The incident occurred In 1975 as Smith was making a left-hand turn into a filling station and nearly sideswiped another car. Smith then angrily made the gesturtl_ "and bis lips were ob- served "'"to move in what was believed to be an obscene ut· terance," the court said. The other car was an un- marked )>()lice car driven by a plainclothes officer, who arrest· ed Smith on the two charges. The Oak Park Circuit Court convicted Smith on both count.a and fined him $.'J() a plua $4 In court costs. Smith took the ob- scene gesture conviction to Oakland County Circuit Court, which uPheJd \he ruling. But Smith, arcu.lna that his First Amendment right to freedom of expression was be· ing violated, took the case to the Michigan Court of Appeals, which at first refuaed to consider it. Smitll then went to the st.ate Supreme Court, which ordered the Appeals Court to Uste~ to Smith's argument. In its tuline, the court nOted "that thouah defendant's CSmlth's) action was immature and obviously offended the of. .ficer's pride, it was not conduct which, under the circumatances ln which it was given, would lead to a breach ofthepeace." ruling would not be tolerated. "This cowt does not iDt.en4 to condone Of open the door to tbe gesture .• .in all future oecur· r .ences. Given the right circumstances, the law may re- taliate, not with its tinier but with Its long arm." FroaaPageAJ BOVAN ••• the four men are due in Oranee County Superior Court for a s imilar hearing. The complex le&al batUes stem from the Oct. 22 shooting death ot Bovan, 'a 38·year-old Fountain Valley resident. He was shot.nine times as he was leaving the El Ranchito restaurant in Newport Beach. ~ AccordhTg to court records, de- f endant Fiori has admitted to be- ing the triggerman 1n Bovan'1 death. Fiori. a relocated federal witness, also faces dnal cbarpi following his arrest in Coeta Mesa. • The orily defendant free on $750,000 ball ls Kulik. ~e ·21- year-old bead of a Newport Beach firm known u Prasadain Distributors, Inc. He also faces separate drug chqes ofter be was at-rested 1n Mlaston Viejo, al· leeedly in ponesaion of 1.1 pounds of heroin. " Tuesday's len1tby bearlq opened with Judge Franklln de- nying a district attorney mot.ton to disqualify himself on 1rounc11• of prejudice. Juqe Franklin claimed the moUon wu not ftJecl at the proper time. The four defendants wlll be back in court Monday, at which time witneu-.Bosal ud llarOne are expectecftQ appftr. Prnklti baa ordered that a ~.ooo bench warrant.for their arnltB be held• The court also said lt aym· pathized with Smith '1 outburst. ~untilM~. • "It was a spootaneoua reaction to a sudden emercency which commonly occurs each day. In 9.uch minor stress circumstances, many drivers ut· ter profane words - a normal re- action in everyd.ay traffic COD· gestion.'' the court said. . The court noted, howeyer, that it was ruling only 1n one 1peclflc case and that blatant abuse of the DEA 'A&ent Killed WASIDNGTON (AP) -A U.S. Drug Enforcement Adrolhlltra· tlon aeent, Robert c. Ltahtfooti. 34, of Ban Dteco, stationed ln Bangkok, Tba1.land, was tat.ally· wounded todaY in u accidental 1bootlng, DEA A4mlnl1trator Peter B. BeftSiD.aer H;t~1 Builder Held · In Bomb. . iqg ' s.(N JOSE (AP) -A Santa Ctuz boat builder wu In duatody today on federal cbaraee Item· ming from tbe alle•ed nr .. bombing of aix crop duatlnc pl1tnea at a Salinas airport. John Clark Haua. M. ~ federal a1ents •aScl wu e~ ed to a ten'Orist ll"OUPf WU g.. rested ~Y at hll home. Uanna wu ordered belcl Oil $100,000 ball alter belft1 u· ratgned· In San ';,lose .b•'r. fedeul Ma1i1tr•t• Nordln Blacker on ~J<>avu cbarc~ Weatenl Air Linn also •· nounced tb1I w.U that lt ta Helt- in1 CAB authorisation to fiy between <>ranee County and Las Veias. Botb are HtldnS c0ulderaUon under the Callfornla /Nevada' Low Fare JnveeU1atJon Cue. Thia proeeedinf ta under way bef Ol'e the CAB and in•olves possibly settln1 new routes and rates between CaWornla and Nevada cities. Air California currently flies out of Or~1e County Airport. Weat~rnAlrllnesdoes not. Strike Widening NEW YOftK (AP) -A step.up from selective strikes to 1eneral strikes was autborlled for waterfronta in Phlladelpbla, New Orleans and Baltimore Tllelday nl1bt 11!:a~~ the Ina.na-tional en'• Auocl•· tloD. upbythiFBJ. N"amed bi the lndletment, in addition to Rlzzltello, were Jack LoCicero, 65, of Hollywood, and James "Jimmy the Wtaael" Fratlanno, ~z ot tbe Su Fran· el1eo area. AU thrM were namtd by the' FBI u ruklnt leaden ol the Ml.fta ln Catif omla. AlJo indicted cm .eurces ol IP· i.rftrlDS with coiqmerce by thrHU and conspiracy 'Wff6 Thomu Ricclardl, '"a OI Canosa Park and Dominlc atfon•, a, formertyof C~ga Park and now posalblyinBrooklyn,N.Y. FBI a,&ea\I Mid tbey are still 1eeklng ?tatlanno, Raff one and Ricciardi. The spokesman said today that as far u be lmowaoooe of the suspecta bad previously been atven new identltiea and ...,. located ln tum for testlf)1U aealnat Mallaftiurea ln the Eut. One suspect in the murder of Stephen John Bovan on Oct. 22 1n Newport Beach was later r,port· ed to be1UCb arelocated wttnea. The cases are JtOt belltvtcl to be related. The invesUgation that led to TUesday's Indictments reported· ly began in March, 1976 and con· eluded ln September Of that year after the men reportedly tried tQ ·mate down ttle "l'• dummy operaUoo. NumStall ?ope'• Talk. VATICAN CITY (AP)- Two num WerruPted Pope Paul VI wtille be was ad· drH•inl Frenctl pllerlma today and were taken away by Vatican Offlclall for qu~ after tbe 80·ytar-ald rnUtt stopped ht• apeec tor a few. aeeondl. A Vatican otttclal eald the nuos in tbe flnt rows of the modernistic audience hall shouted "a few incom· prebensible words" to the pope. The pope resumed hia speech in French u the two nun.a -apparenUy Canadians-were Uken to an adJae«rt room. ·QUAKE •.• - Institute in Buenos Aires 'Mid measuring needlea on Ha seismological ln1trument1 ..Jumped off the paper" becaiwe of the lnt.enalty of tbe quake. The quake rellstered 7 on tlle Richter scale. Ita epicenter wu reported to be 620 miles west ol Buenos Aires near tbe Cblleau border. The Richter Scale JI •measure of around motion In: which every lncreue ol one wbote numbtr meabs a tenfold Increase ta magnitude. A reading of aeven la a major quake capable ot ea• Int widllprud heavy dama.-; • In Buenos Aires, thousands of panic·atricken reSidents ran IPto the au.a wba tremon from th9 quae riaebed the c~ No dama1• we• Ttported In B\Mnot Alnii. but WllldoWI ... tied •Dd bulldlap swayed. Tn1Pot1 81'9 lalrly comDMm In the Andean fOotbill rellODI fl Aretntlna, but they u. rue In • Buenos Alrel. SHOT •• ~ man, Michael Pavllsko, a 20- year·old cook they described u a transient. and inatead bit McJ.D. doe. . • Pavltako also wu arretticJ charted with usault ud b"at.: tery. • Ora~ County ·jallen said • Rlcha was htld Oil sio.ooo ball, Pa.U.lto an $150 bail. BJ MICllAEl.l PASKEVICB Clf .. 0.IY._lta# The COSta Mesa City Council hu taken the Offensive aaatnst a cont.rovenlll rezG11e initiative by the North Coata Meaa Homeownera Anoctation tbat wUl appear on tbe March 1 munltlpal ballot: Jn separate acUons llloDday nlgbt, councllmen ordered city offle!lals ~ School Spirit The whole school turned out Tuesday for Corona del Mar High School's Jog-a-th.on and senior Dan Brown, despite disability that requires him to use crutches, was no exception. He covered 20 laps in the event designed to raise fWlds for student activities and athletic equipment. Stu. dents. teachers and staff members took indlvidUal pledges for the number of laps around the school's track they could cover in an bOur. U all the pledges are cashed in, they'll have raised at least $36,000, stu· • dent leaders said today. BUENOS AIRES, Ar1entina (AP> -A ltrODI earthquake rocked westan Araeotbla early today, killln& at leut SO people and demoli.sb.IDI numerous build- in1s. the 1overnment sald. The quake, wblcb al.IO injured hundreds of people, many seriously, struck hardest near San Juan, a wine srowtna and agricultural city of S00,000 loc.i- ed 800 miles northweet of Buenoe Aires near the ChUun border. The tremors were felt in Buenos Aires u well u across the borders in Chile, Brazil and Peru. No serious damaae or casualties were reported in the other countries. The official news aaency Telam said 80 per~ent of the dwelUnp in rural comsnuniU11 on the outskirts of San Juan were demolished when the quake bit at 6:28a.m. (1:28PS'l'). Mottdwell· inga were of adobe or flimsy materlab. The heaviest damaae and maat casuaJUef occorrid ln Cauoete.: a ~· ~ °' •.O® 11 milea rnorttrw t iOf ~ UP. Telam aaid. The government ordered emergency fll&bta of medical supplies into the affected jwov· ince. Planes were d.iYerted to smaller fields in the area because the quake cracked the San Juanalrportnm.way. The National lleteorololleal In.stitute In Buenol Alia aald measuring needlea on its seiamological lnstrumenta "Jumped off the paper" because of the intensity of the quake. 'Tnatees Vote to A~pt. Monte Vista SchOol - early next yeat. · Tb'e committee. -hich ta scheduled to begin its task later this week. will Include high' school principals (includina Jack Coleman of McNally) and counselors from each blah school. . Followinl completion ot the re- port, lt will be up to tTustees to decide whether McNally should remaln a separate school or be incorporated into existing alternative education programs at regular hl•h achools; T~ have.not ruled out the posslblllO- that McN&llY could be moved to (SeeMCNAU.Y. PafeA!) GBidellaes Studied (!}(](] ·Board to AdJ, Sbiaent Member By IACDEBYMAN ... ...., .......... By PIDUP ROSMARIN ewttiilo.11y.....,..._.. The Irvlne C\tyCowicil. loold.na toward the March councllmanlc elections. voted 4·1 early today to draw up a cam· pai1n conlributlons ordinance aettinc limits on donations lo can· did ates. Councllman John Burton cast th• dissenUne vole. He bas said TONIGHT COAST COMMUNITY COLLEGE BOARD -Regular meeting, 1370 Adams. 8 p.m. SOUTH COAST REPERTORY THEATER -"Last Meeting of the Knights of the White Ma1nolla." Tuesday-Sunday through Dec.18, 8 p.m. he opposes contribution limits beyond what ls already provided by stateandfederallaw•- Tbe ordinance will be preaebt-ed the council for ••urcency .. ap-• proval at its Dec. 13 meeting. It would become effective im- mediatel~t pauea. The p ed ord.Lnance would limit conlribuUou to .council candidates or thelr umpaian committees to ~ per con· tributor. The sum is cumulaUve during the calendar year of an election and the calendar year immediately preceding it. The provision ls an attempt lo' foil tbe common political fundsmanship tactic of bavtne election fwid-raislng events after an election lo pay off pre-election debts. The $250 limit would be revised annually lo reQect cost of living changes. The ordinance also would re· quire an additional contribution disclosure statement other than already required by' state and federal election laws. String of Killings? Dumped Corpse ~ound on Freeway LOS ANGELES (AP> -The body of a young woman was found today dumped along the Golden State Freeway. and pohce believe the murder may be related to nine other recent kill· ings. There were no details availa- ble. but police were operating on the theory that 1t was one more murder in a string or killings dis· cussed at a meeting Tuesday by a task force of 30 law enforcement Crash Victim Said Better A Costa Mesa man who was in- jured in an automobile crash that killed his roommate was report· · ed in serious but stable condition today at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital Poli ce sa id Dennis Zeutenhorst, 24, of 234 Victoria St.. Costa Mesa, was originally listed in critical condition but bas improved since the Monday acci· dent at Newport Boulevard and Fair Drive. Zeutenhorst's roommate, Ricky D. Terbush, 21, who was driving the car, was killed when the vehicle skidded into a signal light pole. Fro..P~AJ MC NALLY •• an existing high school campus, but remain autonomous. However, if trustees believe McNally students should be located in a separate facllity, Monte Vista School will be McN ally's new home. And the district's citiiens ad· visory committee will continue to hold public hearings regarding potential closure of schools with enrollments or 300 students or less. 4 Men Indicted LOS ANGELES <AP) -A federal grand jury baa indicted four Southern California men, :who allecedly ran a multlmfWon· dollar bookmaking operation tn 1975, on charaes of operaUnc an m~1~•.1ambliog business. officers from several jurisdic- tions. Lt. Ed Henderson. who is in charge of the task force, was at the scene lnvesUgaUng, said of· fi cer Carlos Figueroa. Atthe tlme of the m~ting, there were rune bodies. many of them strangled, nude and sexually molested. The body. which appeared lo have been dead for days, was dis- covered by a state highway de· partment worker cleaning brush along the freeway. The Los Feliz offramp of the freeway was closed lo traffic while the Lask force conducted Its investigation. "These victims have been found in the last several months. We're looking at them for similarities," said Lt. Hen- derson. The murders being looked at include those of Sonja Johnson, 14 , and Delores Cepeda, 12, of Highland Park, whose bodies were found Sunday ln Elysian Park; Kristina Weckler, 20, of Glendale, found Saturday in Highland Park; and an uniden· · lifted woman, 17·20 years old with blue eyes and Iona brown hair, found Nov. 17 in the Wilshire District. Also being examined are the deaths of Terry Jill Barcum, 18, of New York State, found Nov. 10 in Franklyn Canyon of West Los Angeles; Lisa Kastin, 21, of Hollywood, discovered Nov. 6, in ~ Glendale ravine; Marg•ret .'Elbabeth Madrid, 7, of Valinda, found Nov. 6 in tbe City of ln· dustry; Theresa Berry, 19, of Pomona, found Nov. 4 ln Walnut; and JudlthLynn Miller, 15, of Hollywood, found Oct. 31 ln La Crescenta. Henderson would not &ive de· tails of the methods of strangula· lion. · · "We can't say for sure at this point. It's the possible key to any suspect we mlght have," he said. I i t .. I'm afraid 1t (the lnltlattve> may p • " aald Couaellm~ Sd McFarland. "l feel I muat do M much u poaible to prevent lt. u Tb• council then overrul94 Raciti ln a 4·1 vott. Racltl wl1l not be obliaed to put hi.a namo an the arsument ahould tho council 4Ml4• &opl•e.lt Wen .otm-~ nere •at blttf ffUMll ds. cuaalon of a ao-callocl <. • "'alternative lnlttatlv_., to cllrect· i ly compete wltb the homeownen' tmtlatlvron the • ballotl but the council wentf°'tbe oppos Uon arcumentlni\ead. "" Celebrating t'lae. ltltiral . Costa M~sa High School students • · celebrate the completion of their celebr•t· . ed mural. The work of art, deslaned and I painted by Students, decorates • wan at : the school and is visible from Fairview • seen ,tbrougb a series of windoWI, indicat-; l ing the balance between DlJD and nature. , Mural, which fills most ot 20 by 90-foot ! wall, was joint project of Mesa : Alternative Program (MALT> and regular Road. It depicts fantastic creatures as ! students. Judge RejeCts Halt Of Diedric~ Probe' A judge who ruled that the Dis- trict Attorney's Office cannot prosecute Orange County Supervisor Ralph Diedrich te- fused Tuesday to order the DA lo halt his investigation ot allega- tions now before the Grand Jury. Superior Court Judae Philip E. Schwab refused to sign the tem· por.ary restraining order de- manded by attorney Sylvan Aronson with the comment that Dledrich's lawyer was involved in "a speculative proceeding." Aronson immediately went before Superior Court Judge Roberl E. Rickles, who ls ban- dlin1 criminal arraignments in the absence of Judge H. Warren Knl1ht, and was granted a bear· ing set for Dec. 2. Ht said he will ask Judge Rickles al thathearing-tbJa1ue a . perm anent injunction which would bar District ALtorney Ced! Hicks' office from proceeding further with Investigation of what are believed to be bribery charges. The move by Aronson was, seen by the prosecution as belns the outcome or Judge Schwab's de· cision two weeks ago to bar their office from any proa~tion ac- tion against Indicted Diedrich. Supervisor Philip Anthony and two codefendants. The Schwab ruling ls being ap· pealed by the District Attorney's Office to the Fourth District Court of Appeals. An affidavit signed by Diedrich in support of the uclu.sion mo- tion contains the comment that "an Indictment would not be re· turned" lf he were "given the op- portunity lo discuss the pertinent facts with an Impartial. objec- Uve, unbiased prosecutor and ap. pear before the grand JUty and answer questions." Jt was areued by Aroftlon and other defense attorneys in the earlier heartn1 before Judge Schwab that dispu~ between Hlcks and county siu>ervlsors at board level clearly led to Hlcka displaYinc prejudice d~ tbe i.Dvestigation that led to the in· dictment. Judge Schwab qreed and ap- pointed the attorney aeneral's of. flee to take over the prosecution .chores. Diedrich, 53, Anthony. 41, financial consultant Gene Conrad, 43, and Dr. Wllllam Kott, 55, face trial on charges of vlolat· ing state political campai(D and finantlal disclosure laws. The erand jury is now believed lo be lnvesUfatinc the pouibllity of allegedly llle&al a..:- Uons in connection with the Board of Supervi.aors declaioo ln 1973 to remove 2,200 acres in Anaheim Hills from an agricultw'al preserve and make the land available for d,evelop- ment. . Two Nevada ' Routes Asked For Air Cal ,.,. . Air California bas applied to the Civil Aeronautics Board for permlsalon to fly between 0\'&nge County Airport and two Nevada cities, Reno and Lu Yea as. Wea\enl Alr Linea •llo an· nounced this ~eek that lt la seek· ing CAB authoritatlon to lly between Orange Coun~ and Lu veaas. Both are seeking consideration under ;tbe California/Nevada Low Fare lnvest11aUon Cue. This proceeding la under way before the CAB and involves ~slbly setting new routes and rates between Callfomla and Nevada cities. Air California currently files oqt of Oran&• County Airport. W eatemAir"linesdoa not. RaclU also oppoMd Uae ctraw- lnl up of a "falt aD4 lmpartial ' statement Cl facts" to be mail94 to re1t•tered voten at tup~ expense, eatlmated betweu \ "~and tl0,000. . ~ Def 01'9 JolnlDI Racttl on the abort alde ot a 3-1 vote la favor ot the proposal. c.ouncuman Jack • Hammett Aid lt woul4 be "utter \ chaos trying to eltabliab •hat ii • fact." ''So much of lt ti aubJeetlft. that'• wh)' lt's so dlfflcult to in- terpret." noted Mayor Nonna Hertzog. But she joined the ma- jority eentiment tha\ a malled ti statement of facta could deftDe ,. the laaue more clearlY before~ 't• elecUon. • AUboutbAh• Callfornla 1 Supreme OOUrt hu upheld the ' rt1ht to raone bf 1n1tlaUve, the .. ~ small size of the p•cela ln ques-. lion ·may be fUe1 for a 11ew court rulln8, acco!lllnr to City At· ·" torney ltob'Ut Campapa. ' However, Cauu>&ID• bas aald be ' doubta the court would Intervene wiUl after the electiQD. Beaides ArnePs parcel, bounded by Bear street. South Coast Plaza Drlve ind the San D l e ' o F r e.-w a y • th e hom~· lnitl•tl..Y• could af· feet nearby par~la owned by t.be Phillips f amll1 (about 1' aeres) and Hubert Wakeham <•.e acres). In clalmini1 the city violated •e. state law by plaClnl the ln.ltlatlve on the ballot. Amel lawyers 1 ~aue that the inltlaUve la actiaal- • 1y desl1Ded to prevent low ln· come and mlnor'lty ~ from .. llvln1 1n Costa Mesa. Spokesmen for tlui homeowners malnta\ll tbat · Amel~~ proposed develbpment la slmpJ1 too dense for the area. Th~ homeowners deay there ls any intel¢ton to prevent anybody from movlnl into Costa Mesa. Farmers Irked IMPERIAL (AP) -Farmers here have voiced stauncb QPPOIU· Uon to the proposed enforcement by the federa\J&overumentafnew • guldellna llmlUng the slze of farms recelvinl federal irrlia· tlon wateTJpl80acres, Statue Moved to Miss Tax 11 DENVER <AP) -An ancient Greek statue bought by the J . Paul Getty Museum of Malibu for more than $3 million bas turned up quieUy ln the Denver Art Museum where it will remain on display until early next year to ·a void California sales tax. The statue, on display at the Den vcr museum since Sep· tember, is a bronze likeness of a laureled, nude at.hlete, and is believed to be the only existing work of Lysippus, a sculptor or the 4th century B.C. It has no feet. The statue's location was re· ported today by the Rocky Moun· lain News. Deborah Ashin, public rela· t1ons director for the privately owned Getty musewn, said the statue waa purchased late in the summer apd the transaction was not made public until reported over the weekend by the London Sunday Times. The purchase price rivals the hi$thest ever pald for a piece of 1art in this country. Or. Armand Hammer~ lAa Angeles recenUy paid more than $3 million for Rembrandfs "JWlo." Denver museum officials did not announce display or the bronze, said director Thomas Maytham, "at the request or the owners. They wanted to withhold publicity because of the im- portance oCthe piece." The statue was shipped lo Denver in September after its purchase from the Armitus Society, a consortium of London art dealers. Ms. A.shin said preshowing of out·Of·state purchases was com· moo policy a mon& Callfornia mµseums. both public and private. .... Pat Stocker, a public relations assistant at the Denver museum, said the tax avoidance was legal. The London newspaper report· ed that the statue was found somewhere in the southern Mediterranean area and has been •. he1d In Euro~ for six years. Curators of the world's famous museums and some of the richest private collectors have seen it but it reportedly had never been displayed publicly until its arrival in Denver. "M aytham estimated that without publlcity 250,000 Denver area residents migbt have seen the statue by March when it will be sent lo Callfornia. Now, he said, that figure ls expected to rise considerably, boosting the art museum's laggin& atten· danc!e. Nursing Home t Fire Kills 5 CAMDEN, N.J. CAP> -A (lre . butned uncontrolled throu&b a 2Y.&·•~ frame nunln1 home for a balf bout ~1y today. kllllnt five of abt resJdents, authoriUes sat4. A 1lxth resident. an 80-year-old man, J~ tosalety frooi a se~ond·fioor window. Chief Ken· neth Peno said. He was hos pi tallied ln good condltlon. The llatlns dlscloied Presley maintained fivo bank account& at National Bank of commerce, in· cludl'11 a DOD·lnterea\ beartni cbeckln1 \&ccount con~lnlof $1,0SS.1'73. . The next largest 'IWero two aav-ina• aeeounts cootalnlnl $M.m and $11.~. He had 0110 aavlna• account at Fint Tennessee BaDk with $38 in lt. The list WU primarily ID item· ., ......... DOUGLAS HAWLEY WITH HIS $25 HOMEMADE GLIDER After Metden 'Fllght, • He Needs • Bigger Hiit ShQrt Bop Glider Flies, But Briefly ' OSWEGATCHIE. N.Y. CA P> -Thls is a story of Douelu Hawley and bis old·time flying machlne, a tale that shows that sometimes a bird in tiand still ends up with two in a bush. Hawley, 2.8, aJways wanted to own a glider Then he found plans for one in a 1909 Popular Mechanics magazine, a nice little plane with a set or double wings and a little tall, U looked something like the famed Wright brothers airplane "IT TOOK ABOUT 25 HOURS. I worked on it for four or five days," said Hawley, who altered the plans sligntly by uslnr plastic to cover the wings instead of muslin and nylon rlHlnl in-stead or wire. The gUder, which cost S25. had a 20-foot wing span and was 13 feet long. It weighed about SO p<>unds When Hawley tried the glider on for siie -the pilot stands in an opening in the lower wing and holds the craft around his waist he had a rew doubts "IT'S AWKWARD AND HABD to balance, 'be sald Still. the Popular Mechanics article made it sound easy: ·•Flying in a glider is simply coasting down hill on the air. and is the most interesting and exciting sport lmagtu..ble " That was enough for Hawley. who has nearly completed re- Quirements for a re1ular pllot's license Trailed by,.a handful of spectators, he carried bis glider through this rural town of 300 resldenta to a steep sand bill. GAZING DOWN, HAWLEY APPEARED to be havlnt second thoughts. "A long way down," someone said. "Yup .'' came the dry reply. ...But Hawley took his gbder in hand and lunged down the hill. ''He's in the air.'· yelled one spectator. SURE ENOUGH, THERE WAS Hawley fiylng through the alr, three, four seconds, looking fme. Then came a sound like som eone thrashing around in a pile or leaves. Hawley and his gl!~er were in a bush al the bottom~ the hill. "lncredlble feeling.·• 1taid an unscathed Hawley. "Get to find a bitger hill." Estranged Sp'!use Slwots, Wounds 2 Two women were wounded Tuesday ln Santa Ana when tbe e1traoged buaband of 1»ne al· le1edly fl red rifle •bots at the car in whlcb they were riding. Three hours after the early moroln1>Jgunfire 1n Utt 600 block of East et Road, police ~l· ed l>aoi! Tnee, '1. of Garden Grove, and chareed hlm with 111· aault With attempt to eonimlt murder. . Trice reportedly sun@dertd voluntarily at ·the Santa Ana police ataUOQ after poltce t>epn a search for him as the prltne suspecUn tbe2:28a.m.1ho0t1na. Slightly wounded as bullets BBitin Seeking 0ust8P of Judge. -'· ' .. , -1 u • I I • Former _,~range County supervisor &Wbert BatUn wants the Judie who sentenced him re- moved from a beartni into bis claim that some of the juron who found him guUty were preJ- udlced. · Battl!, 461 •ent to Superior Court ·ruesaay to demand the'- ouster of Judie Kenneth E. Lae from the Nov. 30 bearing OD the grounds that Lae also ls pre- judiced ag'alnst him. Judge Lae sentenced Battin tO 30 days in Jall and fined him $3,500 after the Santa Ana lawyer was found guilty of mlsu.sin1 county manpower and materials in 1974 durio& his unsuccessful campaign for the office of lieute- nant governor. Battin claimed Tuesday that Judae Lae displayed prejudice against him by not removing the district attorney's office from lhe prosecution role in his trial. He offered as compulson a re- cent ruling by Superior Court Judge Philip E. Schwab who barred the district attorney from prosecuting councy supervlaors Ralph Diedrich and Philip An· thony and two codefendants ln a trial scheduled !or Jan. 9. The Schwab ruling ls under ap- peal. The attorney general's of- fice bas agreed to prosecute the four defendants iC the appellate court upholds Judge Schwab's . decision. Members of the district at- torney's stalf predicted Tuesday that the Battin motion is only the first Of wbiat ~Y beU~ve will 1- . many attempts lo the wake of the Schwab ruling to remove their of- fice from prosecution. Police Probe Nine Killings LOS ANGELES <AP) -Police from several Juria~ctlou, baf· fled by as many as ftino murders of young women In leu than a month, are comparing notes to see if the killinrs are related. More tban 30 officers from city police, county aberiff's, Glendale police and the county coroner•• offlces gathered •t the police do- part men t 's Parker Center downtown Tuesday to ~lscuu the nine bodies. many of them strangled, nude and sexually molested. ' "These victims have been found ln the lut several months. We 're looktn1 at tbem for simllaritles," said Lt. Edwin Henderson, who Will coordlnaw a clty taak force for Ule illveaUca· ti on, Battin's demand for the re- moval ot Judie Lae wlll bo heard by anotbel' JudJe OD a date thU may be aelectecl later today. The Fourth D.latrict cOurt of Appeala arutted Battin the Nov. 30 bell'lnf alt6r be artuecl that several luron at his trial were prejud ced because of bl.I polltlcel backpound and com· mented that be wu IUiltY before the trial. began. An affidavit slpled by juror Gloria Godfrey or San Juan Jary laformed Capistraho contains her com· ment that ju.ron hid thelr true teellqa from the court •ben u.ey were questioned durinl tho jury selection process. A defense motion for a oow. ~ • triat1 based larceb' on Nn. <JGd. • trey 1 post trial commente, was • rejectAMI by Judge Lae prior to. • the appellate court action. A11l1tant Dlatrict Attorney Jack Ryan, who pl'Geecuted Bal· - tin. aald bis ortlce IA•M.tlcated Mrs • .Godfrey's aUegaUozie and found no ltlbstance to them. I Sexually Explicit Movies 'Can 'Help' ~ social value. :--: By TOM BARLEY ot .. Dellyf'Mllla.tf A witness who was described in court as a practJclnf aexoloclat told a jury Tuesd•Y that X·rated movies are a Cood substitute ror sexually inadequate Individuals wbo cannot afford sex coun.sel· lng. Dr. Marguerite Rubenstein of the lnatitut.e for tht Advanced Study ol Humaa Sexuality in San Franolsco tesUfiec:l in an Oranae • County Superior Court trial that 1uch indlyid;a ''learn abO\lt poatUQ ~ ques" ~Jlei, 1 f:.ur.e ~ aexu l;'1 explicit mov· ''It can lead to sexual enrich· ment," abe testUled. "Many marrta1e partners who ao tocetber to theaters showing such movies find they can enhance their potential." Dr. Rubenstein testified as a defense witness for brothers James and Artie .Mitchell in • lawsuit brought by the city of Santa Ana. · Tbe jury la being ask~ '° declare a total of 41 movies •hown at tho Honer Plaza theater over tbe past two years to be ob- scene and ln violation of a clty or-• dinance. Additionally, the jury ls be1q 4•ktd to declare the theater a public nuisance, a decision that would enable tbe city to cloee the faclllty. If those. verdicts are reached. tbe j llry will be asked ln a aeparate JtearlnJ ·to ~11eas damage1 for the clty a181Dlt the Mitchell brotbera. The Jury ot seven women and flve men·bas viewed 17 of tho41 movt• caDdemnecl by the cit1 u obscene and wi&bout redfflllln8 Dr. Rubenstein rebutted the city's condemnation Of the fllms Tuesday and prabed tM tbea&er-, management for playtns what • • she sald ii an lmportct rolo in •· . the commu.nity they aerve. •It• She told Clty ~ttol'Qey James •' Clancy that public vlewlnl ot the many forms of sexual aetlvlt..Y deplcte4).ntbe Honer PJP*JQOV· it ies waameauof dlsilt~ - infonnatlon not normaltY avalt•· ble to the publ5 .;.~ .. But lhe asi-ia .Wt ct thatpubUc~~Of,....•o· tiviUes ahouldootmclu~'6ru· ~· ample, the couple WbO'inle'htdO· '~ cide to make iove Ob tbw ftio01 ' lawn. ., • ·• ~· "I don't think so." ~o ii.ft ··r tt wouldn't =~~ that• H II>': ~ proprtai.tl . ' ': Dr. Rubenstein rejected the 4~ suggutJoa that the kind of PI09· ·'' ies offered by the Mitchell "1 brothers could be deflned as vice. : ; , She told the jury that more --· widespread viewing ot the mov-a ies ~ueaijoned by the clt.y ~cl .. ,, lead to a cut In the crime rate. ., , "A lack of sexual knowledge ~ can lead to vtolence," 1tie said,. a, "Lo()klng at the ~al aotlvttle1 of other people I• a form of educatloo that I have foun4 to be dlsUoctl.Y helpful in cuea. where sex\ttll counaellne baa been necessary." • Lawy'rs for the Mitchell brotbent told act.hiC SuDeTIQr Court Judge MU':Vin G. Weeb that they have aae more WffneM for the de(ense bU\ bO ta Wiab1e to tesuty until Monday. Judse Weelm ordered a sla.cll)t break ID tbetrlal wbichja ~ ed to eo tnt0 ftnal amm• lJt.e Mondqorearl1Tucild11 • 'TIS THE SEASON: :i'he· mbplidays are now Upon us. The , lirat bi~ie looms tomorrow, la'1Jlen we are all supposed to live 9 Maanks by 1ettin1 stuffecf on stufllnl and other &astronomic tt~orrors. ·~ Thankselving, on a more -~~rious note, is a time fof COD• templation of all the tood tblnp lb at have indeed been visited up·. Q(l us Too bad that there are those among us who will celebrate this thankful occasion by drlvine about the countryside cruily and by general overlndul.ence In everything from eatln1 to .jj.estroying eyeballs on marathon ttle\'iston covera1e of football contests. Alas, the staliatica will then be With us on Monday, after th~ Iona 'Jeekend. THANKSGIVING DOES, however, touch off our holldaf season and the Christmas shoP· ~\ng rush. ' I must be gettipe older because \he shopping season seems to ar- 'tl ve earlier every year. Even home decorations for the Yuletide seem to go up sooner. Out on an evening drive several nights ago, the wile happened to remark, "Look, there's a house where they already have their ChristmasJights burnine." IT WAS TRUE. The strines of 'red, green, yellow and blue lights we re burning around the !}..oorway and front wtndows. But I pointed out, "Listen, ,,~at's the place where they never thered taking the light.a down > rom last year." This also was true. But if the holiday season keeps starting earlier and earlier each year, that may be the way we'll dll go. There won't be time to take the ''lights down between seasons. ..... ADDITIONALLY WITH the holiday season, it is a Urne when ''lt\any are thlnkina about soul- ~vhuf. The relleionl!t.S of all Wfarled faltbl and Inclinations are out on the streets with pamphlets or laborinl in the precincts from door to door. ,11 One ot my students up at the university in Long Beach, who _happens to be a person of strong drson!l,.~th. coraplained just e othet.waht, "I can't seem to rn a-(Qcper of tblJf campus •trithout as>mebody pusblna some lf kind ot religious tract into my -face. · 'H you accept the pamphlet • gracefully, they try to convert 11 you. If you refUfe it, then they 1' really ao to work, trying to save a It sinner." ! The )'Qµoa ar~n't the only Ofle8 ,.. who are targets of the mobUe • religionists. I have thls older ~ friend who answered the door the ;. other da~, fil\lrlng it was the ' 11' laundry tnan. ,.. IT WASN'T. Instead, t~o ,. young men asked permlssion to read to her from their ve'rsion of ,ti the Good Book. Politely, she 11' decllned1 indicating she h•d • a)ready oone her daily one-hour • ol devotional Bible readll;l1. -The ')'OUDI men persllted. uk· lll ing if in the future she wanted to jt ~upon High, (esldinC pleasant· it ly wlth the ancets, or telecated to a lower elevation where the tem. peratures would be unbearable. :. "Young men, I never worry "9 about that," she replied. :tp "I have very aoOd friends at botb locotlo~." HAAS COULD NOT be reached for comment. He ls a 195$ West "' °point graduate who won two S~ver Stars and three. J)ronze Turkey Time Guess who's coming to dinner. Thanksgiving may be a good time for turkey -unless you happen to be a turkey, that is. These turkeys seem totally unconcerned about their fate while children peek out from inside the turkey pen. The children are from the Christ Home for Children in Paradise, Pa. Man, Wife Slain In Bizarre Plot JOHANNESBURG, South Africa <AP> -The blood-covered bodies of a forme'r director of the International Monetary Fund and his wife were found in their home early today in a bizarre double slaying, police reported. Letters spelling out "rau" and "tem" were sprayed 1n red paint on a wall in the lounge and on the refrigerator, the $Uttioritjes sai<!. T~ere was no immediate Indication what they in~ant. Chief Detective Brig. J . Smith saict.a.ctiau(fe}lf discove.ted-tbe bodies of Robert Smit, 4•, and his wife, Jeanne, ln their new bome in . the town of Springs, about25 mile1 east of Johannesburg. · I ' PHOENIX, Aria. <AP) -The threat of a strike by Greyhound bus drivers and main~nance employes over the Thanksgivingholi· day ~ppeared over as union and company ne1ottators agreed to stick to their talks as long e.s there's some headway. . ( J Negotiators for tbe Amalaamated Transit Union, ~N SHOKI' which represents 14,000 _ Greyhound bus driver,, mechanic& and clerks, and company spokesmen said Tuesd!l)' they w~uld ~tin~ lalks e~~n through the holiday lfthere 'f~ stgns ofprog~ess. , 1 • <JeHla•d Sdioeb ,,....., BrolW l' CLEVELAND Ohio CAP) -About 10,000 Cleveland school employees went without pay today while school officials urged the state legislature to rescue them fTOm their financial plight. • 'lbe 113,000-pupU system has been operatin1 for more Ulan a ' month \Dlder a court order that negated penniSslon Obtained by school officials to close the system for the rest of the year because it was out of cash. l'catee Ends Setdla A.aerie• t't.U BRASIUA, Brazil (AP> -Secretary of Sttte Cyrus Vanqe winds up hls first vi.sit to South Amettca 1n Veneiuela tocJay follow· ing tnconclusive talka wltb Brullian omclals and a surprise evic· ti.on noUce affecting more than 100 American mlaslonarieit. Vance met Tuesday in BrasWa with Pretident Ernesto Geisel and other top officials of hia military reitme, but there was no sten of any narrowing of dlfferencea ov«" human rt.abts and Brull'• ac· quisition o( advanced nuclear technology from West Germany, the key issues plagulna 'Brazilian-American relations for most of the year. WASHINGTON CAP) - The aovernment is ban- nlnf cigar and pipe amok· ing on U.S. commercial airliners, and cigarettes maybe next. Tbe Civil J.eronauUcs Board told its atafJ Tues· day to write a final order prohibitina pipe and ci'ar smok1n9. Tbe dlrect1ve will ·be issued in a w~k and take effect In either ao or60days. The same order will ban all smokinl op aircraft when the ventilation system is not working. Board members also proposed applyina the pipe and clear order to ciaarettes, but that ex· tension face• moriths of publie hearin•• before final adQptlon. • · • The \)ipe and cigat order ~ was proposed <>et. 26, 1976, and alread.Y has been dls· cuss~ alopen board meet· ing1. • A AB.ENT WHO supported Haaa 1aid, "Many of us feel the acUon was done properly and justly. That's wby we sent our boya there. Because Haas does a coodJob." Some parents accuaed Hau of 1u11estiDs the drummln1 out cereniooy. But Haas and other school offidals contend the cadet corps, angered by petty thefts at ltJACHILlPATNAH, lndl (AP) -Bloatect and IUD blackened bodlea fiotted today water coverinf hundred• o sciuare mUt.s or fertile f annl in squtbeast India 4ev'5tated. by cyclone abd Udal waves that flclals say killed at least 10, persons. TheTtmesotlndlainNew satd the death toll coul reach 20,000, but the final mavncverbelmdwn. CARROLL, Iowa (AP> -Vandals apparenUy used a broomstick to beat to death a rabbit and 11 wild blrdl, includbig twO . Canada geese whose wlo's had been clipped so they could not fly. One goose was decapitated and several other birds at tM Swan Lake State Park had their necks wrun1, aaicl Sheriff .John Longnecker on Tuesday. "TIDS WAS THE operation of a sick bunch of people. It's Jus ridiculous," aaJd I.A>npeckel'. "We have never had anythina u vicious u this. It's just vtc;lous. • • David Olson, a conservation.officer stationed at Swan Lake. said the attack de$troyed the 1eese, two golden pheasants, a peatock, ftve tur.keya, eight chickens and a gulnea hen -aboUt a third of the blrd,s at tHe preserve. · • t , I l, I 1,1 ,,. " From AP Dlapa&elm Two Weat Germaa l•it•latort announced Uii1 are ~I B1yPtJan priildent AttarSa4a& tndtsraelt Prime Mlnlater Meaahem Beala ujolnt eandldatesforthe 1978Novel Peace PriM. · Prime Minister Mnabem BeOD u joint caftdldates for the 19'78 Nobel Peace Prize. • Tbe' sponaors are Kun .ran1 and 11Uer1e• MoeUemua of the smaller Free Democratic Puty in the Nlinl left·llberal coalition. Both are mem·· bffs of the House's Foreign Alfalrs Committee. They said they made the proposal to honor the two statesmen's efforts to "end the escalation of hate and violence and seek ... peaceful coexlltence at one of the fire-spots of world poll tics." • Carol Lee Gainey says her weddlnl in Ralei•b. N.C. wlll be a lar1e affair because she ii ''tlit fltat girl ln the family to get married." There may be another reason that has more to do wttb lb• brt,:le· iroom'sfamUy. Miss Gainey, 24, will PEOPLE Scott Caner Stapleton, ( ) be married Dec. 17 to _ _ 26. He is the son of Ruth --------Carter Stapletaa, which / makes him President Carter'• nephew. An invitation has gone to the White House, Mlss Gaipey says, but ''we won't be certain until '2' or 48 hours before the wedding" whether the first family will be able to attend. • Sen. Johll L. McClellan, the law-and-order ad• vocate who fathered most of the m-.tor aaU.crime legislation of recent years, iJ leaving the Senate after his cur· rent term. 1 McClellan, an Arkansas Democrat, announced that he wlll not seek re-election next year. I Two unidentified youngaters bearing flowers walk on stage to kneeling singer Tony Orlando in the opening moments of his first show in San Carlos since retire- ment three months ago. WlLL11'S <AP> -:-A Qloderate, rolllnc earth· quak• ~ke windows, toppled -cb1mney1 and frt1htened residents ia this small Northern Cali!onila community, outcials said. Residents teported at least six distinct af. tenboca dUring the predawn hours today but the Mendocino County sheriff's office said lt had no re· "Tberci ls no question that ~mla has been and remains the center of dlstrib\ltlon of pontO· graphic ftl lnvol Yi;OI cbUdren, '' Smitb Hid. THE BEAaJNG WAS CAI.LED t4> Ju.clte the Im- pact of tbi new laws and deteMQine lt further legialaUon b needed. ports ot damages or injUriea. No injuries were reported TU~ afternoon in the temblor, which tbe University of Callfomia seismogra~b registered as 5 on the Rlehter Scale. 150,-. Rete•r4 OllnM ''Tber~ is a proper time to .. aspire, a time to-achieve, and a time to retire," sald the 81·Ye&t· old McClellan, who was elected to the Senate in 1942 after two .Emergency Landing LOS ANG~LES (AP) -F.rtendl of slain rock mU1ic promoter Steve Wolf are offeriq a $50,000 re- ward for lnformotlon leadina to the arrest and con· victlon of bis killers. terms uaooave5sman. " Hehas had health problems this year and bas been forced to slow down. • .. John l'Enfer" (John of Hell), a dreamlike novel set in a disintegrating Manhattan inferno. narrowly won the Prix Goncourt, France's mos~ prestigious annual literary award. The award brings 32-year-old author Didier De· coin a symbolic cash prize of 50 francs ($10.45) but assures the novel months on the French best.seller list and sales of around S00,000 copies. The Goncourt Academy, meeting u usual ln a fashionable Paris restaurant, was split evenly S·to·5 between Decoin 's novel and A.atoDJe Maillet'• "Cordes de Bois" <Ropes of Wood. > The deciding vote of the chairman, veteran novelist Herve 811ln, gave the award to Decoln. • "It wasn't a coincidence," says PrtneeH Marcaret, younger sister of Britain's Queen EUube&h D, that she accepted a marriage proposal from her now-estranged husband the day she learned her first love planned to marry another woman. The princess, m December's Ladies' Home Journal. said a ' letter describing Group Capt. Peter Townsend'• marriage plans arrived the same day she agreed to be AJltoQy Armstrong· Jones' wife. ·'I dido 't really want to get married," she Hid. ·'Why did l? Because Tony asked me. ~e was Suth a nice person in those days. He undera~ my job and pushed me to do things. In a way. be introduced me to a new world." , The couple, wed in 1960, aMounced last March they had separated. ,. W~o says Georaian Jlmm)' Ca1*er doean't &et along well with Congress? He's been manni\11 one o( the doors to the House chamber for 11 years and getttn1 aJona Just fine. During the 1976 presidential campaip, Carter the doorman met Carter the candidate and Hid! "I'm Jirnmy Carter. too." They shook bands ana parted ways and now they work at opposite ends of Pennsylvania Avenue. • Elatne Brown. who led the Black Panther Party from an era of gun·braadl•hinl mUltancy to one o( community Involvement and poUUcal Influence in Oakland, resigned u party chairperson. Ms. Brown, who ran the Panthers durln& party co· founder Baey Newtoo'• 2~·Y'81' exile in Cuba, said that ·~ere comes a Ume in eaeh llf e that LI a kind of turninl 1>9ipt. • .~ mental and pb)'llcal atrenltb, after 10 ye~z were wantna. in fact nearly couapslns." There had been sOtculaUon about an ideological•tplit betweera Newton antl ~ 'B"°:'i t>eca\Jfe ol her ~plcuoua ~bsenee 'It Ne\ttort r preliminary llearlna on murder and auault char1es. But bOl.b denied that a rift exbt.ed and said they r~ed close frtend1. T~aveler Strips, A.irplans Returns Wolf, 34, waa shot _______ _ Mondaymornln1wbenhe( .·~-'TE ' J was awakened by tha i:J.14 sound of intruders ln his ..,._ -------Sherman Oaks hillside home. He died lri..1urgery 2~ hours later at Rlvenide Holpital: SAN JOSE CAP) -An airliner mad-. an emeraen: cy return to San Jose Municipal Airpqrt after a • .....,, Viet'-'l•JttHde acreaminl paasenier atr1pped off bi& Clothes, Aprint-• • ed down t.be al.ale and be1an klcldnl in tbe cockpit OAKLAND (AP) -An expert witneiH his d.ls· door, authOrit.les said t.Oday, puted the testimony of two doctors who 1ave the The man was taken iil· Chowcblll~ kidnap victims a clean bill of health to custody by airfiort takeoff and requested hours after their ordeal. • security guards ate lmrnecllate clearance for Dr. o. B.,·c~ Dlckerson '-·lated on the witness Tuesday afte~oon after. landing. '.. l4IO Pacific southwest · "Hesaldanindlvidual stand Tuesday that bus driver Ed Rav and~ Airline Flight 264 to U>s waa tl".Yinl to break in children suffe~ed bodily injury ~ ~ ~ult of their· Angeles landed with 136 the cockpit door, .. Pac· 16\4-bour buri!ll in a van. Thtt UIJ'!nes, he aalct, passengers on bo•rJI dorettt sai,d. were the efCeetS or heat exhausUon. shortly after takeoff. ..A stewardess said be 1W..1•--T~ p C d He w~ identUied b1 took ott lUI clothes ran ~.. r.JI rocea e autboritie• as Halen ·to the eabin yelling and Fawal. •37, a medical screaming and started L<~NG BE~.OH (AP) -About 20 opponents of da'Ctor from Lebanon~ kicktng, •• Paccioretti the ~h1lean malttary ttoverttment picketed in front who they said was •P· added. "He bent the ofC1ty~l.lheretopro~t~LonCBeJ11:bt1istercrty parently here visiting hinges on the door... delegations trip to Va~par•1so, Chile, triends or relatives. The prot~1ters iltns accused Au~uato HE SAID WHEN the Pinochet's re1ime of torture and of violation of ACT . G SECUalTY plane landed Fawal was human rlibts. The picketers urged the City Council chief M1~e Paotloretlt wearing only a "Jock. Tuesday not to approve public funds to finance the said the pilot rep6rted an Evenvthlng else came trip. emergency just after off .. ,- -- A c & Resignation M(}ve Hits Credibility By forcing one of lta members to realp lut Week. a Newport-Mesa School District advisory committee may have lost some of ita credibility. Up to that date, the committee generally had done a good 1ob of making recommendations to school trustees regarding future school closures and the relocation of McNally continuation sohool. More public hearings are scheduled on these issues, but the committee must now overcome the impression that the problems of the district a.re taking a back seat to politicking and personality conflicts. Committee member and Costa Mesa City Council can- didate Chris Steel was asked to resign (and will do so) after he appeared at a school board meeting to voice his opposition to a committee recommendation-closure of Monte Vista School for relocation of McN ally. At least some of the committee members felt Steel's speech was palitically motivated and out of character with ~~:h:~w-key approach of the c~mmitt~. They may be However, Steel isn't the only member of the com· mittcc with t>Olitical aims; at leasttwo other members are near-certain candidates in other local elections. Will they be as\ced to leave if they comment publicly on committee re· commendations? By asking one politically active member to resign, the committee has put itself in a tight bind if any other can· di date for office speaks up. The alternatives are to force him or her off the com· mittee -or to acknowledge that Steel was singled out tot s peaking up. Court Could Help Although they could have further complicated the J\rnel Development vs. North Costa Mesa Homeowners Association fight, Mesa councilmen seemed to have taken the safest and wisest course ~ather than place a second initiative oh the March 7 ball t to compete with the homeowners' rezone initiative, the ouncil has directed the city staff to prepare a written arg ment opposing the initiative. f councilmen approve lts content, the argument will go oD the ballot next to the association's written support of the itlitiative to block Arnel 's planned development. f)f course many homeowners won't be pleased, but it is onl~rational (or the council to stand up for a project it has UPPtc>Ved. tn addition, the city staff will compile from the records a chronological history of the past 18 months of debate on the proposed development. This has included the homeowners· initiative, a $2.5 millin sult against the homeowners by Arnel ; and Arnel ·s ~uit gain st the city for allowing the initiative to be placed on t e ballot. oth suits are due in coutt in early December, at whiQh time the validity of the initiative may be decided. Wishful thinking perhaps, but wouJdn 'tit be nice if the court found a resolution to the compl~x issue? ~h~n the city tvouldn't have to be tom apart by this complex issue un· derstood by so few citizens. It could have been one of 'those classic "citizen fights city hall to the death" cases, but Costa Mesa city officials wouldn't fall for it. Sid Soffer. who complained to the city after his three aging but still operable Cadillacs were towed from his property~will get a towing chargepefundof $127. The city ordinance said SOffer's mailed reply to the city's nuisance abatement letter had to be received within 10 days. He mailed it on the loth day so obviously it was ''received late." City fathers admitted the deadline was "amb.iguoda," apparently aware ot the ritualistic rush for pre-midnight tx>stmarks·oo tax retur~s. The city will now clear up the ambiguities and Soffer bas his cars and his money back. City hall showed it lsn 't temperamentally addicted to the conclusion that rules are beyond questioning. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artlstt. Reader comment Is Invited. Address The Dally Piiot, P .0 Sox 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (71") 6"2·4321 Boyd/ Iron Hand ByL.M.BOVD Germany's ''Man wtth the Iron Hand" was not Blamarck, Kaller Wllbellp ot Adolf HlUer. He was Goeb von Berllchl,naen of Heilbronn, a 16th century knit ht. He waa one of the Clnt wearers « a PfOltbuia1 an iron hand whh rnovab\6 fln1era ..thlch rep\aced• a hand he'd~ 1n a battle, n· writ that M •mashed a lot ot tavern taf>lea with that iron hand when innkeepers were a low to bring wine. Th• Watt Dtaney omi' day l• gro's 1U lour m . . ~' ........ ----------...-~--- money it was pulling in when he died In 1966. Am advised that even a teasoned saltwater sallor With CQMiderable oce8J'\.. ex· "rlence iJ$ quite Dkely to get seasick dutlnl hla flrat lf'lp on the GreatLakea. Waves there aro not wilder or blgher than oceGn waves, jullt faster and Cf\Op}>ter. BRU~!;~ -The tut ex· planatlon ot Western' 1!urope'e rlalns teen <>f U .S.·lrnpoaod llmtta on NATO use of 1round· launched crulH mlaallea la more mllltary than pc>ltttcal: the need for the cruise to balatleo the tm· mense So\l'let torco bulld·UP Jn what are called Central EW'(). pean ''theater" weapon1. The political factor, which leavea U.S. NATO awes feellna victlmlzed by super-power strategic arms agree· m e n t s <SALT), is bad enough for West Germany . Eneland. France and lesser NATO allie&. But truly crit~cal to the future mdependence of Western Europe, these middle·level powers feel. is the necessity for NATO to compensate for the$().. viet buildup. Otherwise an ex- plosive crisis within NA TO seems inevitable. Even though the much· discussed medium-range cruise missile has not yet even been tested or o!ficially asked for by NATO, the West Europeans perceive it as a heaven-sent answer for Soviet proltferatlon of a fantastic array of new weapons systems being produced in daz- zling quantities. TO GRASP the awesome momentum of this buildup, eon· sider these facts brought together in a recently declassified NATO study. In the four years ending last December. largely for Central Europe, the Soviet Union has produced 13,850 front·llne battle tanks, including the newest T-72 model. ag11inst U.S. production of 2,345; 6.SOO long·ranee artillery pieces. the latest or which (~ 155·millimeter > ls believed capa· ble or firing a nuclear explosive. as against 800 Ln the U.S.; 5,500 fighter aircraft <Including the third generation MIG-27 now ap. pearing al a l,OOO·a.year ratel against2.800 U.S. fighters. European members of NATO -particularly the British and West Germans -have been eye· ing the ground-launched cruise "LONDON wants a around· launched crulu of 2\000 kilometers <about 1,200 ml•>. the French and Germana about 1,500 kilometers," one NATO ex- pert told \15. 'That would brina Weswrn Russia, where the SS.20 111 believed most deployable. wlthln range." But pressed by Moscow. the U.S. la per~ived here to have tontatlvely agreed to a 600· kilometer range llmlt. With blgh government oUiclals ln London. Paris and Bonn receiving their first thorough briertng on these THt CARTE& admlnistration bellttl~ these European rears. G•lb, accordln1 to experts here, is aaylng that the ban on a 600- f lua kilometer range wlll lut on- Y three years ( .. just a moratorium''). The NATO ex· perts count.er privately that If the European appeal ts touab enough, Mr. Carter will be eom· pelled to ease the non-transfer 41nd non·circumvention language. Few here predict that the huae Soviet buildup of Central Euro-. •I ... SeJf;.government Needs SeH-disci:Rline To'the Editor It appears the scare or the 1973 oil embarao has thc;>rouahly dis· sipatea from niost minds. The apathy and dlsconcern of the average American a~ms stead· fast. Jt appears Americana re· fuse to reallte the ~avity of the , future becauee praent energy requ1remen~ are so convenient- )y met. Americans have dn undisputed love affair with automobiles. Since the 1973 embargo, the price ol aasoline on the retail level bas doubled, yet consumption has In· creased, not decreased or even stabilized. As a symbol or Americana, nothing seems to surpass the automobile. It signifies the freedom of In· dlvldual movement so che~llhed by Americans public forums were held on Nov. 14. The commission couldn't come up with any valid reason for existence other than to help ratify the ERA (Whieh tboy deny; however, it lf)q ftated in · t.fte 1tatAI charter of SOW, and they ·thought that th~ women of Oranae County wo\fld five them a purpose and some useful ac- Uvtty. Tbe meeUn11 were well publlelzed and promoted. There were approximately 30 women 1n attendance at the mornlng meet· ing, wlth a two·to-one ratio in favor of disbandln& SOW. It was pc>lntecl out that every need or concern that wu discussed i1 already being handled by at least one or more county aaencies (ex- cept for tedera)ly funded child care day centen which the tu payers are against and do not need the elttra burden) THERE WERE approximat~ ly 20 at t.be eveninc meetlna with almost the same two-to-one ratJo in favor of disbandment. The meeting was scheduled for two hours. Tbed1acusslon1 bad ended by the endotthoflratbov. When only :SO wqmen attend an open·t.o.theopubltc Input mutUii ou• ot Use ent pop"1ace of Oran•• Oounty, It prov• that the Oran•• Count.y women do noi want, nor are thoy concerned or interested in n. St•tus qf Women Commluk>nl Why burden th9 taxpayer with J1\0re than be bas alieady when lt is complt1.ely UMece. 11try! DORIS PIE'ITE Veter Chalk~ IT IS also a problem for the voter. Does he note a shift in Qle official's position -once a con· servatlve, now a liberal or vice versa? Can the citizen depend on the candida~e adhering to aoy promised poeiUon? How far has the elected official. as time for re~lectian draws near, strayed from the promised course? Shall we solve the J?robtem by re-electing no one? And shall we then IOle the service of the 1tronte person who adhere$ to his announced principles? Or ~tll we take a chance on a newcomer whose record is a blank paat? AS a •oter carefully measure the candidate! Take nothing for granted. MARYSCOTI' Soda& Securiev To the Editor: The only way to bring SOch1I S.curity pensions ln line with the cost ofliving and to lnaure that lt is properly funded Is to put poUU· clans on Social ~utiW. They hove voted themselves much larnr penalons under dlrrenmt procra~. If they are wealthy, they don't need the Jarae penilons.,llthey aren't, le\ hem ltve on the lame dole that eN llveon. It ts p0pular to give mon,y awtjt. but It isn 'l pop.uhP' t~ IUM r.roarama because it means rail· na taxes. It their owp pensions were the ame or. others, they might bo more interested In tying IL lo the coi,t of living and funding It. .JAM~ w, BOLDING gasoline, or the 10 i:)orcent we use for home comforts will not help much In the overab energy sav-ings. And business and industry cutbacks will make gQOda scarce and more expcnstve and cause mtftoe job losses. GOLDIE JOSEPH . I " I G n11••-.1-1cea DEA~ PAT~ My dau1httt ~fl a Jticlc Of l'ink. •uiarteu sum ln her Jackel pocket. Thcs jacket was washed wtth a n w cotton ud polyetter •hfrt, and the rum ended ur all over the shirt. I atraped some o It off by WJlna ke, but the rest Of the gum hu ltained the ahlrt and I can't find an)'t.blne to remove lt. 11 there any way to save this ahlrt? M.K., l'JewPortBeach Stain removal lUldes r"°mmend sponsl•I on ptrclaloretbylene or otbe1' peue solvellb. A• A YS reader advises 1 "Shout," a Jobnson'1 Wax prodiid, for removla1 crayoa 1talaa from polye1ter fabric. She •prayed tbe stained area heavily, let J& toak ID ud rubbed tJae stalD. A cold water lamadertag followed ud the stat.a disappeared. Thi• may or may not work oe tbe gum ... Whooa" stain remover also I• u effective product recommended for alJ types of stalns, lnclucl.IDg pm. Tbe best solutloa &o yoar problem would be to &Ake tlae shirt to a dry cleaiaer. (Morge-Benne« of Cu1ter'1 Quality Cleaners told A YS &bat cleaners use ~ptclal synthetic solvents for removing dlfrtcalt stalu from polyester falilrlc a. Be adds, however, Ute synthelk dya ased ln some food products a~ almost Im· poHlble to remove oace Uley have penetrated. . Selldlo• .......... DEAR PAT: I recall that you've published a homemade solution for apbid control. I didn't. need iUben. but I do now! I'd prefer not to use chemical spraya. F.W.,CostaMesa Tb~ apJlld 1pray ls made by tborct•PJ:r dltsolvtng three table· 1poon1 of lyot'7 Plake• I• a gallon ol water. U edeterientyourplant. won 't like It. Ud the apbld1 wW not be dllCOClra(ld. . ................ DEAR PAT: Even though everyone I know loves to play tennis, nobody seems to know when this game got its start. Does it, like bowling, have an· cient roots? M.E .. Irvine Not ancient, but pretty old. Tennis wu first played In England, but It bas chanced a lot from Ill orlglnal form which wu called "Royal Tennis." The teaa.la court and game equ.lpmeot we kaow wu devised and patented lo aoe • • ,,,.,. .. "'" '" N 111>1111 ,.... 11111 ""' rii!f , l/tftl1111 11Hr uruWt rt o...t utllon W'll M«d hi 1111l1w 1tlfil;lllf1 111 {IOl•t•...-unJ ,....,_,, Mull IJ(llll t••blt .. l'ul /Niut, Al v ... , "'"'-""· ~ ''onrt Ululw 1""°4 1• o lfoz 1:. c;•ii Alt•. CA r.tJd .4• mQlll/ 1..11 .. U tU µu111/'1• W di ~ Ull•WWl'rd, l>t</ ,n.oftt'd 111q111nn 11r lrlllr• '"" 1 .... /ud1tlfl I~ r~ttr t /..U ..,,."'" o.ldt• u .. lid...,,.,. 11"' .. ,,. ~ Olt•Nr'"""°"""'""''kl•"d TlllH..i .... 11111~0 .. cl<.u l11•1c'Jl($atMrdo~" FebrHry 1814, by MaJ. Watt.er Clop· ton Wlacfteld of EnllHd (IJ13.l91Z>. I ~ e4 a ... p-altlattn," tltt ianae 100D bKame kaowa 11 lawa teanla, •eordlal to &Ile GulDoea Book of WorW aee.ru. TIM oldest eourt fo, hyal T~ wa,a ball& la Pub ta 1CH. The oldeat of 11 Hrvlvl•I <aoyal) .__.. CHl'tl la tile BrtUtla l•let 11 at Ha&n,&ola C..rt Palace. I& wa1 b.Ut by orclet' ti Kia• Henry VID ln 1S2t-•, ud reltallt 1111 order ol Qarlet DID l ... llmt••C ce Seatle DEAR PAT: In September 1976,• I stayed at the Convention Inn in Ed· monlon, Alberta, Canada. The botel'll laundry lost my new $18 jeans, and avoided mMking any adjustment while 1 was a ilJCSt there. I've tried ever slnce to get reimbursed, but my requests are lenored. This is a matter of principle with m tJ. Do I h'ave any re· cour~e. or am I j11st another tourist who has been cheated? A.T.,lrvine The Candadlu Goverament Of(ke of Tourism advlae1 you mall • cem· plalnl letter Lo Its ornce <Sit W. ltll St., Los An1eles, Calif. toel4). Yoar letter wW be forwarded to CGOT beadquuten In Ottawa for seUle· ment wltb the bo&el. Le..LidLe•t PEAR PAT: Lale last June I t.ook a bundle oC laundry to Artistic Ory Cleaners ol Hunttneton Beach. When I pichd it up, I found that several itema...-ere mbsin1. I called the laun· dry and was told a check woukl be made with the laundry service to see .i the articl• could be found. I waited and waited, made several phone calla and personally stopped at the cle;.ners tp Me if any progress had been made. Eventually l was told lo file a claim, which I did Sept. 2. I mailed a followup inquiry Oct. 10, but sUll haven't been able to get this claim settled . D.D .• Huntington Beach Harold Saaden, new mua1er ol Artlatle. .. , .... Cffld not •~a&e .. , record ol y011r clalm. It may have been pklled up by OH of Um dry cleanl•I cltalll's supervlaon, be H)'I, but M lnfonnattoa ls available at Ua1s &ID1e, Sanden uk.I you to contad blm aad provide ano&.ber copy ol you ct.Im ao he caa check l.Dto lta Jfroceu- 1•1· He added &bat loat laundry clalm1 u•l.v att 8et&Jed for aMuttee-Wnl of th •rtilnal value ol lolt ltea1. Beach Nealen For the Record •lrtlu COUY 5urvlvt<I lly ltls Moll1er Oebr1 FRANCIS M. CORAY, rnldtM ot Sw-• .._r .. ten'k" WtltM Mffl a.ti Gorden\, c.a. f.......,. r~ ot .,..ectneMMy Nowrnbef' U, 1971 et 1:00 COSll IMw, c.. Peu.d .... ,on Nov· P.M. II Mante<llO Memorlel Pm. Ill emllOf 21, 1911 el ""' ~ ot u . ....,Inv Colton, C.. Snlllll TllWll LA,,,. GHca t•INr ot fr.,. M. (•UY of C-11 MewMort-yCMrocten...._... IMW, c... -k.llhertM o..-r ot .....-. GO.SI• Mew, c.e. ho tofm•I tuner•I WNITll wrvlcu wlll De MIO, cremetlon -DONALD JOHN WHITE, l•HMO b11rtel ..... COftOll<lecl ., Smltll ....... on-•.''"· Aftl<Nnlql lu\11111 L.-C..11 IMH MOrl""''I' YIXU '\fll...,, ca. $urvl~ !If hit wlfo -.... £1••no• 'llllltll•, <1ewe1tter "•trlcl• "aCHANaC Devis of -lnQi.n BelUI, ca. Mn CHARI.ES PECHANl C, lurnllllA Robert Whitt Of al So4M'111t•, C.. _...,.r - -urwr Oled on O.UQl!let *-' Sewer ot Hllflttnvton November It, ltll el The Century City 8••<11, c. .. d9UQl!ltf Pemel• AltlbtrQ Hospltel In I.Alt A••··· c... A """' of MIMrtf, Vll'lllnla, ... Donald lil<hlt.t, 11 ..... retldtnl OI P-. c.e anCI Jr., of Fo'11Mbtl, lHll, ...... Liiii ... Cc><on• Ott WI«, C.. wltete he WH Ml 8-nMll OI PNl-plll•, "-MlYl..,etli• •ttlv• petron OI m11tlc ' •rt. Mr, ano Utler Ber11lct Roo11•" 01 l'o<ll•ne< l•-vl...0 by'"'" <hllOrM, w.,...10, RlloOe I tl...0, •Ito eleven Mo. Robtrt a n a1 le•l<el•Y. C..., t r-111te1ren lkl<l•I at-. wi.fe11 r. J Q5ep!I PK-ot s. .... ICll. c... 'Soft F .. ,,.r .. -Olre<lon, YIKU -AnM PK-al Alt_,., Ca. A '\felley, C:... m1mor111 ~"''"' will be tlolo •or ,.,, au•H 1omlly t. tr.._ Ofl frklcly Ho,,.mbtr RICKY DEAN lEA BUSH, rHldent U, 1'17 .i 4:CO P'.M ... The 51w,.,,.,. el C...ta Nona, C... "•lMCI -•Y on ~ ounoatlon i u r Peel II< cool NoveMber 21, "n. 5"rvlveel by llltw1i. Htllflw•y, CDl'OM del Mar. In lleu of C..nell<t AM of '\fltU, Ce .. moUMr 110-•• 11'9 fwn!ly W9191Q lllet can-Oororet of ININls, tatllef' ...,_n '11 1r11>u11ont tie -to IM ..,...strlcltt Cotl• Mew, c.. .. ac~r 8111f X'-I Mutk 0..-rllNnl In Pa-., ,,._ of Coli. Mew. C..., llw IWolheB C... Mlcltffl, Mar1I end Tim of lltlnolt and ,.HILLll"I Guy ol Colla"""' c... anCI w ... of CHlllSTOPHl:R JAY PHILLIPS, Go+«Ho,l ..... M.C.tnJNntf~ .... . ·~ 24, ,.... e_., on HovemlMt' 21, c.. .• J\ICIY ..... al AMCllllO. ee .. INlley 191/ •t ~ ~i.1. S<H\'1¥941 by Ann Krotll of llllnoh. Grev••IO• ,..,.nit IN. & Mrs. PllllllJ>s IHtrolel & MnlkH -•llakl Tode'f-' 10:l0 A.M. (yntlllel, bN>INf .John of Klhel, Maul wlllt l"IMfNnl It Fil~ Me-lal anel ""•" Cetherln• encl AMI, Perl!, 1111.1 lettloron F-•• -grendmotllat' IM O. Wero of R.,ie CMtt Ma.wcllr.clon. Rock, Ca. Rftlelent al Newport lead! TllUKIL tor IS .,. .... ··-··· ol htwpotl HaLEH FA't Tllu>eaL, ... '4, rest· H"bor Hlgll School. M•morlll 4'efllofH<1n1tneton8eoc.",C...O.ner11 Oc1eMf' 20, '", Ml. "'" Mtl. 1Hv10 f'•~Mn, tOI .. no .. •11 1-1•0, to.I• lv.eU, bo, Mr. •no Mrs V.<ollQ<tng C.rocittt>, lJ411 v1• :Wn -··~.YU-h lllt, Qlrl Iv r •~o Mo. MKl>.MI (..1Nv11191r, 1 110 • 11na!>t .. htwport-n,eir1 "''' dno Mr~. Jonn Jakot•y, 71) htlotll• o ...... C.0..0<W Clef wr. bo'f Mr •n<1 MrL c;.r., w.nn, 10I lfent<• Avertut-, • J, t1un11ngton be4Kh. 001 ""· .. no MO. kOl>ert Athlty, ~ M•g.nolt.t, 4.MLI Mt••, gtrl Oc:\MW 2'. "" Iv r •n<I lvlrl. ~rt<.11 M<Kl>on•IO, •10 "••I" kom., htwporU11<1<,,,oo, ,.r,enoMn. l1motll)Ultnort,1JH2 Alltnlt<, U19UNh111w1,gor1 Mr. •ne1 Mn. llmotny e.rr111. •lOt tore (..trUt, hunl11191on &t<t<ll, Qorl Mr eno Mn. i.<r•n..nio ""~" 1"1~ I-om-.......... , (..M .. llMW, Qlrl Mr. eno Mn. M•~• I !.ttrn, 19)1 t>ort IHltlol (..lrt .. , ,.,...por l &NC.It, boy ~n.1"1 Mr. •llO MB. "'6Uti.• .IOtOMI, IUO Aoen.t Ave.,;:" 101, (.os141 MeM, boy Mr. ellO MrJ. JltMPfl C..'lfll•no. 201U I.ohm• 1.-, Nun1•1>11ton &e~ll, Doy M•. •no MO ~ltnn (..oltn, 2~2 brun•I•, M••lon \llefO, Doy Foulup at .~an Onofre Nuke Reactor Vessel Pat in Backwarda The Southern CaUfornla. Edison Co. dlsclo1ed Tuesday lhal a 420-ton nuclear reactor ve11et wu put on backwards in one of two nuclear aeoeraUna plants betne built at the edl• ot lhe P1cillc Ocean. The miltake was made last April and dlsconred lest week, project manacer Orlando Ortera aaid. But, be uld., lhe giant torpedo-shaped vessel will stay as Ilia THE FIVE-STORY REACl'OR and the ve:ssel 'a headpiece are both symmetrical. As a result, Ortea• said the head will be placed on the reactor backwaidl, too, and computer proerams chan1ed •'Ml the fuel roda are lb proper poatt1on:"' The reactor 11 ln nuclear generating staU&n 2, expected lo be In operatlcm by 18Sl. The lint plant bas been used for 1everil years. Nearby, plant No. 3 is a1lo under con.atrucUon and expected lo be open by 1984. The constructlQtl work at the site owned jolnUy by Southem Calitorn.la Edison and San Die10 Gas & Electric Co. la expected to cost at least $2.5 billion. A GROUP OF construction aupervllo notlced lh1t a mm· in& on the nuclear r actor -et ''Wu pomtln1 nOrth rather than" 1oulh u orl1lnally lftterided," One1a •aid In an Interview. "But, In taJdnt a aeeond loot at It, the mark la only relative lo tM equipment coKQponeota themselves aQd the equlpment component• au all aym· metrical, 0 Ortea• said. . It waa unclear what dama1e, If any, could have been clone it the ml1take bad been uncletffted. Workers were decldiri' bow to place a ahnJlar reactor m unit a atthetlme. Spaces Found OC Blood Center Parking Still Her Problem Marlene Nelson, a supervislnl judicial stenographer for the Oranse Cou.nty Superior Court, hoped she had found a patkina space In the courthouae base· ment. But tt looks like she '11 continue parking on the street and walk· ing several blocks to work Ms. Nelson, a Placentia resi· dent. found some unused apace ln the courthouse basement -park· ing garage, enough to create four new parkingstalb. SHE TURNED THE IDEA into the county Employee Su11estion Proeram and hoped her reward would be use of one of lhe stalls. Not so, county officlala ruled, A.lrpo.19t Traffie sayina county reaulatlon1 re· quire that the new spaces be re. served for new judaes or court of· fl cl ala. Ms. Nel.llon, who will receive a commendation for her Idea, said Tuesday she's not sorry she made the sugeesUon. ••J'M GLAD I MADE it," she said, then with a chuckle added one more suggestion. The spaces aren't belna used right now, she said, 10 why not let her and three other employes park there until higher ranklne court officials need them? •'Somebody could be usine them," she said, "for two week.I, or a month. We won't claim them rorever.'' FirmFmed . ~ Report Shows Small Growth Nearb' 1.8 million passeneers have departed or arrl\'ed at Orange County Airport so far this year, an lDcreaae of 18 percent over the 1.5 million paaaeneen durina the first 10 month$ of 1976. I Airport atalistlcs u of tbe end of October also show JiUJe lnc~eaae in the ;>umber of commuclal flights, wlth 24,243 for the first JO months of 1917 compared with 23,46:5 mehts during the same period a year earlier. SACRAMENTO (AP> -The state Division Of Industrial Sarety has fined a Los Angeles area ntol'lufacturer $1,000 for using a cancer-causing agent. without required sa feguards for employees. The dlvlJlon uld lt abut down Rubber En1tneeriot of Calllornia in Irwindale until safety measure• are taken. COUNTY OFFICl1U.S REPORT A 3.8 percent. lDcreue in the number or private aircraft take-offs and landings brlnflnt the fi1We to 507,177 so far this year. Many or those are so-called touch-and-go fiifhts which are practice take-offs and landlnp. Airport parking Iota hne bandied 2$1,582 autos so far lh1s year, the report shows. Stabb~ Suspect Trial Date Set A man accuted of stabbing his brother to death during a family quarTel in a Santa Ana home bu been ordered to face trial Jan. 30 in Oranee County Superior Court. Judge Robert E. Rickie• set tbe trial date and a pretrlal appearance Dec. 9 for Carol Harmon. 23. Harmon ls held ln the county jail with ball set at $10,000. -. , URG-NT Persian and Oriental Rugs aitd RIBlen FRIDAY, NOV. 25, 1977 8:00 P.M. I N&WPOITU '"" 1107 J_._.. a&. 1'4•~ ltecti . . . -A.ctto.eer: sa ..... ,......,..., . UcHMCI & loni:led l11spectlon one how before auctloa TerMt: Callt or CIMd&. Moshr C~ & AIMrican Ex;Mit1• Info: fl I JI tll .. 141 OH G'OD! Can Dr. Flanzer perform .miracles? Hrv"u •• ~·· JIMH Epla<.,el ... .,..Arts. Patwd .,.,.,on T111idey C.1t11rc11, 1.100 ltte weon.uelay Nov" Howmllltr 2l, 1917 ot ~ Mamo•l•I tmbet U, 1t11 el 4:• P.M. Arrenee· HoNll\11. IUrvl....O lly i.r h<llNM Cllt• meflt• Illy Neptune Soclelr with prlvell fOnt L. T,_I -of INdl lffvty Mr. •no Mn. l<O<huo t.Mlyle, llt) ARBESTING OFFICERS said Harmon used a All•ni. V.•v, <.osi. MeM, be'f Is his dental work divine? Find out for yourself. And ask about down-to~arth fees while you marvel at the way your dental insurance might cover the total cost of.... Dr. Flanzer's services. -i.111... ~'f I•~ .. ech, Cl, Mrt. SWANSON Tr1111tt WIS ello • '°"'""r of tilt H1t11I· KELLY JOelWAHIC>f4,,.,.ftUI ~ 9Mdl Art~. SM Is II• c.o.t• Mail, C.. P...ci ewey on Nov• wrvlwo by8~0I-DefMly of emller JI, "71 el Ille tl99 al 2 yoers Hunllntl~ ... ~.,, Ce, •f'ICI two 9t•n•t hl .. re11 Alltll lln4 Jo••Pll l>eltly. One alller·~lew 99Mle .IHI' Tllorp '1f Wll'll"'9, k-Ftltnda ...., U.I _. ..... 9rellln "911 ... Mtrt11try ,,..,,, 121•-.. tltO P ,M. Sundey Ho""'1lltr 21, "" .. ...,.., .. ._,vlcatwlllllleCIOf'ICl«toMet tt:•A.M. ,._.,.......,.. ... "11.I~ ,_,.u.M.Y Cot.OMtA'-fUMUA&. NOMI 7801 Bolsa Ave Westminster 893-3525 'AClfllC YllW MIMOllA&. ''-H c.metery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pacific View 0.W. N.wport, C.l!fornl• 84j-2700 ~ win • Ml oe.-~ cer-err. Pierce •roUleft sMitM' Men111ry .. rKferL Mr.-. Mrs. ko...10 -•ro, 21s.1 knife to 1ntllct fatal wounds on bis brother, Isaac, ~•rmo111" ~. """ll"91on & .. ch, 25, last July 5 durind a family fight that Involved 11111 • Mt. eno Mu ... CIMMI &UI, 1'1 t.enter three bnX.ber'8 and thelr father. ~•rtti, -M.~1.,..,.w,111r1 Police said the defendant told them that he was Mr.•noMn.t .... ~.JtalZenllh ·or Arnold H Flan er' Avunu•, :..n11ArwhtlQ111s,111r1 trylne to halt a fight betwffn hia two brothers and • • I Mr, e110 Mrs. l'•ter Menn, um hadnointentlonofuslnjthekn1feontl\4'vlctlm. 370 E. 17ft,;;. Sf. l:•rhtrt Ao.a,l.IQUnl11lllS,OOy ..--------------------n Ntr. •no Mn. IJo<llllH f-rtUlthe, 201 "'•'-"0"" Roeo. "°' .. Nt.tN, 11"1 ·( Costa Mesa Mr.•MMr~2!'.:!7~.mu11e L M. BOYD heque1,S.n~tat>•~tr-.01r1 , __ ""!'-_.....;..._...-. ...... _ _,, 642 0112 Nor. 1no Mrs. C.ltn 1111c1n11r1, U L __ _!~~~~!.~-!~~~~~~~~!J~~~==~:;=========:=::'.::'.::'.::~~·~i~~bi~=~ Ai.trt>rOOll, trvJM,boy • . ,.,.~ • WALNUT BlDG&, Ark. <AP> -Flying an airliner didn't ap· peal to Nick Vaccari. "It's Just like drlvi.Q,f • llu.s on the hiabway Instead. ·of a 1porta carf he declared. acrlcultural aviation op So 11/accari tur~o dustlne to the layman. T rues planes that dip and dart o r dusty fields and under hi&b· voltage power lines. FROM A DISTANCEt the maneuvertni may appear an ex· erclse in Dying acrobatics, but to the 48-year-old Vaccari, It's strictly busl..MJss in the c~kplt. "This la not a business of t\yin1 an airplane for fun -playinJ, or showing ol! the skill of a pilot." he said. "It's work and it's bard work. "It's a very scientific Industry NEW YORK (AP) -The American penchant for calorie counting has invaded even the hearty territ9ry of the beer drinker. Within the past three years, as many as 20 brands of low-calorie beers have popped on the market as U.S. brewers battle for new taste trends among some American drinkers. 'NO MORE DAYS OF THE SCARF AND GOGGLES' Crop DUiter VaCCllrl a.ams No Margin of Error "IT .JlJST IDT AT the right time when enough people were diet conscious; it almost UD· covered a new market," says Chet Gardner, a spokesman for the U.S. Brewers Association. "People who bad stopped drinking beer, guys over 4S who were worried about their heart or . weight or whatever, women or others who felt regular beer was too filling seemed to catch on to it," says Gardner. OC Prices Stable By The A.saoelat.ecl Press Prices paid by consumers in the Orange County-Los Angeles metropolitan area remained the same on the average during Oc- tober, the federal Bureau or Labor StatisUcs has reported. Low-calorie beer, which generally has one·third . to one· half tt\e calories of its regular counterpart, can scarcely be con· sidered a diet drink. Calorie con· tent In many of the best·selllnf beers runs from around 70 for Jlm Wurth, ~hief or the bureau's Southern California office, sald 'Tueirday that the consumer prtce Index for the metropolitan area re- mained at 18J.81ast inontb, which m.-that consumers paid $18.16 for 1oocts and services th it would llive cost s10 in 1961. • ~ • PRICES A"VERA~ED ABOtJT THE same as in September but "~ , "extra light" brands to about~ in a 12-ounce serving. By com· parison, most regular been have about 1!iO calories in 12 ounces. were 5.9 percent b181ler than last October, Wurth sald, adding that It was the lowest yearly lDct~ase recorded since last December, when BUT THE GROWTH of "I•· cals" from barely a trickle when the fint products came out irf 1968 to an estimated 12 millloo barrels, or 8 percent of U.S. ~r consumption this year. is con· • prices were at a level 5.6 percent higher than the preceding 4 December. The cost of apparel and upkeep rose for the third strai1ht month, but that was offset by decreases In housing and transporta. lion costs. he said. ORDER YOURS NOW • • Allergan Says ' Gain-Puzzling · In response to a request of the New Yol'k Stock Exchange, Allergan Pharmaceuticals, Irvine, said Tuesday it knows of no reason for the unusual ac· ti vity In the trading of Its common stock. Aller1an is a domestic and international de- velopei: of ophthalmic, contact lens car• and dermatolqglc products. Earlier this year, the com· pany esUma~ 1977 full year's earnings of $2.SO to $2.60 a share. IN TRADING TUESDAY. Allergan stock gained 2~ points to 33~. Its high since being listed on the NYSE last. May. Monday's aaln was 1\4. Shares traded Tuesday totaled 58,200. In Octobet', the company reported sales for the first n!ne months of $38,535,000, an 18 percent in· creueover 1976. On Nov. 3, directors increased the re1ular quarterly caab dividend to 12.s cents a share on its common stock, up from the previous rate of 10 cents. . . Switeh Fritz Current Current Can't stdered 1omethln1 of a phenomenon in the industry. And for that, the Miller Brew- ing Co. of Milwaukee la widely credited. It started the first na· tional distribution of a low· calorie beer, Miller Lite, in ........... ------_.....a.._---... ~ ~~~- ,,, .... toele It au •ade tt • fleer .drl•lcer'• lleer.' January 1'15. Anbeusec'·Buscb, the nation '1 largest beer pro- ducer, and sucb Industry llants as Scblltz and Pablt. al°'I with a host of regional brewers, have alnce jumped lnto UM competi· lion. Miller acquired Its first llght beer recipe from one of the pioneen ill low-cal beer when it. bought up Melster Brau, .. falter- in g Cbicate·bated re&lonal brewer in 19'12. MEIS'l'Ell BltAU'S Brewers In tbe late 1eso1 ••eame out pilCh1DI at I at people wbo were wel1bt con· scious .•. Miller took It and made it a beer drinker's beer," says Milwaukee analyst Donald Rice of Robol1 w. 8akd •Co. ~ Ola. 0 ~..,,, I !E 1 +VJ A C. 2121 ·-'·' ... :e: l::F. ' .. , +r: a t--r.. -. S3\la i:.&'f l 4M• 4f.16 -f.16 H A~IOll ti"' ~ ,,,,,.... • ... ,... + -" l!~!Oc 1\oa 2"' Dt ... r at. • + 141 1• l'i..Alll _.., "" ~.. r! 4W 4 ,.16 ..... '' SUnT.c 11 o-. 1 ,.,. 1 15,.,. + i.. 1 ~wr•<;U = :1: Miltesv '~ ~ •~ + ~ I: =~ ~ . = ................... gl1 ~'"' :nw ~ ...... ....... •• ••.•• 111 II ~:a . ...., .. ................. ~ 27"_, T•• I~.................... 24 ~& ., 11 .... ,......, ··············-····· 2 a ..._..-. ••• -••••.•••••••••••• Wiit 141<1 ,... .... ............ ........ ,.,.,,11 i .. ~ ' . • OAILY PILOT AO TOothless Win I I Jt,s Broad Advancer ~ NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market 'dt\nded Tuesday's rally with a broad advance today. Gainers outnumbered losers by mOl'ethan a z;.1)ri~1 in the t.allyofNewYorkStock~cbanle-Ustedias1MI. The Dow Jones averaae of 30 industrlalas.vic fCIM • morethan6polntsTUesday, waaupanotber .78to8'3~ • 1 The average would have shown a fain of ti had it not been tor ex-dividends. or dividend-payment ad· Justments. lD the prices of two ~ lta eomponenta -Dupont and American Telephone & Telesraph. The market beam a solid advt.nee Tuesday aftw tb6 1overnment reported a smaller-than-expected 0.3 percent riae in tbe comumer price lndez last month. si~lulnTM SpoiUglti NEW YOftK (AP)· S.-. 4 o.m. IWke eM Mt CMnglt of tlle fll-melt ectl\l't .... Y•lt stock EXCMnvt ~ 11.0lnQ MtlGMllY •\mote IMn $1. Alrco lnc........ 114 »14 +2\fl ~··"······ 2A 4\11 ... "' IHr&Rb ........ '1 • ~ lklutl'd .111 ••• ,... ...._ - Soi>y '°''·. .. .... 21 ,.. ..... HOll<hy '""····. 309,AQO u~ • .., w-l,alMI...... JOS,lto 21~ +tllt wt1ll Oil..... ,,.,,.. ~ -~ IRkllfl • ...... 1N,JllO SI~ • ~ I Ce1 ....... , lD,200 "'--"-__ ...., 11D,tol :w ..... "' -.-s .... . l~IOI a111 +\lo 1~ ....... 11UIOe " + ... Ameriea• £nuler• _lj~~lW YOIUC CAJ>-~ • =-':Jt.~ XM ~·~ INIM, I .. ~.::'1t''w. + .. Cill'P...... "'* , ... ... ~...... 1..-... .. •••••• 7UOO 2$h +I .. .. ...... ~-~ ... .. HellOllM • ....... u .. -~ ........,_ .......... '· + ~ --, ..... ••••, I 11 .. -'-•&.Id••••• ~ ..... ••••• ... .. 1111 -"' '·...,1011nAMragn J#::kwt.u,11 Hiil ~-.... 1.,,_ ~-! !r.n mi E· fl ll i !9 e m1i ii!! t:e 1nc111a ....... •• ••• • ••• •• •• .. L tJt,ao l reirt •.....•..•.•....••••.• at• Uti... ...................... -- '5 Stk ····--·······-······· ~- 1t'Jaat Si~a Did AJ.DAILY "1LOT NATIONAL/ CALIFORNIA Today, Original Feast Priced Out of Sight BJ BVGBL MlJLUOA.N » ..... OW: a , • The town fa of Pl)'mouth. Mao •• lbould be Uwltlul tb11 Tbankl&lvloa tbat the first TbanklliYina wu b 4 858 years alO llilteld ~ tbere Ud DOW. At todq'1 food prices. tlley MHl'coaldaftord it. .. t-IT WILL BE recalled from Gover~~rd'a Journal' that the 1ettler1 early OD e1tablil Cood vlbes with ·the Waml)anoac, the realdent -i tribe, when colQnlat Edward Wln1low cured Bil Cbief Ma11uolt of b1a cbroolc COD· 1Upatioo"by admlnilterinl the favorite phyalc of Dr. Samuel Fuller, the Pilcrim pby1lclan who apparently dJdn 't make wi1wam calls. If Georp Annatron1 Custer had the hlndst1bt to treat Sitting Bull in tb1I humane manner a couple of ctnturle• later, be might have avoided the Wl· pleasantness at the LltUe Bil Horn and the Sioux chief might APWI ....... ROYAL VISIT-Queen Elizabeth goes backstage to meet actress Julie Andrews, left, and Bob Hope at the London Palladium after attending the Silver Jubilee Royal Variety gala, which will be aired on British television next month. Proceeds will go to British charity, Colorado Ski ·Areas Report Conditions DENVER (AP)-ColoradoSkiCoantryUSAreportsthefollow- .ng conditioos ~t major aki areas on Tllesday : A·llalln21dlll(ll,a--.l*MdPG'Mlll:· BeflllOllCI P-1'dePlll, 11 new-. powmr, pecllldJIOWdlr, Keyst-»clefllll, ·--.tllKliN...-r. E1<10H 3'cjltptil, 2new-.pKMc1.....,. Lo ... 1-&IMtZAto41~,2MW~,.....,~....-. ...,lntwPn»dePlll,JIWWINW, ............ ~ Snowd1C191,l1tlndlet..rtfenlD~Ud-cllPIJletlNdaoa,. INewlllllW ....... ID_ln .. PllltZA,_., T·Tr-.) have 1tuck to bit old name of Jumpiq Bad,Cer. -ANYHOW, THE UUEVED aa1amore ol tbt Wampanou WU ao ll'&tetul it reJOll\lnt the re1war fellOWt .be warne« da Pllcrtma ~ a comp ac1 to Wipe out Pl1moutb by tbe rival MasaacbusetU lndlam and wlt.b alacrity, con.sldertna hla cood.l· Uon, accepted an lnvite to the Finl Thanbflvin.S I>lnn.1'. But, as It tUrned out, the chief'• bean wu bit1er ttian the menu. Lost Will 1> To Work -Hope LONDON <AP> -Bob Hope saya be lost tbe will to work after the death ot bis lon1·t1me friend and verbal 1paJTtna partner Bini Crosby. .. I did not feel like wortiu again aft.er bla death but then I realized. we all bad to 10 on," said Hope. BE COMMENTED between rehearsals for the Royal Vartety Show at the London Palladium. The Britllb·bom comedian bad planned to sing a duet fl1th Crosby on the show. "I knew we would all have to go on so I did a ahow ab<>ut 10 days later," said Hope ... But I felt very bad. Then after the au· dience laughed at the flnt joke, I JU.St went straight lnto it. Af. terwards I thanked the audience for makinc me feel much better and they cheered because I think they knew bow I felt to belin with." CROSBY DIED OCI'. 14 ol a heart attack just after playing a round ot golf. Monday nlgbt's abow -featur- ing Shirley MacLaine, Carol Burnett, Rudolf Nureyev and Harry Belafonte in add1Uon to Hope -wu aimed at raising $1.8 million for British cbarttles. It ll to be shown on Briti.sb television Dec.4. t' Officials Sued SACRAllENTO (AP> -A $80 mllllon class action ault has been filed agalnlt nine ShMta County officials lncludlng a Judie tor an alleged ·~pb'acy" to deny adequate public defender services. I I (I ! • I • . ' ( A TIME FOR GRATITUDE ~') CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHlJRCHES ~I. . INVITE YOU TO THEIR THANKSGIVING SERVICE • JENNEil CALLED a preas conference to try to debunk challena• made in a lawsuit flied lut week about a televlllon commercial starrtna Jenner Qd "the breakfast of cbamplOlll." Filed by Dlstrlct Attorney Joe Freitu' ccmua;aer_fraud unit. the suit accmes 'General MW. of false advertitlnc. It claim• the • Soapy Trays Make Marine . Recruits Ill SAN DIEGO CAP) -More than 1,000 YOUDI Marinel were made sick by eatinc off aoapy metal trays. a l)IOkesman dis· closed at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot. The rime cycle on one big dishwasher fafied, be said Tues· day. . The entire 3.867-man recruit force ate the. next meal, Sunda.y night, and wlthln two day1 1,m bad been treated at the dis· penaary for stomach upsets. Tl)ere were aome cues of dlar· rhea. Tboae who eecapecl the soapy food tra,ya ate in other sections of the cafeteria where different dishwaahersare uaed. Tbe IPQtellQD Hid 80 percent of thoee recrulta wbo became sick were given Upt dut.'1 or al· lowed to ai.1 tn bed. NOM ol them wu aertouslJ W, be said. MAS'IECIVMIES 'NE~¥' NEW YORK <AP) -A reap- pralaal of breast removals performed on 53 women shows that the operation• were nece11ary, contrary to the ortcloal concluaidnl of a na· ttonwlde survey, accordlni to a medical news mqulne. "Nearly all the 53 women who underwent wbat a National ln1tltutes of Healtb panel labeled, Jun • few ,,_.u aio. needless mastectomies actually needed them attu all," Medical WorJd Newt repartecl. AND THIS, RB polnta out= does not lnclude the Seotch at to $30 a ftfth. the Holland Jin at a jug and the Dutch beef at $1.15 a bottle. "Some ol the ttem1 like the wild turkey; would be a blt dif • fie ult to come bf toUJ'," nys 1Jo1an, •'IJut we could duplicate , the orlglnal menu if liven ad· vance warnl.nc. The other n.llht someone ordered mallard duck and we bad to eet It fron:i the 21 Club, -bout tbe Olll7 pl•w you can find It." , Let's see now, 148 people at ~ • bead llMI ~ 28 to 30 ahota to tbe bottle o1 boole, t.bal'a I another se per. • . All told, aomtttblDI oo U. order of •171 . not 00\llltlnl tlpe, ·od • uui. somet!dDI atra to keep tboee ft•• cOkd.al da~ ID tbe ldteben from 1ob18 on ltrlte. 'At the Registry Hotel's Grand Portage Restaur- ant. We'll serve you a feast from our special menu whlle you revel In the day long offerings . • ~~ of music by the Paciftc Strings and the evening '\ ' • 1 • I'll •• ~ '" : .. ~ ' sounds of Fred Libby's piano. I f ~ ·~ ~ An1itlaing tor a Scwe ... .._ Colorado Rockies goalie Doug FaveJI goes down making a save on a shot fired by New York Islanders player Mike Kaszycki in the first period Tuesday night. The Islanders, second in the Patrick Division of the National Hock~y League, beat the visiting Rockies, 4-2. Reput ations Ma y Fall .i When NCAA Files Open I KANSAS CITY, Mo. CAP) - A f' time bomb packing enough 1 firepower to damage the reputa· I f lions Of 'hundreds Of respected, import.ant men throu6'hout the 1 , Untted States beaan ticking Tu~day momlng. Histof'y suggests It will explode gradwally. Bits of mformation will leak out here. a name will be joined to an old scandal there. I Eventually, a congressional in· t vestigation into the enforcement poltcies of the National Collegiate Athletic Association could even lose sight or it.self. At 11 a.m. CDT Tuesday an or- ficial of the National Collegiate Athletic Association accepted a subpoena directing the organh:a- tion to surrender confidential files or 100 infractions cues to the House Subcommittee on Oversight and Investiaations .. Walter Byers, NCAA executive director, said, with reluctance, the subpoena would be obeyed The rues cover the period Jan. 1, 1970 to the presenL They name natnes and detail the miadeedsof persoM heretofore protected by the NCAA'• unyieldinl promlseof discretion. Behlnd the headlines of virtual- ly every infractions cue lies a hidden element -people with no omciat connection to the athletic proeram but wbose money or in· flueace wu used in the unetblcal recruitment of a star athlete. Bant preaidenta are there. So are corporation heads, pro· resslonal men, civic leader9 and even politicians. Men of success and Sood standins who, for whatever reasons, helped break the rides that the NCAA mem-bership laid down and expect the NCAA atafttoenlorce. Tbeee people are auilty of no criminal misconduct. But the potenUal for M)barruametrt 1s vut. ~ aubs)oenatid files - literally thowsandf of pieces or paper -are beina duplicated, packaged and readied for de- li very to the aubcommlttee by Monday. It is a development entirely un- precedented in the administra- tion of collegiate athletics. John E. Moss, D-Callr., sub- committee chairman, has as- S \.Ired the NCAA the confidentiality or the sensitive documents will be rigidly respected. But Washington is famous for committee leaks. Moreover. the Associated Press has obtained a copy-of a letter in w~ich Mos~ indicates that his subCommlttee will be the final Judie or what information is released. ,". . .you should be aware that the Subcommittee may always authorize disclosure of evi<.\ence it deems to be in the public in- terest, consistent with our valid legislative purpose, and which is relevant to our investigation," Moss wrote. Jn other words. only that in- form allon relevant to the in- vesttcatiol\ will be made public anct the cooductors or the ln-vt!atigatioo will decide what is relevant.. Tbe situation is rife with irony. Moss has repeatedly insisted the investigation is aimed at the NCAA staff, an effort, in effect, to protect the NCM membership from the orgallisaUon ltaelf. But the confidential informa- tion in the subpoenaed tiles seems unlikely to contain anythlna t.bat could Indict the staff. The welfare of the mem- bership, ostensibly the concern of the aubcOmmlltee, ~an only suffe-r lf the conttdenUallttes are broken. Schools in Oklahoma, Callfomla, JWnnesota, Mlchl1an, Kentuck:y, Kanaas, T~xas , Hawatt,'Nev~a-to n.&m~onl1 a f e11t -h•vt. ~involved In in· fradt'ons lo~eatl«atloDI albce 1970. Constituents and tnstttu- Uon1 ln the states served by the very congressmen doing the In- vestigating stand to be embar- rassed. Many times NCAA schools, up- on learning they are under in- vestigation, cooperate fully. To a great extent, their cooperation hu been extended with the com- forting knowledge that the NCAA Jtafr always, without ran. has maintained strict confidentiality. But the NCAA can no lonier promise confidentialltr, The ef· forts al curbing recruiune abuse will surely be compromised. Sperts i n Brief NEW YORK -Centerfielder Andre Dawson loday became the second player in the nine-year histoty of the Montreal Expos to wln the National League's Rookie of the Year Award, beat- ing Steve Henderson of the New York Mets by one vote. The 23-year-0ld Dawson, who hit .282 with 19 home runs, 6S runs batted in and 21 stolen bases, re- ceived 10 votes in baJloUng by a 24 -man committee or the Baseball Wrtters l\ssoclaUon or America. Jlral'eS Sip Coz ATLANTA-Bobby Cox ls the . pew manager of the Atlanta Braves. Cox, at 36, becomes the )'oungest manaaer ln the major leagues, He replaced Dave Brlttol, who waa fired Oct. 25 after guldlnt the Brave• to a last.- plate flnlah in the National Leaaue West division Ulla past season. ~t•Retlre DAILY PILOT LOS ANGELES (J~P> - Southern Calltornla coach John Robinl()O said the Trojan• voted almost unanimously to accept a provisional Bluebonnet Bowl bid, and add«J. ",Moet of our players have a deep sense of frustration and want to prove something." Robinson, speaking Tuesday at his w"J<ly meelint with newstnen. said, "Our players have had a lot of thj,ngs go wroni. a lol of disappointments, and they want to t~tc. e¥ery chance to make amends." The biggest disappointment in USC's 6-4 sea.son is the fact that the Trojans. with a 4-2 con· ference mark, have no chance to play in the Rose Bowl. But they can knock UCLA out of the PaciCic-8 title Friday evening when ~ two crosstown rivals meet in their nationally televised regular-season finale. A Southern Cal victory would put tbe Trojans into the Bluebon· net Bowl against either Texas or Texas A&M, while Washineton would go to the Rose Bowl and UCLA would stay home. A USC loss means UCLA goes to the Rose Bowl, Washington goes lo the Bh1ebonnet Bowl, and the Trojans go nowhere. The USC-UCLA rivalry is a somewhat unusuil} one in thal it is, while heated, not biller. Robinson reflected that when he talked about the showdown with the Bruins. "We're not really thinking about knockin1 UCLA out of anything,•• he remarked. "I can't say you don't wJsb your rival m . . because there's a little bit or that in all of us. Bul when the eame's over, the main thina we want to say ~. 'We won that football game,• not that we knoeked UCLA out or the Rose Bowl. "We're more concerned with ourselves, how we play, than what happens to tJCLA." A tie ln the game would have the same consequencea as a Tro- jan victory, but the USC coach . said only at the Ume to make the decision would he know for sure ifSoutberuCal .,.iould 10 tor a lle. "If we have• the ball fourth- and-U ca thtlr 35 and lime run-11tnar out " he said, ·~ure, we mlibt kJ~k a fleJ~ il)af for ~ tie. But that's sometlllilg I c~p't say for sure until it happens." While saying he believed neither his Trojans nor the 7-3 Bruins were as good as they were in 1976, Robinson voiced ·respect for UCLA's play this rail. "They've improved each of the past five weeks," he commented. "They've played well enoucb to win. Offensively, they've b d the knack ol gj'.lllng the Job done, bave been able to come up with the big plays . . . sometbinC we baven'tdone." Robinson. Joklnely alludltta to, the fact that a vicW)' over UCLA •l u ..... PHOENIX, ALVA N ADAMS (33) RACE PAST THI!. LAKEAJ. 4 Bu mbling Lake~s . Ripped at Phoenix PHOENIX (AP> -Rookie forward Walter Davis scored a career high or 34 points to send the Los Angeles ~kera -suffer- ing from the absence of Kareem Abdul.Jabbar -to a 118·107 Na- tional Basketball Association ton to the Phoenhc Suns. Tuesd.af nleht's win was the tittb straight home vle!t.orY 'for Phoenbt, brihging its record to 9-5. The Lakers' play Tuesday at Veterans Memorial Coliseum was alm06t bumbling without the aid or the ailing Abdul-Jabbar. During their six-minute score- less stretch from late in the first quarter into the second quarter, the Suns outscored the Lakers 18-0. That put them 13 points behind, al 39·26, and the Lakers played catch-up the rest of the night. -They nearly succeeded when Phoenix' lead dwindlM to three points with four minutes left and a 105-102 score. Then Davis scored nlne quick points to finish the Lakers, who are 7.9 overall, and who have lost five of seven ' road 1a1J1es. Davia and 1uard Ron Lee Joined forces to ~re 2S of the Suns' 30 points In the fourth quarter. Davis, scorine 21 points ln the second hall, rea!flrmed his candidacy tor Rookie or the Year, alona with two other forwards, the New York Nets' Bernard Kina, and Milwaukee's Marques Johnson. Tars' Foe Balanced, ~losive Are B• tiers Out? Shackle/ ord Upset With JRB Group ------- . , lt filU"IS to be aomethlnl Uk• 'the lrresiaUble force meeUn1 the .. ; j~moveableobject, . ~ lb' CRAIG SUFF at•o.MJ ,,......, "I don't like the J'unior Ros• Bowl, anyway," says the Golden West coach. 0 Because of thla one game we have to start practice ln the middle of August and I don't Hite that. 1 don't tlilnk one game should dictate how we run OW" pro1ram.'' • r • That.•1 the outlook for Saturd.lu' • 1 ulibt'• 1:.ao CIF playolf same : ~bet.ween Newport Harbor and , .'West Covina al the Orange Coast .. .Goll••• field. • • The l.rn.iatible force is West ~ Covina'• balaneed, exploalve of. tense wbicb awraies 32.1 POhats • 111 per 1auie. '1be immoveable ob- • •1 ll_ect ls Newport Harbor's de· , 1 ;tense, wblcb allows just 9.3 . , , ~in ts per game. :i•I • Perhaps the single most im- pressive statlaUc of Newport • 1J1arbor1 defense ta lta 21 in- tercepUons in 101ame1, tbe"IDOlt , .., any Sallon team in almost a r., .. '· · ..,..la ll probably the best '1 wecca4ar)' I've blld since I've • tbeeD CO.Ching here," aays de· ·fenslve coordinator Hank Cochrane. .. And it's not just one IUY • who's do1nai it all," Cochrane Sa)ta. "No individual player bu mon tbaD four int.ereepUons. but collectively, I'd aay our secon- dary ls the backbone of our de- ~._ .. Safety Wayne Kasparek bas picked off four passes, cor- nerbact Dave Hitzel boasts three int.erceptiooa, and four defensive 'backs have two apiece-Paul lfelfricb, Jim Corum, Franlc. Venclik and Dave Thompson. "Part of the reason our pass 4efense bas been so good ls the preuure our front line bu been "applying," Cochrane says. "They've been forcing a lot of mtat.altes." Jeff Bitetti leads the charge from his defensive end positioo. The 6-3, 201-pound all-leaguer •·baa 11 quarterback sacks in 10 games. Others oo the front line include Mark Voborll, Mike Ashen, Ryan Abbate and Dave Sturgis. Any diacussion of Newport Harbor's defense would be in- ·complete without mentioning the liDebacking corps, considered ·one of the best in the Sunset Leaeue. • Anchoring the crew is middle linebacker Don Barker, a 6-0, 200-pound choice for the All· .Orange County t.eam. Flanking Barker are Corum and ·' :Thompson, and the roving monster back is Bob Brown. Vencllk alternates at safety and comer back. :B~e Cubs 'Awaiting ~ 10~0 Barons ,., Founlain Valley High 's Barons )lave ertjoyed the advantage or size and strength in r;olllng to a 10·0 football record almost In routine fashion. With tackles Al Koenig (235) and Pete Chinnici (240) leading the way, the Barons ~ave seldom been matched in r Golden W•t Colleae football eoacb RQ Shackleford ta upset with the Junior Rose Bowl selec- tion commit~. Sbacklef ord rates Fullerton as "Tbey have aald that the can· dldatet (from tbe west) are Fullerton, Pasadena and Sad· dloback. whlcb 'U)Sets tbe bell out of me. What lf all three lose th la weekend!,'• says Shackleford, whose team ~es with undefeated f'ullerton in the Avocado Bowl Saturday night at cemtos College. . the No. 1 team tn tbe state. "What they're sa.yina is that tbeae tbree bowl aa.mes (A'focado, Potato and Mlsslon) . are not very important. They're upaettin& the lustre of tbe same. The JRB ~e have done a very poor job.' Jones, llluiPlppi JC bu been selected as tbe eastern represen· tatlve and JBB releases list Fullerton. Puadena and Sad· dleback u the cont.enders for the western bid. Pasadena faces College of Sequoiu in the Potato Bowl Saturday whlle Saddleback battles Glendale in the Ml.salon Bowl. "U Fullerton wins, they def· initely abould go to the Junior Rose Bowl. And Pasadena bu a fine team, also. But we've played a much tougher schedule than Saddleback has and I think we should be considered also, ~specially if we beat Fullerton,•' says Shackleford. "There's no doubt about that. Fullerton has the befit defense in the state and they deserve the rankin& (No. 1 in naUon) they have,"hesays . As far u the Rustlers are con· cerned, Shackleford belteves GWC has "improved tremen· dously" slnce the flrst meeting with Fullerton. "In the firstfour qames we had over 20 turnovers, but slnce that time we've only had elgbt or nine. Out runnin1 backs have t\een hanging on to the football and that's been a blg difference," says Shackleford. Jn the eame aealnst Fullerton • Golden West gave up a touchdown on a pass interception and fumbled away two golden Op· portunities to score at the Hornets 15 and 12-yard lines in the second half. ·•we hope it's the same kind of game as before-except we don't want lo make mistakes," says Shackleford. "I hope it's a low- scoring game, but I don't know that it will be. ... .., ............ _,LMP9'W GWC bas two losses (lo Fullerton and Orange Coast> while Fullerton is unbeaten and Saddleback and Pasadena have lost just once. "Defensively, we've got to make them go a long way the hard way and hope they will make mistakes. We've got to stop their blg plays. And we've got to score some points," adds the Golden West coach. SADDLEBACK'S GREG SPEICHER (22), JOHN GILL (30) FACE GLENDALE SATURDAY. GOLDEN WEST COACH RAY SHACKLEFORD TALKS STRATEGY WITH OB BILL HOLST. 2 CIF Games Tonight Three CIF second round playolf football pmes will not be played Saturday night and two of them are tonight, including a Southern Conference clash in- vol vin& Riverside Poly High, the team which eliminated Estancia (Costa Mesa) High from the playoffs. Poly tangles with Troy (Fullerton) High at Fullerton · Hieb tA:Jni.abt. while Temple City ud La Sera.a collide a\ Cal Bllh In Whittier in an Eastern Con- ference tilt. Both are at 7: 3l\. Friday night at 8, St. Paul (Santa Fe Springs> and South Hills club at Citrus Colleae in Big Five Cooference action. The rest of the playoffs con- tinue Salmday nilbt: ... .... Oltlf._ ~VIiie¥ UNI WLewMe ~lonets.nta IMNcaCIMll9t•I L.-AI• Cf..11W ..._._., .. u.Mnltyof ....,...., . t&. , ... Ct-1) W s..1111 Hlllil (14) • O!Yus ~·~••> ~c POioists Split 1core wa '1-3 lis favor of the wln· ners w1tb Ulne mmat. to play. Jett DellCIU .ccn4 a loal and Wooten blt a Pair to brinl the count to 7-6 with 56 aecondl re- matntng. Golden West was unable to aet the ball back aod Fulle.rtoll ran ·9,µt tbe.dock...,....:. , .... ., ...... QeMllaW• • I 4 4 t-D SOllNM 4 1 i ._,:l ~ ................ 1, Mltdlllt 2. '11111•,K .... U f lll~W ........ ~w.. • t 1 .._. 1,-...,_ I 2 t l-1 ...,.. w.t _... ~11••~ a, Ol#llU z.· "'· Gftuchos Secondary Gets Supreme ·T .est Saddleback College's football team boasts a strong defensive secondary that has intercepted 30 pasaoe this season. That secondary will be put to the acld test. Saturday night (8) wtien coach Ken Swearingen 's Gauchos tangle witb :Western State Conference champion Glertdate College in the Mission Bowl at Glendale High School. Bob Gaallano (8-3, 185), the Glendm quarterback, dll'ecta the puslnf attack for the Va- quero., The Vaqs have passed 2M tJm• this aeaaon and com· pleted 138. But th-. key to the suc- cesa is in interceptl(>ns. Glendale baa been intercepted onl,y five times wbile posting anS-2 record. "I think the No. l key to our success Saturday night wlU be in play Ing good PH• defense,·' Swearingen says. •twe are capa· ble of dotni it and we bave good. athle~ jn our secondary. .. We will also have to·.t.ake away the big playa and try to con· t.rol the ball a little more. I feel our defense can do tho job but we dOn 't plan a lot or surprises for them. "We emphasize different pbues ol our offense one week and our defense another week. We will .,. doing the same ... ing qalnst Glendale." The S.tdleback secondary is led by Jeff Hopp. He intercepted six paawes this season, tops for the Mission Conference cham- pions. Steve Speicher and Steve Car- roll have each intercepted five while Steve Crapo has four to his credit. Dion Strombotne com· pletes the umbrella pass defense of the Gauchos. When Saddleback is on offense. it will be directed by BUI Yancy. He was the leadin1 passer in the conference with 92 eompletions in 164 atumptB for 1,351 yards and nine touchdowns. He also likes to nm the ball an. Ure Gption play. The leading rusher for the Gauchos ls Greg Speicher, brother of defensive standout Steve, who picked up 1.123 yards in 249 carries this season. He was the conference leader in rushing and scoring with 78 points. The Gauchos are near full strength physically forth• came ·•we have the usual bnaisee," Swearing~ says, "but nobody wtll miSs th6'&ame. There is no sense ln saving anybody.'' How does the coach look at Glendale as an opponent? "They do a lot of good things and they have a big 1uy at quarterback who likes to throw the ball and he also scrambles well. "Glendale bas a big team. both olfenaively and defensiv,ly and Cb•Y have good-aizef '-ctles. They also have a good nfn.ninf back in Andre Jones ud they have a couple of very cood out.· side receivers." Sea Kiqgs, Newport lagona Post Win.s \ I -' • BaVCE SIMMS. Capb&ruo VaUe1 -Simms, .f.. &.ud. lntded out bl&hest of any oftenslve players "Nrth•~u;a ln their loa1 to Mluian Viejo. . .. 'TIM FRINK. 'Edbon <Haatlastea Beaela> -1'rtllk carried the ball eight times and aatned 48 yafdl, ln addition to his outatandJ.ng blockia1. nar PREEMAN, l"oantaJa VaJJey -In addl· Uon to h1a solid performaoc• at llMbacker. J't,emm scored two touchdowna and blocked well from bla tun back poalUon. •.• DA\llD REYES, Mater Dd <Santa Au) -/~et sude three outataodin1 catches and execut. ed bla bloeld.n1 autanments with precision in a a.DJClll at Redlands. CorGU ctel lfar-ttone. ~n~ Gllllt1 ' uttericl throUjb a dli•PP«>ltlltl\I t·l7 record 1n ·bta flnt ''Hon u OrJbs• Cout Colle•e '• bHketl>aU coach a year a~ut h•'• opUmlsUc tM can N· •en• that I m•rk In 197?'.7t. OCO launeti•• play S.tuctay nlJJ)t (7:30) at LA TraCle Tecb. "We don't have Jot of aiie, but we h•v• ucb better playe111 than we did lu\.year. Arid we're Hllfl..,. deeper ... 1 think we're COiDI to hue a CoOcl aeUOD, '' &a>'8 GllUI. Four aopbomorea fl1ure to be lo tbe Pirates' at.artlDI llueup Saturday Qight. Tltey In· elude Kevin Karkut (5-10), Mark Oman (&-4), Jon Holl.nd (6·4) and Kent Bnath (6-6). Holland, a 1004 DAVE PISAB8KI, &tancla (Cotta Mesa) _ shooter,, averased 12.3 :t!atancia ran the middle with power at Riverside points per same • )'ear •Poly and Piaarskl WQ a key blocker amidst an en-afO; wbJle Oman and tire front line that did U,e Jot> accordlns to coaches . Karkut bit at 8.1 aQd 3.1 • • clips. Holland was a ALAN PARKER, Mllslon VleJo-Iri his best starter while Oman and ~rformance ol the year, Parker carried the ball 2S Karkut aaw action in all timet lor 128 yards and a pair of touchdowns to lead 261ame1. tbeDlablolputCaplJtrano Valley 29-7. Brush playecl twp • · ' aeuo• ago, then aat out Defenee laat year with an b\jury. • STAN SHIBATA • .FoantalD Valley -ln addi· The other 1tartel" U9D to eatchtq four passes for 39 yards, iacludloe a flew-a to be fresb.nian 17·1ard toucbdown catch, Shibata keyed a defense Pete Neumann (S.,), Golden West Colleg~·s Delan Paulsen wbichabutFontanaHl1h'swishbone attackolfeoG· from Costa Meaa'a (left) will be in the starting lineup Satur- elatatb'. EstanclaHigh. day when GWC's soccer team host.a El California JC championship. El Camino ls ranked No. 1 in the state With itB lone loss coming to Golden WeaL Other playere· who Camino at 1 o'clock for the Southern W~~~.E~fila~~•u•> fifu~promld~~tn-~~=~~~~~~=~~~==~---------~-------- ~ Bo1dan led the defense with 11 unuaiated and G llla' plans include · · tb.ree aaslJted tackles and caused a fumble in a sophomore Rob Yardley Tennis MV Su~er.s Reversal . aterllng performance at St. Paul (Santa Fe (M) and freshmen Ray Sprtnaa)High. Orem (5-11) and PaUl CRAIG OLSON, Ma&er Del <SU&a Alla> -Olson led an inspired second ball rally for the Monarchs against Redlands High with qgressJve »lay and graded out best among the Mai.r Dei de- fenders. Ako~1\t2~·from Estancia Results ~:rM~ from corona v G. I As J7 tuJsallos MOve Out Others on the roster In-.I.' Or Jr 8 ERIC RA.FF, Corona del Mar-The'Sea Kina•' I .ieadinl tackler, Raff played his customary comla- tent same 1D a losing cause against El Dorado <Placentia) High. elude Ed Bell <Edlaon>, • . Stev.e Parrino (Costa «-e.:i~;'~C.-Me a a ), Rob Galey :rs:.;. <Newport Harbor) -1td J ... 1e~c1>0MC11a1111end~ S•-n~-1.. ($an dtl CJ•~-~ .. 2; LYftH -ve ~ Pedro). Meyer• cei ........ •·O, •·•) Gillis figures he'll McCM•nldl<il-"4.M...._ bave e good abootlnf te"'e'••·==•• ct., det Mission Viejo Hllb'a domination of CIF swim circles. with the aaslatance of mult.t.-move Ins within the Mi&sle>n Viejo Nadadora lwllQ. elub system, baa taken a setba~t~ u &be Dlablos rear toward a fourth atralaht CIF 4·A crown. MIKE MURPHY, San Clemente -Murphy team, but reboundln1 ~..a.• .AMw- j)layed a solid game at tackle and was outatan~ will bea weakness. :~.:..,r= .. t~C::: 4Jllidat an otherwise dreary night for the Tritona lo, "We Tt'OO 't be 1tron1 on -7-t: McLMllfll•,....._ cu Mt11lng from Ute 1978 ~araity wUl be the Vassallo brothers of Puerto Rico, who have returned to thelr native land. t!.elr Joa to Esperanza (Anaheim) High. the boards, but we're -Mi;.H.w. • ge\tlna better, .. a•r• the Ql'W. ........ Jesse aDd Vlc Vuaallo were llvina in MIMlen Viejo while the parents were ill 1"1orida or Tea., but have DAVE THOMPSON, Newport Barbor -former Con>na de Mar ~----cttuu...-o- ThomPIOQ led the Sailors with 11 lead tackles and. Hieb bud coach. ....._ five usista, lutercepted a pass and ran 38 yarda to Glllia bas set two aoal.a °"'.;:.~=·"~K~ ~~; 'eet up the winn1nc touchdown, caused two fumbles· for bi.I club. • _ ...... ,,HI,... cc' ..... - aadr«OVeredone. · .. We'd like to win tbe .. ._.... ~ South Coast Con!ereuee ~~a .., Fv11 .... BANDY COLLINS, Capistrano Valley -tiUe and we'd llke to will ~ .... •caet"-Mlni.evw. Collilll bad 14 tackles, six assists and recovered two 18 gamea. I don't thlnk ~-=,::z:~~~ ROGER ·tombles in the Cougars' loss to Miaaion Viejo. · either Coal is umeallatlc. ..., "''"' • co .. ...,w. .. a. CARLSON • • We'vesottbetalenttobe ._ STEVE CUNJFF and GEORGE PINCKNEY. in the running for the a..a..:o-"'* ~ ~ El&aada (Costa Meaa) -The E· .. •ea• linebackera Sou th Coaat cbam· KNtfW <0',. • M'lllll ':4:· .,_. tl!Q M , ... 9 Mlll*t ... S r consistently were in the right place making the pionship." co'-.. 2..~H;~coH•••· 1'clde again.st a potent Riverside Poly team and w. w. ...._ since returned ror .a closer family ~ each was credited wlth elsbt unuatated tackles. ...,.... McDINld <o> ._. ... lationahlp. DAN CllAJlNITSK.I, Mtasloo Viejo-From his linebacker position, Cbarnitski had nine unaaslsted· tackle, five assists and an interception u the .Dtabloa held Capistrano Valley to just one touchdown. ~: ~ripp Ponders I:! Racing Switch Youth Gam.e c11et1ka·C11r••••11• .. N, •••· Jeaae, a Junior wbo fil\ll'el to com-=r.:.":::: t°<A.':!' ,gf:!; pete at tbe MOICOW Olfmplcs in 1980, Youth teams llom the t·•· • .,. .. ,, 1ut $.'7; Jeo•· • 1~ to a CIF champloaablp ln the Fountam Valley Jr. All-:._lflhttlel• to, ..,..w. .... a.... 200-yard=dual medley -1th a American Football pro-1·53.0S c1oc and gram wU1 play a aerl• of Wtnntn1 to the':: =·~ exhibitions Frlday.,... ~=.,,..,,,, whlchWGQlo8:08.tf. - Saturday and Sunda1 u *'-<a ., .,.. .. ,. • Vic • .-..._ •'-CIP ·-ard a benefit for tbe .._....,....,,...,~~ ,a--..-,woawe ,,...,.y Ctltfornia Special f;:.~~=~~1 ba~ ln 53.0& and wu llXth in 01 the IDdo at l:SUT. Vic, too~ ta eon-ympics. ...._ alderedan Oqmjt~ poalbWt:J. .. Thm •1'81D8S0 .... ~.: ! ..=-;::•~c;> .:' .=:; The DlablOI have become rtch with •• • ._ • ci.i..5w .,,, .,_...,.. "> the eombiaaUoa Ol superb fadl.IU. p.m. on each ot tMtbree ... .., w; ..,. a.N .. la and ezcellmt coaclilq from tbe 1115-day1 at C fteld an Ward ,...., -u. • lo VleJ N..;-..1..;:..a... • Street iust 1outb of • n ° _ .... PZ'Oll'UD atied-.... Cllllta.......... 1n1 Into Mlssloa VleJolllih-Talben venue ill l'oa-.. ._.. As dld the Santa Clara B1lb teams talo Valley. '"•••••;: cl'!11a,~1t1•> 41•'· ot yean put under current UCLA Members or tbe foot· ..,,_..,Clllt.._,~...,.... coach Geoqe llaJ.UI, phenomenal . .. ~:~e:=~1!n~ "'"'-<= •·..., 1ucceu ln 81•1l'OUP mrn.mlq at- proceeds benefi'UftS'<the co.. HAii> ...-. ..,, w; .._ -~tr:!a~cta!!!the~most~~am~b!~U~oua~.~~--:~".":'"~~~~~!IJ!~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ Pro•ram of nbvaical cc.. ....... KllMw cc.--· _ r, #• alMSJ .. ... ntneu and athlfidc com-..... :~:~~r~~ ~~= ..,&1111 e=,r:. ... Mtr• penou tbrou&hoUt the =: ~ ""'°"""*' .... •ta~. • . ... \\ 1.1).".~IJ .\' ~ l:OOI~ NEWS "aom.thlng Hutt, Sometht!"O WUc:t .. • TW!AVENGERS "The 50,000 BrePfaat" MtCKIY MOUsE CLUB 8UPEIVAAN SESAME STREET 'VILLA ALEGRE 5:3b BeWITCHEO "Blrdlel, Boglee And Baxtera" m ADAM-12 "Training Dlvtalon" GD HOOOEPOOOE LOOQE 8:00 II C88 NEWS De NEWS e EMERGENCY ONEJ The paramedlca and men of Station e 1 become cone.nee! When their ma1COt becomea llatleta and retuaee to eat. Cil MOVIE 1r * "Hondo And The ~pachea" ( 1967) Ralph Taeger, -.ot>ert Taylor. A half Apache r~ the troubled Southweat *11tory aher the Civil War. ( 1 hr., 50mln.) '8 THE BRADY BUNCH "Mall Order Hero'' Q) THE ROOKIES Webster masquerades as a prisoner at State Prison to aid the cause of prison reform. fJ9 ZOOM ID FOODS FOR THE • MODERN FAMILY "Yeast Breads" (ID) ABC NEWS 8:3011 MOVIE ***~ "1"he Day Of The Jackal" (Part 1} ( 1973) Edward Fox, Terence Alexander. An International contract klller Is hired by OAS to klll Charles de Gaulle. ( 1 hr., 30 min.) '8 MY THREE SONS "From Maggie With Love" &DOVER EASY Imogene Coca and Sid Caesar: unit pricing: visiting nurses program; adult education piano ensemble. 6'I!) FAMILY PORTRAIT "Dollars And Sense" Cl) CBS NEWS Cfl MERV GRIFFIN Guats: Prince and Prlneesa Rainier of Monaco, Jack Paar, Charlton Heston, Wayne Rogers, Dl11a Merrill, Cliff Robertson, Tom Laughlin, Carl Reiner, Dolores Taylor, Dick Van Patten, Vincent Van Patten, Roy Emerson, Clark Grabner, Don Budge. 7:00 G NBC NEWS 8 LIARS CLUB G A8CNEWS '8 I LOVE LUCY "Men Are Messy" m AOAM-12 The chase la on as the officers search for a huge angry dog and an elusive burglar. • MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT Ii) YOGA WITH MADELINE Cl) TO TELL THE TRUTH 7:308 SHANA NA D NEWLYWED GAME f.I MATCH GAME P.M. CD THE BRAllY BUNCH Ja" decides that her freckles Lo"eAtt•r Blythe Danner and Frank Langella are romantically in· volved in Chekhov's "The Seagull," to be presented tonight at 9 .on KCET, Channel 28, as part of the Great Performances series. kMP her from getting a boyfriend. Q) LETS MAKE A DEAL 9 21TONIOHT Guests: Joan Didion and John Gregory Dunne. I!) ST ARBO.ARO "Debi Wlleon" ()) $128,000 QUESTION l!.§) FAMILY FEUD 7:50 0 BASKETBALL Los Angeles Lakers va. Seattle Superaonlca 8:00 IJ ()) ONCE UPON A BROTHERS GRIMM Jacob and Wiiheim Grimm (Dean Jones, Paul Sand) step Into a musical fantasy world and become Involved In the adventures of the fairy tale characters they panned to fame. Ruth Bum, Teri Garr, Arte Johnson, Cleavon Little, Chits Rivera gueat atar. 0 GRIZZLY ADAMS "Gold Is Where You And It" Adams encounters a pair of bumbling prospectors (Larry Storch. Forrest Tucker) aearch· Ing for the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. 8 MOVIE ***"Walt Until Oar*" (1967) Audrey Hepburn, Alan Ar*ln. A blind woman outwits a trio of would-be heroin thieves. (2 hra.) Ratings Guide lMovt• ere r-.o .cc0<dl1>9 lo box ollke •I~. Mo.In tor TV • ._ lucl9ecl "' • ("tic.. I • * * * -Excellent • • • -Very Good * • -Good * ~. -Fair • -Poor George Burns Show Sparkles . By JAY SHARBlJTI' LOS ANGELES (AP) -CBS bu this special tonight at 10 on Channel 2. It 1tars an elderly. ci1ar-smokinc 1ent who started in show biz at age seven, singing with the Peewee Quartet on New York's EastSlde. Yous"°'1Jd see the show, "The George BUMlll One-Man Show," even tha\Wh he shares the bill with Bob Hope, Ann·Mararet, the Captaln and Tenpille and GJad1a Knight and the Pips. • True, too much is made of the fact 8W"U now la 81. Indeed.. the anno~ et Jokingly says tbe pesta are. •fstandin& by jasl'ln ease0 • requires help with thla ~e-mmlhowolhls. find hts pulse. He explains: "I live in Beverly Hills and have an unlisted pulse." GOOD JOKES AND good times abound in this show. But the best momt!nl is a shaggy vaudeville story he tells about the time he was 19 and lodged in an actors' hotel In Philadelphia. The yam concerns coffee, a maid named Trixie, the hotel owne{, a tramp actor named Jack Milo and •mout. And boy. is it complicated. But tt ii mi&hty fWUl)' and d• live.red with aacb preeiJlon ••• well, wateh the abow tontibt and Ht the m.ater at work for youneU. a am EIGHT 18 ENOUGH "All'a Falt In Love And War" Tom'a liberal attitudes .,. put to the t .. t when he auapec1a a romance between his daughter, Mary, and the black aon of an old Army pal. Dorian Hare- wood, J .R. Mii* guest et.,.. '8 CAROL GURNETT ANO fRIEN08 Guest: Joel Gray. II) MOVIE *** "Return Of the Seven" (1966) Yul Brynner. Robert Fuller. Aher one of the 'Magnif- icent Seven' la kidnapped, hla former comrades come to hi• readUe. (2 hrs.) 9 NOVA "Linus Pauling: Crusading Scientist" The only man to ever win two vnshared Nobel Prlzee (Chemistry and Peace) la profiled. . a!) MAGIC OF Oil PAINTING "Morning Scene" 8:30 CD CROSS.WITS Ii> OVER EASY Imogene Coca and Sid CaeMr; unit pricing; visiting nurHa program; adult education piano ensemble. (R) 9:00 0 NBC MOVIE "Llet Of The Mohlcans" (Prem- iere) Steve Forrest, Andrew Prine. zwkeye and his blood brother aid Ma)<>r Duncan Heywa~ ll)l delivering th• daugh ~, a British colonel throug mfle9 of territory heavily pulated with hostile Huron In ans. D tm CHARLIE'S ANGELS "Angela In The Winge" Kris lands a alnglng and danclog role when a aerlel of phantom- of-the-opera-llke accident• ple-- guea a film compeny. Nehemi- ah Persoff. Gene Barry, Shani Wallis gUMt ater. ... NBC89:00-"La.st of the Mohlcans. ''A new Ty ~ movie version or th~ James Ferumore Cooper sq :"" with Steve Forrest and ADdfew Prine heaclln1 tlie u;: ca.st. CBS 10:00 -The George Burns Oae·Man Show. The Oscar-winning comic stars in o variefy special wiUt an all-star cast. <See review below.) KHJ tJ 11:00 -"The Mad Bomber.~• A psychopath terrorizes a city in this 19'72 moVie with Vince Edwards and Chuck Connors. ' tl!M bonJb Mt to explode. (R) I NEWS GET8MART An old bank robb« wantt to arr.nge the ~ of two for-"* cronlel eo he can pme on ..cret .. • CAPTIONED ABC NEWS -r MO~ING 12.:00. TWIUOHT ZONE ''The Jungle'' m FOREVER FERNWOOO m MOV1E *'ltl.i "Reunion In Reno" (1951) M8J't( St.....,,a, Peogy Dow. ~ toa1er child ftMe to Reno after her mother beCOmea ingnant. (1 hr., 30 mfnt.) 12=*» e MOVIE * ** "The Fly" (1958) Al Devld Hedlaon, Patt1cia <>want. An experiment ~ta In the transmutation of a tty end a man, (1hr.,55 mtna..) '8 MOV1E *** !'It Should Happen To You" (1954) Judy Holliday, Jact( Lemmon. A model galna Instant fame by broadc;utlng her name on ....,...., blllboerda atound New Vortt. (2 hra.) 12~7 U 0 A.BC MYSTERY MOVIE **i.i "Nlctc And Nora" (1975) OtW; 6~ Jo Ann Pflug. A . ~ man and wtr. ctetectiv. teem come out or retirement wher) • COf'PM 11 round f1oatlng In the pool of a lwc~ Loa Angelea hotel. (R) 12:40 8 (I) C88 LATE MOVIE **"Sha Cried Murder" (1973) Telly Savalaa, Lynda Day George. A mod.a t,,_ desper- ately to convtnoe a lkeptlcal potlce department that a mur- d« haa been committed. (R) 1:008 TOMORROW Guelta: Danny Sherldan and other footbell prognoctlcat~. G t8PY K.uy and Scott do tom. moon- llghltnO between Wlgnmenta to hefp locate a pricelela man-U9Cf_,. In Italy . 1:aoe MOVIE *** . "Th• Exile" (1~8) DougJae Fairbanks Jr., Merla Montez. While In exile, King Chan. II of England falta In , Porat AJJplaucled Substitute Scores~ In Concert at B£1 .. ~ ... 'Someone bas been mindin.I the store very effectively indeed in · recent months while UC Irvine Symphony Orchestra conductor Alvaro Casauto has been tndulg· ln1 in some musical globetrot- tlnJ. Not even the mercurial Alvaro can be expected to whip hia UCI ch1r1es Into shape while he'r taking bowl from the podium ln such mualc citadels as Ber~ Llabon, Antwerp and Tel Aviv. SO 11"8 JUST AS well that the Popular maestro from Portugal can call on a member of the or- ch..-a lo take over many of the reheal'llla that he bu been com- pelled to in1as at UCt. PVJIUC NOTICE IU l'alllOll COUltT Oft CAU POIUHA COUMTY 01' OllANOa .. l1 STOlfS C[ SPECIAL VALUES FIR TODAY THRU SUNDAY • RACING STYlf MANOU IA• & SAOOlf e CH•OMf CHAIM GUAllO e 0£lUXf IO·Sl'UO 5HIMAMO OlAlt e 27 IN. )( I 16 IN. OUMWAU TIRU ca.•~• r. SffM SHlfTEI o KICK STANO IN OllGIHAl CAllTOt-1 •f PRICED LOW FOR· ·, C~RIST¥AS . - FULLERTON 2946 BRISTOL ST. 1530 S. HARBOR BLVD. SO. OF SAN DIEGO FWY. PHONE: 870-0700 PHONE: 549-1533 OPEN MON. THRU FRI. 8 A.M.-9 P. . . . . 20 !'fat W111l5 27 MONTH LIMITED WARRANT 120 L RRST ST. AT CYPRESS PHONE: 547·7477 1'1KH CONVIR19ll FOi toYS OI Giil$ SIDEWAtK BICYCLES e latGHl Maf AlllC PHIM • AOJU$TAIU SAOOll • RfMQVf!.IU r~Wt«rlU PRICEU RIGHT FOR THE HOLIDAYS J i •Comics Qllendar •Entertal ment , NC>Vemb« 23 1917 ., .. , . ... . I , Citrus labels are being collected !JS works of art, for their beauty and for the nQS.tslgia they offer. 'When you look at them it's just there,' says a librarian. 'It's California and it can only be California.' By DENNIS McLELLAN OI U. 0.llf ...... Si.ff The plnk villa lies nestled in the verdant, sun-kissed valley, filled wlth row after row of orange trees. In the distance, a snow-capped mountain reaches maje•Ucally Into the sky, deep blue and crystal clear. It's a villon of the good life in that Garden of Eden west of the Rockies. It's the California Dream of yesteryear as pictured In an orange crate label. Today the vision bas been altered: the pink vill and its orange grove setting are gone, razed long aeo t.o make way for urban sprawl. And the mountain, its majeety reduced by a· layer of brown haze, is only faintly visible. But the dream lives OD bl the bands of bun· dreds of orange crate label collectQl'J. "California labels are uniquely California," says David Streeter, who oveneea. the Pomona Library collecUon of more thab .,ooo citrus labels. · ''There's a flair you can identify ln California labels that's totally lackln8 in those from Florida or Texu. It'• the artwork." Some, bearing brand names such u Gold Coast, Home of Ramona, Miasioo Bridie and Ocean View, pictured the aurroundln& coun- tr,alde. More of\en than not, h~~ver, the deslps were more narnboyaot: 'Red Rtdinc Hood, Skyrocket, Indian Belle, Athlete and Cleopatra. In~ ..,..i, S~ aays, only a few people, usually reUred arove ownera or packlq boQSe workert, oollected tbe labels. . "NoW they're belnl collected 11 works of art. Peopl'-are attracted by tbe beauty of theni. And the nOl\allla. When you look at them lt 'a just there: It'• Calffi>rnla aod lt can only be California." For more than a balf·ctmturJ the brigbUY· colored labet.-many th& artwork of German • llthoc11aphers-helped attract the e~• end Juri1 .. the dollan of 1rocery shoppers, HpeCtally in tb• anow-bound Midwest and Eut. "The crates were put oqt in the stores, 0 ~ Streeter. 'They <the lithoarapbers >were. dellp .. "' I . iog pictures prtmart11 to appeal to th• bOuaewtfe. The one with the moat attracUve plc:ture 1a ~ one that draws your eye." • ' . ., -' • . ' • J. -I. • -C· J -c ( ' • • <Prom PapCU cheaper to produce. Litet"ally thousands of labels were carted off to the dump. But some, merclfully stashed in dusty storerooms, managed to survive. And it was on the floors of the packing houses that the early collectors nm looked: Many walked away with stacb of labels-for free. Today some of those labels are selling for $50 and more. "You can start at 2S cents," says Streeter, "and go right on up buying labels al whatever price you want. Y<>&a can easily spend several hundred doll.an on a label." Bob Lcmc ~ Fullerton, a member ol Tri· CountyColledon. became fasdnated with tbem aboat four years ago, after seeiDI au article on the subject. Hl8 COLLEcnON BEGAN with several given to him by his father, who worts in the cltrus industry. He now bu approximately•. Long, 32, ftncls It difficult to pUt a value on the collection. But, he figures, ''you 're loolclog at several thousand dollars.'' Like most collectors, be keeps the majority of them in albums, but he has about 20 framed and banging _in bis den. - I I "A Wt ol people are deeoratina with them," says Evallne PW.at!, owner of T' 1 e American Collector's Shop In Santa Ana. "They're usini them as decor .ratloQs because of the pretty graphics. I even k It.Ow a man wbo has wallpapered bi& bathroom 9 AUitt\81." Mrs. PuJati, wbo started t Jer fHVllte ~Uec· lion, about 10 years a80 as .., -l:O't t, .. }'1 many ~Im' customers haw~ lftrd Sime t'Ollllec· ti on with tbe dtrul mctustey. ••1 llAYB A. man wbf J ~l\'16Ddni but Irvine rna.tmal;" Sb. say 18• ••• ... a lady In Placentia lnt9l'GtllCl cmty 1h llibell. •• She dis that sbe ~'lllluaual re- quests from people 9" ft11 ftlM' particular brand.. one woman, 'bO lie lled Dos label, sailla relllttv•~•. ~tor it. "Anotber wom•Ml ~ 11\:l aaytng, 'lb aranclfatber'• boase. 'ts'fl\§~lo l\ICh and aucb label. ... saya 11.ri. r 'Uhtti. Seven yean •MO IJ6bltltilber ol Costa Mesa s ays he could sttl', ·find ~ 1n packini houses. In Fillmore and f .ta»Ut 'l>dhl be was told he could have what.eve!',, ~upU~tbey bad. ··And' lo A+veteltle they bad about 50 packaps ot U ..etn In the'basement. ••he recalls. ,/ I ··1 cameoutoftberewlth about.Slabels." FISHER, WHO HAS a collection ol about 175 labels which he refuses to sell, feels the hobby has gotten out or hand in recent years . "It's a wbeeler-duler business," he says, adding manyeollectora al'e "bl it ror the ~oney. ". A member of the Costa Mesa Historical SodetJ. who at one time was Coln& to write• bis· tory ol the c:oan11'• cltnD tndustrJ, Pbber says .. 1was1Dtenllt.t lD oranses for years.•• The a-year-old Ohio naU•e mo•ed to Califomla ln WJ. Rb flnt Job, lD fact, was in an orange~. He remembers the Anaheim area: 'TIM place was all oruies. ~ Wotlm, you'd drin tbroap there aomeU•a and the onn1e bloesoma ~ ao t.bif.k the odor woo1d make you . sick to)'OW'atomacb. • He alao recalls wben the oll-burnin1 smdd1e pots were Ut to ward olf the frolt. ~ "You'd look ofl toward Santa Ana aad Anabetm and it was just black." Even the Garden of Eden had its off· .moments. Caleadar PAJlEm-5 WITHOUT PAllTNERS: A fami· ly pancake break.fut will be Wd from t :30 a .m . to noon, Sunday, No•. 27 et Costa Mesa City Park, Costa Mesa. FRIENDS OF UCI UBBAJlY: MarUMI Lou Harris, Ubrar\an and medleal history speetallst, will discuss the UCI library at a meetiq to be held at lO:JO a.m .. Monday, Nov. 28 at the Glen· dale Federal Savinas and Loan Building in Newport Cent.er, Newport Beach. B'NAI B'RITB WOHBN: The Anagrove Chapter will meet for dinner and a meeting at 6 :30 p.m .. Monday, NOY. 28 at Llndel's Restaunmt in Anaheim. AMERICAN LUPUS SOCIETY: Edward E. Harnapl, Ull Angeles rbeumatolos1st. will ad· dress the Onnte County cbapUI' at 1 p:m. 'l'Qes· day, Nov. 29, at the Del Mar Mobile Estates Clubboule, HuntiDCtOft Beach. More information b available from Stephen , Stemns at m-2011. NEWPOllT BEACH-,JUNIOR 5BBLU: "Homespun Christmas" will be the theme or the 13th annual La Boutique Unique to be held from 10 a.m. to2 p.m. Tuesday, NOY.• at tlMt Balboa Bay Club. Newport 8eaeb. Tid:ell may be purcbased from a chib member or at the door. DoSOmetlq 0fferent fortne Hot.daysl Toke o cour~ at JRP ( - C&,U@ CAy!NOAR I HOROSCO_!! A Horoscope THtJRSDA Y, NOV. 24 By SYDNEY OMA a a J • ASIES <March 21-~prll 1$): Decorate sur· roundl.Dgs, make home a Wartn place, be with f~UJ. Cycle applles ftOt ~e of bollday but JMUu. t:Jl ,.,... inite need to know that you are Dot lltodtq alCIM. Taurus, Libra persons filaft~. MOMJ wUl .,.pOd. 'IMJ'&UI (AIWU 20-Ma, p>: CycM le such Uiat JOU ••eiotne'back to Ufe. 11...... be c:lear. 9plrtQaaJ M iq Is Dart of.~. You are i'ftaidid. ~eel 'Vou an allo ble to perfeti wllrdQ GBm:NI (11'1 11·.lun •>: Yw feel palni.d tnto a C!Gl"Det. ftla ls W*D. aettric· tlou wm Wttmateb' wwt to Jour ldftntage Ciprkont, Cu~ penons ftll,n'll(jlttGariO. Aclded paulbU.ltJ Will "8Glt la creiater com· pematt., • CANCD <lane 21.JWY.D>: wbat you ltart. Take -,.raqe Ttew. Glw aUenUon to dllplaJ, ~OIL Deal Wllb Aites, lJbra peraou. to ownbw., Aeeeot on hopes, creatlvtt1. roman-~artt1 toan.. LEO (Jul)-D-A II): Take lnlUatlve in m= ... start. :YourerUtift raowces surge towt. Be ..S,iaal, dyna:mtC, active and in· dependent. Accent (ID career, presti&e, standing la community. Obtain hint from Gemini menage. ~ VlltGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 21): J'ollow through oa huneh. Teach ud learn. B.,.tdae Q)' com· municatlon 11.P:. 'A•uanan fJ,pN promthenlly. ~ccent CG pu1>11sbfnJ, bein, ··'bl touch" with .. tbOle at a dlataoee, aettilli action ~t'ssage across. U8RA (Sept. 23·0Ct. 22); Be versatile, ex· amine various upeota of question, problem - give f.al play to lntellectual curiosity. Gemini, Sagittarius pel'900S ftpre In acenario. Stick to number 3. Remember dlet, Maltb resolutions. SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21); Let others sel pace. Be moce of an obHrv• than an activist. £mp a&ICG public relatlom. publicity, confron· tatlon wltb attcney. Llafen and learn -play care eloM to cbeit. You iaa.. a riabt to some prlvateopildoaa. · IAQl'IT,\IUOS (Nov. lt-0.C.)l): Benady for chance~ 1C•Ml"Y" lnteUeetual atimulation, chance to express, to form polley, tcs make your voice biMrd. Gemlnl, Vlflo f1IUN prominently. Y oa an able to find reuom wb7. CAPalCO&N (Dec. 22•.Jm. lt): Study Satil· tartua masa1e. Give fuU play to creative talenta. Refuse to be blocnd. You have right to lmpriDt style. Do ao! Find ways to make family member happy. A .aimple lift -or flowers - YiOUJd flt bUI. AQUAIUUS (Jan. 20-Feb. llU: What seemed lmposalble ia within allbt. You're going in right dlnctlon. Superiors are wlllina to make room for you. Key ls to know who bu autbority, who is "hlatllnC in dark. Places. Virlo figure prom· lnentf1. Youwillpln "rarelnalehU." PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Get around - refuse to be nstricted. Envloua relative is not making sense. Know it and protect your own in· teresll -and sanity. Emphasis on trips, ideas, beinJ responsible, counting 7our change -and inalsting on rieht to live your own ltfe. If Nov. 24 ls your birthday, you appreciate art, luxury, music. You have unusual voice and a "sweet tooth." Taurus, Libra and Storplo persons play Important roles in your life. Yd\tve made llOlificant chan1es -December wlU be a memorable mootll. You are ln love. involved, in the thick ot thlnp. In December. the paroft - W'hiclt eould send your spirits and bent aecoonl soaring. Wedd111g Q:1'd ~ml ~emfmts nm on Sundo.11 in IM DaffJI Pilot. Form.a o~ aw~ at all Daffi Pilot offices or by coJling tM Fealvru IHport· mnt.UU321. To at>Otd dirappoflllmnf, ~ivt ~· 4re rtmlMed to haw -,hefT wtddanQ .tom•, IDiiA o Wock· <Jnd..whiee glou'f of the bnu or of Ow coe.ipW, to the Featurla Dlpartmenl OM Wede be/~• tlw~. f;~ment CPUIOWlCemaU, IOU~ block~· white gtos111 of tlle /lltllrt bride or tht c~. m..C be r•ceiwd bJ1 U. Feotu.re• Deparemeat .U IOffb be/ore the IMfdblg date. To NqW.t o pctare, wrUe or coU U.. F'eattaes Department, 642-4321 Picture• are limited to fund· rcmers open to tht public. ' ' . • . I l . I c . c ( I I I J \ ANN LANDERS I FASHION An ultra suede coat over a crepe de chine easy-flt dress. ...... "_ .. ·-. . A crepe de chine dirndl skirt an~ matching shirt, topped by easy 1acket. ••• Salon Shopping <From Page Cl) made from "peaches and cream," since she uses· those two colors extensively. The whole palette 1s represented, however, in her designs. 'Tm 1n love with color and fabric," she asserted. "The earth tones are my favorite but I love all the different colors." Her favorite fabric. 1ro01cally, is georgelle. a thin crepe. She also likes silks and other natural fibers but sht> most often works with man-made fabrics lake Ultrasuede. "IT'S A CHALLENGE to do something dif- ferent with Ultrasuede." she said. Mrs. Kossoff doesn't put out a "Line" several limes a year but simply designs when she is in- spired. She has clothes made on herself !or fat before they are put on the racks. Quite often a dress ends up with a Lllhe Rubin label because Stanley Kossoff likes someWng hls wife has had made for herself ex· elusively. "My husband usually says, 'Let's make it for stock,"' she said. "Making it for stock" is nothing new to the native New Yorker, who has been designing since she was a tiny girl v1s1t10g her mother's custom milllnery shop after school. "I used to make miniature hats," she said. "using leftover bits of mink and jewels." Mrs. KossofC said her mother "has a tremen· dous natr" for designing and got into the busi· ness "because she had to do something and this ~as available." When styl('S dictated more elaborate hairdos. the millinery business went into a decline, so Mrs. Rubin was forced to swatch to dresses. SHE RETIRED 27 years ago when her daughter and son-in-law took over the business and moved it to Miami "She stall lives in Miami ." Mrs. Kossorc said. "Now. she just takes it easy." A third generation soon will be.fully involved Two-piece velvet skirt and chiffon bow-tied blouse with bugle beads. 10 the store as Candice Kossoff, Georeeu. and Stanley's daughter, is showing signs of talent. She already models for them and ls capable of "minding the store" when they arc away. Mrs. Kossofr, as chief designer, says sb.e 1ets inspiration from ~uropean fashions (she visits Paris and Rome every year> and simply tw beine aware offabrics and lines. T · "I understand fabrics and bow they should go on tbe body,'' she sald. "When you're ln love with something and when you'resolnvoJved with something your mind is hlways clicking. You don 'l Wnk about it for yourself." Additionally, she decorates and selects furnilure for every Lillie Rubin salon which opens (there now are 48 > and loves belni on the go every minute. "YOU CAN NEV EB get bored," sbe says with a smile, thinktnl of afl ber ·~compllsh· menlS. , Georget!e Kossolf, once a tomboy who loved Gold Jame stripes on a black chlffoh make an easy fitting peasant dress. to romp, has come a tong way but she says the transltioo was • 'jushort ofa natural lhlne." Her talent, she contends, ls .. Just an instinct. There are a lot of lhlogs you can't team.•• Though she loves beautiful, feminine clothes, she bas no contempt for thos' "VVbo prefer a more casual look. "It'• the spice ot life. Anyone can do what they want to do. It's lbe free choice o1 dresslDI that mak• ttflAd." Mra. Koesoft whO enJoys cookf~~ says she "likes a chaµ•nge" ana therefore attempts some rather impressive dishes, like Duck a l'Orange, and pate. There's one challenee she ooesn 't like. ..Jaowevef, &n4 th.-t is sewing. "I can •t even sew a button on a dresa," she confided "My mother nevetsewed herself.'' No One Will Cash Friend's Check DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have a very expensive problem. I was given a personal check for $200 by a friend and tried lo cash it at my company's commercial bank with my check cashing card. I was turned down because I have no account with them. I then went lo a branch of the bank. near my of- fice, where my friend's checking account Is held. I was turned down again because I have no ac- count with them. I was sent to the main branch in which the actual checkuig aceount Is held. Again, I was turned down for the same r e· a son. One of the bank of- ficers &uggested that I go t<> a check-cash l n g service. I visited three offices and was told each time that NO check- ••• Singles cashtng .service will cash a personal check. Ann, please tell m e what to do with this check? My friend ls out of town and will be for several weeks. In the meantime, I am - BROKE JN BROOKLYN DEAR BROKE: I COD• suited with one or tlte country's top executl~ed, wbo ls base() ln New York. He asked someone &n bis organization to re- view your dilemma wltll ofrtcera at Cltlb-nlc, Manufacturers Ha11ovtt, Chemical and Chase Manhattu. <P.S. For a 13 cent stamp 1oa are re· celvlng tbe benefit of JO me very clusy talent.) His reJponae l• aa follow•: Banks have been suf. rerlng large losses of late because or increased sophistication ln the use of forged ldentlncattoo. Tbey are, t~erelore, adoptini mueb tougher three:yeardilference. standards for cashl•I I must order a checks to accommodate headstone soon. The plot peo pie not kn own next to him will be mlDe. personaltytotbem. I realize it's terrible to 1 _ __;.;.......::...~*"~_;;..~~~':':"'1',~~~!l+~~--your best bet ls to de-lie on a headstone. but If r posit Ute personal ct.eek my huaband were here lo yo•r own ehecktdg or he'd say, "Go ahead." savtng1 accout. allow What should I do? - for sufficient time for MRS. X. that cbeck to dear aiad D EAR Ma 8. X : then dtaw on It. Surely I& lan'l r.ea1011· · D E A R A N N able for Yo• to •dd LANDERS: My beloved roar years to yoar de· husband died recenUy. ceased husband's a1e. He was seven years B1t family knows ltow younger than I. This did old be u. It'• YOUR age not bother us in the they don't know. The ly- slighlest, but his family m. would Uke place on never knew. My family your beadstoa.e -not thought there was only a b.la. of mothers in the labor force who have small children bas almost doubled since 1970. •By lWlS, Ute latest year for which atataUc• are avaUable, 18.~~rcent of married women with children under st.& were in tho labor .force. Almost half of all mar· ried women with cb.lldren mder 18 work. I 1 f ! 7 - Wtdl II fJJ,N• ...... 1ffl : '!7 pounda of dqg food a day! 49 pounds a weekl 1,517 pounds a month!. .. " I • ~~~f:ii'. J ~~- GORDO .. OUR fRtEND Tt1 t; ilJRKfi · I He acquires . it. I I A SIT! FOR SORE eyes TODAY'S • • I ' ·~ § • ... ... . . . -.. ..... .. . ' ........ ·-~· • -r-11111 .... CDGS..C....._ W.11•1 ........ W.111 ~ ........ ... -- UD'S SO. COAST PWA ""'..,. M••i1111 $41m IUl'S SQ. COAST PWA C.ll.t llnl l4••111tt ~Jiii NOW ..... toll ,.~ SHOWING ---·· 11J..u .._Ill , ....... "SILY• STUAK'' IPGI .......... ,.... .... ~· .... -'!'151.AHDS ltil M SlUAM" • .... --Tllli. 1-. .... ...... "---.... ,,. . ........ -...GIOH•"HI .......... -1 .. ~ ....... _ •JAWS"INI ..... --.TWL-TI--)M.llll "OH, GrOD" IPGJ WED .. MOM.. TUI$. ._-45-t:JO.IO: 11 THUIS.·SUM. l:JO. l:ll, S;OO, 6:45. l!lO. 10:1 • "'NST LOVE"" IR) --.-.TWLW9.lllll ,__.....,.,_ "'¥ ALINTIHO .. --..-.-. ... . _.._-.., ............ . "DUIY O'GIU" IGI -··--"*'"'' ~ . .., .. ~··· "fOLLOW Ml IOYS" IGI -· --y-.,-.-r--...-11.-. ....... 111• ... ui.-11 9'.mr .. ..-------.. GEORGE BURNS • JOttN ~NVER • TERI GAU • OONALO PlWENCE ll()ff • GOO! .. ~1i..! "DAMNATION AUEY'' (PG) "FUTURE WORLD" (PG) "LOOKJNG FOR MR. GOODSAR"• J R) ' "SMOKEY ANO THE BANDIT" (PG) ''THE STING" <PG) r- "BOBBY DEERFIELD" (PG) "ALICE OOESNT LIVE HERE ANY MORE" "CARRIE" (R) "DEMON SEED" "THE SPY WHO LOVED ME" "THE DEEP" (PG) "SMOKEY & THE BANDIT" (PG) "THE STING" (PG) "DAMNATION ALLEY" (A) "FUTURE WORLD" (PG) "HEROES" (PG) "THE OTHER SIDE OF THE MOUNTAIN". "FIRST LOVE" lR) "ALICE DOESNT µVE HERE ANY MORE" . .. IOll OHKI & mmtONI ltdllYAnotU o.tH ~ • Tues.·s.t., 9 A.M.-10 P.M.; Sun.,•Mooft.J ~.M..; Mon. 9 A.M.·6 P.M. (71~) 979.5511 Gali#.,..~ Mod S.,.nt OMlr n..i. ~~"ln~\n 3503 s . ......-~ ~~ Santo Ana twr ........ of .. S..Dilco r, .. ., bellllld o.ntr ~ Nl ..... Cl'ldlte..ts~ f« AfW l'Moh ~& &tlfm-.nt ntl CILDRITY LOUNGI NOWQllllN WNCM "-11 o.M. Mon • .fri. Double ...... ....., Hour 44,... Mon.-H. ' iJohnny Ruslc t 0 1IC*lrl•iMIAT ....... CMlt...M~IClll • _ ... MoLtM IAllW'l-...... _,,,_AY, ! ............ ... .. ..... 2Stfl .. • ...... -..'.~ ~=---~l'FMtiii; . Send CMcll or money cwd9r to: ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER .......... 09pt.8 ~CAl2tOI T1cftet .......... a• J11!ll"·5000 , ............................ , T..._.__....,_ ---·-.. ""1·-· ... --:----~ ~-....... 111. 1.!!1 ........ -- Whet! In S.U....,, C..Ulomi9 .... _.,. • 'L ~ 'na. --- l I ' • • • .•. -~ ... ... ' r. I. l. I .. CAU&l"tlt -.-. .... T~lllMo4M1ll "OIMOHS .. " __ ,.,. ,_......,_"" "OAllY0'6CU. .... , -.-., .. . ,__1...........at "'flOU.OW Ml IOU .. __ ,,.. ,_,,__ 111»1'11 ., MIVB l'IOMlllD YOU AlOSl6AIDIH"i.I __ ,, .. ,_.._~~ ..... ")DAYS OJ THI COMDOa• --·"'' ,,.. ... _ ,,. .. ,... WAUOl,..Y'I "OA .. Y O'OILLw l•I ___ , ... ~~ 111a.111M1ll "fOLLOW Ml. I OYSM --··· ,_"' __ , ... 23, 1tn "'LOOKING FOR MR. GOOD BAR' IS ONE OF THE STRONGEST MOTION PICTURES EVER MADE-AND ONE. OF THE BEST! -uz smith, New York Dally N~w• 11Rlvetlng •.• a dramatic blockbuster ••• Diane Keaton reveal• new emotional depths and enhances the film with her characteristic ease and spontanlety ... Bruce Wllllamson--91ayboy !LOOKING FUR MR. GOODBAR ....,DIANEKEA'OONI TUESDAY WELD WILi.JAM ATHERTON RlCHARD KILEY RICHAlU> GERE -"FREDO!~ FIELDS -"Looking for Mr. Ooodbar la one of the moat Important, me•nlngful, and thoroughly conaummate pfec•• of ,,,,,,. making I have aeentna decade of movie a. Diane Ke•ton bumeahole through the acreenl" Rex Reed-- New York Dally News .. _.._. ....... .... · . ........,..., ......... *'. ~ ......... ... ,,.., ,.. . ,.., ... Nanette F abray Out of Hospital LOS ANGELES (AP) -Actreae Nanette Fabray, who was knocked oft her fMt by a bewildered elephant while •boottnl a movte, bu been dllcbar&ed from the bolpltal after tbreo .,, a . A pokesma.n for Ced...SUW Medical ~enter 1ifd that Mila Fabray left the bOlpJttl attii belq treated for a concussion, bl1\daea anct a apraln ln th• lower .qeck and back. Sbe allo reportedly suffered ·minor lieurological aide effect.a. but tbol were d11· .appeartni, a spokesman eald. Miss Fabray waa knocked to the around alter the animal was frilbtened by a pranbter durinc the abootingoftbe movie 0 HarperValley Pl'A... · "lncomparab~.madcap and firmly rooted in human experience." .---------JohnSimon; ' (Un~~T-..~ 'PO'·~·AfW~J€WSE New Yort Mapzinc · ''A hilarious farce. A very, very funny movte." -Bob La WABC·lV PLUS edwards BRISTOL CINEMA BRISTOL AT MACARTHUR 540.7444 LA MllWIA 4 • LAKEWOOD 4 WAl.IC-IH IAllOAlll l'lllCI fl M MOtiDAtf llwv IATUllOAY ~ He!Wo'91 12:*' .. a. .LA MIRADA 4 ONLY IUNDAYI 1 ltOUDAYI1l:l0 .. HO aBM al '°':.• .. ~· -------=...::.:::::::..,.,. 8 ••• n. p SS lo ••• N -Ci •• •• ,. c: •f I ' • ~. Nowmber 2:!. 1'71 DAILY PILOT DJ ... latatt ••.•.•.• 1000-2999 The Blfleit Markatplace on ~he Orarwe Coast . ·········· ~"" DAILY Pl•OI CLASSIFIED ADS ~ementa. Ptn.Onalt, lost • found •••••• 5050-5'99 Slrvkea & Rtpalra 6000-6099 You Can Sell It, find It, ( 642 S&7S J One (:all Service Trade It With a Want Ad • • Fast Cre<lit Approval ..........,... Notice: All real estate advertised In UWt newspaper la sub·j~~~~~~~~I ject to the lo'ederal Fair Houung Act or 1968 which makes it 11lcgal to advertise "any pre· ference, limitation. or dlscrimlnatton based on race, color, religion, sex, or naUonal ongin, or an intention to make any such prererence, limita· tlon, or discrimination.·' CMTRY ClUI Dlt. 41EDROOM Located o n the golf course side of the street. this prestige home has a ~ft addition that can be Wied for entertaining. The pool table may slay with the right offer . Mesa Verde 1s yours. give us a call for an appl. This newspaper' will not 546-2313 knowingly accept any ortN ''' o .,, s ruN 10M N""I' advertls!ng for real [~ •1 estate which 1s in viola· , · , lion of the law. . . HouMs for Sole ••••••••••••••••••••••• General 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMC«EDllLE VALUE 3 Bdrm, fam rm, 2 ba, OHIJ 1• 9 •If 5 /UN 101•1 N<f • ~~ 1.1. . ' . : ~· 11 ·1 . EASTSIDE R-2 With charming 2 bdrm home bringing Income while you d evelop another unit. Close to shopplni & transport.· !ion. Better take a look. 646·7711 ~ Wa lkm &lee Real Eltate llAUTIFUL . MEWPOltT DUPLEX Two lge 3 bdrm. 3 ba un· Its in very rare condltlon. lt looks new. Private patiot for each unit, two car garage for each urut, wood burning fireplaces, Mexican tile entry. Much more. Call us for details. 646-7171 Of'(N 11(9.i II S fUNto'llE>-llCC1 I ..• 1~11 llGllG SIEDROOM TRIPLEX HewLbtlftg Steps to aand in Newport Beach $150,000. Eves call 642·3338 PRICED TO SELL ThltWeell SUPER 4. Plex, Costa Mesa Eves 673-4852 HO TUalClY Thls OCEANFRONT .Ouplex is the ultimate in Newport Beach living. Practically new & looks like a page out of a home beautiful magazine. Looking for the Bird. .of Paradise? We have it at only $376,500 Cal 64G-616 I. MESA vaDI CHAIMa Big, beautiful 5 bdrm, 3 bath home with formal dining, comfortable family room with fireplace. Spacious living room has open bea111 ceilings & massive fireplace. Prestige location near golf course. Immaculate in every detail. TRULY A WINNER! Cal 54Ml41. Serving Co!:.tt.l M esa -Irvin e Huntington Beach-N ewport Bc<,ch 10021Ga•r• 1002 • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• -. MANAGER WANTED REAL ESTATE A high earning opportunity with a well known standing Real Estate Co. Open· ing a new ofCice in Costa Mesa. Must have experience. Salary + Applica· lions confidential. Reply to Ad #68, Daily Pilot, P .O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 $6,000DOWM Hamt. Beacb area. sq. rt. 2 st.Qry S&S home. 3 yrs. old. 4 br & den bonus rm. Ownr. wil carry. No credlt needed Balance $130,000. a Sl,OOOmo. 759--0648 DOGICBCMB. Home • Kennel, 30 ln· dooi;/outdoor runs. Licented for 50 do&•· Lovely 2 bedrm home on 1\4 acres. Air cond. in home and 1room room. C!S0,000 •• PETE BARRETT ~REALTY- 642·5200 HUNTINGTON IEACH FOUIUNITS Four luxwious units with spacious owner'• unit. Almost carrle1. Owner will trade. Forproflt pro· jection lntJuding tax shelter beol•fils, please eau 962· 7188. ~ K€Y 46'1 f\E:ALTOP.sN LACOSTA HIDEAWAY 2 BR. 2 BA. cmpllly furn condo. 2 Decks & a beaut view. Will trade for mtrbome. Only $64.500. WE.5TCOASTPACIFIC REAL ESTATE 496-8535 831-2600 MESA VERDE SPECTACULAR VIEW The Golf Club with a sparkling lake is your back yard. II,, acre. Spanish 5 Br, 4ba. Open house Frl and Sun only or by appt. 1790 Panay Cir· cle. Agt. 540-0608 ' HAHDSOMI IH HUHTINfiTOH HACH A handsome family h,Ome with 4 bedrooms and a sparkling pool that bas (catch this !> a f amity room, formal dining, a library, a kitchen · overlookin4 the pool and' a 3 car garage. All of this with maximum 'privacy and an open, sunny feeling. See Handsome in Huntington Beach, at $174,500. U~ lfJU I: ti()Ml:S REAL TORS". 546-S990 1525 Mesa Verde Drive, East, Costa Mes& also in Corona del Mar, at 675·6000 I 1002GaMr9 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• PEHIMSULA POIMI' 4 Bdrm., 2 ba. home. All amenities. Lovely area, few steps to beach. $189,500 UDO ISLE Newly remodeled 4 bdrm., dt:~· 4 baths, living· rm. w/ cathedral ceiling. Lge. master bdrm. suite. $224,950 114i CANYON 4 BR, fam. rm., 3 baths. Beautifully decorated Broadmoor Plan 3, on extra large lot. $325,000 BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR 3 ·11 Bny~od,. Dr·~·· NB <•7'> 0161 IALIOA PIHIMf]JLA DUPUX S Ill. HO' Price reduction just authorized. This 3450 building is a prime tax shelter in a heavy appreciation area. Yet it will yield a PoSitive cash flow. For more information on this sort of magic, call 963·8311. IY THE SEA $67,900 Walking distance to beach, community pool, 3 bedroom, l 'Al bath, condo. Lender will finance to investors. • 9MDOOR SUHSHIHI SH.~O Good news! Light up your life with the Indoor sunshine of this beautiful 3 bedroom, l~ bath cornered lot home. Many amenities. Bring your wife & smell the freshly baked bread in thi.s sunny kitchen. 18055 MegttOlla st. ..... v.., '6WJll G1•ral l0021G•Mral IOOZ ........•.•.......•.... . ..................... . \\' 1-:s LI< Y '.'J TAYLOR CO. HE/\ I .TUl{S '-,l f ll"I' 1 !l·lf i A SPl.94DID HOME OM UDO Corner and extra lge lot. 1bil 3 Bdrm plus den home offers warmth and charm. L&e master bedroom, 3 baths. Tastefully decorated. Qua11ty cpt.ng, fine wallpapers. All kitchen amenities plus 2 spacious patios. $259,~. Wdlf M.: T~ Cp.. ....._ 2111 s.J-...NbltOlld MIWPOltT ~ M.L 6.wttlO l • SUPBt..Xa S40.000 What a dynamite op· portunity. JI.me la .ur- round ed b:r $85,000 homes. 1111' ii a Ii.er of all Umes. It rietd9-ever. ytbinir. Jael ft up • ahovellt out! J Bdrm•• z batha ol fWnc,;Slab Ja cracked too. Doo't min out. Call 75'2·lf00 OflfN 1119.: 11 S fUNJOll('ll(f' ~~---~ Tm: REAL E5_1ATER! ~ I . I CAPE COD $53,000/$2, 150 •• t f1\• I rift I '-lf.,\!'u(,, .. n1 "1tt,u ·. 1uv••Cu ••R'"i OLDCDM DUPLEX .2 BR in l'roDt & 1 BR in rear, beautifully re·deae & pncod lo sell. Owaer anxious, VALL!Y 640.9,00 FOREST E OLSON •"<t n. """''"''"" -·~-'-. ST ARTEll HOME WOULD YOU BELIEVE Sharp 3 bedrm, i t, bath, A 2 Wren., 2 ba. ln Irvine t op loc ation. Only fer un•u $60,000. we $52,900. Call anytime. Ila.ave a lovely D·Model i.n SC On RIAL TY Walnut Square that ha1 536.-75H beesl wtelully decoral-,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l~~~~~~~~~I ed. Thil a a must see before beyln1 anytb101 I /SIDI COSTAMISA $72,000 3 Bedrm. hu&e lot Complete with hardwood floor, dbl gar, covered paUo & quiet street. Out of state ewner needs Im· raediale sale. Super buy hurry! Call $4•·58&t UKI Y ARDWOIK? Be aure lo see lhla le. cor· ner lot, 4 br Ranch home. Coun\I')' kltch, •r.ac. ltv· Ina rm & frplc. C 1 lo schl It 1hopplo1. Priced to sell. m.soe. 963-5671 elNI WALi TO SCHOOL: From tl'lll auper 3 bedroom family home wlt.h country kllc:hen. Near lbe new park wllb te®la, pool, park aod cloH to 1b1>ppl111 and fretwa)'J . A1kio1 f14,950. IMDIHFl!LD Por only $7:5,750. Yea. that 11 correct. Thia super 1harp 2 bedroom townhome can be youn today. Nicely up1raded throu1boul. Pool, spa LAG\;f'.A !'.lGUt;L 49H'120 SOUTH LAC.~l\A 499~651 LAGvl'.A Wt:At.H •In 24W' and park areas. Walk to schools ~ le41C11 I 041 ~ H..... I OH . ............................................ ~ UVllM SMOIETREE Not very many bomea come on the market from tha fine development, blJI. we have thlt sharp 2 becfto9m an• a den OJ a bedroom bomt ~at can be youra for only $80,000. IASYUVIHG ln thl• easy care 2 Bdrm., 2 batb O·Y·O. An eaay walk to Main Beach. Euy terms with private financin&. aud It'• easy to see this va· cant property. Just 911$,500. HORIHS llEAL TY •49MOS7• ·.· TOTAL DOWt-4 FfXER UPP&al. ..523 CAMPU5Dl~IRVl"E ~HERITAGE REALTORS RIVIRA EXCLUSIVES '. 'w1nd1ng r oadway lo [!! ~ ""' · sounn11 2 11lory retreat• ,,. fti,.,-.a 3 Bdrm, 2 Ba--$65,000 ..... l d \ i::e~O"' iii,._ ________ Close to Golden West WOODBRIDGE THI rnva e groun s protccl ~ •• Coll h CROSSING seclude .. entry to laVl!'lh ~ _._..======-==~·1 ____ ___.. ege & s oppln1 cen· The Village or Wood· ucnun CLUI " b r living rm Gourmet --JUST len. brldoe Th bet l both "I' HOME i . INCOME. 6 .\MouteLa bBaNlyPll~ ~ ... :,on•Y.,.~~:..4:,!R. ,d6ns00, kitchen overlooks ~un SO CALIFORNIA RLTY • · e s 0 "' IUD• 1ue -c<w.Jo.-srune courtyard' Wind ~6 5805 worlds. Arcbllecturally of beaullful Irvine. Uniu, downtown wauna 49.1.72zz 1• 1 08361--•fl_ba_l_l R__..;lty:_..;_17.:..;_5-4~~ mg slairw<1y leads to Charmang 3br, 2ba, frplc. unique 2"3 bdrms al· MELBOURNE for onl Beach. 3 CommerclaJ. 31~~-~~~~·~-~~l u~T---...DO s we cp1ng master nr lenna + l brrental MARRIED? By owner, terrirlc tached Ii detached re· S88.900aodyo1thavetb residential. Fantasic1. ...snr""" ~ bedroom plus rhtld'!! $154Mowner640.7030 Prest111e home, 4br . sidencea from $96,990. convenience bf almoa ocean views. $595,000. ll0.000. Z Br Z Ba, lplc, • i:l•ba, rrplc, many xtras. 569-1161 private t---•-co·· ... •. N MB.Lii ~AIL RANCH Bier. &U-3U2/1S240'.IS retreat' lluny, seller 1:. R d d SSS cw..., ... ... anxious 847 60lO Mesa I 024 Spend Cbrjstmas 10 a e u c e • • O O O · --------•I asaocialion duH bere OPPORTUNITY OF A Lot 89, beauti!ul, laree $' ..;-•. ,, Q · • ,., N • ••••••••••••••••••••••• home of your own! Vets IW6-8558 ______ ANYTUallY Con ve nlen t t.o a I IJFETIME! Oceanfront corner lot w /view. LIDO ANDS '[Cl~~~ !I ti MESA DELMAR who take home 1270. NEW Landmark never WQULOLOVETO freeway1and1hoppln1. reatauraot, heart of Owoer/Bltr. u~.ooo. Nl~ 3 br bo~.). blk to .i ; Lie & lovjtly 5 BR 3 Ba each week may quohfy! lived in, Plan 2. Move in IESIRVID HBE Lara Be~ All new 544-0614 da7s, 131·3232 bch. Lota of decorator ,~, ; Pool Home waili~g ror Low down! 3 Bedrooms! now' 960140'1 A1ent. 1 · eq pmeot. ,OOO. eves. aqlat\~&even)'OW'Own . -=·-· --·-~ appreciative family. New carpets & paint! --Great Piao 400 in the jacuni Ofl•re4 at. C 11 1 RED CARPET •--------1 Colony. Nicely up-iji MYSTIC HILL S ' Owner ... Hcrow Oft a . I 0 I kl L ....... Vlelo 1061 aa.ooo. r SPARKUHG POOL 754.1202 IEACH HOMl graded. good location. Ir ver oo og aauna: ••••••••••••••••••••••• FULLll.llALTY .•a ,500 will give you a 3 other 50 P'UTropeCri1 0 y ._ 5 T s EA co As T AT . you need room and · . 3.000 sq. ft., Chris Abel B 1 54Mll• · .. brhome. Verycleun,m a nH A MOSP IU:RE 2 Story you're looking for 3 designed 5 bdrm. home. arce ona 3 br, 1reat good nel&hborhood. lftvt.._ll'lh,45-1103 $3_.10, .·· with 3 bdrms + a price, then come a run A rare opportunity al view. A/C, fenced yard.t----..,-llW......:_;_.;:...__ llurry, it ls priced to sell !lludlo/sludy. Elegant Din', because this ls a RAHCHRIALTY $375,000. '68.000. Byowner. SIA I !atl.Call546·2313 Ml.SA DELMAR formal dining, c hef best buy. 4 BR, 21., BA, 551-2000 m4 > 756 · 3629 New s.dford .'.~r. un· ·""'""'"' ''"'''l"''''' Sharp4bdrm,rml,yrm kitchen&ramilycenter, FRandallforaprice of NORTHLAGUNA Walk39 2 Ba d obatruct.ed OrJ:.ean, le I n ~ home. Freshly painted roanna fireplace, 15X30 $10'1,900 ---S-RE_W_A_R_D_S __ ..., tD beach. 3 Large.units, patio lod~~~t, rn~· FublQn lu•l y\e!~·l919 l liJilll :11 Inside & out. Owner has Custom pool with ex• WOODBRIDGE-Spec beautifully ~andscaped. beaut. view. s.a7.'5550 or YOpeacbl Co nlJ .•• ~S,OOO. . ii. nu }J '"'"lied now no w ox Lul woek '1 pd"! 3 ''"'''' dee king & gao to<ul"' ~om•. d"'na ll with o<un "'""· Pri<«l 830-3125 n ~1 Ownet-- . ·--·-noora in kitchen & bat.hs Bedroom Mesa Verde fire rlna. Finest carpel.'!, entry, 3 Dr 2't'.t Ba, beln right at $289,000. NEWPOkT BAY for your enjoyment us home w/fireplaco! RED draperys & noorlngs. prof ln<Qcpd. Cul de sac, TOWERSCONDO --------•I well as self cleaning CARPET7S4-1202 BlcrS36-9311 w/much privacy. Grea MAGNlf'ICENT 3200 sq. wport leach I 06t on lhe Bay tn ~boa, lg REDUCED $2 0001 ovens. Call for appt. 10 1 _______ -_-;.-;1~~~~~111111 ........ l~~~~~~~~~l for cnlcrtainlna. man t!c;n,!. ~=t·O::an1~!~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ier, adul\1, pool , Sale price now '$6?.500. ~~~1' lvly home. HAPPIHISS Condo 1 BR. 1 Ba, nr. llDUCIDTOSIU ;1~8;~0~1~\v~~-~·::u communlty. Loadlorex· ~Mart:a~d~h~~e~Oo1: Co I I ls fUldln& a Greenbrook sbop'g. 2 Ml to ocean. By owner Z Br 2~ Ba. Pal.rick Tenore 552-441 traa. Sl50,000 ;') ll'rll!. "'c.'Jn ttu-'::U:~lh fr~bb~a~ (~IJ'lj113gQ JJ home lived in by people Xlnt cond 142,000. Call Deetfield Twnbme. Pvt Agt. ' / '«,,..,,...., pie that care! New cpt, who care. Tastefully de· _963-__ 124_2 ______ 1 1arden patio, comm --''----------4 LARGE 4 bdrm., family • new cablneta, new paml. .Rut F.atate cor'd. thruout w11rounda pert• pool.a, many nice W~UT SQUAii home. El Toro, cloeo lo 4 br. + ra.m rm + 2 ba. New ~aa.. 2 ~ 2~ Ba. ~ fo~a kin~ Ow~r. ha: =s.f~uJi:io Drive by: 14805 Oval Rd. -~~la " aboppln&. Bi11frplc,2 Pali~ Many 2 '9plc's, c~.11mio-tile ug ano er me •t.ahlltqon 30Gbldertbuah,S59·7219 rl)retti !m3~,R~!~tar.J+I ~r:, ' lrwt trees. Gov mt ap· ki~&. b~ Pool & must aeU immed. Hcri>ow I 00 .. pruisal lo al 1~ Br«*er 754-7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HA.MG YOUR cov'd. patio. Extra• I ' BUILDER'S attention. Two l\>2 loll, heart of Dana Point. Both for ~.000 $6 ,C'ftQO ...,. S..,.t• s..wt Mdl ca....i ._ c..-1.&-Make offer. D,U Z II(; HOUSES Off..-.d at $60,000 .-.• 1 ..... ~ LEA.51/0PTIOH Wow'' ..... l LDT ........ 1 ...__ lost 1_._ of Dnve by: 14631 Oval Rd. 1n ..--In this super ramily Neal2BR,2ba.,famlly INVESTMENT op · . •• 3Br. den 2 frplcs, beum .-. lllOcML / home in Turtlerock. rm., central air. New TO~HOUSI cell'I· ~sq ft. Rear PURCEUl• .. LTY Poolsize tot with paint. Pretty pallo. portunlly; a beautiful Wntclffl......_ .' "" WESTSIDE"iWif- e.ca-2323 house is JBr, l', ba S5.000 Total cost. 2 ba, 2 '""" • · .. 1 C motel, beart or La1una,~----------..:...:·1 ~1 ...... __...___.. . t714tl4 .... 2141 apr111. era . enter lmmed posseaa .... 900 Beach. Close lo beac .. --·-rn 900.,.,...W.,_ lk.UP...-~atctirr frplc. 12001q ft. $105 000 mos old, 2 br condo. -lri .. ''" t I -.. ._. ~ I .. YFllO~ a • . 1 • um ...... enewc:arpe · VaYHCvr~D "P•r'"1. Xlnt cond. "' "'. ' ' Mewportleol&tate Prime oc. Bkr/Aat. Rural settln1. Don't de· RIAi.TOi a SHI 000 Pl"' 2 Q.dnp, 2 bat.b, Aaaoclates 846-5IMIS OCEANFRONT lay, wan'tlut. 552-0434 $750,000 Ma&nlfh:ent '2 atocy eJ. dlnfnf roem, tu•toin Cott 645-6625 Mesa .verc1e 4br, 3ba, Cul· &inset Beach V 6 0·9900 ID Tlaa . ...,...._, ecutiv• home. Spti'alln( ·~I.drape,. P~ O Beams! do·&••, Pr 1 n o al y. 2 hom.,, 21 .... Bkr/Aot ~ '"" .w ...... s Fkepl•'1f + -.ol,µ,.,,<:elll4• 1 c M Triplex S136,000. 556-6445 _IW6-_56ee _____ ~ ~~ Pre•ta•3:. --huie bonus· room. he ·Buil om materials too 2 Br each, xlni'lncome. & ~~ • ":':~~~~===--! beach 11 your front yard. expensive for today's 1 1 MODRHOME HR •• -n....•twaU call7A·17M new c<)nal. Thia 3 br ~a~hs~~ooo. Bkr. PRICESLASHED '"M 1044 ... .__YTIMI -GllC /a\. c "'o:.i'N1tt0 •1lsflJl'f l0~1"~·r'l 1 ~~~~~~~~~ - .... ~!"'" HERITAGE REALTORS ;li<>me w/sunken family 53000 ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• nAr,.. Popular area of Irvine. ...t lP' & I· ·~ '"' ... en y a warm ----n•••~ most desirable area. "" e den. formal dlnln1. hear· ;:,f "ho • • f m 11 wbere you can --------•I 7 Mo old model home In WOODIAIDGI In law quarters, 4 •·~· C ·t'YJIW :i'at .. -r •-Jo ............ _/1 .,__ TOMA.JHOM bedrooms, extra bath•, h..'-' ~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~I" beaut.lru;e'd jmmac. replaceduringlheHoll· EallsldeCostaMeaa.3·2 Mstr BR opens to Nearlynew,thlaelegant tyfireplace.Owneranx· ~---me s1iua on a fee day Season! Total Invest· bedrm homes &room for tropical atrium. Prof. end uni\ ha.a uporaded I K ·-------•I view lot. 1'hla one you ...,.nl _,, 00011 }furry •-.. ..,.. 300' .. I I d ' U " ~l· tpe,900, B R, Call u .,-~ ..... -••-I C-Tto-•~, ..... ....,, · · ... more......... ~eep ol. n scp d ardecornted. crp ne " many other ,_,. ~ UDO ISLI ............. ...,4 ..v ..... • taU~4&46Agt . HUJTY·lota of potential Call!M52·7'188agt. xtras • 2 blc bd.rms., 2 lt11fl'eft ..... -dramatic entry with here! Call~~ ____ __.::;__ ___ , bat.hi, newly offered al 1-EtL 3 Bdrmi., family rm.. 90UT'lteOAST DaM Point I 02' -5.500. '159-.1501 REAL .ESTATE splral 1talrcaM lea41n• 1 __ t~_.___..__~'""-~,,.....1_103 __ IUY A VETIRAH A HOME Use tb.l VA on this Im· ·~~HERITAGE . • REALTORS 11maculate COila Mesa !I~~~~~~~~~ bdrm, 2 bat.h beauty. Alll- ft!VI kitchen. new copper Mesa Verde, 21t.ry, 4/S br, plumblnc, new carpel, 2~ ba. Only $12.:iOO dn. new drapea. Lattice OWn/Aat. 831.-1257 p-eenhowie. fruit t.reea, prdeo. Thi.a one Is a win· MF.SA VERDE ner.Callnow648·717l 4& l~Ba,.Jc.oomer lot, C*fN,..9 •11 stVN•Olll'· ,, \uper aharp w/many xtru. alao RN or boat ac· [ ~Jllll)l•I =~=~· Bkr Mr. OCIAMFIOMT ty ownr, dpJx Balbo•J i Br a Ba1 & 2 Br l · Ba. Ml-72111 $5M22l ••••••••••••••••••••••• lo 2 bd ·--up rms. • aun M()Nl'E(JO 4br 2ba REDUCED I OK deck. Matr. suite on Cam rm own.r. 2015'pori ~ Walkr.r & lee EXIC.COHDO Harbor & Whitewater _..,...._Re_a_l_&_ta_te_....;.__1 View. 3 Bdrm. 2\A ba, ram rm. frplo. End umt. Prof landtc:ated Ii de· «»l'llted. Ga. BBQ, wet bar, 14 m\le beach. Conun pool, jac.~auna, clubbouae. $128,500. Tra1nfer, quick poueulon. Owner 493-3147 • '"""' ..... 2 BR, A /C condo. Bea\llltully up1raded, COO\lll. pool Ii Recrea· tlaD. Qn11 ts,900. VALUY 640,9900 r:-~~ ~~---~-- Ocean view 3 Bdrm •• 2~ ;round level, has 11.ep· d;etaea. N4>-Ulll bat b h 0 me YI It b down llled batb. Solt ocl!.&'llir.I v E ' 11 dl l wopd topea & la~1e slont ~~.~I W am Y / 0 "' room & frplc. add to tbe over•U RRftlM'l'&ftf fireplace. Hurry on this coiy atmosphere of tha• 5811'~ one; priced tD1ell! ! ! Jlne home. fl59.500. $111o4d••S . 1104 so. Q>Ht Hwy. UDO llAL TY l\$tuced for (au 11le. LAGUNA BEACH 67J.7300 ~~1teUer 1i anx- __ 4_9_7_·2_4_5_7 __ ,~~~~~~~j ~ co.IP> !,':fr:i::. .ALWAYSVllWS MUSTSIU. Com~1-pool, aam· Dehae z BR home wel OWMaS MOVING! rnna ft Jacmd. At lllls bar tn tra. den, secluded 1mmac. a BR, 2 Ba Jll'lceit nn'Vut. Huny g a r de n p a t l o • houn, ln excluatve dlllM$<0lD. • Profeuionah bm. EJJtbluff. SlM100C>. No •• · $150,000. reasonable olr~rtt n · %o9"v411lf1lealfor fuled,84().0WOt'M5-fl9$ I ___ ~ __ 1_1 ___ 1 _ _ffl)V .. IST'Dt~ .. USOITTOTHIS 2 s(ofy:3 bdrrp A·framei •t -... Col>' Doll.houae w /Crplc. Want ~ bea...5ib'• poql • SEUL·~LL 4 bib to beach, OnlJ teru;Ua <» wu suo.ooo 1-""""'---;,__---'_;.;..;...;..:.;...;.1 WN1LI~ 493·'1512 ••• ••• •• Dr • F c •• a ( ( I f • .. • • · '~1b HERITAGE . • NtAL.TOn s OWNER WILL CONSIDER LEASE/onlON on lbls beaut.If ul 2 BR Villa Pacifica home. cathedral celllnes, rtllr· rored wardrobe, adult community. '87.500. AMCHOIAM IMYISTMIN'l'S C7141496-7711 (2) Oranao J'ourpluff Super cot1d., clean & qulit netahbothood. ou11 ~~00 each. Bier BREA THT .AKING NEWPORT IAYFRONT HOME Owner will rent fabulous North Baylront home on monlhJy bHis. 38r, 3ba . lie game rm+3 coiy lrplcs. $1500/mo. Call HEIGHTS alter 6 pm lo see. 64~ DUP-..X 1-~~640-~sm_o_·~~~- Tw9 bread & butter unit11 ..._. r..-....a 3207 In nlce location. Owner ••••••••••••••••••••••• will help rmance. 2 Stry home on Penn. 955-0350 r~ C. tl\VI Cllt l lJt..tlJ1/\f\I" nr "' Tt •n" ' ''' 1 <JPr u•, 1 mmrll~.IIlm&l.it I I • 118 I\ I \I I' ~· I L.'..11. ,., Ill' Jt "'• WOODSIDE VIUAGE u ................... ~ l,J&J ...... llMAI 3 ... ~ 3 PoolS, jacuui. sauna, bltn ranae, oven & dishwasher. Completely carpeted & draped. No peta pleue 2511 Swtflow .. 557.4aoo H..-. I o.1.-, .. storaa• =Its from 115 LOWEST mo. locloor .. out.dOOi" RV ......... .... as boet atoraae. M1r on latT.D .... ... ~m.l.te. M biil HCwity. 1be Stora10 Place. taos WT .D. Loiil9I.: 142-1753. Mt. Lanalty, No. of Ellil, l'altolt Term• slnc:.190 ...;..;;..;.;.~..-~.....,:;;;.;.;;;...;:,i ___ --:-----·t.:::=.!:::.::;:..::.::.::;::...__..:...._ l-'~-..~~..;.;..~-1 ~taW:IValley. SaflterMtcJ.Co. Lost~~ C.11. Neut, DANCBOFPUN IA--m-bw_ldo..;;;.;;r..;;.l.;.;;fUl.;;..lll_~-ta-· =-~a0Jtl:.e PboneMH80'1 '42-2111 . MM611 =--,~~~fb:· Btl1 aude,rlrll dap.r" Neu, an Harbor. Ctn· Ofcis."l'ullae".llmo/nto t;g BUY FIB.ST. IND Name ••Ptekwklr". Clll rap Hll on. lOA to &ral.tYloca&ad,m~ 1uML s c. anti; 875 .... Wcmfed 4600 TRVS'l' l>J:El>S. AGT. t;, McClrth)'ctnf11.1900 IAll .. On·Sat '26 .. N. MANY with ldtcben, 1qftat11Ufmo:1Tt1qft ......... n••• ......... 114.-.oeoo· eve . ~UclAJttlh:ct:lst • Phone fr TV. Swtmmin1 at '1'7/mo; 6aT 94 ft at Wanted P\am lBr Apt, ror fUUDSI W/AD pool. jacual. and rec. "56/mo: $28 aQ ft. at Immediate oceupaoc7 uo,ooo. Hcond T.J>. L09t. ;:.mare Whippet n.mxINOMASSAGE -CT0--9-.------ room. Dalty • wHlrl1 4SOO/mo. Call Dlaoe $1.D behind '11,000. on choice Nda cal alt.en. L&lt .Bob Jam ·Lte Masseur A n • Co-Yfi!11!r. ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!~ rate1 Aartl.n& from f48 a fflllden <714>&aM8U Mltielw ~1 =~ ~~:O~ f!~ ~-::U,~~~~!i OUteaU •t, '"'5111 ~~fo~{nent 10 t~ .,. __ ..... ___ 3124 Ollleeclt 3140 week. ~ Pla8 • ....._ 4650 '282.975. Paya lo-Jr. fn· reward. 811·"11 or *5"":.._.DY'S* ent.ertalnmeot. lnd1.1stry • .__v,__ ....__...... 11!...t&--••••••••••••••••.••••••• t.._. d S _. •.OOO $1132 A" Altao ·t.Y,,_. 957-0282 ...._.••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. -...•• -nww --·· ue 1••· . -r-• · tg. clean 2 9" 2 Ba, rar, lldren welcome, 2br, ~~:J~~m':ir;~:rer~kti Vltw ottlce wltb full Calluafor: Winter-awn· buya ill 751·4121 or Loet• German Shepherd o.tcAllM•• .. • t\mJ>itktuaCoupleWatiled centrally located, adlt.a, 2ba ooodo. Newly deco. privlle1uinalradplxnr MrVlcea: Telephone, re· mer-yearly & itore ren· 493-11$3eves. fnBlkl&Orayw/1Uvot fPJt.Mllm.Gm \<> IJ\an11e a 1mall bua. or 1 sml child. 1295. Pooll l:Play areu. t>.na PD\ Marina. Pref cepijoo, secretarial, con· w h the choker" bllr flu collar, BREAST Will not Interfere w/y0ur i5H927orS45-0242 87i-IMQI woman over 35, mu1t fereoce room. Executive tall; • ave mall! ~111ta111C1••/ VI~ C.11. An1wera to ENLARGEMENT pretentJob. M1&Stbewill· ..!.:!..~~=-::::.:=.::::=.:::_ __ t:--:d:--el:-ux-e-:twn-.bs:-a-,.,,-:--'..,:':I work day1. $170 mo In· furniture avail. 2082 h111N11111/ "Shannon." Da11 ·,..__., tflwal1 . lnl lo team. llr. Hall • ..-I l C 11 ft ' Mlcbelloo, 752-0234 Lost & fMd ... 9800 es.t JOL Evu G ·--..-Jr--'42·18.'M. l 2Br1~ Ba, Twnhse apt, 3br 2ba fplc bit.Ill WD c us ve. a a • ••••••••••••u••••••••• Mll-'7082 ro&ap t.btrapy, wel&bt, ____ ....._ ___ _ brand new, never lived hkup patlo dbl atta~1ac 493-la <¥flee SUite, new build· LOlt & Fomd 5300 dfpreulon 4' Hll lm· AnUque Auto Restorer, in, pvt !ncd yd, encl 1ar, ~-5'5-36CM, 1163-42 Slngle adult~ to 60 yn i'::• all or rra~, ' blkl ........ ••••••••••••••• I.oat: Y°""11 rem eaL Drk ~ 1·7Pm 5Sl.o3N mult ~-do everything. upgraded lhruout. 1988 p t b th t anc • m ocean n owotown _..... • Call brown nutty U1er. Vic: EXOTIC G RLS Exp. C¥ cef1 req. rr. hr. Anaheim Ave. lst & laat Beautiful new 3 bdrm v a ' en r e Huotlqtoo Buch. 1325. Loll or l'uv.uu a pet, Btwn Edlnaer Is McFad· I ~ Call Emplo1inent Dev. mq + $100 dep. $350 mo. pats. $410·$4.25. Frpl., Y,!_EW. W~ ~ wfte;"· mo. + utU, 800 Sq. ft. .... Animal A11l11taoce denoffEdwardaat7·21S7C MMUce&KodehDi Dept. 55M5K Ad pd by ALSO 1·3 Br 2 Ba, avl. aar., W /D hookup. _ ... -6864or · a · &as-7:sotorS7a.• ~ SOOI l#aaueM7-2271nofee. e>tuaU6'24.J.•1~ pvtpty. 548-7729 ~1441 VerynJceroomlskitcben. Attractive Of(lce apace •M•••••••••••••••••••• LOST: Neutered male, ~i!'!bll~~e7~: SIXUALIMPOTEMT A--/P_a-.y"""a-b-le-_A_1_1t_B_k_k_p_r 2 BR, 1 Ba, stove & re!ng, 2 Br, 1 ba & 1ara1e, ~· ~~ $11:i ~ ~~· avail, 1500 sq ft, at W sq TRAVa AG&tCY Himalayan cat, bel~e Nr Willon/Harbor, CM. Weltbt tou breaat needed Xlnt co. Sal uUI. pd. Adult!, no pets. children ok. Walk to 1 n;.30 v ' ' ft.673·3272 Let us show you how to 1V/brwn ~rkln1• 4 bk Reward. 142-4889, •nlar1ernent 'by hyp. open. St. John Knits, Nr prk teruua & shop'a beach. $275. 962.3533 673-1451 a . start an aienc7 Travel face. V&c Warner & 54ifl..480Z • nolb. U1.cmt 02·7) 17312 Eu.tman, Jrvlne. $265 ' 548 7689 ' Executive ofllce suite · T 1 Newland, KB. Reward! ~n1l • . mo. · llllRIW• · Vocaffonlnhlls 4250 avail. in preaU&ious NB exp.notnecesaary. ota 968-1683aft3PN FOUND· Fem A11han --------- C..1ean2br, upper,nopet.a. Hno• l14Z ....................... l~aUon. Share recpt/ ~aplrttalurP111}u1'r~e.i;.~,ooot1n1,_.M 1 Y kl 1 1 Jltebrn~/bromas~.Vic'. Fl~UIS!SMAOGDlaS Altt4•LIWOllC C rage 2865 Mendoza •••••••-•••••••••••••• typlat. 955-1335 .... ..... """' -• """~: a e or e, rv ne cl Ne1Wport Blvel Is 30th w )fature NIP. adult w/ex-i\;!t C s26s 751-3006 • Cabin, Bii Bear, 1l'j 4-18. 714·226-8761, 838·92.52 College Park area. Gray St. '75-8239 · ESCO_... per. in knltiinJ, crochet-. · UAMOH~DutLIX ~up. Pool tbl, c r tv; Lookln ror do-lt· ourself &l tan, approx lO lbl, ... ,.._ inJ • eed in ed Very.mce 2 Brunt, patio, i Extra lre. BR'i, t~ dbllrpl,494-BSll. OCl!AM VllW job sfeurtty? o~tstand· needs <laity medlcaUon. FOUND: Female Shellie, OUTCAU;OMLY ro~ :osl~~':n \:anlrt cpts, drps, adlts only, no BA frpJc laWldry fac 2 ~to ShaN 4300 800 IQ. ft. olc. 2 Malo St. ina opportunity for good Reward. 5$1-4685. vie MJulon VleLo off 631·31 I I Needlework Spec!lallty pets. Refs. 2354 Santa car gar'. Hunlln1ton ••••••••••••••••••••••• exposures-at. level eamlnp. Full or PIT. Lost Vie Edl1on H11b. Narcuerile Par way. Shop, Some r.Ull exper. Ana Ave. 646.2423 Harbour area. Nr. Shr Npt Bch hse. Pool, prkf. Mo to Mo or lease Call Mr. Jamieson for Fem Persian, bm/belte. ~aft 6, 581·1~ req ul red. 6'5·5546 J Br. 2 ba lower. $310 beach. Move·io today. tennis walk to bcb. 1175 at$27S. Appt. 898-3758 Dark race w /orance ya Wltdaya a~r9AM. F I 1010 Only $425/DO. No Fee. • R E w A R D am1 y, no pets. Ant 846-l3ll + u t 1 I . 6 4 2. 3 6 9 1 Similar to above + 2500 e Ye a. · Found: Money. ValenciaSt.545·4991 ,....... • evs~wknds.640-0352day aq. ft . of adjacent MoMytoL.om 5025 53IM>907;982·7711'7. Call675-9318 ---···-UN\ ••••••••••••••••••••••• I d 6to11 PM. .."................... lf'f'EMBLY LEAD E-S1de nice 2 br, patio. 1 __ leach ll48 c .. doWll 0 '41& .... ~· , Lost 8 wk ol male pup, =-:--:-=--:-:-7.:=::-=l·-------..1 A.» Walk to school $300 mo. ~ 1 1... ! .6. .6. BEACH I st, 2llKI & 3rd T.D. • Drk bm Germ Shep, vlc Found amJ do& vie Barbor Assembly of sma.11 elec· 675-7396or642-4834 ••••••••••••••••••••••• i.nlng hpettMS AA LOANS AVAILABLE Monrovia & 17th. CM. "Wilson. Cathi\ 4PM to PIUYATIDUTY tro-mechanical de· 1 1 bd bll t C::urJ'.pent.ho~e.12b~.2 Shareabomeo;,.~~~~~ REALTORS c1:ot.~9f.°I'.o°i· 848-0190,642-8913 ldenuty.M8-8428 NUISI EXPH. vicea. Req'1 exper. In ~. Adft':~nly.n~~ ~t!: v 1' e ~n. r~, 1 :~ i' i'~ QousE-CllAru UftUMl•u. 3a7N. El Camino Real LOST: Sm. Blk " wbte I'm a younf Himalayan, Also Quads ::e~~~:s':ri~10 Callaflcr4PM645·3198 downtown. $475 mo. ~~~~"' s.a.. 492·ZIOO Money Available, many cal. Fri eve. Area tempour ly In Villa 557-'441 STACOSWITCHINC 2br, 21.>d. _,5 3br, 2ha, 494·2379eves;957-0282 ru~w"'°'wq sources, all projects. Westcllff/Dover Shores. PaclClc, HB. Will my U»Ball:erColtaMesa -""• For over 6 yrs. 832-4134 S:JOK min. 752-6052 Reward! 646·5775 bwnans pl.I call 9&3·5PO lfousebeper /Companion 5 9 304 a. frplc, pullo, S311S. Mesa OCEANFRONT Deluxe l Newport Cenler-Fuhlon Ugbt hlkkPC 5 day wk 4 • Verde area. A~k for Ilcl· & 2 DR, $400 & $500. incl Female roommate1 181.and 1mall private of· Speculators-investors· FOUND: cloth bag with rtr"IOaCllls 53501 ~re~fa~N~r!'.bc~h.~5'6--085~~7'..__,_1 •• r.ca.ua_l•Opliiilpo•r•E•m•pt-oyiler-ty. 645-9161or540 7086 ut.11. 646·0505 needed In 4 BR home in fice a~all. lmmed. 1140. realton. Short term knitting thread & needle, ••••••••••••••••••· .. ~··-• --. . H.B. $100 Mo .. 963-0592 Xerox aervice Oil pre· money avail last. can Vic. partcln& lot, of Drinldn1problem-> HlfpW..t.d 7100 """IST APT UNGMT ! Br w/gurage $225. Water Outstanding white water Eves. mile '1U1l1 BW Davenport 549·9803 Lucky's C.M. 642·5678 Call Alcohol Helpllfte •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• no;;>WI • ,,. pd. 1567 "B" Oran1ote. view,lBr,den.•/frplc& · ext330c'Sue) hrs d Chrtstlancouple~ed. C&O betwn 1 s M·1'', priv. deck. Completely Female rm mate wanted .... ,........ 4450 · 24 a ay83$-3UO Acctn BkkPDI Man f.o do maintenance. 636-4120 redecor. utJI. mcl. Steps to share NB apt, 1 blk ••••••••-••••••••••••• MoatyW..t.cl 5030 FOUND: Fem. Long PREGNANT! ~y wot:nanlodoofficework. to Victoria Beach. $450. from the ocean. $14!i/mo 4D&UXIOFC•s ••••••••••••••••••••••• haired drk 1rey le wht. Caring confidential 847·9605 C.arge 2 bdrm, garage, .. (U-0267 67"975SDebble lr • ttl Terrier Vic Dwntwn 11 ·-r It Dam•ter Today to "ork•---------pvt patio. Nr. schls, ._. ., Cont. rm., ieat 25, au Y:!l.l re not fe ~g Hunt. Bch .Poat ore: coUJlle na • re erra1. ·~·~nouaaccountlnllc ASSIST.MAMAGIR .shopping. $285. 645-7388 1 Br. Ocean view. Bllt to Super neat fura condo paoeled, am. whse ln re· 13.8 t 0* re:urn ~~ y~ur ~n· Ui-06M Abortion, adoption le bookkhpiDI aHlfD· Prt co~t.ry elub. For bch. Adlt.a/no peta. 129$ needs not»·11moker. ar.10C'2yr.lease.Lake ves men · ca an Y keeplna. menu.. Work dOlt to appt.ca0144-S«M. ! Br. 2 ba. 2421 Elden. mo.494·1313,499·3900 Frplc, patio, pool, Forest area. Kent Roas.AjaitCo.837·3744 APCARE .541·2583 your 1'ome. Flgure•..;..;~..........; _____ _ Garage. $275/mo. Call clbhse, $200. 631..0183 or Harkins. •Average yield on pay. ls Your Profession UNDA & Vltll Clerks to Sr. Accoun· AUTO MECHANIC 673-2825. LaguRG Nlc)uel 1152 &n2332 714-581·9393 offs to Ajax inve9tors, HOME REPAIRS? ~-M= unta needed thruout Lrf dean well equiped ... •••••••••••••••••••• Jan. thru July, 1977 -<>ranaeCo lhop Own CllloJ.s Week 'iharp new redecorated Nice 1 & 2 Br, $265 & up. Rmmte to share 2br, 2 ba $280 lse. Store·Offire, St.ate law permits a pre· Did you know you can Forttle,_of t Ro~rtHalf'a diys: Larry Hunt Auto 2br, lba. no p e ta pool & rec room, quiet condo w /yard. Own 960sqJt. under 30< 19478 payment penalty charge place a classified ad In ServinsaUOraqeCo. Accountempi Center, l825La1U:rta Ca- S2.50/mo. S48·2855 area. Ul-7766 room . $ 188 / mo . Beach Bl. HB. 842·2834 eqwvalent to 80% or 6 the Dally Pilot Service 835-73l3 500S. Maln, SteSOl nyoo Rd L.B. 4N·3000 ---------• 631-2(&1;774·1'60x651 months unearned In· Directory for a whole No U •A-B ... i-.-;;___..;..• ____ _ ~EAR HOAG. 2 Bdrm, Newport leach 3169 Nwpt Bch. Nr. Mariners terest on the balance. month tor 81 llUle aa ELLE•S ·Tower, n,..... an-. Auto Sat c b1ld OK, no pets.••••••••••••••••••••••• Employed male rmmte MileSquare.700sqft Of· Mortgaie Brokers. Of. $1.S2perday? For more •MICH * ln'ttuJCllyo Oranre * >allel!f:SIMtrlOfl Ground level, patio, fncd PAIUC NEWPORT for lge 3 bdrm Laguna nee or store. 2610 Avon rered to California res1· information, call .Outull Ma.uaae 714/83S-4103 l!:irpertenced a eaperson ~~J.ar:~n~~l! ::r.;: Bac helors, 1 or 2 ~lew. $150/utll. St.642·1194,675-6106 dentsonly. 642·5678 10AM·2AM • 731-4412 =el'~tit:,:r::. Rc!rlg option. owner Bedroom.1 "Townbouses Immed ate opennlar. pays water & tras h From $274.50 Roommate needed, Chris· FUil ti pu. Frtpee - S260/mo. 796 Shalimar, Spectacular 1pa, total Uan woman. 1137.50 + ~ benetlt•. Call for in· Apt. 1. Open house 8 to 4 recreation pro1ram, Ulhtl&pbooe.548·1804. tervie'#; ••11k for Sak!s =~0.... 1126 e~urEJ~:~T.... 050 SEND CHRISTMAS CARDS vtJ1 .... 004 •Ms•• ·••••••••••••••• ••• •• •• Joaquin HUii Road •••··~··••••••••••••••• AutotDOt1ve •anorama view. new cln C714t644-lt00 Single carace for rent New Det.all Sbop DOfJdl 2br, 2 ba + den 4-plex. storaa-only, E. 18th St. • ,.. help. Nopets.M&r496·1097 N:~rtt!~h~bd~ai~~ C.M.642·5216 VIA THE DAii ay PILOT ~::.e:-:;1-paS:~~ Yrls.: (714)956-5171 ~ of Single 1ara1e. ,. b~fen" polishers, UP• Storage only. Clean. boltlery 1hampooen. BAYFRONT Lease. 2 Br, 1eeure. Owner lives on check oat. plck·UP & de·, ~of Orange COunt(s most beoUlllul apartment communlles. A retoxilg senlng wltl steams, WOflltfalls. and majestic tr811S.~pools. Joeu:zzl, souno. bllllords, and exclllng ctubhoose wtlh social events. Tennis, gym, ond voleybol at Th6 VIiiage. More of 8V91V1hlng you're IOOklng ror. Fum»ure Is ovaloble. I One and 1Wo Bedroom AdullMng. I Ottlces open 9-00 IO 6 00 NON rennng. 2ba, gar, terracts, pool. premlae•. Reaa rent. • , liver)'. Apply at te00.83J.IM42eves. CM. 7•1574 dy/nlpta Mailed anywhere in the u .s. for $1.00 20SHarborBl,CM 1--------ic~ce a...w 4400 1 MS-1030 BACHROR APT. ····~;:~;;;;;:···· ALL trrlLS PD! 1617 WESTCLIFF·NB 100' Crom the ocean. AGT. 541·5().12 Semi.furnished. Avail•---------• now! 201 E. Balboa Blvd. Yrly. S250 per mo. NO FEE. Call: sue at 566-7707 anyUme Send your Christmas meaaage to your loved one• -write, type or draw your card or we wlll aet It In print for you. Sample• are ahown below. Actual alzes are .1%" x 3" for $10. 1%" x 6" for $20. 3Y•" x 3" for $20. Add $1.00 to the cost and we will mall a complete paper to your loved onea. Your Chrlatmaa Carda " wlll appear on December 6th. For more Information or to order your card by phone please call our Ctlrlatmaa Card Ad·Ylaer at 642·5171. Or you may bring or mall your card to Dally Piiot Christmas Card, 330 W. Bay St., P.O. BoJt 1HO, Coat• Meaa, Callf. 92828. Charge It or uae Meeter Charge or BankAmerlcard. HAPPY HOLIDAYS wttae Dear Aunt Liz: GRIGGS in Virginia We wieh you a Merry Christmas. Love from all of 111• i)8XJ:1b.L AYON . lalmlthr W.ted For 8 lt year olds. Light bou1ekeeplo1, Tuea.- Wed1.-Thurs .• 2:30 to S:30 In MlHlon Viejo. 0)/#eek. Rete'enca re· C\ulred. Call 837-9682. Babysltterrortmo. boy. Mon 8·5, Fri t-5. 645·20M BABYSITTER NEEDED Eveninp Is weekends, Christmas vacatioh. z amaU ctilldrell. 54&-8683 Bab)'Sftter needed tn my tiome for 3 yr old boy. Costa Mesa area. Own trans. 548·75'5aft..12. BuldAITB.LmtS H.B. Branch P\all 6 p/Urae peetUoM avail. llanlt exper. pref'd. Appl)' In PeTIOft Penonnel otrtce Man·Fri, 10.12Cc1·1 Galin, ...... 10230 s. Paraanount Downey, Calif. (211) 112'3·Mll ()ppor' ploJ!W IOAT IUILDER .,..,. Prodllct ..... Looking For Exper'd Electricians En&ine lnatallers Plumbers Carpenters Top pay, xlnl working coods "aooct beoellta. 4 Day week. APPLY IN PERSON DOWN EAST YACHTS 700 EAST ALTON, SA loa ... 'f:r F /C Fash lal nveatmenl (U1b. X1at oppor. Expet-. & maturity req'd. Call 640-0123. •"' ...... ......._ __ .... • -,. I ' ) ( - l • • I.I.SALIS Small •tiblWJicf omce OUM9• COAST DAILY. PILQT i e e d 1 q u a 1 tt te d 330 W. 14 Y ST., COST 4 MIS4 hlaperaona; favor.bit between Uio boun ol a:ooa.m.·5:oop.m. ~otract. Train Inc of· Call !or appointment please fer.cl. Maury Stauffer, 642-021, ed. 276 6t1a Lion Realty ~ual Opportunlt.y_Employer 497·3388.1213 N. Coast ----------------- llwy., La111J1a Beacb HelpW..tH 71 MtlpW..ted 7100 ~ I •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• ieli&u.rant ales career. National . NEW RESTAURAJIT OPENING CARL'SJR. Co., no travel, offices tn NewpQrt Center, out· ata.odlnJ Income paten·. tlal. Send resume to PO Box 18:10, Newport Center Dr., Newport Beach,Ca.936e3 SECRETARIES & TYPISTS Be prepared for tti. up • Coming holidays, earn top SSS on temporary H· alanmenta with olflc• CooQ &.Counter overl<>ad. Call today for Personnel DESMOND'S hnmedJale placement. Daya" nights f 1~HION ISLAND 0 1 c e . • • ParUcFull·Time ~O~ ft · Lunchtimohelpoeeded 1W 0 overload hnmecbately. Exper'd saleslad y Apply 1n person: needed tor moderate -· 557·00" 2·S p.m. lady's department, app· 3723 Birch St, NB TuesdaythruSaturday ly in person f3 Fashiont·-------· For the Westminster Jaland,N.B . • )tall 1---=-------ISecl'dary Units accepllng _...._ .Aasist $I 200 appUcaUons: SALE.S Free. Top growth poe. 18951 '.srookhurst ' ELECTROMlC :i'::~0o~tftr: !:;':r~t Fowilain Valley, CA OR(;.AN SALES good skills thl& can open H 1 G H E S T C O M • lhe door for rewardln1 ' l3640Goldenwest MISSION/GUARAN· career. Also Fee J obs. Westminster, CA T E E / F R I N G E Call Chris, 540·6055, (Nophooecalls please) BENEFITS. Sell in high Coastal Personnel Agen· traffic shopping malls. _ cy. 2790 Harbor. CM ~taurant help for Jack-Some ability to play the -------- Jn-The-Box, immediate organ req'd. Previous •SECRET"'RIES* ppenings on all shifts at 3 sale .. exper. useful, but "' C06ta Mesu 11tores Please we will train you. Call $14,400 Per Yr. 'apply in person .r.~tr~·~L~yn~n~1 89~3-653~~1·~~ Employers Pay All Fees 385 E.17lh St. .:.. Ll.z Reinders Agency 12QS Baker St SALES 4020 Birch St, Ste l<M 2235 Harbor Blvd f« Alt bcitlng Ne:r,:rt Beach 833-8190 CAiia Ca for Appt/F.atab '65 REST AUit.AMT • Applications Being Accepted Cor: Cooks. haboys, &Ho1h1M1 LOCAL Division ol lrg 1--------- nat'I corp. has opening to Secretary be filled immediately tor ERICSON YACHTS abarp individual in· f«Mdd'gVJt. 1 Jnterviews being held at Reuben's Or lsadores ,10-4 Any day Except :Chunday • 2Sl E. CSt Hwy. N.B. • Equal Oppqr Employer terested hi a mar.lceting Excellent opportunity career. The successful r 0 r p e r 8 0 n a b l e applicant w/the abi~ty to self starter. D1ctat100 meet people, ambition & skills reqwred. Marine a cleancut appearance lndustf'Y experle nee -..-:.-----~__.;,___, should earn $16,~ + helpful but not critical. ------•••I Y.ear. C~mpany frm1e Xlnt benefits. Salary benefits included. Need open. A11k tor Red , dependable transporta· 540-8001 --------1 t1on. We wlll train if -------- RETAIL CLERKS necessary. Rapid advan· cement if qualified. App· lyto: TElEl'ROMPTH 901 W. 16th Street Newport Bch. 646-0585 SICltlTARY To the presldent Money mgmt firm, exec s~y to young president. Typing skil l s & baqk jns knowledge helprdl. Hrs. Early AM to 3P.M, W. B. Govaars the 2nd Inc:, ·--------! Newport Beach. 640·23!!0 SECRETARY Immed opening. Type 50·60 wpm . S h or 1111sancl ..._. QIU._. - 1 • • •• ~;-:: i\•o l't A1 •• 1 1 ~ • t t' • " 't 11•. ,. • ". t \l. ·:·•· •,a •-'' WANTllSULTS7 Nlio Senlc•, P.+s S~l_l~~~tt)lr~ •AuHtorfn 9400 ~1'11... • •••••••••••••••••••••• YACN'l'SAUS '84·'7'7 Used lluatn• • • • tiA.JlW ICI< DAT ~UN '•,Ill 1·1,lfl t q11 t1 .tit. 8ll -1l 7'i4'1J -1J/~ •-Wnel t 77 , Hen Got "le Got FUJIJKIWPOlT Parta. 990 No. Parker, DIAUAS Orange. Call OOHOOO 2626 HARIOR ILVD. 2MSHARBOR BLVD (714) "3-9211 Alltos fw S• COSTA MESA 540.6410 54CMJI ll IOll\SO\ & so~ • LINt.OL N Mt Ill.Ult'( COSTA MESA DATSUN 11' Soren100 Sloop cmplt ••••••••••••••••••••••• WI IUY w/aux mtr $1760. ev1 4 we...i Dri•H tl50 US9 CAISI '1~dy1521-5920Bob ••••••••••••••••••••••• we·re the new Chevrolet HOBraCAT14, w/traller, AMc-JllP dealership In the Irvine race equip'd, 2 sails, #I a.. C.Of. Auto Ce11ter. We need muat sell. 148· 76S8 WE OUTSELL ALL your used car! NEWPO RT DATSUN JEEP DEALERS JOI 17' HVDltOWL Comp · INTHESTATE .._...._C PHEISO ..... w/aalll "trlr. Be1t orrer. HUG-llMVIHTORY ~ " 546-3920, 759-l880 All Models New & Used CHEVROLET 24' CAL w/trlr, 8 bag LeuloeAvallable 2lAutoCel)terDrive sails. ROF, head & Costa Meta IRVIN!! galley.12S00.546-'1506 AMCJHp 76a.7222 Sailor'• Oteam. Shoe I( ~ :~~BOH 8~~~23 A.utoi, l.,._..d Santana Zl', trU-, bead, ••••••••••••••••••••••• motor. uns. Clu1stmu JEEPS u77u GiMr.. 970 I '68 Oat, :uO AM FM cass spec. $3750, S51·20U C J 5 , C J 1 , •••••••••. •••• ••••••• •• Gd Ur.,,. rWll t:d. Msl · • • a • . aell S600 642-6573 •••Super r ed racing Cherokees Wagoneers '12 Audi IOOLS. Expertly · · __ Sabot. Great Christmas Plck-uP1 , u'pto$1.200dis' maintained, AM /FM '711 710 wan. AC, 4-sp, gll\. 673-7677, 675-4837 rounls. ~ yr 50,000 mile stereo Sl 600. 499·4304 r /rack radials, stereo . ---warrantya available. after I>. 13M ml. 139SO. 963-2635 14' Hobie Cat, used. ready c--.1anc1 Mtrs I to sail, cash SSOO. Lv m•e ...,.... tnc AtfG Rowwo 9705 '73 1200 a41i-45 ooo mi 4. ~. 2001 E Isl, SA SS8·8000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• spd. Very g~od co~d. lcMlh.SHpt/ Docks 1977 Scout Green. P /S, '76 Alfa Spider Red. Ex· 5"59-ST18afi 4PM P /8 V·ienglne luggage cellent cond. Orla. 9070 ' ' AM/FM ••••••••••••••••••••••• WANTED Sailboat berth. 642-7712 ------i·67 CJS,AllK mt. new tra loah ~toroci-9090 le differential. Eves ..... ; •••••••••••• _.. ••• 640-0849 759-081~ -- Bott.& RV Storage space11 r L-av~U. $30 mo. Newport rueaa 9560 Duilea, 1131 811ck Bu ••••••••••••••••••••••• Or. Nwpl Bch 644-0SlO '76 Dodie 4ll4 Sharp T1•rportetioll Many xtraa. '5500 •••••••••••••••••• ••• • 1975 FORD ~ Ton Cua tom C f lrt. s.lte/ Shortbed-V8, automatic. Reill ~ ' AM/FM stereo tape, aide •••••••••••-•••••--• tank•, air •hocka. For Sale: Big cabOve chrome pipes, chrome campu, x.lnt cond stepbumper, fog lamps, Reasonable. Gall 536-70 button tarp, mags & cuatom f nlnt. S5200. Prl. If cabover camper, good pty. Cal 835·0910 after 4 cond. Stov&, Icebox $550 pm ~-8778 eves. ---- ----'74 Ford Courier, runs gd, Motorfncl likH 9 14 nu tires, must sell, leav- •••••••••••••••••••••• Ing country S2400 FOXI Deluxe Moped 494-6893 $350. or best offer, ------ 648-4732or-S48-1834 ·~ Too Chevy Pickup, --take over pay ments. PUCll Maxie, xlnt cond. ~5031 $350. i.-----~-----646-1102 or 646·0071 6 Chevy ~ T , C ennf, tto~J...~I Cmpr sr.c· trtr bitch, 12.000 m , 350. a'4<>. Ps, 9 1 50 PB, AC, stereo, lilte n'9t', ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• Ofr/Van trade. PP . 1974 250 Yam•ha MX· 842-9542 ------~--Terry kit front fork, Bolt .64 Chevy 'k Ton-owner shockl, etc. $550. Call bu oew truck, 19.000 m l 962·9898afler7p.m_. __ on new 327 eng., air, PS, · 74 HON o A c e 2 o PB, new paint, strong un- W/)(tru .. ab11olutel It. $11175. 963 -~688, perfect. 1700 m1, $600. 673-2933 daya or 547-2231 957-8390 1_e_v_ea_G~l~~n ___ __..._ 9570 1978 BMW1s MERE MOW! CREVIER lrmdNew'77 HOMDACcirs MAHY To ChooM From! UNIVERSITY Opel 9746 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '71 Opel fix up, &ood expt vandallwd wiring. S200 963-8645 Ponclw 97501-'-- ... * DAJLYPILOT ' -~ Including fuel in1ectlon. 1.5 liter OHC engine, • speed. front disc brake., reek & p~n steering, 4-wheel Independent suapen.tfon .and hatchbaci<. Ser. 11783042638 USED VWs { WIDE SELECTIONS TO CHOOSE FROM AT DISCOUNTED PRICES BUY TODAY AND SAVE! 177 FORD GRANADA JDOoaSIDAM s4111 Factory air conditioning, AM radio, bright exterior moldings. opera windows, carpeting. woodtone in&l. panel appllque, limited edition package. wsw tires. rocker panel moldi •• dual accent paint stnpee, flight , bench seat. dlgltal clock, 302 CID V-3 engine, eelectlhift crufM.o.matlc. • wsw radial tires. PQWGr ateering, power frpnt ditc brakes, delul(e bumper group, tinted glaa-complete. Oemo. Str. #20..178 Stk. t0854 . NEW '78 FORD IJIOYAM SEE AND DRIVE THE NEW '78 TRUCKS WE'VE GOT 'EM AND Bucket seatl driver & pasa, exhaust system-reduced sound, emission 1y1tem, tranamlllion crulM-o-matlc, 4 8.00 x 18.6 D 8PR bsw, door poaationerHlde door. mirrora-brlght low mount west .. cigar lighter. glaa.tinted, doOr latch & lock-rear. hub caps-bflght. fuel tank auxiliary w/atd tank, power steering. Ser. WE'RE OFFERING OUR VOLUME DISCOUNTS ~RIGHI NOWI •BA255i99 75 FORD LtD 2 DLH.T. . V•ll, auto. Irena .. factory air cortdl'tlonlng, pQWer ttHrlng. pe>wer dJIO brllkea. llldlo, heater. whitewall ti,..•. vmyt roof. tinted glass. wheel covert. Uo. I063NXN. 4 cyl., 4 ~. radio, heater. luggage rack. Lie. t112MNN Stock 13010. 52299 74FOID ""1'0 WAGOM 4 cyt •• euto. trant., radio. fltattr. luggttge ride. Uc. #&e&PCD. -~ ·- 75FORD MAmtel2DL 6 cyl.1 IM:'fO. trans., Power steering, radio. neater. whitewall tire•. vinyt roof, tinted glaaa, wheel cover•. Lie. 1539NLG. 52399 175 FIAT 1/19 " speed, AM/FM a tape atereo radio. heater. only 23.500 mil••· Lie. 1099MXN Stk. IP3024A. 176 PLYMOUTH YAUAMTllOU4NfAM I Auto. trana., air conditioning, power steering, AM/FM etereo radio. heater. whitewall urea. vlnyl rc~of. Lie. tOOONRO Stlc. t207A. v-a. auto. trans .. pe>wer steering. POWtt brakes. radio. heater. with shell. Lo Lo Mil.age. Stk. fT244A 1C49157 174 PORSCHE 914 4 speed, radio, heater. Hard to find! Lie. 4f627KRK Stk. t330A s49ft 72CHEV VMACN. ' cyl., 4 epetd, ,..dlo. heater. Lio. t078GVJ. 175 PLYMOUTH MYWA.ott V-8, auto. ,,..,.,, f.ctory tlr condition- ing, power eteerlng, Power btekee. radio. heater, tinted glaH, 10 PaaMnger. Lets than 33.000 mllft. Cream Puffl Uc. t154NWA Stk. t1928 tEASING? . THEODORE ROIDIS LEASE COMPANY • LEASES AU: MAKE CARS--: ~ • v-e. auto. trant •• fa~toty air conditioning, pOllWer ltHrtng, POwer braJ(es. AM'~ stereo radio. hMtet', whitewall Urea, tinted glua, wheel cover&. Uc. i387l,)(F sue. tP3151 I I. ( VOL 70, NO. 327, 4 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES Mrilt~rnillion Seattle Tie? 50Kllled Argentina Hit By Earthquake ceon= Mil S ,,.,w ......... MAP SPOTS QUAKE Argentina Shaken HB Visitor BUENOS AIRES, Argentina <AP l -A strong earthquake rocked western Argentina early today, killing at least 50 people and demolishing numerous build· angs, the government said. The quake, which also injured hundreds of people, many !>eriously, struck hardest near San Juan, a wine growing and agricult~al city of 500,000 locat- ed 800 mlles northwest of Buenos Aires near the Chilean border. The tremors were felt in Buenos Aires as well as across the borders in Chile, Brazil and Peru. No serious damage or casualties were reported in the other countries. T he official news agency Telam said 80 percent or the dwellings in rural commUJlities on the outskirts of San Juan were demolished when the quake hit at 6:28 a.m. (1:28 PST). Most dwell- ings were of adobe or flimsy materials. The heaviest damage and most casuaJties occurred in Caucete, a rur al town or 30,000 localed 18 miles northwest or San Juan Telam said. ' . Slwt; Three Teens Arrested The government ordered emergency flights of medical supplies into the affected prov- ince. Planes were diverted to smaller fie lds in the area because the quake cracked the San Juan airport runway. The National Meteorological Institute in Buenos Aires said me asuring needles on its s~ia mological instruments "Jumped off the paper" because or the intensity of the quake. A 37-year-old New Mexico man was ln critical condition today at Hoag Memorial Hospital rn Newport Beach after he was found with two gunshot wounds in · the face in a Huntington Beach field Tuesday morning, police said. · Jorge Hernandez Rodriguez, of ~eming, N.M., was found at 11 .a .m. by a Southern California :Edison Company employee who .spotted the bloodied man in a field near Pacific Coast Highway and '.:Newland Street. : Rodriguez had been shot with a ~-small caliber handgun near bis ;left temple and in his left jaw, pollcesaid. Hunttngton Beach poUce Sgt. Bert Chadwick said today three 16-year·old Riverside youths are bein1 held by police in Riverside for questioning in connection with the1booting. Cb1tdwick said the three teenafers were arrested late ~uesday on su1picion of burglarlzing a Riverside church. Riveralde police said the youths were uatnc the shooting vlcUm's truck in the alle1ed bur1lary. Chadwick aaid Rodriguez car- ried a bandsun. rille and sbotp.n ln his truck. BalllaUcs test.a will be conduct- ed tod•Y to 1ee if Rodriluez' handgun ls tbe same weapon used iD the •hootinl. Chadwicluald. Hunttneton Beach police believe Rcidiisue1 was shot lo Huntbiitan Beach and dumped in the field he was found in. No mOUve tor tbo •boOUDc b)s been e1tablltbect •• yet, Chadwick Hid. The quake registered 7 on the Richter scale. Its epicenter was reported to be 620 miles west or Buenos Aires near the Chilean border. The Richter Scale is a measure of ground motion in which every incnase of one whole number means a tenfold increase in magnitude. A r~ading of seven ls a major quake capable of caus- ing widespread heavy damage. In Buenos Aires, thousands of panlc·etricken residents ran into the streets when tremors from the quake reached the capital. No damage was reported in Buenos Aires, but windows rat· tied and buildings swayed. Tremors are fairly common in the Andean foothill relions ol Argentina, but they· are rare in Buenos Alrea. Valley Man ~lay& ~air, Kills HimseU Sellool Spirit The whole school turned out Tuesday for Corona del Mar High School's jog·a·thon and senior Dan Brown, despite disablllty that requires him to use crutches was no exception. He covered 20 laps m the event designed to raise funds for student ac· HBResidem Named to WuntyPanel Huntlnaiton Beach realdent Dorla Piette, 4', was appolnted by Ort.n1e County Supervlaor Lauren~.Sebmit Tuesday to the Count7 Commllllon on the Statbl of Women. Mn. Piette, of 18111 St. CrQtx Circle, eatd an her appUcatiOCl W the comml.&slon post tbat ah4i 11 73rd auembly cUatrict cbalrtDan for Eaale Forum, an oraanlaa· tlon opPOlinf ratification of the federaf Eq\,lal Rl1bta Amelid· ment. She a1ao Is forpler pu~llahe1\~ two tablotd ma1utnet, promcJt.O mg radii& events, "J>ra1 News" and "BoatNewt."• Mrs. Piette 11 active In cb~ work arid foWlder of hat Rac!PI lritinta!Jctiil. tivlties and tthleUc equipnient. Studelits, teachers aMl staff members took . in· d1VidU81 pledges ·for tbe1 number of laps around the scbool'a track they could cover m an hour. 1bey raised at least $36,000, studentleaders safdtoday. I J 81 lllCHAEL PASKEVICft. ... Dellr ,.....,. Attorneys for four men under a Grand Jury hwHctment In the fan,land-atyle klllln1 of Stephen John Bovan of Fountain Valley ebar1ed the District Attorney's Olflce with "witness tamperln1" Tuesday, during a day-long Binshaw's Sentence ~ HearmgSet · A hearirt1 at which convicted ·former congressman Andrew Hinshaw's lawyer wlJl seek to de- t e r ml n e exactly how lone Hinshaw must stay in prison has been •cheduled for Dec. 2 in Orance County Superior Court Judge Robert P . Kneeland's courtroom. But defense attorney Marshall Mor1an said Tuesday he believes that Hlnabaw, 54, w111 serve only el1ht months of the two years recommended by state correction otficiala. Mor1an said he baaed his belief on comments made by Judge Kneeland when he sentenced Hinshaw alter a jury had found him guilty of acts of bribery com- mitted while he served as county assessor. Morgan said the judge's rec· ommendaUon at that time of a •ix to eight-month prison term had apparently been Ignored by prison authorities. He laid the blame on what he aald was the vagueness of the new determinate sentencing law which went into effect July 1, after Hlnahaw had been sen· tenced. That law gives sentencing judees a choice of three prison terms which they can impose. Moat defendants are sentenced to the middle term. Morgan said the middle term of two years for a bribery convic· tlon waa applied to H1nshaw by prison authorities because Judge Kneeland sentenced him under the old law and did not specify which of the three sentences ahould be.applied. And he repeated his conviction that Judie Kneeland will make JU preference for the lesser of tbe three terms crystal clear at the Dec. 2 bearing. Morgan aald he addlUonalJy wlll ask Judge Kneeland to re- move Hinshaw from connnement at the state's Chino faclllty and allow the former Republican le1l1lator k> complete his term at the Oranee County Jall. Hinshaw ls serving concurrent· Jy a one year jail term ordered after his conviction on further crimJnal charges related to hla il- lecal use of county manpower and materials while serving aa county assenor and running for Con,reu in 1971. p,....pllfleAJ , JN·DICTED. • sham film company, the Forex Company in Van Nuys, and leaked word that they were ex- tortion tartets. FBI qenta aald the}'1'ever dJa. trlbuted aoy f'llm but kept copies of "Deep 'lbroat" 1md 1lmilar fUnu on hand for ahow. Locicero and l\lcclardt af .. Je1edly demanded that Forex pay &hem $20,000 or be put out ol bualneu. Stat11fellleg.J LOS ANGELts (AP) -A all)' •'8t.. allowbw auapemlon of cab driven' permita vrlthout a nottc• or !ieartn1 I• an un- • eon.stftatlonal violation ot duo proc.ua. a Superior Couit JUdl• hnruled. DA!t Y PILOT aerlu of leaal maneuvers ln Harbor lluillcipal Court. lt w11 another twllt ln the already bisarre murder and con- spiracy case lnvolvlne eitht persons with alleaed Unlu to East Coast mobsters and the Hare Krishna reUalous sect. After Deputy District Attorney Taxi Woman ,, Going Ho~ JACKSON, Tenn. CAP) -The dauahter ot a 55- year-old California woman wbo traveled to Jacluon by taxicab aay1 ahe baa penuaded her mother to retunbome. Diane Bernal aald her mother, Jean Caren.l left for their home ln ::;ania Maria. on TUesday, leav· ing behind her black poo- dle, Duchess. Mrs. Bernal refused to say how her mother was traveling. .. I know she'll 10 home becauae J have her doe," .said Mrs. Bernal, who ob- tained a court order pre- venting Black and White Cab Company of Santa Maria from taking Mr1: Caren any farther on her trip to New York. More Police Watc)lHB Yule Drivers . Holiday drivers beware. A J280,903 state irant wilJ ena- ble the Huntinston Beach Police Department to hire five new traf- fic police officers this year to stem the city's growlnJ( number of auto accidents, accordln& to police U . Tom Patton. Patton said there have been 20 fatal traffic accidents in the city thls year. The total number or traffic .accidents is already uP 16 percent this year, he added. "And Cbrtatmu la our worst time of the )'ear for traffic accl· dents," said Patton. Tbe California Office of Traffic Safety irant will pay for five of. ficera• salaries, three motorcycles equipped with radar and one patrol car, said Patton. The state grant will pay for the new officen' salaries for the flnt year and half~ their pay cbecb the second year. The city will pay for the other halt of the fivenlartes the second year. The city will hire one. supervising tratJic patroJ sergeant ftom ita own f\inds, aaic:f. Patton• The six-man team wlll patrol Huntington Beach's heavy traffic problem areas in an attempt to cut the high number or accldenta, said Patton. The new tralfic officers will tree time for the department'a 18 other traffic officers to spend on accident inveJJtigation, he added. "The six-man team wm •pend most of their time enlorcin1 traf-fic laws," said Patton. Patton said the number of tral- fi c accidents la locreaalnJ because of the 1rowin1 number of cars on city streets. Lost Man's Search Ends LONG BEACH (AP) -Coast Guard officials here aay tbey ha vie 1lven up tbe 14'Jrch for a La Mesa man who reportedly tried to awfm ashore frQQl bll dflabled llth1n1 boat @out 10 call•• olf La JolJa. The mlu~nr , m•n, Nell Johnson, 24, toOk .lib ~t(>ot flab .. tne velMl out $~ft4v wltb three companlona. Wbeo \he tD81.ne tailed, there waa PO wa1 to call for help bec•us• the boat bad no radio, thecomPanloaualdlater. Dave Carter felled in a motion to have Municipal Court ,Judie Selim Franklin dlamlaa hlmaelf on crounds of prejudice, defense attorneys beea,n still-unresolved efforts to keep the hearing at the municipal court level. Late Tuesday, defense at- tornen claJmed that prosecutors "arrested" a key witne&.s last week and detained him for near- ly 10 boun before releuln,I him. The defense clalma the arrest of1'rank l.olsl was a premeditat- ed effort to coerce hlcn loto testi- fying •fain.st their clients. Ros11, who bu been O'anted immunity from prosecution, did ·teaucy a,alnst the four defen· danta last week before the Orange County Grand Jury. Roui and Anthony Marone Sr., tbe Cather ol one ol the defen-dut.a, had been. subpoenaed to appear tn court Tuesday but neither showed up. Thls prompt- ed attorney Phlllip DeMassa to claim the two men had been pre- uured by the Di.strict Attorney's Otflce into not appearinc. I>J1trict Attorney Carter bta,nded this charge as "ludicrous," adding that . Tueaday'e preliminary hearinc at the m\DUclpal court level was unneccessary because of recent Grand Jury indictments against the eight defendants, four of whom remain at large. District Attorney Carter at- tempted to "discharge" def~­ dants Alexander Kulik, Antbony Marone Jr., Raymond Resco and Jerry Peter Fiori in an effort to put the case at the Superior Court level. Traditionally, a Grand Jury in- dictment takes precedence over municipal court charges. Defense attorneys argued that the preliminary bearing is needed to allow cross- examination of witnesses and to preserve testimony from wit- nea•es who mi&ht be harmed or fJee the area. Judge Franklin will rule on the district attorney's "discharge" motion at a 3 p.m . Monday hear- lrur. ~cheduled Juat one hour alter the rour men are due in Orange County Superior Court for a similar hearing. . The complex legal battles stem from the Oct. 22 shooting death of Bovan, a 36-year-old F6uh.taln Valley resident. He was shot nine Umes as he was leaving the El Ranchito restaurant in Newport Beach. I',.._ Page Al DRUGS ••• federal prison term at the minimum security prison in Pleasanton, near San Francisco. All are charged in the indict- ment with possession and dis· tributlon of marijuana and con- spiracy to possess and distribute marijuana. Ball for ChristiQn, whose eight commercial lots and one residen- tial lot in Buena Park are being held by the government, ts set at $35,000, Agent Flandensaid: Bail for Guerrero, who was ar- rested Tuesday night in Hunt- ington Beach, and DoMeJly, who was arrested in Seattle, is $10,000, he added. Palmeri's bail is $25,000; .Nelson'• $15,000; and $10,000 bail was set for Kidd just for Sood meuure, although he ts safely confined and Unable to'lk.ip out of Pleaisant.on, DEA agenta said. Guerrero and Donnelly were expected to be artaisned todat in Los Anples and Seattle on the 14·~ount Indictment naming all six codefendanta. Inveatiratort 1aid it was audits of bualnesa record.I thatled to the Cktf endanta. ''AU of them are roofen," A1ent Flanden sald. "But their bu.ine11 records abowed tMy were Joaiq money while tMy were buYlnc real eat.ate and a yaabt." 'lbe~'1ue of Cbriatian'• Buena Perk,pro~rty ii eatlcnat· ed •t "50,000 . Alter evaluattnt tbe J.O.<yur- old Orc•nised Crime Conb'ol .tet; federal atiorney1 ud tile snnc:t jury ordertd CbrilUan'• land 1el.Hd last Friday. • E.Tpetui1'e Aeeldent '\. Bemused tow truck driver contemplates damage to pair of high-priced autos following cruh Tuesday afternoon in Newport Beach. Accident took place about 12 : 30 p.m. in the 900 block ot West Coast HJgbway. Police said no one was injured in the accident. The Porsche was driven by Charles Patterson, 49, Newport Beach, according to police reports. His car slid under the parked Ca dillac owned by Giltspur Exhibits of Garden Grove. The cause of the crash is under investigation. U.S. Envoy Negotiatea With&ulat . CAIRO (AP) -Amertcan Am· ba11ador Hermann Ellts met with President Anwar Sadat at the Egyptian leader's Nile-slde home today in an apparent re- sumption of U.S.-mediated In· direct negoUatlona between Israel and E&Ypl. The Cairo government, meanwhile, wu crackinl down on PalesUniana here in retalia- tion for their bitter "war" againat Sadat for making last weekend'• hJatorJc vialt to larael. · A Palestinian spokesman saJd three top Palestinian offlctals were arrested Tuesday nlgbt and would be expelled from the coun- try. It appeared likely the gov- ernment would close the Palestine Uberation Organiza- tion's omce in Cairo . Eilts and Sadat met after It was officially announced that a direct communication• Unk with Israel, set up for the Sadat trip, had been dbcontinued. Officials declined to say whether Eilts or Sadat requested today's meeUn1 and aave no de- tails of the discussion. Judge Rejects Halt Of Diedrich Probe A judge who ruled that the Dis- trict Attorney's Office cannot prosecute Orange County Supervisor Ralph Diedrich re- fused Tuesday to order the DA to halt bis investigation of allega- tions now before the Grand Jury. Superior Court Judge Philip E. Schwab refused to sign the tem- porary restraining order de- manded by attorney Sylvan Aronson with the comment that Diedricb's lawyer was involved in "a speculative proceeding.'' Aronson immediately went before Superior Court Judge Robert E. Ricki~, who is han- dling criminal arraignments in the absence of Judge H. Warren Knight, and was granted a hear- ing setfor Dec. 2. He said he will ask Judge Rickles ilt that bearing to issue a permanent injuncUon which would bar ~trict Attorney Cecil Hicks' office from proce~nr further with investigation of what are believed to be bribery charges. The move by Aronson was seen by the prosecution as belng the outcome of Judge Schwab's de- cision two weeks ago to bar their oltice from any prosecution ~­ lion agaJnst indicted Diedrich. . Supervisor PhiHp Anthony ud two codefendants. · ' The Schwab ruling is beilll ap.. pealed by the District Attorney's · Office to the Fourth Distri~ , Court of Appeals. , An affidavit signed by Diedrich in S\lpport ot the exclusion 1XlO) tion contains the comment thal, , , "an iJ'ldict01ent would not be re. turned" if he were ''given theOI>' portunity to discuss the pertinent facts with an impartial, objec. tive, unbiased prosecutor and ap.. pear before the grand jury and answer questions." It was argued by Aronson and. other defense attorneys in the earlier hearin$ before Judge Schwab that disputes between Hicks and county supervisors at :i. board level clearly led to Blckl. • displaying prejudice durine th~ investigation that led to the iQ .. dlctment. • r MEllPKIS, Tenn. (AP> -Al his death, Elvta Presley had a ch~klnc accoqnt of SJ. mUUon, et1ht auto o&Jle•, 1lx motorcyclea, two airplanes and a' mansion with 18 televlalona, a partial lilt ot his asset.I reveala. The SZ.page accountin1, filed in Probate Court by Vernon Pr~sley, father of the slnaer and executor of the estate, dld not · place a value on the assets Statue Moved to Miss Tax Df;NVER (APJ -An ancient Greek statue bought by the J Paul Getty Museum of Malibu for more than $3 million has turned up quieUy in the Deftvei- Art Museum where it will remain on display until early next year to ·avoid California sales tax. The statue, on display at the Denver museum since Sep- tember. is a bronze likeness of a laureled, nude athlete, and is believed to be the only existing work of Lysippua, a sculptor of the 4th century B.C. It hos no feet. The statue's location was re· ported loday by the Rocky Moun· lain News. Deborah Ashm, pubhc rela· tions director for the privately owned GeUy museum, said the statue was purchased late in Ute summer and the transactlon was not made public unUl reported over the weekend by the London Sunday Times. The purchase price rivals the highest ever paid for a piece of aart in this country. Dr. Armand Ham mer ol Los Angeles recently paid more than $3 mill ion for Rembrandt's "Juno." Denver museum officials did not announce display of the bronze, said director Thomas Maytham, ''al the request of the owners. They wanted to withhold publicity because or the im· port a nee or the piece .•. The statue was shipped to Denver in September after its puychase from the Armitus Society. a consortium of London art dealers. Ms. Ashln said preshowing of out-of-state purchases was com· mon policy among California muse ums. both public and private. ..- Pat Stocker, a public relations assistant at the Denver museum, said the tax avoidance was legal. The London newspaper report· ed that the statue was found sofnewhere In the southern Mediterianean area and has been held in Euro~ for six. yefrs·. Curators or th·e world's fa ous museuma and some of tb richest private collectors ha e seen it but it reportedly had ne er been displayed publicly un,,l its arrival in Denver. • aytham estimated that wl out publicity 250,000 Denver ar a residents miitht have seen tb• statue by March when it will bej aent to California. Now, he &atd, that figure is expected to rt.. considerably, boostlne the art museum's lagging atten· cf ce. Fare Kills 5 CAMDEN, N.J. (AP> -A fire .bUfDed uncontrolled throqb a 2~·story frame nuraina home for a •alf hour early today, kllllna flYe of slx residents, authorities 1111!. ~•sixth resident, an 80·year-old n>•n, jumped t,osafety from a at~nd·noOr window, Chief Ken- n h Penn said. He wu bo!Pltalized In good condlUon. ............. DOUGLAS HAWLEY WITH HIS $25 HOMEMADE GLIDER After M•lden 'Fflght,' He Needa a Bigger Hiii Short Bop Glider Flies, But Briefly OSWEGATCHIE, N.Y. CAP> -This Is a story of Douglas Hawley and his old-time flying machine, a tale that shows that sometimes a bird in band still ends up with two in a bush. Hawley, 28, always wanted to own a glider Then be found plans for one in a 1909 Popular Mechanics magazine. a nice little plane with a set oC double wings and a little tail. It looked something like the famed Wright brothers airplane "IT TOOK ABOUT 25 HOURS. I worked on It for four or five days," said Hawley, who altered the plans sli&htly by using plastic to cover the wings instead of muslin and nylon riHlni in· stead or wire. The glider, which cost $25, had a 20-foot wing span and was 13 feet long. fl weighed about SO pounds When Hawley tried the glider on for size-the pilot stands in an opening in the lower wing and holds the craft around his waist -he had a few doubts. "IT'S AWKWARD AND HARD to balance. 'he said. Still, the Popular Mechanics article made it sound easy: "Flying in a glider is simply coasting down hlH on the air, and is the most interesting and exciting sport Imaginable " That was enough for Hawley, who has nearly completed re· quirements for a regular pilot's license Trailed by~a handful or spectators. he carried his glider through this rural town or 300 residents to a steep sand hill GAZING DOWN, HAWLEY APPEARED to be having second thoughts. "A long way down," someone said. "Yup ," came the dry reply. But Hawley took his 1Uder in hand and Iunaed down the bill. "He's in lb~ air." yelled one 1pectator. · SURE ENOUGH, THERE WA8Hawleyflylqthrou1bthe air, three, four seconds, lookl.n1 f.tne. Then came a sound like someone thrashing erou"d In a pile of leaves. Hawley and hll gJ!~erwerein a busbat the bo\t<>mofthehill. "Incredible feeling," sald an unst•lhed Hawley. "Got to find a bigger hill." Estranged Spouse Shoots, Wounds 2 Two women were wounded Tuesday ln Santa Ana when the estranged husband of one a) .. legedly ftred rlfte 1hota at the car in which they were riding. Three hours after the early morning gunfire in the fJOO block of East Dyer Road, police arrest· ed Daniel Trice, n. of Oare.ten Grove, and charged him wlth U · sault with attempt to comm.it murder. Trice reportedly aul'l'etldered voluntarily at tbe Santa Ana police station after police besan a search for him as the prime suspect in the 2:28 a.m. abooUn•. Sl11htly wound~ a1 buJletl --..-·--- ..We bave listed the ueetl ,.._ quired by Tenne11ee law." D. Beeobw Smith II, attonley f 1 the estate. aald. "Tb• real estate is not li&ted becaua. real eatate ls ' I .. .... ~Prejudice Clai~d r ." -. •• I Battin Seeking ~ .. ,., Ouster .of Judge -... ? u " Former Oran1e County supervisor Robert Battin wants the judge who sentenced hlm re- moved from a beartne lnto Illa claim that some of the jurors wbo found him guilty wer~ preJ· udiced. -Bat~, '8, went to Superior Court dlU' to demand the ouster o Judie Kenneth E. Lae ·rrom the Nov. 30 heartna on the grounds that Lae also ls pre- judiced against him. Judge Lae sentenced Battin to 30 days in jail and fined him $3,500 aft• the Santa Ana lawyer was found eullty of misualnt county manpower and materiala in 1974 during his unsuccessful campaign for the office of lieute- nant governor. Battin claimed Tuesday that Judge Lae displayed prejudice against him by not removing the district attorney's office rrom the prosecution role in his trial. He offered as comparison a re· cent ruling by Superior Court Judge Philip E. Schwab who barred the district·attoraey from prosecuting county supervisors Ralph Diedrich and Philip An· thony and two codefendants ln a trial scheduled for Jan. 9. The Schwab rulins is under ap- peal. The attorney general'• of- fice has agreed to prosecute the four defendants If the appellate court upholds Judge Schwab's deci~ion. Members of the dlatrict at· torney's staff predicted Tuesday that the Battin motion ls only the first or what they believe will be many attempts ln the wake of the Schwab ruling to remove their of. fice from prosecution. Police Probe LOS ANGELES CAP) -Police from several JurlldJcttom, baf- fled by u many ea nlne murden of young women In le.u than a month, are comparing notes to see If the killings are related. More than 30 otticer1 from city police, county aherlff'1, Glendale police and the county coroner'• offices eathered at the pollce de- par im ent '1 Parker Center downtowb T\lesday to dlscuu the nine bodies, man1 of them strangled, nude and sexually molested. .. These victims haYe bffn found ln the last several months. We're looking at tbem for simUarltlea,•• Hid Lt. Edwin Hendel&Oft. wbo will coordinate a city task foree for tbe lnveatlaa· lion. Battln's demand for the re- moval of Juqe Lae will be heard by another Ju4e cm a date that may be selected la~ today. The Fourth District COurt of Appeals granted Battin tbe Nov. 30 hearlna after he IJ'IUed that several jlU'Ol'S at h1I trial W8" preJ udloed because of bis polltlcal backpound and com· mented that be wu iullty before the trial !>eean. An affidavit signed by Juror Gloria Godfrey of San Juan Jury lnlo;r•ed Capistrano contains her . com- ment th.at jurors hid their true o1 f eellngs from the court when they ' were questioned durtn1 the jury selection process. '11. A defense motion for a new ·: · trial1 based lar1ely on Mrs. God· · frey 1 pe>st trial comments, was rejected by Judie Lae prior to ' • the appellate court action. Asslataot District Attorney Jack Ryan, who proseeuted Bat- un, •ald his offtce lnveat11ated •. Mrs. Godlrey'1 alleaatlou and .. found.QOrubitancetot.hem. "' Sexually ~xplicit Movies 'Can HelJi' .. By TOM BARLEY m .. DMtr ll'llAIUH A wttneu wbo Yiu described In court u a practlcin1 .. xologiat told a jury Tuesday that X·rated movies are a Sood substitute for sexually inadequate indlviduala who cannot afford sex counsel· ing. Dr. Marguerite Bi.abenstel.n d the Institute for the Advanced Study ol Ruman Sexuality ln San Franclaco teatilied 1n an Oranie Co1111ty Superior Court trial that such Individuals .. learn about positions and techniques" by ex· poaure to sexually explicit mov· ies. "It can lead to sexual enrich- ment," sbe testified. "Many marrlase partners wbo go toaetber to theaters showing ncb movies flnd they can enhance their potepUal." Dr, Rubensl,eln testified as a defenae wUneas for brothers James and Artie Mitebell ln a. lawsuit brought by the city ol Santa.Ana. . · The jury is 1,>elni asked to declare a . total of 41 movies shown at tbe Boner Pl.a:ta theater over the past two yeara 1o M ob-- 1cene and lo violation of a city or· dlnance. · Addlt1onally, the jury is being uked to declare th& theater a public nuisance, a deelilon that would~ ~cily to cloae the taclllty. U thoee. verdicts are reacW. the jury will be asked In a aeparate bearin1 to a11esa damages for the city &1a.lnst the MltcheU brothers. The jury of seyen women and ftye men h.u Viewed lt or the 41 movlu condemiied by tbe city u obscene and wtU.out redeemtna social value. Dr. llubeosteln rebutted the clty•a condemnaU.On of the fllms Tuead~ and pralled the theater mana1ement tot playti,1 what ' she said ii an important role In the community they serve. She told City Attorney James · Clancy that public vieWiDC of 0.. many forms1 of 1e&ual actiTtty depleted in the Honer Piasa mov- ie• wu a meam ot 41uemtnattns inf ormaUon .not nonnaUY avalla· ble to ttie public. ,.1 But she •ereed . with Clancy • that public elCpOIUl't ol 1exual ac-- tivlties abould notblclude'. fora· am.Pie, tbe couple wbo astOt de- ckle to make love on their frOat lawn. ' "I don't think IO," the I~ "1 wouldn•t f:(n•rd that u Q-proprlateU I·" Dr. Ruben1teln reje~ the suueatfon that tho kiod of lllOV· Jes offered by th• Mltebell l brotber1 could be defined u Ylcie. Sbe told the Jwy that lnOl'e 1 widespread viewing of the ~ov· les questioned by the city could lead to a cut in the crlme rate. "A lack ot 1exual JmowJtGle • can lead to vtotence,0 1119 'aa1CL "Looking at the 1exu1l aetlvWes of other people II a form of education that I have found to be dilUnctly belpftll In cues wbli'e -: sexual counaolln1 ltaa been : necessary." Lawyera for tbe Mltebell brot.bens told •ctlDI SuPUtor Court .Judie Mamn G. \feaa that they have one man Wlta • fortbedefenaebUt 11 ... bleto testll1 until MoDday. ~ Juue Weeks Ordmld a atztday break in tbetrial wlllch la~ ed to 10 tnto nut ar~ Monday w early Tuelda,y. • . 'TIS THE SEASON: The 1~olidays are now upon us. The ''!: 1 irsl bigeie looms tomorrow, ' hen we are all supposed lo &ive ~'"1'> thanks by getting stu!!ed on 411 u'slu!flng and other gastronomic H7. horrors . ,1.,,. Thanks givrng, on a more 1r1•r1serious note, i s a Ume for con- ,, ,.,temptation of all the •ood thlnes that have indeed been vlslted up- "'h on us •~111! Too bad that there are those among us who will celebrate this thankful occasion by driving about the counlr)'slde craiU1. and by general overindulaeoce in everything frolJl eating to destroying eyeballs on marathon ~elevitiorr coverage of football .-.contests~ Alas, the stati~lics will then be . witllul oh Monday, after the lone '-.weeleoo; ~ THANKSGIVING DOES, however, touch of! our hollday season and the Christmas shop- """ ping rush. lin • I must be getting older because wJ the shopping season seems lo ar- ~1111 rive earlier every year. Even 1J:.1Jt.home decorations !or the Yuletide seem to go up sooner. wn1· Out on an evening drive several .,., .. nights ago, the wife happened to "'' remark, "Look, there's a house where they already have their '" Christmas lights burning " ~n• . IT WAS TRUE. The atrings of . • red, grffn, yellow and blue llahls were burning around the doorway and front windows. 1• But I pointed out, "Listen, .. that's the place where they never :· bothered laking the lights down • " from last year." This also was true. But it the , holiday ·season keeps starting . . earlier and earlier each year, that may be the way we'll all go. ,, , There won't be time to take the ., lights down between aeuons. ,, ADDITIONALLY WITH the holiday season, it la a tlme when many are thinkine about aoul- saving. The religionists of all varied faiths and inclination• are out on the streets with pamphlets • or labQfing in the precincts from door to door. One of my students up at the uniYenity in Long Beach, who happena to be a person of strong penonal faith, complained Just the otliei-night, "1 can't ieem to • turri J. comer of this eampuS Jll withoUVS>mebody pushing some .. kind Cl( religious tr•ct mto my face:·.;-· "If ydu •ccept the pamphlet graocit\llly. they try G> toovert you: U you refuse it, th•n· they really goto work, trying to save a sinnel'.f' Tbe ypµng aren't ~e onty ones who an=. targets or the mobile religlonlats. I have thtl older friend wbo anawered the door the other day, figuring it was the laundryman. J IT WASN'T. ln1tead, two ,.. young men asked permlsaloo to read to her from their venlon of tbe Good Book. Politely, she f decllned, indicating she had already done her daily one-hour of dnot.imal Bible reaclln1. ' The~ men persisted, uk- ing it ln the future 1be wanted to be 1,1pon Hip, midlnl pleuant- ly wtth tbe anaei., or relecated to o lower elevation •here thetem• peratureawouldbeunbearable. uy~ men, I never worry abOUt that," abe replied. ''I !\aye very rood frlends at , bOtblocaUons.'• • Turkey Time Guess who 's coming to dinner. Thanksgiving m~ be a good time for turkey -unless you happen to be a turkey, th1lt ts. These turkeys seem totally unconcerned about their fate while children peek out from inside the turkey pert. The children are from the Christ Home fot Children in Paradise, Pa. Man, Wife Slain In Bizarre Plot 'I ... JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP> -The blood·coverM bodles of a former dtrector ottbe Intematlonal Monetary Fttnd nd his wife were found in their home early today in a bizarre double slaying-, police reported. Letters spelling out • · rau'' and ''t.em'' we.re a prayed in red pain\ oo a wall in the lounge and on1he refri1eralor, the authorities said. There was no immediate indication what they meant. Chief Detective Brig. J . Smith said a chauffe\U' discovered the bodies of Robert Smit, 44, and hls wife, Jeanne, in their new 'horne tn the town of Springs, about 25 mlles east of Johannesburg. l GrefllloU11d Strike TJareat Ertcled PHOENIX, Ariz. CAP> -The threat or a strike by Greyhound bus drivers and maintenance employes over the ThanksJiviQg.boli- day appeared over as union and company .,egotlat.ors a11reed to stick totbeirtalks as Ion' as thel'e's some headway. ( J N e1otlatora for tbe Amal1am•Rcl Tr'"sit Unton. IN SHORT which represents 14,000 _ Guyhound bus <!rivers, -----------· m~chanica and clerks, and. company spokesmen aald Tuesday they wo~ld continue talkt •\>en through the holiday 1f there were signs of prO,ll'ess. · , ' . ~land Selaooi. 'Flat 8re1Ce' ( CLEVELAND Ohio (AP> -:About 10,000 Cleveland school employees went without pay today whUe acbool offictal.s urted the stale legislature to rescue them from their fin•ncJal pll11bt. The ll3,000.pupU aystem bu been operatinc for more than a month under a court order that ne•ated pennlaalon obtalned by school officials to close the system for the rest of the year because lt was out of cash. l'artee Eau Som• A-.erfea Vltft BRASILIA, Brazil (AP) -Secret.,.y ot State Cyrus Vance winds up his fU'St visit to South America ln Venezuela today follow· inl inconclusive talka wlt.b Brazilian officials and a surprtae e\llc· lion notice arrecUna more th'Ul 100 American tntSslonarlea. Vance met TueJday in Br&!'llla with President Etnes\o Geisel and other top officials of hla military rt•lme, but.there wu no alp of any narrowing of differences ov r human rights and Brull'• ac· quisltion of advanced nuclear techlloloa from West Germany, the key issues plagulna Brazilian-American relatkinl fof most of the yeal', PORTSMOUTH1 Va. (AP> - To the aplemn roll of druma, the uniformed tl•ure marched between columna of bla friends, . who turned their back• aa be pa11ed. The ritual 11 an old militacy ordeal, tiut in this cue, the ob.t.ct ot dlagru. waa • 1+ year-old boy. Reaction to the drummtn1 out at Frederick Military Academy bere bu apparenUy forced the realgnatJon of the school's presi- dent . COJ,.. WILLIAM BAAS; wbO was named FMA president in August 1978, realped Sunday, six days after the drummln1 out, but the achool'a direct.an dfd not disclose bi.I decllion until Tues- day. The 14-year-old c•det put through the drummin1 out wu ranked second in bl.a clua. He had admitted stealing $14 from a teacber. HAAS COULD Na? be reacheCt for comment. He 1, a 1955 West Point graduate who won two Sliver Stan and three Brome Pipe, ·Cigar BanOTdered WASHINGTON (AP) - The government la ban- nine clear and pipe amok- ine on U.S. commercial airliners, and cl1arette1 maybenext. The Civil Aeronautics Board told its staff Tues- day to write a final order prohibiting pipe and cigar smokine. Tbe directive wtll be issued ln a week and take effect in either 30 or 60 days . The same order will ban all smoklna on aircraft when the ventilation system la not worklna. Board members also proposed applying the pipe and cigar order to cigarettes. but that ex· tension faces montha of public hearing• before final adopUon. The pipe and ciaar order was proposed Oct. 26, 1.976, and already has been dis- cussed at open board meet- ings. S\ara for 1aUantry in Vietnam. He reUred from the Afmy in 19"15 wltb tbi rank of lleut,nant col- onel. • The last tlme the U.S. mWt.ary drummed aoyone out or the service apparenUy was in 1962, •hen a Marine accused of theft was dn.ubmed out of his unit at Camp Allen in Norfolk, Va. NONE OF THE ' armed services practices the ritual to- day. Sozne parents in the achOol's boostet club complained to direc- t.ors about tbe cermony, calllna it off en.tive and vindlctift. "Many of the boys were Upset by tbla, ••one tioott~r said. 0 Tbey didn't even 'know wbat a drum- ming out was before the ceremony." A PARENT WHO supporttd Ha•• said, "Many of us feel the action was done properly and juatly. That's wby w• sent our boya there. Becau•e Hau does a 1oodJob." · ' Some parenta accused Haas or augeeating the drummlne out ceremony. But Hau and. other school officials contend the cadet corps, angered by petty thef'ls at 'lmt 1'Wous' €yp},one Toll: · 10,000 Dead MACHILlPATNAM, India (AP) -Bloated and SUD· blackened bodies noated today in water covering hundreds of square mlleis of ferule farmland in aoutheut lndla devastated by a cyclone and tidal waves that of- flcl-18 say killed at least 10,000 persona .• The Tip>a of lndla in New Delhi sald tlie death toll coul4 reach 20.000. but the final count mav never be known. CA.RROLL, Iowa (AP> -V•ndala apparently uaed a broomstick to beat to death a rabbit and 19 wild blrda, litcludlna two Canada geese whose wm,s bad been clipped so they could notlly. One g006e was decapitated and ~everal other birds at the Swan Lake State Park had their neclC$ wrun,, .. ld SberUf John Longne<:ker on Tuesday. .. '" 'r From AP DbpatQn Two Weat German le1l1h1tors announced they are proposlrl8 Eayptlan president Aawar Sadat and lsraell Prime Mlnfs~er Menabern B4saia as joint candidates for the 1978 Novel Peace Prize. Prime Mlnllter Mepabem Becln as Joint candidates lot the 1$18 Nobel Peace Prize. The aponaors are Kurt Jue and laercea MoeUemaaa of the smaller Free Democratic Party In the rulln1 Jett-liberal coallUon. Both are mem- bers of the House's Forelen Affairs Committee. They said they made the proposal to honor the two statesmen's efforts to "end the escalation of hate and violence and IJ!ek. . .peaceful coexistence at one of the fire-spots of world politics " • Carol Lee Galney says her wedding in Raleigh, N.C. will be a large affair because she is "the first sirl to the family to get married." There may be another reuon that ha.s more to do with the bride· groom'sfamily. Miss Gainey, 24, will [ ) be married Dec. 17 to P,rnPLE Scott Carter Stapleton, c..v 26. He is the son of Ruth Carter Stapleton, which makes hlm Prealdent Carter's nephew. An invitation has gone to the White House, Miss Gainey says, but "we won't be certain until 24 or 48 hours before tbe wedding'' whether the first family will be able to attend. • Sen. John L. McClellan, the law-and-order ad- vocate who fathered most or the m.,_,r anti-crime legislaUon of recent years, ls Jeavln1 the Senate after bis cur· rent term. McClellan, an Arkansas Democrat, announced that he wUl not seek re·election next year. "There ls a proper Ume to aspire, .a time to achieve, and a time tA> retire," said the 81-year- old McClellan, who•was elected to the Senate ln 19C2 after two terms u a congressman. I He has had health problems this year and hd been forced to slow down. • Floteer Children Two unidentified youngsters bearing flowers walk on stage to kneeling singer Tony Orlando in the opening 1!1omen~ of his first show in San Carlos smce retire- ment three months ago. WILUTS <AP ) A moderate, roUina earth· qu,ake broke windows , toppled chimneys and frightened residents in this small Northern California community. officials said. Residents report~d at leas\ six cUflinct af. tershocks during the predawn hours today but the Mendocino County sheriff's office said it bad no re. LOS,f'NGZLIS (AP) en~ new aws have prompted adult bC>cUtore owtltra to yank "klddy porn" from open ahelv~. tbe:sexual abuse ot ehlldnln cont1nuea undersround In California, law entorcementofticlall say. "Child pomoiraphy ls no Jonaer vlllble on the adult booklhelvt1 ot San Diego County,'' Paw RoblnlOO ot the San Die10 dJaUict attorney'• offlce told a hearinr Tuetday bettoro ~ A embly Col11\-mlttee on Criminal Justlee. "II it'• beln11old, It'• under the counter or out ln tbe back aeat of can." STATE DEPlJTY 4TrOaNEV GENERAL Al Knudsen aatd durtns a hearln1 ~esa that "kiddy poTn" has not been aold openly ln the state since the le1islature•1 ena~tment earlier this year of two Jaws makin1 the use of children ln obscene material a felony . But Alsiltant Attorney Gaeral Arlo Smith said four producers ln San Franci'sco and l! producers in Los Anades are cootlnuin1 to make "klddy pom,. !Uma. ma1uine or other explicit material. "Tbere is no ftUestlon that Call!o,rnia bas beell and remaln.s the center of dlatribuUoo of porno- erapbic film.a lnvolvJn1 cbUdren.., &Dith said. TQ HEARING WAS CAUEJ.> to Judie the Jm- pact ot the new Jaws and aet.rmlne if further Ie1i1l1Uon.il needed. ports of damqes or injuries. No injuries were reported Tuesday afternoon in the temblor, which the UDiverslt.y of Callfornia seismoeraph regiltered u 5 oo the Richter Scale. fS0,000 llell'ard Offered LOS ANGELES (AP) -F!1ends of slain rock m aaic promoter Steve Wolf are offering a $..'50,000 re· ward for tmormatlon leadln8 to the arrest and~ vicUonofblskillen. ,. Wolf, 34, was shot -------- Mondaymomln1when be ( ··~~TE· J was awakened by the ,;;,i,4 sound of intruders in bls --------Sherm41n Oaks hlllslde home. He died m surgery 1 2~ hours later at Riverside Hospital. a .... a,, l'ktf .. 'l•JtfHd' OAKLAND (AP) -An expert witness bas dls· puted the testimony of two doctors Yt'ho gave the Chowchilla kidnap victims a clean bUl of health hours after their ordeal. Dr. O. Bruce Dlclcenon inllsted on the witness stand TuesdlY that bus driver Ed Rav and 21\ children 1\IUered bodily injury u a ttault of their 16~-hour bUrlal in a MD. The tnjuriu, he aald, were the effects of heat exhaustion. 1lG llJE ' l.Pi recent months, the Huntinaton Beach City Celerhen· tar)j}1 School District bas hudly served as a model for goou government. A schism has been allowed to develop and widen bet ween the three male members of the board and the two women members. I Some members have dropped hints that the majority is m~k.ing decisions on informaUon not available to all. The're appears to be some substance to the allegation. Relatively minor issues have been greeted by UD· toward emotionalism. In short, relationships have been lousy. It seems that some of the trustees have forgotten what they were elected for -..-to promote the best education.. of nearly 8,000 youngsters in the district. · A ray of hope for better conditions was introduced at a ri>cent meeting. Trustee Roy How has called for a consultant to come into the district and off er advice and counsel on how the board can smooth things out. How is requesting help on policy programs, establishing goals and, in fact. teaching trustees to become cCfecUve board members. The acknowledgement of the need for help is overdue. But it represents a beginning. We hope that trustees show t•nough maturity to listen to ways they can better perform the job they were elected to do. 'Red Tape' No Excuse Citing a "strained" relationship with city officials. Colottia Juarez residents in Fountain Valley want to farm a citizens ' advisory unit to help speed construction of public works projects in the 54-year-old community. 1\ seems an advisory panel or at least more citizen participation has been needed for a Jong time in light of re· cent misunderstandings. Since 1974, city officials have been under the im· preion that Colonia Juarez residents wanted three new slr ts built. was only after an emotional meeting last month that city icials realized what the residents really wanted. Jonfa residents finally made it clear they want sid(fNalks, curbs and gutters for existing streets -and qui~ly. ity officials have made a definite commitment to do wh the citizens want. But officials blame "red tape" for hol ng things up. ' t appears someone has really botched things up sorn.l!where along the way if a three.year plan to give a 54-ytar-old neighborhood some improvements is stalled rlue 10 red tape. • Pitckage Vote Risky • tt 's time for the Huntington Beach City Council to make a decision on how it wants to handle recommended chailges in the city charter. ~embers of the city's charter revision cordmittee hav completed 13 months work on proposed changes in Lhe ty's form of government and have turned their rec mendations over to the council. he council, after public hearings next month. will de· cid~which changes are most wortbwhile and bow they will be presented to the voters tor ultimate approval. 'everal controversial changes are being recom· mertied. On~· of these is how the recommendations wilJ go to v!crs. he charter revision committee has recotnmended that he entire document be presented as one pa~kage with a single ye5'orno vote determining its totaUate. Some council members, however, have indicated that. they favor separating the controversial items for in· divi ual vote. his seems to be the wisest way to go. It would seem a sha e that voters could turn down the entire document bee se of their feelings on one ot two particular issues. oting on separate issues-such as an elecUve vs. ap· poln ive city attorney, removal of department heads from the ity's personnel system and the creation of. an elected ci•y ontroller-should generate a great deal of interest. o be fair to all, these issues should be decided in· dep dently and ~>n their own merit. ' . Opln1~ns expreued In the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Other9vlewa e)(prHaed on this page are thOM of their authora and artlSt Reader comment Is Invited. Addre~ The Dally Piiot, P.O Box 1 60, Cotta Mesa, CA ~629. Phone (114) 642·4321 . I . .31 : B,oyw Iron Band BRU~ELS -The real ex- planation of Western Europe's l'laln& fears of U.S.·imposed llmlta on NATO use of around-launcbed cruise mllslles ls more mllitaey than pollt1cal: the need for the crulae to balance the lm· men1e Soviet force bulld·UP in what are called Central Euro- pean "theater" weapons. The paUtloal factor, which leaves U.S. NATO allies feeling victJmized by .. • I mlaaUe u perh•PI the only~··· ble count.er to thts Immense So- iet bulldupln Central &urope. Indeed, both London and Bonn (and the French only 1Uptly leq so) perceive ln th preaumabb' hard·to-shoiot.4own cruise mlt· sile a partial answer to v•~ In· creased Soviet "theater" firepbwer, wUh lta thlck a.nU- aircraft c:lelensea, and to the new SS·20 lntermediate·range mobile baWstlc missile. • "LONDON wants a 1round· 1 a uncbed cruise of a,ooo kilometers (about 1,200 miles), the French and Germana about t,500 kilometers," one NATO ex· pert told us. "That would brtn1 Western Russia, where the ~20 is believed most deployabl8, super-power strategic arms agree· m e n t s <SALT>, is bad enough for West Germany , England , France and lesser JllATO . within range." But pressed by Moscow, the U.S. is perceived here to have tentatively asreed to a 600· kilometer range llmit. With high government officials In London, alUes. But truly critical to the future independence of Western Europe, these middle-level powers feel, ts the necessity for NATO to compensate for the So- viet buildup. Otherwise an ex- plosive crisis within NATO seems inevitable. · Paris and Bonn recel'Vlng theJr first thorough brletlni on these Even though the much· discussed medium-range cruise missile has not yet even been tested or officially asked for by NATO, the West Europeans perceive 1t as a heaven·sent answer for Soviet proliferation or a fantastic array of new weapons systems being produced in d8%· zllng quantities. TO GRASP the awesome momentum or this buildup, con· sider these facts brought together In a recently declassified NATO study. In the four years ending last December. largely for Central Europe, the Soviet Union bas produced 13,850 front-line battle tanks, including the newest T·72 model, against U.S. production of 2,345. 6,500 long·range artillery pieces, the lat.est of which (a 155·milllmeter) is belleved capa· ble or firing a nuclear explosive, as against 800 in the U.S.; 5,500 flahter aircraft <including the third generation MlG·27 now ap· pearing at a 1,000·a·year rate) · ·· agalnst2,800 U.S. fighters. European members or NATO -particularly the British and West Germans -have been eye- ing the 1round·launched cruise Mailbox Robert N. \Yetd/Publlshtr ThotilH Kffvll/Edltor &arbent Krwfblcti~dltorhll P4IQI Sdltor ,.. . THE CARTEa adminiatratlon belltdes these European f ean. Gelb, accorillna to ~xperta here, ls ta)'lna that the ban on a eoo- flusJdlomet.erunge will laston- Y t'hree years ("Just a morato11um"). The NATO ex· perts counter privately that tr the European appeal 1a touab enough, Mr. Carter will be com- pelled to ease tbe non-transfer and non ·circum ven tlon language. Few here predict tbat the tuige Soviet buildup Of Central Euro- pean QlU,ltary power threatens audderf\atts;ck. The fear ls dlf· ferent: that polltlca depends on pert~ptlons and tbat, with Warsaw Pact mllltary power clearly movin1 so far ahead Of NATO's, the Soviet.a are notf perceived as approtcbtnf tho kind of suPerlority that could ln· 11en1ibly lead Western Europe to buckle to Sovlet economic and political pressures. That la the answer to the recur· rlna question of ''why": why is Moscow spending H ~~ent of its 1ros1 national prOduct on arms Cmore than twice t.be U.S. rate) and Why has its conven- tl on a 1 firepower In Central Europe almost doubled tn the past four years? ' AS THE Europeans aee it, the answer ls eventual brutalization of Europe by stockplledmilitary power skillfully manipul-ted for poUUcal and economic ends. This is the heart of the arau· ment now healing u., between Europe and Jimmy Carter. SeH-government Needs Self-discipli:De To the Editor: It appears the scare or the 1973 oil embargo has thoroughly dis- sipated from most mind1. The apathy and disconcern of the avera1e American seems stead· fast: It ap~ ~mericans re- • fuse to reall« the gravity of the future because present eneray requirements are so convenient- ly met. Americans have an undisput.ed }Qve affair with automobiles. Since the 1973 embargo, the price or gasoline on the retail level has doubled, yet consumption has in· creased, not decreased or even stablllzed. As a symbol or Americana. nothing seems to surpass the automobile. It sisnifles the freedom of in· divldual movement so cherished by Americans. public forums were held on Nov. 14. The commission couldn't come "I> with any valid reason for existence other th•n to help ratify the ER~ (which thet deny; however, it ia 10 stated lD the state charter of SOW, and they thought that the women of Oranae County would 1ive them a purpoae and some uselUI ac· Uvlty. The meetlnas were well publlclud and promoted. There were app10xlmat.el180 women lri attendance at moriililf im.-; in1. witb • two-to-oil• ratio In favor of dlsbanding SOW. lt was polnted out that every need or coocem that was dfseusHd ls already being handled by at least one or more county asencles (ex· cept for federally fUndtd child care day centers wblcb the tax· payers are a1a1nst ud do not Med the extra burden). THERE W£BB approslmate. ly 20 at the even1D1 meettna ,.,tb almost the same two-~ne raUo in favor of disbandment. The meeting was scheduled for two hours. Tbedlscuaslona had ended by the end of tho fin\ hour. When only so women attend an open·to-the·publlc tnput m~ out of th~ enUN pOp\llace of orange Coun~. lt l>fOVet that tho Oranae County women clo not want, nor are Uier concerned or intereated ln a S~tUI of Women CommlUlMI Why bUrden tlie taxpayer wtth more thin. be bu already when 1t 11 completely u.nneceuar)' t DORISJ>1E'l'T£ •trona peraon who adheres to his announced principles? Or shall we tak• a chance on• newcomer whose recard is a-blank pqe? Al a voter carefully meuure the candidate! Take nothing for 1ranted. MARYSCC11'1' To the F.ditor: Tb• only way to bring Social Security penalons In Une with the cost of living and to lnsure that It 11 Prowl)' funded ls to put poUU· clans oo Social Secunty. Tbe7 have voted themselvea much larger pensions under different programs. If they are wealthy, they don't need the lar1e pensions. U they aren't, let tbem Uve oo the same dole that of.hen live on. lt ia_ popular to give mOMy away, t>« lt lsn't popular to f\md proarams because it means rais• lng taxes. II their own penaiona were the lame as others, they migbt be mote interested in t1lnl lt to the cost or living and funding it. hinden Otlr domestic ptoduetlon that makes us import more OU and gas that hurtl our economy. Or he could be "falrer" to us by Jowerlng the ~ pettent tax we now payon ertetgy lnatead of addln1 new taxes wltb hJs enera plan . Why is 1t "fairer" to pay a lax oo a product, than tor the pro· duct, or a "rip.off" to tbe 1ovem· ment instead of the prodllcer.? But he does now admll that America's 1ecurlty is threatened by this lack of doQleaUc ertereY. )f4l)'be the man la (Jn~ly learn- Ing 1 what mQSt Ameiicang have Jona known. GOLDIE JOSEPH .,, Orango Coast Daily P1loJ Time for Trustees . T<> Remember ·Joi> ' ' lA recent months, the Huntington Beach City (eletnen· tar~11 School Dlitrict has hardly served as a model for gooq government. .\ schism has been allowed to develop and widen between the three male members of the board and the two women members. Some members have dropped hints that the majority is mttking decisions on information not available to all. The~e appears to be some substance to the allegation. Relatively minor issues have been greeted by Wl· towal';d emotionalism. ln short, relationships have been lousy. It seems that s ome of the trustees have forgotten what they were elected for --to promote the best education. of nearly 8,000 youngsters in the district. · A ray of hope for better conditions was introduced at a recent meeting. Trustee Roy How has called for a consultant to come mto the district and offer advice and counsel on how the board can smooth things out. How is requesting help on policy programs, establishing goals and, in fact, teaching trustees lo become effective board members. The acknowledgement of the need for help is overdue. But it represents a beginning. We hope that trustees show 1 enough maturity to listen to ways they can better perform the job they were elected to do. 'Red Tape' No Excuse Citing a ''strained'' relationship with city officials, Colottia Juarez residents in Fountain Valley want to form a citizens' advisory unit lo help speed construction of public works projects in the 54-year-old community. U seems an advisory panel or at least more citizen participation has been needed for a long time in light of re· ccnl miswiderstandings. Since 1974, city officials have been under the im- prein that Colonia Juarez residents wanted three new str ts built was only after an emotional meeting last month that city icials realized what the residents really wanted. Ionia residents finally made it clear they want sidEfNalks, curbs and gutters for existing streets -and quif::iy officials have made a definite commitment to do wh the citizens want. But officials blame "red tape" for hol ng things up. ' t appears someone has really botched things up somewhere along the way if a three-year plan to give a 54·Yt ar-0ld neighborhood some improvements is stalled due o red tape. • Pitckage Vote Risky • 1t 's time for the Huntington Beach City Council to make a decision on how it wants to handle recommended cha ges in the city charter. embers of the city's charter revision corrlrnittee completed 13 months work on proposed changes in ity's form of government and have turned their rec mendations over to the council. he council, after public hearings next month, will de- cid~whlch changes are most worthwhile and bow they will be presented to the voters for ultimate approval. l)everal controversial changes are being recom- meled. On~· of these is how the recommendations will go to v ters. he charter revision committee has recommended that he entire document be presented as one pa~kage with a si~le ye!forno vote determining lta total-fate. Some council members, however, have indicated that thel favor separating the controversial itetn1 for in· divi ual vote. his seems to be the wiseat way to go. It would seem a sha e that voters could turn down the entire document bee xuse of their feelings on one or two particular issues. oting on separate issues-such as an elecijve vs. ap· pain ive city attorney, removal of department heads from the ity's personnel system and the creation of an elected ci\y ontroller-should generate a sreat deal of interest. o be fair to all, these issues should be decided in· dep dently and on their own merit. t • Opfn1~ns expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Other9vlews expreaMd on this page are those of their authors and artist Reader comment Is Invited. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. , ( 8o1' 1 . Costa Mesa, CA 92628. Phone (71~) 642.,.321. , B,oyd/ Iron Hand l By L.M. BOYD Gefmany's "Man with the Ir-c>rt Hand'' was ,i>ot Bism'1rck, Kaiser Wilhelm or AdoU' Hitler. H~ was Goetz von Berllchangen of Hellbronn, • 16th centurx knl•bt. He wu ODf: of t.hh firat w rers of a proethals, an irq6 hand· wlth movable lln11n . tcb r@lacta a hand he'd lost in a batUe. It's writ that he smashed a Jot ot tavern tat>Jos 'Wilb that Iron band wbri lnnkeet>Of• were 1low to bd91 Wine. BRUS.SE~ -The real ex· planaUon of Western Europe's rlalnl fears of U.S.·lmposed Umlta on NATO use or fround- lawiched crube mlasllea ti more mllltar1 than poUUcal: the need for the cruise to balance the im· menae Soviet force bulld·up in what are called Central Euro- pean "theater" weapons. • Tbe poll lie al factor, which leaves U.S. NATO allies feeling vloUmlzed by .. super-power strate1ic arms agree· m e n t s (SALT), is bad enoueh for West Germany , England . France and lesser NATO • ' "LONDON want.a a cround· I a unched crulae of 2,000 kllometen <about 1,200 miles), the French and Germana about 1,500 kilometers," one NATO ex- pert told us. "That would brint Western Russia, where the SS-20 is believed most deployable, within range." But pressed by Moscow, the U.S. is perceived here to have tentatively aareed to a 600· kilometer range limit. With high government officials in London, allies. But truly critical to the future indepepdence of Western Europe, these middle-level powers feel, ls the necessity £or NATO to compensate for the So- viet buildup. Otherwise an ex· plosive crisis within NATO seems inevitable. · Paris and Bonn receiving their first thorough briefing on these Even thoueb the much· discussed medium.range cruise missile has not yet even been tested or officially asked for by NATO, the West Europeans perceive it as a heaven-sent answer for Soviet proliferation of a fantastic array of new weapons systems being produced in daz· zllne quantities. TO GRASP the awesome momentum of this buildup, con- s t de r these facts brought together in a recently declassified NATO study. In the four years ending last December, largely tor Central Europe, the Soviet Union has produced 13,850 front-line battle tanks, including the newest T-72 model, aiainst U.S. production of 2,345. 6,500 long.range artillery pieces the latest of which (a lSS·mlillmeter) is believed capa· ble of firing a nuclear explosive, as against 800 In the U.S.; 5,500 fighter aircratt (including the third generation MIG·27 now ap· pearing at a l,OOO·a-year rate) agalnst2,800 U.S. fighters. European members of NATO -particularly the British and West Germans -have been eye· ing the ground·launched cruise Mailliox To the Editor : It appears the scare of the 1973 oil embargo bas thoroughly dis- sipated from most minds. The apathy and di11concern or the · a veraae American seem$ stead· raat. It appears Amerlcans re, • • fuse to reall• the gravity of the future because present energy requirements are so conveniertt- ly met. Americans have an undisputed love affair with ._utomobiles. Siace the 1973 embargo, the price bf gasoline on the retail level baa doubled, yet consumption bas in· creased, not decreased or even stabilized. As a symbol of Americana, nothing seems to surpass the automobile. It signifies the freedom or in· dividual movement so cherished by Americans. public forums were held on Nov. 14. The commlitsion couldn't come UJ> with an.Y valid reason for existence other than to help ratify the ERA (whlch they deny; however, lt la so stated ln the state charter of SOW, and they thought that the women of Orange Count)' would 11ve them a purpo1e fJKl some usetul ac- Uvlty. The meetings were well publicized and promoted. There were approxlmatd.)r 80 women ln attendance at the momln1 meet· int. wft.b a two-to-on• ratio tn favor of dilbandlnc SOW. lt W'8 pointed out that every need or concern that wu discuned la already being handled by at least one or more county a1encles (ex· cept for federally funded child care day centers wblcb the tax· payers a.re agaimt and do not need the extra burden). TREaE WERE approx.tmate- ly 20 at the evenlnf meetlnl wttb almost the same two-te-one ratio in favor of dl1band111ent. The meeting wu scheduled for two boura. The d.lscuuloos had ended by the end of the flnt hour. When on.Jy 50 wornen attend an open-to-tbe·J>Ubllc Input mfftl.Da out of the entlre populace f)f OranteCOWity. lt pro.ea thJt the Oran•• County women do DOt want, nor aro tf!q concerned or interested in a Statua of Women Commtaton! • cl111Wfld matte.rs only Jut w~k (by Leslie Gelb, No. 1 State Department •dYiser on SALT), there is no doubt at N~TO li•&d· quarters that only a bard·lino European appeal ml1bt now denect President Carter froD\ the a1reement ho seems wedded to: no tra:nster OfU.S. crul e mlssUe technology to the Europeans and· no "circumvention" permittlnf deployment of medlum-ranae cruise mlaailes ·tn Western Europe. TB£ CARTE& administration belittles these European f~ Gelb, according to experts here, is aaylna that Vie ban on a 800- rlu~kUometer range wlll last on· y tllree years (•'just a moratortum"). The NATO ex- perts counter privately that If the European appeal ls tough enough, Mr. Carter will bo com· pelted to ease the non-transfer and non-clrcumventlon tansuage. Few here predict that the h\lge Soviet buildup of Cen'tral E~ strong person who adheres to b1I announced prinoiples?' Or aball we take a chanc~ on • newcomer. whoae record is a blank pa1eY As a voter carefully meuure the candidate! Take nothing for granted. MARYSC<1rT S.etal Seellrie9 To the F.ditor: Tbe cmly way to bring Social Security penaloos in line with the cost of livin& and to insure that it ls properly (unded is to put pollti· clans on Social Security. They have voted themselvn much larger pensions under different programs. tt they are wealthy, they don't need tho lar1e 1>41nslom. U they areo 't, let them live on the same dole that.Others live on. lt ls ,popular to gl"e money away, btlt it isn't popular to f~d J>rograms because it means raIS~ Ing taxes. tr their own penslOM were the stm~ •s others, they migbt be more lntereatff in t1int it to the cost of living and funding lt. Wliy burden tlle taxpayer wtth more thu be bu already when it ls compJettl)' unneceaary I DORJS PIETI'E"'.....,,..._..., Tho..ia Keevll/Edltor hinden our dolnettl.C ptod~ctlon that makes us Import more oil and gas that hurts our economy. Or he coU1d be ••ta rer .. to ua tiJ - lowering the GO ptre!el)t tu we now payon energy instead of addlnlJ new taxes with bls energy plan. Why is lt "fairer" to pay a t.u on a product.. than for the pro· duct, or• "ri~ff" to the aovern. ment in.stead Of tbe producer? But be does now admit tbat America ·a securicy la Ull'eateoed by tht• lac1' of dOmestlc en,erey. M~be the man la llaaUy learn· Ing.what m~ Americana have Jona known. GOLDIE JOSEPH I NOL. 70, NO. 327, 4 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES By MICllAELPASKEVICB Of .. Delly ,....,...,, Attorneys for four men under a Grand Jury indictment ln the gantland·style klllln1 of Stephen John BoYan of Fountain Valley charged the District Attorney's Office with "witness tampering" Tueaday, during a day-long series of legal maneuvers in llarbor Municipal Court. lt was another twist in the already biZUTe murder and con· spiracy oae Involving eicbt persons with alleced links to East Coast mobsters and the Hare Krishna religious aect. After Deputy District Attorney Dave Carter failed in a motion to have Municipal Court Judie Selim Franklin dismiss himself on grounds of prejudice, defense attorneys began still-unresolved efforts to keep the hearing at the municipal court level. Late Tuesday, defense at· torneys claimed that.prosecutors .. attested" a key witness last week and detained him for near· ly 10 hours before releuln1 hlrn. The defense clalma the arrest of Frank Rossi was a premedilat· ed effort to coerce him into testi· fying against their clients. Rossi, who has been granted immunity from prosecution. did C . L. . ampaigD -1m1t Voted • ID By PIUUP ROSMARIN OI U. Dell' l'lleUtMI The Irvine City Council, looking toward the March councilmaruc elections , voled 4 -1 early today to draw up a cam- .Paign contributions ordinance setting limits on donations to can- didates. Councilman John Burton cast the dissenting vote. He has said he opposes contnbulion limits beyond what is already provided Motor Mouse_, · by state and federal laws. The ordinance will be present- ed the council for "urgency" ap· proval at its Dec. 13 meeting. IL would become effective im· mediately if it passes. The proposed ordinance would limit contributions to council candidates or their campaign committees to $250 per con· tr1butor. The sum is cumulative during the calendar year of an election and the calendar year Bonita Canyon School, Irvine student Erika Hoegh, 8. won first prize among primary grade contestants who constructed mini·floats based on children's stories, in competition celebrating National Children's Library Week. Her bard· riding rodent work is based on story, "The Mouse and The Motorcycle." e · immediately precedinl it. The provision is an attempt to foil the common political fundsmansbip tactic of having election fund-raising events after an election to pay off pre·electioo debts. The $250 limit would be revised annually to reflect cost of living changes .. The ordinance also would re· quire an additional contribution <See REFORM, Page AZ) Argentina Rocked by Earthquake BU ENOS At RES, Argenttna c AP> -A 1tron1 earthquake rocked western ArtenUna earl1 today. killing at leut 50 people and demoUshinJ numerous build· lngs. the government said. The quake, which also injured hundreds of people, many seriously, struck hardest near San Juan. a wine growing and agricultural city or 500,000 locat- ed 800 miles northwest of Buenos Aires near the Chilean border. The tremors were felt in Buenos Aires as well as across the borders ln Chile. Brull and Peru. No serious damaee or casualties were reported in the other countries. The official news agency Telam said 80 percent of tbe dwellings in rural communities on the outskirts of San Juan were demolished when the quake hit at 6:28 a.m. (1:28 PST). Most dwell· ings were or adobe or fiimay materials. The heaviest damage and moet casualties occurred lo Caucete, a rural town of 30,000 located 18 mlles northwest of San Juan, Telamsaid. The government ordered emergency rtighta of medical supplies into the affected prov- ince. Planes were diverted to smaller field• in the area because the quake cracked tbe San Juan airport runway. The National Meteorololtcal Institute in Buenos Aires 1~d (SeeQUAKE.Pa•e.Ul .. testify against th• four dden· dants last w• before the Orange County Grand Jury. Rosal and Anthony Marone Sr., the father ol one of tbe defeo· dants, had been subpoenaed to appear in court Tues~ b11t neither showed up. Tbla prompt. ed. attorney Phillip DeMuaa to claJm the two men bad been pre· ssured by the District Attorney's Olllce injOnot appearing. Selaool SpJrit Dtatrict Aftorne:Y Carter branded this charce as "ludicrous," addin1r tbat TuHday's preliminary heartng at the municipal court level waa Ul\lleccessary becauto of recent Grand Jury indictQlents a&alolt the eleht defendants, four of whom r,main at lar1e. District Attorney Carter at- tempt$! to "dileharce" .defen~ dants Aleunder K-.alik, Anthony , The whole ..school tumed out Tue5day for · ·tivities and athletic equipment. Students. Corona del Mar High School's jog·a:..thon teachers and staff members took in· and senior Dan Brown despite disal>iUty divid~al pledges for the number of laps that requires him to use crutches. was no ~oun4 the school's a~k.tbey COu,ld covet exception. He covered 20 laps in the event m an hour. They raised at least $316.~. designed to raise funds for student ac;~ studentleaderssaidtoday. -~ . .. . -o9'. I • OAllY PILOT W9dn!llday H<wember 23, 1117 Ilinshaw Date Set Sentence Heariiig SChe'duled Dec. 2 · A bearini at which convicted former congressman Andrew Hlnabaw's lawyer wlll 11eek to de- term ine exactly how long Hinshaw must stay in prison has been scheduled for Dec. 2 in Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert P. Kneeland'a courtroom. But defense attorney Manhall Morgan said Tuesday he believes that Hinshaw, 54, will serve only eieht months ot the two years recommended by state correction officiall. . Morgan said he baaed hil belief on comments made by Judge Kneeland when be aentenced Hinshaw after a jury had found hlm &uilty ot acta of bribery com· mltted while be served as county asseaaor. Morgan said the judge's rec- ommendation at that time ol a Irvine Sehool Distriet $5 Million Claim Filed Over Injury Attorneys representing an 11-year-old Irvine girl have filed a claim for $S million against the Irvine Unifled School Distrlct al- lealni that poor supervision of a Froaa Page AJ REF.ORM ••• dlacloaure statement other than already required by state and federal election laws. Candidates and their commit· tees would have to file a final pre- election statement with the city clerk before noon on the Frl~ay prior to tbe election. The sect.ion ls likewise an at- tempt to thwart a practice of some candidates to spend heavi- ly after regular disclosure state- ments are filed, leaving voters unaware of actual amounts spent to win the election until af· terward. The proposed ordinance does not include previottsly debated provisions that would have re· quired a councll member to ab- stain from voting on issues which affected his contributors. The compromise reform or- dinance was prepared by Coun· dim an David Sills and Mayor Bill Vardoulis. Two Nevada Routes Asked For Air Cal I Air Calitornia hu applied to the Civil Aeronautics Board for permission to fly between Orange County Airport and two Nevada cities, Reno and Laa Vegas. Western Air Lines also an-~ounced this week that it is aeek- ma CAB authorization to fly between Orange County and Laa Vegas. Both are seekin• consideration under the California/Nevada Low Fare InvestlcaUon Cue. This proceeding la under way before the CAB and involves possibly seltin• new routes and rates between Cautornfa and Nevada clUet. Air California currently rues out of Orange County Airport. Weste~Airllnesdoelnot. ~tMan's Search Ends LONG BEACH (AP) -Coast Guard officials here say they have given up the 1tarcb for a La Mesa man who reportedJ.1 tried to swim ashore from blS disabled flsbing boat about 10 mllea off La Jolla. The mlnlng man, Nell Johnson, 24, toot hla 25-foot ftsb· ins veaael out Sunday wtth three companions. When the ellline failed\. there Wat no way to call tor be1p because the bo~t bad no radio, the eompanlou aatd la~r. DAILY PILOT summer school field trip resulted in her crippling injury. School trustees already have rejected the claim made on behalf of Susanne H. Gllatrap, who attorneys say remains wheelchair-bound after she waa hit in the back by a fallln& eucalyptus tree branch JUIY 25. The lrvlne City Counclf Tues· day rejected an identical claim lodged against tbe city. . A claim for damages la the first legal step taken precedlne a lawsuitlneourt. The cbild wu one of 60 fourth through sixth araders attending summer school at College Park School in Irvine, on a field trip to the Los Angeles County Arboretum in Arcadia. According to news reportl, the children were feeding ducks in a pond when a two-foot-thick, 3(). foot-long branch broke from an overhanging eucalyptus. The girl was struck across the back. According to the claim, she suffered severe spinal damaee and bas been a paUent at a Downey hospital since~ Besides $5 million general damages, the claim asks un· specified medical costs. The school board also recently denied a $10,000 claim made by attorneys for another child in· jured in the same accident, 9· year-old Colleen Romero. F,.._PageAJ QUAKE ••• measurini needles on its seismological instrument• "jumped off the paper" because of the intensity of the quake. The quake registered 7 on the Richter scale. Its epicenter wu reported to be 620 miles west ot Buenos Aires near the Cbllean border. The Richter Scale la a measure of ground moUon in which every increase of one whole number means a tenfold increase in magnftuae. A readlne of seven ls a major quakf capable of caua· int widespread heavy dama1e. In Buenos Aires, tboulanC!a ot paolc·stricken residents ran into the streets when tremors from the quake reached the capital. No damage was reported in Buenos Aires, but windows rat- tled and buildings swayed. Tremon are fairly commOG In the Andean foothlll restons of ArgentJU. but the1 are rare In Buenos Aires. six to eiaht-month prison term bad apparently been tanored by prison authoriUea. He laid tbe blame on what he said was the vagueness of the new determinate sentencing law which went Into effect July 1, after Hinshaw had been sen- tenced. That law gives sentencing judges a choice or three prison terms whlcb they can impose. Most defendants are sentenced to the middle term. Morean aald the middle term of twq years for a bribery convic· lion was applied to Hinshaw by prison authorities because Judge Kneeland sentenced him under the old law and did not specify which of the three sentences should be applied. And he repeated bis c:onvtctioo that Judge Kneeland will make his preference for the leaser ot the three terms crystal clear at the Dec. 2 hearing. Morgan said he additionally will ask Judae Kneeland to re· move Hinshaw from confinement at Ute state's Chino facility and allow the former Republican. legislator to complete his term at the Orange County Jail. Hinshaw ls serving concurrent- ly a one year jail term ordered after his conviction on f\arther crlmlnal charges r~lated to bis 11· leeal use of county manpower and materials while servtna as county assesaor and runnlnl for Congress in 1971. F,...PageAJ DRUGS ••• Bail for Christian, whose eight commercial lots and one residen- tial Jot In Buena Park are belni held by the government, ia set at $35,000, Agent Flanden said. Bail for· Guerrero, ..,o was ar- rested Tuesday night In Hunt- ington Beach, and Donnelly, who was arrested in Sea1tle, ls $10,000, he added. Palmerl's bail is $25,000; Nelson's $1.5,000; and $10,000 ball was set for Kidd just for good measure, altbouah be is safely confined and unable to skip out of Pleasanton, DEA agents said. Guerrero and Donnelly were expected to be arralaned today in Los Angeles and SeaWe on the 14-count Indictment namln& all six codefendant.s. Inveatigaton said it was audits of buainesa records that led to the defendants. "All of them are roofers," Agent F1anders aaid. "But tbe1r business records showed they were toeing money while they were buylni real estate and a yacht." 1be value of Christian's Buena Parlt property la estlmat· ed at $&S>,OOO. After evaluating the 10-year· old Oreanlf.ed Crime Control Act, federal a&torneys and the 1Tand jury ordered Chrlatlan's land seized last J'rlday. Statuie Illegal LOS ANGE~ <AP) -A city statute allowtng auspenslon of cab driven' permits without a notice or bearina ls an un· constitutional violation of due proceea, a Superior Court judge bu ruled. ~"e Aeeidetat Bemused tow truck driver contemplates damage to pair of high-priced autos following crash Tuesday afternoon in ·Newport Beach. Accident took place about 12:30 p.m. in the 900 block of West Cout Highway. Police said no one was injured in the accident. The Porsche was driven by Charles Patterson, 49, Newport Beach. according to police reports. His car slid under the parked Cadillac owned by Gilt.spur Exhlbtts of Garden Grove. The cause of the crash is under lnveattgation. F,....PageAJ BOVAN; •• preserve testimony from wit· nesses who might be harmed or flee the area. Judge Franklin will ru)e on the district attorney's "discharge" moUon at a 3 p.m. Monday bear- ing, scheduled just one hour after the four men are due in Oranae County Superior Court for a similar heartnc. Tbe complex lepl battles stem from the Oct. 22 ahootlnt death of Bovao, a 38-year-old Fountain Valley resident. He was shot nine times as he was leaving the El Ranchlto restaurant ln Newport Beach. According to court records, de· fendant Fiori bas admitted to be· ing the trluerman in Bovan's death. Flori, a relocated Cederal witness, also faces dru• cbarces following bis arrest In Costa Mesa. The only defendant free on $750,000 bail is Kulik, the 28- year-old head of a NeWPort Beach fmn known as Pruadam. DlatribuU!ra, Inc. Be also faces -separate druJ char1es otter be was arrested ln Mission Viejo, al· le4edly in posaeaaion of 1.1 pounds of heroin. U.S. A mbassador I J ., . Confers W i th Sadat . ·· CAIRO (AP) -American Am· bassador Hermann Elita met with President Anwar Sadat at the Egyptian leader'• Nilwlde home today in an apparent re- sumption of U.S.·medlated in· direct negotiatlona between Israel and Egypt. . The Cairo government, .meanwhile, was crack.ins down on Palestlnlans here ln retalla· tion for their bitter ••war" against Sadat for malting last weekend's hlstoric visit to Israel. A Palestinian spokesman said three top PalesUnian officials were arrested Tuesday nJ.abt and would be expelled from the coun· try. It appeared likely the gov- ernment would close the Palestine liberation Or1anlu- Uon 's office tn Cairo. .But diplomatic sources ex· pressed the view that Sadat's in- lt.laUve in tolng to llrael placed the Carter admlnl.atratlon .. on the s~ to produce the con- ceaslons from Israel•• ln order to resume Middle Eut peace tallc.a m Geneva betore th• end of the year. Forelill Ministry sources Aid . direct ne1otiatlons between . Eaypt and Iarael would resume • aa well, but they could not say where or when. , 1 Egypt's acting foretgn , minister, Butros Gball, reaf-·• llrmed today that there were no . plans at th~ moment for Israeli ·• Prtme Mlnlster Menabem Begin to vtstt EIYJ)t. " •• .. Thia question was uked In 1 • Jerusalem .•. both Presldent Sadat and Belin •treed that It • · wu not the tlme to p.repare such a visit," Gball told a reporter. · t The '1'ftlted Palestlnian of· fichd1 were ldentlfled u Oamal Sourani, the PLO'• permanent repreaentatlve here: BJ.bbl Awad, repreaentatt• or Al . Fatab\ the lar1eat.i.~uerrllla .. group m &ho PLO;.ana »m.d. n Sakbr B••••o, h••d of the . Palestlnlan Student Uilioo. • .. ,,. , .. • • . ":\ I ofbt/ .. edne1day411 Clo ·ng Price• w.dneeday, November 23. 1917 DAILY Ptl..OT A• 8' lll.ILTONMOUO~ MllUona ot A.rnmeeos bav nOtbinl lD lbelr rpoiatM but falae teeth and that quallnes lbem u tarceta for u n....- leu and tasteless a bana1e of advertialnl N lt dlrected~ cbUdrenooSaturihiy mominltel;vtaloft. · .•' Frtenda Of denture wearera luiow ..U enoup to trud easily °" th1I 1ubJect. Feellnp ean be ea1lly brul&ed. But advertilel"I have no compuncttOlll. Tb9Y Juit ebart• rtS)lt in there, lnterruptin1 Walter Crcnklte on the CBS Even.llll News and preying OQ fears tb t their dentures wlll I all out or SQJell bad. ONE OP rrHE5S Pl'M'BIS JB about to be ded•red oft lhnltl, thanU to tM F Trade Commluloo, oveneer ~ ot troth 1ll advertlsln1. You remember th• eommer&l •bo•lnl denture wearers taktntbll blta out:.ot ap~a and com oa the eob? 1 The com~erclal reuaUred them: .. Go on, eat u you like. Tak•• 1o0d heilt!l)' bit.at life.'' - Jeney Clty's Block Dn.11 Co, ran tboee comme~ support ot Ill PoU·Grip adbeslv-. which are au to keep falH le th tn place. TM rtC c:om· plained that lt wasn't ~ true, no q"ttter •hat food1 are«Uni ehewid -and an •d · 1Qiniatr1t1ve law J~t• bas upheld that com· · plaint. In bia dee~ion Joda• MUel J. Brown 11.ld denture wearers are lll(elj tO have trouble eatlna bard·to-bJte foods simply becaUM"W the way tile Plata.,. comtnacted. . . FTC COMIUUIONBU UE EXl'2Cl'ED to 1pprove Judie Brown .. decltlop c. BlOdt bu acce~ tt wlth tb• understandins that 1i •Ula~ to otber companla promot.· in1 adbestVelf. • · The FTC bad a1,o chaUenced~ '•claim tbat ttl Bx· tre Strength EtttrVb!cen~ ~lld «thtUN cleanser~ better utan Wamer·~beK'• Em-a ~ Eft'trdenl That'• important for Block -.Cause Eff erdent outaeU.. Poll· dent by a mar4f.n of nearl1 Moel. The1flndJ.Jil la. that Btock lack& m4en~ to make a claim for superiori\y. Block le no lOQPI' uaina Uall plttb. lnatead, tt11 touttJ\I Polldentas l.Q Ald to marital !oqevlty. Commerclall depict a no-lOftler-you.nf couple who are 1t1U. Jovey·dovey, pretumably because Polldent does a 1oocl overnight job of cleaning those delltu.res. THB MOVE INTO Tllli8 SOMA.NTIC com'nM~lll can be called the "Geritol dance.'' When the n'C leaned on J.B. Williams, the Geritol maket, forltaJ>Mudo-medlcal cla1m1, the comapany switched to ltl "I love my wife and ahe takn good car of herself'' theme aon1. It might seem to 1oioe (not denture wearers, of course) that It's an awful waste for arown men w have to apend thelr tlme buslln1 over such welp\)' matt.era. But look at it trom Bloek Drug's standpoint. The company ia doing sales at an annual cllp of $130 million, and 68 percent of tb<>H dollars come from lta den· ture ptodu<:ta. In addWon to Poll·Grip and P9lident. lt I makes Dentu·Creme cleanaer and three other adhealves, , Denlu·Grip, Confident (tbat's bow you are a up posed to feel) and Wernet's Powder. Block also makes some pl'Oducts tor people with teeth: Pycopay and Sortex toothbruabea, plua S.naodyne toothpaste. But lt doesnlt spend an~ to promote Uaem even wtth ita $30 mUllonr&•YNr ad budaet. It'• wben rour teeth have fallen ourtlta~ Block IN you inttl IJO\L Market Continiwa ' t I Jt,s Broad Advant!e 1 NEW YORK (AP) -The stock mart.et extaded.1 Tuesday's rally with a broad advance toUy. Gainers outnumbere4 losers by m°" thaq a l-l 1DUSin • tn the tally of New York stock Exchane•llated lasuea. I The Dow Jones avera1e of 30 lndu.strlall, wtdcb role more thin6 point.I TUeaday, wu up another. '1fltolp.JO. Tbe averase would have ahown a aaln ot about 3 points had lt not been for ex-dividends. or div1dend·P1Yment ad· juatments, ln the prl9es of two ol tta compcments -Dupont; and" American Tel~pboo~ & TelelJ'apb. The market bell.D • aolld advance Tllesday after the1 government reported • 1mallet·than-expected 0.3 pe~entf rise ln the con.sumer prtce index last month. St~la In Tlae Spotlight NEW YC>ftK tAPl• S.-. 4 •·"'· lltiW Mid Mt ''-of Ille flltNn tnOI\ ACIW. HeW York -S4Kll l:11£Mnet -1, lrMI ... MUMellY Ill,,,.,. -$1. iUr<A1 lM,....... 41 ... Jt\14 +21to .. lfMCIA ,........ ~ "" + w SW.RI> ., .. ,. • • WMO ~ .!., ~ lcw{:l······· w~ 50ftY ~ ••• • •••• 211,IOD 7"9 •••.• ....... ~ ...... • • .... 11'11 + .. W-mo... . . JOS,"° ,,._ + W• CAimWI 011..... 1",700 2~ --. All"~"' • . ... . '"'I H"" + "" Mil<>ll UI.... .. Ill, ... -1;, BaMA-• . . . . . llO, h + \.> In...... ,_, S •••\.: ......... '11;!Gt .,.. + Gell wa..... 1~ ..._ + t: Oe•-,u...... 11'AIOO 1"4 + Doft'IC,Hlft .. "eraffeSt MNVtftlWI"'•~-...-. ITOCl(t HN9I L-99 QoM 0. = ~lld ) ""·11 ... !! m::· ..,, 1s utl' tH m11 fl!-!: II 6$ IUl m.1e 9Ua M • 1.0. llld119 .. • • • .. .. .. ••• .. .... .. "Ulj n-.,, •..•.••.•.........••.• ' \ltHt ,., • ..,.,, •••• , ••••• ,.,, 6$ Mil....................... 1,GO RIJaat St~ks Did MUI ; • Due to tat• transml IOn i ~y·s llstlng wlll not e~M In the Dally PUot. . , .4JIOA11..Y PILOT w-..s.y, ~ 23, ttn · NATIONAL I CALIFORNIA ):;'. Today, .. Origirial Fe~t Priced Out of S~ht BJ BVGBa. •UUJGAN »-...WOlo I, I Tb• towa fatben of Plymouth, Mua.. lbouJd be tbankt\al tb1a Tbanks1lvln1 that the flrat Tbanka&Mn1 wq beld 856 yean •IO inatead of there and DOW. At today's food prices, they never could afford it. IT WIU.. BE recalled from -Oovernor Bradford'• Journal' that the Mayflower aettlera early on establl.sbed aood vibes with the Wampanoag, the resident tribe, wbeo colonlat Edward Wtnalow cured Bil Cbitf MaaaalOlt of hb cbronlc eon· at1patJco by admlJllsterinl the favorite physic of Dr. Samuel Fuller, the Pilgrim pbyalclan who apparently dldn 't make wiawam calla. If George Armatroni CUat.er bad the blndllght to treat Slttinl Bull in thla humane manner a couple of centuries later, he ml&bt have •voided the un- pleasant.nesa at the Uttle Bia Horn and the SJous chief mJ&ht ,,, .. ~ ROYAL VISIT -Queen Elizabeth goes backstage to meet actress Julie Andrews, left, and Bob Hope at the London Palladium after attending the Silver Jubilee Royal Variety gala, which will be aired on British television next month. Proceeds will go to British charity. Colorado Ski Areas Report Conditiom 0 ENVER (AP) -Colorado Sk1 Country USA reports the follow- ng conditions ~t major skl areaa on Tuesday : ,..l6etlft%1-..il. , ............... ,..,.,. ~P-ltdltlltl,11--• ..-,~.....-r. ........ --~·--·""'"--· t:::=~=-~~~':i.-. ..---. Vlol,,,., Pf'\»filPll\ a--· llld....-W,lw'd'9<Ud. !>nowcN911Clllln<Mt, ,...,.. to~....,_~aotmldWay. , .... .,_,..._....,_lnllle.,_.2AllOWI. T·Tr-.1 bave atuct to bia old name ol JumptDi Bactcer. ANYHOW THE &Bu.EV aaaamo ... Grthe Wampanoaa waa 10 11atefUl at rejoinlDJ the reaular fellcnn be wamed tho PUarlms of a conspiracy to wipe out Plymouth by th~ rival Musacb\llettl Indiana and with alacrity, COOJlderinC bis condl· tlon, accepted an lnvlte to tbe Finl Tbanlcsetvtn1 Dinner. But, u tt turned out, the chief's heart wu bl11er than the menu. Lost Will To Work .-Hope • LONDON (AP> -Bob Hope says he lost the will to work after the death of h1a long".tJme friend and verbal sparring partner Bing Crosby. "I did not feel like work.inf again after his death but then reallied we all bad to 10 on," saldHope. HE COMMENTED between rehearsals for the Royal Variety Show at the London Palladium. The British·bom comedian had planned to sing a duet wttb Crosby on the show. "I knew we would all have to go on so I did a show about 10 days later," said Hope. "But I felt very bad. Then after the au- dience la\llhed at the first joke, I just went straight into it. Af. terwards I thanked the audience for making_ me feel much better and they cheered because I tbln.k they knew bow I felt to begin with." CROSBY DIED OCT. 14 of a heart attack jwst after playing a roundot&olf. Monday .olgbt's show -featur· Ing Shirley MacLaine, Carol Burnett, Rudolf Nureyev and Harry BelafODte in addition to Hope -wu aimed at raising $1.8 million for BrtU.b charities. It ls to be abown on Brltlab televtalon Dec.4. Official• Sued SACRAMENTO (AP> -A $90 million c1au action suit baa been filed a1ainst nine Shasta County officials incllldin& a judge for an alleged ••oonspiracy" to ddJ adequate public defender services. A TIME FOR GRATITUDE On th• appolnwel day ln 1821, he turned up with 90 or hll bravte, instead d Just a few aaslatant Heh~ to CJ'.IC• lM b .. d table, and thereby eNattd blttory '• first Tbankliirinl panic In the kitchen. / Fa OM THE CRaONICLES we know that of the 102 pusenpna who arrived Oil the MaYflower, lncludlnl the two born at aea,. only 55 aurvi\ted that tll'lt wl.rltAsr and only flve of the 18 wives, who by now probably wlatied they hadn't either. Heri they wer. 1laYln1 over an open fire for an unexpected ,uest Ult of 146 and onb' eQOU&h food'°" a !third the' .rnaoy;.au6traettna UMI flve little ones. MUea St&ndllh clilpat.cbed tour of bla milldamen with towUna piete. to baa a 1a11le of aeese, a aobble of wild turkeys and a brace ot mallards ln the 1ur- ro \ln dln1 woods. Nymphet Priscilla Mulllns stopped bo!dlna bands with Jof\n Alden Iona enou1b to pluek aome lobsters. Be Eats 'eDt Wheaties in Champ's Diet SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -Olympic decathlon champion Bruce Jen· ner bu one regret about Wheaties. He dldn 't save tme boxtops. Not only would boxtops have demonstrated to the dubloua-Uke San Francisco's dlatrlct attorney -that Jenner does ind.eed eat the breakfast cereal but also, the athlete aaid, "I would have every pre- mium General MUia ever of· fered." commercial could mislead the .JENNER CALLED a press conference to try to debunk challenges Made in a lawsuit filed last week about a televtalon commercial 1tarrtn1 Jenner and "the breakfast of champions." Flied by District Attorney Joe Freitas' consumer fraud un.lt, the suit accuses General Mllls of false advertbing. It claims the Soapy Trays Make Marine Recruits Ill SAN DIEGO (AP) -More than 1,000 YOUDI ¥arinea were made sick by eatlna off soapy metal trays, a spokesman dia- c losed at the Marine Corpe Recruit Depot. The rinse cycle on one big dishwasher failed, he sald Tues- day. . The entire 3,68'7·man recruit force ate the next meal, Sunday night, and Ylttbin two days 1,137 had been treated at the dis- penaary for atomach upsets. There were some cues of diar- rhea. Those who escaped the soapy food trays ate In other aectiona of the cafeteria where different dishwashers are used. The spokesman said 90 percent of those recndta who became sick were atven lljhl duty or al· lowed to stay In bed. None' of them wu seriously 111, he said. T public into tblnklng Wbeatles were a 1taple in Jenner's diet while training. "I don't like people Ulinklnc I am not telling the truth," Jenner said, then went OD to detall bla breakfast habits. WHEA11F.S, BE S,UD, "bas been in my diet for many yean." He eats it topped with peach and banana slices. And, he said, he'll often down a steak and maybe some homemade granola q well. "A complete brea.kfut, wlthor without. WheaUes, is very h:opor- tanl," betoldreportera. In the commercial, Jenner is described as bavin1 "downed a lot of Wbeatie:s1' in preparina for the decathlon. Jenner then adds: "'Nheaties bas been on my breakfatt table since I wu a kid .•• MASI'ECTOMIES 'NECESS.4Rl" NEW YORK (AP) -A reap. praisal of breast removals a>erformed on 53 women abowa that the operatlona ·were necessary, contrary to the criginal conclusions of a na- tionwide aurvey, accordin1 to a medical news maeulne. "Nearly all the 53 women wllo underwent what a National In1Utuu1 of Healtb panel labeled, just a few weeu a,o. needleq, mastectomies act~ally .needed them after all," Medical Wol'ld Newitreported. THE SOBER PILG&I Fattiera, who didn't trust the local water. brouaht over eoOQ8h Scotch whlakey, Holland 11n and beer, and other ••1trona aplrita .. to last more than a year after tbi Mayflower departed, and Massasoit's medicine man bad taught them bow to make red and ' white wine from the wlld grapes that abounded OD Cape Cod. Thomas Hogan, director of caterlns at the New York Hilt.on, figures tho original Thanksliv· ing dinner from soup to nutt, from the lobster bisque and oyster stew down throqb the haunch of venison, the roast wt.Id turkey, the braiaed mallard aDa the atuffed 1oose, "would cost $S) a peraon today at any flrat-claU hotel or l'eltaurant." AND TlllS, BE points out. does not include the Scolcb at S28 to '30 a filth, the Holland J1.n at *22 a Joa and the Dutch beer at SL ts a bottle. • "Some of the lt.ema Ute the wild turkey wa.1d be a bit dlf· fl cult to come by \Oday," ••11 Hogan, "but we could duplicate the ortamai m~u W •lven • vance w4ll'ltlna.t The «her nllht someone ordered mallard duck and we bad to get lt from \be 2'1 Club, a~ the only place you canftndit." Let'• see now, 148 people at sso a bead and flPrlD• 28 to ao ahota to tbe bottle ol booze. that •a another $8 per .•• All told~ somethlna Clft the order ol ... 171 _ not count.tna ups, ·and a 11W9 1ometh1Da extra t:O ~eep u-e . five colomal ~es lD the kltcbeA from 1oin1ooltrike. At the Registry Hotel's Grand Portage Restaur· ant. We'll serve you a feast from our special menu while you revel in the day long offerings of music by the Pacific Strings and theevening sounds of Fred Libby's piano. } In the - 7 ., Lag11na/South Coast VOL. 70, NO. 327, -4 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1917 DA Accused of Bov~ri Case Tainper:ing By MICHAEL PASKEVJCH OU•Dllllr PlletSIMt Attorneys for four men under a (;rand Jury indictment in the gangland-style kllllnc of Stephen John Bovan of Fountain Valley cbarced the District Attorney's Office with "witness tampering" Tu ea day, during a day-long series of legal maneuvers in Harbor Muruclpal Court. It was another twist in the already bizarre murder and con- spiracy case involvinl el1bt persons with alleged Unb to East Coast mobsters and the Hare Krishna religious sect. After Deputy District Attorney Dave Carter failed in a moUon to have Municipal Court Judie Selim Franklin dismiss himself on grounds of prejudice, defense attorneys began still-unresolved efforts t.o keep the hearing at the municipal court level. Late Tuesday, defense at- torneys claimed that prosecutors "arrested" a key witness last week and detained him for near- ly 10 hours before releasing bhn. The defense claims the arrest or Frank Rossi was a premeditat- ed effort to coerce bim lnto testl- fylnl against their clients. Rossi, who has been &ranted immunity from prosecution. did ·Huge . Narcotics Ring Smashed By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of .. o.ily ...... $tatt Federal narcotics agents strik- ing in downtown Huntmgton Beach and Seattle, Wash., ar- rested the last two men indicted in connection with an alleged multi-million dollar West Coast marijuana distribution ring Tuesday night. The U.S. Justice Department had already taken unprecedent- ed action against one of the al· leged principals, seizing nearly a half-million dollars worth of Buena Park real estate. Authorities said today 1t was confiscated under provisions of the federal Organized Crime Control Act because it was al- legedly purchased with funds from drug trafficking. Agent Joe Flanders of the U.S. Department of Drue Enforce- Bolida11 Dresnag Indian princess Julie Kopb, 5, adjusts paper collar for pilgrim Jami Ballard, 5, at Top of the World Elemen- tary School in Laguna Beach. Kindergarten teacher Kathy McNeil holds a mirror for U)e two Thanksgiving dressers in a classroom project which saw all the youngsters cutting out their own paper costumes. Chicken Restaurant Bui-ns in €1emente ment, said it is the first time the statute has ever bffn used lo California. Agent Flanders said the bulk~ the marijuana involved was landed via a 24-foot Marauder yacht at various points in Ori.Die County including Huntington Beach and sold1n Seattle. "The bulk of it was distributed in Seattle, but there was some <See DRUGS, Pase A2) Argentina Rocked by. Earthquake BUENOS AIRES, ArgeQf.lna <AP> -A atronc earthquake rocked western Argentina etrly today, klUtng ai least 50 peciipJe and demollsbiotAwnerou.lbldl~ lngs, the government said. The quake, which also injured hundreds of people, mata)' seriously, struck hardest near San Juan, a wine growina and agricultural city of 500,000 locat· ed 800 miles northwest of Buenos Aires near the Chilean border. The tremors were felt tn Buenos Aires as well as across the borders in Chile. Brain and Peru. No serious damage or casualties were reported in the other countries. The official news agency Telam said 80 percent of tbe dwellings in rural communities on the outskirts of San Juan were demolhhed when the quake bit at 6:28 a.m. (1:28 PST>. Most dwell· tngs were of adobe or fllmay materials. The heaviest damaee and most casualties occurred In Caucete, a rural town of 30,000 located 18 miles northwest of San Juan, Telamsald. The government ordered emeraency fliabts of medJcal supplies into the affected prov- ince. Planes were diverted to smaller fields in the area because the quake cracked the San Juan airport runway. The National Meteorological Institute in Buenoa Aires said measurlne needles on its seismolotical instruments ''Jumped olf the paper" because of the int.enslty oftbe quake. The quake reatatered 1 on tbe · Richter acale. Jta epicenter was reported to be 620 miles west of Buenoa Alrea near the Cbilean border. The Richter Selle ls a meuu.r. of eround motion ln whlcb every increase of one whole number mean• a tenfold increase ln maenltude. A readJ.Dt of aeveo ls a r.naJor quake capable of ca•~ Ina wldelptead heavy damaa-. <SeeQVdE, •••• ,\2)' teatify asainst the four deten- danta last week before the Ol'an&e County Grand Jury. . Rosal and Antbdny Marone Sr., the father ol one of the defen- dants, had been subpoenaed to appear in court Tuesday but neither showed up. This prompt- ed attorney Phillip DeMusa to claim the two men bad been pre. ssured by the District Attorney's Office lntonot appearlnp, District Attorney Carter branded this charse aa "ludicrous," adding that Tuesday's preliminary tieario1 at the municipal court level was unneccessary because of recent Grand Jury indictments •Sain.st the eight defendants, four ol whom rei:nain at large. District Attorney Carter at· tempted to "discbaree" defm- dants Aleunder Kulik, Anthony Marone Jr., ltaymond Resco ud Jerry Peter Fiori ln an effort to put the case at the Superior Court level. • Tradlttonally, a Grand Jw:y in· dictrnent takes precedence over municipal C!OWt cbarres. Defense attorneys arcued that the· preUmlnary bearinf is needed to allow cross- exarntnatloa Of witnesses and to <SeeBOVAN, Pa&eA%) The whole school turned out Tuesday for Corona del Mdr Hlgh School's Jog.a-thon and senior Dan Brown, despite disability that requires hkil to use crutches, was no exception. He covered 2A> laps in the event designed to raise funds for student ac- Uvities and athletic equipment. StUdents, teachers and staff members took in- dividual pledges for the number of laps around the school's track they could cover in an hour. They raised at least $36,000, studentleaders said today: Dr. Atherton aald the San Cle11>ente hutlaUve ts part Ol a count.Y·wlde project he uid Other open-apace advocates have \t!l• dertaken to push for a 1male flve· acre parp dedlcatioo ~ ment througbout Uio coun~ .. DAILY PILOT Taxi Woman GoiiigHo~ JACKSON, Tenn. <AP> -The dauabter ot a ~·. year-old Callfomia woman who traveled to Jackson by taxlcab 1ay1 she has perauaded her rnother to return home Diane Bernal said her mother, Jean Caren, left for their horne in Santa Maria, on Tuesday, leav· Ing behind her black poo. dl•> Duchess. Mrs. Bernal refused to say how her mother was lra vcllng. ''I know she'll go home because I have her dog," said Mrs. Bernal, who ob· tained a court order pre· venting Black and White Cab Company of Santa Marla from taking Mrs. Caren any farther on her trip lo New York F,.._PageAJ DRUGS ••. distributed in Orange County," he said. Investigators who obtained a federal grand jury indictment in Los Angeles accuse the six men -one currently in federal prison on a previous narcotics sentence -ol operating between June of 1973 and December of last year. "They were allegedly bringll\g. in 1,000 pounds a month from Mexico and that's only tor the period in the indictment. We think they were in business f9f a lot longer than that," Flanders said. Charged in the case are -Rudy Guerrero, 48, of 8U Pecan Ave., Huntington Beach. -William J . Donnelly, 39, of Seattle. -David C. Christian, 48, ol Downey. -August Palmeri, 47, of Orange. -Roger L. Nelson, 42, of Orange. -Keith A. Kidd, 42, who ls cur- rently serving a drug·relaled federal prison term at the minimum ucurity prison in Pleasant.on, near San Francisco. All are charged In the indict· ment with possession and dis- tribution of marijuana and con· spiracy to possess and distribute marijuana. Bail for Christian, whose ei&bt commercial lots and one residen- tial lot in Buena Park are beinf held by the government, is set at $35,000, Aeent Flanders said. Bail for-Guerrero, who was &r· rested Tuesday nlgbt in Htmt· lniton Beach, and Donnelly, who was arrested in Seattle, is $10,000, be added. Palmeri's bail is S2S,OOO; Nelson's $15,000 ; and $10,000 ball was set for Kidd just for good measure. although he is safely confined and unable lo skip out of Pleasanton, DEA agents said. Guerrero and Donnelly were expected to be arraigned today in Los Angeles and Seattle on the 14·count indictment naming all six codefendants. Investigators said it was audits of business records that led to the defendants. A Los Angeles federal IJ'and jury indicted five reported or· ganlzed crime ficurea Tuesday, one of whom wu arreated ln Ora.,ge County, on charges of at- tempting to extort $20,000 from Los Angeles pornographers. An FBI spokesman said today Michael Anthony Rizzitello, 50, of Canoga Park, was arrested Tues· day at an undisclosed Oranfe County location. He ia d RizzltelJo, also known as Mike Rizzi. just happened to be ln the county when the FBI learned of his whereabouts. The spokesman said no other Orange County connection ts believed to be involved in the case, which reportedly centered on a dummy porno operation set up by the FBI. Named in the indictment, in addition to RizziteJJo, were Jack Locicero, 65, of Hollywood, and James "Jimmy the Weasel" Fratianno, 64, of the San Fran· cisco area. All three were named by the FBI as ranJcin1 leaders of the Mafia in California. Also indicted on charges or In· terfering with commerce by threats and ,conspiracy were Thomas Ricciardi, 46, of Canoca Park and Dominic Raffone, 32, formerly of Canoga Park and now possibly in Brooklyn, N. Y. FBI agents said they are still seeJtlog Fr.atiapno, Raffone and Ricciardi. The spokesman said today that as far as be knows none of the suspects bad previously been given new identities and re· located in turn for testlfyina against Mafia figures in the Eut. One suspect in the murder of Stephen John Bovan on Oct. 22 in Newport Beach was later report.. ed to be such a relocated witness. People Eyed For School Site Panel Selection of members for a school site council at Top of the World Elementary School in Laguna Beach is slated Nov. 30 at the school library. Parents and community mem- bers interested in the educational improvement program, which in· eludes establishment or the coun- /Cll, can attend themeeUnc btein· nlng atT:30p.m. Assembly Bill 6S often state funds to partlcipatin1 schools with a prerequisite that a school improvement program be set up and accomplished by a school slte council. The council must be comprl•ed of half faculty members of the school and half parents or eotn· m unily members. The council will guide the development of ln-s tru ction techniques at the classroom lt!vel. An explanation of AB&s and selection of a slate of school site council members ls planned for the meeting. For mor• lnforma· tion, callJanGessnerat494·1380. What Quake? SOnic Boom Shake. Coaat A thunderous so11ic boom slammed Oranae County at 4 p. m. Tuesday, set.Una off worried calls to police qenciea. HUNTINGTON BEACH Qvil Defense.Director Geor1e Tbyden said tbe big kaboom just had to be a sonic one and the Cal·Tecb Seismological Laboratory Jn Paaadena said no quakes were recorded anywhere on the West Coast. El Toro MCAS spokesmen said they checked and could conrirm no hilb·nYins military aircraft over the Oraoc• Coast but would contloue lnvesUgatlnc today. ' SOME RIOR ALTITUDE YIPof tralls, however, had • been noted over the Oran1e Cout area shortly before ~ sonic boom •book the arH. ORANGI COAIT 1.rsc DAILY PILOT The cues are not believed to be related. · The lnvesttcaUon that Jed to Tueaday•a lndlcrtments reported· ly becan ln March, mt and con· eluded la September of tba~ year after the men reportedly trfed' to shake down the FBl's dummy operation. The FBI wu tipped to the al- teied shakedown of Los Anaeles· pornographers after Fratlanno was reportedly overheard aafing he wanted to control •pomo1· 1aphy ln the area. Since Flll agent.a could find no shakedown targets willing to cooperate, they set up their own sham film company, the Forex Company in Van Nuys, and leaked word that they were ex· tortion targets. FBI agents said they never dis- tributed any film but kept copies of· "Deep Throat" and similar films on band for show. LoCicero and Ricciardi al- le1edly demanded thllt Forex pay them $20,000 or be put out ot business. Dana Point Speed Limit To Be Cut? The speed limit aJong part of Pacific Coast Highway ln Dana Point will be reduced by five to 10 miles an hour if Orange County supecvlsors have their way. Al the suggestion of Board Chairman Thomas Riley, supervisors have asked CalTrans to reduce the SO·mi1e-an~hour speed limit between Selva Road and Street,ofthe Amber Lantern. Riley said the supervisors' fe· quest came in response t.o ·ap- peals Crom Dana Point residents and the Dana Point Chambe.r of Commerce. The Newport Beach supervisors said Pacific Coast Highway through La1una Niguel and Dana Point ts becoming a problem area because it 11 the 10aJor route in that part of coastal Orange County. Riley sald the stretch between Selva Ro~ a~ Street of the Amber Lantern has beco1J1e particularly dangerous because of a Jona tul1l as southbound mot.orl.sta enter Dana Polnt. He a aid there were 18 ace!lclents along that stretch in July, August and September alone. Laguna. Man's. Cash Stolen A Laguna Beach man toJd pollce aomeonfl entered his apart- ment while be was sleeping Mon· day nl~t and extracted $600 in cash from h1I wallet. Thomaa Mtndoza, a dish- washer at a restaurant ln town, said the wallet was in the back pocket ol a pair of pan Ls. He told police be wu wearing the pants in bed at the time of the. burelary, which be estimates took place between 10:30 and 11 p.m. Officers have no suspects in the cat buralary at 1750 South CoaaUfighway. Lost Man's ~cliEnd8 LONG BEACH (AP> -Cout Guard officials here say they h•ve aiven up Ule search for a La Meta man who reported)¥ tried to awlm ashore fro,m bis dlaabled tlabtna boet about 10 miles off La Jolla. Tb• mlntne ~an, Nell Jo.hmoa, at, toot bJa 25-toot tlsh· Jnf veaael out Suncfay wi\b th.Ne companions. Wben the engine failed there WN no way to call for be\p beeaus• the boat bed no radio, thecomOan.lODI Hid later. Expensive Ae~t Bemused tow truck driver contemplates damage to pair of high-priced autos following crash TuHday afternoon In Newport Beach. Accident took place about 12:30 p.m. in the 900 block of West Coast Highway. Police said no one was injured in the accident. The Porsche was driven by Charles Patterson, 49, Newport Beach, according to police report.8. His car slid under the parked Cadillac owned by Giltspur Exhibits of Garden Grove. The cause of the crash is under investigation. I',.._ Page Al BOVAN ••• preserve testimony from wit· nesses Who mlgbt be banned or flee the area. Judge Franklin will rule on the district attorney's ••discharge" motion at a 3 p.m. Monday hear· ing, scheduled just one hour alter the four men are due In Orange County Superior Court for a similar bearing. The complex lecal battles stem. from the Oct. 22 ahooUng death of Bovan, a JS.year-old Fountain Valley resident. He was shot nine : times as he was leavlne the El Ranchito restaurant ln Newport Beach. According to court records, de· Cendant Fiori bas admitted to be- ing the trisgerman In Bovan's death. Fiori. a relocated federal witness, also faces drug charges following hls arrest in Costa Meaa. The only defendant free on $750,000 bail is Kulik, the 28· ydr·old bead of a Newport Beach firm known as Prasadam. Distrlbuto~. Inc. He alao faces separate drul charges ofter be wall arrested in Mlstlon Vlejo, al· legedly in poaaeaslon of 1.1 pounds of heroin. h rt t Judge Rejects Halt Of Diedrich Probe A judge who ruled that the Dis· trlct Attorney's Offtce cannot prosecute Orange County Supervisor Ralph Diedrich re· fused Tuesday to order the DA to hall his lnvesUgaUon or allega. tions now before the Grand Jury. Superior Court Judge Philip E. Schwab refused to sign the tem· porary restraining order de- manded by attorney Sylvan Aronson with the comment that Diedrich's lawyer was involved in "a speculative proceeding." Aronson immediately went before Superior Court ludge Robert E. Rickles, who ls ban· dling crimlnal arraignments ln the absence or Judge H. Watreo Knight, and was granted a bear· lnl aetfor Dec. 2. He said be wUl ask Judge Rickles at that hearm, to issue a permanent lnjun~Uon which would bar District Attorney CecJl llicks' office from proceeding further wttb h1vestlaatloit Of what are beUeved to be bribery charges. ~e QJ~e by :Vqnson was see.a by the prosecution as being the outcome of Judge Schwab's de· cision two weeks ago to bar their omce t'rom any prosecution ac- tion against Indicted Diedrich. Supervisor Philip Anthony and two codefendants. The Schwab ruling la being ap- pealed by the Diatrlct Attomey's Offlce to the Fourth District Court of Appeals. An at'fidavtt signed by Dledricb in support of the exclusion mo- tion j:Ontains the comment that. "an indictment would bot be re- turned" if he were "slven the oP- portunlty t.o discuss the pertinent facts with an impartlal, obJec· tive, unbiased prosecutor and ap-, pear berore the grand Jury and answer questions." It was argued by Aronson and - other def en.se attorneys lD the earlier heartne before Judge Schwab that disputes between • Hicks and county aupervlaon at board tevel clearly led to Hides~ - diaplaytng prejudJce duriJ21 tbe · Jnveatieation that led t.o tho fD.. dictment. , ' , .. ·, ,. 1. •' I• 11 Fro• AP DbpaklMI Two West German le1l1laton announct:d they are proposln1 Ecypttan president Aawar Sadat and Iaraell Prime Mtnlster Menabem Befbl u jolnt cafldtdatesforthe 1978 Novel Peace Prise. Prime Mlniater Menallem Be'1D u Jolnt candidates for tbe1.978Nobel Peace Prize. The sponAors are Kun .Jani and .laerpa Moellem._ of the smaller Free Democratic Party in the rullnl left-liberal coalition. Both are mem· bers of the House's Foreign Affairs Committee. They said they made the proposal to honor the· two statesmen's efforta to "end the escalation of hate and violence and seek ... peaceful coexiJtence at one of the fire-spots of world politics.·· • Carol Lee Gainey says her wedding in Raletp, N.C. will be a large affair because she is '"the first girl in the family to get married." There may be another reason that has more to do with the bride· groom's family. Miss Gainey, 24, will ( ) be married Dec. 17 to PEOPLE Scott Caner Staple&oa, _ _ 26. He iB the son of Ratb --------Carter Stapleton, which makes him President Carter's nephew. ~Claildren Two unidenti(ied youngsters bearing flowers walk on stage to kneeling singer Tony Orlando in the opening moments of his first show in San Carlos since retire· ment three months ago. ~...-~J~~~·<Al'J nt.ll+qbnowli~~ ....... have PfRJDpled adwt tore ownere to yank ''klcldy 'POrn" from open ahelvea, lbt 1uual abuse of cbUdren c:onUmaes under&rq\Jnd tn Califort\la, law enfqrcementoffictaluay, • • "Child Potno1rapby ts no loneer vtslble on the adult bookshelve$ of San D~go County," Paul l\oblnaon of the Sah Dle10 dlatrlct attorney's office told a bearf.og TUesday before the Ahembly Com· mltte' on Criminal Juatlce. • "If lt'e belnS sold, it's under the CQunter or q.at in the back seat (>f cars ... STATE DEPUTY A'M'ORNEY GENEllAL Al Knudsen sllld durln• a bear:tnl recea that "ktddy porn" bas not been 1old openty iii the state alnce the le1islature'1 enactment earlier this year of two Jaws 111ald.ng the use of clilldien m obecene Qiaterial a felon.y • But Assistant Attorney General Ario Smith sild four prodticen In San FrancbcO and 12 producers in LOs Angeles are continuJy to inake "kiddy pont., films, mguineorotherexpUctltmaterial. ( I •1'I'her6 is no question that California bas been and remains the center of dlstrtbuUon ot porno· araphic rums lnvolvint children," Smlj.b.1aid. THE BEARING WAS ~ALI.ED to judie the im· pact of the new laws and determine if fwtber legislation is ne4!ded. If t An invitation has gone to the White Hous~. Miss Gainey says, but "we won't be certain until 24 or 48 hours before the wedding" whether the first family will be able to attend. • Sen. Jolm L. McClellan, the law-and-order ad· vocate wtw> fathered most of the major anti-crime legislation of recent years, is leaving the Senate after his cur- rent term. North Quake Moderate !t·. .. McClellan, an Arkansas Democrat, announced thal he will not seek re-election next year. WILUTS <AP> -A moderate, rolllnl earth· quake broke windowe, toppled chimney' and • fri1bteoed resident• in tbls small Northern CaJitoriUa community, officials said. •'There is a proper time to aspire, a tJme to achieve, and a time to retire," said the 81-year- old McClellan, who was elected to the Senate in 1942 after two ~ terms a.a a congressman. , Hehas had health problems this year and bu been forced to slow down * "John l'En!er" (John or Hell), a dreamlike novel set in a disintegrating Manhattan inferno, narrowly won the Prix Goncourt, France's most presti&ious annual literary award. The award brings 32-year-old author Didier De· coin a symbolic cash prize ot SO francs ($10.45) but assures the novel months on the French best-seller list and sales of around 500,000 copies. The Goncourt Academy, meeting as usual in a fasb,ionable Paris restaurant, was split evenly 5-to-5 between Decoin 's novel and Aa&onte Malllet's "Cordes de Bois" (Ropes of Wood.) The decktip& vote or the chairman, veteran novelist Bene Bula, gave the award to Decoin. * J ;I ·~ "It wun 't a coincidence," n.ys Prt.neeH Marcaret, younger sister of Britain'• Qqeea EUzabeC.b U, that she accepted a marriage proposal from her now-estranged husband the day she learned her first love planned to marry another woman. The princess, in December's Ladies• Home Journal, said a letter describing Group Capt. Peter Townsend's marriage plans arrived the same day she agreed to be Antony Arm1trong. Jones' wife. "I didn't really waotto get.married," she said. ·'Why did 1? Because Tony asked me. He was such a nice person in those days. f{e unders,tood my Job and pushed me to do things. In a way, he introduced me to a new world." The couple, wed in 1960, announced last March they had separated. • Who llays Geor&ian .Jimmy Caner doesn't Jet along well with Congress? He's been mannina ont: of the doors to tbe House chamber for 11 years and getuna aJona Juat. fine. During the 1978 presidenUal campaign, Carter the doorman met Carter th6 candidate and sai~ ''I'm Jimmy Carter, too." They shook hands and parted ways and now they work at oppo$fte ends of Pennsylvanla Avenue. * Elaine Brown. who led tbe Black Panther Party from an era of cun·brandlshinl militancy to one of community involvement and political lnfluence in Oakland. realped as party chairperson. Ma. Brown, who ran the Pantbera durln1 party co· founder Huey New&oa'a J~·ye.r exile ln Cuba, s84<l thet ''there comet a Ume in each Uf e that ii a kin~ of turning point. . ,My me~tal and physical 1trenttb, after' 10 yean, were waning, in fact nearly collapsinc." There bad been speculation about an ideoloitcal pUt between Newton tnd Ma. Brown because Of hv c:onaplcuous absence at Newton'& preliminary hearinc on murder •nd assault charfiS. But bOth denied tnat a rltt existed and •aid they rernPied el e fdendl. ~sidents rePorted at least six diltinct af. tershocks during the predawn hours today but the Mendocino County sheriff's otflce aald lt bad no re- Emergency Landing • · Traveler Strips, Airplane Returns SAN JOSE (AP) -An airliner made an emergen· cy return to San Jose Municipal Airport after a screaming paasenaer 1trlpped off his clothes, eprint· ed down the a11le and began kicking ln tbe cockpit door, authorities said today. The man was taken in·--------- to custody by airport takeoff and requested security guards late immedtate clearance for Tuesday afternoon after landing .... Pac iii c Sou th w eat · "He said an individual Airline Flight 264 to Los was trying to break in Angeles landed with 138 the cockpit door," Pac· pass enaers on board cioretti eaid. shortly after takeoff. "A stewardess said he He. w.-idenWied by took off his clothes, ran 1.aathorities as Halen to the cabin yelllng and rawal, 37, a medical screaming and started doctor from Lebanon, kickin&," Paccioretti who they said was ap. added. "He bent the parenUy here visiting hinges on the door." friends or relatives. PE SAID WHEN the ACTING SECURITY plane landed Fawal was ch.le! Mi~e Pacclorettl wearing only a "jock. · said the pilot reported an Everything else came emergency just aCter off .. , t sso,-. llNar• Ollere4 LOS ANGELES (AP) -Friends of slain rock muaic promoter Steve Wolf areofferiog a $:50,000re· ward for information leadtn1 to the arrest and con· victionofhis killers. Wolf, 34, was shot -------- .Monday momina when be ( .. ~~TE. ) was awakened by the .:J..14 sound of intruders in his --------Sherman Oaks hillside home. He died in sur1ery 21h hours later at River1ide Hospital. B•11ap l'fetl ... 'lajured' I OAKLAND (AP) -An expert wltnes,s bas dis· puted the testimony of two doctors who 1ave the Chowchilla kidnap victims a clean bill of health hours after their ordeal. Dr. 0 . Bruce Dickerson insisted on the witness stand Tuesday that bus driver Ed Rav and 26 children suffered bodily injury as a result of tbelr> 16~·hour burial In a van. The injuries. he said, were the effects of heat ezhausUon. ; ' ~ J ·. •l I I• '• ·' II h .. I ., I{ I I j l T~ 1! !. ' • Fro APDllpa&elMI Two west German le1t1lator1 announced tMy arepropoalrig E8YPtln president .UwarSadat and Iaraell Prime Mlnlater Meaabem Bella u joint cahdldates forthe 1978 Novel Peace Prize. Prtme Mtnlater Meaallem Be&tn u joint candidates for tbel978Nobel Peace Prise. The sponsor• are Kurt Jani and Jaer1e• Moellemua of the smaller Free Democratic Party in the rulinl left-liberal coalition. Both are mem· bers of the House•a Forei1n Affairs Committee. They said they made the proposal to honor the two statesmen'• efforts to "end the escala~on of hate and violence and seek ... peaceful coexistence at one of the fire-spots of world poll tics." * Carol Lee Galney says her wedding in Raleigh, N.C. will be a lar1e atfalr because she is "the first girl in the family to get married." There may be another reason that has more to do with the bride· groom's family. Miss Gainey, 24, will ( ) be married Dec. 17 to PEOPLE Scott Carter Stapletoa, _ _ 26. He is the son of RuUt _______ ....... Carter Stapleton, which makes him President Carter•s nephew. An invitation has gone to the White ({ous~. Miss Gainey says, but •'we won't be certain Witil 24 or 48 hours before the wedding" whether the first family Floteer Clalldren Two unidentified youngsters bearing flowers walk on stage to kneeling singer Tony Orlando in the opening moments of his first show in San Carlos since retire· ment three months ago. STATE DEPUTY A'ITORNEY GENERAL Al Knudsen said durtua a hearln1 recess that "kiddy ~rn' • bas not been sold opeJlly ln tbe state dnce the lefislature'a enactinen~1earller th1S year of two laws IJlakinl tfMt u.se of cmld.ren hi obecene qi~al a (elony. .. But AlsisWt Attorney Gtnerll Arlo SnUth said four producers in Su Fi'anelico and 12 producers in LOa An1etes are continuig to make "kiddy porn" film a m,.,ulneqr other explicit material. I ·~ts no question that California bas been and remains the center of dlst.r1bUlion pf porno- graphic films lnvolvinl chUdrin," Smijluaid. • • :J'HE HEAalNG WAS CAu..ED to judge the lm· pact of the new laws @d determine if further le1islation la n9'C!M . ... will be able to attend. • Sen. Jolan L. McClellan, the law-and-order ad· vocate who fathered most of the m~or anti-crime legislation of recent years, ls leaving the Senate after his cur- North Quake Mo~erate rent term. McClellan, an Arkansas Dernocrat, announced tb he will not seek re-election ne'xt year. "There is a proper Ume to aspire!, a tfrne to achieve, and a time to retire," said the 81-year· old McClellan, who was elected to the Sen•te in 1942 after two WILLITS CAP) -A moderate, tollinJ earth· quake broke windows, toppled chlmneyg and frl1btened residents in this small Northern ~ Calitornia community, officials said. Residents reported at leut six diltinct af • tershocks duri.ng the predawn hours today but the Mendocino County sheriff's office 1a1d it bad no re· . Emergency Landing terms as a congressman. l · He'bas had health problems this year and hal ,.,,..,.IY·ve er Stn~ns, been forced to slow down .... '-Af r . * "John l'Enfer" (John or Hell ), a dreamlike A l R novel set in a disintegrating Manhattan Inferno. ;rp ane etu._.. 0 narrowly won the Prix Goncourt, France's most ., • •&a prestigious annual literary award. The award brings 32-year-old author Didier De· SAN JOSE CAP) -An airliner made an emer1en· coin a symbolic cash prize of 50 francs C$10.45) but cy return to San Jose Municipal Airport after a assure• the novel months on the French best-seller screaming pusen1er stripped off his clothes, a print· list and sales of around 500,000 copies. ed down the aisle and began kickinl in the cockpit The Goncourt Academy, meeting as usual ln a door, authorltiessaldtoday. fash,lonable Paris restaurant, was split evenly S·to·S The man was taken ln· -.....-.:.......;._,,,...----- between Decoln's novel and Aato111le Mamet's to custody by alrport takeoff and requested "Cordes de Bois" <Ropes of Wood.) Tbe dectdtng security 1\&llrds late immediate clearance for vote of the chairman, veteran novelist Bene Buln, Tuesday afternoon after landing. ... gavetheawardtoDecoln. Pacific Sou th west · "He said an individual '* ~ ,, ·~ Airline Flight 264 to Los wu trying to break in "It wun 't a coincidence," says Prlacea1 Angeles landed with 136 the cockpit door," Pac- M t 1 t r B ital • Q passengers on board ciorettl said. ar1are • younger • 1 er 0 r n 1 qeen shortlv after takeoff. "A stewardess said he EUsabetb 0 , that she accepted a ,, marriage proposal from her • • He was idenUf1ed by took off his elothes, ran now-estranged husband the day , 11autborltles as Haten to the cabin yeUing and she learned her first love rawal, 37, a medical screaming and started planned to marry another doctor from Lebanon, kicking " Paccioretti woman. who they said was ~P· added. '"He bent the The princess, in Dec em be r's pare ntly here visit mg hinges on the door." Ladies' Home .Journal, said a friends or relatives. HE SAID WHEN the letter describlnl Group Capt. ~CT~G SECUIUTY plane landed Fawal was Peter Towasead'1 marriage ch.&ef M1~e Paccloretti wearing only 8 "jock. plans arrived the same day she said the pilot reported an Everything ~lee-eame ports of dam aces or inJuri~s. No injuries were rtported Tuesday aftemoon in the temblor, whlcb the University of California seismosrapb re~tered u 5 on the Richter Scale. fS0.00. RetOarll Ollerd LOS ANGELES (AP> -Friendl of slain rock music promoter Steve Wolf are offering a $50,000 re· ward for lnfonnaUon leadln1 to the arrest and con· viction of his klllers. Wolf, 34, was sbot -------- .Monday mominlwhen he l .. ~~TE ) was awakened by the ~.li'I sound of intruders in his ._ _______ __. Sherman Oaks hillside home. He died in surgery 2'.l!a hours later at Riveralde Kospltal. a ... p Vletl•• 'lnJ•red' I OAKLAND CAP> -An expert witness bas dis· puted the testimony of two doctors who gave the Chowchilla kidnap victims a clean bill of health hours after thelr ordeal. Dr. 0. Bruce Dickerson insisted on the witness stand Tuesday that bus driver Ed Rav and 2R children suffered bodily il\JW'Y as a result of their• 16'Al·hour burial in a van. The injuries, he said, were the etrects of heat exhauaUon. Odfea• Trip Protesied t LONG BEACH (AP) -Aboat 20 opponents of the Chilean military government picketed in front of City Hall here to protest a Loni Beach slster city delegation's trip to Valparaiso, Chile. The protesters' siana accused Au~usto Pinochet.'s ,.egime of tortYre and ot violation of human riahls. The picketers orged the City Cowicil Tuesday not to approve public funds to finance-the trip-. agreed to be Antony Armatroai· emergency just after oft .. Jones'wi~. .--------------_,....----:----~-------~--:--:---~--, "I didn't really want to get.married," she said. ·'Why did 1? Because TOn)I asked me. He was such a nice person in those days. f{e unders,tood my job and pushed me to do things. In a way, he introduced me to a new world." Tt}e couple, wed in 1960, announced last March they had separated. * Who says Georfian Jimmy Carter doesn't get alonf well with Contreas? He's been manning one of the doors to the House chamber for 11 Yeats and getttne aloof Juat fine. During the 1978 presidential campatan, Carter the doorman met Carter tM candidate and said, ''I'm Jimmy Carter, too." They shook bands add parted ways and now they work at opposite enda of Pennaylvanta Avenue. 7 A8 USC Orange coat Daltv Piiot Arbitrary RuliDgs Unfair to Owners A majority of the Lagwia Beach City Council last week was ready to tum down a subdivision proposal from the owner of 2.8 acres of land in the hills of Portaflna. And they would have lf a spokesman for the owner had not asked permission to go back to the planning com- mission to revise the proposed 12-lot subdivision. Three council members would have rejected the pro· posed ~lot plan because of increasing traffic woes on Nyes Place and Summit Way. They fear another Arch Beach Ht.." ~hts tn an area already plagued with congestion and circulaJon problems. But two of the council members had legitimate con· cerns about arbitrarily turning down one request while landowners with subdivided lots can go ahead and build on them. . • The 12-lot proposal more than meets the land tlse map requirements of the city's general plan, although the ma- jority of the council's concerns dealt with traffic circula· lion. However, it appears inconsistent to allow the owners of more than 100 already-subdivided parcels to b.uild on their lots, while rejecting subdivision of lots in the same area. The excuse offered by one councilman to "correct the sins of the past," must frustrate those catching the brunt ofthosesins. The council should either rule consistently with their current general plan, or change it. Arbitrary spot rulings only leave the beleagured landowner up in the air over what is acceptable and what is not. Cooperation Essential Last week's meeting between Capistrano Unified School District trustees and county planning com· missioners pointed up the need for greater cooperation between the two boards. The Capistrano school district comprises about one· fifth of Orange County land, much of it still to be de· veloped. Perhaps no place else in tbe county will decisions made by county planners have greater impact than in Capistrano schools. With clistrict classrooms already at capacity and no uncommitted funds available for new school construction, every new housing project approved for tbe Capistrano Unified district places additional overload on the schools. A new state law would allow the county to require de· velopers to dedicate school sites or pay equivalent fees for school construction before new housing projects could be approved. This requirement would add to to rising cost of hous- ing, but in t.}\e Capistrano district, that may be the lesser of two evils. Civic Talent Needed The hills of Laguna Beach are filled with talented civic activists. That is apparent at council meetings, where the citizenry is often vocal, and it's apparent on the various committees where Laguna Beach residents make recom· mendations to the council on items ranging from cable television to human needs of the community. Now, either through lack of interest or lack of public knowledge, candidates are needed for several committees and public bodies in the city. Two members of the Board of Adjustments will be stepping down next month. and councilmen will be in· terviewing candidates for those two posts. There also are vacanctes on 1heilousing committee, the cable television committee aqd the council's human needs committee. Laguna Beach residents interested in serving their city should apply atthe cityc}erk'soffice. It's a chance to do your bit to serve and .perhaps im- prove your community. • 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 Is Invited. Address The Oally Piiot. P 0 Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92826. Phone (714) 642·4321 Boyd/Iron Hand ByL.M.BOYD Germany•s "Man with the Iron Hand" was not Bllmarc~1 Kaiser Wilhelm or Adolf muer. He was Goetz von Berllchinsen of Jn!llbronn, a 16th century kolght. He was one of the first wearers or a ,Pl"Ostht,11, an iron band wtth movable flnaers wlllch replaced a hand he'd lost 1n a battle. lt's WTlt that he smashed a lot or tnvern tables with that iron hand when lnnkeepert were slow to brin1 wlne. The Walt Disney empire to· day ls grossing four times tbe money 1t was pulllng In when he died In 1966. with considerable ocean ex· perlence Is quite likely lo gel seasick during his first trip on the Great Lakes. Wa\'es there are not wilder or higher than ocean waves, just faster and choppier. "Do pengulns catch cQld '!"' Inquires a customer. If turned 1oose among viruses, they do. The Antarctic ls so cold it's almost free of 1erms. So penguins don't build up any immunities. In zoos hereabouts, they have to be k~pt where their alr la llltere4. TO GRASP the awesome momentum or this buildup. con· sider these facts brought together 1n a recently dee I asslfied NA TO study: In the four years ending last December. largely for Central Europe. the Soviet Union has produced 13,850 front-line battle tanks, including the newest T-72 model. against U.S. production of 2,345; 6,500 long-range artillery pieces, the latest of which <a 155-millimcter) is believed capa· ble of firing a nuclear explosive, ns against 800 in the U.S.; 5,500 fighter aircraft <including the third generation MIG -27 now ap· pcaring at a l,OOO·a·year rate> agalnst2,800 U.S. fighters. European members of NATO particularly the British and West Germans -have been eye- ing the ground-launched cruise Mailbox "LONDON want.a a 1round· launched crulae of 2,000 kilometers <about 1,200 mll•). the French and Germans about 1,500 kilometers," one NATO u~ pert told us. "That would bring Western Russia, where the 5&20 is believed most deployable, wlthi.ll range." But pressed by Moscow, the U .S,, ls perceived here to have tentatively aareed to a 600- kilometer range limit. Wllh high government officials in London. Paris and Bonn receiving their first thorough briefing on these THE CA&TEa adminiatraUon belittles these European teen. Gelb, a.Cc:Oidlng to experts here, Is aaylng that tiie ban on a eoo-rlus kilometer range will laat on· y three years ("Just a moratorium"). The NATO •x- per&a counter privately that If the European appeal is to\llh enougb, Mr. Carter will be com· pelled to eue the non·transrer and non-circumvention languase. Few here predict that the huge Soviet buildup of Central Euro· I °' pean mllit.UY power threatens audd attack. The fear ii dll· forent: that poUUca depends on perctptlona and that, with Warsaw Pact military power clearly ~Ii.II ao ftt ahead of NATO·~ the Sovlota ar-e now perceived aa approach1nc the kind of 1upertority that could ln- senalbly lead Western Europe to buckle to Soviet economic and Polltical preuures. That la the answer to Ute recur- ring question of "why": whf is M~cow spending 14 percent or Jts gross national prochact on arms <more than twice the U.S. rate) ~ why bu ita conven- ; Uooal flrepowor In Central Europe almost doubled in the paatfour years! AS TDB Europeans see it, the answer ii eventual brutalization of Europe by stockpiled military power akillfully manipulated for polltlcal and economic ends. This la the heart of the argu- ment now heating up between Europe and Jimmy Carter. Self ·government Needs Self-discipline To the Editor: It appears the scare of the 1973 oil embareo has lhoroueHiy dt!· slpated from most. minds. The apathy and dls~oncern of the averag•j\merican seems stead· fast. It appears Americans re· fuse to realize the gravity of the future because present energy requirements are so convenient· IY-oiet. · Americans have an undisputed Jove affair with automobiles. Since the 1973 embargo. the price or gasoline on the retail level has doubled, yet consumption has in· creased. not decreased or even stabilized As a symbol or Americana. nothing seems to s urpass the automobile. ll s ignifies the freedom of in· dividual movement so cherished by Americans Gullible Disciples take the sue· gestions of the Leaaue of Cities n gosput. They-apvotnted themselves u well·pald mem· hers of a re-developmon'-CIC)m· · mtttee to deliberate on the same ideas that people expected them to conalder as pald. members or· the council. With glorious promises of open spaces, over a half mlllloa dollars were borrowed and spent to stud)' the ~ach end raU.oad tracks. So far $$8,000 bu been spent locally to begin t.alklng and sketchlng a concrete junjle. Now the council feels they can look ahead a hundred years a,td pre· diet how people wm cr~s the tracks? They have even become a Ways and Means Committee - with plans to confiscate propel'· ty. use city equipment •nd employees to clear lt, N·zone It. and tben peddle, build or rent - to make money f~ the city? "radicala" many hours to figure out -nothing is ever ac· "Comptilhedatapu~ meeting. We know the atate San Clemente la In -the question is, what country! RUTH DENJSON t'eter Olallettge To Uie Editor: 'to vote one's conscience; to vote what b considered aood for the commwliLY: to vote ln such a way uto be re-elected; or to vote ravortn& tbose who have given the m9$l support is the problem facing a candidate. be it a top n•· tlonnl office be holds or a lowly local postdon. IT IS also a problem fcrr the voter. Does he note a shift in the ofllclat'a posiUon -ooce a con- servative, now a liberal or vice ven11? Can the citisen depead on the candidate adherin1 to ar.J promised posiUon? How far bu the elected offtcla1, u tlme for re-el'ectloa draws near, stl'ayed from thepromlsedcoune? Shall we solve the problem by re-eleetlnl no one? And shall we then lose the service ot the 1ttona peraoo who adheres to h1I announced prtnciples? Ot shall we take a chance on a newcomer whose reCord is a blank pale? As a voter carefully measure the andidate \ Take nothln1 for aranted. by Tom Barley of your flne publicaµon it would be better to mucde.r your ex.·wlfe than pay_ aUmony lf the sentence by Judge Jerrold S. Oliver of Superior c;ourt of Or1tnge County was token lnto account. He recenUy sentenced Steven Acalo and Alex Segura to 52 days in jaU tor their part ln a dual murder. Fernando Rodardi re- ceived a year ln the county jail and maybe out in as UtUe as nine months. I know of several people who have received alx months to a year for nonpayment of alimony or child support. THIS MOCKERY of justice in sente.oclng ii one reason we have eang1 roamlne tho streets of our ctUes milking them unsafe for everyone. rm for showlnl mer.ey to extenuating clrcumatances but what a dlsappolotmbt and a real a lap 1n tho face-this cae must l>o to proucu:Wl1 and ~ nsUns Officials. Thi.I jud&e should be called to atve an accqunt for h1I acttons 1n wrlUns In a publlca&n. ll·they are n6t aaUsfactort bo certalnlt ahould be impeached. l.W.GASKE President. So"'th Orange County Voters Assn. ) · I ' J ., '!J • I , .. .., . ( • . .. I , • , ' rt. ., :h ,, r .. " • ' .,, .. • ( 7 VOL. 70, NO. 327, .C SECTIONS, 30 PAGES WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1977 N DA Accused Of ~ovan CaSe TaDlJ>ering· By MICHAEL PASKEVICH ot•Oel'r~' .. " Attorney• for four men under a Grand Jury lndlctment in the gangland-style kUllng of Stephen John Bovan of Fountain Valley charged the District AttorQCY's Office with "witness tampering" Tuesday, during a day-long series of legal maneuvers in Harbor Municipal Court. It was anoijle{' twist in the School Spirit . already bliarre murder and con· spiracy case lnvolvine el1ht persons with alle,ed Jinks to East Coast mobsters and the Hare Krisbna rell1Jous sec~ After Deputy Di.strict Attorney Dave Carter failed in a motloo to have Municipal Court Judie Selim Franklin dismiss him.self on grounds of prejudice, defense attorneys began still-unresolved efforts to keep the hearing at the municipal court level. Late Tuesday, defense at- torney1 claimed that prosecutors "arrested" a key wltneaa last w k and detairi.ed him for near· ly 10 hours before releasinl him. The defenae claims the arrest of Frank Rossi was a premeditat· ed effort to coerce him into testi· f ying &Jain.st their clients. Rossi, who has been granted immunity from prosecution. did The whole school turned out Tuesday for Corona dcl Mar High School's jog-a-thon and senior Dan Brown, despite disability that requires him to use crutches. was no exception. He covered several laps in the event designed to raise funds for student activities and athletic equipment. Stu· dents, teachers and staff members took individual pledges for the number of laps around the S<:hool's track they could cover in an hour. If all the pledges are cashed in, tbey•n have raised at least $36,000, stu· dent leaders said today. By ARTHUR R. VINSEL ot .. Oefly ...... , .... Federal narcotics agents strik· ins in downtown Huntlnrton Beach and Seattle, Wash., ar· rested the last two men indicted in connectloe with an alleeed multi·mllllon dollar West Coast marijuana dlatrlbution rln~ Tuesday nlJtht. The U.S. Justice Department bad already taken unpreoectent· ed acUocl asaimt one of ~· at.. lesed prin~lpa11. aeizlbe n•arly • half ·million dollars worth of Buena Park real eatate. teatlfy asainst ihe four defen· dant.s last week before the Orange County Grand Jµry. Rossi and Anthony Marone Sr .• the father or one of the def en· dants, had been subpoenaed to appear ln court Tuesday but neither showed up. This prompt· ed attorney Phillip DeMusa to claim the two men had been pre- ssured by the District Attorney's Office into not appearin~. District Aftorney Carter branded this charce as •'ludicrous,•' addinc that Tuesday's preliminary bearina at the municipal court level was unneccessary beca&Ue·of recent Grand Jury lndlctmenta a1ainst the ell.ht defendants, four of whom remain at lar1e. District Attorney Carter at- tempted to "dlacharce'' defen· dants Alexander Kulik, Ant.bony Marone Jr., Raymond Reaco and Jerry Peter Fiori In an effort w put tbe cue at t.tie SuPeriorCourt level. · Traditionally, a Grand Jury in- dictment takea precedel\ce over municipal courtchar1ea. Defense attomeys ar1ued tbat the preliminary bearine is needed to allow crou- examlnauon of wltn~ and to (See BOVAN, Pace 2) uake Disasten~. Argentina Trenwr Toll Hits 5, BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) -A strong earthquake rocked western Argentina early today, killing al least 50 people and demollshinl numerous build· lnl's. the govemmentaald. The quake, which also injured hundreds of people, many seriously, struck hardest near San Juan, a wine 1rowln1 and agricultural city of S00,000 local· ed 800 miles northwest or Buenos Aires J'lear the Chilean border. Th,e tremors were fell in Buenos Aires as well as across the borders ln Chlle, Brazil and Peru. No serious damage or casualties were reported in the other countries. The official news agency Telam said 80 percent of the dwellings ln rural communities on the outskirts or San Juan were d~mollshed ~hen the quake hit at 6 .28 a.m. (1.28 PST). Most dwell· lnes were or adobe or flimsy materials. The heaviest damase aod most cuualUes occurred In Caucete, a rural town of 30,000 located 11 mllea Dorthwe!st of San luan, Newport-Mesa school trwitees voled M..ruesdaJ Jllght to c:tes. lgnate Monte Vilta Elementary School in Costa Meaa as the new locatlcm of McNally ContlnuaUon High School. The retocatlon would come no sooner tban the fall of 1979 and only if an upcoming report estabU.bes the need for McNall,y to continue u a separate lnltltu. tion, trustees said. Votln1 for the move were trustees Carol Martin, Duke O'Brien. Betty Jo BaJJey, Rod MacM{\llan and Donald Smallwood. Trustees Barbara Skilling and Tom Hendenon vot· ed against il The decision does not preclude the potenUal closure of other dis- trict achools becauae of drop1 lo atudent enrollmen(, truatees aaid. ClOlures could come u ear· lY as the end of th1I school )'ear. Before a surprisingly ll1bt turnout in Costa Mesa City Coun· cil chambers, school trustees ap-proved three aeparate motions to clarity their poeltio» regardln1 the future of M~Nally. Truateea first voted 7 ·Oto direct dlstrict olflctala to lmmediatdy ln1Uate the sale or leaae of the en· tlN 1even .. cre McNally 1it. at 19th ~ Newport Boulevard ln Cosu,Me:aa. Then, in a second unanimous vote, trustees niled th•t MeNa11y would clJOtlnue to operate at its current locaUoo unW the cloee ot the 19'18-79adlool)I r. TruatH Carol MtttlD of Newport Beach then lnttOductd a ~ot.ioo to ~rt a ltben'• adtliory committee llen- datton that peJl.cl Monte Vllta Telamsald. The government ordered emerJency mebts of medical supplies into the affeeted-prov- ince. Planes were diverted to smaller flelda 1n the area because the quake cracked the San Juan airport runwl$. The National Meteorolog1cal 1nsUtute in BuebOI Airet said measuring needles on tu seismological instrument• "jumped off the paper" because of the intensity of the quake. · The quake fegistered 7 on the Richter scale. Its epicenter was reported to be 620 miles west of Buenos Aires near the Chilean border. The Richter Scale 11 a measure of ground motion In which every increase of one whole number means a tenfold increase in magnitude. A reading of aeven la a major quake capable of caus· Ing widespread heavy damaee. .In B._. Ail9, thousands ot panlc·ltrlck«i reeldenta ran into the •tn!eta When tremon from the quate reach«l the eapi~ as tbe best mte fot. McNillY. IA ,pln~&Mp~. trustees nderson and Mn. Sldllln1 argued that trwateea shovld wait UIWl a committee re-port on the dlsbiot•s altematlve educaUosi needs it completed early next year. The committee. which la -! scheduled to begin its task latd thl• week, will lnclud--. bigb school principals (lncludlnf Jack Coleman of McNally) ancl counaelora from each bl•ll achoo I. Following completion of the.-. port, it wm be up to trustees to (8e&l1CNALLY. Pace AZ) GDitlelines Studied . i . ' I Siudent Member By JACKIE RYllAN ot .. DIRY ..... ..,. vottn« because of the ~lbllltt of select.int aomeone who li not really concerned about the board. "I would propose the tt.udent government of tho colle1e tF polnt someone after carer"' screentng and intetvlewt1" ftb. fl'OC:k 1ald. He Mid he li pleued With tM new law. but looks forward totl)s day when tbe etodent boaftt membu wowd be allowed to Tote. I Al OAIL.Y LOT N ... \fJtat Qaake? ... . Sonic Boom Shake• Coaat A thunderous sonic boom slammed Oran1e County at 4 \ p m. Tuesday, setting off womed calla to police atenclea. HUNTINGTON BEACH CMI Defense Director O.Orte Thyden said the big kaboom just had to be a sonJc one and the Cal· Tech Seismolo&lcal Laboratory in Puadena aaid no quakes were recorded anywhere on the West Coast. El Toro MCAS spokesmen said they checked and could confirm no high.flying mllltary aircraft over the Oru1e Coast but would continue investigating today. SOME IOGll ALTITUDE vapor trails, however, bad been noted over the Orange Coast area shortly betoN the sonic boom shook the area. Sentenee Reduetio.n? ·Hinshaw Hearing Scheduled Dec. 2 A hearing at which conv1cle<i former congressman Andrew Hinsbaw's lawyer wlll seek to de- ter ml n e exactly how long Hinshaw must stay in prison has been scheduled for Dec. 2 m Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert P. Kneeland's courtroom. allow the former Republican legislator to complete his term at lbe Orange County Jail. Hinshaw is serving concurrent- ly a one year jail term ordered after bis conviction on further criminal charges related to his Il- legal use of county manpower and materials while servine as county assessor and runnm1 !or Con"gress in 1971. . ,..._P ... AJ BOYAN ••• preu"• t tJmony rrom wtt- nuse1 Wbo mic)it be banned or o .. tbearea, Jud•e Jl'ranklln wUl rule on the dlJt.rict attomeJ'• .. dllcbaqe .. motion a&• 3 p.m. Konoy bear- in,, 1cbedwe4 Just ono hour after the fOW' men at-e due In Ora.nae County Superior Court for a similar heartn1. The complex l91al battles stem from the Oct. 22 ahootJng death ot Bovan, a as.year-old Fountain Valley resident. He waa shot nlne times as he wu leavlng the El RancbJto restaurant in Newport Beach. According to court records, de- fendant Fiori bu admitted t.o t)e. lna the trieaerman in Bovan's death. Flori, a relocated federal witness, also faces dl'Uf charges Collowlne bta arrest ill Costa Mesa. The only defendant free on $750,000 b4tl is Kull~. the 28- year-old bead of a Newport Beach firm known as Pruadam Distribut.ons, Inc. He alao faces -separate drue charges ofter be was arrested in Mlasion Viejo, al- . legedly in possession of 1.1 pounds of heroin. Statute Illegal LOS ANGELES (AP) -A city statute allowing suspension of I ~"e .Aerident Bemused tow truck driver contemplates damage to pair of high-priced autos followine crash Tuesday afternoon in ·Newport Beach. Accident took place about 12!30 p.m. in the 900 block of West Coast Highway. Police said QO one wu injured /" in the accident. The Porsche was driven by Charles Patterson, 49, Newport Beach, according to police reports. His car slid under the parked Cadlllac owned by Giltspur Exhibits of Garden Grove. The cause of the crash is under investigation: . cab drivers' permita without a ., dg R · notice or hearing Is an Un· u e ej·ect Halt ·constitutional violation of due. 8 . process, a Superior Court judge But defense attorney Marshall Morgan said Tuesday be believes that Hinshaw, 54, will serve only eight months of the two years rec om mended by state correction officials. Morgan said be based his belief on comments made by Judge Kneeland when he sentenced Hinshaw after a jury had found him guilty of acts of bribery com- mitted while he served as county assessor. bu•••ed. Of' Diedrich P~ohe String of KilHngs? A Judie who ruled that the Dis- trict Attorney'• Office cannot prosecute Oran1e County Supervilor Ralph Diedrich re- fused TUeaday to order the DA to halt b1s tnvestisatlon of alleP· lions now before tbe Grand Jllry. board level clearly Jed to Hick.a dlaplaylnc prejudice dUl'inJ the inveatigation that led to tile in- dictment. Two Nevada Routes Asked For Air Cal. Morgan swd the judge's rec- om mendalton at that time of a six to eight-month prison term had apparently been ignored by prison authorities. He laid the blame on what he said was the vagueness of the new determinate sentencing law which went into effect July l, after Hinshaw had been sen- tenced. That law gives sentencing j1..dges a choice or three prison terms which they can impose. Most defendants are sentenced lo the middle term. Morgan said the middle term of two years for a bribery convic-tion was applied to Hinshaw by prison authorities because Judge Kneeland sentenced him under the old law and did not specify which of the three sentences should be applied. And he repeated his conviction that Judge Kneeland will make his preference for the lesser or the three terms crystal clear at the Dec 2 hearing. Morgan said he additionally will ask Judge Kneeland to re- move Hinshaw from confinement al tlie state's Chino facility and Dumped Corpse Found on Freeway LOS ANGELES (AP) -The body of a young woman was found today dumped along the Golden State Freeway, and police believe the murder may be related to nine other recent kill· ings. There were no details availa- ble, but police were operating on Taxi Woman GoingH~~ JACKSON, Tenn. (AP) -The daughter of a SS- year-old California woman who traveled lo J acklon by taxicab says she has persuaded her moth4"" to return home. the theory that it wai one more murder in a string of ldllinea dfs. cussed at a meeting Tuesdayby a task force of SO law enforcement officers from several Jurladlc· tions. . Lt. Ed Henderson, who Is in . charge of the task force, was at the scene investigating, said of- ficer Carlos Figueroa. Atthe time of the meeting, there were nine bodies, many of them stran1led, nude and sexually molested. The body, which appeared to have been dead for d~ys, was dis· covered by a state biihway de- partment worker cleaning brush along the freeway. The Los Feliz offramp of the freeway was closed to traffic wblle the ta.sk force conducted It.a investigation. "These victims have been round in the last several months. We're looking at them tor 1lmilarllies," said Lt. Hen- derson. SuperiOI' Court JUdle Philip E. Schwab refused to alp the tem- porary reatralntnc order de· manded by attorney Sylvan Aronson with the comment that Diedrich'• lawyer waa involved in "a apecqlatlve proceed.lag." Aronson Immediately went before SuperJor Court ~ud1e ROl>ert E. Rickles, who ls~an· dllnr criminal arraJcnmellta in the absence of ludse H. Warren Knight, and was granted a bear- ing set for Dec. 2. He aald be wlll ask Jude• Rlcklea at that heariQg to bsue a permanent Injunction which would bar District Attorney Cecil Hicks' office [rom proceeding further with love$tlgatlon of what are believed t.o be bribery cbarces. The move by Aronaon wu seen Judge Schwab agreed and ap. pointed the attorney general's of· flee to take over the prosecution chores. Diedrich, 53, Anthony, 41, financial consultant Gene Conrad, 43. and Dr. Willlam Kott, -55, face trial on char1es of vtol•t- lng state political campaign and financial disclosure laws. The grand jury ls now believed to be investfgaUn1 the poasibillty of allegedly tlleaal ac- tidns in connection wltb the Board of Supervbors decialon bi 1973 to remove 2.200 acres in Anaheim Hilla from an agricultural preserve and make the land available for develop. ment. by the pro1eeutlon aa ·being the outcome of Judge Sch•ab's de- cislcurtwo week& ago to bu their office from any prosecution ac· lion •'81mt lnd.icted Dledrfch, Superviaor Phlllp AnthonJ and two codefendants. Air CalllorJlla bu applied to the Civil Aeronautics Board for permlaslon to fly between Oranre County Airport and two Nevada cJtiea, Reno and Lu Vegas. Western Air Linea al.lo an- nounced tbls week that lt 1s seek· ing CAB authorlzatton to fly between Orange Count7 and Las Veras. Both are 1eeltln1 conalderatioa" under the Calllornle /N•vada Low Fare Jnveatlt•tlon Cue. Thi• p~ ls under •IY before tbe CAB and lnvoh•es poaalbly setUna new routes and rat.. between Oallloi-aia and NevadaclUee. Air CalltomJa curren.Uy rue. out of Orange County Airport. WeaternAiilinesdoesnot. • Biker Killed ESCONDIDO (AP) -Tbe body of WllUam M. Glllham, ~. repmUd .a.tUioc while hlkfnl. •u found ID• pond~ a the bottom ~ 1 dzx ••terfa11. ,. .·) , . ... ,, ,. ., I" ·' •t ' " c. I ·r I !\• '• ll .. ~ . ., ·-! .. ~ 1· f'ro• Page Al Diane Bernal said her mother, Jean Caren, left for their home in Santa Maria, on Tuesday, leav- ing behind her black poo- dle, Duchess. Mrs. Bernal refused lo say bow her mother was traveling. "I know she'll go home because I have her do1," said Mrs. Bernal, who ob- tained a court order pre- venting Black and White Cab Company of Santa Maria from taking Mrs. Caren any farther on her trip to New York. The murders being looked at include those of Sonja Johnsoh, 14, and Delores Cepeda, 12, oC Hlchland Park, whose bodies were found Sunday ln Elysian Park; Kristina Weckler, 20, or Glendale, found Saturday In Highland Park; and an untden- tlfled woman, 17·20 years old, wlth blue eyes and long brown hair, found Nov. 17 ln the Wilshire District. --,...~ MC NALLY •• decide whether McNaUy should remain a separate school or be incorporated into existing alternative education programs at regular high schools. Trustees have not ruled out the possibility that McNally could be moved to an existing high school campus. but remain autonomous. However, if truatees believe McN ally students should be located in a separate facility, Monte Vista School wlll be McNally's new home. And the district's citizens ad- visory committee wlll continue to bold .public hearings re1ard.lng potential closure of schools with enrollments or aoo students or less. Refugees Baited DARWIN, Australia CAP) - The mayor of Darwin demanded Wedoelday that the tederal gov-ernme11t act to halt the tlow of Vietnamese refugee boats Into Ulil northern port clty. ORANOI COAST " DAILY PILOT Fro.Page Al DRUGS ••• or of Also being examined are the deaths of Terry Jill Barcum, 18, of New York State, found Nov. 10 In Franklyn Cuyon of We.st Los Angelea; Lisa Kaatln, 21, of Hollywood, discovered No•. e, in a Glendale ravine; Margaret Elizabeth Madrid, 7, of VaUnda, found Nov. e in the City of In· dustry; Theresa Berry, 19, of Pomona, found Nov. 4 in Walnut; and JudlthLynn MUler, is, of Hollywood, found Oct. 31 in La Cre1centa. Henderson would not give de. tat.J• of the method.a of •transula· tlon. "We can't ny for sure at thla point. 1t11 the poutble ltey to any 1uspect we mJibt ban," ht uldi HBReaident . . .. •• ·' I f 4 ct &it !H~ •2h .~ .. "·~ 1 I r d. .~ .. ( ~ '.J (. , b ' .. !1 I• ti. ,. . ·' '· ,, Ill ,, 11 .. 'tf • v ,. From AP .Diapa~- Two West Gtrman le1i1l1tor1 anoowiced they are Pl'OJ>Ollnl ~1Yptlan pre1ldent hwar Sad-a and Israeli Prime Mmtster Meubea BeclD u joint candidateeforthe 1978Novel Peace Prize. Prime M.lnllter Meaabem Bella u Joint candidates fo't' the 1978 Nobel Peace Prbe. The tponsol'I are Kan Jua1 and her•en Moellemaa of the 1mat1er Free Democratic Party ln the n.tline left·llberal coalition. Both are mem· btn o!the House'• Forel1n Affairs Committee. They said they made the proposal to honor the two statesmen'• efforts to "end the escalation of hate and violence and seek ... peaceful coexistence at one of the flre-spoll of world poll tics.'' ... Carol Lee Gabley says her wei6dift1 in Raleigh, N c will be a laree atfltr because she is "the flnt gi~l ·in the family to cet married." There may be another reason that has more to do with the bride- groom 'a family. Mias Gainey, 2"4, wlll C J be married Dec. 17 to PEOPLE Scott Carter Stapleton, 26. He is the son of Ruth --------Carter Stapleton, which makea him President Carter•s nephew. An invitation has gone to the White House, Miss Gainey SJlYS but "we won't be certain until 24 or 48 hours before the wedding" whether the first famUy will be able to attend. * Sen. John L. McClellan, the law-and-order ad· vocate who fathered most of the major anti·crime legislaUon of r~ent years, ts leaving the Senate after his cur· rent term. McClellan, an Arkanaas Democrat. announced that be will not seek re·electJon next year. ''There 18 a proper thne to aapire • .a time to achieve, and a time to retire," said the 81-year- old McClellan. who was elected to tbe Senate in 1942 after two terms as a congressman. He has had health problems this year and has been forced to slow down. ... "John l'Enfer" <John of Hell), a dreamlike novei set In a dlsintecrating Manhattan inCerno, narrowly won the Prix Goncourt, France's most prestigious annual literary award. The award brings 32-year-old author Dldler De- cobl a symbolic cash prize of SO francs ($10.4S) but assures the novel months on the French best-seller list and sales of around 500,000 copies. The Goncourt Academy, meeting as usual in a fashionable Paris restaurant, was split evenly 5-to·S between Decoin 's novel and An&oale Malllet•s "Cordes de Bois" (Ropes of Wood.) The deciding vote of the chairman, veteran novelist Rene Baaln, gavetheawardtoDecoin. * "It ·wasn't a coincidence," says PrlateH Margaret, youncer sister of Britain's Qaeea EUzabeth ll, that she atcepted a marriaie proposal from h~r now-estranged husband the day she learned her first love planned lo marry another , woman. The princ~. in December's Ladies' Home Jo1UT1al , said a letter describinl Group Capt. Peter Town1ead•1 mnrla•e plans arrived the same day she agreed to be Antony Armstrong. TOWHHHo Jones' wife. .. . "t didn't really want to get married, She said. ·'Why did I? Becauae Tony asked me. He was such a nice person In those days. He understood my job and pushed me to do things. In a way. he introduced me to a new world.'' The couple, wed ln 1960, announced last March they bad separated. ... . Who says Georclan llm•Y Carter doesn't cet along well with Congreas? He's been roanntnc one of the doors to the Hou•e chamber for 11 years and ge~Unif along JU1t fine. During the 1976 presfdenUal ~ampaian, Carter the doorman met Carter the candid&te and .aald, "f'm JJmmy Carter, too." They ,shoot hands and part~ ways and now Qiey work at opposite ends of Pen11Jylvanla Avenue. * E'lame Brown. who led tb• Black Panther P-.rty from an era of BUD·brandllbinf mllitaJfcy to one of eomtnunlty lnvolvement and political tnnuence ln Oakland, re1l1n*1 u party chairperson. Ms. Brown, w~o ran tbe Pantbera durlnc party co· founder Hae1 Ne.non•1 2~·1ear exile lri Cuba, said that ''tlm°e com ea a time In each life that la a kind of turn1n1 point .•• My mtntal and physical 1trenlth. after 10 years, were waninc, in I act nearly collapsinft. •• There bad beu tpeculatlon about •.n ideo\o;tcal 1pllt be~eeQ Newtdn and !41. Bro~ because fl her conaptouous abaence at Newton s pre1lptlri•rr bea.rJn1 on murder and aasau!t c~at1ea. Bu both dentea that• rift Ubted and aald tt\ey remaintd el.OM trtenda. 1 '> • t. Floteer aa•1drea Two unidentified youngsters bearing flowers walk on stage to kneeling singer Tony Orlando in the opening moments. o( his first show in San Carlos since retire· ment three months ago. WILIJTS (AP) A moderate, roWne earth- quake broke windows, toppled cbhnneya and frithtened residents in this small Northern California community, officials aaid. R85identa reported at least six distinct af. tersbocu during the predawn hours today but the Mendocino County sheriff's office said it had no re· EJnergency Landing .. Traveler Strips, • Airplane Returns SAN JOSE CAP> -An airliner made an emer1en· cy return to San Jose Municipal Airport, after • screamfna passenger stripped olf his c~othes, sprint· ed down.the able and besan kicking m the cockpit door, autborlUes said today. The man was taken Jn·_ ........... ________ _ to cuJtodY .bY airport takeoff and requested security guardtl late Immediate clearance for Tuesday aftemoon after Jaoding. Pacific Southwest "Hesaidantndividual Airline Flight 26' to Los was trying to break in Angeles landed with 136 the cockpit door," Pac- pas sengers on board cioretli said. shortly after takeoff. "A stewardess said be He was identified by took off his clothes, ran authorities as Haten to the cabin yelling and Fawal, 37, a medical screaming and started doctor from Lebanon, kicking,'' Paccioretti who they said was ap-added. "He bent the parenlly here visiting hinges on the door." friend& or relatives, HE SAID WREN tbe ACTING SECURITY plane landed Fawal was chief Mike Paccioretti wearing only a "jock. said the pilot reported an Everything else came emergency Just after oet .. portJ of damaset or inJurles. No lnjuriea were report4!d Tuetday afternoon in the temblQr, whlch the Unlverafty ot Callfomia seismograph reglaterecl as 5 on the IUchter Scale. 150,000 Reil'ard Ollere4 LOS ANGELES (AP) -Friends or slain rock music promoter Steve Wolf areoffertna a $50,000re- ward fot information leadin1 to thf' arrest and con· vlctlonofbls killers. --1 WoU, M, was abot ~------....., Monday~ewhenbe(. -~~TE· J was awakened by the .:1.14 sound of intruders in bis '-· -------Sherman Oaks hUl1lde home. Be died 1n suraery 2~ hours later at Riveralde Hoepltal. ..... ,. viei1 .. 'l•J•red' OAKLAND (AP> -An expert witness has dis· puted the teaUmony of two cloclon who gave the Chowchilla kidnap "ictlms a clean bill of health hours after thelr ordnl. Dr. o. Bruce Dlcker1on wisted on the witness stand Tuesd,y that bus driver Ed Rav and ~ children suffered bodily injury as a result of tbelr• 16Y.a·hour burial tn a van. Thfl il:\Suries, he silid, were the effects or beat exbau.stion. Odlealt 'J'r.fp ProtatM LONG BEACH CAP) -Aboul 20 opponent.& Of the Chilean mWta~ soverrunent plclseted lD front or City HaU here to prote.t a Long 8each ~r city delegation's trip to Valparalso, Chile. The protesters' sl1na accused Augusto Pinochet's realme of torture and ()f violation of human riehta: The picket.rs urged the City Council Tuesday not to approve public IUnds to finance the trip. Policy Revision Looks Political Next Monday, Newport Beach city councilmen will select a new planning commiasioner to replace Larry Lynch, the commissioner wh06e reslgnatlon they forced. Lynch, who was appointed to the commiulon in June was forced to resign because councilmen on Sept. 12 changed their policy concerning financial confllcta of in- terest and appointees to city boards and commissions. At no time during the appointment screening process last summer did Lynch attempt to hide or disguise the fact that his firm has a contract with the Irvine Company-the basis of the call for his resignation. Lynch hardly had his commission seat warm when the call for a new confilct of interest policy was made in the council. Jt was almost as it the policy was designed specifically to t>ust Lynch despite the protestations about the good job he was doing on the commission. It also seems apparent that Lynch was a political sacrifice by the council in an effort to reduce the continu- ing friction between the no-growth faction and the rest of the council. We !rankly doubt it will change anything. The whole episode reflects poorly on the city council. Credibility Shaken And another forced resignation last week made another Harbor Area governmental body lose some credibility. Until it virtually kicked out one of its members, the Newport-Mesa School Distict advisory committee had gene rally done a good job of making recommendations to 1 trustees regarding school closures and tlie relocation of Mc Nally continuation school. More public hearings are scheduled on these issues, but the committee must now overcome the impression that the problems of the district are talcing a back seat to politicking and personality conflicts. Committee member and Costa Mesa City Council can- didite Chris Steel was asked to resign Cand will do so> aftEJ J.te appeared at a school board meeting to voice his opptaition to a committee recommendation -closure of MoO-Vista School for relocation of McNally. "'1t least some of lhe committee members felt Steel's spelch was Politically motivated and out of character· with t~eiow-kcy approach of the committee. They may be rag . owever, Steel isn't the only member of the commit- tee .,ith political aims; at least two other members are nea~certain candidates in other local elections. Will they be atked to leave if they comment publicly on committee rec<&'nmendations? py asking one politically active member to resign, the co~ittee has put itself in a tight bind if any other can- did e for office speaks up. he alternatives are to force him or her of( the com· mit~e -or to acknowledge that Steel was singled out for spef<ing up. ' . ' · B4ireaucracy at Work I 1 • · it looks as if it will only take a little more paper work and ~ossibly a phone call or two. and Newport Beac}} city officials will allow the state Departmeht of Fish and <lame to s~k a ship off their shores to create an artifical fishing reef'; ~e project calls for the sinking of a 400·foot Liberty s hip ~ fe~t of water about two miles off west Newport. Cqu ilmen~ who have authority to block such a project bec¥tse it is on city-controUed tidelands, said they wanted to ht sure the project would ha~ lto effect on the west Ne~rt beaohes. Erosion of sand there has been a major probtm in the past. hat was in May. Councilmerl said they wanted to see som scientific information that would support the Fish and ame claim that the ship would not alter the onshore currents. After exchanging several letters authorities from Fish and "Game and the people from the U.S. Army Corps of Eng(neers, wJto issued a declaration of negative environ· mental impact for the project. came to Newport to talk to the oity councilmen. ~ouncilmen justifiably say they want all the as- s urances they heard from the group to be put into writing. Finti\ said the bureaucrats, we•d be glad to, just as soon as you f' ut your request for our assurances in 'writing to us. he way things are going they could sink that ship with red pe and paperwork. I • OPlnlens expressed In the apace above are those of the Daily Piiot othef.viewa expressed on this page are thoae of their authors and artlatl. Reader comment la invited. AddreH The Dally Piiot, P.O. Bolt 1660. Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321 . Boyd/Iron Hand By L:.M. BOYD BRU~E~ The real ex· planatlon of Western Europe's rlalbl feara of U .S.·impoaed llml~ on NATO uae of sround· launched crulae missiles is more military than poliUcal: the need for the cruise to balance the im- mense Soviet force bulld·up in what are called Central Euro- pean "theater" weapons. The polltical factor, which leaves U.S. NATO allies feeling victimized by super.power s trategic arms agree- m e n t s (SALT), is bad enough for We s t Germ any, Eneland, France and lesser NATO allies. But truly critical to the future independence of Western Europe, these middle-level powers feel. is the necessity for NATO to compensate for the So- viet buildup. Otherwise an ex- plosive crisis within NATO seems inevitable. Even though the much- dlscuased medlum·range cruise missile has not yet even been tested or officially asked for by NATO, the West Europeans perceive it as a heaven·sent answer for Soviet proliferation of a fantastic array of new weapons systems being produced in daz- zling quanUUes. TO <iRASP the awesome momentum of this buildup, con· sider these facts brought together in a recently declassified NATO study· In the four years ending last December, largely for Central Europe, the Soviet Union has produced 13,850 front·line battle tanks, including the newest T ·72 model, agaJnst U.S. production of 2,345; 6,500 long-range artillery pieces. the latest or which (a 155·mill.imeter> Is believed capa- ble of firing a nuclear explosive. as against 800 in the U.S.; 5,500 fighter aircraft (including the third generation MIG·27 now ap- pearing at a l,OOO·a-year rate > against2,MO U.S. fighters European memberJ or NATO -particularly the British and West Germans have been eye· ing the ground-launched crui~e Mailbox missile as pUhll)S the Only ~·· ble counter to WI immense So- tet buJld~ln Central~pe. Indeed, both LorUton and Bonn <and the French only 1U1btb' Jest so) perc ve ln tho presumabl.t: hard-to-aboOt-doWn cl'Ulst iNI slle a partlal answer to •Utl1 I.ft· creased Soviet .. theater'' firepower, wtth tta tblck anti. aircraft de!enses, aDd to the new SS·20 lntermedfate-ranae mobile balUstlc mla5Ue. "LONDON wanta a &l"OUDd· launched crul1e of 2,000 kllometen (about 1,200 mites>, the French and Germana about 1,500 kilometers," one NATO ex· pert U>ld ua. "That would bring Westem Ruasla, where the SS.20 is believed most deployable, within range." But pressed by Moscow, the U.S. Is perceived here to have tentatively a1reed to a 600- kilometer range limit. Wltb hleh government officials in London, Paris and Bonn recelvinc their first thorough briefing on these TBE CUTER admlnistration tielltUea these Europep fears. Gelb. accoi'cllill U> experts here, Js eay&q that the bao on a 600- fl~ kilometer range will last on· y three years ("Just a moratorium"). The NATO ex- perts count.er privately tbat If the European appeal ls touah enouab, Mr. Carter wlll be tom· pelled to ease the JlOn·transfer and nort-circ um ven tlon language. Few here predict that the huge Soviet buildup of Central Euro- ~an mlUtary p0wer thHatena suddea attack. Tbe fear la dll· re.rent: tbat poUUca depe.ada on perceptlona 1ad that, with Warsaw Pact military power clearly roovlng ao far Ahead of NATO'I, tbo Sovleta are now perceived aa approacblna tho Jciod of superiority that could in· senalblY lead West.ml E~ to bucklo to SOvlot economic and polltiul pressures. That 11 the answer to th• recur- rinl Queation of "wbyu: why 11 Mo:icow •pendin, 14 percent of ila groa1 naUonal product on arm• (more than twice the U.S. rate) and wby bu it& conven- tional firepower ln Central Europe almost d<M.ll>*l in the paattour years? AS THE Europeans see it, the answer 11 eventual brutalization of Europe by stockpiled mllttary power .skillfUlly manipulated tor polltl~al and economic ends. This 11 ~ beut of the arp. mtnt now be@Uni up between Europe and Jl~ Carter. SeH-governm~nt Needs Self-discipliJie To the Editor. It appears the scare of the 1973 oil embargo has thorouebly dis· sipated from most minds. The apathy and disconcern or the average American seems stead· faat. It appears Americans re· fuse to realize the gravity of the future because present energy requirements are so convenient· ly met. , Americans have an undisputed love affair with automobiles. Since the 1973 embargo, the price of gasoline on the retail level has doubled, yet consumption has in· creased. not decreased or even stabilized . As a s ymbol of Americana, nothing seems to surpass the automobile. It signifies the freedom of in dividual movement so cherished by Americans. public forums were held on Nov. 14. The commission couldn't come up with any valid reason for existence other tbart to help ratify the ERA (whlcb they· deny; however. lt ls so stated in ·the ata~cbamrofSOW. and they · tbou1ht that the women of Orange O:>unty would 1i•e them a purpose and some useful ac- tivity. The meeUnes were wotl publlclud and promoted. There were approximately 30 women in attendance at the momlnlt meet· ing, with a two-to-one ratio ln favor of disbandlnlt SOW. It was pointed out that every need or concern that was dlacU1sed ts already betn1 handled by at least one or more county acenci~ (ex· cept for federally funded child care day centers which the W · payers. are acalnst and do not need the ema burden). IT IS atsa a problem fot" the voter. Does be note a shlft In the official'• position -on~e a coo· servatlve, now a Jlberal or vice versa? Can tho citUen depend on the candidate adherlnJ to any promi1ed Polltion? How far has the elected official, as time for re-election draws near. strayed from the promised course? Shall we solve the problem by te·electlng no one! And shall we then Jose the service of the strong person who adheres to his announced principles? Or sllall we take a chance oo a newcomer whose record ls a blank paae ! . As a voter carefUlly measur~ the candidate! Take nothing for granted. MARYSCOTr Seel411 Sftlirlt9 To the Editor; The onbr way to bring Socl:::l Security pensions In line with the cost of Uvtng and to insure that It is properly funded is to put J'Oliti· cians on Soclal Security. 'Ibey have voted themselves mqch laraer pension• under dlff erent pro1rams. 1lt they are wealthy, they don t need the larg<? penslol'lS. lf they aren·t, let U>em llve on the same dole that others tlveon. b It Is populaf to give moSS«!Y away, but It tso·t popular to fund pro1rama beca e-it meaps rais-ins taxes. If their own penslOM were the same u oth~ra, they might be more interested in tying it to ttie co:it of U ving and rundlna it. JAMES W. BO~DING gasoline. or the lGpercent. we use for home comforts. will not beJp mllch in the overall ener1y sav- h1g1. And btlslnesa and industry cutbacks wm make iood& scarce and more expensive ~nd cause more job losses. IF HE is going to veto any enerey bill that ts ''unfair'. to~. he should veto bis newly created energy agency that costa us $10.6 bllllon ol ~r tax dollars. lt also hinders Q(ir domestic producUon that makes us Import more oil and gas that hurts our economy. Or he could be "f•lrer .. to '1.s by lowering the SO percent r.ax we now payon energy instead or adding new tues with bis ~ertY plan. Why is it "raJrer·· to pay •tax oo a produc~ tban for the pro- duct, or a "rip.off .. to the aovena- ment inatead of the producer! But he does no admlt that America·, security la threatened by this lack of domesUc enerp. Maybe the man ii' finally leam- inlt whnt most Americans have lon1tknown GOLDIE JOSEPH 7 - Saddle Afteraoo .N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 10, NO. 327, 4 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1977 TEN CENTS DA A'ccused of Bovall ,Case. TaDtpEring By MICHAEL PASKEVICR °'*DMl'"*''Yff Attorneys for four men under a Grand Jury indictment in the gangland-style killing of Stephen John Bovan of Fountain Valley charged the District Attorney's Office with "witness tampering" Tuesday, during a day-long series of legal maneuvers ID Harbor Municipal Court It was another twist ID the already bizarre murder ~d con· splracy caae lnvolvlnt etcht persons with alleged llnkl to East Coast mobsters and the Hare Krishna reu,1ous sect. After Deputy District Attorney Dave Carter failed in a motion to have Municipal Court Judie Selim Franklin dlamisa himself on grounds of prejudice, defepse attorneys began stlll-unresol\<ed efforts to keep the hearing at the municipal court level. Late Tuesday. defense at· torney1 claimed that prosecutors "arrested" a key wttnesa last week and detained blm for near· ly 10 tioun before releulnc him. The defense claims the arrest ot Frank RoAi-wu a premeditat- ed effort to coerce him Into teati· t)'ing against their clients. Rossi, who has beeD &ranted immunity from prosecution. did Huge Na~cotics Ring ,Smashed By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Ol Ille o.11, Pl ... St4111 Federal narcotics agents stnk· ing in downtown Huntington Beach and Seattle. Wash .. ar· rested the last two men indicted in connection with an alleged multi-million dollar We st Coast marijuana distribution ring Tuesday mght. The U.S. Justice Department had already taken unprecedent- Tlae Wag It Was ed action against one of the al- leged principals, selting nearly a half-million dollars worth of Buena Park real estate. Authorities said today it was confiscated under provisions of the federal Organized Crime Control Act because it was al· legedly purchued with funds from drug trafficking. Agent Joe Flanders of the U.S. Department, of Drug Enforce- Lomarena Elementary School kindergarteners saw and heard the way the first Thanksgiving really was with the help of Mrs. Thomas Hay whose ancestor~ came over on the Mayflower. In this picture, Mrs. Hay readS a story about the first Thanksgiving to her daughter Corrie, s, and Roberts Abele, 5, holding musket. Mrs. Hay held the youngsters spellbound as she talked about the original holiday and displayed her antique dolls. Judge Rejects Bait ·Of o ·iedFicb Rrobe ment, said it is the fint time the statute has ever been used in California. Agent F1anders said the bulk of the marijuana involved was landed via a 24-foot Marauder yacht at various points in Orange County including Huntington Beach and sold in SeaWe. "The bulk or it was distributed in Seattle, but there was some <See DRUGS, Pate A2> • Argentina Rocked by Earthq_uake BUENOS AIRES. Ar1entina <AP) -A stron• earthquake l'O<!ked west.em Arpntlna earl1 today, killlDI at least 50 people and demollebina numel'OQI build· lngs, the govemment tald. The quake, which also injured hundreds of people, many seriously, st.ruck hardest near San Juan, a wine trowing and agricultural city of 500,000 locat· ed 800 miles northwest of Buenos Aires near the Chilean border. The tremors were felt in Buenos Aires as well as acl'OIS the borders in Chile, Brasil and Peru. No serious damage or casualties were reported in the other countries. The official news agency Telam said 80 percent of the dwellings in rural communities on the out.skirts of San Juan were demolished when the quake bit at 6:28 a.m. C1 :28PST). Most dwell· inga were of adobe or flimsy materials. The heaviest dam ace and most casualties occurred in Caucete, a rural town of 30,000 located 18 miles northwest of San Juan. Telam1aid. The government ordered el1)ergency tllgbta of medical supplies into the affected prov· ince. Planes were diverted to smaller fields in the area because the quake cracked the San Juan airport runway. The National Meteorotogtc._1 Institute in Buenos Aires said measuring needles on its seismological instruments "jumped off the paper .. because <See QUAKE. PHe AU I El 'f oro Girl Hit &y€HP .. UU,l~ed testify aplnst ihe four defen· danta last week before the Oraqe County Grand Jury. Rossi and Anthony Marone Sr., the father of one ()f the def en· dant.a, had been subpoenaed to appear ln court Tuesday but neither showed up. This prompt· ed attorney Phillip DeMasaa to claim the two r;en had been pre· ssured by the l!ftJtrict Attomey'a OfficeintonotappearlnJt. Sehool Spirit. l>lltrlct Attorney Carter branded tbh cbar'e as "ludicrous," addtn1 that Tueeday•a preliminary hearinc at the municipal court level waa unneccessary because of recent Grand Jury indictments aialnst the eight defendants, four of who~ remain at larae. D11trlct Attomey Catter at· tempted to "dlacharge" defen· danu Alex§der Kulik, Anthooy The whole school turned out 'Tuesday•for Corona del Mar Hieb School's jog-a-thou and senior Dan Brown, despite disability that requires him to use crutches was no exceptloo. He covered 20 laps in the event designed to raise funds for student ac· Marone Jr., Raymond R•coanct Jerry Peter Fiori in an etfort to put the case at the Superior Court level. ' Traditionally, a Grand Jury in· dictment takes precedence over municipal court charges. Defense attorneys ar1ued that the preliminary heartn1 ta needed to allow crou- examination of wltnes.ses and to <SeeBOVAN, P11e2> A:I OAl y PILOT. • 88 ke? . Sonic Boom Shake. Coaat ' A thunderous sonic boom slammed Orance County at 4 p. m Tuesday, seltin& oft womed calla to police ac•aciea, HUNTINGTON BEACH Civil Defense Director Georae Tbyden aaJd the big kaboom J~t had to be a sonic ono and \he Cal-Teeb Seismological Laboratory ln Puadena aaid no quakes were recorded anywhere on the West Coast. El Toro MCAS spokesmen said they checked and could confirm no high-flyine military aircraft over the Oranae Coast but would continue lnvesligaUng today. SOME IDGH ALTITUDE vapor trails, however, had been noted over the Ortinge Coast area sMrtly before the sonic boom shook the area. Visitor to · Irvine Wounded by Guard A M aaaachu.setts man visiting friends in Irvine was wounded by mistake by a security guard who fired a 1bot in the dark at another man Tuesday, police reported. Brad Mcindoe, 21, was in satllfactory condition today at Tustin Community Hospital after undergoin1 sur1ery to remove bullet fragments from his liver and lung. Mcindoe was shot through the back as he 1tood by his car, ap· parently unaware of an alterca· lion going on behind him. Police arrested the security guard, Walter J . Richardson, Z7, whet lives ln a temporary house trailer at the construction site. at Irvine Boulevard and Culver Drive, site of the incident. Richardson was booked into Oranie County Jail on a charge of aaaault with a deadly weapon. According to witnesses, Richardson was in his trailer talking with Mother man when Copter Crash In Burbank OaimsTwo BURBANK CAP> -A helicopter that spun out of con· trol ·and crashed into the back yard of a home has killed two people, police say. Burbank police identified the vicUms of the crash Tuesday as pilot Bruce Cowie, 29, or Canyon Country, formerly or Irvine and passenger Richard Hutson, 35, oC Northridge. Witnesses saJd the helicopter, whlcb belonged to the Loa Angeles Helicopter Service and had taken otr from Hollywood· Burbank Airport, was flying at between 800 and 1,000 feet mak· ing slow turns. "Suddenly it pitched downward," police Sgt. James Mula said, "and when it 1ot down to about 500 feet, the tall rotor separated at which lime it went into a violentapin and crashed." Mula said the helicopter came down clear ol any bull dings in the yard, and no other injuries were reported. Cause of the crash was under investigation. Refugees Halted DARWIN, Australia (AP> The mayor or Darwin demanded• Wednesday that the federal gov- ernment act to halt the flow of Vietnamese refugee boats into this northern port city. he heard banging on the walls outside. They said he went out to in· vestigate, was struck with a two- by-four plank, went back inside and got his .22-caliber revolver and fired a single shot toward the fleeing back of the man who hit him. Police said the shot missed the ma{l, Michael Pavlisko, a 20- year-old cook they described as a transient, and instead hit Mcln· doe. Pavlisko also was arrested, charged with assault and bat· tery. Orange County jailers said Richardson was held on $10,000 bail, Pavliskoon $150 bail. I',... Page Al BOVAN ••• preserve testimony from wil· nesses who might be harmed or nee the area. Judge Franklin will rule on the district attorney's "dlacbar1e" motion at a 3 p.m. Monday hear· ing, scheduled just one hour after the four men are due in Orange County Superior Court for a similar hearing. The complex legal battles st.em from the Oct. 22 shooting death of Bovan, a 36-year-old Fountain Valley resident. He was shot nine times as he was leaving the El Ranchito restaurant in Newport Beach. According to court records, de- fendant Fiori has admitted to be· ing tbe triuerman in Bovan'• death. Fiori, a relocated federal witness, also faces drug charges following bis arrest in Costa Mesa. The only defendant free on $750,000 bail is Kulik, the 28- year-old head of a Newport Beach firm known as Pruadam. Distributors, Inc. He also faces separate drug charges ofter be was arrestedJn Miasion Vie)o, al- legedly in possession of 1.1 pounds of heroin. Fro.a Page Al HINSHAW. • ly a one year jail term ordered after his conviction on further criminal charges related to b.la il- legal use of county manpower and materials while serviDS as county assessor and runnin& for Congress in 1971. F,....P ... A~ DRUGS ••• diltrlbut.ed 1n Or&Qle County," be aaJd . Jnv•U,ators wbo obtained a f tderal srand Jury indlctment In Loi ADI 1 aceu1e the 1t& men one cUJTenU)' bi federal priloD on a previous ovcoUca aentence -ol operaUn1 between June ~ 1973 and December of la1t year. "They 'were alleaedly brinCinl. in 1,000 pounds a roonth from Mexico and that's only for the period In the indictment. We \hlnk they were lo buaineu for • lot lon1er than \hat," Flanders said. Charged in the case are: -Rudy Guerrero, 48, of 914 Pecan Ave., Huntington Beach. -William J . Donnelly, 39, of Seattle. -David C. ChrUUan, 48, of Downey. -Auaust Palmeri, 47, of Oran1e. -Roger L . Nelson, .CJ, of Oran1e. -Keith A. Kidd, 42, who ls cur- rently serving a drua·related federal prison term at the minimum security prison in Pleasanton, near San Francisco. All are charged in the indict· ment with J>O$Session and db- tribution of marijuana and con· spiracy to possess and distribute marijuana. Ball for Christian, whose eight commercial lots and one reaiden· tlal lot in Buena Park are 'being held by the government, ia set at $35,000, Agent Flanders said. Bail for Guerrero, who was ar- rested Tuesday night In Hunt- ington Beach, and Donnelly, who waa arrested in Seattle, is $10,000, he added. Palmeri's bail is $25,000; Nelson's $15,000; and $10,000 ball was set tor Kidd Just for good measure, although he ls safely confined and unable to skip out of Pleasanton, DEA agents said. Guerrero and Donnelly were expected to be arraiped today in Los Aneeles and Seattle on the 14-count indictment oamin1 all six codefendants. Investigators said it was audits of business records that led to the defendants. . "All ol them are roofers," Agent Flanders said. "But their business records showed ~Y were losing money whlle · they were buyine real estaie and a yacht." The value of Christian's Buena Park property ls estimat- ed at $450,000. After evaluating the 10-year- old Organized Crime Control Act federal attorneys and the ~ jury ordered Christian's land seized last Friday. Tqxi Woman Going Home JACKSON, TeM. (AP) -The daughter of a SS- year-old California woman who traveled to Jackaon by taxicab says she has persuaded her mother to return home. - Diane Bernal said her mother, Jean Caren..: left for their home ln :santa Maria, on Tuesday, leav- ing behind her black poo- dle, DucheJI. Mre. Bernal reftned to say how ber mother wu traveling. "I know she'll go home because I b,ave her dot,'' said Mn. Bernal, wbo ob- tained a court order pre- venUnc Black and White Cab Company of Santa Marla from takina Mrs. Caren any farther on her trip to New York. Thanksgiving Observed By OUVE BARLEY ... Deify .......... Thankaglvlna ia a time for ~­ jo)'inl bli dinners and nlaxin1 in front of TV lootball eames alon1 ~ Oranp Coast. but resi- dents aay the hollday allO •Un ue f eellnp ot no1taJ1la, eharlna '"4 gratitude. Homeslcleneu le common amoni tbe residents of the El, OflAHOI COMT se DAILY PILOT Toro Marine Base, but Maj. Ruth Polaski said the base bad taken steps to alleviate the pan1a. Sbe said this year M arinea will be able to talk Jone·diatance on the telephone free for eeveu minutes to almost any spot ln th• United States. Mn. Delma Val•n~uela. welfare secretary ot the Salva.. tton Anny in Oranget CM!ity, said her office tries to fUl .not.her type of hol1dq need bY clletribut· ,,...... Pqe'AJ QUAKE .... • .EqlenR~e A~ddent Bemused tow truck driver contemplates damage to pair of high-priced autos following crash Tuesday afternoon in ·Newport Beach. Accident took place about 12 :30 p.m. in the 900 block of West Coast • Highway. Police said no one was injured in the accident. The Porsche was driven by Charles Patterson, 49, Newport Beach, according to police reports. His car slid under the parked Cadillac owned by Giltspur Exhibits of Garden Grove. The · · cause of the crash is under investigation. Five Men Indicted On LA Crime Raps f'ro• Page AJ JUDGE ••. board level clearly led to Hicks displaying prejudice during the investigation that led to the ln· ' dictment. A Los Angeles federal grand jury indicted five reported or- ganized crime figures Tuesday, one of whom was arrested in Orange County, on char1es of at- tempting to extort $20,000 from Loa An1eles pomo1raphers. An FBI spokesman said today Michael Anthony Rlzzltello, 50, ol Canoga Park, wu arreated Tues- day at an undisclosed Orange County locat.ion. He said Rizzitello, also known as Mike Rizzi, juat happened to be in the county when the FBI learned ol his whereaboutl. The spokesman said no other Orange County connection is believed to be involved in the case, whlch reportedly centered on a dummy porno operaUon set up by the FBI. Named ln the indictment. ln addition to Riultello, were Jack LoCicero, 65, of Hollywood, and James "Jimmy the Wea.el" Fratianno, 64, of the Sao Fran· ciaco area. All tbr" were named by the FBI as rankln1 leaden ot the Mafia ln California. Also indicted on charges ot ln- terf ering with commerce by threats and conspiracy were Thomas Ricciardi, 46, ot Canoea Park and Dominic Raffone, 32, formerly of Canoga Park and now possibly in Brooklyn, N. Y. FBI agents said they are sWl seeking Fratianno, Raffone and Ricciardi. The spokesman said today that as far as be knows none of the suspects had previously been given new identities and re. localed in turn for testifying against Malla fi1ure1 ln the E¥t. One suspect in the murder or Stephen Jobn Bovan on Oct. 22 in ~ewport Beach was later report- ed to be such a relocated wltnesa. The cases are not believed to be related. .The investigation that led to Tuesday's indictments reported· ly began ln March, 1976 and con· eluded in September of that year after the men reportedly trieato · shake clown the FBI'• dummy opera Um. Judge Schwab agreed and ap- pointed the attorney general's of- fice to take over the prosecution chores. Diedrich, 53, Anthony, 41, financial consultant Gene Conrad, 43, and Dr. William Kott, SS, face trial on charges of violat- ing state political campaign and financial disclosure laws. . The grand jury is now believed to be investteatina the possibility or allegedly Ulegal ac- tions in connecllon with the Board of Supervisors declaloa in ' 1973 to remove 2,200 acres ift r An a beitn HI Ile from 'n agricultural preserve and make : the land available for develop-; ment. Bandit Hunted MENOOCINO CAP) -> Authorities were acourin' forest land north of here today tor a .. man eought in eonnecUon with ; the robbery of a Bank of America branch of $1,SOOTuesday. ! I I .. < , Fnm AP Dtapatdlel Two Weit. German lealalatora aMou.nced they are p~in8 Etyptjan president Aawar Sadat and hraC,U Prime Mlhlater Meaabem BeelD as joint candldat.elfor the 1978 Novel Peace Prize. Prime Minlater lleaabem Begla as joint candidates , for tbe 1'18 Nobel Peace Prize. The spopaon are Kart Jans and Jaer•ea Moellemua of the smaller Free Democratic Party in the rulln8 left-liberal coalition. Both are mem· bera of the Houff'• Foreign Affain Committee. They said they made the proposal to honor the · two statesmen 'a effor\a to ''end the escalati.Gn of hate and violence and aeek ... peaceful coexistence at one of the flre-spota of world politics." • Canl Lee Gallley aays her wedding m Ralei1h, N.C. wlll be a large aUair because she is "the first girl in the family to 1et married." Tbel'e may be another reason that has more to do with the bride· LOS MG L~ CAP)-~·b new lawt b"ave prompted adult b<>Okatore owpen to )Uk "kiddy porn" from open shelves, the aexual abuse of children continues undercround ln Cillfomla, law enforct1ment.officlal111ay. "Child pomoeraphy ta no lonier !Ylslble on the adult booUhelves of San Dief~ County.'' Paul Roblnson of the San. t>'ego d~ct .att.omey's office told a hearing Tuesday before the A.Uembly Coin· mlttee on Criinlnal Justlc&. ..If lt's belnf sold, lt's under the counter or out in the back seat of cars." " / STATE DEPUTY ATl'ORNE GENERAL AJ; Knudsen said duriJll a bearing r~ that "ktddy porn'' bas not been sold ol>C!QlJ In the atate sinct the legislature'• enactment -eatller thlJ year or two Jaws makln1tM use of chUdrenlD ohlcene material alelony. " · But AINt.a.nt Attomey General Ario Smith said four producers in San Franclaco and 12 prOducera in Los Anieles are continulna to mate "kiddy Pol11'' films, mq&ilne or other explicit material. groom 'a family. Miss Gainey, 24, will ( ) be married Dec. 17 to Floleer Claildrftl "There ls no question that California h• heel) and remains the center ol distribution of pomo- graphic rllms involving children," Smith 1aid. " '• I '· PEOPLE Scott Carter Stapleton, , _ 26. He is the son or Rutb ---------Carter Stapleton, which makes him Pre&ldent Carter'• nephew. An invitation bas gone to the White House, Mias Gainey says, but ••we won't be certain until 24 or 48 hours before the wedding" whether the firsl family will be able to attend. • Sen. John L McClellan, the law-and-order ad· vocate who lathered most or the major anti-crime legislation of recent years, ls leaving the Senate after hla cur· rent term. McClellan, an Arkansas Democrat, announced that he will not seek re-election next year. "There la a proper time to aspire, a time to achieve, and a time to retire," said the 81-year· old McClellan, who was elected to the SenJte in 19'2 alter two terms as a congressman. . He has had health problems this year and bu been forced to slow down. • "John l'Enfer" (John of Hell>, a dreamlike novel set in a disintegrating Manhattan inferno, narrowly won the Prix Goncourt, France's most prestigious annual literary award. The award brings 32-year-old aulhor Dldler De· coin a symbolic cash prize of 50 francs ($10.45) but assures the novel months on the French best-seller list and sales or around 500,000 copies. The Goncourt Academy, meetin1 as usual ln a fa1hionable Paris restaurant, was split evenly 5·lb·5 between Decoin 's novel and Antollle Malllet's "Cordes de Bois" (Ropes of Wood.) The deciding vote of the chairman, veteran novelist Rene Baaln, gave tbe award to Deco in. • "Jl wasn't a coincidence," says Prtnce11 Mar1aret, younger 1ister of Britain's Queea Ellubedl D, that she accepted a marriaee proposal !tom bflr now-est.ranged husband the day she learned her first love planned to marry another woman. The princess, In December's Ladles' Home Journal, said a letter describlnt Group Capl. Peter TownMD4'a marrlue plans arrived the same day she agreed to be Antony Arm1tron1· Jones' wife. "I didn't really want to get married.'i she said. •'Why did I? Because Tony asked me. He \VU such a nice person ln those days. He undentood my Job and pushed me to do things. In a way, he introduced me to a new world." The couple, wed in 1960, announced last March they had separated. • Who says Georfian Jlmmy Carter doesn't get along well with Congress? He's been mannine one of the doors to the Hou1e cbamber for 11 yearl and getting alongjustflne. ' During the 197& prealdenUal campalp, Carter the doorman met Carter the candidate and said, "I'm Jimmy Carter, too." They shook bands and parted ways and now they work at opposite end• of Pennsylvania Avenue. .. . ., . Elalae Brown, who led the Black Panther Party Crom an era of iun·brandlshinC militancy to one of community involvement and PollUcal influence ln Oakland, resltned as party chalrpenon. .. " . ., .... ,1· Lt•f_T. ll Ms. Brown, who ran the Pant.hen durlnc party co· founder Duey Newton's 2'1i·year ,xne In CUba, said that "there co~e• a time In each ure that ls a kind of .tumlnl polnt. •. My mental and pbyslcall strength, alter 10 years, were waniq, ln !act nearly collapsing." There had beeq speculation about. an ideological aplit l>etween N wton and M1. Brown because ol he~ conspicuous ablerlce at Nefrt.on's prellmlnary hearias 011 m der and assault charca. But both denied that a rift uilted and satd they temflne4c&oedrltnda. ,. Two unidentified youngsters bearing flowers walk on stage to kneeling singer Tony Orlando in the opening moments of his first show in San Carlos since retire· ment three months ago. ' THEHEAIUNG WASCAU.BDtojudget.beim· pact of the new laws and detl!rmlne if furthet' legislation ls needed. North · Quake M9derate WILLITS CAP> A moderate, rolling earth· quake broke windows, toppled chimneys and frightened residents in this small Northern California cooimunity, officials said. Residents reported at least six distinct af· tersbocka dunng the predawn hours today but the · M'ndocino County sheriff's orfice said it had no re- Emergency Landing Traveler Strips, Airplane Return8 SAN JOSE CAP) -An airliner nlade an emergen· cy return t.o San Jose Municipal Airport after a screaming passenger stripped off bis clothes, sprint· ed down the aisle and beJ&n kickln1 in the cockpit door, authorities said today. The man was taken tn---------- to custody by alrpo..t takeoff' and requested security euards late imtnediate clearance for Tues~ay afternoon after landing. Pacific Southwest "Hesaidanindividual Airline Fliabt 264 lb Los was trying to break in Angeles landed with 1.36 the cockpit door,'' Pac· passeneers on board ciorettisaid. shortly after takeoff. "A stewardess said he He was identified by took orr his clothes, ran authoritles as Haten to the cabin yelling and Fawal, 37, a medical screaming and started doctor from Lebanon, kicking " Paccioretti who they said was ap· added. '"He bent the parently here visiting hinges on the door." friends or relatives. HE SAID WHEN the ACTING SECUBIT~ plane landed Fawal was ch~ef trfl~e Paccloretts wearing only a "jock. said the pilot reported an Everything else came emergency Just after off .. The nat!on·s la~ commuter llrlln• now offm NEW addtttonll Mnke to PALOMAR and SAN DIEGO 1t1rtJng December 4th 11 well as fr9QUtnt 1Ugbtl to Los Angel11. Oxnard. and Santa Barbara • Now JOU can f1,y the Goldtn Wiit on dtpenctablt OIH&vllland twin Ottera and th• new 30 p1111nge.r SHORTS 330 Wide Body afrcraft. Priority hcklgl 5el"Ylc. Is 1t10 1valtabl1 on all Golden w..t flights and on connecting "'*r alrJlnu to many U.S. dutlnltJons. Contact your Travel Agent or OOLDEN WEST AIRLINES. • ports of damages or injuries. No injuries were reported Tuesday afternoon in the temblor, which the Unt1'ersity of Calllomla seismograph reciltered as 5on the Richter Seate. LOS ANGELJ!;S (AP) -Friends of slain r«lt music promoter Steve Wolf areofferint a $50,000 r~ ward for infonnaUon leadin1 to the arrest and con- viction ol hls killers. , · Wolf, 34, was shot-------...... Monday mornln1 when he[ .~~~TE' J was awakened by the ~i.tI sound of intruders in bis ---------Sherman Oaks hlllside home. He died in sur1ery 21,.. hours later at Riverside Hospital. a .... ap Vfetl ... 'l•J•red' OAKLAND CAP) -An expert witness has dls· puled the testimony of two doctors who gave the Chowchilla kidnap victims a clean blll of bealtb hours after their ordeal. Dr. 0 . Bruce Dickerson insisted on the witness stand Tuesday that bus driver Ed Rav and 2R children suffered bodily lnjury u a result of their 161h·hour burial In a van. The injuri~s. he said, were the effects of heat ex.haustiqn. Odlea11 Trip Prot~1ted . LONG BEACH (AP) -Ab0ut2C)"opponentl of the Chilean military governmat picketed in front or Chy Hall here to protest a Loni Beuh sister city delegation's trip w Valparaiso, Cli.De. The protesters• si10~ accused Augusto Pinochet's reatme ot torture and of violation of human rights. The picket.en urged the City CoUncU Tuesday not to approve public funds to financ. the trip. Sa Conversion Hits Low-cost Housing Apartments -last refuge for those unable to buy dwelling places in south Orfnge County-are apparently an endangered species in Mission Viejo. Total Concepts Corp. of Torrance, owners of the Casa Loma Apartments at 25891 Marguerite Parkway, have ap- plied to the county for permission to convert the dwellings to condominiums. We don't think the permission should be issued. The Casa Loma f acilltles are the only ap.artments in Mission Viejo. Their conversion to condominiums un· doubtedly would almost double the monthly cost of living in the units. That spells blgtroubleformany, ifnotmost,ofthe present tenants. Total Concepts bas told Casa Loma residents that they will have an option to buy under the conversion process, but most residents say they will not be able to afford the monthly increase m costs. It's obvious that the proposed conversion would deny an economic segment of our population the right to live in Mission Viejo. In an age of increasing economic op- portunities for all groups, this is bad policy. If the community is not to be closed to middle-income families, the county planning commission should deny the condominium conversion permit. Was This Necessary? The City of Irvine spent about $4,200 to send 15 city of· ficials to the 1977-78 League of California Cities conference held last September in San 1''ranc1sco, a city report re- veals. Four city councilmen, five city commissioners and six city administrators attended. That's a lot of municipal baggage to pack for one conf ercnce. Although the league conference 1s a n important one to mun,cipalities, there is a question about whether Irvine needed as many as 15 people to get its points across and as- sure adequate coverage of key sessions. The City of Newport Beach, for example, which represents about half again as many people as does Irvine, sent 12delegates. Even that number probably is excessive Although the Irvine junket cost taxpayers a small amount considering the entire city budget, sensitivity to the load of property taxpayers should have dictated a minimal representation. Good Idea, Wrong Site Last week, Mission Viejo Municipal Advisory Council (MAC) members endorsed a senior citizen center in Sad- dleback Valley. The MAC members expressed concern, however, over the proposeti location of the center-the Casa del Sol private retirement community in Mission Viejo. Council members feared that gates surrounding the private community might make some area senior citizens apprehensive about gaining entry to the center. Especially 1f they were interrogated by a guard prior w entering. The MAC's concern has some validity. While the Casa dcl Sol Homeowners Association has agreed to provide a 15-acresite for the center at no charge, the question i~, would the center be as easily accessible as it should be to all Saddleback Valley seniors. While the construction of a senior center would ob· viously enhance the facilities already enjoyed by Casa del Sol residents, it might not be such a good deal for those who live outside the compound. The county -the coordinating governmental entity for the project -should look at possible a)ternative sites that would be easily accessible to all v~Uey senior citizens before settling on the site in question. • Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Pally Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is Invited. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321. Boyd/ Iron Hand ByL.M.BOYD Germany's "Man with the Iron Hand" was not Bismarck, Kaiser Wllhelm or Adolf lfitler. He was Goetz von Berlichingen of Hellbronn, a 16th century knight. He was one of the flrst I wearers of a prosthesis, an iron hand wl(h movable fin1ers which replaced a I hand he'd lost in a batUe. It's I wrlt that he smashed a lot of tavern tables with that lron hand when innkeepers were l 11low to brin1 wine. Median price or a newly I built home in 1970· $23,.COO. Median price today: '50,000. Seven years ago, atrnost half the tamlU• Jn countfy could afford to buy oew houses. Today. only about a fourthcan. • Seoaibie lot, those :East ln· dlan1. A catatn town c:toelt m Indrn a lways strikes the hour twice so that listeners who didn't keep CO\lllt the first time can do so the second Reason you don't see cricket played around here, it's contended, is Americans can't upderstand any game wherein the batter wears gloves and the fielders don't . BRUSSEL.5 -The real eit· planation of Western Europe's rlslnl fears of U .S.-imposed llmlts on NATO use of around· launched cruise missiles b more mllltary than poliUcal: the need for the cruise to balance the im· mense Soviet rorce bulld·l,U) in what are called Central Euro· pean "theater" weapons. The political factor, wh!ch leav~a U.S. NATO allies feeling vlctlmfzed by super-power s trategic arms agree· m e n t s <SALT>, ls bad e nough Cor West Germany. England . France and lesser NATO allies. But truly critical to the future independence of Western Europe, these middle-level powers feel, is the necessity for NATO to compensate for the So· viet buildup. Otherwise an ex· plosive crisis within NATO seems inevitable. Even though the tn uch- dlscussed medium-range cruise missile has not yet even been · tested or orticially asked for by NATO, the West Europeans perceive it as a heaven-sent answer tor Soviet proliferation of a fantastic array of new weapons systems being produced ln daz· zling quantities. TO GRASP the awesome momentum of this buildup, con· sider these facts brought together in a recently dee I asslfted NATO study: In the four years ending last December, largely for Central Europe, the Soviet Union bas produced 13,850 front-line battle tanks, including the newest T-72 model, against U.S. production of 2,345 ; 6,500 long.range artillery pieces. the latest of which <a 155-millimeter> is believed capa- ble or firing a nuclear explosive, as against~ in the U.S.; 5,500 fighter aircraft (including the third generation MIG·27 now ap· pearing at a 1,000-a-year rate l against2.~ U.S. fighters. European members of NATO particularly the British and West Germans -have been eye· ing the ground-launched cruise -Mailbox mlseile perhaps tho only possi· ble counter to thll Immense So- iet build~ln Cenll'al Europe. Indeed, both London and Bonn • (and the ~ti only allghUy 1"5 so) j>erceive in the presumabbt hard-to-shoot-down cruise mll· slle a partial answer to vastly ln· cre1ued Sovlet "theater" ficepower, wlth it.a thick anti· aircraft defenses, and to the new SS·20 intennedJate•ran•e moblle ballisUc miulle "LONDON wants a &round· launched cruise or 2,000 kilometers (about 1,200 mlles>. the French and Germans about 1,500 kilometers," one NATO ex- pert told us. ''That would brin1 Western Russia, where the SS.20 is believed most deployable, within range." But pressed by Moscow, the U.S. is percelvcd here to have tentatively agreed to a 600- kilomet.er range limit. With hiah government officials in London, Paris and Bonn receiving their first thorough briefing on these classllled matt only l11t week (by Leslie c;.Jb, No. \ State Department adviser on S~T), there 11 no i!oub at NATO bead quarters that only a baf'd.Une European appeal mtaht now deflect President Carter from tho a1reement tie seems wedded to: no transfer of u.s.•cnuse missile technology to the Europeens and · no ••circumvention" permltUnc deployment of medi\lm•nnge cruise mlsslles In Western Europe. THE CARTER admu\lsltation belittles these European fears. Gelb, according to experts here. ls saylng that the ban on a IOO- plus kilomeler range will last on· ly three years <''just a moratorium").· The NATO ex· perts cowiter privately that if the European appeal ls toup enough, Mr. Carter will be corn pelled to ease the non-transfer and non-circum1rent1on language.• Few here predict that the huge Soviet buildup or Central Euro· pean mllltaey ~wer threatens sudden attack. The feat li dJf. ferent: that polltlcs depends on perooptlons and that, with WBraatl Pac' milltary power clearly•movlna so for aheod of NATO'•• the Soviets .... now J)ercelved at approachJng ttie kind of 1u1>0rlorlty a.hat could ln· senslblY lead Western Europe to buckle to SOviet ecOQomlc and polltlcal pressures. That lS the answer to tbe recur· ring quest!&n or .. why .. : why ls Moscow s~nding 14 per~nt of 1ta gross national proetuct on arms <more th'1' twice the U.S rate> and why has tu conven- Uo n a 1 firep()wer ln Central Europe almost doubled In the past four years? AS THE Europeans aee it, the answer Ls eventual brutalization of Europe by alockpilcd mllltary power akillf ully manipulated for political and ecooomJc ends. This la the heart of the ar1u- ment now beatin1 up between Europe and Jimmy Carter. Sell-government Needs Self-disciplfue To the Editor: It appears the scare or the 1973 oil embargo has thorou1bly dis- sipated frQm most minds. The apathy and disconcern of tbe average American seems stead· fast. It appe11nf Americans re· (use to reallz& the gravity of th' future becauH present energy requirements ore so convenient· 1J,lnet. · Americans have an undispui.d love artalr with automobiles. Since the 1973 embargo, the prtce of gasoline on the retail level hu doubled, yet consumption bas in- creased, not decreased or even stabilized. As a symbol of Americana, nothing seems to s urpass the automobile It slgntfles the freedom of in- dividual movement so cherished by Americans. IT lS also a problem for the vol er. Does ne note a sbiCt rn the official's position -once a con- servative, how a liberal or vice versa? Can the citi~en depend on the candidate adhering to any promised position? How far hu the elected official, as time for re-election draws near, strayed from the promised course? Shall we solve the problem by re-electing no one? And thall we then lose the service of the strong person who adheres to his announced principles? Or shall we take a chance on a newcomer who$e record ls a blank page? As a voter carefully measure the candidate! Take nothing for ~ranted. ' MARYSCOTr SoeW See•rltt1 To the Edltor: The onlY way to brin1 Social Security pensJona In llne with the cost of Uvlng and to insure that lt Is properly rul)ded is to put poUti· clans on Social Security. They have voted themselves much lar1er perisiona under dlff erent. programs. JC they are weal~y, they don•t need the large pensions. If they aren't, let them live on the same dole that others llvoon. tt it popular to glvc money away, but tt tsn•t popular to fund programs because it means rnla Ing taxes. U their own pension• were t,he same as othel'li. they rnlght be more interested in tjing lt to the coetof Uvlric andlundlng it. .ft\MES W. BlfLOJNG gasoline, or the 10 percent we \ISe for home comro11.1. wlll not help- much in the overall enern sav- ings. And business and.industry cutbacks will make goods scarce and more expensive and cause more job losses. IF 116 is going to veto any ener1y bill that ls "unfair .. to us, he should veto bis newly created energy agency that costs us $10.6 bi111on of our tax dollars. 1t also hinders our doroestlc produellon that m1'kes us import more oil ond sas that hurta our economy. Or be could be "fairer" lo us by lowering lhe 50 percent tax we now payon energy tn'stead or addin1 now taxea with his entt1Y plan. Wby 18 i "fairer .. to pay a tax on a prOduct. than lot tho Pf'O-' duct, or a .. rip.off" to the aovem'. ment instead of the producer? But he does now admit that. America'• security R threatened by this lack of domestic energy. Maybe the man ls finally learn· ing what mOlt Americana tiave Jong known. " h ... ,, ' I y " , "' I H I I t I Wednesday'• . NYSE COMPOSITE 2 pm. ~l)f)·Rrice State Bated 'Health' -'Los ANGELES CAP) -A CautomJa btllla.el1 1rou9 ~ftl tbe state .. v~;,.Jl_lsb maru• for tu ~onom!O~tll ad .ttallt;r,'' IMlt bumadelOIOe~batew impro"manta. The Cl.Ulcnla ROundta* • ll'O'IP ot the ltate'a larpat cOrpar"atlaQI ad us~lat.lana, uur.clo t.bo rtcoWNDda· t.lons T~a)'. Thq *luded 1lmpltfylq UM land cltv•lopment ;permit •1•t•m. 1treamUJdn1 UM .iate Pub11c UUUU Con'lmlltlon and tltmtaaUA1 th• etato'•JJntemO~ and UD.ltaq tuu. s DAllV~ Ai Taste leas Toothless Win Battle of 'Bite' 81 MJLTONKOUO~ MUiiona ol Amerlun• have not.hint ln their mouths but fala.e teeth and that quJllliea them u tara ti for u cean· lets and tuteless a barrat• ol advenl.llbt as le d.lncted at children Ob Saturday mornln1 televtatoa. • Friends of denture wearers knotr well enc>Uth to t.re•d easily oo th.ls subject. Feellnp eaa be euUy bnalMd: BU\ adveniaera have no compunction&: Tbfy Jllst ebar!E'ftOt in tbete, int.errupUn1 Walter Cronkl~ on the CBS ciidri; News and preyinl on rears that their deQtu.ru will fa ut QI' smell bad. ONE OF TUES PITCR&S 18 •bout to be dectlied Qff Umltl, thanka to the Federal Trade Conu!Jluloo; C>vel"lttf ot truth ln adv•rtlalot• You remember tht commercial tbowlnc .Seaturo wearers t.aJdni bl& bltet out of ap»lei_and corn aft tbe tol>T The conu:oerclal rea11qred Ulet:D: "Go on, U1 u '°" like. Take a aood healthy bite of llfe ... Jeraey City'• Block Drui Co. ran tbOIO eommeretala '1 support ot lta Poll·Orlp adbelhea, wbJeb ire 1 ed tq keep ,false teeth ln place. 1be rrc com· plained that tt •un•t true, no matter wb1t foods are belni chewed · -ancl an •d· IQlnJ.strative ta• Judr• blls upheld that com·· plaint. Money -Tree Jn b1a decllte)ft Judie J. B10Wn. 111d denture wearera ~ lit_elf to bne ~· eatlnf harcl:.to..blte foo4t aim ply-·~~ tbe wax th&Plat.e..,.. construetat. FTC COMMISSIONIU OE UPScrED to 1pproTe Judge Brown's declalon 1ince ~~ ~M aceepted ltlrith the understandlne that It will ap~~ cosnpanles promot· ing adhesives. • The FTC had alJO cballented ~··claim that lta ti· tra Strength ~~t J»olldiDftNiiture cle&DHr worls better than Warner-Lambert'• IC:Jdl'a Str'enctb Etroldelit. That's import.ant lor Block t.1uae Merdent outaelll Poll· dent by 1 maratnof.nearly2-to-1. The ftndln1 is that Block lacb evidence to make • claim for 1uperf'ortty. Block is no Joqer Ullnf WI ptteh. Instead, It's toutlnl Polldent a an aid to marttil loaienty. Commercial.a depict a no-1.onier-)'OUDI couple w)¥> Jn 1tW lovey-dovey, presumably because Polldent doel a •ood overnight Job of cleanln1 those dent.urea. THE MOVE INTO tllla ROMANTIC eommera.J can be called the ''Geritol dance. ,._When the FTC leaned on J.B. Williams, the Geritol maker, !or its pseudo-medlcal claims. the comapany switched to Its "J love my wl!e and sbe takes good car or herself" theme sona. It might seem to some <not denture wearen, of COUfH) that it'• an awf.ul waste for crown men to have to •&Mnd their time hassling over 1uch weicbty matten. But loot at it from Block Drug's standpoint. The company is doin1 sales at an annual clip of $130 million, and 85 percent or tho&e dollars come from tta den· ture products. In addition to PoU-Grtp and PoUdtnt. it makes Dentu·Creme cleanser and three other adbeslves," Dentu-Grip, Confident (that's bow you are su-pPQted to feel) and Wernet '• Powder. Block also makes some products for people With teeth: Pycopay and Softex toothbrusbea, ph11 S.n1odyne • toothpaste. But it doesn't spend aJU'lbint to promote tbeJtl even with its $30 milllon·a·year a-d bud1et. ft'• when your teeth have fallen our thal Block let.ls you in ltt •ltbta. Somewhat alualish consumer spendlDlt an_.~dfated lid on inllation rates and a cene.ral air of uncer(alla(7 on th$ part of buslneu wUI be some of the cbaracteri'1Jct ol next year's projected economic scene, says Security faclfic Bank. The1e are some of the blghllgbta from an eeooomle forecast presented by Dr. Robert T. Parry, senior vJcepresJ. dent andadmlnist.ratoroftbe bank'aeconomlcad~. Parry told an Anaheim meeting of the NatlODal Soft Drink Association that the overall pattern In 1978 trill be one ot a moderation from the strong economic pace seen In lBTS . andearlierth.byear. ,,,. ''A SLOWDOWN IN CONSUMD BOaROWING. tlMt recent detertoraUon In conaumer •ealtb aauaecl b1 th6' penistent decUM lb the sloclr prtces, and 1ttempta bJ the American public to rebuild their savin1s wlU.alow the rate of Increase In consumer spendlq in 1978, '' Pafry 1114. The bant's chJef economist also said trowth In the na· lion's employment probably would 1low next 1e1r and would be another rutraint on lncreaHd tpendlQI by coo,. uuners. "At the aame t1me, ~ever, th slow groWtb in Jobi may d1sc0urqe potential Job&eekera, and t.b4i lrowtb 1n the labor fOl'ce should tlow ti\ 1t78 folloW· tne the sharp advance tills 1ur. We ft· peel that the nation'• .tot.1• rate~ dJ'op lliabfly in 1978. down to D AVCT ... of around 6.8 percent from 1m•a averare raieof 1.1pet'Cebt,"he1ald. • 0u .. craesttoa o1 aq1,n.r•1 om. Jock tor lnl'latloe ratd, tlie bank'• econon:!lt Aid pnseot lodfcaion point to htflattca ntn a'fml'1fta Just under• pe~u l"1. qp fracttonall; from 19'l'r1~jtettidrateof5.S ~t. ~ 87 BVGRS. MULUGAN __..... ... 4 •• Tbe ton fathen ol PlTaac>Ulh; MUI., lbould be thaDkful Udl Tbanktll'(lDI tbat the fl.rat 1bankaliviq WU beld ISi )'W'S aao inltad Ol there ud now. At today's food prices, they never could afford lt. IT WILL BE recalled from Governor Bradford'• Journal' that the Mayl]ower teWera earlr on establlabed lood vlbe• with the Wampanoaa. the realdent tribe, wben colonist Edward have stuck to bis old name of Winslow cured Bl• Clllef JumplqBaqer. lluaafO(t ot hla chronic CClft· • 1tlpatlClll by admlnl•tertaa tbe ANYHOW, THE •BUEVED favorite ''DbYalc ot Dr. Sam\tll aaaamore of the Wa=anoaa Fullor, the Pil&rlm phyalclan wu ao p-atef\ll at rejoin the who apparently dldn 't man re1ular follows k w the wl1wam calla. PUtrima of a conaplracy to wipe U Georc• Armltrona Cutter out Plymouth t>y the rival bad the hfndsllht to treat Stttlna Massachusetts Ind.lam and whh Bull ln tbla bumano manner a alacrity, conaldertna his cond.t- couple of centuries later, be ttoo, accepted an invite to the mi1bt hav. avoided tbo un-Firlt Tbanbg.lvtq Dlnner. pleasantness at the lJttle BJc But, u It turned out, the chief's Horn and the Slowe chief milbt heart wu btuer than the menu. A,. ...... lost Will To Work .-Hope • LONDON (AP) -Bob Hope says be lost the will to work after the death of his lon1·Ume friend and verbal aparrtna partner Bing Crosby. ••1 did not feel like work.lna asaln aft.er bis death but then I realized we all had to 10 on," said Hope. HE COMMENTED between rebeanals for the Royal Variety Show at the London Palladium. The Brltish·bom comedian bad planned to sing a duet with Crosby on the show. On the apPOlnted da)' ln 1121, be turned up-Wltb tlO of h1I bra\' .. , instead ol juat a few aulatut aacbema to grace tbe bead table, 1nd tbereb1 created biltoey'a first 'l'lwW&lVilll panic 1D tbt ktteben. FROM 'l1IE CRaONlCL we know that of the 102 pu1eq rs wbo arrived an the Mayflowtr, includtna the two bom at sea,· only '5 1urvtved that flnt wlnter and only ftve of the U wlv9', who by now probably wt.shed they hadn't either. Here tb y wen avlnc over an open ftre for an UDH~ auest'lJ.at Of H6 and oo.ly enoutti food for a third that many. au6tractli1& tho ltve .Utt!• ones. 1111• Staodlsb diJlpatcbid four Of hi• mruuamen with fowllq plecee to baa a •••ale of'""· a aobble of wild turkey• and • brace of mallards li:l the aur- roun dlne woods. Nymphet Prilcllla Mulllna ~ holdlna b•nd1 wltb Jol\n Alden long enou1h to pl~ aome lobllten, Be-Eats 'em· I • clama, oyaters. cod Ud eel from Uie tOwn brook. And t.bO e112b9raued Indians untuck~d tbelr napklne. UD· quivered tbelr arrows and came back wlthftftdeor. SOMEHOW ftlEY GOT It All toaether and came up wlt.b u et1bt·COW"H menu t.bat •~n now would tantall&e the cost acCOUD· tanll ln the catertna departmeflt of an elite bar millvab palaee. There were· no plea or friilt cakes that tint Thanbst~. · because the colonist.a bad run oat of aucar. but the bop wen full Of cranberries and. after a f1ne . barveat, the eoi;nmoo.Jbouae larder wu piled bigh wtua con. IF.IL--&.! --in c1.h.;.:. ..... 's Diet barley,peasanddrledtrult. ,,,.. ,reui,iea •KH~"l:' The Jndlam bad yet to lhOW SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -Olympic dtcatblon champion Bruce Jen· them bow to use pumpkins, b ner buonerecretabout WbeaUee.Hedld.n'taavetmeboxtope. they had learned tbe llreside Not only wou1cl boxtops bave demonstrat.ed to the dubious -like san secrets ol lndJa.n puddtn1 and u Franclaco's dlatrlct attorney -that Jenner does indeed eat the cakes and bow to pop corn and breakfut cereal but allO, the athlete aald, "I woulcl bave every vre-douse lt ln m.ple aap, • favOrtt.e mium General Kllla ever of. with thec.biJdren. ferecS." commercial could mislead tb4t \ public Into tblnklng Wbeaties THE SOBER PILG•IM .JENNER CALLED a praa conference to try to de~unk cballenaes made in a lawtuit filed last week about a televlalon commercial atan1na Jenner and "the breakfast of champions." Filed by District Attorney Joe Freitas' consumer fraud unit, the suit accuses General Milla of false advertlsina. It clatma the Soapy Trays - Make Marine Recruits Ill were C..1:3:~e in Jeaner'a diet Fathers, who didn't tl'\lat tJio while • local watet, brought over enoU,p "l don't like people thlnkint I Scoteb wblakey, Holland e1n and am not tellinf the truth," Jenner beer, IDd other ''Itron& aplrlta0 said, t.ben went on to detail bll . to lut more than a year after the breakfutbablts. Mayflower departed, an• WHEATIES, BE SAID. "bu been in my diet for many years.'' He eats it top~ with peach and banana sl,ices. And, he aald, he'll often down a steak and maybe some homemade aranola u well. "A complete breakfast, with or without Wheaties, la very impor- tant,'' be told reportera. In the commercial, Jenner ii described u having "dowued a lot of Wheaties" in preparm. for the decathlon. Jeunertben adds: Maaauolt'a medicine man bad tau1bt them bow to make red and white wino rrom the wild 1ra.pe1 that abounded oa Cape Cod. "Wheaties bu been on my SAN DIEGO (AP) -More breakfast table 1lnce I wu a Thomas Hogan, director of caterm, at tbe New York Hilton. ft1urea tbe orllinal TbankaaiV· in& dlnner from soup to nutS, from the lobster bisque and oyster llew down tbroueb the haunch of venlaon, the roast wild turkey, tbe braised mallard and the stuffed eoose ... would cost sso a perlOD today at any flrst-dua hotel or restaurant." ROYAL V1SfT -Queen Elizabeth goes backstage to meet actress Julie Andrews, left, and Bob Hope at the London Palladium after attending the Silver Jubilee Royal Variety gala, which will be aired on British television next month. Proceeds will go to British charity. "I knew we would all have to go on so I did a show about 10 days lat.er," said Hope. "But I felt very bad. Then after the au· dlence laughed at the first joke, I just went straight into it. Af. terwards I thanked the audience for making me feel much better and they cheered because I think they knew bow I felt to begin with." than 1,000 young Marines were kld." AND TIDS, HE points ou~ made sick by eatln1 off soapy doea not lnclude the~ at $28 metal trays, a spokesman dill· to$30afiftb,theHollandpnat$22 CROSBY DIED OCT. 1' of a closed at the Marine Corps •I~ ~~U•ES a ju& and the Dutch beer at $t'15 heart attack just after playing a RecntltDepot. i~..1£#...,..1 via.. a boUle. round of eoll. The rinse cycle on one bl1 "Some of the ltema like the Monday night's show -featur· dishwasher f)liled, he said Tues-'N.E~wx:Y:! ~ D"' wild turkey would be a bit dlf· ing Shirley MacLaine, Carol day. . ~.I ftcult to eome by today, .. qya C l ado Sk • A Burnett, Rudolf Nureyev and The entire 3,867·man recruit NEW YORK (AP) _ A reap-Ho1an, "but we could duplicate . 0 O P. .. rnas Harry Belafonte in addition to force ate the next meal, Sunday pralaal of breast removals the orlltnal menu it elven ad· • 1 Cl • ~ Hope -was aimed at raising $1.8 nl&ht, and within two daya 1,131 performed on 53 women shows vance Warn1n1. The other nlaht million for BrtUab charities. It Is had been treated at tbe dis· that the operations were someone ordered mallard duck to be shown on BriUab television pensary for stomach upsets. neceaaary, contrary to the and we bad to pt it from Utt 21 Re1H'rt Cond;t;ORS Dec.•. There were some cues of diar-ortetnal coactuatona of a na-Club, about the only place yoo. Cl Cl rhea. Uonwlde survey. according to a can flnd lt." om • I S ed Those wbo escaped'tbe aoapy mecllcalnewsmllulne. Let'• see now, 1'8 people at ( Colo ado IC!1-t Coon Cl8 8 D food trays ate in other •~Uom ol "Nearly all the 51 women wbo $50 a bead and ftl\ll'1nc 29 to ao DENVER AP)-r ~ tryUSAreportsthefollow· SACRAMENTO <AP> -A $80 the cafeteria where different underwent wbat a National sbotatotbeboWeolbooze,tut•a ng conditions a. t m_,or aid areas on Tuesday : been dish "'-... ..a th ._. All "-'cl millionclaasactionsuitbas wulefitare~. Inatltutes of Health panel ano er._ per... "". =:P==~~--.......... filed a1ainat nlne Sbuta County The •Pok•ma.n aald 90 ~t labeled, Just a few weeks aio, eomethlns on the order ol '8,111 • ,...,11t_...,, __ .l*l!M,...,. offlclala including a Judge for an of those recndta wbo becaine needless maatectomiea actually not countlnt tipe, ·and • HtUO · ~~::=:.::.~..:',.:Qt· * ,,....,..... alleeed "conspiracy" to deny sick were glven lllbt duty or al· needed tbeip after all," Medlcat aomethhla Qtra to keep tbola "'""w'"•--.•-.-· .--..:=-..--· adequate pu~llc defender lowed to atay ln }>ect. None of WorJdNewheporled. flvecolonlaldam4'11DtlMkitcbC ==~~.::--..=;.T, ... ~ll\lclw9\'. services. them wuseriouslylll, be said. from 1om,onltrtke. ~~~~.::~::.'.:::::::..:.:.:=:.:.~------------------=::..:.:.:::_ ____________ ~-===-:.~::.:.:..:..::.::.::...:_~-------===================--=..:::~~==::::::;._~-:-~' ATIME FOR GRATITUDE ~') CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCHES INVITE YOU TO THEIR THANKSGIVING "' ~ SERVICE I THCJRSDAY, NOVEMBER 24 • At the Registry Hoters Grand Portage Restaur- ant. We'll serve you a feast from our special menu while you revel In the day Jong offerings · ' of music by the ·Paclflc Strings and the evening sounds of Fred Ll}>by's piano. In the